{"id": "enwiki-00230014-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East Superleague\nThe 2012\u201313 East Superleague (known as the McBookie.com East Superleague for sponsorship reasons) was the 11th season of the East Superleague, the top tier of league competition for SJFA East Region member clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230014-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East Superleague\nThe season began on 1 September 2012 and ended on 15 June 2013. Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic were the reigning champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230014-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East Superleague\nThere was no relegation this season as the Superleague expanded from twelve to sixteen in 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230014-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East Superleague\nLinlithgow Rose won the title on 27 April 2013, becoming the first club to win the East Superleague on three occasions, and also becoming the first team to go the full season unbeaten in the league. As champions they entered the First Round of the 2013\u201314 Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230015-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East Tennessee State Buccaneers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 East Tennessee State Buccaneers basketball team represented East Tennessee State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Buccaneers, led by 10th year head coach Murry Bartow, played their home games at the ETSU/Mountain States Health Alliance Athletic Center and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 10\u201322, 8\u201310 in A-Sun play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic Sun Tournament to Stetson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230016-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East of Scotland Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 East of Scotland Football League was the 84th season of the East of Scotland Football League. Stirling University were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230016-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East of Scotland Football League\nThe league was split into two separate divisions, the Premier Division and the First Division. This season saw 26 teams competing across the two divisions, which was the largest number in the league's history prior to the influx of Junior clubs in 2018\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230016-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East of Scotland Football League, Premier Division\nWhitehill Welfare claimed their 16th league title. Post-season league reconstruction after the departure of nine clubs to the newly-formed Lowland Football League meant there was there was no relegation from the Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230016-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East of Scotland Football League, Premier Division, Teams\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230016-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East of Scotland Football League, First Division\nThe First Division saw an increase in the number of clubs to fourteen with the addition of Burntisland Shipyard to the league. Craigroyston claimed the First Division title for the second time. Post-season league construction meant a third club gained promotion to the Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230016-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 East of Scotland Football League, First Division, Teams\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230017-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Counties Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Eastern Counties Football League season (known as the 2012\u201313 Thurlow Nunn Eastern Counties Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 71st 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, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230017-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Counties Football League\nDereham Town were crowned champions on 27 April 2013 after a 5\u20130 win over FC Clacton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230017-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 18 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-00230017-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Counties Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 14 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-00230017-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Counties Football League, Division One\nNewmarket Town achieved promotion to the Premier Division on the 13 April 2013. Cambridge University Press also achieved enough points to secure promotion on April 13, 2013 but will not be promoted as they withdrew from the league on April 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230018-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Illinois Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Eastern Illinois Panthers men's basketball team represented Eastern Illinois University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by first year head coach Jay Spoonhour, played their home games at Lantz Arena and were members of the West Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 6\u201310 in OVC play to finish in third place in the West Division. They lost in the first round of the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament to Southeast Missouri State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230019-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Kentucky Colonels basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Eastern Kentucky Colonels basketball team represented Eastern Kentucky University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonels, led by eighth year head coach Jeff Neubauer, played their home games at McBrayer Arena within Alumni Coliseum and were members of the East Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 25\u201310, 12\u20134 in OVC play to finish in second place in the East Division. They advanced to the semifinals of the OVC Tournament where they lost to Murray State. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Gardner\u2013Webb in the first round before falling in the second round to Evansville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230020-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team represented Eastern Michigan University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by second year head coach Rob Murphy, 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 16\u201318, 7\u20139 in MAC play to finish in fourth place in the West Division. They won two games in the MAC Tournament to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Western Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230020-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Arrivals\nRay Lee Ranked as the 19th best point guard in the country by Scout.com and the 142nd best player overall in the 2012 class by Rivals.com committed to EMU. Jalen Ross (Greensboro Day School) another PG was a PACIS (Piedmont Athletic Conference of Independent Schools) All-Conference selection and MVP of the Pizza Hut Invitational in high school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230020-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Roster\nJames Still was dismissed from the team on November 16, 2012, following a guilty plea in felony charges stemming from an incident in April 2010, when he was enrolled at Providence College (see also 2010\u201311 Providence Friars men's basketball team#Offseason).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230020-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Schedule\n^ The game was originally scheduled for 1/30/2013 but was postponed due to the closure of the Ohio campus following an armed robbery of $5 just off campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230020-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Schedule, Noteworthy games\nThe win over Purdue on December 8 was the program's first win over a Big Ten team in nearly 15 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230020-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team, Schedule, Noteworthy games\nThe January 26 win over Northern Illinois set several NCAA defensive records, including lowest field goal percentage allowed in a half since the implementation of the shot clock (3.2%), fewest points allowed in a half (4 points), and lowest field goal percentage allowed in a game (13.1%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230021-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eastern Washington Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Eastern Washington Eagles men's basketball team represented Eastern Washington University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by second year head coach Jim Hayford, played their home games at Reese Court and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 7\u201313 in Big Sky play to finish in ninth place. They failed to qualify for the Big Sky Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230022-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eccellenza\nThis is a list of division winners and playoff matches in the regionally organized Eccellenza 2012\u20132013, which is the 6th level of Italian football", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230023-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edinburgh Rugby season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Edinburgh Rugby's twelfth season competing in the Pro12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230023-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edinburgh Rugby season, Squad List\nProps Geoff Cross Allan Jacobsen W. P. Nel Lewis Niven John Yapp", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230023-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edinburgh Rugby season, Squad List\nLocks Sean Cox Perry Parker Steven Turnbull Izak van der Westhuizen Grant Gilchrist", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230023-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edinburgh Rugby season, Squad List\nLoose Forwards Dimitri Basilaia David Denton Roddy Grant Stuart McInally Ross Rennie Netani Talei", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230023-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edinburgh Rugby season, Squad List\nHalf Backs Alex Black Chris Leck Richie Rees Greig Laidlaw (C) Harry Leonard Piers Francis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230023-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edinburgh Rugby season, Squad List\nCentres Ben Atiga Ben Cairns Nick De Luca John Houston James King Matt Scott", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230023-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edinburgh Rugby season, Squad List\nBack Three Tom Brown Lee Jones Mike Penn Sep Visser Tim Visser Greig Tonks*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season was the 34th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 22, 1979, and 41st season including their play in the World Hockey Association. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season\nThe Oilers finished the season with a sub-.500 record and failed to qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the seventh year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Off-season\nOn June 27, the Oilers named Ralph Krueger as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Off-season, Arena Controversy\nThe Edmonton Oilers have been embroiled in a controversy with the city of Edmonton over a new arena. Oilers owner Daryl Katz has threatened to move the team to Seattle if a new arena is not built, which was panned by fans and politicians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Off-season, Arena Controversy\nIn October 2012, Elections Alberta released campaign finance statements which showed Katz, his family and business partners donated substantial amounts of money to the Progressive Conservatives in the closing days of the 2012 Alberta general election. Katz says it was to prevent the Wildrose Party from taking power and did not have to do with the arena. Contributions from him totalled almost 20% of the total donations during the election campaign for the Progressive Conservatives. Opposition parties in Alberta have asked Elections Alberta to investigate the donations, alleging they were made to ensure the province would kick in 100 million dollars towards a new arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Playoffs\nFor the seventh consecutive season, the Edmonton Oilers failed to qualify for the NHL Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Oilers. Stats reflect time with the Oilers only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Awards and records, Awards\nTaylor Hall was also third in the voting among left-wingers for All-Star voting. Alexander Ovechkin finished second, despite the fact that Ovechkin played only four games on the left wing, with the remainder being played at right wing, where he was voted to the First All-Star Team. This prompted Professional Hockey Writers' Association President Kevin Allen to state, \"We are troubled by the All-Star voting results, and plan to take a closer look at the events that led to Ovechkin winning All-Star acclaim at two positions... We know we got this wrong, and our objective is to make sure it never happens again.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Transactions\nThe Oilers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230024-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Edmonton Oilers season, Draft picks\nEdmonton's picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Oilers possessed the first overall pick for the third-straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230025-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eerste Divisie\nThe 2012\u201313 Eerste Divisie, known as Jupiler League for sponsorship reasons, was the fifty-seventh season of Eerste Divisie since its establishment in 1955. It began on 10 August 2012 with the first matches of the season and ended on 26 May 2013 with the returns of the finals of the promotion/relegation play-offs, also involving the 16th- and 17th-placed teams from the 2012\u201313 Eredivisie. On 3 May 2013, during the last round of the regular season, SC Cambuur secured the championship and the only direct promotion berth. Go Ahead Eagles won promotion to the Eredivisie in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230025-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eerste Divisie, Teams\nA total of 18 teams took part in the league. PEC Zwolle were promoted from the Eerste Divisie as 2011\u201312 champions and replaced by bottom-placed Eredivisie SBV Excelsior, whereas Willem II won a top flight place in the nacompetitie, replacing De Graafschap, who were eliminated from the post-season playoff and therefore relegated to Eerste Divisie for this season. No team was promoted from the Topklasse, thus allowing last-placed FC Emmen to keep their place in the second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230025-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eerste Divisie, Playoffs\nRoda JC and VVV-Venlo joined the Eerste Divisie-teams for the playoffs, after finishing 16th and 17th in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230026-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eerste Klasse\nThe 2012\u201313 Eerste Klasse season was the third edition of the Dutch fifth tier since the Topklasse was formed as the third tier in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230026-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eerste Klasse\nA total of 84 teams participated in the league. As usual, the competition is divided into eleven divisions: five divisions played on Saturdays and six divisions played on Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230026-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eerste Klasse\nThe champion of each division was directly promoted to the 2013\u201314 Hoofdklasse. Saturday Champions were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Egri FC's 6th competitive season, 1st consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 104th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri FC 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri FC 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri FC 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri FC 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri FC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230027-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egri FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230028-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egypt Cup\nThe 2013 Egypt Cup is the eighty-first season of the Egypt Cup since its establishment in 1921. A total of 48 teams contested for the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230029-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egyptian Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Egyptian Premier League was the fifty-sixth season of the Egyptian Premier League since its establishment in 1948.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230029-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egyptian Premier League\nFollowing the 2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat on 3 July 2013, the season was suspended for security reasons, and a decision was reached to cancel the remainder of the season. Thus, the championship play-off and the relegation play-off were not played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230029-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egyptian Premier League, Clubs\nA total of 64 clubs have played in the Egyptian Premier League from its inception in 1948\u201349 up to and including the 2012\u201313 season. But only two clubs have been members of the Egyptian Premier League for every season since its inception. They are Al Ahly and Zamalek. Most of this season's matches and the 2011\u201312 season have been postponed, because of the Egyptian revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230029-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egyptian Premier League, Clubs\nThe following 18 clubs are competing in the Egyptian Premier League during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230030-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Egyptian Second Division\nEgyptian Second Division 2012\u201313 is the 2012\u201313 season of the Egyptian Second Division competition. A total of 69 teams are divided into 6 groups based on geographical distribution. The top 2 teams of each group promotes to Promotion play-offs for season (Egyptian Premier League), The Season started on 14 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230031-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Braunschweig season\nThe 2012\u201313 Eintracht Braunschweig season is the 118th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the club's second consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2011\u201312, after it was promoted from the 3. Liga in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230031-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Braunschweig season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and subsequently lost to Bundesliga side SC Freiburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230031-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Braunschweig season, Review and events\nDue to the ongoing rebuilding of the Eintracht-Stadion, the stadium's capacity is reduced during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230031-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Braunschweig season, Review and events\nEintracht Braunschweig started the season by winning five games in a row and taking over first place in the league on the second matchday. The club never left the direct promotion spots for the rest of the season. After having spent the last two decades mostly between the second and third division of German football, Eintracht's resurgence became noted by the German media. On the 31st matchday, the club secured its return to the Bundesliga after a 28-year absence with a 1\u20130 away win over FC Ingolstadt. Damir Vran\u010di\u0107 scored the decisive goal from a free-kick in injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230031-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Braunschweig season, Review and events\nWith 19 goals, Dominick Kumbela also finished as the top-scorer of the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230031-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Braunschweig season, Management and coaching staff\nSince 12 May 2008 Torsten Lieberknecht is the manager of Eintracht Braunschweig.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230032-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Frankfurt season\nThe 2012\u201313 Eintracht Frankfurt season was the 113th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It was the club's first season back in this league and 44th overall, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2012. Finishing the domestic season in sixth position, Eintracht qualified for the UEFA Europa League 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230032-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Frankfurt season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it was knocked out by 2. Bundesliga side Erzgebirge Aue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230032-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Matches, Bundesliga, 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. For example, if a match is scheduled for matchday 13, but then postponed and played between days 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for day 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\nThe 2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa or T-Mobile Ekstraklasa for sponsorship reasons, was the 79th season of the highest level of football leagues in Poland since its establishment in 1927. It began on 17 August 2012 and concluded on 2 June 2013. A total of 16 teams are participating, 14 of which competed in the league during the 2011\u201312 season, while the remaining two were promoted from the I Liga. Each team played a total of 30 matches, half at home and half away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\n\u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw were the defending champions, winning their 2nd title last season, first since the 1976\u201377 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\n\u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw as reigning champions entered the 2nd qualifying round of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League. \u015al\u0105sk defeated the Montenegrin champions Budu\u0107nost Podgorica 2\u20131 on aggregate, but got eliminated in the third qualifying round by the Swedish champions Helsingborg IF 1\u20136 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\nRuch Chorz\u00f3w, as the runner-up, entered the 2nd qualifying round of the 2012-13 UEFA Europa League, in which they defeated the Macedonian league runners-up Metalurg Skopje 6\u20131 on aggregate. Ruch got eliminated in the next round by the Czech side Viktoria Plze\u0148 0\u20137 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\nLegia Warsaw whom won the 2011\u201312 Polish Cup, as well as finishing third last season also qualified for the 2nd qualifying of the Europa League. Legia defeated the Latvian league runner-up Liep\u0101jas Metalurgs 7\u20133 on aggregate. In the third round Legia defeated the Austrian side SV Ried 4\u20133 on aggregate. Legia were defeated in the Play-off round by the Norwegian side Rosenborg BK 2\u20133 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\nLech Pozna\u0144 as the fourth placed team earned a place in the 1st qualifying round of the Europa League, since Legia Warsaw won the Polish Cup. Lech first defeated the Kazakh side FC Zhetysu 3\u20131 on aggregate, in the next round they defeated the Azerbaijani side Khazar Lankaran 2\u20131 on aggregate. Lech got eliminated in the third round, losing to Swedish side AIK Fotboll 1\u20133 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\nOn May 15, 2013 the Polish FA announced that Polonia Warsaw won't receive the Ekstraklasa license for 2013\u201314 season, citing financial issues. The club's appeal was rejected on May 28. As a result, Polonia was relegated to 2013\u201314 I Liga instead of the 15th placed Ekstraklasa team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\nThe Polish FA also deemed GKS, Widzew, Pogo\u0144, Polonia and Ruch (financial issues) as well as Podbeskidzie and Jagiellonia (infrastructural reasons) ineligible to compete in UEFA competitions. \u015al\u0105sk and Wis\u0142a, although initially denied the licence due to submitting incomplete financial forecasts, were able to fulfil the requirements during the appeal procedure and received the UEFA licence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa\nAlso, the FA's decision to exclude G\u00f3rnik from the European competitions was cancelled, as the club, whose home stadium is undergoing renovative work, has made arrangements to use another venue as their home field in the event of their qualification to the 2013\u201314 Europa League. The three clubs were instead fined 100,000 z\u0142 (\u015al\u0105sk), and 20,000 z\u0142 (both Wis\u0142a and G\u00f3rnik).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa, Teams\nPromotion and relegation as usual was determined by the position in the table from prior season. The bottom two teams were directly relegated to the I Liga, while the top two teams are promoted to the Ekstraklasa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa, Teams\n\u0141KS \u0141\u00f3d\u017a and Cracovia finished in 15th and 16th place, respectively, and were directly relegated to the Polish First League as a result. \u0141KS \u0141\u00f3d\u017a returned to the second tier after just being promoted from the season before. Cracovia spent 8 consecutive seasons in the Ekstraklasa, after returning to the top division for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa, Teams\nPromotion was won by 2011\u201312 I Liga champions Piast Gliwice, who returned to the top division after being relegated in the 2009\u201310 season. Pogo\u0144 Szczecin finished as runners-up in the I Liga and made their comeback to the top tier after 5 years in lower divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230033-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa, League table, Positions by round\nThe following table represents the teams position after each round in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230034-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraliga (women's football)\nThe 2012\u201313 Ekstraliga was the 38th edition of the women's football premier league in Poland. It ran from August 18, 2012, to June 12, 2013, with a mid-season break from November to March. KU AZS UJ Krak\u00f3w, and KS Gosirki Piaseczno replaced relegated teams 1.FC Katowice and MUKS Tomasz\u00f3w Mazowiecki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230034-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ekstraliga (women's football)\nUnia Racib\u00f3rz won its fifth title in a row but with a smaller margin than in previous seasons, two points over Medyk Konin which also was the runner-up for the fourth straight time. G\u00f3rnik \u0141\u0119czna also repeated their third position. Pogo\u0144 Women Szczecin, which had defeated both Unia and Medyk, was disbanded during the mid-season break for financial reasons, leaving the competition one team short. Last-placed Bronowianka KU AZS UJ Krak\u00f3w was thus the only relegated team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230035-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elche CF season\nThe 2012\u201313 Elche CF season is the 80th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230036-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elite Women's Hockey League\nThe 2012\u201313 EWHL season was the ninth season of the Elite Women's Hockey League, a multi-national women's ice hockey league. Six teams participated in the league, and HK Pantera Minsk of Belarus won the championship for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230036-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elite Women's Hockey League, Playoffs\nThe top four teams from the regular season qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230037-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitedivisionen\nThe 2012\u201313 Elitedivisionen was the 41st edition of Denmark women's football premier league. It ran from August 4, 2012 to June 9, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230037-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitedivisionen\nBr\u00f8ndby IF won its eighth championship, and the third one on a row, winning all games but one against Fortuna Hj\u00f8rring, which also qualified for the 2013-14 UEFA Women's Champions League as the runner-up. Odense BK and IK Skovbakken also made it to the championship play-offs, while Vejle BK and BK 1913 were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230037-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitedivisionen, Second stage\nFor the second stage, the points of the first stage were halved and rounded up. Championship round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230038-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien (bandy)\nThe 2012-2013 Elitserien was the sixth season of the Swedish bandy league Elitserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230038-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien (bandy), League table, Knock-out stage\nA best-of-five playoff were used in the quarter-finals and semi-finals. The crucial final was played at Friends Arena in Solna, Stockholm at March 17, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230039-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien (men's handball)\nThe 2012\u201313 Elitserien was the 79th 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\u201313 had to play relegation playoffs against teams from the second division, and team 14 was relegated automatically. Lugi HF won the regular season, but HK Drott won the playoffs and claimed their 11th Swedish title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season\nThe 2012\u201313 SHL season was the 38th season of Elitserien. The regular season began on 13 September 2012 and ended on 5 March 2013. The playoffs began on 12 March 2013 and ended on 18 April 2013. The 2012\u201313 Elitserien season was the last season under the name \"Elitserien\"; on 17 June 2013, the league was renamed \"Swedish Hockey League\" (SHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season\nSkellefte\u00e5 AIK clinched the Swedish Championship for the first time since 1978, defeating Lule\u00e5 HF 4\u20130 in the Finals. It was the team's second Swedish Championship in club history. Skellefte\u00e5 also won the regular season for the first time since the 1980\u201381 season, and the second time in club history. Their 114-point finish is the highest number of points since F\u00e4rjestad BK won the 2001\u201302 regular season with 118 points. Lule\u00e5 HF improved on the record for fewest goals surrendered in a 55-game regular season that they set last season by only having 102 goals scored against them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season\nIn Kvalserien, \u00d6rebro HK (first SHL season) and Leksands IF qualified for the 2013\u201314 SHL season at the expense of Timr\u00e5 IK and R\u00f6gle BK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Summary, Short-term contracts\nShort-term contracts and the possibility of signing players affected by the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout was a controversial issue for several months. The board of hockey operations for Elitserien (Hockeyligan) decided to continue rejecting short-term contracts (i.e. contracts not lasting for the entire season) on 23 August 2012. On 21 September 2012, the Swedish Competition Authority (SCA) examined the matter and responded with a ruling that allowed short-term contracts. Hockeyligan appealed the SCA ruling to the Market Court. On 18 December 2012, the Market Court ruled against the SCA and allowed Hockeyligan to forbid short-term contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Summary, Short-term contracts\nThe uncertainty and concerns of legal punishment caused a number of Elitserien clubs to refrain from signing short-term contracts and await the Market Court's decision. In the end, Cody Franson played 26 Elitserien games with Bryn\u00e4s, Alexander Steen played 20 games with Modo, and Matt Duchene played 19 games and Viktor St\u00e5lberg 11 games with Fr\u00f6lunda before their short-term contracts expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Summary, Outdoor game\nFor the fourth consecutive season, an outdoor game was played. As part of Bryn\u00e4s IF celebrating their 100th year as a club, they hosted Timr\u00e5 IK on December 8, 2012, in a temporary arena called G\u00e4vlebocken (\"G\u00e4vle Goat\") Arena. Bryn\u00e4s won the game 3\u20130 in front of 15,009 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Summary, Decline in attendance\nThe average attendance in Elitserien fell by 10.5% from 6,385 to 5,717 spectators per game, the lowest average since the 2002\u201303 season. The drop meant that Elitserien was fifth in average attendance among professional ice hockey leagues (fourth in Europe) \u2013 after the NHL, NLA, DEL and KHL. In the 2011\u201312 season, Elitserien had the second highest average attendance among professional hockey leagues (first in Europe).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Summary, Decline in attendance\nThere were several reasons for the decline; Fr\u00f6lunda HC saw an 18.1% decrease to an average of 8,588 fans per game. The second most attended team last season, Djurg\u00e5rdens IF, was relegated to HockeyAllsvenskan. Nine of the eleven returning teams from last season had lower attendance numbers, with Skellefte\u00e5 AIK and Lule\u00e5 HF being the only teams to increase their average attendance. HockeyAllsvenskan, on the other hand, improved its attendance average this season from 2,606 to 3,227 spectators per game, an improvement of 23.8% from the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Regular season, Standings\nx \u2013 clinched playoff spot; y \u2013 clinched regular season league title; e \u2013 eliminated from playoff contention; r \u2013 play in relegation series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nUpdated as of the end of the regular season. GP = 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, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThese are the leaders in GAA among goaltenders who have played at least 40% of the team's minutes. Updated as of the end of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Regular season, Statistics, 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, 74], "content_span": [75, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 the second round, the highest remaining seed is matched against the lowest remaining seed. In each round the higher-seeded team is awarded home ice advantage. Each best-of-seven series follows an alternating home team format: the higher-seeded team will play at home for games 1 and 3 (plus 5 and 7 if necessary), and the lower-seeded team will be at home for game 2, 4 and 6 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Semifinals, (1) Skellefte\u00e5 AIK vs. (5) Link\u00f6pings HC\nSkellefte\u00e5 won the series 4\u20131 and advanced to the Finals for the third year in a row, becoming the first team to achieve this feat since HV71 between 2008\u20132010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Semifinals, (2) F\u00e4rjestad BK vs. (3) Lule\u00e5 HF\nLule\u00e5 won the series 4\u20131 and advanced to the Finals for the first time since winning the Swedish Championship in 1996. Linus Persson's game-deciding goal in Game 4, 12 seconds into overtime, is a new record for the fastest overtime goal scored in Elitserien playoff history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Finals: (1) Skellefte\u00e5 AIK vs. (3) Lule\u00e5 HF\nThe Finals became a matchup between the league's two northernmost teams: Skellefte\u00e5 and Lule\u00e5. Skellefte\u00e5 won three of the five regular-season games against Lule\u00e5; two of the five games had to be decided in a shootout. This was only the second playoff series between these two teams; in 2011, Skellefte\u00e5 defeated Lule\u00e5 in six games to advance to the Finals (where they eventually lost). This was Skellefte\u00e5's third consecutive Finals appearance (Skellefte\u00e5 reached the Finals in 2011 and 2012), and their fourth overall excluding seasons before Elitserien was formed. Lule\u00e5 made their first Finals appearance since losing the Swedish Championship to F\u00e4rjestad three games to one in 1997, as well as their third appearance overall (Lule\u00e5 became Swedish Champions in 1996).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Finals: (1) Skellefte\u00e5 AIK vs. (3) Lule\u00e5 HF\nSkellefte\u00e5 won the series 4\u20130, and became Swedish champions for the first time since 1978, and only the second time in club history. Lule\u00e5 became the first team since 2003 to get swept in the Finals, in four straight games. Skellefte\u00e5 finished the playoffs with a 12\u20131 record, the best playoff record since F\u00e4rjestad's playoff run in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Finals: (1) Skellefte\u00e5 AIK vs. (3) Lule\u00e5 HF\nIn Game 4, Skellefte\u00e5 clinched the Swedish Championship with a 4\u20130 shutout over Lule\u00e5. Goaltender Joacim Eriksson stopped all 32 shots against Skellefte\u00e5's crease. After the first period, Skellefte\u00e5 was up 2\u20130, following goals by Oscar M\u00f6ller at 3:33 and Erik Forssell at 15:22. 5:32 into the second period, Johan Forsberg netted his first goal of the playoffs to give Skellefte\u00e5 a three-goal lead. With less than four minutes to go in the third period, Erik Forssell sealed the Swedish Championship for Skellefte\u00e5 with an empty netter, his second goal of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nUpdated as of the end of the playoffs. GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThese are the leaders in GAA and save percentage among goaltenders who played at least 40% of the team's minutes. The table is sorted by GAA, and the criteria for inclusion are bolded. Updated as of the end of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230040-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Statistics, 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, 68], "content_span": [69, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230041-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Elon Phoenix men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Elon Phoenix men's basketball team represented Elon University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Phoenix, led by fourth year head coach Matt Matheny, played their home games at Alumni Gym and were members of the North Division of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 13\u20135 in SoCon play to win the North Division championship. They advanced to the semifinals of the SoCon Tournament where they lost to the College of Charleston. They were invited to the 2013 CIT, their first ever Division I postseason tournament appearance, where they lost in the first round to Canisius.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230042-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 England Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 English Hockey League season took place from September 2012 until April 2013. The end of season play offs were held on the 13 & 14 April for the men and the 20 & 21 April for the women. The Men's Championship was won by Beeston and the Women's Championship was won by Reading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230042-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 England Hockey League season\nThe Men's Cup was won by Surbiton and the Women's Cup was won by Bowdon Hightown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230043-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie\nThe 2012\u201313 Eredivisie was the 57th season of Eredivisie, since its establishment in 1955. It began on 10 August 2012 with the first match of the season and ended on 26 May 2013, with the last matches of the European competition and relegation play-offs. This is the first time VAR has been used for testing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230043-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie, Teams\nA total of 18 teams took part in the league: The best fifteen teams from the 2011\u201312 season, two promotion/relegation playoff winners and the 2011\u201312 Eerste Divisie champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230043-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230043-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie, Play-offs, European competition\nThe teams placed fifth through eighth competed in a play-off tournament for one spot in the second qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. Teams on the left played the first leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230043-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie, Play-offs, European competition, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 16 May 2013, while the return legs were played on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230043-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie, Play-offs, Relegation\nRoda JC and VVV-Venlo joined the Eerste Divisie-teams for the play-offs, after finishing 16th and 17th in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230044-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season\nThe 2012\u201313 Eredivisie season was the 53rd season of the Eredivisie ice hockey league, and the first since the disbanding of the North Sea Cup and the reversion to the league's original name. Six Dutch teams and one Belgian team took part in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230044-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season\nWhen the Leuven Chiefs withdrew from the North Sea Cup at the end of the 2011-2012 season, only one Belgian team, HYC Herentals, remained in the mixed Dutch/Belgian tournament. It was decided to dispense with the North Sea Cup, reinstate the Dutch Eredivisie regular season, and admit HYC Herentals to the Eredivisie. Thus in 2012-2013, Herentals was the sole Belgian team to compete for the Dutch national championship (although Herentals still competed for the Belgian Cup).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230044-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season\nAlso new for the 2012-2013 season was the change of name of the Amsterdam team from \"Amsterdam Capitals\" the \"Amsterdam G's\" after finding a title sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230044-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season\nThe traditional first game (known as the \"Ron Berteling Bowl\"), was played on September 30 between the winner of the Dutch Cup and the winner of the Dutch championship from the previous year. The 7-team, 36-game regular season was followed by a playoff of the top 4 teams (a best-of five semi-final and a best-of-five final). HYS The Hague was both the top team in the regular season and the Dutch national champions after sweeping both rounds of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230045-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ergotelis F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Ergotelis' 83rd season in existence and first season in the Football League after the club's latest relegation from the Super League. Ergotelis also participated in the Greek cup, entering the competition in the First Round. Despite the club facing one of its most challenging seasons to date, with many of the club's veterans being either released or refusing to follow the team in a lower division, and major shareholders announcing they were stepping down during mid-season, the team managed to secure instant promotion in the Super League, after finishing in second place. This marked the third promotion of the club to the Super League in a period of nine years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230045-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230046-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Essex Senior Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Essex Senior Football League season was the 42nd 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-00230046-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Essex Senior Football League, Clubs\nThe league featured 17 clubs which competed in the league last season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season are the Esteghlal Football Club's 12th season in the Iran Pro League, and their 19th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football. They are also competing in the Hazfi Cup and AFC Champions League, and 68th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. season, Player, Iran Pro League 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, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. season, Player, AFC Champions League 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, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nFriendlies and Pre season goals are not recognized as competitive match goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230047-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Esteghlal F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230048-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Estonian Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Estonian Cup was the 23rd season of the Estonia's most prestigious football knockout tournament. The winner of the Cup qualifies for the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. Flora won the competition after they defeated Kalju 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230048-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Estonian Cup, First round\nThe draw was made by Estonian Football Association on 26 May 2012, before the 2011\u201312 final of the same competition. League level of the club in the brackets. FC Helios is the only team that takes part from Rahvaliiga (RL) \u2014 a league organized by Estonian Football Association, but not part of the main league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230048-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Estonian Cup, First round, Byes\nThese teams were not drawn and secured a place in the second round without playing:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230048-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Estonian Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was made on 27 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230048-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Estonian Cup, Third round\nThe draw for the third round was made on 2 August. Provisional match dates are between 21 and 31 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230048-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Estonian Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round was made on 23 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230048-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Estonian Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw was made on 28 February 2013, at the opening of new league season. Tammeka got bye to the semi-finals as the eighth quarter-finalist, Viljandi, was disbanded after the 2012 league season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230049-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ethiopian Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Ethiopian Premier League is the 66th season of the Ethiopian Premier League since its establishment in 1944. A total of 14 teams are contesting the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230050-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey League\nThe 2012\u201313 Euro Hockey League was the sixth season of the Euro Hockey League, Europe's premier club field hockey tournament organized by the EHF. It was held at four different locations from October 2012 to May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230050-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey League\nThe final was played between Bloemendaal and Dragons at Sportpark 't Kopje, in Bloemendaal, Netherlands. The hosts Bloemendaal defeated Dragons 2\u20130 to win their second title. UHC Hamburg were the defending champions but they did not qualify for this season's edition. Amsterdam took the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230050-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey League, Group phase\nThe 24 teams were drawn into eight pools of three. In each pool, teams played against each other once in a round-robin format. The pool winners and runners-up advanced to the round of 16. Pools A, C, E, and F were played in Barcelona, Spain from 12 to 14 October 2012 and the other pools were played in East Grinstead, England from 26 to 28 October 2012. If a game was won, the winning team received five points. A draw resulted in both teams receiving two points. A loss gave the losing team one point unless the losing team lost by three or more goals, then they received zero points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230050-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey League, Knockout stage\nThe round of 16 and the quarter-finals were played in Amstelveen, Netherlands from 29 March to 1 April 2013 and the semi-finals, bronze medal match and the final were played in Bloemendaal, Netherlands from 18 to 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour\nThe Euro Hockey Tour 2012\u201313 was the 17th season of Euro Hockey Tour. It started on 7 November 2012 and ended on 28 April 2013. A total of 24 games were played, with each team playing 12 games. The season consisted of the Karjala Tournament, the Channel One Cup, the Oddset Hockey Games, and the Kajotbet Hockey Games. Russia won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Total standings\nGP: Games played; W: Wins; OTW: Overtime wins; OTL: Overtime losses; L: Losses in regulation time; GF: Goals forward; GA: Goals allowed; Pts: Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Karjala Tournament\nThe 2012 Karjala Tournament was played between 7\u201310 November 2012, and was won by Czech Republic. Five of the matches were played in Turku, Finland, and one match in Prague, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Channel One Cup\nThe 2012 Channel One Cup was played between 13\u201316 December 2012. Five of the matches were played in the Moscow, Russia, and one match in Helsinki, Finland. The tournament was won by Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Oddset Hockey Games\nThe 2013 Oddset Hockey Games was played between 6\u201310 February 2013. Five of the matches were played in Malm\u00f6, Sweden, and one match in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Finland won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Kajotbet Hockey Games\nThe 2013 Kajotbet Hockey Games was played between 25\u201328 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, 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 shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties In Minutes; POS = Position positions: F = Forward; RW = Right winger; LW = Left winger; C = Centre; D = DefencemanSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = Shutouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230051-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour, Rosters\nThese tables shows all skaters and goaltenders who have at least one game in the Euro Hockey Tour 2012\u201313. The tables show how many games they played, how many points they've scored, and their penalties in minutes. POS = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource: [source link] Updated: (UTC)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230052-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 EuroCup Women\nThe EuroCup Women 2012\u201313 will be the eleventh edition of FIBA Europe's second-tier international competition for women's basketball clubs under such name. It will be contested by 30 teams from 15 countries, and it is scheduled to run from 24 October 2012 to 14 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230053-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 EuroLeague Women\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 17th edition of Europe's premier basketball tournament for women \u2013 EuroLeague Women since it was rebranded to its current format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230053-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 EuroLeague Women, Regular season\nRegular season groups started on 24 October 2012 and finished on 6 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230053-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 EuroLeague Women, Round 2\nGame 1 will be played on 19 February 2013. Game 2 will be played on 22 February 2013. Game 3 will be played on 27 February 2013. The team that won two games first, advanced to the quarterfinals. UMMC Ekaterinburg qualified directly to the quarterfinals as hoster of the Final Eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230053-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 EuroLeague Women, Final Eight, Quarter-Final Round\nThe Final Eight will be held in Yekaterinburg. The Quarter-Final Round will be played in a round robin system with two groups of four teams. The two group winners will advance to the Semi-Final Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball\n2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball was the 11th edition of Europe's second-tier level transnational competition for men's professional basketball clubs, the EuroCup. The EuroCup is the European-wide league level that is one level below the EuroLeague. The winner of this competition earned a place at the group stage of the next season's EuroLeague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball\nIn this edition, semifinals were played in home-and-away series, and the final in a single game. Eurocup Qualifying Rounds were deleted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball\nThe final game was played at Spiroudome in Charleroi, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Draw\nThe draws for the 2012\u201313 Eurocup were held on Tuesday, 9 October, after the Euroleague Qualifying Rounds were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Draw\nTeams were seeded into four pots of eight teams, according to their points in the European basketball club rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Draw\nValencia BC Unics Kazan \u010cEZ Basketball Nymburk Ux\u00fae Bilbao Basket Galatasaray Medical Park Cajasol Sevilla Le Mans Sarthe Basket BC Spartak Saint Petersburg", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Draw\nHapoel Migdal Jerusalem Lokomotiv Kuban Krasnodar BC Triumph Lyubertsy Panionios BC Cibona Zagreb Banco di Sardegna Sassari Banvit BK Band\u0131rma KK Budu\u0107nost", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Draw\nVEF R\u012bga Cholet Basket Belgacom Spirou BC Donetsk Budivelnyk Kyiv Telenet Oostende Azovmash Mariupol Crvena zvezda", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Draw\nOrl\u00e9ans Loiret Basket BC Prienai Trefl Sopot Stelmet Zielona G\u00f3ra Ratiopharm Ulm Artland Dragons s.Oliver Baskets PBC Lukoil Academic", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Regular season\nThe top two teams from each group advanced to the top 16. The match-days were on 7 November, 14 November, 27 November, 5 December and 12 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Last 16\nIf teams were level on record at the end of the Last 16 phase, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Knockout stage, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals were two-legged ties determined on aggregate score. The first legs were played on March 6, and the return legs were played on March 13. The group winner in each tie, listed as \"Team #1\", hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Knockout stage, Semifinals\nThe semifinals were two-legged ties determined on aggregate score. The first legs were played on March 20, and the return legs were played on March 26\u201327. The team finishing in the higher Last 16 place, listed as \"Team #1\", hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230054-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball, Knockout stage, Final\nThe final took place on April 13, 2013, in Spiroudome, Charleroi, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230055-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball Knockout Stage\nThe 2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball Knockout stage was the last phase in the competition. Quarterfinals started on March 6 and the Final was played on April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230055-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball Knockout Stage, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals were two-legged ties determined on aggregate score. The first legs were played on March 6 and return legs were played on March 13. The group winner in each tie, listed as \"Team #1\", hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230055-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball Knockout Stage, Semifinals\nThe semifinals were two-legged ties determined on aggregate score. The first legs were played on March 20 and return legs were played on March 26\u201327. The team finishing in the higher Last 16 place, listed as \"Team #1\", hosted the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230055-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Eurocup Basketball Knockout Stage, Final\nThe final took place on April 13, 2013 in Spiroudome, Charleroi, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague\nThe 2012\u201313 Euroleague was the 13th season of the modern era of Euroleague Basketball and the third under the title sponsorship of the Turkish Airlines. Including the competition's previous incarnation as the FIBA Europe Champions Cup, this was the 56th season of the premier competition for European men's clubs. The season started on 11 October 2012 and finished on 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague\nThe Final Four was held at The O2 Arena in London. The championship game was won by Olympiacos, who defeated Real Madrid 100\u201388. Olympiacos became the third team since the introduction of the Final Four format to win two Euroleague championships in a row and the second team in Euroleague Basketball Company era (Euroleague 2000\u201301 season to present) to become back-to-back Euroleague champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Allocation\nA total of 31 teams participated in the 2012\u201313 Euroleague. There were three routes to participation in the Euroleague:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Allocation, Euroleague allocation criteria\nOn 31 May 2012, the Euroleague published the official License Allocation criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Teams\nOn 31 May 2012 the new Euroleague license allocation criteria was announced. Twenty-three teams directly joined the regular season, while one more team joined it from the qualifying rounds. Eight teams fought for the last berth, and Mapooro Cant\u00f9 got the final spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Teams\nThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round (TH: Euroleague title holders):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Qualifying rounds\nThe qualifying rounds were played in a knock-out tournament consisting of eight teams in a single-venue tournament format. The winner advanced to the Euroleague Regular Season. The qualifying rounds were played between 25 and 28 September at the PalaDesio in Desio, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Draw\nThe draws for the 2012\u201313 Turkish Airlines Euroleague were held on Friday, 6 July. The draws determined the qualifying-round matchups and regular-season groups for the Euroleague, as well as the qualifying rounds for the Eurocup and the regular-season for the EuroChallenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 24], "content_span": [25, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Draw\nTeams were seeded into six pots of four teams in accordance with the Club Ranking, based on their performance in European competitions during a three-year period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 24], "content_span": [25, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Draw\nTwo teams from the same country could not be drawn together in the same Regular Season group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 24], "content_span": [25, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Regular season\nIf teams were level on record at the end of the Regular Season, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Top 16\nIf teams were level on record at the end of the Top 16, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230056-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague, Final Four\nOn 12 May 2012 it was announced the Final Four would be hosted at The O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230057-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague Quarterfinals\nResults for the Quarterfinals of the 2012\u201313 Euroleague basketball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230057-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals were played from 9 to 26 of April, 2013. Team #1 (i.e., the group winner in each series) hosted Games 1 and 2, plus Game 5 if necessary. Team #2 hosted Game 3, plus Game 4 if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230058-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Euroleague qualifying rounds\nThe 2012\u201313 Euroleague qualifying rounds were the qualifying rounds for the 2012\u201313 Euroleague. Eight teams was participating in a single-venue tournament format. The winner, Mapooro Cant\u00f9, advanced to the Euroleague Regular Season. The qualifying round was played between September 25 and 28 at the PalaDesio in Desio, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230059-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Badminton Circuit season\nThe 2012\u201313 European Badminton Circuit season started in May 2012 and ended in April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230059-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230060-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Amlin Challenge Cup was the 17th season of the European Challenge Cup, Europe's second-tier club rugby union competition. A total of 23 teams participated\u00a0\u2014 20 in the pool stage, plus three teams parachuting into the knockout stages from the Heineken Cup. The original 20 teams represented six countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230060-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup\nThe pool stage began in Mont-de-Marsan on 11 October 2012, with Stade Montois hosting Gloucester. It ended on 19 January 2013 when Stade Fran\u00e7ais hosted competition newcomers London Welsh, followed by the knockout stages culminating in the final at the RDS Arena in Dublin on 17 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230060-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup\nThe defending Challenge Cup champions, France's Biarritz Olympique, did not initially have a chance to defend their crown because they earned an automatic berth in the Heineken Cup. However, having finish 2nd in their pool, and failing to reach the knockout stages of the Heineken Cup, they were one of three teams parachuted into the Challenge Cup knockout stages. They were knocked out of the competition by Leinster at the semi-final stage. Leinster went on to win the competition, defeating Stade Fran\u00e7ais 34\u201313 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230060-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup, Teams\nGernika Rugby Taldea represented Spain despite finishing just 5th in the Divisi\u00f3n de Honor. Valladolid won the Divisi\u00f3n de Honor, and the championship playoff, but turned down the opportunity to play in the Challenge Cup due to economic factors. As runners up in the championship playoff, Gernika qualified in their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230060-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup, Seeding\nTeams that did not qualify for the 2012\u201313 Heineken Cup were ordered into four tiers according to the European Rugby Club Ranking. Five pools of four teams were drawn comprising one team from each tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230060-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup, Seeding\nThe brackets show each team's European Rugby Club Ranking at the end of the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230060-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup, Pool stage, Seeding for knockout stage\nFollowing the end of the pool stage, the 5 pool winners were seeded alongside the 3 2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool runners-up who failed to qualify for the Heineken Cup quarter-finals\u00a0\u2013 designated (HC). Teams are ranked by total number of Competition Points earned (4 for a win, 2 for a draw, etc.) in the pool stages. If this does not separate the teams, qualification/ranking will be based on:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230061-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup pool stage\nThe 2012\u201313 Amlin Challenge Cup pool stage was the opening stage of the 17th season of the European Challenge Cup, the second-tier competition for European rugby union clubs. It began with a match between Mont-de-Marsan and Gloucester on Thursday 11 October 2012 and ended on 19 January 2013 when Stade Fran\u00e7ais hosted competition newcomers London Welsh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230061-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Challenge Cup pool stage\nTwenty teams participated in this phase of the competition; they were divided into five pools of four teams each, with each team playing the others home and away. Competition points are earned using the standard bonus point system. The pool winners advanced to the knockout stage, where they were joined by three entrants from the Heineken Cup pool stage. These teams then competed in a single-elimination tournament that ended with the final at the RDS Arena in Dublin on 17 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230062-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 European Shield\nIn 2012, the European Shield switched to a new 2 year format with teams playing each other at home and away. The teams involved were the 2010 East and West Champions (Russia and Serbia) who competed along with the 2011 Champions (Germany). They were joined by the 2013 World Cup qualifier (Italy).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230063-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Evansville Purple Aces men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Evansville Purple Aces men's basketball team represented the University of Evansville during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Purple Aces, led by sixth year head coach Marty Simmons, played their home games at the Ford Center and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 21\u201315, 10\u20138 in MVC play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Missouri Valley Tournament to Indiana State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230063-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Evansville Purple Aces men's basketball team\nThey were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Tennessee State, Eastern Kentucky, and Canisius to advance to the semifinals where they lost to East Carolina. Senior guard Colt Ryan set the school's all-time record in scoring in the win at Canisius, and finished his career with 2,279 points; 43 points ahead of Larry Humes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Everton's 21st season in the Premier League and 59th consecutive season in the top division of English football. It is also Everton's 114th season of league football and 116th season in all competitions. Having finished in seventh position in the domestic league in the previous season, Everton missed out on competing in any European competitions for the third season running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season\nThe club entered the League Cup in the second round and were knocked out in the subsequent round following a 2\u20131 away defeat by Championship side Leeds United. Everton entered the FA Cup in the third round and progressed to the quarter-finals where they suffered a 3\u20130 loss at home to Premier League relegation candidates Wigan Athletic. Everton had a very consistent league campaign, never dropping below seventh place throughout the whole season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season\nHighlights included a 1\u20130 win over Manchester United in the first game of the season, scoring two stoppage time goals to defeat Tottenham Hotspur 2\u20131 and a 2\u20130 home win over reigning Premier League champions Manchester City. However, too many draws and a lack of goals saw Everton's push for a European place fade and they finished sixth in the league. It did mean that the club finished above rivals Liverpool for the second successive season for the first time since 1937.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season\nOn 9 May, manager David Moyes announced he would be ending his 11-year tenure at the club when his contract expired at the end of the season, to become the new manager of Manchester United. Moyes transformed the club from struggling at the lower end of the league to regularly competing for the European places. He took charge of the team for over 500 games, including four European campaigns despite often working with a limited budget. Everton's average league position under his management was eighth and they never finished below this in each of his last seven seasons. However, he also received criticism for never winning a trophy during his time at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, June\nOn 1 June 2012, Everton's first pre-season friendly fixtures were announced: an away game against League Two side Morecambe acting as a testimonial to Morecambe's player-manager Jim Bentley, and a second away fixture against Scottish Premier League side Dundee United, and on 7 June 2012 a second match to be played in Scotland was announced, against Motherwell F.C. at their home ground Fir Park Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, June\nA further three friendly fixtures were later determined: a home game against AEK Athens as a testimonial match for Everton's long-serving defender Tony Hibbert, and away matches against Blackpool and Spanish side M\u00e1laga, the latter serving as the 29th edition of the annual Trofeo Costa del Sol friendly competition. Everton was also initially scheduled to take part in the inaugural edition of the Java Cup, a four-team competition held in Indonesia, but later withdrew due to scheduling difficulties and security concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, July\nOn 4 July, Everton made their first move of the summer transfer window, bringing in former Rangers striker Steven Naismith, who had refused to sign a contract to move him from the old Rangers to the new company following their liquidation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, July\nOn 14 July, Everton won their first pre-season match against Morecambe at the Globe Arena on 14 July 2012, with a score of 4\u20131, with recent recruit Francisco J\u00fanior scoring his first ever goal for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, July\nOn 26 July, Tim Cahill's eight-year stay at the club came to an end when he signed for the New York Red Bulls in a \u00a31\u00a0million deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, July\nOn 31 July, Steven Pienaar, who had made a significant impact during his loan spell at the end of last season, signed permanently for the club for \u00a34.5\u00a0million and thus began his third stint at Everton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 6 August, Fenerbah\u00e7e completed a \u00a32\u00a0million move for Joseph Yobo, who had not played for Everton since May 2010 due to two season-long loans at the Turkish side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 8 August, during his testimonial match against AEK Athens, Tony Hibbert (the player with the longest current spell without scoring a goal in English football) broke his goalscoring duck with a 25-yard free-kick, the last of Everton's goals in a 4\u20131 win. Hibbert is still yet to score a competitive goal in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 12 August, reigning Premier League champions Manchester City signed Jack Rodwell for \u00a312\u00a0million, which could rise to \u00a317\u00a0million depending on individual and team performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 19 August, Belgium international Kevin Mirallas signed for the club from Greek champions Olympiacos for a \u00a36\u00a0million fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 20 August, Everton began their season with a 1\u20130 win over last year's runners-up Manchester United. Marouane Fellaini was the scorer, with a headed goal in the 57th minute. This was the first time in five years that Everton had won their opening league game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 25 August, Everton took their unbeaten run in the Premier League to 11 games following a 3\u20131 away victory against Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 29 August, new signing Mirallas scored his first and second goals for the club during an emphatic 5\u20130 League Cup win over Leyton Orient to help Everton advance to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, August\nOn 31 August, the final day of the summer transfer window, Everton signed versatile Costa Rican international Bryan Oviedo from Danish side Copenhagen for an undisclosed fee, believed to be \u00a35\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, September\nOn 1 September, Everton missed the chance to extend their unbeaten run in the league to 12 games when they lost 0\u20132 to West Bromwich Albion. If they had avoided defeat it would have been their longest spell without a loss since the title winning 1984\u201385 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, September\nOn 22 September, Everton beat Swansea City 3\u20130 to move to second place in the league and ensure they have never lost a league encounter against the Welsh side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, September\nOn 25 September, Everton were knocked out of the League Cup following a 1\u20132 defeat by Championship side Leeds United in the third round at Elland Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, September\nOn 29 September, Everton recorded their fourth win in the Premier League after they beat Southampton 3\u20131 at Goodison Park. The win saw them move up to second in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, October\nOn 9 October, David Moyes was named Premier League Manager of the Month for September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, October\nOn 19 October, Everton signed free agent Thomas Hitzlsperger until January on a short term contract. The German international has 52 caps and had been without a club since leaving VfL Wolfsburg at the end of last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, October\nOn 21 October, following the club's 1\u20131 draw with Queens Park Rangers, Everton had scored 15 goals from 8 games, their best ever scoring start to a Premier League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, October\nOn 28 October, Everton faced Liverpool in the Merseyside Derby at Goodison Park. The game saw Everton grab a 2\u20132 draw after being two goals down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, November\nOn 3 November, the club drew 2\u20132 with Fulham at Craven Cottage. This meant Everton had drawn a game for the fourth successive time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, November\nOn 10 November, Everton ended a run of four successive draws with a 2\u20131 win over Sunderland to remain fourth in the table. It was the sixth game in a row where Everton had avoided defeat after going a goal down and stretched David Moyes' unbeaten run against Sunderland to 18 matches in his 400th Premier League game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, November\nOn 17 November, Everton lost to Reading. This was Everton's first league defeat in nine games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, November\nOn 24 November, Everton drew at home with Norwich City. Norwich's 90th-minute goal was the third time this season that Everton had conceded a last minute equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 1 December, Everton drew 1\u20131 with title holders Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium. This result meant that Everton had been unbeaten in six out of the last seven meetings with City. The result also meant that Everton had drawn seven of their last nine games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 9 December, the club scored two stoppage time goals to beat Tottenham Hotspur 2\u20131. The first of these goals, a header from Steven Pienaar, was Everton's 1,000th in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 11 December, Marouane Fellaini was named Premier League Player of the Month for November after scoring four goals in Everton's five games during the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 15 December, Fellaini again made the headlines for allegedly headbutting Ryan Shawcross in Everton's 1\u20131 draw at Stoke City. Fellaini subsequently received a three-match ban for his actions. Stoke's goal was the 1,000th that Everton have conceded in the Premier League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 22 December, Everton travelled to West Ham United and won 2\u20131. This game marked the first time that a Moyes' Everton side had recovered from a goal down at half-time to win away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 26 December, Everton defeated Wigan Athletic at Goodison Park 2\u20131. This result meant that Everton stretched their unbeaten run to seven league games. Wigan's consolation goal also meant that Everton had failed to keep a clean sheet in any of the previous 14 games they had played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, December\nOn 30 December, Everton lost to Chelsea at home, ending an unbeaten run at Goodison Park that stretched back to March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 2 January, Everton won 2\u20131 at Newcastle United, marking the first time in 21 months that they had won successive away games. The club scored and conceded for the 16th consecutive game which is a Premier League record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 7 January, Everton progressed to the fourth round of the FA Cup with a 5\u20131 away win at League Two side Cheltenham Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 12 January, Everton drew 0\u20130 at home to Swansea, keeping their first clean sheet in 19 league and cup games, while they failed to score for the first time in the last 21 league and cup games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 28 January, the club won through to the fifth round of the FA Cup following a 2\u20131 away defeat of Championship side Bolton Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 30 January Everton defeated West Brom 2\u20131 at Goodison Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, January\nOn 31 January, Everton made their only signing of the January transfer window, acquiring 18-year-old John Stones from Barnsley for a fee reported to be in the region of \u00a33\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, February\nOn 2 February, Everton rallied from a two-goal deficit to draw at home with relegation strugglers Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, February\nOn 16 February, Everton conceded an injury time equaliser to Oldham Athletic in the fifth round of the FA Cup, forcing a replay at Goodison Park at the end of the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, February\nOn 23 February, Everton conceded an injury time winner to Norwich to lose 2\u20131 at Carrow Road. The defeat meant that Everton lost for the second time in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, February\nOn 26 February, the club advanced to the quarter-finals of the FA Cup following a 3\u20131 victory over Oldham in the replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 12 March, Everton begin the month with a 3\u20131 win over Reading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 9 March, Everton crashed out of the FA Cup with a 0\u20133 home defeat by Premier League relegation candidates Wigan, with all three goals coming in less than four first-half minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 16 March, Everton bounced back in the league to beat reigning champions Manchester City 2\u20130 at Goodison Park, despite playing with ten men from the 60th minute with the score at 1\u20130, when Steven Pienaar was dismissed. The win came on the day of Moyes' 11th anniversary with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, March\nOn 30 March, Everton defeated Stoke 1\u20130. It was Everton's third league win in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 5 April, Moyes was named Premier League Manager of the Month for March, the second time he has won the award this season and the tenth in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 7 April, Everton drew 2\u20132 at Tottenham, ending a three-game winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 13 April, Everton defeated relegation struggles Queens Park Rangers 2\u20130 at Goodison Park. The victory saw the Toffees unbeaten in the last five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 16 April, Everton drew 0\u20130 at Arsenal, only the second time the club had avoided defeat at Arsenal in the last 16 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 20 April, Everton suffered a 1\u20130 defeat at Sunderland, hampering their bid for European qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, April\nOn 27 April, Everton beat Fulham at home 1\u20130 in the league, meaning they have won all 20 league encounters at home against Fulham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, May\nOn 9 May, the club confirmed that Moyes would be leaving Everton at the end of the season to join Manchester United as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0056-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Season overview, May\nOn 12 May, Everton won their final home game of the season against West Ham, 2\u20130, ensuring a second consecutive season of finishing above rivals Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0057-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230064-0058-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Players, 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0059-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230064-0060-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Players, Reserve 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, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0061-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: match played 19 May 2013Source: Match reports in Results", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0062-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Statistics, Home attendances\nCorrect as of match played 12 May 2013\u00a0\u00a0Win\u00a0\u00a0Draw\u00a0\u00a0Loss", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230064-0063-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Everton F.C. season, Awards, Player of the Month\nAwarded by Everton F.C. to the best first team Everton player of the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230065-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Exeter City F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Exeter City's 111th season in existence and their first season back in League Two, the fourth tier of English football, following their relegation from League One in the previous season. The club finished 10th in League Two, and also participated in the FA Cup, League Cup and League Trophy, where they were eliminated in the first round in all three competitions. The season covered the period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230065-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Exeter City F.C. season, League Two\nThe fixture list for the 2012/13 season was announced on 18 June 2012. It was confirmed that Exeter would begin their campaign with a home fixture against Morecambe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230065-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Exeter City F.C. season, Club Information, The Squad\nStatistics do not include appearances and goals from the 2012-13 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230065-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Exeter City F.C. season, Club Information, Management Record\nAs of 1 July 2012. Only competitive matches for the 2012/13 season are counted", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230065-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Exeter City F.C. season, Statistics, Penalties awarded\nLast updated: 23 July 2012Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230065-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Exeter City F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nLast updated: 8 July 2012Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230066-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.B.C. Unione Venezia season\nIn association football, the 2012\u201313 season of F.B.C. Unione Venezia's was their first season in Lega Pro Seconda after promotion from Serie D in 2011\u201312. The season culminated in a 3rd place league finish, followed by Playoff Final victory to secure promotion to Lega Pro Prima Divisione.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230066-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.B.C. Unione Venezia season\nOn 12 May 2013, with a 3\u20132 win over Savona, they finished in 3rd place and qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230066-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.B.C. Unione Venezia season\nOn June 1 Venezia overcame Renate in the playoff semi-final 2nd leg, following a 1-1 1st leg draw with a 1\u20130 win to qualify for the playoff final. The home leg of the playoff semi-final was played in the neutral stadium Stadio Piergiovanni Mecchia in Portogruaro because of damage to a tower in the Stadio Pier Luigi Penzo which had rendered the stadium unsafe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230066-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.B.C. Unione Venezia season\nOn June 16 in the playoff final second leg, Venezia defeated Monza 3\u20132 with a 94th-minute winner from Davide D'Appolonia to seal promotion to Lega Pro Prima Divisione. This was Venezia's second promotion in as many years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230066-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.B.C. Unione Venezia 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230067-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.C. Copenhagen season\nThis article shows statistics of individual players for the football club F.C. Copenhagen. It also lists all matches that F.C. Copenhagen played in the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230067-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.C. Copenhagen season, Players, Squad information\nThis section show the squad as currently, considering all players who are confirmedly moved in and out (see section Players in / out).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230067-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.C. Copenhagen season, Club, Other information\nUpdated to match played 10 JuneSource:\u00a0F.C. Copenhagen and Parken Stadium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230067-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F.C. Copenhagen season, Matches, Competitive\nLast updated: 20 MaySource: 1F.C. Copenhagen goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different to that of F.C. Copenhagen.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 FA Cup was the 132nd season of the FA Cup, the main domestic cup competition in English football, and the oldest football knock-out competition in the world. It was sponsored by Budweiser for a second consecutive season, thus the competition name was The FA Cup with Budweiser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup\nA total of 833 clubs applied to enter, with 758 clubs being accepted into the competition. The preliminary rounds commenced on 11 August 2012, with the first round proper played on 3 November 2012. The final was played on 11 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium in London between Manchester City and Wigan Athletic, with Wigan Athletic winning 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup\nAs a result, Wigan Athletic participated in the group stage of the following season's UEFA Europa League. Chelsea were the defending champions, having beaten Liverpool 2\u20131 in last season's final, but were eliminated in the semi-finals by Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup\nThree days after winning the cup, Wigan made history by becoming the first side to win the cup and get relegated in the same season, after they lost 4\u20131 to Arsenal, which sealed their relegation to the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Schedule\nThe schedule for the 2012\u201313 FA Cup, as announced by the Football Association, is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 24], "content_span": [25, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Qualifying rounds\nAll of the teams entering the competition that are not members of either the Premier League or the Football League had to compete in the qualifying rounds to win a place in the competition proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, First round proper\nTeams from League One and League Two entered at this stage, along with the winners from the Fourth Round Qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, First round proper\nThe draw was made on 21 October 2012 with ties to be played on 2\u20134 November 2012. Yate Town and Slough Town were the lowest-ranked teams left in the competition, both competing in level 8 of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Second round proper\nThe draw for this round was made on 4 November 2012 with the ties played on the weekend of 1\u20132 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Second round proper\nHastings United, from the seventh tier of English football, were the lowest-ranked team in the second round proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Second round proper\nBradford City were disqualified from this season's competition for fielding Curtis Good, who was ineligible to play, in a 1\u20131 draw against Brentford. As a result, it was presumed that Brentford won by walkover, but Bradford eventually made a successful appeal to the FA against expulsion and were reinstated and fined \u00a31,000 instead allowing a replay to go ahead. Brentford would eventually dump Bradford City out of the cup after winning that replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Third round proper\nTeams from the Premier League and Football League Championship entered at this stage, along with the winners from the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Third round proper\nThe draw for the third round was made on 2 December 2012, with the ties played on the weekend of 5\u20136 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Third round proper\nLuton Town's Alex Lawless won the player of the round award. The results were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Third round proper\nHastings United remained the lowest-ranked football team in the third round proper, competing in level 7 of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Fourth round proper\nThe draw for the fourth round took place on 6 January 2013, with Macclesfield Town and Luton Town, both from the Conference National (5) remaining as the lowest-placed teams still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Fifth round proper\nThe draw for the fifth round took place on 27 January 2013, with Luton Town from the Conference National (5) remaining as the lowest-ranked team still in the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Sixth round proper\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 17 February 2013, with Barnsley, Millwall and Blackburn Rovers all from the Championship remaining as the lowest-ranked teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 10 March 2013, with Millwall from the Championship (2) remaining as the lowest-placed team still in the Cup. The draw was carried out by Edgar Davids and Graeme Le Saux at Wembley Stadium in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Final\nPrior to kick off as Manchester City had already qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League, therefore Wigan Athletic had already secured a place in 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League, regardless of whether they won or lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Broadcasting rights\nThe domestic broadcasting rights for the competition were held by the free-to-air channel ITV and the subscription channel ESPN. ITV has held the rights since 2007\u201308, while ESPN gained FA Cup coverage from the 2010\u201311 season following the collapse of Setanta in the UK. Under the Ofcom code of protected sporting events, the FA Cup Final must be broadcast live on UK terrestrial television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230068-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup, Broadcasting rights\n1ITV unless stated otherwise2Braintree Town vs. Tranmere Rovers was originally scheduled to be on ITV but because the game was postponed it was moved to ITV4", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds\nThe 2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds opened the 132nd 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 758 clubs were accepted for the competition, down five from the previous season's 763.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 clubs from Fourth qualifying round progressed to the First Round Proper, where League clubs tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Calendar and prizes\nThe calendar for the 2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, as announced by the FA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Extra preliminary round\nExtra preliminary round ties were played on Friday (10 August), Saturday (11 August) and Sunday (12 August). Replays were played on Monday (13 August), Tuesday (14 August) and Wednesday (15 August). The relative immediacy of the replays was due to there only being two weeks between consecutive rounds of the competition. 400 teams, from Level 9 and Level 10 of English football, entered at this stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nPreliminary round fixtures were played on the weekend of 25 August 2012. A total of 332 teams took part in this stage of the competition, including the 200 winners from the Extra preliminary round and 132 entering at this stage from the six leagues at Level 8 of English football. The round featured 49 teams from Level 10 still in the competition, being the lowest ranked teams in this round. The draw was as follows: The draw is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe First qualifying round fixtures were played on the weekend of 8 September 2012, with replays being played the following mid-week. A total of 232 clubs took part in this stage of the competition, including the 166 winners from the Preliminary round and 66 entering at this stage from the top division of the three leagues at Level 7 of English football. The round featured twenty clubs from Level 10 still in the competition, being the lowest ranked clubs in this round. The draw is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nClevedon Town's Scott Murray won the Budweiser Player of the Round with 75% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe Second qualifying round fixtures were played on the weekend of 22 September 2012. A total of 160 clubs took part in this stage of the competition, including the 116 winners from the First qualifying round and 44 Level 6 clubs, from Conference North and Conference South, entering at this stage. The round featured Abbey Hey, Nuneaton Griff and Wootton Bassett Town from Level 10 still in the competition, being the lowest ranked clubs in this round. The Second qualifying round draw is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nFC United of Manchester's Nicky Platt won the Budweiser Player of the Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe Third qualifying round took place on the weekend of 6 October 2012. A total of 80 clubs took part, all having progressed from the Second qualifying round. Five clubs from Level 9 of English football, was the lowest-ranked team to qualify for this round of the competition. The draw is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nSouth Park's Kieran Lavery won the Budweiser Player of the Round with 33% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Fourth qualifying round\nThe Fourth qualifying round took place on the weekend of 20 October 2012. A total of 64 clubs took part, 40 having progressed from the Third qualifying round and 24 clubs from Conference Premier, forming Level 5 of English football, entering at this stage. The lowest-ranked sides to qualify for this round were Level 9 clubs South Park, and Blackfield & Langley. The draw is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Fourth qualifying round\nLuton Town's Andre Gray won the Budweiser Player of the Round with 41% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230069-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Cup qualifying rounds, Competition proper\nWinners from Fourth qualifying round advance to First Round Proper, where clubs from Level 3 and Level 4 of English football, operating in The Football League, first enter the competition. See 2012\u201313 FA Cup for a report of First Round Proper onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230070-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 FA Trophy was the 43rd season of the FA Trophy, the Football Association's cup competition for teams at levels 5\u20138 of the English football league system. A total of 266 clubs entered the competition. This season's competition was only the third time that the Trophy Holders, in this case York City F.C., were ineligible to defend it due to promotion to the English Football League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230070-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Trophy\nThe competition was won by Wrexham for the first time, who defeated Grimsby Town 4\u20131 on penalties, after being held 1\u20131 in normal time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230070-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Trophy, First round\nThis round is the first in which Conference Premier teams join those from lower reaches of the National League System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230071-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Vase\nThe 2012\u201313 FA Vase was the 39th season of the FA Vase, an annual football competition for teams in the lower reaches of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230071-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Vase\nSpennymoor Town won the competition, beating Tunbridge Wells in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup was the 42nd season of the FA Women's Cup, the main domestic knockout Cup competition in English women's football. It lacked a sponsor for the second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup\n283 clubs were accepted into the competition. The first qualifying round commenced on 30 September 2012, with the first round proper played on 9 December 2012. Arsenal Ladies beat Bristol Academy 3-0 in the final on 26 May 2013 at the Keepmoat Stadium, Doncaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup\nBirmingham City were the defending champions, having beaten Chelsea in last season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Schedule\nThe schedule for the 2012\u201313 FA Cup, as announced by the Football Association, is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Qualifying rounds\nAll of the teams entering the competition that are not members of either the FA WSL, FA Women's Premier League National Division, FA Women's Premier League Northern Division or FA Women's Premier League Southern Division had to compete in the qualifying rounds to win a place in the competition proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, First round proper\nThe draw was made on 12 November 2012 with ties were scheduled to be played on 9 December 2012. Colne Valley Ladies were the lowest-ranked team left in the competition, competing in the Greater London Division 1 at level 8 of the English Women's football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Second round proper\nThe draw was made on 10 December 2012 with ties were scheduled to be played on 6 January 2013. Colne Valley Ladies were the lowest-ranked team left in the competition, competing in the Greater London Division 1 at level 8 of the English Women's football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Third round proper\nThe draw was made on 7 January 2013 with ties were scheduled to be played on 3 February 2013. Morecambe were the lowest-ranked team left in the competition, competing in the North West Women's Regional League Premier Division at level 5 of the English Women's football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Fourth round proper\nThe draw was made on 4 February 2013 with ties were scheduled to be played on 24 February 2013. Oxford United Ladies were the lowest-ranked team left in the competition, competing in the South West Combination at level 4 of the English Women's football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Fifth round proper\nThe draw was made on 25 February 2013 with ties were scheduled to be played on 17 March 2013. Oxford United Ladies were the lowest-ranked team left in the competition, competing in the South West Combination at level 4 of the English Women's football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 18 March 2013, with Leeds United and Sunderland from the Women's Premier League National Division (2) remaining as the lowest-ranked teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230072-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 1 April 2013, with the ties scheduled to take place on 26 and 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230073-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Premier League\nThe 2012-13 season of the FA Women's Premier League was the 21st season of the former top flight of English women's association football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230074-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Premier League Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 FA Women's Premier League Cup is the 23rd edition of the cup tournament for teams both levels of the Women's Premier League, the National Division and the Northern and Southern Divisions. Thirty teams were initially drawn into six groups (six groups of five teams) with the first games of the season being played on September 9, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230074-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Women's Premier League Cup, Group stage\nThe draw was held at Wembley Stadium in early August 2012. Six groups of five teams were drawn. Rochdale in group 4 withdraw before playing a match. The teams finishing winners and runners-up of each group, along with the best four third-placed teams (based on the highest number of points, superior goal difference, higher number of goals scored in these matches, drawing of lots) progressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230075-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Youth Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 FA Youth Cup was the 61st edition of the FA Youth Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230075-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FA Youth Cup\nThe competition consisted of several rounds and was preceded by a qualifying competition, starting with the preliminary round which is followed by 3 qualifying rounds for non-League teams. Football League teams enter the draw thereafter, with League One and League Two teams entered at the First round, and Premier League and Championship teams entered in the Third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Umbro FAI Intermediate Cup was the 86th season of the tournament's existence. 94 clubs competed to win the title. Avondale United are the defending champions after they beat Cherry Orchard 2-1 for the second successive season in the final after extra time in Tallaght Stadium to gain their fifth Intermediate Cup title. The 16 teams that reach the fourth round will qualify for the 2013 FAI Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup, First round\nIntermediate teams from the Leinster Senior League, Munster Senior League and Ulster Senior League enter at this stage. In this round teams from the Leinster Senior League play each other, teams from the Munster Senior League play each other, and teams from the Ulster Senior League play each other. The draw was made on 4 September 2012 with ties to be played on the weekend of 30 September 2012. Extra-time and penalties will be played if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup, Second round\nIn this round teams from the winners of the first round from the Leinster Senior League play each other, Munster Senior League play each other, and teams from the Ulster Senior League play each other. The draw was made on 3 October 2012 with ties to be played on the weekend of 28 October 2012. Extra-time and penalties will be played if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup, Second round, Leinster\n* The match was abandoned when a Lucan United player was seriously injured. Greystones United were leading 2-1 at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup, Third round\nThe draw for this round was made on 6 November 2012 by the FAI Domestic Committee. Ties are to be played on the weekend on 2 December. In this round teams from the Leinster Senior League, Munster Senior League, Ulster Senior League play each other. The 16 winners of the Third Round ties will progress to the Fourth Round and also qualify for the 2013 FAI Cup. If ties end in a draw after 90 minutes, a replay will be played in which the away side from the first match will have home advantage. In the replay if it remains a draw, extra-time will be played and if required, penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for this round was made on 4 December 2012 by the FAI Domestic Committee. The teams that have made it to the Fourth Round have qualified for the 2013 FAI Cup. If ties end in a draw after 90 minutes, a replay will be played in which the away side from the first match will have home advantage. In the replay if it remains a draw, extra-time will be played and if required, penalties. Parkvilla are the lowest ranked team remaining in the competition, playing in the 4th tier of the Leinster Senior League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup, Quarter Final\nThe draw for this round was made on 5 February 2013 by the FAI Domestic Committee. If ties end in a draw after 90 minutes, a replay will be played in which the away side from the first match will have home advantage. In the replay if it remains a draw after 90 minutes, extra-time will be played and if required, penalties. Parkvilla are the lowest ranked team remaining in the competition, playing in the 4th tier of the Leinster Senior League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230076-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup, Semi Final\nThe draw for the semi finals were made on 5 March 2013 by the FAI Domestic Committee in the FAI Headquarters, Abbotstown . If ties end in a draw after 90 minutes, a replay will be played in which the away side from the first match will have home advantage. In the replay if it remains a draw after 90 minutes, extra-time will be played and if required, penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230077-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Admira Wacker M\u00f6dling season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Admira Wacker M\u00f6dling season is the 100th season in club history. In the 2011\u201312 Bundesliga, Admira qualified for the Second qualifying round of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz season\nThe 2012\u201313 Alania season was their 1st season back in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia, after relegation during the 2010 Russian Premier League season. It will be their 16th season overall in the top flight. Alania also participated in the 2012\u201313 Russian Cup, getting knocked out at the Round of 32 stage by FC Tyumen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz season, Squad, 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230078-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Alania Vladikavkaz 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230079-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Amkar Perm season\nThe 2012\u201313 Amkar Perm season was their 9th season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia, following promotion during the 2003 season. They finished in 11th place in the league and were knocked out of the Russian Cup at the Round of 32 stage by SKA-Energiya Khabarovsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230079-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Amkar Perm 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-00230079-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Amkar Perm 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230079-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Amkar Perm 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230079-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Amkar Perm 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230079-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Amkar Perm 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230080-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season was the 3rd successive season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia. Anzhi Makhachkala finished the season in Third place, qualifying for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League Group stage, whilst they also where Runners Up to CSKA Moscow in the Russian Cup and reached the Round of 16 of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League where they were knocked out by Newcastle United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230080-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season, Season events\nAnzhi Makhachkala's away game against Zenit St. Petersburg on 10 December was played behind closed doors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230080-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Anzhi Makhachkala season, Season events\nAnzhi Makhachkala's home UEFA Europa League knockout phase games where played at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow instead of their regular Dynamo Stadium in Makhachkala, due to security issues involving the city of Makhachkala and the autonomous republic of Dagestan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230080-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Anzhi Makhachkala 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230081-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Arsenal Kyiv season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Arsenal Kyiv season was the club's 18th Ukrainian Premier League season and second season under manager Leonid Kuchuk. During the season, Arsenal Kyiv competed in the Premier League, UEFA Europa League and Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230081-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Arsenal Kyiv 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-00230081-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Arsenal Kyiv 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230082-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Augsburg season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Augsburg season was the 106th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It was the clubs second consecutive season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2011. FC Augsburg also participated in the season's edition of the DFB-Pokal. It was the fourth season for FC Augsburg in the SGL arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230082-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Augsburg season, Review and events\nThe club also participated in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the third round before losing to third division side Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Futbol Club Barcelona's 113th in existence and the club's 82nd consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. The season marked the managerial debut of Tito Vilanova, who served as Pep Guardiola's longtime assistant. Vilanova assumed management of the club after Guardiola, who had managed Barcelona for the prior four seasons, declined to renew his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season\nBarcelona finished first in La Liga but lost in the semi-finals of both the Copa del Rey and the UEFA Champions League. The club also set a record (later equaled by Real Madrid) by scoring in all 38 La Liga matches in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May/June\nOn 29 May, Barcelona announced their first pre-season match to be against Hamburger SV in occasion of the German outfit's 125th anniversary celebration. It will be Tito Vilanova's first match in charge of the first team. The second match will be on 28 July in Tangier, Morocco, versus an all-star starting XI from the Moroccan Football League at the Stade de Tanger. This will be their first appearance in Morocco in 38 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May/June\nOn 1 June, Barcelona announced Brazilian defender Henrique will not return to team after both agreed to terminate the player's contract on 30 June. Henrique did not make an appearance with the first team and was on-loan in 2008\u201309 with German club Bayer Leverkusen, 2009\u201310, and 2010\u201311 with Racing de Santander and in 2011\u201312, with Brazilian club Palmeiras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May/June\nOn 28 June, Barcelona and Valencia CF reached an agreement on the transfer of left back Jordi Alba for \u20ac14 million. The player joined the team after UEFA Euro 2012 and signed a five-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 7 July, Barcelona announced that Seydou Keita would not renew his contract for the upcoming season. The Mali midfielder leaves after four years and 14 titles accumulated while at Bar\u00e7a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 10 July, the Royal Spanish Football Federation released the fixture list for the 2012\u201313 season, with Barcelona opening the season at Camp Nou against Real Sociedad. President \u00c1ngel Mar\u00eda Villar also confirmed that both Barcelona manager Tito Vilanova and Real Madrid manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho will not have to serve their suspensions in the 2012 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a for their altercation in last year's edition. Bar\u00e7a's Board Secretary Toni Freixa stated at a press conference that an \"aggression can never go unpunished\" and \"we understand that an aggression on a coach deserves punishment. This measure doesn't make the aggressor innocent but it allows them to believe that they can keep on being aggressive without consequences. It's a bad example for Spanish football that this aggression hasn't been punished.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 13 July, Barcelona announced that the pre-season match on 28 July would be played against Raja Casablanca instead of Moroccan All-Star XI as previously announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 24 July, Barcelona opened their pre-season with a 2\u20131 victory over Hamburg at the Imtech Arena. Goals scored by Dani Alves and Gerard Deulofeu to set off a victorious debut for Vilanova. Defender Marc Muniesa left the match with a torn ACL in his right knee in the 52nd minute that could possibly see him miss the rest of the season. The next day, Barcelona doctors confirmed that Muniesa will miss up to six months due to the injury picked up the day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 27 July, Barcelona informed the Catalan Football Federation that Barcelona B, instead of the first team, will dispute the Supercopa de Catalunya against Espanyol set for 31 July at the Ol\u00edmpic Llu\u00eds Companys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 28 July, Barcelona defeated Raja Casablanca 8\u20130 in Tangier with Lionel Messi supplying a hat-trick while Alexis S\u00e1nchez added another two goals while Dani Alves, Sergi G\u00f3mez, and Deulofeu scored one each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, July\nOn 30 July, Barcelona announced they accepted the rescheduled date of the Supercopa de Catalunya after the Catalan Football Association proposed the match to be played on 26 September 2012. They also stated that they would play the strongest team possible as chosen by the manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 4 August, Barcelona defeated Paris Saint-Germain 4\u20131 in penalty shoot-out after a 2\u20132 draw in regular time for the Troph\u00e9e de Paris in Paris. Rafinha and Lionel Messi scored the two goals which was kicked off by Eric Abidal, who took the ceremonial kick off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 8 August, Barcelona defeated Manchester United 2\u20130 in a best-of-three penalty shoot-out after a 0\u20130 draw after regular time. V\u00edctor Vald\u00e9s saved a Wayne Rooney penalty in the first half of stoppage time, while Jordi Alba made his debut for Barcelona in the second half of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 11 August, Barcelona defeated Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti 2\u20130 with goals by Lionel Messi and Ibrahim Afellay. The two long-time injured Bar\u00e7a players, David Villa (fractured tibia) and Andreu Font\u00e0s (torn ACL), made their returns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 18 August, Barcelona and English club Arsenal reached an agreement on the transfer of Cameroon midfielder Alex Song for \u20ac19 million. The player signed a five-year deal with an \u20ac80 million release clause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 19 August, Barcelona started their 2012\u201313 La Liga season with 5\u20131 home win over Real Sociedad with two goals by Lionel Messi and one each by Carles Puyol, Pedro and David Villa. It also marked a successful debut for Tito Vilanova's first league match as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 20 August, Barcelona suffered their first defeat of the season at the hands of Sampdoria for the Joan Gamper Trophy by a score of 1\u20130. Sergi Roberto was named the best player of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 23 August, Barcelona defeated Real Madrid in the first leg of the Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a, 3\u20132, with goals by Pedro, Lionel Messi and Xavi. It was Vilanova's first game and win in a Cl\u00e1sico as manager. Messi's 14th Cl\u00e1sico goal allowed him to equal C\u00e9sar Rodr\u00edguez's record for Barcelona and marked the first time a player scored in four consecutive Spanish Super Cup matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 26 August, Barcelona came back from a 1\u20130 half-time deficit to defeat CA Osasuna in El Sadar with a 2\u20131 victory behind two goals from Lionel Messi in the last 15 minutes of the match. Carles Puyol finished with a broken cheekbone after a collision with Osasuna's forward Roland Lamah towards the end of the match, that also saw manager Vilanova ejected for the first time by referee Mu\u00f1iz Fern\u00e1ndez for excessive argument over a play the Bar\u00e7a manager deemed a foul not called in favour of his team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 29 August, the RFEF Competition Committee suspended manager Tito Vilanova after he was ejected in the Osasuna match for what the referee deemed as \"angrily protesting a play of the match, after he had been warned by the assistant referee.\" Bar\u00e7a are set to appeal the suspension. Later that day, Bar\u00e7a were defeated in the second leg of the Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a 2\u20131 at the Santiago Bernab\u00e9u and lost the tie on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nReal Madrid jumped out to a 2\u20130 lead within the first 20 minutes and the comeback was made even tougher for Bar\u00e7a after the sending off of Adriano in the 28th minute. Lionel Messi scored his sixth goal of the season off a free-kick and has scored in all four competitive matches to start the season for Barcelona. Alex Song made his debut for Barcelona with a perfect passing statistic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 30 August, UEFA conducted the group stage draw for the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League in Monaco. Barcelona were drawn into Group G along with Portuguese club Benfica, Spartak Moscow from Russia, and Scottish champions Celtic. Barcelona midfielder Andr\u00e9s Iniesta received the 2011\u201312 UEFA Best Player in Europe Award, beating out teammate Lionel Messi and Real Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo for the prize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, August\nOn 31 August, Barcelona and Schalke 04 agreed on a loan of Ibrahim Afellay to the German club until 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 2 September, Barcelona defeated Valencia 1\u20130 at the Camp Nou to start the league season unbeaten before the FIFA international break. Adriano scored the lone goal in the 23rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 12 September, Barcelona announced that midfielder Andr\u00e9s Iniesta would be out 10\u201315 days with a pulled abductor in his right leg which he picked up during the Georgia\u2013Spain match the day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 15 September, Barcelona defeated Getafe CF with a scoreline of 4\u20131 at the Coliseum Alfonso P\u00e9rez. Lionel Messi started his first match in over a year on the bench but came-on in the 59th minute to score two goals. David Villa added another one as he recovers to full match fitness from his fractured leg from December 2011. Not all was celebrations for Bar\u00e7a, however, as their captain, Carles Puyol, suffered a strained to the posterior cruciate ligament in his left leg in the 53rd minute. The player is expected to miss four-to-six weeks due to the knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 19 September, Barcelona made their Champions League debut for the season with a 3\u20132 home victory over Spartak Moscow. Cristian Tello contributed the opening goal and Lionel Messi the two winning goals, while Dani Alves scored an own goal for the visitors. Early in the first half, Bar\u00e7a's CB Gerard Piqu\u00e9 suffered a sprained left foot and will be out for two to three weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 22 September, Barcelona defeated Granada at home 2\u20130 behind a goal from Xavi late in the 87th minute and an own goal in stoppage time to seal the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 28 September, Lionel Messi won his third consecutive Onze d'Or presented by the French magazine Onze Mondial. With 47.45% of the votes, Messi beat out Cristiano Ronaldo and Atl\u00e9tico Madrid forward Radamel Falcao for the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, September\nOn 29 September, Barcelona came from two goals down to claim a 3\u20132 victory over Sevilla at the Ram\u00f3n S\u00e1nchez Pizju\u00e1n Stadium. After Sevilla took a 2\u20130 lead, two goals by Cesc F\u00e0bregas and one by substitute David Villa in injury time kept Bar\u00e7a on their perfect start to the league season. In the same match, Thiago picked up a knee injury that will sideline him for up to eight weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 2 October, Barcelona defeated Benfica at the Est\u00e1dio da Luz with 2\u20130 scoreline to stay unbeaten at the top of the group. Alexis S\u00e1nchez and Cesc F\u00e0bregas contributed the winning goals, while Sergio Busquets was sent off in the 89th minute. Late in the second half of the game, Carles Puyol suffered yet another injury when he landed awkwardly and dislocated his left elbow. He is expected to be out for eight weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 7 October, Barcelona drew their first game of the season with a 2\u20132 at home against Real Madrid. Both goals came from Lionel Messi, bringing him just one goal short of the all time Cl\u00e1sico scoring record of 18 goals by Alfredo Di St\u00e9fano. Early in the match, Dani Alves picked up a hamstring injury in his left leg and will be out for three weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 15 October, Barcelona announced defender Andreu Font\u00e0s would be loan out to Mallorca until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 20 October, Barcelona took a wild match in A Coru\u00f1a, beating Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a 5\u20134 at the Estadio Riazor. A hat-trick by Lionel Messi gave the visitors all the hard earned three points in where they raced out to a three-goal lead within the first 20 minutes of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 23 October, Barcelona defeated Celtic 2\u20131 at home. A goal by Andr\u00e9s Iniesta at the end of the first half and a Jordi Alba goal in the closing seconds helped Barcelona to take away the win in Xavi's 150th international game with Barcelona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 27 October, Barcelona defeated Rayo Vallecano with a dominating scoreline of 5\u20130 in Vallecas. Leo Messi scored a brace, while David Villa, Xavi and Cesc F\u00e0bregas contributed with a goal each. This win equalled Barcelona's best start in the La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, October\nOn 30 October, Barcelona started their Copa del Rey defence with a victory in Vitoria-Gasteiz over Alav\u00e9s in the first leg with a 3\u20130 win. Goals from David Villa, Andr\u00e9s Iniesta and Cesc F\u00e0bregas gave Bar\u00e7a the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 3 November, Barcelona defeated Celta de Vigo 3\u20131 at home. With goals by Adriano, David Villa and Jordi Alba, Bar\u00e7a confirmed their best start in La Liga in club history. Adriano had to leave the game early with a muscle tear in his right thigh and will be out of action for three weeks. The win opened a three-point gap at the top of the league over Atl\u00e9tico Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 7 November, Barcelona suffered their first Champions League loss of the season with a 2\u20131 loss in Glasgow against Celtic. The lone goal by Lionel Messi came in the closing minutes of the game. This loss marked Bar\u00e7a's first away defeat in the Champions League Group Stage since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 11 November, Barcelona defeated Mallorca 4\u20132 at the Iberostar. Goals by Xavi, Cristian Tello and a brace by Lionel Messi helped equalizing the best ever La Liga start after the first 11 games of the season, previously archived by Real Madrid 1968\u201369 and 1991\u201392. With 76 goals to his name in 2012, Messi also overtook Pel\u00e9's record of 75 goals in a single calendar year from 1958 and is only nine goals from drawing with the all-time record from 1972 by Gerd M\u00fcller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 16 November, Barcelona announced that Qatar Airways will be the new shirt sponsor starting the 2013\u201314 season, marking the first official commercial sponsor on the Barcelona shirt in team's history. President Sandro Rosell stated \"(Qatar Airways) an ambitious brand with global aspirations, always committed to achieving the utmost excellence in its field. These are objectives with which FC Barcelona fully identifies.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 17 November, Barcelona defeated Zaragoza with 3\u20131 at home with another brace by Lionel Messi and Alex Song's first goal for Bar\u00e7a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 18 November, Marc Bartra pulled the adductor in his right leg during a training session and will be sidelined for 15\u201320 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 20 November, Barcelona defeated Spartak Moscow at the Luzhniki Stadium 3\u20130. One goal by Dani Alves and two by Lionel Messi helped Bar\u00e7a to qualify for the knockout phase of the Champions League with one game left to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 25 November, Barcelona defeated Levante in the Ciutat de Val\u00e8ncia 4\u20130. A brace by Lionel Messi and one goal each by Cesc F\u00e0bregas and Andr\u00e9s Iniesta, the latter also contributing three assists, as well as a penalty save by V\u00edctor Vald\u00e9s kept Bar\u00e7a on top of La Liga. For over 60 minutes Barcelona played with only La Masia graduates, after Dani Alves came off injured after 13 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 28 November, Barcelona defeated Alav\u00e9s with 3\u20131 at home. One goal by Adriano and two by David Villa helped Bar\u00e7a to advance to the Round of 16 of the Copa del Rey, where they will face C\u00f3rdoba. With the brace, David Villa passed the 300 career goals mark to 301 goals as a professional, including club and country, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, November\nOn 29 November, FIFA announced the three finalists for the 2012 FIFA Ballon d'Or to be presented on 7 January 2013: Lionel Messi and Andr\u00e9s Iniesta from Barcelona and Cristiano Ronaldo from Real Madrid. This marks the third season in a row that at least two finalist are from Barcelona and the six year in a row that Messi makes the final three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 1 December, Barcelona defeated Athletic Bilbao 5\u20131 at home with two goals by Lionel Messi and one each by Gerard Piqu\u00e9, Adriano, and Cesc F\u00e0bregas. With this win Bar\u00e7a set up the best ever start of any team in La Liga. Messi's two goals made him equalize with C\u00e9sar Rodr\u00edguez as Barcelona's top scorers in La Liga with 190 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 5 December, Barcelona played their first goalless game of the season, drawing 0\u20130 against Benfica at home. Shortly after coming on, Lionel Messi had to be carried off on a stretcher after twisting his knee. It was later revealed that Messi picked up a contusion on the outside of his left knee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 9 December, Barcelona defeated Real Betis in the Benito Villamar\u00edn 2\u20131. With two more goals by Lionel Messi, Bar\u00e7a continued their undefeated run in away games to start La Liga season to eight matches. Those goals also sent Messi's tally to 86 in 2012, overtaking German striker Gerd M\u00fcller's record of 85 goals in a calendar year in 1972. Early in the game, Cesc F\u00e0bregas was subbed off with a torn biceps femoris in his left thigh and will be sidelined for three-to-four weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 12 December, Barcelona defeated C\u00f3rdoba at the Nuevo Arc\u00e1ngel 2\u20130. Both goals were scored by Lionel Messi in his first Copa del Rey game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 16 December, Barcelona defeated Atl\u00e9tico Madrid at home 4\u20131. Two goals by Lionel Messi and one each by Adriano and Sergio Busquets. This victory helped Bar\u00e7a to draw nine points clear at the top of the table, and Messi's goals brought his record up to 90 for the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 17 December, Cristian Tello extended his contract with Barcelona until 30 June 2016, with a set buyout clause of \u20ac10 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 18 December, Barcelona announced the renewal of contracts with Carles Puyol and Xavi until 2016 and Lionel Messi until 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 19 December, Barcelona's Medical Services announced that manager Tito Vilanova was to undergo surgery on the following day after a routine check-up revealed that he suffered a parotid ailment relapse, which he was operated on a year previous. During the recovery time, assistant coach Jordi Roura will lead Bar\u00e7a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 20 December, UEFA conducted the Round of 16 draw for the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League in Nyon. Barcelona were drawn to face Italian club Milan, who they last faced in the previous season's quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0056-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 22 December, Barcelona won their last match of the year at the Jos\u00e9 Zorrilla against Real Valladolid with a score of 3\u20131. Goals by Xavi, Lionel Messi and Cristian Tello helped to keep the nine point lead on top of the table intact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0057-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, December\nOn 23 December, Barcelona announced that backup goalkeeper Jos\u00e9 Manuel Pinto came to an agreement with the club to extend his contract for another year until 30 June 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0058-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 6 January, Barcelona won their first match of the year at home, against Espanyol 4\u20130. Two goals by Pedro and one each by Xavi and Lionel Messi were scored in the first 30 minutes of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0059-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 7 January, Lionel Messi was announced the 2012 FIFA Ballon d'Or winner in Z\u00fcrich. With 41.60% of the votes, Messi became the first player to win the award on four occasions, surpassing Johan Cruyff, Michel Platini and Marco van Basten, all with three. The win also gave Barcelona its tenth winner, the most all time of any European club. Barcelona also celebrated five players in the 2012 FIFA FIFPro World XI, as Messi was joined by teammates Gerard Piqu\u00e9, Dani Alves, Andr\u00e9s Iniesta and Xavi as the world's best for 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0060-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 10 January, Barcelona beat C\u00f3rdoba in the return leg of the Copa del Rey at home by 5\u20130, with one goal scored by Thiago and two each by David Villa and Alexis S\u00e1nchez. With an aggregate score of 7\u20130, Bar\u00e7a went through to the quarter-finals, where they will face M\u00e1laga. Early in the second half of the game, Sergi Roberto was subbed off with a tear in his left hamstring and will be out of action for four weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0061-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 13 January, Barcelona beat M\u00e1laga at the La Rosaleda Stadium 3\u20131, with goals by Lionel Messi, Cesc F\u00e0bregas and Thiago. With this win, Bar\u00e7a ended the first round of the season with a record-breaking 55 out of a possible 57 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0062-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 16 January, Barcelona drew 2\u20132 against M\u00e1laga at home in the first leg of the Copa del Rey quarter-finals. Goals by Lionel Messi and Carles Puyol were scored within one minute of each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0063-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 18 January, Barcelona announced that goalkeeper V\u00edctor Vald\u00e9s will not be extending his contract any further after his current contract expires on 30 June 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0064-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 19 January, Barcelona lost their first league game away against Real Sociedad at the Anoeta Stadium, 3\u20132. After leading by two goals from Messi and Pedro, Gerard Piqu\u00e9 was sent off with a second yellow and Sociedad turned the game around and scored the winning goal in the dying minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0065-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 24 January, Barcelona defeated M\u00e1laga in the La Rosaleda 4\u20132, with goals by Pedro, Piqu\u00e9, Iniesta and Messi. With an aggregate score of 6\u20134, Bar\u00e7a went through to the Copa del Rey semi-finals, where they will face Real Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0066-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 27 January, Barcelona defeated Osasuna at home 5\u20131 with four goals by Messi and one from Pedro. With those goals, Messi broke the 200-goal barrier in La Liga, becoming the youngest player to archive that feat at just 25 years and 217 days of age.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0067-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 30 January, Barcelona drew 1\u20131 against Real Madrid in the Santiago Bernab\u00e9u in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semi-finals. The lone Bar\u00e7a goal was scored by Cesc F\u00e0bregas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0068-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, January\nOn 31 January, Barcelona and Ajax agreed on the loan of forward Isaac Cuenca to the Dutch club until 30 June 2013. On the same day, Bar\u00e7a announced that defender Marc Muniesa will join the B team for the rest of the season after having recovered from a torn ACL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0069-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 3 February, Barcelona drew their second league match of the season and their second season match in a row. A 1\u20131 draw against Valencia at the Mestalla Stadium saw Messi scoring the only goal through a penalty. Xavi, who was substituted in injury time of the match, was diagnosed the following day with a hamstring injury and will be sidelined for 15 days. Barcelona faced Milan in the first leg of the Champions League round of 16 at the San Siro and lost 2\u20130, with goals coming from Kevin-Prince Boateng and Sulley Muntari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0070-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, February\nOn 21 February, Barcelona announced that defender Eric Abidal is fit to play for the first time since receiving a liver transplant in April 2012. On 24 February, Barcelona defeated Sevilla 2\u20131 at Camp Nou with goals from David Villa and Lionel Messi. On 26 February, Barcelona were defeated by Real Madrid 3\u20131, 4\u20132 on aggregate, at the Camp Nou and were knocked out of Copa del Rey contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0071-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 2 March, Barcelona lost to Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernab\u00e9u by a score of 2\u20131. This was Barcelona's second loss against Real Madrid in a week. Four days later, V\u00edctor Vald\u00e9s was handed a four-match league ban after receiving a double yellow card for verbally abusing a referee following his team's defeat in the Cl\u00e1sico in the weekend fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0072-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, March\nOn 9 March, Barcelona defeated Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a 2\u20130 with goals from Alexis S\u00e1nchez and Lionel Messi. On 12 March, Barcelona defeated Milan 4\u20130, 4\u20132 on aggregate, and entered the quarter-finals of the Champions League with goals from David Villa, Jordi Alba and a brace from Lionel Messi. On 17 March, Barcelona defeated Rayo Vallecano 3\u20131 at Camp Nou with Messi scoring two and Villa scoring one goal. On 30 March, Bar\u00e7a drew 2\u20132 with Celta de Vigo with Messi and Cristian Tello scoring one goal each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0073-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 2 April, Bar\u00e7a drew 2\u20132 against Paris Saint-Germain in France in the first leg of the Champions League quarter-final, the goals coming from Messi and Xavi via a penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0074-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 10 April, Bar\u00e7a drew 1\u20131 against PSG at home in the Camp Nou in the Champions League quarter-final second leg. Pedro scored the all-important equaliser, which put Bar\u00e7a through to the semi-finals on the away goals rule. The draw for the semi-finals of the Champions League was held on 12 April, with Bar\u00e7a drawing with Bayern Munich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0075-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 14 April, Barcelona defeated Zarozoga 3\u20130 away from home. A 1\u20130 win over Levante on 20 April means that Barcelona need a maximum of six more points to secure the 2012\u201313 La Liga title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0076-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, April\nOn 23 April, Barcelona lost to Bayern 4\u20130 away at the Allianz Arena in Munich, their largest defeat in Europe in 16 years. On 1 May, in the second leg at home, they lost 3\u20130. With an aggregate score of 7\u20130, they were knocked out of the Champions League in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0077-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May\nOn 5 May, Barcelona defeated Real Betis 4\u20132 at home with two goals by Lionel Messi and one each by David Villa and Alexis S\u00e1nchez with one more win to secure the La Liga title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0078-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May\nOn 11 May, Barcelona clinched their 22nd La Liga title after Real Madrid's draw against Espanyol at the Cornell\u00e0-El Prat. The result gave Barcelona an eight-point lead with two matches remaining, which ensured that they would finish top of the table. Barcelona were at the top of the league table for the entirety of the season, and only lost two matches en route to winning the title. It was the first title for manager Vilanova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0079-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Season overview, May\nOn 30 May, French defender Eric Abidal called a press conference to announce his departure from the club after six seasons. Although admitting he wanted to see out his career as a Bar\u00e7a player, the club ultimately decided not to renew his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0080-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Players, From the youth system\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-00230083-0081-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players listed below made at least one appearance for Barcelona first squad during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0082-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 5 May 2013Source: Ordered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0083-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Statistics, Fair Play award\nThis award is given annually since 1999 to the team with the best fair play during the season. This ranking takes into account aspects such as cards, suspension of matches, audience behaviour and other penalties. This section not only aims to determine the best fair play, but also serves to break the tie in teams that are tied in all the other rules: points, head-to-head, goal difference and goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230083-0084-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Barcelona season, Statistics, Fair Play award\nSource: La Liga Fair Play Award StandingsLast updated: 9 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Basel season is the 120th season in club history and the club's 18th consecutive season in the top flight of Swiss football. Basel started their season with various warm-up matches against teams from Switzerland, Romania and Germany. Their 2012\u201313 Swiss Super League season began on 13 July with the away tie against Servette FC and they started in the 2012\u201313 Swiss Cup first round on 15 September with the away game against FC Amriswil. Basel entered the Champions League in the qualifying phase and were drawn against Estonian club Flora Tallinn. This and the following qualifying round were overstood, however in the play-off round Basel lost both games against CFR Cluj and were knocked out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season\nFollowing a poor start to the season it was announced on 15 October 2012 that Vogel had been replaced by Murat Yakin as manager Following the out in the Champions League Basel played in the Europa League group stage and were drawn into Group G along with Sporting Clube de Portugal, K.R.C. Genk and Videoton FC. They finished the Group in second position and advanced to the knockout phase round of 32. Here they were drawn against the Ukrainian Premier League team Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. Basel won 3\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season\nIn the round of 16 they were drawn against Zenit St. Petersburg and, despite being the underdogs, Basel advanced by winning 2\u20131 on aggregate. Thus they qualified for the quarter-finals and were drawn against Tottenham Hotspur, whom they beat 4\u20131 on penalties after a 4-4 aggregate draw to progress to the semi-finals. The draw for the semi-final matched Basel against the reigning UEFA Champions League holders Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Club, Management\nFirst team manager at the start on the season was Heiko Vogel. His assistants were Marco Walker and Markus Hoffmann. Massimo Colomba retired as a player and was appointed as the new Goalkeeper coach. Massimo Ceccaroni was appointed as the new head of the FCB Youth System. Coach of the Youth Team (U\u201321) was Carlos Bernegger and Benjamin Huggel, who also retired as player, was appointed as his new assistant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Club, Management\nOn 15 October 2012 it was announced that Vogel had been replaced by Murat Yakin as manager, but that the assistants would all remain in their respective positions. On 7 April 2013 it was announced that Carlos Bernegger was released from his still running contract (that was valid until June 2015) so that he could sign a contract with FC Luzern as first team manager. Bernegger started his new job on 8 April and was replaced ad-interim by the Youth Section boss Ceccaroni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, Offseason and preseason\nBasel's biggest signings of the 2012\u201313 season were Mohamed Salah, who transferred in from Arab Contractors, and Marcelo D\u00edaz, who came from Universidad de Chile. D\u00edaz was transferred to Basel in a US$4 million deal and signed a four-year contract. David Degen also returned to his home club after spending four seasons with BSC Young Boys. Stjepan Vuleta, Simon Grether and Mirko Salvi signed from the youth academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, Offseason and preseason\nXherdan Shaqiri left the club and signed a four-year contract with Bayern Munich. The transfer fee was not disclosed by the two clubs. Granit Xhaka also left FC Basel and signed a five-year contract with Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach. The transfer fee was not disclosed. It was also announced that Getafe signed David Abraham in a free transfer and gave him a four-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, Offseason and preseason\nThe two long time and very experienced players Benjamin Huggel and Scott Chipperfield retired from professional football during the summer break. Huggel was appointed as Assistant Youth Team (U\u201321) Coach. Chipperfield joined FC Aesch in the sixth tier of the Swiss Football League as Player-coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, Winter break\nBasel started the preparation for the second half of the season on 4 January 2013. They played a friendly on 12 January against Bayern Munich and spent their training camp in Marbella from 14 to 24 January. Here they played four trials, the last being the 2\u20131 win against the Chinese national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, Winter break\nOn 13 December 2012 FC Basel announced that they had signed Serey Die on a three and a half-year contract and on 17 December 2012 they also announced that Endogan Adili had also been signed on a three and a half-year contract, with an additional one-year option. On 3 January 2013 it was announced that Ra\u00fal Bobadilla had been signed on a contract until 2017. On 29 January 2013 it was announced that Basel had signed Mohamed Elneny on loan until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, Winter break\nIn the other direction, it was also announced that Radoslav Kov\u00e1\u010d was given a free transfer to Slovan Liberec. During January it was also announced that some of the youngsters would be loaned out to lower league clubs, Pak Kwang-Ryong Simon Grether and Pascal Sch\u00fcrpf to Bellinzona, Stjepan Vuleta to Wil and Marco Aratore to Winterthur so that they could all gain playing experience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Domestic League\nBasel's priority aim for the season is to win the league championship for the fourth time in a row. Basel's 2012\u201313 Swiss Super League season began on 13 July 2012 with the away tie against Servette FC. The season started poorly, Basel won just three of their first nine games, drawing five with one defeat. They were in fourth position in the league table, eight points behind the leaders Grasshoppers, this even increased to eleven points just three weeks later. However, following the Management change in October, the team spirits improved and they played better. They ended the first half of the season in second position, had reduced the arrears to four points and had moved one point ahead of Sion and St. Gallen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Domestic League\nIn the second half of the season FC Sion lost their momentum completely and St. Gallen also lost contact to the first two positions in the league table. The Grasshoppers and Basel distanced themselves continually, but remained within a few points of each other. Basel took over the lead in the championship table and, mid-way through the second half of the season, started to open a gap to their last remaining rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Domestic League\nDespite Grasshoppers winning the direct league fixture against Basel three games before the end of the season, Basel had acquired enough points to finish three points ahead of them and to win their fourth title in a row. Basel thus achieved their main aim that they had set for the season, in fact the league campaign can be described as being a successful one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Domestic Cup\nBasel's clear aim for the Swiss Cup is to retain the title. The Cup holders started in the 2012\u201313 Swiss Cup first round on 15 September with the away game against FC Amriswil, a team from the OFV (Ostschweizer Fussballverband) Regional 2. Liga and this tie was won 6\u20131. In the second round they were drawn away against FC Chiasso, this tie was won 4\u20131. For the third round tie Basel were drawn, again away from home, against Locarno and passed into the next round with a 3\u20132 victory, but needed (a.e.t. )for the winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Domestic Cup\nThe Quarterfinals were played on 27 February 2013 and Basel were drawn away from home against FC Thun in a tie that was won 2\u20131, yet again this victory need extra time. Drawn away in the semifinal against Sion on 17 April 2013 Basel advanced to the final thanks to the only goal of the game scored by Valentin Stocker. The final was played on Whit Monday in the Stade de Suisse, Wankdorf in Bern. The opponents were the Grasshoppers. Basel lost the Final 3\u20134 on penalties, the game had ended 1-1 after extra time. Basel missed their aimed cup win, but the cup campaign can be described as being a successful one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Champions League\nBecause Basel entered the Champions League in the qualifying phase their initial aim is to reach the group stage. They were drawn against Estonian club Flora Tallinn winning 5\u20130 on aggregate and in the third round they were drawn against Norwegian club Molde FK winning 2\u20131 on aggregate. However, in the play-off round Basel lost both games against CFR Cluj from Rumainia (being knocked out 3\u20131 on aggregate). Therefore, the initial aim was failed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 65], "content_span": [66, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Europa League\nBecause the losing teams from the Champions League play-off round were eligible for the group stage of the Europa League, Basels next aim was to remain in this European competition over the winter break. Basel were drawn into Group G along with Sporting Clube de Portugal, K.R.C. Genk and Videoton FC. As they finished the Group in second position they advanced to the knockout phase round of 32. Therefore, their second aim was achieved. In the round of 32 Basel were drawn against the Ukrainian Premier League team Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. Basel progressed 3\u20131 on aggregate, winning the home tie and drawing away. Their aims were subsequently revised again and this aim was stated as reaching the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Overview, The Campaign, Europa League\nIn the round of 16 they were drawn against Zenit St. Petersburg and despite being the underdogs, by winning 2\u20131 on aggregate, they qualified for the next round. Basel were drawn against Tottenham Hotspur in the quarter-final. Spurs were beaten 4\u20131 in a penalty shoot-out after a 4-4 aggregate draw to progress to the semi-finals. The draw for the semi-final matched the against reigning UEFA Champions League holders Chelsea. Both games in the tie ended with a defeat, 1\u20132 in Basel 1\u20133 in London. Despite these two defeats Basel's European aims were achieved, in fact the campaign can be described as a very successful one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230084-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230084-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Basel season, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nLast updated: 29 May 2012Source: Squad statistics 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season was the 114th season in the club's history and the 48th consecutive season in the top flight of German football, the Bundesliga, since the promotion of the team from the Regionalliga S\u00fcd in 1965. Before the start of the season, Bayern signed Xherdan Shaqiri, Dante, Claudio Pizarro, Mitchell Weiser, Tom Starke and Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107. Bayern also added holding midfielder Javi Mart\u00ednez after the first week of the Bundesliga season at the transfer deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season\nThe club started the season with a nine-match winning streak. The club would end the season claiming the Treble, winning the Bundesliga, the UEFA Champions League and the DFB-Pokal. Bayern became the first German club to achieve the Treble and the third European Club to complete the Treble in the last five seasons and seventh ever in European Club competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, Summer transfer window and pre-season\nXherdan Shaqiri, Claudio Pizarro, Tom Starke, Dante, Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107, Mitchell Weiser, Lukas Raeder, and Javi Mart\u00ednez transferred to Bayern Munich in the summer transfer. The transfer of Javi Mart\u00ednez, at \u20ac40\u00a0million, was at the time the most expensive transfer in the history of the Bundesliga. Takashi Usami, Breno, Rouven Sattelmaier, Ivica Oli\u0107, and Danijel Pranji\u0107 left Bayern, Hans-J\u00f6rg Butt retired, and Nils Petersen was loaned to Werder Bremen. Hans-J\u00f6rg Butt was appointed head of the Bayern Munich Junior Team on 1 July; but Hans-J\u00f6rg Butt left the position on 7 August. Wolfgang Dremmler was appointed his successor on 9 August. On 2 July, the club announced that Matthias Sammer replaced Christian Nerlinger during UEFA Euro 2012. Jupp Heynckes believed that the 2012\u201313 squad is better than the previous season's squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 89], "content_span": [90, 924]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, Summer transfer window and pre-season\nBayern began pre-season training on 3 July. Bayern Munich CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge stated that the Bundesliga championship is the top priority for the club this season. During pre-season, Bayern defeated SpVgg Unterhaching, FC Ismaning, Trentino XI, and 1. FC Kaiserslautern. Bayern lost to Napoli during pre-season. Bayern participated in cup matches during pre-season. Bayern won the Yingli Cup, Audi Football Summit, and the Paulaner Cup des S\u00fcdens. Bayern finished in third place in the LIGA total! Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 89], "content_span": [90, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, August\nPre -season continued into August Bayern. August started with a pre-season victory against 1. FC Kaiserslautern. Then in the LIGA total! Cup, Bayern lost in the semi-finals to Werder Bremen in a shoot-out on 4 August and won the third place match against Hamburger SV on 5 August. Bayern first competitive match was the DFL-Supercup on 12 August against Borussia Dortmund. Bayern won 2\u20131 with goals from Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107 and Thomas M\u00fcller. Robert Lewandowski scored for Borussia Dortmund. The DFL-Supercup was Bayern's first trophy of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, August\nBayern went on to defeat SV Seligenporten 3\u20131 in a friendly match on 15 August. Bayern then played in the first round of the DFB-Pokal against Jahn Regensburg on 20 August. Bayern won 4\u20130. Bayern got two goals from Mand\u017euki\u0107, a goal from Xherdan Shaqiri and a goal from Claudio Pizarro. Bayern finished August with their opening match of the Bundesliga campaign on 25 August against Greuther F\u00fcrth. Bayern won 3\u20130. Bayern got goals from Thomas M\u00fcller and Mand\u017euki\u0107. Thomas Kleine scored an own goal to put Bayern up 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, August\nBayern finished the matchday in first place in the league table. On 29 August, Karl Hopfner, Deputy Chairman of the Executive Board for Bayern Munich AG, announced he will leave the club on 31 December 2012 due to health reasons. Karl Hopfner applied for managing director of the club in October 1982 after seeing a job ad for the position in the S\u00fcddeutsche Zeitung. Hopfner had an interview in January 1983 and started as managing director in July 1983. The draw for the Group Stage of Champions League took place on 30 August. Bayern were drawn against Valencia, Lille, and BATE Borisov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, September\nBayern started the month with a match against VfB Stuttgart on 2 September. Bayern won 6\u20131 through two goals from Thomas M\u00fcller and one each from Toni Kroos, Luiz Gustavo, Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107 and Bastian Schweinsteiger. Martin Harnik scored for Stuttgart. Bayern finished matchday 2 in first place. Bayern then faced Mainz 05 on 15 September, winning 3\u20131 through goals by Mand\u017euki\u0107, Schweinsteiger and Kroos. \u00c1d\u00e1m Szalai scored for Mainz. Bayern went on to face Valencia in Champions League on 19 September. Bayern won 2\u20131, where Schweinsteiger and Kroos scored for Bayern. Bayern faced Schalke 04 on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, September\nBayern won 2\u20130 with goals from Kroos and M\u00fcller. Bayern faced VfL Wolfsburg on 25 September. Bayern won 3\u20130 with one goal from Schweinsteiger and two from Mand\u017euki\u0107. Bayern finished September with a league match against Werder Bremen on 29 September, where the club prevailed 2\u20130 via Luiz Gustavo and Mand\u017euki\u0107 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, October\nBayern faced BATE Borisov on 2 October. The loss ended Bayern's nine-match winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, December\nThe draw for the Champions League Round of 16 took place on 20 December. The result was that Bayern would face Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, January\nBayern started January with mid-winter training on 3 January. Bayern had training in Qatar. Bayern defeated Lekhwiya SC, Schalke 04, FC Basel, and SpVgg Unterhaching during the mid-winter break. On 16 January, Pep Guardiola was announced as the new head coach for Bayern Munich. Guardiola is set to over for the incumbent Jupp Heynckes on 26 June, the start of pre-season training for the 2013\u201314 season. Bayern started the second half of the Bundesliga campaign on 19 January against Greuther F\u00fcrth. Bayern won 2\u20130 with two goals from Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107. The next day, Bayern defeated Alemannia Aachen in a friendly match. Bayern finished off January with a league match against VfB Stuttgart on 27 January. Bayern won 2\u20130 with goals from Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107 and Thomas M\u00fcller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, February\nBayern started February with a league match against Mainz 05 on 2 February. Bayern won 3\u20130 through one goal from Mand\u017euki\u0107 and two from M\u00fcller. Thomas M\u00fcller scored two goals. Bayern went on to face Schalke 04 on 9 February. Bayern won 4\u20130 with goals from David Alaba, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Mario G\u00f3mez. David Alaba scored two goals. Then Bayern faced VfL Wolfsburg. Bayern won 2\u20130. Mand\u017euki\u0107 and Arjen Robben got the goals for Bayern. Bayern then had the first leg in the Round of 16 of Champions League on 19 February against Arsenal. Bayern won 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, February\nBayern's goalscorers were Toni Kroos, M\u00fcller and Mand\u017euki\u0107. Arsenal's goalscorer was Lukas Podolski. Bayern were back in league action against Werder Bremen on 23 February. Bayern won 6\u20131. Bayern got goals from Robben, Javi Mart\u00ednez, Mario G\u00f3mez and Franck Rib\u00e9ry. Mario G\u00f3mez scored two goals. Theodor Gebre Selassie scored an own goal that put Bayern up 3\u20130. Kevin De Bruyne scored for Werder Bremen. Bayern finished February with a quarter-final match in the DFB-Pokal on 27 February against Borussia Dortmund. Bayern won 1\u20130 with a goal from Robben.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, March\nBayern started March with a league match against 1899 Hoffenheim on 3 March. Bayern won 1\u20130 with a goal from Mario G\u00f3mez. Bayern set a new league record with 583 consecutive minutes without conceding a goal. Bayern Munich faced Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf on 9 March, winning 3\u20132 through Thomas M\u00fcller, Franck Rib\u00e9ry and J\u00e9r\u00f4me Boateng goals. Mathis Bolly and Andreas Lambertz scored for Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf. Bayern had the second leg of the Round of 16 in Champions League on 13 March against Arsenal. Arsenal won 2\u20130 with goals from Olivier Giroud and Laurent Koscielny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, March\nBayern, however, advanced on the away goals rule. The quarter-final draw for Champions League took place on 15 March. Bayern were drawn against Juventus. Bayern faced Bayer Leverkusen on 16 March, winning 2\u20131. Mario G\u00f3mez scored for Bayern, Simon Rolfes equalized for Bayer Leverkusen, then Philipp Wollscheid scored an own goal to win the match for Bayern. Bayern finished March with a league match against Hamburger SV on 30 March. Bayern won 9\u20132. Xherdan Shaqiri, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Claudio Pizzaro, Arjen Robben and Franck Rib\u00e9ry scored for Bayern. Claudio Pizzaro scored four goals and Arjen Robben scored two goals. Jeffrey Bruma and Heiko Westermann scored for Hamburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, April\nBayern started April against Juventus in the first leg of the Champions League quarter-finals on 4 April. Bayern won 2\u20130 with goals from David Alaba and Thomas M\u00fcller. David Alaba's goal inside the first minute of the match. Toni Kroos tore his abductor muscle and was replaced by Arjen Robben in the 16th minute. Bayern went on to face Eintracht Frankfurt on matchday 28 on 6 April. Bayern won the match 1\u20130. The win meant Bayern won the Bundesliga in record time. Luiz Gustavo picked up his fifth yellow card and is suspended for matchday 29 against 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, April\nThe return leg against Juventus was played on 10 April. Bayern again defeated Juventus 2\u20130; Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107 and Claudio Pizzaro scored the goals. With Bayern's victory, the 2012\u201313 Champions League season is the first time that two German clubs are in the semi-finals. Mand\u017euki\u0107 controversially picked up a yellow card early in the match and is suspended for the first leg of the semi-finals. The draw for the semi-finals of the Champions League was held on 12 April. Bayern were drawn against Barcelona. Bayern faced 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg on 13 April. Emre Can started for Bayern, making his Bundesliga debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, April\nXherdan Shaqiri was replaced by Pierre-Emile H\u00f8jbjerg in the 71st minute. H\u00f8jbjerg made his Bundesliga debut. At the age of 17 years and 251 days, H\u00f8jbjerg became the youngest Bundesliga player in Bayern's history, breaking David Alaba's record of 17 years and 255 days. Bayern won 4\u20130 with goals from J\u00e9r\u00f4me Boateng, Mario G\u00f3mez, Rafinha and Xherdan Shaqiri. Bayern faced VfL Wolfsburg on 16 April in the DFB-Pokal. Bayern won 6\u20131. Bayern got goals from Mand\u017euki\u0107, Robben, Shaqiri and G\u00f3mez. Mario G\u00f3mez scored three goals within nine-minute of coming on. Diego scored for Wolfsburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0011-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, April\nBayern faced Hannover 96 on 20 April. Bayern won 6\u20131. Bayern got goals from Rib\u00e9ry, G\u00f3mez and Pizzaro; G\u00f3mez and Pizzaro scored two goals each. With the victory, Bayern equaled Borussia Dortmund's record of 81 points in a season and broke the record for most wins in a season with 26. On 23 April, Bayern announced the signing of announced the signing of Mario G\u00f6tze. Bayern activated the \u20ac37\u00a0million release clause that G\u00f6tze and Borussia Dortmund agreed to. Bayern faced Barcelona in the first leg of the Champions League semi-final on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0011-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, April\nBayern won 4\u20130 with goals from M\u00fcller, G\u00f3mez and Robben. M\u00fcller scored two goals. The media criticized Hungarian referee Viktor Kassai for not calling a penalty shot against Gerard Piqu\u00e9 in the 15th minute, Alexis S\u00e1nchez in the 32nd minute, and allowing Mario G\u00f3mez's goal to stand when he was in an offside position. Bayern finished April with a match against SC Freiburg on 27 April. Bayern won 1\u20130 with a goal from Xherdan Shaqiri. With the win, Bayern had 84 points in the Bundesliga, a new record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, May/June\nBayern started May with the second leg against Barcelona on 1 May. Barcelona players Sergio Busquets, Javier Mascherano, Carles Puyol and Eric Abidal were all out due to injury. Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107 returned from suspension and replaced Mario G\u00f3mez, while Daniel Van Buyten replaced Dante, who was suffering from a cold. Lionel Messi did not play in the match. Bayern won 3\u20130, with goals from Arjen Robben and Thomas M\u00fcller, and an own goal from Gerard Piqu\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, May/June\nPhilipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Javi Mart\u00ednez, Luiz Gustavo, Dante and Mario G\u00f3mez were all one yellow card away from being suspended for the 2013 UEFA Champions League Final. However, none of them received a yellow card and are all available for selection in the final. Bayern went on to face Borussia Dortmund on 4 May in the Bundesliga. The match ended in a 1\u20131 draw. Kevin Gro\u00dfkreutz scored for Dortmund, while Mario G\u00f3mez scored for Bayern. Rafinha was sent off after receiving a second yellow card. Rafinha was eventually suspended for the remaining two Bundesliga matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, May/June\nOn 6 May, the FC Bayern M\u00fcnchen AG supervisory board had a regularly scheduled meeting where Uli Hoene\u00df, president of Bayern M\u00fcnchen e.V. and chairman of FC Bayern M\u00fcnchen AG, offered to step down on a temporary basis. The supervisory board decided to reject Uli Hoene\u00df's offer. Bayern Munich announced that executive board members Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Andreas Jung have signed contract extensions. Rummenigge was given a three-year extension which is scheduled to expire on 30 December 2016 and Jung contract was extended by two years to 30 June 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0012-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, May/June\nIn addition, Bayern also announced that J\u00f6rg Wacker will join the executive board on 1 July 2013. Bayern faced FC Augsburg on 11 May. Bayern won 3\u20130 with goals from M\u00fcller Shaqiri and Luiz Gustavo. Bayern finished their Bundesliga campaign against Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach on 18 May. Bayern won 4\u20133. Mart\u00ednez, Rib\u00e9ry, and Robben scored for Bayern. Franck Rib\u00e9ry scored two goals. Martin Stranzl, Mike Hanke and H\u00e5vard Nordtveit scored for Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach. Bayern faced Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League final on 25 May. Bayern won 2\u20131. Mand\u017euki\u0107 and Robben scored for Bayern, and \u0130lkay G\u00fcndo\u011fan scored for Dortmund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0012-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, May/June\nAfter the match, Bayern had a party at the Great Room in the Grosvenor House Hotel. The party included a buffet for 1,800 people. Brand Finance valued Bayern at $860\u00a0million (\u00a3570\u00a0million), overtaking Manchester United for top spot. Bayern faced VfB Stuttgart in the DFB-Pokal Final on 1 June. Bayern won 3\u20132. Thomas M\u00fcller and Mario G\u00f3mez scored for Bayern. Mario G\u00f3mez scored two goals. Martin Harnik scored twice for Stuttgart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, Bayern\u2013Brazil dispute\nThe Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) insisted that Dante and Luiz Gustavo report to the Brazil national team's training camp for 1 June at 16:00 local time. The training camp was for preparations for the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup. Bayern, however, were due to play VfB Stuttgart in the 2013 DFB-Pokal Final on 1 June. The CBF threatened to exclude both players if they did not report by the stated time. Under FIFA rules, clubs must let players report to national teams 14 days prior to the start of a tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, Bayern\u2013Brazil dispute\nBayern sent a \"polite\" letter asking for their release for the final, however the CBF responded with a \"polite\" letter rejecting it. Bayern attempted to reach an \"amicable solution\". with the Brazilian Football Confederation but failed. Bayern CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge blamed FIFA, the CBF and the German Football Association (DFB). The German Football Association blamed the Brazilian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0013-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Review and events, Bayern\u2013Brazil dispute\nBrazil head coach Luiz Felipe Scolari claimed that Bayern were at fault since the CBF claimed that they sent letters 5, 10 and 15 days before the release date and also stated how they \"would have been willing to negotiate\" with the 15-day notice. Notably, the Royal Spanish Football Federation did not enforce the rule for Javi Mart\u00ednez and made the player available for the DFB-Pokal final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Match results, Bundesliga, League results\nLast updated: 18 May 2013Source: 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, 74], "content_span": [75, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230085-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Bayern Munich season, Awards\nPhilipp Lahm, Manuel Neuer and Mario G\u00f3mez were nominated for the FIFA Ballon d'Or. Jupp Heynckes was nominated for FIFA World Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230086-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dacia season\n2012\u201313 season is the 11th Moldovan National Division season in the history of FC Dacia Chisinau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti's 64th consecutive season in Liga I. In this season, Dinamo played in Liga I, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei and UEFA Europa League. The European place was earned after Dinamo won the Romanian Cup in the season before. Dinamo kept Dario Bonetti as head coach, and won the first trophy of the season, Romanian Supercup, with a win against champions CFR Cluj. But after that the good results failed to appear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nDinamo was eliminated from Europa League, and after 15 rounds, when the team laid on the seventh spot of the standings, Dario Bonetti was sacked and Dorinel Munteanu was brought to replace him. In the Romanian Cup, Dinamo was eliminated by CFR Cluj, after extra-time. At the end of 2012, Munteanu resigned citing his desire to coach abroad. His place was taken by Cornel \u0162\u0103lnar. Under his spell, Dinamo started well the second half of the season and entered the fight for a European place. But after a round of poor results, Dinamo missed a place for a European competition for the first time since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Pre-season\nDinamo started its preparations for the new season on 15 June, with the medical examination. Only one new player was present, Andrei Cristea, who returned to Dinamo after one and a half years spent in Germany. Another new player brought by Dinamo was Issa Ba, a Senegalese midfielder whose contract with CS Gaz Metan Media\u015f expired. Instead, Dinamo released Iulian Tame\u015f and Dorel Stoica on mutual agreement, and sold Adrian Scarlatache to Khazar Lankaran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 21 June, Dinamo left for Austria, for an 18 days training camp, during which, the team played a large number of friendly games. The first matches were against amateur football teams from the Bischofshofen region. Thus, Dinamo's manager, Dario Bonetti had the chance to see the entire team at work, and also the players brought from the youth team, or players on trial. The first important friendly game was played against Ukrainean champions, Shakhtar Donetsk. Dinamo lost the game 1\u20130. Dinamo failed to win any other friendly game played in Austria, losing five and drawing against Anorthosis Famagusta from Cyprus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 26 June, Dinamo lost an important player, Cosmin Mo\u0163i, sold to the Bulgarian team Ludogorets Razgrad. The defender who played more than six years for Dinamo was in his final part of his contract, and the Red Dogs accepted the offer because they could lose him for free in the next months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Pre-season\nInstead, Dinamo managed to sign Cristian Scutaru and Mircea Axente, both returning to Liga I where they played for Poli Timi\u0219oara. In the previous season, they played for Poli in the second division. Also, Dinamo signed the Bulgarian midfielder Boris Galchev, from CSKA Sofia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, July\nDinamo started the season on a high note, winning the first match and consequently the first trophy. It was the Romanian Supercup, where Dinamo defeated the champions CFR Cluj, after penalties. The white and reds controlled the game, having a superior ball possession (60.4%)and a larger number of completed passes (534 vs. 308).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, July\nIn Liga I, Dinamo played the first game against a newly promoted team, CSS Drobeta-Turnu Severin. In front of 14,500 spectators, Dinamo opened the score in the 51st minute, through Mircea Axente, at his first game for the white-reds. The home team equalized a couple of minutes later, but Ionel D\u0103nciulescu, coming from the bench, brought all three points for Dinamo with a goal scored in the 80th minute. The same day, 20 July, Dinamo sold one of its symbols, Marius Niculae, a player grown at the club's academy, who left for a few years to play abroad, but returned to Dinamo. He was transferred to Liga I rivals FC Vaslui.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, July\nThe first home game in this season was played on National Arena, where Dinamo decided to move for the entire season. On 29 July, Dinamo defeated CSMS Ia\u015fi 5\u20132, George \u0162ucudean scoring four goals and offering the decisive pass for the fifth. The striker received the perfect ten in the Gazeta Sporturilor match chronicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, August\nThe first false step came in the third round, when Dinamo met FC Bra\u0219ov. In Bra\u015fov, Dinamo won only once since 2004, and the black series continued. Bra\u015fov led twice, but Dinamo came back every time, and the match ended in a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, August\nIn the fourth round, Dinamo should've met Rapid Bucuresti, but the game was postponed because at that time Dinamo played a friendly game against giants FC Barcelona. The game was played at National Arena in Bucharest, and although Barcelona won 2\u20130, Dinamo had moments when they rose to their rivals level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, August\nEight Dinamo players were called to the national teams for the friendly games played at 15 August. Two of them scored goals, Marius Alexe and George \u0162ucudean helping Romania U21 squad to win against Sweden U21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, August\nDespite the big number of players who left to play internationally, Dinamo's game in the fifth round was not postponed and the manager was forced to change the squad a lot, players like Marius Alexe, Constantin Nica and Cosmin Matei being rested. Thus, Dinamo failed to win at Chiajna, against Concordia. The game ended 0-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, August\nThe European season started badly for Dinamo. In front of 20,000 fans, at Arena Na\u021bional\u0103, Dinamo was beaten by the Ukrainian side Metalist Kharkiv, quarterfinalist in the Europa League the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, August\nIn the sixth round, Dinamo came back to its old stadium, because Arena Nationala was not available due to a concert by Red Hot Chili Peppers. Only 4,000 fans came to see the match against Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti. Dinamo took the lead in the third minute, when Srdjan Luchin scored with a header his first goal for the club in the championship. Previously, he scored two goals for Dinamo, both in the Romanian Cup. Petrolul equalised in the 29th minute, but Dario Bonetti's inspiration paid off in the second part. The manager sent \u0162ucudean on the pitch in the 62nd minute, and the striker scored in the injury time after a cross from C\u0103t\u0103lin Munteanu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, August\nIn the second leg of the Europa League encounter, Dinamo could not produce a miracle. They were beaten at Kharkiv, 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, September\nThe seventh round produce Dinamo's first defeat in the championship. In Ploie\u0219ti, against Astra, Dinamo lost 1\u20130, the only goal being scored in the injury time, from a penalty kick. Dinamo played almost the entire second half with only 10 men, Paul Koulibaly being sent off in the 49th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, September\nThe break for the national teams didn't help, after that Dinamo suffering the third defeat in a row. This time, at home, against Romanian champions CFR Cluj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, September\nThe drought was ended at Cluj-Napoca, where Dinamo defeated Universitatea Cluj, 2\u20131. It was the first game of the season for Ionel D\u0103nciulescu as a starter, and the striker scored one goal, his 209th in Liga I, from a penalty that he obtained. Alexandru Curtean scored the other goal for Dinamo. Three days later, Dinamo started with a win the campaign to defend the trophy in Cupa Rom\u00e2niei. In front of their own fans, at Dinamo Stadium, the red-dogs defeated Vointa Sibiu after extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, October\nIn the next championship round, Dinamo met the former leader, Pandurii Targu Jiu. The game was played at National Arena, under special conditions. Dinamo commemorated 12 years since C\u0103t\u0103lin H\u00e2ldan died, and the supporters created a special captain armband, with H\u00e2ldan face. In this game, Ionel D\u0103nciulescu played for the 490th time in Liga I, equalling a record detained so far by Costic\u0103 \u015etef\u0103nescu. D\u0103nciulescu scored a goal against Pandurii, his 210th in Liga I. Dinamo defeated Pandurii 3\u20130. In the next game, at Media\u015f, D\u0103nciulescu played his 491st match in Liga I, after which he became the player with the most presences in the first league. The team failed to win the third game in a row, drawing with Gaz Metan, 2-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, October\nThe competition took a break for the national team's games. After the break, Dinamo suffered another defeat at home. The newly promoted Gloria Bistri\u0163a lead 2\u20130 at Arena Na\u0163ional\u0103, Dinamo managed to score a single goal and in the second half Ionel D\u0103nciulescu missed a penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, October\nThe first Bucharest derby of the season was played on 22 October, against Rapid. The game was initially scheduled in August, but it was postponed due to the friendly game against FC Barcelona. Rapid took the lead after a goal from Daniel Pancu, in the 30th minute, but Marius Alexe scored twice, the second time from the penalty spot, and Dinamo won 2\u20131, climbling to the fifth place in the championship. After that, Dinamo continued its sinusoidal evolution, and failed to win against Ceahl\u0103ul Piatra Neam\u0163. The game ended in a goalless draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, November\nDinamo started the month of November on a high note, managing to qualify to the quarterfinals stage of the Romanian Cup with a win in T\u00e2rgu Jiu, against Pandurii. It was the second win in the season against this team, and the first loss suffered by Pandurii at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, November\nIn the Eternal derby, against Steaua, Dinamo led at the half time, after a goal scored by Marius Alexe. After one hour, the referee, Alexandre Boucaut from Belgium, gave a penalty kick for Steaua, transformed by Raul Rusescu. In the 80th minute, the referee didn't see an obvious foul against Cosmin Matei, committed by Chipciu who should've been sent off for this foul. Two minutes later, Steaua scored for 2\u20131, and in the 87th minute, their third goal came, putting a 13 points distance between the two rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, November\nNeither in the next game, Dinamo could not find the way to victory. The \"White-and-reds\" lost at home against FC Vaslui, 1\u20130. Thus, this is the worst start of a season in 41 years for Dinamo, since 1971. As a consequence, Bonetti was sacked and Dorinel Munteanu was installed the new head coach. Munteanu signed a contract for two and a half years. His debut game was in Constan\u021ba, against Viitorul. The game was only two days after his installation, so he didn't change much the team comparing with the usual players used by Bonetti. The game ended in a draw, 1-1, after Viitorul failed to convert a penalty in the first half, when the score was 0-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, November\nThe first win under Dorinel Munteanu came against the trainer's former team, O\u0163elul Gala\u0163i. Dinamo won the game 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, November\nIn the quarter-finals of the Romanian Cup, Dinamo played away against CFR Cluj. Despite having a player sent-off, Boubacar Mansaly in the 31st minute, Dinamo took the lead in the 60th minute, due to a goal scored by Marius Alexe. Rafael Bastos equalized in the 66th minute, then Gabriel Mure\u015fan scored the winning goal in the 101st minute, transforming a free kick. Dinamo ended the game with nine players on the pitch, Constantin Nica being sent-off in the final minutes. Dinamo lost 2\u20131, and failed to defend its trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, December\nThe month of December started well for Dinamo who won the game against CS Severin, 4\u20132. The game was played at the Dinamo stadium, instead of Arena Na\u0163ional\u0103, and brought only 200 people in the stands. Dinamo remained unbeaten with Munteanu for another game, as the match against CSMS Ia\u015fi ended in a draw. The pitch was covered in snow and made the players' mission heavier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, December\nAt the end of the year, after only one month and five games in charge at Dinamo, Dorinel Munteanu resigned as head coach, citing the wish to follow his dream to coach abroad. His replacement was Cornel \u0162\u0103lnar who started his fifth spell at the helm of the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, January\nAfter the winter holiday, Dinamo started its preparations for the second half of the season with a training period at Poiana Bra\u015fov, during which, the new coach, Cornel \u0162\u0103lnar, concentrated on physical exercises.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, January\nOn 21 January, Dinamo announced that defender Cristian Pulhac ended his contract after almost 11 years spent at the club. Dinamo also parted ways with striker George \u0162ucudean, sold to Standard Li\u00e8ge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, February\nThe first official game of the spring season was played against FC Bra\u0219ov. The game was played at Dinamo stadium, the club decided to move back to its own arena and kept only two games at Arena Na\u0163ional\u0103, the games against Steaua \u015fi Astra Ploie\u015fti. Against Bra\u015fov, Dinamo won 2\u20131, after two goals from Marius Alexe. The visitors played with only ten men from the 40th minute, after Cristian Ionescu was sent off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, March\nThe month of March started perfectly for Dinamo who won the derby against Rapid, played in Giule\u0219ti stadium. Ionel D\u0103nciulescu scored the only goal of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, March\nOn 14 March, the club changed its owner. Businessman Ionu\u021b Negoi\u021b\u0103 bought the stocks that belonged to Nicolae Badea and Drago\u015f S\u0103vulescu and gained control of 90% of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, March\nOn 16 March, D\u0103nciulescu made his 500th appearance in Liga I, becoming the first player in history to reach this mile. The event happened in a game lost by Dinamo against Petrolul Ploie\u015fti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, March\nFor the game against Astra Giurgiu, Dinamo returned to National Arena, and more than 17.000 fans came to support the team. Dinamo won the game 1\u20130, after a goal scored by Marius Alexe in the middle of the first half. Before the game, Ionel D\u0103nciulescu was awarded for the 500 appearances in Liga I. He received an award from the club, given by two of Dinamo's legends, Cornel Dinu and Ion Nunweiller, and an award from the CCA \u2013 Referees' Commission, given by the referee of the game, Sebastian Col\u0163escu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, April\nDinamo began April with a 1\u20130 win away at CFR Cluj, marked their fifth win in six league games. This saw the team climbing to number four in the rankings, two points behind Astra Giurgiu, the team placed on the second spot. D\u0103nciulescu scored the only goal against CFR Cluj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, April\nIn the 22nd minute of the Cluj-Napoca game, Dinamo's captain, C\u0103t\u0103lin Munteanu was injured. He suffered a rupture of the cruciate ligaments at the right knee and he was operated at a clinic in Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, April\nOn 14 April, Dinamo failed to win against Universitatea Cluj, in a game played at Arena Na\u0163ional\u0103. The Cluj-Napoca team, managed by former Dinamo player Ionel Ganea, opened the score, but Nicolae Mu\u015fat scored his first goal for Dinamo and brought a point for the \"red dogs\". The following round, Dinamo lost away, against Pandurii. This was the first game in 2013 without a goal scored by Dinamo. The team returned quickly to the winning ways with the victory against Gaz Metan Media\u015f, the following round. Alexe scored the first goal in this game, his 11th of the Liga I season, and Andrei Cristea ended his goal drought, scoring his first goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, May\nIn the first game of May, Dinamo travelled to Bistri\u0163a to meet Gloria, the last team in the standings. Cornel \u0162\u0103lnar had a few changes in the squad, Dorin Rotariu, 17 years, being used in the starting 11 for the first time in his career. Gloria led after a goal scored by Andrei Enescu, but Marius Alexe scored twice, each time from the penalty spot, and Dinamo took all the three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, May\nAlexe scored again in the following game, at home, against Ceahl\u0103ul, but his goal was not enough for a win. The game ended with a draw, 1-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, May\nOn 10 May, Dinamo met its biggest rival, Steaua. The game was played at Arena Na\u0163ional\u0103, in front of 43,789 spectators. Steaua won 2\u20130, Dinamo losing for the fourth time in a row in the Eternal derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, May\nDinamo continued its bad shape the following week, when they lost against FC Vaslui, 4\u20131, the biggest loss suffered during the entire season. The next game brought another defeat. This time, at home, against Viitorul Constan\u0163a. Dinamo led 2\u20131, but the visitors scored twice in the final half-hour and won 3\u20132. After this match, Dinamo lost all chances to qualify for a European competition, ending a period of 15 consecutive years in the continental cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Review, Season, May\nThe final game of the season was played away at O\u0163elul Gala\u0163i. Dinamo won 1-0 after a goal scored by Mircea Axente. Despite this win, Dinamo finished the season on the sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230087-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Competitions, Overall\nFC Dinamo plays in four competitions: Liga I, UEFA Europa League, Cupa Rom\u00e2niei and Supercupa Rom\u00e2niei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230088-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk season\nThe Dnipro 2012\u201313 season was Dnipro's twenty-second Ukrainian Premier League season, and their third season under manager Juande Ramos. They finished the season in fourth place, while also reaching the semifinal of the Ukrainian Cup and the Last 32 of the UEFA Europa League when they were eliminated by Basel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230088-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk season, Current squad\nAccording to the club's on February 9, 2013. Note: 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, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230088-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk season, Current 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230088-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230088-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230088-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230088-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230089-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Kyiv season\nThe Dynamo 2012\u201313 season is Dynamo's twenty-second Ukrainian Premier League season, and their third season under manager Yuri Semin. Yuri Semin was sacked 24 September 2012 after losing by Dynamo to principal rivals FC Shakhtar Donetsk in the Ukrainian Cup. On 25 September 2012, Oleh Blokhin was appointed new manager. During the season, Dynamo Kyiv competed in the Ukrainian Premier League, Ukrainian Cup and in the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230089-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Kyiv season, Current squad\nSquad is given according to the club's official website. 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, 44], "content_span": [45, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230089-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Kyiv season, Current 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow season\nThe 2012\u201313 Dynamo Moscow season was the 90th season in the club's history. They participated in the Russian Premier League, finishing in 7th place, the Russian Cup, where they reached the Quarterfinal before losing to Anzhi Makhachkala, and the Europa League where they were eliminated at the Playoff round by Stuttgart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Review and events\nDuring the season, three managers worked with the first team:Sergei Silkin worked at pre-season training, but resigned after the team was beaten on Matchday 3 by arch-rival Spartak 0\u20134 and sank to the bottom of the league table. This match was 9th in the row without victory, previous season included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Review and events\nDmitri Khokhlov was in charge as a caretaker manager for 3 games and brought home the first victory of the season \u2013 5\u20130 over Dundee Utd in Europa League. Dan Petrescu came in when the team was still 16th but managed to lift it to 9th position before winter break. In the spring Dynamo even made it temporarily to the Europa League spot, but failure to win the last game versus Volga at home lowered their final league position to 7th with no European football next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Review and events\nKevin Kur\u00e1nyi started season as a captain of Dynamo Moscow. After arrival of Dan Petrescu as a new manager, captain's functions were delegated also to Igor Semshov, Leandro Fern\u00e1ndez and Aleksandr Kokorin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Transfers, 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Transfers, 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow season, Youth squad\nThe following players are registered with the RFPL and are listed by club's website as youth players. They are eligible to play for the first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230090-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Dynamo Moscow 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-00230091-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Energie Cottbus season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Energie Cottbus season is the 48th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 2. Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the clubs fourth consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2009\u201310, after it was relegated from the Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230091-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Energie Cottbus season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, but was knocked out in the first round by fellow second division side SV Sandhausen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230092-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Erzgebirge Aue season\nThe 2012\u201313 Erzgebirge Aue season was the 67th season in the club's history. The club competed in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the clubs third consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2010\u201311, following promotion from the 3. Liga in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230092-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Erzgebirge Aue season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, where they reached the second round, losing 2\u20130 to Bundesliga side 1. FSV Mainz 05 next.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230093-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season was the 39th season since the club was refounded. The season was largely successful with the taking an unbeaten run from the previous season to 17 games which was ended on 4 October 2012 with a 3-0 defeat to Newcastle United in the Europa League, as well as winning the Coupe de France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230094-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Hansa Rostock season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Hansa Rostock season is the 67th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 3. Liga; the third tier of German football. It is the club's first season in this league after relegation from the 2. Bundesliga in 2012. The club was eliminated in the first round of the DFB-Pokal and are currently in the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230094-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Hansa Rostock season, Review and events\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Hansa Rostock season began on 21 July 2012 with a 2\u20131 victory against Stuttgarter Kickers. The club also took part in the DFB-Pokal of the DFB-Pokal, and was knocked out in the first round by 1. FC Kaiserslautern. The club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Cup, having reached the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230094-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Hansa Rostock season, Review and events\nAfter an average start to the season, with nine points out of eight matches and a 14th place in the table the club dismissed coach Wolfgang Wolf on 3 September and replaced him with Marc Fascher two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230095-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Hoverla Uzhhorod season\nThe Hoverla 2012\u201313 season is Hoverla's sixth Ukrainian Premier League season, and their second season under manager Oleksandr Sevidov. During the season Hoverla will compete in the Ukrainian Premier League and Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230095-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Hoverla Uzhhorod season, Current squad\nSquad is given according to of August 31, 2012. Note: 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, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230096-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Ingolstadt 04 season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Ingolstadt 04 season is the 8th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the clubs third consecutive season in this league since 2010\u201311, having won promotion from the 3. Liga in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230096-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Ingolstadt 04 season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, but was knocked out by fellow second division side VfR Aalen in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230097-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Inter Baku season\nThe Inter Baku 2012-13 season is Inter Baku's twelfth Azerbaijan Premier League season, and their fourth season under manager Kakhaber Tskhadadze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230097-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Inter Baku 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-00230097-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Inter Baku 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230097-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Inter Baku 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230097-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Inter Baku 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230097-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Inter Baku 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230097-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Inter Baku 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230098-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Karpaty Lviv season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Karpaty Lviv season was the 50th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230098-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Review and events, Background\nKarpaty Lviv began pre-season training on 6 June 2012. On 8 June 2012, the club announced that Andriy Tlumak and Taras Petrivskiy will leave FC Karpaty having received free-agent status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230098-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Review and events, Background\nOn 7 December 2012 Polish defender Jakub Tosik left the club with a scandal, stating that he will never set a foot on Ukrainian land and calling club officials \"bastards and thieves\". Tosik appeared in 5 matches before he was suspended from the first team for unknown reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230098-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Review and events, Background\nOn 27 May 2013 at FC Karpaty season review meeting it was decided to transfer list 19 players due to club's unsatisfactory results. Also measures of material influence were imposed on all members of the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230098-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Review and events, Season\nKarpaty opened their 20th top-tier national championship season with a 1\u20131 away draw against Volyn Lutsk in the so-called \"Wild West Derby\". This was the first ever draw between the two clubs in 17 official matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230098-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Karpaty Lviv season, Review and events, Restructuring\nOn 20 September 2012 Petro Dyminsky, an honorary president of Karpaty Lviv, officially passed management authority over the club to the club's supporters, thus making green'n'whites a first Ukrainian football club to do so. Petro Dyminsky stated that the strategic goal of the reorganization of FC Karpaty is a clear understanding that the club should not depend on private funds of founders, but to eventually obtain independent financial stability instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230099-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar season was the club's 2nd successive season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia, in which they finished in 10th place. They also took part in the 2012\u201313 Russian Cup, getting eliminated at the last 16 stage by rivals Kuban Krasnodar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230099-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar 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-00230099-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar 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-00230099-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar season, Squad, Reserve squad\nThe following players were registered with the RFPL and were listed by club's website as reserve players. They are eligible to play for the first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230099-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar season, 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230099-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar 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-00230099-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar 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-00230099-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar 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-00230099-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krasnodar 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-00230100-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara season\nThe 2012\u201313 Krylia Sovetov Samara season was the 19th straight season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia. They also played in the 2012\u201313 Russian Cup, getting eliminated by Anzhi Makhachkala in the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara season\nKrylia Sovetov started the season under the management of Andrey Kobelev. He resigned on 15 November 2012, resulting in Aleksandr Tsygankov taking charge in a caretaker capacity until 27 January 2013 when they appointed Gadzhi Gadzhiev as their permanent manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara season, 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230100-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Krylia Sovetov Samara 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230101-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih season\nThe Kryvbas 2012\u201313 season is Kryvbas's 21st Ukrainian Premier League season, and their second season under manager Oleh Taran. During the season, Kryvbas will compete in the Ukrainian Premier League and Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230101-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih season, Squad\nSquad is given according to the and club's as of September 1, 2012. Note: 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, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230101-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230102-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar season was the second successive season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia. They also participated in the 2012\u201313 Russian Cup, being knocked out at the quarter-final stage by Zenit St. Petersburg on penalties after a 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230102-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar season\nThey started the season with Dan Petrescu as manager; however, he resigned on 14 August 2012 to take over as Dynamo Moscow manager. He was replaced by Yuri Krasnozhan, who himself was fired on 9 January 2013, after five months in charge due to irreconcilable differences with the owners. He was replaced by Leonid Kuchuk, who left Arsenal Kyiv to take over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230102-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar season, Squad\nAs of 16 February 2013, according to the . 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, 40], "content_span": [41, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230102-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230102-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230102-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230102-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Kuban Krasnodar 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230103-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC K\u0259p\u0259z season\nThe K\u0259p\u0259z 2012\u201313 season was K\u0259p\u0259z's third Azerbaijan Premier League season since their promotion back into the top flight. Kapaz started the season under Fuad Ismayilov, but he resigned on August 19, being replaced by Mahmud Gurbanov. K\u0259p\u0259z finished the season in 12th place, getting relegated to the Azerbaijan First Division for the 2013-14 season, after being bottom of the league for all bar two weeks. They also participated in the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Cup, winning their first-round game against Qala 2-4, before losing to Qaraba\u011f in extra time in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230103-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC K\u0259p\u0259z 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-00230103-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC K\u0259p\u0259z 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230103-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC K\u0259p\u0259z 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230103-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC K\u0259p\u0259z 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230103-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC K\u0259p\u0259z 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230104-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season\nThe 2012\u201313 Lokomotiv Moscow season involved the club competing in the Russian Premier League and Russian Cup. It was Slaven Bili\u0107's first season as manager and ended with the worst league result of the team (9th, the lower part of the table) since establishing of Russian Championship in 1992. As a result, the contract of Bili\u0107 was terminated by mutual agreement on 17 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230104-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, Transfers\nIn: Summer transfer window 2012Note: 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, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230104-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, Transfers\nIn: Winter transfer window 2013Note: 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, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230104-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, Transfers\nOut: Summer transfer window 2012Note: 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, 45], "content_span": [46, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230104-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, Transfers\nOut: Winter transfer window 2013Note: 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, 45], "content_span": [46, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230104-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, Season events\nDuring winter camp at Cyprus in February 2013, Guilherme was appointed team captain instead of Denis Glushakov who started 2012-2013 season with captain's armband. Roman Shishkin and Dmitri Tarasov were named vice-captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230104-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Lokomotiv Moscow season, Season events, Player of the Month\nIn September 2012, the club started a monthly poll among Loko fans in the social networks to name the best player of the month. The award went to:Vedran \u0106orluka (September 2012),Andrey Yeshchenko (October 2012),Dame N'Doye (November 2012),Kamil Mullin (March 2013),Dmitri Tarasov (April 2013),Aleksandr Samedov (May 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230105-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Metalurh Donetsk season\nThe Metalurh Donetsk 2012-13 season is Metalurh's 16th Ukrainian Premier League season, and their first season under manager Yuriy Maksymov. During the season Metalurh Donetsk will compete in the Ukrainian Premier League, Europa League and Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230105-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Metalurh Donetsk season, Squad\nSquad is given according to the club's , as of September 1, 2012 , as reported to Ukrainian Premier League. Note: 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, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230105-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Metalurh Donetsk season, Squad\nFor recent transfers, see List of Ukrainian football transfers summer 2010 and List of Ukrainian football transfers summer 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230105-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Metalurh Donetsk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230106-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Mordovia Saransk season\nThe 2012\u201313 Mordovia Saransk season was their 1st season back in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. They finished the season in 15th place, meaning they were relegated back to the Russian National Football League after only one season in the Premier League. Mordovia also participated in the 2012\u201313 Russian Cup, getting knocked out at the Round of 16 stage by Zenit St. Petersburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230106-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Mordovia Saransk 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-00230106-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Mordovia Saransk season, Squad, 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230106-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Mordovia Saransk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230106-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Mordovia Saransk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230106-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Mordovia Saransk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230106-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Mordovia Saransk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230107-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC O\u021belul Gala\u021bi season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be O\u021belul Gala\u021bi's 21st consecutive season in the Liga I, and their 24th overall season in the top-flight of Romanian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230107-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC O\u021belul Gala\u021bi season, Players, 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, 56], "content_span": [57, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230107-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC O\u021belul Gala\u021bi season, Player statistics, Disciplinary records\nLast updated: 26 September 2012Source: MatchesOnly competitive matches = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230108-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Porto season, Squad, 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230108-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Porto season, Squad changes in 2012\u201313, Signings\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, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230108-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Porto season, Squad changes in 2012\u201313, Departures\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, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230108-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Porto season, Squad changes in 2012\u201313, 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, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230109-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Red Bull Salzburg season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Red Bull Salzburg season was the 80th season in club history. Red Bull Salzburg finished the season in 2nd place, 5 points behind champions Austria Wien. In the Austrian Cup, Salzburg reached the semifinals were they were defeated by Pasching, whilst in the UEFA Champions League, Salzburg where knocked out on the Away goals rule rule by F91 Dudelange in the Second Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230109-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Red Bull Salzburg season, Review and events\nOn 15 June 2012, Ricardo Moniz resigned as manager of Red Bull Salzburg. Piet Hamberg was the caretaker manager while the club searched for a new head coach. The new manager is Roger Schmidt. Ralf Rangnick was hired as Sporting Director. Leonardo was released by the club after he criticized Stefan Maierhofer in an interview.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230109-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Red Bull Salzburg 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230109-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Red Bull Salzburg season, Squad, Left 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230110-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rostov season was the fourth straight season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia after they won their relegation playoff tie against Shinnik Yaroslavl. They will also play in the 2012\u201313 Russian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230110-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov 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-00230110-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov season, Squad\nThe following players are listed on the official club's website as reserves and are registered with the Premier League. They are eligible to play for the main squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230110-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov season, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230110-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230110-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230110-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230110-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rostov 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230111-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rotor Volgograd season was the 2nd season that the club played in the Russian National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230111-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd 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-00230111-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230111-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230111-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230111-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230111-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd season, Statistics, Squad Statistics, League\nPlayer Started \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Subbed In \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Suspended \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Injured / Sick \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player on International Duty \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Left Club / Not Signed / Loan Expired \u00a0 \u00a0\u2022 Player in Application \u00a0 \u00a0* Player Dismissed from Field", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230111-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rotor Volgograd season, Statistics, Team Statistics, Home attendance\nNote: bold type font are the highest attendance in round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230112-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rubin season was the ninth successive season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. In addition the domestic league, the club competed in this season's editions of the Russian Cup (as title holders), the Russian Super Cup, and the Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230112-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan 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-00230112-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230112-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan season, Squad, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230112-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230112-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230112-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230112-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Rubin Kazan 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230113-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Schalke 04 season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Schalke 04 season was the 109th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It is the clubs 22nd consecutive season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230113-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Schalke 04 season, Review and events\nThe club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, where it reached the second round and will face 2. Bundesliga side SV Sandhausen next.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230113-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Schalke 04 season, Review and events\nIn Europe the club has qualified for the 2012\u201313 edition of the Champions League where it will play Olympiacos, Montpellier and Arsenal in Group B of the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230113-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Schalke 04 season, Review and events\nHuub Stevens was sacked as head coach on 16 December 2012. Jens Keller replaced Stevens as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230113-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Schalke 04 season, Squad, Squad and statistics\n- transfers during the season. (blue)- transfers during the season (away). (red)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230114-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season\nThe Shakhtar Donetsk 2012\u201313 season is Shakhtar's twenty second Ukrainian Premier League season, and they are the current defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230114-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk 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-00230114-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk season, 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230114-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230114-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230114-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230114-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230114-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Shakhtar Donetsk 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230115-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sheriff Tiraspol season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was FC Sheriff Tiraspol's 16th season, and their 14th in the Divizia Na\u0163ional\u0103, the top-flight of Moldovan football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230115-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sheriff Tiraspol 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, Sion competes in the Swiss Super League and the Swiss Cup. In the summer transfer window, they brought in Italian World Cup winner Gennaro Gattuso, as well as Kyle Lafferty (former of Rangers). In addition, they bought an until then unknown Brazilian footballer called L\u00e9o Itaperuna from the 5th division Club of Arapongas and another forward Mathieu Manset from Reading. Already signed six months earlier, Oussama Darragi coming from Esperance de Tunis joined the team along with Andr\u00e9 Marques from Sporting Lisabon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion season\nThe 2012\u201313 season began well with Sion staying at the top till the 8th round. Fournier played with a 4-2-3-1 system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion season\nOn 4 September 2012, Manset, Joaquim Ad\u00e3o and Darragi were all disciplined after being found in the early hours of the morning in a Lausanne nightclub the day before Sion's game away to FC Z\u00fcrich. Manset's contract with the club was canceled, Ad\u00e3o was demoted to the youth team for one month and Darragi was handed a large fine. This huge upset resulted in the resignation of Sebastien Fournier as coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion season\nFollowing this change, the results were not as convincing as they were at the beginning. Although Sion scored more goals in the second part of the first half, they ended fourth during the winter break, one point away from 2nd and 5 points from first. This increase in goals was due to the change to a 4-4-2 system with Itaperuna and Laffery as center forwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion season\nThe weak spot during the first half was the absence of a winger on the left side. This was because Yoda and W\u00fcthrich were injured at the beginning of the season and never recovered to their original strength. In addition to that, the defense was not as solid as the years before. That resulted in more goals received as in other seasons. The reasons for that were the transfer of the center back Ada\u00edlton to Henan Jianye and the simultaneous injuries of Aislan, Vancz\u00e1k and Sauthier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion season\nVancz\u00e1k broke this cheekbone, but did play again after two weeks with a mask as there were no backups available. During that time, Basha (normally a defensive midfielder) played as a fullback at the position of Vancz\u00e1k, while he moved into the center to his original position as a center back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230116-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Sion 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230117-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Spartak Moscow season\nThe 2012\u201313 Spartak Moscow season was the club's 21st season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. They finished the season in fourth place, qualifying for the UEFA Europa League; reached the round of 16 in the Russian Cup; and were knocked out 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League at the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230117-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Spartak Moscow season\nSpartak started the season under the management of Unai Emery, who they appointed as manager in June 2012 after Valery Karpin resigned following the completion of the previous season. Emery lasted five months before being sacked on 25 November, and Karpin was appointed caretaker manager before being handed the job permanently on 13 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230117-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230117-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230118-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC St. Gallen season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC St. Gallen season in Swiss Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230118-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC St. Gallen season, Players, Current squad\nAs of 2 February 2013. Note: 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, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230119-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC St. Pauli season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC St. Pauli season was the 102nd season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It was the clubs second consecutive season in the league, having played at this level since 2011\u201312, after it was relegated from the Bundesliga in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230119-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC St. Pauli season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and faced Bundesliga side VfB Stuttgart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230120-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Steaua Bucure\u0219ti season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 65th season in the existence of FC Steaua Bucure\u0219ti and the club's 65th 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 Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230120-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Steaua Bucure\u0219ti season, UEFA Club rankings\nThis is the current UEFA Club Rankings, including season 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230121-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Terek Grozny season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Terek Grozny season was the 5th successive season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia. They finished the season in 8th place, their highest finish ever in the RPL, and reached the Quarter-Finals of the Russian Cup where they were eliminated by Rostov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230122-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Thun season\nThis article covers the results and statistics of FC Thun during the 2012\u201313 season. During the season Thun will compete in the Swiss Super League and in the Swiss Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230123-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Twente season was spent in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230123-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente 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-00230123-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230123-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente season, Squad, UEFA List B\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, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230123-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230123-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230123-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230123-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Twente 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230124-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Universitatea Cluj season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 87th season of competitive football by Universitatea Cluj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the eleventh season in FC Vaslui's existence, and its eighth in a row in the top flight of Romanian football. Vaslui will seek to win their first trophy, competing in the Liga I, the Romanian Cup and the UEFA Champions League, after finishing second in the previous Liga I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nVaslui's pre-season transfers started as early as 23 May 2012, when Porumboiu announced they were going to sign Adrian Popa from Concordia Chiajna for an undisclosed fee. However, the transfer collapsed since the player failed his medical. On 24 May, it was reported that Vaslui dropped off the services of Jaime Bragan\u00e7a and Savio Nsereko. On 30 May, Vaslui president, Daniel Stanciu announced that Cape Verde international, Fernando Varela signed a three-year contract as a free agent to substitute Pavol Farka\u0161, and Romanian international, L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Sepsi is going to join Vaslui. However, Sepsi eventually signed CFR Cluj. On 31 May, Chievo Verona reported that they have signed Romanian international, Paul Papp for an undisclosed fee. Later that day, Porumboiu confirmed that Chievo Verona acquired 75% of the player's rights for more than \u20ac1,500,000. The media speculated that the real transfer fee is estimated around \u20ac2,500,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 979]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nVaslui's first and only pre-season training camp was set in Austria. Vaslui's first friendlies for the pre-season schedule were fixed against Czech champions Slovan Liberec and vice-champions Sparta Prague, and Russian Premier League side Terek Grozny. Four more friendlies were set up against Albania champions Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb, Russian side FC Krasnodar, Azerbaijan vice-champions Khazar Lankaran and a Regional League side from Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nTo celebrate the first decade since the foundation, the club decided to change the crest. The new crest was accompanied by the words 'Ad Unum Omnes', translated 'All As One'. The change was not welcomed by Vaslui's fans, who claimed that once dropping the old crest, the club also drops off the history of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 9 June, media reported that two youngsters from Olimpia Satu Mare, Valter Heil and Ervin Zsiga are set to be taken on trial by Vaslui. On 13 June, Liviu Antal and Adrian S\u0103l\u0103geanu joined Vaslui from O\u0163elul Gala\u0163i for a joint fee of \u20ac700,000. Antal signed a four-year contract, while S\u0103l\u0103geanu it is yet to sign. One day later, Irineu Calixto Couto joined Vaslui on trial. On 16 June, despite he previously agreed to extend his contract for one more year, Ada\u00edlton decided to retire from professional football, in order to be with his family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nOn the same day, FCM T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219 defender, Andrei Cordo\u015f signed a two-year contract with Vaslui for an undisclosed fee. One day later, Vaslui signed Olhanense midfielder Cau\u00ea for an undisclosed fee, estimated to be around \u20ac700,000. On 18 June, Vaslui dropped off the services of the Brazilian defenders Anderson and Gladstone. On the same day, both Valter Heil and Ervin Zsiga signed a five-year contract with Vaslui. Vaslui also signed Leix\u00f5es midfielder Eduardo Jumisse for an undisclosed fee. One day later, two more players were released, strikers Yero Bello and R\u0103zvan Neagu. Despite media reported that midfielder Adrian Gheorghiu was also released, he played in the second half of the friendly against Khazar Lankaran. On 20 June, Vaslui signed Polish defender Piotr Celeban, after his contract with \u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nOn the same day, Vaslui played its first pre-season friendly against Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb. Liviu Antal scored his first goal for Vaslui, assisted by Milanov in the 40th minute to win the match for the club. On 24 July, the team traveled to K\u00f6ssen where they faced Khazar Lankaran. Vaslui took a 1\u20130 lead in the first half-hour through N'Doye, but Bonfim equalized in the 67th minute, establishing the final score. Nicolae Stanciu, who had worn the number 31 in the previous season, switched to the number 10 shirt following Ada\u00edlton's retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nThree days later, Vaslui suffered its first defeat from the pre-season, losing 2\u20131 against Terek Grozny. Lebedenko opened the scoresheet in the 78th minute, before Ervin Zsiga equalised with an 85th-minute goal; however, three minutes later Terek restored their lead with a goal from Oleg Vlasov. On 1 July, Vaslui faced Gambrinus liga side Sparta Prague. Antal opened the score in the 8th minute, before Mario Holek equalized two minutes later. In the 12th minute, Reis scored his first goal for Vaslui, since he is on trial. A 51st-minute goal from Sparta Prague captain Marek Mat\u011bjovsk\u00fd secured his team a draw, counting Vaslui's second draw from the pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nVaslui had also news regarding the staff, where Marius Baciu and Eduard Iord\u0103nescu have been appointed assistant managers on 14 and 26 June respectively. The appointment of Iord\u0103nescu without being consulted, drove Augusto In\u00e1cio mad and therefore, on 4 July he resigned from the manager position. Later that day, Porumboiu confirmed that Marius \u015eumudic\u0103 has been appointed as the new manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nOn the same day, Vaslui faced the Regional League side Bischoffen. Since In\u00e1cio resigned earlier that day, Iord\u0103nescu took care of the team. Despite the start-up team consisted in bench players, they began to flow thick and fast as Vasile Buh\u0103escu scored four goals, Nicolae Stanciu, Liviu Antal, Andrei Cordo\u015f, Ervin Zsiga and Tiago Targino got one each to secure a 9\u20131 win. \u015eumudic\u0103's first two matches in charge ended in a 1\u20130 defeats against United Arab Emirates Olympic Team and Slovan Liberec on 6 and 7 July respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 9 July, Sergiu Popovici was loaned out to Gloria Bistri\u021ba for one season long. On the same day, striker Sabrin Sburlea signed from Rapid Bucure\u0219ti for an undisclosed fee, thought to be \u20ac750,000. On 11 July, Vaslui traveled to Kirchdorf in Tirol to face FC Krasnodar. Wesley scored a brace, counting \u015eumudic\u0103's first win as Vaslui manager. A goalless draw against Saudi Professional League side Ittihad FC ended Vaslui's pre-season, on 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 13 July, Marius Constantin returned to his former club Rapid Bucure\u0219ti, signing a four-year contract for an undisclosed fee, believed to be around \u20ac250,000. In return, Vaslui opted for a cheaper deal signing free agent Elias Charalambous on a one-year contract, after his contract with Karlsruher SC expired. Three days later, D\u0103nu\u0163 Coman signed a two-year contract from Rapid Bucure\u0219ti, for a reported fee of \u20ac62,000. Two days before the opening match for Vaslui, Marius Niculae signed a two-year contract from Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti, for a reported fee of \u20ac300,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Liga I\nThe fixtures for the 2012\u201313 season were announced on 11 June, with an early Liga I title contender clash against Rapid Bucure\u0219ti in the opening match, for the third year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230125-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Vaslui season, Review, Liga I\nOn 22 July, Vaslui travelled to Bucharest to face Rapid Bucure\u0219ti for the third year in a row in the opening match. It took Vaslui just over half an hour to open the scoring against Rapid; when N'Doye fed Wesley inside the box and the Brazilian scored with a right-footed strike towards the left corner of C\u0103lin Albu\u021b's goal. Daniel Pancu equalized in the stoppage-time of the first half, from a free-kick obtained by him. Vaslui took the lead, three minutes from the second half, when Celeban threw up the ball, Niculae crossed with a header for Wesley, whose scissor-kick execution put the ball past Albu\u021b. Rapid equalized with a late goal, when Filipe Teixeira scored with a header, following \u0218tefan Grigorie's corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230126-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volga Nizhny Novgorod season\nThe 2012\u201313 Volga season was the 2nd season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of football in Russia. They finished the season in 12th place and were eliminated from the Russian Cup at the Round of 32 stage by Russian National Football League side FC Khimki. Manager Dmitri Cheryshev was sacked during pre-season and was replaced by Gadzhi Gadzhiev on 7 June 2012Gadzhiev then resigned on 19 January 2013 and was replaced by Yuriy Kalitvintsev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230126-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volga Nizhny Novgorod 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230126-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volga Nizhny Novgorod 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230126-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volga Nizhny Novgorod 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230126-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volga Nizhny Novgorod 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230126-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volga Nizhny Novgorod 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230127-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volyn Lutsk season\nThe Volyn 2012-13 season is Volyn's twelfth Ukrainian Premier League season, and their first season under manager Anatoliy Demyanenko. During the season Volyn Lutsk will compete in the Ukrainian Premier League and Ukrainian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230127-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volyn Lutsk season, Squad\nThe squad is given according to the club's official website, updated as of 9 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230127-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volyn Lutsk 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-00230127-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Volyn Lutsk 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230128-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Wacker Innsbruck season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Wacker Innsbruck season in association football is the 11th season since the club was reestablished in June 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230129-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg season\nThe 2012\u201313 Zenit season was the 17th successive season that the club will play in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230129-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230129-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230129-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230129-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230129-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230130-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FC Z\u00fcrich season\nThe 2012\u201313 FC Z\u00fcrich season is the 107th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230131-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FFHG Division 1 season\nThe 2012-13 FFHG Division 1 season was contested by 14 teams, and saw the Albatros de Brest win the championship. They were promoted to the Ligue Magnus as result. The B\u00e9lougas de Toulouse-Blagnac and the Galaxians d\u2019Amn\u00e9ville were relegated to FFHG Division 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230132-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 Federal Hockey League season was the third season of the Federal Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230133-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIBA EuroChallenge\n2012\u201313 EuroChallenge was the 9th edition of Europe's third-tier level transnational competition for men's professional basketball clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230133-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIBA EuroChallenge, Qualifying Round\nFirst leg will be played in September 25 and the second one in October 2. Team 1 plays the second leg at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230133-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIBA EuroChallenge, Regular season\nThe Regular Season began on November 6 and finished on December 14, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230133-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIBA EuroChallenge, Quarter-finals\nQuarter-finals were played in a best-of-three series. Matches dates were 12, 14 and 19 March. Team 1 played the first and the third game at home court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230133-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIBA EuroChallenge, Final Four\nThe Final Four was held in the Kar\u015f\u0131yaka Arena at Izmir, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230134-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nThe 47th World Cup season began on 27 October 2012, in S\u00f6lden, Austria, and concluded on 17 March 2013, at the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland. The overall titles were won by Marcel Hirscher of Austria and Tina Maze of Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230134-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nA break in the schedule was for the biennial World Championships, held 4\u201317 February in Schladming, Austria. Changes for the 2013 season included the awarding of World Cup points for the slalom crystal globe for the limited field city events (parallel slalom), not just in the overall standings. Also, a crystal globe trophy was no longer awarded for the combined event, as many organizers considered the event difficult to market, but its results still counted in the overall rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230134-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nMaze became the first Slovenian to win an overall World Cup title; she clinched it on 24 February after her eighth victory of the season, a super-combined race at M\u00e9ribel, France. Her victory in a downhill race at Garmisch-Partenkirchen in Germany on 2 March gave her wins in all five disciplines for the season, and she became the first racer in World Cup history to score more than 2,000 points in a single season. The previous record of 2,000 points was held by Hermann Maier, set during the 2000 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230134-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nMaze broke various statistical records in this season, including the highest number of podiums in a season (24, record previously held by Maier (22) and by Hanni Wenzel and Pernilla Wiberg for ladies (18)), highest number of top 5 finishes (31, previously Maier and Wiberg (24)), highest number of points after first 10 races (677, previously Katja Seizinger, 643), largest percent of possible points won (69%, previously 61% by Wiberg), and the highest margin over the runner-up (1313, compared to 743 for Maier and 578 for Lindsey Vonn).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230134-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nMaze finished on podium in all giant slalom events, previously achieved only by Vreni Schneider in 1989. She is also the only woman to remain at the top of the overall standings throughout the season - a feat previously achieved only by Bode Miller in 2005. In addition to the overall title, Maze won the super-G and giant slalom titles, finished at the top of the combined list by winning both races in the season, and finished second in the downhill and slalom. Those titles went respectively to two Americans, Vonn and Mikaela Shiffrin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230134-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nVonn's season ended with a knee injury on 5 February at the World Championships, but she held on to win the downhill title by a single point after the final race was cancelled. Three days after turning 18, Shiffrin won the final slalom race at Lenzerheide on 16 March to overtake Maze and win that discipline's season title by 33 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230134-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nThe men's overall title wasn't decided until the World Cup finals at Lenzerheide. A runner-up finish in the giant slalom on 16 March gave Hirscher his second consecutive overall title, the first male to achieve this feat since Stephan Eberharter in 2002 and 2003. Hirscher also won the slalom title, while the downhill and super-G titles went to Aksel Lund Svindal of Norway, the sixth and seventh discipline titles for the former two-time overall champion. The giant slalom title went to American Ted Ligety, who won six of the eight GS races for his fourth season title in that discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230135-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup\n2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup was a multi-race tournament over the season for cross-country skiers. It was the 32nd official World Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and ladies. The season started on 24 November 2012 in G\u00e4llivare, Sweden and ended on 24 March 2013 in Falun, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230135-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup\nThis season's biggest event was the Tour de Ski and the 2013 World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230135-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup, Points distribution\nThe table shows the number of points won in the 2012\u201313 Cross-Country Skiing World Cup for men and women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230135-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup, Points distribution\nEvery skier's results in all distance races and sprint races counts towards the overall World Cup totals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230135-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup, Points distribution\nAll distance races, included individual stages in Tour de Ski and in World Cup Final (which counts as 50% of a normal race), count towards the distance standings. All sprint races, including the sprint races during the Tour de Ski and the first race of the World Cup final (which counts as 50% of a normal race), count towards the sprint standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230135-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup, Points distribution\nIn mass start races bonus points are awarded to the first 10 at each bonus station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230135-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Cross-Country World Cup, Points distribution\nThe Nations Cup ranking is calculated by adding each country's individual competitors' scores and scores from team events. Relay events count double (see World Cup final positions), with only one team counting towards the total, while in team sprint events two teams contribute towards the total, with the usual World Cup points (100 to winning team, etc.) awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230136-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup\nThe 2012/13 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup was the thirty fourth World Cup season in freestyle skiing organised by International Ski Federation. The season started on 22 August 2012 and ended on 25 March 2013. This season included five disciplines: moguls, aerials, ski cross, halfpipe and slopestyle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230137-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup\nThe 2012/13 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the 30th world cup season, a combination of ski jumping and cross-country skiing organized by FIS. It started on 24 November 2012 in Lillehammer, Norway and ended on 16 March 2013 in Oslo, Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230138-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Flying World Cup\nThe 2012/13 FIS Ski Flying World Cup was the 16th official World Cup season in ski flying awarded with small crystal globe as the subdiscipline of FIS Ski Jumping World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230139-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nThe 2012/13 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup was the 22nd in a row (20th official) Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 8th for ladies. This was also the 11th summer continental cup season for men and the 5th for ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230139-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nLower 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-00230139-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup, Europa Cup vs. Continental Cup\nLast two seasons of Europa Cup in 1991/92 and 1992/93 are recognized as first two Continental Cup seasons by International Ski Federation, although Continental Cup under this name officially started first season in 1993/94 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230140-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 34th World Cup season in ski jumping for men, the 16th official World Cup season in ski flying and the 2nd World Cup season for ladies. It began on 23 November 2012 in Lillehammer, Norway and ended on 24 March 2013 in Planica, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230140-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nThe defending champions from the previous season were Anders Bardal of Norway and Sarah Hendrickson of the United States. The defending ski flying champion was Robert Kranjec of Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230140-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nGregor Schlierenzauer of Austria won the overall World Cup title, as well as the ski flying title and the Four Hills Tournament. Norway won the men's Nations Cup and the FIS Team Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230140-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nSara Takanashi of Japan won the ladies' overall World Cup title, while the United States won the ladies' Nations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230140-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup, Map of world cup hosts\nAll 26 locations hosting world cup events for men (21) and ladies (10) in this season. Oberstdorf hosted FIS Team Tour and four hills tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230140-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup, Map of world cup hosts\nFour Hills Tournament FIS Team Tour (Oberstdorf ski flying events included)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230141-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIS Snowboard World Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 FIS Snowboard World Cup was a multi race tournament over a season for snowboarding. The season started on 28 August 2012 and ended on 27 March 2013. The World Cup was organised by the FIS which also runs world cups and championships in alpine skiing, cross-country skiing, ski jumping, nordic combined and freestyle skiing. The FIS Snowboarding World Cup consisted of the parallel slalom, snowboard cross and the halfpipe. The men's side of the world cup also consisted of a big air competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230142-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIU Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 FIU Panthers men's basketball team represented Florida International University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by first year head coach Richard Pitino, played their home games at U.S. Century Bank Arena, and were members of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 18\u201314, 11\u20139 in Sun Belt play to finish in third place in the East Division. They advanced to the championship game of the Sun Belt Tournament where they lost to WKU. Despite the 18 wins, they did not participate in a post season tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230142-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FIU Panthers men's basketball team\nThis was the Panthers finals season as a member of the Sun Belt. In July, 2013, they joined Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230143-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Austria Wien season\nThe 2012\u201313 FK Austria Wien season is the 101st season in club history. Training is set to start on 11 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230143-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Austria Wien season, Review and events\nAustria Wien's Board of Directors met on 21 May 2012 to discuss Ivica Vasti\u0107 future as manager and decided to sack him. The Board of Directors have decided that Franco Foda is their first choice to replace Vasti\u0107 and offered Foda the position. However, Foda turned down Austria Wien's offer and accepted the position from 1. FC Kaiserslautern. On 30 May 2012, Peter St\u00f6ger became the new manager of the club. Preseason training started on 11 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230143-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Austria Wien season, Review and events\nThe club opened their season with a win in the Austrian Cup. Their opening fixture of the Bundesliga season was scheduled for 21 July 2012. The match was rescheduled for the following Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230144-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Baku season\nThe Baku 2012-13 season is Baku's fifteenth Azerbaijan Premier League season. This is Baku's first season under Bo\u017eidar Bandovi\u0107, who replaced Novruz Azimov after the UEFA Europa League qualifiers where they were beaten 2-0 on aggregate by Mura 05 of Slovenia. Baku will also participate in the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230144-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Baku 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230144-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Baku 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230144-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Baku 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230144-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Baku 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230144-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Baku 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230144-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Baku 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season\nThe 2012-13 season was Dukla Prague's second consecutive season in the Czech First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers\nDukla lost the services of loan players Ivan Lietava and Ond\u0159ej \u0160vejd\u00edk, who did not stay on at the club following the end of the previous season. Midfielder Marek Hanousek, who stayed at Dukla on loan after signing for Plze\u0148 the previous winter, concluded his loan and joined up with his new teammates. Defender David Mikula, who had spent the second half of the season away on loan, left the club. Forward Jan P\u00e1zler signed for Jablonec in the summer of 2012 but remained at Dukla on a season-long loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers\nSix players went out on loan, these were: Michal \u0160m\u00edd and Ond\u0159ej \u0160iml, both to Bohemians 1905, Miroslav Markovi\u0107 (to \u010cesk\u00e9 Bud\u011bjovice), Tom\u00e1\u0161 Posp\u00ed\u0161il (to Ban\u00edk Most), Mat\u011bj Mari\u010d (to TJ Kunice) and Jakub Sklen\u00e1\u0159 (to Pardubice).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers\nDefender Ond\u0159ej Vrzal finally became a Dukla player after more than two years at the club on loan from Plze\u0148. Forward Zbyn\u011bk Posp\u011bch joined from local rivals Slavia Prague, and the club's defence was boosted by the loan signing of Luk\u00e1\u0161 \u0160tetina as well as the permanent signing of Spaniard Jos\u00e9 Romera. Midfielders Lubo\u0161 Kalouda and Tom\u00e1\u0161 Borek joined the club. Midfielder Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berger returned to Juliska after an unsuccessful loan period in Plze\u0148.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season, Players, Transfers\nIn the winter transfer window, Jan P\u00e1zler cut his loan at Dukla short and headed to Jablonec ahead of schedule. Another striker left; Miroslav Markovi\u0107, who had been out on loan, signed a deal with fellow First League side Brno. The club brought in a second Spaniard, N\u00e9stor Albiach as an additional striker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season, Cup\nAs a First League team, Dukla entered the Cup at the second round stage. In the second round, Dukla faced third league side FK Kol\u00edn, who they defeated 1\u20130 by way of a first-half goal from Jan Svatonsk\u00fd. The third round match at second league side 1. HFK Olomouc was a closer affair; with Olomouc leading 2\u20130 with just eight minutes remaining, goals from P\u0159eu\u010dil and Marek pushed the game to a penalty shootout, in which Dukla were victorious.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 35], "content_span": [36, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season, Cup\nIn the fourth round, Dukla lost in the first leg of their 31 October tie against fellow First League side Sigma Olomouc by a single goal in front of just 266 spectators. In the return leg, four weeks later, the game had an extraordinary amount of injury time after the referee had to be replaced during the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 35], "content_span": [36, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230145-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Dukla Prague season, Cup\nTen minutes into first-half injury time, leading thanks to two Jan P\u00e1zler goals, Dukla were in a good position, but Olomouc scored twelve minutes into stoppage time and went on to score their second goal of the game and third of the tie in the second half, to which Dukla had no answer. Dukla were therefore eliminated from the competition in the fourth round for the second successive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 35], "content_span": [36, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230146-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Khazar Lankaran season\nThe Khazar Lankaran 2012\u201313 season is Khazar Lankaran's eighth Azerbaijan Premier League season. Khazar Lankaran finished in 8th place in the league, after competing in the Relegation Championship during the second half of the season. They also reached the final of the Azerbaijan Cup, eventually losing to Neftchi Baku on penalties after a 0\u20130 draw. They competed in the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, getting knocked out by Lech Pozna\u0144 of Poland at the Second Qualifying Round stage having previously defeated N\u00f5mme Kalju of Estonia, 4\u20132, in the First Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230146-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Khazar Lankaran season\nKhazar started the season under Yunis Huseinov, until he resigned on 31 October 2012. Erik Roqueta Capilla was appointed as their caretaker manager on 1 November 2012. On 14 November 2012, Carles Martorell Baqu\u00e9s was appointed as the club's permanent manager, replacing caretaker manager Erik Roqueta Capilla. Baqu\u00e9s resigned as manager on 26 February 2013. On 8 March 2013 John Toshack was announced as the new manager, taking over from 15 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230146-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Khazar Lankaran 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-00230146-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Khazar Lankaran 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230146-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Khazar Lankaran 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230146-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Khazar Lankaran 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230146-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Khazar Lankaran 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230147-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Partizan season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is FK Partizan's 7th season in Serbian SuperLiga. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club have and will play during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230147-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230147-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Partizan season, Players, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230147-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Partizan season, Transfers, Out\nFor recent transfers, see List of Serbian football transfers summer 2012 and List of Serbian football transfers winter 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230148-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Partizani Tirana season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, Partizani Tirana competed in the Kategoria e Par\u00eb after promotion from the Kategoria e Dyt\u00eb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230149-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Qaraba\u011f season\nThe Qaraba\u011f 2012\u201313 season is Qaraba\u011f's twentieth Azerbaijan Premier League season, and their fifth season under Gurban Gurbanov. Qaraba\u011f' will also compete in the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230149-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Qaraba\u011f 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-00230149-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Qaraba\u011f 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230149-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Qaraba\u011f 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230149-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Qaraba\u011f 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230149-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Qaraba\u011f 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230149-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Qaraba\u011f 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230150-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Sarajevo season\nThe 2012\u20132013 season was FK Sarajevo's 13th (19th) in Bosnian Premier League, 53rd consecutive season in the top flight and 65th season in existence of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230150-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Sarajevo 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230150-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Sarajevo 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230151-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Vardar season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was a FK Vardar's 21st consecutive season in First League. This article shows player statistics and all official matches that the club was played during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230151-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Vardar season\nIn that season Vardar was won the championship for the second consecutive time, sixth time in his history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230151-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Vardar 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-00230152-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Vojvodina season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was FK Vojvodina's 7th season in Serbian SuperLiga. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club played during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230152-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK Vojvodina 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230153-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK \u017deljezni\u010dar season, Statistics 2012-13, From the youth system\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-00230153-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK \u017deljezni\u010dar season, Statistics 2012-13, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by position, and then shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230153-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK \u017deljezni\u010dar season, Statistics 2012-13, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 26 May 2013Source: Competitive matches and Ordered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230154-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FK-League\nThe 2012\u201313 FK-League was the fourth season of the FK-League. The season began on 24 November 2012, and ended on 23 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230155-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FSV Frankfurt season\nThe 2012\u201313 FSV Frankfurt season is the 114th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the clubs fifth consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2007\u201308, having been promoted from the Regionalliga in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230155-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 FSV Frankfurt season\nThe club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and will face Bundesliga side VfL Wolfsburg. They lost 2\u20130 in the second round against, thus ending their participation in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230156-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fairfield Stags men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Fairfield Stags men's basketball team represented Fairfield University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Stags, led by second year head coach Sydney Johnson, played their home games at Webster Bank Arena and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 19\u201316, 9\u20139 in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the MAAC Tournament where they lost to Manhattan. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230157-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team represented Fairleigh Dickinson University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Knights, led by fourth year head coach Greg Vetrone, played their home games at the Rothman Center and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 7\u201324, 2\u201316 in NEC play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the Northeast Conference Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230157-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fairleigh Dickinson Knights men's basketball team\nFollowing the season, head coach Greg Vetrone's contract was not renewed. His overall record was 26\u201395 and just 16\u201355 in NEC play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season are the Fajr Sepasi's 11th season in the Pro League, and their 2nd consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football and 25th year in existence as a football club. They also competed in the Hazfi Cup where they were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Damash. Fajr Sepasi was captained by Reza Haghighi until December 2012 and Mohammad Mehdi Nazari from then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. season, Player, 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. season, Player, First-team squad\nFor recent transfers, see List of Iranian football transfers winter 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. season, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230158-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fajr Sepasi F.C. season, Top scorers\nFriendlies and Pre season goals are not recognized as competitive match goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230159-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Falkirk F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Falkirk's third consecutive season in the Scottish First Division, having been relegated from the Scottish Premier League at the end of season 2009\u201310. Falkirk also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230159-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Falkirk F.C. season, Summary, Season\nDuring season 2012\u201313 Falkirk finished third in the Scottish First Division. They reached the second round of the Challenge Cup, the second round of the League Cup and the Semi-final of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230159-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Falkirk F.C. season, Summary, Management\nFalkirk began the season under the management of Steven Pressley. On 8 March 2013, Pressley left the club to take up the manager post at Coventry City after compensation was agreed. The club's technical director Alex Smith took over as interim manager with Stevie Crawford acting as his assistant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230159-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Falkirk F.C. season, Summary, Management\nOn 3 April, the club announced that Gary Holt would take over as manager from 8 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230159-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Falkirk F.C. season, Results & fixtures, Pre season\nA match against Stenhousemuir scheduled for 24 July, was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230159-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Falkirk F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 8 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230160-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fencing World Cup\nThe 42nd FIE Fencing World Cup began on October 2012 and concluded on July 2013 at the 2013 World Fencing Championships held in Budapest. Andrea Cassar\u00e0 of Italy won the title for a record fifth time in men's foil, while Romania's Ana Maria Br\u00e2nz\u0103 ended up the top-ranked fencer in women's \u00e9p\u00e9e for a record third time. The World Cup medals were awarded during the FIE's gala dinner in Paris at the Automobile Club de France on 30 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230161-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fenerbah\u00e7e S.K. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Fenerbah\u00e7e's 55th consecutive season in the S\u00fcper Lig and their 105th year in existence. They also competed in the UEFA Champions League starting in the third qualifying round after being second in the 2011\u201312 domestic season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230161-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fenerbah\u00e7e S.K. season, Kits\nFenerbah\u00e7e's 2012\u201313 kits introduced on 27 July 2012 in \u015e\u00fckr\u00fc Saraco\u011flu Stadium and produced by Adidas. Home kit's name is \"2013 Efsane \u00c7ubuklu Forma\" that means 2013 Legendary Barred Kit, away kit's name is \"2013 Arma Forma\" that means 2013 Emblem Kit and third kit's name is \"2013 G\u00f6lge Kanarya Forma\" that means 2013 Shadow Canary Kit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230161-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fenerbah\u00e7e S.K. season, Competitions, Group stage\n8 winners from the fifth and the last qualifying round will be split into two groups of 4 teams. This stage will be a round-robin tournament with home and away matches, in the vein of UEFA European competitions' group stages. The winners and runners-up of the two groups will advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230162-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC's 110th competitive season, 4th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 113th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230162-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC 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-00230162-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230162-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230162-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230162-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230162-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230162-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230163-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Feyenoord season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Feyenoord's 105th season of play. It was their 57th season in the Eredivisie and its 91st consecutive season in the highest Dutch football division. The club ended its league campaign in third place, being undefeated at home, and reached the quarter-finals of the KNVB Cup. Their European campaign ended after four matches, two each in the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League. It was the club's second season under manager Ronald Koeman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230164-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe 2012\u201313 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina is the eighteenth season of the First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the second tier football league of Bosnia and Herzegovina, since its original establishment and the thirteenth as a unified federation-wide league. The 2012\u201313 fixtures were announced on 6 July 2012. It began on 11 August 2012 and will end on sometimes at the begin of June 2012; a winter break where no matches are played will be in effect between 18 November 2011 and 9 March 2012. Gradina were the last champions, having won their first championship title in the 2011\u201312 season and earning a promotion to Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230164-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nSixteen clubs are participating in this session, eleven returning from the previous session, one relegated from Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina and four promoted from four regional Second League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230164-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Changes from last season, Team changes, From First League of the FBiH\nRelegated to one of 4 respective regional Second League of the FBiH", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 135], "content_span": [136, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230164-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams\nUNIS, Famos-SA\u0160K Napredak, Ora\u0161je and Omladinac were relegated to their respective third-level league at the end of the 2011\u201312 season. For Famos-SA\u0160K Napredak and Ora\u0161je this is the worst league tier they played in since independence of BiH. The relegated teams were replaced by the champions of the four third\u2013level leagues, Radni\u010dki from the Second League of the FBiH - North, Troglav from the Second League of the FBiH - South, Podgrme\u010d from the Second League of the FBiH - West and Bosna from the Second League of the FBiH - Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 71], "content_span": [72, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230164-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 64], "section_span": [66, 91], "content_span": [92, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230164-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season statistics, Transfers\nFor the list of transfers involving First League clubs during 2012\u201313 season, please see: List of Bosnia and Herzegovina football transfers summer 2012 and List of Bosnia and Herzegovina football transfers winter 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 94], "content_span": [95, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230165-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Republika Srpska\nThe 2012\u201313 First League of the Republika Srpska is the eighteenth season of the First League of the Republika Srpska, the second tier football league of Bosnia and Herzegovina, since its original establishment and the eleventh as a second-tier league. It will begin on 11 August 2012 and end on 25 May 2013; a winter break where no matches are played will be in effect between 3 November 2012 and 9 March 2013. Radnik were the last champions, having won their third championship title in the 2011\u201312 season and earning a promotion to Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina. This year Mladost Velika Obarska won the championship, the first time they won the First League of the Republika Srpska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230165-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Republika Srpska\nFourteen clubs are participating in this session, ten returning from the previous session, one relegated from Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, two promoted from two regional Second League of the Republika Srpska and one as a replacement for Crvena Zemlja who withdraw from the competition due to financial difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230165-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Republika Srpska, Changes from last season, Team changes, From First League of the RS\nRelegated to one of 2 respective regional Second League of the RS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 113], "content_span": [114, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230165-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Republika Srpska, Changes from last season, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230165-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Republika Srpska, Season events, FK Crvena Zemlja withdrawal\nOn 17 July 2012, Crvena Zemlja announced that they will withdraw from the First League of the Republika Srpska due to financial difficulties. There were many proposals who should replace them, but in the end, Ljubi\u0107 were placed as the replacement. They finished fourth in 2011\u201312 Second League of the Republika Srpska - West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230165-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First League of the Republika Srpska, Season statistics, Transfers\nFor the list of transfers involving First League clubs during 2012\u201313 season, please see: List of Bosnia and Herzegovina football transfers summer 2012 and List of Bosnia and Herzegovina football transfers winter 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230166-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First Vienna FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 First Vienna FC season was the fourth consecutive season in the second highest professional division in Austria after the promotion in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230167-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First Women's Basketball League of Serbia\nThe 2012\u201313 First Women's Basketball League of Serbia is the 7th season of the First Women's Basketball League of Serbia, the highest professional basketball league in Serbia. It is also 69th national championship played by Serbian clubs inclusive of nation's previous incarnations as Yugoslavia and Serbia & Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230167-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First Women's Basketball League of Serbia\nThe first half of the season consists of 11 teams and 110-game regular season (20 games for each of the 11 teams) began on 6 October 2012 and will end on 17 February 2013. The second part of the season consists of two parts, the Play Off and Play Out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230167-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First Women's Basketball League of Serbia\nIn the Play Off playing eight teams, 5 from Adriatic League and 3 from First Women's Basketball League of Serbia. In the Play Out playing six teams it turns out that the last team. After the regular season it turns the bottom team and one team in Play Out. Play Off is played from 10. March 2013. to 6. April 2013, Play Out is played from 5. - 30. March 2013. Champion for this season is Partizan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230167-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First Women's Basketball League of Serbia, 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 Play Off. The regular season began on 6 October 2012 and it will end on 17 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230167-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First Women's Basketball League of Serbia, Play Off\nPlay Off is played according to the cup system. Champion is received after the final was played. The final was played on 3 wins, while in other parts the Play Off at 2 victory. Play Off is played from 10. March 2013. to 6. April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230167-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 First Women's Basketball League of Serbia, Play Out\nIn play out all the clubs play against each other, and the worst ranked team in play out is relegation of the league. Play Out is played from 5. - 30. March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230168-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fleetwood Town F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Fleetwood Town's first in the Football League following promotion from the Football Conference the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230168-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fleetwood Town 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-00230169-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida A&M Rattlers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Florida A&M Rattlers basketball team represented Florida A&M University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rattlers, led by second year head coach Clemon Johnson, played their home games at the Teaching Gym and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finish the season 8\u201323, 5\u201311 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost in the first round of the MEAC Tournament to North Carolina A&T.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230170-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team represented Florida Atlantic University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Owls, led by fifth year head coach Mike Jarvis, played their home games at the FAU Arena, and were members of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 9\u201311 in Sun Belt play to finish in fifth place in the East Division. They lost in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament to Troy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230170-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team\nThis was the Owls final season as a member of the Sun Belt. In July, 2013, they will join Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230171-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gators men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Florida Gators men's basketball team represented the University of Florida in the sport of basketball during the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The Gators competed in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and 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, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230171-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gators men's basketball team\nThe Gators finished the SEC regular season with a 14\u20134 conference record, earning their sixth SEC regular season championship. As a No. 3 seed in the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, the Gators advanced to the Elite Eight for the third consecutive year where they were defeated by Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230171-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gators men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gators finished the 2011\u201312 season with a record of 26\u201311 overall, a 10\u20136 record in SEC play and lost in the Elite Eight round of the NCAA Tournament to Louisville. Freshman shooting guard Bradley Beal, who finished second on the team in scoring average, decided to forgo his sophomore season and enter the 2012 NBA draft. He was selected by the Washington Wizards with the third overall pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230171-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gators men's basketball team, Team statistics\nAs of March 31, 2013. Indicates team leader in specific category. Retrieved from", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230172-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gators women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Florida Gators women's basketball team represented the University of Florida in the sport of basketball during the 2012\u201313 women's college basketball season. The Gators competed in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They were led by head coach Amanda Butler, and played their home games in the O'Connell Center on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230172-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gators women's basketball team\nThe Gators advanced to the Women's National Invitation Tournament, where they lost to the Drexel Dragons in the semifinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230172-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gators women's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the 2011\u201312 season, the Gators finished with a record of 20\u201313 overall, 8\u20138 in the SEC, and lost in the 2nd Round of the NCAA Tournament to Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230173-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team represented Florida Gulf Coast University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by second year head coach Andy Enfield, played their home games at Alico Arena and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished A-Sun play with a record of 13\u20135 to finish in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230173-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team\nIn only their second year of full NCAA eligibility, the Eagles won the Atlantic Sun Tournament, beating top-seeded Mercer in the championship game, to earn their first ever bid to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 15 seed in the south region. Guard Sherwood Brown was named the A-Sun player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230173-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team\nIn their NCAA Tournament debut, the 15 seeded Eagles upset 2 seeded Georgetown 78\u201368. It was the third time in two years and eighth time overall that a 15 seed had upset a 2 seed. With a second round 81\u201371 win over San Diego State, they became the first 15 seed to win two games in a tournament to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. They lost in the Sweet Sixteen to Florida 62\u201350 to finish the season 26\u201311. After the season, Andy Enfield was hired by the USC Trojans to be the head coach. They won the 2013 ESPY for Best Upset.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230173-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team, Roster\nAccording to Yahoo Sports columnist Eric Adelson, \"The out-of-nowhere stories [on the squad] are kind of staggering.\" Brown began his college career as a walk-on, and was so little-regarded in high school that he does not appear in the database of Yahoo's Rivals.com recruiting site. Starting point guard Brett Comer, who had 24 assists in the Eagles' first two NCAA games, said he had no idea how to play the position when he arrived at FGCU; at Winter Park High School, he took a back seat to future NBA player Austin Rivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230173-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles men's basketball team, Roster\nChase Fieler, whose one-handed alley-oop dunk off a Comer pass was the signature play of the Georgetown game, also does not appear in the Rivals.com database, and did not know how to jump off two feet when he arrived at FGCU. Bernard Thompson, named A-Sun Defensive Player of the Year, was by comparison highly touted; he had offers from budding power VCU and five other mid-majors. Nonetheless, he was not nationally ranked out of high school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season was the 20th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 14, 1993. The season was partially cancelled due to a lockout, which ended on January 6, 2013. The campaign for the Panthers then commenced as a shortened, 48-game season beginning on January 19. The shortened season would feature only intra-conference games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season\nThe Panthers were eliminated from Stanley Cup playoff contention, failing to make the playoffs for the 11th time in their past 12 seasons. Florida earned the fewest points of any NHL team in 2012\u201313, finishing with a 15\u201327\u20136 record for last in both the Eastern Conference and 30-team NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Pre-season\nA pre-season schedule was planned for late September and early October, but the lockout forced its cancellation. No pre-season will be held for the truncated, 48-game campaign beginning January 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Regular season\nAs of Thursday, October 4, the NHL has cancelled all games scheduled through Wednesday, October 24, causing the Panthers to lose their first five games of the season, with more cancelled games possible without a resolution to the dispute soon. As of Friday, October 19, the Panthers have lost three additional games through November 1 due to the lockout. All November games were lost one week later on Friday, October 26, eliminating any possibility of a rearranged 82-game season and assuring that any season that does take place will be shortened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Regular season\nOn November 23, two more weeks of hockey and six additional Panthers games were put on the chopping block, with all matchups through December 14 being cancelled. On December 11, after a week of negotiations broke off, all games through December 30 were axed. On December 20, 2012, following a further lack of negotiations during the lockout, all games through January 14 were cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Regular season\nOn January 6, 2013, the lockout ended after a 16-hour negotiation session in an effort to salvage the season. A condensed season, of a length of 48 intra-conference games, will now be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Regular season\nThe Panthers scored 109 goals (excluding three shootout-winning goals) over the lockout-shortened season of 48 games, tied for 29th overall with the Nashville Predators. They also allowed 170 goals (excluding one shootout goal), the most in the League, allowed the most power-play goals, with 39, and had the lowest penalty-kill percentage, at 74.17%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Schedule and results\nBelow is the new, truncated 2012\u201313 schedule for the Panthers, who will open the season on Saturday, January 19 against the Hurricanes, closing on Saturday, April 27 against the Tampa Bay Lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Schedule and results\nWin (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)Boldface text denotes a Panthers goalie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Panthers. Stats reflect time with the Panthers only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Transactions\nThe Panthers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230174-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida Panthers season, Draft picks\nFlorida Panthers' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230175-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team represented Florida State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season The Seminoles were led by eleventh year head coach Leonard Hamilton and played their home games at the Donald L. Tucker Center on the university's Tallahassee, Florida campus. They were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230175-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team\nThe Seminoles finished the season 18\u201316, 9\u20139 in ACC play, to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament to North Carolina. They were invited to the 2013 National Invitation Tournament where they lost in the first round to Louisiana Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230175-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Seminoles finished the 2011\u201312 season 25\u201310, 12\u20134 in ACC play, and lost in the 3rd round of the NCAA Tournament to Cincinnati. Florida State ended the season ranked 10th in the AP Poll and 12th in the Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230175-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team, Awards, Honors\nMichael Snaer has been honored with ACC Player of the Week recognition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230175-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team, Rankings\nEntering the 2012\u20132013 season, Florida State was ranked in both the AP and Coaches' Preseason Polls. The Seminoles were ranked No. 25 in the AP Poll and No. 24 in the Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230175-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team, Schedule\nSeminole Madness was held on October 12 at the Leon County Civic Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230175-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Florida State Seminoles men's basketball team, Media\nFlorida State basketball is broadcast on the Florida State University Seminoles Radio Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230176-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Conference\nThe 2012\u201313 Football Conference season was the ninth season in which the Conference consisted of three divisions and the thirty-third season overall. The Conference covers the top two levels of Non-League football in England. The Conference Premier is the fifth highest level of the overall pyramid, whilst the Conference North and Conference South exist at the sixth level. The Conference was won by Mansfield Town who together with Newport County, the winner of the play-off of the National division, were promoted to Football League Two, while the bottom four were relegated to the North or South divisions. The champions of the North and South divisions were promoted to the National division, alongside the play-off winners from each division. The bottom three in each of the North and South divisions were relegated to the premier divisions of the Northern Premier League, Isthmian League or Southern League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 942]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230176-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Conference\nFor sponsorship reasons, the Conference Premier was referred to as the Blue Square Bet Premier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230176-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Conference, Conference Premier\nA total of 24 teams contested the division, including 18 sides from last season, two relegated from the Football League Two, two promoted from the Conference North and two promoted from the Conference South. The League started on 10 August 2012 with previously relegated Hereford United and Macclesfield Town facing each other at Edgar Street and finished on 20 April 2013 with all matches that day kicking off simultaneously. The 2013 Conference Premier play-off Final on 5 May 2013 was the first Wembley Stadium final to feature two Welsh clubs, Newport County and Wrexham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230176-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Conference, Conference Premier, Stadia and locations\n* Restricted due to stadium expansion or FA ruling. * * Capacity reduced for football matches from maximum capacity of 11,676. * ** Groundshare from 15 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230176-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Conference, Conference Premier, Stadia and locations\nCapacity was temporarily raised to 7,012 for the play-off tie against Grimsby Town", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230176-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Conference, Conference North\nA total of 22 teams competed in the division, including 18 sides which competed in the Conference North the previous season, two promoted from the Southern Football League and two from the Northern Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230176-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Conference, Conference South\nA total of 22 teams competed in the division, including 18 sides which competed in the Conference South the previous season, two relegated from the Conference Premier and two promoted from the Isthmian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230177-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League (known as the npower Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 114th season of the Football League. It began in August 2012 and concluded in May 2013, with the promotion play-off finals. The Football League is contested through three Divisions: the Championship, League One and League Two. The winner and the runner up of the League Championship are automatically promoted to the Premier League and they will are joined by the winner of the Championship playoff. The bottom two teams in League Two are relegated to the Conference Premier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230178-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League (Greece)\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League is the second division of the Greek professional football system and the third season under the name Football League after previously being known as Beta Ethniki. Its regular season began on 28 September 2012 and will end on 9 June 2013. The promotion play-offs, are scheduled to take place after regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230178-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League (Greece), Structure\nAt present, there are twenty one clubs that compete in the Football League, playing each other in a home and away series. At the end of the season, the bottom three teams are relegated to the Gamma Ethniki. The top three teams gain automatic promotion. However, teams positioned fourth to seventh take part in a promotion play-off. Unlike in Super League, clubs in the Football League do not get relegated if the club fails to obtain a license. All teams in the Football League take part in the Greek Football Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230178-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League (Greece), Promotion play-offs\nThe promotion play-offs will comprise the teams ranked 3rd through 6th during the regular season, and they are scheduled to take place immediately after the conclusion of the regular season. Niki Volos started the playoffs with a one-point disadvantage, because of their worse position in contrast to the other teams, when the main season finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230179-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League 2 (Greece)\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League 2 was the 30th season since the official establishment of the third tier of Greek football in 1983. It is scheduled to start on 21 October 2012. 25 teams are separated into two groups, 13 in Group 1 (South) and 12 in Group 2 (North) according to geographical criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League Championship (known as the npower Championship for sponsorship reasons) was the ninth season of the league under its current title and twentieth season under its current league division format. The season began on 17 August 2012 with promotion candidates Cardiff City hosting newly promoted Huddersfield Town at Cardiff City Stadium and finished on 27 May 2013 with the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship\nOf the 24 teams which participate, eighteen of these remain following the 2011\u201312 Football League Championship. They were joined by Charlton Athletic, Sheffield Wednesday and Huddersfield Town from 2011\u201312 Football League One, and Blackburn Rovers, Bolton Wanderers and Wolverhampton Wanderers from the 2011\u201312 Premier League. The final place was decided on 26 May 2012, as Huddersfield Town defeated Sheffield United 8\u20137 on penalties, in the 2012 Football League One play-off Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship\nCardiff City won the league in their first season since a controversial rebrand; they achieved promotion to the top flight for the first time since 1960 and became the second Welsh club to play in the Premier League. The second automatic promotion spot was won by Hull City with a 2\u20132 draw against Cardiff on the final day after a dramatic finale to the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship\nWatford, just two points behind, had to settle for a place in the playoffs, joining Brighton & Hove Albion, Crystal Palace, and Leicester City, who secured their place with a last-minute goal over rivals Nottingham Forest. In the playoffs, Watford defeated Leicester City 3\u20132, Crystal Palace defeated Brighton 2\u20130, and in the final Watford was upset by Crystal Palace to gain the promotion. Bristol City, Wolverhampton Wanderers, and Peterborough United were relegated. Peterborough gained 54 points, the highest ever for a relegated team in Championship history. Wolves' relegation was the first time a team had been relegated from the top tier to the third tier in consecutive seasons since Swindon Town in 1994 and 1995. They also became the first team to achieve this feat twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, Changes from last season, Rules changes\nOn 25 April 2012, it was announced that financial fair play rules would be introduced for teams within The Championship. This means that clubs have agreed to new rules on sustainable financing which includes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, Changes from last season, Rules changes\nAlso the 2011\u201312 season saw Football League clubs vote for five substitutes instead of seven. However, on 1 June 2012, Football League clubs re-voted with the outcome of seven substitutes instead of five, ahead of the 2012\u201313 Football League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, League table\nA total of 24 teams contest the division: 18 sides remaining in the division from last season, three relegated from the Premier League, and three promoted from the League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, Final day of the season\nThe final day of the season fell on 4 May 2013. Watford and Hull City were both fighting for 2nd place and automatic promotion to the 2013\u201314 Premier League. Crystal Palace, Leicester City, Bolton Wanderers and Nottingham Forest were all fighting for 5th and 6th place, and for a play-off spot. However, on the final day, it was mathematically possible for any 2 of 7 teams to get relegated alongside already relegated Bristol City. These teams were Wolverhampton Wanderers, Peterborough United, Huddersfield Town, Blackburn Rovers, Millwall, Barnsley and Sheffield Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, Final day of the season\nLate drama occupied all three battles, with the headlines inevitably going to Hull, who won promotion to the Premier League after a 2\u20132 draw with newly crowned champions Cardiff City and Watford being beaten 2\u20131 by Leeds United. Hull were 2\u20131 up and in the 91st minute when they were awarded a penalty which could have sealed their 2nd place spot. Hull missed their penalty and in the 93rd minute, Cardiff were awarded a penalty, which was converted by Nicky Maynard, bringing the score to 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, Final day of the season\nAfter a serious injury delayed the match, the Watford game was fifteen minutes behind the other games, so with the score at 1\u20131, Watford knew that a win would secure their promotion to the Premier League. In the 89th minute Leeds scored to make it 2\u20131. The scores stayed that way and promotion for Hull was assured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, Final day of the season\nIn the play-off battle between Leicester City, Crystal Palace, Nottingham Forest and Bolton, there was a late goal for Leicester (vs Nottingham Forest) that secured a 3\u20132 victory, meaning that the 2\u20132 draw between Bolton Wanderers and Blackpool left them in 6th place. As the other results turned out, Crystal Palace would have remained in 5th place with a loss, but also scored late on to beat Peterborough 3\u20132. This left Bolton in 7th place, missing out on play-offs via goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230180-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Championship, Final day of the season\nThe relegation battle ended in disappointment for Wolves and Peterborough. The late goal for Crystal Palace against Peterborough meant that a 1\u20131 draw was enough for Blackburn, a 2\u20130 win for Sheffield Wednesday over Middlesbrough was enough to secure their safety, a 1\u20130 defeat for Millwall against Derby County was enough for them and a 2\u20132 draw between Huddersfield and Barnsley was enough for both teams. Wolves lost 2\u20130 to Brighton, having started the day in the most difficult situation of the threatened teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League Cup (known as the Capital One Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 53rd season of the Football League Cup, a knock-out competition for the top 92 football clubs played in English football league system. Liverpool were the defending champions, having beaten Cardiff City in the 2012 final. They were knocked out in the fourth round by Swansea City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup\nThe final was won by Swansea by 5\u20130 against Bradford City at Wembley Stadium on 24 February 2013. Bradford were the first team from the fourth tier of English football to appear in a League Cup final since 1962. Swansea was the first Welsh club to win the League Cup and the first Welsh club to win an English club competition since Cardiff City's 1926\u201327 FA Cup triumph. Swansea qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League through England's berth by winning the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first round took place on 14 June 2012 at 09:30 BST. The 35 matches were to be played on 13\u201315 August 2012, although if both teams agreed, they could play it on 11 or 12 August instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round took place on 15 August 2012, after all the matches for the first round had been completed. The second round draw included the 35 winners from the first round plus the Premier League clubs that are not competing in European competitions: the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League. The second round draw also included the top two highest ranked teams from last season not currently in the Premier League, these being Blackburn Rovers and Bolton Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Third round\nThe draw for the third round was made on 30 August 2012, following the televised second round match between Northampton Town and Wolverhampton Wanderers. The seven English teams playing in European competitions during the season \u2013 Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur \u2013 entered at this stage, while the other 25 teams had all progressed from the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round was made on 26 September 2012, following the televised Third Round match between Manchester United and Newcastle United. All teams participating in the Fourth Round progressed from the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Fifth round\nThe draw for the fifth round took place on 31 October 2012 after the televised game between Chelsea and Manchester United. Bradford City are the lowest ranked team, as the only team from League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Fifth round\nThree of the ties were played on 11 and 12 December 2012. Due to their involvement at the FIFA Club World Cup, Chelsea played their match the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 19 December 2012 after the televised game between Leeds United and Chelsea. Bradford City happened to be the only team from outside the Premiership as they were playing in the lowest tier of English League football, the Football League Two, at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Broadcasting rights\nThe domestic broadcasting rights for the competition were held by the subscription channel Sky Sports, who have held rights to the competition since 1996\u201397. During this season, Sky had exclusive live broadcasting rights, as the BBC lost the shared live rights it had in the previous season. The BBC could, however, show highlights of matches from each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230181-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Cup, Broadcasting rights\nThese matches were broadcast live by Sky Sports on television:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230182-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League One\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League One (referred to as the Npower Football League One for sponsorship reasons) was the ninth season of the league under its current title and twenty-first season under its current league division format. The season began on 18 August 2012 and ended on 27 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230182-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League One, Team overview, Personnel and sponsoring\nNote: 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, known as the Johnstone's Paint Trophy for sponsorship reasons, is the 29th season in the history of the competition. It is a knock-out tournament for English football clubs in League One and League Two, the third and fourth tiers of the English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy\nIn all, 48 clubs will enter the competition. It is split into two sections, Northern and Southern, with the winners of each section contesting the final at Wembley Stadium. Chesterfield are the defending champions, having beaten Swindon Town in the previous year's final, 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, First round\nThe draw for the first round of the competition took place on 18 August 2012. Sixteen clubs were given a bye into the second round, and the remaining 32 clubs, including the holders, were divided into four geographical regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, First round, Southern section\nNorthern sectionBradford City, Bury, Crewe Alexandra, Doncaster Rovers, Hartlepool United, Sheffield United, Shrewsbury Town, Walsall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, First round, Southern section\nSouthern sectionBarnet, Brentford, Cheltenham Town, Colchester United, Leyton Orient, Plymouth Argyle, Torquay United, Wycombe Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, Second round\nThe draw for the second round of the competition took place on 8 September 2012, with matches played in the week commencing 8 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, Area Quarter Finals\nThe draw for the Area Quarter Finals was made on 13 October 2012, and the matches will be played in the week commencing 3 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, Area Semi Finals\nThe draw for the Area Semi Finals was made on 8 December 2012, and the matches will be played in the week commencing 7 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230183-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Trophy, Area finals\nThe area finals, which serve as the semi-finals for the entire competition, were contested over two legs, home and away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230184-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Two\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League Two (referred to as the Npower Football League Two for sponsorship reasons) was the ninth season of the league under its current title and twentieth season under its current league division format. It started on 18 August 2012 and finished on 27 April 2013 with all matches that day kicking off simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230184-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Two, Team overview, Stadia and locations\nNote: Table shows mathematically qualified teams as of 28 April 2012 in alphabetical order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230184-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football League Two, League table\nTwenty-four teams contest the division: 18 sides remaining in the division from last season, four relegated from League One, and two promoted from Conference National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230185-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Football Superleague of Kosovo\n2012\u201313 Raiffeisen Superliga was the fourteenth season of top-tier football in Kosovo. The campaign began on 1 August 2012, and ended on 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230186-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ford Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Ford Trophy was the 42nd season of the official List A cricket tournament in New Zealand, and the second in a sponsorship deal between New Zealand Cricket and Ford Motor Company. The competition ran from 26 February 2013 to 30 March 2013, and was won by the Auckland Aces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230186-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ford Trophy, Rules and regulations\nUpon completion of the round-robin stage, the top two teams play each other in the 1st semi-final, with the winner advancing to the final and the loser advancing to the Preliminary Final, where they play the winner of the 2nd semi-final. The winner of the Preliminary Final will then advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230186-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ford Trophy, Fixtures, Knockout stage\nUpon completion of the round-robin stage, the top two teams play each other in the 1st semi-final, with the winner advancing to the final and the loser advancing to the Preliminary Final, where they play the winner of the 2nd semi-final. The winner of the Preliminary Final will then advance to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230187-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fordham Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Fordham Rams men's basketball team represented Fordham University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Tom Pecora in his third year at the school. Fordham Rams home games were played at Rose Hill Gymnasium and the team was a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 7\u201324, 3\u201313 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for 14th place. They failed to qualify for the Atlantic 10 Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230188-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Forfar Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Forfar Athletic's third consecutive season in the Scottish Second Division, having been promoted from the Scottish Third Division at the end of the 2009\u201310 season. Forfar Athletic also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230188-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Forfar Athletic F.C. season, Summary, Season\nForfar finished fourth in the Scottish Second Division, entering the play-offs losing 7\u20134 to Dunfermline Athletic on aggregate in the Semi-final and remained in the Scottish Second Division. They reached the second round of the Challenge Cup, the first round of the League Cup and the fifth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230189-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf season\nThe 2012\u201313 Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf season is the 118th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It is the clubs first season back in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2012. Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf beat Hertha BSC in the Promotion/Relegation Playoff to earn a spot in the 2012\u201313 Bundesliga season. The sports court and the Federal Court of the German Football Association (DFB) confirmed the club's promotion after Hertha BSC appealed the result of the second leg and lost on both accounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230189-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf season\nThe club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and will face fellow Bundesliga side Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach next.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230189-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf season, Review and events\nAndreas Lambertz will start the season with a two match ban. The ban is for celebrating with a torch in his hand after the second leg of the Promotion/Relegation playoff when Fortuna defeated Hertha BSC on aggregate. The disciplinary panel of the German Football Association decided that Fortuna must play their first home match with no supporters for the supporters running onto the field during the second leg of the promotion/relegation playoff. The club was also hit with a \u20ac100,000 fine. After an appeal, the ban on supporters inside the stadium for the first home match was overturned and are now limited to 25,000 supporters for the first two home matches which includes 5,000 visiting supporters. However, the \u20ac100,000 fine was increased to \u20ac150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230190-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Four Hills Tournament\nThe 2012\u201313 Four Hills Tournament was held at the four traditional venues of Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen, located in Germany and Austria, between 29 December 2012 and 6 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230190-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Four Hills Tournament, Overall standings\nThe final standings after the four events. Gregor Schlierenzauer was the overall winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230191-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Frauen-Bundesliga\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Frauen-Bundesliga was the 23rd season of Germany's premier women's football league. The season began on 1 September 2012 and ended on 12 May 2013. Turbine Potsdam were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230191-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Frauen-Bundesliga\nThe title was won by VfL Wolfsburg for the first time. Turbine Potsdam finished in second place and qualified to the UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230191-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Frauen-Bundesliga\nDuisburg and Bad Neuenahr went into administration during the season. As a result, Bad Neuenahr decided to withdraw from the league, sparing Sindelfingen relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230191-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Frauen-Bundesliga, Changes from 2011\u201312\nSG Essen-Sch\u00f6nebeck was renamed to SGS Essen and now play their home games in the Stadion Essen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230191-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Frauen-Bundesliga, Teams\nThe teams promoted from the previous season's 2nd Bundesliga were VfL Sindelfingen as winners of the Southern division and FSV G\u00fctersloh 2009 as runners-up of the Northern division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230191-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Frauen-Bundesliga, Top scorers\nOgimi won her first top-scorer award in the Bundesliga (women).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230192-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fresno State Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Fresno State Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Fresno State University during the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This was head coach Rodney Terry's second season at Fresno State. The Bulldogs played their home games at the Save Mart Center and were first year members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 11\u201319, 5\u201311 in MWC play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Tournament to Colorado State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Fr\u00f6lunda HC's 33rd season in the top Swedish league, the Elitserien (SEL). The regular season will begin on 13 September 2012 with a home game against Link\u00f6pings HC, and will conclude on 5 March 2012 on away ice against V\u00e4xj\u00f6 Lakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Pre-season, Summary\nFor the pre-season, Fr\u00f6lunda HC will participate in the 2012 European Trophy tournament, starting on 17 August 2012 and eventually ending mid-season on 22 October 2012 (although playoff participation may follow in December). The regulation round consists of four home games and four road games, for a total of eight games per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Pre-season, Playoff team seeds\nThe following is a list of the current six top-ranked teams aside from the two automatically qualified playoff hosts Slovan Bratislava and Vienna Capitals. The top six teams aside from Slovan Bratislava and Vienna Capitals after all regulation games will also qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Pre-season, European Trophy games log\nLegend: \u00a0\u00a0Win \u2039See Tfd\u203a\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/Shootout win (2 points) \u2039See Tfd\u203a\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points) \u2039See Tfd\u203a\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/Shootout loss (1 point) \u2039See Tfd\u203a", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Regular season, Standings\nx \u2013 clinched playoff spot; y \u2013 clinched regular season league title; e \u2013 eliminated from playoff contention; r \u2013 play in relegation series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Regular season, Games log\nLegend: \u00a0\u00a0Win \u2039See Tfd\u203a\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/Shootout win (2 points) \u2039See Tfd\u203a\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points) \u2039See Tfd\u203a\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/Shootout loss (1 point) \u2039See Tfd\u203a", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Playoffs\nEach playoff series is a best-of-seven, meaning that four wins are required to advance to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Transactions\nGoaltending coach Micce Andr\u00e9asson decided to leave Fr\u00f6lunda after only one season, due to his family's living situation he instead signed a one-year contract with HockeyAllsvenskan team \u00d6rebro HK. Andr\u00e9asson was replaced by Jonas Forsberg, who was brought in after two seasons as the goaltending coach of K\u00f6lner Haie of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230193-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fr\u00f6lunda HC season, Drafted players\nFr\u00f6lunda HC players picked in the 2013 NHL Entry Draft on June 30, 2013, at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230194-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fulham F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Fulham's 115th professional season and their 12th consecutive season in the top flight of English football, the Premier League. They will also compete in the League Cup and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230194-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fulham F.C. season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by squad number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230194-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fulham F.C. season, Squad statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by position, and then shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230194-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Fulham F.C. season, Squad statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 19 May 2013Source: Ordered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230195-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Furman Paladins men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Furman Paladins men's basketball team represented Furman University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Paladins, led by seventh-year head coach Jeff Jackson, played their home games at Timmons Arena and were members of the South Division of the Southern Conference (\"SoCon\"). They finished the season 7\u201324, 3\u201315 in SoCon play to finish in last place in the South Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament to Appalachian State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230196-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F\u00e4rjestad BK season\nThe 2012\u201313 F\u00e4rjestad BK season was F\u00e4rjestad BK's 38th season in the Elitserien ice hockey league (SEL), the top division in Sweden. They finished second in the regular season and lost to Lule\u00e5 HF in the playoff semifinals, four games to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230196-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F\u00e4rjestad BK season, Regular season, Standings\nx \u2013 clinched playoff spot; y \u2013 clinched regular season league title; e \u2013 eliminated from playoff contention; r \u2013 play in relegation series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230196-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 F\u00e4rjestad BK season, Playoffs, Semifinals, (2) F\u00e4rjestad BK vs. (3) Lule\u00e5 HF\nLule\u00e5 won the series 4\u20131 and advanced to the Finals for the first time since winning the Swedish Championship in 1996. Linus Persson's game-deciding goal in Game 4, 12 seconds into overtime, is a new record for the fastest overtime goal scored in Elitserien playoff history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230197-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GCC Champions League\nThe GCC Champions League (Arabic: \u062f\u0648\u0631\u064a \u0623\u0628\u0637\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0644\u064a\u062c \u0644\u0644\u0623\u0646\u062f\u064a\u0629\u200e), is an annually organized football league tournament for club of the Arabian Peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230197-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GCC Champions League\nThe 2013 edition is the 28th edition and will feature clubs from Saudi Arabia for the first time since the 2009\u201310 Gulf Club Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230197-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GCC Champions League, Groups\nTop two from each group qualify for the one legged quarter finals with group winners hosting the matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230197-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GCC Champions League, Groups\n1 Al Hala replaced Al-Wasl after the group stage draw was completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-ligaen season\nThe 2012\u201313 GET-ligaen was the 74th season of Norway's premier ice hockey league, Eliteserien (known as GET-ligaen for sponsorship reasons).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-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; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; Pts = Points; C = ChampionsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-ligaen season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nThese were the top ten skaters based on points. If the list exceeds ten skaters because of a tie in points, all of the tied skaters are shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-ligaen season, Regular season, Leading goaltenders\nThese were the top five goaltenders based on goals against average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-ligaen season, Playoffs\nAfter the regular season, the standard of eight teams qualified for the playoffs. In the first and second rounds, the highest remaining seed chooses which of the two lowest remaining seeds to be matched against. In each round the higher-seeded team is awarded home ice advantage. Each best-of-seven series follows a 1\u20131\u20131\u20131\u20131\u20131\u20131 format: the higher-seeded team plays at home for games 1 and 3 (plus 5 and 7 if necessary), and the lower-seeded team at home for games 2, 4 and 6 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-ligaen season, Qualification\nAfter the regular season had ended, the two lowest ranked teams in the league and the two highest ranked teams in the 1. divisjon competed for the right to play in the 2013\u201314 GET-ligaen. Comet, Ringerike Panthers, Rosenborg and the T\u00f8nsberg Vikings took part. The tournament was played from 7 March to 24 March 2013 and was organized according to a double round robin format: each club played the others twice, home and away, for a total of six games. The points system and ranking method used were the same as in the GET-ligaen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-ligaen season, Qualification, 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 = PointsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230198-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GET-ligaen season, Awards\nThe following players were selected to the 2012\u201313 GET-ligaen All-Star team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230199-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GFF National Super League\nThe 2012\u201313 GFF National Super League is the 15th season of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230200-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GMHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 GMHL season was the seventh season of the Greater Metro Junior A Hockey League (GMHL). The fifteen teams of the GMHL played 42-game schedules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230200-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GMHL season\nStarting in February 2013, the top teams of the league played down for the Russell Cup, emblematic of the grand championship of the GMHL. Since the GMHL is independent from Hockey Canada and the Canadian Junior Hockey League, this is where the GMHL's season ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230200-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GMHL season\nThe Bradford Rattlers won their third regular season title with a perfect record of 42 wins and no losses. With a 14 win, 2 loss record, the Rattlers also won their third Russell Cup as league playoff champions with a 4-games-to-2 victory over the Temiscaming Titans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230200-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GMHL 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230200-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GMHL season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230200-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GMHL 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230201-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GNF 2\nThe 2012\u201313 GNF 2 was the 52nd season of Botola 2 (the 2nd tier football league in Morocco). The season started on 15 September 2012 and ended on 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230201-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GNF 2\nOn 28 April 2013, Kawkab Marrakech secure their promotion to Botola Pro after their victory against TAS Casablanca with score 1-0 in their home match, they also clinched their title after their goalless drew in their home match against MC Oujda on 18 May 2013. Later, Association Sportive Sale promoted after defeat Olympique Marrakech 2-0 in their away match on 25 May 2013 while Ittihad Khemisset defeat Racing Casablanca 1-0 in their home match four days later left them 6 points away from safety with only 1 game left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230201-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GNF 2\nOn 18 May 2013, Olympique Marrakech was relegated to GNFA 1 for 2013-14 season after defeated by USM Oujda in their away match with 2-0 left them 7 points away from safety with only 2 game left. TAS Casablanca also relegated after defeated by same team (USM Oujda) in their away match with score 2-0 on 2 June 2013. Union Sportive Temara ahead from TAS Casablanca on their goal difference (US Temara goal difference is -8 while TAS Casablanca goal difference is -10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230202-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GNK 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 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230202-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, First-team 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230202-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GNK Dinamo Zagreb season, Player seasonal records\nCompetitive matches only. Updated to games played 27 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230203-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gabala FC season\nThe Gabala FC 2012\u201313 season is Gabala's eighth season and seventh Azerbaijan Premier League season. They started the season under manager Fatih Kavlak, who was sacked on 24 September 2012 following a poor run of results and was replaced by Ramiz Mammadov. Mammadov was himself sacked on 2 April 2013 following 5 games without a win, with reserve team manager Luis Aragon taking over in a Caretaker role. Gabala also competed in the Azerbaijan Cup, entering at the Last 16 stage and beating Qarada\u011f before being eliminated in the Quarterfinals by Qaraba\u011f.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230203-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gabala FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230203-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gabala FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230203-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gabala FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230203-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gabala FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230204-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gabon Championnat National D1\nThis pages summarizes the results of the 2012\u201313 season of Gabon Championnat National D1, the top football league in Gabon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230204-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gabon Championnat National D1\nRacing Club de Masuku was renamed to AC Bongoville, and was relocated from Libreville to Bongoville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230205-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. Basketball season\nGalatasaray S.K. Men's 2012\u20132013 season is the 2012\u20132013 basketball season for Turkish professional basketball club Galatasaray Medical Park", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230205-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. Basketball season, Players, Squad changes for the 2012\u20132013 season\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, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230205-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. Basketball season, Players, Squad changes for the 2012\u20132013 season\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, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230206-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Galatasaray's 109th in existence and 55th 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 played in during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230206-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. season, Sponsorship\nCompanies that Galatasaray S.K. had sponsorship deals with during the season included the following.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230206-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. season, Season overview\nAyhan Akman retired from his professional football career on 13 May 2012, at the age of 35, after winning his fourth and final S\u00fcper Lig title with Galatasaray in the previous season. Additionally, the club did not seek to extend the contracts of some players, including Servet \u00c7etin and Aykut Er\u00e7etin, and they therefore became free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230206-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. season, Season overview\nGalatasaray began the season by commencing their S\u00fcper Lig campaign on 4 July 2012, in which they were aiming for a nineteenth league title. Between 6 and 15 July, Galatasaray preceded the rest of their 2012\u201313 campaign with an Austrian tour. The tour began with matches against two Austrian teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230206-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Galatasaray S.K. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 18 May 2013Source: Only competitive matches = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230207-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Gardner\u2013Webb University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Runnin' Bulldogs, led by third year head coach Chris Holtmann, played their home games at the Paul Porter Arena and were members of the South Division of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 21\u201313, 11\u20135 in Big South play to finish in second place in the South Division. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big South Tournament where they lost to Liberty. They were invited to the 2013 CIT, their first ever Division I postseason tournament, where they lost in the first round to Eastern Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230208-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Genoa C.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Genoa C.F.C. season is the club's sixth consecutive Serie A season of the football. This article lists its season results, transfers and statistics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230208-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Genoa C.F.C. season, 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230209-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team represented George Mason University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was the 47th season for the program. The Patriots, led by head coach Paul Hewitt, were members of the Colonial Athletic Association and played their home games at the Patriot Center, with one home game at the Recreation and Athletic Complex. They finished the season 22\u201316, 10\u20138 in CAA play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the CAA Tournament where they lost to Northeastern. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they defeated the College of Charleston, Houston, and Western Michigan to advance to the best-of-three games finals series vs Santa Clara. They lost the series to Santa Clara 2 games to 1 to be the CBI Runner-Up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230209-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team\nThis was the Patriots final season as a member of the CAA. They joined the Atlantic 10 Conference in July, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230209-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team, Recruiting\nThe following is a list of players signed for the 2013\u201314 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230210-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 George Washington Colonials men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 George Washington Colonials men's basketball team represented George Washington University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonials, led by second year head coach Mike Lonergan, played their home games at the Charles E. Smith Athletic Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 13\u201317, 7\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a three way tie for eleventh place. They lost in the first round of the Atlantic 10 Tournament to Massachusetts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. They were led by John Thompson III and played their home games at the Verizon Center. They were a member of the Big East Conference. Prior to the January 12 game at St. John's, the team's second leading scorer, Greg Whittington, was suspended indefinitely for academic issues. With a 61\u201339 win over their rival Syracuse Orange on March 9, 2013, the team clinched their 10th Big East Regular Season Championship. Georgetown lost to 15-seed and tournament newcomer Florida Gulf Coast University 78-68 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The team was ranked No. 8 in the final Associated Press Poll of the season and No. 17 in the postseason Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\nThis was Georgetown's last season as a member of the original Big East Conference. It had been a founding member of the conference in the 1979-80 season and had remained a member for 34 seasons, but the conference's increasingly unstable membership and uncertain future and what Georgetown and the conference's other basketball-only members believed to be its focus on college football at the expense of the interests of its basketball programs led Georgetown and six other Big East members (DePaul, Marquette, Providence, Seton Hall, St. John's, and Villanova) to leave the conference after the end of the 2012-13 season. In 2013, they joined Butler, Creighton, and Xavier in forming a new Big East Conference for the 2013\u201314 season. The original Big East Conference then added new members of its own and renamed itself the American Athletic Conference for the 2013-14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 924]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\nThe final regular-season meeting of Georgetown and Syracuse as Big East rivals on March 9, 2013, set an attendance record at the Verizon Center of 20,972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nWithout its three top scorers from the previous season \u2013 Jason Clark and Henry Sims had graduated and Hollis Thompson had left school a year early to enter the 2012 NBA draft \u2013 Georgetown entered the season with no seniors on its roster; the roster included eleven freshman and sophomores, one more than the previous year. Returning were junior Markel Starks at point guard, sophomore Jabril Trawick at guard, junior Nate Lubick, sophomores Mikeal Hopkins, Otto Porter, and Greg Whittington, and redshirt sophomore Aaron Bowen at forward, and junior Moses Ayegba at center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nThe freshman recruiting class consisted of guard D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera, forward Stephen Domingo, and centers Brandon Bolden and Bradley Hayes. Junior John Caprio made the team as a walk-on guard for the third straight season, and freshman David Allen also walked on as a guard. Sophomore center Tyler Adams, sidelined early the previous season by heart arrhythmia, spent the season on a medical hardship waiver that allowed him to continue at Georgetown on a scholarship without counting against the team's scholarship total; relegated to the bench, he made the most of the situation, acting as a de facto assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nGeorgetown's season had an unusual beginning. The Hoyas started off with a ranked opponent \u2013 No. 10 Florida, a team they had not faced since losing to the Gators in the 2006 NCAA Tournament \u2013 in the Navy-Marine Corps Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThe game was played on November 9 in front of a crowd of nearly 3,500 people, including Olympic gold medalist swimmer Conor Dwyer, Jacksonville Jaguars players Paul Posluszny and Laurent Robinson, and United States Navy and United States Marine Corps personnel, on a court set up on the flight deck of the U.S. Navy amphibious assault ship USS\u00a0Bataan, moored at Naval Station Mayport in Jacksonville, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nOn game day, there were concerns that weather would be an issue, with temperatures expected to drop into the 50s (Fahrenheit, between 10 and 15 Celsius) during the evening and a possibility that windy conditions and condensation building up on the court would interfere with game play. In the first half, with condensation creating ever more slippery conditions, the underdog Hoyas allowed the Gators to shoot 45.5 percent from the field, but also forced Florida into eight turnovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0004-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nFlorida, meanwhile, used an effective zone defense to limit Georgetown largely to perimeter shooting, and the Hoyas shot only 35.7 percent from the field and made only three three-pointers. Nate Lubick and Otto Porter led Georgetown with seven points each, and Greg Whittington and Mikeal Hopkins grabbed four rebounds apiece. Florida's greatest lead was a 10-5 advantage, and the Gators held a 27-23 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0004-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nWhile United States Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus conducted a reenlistment ceremony for U.S. Navy personnel on the ship's deck, game officials, staff, coaches, the players, and volunteers spent all of halftime and several minutes after the scheduled start time for the second half attempting to dry the court with towels, but condensation in the humid evening air nonetheless made the floor so slippery that both coaches reluctantly agreed to cease play and suspend the game for the sake of the players\u2032 safety without beginning the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0004-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nAlthough the teams discussed the possibility of resuming play on another date and possibly in another location, a mutually acceptable time and place proved elusive, and Georgetown announced on November 28 that it would not agree to schedule the game's completion. The game was canceled, and did not count in the record of either team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nGeorgetown followed this disappointing beginning to its season by participating for the first time in the Legends Classic, in which the Hoyas first played two pre-selected mid-major opponents at the Verizon Center in non-tournament \"regional\" rounds, then went to the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, to play in a four-team tournament for the Classic championship, while its two regional opponents went to play in a parallel tournament of four mid-major teams in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nIn the first regional round, Georgetown faced Duquesne for the first time since December 1995 \u2013 and only the second since December 1962 in a series the Dukes led 10-3 entering the game. The Hoyas defeated the Dukes despite a first half in which Georgetown shot 5-of-22 (22.7%) from the field and committed seven turnovers and a second half in which they committed 10 more turnovers. Three days later, the Hoyas beat Liberty in the second regional round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nIn his collegiate debut, D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera came off the bench to score a team-leading 19 points against Duquesne, followed by 11 against Liberty. Greg Whittington had 15 rebounds in the Duquesne game and finished with a game-high and career-high 18 points against Liberty in a game in which Georgetown shot only 2-for-15 (13.3%) from three-point range but outscored the Flames 34-10 in the paint, including 24-0 in the first half. Mikael Hopkins scored 13 points against both the Dukes and the Flames, while Nate Lubick also scored 13 against Liberty and grabbed eight rebounds. Struck in the head six minutes into the Duquesne game, Otto Porter sat out the rest of that game and the entire Liberty game with concussion symptoms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThe Hoyas moved on to the Barclays Center to face much tougher opposition in the tournament portion of the Classic, meeting No. 11 UCLA in the semifinals. Leading 31-29 at halftime, Georgetown opened the second half with a 12-0 run that gave the Hoyas their biggest lead of the game at 43-29. The Bruins fought their way back to a 59-53 deficit, but the Hoyas then outscored them 7-1 to extend the lead to 66-54 with 6:17 to play. Again the Bruins began to close the gap, scoring to make it 77-70 with 50 seconds remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThey did not score again, however, and Georgetown hung on for a 78-70 upset victory. The Hoyas shot 18-for-30 (60.0%) in the second half and 30-for-55 (54.5%) for the game; they outrebounded the Bruins 40-31 and had eight blocked shots to UCLA's four. Markel Starks scored a career-high 23 points, and Otto Porter returned to action and made his first collegiate start, finishing with a double-double (18 points and 11 rebounds). Greg Whittington had 13 points, and Nate Lubick had 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThe Hoyas advanced to the Classic's championship game, meeting No. 1 Indiana. During a wild, back-and-forth first half, the two teams combined to shoot 14-for-24 (58.3%) from three-point range, and Indiana led by seven points with 4:22 until halftime, but the Hoyas reduced the Hoosiers\u2032 lead to 36-32 at the half. In the second half, Georgetown fell behind 44-39, then went on a 10-1 run keyed by Otto Porter and Jabril Trawick to take a 49-45 lead. The Hoosiers scored six unanswered points to retake the lead, 51-49, but Georgetown tied the game at 51-51 with 9:22 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThe Hoyas then went scoreless for six minutes. With two minutes left in regulation, Indiana grabbed an offensive rebound and took a 61-54 lead on a layup by Hoosier senior guard Jordan Hulls. Greg Whittington finally broke the Georgetown scoring drought with a layup that closed the score to 61-56, but two Indiana free throws stretched the Hoosiers\u2032 lead back to 63-56 with 1:18 left in regulation. But Georgetown mounted a comeback, with Market Starks and Otto Porter sinking consecutive three-pointers to reduce Indiana's lead to 63-62.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nFollowing a Hoosier free throw, Porter hit a layup with 4.6 seconds left that tied the game at 64-64 and forced overtime. In overtime, Indiana scored the first six points and pulled out to a 79-68 lead with 57 seconds left to play. Mikeal Hopkins, Porter, Starks, and Trawick all fouled out in overtime, during which the Hoyas were forced to foul repeatedly to stop the clock and Indiana went 13-for-18 (72.2%) from the foul line and outscored Georgetown 18-8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0007-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nHulls sank a three-pointer with about a minute left in overtime to give Indiana a 10-point lead, which the Hoosiers held onto to win 82-72. Indiana went 26-for-36 (72.2%) in free throws to Georgetown's 9-for-10 (90%) and went 11 of 17 (64.7%) on three-pointers to Georgetown's 11 of 26 (42.3%). Markel Starks finished with a game-high 20 points, his second straight game with 20 or more points, and Otto Porter had 15, Greg Whittington 12, and Mikeal Hopkins 11. Indiana head coach Tom Crean called the game an \"epic battle,\" saying of both teams that \"everyone that played in that [game] absolutely left it out there.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThe Hoyas rounded out their non-conference schedule with a seven-game winning streak that began with a home win over Mount St. Mary's in which Otto Porter finished with a double-double (17 points and 13 rebounds), Greg Whittington also scored 17 points, Markel Starks contributed 15 points, and Mikeal Hopkins added 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nMaking the Associated Press Top 25 for the first time at No. 20, they next beat Tennessee 37-36 in an SEC\u2013Big East Challenge game that saw them set a school record for the fewest points scored in any game since the institution of the shot clock in the 1985\u201386 season; they also scored the fewest points by a Georgetown team since a 37-36 win over Southern Methodist during a pre-shot-clock \"slowdown\" game in the 1984 NCAA Tournament. It was the Volunteers\u2032 second-worst scoring performance of the shot-clock era and the lowest since a 42-35 loss to Auburn in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nFrom the field, Georgetown shot 36 percent and Tennessee 33 percent, the teams combined to shoot 7-for-20 (35%) from the free-throw line, no one scored during the last 4:10 of play, and no player on either team scored in double digits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0008-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nRising to No. 15 in the AP Poll, where they would remain for the next month, the Hoyas then defeated Texas \u2013 only the second meeting between the teams and the first since January 1972 \u2013 at Madison Square Garden in the Jimmy V Classic, making only four of their 18 three-point attempts (22.2%) but allowing Texas only 41 points on 29.2 percent shooting from the field, the Longhorns\u2032 lowest point total in a game since the arrival of Rick Barnes as their head coach in 1998-99.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0008-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThe Hoyas then returned to the Verizon Center to sweep a four-game homestand that began with another low-scoring win in which Georgetown managed only 17 points on 17 percent shooting from the field in the first half and 46 points on only 29 percent shooting for the game against Towson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0008-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nTwo days later, they forced Longwood into 30 turnovers in the first meeting of the teams, the most by a Georgetown opponent since Elon turned the ball over 32 times on December 13, 2003; Longwood dropped to 0-7 against Big East teams and 0-8 against ranked teams since becoming an NCAA Division I team in 2004-05. In its win over American on December 22, Georgetown extended its winning streak against the Eagles to nine, the last Hoya loss to American having come 30 years earlier in an upset on December 15, 1982.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0008-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nOtto Porter had 14 points against Texas, 10 against Towson, took another blow to the head in the Longwood game but returned to action and finished with a game-high 22 points, scored 12 points and grabbed nine rebounds against Western Carolina, and had a double-double (16 points and 11 rebounds) against American. Markel Starks finished with 11 points against Texas, 17 against Longwood, and 10 against Western Carolina, while Nate Lubick scored 13 points against Texas and 10 against Towson. Mikeal Hopkins also contributed 10 points against Towson. Greg Whittington had a team-high 11 points against Towson and a career-high 25 against Western Carolina, and Jabril Trawick finished with 14 points against Western Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nAfter the completion of the Western Carolina game on December 15, Georgetown athletic director Lee Reed broke the news to the press that seven Big East schools that did not have NCAA Division I football programs \u2013 DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Providence, St. John's, Seton Hall, and Villanova, which the press dubbed the \"Catholic Seven,\" although John Thompson III told the press that religious affinity had no bearing on the decision \u2013 would leave the storied Big East Conference, which they had come to view as too focused on football to accommodate the interests of the basketball-only schools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThey planned to form a new \"basketball-centric\" conference designed in the same way the Big East \u2013 of which Georgetown was an original member \u2013 had been when it was founded in 1979. At the time, it was not clear how quickly the conference exit would take place or what the new conference would be named.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Non-conference schedule\nThe Hoyas finished the non-conference portion of their schedule with a 10-1 record \u2013 with the only loss coming against the No. 1 team in the country \u2013 and an unusually long two-week break in action between their game against American and the beginning of Big East play. Despite their success, they faced questions about their sometimes sluggish scoring, as well about their perimeter defense, as they prepared for a challenging conference schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nPlaying its first game since December 22, Georgetown opened its Big East season on January 5, 2013, with an upset loss at Marquette that snapped the Hoyas\u2032 winning streak at seven games. They dropped to No. 19 in the AP Poll, then suffered another upset loss at the hands of Pittsburgh three days later. The Hoyas\u2032 early-season shooting woes continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nMarquette held Georgetown \u2013 which missed 10 of its first 12 shots \u2013 to 48 points, 16 points below the Hoyas' season average, and won by one point; Markel Starks led the Hoyas with 18 points against the Golden Eagles, while Otto Porter and Greg Whittington each finished with 13 points and Whittington pulled down eight rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe 73-45 loss to Pittsburgh was Georgetown's largest margin of defeat since a 104-71 loss to Maryland at the Capital Centre \u2013 not yet the Hoyas\u2032 home court at the time \u2013 on December 10, 1974, and the largest home loss since a 107-67 defeat by St. John's at McDonough Gymnasium on December 7, 1971. Georgetown shot 35 percent in field-goal attempts and no Hoyas scored in double figures, while the Panthers shot 55 percent from the field and completed a three-game streak in which they beat the Hoyas at the Verizon Center by 16, 15, and 28 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0011-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nIt was the most lopsided Big East road win in Pittsburgh's history, and the Hoyas emerged from the game shooting only 38.7 percent from the field for the season while allowing opponents to average 55.7 points per game. Georgetown opened 0-2 in the conference play for the first time since the 2001-02 season, but the two defeats also were their only back-to-back losses of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Pittsburgh game turned out to be Greg Whittington's last as a Hoya. He had started all 13 games of the season and was second on the team in both points per game (12.0) and rebounds per game (7.0), but was declared academically ineligible and suspended before the next game. He saw no action for the remainder of the season, and after sitting out the beginning of the following season as well with an injury, was dismissed from the team in January 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas won their next two games to even their conference record at 2-2, first returning to Madison Square Garden to cruise to a win over St. John's in a game in which Otto Porter had a double-double (19 points and a season-high 14 rebounds), Markel Starks scored 17 points, Nate Lubick finished with 11, and D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera grabbed 10 rebounds in addition to scoring eight points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThey dropped out of the AP Top 25 before they hosted Providence, but they beat the Friars for the eighth straight time behind 20 points and eight rebounds by Otto Porter before he fouled out, 16 points by Markel Starks, and a 10-point performance by Nate Lubick. However, Georgetown lost at South Florida three days later, the Bulls coming from 11 points behind at the half to win their first conference game of the season. Otto Porter led the Hoyas again with 21 points against South Florida, while D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera scored 16 off the bench and Nate Lubick finished with 10 rebounds and eight points. The Hoyas fell to 12-4 on the year, 2-3 in the Big East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas next visited No. 24 Notre Dame, their second ranked opponent of the season and the first ranked team they met in the Big East season, and began to turn their season around. Georgetown outscored Notre Dame 10-4 in the first 4:44 of play; the Fighting Irish hit only one of their first five field-goal attempts and only three of their first ten, and Notre Dame scored only eight points in the first ten minutes of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nLate in the first half, the Hoyas shot only 3-for-10 over a six-minute span, allowing Notre Dame to close to 25-21, but over the last 4:01 of the half Georgetown went on a 9-0 run to go to the locker room with a 34-21 lead. Early in the second half, Notre Dame had a 10-0 run of its own to close to 40-37, but the Fighting Irish went scoreless over a seven-minute stretch while Georgetown scored 18 unanswered points to take a decisive lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0014-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas shot 53 percent from the field, outrebounded Notre Dame 35-24, and held the Fighting Irish to season lows in field-goal percentage (35 percent), assists (11), and points on the way to a 63-47 upset win. It was only Notre Dame's third loss in its last 24 Big East home games. Otto Porter led the Hoyas with 19 points and nine rebounds, D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera came into the game to score 14 points, and Moses Ayegba came off the bench to grab 10 rebounds. Georgetown evened its conference record at 3-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown returned to the Verizon Center to begin a three-game homestand by facing its second ranked opponent in a row, No. 5 Louisville. Georgetown led 33-29 at halftime. With 3\u00bd minutes to play in the game, Aaron Bowen \u2013 a redshirt sophomore who previously had scored only 47 points over his collegiate career \u2013 scored his only points of the game by appearing seemingly out of nowhere to make an acrobatic move to tip in D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera's missed layup and score the game's decisive basket, giving the Hoyas a 52-50 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nLouisville \u2013 which made all 12 of its first-half free throws but shot only 4-for-10 from the free-throw line in the second half \u2013 made only one of two free throws with 2:22 to play to close to 52-51. The Cardinals had several chances to take the lead after that, but failed to take advantage of them, and Louisville senior guard Peyton Siva \u2013 who got into foul trouble and finished scoreless in a game for the first time since his freshman year \u2013 missed a potential game-winning jumper with 1.4 seconds to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nOtto Porter pulled down the rebound, his 12th of the game, was fouled, and made one of two free throws to finish with 17 points, giving him a double-double. The underdog Hoyas won 53-51, dealing Louisville its third straight loss, the Cardinals\u2032 longest losing streak since January 2010. Like Porter, Markel Starks scored 17 points. The second half had lasted a half-minute longer than it was supposed to because play continued for 30 seconds while the clock was stopped at 6:07, but the officiating mistake appeared to have no impact on the final result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe wins at Notre Dame and against Louisville were the first in what became an 11-game Georgetown winning streak. Georgetown swept the homestand, following the victory over Louisville by defeating Seton Hall and winning a rematch with St. John's. Returning to the AP Top 25 at No. 20 in the AP Poll, they then went on the road to beat Rutgers. During the Seton Hall game, play did not stop even though the lights dimmed for several minutes in the second half due to a storm in the Washington, D.C., area, and the Hoyas finished with a season-high 15 steals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nOtto Porter scored 20 points and Markel Starks 16, D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera came off the bench to add 11, and walk-on John Caprio \u2013 who entered the game having played only 13 minutes all season and only 42 minutes in his collegiate career, scoring eight points and committing 10 turnovers \u2013 had three points, two rebounds, an assist, and a steal in 5\u00bd minutes of play in the first half and finished the game with four points, six rebounds, two assists, and a steal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0016-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAgainst St. John's three days later, Nate Lubick, who entered the game shooting 23-of-33 (69.7%) from the field over the previous five games, sank eight of 10 shots to lead the Hoyas with 16 points and 10 rebounds for a double-double, while Markel Starks and Jabril Trawick each scored 12 and D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera added 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0016-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAt Rutgers, the Hoyas shot 57.4 percent from the field for the game and 60.9 percent in the second half; Otto Porter had a double-double with 19 points \u2013 15 of them in the second half \u2013 and 14 rebounds, while Starks had a team-high 20 points, Mikeal Hopkins came out of an offensive funk to score 14, and Smith-Rivera added 13 off the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nRising to No. 15 in the AP Poll, Georgetown returned home to meet Marquette; unranked when they had upset the Hoyas to start out the Big East season, the Golden Eagles now were ranked No. 18. Both teams mounted aggressive defenses and officials called a tight game, leading to a contest characterized mostly by turnovers, steals, and offensive fouls. Georgetown led 33-23 at halftime, but started the second half by going nearly seven minutes without a field goal while the Golden Eagles outscored them 8-2 and closed to 35-31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nMarquette had closed its 10-point halftime deficit to three with 12:13 remaining in the game when, with Georgetown leading 37-34, officials called a technical foul on Golden Eagles head coach Buzz Williams for arguing an out-of-bounds call. The call changed the game's momentum, prompting an 8-1 run by the Hoyas. Marquette never got closer than eight points the rest of the way, and Georgetown won 63-55, moving into a second-place tie with Marquette in the Big East standings. Otto Porter finished with 21 points, Markl Starks with 16, and Nate Lubick with 10. The Hoyas scored 24 points off 19 turnovers during the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas next squandered a 12-point lead but came from behind to win at Cincinnati, breaking a four-game losing streak against the Bearcats and winning their first game at Cincinnati since the 2006-07 season. Markel Starks had a game-high 17 points and Otto Porter scored 16 against the Bearcats. The Hoyas emerged from the Cincinnati game with the longest active winning streak in the Big East (seven games) and ranked seventh in the United States in defense at 55.7 points allowed per game, although they averaged only 64.3 point per game themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAfter climbing to No. 11 in the AP Poll, they won at home against DePaul in a rout in which D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera shot 10-for-12 (83.3%) from the field, including 5-for-6 from three-point range, and went 8-for-10 in free-throws to score 33 points, the most by a Georgetown freshman in a single game since Victor Page's 34-point performance during a game in the 1996 Big East Tournament. Nate Lubick scored 15 points and grabbed eight rebounds against the Blue Demons, while Jabril Trawick had a 13-point game and Otto Porter added 11 before leaving the game early in the second half with a sore knee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nRiding an eight-game winning streak, No. 11 Georgetown next faced No. 8 Syracuse at the Carrier Dome. Syracuse had announced plans to leave the Big East in July 2013 and join the Atlantic Coast Conference, and a boisterous crowd of 35,012 \u2013 the largest ever to attend a college basketball game on any campus \u2013 attended to see the Hoyas\u2032 last visit to Syracuse as a Big East rival. It was the 72nd crowd of over 30,000 at the Carrier Dome, and the 17th game against Georgetown there to draw more than 30,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown got off to a very poor start, with Syracuse outscoring the Hoyas in a 10-2 run early in the game and Georgetown scoring only one basket, a two-point jumper by Otto Porter, in the game's first nine minutes. The Hoyas missed their first eight three-point attempts. But then Porter came alive, scoring 14 points during a 17-3 Georgetown run that gave the Hoyas a 21-15 lead and quieted the crowd. Then Syracuse staged a rally in the last minute of the half, scoring eight unanswered points to take a 23-21 lead at the intermission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0019-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nAfter a halftime that featured a ceremony in which the Orange retired the jersey of former Syracuse great Carmelo Anthony, Porter led a 10-2 Georgetown run early in the second half that put the Hoyas back in front, and they led 39-31 with 11:13 left to play. But Syracuse came back, and the Orange stole an inbound pass and scored to pull ahead 41-37 with 6:38 remaining in the game. Porter followed with a three-pointer and, fouled on the shot, sank the free throw to tie the game at 41-41 with a four-point play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0019-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown outscored Syracuse 16-5 the rest of the way and pulled away for a 57-46 upset win. Only three days after D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera's 33-point game, Otto Porter went 12 of 19 from the field, including five three-pointers, to score a career-high 33 points \u2013 the only Hoya to score in double figures \u2013 and also had eight rebounds and a game-high five steals. Moses Ayegba pulled down 10 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0019-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nShooting 17-of-50 (34.0 percent) from the field \u2013 5-of-20 (20.0%) on 3-pointers \u2013 Syracuse scored the fewest points it had in a game at the Carrier Dome since a 45-point performance against Pittsburgh in 2004, and Georgetown finished the game having held its opponents to under 60 points 17 times during the season, allowing an average of only 56.1 points per game, and having limited 11 of its last 12 opponents to shooting below 40 percent from the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0019-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe loss dropped Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim\u2032s all-time record against the Hoyas to 37-35 (.513), even though he was the second-winningest coach in NCAA Division I history, with a career record of 912-309 (.748). Georgetown's win also snapped a 38-game Syracuse winning streak at the Carrier Dome, a school record on that court; the last time the Orange had lost at the Carrier Dome was also to Georgetown, on February 9, 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0019-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe end of Syracuse's streak prompted the press to reminisce about the last game at Syracuse's Manley Field House in February 1980, in which Georgetown had ended Syracuse's 57-game home winning streak at Manley, a Syracuse school record in that building, during the Big East's first season \u2013 a game which had sparked the Georgetown-Syracuse rivalry that largely had defined the Big East's identity over its 34 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas\u2032 nine-game winning streak and upset of Syracuse prompted their elevation to No. 7 in the AP Poll by the time they visited Connecticut four days later for a double-overtime thriller in a sold-out Gampel Pavilion in which the Hoyas lost a 12-point lead late in regulation and then had to come from behind in the second overtime for a one-point win. Another win followed at the Verizon Center in a rematch with Rutgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nOtto Porter led the team in both games with 22 points against Connecticut and 28 points and eight rebounds against Rutgers; in the Rutgers game, he was the only Hoya to score in double figures and he sank 15 out of 18 free throws (83.3%), the most free throws made by a Georgetown player in a single game since Mike Sweetney\u2032s 16 on April 1, 2003. Against Connecticut, Markel Starks had 19 and D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera 14 points, and Nate Lubick added nine points and seven rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0020-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nThe Hoyas rose to No. 5 in the AP Poll, but then their 11-game winning streak came to an end in a loss at Villanova in which the Hoyas committed 23 turnovers. It was the Wildcats\u2032 third win of the season over a Top Five team. Otto Porter led the team for the fourth straight game with 17 points, while D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera came off the bench to score 14 and Markel Starks finished with 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nStill ranked No. 5, Georgetown closed out its regular season by hosting No. 17 Syracuse. It was the 89th game between the teams but the final regular-season meeting between them as Big East rivals, and the crowd of 20,972 \u2013 which included former Georgetown players Patrick Ewing and Alonzo Mourning \u2013 set an attendance record at the Verizon Center and was the largest crowd ever to view a Georgetown home game. Both teams played tough defense, and in the first 17\u00bd minutes of play they combined for 14 turnovers and only 13 field goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nMarkel Starks scored the Hoyas\u2032 first eight points and D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera their next eight, while Otto Porter did not even attempt a shot until 7:46 was left in the first half and finished the half 0-for-2 from the field and with only two points, although he did score the final points of the half on two free throws that gave Georgetown a 25-18 advantage at halftime, its biggest lead of the game at the time. Porter scored eight more points in the second half, during which the Hoyas pulled away to a 50-31 lead with 8\u00bd minutes left to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0021-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown outscored the Orange 11-8 the rest of the way, and the Hoyas won 61-39. The crowd celebrated by storming the court. Starks had a game-high 19 points, Smith-Rivera had 15 off the bench, Jabril Trawick scored 14, and Porter finished with 10. The win completed Georgetown's first two-game regular-season sweep of the Orange since the 2001-02 season and narrowed the Orange's lead in the series all-time to 49-41, and Georgetown enjoyed its biggest margin of victory over Syracuse since a 27-point win on March 3, 1985. Shooting 32 percent from the field and only 1-for-11 (9.1%) on three-point attempts, Syracuse scored its fewest points in 558 Big East games \u2013 and, in fact, its fewest points in any game since a 36-35 victory over Kent State on December 1, 1962.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Conference schedule\nGeorgetown finished the regular season with an overall record of 24-5, having won 12 of its last 13 games. In its final season in the original Big East Conference, it finished with a 14-4 conference record, tied for first with Louisville and Marquette. It was the first time the Hoyas had finished in first-place in the conference's regular season standings since the 2007-08 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nBased on tiebreaking criteria, Georgetown was seeded first in the 2013 Big East Tournament, its first No. 1 seed in the tournament since 2008. The high seed gave the Hoyas a double bye, and they did not begin play until the quarterfinals, in which they met ninth-seeded Cincinnati, which had upset eighth-seeded Providence the day before to advance to meet Georgetown. The Hoyas pulled ahead to a 24-8 lead in the first half before the Bearcats began a comeback, outscoring Georgetown 16-5 during the remainder of the half, closing to a 29-24 deficit at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nCincinnati then began the second half with a 9-2 scoring run that gave them a 33-31 lead, their first lead since the first few minutes of the game. Nate Lubick hit a baseline hook to tie the score at 31-31, and then D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera led a scoring surge that combined with the characteristically strong Hoya defense for a 22-6 Georgetown run, giving the Hoyas a 53-39 lead with 3:30 to play. Georgetown continued to pull away to win 62-43. The Bearcats shot only 14-for-38 (36.8%) from the field and committed 15 turnovers. Otto Porter shot only 3-for-9 from the field but made all 11 of his free throws \u2013 most of them in the final minutes \u2013 to finish with a game-high 18 points, Markel Starks had 14, and Smith-Rivera finished with 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nHoping for a No.1 seed in the upcoming 2013 NCAA Tournament, Georgetown moved on to the semifinals to face No. 19 Syracuse, the tournament's fifth seed, which had beaten Seton Hall and Pittsburgh to advance. It was the final game between Georgetown and Syracuse as conference rivals, and Madison Square Garden was sold out, with a mostly pro-Syracuse crowd in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nGeorgetown pulled out to an initial 11-6 lead with 12:24 left in the first half, but a 13-0 Syracuse run \u2013 during which Georgetown did not score for just over eight minutes \u2013 gave the Orange a 27-17 advantage with 2:24 remaining in the half, and Syracuse went to the locker room with a 29-20 lead at the intermission. In the second half, the Orange extended their lead to 12 points at 37-25 with 16:16 to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0024-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nA Mikeal Hopkins dunk and five straight points by Markel Starks cut Georgetown's deficit to 37-32 with 12:41 remaining, but then Syracuse pulled out to a 43-34 advantage with 11:02 to play. Another Hoya surge followed that tied the game at 49-49 with 1:47 left in regulation. Syracuse junior center Baye Moussa Keita sank two free throws with 1:23 to play in regulation and Otto Porter hit both ends of a one-and-one to make the score 51-51 with 7.3 seconds left. After Orange sophomore guard Michael Carter-Williams missed a potentially game-winning shot at the buzzer, the game went into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0024-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nThe Orange scored the first four points in overtime to take a lead they never lost. Markel Starks fouled out with 3:36 left in overtime and, although the Hoyas got as close as 57-55 with 40 seconds left, Jabril Trawick's last-second heave from halfcourt hit the backboard but did not go in, and Syracuse celebrated a 58-55 overtime upset win. The Hoyas shot 4-for-18 (22.2%) from three-point range and 11-for-20 (55.0%) from the free-throw line, and Syracuse's bench outscored that of the Hoyas 23-5. Georgetown dropped to 15-2 in Big East Tournament games in which it was the top seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0024-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Big East Tournament\nIt was the 14th and last meeting in the Big East Tournament between the schools; each won seven games. It also was Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim\u2032s 50th win in the tournament. Syracuse advanced to the tournament championship for the 15th and final time the following day and lost to Louisville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, NCAA Tournament\nFalling to No. 8 in the AP Poll, but with a record of 25-6 and having won 13 of its last 15 games, Georgetown received a bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, the Hoyas\u2032 fourth consecutive appearance in the tournament, seventh in eight seasons, and 29th overall. Seeded second in the tournament's South Region, they met their first opponent, 15th seed Florida Gulf Coast, in the Round of 64, termed the \"Second Round\" this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0025-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, NCAA Tournament\nFlorida Gulf Coast University had only started classes in 1997 and was so new that it had become eligible for postseason NCAA Division I play only in 2011; the Eagles had finished in second place in the Atlantic Sun Conference and won the conference tournament, but it was their first appearance in the NCAA Tournament. The Hoyas entered the game allowing opponents to shoot only 37.6 percent from the field \u2013 fourth-best in the United States \u2013 and limiting opponents to 55.7 points per game, and were the heavy favorites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0025-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, NCAA Tournament\nBehind 11-10 early, Georgetown used an 8-0 run to take an 18-11 lead halfway through the first half. Then their offense went cold, and the Eagles took advantage of it to finish the first half with a 13-4 run and went to the locker room with a 24-22 lead at halftime. The Eagles went on a 21-2 run in the second half to take a 52-33 lead with 12:23 left to play, and they had a 57-40 advantage with 9:22 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0025-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, NCAA Tournament\nA furious Georgetown rally ensued in which the Hoyas closed to 72-68 with 52 seconds remaining, but they did not score again, and the Eagles went 6-for-10 from the free-throw line the rest of the way and shocked Georgetown with a 78-68 victory, to the delight of a crowd that was rooting for the Eagles to pull off the major upset. Florida Gulf Coast hit 21 of its 49 shots from the field (42.9%), while Georgetown shot 24-for-64 (37.5%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0025-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, NCAA Tournament\nMarkel Starks scored 23 points, Otto Porter finished with a double-double (13 points and 11 rebounds), and Jabril Trawick added 11 points. For the fifth straight time, the Hoyas exited the NCAA Tournament in their first weekend due to an upset by a lower-seeded opponent; it was the third time in those five tournaments that they were knocked in their first game, and their fourth straight defeat at the hands of a double-digit seed. It was only the seventh time in NCAA Tournament history that a No. 15 seed had beaten a No. 2 seed. Florida Gulf Coast advanced to defeat San Diego State in the third round, but lost to Florida in the South Region semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nOtto Porter played in 31 of the Hoyas\u2032 32 games, started 30, and led the team with 16.2 points per game on 48.0 percent shooting from the field and 77.7 percent from the free-throw line, and he also led the team in rebounds with 7.5 per game. He also shot 42.2 percent from three-point range, and was a first-team All-American and the Big East Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nMarkel Starks played in all 32 games and started all but one, finishing second on the team with an average of 12.8 points per game on 45.7 percent shooting from the field overall, and he hit 41.7 percent of this three-pointers and 73.1 percent of his free-throws. Greg Whittington played in all 13 games before his mid-season suspension, starting 12 of them, and averaged 12.1 points per game with a 45.1 percent field-goal percentage. D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera came off the bench in all 32 games and shot 40.4 percent from the field to average 8.9 points per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0026-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nNate Lubick, Mikeal Hopkins, and Jabril Trawick also played in all 32 games, with Hopkins and Lubick each starting 31 of them and Trawick starting 20. Lubick added 7.1 points per game on 59.1 percent field-goal shooting, while Hopkins averaged 5.9 and Trawick 5.8 points per game. The Big East's coaches voted John Thompson III Big East Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nWith no seniors on their roster, the Hoyas faced no attrition through graduation during the offseason. However, after an outstanding sophomore season, Otto Porter announced on April 15, 2013, that he would skip his final two years of college eligibility and enter the 2013 National Basketball Association Draft. He left Georgetown having played 64 games in his two years as a Hoya, starting 38 of them, and averaging 12.8 points and 7.1 rebounds per game for his collegiate career. In the draft, the Washington Wizards selected him as the third overall pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nMeanwhile, after a freshman year in which he appeared in only four games, played for only a total of five minutes, took no shots and scored no points, and had no assists or rebounds, Brandon Bolden decided to transfer to Kansas State, where he would have to sit out the following season due to transfer rules but then would have three years of college eligibility remaining. Kansas State announced his decision on May 17, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nThe 2012-13 Georgetown season bore many similarities to the 2011-12 season: In both years, Georgetown fielded young teams dominated by freshman and sophomores that dropped an early in-season tournament game against a highly ranked opponent but otherwise finished the non-conference schedule with a single loss, then stumbled early against conference opposition before enjoying a long conference winning streak and finishing much higher than expected in the conference standings. Both teams consistently mounted very strong defenses and climbed from an unranked start to a high ranking in the AP Poll as the season progressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0028-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nBoth teams also won in their first round of Big East Tournament play and lost their second game. However, both teams also were knocked out of the NCAA Tournament in its first weekend by double-digit seeds, as Georgetown had in each of its five NCAA Tournament appearances since the Final Four year in 2007. The 2012-13 team suffered perhaps the biggest and most embarrassing of these defeats by losing to a 15th-seeded opponent, a tournament rarity. The 2012-13 Hoyas finished with a record of 25-7, and their final ranking was No. 8 in the AP Poll and No. 17 in the Coaches Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nLate in the season, plans were finalized for the conference realignment announced in December 2012. What the press dubbed the \"Catholic Seven\" \u2013 DePaul, Georgetown, Marquette, Providence, Seton Hall, St. John's, and Villanova \u2013 announced their departure from the original Big East Conference effective June 30, 2013, and their plans to join Butler, Creighton, and Xavier to form a new conference, also to be named the Big East Conference; the new conference not only retained the right to the \"Big East\" name, but also the right to hold its annual postseason tournament at Madison Square Garden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0029-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap, Wrap-up\nWest Virginia had left the conference in the summer of 2012 to join the Big 12, and over the summer of 2013 Pittsburgh and Syracuse also left the original Big East to join the Atlantic Coast Conference, while Rutgers stayed with the original conference for one more season before departing for the Big Ten in 2014. Cincinnati, Connecticut, and Louisville remained in the original Big East, which took in several new members and renamed itself the American Athletic Conference for 2013-14 and beyond; marketed as \"the American,\" it was the legal successor to the original Big East. Both the new Big East and the American claimed the history and heritage of the original Big East as part of their own, but in the new Big East the Hoyas faced a future in an unproven conference and without their traditional rival Syracuse on their schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 908]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230211-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Rankings\n*AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings. Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll at the same time the AP did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230212-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgia Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgia Bulldogs basketball team represents the University of Georgia during the 2012\u20132013 college basketball season. The team's head coach is Mark Fox, who is in his fourth season at UGA. They play their home games at Stegeman Coliseum as members of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230212-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgia Bulldogs basketball team, Previous season\nAfter reaching the NCAA Tournament, the Bulldogs struggled in 2011\u201312 by finishing the season 15\u201317 overall, 5\u201311 in conference which was good for eleventh in the SEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230213-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball team represented Georgia Southern University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by fourth year head coach Charlton Young, played their home games at Hanner Fieldhouse and were members of the South Division of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 14\u201319, 7\u201311 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for third place in the South Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament to Davidson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230214-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgia State Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgia State Panthers men's basketball team represented Georgia State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Ron Hunter in his second season at GSU. They played their home games at the GSU Sports Arena and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). This was their final year in the CAA before moving to the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 10\u20138 in CAA play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230215-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgia State Panthers women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgia State Panthers women's basketball team represented Georgia State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Panthers, coached by Sharon Baldwin-Tener, were a member of the Colonial Athletic Association, and played their home games on campus at the GSU Sports Arena. The 2012\u201313 season represented the last season that the Panthers played in the CAA as they joined the Sun Belt Conference in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230216-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Yellow Jackets, led by second-year head coach Brian Gregory, were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Yellow Jackets played their home games at the newly remodeled and renamed McCamish Pavilion. They finished the season 16\u201315, 6\u201312 in ACC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Tournament to Boston College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230217-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgian Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgian Cup (also known as the David Kipiani Cup) is the sixty-ninth season overall and the twenty-third since independence of the Georgian annual football tournament. The competition began on 29 August 2012 and will end with the final in May 2013. The defending champions are Dila Gori, after winning their first ever Georgian Cup last season. The winner of the competition will qualify for the second qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230217-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgian Cup\nAs Dila Gori, Zestafoni, Metalurgi Rustavi and Torpedo Kutaisi are participating in Europe, they will join the competition in the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230217-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgian Cup, Round of 32\nThe first legs were held on 29 and 30 August, with the return matches from the 17th to 19 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230217-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgian Cup, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 took place in the new year, with the 8 best-placed teams in the 2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga in one pot and the remaining 8 teams in the other. The first legs were held on 26 February, with the return matches from 2 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230217-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgian Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs will be held on 13 March, with the return matches from 10 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230217-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgian Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were held on 23 April, with the return matches on 8 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230218-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Georgian Ice Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Georgian Ice Hockey League season was the third season of the Georgian Ice Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Georgia. Four teams participated in the league, and the Ice Knights Tbilisi won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230219-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Getafe CF season\nThe 2012\u201313 Getafe CF season was the club's 30th season in its history and its ninth in La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230220-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ghanaian Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Ghanaian Premier League (known as the Glo Premier League for sponsorship reasons) season is the 54th season of top-tier football in Ghana. The competition began on 6 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230221-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gibraltar Premier Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Gibraltar Premier Division was the 114th season of the national football league in Gibraltar since its establishment - the highest level of football in Gibraltar. It was contested by six clubs - all of which are amateur. The season began on 15 September 2012 and ended on 29 May 2013. Lincoln were the defending champions, and successfully defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230221-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gibraltar Premier Division\nNo team was relegated because of an expansion to eight teams next season. Gibraltar's new UEFA membership required the top division of a country to have at least seven participating clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230221-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gibraltar Premier Division, Participating teams\nAfter the 2011\u201312 season the SJ Athletic Corinthians were relegated and Lynx were promoted from Division 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230221-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gibraltar Premier Division, Results\nEach team played every other team three times, either twice at home and once away, or once at home and twice away, for a total of 15 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230222-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gil Vicente F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Gil Vicente F.C. season was the club's 80th competitive season, 16th in the Primeira Liga, and 88th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230222-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gil Vicente F.C. season\nAs well as competing in the Primeira Liga, Gil Vicente took part in the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal and the Ta\u00e7a da Liga entering at the third and second rounds respectively. They were eliminated in the quarter-finals of the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal following a 2\u20131 away defeat by Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira. The Gilistas were eliminated in the second round of the Ta\u00e7a da Liga following a 3\u20132 aggregate loss by Naval 1\u00ba de Maio. Gil Vicente finished in 13th place in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230222-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gil Vicente F.C. season, First team squad\nStats as of the end of the 2012\u201313 season. Games played and goals scored only refers to appearances and goals in domestic league campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230222-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gil Vicente F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230222-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gil Vicente F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total appearances are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230223-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gillingham F.C. season\nThis page shows the progress of Gillingham in the 2012\u201313 season. This season they will play their league games in Football League Two, the fourth tier of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230223-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gillingham F.C. season\nThis was the season Gillingham had won their first League Championship in nearly 50 years, finishing 1st in League Two after a 2\u20132 draw with AFC Wimbledon in the penultimate match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230224-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gimn\u00e0stic de Tarragona season\nIs the 2012\u201313 Gimn\u00e0stic de Tarragona season. The club plays in two tournaments: the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B and the Copa del Rey. The season marked the club's return to the third tier Segunda B after an eight-year run in the top two tiers of the Spanish football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230225-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Girona FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Girona FC season is the 78th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season\nThe 2012-13 Glasgow Warriors season saw the team participate in competitions including the RaboDirect Pro12 and the European Rugby Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nFraser Brown Kevin Bryce Finlay Gillies Dougie Hall Pat MacArthur Gerwyn Price", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nGerman Araoz Michael Cusack Ofa Fainga\u02bbanuku Ryan Grant Ed Kalman Moray Low Garry Mountford Luke Pettie Gordon Reid Jon Welsh", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nNick Campbell Alastair Kellock Tom Ryder Andy Redmayne Tim Swinson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nJohn Barclay Rob Harley James Eddie Chris Fusaro Viliami Ma\u02bbafu Angus Macdonald Josh Strauss Ryan Wilson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nMark Bennett Alex Dunbar Peter Horne Byron McGuigan Graeme Morrison Peter Murchie Troy Nathan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nStuart Hogg Rory Lamont Sean Lamont Sean Maitland Taylor Paris Tommy Seymour D. T. H. van der Merwe", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Player statistics\nDuring the 2012\u201313 season, Glasgow used 51 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, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Staff movements, Coaches, Personnel Out\nSean Lineen to Scottish Rugby Union (Head of Player Acquisition)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 1\nCastres: Glasgow Warriors: 15 Peter Murchie; 14 Tommy Seymour, 13 Byron McGuigan, 12 Troy Nathan, 11 Fraser Thomson; 10 Scott Wight, 9 Murray McConnell; 1 Gordon Reid, 2 Finlay Gillies, 3 Ed Kalman, 4 Nick Campbell, 5 Tim Swinson, 6 Angus Macdonald, 7 Chris Fusaro (CAPTAIN), 8 Adam AsheSubstitutes: 16 Pat MacArthur, 17 Moray Low, 18 George Hunter, 19 Andrew Redmayne, 20 Ryan Wilson, 21 Henry Pyrgos, 22 Ruaridh Jackson, 23 Alex Dunbar, 24 George Graham, 25 Taylor Paris, 26 Mike Cusack", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 2\nSale Sharks: 15 Rob Miller; 14 Charlie Amesbury, 13 Will Addison, 12 Johnny Leota, 11 Tom Brady; 10 Nick MacLeod, 9 Cillian Willis; 1 Eifion Lewis-Roberts, 2 Joe Ward, 3 Tony Buckley, 4 Fraser McKenzie, 5 James Gaskell, 6 Mark Easter, 7 David Seymour (CAPTAIN), 8 Richie VernonReplacements: 16 Marc Jones, 17 Vadim Cobilas, Aston Croall, 18 Ross Harrison, 19 Richie Gray, Tom Holmes, 20 James Doyle, 21 Dwayne Peel, 22 Danny Cipriani, 23 Jordan Davies, Corne Uys, Charlie IngallGlasgow Warriors: 15 Peter Murchie; 14 Tommy Seymour, 13 Byron McGuigan, 12 Alex Dunbar, 11 Taylor Paris; 10 Ruaridh Jackson, 9 Henry Pyrgos; 1 Gordon Reid, 2 Pat MacArthur, 3 Mike Cusack, 4 Tim Swinson, 5 Nick Campbell, 6 Angus Macdonald, 7 Chris Fusaro (CAPTAIN), 8 Ryan WilsonReplacements (all used): 16 Finlay Gillies, 17 Moray Low, 18 Ed Kalman, 19 James Eddie, 20 Adam Ashe, 21 Troy Nathan, 22 Scott Wight, 23 Peter Horne, 24 Sean Kennedy, 25 Fraser Thomson, 26 George Hunter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 1041]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 3\nGlasgow Warriors: Gordon Reid, Finlay Gillies, Moray Low, Tom Ryder, Nick Campbell, Adam Ashe, John Barclay, Ryan Wilson, Henry Pyrgos, Duncan Weir, DTH van der Merwe, Peter Horne, Byron McGuigan, Tommy Seymour, Fraser ThomsonReplacements: (used:) Michael Cusack, George Hunter, James Eddie, Angus Macdonald, Chris Fusaro, Graeme Morrison, Peter Murchie, Scott Wight, Sean Kennedy, (not used:)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 3\nRyan GrantExeter Chiefs: P Dollman; J Tatupu, I Whitten (L Arscott 57), J Shoemark, M Jess; I Mieres (G Steenson 62), K Barrett (W Chudley h/t); B Sturgess (C Rimmer 65), C Whitehead (S Alcott 74), H Tui; T Hayes (capt, D Welch 71), A Muldowney (J Hanks 62); T Johnson (J Phillips 62), J Scaysbrook, R Baxter (B White 74).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, RaboDirect Pro12, League Table\nIf teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, RaboDirect Pro12, Results\nGlasgow Warriors won the 1872 Cup with an aggregate score of 44 - 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230226-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230226-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230226-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230226-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230226-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230227-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 GlobalPort Batang Pier season\nThe 2012\u201313 GlobalPort Batang Pier season was the franchise's first season in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA). The team took over the Powerade Tigers after its sale to Sultan 900 Capital. Although it did not qualify for the Philippine or Commissioner's Cups, it was a quarterfinalist for the Governors' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230228-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Goa Professional League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Goa Professional League (also known as the Kingfisher Goa Pro League for sponsorship reasons) was the 15th season of top-tier football in the Indian state of Goa. It began on 1 September 2012. Dempo were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230229-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Golden State Warriors season\nThe 2012\u201313 Golden State Warriors season was the 67th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 51st anniversary of their time in the San Francisco Bay Area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230229-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Golden State Warriors season\nThe team finished with a record of 47-35 (.573), and finished the season as the number-six seed, clinching a playoff berth for the first time since 2007. The team had a winning record for the first time since 2008. This season included the first playoff series victory for the first time since 2007, as most of the squad experienced postseason play for the first time. The season began a streak of 7 straight winning records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230229-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Golden State Warriors season\nThe Warriors had four draft picks in the 2012 NBA Draft, a decisive draft year that was vital for a potential future for the team. The picks included Harrison Barnes with the 7th pick, Festus Ezeli with the 30th pick, Draymond Green with the 35th pick, and Ognjen Kuzmic with the 52nd pick. With Brandon Rush and his season-ending injury, Barnes was placed in the starting lineup and became crucial in bringing the team back to the playoffs for the first time in six years. Another injury mid-season from Andrew Bogut also affected the team with the lack of a true center for a majority of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230229-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Golden State Warriors season\nNotable highlights from the season included Stephen Curry breaking the record for three-point field goals made in a single season with 272, thus eclipsing Ray Allen's then-seven-year-old record of 269 made, and Curry and Klay Thompson's rise to NBA dominance as one of the greatest three-point-shooting duos in history, coining the term \"Splash Brothers\" for their abilities to shoot beyond the arc in record-breaking numbers. A seven-game Eastern Conference road trip featured a 6-1 record, including a close win against the defending champion Miami Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230229-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Golden State Warriors season\nDavid Lee was named as an All-Star in the 2013 NBA All-Star Game in Houston, and thus became the first Warrior since Latrell Sprewell in 1997 to be named an All-Star. Lee also led the league in double-doubles. The Warriors returned to the playoffs for the first time in six years; for most players the first time experiencing postseason play except Bogut. After a 4-2 series win against the number-three seed Denver Nuggets in the first round, the Warriors won a playoff series for the first time since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230229-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Golden State Warriors season\nIn the Conference Semifinal, the Warriors faced the number two-seed San Antonio Spurs. Curry scored 44 points in a double-overtime loss in Game 1, but the team pulled off a 100-91 Game 2 win, which was the first Warriors victory, playoff or regular season, in San Antonio since February 1997, to tie the series at one game apiece. However, despite the willingness to fight, the inexperience and youth of the Warrior squad resulted in defeat as the Warriors lost to the eventual Western Conference Champion Spurs in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Gonzaga University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played their home games at the McCarthey Athletic Center, which has a capacity of 6,000. The Bulldogs (also informally referred to as the Zags), were in their 33rd season as a member of the West Coast Conference, and were led by head coach Mark Few, who was in his 14th season as head coach. In the previous season, the Zags gained a record of 26\u20137 and reached the third round of the 2012 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team\nOn March 4, 2013, Gonzaga was the top-ranked team in the nation for the first time in school history. The Bulldogs were the fifth team to be ranked number one during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Preseason\nIn 2012\u201313, the Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team were in their 33rd season as a member of the West Coast Conference. Since 2004, the team has played their home games at the McCarthey Athletic Center, which has a capacity of 6,000. In their previous season, a West Coast Conference Preseason Poll predicted that the Gonzaga Bulldogs would finish atop of the conference. Despite the high expectations, the Zags finished second place behind Saint Mary's in the West Coast Conference Standings with a 13\u20133 conference record, causing its eleven-year run as regular season champions to come to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe Bulldogs lost in the championship game of the West Coast Conference Tournament to Saint Mary's, who claimed their second tournament title in three years. The team drew a seven seed in the 2012 NCAA Tournament, where they lost to two seed Ohio State in the third round, 73\u201366, and finished with a record of 26\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Preseason\nBefore the 2012\u201313 season, the Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team lost two seniors from the previous year to graduation: starter Robert Sacre and transfer Marquise Carter. Sacre was the team's third-highest scorer, with an average of 11.6 points per game, and averages of 6.3 rebounds and 1.4 blocks per game. In his final season, he was selected for the all-conference team and finished his career with 1,270 points, 679 rebounds, and 186 blocks. He would go on to be selected by the Los Angeles Lakers as the 60th overall pick in the second round of the 2012 NBA Draft. Carter was a guard off of the bench, and averaged 3.8 points, 1.5 rebounds, and 1.7 assists per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Preseason\nFour players left Gonzaga voluntarily: freshmen Chris Sarbaugh and Ryan Spangler, as well as sophomores Mathis M\u00f6nninghoff and Mathis Keita. Sarbaugh redshirted in 2011\u201312 after coming out of high school from Gonzaga Prep, and transferred to North Idaho College. Spangler played in 22 games and averaged 6.6 minutes per game before transferring to Oklahoma. M\u00f6nninghoff was a reserve wing for the Zags and played an average of about six minutes per game before he left to play professionally in Germany. Keita played in 23 games, averaging 9.4 minutes and 2.7 points per game before he transferred to Indiana University of Pennsylvania the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Preseason\nOn October 29, 2012, the Bulldogs were voted by other West Coast Conference coaches as the preseason favorite to win the league, receiving seven of the nine votes. Sophomore guards Gary Bell Jr. and Kevin Pangos were selected for the All-Conference Team, as well as junior center Sam Dower and senior forward Elias Harris. Harris and Pangos were listed on the preseason Naismith Award 50-man watchlist, while Harris was also listed on the Wooden Award preseason top 50 list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nThe Gonzaga Bulldogs started their season with a 103\u201365 home win against Southern Utah on November 9. They led Southern Utah at halftime 44\u201327, and started the second half with a 12\u20132 run. The Zags shot nearly 55 percent from the field, but only outrebounded the Thunderbirds 36\u201333. Freshman Przemek Karmowski led the Bulldogs with 22 points, while senior Guy Landri Edi scored a career-high 16 points. Three days later, Gonzaga played West Virginia as a part of the ESPN College Hoops Tip-Off Marathon, where they would go on to rout the Mountaineers 84\u201350.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nThey held West Virginia to 21 percent shooting in the first half, and led 45\u201318 at halftime. Matt Humphrey's steal and dunk cut Gonzaga's lead to 50\u201332 with 14:45 left, but Elias Harris responded with a three-pointer to push the lead back to 20. Gary Bell Jr. led the Bulldogs with 15 points, as four other players scored in double figures. On November 18, the Zags played at home against South Dakota, where they would beat the Coyotes 96\u201358. Despite having 16 turnovers and making 4 of 15 free throws, the team outscored the Coyotes 38\u20139 in the paint. After a slow start, the Bulldogs went on an 18\u20134 run midway through the first half. Karnowski had a team-high 20 points, while Harris had 16 points and a career-high 18 rebounds in the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nDuring Thanksgiving weekend, the Bulldogs travelled to Lake Buena Vista, Florida to participate in the 2012 Old Spice Classic. On November 22, Gonzaga went on to beat Clemson 57\u201349 in the first-round game of the tournament. After being behind by as much as eight, the Zags responded with the help of David Stockton, who had a career-high seven assists. Kelly Olynyk, coming off of a redshirt year, played in his first game of the season after being suspended for the previous three games for violating the student code of conduct.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nThe next day, the Bulldogs went on to beat Oklahoma 72\u201347. The Sooners never had a lead in the game, as Harris scored 14 of his 18 points in the second half. In the Old Spice Classic championship game two days later, the Zags would hold on beat Davidson 81\u201367 to capture its second tournament title and remain undefeated on the season at 6\u20130. After Davidson was ahead by as much as nine, Kevin Pangos connected on a three that made it 58\u201353 with eight minutes to play and scored another three two minutes later to make it 64\u201357. Harris finished with a team-high 24 points and 10 rebounds, while Pangos added 23 points, five assists, and two steals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nThe team returned home to play Lewis-Clark State on November 29. They routed the Warriors 104\u201357, and were led by freshman Kyle Dranginis, who had a career-high 30 points, seven assists, and six rebounds. Despite sitting starters Harris and Bell, the Zags forced 20 turnovers and had a 46\u201320 rebounding advantage. In the teams' first meeting since 1976, the Bulldogs defeated Pacific 85\u201367 two days later. Despite an early 18\u201310 Pacific lead, Gonzaga replied with a 10\u20130 run later in the first half to take a 49\u201334 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nThe frontcourt accounted for 64 of the team's points, as bench player Sam Dower scored 18 points and grabbed nine rebounds. After this, the Zags faced their first true road game of the season as they travelled to play at Washington State. Down 67\u201369, DaVonte Lacy made a layup for the Cougars to tie the game. With the game tied at 69, Pangos drove up the court to make a layup with two seconds left to secure the 71\u201369 victory. Olynyk made 10 of 14 shots and grabbed seven rebounds to keep Gonzaga in the game in the second half, while Harris led the team with 23 points. The victory gave the Bulldogs their best start to a season in Division I history with a 9\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nGonzaga suffered their first loss of the season against #13 Illinois on December 8, falling 85\u201374. Tied at 41 at halftime, the Zags shot 38 percent in the second half after shooting 60 percent in the first half. A free throw by Pangos cut Illinois' lead to 75\u201371 with 2:51 left in the game. However, the Illini responded with an 80\u201371 advantage to take control of the game. The Bulldogs recovered from their first loss of the season by beating Kansas State in the annual State Farm Battle in Seattle game, 68\u201352.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nThe team outscored Kansas State in the paint 38\u201312 and limited the Wildcats to 33 percent shooting. Olynyk led the team with 20 points, while Bell added 11 points. Four days later, Gonzaga returned home and beat Campbell 74\u201352. The team finished with 33 points from the bench and 44 in the paint, while scoring 18 points off of 15 turnovers. Karnowski led the Zags with 14 points, while Harris put up 11 points and a career-high six assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nWith over a week to prepare for their next game at home, the Bulldogs beat Baylor 94\u201387 on December 28. The team was unable to hold a lead until there was 4:53 remaining in the first half. At that point, the game went back and forth, and the Zags led by as many as 12. Pangos led the team with 31 points, while Olynyk and Harris added 21 and 17 points, respectively. Gonzaga then went back on the road to play at #22 Oklahoma State, where they got a 69\u201368 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Preconference season\nWith 35.7 seconds left in the game, Mike Hart set a screen for Bell, who made a three-pointer to give the Zags the 67\u201365 lead. On the following play, Olynyk fouled out and sent Marcus Smart to the free throw line. Smart missed both free throws and Pangos rebounded the ball, and subsequently was sent to the free throw line, where he made both free throws. The win made Gonzaga undefeated against the Big 12 for the season with a 5\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nTo begin the conference season, the Bulldogs travelled to Firestone Fieldhouse on January 3 to play Pepperdine, where they would beat the Waves 78\u201362. David Stockton came off the bench and keyed the Zags with four steals to hold off a Pepperdine team that was down two with 12 minutes left. Despite scoring a season-low 43.4% from the field, Elias Harris scored 18 points and Kelly Olynyk added 16. Two days later, they went to Santa Clara and beat the Broncos 81\u201374.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nThe team managed to withstand a Santa Clara rally late when Olynyk made a key putback with 1:55 remaining. He led the team with a career-high 33 points and 10 rebounds, while Harris added 14 points for the Zags. After this, Gonzaga would go back home to play conference rival Saint Mary's, whom they would beat 83\u201378. Saint Mary's would have one field goal in the final minutes of the first half to help the Bulldogs to a 46\u201328 halftime advantage. However, Stephen Holt would hit three shots and two free throws in a 90-second span to cut the lead to 55\u201344. With 26 seconds left, Kevin Pangos missed and fouled Matthew Dellavedova, who made it 79\u201378. Gonzaga held on for the win and was led by 31 points from Olynyk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nOn January 17, the Bulldogs went on the road to play Portland, whom they beat 71\u201349. Despite two early fouls on Olynyk in the first half, Gonzaga shot 46.6% from the field. Olynyk would come back with a strong second half to finish with 21 points, eight rebounds, one steal, and two blocks. The game extended Gonzaga's best start in school history with an eight-game winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nTwo days later, they would travel to Hinkle Fieldhouse to play a non-conference game at #13 Butler as a part of the debut game of ESPN's College GameDay for the 2013 college basketball season. Gonzaga was ahead 33\u201332 at halftime, but Butler scored the first five points of the second half to take the lead. Ahead 63\u201362 with 3.5 seconds left, Stockton threw the ball inbounds and watched as it was stolen by Butler sophomore Roosevelt Jones, who took the buzzer beater shot to give Butler the 64\u201363 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nThe team would recover and return home from their second loss of the season on January 24 by beating BYU 83\u201363. Olynyk scored 26 points on 9-for-9 shooting and was also 8-for-8 on free throws. The Zags won the rebound battle 37\u201329 and outscored BYU 42\u201328 in the paint while shooting 56.9% from the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nTwo days later, the team would go on to beat San Francisco at home 66\u201352. Despite shooting 58 percent in the first half and building a lead of 24 at one point, the Bulldogs shot just 8 of 27 in the second half. They were led by Olynyk, who had 13 points, eight rebounds, three assists, three steals, and one assist. The team then travelled to Loyola Marymount on January 31, where they would rout the Lions 88\u201343. The team shot 13-for-21 from behind the three-point line and shot 54.4% from the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nGary Bell, Jr. led the team with 15 points, which were entirely three-pointers. The team would face a tougher task when they went to San Diego two days later. The Zags left 36\u201327 at halftime, but San Diego would go on a run to drop the Gonzaga lead to 51\u201350. They trailed 57\u201353 with 7-and-a-half minutes left before outscoring the Toreros 12\u20136. Stockton would hit a runner in the lane with 55.9 seconds left, but Olynyk would miss the front end of a one-and-one to give San Diego a chance to win the game with eight seconds left. However, Harris would go on to block the last-second shot to secure the 65\u201363 victory. Harris scored 18 points and eight rebounds, while Olynyk and Bell added 15 and 13, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nThe team would return home on February 7 to rout Pepperdine 82\u201356. They managed to hold Pepperdine to 36.2% from the field and also forced 21 turnovers. Gonzaga was led by Kevin Pangos, who scored 14 points, collected four assists, and had four steals. Kelly Olynyk was key in the Zag's 74\u201355 home victory over Loyola Marymount two days later. He scored 20 points, grabbed six rebounds, collected four assists, and had two blocks. Pangos also added 20 points, while Harris recorded a double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nGonzaga's next battle would take them down to Moraga, California, where they would play the second conference game against rival Saint Mary's. Gaels point guard Matthew Dellavedova would score 19 of his 22 points in the first half, as the Gaels led the Zags 33\u201332 at the break. However, Gary Bell, Jr. would go on to score 20 points and fuel a 7\u20130 run for the opening 1:06 of the second half to take the lead for good. The team managed to shoot 50% from the field, while converting 9 of 17 three-pointers. Pangos contributed 18 points and led the team with three assists, while Olynyk added 17 points to help the Zags take control of first place in the conference with an 11\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nThe Zags then travelled to play San Francisco at War Memorial Gymnasium, which is a place where they had not won for three consecutive years. Gonzaga's defense forced San Francisco to stay on the perimeter for a majority of their shots, as the Bulldogs limited the Dons to 36.8% from the field. Olynyk led the team with 26 points and nine rebounds, while Harris added 17 points and 13 rebounds to lead the team to a 71\u201361 victory. A rebounding advantage of 45\u201322 and defensive field goal percentage of 30.2% helped Gonzaga rout Santa Clara 85\u201342 on February 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nThe Zags shot 56.2% from the field and converted on 7 of 17 three-pointers. Harris led the team with 17 points and nine rebounds, while Olynyk scored 15. Three days later, the team beat San Diego at home 81\u201350. The team's defense held the Toreros to 35.7% shooting and 2-for-14 beyond the arc. Gonzaga came into the second half making its first six of seven shots to push the lead to 54\u201330 with 14 minutes left. After San Diego scored, transfer Drew Barham's three-pointer started a 13\u20130 Zags run that pushed the lead to 67\u201332. Pangos led the team with 18 points, while Olynyk contributed 14 points, nine rebounds, and three blocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nWith two conference games left, the Bulldogs travelled to play at the Marriott Center against BYU on February 28. The Zags led by 11 with 10:51 left in the game, but BYU would begin to cut the Gonzaga lead. Three three-pointers by Brock Zylstra and Craig Cusick, as well as two free throws by Brandon Davies tied the game at 60 with 4:18 remaining. Olynyk hit a key jumper with 43 seconds remaining and Pangos hit two free throws to give the Bulldogs some breathing room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Conference season\nHowever, Gonzaga fouled Cusick on a three-point attempt, causing him to make three free throws to give BYU one final chance with 6.6 seconds remaining. The Zags fouled BYU before Cusick could attempt a three, and Harris' free throws at the other end sealed Gonzaga's 70\u201365 victory. The final conference game of the season for the Zags would be at home against Portland two days later, whom they would beat 81\u201352. Harris scored 20 points, while Olynyk grabbed a double-double with 15 points and 11 rebounds. The win made the team finish undefeated in conference play at 16\u20130 for the first time in team history and conference history. It also broke the team's previous record for the best regular season start with 29 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Postseason\nOn March 4, 2013, the team drew a number one ranking in both the AP Poll and Coaches' Poll for the first time in program history. In the 2013 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, the Bulldogs received a one seed by virtue of a 16\u20130 conference record, causing them to have a bye into the semifinals. Due to Loyola Marymount beating Santa Clara in the quarterfinals, Gonzaga was matched up against Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Postseason\nThe team would go on to win the game 66\u201348, as they were led by Elias Harris, who had 21 points, eight rebounds, one assist, two steals, and two blocks. In the championship game of the tournament, the Zags would go against rival Saint Mary's for the third time. The defense of the Bulldogs forced Saint Mary's guard Matthew Dellavedova to score two points on 1 of 8 shooting and have the Gaels shoot 35.7% from the field as a whole. The team shot 52.1% from the field and dominated the Gaels in the paint 42\u201318. The Zags were led by Kelly Olynyk, who contributed 21 points and 12 rebounds. Harris also added 19 points for the Bulldogs, and would later be named the MVP of the tournament. With the victory, the Bulldogs secured an automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Postseason\nOn Selection Sunday, Gonzaga received a one seed in the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament for the first time in school history and was set to play Southern on March 21 at EnergySolutions Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah. The Jaguars previously played against the Bulldogs in an opening game for the 2010\u201311 season, where Gonzaga routed Southern 117\u201372. Despite being routed a couple of seasons before, the Jaguars were only behind 34\u201331 at halftime. Olynyk scored 17 of his 21 points in the second half to help Gonzaga pull ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Postseason\nDespite this, Southern managed to tie the game at 56 with 3:45 left, but Gary Bell, Jr. would hit a three-pointer to make it 59\u201356. On the ensuing possession, Southern guard Derick Beltran hit two free throws to cut the deficit to one. However, Kevin Pangos would respond with a three-pointer to put the Zags ahead by four. YonDarius Johnson and Malcolm Miller had open looks on the next possession, but neither was able to convert. Pangos finished with 16 points and hit two free throws with 14.3 seconds left to seal the victory for Gonzaga. The team managed to avoid the upset and hold on for the 64\u201358 victory to advance to the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Postseason\nGonzaga's season came to an end on March 21 with a 76\u201370 loss to ninth-seeded Wichita State. The Shockers had a 36\u201331 lead at halftime, and were ahead by as much as 13 at one point in the game. However, the Bulldogs would respond with a 12\u20130 run in the second half to give themselves a 49\u201341 lead with 11:53 left. Nevertheless, Wichita State started a string of five straight three-pointers when Tekele Cotton hit one with 6:05 remaining, cutting the deficit to four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230230-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team, Season, Postseason\nWith 1:28 seconds left, Fred VanVleet threw up and converted on a three-pointer with one second left on the shot clock to give the Shockers a 70\u201365 lead. The rest of the game was a free throw shooting contest, as Wichita State shot 50% from the field and 50% from beyond the arc, converting on 14 of 28 attempts from long range. Olynyk contributed 26 points and 9 rebounds, while Pangos scored 19. The loss made the Zags the first number one seed to be eliminated as they finished with a record of 32\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230231-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team is representing Gonzaga University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The Bulldogs (also informally referred to as the \"Zags\"), members of the West Coast Conference, are led by head coach Kelly Graves, in his 13th season at the school. The Zags are playing most of their home games at the McCarthey Athletic Center on the university campus in Spokane, Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230231-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gonzaga Bulldogs women's basketball team, Before the Season\nThe Zags were picked to finish second in the WCC Pre-Season poll behind BYU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230232-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grambling State Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Grambling State Tigers men's basketball team represented Grambling State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by first year head coach Joseph Price, played their home games at the Fredrick C. Hobdy Assembly Center and were members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 0\u201328, 0\u201318 in SWAC play to finish in last place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SWAC Tournament to Alabama A&M to become the eighth Division I team in NCAA history to finish a season winless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230233-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Granada CF season\nThe 2012\u201313 Granada CF season was the 79th season in club history and their 19th season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. It covered a period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final\nThe 2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final was an international figure skating competition in the 2012\u201313 season, held together with the ISU Junior Grand Prix Final. The combined event was the culmination of two international series \u2014 the 2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating for senior-level skaters and the 2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix for juniors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final\nThe event was held at the Iceberg Skating Palace in Sochi, Russia from 6\u20139 December 2012. It was a test event in anticipation of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior and junior levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Qualifiers, Senior-level qualifiers\nSkaters who reached the age of 14 by July 1, 2012 were eligible to compete at two senior 2012\u201313 Grand Prix events, including the 2012 Skate America, 2012 Skate Canada International, 2012 Cup of China, 2012 Cup of Russia, 2012 Troph\u00e9e Eric Bompard, and 2012 NHK Trophy. They earned points at these events and the six highest ranking skaters in each discipline qualified for the senior Grand Prix Final. Yulia Lipnitskaya withdrew due to a concussion and was replaced by first alternate Christina Gao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Qualifiers, Junior-level qualifiers\nSkaters who reached the age of 13 by July 1, 2012 but had not turned 19 (singles and females of the other two disciplines) or 21 (male pair skaters and ice dancers) were eligible to compete at two 2012\u201313 Junior Grand Prix events. They earned points at these events and the six highest-ranking skaters in each discipline qualified for the Junior Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview\nT = Toe loop, S = Salchow, A = Axel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Senior event\nJapan's Daisuke Takahashi was first in the men's short program, followed by the reigning World and GPF champion Patrick Chan of Canada, and Yuzuru Hanyu, also of Japan. Spain's Javier Fern\u00e1ndez, fourth overall, won the free skate with a program that included a 4T, 4S+3T, 4S, and 3A. Takahashi won the GPF title in his seventh appearance at the event, Hanyu won silver, and Chan took the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Senior event\nJapan's Mao Asada took the lead in the ladies' short program, with the United States' Ashley Wagner and Japan's Akiko Suzuki in second and third respectively. Asada also placed first in the free skate and won her third GPF title, Wagner injured herself in falls during the free skate but completed the program and took the silver, and Suzuki took the bronze. Russia's Elizaveta Tuktamysheva was second in the free skate but remained in 5th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Senior event\nRussia's Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov won the pairs' short program ahead of teammates Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov and China's Pang Qing / Tong Jian. Bazarova / Larionov won the free skate but Volosozhar / Trankov finished first overall and took their first GPF title, while silver medalists Bazarova / Larionov won their first medal at the event and Pang / Tong took the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Senior event\nThe defending GPF champions, Meryl Davis / Charlie White of the United States, finished first in the short dance ahead of the reigning World champions, Tessa Virtue / Scott Moir of Canada, and Nathalie Pechalat / Fabian Bourzat of France. Davis / White also placed first in the free dance and won their fourth consecutive GPF title, Virtue / Moir won their third silver at the event, and Pechalat / Bourzat won the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Junior event\nRussia swept all four gold medals at the Junior Grand Prix Final and the entire pairs' podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Junior event\nThe United States' Joshua Farris won the men's short program ahead of Russia's Maxim Kovtun and the 2011 JGP Final champion Jason Brown. Kovtun won the free skate with a program that included a 4T-3T, 3A+3T, and 3A. He won the title by 11 points over the silver medalist, Farris, while Japan's Ryuju Hino moved ahead of Brown to take the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Junior event\nRussia's Elena Radionova was first in the ladies' short program, with the United States' Hannah Miller in second and Russia's Anna Pogorilaya in third. Radionova also placed first in the free skate and won the junior ladies' title by 11 points ahead of silver medalist Miller, who placed fourth in the segment, and bronze medalist Pogorilaya. Angela Wang of the United States was second in the free skate but remained in fourth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Junior event\nRussia's Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin took the lead in the pair's short program, followed by Canada's Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro and Russia's Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat. Fedorova / Miroshkin were also first in the free skate and won gold with a total score slightly over five points ahead of the silver medalists, Davankova / Deputat, while Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev rose to take the bronze, producing a Russian sweep of the podium. Davankova / Deputat were the only junior pairs' medalists to attempt (and complete) side-by-side triple jumps. Vigalova (born 29 June 1999) was the youngest skater at the JGP Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230234-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Overview, Junior event\nRussia's Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin won the short dance ahead of France's Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron and 2011 JGP Final silver medalists Anna Yanovskaia / Sergei Mozgov. Stepanova / Bukin also placed first in the free dance and won gold by ten points ahead of Papadakis / Cizeron, while the United States' Alexandra Aldridge / Daniel Eaton moved past Yanovskaia / Mozgov to take the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230235-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grasshopper Club Z\u00fcrich season, Review and events\nThe 2012\u201313 Swiss Super League began with a 0-2 loss against FC Sion. After this defeat the Grasshoppers remained unbeaten for twelve consecutive matches and goalkeeper Roman B\u00fcrki was able to set a new all-time record in keeping a clean sheet in Swiss football. He remained unbeaten for 659 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230235-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Grasshopper Club Z\u00fcrich season, Review and events\nOn May 20, 2013 the Grasshoppers won the 2012\u201313 Swiss Cup by a 5-4-victory on penalties against FC Basel. It was Grasshoppers 19th title in this competition and their first since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships\nThe Great American Conference sponsors championship events for 12 of its 13 sports. The football champion is the team with the best conference record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships\nNorthwestern Oklahoma State and Southern Nazarene were provisional members and not eligible for regular season championships or postseason championship tournaments. Individuals were eligible for postseason honors and may compete in cross country and golf postseason championships but not eligible for titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships, Men's Cross Country\nEast Central University placed three runners in the top four and all seven competitors finished inside the top 15 as the Tigers repeated as Great American Conference Men's Cross Country Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships, Men's Cross Country\nSouthern Arkansas' Mickey Hammer emerged as the individual champion, fending off ECU's Cale Eidson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships, Women's Cross Country\nEast Central won its first Great American Conference Women's Cross Country championship title as the Lady Tigers edged out 2011 champion Harding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships, Women's Cross Country\nHarding sophomore Ewa Zaborowska dominated the race, winning by more than a minute to claim the individual title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships, Women's Soccer\nDown a goal late in the Great American Conference Women\u2019s Soccer Championship, top seeded Southwestern Oklahoma State pulled off a dramatic comeback with two goals in a three-minute span to stun Ouachita Baptist 2-1 to claim the tournament title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships, Volleyball\nOne year after losing to Arkansas Tech in the Great American Conference Volleyball Championship final, Harding reversed its fate with a resounding four-set victory Saturday at the Rhodes Field House. After splitting the first two sets, the Lady Bisons won going away, 25-12 in the third set and 25-16 in the final set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230236-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Great American Conference championships, Volleyball\nLike in their final regular season meeting, Arkansas Tech started strong and took the first set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League\nThe 2012\u201313 Greek Basket League was the 73rd season of the Greek Basket League, the highest tier professional basketball league in Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League, Regular season, Standings\nPts=Points, Pld=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, D=Points difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League, Playoffs\nTeams in bold won the playoff series. Numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's original playoff seeding. Numbers to the right indicate the score of each playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League, 2012\u201313 Greek Basket League Finals\nThe defending Greek Basket League champions, Olympiacos, finished first in the regular season, and faced their arch-rivals Panathinaikos, in the finals of the playoffs, having home-court advantage. Despite the home court advantage, Panathinaikos won the series 3\u20130, by performing a \"clean sweep\", after defeating Olympiacos twice at their home-court. The 3rd game was disrupted by Olympiacos fans throwing flash-grenades at Panathinaikos' bench, when the score was 72\u201376 with 01:27 left to go in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League, 2012\u201313 Greek Basket League Finals\nThe match officials decided to stop the game, and have the stadium cleared of all fans. 75 minutes went by, and 100+ Olympiacos fans had still not vacated the stadium, so the game and the series was officially called off. A technicality win of 0-20 was granted to Panathinaikos, despite there still being 01:27 left on the game clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League, 2012\u201313 Greek Basket League Finals\nThe events of the 3rd game of the series, happened after the owner of Panathinaikos, Dimitrios Giannakopoulos, and three other men, entered into the referee locker room at the home arena of Panathinaikos, OAKA, during halftime of the 2nd game of the series. Giannakopoulos reportedly told the refs that they would not leave the arena, if they did not change how they were calling the game, with Panathinaikos behind in the score at halftime. Giannkopoulos was later sanctioned by the Greek sports prosecutor for these actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League, 2012\u201313 Greek Basket League Finals\nGiannakopoulos was then banned from entering into any arenas in Greece by the Greek Committee of Sportsmanship, for a period of 6 months, however, he was placed on 3 years of probation and given a suspended sentence. He was however, suspended from entering into the arenas at his own team's games, for a period of 3 months time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230237-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Basket League, Stats leaders\nGreek Basket League stats leaders are counted by totals, rather than averages, and include both regular season and playoff games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup was the 71st season of the Greek Football Cup. A total of 62 clubs, five more than the previous edition, were accepted to enter. The competition commenced on 24 October 2012 with the First Round and concluded on 11 May 2013 with the Final, held at Olympic Stadium. The final was contested by Asteras Tripolis and Olympiacos, with Olympiacos winning by 3\u20131 after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup, First round\nThe draw for this round took place on 13 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup, Second round\nThe draw for this round took place on 13 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup, Second round\nEthnikos Gazoros, Larissa, Proodeftiki, Apollon Smyrnis, Anagennisi Karditsa, Panachaiki, Aiginiakos, Pierikos and Kallithea qualify without matches to second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup, Third round\nThe draw for this round took place on 13 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for this round took place on 13 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for this round took place on 4 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230238-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for this round took place on 4 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230239-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Ice Hockey Championship season\nThe 2012-13 Greek Ice Hockey Championship was contested by 11 teams, divided into Northern and Southern groups. The top two teams in each group were supposed to advance to the playoffs, which ended up being cancelled. PAOK Thessaloniki HC finished first in the Northern Group and Iptameni Pagodromoi Athens won the Southern Group, and were later named overall Greek champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230239-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greek Ice Hockey Championship season, Playoffs\nThe two Northern Group teams who had qualified for the playoffs declined to participate. As a result, the playoffs were cancelled, and the Greek Federation declared Iptameni Pagodromoi Athens, winner of the Southern Group, Greek champion for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230240-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Green Bay in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Brian Wardle who is his 3rd year. The Phoenix played their home games at the Resch Center and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 18\u201316, 10\u20136 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Horizon League Tournament where they lost to Valparaiso. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to Bradley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season\nSeason 2012\u201313 sees Greenock Morton compete in their sixth consecutive season in the First Division, having finished 8th in the 2011\u201312 season. Morton will also compete in the Challenge Cup, Scottish League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nPaul Di Giacomo, Colin Stewart, Stuart McCaffrey, Darren McGeouch, Ross Forsyth, Grant Evans, Marc Smyth, Andy Jackson, Matthew McGinley and Iain Flannigan left the club after their contracts expired. Mark McLaughlin was the first to be brought in to begin the rebuilding process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nJoel Kasubandi and Creag Little were released while Fouad Bachirou stated he would not re-sign, Lewis Hawke and Martin Maguire were offered unpaid reserve contracts, and Andy Graham, Thomas O'Ware, Derek Young, Peter MacDonald, Archie Campbell and Peter Weatherson were asked to re-sign. Winger David O'Brien signed on for another season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nWillie Dyer signed on a free transfer from Raith Rovers, and Archie Campbell re-signed to the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nThomas O'Ware signed his new one-year contract, as did Peter Weatherson. Weatherson also agreed to take over as a coach of one of the club's youth sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nMorton signed Scotland youth international Jason Naismith on loan from St Mirren. Former Scotland U19 international Stephen Stirling signed a pre-contract to join when his Stranraer contract expired in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nLondon-based Danshell became the new sponsor of the Morton youth academy, in a \u00a310,000 one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nDavid Hopkin was brought in to work as co-manager of the reserve side alongside Jonatan Johansson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nMorton made their fifth signing of the season, bringing in young Motherwell fullback Jordan Halsman on a free transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nAndy Graham rejected the club's contract offer and signed for Dumbarton, along with Ross Forsyth who has been released in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nAs they did last season, Morton brought in Graeme Jones as a sports scientist on a consultancy basis during the off-season period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nMorton were given a home tie in the First Round of the Scottish League Challenge Cup against Albion Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nMoore revealed that it was unlikely that captain Derek Young would re-sign with the club as \"his kids and his wife are still up in Aberdeen\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nThe fixtures were released on 18 June, with Morton starting off at home to Livingston on 11 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nPeter MacDonald signed a new one-year deal at the club, and goalkeeper Derek Gaston was signed as back-up to Alan Combe from Albion Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nMorton agreed to send a side to Campbeltown to play the local amateur side, Campbeltown Pupils on 11 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nA home friendly against Kilmarnock, and a closed doors game against Rapid Bucure\u0219ti was organised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, June\nSimon Mensing and Kyle Wilkie were taken on trial after being released by Hamilton Accies. Tony Wallace was also on trial, and Moore expected to sign him within the next week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nTony Wallace completed his transfer to Cappielow for an undisclosed nominal fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nMorton also have Craig Reid and Martin Hardie on trial, with the latter scoring in a 1-0 friendly win over Albion Rovers. Reid signed on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nReid, Hardie and ex-Hibs fullback Scott Taggart signed for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nMorton were drawn away to East Stirlingshire in the first round of the Scottish Communities League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, July\nKevin Rutkiewicz accepted a contract offer after playing in two trial matches for the club, and signed on 27 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, August\nAfter dispatching of East Stirlingshire in the first round, Morton were given a home tie against Aberdeen in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, August\nMorton re-signed Fouad Bachirou on 17 August in time for him to make his second d\u00e9but against Hamilton Accies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, August\nAfter only a couple of months, Johansson left the club to become U20 coach at Motherwell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, August\nDavid Hutton signed a short-term deal at the club as understudy to Derek Gaston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, September\nAlan Combe left to become a coach at Tynecastle with Hearts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, September\nAfter not being able to play all season up to this point, Peter MacDonald was ruled out for a further six weeks due to having surgery on his plantar fascia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, September\nMorton brought in ex-Celtic youth Liam Gormley on trial, and he scored in his first match against Largs Thistle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, September\nWith a 3\u20132 defeat of Airdrie United, Morton won four straight league games for the first time since the 1995\u201396 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, October\nMorton entered the Scottish Cup in the third round draw, and received an away tie at Albion Rovers who they defeated in the Challenge Cup earlier in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, October\nArchie Campbell was awarded the SFL Young Player of the Month award and the Irn-Bru Ginger Boot as top scorer in the SFL for September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, November\nAllan Moore received the October SFL Manager of the Month award, as Archie Campbell this time picked up the SFL Player of the Month award to add to his double of awards for September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, November\nMorton defeated Albion Rovers in a replay to set up a fourth round tie against Highland Football League side Turriff United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, November\nAfter eight consecutive wins, Morton's reserves (\"the Bomb Squad\") drew their first game of the season against Airdrie United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, December\nMorton avoided the embarrassment of losing to Turriff when Peter Weatherson earned them a replay at Cappielow in the fourth round of the Scottish Cup. The replay was postponed at the first attempt due to a frozen pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, December\nMorton won the replay 6\u20130 to set up a fifth round tie against Premier League Dundee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, December\nThree youth players went out on loan to junior sides; Iain Beattie to Neilston Juniors, Martin Maguire to Port Glasgow and Euan Blair to Hurlford United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\nMorton started the year badly, going down to a 3\u20130 defeat at home to strugglers Dumbarton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\nDavid Hutton signed an extension to stay with the club to the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\nAidan Fulton went on a week-long trial at Motherwell's U20 side who are managed by former Morton coach Jonatan Johansson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\nAllan Moore again won the dreaded SFL Manager of the Month award for December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\nMorton signed Colin McMenamin with the help of local company McGill's Bus Services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, January\nYoungster Declan McDaid received the first Morton call-up for many years when he was selected to represent Scotland Schools U18's at the 2013 Centenary Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, February\nTo allow him to get some first-team experience before heading to the United States for a scholarship, Lewis Hawke was released to allow him to sign on amateur terms at Annan Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, February\nMorton were hammered by Dundee in the Scottish Cup Fifth Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, February\nDavid Verlaque, whose father used to play for the club in the Scottish Premier Division, signed an amateur contract until the end of the season to play in the reserves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, February\nTwo Morton youth players received call-ups to try out for the Scotland U14 squad at the Excelsior Stadium in Airdrie; they were Lewis Strapp and Scott Miller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, February\nMorton launched their social inclusion project, the Greenock Morton Community Trust, to get people in the local area involved in football at a young age.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, March\nAs Morton suffered their first away league defeat since April 2012, Willie Dyer had to be taken from the field with a dislocated shoulder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, March\nDavid Verlaque went on week long trial to Nottingham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, March\nPeter MacDonald won the player of the month for February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, April\nLewis Strapp rejected an approach from Celtic to stay at Morton's youth academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, April\nAfter Partick Thistle's victory on 20 April, they were confirmed as First Division champions; and Morton confirmed as league runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, April\nMichael Tidser was nominated for the PFA Scotland First Division Player of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0056-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, April\nDavid Graham was released by Morton with two games still to go in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0057-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, April\nKevin Rutkiewicz and Jordan Halsman were released from their contracts to join Carolina RailHawks and Fram respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0058-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Story of the season, May\nFollowing a 4\u20131 defeat away at Falkirk, Morton finished the season in second place with 67 points. Peter MacDonald was the club's top scorer with 15 goals in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230241-0059-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Greenock Morton F.C. season, Squad (that played for 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230242-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guam Men's Soccer League\n2012\u201313 Guam Men's Soccer League, officially named Budweiser Guam Men's Soccer League due to sponsorship reason, is the association football league of Guam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230243-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guatemalan Liga Nacional\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de F\u00fatbol de Guatemala season was the 14th season in which the Apertura and Clausura season is used. The season began on 15 July 2012 and ended in May 2013. Comunicaciones won both the Apertura and Clausura tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230243-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guatemalan Liga Nacional, Format\nThe format for both championships are identical. Each championship will have two stages: a first stage and a playoff stage. The first stage of each championship is a double round-robin format. The teams that finishes 1 and 2 in the standings will advance to the playoffs semifinals, while the teams that finish 3\u20136 will enter in the quarterfinals. The winner of each quarterfinals will advance to the semifinals. The winners of the semifinals will advance to the finals, which will determine the tournament champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230243-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guatemalan Liga Nacional, Teams\nPenarol La Mesilla changed their names to Halcones FC for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230243-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guatemalan Liga Nacional, Torneo Apertura\nThe 2012 Torneo Apertura began on 15 July 2012 and ends in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230244-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guildford Flames season\nDuring the 2012\u201313 season, the Guildford Flames participated in the semi-professional English Premier Ice Hockey League. It was the 21st year of Ice Hockey played by the Guildford Flames and the sixth season under Paul Dixon as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230244-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guildford Flames season\nThe Flames, for the first time in their history, secured a back to back trophy by winning the league championship for the second time in as many seasons, thanks to a loss for the Basingstoke Bison, along with a single point during a 2\u20131 overtime loss at the Sheffield Steeldogs on Saturday 16 March 2013. Just four days later a capacity Spectrum witnessed a 'double, double' when the Flames repeated last year's entire trophy haul with a 5\u20133 Cup win, 9\u20135 on aggregate, over the visiting Slough Jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230244-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guildford Flames season\nThe Flames ended the regular league season with 79 points from 54 games. They won the league by a five-point margin with the Basingstoke Bison finishing as runners-up with 74 points from 54 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230244-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guildford Flames season\nThe Manchester Phoenix captured the playoff title, and brought a halt to the Flames treble bid, with a 5\u20132 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230244-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Guildford Flames season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe league consists of 54 games. The first home and away league games against each opponent (a total of 18 games) counts for both League and Cup table points. Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230245-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Gy\u0151ri ETO FC's 69th competitive season, 53rd consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 108th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230245-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230245-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO FC 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-00230245-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO FC 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-00230245-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO FC 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-00230245-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO FC 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-00230245-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO FC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230245-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Gy\u0151ri ETO FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230246-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HB K\u00f8ge season\nThe 2012-13 season is HB K\u00f8ge's 4th season in existent, since formed from Herf\u00f8lge Boldklub and K\u00f8ge Boldklub in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season\nThe 2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season was the first season for Bratislava based club in Kontinental Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season\nSlovan opened the 2012\u201313 season with a home game against Ukrainian HC Donbass on 6 September 2012, losing 2\u20134 in front of a capacity crowd. The first win was achieved 4 days later by defeating Spartak Moscow 2\u20131 after shootout. During the NHL lockout between September 2012 and January 2013, two defenders \u013dubom\u00edr Vi\u0161\u0148ovsk\u00fd and Andrej Sekera enhanced the team. Slovan ended the season with 78 points as 6th of the Western conference and thus clinched the play-off in their first KHL season. In the first play-off round Slovan played against Dynamo Moscow and lost all four matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season\nDuring the regular season, Slovan had sold out 25 out of its 26 home games with an average attendance of 9,977 spectators which was the 7th highest average attendance in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season, Schedule and results, Pre-season\nPre -season took part in July, August and September with 2 friendly matches and participating European Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season, Schedule and results, Pre-season\nWin (3 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nWin (3 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season, Standings, Western Conference\ny \u2013 Won division; c \u2013 Won Continental Cup (best record in KHL);BOB \u2013 Bobrov Division, TAR \u2013 Tarasov Division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230247-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HC Slovan Bratislava season, Draft picks\nSlovan's picks at the 2012 KHL Junior Draft in Chelyabinsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230248-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Cibalia season\nThis article shows statistics of individual players for the Cibalia football club. It also lists all matches that Cibalia played in the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230248-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Cibalia 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230248-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Cibalia season, Player seasonal records\nCompetitive matches only. Updated to games played 8 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230249-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Hajduk Split season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 102nd season in Hajduk Split's history and their twenty-second in the Prva HNL. Their 2nd-place finish in the 2011\u201312 season means it was their 22nd successive season playing in the Prva HNL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230249-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230249-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Hajduk Split season, Player seasonal records\nCompetitive matches only. Updated to games played 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230249-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Hajduk Split season, Player seasonal records, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230250-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Rijeka season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 67th season in HNK Rijeka\u2019s history. It was their 22nd successive season in the Prva HNL, and 39th successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230250-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Rijeka season, Player seasonal records\nCompetitive matches only. Updated to games played 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230250-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HNK Rijeka season, Player seasonal records, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230251-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HRV Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 HRV Cup (named after the competition's sponsor HRV) was the eighth season of the Super Smash Twenty20 cricket tournament in New Zealand. The season was held between 2 November 2012 and 20 January 2013. 12 matches were telecasted on Friday nights during November and December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230251-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HRV Cup, Rules and regulations\nIf a match ends with the scores level, the tie is broken with a Super Over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230252-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hallescher FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Hallescher FC season is the 67th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. It is the club's second season in this league, having been promoted from the Regionalliga in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230252-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hallescher FC season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, but was knocked out in the first round by 2. Bundesliga side MSV Duisburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230252-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hallescher FC season\nHallescher FC also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the Saxony-Anhalt Cup, having reached the third round after a bye in the first and a 5\u20130 win over 1. FC Lok Stendal in the second round, facing SV Braunsbedra next.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230253-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamburger SV season\nThe 2012\u201313 Hamburger SV season was the 125th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It was the club's 50th season in this league, being the only club to have played every season in the Bundesliga since its introduction in 1963.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230253-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamburger SV season\nThe club finished seventh in the Bundesliga and also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it was knocked out in the first round by third division side Karlsruher SC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230253-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamburger SV season, Review and events\nAt the end of the summer transfer deadline, former HSV player Rafael van der Vaart was signed. He was given the captain wristband in the second half of the season due to a weak performance of the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230253-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamburger SV 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230254-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamilton Academical F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Hamilton Academical's second consecutive season in the Scottish First Division, having been relegated from the Scottish Premier League at the end of the 2010\u201311 season. Hamilton also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230254-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamilton Academical F.C. season, Summary, Season\nDuring season 2012\u201313 Hamilton finished fifth in the Scottish First Division. They reached the first round of the Challenge Cup, the third round of the League Cup and the Quarter-final of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230254-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamilton Academical F.C. season, Summary, Management\nHamilton began the season under the management of Billy Reid. On 3 April 2013, Reid left the club by mutual consent after nearly eight years in charge of the team. Club captain Alex Neil and Hamilton's Academy director Frankie McAvoy took charge of the team until the end of the season on an interim basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230254-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hamilton Academical F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 7 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230255-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hampton Pirates men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Hampton Pirates men's basketball team represented Hampton University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pirates, led by fourth year head coach Edward Joyner, played their home games at the Hampton Convocation Center and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 11\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MEAC Tournament to Delaware State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230256-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Handball-Bundesliga\nThe 2012\u201313 Handball-Bundesliga was the 48th season of the Handball-Bundesliga, Germany's premier handball league, and the 36th season consisting of only one league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230257-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hannover 96 season\nThe 2012\u201313 Hannover 96 season is the 117th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It is the clubs eleventh consecutive season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230257-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hannover 96 season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the third round and faced the cup holders, Borussia Dortmund before being knocked out of the tournament on a 5\u20131 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230257-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hannover 96 season\nIn Europe, the club qualified for the 2012\u201313 edition of the Europa League, where it played Anzhi Makhachkala in the Europa League Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230258-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Hapoel Tel Aviv Football Club's 85th years in the Israeli Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230258-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season, Squad report\nThe team started the season with Nitzan Shirazi as coach. After finishing at the 2nd place the previous Ligat Winner season, Hapoel Tel Aviv Playning on Europe League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230258-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season, Transfers\nThe team so far signed Daniel Borcal, Roee Zachri, Hanan Maman, John Pantsil, Eric Djemba Djemba, Bruno Martins Coutinho, Eliran Danin, Zee'v Haimovich, Tal Ben-Haim,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230258-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season, Transfers\nMarko Suler, Mahran Lala and Bevan Fransman leaves the team from Financial reasons. Omri Kanada Release from Hapoel tel Aviv. Nosa Igiebor Leave to Real Betis C.F..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230258-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season, 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230258-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season, Current squad, Players 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230258-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season, Current squad, Foreigners 2012\u201313\nOnly up to five non-Israeli nationals can be in an Israeli club squad. Those with Jewish ancestry, married to an Israeli, or have played in Israel for an extended period of time, can claim a passport or permanent residency which would allow them to play with Israeli status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season\nThe 2012\u201313 Harlequins season was a successful one, with Harlequins reaching the playoffs in the English Premiership and the knockout rounds of the Heineken Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season, English Premiership\nFollowing their 2011\u20132012 form, Harlequins started their 2012\u20132013 season on a high with four straight wins before suffering a first setback at the hands of Saracens at home in round 5 (16\u201318) and at Exeter Chiefs in round 6 (42\u201328). The club then managed to stay within the first two places of the table. On 29 December Big Game 5 proved to be a success with a 26\u201315 win over London Irish before a capacity crowd (82,000) at Twickenham Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season, English Premiership\nLater in the season the second setback came in the return game against Exeter when the Chiefs managed a 16\u201327 defeat of the Harlequins at The Stoop. The slide continued as they suffered back to back away defeats against Saracens and Gloucester, losing 27\u201312 and 17\u201315 respectively. But they managed to secure their place in the play offs after a 26\u201342 win away in Worcester. They played Leicester at Welford Road in the semi final, but lost 33\u201316 after conceding 3 second half tries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season, Heineken Cup\nHaving qualified for the 2012-13 Heineken Cup on the virtue of their 2012 Aviva Premiership title, Harlequins produced a strong showing in the pool stage, remaining unbeaten in pool 3 against Biarritz Olympique, Connacht Rugby and Italian newborn Pro 12 franchise Zebre to be granted #1 seed for the quarter finals. However, they lost to #8 seed Munster at home 12\u201318 in the quarter final, despite leading 9\u20136 at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season, LV= Cup\nPlayed during the Autumn Internationals and the Six Nations the LV= Cup thus featured a Harlequins team stripped of its players on international duty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season, LV= Cup\nChoosing to rely on a team full of developing players, Director of Rugby Conor O'Shea showed the club was full of promising talents when it remained unbeaten throughout the pool stage and went on to beat Bath Rugby (31\u201323) in the semi-final at The Stoop and Sale Sharks (32\u201314) in the final at Sixways Stadium with names like Nick Easter, Nick Evans, Olly Kohn, Ugo Monye and Jordan Turner-Hall not featured on any matchsheet for the whole campaign. This was Harlequins' third title in the English/Anglo-Welsh Cup and the first since the inception of the Anglo-Welsh format. This title granted Harlequins a place in the 2013-14 Heineken Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season, Premiership Rugby 7s Series\nPrior to the start of the XVs season, Harlequins participated (like all other Premiership clubs of the 2012\u20132013 season) in the Premiership 7s Series. Hosting the Group A tournament at the Twickenham Stoop, Harlequins failed to progress to the Final following two wins (over London Irish and London Wasps) and a loss (to Saracens) on bonus points difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230259-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harlequins season, Aviva A League\nParallel to the first half of the Aviva Premiership, Harlequins A team (a mix of Academy and First Team players) competed in the Aviva A League. Drawing with Saracens Storm in the first game, they went on to win their next four games securing a semi-final berth in the process before losing the last Conference game to Bath United. Level on league point with Saracens Storm they still topped the Southern Conference on points difference. Harlequins went on to beat Gloucester United (40\u201319) in the semi-final before getting the better over Saracens Storm (37\u201312) in the final, both times at The Stoop, to win the club's second title in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season\nThe 2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season was the first season of the new Harrisburg Heat indoor soccer club. The Heat, an Eastern Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their home games in the Farm Show Arena at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex & Expo Center in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The team, owned by Harrisburg Heat Sports Group, LLC, was led by general manager David Grimaldi, head coach Richard Chinapoo, and assistant coach Gino DiFlorio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Season summary\nThe team struggled in the regular season, finishing 6\u201310, and failed to advance to the postseason. Four of Harrisburg's six wins came against the Ohio Vortex who they swept for the season. Their other wins came against the struggling Illinois Piasa and in an upset of the Eastern Division-leading Detroit Waza. The team fared better at the box office with the third-highest average attendance at home games, behind only the Dallas Sidekicks and San Diego Sockers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Season summary\nThe Heat participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They received a bye in the Wild Card round then defeated Real Harrisburg in the Round of 16 before losing to the Detroit Waza on the road in the Quarter-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, History\nThe new Heat claim the heritage of the original Harrisburg Heat professional indoor soccer team which played 12 seasons in the National Professional Soccer League, which later became the Major Indoor Soccer League, from 1991 through 2003. When the Heat played host to the Cincinnati Kings on November 17, 2012, it was the first professional indoor soccer game held at the Farm Show Arena since the original Heat franchise folded in 2003. The arena was upgraded with a new scoreboard in November 2012, just before the team's home debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Off-field moves\nGeneral manager David Grimaldi is a former commissioner of the National Indoor Soccer League and former deputy commissioner of the current Major Indoor Soccer League. Heat head coach Richard Chinapoo and assistant coach Gino DiFlorio both played for the original Harrisburg Heat. Chinapoo also served as that team's head coach from 1998 through 2002. DiFlorio's playing career included the Cleveland Force, Dallas Sidekicks, Dayton Dynamo, Canton Invaders, Cleveland Crunch, Toronto Rockets, Buffalo Blizzard, Cincinnati Silverbacks, Baltimore Blast, and the original Harrisburg Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Off-field moves\nBroadcasts of Heat games for the 2012\u201313 season are carried on radio station WMSS (91.1 FM, \"Super 91\") as well as webcast on wmssfm.com and pennlive.com. Original Heat radio voice John Wilsbach handles play-by-play for the broadcasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Off-field moves\nChuck Mummert, the \"Singing Mayor\" of nearby Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, performed \"The Star-Spangled Banner\" before a December 2012 home game for the Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Off-field moves\nThe team wore pink soccer jerseys for their January 25, 2013, game against the San Diego Sockers. After the game, the sweaters were auctioned to raise money for a breast cancer awareness charity. On January 26, 2013, the team wore camouflage jerseys which were then auctioned to benefit Operation Comfort Warriors, an initiative by the American Legion. Operation Comfort Warriors provides wounded military personnel with comfort items such as DVDs, puzzles, books, ping pong tables, entertainment centers, and computers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Roster moves\nThe Heat's opening night roster included 10 players with experience playing for Harrisburg's professional outdoor soccer team, the Harrisburg City Islanders, a team in the National Division of the USL Pro soccer league. Along with his professional experience playing for the Islanders, goalkeeper Sam Bishop had been a standout college soccer player as a member of the Lehigh Mountain Hawks men's team, having recorded the best goals against average in the team's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Roster moves\nOf all the players on the opening night roster, only goalkeeper Dave Kern and defender Jason Hotchkin had experience playing professional indoor soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Roster moves\nRookie forward Tyler Witmer missed the team's open tryout but persuaded head coach Richard Chinapoo to allow him to work out with the team and earned an invitation to training camp. He went on to become one of the team's leading scorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Roster moves\nIn late January 2013, player Kent Ramirez left the team for a career in law enforcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Roster moves\nOn February 10, 2013, top player Chris Williams left the Heat to sign with the Baltimore Blast of the Major Indoor Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Roster moves\nHead coach Richard Chinapoo, age 56, donned a number 22 jersey and put himself in as a defender for the final three minutes of the team's season finale against the Ohio Vortex on February 16, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Awards and honors\nThe Heat honored head coach Richard Chinapoo during a halftime ceremony during the team's inaugural home game on November 17, 2012. Chinapoo retired as a player in 2000 and was inducted into the Harrisburg Heat Hall of Fame in 2001. The team honored original Harrisburg Heat player and former team captain Bill Becher during a halftime ceremony during the November 24, 2012, game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Awards and honors\nThe team retired the #9 jersey of Danny Kelly, a top player and first-ever draft pick for the original Harrisburg Heat franchise in the 1990s, in a halftime ceremony during the December 8, 2012, game. After retiring as a player, Kelly became the head coach of the Baltimore Blast in May 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Awards and honors\nThe Heat retired the #30 jersey of Gino DiFlorio, now the team's assistant coach, in a halftime ceremony during the December 15, 2012, game. DiFlorio is one of professional indoor soccer's all-time leading scorers and was a member of the original Harrisburg Heat from 1998 to 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Awards and honors\nThe team retired the #40 jersey of David Bascome, the all-time leading scorer for the original Harrisburg Heat franchise, in a halftime ceremony during the December 29, 2012, game. Bascome played with the original Harrisburg Heat in 1991 and from 1993 through 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Awards and honors\nOn January 19, 2013, the team had original Harrisburg Heat owner Rex Herbert kick out the ceremonial first ball. Also, the team recognized Jim Pollihan, the coach of the original Heat from their launch in 1991 through 1999, in a halftime ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Awards and honors\nThe team retired the #5 jersey of Bob Lilley, a standout player for six seasons with the original Heat franchise in the mid-1990s, in a halftime ceremony during the January 25, 2013, game against the San Diego Sockers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230260-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harrisburg Heat season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230261-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hartford Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Hartford Hawks men's basketball team represented the University of Hartford during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hawks, led by third year head coach John Gallagher, played their home games at the Chase Arena at Reich Family Pavilion and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 17\u201314, 10\u20136 in America East play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the America East Tournament to UMBC. They were invited to the 2013 CIT, their first ever Division I postseason appearance, where they lost in the first round to Rider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230262-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hartford Hawks women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Hartford Hawks women's basketball team represented the University of Hartford during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. Hartford was led by head coach Jennifer Rizzotti who was in her fourteenth season as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230263-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hartlepool United F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Hartlepool United's 104th year in existence and their sixth 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 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230263-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230264-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team represented Harvard University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Crimson, led by sixth year head coach Tommy Amaker, played their home games at Lavietes Pavilion and are members of the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team\nHarvard entered the season as the two-time defending Ivy League Champion, but its roster was greatly changed due to graduation and the 2012 Harvard cheating scandal that led to the withdrawal of two star players. With reduced expectations, the team entered the season expected to finish second in conference. During the season, the team swept the three opponents that are also from Boston. The win against Boston College, gave Amaker his sixth victory against no defeats over Atlantic Coast Conference foes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team\nDespite the team's turmoil, it prevailed to win the 2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season regular season championship, earning the team an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, where it won the school's first ever NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament game. The tournament victory over #3 seed New Mexico was also the school's first victory over a top 10 ranked team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team\nThe team was led by Wesley Saunders who was unanimous First Team All-Ivy and Ivy League Rookie of the Year Siyani Chambers who was also a first team honoree. Both Steve Moundou-Missi and Laurent Rivard earned honorable mention All-Ivy recognition. Harvard tied an Ivy League single-season team record with 13 combined Player of the Week and Rookie of the Week Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Preseason\nPrior to the season, Harvard won all four games on its international training trip to Italy. The team announced that senior Christian Webster and junior Laurent Rivard would serve as captain. The Crimson only returned one starter from the prior year. Harvard's two captains from the prior season, Keith Wright and Oliver McNally were seniors. Wright had been the Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year in 2011. Wright, the Crimson all-time leader in blocked shots, signed with Uppsala Basket of the Swedish Basketball League, and McNally, signed with the Moncton Miracles of the National Basketball League of Canada. The team welcomed five freshmen and ten returning players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe Ivy League media selected Harvard as the preseason runner-up to Princeton, giving the team the only first place vote that did not go to Princeton. Jeff Goodman of CBS Sports also selected Princeton first and Harvard second with his preseason predictions, noting that Harvard had been his preseason favorite until the September cheating scandal that involved about 125 athletes and students ensnared Kyle Casey and Brandyn Curry, leading to their withdrawal. Casey and Curry had been first-team and second-team All-Ivy selections respectively for the 2011\u201312 Ivy League men's basketball season, respectively. Both players withdrew from school in hopes of preserving their final year of athletic eligibility following the investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Preseason\nHarvard appeared on 14 televised games in the regular season. Of these 14, six came on the NBC Sports Network. In addition, the team had four games broadcast on four different ESPN networks. Its February 23 game against Yale was televised by CBS Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Schedule\nHarvard's November 14 contest against Massachusetts was televised on ESPN as part of the network's Tip-Off Marathon. Harvard lost the contest 67\u201364. On December 4, the team defeated Boston College for its fifth consecutive victory against Boston College Eagles men's basketball, making Amaker a perfect 6\u20130 against the Atlantic Coast Conference. The team also defeated cross-town rivals MIT and Boston University as well as in-state rival Holy Cross. Harvard's contest against Columbia that was originally scheduled for February 9 at 7:00 PM at Levien Gymnasium in Manhattan was postponed until February 10 at 2:00 PM due to the February 2013 nor'easter (also known as Winter Storm Nemo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Schedule\nHarvard had cruised to a 9\u20131 record in conference play and then fell to 7\u20132 Princeton on March 1. The following night, Princeton defeated Dartmouth and Harvard lost to Penn to give Princeton the lead in the conference race. Harvard earned the Ivy League Championship with wins on March 8 and 9 over Columbia and Cornell to finish at 11\u20133 in conference as Princeton was swept on the same nights to Yale and Brown to fall to 9\u20134 in conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Schedule\nOn March 21 in the 2013 NCAA Tournament, Harvard earned the school's first NCAA Tournament victory and its first victory over a top 10 opponent when it defeated number three seeded New Mexico (#10 AP Poll/#10 Coaches' Poll). The victory was the first by an Ivy League team in the tournament since the 2009\u201310 Cornell Big Red men's basketball team advanced to the Sweet Sixteen. Two days later, the team lost to Arizona, ending its season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Schedule, In season\nEach week the Ivy League selects a player of the week and a rookie of the week. Led by Wesley Saunders' 5 Ivy League Player of the Week Awards and Siyani Chambers' 6 Rookie of the Week Awards, Harvard tied the Ivy League record with 13 single-season weekly recognitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Schedule, All-Ivy\nSiyani Chambers was named the unanimous choice for Ivy League Rookie of the Year and the first freshman to be first team All-Ivy. Chambers and Saunders were the first Harvard teammates selected together as first team All-Ivy. The following players earned Ivy League postseason recognition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230264-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team, Schedule, All-Ivy\nOn March\u00a012, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association named Saunders to its 2012\u201313 Men's All-District I (ME, VT, NH, RI, MA, CT) Team, based upon voting from its national membership. The National Association of Basketball Coaches announced their Division\u00a0I All\u2010District teams on March 26, recognizing the nation\u2019s best men\u2019s collegiate basketball student-athletes. Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, 240 student-athletes, from 24 districts were chosen. The selections on this list were then eligible for the State Farm Coaches\u2019 Division\u00a0I All-America teams. Saunders and Chambers were among the District 13 first team selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230265-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey season\nThe Harvard Crimson represented Harvard University in ECAC women's ice hockey. The Crimison will attempt to win the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230266-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team represented the University of Hawaii at Manoa during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230266-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team\nThe Rainbow Warriors, led by third year head coach Gib Arnold, played their home games at the Stan Sheriff Center and were first year members of the Big West Conference. They finished the season 17\u201315, 10\u20138 in Big West play to finish in fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big West Tournament to UC Irvine. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to Air Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230266-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Rainbow Warrior roster was composed of players from eight countries (Angola, Australia, Canada, Croatia, Germany, Latvia, New Zealand, and the United States).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230266-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors basketball team\nIn 2015, Hawaii announced it would vacate wins from this and the 2013\u201314 season due to the participation of Davis Rozitis and Isaac Fotu, who were ruled ineligible due to improper benefits. The 2016\u201317 Hawaii media guide indicates that all but the November 12 win over Houston Baptist were vacated. Rozitis did not play in that game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230267-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hazfi Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Hazfi Cup was the 26th season of the Iranian football knockout competition. Esteghlal was the defending champion, but was eliminated by Sepahan in semi-final. The competition started on 13 December 2012 and was ended on 5 May 2013. Sepahan won the title after defeating Persepolis in final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230267-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hazfi Cup, Participating teams\nThe following 32 teams compete in the Hazfi Cup 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 116th season of competitive football by Heart of Midlothian, and their 30th consecutive season in the top level of Scottish football, competing in the Scottish Premier League. Hearts also competed in the Europa League, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Summary, Season\nHearts finished tenth in the Scottish Premier League. They reached the Play-off Round of the Europa League, the Fourth round of the Scottish Cup and reached the Final of the League Cup losing 3\u20132 to St Mirren at Hampden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Summary, Financial problems\nThe club continued to experience financial problems with some of the senior team not getting paid on time in September. Some players and the management team did not receive there wages in October on time either, which led to the Scottish Premier League (SPL) hitting the club with a transfer embargo. The embargo meant Hearts were unable to sign any players until at least 23 December 2012. In December, the embargo was extended indefinitely as Hearts were deemed to have broken SPL rules by failing to pay a number of bonuses and appearance payments in a timely manner. On 17 January 2013, the embargo was lifted and replaced with signing restrictions until the end of the season, meaning Hearts could only sign players under the age of 21, on less wages and on a one in one out basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Summary, Financial problems\nIn early November, the club were subject to a tax tribunal against HMRC over a \u00a31.75m bill. The case centred around the transfer of players on loan from FBK Kaunas and whether tax on the players full earnings should have been paid in the UK rather than in Lithuania where there is a lower rate of taxation. Kaunas paid the large part of the players wages and in doing so paid tax in Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Summary, Financial problems\nShortly after the club was issued with a winding up order over a \u00a3449,692.04 unpaid tax bill forcing the club to issue a plea for emergency backing from its fans amid fears Hearts did not have enough funds to continue past their scheduled game against St Mirren on 17 November. Fans were urged to buy match tickets to sell out games and take part in the club's share issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Summary, Financial problems\nn order to fill the shortfall in funds at the club", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Summary, Financial problems\nOn 4 May, Hearts released their financial figures for year ending June 2012. Showing that they had made a loss of \u00a31.65 million and debt had been increased slightly to \u00a324.7m. Hearts said that this was due to the HMRC tax liability being reported during this period. They also further reduced operating costs and employment costs. Turnover at the club increased by \u00a31.76m to \u00a38.68m, this was mainly due to player sales and competing in European competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Scottish Premier League\nThe fixture list for the first 33 Scottish Premier League matches in the 2012\u201313 season was announced on 18 June. Hearts were given a home game to start the season against St Johnstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Europa League\nHearts entered the Europa League during the Play-off round having won the 2011\u201312 Scottish Cup. The draw took place on 10 August 2012, Hearts were unseeded and were drawn against English Premier League side Liverpool. The tie is the club's second all British affair in two seasons having been drawn against Tottenham Hotspur in the same round the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, League Cup\nHaving qualified for the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Hearts entered the League Cup at the third round stage. The draw was held on 3 September and the club were drawn against First Division side Livingston, Hearts won the tie 3\u20131 and progressed to the quarter-final. Hearts went ahead through a deflected goal from Danny Grainger, before Marc McNulty equalised following a defensive mistake. Marius \u017dali\u016bkas then scored twice in quick succession to cancel out his earlier error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, League Cup\nHearts were drawn away to Dundee United for the quarter-final. Callum Paterson opened the scoring before Johnny Russell equalised for the home side, before Hearts had Darren Barr sent off but managed to force the match to extra time. Hearts went on to win the match 5\u20134 on penalties in a dramatic shoot out, with 14 penalties being taken in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, League Cup\nThe draw for the semi-final took place on 8 November, and Hearts were drawn against fellow Scottish Premier League side Inverness Caledonian Thistle. Andrew Shinnie put the Highlanders ahead shortly after half time, but debutant Michael Ngoo struck the equaliser before Scott Robinson was sent off for a two footed tackle on Inverness player Owain Tudor Jones. The teams could not be separated and the match went to penalties with Hearts going through for the second round in a row, with Philip Roberts missing the last penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, League Cup\nThe result meant Hearts would return to Hampden nine months after lifting the Scottish Cup, and would face either St Mirren or Celtic in the final. The following day St Mirren beat Celtic 3\u20132 setting up a non Old Firm final. Following completion of the round Inverness asked the Scottish Football Association (SFA) for clarity over whether Hearts player Danny Wilson should have been suspended for the tie, due to speculation over whether he had served a ban from his time at Rangers. The SFA later confirmed that he was eligible and had served the ban when he joined Liverpool in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, League Cup\nHearts were led into the final by Gary Locke in his first game as the club's official manager, with Andy Webster captaining the side. Hearts went ahead early on through Ryan Stevenson, although their early dominance faltered with Esma\u00ebl Gon\u00e7alves equalising just before half time. Hearts were struck hard in the second half with Steven Thompson and Conor Newton scoring consecutively to make it 3\u20131, before Stevenson struck again to make it 3\u20132. The result meant the cup returned to Paisley for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Scottish Cup\nHearts entered the Scottish Cup at the fourth round stage. The draw was conducted on 5 November and drew the cup holders against Edinburgh Derby rival Hibernian, a repeat of the 2012 Scottish Cup Final. The team crashed out the cup, courtesy of an 84th-minute goal from David Wotherspoon. The shot was heavily deflected off Hearts captain Marius \u017dali\u016bkas into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 18 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Player statistics, Squad information\nThis section includes all players who have been part of the first team during the season. They may not have made an appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Player statistics, Squad information\nAppearances (starts and substitute appearances) and goals include those in the Scottish Premier League, Scottish Cup, League Cup and the UEFA Europa League. 1Player first came to the club on loan and was transferred the following year. Squad only includes players currently registered with the club and those with professional contracts only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Player statistics, Clean sheets\nLast updated: 18 May 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Management\nAt the end of the previous season manager Paulo S\u00e9rgio's contract expired and he returned to Portugal awaiting an offer from the club. The club offered him reduced terms and with concerns offer the size of his player's budget for the new season, on 7 June 2012, Hearts announced he had rejected the clubs offer and would not return to the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Management\nOn 26 June 2012, John McGlynn was appointed as manager on a one-year contract. McGlynn had previously been caretaker manager on two occasions in 2005. Former Hearts player Edgaras Jankauskas was appointed as Assistant Manager with Gary Locke remaining as first-team coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Management\nOn 28 February 2013, with the club sitting second bottom of the league McGlynn left the club by mutual consent. Coach Gary Locke and player development manager Darren Murray took over as the club's interim management team. On 16 March, Locke was appointed as manager until the end of the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Playing kit\nHearts signed a long-term deal with Adidas as their kit manufacture for the 2012\u201313 season, replacing Umbro. Wonga.com remained as the shirts sponsor for the second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Club and player awards\nThe Heart of Midlothian young player of the year awards took place on 6 April 2013, with Angus Beith, Callum Tapping and Jamie Walker the recipients of the nights awards. The Heart of Midlothian player of the year awards took place on 19 May, with Jason Holt winning goal of the year, Jamie MacDonald save of the year, Marius \u017dali\u016bkas fans player of the year and Jamie MacDonald also taking player's player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Club, Club and player awards\nA special award the Doc Melvin Memorial Award was also given to ex Hearts physiotherapist Alan Rae, and the favourite moment of the year was declared as taking the lead at Anfield against Liverpool in the Europa League. Other awards over the course of the season included Jamie Walker winning the Weatherseal's Window of Opportunity Award, given to a player who has made the most of their first team opportunities and the club's match day programme winning best in the SPL and best in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Transfers\nHearts first activity for the new season came with the announcement on 27 April 2012, that David Obua, Aaron Murdoch, Chris Tobin, Ryan Stewart, Colin Hamilton and Matthew Park had not been offered new contracts for the new season. Further announcements followed with the news that Ian Black, Adrian Mrowiec, Stephen Elliott, Gary Glen and Jordan Morton had also not been offered new contracts. On 6 July 2012, it was announced that both Suso Santana and Craig Beattie had turned down new contract offers and would also leave the club. Further departures included Jason Thomson, Chris Kane, Jonny Stewart, Gary Graham and the previous season's top scorer Rudi Skacel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Transfers\nDuring pre-season the club brought in Rory Boulding and Anton Peterlin on trial. Neither signed for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Transfers\nJohn McGlynn's first signing as manager was Finnish international Peter Enckelman, who was brought in as cover following an injury to Mark Ridgers. On transfer deadline day, Ryan Stevenson returned to the club signing a three-year contract, Liam Gordon signed from Raith Rovers and David Smith went the other way on loan. Hearts also accepted an undisclosed bid from Rangers for David Templeton and Ryan McGowan, with the latter opting to stay at Hearts after contract talks with Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Transfers\nOn 3 September, the club signed Alan Combe as a coach but was also registered as a player. He was able to sign out with the transfer window as had been released from his contract with Greenock Morton on the last day of the transfer window. In October free agent Rudi Skacel returned to the club to train, however a deal to re-sign him was stopped by Hearts transfer ban. The club sent three more under-20 players out on loan during the first half of the season, Brad McKay, Callum Tapping and Jack Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Transfers\nIn December Arturas Rimkevicius was brought in on trial, with a view to signing in January. The deal fell through due to the club's enforced restriction on signing over 21's. On 4 January 2013, with his short-term contract expired Peter Enckelman was released by the club. A Further departure was confirmed on 7 January, with Ryan McGowan completing his move to Chinese club Shandong Luneng Taishan. The club had accepted a \u00a3400.000 bid the previous week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Transfers\nOn 18 January, Danny Wilson signed on loan until the end of the season, from English Premier League side Liverpool, this was closely followed by his Liverpool teammate Michael Ngoo who also arrived on loan. Further departures included non-first team players Callum Wyllie, Michael Thomson, Danny Thomson and Ewan Saunderson, meaning six players departed during the January transfer window. In February, Andrew Driver was allowed to leave the club to join Houston Dynamo on loan until his contract expired in the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230268-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Contract extensions\nThe following players extended their contracts with the club over the course of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Heineken Cup was the 18th season of the Heineken Cup, the annual rugby union European club competition for clubs from the top six nations in European rugby. The tournament began with two pool matches on 12 October 2012 and ended with the final at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin on 18 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup\nLeinster, who became one of only two clubs ever to win two consecutive Heineken Cups in 2012, attempted to become the first club ever to win the competition three straight years. However they were eliminated at the pool stages, the first defending champions to do so since London Wasps in 2007\u201308. Toulon won an all-French final 16\u201315 against Clermont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, Teams\nThe remaining two places are filled by the winners of the previous year's Heineken Cup and Amlin Challenge Cup. If the cup winners are already qualified through their domestic league, an additional team from their country will claim a Heineken Cup place (assuming another team is available). Accordingly, Biarritz claimed the Challenge Cup winner's berth, and since Heineken Cup winners Leinster were already qualified through Pro12, the extra Irish berth went to Connacht.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, Teams\nTeams are listed in the order they are presented to Heineken Cup organiser European Rugby Cup by their respective leagues. In the cases of England and France, this does not necessarily match the teams' placement in their national leagues in the preceding season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, Seeding\nThe seeding system was the same as in the 2011\u201312 tournament. The 24 competing teams are ranked based on past Heineken Cup and European Challenge Cup performance, with each pool receiving one team from each quartile, or Tier. The requirement to have only one team per country in each pool, however, still applies (with the exception of the inclusion of the seventh French team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, Seeding\nThe brackets show each team's European Rugby Club Ranking at the end of the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, Pool stage\nThe draw for the pool stage took place on 12 June 2012 at the Aviva Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, Pool stage\nUnder the rules of the competition organiser, European Rugby Cup, tie\u2013breakers within each pool are as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230269-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, Pool stage\nERC has four additional tie\u2013breakers, used if tied teams are in different pools, or if the above steps cannot break a tie between teams in the same pool:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230270-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage\nThe 2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage was the first stage of the 18th season of the Heineken Cup, Europe's top competition for rugby union clubs. It involved 24 teams competing for eight quarter-final berths, awarded to the winners of each of six pools plus the two top-ranked second-place teams. The next three best runners-up were parachuted into the Amlin Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230270-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage\nThe pool stage began with two matches on 12 October 2012 and ended on 20 January 2013. The first four rounds of fixtures were released on 26 July 2012. The quarter-finalists then participated in a knockout tournament that ultimately ended with the final on Saturday 18 May 2013 at Aviva Stadium in Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230270-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage, Seeding\nThe seeding system was the same as in the 2011\u201312 tournament. The 24 competing teams were ranked based on past Heineken Cup and European Challenge Cup performance, with each pool receiving one team from each quartile, or Tier. The requirement to have only one team per country in each pool, however, still applied (with the exception of the inclusion of the seventh French team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230270-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage, Seeding\nThe brackets show each team's European Rugby Club Ranking at the end of the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230270-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nThe draw for the pool stage took place on 12 June 2012 at Aviva Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230270-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nUnder rules of the competition organiser, European Rugby Cup, tiebreakers within each pool are as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230270-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Heineken Cup pool stage, Pool stage\nERC has four additional tiebreakers, used if tied teams are in different pools, or if the above steps cannot break a tie between teams in the same pool:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230271-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hellenic Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Hellenic Football League season was the 60th 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-00230271-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hellenic Football League, Premier Division\nPremier Division featured 17 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-00230271-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hellenic Football League, Division One East\nDivision One East featured ten clubs which competed in the division last season, along with five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230271-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hellenic Football League, Division One West\nDivision One West featured 12 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230271-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hellenic Football League, Division Two East\nDivision Two East featured seven clubs which competed in the division last season, along with six new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230271-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hellenic Football League, Division Two West\nDivision Two West featured eleven 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, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season\nThe 2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season was the franchise's 75th season in the American Hockey League, starting on October 13, 2012, and ending on May 8, 2013, when they were eliminated during the first round of the Calder Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season\nDue to the 2012\u201313 National Hockey League lockout, Washington Capitals coach Adam Oates served as co-coach of the Bears alongside head coach Mark French until November. Several Washington players also played with the Bears for a time, including defenseman Dmitry Orlov and goaltender Braden Holtby, who recorded four season shutouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season\nThe Bears experienced major offensive problems at the start of the season, resulting in the team's worst 17-game start in eight years. But the team saw more success as the season progressed, including a seven-game road winning streak from November 28 to January 11, and a seven-game point streak from January 26 to February 15. The Bears participated in the 2013 AHL Outdoor Classic, but lost to the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season\nHershey was eliminated from the playoffs by the Providence Bruins despite winning the first two games in a best-of-five series, marking only the tenth time this had occurred in league history. Afterward, it was announced that French would not be retained for a fifth season as head coach. The 2012\u201313 season drew a club-record home attendance average of 10,046, only the fifth time a club's average had surpassed 10,000 in recorded league history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Off-season\nAfter several years of roster stability, the Hershey Bears lost several players during the off-season, including Keith Aucoin, Chris Bourque, Andrew Carroll, Sean Collins, Cody Eakin, Kyle Greentree, Christian Hanson, D. J. King, Jacob Micflikier, Graham Mink, Zach Miskovic and Joel Rechlicz. The team obtained several new players through free agency, including Alex Berry, Matt Beaudoin, Matt Clackson, Jon DiSalvatore, Jon Kalinski, Steven Oleksy, Garrett Stafford, Ryan Stoa and Jeff Taffe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Off-season\nRookies Stan Galiev and Cameron Schilling joined the team, Mattias Sj\u00f6gren returned from the Swedish Elite League, and Hershey also obtained Zach Hamill in a trade that sent Bourque to the Boston Bruins organization. Bears coach Mark French said the new roster made the season feel like \"a change in era\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Off-season\nLike all American Hockey League teams, the Hershey Bears saw changes at the start of the season due to the National Hockey League lockout. Washington Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby and defenseman Dmitry Orlov joined the Bears roster due to the lockout, and Capitals head coach Adam Oates became co-coach of the Hershey team along with French. Oates' coaching staff also joined Oates and the team, including assistant coaches Calle Johansson and Tim Hunter, and video coach Brett Leonhardt. Bears goaltender Sergey Kostenko started the regular season on injured reserve due to off-season shoulder surgery, and winger Danick Paquette required surgery after breaking his right forearm during an October 6 exhibition game against the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, October\nHershey began its regular season with major offensive problems. They were outshot in 17 of their first 18 games, and were held to one or fewer goals in seven of those games. Their 6\u201310\u20131\u20130 start was the lowest total through 17 games since 2004\u201305, which was the last season they failed to make the playoffs. After losing their season opener to the Syracuse Crunch, the Bears beat the Binghamton Senators on October 19 despite being outshot 44 to 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, October\nHershey lost their first home game on October 20, falling 8\u20137 to the Rochester Americans; the 15-goal total marked the most combined goals from a Bears home opener, up from the previous record of 12 in 1987. Hershey center Ryan Potulny exited the game with an undisclosed injury, and would not return until November 16 after a nine-game absence. The team's defense improved in subsequent games, allowing two goals or fewer in four of their next five matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, October\nHershey lost 2\u20131 in overtime against Binghamton on October 21. The game would have gone to a shootout, but under the first usage of the AHL's new video replay system at Giant Center, a Senators goal that had been overturned with 6.5 seconds left in overtime was restored. The Bears were held to a single goal in a second straight game in a 3\u20131 loss to Connecticut Whale on October 26, but the next day saw their first home win and first shutout victory of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, October\nThey defeated the Albany Devils 3\u20130 and Holtby, who had been sidelined since the previous week by an upper body injury, made 35 saves. Forward T.J. Syner was recalled from the ECHL's Reading Royals and made his Hershey debut in that game. The Bears finished the month with a 3\u20132 victory against the Penguins on October 28, marking their first winning streak of the season. Orlov would miss the next four games due to an upper body injury, not returning until November 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, November\nHershey defeated the Springfield Falcons 3\u20132 in a shootout on November 2, in which Boyd Kane and Matt Pope scored their first regulation goals of the season, and Galiev made the game-winner in the seventh round of the shootout, his first professional shootout attempt. In a subsequent 3\u20132 loss against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers on November 5, the Bears allowed a season-high 11 power plays, four of which were five-on-three. Hershey had 50 total penalty minutes in the game, compared to 115 minutes total in their first eight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, November\nStoa suffered an upper body injury that left him scratched until January 5. The Bears went 3-for-7 on the power play during a 3\u20131 victory against the Penguins on November 9, ending a 0-for-18 power play stretch; Holtby made 38 saves in the game. The Bears lost their next match 2\u20131 against the St. John's IceCaps on November 10. They were outshot 27 to 19, making a total of 359 to 266 for the season and putting them 29th out of 30 in the league in shots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, November\nHershey's offensive problems continued in a 3\u20131 loss against the Portland Pirates on November 11, in which they struggled to get the puck out of their zone and through the neutral zone. Holtby, who made 31 saves, said afterward, \"We just seemed to look dead the last couple games.\" Kalinski suffered a hand injury and would not return until December 27. The Bears fell to Syracuse again on November 16. The 6\u20131 game, the most lopsided defeat of the season, was their third consecutive loss and third straight home game with only one goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, November\nHershey broke a three-game losing streak on November 17 with a 4\u20131 against the Penguins, where Garrett Mitchell scored two goals, including Hershey's first successful penalty shot since February 27, 2010. The team had surrendered two goals or fewer in eight of their past 14 games. But Hershey lost their next two games, including a 4\u20130 shutout loss to the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on November 21. The Binghamton-based Internet radio Power Play Post Show reported from an anonymous source that Penguins head coach John Hynes put a $200 bounty on Bears defenseman Oleksy for that game, a claim Hynes strongly denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, November\nAfter the November 21 game, Oates announced he and his assistant coaches would no longer coach the Bears, giving full control of the team back to French and assistant coach Troy Mann. Hershey's offensive problems continued with a 3\u20131 loss against the Adirondack Phantoms, where they went 0-for-7 on the power play and saw their points percentage drop to .382, the worst in the Eastern Conference. However, they won five of their next six games starting with a 4\u20132 victory over the Toronto Marlies on November 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, November\nThe Bears' subsequent 5\u20132 win against the Norfolk Admirals on November 28 marked the start of a seven-game road winning streak that would not end until January 11. It was also just the second time in 19 games that they outshot their opponent, with 35 shots to Norfolk's 26. DiSalatore made two of the goals. The Norfolk match was Kane's 310th game with Hershey, placing him 39th in the teams' all-time games played list. The Bears won a third consecutive game against Bridgeport on November 30, against leading in shots 32 to 24. They won 5\u20132, scoring four goals in the third period, a season high for goals in a single period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, December\nThe Bears opened the month with a 5\u20131 loss against Norfolk on December 1, even though the Admirals allowed nine power plays. On December 4, DiSalvatore and Potulny were formally named alternate captains, ending the practice of rotating alternates throughout the season. Orlov suffered an upper body injury during Hershey's 2\u20131 victory against Norfolk on December 6, and did not return to Hershey until March 9. The Bears also won 5\u20134 against Wilkes-Barre/Scranton after Kevin Marshall, who had been a healthy scratch the day before, made his first Hershey goal in overtime for the win. The Bears lost 3\u20132 against the Hamilton Bulldogs, with Potulny scoring both Hershey goals, including a power play goal that ended the team's recent 0-for-19 power play record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, December\nHershey next won 2\u20131 against St. John's on December 11, in which Holtby the eighth goaltender in Hershey history to reach 70 victories. Taffe had two assists, tying him with Aucoin for second in the league for assists, and both Hershey goals came on the power play, marking the first time since November 9 they scored more than one power play goal in a game. Holtby had three shutout victories in the next five games, starting with a 4\u20130 win against St. John's on December 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, December\nThe Bears scored two power plays, marking the first time since the season's three opening games that the Bears scored power plays in three consecutive matches. Paquette and Kostenko were reassigned to ECHL's Reading Royals, and rookie winger Stanislav Galiev was recalled from Reading to the Bears. Holtby's next 4\u20130 shutout victory against Norfolk on December 19 moved him to fifth place in career Hershey shutouts with 13, and seventh place in regular season wins with 72.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, December\nHershey went 0-for-9 in the power play in their subsequent 1\u20130 loss to Springfield on December 22, which ended a seven-game point streak for Taffe. Holtby's 2\u20130 shutout against Scranton on December 26 brought his record to 12\u20139\u20131, tying him for third in the league for wins; his four shutouts of the season tied him for second in the league. During a five-game span he stopped 154 of 158 shots, a .975 save percentage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, December\nWith their sixth straight road win on December 27 against Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Hershey saw a streak of 21 straight successful penalty kills end with a power play goal by the Penguins' Paul Thompson. Hershey lost their next three games, during which they went 0-for-11 on the power play. Although his shutout streak ended, Holtby made 89 combined saves during the losing streak. He was named AHL Goaltender of the Month for December, during which he had a .943 save percentage and allowed one goal or fewer in six of 10 starts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, January\nWith the end of the NHL lockout on January 6, Holtby and Schilling left Hershey for the Washington Capitals, which cleared the way for goaltender Philipp Grubauer to rejoin the Bears from ECHL's Reading Royals. The end of the lockout was believed to ultimately benefit Hershey because they retained more of their roster than most other AHL clubs. Tom\u00e1\u0161 Kundr\u00e1tek scored two goals for Hershey in their 4\u20133 win against Bridgeport on January 8, including the unassisted game-winner with 25.6 seconds left in overtime. Dany Sabourin made 35 saves, marking his third straight win as starting goaltender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, January\nHershey's seven-game road winning streak ended with a 1\u20130 loss to the Penguins on January 11, in which Taffe, Potulny and Evan Barlow all suffered lower body injuries. Despite their absences, the Bears beat Connecticut 4\u20133 the next day, where the line of Kalinski, Mitchell and Barry Almeida combined for two goals and six points. Hershey beat the Whale again on January 13 in a 5\u20130 shutout, scoring four goals in the first period including three power plays, which equaled 11.1 percent of their 27 power plays of the season thus far. Tom Poti scored one of the power play goals; it marked his first game since January 12, 2011 for the Washington Capitals due to a fractured pelvis that threatened to end his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, January\nThe Bears won their third consecutive game on January 16 with a shootout victory over the Worcester Sharks. Grubauer stopped four of five shootout attempts by the Sharks, while Mitchell and Potulny scored on the shootout for the win. But that game was followed by a season-high four-game losing streak, which included a 2\u20131 overtime loss to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton at the AHL Outdoor Classic on January 20. Before a crowd of 17,311 at Hersheypark Stadium, Hershey kept the Penguins scoreless for two periods before they tied it in the third, then Paul Thompson scored a game-winning breakaway goal 1:19 into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, January\nTheir fourth straight loss against Binghamton on January 26 briefly took the Bears out of playoff contention in the Eastern Conference. The Bears ranked 22nd in the league for scoring, averaging 2.53 goals per game, and were last in league for shots on goal per game at 25.21. Their record was 0-for-15 when trailing in two periods, and 12 of their games so far had been one-goal decisions. However, the January 26 loss also started a seven-game point streak for the Bears, which included three wins and four overtime losses, three of which in a shootout. On January 31, the Bears obtained winger Peter LeBlanc in a trade for Beaudoin to the Chicago Blackhawks, and also received Casey Wellman in a trade for Hamill to the Florida Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, February\nHershey broke their four-game losing streak with a 2\u20131 victory against the Manchester Monarchs on February 2, making a season-high 44 shots on goal. LeBlanc and Wellman combined for 10 shots in their Hershey debuts, and LeBlanc scored one of the two goals. Hershey lost the next day to the Penguins, falling 2\u20131 in overtime after allowing a power play goal with 10.8 seconds left in overtime. In a 3\u20132 shootout win against the Lake Erie Monsters on February 5, Sabourin made 35 saves and the Bears killed seven power plays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, February\nThey also defeated Binghamton 4\u20133 on February 9, scoring on two of eight power plays, better than their 1-for-11 power play record going into the game. Hershey lost 4\u20133 in a shootout against Norfolk on February 10, despite scoring three goals in the third period. Potulny made two of the goals, including the last with 34.4 seconds in regulation, marking his second multi-goal game of the season. Stoa also scored his second two-goal game of the season in the Bears' subsequent 4\u20133 loss against Norfolk on February 10, which marked the team's third consecutive shootout loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, February\nHershey's seven-game point streak ended on February 16 with a 2\u20131 loss against Toronto. It was also their eighth one-goal game, tying them with the Houston Aeros for the season's most one-goal contests in the league. In a 4\u20131 win against Rochester the next day, Grubauer blocked 35 shots, marking his personal high in the American Hockey League and the third time this season he held an opponent to one goal in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, February\nThe Bears defeated Binghamton 5\u20134 in a shootout on February 22, rallying from a two-goal deficit in the third period and killing nine of the Senators' 10 power plays. The victory was one of only two victories, both shootouts, in the past 18 games where Hershey trailed after two periods. Taffe scored two power play goals for his first two-goal game for the Bears, and McNeill's three assists move his career points total to 146, making him eighth in all-time scoring among Hershey defensemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0017-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, February\nGrubauer earned his AHL shutout for the Bears with a 3\u20130 win February 23 against Adirondack, making a season high-tying 40 saves. The game brought Hershey's penalty kill record in 10 games to 42-for-46, or 91.3 percent, bringing their overall penalty kill to eighth best in the league. The Bears lost 6\u20134 in Albany on February 24, which was also the third straight game Hershey scored two power play goals. They were scored by Stol and Potulny, who had each had five goals in their last six and seven games, respectively. Wellman also scored two goals in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, March\nThe Bears won their first three contests from March 1 to 3. Although it marked their fourth three-game winning streak of the season, it was their first time winning on three consecutive days, and first winning three in a row at home. The streak started with a 3\u20132 victory against the Penguins, scoring three goals in the first half of the first period. They were outshot 34 to 15, which tied for Bears' lowest total shots in a game. Grubauer was recalled to the Washington Capitals on March 7 to substitute for an ill Michal Neuvirth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, March\nHe stopped 40 of 45 shots in 5\u20132 loss to the New York Islanders in his first NHL start on March 9, and was returned to the Bears the next day after Neuvirth recovered. The Bears' lost their next three straight games, including two back-to-back losses against Norfolk in which they were held to one goal. Those losses placed them in danger of losing playoff contention, tying them with Connecticut for seventh, with Albany and Manchester each one point behind. It was also the first time this season the Bears lost a game in regulation that it led after two periods. The team's losing streak ended with a 1\u20130 victory against Bridgeport on March 17, when Mitchell scored a game-winning overtime goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, March\nHershey faced a challenging schedule for the end of its regular season, with only three of the last 14 games scheduled for home. This marked the fewest in team history, with a previous low of five games in the final 14 of 2002\u201303. The team also experienced significant roster changes in March, with Orlov, Oleksy and Schilling all being recalled to the Washington Capitals. Almeida and Kostenko were reassigned to the Reading Royals, Nicolas Deschamps joined the Bears roster, and Kevin Marshall was for defenseman Chay Genoway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, March\nCapitals winger Joey Crabb also cleared waivers and was assigned to Hershey on March 23. The Bears ended a two-game losing streak with a 4\u20131 victory over Worcester on March 24, but lost 5\u20133 on March 29 to Albany, who had just lost six consecutive games. Grubauer was replaced by Sabourin after surrendering three shots on seven goals. Hershey defeated Providence 3\u20132 the next day, rallying with two goals in the final 12 minutes. It marked the first time this season the Bears had won a game after trailing for two periods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, April\nApril brought further roster changes for the Hershey Bears, with Joel Rechlicz rejoining the team in exchange for Matt Clackson, and Stafford being traded for winger Dane Byers. Forward Michael Latta was also traded to Hershey, meaning the team had added seven new players to the roster via trades since January 31. The April trades were intended to add forward speed and depth to the team, but a late NHL trade deadline resulting from the lockout left only nine james to meld the new players into the line-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, April\nAfter beating Syracuse 4\u20131 on April 5, Hershey fell into a four-game losing slump that briefly knocked them out of playoff contention. The first of those games, a 2-1 loss against Syracuse at home, drew a season-high attendance of 10,943. However, by April 12, a loss against Providence knocked them into ninth place, and last place in the East Division. Another loss the next day to Manchester left them tied with the Monarchs for last place at 75 points, a full four points behind Connecticut and Norfolk to get back into the running for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, April\nThe Bears ended their win drought with a 5\u20133 victory against Portland. After having gone one-for-18 on the power play in the previous five games, Hershey scored a season-high five power play goals against the Pirates, including a hat trick by Crabb. Taffe recorded five assists, the team's season-high points total for a single game. Another victory against Adirondack on April 19 placed Herhsey back into playoff contention, tying them with Manchester, Norfolk and Connecticut at 79 points in the race for the final two spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Regular season, April\nThe Bears clinched the eighth and final seed by defeating Manchester 4\u20132 in their final regular season game on April 21. Taffe finished the regular season the second-highest scorer in the league with 18 goals, finishing behind the Rockford IceHogs' Brandon Pirri at 22 goals. Taffe and Pirri tied for the league high in assists at 53. Taffe was also named the team's Most Valuable Player and made the AHL's 2012-13 second all-star squad. The Bears finished the regular season with a home attendance total of 381,764 and a club-record average of 10,046. This marked only the fifth time an AHL club had averaged more than 10,000 since records started being kept in 1962, and the first time since the then-Philadelphia Phantoms in 1999\u20132000. Boyd Kane was named the club's Man of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Calder Cup playoffs\nThe Bears faced the top-seeded Providence Bruins in the best-of-five first round, marking the eighth consecutive year Hershey made the Calder Cup playoffs. It also marked the sixth AHL playoff meeting between the two teams, with Hershey winning four of the previous five, losing only in the 1949 finals. The Bruins led the league in wins (5) and points (105) for the 2012\u201313 regular season, and no team had beaten the AHL's regular season points leader in the first round of the playoffs since the Cornwall Aces in 1996. The Providence roster featured three former Hershey forwards: Chris Bourque, Christian Hanson and Graham Mink. Defenseman Patrick McNeill did not play for Hershey during the playoff series due to veteran roster limit issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Calder Cup playoffs\nHershey won the first game 5\u20132 on April 26, with Crabb opening scoring with a power play goal, and the Bears taking a 4\u20130 lead by the second period, resulting in Providence goaltender Niklas Svedberg being pulled from the game. The victory marked Hershey's first game one win in a playoff series since defeating Manchester in the 2009\u201310 Eastern Conference finals. The Bears also won their second game 5\u20134 on April 28, with Grubauer making 54 saves, eight short of matching the team's playoff record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Calder Cup playoffs\nThe Bruins allowed 64 shots, which were six short of Hershey's highest in a playoff game. Hershey was losing 4\u20133 in the third, their first time trailing in the series, but Grubauer was pulled for an extra attacker and Crabb tied the game with 91 seconds in regulation, allowing DiSalvatore to score the game-winner in overtime on a power play. Hershey's 5-for-10 power play record ranked the highest in the Calder Cup playoffs at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Calder Cup playoffs\nIf the Bruins were swept, it would have marked the first time an overall top-seed was swept from the opening round of the playoffs since the Cleveland Barons ousted the Buffalo Bisons in 1954. But the Bruins fought off elimination with a 5\u20131 victory in game three on May 4, where Bourque scored two goals and one assists against his former team. Despite scoring the first goal for the third straight game, Hershey failed to score on any of its six power plays, including a five-on-three that lasted a full two minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Calder Cup playoffs\nProvidence also won a dramatic fourth game on May 5. Trailing 4\u20133 in the third period, the Bruins stunned Hershey by scoring two goals in the final four minutes, including Carter Camper completing a hat trick with his game-winner with 64 seconds left in the game. Hershey were eliminated from the playoffs after losing the fifth and final game by 3\u20132. Crabb tied the game 2\u20132 in the third with his fifth goal of the series, but Bruins forward Jamie Tardif broke the tie at 9:20 of the period. The Bears finished the period with a six-on-four advantage but could not score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Calder Cup playoffs\nThis marked the third consecutive year Hershey was eliminated in the first round of the Calder Cup playoffs. They became the tenth team in AHL history to be eliminated after winning the first two games of a best-of-five series; the last was the Lowell Lock Monsters, who lost to St. John's Maple Leafs in 2002. The road team won every game of the Bears and Bruins series. The only other time that had happened in AHL history was in 1995, when the Fredericton Canadiens eliminated the St. John's Maple Leafs. Hershey finished the season with a league-worst average of 26.42 shots on goal per game, and a total of 204 goals, the team's lowest since 2003\u201304.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Post season\nOn May 17, Bears President Doug Yingst and Washington Capitals General Manager George McPhee announced they would not renew the contract of head coach Mark French. French spent four seasons with Hershey, making the playoffs every time and winning the Calder Cup in 2009. He was the fifth winningest Hershey Bears coach at 180 wins, which was one win behind the fourth winningest, John Paddock. French subsequently became head coach of KHL Medve\u0161\u010dak Zagreb for the Kontinental Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Post season\nSeveral people were identified as possible candidates to succeed French, including Troy Mann, Paul Jerrard, Mike Stothers, Eric Veilleux and Larry Courville. After a search, it was announced on June 18 that Mike Haviland had been chosen for the position. Yingst said Haviland was chosen because it was believed he could improve Hershey's home record and create a tougher, more aggressive, \"in your face\" team. Haviland had applied for the Washington Capitals head coach position the year prior, but Oates was selected instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Post season\nAfter four years as Hershey's assistant coach, Mann accepted a job as head coach of ECHL's Bakersfield Condors on June 21. Mann had reinterviewed for his position with the Bears and felt it went well, but said he faced a deadline to accept the Bakersfield job and could not turn it down. Ryan Mougenel was signed as Mann's replacement on July 5. He had previously worked with Haviland, when Mougenel was alternate captain on and Haviland was head coach of the ECHL's Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies in 2002\u201303, the year the team won the Kelly Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Post season\nThe post season saw several players depart the Hershey Bears line-up. Immediately after Hershey was eliminated from the playoffs, the Washington Capitals recalled Joey Crabb and Tom Wilson for their Stanley Cup run; Crabb later signed with NHL's Florida Panthers. After 365 games with Hershey and playing as captain since 2001, Boyd Kane left the Hershey Bears for Medve\u0161\u010dak Zagreb in Croatia, reuniting with French.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0028-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Post season\nSabourin left the Bears for the Graz 99ers of the Austrian Hockey League, and McNeill, who was limited to 47 games in the 2012-13 season due to veteran roster limits, signed a one-year two-way contract with the Columbus Blue Jackets. Potulny signed with the KHL's Avangard Omsk, Pope joined the Aalborg Pirates in Denmark, and Sj\u00f6gren departed for the Link\u00f6pings Hockey Club in the Swedish Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Post season\nByers, Rechlicz, Stoa, Syner and Wellar were all re-signed for the 2013\u201314 season, and Deschamps and LeBlanc received qualifying offers from the Washington Capitals. It was announced June 14 that Taffe re-signed with the Bears. The Swedish Hockey League had announced one month earlier that Taffe had signed a contract with them, but Taffe said that announcement had been premature, and he wanted to keep his family in North America. In July, the Bears signed four free agents to one-year contracts: defenseman Tyson Strachan, winger Matt Watkins, forward Derek Whitmore and goaltender David Leggio. For the 2013\u201314 season, Hershey signed defenseman David Kolomatis, Nate Schmidt, and Jaynen Rissling, as well as goaltender Riley Gill, and forwards Josh Brittain, Dustin Gazley, Brandon Segal, and Jamie Johnson, a former linemate of Taffe's with the Rochester Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 913]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Standings\ny\u2013\u00a0 indicates team has clinched division and a playoff spot\u00a0x\u2013\u00a0 indicates team has clinched a playoff spot\u00a0e\u2013\u00a0 indicates team has been eliminated from playoff contention", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Standings, Conference standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, ET \u2013 East", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Player statistics, Skaters\nNote: GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty MinutesUpdated as of May 8, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Player statistics, Skaters\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining team. Stats reflect time with the team only. \u2021Left the team mid-season*Rookie", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230272-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hershey Bears season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games played; TOI = Time on ice; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; SV = Saves; SA = Shots against; SV% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts; G = Goals; A = Assists; PIM = Penalty minutesUpdated as of May 8, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230273-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season was the 120th season in club history. Hertha BSC lost to Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf in the Promotion/Relegation Playoff. The sports court and the Federal Court of the German Football Association (DFB) confirmed the club's relegation after the club appealed the result of the second leg, losing both appeals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230273-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season\nDefender Levan Kobiashvili was suspended for the remainder of the 2012 calendar year, whilst goalkeeper Thomas Kraft was suspended for five matches for their role in an altercation with the referee during the Promotion/Relegation playoff against Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf. Christian Lell and Andre Mijatovi\u0107 were also suspended for their participation in the altercation. But both were eventually released from the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230273-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season, Review and events\nHertha BSC were relegated during the 2011\u201312 Bundesliga season after losing to 2. Bundesliga club Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf in the promotion/relegation playoff. The sports court and the Federal Court of the DFB confirmed the relegation after the club appealed the result of the second leg and lost both appeals. The DFB also issued suspensions to several Hertha players\u2014Levan Kobiashvili was banned for a year, Christian Lell was banned for six matches, Thomas Kraft was banned for five matches and Andre Mijatovi\u0107 was banned for four matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230273-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season, Review and events\nKobiashvili's suspension was reduced to seven and a half months and Lell's ban was reduced to 5 matches. The suspensions were for an altercation with the referee during the playoff with Fortuna D\u00fcsseldorf. Lell and Mijatovi\u0107 were eventually released by the club. The club itself was also disciplined for its role in the events of the second leg of the playoff, originally being issued a \u20ac50,000 fine and limited to 20,000 tickets sold for their league match against Paderborn 07. The fine, however, was later reduced to \u20ac40,000 and the ticket sale limit increased to 27,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230273-0002-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season, Review and events\nNo tickets are allowed to be sold on the matchday. The club was also ordered to spend an additional \u20ac40,000 on a non-profit program as part of the discipline. Christian Lell, Andre Mijatovi\u0107, Andreas Ottl and Patrick Ebert were all released from the club following the conclusion of the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230273-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season, Review and events\nHertha BSC participated in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, where it was knocked out in the first round by Regionalliga S\u00fcdwest side Wormatia Worms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230273-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hertha BSC season, Review and events\nAfter its 1\u20130 win over SV Sandhausen on 21 April 2013, Hertha ensured direct promotion to the top-flight Bundesliga for the 2013\u201314 season. They later secured the 2012\u201313 2. Bundesliga title after defeating 1. FC K\u00f6ln 2\u20131 on 12 May, their third 2. Bundesliga championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230274-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hessenliga\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Hessenliga was the fifth season of the league at tier five (V) of the German football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Hibernian's fourteenth consecutive season in the Scottish Premier League, having been promoted from the Scottish First Division at the end of the 1998\u201399 season. The club improved on its league performance in the previous season by finishing 7th in the 2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League, but were eliminated from the 2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup in the second round by Queen of the South. Hibernian progressed in the 2012\u201313 Scottish Cup to the 2013 Scottish Cup Final, but this was lost 3\u20130 to league champions Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Friendlies\nHibs announced their pre-season friendly programme on 20 June 2012. A fixture against Union Berlin was originally scheduled to be played at Easter Road, but was switched to Berlin. A match against Rapid Bucharest, scheduled for 11 July, was called off due to a waterlogged pitch. A fixture at East Fife was arranged instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish Premier League\nThe league season began on 5 August 2012, with a 3\u20130 defeat against Dundee United at Tannadice. The first home game was an Edinburgh derby, which saw an improved performance by Hibs as the game ended in a 1\u20131 draw. Hibs earned their first win in the next game, away to St Mirren. A run of results without defeat followed, suggesting that Pat Fenlon had succeeded in rebuilding the team. Further positive results meant that Hibs reached the top of the league in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish Premier League\nThis was followed by a run of four defeats in five matches, including a 3\u20132 loss to Motherwell despite having led 2\u20130. A win and a draw against Celtic and Hearts meant that Hibs went into the winter break with 32 points from 22 games, just one less point than they accrued in the whole of the 2011\u201312 season. A poor run of results after the winter break, however, meant that Hibs slipped into the bottom half of the league at the split. The match against Kilmarnock on 5 May was abandoned after 54 minutes played because a spectator had fallen gravely ill and required emergency medical assistance. A run of victories towards the end of the season meant that Hibs finished in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish Cup\nHibs entered the 2012\u201313 Scottish Cup in the fourth round, with a home tie against Edinburgh derby rivals Hearts. Hibs captain James McPake welcomed the draw, an immediate repeat of the 2012 Scottish Cup Final. A late deflected goal gave Hibs a 1\u20130 victory, ending a 12 match unbeaten run for Hearts in the derby. Hibs were then drawn at home against Scottish Premier League opposition for a second time, being paired with the winner of a replayed tie between Aberdeen and Motherwell. A long-range strike by Gary Deegan and a penalty save by Ben Williams were key contributions as Hibs defeated Aberdeen 1\u20130. The quarter-final draw gave Hibs an away tie against Kilmarnock. Leigh Griffiths scored a hat-trick as Hibs progressed to the semi-finals with a 4\u20132 victory at Rugby Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish Cup\nHibs were drawn against First Division club Falkirk in the semi-finals. Hibs went into the semi-final on a poor run of form, which had cost them a place in the top half of the SPL. Falkirk took a 3\u20130 lead before half-time, but Hibs produced \"one of the great Scottish Cup fightbacks\" to win 4\u20133 after extra time. Celtic also won 4\u20133 in their semi-final, against Dundee United, to set up the 2013 Scottish Cup Final match. Despite Hibs having a bright start to the match, poor defending allowed Gary Hooper to score two first half goals for Celtic. Hibs rarely threatened another comeback and Joe Ledley scored late on to clinch a 3\u20130 win for Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish League Cup\nAs a Scottish Premier League club that had not qualified for European competition, Hibs entered the 2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup in the second round. They were drawn away to Second Division club Queen of the South. Hibs manager Pat Fenlon took a risk by resting key players, including captain James McPake, and this backfired as Queen of the South won 2\u20130 at Palmerston Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Transfers\nHibs narrowly avoided relegation from the Scottish Premier League during the 2011\u201312 season. To do this, the club signed several players on loan during the January 2012 transfer window, all of whom returned to their parent clubs at the end of the season. After the 5\u20131 defeat by Hearts in the 2012 Scottish Cup Final, the Hibs board of directors acknowledged the necessity of rebuilding the squad. Pat Fenlon attempted to strengthen the defence by signing goalkeeper Ben Williams and defenders James McPake and Tim Clancy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Transfers\nLater in the window, Fenlon complained that other Scottish clubs, particularly the relaunched Rangers, were outbidding Hibs for players. Fenlon was able to sign veteran Finnish striker Shefki Kuqi to provide an experienced target man. Towards the end of the window, Fenlon commented that he was looking for more midfielders, as he was left without cover during a match against St Mirren. Defender Ryan McGivern was signed on loan from Manchester City on the last day of the window, but Fenlon said afterwards he was still looking to strengthen one area of the squad. He managed to strengthen the central midfield position in September, after signing free agent Tom Taiwo to a two-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Transfers\nApproaching the January transfer window, Fenlon said that his main priority was an attempt to secure the services of the three loaned players (Griffiths, McGivern and Jorge Claros). It was confirmed on 16 January that the deals for Griffiths and McGivern had been extended to the end of the season. Former Hibs player Kevin Thomson, who had been released by Middlesbrough at the end of January, began training with Hibs in February. He signed a short-term contract with Hibs in March, going without salary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230275-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hibernian F.C. season, Player statistics\nDuring the 2012\u201313 season, Hibs used 30 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, 48], "content_span": [49, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230276-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 High Point Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 High Point Panthers men's basketball team represented High Point University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by fourth year head coach Scott Cherry, played their home games at the Millis Athletic Convocation Center and were members of the North Division of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 17\u201314, 12\u20134 in Big South play to be champions of the North Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big South Tournament to Liberty. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to UC Irvine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230277-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Highland Football League (known as the Press & Journal Highland League for sponsorship reasons) was the 110th season of the Highland Football League. The season began on 4 August 2012 and ended on 25 May 2013. Forres Mechanics were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230277-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland Football League\nThe league was won by Cove Rangers, their fourth Highland League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230278-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland League Cup\nThe 2012-13 Breedon Highland League Cup was the 68th edition of the competition, which was sponsored by Breedon Aggregates. The winners were Keith, who defeated Inverurie Loco Works 2-1 in the final at Princess Royal Park in Banff on 11 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230278-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland League Cup, First round\nIn the First Round draw, fourteen clubs were given a bye into the Second Round, and four clubs were drawn to play each other in the First Round. Ties in the First Round took place on Saturday 2 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230278-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland League Cup, Second round\nThe ties in the Second Round took place on Saturday 16 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230278-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland League Cup, Second round\n1 After Extra Time - Deveronvale won 3-1 on penalties 2 Played on Wednesday 27 March 2013 due to 2 previous postponements due to a waterlogged pitch and a snowbound pitch", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230278-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland League Cup, Third round\nThe ties in the Third Round took place on Saturday 6 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230278-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland League Cup, Third round\n1 After Extra Time - Keith won 5-4 on penalties", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230278-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Highland League Cup, Semi-Finals\nThe Semi-Final ties took place on Saturday 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230279-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hockey East women's ice hockey season\nThe 2012\u201313 Hockey East women's ice hockey season marked the continuation of the annual tradition of competitive ice hockey among Hockey East members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season\nThe 2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season was the 8th season of the HockeyAllsvenskan (14th including seasons under the name \"Allsvenskan\"), the second-highest level of ice hockey in Sweden. The regular season began on 12 September 2012 and ended on 2 March 2013, with the following playoffs and Kvalserien tournaments running until 5 April 2013. Leksands IF, following a season marked by financial instability and scandal, secured first place in the regular season standings, and continued to the qualification round for the 2013\u201314 SHL/Elitserien season, along with second-place S\u00f6dert\u00e4lje SK, third place VIK V\u00e4ster\u00e5s HK, and playoff winner \u00d6rebro HK. Meanwhile, 13th- and 14th-ranked Tingsryds AIF and Karlskrona HK were forced to defend their places in HockeyAllsvenskan for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season\nThis HockeyAllsvenskan season is notable for the participation of players from the National Hockey League during the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season\nHockeyAllsvenskan had an average attendance of 3,227 spectators in 2012\u201313, comfortably the highest attendance of any second-tier league in Europe (beating the 2nd Bundesliga with 2,267), also making HockeyAllsvenskan the eighth most attended European hockey league. It was a 23.8 percent increase over the 2011\u201312 season's attendance average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, Playoff series\nTeams 4\u20137 qualified for a playoff series (Swedish: PlayOff-serien, in previous seasons called f\u00f6rkvalserien), in which all the teams played each other home-and-away. The winner, \u00d6rebro HK advanced to the qualifiers to Elitserien, which was renamed the SHL prior to the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, Playoff series\nThe teams started the playoffs with points based on their performance in the regular season. 7th-place IK Oskarshamn started with one point, 6th-place \u00d6rebro HK with two, 5th-place Djurg\u00e5rdens IF with three, and 4th-place BIK Karlskoga with four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, Elitserien qualifiers\nThe 2013 Elitserien qualifiers (Swedish: Kvalserien) determined which teams would participate in the 2013\u201314 season of Elitserien (which would be renamed the SHL during the 2013 offseason). The two teams with the worst records from the 2012\u201313 Elitserien season (Timr\u00e5 IK and R\u00f6gle BK), along with the three best teams from the 2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season (Leksands IF, S\u00f6dert\u00e4lje SK, and VIK V\u00e4ster\u00e5s HK) and the winner of the HockeyAllsvenskan playoff series (\u00d6rebro HK) all played each other twice, once home and once way. \u00d6rebro and Leksand finished first and second, and were thus promoted to what would become the SHL. Timr\u00e5 and R\u00f6gle were therefore relegated and would play in the 2013\u201314 HockeyAllsvenskan season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season, Post-season, Elitserien qualifiers\nLegend: \u00a0\u00a0Qualified for the 2013\u201314 SHL season; \u00a0\u00a0Play in the 2013\u201314 HockeyAllsvenskan season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season, HockeyAllsvenskan qualifiers\nThe two teams ranked 13th and 14th after the regular season, Tingsryds AIF and Karlskrona HK, were forced to play in the Kvalserien qualification series to defend their spots in HockeyAllsvenskan. They played a double round-robin tournament against the four playoff winners from third-tier Division 1 (IF Bj\u00f6rkl\u00f6ven, HC Vita H\u00e4sten, Huddinge IK, and Pite\u00e5 HC). The series began on 12 March 2013 and ended on 5 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season, HockeyAllsvenskan qualifiers\nUme\u00e5-based IF Bj\u00f6rkl\u00f6ven, who were Swedish champions in 1987 and were in Sweden's top hockey league as recently as 2001, finished first in the standings, resulting in their return to HockeyAllsvenskan three years after their 2010 demotion to Division 1 due to financial difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230280-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 HockeyAllsvenskan season, HockeyAllsvenskan qualifiers\nThe second and final spot in HockeyAllsvenskan was decided dramatically in the final round. Karlskrona went into the final round one point ahead of Tingsryd in the standings. Each team ended up losing their final match in game winning shots, resulting in Tingsryd being demoted to the 2013\u201314 Division 1 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230281-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hofstra Pride men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Hofstra Pride men's basketball team represented Hofstra University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pride, led by third year head coach Mo Cassara, played their home games at Mack Sports Complex and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 7\u201325, 4\u201314 in CAA play to finish in tenth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the CAA Tournament to Delaware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230282-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Holy Cross Crusaders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Holy Cross Crusaders men's basketball team represented the College of the Holy Cross during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Crusaders, led by third year head coach Milan Brown, played their home games at the Hart Center and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 12\u201318, 4\u201310 in Patriot League play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Tournament to Lafayette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional\nThe 2012\u201313 football season was the 47th Honduran Liga Nacional edition, since its establishment in 1965. The season was divided into two tournaments (Apertura and Clausura) and determined the 61st and 62nd national champions. The campaign began on 28 July 2012, and ended on May 2013. Club Deportivo Olimpia was the reigning champions after winning in 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional, 2012\u201313 teams\nOn 3 June 2012, C.D. Real Sociedad obtained the promotion to the Liga Nacional as winner of the 2011\u201312 Liga de Ascenso. Platense F.C. which had been relegated last season, bought C.D. Necaxa's franchise and will play in first division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional, Apertura\nThe fixtures for the Apertura tournament were announced on 4 July; with the results Real C.D. Espa\u00f1a 1\u20130 C.D. Real Sociedad and Atl\u00e9tico Choloma 4\u20132 C.D.S. Vida, the tournament opened fire on 28 July. On rounds 2 and 3, Vida included midfielder Luis Jaramillo on their lineups despite being ineligible to play; on 12 September, the Northern Disciplinary Commission made the decision to award both matches to Real Espa\u00f1a and Victoria 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional, Apertura\nOn 28 October, Club Deportivo Olimpia became the first team to secure a spot for the postseason, after defeating Platense F.C. 0\u20131 at Estadio Exc\u00e9lsior in Puerto Cort\u00e9s. C.D. Victoria also qualified along Olimpia directly to the semifinals finishing second. On the other hand, C.D. Motagua\u2013Real Espa\u00f1a and C.D. Marath\u00f3n\u2013Atl\u00e9tico Choloma had to play a playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional, Apertura\nThe semifinal encounters were settled on 21 November, as Motagua and Atl\u00e9tico Choloma defeated Real Espa\u00f1a and Marath\u00f3n respectively. Motagua crushed Real Espa\u00f1a with a 7\u20133 on aggregate. Meanwhile, Atl\u00e9tico Choloma dispatched Marath\u00f3n after a 2\u20132 aggregated score but with more away goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional, Apertura\nOnce in the semifinals, Olimpia got rid of Atl\u00e9tico Choloma with a 2\u20131 aggregate, meanwhile Victoria and Motagua finished with a 3\u20133 global score, however, Victoria advanced thanks to a better regular season finish over Motagua. With their success in the semifinals, Olimpia and Victoria re-encountered each other in a final for the third time in history, having won one each in the previous two. The first match in La Ceiba ended with a scoreless tie; but in the second leg, Olimpia had no mercy over Victoria and won its third consecutive title with an overwhelming 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional, Clausura\nThe Clausura tournament started on 19 January 2013, the first game was played between locals C.D. Marath\u00f3n and Platense F.C. at Estadio Yankel Rosenthal. The regular season ended on 20 April 2013. C.D. Olimpia and C.D. Real Sociedad qualified directly to the semifinals after finishing 1st and 2nd respectively. The playoffs were paired with C.D. Victoria facing Deportes Savio and Marath\u00f3n vs Platense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230283-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional, Aggregate table\nRelegation was determined by the aggregated table of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments. On 20 April 2013, Atl\u00e9tico Choloma was relegated to the Liga de Ascenso after reaching 38 points, two less than C.D.S. Vida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230284-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de Ascenso de Honduras season was the 34th edition of the Liga Nacional de Ascenso de Honduras, the second division of football in Honduras. For this season, promotion was changed from a two-legged home-and-away match to a one-legged match in a neutral ground. Parrillas One was the promoted team to the 2013\u201314 Honduran Liga Nacional after defeating Juticalpa F.C. in penalties in Estadio Carlos Miranda in Comayagua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230285-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong FA Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Hong Kong FA Cup is the 38th season of Hong Kong FA Cup. It is a knockout competition for all the teams of the 2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League. Starting from this season, the format will change into a two-legged home-and-away ties competition. The winner will guarantee a place in the 2013 Hong Kong AFC Cup play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230285-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong FA Cup, Fixtures and results, Final\nRemarks:1 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230285-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong FA Cup, Scorers\nThe scorers in the 2012\u201313 Hong Kong FA Cup are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League\nThe 2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, also known as 2012\u201313 Red MR Hong Kong First Division League for sponsorship reasons, was the 101st since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League\nKitchee were the defending champions, won their 5th Hong Kong title in the previous season. The season featured 8 teams from the 2011\u201312 Hong Kong First Division League and two new teams promoted from 2011\u201312 Hong Kong Second Division League: Kam Fung, which then renamed as Biu Chun Rangers, and Southern District who replace relegated Sham Shui Po and Hong Kong Sapling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, Teams\nA total of 10 teams contested the league, including eight sides from the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted from the 2011\u201312 Hong Kong Second Division League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, Teams, Stadia and locations\n1 Renamed Biu Chun Rangers, previously known as Kam Fung. 2 The capacity of Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground can be increased to 5,000 if the temporary stand is opened. 3 After successfully gaining the right to play in the 2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League on 8 April 2012, Southern plan to continue using Aberdeen Sports Ground as their home ground in the First Division League. 4 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match. 5 Renamed as Sun Pegasus, previously known as TSW Pegasus. 6 Renamed as Yokohama FC Hong Kong, previously known as Biu Chun Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players was restricted to six per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, League table, Positions by round\nAs there is a special fixture arrangement for rounds 7 and 8, 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. For example, if a match is scheduled for round 7, but then played between rounds 8 and 9, it will be added to the standings for round 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, Fixtures and results, Round 18\nRemarks:1 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match. 2 Yokohama FC Hong Kong's home matches against Kitchee and South China are played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground Siu Sai Wan Sports Ground. 3 Biu Chun Rangers's home matches against South China and Kitchee are played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground Sham Shui Po Sports Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, Fixtures and results, Round 18\n4 South China's home matches against Biu Chun Rangers will be played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground Hong Kong Stadium. 5 The match was abandoned after 28 minutes due to adverse weather and bad pitch conditions. 6 Since the 3,500-seated main stand was all full, the 1,500 temporary stand was opened and therefore the capacity of Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground was 5,000 in the home match against South China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, Season Play-offs\nThe play-off semi-finals were played in one match each, contested by the teams who finished in 2nd and 3rd in the 2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League table, the champions of Senior Challenge Shield and the winners of FA Cup. The winners of the semi-finals went through to the finals, with the winner of the final gaining 2014 AFC Cup participation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230286-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong First Division League, Awards, Monthly awards\nThe monthly awards are organised by the Hong Kong Sports Press Association. 20 journalists who specialise in football in Hong Kong will vote their best player of the month. Player with the highest number of votes wins the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230287-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Fourth Division League\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Paine Ellsworth (talk | contribs) at 07:13, 17 November 2019 (disambiguate link(s)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230287-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Fourth Division League\n2012\u201313 Hong Kong Fourth Division League is the 2nd season, as well as the 1st season after the re-introduction of Hong Kong Fourth Division League, a football league in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230287-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Fourth Division League, Team review\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Hong Kong Fourth Division League consists of 15 clubs, including 9 teams relegated from 2011\u201312 Third 'A' Division, 4 teams relegated from 2011\u201312 Third 'District' Division and 2 newly joined teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield\nThe 2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield is the 85th season of the Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, a knock-out competition for Hong Kong's 40 football clubs playing below the top-tier division league. Wanchai are the defending champions, having beaten Happy Valley in the 2012 Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, Schedule\nThe schedule for the Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, First round\n16 teams out of 40 teams are randomly drawn and required to compete starting from the first round, while other 24 teams will start from the second round. The eight matches will all be played on 16 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, Second round\nThe second round draw included 8 first round winners and 24 teams that is not required to play in the first round. All second round matches will be played on 23 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, Third round\n16 second round winners will fight for 8 quarter-finals places on 6 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, Quarter-finals\n8 third round winners will strive for 4 semi-finals places on 13 January 2013. All matches will be played at Po Kong Village Road Park. Yau Tsim Mong from Fourth Division is the lowest team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, Semi-finals\n4 quarter-finals winners will strive for 2 final places on 20 January 2013. All matches will be played at Po Kong Village Road Park. Kwai Tsing from Third Division is the lowest team still in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230288-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Junior Challenge Shield, Final\nYuen Long defeated Kwok Keung in the final and won the champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230289-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Rangers FC season\nBiu Chun Rangers, previously known as Rangers, will seek to win at least a trophy in this season. They are competing in the First Division League, Senior Challenge Shield and FA Cup this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230289-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Rangers 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230289-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Rangers FC season, Matches, Competitive, First Division League\nRemarks:1 Biu Chun Rangers's home matches against South China and Kitchee were played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground Sham Shui Po Sports Ground. 2 South China's home matches against Biu Chun Rangers were rescheduled and played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground of Hong Kong Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230290-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Reserve Division League\nThe 2012\u201313 Hong Kong Reserve Division League was the fifty-fifth season since the establishment of the Hong Kong Reserve Division League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230290-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Reserve Division League\nThe events in the senior league during the 2011\u201312 season saw Sham Shui Po and Hong Kong Sapling relegated and replaced by Southern and Yokohama FC Hong Kong. Each First Division teams will participate in the reserve division league, and play the teams in the league home and away, making a total of 18 matches played for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230290-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Reserve Division League, League table\nUpdated to games played on 15 May 2013Source: Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head goals scored; 5) goal difference; 6) number of goals scored. (C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round. Only applicable when the season is not finished:(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament. Head-to-Head: used when head-to-head record is used to rank tied teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230290-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Reserve Division League, Results table\nUpdated to games played on 15 May 2013Source: 1 The home team is listed in the left-hand column. Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win. For coming matches, an indicates there is an article about the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230290-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Reserve Division League, Fixtures and results, Week 1\n1Since Yokohama FC Hong Kong Reserves breached the rule of game, the Hong Kong Football Association awarded Biu Chun Rangers Reserves a 3\u20130 win. The match ended 5\u20133 to Biu Chun Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230291-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Season Play-off\nHong Kong Season Play-off for the 2012\u201313 football season was held in May 2013. All matches took place at Mong Kok Stadium in Mong Kok, Kowloon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230291-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Season Play-off\nThe play-off semi-finals are played in one match each, contested by the teams who finished in 2nd and 3rd place in the First Division League table, the winners of the Senior Challenge Shield and the champions of the FA Cup. The winners of the semi-finals go through to the finals, with the winner of the final gaining participation for the 2014 AFC Cup group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230291-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Season Play-off, Qualified teams, First Division League\nThe teams with final position between 2nd and 5th inclusively guaranteed places in the play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230291-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Season Play-off, Qualified teams, Senior Challenge Shield\nThe winners of the Senior Challenge Shield guaranteed a place in the play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230291-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Season Play-off, Qualified teams, FA Cup\nThe winners of the FA Cup will guarantee a place in the play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230291-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Season Play-off, Qualified teams, FA Cup\nNote: Since Kitchee won the FA Cup champions, the 4th place in the league (i.e. Southern) is guaranteed a place in the play-offs, as Kitchee have qualified to the play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230291-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Season Play-off, Scorers\nThe scorers in the 2013 Hong Kong AFC Cup play-offs are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230292-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Second Division League\n2012\u201313 Hong Kong Second Division League is the 67th season of Hong Kong Second Division League, a football league in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230292-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Second Division League, Teams, Team review\nThe following 11 clubs are competing in the Hong Kong Second Division League during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230293-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield\n2012\u201313 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield is the 111th season of one of the Asian oldest football knockout competitions, Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield. The competition will be played in Two-legged tie, except for the final, which will be played in one match at Hong Kong Stadium. The winner will guarantee a place in the 2013 Hong Kong AFC Cup play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230293-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield\nWofoo Tai Po won their first Senior Shield title as they defeated Citizen in the final by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230293-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield, Fixtures and results, Final\nRemarks:1 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230293-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield, Scorers\nThe scorers in the 2012\u201313 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230294-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Third Division League\n2012\u201313 Hong Kong Third Division League is the 62nd season of Hong Kong Third Division League, a football league in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230294-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hong Kong Third Division League, Team review\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Hong Kong Third Division League consists of 14 clubs, including the 2 teams relegated from 2011\u201312 Second Division, 3rd placed to 10th placed team of 2011\u201312 Third 'A' Division and the top 4 teams of 2011\u201312 Third 'District' Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Hoofdklasse is competed in six leagues, three Saturday leagues and three Sunday leagues. The champions of each group promoted direct to the 2013\u201314 Topklasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, League tables, Saturday A\nIn determining which teams relegate directly and which teams are allowed to play the play offs to avoid relegation, only the achieved number of points is considered. The goal difference is completely ignored. Therefore, ARC and Volendam were considered to have ended equal and had to play an additional match against each other on neutral ground to decide which team was allowed to enter the play offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation play-off Topklasse \u2013 Hoofdklasse, First round\nThe 3 period winners of each league are grouped together and play a semi-competition to decide which of the three continues to the second round. Each team plays one match at home and one match away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 87], "content_span": [88, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation play-off Topklasse \u2013 Hoofdklasse, Second and Final round\nThe 3 remaining teams from the Saturday leagues and the team ranked 13th in the 2012\u201313 Topklasse Saturday league play in a knock-out system for 1 spot in the 2013\u201314 Topklasse Saturday league. Likewise, the 3 remaining teams from the Sunday leagues and the team ranked 13th in the 2012\u201313 Topklasse Sunday league play in a knock-out system for 1 spot in the 2013\u201314 Topklasse Sunday league. For details and results see 2012\u201313 Topklasse Promotion/relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 98], "content_span": [99, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse, Saturday\nThe teams ranked 11th and 12th of each of the 3 Saturday leagues (6 teams) and the 3 period winners of each of the 5 Saturday Eerste Klasse leagues (15 teams), making a total of 21 teams are grouped in 7 groups of 3 teams in such a way that the Hoofdklasse teams each end up in a different group. In each group the 3 teams play a semi-competition in such a way that each team plays one match at home and one match away. The 7 group winners will play next season in the 2013\u201314 Hoofdklasse and the remaining teams in the 2013\u201314 Eerste klasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 88], "content_span": [89, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, Promotion/Relegation play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse, Sunday\nThe teams ranked 11th and 12th of each of the 3 Sunday leagues (6 teams) and the 3 period winners of each of the 6 Sunday Eerste Klasse leagues (18 teams), making a total of 24 teams, play in a 2-round 2 leg knockout system in such a way that the Hoofdklasse teams can never meet each other. The 6 winners of the second round matches will play next season in the 2013\u201314 Hoofdklasse and the remaining teams in the 2013\u201314 Eerste klasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 86], "content_span": [87, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday\nEnd of season several clubs/teams from the Sunday leagues decided to switch from the Sunday to the Saturday leagues. The most important reason for doing so was the hope the attract a bigger audience on Saturdays. Among these clubs/teams were 3 Sunday Hoofdklasse teams, Argon, Feyenoord and Hilversum. The decision of Hilversum resulted in an extra spot, in the Sunday Hoofdklasse leagues, becoming available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 79], "content_span": [80, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday\nTherefore, the teams who lost in the second/final round of the regular Promotion/Relegation play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday were allowed to compete for this extra spot in a 2-round system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 79], "content_span": [80, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday, First round\nIn the first round the 6 teams were paired up 2 by 2 to decide in a single match which ones were going to proceed to the second/final round. The home advantage was drawn by lot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 92], "content_span": [93, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday, First round\nSince Feyenoord had already decided to switch to the Saturday leagues, it was decided, after consultation between Feyenoord and the KNVB, to withdraw Feyenoord from the \"Lucky losers\" play-off. As a result, Quick (H) proceeded to the second/final round without playing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 92], "content_span": [93, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday, Second/Final round\nA second spot became available when Achilles '29, as champion of the 2012\u201313 Topklasse Sunday league, decided to promote to the 2013\u201314 Eerste Divisie. Promotion from the Topklasse to the Eerste Divisie is not mandatory and in general declined by the champions of the Topklasse leagues, as done by Katwijk, the champion of 2012\u201313 Topklasse Saturday league. See 2012\u201313 Topklasse Championship play-offs for details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 99], "content_span": [100, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday, Second/Final round\nSo, the 3 remaining teams were now competing for 2 open spots in the 2013\u201314 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 99], "content_span": [100, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday, Second/Final round\nHowever, with the competition already in progress, a third spot became available. Right after the Topklasse / Hoofdklasse playoff semifinals match between Alphense Boys and Haaglandia, a big fight took place. Both teams received a fine of Euro 200,00. Additionally Alphense Boys, as a disciplinary measure, was relegated to the Eerste Klasse, because the club was held accountable for the behavior of their supporters who were designated as the cause for the fight. Alphense Boys lost the appeal against the punishment and decided not to try for a second appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 99], "content_span": [100, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230295-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hoofdklasse, \"Lucky losers\" play-off Hoofdklasse \u2013 Eerste Klasse Sunday, Second/Final round\nThe 3 teams were supposed to play a semi-competition with each team playing one match at home and one match away. With eventually 3 open spots available, all 3 teams were allowed to play in the 2013\u201314 Hoofdklasse Sunday leagues. Therefore, the last match between Joure and Deurne was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 99], "content_span": [100, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230296-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Baptist Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Houston Baptist Huskies men's basketball team represented Houston Baptist University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This was head coach Ron Cottrell's twenty-second season at HBU. The Huskies played their home games at the Sharp Gymnasium and were members of the Great West Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 3\u20135 in Great West play to finish in a three way tie for third place. They advanced to the championship game of the Great West Tournament where they lost to Chicago State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230296-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Baptist Huskies men's basketball team\nThis was the Huskies final season as members of the Great West, as Houston Baptist will join the Southland Conference for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230296-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Baptist Huskies men's basketball team, Media\nAll Houston Baptist games will be broadcast on the radio and online live by (LSN). LSN will also provide online video for every Huskies home game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230297-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Houston Cougars men's basketball team represented the University of Houston during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cougars, led by third year head coach James Dickey, played their home games at Hofheinz Pavilion and participated as a member of Conference USA. The season marked the last for the Cougars as a member of C-USA as they joined the American Athletic Conference in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230297-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Cougars men's basketball team\nThe Cougars ended the regular season with a 3-game winning streak and a 7\u20139 conference record. This placed the team as the number six seed in the C-USA tournament and a matchup with cross-town rival Rice in the first round. The Cougars won the game 72\u201367 and advanced to the quarterfinals to face UTEP where they lost 69\u201380.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230297-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Cougars men's basketball team\nAfter the UTEP loss, UH officials looked into options for the team to play in either the CBI or CIT postseason tournaments to give the young team more experience. The Cougars were later invited to participate in the 2013 College Basketball Invitational and paired up with Texas in the first round. Houston defeated the Longhorns and advanced to the quarterfinals where they lost to George Mason in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230297-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Cougars men's basketball team\nA highlight of the 2012\u201313 schedule was that it featured matchups with five former Southwest Conference rivals (Rice, SMU, TCU, Texas, and Texas A&M).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230298-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Rockets season\nThe 2012\u201313 Houston Rockets season was the 46th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 42nd based in Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230298-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Rockets season\nThe season is best remembered for acquiring All-Star and Sixth Man of the Year James Harden from the Oklahoma City Thunder in a trade. Along with Harden, the team brought in point guard Jeremy Lin after a magical season with the New York Knicks last year and center Omer Asik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230298-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Houston Rockets season\nDespite a stellar season from new team captains Harden and Lin, the Rockets only managed to play mediocre basketball all season finishing with a 45\u201337 record, clinching the number 8 seed in the West. The Rockets season ended with a first round loss to Harden's former team, the Oklahoma City Thunder, in six games. As Houston hosted the 2013 NBA All-Star Game, Harden was the only representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230299-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Howard Bison men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Howard Bison basketball team represented Howard University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bison, led by third year head coach Kevin Nickelberry, played their home games at the Burr Gymnasium and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 7\u201324, 4\u201312 in MEAC play to finish in eleventh place. They lost in the first round of the MEAC Tournament to Delaware State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season\nHuddersfield Town's 2012\u201313 campaign was Huddersfield Town's first season back in the second tier of English football, since the 2000\u201301 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season\nThey qualified to play in the 2012\u201313 Football League Championship after they beat Sheffield United in the final at Wembley Stadium on 26 May 2012. After the match finished 0\u20130 after extra time, the Terriers won the penalty shoot-out 8\u20137, after every player on the pitch took a penalty. The decisive penalty was taken by the United goalkeeper Steve Simonsen, who saw his penalty go over the crossbar, giving Huddersfield the glory, and promotion to the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season\nThis was meant to be Simon Grayson's first full season in charge of the Terriers, but instead he was sacked on 24 January 2013, following a run of 12 consecutive league games without a win. After Town legend Mark Lillis steadied the ship for 5 games, the Coventry City boss Mark Robins was appointed as the new manager on 14 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230300-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Kit\nThe 2012/13 season was the club's second with technical kit supplier Umbro, and their first with home sponsor Rekorderlig Cider. Radian B continued their away shirt sponsorship. The Club introduced new home and away kits, and retained the away kit from the previous season as a third kit. Alternate shorts and socks were available for all outfield kits in the event of a colour clash, however in away games where the home kit could have theoretically been worn, the away kit was worn instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 44], "content_span": [45, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Kit\nThe home shirt is the club's traditional blue and white stripes but with a chequered pattern of light and darker blue within the stripes, and was worn for the first time in the pre-season friendly at Guiseley. It was worn with white shorts and black socks, except in the away games at Crystal Palace and Burnley, in which it was worn with white socks. The away shirt is dark navy with a broad white stripe across the shoulders and collar, and was worn for the first time in the pre-season friendly at Kilmarnock. The goalkeeper kits featured a striking geometric pattern across the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 44], "content_span": [45, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nTown made their first signing of the summer on 22 June, with the transfer of winger/striker Sean Scannell from Crystal Palace for an undisclosed fee. On 27 June, Scotland under-21 international defender Paul Dixon signed on a free transfer from Dundee United. Young midfielder Oliver Norwood signed from Manchester United on a 3-year-deal, beating Championship rivals Barnsley to his signature. On 6 July, Simon Grayson raided his former club Leeds United to sign Adam Clayton on an undisclosed fee, just 2 years after bringing him to Elland Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nOn 11 July, Welsh defender Joel Lynch joined after being released by Nottingham Forest. On 26 July, Blackpool midfielder Keith Southern signed on a 2-year-deal, reuniting him with Simon Grayson, who managed him at Bloomfield Road. On 7 August, defender Anthony Gerrard was signed on a 3-year-deal from fellow Championship side Cardiff City in a deal believed to be worth \u00a3350,000. On 24 August, Norwich City striker James Vaughan joined the club on a season-long loan deal. As the transfer window shut on 31 August, Town signed winger Adam Hammill on loan from Wolverhampton Wanderers until January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nOn 28 September, after being snubbed by the club on transfer deadline day, Jermaine Beckford joined on a 3-month loan deal from divisional rivals, Leicester City. On 8 November, Welsh international striker Simon Church joined on a month's loan from Premier League side Reading. He returned to Reading on 31 December after his extension expired. On 8 January 2013, Beckford's Leicester teammate, Neil Danns joined on loan for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0006-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nOn 22 February, new manager Mark Robins brought back a familiar face to the Terriers, by signing recently capped Jamaican international Theo Robinson on loan from Derby County for the remainder of the season. On 11 April, Town signed striker Daniel Carr from non-league side Dulwich Hamlet for \u00a3100,000, which will see the striker join up with the Terriers once this season has concluded. On 26 April, Irish youngster Jake Carroll was signed from St Patrick's Athletic on an undisclosed fee, and like Carr, will join up with the Terriers after this season is concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nOn 10 August, Antony Kay became the first departure of the season, when he left to sign a 2-year-deal at Milton Keynes Dons. The following day, defender Jamie McCombe had his contract terminated, which paved the way for a move to Doncaster Rovers. On 24 August, defender Liam Ridehalgh rejoined Chesterfield on a one-month loan deal. His teammate, Chris Atkinson joined him on 12 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nOn 30 August, Town fans were left distraught after their prized possession, Jordan Rhodes was sold to their Championship rivals Blackburn Rovers for \u00a38 million, a record selling fee for Town, as well as a record purchasing for Blackburn, and it was also the highest fee paid for a player between 2 non-Premier League clubs. Kallum Higginbotham joined Carlisle United on a 3-month loan deal on 20 September. On 16 October, young striker Jimmy Spencer joined Brentford on a month's loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nOn 22 November, as the loan window shut, Ridehalgh was recalled from his loan at Chesterfield and sent on loan to their divisional rivals, Rotherham United. On 5 December, youngster Jordan Sinnott, joined Conference North side Altrincham (managed by his father and ex-Town player, Lee) on loan for a month. On 7 December, young duo Matt Crooks and James Burke joined Radcliffe Borough on a month's loan. Young strike duo Max Leonard and Connor Loftus were sent out on a month's loan to Garforth Town and Mossley on 21 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0007-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nFollowing his return from Carlisle, Kallum Higginbotham still found himself out of the picture at Huddersfield, so joined Scottish Premier League side Motherwell on loan for the rest of the season on 9 January. The following day, Jimmy Spencer went out on loan for the second time, joining Crawley Town for the remainder of the season, but he returned to Huddersfield on 6 February with a knee injury, making no appearances for the Red Devils. As the transfer window shut on 31 January, midfielder Anton Robinson joined League Two leaders Gillingham on loan for the rest of the season. However, he returned to the club on 11 April, after rupturing his anterior cruciate ligaments, which will rule him out of football for 9 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230300-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230301-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Hull City's third consecutive season back in the Championship after relegation from the Premier League in the 2009\u201310 season. They also competed in the League Cup and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season\nAfter a dramatic last day of the season the club took second place and gained automatic promotion back to the Premier League for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nThe closed season saw the arrival of new manager Steve Bruce, on 8 June 2012, on a three-year deal, replacing Nick Barmby, 6 weeks after he was officially sacked. On 29 June 2012 the club announced the new backroom staff for the up-and-coming season; Steve Agnew became the assistant manager, Keith Bertschin as first team coach and Stephen Clemence as reserve team manager. The announcement preceded the start of the new season which started on 2 July 2012 when the players reported back for pre-season training.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 6 July 2012 Andy Dawson signed a new 1-year deal with the club. On 9 July 2012, goalkeeper Eldin Jakupovi\u0107 signed a two-year contract, becoming Steve Bruce's first full signing as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 19 July 2012 Nick Proschwitz signed a 3-year \u00a32.6\u00a0million (\u20ac3.3\u00a0million) deal with the club. The following day Senegalese defender Abdoulaye Faye signed a one-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 25 July 2012 Sone Aluko signed a 2-year deal with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 30 July 2012 Steve Bruce brought in his son Alex Bruce on a 2-year deal as he was a free agent after leaving Leeds United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 31 July 2012 Hull confirmed that they had signed goalkeeper Ben Amos on a season-long loan from Manchester United. The loan was cut short on 4 January 2013 when he was recalled by Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 8 August 2012 Mark Cullen went on a season long loan to Bury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nRobert Koren signed a new 2-year deal with the club on 11 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 29 August 2012 Danny East went out on a month-long loan to Northampton Town. The loan was later extended to 5 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 30 August 2012 Ahmed Elmohamady arrived on a season-long loan from Sunderland. The loan was cut short on 16 January 2013 when he was recalled by parent club Sunderland. But he returned to Hull on loan for the rest on the season on 31 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 31 August 2012 Cameron Stewart moved to Burnley on loan until January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn transfer deadline day, 31 August 2012, Stephen Quinn of Sheffield United signed a three-year deal with the club for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nIn September 2012, former club manager Stan Ternent was appointed as Chief Recruitment Officer for Hull.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 18 October 2012 Mark Cullen was recalled from a season long loan to Bury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 1 November 2012 Liam Cooper went on a month-long loan to Chesterfield and Jamie Devitt went on a month-long loan to Rotherham United. Though after just two matches Devitt returned to the club for treatment following an injury. Cooper's loan was later extended to 5 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 26 October 2012 Mark Oxley went out on loan to Burton Albion to cover for an injury to Stuart Tomlinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 5 November 2012 Robbie Brady returned to the KC Stadium on loan from Manchester United as an emergency loan, this was extended to 2 January 2012 on 5 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 8 November 2012 David Meyler was brought in on loan from Sunderland until 1 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 20 November 2012 Conor Townsend went for a month-long loan spell at Chesterfield, his loan spell was renewed on 25 January 2013 and extended to the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 22 November 2012 goalkeeper David Stockdale was brought in on loan from Fulham until 2 January 2013. This was cut short on 19 December 2012 when he was recalled by Fulham. Stockdale returned to Hull on 18 January 2013 for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nSone Aluko was named as the November Player of the Month by the Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 18 December 2012 it was announced that Nick Thompson had been appointed as managing director of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nSteve Bruce was named as the December Manager of the Month by the Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 4 January 2013 Jamie Devitt went out on loan to Grimsby Town until the end of the 2012\u201313 season and Aaron McLean moved on loan to Ipswich Town until the end of the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 5 January 2013 Liam Cooper signed a permanent deal with Chesterfield for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 8 January 2013 the club signed Robbie Brady from Manchester United and David Meyler from Sunderland on three and a half-year deals for undisclosed fees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 25 January 2013 Paul McKenna was loaned to Fleetwood Town for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 31 January 2013 Mark Cullen went out on a month-long loan spell to Stockport County. This was later extended to the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 31 January 2013 Ahmed Fathy and Gedo joined on loan for the remainder of the season from Egyptian club Al-Ahly at a cost of \u00a3500,000 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 21 February 2013 George Boyd joined on loan from Peterborough United for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 1 March 2013 Cameron Stewart joined Blackburn Rovers on loan until the end of the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 7 March 2013 Danny East joined Gillingham on loan until the end of the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 8 March 2013 Dougie Wilson joined Grimsby Town on loan until the end of the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 27 March 2013 Seyi Olofinjana joined Sheffield Wednesday on loan until the end of the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 28 March 2013 striker Calaum Jahraldo-Martin was signed on an 18-month contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nGeorge Boyd was named as the March Player of the Month by the Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 16 May 2013 Abdoulaye Faye signed a new one-year deal to stay with the club for the 2013\u201314 season, while 12 other players would be released at the end of their contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nGeorge Boyd signed a 2-year deal on 28 May 2013 to become a permanent member of the club from the start of the 2013\u201314 season when his contract with Peterborough United expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nFollowing release by the club Andy Dawson signed a one-year player/coach deal with Scunthorpe United on 30 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nMark Oxley signed a new two-year contract with the Tigers on 11 June 2013 following the club's promotion to the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 17 June 2013 the signing of defender Maynor Figueroa on a 2-year contract on a free transfer was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 25 June 2013 Birmingham City defender Curtis Davies signed a 3-year deal with the club for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 26 June 2013 James Chester signed a new three-year contract with Hull City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nOn 27 June 2013 Liam Rosenior signed a new two-year contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Events\nAfter being on loan from Sunderland for the season on 28 June 2013 Ahmed Elmohamady signed a three-year contract for an undisclosed fee to become a permanent member of the City squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.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, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Players, 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Results, Pre-season\nThe pre-season matches were announced on 20 June 2012. An additional home fixture against Norwich City was announced on 6 June 2012. A pre-season training camp took place in Portugal from 8 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, League Cup\nHull City received a home match against local League Two side Rotherham United in the first round of the League Cup drawn on 14 June 2012. Following agreement between the clubs the date of the fixture was brought forward to Saturday 11 August 2012 and was the first competitive match of the 2012\u201313 season. Hull progressed to the next round winning 7\u20136 after a penalty shoot-out following a 1\u20131 draw at full-time and no further scoring during extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0050-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, League Cup\nIn the draw for the second round on 15 August 2012 Hull were given another local match away to League One side Doncaster Rovers. The match took place on 28 August 2012 at the Keepmoat Stadium and Doncaster won 3\u20132 after Hull had taken a two-goal lead. The game was marred by a tackle on Tom Cairney that would result in him missing three-months of the season and the sending off of Paul McKenna who had come on as a substitute for Cairney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, FA Cup\nHull City enter the competition at the Third Round Proper stage with matches taking place in early January 2013. The draw for this took place at Wembley Stadium on 2 December 2012. Hull were drawn at home to either Alfreton Town or Leyton Orient. Later the same day Leyton Orient beat Alfreton Town 4\u20132 to set the League One team up with an away tie at the KC Stadium. The game took place on 5 January 2013 and resulted in a 1\u20131 draw with a replay to take place at Brisbane Road on 15 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0051-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe draw for the fourth round took place the following day and the winner of the replay was drawn at home to Barnsley. The replay finished in a 1\u20131 draw after full-time, with Hull getting a late goal in extra time to put them through to the fourth round. The fourth round match took place on 26 January 2013 at the KC Stadium and Barnsley ran out winners by a single Chris Dagnall goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 11 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Statistics, Appearances\nNote: Appearances shown after a \"+\" indicate player came on during course of match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Transfers\nThis section only lists transfers and loans for the 2012\u201313 season, which began 1 July 2012. For transactions in May and June 2012, see transfers and loans for the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Kits\nThe new home kit was revealed on 14 June 2012 on the Hull City web site. The away kit was revealed on 15 August 2012 on the Hull City web site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0056-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Kits\nFor the 2012\u201313 season, the main kit sponsor is Cash Converters and it is manufactured by Adidas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230301-0057-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hull City A.F.C. season, Awards\nThe end of season awards were made at the KC Stadium on 20 April 2013. Ahmed Elmohamady was voted as the Player of the Season and Stephen Quinn took the prize for Players Player of the Year. The prize for the Goal of the Season was taken byNick Proschwitz for his goal against Leyton Orient on 15 January 2013 in the FA Cup third round replay. Dougie Wilson was awarded the Young Player of the Year Award while Andy Dawson was given a Special Contribution Award for his testimonial year with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Hyderabad cricket team's 79th 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-00230302-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nOjha got selected to the Rest of India squad for the 2012 Irani Cup, a first-class cricket competition in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nOjha got selected to the India A squad for the 2012-13 NKP Salve Challenger Trophy, a List-A cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nAkshath got selected to the South Zone squad for the 2012-13 Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nOjha got selected to the Rest of India squad for the 2013 Irani Cup, a first-class cricket competition in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nAshish and Vihari got selected to the South Zone squad for the 2012-13 Deodhar Trophy, a List-A cricket competition in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nThe newly formed local franchise, Sunrisers Hyderabad, which replaced the previous franchise, Deccan Chargers, retained 20 of its players including the Hyderabad's Bhandari, Akshath, Ravi Teja and Ashish and later signed Vihari in the player's draft while Ojha got retained by the Mumbai Indians and Suman got signed by the Pune Warriors for the 2013 Indian Premier League, a professional Twenty20 cricket league in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji Trophy\nThe squad for the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament in India, was announced on 21 October 2012 with V. V. S. Laxman, who recently announced his retirement from the international cricket, leading the Hyderabad. The Hyderabad began their campaign in the Ranji Trophy with a loss against the Punjab at Mohali on 2 November 2012. They finished at the bottom of the Group A with no wins, six draws and two losses and got relegated to the Group C for the 2013\u201314 Ranji Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe Hyderabad team, led by Pragyan Ojha, began their campaign in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List-A cricket tournament in India, with a loss against the Kerala at Vasco da Gama on 14 February 2013. The Kerala pacers, Sandeep Warrier and Prasanth Parameswaran troubled the Hyderabad and restricted them to 192 while 93-run knock from Rohan Prem helped the Kerala complete a six-wicket victory. In the second match, Ojha and Ashish Reddy restricted the Andhra to 202 but the Hyderabad top-order stumbled to Syed Shahabuddin before Hanuma Vihari and Habeeb Ahmed tried to recover the innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nBut, their dismissals set up the win for the Andhra as Paidikalva Vijaykumar wrapped things up to defeat the Hyderabad by two runs. In a rain-hit 25-over match, Dwaraka Ravi Teja's 111 and Akash Bhandari's 78 helped the Hyderabad register an eight-wicket win by chasing the Goa's target of 226 that was set with the help of half-centuries from Swapnil Asnodkar and Sagun Kamat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe centuries from Robin Uthappa and K. L. Rahul helped the Karnataka post 305 while the four-wicket haul from S. L. Akshay helped them to recover from the 140-run partnership between Vihari and Bavanaka Sandeep and defeat the Hyderabad by 47 runs in their fourth match. In the final zonal match, century from Dinesh Karthik set a strong start for Tamil Nadu but Chama Milind struck twice to restrict Tamil Nadu to 262.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0008-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe Hyderabad started the chase strongly but three run-outs in the middle and Palani Amarnath's three-wicket haul at the end hampered the Hyderabad's chase and helped the Tamil Nadu win by 26 runs as the Hyderabad finished fifth in the South Zone and failed to qualify for the knockout stage with a win and four losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nThe Hyderabad team, led by Akshath Reddy, began their campaign in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, a Twenty20 tournament in India, with a loss against the Kerala at Shimoga on 17 March 2013. Two run-outs and disciplined bowling by the Kerala restricted the Hyderabad to 133 while Nikhilesh Surendran's half-century anchored the chase as the Kerala won by six-wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nIn the second match, the 108-run partnership between Akshath and Tirumalasetti Suman set the platform for the Hyderabad for a big total only to be hampered by the four-wicket haul from Tekkami Atchuta Rao and restricted them to 161 while the collective batting effort from the Andhra batsmen helped the Andhra complete the chase with five-wickets to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nIn the third match, the Hyderabad bowlers started strongly dismissing the Goa openers cheaply but the knocks from Swapnil Asnodkar and Ravikant Shukla helped them to recover to 141 while Darshan Misal and his bowling unit restricted the Hyderabad to 134 and win the match for the Goa by 7 runs. Mayank Agarwal's maiden ton and four-wicket hauls from Krishnappa Gowtham and Manish Pandey set up the Karnataka's 12-run win and hand over the fourth loss for the Hyderabad in as many matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230302-0009-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Hyderabad C.A. season, Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\nThe collective effort from Suman, Bavanaka Sandeep and Hanuma Vihari helped the Hyderabad set the target of 168 while the three-wicket haul from Akash Bhandari in the middle and Chama Milind's hat-trick at the end helped the Hyderabad secure their first win in the tournament against the Tamil Nadu by eight runs as they finished fifth in the South Zone and failed to qualify for the Super League stage with a win and four losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230303-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I liga\nThe 2012\u201313 I liga was the 65th season of the second tier domestic division in the Polish football league system since its establishment in 1949 and the 5th season of the Polish I liga under its current title. The league was operated by the Polish Football Association (PZPN).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230303-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I liga\nThe league is contested by 18 teams who competing for promotion to the 2013\u201314 Ekstraklasa. The regular season was played in a round-robin tournament. The champions and runners-up would receive promotion. The bottom four teams were automatically demoted to the II liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230303-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I liga\nAccording to the competition rules, all clubs are required to field at least one youth player (born on 1992 or later and trained in Poland) in every game (except for the times when the only youth player on the roster is sent off or unable to continue playing, in which case he can't be substituted by a senior player).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230303-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I liga\nOn 28 February 2013 the Disciplinary Commission of the Polish FA suspended the \u0141KS's license to compete in the I liga, because of non-payment of salaries to former players. Since the club's appeal was unsuccessful, on 5 April the Polish FA announced the cancellation of Warta\u2013\u0141KS game on the 22nd match day. On 10 April the club announced its withdrawal from the I liga. As \u0141KS had already played over 50% of their games, according to the rules of I liga, they will be ranked in the final league table, with the cancelled games counted as lost 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230303-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I liga, Changes from last season, Additionalnotes\nBefore the start of the season Ruch Radzionk\u00f3w withdrew from 2012\u201313 I liga, citing financial problems. The club also withdrew its reverve team from Bytom region Klasa A (7th level). However, Ruch will be able to join the 2013\u201314 III liga, after a one-year suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 57], "content_span": [58, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230303-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I liga, Changes from last season, Additionalnotes\nRuch's I liga spot was taken by another Silesian club, Polonia Bytom, the highest placed team of the previous season's I liga relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 57], "content_span": [58, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League\nThe 2012\u201313 I-League was the sixth season of the I-League, the Indian professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2007. The season began on 6 October 2012 and finished on 12 May 2013 with Churchill Brothers crowned champions in matchday 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League\nDempo were the defending champions, having won their third I-League title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League\nOn December 29, 2012, Mohun Bagan were barred from competing in the I-League for 2 years following a decision taken by the I League core committee. This was because they failed to turn up in the second half of the match against East Bengal because of crowd trouble. All their results in the I-League were declared null and void and all their remaining fixtures were cancelled. But on 15 January 2013, Mohun Bagan appealed against the decision to ban them from the league and were reinstated, but would start on 0 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League, Teams\nA total of 14 teams contested the league, including 12 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted from the 2012 I-League 2nd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League, Teams\nONGC as champions and United Sikkim as runners-up secured direct promotion from the 2012 I-League 2nd Division. ONGC returned to the I-League after a one-year absence, while United Sikkim made their debut in the I-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League, Teams, Stadium Changes, Air India and Mumbai FC\nDue to the ongoing redevelopment of the Cooperage Ground in Mumbai which is the regular home for Mumbai F.C. and Air India FC in the I-League both clubs will play at the Balewadi Sports Complex in Pune, Maharashtra until it is complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League, Teams, Stadium Changes, ONGC\nThe newly promoted ONGC F.C. also usually play at the Cooperage Ground in Mumbai but due to the redevelopment the team decided to play at the Ambedkar Stadium in Delhi which is where the main company, ONGC, are based. However it will only be for five home matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League, Teams, Stadium Changes, Goan clubs\nThe four Goan clubs in the I-League, Churchill Brothers, Dempo, Salgaocar, and Sporting Clube de Goa, usually play their I-League matches at the Fatorda Stadium in Margao. However, due to a major revamp at the stadium in preparation for the 2013 Lusophony Games which will be held in Goa, the Goan home games for the I-League will be played at the Duler Stadium and then the Tilak Maidan Stadium from the end of January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230304-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 I-League, Teams, Foreign players\nRestricting the number of foreign players strictly to four per team, including a slot for a player from AFC countries. A team could use three foreign players on the field each game including a least one player from the AFC country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230305-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Championship\nThe 2012\u201313 IFA Championship (known as the Belfast Telegraph Championship for sponsorship reasons) was the fifth season since its establishment after a major overhaul of the league system in Northern Ireland. The season began on 10 August 2012 and ended on 4 May 2013. From next season onwards, the league would be operated by the Northern Ireland Football League, which was taking over from the Irish Football Association (IFA) for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230305-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Championship\nIn Championship 1, Ards were confirmed as the champions on 20 April 2013 after a 1\u20131 draw against Institute, securing promotion back to the top flight for the first time since the 2005\u201306 season. Warrenpoint Town finished as runners-up, and qualified for the promotion/relegation play-off against Donegal Celtic. The tie ended 2\u20132 on aggregate with Warrenpoint Town winning on the away goals rule to reach the top flight for the first time in the club's history. Donegal Celtic were relegated to next season's Championship 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230305-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Championship\nEarlier in the season, Newry City were wound up and their IFA membership was later terminated. All of their results were also expunged. As a result of Newry's expulsion from the league, only the club that finished in 13th, Tobermore United, was relegated from Championship 1, and there was no relegation from Championship 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230305-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Championship\nIn Championship 2, winners Knockbreda were promoted to Championship 1, along with runners-up Ballyclare Comrades. Chimney Corner finished bottom for the fourth successive season but were saved from relegation by Newry City's demise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230305-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Championship, Team changes from 2011\u201312\nBallinamallard United were last season's winners of Championship 1, achieving promotion to the 2012\u201313 IFA Premiership. Carrick Rangers replaced them for this season's Championship 1, after finishing in 12th place in the previous season's Premiership. Newry City missed out on promotion as they finished as runners-up, but were defeated 3\u20132 by Lisburn Distillery in the Promotion/Relegation play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230305-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Championship, Championship 1, Results\nEach team plays every other team twice (once at home, and once away) for a total of 24 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230305-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Championship, Championship 2, Results\nEach team plays every other team twice (once at home, and once away) for a total of 30 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership\nThe 2012\u201313 IFA Premiership (known as the Danske Bank Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the fifth season of Northern Ireland's national football league in this format since its inception in 2008, and the 112th season of Irish league football overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership\nThe season began on 11 August 2012 and ended on 27 April 2013. This was the last season of the league under the control of the Irish Football Association. From the following season onwards, the league became part of the newly created Northern Ireland Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership\nLinfield were the defending champions after winning their third consecutive title \u2013 their 51st league title overall last season. This season however, Cliftonville were the champions for the fourth time overall and the first time since the 1997\u201398 season. It was also the first time in eleven years that neither Linfield or Glentoran had won the title, with the previous occasion being 2001\u201302 when Portadown won their fourth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership\nLisburn Distillery finished bottom of the table and were relegated to Championship 1 after a 2\u20130 defeat to Ballymena United on 16 April 2013. The club had participated in all 112 seasons of senior football so far, and at the time were one of only four clubs to have done so; the others being Cliftonville, Linfield and Glentoran. The club had not been outside the top division since winning the 2001\u201302 Irish League First Division title, which at the time was the second tier of senior football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership\nHowever, the restructuring of the league system in 2003 consolidated senior football into one division, which meant that this was the first time in the club's history that they had been relegated to intermediate football. This brought an end to both their 123-year stay in senior football, and their 11-year stay in the top flight. 11th-placed Donegal Celtic joined them in Championship 1, after losing on the away goals rule to Warrenpoint Town in the Promotion/relegation play-off following a 2\u20132 draw on aggregate. This was the first time since the 2005\u201306 season that two clubs had been promoted to, and relegated from the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, Teams\n2011\u201312 Championship 1 winners Ballinamallard United were promoted to this season's Premiership after successfully gaining the required Championship Club Licence from the IFA. Last season's bottom-placed Premiership club Carrick Rangers replaced them in Championship 1 after only one season in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, Teams\nChampionship 1 runners-up Newry City lost out on promotion, as last season's 11th placed club Lisburn Distillery defeated them 3\u20132 on aggregate in the Promotion/relegation play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nDuring matches 1\u201322 each team played every other team twice (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, Results, Matches 23\u201333\nDuring matches 23\u201333 each team played every other team for the third time (either at home, or away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, Results, Matches 34\u201338\nDuring matches 34\u201338 each team played every other team in their half of the table once. As this was the fourth time that teams played each other this season, home sides in this round were chosen so that they played each other twice at home and twice away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, Promotion/relegation play-off\nDonegal Celtic played Warrenpoint Town, the runners-up of the 2012\u201313 IFA Championship 1 in a two-legged tie for a place in next season's NIFL Premiership. Warrenpoint Town won the tie on the away goals rule to reach the top flight for the first time in the club's history. Donegal Celtic were relegated to next season's Championship 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, Promotion/relegation play-off\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Warrenpoint Town won on away goals rule and were promoted. Donegal Celtic were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA coefficient and ranking\nFor the 2012\u201313 UEFA competitions, the associations were allocated places according to their 2011 UEFA country coefficients, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 2006\u201307 to 2010\u201311. In the 2011 rankings used for this season's European competitions, Northern Ireland's coefficient points total was 2.249. After earning a score of 1.125 during the 2010\u201311 European campaign, the league was ranked by UEFA as the 49th best league in Europe out of 53 \u2013 not moving from 49th the previous season. This season Northern Ireland earned 1.125 points, which was added to the points total for the 2013 rankings used in 2014\u201315 UEFA competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 94], "content_span": [95, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Champions League\nAfter winning the league last season, Linfield were the league's sole representatives in the UEFA Champions League. They entered the draw at the first qualifying round where they were drawn to face B36 T\u00f3rshavn from the Faroe Islands. The first leg at Windsor Park ended in a 0\u20130 draw, with Linfield missing several opportunities to score, and Peter Thompson missing a penalty. The second leg was played on 10 July 2012 in the Faroe Islands, and again the teams were inseparable and the game finished as another 0\u20130 stalemate. The tie went to extra time and with still no goals, a penalty shootout. Linfield won the shootout 4\u20133 and progressed to the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 87], "content_span": [88, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Champions League\nThey were drawn to face AEL Limassol of Cyprus. The first leg against was played on 18 July 2012 in Cyprus. Linfield succumbed to a 3\u20130 defeat in the searing heat against their full-time opponents. The return leg at Windsor Park was played on 25 July 2012. This time, Linfield managed to hold their opponents to a 0\u20130 draw, but it was not enough, and they left the competition 3\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 87], "content_span": [88, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Europa League\n2011\u201312 League runners-up Portadown, 3rd-placed Cliftonville, and Irish Cup runners-up Crusaders all earned a place in the UEFA Europa League. They entered the competition at the first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 84], "content_span": [85, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Europa League\nCliftonville faced Kalmar FF from Sweden. The home leg was played on 5 July 2012, with Cliftonville earning a 1\u20130 win, Liam Boyce scoring the winning goal in the 71st minute. However, the away leg ended in a 4\u20130 defeat, and Cliftonville bowed out of the competition 4\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 84], "content_span": [85, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Europa League\nCrusaders got perhaps the toughest draw, after they were paired with Rosenborg BK from Norway, a club that reached the group stage of the 2007\u201308 UEFA Champions League, and held Chelsea to a 1\u20131 draw at Stamford Bridge in a group stage match. The first leg was played on 5 July 2012 at Seaview. Crusaders were second best for most of the match, with Rosenborg earning a comfortable 3\u20130 win. The second leg also ended in a Crusaders defeat, this time 1\u20130. Crusaders exited the competition 4\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 84], "content_span": [85, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Europa League\nPortadown were drawn to face Macedonian side FK Shk\u00ebndija. The first leg was played on 3 July 2012 in Macedonia, and ended in a 0\u20130 draw. The second leg was played on 10 July at Shamrock Park. Portadown fell behind in the 4th minute, but second-half goals from Richard Lecky and Ross Redman won the match for Portadown and they went through 2\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 84], "content_span": [85, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Europa League\nPortadown then faced NK Slaven Belupo from Croatia in the second qualifying round, with the first leg in Croatia being played on 19 July 2012. They were unable to repeat their heroics from the previous round, and fell to a heavy 6\u20130 defeat at the hands of their Croatian hosts. The second leg was played on 26 July 2012, with the Ports seemingly only having pride left to play for. They restored some pride by scoring 2 goals, but still lost the game 4\u20132. Portadown left the competition after a rather heavy 10\u20132 aggregate defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 84], "content_span": [85, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230306-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IFA Premiership, IFA Premiership clubs in Europe 2012\u201313, UEFA Europa League\nThat ended the IFA Premiership's involvement in Europe this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 84], "content_span": [85, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230307-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe Continental Cup 2012\u201313 was the 16th edition of the IIHF Continental Cup. The season started on 28 September 2012, and finished on 13 January, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230307-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe Super Final was played in Donetsk, Ukraine on the 11\u201313 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230307-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe points system used in this tournament was: the winner in regular time won 3 points, the loser 0 points; in case of a tie, an overtime and a penalty shootout is played, the winner in penalty shootouts or overtime won 2 points and the loser won 1 point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230308-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup\nThe 2012-13 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup was the ninth playing of the IIHF European Women's Champions Cup. HC Tornado of Russia's Women's Hockey League won the tournament for the third time in four seasons and second consecutive time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230308-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup, First round\nThe first round was contested from 5 to 22 October 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230308-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup, Second round\nThe first round was contested from 2 to 4 December 2011", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230308-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup, Final round\nThe final round was hosted in Oulu, Finland, and played during 22\u201324 February 2013. The top two teams of each second-round group advanced to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230309-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IPFW Mastodons men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 IPFW Mastodons men's basketball team represented Indiana University \u2013 Purdue University Fort Wayne during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mastodons, led by second year head coach Tony Jasick, played their home games at Allen County War Memorial Coliseum and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 16\u201317, 7\u20139 in The Summit League play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of The Summit League Tournament where they lost to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230310-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series\nThe 2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series, known for sponsorship reasons as the HSBC Sevens World Series, was the 14th annual series of rugby sevens tournaments for full national sides. The IRB Sevens World Series has been run by the International Rugby Board since 1999\u20132000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230310-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series, Itinerary\nThe schedule for the 2012\u201313 Series was released to the general public in late June 2012. At the time, the schedule included a new event to be held in La Plata, Argentina. However, on 16 August, the Argentine Rugby Union pulled out of hosting an event in 2012\u201313, citing demands associated with the country's 2012 entry into The Rugby Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230310-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series, Core teams\nBefore each season, the IRB announces the \"core teams\" that received guaranteed berths in each event of that season's series. This was the first series in which 15 teams received this status, up from 12 in the recent past. All 12 core teams from 2011\u201312 retained their status, with three more being elevated as top finishers in a 12-team qualifying tournament conducted as part of the 2012 Hong Kong Sevens. The 2012\u201313 core teams are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230310-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series, Core teams, Promotion and relegation\nFor the first time, the IRB instituted a formal promotion and relegation process for core team status in the Sevens World Series, replacing the former ad hoc process. The top 12 core teams in the season table after the next-to-last round of the series in Glasgow retained their status for 2013\u201314. The remaining three core teams for 2013\u201314 are being determined in a two-stage qualifying process:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230310-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series, Dream Team\nThe 2012\u201313 HSBC Sevens World Series 'Dream Team' was selected by the series' regular television broadcast commentators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230311-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Women's Sevens World Series\nThe IRB Women's Sevens World Series (2012/2013) was the inaugural edition of the IRB Women's Sevens World Series, organized by the IRB annual series of tournaments for women's national teams in the Rugby Sevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230311-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Women's Sevens World Series\nIn October 2012 the IRB announced that the season would consist of four tournaments - in Dubai, Houston, Guangzhou and Amsterdam - played from November 2012 to May 2013. The Dubai tournament was held in conjunction with the 2012 Dubai Sevens for men, while the others were separate competitions. The number of teams in each of the events was set at twelve, with six core teams participating in all tournaments of the series and the other teams identified by elimination or rankings within the IRB's six regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230311-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Women's Sevens World Series, The competition\nAs in the case of male competition series winner will be the team that the entire season will score the most points awarded for winning various places in each event. Each of the twelve team competition accumulate, six of which (Australia, Canada, England, Netherlands, New Zealand, United States) is a series of regular participants (core teams), while others might be identified through regional qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230311-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IRB Women's Sevens World Series, Points schedule\nThe season championship will be determined by points earned in each tournament. The scoring system, similar to that used in the men's IRB Sevens, was announced shortly before the season kicked off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230312-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISAF Sailing World Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 ISAF Sailing World Cup was a series of sailing regattas staged during 2012\u201313 season. The series featured boats which feature at the Olympics and Paralympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating was a series of senior international figure skating competitions in the 2012\u201313 season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points based on their placement at each event and the top six in each discipline qualified to compete at the Grand Prix Final, held in Sochi, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating\nOrganized by the International Skating Union, the Grand Prix series ran from October 13 \u2013 December 9, 2012. Skaters competed for medals, prize money, and a chance to compete in the Grand Prix Final. The series set the stage for the 2013 European, Four Continents, and World Championships, as well as each country's national championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating\nThe corresponding series for junior-level skaters was the 2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Schedule\nThe ISU announced the following schedule of events taking place in autumn 2012:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Rule changes\nBetween seasons, the ISU eliminated the option for seeded skaters to compete at a third GP event and the option for pairs to compete in both the senior Grand Prix and Junior Grand Prix in the same season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, General requirements\nSkaters who reached the age of 14 by July 1, 2012 were eligible to compete on the senior Grand Prix circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, General requirements\nPrior to competing in a Grand Prix event, skaters were required to have earned the following scores:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Assignments\nThe International Skating Union released the initial list of Grand Prix assignments on May 21, 2012: Due to the 2012 China anti-Japanese demonstrations, the Japan Skating Federation said it might withdraw its competitors from the Cup of China if the organizers did not provide security guarantees. The event was held without incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Top Grand Prix scores\nSkaters ranked according to total score. The short and free columns break down the total score of a skater's best overall event into the short and free program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Top Grand Prix scores\nTop senior Grand Prix scores after all 7 events: Skate America, Skate Canada, Cup of China, Rostelecom Cup, Troph\u00e9e Eric Bompard, NHK Trophy, and Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Prize money and Grand Prix Final qualification points\nThe top finishers will earn prize money, as well as points toward qualifying for the Grand Prix Final, according to the chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Prize money and Grand Prix Final qualification points\nAfter the final event, the 2012 NHK Trophy, the six skaters/teams with the most points advanced to the Grand Prix Final. If a skater or team competed at three events, their two best results counted toward the standings. There were seven tie-breakers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230313-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Prize money and Grand Prix Final qualification points\nIf there is still a tie, the tie is considered unbreakable and the tied skaters would all qualify for the Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix was the 16th season of the series of junior international competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was the junior-level complement to the 2012\u201313 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating contested by senior-level skaters. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix\nSkaters earned points toward qualifying for the final at each of the seven Junior Grand Prix events. The top six skaters or teams from each discipline met at the 2012\u201313 Junior Grand Prix Final, which was held concurrently with the senior final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Competitions\nThe locations of the JGP events change yearly. In the 2012\u201313 season, the series was composed of the following events in autumn 2012:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Qualifying\nSkaters who reached the age of 13 by July 1, 2012 but had not turned 19 (singles and females of the other two disciplines) or 21 (male pair skaters and ice dancers) were eligible to compete on the junior circuit. Unlike the senior Grand Prix, skaters for the JGP are not seeded by the ISU. The number of entries allotted to each ISU member federation is determined by their skaters' placements at the previous season's Junior World Championships in each respective discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Qualifying\nA possibility for pairs to compete on both the junior and senior Grand Prix series in the same season was removed before the 2012\u20132013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Series\nThe 2012\u20132013 ISU Junior Grand Prix season began in August 2012 in Courchevel, France. Russia's Elena Radionova and China's Jin Boyang, both making their JGP debut, won gold in the ladies' and men's event respectively, while France's Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron won gold in ice dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Series\nThe next event was held in Lake Placid, USA. Joshua Farris of the United States won his fourth JGP title, while Japan's Satoko Miyahara, Canadian pair Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro, and American ice dancers Alexandra Aldridge / Daniel Eaton all recorded their first wins on the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Series\nThe series then moved to Linz, Austria, where Radionova and Papadakis / Cizeron took their second titles and qualified for the JGP Final. Making their debuts, Nathan Chen of the United States and Brittany Jones / Ian Beharry of Canada won gold in the men's and pairs' events respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Series\nThe next event was held in Istanbul, Turkey, where reigning JGP Final champion Jason Brown won his second JGP title and qualified for his second final. This made it three for four for the American men and golds. Leah Keiser of the United States won gold in the ladies' event in her first JGP event. Satoko Miyahara of Japan won the bronze and qualified for the JGP Final. Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin won the ice dance event, winning their fifth JGP title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Series\nBled, Slovenia hosted the next event. Americans Joshua Farris and Aldridge / Eaton picked up their second wins of the season and qualified for the JGP Final, ahead of the silver medalists by 24 and 9 points respectively, while South Korea's Kim Hae-jin took her first JGP title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Series\nThe Junior Grand Prix series continued in Zagreb, Croatia. Canada's Purdy and Marinaro won their second title and qualified for the Final. In the free skate, fourth-place finishers Kamilla Gainetdinova / Ivan Bich became the first pair to land a side-by-side 3Lz+2T combination in a junior competition. Russia's Maxim Kovtun won the men's event. Russians Valeria Zenkova / Valerie Sinitsin and American Angela Wang won their first JGP titles, in ice dance and ladies' singles respectively. Nathan Chen, who had earlier won the Austrian event, withdrew due to a lower leg injury and thus did not qualify for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Series\nThe final qualifying event was held in Chemnitz, Germany. Russians won all four disciplines \u2013 Anna Pogorilaya and Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin won their first JGP titles, while Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin won their sixth and Maxim Kovtun his third. All qualified for the JGP Final in Sochi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Final\nRussia swept all four gold medals at the JGP Final and the entire pairs' podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Final\nThe United States' Joshua Farris won the men's short program ahead of Russia's Maxim Kovtun and the 2011 JGP Final champion Jason Brown. Kovtun won the free skate with a program that included a 4T-3T, 3A+3T, and 3A. He won the title by 11 points over the silver medalist, Farris, while Japan's Ryuju Hino moved ahead of Brown to take the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Final\nRussia's Elena Radionova was first in the ladies' short program, with the United States' Hannah Miller in second and Russia's Anna Pogorilaya in third. Radionova also placed first in the free skate and won the junior ladies' title by 11 points ahead of silver medalist Miller, who placed fourth in the segment, and bronze medalist Pogorilaya. Angela Wang of the United States was second in the free skate but remained in fourth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Final\nRussia's Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin took the lead in the pair's short program, followed by Canada's Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro and Russia's Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat. Fedorova / Miroshkin were also first in the free skate and won gold with a total score slightly over five points ahead of the silver medalists, Davankova / Deputat, while Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev rose to take the bronze, producing a Russian sweep of the podium. Davankova / Deputat were the only junior pairs' medalists to attempt (and complete) side-by-side triple jumps. Vigalova (born 29 June 1999) was the youngest skater at the JGP Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Overview, Final\nRussia's Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin won the short dance ahead of France's Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron and 2011 JGP Final silver medalists Anna Yanovskaia / Sergei Mozgov. Stepanova / Bukin also placed first in the free dance and won gold by ten points ahead of Papadakis / Cizeron, while the United States' Alexandra Aldridge / Daniel Eaton moved past Yanovskaia / Mozgov to take the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix Final qualification and qualifiers, Qualification rules\nAt each event, skaters earn points toward qualification for the Junior Grand Prix Final. Following the 7th event, the top six highest scoring skaters/teams advance to the Final. The points earned per placement are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 104], "content_span": [105, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix Final qualification and qualifiers, Qualification rules\nThere are seven tie-breakers in cases of a tie in overall points:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 104], "content_span": [105, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230314-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix Final qualification and qualifiers, Qualification rules\nIf there is still a tie, the tie is considered unbreakable and the tied skaters all advance to the Junior Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 104], "content_span": [105, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230315-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Short Track Speed Skating World Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU Short Track Speed Skating World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season for short track speed skating. The season began on 19 October 2012 and ended on 12 February 2013. The World Cup was organised by the ISU who also ran world cups and championships in speed skating and figure skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230315-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Short Track Speed Skating World Cup, World Cup standings\n* Note \u2013 Standings are calculated on the best 6 out of 8 results for the individual distances", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230316-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup, officially the Essent ISU World Cup Speed Skating 2012\u20132013, was a series of international speed skating competitions which ran the entire season. The season started on 16 November 2012 in Heerenveen, Netherlands, and ended with the final on 10 March 2013, also in Heerenveen. In total, nine competition weekends were held at eight different locations, twelve cups were contested (six for men, and six for women), and 82 races took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230316-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup\nThis season world cup points was awarded in the mass start event. Additionally, the team sprint was contested as a demonstration event at both Heerenveen competitions. The World Cup is organized by the International Skating Union (ISU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230316-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup, Calendar\nNote: the men's 5000 and 10000 metres were contested as one cup, and the women's 3000 and 5000 metres were contested as one cup, as indicated by the color coding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230316-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup, World records, Women\nAt the World Cup stop in Calgary on 20 January 2013, Lee Sang-hwa of South Korea set a new world record on the women's 500 metres with a time of 36.80 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230317-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 1000 metres\nThe 1000 meters distance for men in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over nine races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230317-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 1000 metres\nKjeld Nuis of the Netherlands won the cup, while the defending champion, Shani Davis of the United States, came second, and Hein Otterspeer of the Netherlands came third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230317-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 1000 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230318-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe 1500 meters distance for men in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230318-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nZbigniew Br\u00f3dka of Poland won the cup, while Bart Swings of Belgium came second, and the defending champion, H\u00e5vard B\u00f8kko of Norway, came third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230318-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230319-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 500 metres\nThe 500 meters distance for men in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over 12 races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230319-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 500 metres\nJan Smeekens of the Netherlands won the cup, while Joji Kato of Japan came second, and Michel Mulder of the Netherlands came third. The defending champion, Mo Tae-bum of South Korea, ended up in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230319-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 500 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 65], "content_span": [66, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230320-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 5000 and 10000 metres\nThe 5000 and 10000 meters distances for men in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup were contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230320-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 5000 and 10000 metres\nJust like the previous season, Dutch skaters dominated the 5000/10000 distance, taking 16 out of 18 available podium places over the season, including all gold and silver medals, and only letting two bronze medals slip to a non-Dutchman. The medallists were the same as the previous season, however in a different order: Jorrit Bergsma won the cup, while his countrymen Bob de Jong \u2013 the defending champion \u2013 and Sven Kramer came second and third, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230320-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's 5000 and 10000 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 76], "content_span": [77, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230321-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's mass start\nThe men's mass start in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over four races on four occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230321-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's mass start\nArjan Stroetinga of the Netherlands won the cup, while Bart Swings of Belgium came second, and Jordan Belchos of Canada came third. The defending champion, Alexis Contin of France, ended up in 9th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230321-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's mass start, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 65], "content_span": [66, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230322-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's team pursuit\nThe men's team pursuit in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over four races on four occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230322-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's team pursuit\nThe Netherlands successfully defended their title from the previous season, while South Korea came second and Russia came third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230322-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Men's team pursuit, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230323-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 1000 metres\nThe 1000 meters distance for women in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over nine races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230323-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 1000 metres\nHeather Richardson of the United States won the cup, while Brittany Bowe, also of the United States, came second, and Karol\u00edna Erbanov\u00e1 of the Czech Republic came third. The defending champion, Christine Nesbitt of Canada, came fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230323-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 1000 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230324-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe 1500 meters distance for women in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230324-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nMarrit Leenstra of the Netherlands won the cup, while the defending champion, Christine Nesbitt of Canada, came second, and Ireen W\u00fcst of the Netherlands came third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230324-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230325-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 3000 and 5000 metres\nThe 3000 and 5000 meters distances for women in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup were contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230325-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 3000 and 5000 metres\nMartina S\u00e1bl\u00edkov\u00e1 of the Czech Republic successfully defended her title from the previous season, while Claudia Pechstein of Germany came second, and Diane Valkenburg the Netherlands came third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230325-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 3000 and 5000 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 77], "content_span": [78, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230326-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 500 metres\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinker (talk | contribs) at 22:50, 28 November 2019 (fix small tags). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230326-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 500 metres\nThe 500 meters distance for women in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over 12 races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230326-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 500 metres\nOn Sunday, 20 January 2013, in the Calgary competitions, South Korean Lee Sang-hwa set a new world record of 36.80 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230326-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 500 metres\nLee Sang-hwa went on to win the cup, while Jenny Wolf of Germany came second, and Wang Beixing of China came third. The defending champion, Yu Jing of China, ended up in 10th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230326-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's 500 metres, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230327-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's mass start\nThe women's mass start in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over four races on four occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230327-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's mass start\nKim Bo-reum of South Korea won the cup, while the defending champion, Mariska Huisman of the Netherlands, came second, and Ivanie Blondin of Canada came third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230327-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's mass start, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230328-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's team pursuit\nThe women's team pursuit in the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over four races on four occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 16\u201318 November 2012, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 8\u201310 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230328-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's team pursuit\nThe Netherlands won the cup, while the defending champions, Canada, came second, and Poland came third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230328-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 Women's team pursuit, Standings\nStandings as of 10 March 2013 (end of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 69], "content_span": [70, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230329-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 1\nThe first competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the Thialf arena in Heerenveen, Netherlands, from Friday, 16 November, until Sunday, 18 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230329-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 1, Standings\nThe top ten standings in the contested cups after the weekend. The top five nations in the team pursuit cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230330-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 2\nThe second competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held at the Kolomna Speed Skating Center in Kolomna, Russia, from Saturday, 24 November, until Sunday, 25 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230330-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 2, Standings\nThe top ten standings in the contested cups after the weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230331-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 3\nThe third competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the Alau Ice Palace in Astana, Kazakhstan, from Saturday, 1 December, until Sunday, 2 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230332-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 4\nThe fourth competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the M-Wave arena in Nagano, Japan, from Saturday, 8 December, until Sunday, 9 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230333-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 5\nThe fifth competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the Heilongjiang Indoor Rink in Harbin, China, from Saturday, 15 December, until Sunday, 16 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230334-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 6\nThe sixth competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the Olympic Oval in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, from Saturday, 19 January, until Sunday, 20 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230334-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 6\nOn the second day of the competition, South Korean Lee Sang-hwa set a new world record of 36.80 seconds in the women's 500 metres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230335-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 7\nThe seventh competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the Eisstadion Inzell in Inzell, Germany, from Saturday, 9 February, until Sunday, 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230336-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 8\nThe eighth competition weekend of the 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann Halle in Erfurt, Germany, from Friday, 1 March, until Sunday, 3 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230337-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup \u2013 World Cup 9\nThe ninth and final competition weekend 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was held in the Thialf arena in Heerenveen, Netherlands, from Friday, 8 March, until Sunday, 10 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230338-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking, are the World Standings and Season's World Ranking published by the International Skating Union (ISU) during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230338-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU World Standings for single & pair skating and ice dance, are taking into account results of the 2010\u201311, 2011\u201312 and 2012\u201313 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230338-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU Season's World Ranking is based on the results of the 2012\u201313 season only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230338-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking\nThe 2012\u201313 ISU World standings for synchronized skating, are based on the results of the 2010\u201311, 2011\u201312 and 2012\u201313 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230338-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking, World Standings for single & pair skating and ice dance, Season-end standings\nThe remainder of this section is a complete list, by discipline, published by the ISU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 133], "content_span": [134, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230338-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ISU World Standings and Season's World Ranking, Season's World Ranking\nThe remainder of this section is a complete list, by discipline, published by the ISU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230339-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team represented Indiana University \u2013 Purdue University Indianapolis during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaguars, led by second year head coach Todd Howard, played their home games at IUPUI Gymnasium (better known as The Jungle), with three games at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 6\u201326, 1\u201315 in The Summit League play to finish in last place. They lost in the quarterfinals of The Summit League Tournament to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230340-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Icelandic Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Icelandic Hockey League season was the 22nd season of the Icelandic Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Iceland. Six teams participated in the league, and SA Vikingar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230341-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Idaho State Bengals men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Idaho State Bengals men's basketball team represented Idaho State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bengals, led by first year head coach Bill Evans, played their home games at Reed Gym, with three home games at Holt Arena, and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 6\u201324, 5\u201315 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They failed to qualify for the Big Sky Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230342-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team represented the University of Idaho during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Vandals, led by fifth year head coach Don Verlin, played their home games at the Cowan Spectrum, with a few early season games at Memorial Gym, and were members of the Western Athletic Conference. they finished the season 12\u201318, 7\u201311 in WAC play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to New Mexico State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230343-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2013Champaign in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by first year head coach John Groce, the Illini played their home games at Assembly Hall and were members of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season\nThe 2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season was the seventh season of the Illinois Piasa indoor soccer club and third as a franchise in the Professional Arena Soccer League. The Piasa, named for the Piasa Bird of Native American legend, are an Eastern Division team who played their home games in The Sports Academy in Glen Carbon, Illinois. The team was led by owner Jim Williams and head coach Jason Norsic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Season summary\nThe team struggled in the regular season, compiling a 4\u201312 record. They placed fourth in the five-team Eastern Division and failed to advance to the postseason. The team fared better at home than on the road with all four of their wins coming on home turf. Two of the Piasa's four wins came against the Ohio Vortex but Illinois also provided Ohio with its only win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Season summary\nThe Piasa participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They received a bye in the Wild Card round then lost to the Chicago Mustangs in the Round of 16, ending their tournament run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Off-field moves\nFor the 2012\u201313 season, the team named former goalkeeper Jason Norsic as head coach. He replaced both Joe Reiniger and Justin McMillian who had previously shared coaching duties. Norsic played college soccer at Southwestern Illinois College and McKendree University before playing professionally for the St. Louis Steamers, Swanner United FC, St. Louis Illusion, Piasa FC, and Illinois Piasa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Off-field moves\nThe team's official sportswear for the 2012\u201313 season was supplied by Admiral Sportswear, the world's oldest soccer brand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Off-field moves\nThe Piasa's dance team for the 2012-13 season, the Piasa Pizazz Pro Dance Team, was led by Danielle Lusicic-Wise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Off-field moves\nAt the November 9, 2012, home game, the team organized a canned food drive for a food bank in the St. Louis, Missouri, area. Fans received a discount on tickets when they presented a canned food donation at the box office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Awards and honors\nOn December 11, 2012, the Professional Arena Soccer League named rookie goalkeeper Alan Hagerty as the Player of the Week. The league cited his 32 saves and second-half shutout of rival Rockford Rampage on December 3, leading the Piasa to their first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230344-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois Piasa season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230345-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team represented Illinois State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redbirds, led by first-year head coach Dan Muller, played their home games at Redbird Arena in Normal, Illinois as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 8\u201310 in conference play, to finish in sixth place. As the number six seed in the MVC Tournament, they defeated Northern Iowa in a quarterfinal game before losing to Wichita State in a semifinal game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230346-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team represented Indiana University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. Their head coach was Tom Crean, in his fifth season with the Hoosiers. 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, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230346-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nCombined with the returning players from the previous season, Indiana dominated the college basketball landscape, spending 10 weeks ranked #1 in the country and all but two weeks in the top 5. The Hoosiers won the outright Big Ten regular season title with a 14\u20134 record. Indiana went 7\u20131 against AP Top-25 teams during the season; no other Big Ten team had better than a .500 record in that category. However, all four of the team's regular season losses came against non-ranked Top-25 opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230346-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nThe Hoosiers were five games above .500 (7\u20132) in road games; no other Big Ten team was better than 1 game over .500 on the road in league play. Despite the impressive regular season, the program fell in the Sweet Sixteen for the second consecutive year, extending their championship drought to 26 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230346-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe Hoosiers ended the 2011\u201312 season highly ranked and expected to re-join the elite programs of college basketball. An early Top-25 poll by numerous media outlets ranked the team no. 1 in the country, including ESPN, USA Today, NBC, and Sports Illustrated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230346-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team, Preseason\nSome of the team's preseason accolades were attributable to the five-man recruiting class in 2012 consisting of Yogi Ferrell, Hanner Perea, Jeremy Hollowell, Peter Jurkin, and Ron Patterson. The group has been called \"The Movement\". However, Ron Patterson never played for the Hoosiers due to academic issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230347-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana Pacers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Indiana Pacers season was Indiana's 46th season as a franchise and 37th season in the NBA. The regular season ended with a 49\u201332 win\u2013loss record and the team advanced to the conference finals. The team only played 81 games due to a game versus the Boston Celtics that was cancelled following the Boston Marathon bombing. However, it was not to be as they fell to the Miami Heat in seven games. The Heat would go on to win its third NBA Championship after defeating the San Antonio Spurs in a seven-game NBA Finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230347-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, Game log\nNote: the Indiana Pacers only played 81 games due to the cancellation of the April 16, 2013 game vs the Boston Celtics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230348-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indiana State Sycamores men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Indiana State Sycamores basketball team represented Indiana State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Sycamores, led by third year head coach Greg Lansing, played their home games at the Hulman Center and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 9\u20139 in MVC play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Missouri Valley Tournament where they lost to Creighton. They were invited to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21\nThe 2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21 season was the fifth edition of Indonesia Super League U-21, a competition that are intended for footballers under the age of twenty-one years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, Format\nThe competition is divided into four acts consist of two group stages and two knockout rounds, which is the semifinals and final. The first stage is divided into five groups each containing four clubs, two top teams of each group advanced to the second stage. The second stage consisted of two groups containing eight teams in each group, the two best teams from each group advanced to the semifinals. The winner advanced to the final to battle for the championship, while two teams who were defeated will play a third-placed match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, First stage\nFirst stage of the group stage started 27 April 2013 and ended on 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, First stage, Group 1\nSriwijaya FC U-21 was the host in a home tournament with home and away format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, First stage, Group 4\nBarito Putera U-21 was the host for the first half of the group and Mitra Kukar FC U-21 hosted the rest of the matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, First stage, Group 5\nPersipura U-21 was the host in a home tournament with home and away format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, First stage, Group 5\nUpdated to games played on 16 July 2013. Source: Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd goal difference; 3rd number of goals scored. (C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round. Only applicable when the season is not finished:(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, Second stage\nThe second stage started 19\u201325 August 2013 where each team will play other teams in their group once in a home tournament format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, Second stage, Group K\nAll matches were played in Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium and Bumi Sriwijaya Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, Second stage, Group L\nAll matches were played in Aji Imbut Stadium and Sempaja Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230349-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Indonesia Super League U-21, Second stage, Group L\nUpdated to games played on 25 August 2013. Source: Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd goal difference; 3rd number of goals scored. (C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round. Only applicable when the season is not finished:(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Football Club Internazionale Milano's 104th in existence and 97th consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter confined his market to a few of purchases, as they were not yet ready for a deeper revolution: the most notable arrival being Rodrigo Palacio, from Genoa. For the first three months of 2012\u201313 season Inter achieved good results, especially in away games. However, during winter times, the side suffered from too many absences: Diego Milito and Javier Zanetti - for example - had long-term injuries. As a result, Inter had to use young players who did not have the requested experience and skills. It was Inter's worst season since 1993\u201394, as the club finished ninth and missed out on European football qualification. On 24 May 2013, Stramaccioni was sacked by the club, with successful former Napoli coach Walter Mazzarri taking over the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, June\nOn 6 June, Goran Pandev, who was on loan with Napoli on the previous season, signed a permanent contract with them for a fee of \u20ac8 million, lasting until 2015. One day later, Palacio's transfer become official when he signed a three-year contract worth \u20ac2.7 million per season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, June\nLater on 29 June, Inter announced that L\u00facio would be leaving Inter after it was agreed to cancel the final two years of his contract by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, July\nAfter a failed first season in Milan, Diego Forl\u00e1n agreed to terminate the final year of his contract on 5 July. One day later, the club signed Mat\u00edas Silvestre on loan from Palermo with an option to make the move permanent for \u20ac6 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, July\nOn 9 May, Inter announced with signing of Slovenian goalkeeper Samir Handanovi\u0107 reported \u20ac11 million cash on a co-ownership deal, as well as co-ownership of Davide Faraoni. On 12 July, the team played its first friendly of the new season by easily achieving a 6\u20130 win against Trentino Team. Three days later, they won the second one, defeating Koper 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, July\nOn 20 July, Inter announced that they had signed Gaby Mudingayi from Bologna on loan with an option to purchase for \u20ac750,000. A day later, Inter won its first pre-season trophy, the TIM Trophy, by beating Juventus and Milan to claim their eighth success. On 24 July, Inter continued with their winning streak in friendlies by defeating Como 3\u20132 at Stadio Giuseppe Sinigaglia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, July\nOn 28 July, Luc Castaignos was sold to Twente for \u20ac6 million. The same day, Inter draw 1\u20131 with Celtic at Celtic Park, as their winning streak came to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, August\nInter played its first competitive match on 2 August by comfortably winning 0\u20133 at Hajduk Split for the first leg of 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League third qualifying round. In the returning leg one week later, Hajduk Split caused an upset by winning 0\u20132 at San Siro but nevertheless Inter progressed 3\u20132 on agreegate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, August\nOn 18 August, Inter played their first friendly ahead of the new season by defeating CA Bizertin 3\u20130 at Locarno. Three days later, Inter and Milan reached an agreement over an exchange deal involving Giampaolo Pazzini and Antonio Cassano, with a compensatory sum of \u20ac7.5 million in favor of the Nerazzurri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, August\nIn play-off round, Inter faced Vaslui. On 23 August in the first leg, Inter achieved a comfortable 0\u20132 away win thanks to the goals of Cambiasso and Palacio. This was also the last match of Maicon in an Inter shirt. The same day, \u00c1lvaro Pereira accepted a transfer to Inter from Porto for total fee of \u20ac10 million by signing a contract until June 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, August\nInter kicked off 2012\u201313 Serie A with a perfect 0\u20133 away win at newly promoted Pescara with Sneijder, Milito and Coutinho scoring the goals. On 30 August, Inter officially qualified in the UEFA Europa League group stage after a 2\u20132 home draw in the returning leg in San Siro. On the last day of the month, the Treble heroes J\u00falio C\u00e9sar and Maicon were respectively sold to Queens Park Rangers and Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, September\nInter started September with a 1\u20133 home defeat to Roma with Cassano scoring his first Inter goal. The team bounced back by winning the third matchday 0\u20132 away at Torino. Cassano and Milito were the goalscorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, September\nOn 20 September, Inter played its first match in Europa League group stage, equating 2\u20132 to Rubin Kazan with goals from Marko Livaja and Yuto Nagatomo. Back to Serie A three days later, Inter slumped into a 0\u20132 home defeat to Siena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, September\nWith goals from Pereira and Cassano, Inetr achieved an important victory against Chievo in the matchday 5. In the last match of September, Inter defeated Fiorentina through Milito and Cassano goals at the first half, recording first home win in all competitions after five games without a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, October\nOn 4 October, in the second game of Europa League group stage, Inter won 3\u20131 at Neft\u00e7i Baku with goals of Coutinho, Obi and Livaja. In the first Derby della Madonnina of the season, on 7 October, Samuel's early goal were enough to clinch the points for Inter despite playing with 10-man for about 40 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, October\nInter continued their fine form by winning 2\u20130 home versus Catania, with Palacio and Cassano scoring, and also beating FK Partizan thanks to the winner of Palacio in Europa League group stage matchday 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, October\nIn the ninth round of league, on 28 October, Inter played Bologna away. Ranocchia, Cambiasso and Milito were all in the scoresheet for the team, with the latter scoring his 100th Serie A goal, as Inter recorded their 5th consecutive league win. Inter continued their solid appearances in Serie A by extending their win record up to six matches after a 3\u20132 home win over Sampdoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, November\nInter started November by ending Juventus' 49-game unbeaten run with a 3\u20131 victory at Juventus Stadium. Diego Milito scored a brace before Palacio sealed the win with a late goal. Matchday 4 for Inter in the Europa League against FK Partizan ended in a 1\u20133 away win, which ensued Inter progression to knockout phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, November\nOn 11 November, after seven consecutive league wins, Inter was defeated 3\u20132 away by Atalanta which also ended Inter's longest winning away record (10). Palacio and Guar\u00edn scored the goals. One week later, Inter were stopped 2\u20132 by Cagliari at home, despite taking an early lead with a Palacio goal. A young Inter side were defeated 3\u20130 away by Rubin Kazan in Europa League matchday 5. Back in Serie A, Inter was defeated again, this time by Parma, slipping to 3rd position in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, December\nIn its first match of December, Inter won 1\u20130 at home against Palermo thanks to a Santiago Garc\u00eda owngoal. On 6 December, in the final matchday of Europa League group stage, Inter drew 2\u20132 Neftchi Baku at home thanks to the brace from Marko Livaja, which secured them the second position in Group H and progression to the knockout phase. Three days later, Inter won its second consecutive match by beating title contenders Napoli 2\u20131 at San Siro. Fredy Guar\u00edn and Diego Milito scored the goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, December\nA goal from Lazio's Miroslav Klose in the last minutes were enough to beat Inter in Serie A matchday 17 on 15 December. To begin its Coppa Italia campaign, Inter played in the round of 16 Hellas Verona of Serie B. The match finished in a 2\u20130 home win thanks to the strikes of Antonio Cassano and Guar\u00edn. This match was also notable for Rodrigo Palacio efforts. He played as a goalkeeper for the final 15 minutes due to an injury of Luca Castellazzi, keeping a clean sheet and also making two saves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, December\nBack in Serie A, Inter didn't go more than a 1\u20131 draw with Genoa at home, with Cambiasso scoring the only goal. Livaja missed a clear chance, shooting the post of an open goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, January\nOn 4 January 2013, the fourth day of the winter transfer window, Inter announced an agreement with Lazio for the transfer of Italian striker Tommaso Rocchi. The transfer fee was \u20ac250,000 and the player signed a contract until the end of the season. The new year for the team began with a 3\u20130 devastating defeat to Udinese; Inter finished the match with 10 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, January\nAgain in Serie A on 13 January, Inter returned to winning ways after three consecutive league defeats by clinching a 2\u20130 home win over Pescara. Fredy Guar\u00edn and Rodrigo Palacio scored the goals and also the youngster Marco Benassi made his league debut. Back in Coppa Italia for the quarter-finals, Inter achieved a hard-fought 3\u20132 victory over Bologna after an Andrea Ranocchia goal in the last minute of extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, January\nOn 20 January 2013, Wesley Sneijder was sold on controversial fashion to Galatasaray for \u20ac7.5 million. On the same day, Inter didn't go more than a 1\u20131 away draw against Roma with Palacio canceling Totti's penalty. Against the same opponent three days later, now for the first leg of Coppa Italia semi-final, Inter was defeated 2\u20131 with Palacio again scoring against capital club. One day later, Alfred Duncan was loaned to Livorno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, January\nOn 26 January, the young talent Philippe Coutinho was sold to Premier League club Liverpool for \u20ac10 million. The transfer was made official on 30 January. On 27 January, Inter were held by Torino who earned a 2\u20132 draw at San Siro. Chivu and Cambiasso scored Inter's goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, January\nOn 30 January, McDonald Mariga was sent on loan at fellow Serie A club Parma. Also, Marko Livaja was transferred to Atalanta as part of Ezequiel Schelotto's transfer at Inter. One day later, the final day of the January transfer window period, Juan Pablo Carrizo was signed from Lazio for \u20ac250,000. Hot prospect Mateo Kova\u010di\u0107 was signed for \u20ac11 million plus bonuses from Dinamo Zagreb. Also Zdravko Kuzmanovi\u0107 joined the team from VfB Stuttgart for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, February\nInter begun the month with a 3\u20131 away defeat to Siena. Cassano scored his team's only goal. On 10 February, goals from Cassano, Ranocchia and Milito ensured Inter three points against Chievo, their first after four three matches. Four days later, in first round of the round of 32 in Europa League, Inter achieved a comfortable 2\u20130 home win over CFR Cluj with a brace from Palacio. Striker Diego Milito was injured in the seventh minute with a collateral ligament injury, anterior cruciate ligament, and capsule in his left knee. Two days later, Milito announced that the surgery to repair the injury was a success, but the player will not return to the pitch for at least six months, ruling him out of contention for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, February\nOn 17 February, Inter fell away to Fiorentina 4\u20131 in the Serie A matchday 25, with Cassano scoring the Inter goal. In the second leg of the round of 32 in Europa League, Inter easily won 3\u20130 at Stadionul Dr. Constantin R\u0103dulescu with a brace from Guar\u00edn and a goal from Benassi, progressing to round of 16 with the aggregate 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, February\nOn 24 February, in the second Derby della Madonnina, Stephan El Shaarawy gave Milan the lead in the first half, only for Ezequiel Schelotto to later equalize, salvaged a 1\u20131 draw for Inter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, March\nOn 3 March, Inter achieved a hard-fought victory against Catania at Stadio Angelo Massimino. The team was two goals down at half-time, but a goal from Ricky \u00c1lvarez and a brace from substitute Palacio, including one in the last minute, ensured three points for the Nerazzurri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, March\nFour days later, Inter suffered a 3\u20130 loss at the hands of Tottenham Hotspur in the first leg of Europa League round of 16. The team continued with their unstable from by falling to Bologna 1\u20130 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, March\nOn 14 March, in the returning leg at San Siro, Inter sent the match to extra-time by winning 3\u20130 at regular time with the goals of Cassano, Palacio and an owngoal from William Gallas. At extra-time, Tottenham got one back with a goal from Emmanuel Adebayor, only for Inter to strike back with a header from \u00c1lvarez, winning the match 4\u20131, which was not enough as the team was knocked-out due to away goal rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, March\nThe next Serie A match between Sampdoria and Inter was postponed on 2 April due to bad weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, April\nInter started the month by winning the postponed match against Sampdoria 0\u20132 with both goals scored by Palacio, the second in the last moments after an individual effort. Palacio strained his left hamstring, ultimately ending his season prematurely. Four days later, the brace of \u00c1lvarez and the goal of Rocchi were not enough as Inter suffered a shock 3\u20134 home loss to Atalanta. Striker Cassano suffered a hamstring injury that kept him sidelined for a month, thus ending his season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, April\nIn the next matchday away against Cagliari, Inter suffered another defeat, this time 2\u20130 with both goals coming for the substitute Mauricio Pinilla. Yuto Nagatomo came in the second half and played only eight minutes after suffering e knee injury which ended his season. Also the midfielder Walter Gargano ended the season due to a thigh injury. This loss descended the team to the 7th position. Manager Andrea Stramaccioni dubbed the season as \"cursed\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, April\nIn the returning leg of Coppa Italia semi-final versus Roma, Inter initially took the lead through a Jonathan goal, but Roma fired back with a brace from Destro and a goal from Vasilis Torosidis, before Inter scoring another one with \u00c1lvarez. The match finished 2\u20133 for Roma and Inter was eliminated with the aggregate 5\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, April\nOn 21 April, back in Serie A, Inter won against Parma with a late goal from Rocchi. The month ended with a 1\u20130 away defeat to Palermo. The legendary captain Javier Zanetti suffered an achilles tendon injury that kept him sidelined for the next six months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, May\nThe last month of the season begun on with a 3\u20131 away defeat to Napoli. \u00c1lvarez scored the temporary equalizer in the 23rd minute with a penalty kick before Cavani scored another two goals to conclude the match. In the next matchday, Inter suffered another 3\u20131 defeat, this time at home at the hands of Lazio with \u00c1lvarez again scoring his team's only goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, May\nOn 12 May, Inter didn't go more than a goalless draw at Genoa in the matchday 37. Youngster Lukas Spendlhofer made his senior debut by playing in the last 13 minutes. The final match of the season ended with a 2\u20135 humiliating defeat to Udinese. Juan Jesus scored his first goal for Inter, while Rocchi scored another one in his final Inter match, assisted by the returning Palacio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Month-by-month account, May\nInter finished the season in the 9th position in league, remaining out of European football for the first time since 1999\u20132000. This was also Inter's worst finish in Serie A since 1993\u201394. On 24 May, five days after the end of the season, head coach Andrea Stramaccioni was fired and replaced by Walter Mazzarri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Kit, Kit information\nNike continued its supply of the Inter Milan kit, a relationship dating back to the 1998-99 season. Pirelli was the current sponsor, dating back to the 1995-96 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Pre-season and friendlies, 2012 Indonesia tour\nThe Nerazzurri played two friendlies during their stay in Indonesia and both took place in Jakarta's Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, which hosted training sessions. The first match, held on 24 May, saw Inter took on a mixed starting eleven made up of players from the Indonesia under-23 side and the best players from the Indonesian Premier League. Inter met the Indonesia senior national team in their second game on 26 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for UEFA Europa League Third qualifying round will take place on 20 July 2012. First leg is played on 2 August 2012 and second leg on 9 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Play-off round\nThe draw for UEFA Europa League Play-off round will take place on 10 August 2012. First leg is played on 23 August 2012 and second leg on 30 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Statistics, Squad statistics\nPlayers Used: Internazionale has used a total of \u2013 different players in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total appearances are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230350-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter Milan season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by position, and then shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230351-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inter-National League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Inter-National League season was the first season of the Inter-National League, a multi-national ice hockey league consisting of teams from Austria and Slovenia. It served as the successor to the Austrian National League, which had operated as the second level of ice hockey in Austria. Six teams - four from Austria and two from Slovenia - participated in the league, and Bregenzerwald won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230352-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Inverness Caledonian Thistle's third consecutive season in the Scottish Premier League, having been promoted from the Scottish First Division at the end of the 2009\u201310 season. Inverness also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230352-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 16 February 2013 - List incompleteSource: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 77], "content_span": [78, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230353-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iona Gaels men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Iona Gaels men's basketball team represented Iona College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gaels, led by third year head coach Tim Cluess, played their home games at the Hynes Athletic Center and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 20\u201314, 11\u20137 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They were champions of the MAAC Tournament, defeating Manhattan in the championship game, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Ohio State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230354-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team represented the University of Iowa in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team was led by 3rd year head coach Fran McCaffery and played their home games at Carver-Hawkeye Arena, which has been their home since 1983. They were members of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230354-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team\nThe team finished with a record of 25\u201313, 9\u20139 in conference play and finished 6th in the Big Ten. The 25 wins is the most wins in one season for the Hawkeyes since the 2005\u20132006 season, in which Iowa also had 25 wins. The team went to the 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament as a 6th seed where they defeated Northwestern in the 1st round but lost to Michigan State in the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230354-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team\nThe team went on to earn a #3 seed in the 2013 National Invitation Tournament where they defeated both Indiana State (68\u201352) and Stony Brook (75\u201363) in front of sellout home crowds. Iowa also defeated the #1 seeded Virginia Cavaliers, snapping the Wahoo's 19-game home winning streak, and moving on to the NIT Semifinals for the first time in school history. Iowa advanced to the Championship game after defeating Maryland (71\u201360) but lost to Baylor (74\u201354).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230354-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team, Roster\nThe 2012\u201313 Iowa Hawkeyes squad contained 16 players which included 4 freshmen, 2 redshirt freshmen, 5 sophomores, 3 juniors, and 2 seniors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230355-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team represented Iowa State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cyclones were coached by Fred Hoiberg, who was in his 3rd 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-00230355-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cyclones finished 23\u201311, and 12\u20136 in Big 12 play to finish 3rd in the regular season conference standings. They lost to Texas in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated UConn and lost to Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230356-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ipswich Town F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Ipswich Town's eleventh consecutive season in the Football League Championship, the second-highest division in the English football league system. In addition to competing in the Championship, Ipswich Town also competed in the League Cup and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230356-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230356-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ipswich Town 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-00230356-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad, Under-23 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, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230357-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraklis F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Iraklis first season in the Football League since 1980-81 and second overall. Iraklis finished 6th in the Football League, thus qualifying for the division's Play-offs. Their 2nd place in the Play-offs was not enough to earn promotion to the Greek Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230357-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraklis F.C. season\nThe \"blue-whites\" lost their single Greek Cup game to Proodeftiki and were eliminated from the competition early, in October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230357-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraklis F.C. season, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nLast updated: 19 June 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230357-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraklis F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230357-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraklis F.C. season, Statistics, Top assists\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total assists are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230357-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraklis F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total cards are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230358-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran 2nd Division\nThe article contains information about the 2012\u201313 Iran 2nd Division football season. This is the 3rd rated football competition in Iran after the Azadegan League and Persian Gulf Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230358-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran 2nd Division\nThe league is composed of 28 teams divided into two divisions of 14 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 26 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230358-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran 2nd Division\nIn each division, two teams are promoted to Azadegan League, and two teams are relegated to Iran Football's 3rd Division plus the relegation playoff loser. In total, the league promotes 4 teams to Azadegan League and relegates 9 teams to 3rd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230358-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran 2nd Division, Relegation play-off\nThe loser will be relegated to 2013\u201314 Iran Football's 3rd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230359-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran Football's 3rd Division\nThe article contains information about the 2012\u201313 Iran 3rd Division football season. This is the 4th rated football league in Iran after the Persian Gulf Cup, Azadegan League, and 2nd Division. The league started from September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230359-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran Football's 3rd Division\nIn total and in the first round, 70 teams will compete in 9 different groups. From the First Round, 18 teams go through the Second Round. In the Second Round 18 teams will be divided in three groups of 6, where the winner of each group will be directly promoted to 2013\u201314 Iran Football's 2nd Division. The three group runner-up and the best third place team will go through play-off matches, where the two play-off winners also will be promoted. Therefore, in total, five team will be promoted from this league to Iran Football's 2nd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230359-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran Football's 3rd Division, Teams\nThe following 70 teams will compete in 2012\u201313 Iran Football's 3rd Division season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230360-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran Futsal's 1st Division\nThe 2012\u201313 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-00230360-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230360-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iran Futsal's 1st Division, Teams, Play Off\nAfter the Maku Javan withdrew from league, Football Association decided to hold a playoff game between the two teams that won 3rd place in their group in the 2012 2nd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230361-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iranian Basketball Super League\nThe following is the results of the Iran Super League 2012/13 basketball season, Persian Gulf Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230362-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iranian Futsal Super League\nThe 2012\u201313 Iranian Futsal Super League are the 14th season of the Iran Pro League and the 9th under the name Futsal Super League. Shahid Mansouri are the defending champions. The season will feature 14 teams from the 2011\u201312 Iranian Futsal Super League and two new teams promoted from the 2011\u201312 Iran Futsal's 1st Division: Shahrdari Tabriz and Gaz Khozestan. The regular season, was played from 26 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230362-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iranian Futsal Super League, Teams\n1- Persepolis, Firooz Sofeh and Foolad Mahan withdrew from the league before the beginning. 2- Rah sari and Dabiri Tabriz, in last season placed 13th and 14th in table and Relegatian to the 1st Division. But by the increasing of the number of teams, futsal committee decided to stay at the Super league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230363-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iranian Volleyball Super League\nThe Iranian Volleyball Super League 2012\u201313 was the 26th season of the Iranian Volleyball Super League, the highest professional volleyball league in Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230364-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irapuato FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Irapuato season is the 18th professional season of Mexico's Promotion league. The season is split into two tournaments\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each with identical formats and each contested by the same fifteen teams. Irapuato began their season in a 0-0 draw on July 20, 2012 against Tecos, Irapuato play their homes games in the Estadio Sergio Le\u00f3n Ch\u00e1vez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230364-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irapuato FC season, Torneo Apertura 2012, 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, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230364-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irapuato FC season, Torneo Clausura 2013, 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, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230365-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq Division One\nThe 2012\u201313 Iraq Division One season began on December 8, 2012. Al-Sulaymaniya were the champions of the previous season and Naft Al-Junoob were runners-up, hence both promoted to the 2012\u201313 Iraqi Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230365-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq Division One, Format and teams\nThe 42 teams were split into six groups. At the end of the regular season, the top 2 teams from each group, a total of 12 teams advanced to the next round. In the second round, these 12 teams will be split into two groups of 6, with teams playing a home and away round robin matches with each opponent in the group. The top two teams in each of the two groups advanced to the next round creating a 4 team playoff. The Final stage is one group with teams playing a home and away round robin matches with each opponent in the group. The top two teams qualify to the 2013\u201314 Iraqi Premier League next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230365-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq Division One, Final stage\nThe Final stage is one group with teams playing a home and away round robin matches with each opponent in the group. The top two teams qualify to the 2013\u201314 Iraqi Premier League next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup was the 27th occurrence of the Iraq FA Cup, the main domestic cup in Iraqi football. It was the first edition held since the 2002\u201303 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup\nThe tournament was abandoned during the Round of 32 because of scheduling difficulties the Iraq Football Association had with the 2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup, Format, Participation\nThe cup starts with a qualifying round of 13 teams from the Iraq Division One, 12 of which play against each other and one of which proceeds to the playoff round. The playoff round gets played between three teams from Division One and one from the Iraqi Premier League. The other 17 teams of the Iraqi Premier League and the rest of Division One join the other teams in the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup, Format, Draw\nFor the first round, the participating teams will be split into two pots of 6 teams in one and 7 in the other. For the remaining rounds other than the final, the draw will be conducted from just one pot. The final is held in the Al-Shaab Stadium, a nominally neutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup, Format, Match rules\nTeams meet in one game in the first round. In the playoff round, Round of 32, 16 and the quarterfinals, the teams will have two-legged ties. The semifinals and the final will have only one-legged ties. A match will take place for 90 minutes, with two halves of 45 minutes. If still tied after regulation or tied on aggregate, 30 minutes of extra time will be played, consisting of two periods of 15 minutes. If the score is still level after this, the match will be decided by a penalty shootout. A coin toss will decide who takes the first penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup, Format, Cards\nIf a player receives a second yellow card, they will be banned from the next cup match. If a player receives a red card, they will be banned a minimum of one match, but more can be added by the Iraq Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup, Schedule\nThe rounds of the 2012\u201313 competition are scheduled as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup, Matches\nTimes from the start of the first round, on 28 September 2012, until the end of the second round, on 10 June 2013, are in AST (UTC+03:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230366-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraq FA Cup, Bracket\nThe following is the bracket which the Iraq FA Cup resembled from the Round of 32 onwards. Teams that are bolded advanced on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230367-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League\nThe 2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League was the 39th season of the competition since its establishment in 1974. The season began on 19 October 2012 and finished on 4 September 2013. Al-Shorta were crowned Premier League champions for the third time, finishing on 72 points, two points ahead of nearest competitors Erbil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230367-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League\nHaving only managed a seventh place finish in the previous season, Al-Shorta's results improved significantly under the presidency of Ayad Bunyan and they were able to outperform favourites Erbil, Duhok, Al-Zawraa and Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230367-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League\nOn the final day of the season, three teams were all still in the race for the title. Al-Shorta needed a win against Al-Talaba to secure the league, whilst Erbil had to defeat Al-Najaf and hope that Al-Shorta failed to win their game if they wanted to retain their title. Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya needed both Al-Shorta and Erbil to slip up and needed to defeat Masafi Al-Wasat by a large goal margin in order for them to go home with the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230367-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League\nAll three teams ended up winning their respective matches, making Al-Shorta the champions. It was the club's first league title since the 1997\u201398 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230367-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League, SWAT incident\nOn 23 June 2013, after a match with Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya, seven football players of Karbalaa and their manager were beaten by the anti-terror police. They used sticks and batons against the eight men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230367-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Iraqi Elite League, SWAT incident\nFive of them were in critical condition, and on June 30, Mohammed Abbas Al-Jabouri, the club's manager, died in hospital. Several teams refused to play their matches in round 25 as a result of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Irish Cup was the 133rd edition of the premier knock-out cup competition in Northern Irish football since its introduction in 1881. The competition began on 15 September 2012 with the first round and ended on 4 May 2013 with the final. The cup was sponsored by JJB Sports until October 2012, when the company went into administration. The competition remained without a principal sponsor, but the final was known as the Marie Curie Irish Cup final, after the IFA awarded the naming rights for the final to the charity Marie Curie Cancer Care.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup\nLinfield were the defending champions, after defeating Crusaders 4\u20131 in the 2012 final to win the cup for the sixth time in seven seasons. However, in a tie that was a repeat of the previous two finals, they were knocked out in the fifth round by Crusaders, who inflicted Linfield's first defeat in the competition in four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup\nThe eventual winners were Glentoran, coming from a goal behind to defeat Cliftonville 3\u20131 after extra time to win their first Irish Cup in nine years. Glentoran qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Format and schedule\n119 clubs took part in this season's competition, an increase on the 116 clubs that took part the previous season. Clubs from level 4 and below on the Northern Ireland football league system entered in the first round, and played against other lower league clubs in the first three rounds. Depending on the number of participants, some clubs may be given a bye into the second round. Nine clubs were given a bye this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Format and schedule\n28 of the 30 IFA Championship clubs that started the season entered in the fourth round. Newry City folded after the start of the season and, of the remaining 29 clubs, PSNI did not enter on time. The IFA Championship clubs were joined in the fourth round by the lower league clubs that progressed through the first three rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Format and schedule\nThe winners from the fourth round matches joined the clubs from the IFA Premiership in the fifth round, and from then on it was a straight knock-out competition through to the final. Replays were only used in the fifth round, sixth round and quarter final stages, otherwise extra time and penalties were used to determine the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, First round\nThe draw for the first round was held on 16 August 2012 with the matches played on 15 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, First round\nBallynahinch United, Bangor Amateurs, Crumlin United, Dunmurry Rec., Killyleagh Youth, Magherafelt Sky Blues, Mountjoy United, Newbuildings United and Saintfield United all received byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, First round\n1Wellington Recreation were disqualified for fielding an ineligible player, their opponents were reinstated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Second round\nThe draw for the second round took place on 25 September 2012. The 35 winners from the first round matches entered the competition at this round, along with the 9 clubs that received a bye. The matches were played on 20 and 27 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Second round\n2Comber Recreation and Killyleagh Youth were both disqualified for fielding an ineligible player, their opponents were reinstated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Third round\nThe draw for the third round took place on 1 November 2012. The 22 winners from the second round matches entered the draw for this round, with 20 of the clubs drawn to play against each other. Oxford United Stars and Rathfriland Rangers both received a bye into the fourth round because of the demise of Championship club Newry City, and the failure of fellow Championship club PSNI to enter on time. This had reduced the number of teams in the fourth round and hence it was decided to draw two byes in the third round to make up the requisite fourth-round numbers. The matches were played on 17 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round was made on 22 November 2012. 28 of the 29 clubs from the IFA Championship entered the competition at this stage (PSNI not having entered). They were joined by the 10 winners of the third round matches and the two clubs that received byes. The matches were played on 8 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Fourth round\n3Drumaness Mills were disqualified for fielding an ineligible player, their opponents received a walkover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Fifth round\nThe fifth round draw was made on 13 December 2012. The 12 clubs from the IFA Premiership entered the competition at this stage, along with the 20 winners from the fourth round matches. The matches were played on 12 January 2013, with the replays being played on 22 January and 4 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Sixth round\nThe sixth round draw was made after the fifth round matches were played on 12 January. The matches were played on 9 and 26 February 2013. Northern Amateur Football League club Kilmore Recreation were the lowest ranked side in the draw as the only club from outside the IFA Premiership or IFA Championship left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-final draw was made after the sixth round matches were played on 9 February. The matches were played on 2 March 2013, with one replay taking place on 12 March. Northern Amateur Football League club Kilmore Recreation were the lowest ranked side in the draw as the only club from outside the IFA Premiership or IFA Championship left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final draw was made after the quarter-final matches were played on 2 March. The matches were played on 6 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230368-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish Cup, Results, Final\nThe final took place on 4 May 2013 at Windsor Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Irish League Cup (known as the Irn-Bru League Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 27th edition of Northern Ireland's secondary football knock-out cup competition. It was contested by the twelve members of the IFA Premiership, as well as the 29 members of the IFA Championship. The competition began on 14 August 2012, and ended with the final on 26 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup\nCrusaders were the defending champions after defeating Coleraine 1\u20130 in the 2011\u201312 final. They reached the final again this season, but were unable to defend the trophy as they were defeated 4\u20130 by Cliftonville in the final, who lifted the cup for the second time. This made it six different winners of the cup in the last six seasons. The 4\u20130 scoreline equalled the record for the highest in a final, set when Linfield defeated Coleraine by the same score in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, Format\nThe competition was played in a straight knock-out format and was open to all members of the IFA Premiership and both divisions of the IFA Championship. Twenty clubs from the IFA Championship entered in the first round, with the remaining ten Championship clubs given byes into the second round. They were joined by the twelve members of the IFA Premiership. Newry City were expelled from the IFA this season and their result in the second round match against Dergview was expunged from the records. Replays were not used in the competition - all matches used extra time and penalties to determine the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first round was made on 24 July 2012. The games were played on 14 August 2012. The first round draw was made randomly and included all 29 clubs from the IFA Championship. 20 of those clubs were drawn to face each other with the remaining 9 receiving a bye into the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, First round\nArmagh City, Ballymoney United, Bangor, Carrick Rangers, Coagh United, Dundela, Institute, Killymoon Rangers, and Limavady United all received byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was also made on 24 July 2012. The games were played on 27 August 2012. The draw was later revised, switching some venues to the club originally drawn to play away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, Second round\nThe 12 members of the IFA Premiership entered the draw at this stage, along with the 10 winners from the first round matches, and the 9 clubs that received byes. Dergview were effectively given a bye to the third round, after their 2\u20131 second round victory over Newry City was later expunged from the official records. The draw was seeded so that the IFA Premiership clubs and the top 4 clubs from last season's second tier (IFA Championship 1) avoided each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, Third round\nThe draw for the third round was made on 29 August 2012. Six clubs from IFA Championship 1 made it through to the third round along with the ten remaining clubs from the top flight, but none made it through from Championship 2. The matches were played on 9 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals draw was made on 10 October 2012. No club from outside the IFA Premiership reached this stage. The matches were played on 5 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals draw was made on 7 November 2012. The matches were played on 11 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230369-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish League Cup, Final\nThe final was played on 26 January 2013 at Windsor Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230370-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish SuperLeague season\nThe 2012\u201313 Irish SuperLeague season was the 40th running of Basketball Ireland's premier men's basketball competition. The season featured 8 teams from across the Republic of Ireland, with the regular season beginning on 28 September 2012 and ending on 9 March 2013. With a first-place finish and a 16\u20135 win/loss record, UL Eagles were crowned league champions for the second straight year. Neptune were crowned National Cup champions for the first time in 21 years, while UCC Demons won the inaugural season finale Champions Trophy tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230370-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish SuperLeague season, SuperLeague Select Team, Ireland vs England\nIn January 2013, the SuperLeague Select Team travelled to Birmingham, England to play against the England Select Team in the BBL Cup Final curtain-raiser. The match took place at the National Indoor Arena on Sunday 13 January, with tip off at 12:30pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230370-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Irish SuperLeague season, SuperLeague Select Team, Ireland vs England, Team\nHead Coach: Mark Keenan (UL Eagles)Assistant Coaches: Jerome Westbrooks (Killester) and John King", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230371-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isle of Man League\nThe 2012\u201313 Isle of Man League is the 104th season of the Isle of Man Football League on the Isle of Man.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Israel State Cup (Hebrew: \u05d2\u05d1\u05d9\u05e2 \u05d4\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4\u200e, Gvia HaMedina) was the 74th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the 59th after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. It began on 31 August 2012, while the final was held in Netanya Stadium on 8 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup\nThe competition was won by Hapoel Ramat Gan who had beaten Ironi Kiryat Shmona 4\u20132 on penalties after 1\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup\nBy winning, Hapoel Ramat Gan, qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League, entering in the Third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup, Results, Seventh Round\nThe 16 winners from the previous round of the competition join 12 Liga Leumit clubs in this stage of the competition. The other 4 clubs from Liga Leumit received a bye for the next round. These matches were played on 1 and 2 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup, Results, Eighth Round\nThe 14 winners from the previous round of the competition join the 4 clubs from Liga Leumit, which received a bye for this round and the 16 clubs from the Israeli Premier League in this stage of the competition. These matches were played on 29 and 30 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup, Results, Round of 16\nThe 16 winners of the previous round entered this stage of the competition. These matches took place on 26 and 27 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nThe eight winners of the previous round entered this stage of the competition. These matches took place on 12 and 13 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230372-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israel State Cup, Results, Semi-finals\nThe four winners of the previous round entered this stage of the competition. These matches took place on 17 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230373-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Basketball Super League\nThe 2012\u20132013 Israeli Basketball Super League, for sponsorship reasons known as Ligat Loto, was the 59th season of the Israeli Basketball Super League. The season began on 14 October 2012, and ended on 13 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230373-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Basketball Super League, Teams, Team changes\nNo team has Relegated as there was no relegation spot in last season. Hapoel Tel Aviv been promoted to the league after winning Ligat Leumit last season. Another new team is Hapoel Eilat as the owner of Habik'a B.C. moved his license to the city of Eilat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230373-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Basketball Super League, Regular season\nPld \u2013 Played; W \u2013 Won; L \u2013 Lost; PF \u2013 Points for; PA \u2013 Points against; Diff \u2013 Difference; Pts \u2013 Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230373-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Basketball Super League, Quarterfinals\nThe Quarterfinals were played as The-Best-Of-5 series. The higher ranked team hosted games 1, 3 and 5 (if necessary). The lower ranked team hosted games 2 and 4 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230373-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Basketball Super League, Semifinals\nThe Semifinals were played as The-Best-Of-5 series. The higher ranked team hosted games 1, 3 and 5 (if necessary). The lower ranked team hosted games 2 and 4 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230373-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Basketball Super League, Final\nThe Final was held on 13 June at Romema Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230373-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Basketball Super League, All-Star Game\nThe 2013 Israeli League All-star event was held on March 18, 2013, at the Romema Arena, Haifa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230374-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Futsal League\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Israeli Futsal League was the 7th season of top-tier futsal under the Israel Football Association and 13th overall. The regular season started on 25 December 2012 and was concluded on 30 April 2013. The championship playoffs began on 6 May 2013 with semi-finals series and concluded with the championship final series, played on 13 and 19 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230374-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Futsal League\nMaccabi Nahlat Itzhak Tel Aviv were the defending champions, but lost the title by losing to Rishon LeZion Futsal Club in the playoff semi-final. ASA Ben-Gurion University won the title by defeating Rishon LeZion in the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230374-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Futsal League, Format changes\nWith 6 clubs registered to play in the league, the clubs played each other in a triple round-robin tournament. At the end of the regular season, the top four teams qualified to the playoffs, while the two bottom teams competed for 5th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230375-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Israeli Hockey League season was the 22nd season of the Israeli Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Israel. Seven teams participated in the league, and the Rishon Devils won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230376-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Noar Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Israeli Noar Premier League was the 19th season since its introduction in 1994 as the top-tier football in Israel for teenagers between the ages 18\u201320, and the second under the name Noar Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230376-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Noar Premier League\nMaccabi Haifa won the title, whilst Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League was the fourteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 71st season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 25 August 2012 and ended on 20 May 2013. Ironi Kiryat Shmona were the defending champions, having won their first Premier League title last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League\nMaccabi Tel Aviv secured the title with a 2\u20130 win against Ironi Ramat HaSharon on 22 April 2012. This was their 19th Israeli league title, this win gave Maccabi Tel Aviv a 13-point advantage over the second-place team Maccabi Haifa with four more rounds to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League, Teams\nA total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011\u201312 season and one promoted team from the 2011\u201312 Liga Leumit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League, Teams\nHapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012\u201313 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011\u201312 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League, Teams\nHapoel Ramat Gan were promoted to the 2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League after beating Hapoel Bnei Lod in the 2011\u201312 Liga Leumit promotion playoff. They last played in the top division in the 2010\u201311 Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League, Teams, Stadia and locations\nA: The club plays its home games at a neutral venue because their own ground does not meet Premier League requirements. B: While Netanya Stadium was under construction. Maccabi Netanya hosted their home games in Ramat Gan Stadium until 6 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League, Teams, Managerial changes\nArik Benado was acted as caretaker manager for eight days until his appointment as manager on 25 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230377-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League, Playoffs\nKey numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 26 games):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230378-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 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 15th season of Israel's women's nationwide football cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230378-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe competition was won by Maccabi Holon who had beaten F.C. Ramat HaSharon 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230378-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe Second Division League Cup was won by F.C. Kiryat Gat, who had beaten Bnot Tiv\u2019on 4\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230378-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Israeli Women's Cup, Gvia Ligat Nashim Shniya, Format\nAs the second division had 8 clubs for this season, the competition was played as a strait knock-out competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 98th 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-00230379-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League\nThe constitution of the three divisions was announced on 25 May 2012. For this season, only two clubs were relegated from the Premier Division, and one from each Division One. This was to allow for expansion to 72 clubs for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division consisted of 22 clubs, including 16 clubs from the previous season, and six new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nWhitehawk won the division to earn a second consecutive title and were promoted to the Conference South along with play-off winners Concord Rangers. Due to league expansion there were only two relegation places this season. Initially, Carshalton Athletic and Hastings United were relegated, but Thurrock were subsequently deducted three points for fielding a suspended player on the second day of the season. It sent Thurrock bottom of the table and they were relegated for a second consecutive season. A subsequent appeal was rejected. This allowed for an effective reprieve for Carshalton Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, Division One North\nDivision One North consisted of 22 clubs, including 19 clubs from the previous season, and three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, Division One North\nGrays Athletic won the division and were promoted to the Premier Division along with play-off winners Thamesmead Town. Due to league expansion, there was only one relegation place this season. Ilford finished bottom of the table and were relegated from the division after seven seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, Division One South\nDivision One South consisted of 22 clubs, including 17 clubs from the previous season, and five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, Division One South\nDulwich Hamlet won the division and were promoted to the Premier Division along with play-off winners Maidstone United, who returned after two seasons of absence. Due to league expansion, there was only one relegation place this season. Walton Casuals finished bottom of the table, but were reprieved for the second time in four seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, League Cup\nThe Isthmian League Cup 2012\u201313 was the 39th season of the Isthmian League Cup, the cup competition of the whole Isthmian League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, League Cup, First round\nFour clubs from divisions One participated in the First round, while all other clubs received a bye to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230379-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Isthmian League, League Cup, Second round\nThe two clubs to have made it through the First round were entered into the draw with every other Isthmian League club, making sixty-four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season marked the continuation of the annual tradition of competitive basketball among Ivy League members. The tradition began when the league was formed during the 1956\u201357 season and its history extends to the predecessor Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League, which was formed in 1902. Due to a cheating scandal that involved defending champion Harvard, Princeton was the preseason favorite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season\nHarvard won the regular season title outright and earned the conference's only postseason bid. Princeton's Ian Hummer earned the Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year after setting records for most single-season and career Ivy League Player of the Week awards. Harvard tied an Ivy League single-season team record with 13 combined Player of the Week and Rookie of the Week Awards. Ivy League records also fell for career games played by Hummer and career free throw percentage (Brian Barbour).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season\nIn the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, Harvard earned the school's first ever NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament victory and the conference's first NCAA Tournament victory in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Preseason\nThe Ivy League media selected Princeton as the preseason favorite when 16 of 17 voting members (one voter selected Harvard) named Princeton first in the preseason poll. Jeff Goodman of CBS Sports also selected Princeton as his preseason choice with Harvard second, noting that Harvard had been his preseason favorite until the September 2012 Harvard cheating scandal that involved about 125 athletes and students, including Kyle Casey and Brandyn Curry who withdrew from school as a result. Casey and Curry had been first-team and second-team All-Ivy selections for the 2011\u201312 Ivy League men's basketball season, respectively. Both players withdrew in hopes of preserving their final year of athletic eligibility following the investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Season\nTwelve different television networks scheduled a total of 36 Ivy League men's basketball live broadcasts for the 2012\u201313 season. This includes a 14-game television package, featuring all eight member institutions, with 13 games being broadcast on the NBC Sports Network and one on the CBS Sports Network. The conference endured two one-day postponements due to the February 2013 nor'easter (also known as Winter Storm Nemo). Harvard's contest against Columbia at Levien Gymnasium in Manhattan that was originally scheduled for February 9 at 7:00 PM was postponed until February 10 at 2:00 PM. Similarly, Dartmouth's game against Cornell originally scheduled to be played at 7:00 PM on February 9 at Newman Arena in Ithaca, New York was postponed until February 10 at 12:00 noon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Season\nLed by Wesley Saunders' five Ivy League Player of the Week Awards and Siyani Chambers' six Rookie of the Week Awards, Harvard tied the Ivy League team record with thirteen single-season weekly recognitions. Meanwhile, Hummer tied the individual career record with nine player of the week awards and set a new single-season record with seven. Two Ivy League career statistical records fell. Columbia's Brian Barbour completed his career with an 89.7% free throw shooting percentage, surpassing Jim Barton of Dartmouth (class of 1989) who tallied 89.5%. Hummer surpassed former teammate Doug Davis' (class of 2012) 122 career games played with 123 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Honors and accolades\nColumbia senior guard Brian Barbour was listed among 30 preseason Senior CLASS Award candidates. Cornell's Eitan Chemerinski and Brown's Matthew Sullivan were first team All-District selections from District I placing them among the 40 candidates for the 15-man Academic All-American team. Brown, a third-team selection in 2012, was recognized as a 2013 first-team All-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Honors and accolades, In season\nEach week the Ivy League selected one or more player(s) of the week and one or more rookie(s) of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Honors and accolades, All-Ivy\nThe following players earned Ivy League postseason recognition with (Class, Position \u2013 Hometown):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Honors and accolades, USBWA\nOn March 12, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association released its 2012\u201313 Men's All-District Teams, based upon voting from its national membership. There were nine regions from coast to coast, and a player and coach of the year were selected in each. The following lists all the Ivy League representatives selected within their respective regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Honors and accolades, NABC\nThe National Association of Basketball Coaches announced their Division\u00a0I All\u2010District teams on March 26, recognizing the nation's best men's collegiate basketball student-athletes. Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, 240 student-athletes, from 24 districts were chosen. The selections on this list were then eligible for the State Farm Coaches' Division\u00a0I All-America teams. The following list represented the District 13 players chosen to the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nOn March 21 in the 2013 NCAA Tournament, Harvard earned the school's first NCAA Tournament victory and its first victory over a top 10 opponent when it defeated number three seeded New Mexico (10, AP Poll/10, Coaches' Poll). The victory was the conferences first since the 2009\u201310 Cornell Big Red men's basketball team advanced to the Sweet Sixteen. Two days later, the team lost to Arizona, ending its season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230380-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ivy League men's basketball season, Postseason, Other\nPrinceton declined any postseason invitation. No other bids were accepted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230381-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 JS Kabylie season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, JS Kabylie competed in the Ligue 1 for the 42nd season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230381-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230382-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 JS Saoura season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, JS Saoura competed in the Ligue 1 for the 1st season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230382-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 JS Saoura 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-00230383-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 JSM B\u00e9ja\u00efa season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, JSM B\u00e9ja\u00efa competed in the Ligue 1 for the 13th season, as well as the Algerian Cup. They competed in Ligue 1, the Algerian Cup the Champions League and the Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230383-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 JSM B\u00e9ja\u00efa 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-00230384-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jackson State Tigers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Jackson State Tigers basketball team represented Jackson State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by tenth year head coach Tevester Anderson, played their home games at the Williams Assembly Center and were members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 11\u201318, 9\u20139 in SWAC play to finish in fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the SWAC Tournament where they lost to Prairie View A&M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230385-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jacksonville Dolphins men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Jacksonville Dolphins men's basketball team represented Jacksonville University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dolphins were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference (A-Sun). They were led by head coach Cliff Warren, and played their home games in both the Veterans Memorial Arena and Swisher Gymnasium. They finished the season 14\u201318, 9\u20139 in A-Sun play to finish in a three way tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic Sun Tournament to USC Upstate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230386-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jacksonville State Gamecocks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Jacksonville State Gamecocks men's basketball team represented Jacksonville State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gamecocks, led by fifth year head coach James Green, played their home games at the Pete Mathews Coliseum and were members of the Ohio Valley Conference. Due to low APR scores, the Gamecocks were ineligible to participate in postseason play, including the Ohio Valley Tournament. They finished the season 17\u201311, 8\u20138 in OVC play to finish in fourth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230387-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jaguares de Chiapas season\nThe 2012\u201313 Chiapas season was the 66th professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league and Jaguares de Chiapas final season in the Liga MX. The season is split into two tournaments\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams. Chiapas began their season on July 20, 2012 against UANL, Chiapas played their homes games on Fridays at 7:30pm local time. Chiapas did not qualify to the final phase in either the Apertura or Clausura tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230387-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jaguares de Chiapas season, Torneo 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230387-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jaguares de Chiapas season, Torneo 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230388-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 James Madison Dukes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 James Madison Dukes men's basketball team represented James Madison University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dukes, led by fifth year head coach Matt Brady, played their home games at the James Madison University Convocation Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 21\u201315, 11\u20137 in CAA play to finish in fourth place. They were champions of the CAA Tournament, defeating Northeastern in the championship game, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. They defeated Long Island in the first four-round before losing in the second round to Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230389-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Japan Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2012\u201313 Japan Figure Skating Championships took place on December 20\u201324, 2012 at the Makomanai Ice Arena in Sapporo. It was the 81st edition of the event. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles and ice dancing. No pairs competition was held this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230389-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Japan Figure Skating Championships, Japan Junior Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2012\u201313 Junior Championships took place on November 17\u201318, 2012 at the DyDo Drinco Ice Arena in Nishit\u014dky\u014d, Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230390-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan FA Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 version of the Jordan FA Cup was the 33rd edition to be played. It is the premier knockout tournament for football teams in Jordan. This season, the format had changed from a two-legged knockout competition to a group stage-based competition, similar to the 2011 Jordan FA Shield. Matches were played on a home-and-away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230390-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan FA Cup\nAll twelve top flight clubs took part, divided into two groups of six teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230390-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan FA Cup\nThe cup winner is guaranteed a place in the 2014 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230390-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan FA Cup, 11th Place Match\n11th place match featured sides finishing in 6th place in the group stages", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230390-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan FA Cup, 9th Place Match\n9th place match featured sides finishing in 5th place in the group stages", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230391-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan League\nThe 2012\u201313 Jordan League is the 61st season of the top-flight football in Jordan and started on 21 August 2012. The season will finish in April 2013, Last season Al-Faisaly was the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230391-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan League, Teams\nAl-Jalil and Kfarsoum were relegated to the Jordan League Division 1 after finishing bottom in the 2011\u201312 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230391-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Jordan League, Teams\nAl-Sareeh SC and Shabab Al-Hussein were promoted as First and Second on table of the Jordan League Division 1 2011-2012 .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Juventus Football Club's 115th in existence and sixth consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football. The club won their second Serie A title in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season\nThe season was the first since 1992\u201393 without former Captain Alessandro del Piero, who joined Sydney FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, 2011\u201312 Italian football scandal\nThe events were overshadowed by the recent Calcioscommesse scandals. First team manager Antonio Conte, his assistant Angelo Alessio, technical director Christian Stellini and players Leonardo Bonucci and Simone Pepe were among the accused. Stellini, Bonucci and Pepe were later acquitted, but Stellini resigned from his position in August 2012. Club president Andrea Agnelli released a statement stating his support for the staff and players. Conte and his assistant Angelo Alessio were handed ten-month and eight-month touchline bans respectively by the FIGC disciplinary committee and public prosecution office. Agnelli publicly announced the club's intention to appeal the charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, 2011\u201312 Italian football scandal\nTeam coach Massimo Carrera was appointed caretaker manager for the duration of Conte's ban. Conte returned to his position in December 2012 for the match against Palermo. Conte and Alessio were at Siena at the time the scandal took place, so Juventus itself was not penalized for any wrongdoing. No one involved with Juventus at the time was implicated in the scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 31 January 2013. 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, Transfers, 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, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, Transfers, 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, Transfers, Co-ownership\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-00230392-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, Competitions, Serie A\nThe fixtures for the 2012\u201313 Serie A were announced on 26 July 2012. The season starts on Saturday 25 August 2012 with Juventus taking on Parma at the Juventus Stadium, and ends Sunday 19 May 2013 with a match away against Sampdoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230392-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Juventus F.C. season, Competitions, Coppa Italia\nJuventus started the Coppa Italia directly in the round of 16, as one of the eight best seeded teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230393-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KBL season\nThe 2012\u201313 KBL season was the 18th season of the Korean Basketball League (KBL), the highest level of basketball in South Korea. Ulsan Hyundai Mobis Phoebus won the title for the fourth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230394-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KF Tirana season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Klubi i Futbollit Tirana's 74th competitive season, 74th consecutive season in the Kategoria Superiore and 92nd year in existence as a football club. Following the title win four seasons ago, KF Tirana added to their 23 titles to make it their record 24th title win. KF Tirana played UEFA Europa League against CS Grevenmacher and Aalesunds FK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230394-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KF Tirana season, 2012\nThe club could get organized better for the current season, starting from Europa League participation. Even though having a healthy budget, club officials were too late to bring quality players on time, adding here the fact that they let go of main attacker, Bekim Balaj for a funny transfer sum to AC Sparta Prague despite Balaj still had six month of contract left. And lost few other players, however, they have the merit to keep team's core and also bringing some new arrivals, all for sake of achieving the title after three years drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230394-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 KF Tirana season, 2012\nTirana managed to pass only one round in Europa League, eliminating CS Grevenmacher of Luxembourg, before being knocked out from Norwegians of Aalesunds FK in the 2nd round. Tirana won again the Supercup (their jubilee 10th trophy), by beating on their 3rd final clash KF Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230394-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 KF Tirana season, 2012\nDespite due to extend his link with Tirana for the following two seasons and continuing the project, the successful Spanish coach, Rubio, did not sign that contract officially, due to some clauses on which himself and the club did not agree and eventually him and the club departed ways after over 13 months cooperation. Artur Lekbello was appointed Tirana new coach, but despite his credits as a player in the past, he did not prove that successful as a coach and therefore presented his resignation to club administrator after only 42 days, following unpleasant results in Tirana's bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230394-0001-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 KF Tirana season, 2012\nAlban Tafaj once again took the vacant place as a temporary coach. The end of the year 2012 found KF Tirana in the 3rd spot of 2012-13 Kategoria Superiore, 11 points adrift leaders KF Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb. Tirana were also eliminated early in the Cup. After passed KF Partizani at the first round winning both matches, 2-1 and 1-0 they were eliminated at second round from debut team, FK Kuk\u00ebsi losing first leg 0-4 and winning second one 3-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230394-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KF Tirana season, Players, 2012\u201313 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, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 KHL season was the fifth season of the Kontinental Hockey League. The regular season began on 4 September with the Lokomotiv Cup between last year's finalists Dynamo Moscow and Avangard Omsk. For the first time, the league consisted of 26 teams from 7 different countries. Dynamo Moscow successfully defended their title after beating Traktor Chelyabinsk in the Gagarin Cup finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Changes, Team changes\nAfter withdrawing from the previous season in the wake of the plane crash that killed the team's entire active roster, Lokomotiv Yaroslavl returned to the KHL with new players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Changes, Team changes\nLev Poprad was disbanded, but a team of the same name, Lev Prague, was established in Prague, Czech Republic, while Slovan Bratislava joined the KHL and thus continues the league's presence in Slovakia. Also HC Donbass from Donetsk, Ukraine joined the league. The team previously played in the VHL. This brought the total number of teams to 26, representing 7 different countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Changes, Salary cap\nThe salary cap changed from a soft cap to a hard cap, set at 1.1 billion rubles (approx. US$36.5 million), but each club can waive the cap for one player transferred directly from the NHL, if he is eligible to play for the Russian national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Changes, Season structure\nThe regular season consisted of 52 games for each team \u2014 twice (home and away) against each other team in the league and two extra games against a selected \"rival\" opponent (typically a geographically close team). This was a change from previous seasons, where all intra-division opponents were played more frequently. The top 8 teams from each conference qualified for the play-offs, which are played as best-of-seven series in each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Changes, Nadezhda Cup tournament\nIn January 2013, a new repechage tournament known as the Nadezhda Cup (Cup of Hope) was announced, which was held alongside the playoffs. Six teams from the Western Conference and four teams from the Eastern Conference who had not qualified for the playoffs competed in the tournament, whose prize includes the first overall pick in the next KHL Junior Draft. The new tournament was intended to extend the season, and help maintain interest in hockey for fans and players in preparation for the 2014 Winter Olympics. The first Cup of Hope was won by Dinamo Riga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season\nThe regular season started on 4 September 2012 with the Lokomotiv Cup between the finalists of the previous season, Dynamo Moscow and Avangard Omsk and ended on 17 February 2013 after every team has played 52 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, Notable events, NHL lockout\nThe league set up rules for the NHL lockout which lasted 16 September 2012 to early January 2013. According to the special regulations, each KHL team was allowed to add up to 3 NHL players to their roster, among them at most one foreign player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, Notable events, Proposed matches in New York\nTwo regular season games between Dynamo Moscow and SKA Saint Petersburg were planned to take place in the new Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York in January 2013. However, the KHL reverted this decision in October 2012 and thus these matches will be played in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 80], "content_span": [81, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, Notable events, All-star game\nThe 5th KHL all-star game was played on 13 January 2013 in Chelyabinsk, with Team East, captained by Aleksey Morozov, winning 18\u201311 over Team West, captained by Ilya Kovalchuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, League standings\nThe conference standings determine the seedings for the play-offs. The first two places in each conference are reserved for the division winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, League standings, Western Conference\ny \u2013 Won division; c \u2013 Won Continental Cup (best record in KHL);BOB \u2013 Bobrov Division, TAR \u2013 Tarasov Division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 72], "content_span": [73, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, League standings, Eastern Conference\ny \u2013 Won division; z \u2013 Won conference (and division); CHE \u2013 Chernyshev Division, KHA \u2013 Kharlamov Division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 72], "content_span": [73, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, Player statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 70], "content_span": [71, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Regular season, Player statistics, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SOP = Shootouts played; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 74], "content_span": [75, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Playoffs\nThe playoffs started on 20 February 2013 with the top eight teams from both conferences and ended on 17 April with the last game of the Gagarin Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Playoffs\nDuring the first three rounds home ice was determined by seeding number within the Conference, not position on the bracket. In the Finals the team with better seeding number had home ice advantage. If the seeding numbers were equal, the regular season record was taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Playoffs, Player statistics, Playoff scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 72], "content_span": [73, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Playoffs, Player statistics, Playoff leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SOL = Shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 76], "content_span": [77, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Awards, KHL Awards\nOn 22 May 2013, the KHL held their annual award ceremony. A total of 23 different awards were handed out to teams, players, officials and media. The most important trophies are listed in the table below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230395-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KHL season, Awards, KHL Awards\nThe league also awarded six \"Golden Helmets\" for the members of the all-star team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230396-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Crvena zvezda season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, KK Crvena zvezda will compete in the Basketball League of Serbia, Kup Radivoja Kora\u0107a, Eurocup and Adriatic League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230396-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Crvena zvezda season, Players, Current roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230396-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, Adriatic League, Standings\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230396-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Crvena zvezda season, Competitions, Basketball League of Serbia, Standings\nP=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, D=Points difference, Pts=Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230397-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Mladost Mrkonji\u0107 Grad season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, Mladost Mrkonji\u0107 Grad will compete in the Basketball Championship of Bosnia and Herzegovina, BiH Cup, and RS Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230397-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Mladost Mrkonji\u0107 Grad season, Competitions, Basketball League of Serbia, Standings\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 93], "content_span": [94, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230398-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Partizan season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, Partizan mt:s Belgrade competed in the Basketball League of Serbia, the Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup, the Adriatic League and the Euroleague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230398-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KK Partizan season, Adriatic League, Standings\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230399-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KML season\nThe 2012\u201313 G4S Korvpalli Meistriliiga was the 88th season of the Estonian basketball league and the fourth under the title sponsorship of G4S. Kalev/Cramo came into the season as defending champions of the 2011\u201312 KML season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230399-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KML season\nThe season started on 10 October 2012 and concluded on 17 May 2013 with Kalev/Cramo defeating T\u00dc/Rock 4 games to 0 in the finals to win their 6th Estonian League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230399-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KML season, Individual statistics\nPlayers qualify to this category by having at least 50% games played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 KNVB Cup was the 95th season of the Dutch national football knockout tournament. The competition began on 21 August 2012 with the matches of Round 1 and ended with the final on 9 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup\nPSV Eindhoven were the defending champions, having won the cup the previous season. The winners qualified for the play-off round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, Participants\n92 teams participated in the 2012-13 cup. The 18 clubs of the Eredivisie and the 18 clubs of the Eerste divisie qualified automatically, entering in the second round. Other teams qualify by winning period titles in the previous year's competition or by winning a local KNVB Cup, called 'districtsbeker', for clubs from level 3 onwards, in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2012\u201313 KNVB Cup is as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, First round\n56 amateur clubs competed in this stage of the competition for a place in the Second Round. These matches took place on 21 and 22 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, Second round\nThe 28 winners from the First Round entered in this stage of the competition along with the 18 Eerste Divisie clubs and the 18 Eredivisie clubs. These matches took place from 25 to 27 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, Third round\nThese matches took place from 30 October to 1 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, Fourth round\nThese matches took place from 18 to 20 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, Quarter-finals\nThese matches will take place from 29 to 31 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230400-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 KNVB Cup, Participants per round\nThe number of participants per league per round was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230401-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team represented the University of Kansas in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, which is the Jayhawks' 115th basketball season. The Jayhawks played their home games at Allen Fieldhouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230402-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team represented Kansas State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was Bruce Weber, who was in his first year at the helm of the Wildcats. The team played its home games in Bramlage Coliseum in Manhattan, Kansas, its home court since 1988. Kansas State was a member of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the conference season with record of 14\u20134 to claim a share of Big 12 regular season title with Kansas. In the Big 12 Tournament they beat Texas and Oklahoma State before losing to Kansas in the championship game. The season ended with a loss to La Salle in the first round of the 2013 NCAA Tournament. The Wildcats finished the season with a 27\u20138 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230402-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe team plays its home games at Bramlage Coliseum, which has a capacity of 12,528. They are in their 17th season as a member of the Big 12 Conference. Coming back from their 2011\u201312 season, they compiled a record of 22\u201311 and advanced to the Round of 32 of the 2012 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC's 14th competitive season, 9th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 89th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230403-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kaposv\u00e1ri R\u00e1k\u00f3czi FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230404-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Karlsruher SC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Karlsruher SC season is the 61st season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. It is the club's first-ever season in this league, having been relegated from the 2. Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230404-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Karlsruher SC season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and will face 2. Bundesliga side MSV Duisburg next. The club had knocked out Bundesliga club Hamburger SV in the first round with a 4\u20132 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230404-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Karlsruher SC season\nKarlsruher SC also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the North Baden Cup, having reached the second round against 1. FC Bruchsal after a 2\u20130 win over SpVgg Neckarelz in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230405-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kategoria Superiore\nThe 2012\u201313 Kategoria Superiore was the 74th official season, or 77th season of top-tier football in Albania (including three unofficial championships of the World War II) and the fifteenth season under the name Kategoria superiore. The season began on 25 August 2012 and ended on 11 May 2013. Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb were the defending champions retained their title, winning their fourth Albanian league championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230405-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kategoria Superiore, Promotion and relegation\nPogradeci and Dinamo Tirana were directly relegated to the Kategoria e Par\u00eb after finishing 13th and 14th in the previous year's standings. They are replaced by Kategoria e Par\u00eb champions Luft\u00ebtari Gjirokast\u00ebr and runners-up Kuk\u00ebsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230405-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kategoria Superiore, Promotion and relegation\nThe 10th placed Tomori Berat, 11th placed Kamza and 12th placed Apolonia Fier had to compete in single-match relegation play-offs. Kamza were relegated after were lost 2\u20130 against Kategoria e Par\u00eb fourth-placed club Besa Kavaj\u00eb, while Tomori and Apolonia Fier were retained their place in the league. Tomori won the match against Kategoria e Par\u00eb fifth-placed club Bes\u00eblidhja Lezh\u00eb after a penalty shoot-out and Apolonia Fier were defeated a Kategoria e Par\u00eb third-placed club Lushnja 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230406-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kategoria e Par\u00eb\nThe 2012\u201313 Kategoria e Par\u00eb was competed between 16 teams started on 31 August 2012 and finished on 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230407-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kazakhstan Hockey Championship\nThe 2012\u201313 Kazakhstan Hockey Championship was the 21st season of the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship, the top level of ice hockey in Kazakhstan. 10 teams participated in the league, and Yertis Pavlodar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230408-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Kecskem\u00e9ti TE's 5th competitive season, 5th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 101st year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230408-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE 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-00230408-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230408-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230408-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230408-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230408-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230408-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kecskem\u00e9ti TE season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230409-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kennesaw State Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Kennesaw State Owls men's basketball team represented Kennesaw State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Owls, led by second year head coach Lewis Preston, played their home games at the KSU Convocation Center and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 3\u201327, 2\u201316 in A-Sun play to finish in last place. They failed to qualify for the Atlantic Sun Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230410-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Kent Football League season (known as the 2012\u201313 Hurliman Kent Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 47th in the history of Kent Football League, a football competition in England. At the end of the season the league changed its name to the Southern Counties East Football League, to reflect that many of its member clubs no longer played within the county boundaries of Kent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230410-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent Football League, Clubs\nThe league consisted of 15 clubs from the previous season along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230410-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent Football League, Clubs\nFrom this league, only Erith & Belvedere, Erith Town, Tunbridge Wells, VCD Athletic and Whyteleafe applied for promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230410-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent Football League, Clubs\nFor this season only, the FA were to promote a second club from two of the following six Step 5 leagues: Combined Counties League, Eastern Counties League, Essex Senior League, Kent League, Spartan South Midlands League and the Sussex County League. This was to fulfil the expansion of the Isthmian League Divisions One North and South from 22 to 24 clubs each. The two clubs were to be promoted on a points per game basis, and the two runners-up with the best PPG were VCD Athletic (Kent Football League) and Guernsey (Combined Counties League). Three others \u2013 Aylesbury United (Spartan South Midlands League), Redhill (Sussex County League) and Barkingside (Essex Senior League) \u2013 were also confirmed as promoted by the FA on 17 May, due to resignations and non-promotions elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230411-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent Invicta Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Kent Invicta Football League season was the second in the history of the Kent Invicta Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230411-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent Invicta Football League, Clubs\nThe league featured 15 clubs which competed in the division last season along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230411-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent Invicta Football League, Clubs\nAlso, Erith & Dartford Town changed their name to Kent Football United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230412-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball team represented Kent State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Flashes, led by second year head coach Rob Senderoff, played their home games at the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center and were members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 21\u201314, 9\u20137 in MAC play to finish third place in the East Division. They advanced to the semifinals of the MAC Tournament where they lost to Akron. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Fairfield in the first round before losing in the second round to Loyola (MD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230413-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team's head coach was John Calipari, who was in his fourth season. They played their home games at Rupp Arena and were members of the Southeastern Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 12\u20136 in SEC play to finish in a three-way tie for second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament to Vanderbilt. They were invited to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to Robert Morris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230414-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, coached by Matthew Mitchell, are a member of the Southeastern Conference, and play their home games on campus at Memorial Coliseum\u2014unlike UK's famous men's program, which plays off-campus at Rupp Arena in downtown Lexington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230414-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team, Pre-season outlook\nThe Wildcats returned four starters, including 2012 SEC Player of the Year A'dia Mathies and SEC Freshman of the Year Bria Goss, from a team that finished 28\u20137 and won their second regular-season Southeastern Conference title in school history, their first since 1981\u201382. Jennifer O'Neil also returned after sitting out the 2011\u201312 season with a knee injury, and Kentucky added DeNesha Stallworth (transfer from California), Jelleah Sidney (transfer from Chipola Junior College), and Janee Thompson (McDonald's All-American from Whitney Young High School). The Wildcats were ranked 6th in the Associated Press Preseason Poll, the highest preseason ranking in school history. The SEC coaches also picked Kentucky as the preseason favorite to win the 2012\u201313 conference title and named A'dia Mathies preseason player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230415-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Khuzestan Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Khuzestan Premier League season was the 13th season of the Khuzestan Premier League which took place from October 3, 2012 to May 16, 2013 with 16 teams competing from the province of Khuzestan. Teams played home and away with one another each playing 30 matches. Farhang Ramhormoz finished the season on top of the standings and was promoted to division 3 of the Iranian football system. Meanwhile, Esteghlal Masjedsoleiman, Esteghlal Hamidieh, and Shahin Hendijan were relegated to the Khuzestan Division 1 league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230416-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kilmarnock F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Kilmarnock's fourteenth 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 of which they were the defending champions, having beaten Celtic in the Final the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230416-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Summary, Season\nKilmarnock finished ninth in the Scottish Premier League with 45 points. They reached the second round of the League Cup, losing to Stenhousemuir. Kilmarnock also reached the Quarter-final of the Scottish Cup, losing to Hibernian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230416-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Squad information, Captains\nLast updated: 18 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230417-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kitchee SC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Kitchee SC's 82nd season in football, and the 34th season in the Hong Kong First Division League. Kitchee started as defending champions having won the league, as well as the Hong Kong FA Cup in 2011\u201312, and was looking to retain their title. The club also played in the AFC Cup for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230417-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kitchee SC season, Players, 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230417-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kitchee SC season, Players, First team, 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230417-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kitchee SC season, Competitions, Overall\nUpdated to match played 26 May 2013Source: Competitions1 Kitchee will continue their 2013 AFC Cup matches in the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230417-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kitchee SC season, Matches, Competitive, First Division League\nRemarks:1 Biu Chun Rangers's home matches against Kitchee are played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground Sham Shui Po Sports Ground. 2 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match. 3 Home match against Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei was originally scheduled to be played on 31 March 2013 but was rescheduled to be played on 29 March 2013. 4 Since the 3,500-seated main stand was all full, the 1,500 temporary stand was opened and therefore the capacity of Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground was 5,000 in the home match against South China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230418-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Korfball Europa Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Korfball Europa Cup was the main korfball competition for clubs in Europe played in the season 2012-2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230418-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Korfball Europa Cup, First round\nThe first round took place in the weekend of 14\u201316 September 2012 in Montrond-les-Bains (France).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230418-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Korfball Europa Cup, Final round\nThe final round was held in Budapest, Hungary from 16 to 19 January 2013. With the seeded champions of Netherlands, Belgium, Portugal, Czech Republic, Russia, England, Germany, Catalonia, Poland and host country Hungary, as well as the 2 best teams in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230419-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Korisliiga season\nThe 2012\u201313 Korisliiga season was the 73rd season of the Finnish national championship named Korisliiga, the highest professional basketball league in Finland. Bisons Loimaa successfully defended its title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230420-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kosovo Basketball Superleague\nThe 2012\u201313 BKT Superliga was the 19th season of the Kosovo Basketball Superleague, also called BKT Superliga in its sponsored identity it's the highest professional basketball league in Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230420-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kosovo Basketball Superleague\nThe regular season started on 12 October 2012 and finished on 29 April 2013, after all teams had played 28 games. The 4 best ranked teams advanced to the play-off phase whilst KB Kosova Vushtrri was relegated to the Liga e Par\u00eb e Kosoves ne Baskbetboll after finishing last in the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230420-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kosovo Basketball Superleague\nThe play-offs started on 1 May 2015 and finished on 14 May 2015, KB Peja won their 6th title by beating Sigal Prishtina 3:0 in a 3-game final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230420-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kosovo Basketball Superleague, Playoffs\nSame as last year, the semi-finals were played in a best-of-four format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230421-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwait Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Kuwait Crown Prince Cup is a cup competition involving teams from the Kuwaiti Premier League and the Kuwaiti Division One league. The competition has continued to be played in the beginning of the season but has reverted to a knockout tournament played over two legs. The previous edition was played in a group staged round robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230421-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwait Crown Prince Cup\nAl Arabi are the defending champions and enter at the second round stage (Quarter Finals) along with league winners Al Qadsia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230422-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Federation Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Federation Cup is the 6th edition to be held and started on the 22 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230422-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Federation Cup\nThis edition will see all 14 teams play in one group, rather than the previous editions which have had two groups of 7 sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230422-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Federation Cup\nIt is unclear at the moment if games are played on a home and away basis or if the team at the top after all games have been played will be crowned champions or if a final will be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230423-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Premier League season is the 51st since the league's establishment. The season starts on 14 September 2012 and ends on the 19 April 2013. Kuwait SC won the league title for the 11th time. Kuwait SC has the longest unbeaten record for 21 games. Rog\u00e9rio and Issam Jem\u00e2a won the top goal scorers of the season with 11 goal each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230423-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Premier League, Teams\nAl Shabab were relegated to the Kuwaiti Division One league after finishing bottom in the 2011\u201312 season. They were replaced by Al Salibikhaet, back in the top flight for the first time since relegation in the 2009\u201310 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230423-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Premier League, Promotion/relegation playoff, 2nd Leg\nAl Salmiyah secured place in the top flight after winning 5\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season\nThe 2012\u201313 LEB Oro season was the 17th season of the Liga Espa\u00f1ola de Baloncesto, a Spanish basketball league. It was named Adecco Oro as its sponsored identity. The champion of the regular season would be promoted to Liga ACB. The teams between second and ninth position will play a best of five games play off, where the winner would be promoted too to the higher division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Competition format, Eligibility of players\nTeams can not sign any player after February 28, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Competition format, Regular season\nEach team of every division has to play with all the other teams of its division twice, once at home and the other at the opponent's stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Competition format, Regular season\nLike many other leagues in continental Europe, the Liga LEB takes a winter break once each team has played half its schedule. One feature of the league that may be unusual to North American observers is that the two halves of the season are played in the same order\u2014that is, the order of each team's first-half fixtures is repeated in the second half of the season, with the only difference being the arenas used. This procedure is typical in Europe; it is also used by La Liga in football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Competition format, Regular season\nSince the first round of the second leg, if two or more teams have accumulated the same number of winning games, the criteria of tie-breaking are these:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Competition format, Regular season\nAfter the first leg of the season, the two top qualified teams will play the Copa Pr\u00edncipe de Asturias and the leader will be the host team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Copa Pr\u00edncipe de Asturias\nAt the half of the league, the two first teams in the table play the Copa Pr\u00edncipe de Asturias at home of the winner of the first half season (17th round). If this team doesn't want to host the Copa Pr\u00edncipe, the second qualified can do it. If nobody wants to host it, the Federation will propose a neutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Copa Pr\u00edncipe de Asturias\nThe Champion of this Cup joined the play-offs as first qualified if it finishes the league between the 2nd and the 5th qualified. The Copa Pr\u00edncipe was played on February 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230424-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Oro season, Playoffs, Relegation playoffs\nThe loser of a best-of-five series will be relegated to LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230425-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Plata season\nThe 2012\u201313 LEB Plata season is the 13th season of the LEB Plata, second league of the Liga Espa\u00f1ola de Baloncesto and third division of Spanish basketball. It is also known as Adecco Plata in its sponsored identity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230425-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Plata season, Competition format\nTeams will play a regular season with a Round-robin tournament format. The regular season champion will promote directly to LEB Oro and the last qualified will be relegated to Liga EBA. Teams qualified from second to ninth will join the promotion playoffs. The winner will promote also to LEB Oro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230425-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Plata season, Competition format\nThe two first qualified teams after the first half of the league will play the Copa LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230425-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Plata season, Competition format, Eligibility of players\nTeams can not sign any player after February 28, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230425-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Plata season, Promotion playoffs\nTeams 2nd to 9th qualify for the promotion playoffs to LEB Oro. The quarterfinals will be played in a two-legged tie, where the seeded team will play the second game at home. Semifinals and final winners, will be decided in a best-of-five series, played with 2-2-1 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230425-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Plata season, Copa LEB Plata\nAt the half of the league, the two first teams in the table play the Copa LEB Plata at home of the winner of the first half season (11th round). If this team doesn't want to host the Copa LEB Plata, the second qualified can do it. If nobody wants to host it, the Federation will propose a neutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230425-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEB Plata season, Copa LEB Plata\nThe Champion of this Cup will play the play-offs as first qualified if it finishes the league between the 2nd and the 5th qualified. The Copa LEB Plata will be played on February 2, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230426-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Champions League\nThe 2012\u201313 LEN Champions League was the 50th edition of LEN's premier competition for men's water polo clubs. It ran from 14 September 2012 to 1 June 2013, and it was contested by thirty teams from eighteen countries. There was no defending champion as Pro Recco renounced to the competition for disagreements with the FIN on the number of allowed foreign players in the Italian clubs' squads. Runner-up Primorje Rijeka, former champions Mladost Zagreb and Vasas Budapest, Italy's CN Posillipo and any team from Montenegro also declined to take part in the competition. The Final Four (semifinals, final, and third place game) took place on May 31 and June 1 in Belgrade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230426-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Champions League, Top 16\nThe draw was held on 28 February 2013 in Rome, Italy. The first legs were played on 9\u201310 March, and the second legs were played on 20\u201321 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230426-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Champions League, Quarterfinals\nThe draw was held on 25 March 2013 in Rome, Italy. The first legs were played on 17 April, and the second legs were played on 30 April and 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230427-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Champions League knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2012\u201313 LEN Champions League began on 9 March 2013 and will conclude on 1 June 2013 with the final at Ta\u0161majdan Sports Centre in Belgrade, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230427-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Champions League knockout stage\nTimes up to 30 March 2013 (eight finals) are UTC+1, thereafter (quarter finals and final four) times are UTC+2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230427-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Champions League knockout stage, Eight Finals\nThe draw was held on 28 February 2013 in Rome, Italy. The first legs were played on 9\u201310 March, and the second legs were played on 20\u201321 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230427-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Champions League knockout stage, Quarter finals\nThe draw was held on 25 March 2013 in Rome, Italy. The first legs were played on 17 April, and the second legs were played on 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230428-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Women's Champions' Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 LEN Women's Champions' Cup was the 26th edition of LEN's premier competition for women's water polo clubs, running from 22 November 2012 to 27 April 2013. It was contested by twelve teams from nine countries, with Israel and the Netherlands replacing England and Serbia. There was no defending champion as Pro Recco renounced to the competition for disagreements with the FIN on the number of allowed foreign players in the Italian clubs' squads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230428-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LEN Women's Champions' Cup\nCN Sabadell defeated Kinef Kirishi in the final to win its second title. Vouliagmeni NC and Egri VK also reached the Final Four, which was hosted by the Hungarian team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230429-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LKL season\nThe 2012\u201313 Lietuvos krep\u0161inio lyga was the 20th season of the top-tier level professional basketball league of Lithuania, the Lietuvos krep\u0161inio lyga (LKL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230429-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LKL season, Competition format\nEvery team except \u017dalgiris and Lietuvos rytas played 22 games, two against each other. Those two teams, due to their participation in EuroLeague, played only eleven games, all of them away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230429-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LKL season, Competition format\nThe eight first qualified teams joined the playoffs. Quarterfinal series were played with a best-of-three series format, semifinals with a best-of-five and the finals with a best-of-seven games format. The last qualified of the Regular Season was relegated to the NKL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230430-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LNAH season\nThe 2012\u201313 LNAH season was the 17th 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. Seven teams participated in the regular season, which was won by the Marquis de Jonqui\u00e8re. They also won the playoff championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230431-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LNBP season\nThe 2012\u201313 LNBP was the 13th season of the Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional, one of the professional basketball leagues of Mexico. It started on September 4, 2012 and ended on February 27, 2013. The league title was won by Toros de Nuevo Laredo, which defeated Halcones UV Xalapa in the championship series, 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230431-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LNBP season, Format\n16 teams participate. All the teams played against each other and the standings included all 16 teams with no separation in groups. The first 12 teams qualify for the playoffs. The group playoffs have a first round (best-of-5), a second round (best-of-5), semifinals (best-of-7) and finals (best-of-7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230431-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LNBP season, Regular season, Standings\nNote: the LNBP gave 70 points to Soles, 51 to Lechugueros, 46 to Guerreros and 44 to Osos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230431-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LNBP season, Playoffs, Preliminary round\nThe team seed is indicated after the team name. The first 4 teams in the standings are automatically qualified for the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230432-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LNH Division 1\n2012\u201313 Ligue Nationale de Handball Division 1 season is the 61st since its establishment. Montpellier were the defending champions, having won their title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230432-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LNH Division 1, Regular season, Results\nIn the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230433-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LSU Tigers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 LSU Tigers basketball team represents Louisiana State University during the 2012\u20132013 college basketball season. The team's head coach is Johnny Jones, who is in his first season at LSU. Jones previously served as the head coach at the University of North Texas. Jones played in the 1981 Final Four as a freshman at Louisiana State University, and later served 12 seasons as an assistant coach at LSU under Dale Brown where the pair returned the 1986 Final Four. They play their home games at Pete Maravich Assembly Center as members of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230433-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LSU Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Tigers completed the 2011\u20132012 season with an overall record of 18-15 and a 7\u20139 record in conference play. After falling to the eventual national champions, the Kentucky Wildcats, in the second round of the SEC Tournament, LSU received a bid to the NIT Tournament, where they were defeated by the Oregon Ducks in the first round. LSU lost several major contributors at the end of the season, including 2nd team All-SEC center Justin Hamilton, who was selected 45th overall in the 2012 NBA Draft by the Philadelphia 76ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230433-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LSU Tigers basketball team, Previous season\nIn April 2012, it was announced that after four seasons as head coach, Trent Johnson would be leaving LSU to become the head basketball coach at TCU. Shortly after, LSU announced that it had hired Johnny Jones as its new head coach. Jones played at LSU for four seasons from 1980 to 1984, including an appearance in the 1981 NCAA Final Four. He followed his playing career by serving as an assistant coach under Dale Brown from 1984 to 1997. Prior to becoming the head coach at LSU, Jones had spent the previous eleven seasons as the head coach at the University of North Texas, where he accumulated a record of 190-146 and earned two NCAA Tournament bids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 LV Cup (styled as the LV= Cup) is the 42nd season of England's national rugby union cup competition, and the eighth to follow the Anglo-Welsh format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup\nThe competition consists of the four Welsh Pro12 teams and the 12 English Premiership clubs arranged into pools consisting of three English and one Welsh team. English clubs have been allocated to the pools depending on their finish in the 2011-12 Aviva Premiership. Welsh regions have been allocated to the pools to avoid repeating fixtures from the Heineken and Amlin Challenge cups where possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup\nTeams are guaranteed two home and two away pool matches, with teams in Pools 1 and 4 playing each other and teams in Pools 2 and 3 playing each other, with the top team from each pool qualifying for the semi finals. The competition will take place during the Autumn Internationals window and during the Six Nations thus allowing teams to develop their squad players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup\nLeicester Tigers are defending champions this season after claiming the cup with a 26\u201314 victory over Northampton Saints in the final at Sixways Stadium in Worcester. It was the seventh victory for Leicester Tigers (a record) in the competition, and the second since the current Anglo-Welsh format was adopted in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup, Pool stages, Points system\nThe points scoring system for the pool stages will be as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup, Knock\u2013out stage, Qualification criteria\nThe top teams from each pool qualify for the knockout stages. The pool winners will be decided by the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup, Knock\u2013out stage, Qualification criteria\nEach of the four qualifying clubs shall be ranked as above and shall play each other as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 55], "content_span": [56, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230434-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LV Cup, Knock\u2013out stage, Qualification criteria\nThe first club listed in each of the semi-final matches shall be the home club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 55], "content_span": [56, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230435-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 LVBP season\nThe 2012\u201313 Venezuelan Professional Baseball League season (LVBP by its initialism in Spanish) was the 65th edition of this tournament. It started on October 11, 2012. A total of eight teams participated in the competition, as in the previous season. The tournament was played in honor of Luis Aparicio Ortega, who played in Venezuelan professional baseball between 1931 and 1954 with teams including Magellan, Elders of Vargas, and Gavilanes, in addition to being manager of the Aguilas del Zulia and father of infielder Luis Aparicio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga\nThe 2012\u201313 La Liga season (known as the Liga BBVA for sponsorship reasons) was the 82nd since its establishment. The campaign began on 18 August 2012, and ended on 1 June 2013. Barcelona won the league for a 22nd time, after leading the league the entire season and amassing 100 points, equalling Real Madrid's points record from the previous season. As in previous years, Nike provided the official ball for all matches, with a new Nike Maxim Liga BBVA model to be used throughout the season for all matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, Teams\nA total of 20 teams contested the league, including 17 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and three promoted from the 2011\u201312 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. This included the two top teams from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, and the victorious team of the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, Teams\nVillarreal CF, Sporting de Gij\u00f3n and Racing de Santander were relegated to 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n the previous season: Villarreal were relegated after twelve years in La Liga, Sporting de Gij\u00f3n returned to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n after a four-year tenure in La Liga, while Racing de Santander ended ten consecutive seasons in La Liga, the longest period in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, Teams\nThe three teams that were relegated were replaced by three 2011\u201312 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n sides: Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a made an immediate return to the top level as Segunda Divisi\u00f3n champion. The second-placing team Celta de Vigo was also promoted to La Liga after a five-year absence. The third promoted team was decided in the promotion play-offs where Real Valladolid returned to La Liga after two seasons in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, League table, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, Awards, LaLiga Awards\nLa Liga's governing body, the Liga Nacional de F\u00fatbol Profesional, honoured the competition's best players and coach with LaLiga Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, Awards, Top goalscorers\nThe Pichichi Trophy is awarded by newspaper Marca to the player who scores the most goals in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, Awards, Zamora Trophy\nThe Zamora Trophy is awarded by newspaper Marca to the goalkeeper with fewest goals-to-games ratio. Keepers must play at least 28 games of 60 or more minutes to be eligible for the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230436-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Liga, Awards, Fair Play award\nThis award is given annually since 1999 to the team with the best fair play during the season. This ranking takes into account aspects such as cards, suspension of matches, audience behaviour and other penalties. This section not only aims to determine the best fair play, but also serves to break the tie in teams that are tied in all the other rules: points, head-to-head, goal difference and goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230437-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Salle Explorers men's basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 14:23, 21 June 2020 (\u2192\u200eSchedule: Task 30 - remove deprecated parameter in Template:CBB schedule entry). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230437-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 La Salle Explorers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 La Salle Explorers basketball team represented La Salle University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Explorers, led by ninth year head coach John Giannini, played their home games at Tom Gola Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 24\u201310, 11\u20135 in A-10 play to finish in a three way tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 Tournament to Butler. They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, their first NCAA bid in 21 years. They defeated Boise State in the First Four, Kansas State in the Round of 64, and Ole Miss in the Round of 32 to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Wichita State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230438-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lafayette Leopards men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Lafayette Leopards men's basketball team represented Lafayette College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Leopards, led by 18th year head coach Fran O'Hanlon, played their home games at the Kirby Sports Center and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 19\u201315, 10\u20134 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for second place. They advanced to the championship game of the Patriot League Tournament where they lost to Bucknell. Despite their 19 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230439-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lamar Cardinals basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Lamar Cardinals basketball team represented Lamar University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cardinals, led by second year head coach Pat Knight, played their home games at the Montagne Center and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 3\u201328, 1\u201317 in Southland play to finish in last place. A year after being Southland Tournament champions and playing in the NCAA Tournament, the Cardinals failed to qualify for the 2013 Southland Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season\nThe 2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season was the first season of the Las Vegas Legends indoor soccer club. The Legends, a Southwestern Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played the majority of their home games in the Orleans Arena in Paradise, Nevada. (Three \"holiday season\" games were relocated to an indoor soccer facility at the Las Vegas Sports Park.) The team was led by team president and general manager Meir Cohen, head coach Greg Howes, plus assistant coaches Peter Sharkey and Patrick Lawrence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Season summary\nThe Legends were successful in the regular season, compiling a 13\u20133 record and clinching the Southwestern Division title. They fared better on the road than at home, going undefeated at away games but only 5\u20133 at home. The team advanced to the postseason and earned the right to play for the Ron Newman Cup in the PASL National Championship. The Legends defeated Toros Mexico in two straight games, winning the Southwestern Divisional Finals and advancing to the Semi-Finals to face the San Diego Sockers in San Diego, California. The Legends lost to the Sockers 6\u20135 in overtime, ending their playoff run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Season summary\nThe Legends participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They defeated Real Phoenix in the Wild Card round, the CSC Cavalry of the Premier Arena Soccer League in the Round of 16, and the Tacoma Stars in the Quarter-Finals before losing in the Semi-Finals to the San Diego Sockers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Off-field moves\nThe Legends paid a $50,000 fee to the PASL to participate in the 2012-13 season. The team was initially to be called the Las Vegas Knights, after a local semi-pro soccer team under the same ownership, but a last-minute decision changed the team's name to Legends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Off-field moves\nIn early January 2013, the Legends announced that their pivotal January 18 match against the San Diego Sockers would be dedicated to the memory of Allison Wyatt, one of the children murdered in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in December 2012. Wyatt was the oldest daughter of Ben Wyatt, the vice president of TransAct Technologies, a company with strong Las Vegas ties. The team is donating proceeds from ticket and merchandise sales, a silent auction, and other fundraisers to the Allison Wyatt Memorial Fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Roster moves\nThe Legends signed their first player, veteran Enrique Tovar, in a ceremony at the Luxor Las Vegas on August 7, 2012. Multiple rounds of tryouts in late August 2012 were used to winnow a field of more than 100 applicants to round out the team's final roster. Players selected include local standouts Eric Guzman and Edgar Nava. Guzman, just 19 when the season began, is the youngest player on the Legends roster. Veteran Emmanuel Ayim has a doctorate in sports education leadership and is an academic adviser at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Roster moves\nBrazilian-born Ricardo Sobreira, better known as Ricardinho, emerged as the team's leading scorer. Ricardinho quickly became a fan favorite, drawing praise from his coach and attention from both fans and local media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Roster moves\nCorey Adamson, most recently of the Panama City Beach Pirates, has made appearances on the Legends roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Roster moves\nBrian Fitzmaurice, a former standout soccerplayer at T. C. Roberson High School in Asheville, North Carolina, is now a defender for the Legends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Roster moves\nForward Franck Tayou and defender Uzi Tayou are brothers, two of nine siblings who emigrated to the United States with their father after fleeing Cameroon to escape political persecution. The brothers have lived in Las Vegas since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Awards and honors\nOn December 18, 2012, the Professional Arena Soccer League named Rodrigo Barbirato as its Player of the Week. The league cited his hat trick in Las Vegas' win over Real Phoenix on December 15 and his 14 points in the team's first 5 games this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Awards and honors\nOn February 19, 2013, the PASL named Enrique \"Qeeks\" Tovar as its Player of the Week. The PASL cited his three goals and five assists against the Anaheim Bolts in the Legends's final regular season match plus his setting of a new league record for assists in a single season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Awards and honors\nIn postseason honors, defender Eric Guzman was named to the 2012-13 PASL All-League First Team and forward Enrique Tovar was named to the 2012-13 PASL All-League Second Team. Greg Howes was the runner-up for the 2012-13 PASL Coach of the Year honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230440-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Las Vegas Legends season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230441-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Latvian Football Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Latvian Football Cup is the eightieth season of the Latvian annual football knock-out competition. The winners, FK Ventspils, qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230441-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Latvian Football Cup, First round\nThe matches of this round took place between 3 and 13 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230441-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Latvian Football Cup, Second round\nBecause this season the Latvian Cup had only eight teams in its first round, playing a second one was not necessary, so the first round winners received an automatic bye for the third round, where they will meet First League clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230441-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Latvian Football Cup, Third round\nEntering this round were the 4 teams from the previous round and 8 teams who enter the competition in this round. The matches of this round took place between 30 June and 7 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230441-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Latvian Football Cup, Fourth round\nEntering this round were the 6 teams from the previous round and the 10 teams from the Latvian Higher League who enter the competition in this round. These matches took place on 21 and 22 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230442-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Latvian Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Latvian Hockey League season was the 22nd season of the Latvian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Latvia. Eight teams participated in the league, and HK SMScredit won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230443-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese Basketball League\nThe 2012\u20132013 season was the 17th edition of the Lebanese Basketball League. The regular season began on Friday, November 2, 2012 and ended on Monday March 4, 2013. The playoffs began on Thursday, March 7 and ended in the Semifinals on Sunday May 26, 2013, after the League got cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230443-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese Basketball League, Preseason, SuperCup\nChampville SC, winners of the Lebanese Basketball League 2011-2012 defeated Anibal Zahle, winners of the Lebanese Basketball Cup to win The SuperCup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230444-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese FA Cup\nThe 2012-13 edition of the Lebanese FA Cup is the 41st edition to be played. It is the premier knockout tournament for football teams in Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230444-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese FA Cup\nThe qualifying rounds take place in late 2012 with the Premier League clubs joining at the Round of 16 in early 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230444-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese FA Cup, Round of 16\nThe round of 16 featured matches between the favorites, last years finalists, Nejmeh against Ansar and Safa against Al Ahed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230445-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Lebanese Premier League is the 52nd season of top-tier football in Lebanon. A total of twelve teams are competing in the league, with Safa the defending champions. The season kicked off on 28 September and finished on 16 June 2013, longer than usual, but due to the national team getting to the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification \u2013 AFC Fourth Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230445-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese Premier League, Teams\nAl-Mabarrah and Al-Ahli Saida were relegated to the second level of Lebanese football after ending the 2011\u201312 season in the bottom two places. Promoted from the second level were Shabab Al-Ghazieh, after one season away from the top flight and Al Ijtima'ih Tripoli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230446-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lebanese Women's Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Lebanese Women's Football League was the 6th edition of the Lebanese Women's Football League since its inception in 2008. Five-time defending champions Sadaka won their sixth title, while GFA came second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230447-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lechia Gda\u0144sk season\nThe 2012\u201313 Ekstraklasa season was Lechia's 69th since their creation, and was their 5th continuous season in the top league of Polish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230447-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lechia Gda\u0144sk season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230447-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lechia Gda\u0144sk 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-00230448-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Leeds United F.C. 's third season back in the second tier of English football which saw a minor flirtation with play-offs and later with relegation, but ended with a mid-table finish. In other competitions, the squad recorded their best finish in the League Cup for 18 years, reaching the quarter-finals only to be knocked out by rivals Chelsea. Similar progression was seen in the FA Cup as the team reached the 5th round for the first time since the 1999\u201300 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season\nThe manager's office was vacated on 1 April by Neil Warnock after his promise of promotion appeared dead in the water. The club officials relieved him of his duties and after a brief period with caretaker manager Neil Redfearn in charge, appointed Brian McDermott as the club's eight manager in ten years. Pre -season saw a big change in the playing staff with no more than ten players departing Elland Road and twelve players brought in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season\nNew signing Lee Peltier became club captain after existing leader Robert Snodgrass departed for Norwich City in the summer and was joined in the winter by fan favourite Luciano Becchio \u2013 both transfers much to the chagrin of the supporters. With Becchio gone, the club's top scorers were last year's star Ross McCormack with eight goals and controversial winger El Hadji Diouf with seven who Warnock picked up on a free transfer at the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season\nAcademy product Sam Byram would be the surprise of the season making his debut in the first game of the year and going on to scoop all the major awards at both the official, supporters' and Yorkshire Post's Player of the Year Awards. Other youngsters to take the field included Dominic Poleon who managed two goals and Chris Dawson who has since been awarded a three-year professional contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season\nThe talk of the season though was undoubtedly the protracted takeover of the club. The eight month, \u00a352m takeover by Bahrain based GFH Capital saw the investment bank secure 100% shares of the club's parent company with four of its party joining the board of directors. In March, GFH would sell a 10% stake to the International Investment Bank and announced the company were looking for additional investors to boost the club's finances. The takeover would seemingly inject morale into the supporters with the club's short term finances secured and higher value incoming transfers promised. GFH deputy-CEO David Haigh become the public face for the boardroom with departing chairman Ken Bates taking a step back with a promise of the title club president secured for the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season, Events\nThis is a list of the significant events to occur at the club during the 2012\u201313 season, presented in chronological order, starting on 29 April 2012 and ending on the final day of the club's final match in the 2012\u201313 season. This list does not include transfers or new contracts, which are listed in the transfers section below, or match results, which are in the matches section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season, Players, First team squad information\nAppearances (starts and substitute appearances) and goals include those in the Championship (and playoffs), League One (and playoffs), FA Cup, League Cup and Football League Trophy. 1On loan at Ipswich Town2On loan from SV Zulte Waregem3Currently on loan at Inverness CT", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season, Players, Transfer-listed players\nAppearances (starts and substitute appearances) and goals include those in the Championship (and playoffs), League One (and playoffs), FA Cup, League Cup and Football League Trophy. 1Player made fifty eight appearances (scoring six goals) for the club during his first spell at the club2Player is currently on loan at Sheffield Wednesday3Player is currently on loan at Preston North End4Player is currently on loan at Accrington Stanley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season, Transfers, New contracts\nLast updated: 1The contract includes the option to extend the contract by a further year. 2Option to extend by further year taken up later in season. 3Contract extended by further year after making 30 appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season, Club, First team coaching and medical staff\nIncludes staff currently registered with club only. 1Appointed in April 20132Also Manager of Development Squad", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season, Results, Captains\nLast updated: 16 April 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230448-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leeds United F.C. season, Awards, Internal Awards, Official Player of the Year Awards\nThe results of the 2012\u201313 Leeds United A.F.C. Player of the Year Awards were announced at a dinner on 27 April 2013 at Elland Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230449-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Basket Serie A\nThe 2012\u201313 Lega Basket Serie A was the 91st season of the Lega Basket Serie A, the top level basketball league in Italy. The season started 26 September 2012 and ended on 19 June 2013. Montepaschi Siena initially won the championship. However, their championship was revoked in 2016 after investigations exposed financial and fiscal fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230450-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Prima Divisione\nThe 2012\u201313 Lega Pro Prima Divisione season was the thirty-fifth football league season of Italian Lega Pro Prima Divisione since its establishment in 1978, and the fifth since the renaming from Serie C to Lega Pro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230450-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Prima Divisione\nIt was divided into two phases: the regular season, and the playoff phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230450-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Prima Divisione\nThe league was also composed of 33 teams divided into two divisions of 17 and 16 teams respectively for group A and B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230450-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Prima Divisione\nThere was only one repechage from Lega Pro Seconda Divisione by Virtus Entella, because no other teams showed interest to submit the application for the high price of the guarantee and the repayable contribution required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230450-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Prima Divisione\nTeams finishing first in the regular season, plus one team winning the playoff round from each division were promoted to Serie B; teams finishing last in the regular season, plus two relegation playoff losers from each division were relegated to Lega Pro Seconda Divisione. In all, four teams were promoted to Serie B, and six teams were relegated to Lega Pro Seconda Divisione.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230450-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Prima Divisione, Girone A, Teams\nTeams from Apulia, Emilia-Romagna, Liguria, Lombardy, Piedmont, Sicily, Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol & Veneto", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230451-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione\nThe 2012\u201313 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione season will be the thirty-fifth football league season of Italian Lega Pro Seconda Divisione since its establishment in 1978, and the fifth since the renaming from Serie C to Lega Pro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230451-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione\nIt will be divided into two phases: the regular season, and the playoff phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230451-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione\nThe league currently would be composed of 36 teams divided into two divisions (Girone A and B) divided geographically, with the exception of the Sicilian team Milazzo that plays in group A, each composed of 18 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230451-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione\nTeams finishing first and second in the regular season, plus one team winning the playoff round from each division will be promoted to Lega Pro Prima Divisione. The last three teams in the regular season, plus one relegation play-out loser from each division will be relegated to Serie D. The two relegation play-out winners, one from each division, will play each other and the loser will become the ninth team relegated. In all, six teams will be promoted to Lega Pro Prima Divisione, and nine teams will be relegated to Serie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230451-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione, Girone A, Teams\nTeams from Aosta Valley, Emilia-Romagna, Liguria, Lombardy, Piedmont, Sicily & Veneto", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230451-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione, Girone B, Teams\nTeams from Abruzzo, Apulia, Basilicata, Calabria, Campania, Lazio, Molise, Tuscany & Umbria", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230452-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lehigh Mountain Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Lehigh Mountain Hawks men's basketball team represented Lehigh University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mountain Hawks, led by sixth year head coach Brett Reed, played their home games at Stabler Arena and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 21\u201310, 10\u20134 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for second play. They advanced to the semifinals of the Patriot League Tournament where they lost to Lafayette. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Wyoming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leicester City F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Leicester City F.C. 's 108th season in the English football league system and their 61st (non-consecutive) season in the second tier of English football. It was their fourth consecutive season in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leicester City F.C. season\nLeicester began with a promising first half of the season and sat in second place at the beginning of February. However, a dramatic downturn in form which saw the Foxes win just 2 of their following 16 games saw Leicester not only drop out of the automatic promotion places, but the play-offs as well and they began the final game of the season against local rivals Nottingham Forest in eighth place. The Foxes won 2\u20133 with a dramatic late winner from Anthony Knockaert, and coupled with Bolton Wanderers failing to win, Leicester took the final play-off spot and finished sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leicester City F.C. season\nLeicester eventually lost to Watford in the play-off semi-final though, after a dramatic winner deep into injury time by Troy Deeney, which came as the result of a counter-attack from Anthony Knockaert's missed penalty (which would have sent Leicester through to the final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leicester City F.C. season, Pre-season, Pre-season events\nNote: This section does not include close season transfers or pre-season match results, which are listed in their own sections below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leicester City F.C. season, Pre-season, Kit and sponsorship\nOn 28 April 2012, it was announced on the official Leicester City website that the new kit supplier for the 2012\u201313 season would be Puma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leicester City F.C. season, Events\nNote:This section does not include transfers or match results, which are listed in their own sections below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230453-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leicester City F.C. season, Club statistics, Overall seasonal record\nNote: Games which are level after extra-time and are decided by a penalty shoot-out are listed as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup, was the 112th staging of the Leinster Senior Cup association football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup\n39 teams entered the 2012\u201313 competition including the 11 Leinster based League of Ireland teams who entered the competition at the Fourth round stage. A further 15 Intermediate teams and 13 Junior teams entered the competition at the First and Second Round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup, Participating Teams\nThe teams taking part in the 2013 Leinster Senior Cup are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup, First round\n10 Intermediate clubs and 6 Junior clubs were entered into this round by a draw. Byes were given to 12 other clubs. Winners progress to the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup, Second round\n10 Intermediate clubs and 10 Junior clubs were placed in the draw for the Second Round. The winners of these 10 matches will proceed to the Third Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup, Third round\n5 Intermediate clubs and 5 Junior clubs made it to the draw for the Third Round. The 5 winners will go on to the Fourth Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup, Fourth round\nThe 3 Intermediate teams and the 2 Junior teams that won their Third Round matches were placed in the draw for the Fourth Round along with the 11 Leinster based Senior League of Ireland teams. The draw took place on 28 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230454-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior Cup, Quarter-Finals\nThe draw for the Quarter-Finals was made on 24 April 2013 in Abbotstown, Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230455-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leinster Senior League Senior Division\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, the Leinster Senior League Senior Division\u00a0\u2013 an Irish regional football league\u00a0\u2013 was won by Crumlin United F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230456-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Levante UD season\nThe 2012\u201313 Levante season is the 72nd season in club history and their first ever in European competition, where they will enter the playoff round in the UEFA Europa League after finishing 6th in the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230457-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leyton Orient F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Leyton Orient F.C. season was the 114th season in the history of Leyton Orient Football Club, their 97th in the Football League, and seventh consecutive season in the third tier of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230457-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Leyton Orient F.C. season, Playing staff\nDefender Elliott Omozusi's first contract with Leyton Orient was terminated in November 2011 due to his criminal conviction and subsequent prison sentence. In January 2013 after his release from prison, he re-signed for the club having trained with the first team for a short period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230458-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liberty Flames basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Liberty Flames basketball team represented Liberty University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Flames, led by fourth year head coach Dale Layer, played their home games at the Vines Center and were members of the North Division of the Big South Conference. Despite losing their first eight games of the season and ending up with a 15\u201320 record (6\u201310 in the Big South), Liberty won the Big South Tournament to earn an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Flames were the first 20-loss team in the NCAA Tournament since Coppin State in 2007\u201308 and only the second 20-loss team ever to qualify. They lost in the first four round to North Carolina A&T to finish the season 15\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230459-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup was the sixty-eight 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 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. USV Eschen/Mauren were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230459-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup, First round\nThe First Round featured eight teams. In this round entered seven of the reserve clubs participating in the competition, along with FC Ruggell. The games were played on 21 and 22 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230459-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup, Second round\nThe four winners of the First Round, along with FC Schaan, FC Schaan Azzurri, FC Triesen and FC Balzers II competed in the Second Round. The games were played on 26 September and 2 and 3 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230459-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe four winners of the Second Round entered the quarter-finals, along with the semifinalists from last season's competitions: FC Vaduz, USV Eschen/Mauren, FC Balzers and FC Triesenberg. The games were played on 6 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230459-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup, Semi-finals\nThe four winners of the quarter-finals competed in the semi-finals. The games will be played on 30 March and 17 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230459-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup, Final\nThe final was played in the national stadium, Rheinpark Stadion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2\u20134 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef\nAt the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet, whilst the two clubs which were ranked in 14th place in each division, Maccabi Kafr Kanna and Hapoel Arad entered a promotion/relegation play-offs, Maccabi Kafr Kanna prevailing to stay in Liga Alef, while Hapoel Arad were relegated after losing the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, First round\nSecond and third placed clubs played single match at home against the fourth and fifth placed clubs in their respective regional division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, First round\nHapoel Migdal HaEmek and Hapoel Herzliya (from North division) and Hapoel Azor and Beitar Kfar Saba (from South division) advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, Second round\nThe winners of the first round played single match at home of the higher ranked club (from each regional division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, Second round\nHapoel Migdal HaEmek and Beitar Kfar Saba advanced to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, Third round\nHapoel Migdal HaEmek and Beitar Kfar Saba faced each other for a single match in neutral venue. the winner advanced to the fourth round against the 14th placed club in Liga Leumit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, Fourth round\nBeitar Kfar Saba faced the 14th placed in 2012\u201313 Liga Leumit Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla. the winner on aggregate earned a spot in the 2013\u201314 Liga Leumit. The matches took place on May 24 and 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Promotion play-offs, Fourth round\nBeitar Tel Aviv Ramla won 4\u20132 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba remained in Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Relegation play-offs, North play-off\nThe 14th placed club in Liga Alef North, Maccabi Kafr Kanna, faced the Liga Bet play-offs winner, Hapoel Iksal. the winner earned a spot in the 2013\u201314 Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230460-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Alef, Relegation play-offs, South play-off\nThe 14th placed club in Liga Alef South, Hapoel Arad, faced the Liga Bet play-offs winner, F.C. Kafr Qasim. the winner earned a spot in the 2013\u201314 Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Nahariya (champions of the North A division), Hapoel Beit She'an/Mesilot (champions of the North B division), Hapoel Mahane Yehuda (champions of the South A division) and Maccabi Be'er Ya'akov (champions of the South B division) win the title and promotion to Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet\nThe clubs ranked 2nd to 5th in each division entered a promotion play-off, at the end of which, in the North section Hapoel Iksal lost against Maccabi Kafr Kanna from Liga Alef North and remained in Liga Bet, while, in the South section, F.C. Kafr Qasim won against Hapoel Arad from Liga Alef South and was promoted to Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet\nAt the bottom, F.C. Tzeirei Bir al-Maksur (from North A division), Ihud Bnei Baka (from North B division), Shikun Vatikim Ramat Gan (from South A division), and Bnei Yehud (from South B division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Gimel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet\nThe clubs ranked 12th to 15th in each division entered a relegation play-off, at the end of which Hapoel Ahva Haifa (from North A division), F.C. Kfar Kama (from North B division), Gadna Tel Aviv (from South A division) and Hapoel Merhavim (from South B division) dropped to Liga Gimel as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet, Promotion Play-offs, Northern Divisions\nHapoel Iksal qualified to the promotion play-off match against 14th ranked club in Liga Alef North division, Maccabi Kafr Kanna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet, Promotion Play-offs, Northern Divisions, Promotion Play-off Match\nMaccabi Kafr Kanna remained in Liga Alef; Hapoel Iksal remained in Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 83], "content_span": [84, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet, Promotion Play-offs, Southern Divisions\nF.C. Kafr Qasim qualified to the promotion play-off match against 14th ranked club in Liga Alef South division, Hapoel Arad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 57], "content_span": [58, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230461-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Bet, Promotion Play-offs, Southern Divisions, Promotion Play-off Match\nF.C. Kafr Qasim promoted to Liga Alef; Hapoel Arad relegated to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 83], "content_span": [84, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230462-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga EBA season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga EBA season is the 19th edition of the Liga EBA. This is the fourth division of Spanish basketball. Four teams will be promoted to LEB Plata. The regular season will start in October 2012 and will finish in March 2013. Promotion playoffs to LEB Plata will be in April 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230462-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga EBA season, Format, Regular season\nTeams are divided in five groups by geographical criteria. Group A is also divided in two:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230462-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga EBA season, Format, Final play-off\nThe three best teams of each group plus a fourth qualified decided with special criteria will play a double leg play-off. From these 16 teams, only four will be promoted to LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230462-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga EBA season, Format, Final play-off\nThe final promotion playoffs will be played with Final Four formats where the first qualified of each group will host one of the stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230462-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga EBA season, Final round\nThe 16 qualified teams will be divided in four groups of four teams. The first qualified teams will host the groups, played with a round-robin format. They will be played from 24 to 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230462-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga EBA season, Final round\nThe winner of each group will promote to LEB Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230463-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto was the 50th edition of the Spanish premier women's basketball championship. Regular season started on 12 October 2012 and finished on 30 March 2013. Top six teams played the championship playoffs during April. Eleven teams took part in the regular season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230463-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto\nPerfumer\u00edas Avenida won its third title after defeating Rivas Ec\u00f3polis in the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230463-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto, Competition format\nTop three teams in the standings at mid season and the host team play the Copa de la Reina. If the host team finishes in the top three, the fourth qualified will join the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230463-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Femenina de Baloncesto, Competition format\nAfter the Regular Season, the top six teams play the play-offs. Top two teams qualify directly to semifinals while the teams 3rd\u20136th begin to play on quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230464-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Gimel\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Gimel season saw 95 clubs competing in 6 regional divisions for promotion to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230464-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Gimel\nHapoel Bu'eine (Upper Galilee), Hapoel Bnei Nujeidat (Jezreel), Hapoel Yoqneam (Samaria), Shimshon Bnei Tayibe (Sharon), Hapoel Ramat Israel (Tel Aviv) and Maccabi Sderot (Central-South) all won their respective divisions and were promoted to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230464-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Gimel\nDuring the summer, as several vacancies were created in Liga Bet, runners-up Maccabi Sulam (Jezreel), F.C. Tzeirei Tayibe (Sharon) and Hapoel Abirei Bat Yam (Tel Aviv) were also promoted to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230464-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Gimel, Samaria Division\nDuring the season, Beitar Umm al-Fahm (after 15 matches) folded and its results were annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230464-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Gimel, Sharon Division\nF.C. Tzeirei Tayibe competed with Hapoel Abirei Bat Yam from the Tel Aviv division for a vacant spot in Liga Bet, and lost the match 0\u20131. After the match another spot became available in Liga Bet, and F.C. Tzeirei Tayibe was promoted as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga I was the ninety-fifth season of Liga I, the top-level football league of Romania. The season began on 21 July 2012 and ended on 30 May 2013. CFR Cluj were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I\nSince Romania dropped from 14th to 22nd place in the UEFA association coefficient rankings at the end of the 2011\u201312 season, the league has lost its second UEFA Champions League berth. Further, all teams who will qualify for a European competition via league placement at the end of this season will have to enter these a round earlier as in the season before. The champions will enter the second qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League, while the second- and third-placed teams will begin at the second and first qualifying rounds, respectively, of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. In addition, the winners of the 2012\u201313 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei will also start in the second qualifying round of the Europa League, two rounds earlier than before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I, Teams\nFour teams from the 2011\u201312 season were relegated to their respective 2012\u201313 Liga II division, T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219, Mioveni, Voin\u021ba Sibiu, and Sportul Studen\u021besc Bucure\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I, Teams\nFour teams, two from each division, were promoted from 2011\u201312 Liga II. From the Seria I, CSMS Ia\u0219i and Viitorul Constan\u021ba gained the access because they finished first and second in the standings. From Seria II, the promoted teams where Gloria Bistri\u021ba and Turnu Severin. Politehnica Timi\u0219oara won their promotion place in the field, but they did not receive their licence for the first league, so the Romanian Football Federation decided that the third team in the division, Turnu Severin, should promote instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I, Teams\nTeam FC Astra Ploie\u0219ti were renamed FC Astra Giurgiu, effective to 1 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I, Top goalscorers\n1 Marius Niculae was transferred to Shandong Luneng during the winter transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I, Champion squad\nGoalkeepers: Valentin Cojocaru (3 / 0); R\u0103zvan Stanca (4 / 0); Ciprian T\u0103t\u0103ru\u0219anu (28 / 0). Defenders: Doru Bratu (2 / 0); Vlad Chiriche\u0219 (26 / 1); Andrei Dumitra\u0219 (5 / 0); Florin Gardo\u0219 (21 / 1); Daniel Georgievski (19 / 0); Iasmin Latovlevici (24 / 2); Valeriu Lupu (2 / 0); Novak Martinovi\u0107 (5 / 1); Gabriel Matei (1 / 0); Paul P\u00e2rvulescu (12 / 0); Cornel R\u00e2p\u0103 (8 / 0); \u0141ukasz Szuka\u0142a (20 / 4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230465-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I, Champion squad\nMidfielders: Tiberiu B\u0103lan (5 / 0); Alexandru Bourceanu (32 / 3); Alexandru Chipciu (27 / 6); Lucian Filip (17 / 0); Ionu\u021b N\u0103st\u0103sie (2 / 0); Mihai Pintilii (30 / 5); Adrian Popa (30 / 1); Andrei Prepeli\u021b\u0103 (18 / 1); Cristian T\u0103nase (29 / 8). Forwards: Florin Costea (1 / 0); Mihai Costea (12 / 2); Gabriel Iancu (10 / 2); Adi Rocha (16 / 9); Leandro Tatu (9 / 2); Stefan Nikoli\u0107 (24 / 5); Raul Rusescu (34 / 21). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230466-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I (women's football)\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Liga I Feminin was the 23rd season of Romania's premier women's football league. Olimpia Cluj were the defending champions and defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230466-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I (women's football)\nThe season was the last named Liga I and prepared the restructuring of the Romanian football pyramid. Next season a second-level league was created.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230466-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I (women's football), Standings, Championship play-off\nThe top two of each group advanced to the final stage. The six teams play each other two times for a total of ten games. In contrast to last season, there were no bonus points given for winning their first stage division. Blue Angel Cristian Brasov withdrew their team after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230466-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I (women's football), Standings, Superliga qualification\nPlayed by the third placed teams from the first stage. Two were supposed to qualify, but after Blue Angel withdrew, all qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230466-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga I (women's football), Standings, Play-out\nPlayed by teams placed fourth to sixth in the first stage. CS Negrea Re\u015fi\u0163a were disallowed to participate. All teams start in the Liga I next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230467-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga II\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga II is the 73rd season of the Liga II, the second tier of the Romanian football league system. The first two teams in each series will promote at the end of the season to the Liga I, and the last five in each series will relegate to the Liga III, instead of three, like the previous season, because the 2013\u201314 season will have 2 series of 14 teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230468-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga III\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga III season is the 57th season of the Liga III, the third tier of the Romanian football league system. Day one was played on August 31, 2012 and the last round was played on May 30, 2013. The first team in each series will promote at the end of the season to the Liga II, and the teams that finish 10-16 will relegate to the Liga IV. From the teams that finish 9th, another three are relegated, but separate standings are computed, only results against teams that finished 1-8 are taken into consideration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230468-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga III\nThis season was close to a disaster, only 78 teams registered, although 96 spots were available (6x16), thus 18 spots remained unoccupied. From the 78, 5 withdrew from the championship during the first half, CSO Plopeni, Sevi\u015ful \u015eelimb\u0103r, Oltchim R\u00e2mnicu V\u00e2lcea, FCM Hu\u0219i and FC Cisn\u0103die, thus 73 remained in the tables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230468-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga III\nDuring the second half of the championship another 7 teams withdrew, only 66 teams remained out of 96 spots. This teams were: Young Stars Panciu, Rapid II Bucure\u0219ti, Eolica Baia, CSM Foc\u015fani, Jiul Petro\u015fani, FCM Turda and Girom Albota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230469-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV was the 71st season of the Liga IV, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The champions of each county association play against one from a neighboring county in a play-off match played on a neutral venue. The winners of the play-off matches promoted to Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230470-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Alba\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Alba was the 45th season of the Liga IV Alba, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2012 and ended on 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230471-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Arad\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Arad was the 45th season of the Liga IV Arad, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 10 August 2012 and ended on 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230471-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Arad, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Arad County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Bihor County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230472-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Arge\u0219\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Arge\u0219 was the 45th season of the Liga IV Arge\u0219, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2012 and ended on 8 June 2013. Atletic Bradu was crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230472-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Arge\u0219, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Arge\u0219 County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Giurgiu County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230473-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Bac\u0103u\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Bac\u0103u was the 45th season of Liga IV Bac\u0103u, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2012 and was concluded on 9 June 2013. Negri was crowned as county champion and qualify to the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230473-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Bac\u0103u, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Bac\u0103u County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Vrancea County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230474-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Bihor\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Bihor was the 45th season of the Liga IV Bihor, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 18 August 2012 and ended on 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230474-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Bihor, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Bihor County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Arad County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230475-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Prahova\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Prahova, commonly known as Liga A Prahova, was the 45th season of the Liga IV - Prahova, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 17 August 2012 and ended on 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230476-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Suceava\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Suceava season was the 45th season of the Liga IV Suceava, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 17 August 2012 and ended on 2 June 2013. Pojor\u00e2ta crowned as county champion and qualify to promotion play-off in Liga III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230476-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Suceava, Promotion play-off\nChampions of Liga IV \u2013 Suceava County face champions of Liga IV \u2013 Ia\u0219i County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230477-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga IV Teleorman\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga IV Teleorman was the 45th season of the Liga IV Teleorman, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 25 August 2012 and ended on 8 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Leumit was the fourteen season since its introduction in 1999 and the 71st season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 24 August 2012 and ended on 20 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit\nA total of sixteen teams contested in the league, including twelve sides from the 2011\u201312 season, one promoted team from the 2011\u201312 Liga Alef and three relegated teams from the 2011\u201312 Israeli Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit, Changes from 2011\u201312 season, Team changes\nHapoel Ramat Gan were promoted to the 2012\u201313 Israeli Premier League after beating Hapoel Bnei Lod in the 2011\u201312 Liga Leumit promotion playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit, Changes from 2011\u201312 season, Team changes\nHapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were directly relegated to the 2012\u201313 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011\u201312 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom three places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit, Changes from 2011\u201312 season, Team changes\nIroni Bat Yam, Hapoel Herzliya, and Maccabi Be'er Sheva were all relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last three league places. They were replaced by Maccabi Yavne who were promoted to the 2012\u201313 Liga Leumit after beating Hapoel Asi Gilboa on away goals rule (0\u20130 away, 2\u20132 home) in the 2011\u201312 Liga Alef promotion playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit, Overview, Stadia and locations\nThe club is playing their home games at a neutral venue because their own ground does not meet Premier League requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit, Playoffs\nKey numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230478-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Leumit, Relegation playoff, Relegation playoff\nThe 14th-placed Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla faced 2012\u201313 Liga Alef promotion winner Beitar Kfar Saba. Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, the winner on aggregate kept its spot in the 2013\u201314 Liga Leumit. The matches took place on May 24 and 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 59], "content_span": [60, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230479-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga MX season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga MX season was the 66th professional top-flight football league season in Mexico, and the first under the league's current identity as \"Liga MX\". The season was split into two competitions: the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each of identical format and contested by the same eighteen teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230479-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga MX season, Clubs\nEighteen teams participated in the season. Estudiantes Tecos was relegated to the Liga de Ascenso after accumulating the lowest coefficient over the past three consecutive seasons, ending its 36-year stay in the league. Le\u00f3n was promoted, and as the winner of the 2011\u201312 Liga de Ascenso season, Le\u00f3n returned to the top flight after being relegated 10 years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230479-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga MX season, Torneo Apertura\nThe 2012 Apertura was the opening competition of the season. The regular season began on July 20, 2012 and ended on November 11, 2012. The Liguilla tournament began on November 14, 2012 and ended on December 2, 2012. Santos Laguna had been successful in defending their title since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230479-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga MX season, Torneo Apertura, Top goalscorers\nPlayers ranked by goals scored, then alphabetically by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230479-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga MX season, Torneo Clausura\nThe 2013 Clausura is the second and final competition of the season. The regular season began on January 4, 2013. Tijuana were defending their inaugural champion title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230479-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga MX season, Torneo Clausura, Top goalscorers\nAs of May 5, 2013. Source Players ranked by goals scored, then alphabetically by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230480-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional B\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Bolivian Liga Nacional B, the second category of Bolivian football, was played by 15 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230481-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino (Spanish for: 2012-13 Women's Senior National Volleyball League) or 2012-13 LNSVF was the 9th official season of the Peruvian Volleyball League. Universidad C\u00e9sar Vallejo won the league championship and qualified to the Women's South American Volleyball Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230481-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino, Competition format\nThe 2012-13 season uses the same format as the previous edition, the first round is a double round robyn pool between all teams, after the round, the top 8 move on to the quarterfinal play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230481-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino, Competition format, First round\nThe first round is a Round-Robyn system where all 12 teams will play once against the other 11 in home-and-away matches making a total of 132 matches in the round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 84], "content_span": [85, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230481-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino, Competition format, First round\n1. Match points2. Numbers of matches won3. Sets ratio4. Points ratio", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 84], "content_span": [85, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230481-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino, Competition format, First round\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, 51], "section_span": [53, 84], "content_span": [85, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230481-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino, Final round\nThe final round of the tournament is a knockout stage, teams play the quarterfinals seeded according to how they finished ranking-wise in the second round. This round is played best-out-of-three games, for a team to move on to the next stage, they have to win twice against the opposite team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 64], "content_span": [65, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230481-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional Superior de Voleibol Femenino, Final Standing\nPaola Garc\u00eda,\tVer\u00f3nica Contreras,Wendy Torres,\tRosa del Pilar Hoyos (C),\tMabel Olemar,Milagros Moy,\tAndrea Sandoval,Katherine Romero,Sandra Guibert,\tMarianne Fersola,\tSidarka Nu\u00f1ez,\t\t\tMirian Pati\u00f1o (L)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230482-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season was the 29th season of the top professional basketball league in Argentina. The regular season started on 14 September 2012. Regatas Corrientes won their first title, defeating Lan\u00fas in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230482-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Promotions and relegations\nTorneo Nacional de Ascenso Champions from the previous season Uni\u00f3n Progresista and runners-up Argentino de Jun\u00edn were promoted, occupying the berths left by Quilmes and San Mart\u00edn de Corrientes. Uni\u00f3n Progresista would be relegated at the end of the season, together with 9 de Julio de R\u00edo Tercero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230482-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Regular season, First stage\nThe first stage took place between 14 September and 28 October 2012. Teams were divided into two zones. The top four teams from each zone competed in the Torneo S\u00faper 8 that took place in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230482-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Regular season, Torneo S\u00faper 8\nThe eighth edition of Torneo S\u00faper 8 took place on 7\u201310 November 2012 in the city of Corrientes, Corrientes. Regatas Corrientes won their second title, defeating Quimsa in the Final, and were granted a berth in the 2013 Liga Sudamericana de B\u00e1squetbol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230482-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Regular season, Second stage\nThe second stage started on 1 November 2013. All 16 teams were ranked together. Each team carried over half of the points obtained in the first stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230482-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Playoffs, Championship playoffs\nThe Playoffs started on 13 March 2013 and ended on 15 May 2013. Regatas Corrientes defeated Lan\u00fas in the Finals and won their first title. Both teams were qualified for the 2014 FIBA Americas League. Since Regatas Corrientes had also qualified to the 2013 Liga Sudamericana de B\u00e1squetbol after winning the Torneo S\u00faper 8, their berth was given to the next best team that was not qualified yet, in this case Argentino de Jun\u00edn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230482-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de B\u00e1squet season, Playoffs, Relegation playoffs\nThe relegation series began on 14 March. Uni\u00f3n Progresista and 9 de Julio de R\u00edo Tercero lost their respective series and were relegated to the Torneo Nacional de Ascenso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230483-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de Hockey Hielo season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de Hockey Hielo season was the 39th season of the Liga Nacional de Hockey Hielo, the top level of ice hockey in Spain. Six teams participated in the league, and CD Hielo Bipolo won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230483-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Nacional de Hockey Hielo season, Regular season\n(Note: The game between CH Jaca and CG Puigcerd\u00e1 at the end of the season was not played because both teams playoff positions were already determined.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230484-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's basketball)\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 season was the 63rd season of the Liga Na\u021bional\u0103, the highest professional basketball league in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230484-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's basketball)\nThe first half of the season consisted of 16 teams and 240-game regular season (30 games for each of the 16 teams). The season began on 6 October 2012 and ended on 2 April 2013, just before the Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230484-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's basketball), Playoffs\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, the first eight teams qualify for the play-off and the last eight teams qualify for the play-out. In the play-offs, the teams play by the \"best of five\" system in the first two rounds, and by the \"best of seven\" in the finals. For the third place, CSM Oradea won 2\u20131 against Gaz Metan Media\u015f in the \"best of three\" system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230485-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (men's handball)\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 was the 55th season of Romanian Handball League, the top-level men's professional handball league. The league comprises twelve teams. HCM Constan\u021ba were the defending champions, for the fifth time in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230486-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 (women's handball)\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Na\u021bional\u0103 was the 55th season of Romanian Women's Handball League, the top-level women's professional handball league. The league comprises 11 teams. Z-Terom Ia\u015fi did not register for the new season because it was dissolved. Oltchim R\u00e2mnicu V\u00e2lcea were the defending champions, for the sixth season in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230487-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol season is the 25th season of top-flight football in Panama. The season began on 20 July 2012 and is scheduled to end in May 2013. Ten teams will complete throughout the entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230487-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol season, Teams\nCol\u00f3n C-3 finished in 10th place in the overall table last season and were relegated to the Liga Nacional de Ascenso. Taking their place for this season are the overall champions of last season's Liga Nacional de Ascenso, R\u00edo Abajo F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230487-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Paname\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol season, 2012 Apertura\nThe 2012 Apertura is the first tournament of the season. It began on 20 July 2012 and ended on 2 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230488-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Portuguesa de Andebol\n2012\u201313 Liga Portuguesa de Andebol was the 11th season of the premier Portuguese handball league, the Portuguese Handball First Division (Liga Portuguesa de Andebol). FC Porto were the champions for the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230489-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season was split in two tournaments Apertura and Clausura. Liga Premier was the third-tier football league of Mexico. The season was played between 11 August 2012 and 1 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230489-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season, Torneo Apertura, Regular Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230489-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season, Torneo Apertura, Liguilla\nThe eight best teams of each group play two games against each other on a home-and-away basis. The higher seeded teams play on their home field during the second leg. The winner of each match up is determined by aggregate score. In the Round of 8, quarterfinals and semifinals, if the two teams are tied on aggregate the higher seeded team advances. In the final, if the two teams are tied after both legs, the match goes to extra time and, if necessary, a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230489-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season, Torneo Clausura, Regular Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nPlayers sorted first by goals scored, then by last name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230489-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season, Torneo Clausura, Liguilla\nThe eight best teams of each group play two games against each other on a home-and-away basis. The higher seeded teams play on their home field during the second leg. The winner of each match up is determined by aggregate score. In the Round of 8, quarterfinals and semifinals, if the two teams are tied on aggregate the higher seeded team advances. In the final, if the two teams are tied after both legs, the match goes to extra time and, if necessary, a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230489-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season, Relegation Table\nLast updated: 27 April 2013 Source: P = Position; G = Games played; Pts = Points; Pts/G = Ratio of points to games played", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230489-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga Premier de Ascenso season, Promotion Final\nThe Promotion Final is a series of matches played by the champions of the tournaments Apertura and Clausura, the game is played to determine the winning team of the promotion to Ascenso MX. The first leg was played on 29 May 2013, and the second leg was played on 1 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230490-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de F\u00fatbol Profesional Boliviano season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga de F\u00fatbol Profesional Boliviano season was the 36th season of LFPB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230490-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de F\u00fatbol Profesional Boliviano season, Teams\nThe number of teams for 2012 remains the same. Real Mamor\u00e9 finished last in the 2011 relegation table and was relegated to the Liga Nacional B for the first time since the club was founded. They were replaced by the 2011\u201312 Liga Nacional B champion Petrolero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230490-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de F\u00fatbol Profesional Boliviano season, Copa Libertadores/Copa Sudamericana playoff\nA playoff was contested between the third-placed teams of the 2011/12 Clausura (Oriente Petrolero) and the 2012/13 Apertura (Bol\u00edvar). The winner qualified for the 2013 Copa Libertadores First Stage, while the loser qualified for the 2013 Copa Sudamericana First Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 96], "content_span": [97, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230491-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de Nuevos Talentos season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga de Nuevos Talentos season was split in two tournaments Apertura and Clausura. Liga de Nuevos Talentos was the fourth\u2013tier football league of Mexico. The season was played between 24 August 2012 and 18 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230491-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de Nuevos Talentos season, Torneo Apertura, Liguilla\nThe nine and seven best teams of each group play two games against each other on a home-and-away basis. The higher seeded teams play on their home field during the second leg. The winner of each match up is determined by aggregate score. In the round of 16, quarterfinals and semifinals, if the two teams are tied on aggregate the higher seeded team advances. In the final, if the two teams are tied after both legs, the match goes to extra time and, if necessary, a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230491-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de Nuevos Talentos season, Torneo Clausura, Liguilla\nThe nine and seven best teams of each group play two games against each other on a home-and-away basis. The higher seeded teams play on their home field during the second leg. The winner of each match up is determined by aggregate score. In the round of 16, quarterfinals and semifinals, if the two teams are tied on aggregate the higher seeded team advances. In the final, if the two teams are tied after both legs, the match goes to extra time and, if necessary, a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230491-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de Nuevos Talentos season, Relegation Table\nLast updated: 13 April 2013 Source: P = Position; G = Games played; Pts = Points; Pts/G = Ratio of points to games played", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230491-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liga de Nuevos Talentos season, Promotion Final\nThe Promotion Final is a series of matches played by the champions of the tournaments Apertura and Clausura, the game was played to determine the winning team of the promotion to Liga Premier de Ascenso. The first leg was played on 15 May 2013, and the second leg was played on 18 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230492-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligakupa\nThe 2012\u201313 Ligakupa was the sixth edition of the Hungarian League Cup, the Ligakupa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230492-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligakupa, Quarter-finals\nThe five winners and 3 seconds placed of the previous round were drawn into five group matches. The winners on aggregate advanced to the next round. The first leg were played on 20 February, the second leg were played on 6 March 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230492-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligakupa, Semi-finals\nThe first leg will be played on 20 and 21 March, the second leg will be played on 23 and 24 March 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230493-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligat Nashim\nThe 2012\u201313 Ligat Nashim was the 15th season of women's league football under the Israeli Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230493-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligat Nashim\nThe league was won by ASA Tel Aviv University, its fourth consecutive title and fifth overall. By winning, ASA Tel Aviv qualified to 2013\u201314 UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230493-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligat Nashim\nHapoel Be'er Sheva finished bottom of the first division and was relegated to the second division, and was replaced by second division winner, F.C. Kiryat Gat. The second-bottom club in the first division, Bnot Sakhnin met Maccabi Tzur Shalom Bialik for a spot in Ligat Nashim Rishona, Bnot Sakhnin winning 11\u20130 to remain in the first division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230493-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligat Nashim, Ligat Nashim Rishona, Format changes\nA promotion/relegation play-off was introduced, setting the second-bottom club in the first division's relegation group against the second-top club in the second division's promotion group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 58], "content_span": [59, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230493-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligat Nashim, Ligat Nashim Shniya, Format changes\nAs 8 teams registered to the second division, the participating clubs first played a conventional double round-robin schedule for a total of 14 rounds, after which the 4 top clubs played a promotion play-off, while the bottom 4 clubs played a separate play-off, with clubs in each group playing a round-robin schedule of another 3 matches between them. Points earned in the regular season were kept by the clubs. The top club at the Promotion Group would win promotion to Ligat Nashim Rishona, and the second-placed club would compete in a promotion/relegation play-off against the third placed club in the first division's relegation group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1\nThe 2012\u201313 Ligue 1 was the 75th season since its establishment. Montpellier were the defending champions. The league schedule was announced in April 2012 and the fixtures were determined on 30 May. The season began on 10 August and ended on 26 May 2013. A winter break was in effect from 24 December to 12 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1\nThe season marked the 80th anniversary of professional football in France. In addition, German sportswear company Adidas became the official provider of match balls for the season after agreeing to a long-term partnership with the Ligue de Football Professionnel. To commemorate the 80th anniversary, adidas unveiled an exclusive ball, known as Le 80, for the new season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1\nSince France dropped from fifth to sixth place in the UEFA association coefficient rankings at the end of the 2011\u201312 season, the league's third place team, Lyon qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League, having previously been placed in the playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1\nOn 12 May, Paris Saint-Germain won the league title after a 1\u20130 away win against Lyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1, Teams\nThere were three promoted teams from Ligue 2, replacing the three teams that were relegated from Ligue 1 following the 2011\u201312 season. A total of 20 teams competed in the league with three clubs suffering relegation to the second division, Ligue 2. All clubs that secured Ligue 1 status for the season were subject to approval by the DNCG before becoming eligible to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1, Teams\nBastia became the first club to achieve promotion to Ligue 1. The club clinched the second division title on 1 May 2012 with three matches to spare after defeating Metz 3\u20130 at the Stade Armand Cesari. Bastia is making its return to the first division after a seven-year absence and is entering Ligue 1 on a run of two consecutive promotions. The club had earned promotion to Ligue 2 after winning the 2010\u201311 edition of the Championnat National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1, Teams\nReims and Troyes became the second and third clubs, respectively, to earn promotion to Ligue 1 alongside the champions Bastia. Both clubs achieved promotion with one game to spare following league victories on 11 May 2012, which positioned each club in second and third place permanently. Reims, which is a six-time Ligue 1 champion, is returning to the first division after over 33 years playing in the lower divisions. During those 33 years, the club underwent liquidation and had all aspects of the club (its records, trophies, etc.) auctioned off. Troyes is returning to Ligue 1 after spending four years playing in Ligue 2. During its five-year spell outside the first division, Troyes also played in the Championnat National, the third level of French football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230494-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230495-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1 (Ivory Coast)\nThe 2012-13 Ligue 1 season was the 55th edition and current of the top-tier competition of C\u00f4te d'Ivoire football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230495-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1 (Ivory Coast)\nThe season will start on 2 November 2012 and be in play until 31 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230495-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 1 (Ivory Coast)\nThe Ivoirian Ligue 1 is back to its 2010 formula, consisting of a single group of fourteen teams, after it followed a revised format for two seasons following political problems in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230496-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 2\nThe 2012\u201313 Ligue 2 season was the 74th season since its establishment. The league schedule was announced in April 2012 and the fixtures were determined on 30 May. The season began on 27 July and ended on 24 May 2013. The winter break was in effect from 22 December to 12 January 2013. In addition, German sportswear company Uhlsport became the official provider of match balls for the season after agreeing to a long-term partnership with the Ligue de Football Professionnel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230496-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 2, Teams\nThere were three promoted teams from the Championnat National, replacing the three teams that were relegated from Ligue 2 following the 2011\u201312 season. A total of 20 teams are currently competing in the league with three clubs suffering relegation to the third division, Championnat National. All clubs that secured Ligue 2 status for the season were subject to approval by the DNCG before becoming eligible to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230496-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 2, Teams\nAuxerre was the first club to suffer relegation to Ligue 2 in the 2011\u201312 Ligue 1 season. The club's drop was confirmed on 13 May 2012 following the team's 3\u20130 loss to Marseille; a defeat that made it impossible for the club to finish safe. Auxerre returned to the second division after 32 consecutive years playing in Ligue 1. Prior to the 2011\u201312 season, the club had never suffered relegation from the country's top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230496-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 2, Teams\nOn the final day of the 2011\u201312 Ligue 1 season, Dijon and Caen were both relegated to Ligue 2 following defeats to Rennes and Valenciennes, respectively. Dijon returned to the second division after only one season in Ligue 1, while Caen fell to the second-tier after two years in the first division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230496-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 2, Teams\nOn 18 May 2012, both N\u00eemes and Gaz\u00e9lec Ajaccio were promoted to Ligue 2 after each club achieved results that made it impossible for the league's fourth-placed team to surpass them. N\u00eemes returned to the second division after only one year at semi-professional level, while Gaz\u00e9lec will play in Ligue 2 for the first time since the 1992\u201393 season. On the final day of the 2011\u201312 National season, Niort became the final club to earn promotion to Ligue 2 after beating already-promoted Gaz\u00e9lec Ajaccio 1\u20130. Niort returned to the second division for the first time since the 2007\u201308 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230496-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 2, Teams, DNCG rulings\nOn 11 July 2012, following a preliminary review of each club's administrative and financial accounts in Ligue 2, the DNCG ruled that Le Mans would be relegated to the Championnat National. Following the announcement, Le Mans president Henri Legarda announced that the club would appeal the decision stating the \"shareholders will play their part and the club will go after every possible step to restore its rightful place in the sport.\" On 25 July, Le Mans confirmed on its official website that the DNCG had reversed it decision to relegate the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230496-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue 2, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230497-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue Magnus season\nThe 2012\u201313 Ligue Magnus season was the 92nd season of the Ligue Magnus, the top level of ice hockey in France. 14 teams participated in the league, and the Dragons de Rouen won the championship. The Scorpions de Mulhouse were relegated to the FFHG Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230498-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ligue Nationale du Football Amateur\nThe 2012\u201313 Ligue Nationale du football Amateur was the third season of the league under its current title and was the second season under its current league division format. A total of 42 teams contested the league. The league began on September 14, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230499-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lille OSC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Lille OSC's 69th season in existence and the club's 13th consecutive season in the top flight of French football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230499-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lille OSC season\nThis season marked the opening of the Grand Stade Lille M\u00e9tropole, with a 50,000-seat capacity that went on to host several matches of UEFA Euro 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230499-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lille OSC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230499-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lille OSC season, Players, Goal scorers\nLast updated: 26 May 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230500-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lindenwood Lady Lions ice hockey season\nThe Lindenwood Lady Lions represent Lindenwood University. The 2012\u201313 Lindenwood Lady Lions ice hockey season was the team's tenth season and their second season as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The team is coached by Vince O\u2019Mara and they play their home games at Lindenwood Ice Arena. The 2012-13 season is Lindenwood's first as a member of College Hockey America, after the team competed as an NCAA Division I independent program in 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230501-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lipscomb Bisons men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Lipscomb Bisons men's basketball team represented Lipscomb University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bisons, led by 14th year head coach Scott Sanderson, played their home games at Allen Arena and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 12\u201318, 7\u201311 in A-Sun play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic Sun Basketball Tournament to Mercer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230502-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup is the 24th season of the Lithuanian annual football knock-out tournament. The competition started on 15 June 2012 with the matches of the first round and is scheduled to end in May 2013. \u017dalgiris are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230502-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup\nThe winners will qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230502-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup, Third round\nThe matches were played between 13 and 29 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230502-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup, Fourth round\nThese matches were played between 19 and 28 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230502-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup, Fifth round\nThese matches were played on 22, 23 and 24 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230502-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup, Quarterfinals\nThese matches took place on 6 and 7 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230502-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Football Cup, Semifinals\nThe 4 winners from the previous round entered this stage of the competition. Unlike the previous rounds of the competition, this was played over two legs. The first legs were played on 16 and 17 April 2013 and the second legs were played on 30 April and 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230503-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lithuanian Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Lithuanian Hockey League season was the 22nd 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 121st season in Liverpool Football Club's existence, and their 51st consecutive year in the top flight of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season\nBy virtue of winning the 2011\u201312 Football League Cup, Liverpool automatically qualified for entry into the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, thus securing an immediate return to European competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season\nPre -season saw a change of manager for Liverpool, with Kenny Dalglish leaving on 16 May 2012. Brendan Rodgers was unveiled as his replacement on 1 June 2012. Liverpool finished 7th in the Premier League, one place and nine points higher than the 2011\u201312 season. According to the Forbes' list of the most valuable football clubs published in April 2013, Liverpool were ranked as the 10th most valuable football club in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season, Statistics, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season, Statistics, Goalscorers\n^^ Players who no longer play for Liverpool's current season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total bookings are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230504-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Liverpool F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\n^^ Players who no longer play for Liverpool's current season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230505-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Livingston F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Livingston's second consecutive season in the First Division, having been promoted after winning the Scottish Second Division during season 2010\u201311. They also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230505-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Livingston F.C. season, Summary, Season\nDuring season 2012\u201313 Livingston finished fourth in the Scottish First Division. They reached the first round of the Challenge Cup, the third round of the League Cup and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230505-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Livingston F.C. season, Summary, Management\nThey began the season under the management of John Hughes. On 13 November 2012, Hughes left the club after only nine months in charge to take up the post of first team coach at Hartlepool United. Gareth Evans took over as interim manager following Hughes departure. At the end of November it was confirmed Evans would remain as manager on an ongoing basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230505-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Livingston F.C. season, Summary, Management\nOn 28 February 2013, Evans was sacked by the club with Director of football John Collins resigning from his post. Richie Burke the club's youth development manager took charge of the first team in the interim. On 25 March, Burke was appointed as manager permanently with Mark Burchill joining the club as his assistant. The duo were given contracts until 2015, with Burchill also being registered as a player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230505-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Livingston F.C. season, Results and fixtures, Pre season\nA match against Rapid Bucharest, scheduled for 7 July, was called off due to a waterlogged pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230505-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Livingston F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 6 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230506-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Logan Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Logan Cup was a first-class cricket competition held in Zimbabwe from 30 September 2012 to 7 March 2013. The tournament was won by the Matabeleland Tuskers, who claimed their third consecutive title. The format of the competition was unchanged from the previous season, with five sides playing each other twice in a round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230506-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Logan Cup\nRichmond Mutumbami of the Southern Rocks finished the competition as the leading run-scorer, accumulating 686 runs. The leading wicket-taker was Ed Rainsford of the Mid West Rhinos, who took 38 wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230507-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC's 6th competitive season, 4th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 17th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230507-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC 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-00230507-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230507-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230507-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230507-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230507-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230507-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Lombard-P\u00e1pa TFC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230508-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team represents California State University, Long Beach during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The 49ers, led by sixth year head coach Dan Monson, play their home games at Walter Pyramid and are members of the Big West Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230508-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team\nWith the departure of conference player of the year Casper Ware, James Ennis became the go to player for the 49ers in 2012\u201313. He responded by averaging 16.5 points and 6.7 rebounds per game and leading the 49ers to another regular season Big West championship. At the end of the season, Ennis was named Big West Player of the Year and an AP honorable mention All-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230508-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Long Beach State 49ers men's basketball team\nFollowing the close of his senior year, Ennis was named to the Reese's College All-Star Game, where he led the East team in scoring with 13 points, including a pair of baskets that clinched the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230509-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Long Island Blackbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Long Island Blackbirds men's basketball team represented The Brooklyn Campus of Long Island University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blackbirds, led by first year head coach Jack Perri, played their home games at the Athletic, Recreation & Wellness Center, with three home games at the brand new Barclays Center, and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 20\u201314, 12\u20136 in NEC play to finish in a three way tie for second place. They were champions of the NEC Tournament for the third consecutive year to earn an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the First Four round to James Madison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230510-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team represented Longwood University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lancers, led by tenth year head coach Mike Gillian, played their home games at Willett Hall and were members of the North Division of the Big South Conference. This was the Lancers first season in the Big South. They finished the season 8\u201325, 4\u201312 in Big South play to finish in last place in the North Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big South Tournament to VMI; the tournament constituted Longwood's first postseason appearance as a Division I school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230510-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team\nFollowing the season, Head Coach Mike Gillian stepped down from his duties as Head Coach of Longwood University. He led the team through their transition to Division I and posted a record of 94\u2013215 in ten seasons. He was replaced by Cleveland State associate head coach Jayson Gee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230510-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Longwood Lancers men's basketball team, Last season\nThe Lancers had a record of 10\u201321 in their final season as a Division I independent school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season was the 43rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), their 35th season in Southern California, and their 29th season in Los Angeles. During the offseason, the Clippers signed seven-time all-star Grant Hill and re-acquired Lamar Odom from the Dallas Mavericks. They improved on their 40\u201326 record from the previous season to finish 56\u201326, and they won their first Pacific Division title in franchise history. The title was clinched after defeating the Los Angeles Lakers on April 7, which also completed a season sweep of their crosstown rivals, 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season\nThe franchise had not swept the Lakers since 1974\u201375, when the Clippers were the Buffalo Braves. It was also the first time in 20 years since 1992\u201393 that the Clippers won the season series against the Lakers. Although this was enough to net them home-court advantage in a playoff series for the first time in franchise history, they lost their first-round series to the Memphis Grizzlies in six games. Following the season, Hill and Odom both retired and Chauncey Billups re-signed as a free agent with the Detroit Pistons, where he would spend his last season in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season, Future draft picks, Credits\n2016 second-round draft pick from BrooklynThe L.A. Clippers had the right to swap their own 2016 second-round pick with Brooklyn's 2016 second-round pick provided the Clippers' second-round pick was 31\u201355. If the Clippers' pick was 56\u201360, Brooklyn's obligations to the Clippers shall be extinguished. (Brooklyn-L.A. Clippers, 7/11/2012)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season, Future draft picks, Debits\n2013 second-round draft pick to DetroitThe L.A. Clippers' own 2013 second-round pick to Detroit (top-55 protected in the 2013 Draft). If the Clippers' own 2013 second-round pick was in the top 55 picks, then the Clippers' obligations to Detroit shall be extinguished. [ Detroit \u2013 L.A. Clippers, February 16, 2009]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season, Future draft picks, Debits\n2014 second-round draft pick to San AntonioThe L.A. Clippers' own 2014 second-round pick to San Antonio via New Orleans (top-55 protected in the 2014 draft). If the L.A. Clippers' own 2014 second-round pick was in the top 55 picks, then the L.A. Clippers' obligations to San Antonio via New Orleans shall be extinguished. [ L.A. Clippers \u2013 New Orleans, 1/26/2010 and then New Orleans \u2013 San Antonio, October 18, 2010]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season, Future draft picks, Debits\n2015 second-round draft pick to HoustonThe L.A. Clippers' own 2015 second-round pick to Houston via Toronto (if pick is 51\u201355). If the Clippers' own 2015 second-round pick was not among the 51st through 55th picks, then the Clippers' obligations to Houston shall be extinguished. [ L.A. Clippers \u2013 Toronto, 1/7/2009 and then Houston \u2013 Toronto, July 28, 2010]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season, Future draft picks, Debits\n2015 second-round draft pick to DenverThe Clippers' own 2015 second-round pick to Denver (top-55 protected in the 2015 draft). If the Clippers' own 2015 second-round pick was in the top 55 picks, then the Clippers' obligations to Denver shall be extinguished. [ Denver \u2013 L.A. Clippers, 1/5/2009]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230511-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Clippers season, Future draft picks, Debits\n2016 second-round draft pick to New OrleansThe Clippers' own 2016 second-round pick to New Orleans (top-55 protected in the 2016 Draft). If the Clippers' own 2016 second-round pick was in the top 55 picks, then the Clippers' obligations to New Orleans shall be extinguished. [ L.A. Clippers \u2013 New Orleans, 8/12/2009]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season\nThe 2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season was the 46th season (45th season of play) for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season\nThe team's attempt to defend their first Stanley Cup championship in franchise history was ended by the Chicago Blackhawks in the Western Conference Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, January\nThe King started their season with three losses, their worst season opener since losing five of their first six games in 2007\u201308. They lost 5\u20132 in their season opener against the Chicago Blackhawks on January 19, surrendering more goals than in any of the 20 games during their 2012 playoff run. Chicago scored three goals in the first 15 minutes, and the Kings did not score their first until they were trailing 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, January\nMatt Greene was placed on the injured reserve list after suffering a back injury in the game that was expected to take him out the rest of the season, a major blow to a Kings' defense already suffering from the loss of Willie Mitchell due to knee surgery. The Kings then began a challenging schedule with 11 of their next 15 games away, starting with a 1\u20133 loss against the Colorado Avalanche on January 22. Despite a poor start for Colorado, they defeated Los Angeles after a three-goal rally in the third period. An\u017ee Kopitar, who missed the first game due to a knee injury, failed to make a shot in 24 shifts against Colorado, and the Kings failed to score on any of their six power plays. After the loss, Dustin Penner was a healthy scratch for the next four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, January\nThe Kings lost 1\u20133 to the Edmonton Oilers on January 24, making them one of only three teams in the league without a victory at that point. Los Angeles led 1\u20130 until the third period, when the Oilers appeared to tie it with 1:05 left after Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored, but it was overturned after Jonathan Quick successfully argued Edmonton forward Sam Gagner interfered with him in the crease. But Oilers rookie Nail Yakupov forced overtime after scoring with 4.6 seconds left, which led to an Edmonton overtime victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, January\nThe Kings won their first game of the season on January 26, beating the Phoenix Coyotes 4\u20132. Kopitar scored two goals, his first regular season multi-goal game since October 8, 2011 against the Buffalo Sabres. Los Angeles continued to struggle with the power play, failing to capitalize on a 5-on-3 with their first unit on the ice the first 81 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, January\nThe Kings won a second victory on January 28, beating the Vancouver Canucks 2\u20133. Los Angeles had a 2\u20130 deficit in the second period until Jeff Carter scored seven seconds into a power play advantage. The goal ended a 0-for-25 power play slump for the Kings, but they continued to hold the worst power play record in the league. Slava Voynov scored the game-tying goal with 44 seconds left in the third period to force overtime, where Carter made a third-round shootout goal to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, January\nLos Angeles lost their next game on January 31, falling 2\u20131 in overtime to the Nashville Predators. Dustin Brown scored his first goal of the season, and although the Kings' offense struggled, their defense allowed only 11 shots in regulation and three more in overtime. Nashville goaltender Pekka Rinne stopped five of the Kings' eight shootout attempts before Nashville left wing Sergei Kostitsyn scored in the eighth round for the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nLos Angeles opened the month with a 4\u20137 loss to the Anaheim Ducks on February 2, marking the second time in the season they allowed five goals in regulation. Quick was pulled from the goal after allowing Anaheim's Nick Bonino to score two goals in six minutes. Brown scored two power play goals for the Kings, who tied the game three times but never led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nThe Kings followed that loss with a 4\u20132 victory against the Columbus Blue Jackets, against whom they held without a shot on goal for more than 18 minutes and 28 seconds between the second and third periods. But Los Angeles suffered their first shutout of the season with a 0\u20133 loss to the Nashville Predators on February 7. The Kings made 32 shots on goal, but managed only four during the third period. Penner was again a healthy scratch. The Kings lost again on February 10 to the Detroit Red Wings despite a season-high 47 shots. Alec Martinez tied the game 2\u20132 for the Kings with 53 seconds left in the game, but Detroit's Jonathan Ericsson scored the game-winning goal with five seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nDespite the loss, Red Wings coach Mike Babcock felt Los Angeles was the superior team in the third quarter, and Kopitar and Brown both believed it was the team's best game of the season so far. The Detroit game was later described as a turning point for the Kings, who went on to win five of their next six games. They beat the St. Louis Blues 4\u20131 on February 11, with backup goaltender Jonathan Bernier making 21 saves in his first start with the Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nLos Angeles matched their season best for goals, and Carter scored twice for the first time since game six of the 2012 Stanley Cup Finals. Martinez, however, suffered an upper body injury in the first period and was placed on injured reserve, joining fellow defencemen Greene and Mitchell. Bernier started again the next game on February 15, when the Kings beat Columbus 2\u20131 in their first home game after five away. Kyle Clifford scored late in the second period, marking the first Kings lead in four home games, and Richards scored a goal with a two-man advantage in the third to capture his 400th NHL point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nThe Kings lost 3\u20132 to the first-place Blackhawks on February 17. Trailing 3\u20130 in the third period, Richards scored two power play goals, but Los Angeles failed to tie the game on a six-on-four after pulling Quick from the ice. More than a quarter into the shortened season, the Kings were ranked 29th in the league for goals scored, and several players had no goals including Penner, Doughty, Simon Gagn\u00e9, Trevor Lewis and Dwight King. The Kings won their next two away games, besting the Oilers 3\u20131 on February 19 and the Calgary Flames 3\u20131 on February 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nColin Fraser, returning to the line-up after being scratched for four games, opened the scoring against Edmonton with his first goal of the season, and Carter broke a 1\u20131 tie with 49.4 seconds left in the game. Bernier had his third start and win of the season against Calgary, during which Los Angeles took six shots in the first five minutes before Brown scored on the seventh. Calgary scored their sole goal later in the first period, but Lewis regained the lead with a goal 29 seconds later, marking his first point in 13 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nFinished their schedule of 11 of 15 away games finished, the Kings next began a more favorable schedule with 13 of their next 16 games at home, and 20 of the season's final 33 at home. The Kings beat Colorado 4\u20131 during their first home game on February 23, with Brown scoring the first goal 58 seconds into the game. Shortly after Colorado scored their only goal, Lewis regained the lead by making the Kings' first short-handed goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, February\nLos Angeles also defeated Anaheim 5\u20132 on February 26, where Penner tied the game 2\u20132 in the second period with first goal of the season, which the team followed with three unanswered goals in the third to win. Kopitar had a season-high three assists, and Carter scored an empty netter for his team-leading 10th goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Schedule and results\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Playoffs\nThe Kings entered the playoffs as the Western Conference's fifth seed. Their quest for back to back Cups was ended by the Chicago Blackhawks in the Western Conference Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Player statistics, Skaters\nNote: GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty MinutesFinal stats", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Player statistics, Skaters\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Kings. Stats reflect time with the Kings only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; GS = Games Started; TOI = Time on Ice; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime Losses; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; SV = Saves; SA = Shots Against; SV% = Save Percentage; SO = Shutouts; G = Goals; A = Assists; PIM = Penalty MinutesFinal stats", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Transactions\nThe Kings have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230512-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Kings season, Draft picks\nLos Angeles' selections at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season was the 65th season of the franchise, its 64th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 53rd season in Los Angeles. The Lakers acquired All-Stars Steve Nash and Dwight Howard, giving them a starting lineup of five All-Stars consisting of Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol, Metta World Peace, Nash, and Howard, who were expected to contend for the franchise's 17th NBA championship. Instead, the Lakers struggled to qualify for the playoffs after changing head coaches and implementing multiple offenses. However, a weak defense and multiple injuries were the team's biggest problems. They exited the playoffs in the first round for the first time since 2007. Additionally, this was the first season since 2006-07 without longtime point guard Derek Fisher, who had helped the team win its last five championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThe season began with head coach Mike Brown changing the Lakers offensive strategy to the Princeton offense. After an 0\u20138 preseason record and a 1\u20134 start to the regular season, Brown was fired. Assistant Bernie Bickerstaff was named the interim coach until Mike D'Antoni took over as the full-time head coach. Still, the Lakers began the season 15\u201321 for their worst start since the 1993\u201394 season. They were in jeopardy of missing the playoffs after trailing the Houston Rockets at the All-Star break by 3+1\u20442 games for the eighth and final playoff berth in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThe Lakers started 8\u20132 after the break, gaining sole possession of a top-8 spot for the first time since December 1, and moving two games over .500 for the first time all season. After being swept by their crosstown rivals, the Los Angeles Clippers, the Lakers fell a half game behind the Utah Jazz for the final playoff spot. The Lakers again overtook Utah in the standings, but Kobe Bryant's season ended after suffering a torn Achilles tendon in the 80th game of the season. The Lakers qualified for the playoffs on the last day of the season, defeating Houston to finish 45\u201337 and seeded seventh in the West. Facing the San Antonio Spurs in the first round, the injury-riddled Lakers were swept in four games to the eventual Western Conference champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThis was the last season the Lakers made the playoffs until the 2019\u201320 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Offseason\nAfter being eliminated from the playoffs in the second round in the prior two seasons, the Lakers traded for three-time Defensive Player of the Year Dwight Howard and two-time Most Valuable Player (MVP) Steve Nash. It was the fourth time in league history that a team acquired two players with at least six All-Star selections. Both players were widely considered to be future Hall of Famers. They joined an already strong Lakers nucleus in Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol, and Metta World Peace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Offseason\nThe center Howard made the team younger and more athletic; his acquisition appeared to be the start of a new dynasty for the Lakers. In Nash, the Lakers had their first elite point guard in decades. The trio of Bryant, Howard, and Nash was expected to rival the defending league champion Miami Heat's combination of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. Additionally, the Lakers re-signed key role player Jordan Hill and signed free agent veteran Antawn Jamison and shooting specialist Jodie Meeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Offseason\nCoach Mike Brown began installing the Princeton offense, a decision he made even before the July acquisition of Nash. He thought of using the offense the previous season, but the lockout impacted the schedule, making it too hectic to implement. New assistant coach Eddie Jordan was hired to install the Lakers third offense in three years after the triangle offense during coach Phil Jackson's tenure and Brown's own offense the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Offseason\nDespite the addition of Howard and Nash, Bryant insisted he remained the leader of the Lakers. Nash agreed that it was Bryant's team, but added the team needed to provide support. Bryant looked forward to Nash running the team's offense. Bryant envisioned that after he retired, Howard would assume the role of team leader. Howard anticipated Bryant being tough on him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Offseason\n\"So, I'll take all the heat that he's going to give me because I know at the end of the day that's going to make me a better player and a better person and it's going to make this team better\", Howard said. In 2014, Nash said that \"everyone could see [the relationship between Bryant and Howard] was going to be tough from the start.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Struggles with Princeton offense\nHoward had back surgery earlier in April, and the Lakers had acquired him with the possibility that he might be out until December or January. He did not play basketball until training camp in October. The Lakers went a winless 0\u20138 in the preseason with Howard playing in just two of the games while he was still recovering. Brown estimated it could take until January for the Lakers to fully master the new offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Struggles with Princeton offense\nThe Lakers starting lineup at the start of the regular season was both the league's tallest and its oldest with Nash (38 years old), Bryant (34), Gasol and World Peace (32), and Howard (26). The five All-Stars had a combined 33 All-Star appearances, and the team had the league's highest payroll at just over $100 million. The New York Times called them \"one of the most talented lineups in NBA history.\" ESPN wrote that the Lakers were \"not only expected to win the title but to do so in record-breaking fashion.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Struggles with Princeton offense\nBryant cautioned that they were not \"the most athletic team in the world\" and could be limited in their rebounding and transition game. Howard was ready for the start of the season, but he was still recovering from his back surgery. In his Laker debut, Howard had 19\u00a0points and 10\u00a0rebounds, but he was only 3-for-14 on free throws and fouled out; the Lakers lost 99\u201391.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Struggles with Princeton offense\nBryant said patience was needed as the team adjusted to the Princeton offense. He endorsed the new scheme, comparing it to the triangle offense's ball-sharing principles as well as its difficult learning curve. The Lakers fell to the Los Angeles Clippers 105\u201395 in a \"home\" game, and they started the season 0\u20133 for the first time since 34 years ago in 1978 and just the fourth time in franchise history. Bryant scored 40 points in the loss with two steals, and he passed Magic Johnson (1,724) as the Lakers career leader in steals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Struggles with Princeton offense\nNash did not play after suffering a non-displaced fracture in his left leg in the previous game, and he was expected to miss at least a week. The Lakers beat the Detroit Pistons 108\u201379 for their first win, and avoided their first 0\u20134 start since 1957. However, after a 1\u20134 start, Brown was fired as head coach. The team was still adjusting to the new offense and committing a high number of turnovers; the defense, a specialty of Brown's, was also vulnerable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Struggles with Princeton offense\nIn addition to Nash's and Howard's ailments, Bryant had been playing with an injured foot and was unable to practice. The Lakers, however, had an urgency to win and were not compelled to wait given their aging stars, Howard's pending free agency the coming summer, and owner Jerry Buss' deteriorating health. Brown's dismissal after five games was the third-fastest coaching change in NBA history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nIn the media, former Lakers coach Phil Jackson became the leading candidate to replace Brown. In the meantime, assistant coach Bernie Bickerstaff was the interim head coach. He won the first two games he coached, while the crowd at Staples Center chanted \"We Want Phil\" during the games. The Lakers talked with Jackson first, but he requested two days to consider the opening. He believed the Lakers would wait for his response, but the Lakers thought it was understood they would continue their search.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nThe next day, the team talked with Mike D'Antoni and signed him to a multi-year contract in a unanimous decision by the front office. They felt that D'Antoni's fast-paced style of play made him a \"great fit\" for the team, more suitable than Jackson's structured triangle offense. Buss' preference had always been for the Lakers to have a wide-open offense. D'Antoni was reunited with Nash, who was a league MVP twice in four seasons under D'Antoni while with the Phoenix Suns. Bryant was also familiar with D'Antoni; Bryant as a child knew him when D'Antoni was a star in Italy and Bryant's father was also playing there. Bryant grew close with D'Antoni during their time with the United States national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nD'Antoni's coaching debut with the Lakers was delayed as he recovered from knee replacement surgery. He had surgery weeks before on October 31, as he originally expected that he was taking a year off from coaching and would have months to recover. Bickerstaff continued to be the Lakers' interim coach; he finished with a 4\u20131 record, winning his last two as D'Antoni started leading team practices. Older brother Dan D'Antoni was named a new assistant coach and also assisted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nIn his first press conference, D'Antoni predicted that the Lakers, then 3\u20135 and ranked 20th in scoring with 96.5 points per game, should instead be scoring \"110\u2013115 points a game\". He wanted to revive Showtime. He reiterated general manager Mitch Kupchak's belief that the Lakers were built to win an NBA championship that season. D'Antoni was glad to be back with Nash, noting his unsuccessful stint with the New York Knicks without him. On November 20, he coached his first game\u2014nine days after he was hired\u2014in a 95\u201390 win against the Brooklyn Nets. The Lakers matched their worst start on the road (0\u20134) since the 1995\u201396 season, but snapped the streak with a 115\u201389 win over the Dallas Mavericks; it was also their first 100-point effort in the first four games under D'Antoni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nWith Nash still out, D'Antoni started 2\u20133 as a Laker, a minimal improvement over Brown's 1\u20134 start. The team had been struggling to get the big men Gasol and Howard involved in the new offense. Bryant was also adjusting, running more screen-rolls and fewer post ups than at any time in his career. Additionally, backup point guard Steve Blake had been out since an abdominal injury on November 11, and he would not return until late January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nOn November 30, the Lakers made 17 three-point field goals\u2014tying a team record for a regulation game\u2014in a 122\u2013103 win over the Denver Nuggets. Free agent acquisition Antawn Jamison scored 33 points, the first time a Laker had scored 30 points as a reserve since Shaquille O'Neal in 1998. Jamison also made five three-pointers, while Jodie Meeks scored 21 on a career-high seven three-pointers. Howard even added the second three-pointer of his career in addition to his 28 points and 20 rebounds. They lost 113\u2013103 to the Orlando Magic the following home game in Howard's first matchup against his former team. He had 21 points and 15 rebounds, but he was intentionally fouled and shot only 9\u2013for-21 on his free throws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nAfter being bothered by tendinitis in both knees since training camp, Gasol missed the next game. He was struggling after seven games under D'Antoni, averaging 10.1 points and 8.0 rebounds while shooting 38.8 percent, and he was benched in the fourth quarter in multiple games. The Lakers lost 116\u2013107 to the Knicks in D'Antoni's first game back to New York since he left the previous season. The Lakers allowed another big quarter as they trailed 41\u201327 in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, D'Antoni takes over\nBryant scored 31, but Los Angeles fell to 1\u201311 when he scored 30+ points, 1\u20135 without Gasol, and 4\u20139 overall under D'Antoni. Gasol returned after an eight-game absence, contributing 10 points, nine rebounds and five assists in a 101\u2013100 win over the lowly Charlotte Bobcats. The Lakers overcame an 18-point deficit for their third win in a row, only the second time in the season the streak had been achieved. Nash started against the Golden State Warriors after missing 24 games, and he had 12 points and nine assists in a 118\u2013115 overtime road victory. The team was 12\u201312 during his absence, and won three of their first four games after his return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nThe Lakers lost on New Year's Day, and their 15\u201316 record matched their worst start after 31 games since the 2002\u201303 season. According to Bryant, the team lacked energy \"because we're old as ...\" Prior to their second meeting with their crosstown rivals on January 4, the Clippers were 25\u20138 and fighting for the best record in the league, while the Lakers were nine games behind the Clippers and looking to secure a playoff spot in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nFor only the fourth time in their prior 127 meetings since they moved to Los Angeles, the Clippers had a better record than the Lakers entering their matchup when both teams had played 30 or more games. Bryant called the Clippers \"top contenders\" for a championship before the Lakers lost again to the Clippers. Kupchak told Lakers season-ticket holders the team needed Gasol to be more involved, and the Lakers needed to play better defense. He did not believe that the team, whose roster's average age was 28.5, was too old to win a championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nThe Lakers followed with a home loss to Denver, when Lakers fans revived the \"We Want Phil\" chants from two months earlier. It was their fourth loss in five games, dropping them to 15\u201318 and 11th place in the West, three games behind the Portland Trail Blazers for the eighth and final playoff spot. Nash estimated the Lakers would need a minimum of 45 wins to qualify for the playoffs, which would require the team go 30\u201319 (.612) the following 49 games after playing .455 ball in their first 33 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0012-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nAfter the Denver game, Howard had his right shoulder heavily wrapped in ice. He had played through an injury suffered the previous game against the Clippers, and had tied a career high with 26 rebounds against Denver. Gasol suffered a concussion in the game after receiving a blow to the face from Denver's JaVale McGee in the fourth quarter, and back-up big man Jordan Hill also injured his right hip in the game. Howard and Gasol were declared out indefinitely. Hill, who had brought hustle that was lacking in the team, required surgery that was expected to keep him out until summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nThe team had divergent viewpoints on how they would improve. Howard thought that team chemistry needed to improve. Bryant believed it was okay if the locker room was chippy. D'Antoni said that chemistry-building was overrated if the team played with maximum effort. In response to a New York Daily News report that Howard had to be restrained from going after him, Bryant posted a photo on Twitter of Howard and him jokingly squaring off as D'Antoni looks on with a shocked expression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nOn January 8, 2013, Nash became the fifth player in NBA history to reach 10,000 career assists; however, Los Angeles lost the game 125\u2013112 to the Houston Rockets for their fourth consecutive loss, tying their longest streak of the season. Due to the Lakers' injuries, rookie center Robert Sacre also made his first career start against the Rockets, finishing with 10 points, four blocked shots and three rebounds; Their losing streak grew after losses to the San Antonio Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder, dropping the Lakers to 15\u201321 for their worst start since the 1993\u201394 season. World Peace also suffered a right leg injury against the Thunder that would hamper him for two months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nCompared to the 2011\u201312 team that finished 41\u201325, the Lakers offense had improved in points per 100 possessions (108.3 vs. 106.0), but their defense underperformed. The team was lacking continuity with the projected starting lineup at the beginning of the season having played just 117 minutes together, primarily due to injuries. Howard returned the following game as the Lakers won their first game of 2013, stopping their losing streak at six with a 113-93 win over the lowly Cleveland Cavaliers (9\u201330).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nIn a move to improve the team's defense, D'Antoni began having Bryant guard the opponent's best perimeter player; Bryant was the primary defender on the Cavaliers' Kyrie Irving, who was held to 15 points. Bryant acknowledged he was a more focused defender when he had a challenging defensive assignment as opposed to when he played off the ball against weaker players. His defense disrupted opponents and freed Nash from unfavorable matchups. In addition to his leg injury, World Peace also suffered an injury to his right arm that made it difficult to bend. Things got so bad, D'Antoni moved him off the perimeter on defense and had him guard power forwards instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Early 2013 struggles\nGasol returned after missing five games, coming off the bench in his first game back before returning to the starting lineup. After a 95\u201383 road loss to the Chicago Bulls, the Lakers ninth loss in 11 games for an overall 5\u201314 road record, Los Angeles fell to 12th place in the West with a 17\u201324 record at the midpoint of the season. Calling it a permanent move, D'Antoni had benched Gasol in the game and started Earl Clark to form the faster and smaller lineup that the coach preferred. The team was already ranked No. 2 in pace. Under D'Antoni, the Lakers dropped to 12-19 while scoring an average of 103.3 points a game but surrendering 103.4. Offensively, they reached the 110-point threshold just eight times in the 31 games, going 5\u20133. However, D'Antoni stressed that the team's focus needed to be on its defense, not offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 904]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nThe Lakers struggled to run D'Antoni's fast-paced offense. Howard's back surgery was still affecting his conditioning, and he struggled with Nash to run the pick and roll, a play that D'Antoni expected would be a staple for the team. The team also lacked the shooters and speed that the offense required. Before playing the Memphis Grizzlies, the Lakers held a team meeting to clear the air; the Los Angeles Times reported that \"guys went at each other a little bit.\" The players told D'Antoni that they needed to slow down the pace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nThe coach likened the Lakers to an All-Star team in which \"everybody gets the ball and goes one on one and then they play no defense.\" He added that they \"haven't learned that there's a pecking order\" where stars need to know their roles. Howard, who was averaging 17.1 points, 12.3 rebounds and 2.5 blocks, said he needed to \"bring it\" and dominate in more ways than just scoring. Many times Howard had been upset that he was not getting the ball enough, and he felt that Bryant was shooting too much. Howard predicted the next game would be \"the start of a new season\"; D'Antoni had made a similar declaration a week earlier, when they won two games before losing three in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nIn their first game of the second half, the Lakers lost 106\u201393 to Memphis. Los Angeles was four games behind eighth-place Portland, but only three games ahead of last-place Phoenix and New Orleans. Only five Western teams had ever made the playoffs after a start of 17\u201325 or worse, the last being Denver in 2004\u201305 when they went 32\u20138 to finish 49\u201333. Their defensive rating, points per 100 possessions, was ranked only 20th in the league. The Lakers won their next three home games after they dropped D'Antoni's offense and played without any system. \"We play basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nThe system is move the ball, play hard defense, space the floor and who's open shoots. It's not a difficult thing\", said D'Antoni. The coach moved Nash off the ball and made him more of a spot-up shooter, while Bryant became the primary facilitator on offense. The defense was also more energized. Bryant had at least 10 assists in all three wins with a three-game total of 39 assists, the most in his career. He missed a triple-double in each game with nine rebounds twice and eight in the other. Prior to the role change, Bryant had been leading the league in scoring though much of the first 42 games. Howard and Bryant credited the meeting in Memphis with bringing the team together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nThe Lakers, who were 5\u201315 on the road, went on an important seven-game, 12-day road trip. They lost the first game of the trip to the Suns on January 30 after blowing 13-point lead in the fourth quarter. Los Angeles finished January winless in seven games on the road, the first time in franchise history they finished a calendar month 0\u20137 or worse. Howard left the Phoenix game early after re-aggravating his shoulder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nPlaying without Howard, Gasol returned to the starting lineup and the Lakers won the next two games, their first road wins in 2013 despite blowing double-digit leads in the four games since Phoenix. On February 5, they won 92\u201383 at Brooklyn\u2014their sixth win in seven games and third straight without Howard\u2014but lost Gasol for an estimated six-to-eight weeks after he tore the plantar fascia of his right foot towards the end of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0018-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nBryant urged Howard to return and play through the pain, saying that the center \"worries too much\" and was tentative to return because he \"doesn't want to let anyone down\". Howard mentioned that Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal needed three years to win a title together, but Bryant replied, \"We don't have three years. We've got this year.\" Howard responded that Bryant was \"not a doctor, I'm not a doctor. That's his opinion.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nHoward returned the next game after missing three games, but the Lakers lost 116\u201395 to the Boston Celtics. They finished their road trip 4\u20133 after a loss to the defending NBA champion Miami Heat. The Lakers were tied at the half and trailed the Heat by only five entering the final period, but committed eight turnovers in the final 10 minutes. In their next game at home, Bryant had eight turnovers and scored only four points\u2014his lowest since a two-point game in his second season 1998\u2014but had nine assists in a win over a weak Phoenix team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Another new offense\nIn their last game before the All-Star break, they were outscored by the Clippers 15\u20130 to start the game and lost 125\u2013101, clinching the season series for the Clippers for the first time in 20 years since 1992\u201393. The Lakers entered the break 25\u201329 after winning 8 of their last 12 games. They were represented at the All-Star Game by Bryant and Howard, who were both starters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nDuring the break, Howard committed to having a better second half. An avid candy lover, Howard adopted a healthier diet to get into better shape to anchor the Lakers' defense and run D'Antoni's preferred pick and rolls. On February 18, the day after the All-Star game, Buss died after being hospitalized for 18 months with cancer. In honor of their owner, the team wore commemorative patches with the initials \"JB\" on their jerseys for the remainder of the season. The Lakers entered their post-All-Star schedule with a 25\u201329 (.463) record, 3+1\u20442 games behind eighth-place Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nD'Antoni predicted that Lakers needed at least 45 wins to qualify for the playoffs, requiring them to finish 20\u20138 (.714). Of the Lakers remaining 28 games, half were against teams with winning records compared to only 44% for the Rockets. In the three previous full NBA seasons, the final playoff seed in the West averaged 48 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nThe Lakers were 3\u20130 in their first week back, including a win over the rival Celtics. Bryant was named the Western Conference player of the week after averaging 31.3 points, 7.7 rebounds and 6.0 assists. He scored 38 points while shooting at least 60% in consecutive games, the first time in his career; he also became the oldest player to accomplish the feat. Bryant said he was \"in attack mode since the [All-Star] break\", but was reacting to the defense to determine if he should score or be a playmaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nHoward was looking fresher since the break, yet still said he was \"not even close\" to physically being where he wanted to be. D'Antoni attributed his conditioning to his difficulty with running the pick and roll. On February 25, the Lakers lost 119\u2013108 at Denver, failing to reach .500 for the first time since New Year's Day. Last in the NBA in points allowed off fast breaks, they were outscored by the Nuggets 33\u20133 on fast breaks. The Lakers' three-point shooting and turnovers contributed to their season's fast break woes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0021-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nTheir mediocre three-point shooting resulted in an increase in long rebounds, and they were among the worst in the league in turnovers and last in points allowed per game off turnovers. The Lakers were 9\u20134 in February, ending the month with a 29\u201330 record after entering it 20-26. Bryant was named Western Conference player of the month after averaging 23.9 points with 6.6 assists and 6.7 rebounds a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nOn March 3, the Lakers won 99\u201398 against a quality opponent in the Atlanta Hawks, and they reached .500 for the first time since December 28. They blew a 16-point lead in the second half, but Bryant scored the Lakers' final six points, including the game-winner with nine seconds left in the game. There were four lead changes in the final minute. The Lakers improved to 13\u20135, the fourth best record in the NBA, since their team meeting in Memphis. They also gained 1+1\u20442 games on the final playoff seed during that span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nHowever, they dropped below .500 again after a 122\u2013105 loss at Oklahoma City. The Lakers fell to 10\u201320 on the road and 2\u201313 against the top five teams in the Western Conference. They won their next two games with 25- and 15-point comebacks over New Orleans and Toronto, respectively. Bryant scored at least 40 points and had at least 10 assists in both games, becoming the first Laker to accomplish the feat since Jerry West in 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0022-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nOn March 10, Los Angeles beat Chicago 90\u201381 and moved 1\u20442 game ahead of the Utah Jazz for the final playoff spot in the West. It was the first time they owned sole possession of a top-8 spot since December 1, and the first time they were two games above .500 all season. After the 3\u20130 week in which he averaged 33\u00a0points, 8.8\u00a0assists and 5.8\u00a0rebounds, Bryant was again named Western Conference Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0022-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Jerry Buss' death and Post All-Star success\nThe Lakers were 8\u20132 since the All-Star break, and Howard had 10 straight games with 12 or more rebounds while averaging 15.5\u00a0points, 14.8\u00a0rebounds, and 2.6\u00a0blocks. In Howard's first return to Orlando on March 12, he scored a season-high 39\u00a0points and had 16\u00a0rebounds in a 106\u201397 Lakers win. It was only the second time Los Angeles had won four straight all season. Booed throughout the game, Howard made 25-of-39 free throws, setting Lakers records for free throws made and attempted while tying his NBA record for attempts. He made 16-of-20 free throws when he was fouled intentionally by the Magic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, More injuries\nThe Lakers lost their next game at Atlanta, 96\u201392, as Bryant severely sprained his left ankle. He was declared out indefinitely after landing on the Hawks' Dahntay Jones' foot. Bryant suggested that Jones intentionally put his foot under him, which Jones denied. Bryant said it was his worst sprain since he landed on Jalen Rose's foot in Game 2 of the 2000 NBA Finals, which Rose later admitted was on purpose. The Lakers failed for the 13th time to win both games played on back-to-back nights, and they fell to 12\u201321 on the road and 2\u201316 against teams above .500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, More injuries\nBryant gutted out 12 minutes of play in the next game against the Indiana Pacers, which the Lakers won 99\u201393; Bryant was scoreless for only the 15th time in his 17-year NBA career. However, he sat out the next two games due to his ankle sprain. The Lakers went 1\u20131, failing to win back-to-back games again after losing the second night at Phoenix. The Suns were tied with New Orleans for the West's worst record, but the Lakers scored a season low in the 99\u201376 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, More injuries\nBryant returned against the Washington Wizards along with Gasol, who played for the first time in over six weeks, but the Lakers lost 103\u2013100 at home after leading by 18. On March 25, the Lakers lost to the Warriors, virtually eliminating any chance of the Lakers advancing to the 6th or 7th playoffs seeds past Golden State or Houston, which seemed feasible weeks earlier. The Lakers also lost World Peace in the game after he tore the lateral meniscus in his left knee. He underwent surgery that was originally estimated to sideline him for six weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, More injuries\nThe Lakers' three-game losing streak was partially attributed to D'Antoni reintegrating Gasol into the starting lineup over Clark, making the team taller but slower. After winning the next game against Minnesota, the Lakers failed to win on consecutive nights for the 15th time, losing 113\u2013103 to the Milwaukee Bucks. Nash sat out the end of the game due to hip and hamstring issues. Bothered by a bone spur in his left foot, Bryant also left the game. The Lakers fell behind Utah in the standings. Both Bryant and Nash played in the next game, a 103\u201398 win over the Sacramento Kings, but Nash left the game after less than two minutes with a strained hamstring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, More injuries\nNash remained out, but the Lakers won their next two games to pull ahead of Utah by a half game. Bryant had a triple-double with 23 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists against Dallas, followed by 24 points and nine assists in a win over Memphis. Playing most of the game at the elbow on offense, Gasol added 19 points, nine rebounds, and three assists. \"We're using him the right way\", Bryant said. On April 7, the Lakers lost 109\u201395 to the Clippers, who clinched their first Pacific Division title in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0025-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, More injuries\nThe Lakers had won 23 of the previous 42 division titles. The loss also completed a season sweep by the Clippers, 4\u20130. The franchise had not swept the Lakers since 1974\u201375, when they were the Buffalo Braves. The defeat coupled with a Jazz win dropped the Lakers (40\u201337) a half game behind Utah (41\u201337), who would win in the event of a tie after winning the season series 2\u20131. The Jazz would finish ahead of the Lakers if they won the remaining four games on their schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Fight for playoffs\nOn April 9, Utah lost to Oklahoma City, while Los Angeles defeated New Orleans 104\u201396 to regain a half-game lead for eighth place. Bryant scored 23 of his 30 points in the fourth quarter, and Gasol had 22 points, 11 rebounds, four assists and three blocks. World Peace played 15 minutes in the game, returning 12 days after his surgery though initial estimates were six weeks. In his absence, D'Antoni was using a reduced seven-man rotation with Bryant playing close to all 48 minutes each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Fight for playoffs\nThe next night, the Lakers played in Portland, where they had lost 12 of their previous 14, and 17 of 21 since 2002. Portland appeared vulnerable without three starters and starting four rookies, but they led 95\u201390 in the fourth quarter. The Lakers came back to win, 113\u2013106, as Bryant scored 47 points while playing all 48 minutes. It was the Lakers' first sweep in back-to-back games after 16 attempts during the season. Gasol also had 23 points, seven rebounds and nine assists, while Howard contributed 20 points and 10 rebounds. Bryant, Gasol, and Howard combined for 90 points, their highest of the season. The Lakers moved a full game ahead of the Jazz with three games remaining, all at home, against playoff-bound Golden State, San Antonio and Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Fight for playoffs\nOn April 12, the Lakers beat the Warriors 118\u2013116, but Bryant left with a torn Achilles tendon that ended his season and was expected to sideline him for six to nine months. Bryant had injured both of his knees after collisions with the Warriors' Festus Ezeli in the third quarter, but he played every minute before leaving with 3:06 left in the game. He finished with 34 points, and Gasol had 26 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists for his sixth career triple-double. Howard had 28 points, making 14 of 22 free throws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Fight for playoffs\nBryant's injury came while he was playing seven consecutive quarters and at least 40 minutes for seven consecutive games. He was averaging his most minutes (38.6) in six years, and only Portland rookie Damian Lillard was averaging more minutes. Kupchak had spoken to Bryant about his extensive playing time 10 days earlier, but Bryant insisted the minutes needed to continue given the Lakers' playoff push. Frustrated by his injury, Bryant expressed a range of emotions while ranting on Facebook in the middle of the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Fight for playoffs\nIn their first game without Bryant, the Lakers won 91\u201388 against the Spurs. Howard had 26 points and 17 rebounds and Blake added 23 points. The Lakers went 4\u20130 that week, and Bryant won Player of the Week honors for the third time despite missing the San Antonio game. He led the league in scoring that week (37.0), ranked second in the Western Conference in steals (2.67 per game), and averaged 6.3 rebounds and 5.0 assists. On the last day of the season, the Lakers still risked missing the playoffs, but they qualified after a loss by the Jazz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0028-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Fight for playoffs\nThe Lakers then defeated the Rockets 99\u201395 in overtime, and moved past them into the seventh seed in the West. Gasol had another triple double with 17 points, 20 rebounds, and 11 assists. Blake added 24 points, while Howard had 16 points and 18 rebounds. Nash missed his eighth straight game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, Fight for playoffs\nD'Antoni was named Western Conference Coach of the Month after the Lakers went 7\u20131 in April. They finished the season 28\u201312 after dropping to 17\u201325 in January the day of their team meeting in Memphis. Their defense also improved to 13th during that span, finishing the season 18th at 103.6 points per 100 possessions. The Lakers expected starting five of Bryant, Nash, Howard, Gasol and World Peace started together just seven times all season and without registering a win. \"The Lakers didn't help things by making the coaching change and putting (D'Antoni) in that situation, which he was glad to take. But I think it was a little bit tougher than he thought it would be\", Kupchak said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, First-round playoff exit\nThe Lakers faced San Antonio in the first round of the playoffs. In Game 1, Howard had 20 points and 15 rebounds, and Gasol added 16 points and 16 rebounds, but the Lakers did not take full advantage of their inside game and lost 91\u201379. Nash returned after missing nine games and scored 16 points. Meeks sprained his ankle in the game and missed Game 2. The Lakers shot better, but so did the Spurs as Los Angeles lost 102\u201391. Jordan Hill returned and played for the first time since his injury in January. However, Blake left the game after injuring his right hamstring and was declared out indefinitely. Nash also re-injured his hamstring but continued to play in the game;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, First-round playoff exit\nWith Nash and Blake out in Game 3, the Lakers instead started second-year guards Darius Morris and Andrew Goudelock. In his first playoff start, Goudelock scored a career-high 20 points, but the Lakers lost 120\u201389 at Staples for their worst home playoff loss in franchise history. Gasol added his third triple-double in six games. Due to the Lakers' other injuries, World Peace played in spite of running with discomfort after having fluid drained from a cyst behind his surgically repaired left knee. He was ruled out of Game 4 along with Nash, Blake, and Meeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Season summary, First-round playoff exit\nThey were swept by the Spurs after losing Game 4, 103\u201382. Howard was ejected from the game with over nine minutes left in the third quarter after receiving his second technical foul. Shortly after, the quiet home crowd roared as Bryant hobbled to the bench, making his first appearance on the court since tearing his Achilles. Gasol received a standing ovation when he left the game with 3:08 remaining. The Lakers exited in the opening round of the playoffs for the first time since 2007, and suffered their first opening-round sweep since 1967.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Awards, records and milestones, Awards, All-NBA\nBryant was named All-NBA First Team for the 11th time in his career, his 15th overall selection. Howard was named to the Third Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nMemphis' own 2013 second-round pick to the L.A. Lakers (top 55 protected in the 2013 Draft). If Memphis' own 2013 second-round pick is in the top 55 picks, then Memphis' obligations to the L.A. Lakers shall be extinguished. [ L.A. Lakers \u2013 Memphis, February 18, 2009]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nThe L.A. Lakers will send the least favorable of their own 1st round pick (top-14 protected), Cleveland's own 2013 1st round pick, Sacramento's own 1st round pick (top-13 protected) and Miami's 2013 1st round pick to Phoenix. If the L.A. Lakers' 1st round pick is within the top-14 selections, Phoenix will automatically receive the L.A. Lakers' 1st round pick. [ L.A. Lakers-Phoenix, 7/11/2012]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nCleveland has the right to swap the least favorable of their own 2013 1st round pick, Miami's own 2013 1st round pick (top-10 protected) and Sacramento's own 2013 1st round pick (top-13 protected) with the L.A. Lakers own 2013 first round pick (top-14 protected). If the L.A. Lakers own 2013 first round pick is #1-#14, then the L.A. Lakers' obligation to Cleveland shall be extinguished. [ Cleveland-L.A. Lakers, 3/15/2012]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nDallas has the right to swap their own 2013 2nd round pick with the L.A. Lakers' own 2013 2nd round pick. [ Dallas-L.A. Lakers, 12/11/2011]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nThe L.A. Lakers' own 2014 2nd round pick to Minnesota via Phoenix. [ L.A. Lakers-Phoenix, 7/11/2012 and then Minnesota-New Orleans-Phoenix, 7/27/2012]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nThe L.A. Lakers own 2015 1st round pick to Phoenix. [ L.A. Lakers-Phoenix, 7/11/2012]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nThe L.A. Lakers' own 2015 2nd round draft pick to Orlando (Top-40 Protected). If The L.A. Lakers' own 2015 2nd round pick is within the top-40 selections, then The L.A. Lakers' obligation to Orlando shall be extinguished. [ Denver \u2013 L.A. Lakers \u2013 Orlando \u2013 Philadelphia, 8/10/2012]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230513-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Los Angeles Lakers season, Transactions, Trades, Future draft picks\nThe L.A. Lakers' own 2017 1st round draft pick to Orlando (Top-5 Protected). If The L.A. Lakers' own 2017 1st round pick is within the top-5 selections, then the L.A. Lakers will convey their own second round picks in 2017 and 2018 to Orlando. [ L.A. Lakers \u2013 Orlando, 8/10/2012]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230514-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball team represented Louisiana Tech University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by second year head coach Michael White, played their home games at the Thomas Assembly Center and were members of the Western Athletic Conference. This was their last season as a member of the WAC as they joined Conference USA in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230515-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns men's basketball team represented the University of Louisiana at Lafayette during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ragin' Cajuns, led by third year head coach Bob Marlin, played their home games at the Cajundome and were members of the West Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 13\u201320, 8\u201312 in Sun Belt play to finish in third place in the West Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Tournament to Middle Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230516-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball team represented the University of Louisiana at Lafayette during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Ragin' Cajuns were led by first-year head coach Gary Broadhead; they played their double-header home games at the Cajundome with other games at the Earl K. Long Gymnasium, which is located on campus. They were members in the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 3\u201317 in Sun Belt play to finish fifth place in the West Division. They were eliminated in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Women's Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230516-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns women's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Ragin' Cajuns finished the 2011\u201312 season 7\u201323, 1\u201315 in Sun Belt play to finish sixth in the West Division. They made it to the 2012 Sun Belt Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, losing in the first round game by a score of 53-71 to the Florida International Panthers. They were not invited to any other postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 82], "content_span": [83, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230517-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks men's basketball team represented the University of Louisiana at Monroe during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Warhawks, led by third year head coach Keith Richard, played their home games at Fant\u2013Ewing Coliseum and were members of the West Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 4\u201323, 3\u201317 in Sun Belt play to finish in last place in the West Division. The lost in the first round of the Sun Belt Tournament to WKU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team represented the University of Louisville during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Louisville's 99th season of intercollegiate competition. The Cardinals competed in the Big East Conference and were coached by Rick Pitino in his 12th season as head coach at Louisville. The team played its home games on Denny Crum Court at the KFC Yum! Center. The Cardinals finished the season 35\u20135, 14\u20134 in Big East play to earn a share of the Big East regular season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team\nThey won the Big East Tournament for the third time in school history and received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Cardinals earned a trip to the school's fourth Final Four and defeated Michigan to win the NCAA Championship; however, that title was stripped by the NCAA in 2018. The season marked the final year for the Big East under its original structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Pre-season\nThe Cardinals were the consensus No. 2 team in the preseason polls and were picked to win Big East conference by the media and the coaches. They returned five of nine players from the 2012 Final Four team led by senior and Big East Pre-Season Player of the Year Peyton Siva. They lost senior Mike Marra to a knee injury on the first day of practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Regular season, Out of conference\nLouisville opened with two exhibition victories and 3 wins at home. They played in the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament where they defeated #13 Missouri by 23 before losing to #5 Duke in the championship game. Gorgui Dieng suffered a broken wrist in the Missouri game and did not play against Duke. Louisville won the rest of its out of conference slate including victories at Memphis in the Hall of Fame Shootout and victories against in state rivals Western Kentucky and Kentucky. They entered Big East play with a 12\u20131 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 85], "content_span": [86, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Regular season, Big East\nThe Cardinals opened Big East play with four victories, and were voted #1 in both AP and Coaches Polls in week 10. They then dropped three straight, a 2-point home loss to #6 Syracuse and back to back road losses at Villanova and Georgetown. The Cardinals won 10 of their next 11 with the one loss at Notre Dame in a 5 OT game that is the longest regular season game in Big East history. They finished the regular season with a 26\u20135 (14\u20134) record and claimed a three-way tie with Georgetown and Marquette as Big East Regular Season Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Regular season, Big East\nJunior guard Russ Smith was named a Sporting News Third Team All-American. Senior co-captain Peyton Siva was named 2013 American Eagle Outfitters BIG EAST Men's Basketball Scholar-Athlete of the Year. Junior Gorgui Dieng was named 2013 Big East Defensive Player of the Year. Smith and Dieng were named to the 2013 All-Big East First team. Siva was named to the All-Big East Third Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Postseason, Big East Tournament\nThe Cardinals were the number 2 seed in the tournament and faced Villanova in the quarter finals, defeating them, 74\u201355. They next defeated number 24 Notre Dame, 69\u201357, setting up the final Big East Tournament Championship game against number 19 Syracuse. Louisville was down by 16 in the second half, but rallied to claim their third Big East Tournament Championship with a 78\u201361 victory. The Cardinals repeated as tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 83], "content_span": [84, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nLouisville received the number 1 overall seed in the Midwest Region of the NCAA Tournament. They opened the tournament with a 79\u201348 win over North Carolina A&T, setting the NCAA tournament single-game record for steals with 20. They closed out the opening weekend by defeating Colorado State, 82\u201356. They defeated Oregon in the regional semi-final, 77\u201369, to set up a regional final with Duke, whom they had lost to in the season-opening tournament. Before halftime of the game Louisville guard Kevin Ware suffered a compound fracture. The Cardinals rallied together to defeat Duke by 22 (the largest tournament defeat for coach Mike Krzyzewski since the 1990 National Title Game), 85\u201363.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nThe Cardinals advanced to their second consecutive Final Four (their 10th) to face Wichita State. The Shockers led most of the game, and were up by as many as 12 with 13 minutes to play. A 20-point performance by Luke Hancock, and two timely three-point shots by walk-on Tim Henderson, kept the Cardinals in the game, which they won, 72\u201368, to advance to face Michigan in the National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Postseason, NCAA Tournament\nIn its third NCAA Championship game Louisville went down 12 points. The Cardinals rallied behind a 22-point effort by Final Four MOP Luke Hancock, 18 points and 5 assists from senior captain Peyton Siva, and 15 points and 12 rebounds from sophomore Chane Behanan to win, 82\u201376, giving Louisville basketball its third NCAA Championship and giving coach Rick Pitino his first title at Louisville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Controversies and scandals\nA former Louisville player, Andre McGee, arranged and paid for strippers and prostitutes to perform striptease dances and sexual acts for 17 prospective and former basketball players from 2010 to 2014. On October 3, 2015, the book publisher IBJ Custom Publishing released a book entitled Breaking Cardinal Rules. Based on revelations provided by the local self-described escort, Katina Powell, the book detailed striptease dances and acts of prostitution that Powell and McGee arranged and organized in Minardi Hall over approximately a four-year period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230518-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team, Controversies and scandals\nDuring the investigation of the allegations, the university self-imposed a ban on the 2016 NCAA Tournament. In June 2017, the NCAA announced that the university would lose four basketball scholarships over the course of four seasons, but there would be no further postseason ban. The NCAA had initially suspended head coach Rick Pitino for five ACC games during the 2017\u201318 season, but the Louisville athletic association board agreed unanimously to fire Pitino before the season on October 16, 2017. The NCAA also ordered the university to vacate all wins from 2011 to 2014 (including the 2013 National Championship) that include ineligible players, a decision to which the university has since filed an appeal. On February 20, 2018, the NCAA upheld the decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230519-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Greyhounds men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Loyola Greyhounds men's basketball team represented Loyola University Maryland during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Greyhounds, led by ninth year head coach Jimmy Patsos, played their home games at Reitz Arena and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 23\u201312, 12\u20136 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament to Manhattan. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Boston University and Kent State to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost ton East Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230519-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Greyhounds men's basketball team\nThis was their last year as members of the MAAC as they joined the Patriot League in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230520-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball team represented Loyola Marymount University during the 2012\u201313. This was head coach Max Good's fifth season at Loyola Marymount. The Lions competed in the West Coast Conference and played their home games at Gersten Pavilion. They finished the season 11\u201323, 1\u201315 in WCC play to finish in last place. Despite only winning only one conference game during the regular season, they won three games during the WCC Tournament to advance to the semifinals where they lost to #1 Gonzaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230520-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball team, Before the season, Recruits\nDickinson will redshirt the 2012-13 season and begin play in the 2013-14 season as is required for a D1 Transfer by the NCAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 81], "content_span": [82, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230521-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Marymount Lions women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Loyola Marymount Lions women's basketball team represented the Loyola Marymount in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The Lions, members of the West Coast Conference, were led by head coach Charity Elliott, in her 1st season at the school. The Lions played their home games at the Gersten Pavilion on the university campus in Los Angeles, California, and finished the season 13\u201318, 6\u201310 in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230521-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Marymount Lions women's basketball team, Before the Season\nThe Lions were picked to finish seventh in the WCC Pre-Season poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230522-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Meralco Sparks F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Loyola's 4th season in the Philippines premier league, the UFL Division 1. The club do well last 2012 UFL Cup where they get the third place after defeating Green Archers United, 4\u20131. They reach the quarterfinals of 2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship after they lost to Kaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230522-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Meralco Sparks F.C. season\nAt the start of 2013 UFL season, Vincent Santos took over the coaching duties from Korean Kim Chul-so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230522-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Meralco Sparks F.C. season\nThe club finished the 2013 season of the UFL Division 1 third behind Global FC and the champions, Stallion Sta. Lucia. They only reach the quarterfinal round of 2013 Singapore Cup when they bowed out to Tanjong Pagar United in a 5\u20134 aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230522-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Meralco Sparks F.C. season, 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230523-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team represented Loyola University Chicago during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ramblers, led by second year head coach Porter Moser, played their home games at the Joseph J. Gentile Arena and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 15\u201316, 5\u201311 in Horizon League play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the first round of the Horizon League Tournament to Youngstown State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230523-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Loyola Ramblers men's basketball team\nThis was the Ramblers final season as a member of the Horizon League. In July, 2013 they will become a member of the Missouri Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230524-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luge World Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Luge World Cup was a multi race series over a season for luge. The season started on 24 November 2012 in Igls, Austria and ended on 24 February 2013 in Sochi, Russia. The World Cup was organised by the FIL and sponsored by Viessmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 127th season in the history of Luton Town Football Club. The club competed in the Conference Premier for the fourth consecutive year, finishing in their lowest ever position of seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season\nManager Paul Buckle left the club on 19 February 2013 after a winless run of games left the club 14 points off the top of the table. Dagenham & Redbridge manager John Still was appointed in charge of Luton shortly afterwards, though could secure only a seventh-place finish in the league \u2013 worse than the previous season's lowest ever finish of fifth in the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season\nThe club did, however, make history during the season by becoming the first non-League team to defeat a Premier League club in the FA Cup, beating Norwich City 1\u20130 at Carrow Road. The club eventually reached the Fifth Round of the competition, the furthest they had progressed since the 1993\u201394 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season\nThis article covers the period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nAfter a 30-point deduction and consequent relegation in 2008\u201309 ended an 89-year stay in The Football League, Luton Town have attempted three unsuccessful campaigns for promotion out of non-League football, losing in the play-offs each time, most recently in a 2\u20131 defeat by York City at Wembley Stadium in May 2012. During that season, a seven-game winless run towards the end of the campaign left Luton outside the play-off places, resulting in manager Gary Brabin being replaced by Paul Buckle on a two-year contract. Buckle's tenure saw the club win five of their next eight games, qualify for the play-offs and beat Wrexham 3\u20132 on aggregate in the semi-final, before the loss to York in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nStating his intention to reduce the size of the squad and \"bring players into the club that are not failures\", Buckle released a number of players in the close-season, including Ed Asafu-Adjaye, Charlie Henry, Christian Tavernier, Danny Crow, Dan Gleeson, Shane Blackett, and Amari Morgan-Smith, while Curtis Osano rejected a new contract to sign for League Two side AFC Wimbledon. Robbie Willmott and Godfrey Poku also rejected contracts, with Poku signing a deal to join Mansfield Town. Captain George Pilkington, too, elected to join Mansfield. Most notable was the departure of Keith Keane to League One side Preston North End after nine seasons with Luton in which he had made almost 300 appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nLuton signed various out-of-contract players themselves, with former Stevenage captain Ronnie Henry, Gillingham players Danny Spiller and Garry Richards (Richards' transfer becoming permanent on 1 July), and Gateshead striker Jon Shaw, who had scored 35 goals the previous season, all joining the club for free. The club also bought Wycombe Wanderers forward Scott Rendell for an undisclosed fee and made striker Andre Gray's loan from Hinckley United permanent, as he joined the club on a two-year contract for a fee of \u00a330,000. Meanwhile, Jake Howells, JJ O'Donnell, Alex Lacey and Lewis Kidd signed contract extensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nThe transfers arranged for the beginning of the month became official, with Keith Keane, George Pilkington, Godfrey Poku and Robbie Willmott all leaving the club, and defender Garry Richards joining. On 2 July, Luton signed former Torquay United defender Lathaniel Rowe-Turner on a free transfer. A day later, former Luton goalkeeper Carl Emberson re-joined the club as first team development coach, linking back up with Paul Buckle, who he had been a coach with at Bristol Rovers. Midfielder Alex Lawless and youth team graduates Alasan Ann and Newman Carney signed one-year contract extensions on 4 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nThis was followed by striker Dan Walker, who had previously rejected two contracts and been placed on the transfer list, signing a one-year deal himself on 5 July. Midfielder John Paul Kissock joined Macclesfield Town on loan for six months on 9 July. Iraqi midfielder Yaser Kasim joined Luton from Championship side Brighton & Hove Albion on a six-month loan on 12 July. The club's first friendly game was against local side Hitchin Town on 16 July, ending in a 1\u20130 victory to Luton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nThree trialists played during the match; former Luton goalkeeper Dean Brill, ex-Southend United striker Harry Crawford, and 18-year-old former Leicester City youth midfielder Matt Robinson, who had been training with the club since the end of the 2011\u201312 season. Robinson impressed enough to be offered a two-year contract, which he signed on 18 July. Forward Aaron O'Connor left the club to join Newport County on a free transfer on 25 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0007-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nAfter further pre-season victories over lower league opposition, Luton drew 0\u20130 at home to League Two club Wycombe Wanderers before winning 2\u20130 against a strong Ipswich Town side of the Championship on 28 July. On the final day of July, Luton signed Brill on a two-year contract after he featured in goal for three friendlies. Brill had started his career at Luton, playing for the Hatters 97 times between 2003 and 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nOn 1 August, Andre Boucaud joined League One side Notts County on loan until January 2013. Manager Paul Buckle had previously stated that \"[Boucaud]'s not in our plans.\" Goalkeeper Lewis Kidd was loaned to Spartan South Midlands Football League side Dunstable Town on 4 August. Ronnie Henry was announced as Luton's captain for the season on 6 August. 18-year-old striker Jake Woolley, who had made his debut as a youth player in the previous season, signed a two-year professional contract on 10 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nLuton started their season once again with high expectations and as the bookmakers' favourite for promotion, but this impression was dealt a reality check within the first 35 minutes of their opening game against Gateshead on 11 August as they conceded two first-half goals, including one from former Luton striker Liam Hatch. Substitute Jon Shaw scored on his debut to halve the deficit, coincidentally against his former club, and a goal from Stuart Fleetwood meant Luton drew 2\u20132. A 2\u20130 away victory over Kidderminster Harriers came three days later, Fleetwood scoring both goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nAlasan Ann joined Southern Football League Premier side Kettering Town on a one-month loan on 16 August. On 17 August, Luton played against Hyde, coming from a goal down scored by former-Hatter Matthew Blinkhorn to win 2\u20131 courtesy of a first goal from midfielder JJ O'Donnell and Fleetwood's fourth of the season. Luton lost 1\u20130 at home to AFC Telford United on 25 August, Paul Buckle's first league defeat as manager in a game that saw Ronnie Henry and Telford defender Dan Preston shown red cards, which was swiftly followed two days later with a 3\u20131 win over Ebbsfleet United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0008-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nStuart Fleetwood scored his fifth and sixth goals of the season, with Scott Rendell getting his first goal for the club. Following on from the red cards in the game with Telford, both clubs were charged by the Football Association with failing to control their players. In addition, striker Jon Shaw, who began the incident but was not seen by the referee, was charged by the FA with violent conduct and banned for three matches. With defenders Ronnie Henry and Alex Lacey suspended and injured respectively, Luton signed Gillingham centre-back Connor Essam on a one-month loan on the day of the transfer deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nLuton began September strongly with a 4\u20131 home victory against Macclesfield Town, the goals coming from Jake Howells, Andre Gray, Scott Rendell and Stuart Fleetwood. A 3\u20132 win over local rivals Cambridge United followed three days later, Gray scoring again and defenders J\u00e1nos Kov\u00e1cs and Dean Beckwith also on the scoresheet with goals from set pieces. Injuries to strikers Fleetwood and Rendell, plus Jon Shaw's suspension, led to Northampton Town forward Jake Robinson signing on a one-month loan on 7 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nHe played in Luton's first away defeat of the season the next day, a heavy 3\u20130 loss to Alfreton Town which caused Paul Buckle to apologise for the performance to the Luton fans. Youth team graduate Newman Carney's contract was terminated by the club on 12 September, with the defender having failed to consistently appear for training. Luton drew 0\u20130 at home to Wrexham on 15 September, leaving them two points off the top of the table. This gap increased to five points six days later as Luton were heavily beaten 4\u20131 by Grimsby Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nCentral defenders Kov\u00e1cs and Beckwith were both criticised in the defeat, the latter scoring an own goal and the former dropped from the first-team for Luton's next game against Tamworth on 25 September. Luton won the game 2\u20131 with goals from substitutes Yaser Kasim and Fleetwood. With the team still conceding goals from set-pieces, Buckle signed Guiseley and England C captain and centre-back Simon Ainge on a month's loan on 27 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0009-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nOn the same day, left-back Greg Taylor and midfielder Adam Watkins, neither of whom had been playing in the first-team, were sent on one-month loans to Tamworth and Kidderminster Harriers respectively. Ainge partnered fellow loanee Connor Essam in central defence two days later as Luton beat Southport 3\u20131, with Kov\u00e1cs and Beckwith not even in the squad of 16 players. Fleetwood's ninth strike of the season and two goals from Rendell secured three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nConnor Essam's loan from Gillingham was extended for a further month on 3 October. Luton beat Lincoln City 2\u20131 on 6 October with the Hatters' goals coming from Jon Shaw, his first since the opening day, and an own goal from Lincoln goalkeeper Paul Farman. Forward Jake Robinson and defender Simon Ainge both signed extensions to their loans shortly afterwards; Robinson for one month and Ainge for two. Additionally, Ainge's parent club Guiseley reached an agreement to sell him to Luton when the transfer window in January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nLuton lost 3\u20132 at home to Braintree Town on 9 October, with Stuart Fleetwood sent off for two bookable offences early in the first-half, both controversial, leaving Luton playing the majority of the game with ten men. Four days later, Luton defeated Nuneaton Town with both goals scored in the last five minutes by midfielder Alex Lawless. On 19 October, Luton signed Macclesfield Town's Guinea-Bissau international midfielder Arnaud Mendy on loan until January, at which point the transfer would become permanent. In exchange, Luton midfielder John Paul Kissock would join Macclesfield permanently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nLuton beat local rivals Cambridge United 2\u20130 in the FA Cup to qualify for the First Round with goals from strikers Andre Gray and Shaw. Luton came from behind on 27 October to beat Forest Green Rovers 2\u20131, with Fleetwood equalising for his tenth goal of the season and Scott Rendell netting a last-minute penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nOn 3 November Luton scored a late equaliser in a 1\u20131 FA Cup First Round draw against Nuneaton Town to earn a replay at Liberty Way. Two days later, Luton signed York City midfielder Jonathan Smith on a two-month loan. Luton lost 1\u20130 to Hereford United on 7 November and slipped to third in the league, four points behind leaders Newport County. The club then lost three days later at home to newly promoted Dartford, which saw them fall out of the play-off places and down to sixth in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nScott Rendell scored twice as Luton defeated Nuneaton 2\u20130 in their FA Cup replay on 13 November. They were drawn to play Dorchester Town in the Second Round, who were coincidentally also paired together in the FA Trophy draw. The teams drew 2\u20132 in their Trophy tie, meaning a replay was required in early December. In the league, Luton drew 2\u20132 away to Mansfield Town, with striker Andre Gray scoring both goals for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nLuton defeated Dorchester Town on 1 December in the FA Cup Second Round, and were drawn to play Championship side Wolverhampton Wanderers at Kenilworth Road in the Third Round. The club then played Dorchester again in their FA Trophy replay three days later, winning 3\u20131. The club defeated Alfreton Town 3\u20130 on 8 December to win for the first time in four attempts in the league, but were then comprehensively beaten 5\u20132 by Newport County at Rodney Parade just a few days later. Jonathan Smith was recalled by his parent club York City on 11 December, almost one month before his loan was due to end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nLuton progressed to the Third round of the FA Trophy by defeating Matlock Town 2\u20131 on 15 December. Winger Scott Neilson was signed on a six-month contract from Crawley Town on 24 December, with the transfer going through officially on 1 January 2013. A series of postponements due to inclement weather meant Luton did not play again until 26 December, where they defeated Woking 3\u20131. Despite Jonathan Smith being recalled earlier in the month, Luton signed him from York on an 18-month contract on 29 December for a fee of \u00a350,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nOn New Year's Day, Luton experienced their eighth league loss of the season, being beaten 3\u20131 by Woking in a reverse of the scoreline on Boxing Day. On 5 January, Luton beat Championship side Wolverhampton Wanderers, a side 59 positions higher than them in the league system, 1\u20130. The winning goal came 45 seconds after half-time, scored by midfielder Alex Lawless to put the club into the FA Cup Fourth Round for the first time since the 2006\u201307 season. Lawless later won the FA Cup player of the round award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nThe club beat bottom-of-the-table club Barrow 6\u20131 on 8 January, with Jon Shaw scoring a hat-trick. Four days later, Luton progressed to the quarter-finals of the FA Trophy by scoring two late goals against Skelmersdale United. Luton dropped out of the play-off places with a 0\u20130 draw away to AFC Telford United on 15 January, albeit with games in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nIn terms of transfers, Luton sold Andre Boucaud to Notts County and John Paul Kissock to Macclesfield Town for undisclosed fees on 10 January, while the loans of Simon Ainge and Arnaud Mendy were made permanent. Unfavoured defender Dean Beckwith was released from his contract in early January to join Eastleigh in the Conference South. Alex Lacey also joined Eastleigh, but on a one-month loan, while striker Jake Woolley signed on loan for Southern Football League Premier Division side Hitchin Town. Striker Dan Walker joined Braintree Town on a one-month loan on 17 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nLuton beat Premier League side Norwich City 1\u20130 away at Carrow Road on 26 January in the FA Cup Fourth Round, Scott Rendell's late goal ensuring that the club became the first non-League team in 24 years to defeat a top division side in the competition. This also marked the first time since the 1993\u201394 season that the club had progressed past the Fourth Round of the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nThe club signed winger Dave Martin on 29 January following his release from Southend United. Martin signed a contract until June 2014. Later the same day, Luton were knocked out of the FA Trophy by Grimsby Town in a 3\u20130 defeat. Following a long-term injury, winger James Dance joined Nuneaton Town on a one-month loan on 30 January. The next day, Luton signed Fleetwood Town central defender and captain Steve McNulty on an 18-month contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nThe club lost 1\u20130 away to Barrow on 2 February, and also had Lathaniel Rowe-Turner sent off for violent conduct late on. Luton signed experienced defender Wayne Thomas on a free transfer on 4 February. Midfielder Adam Watkins joined Eastleigh on loan until the end of the season on 11 February. The club were left further adrift from promotion following a home draw with Forest Green Rovers and an away defeat by Dartford in early February. The club's FA Cup run came to an end on 16 February at the Fifth Round after losing 3\u20130 to Millwall at Kenilworth Road in front of the largest crowd of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nManager Paul Buckle left Luton by mutual consent on 19 February two hours before the game against Macclesfield Town. The club cited \"genuine personal reasons\" for the split and expressed that they wanted Buckle to remain at the club for the next season to ensure continuity after successive years of changing managers. Assistant manager Alan Neilson was placed in temporary charge of the team, who drew 1\u20131 with a Macclesfield team that played 70 minutes without a recognised goalkeeper. Luton remained winless in six league games after losing 3\u20132 at home to Mansfield four days later, Lindon Meikle scoring the winner in the last minute following a mix-up between defenders Steve McNulty and Rowe-Turner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nJohn Still left his long-standing managerial position at League Two club Dagenham & Redbridge to become the new Luton manager on 26 February. Alan Neilson again took charge of Luton's game that evening against Braintree Town, which they lost 2\u20130 to fall to tenth position in the table and 14 points off of the play-offs. Neilson apologised for the team's poor performance, stating \"we're all in a real bad place, the players [and] myself\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nJohn Still made his first signing on 1 March, loaning in-form striker Alex Wall from Conference South side Maidenhead United following injuries to regular strikers Jon Shaw and Scott Rendell, and illness to Andre Gray. Still's first game as Luton manager on 2 March saw the club win for the first time in eight games, beating Stockport County 1\u20130 with Jake Howells scoring the only goal of the match. This also marked the club's first away victory in the league for over four months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nThe club signed 19-year-old Millwall defender Jake Goodman on loan until the end of the season on 4 March. It was also announced that Terry Harris, John Still's deputy at Dagenham, was the club's new assistant manager. Goodman started in Luton's 0\u20130 away draw with Nuneaton Town on 5 March. Still signed Nigerian midfielder Solomon Taiwo, who he had worked with at Dagenham & Redbridge, on a free transfer on 7 March. Luton drew 1\u20131 on 9 March at home to Hereford United, Dave Martin scoring his first goal for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0021-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nMeanwhile, winger James Dance rejoined Nuneaton on loan until the end of the season on 11 March. One day later, in a performance described by Still as having \"no positives\", Luton lost 2\u20131 at home to relegation-threatened Hyde in front of Kenilworth Road's lowest league crowd in over 11 years. The club then drew 0\u20130 with league leaders Wrexham on 16 March. Three days later, Luton won their second game under Still with a 1\u20130 home win over Stockport County, Steve McNulty scoring the winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0021-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nThe same day, coaches Carl Emberson and Stuart Cash, who were hired by previous manager Paul Buckle, left the club with immediate effect. Luton drew 0\u20130 with Tamworth on 23 March, securing their fifth clean sheet in seven matches in the process. The club signed left-back Scott Griffiths on a contract until the end of the season two days later. Griffiths had previously played over 200 games for John Still at former club Dagenham & Redbridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0021-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nDefender Greg Taylor, who was dropped from the team following mistakes in the defeat by Hyde earlier in the month, joined Mansfield Town on loan until the end of the season on 28 March. Wayne Thomas also left the club on loan, joining League Two side Rochdale. John Still announced that, along with Taylor, five other out-of-contract players would leave Luton in the summer: central defender J\u00e1nos Kov\u00e1cs, wingers Scott Neilson and James Dance, and strikers Alasan Ann and Stuart Fleetwood. In addition, midfielder Arnaud Mendy was placed on the transfer list. Luton drew 2\u20132 with fellow mid-table side Cambridge United on 30 March, Jon Shaw and Solomon Taiwo scoring the goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April\nApril began with Luton losing 2\u20131 at home to league leaders Kidderminster Harriers. The club then suffered their heaviest defeat in over four years with a 5\u20131 loss to Gateshead in what proved the lowest ever match attendance at a competitive Luton game; the game was played in front of only 382 fans. John Still did not attend the match, leaving assistant Terry Harris in charge while he instead scouted players for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April\nThe result saw Luton slip to 12th position in the table with relegation still a mathematical possibility, though this fear was allayed three days later as the club won 3\u20130 against Lincoln City. The next match saw Luton draw 1\u20131 with Grimsby Town, with the club described as playing \"some of their best football of the season\" and having 21 shots during the game. Leading scorer Andre Gray added two further goals to his season's total in a 2\u20132 home draw with promotion-chasing Newport County on 16 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0022-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April\nLuton then beat relegated Ebbsfleet United 2\u20130 two days later, Alex Wall scoring his first two goals for the club. Four players, Dean Brill, Simon Ainge, Lathaniel Rowe-Turner and Scott Rendell, were transfer listed following the game. Luton ended the season on 20 April with a 3\u20131 away win over Southport that meant they finished seventh in the league table. Matt Robinson scored his first senior goal and two further goals for Gray took his total for the season to 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April\nDefender Scott Griffiths and striker Alex Wall signed one and two-year contracts respectively on 24 April. Steve McNulty, who had been captaining the side while Ronnie Henry was injured, signed a two-year contract extension on 29 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May\nThe club bought Southport players Shaun Whalley and Andrew Parry for undisclosed fees on 1 May, with the transfers planned to go through on 1 July 2013 when the transfer window opened. Both players signed two-year contracts. Midfielder Solomon Taiwo signed a one-year contract extension on 7 May, and player of the season Alex Lawless followed suit by signing a new two-year contract three days later after having talks with two unnamed League One clubs. The club signed young East Thurrock United goalkeeper Elliot Justham on a free transfer on 13 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May\nIt was announced on 15 May that defender Wayne Thomas, goalkeeper Lewis Kidd and midfielder Adam Watkins had been released. Two days later, goalkeeper Mark Tyler signed a one-year contract extension and the club signed 21-year-old striker Mark Cullen, who had been released by Hull City. Luton signed left-back Danny Fitzsimons and midfielder Jim Stevenson from Conference North side Histon on 20 May, with both transfers coming into effect from 1 July. Fitzsimons had won three end-of-year awards at Histon, while Luton's scouts had informed John Still to \"sign [Stevenson] straight away\". It was announced on 24 May that striker Dan Walker would not be offered a new contract. He later signed for Hereford United, with the transfer becoming official on 1 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230525-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, June\nYoung midfielder Matt Robinson agreed a one-year contract extension on 5 June, with winger Dave Martin signing a similar deal a few days later. The club signed out-of-contract defender Anthony Charles on a one-year agreement on 19 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup was the 88th season of Luxembourg's annual football cup competition. It began on 2 September 2012 with Round 1 and ended on 17 May 2013 with the Final. The winners of the competition will qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. F91 Dudelange are the defending champions, having won their fifth cup title last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Round 1\n34 teams from the 2. Division (IV) and 3. Division (V) entered in this round. The games were played on 2 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Round 1\nBye : Alisontia Steinsel, FC Brouch, CS Bourscheid, Jeunesse Biwer, Les Aiglons Dalheim, Mini\u00e8re Lasauvage, US Moutfort/Medingen, Red Boys Aspelt, R\u00e9sidence Walferdange, US Reisdorf, CS Sanem, Sporting Bettembourg, Union Mertert/Wasserbillig, Union Remich/Bous, Vinesca Ehnen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Round 2\nThe seventeen winners of Round 1 and the fifteen other teams from the 2. Division (IV) and 3. Division (V) competed in this round. The games were played on 16 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Round 3\nThe sixteen winners of Round 2 competed in this round, as well as twenty-eight teams from Division 1 (III), which enter the competition in this round. The games were played on 5 and 7 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Round 4\nThe twenty-two winners of Round 3 competed in this round, as well as fourteen teams from the Division of Honour (II), which enter the competition in this round. The games were played on 27 and 28 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Round 5\nThe eighteen winners of Round 4 compete in this round, as well as the fourteen teams from the National Division (I), which enter the competition in this round. The games are played on 16 and 18 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Round 6\nThe sixteen winners of Round 5 competed in this round. The games were played on 1 and 2 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe eight winners from Round 6 competed in the quarterfinals. They were held on 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230526-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg Cup, Semi finals\nThe four winners from quarterfinals competed in the semifinals. They were held on 8 and 9 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230527-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg National Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Luxembourg National Division was the 99th season of top-tier football in Luxembourg. It began on 5 August 2012 and ended on 25 May 2013. F91 Dudelange were the defending champions having won their tenth league championship in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230527-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg National Division, Team changes from 2011\u201312\nUS Rumelange and US Hostert were relegated to the Division of Honour after finishing 13th and 14th in the previous season. Both clubs were relegated after one year in the top flight. They were replaced by 2011\u201312 Division of Honour champions Jeunesse Canach and runners-up Etzella Ettelbruck. Both clubs return to the top flight after a one-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230527-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg National Division, Team changes from 2011\u201312\nHesperange as 12th-placed team had to compete in a single play-off match against third-placed Division of Honour side Wiltz. Wiltz won the match by 6\u20132, and they returned to the top division after a one-year absence. Swift Hesperange were relegated to the Division of Honour after an eleven-year stay in the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230527-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Luxembourg National Division, Relegation play-offs\nThe 12th-placed club in the National Division will compete in a relegation play-off match against the third-placed team from the Division of Honour for one spot in the following season's competition. This will take place once both seasons have finished, usually around the middle of May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230528-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MC Alger season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, MC Alger competed in the Ligue 1 for the 42nd season, as well as the Algerian Cup. It was their 10th consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230528-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MC Alger season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 November 2010.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, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230529-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MC El Eulma season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, MC El Eulma is competing in the Ligue 1 for the 5th season, as well as the Algerian Cup. It is their 5th consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football. They will be competing in Ligue 1, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230529-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MC El Eulma season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 November 2012.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, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230530-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MC Oran season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, MC Oran competed in the Ligue 1 for the 47th season, as well as the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230530-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MC Oran season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 November 2012.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, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230531-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 Maritime Junior Hockey League season was the 46th season in league history. The season consisted of 52 games played by each MHL team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230531-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MHL season\nUpon completion of the regular season, the top qualifying teams will play down for the Kent Cup, the league's playoff championship trophy. The Kent Cup champion will then meet the top teams of the Quebec Junior AAA Hockey League and Central Canada Hockey League in a host city to determine the Eastern Canadian Fred Page Cup champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230531-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MHL season\nThe Summerside Western Capitals won the 2013 Kent Cup by losing only 1 game throughout the entire MHL playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230531-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MHL season\nThe Fred Page Cup was hosted and won by the Truro Bearcats in 2013 with the Summerside Western Capitals the runners-up. The 2013 RBC cup Was hosted by the Summerside Western Capitals they finished 2nd while Truro finished 5th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230531-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MHL season, Regular Season 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 spot; Y - Clinched Division; Z- Clinched first overall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230532-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MJHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the Manitoba Junior Hockey League's (MJHL) 96th season of operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230533-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MOL Liga season\nThe 2012\u201313 MOL Liga season was the fifth season of the MOL Liga, a multi-national ice hockey league consisting of teams from Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia. Seven teams participated in the league, and DAB-Docler won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230533-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MOL Liga season\nThe league also served as the Hungarian Championship for 2012-13. DAB-Docler, the MOL Liga champion, was also the Hungarian national champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230534-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship\nThe 2012-2013 MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship was the inaugural running of the MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship. The series consisted of 10 races, spread across 3 meetings began on 26 October 2012 at the Buddh International Circuit, supporting the 2012 Indian Grand Prix and ended on 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230535-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MSV Duisburg season\nThe 2012\u201313 MSV Duisburg season was the 113th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the 2. Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It was the clubs fifth consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2008\u201309, after it was relegated from the Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230535-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MSV Duisburg season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round but lost to third division side Karlsruher SC next.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230535-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MSV Duisburg season, Review and events\nOn August 25, coach Oliver Reck was sacked and Kosta Runjai\u0107 was announced as the new coach on September 3, 2012. The club was relegated after they were refused a license to play in the second division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230535-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MSV Duisburg season, Squad and statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 19 May 2013Source: Only competitive matches = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230535-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MSV Duisburg season, Squad and statistics, 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be MTK Budapest FC's 103rd competitive season, 1st consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 124th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230536-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 MTK Budapest FC season, Europa League\nThe First and Second Qualifying Round draws took place at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland on 25 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230537-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maccabi Haifa F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Maccabi Haifa's 55th season in Israeli Premier League, and their 31st consecutive season in the top division of Israeli football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230537-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maccabi Haifa F.C. season, Club, Players 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230538-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian First Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Macedonian First League was the 21st season of the Macedonian First Football League, the highest football league of Macedonia. Vardar were the defending champions after winning their sixth Macedonian championship at the end of the 2011\u201312 season. Twelve teams contested the league, comprising ten sides from the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted from the 2011\u201312 2. MFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230538-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian First Football League, Results\nEvery team played three times against each other team for a total of 33 matches. The first 22 matchdays consisted of a regular double round-robin schedule. The league standings at this point were then be used to determine the games for the last 11 matchdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230539-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Football Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Macedonian Football Cup was the 21st season of Macedonia's football knockout competition. Renova are the defending champions, having won their first title. The 2012\u201313 champions were FK Teteks who won their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230539-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Football Cup, Second round\nEntering this round are the 16 winners from the First Round. The first legs took place on 9 and 19 September 2012 and the second legs took place on 26 and 27 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230539-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs of the quarter-finals took place on 14 October and 7 November 2012, while the second legs took place on 21 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230539-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs of the semi finals took place on 17 April 2013, while the second legs took place on 2 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230539-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Football Cup, Final, Original Match\nInitial match was played on 22 May 2013, but the game was abandoned just 10 minutes after the start, because of the crowd trouble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230540-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Second Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Macedonian Second Football League was the 21st season since its establishment. It began on 11 August 2012 and ended on 28 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230540-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Second Football League, Results\nEvery team will play each other team twice (home and away) for a total of 30 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230541-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Macedonian Third Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Macedonian Third Football League was the 21st season of the third-tier football league in the Republic of Macedonia, since its establishment. It began on August 2012 and ended on June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230542-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa\nThe 2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa (English: Hungarian Cup) was the 73rd season of Hungary's annual knock-out cup football competition. It started with the first match of Round 1 on 12 August 2012 and ended with the Final held in May 2013 at Stadium Pusk\u00e1s Ferenc, Budapest. Debrecen were the defending champions, having won their fifth cup competition last season. The winner of the competition will qualify for the second qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230542-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa, Qualifying phase, Round 1\nMatches were played on 12 August 2012 and involved the teams qualified through the local cup competitions during the previous season, Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g III, Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II and the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230542-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa, Qualifying phase, Round 2\nMatches were played on 26 September 2012 and involved the teams qualified through the local cup competitions during the previous season, Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g III, Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II and the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230542-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa, Qualifying phase, Round 3\nMatches were played on 30 and 31 October 2012. Entering this stage of the competition were the 28 winners from the previous round and the four clubs which competed in Europe this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230542-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa, Qualifying phase, Round of 16\nThe sixteen winners of the previous round were drawn into eight two-legged matches. The winners on aggregate advanced to the next round. The first leg will be played on 21 November, the second leg is on 28 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230542-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa, Qualifying phase, Quarter-finals\nThe eight winners of the previous round were drawn into four two-legged matches. The winners on aggregate advanced to the next round. The first leg will be played on 23 February, the second leg is on 27 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230542-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa, Qualifying phase, Semi-finals\nThe four winners of the previous round were drawn into two two-legged matches. The winners on aggregate advanced to the final. The first legs were played on 16 and 17 April, the second legs will be played on 7 and 8 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230543-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maine Black Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Maine Black Bears men's basketball team represented the University of Maine during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Black Bears, led by ninth year head coach Ted Woodward, played their home games at Alfond Arena and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 11\u201319, 6\u201310 in American East play to finish sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the American East Tournament to Albany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230544-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Major Indoor Soccer League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Major Indoor Soccer League season was the second under the United Soccer Leagues banner, fourth under the MISL name, and the fifth season overall. It was also the 35th season of professional Division 1 indoor soccer. The season started on November 2, 2012 and ended on March 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230544-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Major Indoor Soccer League season, Playoffs\nThe MISL Playoffs will begin with the semifinals, featuring the No. 1 and No. 4 seeds and the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds meeting in home-and-home series with a 15-minute mini game to decide the series following the second game if needed. The championship followed the same format. The higher seed will had the option to choose which game it hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230545-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Majstrovstv\u00e1 regi\u00f3nu\nThe 2012\u201313 season of Majstrovstv\u00e1 regi\u00f3nu is the twentieth season of the fourth-tier football league in Slovakia, since its establishment in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230545-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Majstrovstv\u00e1 regi\u00f3nu\n64 teams are geographically divided into four groups: Majstrovstv\u00e1 regi\u00f3nu Bratislava, Majstrovstv\u00e1 regi\u00f3nu Z\u00e1pad, Majstrovstv\u00e1 regi\u00f3nu Stred and Majstrovstv\u00e1 regi\u00f3nu V\u00fdchod (16 teams each). Teams are playing against teams in their own division only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230546-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Malian Premi\u00e8re Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Malian Premi\u00e8re Division is the 48th edition of the highest club level football competition in Mali. Stade Malien won their 18th national title and qualified into the 2014 CAF Champions League the following season. Real Bamako also qualified into the CAF Champions League the following season. As Stade Malien were also cup winners, third place Djoliba qualified and also qualified CO Bamako.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230546-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Malian Premi\u00e8re Division, Overview\nDjoliba AC was the defender of the title. It was the first season that featured 16 teams and had 30 rounds with a total of 240 matches, 516 goals were scored and its average goals per match was more than two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy was the 75th season since its establishment. For the second season, the competition will include all teams from Malta and Gozo. The competition began on 5 September 2012 and is ended on 19 May 2013 with the Final in Ta' Qali Stadium. The defending champions are Hibernians, having won their 9th Maltese Cup last season. The winner will qualify to the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy\nHibernians were the defending champions, and they retain the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, Calendar\nMatches began on 5 September 2012 and concluded with the final on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, First round\nEntering this round were clubs from the Maltese Third Division, the Gozo Football League First Division and the Gozo Football League Second Division. These matches took place between 5 and 11 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, Second round\nEntering this round were the 14 winners from the First Round along with the 12 Maltese First Division clubs and the 14 Maltese Second Division clubs. These matches took place between 19 and 21 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, Third round\nEntering this round were the 20 winners from the Second Round along with the 12 Maltese Premier League clubs. These matches took place between 30 November and 2 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, Fourth round\nEntering this round were the 16 winners from the Third Round. These matches took place between 18 and 23 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, Quarter-finals\nEntering this round were the 8 winners from the Fourth Round. These matches took place on 17 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, Semifinals\nEntering this round were the four winners from the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230547-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese FA Trophy, Final\nEntering this round were the two winners from the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230548-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese First Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Maltese First Division (also known as 2012\u201313 BOV 1st Division due to sponsorship reasons) began on 14 September 2012 and ended on 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230548-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese First Division, Participating teams\nThese teams will contest the 2012\u201313 Maltese First Division season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230549-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Maltese Premier League was the 98th season of the Maltese Premier League, the top-tier football league in Malta. It began in August 2012 and ended in May 2013. Valletta were the defending champions, having won their 21st title last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230549-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Premier League\nThe Premier League consisted of two rounds. In the First Round, every team played each opponent twice, once \"home\" and once \"away\" (in actuality, the designation of home and away were purely arbitrary as most of the clubs did not have their own grounds), for a total of 22 games. The league was then split into two pools. Earned points were subsequently halved. Teams that finished in the positions 1\u20136 compete in the \"Championship Pool\" and teams that finished in positions 7\u201312 play in the \"Relegation Pool\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230549-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Premier League, Teams\nMarsaxlokk were relegated to the First Division after finishing in last place of the relegation pool last season. This ended a three-year stay in the Premier League for them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230549-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Premier League, Teams\nPromoted to the top flight were Rabat Ajax, who returned to the Premier League after an eleven-season absence, and Melita, who became the first amateur club to reach the Premier League as well as being the only amateur club in the world taking part in the top tier of a professional league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230549-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Premier League, Teams, Stadia and training grounds\nOnly a few stadia have the infrastructure needed to host Premier League matches. These are Ta' Qali National Stadium and Centenary Stadium at Ta' Qali, Victor Tedesco Stadium at \u0126amrun and Hibernians Ground at Paola. Additional to that, each team has been assigned to a dedicated training ground. On a few occasions, Hibernians and Hamrun Spartans play at their home ground, but otherwise all games are played on neutral ground, rendering \"home\" and \"away\" games purely symbolic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230549-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Premier League, Championship play-off\nBirkirkara and Hibernians finished the season level on points. A play-off decided the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230550-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Second Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Maltese Second Division (also known as 2012\u201313 BOV 2nd Division due to sponsorship reasons) began on 14 September 2012 and ended on 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230551-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maltese Third Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Maltese Third Division (also known as 2012\u201313 BOV 3rd Division due to sponsorship reasons) began on 16 September 2012 and ended on 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Manchester City's 111th season of football, 11th consecutive season in the Premier League, and 21st season in the Premier League since it was first created. City began the season as defending champions, having won the league in 2011\u201312. The club played in the UEFA Champions League for the third time, the second since the competition was rebranded. City also reached the tenth FA Cup final in their history after beating Chelsea 2\u20131 at Wembley Stadium on 14 April 2013. They then lost the final 1\u20130 against Wigan Athletic on 11 May 2013. On 13 May 2013, Roberto Mancini was sacked as City manager following three-and-a-half years in the role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Kit, Kit information\nUmbro made their last kits for Manchester City this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Points breakdown\nPoints against 2011\u201312 Top Four: 10 Points against promoted teams: 13", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Biggest & smallest\nBiggest home win: 5\u20130 vs. Aston Villa, 17 November 2012 Biggest home defeat: 2\u20133 vs. Norwich City (19 May 2013) and vs Manchester united (9 December 2012)Biggest away win: 4 by a 2-goal margin Biggest away defeat: 3 by a 2-goal margin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Biggest & smallest\nBiggest home attendance: 47,386 vs. Everton, 1 December 2012 Smallest home attendance: 45,579 vs. Queens Park Rangers, 1 September 2012 Biggest away attendance: 75,498 vs. Manchester United, 8 April 2013 Smallest away attendance: 19,623 vs. Wigan Athletic, 28 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Squad information, Playing statistics\nSource: (for players and positions) 00(for squad numbers) 00(for actual stats.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Awards, PFA Team of the Year\nThe combined best 11 from all teams in the Premier League chosen by the PFA", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Awards, Premier League Golden Glove award\nAwarded to the goalkeeper who kept the most clean sheets over the 2012\u201313 Premier League season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Awards, Etihad Player of the Year\nBased on votes polled by official supporters\u2019 clubs and fans online.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230552-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City F.C. season, Awards, Etihad Player of the Month awards\nAwarded to the player that receives the most votes in a poll conducted each month on the MCFC OWS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230553-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City L.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Manchester City Ladies Football Club's 25th season of competitive football and its final season in the FA Women's Premier League. Despite only a fourth-placed finish, Manchester City were given a place in the expanded FA WSL the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230553-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester City L.F.C. season, 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230554-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester Phoenix season\nDuring the 2012-13 season, the Manchester Phoenix participated in the semi-professional English Premier Ice Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Manchester United's 21st season in the Premier League, and their 38th consecutive season in the top flight of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season\nUnited's season began on 20 August 2012 with the first game of the Premier League campaign. After narrowly missing out on goal difference the previous season, they won an unprecedented 20th English top-flight title on 22 April 2013 with a win over Aston Villa at Old Trafford, in which top scorer Robin van Persie scored a hat-trick, finishing the season with 26 league goals and 30 goals in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season\nUnited competed in two domestic cups, the FA Cup and the League Cup, where they entered both tournaments in the Third Round courtesy of their league position. Chelsea proved to be United's nemesis in both competitions, first beating them 5\u20134 in the Fourth Round of the League Cup on 31 October 2012, followed by a 1\u20130 win in the FA Cup Sixth Round Replay on 1 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season\nIn Europe, United were knocked out of the Champions League at the Round of 16 stage after losing 3\u20132 on aggregate to Real Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season\nOn 8 May 2013, United's long time manager, Sir Alex Ferguson announced that he would retire from his position as manager of Manchester United after 26 and a half years in charge, making him the longest-serving manager of any English club by this stage. He had won 38 trophies during that time \u2013 more than any other manager in the history of football \u2013 and at 71 was the oldest serving manager currently in the Premier League or Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season\nThe next day, Manchester United announced that David Moyes of Everton would take over from Ferguson at the beginning of the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nManchester United preceded their 2012\u201313 campaign with a global tour, including trips to South Africa for the first time since 2008, China for the first time since 2009 and Norway for the first time since 2002. The tour began with matches against South African teams AmaZulu on 18 July 2012 and Ajax Cape Town on 21 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nThey then travelled to China to play Shanghai Shenhua on 25 July 2012 at the Shanghai Stadium, before moving on to Norway to play V\u00e5lerenga at the Ullevaal Stadion in Oslo on 5 August, and Sweden to play Spanish side Barcelona at Ullevi, Gothenburg, on 8 August 2012. The final game of the pre-season tour was against Hannover 96 (whom they had not played since 1965) at the AWD-Arena on 11 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nThe fixtures for the 2012\u201313 league season were announced on 18 June at 09:00 BST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited's first game was away from home at Goodison Park to Everton on 20 August 2012, a game that they lost to a goal by Marouane Fellaini in the 57th minute. It was United's first Premier League opening game defeat since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited then returned to Old Trafford where they played against Fulham. The game started with Fulham taking the lead in third minute through a Damien Duff goal, a goal which marked Fulham's first goal at Old Trafford since 2006. United levelled the game seven minutes later through a spectacular volley from Robin van Persie who scored his first goal for United after joining the team a week before. United then took the lead in the 35th minute through Shinji Kagawa who, like Van Persie, scored his first United goal. Rafael made the scoreline 3\u20131 just five minutes before half-time. In the second-half Fulham managed to reduce United's lead after an own goal by United defender Nemanja Vidi\u0107, who collided with goalkeeper David de Gea and back-heeled the ball into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited's next game was against Southampton, and Southampton took shock 1\u20130 and 2\u20131 goal leads through Rickie Lambert and Morgan Schneiderlin before a Van Persie hat-trick saved United at the death after he earlier missed a penalty. In the next game, United thrashed Wigan 4\u20130 with summer signings Alexander B\u00fcttner and Nick Powell scoring their first goals. Hern\u00e1ndez and Scholes also got on the scoresheet. United's next game was against archrivals Liverpool. Liverpool took the lead but United fought back with goals from Rafael and a penalty from Van Persie and won the game 2\u20131. United then suffered a 3\u20132 loss at the hands of Tottenham. Tottenham took a 2\u20130 lead. At half-time, Wayne Rooney made his return and contributed with an assist, but Tottenham held on take victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nThe next match saw Manchester United win 3\u20130 against Newcastle United at St James' Park. Goals from Jonny Evans and Patrice Evra, both headed from corners gave United a 2\u20130 lead before Tom Cleverley scored a curling screamer from 25 yards. The next match saw United win 4\u20132 against Stoke City, Wayne Rooney scored an own goal in the 11th minute before equalising in the 28th minute. Van Persie gave United the lead just before the break, and Danny Welbeck's diving header gave United a two-goal advantage before Michael Kightly cut the margin in the 58th minute. Seven minutes later, Wayne Rooney scored to restore Man Utd's two-goal lead and win the game 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited then played title rivals Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, a stadium where they had not won in the past 10 years. In the first 12 minutes United struck twice. The first was a David Luiz own goal after Robin van Persie's shot hit the post and bounced off the Brazilian, and then the Dutchman himself scored the second. Juan Mata scored for Chelsea just before half time, and Ramires equalised for the hosts ten minutes after the break. Branislav Ivanovi\u0107 was shown the red card for a foul near the area, and nine minutes later Fernando Torres received a second yellow for diving. Substitute Hern\u00e1ndez scored the goal that saw the visitors emerge victorious.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nThe next game was at Old Trafford against rivals Arsenal, in which Van Persie scored against his former club within three minutes of the start. Wayne Rooney missed a penalty just before half time, but Patrice Evra doubled United's lead after heading Rooney's cross into the net. Arsenal pulled a goal back in the final minute via Santi Cazorla. An away visit to Aston Villa turned out to be a thrilling game which saw United fall two goals behind from Andreas Weimann before substitute Hern\u00e1ndez scored twice and assisted an own goal that gave United the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited suffered their third defeat of the season away to Norwich City, falling to a single goal from former Manchester United youth Anthony Pilkington. United then entertained Queens Park Rangers and fell behind after 52 minutes. However, they responded strongly with Jonny Evans and Darren Fletcher both netting from Wayne Rooney corners. Hern\u00e1ndez scored the third goal to make the points safe. United then had visiting West Ham United as their next rivals. United won the match 1\u20130 thanks to an early Van Persie goal after just 31 seconds that deflected over Jussi J\u00e4\u00e4skel\u00e4inen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited established a three-point lead over their closest rivals Manchester City after edging a seven-goal thriller against Reading at Madejski Stadium. Hal Robson-Kanu lashed home the opener, then Anderson cracked in an equaliser and Wayne Rooney slid home a penalty before Adam Le Fondre and Sean Morrison quickly headed in from corners to have the hosts 3\u20132 up by 23 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nDespite the defensive lapses, Manchester United fought back through an irresistible attacking display, and Rooney clinically turned in Patrice Evra's cross to level again, before turning provider for Robin van Persie to spring the hosts' offside trap and beat Adam Federici to make it 3\u20134 in 34 minutes. United held on to the lead in a nervous second half to win the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited then played city rivals and closest contenders Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium. Wayne Rooney scored two goals in the first half hour to give United a two-goal cushion. But the match looked to have turned completely with half an hour left as Ashley Young had a goal wrongly ruled out for offside before Yaya Tour\u00e9 netted within seconds. It allowed the Blues to stage a comeback that led to Pablo Zabaleta levelling from a corner on 86 minutes. Incredibly, Van Persie, with a deflected free kick, had the final say in stoppage time to end City's unbeaten run at home that lasted almost two years and inflict their first league defeat since April 2012. In winning the match, United stretched the advantage at the summit to six points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nIn their next match, United faced Sunderland at Old Trafford and goals from Robin van Persie and Tom Cleverley gave United a two-goal lead at half-time before Wayne Rooney gave United a three-goal advantage in the second half. Fraizer Campbell scored the only goal for the visitors, heading in St\u00e9phane Sess\u00e8gnon's cross. United held on to win the game 3\u20131. United then played Swansea City at the Liberty Stadium. Patrice Evra headed the Reds in front before Swansea striker Michu netted his 13th goal of the season in a see-sawing first half. The game ended at 1\u20131 \u2013 United's first draw of the season \u2013 but it was enough to ensure a lead of four points at the top of the table on Christmas Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nManchester United played Newcastle United at Old Trafford on Boxing Day in what turned out to be a classic. United conceded first when James Perch scored for Newcastle in the fourth minute. Jonny Evans then scored for both teams in quick succession, first equalising for United before putting through his own net to restore Newcastle's lead; the goal was originally ruled out for offside against Papiss Ciss\u00e9, who was lurking behind Evans, but referee Mike Dean allowed it to stand, having deemed that Ciss\u00e9 was not interfering with play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nPatrice Evra scored close to the hour mark to make the scores level with a 25-yard strike to mark his best season in terms of goals. Papiss Ciss\u00e9 then scored with a sublime finish to make it 3\u20132 on 68 minutes, only for Robin van Persie to get United's third equaliser three minutes later. Then United did what they do best with Javier Hern\u00e1ndez dramatically scoring a winner with just seconds of the 90 minutes left to win the game 4\u20133. With Manchester City losing away at Sunderland, United extended their lead at the top to seven points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited then played West Bromwich Albion at Old Trafford, making five changes to the side that played on Boxing Day with Shinji Kagawa returning to the side behind Danny Welbeck. Ashley Young's drilled cross was deflected off Gareth McAuley into his own net in the ninth minute for United's opener. Later in injury time, substitute Robin van Persie scored a wonderful curling shot assisted by Antonio Valencia to make it 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited then played Wigan Athletic at the DW Stadium, making three changes to the side that beat West Brom. Javier Hern\u00e1ndez latched onto a rebound from Patrice Evra's shot and Robin van Persie rounded Iv\u00e1n Ramis and converted before half time. In the second half, Hern\u00e1ndez smashed a volley after a blocked Van Persie free kick. Van Persie himself scored the fourth goal after receiving a short-driving cross from Danny Welbeck from the left hand side of the post to make it 4\u20130. The game was their fifth clean sheet in the league so far this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited's next game was against arch-rivals Liverpool. Van Persie made it 1\u20130 and Evra's header which touched Vidi\u0107's head made it 2\u20130. Liverpool pulled one back but it was not enough. United then drew against Tottenham, Van Persie again opened the scoring with a header but Tottenham equalised in the dying moments of the game through Clint Dempsey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nIn the next game, United played Southampton at home. After going 1\u20130 down within three minutes, United once again pulled it back with two goals from Wayne Rooney in the first half to win 2\u20131. After their midweek home win, United then travelled to London to play Fulham where the deadlock was finally broken by a goal from Rooney in the 79th minute. United held on for the 1\u20130 win to go nine points clear at the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited then capitalised on the defeat of their nearest neighbours and closest rivals at Southampton the day before by beating Everton 2\u20130 at Old Trafford to extend their lead at the top of the table to twelve points with goals from Ryan Giggs early in the first half and Van Persie just before half time and avenging the 1\u20130 defeat they suffered in their first match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nAfter that Manchester United travelled to Loftus Road and had it easy with a 2\u20130 win over QPR where Rafael scored a 30-yard screamer and Giggs scored a clinical finish on his 999th appearance. This meant that Manchester United have opened up a 15-point lead, though this was reduced to 12 after Manchester City won 2\u20130 over Chelsea. Next, Manchester United hosted Norwich City at the \"Theatre of Dreams\" and again opened up a 15-point lead with a 4\u20130 win. Kagawa scored a hat-trick, becoming the first Asian player to do so in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nOn 16 March, Manchester United took advantage of their neighbours and closest title rivals Manchester City's loss to Everton earlier in the day by beating Reading. The game finished 1\u20130 from a deflected goal by Wayne Rooney after a surging run from Rio Ferdinand. This extended Manchester United's lead to 15 points with nine games to play. After the international break, United faced a trip to the Stadium of Light to play Sunderland on 30 March. Again United won 1\u20130 thanks to a Titus Bramble own goal after Van Persie's shot had deflected off him. By winning, United set a new record by winning 25 of their opening 30 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nOn 8 April, Manchester United returned to Old Trafford to play their second Manchester derby, where United were handed their first loss in 18 games after City won 2\u20131. James Milner scored the first for City with a deflected drive, but United equalised after Phil Jones headed a Van Persie free-kick against Vincent Kompany. Sergio Ag\u00fcero, however, scored at the near post after a mazy run. United bounced back from derby disappointment by beating Stoke City at the Britannia Stadium. Michael Carrick scored a toe poke from a corner in the second minute and a late Van Persie penalty secured the points for United. Van Persie also ended his barren run of nine games without a goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nManchester United had to play a midweek fixture away to West Ham. This was a tough game that saw the hosts go ahead twice through Ricardo Vaz T\u00ea and Mohamed Diam\u00e9. But United equalised twice through Antonio Valencia, who netted his first goal of the season, and Robin van Persie. The game ended 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nOn 22 April, Manchester United beat Aston Villa 3\u20130 to win their 13th Premier League title and 20th English championship after Manchester City had lost to Tottenham the day before. In the second minute, Robin van Persie scored after a lay-off from Ryan Giggs to make the score 1\u20130. Van Persie scored again in the 13th minute with a volley from a through ball over the top by Wayne Rooney. Sir Alex Ferguson and many others hailed it as one of the goals of the season. In the 33rd minute, Van Persie completed his hat-trick with another assist from Giggs. United clinched their 20th league title and Sir Alex Ferguson clinched his 13th title with United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nOn 28 April, Manchester United travelled to the Emirates Stadium to face Arsenal. The home team gave United a guard of honour, but Van Persie received a torrid reception by his old fans. Arsenal scored first through a Theo Walcott goal in the second minute that was claimed to be offside. United scored at the end of the first half through a Van Persie penalty after the striker was fouled by Bacary Sagna. Both teams had chances to score in the second half but neither did and the score finished 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nUnited then faced Chelsea at Old Trafford, recording their third-straight defeat to the Blues in the season after losing 1\u20130, courtesy of a Phil Jones own goal. A week later, Sir Alex Ferguson managed his last game at Old Trafford against Swansea. United took the lead through Javier Hern\u00e1ndez, but conceded a strike from Michu in the 52nd minute. Quite oddly, it was Rio Ferdinand who scored the winner with three minutes to go, smashing home a Van Persie corner. Ferguson retired with dignity as he and his team received their medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, Premier League\nFerguson's last game in charge was against West Brom at The Hawthorns, taking a 5\u20132 lead with ten minutes to go. But they failed to hold on and conceded a 5\u20135 draw, setting a record for the first match in the Premier League for both teams to score five goals each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nUnited entered the FA Cup at the Third Round stage with the other Premier League clubs, as well as those from the Championship. The draw was made on 2 December 2012, with the ties taking place on the weekend of 5\u20136 January 2013. United was drawn in an away match against West Ham United. The game ended in a 2\u20132 draw which meant United had to play against West Ham United again, this time at Old Trafford on 16 January 2013, beating them 1\u20130 in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe draw for the Fourth Round took place on 6 January 2013, and gave United a home match on 26 January against Fulham, which United won 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe draw for the Fifth Round took place on 27 January 2013, and gave United another home match, this time against fellow Premier League club Reading. The game which was played on 18 February 2013 gave United a 2\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe draw for the Sixth Round took place on 17 February 2013, and gave United another home match, this time against fellow Premier League club Chelsea. The game which was played on 10 March 2013 ended in a 2\u20132 draw which meant United had to play against Chelsea again, this time at Stamford Bridge on 1 April. The game finished with United losing 1\u20130, meaning that United were knocked out, with Chelsea proceeding to face Manchester City in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nAs one of seven English clubs who qualified for European competition in the 2011\u201312 season, United received a bye to the Third Round of the League Cup. The draw took place on 30 August 2012, with United being paired with fellow Premier League club Newcastle United. United defeated Newcastle 2\u20131 on 26 September. Later that day they were drawn against Chelsea for their Fourth Round match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nHaving finished in the top three in the league last season, United began their Champions League campaign in the group stage. Courtesy of their UEFA coefficient, they were seeded in Pot 1 for the draw, which took place in Monaco on 30 August 2012. United were drawn into Group H, along with Braga of Portugal, Turkish champions Galatasaray and Romanian champions CFR Cluj. Manchester United were previously drawn with Galatasaray in both 1993\u201394 and 1994\u201395, while Braga and CFR Cluj were new opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nUnited ensured qualification into the knockout stage on 7 November when they won away at Braga by a score of 3\u20131. United fell behind early in the second half when Braga was awarded a penalty as the result of a Jonny Evans challenge. Alan converted the penalty in the 49th minute to put the home side ahead. The match was halted for approximately 12 minutes due to the floodlights going out. When play resumed, Robin van Persie tied the match in the 80th minute with a long-range strike. United were then awarded a penalty in the 85th minute, which Wayne Rooney successfully converted. Javier Hern\u00e1ndez then put the game away in stoppage time. With top spot in the group secured United, fielding younger squads, lost both of their final matches 1\u20130 to Galatasaray and CFR Cluj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThe draw for the round of 16 was made in Nyon, Switzerland, on 20 December 2012. The first leg was played on 13 February 2013 away from home, and the second leg was played on 5 March 2013 at Old Trafford. As winners of their group, United were drawn against defending Spanish league champions, Real Madrid, who finished as runners-up in Group D. It was fifth tie between the two famed clubs and the first time they have faced one another since 2003 when Real Madrid won the quarter-final tie 6\u20135 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230555-0037-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nThis also marked the first time United faced Cristiano Ronaldo since selling him to Madrid in 2009 for a record \u00a380 million. In the first tie, United draw 1\u20131 away from home thanks to a goal by Danny Welbeck. In the second tie, United lost 2\u20131 at home to Real Madrid after a red card was handed to United player Nani for going in with his foot at chest height in the 56th minute. Cristiano Ronaldo scored against his former club in both ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230556-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Manhattan Jaspers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Manhattan Jaspers basketball team represented Manhattan College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaspers, led by second year head coach Steve Masiello, played their home games at Draddy Gymnasium and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 9\u20139 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the championship game of the MAAC Tournament before falling to Iona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230557-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team represented Marist College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Red Foxes, led by fifth year head coach Chuck Martin, played their home games at the McCann Arena and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 6\u201312 in MAAC play to finish eighth place. They lost in the first round of the MAAC Tournament to Siena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230557-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team\nOn March 14, 2013, head coach Chuck Martin was fired. He posted a record of 41\u2013118 in five seasons. On April 10, 2013, Marist hired Jeff Bower as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230557-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Marist Red Foxes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Red Foxes finished the 2011\u201312 season 14\u201318, 7\u201311 in MAAC play to finish in eighth place. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament where they lost to Iona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230558-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented Marquette University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Marquette was coached by Buzz Williams and played their home games at the BMO Harris Bradley Center in Milwaukee, WI as were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 26\u20139, 14\u20134 in Big East play to earn a share of Big East Conference regular season championship. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big East Tournament against Cincinnati. The Golden Eagles received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Davidson, Butler, and Miami, before losing to Syracuse in the Elite Eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230558-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Golden Eagles finished the 2011\u201312 season 26\u20137, 14\u20134 in Big East play to finish in second place. Syracuse, the winner of the Big East regular season, was later forced to vacate its wins from the season due to NCAA violations. The Eagles received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated BYU and Murray State to advance to the Sweet Sixteen for the second consecutive year. There they lost to Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230559-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball team represented Marshall University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Thundering Herd, led by third year head coach Tom Herrion, played their home games at the Cam Henderson Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 13\u201319, 6\u201310 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Conference USA Tournament to Tulane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230560-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League\nThe 2012 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League (known as the Martyrs' Memorial Red Bull 'A' Division League Football Tournament 2012 for sponsorship reasons) was the 40th season of the A-Division League since its establishment in 1954/55. A total of 16 teams are competing in the league. The season began on 20 November 2012. Nepal Police Club are the defending champions, having won their fourth A- Division League title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230561-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland Eastern Shore during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hawks, led by fifth year head coach Frankie Allen, played their home games at the Hytche Athletic Center and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 2\u201326, 2\u201314 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for twelfth place. They lost in the first round of the MEAC Tournament to Savannah State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230562-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland, College Park in 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The team, led by second year head coach Mark Turgeon, played their home games at the Comcast Center. They finished the season 25\u201313, 8\u201310 in ACC play to finish in seventh place. They advanced to the semifinals of the ACC Tournament where they lost to North Carolina. They were invited to the 2013 NIT where they defeated Niagara, Denver and Alabama to advance to the semifinals at Madison Square Garden where they lost to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230563-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mascom Top 8 Cup\nThe 2012-13 Mascom Top 8 Cup was the second edition of the Mascom Top 8 Cup. It was played from 23 February to 18 May 2013 by the top teams from the 2011-12 Botswana Premier League. It was won by Gaborone United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230563-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mascom Top 8 Cup, History\nThe 2013 tournament was played from February to May instead of May to July like the previous tournament. It was the only tournament to take place in Botswana for the season, since the 2013 FA Challenge Cup was not played, therefore the winner represented the country in the CAF Confederation Cup. Mogoditshane Fighters was the only debutant in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230563-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mascom Top 8 Cup, Prize money\nThe prize money was kept the same for the winners from the 2012 competition, but was increased for the rest of the competitors from the inaugural edition of the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230563-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mascom Top 8 Cup, Format\nThe quarterfinals and semifinals were played over two legs both home and away, with only one final in a predetermined venue. Three points were awarded for a win, one point for a draw and none for a loss. Aggregate score was used to determine the winner of a round. Where the aggregate score was equal away goals were used to pick out the victor and if those were equal the tied teams went into a penalty shootout. For the 2012-13 edition there was no quarterfinal draw. The teams were seeded based on their position in the table, with the first placed Mochudi Centre Chiefs facing off against eighth placed Mogoditshane Fighters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230563-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mascom Top 8 Cup, Final\nThe final pitted Gaborone United against BDF XI at the New Lobatse Stadium. Gaborone United took a 2-0 lead in the second half before BDF XI's goalkeeper was sent off. The substitute goalkeeper saved the penalty, and ten-man BDI XI scored with 12 minutes to play, but down a man could not find an equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230564-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 McNeese State Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 McNeese State Cowboys basketball team represented McNeese State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cowboys, led by seventh year head coach Dave Simmons, played their home games at Burton Coliseum, with three home games at Sudduth Coliseum, and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 7\u201311 in Southland play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Southland Tournament to Southeastern Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230565-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Meistriliiga (ice hockey) season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Pelmeen10 (talk | contribs) at 14:12, 1 March 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230565-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Meistriliiga (ice hockey) season\nThe 2012\u201313 Meistriliiga season was the 23rd season of the Meistriliiga, the top level of ice hockey in Estonia. Five teams participated in the league, and Tallinn Viiking Sport won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230566-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Aces season\nThe 2012\u201313 Melbourne Aces season will be the third season for the team. As was the case for the previous season, the Aces will compete in the Australian Baseball League (ABL) with the other five foundation teams, and for the first time, the team will play its home games at the Melbourne Ballpark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230566-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Aces season, Offseason\nDuring the offseason, the Aces announced that they were moving their home games from the Royal Melbourne Showgrounds to the Melbourne Ballpark in Altona, Victoria. The Ballpark, which also hosted Melbourne-based teams in the previous incarnation of the league, will undergo significant improvements before the opening of the season, including the adjustment of fences, and the installation of an open-air beer garden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230567-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Heart FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Melbourne Heart FC season was the club's third since its establishment in 2009. The club participated in the A-League for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230567-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Heart 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230568-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Renegades season\nThe 2012\u201313 Melbourne Renegades season was the second in the club's history. Coached by Simon Helmot and captained by Aaron Finch, they competed in the BBL's 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230568-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Renegades season, Summary\nThe 2012\u201313 Big Bash League season saw the Renegades release several star players including the previous seasons captain, Andrew McDonald. However the recruitment of consistent players such as Ben Rohrer and Peter Nevill and cricket legend Muttiah Muralitharan, saw the season being the Renegades most successful season to date, finishing on top of the ladder, only losing to the Perth Scorchers in the regular season. Aaron Finch also became the first Renegades player to score a century after scoring 111 from 65 balls against the Melbourne Stars. Finch also won The Renegades were knocked out by the Brisbane Heat in the semi-finals, losing by 15 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230569-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Stars season\nThe 2012\u201313 Melbourne Stars season was the second in the club's history. Coached by Greg Shipperd and captained by Shane Warne, they competed in the BBL's 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season\nThe Melbourne Victory 2012\u201313 season is Melbourne Victory's eighth A-League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nAt the start of the 2012\u201313 season Ubay Luzardo and Jean Carlos Sol\u00f3rzano returned to their respective clubs after their loan deals had expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nIn April 2012 Ange Postecoglou was appointed as Melbourne Victory manager. Veterans Grant Brebner and Ante Covic were released from Melbourne Victory. Fabio was then released and signed a two-year contract with archrival Sydney FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nIn May 2012, it was announced that Carlos Hernandez had exited Melbourne Victory after the club couldn't come to agree a new deal with him as they attempted to slash costs to fit him into the salary cap. On 26 May, Matthew Kemp retired from the A-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nIn June 2012 Harry Kewell quit Melbourne Victory to return to England to be with his family due to problems with his mother-in-law's health.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nSeveral signings took place during pre-season period. Ivorian defender Adama Traor\u00e9 was signed from the defunct Gold Coast United, Sam Gallagher was signed from Central Coast Mariners, Brazilian attacking midfielder Guilherme Finkler was signed from Crici\u00fama Esporte Clube, Mauritian defensive midfield Jonathan Bru was signed from Moreirense F.C., Spase Dilevski was signed from Adelaide United, Theo Markelis was signed from Vicenza Calcio, former Johnny Warren Medal winner Marco Flores was signed from Henan Jianye and Mark Milligan was signed from JEF United Ichihara Chiba after an impressive loan spell with Melbourne Victory under former coach Jim Magilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nIn July 2012 it was announced that the club had agreed to a sponsorship deal for naming rights of the newly formed statewide Victory League based in Tasmania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nOn 18 October 2012 Daniel Allsopp announced his retirement from professional football after four games from the new season. while Nathan Coe returned to Australia to sign with Melbourne Victory on a three-year deal. on 24 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nDuring January transfer window, Petar Franjic, Isaka Cernak & Julius Davies were released and replaced by Francesco Stella, Jesse Makarounas, Jason Geria & Scott Galloway. Former Adelaide United defender Daniel Mullen was loaned from Dalian Aerbin to replace injured Nicolas Ansell for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nMelbourne Victory finished the season in third place in the ladder and lost to Central Coast Mariners in final series semi final but they are qualified for 2014 Asian Champions League if Australia is given 2.5 slots based on the 2013 AFC Champions League evaluation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Season summary\nOn 18 April 2013, a few days before the previous season ended, Marco Rojas quit Melbourne Victory to pursue his career in Europe after Melbourne Victory was defeated in the final series semi final. On the following day, Tando Velaphi, Diogo Ferreira, Sam Gallagher and Spase Dilevski were released from the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Players, Squad\nAs of 28 January 2013. Note: 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, 51], "content_span": [52, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Players, From the youth system\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-00230570-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Transfers, Winter, 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Transfers, Winter, 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230570-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Melbourne Victory FC season, Transfers, Post-season, 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230571-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Grizzlies season\nThe 2012\u201313 Memphis Grizzlies season was the 18th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 12th for the franchise in Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230571-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Grizzlies season\nThe season saw the Grizzlies make the Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history. Prior to making the Conference Finals, the Grizzlies defeated the Los Angeles Clippers in six games in the First Round, and defeated the top-seeded defending runner-up Oklahoma City Thunder in five games in the Semifinals. However, a four-game sweep to the experienced San Antonio Spurs ended the Grizzlies' season and playoff run. Head coach Lionel Hollins was fired at the conclusion of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230571-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Grizzlies season\nLed by Marc Gasol, the Defensive Player of the Year, the 2013 Grizzlies held opponents to 89.3 points per game. This is the last time a team allowed under 90 points per game in an NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230571-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Grizzlies season\nAs of 2021, this is the closest the Grizzlies were to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team represented the University of Memphis in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, the 92nd season of Tiger basketball. The Tigers were coached by head coach Josh Pastner, who was assisted by Damon Stoudamire, Jimmy Williams and Aki Collins. Stoudamire and Williams both assisted Pastner in 2011\u201312, and Collins left Marquette in May 2012 to join Pastner's staff. The Tigers played their home games at the FedExForum in Memphis. The 2012\u201313 season was the final season the Tigers participated in Conference USA before joining the American Athletic Conference in 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team\nThey finished the season 31\u20135, 16\u20130 in C-USA play to be Conference USA regular season champions. They also were champions of the Conference USA Tournament, winning the championship game in two overtimes vs Southern Miss, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. In the tournament, they defeated Saint Mary's in the second round before losing in the third round to Michigan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Pre-season\nThe 2011\u201312 Memphis Tigers finished the season with a record of 26\u20139 (13\u20133 C-USA). The Tigers won the regular season C-USA title as well as the 2012 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament to secure a berth in the 2012 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament where they lost in the second round to Saint Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Pre-season\nIn the off-season, the Tigers lost rising junior Will Barton to the NBA. However, rising sophomore Adonis Thomas, who projected as a possible first-round draft pick, decided to return to Memphis for his second season with the Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Pre-season\nThe 2012\u201313 Tigers were ranked 17th in the pre-season AP poll and 16th in the pre-season coaches poll. On November 9, 2012, junior Geron Johnson was suspended by the NCAA for the season's first three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Pre-season, Recruiting\nThe Tigers signed wing Damien Wilson and power forward Shaq Goodwin in their 2012 recruiting class. After signing with Memphis, Goodwin was selected as a McDonald's All-American. The Tigers also received a commitment from junior college transfer Geron Johnson, a shooting guard. Johnson was rated as the best junior college player in the country and has two years of eligibility in Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Tigers began the season ranked 17th in the AP poll, marking the third year in a row that the Tigers entered the season in the top 25. The Tigers were also the consensus favorite to win the 2013 Conference USA championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Tigers' roster was dominated by a fairly large junior class, including guard Joe Jackson, guard Chris Crawford, guard Antonio Barton, forward Tarik Black, and walk on guard Trey Draper. Guard Geron Johnson was also a junior in his first season with Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nIn the early season Battle 4 Atlantis tournament, Memphis entered with high expectations. However, without Geron Johnson due to suspension in their first game, Memphis was beaten by unranked VCU and unranked Minnesota in its first two Atlantis games before defeating Northern Iowa. Minnesota guard and Memphis native Andre Hollins scored 41 points against his hometown team, while Memphis guard Joe Jackson was limited to 7 minutes of playing time. VCU and Minnesota both went on to be ranked in the AP top 25 after the tournament. The Atlantis results were disappointing for a Tiger squad which did not have a large number of difficult out of conference opponents remaining on its schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nA positive note from the Tigers' trip to the Bahamas was the emergence of forward D.J. Stephens. Stephens, a senior, had been used sparingly while battling injuries and asthma during his first 3 years with the Tigers. Previously known for his extraordinary leaping ability and athleticism who would see time on the floor to bring energy to the team, Stephens began to demonstrate his all-around game, scoring 15 and grabbing 7 rebounds against Minnesota while seeing more than 20 minutes of playing time per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nIn late November, junior captain Tarik Black walked out of practice and did not play in the Tigers' game against UT Martin as a result. Black, whose playing time had decreased, was reportedly considering a transfer, though he came back to the team and finished out the season with the Tigers before announcing his intention to transfer as a graduate at season's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nOn December 15, the Tigers faced the only ranked opponent left on their regular season schedule, #6 Louisville. The Tigers opened a large lead in the first half against the Cardinals and were up by 7 at halftime. However, the veteran Cardinals defeated Memphis in the end, with Joe Jackson leading the Tigers with 23 points. Louisville went on to win the 2013 national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nAfter the December 15 home loss to Louisville, however, the Tigers began a winning streak that persisted for over two months. Wins during that stretch included at Tennessee, Harvard, at Southern Miss, and UCF. Guard Antonio Barton suffered a foot fracture in the road victory over Southern Miss on February 9. Riding a 14-game winning streak, the Tigers reentered the top 25 in both polls on February 11, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nWith a win over Southern Miss on February 23, Memphis clinched the regular season Conference USA title. The Tigers finished the season undefeated in Conference USA play. Junior Joe Jackson was named CUSA player of the year and coach Josh Pastner was named coach of the year in the conference. Senior DJ Stephens finished the season as the CUSA blocks leader and was named defensive player of the year. Freshman Shaq Goodwin was named to the all freshman team, junior Chris Crawford the sixth man of the year, Jackson to the all conference first team, and three Tigers (sophomore Adonis Thomas, junior Geron Johnson, and Stephens) to the all conference third team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Tigers defeated 2 seed Southern Miss in the CUSA tournament final in double overtime. Chris Crawford was named the tournament MVP, having set a career high in 3 pointers made (7) and points (30) in the Tigers semi-final game against Tulsa and scoring 20+ points in each of the Tigers' three tournament games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230572-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team, Season summary\nMemphis was given a 6 seed in the Midwest region of the 2013 NCAA tournament. The Tigers defeated 11 seed St. Mary's in the round of 64 before losing to 3 seed Michigan State in the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230573-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League\nThe 2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League was the inaugural season of the men's field hockey national team league series. The tournament started in August 2012 in Prague, Czech Republic and finished in January 2014 in New Delhi, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230573-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League\nThe Semifinals of this competition also served as a qualifier for the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup as the 6 highest placed teams apart from the host nation and the five continental champions qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230573-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League\nThe Netherlands won the tournament's Final round for the first time after defeating New Zealand 7\u20132 in the final match. England won the third place match by defeating Australia 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230573-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League, Qualification\nEach national association member of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) had the opportunity to compete in the tournament, and after seeking entries to participate, 62 teams were announced to compete. However, for different reasons, the final count of participating teams was 54.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230573-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League, Qualification\nThe 8 teams ranked between 1st and 8th in the FIH World Rankings current at early 2011 received an automatic bye to the Semifinals while the 8 teams ranked between 9th and 16th received an automatic bye to Round 2. Those sixteen teams, shown with qualifying rankings, were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230573-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League, Final ranking\nFIH issued a final ranking to determine the world ranking. The final ranking was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230574-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Final\nThe 2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Final took place between 10\u201318 January 2014 in New Delhi, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230574-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Final\nThe Netherlands won the tournament for the first time after defeating New Zealand 7\u20132 in the final. England won the third place match by defeating Australia 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230574-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Final, Qualification\nThe host nation qualified automatically in addition to 7 teams qualified from the Semifinals. The following eight teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230574-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Final, Umpires\nBelow are the 10 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230574-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Final, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 114 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 4.75 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230575-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Round 1\nThe 2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Round 1 was held from August to December 2012. A total of 35 teams competing in 9 events were part in this round of the tournament playing for 13 berths in the Round 2, played from February to June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230575-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Round 1, Qualification\nEach national association member of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) had the opportunity to compete in the tournament. Teams ranked 17th and lower in the FIH World Rankings current at the time of seeking entries for the competition were allocated to one of the Round 1 events. The following 35 teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230575-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Round 1, Lousada, Pool\n1 Match was suspended at half time because of bad weather. The final 35 minutes were played on Friday, 28 September 2012 at 11:00 local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230576-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Round 2\nThe 2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Round 2 was held from February to June 2013. A total of 24 teams competing in 4 events were part in this round of the tournament playing for 7 berths in the Semifinals, played from June to July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230576-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Round 2, Qualification\n8 teams ranked between 9th and 16th in the FIH World Rankings current at the time of seeking entries for the competition qualified automatically, but Malaysia was chosen to host a Semifinal. The Czech Republic was invited to take their place. Also, as Azerbaijan withdrew from participating, Oman took their place in the tournament. Additionally 13 teams qualified from Round 1 and three nations that did not meet ranking criteria and were exempt from Round 1 to host Round 2 tournaments. The following 24 teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230577-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals\nThe 2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals took place from June to July 2013. A total of 16 teams competing in 2 events were part in this round of the tournament playing for 7 berths in the Final, played between 10 and 18 January 2014 in New Delhi, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230577-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals\nThis round also served as the qualifier for the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup as the 6 highest placed teams apart from the host nation and the five continental champions qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230577-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals, Qualification\n8 teams ranked between 1st and 8th in the FIH World Rankings current at the time of seeking entries for the competition qualified automatically. After Germany announced they would not be able host a Semifinal due to financial restrictions, Malaysia was chosen to do so therefore exempt from Round 2, to which were qualified by ranking basis. For this reason one less berth was available at that event and only 7 teams qualified from Round 2. France (17th) qualified as the highest-ranked second-placed team between the Saint-Germain-en-Laye and Elektrostal Round 2 events, leaving Russia (20th) unable to qualify. The following sixteen teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230577-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals, Rotterdam, Umpires\nBelow are the 10 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230577-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals, Johor Bahru, Umpires\nBelow are the 10 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230578-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Men's Volleyball Thailand League\nThe Volleyball Thailand League is the highest level of Thailand club volleyball in the 2012\u201313 season and the 8th edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230579-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Meralco Bolts season\nThe 2012\u201313 Meralco Bolts season is the 3rd season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230580-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mercer Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Mercer Bears men's basketball team represented Mercer University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears, led by fifth year head coach Bob Hoffman, played their home games at Hawkins Arena on the university's Macon, Georgia campus and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 24\u201312, 14\u20134 in A-Sun play to win the regular season conference championship. They advanced to the championship game of the Atlantic Sun Tournament where they lost to Florida Gulf Coast. As a regular season conference champions who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the 2013 NIT where they defeated Tennessee in the first round before losing in the second round to BYU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230581-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season\nThe Mercyhurst Lakers women's hockey team represented Mercyhurst College in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Lakers were coached by Michael Sisti and advanced to the NCAA Frozen Four, before being defeated by Boston University 4-1 in the National Semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230581-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season, Offseason\nJunior Forward Christine Bestland and Sophomore Forward Shelby Bram were invited to the Team Canada U22 Development selection camp. Bram was ultimately chosen to the team, and faced off against the US U22 Women, which included Mercyhurst graduate Kelley Steadman. Team USA swept the three game series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230581-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nJunior Forward Christine Bestland was unanimously chosen as the CHA Conference Player of the Year. Stephanie Ciampa was named CHA Goaltender of the Year. Bestland, Forward Shelby Bram and Defender Vaila Higson were named to the All-Conference First Team. Defender Molly Byrne was named to the Second Team. Forwards Emily Janiga and Jenna Dingeldein, as well as Defender Lauren Kilroy were named to the All-Rookie Team. Christine Bestland was named to the All-USCHO Third Team. The USCHO honors the best college players in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 2012\u201313. 2012\u201313 season was the 13th season of Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu football team in S\u00fcper Lig, the top level division in Turkey. Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu football team has finished 2012\u201313 season in 18th place in Turkish S\u00fcper Lig and relegated to 2013\u201314 TFF First League at the end of the season. Team participated in 2012\u201313 Turkish Cup and was eliminated at group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season\nAli Kahramanl\u0131 was club president. Nurullah Sa\u011flam continued as head coach. However, things have gone bad and he resigned before the end of the first half. Giray Bulak took over the team, but he couldn't succeed yet. Hakan Kutlu was charged to complete the season and prepare team for the next season in the lower league. Attacking midfielder Nduka Ozokwo was the most appeared player with 37 appearances in total. Emmanuel Culio, a winger loaned from Galatasaray made the most appearances in league matches (31 apps.). M\u00e1rcio Nobre who known as Mert Nobre in Turkey was the top goalscorer with 13 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig participation\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu participated in 2011\u201312 S\u00fcper Lig. The league was played as Spor-Toto S\u00fcper Lig in that season due to sponsorship reasons. 18 teams attended. The champions and runners-up were qualified for 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League (ECL). The third and fourth teams were qualified for 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League (UEL). The third team to be qualified for UEL was the Cup runners-up, because Cup winners were already qualified for ECL. Bottom three teams were relegated to 2013\u201314 TFF First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig participation\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu finished 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig season at 18th place and was relegated to 2013\u201314 TFF First League at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig participation, League table\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig season place in league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig participation, Results by round\nResults of games M\u0130Y played in 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig by rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig participation, First half\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig 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, 77], "content_span": [78, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig participation, Second half\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig 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, 78], "content_span": [79, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 Turkish Cup participation\n2012\u201313 Turkish Cup was played for 51st time as Ziraat T\u00fcrkiye Kupas\u0131 for sponsorship reasons. The Cup was played by 156 teams in three stages. In the first stage, 5 one-leg elimination rounds were played. In the second stage 8 remaining teams played in two groups (A and B) in a two-leg round robin system. In the third stage first and second teams in each group played semifinals and after finals Fenerbah\u00e7e won the Cup for the 6th time. Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu took place in the Cup starting from second elimination stage and was eliminated in group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 Turkish Cup participation, Cup track\nThe drawings and results Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) followed in 2012\u201313 Turkish Cup are shown in the following table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 Turkish Cup participation, Game details\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2012\u201313 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-00230582-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2012\u201313 squad\nAppearances, goals and cards count for 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig and 2012\u201313 Turkish Cup games. Only the players who appeared in game rosters were included. Kit numbers were allowed to select by players. 18 players appeared in each game roster, three to be replaced. Players are listed in order of appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230582-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, U-21 team\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu U-21 team had participated in 2012\u201313 U-21 League. League was played in three stages. In the first stage, 46 teams played ranking group games in 4 groups on regional basis. 2 consisted of 11 and 2 consisted of 12 teams. In the second stage winners and runners-up of each ranking group constituted final group while the rest played classification group games. In the third stage, winners of classification groups played quarterfinals with first four placed teams in final group. Mersin idmanyurdu U-21 team took place in Ranking Group 4 and finished 6th in the first stage. In the second stage the team took place in Classification Group 4 and finished 4th with 17 wins, 8 deuces and 15 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230583-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mestis season\nThe 2012\u201313 Mestis season was the 13th season of the Mestis, the second level of ice hockey in Finland. Twelve teams participated in the league, and Jukurit won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230584-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Heat season\nThe 2012\u201313 Miami Heat season was the franchise's 25th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA). They came into the season as the defending NBA champions, back-to-back Eastern Conference champions, the third season playing with the \"Big Three\" of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, and the fifth season under head coach Erik Spoelstra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230584-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Heat season\nDuring the season, the Heat embarked on a 27-game winning streak, which at the time ranked as the second longest winning streak in NBA history, and finished with a 66\u201316 record, the best record with the Big Three and a franchise best. James, Wade and Bosh were all selected for the 2013 NBA All-Star Game, while James won his fourth NBA Most Valuable Player Award at the end of the season, just one vote shy of winning the award unanimously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230584-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Heat season\nOn June 3, 2013, the Heat defeated the Indiana Pacers in game seven of the Eastern Conference Finals to become the first team since the Chicago Bulls in 1998 to Three-peat as Eastern Conference champions. The Heat then defeated the San Antonio Spurs in an NBA Finals that went the full seven games, handing the Spurs their first loss in the NBA Finals, and with this victory in the NBA Finals, it echoed the 1997\u201398 Bulls, as they had also been the last Eastern team to repeat as NBA champions. Because of their dominant regular and postseason performance as well as James' individual achievements, this Miami Heat team is widely regarded as one of the greatest teams in NBA history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230584-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Heat season, Draft picks\nTraded to the Philadelphia 76ers for draft rights to Justin Hamilton and a future first-round pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230584-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Heat season, NBA records\nThe following records were set or tied by the Heat this season-", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230585-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team represented the University of Miami during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hurricanes, led by second-year head coach Jim Larra\u00f1aga, played their home games at the Bank United Center and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. With a veteran roster, the Hurricanes finished the regular season with a conference record of 15\u20133 and won the ACC regular season championship. This marked the program's first-ever outright regular season conference championship. They entered the ACC Tournament as the top-seed and received a first-round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230585-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team\nAfter defeating Boston College and NC State, they beat North Carolina to capture the 2013 ACC tournament championship and became the first ACC school other than Duke or North Carolina to win both the ACC regular season and tournament championships in the same season since the 1974 NC State team. The Hurricanes were selected as a 2-seed in the South Region of the 2013 NCAA Tournament and beat 15-seed Pacific in the second round. The Hurricanes beat 7-seed Illinois in the third round to advance to the sweet sixteen where they lost to Marquette. They finished the season 29\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230585-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami Hurricanes men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Hurricanes finished the 2011\u201312 season 20\u201313 overall, 9\u20137 in ACC play and lost in the second round of the NIT to Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230586-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami RedHawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Miami RedHawks men's basketball team represented Miami University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The RedHawks, led by first year head coach John Cooper, played their home games at Millett Hall and were members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 9\u201322, 3\u201313 in MAC play to finish in last place in the East Division. They lost in the second round of the MAC Tournament to Eastern Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230586-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Miami RedHawks men's basketball team\nThis season was the first -and only- season to air on the Cincinnati radio station WCFN (now WOSL). It aired on \"FM 100.3 The Fan\" from its December 30 game vs. Wilmington, when the station launched its sports format, until the end of the season in March. WCFN returned to its rhythmic oldies, which it previously carried as WMOJ \"Mojo 100.3\" format 3 months later as WOSL \"Old School 100.3\", ending the broadcast of RedHawks basketball on 100.3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans represented Michigan State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was Tom Izzo who was in his 18th year. The team played their home games at Breslin Center in East Lansing, MI and were members of the Big Ten Conference. MSU finished with a record of 27\u20139, 13\u20135 to finish in a tie for second place in Big Ten play. The Spartans lost in the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament to Ohio State. MSU received a bid to the NCAA Tournament for the 16th straight year where they reached the Sweet Sixteen for the second consecutive year, losing to Duke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2011\u201312 season with a record of 29\u20138, 13\u20135 to earn a share of the Big Ten Championship. They won the Big Ten Tournament to earn a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, their 15th straight trip to the Tournament, and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen before losing to Louisville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offeseason\nThe Spartans lost Draymond Green (16.2 PPG, 10.6 RPG, 3.8 APG) to the NBA Draft following the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Offeseason, 2012 recruiting class\nMichigan State's top-10 ranked recruiting class, was headlined by 6'4\" SG Gary Harris. The rest of the class consisted of PF Matt Costello, PF Kenny Kaminski, and PG Denzel Valentine. Notably, Matt Costello and Denzel Valentine finished first and second, respectively, in the voting for Michigan's Mr. Basketball, MSU's fourth straight Mr. Basketball signee (2011 winner Dwaun Anderson originally signed with Michigan State, but was released from his National Letter of Intent to go to Wagner College for personal reasons).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 88], "content_span": [89, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nJuniors Adreian Payne (10.5 points and 7.6 rebounds per game) and Keith Appling (13.4 points per game), senior Derrick Nix (9.9 points and 6.6 rebounds per game), and sophomore Branden Dawson (8.9 points and 5.9 rebounds per game) led the Spartans. Freshman Gary Harris (12.9 points per game) also played a major role for the Spartans. The Spartans began the season ranked No. 14 in both polls and traveled to Germany to play Connecticut at Ramstein Air Force Base. The Spartans were stunned by UConn, but rebounded with a win over No. 7 Kansas in the Champions Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nShortly thereafter, MSU fell to Miami in the ACC-Big Ten Challenge. The Spartans defeated Tuskegee at Jenison Field House, their former basketball home on Michigan State's campus in a series of games held to commemorate the \"Game of Change\" that occurred during the 1963 NCAA Tournament. The Spartans cruised through the remaining non-conference season to finish at 11\u20132 and ranked No. 18 in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nMichigan State lost their first Big Ten game to No. 9-ranked Minnesota, but won their next six conference games. The streak included a win over No. 11 Ohio State. Following a loss to No. 7 Indiana, MSU again went on a winning streak, winning their next five games including wins against No. 18 Minnesota and No. 4 Michigan. The streak ended with losses to No. 1 Indiana, at No. 18 Ohio State, and at No. 4 Michigan in a three-game stretch leaving MSU at 11\u20135 in conference. MSU rebounded to win the final two games against No. 22 Wisconsin and Northwestern. The Spartans finished in a second place tie with Ohio State with a 13\u20135 conference record and ranked No. 8 in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nAs the No. 3 seed in the Big Ten Tournament, MSU faced Iowa in the quarterfinals. After a brutal first half where the Spartans only mustered 20 points and trailed Iowa 30\u201320 at the break, MSU responded. Led by Keith Appling and Gary Harris' 13 points each, MSU rallied from a 12-point deficit in the second half to pull out the 59\u201356 victory. The win moved MSU to the semifinals of the tournament against Ohio State. In a hard fought battle, MSU was unable to pull out the victory, falling to OSU 61\u201358.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230587-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Spartans received a No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament, their 16th straight appearance in the Tournament. Led by Derrick Nix's 23 points and 15 rebounds in the game, as the Spartans cruised to a 65\u201354 win over Valparaiso in the First Round. In the Second Round, Gary Harris led the Spartans with 23 points as MSU blew out Memphis to advance to their fifth Sweet Sixteen in six years. The trip to the Sweet Sixteen also marked the Spartans 11th trip in the prior 16 years. However, the Spartans were defeated by No. 2 seed Duke, who was led by Seth Curry with 29 points, in the Sweet Sixteen. Appling's 16 points and Payne's 14 were not enough in the loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team represented the University of Michigan during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played its home games in Ann Arbor, Michigan, at the Crisler Center. This season marked the team's 96th consecutive year as a member of the Big Ten Conference, and it is occasionally referred to as \"Team 96\". The team was led by sixth-year head coach John Beilein.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nAs the defending 2011\u201312 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season regular season co-champions, the Wolverines finished fourth in the conference in 2012\u201313 and as National Runner-up in the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament after losing in the championship game to Louisville. Louisville's win was later vacated due to the 2015 University of Louisville basketball sex scandal. The team achieved a 31\u20138 record, the most wins by the program in 20 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nFollowing the 2011\u201312 season, the team lost graduating senior captains Zack Novak and Stu Douglass, who moved on to professional basketball careers in Europe. The incoming class of Mitch McGary, Glenn Robinson III and Nik Stauskas was ranked among the best classes in the nation by the media. With its new lineup, the team matched the greatest starts in school history. Starting the season with 11 consecutive wins matched the best start since Michigan's 1989 national champions, the 1988\u201389 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nAt 16\u20130, Michigan matched its best start since the last repeat Big Ten Regular season championship, the 1985\u201386 team, tying a school record. Reaching 19\u20131 set a record for the best start in school history. The team also reached the number one position in the AP Poll for the first time since the Fab Five 1992\u201393 team. The team entered February with a 20\u20131 record (7\u20131 Big Ten), but with an injury to eventual B1G All-Defensive selection Jordan Morgan and a stretch of games against its strongest conference opponents, Michigan lost three out of four games. The team closed the season with a 5\u20135 run to finish tied for fourth in the conference and won one game in the Big Ten Tournament before being eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe team was led by 2013 national player of the year, Big Ten Player of the Year and 2013 Consensus All-American Trey Burke and three additional All-Conference honorees. Tim Hardaway Jr. was named to the 2012\u201313 All-Big Ten first team by the coaches and to the second team by the media; Robinson was named an honorable mention All-Big Ten by the media, and Morgan was an All-Big Ten Defensive team selection. Stauskas and McGary earned multiple Big Ten Freshman of the Week recognitions during the season. Burke was the second National Player of the Year and eighth first-team consensus All-American in Michigan basketball history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nMichigan entered the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament as the youngest team in the field. The team made its first Sweet Sixteen appearance since the 1993\u201394 team did so. The Wolverines made their first \"official\" appearance in the Final Four and the national title game since the 1989 national championship season; appearances in 1992 and 1993 were vacated due to a scandal. Following the season, at the 2013 NBA Draft, Burke and Hardaway were selected ninth and twenty-fourth, respectively, becoming the first pair of first-round NBA draft choices from Michigan since the 1994 NBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason roster changes, Departures\nThe team lost both of its captains from the prior season to graduation after they completed their eligibility. Senior two-time captain Douglass turned pro, joining Basket Navarra Club of the Liga Espa\u00f1ola de Baloncesto. Senior three-time captain Novak graduated to play for Landstede Basketbal in the Dutch Basketball League. In addition to the loss of senior co-captains, the team lost three players who decided to transfer: Evan Smotrycz, Carlton Brundidge and Colton Christian. Smotrycz, who transferred to Maryland, had started in 42 of the 69 games he played during his first two years. He left the program as the fifth-best all-time three-point shooter with a percentage of 40.5. Brundidge transferred to Detroit and Christian transferred to Florida International. The program also announced the departure of walk-on Sai Tummala and the return of walk-on Corey Person for a fifth year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 87], "content_span": [88, 980]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason roster changes, 2012\u201313 team recruits\nGlenn Robinson III, son of former first overall NBA draft pick Glenn Robinson, verbally committed on September 14, 2010 as the first commitment in Michigan's class of 2012. On March 26, 2011, Michigan received its second verbal commitment of the class of 2012 from Canadian wing guard Nik Stauskas. On November 3, Mitch McGary, who was ranked as the number two prospect in the nation at the time, announced his verbal commitment to Michigan. Within hours of the commitment, ESPN announced that Michigan ranked as the fifth best class in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 98], "content_span": [99, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason roster changes, 2012\u201313 team recruits\nEach of the three signed a National Letter of Intent with the team on November 9. After several other schools announced their commitments, the signing of McGary moved Michigan from outside the top 25 at the end of October to the number 7 class in the nation by mid-November, according to ESPN. That November, McGary, Robinson and Stauskas ranked 3, 34, and 79, respectively, in the Rivals.com Class of 2012 Top 150.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 98], "content_span": [99, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason roster changes, 2012\u201313 team recruits\nAll three recruits had playoff success: McGary was a member of Brewster Academy's National Prep Championship team. Stauskas earned the championship game MVP of the NEPSAC Class AA Championship after leading St. Mark's to victory. Robinson led Lake Central to its first Indiana High School Athletic Association sectional title in 15 years. He earned the Post-Tribune's Boys basketball player of the year award for Northwest Indiana and the state MVP from the Indiana Basketball News.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 98], "content_span": [99, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason roster changes, 2012\u201313 team recruits\nMcGary was invited to participate in the four-team April 1, 2012 All-American Championship, along with future teammate Robinson in New Orleans. Robinson was awarded the ESPNHS All-American Championship Player of the Game for his 16-point, 4-rebound performance, which included 5 dunks among his 6-for-7 shooting night. McGary was also selected to represent USA Basketball at the fifteenth annual Nike Hoops Summit on April 7 as part of the 2012 USA Junior National Select Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 98], "content_span": [99, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason roster changes, 2012\u201313 team recruits\nMichael \"Spike\" Albrecht committed to Michigan on April 6, 2012. Albrecht led Northfield Mount Hermon School to the 2012 NEPSAC Class AAA Boys' Basketball Tournament, defeating McGary's Brewster Academy in the semifinals. Albrecht was MVP of the tournament. Albrecht was a former AAU teammate of McGary and Robinson. Albrecht's and outgoing captain Novak's fathers were collegiate teammates. Albrecht was a 2011 graduate of Crown Point High School. After most of the big signings announced their decisions on the April 11 signing day, Michigan was ranked as the early number 5 preseason selection as a team by ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 98], "content_span": [99, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013\u201314 team recruits\nZak Irvin was named 2013 Indiana Mr. Basketball, giving Hamilton Southeastern High School the state's first back-to-back winners (Gary Harris) from the same high school. Derrick Walton was runner up in the 2013 Mr. Basketball of Michigan by a 2130\u20132086 margin to Iowa State signee Monte Morris despite having one more first place vote. Both Walton and Irvin were 2013 Parade All-American honorees and were named state Boys Basketball Gatorade Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason\nMichigan basketball hosted its on campus media day press conference on October 10, 2012 at Crisler Center. The team was represented by Burke, Hardaway, Morgan and Beilein at the Big Ten Conference Basketball Media Day press conference on October 24 in Rosemont, Illinois. When the 24-person Big Ten Media poll was announced, Michigan was predicted to finish second to Indiana. Burke was a preseason All-Conference selection by the same media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason\nMichigan enjoyed high expectations from the national media as well during the preseason. Sporting News named them to the number 5 position in its preseason poll, while conference foes Indiana and Ohio State were ranked number 1 and 3, respectively. Michigan also earned the number 5 ranking in both the preseason Coaches' Poll and preseason Associated Press poll, but behind Indiana (#1) and Ohio State (#4) in both. This was Michigan's highest preseason ranking since the 1992\u201393 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason\nSports Illustrated ranked Michigan number 9 in its October preseason power rankings, again behind Indiana (#1) and Ohio State (#6), but when it printed its November preseason poll listed Michigan at number 6 ahead of Ohio State (#7), but behind Indiana (#1). Prior to the first exhibition game on November 1, senior Josh Bartelstein was named team captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Preseason\nESPN's Eamonn Brennan noted that Michigan was a perimeter oriented team with possibly the best one-two guard combination in the country. Burke and Hardaway were both preseason John R. Wooden Award top 50 selections. Burke was a preseason All-American (Associated Press first team, CBS Sports second team, Sports Illustrated second team, ESPN second team, Sporting News third team) as well as a preseason Naismith Award top 50 selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Slogans, nicknames and emblems, WE ON\nThe acronym \"WE ON\" was the slogan for the whole team for the 2012\u201313 season. The team and coaching staff selected it at the beginning of the season as another way for Michigan to say Bo Schembechler's famous quote, \"the Team, the Team, the Team.\" The acronym \"WE ON\" stands for \"When Everyone Operates N'sync.\" Michigan assistant coach Bacari Alexander even tweeted that the acronym summarizes this team-focused mindset. According to Dave Brandon, assistant coach LaVall Jordan and director of basketball operations Travis Conlan guided the team to develop the slogan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Slogans, nicknames and emblems, WE ON\nAdidas warm up shirts were created and were first worn on November 21, 2012, before Michigan's NIT Season Tip-Off game against the Pittsburgh Panthers. The shirts use the school colors with blue with maize lettering. On February 12, 2013, when Michigan played the first of two regularly scheduled rivalry games against Michigan State, students in the Izzone at the Breslin Center wore T-shirts with \"YOU OFF\" printed in Spartan colors (green and white). Michigan State went on to win the game by 23 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Slogans, nicknames and emblems, WE ON\n\"WE\" \u2013 WE is also an acronym for \"Wolverine Excellence\", which is chiefly used by the team. Wolverine Excellence calls for players and managers to focus on its five core values: integrity, unity, passion, diligence and appreciation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Slogans, nicknames and emblems, WE ON\n\"ON\" \u2013 ON represented each player's individual commitment to season-long improvement. There was a \"U-M Fuse Box\" (mock-University of Michigan set of switches) in the Men's Basketball locker room in Crisler Center. Each player had selected one word on which to focus during the season and before every practice and game, each player flipped his switch \"on.\" This represented each player's commitment to improvement every day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Slogans, nicknames and emblems, Fresh Five\nPrior to the season, the five freshmen were dubbed the \"Fresh Five\", a moniker hearkening remembrance of the incoming freshman class of 1991, known as the Fab Five, that led Michigan to back-to-back Championship games while starting the majority of games. However, the nickname and its expectations were downplayed most of the season by the team. Nonetheless, during the final two weeks of the regular season The New York Times ran a feature story on the team that reinvigorated the nickname while noting that the current five were the supporting cast rather than the stars of the team like the original five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 93], "content_span": [94, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Slogans, nicknames and emblems, Canadian flag\nESPN's Chantel Jennings tweeted a picture of a Flag of Canada redone in Michigan's team colors of maize and blue at Crisler Arena on December 4. One of her followers noted that the big version on the wall was a general Stauskas fan flag and that a little version of the flag was added next to it for each three-pointer Canadian Stauskas made in the game. By mid-December of his freshman season, the students in the Maize Rage (Michigan student section at Crisler Arena) had begun cheering Stauskas on with such a flag. The Michigan Public & Media Relations office started mentioning the flag before Christmas. The flag was mentioned widely in the press as he continued his hot shooting into January. Through the first week of January, Stauskas was shooting 53.7% on three-point shots as the team held a 15\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Slogans, nicknames and emblems, 96\nThe team, which represented Michigan Basketball for the ninety-sixth season in the Big Ten Conference, is sometimes referred to as Team 96 or Squad 96. Although this team represented Michigan for the ninety-sixth consecutive year, there was controversy as to whether the team should in fact be marketed as Team 96 because the 1908\u201309 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team was not properly accounted for among the prior teams. The subsequent team was marketed as Team 98.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, November\nHardaway began the season with his fourth career double-double by scoring 25 points (including 5-for-5 three-point shooting) and adding 10 rebounds in a 100\u201362 win over Slippery Rock; this earned him his second career Big Ten Player of the Week award. The 100-point performance of November 9 was Michigan's first since the 2007\u201308 team posted 103 points against Oakland on December 12, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, November\nMichigan hosted games for the first two rounds of the 2012 NIT Season Tip-Off. The team's first game of the tournament, a November 12 contest against the IUPUI Jaguars, resulted in a 91\u201354 Michigan victory. The win also gave Michigan its first consecutive 90-point performances since the 2000\u201301 team recorded three consecutive 90-point games. The following night, Michigan defeated Cleveland State by a 77\u201347 margin, marking the first time the school opened the season with three consecutive 30-point victories. The win also marked the first time Michigan had posted three consecutive 30-point wins since the 1988\u201389 Wolverines team (the 1989 national champion) won five consecutive 30-point games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, November\nIn the championship rounds of the NIT Season Tip-Off tournament at Madison Square Garden on November 21 and 23, Michigan defeated Pittsburgh and Kansas State, respectively, to win the tournament. Hardaway, who totaled 39 points at the Garden, was the tournament MVP and was joined on the all-tournament team by Burke, who contributed 27 points and 10 assists. Stauskas earned Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors for his NIT tournament performance in which he averaged 12.5 points and 4.5 rebounds. On November 27, Michigan raised its Big Ten championship banner from the season before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, November\nThen, the team defeated its first ranked opponent of the season \u2013 NC State (#18 AP/#18 Coaches) \u2013 in the ACC\u2013Big Ten Challenge. The win was supported by Burke's first career double-double which included a career-high 11 assists, no turnovers and 18 points as well as a career-high 20 points from Stauskas in a 79\u201372 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, December\nRanked third in both polls, Michigan established a record as the highest ranked visiting team in the history of Carver Arena on December 1. Giving Stauskas his first career start, Michigan emerged victorious over Bradley. It was the third game of the season that Michigan never trailed in. Stauskas repeated as Big Ten Freshman of the Week on December 3 for his back-to-back 20-point performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, December\nOn December 4, Michigan defeated Western Michigan 73\u201341, giving the team its first 8\u20130 start since the 1996\u201397 team; the team never trailed in the game. Michigan defeated Arkansas 80\u201367 in its December 8 matchup. It marked the fourth 9\u20130 start in school history (1988\u201389, 1985\u201386 and 1926\u201327) and the third consecutive game that Michigan never trailed. Michigan went to 10\u20130 on December 11 by defeating Binghamton 67\u201339.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, December\nMichigan traveled to play in the December 15 Brooklyn Hoops Winter Festival at the Barclays Center, where they defeated West Virginia (coach Beilein's previous employer) 81\u201366 to move to 11\u20130 for the third time in school history (1985\u201386 and 1988\u201389). The team never trailed in the contest. For averaging 23.0 points, 6.5 assists, 4.5 rebounds and 2.0 steals with only 1.0 turnover in the games against Binghamton and West Virginia, Burke earned Player of the Week on December 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, December\nOn December 20, the team became the second in school in history (1985\u201386 went 16\u20130) to reach 12\u20130 when it beat Eastern Michigan. After recording his first career double-double in the game with only 18 minutes of play, McGary was recognized as Big Ten Freshman of the Week. Hardaway suffered an ankle injury that caused him to miss the December 29 game against Central Michigan and that broke his 81 consecutive games played streak that went back to the beginning of his Michigan career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, December\nThe game also marked the team's second game without Jon Horford, who dislocated his knee during the West Virginia game. In Hardaway's absence, Burke posted his second career double-double with 22 points and a career-high tying 11 assists and Robinson posted his second career 20-point game. Stauskas added career highs with 5 three-pointers and 7 rebounds and earned his third Big Ten Freshman of the Week award on December 31. The thirteenth win clinched Michigan's ninth perfect non-conference regular season record. The team never trailed in the contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, January\nOn January 3, Michigan opened the 2012\u201313 Big Ten conference schedule with a 94\u201366 win over Northwestern to move to 14\u20130. Burke had 23 points, 5 assists and a career high 4 steals, while Hardaway added 21 points, Morgan posted a double-double with 12 points and 13 rebounds, while Stauskas and Robinson added 10 points each. Burke and Robinson both posted their third and first career double-doubles, respectively, in a 95\u201367 victory against Iowa on January 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, January\nIt marked the first time that the team scored 90 points in back-to-back conference games since the 1999\u20132000 team and tied for the most points in a conference game since the 1997\u201398 team. On January 7, Burke was recognized as Big Ten Conference Player of the Week and Robinson was recognized as Conference Freshman of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, January\nThe team tied the school record for best start by defeating Nebraska for its 16th straight victory to start the season on January 9. The victory also marked Beilein's 400th Division I coaching victory. On January 13, the team lost to Ohio State (#15 AP/#14 Coaches) snapping their winning streak. Horford returned to the lineup after missing 5 games. Michigan had been the only remaining unbeaten team and was expected to be ranked #1 if they had won. The loss was Michigan's 9th straight in Columbus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, January\nMichigan defeated Minnesota (#9 AP/#12 Coaches) at Williams Arena on January 17, marking the first time Michigan defeated a top-10 team on the road since a December 6, 1996, victory by the 1996\u201397 team over Duke. After his performance, in which he scored 21 points while making 7 of 8 shots and 4 of 5 three-point shots, in addition to recording 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 3 steals and 2 blocks, Hardaway earned a second Big Ten Player of the Week Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, January\nMichigan defeated Purdue 68\u201353 on January 24 and Illinois 74\u201360 on January 27. This gave Michigan the first 19\u20131 start in school history. Robinson earned his second Big Ten Freshman of the Week award on January 28 for a pair of 12-point performances during a week in which he averaged 8 rebounds while maintaining 71.4% field goal percentage. Later that day, Michigan was ranked number one in the AP Poll with 51 of the 65 first place votes. It marked the first time Michigan ranked atop the AP Poll since the Fab Five 1992\u201393 team did so on December 5, 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, January\nMichigan concluded January by beating Northwestern a second time on January 30, becoming the first team in the country to reach 20 wins. After enduring an injured ankle against Illinois, starting center Jordan Morgan missed his first game since redshirting a full season for the 2009\u201310 Wolverines when he sat out the Northwestern game. Horford started in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, February\nOn February 2, 2013, Michigan (#1 AP/#2 Coaches) appeared on ESPN's College GameDay against Indiana (#3 AP/#3 Coaches) who hosted the game at Assembly Hall. Michigan lost 81\u201373, but the television broadcast of the game on ESPN set a Big Ten record for viewership with 4.035 million viewers. Morgan only played two minutes behind replacement starter Horford. Michigan then defeated Ohio State (#10 AP/#10 Coaches) in overtime in the rematch at home on February 5. Starting center Morgan only played 4 minutes. Coach Beilein noted that Morgan's absence affected the team's ability to match up defensively and substitute as it desired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, February\nMichigan lost to Wisconsin on February 9 in overtime following a half-court buzzer beater by Wisconsin that tied the game in regulation It marked Michigan's eleventh consecutive loss against Wisconsin on the road. Morgan did not play, but McGary played 32 minutes, totaling 12 points, 3 steals and 8 rebounds. However, dramatically increased play in Morgan's absence enabled McGary to earn his second Big Ten Freshman of the Week honor on February 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, February\nOn February 12, Michigan lost 75\u201352 in its rivalry game against (#8 AP/#8 Coaches) Michigan State. Among those in attendance were Rick Snyder, Matthew Stafford, Mark Dantonio, Brady Hoke, and Lloyd Carr. It marked the first time both teams were ranked in the top ten of the AP Poll, and resulted in Michigan losing back-to-back games and three consecutive road games for the first time since the 2010\u201311 team did so. Burke's 18 points, 4 assists and 3 steals were one of Michigan's few bright spots in their February 12 contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, February\nOn February 17 against Penn State, Burke posted a season-high 29 points along with 5 assists, 3 rebounds and two steals. As a result of his efforts, Burke won his third player of the week award of the season and fourth of his career on February 18. Morgan returned to the starting lineup in the Penn State contest, but he only played 7 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, February\nAfter playing only 22 total minutes since January 27, Morgan played more minutes (17) than the other low post players (McGary, Horford, and Max Bielfeldt) for the first time on February 24 against Illinois. Michigan defeated Illinois 71\u201358 behind 26 points and 8 assists from Burke. In the game, Burke became the seventh Wolverine sophomore to reach 1000 career points. On February 27, Michigan surrendered a 15-point second-half lead to give Penn State its only conference win of the season. Following the game, the team called a rare players-only meeting at the Pizza House, with fifth-year reserve Corey Person doing most of the talking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, March\nOn March 3, Michigan defeated Michigan State (#9 AP/#10 Coaches) in the Ann Arbor rematch of their rivalry series as Trey Burke made 2 steals in the final 30 seconds to secure the 58\u201357 victory. Michigan snapped a 453-game streak with at least one made three-point shot and became the first team since February 2009 to defeat a top ten opponent without making one. On March 6, with its Big 10 Conference Championship destiny in its own hands, Michigan defeated Purdue to set up a championship showdown with Indiana on March 10. Michigan concluded its road schedule with a 5\u20135 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 82], "content_span": [83, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Regular season, March\nMichigan closed out the season by losing to Indiana (#2 AP/#2 Coaches) on March 10, failing its pursuit of defense of its conference co-championship. Michigan led by 5 with 52 seconds to go, but then missed 3 free throws, including the first attempt during 2 one-and-one situations. Burke and Morgan also missed last-second shots at the rim. Michigan wound down its regular season with its fifteenth sellout and five seniors on the roster: Eso Akunne, Josh Bartelstein, Blake McLimans, Corey Person, and Matt Vogrich. The loss kept Michigan from its first undefeated home season since the 1976\u201377 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 82], "content_span": [83, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason\nMichigan participated in the 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament at the United Center in Chicago. As the #5 seed, they defeated Penn State in the opening round on March 14 by an 83\u201366 margin. In the second round, the team lost to Wisconsin, 68\u201359. Prior to the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, Jeff Goodman of CBSSports.com named Michigan first among tournament teams in terms of having the most future NBA talent on its roster (in the absence of Kentucky, which was left to accept an invitation to the 2013 National Invitation Tournament). Among Michigan's starting lineup, Burke, Robinson, Hardaway, and McGary were all expected to be likely NBA Draft choices, while Stauskas had the potential to be one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason\nDespite its highly touted lineup, Michigan entered the tournament as the sixth youngest team in the country and the youngest team in the field of 68 teams according to Sports Illustrated, based on weighted minutes played. The game marked Michigan's first NCAA Championship Monday appearance since 1989. Some sources claim 1993 as the school's last appearance, but those results have been vacated by the NCAA due to the University of Michigan basketball scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason\nMichigan was entered in the tournament's South region where it would play its first two games at The Palace of Auburn Hills in nearby Auburn Hills, Michigan. As a number four seed, Michigan opened the tournament by defeating South Dakota State 71\u201356, giving the team its most wins in 20 years and matching Beilein's career high as it raised its record to 27\u20137. Michigan then ousted 5th-seeded VCU by a 78\u201353 margin. That gave Michigan its first Sweet Sixteen appearance since the 1993\u201394 team went to the 1994 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason, Sweet Sixteen\n\"It was probably the biggest shot I ever made and definitely a shot I'll always remember.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason, Sweet Sixteen\n\u2014Burke during regional semifinal postgame press conference following his late game-tying three-point shot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason, Sweet Sixteen\nThe regional championship rounds for Michigan were at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. On March 29 against Kansas, Michigan overcame a 14-point deficit with 6:50 remaining and a 10-point deficit with 2:52 remaining to force overtime before an eventual victory. Burke scored eight points in the final 1:15 of regulation time, including a game-tying long three-pointer with 4.2 seconds remaining. McGary (25 points and 14 rebounds) and Burke (23 points and 10 assists) both posted double-doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason, Sweet Sixteen\nIn the regional finals on March 31 against Florida, Michigan built a 13\u20130 lead and never led by less than 10 the rest of the game. Several players had career-highs in the game: Stauskas with 6 three-point shots, Burke 8 rebounds, McGary 5 steals and off the bench Albrecht 7 points and 3 steals. Eight of McGary's 11 points came as Michigan built the initial 13\u20130 lead and 5 of Stauskas' 6 three-pointers came as Michigan built a 41\u201317 lead and closed the half with a 47\u201330 lead. Burke was named South Regional Tournament Most Outstanding Player. McGary and Stauskas joined Burke on the five-man South All-Regional team. Following the regional championship postgame prayer and with Mrs. Beilein's consent, McGary and Hardaway gave Beilein a Gatorade shower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason, Final Four\nThe national championship rounds were held at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. In the April 6 national semifinal against Syracuse, Michigan emerged with its thirty-first victory, the most since the 1992\u201393 team went 31\u20135. McGary posted 10 points, 12 rebounds and 6 assists, while the bench contributed 22 points, including 6 from Albrecht, who raised his NCAA tournament total to 5-for-5 on three-point shots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason, Final Four\nMichigan lost the April 8 national championship game against Midwest number one seed Louisville by an 82\u201376 score. Albrecht scored 17 first-half points on 4-for-4 three-point shooting. Burke scored 24 points in the championship game and made the seven-man All-Tournament team (which was revised multiple times) along with teammates McGary and Albrecht.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0047-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Schedule, Postseason, Final Four\nThe turning point of the game was described as a missed call by the referees when, as Michigan trailed 67\u201364 with 5 minutes left, Burke pinned Peyton Siva's dunk attempt with a clean, all-ball block, but was called for a foul, resulting in two made free throws by Siva. Michigan never got closer than 4 points the rest of the game. Louisville's championship has since been vacated by the NCAA, as well as all its wins from 2011 to 2015. This followed an escort recruitment scandal at the university.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Statistics\nBurke's 260 assists set a school single-season record. He also finished his sophomore season with 1,231 career points, surpassing the former school record for sophomore season career point total of 1,218 by Chris Webber. Stauskas reached a total of 80 made three-point shots, which surpassed Hardaway's 2-year-old school freshman season record of 76.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Watchlists and awards, In-season\nStauskas also earned recognition from Sports Illustrated's Seth Davis as National Freshman of the Week on December 3. On January 9, Burke earned the Oscar Robertson National Player of the Week from the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA). Burke also earned ESPN.com Player of the Week recognition on April 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Watchlists and awards, In-season\nThe Wooden Award midseason top 25 list, which included Burke, was announced on January 10. On January 31, Burke was named to the Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA National Player of the Year) midseason top 12 list, while Stuaskas and Robinson were named to the Wayman Tisdale Award (USBWA National Freshman of the Year) top 12 midseason list. Burke was one of six Big Ten players named among the top 30 finalists for the Naismith Award when the list was announced on February 26. Burke was among four Big Ten Players on the March 4, 14-man Robertson watchlist. On March 9, Burke was named among the top 15 Wooden Award finalists. On March 11, Burke was named one of five finalists for the Cousy Award. Burke was named one of four finalists for the Naismith Award on March 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Watchlists and awards, In-season\nBurke was named a first-team All-American by Sporting News on March 11, the USBWA on March 18, Sports Illustrated on March 19, CBSSports.com on March 20, the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) on March 28, and the Associated Press on April 1. Burke was one of four Big Ten players named to the 10-man Wooden All-American team of finalists for the Wooden Award on April 1. On April 1, Robinson was one of two Big Ten players (Harris) named to the 21-man 2013 Kyle Macy Freshman All-America team. Burke became the fifth Consensus All-American (Cazzie Russell, Rickey Green, Gary Grant and Webber) in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Watchlists and awards, In-season\nSI also named Burke National Player of the Year, making him the second (Russell, 1966) National Player of the Year in school history. On April 4, Burke won the Bob Cousy Award and was named Associated Press College Basketball Player of the Year. Burke won both the Oscar Robertson Trophy from the USBWA as well as the John R. Wooden Award on April 5. On April 7, he won the NABC Player of the Year and Naismith College Player of the Year awards, giving him a sweep of the four major player of the year awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Watchlists and awards, In-season\nBurke earned Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year in 2013 and was a unanimous 2012\u201313 All-Big Ten 1st team selection. Hardaway was a 1st team selection by the coaches and second team by the media. Robinson was an honorable mention All-Conference selection and All-freshman honoree by the coaches. Morgan was a coaches All-defensive team selection. On March 12, the USBWA named Burke and Hardaway to its 2012\u201313 Men's All-District V (OH, IN, IL, MI, MN, WI) Team, based upon voting from its national membership. Burke was recognized as District V Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0053-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Watchlists and awards, In-season\nBurke and Hardaway were selected to the NABC Division\u00a0I All\u2010District 7 first team on March 26, as selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, making them eligible for the State Farm Coaches' Division\u00a0I All-America team. On that same day, Burke was selected to the 21-man 2013 Lute Olson All-America Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Watchlists and awards, In-season\nJohn Beilein was selected as an assistant coach for the 2013 World University Games. Seniors Josh Bartelstein and Matt Vogrich were among the 38 Big Ten men's basketball players recognized as Winter Academic All-Big Ten for maintaining 3.0 averages. Trey Burke was named team MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft\nPrior to the final four, McGary stated that he would not enter the 2013 NBA Draft, but a few days later said he had been caught off guard and would prefer to respond after he had time to reflect on his season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0056-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft\nAt 12:30 PM ET on April 4, Forbes sports business reporter Darren Heitner tweeted that Burke and teammate Hardaway would declare for the 2013 NBA Draft. According to Heiter, one of Burke's potential sports agents was Alonzo Shavers, who had known Burke since his birth. Burke's mother responded at 2:15 PM that same day that \"He has not made any decision\" about going pro, according to Yahoo! Sports reporter Eric Adelson. At 2:23 PM, Heitner tweeted that Hardaway Sr. said his son was undecided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0057-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft\nOn April 9 before boarding the airplane to return from the NCAA Final Four, Beilein met with Burke, Hardaway, Robinson and McGary to direct them to seek the advice of the NBA advisory committee. The draft board had until April 15 to develop each individual report and the players had until April 28 to enter the draft. On that same date, ESPN's Jason King predicted that if all four players had left for the NBA draft, the 2013\u201314 team would have begun the season unranked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0057-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft\nUSA Today projected on April 9 that if one of the four possible 2013 NBA draft entrants returned, Michigan could have been ranked number twenty-four, and that if they all returned, Michigan would have been preseason number one. ESPN journalist Myron Medcalf predicted on April 12 that Burke and Hardaway would enter the draft and that McGary and Robinson were on the borderline of doing so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0058-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft\nOn April 13, reports surfaced that Burke would announce that he would enter the NBA Draft at a press conference the following day. He entered the 2013 NBA Draft on April 14. On April 17, Hardaway declared for the NBA Draft. McGary and Robinson announced on April 18 that they had decided not to enter their names in the NBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0059-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft\nOn June 27, 2013 Burke was selected ninth in the 2013 NBA Draft by the Milwaukee Bucks and then traded to the Utah Jazz for the fourteenth and twenty-first picks, which were used to select Shabazz Muhammad and Gorgui Dieng. Hardaway was drafted twenty-fourth by the New York Knicks. Burke and Hardaway became the first Michigan duo selected in the first round since Juwan Howard and Jalen Rose in the 1994 NBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0059-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft\nBurke became the first top-10 Wolverine selection since Jamal Crawford in the 2000 NBA Draft, and joined Victor Oladipo and Cody Zeller, who were selected second and fourth, respectively, to give the Big Ten its first top ten trio since the 1990 NBA Draft. Hardaway joined his father, who was picked fourteenth in 1989 NBA Draft, as a first round selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0060-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 2013 NBA Draft, Team players drafted into the NBA\nEvery player that started in the 2013 national championship game was drafted either in the 2013 or 2014 NBA draft. Four players from Michigan's 2012 entering class were eventually drafted in the NBA draft (Stauskas, McGary, Robinson and LeVert).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 100], "content_span": [101, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230588-0061-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, Postseason roster changes\nFollowing the season the team lost five seniors from the roster: guard Eso Akunne, guard Josh Bartelstein (captain), forward Blake McLimans, guard Corey Person and guard Matt Vogrich. The team's required 10-year dissociation with players implicated in the University of Michigan basketball scandal ended on May 8, 2013. Bartelstein blogged for the team from October 15, 2010, until April 11, 2013. His blogs from this season were turned into an ebook about the season entitled We On: Behind the Scenes of Michigan's Final Four Run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230589-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season is the 67th college basketball season in the conference's existence. The conference features 12 teams in two divisions, East and West, who will compete for the Mid-American Conference (MAC) regular season and tournament titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230589-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season, Pre-season, Media voting\nOn October 29, the members of the MAC News Media Panel voted in the Preseason Media Poll. They voted Ohio as the favorite in the MAC East Division and Toledo in the MAC West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230589-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season, Pre-season, Media voting\nThe media also took a vote on who they think would win the MAC Tournament at the end of the season. Unlike the preseason votes, the media would only select the winner of the tournament, and not the placement of the teams afterwards. Ohio received the most votes with 18, followed by Akron with six votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230589-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference schedules\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Teams play opponents in their division twice, once at home and once away. Teams play opponents outside of their division once a season. (x) indicates games remaining this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 93], "content_span": [94, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230589-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season, Post-season tournaments, MAC Tournament\nThe 2013 MAC tournament only had 11 teams due to Toledo being ineligible for post season play due to low APR Scores. The Semifinals and Championship Game were held at Quicken Loans Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 96], "content_span": [97, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230589-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mid-American Conference men's basketball season, Awards, All-MAC Preseason Team\nAs a part of the Preseason Media Poll, the members also voted on the Preseason All-MAC East and West Division teams. Ohio and Toledo had two players in the East and West Division polls, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 87], "content_span": [88, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230590-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Middle European League\nMiddle European League for the season 2012-13 was the first season of the Middle European League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230591-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team represented Middle Tennessee State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blue Raiders, led by 11th year head coach Kermit Davis, played their home games at the Murphy Center and were members of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 28\u20136, 19\u20131 in Sun Belt play to become Sun Belt regular season champions. They advanced to the semifinals of the Sun Belt Tournament where they lost to FIU. They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, their first tournament bid since 1989, where they lost in the First Four round to Saint Mary's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230591-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball team\nThis was the Blue Raiders last season as a member of the Sun Belt. In July, 2013, they will become a member of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230592-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Middlesbrough F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Middlesbrough's fourth consecutive season in the Championship. They will also compete in the League Cup and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230592-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Players, Captains\nLast updated: June 2012Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230592-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Middlesbrough F.C. season, First team squad, Disciplinary record, Suspensions served\nKey:(H) = League Home, (A) = League Away, (FA) = FA Cup, (CC) = League Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 92], "content_span": [93, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230593-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Midland Football Alliance\nThe 2012\u201313 Midland Football Alliance season was the 19th season of the Midland Football Alliance, a football league in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230593-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230594-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Midland Football Combination\nThe 2012\u201313 Midland Football Combination season was the 76th 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-00230594-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Midland Football Combination, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 13 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with six new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230595-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Millwall F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League Championship was the 128th season in the history of Millwall Football Club. It was their 87th season as a Football League side and their 38th in the second tier of English football. This season marked Millwall's third continuous season in the Championship, after promotion from League One in 2010. This was manager Kenny Jackett's fifth and final season in charge of the club, he resigned at the end of the campaign on 7 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230595-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Millwall F.C. season\nMillwall reached the semi-final of the FA-Cup for only the fifth time in their history, losing to Wigan Athletic. In the league, Millwall flirted with the play-offs in the first half of the season, after a 13-game unbeaten run, but they finished poorly and narrowly avoided relegation by two points on the last day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230595-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Millwall F.C. season, Matches\nMillwall kicked off their pre-season campaign with a tour of Ireland, playing in the Republic of Ireland for two games before crossing the border to finish with a match in Northern Ireland. They returned to England for three more away games before the Football League Championship kicked off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230596-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Milton Keynes Dons' ninth season in their existence as a professional association football club, and their fifth consecutive season competing in League One. As well as competing in League One, the club also competed in the FA Cup, League Cup and League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230596-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230597-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Milwaukee Bucks season\nThe 2012\u201313 NBA season was the Bucks' 45th season in the NBA. The Bucks finished 38-44 and in eighth place in the Eastern Conference in the regular season. They were swept by the eventual back-to-back NBA champion Miami Heat in the first round of the 2013 NBA Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230598-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Milwaukee during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by head coach Rob Jeter, played their home games at the Klotsche Center and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 8\u201324, 3\u201313 in Horizon League play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Horizon League Tournament to Green Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230599-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs women's ice hockey season\nThe Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs represented the University of Minnesota Duluth in WCHA women's ice hockey. The Bulldogs will attempt to win the NCAA tournament for the sixth time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230600-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team represented the University of Minnesota in the 2012-13 college basketball season. It was the sixth and final season for team's head coach, Tubby Smith, who was fired shortly after the conclusion of the season. The Golden Gophers, members of the Big Ten Conference, played their home games at Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota. They finished with a record of 21\u201313 overall, 8\u201310 in Big Ten for a three-way tie for 7th place. They lost to Illinois in the first round in the 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament. They were invited to the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament and lost in the third round to Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230600-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team\nCoach Tubby Smith's firing was announced on March 25, 2013. On April 3, 2013, it was verbally agreed upon that Richard Pitino would become the new Gophers basketball coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230601-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season\nThe Minnesota Golden Gophers women's hockey team represented the University of Minnesota in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Gophers hosted the 2013 NCAA Frozen Four and repeated as national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230601-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season\nNotably, the Gophers were the first ice hockey team in the history of today's NCAA Division I, of either sex, to complete an undefeated season. The last NCAA ice hockey team to complete an unbeaten season was the 1983\u201384 Bemidji State men's team, which then competed in Division II, a level that no longer holds a championship (the Beavers now compete in Division I hockey). The last team in the top level of NCAA ice hockey with an unbeaten season was the 1969\u201370 Cornell men's team, competing in the University Division, predecessor to today's Division I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230602-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nThe 2012\u201313 Minnesota Timberwolves season was the 24th season for the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The team missed the playoffs for the 9th straight season, but won at least 30 games for the first time since Kevin Garnett was traded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230602-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Timberwolves season, Injuries\nKevin Love suffered a fracture in his right hand during a team workout midway through the pre-season. He is expected to be sidelined between six and eight weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season\nThe 2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season was the 13th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 25, 1997. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season\nThe Wild made the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time since the 2007\u201308 season, where they fell to the Chicago Blackhawks in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season, Off-season\nThe Wild made a splash in the free-agent pool by signing top free agents Zach Parise and Ryan Suter on July 4, 2012. Both were signed to 13-year-long contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season, Regular season\nOn February 26, 2013, Zach Parise scored just 27 seconds into the overtime period to give the Wild a 2\u20131 home win over the Calgary Flames. Parise tied Marian Gaborik's mark, set on January 23, 2013, when he scored 27 seconds into the overtime period to give the Rangers a 4\u20133 home win over the Boston Bruins. Both goals would prove to be the fastest overtime goals scored during the lockout-shortened season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season, Regular season\nThe Wild were the most disciplined team during the regular season, with a league-low 135 power-play opportunities against. They also tied the New York Islanders for the fewest shorthanded goals allowed, with zero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season, Schedule and results\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Wild. Stats reflect time with the Wild only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season, Transactions\nThe Wild have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230603-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Minnesota Wild season, Draft picks\nMinnesota's picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230604-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mississippi State Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Mississippi State Bulldogs men's basketball team represent Mississippi State University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team's head coach is Rick Ray, in his first season at Mississippi State and overall. The team plays their home games at the Humphrey Coliseum in Starkville, Mississippi as a member of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230604-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mississippi State Bulldogs basketball team, Pre-season\nThe Bulldogs posted a record of 21\u201312 (8-8 SEC) in the 2011\u201312 season and finished sixth in the SEC standings. The Bulldogs lost all five starters and four other lettermen off of the previous team as well as replaced head coach Rick Stansbury after his thirteenth season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230605-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils basketball team represented Mississippi Valley State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Delta Devils, led by first year head coach Chico Potts, played their home games at the Harrison HPER Complex and were members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. Due to low APR scores, the Delta Devils were ineligible to participate in the post season, including the SWAC Tournament. One year after winning the SWAC and participating in the NCAA Tournament, they finished the season 2012\u201313 5\u201323, 5\u201313 in SWAC play to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230606-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season\nThe 2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season is the fourth season of the Central Hockey League (CHL) franchise in Independence, Missouri, a suburb of Kansas City, Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230606-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season, Off-season\nOn May 24, 2012, the Mavericks extended Head Coach Scott Hillman's contract for two additional seasons through the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230606-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season, Off-season\nOn July 31, 2012, the Mavericks announced an agreement with Entercom to have all 66 games for the 2012-13 season broadcast on radio on 1660 KUDL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230606-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season, Off-season\nOn September 8, 2012, the Mavericks announced the renewal of their affiliation agreement with the Chicago Wolves of the American Hockey League for the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230606-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season, Off-season\nOn October 19, 2012, the day of the Mavericks' first Regular Season game against the Denver Cutthroats, the team announced Sebastien Thinel as the team's Captain and Ryan Jardine, Dave Pszenyczny, and David Simoes as Alternate Captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230606-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season, Regular season\nOn March 17, 2013, with a 3\u20131 win over the Quad City Mallards, the Mavericks clinched their fourth consecutive berth in the 2013 Central Hockey League Ray Miron President's Cup Playoffs. It was announced on March 24, 2013, that the Mavericks clinched the 5th seed and would play the 4th-seeded Rapid City Rush in the first round of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230606-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Mavericks season, Playoffs\nOn April 23, 2013, the Mavericks' 2012\u201313 season ended with a 7\u20133 loss to the Allen Americans on the road in Allen, Texas in Game 7 of the Ray Miron President's Cup Playoffs Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230607-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri State Bears basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Missouri State Bears basketball team represented Missouri State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears, led by second year head coach Paul Lusk, played their home games at JQH Arena and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 11\u201322, 7\u201311 in MVC play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Missouri Valley Tournament to Wichita State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230608-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team represented the University of Missouri in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Frank Haith, who was in his second year at Missouri. The team played its home games at Mizzou Arena in Columbia, Missouri, and played its first season in the Southeastern Conference after leaving the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230608-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team, Schedule, Summer European Exhibition Tour\nMissouri competed in an exhibition trip to Europe in August. The NCAA allows teams 10 extra practices before international exhibition tours like these. With many new players Coach Haith wanted to use the extra playing time and practices to help build team chemistry similar to what Mizzou did in 2008\u201309 with the Canadian tour. The 08\u201309 team ended up 31\u20137 and made the NCAA tournament's Elite EightSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230608-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Missouri Tigers men's basketball team, Schedule, 2012 Battle 4 Atlantis\nOn Thanksgiving weekend (Nov. 22\u201324), Missouri participated in a tournament held in the Bahamas. The eight-team field has been announced as Missouri, Stanford, Memphis, Northern Iowa, Duke, Minnesota, VCU, and Louisville. Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230609-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mizoram Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Mizoram Premier League (Also known as the Mahindra 2 Wheelers Mizoram Premier League for sponsorship reasons) is the 1st season of the Mizoram Premier League which is the third tier of the Indian football system and the top tier of the Mizoram football system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230610-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mohun Bagan AC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Mohun Bagan A.C. season is the 123rd season of Mohun Bagan A.C. since the club's formation in 1889 and their 16th season in the I-League which is India's top football league. The team finished runners-up in the Calcutta Football League and a dismal tenth in the I-League. They were crowned Champions in the Airlines Cup after Mohammedan refused to play the finals and gave a walkover. Mohun Bagan crashed out in the group stage of the Federation Cup and were defeated by arch rivals East Bengal in the semi finals of the IFA Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230610-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mohun Bagan AC season\nOn 29 December 2012, Mohun Bagan were barred from competing in the I-League for 2 years following a decision taken by the I-League core committee. All their results in the I-League were declared null and void and all their remaining fixtures were cancelled. The suspension came because Mohun Bagan had refused to take the field in the second half of the match against East Bengal on 9 December 2012, citing crowd violence and unsuitable atmosphere for the continuation of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230610-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mohun Bagan AC season\nHowever, on 15 January 2013, Mohun Bagan appealed against the decision to ban them from the I-League and were reinstated, but were fined a hefty amount, there officials were suspended from all AIFF meetings for one year and the team would start on 0 points and would play out only the remaining 16 fixtures in the league. This however, did not affect their win-loss and goal difference record in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230610-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mohun Bagan AC season, Player statistics, Appearances and Goals\nSource: Last Updated: 23 May 2013 Apps: (Matches Started)+(Substitute Appearances)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230611-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan \"A\" Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Moldovan \"A\" Division season is the 22nd 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-00230612-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan \"B\" Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Moldovan \"B\" Division season' was the 22nd since its establishment. Was approved new system with three divisions, thus coming back to the system that was used between the 1993\u201394 and 1995\u201396 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup is the 22nd season of the Moldovan annual football tournament. The competition began on 25 August 2012 with the First Preliminary Round and will end with the final held in May 2012. The winner of the competition will qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, First Preliminary Round\nEntering this round are 30 clubs from the Moldovan \"B\" Division. These matches took place on 14 September 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, Second Preliminary Round\nThe 13 winners from the previous round and 1 club from the Moldovan \"B\" Division entered this stage of the competition. These matches took place on 1 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, First round\nIn this round enter teams from \"A\" Division. They will play against 8 winner teams from the second preliminary round. These matches took place on 8 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, Second round\nIn this round enter 4 teams from National Division. These matches were played on 26 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, Third round\nIn this round entered the five winners from the previous round, the three winners from first round and the remaining eight teams from the National Division. These matches were played on 31 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, Quarter-finals\nThis round featured the eight winners from the previous round. The matches were played on 16\u201317 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, Semi-finals\nThis round featured the four winners from the previous round. The matches were played on 7 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230613-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan Cup, Final\nThe match was scheduled to be played at 27 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division (Moldovan: Divizia Na\u0163ional\u0103) is the 22nd season of top-tier football in Moldova. The competition began on 13 July 2012 and will end in May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division\nThe league comprises 12 teams, 11 from the 2011\u201312 season and one promoted site from 2011\u201312 A Division. Sheriff Tiraspol are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division, Teams\nCSCA\u2013Rapid Chi\u015fin\u0103u and FC Costuleni were originally relegated on competitive grounds at the end of the 2011\u201312 season as they finished in the bottom two places of the league table. However, both clubs were eventually spared after Sfintul Gheorghe Suruceni did not obtain a National Division licence for 2012\u201313 and only one team, runners-up Speran\u0163a Crihana Veche, could be promoted from the top four 2011\u201312 A Division sides on the same grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division, Teams\nIn further changes, FC Academia UTM Chi\u015fin\u0103u were renamed FC Academia Chi\u015fin\u0103u.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division, Teams, Personnel and sponsorship\nPromoted sides Speran\u0163a Crihana Veche play their home matches in the nearby town of Cahul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division, League table, Positions by round\nThe following table represents the teams position after each round in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division, Results\nThe schedule consists of three rounds. During the first two rounds, each team plays each other once home and away for a total of 22 matches. The pairings of the third round will then be set according to the standings after the first two rounds, giving every team a third game against each opponent for a total of 33 games per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230614-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Moldovan National Division, Results, Third round\nKey numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 22 games):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230615-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Momentum One Day Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Momentum One Day Cup was a domestic one-day cricket championship in South Africa. It was the 32nd time the championship was contested. The competition was played over 5 weeks, starting with the first match on 2 November 2012 and finishing with the final on 15 December 2012 at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg. The trophy was shared by the Cape Cobras and Lions when the two attempts at playing the final were both abandoned due to rain. The first match saw the Cobras batting first, but was abandoned during the 17th over of their innings. The second match saw the Lions bat first and make 241/7 in their innings, but rain ended the match with the Cobras 69/2 after 11 overs, fewer than the 20 overs required for a Duckworth\u2013Lewis calculation to be applied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230615-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Momentum One Day Cup, Knockout stage\nOf the 6 participants, the following 3 teams qualified for the knockout stage:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230616-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Monarcas Morelia season\nThe 2012\u201313 Morelia season was the 66th professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league. The season is split into two tournaments\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams. Morelia began their season on July 21, 2012, against Cruz Azul, Morelia played most of their homes games on Fridays at 9:30 local time. Morelia was eliminated in the quarter-finals by Am\u00e9rica and Cruz Azul in the Apertura and Clausura tournaments respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230616-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Monarcas Morelia season, Torneo 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230616-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Monarcas Morelia season, Torneo 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230617-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Monmouth Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Monmouth Hawks men's basketball team represented Monmouth University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hawks, led by second year head coach King Rice, played their home games at the Multipurpose Activity Center and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 10\u201321, 5\u201313 in NEC play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They failed to qualify for the Northeast Conference Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230617-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Monmouth Hawks men's basketball team\nThis was the Hawks last year as a member of the NEC as they joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230618-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montana Grizzlies basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Montana Grizzlies basketball team represented the University of Montana during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Grizzlies, led by seventh year head coach Wayne Tinkle, played their home games at Dahlberg Arena and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 25\u20137, 19\u20131 in Big Sky play to win the Big Sky regular season championship. They were also champions of the Big Sky Tournament, winning the championship game over Weber State, to earn the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Syracuse 34\u201381. The 47 win by Syracuse is the most lopsided win by a team seeded 3 or lower in the history of the tournament, breaking a record set only one hour prior when 5 seed VCU defeated 13 seed Akron by 46.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230619-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montana State Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Montana State Bobcats men's basketball team represented Montana State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by seventh year head coach Brad Huse, played their home games at Worthington Arena and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 13\u201317, 10\u201310 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Tournament where they lost to Northern Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230620-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Montenegrin Cup is the seventh season of the Montenegrin knockout football tournament. The winner of the tournament received a berth in the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. The defending champions are \u010celik, who beat Rudar in the final of the 2011\u201312 competition. The competition will feature 30 teams. It will start on 19 September 2012 and end with the final in May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230620-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Cup, First round\nLast year's finalists Rudar and \u010celik received a bye to the Second Round. The 14 matches in this round will be played on 19 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230620-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Cup, Second round\nThe 14 winners from the First Round and last year's cup finalists, Rudar and \u010celik, compete in this round. Starting with this round, all rounds of the competition will be two-legged except for the final. The first legs were held on 3 October 2012, while the second legs were held on 24 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230620-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe eight winners from the Second Round competed in this round. The first legs took place on 6 and 20 November 2012 and the second legs took place on 20 and 28 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230620-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Cup, Semifinals\nThe four winners from the Quarterfinals competed in this round. These matches took place on 3 and 16 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230621-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First Handball League\nThe 2012\u201313 Montenegrin First Handball League was seventh season of the Montenegrin First League of Men's Handball, Montenegro's premier handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230621-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First Handball League, Participants\nThe league regularly consists of eight teams, but in the season 2012/13 there was seven participants. In the second part of season, four best clubs participated in the TOP4 league for champion, and the last three played in relegation league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230621-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First Handball League, Participants\nThe following seven clubs participated in the Montenegrin First League 2012/13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230621-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First Handball League, First part\nDuring the first part of the season, all members played 12 games. Four best placed teams - Lov\u0107en, Mojkovac, Budvanska rivijera and Sutjeska continued season in the TOP4 league for champion. Other teams were playing league for relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230621-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First Handball League, TOP4 / relegation league\nAt the final phase, RK Lov\u0107en Cetinje defended their champions' title from the last season. Lov\u0107en became second team ever to finish a season without losing a point. (the first team to do it was Budu\u0107nost in the season 2009/10)In the relegation league, most success have RK Ulcinj, which survived in the First league. Other two clubs were relegated to the Second league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230622-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First League\nThe 2012\u201313 Montenegrin First League was the seventh season of the top-tier football in Montenegro. The season began on 11 August 2012 and ended on 1 June 2013. The mid-season winter break began on 2 December 2012 and ended on 7 March 2013. FK Budu\u0107nost Podgorica are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230622-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First League, Teams\nLast season, Bokelj, Berane, and De\u010di\u0107 were relegated to the Montenegrin Second League. Montenegrin Cup winners FK \u010celik Nik\u0161i\u0107 were promoted along with Mornar and Jedinstvo Bijelo Polje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230622-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First League, Teams, Stadiums and locations\nAll figures for stadiums include seating capacity only, as many stadiums in Montenegro have stands without chairs which would otherwise be the actual number of people able to attend football matches not regulated by UEFA or FIFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230622-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First League, Results\nThe schedule consisted of three rounds. During the first two rounds, each team played each other once home and away for a total of 22 matches. The pairings of the third round were then set according to the standings after the first two rounds, giving every team a third game against each opponent for a total of 33 games per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230622-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First League, Results, Third round\nKey numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 22 games):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230622-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin First League, Relegation play-offs\nThe 10th-placed team (against the 3rd-placed team of the Second League) and the 11th-placed team (against the runners-up of the Second League) will both compete in two-legged relegation play-offs after the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230623-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Second League\nThe 2012\u201313 Montenegrin Second League (Serbian: Druga Crnogorska Liga / \u0414\u0440\u0443\u0433\u0430 \u0446\u0440\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e\u0440\u0441\u043a\u0430 \u043b\u0438\u0433\u0430) was the seventh season of the competition as the second top football league in Montenegro. The league played its first games of the season on August 19, 2012 and its final matches were played on June 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230623-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Second League, League format\nTwelve teams participate in this league. The top team directly qualifies for the Montenegrin First League while the second and third teams contest in a two matches playoff against the 11th and 12th team from the First League. The two bottom-placed teams are relegated to the Third League, to be replaced by the two winners of the Third League promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230623-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montenegrin Second League, Promotion play-offs\nThe 3rd-placed team (against the 10th-placed team of the First League) and the runners-up (against the 11th-placed team of the First League) will both compete in two-legged promotion play-offs after the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230624-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montpellier HSC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Montpellier HSC season was the 39th season since the club was refounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230625-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season\nThe 2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season was the 104th season of play for the franchise that was founded on December 4, 1909, and its 96th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230625-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season, Off-season\nAfter a disappointing 2011\u201312 season, the Canadiens started over in the front office. Marc Bergevin was named the new general manager on May 2, 2012. Rick Dudley was then named as the assistant general manager. The search then began for a new head coach and on June 5, Michel Therrien was named the new head coach. This would be Therrien's second stint as the Canadiens head coach (previously coached team from 2000 to 2003) Scott Mellanby was hired as the director of player personnel and Randy Cunneyworth and Randy Ladouceur were relieved of their assistant coaching duties. Some other hockey operations changes included the hiring of Martin Lapointe as director of player development, Patrice Brisebois was hired as a player development coach and on June 15, Gerard Gallant, J. J. Daigneault and Clement Jodoin were added to Montreal's coaching staff as assistant coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230625-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season, Off-season\nMontreal held the third overall pick in the 2012 NHL Entry Draft and selected Alex Galchenyuk from the Sarnia Sting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230625-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season\nThe Canadiens had the most power-play opportunities during the regular season, with 207. They also tied the Tampa Bay Lightning for the fewest shorthanded goals scored, with zero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230625-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Canadiens. Stats reflect time with the Candadiens only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Canadiens only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230625-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season, Transactions\nThe Canadiens have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230625-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Montreal Canadiens season, Draft picks\nMontreal Canadiens' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230626-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Morecambe F.C. season\nDuring the 2012\u201313 English football season, Morecambe Football Club competed in Football League Two where they finished in 16th position with 58 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230627-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Morehead State Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Morehead State Eagles men's basketball team represented Morehead State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by first year head coach Sean Woods, played their home games at Ellis Johnson Arena and were members of the East Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 15\u201318, 8\u20138 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fourth place in the East Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament to Tennessee State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230628-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Morgan State Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Morgan State Bears men's basketball team represented Morgan State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears, led by seventh year head coach Todd Bozeman, played their home games at the Talmadge L. Hill Field House and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 17\u201315, 10\u20136 in MEAC play to finish in fifth place. They advanced to the championship game of the MEAC Tournament where they lost to North Carolina A&T.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230629-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Motherwell F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Motherwell's fourteenth consecutive season in the Scottish Premier League, having competed in it since its inauguration in 1998\u201399. Motherwell will also compete in the Champions League, Europa League, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230630-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers men's basketball team represented Mount St. Mary's University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mountaineers, led by first year head coach Jamion Christian, played their home games at Knott Arena and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 18\u201314, 11\u20137 in NEC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the championship game of the Northeast Conference Tournament where they lost to Long Island. Despite the 18 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Mumbai F.C. season will be the club's sixth season since their formation in 2007 and their fifth season ever in the I-League which is India's top football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, Background\nThe club played their first season in the I-League during the 2008\u201309 I-League season. The club played their first ever I-League match against historic club Mohun Bagan on 27 September 2008 in which Abel Hammond scored the first ever I-League goal for Mumbai FC as Mumbai went on to win 2\u20131 at the Barasat Stadium. Mumbai then completed a double against the two giant Kolkata clubs after they defeated East Bengal F.C. at the Salt Lake Stadium 1\u20130 with Felix Aboagye scoring the only goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, Background\nMumbai then played their first ever home match in their history at the Cooperage Ground on 11 October 2008 with Kalia Kulothungan scoring the only goal in the match. Half-way through the season Mumbai was placed in sixth place in the table. The club, however, could not last in the I-League and finished in 7th place which currently remains their best position to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, Transfers\nNote: 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, 35], "content_span": [36, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, Federation Cup\nMumbai entered the 2012 Indian Federation Cup automatically as they were already in the I-League. They were placed in Group A along with defending I-League champions Dempo, Pailan Arrows, and Shillong Lajong and their matches were played in Jamshedpur. The tournament did not end well for Mumbai as they lost two of their matches and drew one, finishing with 1 point, 3 goals scored and 7 conceded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nMumbai began their first I-League game of 2012\u201313 away from home on 6 October 2012 against Pailan Arrows in which the team lost 3\u20132. The next match was not any better as Mumbai lost 3\u20132 to Pune at the Balewadi Sports Complex in Pune on 11 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nAfter the defeat Mumbai had a two-week break before their next match on 27 October 2012 against Churchill Brothers at the Fatorda Stadium in Margao, Goa but when the match came Mumbai failed to secure yet another point as they lost their third game on the trot by a score of 3\u20131 with Ghanaian Yusif Yakubu scoring his first goal for Mumbai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nMumbai started November with yet another lost as they stumbled to former champions Salgaocar at the Balewadi Sports Complex 1\u20130 after a 9th-minute goal for Francis Fernandes. This was Mumbai's fourth loss in a row and thus meant that after the first four matches of season, Mumbai had managed to win 0 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nHowever Mumbai finally won their first match of the season in their fifth attempt as they came back from 2\u20130 down to win 3\u20132 on 9 November 2012 at the Balewadi Sports Complex with Gabriel Fernandes, Justin Stephen, and Afghani international Zohib Islam Amiri scoring the goals for Mumbai. Mumbai then won their second game in a row on 17 November 2012 against Sporting Clube de Goa at the Balewadi Sports Complex Nicholas Rodrigues, Gabriel Fernandes, Justin Stephen, and David Opara providing the goals for Mumbai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nMumbai then drew their first match of the season in a surprising 1\u20131 draw on 25 November 2012 with Mohun Bagan at the Balewadi Sports Complex after former Indian international Abhishek Yadav scored the equalizer for Mumbai in the 62nd minute after three-time I-League top scorer Odafe Onyeka Okolie gave Bagan the lead in the 21st minute. The club then ended the month of November with their third win in four games on 28 November 2012 against ONGC F.C. at the Balewadi Sports Complex (this was Mumbai's 5th home game in a row) after Ghanaian Evans Quao gave Mumbai the winner in the 73rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nThe club then began the month of December with a major upset over new rich-boys Prayag United S.C. at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata after Evans Quao scored a 52nd-minute equalizer for Mumbai after Ranti Martins gave Prayag the lead in the 29th minute; Mumbai then scored two more goals with Abhishek Yadav and Yusif Yakubu being the scorers in the 82nd and 94th minute to award Mumbai a special 3\u20132 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nThe club then went from major upsetters to the team that was getting the upset against them after the club lost 4\u20131 to relegation fighters Air India FC at the Balewadi Sports Complex. This was Mumbai's first loss in 6 games. The club then regrouped and went back onto the winning track after they defeated newly promoted side United Sikkim at the Balewadi Sports Complex on 15 December 2012 with David Opara being the only goalscorer for Mumbai in the 45th minute as the club won 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nThe club then came up as the surprise winners again after they defeated Kolkata giants East Bengal F.C. at the Balewadi Sports Complex 2\u20131 thanks to goals from Gabriel Fernandes and Yusif Yakubu in the 64th and 94th minutes respectively; this result pushed Mumbai into fifth place, ahead of Prayag United, eight rounds after they found themselves in last place in the I-League and staring relegation in the face. Mumbai then ended the month of December and 2012 with a draw against the reigning champions of the I-League, Dempo S.C. at the Balewadi Sports Complex on 30 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nThen to begin the month of January and the year 2013 Mumbai took on United Sikkim at the Paljor Stadium on 9 January 2013 in Round 15 after their Round 14 clash with Mohun Bagan was canceled due to Bagan being expelled from the league. Mumbai drew the match late on by a score of 2\u20132 after Yusif Yakubu scored the equalizer for the club four minutes into second half stoppage time but not before he gave Mumbai the lead in the 11th minute before United Sikkim scored two goals in the 15th and 18th minutes of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nThe club then succumbed to their first loss of the season on 13 January 2013 when the club lost to East Bengal at the Kalyani Stadium in West Bengal by a score of 2\u20130 with Edeh and Lalrindika Ralte scoring the goals for East Bengal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC season, I-League\nHowever Mumbai did not let that loss get to them as they went back to winning ways on 19 January 2013 against Prayag United at the Balewadi Sports Complex when the club beaten them by a score of 2\u20131 with Gabriel Fernandes scoring the goal for Mumbai in the 30th minute before C.K. Vineeth equalized for Prayag in the 47th minute but Mumbai then won the match three minutes later in the 50th minute when Bello Razaq scored an own-goal and thus award the victory to Mumbai. The club then played their final match of January 2013 on 24 January 2013 against Churchill Brothers in which the club drew the match 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230631-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Mumbai FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230632-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Munster Rugby season\nThe 2012\u201313 Munster Rugby season was Munster's twelfth season competing in the Pro12, alongside which they also competed in the Heineken Cup. It was Rob Penney's first season as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230632-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Munster Rugby season, Summary\nMunster were drawn in pool 1 for the 2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, alongside Scottish Pro12 rivals and semi-finals of the previous seasons competition Edinburgh, English Premiership side Saracens and French Top 14 side Racing M\u00e9tro 92. Hew head coach Rob Penney appointed Doug Howlett as the new squad captain ahead of the 2012\u201313 season. Munster opened their Heineken Cup campaign with a 22\u201317 away defeat against Racing M\u00e9tro 92 on 13 October 2012. 8 days later, Munster won 33\u20130 in their round 2 home fixture against Edinburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230632-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Munster Rugby season, Summary\nIn the December back-to-backs against Saracens in rounds 3 and 4, Munster won 15\u20139 at home, before being defeated 19\u201313 away. Munster won 26\u201317 away from home against Edinburgh on 13 January 2013. One week later, Munster beat Racing M\u00e9tro 92 29\u20136 at home to secure the second 'best runner-up' spot and advance to the tournament knockout stage. In their quarter-final against English team Harlequins on 7 April 2013, Munster produced an immense performance, captained by Paul O'Connell in the absence of Doug Howlett, to win 18\u201312 away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230632-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Munster Rugby season, Summary\nIn the semi-final on 27 April 2018, Munster were beaten 16\u201310 by French side Clermont, despite a gallant effort in the second half in the Stade de la Mosson. The match turned out to by club legend Ronan O'Gara's final appearance for Munster, as he announced his retirement from rugby a few weeks later. Squad captain and another club legend, Doug Howlett, was forced to retire after a shoulder injury suffered against Glasgow Warriors in March 2013. Munster finished 6th in the 2012\u201313 Pro12 regular season with 11 wins, 10 defeats and 1 draw, missing out on the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230632-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Munster Rugby season, 2012\u201313 Playing Squad, Players Out\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, 64], "content_span": [65, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230632-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Munster Rugby season, 2012\u201313 Pro12\nIf teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230633-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Murray State Racers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Murray State Racers men's basketball team represented Murray State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Racers, led by second year head coach Steve Prohm, played their home games at the CFSB Center and were members of the West Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 21\u201310, 10\u20136 in OVC play to be champions of the West Division. They advanced to the championship game of the OVC Tournament where they lost to Belmont in overtime. Despite the 21 wins, they did not participate in a post season tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230633-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Murray State Racers men's basketball team, Roster\nBefore the season, sophomore guard Zay Jackson was suspended for the 2012\u201313 season after pleading guilty to reduced charges stemming from a September 2012 incident in which he was accused of hitting two people with his car in a Walmart parking lot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230634-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u00e1laga CF season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 81st season in M\u00e1laga CF's history and their 32nd season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. It covers a period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230634-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u00e1laga CF season\nDuring the season, M\u00e1laga competed in the UEFA Champions League for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230634-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u00e1laga CF season, Players, Squad information\nThe numbers are established according to the official website: and", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230634-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u00e1laga CF season, Statistics, Goals\nLast updated: 2 June 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230635-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u017dRKL\nM\u017dRKL League for the season 2012\u201313 was the eleventh season of the Adriatic League. The study included eleven teams from four countries, a champion for the second time in team history became the Partizan Galenika. In this season participating clubs from Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia and from Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230635-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u017dRKL\nM\u017dRKL League for the season 2012\u201313 has begun to play 26 September 2012 and ended on 23 February 2013, when he it was completed a Regular season. Final Four to be played from 2\u20133 March 2013. in Novi Sad, Serbia. Winner Final Four this season for the team Partizan Galenika from Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230635-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u017dRKL\nCadet M\u017dRKL League this season playing for the first time. It was intended to be played this season, and in the case of success to continue next season. Cadet M\u017dRKL League comprises 11 teams, where each team plays each at once. One team is organizing a mini tournament where four teams play two rounds of the league for a weekend and so once a month. Top 4 teams qualify for the Final Four to be played in the same place for seniors and the same weekend play. Winner Final Four this season for the first time in team history became the team Tre\u0161njevka 2009 from Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230635-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u017dRKL, 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 26 September 2012 and it will end on 23 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 29], "content_span": [30, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230635-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 M\u017dRKL, Final four\nFinal Four to be played from 2\u20133 March 2013. in the SPC Vojvodina in Novi Sad, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season\nThe 2012\u201313 NBA season was the 67th season of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The regular season began on October 30, 2012, when the 2011\u201312 NBA champions Miami Heat started the season by hosting the Boston Celtics. The 2013 NBA All-Star Game was played on February 17, 2013, at Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. The regular season ended on April 17, 2013, and the playoffs began on April 20, 2013 and ended on June 20, 2013, with the Miami Heat defeating the San Antonio Spurs in seven games to win the 2013 NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Transactions, Free agency\nFree agency negotiation started on July 1, 2012, with players being able to sign starting July 11, after the July moratorium ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Preseason\nThe preseason started on October 5, 2012, and ended on October 26, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Preseason\nNBA Europe Live 2012 was played October 5 \u2013 7 and 9, 2012 featuring the Boston Celtics, Dallas Mavericks, and teams from Europe (Fenerbah\u00e7e \u00dclker, Alba Berlin, Olimpia Milano and Regal FC Barcelona). The Miami Heat defeated the Los Angeles Clippers at the sixth annual NBA China Games on October 11 in Beijing. A second game took place on October 14 in Shanghai. On October 7, the NBA Mexico Games 2012 were played between the New Orleans Hornets and Orlando Magic. Finally, the NBA Canada Series was played on October 19 between the Toronto Raptors and New York Knicks in Montreal, and on October 24 between the Minnesota Timberwolves and Detroit Pistons in Winnipeg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Regular season\nThe regular season started on October 30, 2012, when the 2011\u201312 NBA champions Miami Heat defeated the Boston Celtics 120\u2013107. The regular season ended on April 17, 2013. The entire schedule was released on July 26, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Regular season\nFor the first time since 2008, the NBA did not schedule any Thanksgiving games. The NBA's annual Christmas games featured, in chronological order, the Boston Celtics at the Brooklyn Nets, the New York Knicks at the Los Angeles Lakers, the Oklahoma City Thunder at the Miami Heat, the Houston Rockets at the Chicago Bulls, and the Denver Nuggets at the Los Angeles Clippers (thus the Staples Center was in the rare situation of hosting two NBA games on the same day).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Regular season\nA regular season game took place at the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom between the Detroit Pistons and the New York Knicks on January 17, 2013. The Knicks won the game 102\u201387.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Playoffs\nThe playoffs began on April 20, 2013, and concludes with the 2013 NBA Finals, which began on June 6 between the Miami Heat and the San Antonio Spurs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBA season, Awards, Players of the week\nThe following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Players of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230636-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230636-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230636-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230637-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 NBB Cup was the 45th season of the Dutch NBB Cup. The championship game was played on March 24, 2013 in the Topsportcentrum (Almere). EiffelTowers Den Bosch won the game 73\u201361 over Landstede Basketbal and the club won its sixth NBB Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230637-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB Cup, Bracket\nThe bracket includes games beginning with the 4th round, when professional teams from the DBL play their first games. In the quarterfinals and semifinals, the teams played two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 24], "content_span": [25, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season\nThe 2012\u201313 NBB season was the fifth edition of Novo Basquete Brasil, the Brazilian basketball league. This tournament is organized entirely by the Liga Nacional de Basquete (LNB). The NBB serves as a qualifying competition for international tournaments such as Liga Sudamericana and Torneo InterLigas. For this season the qualify for the FIBA Americas League came to be through the Liga Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season\nThis season has a record number of participating teams, with eighteen teams playing each other in round and second round in the regular season. At the end of two rounds the top four teams qualify for the quarterfinals of the playoffs automatically, while the teams finishing in the 5th and 12th place participated in the first round of the playoffs to determine the other four teams in the quarterfinals, best of five matches, advances to the next phase who win three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season\nFor this season, the LNB added a new feature: the last two regular season placed will dispute a four-group against the two finalists in the Super Copa Brasil de Basquete. The two top finishers in this group receive the right to contest the next NBB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, NBB All-Star Weekend\nThis season, the All-Star Weekend will be played in Gin\u00e1sio Nilson Nelson in Bras\u00edlia on March 1\u20132, 2013. In the first day of the event, it will be disputed the \"Dunk Tournament\", \"Three-Point Tournament\" and \"Skills Challenge\". In these three tournaments, the champions in the previous season are already included, while the other participating players will compete for the remaining spots. The players of Bras\u00edlia, the host team, are also included at these tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, NBB All-Star Weekend\nIn the second day, it will occur the main event on the weekend, the NBB All-Star Game, which will be disputed by two teams divided into \"NBB Brasil\", formed by Brazilian players, and \"NBB Mundo\", formed by foreign players. On February 6, the Liga Nacional de Basquete (LNB) announced the players that will make up the teams NBB Brasil and NBB Mundo, which will compete in the fifth edition of the All-Star Game of the national competition. In all, 85 votes were counted. Different professionals who participated in the election had assigned different weights. The coaches of the 18 teams vying for the NBB accounted for 50%, the captains of the teams were left with 20%, while the specialist press and the personalities of basketball had 30% weight. The starter players will be chosen by votes on the internet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, NBB All-Star Weekend, Dunk Tournament\nFor Dunk Tournament, the champion in the previous season was the shooting guard Gui Deodato, from Bauru, while the host team, Bras\u00edlia, will be represented by the shooting guard Isaac Gon\u00e7alves. The other challengers to the title was defined after being evaluated by a jury of personalities from the artistic and basketball. The judges evaluated each participant a dunk and choose two athletes (Danilo Fuzaro and Jefferson Socas). The fifth element (Desmond Holloway) was set after a popular vote on the Internet. The two finalists were the champion of the previous season Gui Deodato and the shooting guard Danilo Fuzaro. Using the cover of the character Batman and a mask of the famous villain Darth Vader, Gui Deodato won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 57], "content_span": [58, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, NBB All-Star Weekend, Three-Point Tournament\nThe tournament will have six competitors for the title. The champion of previous season Helinho, from Uberl\u00e2ndia, and Rossi, from the host city team, had already been secured in the dispute and its four rivals was decided after the completion of qualifying, which was played between matches of the NBB on February 14 and February 16. In the final, which featured Matheus Dalla, from Limeira, and Matheus Costa, from Basquete Cearense, it was necessary two tiebreaks to know the champion. In the second tiebreak Matheus Dalla won his first Three-Point Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, NBB All-Star Weekend, Skills Challenge\nThe Skills Challenge, which will be played for the third time, will have the presence of double champion Fernando Penna, from Pinheiros, the guard Eric Tatu, from the host team Bras\u00edlia, and six more competitors which was determined by the LNB Technical Department. In the final, Fernando Penna, for the third consecutive time, won the challenge, against the point guard Gustavinho, Mogi das Cruzes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, NBB All-Star Weekend, NBB All-Star Game\nOn February 25, the election on the Internet finished, and the starter players were defined, according to the official site of NBB All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, NBB All-Star Weekend, NBB All-Star Game\nJeff Agba, from Bauru, was originally selected to take part in the NBB Mundo team, but he injured and was replaced by Tyrone Curnell, from Palmeiras, while Guilherme Giovannoni, from Bras\u00edlia, also was taken out of the game because of damage in his thigh, and for his place was named Jefferson William, from S\u00e3o Jos\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, Promotion Tournament\nDuring the NBB semifinals, Tijuca, the penultimate placed in the regular season in the NBB (the last placed Suzano later withdrawn due to financial troubles), as well as Fluminense and Maca\u00e9, the two finalists of the Super Copa Brasil de Basquete, played a small tournament between them to decide the two teams that would join the other sixteen teams in the 2013\u201314 NBB season. All matches were played in the Gin\u00e1sio \u00c1lvaro Vieira Lima, Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230638-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBB season, Promotion Tournament\nAfter two rounds, Tijuca remained in NBB with two wins and Maca\u00e9 was promoted to his first season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season\nThe 2012\u201313 NBL Canada season was the second season of the National Basketball League of Canada. The regular season began on Friday, November 2, 2012, when the Summerside Storm hosted the Saint John Mill Rats. The regular season ended on Saturday, March 16, 2013. The playoffs started on March 19 and ended on April 12 when the London Lightning defeated the Summerside Storm in Game 4 of their series, 87\u201380, winning the Finals, 3\u20131 and to capture the franchise's second NBL Canada title. Marvin Phillips was named the Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, Preseason\nFollowing the end of the 2011-12 NBL Canada season, the NBL Canada awarded Windsor, Ontario a franchise, named the Windsor Express, for the 2012-13 season. With the addition of the Express, the NBL Canada incorporated two four-team divisions, the Central and the Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, Preseason\nLater in the preseason, the Quebec Kebs relocated to Laval, Quebec and were renamed the Laval Kebs. However, the Keb's ownership folded the team before the start of the 2012-13 season. The NBL Canada replaced the Kebs with a franchise in Montreal, Quebec, named the Montreal Jazz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, Preseason, Draft\nThe 2012 NBL Canada draft was held August 27, 2012. The Windsor Express had the first pick and selected center Robert Curtis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on November 2, 2012 with the Saint John Mill Rats taking on the Summerside Storm. The number of games played by each team was increased to 40. The regular season ended on Saturday, March 16, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, Awards, Players of the week\nThe following players were named the NBL Canada Players of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, Playoffs\nThe NBL Canada Championship Playoffs began on March 19, with the top five teams going for the championship. The two division winners, along with the second place team with the next best record are given the top three seeds. The next two teams in terms of record are given the lower seeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, Playoffs\nThe fourth and fifth seeds meet each other in the first round of the NBL Canada Playoffs. The winner of this best-of-three series goes on to meet the first seed in a best-of-five semi-finals series. Second and third seeds meet in the other semi-finals series. The winner of the two semi-finals series will meet in a final best-of-five series, known as the NBL Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230639-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Canada season, All-Star Game\nThe 2013 NBL All-Star Game will take place the weekend of April 13\u201314, in Saint John, New Brunswick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230640-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Indonesia season\nThe 2012-13 NBL Indonesia is the third season of NBL Indonesia, a nationwide basketball competition which previously known as Indonesian Basketball League (IBL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230640-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Indonesia season, Competition format\nParticipating teams compete in the regular season using home tournament format. The regular season divided into 5 series, each with different host cities. The top teams in final overall standings will continue to the championship playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230640-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Indonesia season, Competition format\nThere is also a pre-season warm-up tournament held before the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230640-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Indonesia season, Postseason\nThe championship series began on Saturday May 18, 2013, and concludes with the 2013 NBL Indonesia Finals, which began on May 26 between the Dell Aspac Jakarta and the Pelita Jaya Energi-MP Jakarta", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230640-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Indonesia season, Postseason, Bracket\nAll matches were played in GOR UNY in Universitas Negeri Yogyakarta, Yogyakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230640-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL Indonesia season, Postseason, Bracket\nExcept the Final, the team was eliminated after two losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season\nThe 2012\u201313 NBL season was the 35th season of competition since its establishment in 1979. A total of eight teams contested the league. The regular season was played between 5 October 2012 and 24 March 2013, followed by a post-season which involved the top four in April 2013. The schedule was announced on 4 June 2012. The New Zealand Breakers successfully defended their 2011\u201312 title for a third consecutive championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season\nBroadcast rights were held by free-to-air network Channel Ten and its digital sports sister station One, in the third year of a five-year deal, through to the 2014\u201315 season. In New Zealand, Sky Sport were the official league broadcaster, with a three-year exclusive deal being signed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season\nSponsorship included iiNet entering its third season as league naming rights sponsor and Spalding providing equipment including the official game ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season\nThe NBL All-Star Game was reintroduced to the fixture list after a four-year absence and was played on 22 December 2012 at the Adelaide Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season\nThe league reverted to an eight-team competition when Gold Coast Blaze withdrew on 18 July 2012. A new schedule was released on 25 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230641-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season, Ladder\n1Head-to-Head between Sydney Kings and Melbourne Tigers (2-2). Sydney Kings won For and Against (+2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season, Finals Series\nThe 2012\u201313 National Basketball League Finals will be played in March and April 2013, consisting of two best-of-three semi-final and final series, where the higher seed hosts the first and third games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season, Finals Series, Playoff Seedings\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, 51], "content_span": [52, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season, Finals Series, Playoff Seedings\nUnder this system, Melbourne did not qualify for the playoffs by equalling Sydney's win-loss record, as the latter held advantage in the tiebreaker (2-2, +2 points).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230641-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL season, Awards, Season\nThe end-of-season awards ceremony was held in the Palladium Room at Crown Casino, Melbourne on Sunday, 24 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230642-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NBL squads\nThe 2012\u201313 NBL season was the thirty-fifth season of the NBL. There were eight teams in the competition. The regular season was played between October 5, 2012 and March 24, 2013, followed by a post-season involving the top four in April 2013. The New Zealand Breakers were the defending champions, for the second straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230643-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team represented North Carolina State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Mark Gottfried in his second season. The team played their home games at PNC Arena in Raleigh, North Carolina, as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 24\u201311, 11\u20137 in ACC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the ACC Tournament where they lost to Miami (FL). They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Temple.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230643-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team, Preseason\nNational pundits talked a lot about the Wolfpack in their early preseason discussions of the top teams in the country. NC State returned its top four leading scorers from the 2011-12 season in C. J. Leslie (14.7 ppg), Lorenzo Brown (12.7 ppg), Scott Wood (12.4 ppg) and Richard Howell (10.8 ppg). In addition, NC State landed Rodney Purvis, Tyler Lewis, and T. J. Warren to wrap up a Top 10 recruiting class. ESPN\u2019s Andy Katz had the Wolfpack as the top rated ACC squad, at No. 6, in his early predictions. His counterpart, Sports Illustrated\u2019s Luke Winn, had the Wolfpack listed as the No. 5 team in the nation according to his power rankings. NC State was ranked 20th in the final ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll following its Sweet Sixteen run in the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230643-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nNC State's January 12 win over (AP) #1 Duke was the program's sixth win over an AP #1 program and their second over Duke as the AP #1 team. NC State's last win over an AP #1 team was Feb. 15, 2004, also over Duke. ESPN's College GameDay covered the January 26th game against UNC, marking the first and only time that the Wolfpack have appeared on the basketball version of the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230644-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings\nTwo human polls make up the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings, the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230644-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings, AP poll\nThis poll is compiled by sportswriters across the nation. In Division I men's and women's college basketball, the AP Poll is largely just a tool to compare schools throughout the season and spark debate, as it has no bearing on postseason play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230644-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings, USA Today Coaches Poll\nThe Coaches Poll is the second oldest poll still in use after the AP Poll. It is compiled by a rotating group of 31 college Division I head coaches. The Poll operates by Borda count. Each voting member ranks teams from 1 to 25. Each team then receives points for their ranking in reverse order: Number 1 earns 25 points, number 2 earns 24 points, and so forth. The points are then combined and the team with the highest points is then ranked #1; second highest is ranked #2 and so forth. Only the top 25 teams with points are ranked, with teams receiving first place votes noted the quantity next to their name. The maximum points a single team can earn is 775.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 73], "content_span": [74, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230644-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings, Preseason polls\nVarious publications and news sources release their preseason top 25 months before the season commences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November with the 2K Sports Classic and ended with the Final Four in Atlanta, April 6\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nThe 2012\u201313 season saw the second wave of membership changes resulting from a major realignment of NCAA Division I conferences. The cycle began in 2010 with the Big Ten and the then-Pac-10 publicly announcing their intentions to expand. The fallout from these conferences' moves later affected a majority of D-I conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nIn addition, two schools moved from Division II starting this season. These schools are ineligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play until completing their D-I transitions in 2016. Finally, one school that had announced a transition to Division II, New Orleans, announced that it would halt its transition and remain in Division I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Season outlook, Pre-season polls\nThe top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season\nA number of early-season tournaments will mark the beginning of the college basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season, Early-season tournaments\n*Although these tournaments include more teams, only the number listed play for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference winners and tournaments\nThirty athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that win their regular season title are given the number one seed in each tournament. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The Ivy League does not have a conference tournament, instead giving their automatic invitation to their regular season champion. As of 2013, the Great West Conference does not have an automatic bid to the NCAA Men or Women's College Tournament but the men's tourney champion does receive an automatic bid to the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 99], "content_span": [100, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Postseason tournaments, NCAA Tournament, Tournament upsets\nFor this list, a \"major upset\" is defined as a win by a team seeded 7 or more spots below its defeated opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 107], "content_span": [108, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Postseason tournaments, National Invitation Tournament\nAfter the NCAA Tournament field is announced, the NCAA invited 32 teams to participate in the National Invitation Tournament. The tournament will begin on March 19, 2013, with all games prior to the semifinals played on campus sites. The semifinals and final will be respectively held on April 2 and April 4, 2013 at the traditional site of Madison Square Garden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 103], "content_span": [104, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Postseason tournaments, College Basketball Invitational\nThe fifth College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament began on March 19, 2013 and ended with a best-of-three final scheduled for April 1, 3, and 5; the final went the full three games. This tournament featured 16 teams who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 104], "content_span": [105, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Postseason tournaments, CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament\nThe fourth CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament was held beginning March 2013 and ending with a championship game in April 2013. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from \"mid-major\" conferences who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT. 32 teams participated in this tournament, which granted an automatic bid to the Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 113], "content_span": [114, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Award winners, Consensus All-American teams\nThe following players are recognized as the 2013 Consensus All-Americans:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 92], "content_span": [93, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230645-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Coaching changes\nA number of teams changed coaches during and after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230646-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings\nTwo human polls made up the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings, the USCHO.com/CBS College Sports poll and the USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine poll. As the 2012\u201313 season progressed, rankings were updated weekly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230647-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season\nThe 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season began on October 6, 2012 and concluded with the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament's championship game on April 13, 2013 at the Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This was the 66th season in which an NCAA ice hockey championship was held and is the 118th year overall where an NCAA school fielded a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230647-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Polls, Pre-season\nThe top 20 from USCHO.com, October 1, 2012, and the top 15 from USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine, September 24, 2012. First place votes are in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230647-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230647-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230648-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings\nTwo human polls comprise the 2012\u201313 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season began in November and ended with the Final Four in New Orleans, April 7\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nThe 2012\u201313 season saw the second wave of membership changes resulting from a major realignment of NCAA Division I conferences. The cycle began in 2010 with the Big Ten and the then-Pac-10 publicly announcing their intentions to expand. The fallout from these conferences' moves later affected a majority of D-I conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Conference membership changes\nIn addition, two schools are moving from Division II starting this season. These schools will be ineligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play until completing their D-I transitions in 2016. Finally, one school that had announced a transition to Division II, New Orleans, announced that it would halt its transition and remain in Division I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Season outlook, Pre-season polls\nThe top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Regular season\nA number of early-season tournaments marked the beginning of the college basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Regular season, Conference winners and tournaments\nThirty athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that win their regular season title are given the number one seed in each tournament. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The Ivy League does not have a conference tournament, instead giving their automatic invitation to their regular season champion. As of 2013, the Great West Conference does not have an automatic bid to the NCAA Men or Women's College Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 101], "content_span": [102, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Postseason tournaments, NCAA tournament, Tournament upsets\nFor this list, a \"major upset\" is defined as a win by a team seeded 7 or more spots below its defeated opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 109], "content_span": [110, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Postseason tournaments, Women's National Invitation tournament\nAfter the NCAA Tournament field is announced, 64 teams were invited to participate in the Women's National Invitation Tournament. The tournament began on March 20, 2013, and ended with the final on April 6. Unlike the men's National Invitation Tournament, whose semifinals and finals are held at Madison Square Garden, the WNIT holds all of its games at campus sites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 113], "content_span": [114, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Award winners, Consensus All-American teams\nThe following players are recognized as the 2013 Consensus All-Americans:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 94], "content_span": [95, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230649-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, Coaching changes\nA number of teams changed coaches during and after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230650-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season\nThe 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season will begin in October, 2011, and ended with the 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Ice Hockey Tournament's championship game in March, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230651-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division II men's ice hockey season\nThe 2012\u201313 NCAA Division II men's ice hockey season began on October 26, 2012 and concluded on March 2 of the following year. This was the 31st season of second-tier college ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230652-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season\nThe 2012\u201313 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season began on October 18, 2012, and concluded on March 16, 2013. This was the 40th season of Division III college ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games\nThe 2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games were a series of college football bowl games. They concluded the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season, and included 35 team-competitive games and four all-star games. The games began on Saturday December 15, 2012 and, aside from the all-star games, concluded with the 2013 BCS National Championship Game in Miami Gardens, Florida that was played on January 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games\nThe total of 35 team-competitive bowls was unchanged from the previous year. While bowl games had been the purview of only the very best teams for nearly a century, this was the seventh consecutive year that teams with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games. To fill the 70 available team-competitive bowl slots, a total of 13 teams (19% of all participants) with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games\u201412 had a .500 (6-6) season and, for the second consecutive year, a team with a sub-.500 (6-7) season was invited to a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Selection of the teams, Bowl-eligibility contingency plan\nAs per 2010 and 2011, initial bowl eligibility would go to teams with no lower than a non-losing record (6-6) for the season. On August 2, 2012, the NCAA Division I Board of Directors approved a significant change to the process to determine bowl eligible teams, going so far as to potentially allow 5-7 teams to go to a bowl, in case there were not enough regular bowl-eligible teams to fill every game. If a bowl has one or more conferences/teams unable to meet their contractual commitments and there are no available bowl-eligible teams, the open spots can be filled \u2013 by the particular bowl's sponsoring agencies \u2013 as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Selection of the teams, Bowl-eligibility contingency plan\nThis process was created as a number of schools were banned, self-banned or potentially banned from the 2012 bowls, risking unfilled bowl games under the previous process: Ohio State, Penn State, North Carolina and UCF received bowl bans for this season (UCF's appeal hearing has been delayed until 2013, keeping them eligible this season), while there were unresolved NCAA cases examining Oregon and Miami (Miami has self-imposed a bowl ban for both 2011 and 2012).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Selection of the teams, Bowl-eligibility contingency plan\nNote: Georgia Tech lost in the ACC Championship Game to go 6\u20137 on the season. Georgia Tech applied for a waiver, distinct from the bowl-eligibility contingency plan, stating that they were forced to play the ACC Championship Game because higher finishing Miami self-imposed a postseason ban in a bid to lessen possible NCAA sanctions resulting from their school's 2011 athletics scandal. (North Carolina, which also finished ahead of Georgia Tech, was ineligible to participate due to NCAA sanctions.) The NCAA granted Georgia Tech the waiver and direct, non-contingent, eligibility for bowl play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl eligibility, Eligible\nNumber of bowl berths available: 70Number of teams assured of bowl eligibility: 72 (71 plus 6\u20137 Georgia Tech, per NCAA waiver)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl eligibility, Eligible\nBowl eligible teams that did not receive a bid: 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl eligibility, Eligible\nNote: On Friday, November 30, Louisiana Tech was invited to play in the Independence Bowl but asked for more time as they were in negotiations with the Liberty Bowl and Heart of Dallas Bowl. Louisiana Tech athletic director Bruce Van De Velde and WAC commissioner Jeff Hurd both claimed that on Saturday, December 1, the Liberty Bowl executive director Steve Ehrhart guaranteed the Bulldogs a bowl invite. After the Independence Bowl's deadline for Louisiana Tech to accept their invitation passed, the Independence Bowl selected the MAC's Ohio (8-4) instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl eligibility, Eligible\nOn Sunday, December 2, the Liberty Bowl extended their remaining bid to Iowa State (6-6) instead of Louisiana Tech (9-3). The Bulldogs did not end up playing in any bowl game despite boasting the nation's top scoring offense. Other media reports indicated that the Liberty Bowl and Sun Belt were discussing placing the winner of Arkansas State and Middle Tennessee State in the Memphis-based Liberty bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl eligibility, Teams unable to become bowl-eligible\nNumber of teams assured of bowl ineligibility: 52 (since the above noted bowl-eligibility contingency plan was not required)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, New bowl sponsors\nThe Champs Sports Bowl, in Orlando, is now the Russell Athletic Bowl. The Insight Bowl, held in Tempe, Arizona, is now the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl. The TicketCity Bowl has been renamed the Heart of Dallas Bowl; its new sponsor is Plains Capital Bank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Moratorium on new bowl games\nThe NCAA has placed a three-year moratorium, starting with the 2011-12 bowl season, on any new bowl games. This follows the addition of two new games (Pinstripe Bowl, TicketCity Bowl) for the 2010-11 bowl season, bringing the total number of bowl games to 35. The expansion to 70 teams required to fill these 35 bowl games has challenged the ability to actually find enough teams with winning (7-5 or better) records to fill bowl slots. Teams with non-winning (6-6) and losing (6-7) records have participated in bowl games since the expansion to 35 games. As discussed above (Bowl-eligibility contingency plan), the NCAA was forced to anticipate a need to allow teams with even worse (5-7) losing records to fill bowl selection slots in 2012-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Schedule\nThe bowl game schedule was released July 10, 2012. On December 2, 2012, the final BCS standings were announced and teams were officially selected for the various bowl games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230653-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games, Schedule\nNOTES: *All times are EST (UTC \u22125). *Rankings are from final BCS Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs\nThe National Football League playoffs for the 2012 season began on January 5, 2013. The postseason tournament concluded with the Baltimore Ravens defeating the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII, 34\u201331, on February 3, at Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs\nAll playoff teams in both conferences won at least 10 games, the first time since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs\nUnless otherwise noted, all times listed are Eastern Standard Time (UTC-05)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230654-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230654-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230654-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Schedule\nIn the United States, NBC 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 the Super Bowl. All games were broadcast by Dial Global radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nFor the second year in a row, Houston defeated Cincinnati in the first game of the playoffs, outgaining them in total yards 428\u2013198 and holding their offense to just two field goals in nine drives (including 0/9 on third downs). The win was especially satisfying for Texans quarterback Matt Schaub, who was playing in his first playoff game in his nine-season career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nOn the Texans' second drive of the game, they moved the ball 65 yards and scored on a 48-yard field goal from Shayne Graham (a former Bengal). Then, after forcing a punt, they drove the ball all the way to the Bengals 9-yard line, but once again settled for a Graham field goal a few minutes into the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nFollowing another Cincinnati punt, the Bengals took their first lead of the game when defensive back Leon Hall intercepted a pass intended for James Casey on the left sideline and returned it 21 yards for a touchdown. But the Texans took it back with a 61-yard drive to the Bengals 4-yard line, 46 coming from Arian Foster, that resulted in Graham's third field goal, making the score 9\u20137 at the end of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nEarly in the third quarter, a fair catch interference penalty on Bengals defensive back Chris Lewis-Harris gave Houston the ball on the Cincinnati 49-yard line. Houston then drove 51 yards, featuring a 22-yard completion from Schaub to Andre Johnson, and scored on a 1-yard touchdown run by Foster. The Bengals struck back with Andy Dalton's 45-yard completion to A. J. Green setting up Josh Brown's 34-yard field goal to cut the score to 16\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nCincinnati managed to force a punt on Houston's next drive, but with just over three minutes left in the third quarter, defensive back Johnathan Joseph (another former Bengal) intercepted Dalton's pass and returned it 16 yards to the Bengals 24-yard line. This led to Graham's fourth field goal on the second play of the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nBengals receiver Brandon Tate returned the ensuing kickoff 43 yards to the 39-yard line, sparking a drive that ended with Brown's 47-yard field goal that trimmed the lead to one score, 19\u201313. Cincinnati then forced a punt and drove into Texans territory, but on fourth down and 11 from the Houston 36-yard line, rookie receiver Marvin Jones was tackled by Joseph and Shiloh Keo three yards short of the first down marker. Houston then took over and held the ball for the final 2:44 of the game to clinch the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nFoster finished the game with 32 carries for 140 yards and a touchdown, along with eight receptions for 32. He became the first player ever to rush for over 100 yards in each of his first three career playoff games. Tight end Owen Daniels was the top receiver of the game with nine receptions for 91 yards, while Green had five receptions for 80 yards to lead Cincinnati. With this loss, Cincinnati's playoff win drought was extended to 22 years and remains the longest among all 32 NFL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, AFC: Houston Texans 19, Cincinnati Bengals 13\nThis was the second consecutive postseason meeting (and second overall) between the Bengals and Texans. Houston won 31\u201310 in the 2011 AFC Wild Card playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nThe Vikings got into the playoffs by a win in their season finale as quarterback Christian Ponder helped lead the team to victory. However, Ponder had suffered a shoulder injury during the win and was declared inactive for Minnesota's playoff game against the Packers. Joe Webb, who had not played in a single game during the 2012 season and had not started at quarterback since 2010, was given the start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nMinnesota's Marcus Sherels returned the opening kickoff 37 yards to the 35-yard line. From there, the Vikings drove to the Packers 15 with eight running plays, including a 17-yard scramble by Webb. Rookie kicker Blair Walsh finished the drive with a 33-yard field goal to give Minnesota a 3\u20130 lead. After an exchange of punts, Green Bay drove 82 yards and scored on an 8-yard touchdown run by DuJuan Harris with 33 seconds left in the first quarter. Harris was initially ruled down at the 1, but the call was changed to a touchdown by Mike McCarthy's replay challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nIn the second quarter, Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers hit James Jones for 20 yards and Greg Jennings for 32 on a 72-yard drive that ended with a 20-yard field goal by Mason Crosby. After forcing a punt with under two minutes left in the half, Rodgers completed passes to Jordy Nelson for 22 yards, Jennings for 14, and Nelson again for 23 before fullback John Kuhn completed the drive with a 3-yard touchdown run, making the score 17\u20133 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nGreen Bay scored another touchdown on their opening drive of the second half, moving the ball 80 yards in 12 plays and closing it out with Rodgers' 9-yard toss to Kuhn. Meanwhile, all that lay in store for the Vikings was three consecutive turnovers. First, they drove to the Packers 38-yard line, but then linebacker Clay Matthews forced a fumble while sacking Webb and recovered it. Then, following a punt, they drove to the Green Bay 46, only to lose the ball again on an interception by Sam Shields.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nThe Vikings defense forced another punt early in the fourth quarter, but Sherels muffed the kick and Green Bay's Dezman Moses recovered the ball. Later on, another drive into Green Bay territory was ended with no points when the Vikings failed to convert a fourth down and four on the Packers 43-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nMinnesota eventually managed to score a touchdown on a 50-yard pass from Webb to receiver Michael Jenkins. But by then, there was only 3:39 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nRodgers completed 23 of 33 passes to ten different players for 274 yards and a touchdown. Harris was the team leader in rushing yards (47) and receptions (five for 53 yards). Matthews had four tackles, two sacks, a forced fumble, and a fumble recovery. Shields had seven tackles and an interception. Webb finished with 180 passing yards, with one touchdown and one interception, while also rushing for 68 yards. Vikings running back Adrian Peterson was the top rusher of the game with 99 rushing yards. He also caught a pass for eight yards. Jenkins had three receptions for 96 yards and a score. Webb completed only 11 of 30 passes with a touchdown and an interception in what was his last game as a quarterback; the Vikings converted him to a wide receiver for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 5, 2013, NFC: Green Bay Packers 24, Minnesota Vikings 10\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Vikings and Packers. Minnesota won the previous meeting at Lambeau 31\u201317 in the 2004 NFC Wild Card playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nDespite racking up 419 yards and 25 first downs, Indianapolis was unable to dent the end zone against a stingy Ravens defense, who recorded three sacks, forced two turnovers, and limited them to just four field goal attempts. Meanwhile, Baltimore's offense rolled up 441 yards and 24 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nBoth teams blew scoring chances in the first half. After forcing a punt on the opening drive (which Jacoby Jones returned 34 yards to the 48), Baltimore drove all the way to the Colts 11-yard line. But then lineman Cory Redding stripped the ball from Ray Rice and Lawrence Guy recovered it for the Colts. Then Indy took over and drove to the Ravens 30, only to lose their own fumble when quarterback Andrew Luck was sacked by Paul Kruger and defensive end Pernell McPhee dove on the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nIn the second quarter, a 22-yard reception by Ravens receiver Torrey Smith and an 18-yard run by rookie Bernard Pierce set up a 23-yard field goal by Justin Tucker. Following an exchange of punts, Luck completed 4/4 passes for 50 yards on a drive that ended with Adam Vinatieri's 47-yard field goal to tie the game. Jones responded with a 37-yard kickoff return. Four plays later, Rice caught a screen pass from Joe Flacco and ran it 47 yards to the Colts 2-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nOn the next play, fullback Vonta Leach scored a 2-yard touchdown run to give the Ravens a 10\u20133 lead with 55 seconds left in the half. But Luck quickly led his team back, completing 4/5 passes for 62 yards to set up Vinatieri's 52-yard field goal, cutting the score to 10\u20136 at halftime. For Vinatieri, the NFL's all-time leader in postseason scoring, it was the longest playoff field goal of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nMidway through the third quarter, Flacco's 46-yard completion to Anquan Boldin moved the ball to the Colts 15-yard line. Following an incompletion and a false start penalty, he hit tight end Dennis Pitta for a 20-yard touchdown throw, increasing the lead to 17\u20136. Indianapolis responded with another drive deep into Ravens territory, but it was halted on the 8-yard line where Vinatieri kicked his third field goal of the game (and 48th postseason field goal of his career).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nEarly in the fourth quarter, Colts linebacker Pat Angerer recovered a fumble from Rice, leading to another drive into the Ravens red zone. But this time they came up empty when Vinatieri missed a field goal from 40 yards out. This was Vinatieri's first postseason miss against Baltimore. He had been 18/18 when playing against the Ravens up to this point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nThe miss turned out to be devastating. Just two plays later, Pierce ran the ball 43 yards to the Colts 18-yard line, and then Flacco finished the drive with an 18-yard touchdown pass to Boldin, giving the team a 24\u20139 lead. Then their defense closed out the game by forcing two turnovers inside their own 40. First, they stopped the next drive when defensive back Cary Williams intercepted a pass from Luck on the Ravens 15-yard line and returned it 41 yards. Then, after a punt, Indianapolis turned the ball over on downs at the Baltimore 37 with 2:10 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nFlacco finished the game 12/23 for 282 yards and two touchdowns. Boldin caught five passes for a franchise playoff record 145 yards (all in the second half). Pierce rushed for 103 yards, while Rice had 70 rushing yards and a 47-yard catch. Jones returned four punts for 57 yards, two kickoffs for 60 yards, and caught an 8-yard pass. Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis, who returned for this game after missing most of the season with injuries and had recently announced his intention to retire after the postseason, finished with a team leading 13 tackles and a pass deflection. Kruger had four tackles and 2.5 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nFor the Colts, Luck finished his first playoff game completing 28 of 54 passes for 288 yards and an interception, while also rushing for 35 yards. Receiver Reggie Wayne caught nine passes for 114 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 24, Indianapolis Colts 9\nThis was the third postseason meeting between the Colts and Ravens. Indianapolis won the prior two meetings, the last being 20\u20133 in the 2009 AFC Divisional playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nSeattle overcame a 14-point deficit in the first quarter to earn their first playoff win on the road since 1983. Seattle has now won three straight playoff games against Washington, who were playing in their first home playoff game since 1999. Coincidentally, the Seahawks also ended another playoff futility streak against the Redskins in the 2005 season (game played in 2006) when they beat them 20\u201310 at home in the divisional game for their first playoff victory at all (home or road) since 1984 on their way to their first Super Bowl appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0028-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nRobert Griffin III faced off against Russell Wilson for the second such instance of both teams starting with rookie quarterbacks in the playoffs, in the Super Bowl era; after T. J. Yates and Andy Dalton had previously done so for the Houston Texans and the Cincinnati Bengals respectively, in the 2011\u201312 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nWashington stormed out of the gate with touchdowns on their first two drives. After receiving the opening kickoff, they drove 80 yards, featuring a 30-yard reception by Pierre Gar\u00e7on and an 18-yard run by Alfred Morris. Griffin finished the drive with a 4-yard touchdown pass to reserve running back Evan Royster. Then the Redskins defense forced a three-and-out, and Richard Crawford gave them good field position with a 12-yard punt return to the 46-yard line. Washington subsequently moved the ball 54 yards and scored on Griffin's 4-yard toss to tight end Logan Paulsen. On the drive, Griffin, who was playing with a severely sprained lateral collateral ligament in one of his knees, further injured the joint. He remained in the game until the fourth quarter but was nowhere near 100% after the opening two Redskins' drives of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 957]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nBut Seattle dominated the rest of the game, holding the Redskins to a final total of just 202 offensive yards. The Seahawks responded with a 66-yard drive, including a 19-yard scramble by Wilson, that ended on a field goal by Steven Hauschka. Following a punt, running back Marshawn Lynch's 20-yard gain on a fumble recovery set up their first touchdown of the game. Fullback Michael Robinson also made a big impact on the drive, catching a 19-yard pass from Wilson and capping the drive with a 4-yard touchdown catch. On the next possession, safety Earl Thomas intercepted a pass from Griffin on the Seattle 26-yard line. Wilson's subsequent completions to Doug Baldwin and Zach Miller for gains of 33 and 22 yards set up Hauschka's second field goal, cutting the score to 14\u201313 at the end of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nSeattle started the third quarter with a drive to the Redskins 1-yard line, but then Lynch lost a fumble that was recovered by Washington lineman Jarvis Jenkins. In the fourth quarter, he managed to redeem himself with a 27-yard touchdown run. Then Wilson completed a pass to Miller for the two-point conversion, giving his team a 21\u201314 lead. Then, after the kickoff, Bruce Irvin sacked Griffin for a 12-yard loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nOn the next play, Griffin fumbled the snap and as he went to try to recover it, he collapsed to the ground as he tore the already sprained LCL and the anterior cruciate ligament in the same knee. Seahawks lineman Clinton McDonald recovered the ball on the Redskins 5-yard line, setting up Hauschka's third field goal to make the final score 24\u201314. Washington responded with a drive to the Seattle 20, but turned the ball over on downs with 1:08 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nWilson finished his first playoff game 15/26 for 187 yards and a touchdown, along with 67 rushing yards. Lynch rushed for 132 yards and a touchdown, and caught a pass for nine yards. For the Redskins, safety Reed Doughty had 11 tackles and two sacks. Morris was their top rusher with 80 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nAfter the game, an MRI revealed Griffin suffered partial tears of his anterior cruciate and lateral collateral ligaments in his knee and had to undergo surgery to repair it. In response, Washington coach Mike Shanahan faced criticism for not pulling Griffin from the game earlier, despite warning signs he was playing injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 6, 2013, NFC: Seattle Seahawks 24, Washington Redskins 14\nThis was the third postseason meeting between the Seahawks and Redskins. Seattle won both prior matchups, including the most recent being 35\u201314 in the 2007 NFC Wild Card playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 115], "content_span": [116, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nBaltimore defensive back Corey Graham's interception from Peyton Manning set up Justin Tucker's 47-yard game-winning field goal 1:42 into double overtime to stun the heavily favored Broncos. This brought Denver's 11-game winning streak to an end and sent the Ravens to their third AFC title game in the last five years. It was the sixth double overtime game in history, the first since 2003 (a game that coincidentally also featured head coach John Fox), and the fourth-longest game in NFL history at a total of 76:42 of game time,. With the loss, the Broncos became the ninth #1 seed in the last eight years to lose their first playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nBroncos receiver Trindon Holliday opened up the scoring by returning a Sam Koch punt 90 yards for a touchdown, the first postseason punt return score in franchise history. Things seemed to get even better for Denver when Jacoby Jones fumbled the ensuing kickoff and was downed on the 6-yard line. But two plays later, defensive back Tony Carter was hit with a 25-yard pass interference penalty on third down. Then Joe Flacco tied the game with a 59-yard touchdown pass to Torrey Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0036-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nThe situation only got worse for Denver on the next drive, as Graham picked off a deflected pass and returned it 39 yards for a touchdown, making the score 14\u20137. But Manning rallied his team back, completing 5/7 passes for 69 yards on a 74-yard drive that ended on his 15-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Stokley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nLater in the second quarter, a 32-yard reception by Broncos receiver Eric Decker set up Manning's 14-yard touchdown pass to Knowshon Moreno. Denver then forced a punt and drove to the Ravens 34-yard line, but this time they failed to score as Matt Prater missed a 52-field goal. Taking the ball back on their own 42 with 1:16 remaining, Flacco hit Anquan Boldin for 11 yards and tight end Dennis Pitta for 15 before finding Smith in the end zone on a 32-yard score, tying the score at 21 at the end of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nHolliday quickly broke the tie just 13 seconds into the third quarter by returning the second half kickoff 104 yards for a touchdown, making him the first player ever to return a punt and kickoff for a touchdown in a postseason game. Later in the quarter, Manning lost a fumble while being sacked by Pernell McPhee, and Ravens lineman Paul Kruger recovered it on the Broncos 37-yard line. Running back Ray Rice took it to the end zone from there with five consecutive running plays (one of them for 32 yards), the last one a 1-yard touchdown run to tie the game back up at 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nMidway through the fourth quarter, Denver drove 88 yards and scored on a 17-yard pass from Manning to Demaryius Thomas, taking a 35\u201328 lead with just over seven minutes left in regulation. Baltimore responded with a drive to the Broncos 31-yard line, but turned the ball over on downs with 3:16 left. The Ravens defense had to use all their timeouts on Denver's ensuing drive, but managed to force a punt and get the ball on their own 23-yard line at the 1:09 mark. After an incomplete pass and a 7-yard scramble, in the signature play of the game, Flacco tossed a 70-yard Hail Mary touchdown pass to Jones, sending the game into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nAfter the first three drives of overtime ended in punts, Graham intercepted a pass from Manning on the Broncos 45-yard line. On the last play of the first overtime period, Rice's 11-yard run moved the team into field goal range. A few plays later, Tucker kicked a 47-yard field goal to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nFlacco threw for 331 yards and three touchdowns. Smith caught three passes for 98 yards and two scores. Rice rushed for 131 yards and a touchdown. Graham had eight tackles, two interceptions, and a touchdown. Linebacker Ray Lewis had 17 tackles, the most by any player in the postseason up to this point, while linebacker Terrell Suggs recorded 10 tackles and two sacks. For Denver, Manning completed 28 of 43 passes for 290 yards and three touchdowns, with two interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0041-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nHolliday's 90-yard punt return and 104-yard kickoff return were the longest ever in each NFL postseason category, though his record for the kickoff return touchdown lasted only a few weeks before being broken by Jones' 108-yard touchdown return in the Super Bowl. Holliday's 248 total special teams return yards were an NFL postseason record as well, breaking a record previously owned by Andre Coleman and Desmond Howard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 38, Denver Broncos 35 (2OT)\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Ravens and Broncos. Baltimore won the last meeting 21\u20133 in the 2000 AFC Wild Card playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nIn his first career playoff game, 25-year-old 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick rushed for 181 yards and two touchdowns, setting both the NFL single-game record for rushing yards by a quarterback and the 49ers postseason record for rushing, regardless of position. He also passed for 263 yards and two scores. Overall, San Francisco racked up 579 yards, including a franchise record 323 rushing yards, and scored a touchdown in every quarter to earn their second consecutive trip to the NFC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nHowever, Kaepernick didn't get off to a good start. Less than two minutes into the game, he threw a pass that was intercepted by Sam Shields and returned 52 yards for a touchdown. But he quickly rallied his team back, completing a 45-yard pass to running back Frank Gore before taking the ball into the end zone himself on a 20-yard run. Later in the quarter, Green Bay took a 14\u20137 lead with Aaron Rodgers' 44-yard completion to James Jones setting up an 18-yard touchdown run by DuJuan Harris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0044-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nThe Packers then forced a punt, but returner Jeremy Ross muffed the kick and C. J. Spillman recovered it for San Francisco on the Packers 9-yard line. Two plays later, Kaepernick tied the score at 14 with a 12-yard touchdown pass to Michael Crabtree. Then defensive back Tarell Brown intercepted a pass from Rodgers, setting up Kaepernick's second touchdown pass to Crabtree, this one from 20 yards out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nWith 2:39 left in the half, Rodgers' 20-yard touchdown pass to Jones tied the score at 21. But on the 49ers next drive, a pair of runs by Kaepernick for gains of 19 and 17 yards enabled David Akers to kick a 36-yard field goal, sending the teams into their locker rooms with San Francisco leading 24\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nIn the third quarter, Green Bay drove 76 yards in nine plays, featuring a 30-yard reception by Greg Jennings and scored a Mason Crosby field goal. But the tie turned out to be short lived. On the third play of their next drive, Kaepernick faked a handoff, rolled right, and took off for at the time his career long 56-yard touchdown run, retaking the lead at 31\u201324. Then, after a punt, he completed a 44-yard pass to tight end Vernon Davis, setting up Gore's 2-yard touchdown run on the first play of the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0046-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nFollowing another punt, Kaepernick led the 49ers back for more points, this time on a 93-yard drive. First he ran for a 16-yard gain, and later he completed a 17-yard throw to tight end Delanie Walker. On the next play, Gore's 26-yard burst moved the ball to the Packers 27-yard line. Anthony Dixon eventually finished the 11-play drive with a 2-yard touchdown run, making the score 45\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nWith under a minute left, Rodgers threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Jennings. But any hope of a miracle comeback was dashed when Walker recovered the ensuing onside kick attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nCrabtree was the top receiver of the game, with nine catches for 119 yards and two touchdowns. Gore rushed for 119 yards and a touchdown, while also catching two passes for 48 yards. Linebacker Patrick Willis had seven tackles and a sack. Rodgers completed 26 of 39 passes for 257 yards, two touchdowns, and an interception, while also rushing for 28 yards. Kaepernick finished the game responsible for more yards gained (444) then the entire Packers team (352)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 12, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 45, Green Bay Packers 31\nThis was the sixth postseason meeting between the Packers and 49ers. Green Bay had won four of the five prior meetings, including winning 25\u201315 in the 2001 NFC Wild Card playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nThe Falcons built up a 20\u20130 first-half lead, but had to overcome a furious Seattle comeback to earn their first trip to the conference championship game since 2005. Trailing 28\u201327 with 25 seconds left, Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan's completions to Harry Douglas and Tony Gonzalez moved the ball 41 yards in just 12 seconds of game time to set up Matt Bryant's 49-yard game-winning field goal. For Gonzalez, the NFL's all-time leader among tight ends in nearly every receiving category, it marked the first playoff win in his 16-season career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nAtlanta scored on their opening drive, moving the ball 55 yards on the way to a 39-yard field goal from Bryant. Later in the quarter, Seattle got a scoring opportunity when linebacker Bobby Wagner intercepted a Ryan pass and returned it to the Falcons' 33-yard line. But running back Marshawn Lynch fumbled the ball while being tackled by Sean Weatherspoon and defensive tackle Jonathan Babineaux recovered it. On Atlanta's ensuring drive, a pair of 16-yard receptions by Roddy White and tight end Chase Coffman set up Ryan's 1-yard touchdown pass to Gonzalez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nOn the last play of the first quarter, Atlanta running back Jacquizz Rodgers ran the ball 45 yards to the Seahawks 42-yard line. Atlanta then continued on to the 19-yard line, where Bryant kicked a 37-yard field goal. Seattle responded with a drive to the Atlanta 11-yard line, but turned the ball over when fullback Michael Robinson was dropped for a 1-yard loss by safety William Moore on fourth down and one. With Atlanta taking the ball back on their own 12, Michael Turner made a 33-yard run before Ryan's 47-yard touchdown pass to White increased their lead to 20\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0052-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nSeattle responded with a drive to the Falcons' 11-yard line on a drive that used up all their timeouts. With 17 seconds left in the half, they attempted one last play before sending in the field goal unit, but quarterback Russell Wilson was sacked by Babineaux and the clock ran out before they could run another play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nSeattle started out the second half with an 80-yard touchdown drive, with Wilson rushing for 19 yards and completing a 19-yard throw to tight end Zach Miller before tossing a 29-yard touchdown pass to Golden Tate. Atlanta countered with an 80-yard drive of their own, featuring a 21-yard reception by Julio Jones and scoring on Ryan's 5-yard pass to fullback Jason Snelling. But it wasn't long before Seattle completed the third consecutive 80-yard possession; Wilson hit Tate for 24 yards, rushed for 12, and then completed a 26-yard pass to Miller on the Falcons 13-yard line. A few plays later, he took it into the end zone himself on a 1-yard run, making the score 27\u201314 with 13:06 left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nThree plays into Atlanta's next drive, safety Earl Thomas intercepted a pass from Ryan at the Seattle 38. Wilson then moved the ball into the Falcons red zone with a 24-yard completion to Sidney Rice and a 30-yarder to reserve running back Robert Turbin. On the next play, his 3-yard touchdown pass to Miller cut the deficit down to one score, 27\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nWith three minutes left in the game, Seattle's Leon Washington returned a punt 15 yards to his 39-yard line. Then Wilson went back to work, with completions to Tate and Lynch for gains of 19 and 24 yards. Then, with 31 seconds left, Lynch's 2-yard touchdown run gave them their first lead of the game, 28\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0056-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nRodgers returned the ensuing kickoff 34 yards to the 28-yard line, giving the Falcons the ball with 25 seconds and two timeouts left. On their first play, Ryan completed a 22-yard pass to Douglas near the left sideline, running six seconds off the clock. Then he found Gonzalez over the middle for a 19-yard gain to the Seattle 31-yard line that used up six more seconds before the clock was stopped on their final timeout. With 13 seconds left in the game, Atlanta decided to try the game-winning field goal on their next play. Shortly before the ball was snapped, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll called a timeout, giving Bryant a \"practice kick\" on the field, which he missed. But after the timeout, Bryant's 49-yard field goal kick was good, retaking the lead for Atlanta with eight seconds left on the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0057-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nHowever, Seattle was not quite out of the game. Taking the ball on their 46-yard line after Atlanta's squib kick, Wilson's 6-yard completion to Doug Baldwin moved the ball to the Atlanta 48, where he went out of bounds with two seconds left. Rather than attempt a 65-yard field goal (which was two yards longer than the NFL record for longest field goal at that time), Seattle decided to try a Hail Mary pass with their final play. Wilson heaved the ball into the end zone, but Jones, who had been brought in as an extra defensive back, intercepted the pass to seal the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0058-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nRyan completed 24 of 35 passes for 250 yards and three touchdowns, with two interceptions. Turner rushed for 98 yards. Rodgers rushed for 64 yards, and added 104 more on five kickoff returns. Wilson threw for 385 yards and two touchdowns with one interception, while also rushing for 60 yards and another score. Miller was the top receiver of the game with eight receptions for 142 yards and a touchdown, while Tate added six catches for 103 yards and a touchdown. Wagner had eight tackles and an interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0059-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 30, Seattle Seahawks 28\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Seahawks and Falcons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0060-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nIn Week 14 of the regular season, New England defeated Houston 42\u201314. This time around, the Texans managed to keep the score tighter, but the final result didn't change. New England quarterback Tom Brady passed for 344 yards and three touchdowns as he led the team to their seventh AFC Championship Game in his 12 years as a starter. This was also his 17th postseason win, surpassing the NFL's all-time record held by Joe Montana. However, the win did come with a price: Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski, who suffered a season ending arm injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0061-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nHouston started out with a huge burst of momentum when Danieal Manning returned the opening kickoff 94 yards to the New England 12-yard line. But a dropped pass by James Casey and an overthrown pass in the end zone forced them to settle for a 27-yard field goal from Shayne Graham. Later in the quarter, Brady completed three consecutive passes for 51 yards on a 65-yard drive on the way to a 1-yard touchdown run by Shane Vereen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0062-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nOn their next drive, a 30-yard completion to Wes Welker, along with Vereen's 22-yard run and 12-yard reception, set up a 37-yard field goal by Stephen Gostkowski. Following a punt, Brady completed a 47-yard pass to Welker, moving the ball to the Texans 8-yard line. On the next play, he threw a touchdown pass to Vereen, making the score 17\u20133. On the ensuing kickoff, a 35-yard return by Manning and a 15-yard penalty against Gostkowski for a horse collar tackle gave Houston the ball at the Patriots 47-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0062-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nArian Foster took the ball to the end zone from there with five consecutive running plays, the last a 1-yard touchdown run. Then after forcing a punt, quarterback Matt Schaub completed three passes for 25 yards in a span of just 22 seconds, moving the ball to the Pats 37 where Graham made a 55-yard field goal as time expired in the half and cutting the score to 17\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0063-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nHowever, New England dominated the second half with 21 unanswered points. On the first drive of the second half, Brady's 40-yard completion to tight end Aaron Hernandez set up Stevan Ridley's 8-yard touchdown run. Later in the quarter, Patriots linebacker Rob Ninkovich intercepted a pass and returned it to the 37-yard line. Ridley then rushed four times for 37 yards on a 63-yard drive that ended with Brady's 5-yard touchdown completion to Brandon Lloyd. Early in the fourth quarter, Houston failed to convert a fourth down and one on their own 33-yard line, and Brady threw a 33-yard touchdown pass to Vereen on the next play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0064-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nNow trailing 38\u201313, Houston made one last comeback attempt. Manning's 65-yard kickoff return gave them the ball on the Pats 37-yard line, where they scored on a five play drive that ended with Schaub's 25-yard touchdown pass to receiver DeVier Posey. Then after a punt, they drove 79 yards, including a 24-yard catch by tight end Owen Daniels and scored on Schaub's 1-yard completion to Foster. On the next play, he completed a 2-point conversion pass to Andre Johnson, making the score 38\u201328 with 5:11 left in the game. But New England ended their comeback chances when Ninkovich recovered their onside kick attempt, leading to Gostkowski's 38-yard field goal to put the game away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0065-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nVereen finished with 124 all-purpose yards and three touchdowns. Welker caught eight passes for 131 yards. For the Texans, Schaub threw for 352 yards, two touchdowns, and an interception. Foster rushed for 90 yards, caught seven passes for 63 yards, and scored two touchdowns. Johnson caught eight passes for 95 yards. Manning returned four kickoffs for 216 yards, the third highest total in postseason history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0066-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 13, 2013, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Texans and Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 116], "content_span": [117, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0067-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nSan Francisco overcame a 17-point deficit, the largest comeback ever in an NFC Championship Game, to earn their sixth Super Bowl appearance in franchise history. It was their first road playoff win in 24 years. Ironically, the previous biggest comeback in NFC Championship history was the Falcons overcoming a 13-point deficit in the 1998 NFC title game. This marked the seventh year in a row where the NFC Champion came from the division that faced the AFC East in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0068-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nAtlanta dominated the first quarter, mainly on plays by receiver Julio Jones, who caught five passes for 100 yards, including a 46-yard touchdown catch on their opening drive, and a 27-yard reception on their next drive to set up a Matt Bryant field goal. Following a punt, Matt Ryan hit Roddy White for a 23-yard gain on the last play of the first quarter. Then he threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Jones on the first play of the second, giving the Falcons a 17\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0069-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nThis time San Francisco struck back with an 80-yard scoring drive, with Frank Gore rushing for 20 yards and Vernon Davis catching a pass for 27. LaMichael James finished the drive with a 15-yard touchdown run. Then, after forcing a three-and-out, Colin Kaepernick rushed for 23 yards and completed three passes to Davis for 48 yards, the last a 4-yard touchdown pass to make the score 17\u201314. But Atlanta stormed back as Ryan completed five passes for double-digit gains on their next drive, the last one a 10-yard score to tight end Tony Gonzalez with 25 seconds left in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0070-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nThe 49ers took the opening kickoff and drove 82 yards, with Kaepernick completing two passes to Randy Moss for 38 yards and one to tight end Delanie Walker for 20. Gore completed the drive with a 5-yard touchdown run, cutting their deficit to 24\u201321. On Atlanta's ensuing possession, defensive back Chris Culliver gave San Francisco a great chance to tie or take the lead by intercepting a pass from Ryan and returning it to the Falcons 25-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0070-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nBut San Francisco failed to gain a first down and came up empty when David Akers hit the uprights on a 38-yard field goal try. Later on, the 49ers got another scoring opportunity when defensive lineman Aldon Smith recovered a fumble from Ryan on his own 40-yard line. They subsequently drove deep into Falcons territory, but once again they failed to score when defensive back Dunta Robinson stripped the ball from Michael Crabtree on the 1-yard line as he tried to get in for the go-ahead score, and linebacker Stephen Nicholas recovered it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0071-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nWith 12 minutes left in regulation, Ted Ginn Jr.'s 20-yard punt return gave San Francisco the ball on the Falcons 38-yard line. Five plays later, Gore scored his second touchdown on a 9-yard run, giving the 49ers their first lead of the game at 28\u201324. Atlanta responded with a drive to the 49ers 13-yard line, but consecutive incompletions on third and fourth down caused a turnover on downs with just 1:13 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0072-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nAtlanta managed to force a punt and get the ball with 13 seconds to go. Ryan completed a pass to Jones on the final play, but he was tackled at the 49ers 35-yard line as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0073-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nKaepernick completed 16 of 21 passes for 233 yards and a touchdown, along with 21 rushing yards. Davis caught five passes for 106 yards and a score. Gore rushed for 90 yards and two touchdowns. Ryan completed 30 of 42 passes for 396 yards and three touchdowns, with one interception. Jones caught 11 passes for 182 yards and two touchdowns, while White had seven receptions for 100 yards. Gonzalez caught eight passes for 78 yards and a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0074-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, NFC: San Francisco 49ers 28, Atlanta Falcons 24\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the 49ers and Falcons. Atlanta won the only prior meeting 20\u201318 in the 1998 NFC Divisional playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0075-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nBaltimore's defense forced three turnovers, held Tom Brady and the New England Patriots to 13 points, and kept them scoreless in the second half en route to their first Super Bowl in 12 years, covering over their previous year's AFC title loss. The Patriots suffered their worst loss of the season and their lowest scoring total of the season despite six trips inside the Ravens 25-yard line. Brady suffered his first career loss at home when leading by halftime, in which during that span he was 67\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0076-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nIn the first quarter, New England receiver Brandon Lloyd caught two passes for 29 yards on a drive that ended with a Stephen Gostkowski field goal. In the second quarter, Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco completed 5/6 passes for 64 yards on an 87-yard drive that ended with Ray Rice's 2-yard touchdown run to take the lead. New England struck back with a 79-yard touchdown drive. The key player on it was Wes Welker, who caught a 24-yard pass and later finished it with a 1-yard touchdown reception from Brady.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0076-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nBaltimore was forced to punt after three plays on their next drive, and Welker returned the ball 15 yards to the Ravens 43-yard line. New England then drove to the 7-yard line where Gostkowski kicked his second field goal as time expired in the half, giving the Patriots a 13\u20137 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0077-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nIn the second half, New England managed several drives deep into Ravens territory, but were unable to convert any into points. First, they drove to Baltimore's 34-yard line, but were halted there and decided to punt rather than attempt a 52-yard field goal. Tight end Dennis Pitta subsequently caught three passes for 32 yards on Baltimore's ensuring 87-yard drive, the last a 5-yard touchdown catch. New England was quickly forced to punt and Jacoby Jones returned it 11 yards to the 37. Baltimore then drove 63 yards, featuring a 23-yard reception by Torrey Smith and scored on Flacco's 3-yard touchdown pass to Anquan Boldin on the first play of the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0078-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nThe Ravens dominated the final quarter, forcing a turnover on every New England drive. First, Pats running back Stevan Ridley lost a fumble while being tackled by Bernard Pollard and defensive end Arthur Jones recovered it on the New England 47-yard line. Three plays later, Flacco threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Boldin, making the score 28\u201313. The Patriots then drove to the Ravens 19-yard line, only to turn the ball over on downs after failing to convert a fourth down and 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0078-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nFollowing a punt, New England moved the ball back to the Ravens 19, only to lose it again when Brady threw a pass that was tipped by Pernell McPhee at the line of scrimmage and intercepted by Dannell Ellerbe. After another Ravens punt, Baltimore defensive back Cary Williams put the game away by intercepting a pass from Brady in the end zone with 1:13 left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0079-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nFlacco threw for 240 yards and three touchdowns. Linebacker Ray Lewis had 14 tackles, giving him a staggering 44 total tackles in the Ravens three playoff games. Brady threw for 320 yards and one touchdown with two interceptions. Welker caught eight passes for 117 yards and a touchdown, while also returning four punts for 56 yards. Pats linebacker Brandon Spikes had 11 tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0080-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nThe Ravens became the first team to win the AFC Championship on the road since the 2005 Pittsburgh Steelers and were the last road team to win a conference championship game until the Los Angeles Rams and New England Patriots won their respective conference championship games in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0081-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 20, 2013, AFC: Baltimore Ravens 28, New England Patriots 13\nThis was the second consecutive postseason meeting and third overall between the Ravens and Patriots. Both teams split the prior two meetings, with New England winning the 2011 AFC Championship Game 23\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0082-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl XLVII: Baltimore Ravens 34, San Francisco 49ers 31\nAlthough this game was looking to be a blowout win for the Ravens after a 21-6 first half lead, the 49ers rallied to keep it close, but the game came down to the Ravens hanging on to a 5 point lead in the final seconds and intentionally giving up a safety for the resulting final score. This was the third Super Bowl in five years, after XLIII and XLV, to not feature either #1 seed from either conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 83], "content_span": [84, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230654-0083-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl XLVII: Baltimore Ravens 34, San Francisco 49ers 31\nThis was the first Super Bowl meeting between the Ravens and 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 83], "content_span": [84, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout\nThe 2012\u201313 NHL lockout was a labor dispute between the National Hockey League (NHL) and the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) that began at 11:59\u00a0pm EDT on September 15, 2012. A tentative deal on a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA) was reached on January 6, 2013, with its ratification and signing of a memorandum of understanding on the agreement completed by January 12, 2013, 119 days after the expiry of the previous CBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout\nThe owners of the league's franchises, led by NHL commissioner Gary Bettman, declared a lockout of the members of the NHLPA after a new agreement could not be reached before the expiry of the NHL collective bargaining agreement on September 16, 2012. The lockout shortened the 2012\u201313 NHL season, originally scheduled to begin on October 11, 2012, from 82 to 48 games, a reduction of 41.5 percent. The revised season started on January 19, 2013 and ended on April 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout\nAt issue for the owners were desires to reduce the players guaranteed 57% share of hockey-related revenues, introduce term limits on contracts, eliminate salary arbitration, and change free agency rules. The union's initial offers focused on increased revenue sharing between owners and a fixed salary cap that is not linked to league revenues. As the deadline for a work stoppage approached, the union unsuccessfully challenged the league's ability to lock out players of three Canadian teams \u2013 the Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames (in the jurisdiction of Alberta), and the Montreal Canadiens (in the jurisdiction of Quebec).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout\nThe dispute was the third lockout in the 19 years since Bettman became Commissioner in 1993, following player lockouts in 1994\u201395 and 2004\u201305, with the latter case leading to the cancellation of the entire season. This was also the third labor dispute for NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr who, as head of the Major League Baseball Players' Association, led his union through a lockout in 1990 and a strike in 1994\u201395.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout\nDuring the lockout, many NHL players went to other leagues in North America and Europe. Many businesses in the United States and Canada located near NHL arenas lost money as a result of the games not played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Cancelled games\nAll games on the original 2012\u201313 NHL calendar up to January 14, 2013 were cancelled, including the 2013 NHL Winter Classic between the Detroit Red Wings and the Toronto Maple Leafs, which was rescheduled for 2014. In addition, the 2013 All-Star Game, scheduled for January 27, was also cancelled. The revised 48-game schedule resulted in the cancellation of 510 regular season games, comprising 41.5 percent of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Issues\nThe owners identified their key issues in their first offer, presented on July 13, 2012. Their offer retained the framework established following the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout but made numerous changes to player salary and movement rights:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Issues\nThe players' union waited a month to offer a counter-proposal as it requested additional financial data from the league. When the union proposed it on August 14, it retained a salary cap, but de-linked it from revenue. It proposed a fixed cap for three years, followed by a players' option to return to the terms of the expired CBA in the fourth year. Fehr suggested their proposal could save the league as much as $465 million and would feature an enhanced revenue sharing system that would help lower-revenue teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe two parties exchanged a pair of offers as the deadline for a lockout approached. The union's last offer before the expiry of the collective bargaining agreement continued to call for an unlinked salary cap that would steadily increase over a five-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nDonald Fehr argued that if the league continued to see revenue increase at the seven percent average of the 2005\u20132012 CBA, the players' share of revenues would drop from the 57 percent they received in 2011\u201312 to a low of 52 percent in 2015\u201316, but increase in the final two years of the deal back to 54 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe NHL countered with a time-limited offer where it would continue with the existing definition of hockey-related revenue and a linked salary cap that would pay the players 49 percent of revenues in 2012\u201313 and fall to 47 percent by the sixth year of the deal. Each side rejected the others' offer, and some veteran players expressed willingness to sit out an entire season if necessary. The National Hockey League officially locked its players out when the CBA expired,and on September 19, cancelled all preseason games for the month of September. Several players then signed contracts to play in European leagues for the duration of the dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe NHLPA challenged the NHL's right to lock out the players in two Canadian jurisdictions. Sixteen members of the Montreal Canadiens unsuccessfully sought a temporary injunction from the Quebec labor Relations Board that would prevent the team from locking its players out of practice facilities and would have required the Canadiens to pay its players regardless. Twenty-one members of the Calgary Flames and Edmonton Oilers sought similar relief from the Alberta labor Relations Board, but the board ruled in favour of the NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nHaving cancelled the remainder of the preseason, and regular season games up to November 1, on October 16, Bettman offered a 50\u201350 revenue split in the owners' latest CBA proposal. Two days later, the Players' Association presented three counterproposals. Both sides were still far apart when negotiations ended. The league, which refused to negotiate with the NHLPA unless they used the league proposal as the starting point, withdrew its offer after negotiations failed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nSubsequently, on October 26, the NHL cancelled all games scheduled for November, including the annual Hall of Fame game, scheduled for November 9 at the Air Canada Centre, and the Black Friday Thanksgiving Showdown scheduled to air on NBC. In addition, the 2013 NHL Winter Classic was cancelled on November 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe league and players' association resumed negotiations on November 6, meeting over six consecutive days in a neutral, undisclosed location. The NHL offered to pay a $211 million \"make whole provision\" over the first two years of the deal to honour existing player contracts; the NHLPA sought $590 million. On November 21, the NHLPA made a new proposal that left the sides $182 million apart, which Bettman immediately rejected. Two days later, all games up to December 14 were cancelled, as well as the All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe NHL and NHLPA agreed to mediation under the auspices of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service on November 26. The sides met with mediators on November 28 and 29, but the mediators quit after that point, determining they could not make any progress reconciling the two parties' demands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nFollowing mediation, Bettman proposed a meeting between players and team owners to Donald Fehr, and Jamal Mayers tweeted that the NHLPA had made a similar offer to meet directly with owners. From December 4 to 6, six team owners, 17\u201319 players, and staff from both sides met to negotiate and exchange proposals. The league offered to raise the \"Make Whole\" provision to $300 million and to give ground on player contracting and pension issues, but identified three components of the CBA they considered important: a five-year limit on player contracts, a ten-year length of the new CBA, and compliance issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe players offered an eight-year limit on contracts and an eight-year CBA with an opt-out clause after six years. The NHL rejected the offer, and talks broke down again. After negotiations failed, Bettman delivered a press conference saying the \"Make Whole\" provision would be pulled off the table. He also stated that the league would deny the union's request to bring mediators back into the negotiations. Four days later, the NHL cancelled all games up to December 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nAfter talks broke down, rumours leaked that the NHLPA planned on filing a \"disclaimer of interest\" (a quicker, less formal way to dissolve the player's union, compared with decertification)and, with collective bargaining no longer in effect, pursuing an antitrust lawsuit against the NHL. The NHL responded on December 14 by filing a class action suit with the U.S. District Court in New York seeking to establish that its lockout was legal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nIncluded in the lawsuit was a request for all existing player contracts to be \"void and unenforceable\", should the NHLPA be dissolved, resulting in all NHL players becoming free agents. The league also filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board, stating that the union had been negotiating in bad faith and that its threat to disclaim interest was a negotiating ploy that violated the collective bargaining process. In a vote conducted from December 17 to 21, the players authorized the union's executive board to file a disclaimer of interest, up until January 2, 2013, though it did not proceed with the filing. On December 20, the league cancelled all games up to January 14, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nAfter a Christmas hiatus, the league made another offer to the players on December 27. The offer was reportedly for a ten-year contract with an opt-out clause after eight, and included a US$60 million salary cap taking effect in 2013, a six-year term limit on player contracts (seven years for teams re-signing their own players), an increase in the allowed amount of variance year-to-year in player contracts to ten percent from the originally proposed five, and the make-whole provision remaining the same as the previous offer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe proposal required a minimum 48-game regular season schedule starting no later than January 19 which would be preceded by a one-week training camp, thereby requiring an agreement to be reached by January 11. Face-to-face negotiations recommenced shortly thereafter. With the expiry of the NHLPA's authorization to file a disclaimer of interest, the two sides continued to discuss three key issues: player pensions, the salary cap (with the players requesting a US$65 million cap for the second year of the collective bargaining agreement), and contract lengths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Resolution\nAround 4:45\u00a0am EST on January 6, after approximately 16 continuous hours of negotiating, a tentative deal was reached on a new collective bargaining agreement to end the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Resolution\nThe terms included a limit of eight years on contract extensions and seven years on new contracts, a salary floor of US$44 million and a salary cap of US$60 million (a two-year transition period will allow teams to spend up to US$70.2 million in the deal's first season, prorated for the season length, and up to a salary cap of US$64.3 million in the second season), a maximum 50-percent variance in the salaries over the course of a contract, mandatory acceptance of arbitration awards under US$3.5 million, no realignment, and an amnesty period to buy out contracts that do not fit under the salary cap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Resolution\nThe NHL Board of Governors ratified the new CBA on January 9, followed three days later by the ratification of the deal by the NHLPA members, and the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the two parties, officially marking their agreement to the CBA. A 48-game schedule was played, starting on January 19, 2013 and ending on April 28, 2013, with no inter-conference games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Alternatives for players\nAs in the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout, the players had numerous options for playing professional hockey during the lockout. All players eligible for the American Hockey League were assigned to their AHL clubs leading into the lockout, as were players still eligible to play junior hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Alternatives for players\nMore experienced players sought employment in European leagues such as the predominantly Russian Kontinental Hockey League (KHL), Finland's SM-liiga, Germany's Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL), Austria's Erste Bank Hockey League (EBEL), the Czech Extraliga (ELH), the Slovak Extraliga, Switzerland's National League A (NLA), Norway's GET-ligaen, the United Kingdom's Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL) and the Swedish Elitserien (SEL), the last of which largely resisted signing locked-out NHL players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Alternatives for players\nBy November 15, over 170 NHL players had joined teams in Europe. Pavel Datsyuk, Ilya Kovalchuk, Evgeni Malkin, and Alexander Ovechkin were among the stars who returned to their native Russia. Nicklas Backstrom also decided to play in Russia together with his teammate Ovechkin. Other players, such as Patrice Bergeron, Logan Couture, Patrick Kane, Rick Nash, Matt Duchene, Tyler Seguin, Jason Spezza, Max Pacioretty, John Tavares, Joe Thornton and Henrik Zetterberg, signed with teams in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Alternatives for players\nThe assignment of NHL players to the AHL caused a trickle-down effect that pushed AHL players to the ECHL, ECHL players to lower leagues such as the CHL, FHL and SPHL, and marginal players from those leagues out of professional hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Alternatives for players\nWith the large number of notable NHL players playing in Europe, American sports network ESPN signed a multi-platform deal with the KHL to televise the game of the week on its television and online platforms, a deal that cost the network less than US$100,000 in rights fees. This was followed by another American television network, MSG, also securing rights for broadcasting select KHL games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Alternatives for players\nThe 2012 Spengler Cup in Davos, Switzerland, also included a number of NHL players who would likely not have participated if not for the lockout. Top NHLers, including Patrice Bergeron, Tyler Seguin, Jason Spezza, and John Tavares, helped Team Canada win its first Spengler Cup since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Alternatives for players\nDuring the lockout, several NHL players threatened to not return if the lockout was to end. Lubomir Visnovsky was the only one not to report to his NHL team, the New York Islanders, for the delayed start of the season and was suspended by the Islanders. His agent said on January 26, 2013, that Visnovsky would report to the team by February 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Effects\nGary Bettman stated that during the lockout, \"the business is probably losing between $18 and $20 million a day and the players are losing between $8 and $10 million a day.\" The league office cut employees' pay by 20 percent, and some teams laid off employees and cut pay, as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Effects\nIn Canada, businesses in areas with NHL teams were hurt because of the lockout. Canadian lotteries also lost money. Molson-Coors reported reduced sales in Canada, blaming the lack of sales on the arenas being empty and people not having hockey parties taking away many beer-buying opportunities. In the United States, businesses located near NHL arenas were affected negatively due to the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Effects\nKraft Hockeyville 2013 was cancelled due to the lockout. Hockey Day in Canada was moved from Lloydminster to Peterborough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Effects\nDuring the lockout, NHL players participated in a few charity games. \"Operation Hat Trick\", a charity hockey game, was played at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City to raise money for Hurricane Sandy victims. The game, which was held on November 24, 2012, saw the team captained by Brad Richards defeat the team captained by Scott Hartnell, 10-6. Some of the NHL players that also participated in the game included Henrik Lundqvist, Martin Brodeur, Andy Greene, Bobby Ryan, and James van Riemsdyk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Effects\nBecause of the shortened season, hockey card manufacturers did not include many rookies (such as Nail Yakupov) in the season's product lines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Effects\nWhen the season started on January 19, 2013, the Chicago Blackhawks began a streak of 24 consecutive games without a regulation loss, setting an NHL record. On June 24, the Blackhawks defeated the Boston Bruins to win the Stanley Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230655-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL lockout, Effects\nThe average attendance for the season was 17,768, up 2.6 percent from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 NHL season was the 96th season of operation (95th season of play) of the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season began on January 19, 2013 and ended on April 28, 2013, with the playoffs to follow until June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season\nThe season start was delayed from its original October 11, 2012 date due to a lockout imposed by the NHL franchise owners after the expiration of the league's collective bargaining agreement (CBA). After a new labour agreement was reached between the owners and the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA), training camps opened on January 13, 2013 and a 48-game season (reduced from 82 games) started on January 19. Similar to the 1994\u201395 season, the shortened regular season was limited to intra-conference competition. The season calendar opened with the 2012 NHL Entry Draft on June 22\u201323, 2012, held at the Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Lockout\nOn September 13, 2012, all 29 league ownership groups (with the Phoenix Coyotes collectively owned by the NHL) authorized commissioner Gary Bettman to lock out the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) upon the expiration of the NHL collective bargaining agreement (CBA) on September 15. The action marked the fifth labour dispute in twenty years for the league, following a 1992 strike, lockouts in 1994\u201395 and 2004\u201305, as well as a referees lockout in 1993; this is more than any of the other major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada during this period. In preparation for the lockout, NHL teams assigned all of their eligible players to their American Hockey League farm clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Lockout\nAlthough Bettman acknowledged the 2005\u201312 CBA was fair, he also stated that he was demanding concessions as a result of the late 2000s recession, even though the league experienced significant growth at that time. Sports media reported on July 14 on the NHL's first offer to the players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Lockout\nThe offer reportedly included: a drop in players' share of \"hockey-related revenues\" from 57 per cent to 46 per cent; a requirement that players play ten years before becoming an unrestricted free agent (UFA); a limit on players' contracts to five years in length; elimination of salary arbitration; and an extension of entry-level contracts to five years from three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Lockout\nThe NHLPA made an attempt to strike down the lockout as illegal in Alberta and Quebec; the Quebec Labour Board ruled against the NHLPA on September 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Lockout\nThe NHL season officially entered a lockout after the expiration of the CBA on September 15, 2012, prior to the planned start of the pre-season. Locked-out players immediately began signing with the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL), Czech Extraliga (ELH), the SM-liiga, and the Elitserien (SEL), the last of which largely resisted signing locked-out players. The NHL canceled all regular-season games originally scheduled up to January 14, 2013, including the 2013 NHL Winter Classic. The 2013 NHL All-Star Game was also canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Lockout\nOn January 6, 2013, after a 16-hour negotiating session, the owners and players union reached a tentative agreement for a 10-year deal. NHL owners ratified the CBA on January 9, 2013, followed three days later by the deal's ratification by NHLPA members, and the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the two parties, marking their official agreement on the labour pact. The NHL announced a 48-game schedule, starting on January 19, 2013 and ending on April 28, 2013, consisting solely of intra-conference competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Proposed realignment\nThe relocation of the Atlanta Thrashers from the American southeast to the Canadian prairies, where the franchise is now known as the Winnipeg Jets, in the summer of 2011 resulted in discussions within the league on how to realign the league's 30 teams. Following several months of speculation, the NHL's Board of Governors voted in favor of a radical realignment plan that would have reduced the six current divisions in two conferences into four conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 57], "content_span": [58, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Proposed realignment\nThe top four teams in each conference would then qualify for the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs, while for the regular season, each team would face its non-conference opponents twice: once each at home and on the road. Conference opponents would face each other five or six times each. The plan was designed to better balance each grouping of teams by time zone, as well as to cut the costs of travel western teams face.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 57], "content_span": [58, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Proposed realignment\nHowever, on January 6, 2012, the league announced that the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) had rejected the proposed realignment, delaying any future changes until at least 2013\u201314. NHLPA officers expressed a desire to see a draft schedule for the realignment, which the league had not completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 57], "content_span": [58, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Salary cap\nThe NHL announced the revised salary cap on June 28, 2012. The salary cap figure is in effect until the end of the current collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the Player's Association. The salary cap for players' salaries rose $5.9 million (USD) to $70.2 million per franchise. The salary floor, the minimum which franchises must spend, rose to $54.2 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Salary cap\nAs part of the newly agreed upon CBA, the salary cap for teams will be $64.3 million per franchise, with a floor of $44 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Change of venue\nOn October 24, 2012, the New York Islanders announced that the team had signed a 25-year lease with the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, starting in 2015 after the team's current lease for the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum expires. The arena, originally constructed as the home for the National Basketball Association's Brooklyn Nets, was intended to be expanded to meet NHL standards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, League business, Rule changes\nWith the ratification of the new collective bargaining agreement, several rule changes took effect this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Regular season\nOriginally planned for October 11, 2012, the lockout delay pushed the start of the 2012\u201313 season to January 19, 2013, with 12 games for the opening night. Each team played 18 games within its division (four or five games for each team) and 30 games against teams in the other division (three games for each team); no interconference games were played during the regular season. The regular season was shortened from 82 games down to 48, canceling 41.5 percent of the full regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Regular season, Winter Classic\nThe 2013 NHL Winter Classic was scheduled to feature the Detroit Red Wings hosting the Toronto Maple Leafs at Michigan Stadium (the largest stadium in North America) in Ann Arbor, Michigan, but it was canceled due to the labour lockout. The game was played instead on January 1, 2014 at Michigan Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Regular season, All-Star Game\nOriginally scheduled to take place January 27, 2013, in Columbus, Ohio, the All-Star Game was canceled as a result of the ongoing lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Regular season, European Premiere games\nIn past seasons, selected NHL teams began their season with exhibition games and the first two regular season games in European cities. In March 2012, the NHL announced that it had decided not to start the season with games in Europe, because of the upcoming Collective Bargaining Agreement negotiations and the surrounding uncertainty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Regular season, European Premiere games\nWith the NHL not playing games in Europe, Russia's Kontinental Hockey League (against which the NHL has played several interleague competitions) was instead to come to the United States, with the NHL's blessing; the KHL was to feature two games between Dynamo Moscow and SKA Saint Petersburg at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn on January 19 and 20, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Regular season, European Premiere games\nHowever no agreement between the KHL and the Barclays Center had been signed, and the KHL announced the two games would be held in Russia; due to the NHL lockout, the signing of a 25-year lease with the New York Islanders, and pleas from the teams' fans to keep the games in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Regular season, Standings\nDue to the lockout, each team played 48 games this season, all within their conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Playoffs\nBecause of the lockout and delayed start of the shortened regular season, the playoffs did not begin until April 30. The last possible date of Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals was then scheduled for June 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Playoffs\nIn each round, the highest remaining seed in each conference is matched against the lowest remaining seed. The higher-seeded team is awarded home ice advantage. In the Stanley Cup Finals, home ice is determined based on regular season points. As the Presidents' Trophy winners, the Blackhawks had home ice advantage in the 2013 Finals. Each best-of-seven series follows a 2\u20132\u20131\u20131\u20131 format: the higher-seeded team plays at home for games one and two (and games five and seven, if necessary), and the lower-seeded team is at home for games three and four (and game six, if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, NHL awards\nAwards were presented during the NHL Awards television specials on June 14\u201315, 2013. Finalists for voted awards are announced during the playoffs and winners are presented at the awards specials. Voting concluded immediately after the end of the regular season. The President's Trophy, the Prince of Wales Trophy and Campbell Bowls are not presented at the awards specials. The Lester Patrick is announced during the summer and presented in the fall. NHL Network U.S. and NHL Network Canada aired the first part of the awards presentation on June 14, while NBC Sports Network and CBC aired the second part on June 15 preceding Game 2 of the 2013 Stanley Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, NHL awards, All-Star teams\nNote: Alexander Ovechkin was listed as a Left Wing but played the majority of his games at Right Wing. Some members of the Professional Hockey Writers Association voted for him at Left Wing while others voted for him at Right Wing and consequently, Ovechkin placed twice on the NHL All-Star team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Player statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players lead the league in points following the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Player statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Player statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders lead the league in goals against average following the conclusion of the regular season while playing at least 1200 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Player statistics, 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, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Milestones, First games\nThe following is a list of notable players who played their first NHL game in 2013, listed with their first team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Milestones, Last games\nThe following is a list of players of note who played their last NHL game in 2012\u201313, listed with their team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230656-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL season, Notes\n1: Michael Cammalleri had previously scored the 20,000th goal in Canadiens' franchise history on December 28, 2009. Cammalleri's mark included goals from the Canadiens time in the National Hockey Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230657-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL suspensions and fines\nThe following is a list of all suspensions and fines enforced in the National Hockey League during the 2012\u201313 NHL season. It lists which players or coaches of what team have been punished for which offense and the amount of punishment they have received. The season was shortened to 48 games due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout. No pre-season games were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230657-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL suspensions and fines, Suspensions\n\u2021 - suspension covered at least one 2013 post-season game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230657-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL suspensions and fines, Fines\nFines were changed for this season such that players can be fined up to 50% of one day's salary, up to a maximum of $10,000.00 U.S. for their first offense, and $15,000.00 U.S. for any subsequent offenses. The previous maximum fine before this season was only $2500.00 U.S., for players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions\nThe following is a list of all team-to-team transactions that have occurred in the National Hockey League during the lockout shortened 2012\u201313 NHL season. It lists what team each player has been officially released by, traded to, signed by, or claimed by, and for which player(s) or draft pick(s), if applicable. Players who have retired are also listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions\nThe 2012\u201313 trade deadline was set for April 3, 2013, at 3 pm EST. Players involved in any trades after this deadline are ineligible to participate in the Stanley Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Contract terminations\nAt any time, a team and a player can mutually agree to terminate a player's contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Contract terminations\nTeams may buy out player contracts (after the conclusion of a season) for a portion of the remaining value of the contract, paid over a period of twice the remaining length of the contract. This reduced number and extended period is applied to the cap hit as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Contract terminations\nAll players must clear waivers before having a contract terminated. Injured players cannot be bought out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Contract terminations\n\u2020 - Following the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout each team was granted two compliance buyouts (to be exercised after the 2012\u201313 season and/or after the 2013\u201314 season that would not count against the salary cap in any further year, regardless of the player's age. After using an compliance buyout on a player, that player is prohibited from rejoining the team that bought him out for one year; the NHL deemed that the re-signing of a player following a trade and a subsequent compliance buyout would be ruled as cap circumvention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Contract terminations\n\u2021 - Following the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout each team was granted one accelerated compliance buyout on a player with a salary cap hit of $3 million U.S. or more before the regular season began. If an accelerated compliance buyout is used, that team will only have one more compliance buyout left, and they must use it after the completion of the 2012\u201313 season (and before the start of 2013\u201314 season). The player's cap hit is applied in full to the team's salary cap for the 2012\u201313 season, but for no season after, regardless of contract length.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Free agency, Offer sheets\nAn offer sheet is a contract offered to a restricted free agent by a team other than the one for which he played during the prior season. If the player signs the offer sheet, his current team has seven days to match the contract offer and keep the player or else he goes to the team that gave the offer sheet, with compensation going to his first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Trades\n* - Following the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout each team was granted to have up to three contracts on their payroll where they have retained salary in a trade (i.e. the player no longer plays with Team A due to a trade to Team B, but Team A still retains some salary). Only up to 50% of a player's contract can be kept, and only up to 15% of a team's salary cap can be taken up by retained salary. A contract can only be involved in one of these trades twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Trades, June (2013)\nFor details concerning conditional draft picks see the appropriate Entry Draft pages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230658-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NHL transactions, Waivers\nOnce an NHL player has played in a certain number of games or a set number of seasons has passed since the signing of his first NHL contract (see here), that player must be offered to all of the other NHL teams before he can be assigned to a minor league affiliate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230659-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NJIT Highlanders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 NJIT Highlanders men's basketball team represented New Jersey Institute of Technology during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Highlanders, led by fifth year head coach Jim Engles, played their home games at the Fleisher Center and were members of the Great West Conference. They finished the season 16\u201313, 6\u20132 in Great West play to win the regular season conference championship. They lost in the semifinals of the Great West Tournament to Houston Baptist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230659-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NJIT Highlanders men's basketball team\nThis was their final year as a member of the Great West as the conference was disbanded when most of its members joined different conference beginning in the 2013\u201314 season. NJIT was unable to find conference membership and became the only Division I men's basketball independent for 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 53rd season in the history of NK Maribor and the club's 22nd consecutive season in the Slovenian PrvaLiga since the league establishment in 1991. The team participated in the Slovenian PrvaLiga, Slovenian Football Cup, UEFA Champions League, and UEFA Europa League. The season covers the period from 1 June 2012 to 31 May 2013. Darko Milani\u010d was a head coach of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, Supercup\nThe 2012 Slovenian Supercup was the eighth edition of the Slovenian Supercup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Slovenian PrvaLiga and Slovenian Cup competitions. However, Maribor has won the double during the 2011\u201312 season, having finished first in the 2011\u201312 Slovenian PrvaLiga and 2011\u201312 Slovenian Cup. As a consequence and according to the rules of the Football Association of Slovenia, they played the 2012 Supercup against the runners-up of the PrvaLiga, Olimpija. This was the first major domestic cup final of Olimpija, since the club was established in 2005. Maribor won the match 2\u20131 and secured their second supercup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, Supercup\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, Slovenian League, Matches\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, Slovenian Cup\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nQualified as the 2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga champions, Maribor started their European campaign in the second qualifying round of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League against Bosnian Premier League champions \u017deljezni\u010dar. This was the first meeting in UEFA competitions between Maribor and a team from Bosnia and Herzegovina. The first leg was played at the Ljudski vrt stadium, the home of Maribor. The match started poorly for the home side as shortly after the missed scoring opportunity from Ibraimi, Maribor soon found themselves a goal behind when Adilovi\u0107 scored the opener in the 15th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nMaribor then took control and tried to score an equalizer before half time, however, they were unsuccessful and the score was 1\u20130, in favour of the Bosnian side, at the 45 minute mark. Maribor dominated during the second half and was able to capitalize on their chances. Beri\u0107 scored the first goal for the home side in the 47th minute, with Mezga adding the second one in the 67th, from penalty. Beri\u0107, who was man of the match, scored his second goal in the 76th minute, giving his side a 3\u20131 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nHe did not stop there as in the 90th minute he assisted team captain Tavares, who scored his first goal of the season, for the final score 4\u20131. The second leg was played a week later in Sarajevo and was followed by over 500 Maribor supporters. \u017deljezni\u010dar plays their home matches at Grbavica Stadium, however, their stadium did not meet UEFA stadia criteria and they were forced to play at Asim Ferhatovi\u0107 Hase Olympic stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0005-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nThe home side needed a three goals victory to progress to the next round and had couple of chances to score early in the match, including a disallowed goal from Adilovi\u0107 who was in offside position. Their plans for an early lead were shattered, however, when Ibraimi scored from a long range effort in the 20th minute, which was the only goal during the first half. Second half started poorly for the Bosnians when \u010coli\u0107 received his second booking and was subsequently sent off. \u017deljezni\u010dar bounced back in the 59th minute when Kvesi\u0107 scored an equalizer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0005-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nHowever, soon afterwards the nervous home players received two red cards in a matter of minutes and had to finish the match with only eight players. Maribor then prevailed, took the ball possession and finished the match with the goal from Tavares, for the final score of the match 2\u20131, and 6\u20132 aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nIn the third qualifying round, Maribor faced Dudelange from Luxembourg, a team which made a huge upset by eliminating the Austrian champions Salzburg. This was the second year in a row for Maribor to face Dudelange. During the 2011\u201312 season Maribor played against them in the second qualifying round of the 2011\u201312 UEFA Champions League and was successful with two victories and the score 5\u20131 aggregate. The first match against the Luxembourg champions was played on 1 August 2012 at Ljudski vrt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nBeing fully aware that a two-legged victory over Dudelange secures, at least, the UEFA Europa League group stages, Maribor players started their home match strong and quickly took the lead with a free kick goal by Mezga. Another free kick goal followed in the 38th minute when Mezga left the ball to Tavares who scored with a strong shot to the lower left corner, for the half-time score 2\u20130. It took only two minutes of the second half for the home players to score the third goal, when Mezga scored another long range effort from outside of the penalty box.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nIn the 77th minute Beri\u0107 continued his good form, having scored his third goal in as many 2012\u201313 UEFA qualifying matches. This goal was not the last, however, as Joachim took advantage of a mistake from Raj\u010devi\u0107 and scored in the 92nd minute for the final score 4\u20131. One week later Maribor again proved to strong for the Luxembourg champions and won 1\u20130, with the goal by Mertelj in the 79th minute. Similarly to the 2011\u201312 season Maribor again secured two victories over Dudelange, with the score 5\u20131 aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nFor the play-off round of the elite UEFA Champions League, Maribor was drawn together with Croatian champions Dinamo Zagreb. This was the second time the two clubs have met in the UEFA competitions, having faced each other during the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying stages, when Dinamo secured a close 2\u20131 aggregate victory. The first leg was played at Maksimir stadium in front of 20,135 spectators, over 1,000 of which were Maribor supporters, a record for the most fans gathered on Maribor's away matches. Dinamo were the favorites and took an early lead with a goal by Duje \u010cop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nDinamo continued to play well and had couple of more chances, but it was Maribor who scored the second goal, from an own goal scored by Dinamo's captain Milan Badelj. Both teams had chances to take the lead in the second half and in the 74th minut Badelj scored another goal. This time it was in the right net and Dinamo regained their lead. Shortly afterwards Maribor's Robert Beri\u0107 had a good chance to equalize, but was unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nRight at the end, Sammir had a good chance to increase the lead of the home team, however, his free-kick attempt narrowly missed the target. The second leg in Maribor saw a turn out of 12,420 spectators, the most of the 2012\u201313 season, which were expecting a good result from the home side and the qualification to the Champions league for the first time in almost 10 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0007-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League\nThe Croatians, however, proved again to be too strong and after taking another early lead, they comfortably held the positive result right until the very end, with couple of good chances to increase the lead. Dinamo thus won the second leg with an away 1\u20130 victory, aggregate 3\u20131, and advanced to the Champions league group stages for the second successive season. Even though, they were defeated, Maribor advanced to the group stages of the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League, Second qualifying round\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League, Third qualifying round\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Champions League, Play-off round\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, European campaign, UEFA Europa League, Group J\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, Friendlies\nColour key: Green = Maribor win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, Squad statistics, Appearances and goals\nCorrect as of 29 May 2013, end of the 2012\u201313 season. Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. The players squad numbers, playing positions, nationalities and statistics are based solely on match reports in Matches sections above and the official website of NK Maribor and the Slovenian PrvaLiga. Only the players, which made at least one appearance for the first team, are listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230660-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Maribor season, Squad statistics, Discipline\nCorrect as of 29 May 2013, end of the 2012\u201313 season. Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. The players squad numbers, playing positions, nationalities and statistics are based solely on match reports in Matches sections above and the official website of NK Maribor and the Slovenian PrvaLiga. If a player received two yellow cards in a match and was subsequently sent off the numbers count as two yellow cards, one red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230661-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Osijek season\nThis article shows statistics of individual players for the Osijek football club. It also lists all matches that Osijek played in the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230661-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Osijek 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-00230661-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Osijek season, Player seasonal records\nCompetitive matches only. Updated to games played 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230662-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Slaven Belupo season\nThis article shows statistics of individual players for the Slaven Belupo football club. It also lists all matches that Slaven Belupo played in the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230662-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Slaven Belupo 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-00230662-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NK Slaven Belupo season, Player seasonal records\nCompetitive matches only. Updated to games played 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230663-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NLA season\nThe 2012\u201313 National League A season is the sixth ice hockey season of Switzerland's top hockey league, the National League A. Overall, it is the 75th season of Swiss professional hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230663-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NLA season, Relegation Playoffs\nThe bottom 4 teams of the National League A will compete in a losing team advances tournament to determine if they should stay in the League. The loser of this tournament will compete against the champions of the National League B to determine which league they will play in next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230663-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NLA season, Playdowns\nThe SCL Tigers were defeated by Lausanne HC, champions of the National League B, in the promotion/relegation games with a series of 4-2. The 12th team of the National League A for the season 2013/2014 will be Lausanne HC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230664-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOFV-Oberliga\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the NOFV-Oberliga was the fifth season of the league at tier five (V) of the German football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230664-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOFV-Oberliga\nThe NOFV-Oberliga was split into two divisions, the NOFV-Oberliga Nord and the NOFV-Oberliga S\u00fcd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230665-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOJHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 NOJHL season was the 35th season of the Northern Ontario Junior Hockey League (NOJHL). The seven teams of the NOJHL played 48-game schedules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230665-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOJHL season\nCome February, the top teams of each division will play down for the Copeland-McNamara Trophy, the NOJHL championship. The winner of the Copeland-McNamara Trophy will compete in the Central Canadian Junior \"A\" championship, the Dudley Hewitt Cup. If successful against the winners of the Ontario Junior Hockey League and Superior International Junior Hockey League, the champion would then move on to play in the Canadian Junior Hockey League championship, the 2013 Royal Bank Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230665-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOJHL season, Current 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, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230665-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOJHL season, Dudley Hewitt Cup Championship\nHosted by the North Bay Trappers in North Bay, Ontario. North Bay finished 4th, while the Soo Thunderbirds finished 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230665-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOJHL 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-00230665-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NOJHL season, Leading goaltenders\nNote: 1000 Minutes minimum; 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230666-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NTFL season\nThe 2012/13 NTFL season was the 92nd season of the Northern Territory Football League (NTFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230666-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NTFL season\nSt Marys have won there 29th premiership title while defeating the Tiwi Bombers in the grand final by 31 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230667-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season\nThe 2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season was the team's 15th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230667-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season, Off-season\nAfter already losing one half of their All-Star defensive core to free agency when Ryan Suter signed with the Minnesota Wild, on July 19, 2012, Shea Weber signed an offer sheet from the Philadelphia Flyers. The Predators had seven days to decide whether to match the offer, opting to do so on July 24 to keep Weber in a Predators uniform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230667-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season, Regular season\nThe Predators scored 109 goals (excluding three shootout-winning goals) over the lockout-shortened season of 48 games, tied for 30th overall with the Florida Panthers. The Predators were also shut out a league-high nine times, tied with the Phoenix Coyotes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230667-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season, Playoffs\nFor the first time since the 2008-09 season, the Predators missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230667-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season, Player stats\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Predators. Stats reflect time with the Predators only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230667-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season, Transactions\nThe Predators have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230667-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nashville Predators season, Draft picks\nNashville's picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230668-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National First Division\nThe 2012\u201313 National First Division was played from September 2012 until May 2013, and is the second tier of South Africa's professional football. Polokwane City won the league, earning promotion to the 2013\u201314 South African Premier Division. Santos and Mpumalanga Black Aces finished second and third respectively, qualifying for the 2012\u201313 PSL Playoff Tournament, which Mpumalanga Black Aces won, also earning them promotion to the 2013\u201314 South African Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230668-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National First Division\nClubs played a varying number of games over the course of the season due to a number of boycotts which took place at the beginning of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1\nThe 2012\u201313 National League 1 was the fourth season of the third tier of the English domestic rugby union competitions since the professionalised format of the second division was introduced. New teams to the division included Esher who were relegated from the 2011\u201312 RFU Championship, Loughborough Students who were promoted as champions from the 2011\u201312 National League 2 North along with Old Albanian (champions) and Richmond (playoffs) who came up from the 2011\u201312 National League 2 South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1\nEaling Trailfinders finished in first place and, as champions, were promoted to the 2013\u201314 RFU Championship for next season. Macclesfield, Sedgley Park and Cambridge were relegated to the fourth tier, the first two named, to the 2013\u201314 National League 2 North and Cambridge to the 2013\u201314 National League 2 South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Team\n104 - 5 Rosslyn Park at home to Cambridge on 12 January 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Team\n105 - 12 Loughborough Students away to Sedgley Park on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Team\n105 - 12 Loughborough Students away to Sedgley Park on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Team\nRosslyn Park at home to Cambridge on 12 January 2013Loughborough Students away to Sedgley Park on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Team\nLoughborough Students away to Sedgley Park on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Player\nStuart Hall for Loughborough Students away to Sedgley Park on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Player\nHugo Ellis for Rosslyn Park at home to Cambridge on 12 January 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Player\nStuart Hall for Loughborough Students away to Sedgley Park on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Player\nTom Wheatcroft for Ealing Trailfinders away to Blackheath on 13 October 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Attendances\nRichmond at home to Rosslyn Park on 27 October 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230669-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 1, Season records, Attendances\nSedgley Park at home to Loughborough Students on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North\nThe 2012\u201313 National League 2 North was the third season (twenty-sixth overall) of the fourth tier (north) of the English domestic rugby union competitions since the professionalised format of the second division was introduced. The league system was 4 points for a win, 2 points for a draw and additional bonus points being awarded for scoring 4 or more tries and/or losing within 7 points of the victorious team. In terms of promotion the league champions would go straight up into National League 1 while the runners up would have a one-game playoff against the runners up from National League 2 South (at the home ground of the club with the superior league record) for the final promotion place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North\nThe league title battle was extremely tight this year with Hull Ionians eventually taking the championship and promotion to the 2013\u201314 National League 1 ahead of Stourbridge with both sides dead level on points but Ionians having more wins despite Stourbridge having a much better for/against record and more bonus points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North\nAs runners up Stourbridge faced the 2012\u201313 National League 2 South runners up Worthing Raiders in what would be a very close game - losing 26 - 28 to the south coast side - meaning that the Stourton Park-based side would not have an instant return to National League 1. At the other end of the table Huddersfield were easily the weakest team in the division and were the first to be relegated, with the more competitive Stockport and Westoe being the other two sides to follow them by the end of the season. All three sides would drop down to National League 3 North for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Participating teams and locations\nTwelve of the teams listed below participated in the 2011\u201312 National League 2 North season; Stourbridge and Birmingham & Solihull were relegated from the 2011\u201312 National League 1 while Dudley Kingswinford came up from National League 3 Midlands as playoff winners along with Darlington Mowden Park who were champions of National League 3 North.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Participating teams and locations\nRugby Lions had won the National League 3 Midlands title and were expected to join the 2012\u201313 National League 2 South instead of National League 2 North but went into liquidation over the summer and dropped out of the leagues leaving the southern division with just 15 teams. The season also saw newly demoted Birmingham & Solihull move from ground-sharing with a local football team at Damson Park to their former training base Portway. Another team would switch grounds during the season, with Darlington Mowden Park playing their first game at the 25,000 capacity The Northern Echo Arena (former home of the ill-fated football team Darlington F.C.) on 2 February 2013 against Bromsgrove.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Results, Promotion Play-Off\nEach season, the runners\u2013up in the National League 2 South and National League 2 North participate in a play\u2013off for promotion into National League 1. Stourbridge as runners-up in the north had the better league record than southern counterparts Worthing Raiders and would host the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\n69 - 5 Darlington Mowden Park at home to Huddersfield on 23 February 201383 - 19 Preston Grasshoppers at home to Leicester Lions on 20 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\n64 - 5 Luctonians away to Huddersfield on 20 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\n83 - 19 Preston Grasshoppers at home to Leicester Lions on 20 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\nPreston Grasshoppers at home to Leicester Lions on 20 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\nPreston Grasshoppers at home to Leicester Lions on 20 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Team\nDarlington Mowden Park away to Birmingham & Solihull on 15 September 2012Hull at home to Otley on 13 October 2012Birmingham & Solihull at home to Bromsgrove on 17 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nSean Taylor for Preston Grasshoppers at home to Leicester Lions on 20 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nShaun McCartney for Darlington Mowden Park at home to Bromsgrove on 2 February 2013 James Twomey for Otley at home to Dudley Kingswinford on 27 April 2013 Adam Birchall for Preston Grasshoppers at home to Luctonians on 11 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nSean Taylor for Preston Grasshoppers at home to Leicester Lions on 20 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Player\nGregory Lound for Hull at home to Otley on 13 October 2012 Jack Jolly for Birmingham & Solihull at home to Bromsgrove on 17 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Attendances\nDarlington Mowden Park at home to Bromsgrove on 2 February 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230670-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 North, Season records, Attendances\nWestoe at home to Darlington Mowden Park on 22 December 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South\nThe 2012\u201313 National League 2 South was the fourth season (26th overall) of the fourth tier (south) of the English domestic rugby union competitions since the professionalised format of the second division was introduced. The league system was 4 points for a win, 2 points for a draw and additional bonus points being awarded for scoring 4 or more tries and/or losing within 7 points of the victorious team. In terms of promotion the league champions would go straight up into National League 1 while the runners up would have a one-game playoff against the runners up from National League 2 North (at the home ground of the club with the superior league record) for the final promotion place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South\nHenley Hawks, as champions, were promoted to the third tier (2013\u201314 National League 1) for next season, along with Worthing Raiders who finished second. Worthing beat the 2012\u201313 National League 2 North runners up Stourbridge 28\u201326 to win the annual promotion playoff. Barking and Lydney were both relegated to National League 3 South West and National League 3 London & SE respectively with Barking winning just one game in what was a very poor season. As well as winning the league Henley Hawks also saw a divisional record attendance at Dry Leas with 3,270 fans turning up to the last game of the season - the championship decider against Worthing Raiders which Henley won 55 - 27 to seal the title for the Oxfordshire club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Participating teams\nTwelve of the teams listed below participated in the 2011\u201312 National League 2 South season. Barking were relegated from National League 1 after just one season and both Bournemouth and Chinnor were promoted from National League 3 South West. Rugby Lions were on the original fixture list after winning promotion from National League 3 Midlands but during July 2012 they went into liquidation and were unable to participate in the division, leaving fifteen teams instead of the usual sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Promotion play\u2013off\nEach season, the runners\u2013up in the National League 2 South and National League 2 North participate in a play\u2013off for promotion into National League 1. The team with the best playing record, in this case northern runners up Stourbridge, would gain the home advantage with southern runners up Worthing Raiders having to travel up to the Midlands for the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\n74 - 0 Taunton Titans at home to Barking on 17 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\n85 - 3 Henley Hawks away to Barking on 27 October 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\n85 - 3 Henley Hawks away to Barking on 27 October 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\nHartpury College away to Dings Crusaders on 17 November 2012Dings Crusaders away to Lydney on 1 December 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Team\nLaunceston away to Hartpury College on 5 January 2013Southend Saxons away to Worthing Raiders on 30 March 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nKieron Lewitt for Launceston at home to Barking on 6 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nGareth Evans for Hartpury College at home to Clifton on 27 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nJames Combden for Henley Hawks away to Barking on 27 October 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nLuke Cozens for Hartpury College away to Dings Crusaders on 17 November 2012 Danial Trigg for Dings Crusaders away to Lydney on 1 December 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Player\nJake Murphy for Launceston away to Hartpury College on 5 January 2013 Robert Kirby for Southend Saxons away to Worthing Raiders on 30 March 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Attendances\nHenley Hawks at home against Worthing Raiders on 4 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230671-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League 2 South, Season records, Attendances\nBarking at home against Taunton Titans on 30 March 20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230672-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League B season\nThe 2012\u201313 National League B season was played from September 14, 2012 to February 10, 2013. The regular season was won by HC Ajoie with 105 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230672-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National League B season, League Qualification\nLausanne HC will play the losing team of a Play-Out tournament from the National League A for the 12th and final spot in the top division next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230673-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National One Day Cup\nThe Faysal Bank One Day Cup (aka National One-day Championship) is the premier List A cricket domestic competition in Pakistan, which was held from 5 to 22 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230674-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National T20 Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Faysal Bank T20 Cup was the ninth season of the Faysal Bank T20 Cup in Pakistan, which was held from 1 to 9 December 2012. The winning team will receive Rs 20 million as prize money and while the runners-up will receive Rs 10 million. This was also the last tournament played and was replaced with the Pakistan Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230674-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National T20 Cup, Statistics\nThe tables below show the top five holders for each class of record. If the fifth place is shared then all holders are shown. Last updated on 10 December 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230675-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National Youth League (Australia)\nThe 2012\u201313 A-League National Youth League was the fifth season of the Australian A-League National Youth League competition. The season ran in parallel with the 2012\u201313 A-League season. The new Western Sydney Wanderers played their inaugural season in the league, replacing the defunct Gold Coast United team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230675-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 National Youth League (Australia), Top goalscorers\nGoal scored from penalty kick \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Two goals scored from penalty kick", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230676-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Navy Midshipmen men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Navy Midshipmen men's basketball team represented the United States Naval Academy during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Midshipmen, led by second year head coach Ed DeChellis, played their home games at Alumni Hall and were members of the Patriot League. They finished the season 8\u201323, 2\u201312 in Patriot League play to finish in last place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Patriot League Tournament to Bucknell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230677-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team represented the University of Nebraska\u2013Lincoln. Led by head coach Tim Miles, in his first season with the Cornhuskers. The team will play its home games in Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Nebraska, and were a member of the Big Ten Conference. This was their final season at the Bob Devaney Sports Center before moving into their new arena, Pinnacle Bank Arena, for the 2013-14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup\nNedbank Cup is a South African club football (soccer) tournament. The knockout tournament, based on the English FA Cup format, was one of a weak opponent facing a stronger one. The competition was sponsored by ABSA until 2007, after which Nedbank took over sponsorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup\nThe winner of the 2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup will qualify for the 2014 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup, Format\nThe 16 Premier Soccer League clubs, 8 National First Division teams, as well as 8 teams from the amateur ranks compete for the prize money of R6 million. The winner also qualifies for the CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup, Format\nThe preliminary round features all 16 National First Division teams and will be reduced to eight when the teams play on 12 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup, Format\nThe teams are not seeded at any stage, and the first 16 sides drawn out of the hat receive a home-ground advantage. There are no longer any replays in the tournament, and any games which end in a draw after 90 minutes are subject to 30 minutes extra time followed by penalties if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup, Teams\nThe 32 teams competing in the Nedbank Cup competition are: (listed according to their league that they are playing in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup, Results, Preliminary Round\nThe preliminary round will see National First Division sides play each other is a knockout round to decide who will compete in the 2013 Nedbank Cup. All the game were scheduled to be played on 12 December 2012, but were postponed to 12 February 2013 due to a technical issue regarding the validity of the Rules for the preliminary qualification round and the winners of each game will go into the draw to determine the fixtures for the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 47], "content_span": [48, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230678-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nedbank Cup, Results, First Round (Round of 32)\nThe draw for the First round of the Nedbank Cup was done on Monday 15 January 2013. The first round ties will be played the weekend of February 22\u201324 and February 27, with the exact dates, venues and kick-off times to be decided by the PSL Cup Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230679-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Neftchi Baku PFK season\nThe Neftchi Baku 2012\u201313 season is Neftchi Baku's 21st Azerbaijan Premier League season, and their third season under manager Boyukagha Hajiyev. Neftchi participated in the Second and Third UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, defeating FC Zestafoni of Georgia in the Second round before losing to Ironi Kiryat Shmona of Israel in the Third round. This meant that they dropped down into the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League Play Off Round, where they defeated APOEL of Cyprus 4\u20132 on aggregate to qualify for the group stages of the Europa League for the first time. In the group stages they were drawn against FK Partizan of Serbia, Rubin Kazan of Russia and Internazionale of Italy. They also won the Azerbaijan Premier League for the 3rd time in a row, and completed a domestic double by defeating Khazar Lankaran on penalties in the Azerbaijan Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 887]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230679-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Neftchi Baku PFK 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-00230679-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Neftchi Baku PFK 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230679-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Neftchi Baku PFK 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230679-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Neftchi Baku PFK 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230679-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Neftchi Baku PFK 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230679-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Neftchi Baku PFK 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230680-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I\nThe 2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, also known as NB I, was the 111th season of top-tier football in Hungary. The league is officially named OTP Bank Liga for sponsorship reasons. The season began 27 July 2012 and ended on 2 June 2013. Debrecen were the defending champions having won their sixth Hungarian championship last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230680-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams\nZalaegerszegi TE and Vasas SC finished the 2011\u201312 season in the last two places and thus were relegated to their respective NB II divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230680-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams\nThe two relegated teams were replaced with the champions of the two 2011\u201312 NB II groups, Eger of the East Group and MTK of the West Group. MTK made their immediate comeback to the league, while Eger returned to the competition for the first time since the 1986\u201387 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230680-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams, Stadia and locations\nFollowing is the list of clubs competing in 2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, with their location, stadium and stadium capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230680-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Teams, Personnel and kits\nFollowing is the list of clubs competing in 2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, with their manager, captain, kit manufacturer and shirt sponsor. Note: 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230681-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball), Regular season, Standings\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball)\nThe 2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I was the sixty-second edition of the top level championship in the Hungarian team handball for women. The regular season began on 31 August 2012 and concluded on 31 March 2013, followed by the classification rounds and the playoff finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball)\nDefending champions Gy\u0151ri ETO KC won the regular season with an almost perfect performance: 21 victories on 22 games and only one draw against their rival Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC, last season's runners-up. This year's final also confronted Gy\u0151r to Ferencv\u00e1ros, after both teams had easily won their semi-finals against V\u00e1ci NKSE and \u00c9rd NK. Unlike last season's final, Ferencv\u00e1ros did not challenge the eventual champion as Gy\u0151r won both legs by six and seventeen goals and so became Hungarian champion for the tenth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Overview, Teams\nThis year, twelve teams competed in the championship: eleven clubs from the past season and only one promoted team from the second division, Budapest SE, the winner of the Eastern group. It was the first time that this club had played in the elite. As per the previous edition, the winner of the Western group, Moh\u00e1csi TE announced that they didn't want to be promoted. As a result, last season's eleventh placed Kiskunhalas NKSE escaped relegation and stayed in the first division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Overview, Teams\nThe league comprised two teams from the capital Budapest (Ferencv\u00e1ros and BSE); two clubs from Central Hungary (\u00c9rd and V\u00e1c); two from the Southern Great Plain (B\u00e9k\u00e9scsaba and Kiskunhalas); three from Central Transdanubia (Veszpr\u00e9m, Feh\u00e9rv\u00e1r, Duna\u00fajv\u00e1ros) and only one team from Western Transdanubia (Gy\u0151r) and the Northern Great Plain (DVSC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Overview, Teams\nAs Hungarian champion, Gy\u0151ri Audi ETO KC entered the Group Phase of the EHF Champions League while EHF Cup Winners' Cup's winner FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria also reached the Top 16 after beating IUVENTA Michalovce in the Qualification Round. Third and fourth placed Si\u00f3fok KC and \u00c9rdi VSE played in the EHF Cup. It was the first participation in a European Cup for either team. Finally, the runner-up and the bronze medallist of the Hungarian Cup, V\u00e1ci NSKE and B\u00e9k\u00e9scsabai ENKSE, competed in the EHF Cup Winners' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Postseason, Classification Round 9\u201312\nTeams finishing in bottom four places at the close of the regular season entered a classification round, for which a double round-robin system was used. According to their final position in the regular season, these four teams were awarded bonus points. Ninth placed Si\u00f3fok got four points, tenth placed B\u00e9k\u00e9scsaba received three points, eleventh placed Debrecen got two points and finally last placed BSE were awarded only one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Postseason, Classification Round 9\u201312\nAdditional points that were awarded after the final positions in the regular season are indicated in the bonus points column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Postseason, Classification Round 5\u20138\nTeams finished between fifth and eight place also played a play off round. Similarly to the bottom four Classification Round, these four teams were given points depending on their final placement in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Postseason, Classification Round 5\u20138\nAdditional points that were awarded after the final positions in the regular season are indicated in bonus points column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Final standing\n2 Although finishing in sixth place, Kiskunhalas NKSE withdrew from the elite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Final standing\n3 Since both 2012\u20132013 Magyar Kupa finalists Gy\u0151ri Audi ETO KC and FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria qualified for the 2013\u201314 EHF Champions League Group Phase and Qualification Round, the EHF Cup Winners' Cup spot was passed to cup third Veszpr\u00e9m Barab\u00e1s Duna Takar\u00e9k KC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Final standing\n4 Despite finishing in the relegation zone, DVSC-F\u00f3rum remained in the elite, because Moh\u00e1csi TE, winner of the Eastern Group of the second division, declined promotion to the Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Final standing\n5 Because of Kiskunhals NKSE's withdrawal, Budapest SE could stay in the first division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230682-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (women's handball), Final standing\nEduarda Amorim, Anita G\u00f6rbicz, Ana Gros, Orsolya Herr, \u00c1gnes Horny\u00e1k, D\u00f3ra Horny\u00e1k, Dorina Kors\u00f3s, Anik\u00f3 Kovacsics, Andrea Leki\u0107, Heidi L\u00f8ke, Katrine Lunde Haraldsen, Adrienn Orb\u00e1n, Jovanka Radi\u010devi\u0107, Nadine Schatzl, Vikt\u00f3ria R\u00e9dei-So\u00f3s, Szederke Siri\u00e1n, Ivett Szepesi and Rapha\u00eblle Tervel. Head Coach: Ambros Mart\u00edn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230683-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g II\nZalaegerszegi TE and Vasas SC finished the 2011\u201312 season in the bottom two places of the table and thus were relegated to their respective NB II divisions. Vasas ended an 8-year stay in the top league. Zalaegerszeg ended an 18-year stay in the top league. The two relegated teams were replaced with the champions of the two 2011\u201312 NB II groups, Egri FC of the East Group and MTK Budapest FC of the West Group. MTK made their immediate comeback to the league, while Eger returned to the competition after an absence of 26 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230684-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g III\nThe 2012\u201313 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g III is Hungary's third-level football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230685-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team represented the University of Nevada, Reno during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wolf Pack, led by fourth year head coach David Carter, played their home games at the Lawlor Events Center and were new members of the Mountain West Conference. They finish with a record of 12\u201319 overall, 3\u201313 in Mountain West play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Mountain West Tournament to Wyoming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230686-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Hampshire Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 New Hampshire Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of New Hampshire during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wildcats, led by eighth-year-head-coach Bill Herrion, played their home-games at Lundholm Gym and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 9\u201320, 5\u201311 in American East play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the American East Tournament to Vermont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season\nThe 2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season was the 39th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 11, 1974, and 31st season since the franchise relocated from Colorado to New Jersey to start the 1982\u201383 season. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season\nThe defending Stanley Cup runners-up were eliminated from the playoff race after a 4\u20131 loss to the New York Rangers on April 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season, Off-season\nEntering the off season, the Devils were faced with a major dilemma of having over ten unrestricted free agents, including captain Zach Parise. The Devils were able to resign goaltenders Martin Brodeur and Johan Hedberg, defenseman Bryce Salvador and several others, but lost Parise to the Minnesota Wild.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season, Pre-season\nOn July 19, the New Jersey Devils announced their 2012 pre-season schedule. The team would have played seven pre-season games, including a game against the New York Islanders at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, but all pre-season games were eventually cancelled due to the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season, Regular season\nOn June 21, the New Jersey Devils announced their schedule for the 2012\u201313 regular season. Their regular season would have begun on October 12 at the Washington Capitals, and their home-opener would have taken place the following night against the Boston Bruins. The original schedule would have ended with a game at the New York Islanders on April 13. A new schedule would need to be released if the lockout is resolved. On April 15, the Devils lost 2\u20130 to the Toronto Maple Leafs, their 10th loss in a row (0\u20136\u20134), which was equal to the franchise loss record set in 1983\u201384.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season, Regular season\nFor the second consecutive season, the Devils led the League in shorthanded goals scored, as they scored 11 shorthanded goals in the 48-game regular season. However, after a 4\u20131 loss to their Hudson rival, the New York Rangers, on April 21, the Devils were eliminated from the playoff race, despite making it to the Stanley Cup Finals the previous year against the eventual champions, the Los Angeles Kings. This was the first time a Stanley Cup finalist missed the playoffs the next season since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Devils. Stats reflect time with the Devils only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Devils only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season, Transactions\nThe Devils have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230687-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Jersey Devils season, Draft picks\nThe New Jersey Devils picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230688-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Mexico Lobos men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 New Mexico Lobos men's basketball team represented the University of New Mexico as a member of the Mountain West Conference during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lobos were coached by sixth-year head coach Steve Alford and played their home games at The Pit in Albuquerque, New Mexico. They finish with a record of 29\u20136 overall and 13\u20133 in Mountain West play to win the Mountain West regular season championship. They were also champions of the Mountain West Tournament, defeating UNLV in the championship game, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. In the tournament, they were upset by Harvard in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230688-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Mexico Lobos men's basketball team\nOn March 20, head coach Steve Alford signed a 10-year contract extension. However, on April 2 Alford resigned to take the head coaching job at UCLA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230689-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Mexico State Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 New Mexico State Aggies men's basketball team represented New Mexico State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aggies, led by sixth year head coach Marvin Menzies, played their home games at the Pan American Center and were members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 24\u201311, 14\u20134 in WAC play to finish in third place. They were champions of the WAC Tournament to earn the conferences automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Saint Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230689-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Mexico State Aggies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aggies finished the season 26\u201310, 10\u20134 in WAC play to finish in second place. They were champions of the WAC Tournament to earn an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. In their 20th NCAA Tournament appearance, they lost in the second round to Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230690-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Orleans Hornets season\nThe 2012\u201313 New Orleans Hornets season was the 11th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). It was also the final season the New Orleans franchise played with the Hornets name; the team would change their name to the New Orleans Pelicans shortly after the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230691-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Orleans Privateers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 New Orleans Privateers men's basketball team represented the University of New Orleans during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Privateers led by second year head coach Mark Slessinger, played their home games at Lakefront Arena and played as an independent. They finished the season 8\u201318. This was the Privateers last year as an independent as they will join the Southland Conference in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season\nThe 2012\u201313 New York Islanders season was the 41st season in the franchise's history. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season\nFor the sixth time in franchise history, the Islanders tied their longest homestand (of seven games) \u2013 beginning on February 24 and lasting through March 9 \u2013 in which they earned three wins during that span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season\nThe Islanders qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time since the 2006\u201307 NHL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season, Regular season\nOn March 22, 2013, the Islanders were 12th in the Eastern Conference and a playoff spot seemed unlikely. The team would then earn points in 14 of 15 games, including 11 consecutive games with at least a point to officially clinch a playoff berth on April 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season, Regular season\nThe Islanders tied the Minnesota Wild for the fewest shorthanded goals allowed, with 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season, Schedule and results\nWin (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0OT/SO Loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season, Playoffs\nThe New York Islanders ended the 2012\u201313 regular season as the Eastern Conference's 8th seed. They were defeated 4\u20132 by the #1 seed Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Islanders. Stats reflect time with the Islanders only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Islanders only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season, Transactions\nThe Islanders have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230692-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Islanders season, Draft picks\nNew York Islanders' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230693-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Knicks season\nThe 2012\u201313 New York Knicks season was the 67th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). They clinched a playoff berth on March 22, 2013, with a win over the Toronto Raptors, and clinched the Atlantic division title on April 9 against the Washington Wizards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230693-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Knicks season\nIn the playoffs, the Knicks defeated the Boston Celtics in six games in the first round, before falling to the Indiana Pacers in the conference semifinals in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230693-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Knicks season\nThis was the Knicks' first Atlantic division title since the 1993\u201394 season, their highest win total since the 1996\u201397 season, their first 50-win season as well as the first time they advanced past the first round since the 1999\u20132000 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230693-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Knicks season\nAfter this season, the Knicks would not return to the playoffs until the 2020\u201321 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season\nThe 2012\u201313 New York Rangers season was the National Hockey League franchise's 86th season of play and their 87th season overall. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout. The lockout ended on January 5 when the NHL and NHL Players' Association (NHLPA) reached an agreement. The Rangers defeated the Washington Capitals in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, but were defeated by the Boston Bruins in the Eastern Conference Semi-finals. After the Rangers' season ended, John Tortorella was fired as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Off-season\nAfter speculation that began during the 2011\u201312 season, Rick Nash was traded to the Rangers in a blockbuster trade on July 23, 2012, giving the Rangers the much-needed scoring winger they were seeking. The Rangers sent forwards Artem Anisimov and Brandon Dubinsky, defenseman Tim Erixon and a first-round draft pick in 2013 to the Blue Jackets in exchange. The Rangers also received minor league defenseman Steven Delisle and a conditional third-round draft pick in 2013 (the condition being that the Rangers make the Stanley Cup Finals in 2013) from Columbus. Nash had been on the trading block since the February 2012 trade deadline, after Nash had requested a trade out of Columbus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Off-season\nOn September 15, the collective bargaining agreement expired and the NHL owners locked-out the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Pre-season\nThe New York Rangers were scheduled to play six exhibition games (all on the road) prior to the beginning of the regular season, but due to the ongoing labor negotiations between the League and the players resulting in a lockout, the NHL cancelled all preseason games in September on September 19. The Rangers were scheduled to play the New Jersey Devils on September 26 (in Albany) and on September 28, and the Philadelphia Flyers on September 29. Later, on September 27, the NHL cancelled the remainder of the pre-season. The Rangers were scheduled to play the New York Islanders on October 4, the Colorado Avalanche on October 6 (in Kansas City, Missouri) and the Los Angeles Kings on October 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, 2012\u201313 NHL Lockout\nOn October 4, the first two weeks of the 2012\u201313 season was cancelled due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout. Cancellations would continue until games for the 2012\u201313 season were cancelled through January 14, 2013, on December 20, 2012. This was the last set of game cancellations before the NHL and NHLPA came to an agreement on a new CBA on January 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, 2012\u201313 NHL Lockout\nDuring the lockout, nine New York Rangers (Arron Asham, Brian Boyle, Steve Eminger, Dan Girardi, Jeff Halpern, Henrik Lundqvist, Taylor Pyatt, Brad Richards and Marc Staal) played as part of Team New York in Operation Hat Trick, a charity game to benefit Hurricane Sandy relief efforts. The game was played on November 24, 2012, at Atlantic City's Boardwalk Hall. Team New York beat Team New Jersey 10\u20136 in front of 10,792 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season\nOnce the new CBA was signed, the Rangers were able to open their 2013 training camp on January 13, 2013. The new regular season schedule was announced, with all teams playing within their conference for a shortened 48-game season beginning on January 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, January\nThe New York Rangers opened the season on January 19 with a 3\u20131 loss against the Boston Bruins. They were outshot 34 to 21, and failed to capitalize on a 90-second five-on-three during the third period, when they were trailing 2\u20131. While Brad Richards attributed the team's poor performance to \"rust\" from the eight-month layoff, John Tortorella refused to entertain any questions from reporters about the topic. The team fared even worse the next day against the Pittsburgh Penguins, who defeated them 6\u20133 during New York's first home game at Madison Square Garden. The Rangers gave up two power play goals in the first 30 minutes, and although they scored two of their three goals during the third period, the rally came too late. Lundqvist was pulled from the net in the third period after giving up four goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, January\nThe Rangers captured their first win of the season on January 23, besting the Bruins 4\u20133 in overtime. Rick Nash, Brad Richards and Marian Gaborik were placed in a line together for the first time and dominated the game, making 15 of the team's 33 shots. Gaborik scored a hat-trick, the 14th of his career and fifth as a Ranger, capturing his third goal on a breakaway 27 seconds into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, January\nZach Parise of the Minnesota Wild would tie Gaborik's mark on February 26, 2013, when he scored 27 seconds into the overtime period to give the Wild a 2\u20131 home win over the Calgary Flames. Both goals would prove to be the fastest overtime goals scored during the lockout-shortened season. But on January 24, New York lost 1\u20132 to a previously-winless Philadelphia Flyers, despite Lundqvist making 31 saves and the Flyers lacking their top forwards due to injuries or suspensions. Taylor Pyatt scored his third goal in as many games, but the Gaborik, Richards and Nash line managed only three shots, and the Flyers killed nearly four minutes of consecutive Rangers power play in the third period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, January\nChris Kreider, who scored five goals during his debut in the 2012 playoffs, was scratched for the Flyers game and would not for the next five games. This led Tortorella to consider sending him back to the American Hockey League, although it was later learned Kreider had been playing since January 5 with a bone chip in his right ankle. The Rangers next earned their first two consecutive wins, beating the Toronto Maple Leafs 5\u20132 after a two-goal deficit on January 26, followed by Philadelphia 2\u20131 on January 29. New York sent into the third period against Toronto trailing 1\u20132, but won after a four-goal rally in the third period. G\u00e1bor\u00edk captured two goals, bringing his season total to five. The Rangers outshot the Maple Leafs 42 to 17, but failed to score on four power plays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, January\nAgainst Philadelphia, Ryan Callahan scored a goal to earn his 200th career point, but suffered a left shoulder subluxation during a third period fight with Maxime Talbot, an injury that was expected to make him miss up to 14 days. The Flyers only goal came on the power play shortly after Callahan left, raising concerns about how his absence would affect the Ranger's penalty killing and defensive forward play. The Rangers ended the month with a 0\u20133 loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins on January 31, the team's first shutout loss in 31 regular season games. New York failed to score on four power plays without Callahan and surrendered seven penalties, including their fourth penalty for too many men on the ice in seven games, the most of any team in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nThe Rangers won their third in four games with a 3\u20132 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on February 2, but lost 3\u20131 to the New Jersey Devils on February 5, a game in which Chris Kreider scored his first regular season goal. Afterward, John Tortorella said the Rangers played too \"scared\" and \"tentative.\" However, the team went on to win four of their next five games, starting with a 4\u20131 victory against the New York Islanders on February 7 that also marked the return of Ryan Callahan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nNineteen-year-old rookie forward J. T. Miller scored two goals, marking the Rangers' first multi-goal Madison Square Garden debut since Chris Kontos in 1993. Miller scored the team's only fourth power play goal out of 37 opportunities, giving them the worst power play record of the season at that point. Brian Boyle was a healthy scratch and missed a total of three games due to poor performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nThe Rangers defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning 5\u20131 on February 10, and beat the Boston Bruins in overtime on February 12. Boston tied game with a three-goal rally in the third period, including two goals in 91 seconds with the goaltender pulled, but Callahan made the game-winning shootout goal in the fourth round. During that game, the Rangers received their sixth penalty of the season for too many men on the ice, the most of any team in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nThey lost 3\u20134 in overtime against the New York Islanders on February 14, surrendering a 0\u20132 lead after the Islanders scored three goals in seven minutes during the second period. Hagelin scored his fourth goal in three games to tie the game, but they lost in an overtime shootout when Gaborik's and Nash's shots were stopped. The Rangers beat the Washington Capitals 2\u20131 on February 17, bringing New York to seventh place and putting them in playoff contention for the first time all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nDarroll Powe left the game with a concussion after accidentally colliding with Washington's Matt Hendricks and landing on his head. He was placed on injured reserve and missed the next three games, and Brandon Mashinter was called up from Whale to fill in for him in that time. Nash also missed the next four games due to an unspecified injury widely suspected to be a concussion. His absence corresponded with a four-game losing streak for the Rangers, starting with a 3\u20131 loss to the Montreal Canadiens on February 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nArron Asham missed the next five games after that due to back spasms. New York lost 3\u20132 in overtime to the Ottawa Senators on February 21, where Callahan was the only Ranger to score in a seven-round shootout. Michael Del Zotto suffered a lower body injury that took him out of the next two games, and the Rangers briefly recalled Christian Thomas and Steve Eminger from the Whale due to the team's litany of injuries. Tortorella believed the team was struggling with consistency problems, despite what he called strong play in recent games from Carl Hagelin and Derek Stepan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nThe Rangers suffered two more injuries during their 0\u20133 shutout loss to the Canadiens on February 23. McDonagh was hit into the glass by forward Max Pacioretty, requiring 14 stitches near his mouth and forcing him out of the next game. Dan Girardi was injured when a shot by P. K. Subban struck his ankle, but he did not suffer a fracture and missed no games. The Rangers started a four-game homestead on February 26 with a 4\u20133 loss to the Winnipeg Jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, February\nCallahan received a standing ovation after blocking two shots and making two hits despite lacking a stick, but it failed to rally the Rangers. New York broke their losing streak with a 4\u20131 win against Tampa Bay on February 28, a game that also saw the return of Nash, Del Zotto and McDonagh. Nash scored a goal and made a career-high 12 shots in the game, and Hagelin scored his seventh goal of the season, tying him with Gaborik as the team's lead goal-scorer. The game brought their season penalty kill percentage to ninth best in the league. Kreider, who had one goal and one assist in 11 games, was sent back to the Whale on February 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, March\nOn March 3, the Rangers were trailing the Buffalo Sabres 1\u20130 at home after two periods. Early in the third, Sabres forward Patrick Kaleta was given a five-minute major and a game misconduct for checking Brad Richards from behind. He would later be given a suspension. Rangers scored on a 5-on-3 opportunity, and then another power play goal. The game was tied by a shorthanded goal from Nathan Gerbe and went into overtime. Rick Nash and Ryan Callahan each scored in the shootout to win it for the Rangers Two days later, the Rangers hosted the Philadelphia Flyers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, March\nRyan Callahan scored a pair of goals in the first period, and Rick Nash scored two in the third to lead the Rangers to a 4\u20132 victory. On March 7, the Rangers played the Islanders in Nassau Coliseum. Nash scored a late goal to prevent a 1\u20130 loss, and the game went to overtime. Rangers connected on the power play and Marian Gaborik found the perfect time to get out of his scoring slump. The next day, Rangers lost 3\u20132 to the Ottawa Senators at home. On March 10, the Rangers topped the Capitals 4\u20131 in Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, March\nOn March 12, Derek Stepan scored his first NHL short-handed goal against Buffalo, but the Rangers lost 3\u20131. Two days later, the Rangers were defeated 3\u20131 in Winnipeg, and two days after that, they were shutout 3\u20130 in Pittsburgh. On March 18, Rangers ended their three-game slump by beating the Carolina Hurricanes 2\u20131 in a shootout. The next day, the Rangers traveled to New Jersey. Michael Del Zotto gave the Rangers a 1\u20130 lead, but the Devils were quick to tie it. Carl Hagelin gave them a 2\u20131 lead, but again the Devils tied it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0015-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, March\nIn the second period, Nash's goal gave Rangers a 3\u20132 lead that they would hold on to for the rest of the game. On March 21, Rangers were beaten by the Florida Panthers 3\u20131 on home ice. On March 23, Rangers were beaten 3\u20132 in the shootout by the Capitals. Two days later, the Rangers beat the Flyers on the road 5\u20132. They did not end the month well as they were shutout by the Senators and Montreal Canadiens, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, April\nThe Rangers acquired Ryane Clowe on April 2, and on April 3, the day of the NHL trade deadline, they acquired Derick Brassard, Derek Dorsett and John Moore. Clowe, Brassard and Moore made their debuts with the Rangers on April 3 in a game against the Pittsburgh Penguins at Madison Square Garden, which the Rangers won 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Regular season, April\nThis trio made history as it was the first time in franchise history that three players making their debuts scored goals in the same game, as Brassard had a goal and three assists, Clowe had two goals and an assist, and Moore had one goal. Brassard's four points was also the most for a Rangers debut since Doug Bentley in 1954.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Playoffs\nThe New York Rangers ended the 2012\u201313 regular season as the Eastern Conference's 6th seed. They faced the #3 seed Washington Capitals in the first round of the playoffs and won 4 games to 3. They were defeated by the #4 seed Boston Bruins in the Eastern Conference semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Rangers. Stats reflect time with the Rangers only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Transactions\nThe Rangers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Transactions, Trades\n2nd-round pick in 20133rd-round pick in 20135th-round pick in 2014", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230694-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New York Rangers season, Draft picks\nNew York Rangers' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season\nThe 2012\u201313 NBL season was the 10th season of the New Zealand Breakers in the NBL. The Breakers succeeded in winning their third NBL championship, becoming the second team in the league to win a three-peat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season\nIn the preseason, the Breakers record was 3\u20133. The Breakers lost their preseason series with the Wollongong Hawks 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season\nOn 24 April 2013, following the conclusion of the 2012\u201313 season, Lemanis was announced as the new head coach of the Australian men's national basketball team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, Off-Season, Additions\nThe Breakers also signed Reuben Te Rangi and Morgan Natanahira as contracted development players and Tai Webster as a non-contracted development player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, Off-Season, Re-signed players\nThe Breakers re-signed Cedric Jackson, Leon Henry, Tom Abercrombie, Dillon Boucher, Mika Vukona, C. J. Bruton, Alex Pledger, Daryl Corletto and Josh Bloxham (DP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, Off-Season, Re-signed players\nCorey Webster also returns to the team, after a 12-month suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, Finals\nWith the Breakers making the playoffs in 2012/13, it was their fifth appearance in the NBL Finals. If they progress to the Grand Final, it would be their third appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, Finals\nSemi-final 1: vs Kings \u2013 28 March 2013 @ Vector Arena, AucklandSemi-final 2: @ Kings \u2013 1 April 2013 @ Sydney Entertainment Centre, SydneyGrand Final 1: vs Wildcats \u2013 7 April 2013 @ Vector Arena, AucklandGrand Final 2: @ Wildcats \u2013 12 April 2013 @ Perth Arena, Perth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, NBL All-Star round\nThe NBL All-Star Round was played on 22 December at the Adelaide Arena. Two of the New Zealand Breakers' roster and coach Andrej Lemanis took part in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, NBL All-Star round, All-star line up\nThe New Zealand Breakers were placed in the \"South\" team for the All-Star game, along with the Adelaide 36ers, Melbourne Tigers and Perth Wildcats. Breakers who played for the South All-Stars were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, NBL All-Star round, All-star coach\nThe Breakers' coach, Andrej Lemanis, coached the South All-Stars team. This was decided because the Breakers had the top NBL ladder spot of the South teams at the end of Round 9, when the decision was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230695-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Breakers season, NBL All-Star round, Slam dunk competition\nThomas Abercrombie took part in the Slam Dunk Competition. This was decided by the League Office after the teams nominated players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230696-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2012\u201313 New Zealand Figure Skating Championships was held at the Paradice in Botany Downs of Auckland from 29 September through 2 October 2012. 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, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230697-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Football Championship\nThe New Zealand Football Championship's 2012\u201313 season (known as the ASB Premiership for sponsorship reasons) will be the ninth season of the NZFC since its establishment in 2004. The home and away season will begin on 3 November 2012 with the final scheduled to be on 17 March 2013. As a new feature, three games will be played as curtain-raisers to Wellington Phoenix home matches in Westpac Stadium. Auckland City and Waitakere United will represent the ASB Premiership in the 2012\u201313 OFC Champions League after finishing Minor Premiers and Champions respectively in the 2011\u201312 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230697-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Football Championship, Season statistics, Leading goalscorers\nA goal was scored from a penalty kick\u00a0\u00a0 Two goals were scored from penalty kicks", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230698-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's One-Day Competition\nThe 2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's One-Day Competition was a 50-over women's cricket competition that took place in New Zealand. It ran from November 2012 to January 2013, with 6 provincial teams taking part. Canterbury Magicians beat Auckland Hearts in the final to win the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230698-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's One-Day Competition\nThe tournament ran alongside the 2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230698-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's One-Day Competition, Competition format\nTeams played in a double round-robin in a group of six, therefore playing 10 matches overall. Matches were played using a one day format with 50 overs per side. The top two in the group advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230698-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's One-Day Competition, Competition format\nThe group worked on a points system with positions being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230698-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's One-Day Competition, Competition format\nWin: 4 pointsTie: 2 pointsLoss: 0 points. Abandoned/No Result: 2 points. Bonus Point: 1 point awarded for run rate in a match being 1.25x that of opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230699-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition\nThe 2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition was the sixth season of the women's Twenty20 cricket competition played in New Zealand. It ran from November 2012 to January 2013, with 6 provincial teams taking part. Wellington Blaze beat Canterbury Magicians in the final to win the tournament, their second Twenty20 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230699-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition\nThe tournament ran alongside the 2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's One-Day Competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230699-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition, Competition format\nTeams played in a round-robin in a group of six, playing 5 matches overall. Matches were played using a Twenty20 format. The top two in the group advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230699-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition, Competition format\nThe group worked on a points system with positions being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230699-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition, Competition format\nWin: 4 pointsTie: 2 pointsLoss: 0 points. Abandoned/No Result: 2 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230700-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle Jets FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Newcastle Jets' eighth consecutive season in the A-League since its foundation season in 2005\u20132006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230700-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle Jets FC season, Players, 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230700-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle Jets FC 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230700-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle Jets FC 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230700-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle Jets FC 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230700-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle Jets FC 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230700-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle Jets FC 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230701-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle United F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Newcastle United's 120th season of professional football. They competed in the Premier League for the third consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230701-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle United F.C. season, Club, Team kit\nPuma supplied the team kits. The new Home kit was debuted on 13 July during a pre-season friendly against German Third Division side Chemnitzer FC, and went on sale on 1 August, as did the third kit. The shirt sponsor was Virgin Money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230701-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle United 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230701-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newcastle United 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Newport County's third consecutive season in the Conference National and 92nd season of league football overall. The season marked the return of association football to Rodney Parade for the first time in 72 years. The club celebrated its centenary in the 2012\u201313 season by winning promotion to Football League Two after a 25-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, Introduction\nIn May 2012, Newport County announced that they had agreed a deal to move to the city's rugby stadium, Rodney Parade. In August 2012 EuroMillions lottery winner Les Scadding succeeded Chris Blight as club Chairman. In February 2013 a further 10-year lease to play at Rodney Parade was signed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, Introduction\nThe centenary 2012\u201313 season saw Newport County finish third in the Conference Premier league, reaching the play-offs for the first time. A 2\u20130 aggregate win over Grimsby Town in the two-legged play-off semi-final saw Newport County reach the 2013 Conference Premier play-off Final at Wembley Stadium. The final versus Wrexham was the first Wembley final to feature two Welsh teams, and Newport County won 2\u20130 to return to the Football League after a 25-year absence with promotion to League Two. County were awarded Freedom of the City of Newport on 17 August 2013 in recognition of this achievement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2012\nThe season started away to promotion hopefuls Mansfield Town. County were 2\u20130 up within 13 minutes, but found themselves level at 2\u20132 five minutes into the second half. Eventually winning 4\u20133 County were 3rd in the table. After a 4\u20130 home win to Nuneaton Town County were top of the table and stayed there during a run of five consecutive wins culminating in a 2\u20130 home victory to local rivals Hereford United \u2014 their first visit to Newport since the Welsh Cup clash in 1989. County were now the only team in the division with a 100% record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2012\nHowever, following defeats to 10th-placed Wrexham and 12th-placed Dartford County were back in 3rd place, but the next three games were won and County were back to the top. Following a 0\u20130 draw with Grimsby Town County were temporarily down to 2nd, but were back at the top after the next six games. Following a shock home defeat to second-bottom Hyde County were down to 2nd on goal difference, but back on top the following game after a 3\u20131 home win against Gateshead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2012\nDespite leading Kidderminster Harriers 2\u20131 in the next game County lost 3\u20132 and they were back to 3rd. The home match with Luton Town was won 5\u20132, taking County back to the top of the table. The last game of 2012 was won away at Forest Green Rovers, but with Grimsby Town having played an extra game County finished the year in 2nd place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2013\nThe first fixture of the new year was the home visit of Forest Green Rovers. County were decisively beaten 5\u20130 and dropped to 3rd in the table as a result. The next match at home to Wrexham ended in a 1\u20131 draw, which was enough to put Wrexham top of the table, with County staying 3rd, one point behind. County rose to 2nd in the table following the 4\u20132 away win at Lincoln City, with d\u00e9butant Robbie Willmott scoring a brace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2013\nWith momentum in their favour County were desperate to get the home match with bottom-placed Barrow on, but the Rodney Parade pitch was under several feet of snow on the morning of 19 January. Over 120 fans helped to clear the pitch but County went on to lose 2\u20130. Following that setback, Newport then went on a seven-match unbeaten run, including completing the double over Mansfield Town and Hereford United in the process. The Hereford match being particularly notable for the award of three penalties to Hereford, two of which were scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2013\nIn the following match a 90th-minute winner for Kidderminster Harriers resulted in them being the only team to complete double victories over County and move into top place in the table as a result. The next game resulted in a second consecutive County defeat away at Stockport County \u2014 Stockport winning 1\u20130 as a result of a Lee Minshull own goal. County now faced the prospect of the remaining 10 matches in just 26 days. However they went on another unbeaten run, winning at Southport three days later, followed by a 0\u20130 away draw with Gateshead two days after that.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0004-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2013\nThe Gateshead match was played at Boston United's York Street ground with the match having been postponed on four previous occasions. A further 0\u20130 draw was played out with Dartford just two days later. Newport got back to winning ways with their second victory over Nuneaton Town two days after that. Following a 0\u20130 away draw with Cambridge United a place in the play-offs was secured with a 1\u20130 home victory over Braintree Town which also represented the seventh double of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0004-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, 2013\nNewport finished their home season with victories over Macclesfield Town and Alfreton Town, the latter of which was played in torrential rain with large pools of standing water. The penultimate game of the season was a 2\u20132 away draw with Luton Town with the final game against fellow play-off contenders Grimsby Town. County manager Justin Edinburgh fielded a much-changed side, resting many first-team players ahead of the play-off matches. As a result, County lost 3\u20130 and set up a semi-final first leg back at Blundell Park four days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, Play-offs\nThe County team that lined up against Grimsby in the semi-final first leg contained seven changes from the team that had played in the last league game. Grimsby, who boasted the best defensive record in the division, made only three changes. In a vastly different affair to the league game, County triumphed 1\u20130 as a result of an Ismail Yakubu header in the 89th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, Play-offs\nAs the second of the two semi-final second legs played County already knew that their potential opponents in the final would be Wrexham who had beaten Kidderminster Harriers 5\u20132 on aggregate. Taking the 1\u20130 lead into the home game County would only need a draw to make it to Wembley. However, in front of a Rodney Parade record crowd Christian Jolley scored the only goal of the game to make it 2\u20130 on aggregate and book County's place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, Play-offs\nIn order to win the final and promotion County needed to beat Wrexham, something which they had failed to do on each of their previous six Conference meetings. The game was billed as a battle between the league's best midfield against the most potent strike force. Wrexham's midfielders had shut out the County attack for 86 minutes, until Wrexham's David Artell got his head to a ball over the top but couldn't deal with it completely and Christian Jolley latched on to it and lifted the ball over Chris Maxwell to give County the late advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, League, Play-offs\nAs Wrexham pushed for a leveller they were caught on the counter-attack in injury time and their fate was sealed. Aaron O'Connor hammered the ball into the roof of the net, at the second attempt, after his initial effort was saved by Maxwell, to prompt wild celebrations from the County players, management and fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, Cup, FA Cup\nCounty were drawn away to Yate Town of the Southern League Division One South & West. When the match was played County were the highest-placed club left in the competition and Yate the lowest. Despite taking the lead as early as the 6th minute, County found themselves 3\u20131 down by the 69th. With two minutes of time remaining Aaron O'Connor scored County's second and Tony James the equaliser in the 4th minute of injury time to force a replay at Rodney Parade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, Cup, FA Cup\nThe replay began in a similar fashion with O'Connor opening the scoring in the 43rd minute for County to lead 1\u20130 at half time. On 65 minutes David Pipe was sent off for a second yellow card and minutes later the visitors were awarded and scored a soft penalty. This tied the score at 1\u20131 and extra time was needed. With two late goals Yate progressed into the First Round proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230702-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Newport County A.F.C. season, Season review, Cup, FA Trophy\nThere was no repeat of the previous season's Wembley final for County as they lost their First Round FA Trophy match 0\u20132 away to Conference South Welling United. Welling themselves went on to become champions of Conference South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series\nThe 2012\u201313 NextGen Series was the second season of the NextGen Series. The tournament involved the under-19 teams from 24 different countries across Europe. The tournament was won by Aston Villa who overcame Chelsea in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Format changes\nFrom the previous season's competition, one major format change has been announced, with the competition moving from a 16-team to a 24-team affair. The group stage was run in six groups of four, an expansion of the same format as the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Teams\nThe 24 teams were sorted into six groups, where they played each other home and away in a Round-robin tournament. The top teams advanced to the finals of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Teams\nFifteen of the 16 founder-members reprise their roles, consisting of some of the highest-reputations teams from across UEFA, mirroring the current or recent Champions League involvement of their first teams. Only Basel of Switzerland declined the invitation to reappear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Teams\nThey were joined by a further nine teams of high standing for the expanded series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Group stage\nThe 24 teams were sorted into six groups of four, where they play each other home and away in a double round robin format. The top-two teams from each group progressed to the knock-out stages of the competition alongside the four highest points-scoring third-place finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Knockout stage\nThe knockout round matches were decided by ordering each team from 1 through 16, with the top ranked team facing the lowest ranked team, and on down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Top goalscorers\nPlayers and teams in bold are still active in the competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230703-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 NextGen Series, Top goalscorers\n1: In January 2013 Alex Pritchard moved on loan from Tottenham Hotspur to Peterborough United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230704-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team represented Niagara University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Purple Eagles, led by 14th year head coach Joe Mihalich, played their home games at the Gallagher Center and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 19\u201314, 13\u20135 in MAAC play win the regular season conference championship. They advanced to the semifinals of the MAAC Tournament where they lost to Iona. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230705-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nicholls State Colonels men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Nicholls State Colonels men's basketball team represented Nicholls State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonels, led by ninth year head coach J. P. Piper, played their home games at Stopher Gym and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 9\u201321, 8\u201310 in Southland play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the first round of the Southland Tournament to McNeese State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230706-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Norfolk State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Norfolk State Spartans men's basketball team represented Norfolk State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by sixth year head coach Anthony Evans, played their home games at the Joseph G. Echols Memorial Hall and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 16\u20130 in MEAC play be crowned MEAC regular season champions. The defending conference champion lost in the quarterfinals of the MEAC Tournament to Bethune-Cookman. As a regular season champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter\nThe 2012\u201313 North American winter started out somewhat early, as the remnants of Hurricane Sandy brought heavy snow to the mountains of West Virginia in late October. Later, a strong nor'easter affected the weary Northeast, hampering storm recovery efforts and dropping several inches of snow. The rest of the winter featured several other notable events, such as a Christmas winter storm that affected most of the eastern part of the country, and the most notable event occurring in early February, when a powerful blizzard struck the Northeast and bringing record snow to some areas. During the winter, a weak El Nino was expected to influence weather conditions across the continent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter\nWhile there is no well-agreed-upon date used to indicate the start of winter in the Northern Hemisphere, there are two definitions of winter which may be used. Based on the astronomical definition, winter begins at the winter solstice, which in 2012 occurred late on December 21, and ends at the March equinox, which in 2013 occurred on March 20. Based on the meteorological definition, the first day of winter is December 1 and the last day February 28. Both definitions involve a period of approximately three months, with some variability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Seasonal forecasts\nOn October 18, 2012, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center issued its U.S. Winter Outlook. In the outlook, little rainfall was anticipated in the Northwestern United States and the Upper Midwest, while above-average precipitation was anticipated in the Southeastern United States. Equal levels of precipitation and temperatures were expected in the Alaskan panhandle. Below-average temperatures were favored in Florida, while above-average temperatures were favored in much of the Western United States, and northern Alaska. The remainder of the country fell into the outlook's \"equal chance\" category, with an equal chance of above-average, below-average, and near-average temperatures and/or precipitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Hurricane Sandy\nOn October 29, 2012, Hurricane Sandy made landfall in southern New Jersey as an 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h) Category 1 post-tropical cyclone. While initially bringing historic storm surge, damaging winds and heavy rainfall, due the cold air nearby in Canada, the cyclone (dubbed a 'super'storm by many news outlets and sources) was able to produce snow in its massive circulation. The snowstorm portion of the hurricane dumped as much as 28 inches (71\u00a0cm) of snow in the higher terrains of West Virginia and northern Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Hurricane Sandy\nMeteorologists assume the reason why Sandy was able to produce such a snowstorm was due to a blast of arctic air \u2013 associated with the polar vortex \u2013 that had plunged into the Northeast, which led to Sandy actually maintaining its intensity while subsequently deepening before landfall. About a week later, the same areas affected by Sandy were impacted by an early season nor'easter, further hindering recovery efforts in those areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Early November nor'easter\nLess than a week after Hurricane Sandy impacted the Northeastern United States, the same areas affected by the cyclone experienced an early season snowstorm on November 7\u20138. Development began when an area of low pressure formed in the Central United States on November 5. Moving eastward, the disturbance moved off the coast late on November 6, and began to take a more northernly track, slowly strengthening as it did so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Early November nor'easter\nEarly on November 7, rainbands began affecting the New York metropolitan area, however, due to the cold air that was in place over Canada near the U.S\u2013Canada border, snow began to break out on the storm's western side, directly over the state of New Jersey. Snowfall rates approached 1\u20132 inches (2.5\u20135.1\u00a0cm) in some areas. Coastal flooding was also a threat, in nearly the same areas that were devastated by coastal flooding from Sandy. It finally moved away from the coast on November 8, leaving more damage in its wake and snowfall totals peaking at around 14 inches (36\u00a0cm).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Mid-December blizzard\nAround the beginning of winter, a potent blizzard moved across the Upper Midwest into the Ohio Valley, dumping as much as 15 inches (38\u00a0cm). On December 17, an upper-level shortwave and associated trough made landfall along the coast of the Pacific Northwest. The system initially moved towards the southeast, strengthening over the Rocky Mountains. This led to the development and formation of a surface low over eastern Colorado early on December 19. The low began to curve towards the northeast, and its barometric pressure began to deepen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Mid-December blizzard\nThe low attained its lowest pressure at 1800 UTC on December 20 over northern Illinois. However, the system became occluded, and as such moved quickly to the northeast, where it weakened and subsequently dissipated over southern Ontario late on December 21. Another low pressure area formed in the vicinity of the previous low over the East Coast of the United States, which quickly moved north across the coast, bringing heavy snowfalls to the region. The low later exited the continental United States on December 22. During the next several days, the winter storm drifted northeastward, and eventually to the south of Greenland, before finally being absorbed by another more powerful extratropical cyclone just south of Iceland, on December 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Christmas Day storm complex and tornado outbreak\nOn Christmas Day, one of the largest Christmas tornado outbreaks occurred. A large line of thunderstorms suddenly erupted in eastern Texas early on December 25, with a few immediately becoming supercells. Tornadoes began to develop, causing damage to areas in Louisiana, Mississippi, all the way to the Outer Banks (threat began to decline as the squall line approached the area), with at least three being EF3s (one was a long-tracked tornado), and eight being EF2s. Other tornadoes were reported through December 25\u201326, causing up to more than US$1 million in damages. The storm complex also produced a strong blizzard, with strong winds and snowfall accumulations from 6\u201318 inches (15\u201346\u00a0cm) in an area stretching from northern Texas all the way to Maine. The system moved out by December 29, as another winter storm began to affect the Northeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 938]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Early February blizzard\nA major blizzard affected much of the Northeast on February 8\u20139. The nor'easter dropped up to as much as a little over 3 feet (36\u00a0in) of snowfall, specifically near Long Island and Connecticut, causing major headaches. Originating from the merger of two areas of low pressure, with the latter being the dominant low of the storm, it moved up the East Coast, and when just offshore of New Jersey, an intense band of precipitation formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Early February blizzard\nThis particular band persisted for more than eight hours, creating snowfall rates of up to 3 inches (7.6\u00a0cm) per hour over Long Island, which was where the heaviest snow accumulations fell. The system continued to produce heavy snow and wind before finally moving away from the coast late on February 9. The storm also received names such as Winter Storm Nemo, Blizzard of 2013, or just simply Blizzard 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late February winter storm\nOn February 19, 2013, an extratropical disturbance developed in the Gulf of Alaska. Within the next few days, the system rapidly intensified, before attaining a minimum low pressure of 984 millibars on February 22. It was already affecting the Pacific Northwest, and because it was also forecasted to cause a lot more damage in the U.S. within the next week. After moving ashore in British Columbia, the storm weakened and shrunk considerably in size as it moved southeastwards into the southern Plains. On February 25, the storm began absorbing moisture coming from the Gulf of Mexico, and began to reintensify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late February winter storm\nThe storm quickly became a blizzard, and leveled out at 994 millibars. Its southern severe side spawned severe thunderstorms and several tornadoes on February 25. The storm began dumping ice in some parts of the Midwest beginning on February 25. The system rapidly grew in size and continued to organize, before beginning to weaken later on February 26. Late on February 26, the blizzard began interacting with a much smaller storm to the west, which added extra moisture to the winter storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late February winter storm\nThe powerful blizzard turned northeastwards towards the Great Lakes region, and continued dumping snow across areas already impacted by another winter storm the week before. On February 27, the storm absorbed the smaller storm to the west. At the same time, the storm spawned a secondary low along its frontal boundary, over the Southeastern United States. The new storm intensified to 991 mbars as it moved off the coast of New England, while the winter storm's main low pressure area became a 1000-mbar cut-off low over the Great Lakes, while continuing to steadily weaken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0009-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late February winter storm\nDespite this, the blizzard continued producing powerful winds, and dumping large amounts of snow and ice. A maximum wind gust of 91\u00a0mph was reported in Cedar Key, Florida. The storm complex also spawned a waterspout over downtown Tampa, Florida, which came ashore as an EF0 tornado. The storm systems continued dumping large amounts of snow, icy mix, and rain across most of the Eastern United States, while slowly moving eastward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0009-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late February winter storm\nThe snowfall totals from the winter storm (maximum was 32.5 inches (83\u00a0cm)) combined with the previous winter storm greatly exceeded the snowfall totals of 2012, with many states in the Great Plains receiving record amounts of snow. On February 28, the winter storm shrunk in size and developed two smaller circulations within the storm, as it continued weakening. It moved over New England and lost much of its moisture, as it continued moving towards the northeast. It absorbed the smaller secondary ciruculations, while the main secondary low moved out into the Atlantic Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0009-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late February winter storm\nOver the next few days, the winter storm stalled over Nova Scotia, and rapidly weakened into a weak winter storm, while bringing snow showers to the northeast. The storm became a mostly rain system on March 4, but slightly restrengthened, and developed a few smaller circulations. Later, the storm slowly began to weaken again. On March 5, the storm moved out to sea, with a few lingering rain and snow showers in the northeast. On March 5, the system rapidly moved northeastward, and on March 6, it was later absorbed by a larger extratropical system to the east of Europe. Due to the system, a 400-mile stretch of Interstate 40 between Sayre, Oklahoma and Albuquerque, New Mexico was closed for two days due to whiteout conditions, leaving hundreds of trucks stranded on either end of the closure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Early March nor'easter\nIn early March, a winter storm formed in the Upper Midwest and began to move to the south-southeast. This system was sort of a hybrid Alberta clipper, in the way it had more moisture then a usual clipper has. The winter storm moved to the east, dropping snow accumulations of 3\u20136 inches (7.6\u201315.2\u00a0cm) on March 5. Moving now to the east, it began to approach the Northeast. The snow was hanging back on the western end of the storm, making it look like the system was being stretched out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Early March nor'easter\nRain began to move into the Mid-Atlantic late on March 5, quickly switching over to snow near Washington, D.C. The winter storm continued to move to the east towards the coastline, with the western edge of the snow back in Indiana dissipating. Snow began to condense into snowbands as the system moved off the East Coast near Virginia and began to transition to a nor'easter. The system continued to move northeastward, dropping light snow accumulations before slowing down and stalling for a day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Early March nor'easter\nDuring this time period, the system absorbed a weak disturbance to the west that was approaching it, resulting in more moisture being added to the system. This sudden addition of moisture resulted in a blossom of snow developing from Vermont to southern New Jersey. With this, snowfall totals were much higher than anticipated. The storm gradually moved away by March 10, with snowfall totals of 12\u201324 inches (30\u201361\u00a0cm) in the Northeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late March storm complex\nA winter storm affected much of the country after the beginning of spring, starting the night of March 18, and left the east coast on March 24. The Green and White Mountains and Allagash of Maine will pick up over a foot of snow. The New York City Department of Sanitation issued a snow alert for March 18 starting at 1:00 PM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late March storm complex\nSome schools in upstate New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Connecticut were closed or delayed opening. Massachusetts officials postponed the English composition section of its standardized state test until March 25. FlightAware recorded nearly 400 flight cancellations across the United States on March 18. Snow totals as of the morning of March 19 are: 4\" in Manchester, Connecticut; 4.5\" in Ludlow, Massachusetts; 5.2\" in South Weymouth, Massachusetts; 5.3\" in Fitchburg, Massachusetts; and 8.0\" in Brookline, Massachusetts. The World Trade Center (PATH station) closed briefly during the evening of March 18, because of falling ice from 1 World Trade Center. As of late March 19, five inches of snow was recorded southwest of Erie, Pennsylvania and East Hampstead, New Hampshire reported 15 inches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230707-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North American winter, Events, Late March storm complex\nAt least one person was killed in Queens, New York, and seven were injured on March 18, all due to vehicle-related accidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230708-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Carolina A&T Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 North Carolina A&T Aggies men's basketball team represented North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aggies, led by first year head coach Cy Alexander, played their home games at the Corbett Sports Center and are members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 20\u201317, 8\u20138 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They were champions of the MEAC Tournament, winning the championship game over Morgan State, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they defeated Liberty in the first round, for their first ever NCAA Tournament win, before losing in the second round to Louisvlle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230709-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Carolina Central Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 North Carolina Central Eagles men's basketball team represented North Carolina Central University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by fourth year head coach LeVelle Moton, played their home games at the McLendon\u2013McDougald Gymnasium and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 22\u20139, 15\u20131 in MEAC play to finish in second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MEAC Tournament to North Carolina A&T. Despite the 22 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230710-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Roy Williams, who is in his 10th season as UNC's head men's basketball coach. They played their home games at the Dean E. Smith Center and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 25\u201311, 12\u20136 in ACC play to finish in third place. They advanced to the championship game of the ACC Tournament where they lost to Miami (FL). They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they defeated Villanova in the second round before, in the third round, having their season ended for the second consecutive year by Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230710-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Pre-season, Recruits\nCoach Williams adjusted his line-up starting with the game against Duke on 13 February 2013. He went with a smaller line-up with four guards and moved P.J. Hairston into the starting five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230711-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Dakota State Bison men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 North Dakota State Bison men's basketball team represented North Dakota State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bison, led by sixth year head coach Saul Phillips, played their home games at the Bison Sports Arena, with one home game at the Fargodome, and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 24\u201310, 12\u20134 in Summit League play to finish in third place. They advanced to the championship game of The Summit League Tournament where they lost to South Dakota State. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Western Michigan in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230712-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Florida Ospreys men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 North Florida Ospreys men's basketball team represented the University of North Florida during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ospreys, led by fourth year head coach Matthew Driscoll, played their home games at the UNF Arena and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 13\u201319, 8\u201310 in A-Sun play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic Sun Tournament to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230713-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Superleague\nThe 2012\u201313 North Superleague was the twelfth staging of the North Superleague, the highest tier of league competition in the North Region of the Scottish Junior Football Association. The season began on 4 August 2012. The winners of this competition gain direct entry to round one of the 2013\u201314 Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230713-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Superleague\nCulter won the championship on 4 May 2013, the club's sixth Superleague title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230713-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Superleague, Member clubs for the 2012\u201313 season\nHermes were the reigning champions. North Division One winners Inverness City were ineligible for promotion to the Superleague on ground criteria. Division One runners-up Fraserburgh United replaced the relegated Sunnybank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230713-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Superleague, Member clubs for the 2012\u201313 season\nDeveronside, who finished third in Division One, defeated thirteenth placed Forres Thistle 7\u20131 in a play-off arranged to decide the final promotion/relegation spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230714-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Texas Mean Green men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 North Texas Mean Green men's basketball team represented the University of North Texas during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mean Green, led by first year head coach Tony Benford, played their home games at UNT Coliseum, nicknamed The Super Pit, and were members of the West Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 12\u201320, 7\u201313 in Sun Belt play to finish in fourth place in the West Division. They lost in the First Round of the Sun Belt Tournament to Louisiana\u2013Lafayette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230714-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North Texas Mean Green men's basketball team\nThis was the Mean Green's final season as a member of the Sun Belt. In July, 2013, they will join Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230715-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North West Counties Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 North West Counties Football League season was the 31st in the history of the North West Counties Football League, a football competition in England. Teams were divided into two divisions: the Premier Division and Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230715-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North West Counties Football League, Premier Division\nFrom this league, only Barnoldswick Town, Bootle, Colne, Congleton Town, Glossop North End, Maine Road, Padiham, Runcorn Linnets, Runcorn Town and Winsford United applied for promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230716-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North of Scotland Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 North of Scotland Cup began on 28 July 2012 and ended on 20 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230716-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 North of Scotland Cup\nThis season saw AJG Parcels as the sponsors for the first year with draw taking place at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium, Inverness 15 June 2012. The draw, like previous years, was split into north and south sections and due to the uneven number of teams competing several clubs receives byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230717-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northampton Town F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Northampton Town's 116th season of existence and their fourth competitive season in League Two. Along with competing in League Two, the club also participated in the FA Cup, League Cup and Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230717-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northampton Town F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230718-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northeastern Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northeastern Huskies men's basketball team represented Northeastern University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Huskies, led by seventh year head coach Bill Coen, played their home games at Matthews Arena and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 20\u201313, 14\u20134 in CAA play to claim the regular season CAA championship. They advanced to the championship game of the CAA Tournament where they lost to James Madison. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they earned an automatic bid to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230719-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks men's basketball team represented Northern Arizona University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lumberjacks, led by first year head coach Jack Murphy, played their home games at the Walkup Skydome, with two home games at the Rolle Activity Center, and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 8\u201312 in Big Sky play to finish in a three-way tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Tournament to Weber State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230720-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Colorado Bears men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Colorado Bears men's basketball team represented the University of Northern Colorado during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bears, led by third year head coach B. J. Hill, played their home games at the Butler\u2013Hancock Sports Pavilion and were of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 13\u201318, 10\u201310 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big Sky Tournament where they lost to Montana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230721-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Counties East Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Counties East Football League season was the 31st 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-00230721-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Counties East Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 19 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230721-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Counties East Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 17 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230722-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Football League season was the 115th 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-00230722-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 19 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-00230722-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 18 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-00230723-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team represented Northern Illinois University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Huskies, led by second year head coach Mark Montgomery, played their home games at the Convocation Center and were members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 5\u201325, 3\u201313 in MAC play to finish in last place in the West Division. They lost in the first round of the MAC Tournament to Eastern Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230723-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team, NCAA Record\nThe Huskies set an NCAA Division I record during the shot-clock era on December 1, 2012 against the Dayton Flyers scoring five points in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 68], "content_span": [69, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230723-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team, NCAA Record\nThis record was broken against the Eastern Michigan Eagles on January 26. 2013, where the Huskies scored four points in the first half. The Huskies had a 3.2% field goal shooting in the first half which also set a record, breaking Savannah State's 4.3% shooting percentage against Kansas State in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 68], "content_span": [69, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230724-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Iowa Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Iowa Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Northern Iowa during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by seventh year head coach Ben Jacobson, played their home games at McLeod Center and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 21\u201315, 11\u20137 in MVC play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Missouri Valley Tournament to Illinois State. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated North Dakota, UIC and Bradley to advance to the semifinals where they lost to Weber State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230725-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team represented Northern Kentucky University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Norse, led by 9th year head coach Dave Bezold, played their home games at The Bank of Kentucky Center and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 11\u201316, 9\u20139 in A-Sun play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. Due to their transition to Division I, the Norse will not be eligible to participate in post season play until 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 45th season of the Northern Premier League Premier Division, and the sixth season of the Northern Premier League Division One North and South. The League sponsors for 2012\u201313 are Evo-Stik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League\nDue to Step Three leagues increasing their number of teams from 22 to 24 from the 2013\u201314 season onwards, only two teams will be relegated from the Premier Division, and only one team will be relegated from each of Division One North and South this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Northern Premier League Challenge Cup (billed as the 2012\u201313 Doodson Sports Cup for sponsorship reasons) is the 43rd season of the Northern Premier League Challenge Cup, the cup competition of the Northern Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, Preliminary Round\nIn the Preliminary Round, eight teams from the lower regional divisions have been drawn together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, First Round\nThe four clubs which make it through the Preliminary Round enter into the draw with the rest of the teams from the two Division One leagues which weren't drawn into the Preliminary Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, Second Round\nThe 20 clubs which make it through the First Round enter into the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, Third Round\nTeams from the Northern Premier League Premier Division entered at this stage, along with the 10 winners from the second round. The draw for the third round was made on 19 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, Fourth Round\nThe draw for the fourth round took place on 10 January 2013, with the 16 clubs that made it through the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, Quarter Finals\nThe eight clubs to have made it through the fourth round were entered into the quarter-finals draw, which took place on 19 February 2013. Cammell Laird, Farsley, and Curzon Ashton from the NPL Division One North and Northwich Victoria from the NPL Division One South remain as the lowest-placed teams still in the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, Semi-finals\nThe four clubs to have made it through the quarter finals were entered into the semi-finals draw. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 21 March 2013, with Cammell Laird from the Northern Premier League Division One North remaining as the lowest-placed team still in the Cup. Witton Albion was removed from the semi-finals due to fielding an ineligible player on 19 February 2013 against F.C. United of Manchester since the player had already represented Curzon Ashton in a previous round on 27 November 2012. Curzon Ashton was reinstated to play Matlock Town in place of Witton Albion in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Challenge Cup, Final\nThe Challenge Cup Final was played at the Throstle Nest, the home ground of Farsley F.C.. This was the second consecutive Challenge Cup Final for North Ferriby United and Curzon Ashton's first Finals appearance. After a 1\u20131 draw, North Ferriby United went on to win the penalty shoot-out and secure their second Challenge Cup in a row while also being the third team ever to retain the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230726-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northern Premier League, Peter Swales Shield\nFor the 2013 edition of the Peter Swales Shield, the 2012\u201313 champions of the Northern Premier League First Division North, Skelmersdale United, played against the 2012\u201313 champions of the Northern Premier League First Division South, King's Lynn Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230727-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northwestern State Demons basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northwestern State Demons basketball team represented Northwestern State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Demons, led by 14th year head coach Mike McConathy, played their home games at Prather Coliseum and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 23\u20139, 15\u20133 in Southland play to finish in second place. They were champions of the Southland Conference Tournament, winning the championship game over Stephen F. Austin, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230728-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball team represented Northwestern University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This was head coach Bill Carmody's thirteenth and final season at Northwestern; on March 16, 2013, the university announced that he would not return to the team. The Wildcats were members of the Big Ten Conference and played their home games at Welsh-Ryan Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230729-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Norwich City F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 111th season of football for Norwich City. It is Norwich City's second campaign in the Premier League since being promoted in the 2010\u201311 season. It is their 23rd season in the top flight of English football. During the season, they competed in the League Cup and the FA Cup exiting at the quarter final and fourth rounds respectively. During their FA Cup campaign Norwich became the first top flight club to lose to a non-league club since 1989 when they lost 1\u20130 at home to Luton Town in the fourth round. S\u00e9bastien Bassong was named player of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230729-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Norwich City F.C. season, Players, Squad\nNationality: when 2 flags, 1st flag = country that plays for internationally, 2nd flag = country of birthApps/goals: statistics prior to 2012/13 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230729-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Norwich City F.C. season, Competitions, Premier League, Matches\nNorwich City's second season in the premier league started with a heavy defeat away to Fulham. Damien Duff, Alexander Ka\u010danikli\u0107 both scored one, Mladen Petri\u0107 scored two and Steve Sidwell scored a penalty. Manager Chris Hughton said that Norwich simply didn't defend enough. Chris Hughton responded by signing defender S\u00e9bastien Bassong and defensive midfielder Alexander Tettey before the following game at home to QPR. Bassong and summer loan signing Javier Garrido made their d\u00e9buts for the club in the match. Simeon Jackson opened the scoring and with Bobby Zamora scoring an equaliser. Djibril Ciss\u00e9 missed a penalty which was awarded following a coming together between Ciss\u00e9 and Bassong. The month ended with Norwich signing goalkeeper Mark Bunn from Blackburn Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230730-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team represented the University of Notre Dame in the sport of basketball during the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The Fighting Irish competed in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Big East Conference. They were led by head coach Mike Brey, and played their home games at the Edmund P. Joyce Center Notre Dame, Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230730-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Fighting Irish finished the 2011\u201312 season 22\u201312, 13\u20135 in Big East play, finishing third place behind Champion Syracuse. There were several Irish to receive All-Big East honors. Junior Jack Cooley was named the Big East's Most Improved as well as was named 2nd Team All-Big East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230730-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Irish were defeated in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament by Louisville. They earned a #7 seed for the NCAA Tournament, where they were eliminated in the second round by Xavier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230730-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team, Pre-season\nFollowing the end of the 2011\u201312 season, both Tim Abromaitis and Scott Martin applied to the NCAA for a sixth year of eligibility. Abromaitis had been a redshirt during the 2008\u201309 season, but suffered a torn ACL on November 25, 2011, during practice. He played in just two games during the season, having sat out the first four due to a misunderstanding of the rules during his redshirt season (he had played in exhibition games before the official start of the '08-'09 season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230730-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team, Pre-season\nMartin had transferred to Notre Dame after his freshman season at Purdue and sat out the 2008\u20132009 season due to NCAA transfer rules, but then suffered a torn ACL during a preseason practice in October 2009, causing him to miss a second full season. His petition for a sixth year was successful, but Abromaitis' was denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230730-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team, Pre-season\nIn June 2012, Notre Dame officially announced a 10-year contract extension for head coach Mike Brey, the third-winningest coach in school history and, with the retirement of Connecticut's Jim Calhoun, now the second-longest tenured coach in the Big East after Jim Boeheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230730-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team, Pre-season\nNotre Dame recruited three players from the high school senior class of 2011\u201312, each of whom signed letters-of-intent in November 2011. The recruiting class was rated 16th in the nation by Rivals.com:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230731-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nottingham Forest F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Nottingham Forest Football Club's 5th consecutive season in the Championship since promotion in 2007-08.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230731-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Squad statistics, Appearances and goals\nThis is a list of the first-team players from the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230732-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Notts County F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Notts County Football Club's 124th year in the Football League and their third consecutive season in the third tier of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230733-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OB I bajnoksag season\nThe 2012\u201313 OB I bajnoksag season is the 76th season of the OB I bajnoksag, the top level of ice hockey in Hungary. The league proper was not contested this season, as four of the top Hungarian teams competed in the multi-national MOL Liga. The top-ranked Hungarian team in the league was crowned national champions. Dab.Docler, who won the MOL Liga, was recognized as Hungarian champion this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230733-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OB I bajnoksag season\nAlba Vol\u00e1n Sz\u00e9kesfeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r, who played in the Austrian Hockey League, and was the Hungarian champion for ten straight years, was unable to participate in the Hungarian Championship, as they were required to enter their second team in the Erste Bank Junior League. They did not directly inform the Hungarian Ice Hockey Federation of their decision. This led to re-fro However, the club still participated in the Hungarian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League\nThe 2012\u201313 OFC Champions League was the 12th edition of the Oceanian Club Championship, Oceania's premier club football tournament organized by the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and the 7th season under the current OFC Champions League name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League\nAuckland City became the first team to win three consecutive title after defeating Waitakere United in an all-New Zealand final. As the winner of the 2013 OFC Champions League, they earned the right to represent the OFC at the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Format change\nThe OFC decided on the following format changes for the 2013 edition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Schedule\nMatches played in Tahiti are one day behind the other countries in global time as Tahiti is on the other side of the International Date Line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Preliminary stage\nThe preliminary stage matches were played in Tonga from 1 May to 8 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Preliminary stage, Preliminary round\nIn the preliminary round, the four teams played each other on a round-robin basis. The group winner advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Preliminary stage, Play-off round\nIn the play-off round, the winner of the preliminary round and the team entering in this round played each other over one match. The winner advanced to the group stage to join the seven automatic qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Group stage\nIn the group stage, the eight teams were divided into two groups of four. In each group, the four teams played each other on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Group stage\nOn 5 February 2013, the OFC announced the draw and schedule of the group stage. The group stage matches were played from 30 March to 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the winner of Group A play the runner-up of Group B, and the winner of Group B play the runner-up of Group A. In each tie, teams play each other on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the group winners hosting the second leg. If the aggregate score is tied after the second leg, the away goals rule is applied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Semi-finals\nIf away goals are also tied, extra time is played, and the away goals rule is applied again after extra time, i.e., if there are goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score is still tied, the away team qualifies. If no goals are scored during extra time, the winner is determined by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 4 and 5 May 2013, and the second legs were played on 11 and 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Semi-finals, Second leg\nAuckland City won 7\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Semi-finals, Second leg\nWaitakere United won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Final\nIn the final, the two semi-final winners played each other over one match at a pre-determined venue, with extra time and penalty shoot-out used to decide the winner if necessary. The final was played at Arena 2 of Mount Smart Stadium in Auckland, New Zealand on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Goalscorers, Preliminary stage\nIn the preliminary stage (preliminary round and play-off round), there were 37 goals in 7 matches, for an average of 5.29 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230734-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, Goalscorers, Final stage\nIn the final stage (group stage, semi-finals and final), there were 95 goals in 29 matches, for an average of 3.28 per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 OHL season was the 33rd season of the Ontario Hockey League. The Mississauga St. Michael's Majors were sold during the off-season. As part of the sale, the \"St. Michael's Majors\" name was returned to St. Michael's College School. The new name of the team will be the Mississauga Steelheads. The Brampton Battalion announced during the season that this would be their last season in Brampton and will relocate to North Bay, Ontario for the 2013\u201314 OHL season. Twenty teams played 68 games each during the regular season schedule, which began in September 2012 and ended in March 2013. The London Knights won their second consecutive J. Ross Robertson Cup and third in franchise history, and with it a berth in the 2013 Memorial Cup hosted by the Saskatoon Blades of the WHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: DIV = Division; 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, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, Regular 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, 55], "content_span": [56, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, Playoffs, Playoff scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, Playoffs, Playoff 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, 57], "content_span": [58, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, All-Star teams\nThe OHL All-Star Teams were selected by the OHL's General Managers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, 2013 OHL Priority Selection\nOn April 6, 2013, the OHL conducted the 2013 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection. The Ottawa 67's held the first overall pick in the draft, and selected Travis Konecny from the Elgin-Middlesex Chiefs. Konecny 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, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, 2013 OHL Priority Selection\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round of the 2013 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, 2013 NHL Entry Draft\nOn June 30, 2013, the National Hockey League conducted the 2013 NHL Entry Draft held at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. In total, 37 players from the Ontario Hockey League were selected in the draft. Sean Monahan of the Ottawa 67's was the first player from the OHL to be selected, as he was taken with the sixth overall pick by the Calgary Flames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, 2013 NHL Entry Draft\nBelow are the players selected from OHL teams at the NHL Entry Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, 2013 CHL Import Draft\nOn July 3, 2013, the Canadian Hockey League conducted the 2013 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 Alex Lintuniemi from Finland with their selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230735-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OHL season, 2013 CHL Import Draft\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round by Ontario Hockey League teams in the 2013 CHL Import Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 OJHL season is the 19th season of the Ontario Junior Hockey League (OJHL) and the third since the league existed as two separate bodies in 2009\u201310. The twenty-two teams of the North, South, East and West Divisions will play 55-game schedules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season\nCome February, the top teams of each division will play down for the Frank L. Buckland Trophy, the OJHL championship. The winner of the Buckland Cup will compete in the Central Canadian Junior \"A\" championship, the Dudley Hewitt Cup. If successful against the winners of the Northern Ontario Junior Hockey League and Superior International Junior Hockey League, the champion would then move on to play in the Canadian Junior Hockey League championship, the 2013 Royal Bank Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; SOL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title; z = clinched conference title; w = eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season, Final standings\nShaded Green denotes divisional and conference leader, red is the other divisional leader, blue are teams in line for playoff seeds 3 through 8 of their conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season, 2012-13 Frank L. Buckland Trophy Playoffs\nPlayoff results are listed by Pointstreak on the official league website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season, Dudley Hewitt Cup Championship\nHosted by the North Bay Trappers in North Bay, Ontario. The St. Michael's Buzzers lost the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230736-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OJHL season, Central Canada Cup Challenge\nThe second annual Central Canada Cup Challenge is an interleague all-star tournament hosted by Wellington, Ontario. The event runs December 27\u201329, 2012. The name of the event has been slightly altered from the 2011 event, probably in response to the creation of the Western Canada Cup by their rival Western leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230737-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the OK Liga was the 44th season of top-tier rink hockey in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230737-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga\nCoinasa Liceo won the championship by a single point difference. It was its seventh overall title and the first since 1992\u201393 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230737-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga, Copa del Rey\nThe 2013 Copa del Rey was the 70th edition of the Spanish men's roller hockey cup. It was played in Oviedo 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, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230738-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga Femenina\nThe 2012\u201313 OK Liga Femenina was the fifth edition of Spain's premier women's rink hockey championship, running from September 15, 2012 to May 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230738-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga Femenina\nCP Voltreg\u00e0 won its third title in a row while Reus Deportiu and Cerdanyola were relegated to Primera Nacional. Despite to finish in relegation positions, Borbolla and Traviesas regained its spots in OK Liga, as Reus and Cerdanyola resigned to their places in the league due to their financial problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230738-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga Femenina\nVoltreg\u00e0, Biesca Gij\u00f3n, Girona and Alcorc\u00f3n qualified for CERH Women's Euroleague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230738-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga Femenina, Copa de la Reina\nThe 2013 Copa de la Reina was the 8th edition of the Spanish women's roller hockey cup. It was played in Sant Hip\u00f2lit de Voltreg\u00e0 between the four first qualified teams after the first half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230738-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 OK Liga Femenina, Copa de la Reina\nBiesca Gij\u00f3n won its second consecutive title after beating CP Alcorc\u00f3n by 3\u20132 in the final, thanks to a golden goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230739-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team represented Oakland University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Grizzlies, led by 29th year head coach Greg Kampe, played their home games at the Athletics Center O'rena and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 16\u201317, 10\u20136 in The Summit League to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of The Summit League Tournament to Fort Wayne. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to Youngstown State. This was the Golden Grizzlies last year as a member of The Summit League as they joined the Horizon League in the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230739-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team, Preseason\nOakland was selected to finish third in The Summit League in the preseason poll of coaches, sports information directors and media. Junior guard Travis Bader was selected to the preseason all-league first team and senior forward Drew Valentine was selected to the second team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 65], "content_span": [66, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230739-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team, Preseason\nFrom the previous season's 20-win team that reached the CollegeInsider.com Tournament semifinals, Oakland lost starting point guard Reggie Hamilton and guard Laval Lucas-Perry to graduation. Then-redshirt freshman center Kyle Sikora transferred to Stetson in order to be closer to his family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 65], "content_span": [66, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230739-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team, Season\nSophomore center Corey Petros earned league Player of the Week honors on November 19. Petros earned his first career award averaging 18 points and 9.5 rebounds in road games against Boise State and Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230739-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team, Season\nJunior guard Duke Mondy was named Player of the Week for the week of December 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230739-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team, Season\nAfter a 47-point performance and averaging 36.5 points per game the week of January 20, Bader was named National Player of the Week by ESPN's Dick Vitale, the Capital One Impact Performance of the Week and The Summit League's Player of the Week awards. In the 47-point game, Bader set an Oakland single-game record for three-point field goals made (11), scored the most points in a game in NCAA Division I this year and tied the league record for most three-pointers in a game. The 47 points were the third-highest total in Oakland history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230740-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oberliga (ice hockey) season\nThe 2012-13 Oberliga season was the 54th season for the Oberliga, the third-level ice hockey league in Germany. It was divided into four groups (North, South, East, West). Rote Teufel Bad Nauheim won the championship. A total of 39 teams participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230741-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, the highest association football league in the state of Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, was the fifth season of the league at tier five (V) of the German football league system and the 35th season overall since establishment of the league in 1978. The regular season started on 11 August 2012 and finished on 25 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230741-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg\nThe league was won by SpVgg Neckarelz which thereby earned promotion to the Regionalliga S\u00fcdwest for 2013\u201314. Offenburger FV, FSV 08 Bissingen and FC Singen 04 were relegated to the Verbandsligas. Dejan Bozic of runners-up FC Astoria Walldorf was the top goal scorer with 24 goals. FC N\u00f6ttingen's game against TSV Grunbach attracted the most spectators for the season with 2,070 while SSV Reutlingen was the best supported club with an average of 698 spectators per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230741-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Standings\nThe league featured four new clubs with SGV Freiberg and FSV 08 Bissingen promoted from the Verbandsliga W\u00fcrttemberg, FC Singen 04 from the Verbandsliga S\u00fcdbaden and TSV Grunbach from the Verbandsliga Baden. The Karlsruher SC II had been relegated from the Regionalliga S\u00fcd to the Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230741-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Promotion play-offs\nPromotion play-offs were held at the end of the season to the Oberliga, involving the runners-up of the Verbandsliga W\u00fcrttemberg, Verbandsliga S\u00fcdbaden and Verbandsliga Baden. In the first round the runners up of S\u00fcdbaden and Baden met with the winner then taking on the W\u00fcrttemberg runners-up. The latter, FV Ravensburg, won promotion by defeating Baden runners-up SV 98 Schwetzingen 5\u20131 in the return leg at Schwetzingen:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Odense Boldklub's 125th anniversary year. With a 10th place in season 2011\u201312, they were ready to for a new start, with a new manager, Troels Bech. They began the season winning 1\u20130 against Br\u00f8ndby IF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season\nOdense Boldklub is currently placed 4th in the Danish Superliga after 19 rounds played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 1: Br\u00f8ndby IF vs OB\nBr\u00f8ndby IF vs Odense BK was the opening match of the 2012-13 Danish Superliga season. The match were played at Br\u00f8ndby Stadium, with a very low attendance from the home crowd. The Br\u00f8ndby manager Auri Skarbalius chose to bench Michael Krohn-Dehli, who was the big star for Denmark at the UEFA Euro 2012, because he stayed on a too long vacation in connection with the tournament. OB took the lead after 17 minutes with a goal by Jacob Schoop, which was his first goal in the OB-jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 1: Br\u00f8ndby IF vs OB\nBr\u00f8ndby created more chances in the second half, and after 78 minutes Clarence Goodson equalized to 1-1, but the referee Lars Christoffersen cancelled the goal because Goodson pushed Daniel H\u00f8egh in the back. OB won the opening match 1\u20130. It was the first match with Troels Bech as the manager of Odense Boldklub.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 2: OB vs Randers FC\nOdense BK vs Randers FC was the second match of the 2012-13 Danish Superliga season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 3: FC Nordsj\u00e6lland vs OB\nFC Nordsj\u00e6lland vs Odense BK was the third match in the 2012-13 Danish Superliga. The match ended 1-1 after FC Nordsj\u00e6lland led 1-0 most of the game since the 16th minute. But in the 81st minute Kalilou Traor\u00e9 equalized to 1-1 for OB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 4: Silkeborg IF vs OB\nSilkeborg IF vs Odense BK was the fourth round of the 2012-13 Danish Superliga. The game took place at Mascot Park in Silkeborg. Most of the chances was for Silkeborg, but they didn't get the ball over the line. Instead in 3 minutes extra time, OB got the leading goal - out of nowhere - by Morten Skoubo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 5: OB vs FC Midtjylland\nOdense BK vs FC Midtjylland was the fifth match of the 2012-13 Danish Superliga season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 6: S\u00f8nderjyskE vs OB\nS\u00f8nderjyskE vs Odense BK was the sixth round of the 2012-13 Danish Superliga. It was a match between number 2 and 3 in the league. OB won 1\u20132, and took the 2nd place from S\u00f8nderjyskE. It was also their 3rd victory in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 8: OB vs FC Copenhagen\nOdense BK vs FC Copenhagen was the eighth match of the 2012-13 Danish Superliga season. Before kick-off, Kalilou Traor\u00e9 got honored, because of his last game for OB, after switching to FC Sochaux.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 87], "content_span": [88, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Danish Superliga, Matches, Round 13: FC Midtjylland vs OB\nFC Midtjylland vs Odense BK was the 13th round in the 2012-13 Danish Superliga. OB dominated the first half, and got the leading goal after 34 minutes by Kriszti\u00e1n Vad\u00f3cz. After the break, FC Midtjylland got a lot of more chances, but after a few minutes Izunna Uzochukwu got sent off the pitch after stamping Kriszti\u00e1n Vad\u00f3cz's shin. But that didn't stop FC Midtjylland continuing create chances, while OB's Marcus Pedersen got a red card too. The referee Lars Christoffersen added 6 more minutes, and that was enough for Midtjylland to get an equalizer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230742-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Odense Boldklub season, Matches, Competitive\nLast updated: 21 MaySource: 1Odense Boldklub goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different from that of Odense Boldklub.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230743-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by first year head coach Jim Christian, played their home games at the Convocation Center and were members of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 24\u201310, 14\u20132 in the East Division to claim a share of the East Division and MAC overall regular season championship with Akron. They lost in the championship game of the MAC Tournament to Akron. They were invited to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to Denver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230743-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe Ohio University Bobcat fans continued to show support for the team leading the MAC in fan attendance for the 7th time in the last 8 seasons, averaging just under 7,000 fans attending each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230743-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team, Schedule\n^ Game was originally scheduled for 1/30/2013, but was postponed due to the closure of the Ohio campus following an armed robbery near the university.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230744-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team represents The Ohio State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach is Thad Matta, in his ninth season with the Buckeyes. The team plays its home games at Value City Arena in Columbus, Ohio. They finished with a record of with a record of 29\u20138 overall, 13\u20135 in Big Ten play for a second place tie with Michigan State. They won the 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament and receive an automatic bid in the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament which they were defeated by Wichita State in the Elite Eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230744-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team, Before the season, Previous season\nThe Ohio State Buckeyes began the 2011\u201312 season ranked #3 in the nation and would go on to an 8\u20130 start to the season, with their first loss coming at Allen Fieldhouse against the Kansas Jayhawks. Ohio State remained in the top three through the first two months of the season, until they lost their first conference game of the season on December 31 against the Indiana Hoosiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230744-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team, Before the season, Previous season\nOhio State went 13\u20135 through Big Ten play and ended the season with a 25\u20136 record and won a share of the Big Ten regular season championship, sharing it with Michigan State and Michigan. Ohio State would end up losing in the championship game of the Big Ten tournament and enter the NCAA tournament as a #2 seed. Ohio State would go on to defeat Syracuse in the Elite Eight en route to the program's eleventh Final Four appearance. Ohio State lost to the Kansas Jayhawks in the Final Four and ended the season with a 31\u20138 record and #3 ranking. After the season, Jared Sullinger declared for the NBA Draft after his sophomore season, while Deshaun Thomas decided to return for his junior season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230745-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio State Buckeyes women's ice hockey season\nThe Ohio State Buckeyes represented Ohio State University in WCHA women's ice hockey. The Buckeyes will attempt to qualify for the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season\nThe 2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season was the fourth season of the Ohio Vortex indoor soccer club. The Vortex, an Eastern Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played the majority of their home games at the Pinnacle Sports Complex in Medina, Ohio. The team was led by executive director Jodi Wayble and head coach Denzil Antonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Season summary\nThe Vortex struggled in the regular season, posting a 1\u201315 record, and failed to advance to the postseason. The team won only one game, against the Illinois Piasa, before dropping the final 13 matches giving the franchise the longest losing streak in the league this season. The franchise struggled off the field as well, drawing only an average of 210 fans per home game, besting just the two Arizona-based teams. The Ohio club's abrupt relocation from Canton 60 miles northwest to Oberlin just before the start of the season then again 30 miles east to Medina after the second home game likely contributed to the team's box office issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Season summary\nThe Vortex participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They received a bye in the Wild Card round then lost to the Detroit Waza in the Round of 16, ending their tournament run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Off-field moves\nFounded in 2008, the Ohio Vortex began play in the 2009\u201310 season at the Cleveland Metroplex Events Center in Warrensville Heights, Ohio, before settling into the Canton Civic Center in Canton, Ohio. The team, an original member of the Professional Arena Soccer League, followed in the footsteps of the Canton Invaders, a team in the National Professional Soccer League that called Canton home from 1984 through 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Off-field moves\nOn October 26, 2012, one week before the start of the season, the team announced it was moving from Canton to Oberlin, Ohio, for the 2012\u201313 season and would play their home games at the Gameday Sports Center. After the first two home games, the team relocated to the Pinnacle Sports Complex in Medina, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Off-field moves\nOn March 14, 2013, the team began selling off its game uniforms and pre-game warmup shirts via its official Facebook page. The team's official website was taken down in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Roster moves\nOn November 20, 2012, Vortex goalkeeper Mike Mason was named PASL Player of the Week for his role in the team winning its first game of the 2012\u201313 season. Mason's 18 saves in a 7\u20130 win against Illinois Piasa constituted the fifth shutout in league history and first since February 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Roster moves\nOn December 5, 2012, the Vortex announced the signing of midfielder Joe Salem. An Akron, Ohio, native with professional experience on the Puerto Rico Islanders of the North American Soccer League, Salem is also an assistant coach at Highland High School.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230746-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ohio Vortex season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below. \u00a7 Team began season at Gameday Sports Center; relocated to Pinnacle Sports Complex for final six home games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season\nThe 2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season was the 5th season of the franchise in Oklahoma City and the 47th in the National Basketball Association (NBA). After their trip to the NBA Finals, despite losing the Finals to the Miami Heat in five games, the Thunder improved on last season's output, winning 60 games, earning them the top seed in the Western Conference. The first round pitted the Thunder against the eight-seeded Houston Rockets, led by James Harden, a former Thunder player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season\nDespite a season-ending injury to Russell Westbrook in game 2, the Thunder still managed to breeze past the Rockets in six games, to advance to the next round, where they faced the Memphis Grizzlies. The absence of Westbrook, however, affected the Thunder and they would end up losing to the Grizzlies in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Draft picks\nGoing into the draft on June 28, 2012, the Thunder retained only their first-round draft pick, their 2012 second-round selection having been previously traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves during the acquisition of Lazar Hayward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Draft picks\nThe Thunder used their first-round pick (#28 overall) and only pick to select forward Perry Jones III from Baylor University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Off-season\nHead athletic trainer for the Thunder Joe Sharpe was named as one of the medical staff members for USA Basketball's Olympic team in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Off-season\nIn May 2012, Thunder shooting guard James Harden was selected to the 18-man preliminary roster for the USA Olympic basketball team, joining teammates Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant. On July 7, 2012, all three were announced as members of the final 12-man roster representing the USA in the London Olympic Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Off-season\nIn addition, Thunder forward Serge Ibaka, a naturalized Spanish citizen, was named to Spain's Olympic basketball team for 2012, making four Thunder players represented at the 2012 Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Off-season\nLate on October 27, 2012, the Thunder and the Houston Rockets agreed to a trade that sent G James Harden, C Cole Aldrich, G/F Daequan Cook and F Lazar Hayward to Houston in exchange for G Kevin Martin, G Jeremy Lamb, Houston's 2013 first-round draft pick, the Toronto Raptors's 2013 first-round pick (acquired in the Kyle Lowry trade) and the Charlotte Bobcats's 2013 second-round draft pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Injuries and surgeries\nIn July 2012, center Kendrick Perkins underwent surgeries for a torn ligament in his left wrist as well as a right groin muscle, both injuries suffered during the 2012 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Transactions\nOn June 26, 2012, the NBA assigned the Thunder's 2013 second-round draft selection to the Boston Celtics in compensation for a lack of information disclosure in the February 2011 trade that sent Jeff Green to Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Transactions\nOn July 4, 2012, the Thunder announced they had reached a two-year agreement with unrestricted free agent center Hasheem Thabeet, at a reported minimum NBA salary (approximately $880,000 in 2012\u201313).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Transactions\nAlso on July 4, the Thunder announced a four-year contract extension for head coach Scott Brooks, keeping Brooks under contract with the team through the 2015\u201316 season with total compensation reported at $18 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230747-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma City Thunder season, Transactions\nOn August 18, 2012, the Thunder signed a four-year contract extension with forward Serge Ibaka, paying him a reported $48 million and keeping Ibaka under contract through the 2016\u201317 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230748-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Oklahoma Sooners basketball team represented the University of Oklahoma in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Sooners were led by Lon Kruger in his second season. The team played its home games at the Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Oklahoma as a member of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 20\u201312, 11\u20137 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament to Iowa State. The received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, where they lost in the second round to San Diego State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230749-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team represented Oklahoma State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Travis Ford's fifth season at Oklahoma State. The Cowboys competed in the Big 12 Conference and played their home games at the Gallagher-Iba Arena. They finished the season 24\u20139, 13\u20135 in Big 12 play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big 12 Tournament where they lost to Kansas State. They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230750-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Old Dominion Monarchs basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Old Dominion Monarchs basketball team represented Old Dominion University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Monarchs, led by 12th year head coach Blaine Taylor, played their home games at Ted Constant Convocation Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. This was their final season as a member of the CAA as they will join Conference USA in July 2013. As a result of the conference change, the Monarchs were not be eligible to participate in the 2013 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230750-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Old Dominion Monarchs basketball team\nAfter a 2\u201320 start to the season, head coach Blaine Taylor was fired. Assistant coach Jim Corrigan was named the Monarchs interim head coach for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230750-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Old Dominion Monarchs basketball team\nThey finished the season 5\u201325, 3\u201315 in CAA play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230751-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Oldham Athletic's 16th consecutive season in the third division of the English football league system. It was Paul Dickov's third season as manager of the club. Oldham began inconsistently in the league before a poor run of form before Christmas 2012 led to Dickov's coaching team being placed on gardening leave. Victories over Nottingham Forest and Liverpool in the FA Cup followed but after a run of one point from nine games, Dickov resigned as manager on 3 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230751-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season\nTony Philliskirk took over as caretaker manager and Matt Smith's last minute equaliser earned Philliskirk's men an FA Cup fifth round replay against Everton which Everton ultimately won 3\u20131. It was the furthest that the Latics had progressed in the FA Cup since reaching the semi-final in 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230751-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season\nLee Johnson was appointed as Oldham's new manager on 18 March 2013, becoming the youngest manager in the Football League at only 31 years of age. Johnson led Oldham to safety with two games to spare with four wins, three draws and three defeats from the last ten games. Oldham finished the season in 19th position and with many of his first team squad out of contract, Johnson faced a summer of rebuilding in preparation for the 2013-14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230752-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team represented the University of Mississippi in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team's head coach was Andy Kennedy, in his seventh season at Ole Miss. The team played their home games at the Tad Smith Coliseum in Oxford, Mississippi as a member of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230752-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team\nAfter finishing the regular season with a record of 23\u20138 (12\u20136 SEC), the Rebels claimed the 2013 SEC Tournament championship by defeating Florida in the title game. They earned an automatic berth into the 2013 NCAA Tournament as a #12 seed in the west region, where they advanced to the third round before falling to La Salle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230752-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe Rebels posted a record of 20\u201314 (8-8 SEC) in the 2011\u201312 season and finished seventh in the SEC standings. The Rebels were invited to the 2012 NIT and lost in the first round to Illinois State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230752-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ole Miss Rebels men's basketball team, Preseason\nEntering his seventh year as the Rebels\u2019 head coach, Kennedy's 108 wins are the most by any coach in program history in a five-year span, and the Rebels\u2019 38 victories over Southeastern Conference foes are the most by a Rebel coach in his first five seasons. The 2012\u201313 Rebel squad will look to build on three straight seasons with 20 or more wins and a postseason berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Olympiacos's 54th consecutive season in the Super League Greece. They competed in the Greek Super League, Greek Cup, UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. season\nOlympiacos completed a domestic double, winning the Super League and the Greek Cup. Olympiacos won the title for a third consecutive season, reaching 40 domestic titles and therefore adding a fourth star to the team's shirt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. season\nThe club finished third in Group B of the Champions League, which resulted in them entering the Europa League. Olympiacos was eliminated in Round of 32 by Levante with two defeats, falling 0\u20134 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. season, Squad\nAs of 7 April 2013Note: 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, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230753-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympiacos F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230754-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympique Lyonnais season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Olympique Lyonnais's 63rd professional season since its creation in 1950. The club competed in Ligue 1, finishing third, in the Coupe de France, Coupe de la Ligue, and in the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230754-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympique Lyonnais 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230754-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympique Lyonnais 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230754-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympique Lyonnais season, 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230755-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympique de Marseille season\nThe 2012\u201313 season of Marseille will be the club's 63rd season in the Ligue 1 and this year they will be challenging for four titles: Ligue 1, UEFA Europa League, Coupe de France and Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230755-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Olympique de Marseille season, Kits\nMarseille's home kit features the traditional white / turquoise blend with orange trims. The away kit features a retro style, with one of the club's older badges and French tricolor on collar and sleeves. The third kit is an inversion of the club's home colours, providing an intimidating black-orange look.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230756-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team represented the University of Nebraska at Omaha during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mavericks, led by eighth year head coach Derrin Hansen, played their home games at the Ralston Arena and were members of The Summit League. As part of their transition from Division II to Division I, the Mavericks were not eligible for The Summit League Tournament or other postseason play. They finished the season 11\u201320, 6\u201310 in The Summit League play to finish in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230757-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman Elite League\nThe 2012\u201313 Oman Elite League (known as the Omantel Elite League for sponsorship reasons) was the 37th edition of the top football league in Oman. It began on 4 October 2012 and was scheduled to finish on 19 May 2013, but for the second season running, the league title had to be decided by a playoff. Fanja SC were the defending champions, having won the previous 2011\u201312 Elite League season. On Wednesday, 22 May 2013, Al-Suwaiq Club won the Championship Final match against Fanja 3\u20131 and emerged as the champions of the 2012\u201313 Oman Elite League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230757-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman Elite League, Teams\nThis season the league had increased from 12 to 14 teams. As a result, despite losing the relegation play-off to Al-Seeb Club, Salalah SC retained their place in the top division and Al-Musannah SC, whose 11th-place finish would have seen them relegated also retained their place in the top division. Ahli Sidab Club, however were relegated to the Second Division League. Saham SC and Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. were promoted to the Omani League (First Division) after finishing in the top two positions in the Second Division League in the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230757-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman Elite League, Teams\nThe winner qualified for the AFC Champions League qualifiers and the runner-up and the second runner-up qualified for the 2014 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230757-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman Elite League, Promotion/Relegation Play-off, 2nd Leg\nSohar secured promotion after winning on the away goals rule", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230758-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman Federation Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Omani Federation Cup was the second edition of a pre-season football competition held in Oman. The first edition was played in 2007. The competition started on 2 August 2012 and finished on 28 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230758-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman Federation Cup\nThe competition featured four groups of 3 teams, with the top two advancing to the quarter-final stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230758-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman Federation Cup\nThe competition featured all the clubs playing in the top flight in the 2012\u201313 season. Two clubs, Oman Club and Al-Seeb Club who won the first edition withdrew due to a dispute with the Oman Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230759-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman First Division League\nThe 2012-13 Oman First Division League (known as the Omantel First Division League for sponsorship reasons) is the 37th edition of the second-highest division overall football league in Oman. The season began on 5 October 2012 and concluded on 10 May 2013. Saham were the defending champions, having won their first title in the previous 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230759-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oman First Division League, Promotion/Relegation Play-off, 2nd Leg\nSohar secured promotion after winning on the away goals rule", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230760-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ontario Curling Tour\nThe 2012\u201313 curling season began at the end of August 2012 and will end in April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230761-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented Oral Roberts University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by 14th year head coach Scott Sutton, played their home games at the Mabee Center and were first year members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 20\u201315, 13\u20135 in Southland play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Southland Tournament to Sam Houston State. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Texas\u2013Arlington and UC Irvine to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Weber State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230762-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team represented the University of Oregon during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Ducks, led by their third year head coach Dana Altman, were members of the Pac-12 Conference and played their home games at Matthew Knight Arena. They finished with a record of 28\u20139 overall, 12\u20136 in Pac-12 play to finish in a three-way tie for second place. They were champions of the Pac-12 Tournament, defeating UCLA in the championship game, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they defeated Oklahoma State in the second round and Saint Louis in the third round to advance to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Louisville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230762-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oregon Ducks men's basketball team, Notes\nOn March 12, 2013 Dana Altman was named the John R. Wooden Pac-12 head coach of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230763-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team represented Oregon State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Head coach Craig Robinson was in his fifth year with the team. The Beavers played their home games at Gill Coliseum in Corvallis, Oregon and were a member of the Pac-12 Conference. They finish with a record of 14\u201318 overall, 4\u201314 in Pac-12 to finish in a last place tie with Washington State. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230764-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Orlando Magic season\nThe 2012\u201313 Orlando Magic season was the 24th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Magic were eliminated from playoff contention with their 115\u2013109 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks on March 17, 2013. This marked the first time since the 2005\u201306 season that the Magic failed to qualify for the playoffs. Ending the season with a 20\u201362 record, the Magic finished with the worst record in the NBA. This was also the worst record posted by the Magic since their inaugural season in 1989\u201390. This was also the first season since 2003-04 that All-Star center Dwight Howard was not on the roster, as he was traded to the Los Angeles Lakers (his first stint) on August 10, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230765-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo)\nThe 2012\u201313 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I is the 107th season of the Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Hungary's premier Water polo league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230765-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Regular season, Results\nIn the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 72], "content_span": [73, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season\nThe 2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season was the 21st season of the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout. Despite having a large number of injuries, the Senators qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs, defeating the Montreal Canadiens in the first round before being eliminated by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season\nAfter 19 years, this season marked the end of the Daniel Alfredsson era. Before signing with the Detroit Red Wings the following season, Alfredsson has been the Senators' team captain since 1999 and is believed by many as the greatest Senator of all-time. As captain, Alfredsson led his team to 11 playoff appearances and one Stanley Cup Finals appearance in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Off-season\nAt the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, the Senators selected local Orleans, Ontario, and Ottawa 67's player Cody Ceci in the first round, 15th overall. The pick was the first first-round pick of a 67's player by the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Off-season\nThe Senators' roster was not changed substantially during the summer. The Senators lost forward Zenon Konopka and defencemen Filip Kuba and Matt Carkner to other teams through free agency. The team traded forward Nick Foligno to the Columbus Blue Jackets for defenceman Marc Methot to add to the defence. The team picked up winger Guillaume Latendresse and defenceman Mike Lundin through free agency, both from the Minnesota Wild. Later in the summer, the team bought-out winger Bobby Butler and he signed with the New Jersey Devils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Off-season\nThe team made re-signing Norris Trophy winner and potential restricted free agent Erik Karlsson a priority, and he signed a seven-year extension with the team. The team reached agreement on contract extensions with Chris Neil, Kyle Turris and Zack Smith. The club also re-signed Peter Regin, Kaspars Daugavins and Stephane Da Costa to one-year contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Pre-season\nOn Tuesday, June 19, the Ottawa Senators announced a seven-game preseason. The schedule included three road contests in Montreal, Toronto and Winnipeg. Three home contests against Toronto, Montreal and a split-squad of the New York Islanders. There will also be one neutral site game taking place in Barrie, Ontario, against the other split-squad of the New York Islanders. These games were not played due to the lockout. No pre-season games were played as part of the revised season schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\nOn June 21, the Ottawa Senators announced their 2012\u201313 regular season schedule. The Senators regular-season opener was to take place at the Bell Centre in Montreal against the Canadiens on Thursday, October 11. Their home-opener was to be played at Scotiabank Place on Saturday, October 13, against the Washington Capitals, with the Senators to close out their regular season at home on Saturday, April 13, against the Winnipeg Jets. However, this schedule was eventually abandoned due to the lockout. Once the lockout had been resolved, a revised schedule of 48 games was released on January 12, 2013. The Senators opened their season on January 19, 2013 in Winnipeg against the Jets. Their regular season concluded with a road game against the Boston Bruins on April 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\n2012\u201313 saw the Senators devastated with injuries throughout much of the season. Jason Spezza suffered a herniated disc and required back surgery, Milan Michalek underwent arthroscopic surgery on his right knee, league leading goaltender Craig Anderson injured his ankle when Chris Kreider of the New York Rangers slid into his leg, Jared Cowen had hip surgery, and Erik Karlsson had his achilles tendon cut by Pittsburgh's Matt Cooke. The play was reviewed by the NHL but no discipline or suspensions were handed out. Senators owner Eugene Melnyk commenced a private investigation into the conduct of Cooke. Despite being devastated by injury, the Senators continued to find ways to win games, earning the nickname Pesky Sens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\nThe Senators had solid goaltending, finishing the lockout-shortened regular season of 48 games with just 100 goals allowed (excluding four shootout goals against), the fewest in the League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs\nOn April 25, after a 2\u20131 overtime victory over the Washington Capitals, the Ottawa Senators clinched a playoff berth for the 14th time in the modern franchise's history. This would also mark the first time the team clinched in back-to-back seasons since the 2006\u201307 and 2007\u201308 seasons and the first time the Senators made the playoffs while the New Jersey Devils missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs\nAfter the end of the season on April 28, Ottawa finished seventh, drawing the Montreal Canadiens in the first round of the playoffs. It was the first playoff series between Montreal and Ottawa since 1928, when the original Senators were defeated by the Montreal Maroons in a two-game, total goal playoff. The Canadiens played the original Senators in the 1927 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nThe first game of the series was won by the Senators 4\u20132 in Montreal. During the game, Senators defenceman Eric Gryba checked Montreal center Lars Eller, causing a concussion and facial fractures. Gryba would be given a two-game suspension by the league for the hit. Montreal took 27 shots at Craig Anderson in the second period, and 50 overall. The Senators won the game on a three-goal third period, erasing a 2\u20131 deficit to win the game. Anderson lost a tooth on a shot off his mask, but continued and was named the game's first star. The 27 shots in the second against Anderson set a new playoff record by the Senators for shots allowed, and the Canadiens for shots taken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nIn the second game, Montreal played without Eller and regulars Max Pacioretty and Brian Gionta. The Senators could not capitalize on the Canadiens missing the players and lost 3\u20131. Montreal goaltender Carey Price would be named the first star of the game. Like Anderson in the first game, Price would also lose a tooth and be named first star.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nIn the third game in Ottawa, Senators' rookie Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored his first NHL hat-trick; his first goal was the game-winner. On the goal, Pageau lost a tooth on a stick to the face, becoming the third consecutive first star to lose a tooth in the series. The Senators played a more physical style in the third game and focussed on wearing down the Canadiens' top defenceman P. K. Subban. Subban would be ineffective, recording more penalty minutes than playing time, before being ejected. The Senators broke the game open in the third, scoring four goals to win 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nAfter the Senators took a 4\u20131 lead, all players on the ice for both teams except the goaltenders fought. Eight players were ejected. The game tied or set several Senators' records: the four goals in the third period matched the record for most in a period; the two power-play goals in the period matched another record; the 16 penalties and 93 minutes taken by the Senators in the third set a new record; the 107 minutes of penalties during the game also set a new record. The margin of victory matched the highest by a Senators team in the playoffs, matching a 5\u20130 defeat of Toronto in the 2002 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nIn game four, the teams stuck mostly to hockey: only four penalties were called, all minors. The first period was scoreless. In the second period, the Canadiens' Subban and Alex Galchenyuk scored to give the Canadiens a 2\u20130 lead into the third period. In the third period, the Canadiens played a tight defensive game, while the Senators pressed to equalize, out-shooting Montreal 13\u20134. Mika Zibanejad scored on a deflection off his skate. It was ruled on the ice and after video review to be a good goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nWith 22 seconds left, and Anderson on the bench for an extra attacker, Cory Conacher scored to tie the game and force overtime. In the final seconds of the third period, Zibanejad shot on the Montreal net and the shot was deflected by Carey Price. However, on the shot Price was injured and was unable to play in overtime, his position taken by Peter Budaj. In overtime, Kyle Turris wristed a shot on net that was deflected by Canadiens' defenceman Raphael Diaz past Budaj. The goal won the game for the Senators 3\u20132 and the Senators took the series lead three games to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nTwo Canadiens could not play in game five at the Bell Centre: Price and Brian Gionta. The Senators scored twice in the first period before the Canadiens scored late to close the margin to 2\u20131 at the first intermission. The Senators restored their two-goal lead in the second on a controversial short-handed goal by Turris. Turris fell into the crease of Montreal goaltender Peter Budaj and the puck was shot on net and deflected in off Turris. It was ruled a good goal as Turris had been pushed into the net by a Montreal player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2)\nIn the third period, the Senators scored three goals, finishing 6\u20131 and eliminating the Canadiens. For the series, the Senators did not allow a third period goal by the Canadiens in any game. It was also the first time that the Sens had won a playoff series since eliminating the Buffalo Sabres in game five of the 2007 Eastern Conference Final on May 19, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Pittsburgh Penguins (1)\nThe Penguins defeated the New York Islanders in six games to advance to the Conference Semi-final versus the Senators. The Penguins won the final two games with backup goaltender Tomas Vokoun in net, and Vokoun drew the starting goaltender assignment for the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Pittsburgh Penguins (1)\nIn game one, the Penguins scored two power-play goals and a short-handed goal on way to a 4\u20131 win on home ice. In game two, Sidney Crosby scored a hat-trick and the Penguins held off a Senators comeback to win 4\u20133 and go ahead in the series two games to none going to Ottawa. Game three saw the return of Jason Spezza to the Senators' lineup after a long injury layoff due to back surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs, Ottawa Senators (7) vs. Pittsburgh Penguins (1)\nThe Penguins very nearly took a three games to none lead in the series, but gave up a last-minute short-handed goal by Daniel Alfredsson which sent the game to overtime. The game was won in the second overtime on a goal by Colin Greening, his third of the series, on a rebound of an Andre Benoit shot. The Penguins won game four in Ottawa 7\u20133 to put the Senators on the brink of elimination. The Penguins won the series at home in game five, winning 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Senators. Stats reflect time with the Senators only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230766-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ottawa Senators season, Draft picks\nOttawa Senators' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on June 22\u201323, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Oud-Heverlee Leuven's 11th competitive season in professional football. It was their second season in the Belgian Pro League. A promising start by OH Leuven and a 5-match winning streak in October resulted in a third place after 13 matchdays, but thereafter the team dropped in the standings to finally end 10th. In the playoffs, OH Leuven won their group but then lost the playoff final to Gent. In the Belgian Cup, OHL immediately lost their first match just like the previous season, this time going out to Oostende.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, April/May\nOn April 27, a first transfer for the new season is announced, as Belgian defender Kenny Thompson signs for OHL, coming from Lierse and two weeks later on May 14, OHL also signs Christopher Verbist from Standard Li\u00e8ge. Verbist played an impressive 2011\u201312 season in the Belgian Second Division, as he was on loan to Second Division champions Charleroi from Standard Li\u00e8ge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, April/May\nOn May 25, there is a lot of transfer activity at OHL, as two players leave and one is signed. Both Wingback Lionel Gendarme and central defender Pieter Nys decide to sign with a second division team. Gendarme moves to Oostende, while Nys moves to Dutch side Sparta. Meanwhile, on the same day, OHL confirms the signature of G\u00fcnther Vanaudenaerde from recently relegated Westerlo. Due to injury, Vanaudenaerde missed most of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, June\nBeing founded in 2002, Oud-Heverlee Leuven celebrates its tenth anniversary. During the festivities, results of the \"merit\" award are presented. Through a web poll, the OHL fans chose Fran\u00e7ois Sterchele as the player having the most merit during the ten inaugural years. Sterchele played for OHL during the 2004\u201305 season, in which OHL successfully promoted to the Belgian Second Division, with Sterchele the club top scorer, including eight goals during the promotion playoffs. Other players completing the top 5 were (in order): Bjorn Ruytinx, Jordan Remacle, Joeri Vastmans and Hans Goethuys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, June\nAfter signing G\u00fcnther Vanaudenaerde from Westerlo earlier, OHL confirms also the signing of Westerlo youngster Wout Bastiaens on June 5 and announces a few days later that another promising youngster joins the squad as Ben Yagan (17) is promoted from the reserve team to the first team for the coming season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, June\nOn June 11, the Belgian Pro League fixtures for the 2012\u201313 season are announced. Oud-Heverlee Leuven opens the season with an away match to Mons on 28 July 2012. One week later, Genk will be the opponent for the first home match. Later that same day, OHL first announces that Arnold Rijsenburg has signed as part of the staff, becoming the second assistant first team coach for head manager Ronny Van Geneugden, before spreading the news that the club has signed yet another Belgian defender. Twenty-six-year-old Ludovic Buysens has signed a two-year deal, signing from recently relegated Sint-Truiden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, June\nThree days later, OHL sign a fifth Belgian defender with Jonas De Roeck. The experienced 32-year-old was a free player after his contract had expired at Bundesliga team Augsburg. Meanwhile, Sint-Truiden announce the signing of Maxime Annys from OHL on their website. Annys had been with OHL since 2009, but was deemed surplus and allowed to leave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, June\nIn need of a new goalkeeper since the departure of Thomas Kaminski following the end of the previous season, OHL finally choose to sign Logan Bailly. With Bailly, OHL sign a 26 year old Belgian international goalkeeper, who has already gained 8 caps for the Red Devils. Bailly gained fame when playing for Genk, leading to a lucrative transfer to Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach in 2008. After some less successful loans, Bailly now moves to OHL, hoping to relaunch his career under Ronny Van Geneugden, who he knows from his period at Genk. Bailly is given a one-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, June\nInitial signs were already bad as Captain Bjorn Ruytinx was forced to walk off the field with a swollen knee during the friendly match against Kampenhout on 27 June, but two days later the feared news is confirmed that Ruytinx has indeed suffered an anterior cruciate ligament injury. Ruytinx, who had just signed a one-year contract extension in March 2012 to perform one more season for Oud-Heverlee Leuven, is now expected to be out for about 6 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, June\nOn the last day of June 2012, OHL announce the signing of Gambian forward Ibou, who signs a three-year contract with an optional extra season. He is transferred from Kortrijk, where he has played since 2008, although that includes a six-month loan to Mechelen and a season-long loan to Mons. Later that same day, news is released that new signings Logan Bailly and Kenny Thompson are both out for weeks. Goalkeeper Bailly has suffered a broken finger during training, while Thompson is suffering from meningitis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, July\nAlthough it was already known that Ghanaian striker Ibrahim Salou was going to be released, the news becomes official only when Belgian Third Division team La Louvi\u00e8re Centre announce the signing of Salou on their website on July 18. OHL draws much more media attention on July 20, when the transfer of last season OHL top scorer Jordan Remacle to Gent is now officially announced. Following weeks of rumours considering the future of Remacle, who requested a transfer and even handed in a doctors note to allow him to stay absent from training, the deal is now complete. One day later, this is followed by the news of signing Evariste Ngolok, a Belgian midfielder. After Wout Bastiaens and G\u00fcnther Vanaudenaerde, Ngolok is the third player coming from Westerlo to sign for OHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, July\nIn their opening match of the 2012\u201313 Belgian Pro League on July 28, Oud-Heverlee Leuven suffer a heavy loss, going down 5\u20132 away to Mons, with goals for OHL coming from Karel Geraerts and new signing Ibou, who scores his first goal for OHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, August\nOHL presents the team kits for the new season, the main difference being that the logo of head sponsor Option is now blending in with the shirt. The home kits remain white, while the away kits will now be green, with the third kit being coloured red. Head coach Ronny Van Geneugden claims it to be \"a youthful kit, matching the youthful character of our supporters, who will surely identify themselves with it\". One day later, the 5 000th season ticket is sold. This is a large increase of the record for OH Leuven, as the record stood at 4 772, set during the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, August\nPlaying for the first time in their new kits, the team bounce back from trailing 0\u20132 with 15 minutes to go, to draw 2\u20132 with Genk in their first home match of the season. During that same match, defender G\u00fcnther Vanaudenaerde tears one of the muscles in his abdomen and is expected to be out for 4 to 6 weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, August\nThe following week, transfer activity is again increased, as OHL loans out three Belgian players to Belgian Second Division team Antwerp. Defender Nicky Hayen and midfielders Kevin Roelandts and Jorn Vermeulen join the Antwerp team for one season, while Christian Pouga is presented as the latest new signing. The 26 year old striker from Cameroon is signed from Portuguese team Mar\u00edtimo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, August\nOnly 34 seconds into the match against Gent, Ibou scores his third of the season. Eventually the match against the new team of Jordan Remacle ends in a 1\u20131 draw, a small revenge for OHL after the 6\u20131 loss during the previous season. One week later, OHL books a first win, coming back twice to beat Cercle Brugge 3\u20132 at home, with Evariste Ngolok scoring his first goal for OHL. Other goals came from Ibou and Geraerts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, August\nAlthough various media already reported the coming of Ivorian defender Ali Bamba to OHL on loan from Le Mans, the deal is cancelled on 21 August 2012 after Bamba fails his medical tests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, August\nAgainst an Anderlecht squad in which no less than 8 first team players have been replaced to keep them fresh for their upcoming Champions League fixture, OHL draws 1\u20131 at Den Dreef. For the fifth game in a row, Ibou gets on the scoresheet, thereby taking the lead in the goal scorer standings, however he also suffers an injury, causing him to be sidelined for about a week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, August\nOn the last day of the transfer window, OHL confirmed the signing of the 23-year-old Zimbabwean midfielder Ovidy Karuru from French side US Boulogne. It was also announced that Antoine Palate would be loaned for one season to Diegem Sport in the Belgian Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, September\nAn injury time goal from Christian Pouga secures one point for OHL away to Lierse. The absence of Ibou is clear on the pitch, as OHL struggles to create big scoring opportunities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, September\nOHL enters the draw for the Belgian Cup and is drawn away to Belgian Second Division team Oostende in the 16th finals. Should OH Leuven get past Oostende, they will play another away game, against the winner of the match between Brussels and Waasland-Beveren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, September\nAfter one week break because of international football, OHL plays a dull match at home against Zulte Waregem. With just under ten minutes to play, Zulte Waregem scores the only goal of the match to give OHL a first home loss of the season. OHL also drops into 14th position, just two points clear of the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, September\nAvailable as a free player, OH Leuven adds 29-year-old Brazilian defender Robson to the squad on September 20, giving him a one-year contract with a possible one-year extension. Robson had been training with the team already for several weeks and previously played for Mar\u00edtimo, alongside Christian Pouga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, September\nAlthough Lokeren took the lead twice, OHL manages to keep one point in the away match at Daknam, with first Wim Raymaekers equalizing to 1\u20131 and finally Karel Geraerts scoring the 2\u20132 equaliser just before the end of the match. During the following midweek match, OHL is kicked straight out of the cup in their first match, for the second consecutive season. Against Oostende, a red card for Ludovic Buysens and a handling error by Logan Bailly leading to the opening goal allow the second division team to eventually win easily, by a score of 2\u20131. For OHL, youngster Joren Dehond manages to score his first goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, September\nAfter the disappointing cup loss, OHL responds with a spectacular home win against newly promoted Waasland-Beveren. After two goals from Christian Pouga and a stunning free kick by Stef\u00e1n G\u00edslason, Ibou completes the game with two more goals, the last one in injury time just seconds after he missed a penalty kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, October\nIn October, OHL continues where they left off and even improves their level, extending the streak of consecutive matches won to five. First the team starts with a 0\u20134 win away to Charleroi in which Chuka, who had been struggling to find the net, completes a hattrick. The final goal came again from Ibou, who now ties with Club Brugge striker Carlos Bacca for the lead in the standings for top scorer with 8 goals. Thereafter, a previously undefeated Club Brugge comes to lose at Den Dreef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0025-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, October\nAfter going down already with under five minutes played due to a goal from Carlos Bacca, Ibou scores a hattrick to race past Bacca in the top scorers' standings with 11 goals from the same number of matches. Ovidy Karuru adds his first goal for OHL to result in a final 4\u20131 score. With the win, OH Leuven moves into position 6 in the standings. Also, for the first time since the expansion of Den Dreef to a capacity of 9.500, OHL plays in front of a sellout crowd. Since the 1970s, there have not been that number of supporters at a football match in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, October\nThe fourth win is achieved away to Beerschot, where OHL struggled for an hour until Kenneth Van Goethem put the ball past Stijn Stijnen. After taking the lead, the team controlled the flow of play and extended the lead further through goals from Karel Geraerts and Stef\u00e1n G\u00edslason. In injury time, Hern\u00e1n Losada scored the consolation goal for Beerschot from a penalty kick. During a midweek match, OHL moves into third place in the standings after the winning streak is extended to five matches against KV Mechelen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, October\nFor a second consecutive sellout crowd and with only 52 seconds played, Christian Pouga heads in the first goal from an assist by Ibou. After an equalizer by Mechelen, OHL scores two more goals through Chuka and Ibou to win the match 3\u20131. Downside is the injury of central defender Wim Raymaekers, who suffers a knee injury during the first half. Although the injury is less severe than originally feared, Raymaekers still has to undergo surgery and is thereafter estimated to be out for 4 to 5 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, November\nAfter moving into third position following the month of October, OHL starts struggling in November. A 2\u20130 loss away to Standard Li\u00e8ge is followed by a lacklustre 0\u20130 draw at home against Kortrijk and a loss against Mons, also at Den Dreef. In the latter match, an error by Jonas De Roeck allows Mons striker J\u00e9r\u00e9my Perbet to score the opening goal after just two minutes. Thereafter, Perbet completes a hattrick which means the late goal by Christian Pouga is no more than a consolation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, November\nOHL ends the month with a positive note however, as the team holds Genk to a 1\u20131 draw, with Ibou converting an injury time penalty to grab the point in Genk. With that, OHL moves into 8th place, seemingly headed for a safe mid-table position as the gap with the relegation zone has grown to 11 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, December\nAlthough Karel Geraerts manages to equalise after an early goal by Gent, OHL fails to win, as the home game ends in a 1\u20131 draw. One day later, 26-year-old first goalkeeper Logan Bailly signs a 1-year contract extension, keeping him in Leuven until 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, December\nOne week after the draw with Gent, OHL scores a third consecutive 1\u20131 draw, away to bottom league team Cercle Brugge. Both goals are scored through a penalty kick, with the goal from Ibou cancelled out by Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen. Although a fourth 1\u20131 draw would have been welcome away to Anderlecht to deny them an eight consecutive league win, OH Leuven does lose by a score of 2\u20131, the first-ever loss by OHL against Anderlecht in the league. Ibou scored the goal for OHL after a fast counterattack and as OH Leuven had several opportunities, coach Van Geneugden states:\"I have congratulated my players after the match because we should be proud of our achievement today\". Nevertheless, OH Leuven has now suffered 7 matches without a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, December\nJust two weeks after first goalkeeper Bailly, it is now second goalkeeper Yves Lenaerts who prolongs his contract. In contrary to Bailly however, Lenaerts extends his contract by three seasons, to 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, December\nThe non-winning streak of OHL continues, as before the end of the year, two more matches are played without a win. First Lierse, who are fighting to avoid relegation, come to Den Dreef to score a point in a 2\u20132 draw, with Ibou and Geraerts scoring the goals for the Leuven team. Thereafter, OHL loses against overachievers Zulte Waregem due to an injury-time winner by Habib Habibou. A late goal by Chuka had cancelled out an earlier goal by Habibou and seemed to be giving OHL a point, but Habibou decided otherwise. OHL thus finishes the year in 10th place with 28th points out of 22 matches, just one point less than the team earned during the whole 2011\u201312 Belgian Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, December\nRight before the end of the year, captain Kenneth Van Goethem is the third player to extend his contract. The midfielder adds three years and now has a contract until 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, January\nWith the winter transfer window opening, several teams in the Belgian Pro League decide to make some changes in their personnel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0033-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, January\nIn the first week of 2013, OHL announces three new transfers: on 1 January, 18-year-old Belgian defender C\u00e9dric Buekers is signed from Belgian Second Division team Sint-Truiden until 2015, two days later the team also announces that two more players have been signed: 20-year-old Belgian striker Alessandro Cerigioni comes from Lommel United and is signed immediately, while defender Zainoul Haidara from Guinea will finish the season with his team FC Bleid-Gaume in the Belgian Third Division and join OHL in the summer of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, January\nOH Leuven continues to give players contract extensions, as both young striker Ben Yagan (18) and experienced Brazilian central defender Robson (29) prolong their stay in Leuven. Yagan is signed until 2015, Robson until 2016. One day later, Frederik Boi leaves the club as he moves back to his former team Cercle Brugge on loan. Due to several minor injuries, Boi had played only a few matches and had asked to be transferred and not to participate in the winter training camp with the rest of the team in Malta. With the contract of Boi expiring in 2013, it seems unlikely to see him return to OHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, January\nIn the first match after the winter break, Lokeren holds a 0\u20132 lead at half-time through two goals by Benjamin Mokulu. Goals by Thomas Azevedo and Karel Geraerts allow OHL to draw level, but thereafter Lokeren manages to score four more goals to end the game 2\u20136. Although Waasland-Beveren only played with 10 players for almost 35 minutes after a red card, the non-winning streak continues and grows to 11 matches as OH Leuven loses 2\u20130 in Beveren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, January\nTwo more transfers are completed before the end of the transfer window: 31-year-old Croatian central defender Tomislav Mikuli\u0107 is signed on loan from Beerschot until the end of the season, while striker Christian Pouga is loaned out to Lierse until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, February\nA goal by Chuka ends the spell without a win as it proves enough to beat Charleroi at home. For OHL it is the first win since 31 October, which could have been followed by a second win away to Club Brugge as the team were leading 0\u20131 with only half an hour to play, with former Club Brugge player Karel Geraerts putting OHL in front. However, after a red card for Kenny Thompson, Brugge took control and won 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0037-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, February\nOHL again fails to win one week later against bottom league team Beerschot, with a late equalizer by Benito Raman cancelling out the goal by Ibou. However, the team responds with a 1\u20132 away win to Mechelen, with Koen Weuts and Chuka getting on the scoresheet. During that same match, Mazin Ahmed Al-Huthayfi is brought in as a substitute during the injury time. The signing of Al-Huthayfi had not been announced, causing eyebrows to be raised as to who was this player. Apparently, Al-Huthayfi was signed on loan from Ittihad FC until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, March\nOHL ends the regular season in a bad way after suffering a severe 0\u20134 loss at home against Standard Li\u00e8ge, with Imoh Ezekiel scoring for Standard after only 13 seconds, after which Logan Bailly saves a last minute penalty to keep Kortrijk to a 0\u20130 draw. Overall, OH Leuven was never in any danger of relegation and ends the season safely in tenth place with 36 points. Regarding the playoffs, the team is paired with Charleroi, Mechelen and Waasland-Beveren, against which the team scored 15 out of 18 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, March\nOHL starts the playoffs with a 3\u20131 victory over Waasland-Beveren. Youngsters Alessandro Cerigioni and Joren Dehond score their first league goal for Leuven, with the other goals coming from Chuka (for OHL) and Stijn De Smet for Waasland-Beveren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, April & May\nThe month of April starts with the news that Icelandic midfielder Stef\u00e1n G\u00edslason signs a new contract to keep him with Leuven for another season, until 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, April & May\nThe victory against Waasland-Beveren is not followed up with more good performances, as Charleroi first takes revenge for the 0\u20134 loss during the regular competition, beating OHL 3\u20130 in Charleroi, after which Leuven loses again by three goals to nil, now at home to KV Mechelen. OH Leuven thereby drops to the last position in the group with only three points, but all is still open, as after three matches Charleroi has five points, while both KV Mechelen and Waasland-Beveren have four points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, April & May\nAfter being down 1\u20130 at halftime to KV Mechelen in Mechelen, the season seems to be finished for OHL, but in the second half OHL comes back, scoring no less than five goals to take the win. Two goals came from Ibou, with the others provided by Alessandro Cerigioni, Tomislav Mikuli\u0107 and Robson. In the following match at home against Charleroi, Ibou fails to score a penalty kick, which proves costly as the match ends 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0042-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, April & May\nWith three teams tied on 7 points and only Waasland-Beveren trailing on 5 points, OHL knows that a win away to Waasland-Beveren will win the group unless KV Mechelen wins by a larger margin in Charleroi. Mechelen grasps a late 1\u20132 win due to an injury time goal, but captain Bjorn Ruytinx, injured for most of the season and returning for the first time again in the starting lineup, scores a vital goal to hand OH Leuven the win against Waasland-Beveren. With that, OHL wins group B of the playoffs and will face group A winners Gent. With negotiations and rumours ongoing for a few weeks already, club icon Bjorn Ruytinx signs a new contract tying him to the club for one more season, until 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Season Overview, April & May\nIn the playoff final, OHL proves to be no match for Gent, twice losing by four goals to one, first in Leuven, then in Ghent. The goals for Leuven came from Bjorn Ruytinx (at home) and Evariste Ngolok (in Ghent). With that, the season ends for OHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Team kit\nThe team kits for the 2012\u201313 season are produced by Vermarc and the main shirt sponsor is Option which is displayed on the front center of the shirt. Other sponsors featuring on the kit: Rayden Transport and Vermarc (shirt front), Dataflow and Lotto (shirt back), Tegel Concept (shirt sleeves) and Rayden Transport, GMS Leuven, Stad Leuven and Mercedes (shorts). OHL still plays in white during home matches, but now has green as primary colour for the away matches. A red outfit is available also as third kit. The goalkeeper kit is normally green during home matches and red during away matches, keeping in mind that it always needs to differ enough from the kit colour of the opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, First team squad\nIndicates that the player was only part of the team during the first half of the season\u00a0\u00a0Indicates that the player was only part of the team during the second half of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Competitions, Belgian Pro League\nOHL's second season in the Belgian Pro League began on 28 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Competitions, Belgian Pro League, Regular season\nPoints at home: 21 Points away from home: 15 Points against 2011/12 Playoff 1 teams (6): 10 (27.78%)Points against 2011/12 Playoff 2 teams (7): 17 (40.48%)Points against newly promoted teams (2): 9 (75%)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Competitions, Belgian Pro League, Regular season\nBiggest home win: 5\u20132 vs. Waasland-Beveren; 4\u20131 vs. Club BruggeBiggest home defeat: 2\u20136 vs. LokerenBiggest away win: 0\u20134 vs. CharleroiBiggest away defeat: 5\u20132 vs. Mons", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Competitions, Belgian Pro League, Regular season\nBiggest home attendance: 9,599 vs. Club Brugge, vs. Mechelen and vs. Standard Li\u00e8geSmallest home attendance: 6,746 vs. Cercle BruggeBiggest away attendance: 23,800 vs. Club BruggeSmallest away attendance: 3,500 vs. Mons", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Competitions, Belgian Pro League, Playoffs\nAfter finishing 10th during the regular season, OHL was placed in Group B of the Europa League Playoff together with Mechelen, Charleroi and Waasland-Beveren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230767-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oud-Heverlee Leuven season, Competitions, Belgian Pro League, Playoffs\nBy winning playoff Group B, OHL qualified for the playoff final against Group A winners Gent. This two legged final was lost on aggregate 8\u20132, ending the season for OHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230768-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oxford United F.C. season\nOxford United F.C. season 2012\u201313 was the club's third season in League Two after returning from the Conference. Oxford United had finished 9th in League Two in 2011\u201312 and failed to improve on this position in 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230768-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oxford United F.C. season\nThe club's opening nine league fixtures, consisting of three wins followed by six defeats, set the tone of a campaign in which the club were never serious contenders for a playoff place and which alternated between winning and losing streaks; a case in point was the three-game run of victories at the end of the season after the possibility of promotion had disappeared, which put a somewhat flattering gloss on Oxford's final position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230768-0000-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oxford United F.C. season\nThey were knocked out by higher-division opposition in the early rounds of both the FA Cup and League Cup (including elimination at the hands of Sheffield United from the former competition for the second year in succession), but reached the Area Semi-final of the Football League Trophy and won the Oxfordshire Senior Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230768-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oxford United F.C. season\nIt was the club's first season under the chairmanship of owner Ian Lenagan, who had taken over from Kelvin Thomas in the previous close season. James Constable finished the season as overall top scorer for the fifth consecutive season with 14 goals (9 in the league), while Alfie Potter and Tom Craddock jointly topped the list of League scorers, with 10 League goals apiece. During the season, veteran defender Michael Duberry overtook the club record for the oldest first-team outfield player, his final appearance coming in the last game of the season against Accrington Stanley at the age of 37 years and 195 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230768-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oxford United F.C. season\nIt was the club's 119th year in existence, their 113th of competitive football and their 64th since turning professional. This article covers the period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230768-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oxford United F.C. season, Team kit\nThe previous season was the last in a three-year deal with Nike Inour kit. The club's main sponsor for the 2012\u201313 season was Bridle Insurance, an Oxfordshire-based insurance company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230768-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Oxford United F.C. season, Match fixtures and results, League Two\nFor more information on this season's Football League Two, see 2012\u201313 Football League Two. Oxford United's home games are played at the Kassam Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230769-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAOK FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was PAOK Football Club's 87th in existence and the club's 54th consecutive season in the top flight of Greek football. The team entered the Greek Football Cup in the Third Round and also competed in UEFA Europa League starting from the third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230769-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAOK FC season\nOn 31 May 2012, Giorgos Donis signed a two-year contract, becoming PAOK's manager after the sacking of L\u00e1szl\u00f3 B\u00f6l\u00f6ni in the end of 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230769-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230769-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAOK FC season, Statistics, Goalscorers\nLast updated: All matchesSource: Match reports in Competitive matches 0 shown as blank", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230769-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAOK FC season, Statistics, Assists\nLast updated: 17 April 2013Source: , , 0 shown as blank", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230769-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAOK FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 14 April 2013 Source: Match reports in competitive matches, , , Only competitive matches Ordered by , \u00a0 and", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230769-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAOK FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\n= Number of bookings; \u00a0 = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230770-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAS Giannina F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is PAS Giannina F.C. 's 18th competitive season in the top flight of Greek football, 3th season in the Super League Greece, and 47th year in existence as a football club. They also compete in the Greek Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230770-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAS Giannina F.C. season, Transfers, Summer, Out\nFor recent transfers, see List of Greek football transfers summer 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230771-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAS Hamedan F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is PAS Hamedan's 2nd season in the Azadegan League. The team was managed by Vinko Begovi\u0107 and captained by Mohammad Alavi. Vinko Begovi\u0107 was replaced with Omid Tayeri in the middle of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230771-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAS Hamedan F.C. season, First-team squad\nas of September 8, 2012Note: 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, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230771-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAS Hamedan F.C. 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230771-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAS Hamedan F.C. 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230771-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PAS Hamedan F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230772-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA Philippine Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Philippine Cup was the first conference of the 2012\u201313 PBA season. The tournament started on September 30, 2012 and concluded on January 16, 2013. The tournament does not allow teams to hire foreign players or imports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230772-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA Philippine Cup, Format\nThe following format was observed for the duration of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230773-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA Philippine Cup Finals\nThe 2012\u201313 Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Philippine Cup Finals was the best-of-7 championship series of the 2012\u201313 PBA Philippine Cup, and the conclusion of the conference's playoffs. The Talk 'N Text Tropang Texters and the Rain or Shine Elasto Painters competed for the 107th championship contested by the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230773-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA Philippine Cup Finals\nTalk 'N Text defeated Rain or Shine by sweeping the series, 4\u20130 and winning their third consecutive Philippine Cup. The Tropang Texters will also have permanent possession of the Jun Bernardino Trophy, which is awarded to the champions of the tournament since the 2006\u201307 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230773-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA Philippine Cup Finals, Background, Head-to-head matchup\nThe lone conference head-to-head matchup of the two teams was won by Talk 'N Text.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230774-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA season\nThe 2012\u201313 PBA season was the 38th season of the Philippine Basketball Association. The season formally opened on September 30, 2012, and finished October 25, 2013. This was the longest in PBA history with 13-month span. The season continued to use the three-conference format, starting with the Philippine Cup, or the traditional All-Filipino Conference. The mid season Commissioner's Cup will continue to feature unlimited height limit for imports. The last conference of the season, the Governors' Cup will have imports with a 6'5\" height limit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230774-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA season\nThe first activity of the season was the 2012 PBA Draft held on August 19, 2012 at Robinsons Midtown Mall in Ermita, Manila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230774-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA season, Arenas\nLike several Metro Manila-centric leagues, most games are held at arenas within Metro Manila, and sometimes, Antipolo. Games outside this area are called \"out-of-town\" games, and are usually played on Saturdays. Provincial arenas usually host one game, rarely two; these arenas typically host only once per season, but could return occasionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230774-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBA season, Opening ceremonies\nThe season began on September 30, with Barangay Ginebra San Miguel defeating GlobalPort Batang Pier, 110-90.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230775-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBL season\nThe 2012\u201313 Russian Professional Basketball League (PBL) was the third and last season of the Russian Professional League, and the 22nd overall season of the Russian Professional Championship. The season started on 3 October 2012 and ended 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230775-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBL season, Unification with VTB United League\nIn May 2012, all the PBL clubs gathered to decide which format would be used for the next season, and some of the club's directors raised the possibility of uniting with the VTB United League, in order to produce greater competition between the Russian basketball clubs. They suggested that the new league would be named the Eastern European Professional Basketball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230775-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBL season, Unification with VTB United League\nIn July 2012, the Council of VTB United League gave a definitive decision. It was decided that the PBL league would continue for one more year, with some of the games of the VTB United League that took place between two Russian clubs being counted as PBL games. The first tier Russian clubs then replaced the PBL with the VTB United League as their new national domestic league championship, starting with the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230775-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PBL season, Format\nThere were no league playoffs during this season. The team that finished first in the regular season standings was declared the league's champions. All teams met each other at home and away venues. In the regular season, each team played 18 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230776-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Botev Plovdiv season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Botev Plovdiv's 1st season in A Group after their return to the top division of the Bulgarian football league system. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club will play during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230776-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Botev Plovdiv season, Players in/out, Winter 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230776-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Botev Plovdiv season, Players in/out, Winter 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230776-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Botev Plovdiv season, Matches, Bulgarian Cup\nBotev won 9\u22121 on aggregate and qualified for the Third Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230777-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Moscow season\nThe 2012\u201313 CSKA season was the 21st successive season that the club will play in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was PFC CSKA Sofia's 65th consecutive season in A Group. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club will play during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Players in/out, Summer 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Players in/out, Summer 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Players in/out, Winter 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Players in/out, Winter 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Competitions, Bulgarian Cup\n2\u20132 on aggregate. CSKA won on away goals and qualified for the Third Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Competitions, Bulgarian Cup\nCSKA won 7\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Competitions, Europa League\nBy ending as runner-up from A Grupa 2011/12, CSKA Sofia qualified for the Europa League. They started in the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, Competitions, Europa League\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Mura 05 won on away goals. CSKA is eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230778-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC CSKA Sofia season, UEFA Club Rankings\nThis is the current UEFA Club Rankings, including season 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230779-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Cherno More Varna season\nThis page covers all relevant details regarding PFC Cherno More Varna for all official competitions inside the 2012\u201313 season. These are A PFG and Bulgarian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230779-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Squad statistics\nKey:\u00a0\u00a0\u2021 On loan from another club \u00a0\u00a0* First appearance(s) for the club", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230779-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Cherno More Varna season, Squad statistics\nCorrect as of 26 May 2013. Starting appearances are listed first, followed by substitute appearances in parentheses where applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230780-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Levski Sofia season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Levski Sofia's 91st season in the First League. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club has played during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230780-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Levski Sofia 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-00230781-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Ludogorets Razgrad season\nThe 2012-13 season is Ludogorets Razgrad's second season in A Football Group, of which they are defending Champions. They will also take part in the Bulgarian Cup, SuperCup and enter the UEFA Champions League at the second qualifying round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230781-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Ludogorets Razgrad 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230782-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Turan Tovuz season\nThe Turan Tovuz 2011-12 season was Turan Tovuz's twentieth Azerbaijan Premier League season. Turan Tovuz started the season under the management of Asgar Abdullayev, but he resigned and was replaced by Afghan Talybov on 12 October 2012. Turan Tovuz ended the season in 11th-place resulting in relegation to the Azerbaijan First Division for the 2013-14 season. They also participated in the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Cup getting knocked out in the second round on penalties to Khazar Lankaran after the game ended 1-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230782-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Turan Tovuz 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-00230782-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Turan Tovuz 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230782-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Turan Tovuz 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230782-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Turan Tovuz 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230782-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFC Turan Tovuz 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship\nThe 2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship (also known as 2012\u201313 PFF\u2013Smart National Club Championship) was the 2nd season of the PFF National Men's Club Championship, a Filipino association football competition organized by the Philippine Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship\nOn February 2, 2013, Ceres defeated PSG with a 1\u20130 scoreline to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Competition format\nSimilar to the previous tournament, the Smart National Club championships this year had cluster and regional eliminations outside of Manila and the quarterfinal matches were hosted in the provinces. There were two clusters for Luzon, one for Visayas, four for Mindanao and one for the National Capital Region. After the cluster eliminations, there was a Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao eliminations, where the top two teams advanced to the quarterfinal round along with the top 10 teams that were participating in the UFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Competition format\nThere was another drawing of lots for the quarterfinal round and if a provincial team faced a UFL club, that game will be hosted by the provincial football associations. The Provincial Football Association (PFA) teams who made the quarterfinal round was given a transfer window to allow teams to add or drop eight players for their 25-man squad. This was done to help boost the provincial teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Competition format\nTeams played in a single round-robin format with the top teams advancing to the regional eliminations. Top two teams from each group advanced to the Round of 16, the start of the knockout stage, wherein they were joined by the top 10 UFL teams. In the Round of 16, qualified teams were divided into two groups. The top 8 UFL teams comprised the first group and the remaining two UFL teams joined the six regional qualifiers from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao in the second group. Only two matches were played in Manila as the rest were played in the provinces. If a provincial team drew a UFL team, the match will be played in their turf. The top eight teams from the Round of 16 advanced to the quarterfinals, top four to the semifinals and top two to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Competition format\nTop two teams in Mindanao joined top two teams of Luzon, top two teams from Visayas and top ten United Football League teams for the round of 16 which started on 12 January 2012. The tournament will also serve as a qualifying process of teams which have plans to join the country\u2019s premier football league \u2013 the United Football League (UFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round\nMember Associations (MA) of the Philippine Football Federation organized their own tournaments as part of Provincial Qualifying Rounds to determine their representatives to the Group Stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round, National Capital Region Cluster\nTop ten teams of the 2012 UFL Cup from National Capital Region F.A. moved to the knockout stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round, National Capital Region Cluster\n1 Competing as a guest club in the UFL; General Trias International FC is a member of Cavite Football Association. 2 Competing as a Division 1 club in the UFL; Stallion is a member of Iloilo Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round, Luzon Cluster\nNorth, Central and South Luzon cluster eliminations were held in La Trinidad, Benguet on October 17, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round, Visayas Cluster\nVisayas region with its lone cluster held its regional elimination in San Carlos City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round, Visayas Cluster\nIloilo Football Association and Negros Oriental Football Association withdrew participation later on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round, Visayas Cluster\nCeres and Cebu Queen City United qualified for the knockout stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Qualifying Round, Mindanao Cluster\nMindanao hosted the most number of cluster elimination rounds, taking place in Malaybalay on 17 October 2012 while South Cotabato and Dipolog City commenced thereafter. Davao City commenced their qualification matches earlier, on October 3, 2012. 16 football associations in the Mindanao region took part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Regional Championships\nGames were played in single round-robin format where winners and runners-up advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Regional Championships, All-Luzon Championship\nLuzon will stage their regional eliminations in Laguna. Winners and runners-up from both Luzon clusters will advance to the All-Luzon Championship and will compete in single-round robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 92], "content_span": [93, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Regional Championships, All-Mindanao Championship\nMindanao will stage their regional eliminations in Davao City. Winners from the four Mindanao clusters will advance to the All-Mindanao Championship and will compete in single-round robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Regional Championships, All-Mindanao Championship\nAdvocates FC back out at the last minute, leaving three clubs in the regional eliminations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230783-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PFF National Men's Club Championship, Knockout stage\nThe draw for the qualified teams from regional qualifiers was made at the Philippine Football Federation headquarters on 7 December 2012. Knock-out stages was held starting January 19, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230784-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w season\nPGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w 2012\u20132013 season is the 2012/2013 volleyball season for Polish professional volleyball club PGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w. The club won bronze medal of FIVB Volleyball Club World Championship, was 5th team of PlusLiga, lost in quarterfinals of Polish Cup and lost in playoff 12 of CEV Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230785-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PLK season\nThe 2012\u201313 Polish Basketball League \u2013 for sponsorship reasons Tauron Basket Liga \u2013 was the 79th season of the highest professional basketball league in Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230785-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PLK season\nStelmet Zielona G\u00f3ra won the Polish championship, the club beat PGE Tur\u00f3w Zgorzelec 4\u20130 in the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230786-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven season\nThe 2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven season saw the club competing in the 2012\u201313 Eredivisie, 2012\u201313 KNVB Cup and 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230786-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven 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-00230786-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven season, Squad, Players 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230786-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven season, Squad, Jong PSV\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-00230786-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230786-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230786-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230786-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PSV Eindhoven 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230787-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2012 and ended with the 2013 Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament from March 2013 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Paradise, Nevada. The regular season began on the first weekend of November 2012, with the conference schedule starting in December 2012. On March 9, 2013, the UCLA Bruins defeated the Washington Huskies 61\u201354 to clinch the regular season conference title. They were seeded as the No. 1 team in the Pac-12 Conference tournament in Las Vegas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230787-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season\nThis was the second season under the Pac-12 Conference name. In July 2011, two schools joined the conference. Colorado came from the Big 12 and Utah arrived from the Mountain West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230787-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Conference Schedule, Composite Matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230787-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball season, Awards and honors, NBA Draft\nSeveral players from the conference declared early for the NBA draft. The following all-conference selections were listed as seniors: Larry Drew II, Solomon Hill, Mark Lyons, E.J. Singler, Carrick Felix, and Brock Motum. Several players were among the 60 players invited to the 2013 NBA Draft Combine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 79], "content_span": [80, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230788-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pacific Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Pacific Tigers men's basketball team represented the University of the Pacific during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by 25th year head coach Bob Thomason, played their home games at Alex G. Spanos Center and were members of the Big West Conference. They finished the season 22\u201313, 13\u20135 in Big West play to finish in second place. They were champions of the Big West Tournament, winning the championship game over UC Irvine, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the first round to Miami (FL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230788-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pacific Tigers men's basketball team\nBefore the season, Bob Thomason announced that he would retire at the end of the season. This was also Pacific's final year in the Big West. In July 2013, they rejoined the West Coast Conference. The Tigers were charter members of the WCC in 1952 and left the conference in 1971.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season\nThe 2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season was the club's third season since their formation in 2010 and their second under the name Pailan Arrows. They finished 12th in the I-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, Background\nThe club changed their name to Pailan Arrows on 15 June 2011 after the All India Football Federation reached an agreement with Pailan Group to sponsor the team. With the deal Pailan Arrows was also relocated to Kolkata and the Salt Lake Stadium. Then on 13 August 2012 head coach Desmond Bulpin was sacked by the club due to his \"style of football\" while former India national football team coach Sukhwinder Singh was signed to take over the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, Background\nThe club also lost many of the stars of the previous season like Lalrindika Ralte, Jeje Lalpekhlua (top scorer for Pailan and among Indians in 2010\u201311), Manandeep Singh and Gurpreet Singh Sandhu. The club again participated in the Federation Cup in 2011 where Pailan won two matches but lost one which meant that they would finish 2nd behind Salgaocar and thus meant Pailan were knocked out in the group stage again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, Background\nPailan Arrows then began their 2011\u201312 I-League campaign against Mohun Bagan at the Salt Lake Stadium on 23 October 2012 in which they lost 1\u20133 after Lalrozama Fanai gave them the early lead. On 7 February 2012 Sukhwinder Singh resigned as coach of Pailan Arrows due to personal reasons, at this point also Pailan had not won a single match in I-League and had only managed eight draws in 17 matches. Assistant coach Sujit Chakravarty took over the reins as head coach for the remainder of the season. Towards the end of the season Pailan managed to win two matches, one against Chirag United Club Kerala and another against HAL to finished the season in 13th place out of 14 teams but since they are a developmental team, Pailan were not relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, Durand Cup\nPailan Arrows entered the Durand Cup in 2012 in the group stage and were placed in Group A with Air India and Delhi United. Pailan started the tournament with a 2\u20132 draw against Delhi United with Holicharan Narzary and Milan Singh scoring for Pailan at the Ambedkar Stadium. Pailan then bowed out of the tournament after drawing 1\u20131 with Air India. Pailan ended with two points while Air India had 4 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, Federation Cup\nAs with the Durand Cup Pailan entered the Federation Cup in the group stage and were placed in Group A with 2011\u201312 I-League champions Dempo, along with Mumbai, and Shillong Lajong. All their group matches would be played at the JRD Tata Sports Complex in Jamshedpur, Orissa. In their first match Pailan faced off against Dempo at the JRD Tata Sports Complex in which the club drew the match 1\u20131 against the reigning league champions with Holicharan Narzary giving the club the lead in the 52nd minute before Clifford Miranda tied it up eight minutes later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, Federation Cup\nIn Pailan Arrow's next match two days later on 21 September 2012 the club took on Mumbai F.C. at the Keenan Stadium; the club once again drew with their opponents but this time by a score of 2\u20132 with Dhanpal Ganeshan and Deepak Devrani scoring in the 45th and 78th minutes of the match while David Opara scored twice for the opposition to deny Pailan Arrows the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, Federation Cup\nThe club then finished their Federation Cup campaign on a high note with a victory over Shillong Lajong F.C. on 23 September 2012 at the Keenan Stadium by a score of 2\u20131 with Holicharan Narzary and Prabir Das scoring for Pailan Arrows in the 17th and 69th minutes of the match while Ebi Sukore scored in the 21st minute for the opposition. The club, despite not losing a match, however were knocked-out at the group stage of the Federation Cup as Dempo had won one more match than Pailan and thus had more points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nPailan Arrows began their 2012\u201313 I-League campaign in style on 6 October 2012 with a victory over Mumbai F.C. at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata, West Bengal with the Arrows winning 3\u20132 over the Maharashtra club with Holicharan Narzary scoring a brace in the 34th and 76th minute with Milan Singh scoring in between Narzary's goal with a penalty-kick goal in the 54th minute; David Opara and James Singh scored the two goals for Mumbai in the 39th and 45th minutes respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nPailan Arrows then won their second match of the season and second match of the season on 11 October 2012 against Air India FC at the Salt Lake Stadium with Holicharan Narzary scoring his third goal in two games in the 41st minute before Henry Ezeh equalized for Air India in the 67th minute but just two minutes later Milan Singh converted his second penalty-kick of the season to win Pailan Arrows the match 2\u20131. Pailan Arrows then ended their first month of the season and the month of October undefeated after they drew with Salgaocar F.C. at the Fatorda Stadium in Margao, Goa 0\u20130 on 28 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nPailan Arrows began the month of November on an ordinary note with a draw against United Sikkim F.C. at the Paljor Stadium in the Sikkimese capital of Gangtok on 4 November 2012 with the score ending up as 0\u20130. The club then however suffered a set-back when they lost to Pune F.C. at home on 9 November 2012 with Karma Tsewang and Subhash Singh scoring in the 11th and 46th minutes of the game for Pune to help Pailan suffer their first defeat of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nPailan then suffered yet another set-back when they lost their second game on the trott when they lost to Prayag United on 18 November 2012 with C.K. Vineeth and Lalkamal Bhowmick ensuring that Pailan would not win the match while Narayan Das scored his first goal of his career in the 84th minute which was actually the equalizer for Pailan Arrows before Bhowmick finished the game off in the 88th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nPailan however did make a comeback in their next match on 23 November 2012 against Sporting Clube de Goa at the Fatorda Stadium when they won 1\u20130 over the Goan club with Narayan Das being the goalscorer again for Pailan Arrows in the 54th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0005-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nPailan though, however, failed to end the month of November on a bright note as the fell to their third loss of the month in five games on 28 November 2012 against Shillong Lajong F.C. by a score of 3\u20131 at the Nehru Stadium in Shillong with Tirthankar Sarkar being the lone scorer for Pailan in the 67th minute after Lajong scored through Sushil Kumar Singh in the 3rd and 49th minutes and Gbeneme Friday in the 52nd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nDespite the rough month of November Pailan Arrows began the month of December with a bang on 1 December 2012 with a 4\u20131 victory over ONGC F.C. at the Salt Lake Stadium with Deepak Devrani scoring his first goal of his career for Pailan in the 10th minute before ONGC equalized through Liberian Eric Brown in the 21st minute but Holicharan Narzary scored his fourth league goal of the season in the 25th minute to give Pailan the lead before Milan Singh scored in the 57th minute from the penalty spot and Alwyn George scored his first goal of the season in the 82nd minute to confirm Pailan's mega victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nThere after however Pailan were brought back down to earth in their next match against Churchill Brothers S.C. on 10 December 2012 at the Salt Lake Stadium when they lost 3\u20130 with Bineesh Balan and Beto providing the goals for Churchill Brothers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nPailan then had 12 days to prepare for their next match against Dempo S.C. as their match against Mohun Bagan A.C. for 15 December 2012 was postponed; when Pailan played Dempo on 22 December 2012 at the Salt Lake Stadium they once again saw themselves lose with Joaquim Abranches scoring both the goals for Dempo in the 10th and 59th minutes of the match while Milan Singh scored the equalizer for Pailan in between from the penalty spot in the 45th minute before halftime. Pailan Arrows however then ended the month of December and the year 2012 with their third defeat in a row when they lost 3\u20130 to East Bengal at the Kalyani Stadium on 30 December 2012 with Robin Singh and Sanju Pradhan doing the damage against the Pailan Arrows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nThe club then failed to begin the year 2013 on a good start when they fell to ONGC, a club they had beaten 4\u20131 only a month earlier, by a score of 3\u20130 with Pritam Kotal scoring an own goal for Pailan in the 6th minute before goals from Eric Brown and Lalnun Puia scoring the other two goals for ONGC in the 30th and 67th minutes of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nThe club then succumbed to their fifth defeat of the season on 9 January 2013 against Churchill Brothers at the Duler Stadium in which the club lost 3\u20131 due to a double by Gabon international striker Henry Antchouet and a goal by Israil Gurung all within five minutes from the 60th to the 65th minutes of the match; Pailan did have the lead though when Prathamesh Maulingkar put Arrows in the lead in the 56th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230789-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pailan Arrows season, I-League\nDespite their fifth loss of the season though, Pailan Arrows still managed to break that run in the very next match against Air India on 12 January 2013 at the Balewadi Sports Complex in which Pailan Arrows drew the match 1\u20131 with Rajinder Kumar giving Arrows the equalizer they needed right before halftime, after Henry Ezeh put Air India in the lead in the 37th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League was the 9th season of the Pakistan Premier League, the Pakistani professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2004. The season began on 5 September 2012 and ended on 15 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League\nKhan Research Laboratories were the defending champions, having won their second Premier League title the previous season. This was their second top division league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League\nOn 13 January 2013, Khan Research Laboratories won their third Premier League title and Pakistani titles after drawing 0\u20130 with Pakistan Airlines at KPT Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League\nKaleemullah Khan became the first player to score 30+ goals in a Pakistan Premier League season, after scoring 35 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League, Format\nTeams play each other on a home and away basis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League, Format\nThe winners will represent Pakistan at the 2013 AFC President's Cup. The bottom two teams will be relegated to the Pakistan Football Federation League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League, Teams\nPakistan Police and Pak Elektron were relegated at the end of the 2011\u201312 season and were replaced by Wohaib and Zarai Taraqiati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230790-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan Premier League, Teams\nThe Pakistan Navy on the other hand have vacated their previous home ground, the Municipal Stadium in Rawalpindi for the Karachi Port Trust Stadium in Karachi due to the former ground having various issues with the pitch condition, thus KPT Stadium will be used by three teams this season, other two being Karachi Port Trust and National Bank, both has used KPT Stadium as their home ground since the start of Pakistan Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230791-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan federal budget\nThe Pakistan federal budget of Fiscal year of 2012\u20132013 was the federal budget of Pakistan for the fiscal year beginning from 1 July 2012 and ending on 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230791-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan federal budget\nThe budget was formally presented on 1 June 2012 by Finance Minister Dr. Abdul Hafeez Sheikh during a National Assembly session. The budget was a milestone in the context that this was the first time in the history of the country that a democratically elected government presented its fifth budget during its tenure. Work on budget and recommendation on spending request was completed by Hafeez Sheikh to the government of the Pakistan Peoples Party with the cabinet being led by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230791-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pakistan federal budget\nThe budget outlay was totaled at an estimated at \u20a8. 3.203 trillion. Notable proposals in the budget included creating one hundred thousand jobs in the economy, addressing the energy crisis, and the construction of dams and water infrastructure. The Ministry of Finance also launched the Economic Survey of Pakistan in the run-up to the budget \u2014 \"a pre-budget document highlighting the overall performance of the economy during the out-going fiscal year.\" The survey showed that the economy registered a 3.7% growth in GDP in the outgoing fiscal year, compared to the previous year's target of 4.2%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Paksi SE's 7th competitive season, 7th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 60th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230792-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paksi SE season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections\nLocal elections were held in the Palestinian territories on 20 October 2012, with a second part to be held on 24 November 2012. A total of 245 village councils, 98 municipal councils and 10 local councils would be elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections, Background\nLocal elections had originally been scheduled for 17 July 2010. However, the Central Election Commission was unable to operate in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, resulting in the Palestinian government announcing on 25 April that the elections would be postponed in the Strip. On 10 June 2010 the government announced that all local elections were cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections, Background\nAs a result of the cancellation, several lawsuits were filed against the government. On 13 December the High Court ruled that cancelling the elections was illegal. The government subsequently announced that local elections would be held in 2011. They were originally scheduled for 9 July, before being postponed until 22 October due to the political split between the West Bank controlled by Fatah and the Gaza Strip controlled by Hamas. However, in August 2011, they were postponed indefinitely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections, Background\nOn 10 July 2012 the government announced that local elections would be held on 20 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections, Elections\nLocal elections were held in the West Bank on 20 October 2012, with a second part to be held on 24 November 2012. Fatah claimed victory after Hamas withdraw from elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections, Elections\nvoting took place in only 92 of the West Bank's 353 municipalities. More than 80 villages were unable to produce candidate lists(a symptom, Hamas claims, of Fatah intimidation). In a further 181 districts, only one candidate list was registered rendering polling unnecessary. With 54.8 per cent of those eligible to vote turned out to cast their ballot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections, Elections\nMs Nour Odeh, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Authority said \"We are still hoping that elections will be held in Gaza. A person's right to vote cannot be held hostage to any political faction,\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230793-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Palestinian local elections, Elections\nHamas Government in Gaza has refused to recognise the election \"as a legitimate expression of the Palestinian peoples' will.\" The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights also questioned the legitimacy of the polls, \"in light of the limiting of public freedoms and continuing widespread violations of human rights by the PA.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230794-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Panathinaikos F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Panathinaikos' 54th consecutive season in Super League Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230794-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Panathinaikos F.C. season\nThey also competed in the Greek Cup. They were eliminated from the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230794-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Panathinaikos F.C. season, First-team squad\nAs of 31 January 2013Note: 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, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230795-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Panionios F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Panionios Gymnastikos Syllogos Smyrnis' 122nd season in existence and its 52nd in the top tier of the modern Greek football league system. This season marks the managerial debut of Dimitrios Eleftheropoulos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230795-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Panionios F.C. season\nThe club's U17 and U20 squads will compete in their respective leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Paris Saint-Germain Football Club's 43rd in existence and their 40th in the top-flight of French football. The team competed in Ligue 1, the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue and the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nReinforced by new stars Ezequiel Lavezzi, Zlatan Ibrahimovi\u0107 and Thiago Silva, PSG warmed up for the 2012\u201313 season with the aim of winning the league crown that dramatically eluded the club the previous year. Paris began at home to Lorient at the Parc des Princes. Les Merlus caused Paris plenty of problems and the match ended 2\u20132 thanks to Ibrahimovi\u0107's first brace of the season. The PSG squad took a little time to get going and after three consecutive draws, Les Parisiens recorded their first victory in matchweek 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nIt was in the north of France that Paris finally launched their campaign against Lille and a 2\u20131 victory featuring another double from Ibrahimovi\u0107. Another three points followed against Toulouse (2\u20130), before it was time for the UEFA Champions League. After nearly a decade's absence, PSG marked their return to Europe's premier club competition with a resounding 4\u20131 victory over Dynamo Kyiv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nBuoyed by their continental success, the capital club recorded their largest ever away win with a 4\u20130 demolition of Bastia before defeating Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard 2\u20130, in a perfect month of September. October began less well with a late 1\u20130 defeat away to Porto. Then it was time to travel to the Stade V\u00e9lodrome for Le Classique against Olympique de Marseille. Inspired, Zlatan netted two more remarkable goals as the match ended 2-2. It got even better as Stade de Reims, Dinamo Zagreb, Nancy and Marseille, this time in the Coupe de la Ligue, all fell to Paris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe first defeat of the campaign came soon after, 2\u20131, to Saint-\u00c9tienne. It marked the start of a difficult month of November for the side from the French capital. A festive December started in style with a 2\u20131 win over Porto which saw Paris clinch top spot in Group A of the Champions League. Next up came Evian (4-0), Valenciennes (0\u20134) and Lyon (1\u20130); all fell victim to the high-flying Les Rouge-et-Bleu. A comprehensive 3-0 win over Stade Brest in the final match of the calendar year saw PSG secure the honorary title of autumn champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\n2013 began with new Brazilian signing Lucas Moura meeting his new teammates. The return to competition wasn't easy with a tough and slender 4\u20133 win over Arras in the Coupe de France. After a scoreless draw with AC Ajaccio, Paris stepped up a gear with wins over Bordeaux, Toulouse in the Coupe de France and Lille. The run of matches saw goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu set a new club record for longest run without conceding a goal, surpassing the previous time set by the legendary Bernard Lama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nPSG then produced a huge surprise for their supporters by announcing the signature of David Beckham on the final day of the winter transfer window. The arrival of the English superstar saw the club continue on its winning ways with a 4\u20130 triumph over Toulouse followed by a 3\u20131 win over Bastia before the last 16 of the Champions League. Away to Spanish giants Valencia in the first leg, Paris run out 2\u20131 winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe return to domestic action proved a little less convincing with a 3\u20132 upset at the hands of Sochaux. The reaction was immediate. As Beckham debuted in his new colours, Paris recorded back to back 2\u20130 home wins against arch-rivals Marseille, firstly in the league and then in the Coupe de France. Paris confirmed their place in the Champions League quarter-finals with a 1\u20131 draw at home to Valencia. Despite hiccups against Reims (0\u20131) and Saint-\u00c9tienne (2\u20132), Paris continued to set the pace at the top of the ladder with victories over Nancy, 2\u20131, and defending champions Montpellier, 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThen came one of the highlights of the season with the quarter-final of the Champions League against Barcelona. And the match lived up to the hype with Blaise Matuidi scoring in the last minute to secure a thrilling 2\u20132 draw at the Parc des Princes. PSG warmed up for the return match against the Catalan outfit with a 2\u20130 victory over Rennes in Ligue 1. Then, at the Camp Nou, Javier Pastore opened the scoring for Carlo Ancelotti's players, only to be eliminated on away goals by Pedro\u2019s equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nLes Rouges et Bleu bounced back with a 1\u20130 win over Troyes before quarter-final exits in both the Coupe de la Ligue and the Coupe de France. The players just had to focus on the Ligue 1 title and they did so with a 3\u20130 victory over Nice before avenging their cup exit with a 1\u20130 win of their own away to Evian. In the end, a 1\u20130 win away to Lyon secured the club's first Ligue 1 title in 19 years, and third overall. J\u00e9r\u00e9my M\u00e9nez struck the goal that sent Paris into rapture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe penultimate match of the season saw a 3\u20131 win over Brest at the Parc des Princes, followed by the official presentation of the Ligue 1 trophy. It also marked the final match of David Beckham's playing career. The final match of the season saw the newly-crowned 2013 champions end with a win over Lorient as Zlatan Ibrahimovi\u0107 received his Golden Boot trophy for Ligue 1 top scorer with 30 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain 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-00230796-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Players, 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Players, Transfers 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230796-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Players, 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230797-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Parma F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Parma Football Club's 22nd season in Serie A, and their fourth consecutive season in the top-flight, having finished in eighth position in the previous season. The team is also competing in the Coppa Italia and benefit from a bye to the Round of 16 after the strong league finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230797-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Parma F.C. season, Pre-season\nOn 4 June 2012, the club announced its intention to go on a pre-retiro in Sardinia from 4 until 10 July. This was to be followed by a third consecutive season retiro in Levico Terme from 14 until 28 July, where they would again face Levico and Slavia Prague. Thirty-one players were initially selected to take part. From 31 July to 5 August would be spent in Prague, where two friendlies were organised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230797-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Parma F.C. season, Competitions, Serie A\nParma's first game of the season was a trip to Turin to face champions Juventus. Banned for his part in the 2011\u201312 Italian football scandal, Juventus boss Antonio Conte saw his side win 2\u20130 through second Stephan Lichtsteiner and Andrea Pirlo goals in the second half. Parma goalkeeper Antonio Mirante had saved a dubiously awarded penalty in the first half. There was some doubt whether or not Pirlo's effort crossed the line, but Parma coach Roberto Donadoni refused to comment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230797-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Parma F.C. season, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230797-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Parma F.C. season, Transfers\nOn 21 June 2012, the first significant move of Parma's summer was announced: top scorer and Italian international Sebastian Giovinco re-joined Juventus, who already owned half of the player's registration, in a \u20ac11 million deal. Parma's share of Fabio Borini, previously co-owned but plying his trade with Roma, was bought out by the Rome club for \u20ac4.9 million on 23 June. On 28 June, the club announced the first of a duo forward replacements when Colombian striker Dorlan Pab\u00f3n became a Parma player. Four days later, Brazilian-Italian forward Amauri rejoined the club on a two-year deal. He had been out of contract with former club Fiorentina and netted seven times in 11 appearances in a short spell on loan at Parma in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230797-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Parma F.C. season, Transfers\nThe club French defender Yohan Benalouane in late August on a year-long loan deal. This was followed by the loan signing of Venezuelan youngster Manuel Arteaga, who was at Zulia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230797-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Parma F.C. season, Transfers\nIn January, Parma and Feyenoord agreed to a \u20ac3 million deal to make Graziano Pell\u00e8's move to the Dutch side permanent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230798-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Partick Thistle F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Partick Thistle's seventh consecutive season in the Scottish First Division, having been promoted from the Scottish Second Division at the end of the 2005\u201306 season. Partick Thistle also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230798-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Partick Thistle F.C. season, Summary, Season\nPartick Thistle finished first in the Scottish First Division, and were promoted to the Scottish Premier League. They reached the final of the Challenge Cup, losing 6\u20135 on penalties to Queen of the South, the second round of the League Cup and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230798-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Partick Thistle F.C. season, Summary, Management\nThistle began the season under the management of Jackie McNamara. On 29 January 2013, the club gave permission to Dundee United to speak to McNamara about becoming their new manager. The following day McNamara and his assistant Simon Donnelly resigned, to become the new management team at United. Later the same day the club announced that Alan Archibald and Scott Paterson would take over as the club's interim management team. On 22 March, the duo were given the job on a permanent basis signing a one-year rolling contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230798-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Partick Thistle F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 4 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230799-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Penn Quakers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Penn Quakers men's basketball team represented the University of Pennsylvania during the 2011\u201312 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Quakers, led by fourth year head coach Jerome Allen, played their home games at The Palestra and were members of the Ivy League. They finished the season 9\u201322, 6\u20138 in Ivy League play to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230800-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Penn State Nittany Lions basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Penn State Nittany Lions basketball team represents Pennsylvania State University. Head coach Pat Chambers is in his second season with the team. The team played its home games in University Park, Pennsylvania, US at the Bryce Jordan Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230801-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Penn State Nittany Lions women's ice hockey season\nThe Penn State Nittany Lions women's hockey team will represent Penn State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. Junior Taylor Gross will be the team captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230802-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pepperdine Waves men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Pepperdine Waves men's basketball team represented Pepperdine University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Marty Wilson's second full season at Pepperdine. The Waves played their home games at the Firestone Fieldhouse and were members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 12\u201318, 4\u201312 in WCC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the second round of the WCC Tournament to San Diego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230802-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pepperdine Waves men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nAll non-conference home games, and conference home games not picked up by the WCC regional packages, are shown on TV-32 in Malibu, known as Pepperdine TV. They are also shown on pepperdinesports.com at no cost for all fans to enjoy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230803-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pepperdine Waves women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Pepperdine Waves women's basketball team represented Pepperdine University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The Waves, members of the West Coast Conference, were led by head coach Julie Rousseau, in her 9th and final season at the school. The Waves played their home games at the Firestone Fieldhouse on the university campus in Malibu, California. They finished the season 5-23, 2\u201314 in conference, and were 9th place in the conference standings. They lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament to conclude their season and the coaching career of Rousseau at Pepperdine. Rousseau would resign on April 3, 2013, after compiling a 123\u2013144 record at Pepperdine with 3 NCAA Tournament appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230803-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pepperdine Waves women's basketball team, Before the Season\nThe Waves were picked to finish fifth in the WCC Pre-Season poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Persepolis's 12th season in the Pro League, and their 30th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian Football. They competed in the Hazfi Cup. Persepolis saw a change in managerial role in the beginning of the season when Mustafa Denizli announced via an open letter to the fans that he couldn't cooperate with Perspolis anymore due to his personal problems and was replaced with former Al Ahly boss Manuel Jos\u00e9. Persepolis is captained by Mehdi Mahdavikia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. season, Squad, First team squad\nApps and goals updated as of 10 May 2013 For more on the reserve and academy squads, see Persepolis Novin, Persepolis Academy & Persepolis Qaem Shahr. Source: ,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. season, Squad, Iran Pro League 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, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. season, Squad, Iran Pro League 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230804-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persepolis F.C. 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup (also known as Iran Pro League) was the 30th season of Iran's Football League and 12th as Iran Pro League since its establishment in 2001. Sepahan were the defending champions. The season featured 15 teams from the 2011\u201312 Persian Gulf Cup and three new teams promoted from the 2011\u201312 Azadegan League: Paykan as champions, Aluminium Hormozgan and Gahar Zagros. The league started on 19 July 2012 and ended on 10 May 2013. Esteghlal won the Pro League title for the third time in their history (total eighth Iranian title).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Events, Competition format\nAfter the 2012\u201313 Iran Pro League season the number of teams was planned to be reduced from 18 to 16 for the next season, so 4 team was directly relegated to the Azadegan League, while one team was played against the 3rd ranked team from the second division league team in a play-off. 2 teams also are directly promoted from current Azadegan league to the next pro league season and one team played against the 14th placed pro league team in a play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Events, Rules and regulations\nThe Iranian Football Clubs who participate in 2012\u201313 Iran Pro League are allowed to have up to maximum 35 players (including up to maximum 4 non-Iranian players) in their player lists, which will be categorized in the following groups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Events, Rules and regulations\nBased on the fact that the Season is started from 19 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 51], "content_span": [52, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Relegation play-offs\nZob Ahan as 14th-placed team faced play-off winner of 2012\u201313 Azadegan League, Pas Hamedan in a two-legged play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Relegation play-offs\nZob Ahan won 5\u20133 on aggregate and retained its Iran Pro League spot for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Awards, Team of the Tournament\nGoalkeeper: Mehdi Rahmati (Esteghlal)Defence: Mehrdad Jama'ati (Foolad), Pejman Montazeri (Esteghlal), Amir Hossein Sadeghi (Esteghlal), Khosro Heydari (Esteghlal)Midfield: Reza Haghighi (Perspolis), Bakhtiar Rahmani (Foolad), Moharram Navidkia (Sepahan), Yaghoub Karimi (Naft.t)Attack: Jalal Rafkhaei (Malavan), Mohammad Reza Khalatbari (Sepahan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Awards, Player of the Tournament\nMoharram Navidkia was awarded as the best player of the season among Mehdi Rahmati and Pejman Montazeri became second and third. Saeid Ezzatollahi was also awarded as the best young player of the season and Alireza Jahanbakhsh was ranked second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Awards, Other awards\nAmir Ghalenoei was awarded as the best coach of the season, Zlatko Kranj\u010dar becomes second and Hossein Faraki third. Saeid Mozafarizadeh awarded best referee, Fair Play Award was given to the Fajr Sepasi and Esteghlal was the team of the season. Mehdi Mahdavikia, Ali Parvin, Homayoun Behzadi and Ali Jabari were also awarded for their service to the Iranian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230805-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Persian Gulf Cup, Attendances, Average home attendances\nUpdated to games played on 10 May 2013Source: Notes:Matches with spectator bans are not included in average attendancesAluminium Hormozgan, Gahar Zagros and Paykan played last season in Azadegan League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230806-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Perth Glory FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Perth Glory's 8th season since the inception of the A-League and 16th since the club's founding, in 1996. It was their third season with Ian Ferguson as head coach (he was replaced by Alistair Edwards in February 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230806-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Perth Glory FC season, Home Stadia\nDue to redevelopment reducing the capacity to 9500, the 2012/2013 A-League season saw the club reclaim Patersons Stadium (formerly Subiaco Oval) as a home stadium in addition to their traditional home at nib Stadium. Perth Glory had not competed at Patersons Stadium since the 2003\u201304 National Soccer League (NSL) Preliminary Final, where they defeated Adelaide United by five goals. Perth Glory began their campaign against Brisbane Roar at Patersons Stadium, a rematch of the 2012 A-League Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230806-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Perth Glory 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230806-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Perth Glory FC season, Squad statistics, Goal scorers\n1 goal was scored from a penalty kick\u00a0\u00a02 goals were scored from penalty kicks", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230807-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Perth Heat season\nThe 2012\u201313 Perth Heat season will be the third season for the team. The Heat will once again compete in the Australian Baseball League (ABL) with the other five foundation teams, and will again play its home games at Barbagallo Ballpark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230807-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Perth Heat season\nThe Heat will also be defending the ABL Championship title, having won the previous season's Championship Series, and over the course of the season, will represent Australia in the 2012 Asia Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230807-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Perth Heat season, Offseason\nIn 2012, for the second consecutive year, the Heat will represent Australia in the Asia Series, a round-robin tournament of champion teams from the baseball leagues of Asia, including representatives of Japan, Republic of Korea, Republic of China and, going forward, People's Republic of China. The Heat qualified as winners of the 2012 ABL Championship Series. To date, the Heat is the only team to represent Australia in the Asia Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230808-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Peterborough Phantoms season\nDuring the 2012\u201313 season, the Peterborough Phantoms participated in the semi-professional English Premier Ice Hockey League. It was the 10th year of Ice Hockey played by the Peterborough Phantoms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230809-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Peterborough United F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Peterborough United's second consecutive season in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230809-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Peterborough United 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230809-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Peterborough United F.C. season, Transfers, In\n1Although officially undisclosed, the Peterborough Evening Telegraph reported the fee to be around \u00a3300,000. 2Although officially undisclosed, the Express and Star reported the fee to be \u00a3100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230810-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Peterhead F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Peterhead's second consecutive season in the Scottish Third Division, having been relegated from the Scottish Second Division at the end of the 2010\u201311 season. Peterhead also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230811-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Petron Blaze Boosters season\nThe 2012\u201313 Petron Blaze Boosters season was the 38th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA). The team placed seventh in the Philippine Cup, third in the Commissioner's Cup and second in the Governors' Cup. It had three draft picks: two Filipino and one American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230812-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia 76ers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Philadelphia 76ers season was the 74th season of the franchise, 64th in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 50th in Philadelphia. Before the start of the season the team made a major multiple team trade to get center Andrew Bynum from the Los Angeles Lakers (giving up the eventual 2015 NBA Finals MVP Andre Iguodala). However Bynum missed the entire regular season due to a foot injury sustained while bowling, and would never end up playing in a Sixers uniform. They finished with a record of 34\u201348 and would miss the post season in Doug Collins' 3rd and final season as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230812-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia 76ers season, NBA Draft\n\u00d7 Philadelphia acquired the draft rights to 27th pick Arnett Moultrie from the Miami Heat in exchange for the draft rights to 45th pick Justin Hamilton and a future first-round draft pick. \u00b0 Traded draft rights to Brooklyn in exchange for cash considerations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season was the Flyers' 46th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout. The Flyers missed the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time since 2007, and only the second time since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nThe Flyers first roster move of the off-season was trading backup goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky to the Columbus Blue Jackets for three draft picks the afternoon prior to the NHL Entry Draft. The Flyers re-signed Michael Leighton, who had spent most of the previous two seasons playing for the Adirondack Phantoms, the Flyers' American Hockey League affiliate, to a one-year contract on July 1 to replace him. Shortly after day two of the Draft, the Flyers traded James van Riemsdyk to the Toronto Maple Leafs for Luke Schenn, Brayden Schenn's older brother. The trade gave the Flyers their first pair of brothers since Ron and Rich Sutter back in the mid-1980s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nWhen the free agency period opened on July 1 the Flyers heavily pursued the two most coveted unrestricted free agents on the market, forward Zach Parise of the New Jersey Devils and defenseman Ryan Suter of the Nashville Predators. The Flyers lost out on both as Parise and Suter signed identical 13-year contracts worth $98\u00a0million with the Minnesota Wild on July 4. The Flyers had reportedly offered Parise a contract worth a total of $110\u00a0million. As the pursuit of Parise and Suter was occurring, the Flyers lost their two biggest unrestricted free agents, Jaromir Jagr and Matt Carle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nJagr signed a one-year contract worth $4.5\u00a0million with the Dallas Stars on July 3. He later said the Flyers requested that he wait while they pursued Parise and Suter, but Jagr did not want to wait and signed with the Stars after Dallas promised him a spot on the top line. Carle signed a six-year contract worth $33\u00a0million with the Tampa Bay Lightning on July 4. The Flyers most notable unrestricted free agent signings were former Flyer Ruslan Fedotenko to a one-year, $1.75\u00a0million contract and defenseman Bruno Gervais to a two-year, $1.65\u00a0million contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nAfter failing to land Suter or re-sign Carle, the Flyers signed restricted free agent defenseman Shea Weber of the Nashville Predators to a 14-year offer sheet worth $110\u00a0million, $68\u00a0million of which was a signing bonus, on July 19. The offer sheet was the richest in NHL history in terms of total money, money per season, and length, surpassing the previous offer sheet record set by Thomas Vanek. The Predators, already having lost Weber's defensive partner Suter to Minnesota, matched the offer sheet five days later. Had the Predators declined to match, they would have received the Flyers' next four first-round draft picks as compensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nIn the weeks leading up to the 2012\u201313 lockout, the Flyers re-signed wingers Wayne Simmonds and Scott Hartnell to six-year contract extensions. Simmonds extension was worth $23.85\u00a0million and Hartnell's $28.5\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nWith team captain Chris Pronger unlikely to return as a result of continuing post-concussion syndrome which has placed his playing career in jeopardy, the Flyers named Claude Giroux team captain on January 15 shortly after the lockout ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Regular season\nThe Flyers started the season 0\u20133\u20130, the franchise's worst season start in 17 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Regular season\nThe Flyers did not qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time since the 2006\u201307 season and only the ninth time in team history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Regular season\nThe Flyers were the most penalized team during the regular season, with 184 power-play opportunities against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nWin (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions\nThe Flyers were involved in the following transactions from June 12, 2012, the day after the deciding game of the 2012 Stanley Cup Finals, through June 24, 2013, the day of the deciding game of the 2013 Stanley Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230813-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230813-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230813-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230813-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Philadelphia Flyers season, Draft picks\nPhiladelphia's picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22\u201323, 2012. The Flyers traded their originally allotted second, third, and sixth-round picks in three different trades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230814-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Coyotes season\nThe 2012\u201313 Phoenix Coyotes season was the franchise's 34th season in the National Hockey League (NHL), the 17th in Arizona, and 41st overall, including its play in the World Hockey Association. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230814-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Coyotes season, Regular season\nThe Coyotes concluded the regular season having been shut-out nine times, tied with the Nashville Predators for the most in the NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230814-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Coyotes season, Playoffs\nFor the first time since the 2008\u201309 season, the Coyotes failed to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230814-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Coyotes season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Coyotes. Stats reflect time with the Coyotes only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230814-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Coyotes season, Transactions\nThe Coyotes have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230814-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Coyotes season, Draft picks\nPhoenix Coyotes' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season\nThe 2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season was the organization's 45th season in the National Basketball Association. This season was the first since the 2003\u201304 season that the Suns were without star point guard and former two-time MVP Steve Nash after Nash was sign-and-traded to the rival Los Angeles Lakers. Another fan favorite, Grant Hill, also left for Los Angeles in this season, but he would sign with the Los Angeles Clippers. By technicality, the player who held the most playing experience for the Suns this season was Jermaine O'Neal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, NBA Draft\nThe Suns will once again only have pick 13 as their only first-round draft pick. The Suns used their only pick to select point guard Kendall Marshall from North Carolina. Marshall was a prolific passer, averaging 8.1 points and 9.8 assists in his last season with the Tar Heels. He also set the ACC & University of North Carolina season assist records, as well as winning the Bob Cousy Award for his performance in his sophomore year. Unfortunately, Marshall would retire from the league after playing for five years in the league. As for their second-round pick, it was traded to the Atlanta Hawks for Josh Childress via sign and trade. That selection became Mike Scott, who eventually came to Phoenix himself for a couple of days in 2017", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nVeteran players Grant Hill and Steve Nash, as well as the newly signed Shannon Brown, Michael Redd, and Ronnie Price have all become unrestricted free agents as of the end of the 2011\u201312 NBA season. Center Robin Lopez has become a restricted free agent as of the end of the season as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nIn a unique situation, former CBA player Aaron Brooks is still a restricted free agent, but due to his signing with the Guangdong Southern Tigers and the Suns not re-signing Brooks to a new contract during the 2011\u201312 NBA season, he'll be a restricted free agent with restricted benefits. For example, the Suns can match any offer that they see fit, but they cannot do any sign-and-trades whatsoever with him. However, Phoenix was unlikely to bring back Aaron Brooks to an restricted free agent offer, so they made him unrestricted after trying to get Eric Gordon. In addition, the Suns may also use their amnesty clause to get rid of a player that they see is holding them back. However, they have to use it a week after the July moratorium (July 11); otherwise, the amnesty clause stays with the team until at least next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nOn July 3, 2012, Eric Gordon agreed to a tentative deal with the Suns for 4 years and $58 million. However, despite Gordon saying that \"Phoenix is where my heart is now\", since Gordon's a restricted free agent, his offer was matched by the New Orleans Hornets a full three days after signing free agents officially took place. Phoenix has, however, gained both former back-up point guard Goran Dragi\u0107 and forward Michael Beasley as of July 4, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nAs for Steve Nash, he was officially traded to the rival Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for first and second round draft picks in the 2013 draft, as well as a first round pick in the 2015 draft and a second round pick in the 2014 draft on July 4 as well. Grant Hill also went to Los Angeles, but he went to play for the Los Angeles Clippers on July 18, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nRonnie Price would sign with the Portland Trail Blazers on July 18 as well; however, unlike Grant Hill, Ronnie Price would be waived by Portland on February 21, 2013. Aaron Brooks would go to the Sacramento Kings on July 16, 2012, but he would play for them until March 1, 2013. Four days later, Brooks decided to officially sign with his former team, the Houston Rockets, which tended to reverse Phoenix and Houston's trade in 2011 that had Goran Dragi\u0107 going to Houston and Brooks going to Phoenix. The last player that became a free agent, Michael Redd, ended up retiring on November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nOn July 15, 2012, a day after Eric Gordon's contract was matched by the Hornets, the Suns ended up placing a winning bid on former Houston Rockets power forward Luis Scola, as well as used their amnesty clause on Josh Childress, who would eventually sign with the Brooklyn Nets until December 29, 2012. On July 25, 2012, the Suns agreed to re-sign Shannon Brown, as well as sign former Texas University standout P. J. Tucker and produce a three-way trade with the New Orleans Hornets and the Minnesota Timberwolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nTwo days later, the Suns exchanged Robin Lopez and Hakim Warrick to the Hornets and the Lakers' 2014 second round pick to the Timberwolves for Brad Miller's expiring contract and Jerome Dyson's non-guaranteed contract from the Hornets, as well as Wesley Johnson and a lottery protected 2013 first round draft pick that will stay in the first round until 2016 from the Timberwolves, which would then turn into two second round picks in 2016 and 2017. On August 15, 2012, the Suns decided to waive Jerome Dyson and Brad Miller's contracts and sign a one-year deal for Jermaine O'Neal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nFormer Suns player Leandro Barbosa considered playing for the Suns again, as well as the Los Angeles Lakers and the Brooklyn Nets, before officially signing with the Boston Celtics on October 17, 2012. Luke Zeller and Diante Garrett were initially announced as training camp invitees on October 1. However, due to the heart condition involving Channing Frye, both players ended up making the team. Other players announced as possible candidates that day include Othyus Jeffers, Solomon Jones, and Ike Diogu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nBefore the 2011\u201312 NBA season officially ended, Bill Cartwright had announced that he will not be returning as an assistant head coach to the Phoenix Suns. On July 2012, Elston Turner had competed for the head coach spot for the Portland Trail Blazers. Ultimately, he was not hired, and he stayed as an assistant coach for at least the start of the season. On August 28, 2012, the Suns hired Lindsey Hunter as an initial assistant head coach for player development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nOn October 4, 2012, the Suns also added both Sean Rooks and Basketball Hall of Famer Ralph Sampson as assistants for player development as well. Phoenix Mercury head coach Corey Gaines has also gained an assistant head coach role for player development later on in the season as well. The same thing would also be said for Dan Panaggio later on in 2013 as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nOn January 18, 2013, head coach Alvin Gentry was fired from head coaching duties. Gentry's firing came right after the Suns' worst opening stint in 28 years. Two days later, the Suns announced that Lindsey Hunter would surprisingly take on the role of interim head coach for the Suns instead of either Dan Majerle or Elston Turner throughout the remainder of the season. It was also announced that Sean Rooks would resign from his developmental coaching duties. A day later, Suns fan favorite Dan Majerle announced that he would resign from his assistant head coaching duties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Coaching changes\nTwo days later, defensive assistant head coach Elston Turner announced his resignation from his duties as well. Because of their resignations, Phoenix Mercury head coach Corey Gaines gained a more permanent assistant coaching role for at least the rest of the season. In addition, former Suns scout and Shanghai Sharks head coach Dan Panaggio from the Chinese Basketball Association ended up becoming a new assistant head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Roster, Salaries\nBecause the Suns decided to amnesty Josh Childress' contract, he still gets paid the $6,500,000 that he would have been owed had he played for the Suns this season. While he still gets paid money out of being amnestied from the team for two more seasons, his salary does not actually affect the Suns' actual salary cap. In addition, since Brad Miller's contract guaranteed him around $850,000 this season, he was paid that salary despite being waived by the team and retiring in the process. Also, because Luke Zeller was waived from the team after January 10, 2013 came to fruition, his rookie salary of $473,604 ended up being counted by the Suns' salary cap as well since his contract was guaranteed by that point of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Trades\n^\u00a0I:\u00a0The Los Angeles Lakers originally planned for their 2015 first round pick to be conveyed to Phoenix. Due to the Lakers' poor season records in the following seasons, the selection failed to be conveyed until 2018 when the Lakers did not have any protections on that year's pick. ^\u00a0II:\u00a0The Minnesota Timberwolves' second round pick the Suns were to get was originally projected to be their own second round pick at the time of the trade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Trades\nHowever, due to stipulations between New Orleans and a future trade involving the Timberwolves, the pick that was sent to Phoenix was New Orleans' second round pick in 2016 instead of Minnesota's 2016 second round pick. ^\u00a0III:\u00a0The Minnesota Timberwolves had initially planned to send their own first round pick (top-13 protected from 2013\u201314; top-12 protected from 2015\u201316) to the Suns before they traded it away to the Boston Celtics on January 9, 2015, for Brandan Wright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Trades\nHowever, because Minnesota could not convey a first round selection for the Celtics due to their selections in those years being protected by 2016 due to them being eliminated from playoff contention in late March 2016, the Timberwolves would convey their 2016 and 2017 second round draft picks to Boston instead. ^\u00a0IV:\u00a0The Toronto Raptors sent the least favorable of their own 2014 second round pick (top-36 protected) and the Sacramento Kings' 2014 second round pick (top-55 protected) that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Additions\n^\u00a0a:\u00a0P. J. originally signed a contract to play for Spartak St. Petersburg in Russia. However, due to his performance in the Phoenix Suns' Summer League team, P. J. had earned the right to opt out of his contract with Spartak St. Petersburg and sign with the Suns. The last team P.J. officially played for, however, was with the Brose Baskets Bamberg in Germany. P. J. was also using his birth name of Anthony Tucker at that time as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Additions\n^\u00a0b:\u00a0Both Diante and Luke had initial rookie scale minimum deals due to being undrafted and spending their first seasons with the NBA. However, their deals weren't officially guaranteed until they continued to stay with the team on January 10, 2013. After the January 10 deadline, while both Garrett and Zeller ended up getting their money guaranteed, Zeller would end up being waived after the Suns traded for Marcus Morris, while Garrett was the only player to have stayed with the team at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0c:\u00a0Because Josh Childress was amnestied from the Suns, he still got paid the remainder of his contract with the Suns (3 Years, $21 Million), but his salary away from the team did not affect the team's overall salary cap during that time period. ^\u00a0d:\u00a0Childress would get waived by the Brooklyn Nets on December 29, 2012, and would not play for the rest of the season. ^\u00a0e:\u00a0Aaron Brooks originally left the Suns due to the 2011 NBA lockout in concerns of playing for the 2011\u201312 NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\nHe signed with the Guangdong Southern Tigers in the Chinese Basketball Association. However, due to the CBA's newest policy during the lockout, he could not return to the Suns once the lockout ended. After his season with Guangdong officially ended, the Suns decided not to re-sign him for a new contract that year. He was initially given a qualifying offer as a restricted free agent with restricted benefits, but he was eventually rescinded of his restricted rights and became an unrestricted free agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0f:\u00a0Brooks originally signed with the Sacramento Kings after the Suns decided to not use his restricted free agent rights that they initially had. Brooks continued to play for the Kings until March 1, 2013, which would be when the Kings decided to waive his contract. Four days later, Brooks decided to return to his original team, the Houston Rockets, for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0010-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\nAs a result, the 2011 trade of having Goran Dragi\u0107 being sent to the Houston Rockets and Aaron Brooks being sent to the Suns more or less ended up being reversed around two years later. ^\u00a0g:\u00a0Ronnie Price would be waived by the Portland Trail Blazers on February 21, 2013. ^\u00a0h:\u00a0Hakim Warrick was first traded to the New Orleans Hornets along with Robin Lopez. However, later on in the month of November, the Hornets decided to trade Warrick to the Charlotte Bobcats in exchange for Matt Carroll, who would never play a single game for the Hornets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0010-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\nIn contrast, Warrick only played one game for the Hornets before the trade happened. However, Warrick would be traded once again before the trade deadline; this time, he was sent to the Orlando Magic in exchange for power forward Josh McRoberts. Warrick would then be waived from the Orlando Magic two days after the trade deadline; he would never play a single game for the Magic. ^\u00a0i:\u00a0Even though Brad Miller announced that after last season he would retire from playing basketball, he still had obligations in his contract that allowed him to come over with the Suns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0010-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\nOnce the Suns decided to let him go (alongside Jerome Dyson), Miller would officially announce his retirement from playing basketball. In addition, even though Michael Redd was considered a free agent after his season with the Suns was over with, he never did find a new team for him to sign up with. As a result, Redd would announce his retirement from the NBA on November 6, 2013, well over a year after being an unrestricted free agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230815-0010-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Phoenix Suns season, Transactions, Free agents, Subtractions\n^\u00a0j:\u00a0Luke Zeller first tried out for the Georgia national basketball team during the 2013 EuroBasket Tournament's tryouts at the end of the 2012\u201313 season before signing with the D-League's Austin Toros (which was also the last team Zeller played for before signing up with the Suns) nearly an entire year after being waived by the Suns on December 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230816-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Pittsburgh, widely known as \"Pitt\", in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers' head coach was Jamie Dixon, in his 10th year as head coach and 14th overall at Pitt. The team played its home games in the Petersen Events Center in Pittsburgh and was in its final season as a member of the Big East Conference. Pitt played in the ACC the following season. They finished the conference season with 12\u20136 in the Big East Conference, which they placed 4th. In the postseason, they lost to Syracuse in the quarterfinals of the 2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament and lost in the second round of 2013 NCAA Tournament to Wichita State to conclude the season with an overall record of 24\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230816-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team, Postseason\nPitt was announced as one of the four eight seed in the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament on Sunday, March 17, 2013. They played in the West Region. Their first game was against nine seed Wichita State University on Thursday, March 21, in Salt Lake City at 1:40 in the afternoon. They lost with a final score of 73 to 55.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230817-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Panthers were coached by Agnus Berenato in their final year as a member of the Big East Conference. The Panthers played their home games at the Petersen Events Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania except for one game at Fitzgerald Field House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230817-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team, Season\nThe Panthers went 0-16 in Big East Conference play for the second year in a row prompting the replacement of head coach Agnus Berenato with Suzie McConnell-Serio on April 12, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230817-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team, Roster\nSix-foot, 11-inch center Marvadene \"Bubbles\" Anderson redshirted during the 2012-13 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230817-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Panthers women's basketball team, Schedule\nNote: All-Access is the CBS Sports Network's suite of subscription-based live video web streaming of the respective schools selected sports events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season\nThe 2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season was the franchise's 46th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Off-season\nThe Pittsburgh Penguins finished their 2011\u201312 season with 108 points, ranking second in the Atlantic Division and fourth in the Eastern Conference. Pittsburgh started off the 2012 Stanley Cup playoffs in the Eastern Conference Quarter-finals against their cross-state rivals, the Philadelphia Flyers. Pittsburgh eventually went on to lose in six games, with Philadelphia taking the series 4\u20132. The 45 goals scored through the first four games set an NHL record for goals in the first four games of a seven-game series. A total of 56 goals were scored over the course of the entire series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Off-season\nAfter elimination, Pittsburgh went on to sign 2010 draft pick Reid McNeill on May 15, 2012 and 2011 draft pick Dominik Uher on June 1, 2012 to three-year entry level contracts. On June 4, 2012, the Penguins signed goaltender Tomas Vokoun to a two-year contract after acquiring him from the Washington Capitals for a seventh-round draft pick in 2012. On June 28, 2012, the Penguins agreed to terms with All-Star center Sidney Crosby to a 12-year contract extension worth $104.4\u00a0million, but due to the terms of the current NHL Collective Bargaining Agreement, the new deal could not be signed until July 1, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Off-season, Lockout\nAt 11:59\u00a0p.m. (EDT) on September 15, 2012, following the expiration of the NHL collective bargaining agreement (CBA) the owners declared a lockout of the members of the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) until a new agreement could be reached. As a result, training camps will not open until agreement on a new CBA is reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Off-season, Lockout, Resolution\nAt approximately 4:40\u00a0am EST on January 6, 2013 the NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman and NHLPA Executive Director Donald Fehr announced that they have reached an agreement on the framework of a new CBA. On January 9, 2013 the NHL Board of Governors voted unanimously to accept the new 10-year CBA between the NHL and the NHLPA, but will not become official until the NHLPA completes a ratification vote. The NHLPA announced that ratification voting would start at 8\u00a0pm (EST) Thursday (January 10, 2013) and will continue for 36 hours through Saturday (January 12, 2013) at 8\u00a0am (EST).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Off-season, Lockout, Resolution\nOn January 12, 2013 the NHLPA announced that the union had voted to ratify the new CBA with the NHL, but the new CBA will not become official until the NHL and the NHLPA sign a Memorandum of understanding (MOU). Later that same day both the NHL and the NHLPA announced that both sides signed the MOU reflecting the terms of the new 10-year CBA officially ending the lockout and announcing a 720-game (48 per team) regular-season schedule will begin on January 19, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, January\nThe Penguins released a statement from co-owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle and CEO David Morehouse shortly after the NHL announced the framework agreement, offering an apology to the fans and the community and thanking them for their patience and loyalty to the team. As part of the organization thanking the fans and community for their loyalty, the Penguins organization announced that they would offer free selected concession items and \"half off\" all merchandise during the team's first four home games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, January\nIn preparation of the start of the regular season the Penguins scheduled a free to fans \"Black & Gold\" game on January 16, 2013, which would simulate a game-like atmosphere with teammates facing teammates. The Penguins fans showed their appreciation to the organization by filling the CONSOL Energy Center with approximately 18,000 fans (official attendance could not be compiled without a ticket count due to the game's being open and free to the public) with the organization naming the fans as the number one star of the game. Team Black defeated Team White 5\u20134 in a game which simulated various scenarios (random five-on-three, four-on-four situations) including a full five-minute overtime and a shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, January\nThe Penguins started the season with a win over their cross-state rivals the Philadelphia Flyers that propelled Marc-Andre Fleury past Tom Barrasso to become the Penguins' all-time winning goaltender. While the Penguins went on to finish the month with four wins and three losses they did not win a game at home in the seven games in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, February\nThe Penguins started February with a four-game winning streak including their first home victory of the season against the New Jersey Devils. In a game on February 3 against the Washington Capitals, Chris Kunitz set a career milestone for scoring four goals in one game and was then named NHL Second Star of the Week. With 18.7 seconds left in the second period in a game on February 13 against the Ottawa Senators, Matt Cooke went to finish a hit on Erik Karlsson when Cooke's skate blade caught Karlsson on the back of his left leg lacerating his left Achilles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, February\nThroughout the first four home games, as part of the special promotion following the lockout, the Penguins organization gave away 52,142 fountain drinks, 33,289 nachos, 26,633 pretzels, 22,258 hot dogs, 22,118 chicken sandwiches and 20,380 hamburgers and sold at half-price 8,680 jerseys, 18,950 T-shirts and 8,776 hats. In a game against the Florida Panthers on February 22, during the third period, Evgeni Malkin was skating toward the Panthers net when he got tangled up with Panthers defenceman Erik Gudbranson and then crashed violently into the boards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, February\nMalkin went on to miss the rest of the remaining three games of February and was diagnosed with a concussion suffering from short-term memory loss and retroactively was placed on IR effective the time of initial injury. Sidney Crosby was named NHL Second Star of the Month leading the NHL with 18 assists and 24 points in the 14 games during the month and had six three-point games while obtaining at least one point in eleven of fourteen games. The Penguins lost the last game of February against ex-Penguin Jordan Staal of the Carolina Hurricanes but still finished the month with nine wins and five losses leading the Atlantic Division and second place in the Eastern Conference with twenty-six points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nThe Penguins started out March with a wild game against the Montreal Canadiens that combined for a total of thirteen goals including the Brandon Sutter game-winner in overtime. The game featured Brandon Sutter, Matt Cooke and Chris Kunitz all scoring two goals apiece with defenceman Kris Letang finished with a career-high four assist night. After missing four games, Evgeni Malkin made his return to the lineup against the Tampa Bay Lightning on March 4 where he tallied a goal and an assist before defeating the Lightning 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nChris Kunitz extended his career-long point streak to six games scoring six goals and nine points during the stretch and has at least one point in eighteen of the Penguins' last 23 games. After falling behind the Philadelphia Flyers 4\u20131 in the first period on March 7, and being outshot 18\u20134, the Penguins tied the score in the second period 4\u20134 outshooting the Flyers 12\u20133 eventually defeating the Flyers 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nChris Kunitz scored twice in the game extending his career-long point streak to seven games as he and his linemates (Sidney Crosby, Pascal Dupuis) combined for three goals and eight points in the game. James Neal scored his sixteenth goal of the season thirty-six seconds into the March 9 game against the Toronto Maple Leafs but despite the early lead the Leafs tied the game and sent the game to a shootout. Marc-Andre Fleury stopped Tyler Bozak and Nazem Kadri with James Neal and Sidney Crosby scoring on James Reimer with James Neal scoring the determining goal. Chris Kunitz saw his career-long point streak end being held without a point against the Leafs. After absorbing a hit from James van Riemsdyk in the third period, Evgeni Malkin left the game with an upper-body injury and did not return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nThe Penguins played the next night against the New York Islanders in an offensive showing by the Penguins defeating the Islanders 6\u20131. The game featured Chris Kunitz scoring his fourth career hat-trick and had a career-high five-point game, Pascal Dupuis scoring twice and Sidney Crosby finishing with five assists tying a single-game career-high. Sidney Crosby was named NHL Second Star of the Week scoring two goals, nine assists and eleven points through the week during an eight-game point streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nIn a game that seemed likely to be the Penguins first game being shutout of the season, also proved to be one of the Penguins biggest come-back games of the season. After being held scoreless throughout 53:42 minutes of March 12 game against the Boston Bruins, Chris Kunitz scored with Brandon Sutter scoring twice with the game-winner coming with only 2:03 minutes left in regulation. The next game against the Toronto Maple Leafs started out the same way as the last did with the Penguins falling behind and being held off the scoreboard until 7:18 minutes of the third period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nThe Penguins who were behind 1\u20130 saw Pascal Dupuis score the tying as well as the game-winning goal with Craig Adams scoring an empty net goal with 9.4 seconds left tallying the Penguins first short-handed goal of the season defeating the Leafs 3\u20131. On March 16, in a game against the New York Rangers, Marc-Andre Fleury recorded a franchise all-time leading 23rd career shutout in a 3\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nThe Penguins tenth straight win came on March 19 with a 2\u20131 win over the Washington Capitals when Matt Niskanen scored the game-winning goal late in the third period just nine seconds after the Penguins killed off a four-minute Matt Cooke penalty for boarding and unsportsmanlike conduct. On March 24 the Penguins announced that they acquired 13-year veteran and Dallas Stars captain Brenden Morrow in exchange for Joe Morrow and a 2013 fifth-round draft pick after Morrow waived his no-trade clause to play for the Penguins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nLater that evening the Penguins went on to defeat the Philadelphia Flyers 2\u20131 in overtime extending the winning streak to 12 games surpassing the Chicago Blackhawks with the longest winning streak in the NHL this year. The next day the Penguins announced that they acquired defenceman Douglas Murray from the San Jose Sharks in exchange for a 2013 second-round draft pick and a 2014 conditional second-round draft pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nThe Penguins defeated the Canadiens 1\u20130 on March 26 with a lone goal from Chris Kunitz in a game that featured Marc-Andre Fleury and Tomas Vokoun combining for a team shutout after Marc-Andre Fleury left that game after the second period when Tyler Kennedy and Brian Gionta got tangled up and crashed into him. The next day defenseman Kris Letang was placed on Injured Reserve and will be out 7\u201310 days with a lower-body injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nIn the early morning hours on March 28 the Pittsburgh Penguins announced that they had acquired 16-year veteran and Calgary Flames captain Jarome Iginla in exchange for Ben Hanowski, Kenny Agostino and a 2013 first-round draft pick after Iginla also waived his no-trade clause to play for the Penguins. That evening the Penguins went on to defeat the Winnipeg Jets 4\u20130 which featured Evgeni Malkin making his return to the lineup after missing nine games and goaltender Tomas Vokoun recording his 50th career shutout extending the Penguins winning streak to 14 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nJarome Iginla filled an immigration petition and was approved to join the team on March 29 in time to be added to the starting line-up against the New York Islanders. The Penguins went on to defeat the Islanders extending the winning streak to 15 games and became the first team in league history to have a perfect record over a calendar month. The Penguins also set a franchise record for longest shutout streak of 208:24 minutes and Vokoun setting a personal and Penguins record for an individual shutout streak with 162:42 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, March\nThe win came with a price after 50 seconds into his first shift, Sidney Crosby left the game after a shot from Brooks Orpik was deflected and re-directed into his mouth. The next day, head coach Dan Bylsma announced that Sidney Crosby needed to have oral surgery as a result of the injury and was out indefinitely with a broken jaw. Defenseman Paul Martin also underwent surgery on a broken bone in his hand and is projected to miss 4\u20136 weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, April\nThe Penguins history-making streak came to an end Tuesday night, April 2, 2013, at the hands of the Buffalo Sabres. The team honored Brooks Orpik who played his 622nd game as a Penguin the most games played ever in franchise history by a defenseman. On the day of the NHL trade deadline, April 3, 2013, the Pittsburgh Penguins acquired forward Jussi Jokinen from the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for a conditional sixth or seventh round draft pick in 2013 with Carolina retaining a portion of Jokinen's salary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, April\nThe Penguins that night went on to drop the second game in a row losing against the New York Rangers. The next game the Penguins beat the Rangers in a game which featured Jussi Jokinen making his Penguin debut and scoring the game-tying and game-winning goal in a shootout. James Neal left the game halfway through the third period after Rangers defenseman Michael Del Zotto turned and caught Neal with an elbow up high and did not return the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, April\nNeal was later diagnosed with a concussion and would miss the upcoming road-trip with no timetable for his return given while Kris Letang, who missed the last five games, was cleared for team practice. The Penguins defeated the Carolina Hurricanes the next night, 5\u20133, securing themselves a playoff position. Kris Letang returned to the lineup the next game and defenseman Tanner Glass scored his first goal as a Penguin helping the Penguins defeat the Tampa Bay Lightning 6\u20133. Evgeni Malkin missed the next game against the Florida Panthers and was later classified as day-to-day due to an upper-body injury. The next game against the Montreal Canadiens, defenseman Douglas Murray scored a goal which ended the longest goalless streak in the NHL of 146 games helping the Penguins defeat the Canadiens 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, April\nThe game scheduled against the Boston Bruins on April 19, 2013 was postponed to April 20, 2013 due to the city of Boston being placed in a state of lock-down while authorities searched the areas for the suspects from the Boston Marathon bombing. The game originally scheduled on April 20, 2013 against the Buffalo Sabres was moved to April 23, 2013 with all tickets for the original game being honored for the rescheduled game. The Penguins went to defeat the Boston Bruins and solidified their spot as the number one seed in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, April\nThe Penguins honored the lives lost and the town of Boston by wearing a special patch on their jerseys with the outline of Boston's downtown with an American flag in the background and the numbers \"617\" \u2013 which is the Boston area code. After the game the jerseys were auctioned off with the proceeds being donated to \"The One Fund Boston\". The Penguins next win over that Ottawa Senators featured Tomas Vokoun reach his 300th career win in his 700th career game and Dan Bylsma became the fastest coach in NHL history to reach 200 wins (316 games).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0013-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, April\nEvgeni Malkin returned to the line up after missing the last four games but failed to defeat the Buffalo Sabres. Brooks Orpik also left the game after the first period and did not return from a lower-body injury. The Penguins then went on to lose a their last regular season away game against the New Jersey Devils 3\u20132. The Penguins finished off the last game of the regular season with a home game against the Carolina Hurricanes which featured the return of Jordan Staal to the city of Pittsburgh. In the game's first television timeout, a highlight reel containing some of Staal's best moments as a Penguin aired on the jumbotron. After the video package ended, Staal received a standing ovation. The Penguins defeated the Hurrincanes 8\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, April\nThe Penguins led the League in scoring for the second consecutive year, scoring 162 goals overall (excluding 3 shootout-winning goals). The Penguins also scored at least one goal in all of their 48 regular-season games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals\nThe Penguins started the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs in the first seed of the Eastern Conference facing the #8 seed the New York Islanders. The Penguins defeated the Islanders four games out of five that they faced each other during the regular season, outscoring the Islanders 17\u20139. The Penguins dominated Game 1 with a score of 5\u20130 which marked Marc-Andre Fleury's sixth career playoff shutout tying a franchise record and rookie Beau Bennett's first career postseason goal on the first shift of his first game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 90], "content_span": [91, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals\nSidney Crosby made his return in Game 2 after missing the past 13 games (12 regular season, one playoff) but after taking an early lead the Penguins lost Game 2, 3\u20134. The Penguins went on to win Game 3 at the 8:44 mark of overtime when Chris Kunitz scored a power-play goal defeating the Islanders 5\u20134. James Neal opened the scoring in Game 3 after missing the last two games with a lower-body injury but the Penguins lost 6\u20134 with the Islanders tying the series at two games apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 90], "content_span": [91, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals\nTomas Vokoun replaced Marc-Andre Fleury for Game 5 and also saw the return of Tyler Kennedy and Joe Vitale with Kennedy scoring the game-winning goal in a 4\u20130 shutout victory taking the lead in the series. Game 6 saw the Penguins behind 3\u20132 towards the end of regulation when Paul Martin tied the game with 5:17 left in regulation. Unlikely hero, Brooks Orpik scored his first career playoff goal in 78 playoff games defeating the Islanders 4\u20133 and advancing the Penguins onto the Eastern Conference Semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 90], "content_span": [91, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Semi-finals\nThe Penguins opened the Semi-finals against the seventh-seeded the Ottawa Senators, a team that the Penguins defeated in all three meetings during the regular season, outscoring them 9\u20134. The Penguins defeated the Senators in Game 1, 4\u20131, in a physical game that saw a total of 66 hits (40 Penguins, 26 Senators). The Penguins chased goaltender Craig Anderson just 1:15 into the second period of Game 2 after Sidney Crosby's slap shot beat Anderson, with Crosby becoming just the second Penguins player other than Mario Lemieux to notch multiple post-season hat-tricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Semi-finals\nWith less than a minute to play in regulation of Game 3 and the Penguins on a power-play, the Senators pulled their goaltender for the extra attacker, where captain Daniel Alfredsson scored a shorthanded goal to tie the game with 28.6 seconds left. Game 3 went into double-overtime and 7:39 minutes into the second overtime period, Colin Greening scored on a rebound to give the Senators a 2\u20131 victory, bringing the series to 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0016-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Semi-finals\nJarome Iginla and James Neal both scored two goals apiece in Game 4, with the Penguins defeating the Senators 7\u20133, pushing the Senators to the risk of elimination and bringing the series to a 3\u20131 score. James Neal added three more goals in Game 5 to record his first career playoff hat-trick, and his fifth goal in the last six periods, eliminating the Senators with a 6\u20132 win and advancing the Penguins to the Conference Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0016-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Semi-finals\nThe Penguins outscored the Senators 22\u201311 and defeated Craig Anderson, who finished the regular season with a 1.69 GAA and a 0.941 save percentage over 24 games but finished the playoffs with a 3.01 GAA and a 0.918 save percentage over ten games total and allowed 20 goals over the five games against the Penguins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Finals\nThe Penguins faced the fourth-seeded Boston Bruins in the Conference Finals, the fifth time the two franchises faced off in a playoff series, and the third time in the Eastern Conference Finals. Their most recent meeting was in the 1992 Wales Conference Finals, where Pittsburgh swept the Bruins out of the playoffs. The Penguins had won all three games in this year's regular season series, all three games by one goal. The Pittsburgh Penguins had made it to their third Conference Finals since 2008, while the Boston Bruins were making their second appearance in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Finals\nThe Bruins swept the top seeded Penguins, as Boston goaltender Tuukka Rask recorded his first two career playoff shutouts and only allowed two Pittsburgh goals in the entire series. Penguin stars Evgeni Malkin, Sidney Crosby and the newly acquired Jarome Iginla were held to zero combined points during the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Stanley Cup playoffs, Eastern Conference Finals\nDavid Krejci had two goals in the Bruins' 3\u20130 Game 1 victory, the Bruins recorded six goals in a 6\u20131 rout in Game 2, Patrice Bergeron scored at 15:19 of the second overtime period of Game 3 to give Boston a 2\u20131 win, and in Game 4, Adam McQuaid scored the lone goal to give the Bruins a 1\u20130 win and a trip to the Stanley Cup Finals. This series marked the first time since 1979 that the Penguins were swept in a playoff series; notably, it was the same Bruins franchise that swept the Penguins that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 Team only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Transactions\nThe Penguins have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230818-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Draft picks\nPittsburgh Penguins' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230819-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Plunket Shield season\nThe 2012\u201313 Plunket Shield season was the 84th season of official first-class domestic cricket in New Zealand. The season started on 27 October 2012 and ran to 23 February 2013. Central Districts won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230819-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Plunket Shield season, Points Distribution\nBatting Bonus Points are awarded in relation to the number of runs scored after 110 overs are bowled in the first innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230819-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Plunket Shield season, Points Distribution\nBowling Bonus Points are awarded in relation to the number of wickets taken after 110 overs are bowled in the first innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230820-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PlusLiga\n2012\u201313 PlusLiga - was the 77th season of Polish Championship (13th season as professional league - PlusLiga) 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, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230820-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 PlusLiga\nIn season 2012/2013 Asseco Resovia Rzesz\u00f3w, PGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w and ZAKSA K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale played in CEV Champions League, Jastrz\u0119bski W\u0119giel and Delecta Bydgoszcz in CEV Cup. PGE Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w played in the Club World Championship 2012 and achieved bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230821-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 99th season of competitive association football played by Plymouth Argyle Football Club, an English team based in Plymouth. The season was the club's 86th in the Football League and seventh in the fourth tier of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230821-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Squad statistics\nAppearances and goals are sourced from Soccerbase. For a description of playing positions, see association football positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Polish Cup was the fifty-ninth season of the annual Polish football knockout tournament. It began on 18 July 2012 with the first matches of the Extra Preliminary Round and ended on 3 May 2013 with the Final. The winners qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup\nLegia Warsaw were the defending champions, having won their record breaking 15th title in the previous season. They successfully defended this title, becoming the winner of the Polish Cup for the 16th time in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, Extra Preliminary Round\nThe draw for this round was conducted at the headquarters of the Polish FA on 18 June 2012. Participating in this round were 16 regional cup winners and 35 teams from the 2011\u201312 II Liga. The matches were played on 18 July 2012. Pelikan \u0141owicz received a bye to the Preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, Preliminary round\nThe draw for this round was conducted at the headquarters of the Polish FA on 18 June 2012. The matches were played on 24 and 25 July 2012. Stomil Olsztyn and Sok\u00f3\u0142 Aleksandr\u00f3w \u0141\u00f3dzki received a bye to the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, First round\nThe draw for this round was conducted at the headquarters of the Polish FA on 26 July 2012. Participating in this round are the 12 winners of the preliminary round along with Stomil Olsztyn and Sok\u00f3\u0142 Aleksandr\u00f3w \u0141\u00f3dzki and the 18 teams from 2011\u201312 I Liga (Poland). The matches will be played on 31 July\u20131 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, Round of 32\nThe draw for this round was conducted at the headquarters of the Polish FA on 26 July 2012. Participating in this round are the 16 winners of the first round along with and the 16 teams from 2011\u201312 Ekstraklasa. The matches will be played on 11\u201312 August 2012 with the exception of matches involving Legia Warsaw and \u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, Round of 16\nThe 16 winners from Round of 32 compete in this round. The matches will be played on 25\u201327 September and 2\u20133 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe 8 winners from Round of 16 competed in this round. The matches will be played in two legs. The first leg took place on 26 and 28 February 2013, while the second legs were played on 12 and 13 March 2013.Pairs were determined on 24 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, Quarterfinals\nTwo second legs were moved to 26\u201327 March 2013 due to bad weather conditions. This is an official UEFA date and matches will be played without players called to the National Teams, what was agreed by interested teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230822-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup, Semi-finals\nThe 4 winners from the Quarterfinals will compete in this round. The matches will be played in two legs. The first legs took place on 10 April 2013, while the second legs were played on 17 April 2013.The two winners moved on to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230823-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup of men's volleyball\n2012\u201313 Polish Cup was the 56th edition of the Polish Cup of men's volleyball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230823-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polish Cup of men's volleyball\nAs a venue for final tournament was chosen Hala Widowiskowo-Sportowa in Cz\u0119stochowa. ZAKSA K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale achieved their fourth trophy in history of club. Brazilian outside hitter Felipe Fonteles was awarded Most Valuable Player of final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230824-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polska Liga Hokejowa season\nThe 2012\u201313 Polska Liga Hokejowa season was the 78th season of the Polska Liga Hokejowa, the top level of ice hockey in Poland. Eight teams participated in the league, and KS Cracovia won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230824-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Polska Liga Hokejowa season\nDue to financial difficulties, KS Toru\u0144 pulled out from competition after 14 matches. They did not participate in the playoffs, and they were relegated to the 1. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Port Vale's 101st season of football in the English Football League, and fifth successive season in League Two. The club secured promotion into League One with a third-place finish. Administration scuppered the club's promotion chances in the previous campaign, and high-profile departures in the summer meant that manager Micky Adams had to rebuild his team from the ground up. His rebuilding efforts were severely hampered when Keith Ryder's expected takeover collapsed. The club was instead taken over by Paul Wildes on 20 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season\nThere were no lengthy cup runs, as Vale exited the League Cup with an opening day defeat to Championship club Burnley, and were knocked out of the FA Cup at the Second Round with a loss away at League One side Sheffield United, before their progress in the Football League Trophy was halted by League Two rivals Bradford City. This allowed the \"Valiants\" to focus on gaining promotion, and their goal-scoring feats took them up to second place by 15 September, behind only defensive masters Gillingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season\nWith the new owners in place, Adams could afford to sign experienced players in the January transfer window, and the team pushed on to establish themselves as the division's leaders. However the wheels then fell off as Vale struggled to score as they showed relegation form heading on from mid-February. After just one win in eight games, Vale rediscovered their previous form by mid-March and went on to beat fourth-placed Burton Albion 7\u20131 in front of 10,978 supporters on 5 April. Promotion was secured 15 days later with a 2\u20132 draw with Northampton Town before a home crowd of 12,496. After promotion was secured Paul Wildes resigned as chairman and Norman Smurthwaite took full control of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nOn 19 June 2012, Port Vale were given odds of 40 to 1 of gaining promotion. The club had lost some its best players as versatile defender Lee Collins, midfield general Anthony Griffith, and top-scorers Sean Rigg and Marc Richards all signed big money deals elsewhere \u2013 the latter two moving to club's expecting to win promotion out of League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nWith the club's new owner in place, Adams signed six players early in July. He first signed midfielder Darren Murphy and winger Jennison Myrie-Williams (who had impressed in a loan spell at the club the previous season) from Stevenage, as well as Colchester United attacker Ashley Vincent. He then made another triple swoop by bringing in Shrewsbury Town goalkeeper Chris Neal, Crewe Alexandra centre-back David Artell, and former Wales international Richard Duffy. Highly rated striker Liam Dickinson, veteran forward Darren Byfield, and Irish attacker Tadhg Purcell also joined the club on trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nAdams appointed Doug Loft as club captain at the end of July. The pre-season tour of Ireland was hailed as a success, whilst Vale recorded wins in each of their encounters with non-league opposition. However, David Artell left the club as a free agent days before the start of the season, as he refused to sign a contract that reflected the club's status as 'in administration' (the initial contract he signed listed Keith Ryder as the club's owner, and was therefore invalid).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\n\"The players have been absolutely amazing. I've told them that I can't thank them enough for their loyalty, character and commitment. They have thrown away a lot of money in signing these [revised] contracts... I'm embarrassed because I believed in Keith Ryder and believed in what he was doing. To find out that the players could have walked away for nothing after all the work we had done in pre-season was unbelievable. I hope the football club has hit rock-bottom and we can start to climb again, but I can't guarantee that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nThe team got off to a solid start in August, recording wins over a poor Barnet side and a much more resilient Morecambe. They lost away at Accrington Stanley despite having 56% possession and 12 attempts on goal. They continued their form into September, as 14 points from a possible 18 left them sitting second in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nOnly a bizarre own goal from Brian Saah won them a point at home to Torquay United, before Tom Pope hit four against former club Rotherham United in a 6\u20132 victory; the win over Steve Evans's big spending \"Millers\" sent a message to the rest of the division that Vale were genuine promotion candidates. They then came from behind to win away at Plymouth Argyle, before putting a highly impressive Fleetwood Town to the sword with a 5\u20132 away victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nA top-of-table clash with Gillingham at Vale Park ended the \"Valiants\" impressive run, as the visitors claimed a 2\u20130 victory with a professional performance. Having named the same first eleven for nine successive games, Adams introduced Rob Taylor and Ryan Burge at the expense of central midfielders Sam Morsy and Chris Shuker, and was rewarded with a 1\u20130 win over high-flying Bradford City in front of over 11,000 spectators at Valley Parade. Micky Adams was named as Manager of the Month and Pope was named as Player of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nOctober opened with a dismal home draw with Dagenham & Redbridge, with goalkeeper Chris Neal making an uncharacteristic error to allow a blunted \"Daggers\" attack to claim an unlikely goal. The team then rallied to produce a convincing 2\u20130 win away at fourth-placed Exeter City, Pope's two goals taking him into double figures with 35 league games yet to play. However injuries took hold of the small squad, with captain Loft sidelined with a calf injury, and winger Lewis Haldane forced to announce his retirement after failing to recover from a broken leg he sustained in August 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nThey played Oxford United on a Monday night in front of the Sky Sports cameras, and did themselves justice with a convincing 3\u20130 win, with both Ashley Vincent and Sam Morsy scoring impressive goals. An injury/suspension crisis in midfield then did little to prevent a patched up Vale side to come from behind to beat Gareth Ainsworth's Wycombe Wanderers 4\u20131. They then travelled to Staffordshire rivals Burton Albion, and battled to a 1\u20131 draw after falling behind to a fluke goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nThe month ended on a sour note at Sixfields, as John McCombe was sent off after breaking the leg of Northampton Town goalscorer Alex Nicholls; injuries and suspensions left teenagers Joe Davis and Kingsley James to form a makeshift centre-back partnership, though the score was kept to a respectable 2\u20130. For a second successive time, a Vale player was named the division's Player of the Month; Ashley Vincent took the award, but credited his teammates, saying \"this award is as much for them as it is for me\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nVale went three league games without a win on 6 November, as they lost a two-goal lead to draw 2\u20132 at home with Rochdale; the game turned on Sam Morsy's sending off on the 67 minute mark. Three days later, Adams boosted his midfield by signing former Shrewsbury player Sean McAllister to an eight-week deal. A day later and Vale travelled to Roots Hall and came away with a point following a goalless draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nVale then went five league games without a win, after throwing away a two-goal lead for the second successive home game, to draw 2\u20132 with York City. Adams said \"It's not a time for people to criticise and get on the players' backs, so I'll have to put my arm around a few of them, even if I feel like strangling them at times.\" His team duly went on to record a simple 4\u20130 win over Bristol Rovers, with Pope's hat-trick taking him to 20 goals in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nOn 22 November, Liam Chilvers re-signed on loan from AFC Telford United in order to provide more options in defence. Notts County striker Lee Hughes was also reported to have joined the club on loan, with a view to a permanent move; however, the next day it was revealed that the loan move would not go through as the relevant paperwork had not been sent in to the Football League on time. Vale carried on scoring goals regardless, ending the month with a 3\u20131 win in miserable conditions at Aldershot Town. They also welcomed Calvin Andrew, who was signed to provide cover for Tom Pope.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nVale went into the festive schedule with a 2\u20130 home defeat to Chesterfield, who boasted four former \"Valiants\" in their team, including goal scorer Jay O'Shea. Adams tried to boost the team's confidence and said he then did \"a bit of psychology with the players... sat them down, one-on-one, and reminded them about what and where they are.\" The talks seemed to work, as a Louis Dodds goal ensured that they came from behind at third-place Cheltenham Town to record a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nAssistant manager Mark Grew also employed psychology, telling the media that \"We have the ability to bring people in, but hopefully we won't have to... if we lose three or four games, then the gaffer might have to freshen things up... but if we can pick up maybe nine points over Christmas and new year, then we wouldn't have a problem.\" On Boxing day, Vale headed to the New York Stadium for the first time, and completed the double over Rotherham with a 2\u20131 win. They then ended the year top of the table, after beating the \"Daggers\" 3\u20132 in rain-soaked conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nThe new year was welcomed with a poor showing at home to Fleetwood, that ended in a 2\u20130 loss. There was good and bad news on 3 January, as Trinidad and Tobago international midfielder Chris Birchall was re-signed to the club as John McCombe was ruled out injured for \"at least six weeks\". Adams responded to the defeat to Fleetwood by making six changes at home to Plymouth, and was rewarded with a comprehensive 4\u20130 win over a struggling team reduced to ten men in the first half. He also signed experienced Argyle centre-back and captain Darren Purse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nGareth Owen and Darren Murphy both left the club, whilst veteran striker Lee Hughes was signed from Notts County. Liam Chilvers was also signed up until the end of the season. Both Purse and Hughes were handed debuts for the top of the table clash with Gillingham on 12 January, and played vital roles in the team's 2\u20131 victory. Adams then added another new face, with left-sided Sheffield Wednesday player Daniel Jones signed on until the end of the season. With the influx of defenders limiting first team opportunities, Clayton McDonald joined Bristol Rovers on loan until the end of the season. Jones scored on his debut, helping Vale to earn a point away at AFC Wimbledon in front of the television cameras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nNew signings Hughes and Purse gave Vale a 3\u20130 home win over Accrington on 2 February. Three days later bottom club Wimbledon arrived at Vale Park, and Vale won the game 3\u20130 thanks to goals from Hughes and Vincent (2). The next challenge was another club battling against relegation, Barnet, and Adams named the same team for the fourth successive game; however for only the second time in the season Vale fans witnessed a goalless draw. Mid", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\n-table Morecambe then arrived at Vale Park as the club honoured former chairman Bill Bell, who died on 12 February; the game ended with a 1\u20130 defeat to ten-man Morecambe. Calvin Andrew was given a surprise start at Torquay, and rewarded Micky Adams with the only goal of the game. However Vale then tasted a 2\u20130 defeat at home to play-off hopefuls Exeter City, who put in a superb performance; Adams nevertheless found his team's lack of urgency going forward as a \"little bit baffling\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nOxford beat Vale 2\u20131 on 2 March, ending Vale's five-month unbeaten run on the road. Adams then tried to add some steel to his midfield by re-signing tough-tackling Anthony Griffith from Leyton Orient. League Cup finalists Bradford then came to Burslem, and left with a point after the first goalless draw at Vale Park of the season. With the gap between Vale and play-offs getting ever more slender, Southend then successfully defended a two-goal lead at half-time to beat Vale 2\u20131. Adams admitted that \"Promotion seems a million miles away with the way we're playing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nThings then went from bad to worse at Bristol Rovers, with former Stoke player Ryan Brunt giving the \"Gas\" a 2\u20130 win whilst Ashley Vincent suffered a season-ending injury. Adams claimed that \"idiots\" in a \"certain section of the crowd\" were giving him \"personal\" abuse following the run of bad results and his decision to drop fan favourite Ryan Burge for disciplinary reasons. Full -back Adam Yates later said this low-point motivated the players to pull together to prove wrong fans that had barracked Adams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nBurge was suspended for two weeks after refusing to apologize for making veiled criticism of the club on Twitter. Vale then put a poor York side to the sword with goals from Myrie-Williams and Hughes. Cheltenham Town proved a much sterner challenge, but Vale recovered from 2\u20131 down to win a crucial match 3\u20132, with Tom Pope hitting his third hat-trick of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nVale were holding onto second place going into April, and though they failed to capitalize on their rivals dropping points on 1 April, they managed to come from behind to two Marc Richards goals at Chesterfield to secure a point. Four days later, Vale hosted fourth placed Burton Albion, in what was labelled as the biggest game of the season for the \"Valiants\". Reduced tickets of \u00a39 ensured a crowd of 10,978, and they were treated to a comprehensive 7\u20131 victory as Lee Hughes scored a hat-trick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nBottom-placed Aldershot were the visitors four days later, and were seemingly fired up after manager Andy Scott took offense to Adams saying that \"[Aldershot] are down the bottom because [they] deserve to be\"; Scott stated that \"Sometimes managers say things to deflect from what is going on at their own club. We will find out if they have got the stomach for the fight and see if they want to get promoted as they have got a few clubs chasing them.\" The match proved to be low on action, and Vale surrendered a half-time lead to draw the game 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nOn 12 April, it was confirmed that Burge had left the club by mutual consent. Vale could have won promotion the following day, and seemed to have done so after Liam Chilvers made amends for a horrific first half own goal by heading Vale into the lead on 89 minutes; however an injury-time equalizer left the Vale still just short of their final target. Automatic promotion was effectively secured with a 2\u20132 draw against Northampton Town on 20 April, the two unlikely goalscorers were Chilvers and former \"Valiant\" turned \"Cobbler\" Lee Collins. Promotion was confirmed with a 1\u20131 draw with Wycombe at Adams Park on the last day of the season, in what was former favourite Gareth Ainsworth's last game as a player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League Two\nAt the end of the season all out-of-contract players were rewarded with a contract offer, except for Darren Purse, Calvin Andrew, Clayton McDonald, and Kingsley James. Ashley Vincent rejected his contract, choosing instead to leave the club. Despite still being under contract, John McCombe chose to leave the club by mutual consent. Sam Morsy was the third to leave the club, after he rejected the two-year contract on offer in order to sign with Chesterfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nThe trauma of administration still afflicted Port Vale during the 2012\u201313 season, as Micky Adams was unable to sign any players until the club's new owner, Keith Ryder, was granted clearance from the Football League. The takeover deal was delayed for a number of weeks after Ryder faced difficulties in passing the league's 'fit and proper persons' test. The administrators lost patience in Ryder, and publicly stated that if Ryder did not pay the \u00a31.3 million takeover sum before 1 August 2012 then his bid would be rejected, and 'plan B' would be implemented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nThe deadline passed without comment from either party. Confusion reigned as the administrators confirmed that they were open to negotiations with other parties, and that it was up to Ryder to complete his takeover, as he had the opportunity, the funds and \u2013 according to Ryder himself \u2013 the inclination to complete his takeover. Administrator Bob Young stated that \"We initially gave him a deadline of the end of June, which was then extended to 6 July. If someone comes back to us with the funding first, then we will obviously take that forward.\" Ryder responded that \"I wake up every morning believing this is the day we will complete the takeover. If the deal does not go through, and someone else buys the club, there will be no-one more disappointed than me.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nThe time sensitive nature of the situation was emphasized when the club revealed that the two pre-season friendlies at Vale Park would be played behind closed doors \"as the club has been unable to carry out usual maintenance work during the closed season owing to the prolonged period in administration.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nThe 18 players who signed new contracts in the summer did so on the understanding that Ryder would be the club's owner, and so when told that they had to sign revised contracts that offered less security they sought the advice of the Professional Footballers' Association \u2013 they technically remained free agents, free to join another club, until either they agreed to the revised contracts or until Ryder completed his takeover. All but one of the players agreed to sign revised contracts, allowing the club to at least start the season with a full complement of senior players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nRyder disappeared from the scene completely, losing some \u00a3170,000 he had spent on a non-refundable deposit and some pre-seasons costs. The off-field problems even extended to the first team kit, as they spent the pre-season in only the grey away strip and played the League Cup First Round game in a pink strip. This was because of a problem supplying the black and white home kit. The new away black and gold kit was released in mid-September, and the new home kit was released the following month. Fans could purchase seasons tickets for between \u00a3272 and \u00a3356, and could purchase matchday tickets for between \u00a320 and \u00a321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nAt the end of September, Bob Young said that he was hopeful of selling the club by the end of October at the earliest, and that he would \"be disappointed if we haven't sold the club by the end of the year\". The new preferred bidder was revealed to be Wirral-based businessman Paul Wildes. On 17 November, the Roy Sproson status was revealed, as was new home shirt sponsor UK Windows Systems Ltd. Wildes completed his \u00a31.25 million takeover of the club on 20 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\n\"I have a lot of experience of fixing broken businesses. It's what I'm good at for 30 years. And while this is very different to what I've done before, the model is no different. If you don't have any debt, which we won't have, and you don't have any excessive payrolls for people driven by ego, which we won't have, this business can only go one way and that's up. The only ego issue is ensuring I deliver what I believe this business needs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nBut everything we do here will be for the benefit of the club, and ultimately for the benefit of the team and the supporters. We'll try to get more people into the ground, increase our turnover, encourage people to spend more within the business and that will enable me to put money directly into the playing budget. There's nothing clever about it. We'll only be custodians of this club, just like everybody else before us, but I'm hoping when people look back they'll see that the club is in a better place than when I arrived...", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0017-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nIt's a business which needs a lot, but not a lot. That sounds like a contradiction, but there are stupid things which are broken and simply by fixing them we'll make Vale Park a better place. The only way we can influence things on the pitch is by creating the commercial resources to increase our income. We'll filter that down to the squad. It's difficult to list priorities because there are so many things that are broken, damaged or tarnished \u2013 from the toilets to the stadium seating to people's perception of the business and the overall match-day experience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0017-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nBut this should not be a one-day-a-week venue. The resources here are massively under-used at the moment and we want to change that... We'll have a board for operational purposes, but there will be just two shareholders \u2013 Paul, who will be chairman, and myself, and we'll take no salaries or dividends. We're planning to take nothing out of this club whatsoever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0017-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nWe're bringing in people from within our current group of businesses, but it will be a very flat structure, and even their costs will come from within the group of businesses that we run, so the finance and operational side of things will not be a cost to Port Vale... If you're coming to the game, come earlier, drink our beer and eat our pies because everything we can do to increase turnover will directly go straight into the playing squad, It's that simple.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances & ownership issues\nAfter promotion was secured, Smurthwaite said that \"I've never had any hobbies to speak of, but buying Port Vale has given me a passion. The club has reinvigorated me \u2013 it has saved me really, given me a new purpose.\" On 18 May, Paul Wildes made a shock decision to resign as chairman and sell his 50% stake to Smurthwaite, who became the club's chairman and sole owner; Wildes stated that \"From many conversations with Norman, it's clear we have conflicting ideas on how to take Vale forward\". It was revealed that Smurthwaite had funded the initial takeover, and that the pair had a disagreement following defeat to Bristol Rovers in March, with Smurthwaite insisting on a more public approach to take pressure off the manager and players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nThe FA Cup draw was not kind on the \"Valiants\", as they were forced to travel to Conference play-off hopefuls Forest Green Rovers at The New Lawn. Ashley Vincent and Clayton McDonald (scoring his first goal for the club) opened the scoring, before Rovers levelled shortly after half-time; substitute Ben Williamson then scored a late winner to avoid a replay. The Second Round was also tough, particularly for Micky Adams, who was tasked with overcoming Sheffield United at Bramall Lane; the League One title chasers had sacked Adams and appointed Danny Wilson in May 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nEver ready with a quote, Adams said: \"I just thought 'All those balls in that bag and they picked this one out'\". Vale seemed certain to progress to the Third Round after Tom Pope put them into the lead, before two late goals from Shaun Miller dumped them out of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nAs per tradition, Vale exited the League Cup at the First Round stage. They were beaten 3\u20131 by Championship side Burnley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nThe Football League Trophy First Round draw left Vale facing League One leaders Tranmere Rovers for the second successive season. Wishing to advance in the competition, Adams picked a strong side, and Vale won the game 2\u20130 thanks to a brace from Jennison Myrie-Williams, who scored with a 30-yard free kick and a penalty. For the Second Round clash with Walsall at the Bescot Stadium, Adams took the unusual move of naming his team a day in advance \"to allow Vale fans a fairer chance to decide whether they think it is worth making the short trip down the M6\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230825-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nNineteen-year-old goalkeeper Sam Johnson made his debut in the game, and was unable to prevent the two \"Saddlers\" goals in a 2\u20132 draw. However, in a remarkable turn of events he went on to score the winning penalty as the 22nd penalty taker of the penalty shoot-out. However suspensions weakened the team \u2013 Tom Pope's presence was especially missed \u2013 for the encounter with Bradford City, and Vale exited the competition with a 2\u20130 home defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230826-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vila Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 TVL Premier League or 2012\u201313 Port Vila Premier League is the 19th season of the Port Vila Premier League top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230826-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vila Premier League\nThe top three of the league qualify for the 2013 VFF National Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230826-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vila Premier League\nThe season lasted from September 13 to December 12, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230826-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Port Vila Premier League\nAmicale FC were the champions and Seveners United relegated to the 2013\u201314 TVL First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230827-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portland Pilots men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Portland Pilots men's basketball team represented the University of Portland during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pilots were members of the West Coast Conference and were led by seventh-year head coach Eric Reveno. They played their home games at the Chiles Center. They finished the season 11\u201321, 4\u201312 in WCC play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the first round of the WCC Tournament to Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230828-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portland Pilots women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Portland Pilots women's basketball team is representing the University of Portland in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This is head coach Jim Sollar's twenty-sixth season at Portland. The Pilots are members of the West Coast Conference and will play their home games at Chiles Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230828-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portland Pilots women's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Pilots were picked to finish eighth in the WCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230829-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portland State Vikings men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Portland State Vikings men's basketball team represented Portland State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Vikings, led by fourth year head coach Tyler Geving, played their home games at the Peter Stott Center and were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 8\u201320, 5\u201315 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They failed to qualify for the Big Sky Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230830-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portland Trail Blazers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Portland Trail Blazers season was the 43rd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The offseason saw the team draft a pair of first round draft picks, future All-Star Damian Lillard was taken 6th overall and Meyers Leonard was taken 11th overall. Despite the team finishing off 11th place in the western conference with a mediocre 33\u201349 record including a 13-game losing streak to finish, Lillard enjoyed a stellar rookie season, winning Rookie of the Year honors for his efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230830-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portland Trail Blazers season, Awards and records\nOn December 5, 2012, Damian Lillard was named Western Conference Rookie of the Month for November, making him the third rookie in Blazers history to earn the honor, following Arvydas Sabonis (1994) and Brandon Roy (2007). When asked about the honor, Lillard stated \"I\u2019m happy that I can get it, but I think all that it says is that I played good for one month. My mind has been focused on being consistent for the whole season, so ... it's a big deal to win the award, but it's not a big deal for the season. I\u2019ll be happy about it and then it\u2019ll be gone. It's a new month already.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230830-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portland Trail Blazers season, Injuries\nReserve guard Elliot Williams tore his left Achilles tendon during a team workout on September 9. He was out for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230831-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portsmouth F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Portsmouth's first season in League One. This was the first time that Portsmouth had played in the third tier of English football since the 1982\u201383 season. Portsmouth were relegated to League Two on 16 April 2013, following Oldham Athletic's win over Yeovil Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230831-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portsmouth F.C. season, Players, Squad details\n1 Not in first team squad, but appeared at least on the bench in a first team game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230831-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portsmouth F.C. season, Players, Transfers, Out\n1Although officially undisclosed, the Portsmouth News reported the fee to be \u00a3600,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230831-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portsmouth F.C. season, Players, Transfers, Out\n2Although officially a free transfer, the Yorkshire Evening Post reported the fee to be \u00a3250,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230831-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portsmouth F.C. season, Players, Transfers, Out\n3Although officially undisclosed, the Portsmouth News reported the fee to be \u00a3200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230831-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Portsmouth F.C. season, Competition, Development Squad/Friendlies\nDue to lack of first team players, Development squad matches were not needed for the rest of the season, as Development players were sent out on loan to non-league clubs. In addition to this, development squad supervisor Guy Whittingham became Portsmouth's caretaker manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230832-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Prairie View A&M Panthers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Prairie View A&M Panthers basketball team represented Prairie View A&M University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by seventh year head coach Byron Rimm II, played their home games at the William Nicks Building and were members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 15\u201319, 8\u201310 in SWAC play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place. They advanced to the championship game of the SWAC Tournament where they lost to Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230833-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Arena Soccer League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Premier Arena Soccer League season consists of 46 teams grouped into 6 divisions across the US. The Premier Arena Soccer League continues to serve as the developmental league to the Professional Arena Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230833-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Arena Soccer League season, Standings\nAs of March 9, 2013 \u00a0\u00a02012-13 League Championship\u00a0\u00a02012-13 National Finals Entrant\u00a0\u00a02012-13 Division Playoff Qualifier(Bold Division Winner, automatic National Finals Qualifier)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230833-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Arena Soccer League season, 2012-13 PASL-Premier Finals\nThe finals will be played at San Diego, California, on March 10\u201311, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Premier League (known as the Barclays Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the 21st season of the Premier League, the English professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1992. The fixture schedule was released on 18 June 2012. The season began on 18 August 2012 and ended on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League\nManchester City were the defending champions, having won their first Premier League title the previous season. This was their first top division league title since the 1967\u201368 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League\nOn 22 April 2013, Manchester United won their 13th Premier League title and 20th English title overall by defeating Aston Villa 3\u20130 at Old Trafford. This left reigning champions Manchester City 16 points behind with only 15 left to play for. It was the first time the title had been decided in April since Chelsea were the winners in 2005\u201306. It was also only the fourth time in the history of the Premier League that it had been won with at least four games remaining in the season, the last time being in 2003\u201304 when Arsenal were champions. England national football team manager, Roy Hodgson declared that United's manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, was a \"magician\" having won 13 titles in 21 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League\nOn 28 April 2013, Queens Park Rangers and Reading were both relegated from the Premier League after a 0\u20130 draw against each other. Wigan Athletic were the third and final club to be relegated, after a 4\u20131 defeat to Arsenal on 14 May 2013. This brought an end to their eight-year stay in the Premier League, and came three days after winning the season's FA Cup. This made them the first club to win the FA Cup and suffer relegation in the same season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nThe season opened the weekend of 18 August 2012. Defending champions Manchester City opened their season with a narrow 3\u20132 victory over Southampton, who had just been promoted back to the Premier League after seven seasons in lower divisions. Man City had taken a 1\u20130 lead, with Southampton turning it on its head to go 2\u20131 up with 20 minutes remaining. City eventually came back and Samir Nasri scored the winning goal with ten minutes left. In a Monday evening fixture at Goodison Park, Manchester United started their season with a 1\u20130 loss to Everton, the goal scored by Marouane Fellaini. The first goal of the season, however, was scored by Swansea City's Michu, whose team thrashed Queens Park Rangers 5\u20130 away from home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nManchester United recovered from their opening week loss with a 3\u20132 win over Fulham in their opening home game at Old Trafford, but lost striker Wayne Rooney to injury during the match. Other second week highlights included Chelsea's 2\u20130 win over Newcastle United, with recent Belgian signing Eden Hazard involved in both goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nEarly leaders Chelsea had week three off, while a win by Manchester City over Queens Park Rangers left the defending champions two points off the pace. The game was a highly anticipated rematch between the two teams that squared off on the final day of the 2011\u201312 season, when Manchester City snatched the title on goal difference with a late goal by Sergio Ag\u00fcero. This time though, it was less exciting, with Manchester City comfortably winning 3\u20131. Level on points with Manchester City in second place were Swansea City, who registered a 2\u20132 draw with Sunderland, and West Bromwich Albion, who defeated Everton 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nThe fourth week of the season began with controversy, as the Chelsea v Queens Park Rangers match was fraught with racial tensions when QPR's Anton Ferdinand refused to shake hands with Chelsea's John Terry, who had been suspended for four games for using racial epithets against Ferdinand during the previous season. The teams would play out a 0\u20130 draw, however second place Manchester City could not gain ground as they also drew, with Stoke City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nWeek five saw Chelsea extend their league lead to 3 points with a 1\u20130 win over Stoke City. A late goal in the 85th minute by Ashley Cole secured the win for the Blues. Everton and West Bromwich Albion maintained control of second place, with both teams notching a win in week five, though a draw by the Baggies in week six would drop them back to fifth place, which they would share with Tottenham Hotspur following their surprise 3\u20132 win over Manchester United at Old Trafford. Chelsea, Everton, and Manchester City would all win in week six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nThe results table after six games would have Chelsea in the lead with 16 points, followed by Everton and Manchester City with 13 points each, and Manchester United with 12. At the bottom of the league, Liverpool forward Luis Su\u00e1rez scored a hat trick against Norwich City, leading Liverpool to a 5\u20132 victory. It was the second consecutive year that Su\u00e1rez had scored a hat trick at Carrow Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nThe month of October saw a tightening at the top of the standings, with Chelsea, Manchester United and Manchester City all winning their first two of three games for the month, setting up a vital Sunday afternoon match at Stamford Bridge between third placed Manchester United and the leaders Chelsea. The game did not disappoint, as Chelsea went down 2\u20130 early on an own goal by David Luiz in the fourth minute and a goal by Robin van Persie in the 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nVan Persie had also taken the shot that had rebounded off of Luiz, and thus was ultimately responsible for the Red Devil's one-goal lead at half-time, following a late first half goal by Chelsea's Juan Mata from a free kick. Eight minutes into the second half Ramires equalised for Chelsea, and in the 75th minute United's Javier Hern\u00e1ndez scored what proved to be the deciding goal via a rebound from a missed Van Persie shot. Replays showed that Hern\u00e1ndez was in an offside position, generating a great deal of controversy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nAfter the game, only a single point separated leaders Chelsea from second placed Manchester United. The rest of the standings were tightly packed in mid-table as 4 points separated fourth through ninth place. Another key match in October included a fixture between Liverpool and Reading, with Liverpool winning 1\u20130 (with winger Raheem Sterling scoring his first goal for the club) and giving manager Brendan Rodgers his first win at Anfield in the league against Reading, a team he formerly managed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0009-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nThe final week of October featured the longest match in the 20-year history of the Premier League, a 103-minute game between Manchester City and Swansea that featured two serious injuries, one to the groin of Swansea keeper Michel Vorm and the other to the knee of Manchester City back Micah Richards, both of which required stretchers to carry them off. City prevailed 1\u20130 in the marathon event with a goal from Carlos Tevez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nLeague leaders Chelsea suffered a dip in form in November. They opened the month with draws against Swansea City and Liverpool, dropping them to third in the standings. A loss to West Bromwich Albion on 17 November was marked by ineffective second half play, as the team was unable to capitalise on a late first half equaliser by Eden Hazard. The Blues closed out the month with uninspiring 0\u20130 draws against Manchester City and Fulham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nThe primary beneficiaries of Chelsea's slide were Manchester United and Manchester City, as the two rivals moved into commanding control of the first two places in the league table. Key November games included a 2\u20131 Manchester United win over Arsenal on 3 November, and a dominating 5\u20130 win by Manchester City over Aston Villa on 17 November marked by a pair of two-goal performances by Carlos Tevez and Sergio Aguero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nWest Bromwich Albion proved to be the biggest mover up the league table, moving from eighth up to joint third with Chelsea, on the strength of four wins over Southampton, Wigan Athletic, Chelsea, and Sunderland. At the bottom end of the table, Queens Park Rangers found themselves as the only team without a league win by the end of November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nThe month of December saw minimal change in the standings at the top end of the table. The situation by New Year's Eve with the top three places was the same as it was at the start of the month, though Manchester United had extended their lead over second place Manchester City to seven points, with Chelsea four points back from City in third place. Tottenham Hotspur occupied fourth place with Arsenal, Everton, and West Bromwich Albion all tied for fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nChelsea stopped their November slide with a 3\u20131 win at Sunderland on 8 December on the strength of two goals by Fernando Torres. The Manchester derby was renewed on 9 December at the City of Manchester Stadium with first place on the line. United took a two-goal lead thanks to two goals from Wayne Rooney in the 16th and 30th minute. City responded with a Yaya Tour\u00e9 goal in the 60th minute, a goal that followed two saves in rapid succession by United keeper David de Gea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Season summary\nPablo Zabaleta equalised in the 86th minute, but Robin van Persie once again proved to be the hero for United, scoring the winning goal two minutes into extra time to extend United's lead over City at the top of the table to six points. The last team without a league win, Queens Park Rangers, finally got their first win of the season on 15 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 Championship. The promoted teams were Reading, Southampton and West Ham United, returning to the top flight after absences of four, seven and one year respectively. They replaced Bolton Wanderers, Blackburn Rovers (both teams relegated after eleven years in the top flight) and Wolverhampton Wanderers (ending their three-year top flight spell).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Manager of the Season\nManchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson, 71, received the Premier League Manager of the Season. It was his 11th win, awarded in the final season of his managerial career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 83], "content_span": [84, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Player of the Season\nThe Premier League Player of the Season was awarded to Gareth Bale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 82], "content_span": [83, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Players' Player of the Year\nThe PFA Players' Player of the Year was awarded to Gareth Bale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 78], "content_span": [79, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Young Player of the Year\nThe PFA Young Player of the Year was also awarded to Gareth Bale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 75], "content_span": [76, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, FWA Footballer of the Year\nThe FWA Footballer of the Year was also awarded to Gareth Bale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 73], "content_span": [74, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Golden Glove\nThe Premier League Golden Glove award was won by Joe Hart of Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Fair Play Award\nArsenal won the Premier League Fair Play Award after finishing the 2012\u201313 Premier League top of the Fair Play Table. The award for best behaved fans went to Norwich City for the second year running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230834-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Merit Award\nThe Premier League Merit Award was awarded to Sir Alex Ferguson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 73], "content_span": [74, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize\nThe 2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize is the second season of the highest competitive football league in Belize, after it was founded in 2011. There are two seasons which are spread over two years, the opening (which was played towards the end of 2012) and the closing (which was played at the beginning of 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Opening season\nAll but one of the 12 teams that competed in the 2012 Premier League of Belize continued to play in the opening season of 2012\u201313, with the exception of World FC who were replaced by R.G. City Boys United from Belize City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Opening season\nThe league is split into two zones; Zone A and Zone B. Each team will play teams in their zone twice, plus four out-of-zone games, meaning each team plays a total of 14 regular season games. Subsequently the top 2 teams from each zone advances to the playoffs. The opening season commenced on 25 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Opening season\nThe Round 10 game between Juventus and Belize Defence Force scheduled for 4 November 2012 was abandoned at half time due to rain, with Belize Defence Force leading 3-0. Juventus forfeited the game on 23 November 2012, giving the 3-0 victory to Belize Defence Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Opening season\nThe Round 14 game between San Pedro Seadogs and Juventus scheduled for 2 December 2012 was forfeited by Juventus, giving the 3-0 victory to San Pedro Seadogs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Opening season, Awards\nOn 28 December 2012, the Premier League of Belize Commissioner, Myito Perdomo announced the 2012-13 opening season Individual Awards for the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Closing season\nOnly 8 of the 12 teams competing in the opening season continued to play in the closing season. Juventus, Paradise/Freedom Fighters, R.G. City Boys United and San Pedro Seadogs were the absentees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Closing season\nInstead of being split into two groups, like the opening season, there would be one league consisting of 8 teams. The closing season commenced on 9 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Closing season\nThe Round 8 game between Police United and Placencia Assassins played on 28 March 2013 which was originally won by Placencia 3-0 was overturned after a successful protest by Police United, meaning the latter were awarded the 3-0 victory by default.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230835-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Belize, Closing season, Awards\nIn the post-game ceremonies of the final game of the season, the Football Federation of Belize President, Ruperto Vicente and the Premier League of Belize Commissioner, Myito Perdomoto delivered the trophies and individual awards for both regular season and the playoffs for the 2012-13 closing season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe 2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, also known as BH Telecom Premier League for sponsorship reasons, was the thirteenth season of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the highest football league of Bosnia and Herzegovina, since its original establishment in 2000 and eleventh as a unified country-wide league. The season began on 4 August 2012 and ended on 26 May 2013, with a winter break between 26 November 2012 and 2 March 2013. The official fixture schedule was released on 3 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\u017deljezni\u010dar was able to defend the title this season, as they were the defending champions of the last season, having won their eighth domestic league title this season with two rounds left playing. A total of 16 teams contested the league, including 14 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and one promoted club from each of the two-second-level leagues, Gradina from 2011\u201312 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Radnik from 2011\u201312 First League of the Republika Srpska who replace relegated Sloboda and Kozara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams\nA total of 16 teams contested the league, including 14 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted from each of the second-level league, 2011\u201312 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and 2011\u201312 First League of the Republika Srpska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams\nWhile relegation of Kozara was confirmed couple of rounds before the end of the last season, Sloboda were relegated only after all the result of the last round were known. Kozara returned to First League of the Republika Srpska after only one season in top flight, while Sloboda were relegated for the first time after 43 years in the highest tier, including also as part of Yugoslav First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams\nThe relegated teams were replaced by the champions of the two-second\u2013level leagues, Gradina from the First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Radnik from the First League of the Republika Srpska. Radnik returned to the top flight after spending five years in lower tier, while Gradina made their debut in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams, Stadiums and locations\n1 \u010celik has played in round 2 and 4 on Kamberovi\u0107 polje due to works on the pitch of Bilino Polje, which included installing of a new drainage and under-soil heating, as well as the replacement of the turf, sound system and bench for the reserve players. They returned to Bilino Polje on round 6 against Borac.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 79], "content_span": [80, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams, Stadiums and locations\n2 Gradina played their home matches in the first half of the season on Banja Ilid\u017ea and NC Goal (only round 6 and 8) due to their own stadium Gradski Stadion, Srebrenik not fulfilling the necessary requirements, but for the second half of the season their stadium got a conditional license to host Premier League matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 79], "content_span": [80, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams, Stadiums and locations\n3 Olimpic decided to play its home games in the second half of the season in Tuzla on Tu\u0161anj stadium instead of Otoka stadium which they used in the first half of the season but in the end played only one game on it (round 17). Already the next home game (round 20) they returned to their regular home stadium \u2013 Otoka stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 79], "content_span": [80, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 75], "content_span": [76, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season events, Sponsorship of the league\nOn 31 July 2012, an agreement between Football Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and BH Telecom was reached regarding sponsorship of the league. The contract worth about 2 million KM was signed on two years, officially renaming the league to BH Telecom Premier League. At first, two clubs, \u017deljezni\u010dar and \u0160iroki Brijeg, didn't want to agree on the terms of the sponsorship contract because it, as they say, was humiliating for their clubs and that not all clubs in the league can be treated the same way regarding sponsorship. In the end, with few adjustments for those two clubs, the contract was officially signed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 90], "content_span": [91, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season events, Ban on away fans lifted\nOn 31 July 2012, the ban on organized attendance of away fans has been lifted. The ban was on power since 8 October 2011 after a couple of incidents, all done by Ultras groups. Also, if one club will have their supporters on an away game they must inform the other club and the football federation 4 days prior to the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 88], "content_span": [89, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season events, Ban on away fans conditionally reactivated\nAfter, once again, ultras groups made serious incidents, including derogatory chanting and attempted attack on away fans on match of round 2 between \u017deljezni\u010dar and Borac on Grbavica stadium, the same in round 5 between once again \u017deljezni\u010dar and this time Slavija, demolishing a pub by The Maniacs, ultras supporters of \u017deljezni\u010dar, who arrived in Herzegovina without announcement to the local police in Mostar. The pub was a gathering point of Ultras Zrinjski, ultras group supporting H\u0160K Zrinjski Mostar and this happened before a match in round 6 between Zrinjski and \u017deljezni\u010dar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 107], "content_span": [108, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season events, Ban on away fans conditionally reactivated\nIn an act of revenge, some of Ultras Zrinjski demolished a pub in another part of the city where they thought The Maniacs were. Also, on the same day, after returning from an away match of round 6 between \u010celik and Borac, Le\u0161inari, ultras group supporting Borac, demolished two train wagons, while the next day someone burned down a van in which about 12 supporters of Slavija, so-called Sokolovi, were returning from an away match of round 6 between GO\u0160K and Slavija (only the driver was slightly injured).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 107], "content_span": [108, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season events, Ban on away fans conditionally reactivated\nAfter all this, the Football Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina decided to bring up a conditional ban on away fans which will be activated after any serious incident on or before a football match of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina or in the Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup. Overall, in the first five round of the league the disciplinary commission of Football Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina distributed penalties in the amount of almost \u20ac32000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 107], "content_span": [108, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season statistics, Transfers\nFor the list of transfers involving First League clubs during 2012\u201313 season, please see: List of Bosnia and Herzegovina football transfers summer 2012 and List of Bosnia and Herzegovina football transfers winter 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\n* Italic highlights the former club, while bold the current one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230836-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Season statistics, Top assists\n* Italic highlights the former club, while bold the current one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 80], "content_span": [81, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League\nThe 2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League season (known as the ABSA Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the seventeenth season of the Premier Soccer League since its establishment in 1996. The season began in the second week of August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League\nOrlando Pirates were the defending champions, having won the previous 2011-12 Premier Soccer League (PSL) season, but lost their title to Kaizer Chiefs. The season featured 14 teams from the 2011-12 PSL season and two new teams promoted from the 2011\u201312 National First Division: Tuks FC and Chippa United who replace relegated Santos and Jomo Cosmos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, Format changes\nThe 2012\u201313 season saw the introduction of the Q-innovation system. The league schedule was split into four fixture-blocks referred to as quarters, the first and third blocks had eight fixtures, the second and fourth blocks had seven fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, Format changes\nPrize money was given to the teams who finish top of the table after each block of fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, Teams\nA total of 16 teams contested the league, including 14 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted from the 2011\u201312 National First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, Teams\nRelegation for Jomo Cosmos to the 2012\u201313 National First Division was confirmed on 16 May 2012, as Jomo Cosmos maintained their reputation as a yo-yo club, suffering their third relegation from the PSL in five seasons. Santos had finished 15th and thus had to go through the 2011-12 PSL Playoff Tournament alongside Chippa United and Thanda Royal Zulu of the National First Division. Santos were unable to retain their place in the PSL following a 4-3 defeat in the final game of the PSL Playoff Tournament on 30 June 2012 and were subsequently relegated to the National First Division for the 2012-13 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, Teams\nTuks FC earned promotion to the PSL as 2011-12 National First Division Champions. Chippa United, who had finished second in the 2011-12 National First Division season, earned their place in the PSL after defeating Santos and Thanda Royal Zulu in the 3-team PSL promotion tournament. Both teams made their first appearances in the PSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, Teams, Stadiums and locations\nFootball teams in South Africa tend to use multiple stadiums over the course of a season for their home games. The following table will only indicate the stadium used most often by the club for their home games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, PSL playoff tournament\nThe teams that finished second and third during the 2012-13 National First Division season were joined by the team that finished 15th in the 2012-13 Premier Soccer League season in a 3-team promotion and relegation playoff called the PSL Playoff Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, PSL playoff tournament, Format\nThe 3 teams participated in a mini-league in which they played one another twice (home and away) with log points being awarded for winning a match (3 points) and drawing a match (1 point). At the conclusion of the mini-league phase the team that was in first place would either earn or maintain their place in the PSL for the 2013-14 season. If the team that finished 15th in the PSL was unable to win the mini-league, they were relegated to the National First Division for the 2013-14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230837-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premier Soccer League, PSL playoff tournament, Playoff table\nPld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points(R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby\nThe 2012\u201313 Aviva Premiership was the 26th season of the top flight English domestic rugby union competition and the third one to be sponsored by Aviva. The reigning champions entering the season were Harlequins, who had claimed their first title after defeating Leicester Tigers in the 2012 final. London Welsh had been promoted as champions from the 2011\u201312 RFU Championship, their first promotion to the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Summary\nLeicester Tigers won their tenth title after defeating Northampton Saints in the final at Twickenham after having finished second in the regular season table. London Welsh were relegated in part for having received a 5 point deduction for fielding a player who did not hold an Effective Registration. It was the first time that London Welsh have been relegated from the top flight since they first achieved promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Summary\nAs usual, round 1 included the London Double Header at Twickenham, the ninth instance since its inception in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Rule changes\nFor the second consecutive season, significant changes were made to the Premiership's salary cap. Last season, \"academy credits\" were introduced, giving each team a \u00a330,000 cap credit for each of up to eight home-grown players in the senior squad. This season, the team cap rose for the first time since the 2008\u201309 season, when it was increased from \u00a32.2 million to \u00a34 million. The new cap is \u00a34.26 million before academy credits and up to \u00a34.5 million with credits. In addition, each team was allowed to sign one player whose salary did not count against the cap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Teams\nTwelve teams compete in the league \u2013 the top eleven teams from the previous season and London Welsh who were promoted from the 2011\u201312 RFU Championship to the top flight for the first time. They replaced Newcastle Falcons who were relegated after fifteen years in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Pre-Season\nFollowing a lengthy appeal, London Welsh successfully gained promotion to the Premiership, having contested the Professional Game Boards recommendation to refuse them entry based on the Minimum Standards Criteria. This meant that Newcastle Falcons were relegated, following their confirmation that they would not appeal the new decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Pre-Season\nThe 2012 edition of the Premiership Rugby Sevens Series began on 13 July 2012 at The Stoop, continued on 20 July at Edgeley Park and 26 July at Kingsholm. This was the first opportunity of the season for any of the teams competing in the Premiership to win a trophy. The finals were held on 3 August 2012 at The Recreation Ground and the Series was won by London Irish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Table\n(CH) Champions. (RU) Runners-up. (SF) Losing semi-finalists. (R) RelegatedStarting table\u00a0\u2014 source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Table\nTiebreakers for teams tied on points: 1) Number of matches won; 2) Difference between points for and against; 3) Total number of points for; 4) Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams; 5) Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Regular season\nPremiership Rugby announced the fixture list on 4 July 2012. As with previous seasons, Round 1 included the London Double Header at Twickenham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Regular season, Round 22\nAll games in Round 22 kicked off at 15.00 on 4 May 2013, so as to not give any team a potential advantage with regards to knowing how to achieve a play-off berth, Heineken Cup place, or safety from relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Play-offs\nAs in previous seasons, the top four teams in the Premiership table, following the conclusion of the regular season, contest the play-off semi-finals in a 1st vs 4th and 2nd vs 3rd format, with the higher ranking team having home advantage. The two winners of the semi-finals then meet in the Premiership Final at Twickenham on 25 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Play-offs, Final\nThe final was contested at Twickenham on 25 May 2013 between Leicester Tigers and Northampton Saints with Leicester winning 37-17. Northampton captain Dylan Hartley was sent off for using foul and abusive language just before half-time after calling referee Wayne Barnes a \"f*****g cheat\" . This was the first time a player has ever been red carded in a Premiership Final, as was said by the commentators during the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230838-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Premiership Rugby, Leading scorers\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, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230839-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Presbyterian Blue Hose men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Presbyterian Blue Hose men's basketball team represented Presbyterian College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blue Hose, led by 24th year head coach Gregg Nibert, played their home games at the Templeton Physical Education Center and were members of the South Division of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 8\u201324, 4\u201312 in Big South play to finish in last place in the South Division. They lost in the first round of the Big South Tournament to Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230840-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 President's Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 President's Trophy was one of two first-class cricket competitions that were held in Pakistan during the 2012\u201313 season, the other being the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy. It was the inaugural edition of the President's Trophy. Ten departmental teams each played nine 4-day matches in a round-robin league phase between 3 October and 7 December 2012, with the top two teams contesting the final on 11\u201314 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230840-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 President's Trophy\nSui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited went undefeated in claiming the title, winning six of their nine group matches and beating Habib Bank Limited in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230840-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 President's Trophy, Background\nBefore the start of the 2012\u201313 season, the Pakistan Cricket Board restructured the domestic system by separating the regional and department sides, who had both competed in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy over the previous seasons, with the departments moving into a new President's Trophy competition and the regions remaining in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230840-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 President's Trophy, Format\nIn 2012-13 season of the President's Trophy, ten departmental teams each played nine 4-day matches in a round-robin league phase, with the top two teams contesting the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230840-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 President's Trophy, Group stage, Points Table\nThe order in the table is determined by total points, followed by number of matches won, fewest matches lost, and then net run rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230841-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Preston North End F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Preston North End's 124th year in The Football League and their second consecutive in the third tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230841-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Preston North End F.C. season, League One data, Results summary\nLast updated: 5 February 2013. Source: PNEFC League One Results", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230842-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primeira Liga\nThe 2012\u201313 Primeira Liga (also known as Liga ZON Sagres for sponsorship reasons) was the 79th season of the Primeira Liga, the top professional league for Portuguese association football clubs. It began on 19 August 2012 and concluded on 19 May 2013. Sixteen teams contested the league, fourteen of which took part in the previous season and two of which were promoted from the Liga de Honra. Porto were the defending champions and secured their third consecutive and 27th overall title, after completing their second unbeaten season in three years. Porto striker Jackson Mart\u00ednez was the top scorer with 26 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230842-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primeira Liga, Teams\nA total of sixteen teams contested the league, fourteen of which were present in the 2011\u201312 Primeira Liga and two of which were promoted from the 2011\u201312 Liga de Honra. The two relegated teams after the 2011\u201312 season were Feirense and Uni\u00e3o de Leiria, which returned to the Liga de Honra after one and three years, respectively, in the top level. Replacing them in the top-flight division were 2011\u201312 Liga de Honra champions Estoril and runners-up Moreirense, both returning after a seven-year absence. Estoril contested their 21st season in the Primeira Liga, while Moreirense participated only for the fourth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230842-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primeira Liga, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230843-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera B Metropolitana\nThe 2012\u201313 Argentine Primera B Metropolitana was the season of third division professional of football in Argentina. A total of 21 teams competed; the champion was promoted to Argentine Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230843-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera B Metropolitana, Torneo Reducido\nThe semifinals and finals is determined by the team standings in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230844-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera B Nacional\nThe 2012\u201313 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 27th season of second division professional of football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion, runner-up and third-placed team were promoted to Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230844-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera B Nacional, Relegation\nClubs with an indirect affiliation with Argentine Football Association 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 Rosario Central, Newell's Old Boys, Central C\u00f3rdoba and Argentino de Rosario, all from Rosario, and Uni\u00f3n and Col\u00f3n from Santa Fe. The bottom two teams of this table face relegation regardless of their affiliation status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230845-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera C Metropolitana\nThe 2012\u201313 Argentine Primera C is the season of professional fourth division of Argentine football league system. With a total of 20 teams competing there, the champion is promoted to the upper level, Primera B Metropolitana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230845-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera C Metropolitana, Torneo Reducido\nThe semifinals and finals is determined by the team standings in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230846-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3\nThe 2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3 is the eighteenth season of top-tier football in Andorra. It began in September 2012 and ended in April 2013. The defending champions are FC Lusitanos, who won their first championship in the previous season. The title was retained by Lusitanos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230846-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Competition format\nThe participating teams first played a conventional round-robin schedule with every team playing each opponent once \"home\" and once \"away\" (in actuality, the designation of home and away was purely arbitrary as the clubs did not have their own grounds) for a total of 14 games. The league was then split up in two groups of four teams with each of them playing teams within their group in a home-and-away cycle of games. The top four teams competed for the championship. The bottom four clubs played for one direct relegation spot and one relegation play-off spot. Records earned in the First Round were taken over to the respective Second Rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230846-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Promotion and relegation from 2011\u201312\nFC R\u00e0nger's were relegated after last season due to finishing in 8th place. They were replaced by Segona Divisi\u00f3 champions FC Encamp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230846-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Promotion and relegation from 2011\u201312\nInter Club d'Escaldes, who finished last season in 7th place, and 2nd place Segona Divisi\u00f3 club UE Extremenya played a two-legged relegation play-off. Inter Club d'Escaldes won the playoff, 3\u20130 on aggregate, and remained in the Primera Divisi\u00f3 while Extremenya remained in the Segona Divisi\u00f3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230846-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Relegation play-offs\nThe seventh-placed club in the league competed in a two-legged relegation play-off against the runners-up of the 2012\u201313 Segona Divisi\u00f3, for one spot in 2013\u201314 Primera Divisi\u00f3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230847-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n (women)\nThe 2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n season was the 25th edition of Spain's highest women's football league. FC Barcelona were the defending champions, having won their 1st title in the previous season. The season played from 2 September 2012, and end on 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230847-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n (women)\nA total of 16 teams contested the league, 14 of which already contested in the 2011\u201312 season. Sevilla and Levante Las Planas were promoted from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230847-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n (women)\nThe championship was decided on the last matchday, when Athletic Club Bilbao met Barcelona. After trailing Athletic the whole season, Barcelona overtook them by winning 2\u20131, and thus defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230848-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Primera Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Sala was the 24th season of top-tier futsal in Spain. It was the second season under the \"Primera Divisi\u00f3n\" name. The regular season started on September 14, 2012 and finished on May 3, 2013. The championship playoffs began on May 18 with quarter-finals series and concluded with the championship final series from 11\u201322 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230848-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal\nBarcelona Alusport were defending champions and will remain so for next season by defeating ElPozo Murcia 3\u20131 in the Championship Final series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230848-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal, Championship playoffs, Quarter-finals, 2nd leg\nFC Barcelona Alusport won series 2\u20130 and advanced to Semifinals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230848-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal, Championship playoffs, Semifinals, 3rd leg\nFC Barcelona Alusport won series 2\u20131 and advanced to Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua\nThe 2012\u201313 season in Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua was divided into two tournaments (Apertura and Clausura) and determined the 61st and 62nd champions in the history of the league. It also provided the country's sole berth for the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League. The Apertura tournament was played in the second half of 2012, while the Clausura was played in the first half of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Apertura\nThe 2012 Apertura was the first tournament of the season. It began on August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Apertura, Regular season\nThe regular season began on August 2012. The top four finishers will move on to the next stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Apertura, Finals round\nThe top two finishers in the Semi Finals Group will move on to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Top scorers\nUpdated to games played on 14 September 2012. Post-season goals are not included, only regular season goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players in Apertura 2012. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, List of foreign players in the league\nA new rule was introduced this year, that clubs can have upwards of five foreign players in a squad, However some conditions include: The player has to be younger than 30 years old, spent year abroad away from Nicaragua, and clubs can only have four foreign players on the field at one time .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Clausura\nThe 2013 Clausura was the second tournament of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Clausura\nThe 2013 Clausura was the first tournament of the season. It began on August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Clausura, Regular season\nThe regular season began on 2013. The top four finishers will move on to the next stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, Clausura, Finals round\nThe top two finishers in the Semi Finals Group will move on to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, List of foreign players in the league\nThis is a list of foreign players in Apertura 2012. The following players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230849-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Nicaragua, List of foreign players in the league\nA new rule was introduced this year, that clubs can have upwards of five foreign players in a squad, However some conditions include: The player has to be younger than 30 years old, spent year abroad away from Nicaragua, and clubs can only have four foreign players on the field at one time .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team represented Princeton University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by second year head coach Mitch Henderson, played their home games at Jadwin Gymnasium and were members of the Ivy League. The Tigers entered the season as the favorites to win the Ivy League regular season title. For the first time in school history, the team was served by a quartet of captains. They finished the season 17\u201311, 10\u20134 in Ivy League play to finish in second place. They chose not to participate in a postseason tournament. Following the season Hummer earned Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe Ivy League media selected Princeton as the preseason favorite when 16 of 17 voting members (one voter selected Harvard) named Princeton first in the preseason poll. Jeff Goodman of CBS Sports also selected Princeton as his preseason choice with Harvard second, noting that Harvard had been his preseason favorite until the September 2012 Harvard cheating scandal that involved about 125 athletes and students ensnared Kyle Casey and Brandyn Curry, leading to their withdrawal. Casey and Curry had been first-team and second-team All-Ivy selections for the 2011\u201312 Ivy League men's basketball season, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Preseason\nPrinceton returned three of its five starters from the 2011\u201312 team: first-team All-Ivy senior forward Ian Hummer, senior center Brendan Connolly and junior guard T.J. Bray. Bray had been the team leader in assists, while Hummer's 515 points was the most by a Tiger in a single season since Bill Bradley. Princeton announced a quartet of captains for the first time in school history. Its trio of seniors, Hummer, Connolly, and Mack Darrow were joined by Bray as team quad-captains for the season. Princeton's most significant loss from the prior year was the graduation of shooting guard Doug Davis. Davis had finished as the second leading scorer in Princeton history. CBS' Goodman selected Hummer as his Preseason Ivy League Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Preseason\nJimmy Sherburne took the entire school year off from the team and Princeton as he recuperated from a shoulder injury. Three freshmen: Hans Brase, Edward \"Edo\" Lawrence and Mike Washington, Jr. joined the team. 7-foot-1-inch (2.16\u00a0m) Lawrence is believed to be the tallest Princeton Tiger basketball player of all time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Preseason\nPrinceton entered the season with 9 of the team's 14 players measuring 6\u00a0feet 8\u00a0inches (2.03\u00a0m) or taller. The team is scheduled to appear on NBC Sports Network three times, including the January 12 rivalry game against Penn. In addition, Princeton's March 1 contest with Harvard will be broadcast on ESPNU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Schedule\nWhen Yale defeated Princeton at Jadwin Gymnasium on February 9, it snapped a 21-game conference home winning streak, which was Princeton's longest since it won 26 consecutive home games from 1996 to 1999. The 2012\u201313 Tigers finished with a 17\u201311 (10\u20134) record and did not qualify for the postseason. Princeton entered the final weekend of the season with three games remaining and a half-game lead over Harvard. The team got swept in its two weekend games, while Harvard won both its games to clinch the 2012\u201313 Ivy League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Schedule, In season\nEach week the Ivy League selects a player of the week and a rookie of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Schedule, All-Ivy\nIan Hummer was named Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year. The following players earned Ivy League postseason recognition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230850-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team, Schedule, All-Ivy\nOn March\u00a012, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association named Hummer to its 2012\u201313 Men's All-District II (NY, NJ, DE, DC, PA, WV) Team, based upon voting from its national membership. The National Association of Basketball Coaches announced their Division\u00a0I All\u2010District teams on March 26, recognizing the nation\u2019s best men\u2019s collegiate basketball student-athletes. Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, 240 student-athletes, from 24 districts were chosen. The selections on this list were then eligible for the State Farm Coaches\u2019 Division\u00a0I All-America teams. Hummer was among the District 13 first team selections. Hummer also earned Associated Press honorable mention All-American recognition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230851-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Princeton Tigers women's ice hockey season\nThe Princeton Tigers represented Princeton University in ECAC women's ice hockey. The Tigers will attempt to win the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230852-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro A season\nThe 2012\u201313 LNB Pro A season was the 91st season of the French Basketball Championship and the 26th season since inception of the Ligue Nationale de Basketball (LNB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230852-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro A season\nThe regular season started on October 5, 2012 and ended on April 30, 2013. Playoffs started on May 14 and ended on June 8, 2013. JSF Nanterre won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230852-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro A season, Promotion and relegation\nTeams promoted from 2011 to 2012 Pro B (French 2nd basketball division)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12\nThe 2012\u201313 Pro12 League (also known as the RaboDirect Pro12 for sponsorship reasons) was the 12th season of the rugby union competition originally known as the Celtic League, the third with its current 12-team format, and the second with RaboDirect as title sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12\nOspreys were the defending champions, but they failed to qualify for the end-of-season playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12\nThe twelve teams that competed were the four Irish teams, Munster, Leinster, Connacht and Ulster; two Scottish teams, Edinburgh and Glasgow Warriors; four Welsh teams, Cardiff Blues, Newport Gwent Dragons, Ospreys and Scarlets; and two Italian teams, Benetton Treviso and newly created Zebre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12\nThe title was won by Leinster, defeating Ulster 24\u201318 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Changes for the season, Italy\nZebre replaced Aironi Rugby after they had their licence revoked by the Italian Rugby Federation for financial reasons. Roberto Manghi will become their Head coach for their d\u00e9but season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 44], "content_span": [45, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Changes for the season, Scotland\nAhead of this season Glasgow Warriors moved home, leaving their previous home of Firhill in the Maryhill area of the city for the smaller Scotstoun Stadium. They also came into the season with a new head coach, with former Scotland stand-off Gregor Townsend replacing Sean Lineen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 47], "content_span": [48, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Changes for the season, Ireland\nNew Zealander Rob Penney replaced Tony McGahan as director of rugby at Munster, and fellow New Zealander Mark Anscombe replaced Brian McLaughlin as head coach of Ulster. In Munster, Paul O'Connell stood down as captain, with Doug Howlett announced as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 46], "content_span": [47, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Changes for the season, Wales\nThe Welsh regions saw a number of changes in coaching personnel, as Phil Davies took over the reins at Cardiff Blues, Steve Tandy replaced Sean Holley as Ospreys head coach and former Ireland international Simon Easterby succeeding Nigel Davies at the Scarlets, after he departed to take over at English Premiership side Gloucester. Scarlets also announced that Rob McCusker would replace Matthew Rees as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 44], "content_span": [45, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Changes for the season, Wales\nOn 28 August 2012, the Welsh Rugby Union announced a new annual event which will feature all four regions playing in a doubleheader at Millennium Stadium (similar to the long-established London Double Header in the English Premiership). The first of these events took place on 30 March 2013, with an initial contract set to run for four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 44], "content_span": [45, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Table\nIf teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Fixtures, Round 4 rescheduled match\nThis match\u00a0\u2013 originally scheduled to be held during Round 4, on 21 September 2012\u00a0\u2013 was postponed due to the death of Ulster player Nevin Spence in a farming accident on 15 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 50], "content_span": [51, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Fixtures, Round 19 rescheduled match\nThis match\u00a0\u2013 originally scheduled to be held during Round 19, on 30 March 2013\u00a0\u2013 was postponed due to a waterlogged pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 51], "content_span": [52, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Play-offs, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on the weekend of 10/11 May 2013; these followed a 1 v 4, 2 v 3 system with the games being played at the home ground of the higher placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Play-offs, Final\nThe final was contested on Saturday, 25 May 2013, between the winners of the two semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 31], "content_span": [32, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, Play-offs, Final\nTouch judges:George Clancy (Ireland)Peter Fitzgibbon (Ireland)Television match official:Dermot Moloney (Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 31], "content_span": [32, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230853-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro12, 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, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230854-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship\nThe 2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship was the eleventh edition of the Pro50 Championship, a List A cricket tournament in Zimbabwe. The competition began on 6 October 2012 and the final was played on 19 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230854-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship\nIn the opening round of fixtures, the Mashonaland Eagles had a comfortable victory over the Southern Rocks, while the Mid West Rhinos easily defeated the Matabeleland Tuskers by seven wickets, with the Rhinos openers putting on a partnership of 170 runs in their chase of 211. A second List A century for Vusi Sibanda helped the Rhinos to victory over the Rocks in the second round; he was eventually dismissed for 190. The other game between Mountaineers and the Eagles was postponed following the death of Mashonaland coach Kevin Curran, and the rescheduled match was later abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230854-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship\nThe third round brought victories for the Rhinos and the Tuskers against the Eagles and Rocks, respectively. The Eagles completed a tense one-wicket win over the Tuskers in round four, while the other game was more one-sided with the Rhinos bowling out the Mountaineers for just 66 runs and then chasing down the target in the 13th over of their reply. In round 5, Graeme Cremer scored an unbeaten 106 and then Glen Querl took his first List A five-for to seal a 132-run win for the Tuskers over the Rhinos. Tino Mawoyo scored his first List A century (an unbeaten 120) and shared and opening stand of 182 with Kevin Kasuza (who scored 85), which made short work of the Mountaineers chase of 267 to beat the Rocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230854-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship\nThe sixth round was affected by rain, with the Tuskers narrowly winning against the Mountaineers by 9 runs on the Duckworth\u2013Lewis method, while the match between the Eagles and the Rocks was abandoned after only 22 overs due to rain. Round seven saw the Eagles cruise to an eight-wicket win over the Mountaineers, with the highlight being an opening stand of 102 between Stuart Matsikenyeri and Sikandar Raza in their chase. Meanwhile the Rhinos thrashed the Rocks by 189 runs, with Vusi Sibanda (106) and Brendan Taylor (134 from 106 deliveries) adding 204 runs for their second wicket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230854-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship\nIn the eighth round of matches, the Tuskers defeated the Rocks in a match that was reduced to 37 overs per side and the match between the Rhinos and the Eagles was abandoned after less than 10 overs due to rain. In round nine, Sean Ervine top scored with 45 and took three wickets as the Tuskers beat the Eagles to remain top of the table. In the other game, the Mountaineers successfully chased a revised target in a rain-shortened contest against the Rhinos, aided by a century opening stand between Hamilton Masakadza and English batsman Mark Pettini. The final round of the group stage was washed out by rain, with just 11 overs completed in one match and no play at all in the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230854-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship\nMashonaland Eagles won the tournament for the second time, defeating the Matabeleland Tuskers by 5 runs in a rain-affected final. Prosper Utseya put in a strong all-round performance, scoring 53 runs batting at number seven to top score for the Eagles before being given out for Obstructing the field and then taking three wickets. Tuskers captain Gavin Ewing scored 94 runs, but his team were just short of the Duckworth\u2013Lewis target when their chase was stopped after 47.5 overs due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230854-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pro50 Championship\nMid West Rhinos batsman Vusi Sibanda was the tournament's leading run-scorer with a total of 437 runs. Matabeleland Tuskers bowlers Christopher Mpofu and Glen Querl were the joint-leading wicket-tackers with a total of 14 wickets each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230855-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 ProA\nThe 2012\u201313 ProA was the 6th season of the ProA, the second level of basketball in Germany. SC Rasta Vechta won the league and promoted to the Basketball Bundesliga by winning 2\u20130 in the Finals over Gloria Giants D\u00fcsseldorf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230856-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional Arena Soccer League season\n2012-13 Professional Arena Soccer League (PASL) season is the fifth season for the American indoor soccer league. The season started on November 1, 2012, and ended on February 23, 2013. This season, the league expanded to 19 teams divided into four divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230856-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional Arena Soccer League season, Standings\nAs of February 23, 2013 \u00a0\u00a02012-13 League Championship\u00a0\u00a02012-13 Playoff Team(Bold) Division Winner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230856-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional Arena Soccer League season, 2013 Ron Newman Cup, Playoff format\nEach of the four divisions pitted their first and second-place teams against one another in a home-and-home format. A 30-minute mini-game would have been held immediately after Game 2 if the series was tied at one win apiece. The Semi-Final and Championship games were single elimination and hosted by the San Diego Sockers, the team with the best regular season record. The Semi-Finals were held on Sunday, March 10, 2013, with the Championship game the following day, Monday, March 11, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 84], "content_span": [85, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230857-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Professional Hockey League season was the 21st annual edition of the Ukrainian Hockey Championship, and the second season of the Professional Hockey League (PHL). Seven teams participated in season, with HC Donbass-2 becoming national champions for second year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230857-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional Hockey League season, Player statistics, Top scorers\nThe following players lead the league by points at the end of the regular season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230857-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional Hockey League season, Player statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league by save percentage at the end of the regular season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230858-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League\nThe 2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League (League 1 referred to as the Barclays Under 21 Premier League for sponsorship reasons ) was the inaugural season of the Professional Development League's U21 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230858-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League\nThere were 45 participating teams in the 2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development Leagues; 22 in League 1 and 23 in League 2 (12 in the North Division, 11 in the South Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230858-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League, League 1, First Group Stage\nThe top three teams in Groups 1, the top two teams in Group 2 and 3, and the best third-placed team from Group 2 and 3 will go forward to the Elite Group Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230858-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League, League 1, First Group Stage\nThe remaining third-placed team, and the fourth and fifth-placed teams from all three groups, will go forward to Qualification Group Tier One Stage. The sixth and seventh-placed teams, and the eighth-placed team from Group 1, will go forward to the Qualification Group Tier Two Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230858-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League, League 1, Knockout Stage\nThe teams finishing first in the two Qualification Groups played each other to decide who makes the semi-final against the winner of the Elite Group Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230858-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League, League 1, Knockout Stage\nThe teams finishing second and third in the Elite Group Stage played in the other semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230858-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Professional U21 Development League, League 2, Knockout stage\nThe teams finishing first in each division will play a semi-final against the runners-up of the opposite division, with the winners of each semi-final contesting a final to crown the overall champions of the combined League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230859-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Providence Friars men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Providence Friars men's basketball team represented Providence College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Friars, led by second-year head coach Ed Cooley, played their home games at the Dunkin' Donuts Center and were members of the Big East Conference. The Friars finished the season 19\u201315, 9\u20139 in Big East play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost to Cincinnati in the second round of the Big East Tournament. The Friars received an at-large bid to the National Invitation Tournament where they defeated Charlotte and Robert Morris to advance to the NIT quarterfinals. There they lost to the eventual NIT champions, Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230859-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Providence Friars men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Friars finished the 2011\u201312 season 15\u20137, 4\u201314 in Big East play to finish in 16th place. They lost to Seton Hall in the first round of the Big East Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230860-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Puebla F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Puebla season was the 66th professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league. The season is split into two tournaments\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams. Puebla began their season on July 20, 2012 against Tijuana, Puebla play their homes games on Sundays at 12:00pm local time. Puebla did not qualify to the final phase in either the Apertura or Clausura tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230860-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Puebla F.C. season, Torneo 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230860-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Puebla F.C. season, Torneo 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Pune F.C. season is the club's 5th and 6th year of existence as well as its 4th season in I-League, the top-flight of Indian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season\nPune F.C. finished 2nd in the I-League, which is their best performance in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season\nAfter a good 2011\u201312 season in which the club finished 5th, Pune looked to bounce back to their 2009\u201310 form which saw them finish in 3rd place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nThe 2011\u201312 I-League season ended on 6 May 2012 for Pune but the business end of the 2012\u201313 season began three days later on 9 May with the announced departures of club captain and #1 goalkeeper for club and country Subrata Pal as well as central midfielder Baldeep Singh both to fellow I-League club Prayag United. It was then announced on 27 May 2012 that midfielder Paresh Shivalkar left the club and signed for newly formed Dodsal Football Club who would begin play in the Mumbai Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nThen on 5 June 2012 it was revealed that Pune top scorer for the last 2 seasons, Mandjou Keita, would be leaving the club to join reigning Malaysia Super League champions, Kelantan FA, on a free transfer. The Pune departures did not stop however as only three days later on 8 June 2012 it was officially announced that the 21-year-old defender, Rollingson Hungyo, would be one of the first official signings of the season for Shillong Lajong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nThen on 11 June 2012 it was officially announced that Pune had sold Indian international midfielder Lester Fernandez to Prayag United for \u20b920 lakh in what is a notable event in Indian football history as this was the first ever transfer which involved money being given for a player instead of the usual free transfers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nPune then made their first two signings of the season on 23 June 2012 with the signing of India international defender Nallappan Mohanraj and the even bigger signing of South Sudan international striker James Moga who scored 15 goals in the I-League in 2011\u201312 for Sporting Clube de Goa. Pune went on to make two more signings afterwards with the signings of Vellington Rocha and Mumtaz Akhtar from Margao FC and United Sikkim respectively. The club then signed the on-loan keeper from last season, Abhra Mondal, on a permanent deal from East Bengal on 11 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nThe club then dipped into the 2012 I-League U20 championship winning academy squad by signing U20 captain Suji Kumar and Kamardeep Singh to professional contracts on 15 July 2012. The club then made their defense stronger on 30 July 2012 after they signed Zohmingliana Ralte from Shillong Lajong", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nPune began pre-season training with the full squad on 16 July 2012. Seven of the players however began training with the club a week earlier due to injuries they had towards the end of last season. Those players were Amrinder Singh, John Benedick, Maninder Singh, Asim Hassan, Jeh Williamson, Kamardeep Singh, and Sukhwinder Singh. Two of the 26-member squad did not join the club till early August. They were midfielder Pierre Djidjia Douhou and South Sudan international James Moga. However defender Anas Edathodika, who is sidelined with malaria, is not decided how long he is out for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nFor the first-week of training the club focused on non-ball exercises and fitness. The team was coached that week and supervised under fitness coaches Elton Menezes and Sridhar K. The second week still focused on fitness but added the ball as well for three sessions. On 3 August 2012 it was announced that the club would spend time in Goa in August and focus on technical and tactical aspects of the game and also play in a few friendlies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Overview, Pre-Season\nThe club played their first pre-season match against DSK Shivajians in Pune. Pune FC drew the match 2\u20132 with Singam Subhash Singh and Chika Wali scoring. The next game Pune took on the Pune F.C. Academy in which Pune FC won 2\u20131 with Subhash Singh scoring 2 goals. Pune and Subhash continued their good form against Deccan XI in which Pune won 3\u20130 with goals from Subhash (his fourth in pre-season), Jeh Williamson and an Asian trialist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230861-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Pune FC season, Players and Staff, 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230862-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team represented Purdue University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season . The head coach was Matt Painter, in his eighth season with the Boilers. The team played its home games in Mackey Arena in West Lafayette, Indiana and was a member of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 16\u201318, 8\u201310 in Big Ten play to finish in a three-way tie for seventh place. After a first round loss in the Big Ten Tournament, the school received a bid to in the College Basketball Invitational where they lost to Santa Clara in the quarterfinals. The season marked the first time in six years that Purdue had not won at least one NCAA Tournament game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230862-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Boilermakers finished the 2011\u201312 season 22\u201313, 20\u20138 in Big Ten play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 10 seed. There they defeated Saint Mary's in the Second Round (formerly and now known as the First Round) before losing to No. 6 Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC's 48th competitive season, 2nd consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 62nd year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230863-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 P\u00e9csi Mecsek FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230864-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 QMJHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 QMJHL season was the 44th season of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL). The regular season consisted of eighteen teams playing 68 games each, began on September 20, 2012, and ended on March 17, 2013. This was the Sherbrooke Phoenix's first season in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230864-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 QMJHL season, Regular season 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", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230864-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230864-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 QMJHL 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230864-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 QMJHL season, Playoff scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230864-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 QMJHL season, Playoff 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230865-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League\nThe 2012\u201313 Qatari League, also known as Qatari Stars League was the 40th edition of top level football championship in Qatar. The season started on 15 September 2012 and took a monthlong break from 21 December to 21 January 2013 due to the Gulf Cup of Nations. Lekhwiya were the defending champions. Al-Sadd won the league for the 13th time in their history, making them the most successful team in the Qatar Stars League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230865-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League, Teams\nAl Ahli were relegated to the second level league after finishing bottom in the 2011\u201312 Qatar Stars League campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230865-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League, Teams\nAl-Sailiya were promoted as the 2nd level champions and are back after one season away from the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230865-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League, Teams, Stadia and locations\n1 Al Sailiya do not have a stadium of their own so will share with Al Rayyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230865-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230865-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League, League Expansion\nAt the end of the season it was announced that the 2013\u201314 season would feature 14 teams. The decision to increase the numbers of teams means Al Sailiya \u2013 who finished bottom of the league \u2013 will avoid relegation. Meanwhile, Muaither \u2013 who lost to Al Arabi in the play-offs \u2013 will join as the 14th team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230865-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League, League Expansion\nThe Second Division and the reserve league will also merge to create a stronger second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230866-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatari Stars Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Qatari Stars Cup is the 4th edition of the league cup competition in Qatar. It started on 6 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230866-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Qatari Stars Cup\nIt features 12 teams from the Qatar Stars League divided into two groups, with the winner and runner-up of each group advancing to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230867-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy was one of two first-class domestic cricket competitions that were held in Pakistan during the 2012\u201313 season. It was the 55th edition of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, and was contested by fourteen teams representing regional cricket associations. It was preceded in the schedule by the President's Trophy, which was contested by ten departmental teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230867-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nThe Pakistan Cricket Board made substantial changes to the structure of domestic first-class cricket for the 2012\u201313 season. Having competed together for the previous five seasons, the regional associations and departments were separated into their own competitions. The format of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy was also changed, with two round-robin group stages and a final between the top sides in the \"Super-Eight\" to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230867-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nKarachi Blues won the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy for the ninth time, and the twentieth by a Karachi team, beating Sialkot by nine wickets in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230867-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Structure and format\nThe Pakistan Cricket Board made substantial changes to the structure of domestic first-class cricket for the 2012\u201313 season. Having competed together for the previous five seasons, the regional associations and departments were separated into their own competitions. The regions remained in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy and the departments were moved into a new President's Trophy competition. The format of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy was also changed, with two round-robin group stages and a final between the top sides in the \"Super-Eight\" to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230867-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Structure and format\nWith the absence of departments from the competition, teams were permitted to recruit five departmental players to their squads, of which four could be named for any given match. Kookaburra cricket balls, commonly used in international cricket, were also introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230867-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Structure and format\nThe fourteen teams, the thirteen who competed in 2011\u201312 plus Bahawalpur, were divided between two groups in the first stage of the competition. The top four teams from each group proceeded to the Super-Eight in the second stage, while the remaining six teams proceeded to the Plate-League. In both the Super-Eight and the Plate-League, the teams were split into two groups based on ranking in the first stage, with the top team in each second stage group contesting a final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230867-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Structure and format, Standings and points\nPositions in the tables were 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, 71], "content_span": [72, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230868-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Queen of the South F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Queen of the South's first season back in the Scottish Second Division after an absence of a decade after the club's relegation from the Scottish First Division at the end of the 2011\u201312 season. Queens also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230868-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Queen of the South F.C. season, Summary\nQueen of the South finished first in the Second Division to be crowned champions and were promoted to the Scottish Championship. The club were also the winners of the Challenge Cup to complete a historic double for the club and also reached the third round of the League Cup and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230868-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Queen of the South F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 5 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230868-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Queen of the South F.C. season, Player statistics, Clean sheets\nLast updated: 4 May 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230869-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Queens Park Rangers's 124th professional season and their sixth season in the Premier League. They were relegated on 28 April 2013 after a goalless draw with Reading at the Madejski Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230870-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quer\u00e9taro F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Quer\u00e9taro season was the 66th professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league. The season is split into two tournaments\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams. Quer\u00e9taro began their season on July 21, 2012 against Le\u00f3n, Quer\u00e9taro played their homes games on Saturdays at 5:00pm local time. Quer\u00e9taro was relegated to the Ascenso MX (second professional level of the Mexican football league system) due to being last place in the relegation percentage table. Quer\u00e9taro did not qualify to the final phase in either the Apertura or Clausura tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230870-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quer\u00e9taro F.C. season, Torneo 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230870-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quer\u00e9taro F.C. season, Torneo 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230870-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quer\u00e9taro F.C. season, Torneo Clausura, Regular season, Clausura 2013 results\nQuer\u00e9taro did not qualify to the Final Phase due to being relegated", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 85], "content_span": [86, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230871-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quinnipiac Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Quinnipiac Bobcats men's basketball team represented Quinnipiac University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by sixth year head coach Tom Moore, played their home games at the TD Bank Sports Center and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 11\u20137 in NEC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Northeast Conference Basketball Tournament to Long Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230871-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Quinnipiac Bobcats men's basketball team\nThis was the Bobcats last year as a member of the NEC as they will join the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230872-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 R.S.C. Anderlecht season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is a season in Belgian Pro League played by R.S.C. Anderlecht, a Belgian football club based in Anderlecht, Brussels. The season covers the period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230872-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 R.S.C. Anderlecht 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230873-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Espanyol season\nThe 2012\u201313 RCD Espanyol season was the 112th season in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230873-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Espanyol season, Squad\nThe numbers and players are established according to the official website: and", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230873-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Espanyol 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-00230873-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Espanyol 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-00230874-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Mallorca season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 79th season in Real Club Deportivo Mallorca's history and their 16th consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230874-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Mallorca season\nMallorca competed for their first La Liga title after an eighth-place finish in the 2011\u201312 La Liga. They also entered the Copa del Rey in the Round of 32 and were knocked out in the Round of 16 by Sevilla in a 6\u20132 aggregate defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230874-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Mallorca 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-00230874-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Mallorca 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-00230874-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RCD Mallorca season, Competitions, La Liga, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after completion of each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship\nThe 2012\u201313 RFU Championship is the fourth season of the professionalised format of the RFU Championship, the second tier of English domestic rugby union competitions, played between August 2012 and May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship\nAfter an appeal, last seasons champions, London Welsh were promoted to the Aviva Premiership and subsequently Newcastle Falcons relegated, due to finishing bottom of the Aviva Premiership during the 2011\u201312 season. On 8 May 2012 it was announced that only Bristol and London Welsh (subject to further developments) were eligible for promotion under the RFU's minimum standards criteria; London Welsh advanced to the Championship final, whilst Bristol were defeated in their semi-final by the Cornish Pirates, a club that could not meet the standards criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship\nHowever, on 23 May, the day of the first leg of the final, the RFU announced that London Welsh would not be eligible for promotion due to \"various failures\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship\nLondon Welsh's appeal was heard by an Independent Panel on 29 June which ruled \u2033... that the Exiles should be promoted on the basis that they play their home games at Oxford's Kassam Stadium and that the club meet the minimum entry criteria to the league as imposed by the Professional Game Board.\u2033 Chief Executive Officer of the RFU, Ian Richie, subsequently announced that there would be a full review of the Minimum Standard Criteria. Esher dropped out of the Championship after being relegated to the 2013\u201314 National League 1 and they will be replaced by a club from the Channel Islands, Jersey who won National League 1 last season and will compete in the Championship for the first time after three consecutive promotions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship\nThe twelve clubs in the 2012\u201313 Championship will also participate in the 2012\u201313 edition of the British and Irish Cup along with clubs from Wales, Scotland and Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship\nOn 30 August the RFU announced that, for the first time, a team coached by Mike Rayer of Bedford Blues and consisting of English Qualified Players from RFU Championship teams will play a touring team. The match took place on 17 November at Castle Park, Doncaster against the M\u0101ori All Blacks with the New Zealand team winning 52 \u2013 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Structure\nThe Championship's structure has all the teams playing each other on a home and away basis. The play\u2013off structure has been changed dramatically for the 2012\u201313 season. Previously, the top eight teams entered into a complex mixture of pool and knockout play to determine promotion to the Premiership, whilst the bottom four entered into a pool whose last\u2013placed team was relegated to National League 1. The play\u2013off pools have been abolished beginning with this season. On the promotion side, the knockout stage, involving two\u2013legged semi\u2013finals followed by a two\u2013legged final, will remain in place. Now, the top four teams at the end of the home\u2013and\u2013away season qualify for the promotion play\u2013offs which follow a 1 v 4, 2 v 3 system. There will be no relegation play\u2013offs; the bottom team will now be automatically relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Structure, Competition funding\nThe RFU Championship clubs were in dispute with the RFU over funding for the competition and claimed that each club was owed \u00a377,000 for the past three seasons and will be owed a further \u00a3120,000 over the next four seasons. The clubs also believed they should have received \u00a3295,000 in 2009\u201310, rising to \u00a3400,000 by 2015\u201316 and further believed there was a breach of contract on the part of the RFU. The RFU stated that the original funding was an estimate and by 2015\u201316 the figure will be \u00a3359,400.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Structure, Competition funding\nOn 21 August the RFU unveiled the Championship funding structure for the next four seasons to 2015\u201316. The funding is based on the continuation of the \"English Qualified Players scheme\", where clubs are required to field fifteen English qualified players in the 22-man squad on each matchday. (In previous seasons teams were required to field fourteen.) Although the amount is not given in the press release, the RFU also stated they will \"increase its financial underwritings in relation to a title sponsorship while efforts continue to secure a partner\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Regular season\nThe 2012\u201313 RFU Championship kicked off on 31 August with Nottingham defeating Leeds Carnegie and will finish on 20 April 2013. Each team will play the other twice on a home and away basis with the top four qualifying for the promotion phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Play\u2013offs, Semi\u2013finals\nThe semi\u2013finals followed a 1 v 4, 2 v 3 system - with the games being played over two legs and the higher placed team deciding who played at home in the first leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Play\u2013offs, Semi\u2013finals\nNewcastle Falcons finished the regular season in first place and played fourth-placed finishers Leeds Carnegie, with both matches being shown on SkySports. The other semi\u2013final was between second placed Nottingham and Bedford who finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Play\u2013offs, Semi\u2013finals\nFollowing the findings of an independent audit report, Leeds Carnegie, Newcastle Falcons and Nottingham Rugby met the \"Minimum Standards Criteria\" (MSC), and were eligible for promotion to the 2013\u201314 Aviva Premiership should they win the RFU Championship. Bedford Blues failed to meet the MSC but have the right to an appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, RFU Championship XV\nThe RFU Championship fielded a representative team for the first time against the Maori All Blacks, a touring team from New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, RFU Championship XV, Other tour match\nNewcastle Falcons played a match against Tonga on Tuesday 13 November 2012 winning 24 \u2013 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\n63 \u2013 7 Nottingham at home to Bristol on 4 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\n53 - 13 Newcastle Falcons away to Moseley on 6 October 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\n63 \u2013 7 Nottingham at home to Bristol on 4 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\nLondon Scottish at home to Rotherham Titans on 2 September 2012Bedford Blues away to Newcastle Falcons on 29 April 2013Newcastle Falcons at home to Bedford Blues on 29 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Team\nRotherham Titans away to Cornish Pirates on 11 November 2012Bedford Blues away to Newcastle Falcons on 8 March 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nGary Law for Rotherham Titans at home to Jersey on 22 September 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nMatt Evans for Cornish Pirates away to Jersey on 1 September 2012 Allister Hogg for Newcastle Falcons away to London Scottish on 8 September 2012 James Stephenson for Bedford Blues at home to London Scottish on 15 September 2012 Charlie Hayter for Moseley away to Jersey on 15 September 2012 Phil Burgess for Cornish Pirates at home to Rotherham Titans on 11 November 2012 Johny Harris for Nottingham at home to Plymouth Albion on 3 March 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nJames Arlidge for Nottingham at home to Bristol on 4 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nJames Love for London Scottish at home to Rotherham Titans on 2 September 2012 Jake Sharp for Bedford Blues away to Newcastle Falcons on 29 April 2013 Jimmy Gopperth for Newcastle Falcons at home to Bedford Blues on 29 April 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Player\nGary Law for Rotherham Titans away to Cornish Pirates on 11 November 2012 Mark Atkinson for Bedford Blues away to Newcastle Falcons on 8 March 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Attendances\nNewcastle Falcons at home to Bedford Blues on 29 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230875-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RFU Championship, Season records, Attendances\nLondon Scottish at home to Moseley on 24 November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230876-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RIT Tigers women's ice hockey season\nThe RIT Tigers represented the Rochester Institute of Technology in College Hockey America during the 2012-13 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. This was the inaugural year at the Division I level. The Tigers had been the Division III National Champions in 2011-12, with a 28-1-1 record. In their move to Division I, and the College Hockey America conference, RIT had a modestly successful season, and reached the Semifinal level of the CHA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230876-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RIT Tigers women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nAssistant captain Forward Tenicia Hiller was named to the All-CHA Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230877-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RK Zamet season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 56th season in RK Zamet\u2019s history. It is their 5th successive season in the Dukat Premier League, and 35th successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230878-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RNK Split season\nThis article shows statistics of individual players for the RNK Split football club. It also lists all matches that RNK Split played in the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230878-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RNK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230878-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 RNK Split season, Player seasonal records\nCompetitive matches only. Updated to games played 30 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230879-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Radford Highlanders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Radford Highlanders men's basketball team represented Radford University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Highlanders, led by second year head coach Mike Jones, played their home games at Dedmon Center and were members of the North Division of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 13\u201319, 7\u20139 in Big South play to finish in tie for third place in the North Division. They lost in the first round of the Big South Tournament to Winthrop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230880-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup season is the eleventh season of the Serbian national basketball cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230880-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup\nThe competition starts on February 7 and will conclude with the Final on February 10, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230881-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rain or Shine Elasto Painters season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rain or Shine Elasto Painters season was the seventh season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230882-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raith Rovers F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Raith Rovers' fourth consecutive season in the Scottish First Division, having been promoted from the Scottish Second Division at the end of the 2008\u201309 season. Raith Rovers also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230882-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raith Rovers F.C. season, Management\nRaith will be led by player-manager Grant Murray for the 2012\u201313 season, following the departure of John McGlynn. McGlynn signed a new one-year contract during the close season, and began leading the club for pre season. However, on 26 June 2012, McGlynn was appointed as the new manager of Heart of Midlothian, because he was under contract compensation was owed to Raith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230882-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raith Rovers F.C. season, Results & fixtures, Pre season\nA match against Alloa Athletic scheduled for 24 July, was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230882-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raith Rovers F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: May 2011Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230883-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raja CA Casablanca season\nRaja Casablancas 63rd year in existence, they finished 4th last season and will be hoping to finish 1st so that they have the opportunity to play in the 2013 Club World Cup which is being held in Morocco. They start the season off with a new president Mohamed Boudrika who brought back manager Mohamed Fakhir who had previous spells with Raja Casablanca winning the league and Moroccan Cup as they were looking at bringing back the glory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230883-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raja CA Casablanca season, Competitions, Friendly matches, First team matches\nWith Lots of new signings coming in Raja Casablanca prepared a lot of Friendly Matches to get the team ready for the new season. Raja Casablanca had a very good pre-season winning most of their matches and only losing once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230883-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raja CA Casablanca season, Competitions, Friendly matches, 2012 Tournoi Antifi\nThe tournament is held in honor of the late Ahmed Antifi, a former leader of the hosts Racing de Casablanca and former vice-president of the Royal Moroccan Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 86], "content_span": [87, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230883-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Raja CA Casablanca season, Competitions, Reserve team matches, Preseason\nThe Raja Casablanca Reserve team also had a lot of Pre - Season matches to build a strong team for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230884-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ram Slam T20 Challenge\nThe 2012\u201313 Ram Slam T20 Challenge was the tenth season of the Ram Slam T20 Challenge, established by the Cricket South Africa. The tournament was previously known as the MiWay T20 Challenge and the Standard Bank Pro20 Series. The tournament was played between 15 February and 7 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230884-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ram Slam T20 Challenge\nThe Highveld Lions beat the Titans in the final by 30 runs to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230884-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ram Slam T20 Challenge, Rules and regulations\nThe tournament is divided into a group stage and a knockout stage. In the group stage, teams face each other in a double round-robin tournament (i.e. each team plays every other team twice, once at home and once away). At the end of the group stage, the top team qualifies for the final. The teams in second and third take part in a play-off match with the winners contesting the final. If a match in the knockout stage ends with a tie, a Super Over will determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230884-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ram Slam T20 Challenge, Rules and regulations\nIn the event of teams finishing on equal points, the right to play in the semi-finals will be determined in the following order of priority:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 133rd season of competitive football by Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nRangers played a total of 47 competitive matches during the 2012\u201313 season. Prior to the Rangers first team even kicking a ball in a football match that season, there were a series of off-the-field issues that had to be resolved. In June 2012, a criminal investigation was launched into Craig Whyte's takeover of Rangers Football Club Plc after a preliminary examination of the information passed to police by administrators Duff & Phelps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nWhile 4 July saw ten of the other eleven Scottish Premier League clubs vote against Rangers being admitted to the league for the 2012\u201313 season, meaning the club had to apply for a place in the Scottish Football League. Over a week later, on 13 July, twenty-five of the thirty SFL member clubs voted to offer Rangers a place in the Third Division of the Football League for the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nHowever, as part of the transfer of SFA membership from oldco to newco, both companies along with the SFA, SPL and SFL had to agree to a five-way agreement. The club received a twelve-month transfer ban which prevented it from registering any players over the age of eighteen, which began on 1 September and concluded at the end of the 2013 summer transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nFurther to this the SPL instigated an investigation into Rangers transfer dealings between 2001 and 2011, after allegations of dual contracts between Rangers Football Club PLC (the company that formerly owned Rangers) and its staff. The investigation was conducted by a commission headed by Lord Nimmo Smith and concluded in February 2013. The commission's findings concluded that Rangers Football Club PLC did not fully disclose to the football authorities all payments that it made to players and staff; however, this non-disclosure did not effect the playing staff's eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nTherefore, instead of a potential penalty that included the stripping of titles won by the first team, the punishment was only a fine of \u00a3250,000 for Rangers Football Club PLC. Alongside the SPL investigation, HMRC's first tier tax tribunal's came to a conclusion during the season. On 20 November, the First-tier Tax Tribunal ruled that the Rangers Football Club PLC had not contravened tax law with its use of Employee Benefit Trusts, however HMRC subsequently launched an appeal against the first-tier verdict in March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nTurmoil continued inside Ibrox Stadium despite the return of Walter Smith as a non-executive director in November 2012. The company owning the club, Rangers Football Club Ltd, was floated on the stock exchange the following month, raising over \u00a322m from an Initial public offering. The tenure of Charles Green as chief executive proved volatile, with a number of contentious issues arising throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nThis included the sacking of Spanish striker Francisco Sandaza for reportedly attempting to negotiate transfer away from the club, and allegations from former chairman Craig Whyte that he and Green had an agreement over the purchase of Rangers that allowed Whyte to retain a stake in the company. An internal investigation by the club later concluded that there was no link between Green and Whyte. The culmination of Green's tenure resulted in him resigning as chief executive after the club launched an internal investigation into alleged racist remarks Green had made to commercial director Imran Ahmad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nThe off the field drama was to be mirrored by some on field, at least initially, as Rangers struggled to get to grips with life in the Third Division. The very first match in August away to Peterhead ended in a 2\u20132 draw and that was only thanks to a late goal from Andrew Little with the Toon out playing Rangers for large spells in the match. The away day league formed resulted in subsequent draws to Annan Athletic and Berwick Rangers. The side clinched the Scottish Third Division title, and promotion to the Second Division, on 30 March after a goalless draw away to Montrose and second placed Queens Park losing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nOn a busy day in April, the SFA wrote to Rangers chief executive Charles Green seeking clarification about his business dealings with Craig Whyte, the Police carried out a series of searches relating to the purchase of Rangers Football Club by Craig Whyte from Sir David Murray and Whyte was ordered to pay \u00a318m to the finance firm Ticketus after he lost a claim against him at the High Court in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, Scottish Third Division\nLast updated: 4 May 2013Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers 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, 61], "content_span": [62, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, Scottish Cup\nLast updated: 2 February 2013Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers 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, 50], "content_span": [51, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, League Cup\nLast updated: 26 September 2012Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers 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, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, Challenge Cup\nLast updated: 29 July 2012Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers 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, 51], "content_span": [52, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230885-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, Friendlies\nLast updated: 10 April 2013Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers 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, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230886-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ranji Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Ranji Trophy was the 79th season of the Ranji Trophy. It was contested by 27 teams divided into three groups of nine teams each. The top three teams from Groups A and B proceeded to the quarterfinals along with the top two teams from Group C. Mumbai won this year's trophy for the 40th time by beating Saurashtra in the final at the Wankhede.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230886-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ranji Trophy\nThe season had a different grouping system compared to that of the previous seasons, which had Elite and Plate divisions. The new system also increased the number of matches of the tournament. The points awarded to outright wins were increased from five to six in order to encourage results. The knock-out matches will be played across five days instead of four. All these changes were recommended by the BCCI's Technical Committee in June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230886-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ranji Trophy, Points system\n27 teams were divided into three groups of nine teams each. The top three teams from Groups A and B proceed to the quarterfinals along with the top two teams from Group C. The winner of this knock-out tournament wins the Ranji Trophy. These knock-out matches are decided on the first innings result if the final result is a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230886-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ranji Trophy, Points system\nPoints in the group stage of the tournament are awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230887-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ravan Baku season\nThe Ravan Baku 2012-13 season was Ravan Baku's second Azerbaijan Premier League season. Ravan started the season under new manager Cevat G\u00fcler, having replaced Bahman Hasanov in preseason. G\u00fcler was sacked as manager on 25 August with Hasanov being brought in as caretaker manager until Ravan appointed Kemal Alispahi\u0107 on 24 September. Alispahi\u0107 himself was sacked on 21 December 2012, after 4 wins in 13 games, and was replaced by Ramil Aliyev. Ravan went on to finish 8th in the league. They also participate in the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Cup, reaching the Quarterfinals, where they went out 6-2 on aggregate to Khazar Lankaran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230887-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ravan Baku 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-00230887-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ravan Baku 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230887-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ravan Baku 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230887-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ravan Baku 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230887-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ravan Baku 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230888-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rayo Vallecano season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rayo Vallecano season was the 79th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230888-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rayo Vallecano season, Squad, Starting 11\nNo. Position\tPlayer2\tSpain\tDF\tTito5\tSpain\tDF\t\u00c1lex G\u00e1lvez6\tSpain\tDF\tRodri8\tSpain\tMF\tAdri\u00e1n9\tSpain\tMF\tJos\u00e9 Carlos14\tSpain\tDF\tAnaitz ArbillaNo. Position\tPlayer17\tSpain\tMF\tRoberto Trashorras19\tGuinea\tFW\tLass25\tSpain\tGK\tDavid Cobe\u00f1oColombia\tDF\tJohan Mojica (on loan from Colombia Llaneros F.C.) Spain\tMF\tRa\u00fal BaenaMexico\tFW\tNery Castillo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Reading Football Club's third season in the Premier League, and the first since their relegation to the Championship in 2008. Reading secured automatic promotion on 17 April 2012 following a 1\u20130 win against Nottingham Forest and were crowned as Championship winners four days later. They began the season in August with a 1\u20131 draw against Stoke City but had to wait until mid-November for their first league win, a 2\u20131 win over Everton on 17 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season\nA run of four wins in six around January saw Brian McDermott and Adam Le Fondre named Manager of the Month and Player of the Month respectively, though one month later, after defeats by relegation rivals Wigan Athletic and Aston Villa, McDermott was sacked as the club's manager. He was replaced by Nigel Adkins on 26 March, ending Eamonn Dolan's two-week stint as caretaker manager. On 28 April, following a 0\u20130 home draw against Queens Park Rangers, Reading were relegated to the Championship for the 2013\u201314 season. They finished the season with six wins from 38 games, the lowest number in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season\nIn addition to the Premier League, the club also participated in the two domestic cup competitions. After beating Peterborough United and QPR in the second and third rounds respectively, Reading were knocked out of the League Cup in the fourth round by Arsenal after a dramatic 7\u20135 extra time defeat. In the FA Cup they recorded victories over Crawley Town and Sheffield United, before a close 2\u20131 defeat by Manchester United in the fifth round. At the end of the season Adam Le Fondre, who was Reading's top scorer with 14 goals, was named the club's Player of the Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Promotion\nOn 17 April 2012, during the 2011\u201312 season, Reading required a better performance than rivals West Ham United to achieve automatic promotion from the Championship to the Premier League. On the evening, West Ham drew 1\u20131 with Bristol City, and Reading's Mikele Leigertwood scored an 81st-minute goal from an Ian Harte free kick against Nottingham Forest to secure promotion. Upon the final whistle, there was a pitch invasion at the Madejski Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers\nOn 2 May, Reading announced that they would be renewing ten players contracts whilst 13 would be released. The players leaving included Andy Griffin, Brian Howard and Tomasz Cywka, as well as a number of youngsters. Experienced duo Ian Harte and Brynjar Gunnarsson were both handed one-year extensions along with several young professionals and scholars including Michael Hector and Gozie Ugwu. Reading completed their first signing of the season on 16 May with Garath McCleary signing a three-year deal on a Bosman transfer from Nottingham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers\nThe club were linked with a number of players over the next six weeks before Danny Guthrie joined on a free transfer from Newcastle United, becoming Reading's second signing of the summer. The following week Pavel Pogrebnyak signed a four-year deal on a free transfer from Fulham following the approval of his work permit, and the day after, on 6 July, Irish youngster Pierce Sweeney joined for an undisclosed fee from Bray Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers\nNicky Shorey rejoined the club on a one-year deal on 10 July following his release from West Bromwich Albion, whilst three days later the first outgoing business of the season was completed with Mathieu Manset joining Sion on a three-year contract. On 17 July the club completed a double signing with Adrian Mariappa and Chris Gunter joining from Watford and Nottingham Forest respectively. Both signed on three-year deals for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers\nSeveral young players left the club on loan during the summer. Left back Joseph Mills became the first outgoing player, joining Burnley on a season long loan on 17 July, whilst two days later Gozie Ugwu, having just signed a new 2-year contract, was loaned to Yeovil Town until 1 January 2013. The following week Michael Hector joined League One team Shrewsbury Town until 2 January 2013 and on 30 July Angus MacDonald joined AFC Wimbledon on a six-month deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Transfers\nOn 4 August there were two more loan departures with Karl Sheppard joining Accrington Stanley on a six-month loan and Brett Williams joining Woking on a season long deal. Two days later Michail Antonio left the club permanently, joining Sheffield Wednesday for an undisclosed fee and on 17 August, Mikkel Andersen joined Portsmouth on a one-month loan, with Jordan Obita joining him four days later on a similar deal. Having trained with the club since mid July, Stuart Taylor signed a one-year deal on 20 August, completing Reading's summer transfer business.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Friendlies\nOn 14 July the senior team played their first friendly away at AFC Wimbledon in a game they won 7\u20130. Adam Le Fondre scored twice to give Reading a 2\u20130 lead at half time, during which Reading made ten changes. Michail Antonio scored five minutes into the second half, before a 15-minute hat-trick for Simon Church and a goal from Jordan Obita completed the scoring. Stuart Taylor came on for the last 30 minutes, replacing Alex McCarthy, as he continued his trial with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Friendlies\nReading then flew out to Portugal to play three friendlies, the first of which took place on 21 July against Portuguese third division side Quarteirense in Quarteira. The match finished 1\u20131 with a trademark Ian Harte free kick only enough for draw. Three days later they lost 0\u20132 to Sheffield Wednesday, the goals coming from Mike Jones and Chris O'Grady either side of half time. Reading's final game in Portugal was played on 27 July against first division side Olhanense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Friendlies\nIn a surprisingly ill-tempered game, Reading earned a 1\u20131 draw with Danny Guthrie scoring for the Royals in the first half before Rui Duarte scored a second half penalty. On 4 August they drew 2\u20132 away at AFC Bournemouth thanks to goals from Adrian Mariappa and Hal Robson-Kanu before they travelled Brighton & Hove Albion for the Michael Kuipers testimonial three days later. Reading went 1\u20130 down to a Vicente penalty in the first half, before an 89th-minute equaliser from Robson-Kanu levelled the game. Reading's last friendly was on 11 August against Crystal Palace at the Madejski Stadium. Second half goals from Pavel Pogrebnyak and Adam Le Fondre were enough to complete a winning end to the pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Friendlies\nIn addition to the senior team, the club also fielded a Reading XI composed mainly of players from the development squad to face local non-league sides. Their first pre-season friendly was against Didcot Town on 10 July, and saw a team featuring a couple of trialists win 3\u20132. The Reading XI were 3\u20130 up at half time thanks to goals from Jordan Obita, Karl Sheppard and Ryan Edwards before Didcot scored twice in the second half. A week later the development side were in action again away to Ebbsfleet United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Friendlies\nFor the second game in a row they won 3\u20132 with second half goals from Jordan Obita and Brett Williams adding to Jake Taylor's first half header. On 21 July, in addition to the senior team's friendly in Portugal, the Reading XI were in action away to Basingstoke Town and suffered a heavy 5\u20130 defeat. Three days later they faced Boreham Wood and won 2\u20131 thanks to two Dominic Samuel goals before a trip to Salisbury City on 28 July where they lost 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Pre-season, Friendlies\nThe Reading XI were soon in action again, earning a 2\u20131 win away at Hendon on 31 July and then a 1\u20130 victory over Hungerford Town on 4 August. Three days later they travelled away to Hemel Hempstead Town and earned a 1\u20131 draw with Jordan Obita scoring his fourth goal in seven pre-season games. The final Reading XI game saw the team came from 2\u20130 down to win 4\u20132 away against Eastleigh on 11 August. Goals from Jake Taylor, Aaron Tshibola and a double from Craig Tanner were enough to secure a seventh victory in nine games for the development squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nAugust began with news that Adam Federici had signed a new contract, keeping him with the club until 2015. On 15 August Reading were drawn at home to Peterborough United in the second round of the League Cup with the tie to be played on 28 August. Reading started their first season back in the Premier League with a 1\u20131 home draw against Stoke City on 18 August. Stoke took the lead in the first half after a mistake by Federici let Michael Kightly's shot spill into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nIn the 90th minute Dean Whitehead fouled Garath McCleary in the box, resulting in Whitehead receiving a second booking and allowing Adam Le Fondre to score the penalty and draw the game. Reading's next game against Chelsea was moved forward to 22 August from 1 September due to Chelsea's participation in the UEFA Super Cup on 31 August. Chelsea opened the scoring through a Frank Lampard penalty on 18 minutes, before a quick-fire double from Pavel Pogrebnyak and Danny Guthrie saw Reading take the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nGary Cahill brought things level again in the 69th minute before Fernando Torres, who was arguably in an offside position, gave Chelsea the lead again in the 81st minute. Branislav Ivanovi\u0107 then scored a break away goal in the 95th minute after Adam Federici was caught upfield for a last minute corner, securing a 4\u20132 win for Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, August\nReading's fixture list experienced further disruption after the away game against Sunderland on 25 August was called off an hour before kickoff due to a waterlogged pitch at the Stadium of Light. The last game in August was the League Cup tie against Peterborough United, which ended 3\u20132 to Reading. Peterborough took the lead in the through Paul Taylor in the 12th minute, before three goals in four minutes saw Reading equalise, through Pavel Pogrebnyak, go behind again, thanks to Lee Tomlin, and then equalise again through Chris Gunter. Nathaniel Knight-Percival's own goal in the 39th minute then edged Reading ahead, and after a goalless second half they held out to progress to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nWith the postponement of the Sunderland game, Reading faced a gap of nearly three weeks between the Peterborough United cup match and the league fixture against Tottenham Hotspur. To keep match fitness levels up the club arranged a friendly against Bray Wanderers, the club they signed defender Pierce Sweeney from during the summer, to take place on 2 September in Bray. Reading played a near full-strength side won the game emphatically 8\u20131 thanks to hat-tricks from Adam Le Fondre and Jay Tabb, as well as goals from Alex Pearce and Jem Karacan. Three days later the club submitted their 25-man squad for the Premier League campaign. All Reading's senior players were included except Brett Williams and Nicholas Bignall, who was recovering from a long-term injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nThe team were finally back in competitive action on 16 September at home to Tottenham Hotspur, in a game they lost 3\u20131. Following several costly mistakes in the first three games Adam Federici was replaced in goal by Alex McCarthy, though he was powerless to prevent Spurs going 3\u20130 up thanks to goals from Jermain Defoe in the first half and a quick-fire double from Gareth Bale and Defoe in the second half. Hal Robson-Kanu pulled one back for the Royals in the 90th minute but it proved to be no more than a consolation goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nOn 18 September Jordan Obita and Mikkel Andersen extended their loan spells at Portsmouth for another month and the next day Jem Karacan extended his contract with the club until June 2015. The following Saturday Reading made the trip to The Hawthorns to face West Bromwich Albion and despite several good saves from McCarthy, they lost 1\u20130 after a 71st minute Romelu Lukaku goal. The fourth round of the League Cup saw Reading travel to Queens Park Rangers on 26 September. QPR opened the scoring through Junior Hoilett before Kaspars Gork\u0161s equalised 2 minutes later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nDjibril Ciss\u00e9 then restored QPR's lead in the 71st minute only for Nicky Shorey to make it 2\u20132 with a free kick five minutes later, his first goal since his return to the club. Reading scored again in the 81st minute with a flick from Pavel Pogrebnyak and it proved enough to secure a 3\u20132 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, September\nTwo days later Reading recalled Angus MacDonald from his loan with AFC Wimbledon having made six appearances for the League Two club and on 29 September it was reported that the club had taken Russian youngsters Sergey Kundik and Nikita Khaykin, formerly of Chelsea, on trial. On the same day, the final game of the month took place at the Madejski Stadium with Reading earning a 2\u20132 draw against Newcastle United. Reading twice took the lead through Jimmy Kebe and Noel Hunt but a late Demba Ba goal was enough to secure Newcastle a share of the points. Despite suspicions of handball, Ba's goal was allowed to stand and Reading entered October in 19th position and still without a win in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nOctober began with news that Sean Morrison had signed a new deal with the club, keeping him at Reading until 2016. The start of the month also saw Steve Head, a former youth team player at Elm Park, brought in as head of scouting and recruitment to expand the club's scouting network. On 6 October the team travelled to Swansea City for the first league game of the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nGoals from Pavel Pogrebnyak and Noel Hunt gave Reading a 2\u20130 at half time against the run of play before Swansea came back in the second half, scoring twice through Michu and Wayne Routledge to secure a 2\u20132 draw. Reading were outplayed for much of the game, managing just eight shots compared to Swansea's 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nOn 16 October it was revealed that Reading had taken Indian under-19 international Brandon Fernandes on a two-week trial from ASD Cape Town. Two days later Adam Le Fondre became the fourth player of the season to sign a new contract, penning a three-year deal and joining Adam Federici, Jem Karacan and Sean Morrison in committing his future to the club. The next day young defender Matt Partridge was the first player to depart during the month, joining Bognor Regis Town on a one-month loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nReading's next league game was against Liverpool at Anfield on 20 October with Raheem Sterling scoring the only goal as Liverpool ran out 1\u20130 winners. Prior to the game Jason Roberts caused controversy by refusing to wear a Kick It Out T-shirt in protest at a perceived lack of action against racism by the organisation. Roberts was joined by several other high-profile players including Rio Ferdinand and Joleon Lescott in boycotting the campaign, although his stance was criticised by others including Alex Ferguson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nOn the same day Jordan Obita returned early from his loan spell at Portsmouth following a family bereavement, though Mikkel Andersen's stay at Fratton Park was extended for a third, and final month. Further loan news followed with Lawson D'Ath joining League Two side Cheltenham Town on a one-month loan on 25 October. The team were back in league action two days later at home to Fulham in a game that finished 3\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0014-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nReading took the lead in the lead in the 26th minute through Mikele Leigertwood and remained in front until the 61st minute, when Fulham substitute Bryan Ruiz equalised. The visitors then took the lead through a Chris Baird header, setting up frantic last five minutes. Garath McCleary made it 2\u20132 before Dimitar Berbatov again put Fulham in the lead, only for Hal Robson-Kanu to grab a 90th-minute equaliser for Reading. The draw was not enough to drag the Royals out of the bottom three, and extended their winless run in the league to nine games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nThe final game of the month was the League Cup fourth round tie against Arsenal at the Madejski Stadium. In an extraordinary game, Reading lost 7\u20135 after extra time despite leading by four goals at one point. Reading had fired themselves into a 4\u20130 lead with only 37 minutes played after goals from Jason Roberts, a Laurent Koscielny own goal, Mikele Leigertwood and Noel Hunt. Theo Walcott got one back for the visitors just before half time as the visitors went into the break trailing by three goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, October\nOlivier Giroud further reduced the deficit before Koscielny and Walcott scored in the closing minutes to make it 4\u20134 after 90 minutes. Marouane Chamakh gave Arsenal the lead in extra time only for substitute Pavel Pogrebnyak to again bring the scores level. Walcott then completed his hat-trick in injury time before Chamakh's second sealed the match for Arsenal. October closed with confirmation that the club would not be offering a contract to Brandon Fernandes following his two-week trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nOn 1 November the postponed away game against Sunderland was rearranged to be played on 11 December at 19:45. Reading's winless run in the league continued as they drew 1\u20131 away to fellow strugglers Queens Park Rangers on 4 November. Kaspars Gork\u0161s opened the scoring in the 16th minute, acrobatically firing home from close range before QPR equalised in the second half through Djibril Ciss\u00e9. The game ended on a sour note for Reading though after Alex McCarthy injured his shoulder in a collision with the goalpost. The club later confirmed that he had been to see a specialist and would be out for a \"little while\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nOn 8 November Simon Church became the first of several loan departures during the month, joining Huddersfield Town on a one-month deal. Two days later the team faced Norwich City at the Madejski Stadium in a game that ended goalless and consigned Reading to a sixth draw in ten games. The following week Reading were again at home for the visit of Everton. The visitors took the lead in the 10th minute after a series of defensive errors allowed Steven Naismith to score from close range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nEverton then had several chances to extend their lead before a second half Adam Le Fondre inspired comeback gave Reading a 2\u20131 lead. Having headed in a Nicky Shorey free-kick to draw the scores level, Le Fondre then converted a late penalty and Reading held on to earn their first Premier League win at the eleventh attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nIn mid-November a series of loan returns and departures were completed. Firstly, on 20 November, goalkeeper Mikkel Andersen returned from Portsmouth having made 19 appearances during his three-month stay. He was followed the next day by Michael Hector who was recalled early from Shrewsbury Town having fallen out of first team contention. Within hours of being recalled Hector was on the move again, joining Aldershot Town until January whilst Angus MacDonald joined Torquay United on a similar deal. Lawson D'Ath extended his stay at Cheltenham Town and was joined at the club by Jake Taylor with both signing until the beginning of January. The loan business was completed by Simon Church who extended his stay at Huddersfield for a further five weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nReading travelled away to Wigan Athletic on 24 November for their next league fixture, with the game ending in a 3\u20132 defeat. Sean Morrison's first league goal for the club put them into the lead before Jordi G\u00f3mez equalised after 58 minutes. G\u00f3mez then scored Wigan's second until a calamitous Ali Al-Habsi own goal levelled the scores again. The game looked set to finish 2\u20132 before a Wigan counter-attack allowed G\u00f3mez to seal his hat-trick and the win. Three days later the final game of the month saw Reading head north to face Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, November\nDespite several chances, neither team could make the breakthrough until the last ten minutes when Christian Benteke scored a header to give Villa a vital 1\u20130 win. Although the win against Everton briefly lifted the Royals out of the bottom three, defeats by relegation rivals Wigan and Aston Villa meant they finished November in 19th, four points off safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nReading started the month with a home game against Manchester United. The Royals took the lead through Hal Robson-Kanu before an Anderson strike and a Wayne Rooney penalty, following a Jay Tabb foul, gave United a 2\u20131 lead after 16 minutes. Three minutes later Adam Le Fondre headed in a Nicky Shorey corner to level the scores, before Sean Morrison put Reading back in front from another Shorey corner. Rooney scored his second after half an hour to again bring the visitors level before Robin van Persie scored five minutes later to give United a 4\u20133 lead and the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nWith all seven goals coming in the first 35 minutes, the game equalled a Premier League record for most goals scored in the first half of a match. On 2 December the draw for the FA Cup third round took place with Reading handed an away tie against Crawley Town to be played in early January. Three days later Shaun Cummings became the latest player to commit his future to the club, signing a new two-and-a-half-year contract. The news was followed by confirmation that, despite initial hopes his injury sustained in November was not too serious, Alex McCarthy had been forced to undergo shoulder surgery, potentially ruling him out for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nReading's next league game was an away trip to Southampton on 8 December which they lost 1\u20130. A second half Jason Puncheon goal was enough to secure the win for Southampton in a game they dominated. Three days later Reading travelled north to play their postponed match against Sunderland, originally scheduled to be played in August. A disappointing performance saw Sunderland run out 3\u20130 winners with goals from James McClean and Steven Fletcher in the first half, and St\u00e9phane Sess\u00e8gnon in second half injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nAcademy graduate Dominic Samuel made his professional debut in the game, coming on in the 72nd minute and becoming Reading's youngest top flight player in the process. Controversy arose after the game when it emerged that Danny Guthrie had refused to travel with the team to Sunderland, stating that his \"head was not in the right place\" to play. He was fined two-weeks wages by the club and later issued an apology to his teammates and the fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nIn a quiet month of loan activity young goalkeeper Jon Henly was the only outgoing player, joining Hungerford Town on 14 December on a one-month deal. On 17 December Reading were back at the Madejski Stadium to face Arsenal in what turned out to be another high scoring game between the two sides. The visitors took a 4\u20130 lead through Lukas Podolski and a Santi Cazorla hat-trick before the Royals gave themselves a lifeline with two quick goals from Le Fondre and Jimmy K\u00e9b\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nAny hopes of a comeback were dashed after 80 minutes though when Theo Walcott scored Arsenal's fifth as the game finished 5\u20132. The following weekend Reading were away to Manchester City and despite putting in a much improved performance, they were beaten 1\u20130. The Royals held out for 93 minutes until Gareth Barry rose above Nicky Shorey to head past Adam Federici and snatch victory. Boxing day saw the visit of Swansea City with a 0\u20130 draw enough to end a run of seven straight defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0022-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nAdam Le Fondre had a second half goal disallowed for handball though they created few other chances with Federici forced to pull off a number of saves to keep Swansea from scoring. On the same day Matt Partridge returned from his loan spell at Bognor Regis Town having spent two months with the Rocks. The last game of the month saw Reading clinch a vital 1\u20130 win over West Ham United at the Madejski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0022-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, December\nA mistake from James Collins allowed Pavel Pogrebnyak to score after just five minutes and the Royals held on for just their second win of the season. Despite a good end to the month, the team managed just four points from a possible 21 and remained in 19th place going into the new year. The year ended with the return of Simon Church from his loan spell at Huddersfield having been with the Yorkshire side since early November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe first game of the new year took place on 1 January against Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane. Reading took the lead in the 4th minute when Ian Harte's free kick rebounded off the crossbar allowing Pavel Pogrebnyak to head in from close range. Spurs levelled within five minutes through Michael Dawson, before second half goals from Emmanuel Adebayor and Clint Dempsey secured a 3\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January\nFour days later Reading played their FA Cup third round match away to Crawley Town and quickly found themselves 1\u20130 down when Nicky Adams scored after just 14 seconds, the fastest ever FA Cup goal. Adam Le Fondre equalised in the 13th minute before Noel Hunt scored Reading's second just before half time. A Le Fondre penalty soon after half time sealed a 3\u20131 win and saw the Royals progress into the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0023-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe day after the match, the draw for the fourth round was made with Reading handed a home tie against Sheffield United to be played at the end of the month. On 12 January the team were back in Premier League action at home to West Bromwich Albion. The visitors took the lead after 19 minutes through Romelu Lukaku who then doubled the lead midway through the second half. With less than ten minutes remaining Jimmy K\u00e9b\u00e9 pulled one back from close range, before winning a penalty which Adam Le Fondre converted to level the scores. The comeback was completed on 90 minutes when Pavel Pogrebnyak latched onto the end of a free kick, tapping it past Ben Foster and clinching what had seemed an unlikely win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe following weekend Reading travelled north to face Newcastle United and secured their first away win of the season thanks to another late comeback. Newcastle took the lead in the first half through a Yohan Cabaye freekick and remained in front until the 71st minute when substitute Adam Le Fondre equalised with his first touch. Le Fondre then won the game with his second goal six minutes later as Reading held on for a 2\u20131 victory. On 26 January Reading's FA Cup fourth round tie against Sheffield United took place at the Madejski Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January\nThe Royals took the lead after six minutes through Noel Hunt and doubled their advantage just before half time when Mikele Leigertwood scored with a powerful shot from distance. Hunt grabbed his second five minutes after half time with Garath McCleary also getting on the score sheet as game finished 4\u20130. Following the match the Royals were drawn against Manchester United in the fifth round with the tie to be played in mid-February. Reading's final game of the month took place four days later with the visit of Chelsea to the Madejski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0024-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January\nGoals from Juan Mata in first half injury time, and Frank Lampard midway through the second half had given Chelsea a comfortable lead but with 87 minutes gone Adam Le Fondre pulled one back for Reading. With the hosts still heading for defeat, Le Fondre then volleyed in a Hope Akpan flick-on to salvage a point in the fifth minute of stoppage time. Having secured seven points from a possible twelve in January, the draw with Chelsea took the Royals out of the relegation zone for the first time since November. For their roles in the revival, manager Brian McDermott was awarded the Premier League Manager of the Month award, whilst Le Fondre, who scored fives times in the league during January, was named Premier League Player of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nReading's first piece of business was announced on 31 December with Portuguese utility player Daniel Carri\u00e7o joining the club for \u20ac750,000 from Sporting CP. On 8 January midfielder Hope Akpan signed on a three-and-a-half-year deal from Crawley Town for \u00a3300,000 plus add-ons, and he was followed by Stephen Kelly who joined from Fulham on a two-and-a-half-year contract three days later. In mid-January Stopilla Sonzu joined the club for four days to train and be assessed by the coaching staff with a view to a potential permanent transfer in the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0025-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nNo further deals were completed until 30 January when Nick Blackman joined from Sheffield United on a three-and-a-half-year contract for an undisclosed fee. Both Akpan and Blackman joined from their respective club within days of playing against Reading in the FA Cup. Following the closure of the transfer window manager Brian McDermott revealed that the club had tried, and failed, in last-minute deals to sign Tom Ince, and former Reading player Gylfi Sigur\u00f0sson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nAs well as the four permanent transfers, January saw several players return to, and leave the club on loan. On 1 January Gozie Ugwu returned from his spell at Yeovil Town, whilst Michael Hector extended his stay at Aldershot Town the following day, keeping him with the club until the end of the month. Young striker Dominic Samuel joined Colchester United on a one-month youth loan on 3 January with Karl Sheppard returning from his spell at Accrington Stanley the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nThe day after, Jake Taylor extended his loan with Cheltenham Town for another month, though Lawson D'Ath's deal with the Robins was not renewed and he returned to Reading having made three appearances. On 8 January Angus MacDonald's loan to Torquay United was extended until the end of the season and a week later Jon Henly returned after a one-month stay with Hungerford Town. Having returned from Yeovil two weeks earlier, Gozie Ugwu was on the move again, this time to Plymouth Argyle on a one-month youth loan on 17 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0026-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, January, Transfers\nA final flurry of activity began on 28 January when Jake Taylor was recalled from Cheltenham having started just one game since his loan was extended. The following day Michael Hector returned from Aldershot and was immediately loaned out again, swapping places with Taylor and joining Cheltenham for a month. The last day of the month saw two young players move out on loan. Jordan Obita joined Oldham Athletic for one month whilst Karl Sheppard rejoined his former club Shamrock Rovers until July 2013. Deadline day also saw Dominic Samuel return from his spell at Colchester having made two appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, February\nThe month began with a home game against Sunderland on 2 February which Reading won 2\u20131. The hosts took the lead through Jimmy K\u00e9b\u00e9 in the 7th minute, only for Craig Gardner to equalise with a penalty midway through the first half. With only five minutes left, K\u00e9b\u00e9 popped up again and headed in at the far post to seal victory for Reading and make it three wins from four matches. The following week Reading travelled away to Stoke City and after a goalless first half, found themselves 2\u20130 down thanks to goals from Robert Huth and Cameron Jerome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, February\nAdrian Mariappa pulled one back with his first goal for Reading in the 83rd minute, but Stoke held on for a 2\u20131 win, ending Reading's four-game unbeaten run. On 12 February, having fallen out of first team contention, Kaspars Gork\u0161s joined Wolverhampton Wanderers on a three-month loan with a view to a permanent deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, February\nIn preparation for their FA Cup fifth round tie away to Manchester United, Reading headed to Dubai for warm weather training. The match itself took place on 18 February with United prevailing 2\u20131 thanks to second half goals from Nani and Javier Hern\u00e1ndez. A late Jobi McAnuff strike, his first goal of the season, proved no more than a consolation for the Royals. The following day, despite barely featuring because of injury, Gozie Ugwu extended his stay with Plymouth Argyle for a second month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0028-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, February\nThe final game in February saw Wigan Athletic visit the Madejski Stadium for a crucial relegation clash. Wigan took the lead on 44 minutes through Arouna Kon\u00e9, who then scored again just one minute later to give Wigan a 2\u20130 lead at the break. Maynor Figueroa made it 3\u20130 soon after the restart before Pavel Pogrebnyak completed a miserable day for the Royals when he was sent off for a reckless challenge after 56 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0028-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, February\nFour days later the club announced that they had signed a partnership with Turkish side Galatasaray, paving the way for co-operation on academy, scouting and other matters. February ended with news that Michael Hector had extended his stay at Cheltenham Town, whilst Jake Taylor joined Crawley Town on a one-month loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, March\nOn 2 March Reading travelled to Everton for their first game of the month. Goals from Marouane Fellaini, Steven Pienaar and Kevin Mirallas gave Everton a commanding lead, with Hal Robson-Kanu's late strike only a consolation as the hosts ran 3\u20131 winners. The following week Jordan Obita extended his youth loan at Oldham Athletic until 1 April, whilst Jay Tabb moved to Ipswich Town on a one-month loan having fallen out of first-team contention. On 7 March, after nearly eight years with Reading, Brynjar Gunnarsson moved back to KR, the club he started his career with.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0029-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, March\nTwo days later Reading were at the Madejski Stadium to face fellow relegation rivals Aston Villa. The Royals took the lead through a Nathan Baker own goal but held on to it for just one minute before Christian Benteke levelled for Villa. Gabriel Agbonlahor then struck on the stroke of half time, and with no further goals in the second half, the game finished 2\u20131 to the visitors. The evening before the game, the club had received further bad news with Jason Roberts revealing that he would miss the rest of the season after having surgery on the hip injury he sustained against Southampton in December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, March\nOn 11 March, after four successive defeats, manager Brian McDermott was sacked by the club. He was followed out of the club by first-team coaches Nigel Gibbs and Yannis Anastasiou, with Academy Manager Eamonn Dolan taking over first team duties in a caretaker capacity. On the same day, Gozie Ugwu was recalled early from his injury-plagued loan spell at Plymouth Argyle, whilst later that week, Lawson D'Ath and Charlie Losasso both left the club on loan, joining Exeter City and Isthmian Premier Division side Whitehawk respectively until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0030-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, March\nOn 16 March, Dolan took charge of his first and only game as caretaker manager away to Manchester United, with a solitary Wayne Rooney goal giving United a 1\u20130 win. Soon afterwards Reading announced their first transfer business of the forthcoming summer, with Icelandic duo Sam\u00fael Fridj\u00f3nsson and T\u00f3mas Urbancic set to sign on 1 July. Fifteen days after McDermott was sacked, Nigel Adkins was appointed as the Reading's new manager on a three-year contract with his former assistant at Southampton, Andy Crosby, also joining the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0030-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, March\nAdkins first game in charge took place on 30 March and saw Reading travel to Arsenal with the game finishing 4\u20131 to the Gunners. Hal Robson-Kanu again scored a late consolation, with Arsenal's four goals bringing their total against Reading this season to 16. The end of the month saw Michael Hector extend his loan with Cheltenham Town until the end of the season, and Jake Taylor return after a one-month spell at Crawley Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, April\nApril began with the return of Jordan Obita following his two-month spell at Oldham Athletic and the extension of Jay Tabb's loan at Ipswich Town until the end of the season. The first game of the month was at home against Southampton on 6 April with the Saints winning 2\u20130. A goal in each half from Jay Rodriguez and Adam Lallana were enough for a comfortable Southampton victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, April\nTwo days later Newcastle Jets player Craig Goodwin joined the club on trial for two weeks and though the trial was later extended to allow Goodwin to play in a reserve game, he was not offered a contract following its conclusion. On 11 April, Reading announced another young player would be joining the club over the summer with 17-year-old American goalkeeper Aleksander Gogic set to sign a two-year professional deal prior to the 2013\u201314 season. Reading's current goalkeeper Alex McCarthy was largely to thank for the Royals' 0\u20130 draw with Liverpool on 13 April, with his performance earning him the man-of-the-match award and giving Reading their first clean sheet in nine games against Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, April\nOne week later the team travelled to Carrow Road to face Norwich City. After a goalless first half, Norwich struck twice in 90 seconds with a long range Garath McCleary shot not enough to salvage anything as the game finished 2\u20131 to the hosts. The last game of the month took place on 28 April as Reading faced 19th place Queens Park Rangers at the Madejski Stadium. Despite both teams needing a win to maintain any hope of avoiding relegation, a drab 0\u20130 draw condemned both to Championship football for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, May\nReading travelled to Fulham on 4 May and recorded only their second away win of the season with two goals from Hal Robson-Kanu and one each from Jem Karacan and Adam Le Fondre securing a 4\u20132 victory. Le Fondre's strike also set a new Premier League record for most goals scored as a substitute. Ten days later, Reading played their last home game of the season against Manchester City, losing 0\u20132. Prior to kick-off, Le Fondre was named the Reading F.C. Player of the Season, with Alex McCarthy and Hal Robson-Kanu coming second and third respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0033-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, May\nOn 16 May, McCarthy also became Reading's first youth graduate to be called up to the England squad since the start of the Academy era. On the same day the club announced they had agreed in principle to buy land at Bearwood Lakes Golf Club for a new training ground. The final game of the season took place on 19 May away to West Ham United. Garath McCleary and Le Fondre both scored for Reading, but a Kevin Nolan hat-trick helped the Hammers to a 4\u20132 win and consigned the Royals to a 22nd defeat in 38 games. The following week the club announced that ten senior players would be leaving the club upon the expiry of their contracts. Among those leaving were Noel Hunt, Ian Harte, Nicky Shorey and Jay Tabb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Under-21s and Academy\nReading's application for Category 1 academy status under the new Elite Player Performance Plan meant that their under-21 and under-18 teams would compete in the new Professional Development League 1 for the 2012\u201313 season. Although the under-21 league games are predominantly contested by the younger players, one goalkeeper, and three outfield players over the age of 21 are eligible for selection for each fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Under-21s and Academy\nThe under-21s first game of the season was a 3\u20131 defeat away to West Ham with Ryan Edwards scoring Reading's only goal. A heavy 6\u20131 defeat of West Bromwich Albion, and 3\u20130 victory over Norwich City followed before a run of four games without a win. They won a further two games, against Norwich and West Ham, but ended the first league phase with another four-game winless run which consigned them to seventh position. The second-from-bottom finish meant the under-21s were placed in Group 2 for the second phase of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0035-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Under-21s and Academy\nThey again began with a defeat, losing 3\u20131 away to Manchester City but went on to win six of their next eight games, including two wins over Stoke City and a 3\u20130, Dominic Samuel inspired victory over Man City. Their hopes of reaching the knockout stages were ended though after three successive defeats saw them finish in third place, with only the top team advancing. With six goals each, Lawson D'Ath and Dominic Samuel were Reading's joint top scorers over the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0035-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Under-21s and Academy\nAt the end of the season Charlie Losasso and Josh Webb, who had both featured regularly for the under-21s, were among the ten players released by the club. Reading also confirmed and that development coach, and under-21 manager, Chris Cummins would leave at the end of the season, having been with the club since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Under-21s and Academy\nThe under-18s also started their season against West Ham, drawing 2\u20132. They lost just one game during the initial league phase, a 3\u20132 defeat by Bolton, finishing top of the table with 11 wins from 14. The team also progressed in the FA Youth Cup, beating Brentford 5\u20131 at Griffin Park in December. By winning their league, the under-18s were placed in the Elite Group for the second half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0036-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Season review, Under-21s and Academy\nThey struggled initially, losing three of their first four matches and were also knocked out of the Youth Cup in the fourth round after a 2\u20130 home defeat by Bolton. Following the run of defeats, the under-18s won ten matches in a row, including doubles over Chelsea and Crystal Palace, finishing second in the group on goal difference to Fulham and qualifying for knockout stage. After beating Everton 4\u20130 in the semi-final Reading faced Fulham in the final but could not extend their winning run to twelve, losing 3\u20130. Following their successful season, the club offered eight scholars professional contracts for the 2013\u201314 season, including Uche Ikpeazu who was the top scorer in the country at under-18 level with 28 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00230889-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Competitions\nUpdated to match played match played 19 May 2013Source: Competitions", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Competitions, League Cup\nReading entered the League Cup at the Second Round stage with the other Premier League clubs not involved in European competition. On 15 August, they were drawn at home to Peterborough United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230889-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Reading F.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\nReading entered the FA Cup at the Third Round stage with the other Premier League clubs, as well as those from the Championship. The draw was made on 2 December 2012, where Reading were drawn against Crawley Town on 5 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230890-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Betis season\nThe 2012\u201313 Real Betis season was the club's 78th season in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230891-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid CF season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 109th season in Real Madrid Club de F\u00fatbol's history and their 82nd consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. It covers a period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013. Real Madrid began the season by winning the Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a, defeating Barcelona on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230891-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid CF season\nThe team finished runners-up to Bar\u00e7a in La Liga and reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League for the third year in a row, where they were eliminated by Borussia Dortmund 3\u20134 on aggregate. It was Madrid's 16th successive season in the premier European club competition. Real also entered the Copa del Rey in the round of 32, going on a memorable run to the final, which saw them defeat Barcelona in the semi-finals before losing to Atl\u00e9tico Madrid 1\u20132 a.e.t. in a heartbreaking fashion, which meant that the team finished the season with one trophy out of four, despite being close to winning them all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230891-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid CF season, Club, Official sponsors\nBwin\u2022 Adidas\u2022 Mahou\u2022 Movistar\u2022 Audi\u2022 Emirates\u2022 Coca- Cola\u2022 STC\u2022 BBVA\u2022 Samsung\u2022 Sanitas\u2022 Nivea\u2022 Sol\u00e1n\u00a0de\u00a0Cabras\u2022 Solaria", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230891-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid CF season, Pre-season and friendlies\nLast updated: 26 September 2012Sources: Real Oviedo, Benfica, LA Galaxy, Santos Laguna, Milan, Celtic, Millonarios", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230891-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid CF season, Statistics, Goals\nLast updated: 1 June 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230891-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid CF season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 1 June 2013Source: Competitive matches and ESPN.comOrdered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Players, Current squad\nAs of 1 February 2013 Note: 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, 59], "content_span": [60, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Players, Current squad\n\u2663 Registered with Real Madrid C\u2666 Registered with Juvenil A", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Players, 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Players, 2012\u201313 transfers, 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Players, 2012\u201313 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Statistics, Squad statistics\nOrdered by minutes playedLast updated: 8 June 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Statistics, Goals\nLast updated: 8 June 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 8 June 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230892-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Madrid Castilla season, Statistics, Overall\nLast updated: 8 June 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230893-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Phoenix season\nThe 2012\u201313 Real Phoenix season was the first and only season of the Real Phoenix professional indoor soccer club. Real Phoenix, a Southwestern Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their first six home games in the Barney Family Sports Complex in the greater Phoenix suburb of Queen Creek, Arizona. The team played the final two home games of the season at the Arizona Sports Complex in Glendale, Arizona. The team was led by general manager Rosario Lopez Jr., head coach Kevin Grub, and assistant coach Rodolfo Hernandez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230893-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Phoenix season, Season summary\nReal Phoenix struggled in the regular season, ultimately earning a 4\u201312 record and last place in the PASL's four-team Southwestern Division, and failed to advance to the postseason. The team also struggled at the box office, placing 18th in the 19-team league for average home attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230893-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Phoenix season, Season summary\nIn late January 2013, the team informed the PASL that they were financially unable to complete their road schedule and the league revoked their franchise. The league sent a replacement squad coached by Kevin Leonard and filled out largely by members of his Texas Xtreme Premier Arena Soccer League team to cover Phoenix's road dates in south Texas. The team's final two home games were played with a squad of regular Real Phoenix players but with Kevin Leonard remaining as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230893-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Phoenix season, Season summary\nThe team participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They lost to the Las Vegas Legends in the Wild Card round, abruptly ending their run in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230893-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Phoenix season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below. \u00a7 Team relocated to Arizona Sports Complex for final two home games. \u2665 Replacement squad after franchise revoked by league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Real Sociedad's 67th season in La Liga. The club's league campaign surpassed all expectations as 4th spot was achieved and the team qualified for the Champions league play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Season summary\nThe season began with mixed results. A series of home wins and away defeats were reminiscent of previous season's frustration. A convincing win in the Basque derby was the only exception during this disappointing period. Early in November, the club suffered a Copa del Rey defeat away to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n side C\u00f3rdoba. This was followed by a league defeat at home against 19th-ranked team Espanyol. With the match still in play, fans at the stadium called for Montanier's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Season summary\nIn the Copa del Rey, the team was incapable of overturning the first leg's deficit and exited the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Season summary, An exceptional run\nWith an away victory to M\u00e1laga, Real Sociedad began a run that stretched from mid-November to the end of the season where the team suffered only two defeats. The team found stability with a 4\u20132\u20133\u20131 formation comprising Asier Illarramendi and Markel Bergara in the double 6 and Xabi Prieto just ahead of them as an attacking midfielder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Season summary, Race for fourth\nIn April, it became clear that either Real Sociedad or Valencia would capture the fourth-place spot. On 28 April, a decisive match between these two took place at Anoeta. Real Sociedad was capable of coming back and won the match, thus opening a five-point gap with Valencia. In the following weeks, however, Valencia won three-straight games while Real Sociedad dropped points. Before the last matchday, Real Sociedad were two points behind Valencia and had to travel to relegation-threatened Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a. Real Sociedad won their match and Valencia lost theirs, sending the Basque team to fourth place and securing a spot at the UEFA Champions League play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Season summary, Race for fourth\nReal Sociedad scored 70 goals that season, more than any other club bar Real Madrid and Barcelona and had the fourth-best defence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Season summary, Race for fourth\nTowards the end of the season, when it seemed like Philippe Montanier was about to renew his contract, he signed a contract with Rennes instead. Montanier was awarded the Ram\u00f3n Cobo trophy, given to the best manager, by the Royal Spanish Football Federation's coaches committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Season summary, Dispute over TV broadcasting rights\nEarly in 2012, Real Sociedad filed lawsuit against Mediapro on the grounds that payments were not in time or were incomplete. This escalated to a legal case that was eventually won by Real Sociedad. The media group was told to pay what had been established in the contract and \u20ac7\u00a0million as compensation. Real Sociedad was in addition declared free to sign a broadcasting contract with whoever they wanted to. Weeks before the start of the new season Real Sociedad agreed a 3-year deal with Canal +. Mediapro appealed this decision and in May a provincial court declared that the infringement was not serious enough to justify the \u20ac7\u00a0million compensation. Real Sociedad had to refund this amount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230894-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad 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-00230894-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Sociedad season, Start formations\nLineup that started most of the club's competitive matches throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230895-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Valladolid season\nThe 2012\u201313 Real Valladolid season was the club's first season in La Liga since its relegation at the end of the 2009\u201310 season. The club's manager in the previous season, Miroslav \u0110uki\u0107, continued with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230895-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Valladolid season, Current squad, 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230895-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Valladolid season, Current squad, Youth system\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, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230895-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Valladolid season, Current squad, Long-term injuries, V\u00edctor P\u00e9rez's broken fibula\nIn the morning training of 5 January 2013, V\u00edctor P\u00e9rez broke the fibula in his right leg fortuitously, and at the evening he underwent surgery in the Hospital Sagrado Coraz\u00f3n by Dr. Rafael Ramos, chief of Real Valladolid's medical service. The estimated time for recovery of his injury is about four months approximately, so he would miss the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230895-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Valladolid season, Competitions, La Liga\nLa Liga Winner (also qualified for 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League Group Stage)\u00a0 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League Group Stage\u00a0 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League 4th Qualifying Round\u00a0 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League Group Stage\u00a0 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League 4th Qualifying Round \u00a0 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League 3rd Qualifying Round\u00a0 Relegation to Liga Adelante", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230896-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Zaragoza season\nThe 2012\u201313 Real Zaragoza season is the 78th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230896-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Real Zaragoza 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-00230897-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Recreativo de Huelva season\nThe 2012\u201313 Recreativo de Huelva season is the 75th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230898-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade season\nIn season 2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade will be competing in Serbian SuperLiga, Serbian Cup and UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230898-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade season, Previous season positions\nThe club competed in Serbian SuperLiga, Serbian Cup in domestic and UEFA Europa League in European competitions. Finishing 2nd in domestic league, behind Partizan, won Serbian Cup (beat Borac \u010ca\u010dak in final) and losing to 6th placed team from French championship Rennais in Play-off round for UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230898-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade season, Kit\nRed Star Belgrade players are wearing a kit made by Legea for the 2012\u201313 season. The home colors are of a typical Red-White design with small stripes. The Away and third kit colors are swapped. Also both away and third kit are based on Udinese Calcio Away kits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 37], "content_span": [38, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230898-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade season, Players, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230898-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade season, Competitions, Serbian SuperLiga\nRed Star Belgrade will compete with 15 other teams in the Serbian SuperLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230898-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade season, Competitions, Serbian Cup\nRed Star Belgrade will participate in the 7th Serbian Cup starting in the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230898-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Red Star Belgrade season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League\nBy winning 2011\u201312 Serbian Cup, Red Star Belgrade qualified for the Europa League. They started in the second qualifying round against Belarus side Naftan Novopolotsk, and were eliminated in Play-off round by French side Bordeaux.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230899-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regional Four Day Competition\nThe 2012\u201313 Regional Four Day Competition is the 47th domestic first-class cricket tournament held in the West Indies. It will take place from 9 February 2013 \u2013 7 May 2013. The seven teams based in the Caribbean will compete in a round-robin tournament followed by semi-finals involving the top four teams and a final match between the winners of the semi-finals. There is no touring team competing this edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230899-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regional Four Day Competition, Points allocation\nIn the event of a match being abandoned without any play having taken place, or in the event of there being no 1st innings decision, three points each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230900-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regional Super50\nThe 2012\u201313 Regional Super50 is the domestic one-day cricket competition in the West Indies. This edition of the Regional Super50 tournament will feature the six permanent first-class regions of the West Indies along with the Combined Campuses and Colleges team. The tournament will consist of a round-robin group stage followed by two semi-final matches for the top four finishers with the winners advancing to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga\nThe 2012\u201313 Regionalliga was the fifth season of the Regionalliga as the fourth tier of the German football league system. From this season onwards, the structure of this tier has changed. The three division format administrated by the German FA has been replaced by five leagues, each of which is administrated by its respective regional FA. Additionally, the leagues will be structured on geographical affiliation, in contrast to the partially arbitrary divisional alignment. League champions will qualify for a promotion play-off. Additionally, the Regionalliga S\u00fcdwest runners-up will qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Nord\n18 teams from Bremen, Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein competed in the first season of the reformed Regionalliga Nord. Holstein Kiel won the championship and also won their promotion playoff, winning promotion to 3. Liga. Both VfB L\u00fcbeck and FC Oberneuland entered insolvency proceedings during the season; results involving these two teams were annulled. Kiel's promotion and the fact that no team was relegated from the 3. Liga meant that the number of relegated teams was reduced to just two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Nordost\n16 teams from Berlin, Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia competed in the first season of the reformed Regionalliga Nordost. RB Leipzig won the league, suffering no defeats, and also won their promotion playoff, gaining promotion to 3. Liga. As SV Babelsberg 03 was relegated from 3. Liga and Leipzig won promotion, the standard two teams were relegated. In FC Carl Zeiss Jena, 1. FC Lok Leipzig and 1. FC Magdeburg, this fourth-tier league contains three teams that have been finalists in European competitions, Magdeburg even winning the 1974 European Cup Winners' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga, Regionalliga West\n20 teams from North Rhine-Westphalia competed in the first season of the reformed Regionalliga West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga, Regionalliga S\u00fcdwest\n19 teams from Bavaria, Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg, Hesse, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland competed in the first season of the newly formed Regionalliga S\u00fcdwest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga, Regionalliga Bayern\n20 teams from Bavaria competed in the first season of the newly formed Regionalliga Bayern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga, Promotion play-offs\nThe draw for the 2012\u201313 promotion play-offs was held on 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230901-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Regionalliga, Promotion play-offs, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 29 May, and the second legs were played on 2 and 4 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup\nThe Republika Srpska 2012\u201313 was tenth season of the Republika Srpska national football tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup\nThe competition started on 19 September 2012, and got concluded on 2 June 2013. FK Borac Banja Luka were the defending champions, while FK Radnik Bijeljina were the new champions after defeating Borac in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup, Draw\nThe draws for the round of 32 was conducted in Banja Luka at 12:00 (CEST) on 6 September 2012. All 31 clubs were in the same pot, resulting that every club could get any other club as his opponent. The first-drawn team served as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup, Competition, Round of 32\nThis round consisted of 16 single-legged fixtures. All 31 clubs entered the competition from this round, while the matches were played on 12 September 2012. In case of a draw in the regular time, the winner would have been determined with a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup, Competition, Round of 16\nThis round consisted of 8 single-legged fixtures. The date for the matches were determined with the draw which was held on October 4 . The matches took place on October 10. In a case of a draw in the regular time, the winner would have been determined with a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup, Competition, Quarterfinals\nThis round consisted of 4 single-legged fixtures. The date for the matches were determined with the draw which was held on October 25 . The matches took place on November 7. In a case of a draw in the regular time, the winner would have been determined with a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup, Competition, Semifinals\nThe four winners from the previous round played their opponents in this last hurdle before the final. The semifinals consisted of two two-legged fixtures. The first leg took part on 17 April, while the second leg was played on 15 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230902-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Republika Srpska Cup, Competition, Final\nThe final will be contested between Borac Banja Luka and Radnik on 30 May and 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230903-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rhode Island Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Rhode Island Rams basketball team represented the University of Rhode Island during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rams, led by first year head coach Dan Hurley, played their home games at the Ryan Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 8\u201321, 3\u201313 in A-10 play finish in a tie for 14th place. They failed to qualify for the Atlantic 10 Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230904-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rice Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Rice Owls men's basketball team representedRice University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Owls, led by fifth year head coach Ben Braun, played their home games at the Tudor Fieldhouse and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 5\u201326, 1\u201315 in C-USA play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Conference USA Tournament to Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230905-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Richmond Spiders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Richmond Spiders men's basketball team represented the University of Richmond in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college basketball during the 2012\u201313 season. Richmond competed as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10) under eighth-year head basketball coach Chris Mooney and played its home games at the Robins Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230905-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Richmond Spiders men's basketball team, 100 Years celebration\nThe University celebrated the 100th season of Spider basketball in several ways. Many former Spider players, coaches and teams were honored throughout the season and on January 22 the school announced their All-Time team, honored at halftime of their February 9 game against Saint Louis:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230906-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rider Broncs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Rider Broncs men's basketball team represented Rider University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Broncs, led by first year head coach Kevin Baggett, played their home games at Alumni Gymnasium and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 19\u201315, 12\u20136 in MAAC play to finish in a tie for second place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament to Fairfield. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Hartford in the first round before losing in the second round to East Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230907-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Riksserien season\nThe 2012\u201313 Riksserien season was the highest tier of women's ice hockey in Sweden. Eight teams competed in the league, with the top six participating in the 2013 Swedish Championship playoffs in women's ice hockey. MODO finished first in the regular season, but were eliminated in the semifinals by Bryn\u00e4s IF, who would lose in the finals to AIK. The bottom two teams were forced to participate in a qualifier to keep their spots in the league, which resulted in HV71 being demoted to the second-tier league, Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230907-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Riksserien season, 2013 Riksserien qualifier\nThe Riksserien qualifier (Swedish: Kval till Riksserien) was contested by the two teams with the best records from the 2012\u201313 Allettan season and the two teams with the worst records from the 2012\u201313 Riksserien. The teams played a single round robin tournament with one game between each team. The two team with the best records were qualified for play in the 2013\u201314 Riksserien season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230907-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Riksserien season, 2013 Riksserien qualifier\nIF Sundsvall finished second, and thereby replaced third-placed HV71 in Svenska Serien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season was the first season of the Rio Grande Valley Flash indoor soccer club. The Flash, a Central Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their home games in the State Farm Arena in Hidalgo, Texas. The team was led by owner Gerardo Guerra Lozano and head coach Mariano Bollella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Season summary\nThe Flash were successful in the regular season, compiling a 12\u20134 record and placing second in the competitive Central Division. The team split the first half of the season with four wins and four losses before winning the final regular season matches. The team also fared well at the box office, drawing the fourth-highest average attendance for home games this season. The Flash qualified for the postseason and earned the right to play for the Ron Newman Cup in the PASL National Championship. They defeated Central Division regular season champion Dallas Sidekicks in consecutive games and advanced to the PASL Semi-Finals in San Diego where they fell to the Detroit Waza in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Season summary\nThe Flash did not participate in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Off-field moves\nThe team was originally organized in 2011 as the Monterrey Flash in the Liga Mexicana de Futbol R\u00e1pido Profesional (LMFR). Although successful (they won the league championship and finished second in the 2012 FIFRA Club Championship) owner Gerardo Guerra Lozano moved the team across the border to Texas and joined the PASL in September 2012. In mid-October 2012, the Flash announced that they had rejoined the LMFR and would participate in both leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Off-field moves\nThe team's initial logo matched the one used in Monterrey, with only the location named updated. On January 9, 2013, the Flash unveiled a new, sleeker logo during a press conference at Ford Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Off-field moves\nThe Flash held several pre-season promotion events including a friendly match against local media on November 14 and a \"Student's Day\" for local area schools during their November 15 match against the Texas South Devils of the National Premier Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Roster moves\nOn January 9, 2013, the team announced that it had signed a number of \"soccer stars from Mexico\" to play for the Flash during home games. The first such announced signing was Claudio \"Diablo\" Nu\u00f1ez, formerly of the Tigres UANL. At the same press conference, the Flash announced the signing of goalkeeper Juan Gamboa, a Brownsville, Texas, native who played for The University of Texas at Brownsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Roster moves\nOn January 31, 2013, the team announced the signing of Hector Nicanor. The veteran defender played for C.F. Monterrey and Monarcas Morelia in the Mexican Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Liga MX in the mid-1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230908-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rio Grande Valley Flash season, Awards and honors\nIn postseason honors, defender Damian Garcia was named to the 2012-13 PASL All-League Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230909-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Robert Morris Colonials men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Robert Morris Colonials men's basketball team represented Robert Morris University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Colonials, led by third year head coach Andrew Toole, played their home games at the Charles L. Sewall Center and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 24\u201311, 14\u20134 in NEC play to be regular season NEC champions. They lost in the semifinals of the Northeast Conference Tournament to Mount St. Mary's. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they earned an automatic bid to the 2013 NIT where they hosted and defeated Kentucky in the first round before losing in the second round at Providence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230910-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Robert Morris Colonials women's ice hockey season\nThe Robert Morris Colonials women represented Robert Morris University in CHA women's ice hockey during the 2012-13 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. The Colonials finished conference play in fourth place. They made it to the semifinal game of the CHA Tournament when they were narrowly defeated by Mercyhurst.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230910-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Robert Morris Colonials women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nSophomore Forward Rebecca Vint was named to the CHA All-Conference First Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 76], "content_span": [77, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230910-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Robert Morris Colonials women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nSenior Defender Jamie Joslin was named to the CHA All-Conference Second Team Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230911-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rochdale A.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 92nd season of competitive football for Rochdale A.F.C., a professional English football club based in Rochdale, Greater Manchester. Rochdale return to Football League Two for 2012\u201313 following a two-season stint in League One which ended with a last-place finish in 2011\u201312. Rochdale began their 2012\u201313 Football League Two season with a 0\u20130 draw with Northampton. They entered into three cup competitions in the first round due to the league table they are in. John Coleman's and Jimmy Bell's contracts were terminated by Rochdale on 21 January 2013 following a poor run in form.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230911-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rochdale 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season was the first and only season of the new Rockford Rampage indoor soccer club. The Rampage, a Central Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their home games in the Victory Sports Complex in Loves Park, Illinois. The team was led by owner Saul Robles, head coach Jeff Kraft, and assistant coach Armando Sanchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, Season summary\nThe team had mixed results in the regular season. The Rampage started the season with a four-game win streak but stumbled as the team's best players were signed by the Chicago Soul of the Major Indoor Soccer League. Ultimately, the team finished 7\u20139 and failed to qualify for the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, Season summary\nThe Rampage participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They lost to the Chicago Mustangs in the Wild Card round, abruptly ending their run in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, History\nThe previous indoor soccer franchise, founded in 2005 as the Rockford Thunder, was initially a member of the American Indoor Soccer League. They played home games at the Victory Sports Complex in Loves Park, Illinois. In August 2007, the team changed its name to \"Rockford Rampage\" to accommodate a women's fastpitch softball team, the Texas Thunder, which relocated to Rockford. The Rampage won the 2007\u201308 AISL Championship but the league folded soon after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, History\nIn 2008, the Rampage became a founding member of the National Indoor Soccer League and relocated to the Rockford MetroCentre in downtown Rockford, Illinois. The team continued in that league (renamed \"Major Indoor Soccer League\" in 2009) until going on hiatus in October 2010. Current Rampage head coach Jeff Kraft also led these previous incarnations of the team. The new Rockford Rampage joined the Professional Arena Soccer League in August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, Off-field moves\nIn November 2012, the Rampage signed a marketing agreement that made Radioactive Energy Drink the team's \"presenting sponsor\" for this season. The beverage's logo was featured on the front of the team's uniform jerseys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, Roster moves\nThe team held an open tryout at the Victory Sports Complex on Saturday, September 22, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, Awards and honors\nOn November 13, 2012, Rampage goalkeeper Ante Cop was named PASL Player of the Week for helping lead the team to a 3-0 start and for excellent defensive goalkeeping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230912-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rockford Rampage season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230913-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Romanian Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Romanian Hockey League season was the 83rd season of the Romanian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Romania. Seven teams participated in the league, and HSC Cs\u00edkszereda won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230914-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ross County F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Ross County's first season in the Scottish Premier League, having been promoted as champions of the Scottish First Division at the end of 2011\u201312 season. They also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230914-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ross County F.C. season, Summary, Season\nDuring season 2012\u201313 Ross County finished fifth in the Scottish Premier League. They reached the second round of the League Cup and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230914-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ross County F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 19 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, The Millers competed in League Two-the fourth tier in the football league. It was the 142nd season for the club since forming in 1870 as Thornhill and the fifth season in a row that Rotherham have been in League Two. It was a commemorative season for Rotherham United and a new chapter in the history books, as they returned home to Rotherham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season\nThey played their home games at The Don Valley Stadium in nearby city Sheffield, of which they had been shadowed by for 4 years since the dispute with Ken Booth, the owner of traditional home Millmoor-which forced them to leave. Rotherham's first game of the season was played on 18 August 2012, versus Burton Albion, in their new home; which was requested by chairman Tony Stewart because of the homecoming occasion. They came out victorious 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0000-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season\nBefore the season began, the club were tipped by many bookies to lift the League Two title, leaving newly promoted Fleetwood Town and local rivals Chesterfield in their tracks. United were also tipped to be one of numerous favourites to contest the Football League Trophy, however they were out in the first round prior to a 1\u20130 defeat to York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season\nJust one week prior to the first league encounter, Rotherham faced a trip to Yorkshire rivals, Hull City, in a League Cup first round fixture. They were knocked out 7-6 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season\nRotherham United won promotion to League One after finishing second in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Kit\nRotherham wear traditional colours red and white as their home kit. On the right shoulder, there is a solid white bar, with the black Puma logo on it, due to them being the kit manufacturers. Below it is the town crest, put on as a symbolic representative of the move back to Rotherham. It retains the sponsorship of local shopping centre Parkgate. The away kit is an amber and black coloured strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 41], "content_span": [42, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Kit\nThe reason behind the chosen colours is that in 1925, when Rotherham Town and Thornhill United merged to become Rotherham United, their first ever kit was amber with a black rugby-like 'V' design on the chest. However, this season's away top is a thick, black bar across the chest, with the badge on the left, Puma logo in the centre and the town crest on the right. This kit also retains sponsorship from last season, with One Town One Community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 41], "content_span": [42, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Season fixtures, Pre-season\nThe first training session of the season was held on week commencing 2 July 2012, 13 days previous to the first pre-season fixture against local team Parkgate. It was a vital time, as the players got a long jog and light training to get back into the football routine; as well as meeting the summer recruitments. On 14 July 2012, a few hours after the 0-6 victory against Parkgate, The Millers flew out to a training camp in the Algarve District of Portugal. On 18 July 2012, Rotherham locked horns with nearby training Oldham Athletic. Managed by Paul Dickov, Oldham were a stature of whom were a League One side. Surprisingly, Steve Evans' men came out on top 3\u20131. The players returned home the next day to prepare for the upcoming pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Season fixtures, Pre-season\nFor Rotherham, not just the club but the fans too, this was a special pre-season. The first ever match at their new home venue The New York Stadium would be staged during this period of time. However, this match was just one quarter of stadia safety certificate matches. The opponents in these games, of which were two Yorkshire rivals in Barnsley and Doncaster Rovers, would stage 6,000 and 9,000 maximum capacity matches respectively. The 2012 Scottish Cup champions Hearts, and local rivals Sheffield United would both stage maximum (12,000) capacity matches, also respectively. These fixtures were simply to ensure that the facilities of the ground were able to cope with match-day standards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Season fixtures, Pre-season\nOther games included away trips to Mansfield Town, Stocksbridge Park Steels, Stamford, a short journey to local lads Dinnington Town, and an encounter at Nene Park against Kettering Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Season fixtures, Pre-season\nRotherham fans grew ever confident that the club would be successful this year. The performances were \"too good for the league\" according to many fans, and it was justified with victories over higher league outfits Oldham, Doncaster and Barnsley. Comments from other supporters suggested that the players brought in were Championship quality, and would tear other teams such as Barnet and Accrington Stanley to pieces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Squad statistics\nEverything below is not up-to-dateNote: 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, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Squad statistics, 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Coverage\nThroughout the season, Rotherham will feature on many highlight shows. BBC's Football League Show will show highlights of every Football League game played on a Saturday, sometimes doing special segments-in which The Millers featured in when they beat Burton Albion 3\u20130 on the first day of the season. A weekly post-match program on Sky Sports News, called Goals Express, also shows goals from the matches. Local radio station BBC Radio Sheffield sometimes do commentary, and 6 days a week hold the Football Heaven phone in, and after matches fans are able to call and express their opinions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230915-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rotherham United F.C. season, Coverage\nRotherham may be on Sky Sports sometimes, and if the club were to progress far in a domestic cup then they may have matches on BBC or ITV. Millers Player also host commentary and match stats during games, for under 10p a day the buyer is treated to exclusive information that can only be seen via the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230916-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby Pro D2 season\nThe 2012\u201313 Rugby Pro D2 is the second-level French rugby union club competition, behind the Top 14, for the 2012\u201313 season. It ran alongside the 2012\u201313 Top 14 competition; both competitions are operated by the Ligue Nationale de Rugby (LNR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230916-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby Pro D2 season, Competition format\nThe top team at the end of the regular season (after all the teams played one another twice, once at home, once away), is declared champion and earns a spot in the next Top 14 season. Teams ranked second to fifth compete in promotion playoffs, with the semifinals being played at the home ground of the higher-ranked team. The final is then played on neutral ground, and the winner earned the second ticket to the next Top 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230916-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby Pro D2 season, Competition format\nThe LNR uses a slightly different bonus points system from that used in most other rugby competitions. It trialled a new system in 2007\u201308 explicitly designed to prevent a losing team from earning more than one bonus point in a match, a system that also made it impossible for either team to earn a bonus point in a drawn match. LNR chose to continue with this system for subsequent seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230916-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby Pro D2 season, Relegation\nNormally, the teams that finish in 15th and 16th places in the table are relegated to F\u00e9d\u00e9rale 1 at the end of the season. However, 7th placed Carcassonne were under threat of demotion due to \"financial reasons\". Carcassonne appealed this decision and their appeal was successful. Consequently, Pays d'Aix were demoted along with Massy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230916-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby Pro D2 season, Play\u2013offs, Semi\u2013finals\nThe semi\u2013finals follow a 2 v 5, 3 v 4 system - with the higher ranked team playing at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga\nThe 2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga was the 42nd edition of this competition and the 93rd edition of the German rugby union championship. In the Rugby-Bundesliga, twenty-two teams played in, initially, four regional divisions, the first stage of the competition. The season started on 25 August 2012 and finished with the championship final on 15 June 2013, interrupted by a winter break from 25 November to 3 March. The regular season finished on Wednesday 1 May and the play-offs started on the following weekend, 4 May, and the German championship final was held on 15 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga\nThe defending champions were Heidelberger RK who defeated TV Pforzheim in the 2012 final to take out its eights championship and third in a row. Heidelberger RK took out the national championship once more, remaining unbeaten all season and defeating local rival SC Neuenheim 41\u201310 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Overview\nThe league has been radically modified from the 2011\u201312 season. In 2011\u201312 the league operated with ten teams playing in a single division in a home-and-away format with semi-finals and a final at the end. In 2012\u201313 the league has been expanded, initially to twenty-four teams, which were to play in four regional divisions of six teams each. In those each team would play the others in its division just once. However, two teams resigned from the league before the start of the season, reducing the number of clubs to twenty-two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Overview\nThe Berlin Grizzlies of the eastern division opted to form a team with the reserve side of USV Potsdam Rugby and play in the 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga instead. DRC Hannover withdrew from the northern division just before the first game of the season, suffering from a lack of first team players and entered the tier three Rugby-Regionalliga instead for 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Overview\nThe first stage of the competition, the Vorrunde, will finish on 3 October 2012 after which the second stage will start, the Qualifikationsphase, in which the top four teams each from the southern and the western group play each other in one group while the top teams from the north and east play each other in another. The finals series will be expanded from four to eight teams. The six teams not qualified for the Qualifikationsphase will enter the DRV-Pokal, the German rugby union cup, together with the top eight teams of the 2nd Bundesliga. The 2nd Bundesliga teams not qualified for the DRV-Pokal will play for the Liga Pokal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Overview\nIn the second stage the teams within a group will play each other in a home-and-away format, with the teams that already played each other in the first stage carrying over those results. All sixteen clubs will qualify for the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Overview\nOne of the main aims of the reform was to reduce the number of kilometres traveled by individual teams and therefore reduce the travel expenses. Additionally, the 2nd Bundesliga was also expanded to 24 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Overview\nBecause of the enlargement of the league from ten to twenty-two (initially twenty-four) teams no club was relegated after the 2011\u201312 season but twelve clubs promoted:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Overview\nTwo clubs finished the regular season unbeaten, DSV 78 Hannover and Heidelberger RK. Of the sixteen clubs qualified for the play-offs three decided to cancel their first round match, the three bottom placed clubs in the north east, Berliner SV 92, Victoria Linden and USV Potsdam, with all three games awarded 50-0 to the opposition. The quarter finals saw the south western clubs dominate with all four advancing teams being from that division and all north eastern clubs being knocked out. The semi finals were heavily affected by bad weather, with both games, to be held in Heidelberg, being canceled and rescheduled. The final saw Heidelberger RK defeat SC Neuenheim 41\u201310 to take out its ninth national championship and fourth consecutive one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Bundesliga tables & results, First stage\nIn the first stage twenty-two clubs played in four groups. Within each group each team played the other just once. The best four teams in each group advanced to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Bundesliga tables & results, Second stage\nIn the second stage sixteen clubs played in two groups of eight clubs each. Within each group each team played the others home and away except for the match-ups that already had been played in the first round. The results of those were carried over. All teams in this stage qualified for the play-offs and were seeded according to the final standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230917-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rugby-Bundesliga, Bundesliga tables & results, Play-off stage\nIn the play-offs the sixteen qualified clubs play a knock-out competition in single game format with the winner moving on to the next round. In the first round of the play-off the north-east division clubs play against the south-west division clubs. The play-offs began on 4 May with the round of sixteen, followed by the quarter finals on 25 May, semi finals on 1 June and the German championship final on 15 June 2013. However, both semi final games, to be held in Heidelberg, had to be postponed because of bad weather, and rescheduled for 12 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230918-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Bandy Super League\nThe 2012\u20132013 season of the Russian Bandy Super League was played from November 2013 until March 2014, when the Russian champions were named after a play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Russian Cup, known as the 2012\u201313 Pirelli\u2013Russian Football Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 21st season of the Russian football knockout tournament since the dissolution of Soviet Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup\nThe competition started on July 11, 2012 and finished with the final held on June 1, 2013. The cup champion wins a spot in the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, First round\nThis round featured 35 Second Division teams and 1 amateur team. The game was played July 11, 15, 16 and 17, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Second round\nIn this round entered 18 winners from the First Round and 38 Second Division teams. The matches were played from July 29 to August 5, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Third round\nIn this round entered 28 winners from the Second Round. The matches were played from August 10 to August 18, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Fourth round\nThe 14 winners from the Third Round and the 17 FNL teams entered this round. The matches were played on September 1\u20132, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Round of 32\nThe 16 winners from the Fourth Round hosted the 2012\u201313 Russian Premier League teams in this round. The matches were played on September 25\u201327, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Round of 32\nThe game was stopped in the first half and eventually abandoned in the 50th minute due to Torpedo fans throwing fireworks on the field during the celebrations of Boyarintsev's goal and was later awarded to Dynamo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Round of 16\nThe 16 winners from the Round of 32 round entered. The matches were played on October 30\u201331, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe 8 winners from the Round of 16 round entered. The matches will be played on April 17\u201318, 2013. The home teams in Dynamo \u2013 Anzhi and Rostov \u2013 Terek pairs were determined in a draw held on November 7, 2012. CSKA and Zenit will be home teams in their pairs due to playing more away games than Yenisey and Kuban respectively in earlier rounds. Yenisey from the National Championship is the lowest ranked team left in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Semi-finals\nThe four winners from the quarter-finals entered the semi-finals. The matches were played on 6 May 2013. The home teams in Zenit, Anzhi, Rostov and CSKA pairs were determined in a draw held on 18 April 2012. Zenit and Rostov will be home teams in their pairs due to playing more away games than Yenisey and Kuban respectively in earlier rounds. All teams are from the Russian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Final\nPlayed in the earlier stages, but were not on the final game squad:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Final\nPFC CSKA Moscow: Sergei Ignashevich (DF), M\u00e1rio Fernandes (DF), Kim In-sung (MF), Ravil Netfullin (MF), Elvir Rahimi\u0107 (MF), Zoran To\u0161i\u0107 (MF), Konstantin Bazelyuk (FW), Dmitri Yefremov (FW), Sekou Oliseh (FW).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230919-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Cup, Final\nFC Anzhi Makhachkala: Arseniy Logashov (DF), Georgy Gabulov (MF), Nikita Burmistrov (FW), Shamil Lakhiyalov (FW), Serder Serderov (FW), Fyodor Smolov (FW).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230920-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Football National League\nThe 2012\u201313 Russian National Football League was the 21st season of Russia's second-tier football league since the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The season began on 9 July 2012 and ended on 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Russian Premier League was the 21st season of the Russian football championship since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and 11th under the current Russian Premier League name. It began on 21 July 2012 and ended on 26 May 2013, with a winter break between the weekends around 13 December 2012 and 10 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League\n16 teams from 12 cities compete in the season, with Zenit St. Petersburg as defending champions. For the first time since 2005, no Siberian clubs take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League\nThis was the first season in Russian football history to be played on the basis of the autumn/spring calendar, rather than the spring/autumn schedule traditionally used in Russia due to climate conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League\nA total of sixteen teams participate in the league, the best fourteen sides of the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted clubs from the 2011\u201312 National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Teams\nThe following teams are mathematically confirmed to compete in the 2012\u201313 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Teams\nTom Tomsk and Spartak Nalchik were relegated at the end of the 2011\u201312 season after finishing the season in the bottom two places. Both teams returned to the First Division after respectively seven and six seasons in top level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Teams\nThe relegated teams were replaced by 2011\u201312 First Division champions Mordovia Saransk and runners-up Alania Vladikavkaz. Former Russian champions Alania made their immediate return to the Premier League, while Mordovia are playing their first season at the highest football level of Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Tournament format and regulations, Basics\nThe 16 teams played a round-robin tournament whereby each team plays each one of the other teams twice, once at home and once away. Thus, a total of 240 matches was played, with 30 matches played by each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Tournament format and regulations, Promotion and relegation\nThe teams that finish 15th and 16th will be relegated to the FNL, while the top two FNL teams will be promoted to the Premier League for the 2013/14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Tournament format and regulations, Promotion and relegation\nThe 13th and 14th Premier League teams will play the 4th and 3rd FNL teams respectively in two playoff games with the winner securing a Premier League spot for 2013/14 (see paragraph 4.5.1 in the league regulations).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Tournament format and regulations, Junior teams\nAccording to long-standing practice, a tournament of junior teams will be held in parallel with the championship. The age limit for junior teams' players for this season is yet to be decided. Each club will be allowed to field no more than 3 field players and 1 goalkeeper older than the age limit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 79], "content_span": [80, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Tournament format and regulations, Foreign players\nAs of 4 July, a team will be allowed to have 7 foreign (non-Russian nationals) players on the pitch at the same time, unlike the previous season when the limit was 6 foreigners per team. The new rule will run until 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Season events, Dynamo \u2013 Zenit game\nOn 17 November 2012, the game in which Dynamo Moscow was hosting Zenit St. Petersburg at Arena Khimki was abandoned at the 37th minute with Dynamo leading 1\u20130 through a free kick goal by Vladimir Granat when a firecracker thrown from the stands hit Dynamo goalkeeper Anton Shunin. Shunin was taken to the hospital where he was diagnosed with the chemical burns of his corneas and eyelids, conjunctivitis, and otitis of his right ear with partial loss of hearing. Dynamo insisted that the game should be awarded to them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Season events, Dynamo \u2013 Zenit game\nZenit's general director Mikhail Mitrofanov suggested that Zenit might drop out of the Russian league altogether if the game is awarded to Dynamo. According to the police, the main suspect is a female fan who was arrested after the game. The criminal investigation was opened on the charge of hooliganism. On 22 November, Russian Football Union's Control-Disciplinary Committee awarded the game to Dynamo with a score of 3\u20130 and fined both clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Season events, Dynamo \u2013 Zenit game\nDynamo had to play their next home game (against Rubin Kazan) behind closed doors and Zenit had to play their next 2 home games (against CSKA Moscow and Anzhi Makhachkala) behind closed doors as well. Yellow cards received by Bruno Alves and Roman Shirokov before the game was abandoned still count for disciplinary purposes. Shunin did not play in the remaining 3 games of 2012. Zenit only gained 2 points in their behind closed doors games, Dynamo won their behind closed doors game. Zenit filed an appeal for that decision with the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which heard their case on 9 May 2013. The appeal was denied on 14 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Awards, Top 33\nOn 11 June 2013 Russian Football Union named its list of 33 top players:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Russian Manager of the Season\nCSKA Moscow manager Leonid Slutsky, received the Russian Manager of the Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Russian Player of the Season\nThe Russian Player of the Season was awarded to Igor Akinfeev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Russian Referee of the Season\nThe Russian Referee of the Season was awarded to Aleksandr Egorov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Medal squads\nGoalkeepers: Igor Akinfeev (29), Sergei Chepchugov (1)Defenders: Vasili Berezutski (29), M\u00e1rio Fernandes (28), Sergei Ignashevich (28), Kirill Nababkin (19), Georgi Shchennikov (18), Aleksei Berezutski (5), Pyotr Ten (1). Midfielders: Rasmus Elm (26 / 5), Pontus Wernbloom (26 / 4), Zoran To\u0161i\u0107 (25 / 3), Aleksandrs Cau\u0146a (25 / 3), Alan Dzagoev (24 / 7), Keisuke Honda (23 / 7), Pavel Mamayev (19 / 1), Mark Gonz\u00e1lez (11), Sekou Oliseh (11), Ravil Netfullin (8). Forwards: Ahmed Musa (28 / 11), V\u00e1gner Love (9 / 5), Seydou Doumbia (7 / 3), Dmitri Yefremov (3), Tom\u00e1\u0161 Necid (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Medal squads\nTransferred out during the season: Sekou Oliseh (on loan to \u00a0PAOK).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Medal squads\nGoalkeepers: Vyacheslav Malafeev (26), Yegor Baburin (4), Yuri Zhevnov (2). Defenders: Tom\u00e1\u0161 Hubo\u010dan (24), Aleksandr Anyukov (22 / 1), Nicolas Lombaerts (22), Bruno Alves (21 / 1), Domenico Criscito (12 / 2), Renat Yanbayev (11 / 1), Lu\u00eds Neto (9 / 1), Aleksandar Lukovi\u0107 (9), Milan Rodi\u0107 (4), Michael Lumb (1), Igor Cheminava (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Medal squads\nMidfielders: Konstantin Zyryanov (27 / 6), Roman Shirokov (25 / 5), Viktor Fayzulin (24 / 6), Vladimir Bystrov (24 / 3), Igor Denisov (23), Axel Witsel (19 / 4), Sergei Semak (16 / 2), Danny (12 / 2), Pavel Mogilevets (2), Alexey Yevseyev (1), Vyacheslav Zinkov (1), Danila Yashchuk (1). Forwards: Aleksandr Kerzhakov (23 / 10), Hulk (18 / 7), Aleksandr Bukharov (9 / 1), Maksim Kanunnikov (9 / 1), Luka \u0110or\u0111evi\u0107 (7), Aleksei Gasilin (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Medal squads\nTransferred out during the season: Renat Yanbayev (end of loan from Lokomotiv Moscow), Maksim Kanunnikov (to Amkar Perm), Michael Lumb (to Bochum).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Medal squads\nGoalkeepers: Vladimir Gabulov (27), Yevgeny Pomazan (5). Defenders: Jo\u00e3o Carlos (25 / 2), Rasim Tagirbekov (22 / 2), Arseniy Logashov (19), Christopher Samba (17 / 2), Kamil Agalarov (14), Ali Gadzhibekov (8), Emir Spahi\u0107 (7 / 1), Ewerton (7), Andrey Yeshchenko (2). Midfielders: Jucilei (27), Mbark Boussoufa (26 / 4), Oleg Shatov (24 / 3), Yuri Zhirkov (23 / 2), Mehdi Carcela (20 / 1), Odil Ahmedov (17 / 1), Lassana Diarra (14), Willian (7 / 1), Georgy Gabulov (7 / 1), Sharif Mukhammad (3), Aleksei Ivanov (1). Forwards: Samuel Eto'o (25 / 10), Lacina Traor\u00e9 (24 / 12), Fyodor Smolov (15), Shamil Lakhiyalov (8), Serder Serderov (4), Nikita Burmistrov (4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230921-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Medal squads\nTransferred out during the season: Christopher Samba (to Queens Park Rangers), Shamil Lakhiyalov (to Krylia Sovetov Samara), Georgy Gabulov (to Alania Vladikavkaz), Nikita Burmistrov (on loan to Amkar Perm), Aleksei Ivanov (to Mordovia Saransk).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230922-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Russian Second Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Russian Second Division was the third strongest division in Russian football. The Second Division is geographically divided into 5 zones. The winners of each zone are automatically promoted into the First Division. The bottom finishers of each zone lose professional status and are relegated into the Amateur Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230923-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team represented Rutgers University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Scarlet Knights, led by third year head coach Mike Rice Jr., played their home games at the Louis Brown Athletic Center, better known as The RAC, and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 5\u201313 in Big East play to finish in 12th place. They lost in the second round of the Big East Tournament to Notre Dame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230923-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team\nThis was their last year as a member of the Big East Conference. The so-called Catholic 7 members of the Big East will separate themselves from the conference, along with Butler, Creighton and Xavier, to form a new conference that retains the Big East Conference name. In 2013\u201314, Rutgers will be part of the American Athletic Conference. They will only play in the AAC for one season as they will join the Big Ten Conference in 2014\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230923-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball team\nHead coach Mike Rice Jr. was fired April 3, 2013. Assistant coach Jimmy Martelli resigned on April 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230924-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rwanda National Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Rwanda National Football League (known as the Primus National Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 36th season of the Rwanda National Football League since it began in 1975. The season began on 22 September 2012 and ended on 25 May 2013. Arm\u00e9e Patriotique Rwandaise were the defending champions, having won their record 13th title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230924-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rwanda National Football League\nRayon Sports won their 7th title, finishing at the top of the table with 57 points, and represented Rwanda in the 2014 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230924-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Rwanda National Football League, Clubs, Changes from last season\nThe number of teams in the league increased from 13 last season to 14 this season after Nyanza's withdrawal and their replacement by Espoir in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230925-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ryobi One-Day Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Ryobi One Day Cup was the 43rd season of official List A domestic cricket in Australia. The competition had the same format as the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230925-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ryobi One-Day Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 competition was won by the Queensland Bulls. The final was reduced to 32 overs due to rain, with Queensland defeating Victoria by 2 runs. The win was Queensland's first since the 2008\u201309 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230926-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.C. Damash season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Damash's 3rd season in the Pro League, and their 2nd consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football and 5th year in existence as a football club. They competed in the Hazfi Cup. Damash was captained by Mohammad Reza Mahdavi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230926-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.C. Damash 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230926-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.C. Damash 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230926-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.C. Damash 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230926-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.C. Damash 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230926-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.C. Damash season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by squad number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230927-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.L. Benfica season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Sport Lisboa e Benfica's 109th season in existence and the club's 79th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football. It involved Benfica competing in the Primeira Liga, Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Ta\u00e7a da Liga and the group stage of the UEFA Champions League. Benfica qualified for the Champions League by coming second in the previous Primeira Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230927-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.L. Benfica season\nBenfica could have enjoyed a treble in May if they could win the UEFA Europa League, maintain their lead in the Primeira Liga, and win the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal. In the league, they came second to Porto after conceding a 90th-minute goal; and despite a win in their last match, they could not prevent their rivals from winning the title. Afterwards, they lost the UEFA Europa League Final to then European champions Chelsea (2\u20131) when Branislav Ivanovi\u0107 headed in an injury-time winner. In the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Benfica reached the final for the first time since 2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal but lost to Vit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es, conceding two goals in two minutes. The Ta\u00e7a da Liga ended at the semi-finals, which prevented Benfica for winning their fifth league cup in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230927-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.L. Benfica season\nIn the UEFA Champions League, Benfica finished third in the group stage, with ten points, behind Barcelona and Celtic, and was relegated to the UEFA Europa League, where they reached the club's ninth European final and first since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230927-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.L. Benfica season, Review and events\nIn manager Jorge Jesus' fourth year with the club, starting midfielders Javi Garc\u00eda and Axel Witsel were sold to Manchester City for \u20ac23\u00a0million and Zenit Saint Petersburg for \u20ac40\u00a0million, respectively; Nemanja Mati\u0107 and Enzo P\u00e9rez replaced the duo in the regular starting lineup. Striker Javier Saviola's contract was mutually terminated, where he then joined M\u00e1laga of the Spanish La Liga on a free transfer. Starting left-back Emerson was also sold, joining Turkish club Trabzonspor for a transfer fee of \u20ac1.6\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230927-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.L. Benfica season, Review and events\nOther notable outgoing transfers included left-back and former Spanish international Joan Capdevila to Espanyol for \u20ac500,000, the loaning of longtime Benfica midfielder R\u00faben Amorim to Braga and the loaning of Portuguese international striker N\u00e9lson Oliveira to Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a. In the winter transfer window, winger Nolito was loaned to Granada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230927-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.L. Benfica season, Review and events\nOn the right wing, Eduardo Salvio, on loan with Benfica for the 2010\u201311 season from Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, returned to regain his place after the club paid Atl\u00e9tico \u20ac13.5\u00a0million for his services. Ola John, part of the Dutch Twente squad that faced Benfica the year before in UEFA Champions League qualifying, was also purchased for a fee of \u20ac9\u00a0million, providing Jesus with another option on the left wing behind Nicol\u00e1s Gait\u00e1n, now back on the left wing. Benfica then added striker Lima from Braga, who quickly established himself as a starting striker alongside \u00d3scar Cardozo, relegating Rodrigo to the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230927-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.L. Benfica season, Review and events\nFor the upcoming season, Benfica also signed depth players Paulo Lopes from Feirense, Luisinho from Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira, Michel from Braga and Hugo Vieira from Gil Vicente, who was immediately loaned out to Sporting de Gij\u00f3n. Returning from loan were Lorenzo Melgarejo from Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira, Carlos Martins from Granada, Enzo P\u00e9rez from Estudiantes de La Plata and Alan Kardec from Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230928-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S. Lazio season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 113th season in Societ\u00e0 Sportiva Lazio's history and their 25th consecutive season in the top-flight of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230928-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S. Lazio season, Pre-season\nDuring the pre-season, Lazio bought Ederson from Lyon, Antonio Candreva from Udinese and Micha\u00ebl Ciani from Bordeaux.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230928-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S. Lazio 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230928-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S. Lazio season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Play-off round\nNote 1: Mura 05 played their home match at Ljudski vrt, Maribor as their own Fazanerija City Stadium did not meet UEFA criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230928-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S. Lazio season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase\nNote 2: The first match that was played behind closed doors due to the punishment handed to Lazio by UEFA following racism issue of their 300 fans at Stadio Olimpico in a match against Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach in second leg of 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230928-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S. Lazio season, Competitions, UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase\nNote 3: The second match that was played behind closed doors due to the punishment handed to Lazio by UEFA following racism issue of their 300 fans at Stadio Olimpico in a match against Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach in second leg of 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230929-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S. Virtus Lanciano 1924 season\nThis articles presents the performance of S.S. Virtus Lanciano 1924, an Italian association football club, during the 2012-2013 season. During this season, Virtus Lanciano hosted the first championship of Serie B in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230930-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S.C. Napoli season\nThe 2012\u201313 season saw Societ\u00e0 Sportiva Calcio Napoli compete in Serie A, UEFA Europa League and Coppa Italia. In December 2012, Napoli were docked two points for two of their players not reporting plans to fix matches in 2010. About a month later, however, Napoli won their appeal against the ban and the punishments were overturned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230930-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S.S.C. Napoli 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-00230931-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Bastia season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is French football club SC Bastia's 107th professional season, their 47th consecutive season in French top-flight, and their 30th consecutive season in Ligue 1. Bastia is president by Pierre-Marie Geronimi, managed by Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Hantz, and captained by Yannick Cahuzac for the season. Last season; finished as second league champion, and won the first league the right to rise. Bastia, is finished 12th in league, participated in the Coupe de la Ligue for the first time since 2001, reaching the quarter-final before being eliminated by Lille. In the Coupe de France; the \"end of 64\" tour, eliminated to CA Bastia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230931-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Bastia season\nName of the team's top scorer; including 15 league goals, 17 goals scored by Anthony Modeste. Name of the team league top passer; 8 assist by J\u00e9r\u00f4me Rothen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230931-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Bastia season, Kit\nSupplier: KappaSponsor(s): Oscaro, Corsica Ferries, Afflelou*, G\u00e9ant, Kaporal Jeans*, Haute-Corse General Council, Odalys Vacances*, and Vocalcom*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 29], "content_span": [30, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230931-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Bastia season, Reserves and academy, CFA 2, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230932-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Freiburg season\nThe 2012\u201313 SC Freiburg season is the 109th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It is the club's fourth consecutive season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga at the conclusion of the 2008\u201309 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230932-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Freiburg season\nThe club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the semi-final stage after defeating fellow Bundesliga side Mainz 05 1\u20132 after extra time on 26 February 2013. They then lost to VfB Stuttgart 2\u20131 in Stuttgart. They also qualified for the Group Stage of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230933-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Paderborn 07 season\nThe 2012\u201313 SC Paderborn 07 season is the 28th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313, the club plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the club's fourth consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2009\u201310, after it was promoted from the 3. Liga in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230933-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Paderborn 07 season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, but was knocked out in the first round by third division side Arminia Bielefeld.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230933-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Paderborn 07 season\nThe club finished the season in 12th place to secure a spot in the following year's 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230933-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Paderborn 07 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-00230934-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster season\nThe 2012\u201313 SC Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster season is the 106th season in the club's football history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230934-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster season, Review and events\nIn 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. It is the club's second season in this league, having been promoted from the Regionalliga in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230934-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster season, Review and events\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and will face Bundesliga side FC Augsburg next. The club had knocked out Bundesliga club Werder Bremen in the first round with a 4\u20132 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230934-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SC Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster season, Review and events\nPreu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the Westphalia Cup, having reached the second round against DSC Wanne-Eickel after a 5\u20130 win over TuS Hiltrup in the first round. In the round of 16, they defeated FC Br\u00fcnninghausen with 8\u20130 and progressed to the quarter-final where they won against Sportfreunde Lotte 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230935-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SD Huesca season\nThe 2012\u201313 SD Huesca season is the 54th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230935-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SD Huesca season, Squad, Starting 11\n1\t\tGK\tNacho Zabal (on loan from Osasuna)3\t\tMF\tLuis Helguera4\t\tMF\tCarlos L\u00e1zaro Vallejo (on loan from Valladolid)5\t\tDF\tRafael Clavero6\t\tMF\tDavid L\u00f3pez7\t\tMF\tAntonio N\u00fa\u00f1ez8\t\tFW\tDaniel Pacheco (on loan from Liverpool)9\t\tFW\tBorja (on loan from Atl\u00e9tico Madrid)10\t\tMF\tJuanjo Camacho11\t\tMF\tJorge Larena13\t\tGK\tLuis Garc\u00eda14\t\tMF\tMarc Mart\u00ednez15\t\tMF\tJoaqu\u00edn Sorribas No. Position\tPlayer16\t\tDF\tSergio D\u00edaz17\t\tFW\tNacho Novo18\t\tDF\tCarlos Diogo19\t\tFW\tTariq20\t\tDF\tAlex P\u00e9rez (on loan from Getafe)21\t\tMF\tXavi Annunziata (on loan from Osasuna)22\t\tDF\tDavid Rivas23\t\tDF\tJos\u00e9 Antonio Llamas24\t\tFW\tJokin26\t\tDF\tRub\u00e9n Garc\u00e9s31\t\tMF\tJuan Carlos (on loan from Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a)\tDF\tRub\u00e9n P\u00e1rraga", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230936-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SEHA League\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 2nd season of the SEHA League and 10 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Slovakia and Belarus participate in it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230936-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SEHA League, Regular season, Standings\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230936-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SEHA League, Regular season, Results\nIn the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230937-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 SIJHL season was the 12th season of the Superior International Junior Hockey League (SIJHL). The seven teams of the SIJHL were to play 56-game schedules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230937-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL season\nCome February, the top teams of the league will play down for the Bill Salonen Cup, the SIJHL championship. The winner of the Bill Salonen Cup will compete in the Central Canadian Junior \"A\" championship, the Dudley Hewitt Cup. If successful against the winners of the Ontario Junior Hockey League and Northern Ontario Junior Hockey League, the champion would then move on to play in the Canadian Junior Hockey League championship, the 2013 Royal Bank Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230937-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL 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-00230937-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL season, Final standings\nSioux Lookout left the league after only 3 games, schedule was reorganized without them. Duluth's franchise was revoked by the league after 36 games, leaving 20 games unplayed, these are listed as 1-0 forfeit losses by the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230937-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL season, Dudley Hewitt Cup Championship\nHosted by the North Bay Trappers in North Bay, Ontario. Minnesota Wilderness win the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230937-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL season, 2013 Royal Bank Cup Championship\nHosted by the Summerside Western Capitals in Summerside, Prince Edward Island. Minnesota Wilderness lost semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230937-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL 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-00230937-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIJHL season, Leading goaltenders\nNote: Minimum 1000 minutes; 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230938-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team represented Southern Illinois University Edwardsville during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cougars, led by sixth-year head coach Lennox Forrester, played their home games at the Vadalabene Center and were members of the West Division of the Ohio Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230938-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Preseason\nTen players returned from the 10\u201317 team of 2011\u201312, and two transfers were newly eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 65], "content_span": [66, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230938-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe OVC's pre-season coaches' poll picked SIUE to finish fourth in the West Division. Senior Mark Yelovich was selected to the pre-season All-OVC team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 65], "content_span": [66, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230938-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Season\nDuring the season, crucial team members Reggie Reed, Maurice Wiltz, and Mark Yelovich suffered injuries, and late in the season, leading scorer Jerome Jones was suspended for the duration. As a result, the Cougars foundered, ending the season 9\u201318 and 5\u201311 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fourth place in the West Division. They failed to qualify for the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230938-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's basketball team, Roster\n\u2020 Sat out 2012\u201313 season due to NCAA Division I transfer rules", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230939-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SK Rapid Wien season\nThe 2012\u201313 SK Rapid Wien season was the 115th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230939-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SK Rapid Wien season, Review and events\nRapid Wien gave a contract extension to midfielder Boris Prokopi\u010d during the off-season. Rapid Wien started pre-season on 6 June 2012. Rapid hired Helmut Schulte as the new Sporting Director. However, fans were critical of the hiring and don't want him as Sporting Director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230940-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SK Sturm Graz season\nThe 2012\u201313 SK Sturm Graz season is the 104th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230940-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SK Sturm Graz season, Review and events\nPeter Hyballa was hired as new coach of Sturm Graz on 16 May 2012. He takes over on 5 June 2012 when pre-season begins. Sporting Director Paul Gludovatz is on indefinite sick leave as of 22 May 2012. Gludovatz's contract was eventually dissolved by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230941-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SM-liiga season\nThe 2012\u201313 SM-liiga season was the 38th season of the SM-liiga, the top level of ice hockey in Finland, since the league's formation in 1975. The title was won by \u00c4ss\u00e4t Pori who defeated Tappara Tampere in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230941-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SM-liiga season, Regular season\nEach team played four times against every other team (twice home and twice away), getting to 52 games. Additionally, the teams were divided to two groups, where teams would play one extra game. One group included \u00c4ss\u00e4t, Blues, HIFK, Jokerit, K\u00e4rp\u00e4t, Lukko and TPS, while other had HPK, Ilves, JYP, KalPa, Pelicans, SaiPa and Tappara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230941-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SM-liiga season, Regular season\nAdditionally, there were two games where teams could choose the opponents. These were played back-to-back in January and the choices were made in December, with team with lowest point total to that date was able to choose first. These pairs were: Pelicans-Ilves, TPS-Lukko, \u00c4ss\u00e4t-Blues, HIFK-HPK, Tappara-Jokerit, K\u00e4rp\u00e4t-KalPa and SaiPa-JYP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230941-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SM-liiga season, Regular season\nTop six advanced straight to quarter-finals, while teams between 7th and 10th positions played wild card round for the final two spots. The last-placed team Ilves had to play best-of-seven series against Mestis winner Jukurit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230942-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SMU Mustangs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 SMU Mustangs men's basketball team represented Southern Methodist University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mustangs, led by first year head coach Larry Brown, played their home games at the Moody Coliseum and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 15\u201317, 5\u201311 in C-USA play to finish in eleventh place. They lost in the first round of the Conference USA Tournament to UAB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230942-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SMU Mustangs men's basketball team\nThis was the Mustangs last season as a member of C-USA as they joined the American Athletic Conference in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230943-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SPHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 Southern Professional Hockey League season was the ninth season of the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL). The regular season began October 26, 2012 and ended April 14, 2013, after a 56-game regular season and an 8-team playoff. The Fayetteville FireAntz captured their first SPHL regular season title. The Pensacola Ice Flyers defeated the Huntsville Havoc in the President's Cup final 2 games to 1 to win the team's first President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230943-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SPHL season, Awards\nThe SPHL All-Rookie team was announced on March 27, 2013, the All-SPHL teams on March 28, Defenseman of the Year on March 29, Rookie of the Year on April 1, Goaltender of the Year on April 2, Coach of the Year on April 3, and Most Valuable Player on April 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230944-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SSV Jahn Regensburg season\nThe 2012\u201313 SSV Jahn Regensburg season was the 106th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It was the club's first season back in this league, having won promotion from the 3. Liga in 2011\u201312 after a play-off victory over Karlsruher SC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230944-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SSV Jahn Regensburg season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, but was knocked out by Bundesliga side FC Bayern Munich in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230944-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SSV Jahn Regensburg season, Review and events\nAfter a string of losses, manager Oscar Corrochano was suspended on 4 November 2012 and sporting director Franz Gerber took over until the end of 2012. On 2 January 2013, Franciszek Smuda was announced as new manager. His contract ran until the end of the 2012\u201313 and would have been automatically extended for another season if Regensburg avoided relegation. But Regensburg's relegation was clear on matchday 31 and Smuda said that he would not coach in the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230945-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Darmstadt 98 season\nThe 2012\u201313 SV Darmstadt 98 season is the 116th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. It is the club's second season in this league, having been promoted from the Regionalliga in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230945-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Darmstadt 98 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-00230945-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Darmstadt 98 season, Review and events\nThe club lost coach Kosta Runjaic on 3 September to second division side MSV Duisburg. Runjaic was replaced with J\u00fcrgen Seeberger two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230945-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Darmstadt 98 season, Review and events\nAt mid-season, Darmstadt were sitting in dead last, 20th place, in the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230945-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Darmstadt 98 season, Review and events\nAt the end of the season, the club finished in 18th, which is in the first spot of the relegation zone of the 3. Liga. But due to the fact that Kickers Offenbach had their license revoked, Darmstadt was not relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230946-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Ried season\nThe 2012\u201313 SV Ried season is the 112th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230947-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Sandhausen season\nThe 2012\u201313 SV Sandhausen season is the 98th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It was the clubs first-ever season in this league, having won promotion from the 3. Liga in 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230947-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Sandhausen season, Review and events\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and lost to Bundesliga side Schalke 04.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230948-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Wacker Burghausen season\nThe 2012\u201313 SV Wacker Burghausen season is the 83rd season in club history. The season started on 21 July 2012 and will finish on 18 May 2013. The club is participating in the 3. Liga, DFB-Pokal and Bavarian Cup. They play their home matches at Wacker Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230948-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Wacker Burghausen season, Review and events\nThe 2012\u201313 SV Wacker Burghausen season started on 21 July 2012 with a home loss to Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster and will end at home on 18 May 2013 against Arminia Bielefeld. The club is the participating in the 3. Liga, DFB-Pokal and Bavarian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230949-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Wehen Wiesbaden season\nThe 2012\u201313 SV Wehen Wiesbaden season is the 88th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. It is the club's fourth season in this league, having been relegated from the 2. Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230950-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Werder Bremen season\nThe 2012\u201313 Werder Bremen season was the club's 103rd season in its history. In 2012\u201313, the club participated in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football; it is the club's 32nd consecutive season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230950-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Werder Bremen season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, where it was knocked out by 3. Liga side Preu\u00dfen M\u00fcnster in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230950-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Werder Bremen season, Review and events\nWerder Bremen presented Wiesenhof as its new shirt sponsor on 13 August 2012. Supporters of the club were outraged over Wiesenhof's sponsorship of the club that several supporters have cancelled their membership in the club. The conduct of Wiesenhof was reported in a documentary in Germany in 2011 where they have been \"accused of treating the poultry in its care cruelly and keeping them in inhumane conditions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230950-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SV Werder Bremen season, Review and events\nThe club opened its Bundesliga campaign against Borussia Dortmund, the defending champions. The final score was 2\u20131 in favour of Borussia Dortmund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230951-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SVB Hoofdklasse\nThe 2012\u201313 Surinamese Hoofdklasse was the 80th season of the SVB Hoofdklasse, the highest football league competition of Suriname. The season began in October 2012, and finished in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230952-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saba Qom F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season are the Saba Football Club's 9th season in the Iran Pro League, and their 9th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football. They are also competing in the Hazfi Cup and AFC Champions League, and 11th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230952-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saba Qom F.C. season, Player, Iran Pro League 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, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230952-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saba Qom F.C. season, Player, AFC Champions League 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, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230952-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saba Qom F.C. 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230952-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saba Qom F.C. 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230952-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saba Qom F.C. 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230952-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saba Qom F.C. 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230953-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacramento Kings season\nThe 2012\u201313 Sacramento Kings season was the 68th season of the franchise, and the 64th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 28th in Sacramento.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230954-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball team represented California State University, Sacramento during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hornets were led by fifth year head coach Brian Katz and played their home games at Hornets Nest. They were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 14\u201315, 8\u201312 in Big Sky play to finish in a three way tie for sixth place. They failed to qualify for the Big Sky Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230955-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacramento Surge season\nThe 2012\u201313 Sacramento Surge season was the first season of the Sacramento Surge professional indoor soccer club. The Surge, a Pacific Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their home games in the Off the Wall Soccer Arena in Sacramento, California. The team was led by chairman Airrick Harvey and head coach Jorge Fernandez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230955-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacramento Surge season, Season summary\nThe team struggled in the regular season, placing fifth in the PASL's five-team Pacific Division, and failed to advance to the postseason. The Surge compiled a 2\u201314 record with one win coming against Toros Mexico on January 19, 2013, and the other by forfeit when the Tacoma Stars announced they would not make the trip south for the final game of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230955-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacramento Surge season, Season summary\nThe Surge participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They lost to the Turlock Express in the Wild Card round, abruptly ending their run in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230955-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacramento Surge season, History\nIn 1991 and 1992, Sacramento was home to the Sacramento Surge of the World League of American Football. The team won the 1992 World Bowl, the only North American team to do so. WLAF operations were suspended following the 1992 season and the Sacramento team disbanded. The soccer team is named in their honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230955-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacramento Surge season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230956-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sacred Heart Pioneers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Sacred Heart Pioneers men's basketball team represented Sacred Heart University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was the Pioneers' 14th season of NCAA Division I basketball, all played in the Northeast Conference. The Pioneers were coached by Dave Bike in his thirty-fifth year as Sacred Heart's head coach. SHU played their home games at the William H. Pitt Center. They finished the season 9\u201320, 7\u201311 in NEC play to finish in ninth place. They failed to qualify for the Northeast Conference Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230957-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Francis Red Flash men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Saint Francis Red Flash men's basketball team represented Saint Francis University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Red Flash, led by first year head coach Rob Krimmel, played their home games at the DeGol Arena and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 5\u201324, 5\u201313 in NEC play to finish in a tie for tenth place. They failed to qualify for the Northeast Conference Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230958-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Saint Joseph's Hawks basketball team represented Saint Joseph's University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hawks, led by 18th year head coach Phil Martelli, played their home games at Hagan Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 18\u201314, 8\u20138 in A-10 play to finish in a three-way tie for the eighth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 Tournament to VCU. They were invited to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to St. John's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230959-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team represented Saint Louis University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Billikens' head coach Rick Majerus was to sit the season out for health concerns while Jim Crews served as the interim head coach. Majerus died on December 1, 2012. The team played their home games at Chaifetz Arena. They were a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 28\u20137, 13\u20133 in A-10 play to win the regular season conference championship. They were also champions of the Atlantic 10 Tournament, defeating VCU in the championship game, to earn the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they defeated New Mexico State in the second round before losing in the third round to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230959-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Louis Billikens men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe Billikens garnered buzz as one of the preseason favorites to win their conference. \"[T]he only major loss is 6-foot-6 forward Brian Conklin, the team's leading scorer. But everyone else of note -- point guard Kwamain Mitchell, off-guards Mike McCall and Jordair Jett, swingman Dwayne Evans, forward Cody Ellis -- is back. Meanwhile, 6-11 forward Rob Loe looks capable of stepping into a bigger role in the frontcourt in his junior season.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230960-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Mary's Gaels men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Saint Mary's Gaels men's basketball team represented Saint Mary's College of California during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Randy Bennett's twelfth season at Saint Mary's. The Gaels competed in the West Coast Conference and played their home games at the McKeon Pavilion. They finished the season 28\u20137, 14\u20132 in WCC play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the WCC Tournament where they lost to Gonzaga. They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they defeated Middle Tennessee in the first four-round before falling in the second round to Memphis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230961-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Mary's Gaels women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Saint Mary's Gaels women's basketball team represented Saint Mary's College of California in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. It was head coach Paul Thomas's seventh season at Saint Mary's. The Gaels, members of the West Coast Conference, played their home games at the McKeon Pavilion. They finished the season at 23\u201311, 11\u20135 in conference play, and clinched the #3 seed in the WCC Tourney. After losing in the semifinals of the WCC Tournament, Saint Mary's was invited to participate in the 2013 Women's National Invitation Tournament, where they advanced to the quarterfinal round before being eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230961-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Mary's Gaels women's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Gaels were picked to finish third in the WCC behind BYU and Gonzaga. While the Gaels finished tied for third with BYU, the Treros were a sneaky bunch and claimed the #2 seed in the WCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230962-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saint Peter's Peacocks basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Saint Peter's Peacocks basketball team represented Saint Peter's University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Peacocks, led by seventh year head coach John Dunne, played their home games at the Yanitelli Center and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 9\u201321, 3\u201315 in MAAC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the MAAC Tournament to Fairfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230963-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sam Houston State Bearkats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Sam Houston State Bearkats men's basketball team represented Sam Houston State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bearkats, led by third year head coach Jason Hooten, played their home games at the Bernard Johnson Coliseum and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 17\u201317, 8\u201310 in Southland play to in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Southland Tournament where they lost to Northwestern State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230964-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Samford Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Samford Bulldogs basketball team represented Samford University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by first year head coach Bennie Seltzer, played their home games at the Pete Hanna Center and were members of the North Division of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 9\u20139 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for third place in the North Division. They lost in the first round of the SoCon Tournament to Furman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230965-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Samoa National League\nThe 2012\u201313 Samoa National League was the 23rd edition of the Samoa National League, the top league of the Football Federation Samoa. This season was won by Lupe o le Soaga for the first recorded time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230966-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Antonio Spurs season\nThe 2012\u201313 San Antonio Spurs season was the 46th season of the franchise, 40th in San Antonio and 37th in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Spurs finished the regular season with a 58\u201324 record as the 2nd seed in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230966-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Antonio Spurs season\nIn the playoffs, the Spurs swept the Los Angeles Lakers in the First Round in four games, defeated the Golden State Warriors in the Semifinals in six games, and swept the Memphis Grizzlies in the Conference Finals in four games, advancing to the NBA Finals for the fifth time in franchise history since 2007, but came up short of a fifth title, losing to the Miami Heat in a tough seven-game series, who would hand them their very first defeat in the NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season\nThe 2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season was the fourth season of the San Diego Sockers professional indoor soccer club as a franchise in the Professional Arena Soccer League. The Sockers, a Pacific Division team, played their home games in the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego, California. General manager John Kentera and head coach Phil Salvagio led the Sockers to the best regular season record in the PASL and their fourth consecutive league championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Season summary\nThe Sockers were very successful in the regular season, finishing 15\u20131 and clinching the Western Division title for the fourth consecutive season. They began the season with a 37-game win streak, one of the best in professional sports history, and the last three PASL league championships. The team's win over Toros Mexico on November 23, 2012, gave the Sockers the new United States record for consecutive wins by a professional soccer team. The team remained undefeated at home but the streak was snapped after 48 games by a 6\u20135 overtime road loss to longtime rival Dallas Sidekicks on January 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Season summary\nSan Diego also performed well at the box office, placing second in the league (behind only Dallas) in overage home attendance. The team advanced to the postseason and earned the right to play for the Ron Newman Cup in the PASL National Championship. The Sockers defeated the Turlock Express in two straight games, winning the Pacific Divisional Finals and advancing to the Semi-Finals in San Diego where they defeated the Las Vegas Legends in overtime. The team defeated the Detroit Waza 8\u20136 in regulation for the league championship on March 11, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Season summary\nThe Sockers also participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They defeated the Arizona Storm in the Wild Card round, the Anaheim Bolts in the Round of 16, the Turlock Express in the Quarter-Finals, and the Las Vegas Legends in the Semi-Finals before losing 6\u20137 to the Detroit Waza in the Championship game on March 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, History\nThis is the third franchise to bear the \"San Diego Sockers\" name. The original Sockers were founded in 1978 and played in the NASL, original MISL, and the CISL before folding in 1996. The second Sockers were revived for the WISL in 2001 and transitioned to the second MISL in 2002 before folding in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, History\nThe current Sockers franchise was founded in 2009 and played its first three seasons at the Chevrolet Del Mar Arena in Del Mar, California. For the 2012\u201313 season, the Sockers returned to the former San Diego Sports Arena (now the Valley View Casino Center) which hosted the indoor games of both of the previous Sockers franchises.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Off-field moves\nThe majority of San Diego Sockers games were broadcast live on XEPE-AM (1700 AM, \"ESPN Radio 1700\") with Craig Elsten on play-by-play plus sideline reporter Tim Strombel at home games. (The Ron Newman Cup league championship game aired on XEPRS-AM, \"The Mighty 1090\".) The same team presented every regular season match as streaming audio on the Sockers' official website and their audio accompanied the video of America One Sports webcasts of Sockers games. 2012\u201313 is Elsten's fourth seasons the voice of the Sockers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Roster moves\nIn October 2012, the team re-signed veteran forward Paul Wright for the 2012-13 season. Wright's 25-year professional soccer career began with the San Diego Nomads and continued with the Cleveland Crunch, the original San Diego Sockers, the Milwaukee Wave, the Los Angeles Salsa, the Baltimore Blast, the Wichita Wings, the Sacramento Knights, the Kansas City Wizards, the Western Mass Pioneers, the Philadelphia KiXX, the second San Diego Sockers, the San Diego Fusion, the Anaheim Bolts, and a previous stint with the current San Diego Sockers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Awards and honors\nThe San Diego Hall of Champions honors athletes with ties to the San Diego area each month by selecting its Stars of the Month. For November 2012, this list included Sockers forward Miguel \"Chiky\" Luna. For December 2012, the honorees included Sockers top-scorer Kraig Chiles. In January 2013, the Hall announced that Kraig Chiles was one of 15 area athletes selected as a 2012 Star of the Year. For January 2013, the honorees included high-scoring midfielder Brian Farber. For February 2013, the hall honored team captain Aaron Susi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Awards and honors\nOn November 27, 2012, citing his eight goals in the Sockers' match against Toros Mexico, the Professional Arena Soccer League named Kraig Chiles, the league's leading scorer and its reigning Most Valuable Player, as their Player of the Week. On December 25, 2012, the PASL named Sockers team captain Aaron Susi as their Player of the Week. The league cited the veteran's 2 goals and 3 assists in his team's victory over the Anaheim Bolts on December 22 as well as his 25 total points to date this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Awards and honors\nThe team honored former Sockers player and coach Brian Quinn with a halftime ceremony during the January 5, 2013, game against the Turlock Express. Quinn played for the original Sockers franchise from 1983 to 1991 and later served as coach of both the original and first revival versions of the team. On January 2, 2013, the San Diego Hall of Champions announced that Quinn would be inducted into its Breitbard Hall of Fame on February 25, 2013, as part of the Class of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Awards and honors\nOn January 22, 2013, the league cited his game-winning goal in the Sockers defeat of the Las Vegas Legends in naming Brian Farber as the PASL's Player of the Week. Farber scored two goals and two assists with the final score coming just 2.2 seconds before the end of regulation. It gave San Diego their first lead of the match and the win, preserving their record-setting winning streak and clinching the Pacific Division title for the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Awards and honors\nOn February 5, 2013, the PASL named Kraig Chiles as its player of the week for the second time this season. The league cited his offensive performance against the Anaheim Bolts the previous weekend where he set a new regular season goal scoring record, breaking his own make from last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Awards and honors\nOn February 12, 2013, the league named Kraig Chiles as its player of the week for the second week in a row and third time this season. Chiles broke the league points record held by Bernie Lilavois since the 2008\u201309 season. He also became the first player in PASL history to score 50 goals in a single season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Awards and honors\nIn postseason honors, forwards Kraig Chiles and Brian Farber were named to the 2012-13 PASL All-League First Team. Forward Aaron Susi was named to the 2012-13 PASL All-League Second Team and Chiles was also named the 2012-13 PASL Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230967-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Sockers season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230968-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego State Aztecs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 San Diego State men's basketball team represents San Diego State University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. They are members in the Mountain West Conference. This will be head coach Steve Fisher's fourteenth season at San Diego State. The Aztecs play home games at Viejas Arena. They finished with a record of 23\u201311 overall, 9\u20137 in Mountain West play for 3rd place tie with Boise State. They lost in the semifinals in the 2013 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament to New Mexico. They received an at-large bid in the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, in which they beat Oklahoma in the second round and lost in the third round to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230969-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Toreros men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 San Diego Toreros men's basketball]team represented the University of San Diego during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Bill Grier's sixth season at San Diego. The Toreros competed in the West Coast Conference and played their home games at the Jenny Craig Pavilion. They finished the season 16\u201318, 7\u20139 in WCC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They advanced to the semifinials of the WCC Tournament where they lost to Saint Mary's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230970-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Toreros women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 San Diego Toreros women's basketball team represented the University of San Diego in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The Toreros, members of the West Coast Conference, were led by head coach Cindy Fisher, in her 8th season at the school. The Toreros played their home games at the Jenny Craig Pavilion on the university campus in San Diego, California. For the season the Toreros went 22\u201310, 12\u20134 in conference, and finished 2nd in the WCC. They qualified for the 2013 Women's National Invitation Tournament where they lost to Utah in the 2nd Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230970-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Diego Toreros women's basketball team, Before the Season\nThe Toreros were picked to finish fourth in the WCC Pre-Season poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230971-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Francisco Dons men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 San Francisco Dons men's basketball team represented the University of San Francisco during the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This was head coach Rex Walters fifth season at San Francisco. The Dons played their home games at the War Memorial Gymnasium and were members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 7\u20139 in WCC play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the second round of the WCC Tournament to Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230971-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Francisco Dons men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe Dons will participate in a 5-day foreign tour in Cancun, Mexico August 12\u201316. During the tour they will play 3 games against 2 teams from the Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230972-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Francisco Dons women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 San Francisco Dons women's basketball team represented the University of San Francisco in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This was head coach Jennifer Azzi's third season at San Francisco. The Dons, members of the West Coast Conference, played their home games at the War Memorial Gymnasium and finished the season 12\u201319, 4\u201312 in WCC play to finish 8th in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230972-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Francisco Dons women's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Dons were picked to finish ninth in the WCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season\nThe 2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season was the club's 22nd season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, January\nThe Sharks started the 2012\u201313 season with a perfect record; getting 14 out of 14 possible points in their seven January games. Patrick Marleau scored the Sharks first goal of the season, in the second period of the regular season opener against the Calgary Flames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, February\nFebruary would however be troublesome\u00a0\u2013 in 12 games the Sharks would only get two wins and a total of eight points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, March\nThe Sharks were successful at home in March, with five wins and a loss in overtime. On the road, they had less success\u00a0\u2013 registering three wins, five losses and an overtime loss. After eight seasons with the Sharks, Douglas Murray was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins on March 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, April\nThe Sharks were active around the trade deadline; Ryane Clowe, who also played with the Sharks for eight seasons, was traded to the New York Rangers, Michal Handzus was traded to the Chicago Blackhawks, Raffi Torres was acquired from the Phoenix Coyotes and Scott Hannan was acquired from the Nashville Predators. This is Hannan's second stint with San Jose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, April\nOn April 23, 2013, in the final home game of the regular season, the Sharks defeated the Stars 3\u20132 to clinch a playoff berth. The Sharks finished with a home record of 17\u20132\u20135 and qualified for the playoffs for the ninth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Schedule and results\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Playoffs\nThe San Jose Sharks enters the playoffs as the Western Conference's sixth seed. They swept the Vancouver Canucks in the first round, but were knocked out of the playoffs in a 4\u20133 series loss to the Los Angeles Kings in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Sharks. Stats reflect time with the Sharks only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Transactions\nThe Sharks have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230973-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose Sharks season, Draft picks\nSan Jose's picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230974-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team representsed San Jose State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by eighth year head coach George Nessman, played their home games at the Event Center Arena and were members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 9\u201320, 3\u201314 in WAC play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They lost in the first round of the WAC Tournament to UTSA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230974-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team\nThis was their last season as a member of the WAC. San Jose State joined the Mountain West Conference in July 2013. San Jose State fired Nessman on March 13, the day after the final game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230974-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team, Roster\nBrent Davis (San Diego State)Donald Williams (Cal State Hayward)Tim Marrion (Washington State)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230974-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team, Roster, Suspensions\nJames Kinney, the team's leading scorer, was suspended twice in the season for violating team rules: once for the December 22, 2012 game against James Madison and again beginning with the January 11, 2013 game against Utah State. On February 8, coach Nessman confirmed that Kinney's suspension would continue until the end of the season; the San Jose Mercury News reported that the suspension \"is believed to be related to academics.\" After Kinney's second suspension, San Jose State's scoring average went down 15 points to 49.8, and the team never won a game for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230974-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team, Roster, Suspensions\nStarting forward Louis Garrett was also indefinitely suspended on January 11 for a violation of team rules but was reinstated on January 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230974-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team, Roster, Suspensions\nTwo more players were suspended after Kinney. Chris Jones was suspended beginning February 28, and Alex Brown was suspended beginning March 2. Jones was suspended after San Jose State student newspaper The Spartan Daily published a comment of his saying that Nessman \"should have been fired a long time ago.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230974-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team, Schedule\nMarch 7's game vs UTSA was canceled due to a leak in the roof at The Events Center Arena. The game was not made up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230975-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Luis F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 San Luis season was the 66th professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league. The season is split into two tournaments\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams. San Luis began their season on July 21, 2012 against Santos Laguna, San Luis played most of their homes games on Saturdays at 9:00pm local time. San Luis did not qualify to the final phase in either the Apertura or Clausura tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230975-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Luis F.C. season, Torneo Apertura\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-00230975-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Luis F.C. season, Torneo 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, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230976-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 San Mig Coffee Mixers season\nThe 2012\u201313 San Mig Coffee Mixers season is the 25th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230977-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santa Clara Broncos men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Santa Clara Broncos men's basketball team represented the University of Santa Clara during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Kerry Keating's sixth season at Santa Clara. The Broncos played their home games at the Leavey Center and were members of the West Coast Conference. They finished the season 26\u201312, 9\u20137 in WCC play to finish in fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WCC Tournament to Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230977-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santa Clara Broncos men's basketball team\nThey were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Vermont, Purdue and Wright State to advance to the best-of-three games finals against George Mason. They won the series 2 games to 1 to become the 2013 CBI Champions. Santa Clara is the first school to win a CBI championship and a CIT championship (CIT won by the 2010\u201311 team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230978-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santa Clara Broncos women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Santa Clara Broncos women's basketball team represented Santa Clara University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. It was head coach Jennifer Mountain's fifth season at Santa Clara. The Broncos, members of the West Coast Conference, played their home games at the Leavey Center. The Broncos would finish the season 14\u201316, 6\u201310 in conference, to finish in a tie for 5th place. Despite having the better overall record, the Broncos were awarded the 6th seed in the WCC Tournament and were eliminated in the 2nd round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230978-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santa Clara Broncos women's basketball team, Before the season\nThe Gaels were picked to finish fifth in the WCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230979-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santosh Trophy\nThe 2013 Santosh Trophy was the 67th edition of the Santosh Trophy, the main state competition in Indian football. The tournament this season was held from 1 February to 3 March 2013 in Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230979-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santosh Trophy\nServices won the Santosh Trophy 2013 after defeating Andhra Pradesh in the 2013 final at Jawaharlal Nehru International Stadium, jammu, Jammu and Kashmir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230979-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santosh Trophy, Teams\nIn this tournament, 31 state teams from India will be participating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230980-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Santosh Trophy qualification, Format\nThe qualifiers will start from 1 February to 19 February 2013 and will consist of 27 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup was the 38th season of the Saudi Crown Prince Cup since its establishment in 1957. This season's competition featured a total of 16 teams, 14 teams from the Pro League, and 2 teams from the Qualifying Rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2013 Crown Prince Cup Final was played between Al-Hilal and Al-Nassr at the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh. Al-Hilal defeated Al-Nassr 4\u20132 on penalties (1\u20131 after extra time) in the final to win a record-extending twelfth Crown Prince Cup title and their sixth one in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds\nAll of the competing teams that are not members of the Pro League competed in the qualifying rounds to secure one of 2 available places in the Round of 16. First Division sides Al-Qadisiyah and Al-Orobah qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds, Preliminary Round 1\nThe Preliminary Round 1 matches were played on 16 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds, Preliminary Round 2\nThe Preliminary Round 2 matches were played on 19, 20 & 21 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds, First Round\nThe First Round matches were played on 3 & 4 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds, Second Round\nThe Second Round matches were played on 14 & 21 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds, Third Round\nThe Third Round matches were played on 4 November and 2 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds, Final Round\nThe Final Round matches were played on 18 November and 10 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Round of 16\nThe Round of 16 fixtures were played on 18 & 19 December 2012. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe Quarter-finals fixtures were played on 22 & 23 December 2012. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Semi-finals\nThe Semi-finals fixtures were played on 9 February 2013. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230981-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Final\nThe final was held on 22 February 2013 in the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230982-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi First Division\nThe RAKAA Professional League is the First Division in Saudi Arabia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230982-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi First Division\nAt the end of the 2012\u201313 season the league was called Saudi First Division, but the league has been renamed to RAKAA Professional League and the name stands for a Holding provider called RAKAA which has now become an official sponsor of the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League\nThe 2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League (known as the Zain Professional League for sponsorship reasons) was the 37th season of the Saudi Professional League, the top Saudi professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1976. The season began on 2 August 2012 and ended on 27 April 2013. Al-Shabab were the defending champions. The league was contested by the 12 teams from the 2011\u201312 season as well as Al-Shoulla and Al-Wehda, who joined as the promoted clubs from the 2011\u201312 First Division. They replace Al-Ansar and Al-Qadisiyah who were relegated to the 2012\u201313 First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League\nOn 14 April, Al-Fateh won their first League title, with 2 games to spare, following a 1\u20130 home win over Al-Ahli. Al-Fateh became the seventh club to win the Pro League. This is considered by many to be one of the greatest shocks in Saudi football history, especially considering that Al-Fateh were promoted to the Pro League for the first time only four years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League\nAl-Wehda were the first team to be relegated following a 2\u20131 home defeat to Al-Faisaly on 29 March. Hajer became the second and final team to be relegated following a 2\u20131 defeat away to Al-Shabab on the final matchday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League, Teams\nFourteen teams competed in the league\u00a0\u2013 the twelve teams from the previous season and the two teams promoted from the First Division. The promoted teams were Al-Shoulla (returning after an absence of eight seasons) and Al-Wehda (returning after a season's absence). They replaced Al-Qadisiyah (ending their three-year top-flight spell) and Al-Ansar (who were relegated after one season in the top flight).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is restricted to four per team, including a slot for a player from AFC countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League, Teams, Foreign players\nPlayers name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League, Attendances, By team\nUpdated to games played on 27 April 2013Source: Notes:\u2020 Teams played previous season in First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230983-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Professional League, Awards\nOn 7 February 2014, it was announced that both Al-Riyadiya Awards and Arriyadiyah Awards for Sports Excellence would be merged and known as the Arriyadiyah Awards for Sports Excellence. The Arriyadiyah Awards for Sports Excellence were awarded for the seventh time since its inception in 2007. The awards were sponsored by Saudi newspaper Arriyadiyah and Saudi sports network Al-Riyadiya. The awards were presented on 16 February 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230984-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Second Division\nThe Saudi Second Division is the Third level football competition in Saudi Arabia. Qualified three teams to Saudi First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230984-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Saudi Second Division\nLocation: is the site of the club and not the site of the stadium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230985-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Savannah State Tigers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Savannah State Tigers basketball team represented Savannah State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by eighth year head coach Horace Broadnax, played their home games at Tiger Arena and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 19\u201315, 11\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MEAC Tournament to Morgan State. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to East Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230986-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scarlets season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the tenth in the history of the Scarlets Welsh regional rugby union side. In this season, they will compete in the Pro12 (formerly known as the Celtic League), the Heineken Cup and the LV Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230987-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup, known as the Ramsdens Challenge Cup due to sponsorship reasons with Ramsdens, was the 22nd season of the competition. It was competed for by 32 clubs, which included the 30 members of the 2012\u201313 Scottish Football League, and for the second season running, the top two Highland Football League clubs with a valid SFA club licence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230987-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThe defending champions were Falkirk, who defeated Hamilton Academical in the 2012 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230987-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup\nInverurie Loco Works who finished fourth and Wick Academy eighth in the Highland Football League qualified for the competition for the first time after being asked to compete following their work in the SFA's Club Licensing programme. Clubs ranked higher such as Forres Mechanics were not compliant with the programme so the qualification spot moved to a lower ranked club. Buckie Thistle and Deveronvale were ruled out as they had been invited in the previous season's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230987-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup, Fixtures and results, First round\nThe first round draw was conducted on 12 June 2012 at the Falkirk Stadium, the home of the reigning champions Falkirk F.C., by former player Kevin McAllister and Ramsden's representative Stewart Smith. Like the previous season, the first round is separated regionally into two sections: north and east and south and west. After the draw was made, Rangers F.C. were placed in Division 3 of the SFL, being replaced in the SPL by Dundee FC. Following this change, Dundee's place in the competition was taken by Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230987-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup, Fixtures and results, Second round\nThe second round draw was conducted on 30 July 2012, at the Ramsdens store in the Forge Shopping Centre in Glasgow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230987-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup, Fixtures and results, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-final draw was conducted on 22 August 2012, at Hampden Park in Glasgow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230987-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Challenge Cup, Fixtures and results, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final draw was conducted on 19 September 2012, at Hampden Park in Glasgow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Cup was the 128th season of Scotland's most prestigious football knockout competition. The tournament began on 4 August 2012 and ended on 26 May 2013. It was sponsored by bookmaker William Hill in the second season of a three-year partnership and is known as the William Hill Scottish Cup. The winner of the competition qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. The holders Hearts were knocked out by their Edinburgh rivals Hibernian in the fourth round, in a repeat of the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Format and Calendar\nDue to an increase in the number of participating teams, there was a preliminary round involving four teams. Thirty four other clubs from the Highland League, qualifying Junior clubs and other clubs affiliated with the Scottish Football Association were given a bye to the first round proper. Third Division clubs enter in the second round, while Second Division and some First Division clubs start in the third round. The remaining First Division and all Scottish Premier League (SPL) clubs enter in the fourth round (last 32). The fourth round was played in early December 2012, to allow SPL clubs a brief winter shutdown in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Format and Calendar\nFor the first time in its history, the Scottish Cup Final was due to be played on a Sunday. This is to comply with UEFA regulations which prohibit televised matches being played on the same day as the UEFA Champions League Final. The 2012 Scottish Cup Final was played on the same day as the 2012 UEFA Champions League Final, but this was done under a one-year waiver offered by UEFA. Fixture congestion meant that the 2013 Scottish Cup Final could not be moved to an earlier weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round draw was conducted on 3 July 2012 at Hampden Park, Glasgow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Preliminary round\nThirty four clubs received a bye into the First round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, First round\nThe first round draw took place on 23 July 2012 at the Queen Anne Suite, Edinburgh Castle, at 2:00pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, First round\nThis round was contested by the winners of the two preliminary round ties plus the thirty four clubs who received a bye in the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Second round\nThe second round draw took place on 27 August 2012. All ten teams from the Third Division were added to the competition at this stage, along with the champions of the South of Scotland League (Dalbeattie Star) and East of Scotland League (Stirling University), and the champions and runners-up from the Highland League (Forres Mechanics and Cove Rangers).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Third round\nSixteen teams joined in the 3rd round: all ten current Second Division clubs, along with 6th to 8th in last season's First Division (Partick, Raith and Morton) and the three teams that were promoted from last season's Second Division (Cowdenbeath, Dumbarton and Airdrie United).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Fourth round\nThe Fourth Round draw was conducted on 5 November 2012 at 2:30pm at Hampden Park live on Sky Sports News.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Fourth round\nThe 16 winners from the Third Round entered here, along with the 12 SPL clubs and four SFL First Division clubs who were exempt from playing in the Third Round (Dunfermline Athletic, Falkirk, Hamilton Academical, Livingston).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Fifth Round\nThe Fifth Round draw was conducted on 3 December 2012 at 1:00pm at Hampden Park live on Sky Sports News.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe Quarter-finals draw was conducted on 3 February 2013 at 5:45pm at Easter Road Stadium live on Sky Sports 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Semi-finals\nThe Semi-finals draw was conducted on 4 March 2013 at 1:30pm at Hampden Park live on Sky Sports News.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Awards\nThe Scottish Cup Player of the Round was decided by the fans, who cast their vote to choose a winner from a list of nominations on the official Scottish Cup Facebook page.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230988-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Cup, Media coverage\nFrom round four onwards, selected matches from the Scottish Cup are broadcast live in Ireland and the UK by BBC Scotland and Sky Sports. BBC Scotland has the option to show one tie per round with Sky Sports showing two ties per round with one replay also. Both channels will screen the final live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230989-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish First Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Football League First Division, also known as the 2012\u201313 Irn Bru Scottish Football League First Division for sponsorship reasons, was the 18th season of the Scottish Football League First Division and the 107th season of a second-tier football league in Scotland. Partick Thistle were confirmed as 2012\u201313 champions, on 20 April following their 2-0 win over Falkirk. This was the final season of the First Division under its then format, as it was replaced by the Scottish Championship from the 2013\u201314 season onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230989-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish First Division, Teams\nRoss County were promoted to the Scottish Premier League as champions, while Dunfermline Athletic were relegated from the SPL to this division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230989-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish First Division, Teams\nTwo sides were relegated from this division at the end of the 2011\u201312 season. Queen of the South, who finished bottom, and Ayr United in the play-offs. They were replaced by Second Division champions Cowdenbeath, and Dumbarton as winners of the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230989-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish First Division, Teams\nOn 13 July, Rangers were admitted to the Third Division after being voted out of the SPL. As a result, the playoff losing finalist Airdrie United were promoted to the First Division to fill the gap caused by Dundee replacing Rangers in the SPL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230989-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish First Division, Results\nTeams play each other four times in this league. In the first half of the season each team plays every other team twice (home and away) and then do the same in the second half of the season, for a total of 36 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230989-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish First Division, Play-offs, Semi-Finals\nThe fourth placed team in the Second Division (Forfar Athletic) played the ninth placed team in the First Division (Dunfermline Athletic) and the third placed team in the Second Division (Brechin City) played the second placed team in the Second Division (Alloa Athletic). The play-offs were played over two legs, the winning team in each semi-final advancing to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230989-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish First Division, Play-offs, Final\nThe two semi-final winners played each other over two legs. The winning team was awarded a place in the 2013\u201314 First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup was the 127th season of the Scottish Junior Cup, the national knockout tournament for member clubs of the Scottish Junior Football Association. The competition was sponsored by Emirates and is known as The Emirates Junior Cup for sponsorship purposes. The winner of this competition was eligible to enter the following season's Scottish Cup at the first round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup\nA total of 163 clubs entered, one fewer than the previous season. Dropping out were Stonehouse Violet, who had folded and Dufftown, who are in abeyance. Scone Thistle returned to the tournament after taking one season out of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup\nThe five Junior clubs qualified for this season's Scottish Cup, were not included in the draw for the first round. These were the three Superleague champions: Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic (East), Hermes (North) and Irvine Meadow (West); the Scottish Junior Cup winners Shotts Bon Accord, and Girvan who qualify automatically as a full member of the Scottish Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Calendar\nThe scheduled dates for each round of the 2012\u201313 tournament were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Calendar\nDrawn matches are replayed the following weekend. Replays ending in a draw proceed direct to penalty shootout. Semifinals are played home and away over two legs, subject to decision by the SJFA management committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, First round\nThe first round draw took place at the Scottish Football Museum, Hampden Park, Glasgow on 22 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, First round\n1 Tie played at New Elgin F.C.2 Tie played at Ravenscraig Regional Sports Facility", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Second round\nThe second round draw took place at the Shotts Bon Accord Social Club, Shotts on 30 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Third round\nThe third round draw took place at the offices of the Sun newspaper, Glasgow, on 6 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Third round\n4 Tie played at Oakley United F.C.5 Tie played at Arthurlie F.C.6 Tie played at Kinnoull F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Third round, Replays\n7 Tie played at Ravenscraig Regional Sports Facility8 Tie played at Forfar Athletic F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Fourth round\nThe fourth round draw took place at the offices of the Evening Times newspaper, Glasgow, on 27 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Fifth round\nThe fifth round draw took place on the Clyde 1 football phone-in show, on 7 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter finals took place on the Central 103.1 FM football phone-in show, on 26 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230991-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Junior Cup, Semifinals\nThe draw for the semifinals took place at Mar Hall, Erskine on 24 March 2013, at a training base of the Scotland national football team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230992-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Championship\nThe 2012-13 Scottish League Championship (or 2012-13 RBS Scottish League Championship for sponsorship reasons) was the 39th season of formal domestic rugby union leagues in Scotland. The season was contested between August 2012 and March 2013, with Ayr RFC winning a historic Championship and Cup double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230992-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Championship, Participants, Scottish Regional Leagues\nThere are three Regions: West, East and Caledonia. These have been formed over time from the old system of independent District leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup was the 67th season of Scotland's second-most prestigious football knockout competition. It is also known as the Scottish Communities League Cup for sponsorship reasons, after the Scottish Government continued their 1.7 million sponsorship for a second season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup, Format\nThe competition is a single elimination knock-out competition. In each round, fixtures are determined by random draw, with the first to third rounds seeded according to last season's league positions (higher 50% of finishers drawn v lower 50% of finishers, alternating which is at home with each tie drawn).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup, Format\nFixtures are played to a finish, with extra time and then penalties used in the event of draws. The competition is open to all clubs in the Scottish Premier League and Scottish Football League. Clubs involved in European competitions are given a bye to the third round in order to avoid congestion of fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup, Fixtures and results, First round\nThe first round draw was conducted on 20 July 2012 at Ochilview Park, Stenhousemuir by the First Minister of Scotland, Alex Salmond. Rangers were entered into the draw pending an application for membership of the Scottish Football Association, which is needed to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup, Fixtures and results, Second round\nThe Second round draw was conducted on 9 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup, Fixtures and results, Third round\nThe third round draw took place on 3 September 2012. The matches were played on Tuesday 25 or Wednesday 26 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup, Fixtures and results, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-final draw took place on 4 October 2012. The matches were played on Tuesday 30 or Wednesday 31 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230993-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup, Fixtures and results, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final draw took place on 8 November 2012. The first match was played on Saturday 26 and the second was played on Sunday 27 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230994-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Men's National League season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 44th campaign of the Scottish Men's National League. The season featured 10 teams from across Scotland. Falkirk Fury won their 2nd league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230994-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Men's National League season, Teams\nThe line-up for the 2012-2013 season features the following teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League was the fifteenth and final season of the Scottish Premier League, the highest division of Scottish football, since its inception in 1998. The season began on 4 August 2012 and ended on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League\nTwelve teams contested the league. Ross County (champions) and Dundee (runners-up) were promoted from the 2011\u201312 First Division, replacing Dunfermline (relegated) and Rangers (entered administration and demoted). After the SPL clubs voted against Rangers continuing in the league, the club were accepted into the fourth tier of Scottish football, with Dundee taking their place in the SPL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League\nOn 21 April, Celtic retained their title after a 4\u20131 home win against Inverness Caledonian Thistle at Celtic Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League\nThis was the final season of the Scottish Premier League before it was abolished in June 2013, when the SPL and SFL merged to form the new Scottish Professional Football League, with its top division being known as the Scottish Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League, Teams\nDunfermline were relegated from the 2011\u201312 Scottish Premier League. Ross County, who won the 2011\u201312 Scottish First Division, were promoted. The 2012\u201313 season marks the top-flight debut for the Highland team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League, Teams\nAfter failing to exit administration by an agreed CVA, Rangers was replaced with the term \"Club 12\" when the fixture list was published on 18 June 2012. The transfer of the club's membership share of the SPL to the new company that had bought Rangers was dependent on a vote by the remaining SPL clubs. Eight clubs publicly declared that they would oppose the membership transfer, which would mean that they could not play in the SPL. The vote took place on 4 July 2012, and Rangers were refused re-entry to the SPL by a 10-1 majority. Dundee, who had finished second in the 2011\u201312 Scottish First Division, were invited to replace Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nTeams play each other twice, once at home, once away", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 23\u201333\nTeams play every other team once (either at home or away)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230995-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 34\u201338\nAfter 33 matches, the league splits into two sections of six teams each, with teams playing every other team in their section once (either at home or away). The exact matches are determined upon the league table at the time of the split.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230996-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier Under-20 League\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Premier Under 20 League (also known as the Clydesdale Bank Under-20 Premier League due to sponsorship reasons) was the fifteenth season of the Scottish Premier under-20 League, the highest youth Scottish football league, and also the first season under the new under 20 format. It began on August 2012 and ended in May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230996-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier Under-20 League, Changes\nThe league was converted from under-19 to under-20 and was expanded from 12 to 15 teams. Rangers left the league as a result of it entering liquidation at the end of the season to be replaced by Dundee which was promoted to the replace Rangers in the Premier League. In addition, the under-20 sides of the relegated Scottish Premier League club Dunfermline Athletic and the clubs finishing third and fourth in the Scottish Football League took up a place in the new league. A position in the league for teams outside the SPL was based on their youth academy's elite status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230996-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier Under-20 League, Changes\nThe definition of an under-20 player is a player who has not attained the age of 19 years on 31 December of the year before the relevant season commences. Additionally, a limited number of overage players are allowed to compete in each fixture. The under-20 league was adopted in order to promote the development of youth footballers and to assist in their progression to the full professional game, when compared to the under-18 or under-19 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230996-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Premier Under-20 League, League table, Matches\nTeams played each other twice, once at home, once away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230997-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Second Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Football League Second Division (also known as the 2012\u201313 Irn Bru Scottish Football League Second Division for sponsorship reasons) was the 18th season in the current format of 10 teams in the third-tier of Scottish football. Cowdenbeath were the current champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230997-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Second Division, Teams\nTwo sides were promoted from the 2011\u201312 competition. Cowdenbeath as champions, and Dumbarton as winners of the promotion play-offs. They were replaced by Queen of the South, who finished bottom of the First Division, and Ayr United, who were relegated through the first division play-offs. Stirling Albion were relegated from this division after finishing bottom, and they were replaced by Third Division winners Alloa Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230997-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Second Division, Teams\nAlbion Rovers finished in 9th place, but were able to stay up as a result of winning the promotion play-offs. Stranraer, who had lost to Albion Rovers in the play-off final, were promoted to the Second Division after the decision was made for Rangers to start in the Third Division. Stranraer replaced Airdrie United, who will take up the space in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230997-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Second Division, Results\nTeams play each other four times in this league. In the first half of the season each team plays every other team twice (home and away) and then do the same in the second half of the season, for a total of 36 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230997-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Second Division, Second Division Play-offs, Semi-finals\nThe fourth placed team in the Third Division (Berwick Rangers) played the ninth placed team in the Second Division (East Fife) and third placed team in the Third Division (Peterhead) played the second placed team in the Third Division (Queen's Park). The play-offs were played over two legs, and the winning team in each semi-final advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230997-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Second Division, Second Division Play-offs, Final\nThe two semi-final winners played each other over two legs. The winning team was awarded a place in the 2013\u201314 Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230998-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Third Division\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Football League Third Division (known as the Irn Bru Scottish Football League Third Division for sponsorship reasons) was the 18th season in the current format of 10 teams in the fourth tier of Scottish football. Alloa Athletic were the current champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230998-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Third Division\nRangers were confirmed as champions after a goalless away draw with Montrose on 30 March. They were presented with the trophy after a 1\u20130 win against Berwick Rangers on 4 May in front of 50,048.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230998-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Third Division\nDuring their first season in the division, Rangers had one of the highest home attendances in Britain, consistently ranking in the top four in the UK as a whole and first in Scotland. They set the record for the highest attendance in a 4th tier league worldwide. Bottom side Stirling Albion defeated Rangers on 6 October 2012 in what was reported to be a shock result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230998-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Third Division, Teams\n2011\u201312 champions Alloa Athletic were promoted from this division, and were replaced by Stirling Albion, who finished bottom of the Second Division. Another promotion spot was available through the promotion play-offs, however this was won by second division side Albion Rovers, who thus stayed in the Second Division. However, losing play-off finalists Stranraer were elevated to the Second Division as a result of Rangers being elected to the bottom tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230998-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Third Division, Teams\nThere was no relegation from this division, as this is the lowest in the Scottish League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230998-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Third Division, Results\nTeams play each other four times in this league. In the first half of the season each team plays every other team twice (home and away) and then do the same in the second half of the season, for a total of 36 games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup was the 30th season of the Scottish Youth Cup, the national knockout tournament at youth level organised by the Scottish Football Association for its full and associate member clubs. The tournament is now for the under-20 age group to complement current youth development strategies, having formerly been an under-19 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup\nCeltic won the competition for the fourth year in succession, defeating Dunfermline Athletic, 3\u20131 in the final at Hampden Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Calendar\nThe final of the competition was brought forward by one day to 1 May 2013 after a request by Dunfermline Athletic, as a number of their youth squad had stepped up to the first-team after the club entered administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Format\nThe sixteen clubs who reached the Fourth round of the 2011\u201312 competition receive a bye to the third round of this season's tournament. The remaining thirty four clubs enter the first round and are initially divided into three regional groups to reduce travelling. The tournament becomes an all-in national competition from the third round onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, First round\nThe draws for the First and Second Rounds were conducted on 31 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, First round, Central Group\nThree ties were drawn in this group with the following clubs receiving a bye to the second round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, First round, North Group\nNo First Round ties were drawn in this group with all the following clubs receiving byes to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, First round, South Group\nNo First Round ties were drawn in this group with all the following clubs receiving byes to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Second round\nThe second round ties are due to be played on or around 23 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Third round\nThe following sixteen clubs enter at this stage by virtue of having reached the fourth round of last season's competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Third round\nThe third round draw took place on 25 September 2012 at Hampden Park, Glasgow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Third round\nAnnan Athletic were expelled from the tournament due to player registration errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Fourth round\nThe fourth round draw was conducted on 23 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00230999-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scottish Youth Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final draw was conducted at Hampden Park on 27 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231000-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scunthorpe United F.C. season\nThe 2011\u201312 season is Scunthorpe United F.C. 's second consecutive in Third Tier of the Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231000-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Scunthorpe United 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-00231001-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Seattle Redhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Seattle Redhawks men's basketball team represented Seattle University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redhawks, led by fourth year head coach Cameron Dollar, played their home games at KeyArena, with one home game at the ShoWare Center, and were first year members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 8\u201322, 3\u201315 in WAC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the WAC Tournament to Texas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231002-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segona Divisi\u00f3\nThe 2012\u201313 Segona Divisi\u00f3 was the 14th season of second-tier football in Andorra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231002-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segona Divisi\u00f3, Relegation play-offs\nThe seventh-placed club in the Primera Divisi\u00f3 competed in a two-legged relegation playoff against the runners-up of the Segona Divisi\u00f3, for one spot in 2013\u201314 Primera Divisi\u00f3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n season (known as the Liga Adelante for sponsorship reasons) was the 82nd since its establishment. The season started on 17 August 2012 and the league phase of 42 rounds ended on 9 June 2013. The entire season ended on 22 June 2013 with the promotion play-off finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Teams\nA total of 22 teams contested the league, including 15 sides from the 2011\u201312 season, four promoted from the 2011\u201312 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B and three relegated from 2011\u201312 La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Teams\nVillarreal CF, Sporting de Gij\u00f3n and Racing de Santander were the teams which were relegated from La Liga the previous season. Villarreal was relegated after 12 years in La Liga, Sporting de Gij\u00f3n returned to the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n after a four-year tenure in La Liga, while Racing de Santander ended ten consecutive seasons in La Liga, the longest period in its history. Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a was promoted the previous season and made their immediate return to the top level, Celta de Vigo after five years in the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, and the other team promoted to La Liga as play-off winner was Valladolid after two years of absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Teams\nThe teams relegated the previous season were Villarreal B, Gimn\u00e0stic de Tarragona, Alcoyano and Cartagena. These four were replaced by four Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B teams: Real Madrid Castilla (group 1 champions and 2\u00aaB champions), Mirand\u00e9s (group 2 champions and 2\u00aaB runners-up) and the winners of third round play-offs Ponferradina and Lugo. Ponferradina made an immediate return to the second level, while Real Madrid Castilla and Lugo returned to it respectively after 5 and 19 years. Finally, Mirand\u00e9s made their debut in the second level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Teams\nVillarreal B did not finish in the relegation places, but Villareal were relegated from Liga BBVA, and the rule of Spain is that two teams of the same owner cannot play in the same league, forcing Villarreal B's relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Promotion play-offs\nThis promotion phase (known as Promoci\u00f3n de ascenso) was to determine the third team which was promoted to 2013\u201314 La Liga. Teams placed between 3rd and 6th position (excluding reserve teams) took part in the promotion play-offs. Fifth placed faced against the fourth, while the sixth positioned team faced against the third. The first leg of the semi-finals was played on 12 June, the best positioned team was played at home the second leg on 16 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Promotion play-offs\nThe final was also be two-legged, with the first leg on 19 June and the second leg on 23 June, with the best positioned team also playing at home the second leg. Girona and Almer\u00eda played the final phase, where Almer\u00eda was winner and promoted to La Liga after a two-year absence. Alcorc\u00f3n and Las Palmas were eliminated in semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Awards and season statistics, Zamora Trophy\nThe Zamora Trophy is awarded by newspaper Marcato the goalkeeper with least goals-to-games ratio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Awards and season statistics, Fair Play award\nThis award is given annually since 1999 to the team with the best fair play during the season. This ranking takes into account aspects such as cards, suspension of matches, audience behaviour and other penalties. This section not only aims to know this aspect, but also serves to break the tie in teams that are tied in all the other rules: points, head-to-head, goal difference and goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 71], "content_span": [72, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231003-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 9 June 2013Source: Official websites and other Spanish media", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231004-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B\nThe 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B season was the 36th since its establishment. The first matches of the season were played on 26 August 2012, and the league phase ended on 19 May 2013. The entire season ended on 30 June 2013 with the promotion play-off finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231004-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Groups\nAccording to RFEF the distribution of teams in groups, are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231005-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinker (talk | contribs) at 11:16, 31 March 2020 (fix bold). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231005-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal\nThe 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal season is the 20th season of second-tier futsal in Spain since its inception in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231005-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal\nThe season comprises regular season and championship playoff. Regular season started in October 2012 and finished on April 27, 2013. Top team at standings when finishing to play the regular season is promoted to Primera Divisi\u00f3n while teams that finished between 2nd\u20136th positions play the promotion playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231005-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de Futsal\nOn 3 May, LNFS announced the cancellation of promotion playoffs due to Primera Divisi\u00f3n's expansion to 16 teams, so Castell Pe\u00f1\u00edscola Benicarl\u00f3 and Fuconsa Ja\u00e9n were promoted to Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231006-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o\nThe 2012\u201313 season (officially known as Liga de Plata) will be El Salvador's Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o The season will be split into two championships Apertura 2012 and Clausura 2013. The champions of the Apertura and Clausura play the direct promotion playoff every year. The winner of that series ascends to Primera Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol de El Salvador. The Apertura 2012 will be named the Torneo Luis Baltazar Ram\u00edrez named after the 1982 world cup player Luis Ram\u00edrez Zapata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231006-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Promotion and relegation 2012\u20132013 Season\nTeams promoted to Primera Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Profesional - Apertura 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231006-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Promotion and relegation 2012\u20132013 Season\nTeams relegated to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o - Apertura 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231006-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Promotion and relegation 2012\u20132013 Season\nTeams relegated to Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Profesional - Apertura 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231006-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Promotion and relegation 2012\u20132013 Season\nTeams promoted from Tercera Division De F\u00fatbol Profesional - Apertura 2011", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231006-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n de F\u00fatbol Salvadore\u00f1o, Promotion and relegation 2012\u20132013 Season\nTeams that failed to register for the - Apertura 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231007-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Divis\u00e3o\nThe 2012\u201313 Segunda Divis\u00e3o season was the 79th season since its establishment. Varzim were the defending champions. It was the last edition of the competition as Campeonato Nacional de Seniores was created in 2013 to replace the Segunda Divis\u00e3o B and Terceira Divis\u00e3o (third and fourth tier of the Portuguese football league system respectively) for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga\nThe 2012\u201313 Segunda Liga was the 23rd season of the second-tier of football in Portugal. This season marked a series of changes in the league overall. The league's name was changed back to Segunda Liga from the previous Liga de Honra. A total of 22 teams contested the league, up from 16 in the previous season; 14 of which contested the 2011\u201312 season, two of which were promoted from the Portuguese Second Division (including a reserve team), one of which was relegated from the 2011\u201312 Primeira Liga, and five of which were new reserve teams of Primeira Liga clubs. The reserve teams were not eligible for promotion to the Primeira Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Events\nUni\u00e3o de Leiria were relegated to the second division due to not fulfilling the mandatory requirements by the Portuguese League for Professional Football regarding the application process to professional competitions. Thus, Sporting Covilh\u00e3 was invited to stay in the Segunda Liga despite being relegated in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Events\nVarzim, the 2011\u201312 Segunda Divis\u00e3o champions, also did not fulfill the requirements and were not registered in the Segunda Liga. Again, Portimonense were invited to remain in the Segunda Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Awards, Annual awards, LPFP Segunda Liga Player of the Year\nThe LPFP Segunda Liga Player of the Year was awarded to Miguel Rosa of Benfica. Rosa became the first player to win the award twice after previously winning the award in relation to the 2010\u201311 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 81], "content_span": [82, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Awards, Annual awards, LPFP Segunda Liga Breakthrough Player of the Year\nSporting CP B's Bruma was awarded with the LPFP Segunda Liga Breakthrough Player of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 94], "content_span": [95, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Awards, Annual awards, LPFP Segunda Liga Goalkeeper of the Year\nThe LPFP Segunda Liga Goalkeeper of the Year was awarded to Matt Jones of Belenenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 85], "content_span": [86, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Awards, Annual awards, LPFP Segunda Liga Manager of the Year\nBelenenses' Mitchell van der Gaag was the recipient of the LPFP Segunda Liga Manager of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231008-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, Awards, Annual awards, LPFP Segunda Liga Fairplay Award\nThe LPFP Segunda Liga Fairplay Award was awarded to Benfica B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 77], "content_span": [78, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231009-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy was the fourth edition of India's 50 over Women's Challenger Trophy. Three teams made up of the best players in India competed in a round-robin group, with the top two advancing to the final. All matches were held at the Bandra Kurla Complex Ground, Mumbai across four days in December 2012. The tournament was won by India Blue, who beat India Red in the final by 60 runs. The other team in the tournament, India Green , were newly made an Under-19s team for this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231009-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy, Competition format\nThe three teams played in a round-robin group, playing each other team once, with the top two advancing to the final. Matches were played using a 50 over format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231009-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy, Competition format\nThe group worked on a points system with positions with the group being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231009-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy, Competition format\nWin: 4 points. Tie: 2 points. Loss: 0 points. No Result/Abandoned: 2 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231009-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy, Competition format\nIf points in the final table are equal, teams are separated by their Net Run Rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231010-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's One Day League\nThe 2012\u201313 Senior Women's One Day League was the 7th edition of the women's List A cricket competition in India. It took place in November 2012, with 26 teams divided into five regional groups. Railways won the tournament, their sixth, beating Uttar Pradesh in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231010-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's One Day League, Competition format\nThe 26 teams competing in the tournament were divided into five zonal groups: Central, East, North, South and West. The tournament operated on a round-robin format, with each team playing every other team in their group once. The top two sides from each group progressed to the Super League round, where the 10 remaining teams were divided into two further round-robin groups. The winner of each group progressed to the final. Matches were played using a 50 over format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231010-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's One Day League, Competition format\nThe groups worked on a points system with positions with the groups being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231010-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's One Day League, Competition format\nWin: 4 points. Tie: 2 points. Loss : \u20131 points. No Result/Abandoned: 2 points. Bonus Points: 1 point available per match. Consolation Points: 1 point available per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231010-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's One Day League, Competition format\nIf points in the final table are equal, teams are separated by most wins, then head-to-head record, then number of Bonus Points, then Net Run Rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231011-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's T20 League\nThe 2012\u201313 Senior Women's T20 League was the 5th edition of the women's Twenty20 cricket competition in India. It took place in February and March 2013 with 26 teams divided into five regional groups. Railways won the tournament, their fourth in a row, beating Hyderabad in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231011-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's T20 League, Competition format\nThe 26 teams competing in the tournament were divided into five zonal groups: Central, East, North, South and West. The tournament operated on a round-robin format, with each team playing every other team in their group once. The top two sides from each group progressed to the Super League round, where the 10 remaining teams were divided into two further round-robin groups. The winner of each group progressed to the final. Matches were played using a Twenty20 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231011-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's T20 League, Competition format\nThe groups worked on a points system with positions with the groups being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231011-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's T20 League, Competition format\nWin: 4 points. Tie: 2 points. Loss: 0 points. No Result/Abandoned: 2 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231011-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Senior Women's T20 League, Competition format\nIf points in the final table are equal, teams are separated by most wins, then head-to-head record, then Net Run Rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Sepahan's 12th season in the Pro League, and their 19th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian Football and 60th year in existence as a football club. They also competed in the Hazfi Cup and AFC Champions League. Sepahan was captained by Moharram Navidkia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season, Player, First team squad\nFor more on the reserve and academy squads, see Sepahan Novin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season, Player, Iran Pro League 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, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season, Player, Iran Pro League squad\nFor recent transfers, see List of Iranian football transfers winter 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. 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-00231012-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. 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-00231012-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. 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-00231012-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. 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-00231012-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season, Statistics, Appearances\nApps: x+y+z, where x means full match (90-minute) appearance, y means match starting appearance and then exchanged, z means appearance as the exchange player in the middle of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season, Statistics, Goal scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season, Statistics, Goal scorers\nFriendlies and Pre-season goals are not recognized as competitive match goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231012-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sepahan F.C. season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Serbian Cup season is the seventh season of the Serbian national football tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup\nThe competition started on 5 September 2012 and concluded with the Final on 8 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup\nThe winner of the competition will qualify for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup, Preliminary round\nA preliminary round was held in order to reduce the number of teams competing in the next round to 32. It consisted of 7 single-legged ties, with penalty shoot-out as decider, if the score was tied after 90 minutes. Appearing in this round were bottom 9 teams from 2011\u201312 Serbian First League, as well as 5 regional cup winners. The draw contained seeded and unseeded teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup, Preliminary round\nBottom 9 teams from 2011\u201312 Serbian First League (RFK Novi Sad, OFK Mladenovac, Kolubara, \u010cukari\u010dki, Banat, Radni\u010dki Sombor, Mladi Radnik, Sin\u0111eli\u0107 Ni\u0161 and Srem) were set as seeded teams, with 5 regional cup winners (Dunav, Kova\u010devac, Timok, Jedinstvo U\u017eice and Trep\u010da) being set as unseeded teams. After drawing 5 seeded-unseeded match-ups, remaining 2 fixtures were determined by regular draw, without seeds. The matches were played on 5 and 12 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup, Round of 32\nIn this round, seven winners from the previous round will be joined by all 16 teams from Serbian Superliga from 2011\u201312, as well as top 9 teams from Serbian First League from 2011\u201312. The draw contained seeded and unseeded teams. 16 teams from 2011\u201312 Serbian SuperLiga (Partizan, Red Star, Vojvodina, Jagodina, Sloboda U\u017eice, Radni\u010dki 1923, Spartak Subotica, OFK Beograd, Javor, Rad, Hajduk Kula, BSK Bor\u010da, Smederevo, Novi Pazar, Borac \u010ca\u010dak (II) and Metalac (II)) were set as seeded teams. Draw was held on 13 September 2012. The matches were played on 26 September 2012. No extra time was played if the score was tied after regular 90 minutes, with games going straight into penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup, Round of 16\n16 winners from first round took part in this stage of the competition. The draw was held on 4 October 2012 and contained seeded and unseeded teams. Seedings were determined by last seasons final standings in top two Serbian divisions. Seeded teams: Partizan, Red Star, Vojvodina, Jagodina, Spartak Subotica, OFK Beograd, Javor and Rad. Unseeded teams: Hajduk Kula, Smederevo, Novi Pazar, Borac \u010ca\u010dak (II), Metalac (II), In\u0111ija (II), RFK Novi Sad (II) and \u010cukari\u010dki (II). The matches were scheduled for 24 and 31 October 2012. No extra time was played in case of tie after 90 minutes. Those games went straight into penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup, Quarter-finals\n8 winners from Last 16 took part in this stage of the competition. The draw was held 2 November 2012 and contained seeded and unseeded teams. Seedings were determined by following key: Last season's cup semifinalists were automatically set as seeded teams, with remaining seeds determined by last season final standings in top two Serbian divisions. Seeded teams: Red Star, Borac \u010ca\u010dak (II), Vojvodina and Jagodina. Unseeded teams: Spartak Subotica, OFK Beograd, Javor, and Rad. The matches were played on 21 November 2012. No extra time was played in case of tie after 90 minutes. Those games went straight into penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup, Semi-finals\n4 winners from Quarter finals (Vojvodina, Jagodina, OFK Beograd and Javor) took part in this stage of the competition. Semi-finals were contested over two legs. Aggregate winners qualified for the Cup finals. If the scores are tied over two legs, away goals rule will be used. If the score is still tied extra-time will be played, with penalty shoot-out to follow if the aggregate score is tied after extra-time. The draw was held on 12 December 2012. There were no seedings in the draw. First legs were played on 13 March 2013, while second legs were played on 17 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231013-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Cup, Final\n2 winners from Semi-finals took part in the single-legged final. Extra time is played if the score is tied after 90 minutes, with penalty shoot-out to follow if the score is still tied after extra time. The final game was played on 8 May 2013, at Partizan Stadium in Belgrade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231014-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian First League\nThe Serbian First Football League (Serbian: Prva Liga Srbija) is the second-highest football league in Serbia. The league is operated by the Serbian FA. 18 teams will compete in this league for the 2012-13 season. Two teams will be promoted to the Serbian Superliga and six will be relegated to the Serbian League, the third-highest division overall in the Serbian football league system. From next season, this division will be reduced to 16 clubs, thus 6 teams will be relegated from, and 4 will gain promotion to Serbian First League. The season will begin on 26 August 2012 and end on 5 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231015-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Serbian Hockey League season was the 22nd season of the Serbian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Serbia. Six teams participated in the league, and HK Partizan won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231016-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian League East\nThe 2012\u201313 Serbian League East season. It began on 19 August 2012 and ended on 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231017-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian League West\nSrpska Liga West is a section of the Srpska Liga, Serbia's third football league. Teams from the western part of Serbia are in this section of the league. The other sections are Srpska Liga East, Srpska Liga Vojvodina, and Srpska Liga Belgrade. In the 2012-13 season 1st placed team gains promotion to the Serbian First League and the last two team get relegated the Zone League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga\nThe 2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga (known as the Jelen SuperLiga for sponsorship reasons) was the seventh season of the Serbian SuperLiga since its establishment. The season began on 26 August 2012 and ended on 25 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga\nA total of 16 teams contested the league, including 14 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted from the 2011\u201312 Serbian First League. Partizan successfully defended their title. Last two teams, BSK Bor\u010da and Smederevo were relegated, while 14th team played play-off with 3rd placed team from 2012\u201313 Serbian First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams\nMetalac and Borac \u010ca\u010dak were relegated to the 2012\u201313 Serbian First League after the last season for finishing in 16th and 15th place, respectively. Metalac completed a three-year tenure in the league, while Borac was relegated after competing in top-tier football for nine seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams\nThe relegated teams were replaced by 2011\u201312 First League champions Radni\u010dki Ni\u0161 and runners-up Donji Srem. Radni\u010dki will be returning to the top tier for the first time since the season 2002\u201303, while this will be first season in top-tier competition for Donji Srem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams, Stadiums and locations\nAll figures for stadiums include seating capacity only, as many stadiums in Serbia have stands without seats which would otherwise depict the actual number of people able to attend football matches not regulated by UEFA or FIFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Transfers\nFor the list of transfers involving SuperLiga clubs during 2012\u201313 season, please see: List of Serbian football transfers winter 2012\u201313 and List of Serbian football transfers summer 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Awards, Top assists\n* Italic highlights the former club, while bold the current one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Attendance\n* due to previous crowd troubles, audience was not allowed on some games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Champion Squad\nDefenders: Ivan Ivanov (29/4); Aleksandar Miljkovi\u0107 (24); Aleksandar Lazevski (17); Milo\u0161 Ostoji\u0107 (13/1); Vladimir Volkov (12/1); Tomislav Pajovi\u0107 (12); Vojislav Stankovi\u0107 (7); Branko Pauljevi\u0107 (5); Marko \u017divkovi\u0107 (2); Stefan A\u0161kovski (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Champion Squad\nMidfielders: Sa\u0161a Ili\u0107 (25/5); Milan Smiljani\u0107 (24/1); Nikola Ninkovi\u0107 (21/4); Milo\u0161 Joji\u0107 (20/4); Sa\u0161a Markovi\u0107 (17/2); Predrag Luka (14/3); Darko Bra\u0161anac (11/1); Eliomar (7); Goran Lovre (4); Dejan Babi\u0107 (2); Filip Kne\u017eevi\u0107 (1); Andrija \u017divkovi\u0107 (1); Danilo Panti\u0107 (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Champion Squad\nForwards: Aleksandar Mitrovi\u0107 (25/10); Lazar Markovi\u0107 (19/7);Marko \u0160\u0107epovi\u0107 (17/6); Nemanja Koji\u0107 (13/6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Champion Squad\nOn the roster but haven't played in a league game: \u017darko Toma\u0161evi\u0107", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231018-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serbian SuperLiga, Champion Squad\nTransferred out during the season: Stefan \u0160\u0107epovi\u0107 (14/8, to Ashdod); Nemanja Tomi\u0107 (13/3, to Gen\u00e7lerbirli\u011fi); Medo (8, to Bolton Wanderers); Mohammad Za'abia (4/1, released); Nikola Aksentijevi\u0107 (3, to Vitesse Arnhem); Sreten Sretenovi\u0107 (1, to Gyeongnam); Zvonimir Vuki\u0107 (to P.A.O.K. ); Radi\u0161a Ili\u0107 (retired).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231019-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A\nThe 2012\u201313 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 111th season of top-tier Italian football, the 81st in a round-robin tournament, and the 3rd since its organization under a league committee separate from Serie B. It began on 25 August 2012 and ended on 19 May 2013. Juventus were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231019-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A\nA total of 20 teams contested the league, comprising 17 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and three promoted from the 2011\u201312 Serie B. As in the previous years, Nike provided the official ball for all matches, with a new Nike Maxim Serie A model to be used throughout the season for all matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231019-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A\nOn 21 August 2012, FIGC allowed Serie A teams to have up to 12 substitution players on the bench for each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231019-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A, Events\nThe 2012\u201313 season features the return of Pescara, Torino, and Sampdoria, who were promoted back to Serie A after nineteen, three, and one years respectively. It is also Cagliari's first season out of Stadio Sant'Elia after more than 40 years, following its closure due to safety issues; as a replacement, the team agreed to renovate the Stadio Is Arenas located in Quartu Sant'Elena, in order to use it as its home venue for this season (Cagliari has ongoing plans to build its own brand-new stadium in the next few years). The fixtures were presented on 26 July in a lavish hour-long televised ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231019-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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. For example, if a match is scheduled for matchday 29 (Sampdoria vs Internazionale), but then postponed and played between days 30 and 31, it will be added to the standings for day 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231019-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A, League table, Positions by round\nIf there is a color without a number, it means that the team is at least qualified for that round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231020-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A (ice hockey) season\nThe 2012\u201313 Serie A season was the 79th season of the Serie A, the top level of ice hockey in Italy. 10 teams participated in the league, and Asiago Hockey won the championship. SG Pontebba was relegated to the Serie A2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231021-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A1 (men's water polo)\nThe 2012\u201313 Serie A1 is the 94th season of the Serie A1, Italy's premier Water polo league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231021-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie A1 (men's water polo)\nThis article about a water polo competition in Italy is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231022-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie B\nThe 2012\u201313 Serie B (known as the Serie bwin for sponsorship reasons) is the 81st season since its establishment in 1929. A total of 22 teams will contest the league: 16 of which returning from the 2011\u201312 season, 4 of which promoted from Lega Pro Prima Divisione, and two relegated from Serie A. Puma replaced Nike as manufacturer of the official Serie B match ball, a relationship that continues today.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231022-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie B\nThe league featured two clubs relegated from Serie A: Novara returned to the second division after only a single season in the top flight, whereas Cesena were relegated after a two-year stint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231022-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie B\nFour teams were promoted from Lega Pro Prima Divisione, one of them returning to Serie B after a significant absence and one of them will play Serie B for the first time in their history, Pro Vercelli after 64 years, Ternana after 6 years, while Spezia will take part to Serie B after 4 years. The fourth promoted team, Virtus Lanciano will make debut in Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231022-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie B\nGrosseto and Lecce were provisionally, not yet enforceable, condemned to relegation to Lega Pro Prima Divisione, due to a large match fixing scandal involving Italian football; both clubs appealed the decision to the Italian Football Federation's Court of Justice. In appeal, Grosseto was acquitted from all charges and readmitted to Serie B, whereas Lecce's relegation was confirmed. Lecce already announced its intention to appeal the decision at the TNAS (National Sports Arbitration Court, at the Italian Olympic Committee level), but not blocking the relegation being immediately enforceable. On 23 August 2012, FIGC officially communicated that Vicenza were to replace Lecce, and there has been a possibility of extending the transfer window as regards Grosseto and Vicenza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231022-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie B, League table, Promotion Playoffs\nThe higher placed team plays the second leg of the promotion playoff at home. If scores are tied after both games in the semifinals the higher placed team progresses to the final. The same conditions apply to the final except for there being extra time played if scores are tied after both games, the higher placed team will be promoted if scores are still level at the end of this period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D\nThe 2012\u201313 Serie D was the sixty-fifth edition of the top level Italian non-professional football championship. It represented the fourth tier in the Italian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D\nIt consisted of 162 teams divided into nine 18-team divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Promotions\nThe nine division winners are automatically promoted to Lega Pro Seconda Divisione 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Playoffs\nTeams placed second through fifth in each division enter a playoff tournament, after the regular season, where the nine winners will compete among themselves with the best semifinalist and the finalist of Coppa Italia Serie D to determine three of the four semi-finalists. The fourth is the winner of Coppa Italia Serie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Tie-Breakers\nIf the two teams finish in an aggregate tie for to decide who is promoted and relegated, in neutral ground will be played one tie breaker, with possible extra time and penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Scudetto Dilettanti\nThe nine division winners enter a tournament to determine the over-all Serie D champion and is awarded the Scudetto Dilettanti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Events, Start of season\nGiven a normal season where there are no team failures and special promotions, Serie D would feature 9 teams that had been relegated from Lega Pro Seconda Divisione, 36 teams that had been promoted from Eccellenza, and 123 teams that had played in Serie D the year before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Events, Start of season\nDue to eight bankruptcies and exclusions, the 2012\u201313 season is to feature 6 teams that played in the 2011-12 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione season, 37 teams that played in the 2011-12 Eccellenza season and 119 teams that played in 2011\u201312 Serie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Events, Start of season\nThe league also admitted three of the teams that were excluded from the professional leagues. Real Spal (Girone D), formerly SPAL, Foggia (Girone H) and Taranto (Girone H) which all played in the 2011-12 Lega Pro Prima Divisione season. The league further admitted three teams from Eccellenza to fill the vacancies created. These teams are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Scudetto Dilettanti, Semi-finals\nOne leg played on May 23, 2013 on the neutral ground at Piancastagnaio, Stadio Comunale. If the games ending in a tie are extended to the penalty kicks without play extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Scudetto Dilettanti, Final\nOne leg final will be played on May 25, 2013 on the neutral ground at Piancastagnaio, Stadio Comunale. If the games ending in a tie are extended to the penalty kicks without play extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Promotion playoffs\nPromotion playoffs involved a total of 39 teams; four from each of the nine Serie D divisions (teams placed from 2nd through to 5th) with the best semifinalist, the finalist and the winner of Coppa Italia Serie D that are directly respectively admitted to the third, fourth round and the Semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231023-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Serie D, Relegation playoffs\nPlayed on May 19 & May 26, 2013In case of aggregate tie score, higher classified team that plays the 2nd match in home wins, without extra time being playedTeam highlighted in green is saved, other is relegated to Eccellenza", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231024-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Servette FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Servette FC season is the 122nd season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231025-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball team represented Seton Hall University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Pirates, led by head coach Kevin Willard, played its home games in Newark, New Jersey at the Prudential Center and were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 15\u201318, 3\u201315 in Big East play to finish in a tie for 13th place. They lost in the second round of the Big East Tournament to Syaracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231026-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sevilla FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Sevilla Football Club's 12th consecutive season in La Liga and its first season without participating in European competitions since 2004. The team manager in the previous season, M\u00edchel, continued with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231026-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sevilla 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231026-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sevilla FC season, Players, Youth system\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, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231026-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sevilla FC season, Players, Long-term injuries, Congenital abnormality in Maduro's heart\nOn 28 July, Sevilla announced that Hedwiges Maduro was suffering from a congenital anomaly in his heart. It was detected in a special examination by physicians during the second part of the team's summer concentration in Costa Ballena, near Rota. The club said days after that the player had traveled to Houston, Texas, for an examination and a full diagnosis. Maduro said after the first extensive revisions made in Spain that his life was not in danger. After being investigated in Houston by Dr. Paolo Angelini, Sevilla medical services made public that Maduro's abnormality would not prevent him from playing football professionally, and he could rejoin the squad as normal, in late August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 96], "content_span": [97, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231026-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sevilla FC season, Players, Long-term injuries, Trochowski's knee injury\nAfter scoring the first goal of the match against Barcelona on 29 September, Piotr Trochowski had to leave the match with a knee injury. Sevilla's medical services analyzed his illness during the following days. The treatment he received first failed, and doctors thought it was appropriate to operate him in late October in Denver, Colorado. After the surgery, the club told press that the time without playing would be eight months, figuring that his reappearance could be in May 2013, meaning he would miss the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231027-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Shield season\nThe 2012\u201313 Sheffield Shield season was the 111th season of the Sheffield Shield, the domestic first-class cricket competition of Australia. The competition was won by Tasmania. It will go down as one of the most tightly contested seasons in recent history. All six teams had a chance to make the final heading into the last round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231027-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Shield season, Table\n(updated to 17 March 2013)Pld: matches played; WO: won outright; WI: won 1st innings; D: match drawn; LO: lost outright; LI: lost 1st innings; Pts: total points; Q: quotient (for and against runs/wickets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231028-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Steeldogs season\nDuring the 2012\u201313 season, the Sheffield Steeldogs participated in the semi-professional English Premier Ice Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season\nSheffield United Football Club participated in League One, the third level of English football in 2012\u201313, after having failed to win promotion, losing in the previous season's play-off final. Danny Wilson remained in charge for a second season and the club continued to reduce costs as they sought to adapt to life at the third level of English football. Many of the players involved in the previous season were either sold or released, while the likes of Nick Blackman, Tony McMahon, Shaun Miller and Dave Kitson were signed to replace them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season\nThe team went unbeaten in the league until November, briefly climbing to the top of the table, and returned to first place once again over the Christmas period. United had little success in the various cup competitions however, as they were beaten in the first round of the Football League Cup by Burton Albion, and by Coventry City in the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season\nThey did manage to reach the fourth round of the FA Cup but were comprehensively beaten by Reading, a result which came amidst a rapid downturn in league form during January, that almost saw United almost drop out of the play-off places. After a brief recovery through February, the decline in results continued and following another string of poor results in April, Danny Wilson was dismissed as manager, with coach Chris Morgan being appointed as caretaker for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season\nDespite the change of manager, United's form did not significantly improve and they finished the season in 5th place in the league, thus facing Yeovil Town in the play-offs. Having beaten Yeovil 1\u20130 in the first leg, they were defeated by two goals in the second and as such were consigned to remain in League One for at least another season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Background\nThe previous season had been United's first in the third tier of English football for 23 years and had seen them install Danny Wilson as manager. United had competed for automatic promotion throughout the season but when top scorer Ched Evans was handed a prison sentence after being convicted of rape in April, the team's results tailed off towards the end of the season and they were overtaken by local rivals Sheffield Wednesday who claimed the final automatic promotion spot. United reached the play-off final but were beaten on penalties by Huddersfield Town, consigning United to a second season in League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Team kit\nIn June United struck a deal with gaming company Redtooth to sponsor the team's away kit for the coming season. It had been expected that the team shirts would be jointly sponsored by Westfield Health and Gilders as per the previous season but the club announced that the car dealers were to continue a commercial relationship with the club but would no longer be shirt sponsors. At the end of July United officially launched their new away kit baring Redtooth's logo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Team kit\nIn a change to the previous season the shirt itself was predominantly black with a light-red trim and a light-red diagonal stripe across the chest. In September the club announced a new third kit, this one being all white, introduced to avoid further colour clashes. At the end of that month the club also announced a new secondary kit sponsor, revealing that the GCI Com logo would be included on the back of the team shirts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, Pre-season\nPre -season began with 11 players being released, including former Player of the Year James Beattie, defenders Andy Taylor and Johnny Ertl, and first choice stopper Steve Simonsen. Three senior out-of-contract players were offered new terms with Kevin McDonald, Chris Porter and Lee Williamson being offered the chance to remain with United. On 5 July Chris Porter signed a two-year contract with the option of a third, while Academy graduate Jordan Chapell also agreed a new one-year deal. The following day young right-back Matthew Lowton was sold to Premier League Aston Villa for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, Pre-season\nThe Blades returned to pre-season training having arranged the now annual pre-season tour of Malta, followed by a string of low key friendlies. With manager Danny Wilson seeking to improve the squad, on 13 July he signed 19-year-old striker John Cofie from Manchester United on a season-long loan. The first game of pre-season came against non-league Ilkeston where a side relying mainly on young players and triallists were held to a 1\u20131 draw after Harry Maguire had opened the scoring. A day later the Blades made their first permanent signing of the transfer window with 21-year-old right back Darryl Westlake signing a two-year deal with the option of a third year, with a fee to be agreed with his former club Walsall via a tribunal due to his age.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, Pre-season\nThe squad commenced their summer training camp on the island of Malta and their next fixture saw them record a comfortable 6\u20130 victory over local side Zejtun Corinthians. As the training camp continued Chris Morgan announced during a question and answer session with the fans in attendance that he had decided to retire from playing due to a recurrent injury, and that he would now focus solely on his role as reserve-team coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, Pre-season\nThe following day United confirmed that Kevin McDonald had signed a new two-year contract, the news coming a couple of hours before the Blades were held to a 0\u20130 draw by Maltese side Hibernians. Back in the UK, and with July almost over, United made a triple signing, handing two-year deals to defenders Tony McMahon who had been released by Middlesbrough, and former loanee Matt Hill who had left Blackpool, along with signing striker Shaun Miller for an undisclosed fee from Crewe Alexandra. United's final game of July saw them take on Rotherham United at their newly opened ground, The New York Stadium, and recording a 1\u20130 victory thanks to a goal from loanee John Cofie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, Pre-season\nAs August began a United XI travelled the short distance to Hallam where two goals each from Ironside and Philliskirk were enough to secure a comfortable 4\u20130 victory. Joe Ironside was on target again a few days later as both he and new signing Tony McMahon scored to give United a 2\u20130 victory at Morecambe. With pre-season coming to an end reserve coach Chris Morgan took a young United XI side to Matlock Town where they recorded a 1\u20130 victory thanks to a goal from Erik T\u00f8nne. Then, the day before the season opener against Burton Albion, United announced the signing of Blackburn Rovers striker Nick Blackman on a two-year deal for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, August and September: Too many draws\nThe Blades first competitive game of the season was a home League Cup tie against Burton Albion. Howard, Miller, Blackman, McMahon and McFadzean all made their first team d\u00e9buts for United but with the game tied at 2\u20132 after extra time United lost on penalties for the second game in succession. The Blades began their league campaign with a home game against newly promoted Shrewsbury Town, winning 1\u20130 thanks to a goal from former Shrewsbury loanee David McAllister. A trip to Coventry City followed a few days later with United snatching a late goal for a 1\u20131 draw, with the same result being repeated the following Saturday as the Blades were held to another draw by Colchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, August and September: Too many draws\nWith the transfer window closing at the end of August, United continued to reshape their squad in an effort to reduce the wage bill, agreeing a new contract with Richard Cresswell for him to become player coach. On the final day of transfer activity the club agreed to sell Stephen Quinn to Hull City for an undisclosed fee, and allowed Nick Montgomery, the club's then longest serving player, to leave in order to move to Australia. United concluded their summer transfer dealings by offering former Portsmouth striker Dave Kitson a short-term deal to run up until Christmas 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, August and September: Too many draws\nSeptember began with a 5\u20133 victory over Bournemouth at Bramall Lane thanks in part to a brace of goals from Ryan Flynn. Flynn was also a central figure in the following game as both he and fellow midfielder Michael Doyle were shown red cards against Scunthorpe United before the Blades came from behind to grab a 1\u20131 draw. Off the field, the following week the club parted company with Chief Executive Julian Winter and Director of Academy Coaching John Pemberton, citing ongoing restructuring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, August and September: Too many draws\nWith the red cards for both Doyle and Flynn being upheld on appeal, Danny Wilson bolstered the squad by bringing forward Paul Gallagher in on a months loan from Leicester City. Back on the pitch Gallagher, Kitson and Westlake all made their United debuts as the Blades were held to a 1\u20131 draw by Bury at Bramall Lane, whilst a 0\u20130 draw was the result when Doncaster Rovers visited Sheffield a couple of days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, August and September: Too many draws\nA third goal of the season from Neill Collins was enough to continue the Blades' unbeaten start with a 1\u20130 victory over Yeovil Town at Huish Park. Despite the return of Michael Doyle and Ryan Flynn from suspension and a first goal from Dave Kitson, United were forced to settle for yet another 1\u20131 draw in their last game of September, versus Notts County at Bramall Lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nOctober started more positively for the Blades as a late goal from Paul Gallagher, his first for the club, snatched a victory in an away fixture against Hartlepool United. United then made it two wins in a row on their travels as they defeated Leyton Orient 1\u20130 thanks to Nick Blackman's fifth goal of the campaign. During the match Mark Howard suffered a thigh injury in the 11th minute, being replaced in goal by George Long, and was later ruled out for up to 12 weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nThe following week, and despite attempts to retain his services, Paul Gallagher's loan period expired and he returned to his parent club. The Blades also announced changes to the Football Club board, with chairman Chris Steer stepping down to be replaced by Dave Green, and Nigerian financier Jacob Esan being added as a director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nDespite George Long having made some impressive performances, Danny Wilson still looked to bring in another goalkeeper as cover and confirmed that former Wales international and free agent Danny Coyne had been invited to train with the Blades; but insisted that Long would continue to be first choice for the time being. The Blades then entertained Oldham Athletic at Bramall Lane, a bad tempered match which saw Oldham score in the seventh minute of injury time to snatch a 1\u20131 draw, and Lactics striker Lee Croft subsequently accused of racially abusing a ball boy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0011-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nHaving received a bye for the first round, United began their Football League Trophy campaign with a 4\u20131 victory over Notts County at Meadow Lane. Lecsinel Jean-Fran\u00e7ois played for the first time in over six months after a knee injury, appearing for the last 15 minutes as a substitute, however he injured his other knee and was ruled out for a further two months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0011-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nBack in the league and a trip to Preston North End culminated in a 1\u20130 win thanks to a Dave Kitson goal, before a Nick Blackman penalty was enough to claim the same result in a home game against Walsall. With the month almost over the Blades beat the likes of Manchester United, Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsnenal by handing a three-year deal to 17-year-old Academy player Diego De Girolamo, before another Nick Blackman spot-kick was enough to despatch Portsmouth 1\u20130 at Bramall Lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nNovember began with a trip to Bristol to face Bristol Rovers in the first round of the FA Cup. Despite conceding an early goal United came back to score twice in the second half and book their place in the second round. Back in League One an away trip to Swindon Town ended in a 0\u20130 stalemate, but it was a result that allowed United to climb into the automatic promotion places for the first time in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nA few days later vice-captain Neill Collins extended his current contract by a further two years until Summer 2015 with the option of another year, before the Blades unbeaten run finally came to an end as they conceded a controversial last minute penalty to lose 1\u20130 away at Milton Keynes Dons. The following week Matthew Harriott was allowed to join Alfreton Town on loan, initially until 9 December, while Harry Maguire made his England Under-21 d\u00e9but as a substitute in the 60th minute, coming on for Liverpool's Andre Wisdom in a 2\u20130 against Northern Ireland Under-21 at Bloomfield Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nA few days later it was announced that Danny Wilson had been named League One Manager of the Month and that George Long had won League One Player of the Month for October. Later the same day, Dave Kitson extended his contract until the end of the season with the option of another year; Kitson stated that \"It wouldn't have sat comfortably with me to leave a job half done after integrating myself into a great squad\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0012-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nAt the end of a busy week free agent and former Wales national goalkeeper Danny Coyne signed a 28-day deal as cover for George Long as third choice keeper George Willis had sustained a minor injury preventing him from playing. Seven days after the disappointing defeat at MK Dons, United returned to winning ways in emphatic style, convincingly beating promotion rivals Stevenage 4\u20131 at Bramall Lane, thanks in part to a brace from Shaun Miller who was making his first league start for United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0012-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, October and November: Long live King George\nA mid-week home fixture against Crewe Alexandra followed which ended in a 3\u20133 draw, despite United having taken a two-goal lead in the first half. The following day Jordan Chapell extended his loan with Burton Albion for a further month, before the final game of November saw United slip to a damaging 2\u20130 defeat away at Brentford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nOn 1 December the Blades returned to winning ways with a late 2\u20131 victory over former United boss Micky Adams's Port Vale side in the second round of the FA Cup at Bramall Lane. Shaun Miller saved the day for the Blades with a brace in injury time after Vale had taken the lead in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nWith the Blades beginning to struggle with injuries Jordan Chapell was recalled early from his loan spell at Burton Albion, and returned to the United first-team later that day as the Blades crashed out of the Football League Trophy on penalties to Coventry City. Meanwhile, Matthew Harriott extended his loan deal with Alfreton Town until 6 January and back in the league United returned to winning ways, defeating Carlisle United 3\u20131, but were held to a 0\u20130 draw by table-topping Tranmere Rovers the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0013-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nAfter Danny Coyne extended his short-term contract to keep him with the club until the end of January, United started their festive programme by rising to the top of the League One table following a 2\u20130 win over Crawley Town on their first ever visit to the Broadfield Stadium thanks to two goals from Tony McMahon, before a comfortable 3\u20130 home win over Scunthorpe United on Boxing Day consolidated their place as league leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0013-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nWith injuries and suspensions starting to weaken the first-team United finished the year by slipping to a surprising 2\u20133 home defeat to bottom club Hartlepool United, a result which saw them drop to second in the table. On 28 December it was announced that due to injuries sustained against Scunthorpe United, Shaun Miller would be out for the remainder of the season and out up to nine months in total with a cruciate knee ligament injury; whilst Neill Collins would be out for around two months with a fractured cheekbone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nThe opening of the January transfer window allowed Danny Wilson to strengthen his squad by signing experienced defender Danny Higginbotham on a free transfer from Stoke City on New Years Day, and both he and Elliott Whitehouse made their United d\u00e9buts for United that afternoon in the South Yorkshire derby against Doncaster Rovers at the Keepmoat Stadium where the Blades needed late goals from Blackman and Kitson to rescue a 2\u20132 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nOn 3 January Danny Wilson continued to revamp the squad by signing winger Jamie Murphy from Motherwell on a three and a half-year contract for an undisclosed fee, whilst John Cofie's loan deal was terminated and he returned to his parent club Manchester United, despite claiming that he wanted to see out the season with the Blades. Young forward Diego De Girolamo was called up to the Italy national under-18 squad ahead of the Blade's third round FA Cup tie at Oxford United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0014-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nMurphy made his Blades debut against Oxford United as they booked their place in the fourth round, running out 3\u20130 winners thanks to goals from McMahon, Kitson and Blackman, earning United a trip to the Madejski Stadium against Premier League strugglers Reading. United continued to struggle with injuries as defender Matt Hill was ruled out for six weeks with a fractured cheek bone following the game at Oxford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0014-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nUnited's transfer dealings continued with midfielder David McAllister leaving the Blades for former loan club Shrewsbury Town for an undisclosed fee, Alfreton Town decided to extend Matty Harriott's loan for a third month, and youth keeper George Willis signed his first professional contract with the Blades on a two and half-year deal. United's disappointing league form continued as they were beaten 2\u20130 at home by Yeovil Town, and allowed Notts County to score a late equaliser to draw 1\u20131 despite being reduced to ten men for much of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0014-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, December and January: (Briefly) Top of the league\nWith the transfer window close to completion United allowed young striker Danny Philliskirk to leave after cancelling his contract. With the Blades game at Bury postponed due to weather conditions, their next match was the FA Cup fourth round tie at Reading, a match which saw United crash out of the competition following a 4\u20130 defeat. With a day of the transfer window remaining Reading agreed a deal to sign Nick Blackman, only six months after he had arrived at Bramall Lane, and after he had rejected a move to Crystal Palace. On deadline day itself former United youth player Jonathan Forte returned to the Blades on loan for the rest of the season from Southampton and Scottish international Barry Robson signed a short-term deal until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, February and March: Moving back up\nUnited's poor home form continued into February as they suffered their third consecutive home loss, going down 2\u20131 to Coventry City. With United's home fixture against Crawley Town postponed due to a waterlogged pitch, the first time in ten years United had had to postpone a match for such a reason, their next fixture was an away trip to Shrewsbury Town where goals from Michael Doyle and Dave Kitson helped them to a 2\u20131 victory and their first league win of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, February and March: Moving back up\nUnited registered back-to-back victories with a 2\u20130 away win over Bury, before signing young striker Dominic Poleon from Leeds United on loan until the end of the season, and allowing Chris Porter to sign a one-month loan deal with Shrewsbury Town. United climbed back into the automatic promotion places as they registered their first home win of 2013, beating Colchester United 3\u20130. On 18 February Coyne once again extended his stay with United keeping him at the Lane until late March. A fourth straight victory saw United return to the top of the table, leapfrogging their hosts Bournemouth after a 1\u20130 victory. Teenager Harry Maguire made his 100th start for the Blades in their next game, but United slipped back to second place following a 0\u20130 home draw with Leyton Orient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, February and March: Moving back up\nMarch started with a 2\u20130 victory over Oldham Athletic, before the Blades managed to hold onto second place in the league, despite being held to a second consecutive 0\u20130 home draw, this time against Milton Keynes Dons. After United's scheduled trip to Crewe Alexandra was postponed due to a frozen pitch, Jordan Chapell was loaned out to Torquay United until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, February and March: Moving back up\nThe following day Chris Porter returned from his loan spell at Shrewsbury Town to increase United's striking options, before United's away run was brought to a halt as Stevenage beat them 4\u20130 at The Lamex Stadium. United signed young striker Joe Ironside to a two and a half-year deal, before allowing Richard Cresswell to re-join his first ever club, York City, on a one-month loan deal. Later the same day former United player Jamie Hoyland resigned his post as Academy manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0016-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, February and March: Moving back up\nDue to a lack of first team opportunities Erik T\u00f8nne was allowed to return to his native Norway for a trial with HamKam ahead of a potential loan move. A busy week off the field concluded with young keeper George Long being named Young Player of the Month for February 2013 by The Football League. United's fixture problems continued when their scheduled home game with Brentford was called off due to heavy snowfall, meaning that their first game for two weeks came against promotion rivals Tranmere Rovers, with an own goal from Tranmere's Ash Taylor being enough to secure the points for United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, April: Farewell Danny\nApril started with yet another goalless draw at Bramall Lane when Carlisle United held their hosts, despite being reduced to ten men for the final third of the game. Two days later on-loan forward Dominic Poleon was recalled by his parent club, Leeds United, while Erik T\u00f8nne was allowed to join Norwegian side HamKam on loan until November 2013. An away trip to Walsall provided yet another draw for United, with a second half goal from Chris Porter rescuing a point for the Blades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, April: Farewell Danny\nUnited continued their disappointing home form into the following game when Crawley Town were 2\u20130 victors, a result that saw Danny Wilson sacked the following day, and being replaced by reserve team coach Chris Morgan for the remainder of the season. The following day the club announced former player and Academy coach, David Unsworth as assistant to Morgan for the duration of his tenure. The new management team's first action was to recall Jordan Chapell from his loan spell at Torquay United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0017-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, April: Farewell Danny\nChris Morgan's first game in charge saw Swindon Town visit Bramall Lane, with United running out as 2\u20130 winners, thanks to goals from Porter and Kitson. Following an injury to one of his Achilles tendons, Richard Cresswell returned early from his loan at York City, the day before a dramatic game home against Brentford saw three players sent off and four penalties awarded as the teams played out a 2\u20132 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0017-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, April: Farewell Danny\nOn the penultimate weekend of the season United, saw their hopes of automatic promotion extinguished as they were beaten 3\u20130 by already relegated Portsmouth, although results elsewhere confirmed their place in the play-offs. Their poor form continued with a 1\u22120 away loss Crewe Alexandra, followed by yet another 0\u20130 home draw against Preston North End in the final game of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0017-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, April: Farewell Danny\nMeanwhile, Academy prospects Conor Dimaio and Jamie McDonagh were called up to the Ireland under\u201318s and the Northern Ireland under\u201319s respectively, while young defender Harry Maguire was named as the club's Player of the Year and was named in the PFA League One Team of the Year, winning both for the second season in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season overview, May: Play-off Misery again\nHaving finished fifth in the final table, United were paired with fourth place Yeovil Town in the play-off semi-final. The first leg was played at Bramall Lane, where a close game resulted in substitute Callum McFadzean scoring the only goal, giving United a slender advantage going into the second game. The second leg was another tight affair but United created few chances on goal and were beaten 2\u20130 by their hosts to record a seventh successive failure in play-off competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 81], "content_span": [82, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Squad, Players leaving before 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season firsts, Player d\u00e9but\nPlayers making their first team Sheffield United d\u00e9but in a fully competitive match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season firsts, D\u00e9but goal\nPlayers scoring their first goal for Sheffield United in a competitive fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season firsts, Competitive fixture\nFirst ever meeting of the two clubs in a competitive fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season firsts, Stadia\nFirst ever visit to a stadium for a competitive fixture", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231029-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield United F.C. season, Squad statistics, Disciplinary record, Suspensions\nDate of start of suspension assumed to be the date of the game during which the disciplinary incident occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 88], "content_span": [89, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season\nDuring the 2012\u201313 season, Sheffield Wednesday Football Club competed in the 2012\u201313 Football League Championship, the FA Cup and the League Cup. Sheffield Wednesday have stayed in the Football League Championship after recently being promoted from the Football League One the previous year. They were managed by Dave Jones, while the club's chairman was Milan Mandaric. Their league season kicked off on 18 August 2012, while the League Cup began a week earlier as they entered at Round 1 of the competition. In the FA Cup, The Owls began in January as they entered at Round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nPre -season for Sheffield Wednesday is due to kick-off at the beginning of July 2012. On 10 May 2012, Sheffield Wednesday confirmed their first pre-season friendly. This was to be against West Bromwich Albion at home on 4 August. On 15 May, the Owls released several players, these were young goalkeeper's Sean Cuff and Richard O'Donnell, who had spent the later stages of the previous season on loan. Also Jon Otsemobor, Chris Sedgwick, Clinton Morrison, and Vadaine Oliver were released. Meanwhile, in the youth squad, Matthew Tumilty who had made one appearance for the club the previous season was released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nLee Wall, Scott Canham and Tom Rowbotham were also released. Whereas youth player Mitcham Husbands remains at the club for a further year, and 2011\u201312 Academy Player of the Year Jarrod Kyle accepted his first-year professional contract. On 18 May the pre-season schedule was confirmed, with the Owls 2012\u201313 Football League Championship fixtures announced on 18 June, their first friendlies both away on 17 July firstly local club Stocksbridge Park Steels and oldest club in the world Sheffield F.C. later that same evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nA day after this Wednesday are due to fly to Portugal for their pre-season tour where they will play two unconfirmed teams before arriving back in England to play recently relegated Doncaster Rovers away on 28 July. The club's last pre-season friendly has already been confirmed to be against West Bromwich Albion on 4 August. Five days later the club announced their first signing ready for the new season. Ex-England international goalkeeper Chris Kirkland joined the club on a free transfer from Wigan Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThis is after the club released two goalkeeper's and had yet to confirm if other goalkeeper's Stephen Bywater and Arron Jameson had re-signed with the club, their previous contracts had expired that summer. However a day after this it was confirmed that one of these goalkeeper's had signed a new two-year contract at the club. Wednesday Academy product Arron Jameson signed to make his stay at the club last up to six-years by 2014. Jameson had only ever made two appearances for the club, both against Milton Keynes Dons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 28 May 2012 the Owls confirmed the highly expected capture of defender Kieran Lee on a free transfer and a three-year contract. The signing of Lee had been expected to be confirmed at any time within the last two weeks after an Oldham Athletic member of staff confirmed that they could not compete with a club of Sheffield Wednesday's position and stature. After confirming a pre-season friendly with Kilmarnock as a testimonial for James Fowler, Sheffield Wednesday signed another free-agent. Joe Mattock signed on a three-year-contract after his contract ran out at West Bromwich Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 14 June 2012, 2012\u201313 Football League Cup draw was made and Wednesday found out which team they would play in their first competitive match of the season. The Owls were drawn away to Oldham Athletic, a team who the side will be familiar with after being in the same league as them the previous season. Later that same day Sheffield Wednesday revealed the game would be live on Sky Sports, and be a day earlier than the majority of the rest of the games in Round 1, on Monday 13 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\n4 days after the League Cup draw, the fixtures for the 2012\u201313 Football League Championship were announced. It was confirmed that Wednesday's league campaign would kick-off away to Derby County, with their first home game three days later against last season's play-off semi-finalists Birmingham City. This would be followed by another home fixture against Millwall the following weekend. Yorkshire derbies against Huddersfield Town will take place on Tuesday 18 September and Saturday 29 December, while the local derby against Leeds United will take place at home on 20 October and away on 13 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0007", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nAnd the other local rivalry with Barnsley will take place away on 15 December and at home on 30 March. Sheffield Wednesday will play Bolton Wanderers on Boxing Day away, and the season will end at Hillsborough Stadium against Middlesbrough. Meanwhile, as well as the league fixtures being announced Sheffield Wednesday confirmed their final pre-season friendly, this was announced to be against Sporting Lisbon on 22 July while on tour in Portugal. The long anticipated signing of defender Anthony Gardner was made on 20 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0008", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe signing again was on a free transfer and the thirty-one-year-old signed on a two-year contract from Crystal Palace. It was however speculated that same morning that Gardner may not be signing for Wednesday after all, and that Dave Jones was getting impatient, with interest from Chinese clubs as well. However, just hours later the deal was done and the Owls made their fourth summer signing. The day after this Sheffield Wednesday completed another signing, this time in the forward position, with Chris Maguire signing on an undisclosed fee from Derby County on a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0009", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nWith June coming to a close it was time for players who had been offered contracts to either agree terms or look to play elsewhere. Goalkeeper Stephen Bywater signed a new deal to keep him with the club for a further season, meaning a total of four potential first-team goalkeeper's were now at the club. Then two days later on 29 June, Sheffield Wednesday Academy product Mark Beevers signed a two-year deal which would see his Sheffield Wednesday professional career span to seven-years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0001-0010", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 6 July 2012, rumours became official of assistant manager Terry Burton joining Premier League side Arsenal to take on their Reserve and Head of Development Coach role. Burton had only been in the assistant manager role since March, after joining Wednesday just after manager Dave Jones. Finally on 9 July 2012, Jamaican Jermaine Johnson sign with the club\u2014all four were with Sheffield. JJ in his early-thirties will stay at the club for at least another year. One day later Sheffield Wednesday made their sixth signing of the summer by signing Portugal U-21 midfielder Diogo Amado. The player signs on a two-year contract from Uniao Leiria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nPre -season training finally started in the week-commencing 9 July, and the day before their first two pre-season friendlies against Sheffield F.C. and Stocksbridge Park Steels, Sheffield Wednesday confirmed their seventh summer signing. Slovenia international Nejc Pe\u010dnik, who had been on trial at the club, signed on a two-year contract from Portuguese side Nacional. Pe\u010dnik is a winger who had played in the 2010 FIFA World Cup two-years previously. However, it was disappointing to hear that earlier that same day Sheffield Wednesday Academy manager Sean McAuley had left the club having been with the Owls since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nMcAuley had gone over to America to become assistant manager at Major League Soccer club Portland Timbers. With a number of midfielder's in the Sheffield Wednesday squad Dave Jones decided to off-load promising youngster Liam Palmer on-loan to League One club Tranmere Rovers for a total of six-months. Palmer, a product of the Sheffield Wednesday Academy and a Scotland U-21 international, has scored one goal for the Owls and was a consistent starter at the early parts of the 2011\u201312 football league season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0002-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nWednesday played their first pre-season friendlies both at the same time, with manager Dave Jones sending out two different squads to the grounds of Sheffield F.C. and Stocksbridge Park Steels. A single goal by Chris O'Grady against Sheffield F.C. was not enough to earn a win and the game finished rightly as a draw, while a slightly stronger side beat Stocksbridge Park Steels 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0002-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nTwo goals from Chris Maguire and one from Gary Madine and young trialist Patrick Antelmi saw the Owls get off to a good start in preparation to the pre-season tour in Portugal where the squad were due to fly to the next day. Sheffield Wednesday played their first game of two in Portugal after nearly a week of training their. The Owls went down 2\u20130 to a strong Sporting Lisbon side. Goals in either half saw off the Owls and was overall seen as a good workout in their preparation to the new season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0002-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nTwo days after this, Sheffield Wednesday were back at the Estadio Municipal de Albufeira to play Premier League side Reading, who had just been promoted from the Football League Championship. A goal either side of half-time from Mike Jones and Chris O'Grady saw Wednesday go out deserved 2\u20130 winners. After the win, the Owls came back to their training base in Sheffield. On 28 July 2012, Wednesday played their first game since getting back to England, a friendly against Doncaster Rovers, and with little chances from both teams the game finished a goalless draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0002-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nBack to the transfer market and the Owls revealed the new signing of Rhys McCabe on a free transfer after deciding not to join the new-co Rangers. The young attacking midfielder agreed a three-year deal with the club. However, the signing was over-shadowed by the leaving of club captain and fan favourite Rob Jones, who left via mutual consent and went on to join Doncaster Rovers just the very next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nThe beginning of August saw another departure, with striker Ryan Lowe leaving on an undisclosed fee to join Football League One side Milton Keynes Dons. On 4 August, Wednesday played their only pre-season friendly at home, this was against West Bromwich Albion. The game finished in a 1\u20131 draw with goals from Nejc Pe\u010dnik and then on the eighty-eighth minute Peter Odemwingie. Although unable to maintain their lead until the final whistle the game was seen as a good step forward in preparation to the first competitive game of the season, especially since they drew with a team from the league above the Owls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nThe most anticipated signing for fans was finally completed on 6 August, after a successful third bid. Last season's promotion 'hero' Michail Antonio had finally joined the Owls on a four-year contract from Reading for an undisclosed fee rumoured to be around \u00a31.2\u00a0million. The final pre-season game for Sheffield Wednesday took place as a testimonial match for James Fowler, the Kilmarnock player. First-half goals from trialist Marlon Harewood and Chris O'Grady gave Wednesday a half-time lead. Although, a goal from Manuel Pascali pulled a goal back for Kilmarnock at the beginning of the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nHowever, what was a fairly weaker Wednesday side, scored two late goals as Marlon Harewood grabbed his hat-trick, in hope to persuade manager Dave Jones to offer him a contract. With so many new signings and very few player departures the squad was seen to be 'too big'. Dave Jones does have plans to get rid of some players with a number of players' futures being questioned. On 9 August out-of-favour left-back Mark Reynolds went out on loan to Aberdeen for the second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nThis time however it was a season-long loan and Reynolds looks like he would not play for the Owls again as his contract runs out at the end of this season. The weekend of 11 August 2012 saw the end of pre-season for all The Football League clubs below the Premier League as the 2012\u201313 League Cup kicked off. Half the fixtures of the first round took place that weekend, while others on the Tuesday and Wednesday of the following week. Meanwhile, Sheffield Wednesday were in-between on the Monday as they played Oldham Athletic, away and live on Sky Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0004-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nAs the first competitive game approached it meant manager Dave Jones had to confirm and announce the squad numbers for the season. New goalkeeper Chris Kirkland was given the number one jersey, while Michail Antonio was given the number seven. Goalkeeper's Nicky Weaver and Arron Jameson were not assigned numbers; Jameson had recently re-signed and it was thought the future of Weaver at the club was uncertain. Meanwhile, left-back Julian Bennett was not given a number which increased speculation about who no longer had a future with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nOn 13 August 2012, Sheffield Wednesday finally began the season with their first competitive match against League One Oldham Athletic in the League Cup. The Owls were obviously favourites for the cup clash due to being a league above their opposition. However, Wednesday started the game still in 'pre-season mode', while Oldham Athletic played in a competitive manner and scored within seven minutes with Jordan Slew scoring on his debut for the club. Oldham then doubled their lead with defender Jean-Yves Mvoto getting on the scoresheet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nThe first half was then summed up when debutant Nejc Pe\u010dnik missed a penalty for the Owls. After one of the worst starts to the season, Wednesday came out in the second half a completely different side. Jermaine Johnson pulled one back and then substitute Chris O'Grady nine-minutes later equalised. A great comeback was completed when O'Grady grabbed his second of the game on the seventieth-minute, while last season's promotion hero and new-signing Michail Antonio scored late on to secure Wednesday of the win and a place in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nThe second-round draw took place on the Wednesday of the same week and the Owls found themselves drawn at home to Premier League side Fulham, with the tie due to be played later on that month. The day before the first league game of the season Wednesday signed young Preston North End midfielder Danny Mayor on a three-year contract. Finally after a long pre-season the league campaign kicked off at 15:00 on 18 August 2012. However, Wednesday started poorly, similarly to the League Cup game earlier in the week against Oldham Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0005-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nThe Owls went behind after a goal from Nathan Tyson, and then Jake Buxton doubled the lead for Derby County, just before the half-hour mark. Chris O'Grady hit a wonderful strike before half-time to make it 2\u20131 at the break. Wednesday dominated the majority of the second half, and had two goals disallowed, but they finally scored in the last minute of normal time. Defender R\u00e9da Johnson headed home for the game to finish 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nOn the Monday before the first home game against Birmingham City, Wednesday confirmed the signing of Rodrigo R\u00edos Lozano, also known as Rodri, on a season-long loan from Barcelona B. It is expected that the Owls have the option to buy Rodri on a permanent basis at the end of the season. Rodri made his debut for Wednesday just the next day when he started in the first home tie of the campaign against Birmingham City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nAfter R\u00e9da Johnson put the Owls ahead due to a mistake from England goalkeeper Jack Butland, Rodri scored on his debut, after a brilliant solo effort. The first half ended with Wednesday two goals up. Nikola Zigic did pull back a goal for Birmingham in the second half, but Jermaine Johnson sealed victory on the eighty-ninth minute, after going one-on-one with the goalkeeper. However, Marlon King did score from the penalty-spot, with exactly the last kick of the game, after a clumsy challenge from R\u00e9da Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nWednesday went second in the league after two games, due to the number of goals scored. Millwall were Wednesday's next opponents, again at home, and the Owls took the lead through the in-form Jermaine Johnson, who scored with a wonderful shot from outside the area. However, as thunder and lightning struck Hillsborough Wednesday's level of performance dropped, and so did their lead with Millwall scoring twice through James Henry and Liam Trotter, and Sheffield Wednesday went into the break a goal behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0006-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nGreat team spirit and a higher level of performance saw Miguel Llera score a thoroughly deserved equaliser after a scramble in the box, which included the ball hitting the post and a wonderful save. Then as Wednesday pushed on defender Miguel Llera scored again after a Rhys McCabe free-kick in the last-minute of normal time. The Owls had turned it around again and won the game 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nOn the day of the last game of the month, against Fulham in the second round of the League Cup, Wednesday confirmed that midfielder David Prutton had joined Scunthorpe United on a three-month loan deal. Also, it was announced that Jermaine Johnson and Miguel Llera had been included in the Football League Championship Team of the Week. Later that same day it was confirmed that Diogo Amado had left the club to join Estoril Praia on an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nAmado had been unable to settle at the club after being there just a month having joined earlier on in the summer. Amado did not make a competitive appearance for the Owls, but played a healthy part in pre-season. The end of a busy Tuesday saw Sheffield Wednesday face Premier League Fulham in the League Cup second round. After an even first half, the Owls came out the better in the opening stages of the second half, and were rewarded after Chris Maguire was fouled inside the box and Gary Madine converted the penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nNejc Pe\u010dnik later hit the bar, but the game finished 1\u20130, with Wednesday going into the Third Round. The end of August every year always sees the end of the summer transfer window. Wednesday were looking to capture at least another three or four more players before the window shuts on 31 August at 23:00 (BST). The Owls did sign another with two-days to go before the transfer window shuts, as young midfielder Paul Corry joined the club on a three-year contract for an undisclosed fee from University College Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0007-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nThe Owls found out who they would meet in Round 3 of the League Cup on 30 August, and they saw themselves drawn away to Premier League new-boys Southampton. The last day of August saw one of the most exciting days of the football calendar \u2013 transfer deadline day. Dave Jones commented in hoping to bring in at least two players, while also expecting departures from the club. At 16:19 (BST), the Owls confirmed that midfielder Mike Jones had joined League One side Crawley Town for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0007-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nJones joined Wednesday just over six-months previously while Gary Megson was still manager. Under an hour later it was confirmed that Giles Coke, who had played in the mid-week League Cup win against Fulham, had joined Swindon Town on loan for six-months. Finally, with just over four-hours to go until the transfer window shuts Wednesday did confirm a capture, however only on a six-month loan deal. Queens Park Rangers forward Jay Bothroyd had joined the club having in the past worked with manager Dave Jones at Cardiff City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0007-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, August\nWith eight-minutes to go until the transfer window shuts Sheffield Wednesday confirmed the signing of central defender Martin Taylor from Watford. The thirty-two-year-old has signed on a two-year deal for an undisclosed fee. The late signing totalled a number of fourteen summer signings for Sheffield Wednesday (including loans), thirteen when excepting Diogo Amado who signed and then departed from the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nThe first day of September saw the Owls play their second away game of the season. The game was against Crystal Palace and the last time the two teams met it was in the dramatic relegation 'play-off' on the last day of the 2009\u20132010 season. The game kicked off and almost immediately Palace scored through Glenn Murray within the first minute, and although the Owls hit the woodwork they went into the break a goal down. Five-minutes into the second half and Michail Antonio tapped in for the Owls to put them back on level terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nAfter the referee correctly changed his mind over giving Crystal Palace a penalty, Glenn Murray scored his second of the game with seven-minutes to go. The game finished in a 2\u20131 loss and saw manager Dave Jones' 17-match unbeaten run come to an end, and Wednesday's nineteen-match unbeaten run come to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nThe first international break of the campaign arrived and saw two Sheffield Wednesday players going out on international duty. Impressive youngster Rhys McCabe played the whole of the first game for the Scotland U-21's against Luxembourg U-21, however McCabe was only on the bench for the game against Austria U-21. Nejc Pe\u010dnik for Slovenia did not come off the bench for the game against Switzerland, however did within just the first five minutes against Norway in which Slovenia lost 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nWednesday 12 September 2012, saw the eagerly anticipated release of over 400,000 pages of official documents from the Hillsborough Independent Panel, in relation to the Hillsborough disaster. Sheffield Wednesday made a club statement on the day in which the Owls offered an apology to the families who lost loved ones in the disaster over twenty-three years ago and welcomed the release of the Hillsborough Independent Panel report. Later on in the week and after the 'emergency loan market' opened, Wednesday sealed a one-month loan deal for eighteen-year-old Everton midfielder Ross Barkley, whom the club had been chasing for 'some time'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nLater that same Friday Wednesday played away to Brighton & Hove Albion. After a fairly even first twenty-four minutes Manchester City-loanee Wayne Bridge hit a free-kick that took a large deflection off Rhys McCabe and went into the back of the net. After that Brighton took control of the game and maybe deserved to be 2\u20130 up at the break. The Owls came back slightly better after the break with Ross Barkley coming off the bench to make his debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0009-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nHowever, Brighton soon went back to dominating the game and within ten minutes of the restart they scored again through top scorer Craig Mackail-Smith and four minutes later a good move saw Will Buckley to score and finish Wednesday off. Debutant Jay Bothroyd came close to a late consolation goal but the end result finished in a 3\u20130 loss for the Owls, their biggest loss since nearly exactly the same time last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nBack on home soil, Wednesday faced Yorkshire rivals Huddersfield Town, and a great game was anticipated after last season's very dramatic 4\u20134 draw at Hillsborough Stadium. The game however was introduced with a minutes silence in respect to those that we have all lost, after a long few weeks which saw the Hillsborough disaster being a major talking point in society and through the media and also due to a Huddersfield Town fan who had died the week previously in the war in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nThe game then kicked off, and, within the first fifteen minutes of the game, Mark Beevers hit the bar for the Owls, and also James Vaughan of Huddersfield had an optimistic effort hit the bar. However, a controversial penalty was awarded when Jermaine Johnson seemed to foul Jack Hunt in the area. Oliver Norwood saw his penalty saved by Chris Kirkland but scored from the follow-up. Just two minutes later and a diving header from Lee Novak doubled Huddersfield's lead, and saw echoes of last season's encounter at Hillsborough, where Huddersfield were also two-up at this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nNearly twenty minutes later and R\u00e9da Johnson headed home to make the score 1\u20132. A minute after the goal, Joel Lynch saw a straight red card, after a challenge on Michail Antonio. With, Wednesday pushing for an equaliser before half-time, the Owls' defender Joe Mattock was sent-off deep in stoppage-time of the first half, with his first yellow card also being debatable. Half-time was then called after an entertaining first half. The second half began quite evenly, however eventually Wednesday started to push with R\u00e9da Johnson and Nejc Pe\u010dnik coming close.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0010-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nHowever, referee Salisbury was centre of attention again when he awarded Huddersfield Town their second penalty of the match for a Rhys McCabe handball, which replays after the game saw the decision to be harsh and more of a ball-to-hand incident. Adam Clayton stepped up and scored from the spot. R\u00e9da Johnson missed an almost open-net late on and the game finished in a 1\u20133 loss, with a total of seven yellow cards and two reds being handed out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0010-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nThis was Sheffield Wednesday's third defeat on the bounce, their first at home since February (after losing to Stevenage), and their biggest home defeat since March 2011 when they were defeated by Brentford. Later that same week Wednesday were in action again at home, this time against recently relegated Premier League side Bolton Wanderers. Although the Owls started brightly, with Michail Antonio looking the most troublesome player, the game became quite even and a Bolton corner saw Marcos Alonso score with a free-header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0010-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nSecond half was similar to the first with quite an even contest, but the Owls did start to push for the equaliser and deservedly got it when a foul in the box was conceded and loanee Ross Barkley scored from the penalty spot. However, just three minutes later and after a mistake by new-signing and captain Martin Taylor, Mark Davies curled a shot into the top corner of the goal, which saw Bolton Wanderers win the game 1\u20132. This was the first time Sheffield Wednesday had been beaten in four consecutive league matches since September 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nA long away trip to the south coast saw Sheffield Wednesday face Premier League Southampton in Round 3 of the League Cup. Many changes were made by both sides and young summer signing Paul Corry made his debut for the club. After half-an-hour in, with Southampton slightly the better team, Jay Rodriguez scored. Southampton went on to dominate the game but could not double their lead before half-time. Southampton maintained their dominance in the second half and were awarded a penalty, which first replays are seen as to be quite harsh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nJay Rodriguez stepped up and even though Stephen Bywater got a hand to the shot, he was unable to prevent Southampton from doubling their lead. Although substitute Jermaine Johnson came close in the final seconds of the game, Sheffield Wednesday went out of the competition losing 2\u20130. This was the first time since December 2009 that the Owls had lost five games consecutively in all competitions. The last game of September came in another away game, this time against recently Premier League relegated side Wolverhampton Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nThe game started with Wednesday on the front foot and arguably should have had a penalty when Michail Antonio was fouled in the box. However, later on in the first half Wolves got into the game and when they got a free-kick on the edge of the area and took it quickly, the ball just went wide of the post. The referee decided he was not ready for the free-kick to be taken and booked Bakary Sako, and asked them to re-take the free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0011-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, September\nThe wall defending the free-kick was clearly not a full ten-yards back from the ball, but this time the referee did not ask the free-kick to be re-taken, and the ball hit the back of the net. Wolves went into the break a goal up. In the second half the game did not produce too many key chances, and the game finished in a 1\u20130 loss for the Owls, their sixth loss in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\n2 October 2012 saw Sheffield Wednesday face Burnley at Turf Moor, with the Owls hoping to bring a stop to their six consecutive defeats. With Wednesday having conceded seventeen goals in eleven games, and Burnley fifteen goals in eleven games, the clash was anticipated to include many goals. After starting the better side, Sheffield Wednesday found themselves behind against the run of play, in-form Charlie Austin scoring on the twenty-second minute for Burnley. Less than a minute later though Chris O'Grady had equalised for the Owls with Michail Antonio assisting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nSeven minutes before the break and Sheffield Wednesday found themselves behind again, Charlie Austin getting his second of the game. Nearly halfway through the second half and Chris O'Grady scored again to make the scores 2\u20132. Wednesday had several very good chances to win the game, but Charlie Austin managed to grab his hat-trick, and the Owls could have been heading for their seven consecutive defeat, but Michail Antonio hit a magnificent twenty-five yard strike less than a minute later, and the game ended in a very entertaining 3\u20133 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nThe following Friday, the day before the home match against Hull City, it was confirmed that Wednesday Academy product Mark Beevers was to join Millwall on an emergency loan deal for 28-days, Beevers has so far made eight appearances this season for the Owls. The day after Mark Beevers' one-month departure, Sheffield Wednesday faced Hull City at home, with the team looking to build on their dramatic draw from mid-week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0012-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nThe first half went by without much action to report, with both teams seemingly to concentrate on their defensive duties, due to the number of goals each team has let in within recent games. The second half saw a decision go against winger Michail Antonio, which could have arguably been given, and therefore ended up being a penalty kick. However, with the game going towards a simple goalless draw, neat work by Hull City saw substitute Aaron McLean's shot creep into the far corner, and give Hull City the one goal victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nThe international break came with Wednesday having lost six of their last seven games. Rhys McCabe was called up to the Scotland U-21 squad, but did not play due to injury. Meanwhile, Nejc Pe\u010dnik was called up to the Slovenia side, but did not come off the bench in either of their games against Cyprus and Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nBack to league football and Sheffield Wednesday came upon their biggest game of the season yet, against local Yorkshire rivals Leeds United at Hillsborough. The highly anticipated game, live on Sky Sports, saw the biggest attendance yet and the Owls hoping to get back to winning ways, and Leeds United looking to at least temporarily jump to third place in the league, with the game being played on a Friday night. The game kicked off with a very lively atmosphere, with both teams starting fired up and giving it their all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nThe first chance fell to the Owls with Jay Bothroyd's long range shot being spilt by ex-Sheffield United goalkeeper Paddy Kenny, and then hitting the bar, before bouncing back into Kenny's hands. Then Sheffield Wednesday should have been given a penalty and maybe even a red card for Leeds United, after a Leeds played handled the ball in the box, and put it out for a corner. The referee missed this and the game continued goalless, until finally just before half-time the break through came.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0014-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nA long throw in by Michail Antonio saw Jay Bothroyd jump highest and head home into the bottom corner. Sheffield Wednesday deservedly went into the break a goal up. The second half started with Leeds United pushing for a second goal, before Wednesday settled back into the game and were searching for a second. Midway through the second half and crowd trouble began in the away end with riot police being forced out to stop Leeds fans entering the Sheffield Wednesday North Stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0014-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nBottles, chairs, coins and advertising boards were thrown in what was seen to be an embarrassment to the game. However, it got worse when another ex-Sheffield United player volleyed home from twenty-five yards for Leeds United, Michael Tonge the goalscorer. And amid the wild celebrations, several away fans entered the pitch, and one assaulted Sheffield Wednesday goalkeeper Chris Kirkland by pushing him in the face, and Chris Kirkland needing treatment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0014-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nIt is being asked how they were able to enter the pitch, but the stewards and police were busy trying to handle fans in the corner from entering the Sheffield Wednesday stand. The game eventually continued but was never as lively, and, although Sheffield Wednesday seemingly deserved all three points, they came away with just the one. The incident or incidents with the Leeds United away support made headline news around the country after the game, and many, including both teams managers Neil Warnock and Dave Jones, calling for bans and fines on the Leeds United away support. The assault on Chris Kirkland was caught live on television, and the culprit less than twenty-four hours later is already close to being caught, meanwhile South Yorkshire Police and the Football Association are investigating the incidents involving fans within the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nAt the beginning of the week, it was confirmed that the Leeds United fan that had assaulted Chris Kirkland had been banned from attending football matches for just five-years and also jailed for sixteen-weeks, this being confirmed just three-days after the incident. After confirming Ross Barkley's stay at the club for at least another month, and capturing ex-Everton young goalkeeper Adam Davies, due to a goalkeeping crisis, Wednesday faced Blackburn Rovers at Ewood Park. A poor start saw Blackburn take the lead with Grant Hanley scoring from close range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nAnd after dominating large parts of the match and Michail Antonio coming particularly close, Wednesday just could not find the equaliser, or even two goals, of which they deserved. Another loss loomed for Sheffield Wednesday, and although Dave Jones has apparently got chairman Milan Mandaric's support, fans are starting to get worried. The end of the last full week of October saw Sheffield Wednesday face the only other team that was lower than themselves in the division \u2013 Ipswich Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nThe game at Portman Road saw the first game for Ipswich Town without Paul Jewell as the manager was sacked earlier on in the week. Unusual compared to the rest of the season so far Sheffield Wednesday had a great start and took the lead after just two-minutes through on-loan youngster Ross Barkley after placing the ball into the net. The Owls continued to be on top for the rest of the half, with Ipswich Town also coming close on a few occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0015-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, October\nThe second half saw Wednesday dominate but not seemingly to take their chances, but they did finally double their lead after a great left-footed volley from Ross Barkley, scoring his second of the game. The Owls continued to remain comfortable and with ten-minutes to go Michail Antonio rounded the goalkeeper and made it 0\u20133. Sheffield Wednesday claimed their first away win of the season, and their first win since the end of August. Also, the clean sheet was the first in the league this season, and it was a win that was inevitably coming after the previous few games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nPeterborough United were the first team to face the Owls in the month of November, with the two sides meeting at Hillsborough. Another big game as Peterborough were on the same number of points as Wednesday, however a place above them and sat just outside the relegation-zone. However, Peterborough United were in-form having won the last four out of six games. The first half saw little to talk about and the only key chances were both from Miguel Llera, who put two free-headers over the bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThe second half started and after just eleven-seconds, the in-form loanee Ross Barkley put the Owls ahead. Sheffield Wednesday seemed to just edge the match after this and could have had two penalties with Michail Antonio going down under challenge in the box, however neither were given. Sheffield Wednesday managed to get a second with Miguel Llera heading home from close range. Although, just three-minutes after this Peterborough pulled a goal back through their top goalscorer George Boyd, and setting up a nerve-racking last ten-minutes. Sheffield Wednesday were able to hang-on though and confirmed their second-consecutive win, and their first home win since beating Fulham in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThe second game of three within six days came against Blackpool at Hillsborough Stadium on 6 November. After Michail Antonio had provided very two clever balls in the box with any touch needed for the ball to go in, Blackpool took the lead after very clever play by Matt Phillips on the left-hand side saw his cut back met by Tom Ince who placed the ball into the net. Wednesday kept plenty of the ball in the second half, but were unable to create any chances, with the only key chance of Miguel Llera's header going high over the bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nBefore this though Michail Antonio was brought down in the box and should have most definitely been given a penalty for the Owls, however the referee decided not to give it, even with the many appeals from players and fans. Blackpool meanwhile hit the bar before doubling their lead due to more clever work on the flank, this time by Tom Ince and his ball into the box was met by Ludovic Sylvestre who tapped the ball into the net. The game finished in a 0\u20132 loss, another very frustrating defeat for the Owls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0017-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThe third game in six days came away to Middlesbrough, live on Sky Sports on a Friday night. With Middlesbrough in good form and looking to at least temporarily go top of the table with a win, they took the lead through Justin Hoyte. Hoyte scored his second goal for Middlesbrough in nearly 150 appearances with a beautiful finish into the far corner of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0017-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nAlthough Middlesbrough looked more likely to score within the first ten-minutes after the goal, Sheffield Wednesday were unlucky to go into the break a goal down after playing better than the opposition for the second part of the first half. Miguel Llera, Michail Antonio, Jay Bothroyd, and Ross Barkley all went close to scoring for Wednesday. The Owls did get what they deserved just three-minutes into the second half with Gary Madine tapping in from close range. However, replays showed that Madine was a good few yards offside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0017-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nAfter this Sheffield Wednesday found more confidence and looked more dangerous attackingly, however a lack of concentration at the back saw Ishmael Miller put Middlesbrough back in front, scoring into the empty net. However, replays also showed that this goal should not have been given due to offside. Then with fifteen-minutes to go Lukas Jutkiewicz finished Wednesday off scoring from a resulting corner. The Owls felt hard done by, due to doing well for majority of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nJust over a week later, the Owls were in action again, this time away to Nottingham Forest. The day had been organised by Sheffield Wednesday fans as 'Semedo Day', after popular midfielder Jos\u00e9 Semedo. The 4,300 away fans at the game dressed up with Semedo masks, and in Portuguese colours, after the players nationality. A very entertaining first half ended goalless, with both teams going close, particularly Gary Madine for Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThe second half was even more entertaining as Jay Bothroyd had his effort cleared off the line, Gary Madine going close on several occasions again, and Michail Antonio firing just over the bar having should have done better after coming close seconds earlier. Nottingham Forest also came close through ex-Sheffield Wednesday forward Billy Sharp and Dexter Blackstock both having good chances. Although the game was very even, Forest did take the lead with a ball into the box finding the head of Owls' defender Miguel Llera who scoring into his own net. Sheffield Wednesday did not create any key cut chances for the last fifteen-minutes of the game, which ended in another harsh loss for Sheffield Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThe beginning of the week after the loss against Nottingham Forest came more bad news for the Owls, as eighteen-year-old loanee and top scorer Ross Barkley was re-called by Everton. Barkley who had impressed while on loan at Wednesday made 13 appearances scoring 4 goals. After Barkley's departure it could mean that manager Dave Jones would look for a replacement to bring on loan, along with the rumours of the manager looking to bring in a forward on loan before the emergency loan deadline on Thursday 22 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThursday 22 November came and within the space of half an hour before midday, it was confirmed that the club had captured two players on loan. The first being left-back/left-winger J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan on loan for a month from Manchester City. The other loan capturing was Mamady Sidib\u00e9, from Stoke City, with the striker also coming on loan for a month. The end of a busy week for Wednesday ended back at Hillsborough Stadium, as the Owls entertained the in-form Leicester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0019-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nNew loan signings Mamady Sidib\u00e9 and J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan were handed starts for their debuts, and the first twenty-minutes of the game was quite evenly contested. However, Leicester City slowly started to take control of the match and deservedly took the lead with four-minutes to go until half-time as Danny Drinkwater volleyed home into the far corner, even though there should have been a foul given in favour of Wednesday within the build-up. In the second half Leicester continued to play in the manner which reflected their near top of the league position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0019-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nAlthough, Sheffield Wednesday gave it a go and restricted Leicester City more, the Owls hardly created a chance. Then on the seventy-sixth minute last season's loanee Ben Marshall cut inside and curled a delightful effort with his left-foot into the far corner to confirm Leicester City's victory. Marshall did not celebrated however, in respect to his former club Sheffield Wednesday. Leicester could have increased their lead even further before the full-time whistle as they had a couple more key chances after they had hit the bar. The game finished in another loss for Wednesday, with some fans losing patience with players and the manager alike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThe last game of November came at home to Watford. The game started brightly and after just three-minutes a mistake from the back by Watford sent Michail Antonio through on goal who slotted coolly past the goalkeeper to put the Owls a goal up. However, quarter of an hour later and a thrown-in was taken and Fernando Forestieri took a shot from near the outside of the area which hit the inside of the post and went into the back of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nLater in the first half, a clever ball over the top saw Jay Bothroyd through one-on-one with the goalkeeper but was brought down by the defender behind him and won a penalty. The player was not sent off however after Jay Bothroyd has just taken a poor touch in which may not have been a clear goal scoring opportunity. Up stepped Chris Lines, in his first start for the club since pre-season, and his soft penalty was saved by Manuel Almunia. At half-time though the score was deservedly even with the score at 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0020-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nThe second half started with Forestieri going close for Watford, and neither team could gain control in the game. Watford did push on however, and after the assistant referee made a poor decision by giving Watford a soft free-kick, the ball was floated into the box and a free-header by Alexandre Geijo found its way into the net. Watford continued to attack and it took a great save from Chris Kirkland after Fernando Forestieri went through on goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0020-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, November\nOn the seventy-fifth minute a mistake by ex-Watford player and Wednesday captain Martin Taylor saw Troy Deeney finish the Owls off with a third goal. Sheffield Wednesday's misery was not over and ex-Sheffield United player Mark Yeates scored to put the game beyond doubt. The final result ending in another loss, this time by a large margin of 1\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nDecember saw the first time in the season for Sheffield Wednesday that they were to play on a Sunday. The game against second in the league (only due to not playing the previous day) Cardiff City was at the Cardiff City Stadium. Ten-minutes before kick-off though it was confirmed who the Owls were to play in the third round of the FA Cup. Sheffield Wednesday were the second-to-last team to be drawn, therefore they were at home, and this was to Milton Keynes Dons, who had only just beaten AFC Wimbledon moments earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nThe game against Cardiff City kicked off, and, although Craig Bellamy went close in the first half, Wednesday also had their chances; however, the game went into the break goalless. In the second half, Gary Madine went agonisingly close, and should have scored, while Michail Antonio also went close. Cardiff City pressurised Wednesday who were defending excellently and Craig Bellamy also had a header which he should have scored from. Cardiff undeservedly scored though after great defending from the Owls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0021-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nAfter the ball bounced around in the box it came to the edge of the box where Craig Conway's shot went into the back of the net. As the minutes ticked on it was not at all a comfortable ride for Cardiff City as Wednesday had attack after attack and goalkeeper Chris Kirkland came close after coming up for a last-minute corner. The game, however, finished in a 1\u20130 loss, even though Sheffield Wednesday arguably did not deserve it and had a lot of positives to take from the game. Meanwhile, Cardiff City went back to the top of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nTwo days before the relegation battle against Bristol City at Hillsborough, it was confirmed that the Owls' academy product Mark Beevers was to join Millwall on a permanent basis. Beevers is on loan at Millwall until January where he will then be signed officially. Beevers, who has always been one of the fan favourites, will leave his home town club after 161 appearances since he made his debut at the age of seventeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nThe relegation clash against Bristol City came on 8 December 2012, with Bristol City sitting a place above the Owls in 22nd place, however both teams had the same number of points. The game started lively with the home fans at Hillsborough urging on the team and with just three-minutes gone a corner by Chris Lines met the free-head of Miguel Llera who guided the ball into the net to put the Owls a goal up. Sheffield Wednesday then continued to pressurise the opposition defence and Chris O'Grady should have scored when putting the ball over the bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0022-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nBristol City then settled into the game and after a key spell from them they were given a penalty as a ball was whipped in the box and Miguel Llera went to kick the ball clear, but unintentionally kicked the man who ran in front of him. Sam Baldock stepped up for Bristol City and scored to put the scores level at 1\u20131. Both teams matched each other for the rest of the half and it remained level at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0022-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nIn the second half and both teams continued to push for the winner and Sheffield Wednesday looked far the more likely for the majority of the second half, with Miguel Llera going close again along with Michail Antonio. However, the break through finally came when a long thrown ball by Chris Kirkland found Jermaine Johnson who dribbled in the middle of the pitch and his shot was saved by the keeper who could not prevent Gary Madine pouncing on the loose ball and scoring to put the Owls 2\u20131 up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0022-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nBut, with just four-minutes to go plus stoppage-time Gary Madine was penalised in his own box for a handball and another penalty was given to Bristol City. Sam Baldock stepped up again and hammered the ball into the centre of the goal to put the score level at 2\u20132. Then just two-minutes later Bristol City were given a light free-kick twenty-five yards from goal, which Albert Adomah curled into the top corner and all of a sudden Bristol City had turned the game around and they were ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0022-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nIn the dying few minutes a long ball forward by Chris Kirkland bounced into the box where a Bristol City defender handled the ball. Miguel Llera and Rodri ran to the referee in appeals of a penalty and Miguel Llera ended up on his knees pleading with the referee. While this was happening, a ball in the box was volleyed into the net by Gary Madine. There was a few minutes confusion while the Wednesday players surrounded the referee in appeals that the goal should count as the referee had not blew his whistle to stop the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0022-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nThe goal was not given though and neither was a penalty. The referee said Miguel Llera had pushed him, while Miguel Llera has since explained that he had not. However, if a push had taken place there should have been a red card instead of a yellow card, and also the goal should still have been given due to the referee not stopping the game. Another loss though came to question how long left would manager Dave Jones have to save his job?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nA week after the loss against relegation rivals Bristol City, Sheffield Wednesday faced another relegation rival, but this time also local rival as they travelled to Barnsley. The eagerly anticipated game was live on Sky Sports at a later kick-off of 17:20. The game started quite evenly with few key chances, however Barnsley's Craig Davies did come the closest. Although, after thirty-five minutes a long ball into the box by Lewis Buxton was not collected by goalkeeper Luke Steele, Chris O'Grady then fired home into the empty net to put the Owls a goal up by half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nThe second half started with Gary Madine's header being the best chance for Wednesday all the second half as Barnsley went on to dominate the game. Craig Davies went close on numerous occasions for Barnsley and Marlon Harewood also volleyed just over the bar. Miguel Llera and David Prutton cleared off the line for Wednesday after a Barnsley free-kick and corner and Chris Kirkland continued to make some great saves. The game finished, and ended seven straight defeats for the Owls who remained second-bottom to the table after Peterborough United's surprise win earlier on in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nThe weekend before Christmas saw the Owls face Charlton Athletic at Hillsborough. Charlton was one of only two teams last season to beat Wednesday at Hillsborough. Charlton Athletic started the better of the two teams and came close after great work by Danny Haynes. However, Sheffield Wednesday slowly progressed into the game and started to be the team on the front foot, and after twenty-minutes a corner by Miguel Llera was cleared to the edge of the box where youngster Rhys McCabe spectacularly volleyed with his left foot into the back of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nSheffield Wednesday remained on top for the majority of the rest of the half, although created little else. Similarly to the first half, the second half started with Charlton Athletic on top, but Wednesday worked themselves into the game and the contest was quite even until the last five-minutes, along with stoppage time, where Charlton tried to push for an equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0024-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nThe Owls remained comfortable at the back though, and scored another in the last minute of stoppage time, when a brilliant burst of pace by loanee J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan saw him sprint past two players and finished from a tight angle to give Sheffield Wednesday a 2\u20130 win. It was Sheffield Wednesday's second-consecutive win and clean sheet, and their first home win since the beginning of November. It also brought them out of the relegation zone for the first time since the middle of November, despite other teams around them winning as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nOn Christmas Eve the loans of J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan and Mamady Sidib\u00e9 were confirmed to be extended until 19 January 2013, and therefore made available for the Boxing Day clash at Bolton Wanderers. Three o'clock on Boxing Day came and the game started quite evenly although David N'Gog did come close before the first goal of the game did come. A great ball whipped into the box by Kieran Lee was headed perfectly home by loanee Mamady Sidib\u00e9, just two days after renewing his loan with the Owls. Kieran Lee then could have doubled the lead before half-time. In the second half and N'Gog came close again, however so did Michail Antonio. Wednesday managed to hold on in the last few minutes to another valuable victory, and the first three-consecutive victories of the season for the Owls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nThe last game of what is seen as a successful 2012 for Sheffield Wednesday, despite being in the bottom four of the league, came away to Yorkshire rivals Huddersfield Town. An early kick-off of 12:30 saw the Owls start the brighter of the two teams, with J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan coming close in the opening stages and then later had appeals of a penalty turned down before being booked for diving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nDavid Prutton also went close in that half, but the main talking point was when the referee appeared to show J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan a second yellow card, but did not send the player off. Huddersfield's manager had words with the fourth official over the confusion, and a red card was not given with the player continuing on in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0026-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, December\nHuddersfield Town settled more comfortably in the game in the second half, and with the game coming to a close Mamady Sidib\u00e9 came close to a winner, before in the dying seconds James Vaughan's shot went inches wide of the post. The scores were level at goalless at full-time, with the result seen as a good point for Sheffield Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nNew Year's Day saw Sheffield Wednesday's first game of 2013 to be played at Hillsborough Stadium, as the Owls faced Burnley. The first half was fairly even although Burnley may have seen to just edge it, with Chris Kirkland being forced to make a string of several good saves. However, wingers J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan and Michail Antonio both did come close for Wednesday. Ex-Owl Keith Treacy came on at half-time for Burnley, having helped Wednesday to promotion last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nTreacy made a huge impact to the game as Burnley started to take control of the game, it was his goal that gave the away team the lead. Keith Treacy was then in the build-up to the second-goal which came from the penalty spot. Another penalty decision going against Sheffield Wednesday saw Ross Wallace convert straight down the middle. Burnley finished the game deserved winners. A day after the loss it was confirmed Jay Bothroyd had returned to his parent club Queens Park Rangers, with Wednesday not wanting to extend the loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0027-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nIn 14 appearances, Bothroyd's only goal came against local rivals Leeds United. As one loanee went back, another loan was extended. Young Owl Liam Palmer was confirmed to have extended his loan with Tranmere Rovers until the end of the season, while he also signed a new contract, keeping him at the club until June 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0027-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAt the end of the week came Sheffield Wednesday's FA Cup campaign start, with the team entering at Round 3. Hillsborough Stadium was the location of the clash against Milton Keynes Dons, and a game with very few chances saw Mamady Sidib\u00e9's header and Michail Antonio's deflected shot being the best chances of the first half. In the second half and MK Dons looked to go onto push for the shock result with ex-Owls Darren Potter and Ryan Lowe linking up well, with the end chance being blocked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0027-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nWith time ticking MK Dons then hit the post, and another Darren Potter effort was excellently saved by Stephen Bywater (whom had earned a rare start). A fairly uninteresting game came to a close with the score locked dead at 0\u20130, with the sides having to meet again in a replay at Milton Keynes. The end of the first week of 2013 saw the draw of the fourth round of the FA Cup. Sheffield Wednesday were the third to last time to be drawn out the hat and found themselves away to either Queens Park Rangers or West Bromwich Albion, but only if the Owls beat Milton Keynes Dons in the replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nSaturday 12 January 2013 saw a late kick-off for Sheffield Wednesday as they faced second in the league Hull City at the KC Stadium, live on Sky Sports. Manager Dave Jones opted to play with no recognised striker and therefore had six midfielder's playing, with one being Giles Coke, who has only played once so far this season, and went on loan and has been injured until today's comeback. The game kicked off and first chance of the game came to Jermaine Johnson, whose shot just outside the area was tipped over the bar by the goalkeeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0028-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nHull City started to take control of the game, but did not have any key chances. However, Hull City defender Abdoulaye Faye went into a tackle very dangerously using two-feet, and although won the ball should have arguably been sent-off. The defender escaped without a card, this decision was the first of many controversial decisions within the game. Then on 24-minutes, a free-kick by Rhys McCabe was met by R\u00e9da Johnson whose effort was poorly saved by Hull City goalkeeper Eldin Jakupovi\u0107 and it rolled into the back of net, giving Wednesday the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0028-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAs Hull City began to pressurise Sheffield Wednesday, a counterattack was suddenly started and Jermaine Johnson's square pass to Michail Antonio had the goal gaping for the 0\u20132 lead. However, Michail Antonio very poorly controlled the ball and the goalkeeper ended up making a comfortable save. The Owls managed to hold onto the lead for half-time. Into the second half and the game began to even out, although Sheffield Wednesday did still look the more dangerous side on the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0028-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nThen another free-kick for Sheffield Wednesday saw Anthony Gardner flick on the ball where Giles Coke just beat the goalkeeper to the ball and Sheffield Wednesday were unexpectedly celebrating a 0\u20132 lead. However, as the camera's concentrated on the celebrations, Hull City were suddenly attacking, the referee had not given the goal. It appears the referee had called for a foul for Giles Coke taking the ball out of the goalkeeper's hands. However, replays show this was most certainly not the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0028-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nSheffield Wednesday looked robbed of a clear victory when a superb ball into the box saw Robert Koren head home and equalise for Hull City. Wednesday did not give up faith, and were rewarded when three-minutes later a corner by Sheffield Wednesday curled into the goalkeeper's hands, although he caught the ball just behind the line and the Owls were leading again. Hull City goalkeeper Jakupovi\u0107 went down in a bundle, in which seemed to be a shame behind the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0028-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nHowever, it soon was obvious that Eldin Jakupovi\u0107 was seriously injured and was taken off in a stretcher with replays showing R\u00e9da Johnson just catching the goalkeeper on the face, but it was not a defence for the goal not to be given. There was seven-minutes stoppage time indicated and in the fifth-minute of stoppages, a clearance saw Michail Antonio just beat one player to the ball and then taking-on another man to be one-on-one, he rounded the substitute goalkeeper and passed the ball into the empty net. Sheffield Wednesday led by 1\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0028-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nIt was not the end of controversy as the referee seemed to take an age to blow his whistle for full-time, in the thirteenth-minute of stoppages, Ahmed Elmohamady for Hull went down easily in the box and a penalty was given. Jay Simpson stepped up and his penalty was saved by Chris Kirkland. An incredible game with plenty to talk about was ended a minute-later with Sheffield Wednesday gaining a surprising but vital victory, taking them three-points clear of the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nThree-days after the great win away to Hull City, Sheffield Wednesday were away to Milton Keynes Dons in the FA Cup Round 3 Replay. Dave Jones opted to make seven-changes to the side from the weekend, which made clear how the league was always the team's priority. The game started in a slow fashion, although Wednesday did look the more likely team to score as it was not until midway through the first half until goalkeeper Stephen Bywater had a touch of the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0029-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAnd although both sides created hardly any chances, it was a foul in the box by Lewis Buxton that gave MK Dons a penalty. Shaun Williams dispatched the ball into the net to give the home side the lead. Seconds later MK Dons should have had another penalty, but it was not given, after Martin Taylor appeared to foul his man in the box. Paul Corry and Nejc Pe\u010dnik came close, but the Owls trailed at half-time by a goal to nil. The second half started much more lively, but chances for both sides were still rare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0029-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nDanny Mayor tested the opposition goalkeeper before the second goal of the match came. With fifteen-minutes to go a free-kick by Dean Bowditch, aiming for players in the box, managed to miss everyone and find its way into the net. Ex-Owl Ryan Lowe had a chance to score a third before the full-time whistle, but it was nt to be. Sheffield Wednesday were knocked out of the 2012\u201313 FA Cup at the Round 3 Replay stage, being knocked out by lower league opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0029-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAlthough, with the many changes the focus was always on the league, with the cup just being a distraction. On 17 January the second departure of the January transfer window was Daniel Jones. The defender made eleven appearances this season, while overall making sixty-two appearances since joining in the summer of 2010. With severe weather conditions of snow affecting the country with many postponed games, Sheffield Wednesday's home game against Wolverhampton Wanderers did manage to beat off the snow and continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0029-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nWednesday were sitting at the top of the form table coming into this game and the first half it was obviously why. The Owls dominated the first half with Michail Antonio coming very close on several occasions, meanwhile Jermaine Johnson also came close on many occasions. Kieran Lee was inches wide with a couple of chances, while R\u00e9da Johnson had his header stopped just on the line by the opposing goalkeeper. Somehow though it remained goalless at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0029-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nInto the second half and Michail Antonio again had some wonderful chances which were not taken, and J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan also missed the back of net with two glorious opportunities. The game finished and Wolves had somehow managed to hang on for the draw. Although near the bottom of the table and points are grateful, with such dominance by Sheffield Wednesday throughout the game, it was seen as two points dropped rather than one point gained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAnother departure came in the last full week of January when it was announced that Chris Lines was to be going on loan to Milton Keynes Dons for the rest of the season. The day before the Charlton Athletic game there was a total of four departures and arrivals at the club. Firstly it was announced that youngster Caolan Lavery would be joining Southend United on loan until the end of the season, Lavery is yet to make his deb\u00fat for Sheffield Wednesday, but has featured twice on the bench in the League Cup games against Fulham and Southampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0030-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAnother youngster was then announced to go out on loan, as forward Matthew Fletcher joined Cambridge United for only a month. Then the first arrival of the January transfer window for Wednesday was announced when Leroy Lita joined on loan until the end of the season from Swansea City. It was a great relief to Sheffield Wednesday to finally get their hands on a proven goal scoring striker. Wide-midfielder Danny Pugh then also joined on loan until the end of the season from fellow Championship side Leeds United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0030-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nMeanwhile, loanee's Mamady Sidib\u00e9 and J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan went back to their respective clubs \u2013 although it was widely known that Dave Jones was trying to re-capture H\u00e9lan, but it was then confirmed that he had joined Watford on loan instead. The game away to Charlton Athletic came as the last game of the first month of the year, and a deb\u00fat was given to new-loanee Danny Pugh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0030-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nThe clash started off fairly quietly and evenly, and the first key chance fell to Sheffield Wednesday, as Danny Pugh's corner found Anthony Gardner completely unmarked at the far post, and after a touch from Michail Antonio the ball was cleared off the line. Then at the other end there was a fantastic chance for Charlton Athletic to take the lead, as ex-Owl Michael Morrison saw his diving header from just three-yards out hit the bar, with goalkeeper Chris Kirkland standing at the other end of the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0030-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nHowever, this chance could arguably have been a penalty as Michael Morrison was having his shirt clearly pulled by the opposing defender. Another chance then fell to Wednesday as the goalkeeper Ben Hamer was unable to catch a long-ball forward by Lewis Buxton and it fell to R\u00e9da Johnson who near enough missed an open net. Into the second half and a counter-attack from a Sheffield Wednesday corner saw a chance by Johnnie Jackson taken, and Charlton had broken the dead-lock to put the home side a goal up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0030-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAfter this Wednesday pressurised for an equaliser, and Michail Antonio, Jermaine Johnson, and substitute deb\u00fatant Leroy Lita all came close. However, through Wednesday's chances, a rare attack for Charlton saw them go on and hit the post. And while it all looked again that the Owls were not going to be able to score despite their chances, a cross from Lewis Buxton with six-minutes to go saw R\u00e9da Johnson's looping header go into the far corner of the net. Even after the equaliser Sheffield Wednesday pushed for a possible winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0030-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nThen with one-minute of normal time to go, Leroy Lita's shot took a large deflection and nestled into the other bottom corner. Lita had scored on his deb\u00fat and given the Owls a vital victory and took them six-points clear of the relegation zone, while also ending Charlton's run of three successive wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAs the transfer deadline approached in January, it was confirmed that Barcelona B loanee Rodri was to return to his parent club by mutual consent after a largely unsuccessful spell at Sheffield Wednesday and failing to settle or adapt to the Championship. Elsewhere, while it was largely believed that J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan had joined Watford on loan, talks between the two parties had broken down and H\u00e9lan did return to Sheffield Wednesday after all. Transfer deadline day eventually came and with many moves happening across the globe, the day was fairly quiet for Sheffield Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, January\nAt 15:55 a departure was confirmed, as forward Chris O'Grady moved to Barnsley on loan until the rest of the season, after seemingly losing his place for the second half of the season. With one forward departing, it was questioned over fans whether another would join the club before the end of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nBrighton & Hove Albion were the visitors at Hillsborough Stadium for the first game in February. Brighton had only lost twice in their last sixteen games, but it was Wednesday who started the brighter of the two teams and got their reward after just five-minutes when a cross from Michail Antonio found loanee Leroy Lita whose effort hit the top corner of the goal to score his second goal in as many appearances for the club. Brighton almost immediately hit back though when a free-kick found Brighton's new signing Leonardo Ulloa whose strike was smartly saved by Chris Kirkland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0032-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nAfter this Brighton & Hove Albion pushed for the equaliser, but a late and vicious challenge near the Brighton box by Ashley Barnes saw him see a straight red card, this putting the game back into Sheffield Wednesday's favour. The resulting free-kick was taken by other new loanee Danny Pugh who managed to score from the tight angle to double the Owls' lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0032-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nInto the second half and Leroy Lita came close before great work by Brighton substitute Craig Mackail-Smith, along with a poor clearance, saw a strike by Andrea Orlandi smash the back of the net to make the score 2\u20131. However, just two-minutes later at the other end of the field, and a clever corner saw Michail Antonio manage to just tap home to give Wednesday their two-goal cushion back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0032-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nThen with fifteen-minutes to go a late challenge by Danny Pugh, which analysts believe the referee to have opted the right punishment of a yellow card, caused disagreements and a scuffle on the touchline between coaching staff of both clubs. A Brighton coaching staff member was sent to the stands, along with Sheffield Wednesday manager Dave Jones. The only notable chance before the game ended was from Giles Coke whose strike was comfortably saved, and the game finished with a thoroughly deserved and pleasing victory for Sheffield Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nThe day before the home game against Derby County, and just after the emergency loan window had re-opened, it was confirmed that Sheffield Wednesday had signed another forward on loan. This was to be England U21 international Connor Wickham from Sunderland. It is rumoured that Wednesday had attempted to bring the player in earlier on in the season, but now Sunderland have brought an extra striker in during the transfer window, meaning it was now possible to sign him. So nine-days into the second month of the year and Sheffield Wednesday faced Derby County at Hillsborough Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0033-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nDerby started the brighter of the two-teams and got their reward after twenty-three minutes as neat passing play down the middle saw Jeff Hendrick through on goal and he slotted the ball comfortably pass Chris Kirkland and into the back of the net. As things were not going well Connor Wickham was introduced with only just over half-an-hour gone to make his debut. Michail Antonio come close with a long-range effort before the break, but it was Derby County who went into half-time a goal up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0033-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nTwo-minutes into the second half and a mistake by a Derby defender saw Michail Antonio given a great opportunity to equalise, however he blasted the ball over the bar. Then just one-minute later a high ball into the Wednesday box saw Miguel Llera foul ex-Sheffield United player Jamie Ward, who then stepped up and put Derby two goals up with a penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0033-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nSheffield Wednesday then started to play as their form suggested and although Leroy Lita hit a volley over the bar, a corner saw Michail Antonio score from close range \u2013 although it was firstly thought that it was Leroy Lita. Then just six-minutes later great work again by Michail Antonio saw him produce an excellent cross which Miguel Llera heading home and the scores were back level. The game was fairly even for the rest of the match although Sheffield Wednesday did continue to create more chances. Similarly to the first game of the season it finished 2\u20132, where Derby County were two-goals up in both matches, but Wednesday managed to come from behind to draw the game level on each occasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nWith Millwall playing Luton Town in the FA Cup, Sheffield Wednesday did not have a fixture on the weekend of 16 February. With some teams in the league that are around the Owls playing, the club dropped down one place in the league to twentieth, two points above the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nAfter no fixture for Sheffield Wednesday at the weekend, the Owls faced Birmingham City] away in the first mid-week league fixture of the year. The game started lively with Marlon King having two opportunities for Birmingham, with one going wide and the other comfortably saved by Kirkland. Birmingham continued to create some half chances, but the best chance of the game at this stage, fell to Wednesday as a corner met by Miguel Llera's head was absolutely brilliantly saved by Jack Butland to keep the scores level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0035-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nInto the second half and Connor Wickham volleyed wide on the turn, while at the other end a cross/shot from Chris Burke saw Nikola \u017digi\u0107 miss a near enough open net from four-yards out as Chris Kirkland dived the other way to save the Burke opportunity. Marlon King tested the keeper again, while \u017digi\u0107 fired a header just wide. At the other end and a free-kick from Wednesday saw Martin Taylor's header hit one of his own players to guide the ball just wide of the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0035-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nThe game ended in a goalless draw with Wednesday moving up another place in the league. The second game of the week then came back at Hillsborough Stadium as Sheffield Wednesday faced Crystal Palace, one of several particularly tough fixtures coming up for the Owls. Last time the two teams met it helped move the clubs their separate ways, with Crystal Palace being bottom and now fourth, and Sheffield Wednesday being second and now nineteenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0035-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nThe last time the two teams met at Hillsborough it was a relegation-'play-off' with either of the two teams possibly being relegated \u2013 it was however Sheffield Wednesday who ended up facing the drop that day. The game kicked off with both sets of fans getting right behind the two teams and it was David Prutton's volley that was the first piece of action, with the ball firing just over the bar. Leroy Lita then had a good header, which was comfortably saved, and left Leroy Lita believing he could have tested the keeper more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0035-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nThe game went into the break goalless after Crystal Palace scaring the Wednesday goal on just a few occasions. Into the second half and Giles Coke came close to scoring an own goal, while Kagisho Dikgacoi's long-range effort went just wide of the post. Yannick Bolasie also went close for Palace, but as Sheffield Wednesday got more and more into the game, they finally got their hard works reward. A usual fantastic cross from Michail Antonio found the head of Leroy Lita, with just nine-minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0035-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nCrystal Palace failed to threaten for the rest of the game and nearly went two-down, as good pressure by Madine saw Leroy Lita through on goal, but a good save by the opposing keeper preventing the scores from doubling. The game finished 1\u20130, a great result for Sheffield Wednesday as they moved five-points clear of the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, February\nThe Crystal Palace game was the last of February and the remaining five-days of the month saw a Milan Mandari\u0107 interview, around two-years after taking over the club, a fans' forum where general questions were asked by fans to manager Dave Jones and chairman Milan Mandari\u0107. It also saw, on 26 February, one year since the club beat Sheffield United at Hillsborough Stadium, where the club then saw Gary Megson sacked as manager and the long unbeaten run to promotion begin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nWith ex-manager Gary Megson being sacked last year at the end of February, it meant manager Dave Jones' first anniversary of being appointed. However, it was not a great anniversary 'off-the-field' as an exclusive article on the front page of the national newspaper The Sun talked about Dave Jones' personal life, and how he had been having an affair with a well-known netball player. This out-break of news through the media came at unfortunate timing as it was a day before the televised clash with Nottingham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0037-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThe fans just hoped that this news 'off-the-field' would not affect the performances 'on-the-field'. So the late game the next day against Nottingham Forest kicked off live on Sky Sports. The game started with quite a few good chances with Dexter Blackstock having a shot off-target for Nottingham Forest, while Connor Wickham's header also came close. Forest captain Danny Collins then had his header go a whisker wide of the post, but looked like the player should have scored. Nottingham Forest started to play some brilliant football, and went on to dominate the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0037-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nDexter Blackstock had a goal disallowed for offside, and then Forest got their reward with some brilliant football and teamwork that saw Rados\u0142aw Majewski slot the ball home into the almost empty net. Nottingham Forest continued to dominate before half-time and Chris Kirkland was forced into making one fine save, before Simon Cox also went close. Somehow the teams went into the break with Sheffield Wednesday only trailing by the one goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0037-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThe second half was found to be more of an even contest, however Nottingham Forest continued to look comfortable on the ball and in defence, limiting Wednesday with just a few half-chances. Leroy Lita's shot for example was comfortably saved and Michail Antonio's left-footed shot went just over the bar. Rados\u0142aw Majewski could have scored again for Forest at the other end of the pitch after fantastic play from a corner. Leroy Lita had another header and shot stopped by the opposition defence, while in the last few minutes Michail Antonio had his long range effort excellently blocked by Blackstock. The game finished in a loss for Sheffield Wednesday \u2013 their first for two-months, as they dropped to four-points adrift of the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nOne-day off exactly a year since Dave Jones took charge in his first full game at Sheffield Wednesday (the 4\u20131 win against Bury), the Owls faced an away game against third in the league Watford \u2013 who were inevitably in good form. However, before this game the Sheffield Wednesday U-21 squad were due to play the Leeds United U-21 squad at Hillsborough, the game was confirmed to have been postponed at around 5 o'clock that afternoon in most extraordinary circumstances, as police had found an unexploded bomb just outside the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nAt 19:45 later that evening Sheffield Wednesday did kick-off against Watford at Vicarage Road. The first ten-minutes of the game started as the whole game was expected to be like, when looking at the league tables, with Watford having plenty of the ball and attacking Sheffield Wednesday consistently. Troy Deeney had his shot go just wide of the post, before the best chance of the game at this point fell to Mat\u011bj Vydra whose effort hit the outside of the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThen, at the other end of the pitch, J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan's troublesome dribbling and pace saw him worry the defence into making a back pass, where Watford goalkeeper Jonathan Bond made a mistake, which led to Michail Antonio giving the Owls the lead, scoring from a tight angle. After the goal Sheffield Wednesday were by far the better team and arguably should have been at least three or four goals up by half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nA great free-kick by Miguel Llera saw Jonathan Bond make a fabulous save right in the top corner of the goal, this save saw a header from Lewis Buxton just cleared-off the line by an opposition defender as Anthony Gardner tried to put the ball home as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nHowever, replays show that Lewis Buxton's header en route to goal was handled by a Watford defender, trying to stop the ball from going into the net, and the ball that was then cleared off the line by another defender had actually crossed the line after all, therefore Sheffield Wednesday should have either been given a penalty and Watford down to ten-men, or Sheffield Wednesday should be two-goals up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nAfter this incident, superb play by J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan once more, saw his volley finely saved by the goalkeeper, and Kieran Lee's effort somehow go wide of the goal, with it looking easier for ball to put into the back of the net. Wednesday went on to have a few half chances before the break, but so did Watford as Chris Kirkland made one fine save. Half-time was called and although a good lead for Sheffield Wednesday, they really should have been leading by more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThe second half started like the first with Watford on top and a corner they had was flicked on at the near post and met by substitute Fernando Forestieri who tapped home the equaliser. The Owls felt really hard done by, and Watford were now the team with the ascendancy and the home crowd right behind them. Watford continued to pressurise and good work by Fernando Forestieri just outside the area saw his shot miss three or four players before somehow finding the back of the net. Watford had turned the game on its head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0007", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nBoth sides had reasonable half-chances before the end of the game, and although Sheffield Wednesday gave it everything for the equaliser they just could not get it. The game finished in a 2\u20131 defeat and Watford moved up to second, while Sheffield Wednesday went just two-points adrift of the relegation zone, with more very tough games coming up \u2013 fifth placed Leicester City were next before heading back home to face top of the league Cardiff City. So the second-game of the week saw the Owls travelling to play Leicester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0008", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nBoth teams started the game lively and it was Leicester who had the first opportunity of the game when a clever volley from David Nugent forced Chris Kirkland into making a good save. Then at the other end of the pitch Michail Antonio managed to beat his man and send a fantastic cross over to the far post where Leroy Lita somehow managed to head the ball over the bar. Ritchie De Laet managed to beat his man later on in the game and forced another great save from Kirkland when he powered a shot towards goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0009", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nIt remained goalless at half-time and Leicester had the first major opportunity in the second half when a cross in the box saw Harry Kane head over the bar, when the player seemingly should have at least got the header on target. At the other end of pitch Lita sent a fine through-ball to Michail Antonio whose one-on-one effort was saved by Kasper Schmeichel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0038-0010", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nAs the game remained very even with equally as good chances falling to both teams it was with twenty-minutes to go when Lewis Buxton sent in a cross, Michail Antonio flicked on and a volley by loanee Connor Wickham gave Sheffield Wednesday a vital lead. As the clock ticked on towards full-time a Leicester City corner saw Andy King's header hit the outside of the post and go wide. Fortunately for the Owls it was the last piece of major action in the game and Sheffield Wednesday gained a vital victory on the road to safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nOnto the weekend of 16 March, Sheffield Wednesday faced top of the league Cardiff City at home, this was the last game of the run where Wednesday faced five of the top six teams in the league, it was also the last game before the international break. The first half only had very few minor incidents, with the only one note worthy of was when Leroy Lita looked like he could have been obstructed in the box and had claims for a penalty turned down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0039-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nAs the game looked to go in as a goalless draw at the break, a corner by Cardiff was punched out by Kirkland and Don Cowie fired a shot towards goal that could not quite be stopped by David Prutton on the line, as the ball trickled into the net. Cardiff City went luckily into the break a goal up. The majority of the second half was similar to the first with only very few minor chances. However, with twenty-minutes in, a free-kick from Cardiff saw Matthew Connolly score from a free-header, somehow giving Cardiff City a 0\u20132 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0039-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nAfter this Sheffield Wednesday had better chances to score as Miguel Llera had two free-kicks saved by the opposition keeper and Leroy Lita had a goal disallowed for offside, while also a shot cleared off line after Anthony Gardner's header could not find the net. The game finished and it was not particularly the result that saddened the fans but the results elsewhere and the league table. All the teams around Sheffield Wednesday (apart from Bristol City as they played Wolves) won, this being Millwall, Huddersfield Town, Barnsley, Peterborough United, Ipswich Town, Birmingham City, and Wolves. This left Sheffield Wednesday just one-point and place above the relegation zone with two massive games coming up, against Barnsley and Bristol City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nAs the 2-week international break was in progress, there was some very bad news for Sheffield Wednesday, as it was confirmed that the groin injury Michail Antonio had picked up against Cardiff City at the weekend, meant that Michail Antonio would be out for the rest of the season. Michail Antonio is well in the lead as the club's top goalscorer and even further ahead with assists this season, as he has nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0040-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThis very bad news came at probably the most pivotal point of the season for Sheffield Wednesday as with just over a month to go before the end of the season the club are just one point and place above the relegation zone, and games such as Barnsley, Bristol City, and Peterborough United all still to come.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThe last few days before the end of March, and the Easter weekend relegation clashes against Barnsley and Bristol City, saw the end of the emergency loan window. Having just lost two-key players of Michail Antonio and Connor Wickham, along with the possibility of Giles Coke being out for a longer amount of time, manager ave Jones made three loan signings over the last two-days of the emergency loan window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0041-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nFirstly, Hull City experienced midfielder Seyi Olofinjana was signed until the end-of-the-season, and then one of Bolton Wanderers' star men, Stuart Holden, signed for one-month having just come back from injury and looking for some game time. Then just a few-minutes later it was confirmed forward Steve Howard had been signed for the rest of the season on loan from bottom of League One side Hartlepool United. The signing of Howard was by far the strangest as the 36-year-old has been unable to even break into the Hartlepool side, who were bottom of the league below Sheffield Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0041-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThe Easter weekend came and the Owls faced local rivals and also a mighty relegation battle against Barnsley, who were in very good form. It was seen as the biggest game of the season so far, with the crowd amounting to the highest attendance of the season so far at Hillsborough. The game started with both teams fired-up and looking for the win. Leroy Lita had an early goal correctly disallowed for offside, while the same then happened to Marlon Harewood at the other end, however he did not hit the target.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0041-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nLita then had a goal mouth scramble eventually cleared away by Barnsley. Both teams had cancelled each other out in the first half and although they were both giving it their all in this clash, they both somehow needed to find more in order to try to get a winner. Into the second half and substitute Reuben Noble-Lazarus had a long-distance shot very well saved by Chris Kirkland. Another substitute by Barnsley, Jason Scotland, then had a chance as his shot was also well saved by Kirkland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0041-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nThen soon after at the other end of the pitch, good link up play between Jermaine Johnson and Lewis Buxton saw a cross into the box met by Gary Madine who tapped home a vital Sheffield Wednesday goal to give them the lead. Madine then had several shots within a few-seconds saved and blocked when there was another goal-mouth scramble in the box. Then with just over ten-minutes to go, plus stoppage time, a free-kick taken by Miguel Llera was launched into the box and R\u00e9da Johnson headed home to give Wednesday a fantastic two-goal lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0041-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, March\nWith six-minutes to go the Owls were then wrongly given a penalty for handball. Gary Madine stepped up but very poorly ended-up putting the ball wide. Three-minutes later and Lewis Buxton failed to stay ten-yards away when Barnsley were given a free-kick just outside the area. Buxton was shown a second yellow-card and was sent-off. There was six-minutes added time and in the second Jacob Mellis volleyed a ball into the far-corner to give Barnsley a chance of gaining something from the game. However, it was not to be and the game ended with a great chance for Barnsley just going wide, however the chance had been given as offside anyway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nJust two-days later and Sheffield Wednesday faced another massive game as they faced another relegation-contender as they played bottom-of-the-league Bristol City away at Ashton Gate. The first chance of the game on Easter Monday came to Bristol City as a great ball into the box was just unable to meet Steve Davies' head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nFive changes were made by the Owls from the side that won against Barnsley, one of which was Steve Howard, who with ten minutes to go before half-time flicked on a ball which Jermaine Johnson just got to before the defender and found himself through on-goal, Jermaine Johnson cleverly went around the goalkeeper and passed the ball into the back of the net to give the Owls a vital lead. After this Steve Davies also found himself through on goal at the other end for Bristol City, he hit the post but the chance had been waved for offside anyway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThe first major chance in the second half was created by Jermaine Johnson who dribbled in and out of several defender's and could not find either the net or Giles Coke at the far post. With fifteen-minutes to go tempers flared as one of the Bristol City defender's dived in the box which made several of the Wednesday players furious, particularly Chris Kirkland, but the referee gave the right decision and the offender was shown a yellow card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nAs time ticked on Bristol City pressed for an equaliser and thought their moment had gone when Albert Adomah volleyed well over the bar having expected to do a lot better. However, as the game went into the second-minute of stoppage time a cross into the box was not caught as Chris Kirkland had planned as he was clattered by an opposition player, the ball landed perfectly for Sam Baldock to volley home for the game to finish 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\n4 points from two games was seen as pretty successful for Sheffield Wednesday, however their other relegation rivals continued to do even better, for example Wolves who were in the relegation-zone at the beginning of Monday, beat Birmingham (who had just beaten fourth-place Crystal Palace 0\u20134, away on Friday). As the last full month of games began the league table saw second-to-bottom (twenty-third) on 45 points, then four teams above this were all on forty-seven (including Sheffield Wednesday). Wolves were one point above this tally, while seventeenth-to-fifteenth were all on fifty points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nPeterborough United and Huddersfield Town, two of three teams below Sheffield Wednesday had not played on the Monday, and were due to play the following day. On 6 April, Sheffield Wednesday faced another massive game as they played Blackburn Rovers at Hillsborough, with Blackburn being on the same number of points as Wednesday and as equally in danger of being relegated. The game started very lively from both teams, as they both attacked from the early stages looking for the vital win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThe first major talking point was only twelve minutes into the game, as Chris Kirkland just beat Jordan Rhodes in the box chasing down a long-ball, however Kirkland only managed to pat it to the opposition player David Dunn, Dunn knocked it round the keeper who then just pulled him back slightly and a penalty was given. Dunn had knocked the ball quite far and therefore only a yellow card was shown, and not a red due to it not being a definite goal scoring opportunity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0007", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nJordan Rhodes, who scored four-goals at his one visit at this ground last season, stepped up and sent Chris Kirkland the wrong way to give Blackburn the lead. Not ten minutes later however, and a stretched Blackburn players foot gave Jermaine Johnson the ball just outside the area, whose trickery went round one player and finished finely into the bottom far corner to bring the scores back level again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0008", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nSheffield Wednesday were easily on top for the rest of the half after this goal, with R\u00e9da Johnson turning brilliantly but blasting over the bar, soon after though and R\u00e9da Johnson went over in the box after his shirt was being pulled, the referee decided in giving another penalty in this game. Sheffield Wednesday had only scored one penalty and missed three so far this season, however the record was improved when Leroy Lita fired the penalty into the roof of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0009", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nLita then had a chance to put the Owls two goals clear by the break but the opposition goalkeeper made a save. Into the second half and Sheffield Wednesday could not get into their stride and Blackburn Rovers had large amounts of play but created very little, although Jordan Rhodes and David Jones did come close. It was not until just under twenty-minutes to go when Blackburn Rovers got what they deserved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0010", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nA corner came back out to Colin Kazim-Richards, who whipped a ball into the box which was met by Scott Dann who headed home to put the scores back level again. After this the game became more even and Sheffield Wednesday got their foot in the game again and when the on-form Jermaine Johnson got the ball at this feet, just six minutes after the Blackburn goal, he dribbled with his pace and unleashed a fiere shot from 25 yards into the far bottom corner to give Sheffield Wednesday another vital lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0042-0011", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nJermaine Johnson then sent J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan through on goal before the end of the match, but H\u00e9lan could not finish the game off. Sheffield Wednesday gained another vital and fantastic victory, and with results elsewhere going their way, they managed to climb three-points clear of the relegation-zone and putting Blackburn in it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nSheffield Wednesday played Millwall just three days after the Blackburn game. The Millwall game was the game that the Owls had in hand over the majority of the other teams in the league, and therefore was seen as probably the most important game of the season so far, as it could see Sheffield Wednesday go six points clear of the relegation-zone and up to fourteenth in the league \u2013 their highest point since early October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nMillwall, who themselves could still possibly get relegated, had the first chance after just two minutes, when several strong 50\u201350 challenges took place within just a few seconds around the middle of the field, eventually saw the ball go out wide where a Millwall player took on two players, crossed into the box and at the far-post Jimmy Abdou tapped into the empty net to give Millwall a crucial early lead. It was the first chance of the game, a chance that was scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nSoon after a bobble on the edge of the area saw Millwall and ex-Sheffield United player Rob Hulse through on goal but Kirkland prevented him from dribbling the ball around him. Although Steve Howard had a shot well saved for Sheffield Wednesday, Millwall remained on top of the game with ex-Owl Mark Beevers coming close.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nWith five minutes to go until half-time Sheffield Wednesday were awarded a free-kick around thirty yards from goal which Miguel Llera stood up and curled the ball into the bottom corner to leave the scores level at half-time, although Wednesday will have been wondering how they had come in at the break on level terms at all. The second half was much similar to the first with Millwall being on top, however the Owls defended much better this time around.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nMillwall still created chances though, Jermaine Easter had two, one of which was a one-on-one that was well saved by Kirkland, and he then later made another great save as a corner lead to Sean St Ledger over-head kicking the ball towards the bottom corner of the net. In-form Jermaine Johnson came on off the bench for the Owls and had a brilliant solo-run that ended with the ball just going inches wide from back of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nIt was Sheffield Wednesday's one of very few chances, and Millwall continued to pressurise and a long-ball forward saw Danny Shittu and Chris Kirkland come together and the ball dropped to a Milwall player whose shot was cleared off the line by Miguel Llera, although the whistle had just been blown for a foul on Kirkland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nAs the clocked ticked down and the game went into the second minute of stoppage time Sheffield Wednesday earned a corner that was whipped towards the near post and it was substitute Chris Maguire who volleyed the ball home from a tight angle to send players, staff and the Owls fans 'bananas'. Somehow Sheffield Wednesday had managed to win the game, and it was a result and goal that would hopefully be looked back on at the end of the season as the game that kept Sheffield Wednesday up in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0007", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nAnother massive game came just a few days later in an early kick-off against Yorkshire rivals Leeds United. The last contest between the two teams saw a fierce game on and off the pitch, with the most significant moment being when a Leeds United fan ran on the pitch and pushed goalkeeper Chris Kirkland in the face. The game at Elland Road saw Leeds's new manager Brian McDermott in charge for the first time, and it started with Rodolph Austin having quite a few attempts although they were all from long distance and went well-wide from the target.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0008", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nBoth teams were cancelling out each other well, and when the ball was punted up field and flicked on by J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan, Jermaine Johnson's pace beat the opposition defender to the ball, and hooked it over the on-rushing keeper to put Wednesday a goal up. Into the beginning of the second half and Leeds started to take control of the game and Steve Morison had a brilliant chance when he went through on goal and when he was just about to pull the trigger R\u00e9da Johnson came in with a fantastic tackle to keep the Owls in the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0009", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nSoon after Sheffield Wednesday were constantly having to make great saves and throwing bodies on the line to prevent Leeds United from scoring, but eventually it was not enough. After all that fantastic defending the equaliser came from a free-header by ex-Owl Luke Varney to put the scores deservedly level. However, Leeds continued to be on top and just a few minutes later another cross by Ross McCormack met another free-header by Luke Varney who took it very well again and Leeds United were then in front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0043-0010", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nAfter this however, Sheffield Wednesday were on top of the game as they pushed for the equaliser. Steve Howard came ever so close when hitting the post, and Leroy Lita's header from just a few yards out somehow did not end up in the back of the net. On another day Sheffield Wednesday would have got something from this game, but today was not the day and the derby finished Leeds United 2\u20131 Sheffield Wednesday. The Owls were now in sixteenth, but just four points above the relegation-zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThe third away game in succession came as Wednesday faced Blackpool on a pitch, after all the poor winter weather, had been described many of times as being a 'beach' rather than a football pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nAs Dave Jones sat in the stand for his last game of the two-game touchline ban, Sheffield Wednesday started by far the strongest team and had two really good chances within just the first five minutes; Jermaine Johnson just nicked the ball off one of the opposition defender's but his shot was well saved by Matt Gilks, then another mistake lead to Giles Coke striking a fierce shot from 25-yards which forced an even better save out of Matt Gilks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThomas Ince went close at the other end of the pitch with a long-distance shot, and then a mistake \u2013 this time by Wednesday \u2013 led by another in quick succession due to the poor pitch condition, saw Ince through one-on-one, but Chris Kirkland pulled out a good save to turn the ball behind for a corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nInto the second half and a corner by Blackpool saw one of their players have the best opportunity of the game when he hit the bar, this then led to a cross and a goal-mouth scramble which was eventually cleared away by the Owls. Apart from this the second half only entertained some half-chances, but both keepers had to ensure they were on their guard. The final whistle blew and it was seen as good point for Sheffield Wednesday as it was an extra point towards safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThe last three o'clock kick-off of the season for Sheffield Wednesday was when the Owls faced Ipswich Town at Hillsborough Stadium, with points for either team being vital in securing Championship safety. It was Ipswich who had the first chance of the game when a corner was whipped in and headed down at the far post to see Danny Pugh fortunately being able to clear off the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nIt was not too long into the game when the first goal did come, and it was poor defending by Sheffield Wednesday when a long throw-in was not headed clear by Miguel Llera, and Jay Tabb easily tapped the ball into the net. Soon after the goal Chris Kirkland made a great save from a volley outside the box. Wednesday's luck soon got worse though as a tactical substitution saw Kieran Lee replaced by Steve Howard, seeing Wednesday's main goal threat, Jermaine Johnson, go out on the wing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nJust three minutes later Jermaine Johnson pulled his hamstring and another sub had to be made, and if Jermaine Johnson had injured himself before the tactical substitution, then Steve Howard would most likely have just replaced him, however instead two subs had been made within half-an-hour, and another injury was added to the list, unfortunately it was Sheffield Wednesday's main goal threat. The Owls did have a great opportunity when Steve Howard had a free header sail over the bar from a corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0007", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nBefore half-time though a goal-mouth scramble saw a Leroy Lita volley saved and then Anthony Gardner's shot cleared off the line by an opposing defender. Ipswich went close with a shot just a few minutes into the second half, but Sheffield Wednesday continued to make chances of their own, such as when Miguel Llera had a great effort in the area well saved by the opposing goalkeeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0008", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nFinally the well deserved equaliser did come, and it was good link up play between Chris Maguire and Lewis Buxton down wing that produced a cross that managed to make its way to the back post where Leroy Lita scored an unstoppable shot into the bottom corner. Miguel Llera then soon had a free-header which he somehow failed to put into the back of the net and then when J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan's pace on the wing produced a cross, Leroy Lita headed home to send Hillsborough wild. However, scenes soon died down as the goal was disallowed for offside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0044-0009", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThe last main piece of action of the game came from another long-throw from Ipswich, which Kirkland failed to punch clear, it was flicked on with the ball heading towards the empty net but luckily Danny Pugh was there yet again to clear off the line. It left the Owls four-points from safety, like several other teams, with just two games to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nIn arguably the biggest game of the season, Sheffield Wednesday travelled to face Peterborough United in a late kick-off in front of the live Sky Sports television camera's. With some of the earlier results going Sheffield Wednesday's way the Owls only needed a point to secure Championship safety. However, if the Owls lost it would mean they would be one point above the relegation zone with one game to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0045-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nWith Wednesday without both star men Michail Antonio and Jermaine Johnson, along with Peterborough having only lost once in eleven games, it was Peterborough who had the majority of possession in the first half. The first chance also fell to Peterborough when Dwight Gayle's out-stretched foot managed to get a shot-off which was only half-saved by Chris Kirkland and the ball continued to roll towards the net, but Miguel Llera was there to clear it away before anybody could get an extra touch to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0045-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nDanny Pugh made a great clearance after a cross, but then at the other end Giles Coke forced a good save out of the opposition goalkeeper to keep the scores level. A free-kick for the Owls then saw a scramble in the box that fell sweetly for J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan to volley, but Peterborough were putting their bodies on the line to block the shot. Soon the best chance of the game so far came when Sheffield Wednesday's corner was whipped to the far post and Anthony Gardner somehow headed wide when it was just a simple tap in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0045-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThat was the last main piece of action of the half and as things stood the Owls were safe. Another half was still to be played though and when Gayle soon had a shot stopped by Miguel Llera the Peterborough players appealed for handball, however it was not given and replays showed it looked more like ball-to-hand. As Peterborough continued to be on top Anthony Gardner failed to clear his lines and ended up conceding a free-kick 25-yards out. Grant McCann stepped up and curled the ball around the wall and it hit the inside of the post...and went in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0045-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nPeterborough celebrated wildly as it could mean a lot in a weeks time when deciding who would get relegated. As Wednesday went in search of an equaliser Peterborough still looked more likely to score as they attacked on the break. And when a dangerous cross was sent in and contact at all by Dwight Gayle would have doubled the score, but fortunately for the Owls he did not. As time ticked on Wednesday did not really threaten the Peterborough goal as they searched for the equaliser that would save their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0045-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nThen a corner with just a few-minutes to go was whipped to the far-post and headed into the centre of the box where several Sheffield Wednesday players were and several Peterborough players attempted to clear off the line, Peterborough did clear the almighty goal mouth scramble and that was the last main piece of action of the game. Peterborough United had pulled off their greatest victory of the season in the attempt to fight off the drop, but it meant Sheffield Wednesday were one-point clear with one game to go and a host of clubs could be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, April\nMillwall, who could also get relegated, played their game in hand against Crystal Palace mid-week which finished goalless. So with one-game to go for all clubs, and with several of them still possible to finish 22nd and 23rd, therefore getting relegated (joining 24th Bristol City), the table looked as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, May\n4 May 2013 fell to the last game of the Championship season, which turned out to be the biggest and most important game of the season for Sheffield Wednesday as by the end of the match at home to Middlesbrough it would be known whether Sheffield Wednesday had secured Championship safety or been relegated to League One. In the biggest attendance of the season at Hillsborough the home players played to match the great atmosphere as they started brilliantly, with Jermaine Johnson firstly dribbling between several players before shooting well wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0047-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, May\nAfter the early first chance the Owls could not stop creating chances as soon after Seyi Olofinjana volleyed over the bar. Wednesday's early attacking pressure soon paid off with just nine-minutes gone. A fantastic long through ball by Miguel Llera saw Steve Howard turn his man and fire an unstoppable shot into the roof of the net, sending Hillsborough wild. Middlesbrough's best chance of the half was a solo effort by Curtis Main but his shot went comfortably wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0047-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, May\nSheffield Wednesday continued to pressurise the Middlesbrough defence though and good play by Owls' Player of the Year Lewis Buxton lead to Jermaine Johnson's distance shot just going wide. As the half hour make just passed a corner whipped in by Lewis Buxton was poked into the net by Leroy Lita to double the Owls' advantage and to step them closer to the win that would secure survival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0047-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, May\nSoon after the second-goal J\u00e9r\u00e9my H\u00e9lan won back the ball from the wide position and put in a clever ball towards Steve Howard to tap into the net, however Howard missed his kick and the ball deflected back off the goalkeeper back into his path, but this time his shot was somehow kept out by a magnificent goal line clearance. Before the half-time whistle was blown Wednesday created another great chance, or at least Danny Pugh did. Pugh took on two-players before firing a shot into the side netting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0047-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, May\nIt could have been at least three or four goals for Sheffield Wednesday by half-time and they should have scored the third early in the second half as a back pass by Middlesbrough went straight to Leroy Lita whose shot was saved well by the opposing goalkeeper. The second half developed into a different game as neither team created many chances but Middlesbrough had the better of the play, a free header from a corner went over the bar and then Grant Leadbitter's long-distance shot went just wide of pulling a goal back for Middlesbrough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0047-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, May\nSheffield Wednesday did have the last main chance of the game though when Leroy Lita's header went just wide, but at first the outcome looked terrifying as Lita collided with another player leading to teammates from both teams urgently going to the attention of Lita and calling for the club doctors and physios immediately. However, luckily Leroy Lita soon got up and although was subbed, walked off looking okay. The final whistle eventually came at the end of five-minutes of stoppages, leading to a pitch invasion in celebration of Sheffield Wednesday confirming their place in next season's Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0047-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Review, May\nElsewhere, Wolverhampton Wanderers joined Bristol City in next season's League One along with Peterborough United after a last-minute conceded goal saw them go down instead of Barnsley. So far Doncaster Rovers and Bournemouth from League One, and Reading and Queens Park Rangers from the Premier League are confirmed be playing Championship football next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Players, Development and 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Players, Player debuts\nPlayers making their first team Sheffield Wednesday d\u00e9but in a fully competitive match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Players, D\u00e9but goals\nPlayers scoring their first goal while playing their first game for Sheffield Wednesday in a competitive fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231030-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Fixtures and results, Football League Championship\nLast updated: 4 May 2013 Source: Note: Championship fixtures not listed due to copyright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 91], "content_span": [92, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231031-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Shirak FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Shirak's 22nd consecutive season in the Armenian Premier League and covers the period from 1 January 2012 to 30 June 2013. Shirak finished the season by winning their fourth Premier League title, whilst they lost to Pyunik in the final of the Armenian Cup. In Europe, Shirak defeated Rudar Pljevlja in the First Qualifying Round of the UEFA Europa League before being knocked out by Bnei Yehuda in the Second Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231032-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Shrewsbury's first season back in League One following promotion from League Two the previous season. They also participated in the FA Cup, the Football League Trophy and the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231032-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Season review\nShrewsbury entered the League Cup at the first round stage, but were knocked out by Leeds United after losing 4\u20130. They entered the Football League Trophy at the second round stage on 9 October 2012, and where beaten at home by Crewe Alexandra 1\u20132. They entered the FA Cup at the second round stage on 3 November away to Hereford United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231032-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Shrewsbury Town 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-00231033-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Siena Saints men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Siena Saints men's basketball team represented Siena College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Saints, led by third year head coach Mitch Buonaguro, played their home games at the Times Union Center and were members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. They finished the season 8\u201324, 4\u201314 in MAAC play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament to Niagara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231033-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Siena Saints men's basketball team\nFollowing the season, head coach Mitch Buonaguro was fired after posting a record of 35\u201359 in three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231034-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Simurq PFC season\nThe Simurq PFC 2012\u201313 season was Simurq PFC's seventh Azerbaijan Premier League season, and it is their first full season under manager Giorgi Chikhradze. They finished the season in 4th place and were knocked out of the Azerbaijan Cup at the Quarterfinals stage by Neftchi Baku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231034-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Simurq PFC 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-00231034-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Simurq PFC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231034-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Simurq PFC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231034-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Simurq PFC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231034-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Simurq PFC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231035-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Skeleton World Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Skeleton World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season for skeleton. The season started on 8 November 2012 in Lake Placid, New York, United States, and ended on 17 February 2013 in Sochi, Russia. The World Cup is organised by the FIBT who also run World Cups and Championships in bobsleigh. This season was sponsored by Viessmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231036-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sloboda U\u017eice season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Sloboda U\u017eice's 3rd consecutive season in the Serbian SuperLiga. Pre -season started on 9 July 2012. Sloboda kicked off the season at home against Spartak ZV on 11 August. The first away game was against BSK Bor\u010da on 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231036-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sloboda U\u017eice season, Fixtures, Serbian SuperLiga\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, 57], "content_span": [58, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231037-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slough Jets season\nDuring the 2012-13 season, the Slough Jets participated in the semi-professional English Premier Ice Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231038-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak 1. Liga season\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovak 1.Liga season was the 20th season of the Slovak 1. Liga, the second level of ice hockey in Slovakia. 12 teams participated in the league, and HC 46 Bardejov won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231039-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovak Cup, also known as Slovnaft Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 44th edition of the competition. 43 clubs participated in the tournament. The winners of the competition, \u0160K Slovan Bratislava, as a 2013\u201314 Slovak First Football League champions qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League. The Slovak Cup runner-up team, M\u0160K \u017dilina, qualified for the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231040-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak Extraliga season\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovak Extraliga season was the 20th season of the Slovak Extraliga, the highest level of ice hockey in Slovakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231040-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Standings\nKey - GP: Games played, W: Wins, OTW/SOW: Overtime/Shootout wins, OTL/SOL: Overtime/Shootout losses, L: Losses, GF: Goals for, GA: Goals against, PTS: Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231040-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak Extraliga 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231040-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThese are the leaders in GAA among goaltenders that have played at least 1200 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231040-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231040-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak Extraliga season, Relegation round\nIn the relegation round the 10th place team MHC Martin played against the 1.Liga champion HC 46 Bardejov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231041-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak First Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovak First Football League (known as the Slovak Corgo\u0148 Liga for sponsorship reasons) is the 20th season of first-tier football league in Slovakia, since its establishment in 1993. This season was started on 14 July 2012 and ended on 26 May 2013. M\u0160K \u017dilina are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231041-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak First Football League, Teams\nA total of 12 teams will contest the league, including 11 sides from the 2011\u201312 season and one promoted from the 2. liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231041-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak First Football League, Teams\nRelegation for DAC Dunajsk\u00e1 Streda to the 2012\u201313 2. Liga was confirmed on 5 May 2012, ending a four-season Corgo\u0148 Liga tenure. The one relegated team will be replaced by Spartak Myjava. Spartak Myjava will make their Corgo\u0148 Liga debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231041-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovak First Football League, Results\nThe schedule consisted of three rounds. The two first rounds consisted of a conventional home and away round-robin schedule. The pairings of the third round were set according to the 2010\u201311 final standings. Every team played each opponent once for a total of 11 games per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231042-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Basketball League\nThe 2012\u201313 Telemach League was the 22nd season of the Premier A Slovenian Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in Slovenia. The first half of the season consisted of 10 teams and a 90-game regular season (18 games for each of the 10 teams) and began on Saturday, 20 October 2012. The second half of the season consisted of two teams from the Adriatic League and the best four teams from first half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231042-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Basketball League, Regular season\nPld \u2013 Played; W \u2013 Won; L \u2013 Lost; PF \u2013 Points for; PA \u2013 Points against; Pts \u2013 Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231042-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Basketball League, Champions standings\nP=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231042-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Basketball League, Relegation league\nP=Matches played, W=Matches won, L=Matches lost, F=Points for, A=Points against, Pts=Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231043-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian First League (men's handball)\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovenian First League was the 22nd season of the 1. A liga, Slovenia's premier handball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231043-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian First League (men's handball), Regular season, Standings\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 74], "content_span": [75, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231043-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian First League (men's handball), Championship play-offs, Standings\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231043-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian First League (men's handball), Championship play-offs, Results\nIn the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231043-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian First League (men's handball), Relegation round\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231044-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Football Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovenian Football Cup was the 22nd 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-00231044-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Football Cup, First round\nMaribor, Celje, Olimpija, Mura 05 and Tolmin joined the competition in the second round (Round of 16).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231044-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Football Cup, Round of 16\nThe draw for the second round (Round of 16) took place in Ljubljana at the headquarters of the Football Association of Slovenia on 3 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231044-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the third round (Quarter-finals) took place in Ljubljana at the headquarters of the Football Association of Slovenia on 8 October 2012. The quarter-final pairs were drawn together by footballer Tim Matav\u017e, with each team playing one match at home and one away. At the time of the draw only seven quarter-finalist were known, as the Round of 16 match between Zavr\u010d and Maribor was rescheduled from 19 September to 31 October. However, the draw was possible because the teams were not seeded. The date of the quarter-finals match between Olimpija Ljubljana and Maribor was announced by the Football Association of Slovenia on 12 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231044-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the fourth round (Semi-finals) took place in Ljubljana at the headquarters of the Football Association of Slovenia on 8 March 2013. The semi-final pairs were drawn together by Slovenia national football team manager Sre\u010dko Katanec, with each team playing one match at home and one away. The semi-final consists of three Styrian clubs (Aluminij Kidri\u010devo, Celje, Maribor) and Triglav Kranj. The 2012\u201313 Cup edition is Maribor's tenth successive season, where they have qualified at least to a semi-final stage of the competition. The 2011\u201312 Slovenian Cup final was played between Celje and Maribor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231045-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Hockey League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovenian Hockey League season was the 22nd season of the Slovenian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Slovenia. Three teams participated in the regular season, which was won by Mladi Jesenice. For the playoffs, the three teams from the regular season were joined by Olimpija, which had participated in the Erste Bank Eishockey Liga during the regular season, and Triglav Kranj and Slavija, which had both played in the Inter-National League during the regular season. Olimpija won the play-off championship by defeating Slavija in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231046-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga was the 22nd edition of the Slovenian PrvaLiga since its establishment in 1991. Also known by the abbreviation 1. SNL, PrvaLiga was contested by the top ten clubs in Slovenia, for the title of national champions. The fixture schedule was released on 26 June 2012. The season began on 14 July 2012 and ended on 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231046-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga\nMaribor were the defending champions, having won their 10th league title the previous season. The season featured nine teams from the 2011\u201312 Slovenian PrvaLiga and one team from the 2011\u201312 Slovenian Second League, Aluminij, who was promoted directly as the winners of the second division, replacing Nafta. This was the first season for Aluminij in the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231046-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga, Teams\nA total of ten teams constested the league, including nine from the 2011\u201312 Slovenian PrvaLiga and one promoted from the 2011\u201312 Slovenian Second League. Winners of the Slovenian second division Aluminij secured direct promotion as champions of the Slovenian Second League. They replaced Nafta Lendava in the top division, who finished at the bottom of the PrvaLiga table, ending their seven-season tenure in the top division. This was the first season for Aluminij in the Slovenian PrvaLiga. Even though Dob won the relegation play-offs against Triglav Kranj, they decided against competing in the top division because of financial reasons; as a result, Triglav was not relegated and remained in the PrvaLiga for the 2012\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231046-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga, Teams, Stadiums and locations\n1Seating capacity only. Some stadiums (e.g. Aluminij, Mura 05, Rudar) also have standing areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231046-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga, Results\nEvery team plays four times against their opponents, twice at home and twice on the road, for a total of 36 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231047-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Second League\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovenian Second League season began on 4 August 2012 and ended on 25 May 2013. Each team played a total of 27 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231047-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Second League, League table, Promotion play-offs\nDob, who finished in second place in the league, should play against Mura 05, who finished in ninth place in the PrvaLiga. However, Mura 05 did not get the competition licence for the 2013\u201314 season and was directly relegated, while Dob declined promotion, so the third placed Krka got promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231048-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Third League\nThe season began in August 2012 and ended in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231049-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Women's Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Slovenian Women's Cup, held from August 12, 2012 to May 29, 2013, was the 14th edition of the Slovenian women's football national cup. It was contested by the nine teams in the 2012\u201313 Slovenian top league and \u017dNK Izola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231049-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Slovenian Women's Cup\nThe defending champions \u017dNK Pomurje again defeated \u017dNK Rudar \u0160kale in the final, held in Koper, to win its fourth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231050-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Alabama Jaguars basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 South Alabama Jaguars basketball team represented the University of South Alabama during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaguars were led by head coach Ronnie Arrow, in his sixth year of his second stint as head coach and 13th year overall, for the first 10 games until his abrupt resignation. They were led by interim head coach Jeff Price the remainder of the season. They played their home games at the Mitchell Center, and were members of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 17\u201313, 14\u20136 in Sun Belt play to finish in second place in the East Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Tournament to WKU. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to Tulane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231051-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball team represent the University of South Carolina in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team's head coach is Frank Martin, who is in his first season at South Carolina. The team plays their home games at the Colonial Life Arena in Columbia, South Carolina as a member of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231051-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Gamecocks posted a record of 10\u201321 (2-14 SEC) in the 2011\u201312 season and finished twelfth in the SEC standings. The Gamecocks at the conclusion of the season terminated head coach Darrin Horn after his fourth season as coach. In his place the Gamecocks hired Frank Martin, who had coached the previous five seasons at Kansas State. While at Kansas State, Martin guided the Wildcats to four NCAA Tournament berths including an Elite Eight appearance in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 71], "content_span": [72, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231052-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Carolina State Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 South Carolina State Bulldogs basketball team represented South Carolina State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by sixth year head coach Tim Carter, played their home games at the SHM Memorial Center and were members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Murray Garvin became head coach when head coach Tim Carter resigned midway through the 2012-2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231052-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Carolina State Bulldogs basketball team\nThe team finished the season 6\u201324, 2\u201314 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for twelfth place. They lost in the first round of the MEAC Tournament to Morgan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season\nSouth China AA will seek to win their first trophy for one season after Kitchee won the Hong Kong First Division League, the Hong Kong FA Cup and Hong Kong League Cup while Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei defeated them to win the Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield last season. South China are competing in the First Division League, Senior Shield and FA Cup this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, Pre-season\nAfter an unsuccessful season coached by Slovak J\u00e1n Kocian, South China will like to take revenge from Kitchee, who claimed an historic treble as they won the First Division League, the League Cup and the FA Cup last season. Unlike the previous season, chairman Steven Lo did not say too much about the changes of the team. He even stopped writing blog articles after the team finished their last league game until 9 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, Pre-season\nOn 9 July 2012, chairman Steven Lo published his first blog articles for the new season. He published the new first team squad and the in-and-out player changes. He also appointed Liu Chun Fai as the new head coach, and allowed former assistant coaches Chan Chi Hong and Chan Ho Yin to leave the club. The team also started having training on the same day. However, public media are not allowed to go into the training court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, Pre-season\nSouth China started having public training on 17 July 2012. Chairman Steven Lo announced that the team would go to Guangdong for training camp. The team started the training camp on 23 July 2012. However, there are no news about the team in training camp and the players did not say anything on the social networking website, until the team published a photo, showing the players watching a football match in Guangdong. Soon after, chairman Steven Lo wrote an article on his blog about the training camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, Pre-season\nThe team will play total of 6 matches with Guangdong Sunray Cave, which Hong Kong and former South China players Leung Chun Pong and Chan Siu Ki is playing in, during the training camp. By the day that Steven Lo published the blog article, the team had a great result as they won 3 matches and tied once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, Pre-season\nWhile the team was having training camp in mainland China, chairman Steven Lo introduced a new player. defender Sean Tse joined the club from English Premier League club Manchester City for an undisclosed fee. Since he is holding a Hong Kong ID card, he will not be registered and counted as a foreign player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, Pre-season\nThey got their first win in recent 4 pre-season matches on 22 August 2012. Itaparica and Au Yeung Yiu Chung scored once while center defender Joel Bertoti Padilha netted twice, as the club defeated Sun Pegasus 4\u20130 at Tsing Yi Northeast park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, September\nSouth China began the new season at their home ground Hong Kong Stadium, playing against J. League Division 2 club Yokohama F.C. 's satellite team Yokohama FC Hong Kong on 2 September 2012. Tsuyoshi Yoshitake scored for Yokohama FC Hong Kong at the beginning of the game, but goals from Dhiego de Souza Martins, Itaparica, Tic\u00e3o and Lee Hong Lim secured the win for the club, although Lee Ka Ho of Yokohama FC Hong Kong scored at the very last minute. Just a week later, South China visited Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei at Mong Kok Stadium. Defender Lee Chi Ho and Brazilian forward Leandro Rodrigues goals was not enough to see off the defending champions of Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield, as Mamadou Barry and Cheung Kwok Ming equalised the game for Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei. The match ended as a 2\u20132 tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, September\nThey went back to their home against Citizen on 19 September 2012. Lee Chi Ho scored his second goal of the season but Festus Baise equalised 7 minutes later. Winning goal from Itaparica helped the team to win over 2\u20131. As they start playing the Senior Challenge Shield from the quarterfinals, they had a free weekend, having more time to prepare for the big match against Kitchee a week later at home. Having won the First Division League in the past 2 seasons, Kitchee had achieved a great result against South China in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, September\nBoth team struggled to make goalscoring chances in the first half, but the second half was totally a different game. Jonathan Carril's 6-yard strike should have opened the deadlock for Kitchee but his shot hit the bar. Dhiego de Souza Martins scored the winning goal for South China in the stoppage time, thanked a lovely cross from Jack Sealy. This goal also helped the team to climb at the top of the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, October\nHead coach Liu Chun Fai made two changes to his starting XI for the visit of Wofoo Tai Po in a league match on 7 October 2012. Au Yeung Yiu Chung and Cheng Lai Hin made their first starts of the season. Lee Hong Lim scored two headers while Au Yeung Yiu Chung and Itaparica scored two goals and one goal respectively, which helped the team to stay at the top of the league for another week. This was also the second league clean sheet of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, October\nDue to the FIFA international match period, South China did not feature any matches for two weeks. Moreover, a number of players was called up for the international friendly match between Hong Kong and Malaysia. Yapp Hung Fai, Lee Chi Ho, Bai He, Lee Hong Lim and Au Yeung Yiu Chung had played in the friendly match held at Mong Kok Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, October\nBack to the league after international match period, South China welcomed Southern, which was at the bottom of the league table before the match, at home. Southern had gained 2 points in last two matches, after going behind in both matches. Although South China dominated the possession and the attacks, they could not manage to score a goal due to the solid defence of Southern. The club dropped two points and dropped a place to second in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, October\nSouth China ended October at the second place of the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, November\nSouth China began November with an away match against Biu Chun Rangers at Mong Kok Stadium. Thank to goals from Mauro, Dhiego Martins and Chan Wai Ho respectively, they claimed the 3\u20131 victory on 4 November. Despite winning the match, South China remained at the second place, behind Kitchee. They reclaimed the first place with a tough win at home against Tuen Mun on 11 November, thank to Michael Luk's and Itaparica's goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, November\nSouth China faced rivalry club Kitchee in the Senior Challenge Shield at Hong Kong Stadium on 17 November. Midfielder Itaparica's late goal helped the team record an important victory, with Kitchee's defender Liu Quankun was sent off in the stoppage time of the second half. They soon played against each other again one week later on 25 November at Kitchee's home ground Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground. South China successfully kept a clean sheet and eliminated their rival by 1\u20130 in aggregate, reaching the semi-finals stage of the shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, December\nSouth China started the new month with a Senior Shield semi-finals 1st leg match against 2011 champions Citizen at home Hong Kong Stadium on 15 December 2013. They suffered their first defeat of the season as they lost 2\u20133 to Citizen. Mauro's goal in the first half help them take the lead into changing room. However, Man Pei Tak was sent off on the 67th minute and Citizen's Campion, Paulinho and Festus scored three goals in 11 minutes. Lee Wai Lim scored a goal in the stoppage time, making a narrower lead for them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, December\nBack into the league, they faced Sun Pegasus at Yuen Long Stadium a week later on 22 December. Goals from Kwok Kin Pong, Cheng Lai Hin and Lee Wai Lim, all in the second half, helped secure the victory for them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, December\n4 days later on 26 December, South China travelled to Mong Kok Stadium and faced Citizen for the FA Cup first round 1st leg match. An easy win by 2\u20130 thank to Dhiego Martins and Au Yeung Yiu Chung in the second half, as well as the second red card from Chiu Chun Kit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, January\nSouth China travelled to Mong Kok Stadium and faced Citizen for the Senior Shield semi-finals 2nd leg, their first game in 2013. Although taking the advantage throughout the game, they failed to score and was eliminated by Citizen in aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, January\nA week later on 13 January, South China hosted Citizen at home Hong Kong Stadium for the FA Cup first round 2nd leg match. They scored five goals in the match, with Au Yeung Yiu Chung scoring twice and Alessandro Celin, Michael Luk and Mauro scoring once. They defeated Citizen by 5\u20131, conceding one goal from Sandro's penalty kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, January\nBack into the league, South China faced Wofoo Tai Po at Hong Kong Stadium on 18 January. More or less the same as last week, they defeated Wofoo Tai Po 5\u20131, securing themselves in the first place of the league table. A week later on 26 January, they overcame Biu Chun Rangers from 1 goals down and scored 6 goals later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, February\nSouth China started a new month and hosted a league match against Sun Pegasus at Hong Kong Stadium on 2 February. Jaimes McKee converted a penalty kick on the 10th minute and leading South China for almost all the game. A controversial goal from Dhiego Martins in the stoppage time help South China avoid losing all three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Review, February\nTwo weeks later on 17 February, South China faced Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei for the FA Cup quarter-finals 1st leg match at Hong Kong Stadium. Goals from Au Yeung Yiu Chung, Tic\u00e3o and Itaparica helped secure a 3\u20131 victory for them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Players, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Players, First team, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Stats, Overall Stats\nPlayers Used: South China has used a total of 27 different players in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Stats, Captains\nLast updated: 4 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Matches, Competitive, First Division League\nRemarks:1 South China's home matches against Biu Chun Rangers was rescheduled and were played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground Hong Kong Stadium. 2 South China's away match against Yokohama FC Hong Kong was played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of Siu Sai Wan Sports Ground. 3 The match was abandoned after 28 minutes due to adverse weather and bad pitch conditions. 4 The replay of week 15 match against Yokohama FC Hong Kong was scheduled to be played at Siu Sai Wan Sports Ground on 4 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231053-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South China AA season, Matches, Competitive, First Division League\n5 Since the 3,500-seated main stand was all full, the 1,500 temporary stand was opened and therefore the capacity of Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground was 5,000 in the home match against South China. 6 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231054-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team represented the University of South Dakota during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Coyotes, led by 25th year head coach Dave Boots, played their home games at the DakotaDome and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 10\u201320, 5\u201311 in The Summit League play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of The Summit League Tournament to Western Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231055-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Dakota State Jackrabbits men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 South Dakota State Jackrabbits men's basketball team represented South Dakota State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jackrabbits, led by 18th year head coach Scott Nagy, played their home games at Frost Arena and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 25\u201310, 13\u20133 in The Summit League play to finish in a tie for the regular season conference championship with Western Illinois. They were champions of The Summit League Tournament, winning the championship game over North Dakota State, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team represented the University of South Florida Bulls during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was the 42nd season of basketball for USF and its 8th season as a member of the Big East Conference. The team was coached by Stan Heath in his sixth year at the school. USF played its home games at the newly renovated USF Sun Dome. They finished the season 12\u201319, 3\u201315 in Big East play to finish in a tie for 13th place. They lost in the first round of the Big East Tournament to Seton Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team\nThis was the Bulls' final season in the Big East Conference, as they joined the American Athletic Conference the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Off season\nAfter completing massive renovations to the USF Sun Dome, the Bulls will return to their home venue after a year away. The opening game was scheduled to be on November 10 against rival UCF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Off season\nUSF was selected to play in the Big East-SEC Challenge and will host Georgia on November 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Off season\nAt Big East Media day, USF was selected to finish in 8th place in the Big East Preseason Coaches' Poll, their highest selection since joining the Big East in 2005. Sophomore point guard, Anthony Collins was also awarded at Big East Media Day, being selected to the Preseason All-Big East Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Season Highlights\nUSF notched its first ever win in the SEC-Big East Challenge with a home victory over Georgia on November 30. That victory helped the Big East Conference to a 9-3 victory over the SEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Season Highlights\nA number of USF players received honors during the season for their performance on the court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Season Highlights\nAnthony Collins was honored by the Big East by being named to the Big East Honor Roll on December 2. On December 20, Collins was nominated as a candidate for the Bob Cousy Award, one of 85 nominees for the best collegiate Point Guard in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Season Highlights\nVictor Rudd picked up a pair of honors on December 23, being named the Big East Player of the Week and being named the Oscar Robertson National Player of the Week by the United States Basketball Writers Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Season Highlights\nThe Bulls finished the regular season with a record of 12-18, 3-15 in conference play. USF earned the #13 seed in the 2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, where they were eliminated in the first round with a 42-46 loss in overtime to Seton Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Season Highlights\nUSF finished the season with an overall record of 12-19 and were unable to qualify for a post season tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231056-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Florida Bulls men's basketball team, Season Highlights\nThis marked the end of USF's membership in the Big East before moving to the American Athletic Conference. The Bulls finished their run in the Big East with an overall record of 41-107 (.277).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season\nThe 2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season was a below average tropical cyclone season, with five tropical cyclones occurring within the basin between 160\u00b0E and 120\u00b0W. The season officially ran from November 1, 2012, to April 30, 2013, however the last tropical disturbance was last noted on May 1, as it moved into the subtropics. During the season, tropical cyclones were officially monitored by the Fiji Meteorological Service (FMS), Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) and New Zealand's MetService.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season\nThe United States Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) and other national meteorological services including M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France and NOAA also monitored the basin during the season. During the season there were 22 significant tropical disturbances assigned a number and a F suffix by the FMS's Regional Specialized Meteorological Center in Nadi, Fiji (RSMC Nadi), including Severe Tropical Cyclone Sandra which moved into the basin from the Australian region on March 9. The BoM, MetService and RSMC Nadi all estimated sustained wind speeds over a period of 10-minutes and used the Australian tropical cyclone intensity scale, while the JTWC estimated sustained winds over a 1-minute period, which are subsequently compared to the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nAhead of the cyclone season, RSMC Nadi, TCWC Wellington, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), the New Zealand National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) and various other Pacific Meteorological services, all contributed towards the Island Climate Update tropical cyclone outlook that was released during October 2012. The outlook took into account the ENSO neutral conditions and near normal sea surface temperature anomalies that had been observed across the Pacific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nAs a result, the outlook called for a near average number of tropical cyclones for the 2012\u201313 season, with nine to twelve named tropical cyclones predicted to occur between 135\u00b0E and 120\u00b0W compared to an average of 10. At least two of the tropical cyclones were expected to become category 3 severe tropical cyclones, while one might intensify into a category 4 severe tropical cyclone. The outlook also noted within past analogues, category 5 severe tropical cyclones had not been prominent for ENSO neutral seasons, but the most recent analogue suggested that this type of event was possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nIn addition to contributing towards the outlook, RSMC Nadi and the BoM issued their own seasonal forecasts for the South Pacific region. The BoM issued 3 seasonal forecasts for the South Pacific region between 142.5\u00b0E and 120\u00b0W, one for the Western Southern Pacific region between 142.5\u00b0E and 165\u00b0E and one for the Eastern Southern Pacific region between 165\u00b0E and 120\u00b0W. They noted that the current neutral ENSO conditions would historically suggest the South Pacific region as a whole would experience near average tropical cyclone activity during the coming season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nHowever, because of the warmer than average sea surface temperatures that were experienced in the central equatorial Pacific between July\u00a0\u2014 September 2012, the western Southern Pacific had a 65% chance for average to below average tropical cyclone activity. For the Eastern part of the region, the BoM predicted that it had a 55% chance of above average tropical cyclones, while for the overall region, they predicted that the region would experience a near average amount of tropical cyclones with a 53% chance of having an above average number of tropical cyclones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0002-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts\nWithin their outlook RSMC Nadi predicted that between seven and ten tropical cyclones, would occur within the basin compared to an average of around 7.4 cyclones. At least four of the tropical cyclones were expected to become category 3 severe tropical cyclones, while two-three might intensify into a category 4 or 5 severe tropical cyclones. They also reported that the tropical cyclone genesis trough was expected to be located near the International Date Line. This was based on the ENSO Neutral conditions, and the existence of the warm pool of sea surface and sub surface temperature anomalies near the dateline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts, Risk forecasts\nBoth the Island Climate Update and RSMC Nadi's tropical cyclone outlooks assessed the risk of a tropical cyclone affecting a certain island or territory. As the tropical cyclone genesis trough of low pressure was expected to be located near the Dateline, normal or above normal activity was expected for areas near the dateline. The Island Climate Update Outlook predicted that most of the countries to the west of the International Date Line, including Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia Tonga and Fiji were expected to experience near normal or slightly above normal activity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts, Risk forecasts\nAt least one or more severe tropical cyclones were expected to occur anywhere across the southwest Pacific during the season. RSMC Nadi's outlook predicted that New Caledonia, Southern Tonga, Tokelau, Tuvalu, Solomon Islands, Fiji and Vanuatu had an average risk of being affected by a tropical cyclone. Wallis and Futuna, Samoa, Northern Tonga, Niue, Cook Islands and French Polynesia were predicted to face an above average chance of being affected by a tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal forecasts, Risk forecasts\nRSMC Nadi also predicted that there was a potential risk in the chances of severe tropical cyclones, affecting the region this year when compared to the previous season. There was a high chance of Tokelau being affected by a tropical cyclone while there was a moderate to high risk for severe tropical cyclones to affect New Caledonia, the Cook Islands, the Samoan Islands and the Solomon Islands. Wallis and Futuna, Tuvalu, Niue and Vanuatu were predicted to have a moderate risk while Fiji and Tonga were thought to have a low to moderate risk of being impacted by a severe tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nThe first tropical disturbance of the season developed on November 6, to the southwest of Suva, Fiji which moved towards the southeast over the next day before it was last noted during the next day as it moved out of the tropics. Tropical Disturbance 02F subsequently developed on November 18 to the northeast of Port Vila, Vanuatu and over the next few days slowly moved to the west-southwest while gradually developing further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nThe system almost developed into a weak tropical cyclone as it moved along the Vanuatu Islands causing some locally heavy rain, minor damage and flash flooding, before it was last noted November 24 as it moved out of RSMC Nadi's area of responsibility. After 02F left the tropics, the basin remained quiet until early December when the Australian monsoon pushed eastwards along the South Pacific convergence zone, and a Madden\u2013Julian oscillation caused an increase in tropical cyclone activity. On December 9, RSMC Nadi started to monitor the precursor systems to Tropical Depression 03F and Severe Tropical Cyclone Evan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 02F\nTropical Disturbance 02F developed within a trough of low pressure to the north-east of the Santa Cruz Islands during November 18. Over the next few days the system moved slowly and gradually developed further in an area of low vertical wind shear and was declared a tropical depression during November 20. The system subsequently turned towards the south-southeast and impacted Vanuatu, before it moved into an area of unfavourable conditions for further development, including high vertical wind shear and lower sea surface temperatures during November 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 02F\nAs a result, convection surrounding the system significantly decreased and detached from the systems low level circulation center. The system was subsequently last noted by the FMS during November 24, as it approached the subtropics as a former tropical depression. There was no damage recorded when the depression impacted Vanuatu between November 20\u201322. A rainfall total of 91\u00a0mm (3.6\u00a0in) was recorded at the Whitegrass Observation Station on Tanna Island during November 21, while a total of 108\u00a0mm (4.3\u00a0in) was recorded on Aneityum Island during November 22. The trough of low pressure associated with 02F, brought strong winds over Western and Southern parts of Fiji during November 22, with Ono-i-lau recording the highest sustained winds of 50\u00a0km/h (31\u00a0mph) and gusts of up to 77\u00a0km/h (48\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 03F\nDuring December 9, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Depression 03F had developed in an area of high vertical windshear, about 600\u00a0km (375\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Avarua on the Cook Island of Rarotonga. It was classified as a Subtropical system by the SSHWS as it reached peak intensity on December 13 but failed to be a tropical cyclone. 03F then dissipated on December 17 near a subtropical ridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Evan\nOn December 9, RSMC Nadi started to monitor a weak tropical depression, that had developed within the South Pacific convergence zone, about 700\u00a0km (435\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Suva, Fiji. Over the next two days, the depression gradually developed further in an area of low vertical windshear and favourable sea surface temperatures, as it was steered eastwards by an upper level ridge of high pressure. During December 11, the JTWC started to issue warnings and designated the system as Tropical Cyclone 04P, after 1-minute sustained winds had become equivalent to a tropical storm. RSMC Nadi then reported early the next day that the system had become a category one tropical cyclone and named it Evan, while it was located about 410\u00a0km (255\u00a0mi) to the west of Pago Pago on the American Samoan island of Tutuila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Evan\nThe cyclone struck Samoa on December 13 with category 2 strength winds of more than 110\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph), causing widespread damage in the capital, Apia. Most of the roads out of Apia have reportedly been cut off by floodwaters. The system is expected to head south towards Fiji. On December 13, Tropical Cyclone Evan battered Samoa and American Samoa with wind gusts up to 175\u00a0km/h (110\u00a0mph), before roaring over Fiji as a Category 4 storm on December 17, with winds reaching up to 230\u00a0km/h (145\u00a0mph). It then weakened to a Tropical Depression on October 19 as its remnants became exposed. Its remnants continued to move southerly direction which gave heavy rains and strong winds to New Zealand on December 21 and 22 and fully dissipated on late on December 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Evan\nEvan killed at least 14 people on Samoa and left behind severe damage. The US Ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa David Huebner confirmed the United States had provided NZ$ 60,000 to the Samoan Red Cross for relief operations. New Zealand authorities sent NZ$ 50,000 on December 15, as well as the P-3 Orion plane to search for the missing fishermen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Evan\nTwo days later the New Zealand Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully announced an additional NZ$ 550,000 was to be made available to the Samoan government, as well as the Samoan Red Cross and any agencies on the ground that might need it. Five additional New Zealand Red Cross workers were also sent to support local efforts. As the legislators prepared to receive initial assessments of the economic damage wrecked by Evan, the bill was expected to be at least NZ$ 200,000,000, and possibly rise as high as 300 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nOn December 26, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 05F had developed within an area of low to moderate vertical windshear about 1075\u00a0km (670\u00a0mi) to the north of Port Vila, Vanuatu. During that day as the system moved towards the west, convection surrounding the centre and the general organization of the system increased, before RSMC Nadi reported that the system had developed into a tropical depression. During December 27, the depression started to move towards the southwest and the southern Solomon Islands, as convection surrounding the centre and the general organization of the system continued to increase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nThe system then passed near the Southern Solomon Islands early the next day, before the JTWC designated the depression as Tropical Cyclone 06P and initiated advisories on it as the system had become equivalent to a tropical storm. Later that day RSMC Nadi reported that the depression had become a category one tropical cyclone and named it Freda, as it continued to move towards the southwest and passed over Rennell Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nDuring December 29, Freda continued to move towards the south-southwest, crossed 160\u00b0E and briefly moved into the Australian region, before it started to move towards the south-southeast along the western edge of the subtropical ridge of high pressure and moved back into the South Pacific basin. During that day the system developed an 20\u00a0km (10\u00a0mi) wide eye while significantly intensifying further, with RSMC Nadi reporting by 1800\u00a0UTC that Freda had become a category 3 severe tropical cyclone with 10-minute sustained windspeeds of 150\u00a0km/h (95\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nDuring December 30, Freda continued to intensify further, before RSMC Nadi reported that Freda had peaked as a category 4 severe tropical cyclone with 10-minute sustained windspeeds of 185\u00a0km/h (115\u00a0mph). The JTWC subsequently followed suit and reported that Freda had peaked with 1-minute sustained windspeeds of 205\u00a0km/h (125\u00a0mph) which made it equivalent to a category 3 hurricane on the SSHS. After it had peaked, Freda started to quickly weaken as it continued to move towards the south-southeast, as vertical windshear over the system increased and caused convection over Freda's northern semicircle to gradually wear away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nBy 0000\u00a0UTC on January 1, the JTWC reported that Freda had become equivalent to a category one hurricane, while RSMC Nadi had reported that the system had weakened into a category 2 tropical cyclone. Throughout that day, Freda continued to weaken before at 1800\u00a0UTC after deep convection had become displaced to the east of the low level circulation center, RSMC Nadi reported that the cyclone had weakened into a tropical depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nDuring the next day the JTWC issued their final advisory on the system after the low level circulation center had become fully exposed before the remnant tropical depression crossed the northern part of New Caledonia's Grande Terre Island. After crossing New Caledonia's biggest island, Freda started to move towards the southeast between Grande Terre and the Loyalty Islands, while the JTWC reported that Freda had become a subtropical cyclone, as it was positioned under a strong subtropical westerly flow. The remnant depression was subsequently last noted during January 4, as it dissipated about 630\u00a0km (390\u00a0mi) to the southwest of Nadi, Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nAs of December 29, the storm has hit the Solomon Islands with strong winds and heavy rain. The cyclone was full force on Rennell Island and the country's major island of Makira, which so far was the hardest hit. Winds of up to 130 kilometres per hour were expected in Rennell and Bellona Islands. Freda is expected to affect the country until early Monday morning. On December 30, New Caledonia was being warned to prepare for the arrival of Freda on January 2. The category four system was weakening as it headed south-south east at about 13 kilometres per hour. On December 30, Freda moved across the southern Solomon Islands. As Cyclone Freda weakened, it struck New Caledonia as a tropical storm at about 0000 UTC on January 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Freda\nAt the height of the storm one man drowned in New Caledonia, while another person was left missing after attempting to cross a swollen river while around 3200 people were without power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 08F\nOn January 9, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 08F had developed about 270\u00a0km (170\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Wallis Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Garry\nOn January 14, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 09F had developed about 615\u00a0km (380\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Honiara on the Solomon Island of Guadalcanal. Tropical Cyclone Garry was forecast to intensify as a Category 1 with 1-min sustained winds of 65 knots briefly according to the JTWC. However, it intensified to a Category 2 with 1-min sustained winds of 85 knots according to the JTWC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 11F\nOn January 26, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Depression 11F had developed within an area of high vertical windshear about 614\u00a0km (380\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Suva, Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Haley\nOn February 7, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 14F had developed under an upper level ridge of high pressure in an area of low vertical windshear, about 450\u00a0km (280\u00a0mi) to the east of the Cook Island: Suwarrow. A few days later, it strengthened to Tropical Cyclone Haley. On February 11, RSMC Nadi issues its final advisory for ex-Tropical Cyclone Haley having agreed that it would move South-East and weaken further. By February 11, Haley weakened into a tropical depression, with the low level circulation center becoming fully exposed, with most of the convection displaced to the far east due to wind shear from the west, overall decreasing its organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Disturbance 16F\nOn February 28, RSMC Nadi started to monitor a tropical disturbance that had developed, about 390\u00a0km (240\u00a0mi) to the south of Honiara on the Solomon Island of Guadalcanal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Disturbance 16F\nThe system was last noted on March 7, while located about 160\u00a0km (100\u00a0mi) to the south-west of Suva, near the Fijian island of Matuku.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Sandra\nDuring March 9, Cyclone Sandra moved into the South Pacific basin from the Australian region as a Category 3 Severe Tropical Cyclone, while located about 700\u00a0km (435\u00a0mi) to the south of Honiara in the Solomon Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Sandra\nUpon reaching Category 4 and threatening New Caledonia, it hit Lord Howe Island as a Category 2 storm on March 15, despite weakening to Category 1 the day before. The remnants of Sandra bought areas of heavy rain and thunderstorms to drought-stricken parts of New Zealand, with reports of up to 112\u00a0mm at Turakina near Whanganui and a tornado in New Plymouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nThe following weak tropical disturbances and depressions were also monitored by RSMC Nadi, however all of these systems were either short lived or did not develop significantly. The first tropical disturbance of the season developed on November 6, to the southwest of Suva, Fiji. The system subsequently moved towards the southeast over the next day, before it was last noted during November 7, as it moved out of the tropics. Late on December 30, Tropical Depression 06F developed within the South Pacific convergence zone, about 515\u00a0km (320\u00a0mi) to the west of Niue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring the next day, the system slowly moved southwards and developed into a tropical depression, before it was last noted later that day as it moved out of the tropics. On January 7, Tropical Disturbance 07F developed near an upper level low, in area of moderate vertical windshear about 800\u00a0km (495\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Papeete on Tahiti Island in French Polynesia. Over the next two days the disturbance moved towards the southeast, before it was last noted during January 9, as it was not expected to become a tropical cyclone and convection surrounding the system had become irregular.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn January 26, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 10F had developed within an area of moderate vertical wind shear about 80\u00a0km (50\u00a0mi) to the east of the Duff Islands. Over the next couple of days the system slowly moved south-eastwards, before the disturbance was last noted by RSMC Nadi on January 28. Tropical Disturbance 12F developed on February 2, under an upper level ridge of high pressure in an area of moderate to high vertical windshear, about 285\u00a0km (175\u00a0mi) to the south of Papeete, on the French Polynesian island of Tahiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring that day, convection surrounding the system became displaced to the east of the low level circulation center before the final warning was issued later that day. As the final warning on 12F was issued, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 13F had developed under an upper level ridge of high pressure in an area of moderate vertical windshear, about 360\u00a0km (225\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Suva, Fiji. By February 7, the system's low level circulation center became exposed, with RSMC Nadi issuing their final warning on the system as it had left the tropics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nTropical Depression 15F was first noted within a trough of low pressure on February 21, while it was located about 640\u00a0km (400\u00a0mi) to the west of Port Vila, Vanuatu. Over the next couple of days the system moved slowly westwards and impacted Fiji, with heavy rain and squally thunderstorms which led to localised flooding being reported in various places on Viti Levu. The system was subsequently last noted during February 24, as it turned and started to move south-eastwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn March 12, Tropical Disturbance 18F developed within an area of moderate vertical windshear, underneath an upper level ridge of high pressure about 465\u00a0km (290\u00a0mi) to the north of Suva, Fiji. Over the next few days the system moved towards the southwest as deep convection surrounding the system decreased, before the system was last noted during March 15. Tropical Disturbance 19F developed on March 14, within an area of moderate vertical windshear about 530\u00a0km (330\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Port Vila, Vanuatu. Over the next few days, the system moved towards the southwest and affected the Northern islands of Vanuatu, before the disturbance was last noted during March 17. Tropical Disturbance 20F developed on March 27, about 210\u00a0km (130\u00a0mi) NW of Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nIn April no designations were issued until the 20th, when Tropical Disturbance 21F was analysed 165\u00a0km (105\u00a0mi) south of Rotuma, Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn April 28, Tropical Disturbance 22F developed within a trough of low pressure, about 485\u00a0km (300\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Port Vila in Vanuatu. Over the next couple of days convection surrounding the system remained poor, as it moved south-eastwards into an area of high vertical windshear. The system was last noted on May 1, to the south of Fiji as it moved into TCWC Wellington's area of responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231057-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 2012\u20132013 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 2012 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231058-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South West Peninsula League\nThe 2012\u201313 South West Peninsula League season was the sixth in the history of the South West Peninsula League, a football competition in England, that feeds the Premier Division of the Western Football League. The league had been formed in 2007 from the merger of the Devon County League and the South Western League, and is restricted to clubs based in Cornwall and Devon. The Premier Division of the South West Peninsula League is on the same level of the National League System as the Western League Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231058-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South West Peninsula League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 20 teams, the same as the previous season, after Royal Marines were relegated and subsequently folded, and Buckland Athletic were promoted to the Western League Premier Division. Dartmouth resigned before the season began. Two new clubs joined the league:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe 2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season was a slightly above average event in tropical cyclone formation in the Southern hemisphere tropical cyclone year starting on July 1, 2012, and ending on June 30, 2013. Within this basin, tropical and subtropical disturbances are officially monitored by the Regional Specialised Meteorological Centre on R\u00e9union island, while the Mauritius and Madagascar weather services assign names to significant tropical and subtropical disturbances. The first tropical disturbance of the season developed on October 12 and rapidly developed into the earliest known intense tropical cyclone on record during October 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nThe first tropical disturbance of the season developed on October 12 and gradually intensified to become the earliest known intense tropical cyclone on record on October 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Anais\nOn October 12, 2012, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) on a system near the Chagos Islands. Soon afterwards, RSMC La R\u00e9union designated the system as a tropical disturbance while located roughly 70 nautical miles (130\u00a0km) to the west of Diego Garcia. That afternoon, the JTWC upgraded the system into a tropical depression, giving it the designation 01S. The next day, RSMC La R\u00e9union reported that the system had intensified into a moderate tropical storm and named it Anais.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Anais\nAs the day progressed, Anais began a period of quick intensification\u2014being upgraded into a tropical cyclone by RSMC La R\u00e9union and a category one tropical cyclone by the JTWC. Anais continued to gradually intensify and was upgraded into an intense tropical cyclone by RSMC La R\u00e9union early on October 14, while it was upgraded to a category 3 cyclone by the JTWC, as it started to form a well defined eye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0002-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Anais\nLate on October 15, as it started to weaken, the system's eye started to collapse, but deep convection remained over the low level circulation center, and it was downgraded to a category 1 cyclone by October 16. On October 17, the system weakened into a tropical storm, and the low-level circulation center became totally exposed, with convection being displaced to the south due to moderate vertical wind shear from the north west. As the day progressed, Anais weakened into a tropical depression. On October 19, the remnants of Anais made landfall over Madagascar associated with a few burst of thunderstorms, before dissipating completely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Anais\nOn October 14, Anais became the earliest intense tropical cyclone in the South-West Indian Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Disturbance 02\nOn November 8, an area of low pressure formed far northeast of La R\u00e9union. It gradually drifted west and developed a low-level circulation center (LLCC). On the next day, isolated convection developed around the system with fragmented spiral banding. The low drifted southwest and slightly weakened on November 12. The low-pressure area soon became disorganized and the JTWC stopped tracking it later that day. Early on November 15, the disturbance regained strength and the convective banding around its LLCC improved and JTWC resumed tracking the system. At the same time, RSMC La R\u00e9union upgraded the low-pressure area to a tropical disturbance. The next day, the system lost most of its convection and M\u00e9t\u00e9o France stopped tracking the disturbance, reporting that their forecast models showed no chance of the system restrengthening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Boldwin\nOn November 13, a cluster of thunderstorms formed off Western Sumatra. Over the next couple of days, the cluster developed a circulation center, and became a tropical disturbance, being dubbed Invest 96S by the JTWC. Over the next couple of days, unfavorable conditions haltered the development of the system. On November 23, the system organized under moderate vertical wind shear, and the M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France started to track the system as a tropical disturbance By midnight, that day, M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France further upgraded the system to a tropical depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Boldwin\nIn the early hours of November 24, RSMC La R\u00e9union further upgraded the tropical depression into a Moderate Tropical Storm with Mauritus assigning it the name Boldwin. Later the same day, the JTWC also started tracking the system as Tropical Cyclone 02S with winds equivalent to a tropical storm on the SSHS, while it developed an eye-like feature. During the afternoon, M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France further upgraded Boldwin into a Severe Tropical Storm with 10-minute sustained winds reaching 100\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Boldwin\nOn November 25, the storm encountered strong vertical wind shear and much of its convection got displaced to the southeast, partially exposing the center. That day, Boldwin weakened into a Moderate Tropical Storm. Later that night, Boldwin's LLCC became fully exposed and started weakening rapidly. As a result, the JTWC issued their final advisory on the system. At the same time, M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France reported that Boldwin further weakened into a Tropical Depression. Finally, during the early hours of November 26, M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France issued their final warning on Boldwin, as it weakened into a remnant low, as moderate vertical wind shear had torn the system apart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Claudia\nOn 29 November the NRL began monitoring a disturbance initially located in the Australian area of responsibility. The disturbance moved south-westwards over the following week, strengthening as wind shear decreased. On 6 December, JTWC issued a TCFA and RSMC La R\u00e9union commenced advisories for a Tropical Disturbance. The disturbance was then located about 900\u00a0km (550\u00a0miles) SE of Diego Garcia. The next day it was named Moderate Tropical Storm Claudia by NWS Mauritius. On December 8, Cyclone Claudia was in South Indian Ocean and had strengthened rapidly with winds over 160\u00a0km/h (100\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Claudia\nOn December 10, a well-developed eye was observed, with diameter of approximately 19\u00a0km (12\u00a0mi). By December 11, Claudia's eye had dissipated, and the cyclone became more disorganized, with wind shear causing elongation from east to west. Claudia moved into sea surface temperatures below 80\u00a0\u00b0F (27\u00a0\u00b0C), as a result of the western edge of a high pressure ridge steering the system south. On December 12, high vertical wind shear near 30 knots (55.5\u00a0km/h; 34.5\u00a0mph) impacted the northwestern quadrant of the low level circulation center, exposing the center, as it became extratropical over cooler waters. On December 13, the system became fully extratropical, with the low level circulation center becoming fully exposed, and convection displaced far south of the circulation center by strong vertical wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Dumile\nOn December 28 a low-pressure area continued to organize, with a significant increase in convection, located just to the west of an anticyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Dumile\nIn Mauritius, the storm produced winds up to 108\u00a0km/h (67\u00a0mph) that downed trees and power lines. Transportation across the region was several disrupted as public transit was shut down and many roads were blocked by debris. In Cassis, a billboard collapsed and damaged a nearby home. One person was found dead after his body washed ashore in Flic-en-Flac. In addition to winds, the storm brought heavy rains to the region, amounting to 192.8\u00a0mm (7.59\u00a0in) in Arnaud. Overall, damage from the storm was fairly limited in Mauritius.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Dumile\nCyclone Dumile produced strong winds across R\u00e9union Island, peaking at 180\u00a0km/h (110\u00a0mph), that downed numerous trees and power lines, leaving approximately 125,000 residents without electricity. Downed wires also led to the death of one person after he tried to remove a live wire from the roof of his home. Additionally 14 people were injured by the storm. Heavy rains also affected much of the island, with 834\u00a0mm (32.8\u00a0in) falling in Cirad over a 24\u2011hour span. These rains proved to be mostly beneficial, restoring reservoirs and replenishing rivers, as the island experienced below-average rainfall in the preceding two months. Significant agricultural damage took place on the island, with losses reaching \u20ac31\u00a0million (US$41.3\u00a0million). Insured losses were estimated at \u20ac3.5\u00a0million (US$4.7\u00a0million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 887]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Emang\nOn December 27 a cluster of thunderstorms developed into a weak low-pressure area. By December 28, the JTWC began tracking the system, as it began to make a significant increase in deep convection, with formative convective banding developing around the system. At that time, the disturbance was located west of an upper-level anticyclone and directly beneath a subtropical ridge center, in an area of light vertical wind shear, 805\u00a0km (500\u00a0mi) north-northwest of Learmonth, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Emang\nOn December 30, the low-level circulation center became partially exposed due to moderate to strong easterly moving vertical wind shear, while the western part of the system still had deep, persistent convection. By January 17, Emang became disorganized and weakened into a small area of flaring convection. The low-level circulation center had become weak and poorly defined, due to moderate vertical wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Felleng\nOn January 18, an elongated, poorly organized area of convection associated with the remnants of Tropical Storm Emang lingered near the ITCZ. By January 24, RSMC La R\u00e9union reported a totally exposed vortex with occasional burst of convection persisted about 470 miles (755\u00a0km) NNE of Rodrigues, and 580 miles (935\u00a0km) SW of Diego Garcia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Felleng\nAt that time it was not expected to strengthen, but early on 26 January, convective activity improved, with deep convection and redeveloped a well defined, partially exposed low level circulation center due to moderate vertical wind shear from the East, and was designated as a Tropical Depression. It continued to strengthen as it moved west, then south-west as it steadily intensified, reaching Intense Tropical Cyclone strength on 30 January while developing a well defined eye, with a deep, intense ring of convective banding forming in the eyewall. On January 31 the eye became less well defined, and started to collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Felleng\nOn February 1 the system started to become elongated, and weakened into a severe tropical storm as it began its extratropical transition. By February 3, Felleng became fully extratropical, with the low level circulation center becoming totally exposed and elongated, under vertical wind shear, located to the west of the remnant convection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Felleng\nAlthough the center of Cyclone Felleng remained offshore, heavy rain from the storm's outer bands triggered significant flooding in parts of Madagascar. Flood waters rose rapidly in the capital Antananarivo, flooding many low-lying homes, as well as several hundred hectares of rice fields. Government authorities confirmed at least 800 people have been affected by the floods in the capital alone. Across the island, 9 people were killed and 1,303 were left homeless. A total of 162\u00a0homes were destroyed while another 1,803 were damaged by flood waters, most of which were in Vatovavy-Fitovinany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Felleng\nHeavy rains and winds associated with the storm also impacted R\u00e9union Island, where 11,200 homes were left without power. Over the course of three days, up to 800\u00a0mm (31\u00a0in) of rain fell in parts of the island, resulting in significant flooding. In Plaine des Cafres, 512\u00a0mm (20.2\u00a0in) fell during a 24\u2011hour span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Gino\nOn 11 February, RSMC La R\u00e9union announced that a Tropical Depression had formed about 760\u00a0mi (1,225\u00a0km) ESE of Diego Garcia. The disturbance had first been noticed several days earlier as a Tropical Low in the Australian AoR. It was soon upgraded and named Moderate Tropical Storm Gino. On 12 February at 1500 UTC, the storm's maximum sustained winds was 75\u00a0kn (39\u00a0m/s; 139\u00a0km/h; 86\u00a0mph)making the storm the equivalent of a category one hurricane. At that time, Gino was centered near 17.1 south latitude and 79.5 east longitude, about 700\u00a0nmi (1,300\u00a0km; 810\u00a0mi) southeast of Diego Garcia. Gino moved south-southwest at 10\u00a0kn (5.1\u00a0m/s; 19\u00a0km/h; 12\u00a0mph), around the northwestern edge of a subtropical ridge of high pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Haruna\nIn the middle of February, an area of convection persisted in the Mozambique Channel. The system shifted southward after exiting the coast of Mozambique and slowed to a drift in response to a break in the subtropical ridge. Subsequently, convection became more pronounced and M\u00e9t\u00e9o France classified the system as a tropical disturbance on February\u00a018. On February\u00a019, the system attained gale-force winds and was upgraded to Moderate Tropical Storm Haruna. The structure of Haruna continued to become more symmetrical with a large radius of maximum winds, developing a ragged eye early on February\u00a020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Haruna\nBased on the improved appearance, MFR upgraded Haruna to a severe tropical storm at 0000\u00a0UTC that day. About 12\u00a0hours later, the agency upgraded Haruna further to tropical cyclone status, with 10\u00a0minute winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph). That day, an approaching trough weakened the ridge to the south, causing the cyclone to slow and move erratically. MFR assessed that Haruna reached 10\u00a0minute winds of 150\u00a0km/h (95\u00a0mph) on February\u00a020. At around 0230\u00a0UTC on February\u00a022, the cyclone made landfall about 55\u00a0km (35\u00a0mi) south of Morombe in southwestern Madagascar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Haruna\nHaruna quickly weakened below cyclone status, and while over land it accelerated to the southeast. At 1200\u00a0UTC on February\u00a024, MFR issued its last advisory after Haruna began losing tropical characteristics, designating it as a subtropical depression. The next day, the JTWC also discontinued advisories on the storm, noting that Haruna was dissipating about 665\u00a0km (415\u00a0mi) south-southwest of R\u00e9union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Haruna\nStriking the southwestern coast of Madagascar, Cyclone Haruna impacted areas that usually do not see tropical cyclones. The most significant damage took place north of Toliara around the Mikea Forest. The storm brought wind gusts estimated at 210\u00a0km/h (130\u00a0mph), resulting in extensive damage. Many homes lost their roofs and numerous roads were blocked by debris, isolating communities. Several days of heavy rain caused extensive flooding, especially in Morombe where approximately 70\u00a0percent of the city was destroyed due to flash flooding and dam collapses. In nearby Toliara, dozens of people were evacuated due to similarly dangerous flooding. At least 24 people were killed across southern Madagascar and another 16 were listed as missing. In addition, at least 92 were injured and nearly 10,000 left homeless after the passage of Haruna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 926]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Imelda\nOn April 3, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center started tracking an area of weak, shallow convection located around a low-level circulation center (LLCC) near 8.5\u00b0S 75.6\u00b0E. By April 4, the system developed flaring convection around a consolidating, partially exposed LLCC. On April 5, the system developed convective bands that have further deepened, and wrapped tighter around the LLCC. Later that day, the RSMC designated the system Zone of Disturbed Weather 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Jamala\nIn the middle of May, Tropical Storm Jamala existed in the northeastern portion of the basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Storm names\nWithin the South-west Indian Ocean Tropical Depressions and Subtropical Depressions that are judged to have 10-minute sustained windspeeds of 65\u00a0km/h, (40\u00a0mph) by the Regional Specialized Meteorological Center on La R\u00e9union Island, France (RSMC La R\u00e9union) are usually assigned a name. However it is the Sub-Regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Centers in Mauritius and Madagascar who name the systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Storm names\nThe Sub-Regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Center in Mauritius names the storm should it intensify into a moderate tropical storm between 55\u00b0E and 90\u00b0E, if the storm should intensify into a moderate tropical storm between 30\u00b0E and 55\u00b0E then the Sub-Regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Center in Madagascar assigns the appropriate name to the storm. New name lists are used every year, whilst a name is normally only used once so thus far no names are retired. For the first time this year tropical cyclones that move into this region from the Australian Region will not be renamed by the Sub-Regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Center in Mauritius.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231059-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season effects\nThis table lists all of the tropical cyclones and subtropical cyclones that were monitored during the 2012\u20132013 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season. Information on their intensity, duration, name, and 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 2012\u00a0USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season was the club's 14th season in the Premier League, and their 36th at the top level of English football. Having achieved consecutive promotions from League One and the Championship the previous two seasons, the club were looking to retain their place in the Premier League after a seven-year absence from the top flight. Southampton finished 14th in the league table, five points above the relegation zone. They also made it to the fourth round of the League Cup, and were eliminated from the FA Cup in the third round by Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season\nIn preparation for their first season back in the top flight, Southampton strengthened their squad relatively heavily during the summer transfer window, breaking the club's transfer fee record twice with the acquisitions of Burnley striker Jay Rodriguez in July and Uruguayan midfielder Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez from Bologna on deadline day. Other significant additions included Rangers midfielder Steven Davis, Japanese defender Maya Yoshida, and young full-back Nathaniel Clyne. Several players were released at the start of the campaign, while Dan Harding was the only player sold by the club, moving to Nottingham Forest in July. Norwegian centre-back Vegard Forren was signed in January 2013, although did not make an appearance during his first season at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season\nSouthampton began their first top-flight campaign in seven years against reigning champions Manchester City and runners-up Manchester United, and picked up only four points from their opening ten games leaving them firmly at the bottom of the table. In November and December the team's fortunes improved, and they picked up important wins over fellow strugglers to lift themselves out of the relegation zone. After Christmas the Saints went on a six-game unbeaten run, and they later picked up high-profile wins against Manchester City, Liverpool and Chelsea to continue to move away from the drop zone. Survival in the Premier League was confirmed on 14 May when Wigan Athletic lost to Arsenal to take the final relegation place. Southampton finished 14th in the table having won nine, drawn 14, and lost 15 of their 38 games, collecting 41 points in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season\nDespite leading Southampton to back-to-back promotions in 2011 and 2012, manager Nigel Adkins was fired in January 2013, with the club in 15th place in the Premier League table, and was replaced by former Espanyol boss Mauricio Pochettino. Along with the manager, the majority of Adkins's coaching team were also dismissed, replaced by staff of Pochettino's appointment. The winner of the club's Player of the Season award was Morgan Schneiderlin, who was voted in ahead of top scorer Rickie Lambert and midfield partner Jack Cork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nSouthampton began their pre-season preparations on 14 July 2012 with the Markus Liebherr Memorial Cup, which this year featured fellow Premier League club Arsenal and Belgian Pro League champions Anderlecht. In the first match of the tournament, Southampton lost to Anderlecht 1\u20130, with the only goal coming early in the first half from striker Tom De Sutter. Arsenal won their first game against Anderlecht by the same scoreline, with a goal from young midfielder Henri Lansbury deciding the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nSouthampton scored their first goal of the 2012 pre-season in their final match against Arsenal, when new signing Jay Rodriguez converted a Danny Fox cross in the 31st minute, although the lead proved short-lived when Gervinho equalised a few minutes later, causing the game to end in a tie. Despite winning the subsequent penalty shoot-out, the Saints could not overhaul the points lead of their opponents and it was Arsenal who won the second Memorial Cup and joined Athletic Bilbao on the honours list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nTravelling to a French training camp later in the month, the Saints played \u00c9toile Carouge on 18 July and faced Evian Thonon Gaillard on 21 July. In the first match, Southampton came back from a 1\u20130 deficit to win 4\u20131, with a goal from Luke Shaw and a late hat-trick from Billy Sharp. In the second, the Saints won by a single first-half goal from Jason Puncheon. Back in England, St Mary's hosted Dutch champions Ajax on 28 July, with the visitors securing a 1\u20130 win with a second half goal from winger Aras \u00d6zbiliz. On 4 August recently relegated Wolverhampton Wanderers travelled to face Southampton, with the home side winning 2\u20130 thanks to goals from Billy Sharp and midfielder Jason Puncheon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nSouthampton travelled away for their penultimate pre-season friendly, facing Bristol City on 7 August. Jon Stead opened the scoring for the home side late in the first half with a long range goal, and the side nearly doubled their lead before the break but for a Nathaniel Clyne block in the penalty area. The second half was shared relatively evenly between the sides, and it took until stoppage time for the Saints to come back and leave the game level courtesy of striker Billy Sharp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nThe club's final pre-season game was played at St Mary's on 11 August against Italian club Udinese. Despite enjoying a large portion of possession throughout the game, it was the visitors who took the spoils in indulgent fashion with a 4\u20130 win over the Saints. Udinese went one up after 12 minutes with a long range effort from captain Antonio Di Natale, and doubled their lead another 12 minutes later with a similar long range strike from Brazilian midfielder Willians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Pre-season\nYet another 12 minutes later, Di Natale scored his second and the team's third to put Udinese three up at half time. Ultimately, Southampton were unable to respond, and in the 64th minute Colombian striker Luis Muriel scored Udinese's fourth to mark a disappointing end to a relatively successful pre-season campaign for Southampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nSouthampton began their first season back in the Premier League on 19 August against title holders Manchester City. The game began well for the visitors, who put a lot of pressure on City early on, before defender Jos Hooiveld gave away a penalty for a 16th-minute foul. David Silva missed the penalty, but after a period of heavy possession for the hosts the first goal was scored by striker Carlos Tevez five minutes before half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nTen minutes into the second half Rickie Lambert was brought on as a substitute, and within three minutes he had scored the equaliser in a move involving forward Guly do Prado and young midfielder James Ward-Prowse. Southampton went ahead just under ten minutes later, when second substitute Steven Davis scored on his league debut for the club, although the lead was cut short after just four minutes by substitute striker Edin D\u017eeko, and the hosts retained the lead in the 80th minute courtesy of Samir Nasri. Despite additional chances for both sides, Southampton could not equalise again and the game ended 3\u20132 to the reigning Premier League champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nIn their Premier League return to St Mary's, Southampton hosted Wigan Athletic on 25 August. Despite boasting a few clear goalscoring opportunities in the first half, including an Adam Lallana shot which hit the crossbar, the Saints were unable to break the deadlock in the first period and the teams went into half time level. It was the visitors who came out in the second half firing however, as Franco Di Santo broke the deadlock six minutes after the break with a powerful shot from inside the area. With chances opening for both sides, Athletic put the game beyond the hosts in the last minute, when a defensive error gave Ivorian Arouna Kon\u00e9 the chance to end the game, leaving Southampton in the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nOn 2 September the Saints hosted last season's runners-up Manchester United in their third game on the season. Rickie Lambert opened the scoring for the home side with his second goal of the season in the 16th minute, heading in a Jason Puncheon cross. The lead was cancelled out just seven minutes later however, as new United signing Robin van Persie equalised. The first half ended level, and it took until the 55th minute for the deadlock to be broken, with Morgan Schneiderlin putting Southampton ahead for the second time in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\n15 minutes later the visitors were awarded a penalty due to a foul by Jos Hooiveld on Van Persie, although it was saved by Kelvin Davis to keep Saints ahead. In the 87th minute however, Van Persie scored his second of the match to equalise for the second time, and he completed a hat-trick in stoppage time to secure United's win and subject the Saints to their third loss in three games, leaving them bottom of the table as the only club yet to have picked up a point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nFollowing a two-week international break, Southampton travelled to the Emirates Stadium to face Arsenal on 15 September. The match started poorly for the travelling Saints, as the home side went one up in the 11th minute when Jos Hooiveld deflected in Kieran Gibbs's saved shot to score an own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nJust 20 minutes later Lukas Podolski scored a free kick following a foul on Francis Coquelin by Steven Davis, starting off a hugely negative ten-minute period for the visitors \u2013 within four more minutes it was 3\u20130 to the home side when Gervinho added his name to the scoresheet, and two minutes later Nathaniel Clyne scored the second own goal of the game to put Arsenal 4\u20130 up. Just before the break Danny Fox scored his first goal for Southampton, taking advantage of a mistake by Arsenal goalkeeper Wojciech Szcz\u0119sny to give the Saints a first half consolation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nSouthampton started better in the second half, but could not break through the defence of the home side, who went 5\u20131 up after 71 minutes with Gervinho scoring his second of the match. Former Southampton winger Theo Walcott finished off the match with an 88th-minute conversion, leaving the Saints at the bottom of the table still with no points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nOn 22 September Southampton hosted Aston Villa, in a match which they had to win in order to avoid their worst ever start to a season. After a relatively even first half hour, it was Villa who broke the deadlock in the 36th minute when Darren Bent took advantage of a defensive error to score, putting the visitors one up going into half time. The Saints started the second half much more aggressively though, and in the 58th minute equalised courtesy of a Rickie Lambert strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nWith the added momentum, Southampton went ahead five minutes later when Nathaniel Clyne scored his first goal for the club, with Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez providing the assist for the goal. Jason Puncheon put the club 3\u20131 up another nine minutes later, with Lambert and Ram\u00edrez working together to provide the assist for the goal. Lambert scored his second of the match from the penalty spot in stoppage time, and the Saints saw the game out until the end to pick up their first points of the season and move out of the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nThe following week Southampton travelled to Goodison Park to face Everton, who had won three out of their opening five games of the season. The Saints started strongly, when Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez scored his first goal for the club in the sixth minute when he headed in Adam Lallana's corner. The visitors looked set for another goal from Jay Rodriguez a few minutes later, but it was Everton who scored next when Leon Osman equalised in the 25th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nSouthampton suffered defensive troubles throughout the rest of the first half, and within seven minutes Everton were two up courtesy of a goal from Nikica Jelavi\u0107. The home side doubled their lead just six minutes later, when Jelavi\u0107 headed in his second goal to put Everton 3\u20131 up at the end of the first half. Despite a number of chances in the second period for Rickie Lambert, Jay Rodriguez and Adam Lallana, Southampton could not beat the Everton defence and dropped another three points and one position in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nOn 7 October Southampton hosted Fulham before the second international break of the season. The Saints started the game well, as defender Jos\u00e9 Fonte scored in the fourth minute with a header from Adam Lallana's corner to put the home side a goal up early. A few minutes later, right-back Frazer Richardson had to leave the game with a leg injury, and was replaced with centre-back Jos Hooiveld with Maya Yoshida moving to the right side of defence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nSouthampton continued to dominate the rest of the first half, with Rickie Lambert and Jason Puncheon coming close to increasing the team's lead, but the score remained 1\u20130 going into half time. Fulham improved after the break, and in the 69th minute the visitors equalised when Jos Hooiveld turned John Arne Riise's shot into his own goal. Rickie Lambert was taken off, which notably reduced Southampton's goal threat, and Kieran Richardson scored a second for Fulham in the 88th minute. Jos\u00e9 Fonte scored again, however, to level the match when he headed in Danny Fox's cross in the last minute of normal time, and the match ended 2\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nThe Premier League resumed on 20 October, when Southampton travelled to face West Ham United at the Boleyn Ground. Concern was raised by fans due to manager Nigel Adkins's decisions to include goalkeeper Artur Boruc in the team and to leave Rickie Lambert out of the team, but in the first half the Saints performed strongly and looked the more likely side to score. The half ended goalless, but within three minutes after the break the travelling side were 2\u20130 down to the hosts, thanks to goals from midfielder Mark Noble and captain Kevin Nolan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\n15 minutes later Adam Lallana scored his first goal of the season, before Lambert and Emmanuel Mayuka came on as substitutes to bolster the attacking strength of the side. Lambert had a few quick chances, but the comeback was short-lived as Noble converted from the penalty spot after a Jos\u00e9 Fonte handball. West Ham continued the dominance when they scored a fourth just before the end courtesy of a Modibo Ma\u00efga effort, and the match ended 4\u20131 to leave Southampton just above the relegation zone (although due to another result later in the day they dropped down to 18th).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nSouthampton returned to St Mary's on 28 October to host Tottenham Hotspur, sitting in 19th place in the Premier League due to results the day before. The game started poorly for the Saints, as they went behind in the 15th minute to a goal from former Southampton player Gareth Bale, who headed in a Tom Huddlestone cross to put Spurs ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October 2012\nThe visitors continued to take charge of the first half, with Bale receiving and creating many additional chances, many for striker Jermain Defoe, and the run of play finally culminated in a second goal for the visitors when Clint Dempsey followed up a Defoe shot in the 39th minute. After more domination by the visitors in the second half, the hosts finally pulled a goal back courtesy of Jay Rodriguez in the 66th minute, who converted a chance following a shot by Jos\u00e9 Fonte saved by Brad Friedel. Southampton continued to put pressure on Tottenham, with more chances for Lambert and Rodriguez, but it wasn't enough to bring them out of the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nOn 5 November Southampton travelled to face West Bromwich Albion able to move out of the relegation zone with a win thanks to the draw between Reading and Queens Park Rangers the day before. The game started with both sides relatively evenly matched, but it was the home side who broke the deadlock nine minutes before the break courtesy of Peter Odemwingie. After half time it was the Saints who had the early chances, with Lambert hitting the crossbar as soon as the game resumed, but more defensive problems led to a second goal for the hosts, again from Odemwingie. West Brom continued to enjoy chances throughout the rest of the game, but it ended 2\u20130 to leave Southampton bottom of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nAfter two losses in a week, including elimination from the League Cup, Southampton returned to St Mary's on 10 November to host Swansea City. In a game which featured the league debut of Luke Shaw, as well as the first league game of the season for Jack Cork, the Saints dominated possession and goal-scoring chances in the first half but failed to break the deadlock before the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nAfter half time Southampton continued to play well, with a penalty possibility for Adam Lallana turned down ten minutes after the break, before Morgan Schneiderlin headed in a cross from Rickie Lambert to score his second goal of the season and go 1\u20130 up against the Welsh side. Despite more chances for the home side, however, former Saints player Nathan Dyer scored to equalise for the visitors following a mistake by goalkeeper Paulo Gazzaniga. The game remained 1\u20131, despite more chances for both sides, and due to other results the Saints moved off the bottom of the table with only their fifth point of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nThe following week Southampton travelled to Loftus Road to face Queens Park Rangers, the only team lower in the table than the Saints. The game started well for the visitors, who dominated possession for the first half and enjoyed the majority of the goal-scoring opportunities and attacking play. The positive start led to a goal for Rickie Lambert in the 23rd minute, putting Southampton 1\u20130 up and on the way to only their second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nJust before the half time break, Jason Puncheon made it 2\u20130 for the Saints with a solo strike beating QPR goalkeeper J\u00falio C\u00e9sar. Early into the second half however, Southampton conceded a goal when Canadian winger Junior Hoilett took advantage of individual mistakes to bring the home side back into the game. The remainder of the second half was relatively even, with both sides having a number of chances to score, but it was Southampton who eventually scored another when Morgan Schneiderlin took a shot in the 83rd minute which was deflected in by defender Anton Ferdinand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nOn Sunday 25 November Southampton hosted Newcastle United in a match which saw the first return of former Saints manager Alan Pardew since his dismissal in August 2010. After half an hour of chances either way, including a Rickie Lambert free kick which hit the crossbar and a strong Jason Puncheon chance, the hosts went ahead in the 35th minute when captain Adam Lallana took advantage of a mistake by Newcastle goalkeeper Tim Krul to put Southampton 1\u20130 up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nAfter the break the visitors increased their attacking presence, but it was Southampton who scored next when Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez took advantage of another mistake by Krul from a Jason Puncheon cross to put the home side 2\u20130 up in the 60th minute. The Southampton side were frustrated by a number of decisions by the officials in the match, with Ram\u00edrez being denied two penalties following his goal. Puncheon also hit the post again, and Jos\u00e9 Fonte missed out on his third goal of the season thanks to the crossbar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0019-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nJay Rodriguez scored late in the game, but was offside when the ball was played to him, and 2\u20130 it remained for the Saints to pick up their third win of the season, including their first clean sheet, to move out of the relegation zone for the first time in over a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nThree days later, the Saints hosted Norwich City looking for a third consecutive win. The game started well for the home side, who dominated possession in the early stages and broke the deadlock in the 32nd minute when Rickie Lambert converted a chance from an Adam Lallana free kick. On the stroke of half time though, Robert Snodgrass equalised for the visitors to put a dampener on the spirits of the players going into the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nIn the second period Norwich came out with much more confidence, and shut Southampton out of the game for a large period, with the defence weakening quickly. Southampton and Norwich were held in the deadlock though, with the sides sharing the spoils and the hosts failing to move out of the top relegation spot again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nOn 1 December the Saints travelled to Anfield to face Liverpool, who had lost in midweek to Tottenham Hotspur. The hosts dominated the majority of the match, although were unable to break the deadlock until Daniel Agger headed in a Glen Johnson cross just before half time. Throughout the second half Liverpool continued to enjoy goal-scoring chances, particularly for Luis Su\u00e1rez, and it ended 1\u20130 with Southampton having very few chances at all to equalise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nSouthampton returned to St Mary's the following week to face Reading, who sat just three points behind 18th-placed Southampton in 19th position in the table. The game started relatively evenly with a number of chances for each side, with the home side's best chance coming after half an hour when Jason Puncheon turned in a corner to score a goal then disallowed for pushing in the penalty area. Just before half time team captain Adam Lallana received an injury, and was replaced by Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez who had not started the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nAfter the break the Saints continued to pressure the visitors, and in the 61st minute Jason Puncheon finally broke the deadlock to put Southampton one up. More chances went the way of the Saints, including late chances for Guly do Prado and Jack Cork, and ultimately the side held on to pick up the three points and move out of the relegation zone once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nAfter a weekend without a game due to Chelsea's FIFA Club World Cup commitments, Southampton returned to St Mary's on 22 December to face Sunderland, who sat just one position above them in the table. The game, which saw the first Premier League start for striker Emmanuel Mayuka, started quickly, but after the first ten minutes there were very few opportunities for either side to score goals and win the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nSunderland striker Steven Fletcher scored just before half time, and the goal was enough to win the game for the visitors with very little action occurring in the second period. As Wigan Athletic had lost earlier in the day, Southampton remained just above the relegation zone, three points behind Aston Villa in 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nFour days later, Southampton travelled to Craven Cottage to face Fulham in the Boxing Day fixture. The game started poorly for the Saints, who conceded after only eight minutes when Dimitar Berbatov converted from inside the six-yard box to put the hosts up by one goal. The first half saw very few additional chances for either side, and Fulham went into half time a goal to the better. The second half was relatively uneventful, until in the 85th minute Southampton were awarded a penalty due to a handball by former Saints player Chris Baird. Rickie Lambert scored the penalty, and in the last few minutes Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez also came close, but ultimately it ended 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nFor their last fixture of 2012, Southampton travelled to face Stoke City on 29 December. The game started well for the Saints, who went ahead after only ten minutes when top scorer Rickie Lambert converted a cross from Guly do Prado on the left of midfield in the injured Adam Lallana's place. Former Southampton striker Kenwyne Jones pulled one back for the hosts six minutes later, but this was cancelled out by another goal for the visitors courtesy of second striker Jay Rodriguez from a Lambert setup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0025-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nJust after ten minutes later, Southampton went 3\u20131 up when Lambert's penalty area shot was converted into the Stoke goal by defender Andy Wilkinson, and the Saints went into the break two goals to the better. The second half saw a similar frequency of chances for each side, but it was Stoke who enjoyed the next break when Matthew Upson scored in the 67th minute after linking up with first goalscorer Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0025-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December 2012\nAfter 70 minutes French midfielder Steven Nzonzi was sent off for a foul on Jack Cork, although the away side made some defensive substitutions in an attempt to hold the lead to become the first side of the season to win at the Britannia Stadium; in the final minute of normal time, however, another former Southampton striker, Peter Crouch, set up Cameron Jerome to score another equaliser. Despite seven minutes of injury time being added on, Southampton could not score again, and Stoke almost clinched a winner, meaning the Saints moved back into the relegation zone with Wigan Athletic moving up to 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nIn their first fixture of 2013, Southampton hosted Arsenal in the return leg of their 6\u20131 thrashing earlier in the season. From the start Arsenal played quickly to try and mount the pressure on the Saints, but the home side made it difficult for the Gunners to break through the defence and eventually broke the deadlock themselves when Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez took advantage of some weak defending to put Southampton in front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nThe lead was not held for long however, as just over six minutes later a Theo Walcott free kick was turned into his own net by singer Guly do Prado to bring Arsenal on level terms. After the break Southampton continued to enjoy the majority of possession, and Ram\u00edrez came close to a second goal on a number of occasions, although in the end it finished 1\u20131 to pull Southampton out of the relegation zone going into a break from league football for the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nAfter a break for FA Cup and League Cup ties, Premier League matches resumed on 12 January, with Southampton travelling to Villa Park for the return leg against Aston Villa, another side looking to avoid relegation. The Saints looked to take advantage of Villa's inexperienced defence, and almost opened the scoring on a number of occasions in the opening half an hour with the dual strike force of Rickie Lambert and Jay Rodriguez, who had scored Southampton's goal in the FA Cup defeat to Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nIn the 33rd minute, a controversial penalty was awarded to the visitors when Rodriguez was seen to have been brought down in the area by Enda Stevens, and Lambert converted the spot kick for his ninth goal of the season to put the Saints ahead. The home side increased the pressure in the second half, with Christian Benteke almost scoring after taking advantage of an Artur Boruc parry, and Charles N'Zogbia also came close to equalising. Luke Shaw picked up an injury late on, and Nathan Baker had Villa's final chance in injury time when he hit the woodwork with a header, but ultimately Southampton held on to pick up three points and move to relative safety in 15th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nJust 11 days after facing them at St Mary's in the FA Cup, which they lost 5\u20131, Southampton travelled to Stamford Bridge to face third-placed Chelsea in their game-in-hand. In a match which saw Lambert and Ram\u00edrez left on the bench, both sides were evenly matched with the Saints holding a lot of possession while the hosts enjoyed the majority of goal-scoring opportunities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0028-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nDemba Ba broke the deadlock in the 25th minute, taking advantage of clumsy defending to volley home from inside the penalty area, before Eden Hazard scored a similar goal in similar circumstances to make it two on the stroke of half time. The visitors came out with much more confidence in the second period, and within two minutes of coming on in the 58th minute Rickie Lambert scored a header from a Nathaniel Clyne cross to bring Southampton back into the game. The team continued the pressure on Chelsea, and eventually scored a second when Luke Shaw crossed for Jason Puncheon to volley into the top corner, and the side held on to take a point from the match and move one away from Newcastle below them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nThe following Monday, Southampton hosted 5th-placed Everton in the return leg of their 3\u20131 loss at Goodison Park, for the first match with manager Mauricio Pochettino in charge. The Saints started positively from the beginning of the game, creating numerous chances for the returning Rickie Lambert with Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez, having recently returned from injury, also taking part in many attacking moves early on. In the 20th minute Lambert hit the crossbar with a free kick, and later in the first half had a headed effort cleared off the line by striker Nikica Jelavi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0029-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nIn the second half the visitors enjoyed more of the action, with midfielder Marouane Fellaini coming close twice early after the break. Artur Boruc made a number of key saves later in the game, and despite having a high number of corners Southampton could not break the deadlock and the match ended 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nAfter a break for the FA Cup fourth round matches, during which time the squad travelled to Barcelona for training, Southampton travelled to Old Trafford to face league leaders Manchester United on 30 January 2013. The game started positively for the visitors, as Jay Rodriguez scored after just two minutes following a poor pass back by Michael Carrick to goalkeeper David de Gea. Just six minutes later, however, Wayne Rooney equalised, and Shinji Kagawa almost made it two in the tenth minute when he hit the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0030-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nIn the 27th minute, Rooney scored the second for the home side as he tapped in a header by Patrice Evra from a Robin van Persie free kick awarded for a foul on Phil Jones by Rodriguez. In the second half, Van Persie came close to a headed goal but for an impressive Artur Boruc save, and he also had a goal disallowed for offside. Despite the majority of the possession in the second half, the Saints were unable to make any of their chances count, and suffered their first league defeat since 22 December 2012 to remain 16th in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nOn 2 February Southampton travelled to the DW Stadium to face fellow relegation possibilities Wigan Athletic, who earlier in the season had beaten the Saints 2\u20130. The early minutes of the game were noticeably scrappy, with both sides fighting for possession in the middle of the field, and it was Wigan who had the first chance when an early effort from Franco Di Santo was saved by Artur Boruc, before Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez volleyed over the bar from inside the penalty area at the other end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nThe home side broke the deadlock later on in the half, when captain Gary Caldwell headed in a corner to put his side one up going into the break. In the second half the Saints largely outplayed the hosts, and eventually on-form striker Rickie Lambert equalised when he headed in Jay Rodriguez's knock-on from Jack Cork's cross in the 64th minute. Substitute Adam Lallana then hit the post, and Lambert saw a volley trickle wide, before Morgan Schneiderlin scored in the last ten minutes to all but seal the victory for Southampton. In the last minute of normal time, however, Gary Maloney touched the ball into Southampton's goal to share the spoils between the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nBack at St Mary's the following week, the Saints hosted current champions Manchester City in the return game of the opening match of the season. The game began relatively quickly, and within seven minutes the hosts had scored as Jason Puncheon took advantage of a mistake by Gareth Barry to cross in for Jay Rodriguez; the effort was saved, but Puncheon followed it up from the edge of the area to put Southampton 1\u20130 up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0032-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nThe home side continued the pressure on the visitors, and in the 22nd minute Steven Davis made it two when Joe Hart failed to catch a shot from Rickie Lambert with the midfielder running into the box for the tap-in. Rodriguez almost scored a third for Southampton, volleying narrowly wide, but City replied before the break with a counter-attack goal from Edin D\u017eeko set up by Pablo Zabaleta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0032-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nThe half ended with a strong penalty call for Southampton, and after the break the Saints continued to play for a third goal; it came quickly, as Barry's bad fortunes continued when he turned Lambert's cross into his own net despite very little pressure on the ball to make it 3\u20131 to the 16th-placed side. Despite a change in personnel and tactics, City were unable to get back into the game in a meaningful way, giving Southampton their first win since 12 January to move up to 15th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nAfter another break, Southampton travelled to face fellow strugglers Newcastle United on 24 February. The game started well for the Saints, as Morgan Schneiderlin opened the scoring within three minutes with a half volley into the bottom corner from a Rickie Lambert cross knockdown. The hosts quickly increased the pace of their play though, and after several chances they scored half an hour later when Moussa Sissoko converted a saved Yoan Gouffran chance to equalise. Just before half time they made it two, as Papiss Ciss\u00e9 scored a long range goal to put Newcastle 2\u20131 up going into the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0033-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February 2013\nSouthampton came out dominating in the second period, with Lambert picking up his 100th goal for the club when he turned in an Adam Lallana cross from the right wing. Danny Fox and Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez came on for Luke Shaw and Steven Davis later on, and it was the defender who gave away a penalty for handball which was converted by Yohan Cabaye in the 67th minute. The Saints attempted to get back into the match, but the result was confirmed when an attempted clearance by Fox went into his own net off Jos Hooiveld, meaning the team dropped from 15th to 16th in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nOn 2 March, Southampton hosted bottom-placed Queens Park Rangers, in a match which saw competing managers Mauricio Pochettino and former Saints manager Harry Redknapp share their birthday. Southampton got off to a strong start, enjoying the majority of chances for the opening minutes, but it was QPR who broke the deadlock with their first shot on goal in the 14th minute courtesy of a Lo\u00efc R\u00e9my strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0034-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nA scrappy first half continued on, with the home side unable to equalise until the very end of the first period when QPR goalkeeper J\u00falio C\u00e9sar parried a shot from substitute Jay Rodriguez into the path of Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez, who chipped the ball into the net for 1\u20131. The second period started equally scrappily, with the hosts pulling out in front early on when both Jos\u00e9 Fonte and Rodriguez came close to putting the Saints ahead in the opening action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0034-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nShaky defending from substitute left-back Luke Shaw and centre-back Maya Yoshida led to the visitors' second (and winning) goal, when Park Ji-sung crossed the ball in for a Jay Bothroyd tap-in past Artur Boruc. Robert Green replaced the injured J\u00falio C\u00e9sar late on, and the move came good when he made an athletic save to deny Yoshida in the last few minutes, giving QPR only their third win of the season and leaving Saints in the relegation mix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nThe following week Southampton travelled to Carrow Road to play Norwich City. Southampton were arguably the more likely to score early on in the game, with attacking players Adam Lallana, Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez, Jay Rodriguez and Rickie Lambert all enjoying first-half chances, and City goalkeeper Mark Bunn played his part in denying the visitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0035-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nRobert Snodgrass, Grant Holt and Michael Turner all had chances for the hosts, but it was the final minute in which the game really took shape \u2013 Southampton defender Luke Shaw was penalised for a challenge on Norwich striker Grant Holt, and City were awarded a controversial penalty. Ultimately Artur Boruc saved the penalty, meaning the points were shared between the teams, although due to the reaction by their players after the penalty decision Southampton were fined by The Football Association for \"failing to control their players\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nOn 16 March Southampton hosted Liverpool, and after a shaky start the home side went ahead through Morgan Schneiderlin's fifth goal of the season, converting a Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez cross headed down into the penalty area by Jay Rodriguez. The Saints dominated most of the first half, with chances for more goals falling to Adam Lallana, Rickie Lambert and Rodriguez within the opening 20 minutes of play; Lambert eventually did put his side 2\u20130 up, with a free kick deflecting off the Liverpool wall to beat Brad Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0036-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nFormer Southampton target Philippe Coutinho was the main threat from the visiting side, and after being denied by Artur Boruc in the 40th minute he brought his side back into the game on the stroke of half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0036-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nThe second half was much more scrappy, with Liverpool edging Saints out and forcing them into defensive errors, but late on in the game it was Rodriguez who scored the fourth and final goal of the game, running almost half the pitch and converting a deflection off Jones to win the game for Southampton in front of a season record attendance of 32,070.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nFollowing the final two-week international break, Southampton returned to St Mary's on 30 March to face Chelsea for the third time in the season, ahead of the visitors' FA Cup replay just two days later. Despite a number of key injuries, including captain Adam Lallana and playmaker Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez, Southampton started the game at a high tempo, with Jay Rodriguez coming close early on after a long run through the Chelsea defence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0037-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nRodriguez eventually did open the scoring for the hosts in the 23rd minute, linking up well with Steven Davis to slot calmly past Petr \u010cech to put the Saints ahead. Ten minutes later John Terry equalised with a header from a corner, although the hope for the visiting side did not last long as a Rickie Lambert free kick on his 500th career league appearance just two minutes later put the home side back in the lead going into half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0037-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nGoalkeeper Artur Boruc was taken off at the break and replaced by Kelvin Davis, who later made a number of key saves to deny Chelsea from coming back into the match. Despite high pressure from the visitors towards the end of the game, Southampton held on and moved up to 12th in the table following Everton's win later in the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nAfter two wins in a row, and the club in 12th place in the Premier League, Southampton travelled to face Championship title holders Reading, in a game which saw the Saints face old manager Nigel Adkins for the first time since his sacking. The game started badly for the travelling side, who defended poorly to almost allow Adam Le Fondre to open the scoring, although it was Southampton who broke the deadlock through Jay Rodriguez's sixth league goal of the season, and his third in three consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0038-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nSouthampton continued pressuring the home side throughout the rest of the first half, with Rodriguez coming close to netting a second but hitting the bar and Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez missing an opportunity. After the break the visitors came out stronger, although many chances were missed and the hosts began to take the advantage; Adam Lallana replaced Ram\u00edrez in the 63rd minute though, and within ten minutes had scored Southampton's second. A controversial Artur Boruc save denied Reading a consolation, and despite added pressure Southampton held on to record a third consecutive victory in the top flight for the first time since December 2003, and move up to 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nWith the club in 11th place in the league table, Southampton hosted West Ham United just a position below them on equal points on 13 April. The game was a largely scrappy affair in difficult weather conditions, and both the home side and the away side enjoyed early chances \u2013 a shot by Rickie Lambert from a corner was deflected onto the post by United goalkeeper Jussi J\u00e4\u00e4skel\u00e4inen, and winger Ricardo Vaz T\u00ea was denied by the crossbar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0039-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nJust before the hour mark, however, the Saints finally broke the deadlock when Gast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez found himself free of the West Ham defence and, on the second attempt, slotted the ball into the visitors' net. The lead was sacrificed just seven minutes later, as a Jos Hooiveld-conceded free kick was scored scrappily by Andy Carroll to put the Hammers in with a chance of points. Jay Rodriguez and Jason Puncheon were introduced later in the match, which helped the home side, but it was not enough to overcome a resilient West Ham side and obtain all three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nThe following week Southampton travelled to face Swansea City, still in the top half of the table. The hosts started the stronger of the two sides, with \u00c0ngel Rangel and Jonathan de Guzm\u00e1n coming close early on, with Jack Cork and Jay Rodriguez responding for the visiting Saints and forcing saves from Swansea goalkeeper Michel Vorm. Rickie Lambert came close to scoring with a free kick, and from the resulting corner Adam Lallana converted into the Swansea net but the goal was disallowed for a foul on Vorm by the Southampton captain. Both sides enjoyed decent chances throughout the second half, and substitute Emmanuel Mayuka came close to winning it in the closing minutes but for a reflex save from in-form Vorm; the game ended goalless, extending Southampton's unbeaten run to six matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nOn 27 April Southampton hosted a West Brom side which had not won since 9 March. The game started relatively well for the home side, who dominated possession and had chances to score first within the opening few exchanges, but it was the visitors who opened against the run of play in the sixth minute when Marc-Antoine Fortun\u00e9 turned in a corner on the third attempt to give the Baggies an early advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0041-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nFor Southampton the standout player was Jay Rodriguez, who took a number of opportunities to shoot but only hit the target a few times, although West Brom had their fair share of chances too (many involving Chelsea loanee Romelu Lukaku) in a largely cagey and scrappy opening 45 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0041-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nGast\u00f3n Ram\u00edrez came on at half time and was involved in a few early attacks for the hosts, but 25 minutes into the second half (after Lukaku had taken advantage of defensive errors to double his team's lead) he was sent off for an incident involving Fortun\u00e9 following an alleged elbow on Shane Long, which also saw the West Brom goalscorer dismissed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0041-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nLong later scored a third for the visitors, before referee Robert Madley \u2013 in charge of his first game in the Premier League \u2013 gave Danny Fox his second booking of the game and Southampton's second red card of the game (and of the season) to leave them with nine-men for the last ten minutes; due to other results, Southampton only dropped one place in the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nThe following week Southampton travelled to White Hart Lane to face European hopefuls Tottenham Hotspur. With kick-off delayed by half an hour due to an issue on the local motorway, the travelling side took the early initiative with Rickie Lambert coming close after latching onto a lofted ball by Nathaniel Clyne; Lambert came close again minutes later, as he saw a close-range free kick pushed by Hugo Lloris onto the post, and Steven Davis could not convert the follow-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0042-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nAfter the break the Saints continued to enjoy the majority of scoring opportunities, with a notable chance for Adam Lallana going astray, followed by a period of dominance for the hosts in which Clint Dempsey and Tom Huddlestone came close.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0042-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nIn the final five minutes though, recently named PFA Players' Player of the Year and PFA Young Player of the Year and former Southampton player Gareth Bale scored his second in two against his old club when he broke away from Luke Shaw and fired a shot into the top corner of Southampton's net, subjecting them to a second defeat in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nSouthampton travelled to the Stadium of Light for their penultimate game of the season, facing a Sunderland side just one point and one place below them in the bottom quadrant of the league table. Once again the Saints dominated early possession and chances, although they lacked an end product with Rickie Lambert often found offside and surrounding players in poor form in the opposition half; it took until 27 minute for Sunderland to have the first actual chance of the game, which ended with a harmless shot at Artur Boruc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0043-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nInto the second half the game continued on level terms, with Sunderland goalkeeper Simon Mignolet performing well against the attacks of the visitors, and it was the home side who took advantage on 68 minutes when full-back Phil Bardsley made a run into the Southampton half and drove a shot in from outside the box. The Saints responded quickly however, as both substitute midfielders James Ward-Prowse and Jason Puncheon linked up well to equalise for Pochettino's side eight minutes later. Lambert had a chance to win it for the visitors, but in the end the game finished 1\u20131 which meant Southampton were almost entirely safe in the Premier League, but for an unlikely run of results in the final matches of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nSouthampton's final game of the season was at home to Stoke City, which was also the final career match of striker Michael Owen. The home side began the game strongly, with season top scorer Rickie Lambert scoring within the first minute only for the goal to be disallowed for offside. The remainder of the first half saw few chances for either side, but it was Stoke who struck first after the break when former Saints striker Peter Crouch headed in a cross from Geoff Cameron to put the Potters one up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0044-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May 2013\nIn response, Steven Davis and Morgan Schneiderlin came close to scoring an equaliser but for the performance of Asmir Begovi\u0107 in goal, and ten minutes after the opener Lambert made it 15 for the season with a tap-in from close range. The scores remained level and it left Southampton in 14th place for their first season back in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, Premier League, Results and table\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, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, FA Cup\nOn 5 January 2013, Southampton hosted FA Cup holders Chelsea in the Third Round of the tournament. The Saints started strongly in the first half, breaking the deadlock in the 22nd minute courtesy of a Jay Rodriguez strike set up by Jason Puncheon, but could not hold the lead until the break as Chelsea striker Demba Ba scored on his debut just over ten minutes later, before Victor Moses scored the away side's second on the stroke of half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0046-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, FA Cup\nShortly after the break the hosts conceded again when Branislav Ivanovi\u0107 headed in a Juan Mata cross, and Ba made it 4\u20131 for the reigning champions on the hour mark. In the last ten minutes Chelsea were awarded a penalty for a handball by Steven Davis, and substitute captain Frank Lampard converted confidently to seal a 5\u20131 win at St Mary's, knocking Southampton out of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, League Cup\nOn 28 August 2012, Southampton travelled to play Stevenage in the second round of the 2012\u201313 Football League Cup. After a relatively even and incident-free first half, the Saints came out firing after the break as returning striker Tadanari Lee scored his first goal of the season to put the visitors one up. Billy Sharp, who provided the assist for the first goal, got on the scoresheet himself 20 minutes later with Southampton's second, before winger Jason Puncheon scored a third two minutes later from outside the penalty area. Among a number of young players coming on as substitutes late in the game, Ben Reeves scored on his season debut in the third minute of injury time to seal the win for the Saints, with the home side picking up a consolation goal to leave the score at 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, League Cup\nSouthampton's third round draw saw the club host Championship side Sheffield Wednesday on 25 September. After half an hour of pressure from both sides, Jay Rodriguez scored his first goal for the Saints with a shot from the edge of the penalty area to put the hosts ahead. Following a number of additional chances for Southampton to go two up, the sides went into half time at 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0048-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, League Cup\nDespite a number of clear cut chances in the second half, it took until the 78th minute for Rodriguez to double Southampton's lead when he converted a penalty following a foul on winger Steve De Ridder. Wednesday increased the pressure in the final part of the match, but were unable to reverse Southampton's win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231060-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southampton F.C. season, League Cup\nFor the fourth round of the cup, Southampton were drawn in an away match against Championship side Leeds United for 30 October. The home side held the majority of the possession and enjoyed more chances than the visitors in the first half, and opened the scoring in the 34th minute courtesy of loanee midfielder Michael Tonge. The second half continued in much the same way, with Leeds boasting more of the few chances, before El Hadji Diouf finally secured the victory for the hosts with an 88th-minute goal. In the last minute Leeds were also awarded a penalty, which was scored by substitute striker Luciano Becchio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231061-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks men's basketball team represented Southeast Missouri State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redhawks, led by fourth year head coach Dickey Nutt, played their home games at the Show Me Center and were members of the West Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 17\u201316, 8\u20138 in OVC play to finish in second place in the West Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the OVC Tournament to Eastern Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231062-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2012, followed by the start of the regular season in November. Conference play started in early January 2013, and concluded in March with the 2013 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. This was the first season for two former Big 12 teams, as the Texas A&M Aggies and the Missouri Tigers played their first season in the SEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231062-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season, Conference Schedules, Conference matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. (x) indicates games remaining this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 96], "content_span": [97, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231063-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southeastern Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 SEC women's basketball season began with practices in October 2012, followed by the start of the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season in November. Conference play started in early January 2013 and concluded in March, followed by the 2013 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament at the Gwinnett Center in Duluth, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231064-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southeastern Louisiana Lions basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Southeastern Louisiana Lions basketball team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lions, led by ninth year head coach Jim Yarbrough, played their home games at the University Center and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 13\u201318, 10\u20138 in Southland play to finish in fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Southland Tournament where they lost to Stephen F. Austin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231065-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southend United F.C. season\nThis page shows the progress of Southend United F.C. in the 2012\u201313 football season. During this campaign, they played their third successive season in the fourth tier of English football, League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231066-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern District RSA season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Southern District RSA's debut season in the Hong Kong First Division League since their establishment. They will seek to avoid relegation in the Hong Kong First Division League, as well as to achieve a better result in the Senior Challenge Shield and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231066-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern District RSA 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-00231066-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern District RSA season, Stats, Overall Stats\nPlayers Used: Southern has used a total of 27 different players in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231066-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern District RSA season, Stats, Top scorers\nRemarks:1 Jonathan Carril scored 3 goals for Kitchee before joining Southern District in October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231066-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern District RSA season, Stats, Captains\nLast updated: 19 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231066-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern District RSA season, Matches, Competitive, Hong Kong AFC Cup play-offs\nRemarks: 1 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match. 2 Wofoo Tai Po's home match against Southern of FA Cup first round will be played at Kowloon Bay Park instead of Wofoo Tai Po's home ground Tai Po Sports Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 87], "content_span": [88, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 110th in the history of the Southern League, which is an English football competition featuring semi-professional and amateur clubs from the South West, South Central and Midlands of England and South Wales. From the previous season onwards, the Southern League was known as The Evo-Stik League Southern, following a sponsorship deal with Evo-Stik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League\nDue to step three leagues increasing their number of clubs from 22 to 24 from the 2013\u201314 season onwards, only two clubs were relegated from the Premier Division, and only one club was relegated from each of Division One Central and South & West this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division consisted of 22 clubs, including 15 clubs from the previous season and seven new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nHinckley United and Maidenhead United were originally relegated to this division from the Conference North/South, but were reprieved after the liquidation of Darlington and the resignation of Kettering Town from the Conference National. Darlington were relegated to the Northern League, and Kettering applied to join the Southern League, allowing for a further reprieve for Hemel Hempstead Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nLeamington won the division and were promoted to the Conference North, while play-off winners Gosport Borough were promoted to the Conference South. Hemel Hempstead Town reached play-off final after two relegation reprieves in previous three seasons. Only two clus were to relegate this season due to Premier Division expansion up to 24 clubs for the next season. Bedworth United relegated straight back to eight level, while Kettering Town continued their fall to Division One Central.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Division One Central\nDivision One Central consisted of 22 clubs, including 18 clubs from previous season and four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Division One Central\nBurnham won the division on the final day of the season and were promoted to the Premier Division along with play-off winners Biggleswade Town. Woodford United lost all their matches and were the only club relegated from division this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Division One South & West\nDivision One South & West consisted of 21 clubs, including 17 clubs from previous season and four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Division One South & West\nPoole Town won the division in their second season in the league, and were promoted to the Premier Division along with play-off winners Hungerford Town. Winchester City finished bottom and left the Southern League for the Wessex League for the second time in four seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Division One South & West\nSholing resigned at the end of the season for financial reasons, and dropped down to the Wessex League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, Division One South & West\nOn 12 May 2013, Abingdon United also resigned from the league for financial reasons, and dropped down to the Hellenic League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231067-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Football League, League Cup\nThe Southern League Cup 2012\u201313 (billed as the RedInsure Cup 2012\u201313 for sponsorship reasons) is the 75th season of the Southern League Cup, the cup competition of the Southern Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231068-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball team represented Southern Illinois University Carbondale during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Salukis, led by first year head coach Barry Hinson, played their home games at the SIU Arena and were members of the Missouri Valley Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 6\u201312 in MVC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Missouri Valley Tournament to Missouri State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231069-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Jaguars basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Southern Jaguars basketball team represented Southern University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaguars, led by second year head coach Roman Banks, played their home games at the F. G. Clark Center and were members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 23\u201310, 15\u20133 in SWAC play to finish in a tie for second place. They were champions of the SWAC Tournament to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Gonzaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231070-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Miss Golden Eagles basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Southern Miss Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented the University of Southern Mississippi during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by first year head coach Donnie Tyndall, played their home games at Reed Green Coliseum and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 27\u201310, 12\u20134 in C-USA play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the Conference USA Tournament where they lost to Memphis in two overtimes. They received an invitation to the 2013 National Invitation Tournament where they Charleston Southern in the first round and Louisiana Tech in the second round before losing in the quarterfinals to BYU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231070-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Miss Golden Eagles basketball team\nIn 2016, the NCAA vacated all 27 wins (including 12 conference wins) due to participation of academically ineligible players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231071-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Southern Utah Thunderbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Southern Utah Thunderbirds basketball team represented Southern Utah University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Thunderbirds were led by first year head coach Nick Robinson and played their home games at the Centrum Arena. They were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 11\u201320, 8\u201312 in Big Sky play to finish in a three way tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Sky Tournament to North Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231072-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SpVgg Greuther F\u00fcrth season\nThe 2012\u201313 SpVgg Greuther F\u00fcrth season is the 110th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It is the clubs first-ever season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231072-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SpVgg Greuther F\u00fcrth season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it was knocked out in the first round by third division side Kickers Offenbach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231072-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 SpVgg Greuther F\u00fcrth season, Review and events\nFor the club's second home game in the Bundesliga, against Schalke 04, former United States Secretary of State Henry Kissinger announced his attendance, having been a lifelong fan of the club. Felix Klaus put his name down in the history books, as his goal against Mainz 05 in their second game earned Greuther F\u00fcrth their first ever win in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231073-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Spartan South Midlands Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Spartan South Midlands Football League season (known as the 2012\u201313 Molten Spartan South Midlands Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 16th 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, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231073-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 20 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, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231073-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Premier Division\nFor this season only, the FA were to promote a second club from two of the following six Step 5 leagues: Combined Counties League, Eastern Counties League, Essex Senior League, Kent League, Spartan South Midlands League and the Sussex County League. This was to fulfil the expansion of the Isthmian League Divisions One North and South from 22 to 24 clubs each. The two clubs were to be promoted on a points per game basis, and the two runners-up with the best PPG were VCD Athletic (Kent Football League) and Guernsey (Combined Counties League). Three others \u2013 Aylesbury United (Spartan South Midlands League), Redhill (Sussex County League) and Barkingside (Essex Senior League) \u2013 were also confirmed as promoted by the FA on 17 May, due to resignations and non-promotions elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231073-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Premier Division\nFrom this league, only AFC Dunstable, Aylesbury United, Dunstable Town, Haringey Borough, Oxhey Jets and Tring Athletic applied for promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231073-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 18 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231073-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured eleven clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231074-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting CP season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Sporting Clube de Portugal's 80th season in the top flight, the Primeira Liga, known as the Liga ZON Sagres for sponsorship purposes. This article shows player statistics and all matches that the club plays during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231074-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting CP season\nIt is considered to be the worst season ever in Sporting's history. The club ended in the seventh place in the league table, the lowest position in the club's history, thus failing to qualify for the following season's UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League. Sporting were also eliminated from the Europa League group stage for the first time ever, ending in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231074-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting CP 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231074-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting CP season, Transfers, 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231075-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season\nThe 2012\u201313 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season was the first season that the club played in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n after the relegation from the highest tier of football in Spain, La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231075-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231075-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Players, Youth system\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, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231075-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Squad statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 11 March 2013Source: Competitive matches and Ordered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231076-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St Johnstone F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was St Johnstone's fourth consecutive season in the Scottish Premier League, having been promoted from the Scottish First Division at the end of the 2008\u201309 season. St Johnstone also competed in the Europa League, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231076-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St Johnstone F.C. season, Summary, Season\nSt Johnstone finished third in the Scottish Premier League. They reached the Second qualifying round of the Europa League, the Quarter-final of the League Cup and the fifth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231076-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St Johnstone F.C. season, Player statistics, Captains\nLast updated: 19 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231076-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St Johnstone F.C. season, Transfers\nChris Millar initially turned down a new deal but later re-signed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231077-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St Mirren F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was St Mirren's seventh consecutive season in the Scottish Premier League, having been promoted from the Scottish First Division at the end of the 2005\u201306 season. St Mirren also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231077-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St Mirren F.C. season, Summary, Season\nSt Mirren finished eleventh in the Scottish Premier League. They reached the Quarter-final of the Scottish Cup, and won the League Cup for the first time in the club's history, beating Heart of Midlothian 3\u20132 in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231077-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St Mirren F.C. season, Squad information, Captains\nLast updated: 18 May 2013Source: Competitive match reports. Competitive matches onlyMatches started as captain onlyCountry: FIFA nationality; No. : Squad number; P: Position; Name: Player name; No. Games: Number of games started as captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231078-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Bonaventure Bonnies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 St. Bonaventure Bonnies men's basketball team represented St. Bonaventure University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bonnies, led by sixth year head coach Mark Schmidt, played their home games at the Reilly Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 14\u201315, 7\u20139 in A-10 play to finish in a three-way tie for 11th place. A year after being tournament champions, they failed to quaily for the Atlantic 10 Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u20132013 St. Francis Terriers men's basketball team represented St. Francis College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by third year head coach Glenn Braica, who is the reigning NEC head coach of the year. The Terrier's home games were played at the Generoso Pope Athletic Complex. They also played 2 games at the new Barclays Center in Downtown Brooklyn against Long Island in a neutral site match up and St. John's in the inaugural Brooklyn Hoops Winter Festival. The team has been a member of the Northeast Conference since 1981. They finished the season at 12\u201318 overall and 8\u201310 in the NEC to finish in eighth place, which qualified them for the NEC Basketball Tournament. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Northeast Conference Basketball Tournament to number one seed Robert Morris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Season outlook\nIn Glenn Braica's first two seasons the Terriers have made the NEC tournament. Going into this season Braica has a combined 30\u201330 record and is coming off of winning the 2012 NEC Coach of the Year Trophy. Last year the Terriers earned the fourth seed in the conference and hosted their first home playoff game since 1997. For the 2012\u20132013 season, Braica's Terriers were selected to finish fifth by the Northeast Conference men's basketball coaches. The Terriers had four of their five starters returning for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Season outlook\nThe only loss in the starting five was swingman and three-point specialist Stefan Perunicic. Perunicic is the program's second-leading three-point shooter of all-time. The Terriers also lost guard Justin Newton to graduation. Yet the Terriers saw the return of former starting guard Dre Calloway, who missed most of last season after having season-ending shoulder surgery in November 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Season outlook\nThe Terriers returned four starters: Jalen Cannon, Akeem Johnson, Brent Jones and Ben Mockford. Power forward Jalen Cannon was selected to the 2012 NEC All-Rookie team and led the team in rebounding with 8.8 per game. Cannon also recorded 8 double-doubles. Forward-center Akeem Johnson had 3 20+ point games and started 26 out of 30 games. Johnson was also one of the more efficient players in the Northeast Conference with a 55% field goal mark. Point guard Brent Jones was last year's assists leader, averaging 3.9 per game. Jones took over the starting job down the stretch last year, starting 12 of the last 13 contests. Shooting guard Ben Mockford led the team in scoring with 11.8 points per game and started all 30 contests last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Preseason signings\nThe Terriers announced that 6\u00a0ft 3 in combo guard Anthony White (Mastic, New York) and 6'4\" shooting guard Aleksandar Isailovic (Belgrade, Serbia) had signed National Letters-of-Intent to enroll at the college in fall 2012. Anthony White came from William Floyd High School, where in his junior year he led his team in points, rebounds and assists. White was also an All-League selection, All-Conference, All-Suffolk County and was selected to the Newsday All-Long Island Team. Aleksander Isailovic is arriving from Collin College in Plano, Texas. Isailovic averaged 10.5 points, 2.7 rebounds, and 0.7 steals per game last season at Collin Community College and will have two years of eligibility as a Terrier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 79], "content_span": [80, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nFor the second season in a row the Terriers opened their season mostly on the road, as they played 8 of their first 11 games away from The Pope. The Terriers completed the non-conference portion of their schedule at 4\u20137. The team won the season opener against Lafayette on the road, with four of the five Terrier starters scoring double digits. Jalen Cannon notched his first double-double of the season with 13 points and 13 rebounds and the Terriers led by a much as 17 on their way to a 76\u201365 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nThe Terriers snapped a three-game losing streak against the Leopards and also won for the first time on opening night since November 9, 2007. The Terriers then lost to Illinois 64\u201389. The Illini were the Terriers most difficult opponent all year long, they went on to be ranked as high as 10th in the nation by the AP and Coaches Polls. The Terriers home opener at The Pope was against Army, the game saw the Terriers defeated 59\u201367.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nThe Terriers closed the first half down by one point, 30\u201331, yet they never led in the second half as the Black Knights soundly defeated the Terriers. Jalen Cannon scored a career-high 23 points and grabbed 10 rebounds and classmate Kevin Douglas added 15 points and rejected a career-high three shots in the losing effort. The Terriers then traveled to Rhode Island to play at Brown, where they beat the Bears 76\u201372 in overtime. Mockford scored 8 of his 14 points in overtime to lead the Terriers in the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0004-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nAfter a 2\u20132 start, the Terriers went on to lose 5 straight games against Norfolk State, Albany, Boston College, Stony Brook and St. John's. Against both Norfolk State and Boston College the Terriers had second-half leads of 11 and 9 points respectively, but in both cases were unable to hold on for the win. Against Albany, Stony Brook and St. John's, the Terriers were soundly defeated. The Terriers then won their last two non-conference games against Colgate and NJIT. The game against Colgate saw Jalen Cannon drop 24 points, a new career high, and Travis Nichols 20 points off the bench. At NJIT, Johnson had the game-winning layup with five seconds remaining and Cannon put up 23 points and grabbed 12 rebounds for his 5th double-double of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nThe Terriers then beat Quinnipiac, to extend their winning streak to three games and win their first game of the conference schedule. The Terriers went on to finish conference play at 8\u201310 and qualify for the NEC tournament with the 8th seed. Their next game, at Sacred Heart, saw the Terriers lose in the final seconds of the contest 65\u201366, even though Cannon poured in 20 points and grabbed 16 rebounds for his 6th double-double. Against Mount St. Mary's the Terriers were led by Ben Mockford's 19 point performance to win 70\u201356.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nIn that game 4 Terriers were in double figures for points scored. At Wagner, the Terriers who were underdogs beat the Seahawks by 19 points, 71\u201352. For the first time all season Coach Braica had to change his starting 5 by starting Aleksandar Isailovic in place of Kevin Douglas, who has an injured right hand. Travis Nichols came off the bench to score 20 points and grab 6 rebounds, which contributed to the Seahawks first loss at home this season. After the Terriers opened conference play at 3\u20131, they went on to go 5\u20139 in their next 14 contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, Regular season\nThe Terriers lost 2 games a piece to Monmouth and Long Island, including the Battle of Brooklyn game. Down the stretch Mockford scored a career high 29 points against Mount St. Mary's and Kevin Douglas did not return to the line-up until the last game of the regular season against Sacred Heart. St. Francis Brooklyn has struggled closing out games this season. The Terriers have held a second-half lead in 22 of their 27 contests this season (exceptions are Illinois, Army, St. John's, Stony Brook, and Mount St. Mary's). St. Francis has held a second-half lead in 16 of 18 NEC contests but are just 8\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231079-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers men's basketball team, NEC tournament\nThe 8th-seed Terriers traveled to 1st seed Robert Morris and lost 57\u201375; they were led by sophomore Jalen Cannon (15 points, 6 rebs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 75], "content_span": [76, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231080-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers women's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 St. Francis Brooklyn Terriers women's basketball team represented St. Francis College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Terrier's home games were played at the Generoso Pope Athletic Complex. The team has been a member of the Northeast Conference since 1988. St. Francis Brooklyn was coached by John Thurston, who was in his first year at the helm of the Terriers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231081-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team represented St. John's University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Steve Lavin in his third year at the school. St. John's home games were played at Carnesecca Arena and Madison Square Garden and the team was a member of the Big East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season\nThe 2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season was the 46th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on June 5, 1967. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Off-season\nOn January 6, 2013, after a 113-day lockout, the NHL Owners and Players reached a new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), ratified on both sides by January 12, 119-days after the lockout. The old CBA expired on September 15, 2012, precipitating the lockout of the players by the owners. The new CBA has to be ratified by both the owners and players before the season can begin. On the same day, team owner Tom Stillman released a statement apologizing to the fans for the more-than-three-month lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Off-season\nThe Blues and the NHL released the new playing schedules for 2013, covering 48 games instead of the usual 82. The Blues open the season at home on January 19 against the Detroit Red Wings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Off-season\nFox Sports Midwest will broadcast 41 of the 48 games. NBC/NBC Sports will broadcast the remaining seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Off-season\nOn the eve of the start of the abbreviated 2012\u201313 season on January 19, the Blues trimmed their roster to 23 by the January 18 deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, January\nThe first game of the 48-game season scored a first for the Blues: the first shutout in the first game of the season in their 46-year history. A 6\u20130 shutout of Detroit at home by Jaroslav Halak (14th with the Blues; facing only 14 shots) featured a two-goal game on his first two NHL shots by acclaimed Russian rookie Vladimir Tarasenko, two goals by Chris Stewart and a short-handed goal by T. J. Oshie, with four of the six goals on the power-play, to a standing-room-only crowd of 20,035 in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, January\nThe opening game was the highest-rated Blues season or home opener on FOX Sports Midwest. It averaged a 6.0 household rating, making it the highest-rated program in prime time in St. Louis on Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, January\nThe second game of the season, on Monday January 21 against the Nashville Predators, was the highest-rated regular season Blues telecast ever on FOX Sports Midwest. The Blues' 4\u20133 shootout win at Nashville generated a 7.4 household rating in the St. Louis DMA, according to Nielsen Media Research. That easily tops the previous regular season high of 6.3 set March 13, 2012 at Chicago. The Monday telecast peaked at a 9.1 rating (113,000 households) during the shootout. The Blues Live postgame show followed with an impressive 4.7 rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, January\nOn January 27, the Blues honored the late St. Louis Cardinals' baseball Hall of Famer Stan Musial, who died in Ladue, Missouri, on January 19 at the age of 92. The Blues wore number 6 (Musial's number) on their warmup jerseys that were autographed and then auctioned to benefit Cardinals Care and the St. Louis Blues 14 fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, February\nOn February 4, Blues' forward Vladimir Tarasenko was named by the NHL as January's Rookie of the Month, as he led all rookie forwards with nine points (five goals and four assists) in seven games in the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, February\nOn February 13, goaltender Jake Allen made his first start in goal, against the Detroit Red Wings at Joe Louis Arena, where his team beat Detroit 4\u20133 in overtime, stopping 15 of 18 shots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, February\nVladimir Tarasenko was the early favorite to win the Calder Memorial Trophy as Rookie of the Year after the one-quarter mark (12 games) of the season, scoring six goals and five assists (11 points) in 13 games, playing only 14:27 average per game. On February 22, he was placed on the injured reserve list after getting hit on the head in the February 20 game in Colorado. His five points in his first two games tied him with Wayne Babych for the best start by a rookie in Blues' history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, February\nOn February 23 at home, Barret Jackman became the all-time Blues' leader in games played by a defenseman with his 616th game played since his debut on April 14, 2002. He has 22 goals and 121 assists for 143 points in his career and a plus-minus rating of +37. This season, he passed Bob Plager (615), Barclay Plager (614), Al MacInnis (613), Larry Patey (603) and Chris Pronger (598). Only forwards Bernie Federko (927), Brian Sutter (779), Brett Hull (744) and Garry Unger (662) have played in more games than Jackman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, February\nAfter starting out with a 6\u20131 record in January, the Blues skidded to a 4\u20137\u20131 record in February, with a 1\u20135\u20131 record at home; in that span, they scored only 11 goals while giving up 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, March\nRookie goaltender Jake Allen earned his first NHL shutout at home against the Phoenix Coyotes, stopping all 28 shots on March 14. It boosted his record to 7\u20131 in his first eight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, March\nGoaltender Jaroslav Halak tied Glenn Hall for the Blues' franchise record of 16 career shutouts when Halak shut-out the Edmonton Oilers on March 23, stopping all 19 shots on net. It was his 25th career shutout in the NHL. Roman Turek is third on the franchise list with 13 shutouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, March\nA freefall at the end of March, losing four of five games, dropped the Blues to eighth place in the Conference, just barely hanging on to a playoff spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, March\nA few days before the NHL trade deadline (April 3), the Blues, on March 30, picked up a left-shooting defenseman Jordan Leopold in a trade with the Buffalo Sabres to bolster its defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, April\nIn his second trade in two days, on April 1, general manager Doug Armstrong, after pushing for 10 months, finally acquired left-shooting defenseman Jay Bouwmeester from the Calgary Flames. In his final trade, his third in four days, just before the deadline on April 3, Armstrong traded defenseman Wade Redden to the Boston Bruins for a conditional seventh-round draft pick in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, April\nApril 16 saw head coach Ken Hitchcock earn his 600th NHL win with the 2\u20131 shootout victory over the Vancouver Canucks. He became the 11th NHL coach to reach that milestone. Of the 11, only two have higher career point percentages: Scotty Bowman (.657) and Joel Quenneville (.612), with Hitchcock at .595. Ironically, Bowman and Quenneville were both former Blues' coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, April\nThe Blues clinched a playoff spot in the top eight teams in the Western Conference after their 3\u20131 home win against the Colorado Avalanche on April 23, giving them a 27\u201317\u20132 (56 points) record. Final seeding will depend on the result of their final two games of the season at home against the Calgary Flames and Chicago Blackhawks, with a chance for fourth place giving them home advantage in the first round. They reached the playoffs for 25 consecutive years from 1979 to 2004, and their third in the last eight seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, April\nThe team was 17\u201314\u20132 (36 points), sitting at ninth place in the Western Conference at the end of March, and were in danger of not making the playoffs. A 12\u20133 run in April, however, pushed them to fourth place and home ice in the first round of the playoffs against the Los Angeles Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, April\nGoaltender Brian Elliott was named the NHL's Second Star of the Month for April, with his franchise-record (including post-season) 11 wins in the month. He had an 11\u20132\u20130 record, 1.28 goals against average and .948 save percentage, with three shutouts in 13 games, to push the Blues into fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, April\nThe Blues tied the Vancouver Canucks for most shutouts for in the NHL, with seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, May\nAfter the Blues' first-round loss, their third playoff loss in four seasons, sportswriter Bernie Miklasz asked why the Blues are so easily satisfied. He previously wrote that the team was good, but just not good enough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Schedule and results\n(all games on Fox Sports Midwest, except those on NBC/NBC Sports marked with a * )", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Schedule and results\nWin (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Schedule and results\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Player statistics\n* indicates not currently on the active roster. + indicates on Injured Reserve. \u2021Traded away mid-season, date of last game in ( ). Stats reflect time with Blues only. \u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Blues, date of first game in ( ). Stats reflect time with Blues only. Bold = leading team in category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Blues. Stats reflect time with the Blues only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Transactions\nThe Blues have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Draft picks\nSt. Louis' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at the Consol Energy Center from June 22\u201323, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Farm teams, Peoria Rivermen\nThe Peoria (Illinois) Rivermen are the Blues American Hockey League affiliate in 2012\u201313. On April 1, 2013, the Blues announced that the Vancouver Canucks on March 29 agreed to buy the Rivermen from the Blues, pending approval from the NHL. Details not available. It is expected the Blues will affiliate with the AHL's Chicago Wolves for the 2013\u201314 season. The Blues officially announced their affiliation with the Wolves on April 23, for at least three seasons. They play in the Allstate Arena in the Chicago suburb of Rosemont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0032-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Farm teams, Peoria Rivermen\nThe team was formerly affiliated with the Vancouver Canucks from 2011\u20132013, and the Atlanta Thrashers from 2001\u20132011. The swap was hard to take for the fans of the team, but the team's attendance was light, and the sponsorship not very strong. The team is one of the premier franchises in the AHL. The team's owner is Don Levin, coached by Scott Arniel, and their GM is Wendell Young.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231082-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 St. Louis Blues season, Farm teams, Evansville IceMen\nThe Evansville IceMen are the Blues affiliate in the ECHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231083-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team represented Stanford University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cardinal, led by fifth year head coach Johnny Dawkins, played their home games at Maples Pavilion and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 19\u201315, 9\u20139 in Pac-12 play to finish in a four way tie for sixth place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Arizona State. They were invited to the 2013 NIT where they defeated Stephen F. Austin in the first round before losing in the second round to Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231084-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stenhousemuir F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Stenhousemuir's fourth consecutive season in the Scottish Second Division, having been promoted from the Scottish Third Division at the end of the 2008\u201309 season. Stenhousemuir also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231084-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stenhousemuir F.C. season, Summary, Season\nStenhousemuir finished sixth in the Scottish Second Division. They reached the Quarter-final of the Challenge Cup, the third round of the League Cup and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231084-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stenhousemuir F.C. season, Summary, Management\nStenhousemuir were managed by Martyn Corrigan for the 2012\u201313 season, following the resignation of Davie Irons due to personal reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231085-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks basketball team represented Stephen F. Austin University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Lumberjacks, led by 13th year head coach Danny Kaspar, played their home games at the William R. Johnson Coliseum and were members of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 27\u20135, 16\u20132 in Southland play to win the Southland regular season championship. They advanced to the championship game of the Southland Tournament where they lost to Northwestern State. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to Stanford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231086-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stetson Hatters men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Stetson Hatters men's basketball team represented Stetson University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hatters, led by second year head coach Casey Alexander, played their home games at the Edmunds Center and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 15\u201316, 11\u20137 in A-Sun play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Atlantic Sun Tournament where they lost to Florida Gulf Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Stevenage F.C. 's third season in the Football League, where the club competed in League One. This article shows statistics of the club's players in the season, and also lists all matches that the club played during the season. Their sixth-place finish and subsequent play-off semi-final defeat during the 2011\u201312 campaign means it was Stevenage's second season of playing in League One, having only spent two years as a Football League club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nThe season also marked the third season that the club played under its new name \u2013 Stevenage Football Club, dropping 'Borough' from its title as of 1 June 2010. It was manager Gary Smith's first start to a season as Stevenage manager, having been appointed in January 2012. However, Smith was sacked in March 2013 following a run of 14 defeats in 18 games. His successor was Graham Westley, returning for his third spell in-charge of Stevenage, having previously managed the club for three years from 2003 to 2006, and then four years during his second-spell from 2008 to 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nAhead of the season, there were wholesale changes involving the playing squad. Eight players were released in May 2012, including Ronnie Henry, subsequently ending his seven-year association with the club. With a number of players out of contract, further departures were revealed as Chris Beardsley, Joel Byrom, Scott Laird and John Mousinho all rejected the offer of contract extensions at Stevenage, and all four ended up signing for Preston North End, who at the time were managed by Westley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nThree more first-team players left Stevenage before the start of the new campaign, both Michael Bostwick and Lawrie Wilson made the step up to the Championship, signing for Peterborough United and Charlton Athletic for respective undisclosed fees; while Craig Reid signed for League Two side Aldershot Town for a five-figure fee. Smith's first three signings of the close season were announced at the end of May, with goalkeeper Steve Arnold joining from Wycombe Wanderers, as well as midfielders James Dunne and Greg Tansey signing from Exeter City and Inverness Caledonian Thistle respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nFive more players joined the club before the start of pre-season, and Lee Hills and Matt Ball were further additions following successful trials. In terms of transfer activity during the season, both Don Cowan and Rob Sinclair left the club on free transfers. Strikers Patrick Agyemang and Dani L\u00f3pez were signed before the close of the summer transfer window, while defenders Andy Iro and Ben Chorley were acquired mid-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nDespite the squad overhaul, Stevenage began the season positively, going on an eleven-match unbeaten run, six of which victories, to open the new campaign. Following the club's 2\u20131 home victory over Portsmouth in late October 2012, Stevenage found themselves in second place, just a point behind the league leaders at the time. However, Stevenage were defeated heavily in three of their next four matches, conceding four goals in each of the three defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nSitting in fifth position at the start of December, Stevenage would go on to win just five league matches out of the remaining 25, although did secure notable victories over promotion-chasing Brentford and Sheffield United. A run of 14 defeats in 18 matches ultimately resulted in Smith's sacking on 20 March 2013, \". Captain Mark Roberts briefly took caretaker charge, before it was announced that Westley would be returning for a third spell in-charge of the club, joining on 30 March. The club ended the season in 18th position in League One, with 54 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nStevenage also competed in three cup competitions during the season. The club opened the season by beating AFC Wimbledon in the League Cup, and as a result won a League Cup fixture for the first time in their history. They lost to Premier League side Southampton at Broadhall Way in the Second Round. The club fell at the first hurdle in both the Football League Trophy and FA Cup, losing 3\u20132 away to League Two opposition in both competitions; firstly to Dagenham & Redbridge in the Football League Trophy, before losing to Rotherham United in the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season\nWinger Lucas Akins, who had joined the club in August 2012 for an undisclosed fee, was the club's top goalscorer for the season with ten goals, all of which came in the league. Akins also played in all 46 of Stevenage's league matches during the campaign, the only Stevenage player to remain ever-present during the league season. Another pre-season signing, James Dunne, won the Player of the Year award, as well as being voted Players' Player of the Year, for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nIn May 2012, Stevenage announced that their pre\u2013season campaign would consist of eight friendlies to open the 2012\u201313 season. A home fixture against Championship side Peterborough United was later added to the list of friendlies. In early July, the club announced that Stevenage would be travelling to Dublin to play two further pre-season friendlies, against St James's Gate and UCD respectively. It was also revealed that due to the first-team's pre-season tour to Dublin, the club would instead be sending a Stevenage XI side, composed of trialists and youth players, to the arranged fixture against Hitchin Town on 24 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nSimilarly, Stevenage sent a Stevenage XI side to play Colney Heath on 31 July, as opposed to the first-team as first announced. The last of Stevenage's pre-arranged friendlies, against Barnet, scheduled to be played on 10 August, was also cancelled due to the 2012 Summer Olympics. Instead, it was announced that Stevenage would play Queens Park Rangers in a \"behind closed doors\" friendly on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nStevenage's first pre-season fixture was an away trip to Conference South side Boreham Wood on 14 July, with the game ending in a 1\u20131 draw. Stevenage fielded two entirely different teams in each half, playing a mixture of first-team players and trialists. The home side took the lead on the half hour mark when Inih Effiong cut in from the left wing before firing into the bottom left hand corner of the goal. Shortly after the interval, summer signing Marcus Haber headed in a Filipe Morais corner to restore parity, with the game ultimately finishing at one goal apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nThe club's next pre-season fixture took place four days later, on 18 July, as Stevenage welcomed Premier League side Tottenham Hotspur to Broadhall Way. Tottenham won the match 2\u20130, courtesy of second-half goals from new signing Gylfi Sigur\u00f0sson and youngster Iago Falqu\u00e9. Similarly to the match against Boreham Wood, Stevenage fielded two different teams in each half, with the second-half team featuring a number of trialists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nThe club then embarked on their pre-season tour of Dublin, arriving on 20 July and playing their first match a day later \u2014 beating St James's Gate 7\u20130, courtesy of four goals from midfielder Robin Shroot, a brace from Michael Thalassitis, and a free-kick from Greg Tansey. The second, and final, game of the tour took place three days later, on 24 July, with Stevenage beating UCD 4\u20133 at the UCD Bowl. Marcus Haber opened the scoring when he headed in Filipe Morais' cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0006-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nThe hosts replied by scoring goals either side of the interval, before Stevenage equalised through Robin Shroot. UCD replied instantly when Daniel Ledwith's left wing free-kick evaded everyone, before Shroot scored his second of the game with fifteen minutes remaining with an individual effort. Greg Tansey scored what proved to be the winner with a curling free-kick five minutes from time to ensure Stevenage won both of their games in Dublin. The team returned to England a day after their victory over UCD, and, at the end of the week, hosted an Arsenal XI side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0006-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nThe game ended goalless in front of a crowd of 1,068, with Arsenal's Serge Gnarby having the best effort of the game, seeing his shot rebound off the crossbar. Stevenage then lost 4\u20132 away to Bishop's Stortford, fielding a mixture of first-team players, trialists and members of the youth team, with Filipe Morais and Robin Shroot scoring for the away side. Three days later, on 4 August, the team drew 1\u20131 with Championship side Peterborough United. Greg Tansey scored Stevenage's goal, before Lee Tomlin equalised late-on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0006-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Pre-season\nA 2\u20131 win over St Albans City at Clarence Park followed, both of Stevenage's goals coming from Robin Shroot. The club's final friendly, a \"behind closed doors\" match against Queens Park Rangers in Harlington, ended 2\u20132, with Stevenage coming from two goals down to draw, courtesy of second-half goals from Luke Freeman and Robin Shroot \u2014 Shroot's tenth goal of pre-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe 2012\u201313 League One fixtures were released on 18 June 2012, with Stevenage opening their league campaign at home to Carlisle United on 18 August 2012. The game ended 1\u20131, meaning Stevenage had drawn their opening league fixture for a fourth consecutive season. Carlisle took the lead with just twenty minutes remaining, substitute Danny Cadamarteri neatly setting Matty Robson free down the left wing, who drove the ball across goal and into the bottom corner of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe home side equalised two minutes before time, substitute Lucas Akins' shot was dropped by goalkeeper Adam Collin, and another substitute, Robin Shroot, was there to tap the ball in from close range. Three days later, on 21 August, Stevenage faced Leyton Orient at Brisbane Road, in the club's first away game of the campaign. The game ended 1\u20130 in Stevenage's favour, their first win of the league season, with Lucas Akins scoring his first goal for the club mid-way through the first half after the home side had failed to clear Luke Freeman's free-kick. The team then travelled to Oldham Athletic four days later, on 25 August, and secured a second straight 1\u20130 away win. The only goal of the game was scored in the first-half, from the penalty spot, by Lucas Akins after Marcus Haber had been fouled by Oldham goalkeeper Alex Cisak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe club started September with a 1\u20131 draw against Shrewsbury Town at Broadhall Way. The away side took the lead after just five minutes; Chris Day spilled Marc Richards' free-kick, and Paul Parry was there to prod the ball into the goal on the rebound. Stevenage equalised twenty minutes later when Darius Charles ran from his own half before striking a curling shot from 25-yards that beat Chris Weale in the Shrewsbury goal. A 2\u20131 away victory against recently relegated Coventry City followed on 9 September, with the game being televised live on Sky Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nCoventry took the lead after eleven minutes when loanee David McGoldrick turned on the edge of the area, before striking a curling effort into the top corner of the goal. Stevenage equalised ten minutes later when a counterattack culminated with a Luke Freeman shot being parried into the path of an onrushing Robin Shroot, who swept the ball home from just inside the area. The comeback was completed with twenty minutes remaining, substitute Marcus Haber heading in Darius Charles' flick on from a Freeman corner. Six days later, Stevenage faced newly promoted Crewe Alexandra at Broadhall Way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nCrewe started brightly and opened the scoring after just six minutes. A Gregor Robertson free-kick was blocked, but found its way to Max Clayton on the left wing, who rifled the ball across goal where A-Jay Leitch-Smith was on hand to connect from close range. Leitch-Smith doubled Crewe's advantage almost instantly, running on to a neat Chuks Aneke pass before finishing calmly with a low driven shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0008-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nLuke Freeman halved Stevenage's deficit midway through the first-half when he unleashed a shot from 25-yards, following good work from Patrick Agyemang and Lucas Akins, which left Crewe goalkeeper Alan Martin rooted to the spot. Former Stevenage loanee, Aneke, was sent-off for Crewe in the second half for a two-footed tackle on Anthony Grant. The home side made their numerical advantage count when substitute Robin Shroot scored with a neat turn and finish with ten minutes remaining. A 3\u20131 home victory over Walsall followed on 18 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0008-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nRobin Shroot had given Stevenage a first-half lead with a tidy finish from outside the area, before Walsall's George Bowerman equalised on the hour mark. The home side restored their lead through Greg Tansey, who scored with a driven shot from 30-yards, his first goal for the club. Lucas Akins sealed the victory late-on, when he steered in Tansey's cross at the back post. A week later, on 22 September, Stevenage drew 1\u20131 at Doncaster Rovers. Loan signing Oliver Risser headed Stevenage into the lead, before Doncaster's Chris Brown levelled in the second-half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0008-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe month ended with a 2\u20132 against Bury at Broadhall Way. The visitors, under the new management of Kevin Blackwell, opened the scoring through Tom Hopper's looping header. After the interval, Stevenage scored twice within the space of two minutes to turn the game on its head. Marcus Haber headed in Luke Freeman's corner to restore parity, before Greg Tansey scored a curling long-range strike. Bury equalised through second-half substitute Mark Cullen, to ensure a share of the spoils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nStevenage travelled to second placed Notts County to begin October, securing a 2\u20131 victory at Meadow Lane. The hosts missed a penalty at the start of the second-half, with Jeff Hughes' spot-kick hitting the post. They were awarded another penalty twenty minutes later; this time Jamal Campbell-Ryce stepped up and duly converted from twelve yards. Stevenage levelled with just seven minutes remaining, Lucas Akins scoring from the penalty spot after Alan Sheehan handled Marcus Haber's goal-bound effort, with Sheehan receiving a straight red card for the offence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nSubstitute Robin Shroot scored in injury-time to give Stevenage the win, latching onto Haber's lofted through-pass to finish calmly. Stevenage then secured a 1\u20130 home victory over Scunthorpe United four days later. The only goal of the game came courtesy of Greg Tansey's curling free-kick fifteen minutes from time, enough to earn the hosts their second successive win. The club's unbeaten start to the league season was ended a week later, as they fell to 1\u20130 defeat away to Colchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nStevenage had Anthony Grant sent-off early in the second half for two bookable offences, before Colchester's Sanchez Watt scored the deciding goal with a drilled finish two minutes later. Stevenage recovered from their first defeat of the season by inflicting the first home defeat of the season on MK Dons a week later, with a first-half Lucas Akins strike settling the game and ensuring a 1\u20130 away victory. Three days later, on 23 October, Stevenage beat Portsmouth at Broadhall Way, winning 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0009-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nMidfielder Filipe Morais scored his first goal for the club after fifteen minutes, heading in a Lucas Akins cross. The visitors equalised early on in the second-half when Jon Harley found space on the edge of the area and fired in a left-footed shot from 20 yards. Stevenage responded almost instantly when a Morais cross evaded everyone and found its way into the net. Just four days later, Stevenage's unbeaten home record was ended courtesy of a 4\u20130 loss to Swindon Town. Swindon were three goals to the good before the interval, thanks to goals from Raffaele De Vita, Matt Ritchie, and Miles Storey, with the away side also missing a penalty. Swindon substitute Adam Rooney added a fourth on the hour mark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nFollowing the heavy home loss to Swindon, Stevenage returned to league action on 6 November, travelling to Huish Park to face Yeovil Town \u2014 with Stevenage winning the match by a 3\u20131 scoreline. The visitors opened the scoring after just two minutes; Felipe Morais turning in Greg Tansey's cross at the back post. Yeovil responded instantly through Paddy Madden's scissor kick. Shortly after the interval, Lucas Akins was on hand to turn in substitute Marcus Haber's low cross, before James Dunne's deflected effort doubled Stevenage's advantage and put the game beyond doubt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nFour days later, Stevenage suffered their second consecutive heavy home defeat, this time losing 4\u20131 to Preston North End. The away side scored early on through Stuart Beavon's powerful strike, before Stevenage's Greg Tansey briefly restored parity with a curling effort from the edge of the area. Preston regained the lead through Jack King following good work from Jeffrey Monakana ten minutes before half-time. Two second-half long-range strikes from Monakana and Nicky Wroe respectively gave Preston a comfortable win. Another defeat followed a week later, losing 4\u20131 away to Sheffield United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe home side took the lead on the twenty-minute mark, defender Neill Collins heading home unmarked from Ryan Flynn's centre. Stevenage equalised just before half-time, captain Mark Roberts scoring with a header from Filipe Morais' corner. The parity was short-lived, however, as Shaun Miller netted twice after the interval, before Chris Porter added a fourth late-on to ensure a routine victory. Stevenage then travelled to Bournemouth three days later, securing a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0010-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe visitors took the lead mid-way through the first-half when Marcus Haber found space down the right wing, before laying the ball onto Greg Tansey, who found the net from just outside the area. Bournemouth equalised with fifteen minutes remaining, substitute Matt Tubbs heading in Lewis Grabban's cross at the back post. Another 1\u20131 scoreline followed when Stevenage took on league leaders Tranmere Rovers at Broadhall Way on 24 November. The game came to life with just ten minutes left; Tranmere striker Jake Cassidy found space in the area, and headed in Adam McGurk's cross unmarked. Stevenage then hit the post late-on through Robin Shroot, before equalising deep into stoppage time when Greg Tansey picked up Mark Roberts' pass and curled a looping shot over Owain F\u00f4n Williams in the Tranmere goal. The goal was Tansey's third in four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nAfter a two-week break, Stevenage opened December with a 2\u20130 away victory against bottom-of-the-table Hartlepool United. Marcus Haber scored his third goal of the season when he reacted quickest after his initial header had rebounded off the post, giving Stevenage the lead after twenty minutes. The away side doubled their advantage on the hour mark. Hartlepool's Jordan Richards was adjudged to have handled the ball in the area, and Lucas Akins scored the resultant spot-kick. A 2\u20131 home loss to Crawley Town followed a week later, on 15 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe match was the first home game for Stevenage since Mitchell Cole's passing, and the occasion was marked with numerous tributes to the former Stevenage player. The home side looked on course to take the three points when Robin Shroot neatly tucked the ball home from close range following David Gray's centre. However, Crawley netted twice within the space of four second-half minutes to secure their first league win in seven games. The club's game against Brentford, scheduled to be played at Griffin Park on 22 December, was postponed due to a waterlogged pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nStevenage returned to action on Boxing Day following an eleven-day break, losing 3\u20131 at home to in-form Coventry City. A first-half Lucas Akins penalty had given the hosts the lead, only for Coventry to score three times in the final ten minutes to secure all three points. Stevenage's last scheduled game of 2012, a home game against Notts County on 29 December, was postponed due to a waterlogged pitch. The club had held a 9am pitch inspection on the day of the game, and deemed the surface unplayable due to heavy rainfall during the days leading up to the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe new year began with a 1\u20130 defeat by Walsall at the Bescot Stadium on 1 January. A long-range Jamie Paterson strike with three minutes remaining was enough to settle the game. Four days later, Stevenage travelled to Crewe looking for their first win in a month. The game ended 2\u20131 to Stevenage, coming back from a first-half deficit to take all three points. Former Stevenage loanee, Chuks Aneke, had given Crewe the lead with a calm side-footed effort mid-way through the first period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nStevenage replied twice within the space of five second-half minutes; first Lucas Akins tapped in Anthony Grant's centre, before Akins' flick-on gave Marcus Haber room to run and slide the ball through Steve Phillips' legs in the Crewe goal. A week later, on 12 January, Stevenage's bad home form continued when they lost 2\u20131 to promotion chasing Doncaster Rovers. Doncaster, without a manager at the time of the game due to Dean Saunders leaving for Wolverhampton Wanderers, scored twice late-on to secure victory after Stevenage had led through James Dunne's powerful half-volley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nThe defeat meant that Stevenage were without a home win in six league matches. Stevenage's scheduled away game against Bury on 19 January was postponed as a result of heavy snowfall in the days leading up to the fixture. The Gigg Lane pitch failed an 11:30am inspection a day before the match was due to be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nAfter a three-week period without first-team football, Stevenage returned to action with a home game against Leyton Orient on 2 February. The game ended 1\u20130 to the visitors, with an early Dean Cox goal separating the two teams. New signing Ben Chorley made his debut during the match, having signed from Orient just two days earlier. Three days later, on 5 February, Stevenage secured their first home win since October, beating Notts County 2\u20130 at Broadhall Way. Loanee Sam Hoskins gave Stevenage the lead inside the first minute, finishing calmly after Filipe Morais' shot had deflected into his path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nSubstitute Marcus Haber headed in a Morais cross in the final minute to give Stevenage a two-goal cushion. The team then made the long journey north to face Carlisle United on 9 February, losing the match 2\u20131. Carlisle were two goals to the good within the first fourteen minutes. Striker Rory Loy gave the hosts the lead, before Lee Miller doubled their advantage from the penalty spot, with goalkeeper Steve Arnold receiving a red card for a foul on Loy that resulted in the penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0013-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nMarcus Haber scored his second goal in as many games to reduce the deficit, but Carlisle held on for the win. Stevenage then faced their second away game in three days, travelling to Griffin Park to face promoting-chasing Brentford. The hosts secured a comfortable 2\u20130 victory, thanks to long-range strikes from Tom Adeyemi and Marcello Trotta. A third straight defeat followed a week later, with Stevenage losing 2\u20131 at home to Oldham Athletic. The home side had taken a one-goal lead into the interval, courtesy of James Dunne's neat finish from the edge of the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0013-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nHowever, Oldham fought back with second-half goals from Dean Furman and James Tarkowski, taking all three points and inflicting Stevenage's eighth defeat in ten matches. Another defeat followed four days later, on 23 February, this time a 2\u20131 loss to Shrewsbury Town at New Meadow. Similarly to their previous match against Oldham, James Dunne gave Stevenage the lead in the first-half. Shrewsbury equalised on the half hour mark, before scoring late-on to secure all three points. Stevenage then lost 1\u20130 to Scunthorpe United three days later, with a second-half Mark Duffy strike settling the match. The result was Stevenage's tenth defeat in twelve matches, leaving them just eight points above the relegation places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nMarch began with a sixth straight defeat, with the club losing 2\u20130 at home to Colchester United. Two second-half Jabo Ibehre goals proved to be the difference. Just three days later, on 5 March, Stevenage ended their run of defeats by beating high-flying Brentford 1\u20130 at Broadhall Way. Having dominated the match for large spells, the home side took the lead with fifteen minutes left when Marcus Haber dinked the ball over Simon Moore in the Brentford goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nStevenage then lost 2\u20130 away to Preston North End on 9 March, with goals from Lee Holmes and Will Hayhurst in the opening fifteen minutes settling the match. Another defeat followed three days later, with the club losing 1\u20130 at home to Bournemouth. A first-half Brett Pitman penalty was the only goal of the game, as Darius Charles was sent-off late-on for a second bookable offence. Stevenage's next match, played four days later, was a 4\u20130 home victory over second-placed Sheffield United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0014-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nReturning from a loan spell at Barnet, striker Dani L\u00f3pez made his first start for the club; opening the scoring just before half-time after turning Neill Collins inside the area and beating George Long in the Sheffield United goal. He then added a second shortly after the interval when he neatly converted a chipped through ball by Gavin Mahon. L\u00f3pez scored his hat-trick just after the hour mark when Anthony Grant broke free and played a through ball to the Spanish forward, who then unleashed an unstoppable shot from just inside the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0014-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nLucas Akins added Stevenage's fourth goal of the match with twenty minutes to go when he cut inside and beat Long with a low curling shot. Just three days after the club's impressive win over Sheffield United, Stevenage lost 2\u20130 to bottom-placed Bury at Gigg Lane. Goals from Craig Jones and Jonson Clarke-Harris, both of which coming within the final ten minutes of the match, proved to be the difference. Stevenage goalkeeper Steve Arnold also saved a first-half Steven Schumacher penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0014-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nA day after the defeat by Bury, on 20 March, Stevenage announced that manager Gary Smith had been sacked following a run of 14 defeats in 18 games. Stevenage captain Mark Roberts was placed in caretaker charge while the club searched for a new manager, but could not prevent a 3\u20131 defeat by Tranmere Rovers at Prenton Park on 24 March, a game that was televised live on Sky Sports. Tranmere went ahead after ten minutes when Zoumana Bakayoko tapped in from close range, before Stevenage equalised almost instantly courtesy of a curling Luke Freeman free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0014-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nJust three minutes later, on the fifteen-minute mark, Tranmere had regained their lead; Stevenage failed to clear a Jean-Louis Akpa Akpro shot and the ball fell to defender Ben Gibson, whose shot went in following a deflection off David Gray. Bakayoko then doubled his goal tally and Tranmere's advantage shortly before the interval when he tucked away Paul Black's through pass. Five days later, Roberts took charge of the side for their trip to Broadfield Stadium to face Crawley Town. Full back Miguel Comminges was sent-off for two bookable offences after just half an hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0014-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nDespite being a man light, Stevenage took the lead just before the interval when David Gray headed on Luke Freeman's free-kick, and Roberts was on hand to head the ball into the goal from six yards. Crawley equalised ten minutes into the second-half after Matt Sparrow tucked the ball into the bottom corner of the goal. Both sides had chances to take all three points, but the game ended 1\u20131. A day after the draw to Crawley, on 30 March, Stevenage announced that Graham Westley had been re-appointed as the club's new manager, his third spell in-charge of the Hertfordshire side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nWestley's first game back as manager was a 1\u20130 home victory over Hartlepool United on 1 April. In what was a tight match, loan signing Max Ehmer scored the decisive goal with fifteen minutes remaining; latching onto Filipe Morais' blocked shot before scoring with a first-time finish, ensuring a winning start for Westley. A 0\u20130 draw against Portsmouth at Fratton Park followed five days later. A game of very few goalscoring opportunities, Stevenage striker Marcus Haber had the best chance of the match, hitting the crossbar with a header in injury-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nA week later, Stevenage fell to a 2\u20130 home defeat by promotion-chasing Yeovil Town, with second-half goals from Sam Foley and James Hayter securing the win for the visitors. Another defeat followed a week later as Stevenage came up against another team chasing promotion, losing 3\u20130 to Swindon Town at the County Ground. Swindon took the lead through Aden Flint's volley after twenty minutes, before the visitors had Dani Lopez sent-off for a clash with Swindon midfielder Alan McCormack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League One\nSwindon winger Gary Roberts added a second shortly after the interval, before Flint scored his second of the game to round off a comfortable win. The season ended with a 2\u20130 home defeat by MK Dons on 27 April. The away side took the lead ten minutes before half-time when Patrick Bamford headed in Shaun Williams' cross. Substitute Ryan Lowe doubled the advantage late-on in the second-half. Stevenage finished their second League One season in 18th place, picking up 54 points throughout the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League Cup\nFirst Round fixtures for the competition were released on 14 June 2012, with Stevenage being drawn at home to League Two opposition in the form of AFC Wimbledon. Unlike in previous seasons, the first round fixture turned out to be the opening game of the domestic season, as opposed to teams traditionally starting a campaign with a league match. The game ended 3\u20131 in Stevenage's favour, with all four goals coming in the first-half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League Cup\nThe hosts opened the scoring after fifteen minutes when Luke Freeman drove a left-wing ball across goal, which was ultimately turned into his own net by AFC Wimbledon defender Pim Balkestein. Stevenage doubled their advantage seven minutes before the interval. AFC Wimbledon goalkeeper Seb Brown mis-timed a heavy defensive back pass, with the ball falling to debutant James Dunne, who slotted the ball into an empty net. The visitors responded immediately, Brendan Kiernan reducing the deficit when he successfully connected with a Luke Moore cross. Just four minutes later, in first-half injury time, Stevenage restored their two-goal cushion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0016-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League Cup\nA Greg Tansey free-kick was met on the half-volley by Marcus Haber; with Haber's volley goalbound, captain Mark Roberts slid in at the back post to ensure the ball crossed the line. Despite a number of goalscoring opportunities for the hosts in the second period, the scoreline remained the same and Stevenage progressed to the second round of the competition for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League Cup\nA day after the win over Wimbledon, on 15 August, the second round draw was made, with Stevenage being dealt another home tie, this time against Premier League opposition in the form of newly promoted Southampton. The match was played on 28 August, with Southampton running out 4\u20131 winners. The visitors took the lead early on in the second-half through Tadanari Lee, who swept home Billy Sharp's low cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, League Cup\nThe away side doubled their advantage in controversial fashion when Sharp scored from a quick free-kick inside the area after referee Oliver Langford had wrongly adjudged defender Mark Roberts to have deliberately passed the ball back to goalkeeper Chris Day, who in-turn picked up the ball. Almost immediately after, Southampton scored once again, Jason Puncheon scoring with a volley from 35 yards. Substitute Michael Thalassitis scored his first goal for the club in injury-time to reduce the deficit, netting from an acute angle after good work down the right from David Gray. Southampton scored a fourth almost instantly when substitute Ben Reeves curled in a shot from the edge of the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, FA Cup\nThe club entered the 2012\u201313 FA Cup at the First Round stage \u2014 only the third time the club had entered the competition at this stage since 1997. The First Round draw was made on 21 October 2012; Stevenage facing a trip to League Two side Rotherham United at the New York Stadium. The game was played on 3 November, with Rotherham running out 3\u20132 winners. The home side were three goals to the good before the hour mark, courtesy of a Mark Bradley strike and a brace from Lee Frecklington. Stevenage rallied late-on, scoring through a long-range strike from James Dunne and a first-time finish from Filipe Morais, but Rotherham ultimately held on to ensure Stevenage suffered an early exit from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231087-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stevenage F.C. season, Match results, Football League Trophy\nThe First Round draw was made on 18 August 2012, with Stevenage being dealt an away tie against League Two side Dagenham & Redbridge. The game was played on 4 September 2012, with Dagenham winning the match 3\u20132. The hosts took the lead after twelve minutes when Brian Woodall headed in Dominic Green's cross. Stevenage levelled through Mark Roberts, who scored from close range after the Dagenham defence had failed to clear a free-kick. The home side responded instantly with two goals in quick succession through Josh Scott and a Michael Spillane penalty. Second-half substitute Robin Shroot halved Stevenage's deficit with a driven effort fifteen minutes from time, although ultimately it was Dagenham who held on to progress to the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Stoke City's fifth season in the Premier League and the 57th in the top tier of English football. It was also the club's 150th year in existence and to mark the occasion the club had a special crest and the away kit was the same colours that Stoke Ramblers wore back in 1863, navy and cardinal Stoke also had a new shirt sponsor Bet365 taking over from Britannia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season\nThe summer of 2012 saw the departure of fan favourite Ricardo Fuller whilst in came winger Michael Kightly and USA defender Geoff Cameron, later followed by Charlie Adam and Steven Nzonzi. Stoke began the season with four straight draws and an embarrassing League Cup exit to Swindon Town. Despite recording one victory in their opening ten match they did put in some impressive performances away at Chelsea and Manchester United and at home to champions Manchester City. Stoke then went ten matches undefeated from 10 November to 29 December with a 3\u20131 victory over Liverpool on boxing day the stand out result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season\nDuring that run Stoke conceded just seven goals but at the turn of the year their form and performances dropped off as in the next ten matches Stoke picked up just five points, scored only six goals and conceded 19. Results and performances failed to improve and after an awful defeat at home to Aston Villa, Stoke were in danger of being involved in the relegation battle. Back to back wins against Queens Park Rangers and Norwich City lifted Stoke away from the foot of the table and they recovered to finish in 13th position with 42 points. At the end of the season manager Tony Pulis left the club by mutual consent bringing an end to his seven-year tenure at the club. He was replaced by the former Wales, Blackburn Rovers, Manchester City, Fulham and Queens Park Rangers manager Mark Hughes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nThere was expectation that several players would leave the club in the summer with a number reaching the end of their contacts and chairman Peter Coates said that Tony Pulis will have to sell if he wants to buy. Pulis released Louis Moult, Tom Soares, Salif Diao and club legend Ricardo Fuller after the end of their contracts and Jonathan Woodgate and Danny Collins left for Middlesbrough and Nottingham Forest respectively. On 8 August Wolverhampton Wanderers winger Michael Kightly joined that club for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nFor the 2012\u201313 pre-season, Stoke travelled to the United States where they will spend eleven days and play matches against Major League Soccer sides Columbus Crew and Sporting Kansas City as well as affiliated USL Pro club Orlando City. Matches have also been arranged against Swiss side FC Sion and German Bundesliga team SpVgg Greuther F\u00fcrth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nStoke began their pre-season in Switzerland and played a match against FC Sion which was won 1\u20130 thanks to a penalty from Matthew Etherington. City then travelled to The USA and played their first match against the Columbus Crew. Despite taking the lead via Jonathan Walters the Americans were much brighter and scored twice through Aaron Horton and Ben Speas. The next match against affiliated club Orlando City saw Stoke win 1\u20130 with Walters scoring his second goal of pre-season but it was marred with Glenn Whelan being sent off after a harmless altercation with former Stoke midfielder James O'Connor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nStoke's final match in USA against Sporting Kansas City saw Stoke miss a number of chances but did eventually take the lead with six minutes left when Michael Tonge whose only contribution to the club is in pre-season was fouled in the area and he scored the spot kick. Stoke however conceded a comical equaliser as Asmir Begovi\u0107's clearance went straight to Kyle Miller who had the easy task of heading the ball into an empty net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Pre-season\nOn their return to England they played two matches against Football League opposition, Torquay United and Yeovil Town. Both matches ended 1\u20131 and they had a Polish international trialist Sebastian Boenisch playing at left back. The final match of pre-season saw Stoke take on German side SpVgg Greuther F\u00fcrth in Bavaria. New signing Michael Kightly made a perfect start to his Stoke career scoring with his first touch. Matthew Upson gave away a penalty and Bernd Nehrig scored from the spot and for the four time in pre-season that match finished 1\u20131. Afterwards Tony Pulis revealed that Stoke had agreed to take Macedonian left back Goran Popov on loan from Dynamo Kyiv until the end of the season. However the move collapsed as he failed to gain a work permit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, August\nStoke's first league match of the 2012\u201313 season saw them come up against newly promoted Reading at the Madejski Stadium. New signing Michael Kightly made his league debut and marked it with scoring the opening goal albeit thanks to an error from \"Royals\" goalkeeper Adam Federici.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, August\nThe home side were not posing much of a threat to Stoke's goal but they were gifted the chance to equalise in the final minute of the match as Dean Whitehead brought down Garath McCleary in the area and conceded a penalty, and to make matters worse for Whitehead he was shown a second yellow. Adam Le Fondre made no mistake from the spot and it was a case of two points dropped for Stoke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, August\nThe first home match of the season was against old adversaries Arsenal with the match being broadcast live on TV. Geoff Cameron made his first appearance in a red and white shirt and produced a good performance in a match which surprisingly failed to live up to the buildup. There were few moments of excitement with Jonathan Walters having Stoke's best effort, hitting the back of the net but it was ruled out for offside. The \"Gunners\" struggled to make Asmir Begovi\u0107 work in the City goal and the match finished in a rather tame goalless draw. On transfer deadline day Stoke completed the signings of midfielders Charlie Adam, Maurice Edu and Steven Nzonzi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, September\nCharlie Adam and Maurice Edu were both on the bench for the match at 'bogey' side Wigan Athletic. Stoke made a terrible start to the match conceding a penalty after just four minutes after Robert Huth handled in the area and Shaun Maloney made no mistake from the spot. The away support were beginning to vent their frustration towards Pulis but after half an hour he brought on Adam for his debut. He impressed instantly with his passing ability and Stoke were awarded a penalty of their own just before half time, Jonathan Walters scoring for Stoke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, September\nBut poor defending at the start of the second half gifted Franco Di Santo a goal and Stoke were again chasing the match. Peter Crouch scored his first league goal of the season and Stoke could have won it but for a wonder save from Ali Al-Habsi denying Adam a debut goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, September\nOn 4 September Stoke announced the signing of former Real Madrid and England striker Michael Owen on a one-year contract. Nzonzi and Adam made their home debuts against Premier League title holders Manchester City as Stoke lined up in a new look formation which included three centre midfielders. And it was Stoke who took the lead via Peter Crouch, although TV replays showed that he handled in the buildup. Stoke then had to as expected weather a lot of pressure from Man City but they leveled from a set play, Javi Garc\u00eda being left unmarked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, September\nMichael Owen came off the bench for the final few moments as Begovi\u0107 and Shawcross prevented Manchester City winning the match late on. It was Stoke's fourth draw in a row and all from the start of a season, a club record. After the match Andy Wilkinson was handed a three match ban after an off the ball altercation with Mario Balotelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, September\nStoke then played Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, and were the better side for most of the 90 minutes. They had chances to take the points with Walters hitting the crossbar and Kightly and Crouch guilty of missed opportunities and Chelsea took full advantage with Ashley Cole scoring with five minutes left handing Stoke an undeserved defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, September\nStoke went into their next match at home to Swansea looking for their first win of the season and that's what they got after a simple enough victory. Michael Laudrup's Swansea as expected enjoyed a large amount of possession but they never threatened to trouble Stoke's defence and Peter Crouch scored twice before half time to settle the contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, October\nPrior to the League match against Liverpool Stoke were handed a boost when captain Ryan Shawcross earned a call up to the England team. The match against Liverpool saw both sides cancel each other out in a bad tempered 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, October\nAfter the international break Stoke completed their tough set of opening fixtures away at Manchester United. Stoke made a great start and took the lead through an own goal by Wayne Rooney and Stoke could have added to their goal tally with Adam and Walters going close. But poor defending cost Stoke dearly as Rooney, Robin van Persie and Danny Welbeck saw the \"Red Devils\" turn the match in their favour. Kightly pulled one back but Rooney scored his second goal to make it 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, October\nThe next match saw Stoke and Sunderland play out an uneventful and lifeless goalless draw at the Britannia but it proved to be a costly one for Stoke as left back Marc Wilson broke his fibula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, November\nStoke then put in a poor performance away at Norwich City going down by a solitary goal from Bradley Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, November\nStoke went into their next match then against bottom of the table Queens Park Rangers looking for a much needed win. It was a scrappy encounter with Rangers' Adel Taarabt causing City's defence problems with his skill but were also thankful for his poor decision making which left him squandering QPR's best chances. Charlie Adam scored his first goal for Stoke just after half time and that proved to be the winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, November\nStoke's next match was against in form West Ham United moved to a Monday night for live TV coverage. Stoke began the match brightly and scored through Walters after 13 minutes via a well worked corner routine. City continued to dominate the first half and almost scored again but Nzonzi's powerful shot cannoned off the woodwork. However it was role reversal in the second half at the \"Hammers\" took control of the game and soon levelled through Joey O'Brien but Stoke fought off West Ham's revival and earned a decent point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, November\nStoke then began a three-game week with a home match against Fulham and for the second match at the Britannia the match was settled by a single goal from Charlie Adam. Stoke had several chances to win by a bigger margin but were guilty of poor finishing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, November\nThe mid-week match against an out of form Newcastle United side saw Stoke come from behind to claim a late victory. Papiss Ciss\u00e9 put the \"Magpies\" in front just after half time capitalising on an error from Glenn Whelan. Substitutes Kenwyne Jones and Cameron Jerome then came off the bench to spark Stoke's turnaround. Firstly, Jerome provided an assist for Jonathan Walters and then scored the winning goal after being set up by Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, December\nStoke's then played high-flying West Bromwich Albion who at the time were in the top four. Stoke produced a disciplined defensive performance nullifying Albion's attack and grabbed a 1\u20130 win thanks to a rare goal from Dean Whitehead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, December\nStoke again played away at Midlands opponents this time Aston Villa and both sides cancelled each other out in a drab goalless draw. Stoke had Ryan Shotton sent off for two bookable offences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, December\nStoke then played out a bruising 1\u20131 draw with Everton on 15 December. The \"Toffees\" took the lead after Steven Pienaar's cross was deflected into the net by Ryan Shawcross and the visitors almost scored again soon after with Leon Osman missing from close range. Stoke levelled thanks to Kenwyne Jones' first league goal since August 2011 but the major indecent of the match saw Marouane Fellaini deliberately headbutt Shawcross which was missed by referee Mark Halsey. After the match Fellaini issued a public apology to Shawcross and was given a retrospective three match ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, December\nCity then earned their fifth goalless draw of the season (10th in total) with an impressive defensive display at Tottenham Hotspur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, December\nOn Boxing day City took on Liverpool in a late evening kick-off and the visitors took the lead very early on as after just 30 seconds Luis Su\u00e1rez was fouled in the area and Steven Gerrard scored the spot kick. Stoke instantly replied with Walters and then Jones to turn the game around and victory was completed in the second half with Walters scoring a second to earn Stoke a 3\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, December\nThe final match of 2012 saw another incident packed 90 minutes against Southampton. Stoke without key defensive duo Shawcross and Cameron saw the \"Saints\" take the lead through Rickie Lambert but Stoke soon levelled though a Jones back heel. Then two awful defensive mistakes gave the away side a 3\u20131 lead. Stoke pulled one back through Matthew Upson midway through the second half and then had Steven Nzonzi sent off for an apparent stamp on Jack Cork. Stoke did make it 3\u20133 with Cameron Jerome scoring from 30 yards in the final minute. Nzonzi's red card was later rescinded by the FA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, January\nStoke began 2013 with another tame 3\u20130 defeat away at Manchester City on 1 January, ending Stoke's ten-match unbeaten run. Manchester City were in complete control of the match and only their poor finishing prevented them taking the lead. Eventually they did break the deadlock just before half-time after James Milner's cross was blocked by Begovi\u0107 but Pablo Zabaleta was able to score the rebound. The second half continued in the same vein and after Sergio Ag\u00fcero's shot was parried by the Stoke keeper his compatriot Edin D\u017eeko scored a simple tap-in. Stoke tried to hit back through a Charlie Adam free-kick before Walters blazed a shot over from close-range. Stoke's misery was compounded when Nzonzi fouled David Silva and conceded a penalty which Ag\u00fcero converted, with Nzonzi receiving a yellow card for the foul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, January\nChelsea then ended Stoke's 11-month unbeaten home run in the Premier League in emphatic fashion beating Stoke 4\u20130. However it was a harsh scoreline as Chelsea's goals came from two own goals from, Jonathan Walters a Frank Lampard penalty and a long-range effort from Eden Hazard. To add to Walters' woe he also missed a last minute penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, January\nStoke's awful start to 2013 continued with a poor 3\u20131 loss at Swansea City After a goalless first half Swansea dominated the second period and took the lead through their full-back Ben Davies. After Adam had fouled Michu, Dutch midfielder Jonathan de Guzm\u00e1n curled in the free-kick and then Jerome missed an easy chance to pull one back for Stoke. de Guzm\u00e1n ended the game as a contest when he scored to complete a flowing Swansea move although Stoke did manage to get a consolation goal, Michael Owen scoring in the final minute for what was his 150th Premier League goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, January\nStoke then threw away a two-goal lead against Wigan Athletic on 29 January, their fourth 2\u20132 draw with Wigan in four seasons. Stoke ended the month by completing the transfers of USA international Brek Shea and England goalkeeper Jack Butland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, February\nStoke continued their poor run with a narrow 1\u20130 defeat at Arsenal courtesy of a Lukas Podolski free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, February\nStoke secured their first league win of 2013 against Reading. After a goalless first half Stoke scored through a Robert Huth header and a fine goal from Jerome but the Royals quickly responded with Adrian Mariappa heading a late corner but Stoke held on for a 2\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, February\nAfter a two-week international break Stoke travelled to Craven Cottage to take on Fulham. Stoke failed to improve on their terrible away record of one win in 23 as Martin Jol's side won 1\u20130 thanks to a fine volley from Dimitar Berbatov. Stoke had the chance to earn a point from the penalty spot but Walters's kick was weak and easily saved by Mark Schwarzer. It got worse for Stoke as Huth was given a retrospective three match ban after an off the ball altercation with Philippe Senderos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, March\nWith Huth suspended Marc Wilson filled in a centre back against West Ham United in what was another poor performance by Stoke. West Ham scored the only goal via Jack Collison and the Stoke supporters began to vent their frustration at manager Tony Pulis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, March\nStoke's next away match was against Newcastle United and Stoke took the lead in the second half with Walters converting a penalty which he won. Stoke could not hold out for a point though as the Magpies drew level through a Yohan Cabaye free-kick and then Papiss Ciss\u00e9 scored in the final minute to extended Stoke's losing run to three matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, March\nThe Midlands derby against West Brom was a good opportunity for Stoke to end their poor form but it turned out to be a frustrating afternoon. There was few chances from both sides and Stoke's best chance came in the final minute through Kenwyne Jones but he could only hit his shot straight at Ben Foster and the match finished in a drab 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, March\nStoke's final game of a barren March saw them travel to Everton. Stoke missed a glorious chance to take an early lead after a Ryan Shotton long throw-in was headed towards goal by Huth and saved by Tim Howard, Walters could only hit the crossbar. Everton had a couple half-chances though Nikica Jelavi\u0107 before they scored in fine style. A Marc Wilson cross was punched away by Howard and the ball fell for Belgian Kevin Mirallas who broke clear of the retreating Stoke defence and slotted the ball past Begovi\u0107. Stoke had chances in the second half to pull level but failed to take them with Walters, Huth, Shotton and Jerome all guilty of poor finishing and Everton won the match 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, April\nStoke entered the final six games of the 2012\u201313 season with a vital home match against Midlands rivals Aston Villa at the Britannia Stadium. Stoke got off to an awful start after poor defending let in Gabriel Agbonlahor to score after ten minutes. Stoke failed to trouble Brad Guzan and Villa almost scored again through Andreas Weimann whose shot hit the post. City improved marginally after the break and scored in the 80th minute through substitute Michael Kightly. But Villa defender Matthew Lowton then scored an unstoppable goal, a volley from 30 yards and with Stoke pushing for an equaliser they were caught on the counterattack and Christian Benteke sealed a 3\u20131 win and left Stoke fully involved in the relegation fight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, April\nStoke's slide towards the relegation zone continued with 2\u20130 home defeat against champions elect Manchester United on 14 April. The Potters made an awful start conceding after just four minutes after a Robin van Persie corner was not dealt with by the Stoke defence and the ball was prodded in by Michael Carrick. Stoke rarely threatened David de Gea and when he was finally tested by Charlie Adam Stoke gave away a penalty after Wilkinson fouled van Persie in the area who converted the spot kick. Pulis decided to impose a media ban for the remainder of the season on his players in order to 'keep them focused'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, April\nCity then travelled to lowly Queens Park Rangers and came away with a vital 2\u20130 victory only their 2nd win of 2013. Peter Crouch scored for the first time since January and a Walters penalty lifted Stoke six points away from danger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, April\nStoke then beat Norwich City 1\u20130 on 27 April to move them onto the 40 point mark in a match which saw the supporters pay tribute to former player Paul Ware. Charlie Adam scored the only goal of the game just after half-time, Stoke could have added a second but Crouch was guilty of some poor finishing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, May\nStoke played relegation threatened Sunderland on 6 May and Stoke took a 9th-minute lead through Walters after Sunderland failed to clear a Charlie Adam corner. It got worse for the Black Cats as Craig Gardner was sent-off for a foul on Adam just before half time. However Sunderland managed to earn a point thanks to a goal from John O'Shea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, May\nThe last home match of the 2012\u201313 season against Tottenham Hotspur was used as a 'celebration match' for the club's 150th anniversary. To mark the occasion 80 former players attended the match and performed a lap of honour whilst the supporters received a free T-shirt. Stoke started the match brilliantly with Steven Nzonzi scoring his first goal for City after just three minutes. Spurs levelled through Clint Dempsey who punished a defensive mix-up between Wilson and Begovi\u0107. Just after half time Stoke's task was made harder when Charlie Adam picked up a second yellow card meaning Stoke had to play the remaining 40 minutes with ten men. Stoke couldn't hold on to a draw as Emmanuel Adebayor scored the winning goal for Spurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, Premier League, May\nStoke ended the 2012\u201313 season with a 1\u20131 draw away at Southampton, Crouch scoring just after half time for Stoke before Rickie Lambert made sure the season ended with a draw. It proved to be Pulis' final game in charge of Stoke as two days later he left the club by mutual consent. He was replaced by fellow Welshman Mark Hughes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, FA Cup\nStoke were drawn away at Championship side Crystal Palace in the third round and the match at Selhurst Park saw both sides cancel each other out in a 0\u20130 draw meaning that a replay would be required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe replay was a far more eventful affair which began with the tricky Wilfried Zaha winning a penalty but Jermaine Easter's spot kick was saved by S\u00f8rensen. Kenwyne Jones put Stoke in front on 70 minutes before Palace were awarded another penalty which Glenn Murray converted to send the tie into extra time. With Palace tiring Stoke took full advantage and a brace from Walters and a last minute strike from Cameron Jerome earned Stoke a 4\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe fourth round saw a repeat of the 2011 FA Cup Final, unfortunately for Stoke the outcome was the same, Man City winning 1\u20130, thanks to a late strike from Pablo Zabaleta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, League Cup\nStoke were on the receiving end of a cup upset as League One Swindon Town knocked Stoke out in the second round. The \"Robins\" showed no fear at playing at the Britannia Stadium and took the lead through James Collins after a Thomas S\u00f8rensen mistake. Swindon and Collins scored again just before half time and they also had chances to increase their goal tally much to the anger of Stoke fans who booed their team off at half time. In the second half Stoke scored through Kenwyne Jones and Jonathan Walters to send the tie into extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231088-0048-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stoke City F.C. season, League Cup\nHowever, despite squandering their two-goal lead Swindon were not affected and scored again through Aden Flint but Peter Crouch replied for Stoke. Jamie Ness had to leave the action after picking up an injury and it seemed it would go all the way to a penalty shoot-out but Collins beat the offside trap and claimed his hat-trick and victory for Paolo Di Canio's Swindon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231089-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team represented Stony Brook University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were coached by eighth year head coach Steve Pikiell and played their home games at Pritchard Gymnasium. They were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 25\u20138, 14\u20132 in America East play to become America East regular season champions. They advanced to the semifinals of the America East Tournament where they lost to Albany. As a regular season conference champion who failed to win their conference tournament, they received an automatic bid to the 2013 NIT. The Seawolves defeated Massachusetts in the first round for their first ever postseason tournament victory in school history. They lost in the second round to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231089-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Previous season\nAfter being picked second, behind the Boston Terriers, in the conference coaches preseason poll the Seawolves exceeded expectations capturing their second regular season championship in three years. Stony Brook went 5\u20136 through the non-conference regular season. Among their losses were Indiana, Northwestern, Boston College, and Rutgers in the Madison Square Garden Holiday Festival. Despite the slow start, the Seawolves cruised through the conference season capturing a program record 14 wins and 2 losses to earn the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231089-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the America East tournament Stony Brook went on to defeat the Binghamton Bearcats and Albany Great Danes to advance to their second consecutive championship game. The following week Stony Brook faced off against Vermont at the Stony Brook Arena falling by a score of 43\u201351. Despite their championship exit, Stony Brook participated in the 2012 NIT First Round falling by the score of 63\u201361 in the last bucket to end their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231089-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Before the season, Losses\nThe Seawolves lost to graduation Danny Carter, all-time points leader Bryan Dougher, Dallis Joyner, and Al Rapier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231089-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball team, Before the season, Ranking and polls\nStony Brook was chosen second, behind the Vermont Catamounts, in the 2012 America East Preseason Coaches Poll ahead Boston University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 89], "content_span": [90, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231090-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stranraer F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Stranraer's first season back in the Scottish Second Division. Stranraer also competed in the Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup. They were due to play in their fourth consecutive season in the Scottish Third Division, having been relegated from the Scottish Second Division at the end of the 2008\u201309 season. On 16 July 2012, it was confirmed that Stranraer would be promoted to the Scottish Second Division to fill the vacancy's left by Dundee's promotion to the Scottish Premier League and Airdrie United's promotion to the Scottish First Division. This was to fill the slot vacated by Rangers, who were voted into the Scottish Third Division following their liquidation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231090-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stranraer F.C. season, Summary, Season\nStranraer finished eighth in the Scottish Second Division. They reached the first round of the Challenge Cup, the first round of the League Cup and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231090-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stranraer F.C. season, Summary, Management\nStranraer began the season under the management of Keith Knox. On 22 October 2012, Knox was sacked by the club following unacceptable results, with Knox's assistant Stephen Aitken taking over as interim manager following his departure. After the Forfar Athletic match on 27 October 2012, Aitken was given the manager's job on a permanent basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak\nThe 2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak is the public disclosure of a number of internal emails between geopolitical intelligence company Stratfor's employees and its clients, referred to by WikiLeaks as the Global Intelligence Files. E-mails began appearing on WikiLeaks on February 27, 2012, with 5,543,061 emails published as of July 18, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak\nStratfor is a security group based in Austin, Texas. On December 24, 2011, hackers took control of Stratfor's website and released a list of names, credit card numbers, passwords, and home and email addresses. Those listed were affiliated with organizations such as Bank of America, the United States Department of Defense, M\u00e9decins Sans Fronti\u00e8res, Lockheed Martin, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and the United Nations. The hackers included Jeremy Hammond, who worked with Anonymous to release Stratfor's emails to WikiLeaks. The emails revealed Stratfor's surveillance of groups such as Occupy Wall Street and protestors of the Bhopal disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak\nThe e-mails claim to include client information, notes between Stratfor employees and internal procedural documentation on securing intelligence data. These communications date from July 2004 through to December 2011. WikiLeaks said it had obtained the e-mails from the hacker group Anonymous, who broke into Stratfor's computer network in 2011. In an initial announcement, WikiLeaks stated that they opened up a database of the emails to two dozen media organizations operating in several countries, including the McClatchy Company, l'Espresso, la Repubblica, ARD, the Russia Reporter, and Rolling Stone, along with a \"sneak preview\" to the Yes Men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content\nOne of the first items released was an email containing a glossary titled \"The Stratfor Glossary of Useful, Baffling and Strange Intelligence Terms\", which contained concise and sometimes humorously candid definitions, along with pointed assessments of U.S. intelligence and law enforcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Julian Assange\nJulian Assange was a frequent topic of discussion in emails from Stratfor staff in the period 2010\u20132012. Emails from Fred Burton (Stratfor's Vice-President for Counterterrorism and Corporate Security, and former Deputy Chief of the Department of State) indicated that he knew in January 2011 about a United States Government secret indictment against Assange. Stratfor emails gave a suggested strategy for dealing with Assange: \"move him from country to country to face various charges for the next 25 years\" and \"[bankrupt] the asshole first ... ruin his life. Give him 7-12 years for conspiracy\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Governmental\nAn email involving a Stratfor analyst stated that it had been determined that up to 12 officials in Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency knew of Osama bin-Laden's safe house.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Governmental\nYnetnews reported that, according to internal emails between Stratfor employees, Israel and Russia were engaged in an exchange of information in 2008. Israel gave Russia \"'data link codes' for unmanned aerial vehicles that the Jewish state sold to Georgia\" and that Russia gave \"the codes for Tor-M1 missile defense systems that Russia sold Iran\". The emails also stated that, during the 2008 South Ossetia war, Georgia \"realized that their UAVs were compromised and were looking for a replacement for the Israeli made drones\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Governmental\nInternational Business Times reported that Stratfor had found that several Central European countries, especially the Czech Republic, have been petitioning NATO for missile defenses and F-16s to use against Russia. The Czech Republic, according to an unknown Stratfor source, has stated that, if the talks with the US fail, then it will be breaking all ties with NATO and the US in general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Governmental\nBusiness Insider reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was an intelligence source for Stratfor between 2007 and 2010. In emails, Fred Burton discussed his personal communications with Netanyahu. Burton stated by email that Netanyahu informed him of his success in consolidating power within the Likud party ahead of regaining the position of prime minister, shared thoughts regarding his distrust of US President Barack Obama, threatened assassination of Hezbollah leader Hasan Nasrallah, and declared intentions to unilaterally start a war against Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Governmental\nAl Akhbar, citing internal emails from the Stratfor hack, reported former Blackwater director James F. Smith had a relationship with Stratfor and was for a time considered one of their major sources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Companies\nAs reported by The Times of India, some of the emails reveal that Stratfor was allegedly hired by Dow Chemical Company to spy on protesters of the Bhopal disaster. Dow Chemical Company responded with a written statement that read: \"Major companies are often required to take appropriate action to protect their people and safeguard their facilities,\" and that it had not broken any laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Email content, Companies\nThe released emails indicated that the Coca-Cola Company paid Stratfor to determine \"to what extent will US-based PETA supporters travel to Canada to support activism\" at the 2010 Olympics. The Coca-Cola Company responded to the emails with a statement saying that they \"consider it prudent to monitor for protest activities at any major event we sponsor\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Responses, Official response\nAround midnight on February 27, Stratfor released a statement saying that \"the release of its stolen emails was an attempt to silence and intimidate it.\" It also dismissed rumors of CEO George Friedman's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Responses, Official response\nStratfor stated that some of the leaked emails \"may be forged or altered to include inaccuracies; some may be authentic\", but that they would not confirm either possibility. They further stated that the emails represented candid internal language that would probably be ripe for misinterpretation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Responses, Official response\nWikiLeaks founder Julian Assange told Reuters that his concerns with Stratfor stem from it being a private intelligence firm relying on informants from government agencies with dubious reputations, both from the U.S. and abroad, and especially its monitoring of activist organizations. He also called the company a \"shadow CIA\" (a term originally coined by Barron's magazine in a 2001 article about the quality of Stratfor's analysis, not any actual association with the CIA) and stated that the emails would \"reveal Stratfor's web of informers, payoff structure, payment-laundering techniques and psychological methods.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Responses, Other responses\nFormer NSA Director Bobby Inman stated that the leak would be damaging to Stratfor's business. He had previously stated that Stratfor was competent, delivering high-quality intelligence analyses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231091-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stratfor email leak, Responses, Other responses\nMax Fisher, the associate director of The Atlantic, argued that Stratfor has a poor reputation \"among foreign policy writers, analysts, and practitioners\" and that as a result Anonymous and Wikileaks have exaggerated the significance of the information they released. He also suggested that Assange may have targeted a relatively unimportant firm and over-hyped the results in order to \"regain some of his former glory\". Australian Broadcasting Corporation foreign correspondent and Stratfor subscriber Mark Corcoran also wrote that the e-mails showed Stratfor's methods used to gather information are similar to those employed by journalists, though he wrote that the quality of its reports are often inferior to news reports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231092-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stuttgarter Kickers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Stuttgarter Kickers season is the 113th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. It is the club's first season back in this league, having been promoted from the Regionalliga in 2012. The club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the W\u00fcrttemberg Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231092-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stuttgarter Kickers season, Reserve team\nKickers' reserve team finished 14th in the Oberliga Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg and were coached by J\u00fcrgen Hartmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231092-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Stuttgarter Kickers 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231093-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sultan Qaboos Cup\nThe 2012 Sultan Qaboos Cup was the 40th 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, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231093-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sultan Qaboos Cup\nThe competition began on 30 November 2012 with the Round of 32 and concluded on 26 May 2013. Dhofar S.C.S.C. were the defending champions, having won their eighth title in 2011. On Sunday 26 May 2013, Al-Suwaiq Club were crowned the champions of the 2012 Sultan Qaboos Cup when they defeated Al-Nahda Club 2-0, hence winning the title for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231093-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Teams\nThis year the tournament had 32 teams. The winners qualified for the 2014 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231093-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Round of 32\n32 teams played a knockout tie. 16 ties were played over one leg. The first match played was between Fanja SC and Al-Nahda Club on 30 November 2012. 16 teams advanced to the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231093-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-Salam SC and Bowsher Club on 24 December 2012. 8 teams advanced to the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231093-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Quarterfinals\n8 teams played a knockout tie. 4 ties were played over one leg. The first match was played between Al-Oruba SC and Al-Tali'aa SC on 25 February 2013. Al-Oruba SC, Al-Nahda Club, Dhofar S.C.S.C. and Al-Suwaiq Club qualified for the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231093-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Semifinals\n4 teams played a knockout tie. 2 ties were played over two legs. The first match was played between Al-Suwaiq Club and Al-Oruba SC on 16 April 2013. Al-Suwaiq Club and Al-Nahda Club qualified for the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231094-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sumgayit City F.C. season\nThe Sumgayit 2012-13 season is Sumgayit's second Azerbaijan Premier League season, and second season under Bernhard Raab. Sumgayit also competed in the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Cup, getting knocked out by Baku at the Second round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231094-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sumgayit City F.C. 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231094-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sumgayit City F.C. 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231094-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sumgayit City F.C. 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231094-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sumgayit City F.C. 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231095-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sun Hei SC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei's 12th season in the Hong Kong First Division League. They started as the defending champions having won the Senior Challenge Shield last season. As the champions of 2011\u201312 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield, they competed in the 2013 AFC Cup. They also competed in the Hong Kong First Division League and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231095-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sun Hei SC season, Players, 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231095-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sun Hei SC season, Matches, Competitive, First Division League\nRemarks: 1 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match. 2 Home match against Yokohama FC Hong Kong was originally scheduled to be played on 2 March 2013 but was postponed and rescheduled to be played on 23 March 2013. 3 Away match against Kitchee was originally scheduled to be played on 31 March 2013 but was rescheduled to be played on 29 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231095-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sun Hei SC season, Matches, Competitive, AFC Cup\nRemarks:1The match was abandoned after 65 minutes of play as Persibo Bojonegoro failed to reach the required limit of players on pitch. Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei were leading 8\u20130. The result was declared final by AFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231096-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sun Pegasus FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Sun Pegasus FC's 5th season in football in Hong Kong First Division League. Sun Pegusus will seek to win the league, which they failed last year as Kitchee won. The club will also be competing in the Senior Challenge Shield and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231096-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sun Pegasus FC season, Players, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231097-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sunderland A.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Sunderland's sixth consecutive season in the top division of English football, the Premier League. They finished the season in 17th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231097-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Pre-season, 2012 Peace Cup\nSunderland, along with Eredivisie side Groningen, K-League side Seongnam, and Bundesliga side Hamburg, will compete in a friendly tournament, 2012 Peace Cup. All matches will be played at the Suwon World Cup Stadium in the Korean city of Suwon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231097-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sunderland A.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, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231097-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sunderland A.F.C. 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231098-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sunfoil Series\nThe 2012\u201313 Sunfoil Series was a first-class cricket competition held in South Africa from 20 September 2012 to 10 February 2013. Cape Cobras won their third title, during a 10 wicket victory in the final round against Knights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231099-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Suomi-sarja season\nThe 2012\u201312 Suomi-sarja season was the 14th season of the Suomi-sarja, the third level of ice hockey in Finland. 12 teams participated in the league, and RoKi won the championship, however no playoffs were held. They were not promoted to the Mestis league for 2013\u201314 however and Kotkan Titaanit was relegated to III-divisioona for financial reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231100-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Super League Greece\nThe 2012\u201313 Super League Greece was the 77th season of the highest football league of Greece and the seventh under the name Super League. The season started on 25 August 2012 and ended on 2 June 2013 with the last matches of the European playoff round. Olympiacos were the defending champions, having won their 39th Greek championship in the 2011\u201312 season. They successfully defended their crown, finishing 15 points ahead of second-placed PAOK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231100-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Super League Greece\nThe league comprised 13 teams from the 2011\u201312 season and three promoted teams from the 2011\u201312 Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231100-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Super League Greece, Teams\nThree teams were relegated at the end of the 2011\u201312 season to the 2012\u201313 Football League: Doxa Drama, Panetolikos, Ergotelis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231100-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Super League Greece, Teams\nThree teams were promoted from the 2011\u201312 Football League, champions Panthrakikos, runners-up Veria and the winners of a four-team play-off round Platanias. Panthrakikos and Veria returned to top level respectively two and four years after relegation, while Platanias made their debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231100-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Super League Greece, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231100-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Super League Greece, Teams, Personnel and kits\nAdidas is the official ball supplier for Super League Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231100-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Super League Greece, Playoffs\nIn the play-off for Champions League, the four qualified teams play each other in a home and away round robin. However, they do not all start with 0 points. Instead, a weighting system applies to the teams' standing at the start of the play-off mini-league. The team finishing fifth in the Super League will start the play-off with 0 points. The fifth placed team's end of season tally of points is subtracted from the sum of the points that other teams have. This number is then divided by five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231101-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga Femenina de Voleibol\nSuperliga Femenina de Voleibol 2012\u201313 was the 44th season since its establishment. The 2012\u201313 regular season started in November 2012, and finished on March 23, 2013. Championship playoffs began March 29 with semifinal matches and finished on 27 April with the 4th match of the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231101-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga Femenina de Voleibol\nDefending champions were Valeriano All\u00e8s Menorca having defeated Haro Rioja Voley in the championship playoff final from past season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231101-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga Femenina de Voleibol\nHaro Rioja Voley won its first ever title of Superliga after defeating 3\u20131 to Nuchar Tramek Murillo in the Championship playoffs Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231102-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga de Voleibol Masculina\nSuperliga de Voleibol Masculina 2012\u201313 is the 49th (XLIX) season since its establishment. The 2012\u201313 regular season started on October 13, 2012, and finished on March 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231102-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga de Voleibol Masculina\nChampionship playoffs began March 8, with the two semifinals winners vying for the championship title in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231102-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga de Voleibol Masculina\nDefending champion CAI Teruel was defeated in the Final by Unicaja Almer\u00eda, thus winning its ninth title, its first title since the last time in 2004-05 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231102-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga de Voleibol Masculina, Competition format\n10 teams played in a two-rounds format. Upon completion of regular season, the top four teams play Championship's playoffs, while the bottom team is relegated to Superliga 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231102-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Superliga de Voleibol Masculina, Competition format\nDuring regular season, a win by 3\u20130 or 3\u20131 means 3 points to winner team, while a 3\u20132 win, 2 points for winner team & 1 for loser team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231103-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Surrey Heat season\nThe 2012\u201313 Surrey Heat season is the franchise's 8th season in the British Basketball League. It's the first season since being renamed as the Surrey Heat, having previously been called the Guildford Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231103-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Surrey Heat season\nThe Surrey Heat got their season off to the best possible start at the Surrey Sports Park when they comprehensively defeated the visiting Mersey Tigers. The final score was 106-45, which set all sorts of Heat franchise records. The Heat surpassed last year\u2019s highest score (which was 100, against an under-strength Newcastle Eagles in the last regular season game). In fact, it was the second highest output by the Heat in over three seasons and fell one point short of the most points scored against the Tigers, when the (then) Guildford Heat beat the (then) Everton Tigers 107-101 in the 2008-09 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231103-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Surrey Heat season\nHowever, it was the defensive performance which set the records tumbling. The 61 point margin of victory is a franchise high, easily surpassing the 49 point margin of victory achieved back in the 2007-08 season, when the Heat defeated the Worthing Thunder, 118-69, in the BBL Trophy (the Heat\u2019s highest-scoring game). The 45 points conceded was also a franchise low, beating the 52 points allowed in the 2009-10 season when the Heat notched up an 85-52 victory over the London Capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231103-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Surrey Heat season, BBL Cup\nThe Surrey Heat suffered a hard-fought 74-79 loss against the visiting Plymouth Raiders in the BBL Cup Quarter Final. And, to add injury to insult, they lost star player Martelle McLemore to an ankle injury in the second quarter. The Heat were led by Chavis Holmes\u2019 20 points to go with his eight assists. Frank Holmes added 17 points and nine rebounds to go with four blocks and Sam Cricelli had 14 points and seven rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231103-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Surrey Heat season, BBL Trophy\nThe Heat ran out 86-68 winners against the Reading Rockets in the round of 16, with Albert Margai leading the way with 16 points. In his last game for the Heat, Travis Holmes scored 15 points to go with his seven steals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231103-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Surrey Heat season, BBL Trophy\nThe Guildford Heat were led by Julius Joseph's 16 points, in the QF loss to the Leicester Riders. Chavis Holmes and Albert Margai had 12 each, and Frank Holmes had 17 rebounds. The Leicester Riders converted more than 50% of their shots. Jay Couisnard lead the way for the visitors with 22 points and seven rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231104-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sussex County Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Sussex County Football League season was the 88th 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-00231104-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sussex County Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 19 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-00231104-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sussex County Football League, Division One\nFor this season only, the FA were to promote a second club from two of the following six Step 5 leagues: Combined Counties League, Eastern Counties League, Essex Senior League, Kent League, Spartan South Midlands League and the Sussex County League. This was to fulfil the expansion of the Isthmian League Divisions One North and South from 22 to 24 clubs each. The two clubs were to be promoted on a points per game basis, and the two runners-up with the best PPG were VCD Athletic (Kent Football League) and Guernsey (Combined Counties League). Three others \u2013 Aylesbury United (Spartan South Midlands League), Redhill (Sussex County League) and Barkingside (Essex Senior League) \u2013 were also confirmed as promoted by the FA on 17 May, due to resignations and non-promotions elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231104-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sussex County Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 15 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs, promoted from Division Three:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231104-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sussex County Football League, Division Three\nDivision Three featured ten clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two new clubs, joined from the West Sussex League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen\nThe 2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen was the 57th season of Svenska Cupen and the first season since 2000\u201301 to be held according to the fall-spring season format. The season also reintroduced a group stage, the first since 1995\u201396.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen\nA total of 96 clubs entered the competition. The first round commenced on 3 June 2012 and the final was contested on 26 May 2013 at Friends Arena in Solna. Helsingborgs IF were the defending champions, having beaten Kalmar FF 3\u20131 in last season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen\nIFK G\u00f6teborg won their sixth Svenska Cupen title on 26 May 2013 after defeating Djurg\u00e5rdens IF 3\u20131 on penalties after the match had finished 1\u20131 after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Qualifying rounds\nThe only one of the Swedish District Football Associations that had a qualifying round was Dalarnas FF, the other ones decided their teams in other ways. The first round commenced on 3 March 2012 and the final was contested on 22 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Round 1\n64 teams from the third tier or lower of the Swedish league system competed in this round. The round was played between 3 June and 5 August 2012 with the majority of the fixtures played in early August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Round 2\nAll teams from 2012 Allsvenskan and 2012 Superettan entered in this round, 32 teams in total, where they were joined by the 32 winners from round 1. The 32 teams from Allsvenskan and Superettan were seeded and played against the 32 winners from round 1, the matches were played at the home venues for the unseeded teams. The fixtures were drawn on 6 August 2012 and the round was initially scheduled to be played between 16 and 20 August 2012, however three fixtures were postponed to later dates due to clashes with Allsvenskan and European cup play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Group stage\nThe 32 winners from round 2 were divided into eight groups of four teams. The 16 highest ranked winners from the previous rounds were seeded to the top two positions in each groups and the 16 remaining winners were unseeded in the draw. The ranking of the 16 seeded teams were decided by league position in the 2012 season. All teams in the group played each other once, the highest ranked teams from the previous rounds and lower tier teams had the right to play two home matches. The group stage was played in March 2013. The draw for the group stage was held on 13 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Group stage, Tie-breaking criteria and key\nIf 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals were played on 3 and 4 April 2013 and consisted of the eight teams that won their respective group in the previous round. The four best group winners were entitled to play the match at their home venue. The draw for the quarter-finals took place on 17 March 2013, with IK Sirius from Division 1 remaining as the lowest-ranked team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on 1 May 2013 and consisted of the four winners from the quarter-finals. The teams drawn first were the home teams. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 8 April 2013, with \u00d6rgryte IS from Superettan remaining as the lowest-ranked team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231105-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen, Knockout stage, Final\nThe final was played on 26 May 2013 at Friends Arena, Solna. The home team was designated through a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231106-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen Qualifying Rounds\nThe 2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen was the 57th season of Svenska Cupen and the first season since 2000\u201301 to be held according to the fall-spring season format. The season also reintroduced a group stage, the first since 1995\u201396.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231106-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen Qualifying Rounds\nA total of 96 clubs entered the competition. The first round commenced on 3 June 2012 and the final was contested on 26 May 2013 at Friends Arena in Solna. Helsingborgs IF were the defending champions, having beaten Kalmar FF 3\u20131 in last season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231106-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen Qualifying Rounds\nIFK G\u00f6teborg won their sixth Svenska Cupen title on 26 May 2013 after defeating Djurg\u00e5rdens IF 3\u20131 on penalties after the match had finished 1\u20131 after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231106-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen Qualifying Rounds\nThe only one of the Swedish District Football Associations that had a qualifying round was Dalarnas FF, the other ones decided their teams in other ways. The first round commenced on 3 March 2012 and the final was contested on 22 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231107-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swansea City A.F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Swansea City's fourth season in the top tier of English football, and their second consecutive season in the Premier League. It was their 93rd season in the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231107-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swansea City A.F.C. season\nThe club celebrated its centenary, and to mark the occasion released a new crest. In keeping with the centenary theme, the home kit for the season used the colours white and gold, rather than the more traditional white and black, making it very similar to the 2011\u201312 Real Madrid home kit (also manufactured by Adidas). The away kit for the season was red, white and green, depicting the colours of the Welsh flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231107-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swansea City A.F.C. season\nDuring pre-season, Brendan Rodgers became the new Liverpool manager and signed a three-year contract on 1 June. In total, Liverpool paid Swansea \u00a37\u00a0million in compensation for Rodgers, coach Colin Pascoe, assistant performance analyst Chris Davies and performance consultant Glen Driscoll. On 15 June, Swansea appointed former Barcelona, Real Madrid and Juventus midfielder Michael Laudrup as their new manager. Laudrup signed a two-year contract with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231107-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Pre-season friendlies\nSwansea began their 2012\u201313 campaign with a 10-day pre-season tour of America. The club played against MLS sides Colorado Rapids and San Jose Earthquakes, and also against USL Premier Development League side Ventura County Fusion. The Club also played at other venues within the UK, including a trip to Aberystwyth. This Swansea team contained some first team players, but also some reserves and youngsters, although it was part of the first team calendar. They also played Carmarthen Town. Swansea's first opponents at the Liberty Stadium were Blackpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231107-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231107-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Squad statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total cards are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231108-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swazi Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Swazi Premier League season was the 2012\u201313 season of the top level of football competition in Swaziland. It began on 17 August 2021 and concluded on 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231109-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swedish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2012\u201313 Swedish Figure Skating Championships were held at the Vida Arena in V\u00e4xj\u00f6 between December 13 and 16, 2012. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and pair skating on the senior, junior, and novice levels. The results were among the criteria used to choose the teams to the 2013 World Championships and 2013 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Swindon Town's first season in the League One since 2010\u201311. Swindon will seek to achieve back-to-back promotions after winning promotion from League Two. The club will also compete in the FA Cup, League Cup and the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Sponsors\nSupplier: AdidasSponsor(s): Samsung (Home), EA Sports (Away), The People (F.A. Cup)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Pre-Season\nDuring the final stages of the 2011/12 season Swindon Town confirmed two pre-season friendlies, the first confirmed fixture was a home tie against Championship side Crystal Palace (8 August). Shortly afterwards the club announced that a local friendly with fellow Wiltshire outfit Salisbury City was confirmed to take place at the Raymond McEnhill Stadium on 3 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Pre-Season\nIn June 2012, it was announced that the club would be spending two weeks of pre-season training in Italy between Sunday 1st \u2013 Saturday 14 July. The team based themselves close to Bardolino near Lake Garda. It was later confirmed that Swindon would play a local Select XI consisting on Serie D standard players and Bayern Munich II. An away fixture against Non-League side Weston-super-Mare was later confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, League One\nThe fixture list for the 2012/13 season was announced on 18 June 2012. It was confirmed that Swindon would begin their campaign with an away fixture at Hartlepool United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Club Information, Manager Season Stats\nAs of 1 May 2013. Only competitive matches for the 2012/13 season are counted", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Squad Details, Hat-tricks\nLast updated: 19 January 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Squad Details, Penalties awarded\nLast updated: 5 February 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Squad Details, Clean sheets\nLast updated: 28 March 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231110-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swindon Town F.C. season, Development Squad\nIn June 2011 it was announced that Swindon Town would not compete in a Reserve League for the 2011/12 season and would therefore arrange friendlies with other clubs. This decision remained in place for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231111-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Challenge League\nThe 2012\u201313 Swiss Challenge League was the tenth season of the Swiss Challenge League, the second tier of the Swiss football league pyramid. It began on 14 July 2012 and ended on 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231111-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Challenge League, Teams\n2011\u201312 Challenge League champions St. Gallen were promoted to the 2012\u201313 Super League. They weren't replaced by another team due to Neuch\u00e2tel Xamax being demoted to the 4th tier of Swiss football for financial irregularities. 2011\u201312 Challenge League runners-up Aarau had to compete in a promotion/relegation playoff against 9th-placed Super League team Sion and remained in the Challenge League after losing 3\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231111-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Challenge League, Teams\nThe bottom five teams \u2013 Stade Nyonnais, \u00c9toile Carouge, Del\u00e9mont, Kriens and Br\u00fchl \u2013 were relegated to the newly formed 1. Liga Promotion with no teams replaced them due to the Challenge League reducing from 16 to 10 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231111-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Challenge League, Results\nTeams played each other four times (twice home and twice away) over the course of the season, home and away, for a total of 36 matches per team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Swiss Cup was the 88th season of Switzerland's annual football cup competition. The competition commenced on 14 September 2012 with the first game of Round 1 and ended on 20 May 2013 with the Final. The winners of the competition, Grasshopper Club Z\u00fcrich qualified for the play-off round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. They beat defending champions FC Basel in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup, Participating clubs\nAll ten Super League and nine Challenge League teams (FC Vaduz are from Liechtenstein and thus play in the 2012\u201313 Liechtenstein Cup) entered this year's competition, as well as 45 teams from lower leagues. Teams from 1. Liga Promotion and below qualified through separate qualifying rounds within their leagues. Teams from regional leagues qualified by winning the last season's regional cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup, Participating clubs\nth Title holders. FP Qualified for having the lowest fair play points inside its regional tier. \u2020 Qualified as regional leagues cup winners before being promoted to 2. Liga Interregional. \u2021 Qualified through 2. Liga Interregional qualifiers after being relegated to their regional league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231112-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup, Round 2\nThe winners of Round 1 played in this round. Teams from Super League were seeded, 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, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup, Round 3\nThe winners of Round 2 played in this round, 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, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe winners of Round 3 played in the Quarter-finals, there was no home advantage granted in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup, Semi-finals\nThe winners of the Quarter-finals stage advanced to play in the Semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231112-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Cup, Final\nThe winners of the Semi-finals stage played in the Final, which was held in the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231113-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Super League\nThe 2012\u201313 Swiss Super League, also known as Raiffeisen Super League for sponsoring purposes, was the 116th season of top-tier football in Switzerland. It began on 14 July 2012 and ended on 2 June 2013. Basel successfully defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231113-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Super League\nThe league comprised the best eight sides from the 2011\u201312 season, the 2011\u201312 Swiss Challenge League champions FC St. Gallen, and FC Sion, the winners of the relegation/promotion play-off between the ninth-placed Super League team and the Challenge League runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231113-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Super League\nSince Switzerland climbed from sixteenth to fourteenth place in the UEFA association coefficient rankings at the end of the 2011\u201312 season, the league regained its second spot for the UEFA Champions League. In other changes, the league abolished the relegation/promotion play-off from this season after a structural change at lower tiers of the Swiss football league pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231113-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Super League, Teams\nNo team were relegated on competitive grounds at the end of the 2011\u201312 season after Neuch\u00e2tel Xamax were expelled from the league over financial irregularities midway through the campaign. The club went into administration soon afterwards and was eventually liquidated. Its successors Neuch\u00e2tel Xamax 1912 were subsequently inserted into the fifth-tier 2. Liga Interregional. Xamax were replaced by 2011\u201312 Challenge League champions FC St. Gallen, who immediately returned to the highest football league of Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231113-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Swiss Super League, Teams\nA further spot in the league was contested in a relegation/promotion playoff between ninth-placed FC Sion and Challenge League runners-up FC Aarau. Both teams played a two-legged series, which was won by Sion, 3\u20131 on aggregate. The club from Valais thus remained in the league despite having received a 36-point deduction for fielding ineligible players during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231114-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney Blue Sox season\nThe 2012\u201313 Sydney Blue Sox season was the third season for the team. As was the case for the previous season, the Blue Sox competed in the Australian Baseball League (ABL) with the other five foundation teams, and again played its home games at Blacktown International Sportspark Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Sydney FC's eighth consecutive season in the A-League since its foundation season in 2005\u20132006. Sydney started the season under the management of Ian Crook until his departure on 11 November 2012, being replaced by assistant coach Steve Corica who took up a caretaker role from 12\u201327 November. On 28 November Frank Farina was appointed as manager and Steve Corica returned to assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231115-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney FC season, End-of-season awards\nOn 10 April, 2013, Sydney FC hosted their annual Sky Blue Ball and presented seven awards on the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231116-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney Sixers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Sydney Sixers season was the club's second consecutive season in the Big Bash League (BBL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231116-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney Sixers season, Players, Squad\nNote: This table is for the 2012\u201313 Big Bash League season squad. See also 2012 Champions League Twenty20 squads#Sydney Sixers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231116-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney Sixers season, Players, Transfers\nNote: Transfers occurred after the Champions League Twenty20 tournament. Thus players listed as \"Out\" (excluding MacGill, Bravo and Cowan) competed in the CLT20 tournament and players listed as \"In\" did not. See also 2012 Champions League Twenty20 squads#Sydney Sixers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231116-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney Sixers season, Champions League Twenty20\nAs winners of the 2011\u201312 Big Bash League, the Sydney Sixers qualified for the 2012 Champions League Twenty20 series held in South Africa. Corey Richards was the caretaker coach of the Sixers for this tournament as Trevor Bayliss's Indian Premier League team, the Kolkata Knight Riders also qualified. The tournament would prove to be successful for the Sixers, winning the tournament in their first attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231116-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Sydney Sixers season, Big Bash League, Finals\nThe Sixers poor season saw them finish seventh with only three wins. This was not good enough to qualify for the finals series and thus also ensuring they would not be able to defend their Champions League Twenty20 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231117-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy\n2012\u201313 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was the fourth edition of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy competition, an Indian domestic team only Twenty20 cricket tournament in India. It was contested by 27 teams. Gujarat emerged as winners of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231117-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, Squads\nThe squads details of all the 27 participating teams is present", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team represented Syracuse University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach, Jim Boeheim, served for his 37th year. The team played its home games at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York and was a member of the Big East Conference. This team reached the Final Four for the fifth time in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Preseason outlook\nSyracuse began the season ranked #9 in the Coaches' Poll and the AP Poll, the second-highest ranking among Big East teams behind Louisville. In a poll of Big East coaches, Syracuse was predicted to finish second in the conference. In this same poll, the coaches named Brandon Triche to their all-Big East second team. C. J. Fair received an honorable mention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Preseason outlook\nA poll of writers in Big East cities predicted Syracuse would finish second in the conference. Triche, Fair and Michael Carter-Williams were named to the writers' all-Big East second team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Roster changes\nSyracuse returned five players that had significant playing time last season (three players that earned starts and two that came off the bench), while losing four significant contributors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Roster changes\nSyracuse graduated two players that started every game during the previous season: senior point guard Scoop Jardine and senior forward Kris Joseph. Sophomore guard Dion Waiters, who averaged 24 minutes per game in the 2011\u201312 season, left school early to enter the NBA draft, as did sophomore center Fab Melo, who was a starter before the university ruled him academically ineligible toward the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Roster changes\nThe starting line-up for the first half of the current season featured three players who started games in the previous season: senior guard Brandon Triche, junior forward C.J. Fair and sophomore forward Rakeem Christmas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Roster changes\nSophomore guard Michael Carter-Williams, who did not start in the previous season, but played an average of 10 minutes per game, entered the starting line-up in the 2012\u201313 season, along with true freshman forward DaJuan Coleman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Roster changes\nNine players have earned more than 10 minutes per game in the first half of the season. Senior James Southerland was averaging 26 minutes per game through 16 games before Syracuse University ruled him ineligible in January 2013. The three other players who have been playing off the bench for the team this season are redshirt freshman guard Trevor Cooney, freshman forward Jerami Grant and junior center Baye Moussa Keita. Keita also played off the bench last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Roster changes\nBy January of the 2012\u201313 season, more than halfway through, Syracuse was playing with just seven scholarship players due to Dajuan Coleman's knee injury and James Southerland's suspension. Coleman was Syracuse's starting center at the beginning of the season and Southerland led the team in three point scoring coming off the bench before his suspension. Head coach Boeheim said he thinks a rotation of seven or eight players is enough to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Roster changes, Current depth chart\nThe three players on this year's team that consistently have earned the most playing time have been Triche, Fair and Carter-Williams. Cooney has been coming off the bench to spell the guards this season, while four back-line players (Coleman, Christmas, Keita and Grant) have been rounding out the line up. Total combined production from these four players has varied significantly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231118-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team, Jim Boeheim milestones\nJim Boeheim became only the third coach to win 900 men's NCAA Division I games on December 17, 2012 when Syracuse defeated Detroit, 72\u201368. On December 31, 2012, Jim Boeheim won his 902nd game tying Bob Knight for second-most men's NCAA Division I victories with a 96\u201362 win over Central Connecticut. Boeheim passed Knight to gain sole possession of second place behind Mike Krzyzewski when Syracuse defeated Rutgers 78\u201353 on January 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231119-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange women's ice hockey season\nThe Syracuse Orange women represented Syracuse University in CHA women's ice hockey during the 2012-13 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season. It was the program's most successful season. The goaltending duo of Kallie Billadeau and Jenesica Drinkwater registered 8 shutouts between them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231119-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nHead Coach Paul Flanagan was named the CHA Coach of the Year. Flanagan earned his 300th career win on February 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231119-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nJunior Defense Akane Hosoyamada was named to the All-CHA First Team, along with Junior Goaltender Kallie Billadeau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231119-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Syracuse Orange women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nSophomore forward Nicole Ferrera and junior forward Margot Scharfe were named to the Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231120-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s's 57th competitive season, 5th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 93rd year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231120-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s 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-00231120-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231120-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231120-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231120-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231120-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231120-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Szombathelyi Halad\u00e1s season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231121-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig\nThe 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig (known as the Spor Toto S\u00fcper Lig for sponsorship reasons) was the 55th season of the S\u00fcper Lig, the highest football league of Turkey. Galatasaray are the defending champions. The season began on 17 August 2012 and ended on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231121-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig\nOn 5 May, Galatasaray won a record 19th Turkish title after beating Sivasspor 4-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231121-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig, Teams\nSamsunspor, Manisaspor and Ankarag\u00fcc\u00fc were relegated at the end of the 2011\u201312 season after finishing in the bottom three places of the standings. Ankarag\u00fcc\u00fc concluded 31 years at top level, Manisaspor returned to second level after 2 years and Samsunspor immediately returned to second one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231121-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig, Teams\nThe relegated teams were replaced by 2011\u201312 TFF First League champions Akhisar Belediyespor, runners-up Elaz\u0131\u011fspor and promotion play-off winners Kas\u0131mpa\u015fa S.K.. Elaz\u0131\u011fspor returned to the top level after 8 years by making two successive promotions. Akhisar Belediyespor makes its debut in Turkey's top flight. Kas\u0131mpa\u015fa returned immediately after their relegation to the First League in the 2010-11 season. Elaz\u0131\u011fspor got sponsorship from Sanica Boru and changed their name to \"Sanica Boru Elaz\u0131\u011fspor\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231121-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig, League table, Positions by round\nThe following table represents the teams position after each round in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231122-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TB2L season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season of the basketball Turkish 2nd Division (TB2L), U\u015fak Sportif finished on top of the regular season league standings, but in the playoffs between the top 8 teams, Trabzonspor Basketball won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231123-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TBHSL season\nThe 2012\u201313 Turkish Ice Hockey Super League season was the 21st season of the Turkish Ice Hockey Super League, the top level of ice hockey in Turkey. 7 teams participated in the league, and Ba\u015fkent Y\u0131ld\u0131zlar\u0131 Spor Kul\u00fcb\u00fc won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231124-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TCU Horned Frogs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 TCU Horned Frogs basketball team represented Texas Christian University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Trent Johnson's first season at TCU. They played their home games at Daniel\u2013Meyer Coliseum in Fort Worth, Texas and were in their first season as members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 11\u201321, 2\u201316 in Big 12 play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament to Texas. On February 8, 2013, TCU earned their first ever Big 12 conference victory with a 62\u201355 upset win over 5th ranked Kansas. The win was also TCU's first over an opponent ranked in the top 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231125-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF First League\nThe 2012\u201313 TFF First League, also known as PTT First League) due to sponsoring reasons (in Turkish: PTT 1. Lig, is the 12th season since the league was established in 2001 and 50th season of the second-level football league of Turkey since its establishment in 1963\u201364. The start date of the league was 25 August 2012 and end date is 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231125-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF First League, Teams\nManisaspor, Ankarag\u00fcc\u00fc and Samsunspor relegated from S\u00fcper Lig. Akhisar Belediyespor, Elaz\u0131\u011fspor and Kas\u0131mpa\u015fa promoted to 2012\u201313 S\u00fcper Lig.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231125-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF First League, Teams\n1461 Trabzon, \u015eanl\u0131urfaspor and Adana Demirspor promoted from TFF Second League. \u0130stanbul G\u00fcng\u00f6renspor, Sakaryaspor and Giresunspor relegated to 2012\u201313 TFF Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231125-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF First League, Promotion playoffs\nThe teams ranked fourth through seventh will compete in the promotion playoffs for the 2013\u201314 S\u00fcper Lig. The 4th team and 7th teams will play two matches in their own grounds. Likewise the 5th and 6th teams will play two mathes elimination round. This round is named as semi-finals. Winning teams will play one final match at a neutral venue. The winner of the final will be the third team to promote to S\u00fcper Lig 2013\u20132014. 3rd-placed team 1461 Trabzon is S\u00fcper Lig side Trabzonspor's reserve team So They Were Ineligible For Promotion And their play-off spot went to 7th-placed team Adana Demirspor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231126-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF Second League\nThe 2012\u201313 Second League (known as the Spor Toto 2. Lig for sponsorship reasons) is the third level in the Turkish football. The season began on 9 September 2012. In end of the 2012\u20132013 season, 4 teams (2 teams in each group) relegate to TFF Third League and 6 teams promote from TFF Third League. Because 36 teams (18 teams in each group) will be competing in 2013\u20132014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231126-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF Second League\nThe following are the results to the 2012-2013 TFF Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231127-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF Third League\nThe 2012\u201313 TFF Third League (also known as Spor-Toto Third League due to sponsorship reasons) is the 12th season of the league since its establishment in 2001 as the fourth level division; and the 42nd season of the third league in Turkish football since its establishment in 1967\u201368 (before 2001 league was played as third level division). The start date of the league is 8 September 2012 and end date is 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231127-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TFF Third League\nLeague was started with 54 teams in three groups: Groups 1, 2 and 3, each consisting 18. Winner of each group promoted to 2013\u201314 TFF Second League. A playoff series was played among the best four teams in each group to determine the three more teams to promote. Bottom three teams in each groups relegated to 2013\u201314 Turkish Regional Amateur League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231128-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season\nThe 2012\u201313 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season is the 114th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It is the club's fifth consecutive season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231128-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, where they were eliminated in the first round by fourth division side Berliner AK 07, losing 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231128-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season, Review and events\n1899 Hoffenheim began their season with a 4\u20130 defeat against regional team Berliner AK, the largest victory for a fourth division club against a Bundesliga side. Tim Wiese made his competitive debut for the club. On 3 December, manager Markus Babbel was released because of poor results, with the team in 16th place in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231128-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim season, Competitions, Bundesliga, Relegation play-offs\n1899 Hoffenheim, as the 16th-placed team, faced third-placed 2012\u201313 2. Bundesliga side Kaiserslautern in a two-legged play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231129-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSV 1860 Munich season\nThe 2012\u201313 TSV 1860 Munich season is the 108th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 2. Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the clubs ninth consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2004\u201305, after it was relegated from the Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231129-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSV 1860 Munich season\nThe club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and will face fourth division side Berliner AK 07 next.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231129-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSV 1860 Munich season, Review and events\nIt is the clubs ninth consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2004\u201305, after it was relegated from the Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231129-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TSV 1860 Munich season, Review and events\nThe club also takes part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round and will face fourth division side Berliner AK 07 next.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231130-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TT Pro League\nThe 2012\u201313 TT Pro League season (known as the Digicel Pro League for sponsorship reasons) was the fourteenth season of the TT Pro League, the Trinidad and Tobago professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1999. A total of eight teams contested the league, with W Connection the defending champions. The season began on 14 September 2012 and ended on 10 May 2013 with the crowning of Defence Force as the league champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231130-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TT Pro League\nSpeaking on the number of clubs in the Pro League prior to the start of the season, CEO Dexter Skeene stated in an interview that he feels the country's best footballing interests are served by an eight-team league. On 30 June 2012, San Juan Jabloteh announced that due to financial constraints the club suspended their football operations. As a result, the four-time Pro League champion, San Juan Kings, did not participate for the first time in the league's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231130-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 TT Pro League\nIn response, a new club established by Brent Sancho to represent the Central region of the country, Central FC, was formed and officially applied for Pro League membership on 25 July 2012. The club is officially based in California and plays its home games in Ato Boldon Stadium. Central was admitted into the league on 6 September 2012 and became the 21st team to compete in the Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231130-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TT Pro League\nThe first goal of the season was scored by two-time Golden Boot winner Devorn Jorsling of Defence Force against St. Ann's Rangers in the thirty-second minute of the first game on 14 September 2012. Bevon Bass of T&TEC scored the first hat-trick of the season as the Electricity Boys defeated St. Ann's Rangers 3\u20132 on 20 October 2012. Jorsling went on to claim an unprecedented third Golden Boot award after leading the league with 21 goals scored for Defence Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231130-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TT Pro League\nOn 6 May 2013, Defence Force secured the TT Pro League championship following a Caledonia AIA 2\u20131 loss to Central FC in Couva. The league title was the Teteron Boys' second in three seasons and marked their third Pro League title overall. Consequently, Defence Force and Caledonia AIA, having finished as runners-up, earned places within the 2014 CFU Club Championship. Following the season, T&TEC withdrew from the league citing financial struggles to field a professional football club. The Electricity Boys became the seventh team to leave the league in the previous four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231130-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TT Pro League, Teams, Team summaries\nNote: 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231130-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 TT Pro League, 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. For example, if a match is scheduled for the tenth round of matches, but then postponed and played between rounds 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for round 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season\nThe 2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season was the third season of the Tacoma Stars professional indoor soccer club as a franchise in the Professional Arena Soccer League. The Stars, a Pacific Division team, played their home games in the new Pacific Sports Center in Tacoma, Washington. The team was led by head coach Joe Waters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Season summary\nThe team had mixed results in the regular season, finishing 8\u20138, including the forfeit of their final scheduled game against the Sacramento Surge. The team struggled on the road with 6 of their 8 wins coming at home. Still, the Stars placed third in the PASL's five-team Pacific Division and only narrowly failed to qualify for the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Season summary\nThe Stars participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They received a bye in the Wild Card round and defeated the Oregon Blacktails of the Premier Arena Soccer League in the Round of 16 before losing to the Las Vegas Legends in the Quarter-Finals, ending their tournament run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Off-field moves\nBetween the 2011\u201312 and 2012\u201313 seasons, Tacoma Stars team owner Marian Bowers completed construction on a new 52,000 square feet (4,800\u00a0m2) multi-sport facility on Tacoma's south side to replace the team's former home, the Tacoma Soccer Center. The Pacific Sports Center seats up to 1,200 spectators, includes 200 parking spaces, and cost approximately $4.2 million to construct. The April 2012 grand opening included free soccer clinics, appearances by Tacoma Stars players, and an \"official first kick\" by Joe Lonergan, then Deputy Mayor of Tacoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Off-field moves\nOn January 19, 2013, the Stars announced a partnership with the local Special Olympics organization. The team hosted a match between the Sounders Special Olympics Unity team and the Tacoma Stars Special Olympics Unity team during halftime of the January 20, 2013, game as part of the Special Olympics Unified Sports campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Off-field moves\nThe Stars were originally scheduled to visit the Turlock Express on both January 25 and February 15, 2013. To reduce travel costs, the latter game was moved up to January 25 to form a doubleheader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Off-field moves\nBefore the start of the 2013\u201314 PASL season, the Tacoma franchise announced that it was putting itself on hiatus for at least one season and would return to the Premier Arena Soccer League as the Tacoma Galaxy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Roster moves\nIn early September 2012, the Tacoma Stars signed veteran coach Joe Waters for the 2012\u201313 season. Waters played 8 seasons for the original Tacoma Stars in the 1980s and early 1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231131-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tacoma Stars season, Roster moves\nThe Stars held open tryouts on September 28 and 29, 2012, at the Pacific Sports Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231132-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tai Po FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Wofoo Tai Po's 7th season in the Hong Kong First Division League. Wofoo Tai Po will seek to win their first trophy for 3 seasons, competing in the Hong Kong First Division League, the Senior Challenge Shield and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231132-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tai Po FC season, Players, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231132-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tai Po FC season, Matches, Competitive, Hong Kong AFC Cup play-offs\nRemarks: 1 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match. 2 Wofoo Tai Po's home match against Southern of FA Cup first round will be played at Kowloon Bay Park instead of Wofoo Tai Po's home ground Tai Po Sports Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 75], "content_span": [76, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231133-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Talk 'N Text Tropang Texters season\nThe 2012\u201313 Talk 'N Text Tropang Texters season is the 23rd season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season\nThe 2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season was the franchise's 21st season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season\nThe Lightning began the season with one of the best starts in franchise history, earning a 6\u20131\u20130 record. However, since that seventh game, the team went 7\u201316\u20131, falling to 14th out of 15 teams in the Eastern Conference. This prompted general manager Steve Yzerman to fire head coach Guy Boucher on March 24, 2013. Boucher was in his third year as the team's head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season\nOne day later, the Lightning named Jon Cooper as the team's new head coach. Cooper was first hired by the organization in 2010 to coach the Lightning's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Norfolk Admirals, and after the Lightning changed affiliates, the Syracuse Crunch. While coaching the Admirals in the 2011\u201312 season, the team won 28 consecutive games and would go on to win the Calder Cup, sweeping the championship series. At the time of Cooper's naming as Lightning head coach, ten players on the team's roster had played for Cooper in Syracuse at some point during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season\nWith goaltending having been an issue for the team all season, on April 3, the day of the trade deadline, the Lightning acquired Ben Bishop from the Ottawa Senators. In return, the Lightning dealt rookie left wing Cory Conacher, who at the time was second in the League in points among first-year players with 24, and led all rookies in assists with 15. The Lightning also gave up a fourth-round pick in the 2013 NHL Entry Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season\nThe Lightning tied the Montreal Canadiens for the fewest shorthanded goals scored with zero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Schedule and results, Preseason\nAs a result of the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout, the entire pre-season was canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nDue to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout, the Lightning's original 82-game schedule was reduced to a 48-game schedule in which they would face only teams from the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nWin (2 Points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Schedule and results, Playoffs\nThe Lightning were unable to qualify for the playoffs for the second year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Player stats\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Tampa Bay. Stats reflect time with Tampa Bay only. \u2021Traded to Tampa Bay mid-season. Bold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Transactions\nThe Lightning have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231134-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Draft picks\nTampa Bay Lightning's picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga\nThe 2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga was the sixth edition of the Ta\u00e7a da Liga, the Portuguese football league cup competition. It was organized by the Portuguese League for Professional Football (LPFP) and contested between the 32 clubs competing in the 2012\u201313 Primeira Liga and 2012\u201313 Segunda Liga, the top two tiers of Portuguese football. The first matches were played on 28 July 2012, and the final was played on Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra in Coimbra, on 13 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga\nBraga eliminated the holders and four-time winners Benfica in a penalty shootout in the semi-finals. In the final, they defeated Porto 1\u20130 to win their first title in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format\nThe competition format for the 2012\u201313 edition consists of three rounds plus a knockout phase. In the first round, only teams competing in the 2012\u201313 Segunda Liga (excluding reserve teams from Primeira Liga clubs) take part. The sixteen teams are drawn into four groups of four teams, where each team plays against the other three in a single round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advance to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format\nIn the second round, the eight teams that qualified from the previous round are joined by the six Primeira Liga teams placed 9th to 14th in the previous season and the two teams promoted to 2012\u201313 Primeira Liga. Two-legged home-and-away fixtures are played between Segunda Liga teams qualifying from the first round and Primeira Liga teams entering this round, and the winner advances to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Format\nThe third round features the eight winners of the previous round the remaining eight Primeira Liga teams, ranked 1st to 8th in the previous season. Similarly to the first round, the sixteen teams are drawn into four groups of four teams, according to a seeding based on their classification in the previous season. Each team plays against the other three in a single round-robin format, and only the group winners advance to the knockout phase. The knockout phase consists of semi-finals and one final, both decided in one-legged fixtures. The final match is played at a neutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Teams\nThe 32 teams competing in the two professional tiers of Portuguese football for the 2012\u201313 season are eligible to participate in this competition. For Primeira Liga teams, the final league position in the previous season determines if they enter in the second or third round of the Ta\u00e7a da Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Schedule\nAll draws were held at the LPFP headquarters in Porto, except the draw for the first round, which was done at the Pal\u00e1cio do Freixo in Porto, during the draw ceremony for the LPFP competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231135-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a da Liga, Third round\nThe draw for the third round took place on 5 November 2012 at the LPFP headquarters in Porto. The third round group phase matches took place between December 2012 and January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nThe 2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal was the 73rd season of the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, the premier Portuguese football knockout cup competition organized by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF). It was contested by a total of 162 teams competing in the top four tiers of Portuguese football. The competition began with the first round matches in August 2012 and concluded with the final on 26 May 2013, at the Est\u00e1dio Nacional in Oeiras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nVit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es were the winners, following their 2\u20131 defeat of Benfica. They secured their first title in the competition after five previous failed attempts and became the twelfth team to win the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal \u2013 the first first-time winners since Beira-Mar in 1999. With this victory, Vit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nAcad\u00e9mica de Coimbra were the defending champions after defeating Sporting CP 1\u20130 in the previous season's final, but were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Benfica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Format\nAs in the previous season, the competition format was organized in a knockout system consisting of seven rounds, which preceded the final match. Teams competing in the Segunda Divis\u00e3o and Terceira Divis\u00e3o, respectively the third and fourth tiers of Portuguese football, entered the competition in the first round. In the second round, Segunda Liga teams were joined by the first round winners and the remaining Second and/or Third Division teams that received a bye in the previous round. The second round winners advanced to the third round, where they met the top tier Primeira Liga teams for the first time. Unlike the previous rounds, which were contested in one-legged fixtures, the semi-finals were played over two legs in a home-and-away basis. The final was played at a neutral venue, the Est\u00e1dio Nacional in Oeiras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Teams\nA total of 162 teams from the top four tiers of the national football system from were considered eligible by FPF to participate in the competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Schedule\nAll draws were held at the FPF headquarters in Lisbon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, First round\nTeams from the Segunda Divis\u00e3o (II) and Terceira Divis\u00e3o (III) entered in this initial round. The draw was made on 2 August 2012 and determined the 100 teams contesting this round and the remaining 30 teams with a bye into the second round. Matches were played mainly on 26 August, with a few taking place the day before and later on 9 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, First round\nThe following 30 teams were given a bye into the second round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, First round\nLourinhanense, Melgacense, Santa Maria and Limianos were the only Third Division teams to eliminate opponents from the upper Second Division tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Second round\nThe 50 winners from the first round joined the 30 teams awarded with a second round bye and the 16 teams competing in the Segunda Liga (SL), the second tier league. The draw took place on 31 August 2012 and matches were played mainly on 16 September 2012, with a few games taking place the day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Second round\nThird Division teams Aliados de Lordelo, Caldas, Lourinhanense, Oliveira do Hospital and Santa Eul\u00e1lia were the only teams to eliminate opponents from better ranked leagues. Lourinhanense defeated a Second Division team for the second consecutive time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Third round\nThe 16 teams competing in the top tier Primeira Liga enter the tournament at this stage, where they are joined by the 48 winners of the previous round. The draw for this round took place on 25 September 2012, and matches were played mostly during the weekend of 20\u201321 October 2012. The matches involving Benfica and Braga were played respectively on the 18 and 19 October, due to broadcasting purposes, whereas the match between Caldas and Coimbr\u00f5es was postponed to 2 December 2012, due to logistical difficulties by the latter club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Third round\nEstoril and Sporting CP were the only Primeira Liga teams to fall in this round, both against teams from the same league. For the third and second consecutive round, respectively, Lourinhanense (III) and Oliveira do Hospital (III) reassured their maintenance in the competition at the expense of opponents from a higher league. Similar achievements were made by Pampilhosa (II), Pedras Rubras (III) and Penalva do Castelo (III).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round took place on 29 October 2012, and matches were played mostly on 18 November 2012, with a few being held earlier on 16 and 17 November. The match between Desportivo das Aves and Coimbr\u00f5es was played later, on 12 December, because of the delays resulting from the FPF evaluation of irregularities that occurred in the second round fixture between Oper\u00e1rio (II) and Caldas (III).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fourth round\nIn this round, three teams eliminated opponents from upper tier leagues: Arouca (SL), Tourizense (II), which advanced to fifth round as the last remaining Second Division team in competition; and giant-killers Lourinhanense (III), who have consecutively beaten teams from stronger leagues since the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fifth round\nThe draw for the fifth round took place on the 20 November 2012, and matches were to be played between 30 November and 2 December 2012. The match opposing Benfica (PL) and Desportivo das Aves (SL) was due to be played on 1 December but was rescheduled to 2 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fifth round\nPrimeira Liga champions Porto were defeated by league opponents Braga, becoming the second \"Big Three\" club to be eliminated, after Sporting CP in the third round. None of the last remaining teams from the Second and Third Division survived this round: Tourizense (II) was defeated by title-holders Acad\u00e9mica de Coimbra, while Fabril Barreiro (III) lost to Belenenses (SL) and underdogs Lourinhanense (III) were finally halted at home by Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira (PL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Quarterfinals\nThe draw for the quarterfinals \u2013 which also determined the pairings for the semifinals \u2013 took place on 18 December 2012, and the matches were played on 16\u201317 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Quarterfinals\nBelenenses defeated Arouca in the match between the last surviving Segunda Liga teams, whereas Benfica ended the reign of defending champions Acad\u00e9mica de Coimbra with a crushing 4\u20130 away win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231136-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Semifinals\nThe semifinal pairings were previously determined during the draw for the quarterfinals, held on 18 December 2012. This round is contested over two legs, with the first leg taking place on 30 January 2013 and the second leg on 17 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231137-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Temple Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Temple Owls basketball team represented Temple University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Owls, led by seventh year head coach Fran Dunphy, played their home games at the Liacouras Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 24\u201310, 11\u20135 in A-10 play to finish in a three way tie for third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 Tournament to Massachusetts. They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they defeated North Carolina State in the second round before losing in the third round to Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231137-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Temple Owls men's basketball team\nThis was their last season as a member of the Atlantic 10 as they will join the American Athletic Conference in July 2013. With a win over Bowling Green on December 31, 2012, the Owls became only the 6th team in NCAA history to record 1,800 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231138-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tennessee State Tigers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Tennessee State Tigers basketball team represented Tennessee State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by first year head coach and former assistant Travis Williams, played their home games at the Gentry Complex and were members of the East Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 18\u201315, 11\u20135 in OVC play to finish in third place in the East Division. They advanced to the semifinals of the OVC Tournament where they lost to Belmont. They were invited to the 2013 CIT, their second consecutive CIT appearance, where they lost in the first round to Evansville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231139-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented Tennessee Technological University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by second year head coach Steve Payne, played their home games at the Eblen Center and were members of the East Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 12\u201317, 5\u201311 in OVC play to finish in last place in the East Division. They failed to qualify for the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231140-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 14:37, 21 June 2020 (\u2192\u200eSchedule: Task 30 - remove deprecated parameter in Template:CBB schedule entry). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231140-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Tennessee Volunteers men's basketball team represented the University of Tennessee in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team's head coach was Cuonzo Martin, who was in his second season at Tennessee. The team played their home games at the Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tennessee as a member of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231140-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tennessee Volunteers basketball team, Previous season\nThe Volunteers posted a record of 19\u201315 (10-6 SEC) in the 2011\u201312 season and finished second in the SEC standings in Cuonzo Martin's first season as head coach. The season was highlighted by a sweep of Florida and a victory over perennial power Connecticut. The Volunteers a streak of five consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances come to an end by appearing in the 2012 National Invitation Tournament. The Volunteers lost in the first round of the NIT to Middle Tennessee State by a score of 64-71.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231141-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Terceira Divis\u00e3o\nThe 2012\u201313 Terceira Divis\u00e3o season was the 63rd season of the competition and the 23rd season of recognised fourth-tier football in Portugal. It was the last edition of the competition as Campeonato Nacional de Seniores was created in 2013 to replace the Segunda Divis\u00e3o and Terceira Divis\u00e3o (third and fourth tier of the Portuguese football league system respectively) for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231141-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Terceira Divis\u00e3o, Overview\nThe league was contested by 82 teams in 6 divisions of 12 teams, and 1 division of 10 teams. S\u00e9rie Madeira was cut from this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231141-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Terceira Divis\u00e3o, Overview\nSince it was the last year of the competition a large number of clubs needed to be relegated to achieve the 80 clubs that Campeonato Nacional de Seniores has. So the best 2 of each of the Promotion Group and five of the best third's were promoted. In S\u00e9rie A\u00e7ores, only the top two of the Promotion Group were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231141-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Terceira Divis\u00e3o, Overview\nAll other were relegated, including all of the teams in the Relegation Group and the worst 3 in the Promotion Group, and including the worst third of the Promotion Group. In S\u00e9rie A\u00e7ores, it was the worst 2 in the Promotion Group. In total 63 teams were relegated back to the Distritais.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231142-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n was the fourth tier of football in Spain. Play started on 24 August 2012 and the season ended on 30 June 2013 with the promotion play-off finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231142-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n, Overview\nThere were 359 clubs competing in Tercera Divisi\u00f3n (Third division) in the 2012\u201313 season, divided into 18 regional groups, accommodating between 18 and 21 clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231142-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n, Overview\nThe following clubs finished as champions of their respective groups", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231142-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n, Overview\nThe 18 group champion clubs participated in the Group Winners Promotion Play-off and the losers from these 9 play-off ties then proceeded to the Non-champions Promotion Play-off with clubs finishing second third and fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season\nThe 2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n season is the fourth-tier football league of Mexico. The tournament began on 31 August 2012 and finished on 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Competition format\nThe Tercera Divisi\u00f3n (Third Division) is divided into 14 groups. For the 2009/2010 season, the format of the tournament has been reorganized to a home and away format, which all teams will play in their respective group. The 14 groups consist of teams who are eligible to play in the liguilla de ascenso for one promotion spot, teams who are affiliated with teams in the Liga MX, Ascenso MX and Liga Premier, which are not eligible for promotion but will play that who the better filial team in an eight team filial playoff tournament for the entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Competition format\nThe league format allows participating franchises to rent their place to another team, so some clubs compete with a different name than the one registered with the FMF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 1\nGroup with 9 teams from Campeche, Chiapas, Quintana Roo, Tabasco and Yucat\u00e1n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 3\nGroup with 17 teams from Guerrero, Morelos, Oaxaca, Puebla, State of Mexico and Veracruz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 5\nGroup with 16 teams from Mexico City, Michoac\u00e1n and State of Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 6\nGroup with 16 teams from Hidalgo, Puebla, San Luis Potos\u00ed, State of Mexico and Tlaxcala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 8\nGroup with 17 teams from Guanajuato, Guerrero, Michoac\u00e1n and Quer\u00e9taro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 9\nGroup with 18 teams from Aguascalientes, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Michoac\u00e1n, San Luis Potos\u00ed and Zacatecas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 12\nGroup with 17 teams from Coahuila, Nuevo Le\u00f3n, San Luis Potos\u00ed and Tamaulipas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 13\nGroup with 11 teams from Baja California, Sinaloa and Sonora.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231143-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico season, Group 14\nGroup with 9 teams from Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango and Sonora.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231144-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team represents the Texas A&M University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team's head coach is Billy Kennedy, who is in his second season at Texas A&M. The team plays their home games at the Reed Arena in College Station, Texas and will play in its first season as a member of the Southeastern Conference. On 21 December 2012, Forward Keith Davis left the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231144-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas A&M Aggies men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Aggies posted a record of 14\u201318 (4-14 Big XII) in the 2011\u201312 season and finished ninth in their last full season as a member of the Big XII. The season was particularly troubling for Head Coach Kennedy, who was diagnosed prior to the beginning of the season with Parkinson's Disease. The Aggies missed the NCAA Tournament for the first time in six seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231145-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders men's basketball team represented Texas A&M University\u2013Corpus Christi in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Willis Wilson's second season at Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi. The Islanders were members of the Southland Conference and played their home games at the American Bank Center. They finished the season 6\u201326, 5\u201313 in Southland play to finish in ninth place. Although, they would not have qualified for the conference tournament, they were on a post season ban for low APR scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231145-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi Islanders men's basketball team, Media\nTexas A&M\u2013Corpus Christi men's basketball airs on KKTX with Steven King on the call all season long. Video streaming of all non-televised home games is available at GoIslanders.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 71], "content_span": [72, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231146-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Rick Barnes, who was in his 15th year. The team played its home games at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, Texas and were members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 16\u201318, 7\u201311 in Big 12 play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament to Kansas State. Texas received an invitation to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational and became the first Big 12 team to participate in the postseason tournament's six-year history. The Longhorns lost in the first round to former Southwest Conference rival Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231147-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Southern Tigers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas Southern Tigers basketball team represented Texas Southern University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by first year head coach Mike Davis, played their home games at the Health and Physical Education Arena and were members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. Texas Southern is serving a two-year postseason ban for men's basketball, after the NCAA Division I Infractions Committee said it found a lack of institutional control and outlined problems spanning 13 sports over a seven-year period, including booster-related recruiting violations, academic improprieties, the use of ineligible athletes and exceeding scholarship limits. The Tigers finished the season 17\u201314, 16\u20132 in SWAC play to claim the SWAC regular season championship. They ended the season on a 12-game winning streak. Due to the post season ban, they could not participate in the 2013 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 999]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231148-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas State Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas State Bobcats men's basketball team represented Texas State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bobcats, led by seventh year head coach Doug Davalos, played their home games at Strahan Coliseum and were first year members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 12\u201322, 5\u201313 in WAC play to finish in seventh place. They advanced to the semifinals of the WAC Tournament where they lost to New Mexico State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231148-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas State Bobcats men's basketball team\nThis was their only season as a member of the WAC as they joined the Sun Belt Conference in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231149-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season was the first season of the Texas Strikers professional indoor soccer club. The Strikers, a Central Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their home games in Ford Arena in Beaumont, Texas. The team was led by owner James Germany and head coach Chris \"Topper\" Cogan. The Strikers are Beaumont's first professional soccer team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231149-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season, Season summary\nThe team struggled early in the regular season but split its last six games, amassing a 3\u201313 record. The Strikers placed fifth in the five-team Central Division and failed to advance to the postseason. The franchise fared better at the box office, placing seventh in the 19-team league for average home attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231149-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season, Season summary\nThe Strikers did not participate in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231149-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season, Off-field moves\nThe team's December 1, 2012, home opener against the Dallas Sidekicks was delayed by nearly two hours as the goals had not been properly installed by gametime. Blaming late shipping from the supplier for the delay, the team gave free popcorn and soft drinks to fans while they waited. The team later announced that anyone with a ticket stub from the delayed game could redeem it for free admission to the December 8 game against the Arizona Storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231149-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season, Roster moves\nIn early October 2012, the Strikers held two rounds of tryouts for prospective players at the Cris Quinn Soccer Complex in Beaumont. 63 prospects participated in the tryouts as the team worked to fill out a 20-man roster for the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231149-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season, Roster moves\nOn October 30, the team signed Thomas Shenton from Doncaster, England, Mikey Olabarrieta from Honduras, and Texas native Jeff LeBlanc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231149-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Strikers season, Roster moves\nThe team roster for the regular season finale against the Dallas Sidekicks was partially filled out with players from Vitesse Dallas of the Premier Arena Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231150-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team represented Texas Tech University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team, led by interim head coach Chris Walker, played its home games at the United Spirit Arena in Lubbock, Texas and were members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 11\u201320, 3\u201315 in Big 12 play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament to Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231150-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team, Pre-season, Departures\nIn addition to departing players, Texas Tech came to the spotlight on Friday, September 7 when head coach Billy Gillispie was hospitalized for undisclosed medical reasons. That same day, Texas Tech officials announced that Gillispie was being investigated for possible player misconduct. Gillispie would be discharged from the hospital on Wednesday, September 5. A few days later, Monday, September 10, an ambulance was sent to the home of Gillispie. Gillispie was once again sent to the hospital for an undisclosed medical reason. On Thursday, September 13, Gillispie resigned as head coach of Texas Tech, citing he was leaving due to health reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231151-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas\u2013Arlington Mavericks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas\u2013Arlington Mavericks men's basketball team represented the University of Texas at Arlington during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mavericks, led by seventh year head coach Scott Cross, played their home games at the College Park Center and were first year members of the Western Athletic Conference. This was their only season as a member of the WAC as they joined the Sun Belt Conference in July 2013. They finished the season 19\u201314, 11\u20137 in WAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They advanced to the championship game of the WAC Tournament where they lost to New Mexico State. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they lost in the first round to Oral Roberts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231152-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas\u2013Pan American Broncs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Texas\u2013Pan American Broncs men's basketball team represented the University of Texas\u2013Pan American during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Ryan Mark's fourth season at UTPA. The Broncs played their home games at the UTPA Fieldhouse and were members of the Great West Conference. They finished the season 16\u201316. 5\u20133 in Great West play to finish in second place. They lost in the semifinals of the Great West Tournament to Chicago State. On March 18, head coach Ryan Marks was fired after posting a record of 39\u201389 in four seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231152-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Texas\u2013Pan American Broncs men's basketball team\nThis was the Broncs last season in the Great West. The Broncs will join the Western Athletic Conference for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231153-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 The Citadel Bulldogs basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 The Citadel Bulldogs basketball team represented The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs were led by third year head coach Chuck Driesell and played their home games at McAlister Field House. They were a member of the South Division of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 8\u201322, 5\u201313 in SoCon play to finish in fifth place in the South Division. They lost in the first round of the SoCon Tournament to Western Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231153-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 The Citadel Bulldogs basketball team, Preseason\nThe Citadel signed two recruits in the early signing period. The Bulldogs also landed graduate enrollee Stephen Elmore, son of Maryland great Len Elmore. Elmore will have one year of eligibility after graduating in three years from Princeton University, where he played baseball. The Bulldogs also lost three players to transfer, DeVontae Wright (South Carolina\u2013Aiken), Jordan Robertson (Davidson County Community College), and Bo Holston (Anderson University).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231154-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tigres UANL season\nThe 2012\u201313 UANL season is the 66th professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league. The season is split into two tournaments\u2014the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura\u2014each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams. UANL began their season on July 20, 2012 against Chiapas, UANL play their home games on Saturdays at 7:00\u00a0pm local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231154-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tigres UANL season, Torneo 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231154-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tigres UANL season, Torneo Clausura\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, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231155-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toledo Rockets men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Toledo Rockets men's basketball team represented the University of Toledo during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Rockets, led by third year head coach Tod Kowalczyk, played their home games at the Savage Arena and were members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. Due to low APR scores, the Rockets were ineligible for post season play, including the MAC Tournament. They finished the season 15\u201313, 10\u20136 in MAC play to finish in a tie for the West Division championship. However, due to their postseason ban, the MAC did not allow them to be division champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231156-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top 14 season\nThe 2012\u201313 Top 14 competition was a French domestic rugby union club competition operated by the Ligue Nationale de Rugby (LNR). Two new teams from the 2011\u201312 Pro D2 season were promoted to Top 14 this year, Grenoble and Stade Montois in place of the two relegated teams, CA Brive and Lyon OU. Home-and-away play began on 17 August 2012 and continued through to 5 May 2013. The regular season was followed by a three-round playoff involving the top six sides. The final was contested at the Stade de France between Toulon and Castres; the match was won 19\u201314 by Castres to earn them their first title since the controversial final in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231156-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top 14 season, Table\nUpdated 18 May 2013If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League\nThe 2012\u201313 Top League was the tenth season of Japan's domestic rugby union competition, the Top League. It kicked off on 31 August 2012. The final was held on 27 January 2013 and won by Suntory Sungoliath to claim their third Top League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Regular season\nThe 14 teams played a round-robin tournament for the 2012\u201313 Top League regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Regular season\nThe top 4 qualified for the title play-offs to fight for the Microsoft Cup and the Top League title. The top 4 also qualified directly into the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Regular season\nTeams ranked 5th to 10th went through to the wildcard play-offs for qualification into the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship. Teams ranked 13th and 14th went to the promotion and relegation play-offs against regional challengers to fight to remain in the Top League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Regular season, Table\n\u2022 The top 4 teams qualified to the title play-offs. \u2022 The top 4 teams also qualified for entry into the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship. \u2022 Teams 5 to 10 qualified to the wildcard play-offs for entry into the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship. \u2022 Teams 11 and 12 remain in the Top League for 2013\u201314. \u2022 Teams 13 and 14 went through to the promotion and relegation play-offs against regional challengers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Regular season, Table\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, 41], "content_span": [42, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Title play-offs\nTop 4 sides of the regular season competed in the Microsoft Cup (2013) knock out tournament to fight for the Top League title. The top 4 teams of 2012\u201313 were Suntory Sungoliath, Toshiba Brave Lupus, Panasonic Wild Knights, and Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Wildcard play-offs\nThe two second round winners qualified for the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Wildcard play-offs, First round\nThe Top League teams ranked 7th and 10th played-off for the right to meet the Top League team ranked 5th in the second round. The Top League teams ranked 8th and 9th played-off for the right to meet the Top League team ranked 6th in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Wildcard play-offs, Second round\nThe Top League team ranked 5th played-off against the winner of the teams ranked 7th and 10th, and the Top League team ranked 6th played-off against the winner of the teams ranked 8th and 9th. The two winning second round teams advanced to the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Wildcard play-offs, Second round\nSo Toyota and Yamaha advanced to the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Top League Challenge Series\nCoca-Cola West Red Sparks and Kubota Spears won promotion to the 2013\u201314 Top League via the 2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, while Mitsubishi Sagamihara DynaBoars and Toyota Industries Shuttles progressed to the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Promotion and relegation play-offs\nThe Top League teams ranked 14th and 13th played-off against the Challenge 1 teams ranked 3rd and 4th respectively, for the right to be included in the Top League for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, Promotion and relegation play-offs\nSo Toyota Industries was promoted, Sanix was relegated, and NTT remained in the Top League for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231157-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League, End-of-season awards\nAwards for the Top League season, including the Best XV, were chosen by a panel of members of the media, coaches and captains. The Best XV for the 2012-13 season was spread across six different clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series\nThe 2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series was the 2012\u201313 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 2013\u201314 season. The competition was contested from 9 December 2012 to 20 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series\nCoca-Cola West Red Sparks and Kubota Spears won promotion to the 2013\u201314 Top League, while Mitsubishi Sagamihara DynaBoars and Toyota Industries Shuttles progressed to the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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. The winner of Challenge 2 also progressed to a four-team Challenge 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Competition rules and information\nThe top two teams in Challenge 1 won automatic promotion to the 2013\u201314 Top League, while the third and fourth-placed teams qualified to the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification\nThe teams qualified to the Challenge 1 and Challenge 2 series through the 2012 regional leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification, Top West League\nThe final standings for the 2012 Top West League were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification, Top East League\nThe final standings for the 2012 Top East League were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification, Top Ky\u016bsh\u016b League\nThe final standings for the 2012 Top Ky\u016bsh\u016b League were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 1, Standings\nThe final standings for the 2012\u201313 Top League Challenge 1 were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 1, Matches\nThe following matches were played in the 2012\u201313 Top League Challenge 1:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 2, Standings\nThe final standings for the 2012\u201313 Top League Challenge 2 were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231158-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 2, Matches\nThe following matches were played in the 2012\u201313 Top League Challenge 2:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231159-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Topklasse\nThe 2012\u201313 Topklasse season is the third edition of the Dutch third tier since its inauguration in the current form in 2010. A total 32 teams are participating in the league: 24 from the 2011\u201312 Topklasse, and the remaining eight from the 2011\u201312 Hoofdklasse. As usual, the competition is divided into two leagues: \"Saturday\" and \"Sunday\", who differ by the day their games are usually played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231159-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Topklasse\nFor the second consecutive season, no team was relegated from the Eerste Divisie, this time due to the fact all 2011\u201312 Topklasse have declined promotion into professionalism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231159-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Topklasse, Championship play-offs\nKatwijk won the overall Topklasse title. Katwijk didn't apply to promote to the Eerste Divisie, Achilles '29 did. Therefore, Achilles was promoted to the 2013\u201314 Eerste Divisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231159-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Topklasse, Promotion/relegation play-offs, Topklasse / Hoofdklasse playoff finals\nBecause Achilles '29 promoted to the 2013\u201314 Eerste Divisie, there was an extra spot in the 2013\u201314 Sunday Topklasse. Therefore, Juliana '31 and Haaglandia didn't have to play the playoff final, as they were both qualified for the 2013-14 Topklasse. Spakenburg won the playoffs for the Saturday Topklasse and were not relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 89], "content_span": [90, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231160-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torino F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Torino F.C. season was the club's 102nd season of competitive football, 85th season in the top division of Italian football and 68th season in Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231160-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torino F.C. season, Season overview\nTorino were promoted to Serie A after three years in the lower division, the president Urbano Cairo decided to continue the partnership with the coach Giampiero Ventura and sporting director Gianluca Petrachi for the 2012\u201313 season, the 96th in the top flight in Torino's history. The return to Serie A also granted the club an income of between \u20ac30\u201340\u00a0million, including TV rights, placement in the standings and domestic trophies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231160-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torino 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231160-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torino F.C. season, Statistics, Top scorers\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231161-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torneo Argentino A\nThe 2012\u201313 Argentine Torneo Argentino A was the eighteenth season of third division professional football in Argentina. A total of 25 teams competed; the champion was promoted to Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231161-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torneo Argentino A, Club information, South Zone\n1 Play their home games at Estadio Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Minella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231161-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torneo Argentino A, Rev\u00e1lida Stage, Zone A\nRacing (C) was ineligible for the Second Round, as it was involved in relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231161-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torneo Argentino A, Rev\u00e1lida Stage, Zone A, Overall standings\nThe overall standings for the seven teams of Zone A include the regular season and the first round of the Rev\u00e1lida. The bottom team relegates to the Torneo Argentino B, while the next-to-last team plays the relegation play-off with a team from such category. Those two teams cannot qualify for the second round of the Rev\u00e1lida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231161-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torneo Argentino A, Rev\u00e1lida Stage, Zone B, Overall standings\nThe overall standings for the seven teams of Zone B include the regular season and the first round of the Rev\u00e1lida. The bottom team relegates to the Torneo Argentino B, while the next-to-last team plays the relegation play-off with a team from such category. Those two teams cannot qualify for the second round of the Rev\u00e1lida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nThe 2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season was the 96th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise that was established on November 22, 1917. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nDue to the abbreviated 48-game schedule, the Maple Leafs played only teams from their own Eastern Conference. Within their division, they played the Boston Bruins and Buffalo Sabres four times each, and the Montreal Canadiens and Ottawa Senators five times each. The Maple Leafs played all non-divisional Eastern Conference opponents three times each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nToronto qualified for the playoffs for the first time in nine years and the first time in eight seasons (as the 2004\u201305 season was not played due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout). The Leafs lost Game 7 in the first round against the Boston Bruins despite holding a 4\u20131 lead with 11 minutes to go in the third period, though Toronto had battled back from a three games to one deficit just to force the seventh game. The Leafs would not qualify for the playoffs again until the 2016\u201317 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nThe Maple Leafs concluded the regular season with the best penalty-kill percentage (88%) Tied with the Ottawa Senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Playoffs\nThe Maple Leafs qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time since the 2003\u201304 NHL season in a game against the Ottawa Senators on April 20, 2013. They lost to the Boston Bruins in 7 games in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Maple Leafs. Stats reflect time with the Maple Leafs only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Transactions\nThe Maple Leafs have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231162-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Draft picks\nToronto Maple Leafs' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231163-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toronto Raptors season\nThe 2012\u201313 Toronto Raptors season was the 18th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). In the off-season, after failing to pursue Steve Nash in free agency, the Raptors acquired Kyle Lowry from the Houston Rockets for a first round pick. The season also marked the debut of Jonas Valan\u010di\u016bnas, their first pick in the 2011 Draft from Lithuania. On January 30, 2013, the Raptors acquired Rudy Gay in a three-way deal with the Memphis Grizzlies and Detroit Pistons which sent longtime point guard Jos\u00e9 Calder\u00f3n to the Pistons. Despite a winning home record (21-20) the Raptors failed to secure a playoff spot with a 34-48 record. This season also marked the official beginning of the DeRozan/Lowry era in Toronto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231164-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toros Mexico season\nThe 2012\u201313 Toros Mexico season was the fourth season of the Toros Mexico professional indoor soccer club but first under the \"Toros Mexico\" name. The Toros, a Southwestern Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their home games at UniSantos Park in Tijuana, Mexico. The team was led by owner and head coach Joe Pollard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231164-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toros Mexico season, Season summary\nThe team had mixed results in the regular season, compiling a 7\u20139 record, but placed second in the PASL's Southwest Division. The Toros fared better at home than on the road, dropping six of their eight away matches. The team advanced to the postseason and earned the right to play for the Ron Newman Cup in the PASL National Championship. The Toros lost two straight games to the Las Vegas Legends in the Divisional Finals, ending their playoff run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231164-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toros Mexico season, Season summary\nThe Toros did not participate in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231164-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toros Mexico season, History\nThe Toros played the 2009-10, 2010\u201311, and 2011\u201312 seasons as \"Revoluci\u00f3n Tijuana\". In September 2012, Ramon Quezada and Eduardo Vele sold the team to head coach Joe Pollard but retained the rights to the old name and logo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231164-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toros Mexico season, History\nThe team's road loss to the San Diego Sockers on November 23, 2012, gave the Sockers the new United States record for consecutive wins by a professional soccer team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231164-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toros Mexico season, Off-field moves\nAs part of the Toros Mexico commitment to social work, the team visited the Casa Hogar La Esperanza orphanage on December 20, 2012, to entertain the children, bring them gifts, and play exhibition soccer with the residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231165-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torquay United F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Torquay United F.C. season was Torquay United's 77th season in the Football League and their fourth consecutive season in League Two. The season ran from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231165-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torquay 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231165-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Torquay United F.C. season, End of season honours\nAt the end of the 2012\u201313 season four awards were given out, for Young Player of the Season, Top Goalscorer, Players' Player of the Season and Supporters' Player of the Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231166-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al\nThe 2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al was the 29th season of the third important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 9th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231166-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al\nIt was held in two stages. First, fourteen Premier League teams were divided into three groups, five teams in groups A and C and four teams in group B. The teams played against each other once. The best 3 teams from groups A and C and the best 2 teams from group B were advanced to the quarter finals. The quarter finals were two-legged ties. The Semifinals and the Final were one-legged matches, that were held in a neutral stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231166-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al\nThe tournament began on 4 August 2012 and ended on 23 January 2013. Ironi Kiryat Shmona were the defending champions, who made it their second Toto Cup Al title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231166-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al\nOn 23 January 2013, Hapoel Haifa won the cup after beating Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231166-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al, Group stage\nThe matches were played from 4 August to 3 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231166-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al, Elimination rounds, Quarterfinals\nThe draw for the quarterfinals was held on 9 October 2012. The first legs was played on 27 and 28 November, and the second legs were played on 11 and 12 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 54], "content_span": [55, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231166-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Al, Elimination rounds, Quarterfinals\nIroni Kiryat Shmona first tie was played on 12 December due to their involvement in the UEFA Europa League, with their second leg played on 18 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 54], "content_span": [55, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231167-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Leumit\nThe 2012\u201313 Toto Cup Leumit is the 23rd season of the second tier League Cup (as a separate competition) since its introduction. It will be held in two stages. First, sixteen Liga Leumit teams are divided into four groups. The winners and runners-up advancing to the quarter-finals. Quarter-finals, semi-finals and the Final are to be held as one-legged matches, with the Final played at the Ramat Gan Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231167-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Leumit\nIt began on 10 August 2012 and ended on 4 December 2012. Hapoel Ramat Gan, making it their second Toto Cup title overall, due to the promotion in the previous season the club could not defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231167-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Leumit\nIt won on 4 December 2012 by Hapoel Rishon LeZion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 74]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231167-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Leumit, Group stage\nThe matches were played from 10 August to 8 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231167-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toto Cup Leumit, Elimination rounds, Quarterfinals\nThe matches were played on 12 and 13 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231168-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Tottenham Hotspur's 21st season in the Premier League and 35th 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-00231168-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season\nThe campaign featured Tottenham's 11th appearance in the UEFA Europa League (formerly the UEFA Cup), entering the group stage due to finishing fourth in the 2011\u201312 Premier League season but missing out on qualification to the Champions League due to their London rivals Chelsea winning the Champions League trophy in 2012 but finishing outside of the top four positions in the Premier League. The season was also notable for the fact that Tottenham achieved their record points tally in a Premier League season, 72 points from 38 games. They scored 66 goals and conceded 46 throughout the course of the Premier League season, ending with a goal difference of +20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231168-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231168-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Matches, UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase\n4 \u2013 4 aggregate, Tottenham Hotspur win on away goals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231168-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Matches, Post-season\nTottenham played against the Jamaica national football team on 23 May 2013 in The Bahamas as part of the 40th anniversary of Bahamas' independence celebrations. Jamaica used the game as part of their preparations for the 2014 World Cup qualifying campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231168-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231168-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231169-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toulouse FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Toulouse FC season was the 43rd professional season of the club since its creation in 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231169-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toulouse FC season, Players\nFrench teams are limited to four players without EU citizenship. Hence, the squad list includes only the principal nationality of each player; several non-European players on the squad have dual citizenship with an EU country. Also, players from the ACP countries\u2014countries in Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific that are signatories to the Cotonou Agreement\u2014are not counted against non-EU quotas due to the Kolpak ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231169-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toulouse FC 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-00231169-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Toulouse FC season, Players, 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231170-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tour de Ski\nThe 2012\u201313 Tour de Ski was the 7th edition of the Tour de Ski. The event began in Oberhof, Germany on December 29, 2012, and ended in Val di Fiemme, Italy on January 6, 2013. The ladies' trophy was won by defending champion Justyna Kowalczyk (Poland) while the men's trophy was won by Russian Alexander Legkov ahead of defending champion Dario Cologna of Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231170-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tour de Ski, Stages, Stage 4\n3 January 2013, Cortina d'Ampezzo \u2013 Toblach - distance (handicap start)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231170-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tour de Ski, Stages, Stage 5\n4 January 2013, Val di Fiemme - distance (individual start)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231170-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tour de Ski, Stages, Stage 6\n5 January 2013, Val di Fiemme - distance (mass start)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231170-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tour de Ski, Stages, Stage 7\n6 January 2013, Val di Fiemme - distance (final climb)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231171-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tours FC season\nTours Football Club (pronounced\u00a0[tu\u0281]; commonly referred to as simply Tours) is a French association football club based in Tours, the capital city of the Indre-et-Loire department. The club play in Ligue 2, the second level of French football. Following is the description of its plays in 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231171-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tours FC season, Squad\nAs of 11 July 2012. Note: 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, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231172-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Towson Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Towson Tigers men's basketball team represented Towson University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tigers, led by second year head coach Pat Skerry, played their home games at the Towson Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. Due to low APR scores, the Tigers were ineligible for post season play, including the CAA Tournament. They finished the season 18\u201313, 13\u20135 in CAA play to finish in a tie for second place. This was the Tigers' last season playing home games at the Towson Center as they moved to their new home, Tiger Arena, in 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231172-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Towson Tigers men's basketball team, NCAA single season turnaround record\nThe 2012\u201313 team's record of 18\u201313 was a 17.5-game win improvement from the year before, which set the new NCAA Division I record for a single-season turnaround (in 2011\u201312 they had finished 1\u201331). The 2002\u201303 Mercer Bears and 2003\u201304 UTEP Miners basketball teams had each formerly held the record of 17-game improvements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231173-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trabzonspor season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, Trabzonspor finished in ninth place in the S\u00fcper Lig. The top scorer of the team was Adrian Mierzejewski, who scored thirteen goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231173-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231173-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trabzonspor 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231174-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 112th season of competitive association football and the 86th season in the Football League played by Tranmere Rovers Football Club, a professional football club based in Birkenhead, Wirral. During the season, Tranmere Rovers competed in Football League One under Ronnie Moore in his first full season in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231174-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Season summary\nTranmere enjoyed a fine start to the season, standing top of League One at the end of January. Injuries to key players including Andy Robinson, Jean-Louis Akpa Akpro and captain James Wallace sparked a dramatic downturn in form. Tranmere fell to sixth by the end of March and finished the season 11th with no goals scored in their final six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231174-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Players\nTransfers, contract extensions and loans are listed from the last day of the previous season till the final day of this season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231174-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season, Players, Season statistics\n\u2020 Statuses are mentioned for youth academy players without senior contract and players who were signed on non-contract basis or on loan. Dates joined and left are mentioned only for players who changed club between the first and the last matchday of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy was the 83rd season of the FA Trophy, which is the oldest football competition for teams in Trinidad and Tobago. Caledonia AIA entered as the tournament's defending champion, who defeated Defence Force 1\u20130 in the 2011\u201312 final at Manny Ramjohn Stadium. The tournament began on 5 December 2012 with 36 teams competing in single elimination matches and concluded on 1 March 2013 with the crowning of the cup winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Qualification\nThe tournament features teams from the top three levels of the football pyramid. These three levels and 9 leagues, namely the TT Pro League, National Super League, Central FA's Premier Division, Eastern FA's Premier Division, Eastern Counties' Football Union, Northern FA's Premier Division, Southern FA's Premier Division, Tobago FA's Premier Division, and the Secondary School Football League each have their own separate qualification process to trim their ranks down to their final team delegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Qualification\nAll eight teams from the TT Pro League entered the competition. The top six following the 2012 National Super League season also met qualification. In addition, all six regional football associations were awarded three qualification positions and four teams qualified from the Secondary Schools Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Qualification\nThe following clubs qualified for the 83rd edition of the FA Trophy:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Schedule\nThe schedule for the 2012\u201313 FA Trophy, as announced by the Trinidad and Tobago Football Association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results\nAll matches were played over two 45 minute halves, and in the process if the match were drawn at the end of regulation time, then two additional 15-minute halves were used, and if necessary, penalty kicks if still drawn after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, First round\nThe draw for the most prestigious knockout tournament held by the Trinidad and Tobago Football Association was made on 30 November 2012 at its head office in Port of Spain, Trinidad with ties played in the week beginning 3 December 2012. The only Pro League match-up featured W Connection facing North East Stars in the opening match of the FA Trophy. The remaining 28 teams after the random draw were given byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, First round\nNorth East Stars came from a goal behind in the final eight minutes of the match with W Connection to win 2\u20131 over their Pro League opponent with goals from Kaydion Gabriel and Elijah Manners. The other teams to advance into the draw for the second round include Point Fortin Civic, La Horquetta SA, and Marabella Family Crisis Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Second round\nThe draw for the second round took place on 7 December 2012 and involved the four winning teams from the first round and the remaining 28 teams that received byes into the second round. These were from the following levels:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Second round\nMatches in the second round were played in the week commencing 10 December 2012. The defending champions, Caledonia AIA, entered the competition in the second round to easily defeat Northern FA's Petit Valley United 8\u20130 with a second-half hat-trick from Trevin Caesar to advance into the third round draw. Shiva Boys' Hindu College was one of the surprises of the round after the Shiva Boys defeated Eagles United from the National Super League 7\u20136 on penalties after the match ended in a 3\u20133 draw. Stokely Vale continued their giant-killing from the 2012 TOYOTA Classic after they won 3\u20132 over St. Ann's Rangers from the TT Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Third round\nThe draw for the third round took place on 14 December 2012 and involved the 16 winning teams from the second round. These were from the following levels:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Third round\nMatches in the third round will be played in the week commencing 17 December 2012. After having eliminated WASA and Guaya United in the first and second rounds, respectively, Point Fortin Civic knocked off another club from the Super League with a 2\u20130 win over Joe Public to advance into the quarterfinals. However, the surprise of the round again came from Stokely Vale who picked off their second successive Pro League club when they shocked Defence Force 2\u20131 at Hasely Crawford Stadium. In the lone all-Pro League encounter, Central FC defeated Police with a 2\u20131 comeback win using goals from Anthony Wolfe and Darryl Trim to propel The Sharks into the last eight. Caledonia AIA narrowly defeated Joe Public of the Eastern FA Premier Division by a scoreline of 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Quarterfinals\nThe draw for the quarterfinals took place on 20 December 2012 and involved the eight winning teams from the third round. The lowest ranked teams left in the competition were Cunupia of the Central FA Premier Division and Point Fortin Civic of the Southern FA Premier Division, both from the third tier of Trinidad and Tobago football, and Shiva Boys' Hindu College of the Secondary Schools Football League. The eight remaining teams were from the following levels:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Quarterfinals\nMatches in the quarterfinals will be played on 9 January 2013. Central FC eased into the semifinals with a 2\u20130 win over Shiva Boys with goals from Tyrone Charles and Quincy Charles. The other two quarterfinal matches were decided on penalty kicks with T&TEC and North East Stars respective victors over Point Fortin Civic and Cunupia. The remaining quarterfinal match between Caledonia AIA and Stokely Vale was postponed until 16 January 2013 due to the absence of match officials. The Stallions from Morvant/Laventille came away with a narrow 1\u20130 victory in Plymouth, Tobago with a 55th-minute goal from Sheldon Holder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Semifinals\nThe draw for the semifinals took place at the Trinidad and Tobago Football Association office in Woodbrook on 11 January 2013. The four remaining teams consisted of clubs from the Pro League (1) which included Caledonia AIA, Central FC, North East Stars, and T&TEC. The first semifinal match was contested at Ato Boldon Stadium between Central FC and T&TEC on 16 January 2013. At Hasely Crawford Stadium, Caledonia AIA faced North East Stars in the second semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Semifinals\nIn the first semifinal match, Central FC secured a place in the club's first FA Trophy final following a 1\u20130 win over fellow Pro League club T&TEC at Ato Boldon Stadium. Marvin Oliver grabbed the winner for the Sharks in the 76th minute. In the other semifinal, Caledonia AIA came from a one-goal deficit to defeat North East Stars 2\u20131 with goals from Sheldon Holder in the 69th minute and ten minutes later from substitute Sherron Joseph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231175-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Trinidad and Tobago FA Trophy, Results, Final\nThe final will be contested on 1 March 2013 at a venue to be announced. The match featured Pro League newcomers Central FC, who defeated T&TEC 1\u20130 in the first semifinal match, and the defending FA Trophy winners Caledonia AIA who defeated North East Stars 2\u20131 in the second semifinal. Caledonia AIA successfully defended their FA Trophy title with a win over Central FC 2\u20130 with goals on either side of the half. Keyon Edwards scored the game winner in the 32nd minute for the Stallions of Morvant/Laventille with another goal from Akim Armstrong to secure the win. The leading goal scorer of the tournament was Marcus Joseph of Point Fortin Civic, who ended the competition with seven goals and led his team to an appearance in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231176-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Troy Trojans men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Troy Trojans men's basketball team represented Troy University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Trojans, led by 31st year head coach Don Maestri, played their home games at Trojan Arena and were members of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 12\u201321, 6\u201314 in Sun Belt play to finish in last place in the East Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Sun Belt Tournament to Arkansas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231177-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tuen Mun SA season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Tuen Mun Sports Association's 3rd consecutive season in the Hong Kong First Division League, the top flight of Hong Kong football. Tuen Mun will seek to win their first trophy for two seasons, competing in the Hong Kong First Division League, the Hong Kong League Cup and the Hong Kong FA Cup after finishing 6th in the previous First Division League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231177-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tuen Mun SA 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-00231177-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tuen Mun SA season, Matches, Competitive, First Division League\nRemarks:1 The capacity of Aberdeen Sports Ground is originally 9,000, but only the 4,000-seated main stand is opened for football match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231178-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tulane Green Wave men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Tulane Green Wave men's basketball team represented Tulane University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Green Wave, led by third year head coach Ed Conroy, played their home games at Devlin Fieldhouse and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 20\u201315, 6\u201310 in C-USA play to finish in three way tie for ninth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Conference USA Tournament to Memphis. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated South Alabama in the first round before losing in the second round to Bradley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231179-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team represented the University of Tulsa during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Hurricane, led by first year head coach Danny Manning, played their home games at the Reynolds Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 17\u201316, 8\u20138 in C-USA play to finish in sixth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the C-USA Tournament where they lost to Memphis. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Wright State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231180-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1\nThe 2012\u201313 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 (Tunisian Professional League) season was the 87th season of top-tier football in Tunisia. The competition began on 10 November 2012 and is scheduled to conclude in June 2013. The defending champions from the previous season are Esp\u00e9rance Sportive de Tunis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231180-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1, Team and format changes\nLast season two teams were relegated as usual (AS Gab\u00e8s and ES Beni-Khalled), with two teams promoted from the Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 2 to replace them (Olympique du Kef and Stade Gab\u00e8sien). However, in a change from previous seasons, the league is now split into two groups of 8 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231181-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Spor Toto Turkish Cup was the 27th season of the Turkish Basketball Cup. Fenerbah\u00e7e \u00dclker won their fourth Turkish Cup by beating Galatasaray Medical Park in the final. Fenerbah\u00e7e's David Andersen was named Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231181-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball Cup, Group stage, Group A\nGroup A matches played in Adana from 4 to 6 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231181-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball Cup, Group stage, Group B\nGroup B matches played in \u0130zmit from 5 to 7 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231181-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball Cup, Group stage, Group C\nGroup C matches played in Manisa from 5 to 7 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231181-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball Cup, Group stage, Group D\nGroup D matches played in \u0130zmir from 2 to 4 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231181-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball Cup, Final 8\nThe final rounds were played among the top eight teams out of four groups in 6\u201310 February 2013. Quarter-finals were played on 6 and 7 February 2013. Semi-finals were on 8 February 2013. Final match was played on 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231182-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball League\nThe 2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball League, which is called Beko Basketball League due to sponsorship reasons, was the 47th season of the top professional basketball league in Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231182-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Basketball League\nThe regular season started on October 13, 2012, and ended on May 15, 2013. Playoffs started on May 17, 2013, and ended on June 15, 2013. Be\u015fikta\u015f were the defending champions. Galatasaray Medical Park won their 5th title, after not winning one for twenty three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Turkish Cup (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye Kupas\u0131) was the 51st season of the Turkish Cup. Ziraat Bankas\u0131 is the sponsor of the tournament, thus the sponsored name is Ziraat Turkish Cup. The winners earned a berth in the play-off round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League. Fenerbah\u00e7e are the defending champions. The winners also qualified for the 2013 Turkish Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup\nIn a bet to widen the audience and turn the cup into a true national cup, a format change has been made for this season. The number of participating teams increased from 57 to 156, allowing teams from Turkish Regional Amateur League to have a shot at the cup. The knockout qualifying format of the 2011\u20132012 season have been revised. The group stage matches that were contested between 2005 and 2011 returned as a round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, First round\nIn the first round, 32 teams from the Turkish Regional Amateur League and 54 teams from the TFF Third League played in a one-legged knockout tournament. The 43 winners advanced to the second round. The draw for the first round took place on 14 September 2012 at 14:30 (EEST). A Haber broadcast the draw live on television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, Second round\nThe most fixtures were played in the second round. 13 teams from the S\u00fcper Lig, 18 teams from the TFF Second League, 12 teams from the TFF Third League played matches against 43 winners from the first round. Also 22 teams from TFF Second League played against each other. 54 winners in this round advanced to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, Third round\n54 winners of the second round played against each other. 27 winners advanced to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, Fourth round\n5 teams from S\u00fcper Lig, that are playing in European competitions (namely, Galatasaray, Fenerbah\u00e7e, Trabzonspor, Bursaspor and Eski\u015fehirspor) joined the 27 winners from third round. 32 teams competed for the fifth round and a seeding procedure was underway. Matches were played in first team's home ground. 16 teams advanced to the fifth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, Fifth round\nThe draw for the fifth round was on 6 December 2012. 16 winners of the fourth round played against each other for the last 8 spots for the group stage. The matches took place on 11\u201313 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, Group stage\n8 winners from the fifth and the last qualifying round were split into two groups of 4 teams. This stage was a round-robin tournament with home and away matches, in the vein of UEFA European competitions' group stages. The winners and runners-up of the two groups advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, Semi-finals\nWinner of the first group was drawn against runners-up of the second group. Also the winners of the second group played against runners-up of the first group. The matches were contested as two-legged ties with home and away matches. The runners-up played the first match in their home ground. The winners of the two legs played in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231183-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Cup, Final\nThe final was contested in a neutral ground as a one-off match. The winners were awarded 50 medals per club along with the Turkish Cup trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231184-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Women's First Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 season of the Turkish Women's First Football League is the 17th season of Turkey's premier women's football league. Konak Belediyespor is the champion of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231185-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Women's Volleyball Cup\nThe 2012-2013 Teled\u00fcnya Turkish Women's Volleyball Cup (Turkish: 2012-2013 Teled\u00fcnya T\u00fcrkiye Bayanlar Voleybol Kupas\u0131) was the 15th edition of Turkish Women's Volleyball Cup. It was held between October 6, 2012 and February 24, 2013. Vak\u0131fbank won the cup defeating the title defender Eczac\u0131ba\u015f\u0131 VitrA with 3-0 in the final, and captured the title for the first time again after 15 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231185-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Women's Volleyball Cup, Round 1\n24 teams were drawn to 6 pools of 4 teams each. The 1st and 2nd ranked qualified for Round 2. The remaining 3rd placed and all 4th placed teams were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231186-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turkish Women's Volleyball League\nThe 2012/13 season of the Turkish Women's Volleyball League (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye Kad\u0131nlar Voleybol 1. Ligi), was the annual season of the country's highest volleyball level and was conquered for 7th time in a row by Vak\u0131fBank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season\nThe 2012\u201313 Turlock Express season was the second season of the Turlock Express professional indoor soccer club. The Express, a Pacific Division team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, played their home games in the Turlock Soccer Complex in Turlock, California. The team was led by head coach Art Pulido.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season, Season summary\nThe Express were successful in the regular season, compiling a 9\u20137 record and placing second in the Pacific Division. The team won and lost in streaks, dropping their first two games, winning their next six, losing the following five, and ending the regular season with three straight wins. The Express qualified for the postseason and earned the right to play for the Ron Newman Cup in the PASL National Championship. The team lost two straight games to the San Diego Sockers in the Pacific Divisional Finals, ending their playoff run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season, Season summary\nThe Express participated in the 2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer. They defeated the Sacramento Surge in the Wild Card round and the Las Vegas Knights of the Premier Arena Soccer League in the Round of 16 before losing to the San Diego Sockers in the Quarter-Finals, ending their tournament run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season, Off-field moves\nTurlock was originally scheduled to host the Tacoma Stars on both January 25 and February 15, 2013. To reduce travel costs, the latter game was moved up to January 25 to form a doubleheader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season, Roster moves\nOn December 4, 2012, the PASL named rookie Ivan Campos as its Player of the Week. The league cited his four goals (including the game-winning goal in overtime) against the Anaheim Bolts as well as his having scored in each of the first five Express games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season, Roster moves\nOne of the team's leading scorers, Bronil Koochoie, is a graduate of Turlock High School but has international professional experience with teams in Sweden, Thailand, and Iran as well as several domestic leagues, both indoor and outdoor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season, Awards and honors\nIn postseason honors, forward Ivan Campos was named to the 2012-13 PASL All-League Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231187-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Turlock Express season, Schedule, Regular season\n\u2020 Game also counts for US Open Cup, as listed in chart below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231188-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.C. Sampdoria season\nThe 2012-13 season is Sampdoria's 66th in existence. Sampdoria finished the 2011\u201312 season in sixth place in Serie B and was promoted to Serie A through the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231188-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.C. Sampdoria 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231188-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.C. Sampdoria season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231189-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Alessandria Calcio season\nThe 2012\u201313 season of U.S. Alessandria Calcio 1912's was their 92nd in Italian football and their 16th in Lega Pro Seconda Divisione (former Serie C2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231190-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Ancona 1905 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season\nU.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo played the 2012\u201313 season in Serie A, the ninth consecutive season for the Sicilian club in the Italian top flight since their return to the league in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nAfter a disappointing end to its 2011\u201312 campaign (16th place, the worst in the club history since its 2004 Serie A return) Palermo parted ways with end-of-season boss Bortolo Mutti. In an attempt to provide a better structure for the club, Siena director of football Giorgio Perinetti was appointed as vice-president in charge of transfer matters, with Luca Cattani moved back to his previous role as scouting chief and Argentine manager Patricio Teubal (formerly a Mediaset employee) as marketing chief. Following Perinetti's appointment, many media sources strongly linked Siena head coach Giuseppe Sannino to the Palermo managerial vacancy. Sannino was officially announced as new head coach of Palermo on 6 June 2012. In addition, PUMA will replace Legea as main technical sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nRegarding the club's summer market moves, the first signing already came in January as promising midfielder Nicolas Viola had immediately agreed a contract with the Rosanero but stayed on loan at Reggina for the remainder of the season. Later in April, chairman/owner Maurizio Zamparini announced to have acquired promising Argentine youngster Paulo Dybala, labelling him the \"new Ag\u00fcero.\" The move was however denied by Dybala's football agent, who declared that Palermo had not found a contract agreement with the player yet, despite having bought the player's transfer rights as confirmed by the Instituto board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nLater in May, Zamparini announced also the signing of 18-year-old Uruguayan forward Sebasti\u00e1n Sosa from Cerro Largo FC. On 21 May 2012, FC Koper announced to have permanently sold midfielder Alja\u017e Struna to Palermo, thus becoming the fifth Slovene to move to Sicily in the last two years. On 6 June 2012, together with the announcement of new head coach Sannino, Palermo confirmed to have signed 33-year-old attacking midfielder/deep-lying forward Franco Brienza, formerly a Rosanero from 2000 to 2007, from Siena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nOn 26 June 2012, Palermo announced the departure of youth coach and former playing hero Giovanni Tedesco, who left the club to pursue a head coaching career in the lower ranks of Italian football. The same day, the club also announced to have hired former Juventus and Napoli player Dario Baccin as new technical area coordinator for the club's youth system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nOn 6 July 2012, Palermo confirmed to have reached an agreement for the transfer of Argentine defender Mat\u00edas Silvestre on loan to Internazionale, with an option for the club to make the acquisition permanent by the end of the season. The first team roster started its preparation at the orders of coach Giuseppe Sannino on 12 July 2012 in Varese, and will move at the Venosta training camp four days later. Later the same day, striker Igor Budan was allowed to leave as his two-year-old daughter suddenly died in Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nOn 13 July 2012, Palermo supporters were awarded the Lega Serie A Fair-Play Trophy \"Gaetano Scirea\" for their sportsmanship behaviour in the last championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nOn 20 July 2012, incidentally also the tenth anniversary of Zamparini's reign as Palermo chairman, the club announced to have completed the signing of Argentine youngster Paulo Dybala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nOn 23 July 2012, Palermo formalized the signing of Uruguayan international Egidio Ar\u00e9valo R\u00edos from Club Tijuana in a three-year permanent deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nIn the first days of August, the club sold a number of first team players: on 1 August, Emiliano Viviano and Francesco Della Rocca were loaned to Fiorentina, whereas vice-captain and Italy international full-back Federico Balzaretti left Sicily after five years to sign a three-year contract with Roma. The following day, the club completed the transfer of Edgar \u00c1lvarez to Romanian side Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nLater on 20 August, Palermo formalized and announced a deal that brought Swiss international Steve von Bergen in Sicily, in exchange for Alexandros Tzorvas (permanent) and youth team forward Daniel Jara Mart\u00ednez (on loan). Palermo made a disappointing debut in the Serie A season, losing 0\u20133 to Napoli at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nIn the final day of the transfer window, Palermo also sold vice-captain and long-time rosanero Giulio Migliaccio to Fiorentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nPalermo experienced a dismal start, with two 0\u20133 losses in a row (at home to Napoli, then away at Lazio) followed by a 1\u20131 home draw against Cagliari. These results led chairman Maurizio Zamparini to state he was \"afraid of relegation\", and persuaded him to remove Sannino from his coaching duties on 16 September 2012, and replace him with former Genoa and Inter boss Gian Piero Gasperini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nGasperini started his stint as Palermo coach with two consecutive defeats to Atalanta and Pescara; following that, chairman Zamparini shuffled the cards once again, announcing former Catania director of football Pietro Lo Monaco as new managing director and minority stakeholder, thus effectively replacing summer appointment Giorgio Perinetti and reducing his own role at Palermo; as a consequence, Perinetti tended his resignation days after these events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nIn the following game, Palermo trashed Chievo 4\u20131 at home thanks to a hat-trick from captain Fabrizio Miccoli (including a nationally praised volley goal from 45 metres), finally winning its first three points of the season. In the same game, Miccoli also marked the goal number 1,000 in the story of the club in the Italian top flight. Despite Gasperini's appointment, Palermo kept struggling in the league and found itself involved in the relegation battle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0011-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nPalermo's second win under Gasperini came in a 2\u20130 home win against Sampdoria thanks to a brace from 18-year-old Paulo Dybala, who effectively replaced injured Miccoli by scoring his first goals in the Italian championship. The following home game saw Palermo trashing Catania 3\u20131 in the Sicilian derby, with a goal from Miccoli (the 100th of his Serie A career) followed by two from Ili\u010di\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0011-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nHowever, this was followed by a string of four winless games in a row (one draw and three losses), the last of them being a 0\u20133 home loss at the hands of Fiorentina that left the Rosanero in 18th place by the end of the calendar year, thus in deep relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nAs previously suggested by both chairman Zamparini and general manager Lo Monaco, who publicly announced their intention to sign at least one striker, a left back/left winger and a defender, Palermo decided to actively change the roster in the winter transfer window. The first signing, already announced in December, regarded Palermo-born experienced defender Salvatore Aronica, who joined from Napoli, in the same days the club completed the permanent sale of Nicol\u00e1s Bertolo to Mexican club Cruz Azul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nAnother signing, Brazilian midfielder Anselmo, came then into effect as a co-ownership bid, in exchange for Eros Pisano, who moved to the other direction in another co-ownership deal. Days later, Palermo also announced the loan signing of Andrea Dossena from Napoli in an attempt to replace a vacancy created already in the summer by the departure of Federico Balzaretti to Roma. One more loan move was announced on 23 January, this being the signing of attacking midfielder Mauro Formica from English side Blackburn Rovers. This was preceded by a number of departures: Carlos Labr\u00edn left to move back to Huachipato and Eran Zahavi returned to his previous Israeli club, Maccabi Tel Aviv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nOther departures involved respected veteran striker Igor Budan, who moved to Atalanta on loan until the end of the season, and Luigi Giorgi, who also moved to Atalanta after Palermo opted to terminate the loan deal with Novara. Palermo also entered a long, well-publicized negotiation with Chievo regarding the services of 34-year-old goalkeeper Stefano Sorrentino to replace Ujkani, who was deemed as inexperienced by the club; after overcoming a number of obstacles, Palermo succeeded in completing the deal on 25 January, thus opening the doors for Ujkani's departure. Sorrentino promptly provided a man-of-the-match debut in a 1\u20131 draw at Cagliari, with Palermo suffering an injury-time equalizer to prevent the Rosanero from winning their first away game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nThe next day, on 28 January, Lo Monaco completed two more moves for Palermo, signing centre forward Mauro Boselli (on loan from Wigan Athletic) and right back/right winger N\u00e9lson from Real Betis. However, following disagreements with Zamparini, Lo Monaco resigned later in February and Perinetti was hired back to his previous role as director of football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nResults did not improve, leaving Palermo in deep relegation zone and leading to a mutual consent contract termination between Gasperini and the club on 11 March, following a 1\u20132 home loss to Siena; one day later, Sannino was re-hired to attempt a desperate escape from relegation. Despite a number of positive results, including wins to Roma and Internazionale, Sannino did not however manage to bring the team out of the relegation zone and Palermo were relegated by the end of the season, thus marking an end to a nine-year stay to the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Match results, Serie A\nThe fixtures for the 2012-13 Serie A were announced on 26 July 2012. The season starts on Sunday 26 August 2012 with Palermo taking on Napoli at the Renzo Barbera, and ends Sunday 19 May 2013 with a match against Parma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231191-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nThis includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231192-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAB Blazers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UAB Blazers men's basketball team represented the University of Alabama at Birmingham during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Blazers, led by first year head coach Jerod Haase, played their home games at Bartow Arena and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 16\u201317, 7\u20139 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Conference USA Tournament to Southern Miss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231193-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE League Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 UAE League Cup, commonly known as the Etisalat Emirates Cup for sponsorship reasons, is the fifth season of the league cup competition for teams in the UAE Pro-League. It started on 18 September 2012 and is scheduled to finish in May 2013. The current holders are Al Ahli who won their first title last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231193-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE League Cup, Format\nThe number of teams involved in the competition has increased this year from 12 to 14, in line with the league. As a result, there are now 3 instead of 2 groups in the initial group stage - two of 5 teams and one of 4 teams. The three teams who finish top of each group will advance automatically to the semi-finals, along with one runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231194-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE President's Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 UAE President's Cup is the 37th season of the UAE President's Cup, the premier knockout tournament for association football clubs in the United Arab Emirates. The reigning champions are Al Jazira, having won their second title last season. The winners will qualify for the group stage of the 2014 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231194-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE President's Cup\nAfter a change to the format last season garnered criticism for not including as many lower-league teams, the format has now returned to a previous format. 14 teams from UAE Division 1 Group A and Group B took place in a group stage with 2 groups of four and 2 groups of three, with the group winners advancing to a play-off stage. The two winners of the play-off matches will join the 14 Pro-League teams in the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231194-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE President's Cup, Second round\nThe four group winners from the first round entered at this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231194-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE President's Cup, Second round\nThe winners of each match advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231194-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE President's Cup, Third round\nThe two winning teams from the second round join the 14 Pro-League teams in this round. The games took place on 19, 20 and 21 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231194-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE President's Cup, Quarter finals\nThe eight winning teams from the third round advance to the Quarter Finals, played on 2, 10 and 11 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231195-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE Pro League\nThe UAE Pro League (known as Etisalat Pro League for sponsorship reasons) is the premier league in United Arab Emirates. It will be the 38th top-level football season in the UAE, and the fifth Professional season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231195-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE Pro League\nIt will be contested by 14 teams due to an expansion in the league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231195-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE Pro League\nAl Ain are the defending champions, having won the previous 2011\u201312 Pro League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231195-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE Pro League\nOn Thursday, 18 April 2013, Al Ain won their match against Dubai which guarantees them as winners of the 2012\u201313 Pro League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231195-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE Pro League\nThey will receive their trophy on their last match against Al Nasr on Saturday, 25 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231195-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE Pro League, Promotion\nIn June 2012 the UAE FA announced that the league would expand to 14 clubs The two teams that came in the bottom two of the previous campaign \u2013 Al Sharjah and Emirates Club \u2013 would enter a promotion/relegation series with the teams that came third and fourth in the second level \u2013 Al Dhafra and Al Shaab Sharjah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231195-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAE Pro League, Promotion\nThis two sides would join Ittihad Kalba and Dibba Al Fujairah who came in the top two in the second division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231196-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup was the 26th season of the Arab World's inter-club football tournament organised by UAFA, and the first season since it was renamed from the Arab Champions League to the UAFA Cup. 22 teams participated to this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231196-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup\nUSM Alger won the tournament after beating Al-Arabi 3\u20132 on aggregate in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231196-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup, Qualifying rounds, First round, African zone\nThree teams play a tournament matches as a championship in Moroni, Comoros. Only one team qualify to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231197-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup knockout stage\nThe 2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup knock-out stage matches took place from 8 February to 14 May 2013. A total of 8 teams competed in the knock-out stage to decide the champions of the 2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231197-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup knockout stage, Format\nAll knock-out ties were 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 applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded to a penalty shootout after extra time is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231197-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe knock-out stage featured eight teams: four from Africa zone and four from Asia zone took place in quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231198-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying play-off\nThe 2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying rounds was played from 11 September to 5 December 2012. A total of 22 teams from Africa and Asia zones competed in the qualifying rounds to decide the 8 places in the knock-out stage of the 2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231198-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying play-off, Teams\nThe following 22 teams (10 from African Zone and 12 from Asian Zone) entered the qualifying rounds, which consisted of two rounds (first Round and second Round):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231198-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying play-off, Format\nQualification ties were 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 was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded to a penalty shootout after extra time was played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231198-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying play-off, First round, African zone\nThree teams play a tournament matches as a championship in Moroni, Comoros. Only one team qualify to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231198-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying play-off, First round, Asian zone\nShaab Ibb advanced on the away goal rule after drawing 3\u20133 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231198-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying play-off, First round, Asian zone\nAl-Hidd advanced on the away goal rule after drawing 1\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231198-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UAFA Club Cup qualifying play-off, Second round\nThe draw was held in Amman, Jordan on 29 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231199-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UC Davis Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UC Davis Aggies men's basketball team represented University of California, Davis during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Aggies, led by second year head coach Jim Les, played their home games at The Pavilion and were members of the Big West Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 9\u20139 in Big West play to finish in sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big West Tournament to Cal Poly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231200-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team represented the University of California, Irvine during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Anteaters, led by third year head coach Russell Turner, played their home games at the Bren Events Center and were members of the Big West Conference. They finished the season 21\u201316, 11\u20137 in Big West play to finish in fourth place. They advanced to the championship game of the Big West Tournament where they lost to Pacific. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated High Point in the first round before losing in the second round to Oral Roberts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231201-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UC Riverside Highlanders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UC Riverside Highlanders men's basketball team represented University of California, Riverside during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Highlanders, led by sixth year head coach Jim Wooldridge, played their home games at the Student Recreation Center Arena and were members of the Big West Conference. Due to low APR scores, the Highlanders were ineligible for post season play, including the Big West Tournament. They finished the season 6\u201325, 3\u201315 in Big West play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231201-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UC Riverside Highlanders men's basketball team\nOn December 15, the Highlanders tied the Big West conference record for fewest points scored in a single game, in a 26\u201370 loss at USC. It was also a school record for the fewest points scored in a game, breaking the previous record of 30 points which they had set earlier in the season against Fresno State in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231202-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's basketball team represented the University of California, Santa Barbara during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gauchos, led by 15th year head coach Bob Williams, played their home games at the UC Santa Barbara Events Center, nicknamed The Thunderdome, and were members of the Big West Conference. They finished the season 11\u201320, 7\u201311 in Big West play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big West Tournament to Pacific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231203-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCF Knights men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UCF Knights men's basketball team represented the University of Central Florida during the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The Knights competed in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and Conference USA (C-USA). The Knights, in the program's 44th season of basketball, were led by third-year head coach Donnie Jones, and played their home games at the UCF Arena on the university's main campus in Orlando, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231203-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCF Knights men's basketball team\nDue to NCAA sanctions, UCF was ineligible for the 2013 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament or a post-season berth. This was also the last season UCF played in Conference USA before moving to the American Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231203-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCF Knights men's basketball team\nThey finished the season 20\u201311, 9\u20137 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231203-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCF Knights men's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the previous year, the Knights finished the season 22\u201311, 10\u20136 in C-USA play. UCF was invited to the 2012 National Invitation Tournament, which they lost in the first round to Drexel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231204-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Africa Tour\nThe 2012\u201313 UCI Africa Tour was the ninth season of the UCI Africa Tour. The season began on 3 October 2012 with the Grand Prix Chantal Biya and ended on 12 May 2013 with the Troph\u00e9e de la Maison Royale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231204-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Africa Tour\nThe points leader, based on the cumulative results of previous races, wears the UCI Africa Tour cycling jersey. Tarik Chaoufi of Morocco was the defending champion of the 2011\u201312 UCI Africa Tour. Adil Jelloul of Morocco was crowned as the 2012\u201313 UCI Africa Tour champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231204-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Africa Tour\nThroughout the season, points are awarded to the top finishers of stages within stage races and the final general classification standings of each of the stages races and one-day events. The quality and complexity of a race also determines how many points are awarded to the top finishers, the higher the UCI rating of a race, the more points are awarded. The UCI ratings from highest to lowest are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231205-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI America Tour\nThe 2012\u201313 UCI America Tour was the ninth season for the UCI America Tour. The season began on 7 October 2012 with the Tobago Cycling Classic and ended on 7 September 2013 with the Bucks County Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231205-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI America Tour\nThe points leader, based on the cumulative results of previous races, wears the UCI America Tour cycling jersey. Rory Sutherland from Australia was the defending champion of the 2011\u201312 UCI America Tour. Janier Acevedo from Colombia was crowned as the 2012\u201313 UCI America Tour champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231205-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI America Tour\nThroughout the season, points are awarded to the top finishers of stages within stage races and the final general classification standings of each of the stages races and one-day events. The quality and complexity of a race also determines how many points are awarded to the top finishers, the higher the UCI rating of a race, the more points are awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231205-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI America Tour\nThe UCI ratings from highest to lowest are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231205-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI America Tour, Final standings\nThere is a competition for the rider, team and country with the most points gained from winning or achieving a high place in the above races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231206-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour\nThe 2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour was the 9th season of the UCI Asia Tour. The season began on 20 October 2012 with the Tour of Hainan and ended on 30 September 2013 with the Tour of China II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231206-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour\nThe points leader, based on the cumulative results of previous races, wears the UCI Asia Tour cycling jersey. Hossein Alizadeh from Iran was the defending champion of the 2011\u201312 UCI Asia Tour. Juli\u00e1n Arredondo from Colombia was crowned as the 2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231206-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour\nThroughout the season, points are awarded to the top finishers of stages within stage races and the final general classification standings of each of the stages races and one-day events. The quality and complexity of a race also determines how many points are awarded to the top finishers, the higher the UCI rating of a race, the more points are awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231206-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour\nThe UCI ratings from highest to lowest are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231206-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour, Final standings\nThere is a competition for the rider, team and country with the most points gained from winning or achieving a high place in the above races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231207-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup\nThe 2012\u20132013 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup events and season-long competition took place between 21 October 2012 and 20 January 2013, sponsored by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). The events in Igorre and Li\u00e9vin were dropped from the series, replaced by the return of Roubaix and the introduction of Rome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231208-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup\nThe 2012\u20132013 UCI Track Cycling World Cup (also known as the 2012\u20132013 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, presented by Samsung for sponsorship reasons.) is a multi race tournament over a track cycling. It was the twenty-first series of the UCI Track Cycling World Cup organised by the Union Cycliste Internationale. The series ran from 11 October 2012 to 19 January 2013 and consisted of three rounds in Cali, Glasgow and Aguascalientes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231208-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series\nThe 2012\u20132013 UCI Track Cycling World Cup consisted of three rounds, in Cali (Colombia), Glasgow (United Kingdom) and Aguascalientes (Mexico).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231208-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Cali, Colombia\nThe first round of the World Cup was hosted in Cali, the third most populated city in Colombia. Cali has hosted the World Cup on twelve occasions. This round was hosted between 11\u201313 October 2012 at the Unidad Deportiva Alberto Galindo Velodrome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231208-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Glasgow, United Kingdom\nThe second round of the World Cup was hosted in Glasgow, the largest city in Scotland. This round was hosted between 16\u201318 November 2012 at the Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231208-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Glasgow, United Kingdom\nThe World Cup was the first major competition to be held at the Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome, which was built for the 2014 Commonwealth Games and officially opened on 5 October 2012. Tickets for the event sold out in under an hour when released to the general public; this followed a pre-sale for British Cycling members which sold out in 24 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231208-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Series, Aguascalientes, Mexico\nThe third round of the World Cup was hosted in Aguascalientes. This round was hosted between 17\u201319 January 2013 at the Aguascalientes Bicentenary Velodrome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231208-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Overall team standings\nOverall team standings are calculated based on total number of points gained by the team's riders in each event. The top ten teams after the third and final round are listed below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231209-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup \u2013 Round 2 \u2013 Men's keirin\nThe second round of the men's keirin of the 2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup took place in Glasgow, at the Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome on 17 November 2012. 20 cyclists participated in the contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231209-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup \u2013 Round 2 \u2013 Men's keirin, Competition format\nThe keirin races involve 6.5 laps of the track behind a pace-setter, followed by a 2.5 lap sprint to the finish. The tournament consisted of a first round and repackages, a second round and the finals. The first rounds and repechages narrowed the field to 12. The second round divided the remaining 12 into six finalists. The final round also included a ranking race for 7th to 12th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 80], "content_span": [81, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231209-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup \u2013 Round 2 \u2013 Men's keirin, Schedule\nSaturday 17 November12:35-13:05 First round14:00-14:30 First round repaches20:04-20:14 Second round21:16-21:21 Finals 7th - 12th Places21:23-21:28 Finals 1st - 6th Places", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 70], "content_span": [71, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231209-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup \u2013 Round 2 \u2013 Men's keirin, Results, First round\nThe top 2 cyclists of each heat advanced to the second round and the others to the repaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 82], "content_span": [83, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231209-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup \u2013 Round 2 \u2013 Men's keirin, Results, First Round Repaches\nThe first rider of each heat advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 91], "content_span": [92, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231209-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCI Track Cycling World Cup \u2013 Round 2 \u2013 Men's keirin, Results, Second round\nThe first three riders of each heat advanced to the final race. The top 3 riders of each heat advanced to the final race and the others to 7th - 12 classification race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 83], "content_span": [84, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231210-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team represented the University of California, Los Angeles during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bruins competed in the Pac-12 Conference and were led by head coach Ben Howland. Prior to the start of the season, the Bruins took a Goodwill Tour of China in late August. The Bruins reopened the newly renovated Pauley Pavilion on November 9, 2012 in front of a then record crowd of 13,513.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231210-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nOn March 9, 2013, the Bruins clinched the regular season championship of the Pac-12 Conference by defeating Washington, 61\u201354, to finish conference play with a record of 13\u20135. They were seeded as the No. 1 team in the Pac-12 Conference tournament in Las Vegas. They were defeated by Oregon in the championship game. A week later, the Bruins were eliminated in the second round of the 2013 NCAA tournament by Minnesota 63\u201383 to finish the season 25\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231210-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nAfter the season, on March 25, 2013, coach Ben Howland was fired by UCLA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231210-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team, Recruiting class\nThe Bruins also received a notable walk-on this season in the form of Spanish frontcourt project Adri\u00e0 Gasol, the younger brother of NBA stars Pau and Marc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231210-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team, Season\nBefore the season's opening game, freshman Shabazz Muhammad was declared ineligible to participate by the NCAA. He was ruled to have received improper benefits for travel expenses and lodging during unofficial visits to Duke and North Carolina. After missing three games and an appeal by UCLA, he was reinstated, and his family was required to repay approximately $1,600. He scored 15 points off the bench in his debut in a 78\u201370 loss to Georgetown in the semifinals of the Legends Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231210-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team, Season\nJordan Adams added 22 points in the game, extending his school record to four games of 20-point games by a freshman to start a season. Muhammad became a starter in the next game against Georgia, and he scored a game-high 21 points in a 60\u201356 win in the Classic's consolation game. The following game, UCLA led Cal Poly by 18 points with 12 minutes remaining before they were upset, 70\u201368. Earlier in the year, the Bruins needed overtime to defeat another Big West team, UC Irvine. UCLA dropped out of the AP Poll after being ranked No. 11. UCLA lost 78\u201369 in the John R. Wooden Classic to the San Diego State Aztecs, the Bruins' first ranked opponent of the year. Although it was a neutral-site game in nearby Anaheim, the crowd favored the Aztecs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231210-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team, Season\nUCLA won its next 10 games, including an upset win over #7 Missouri, before losing to No. 16 Oregon. It followed with an 84\u201373 road win over No. 6 Arizona behind Muhammad's game-high 23 points. After losing their next two games, to Arizona State and USC, the Bruins won seven of their final nine games, clinching the regular season Pac-12 title in their final regular season game, with a win over Washington in Seattle on March 9. During the game, point guard Larry Drew II broke Pooh Richardson's school record for single-season assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season\nIs the 2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season. The club plays in two tournaments: the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n and the Copa del Rey. It is the second season since the club had been relegated from La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season\nOn 22 June, Almer\u00eda is promoted to La Liga, after defeating Girona in the play-offs. Charles finished the season as the club and division topscorer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season, Players, Squad, Youth team 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season, Competition, Competitive, Promotion play-offs\nAssistant referees:Francisco Javier Garc\u00eda Sabuco (Navarre)I\u00f1igo Prieto L\u00f3pez de Cera\u00edn (Navarre)Fourth official:David Jes\u00fas Pinto Herrera (Tenerife)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season, Competition, Competitive, Promotion play-offs\nAssistant referees:Juan Manuel S\u00e1nchez Fern\u00e1ndez (Extremadura)Alberto Romera Dur\u00e1n (Extremadura)Fourth official:Francisco Javier Hern\u00e1ndez Maeso (Extremadura)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season, Competition, Competitive, Promotion play-offs\nAssistant referees:C\u00e9sar de Juana Gonz\u00e1lez (Cantabria)Mateo Nicol\u00e1s Vaquero Agama (Extremadura)Fourth official:Adri\u00e1n Cordero Vega (Cantabria)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231211-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UD Almer\u00eda season, Competition, Competitive, Promotion play-offs\nAssistant referees:Jorge Bueno Mateo (Aragon)Jos\u00e9 Antonio Garrido Romero (Community of Madrid)Fourth official:Andr\u00e9s Manuel Ceballos Silva (Extremadura)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League was the 58th season of Europe's premier club football tournament organised by UEFA, and the 21st season since it was renamed from the European Champion Clubs' Cup to the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League\nThe final was played at Wembley Stadium in London, England, in recognition of the 150th anniversary of the formation of England's Football Association, the world's oldest football association. It came just two years after Wembley hosted the final in 2011, making it the seventh occasion Wembley Stadium (current and old) had hosted the Champions League final. Bayern Munich, who had been runners-up in 2011\u201312, won by defeating Bundesliga rivals Borussia Dortmund 2\u20131 via an 89th-minute goal from Arjen Robben. This was Bayern's 10th final, their first European Cup title in 12 years, and their fifth overall. This was the first all-German final, and the fourth final to feature two teams from the same association, after the finals of 2000, 2003, and 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League\nThe defending champions, Chelsea, were eliminated in the group stage, becoming the first title holders to leave the competition at this stage. They went on to win the 2013 Europa League final, and became the first team to win the Europa League while holding the Champions League crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation\nA total of 76 teams from 52 of the 53 UEFA member associations participate in the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League (the exception being Liechtenstein, which do not organise a domestic league). The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients is used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation\nSince the winners of the 2011\u201312 UEFA Champions League, Chelsea, failed to qualify for the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League through their domestic league (finishing sixth in the Premier League), and because of the restriction that no association can have more than four teams playing in the Champions League, Chelsea's entry in the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League as title holders came at the expense of Tottenham Hotspur, the fourth-placed team of the 2011\u201312 Premier League (who entered the Europa League instead).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, the associations are allocated places according to their 2011 UEFA country coefficients, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 2006\u201307 to 2010\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nTottenham Hotspur were due to enter the Champions League play-off round for non-champions, but instead entered the Europa League because Chelsea won the Champions League the previous season. As this spot in the play-off round was vacated, the following change to the default allocation system was made to compensate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nLeague positions of the previous season, except Chelsea which only qualified as title holders, shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Round and draw dates\nAll draws were held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland unless stated otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds\nIn the qualifying rounds and the play-off round, teams were divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients, and then drawn into two-legged home-and-away ties. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe draws for the first and second qualifying rounds were held on 25 June 2012. The first legs were played on 3 July, and the second legs were played on 10 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe first legs were played on 17 and 18 July, and the second legs were played on 24 and 25 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe third qualifying round was split into two separate sections: one for champions (Champions Route) and one for non-champions (League Route). The losing teams in both sections entered the Europa League play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for the third qualifying round was held on 20 July 2012. The first legs were played on 31 July and 1 August, and the second legs were played on 7 and 8 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Play-off round\nThe play-off round was split into two separate sections: one for champions (Champions Route) and one for non-champions (League Route). The losing teams in both sections entered the Europa League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 10 August 2012. The first legs were played on 21 and 22 August, and the second legs were played on 28 and 29 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held in Monaco on 30 August 2012. The 32 teams were allocated into four pots based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients, with the title holders, Chelsea, being placed in Pot 1 automatically. They were drawn into eight groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The matchdays were 18\u201319 September, 2\u20133 October, 23\u201324 October, 6\u20137 November, 20\u201321 November, and 4\u20135 December 2012. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the round of 16, while the third-placed teams entered the Europa League round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nA total of 17 national associations were represented in the group stage. Montpellier, Nordsj\u00e6lland and M\u00e1laga made their debut appearances in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nSee here for tiebreakers if two or more teams are equal on points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase\nIn the knockout phase, teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 20 December 2012. The first legs were played on 12, 13, 19 and 20 February, and the second legs were played on 5, 6, 12 and 13 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2013. The first legs were played on 2 and 3 April, and the second legs were played on 9 and 10 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals and final (to determine the \"home\" team for administrative purposes) was held on 12 April 2013. The first legs were played on 23 and 24 April, and the second legs were played on 30 April and 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 25 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium in London, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Prize money\nFor the 2012\u201313 season, UEFA awarded \u20ac2.1\u00a0million to each team in the play-off round. For reaching the group stage, UEFA awarded a base fee of \u20ac8.6\u00a0million. A win in the group was awarded \u20ac1\u00a0million and a draw was worth \u20ac500,000. In addition, UEFA paid teams reaching the first knockout round \u20ac3.5\u00a0million, each quarter-finalist \u20ac3.9\u00a0million, \u20ac4.9\u00a0million for each semi-finalist, \u20ac6.5\u00a0million for the runners-up and \u20ac10.5\u00a0million for the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231212-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, Prize money\nA large part of the distributed revenue from the UEFA Champions League is linked to the \"market pool\", the distribution of which is determined by the value of the television market in each country. For the 2012\u201313 season, Juventus, who were eliminated on quarter-finals, earned nearly \u20ac65.3\u00a0million in total of which \u20ac20.5\u00a0million was prize money, compared with the \u20ac55.0\u00a0million earned by Bayern Munich, who won the tournament and was awarded with \u20ac35.9\u00a0million of prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage featured 32 teams: the 22 automatic qualifiers and the 10 winners of the play-off round (five through the Champions Route, five through the League Route).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage\nThe teams were drawn into eight groups of four, and played each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The top two teams in each group advanced to the round of 16, while the third-placed teams dropped down to the Europa League round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage, Seeding\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 30 August 2012, 17:45 CEST (UTC+2), at Grimaldi Forum, Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage, Seeding\nTeams were seeded into four pots based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients. The title holders, Chelsea, were automatically seeded into Pot 1. Pot 1 holds teams ranked 1\u201312, Pot 2 holds teams ranked 13\u201331, Pot 3 holds teams ranked 32\u201360, while Pot 4 holds teams ranked 63\u2013171.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage, Seeding\nEach group contained one team from each of the four pots, with the restriction that teams from the same national association cannot be drawn against each other. Moreover, the draw was controlled for teams from the same association in order to split the teams evenly into the two sets of groups (A\u2013D, E\u2013H) for maximum television coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage, Seeding\nThe fixtures were decided after the draw. On each matchday, four groups played their matches on Tuesday, while the other four groups played their matches on Wednesday, with the two sets of groups (A\u2013D, E\u2013H) alternating between each matchday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage, Seeding\nThere were other restrictions, e.g., teams from the same city (e.g. Manchester United and Manchester City) in general did not play at home on the same matchday (UEFA tries to avoid teams from the same city playing at home on the same day or on consecutive days), and Russian teams did not play at home on the last matchday due to cold weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). 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, 54], "content_span": [55, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 18\u201319 September, 2\u20133 October, 23\u201324 October, 6\u20137 November, 20\u201321 November, and 4\u20135 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231213-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231214-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase\nThe knockout phase of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League began on 12 February and concluded on 25 May 2013 with the final at Wembley Stadium in London, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase\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-00231214-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Round and draw dates\nAll draws were held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Format\nThe knockout phase involved the sixteen teams who finished in the top two in each of their groups in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Format\nEach tie in the knockout 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 away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs progressed. If away goals were also equal, then thirty minutes of extra time were played, divided into two fifteen-minutes halves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Format\nThe away goals rule was again applied after extra time, i.e. 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 by a penalty shoot-out. In the final, the tie was played as a single match. If scores were level at the end of normal time in the final, extra time was played, followed by penalties if scores remained tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Format\nThe mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 12, 13, 19 and 20 February, and the second legs were played on 5, 6, 12 and 13 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Round of 16, Matches\nA minute's silence was held before the match to commemorate the victims of the crash of South Airlines Flight 8971, which had been filled mostly with football fans heading for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 2 and 3 April, and the second legs were played on 9 and 10 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 23 and 24 April, and the second legs were played on 30 April and 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231214-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 25 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium in London, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round decided 10 of the 32 teams which played in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Round and draw dates\nAll draws were held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 87], "content_span": [88, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nThere were two routes which the teams were separated into during qualifying:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nEach tie was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scored more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. In the event that aggregate score finished level, the away goals rule would be applied, i.e., the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then thirty minutes of extra time would be played, divided into two fifteen-minutes halves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nThe away goals rule would again be applied after extra time, i.e., if there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team would advance by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie would be decided by penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nIn the draws for each round, teams were seeded based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients, with the teams divided into seeded and unseeded pots. A seeded team was drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs in each tie decided randomly. Due to the limited time between matches, the draws for the second and third qualifying rounds took place before the results of the previous round were known.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nThe seeding in these draws (or in any cases where the results of a tie in the previous round were not known at the time of draw) was carried out under the assumption that the higher-ranked teams of the previous round would advance to this round, which means if a lower-ranked team were to advance, it would simply take the seeding of its defeated opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Format\nPrior to the draws, UEFA may form \"groups\" in accordance with the principles set by the Club Competitions Committee, but they were purely for convenience of the draw and for ensuring that teams from the same association were not drawn against each other, and did not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 73], "content_span": [74, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Teams\nBelow were the 54 teams (40 in Champions Route, 14 in League Route) involved in the qualifying phase and play-off round, grouped by their starting rounds. The 10 winners of the play-off round (5 in Champions Route, 5 in League Route) qualified for the group stage to join the 22 automatic qualifiers. The losing teams from the third qualifying round and the play-off round dropped down to the Europa League play-off round and group stage respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 72], "content_span": [73, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nShamrock Rovers Molde KR The New Saints F91 Dudelange Flora Tallinn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 99], "content_span": [100, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nDinamo Zagreb Partizan Sheriff Tiraspol Slovan Liberec \u015al\u0105sk Wroc\u0142aw Zestafoni", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 99], "content_span": [100, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nLudogorets Razgrad Valletta Budu\u0107nost Podgorica Neftchi Baku Shakhter Karagandy Ulisses", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 99], "content_span": [100, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231215-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round, Statistics\nThere were 226 goals in 88 matches in the qualifying phase and play-off round, for an average of 2.57 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League was the 42nd season of Europe's secondary club football tournament organised by UEFA, and the 4th season since it was renamed from the UEFA Cup to the UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League\nThe final was played at the Amsterdam Arena in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It was contested on 15 May 2013 between Portuguese club Benfica and English club Chelsea, who entered the competition at the Round of 32 after they finished in third place in the group stage of the 2012\u201313 Champions League. Chelsea won the final 2\u20131 for their first Europa League title, making them the fourth club \u2013 after Juventus, Ajax and Bayern Munich \u2013 and the first English club to have won all three major European trophies (UEFA Champions League, Europa League, and the Cup Winners' Cup).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League\nFor the 2012\u201313 edition, the following changes were made from the 2011\u201312 edition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League\nAtl\u00e9tico Madrid were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Rubin Kazan in the Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation\nA total of 193 teams from 53 UEFA member associations participate in the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League. The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients is used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation\nThe winners of the 2011\u201312 UEFA Europa League are given an additional entry as title holders if they do not qualify for the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League or Europa League through their domestic performance. However, this additional entry is not necessary for this season since the title holders qualified for European competitions through their domestic performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, the associations are allocated places according to their 2011 UEFA country coefficients, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 2006\u201307 to 2010\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nDue to the following reasons, changes to the default allocation system had to be made:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nThe following changes to the default allocation system were made to compensate for these vacated spots:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, Distribution, Redistribution rules\nA Europa League place is vacated when a team qualifies for both the Champions League and the Europa League, or qualifies for the Europa League by more than one method. When a place is vacated, it is redistributed within the national association by the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Association team allocation, 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, 62], "content_span": [63, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Round and draw dates\nAll draws are held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland unless stated otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Round and draw dates\nMatches in the qualifying, play-off, and knockout rounds may also be played on Tuesdays or Wednesdays instead of the regular Thursdays due to scheduling conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds\nIn the qualifying rounds and the play-off round, teams were divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients, and then drawn into two-legged home-and-away ties. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe draws for the first and second qualifying rounds were held on 25 June 2012. The first legs were played on 3 and 5 July, and the second legs were played on 10 and 12 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe first legs were played on 19 July, and the second legs were played on 26 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for the third qualifying rounds was held on 20 July 2012. The first legs were played on 2 August, and the second legs were played on 9 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 10 August 2012. The first legs were played on 22 and 23 August, and the second legs were played on 28 and 30 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held in Monaco on 31 August 2012. The 48 teams were allocated into four pots based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients, with the title holders, Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, being placed in Pot 1 automatically. They were drawn into twelve groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The matchdays were 20 September, 4 October, 25 October, 8 November, 22 November, and 6 December 2012. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the round of 32, where they were joined by the eight third-placed teams from the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nA total of 25 national associations were represented in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Group stage\nSee here for tiebreakers if two or more teams are equal on points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase\nIn the knockout phase, teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Round of 32\nThe draws for the round of 32 and round of 16 were held on 20 December 2012. The first legs were played on 14 February, and the second legs were played on 21 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 7 March, and the second legs were played on 14 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 15 March 2013. The first legs were played on 4 April, and the second legs were played on 11 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals and final (to determine the \"home\" team for administrative purposes) was held on 12 April 2013. The first legs were played on 25 April, and the second legs were played on 2 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231216-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League, Knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 15 May 2013 at the Amsterdam Arena in Amsterdam, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage featured 48 teams: the 7 automatic qualifiers, the 31 winners of the play-off round, and the 10 losing teams from the Champions League play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage\nThe teams were drawn into twelve groups of four, and played each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The top two teams in each group advanced to the round of 32, where they were joined by the eight third-placed teams from the Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage, Seeding\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 31 August 2012, 13:00 CEST (UTC+2), at Grimaldi Forum, Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage, Seeding\nTeams were seeded into four pots based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients. The title holders, Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, were automatically seeded into Pot 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage, Seeding\nEach group contained one team from each of the four pots, with the restriction that teams from the same national association cannot be drawn against each other. Moreover, the draw was controlled for teams from the same association in order to split the teams evenly into the two sets of groups (A\u2013F, G\u2013L) for maximum television coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage, Seeding\nThe fixtures were decided after the draw. On each matchday, six groups played their matches at 19:00 CET/CEST, while the other six groups played their matches at 21:05 CET/CEST, with the two sets of groups (A\u2013F, G\u2013L) alternating between each matchday. There were other restrictions, e.g., teams from the same city in general did not play at home on the same matchday (UEFA tries to avoid teams from the same city playing at home on the same day or on consecutive days), and Russian teams did not play at home on the last matchday due to cold weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). 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, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 20 September, 4 October, 25 October, 8 November, 22 November, and 6 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231217-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League group stage, Groups\nTimes up to 27 October 2012 (matchdays 1\u20133) are CEST (UTC+2), thereafter (matchdays 4\u20136) times are CET (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase\nThe knockout phase of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League began on 14 February with the round of 32 and concluded on 15 May 2013 with the final at Amsterdam Arena in Amsterdam, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase\nTimes up to 30 March 2013 (round of 16) are CET (UTC+1), thereafter (quarter-finals and beyond) times are CEST (UTC+2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round and draw dates\nAll draws are held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round and draw dates\nMatches may also be played on Tuesdays or Wednesdays instead of the regular Thursdays due to scheduling conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nThe knockout phase involves 32 teams: the 24 teams that finished in the top two in each group in the group stage and the eight teams that finished in third place in the Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nEach tie in the knockout phase, apart from the final, is played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that has the higher aggregate score over the two legs progresses to the next round. In the event that aggregate scores finish level, the away goals rule is applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs progresses. If away goals are also equal, then thirty minutes of extra time are played, divided into two fifteen-minutes halves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nThe away goals rule is again applied after extra time, i.e. if there are goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score is still level, the visiting team qualifies by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals are scored during extra time, the tie is decided by penalty shootout. In the final, the tie is played as a single match. If scores are level at the end of normal time in the final, extra time is played, followed by penalties if scores remain tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Format\nThe mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round of 32\nThe first legs were played on 14 February, and the second legs were played on 21 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round of 32, Second leg\n3\u20133 on aggregate. Zenit Saint Petersburg won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 7 March, and the second legs were played on 14 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 4 April, and the second legs were played on 11 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 25 April, and the second legs were played on 2 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231218-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League knockout phase, Final\nThe final was played on 15 May 2013 at the Amsterdam Arena in Amsterdam, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round was the last of four rounds of matches prior to the tournament's group stage, and decided 31 of the 48 teams that would participate in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round, Round and draw dates\nAll draws were held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round, Round and draw dates\nMatches could also be played on Tuesdays or Wednesdays instead of the regular Thursdays due to scheduling conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round, Format\nEach tie was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scored more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. In the event that aggregate score finished level, the away goals rule would be applied, i.e., the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then thirty minutes of extra time would be played, divided into two fifteen-minutes halves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round, Format\nThe away goals rule would again be applied after extra time, i.e., if there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team would advance by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie would be decided by penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round, Format\nIn the draws for each round, teams were seeded based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients, with the teams divided into seeded and unseeded pots. A seeded team was drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs in each tie decided randomly. Due to the limited time between matches, the draws for the second and third qualifying rounds took place before the results of the previous round were known.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round, Format\nThe seeding in these draws (or in any cases where the results of a tie in the previous round were not known at the time of draw) was carried out under the assumption that the higher-ranked teams of the previous round would advance to this round, which means if a lower-ranked team were to advance, it would simply take the seeding of its defeated opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231219-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League play-off round, Format\nPrior to the draws, UEFA may form \"groups\" in accordance with the principles set by the Club Competitions Committee, but they were purely for convenience of the draw and for ensuring that teams from the same association were not drawn against each other, and did not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase decided the 62 teams that would participate in the final play-off round of qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Round and draw dates\nAll draws were held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Round and draw dates\nMatches may also be played on Tuesdays or Wednesdays instead of the regular Thursdays due to scheduling conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Format\nEach tie was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scored more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. In the event that aggregate score finished level, the away goals rule would be applied, i.e., the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then thirty minutes of extra time would be played, divided into two fifteen-minutes halves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Format\nThe away goals rule would again be applied after extra time, i.e., if there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team would advance by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie would be decided by penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Format\nIn the draws for each round, teams were seeded based on their 2012 UEFA club coefficients, with the teams divided into seeded and unseeded pots. A seeded team was drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs in each tie decided randomly. Due to the limited time between matches, the draws for the second and third qualifying rounds took place before the results of the previous round were known.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Format\nThe seeding in these draws (or in any cases where the results of a tie in the previous round were not known at the time of draw) was carried out under the assumption that the higher-ranked teams of the previous round would advance to this round, which means if a lower-ranked team were to advance, it would simply take the seeding of its defeated opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Format\nPrior to the draws, UEFA may form \"groups\" in accordance with the principles set by the Club Competitions Committee, but they were purely for convenience of the draw and for ensuring that teams from the same association were not drawn against each other, and did not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Teams\nBelow were the 168 teams involved in the qualifying phase and play-off round, grouped by their starting rounds (including 14 losing teams from the Champions League third qualifying round which entered the play-off round). The 31 winners of the play-off round qualified for the group stage to join the 7 automatic qualifiers and the 10 losing teams from the Champions League play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, First qualifying round, Seeding\nLech Pozna\u0144 Metalurgi Rustavi Pyunik Olimpija Ljubljana Birkirkara Khazar Lankaran", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, First qualifying round, Seeding\nMetalurg Skopje Jeunesse Esch Zeta Zhetysu N\u00f5mme Kalju Teuta Durr\u00ebs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, First qualifying round, Seeding\nSt. Patrick's Athletic Stab\u00e6k Liep\u0101jas Metalurgs Bangor City Shk\u00ebndija EB/Streymur", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, First qualifying round, Matches, Second leg\n2\u20132 on aggregate. St. Patrick's Athletic won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nViktoria Plze\u0148 CSKA Sofia Rapid Bucure\u0219ti Slovan Bratislava Kalmar FF\u2020", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nMarseille Sparta Prague Lech Pozna\u0144\u2020 Gent\u2020 Sarajevo\u2020 Red Star Belgrade\u2020", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nLiverpool Steaua Bucure\u0219ti Young Boys\u2020 Bursaspor Dynamo Moscow Mura 05\u2020", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nArsenal Kyiv Kalmar FF\u2020 Dundee United KuPS\u2020 Spartak Trnava\u2020 Gomel\u2020", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nAthletic Bilbao Hannover 96 Rosenborg\u2020 Mar\u00edtimo Legia Warsaw\u2020 Anzhi Makhachkala\u2020", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nVitesse Arnhem\u2020 Asteras Tripoli\u2020 Ried\u2020 Servette\u2020 St. Patrick's Athletic\u2020 Slaven Belupo\u2020", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Third qualifying round, Matches, Second leg\n0\u20130 on aggregate. Red Star Belgrade won 6\u20135 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231220-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase, Statistics\nThere were 757 goals in 274 matches in the qualifying phase and play-off round, for an average of 2.76 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231221-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Futsal Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Futsal Cup was the 27th edition of Europe's premier club futsal tournament and the 12th edition under the current UEFA Futsal Cup format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231221-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Futsal Cup, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the preliminary round and the main round took place on 4 July 2012 in the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. First, the 27 lowest ranked teams were divided into 7 groups of 4 (one of 3) and later the tournament hosts were selected, which are indicated in italics. The preliminary round will run from 8 to 12 August, with only the group winners advancing to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231221-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Futsal Cup, Main round\nFollowing the preliminary round draw, the seventeen teams allocated in the main round pot and the seven group winners were distributed into six groups of four. Matches are set to take place between 4 September and 8 October, hosted by a selected club in each group, which is highlighted with italics. The top two teams in each group will join the four highest-ranked clubs, that are already in the elite round after received bye for the early stage of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231221-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Futsal Cup, Final four\nThe following teams have qualified for the Final Four round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League\nThe 2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League was the 12th edition of the European women's championship for football clubs. The final was held at Stamford Bridge, London, England on 23 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Team allocation and distribution\nThe national champions and runners-up, where known, in nations that have participated in the past five years are listed as expected to compete. Some of these teams may choose not to participate. Norway has overtaken Iceland in the UEFA coefficients and thus assured themselves a second entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Team allocation and distribution\nCountries are allocated places according to their UEFA league coefficient for women. A first entry list was posted on 14 June 2012 by the Belgian representative. Not returning since last year is the champion of Luxembourg, for the first time Montenegro sends its champion. Here CH denotes the national champion, RU the national runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round\n32 teams enter in the qualifying round, and were divided into eight groups of four teams, with one team from each seeding pot. The group-winners and best two runners-up qualify for the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round, Seeding and draw\n32 teams entered in the qualifying round, and were divided into eight groups of four teams, with one team from each seeding pot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round, Seeding and draw\nThe eight hosts were confirmed by UEFA before the draw, and two hosts could not be placed in the same group. Each team played the other teams in the group once. The matches were played between 11 and 16 August 2012. The draw was held on 28 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round, Tie-breaker criteria\nAs usual in UEFA competitions, three points are awarded for a win, and one point for a draw. If teams are equal on points after all matches have been played, the following criteria applies:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 77], "content_span": [78, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round, Tie-breaker criteria\nCriteria 1\u20133 are reapplied until the tie cannot be resolved; only then is criteria 4 used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round, Group 6\nApollon's 21\u20130 victory over Ada set a new competition record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Qualifying round, Ranking of group runners-up\nThe two best runners-up also qualify for the round of 32. The match against the fourth-placed team in the group does not count for the purposes of the runners-up table. The tie-breakers in this ranking are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout stage\nThe top 16 ranked teams are seeded for the round of 32. Team that qualified through the qualifying round are marked with (Q).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThere was an open draw held for the quarterfinals and the following rounds on 27 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Statistics\nTop scorers and assists (excluding qualifying rounds and play-off round):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Statistics, Top goalscorers\nThe top-scorer award is given to the player scoring the most goals including the qualifying rounds, thus Romanian player Laura Rus from Apollon Limassol won the award by scoring 11 goals up to the round of 32. Conny Pohlers scored her 42nd goal in the competition history, to become the sole all-time topscorer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231222-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UEFA Women's Champions League, Statistics, Top goalscorers\nThe following are the top scorers excluding the qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231223-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UIC Flames men's basketball team\nThe 2011\u201312 UIC Flames men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois at Chicago in the 2011\u201312 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Howard Moore, serving his third year. The Flames played their home games at the UIC Pavilion and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 18\u201316, 7\u20139 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament to Green Bay. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Chicago State in the first round before losing in the second round to Northern Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231224-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UMBC Retrievers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UMBC Retrievers men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland, Baltimore County during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Retrievers, led by first-year head coach Aki Thomas, played their home games at the Retriever Activities Center and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 8\u201323, 5\u201311 in American East play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They advanced to the semifinals of the America East Tournament where they fell to Vermont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231225-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team represented the University of Missouri\u2013Kansas City during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Kangaroos, led by sixth year head coach Matt Brown, played their home games at the Swinney Recreation Center, with one home game at the Municipal Auditorium, and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 8\u201324, 5\u201311 in The Summit League play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of The Summit League Tournament to North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231225-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team\nFollowing the season, head coach Matt Brown was fired after posting a record of 64\u2013122 in six seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231225-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UMKC Kangaroos men's basketball team\nThis was UMKC's last year as a member of The Summit League as they will join the Western Athletic Conference in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231226-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UMass Minutemen basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UMass Minutemen basketball team represented the University of Massachusetts Amherst during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Minutemen, led by fifth year head coach Derek Kellogg, played their home games at the William D. Mullins Memorial Center and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 9\u20137 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Atlantic 10 Tournament where they lost to VCU. They were invited to the 2013 NIT as the highest A-10 team not to go to the NCAA Tournament, where they lost in the first round to Stony Brook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231227-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Asheville during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by 17th year head coach Ed Biedenbach, played their home games at Kimmel Arena and were members of the South Division of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 16\u201316, 10\u20136 in Big South play to finish in third place in the South Division. They lost in the first round of the Big South Tournament to Longwood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231227-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UNC Asheville Bulldogs men's basketball team\nHead coach Ed Biedenbach resigned at the end of the season to take an assistants job at UNC Wilmington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231228-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UNC Greensboro Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UNC Greensboro Spartans men's basketball team represented University of North Carolina at Greensboro during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by second year head coach Wes Miller, played their home games at the Greensboro Coliseum and were members of the North Division of the Southern Conference. They finish the season 9\u201322, 6\u201312 in SoCon play to finish in last place in the North Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament to Elon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231229-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UNC Wilmington Seahawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UNC Wilmington Seahawks men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina Wilmington during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Seahawks, led by third year head coach Buzz Peterson, played their home games at the Trask Coliseum and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. Due to low APR scores, the Seahawks were ineligible for post season play, including the CAA Tournament. They finished the season 10\u201320, 5\u201313 in CAA play to finish in ninth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231230-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UNLV Runnin' Rebels men's basketball team represented the University of Nevada, Las Vegas during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Dave Rice, in his second year with the Runnin' Rebels. They played their home games at the Thomas & Mack Center on UNLV's main campus in Las Vegas, Nevada and were a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished with a record of 25\u201310 overall, 10\u20136 in Mountain West play to finish in third place. They advanced to the championship game of the Mountain West Tournament where they lost to New Mexico. They receive an at-large bid in the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231231-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USC Trojans men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 USC Trojans men's basketball team represented the University of Southern California during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by fourth year head coach Kevin O'Neill until January 14 when O'Neill was fired. Bob Cantu was named as an interim head coach for the remainder. They played their home games at the Galen Center and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 9\u20139 in Pac-12 play to finish in a four-way tie for sixth place. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231232-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 USC Upstate Spartans men's basketball team represented the University of South Carolina Upstate during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by 11th year head coach Eddie Payne, played their home games at the G. B. Hodge Center and were members of the Atlantic Sun Conference. They finished the season 16\u201317, 9\u20139 in A-Sun play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Atlantic Sun Tournament where they lost to Mercer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 USHL season is the 34th season of the United States Hockey League as an all-junior league. The regular season began on September 28, 2012, and concluded on April 13, 2013, with the regular season champion winning the Anderson Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season\nThe playoffs began on April 16, 2013, and completed on May 17, 2013. The top four teams from each conference competed for the Clark Cup, with all series played in a best-of-five format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season\nThis season was the 21st season in which one team captured both the Anderson Cup and the Clark Cup in the same season. It was the first time the Dubuque Fighting Saints accomplished this feat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season, Regular season\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PIM = Penalties in Minutesx = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched conference title; z = clinched regular season title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season, Players, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; PTS = Points; +/- = Plus/Minus Rating; PIM = Penalties in Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season, Players, Leading goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes Played; W = Wins; L = Losses: OTL = Overtime Losses; SL = Shootout Losses; SO = Shutouts; GA = Goals Allowed; GAA = Goals Against Average; SV% = Save Percentage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season, Playoff Statistics, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; PTS = Points; +/- = Plus/Minus Rating; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231233-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USHL season, Playoff Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SO = Shutouts; GA = Goals Allowed; GAA = Goals Against Average; SV% = Save Percentage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231234-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USM Alger season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, USM Alger competed in the Ligue 1 for the 35th time, as well as the Algerian Cup. It was their 18th consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231234-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231234-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231235-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USM Bel-Abb\u00e8s season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, USM Bel-Abb\u00e8s is competing in the Ligue 1 for the 20th season, as well as the Algerian Cup. They will be competing in Ligue 1, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231235-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USM Bel-Abb\u00e8s season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 November 2012.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, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231235-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USM Bel-Abb\u00e8s season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231236-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USM Blida season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, USM Blida is competing in the Ligue 2 for the 20th season, as well as the Algerian Cup. They will be competing in Ligue 2, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231236-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231237-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USM El Harrach season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, USM El Harrach is competing in the Ligue 1 for the 29th season, as well as the Algerian Cup. They will be competing in Ligue 1, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231237-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 USM El Harrach season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 November 2012.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, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231238-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UT Martin Skyhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Tennessee\u2013Martin Skyhawks men's basketball team represented University of Tennessee at Martin during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Skyhawks, led by fourth year head coach Jason James, played their home games at Skyhawk Arena and were members of the West Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 9\u201321, 5\u201311 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fourth place in the West Division. They lost in the first round of the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament to Morehead State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231239-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UTEP Miners men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UTEP Miners basketball team represented the University of Texas at El Paso during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Miners, led by third year head coach Tim Floyd, played their home games at the Don Haskins Center and were members of Conference USA. They finished the season 18\u201314, 10\u20136 in C-USA play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Conference USA Tournament where they lost to Southern Miss. Despite the 18 wins, they did not participate in a postseason tournament. UTEP averaged 8,490 fans per game, ranking 52nd nationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231240-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team represented the University of Texas at San Antonio during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Roadrunners, led by seventh year head coach Brooks Thompson, played their home games at the Convocation Center and were first year members of the Western Athletic Conference. They finished the season 10\u201322, 3\u201314 in WAC play to finish in a tie for eighth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the WAC Tournament to Texas\u2013Arlington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231240-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team\nThis will be their only season as a member of the WAC as they will join Conference USA in July 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231240-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team, Schedule\nMarch 7's game vs San Jose State was canceled due to a leak in the roof at The Events Center Arena in San Jose. The game was not made up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231241-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Udinese Calcio season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was Udinese Calcio's 33rd season in Serie A, and their 18th consecutive season in the top-flight. Having finished 3rd in the 2011\u201312 Serie A, the team qualified for the play-off round of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League. Defeated by Braga, Udinese dropped down to the group stage of the UEFA Europa League. The club also competed in Serie A and the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231241-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Udinese Calcio 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231242-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Big League\nThe 2012\u201313 Ugandan Big League was the 4th season of the official second tier Ugandan football championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231242-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Big League, Overview\nThe 2012\u201313 Uganda Big League was contested by 19 teams divided into two groups. The Elgon Group was won by CRO FC and the Rwenzori Group was won by Bright Stars FC. The third promotion place went to Soana FC who won the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231242-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Big League, Overview\nClubs within the Big League enter the Ugandan Cup and Bright Stars FC progressed as far as the Quarter Finals where they were defeated 2-0 away to SC Victoria University, the eventual winners of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231243-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Super League\nThe 2012\u201313 Ugandan Super League was the 46th season of the official Ugandan football championship, the top-level football league of Uganda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231243-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Super League, Overview\nFor an eight-month period in the 2012\u201313 season, Uganda had two parallel leagues structures, the Federation of Uganda Football Associations (FUFA) Super League, run by the national Federation, and the Uganda Super League which was managed by the Uganda Super League Limited (USLL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231243-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Super League, Overview\nUganda\u2019s cabinet chaired by the Prime Minister Patrick Amama Mbabazi on 8 May 2013 declared that only one league would exist for the 2013/14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231243-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Super League, FUFA Super League\nThe 2012\u201313 FUFA Super League was contested by 16 teams and was won by Kampala City Council FC, while Victors FC, Aurum Roses and Water FC were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231243-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Super League, FUFA Super League, Participants and locations\nSome of the Kampala clubs may on occasions also play home matches at the Mandela National Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231243-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Super League, FUFA Super League, Leading goalscorer\nThe top goalscorer in the 2012\u201313 season was Herman Wasswa of SC Villa and Kampala City Council FC with 20 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231243-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uganda Super League, Uganda Super League Limited\nThe 2012\u201313 Ugandan Super League Ltd (USLL) was contested by 11 teams and was won by Maroons FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231244-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague\nThe 2012\u201313 Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague was the 22nd edition of the Ukrainian top-tier basketball championship. The season has started on 28 September 2012 and ended on 31 May 2013. BC Budivelnyk won the Ukrainian championship by beating BC Azovmash 4\u20133 in the Finals. Ferro-ZNTU ended on the third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup was the 22nd annual season of Ukraine's football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup\nThe Cup began with two preliminary rounds, before the first round proper involving the Premier League clubs. The draw for both the preliminary rounds was held on 5 July 2012. The First Preliminary Round consisting of teams from Druha Liha and Amateur Cup finalists. In the Second Preliminary Round teams of the Persha Liha entered the competition. Sixteen teams, the winners of the 2nd preliminary round, entered the First Round proper or the Round of 32 where the Premier League teams entered the competition for the first time. The winner of the competition qualified for the play-off round (based on the UEFA club coefficient) of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Team allocation, 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, 60], "content_span": [61, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Team allocation, Round and draw dates\nThe final to be scheduled for 1 June 2013, if there is a necessity to conclude the Ukrainian Premier League season with a \"Golden Match\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Team allocation, Round and draw dates\nOriginally scheduled for 30 May 2013, it was later planned to conduct on 1 June 2013. On 18 April 2013 the FFU Executive Committee rescheduled the match for 22 May 2013. On 24 April 2013 the FFU Executive Committee changed location of the final match from Olimpiysky in Kiev to Metalist in Kharkiv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, First Preliminary Round (1/64)\nIn this round entered 16 clubs from the Druha Liha and the finalists of Ukrainian Amateur Cup. The round matches were played on 25 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, First Preliminary Round (1/64)\nMyr Hornostayivka informed the PFL that they will not travel for the scheduled match. (19 July 2012) Stal Dniprodzerzhynsk win the match with a 3\u20130 technical victory and advance into the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, First Preliminary Round (1/64)\nHvardiyets Hvardiyske were drawn to play away against FC Bastion Illichivsk but they were omitted from the professional ranks prior to the start of the 2012\u201313 season. (13 July 2012) Hvardiyets Hvardiyske receive a bye into the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Second Preliminary Round (1/32)\nIn this round entered all 17 clubs from Persha Liha (except Dynamo-2 Kyiv) and the higher seeded clubs from the Druha Liha (top four of each group). They were drawn against the nine winners of the First Preliminary Round. The matches were played 22 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Second Preliminary Round (1/32)\nHvardiyets Hvardiyske were originally drawn to be the away side. However, the PFL regulations for the draw determine that a team from a lower level are designated as the home team. Match was played in Hvardiyske.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Second Preliminary Round (1/32)\nStal Dniprodzerzhynsk were originally drawn to play away against FC Lviv but they withdrew from the professional ranks prior to the start of the 2012\u201313 season. Stal Dniprodzerzhynsk receive a bye and advance to the First Round of the Cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Round of 32\nIn this round all 16 teams from the Premier League entered the competition. They and the 16 winners from the previous round consisting of seven clubs from the Persha Liha and nine clubs from the Druha Liha were drawn in this round. The draw took place 5 September 2012 and was performed by Volodymyr Troshkin who was invited as a guest by the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Round of 32\nFixture played at the CSC Nika Stadium located in the district center of Oleksandria, since the home ground has limited capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Round of 16\nIn this round the 16 winners from the previous round consisting of 11 teams from the Premier League, two clubs from the Persha Liha and three clubs from the Druha Liha were drawn in this round. The draw took place September 26, 2012 and was performed by Mykhailo Fomenko who was invited as a guest by the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Round of 16\nFixture played at the CSC Nika Stadium located in the district center of Oleksandria, since the home ground has limited capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Quarterfinals\nIn this round entered the eight winners from the previous round consisting of seven teams from the Premier League and a club from the Persha Liha were drawn in this round. The draw took place 1 November 2012 and was performed by former Ukrainian international player Ivan Hetsko but due unforeseen circumstance was not able attend the draw. The draw was performed by former Ukrainian international player Vladyslav Vashchuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231245-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Cup, Competition schedule, Semifinals\nIn this round entered the four winners from the previous round consisting of three teams from the Premier League and a club from the Persha Liha were drawn in this round. The draw took place 19 April 2013 and was performed by former Ukrainian international player Ivan Hetsko. The home team for the final was selected as the winner of Sevastopol \u2013 Shakhtar match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231246-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League\nThe 2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League will be the 22nd since its establishment. The competition commenced on 13 July 2012 when Obolon Kyiv visited Sumy and played a goalless draw against FC Sumy. The competition had a winter break that started 25 November 2012 and resumed on 23 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231246-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League, Promotion and relegation, Promoted teams\nThree teams were promoted from the 2011\u201312 Ukrainian Second League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231246-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League, Promotion and relegation, Relegated teams\nTwo teams were relegated from the 2011\u201312 Ukrainian Premier League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231246-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League, Promotion and relegation, Withdrawn teams\nPrior to the season starting Nyva Vinnytsia withdrew from the PFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231246-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League, Team locations, Stadiums\nThe following stadiums are considered home grounds for the teams in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231246-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nA promotion/relegation home and away play-off were played by the 2nd team in Group 1 and 2 of 2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League against the 15th and 16th placed teams of the 2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League competition. The draw for the play-off matches was held on 7 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231246-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League, Promotion/Relegation play-off, Match #1, Second leg\n6\u20131 on aggregate. FC Odesa after being relegated to Second League withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231247-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League season was the 22nd since its establishment in 1991 and fifth since its reorganisation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231247-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League\nA total of sixteen teams participated in the league, the best 14 sides of the 2011\u201312 season and two promoted clubs from the 2011\u201312 Ukrainian First League. The season commenced on July 13, 2012 when Karpaty Lviv visited Lutsk and played a 1\u20131 draw against Volyn Lutsk. The competition had a winter break that began on 2 December and resumed on 1 March 2013 when Volyn Lutsk visited Donetsk and played against Shakhtar Donetsk. The ending date of the competition was 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231247-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League\nHenrikh Mkhitaryan from Shakhtar Donetsk set a new Ukraine Premier League record for number of goals scored in one season. It is the second season in the league when no clubs were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231247-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League, Teams, Renamed teams\nPrior to the start of the season Hoverla-Zakarpattya Uzhhorod was renamed to Hoverla Uzhhorod.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231247-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League, Results\nThe following table displays match results between each team in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231247-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League, Results, Round by round\nThe following table represents the teams position after each round in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231248-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League Reserves and Under 19\nThe 2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League Reserves and Under 19 season are competitions between the reserves of Ukrainian Premier League Clubs and the Under 19s. The events in the senior leagues during the 2011\u201312 season saw Obolon Kyiv Reserves and Oleksandria Reserves all relegated and replaced by the promoted teams Hoverla Uzhhorod Reserves and Metalurh Zaporizhya Reserves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231248-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Premier League Reserves and Under 19\nIn 2012 the Premier League expanded the league to include an Under 19 competition. The Under 19 competition is divided into two geographical groups and in the first stage of the competition play a round robin phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League\nThe 2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League was the 22nd season of 3rd level professional football in Ukraine. There are two groups of competition divided by region. The competition began on 13 July 2012 when Hirnyk-Sport Komsomolsk visited Sevastapol to play against FC Sevastopol-2 and lost 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Stage details\nThe competition for the 2012\u201313 season has been changed from previous seasons 2 stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Stage details\nThe first stage will be a round robin competition similar to the previous seasons. The first stage of the competition will be played prior to the winter break. Each team will play with other teams two games (one home, one away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Stage details\nThe second stage will begin the spring of 2013. Teams will be divided into 4 groups. The first stage Groups A and B will be split into two pools one of teams playing for promotion to the First League, another of teams competing to remain in the Second League. Each team in a group will play with every other team two games in a round robin competition. The first two groups The top six teams of the first stage Groups A and B will advance. All points accumulated in the first stage will carry over. The champions of the Groups 1 and 2 will be directly promoted to the Ukrainian First League. The top teams of Groups 1 and 2 will also qualify for a championship play-off for the title of the Second League Champion as in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Stage details\nThe second place teams of both groups will qualify for a promotion/relegation play-off against the 15th and 16th placed teams of the 2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League. In the case of exclusion and/or withdrawal of teams from the First League during the season the format of the promotion/relegation play-off will change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Stage details\nTeams will enter Groups 3 and 4 that are placed below the sixth place in Groups A and B in the first stage. Initially, These teams will play for the rights to remain in the Ukrainian Second League but due to the withdrawal for teams the competition was reformated for the second stage. (See Favbet tournament)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Stage details\nThe Ukrainian Second League will be consolidated to twenty teams for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Placing\nThe placing of teams in the table of all stages is done in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Competition information, Placing\nThe play-offs will consist of two games where each team will play one game at home and another away. The tiebreak rules will be based primarily on the record of the both games and secondarily on the goals scored in away game. In case when all the conditions will not identify a winner, the second game will go into an extra time and, if necessary, the penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Team changes, Admitted teams\nThe following teams were admitted by the PFL after playing in the 2012 Ukrainian Football Amateur League and passing attestation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Team changes, Omitted teams\nPrior to the season it was expected that FC Lviv (relegated from the 2011\u201312 Ukrainian First League), Nyva Vinnytsia (withdrew from PFL and then reapplied) and Bastion Illichivsk (license granted after absence of one year) would participate in the competition. All three teams informed that they would not enter the competition one day before the competition was to start. (13 July 2012)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Team changes, Name changes\nLast season FC UkrAhroKom Pryiutivka entered the PFL with the registered address of their parent company UkrAroKom in Pryiutivka. The club's home ground is located in Holovkivka. Prior to the start of the season the club changed its location with the PFL to Holovkivka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Second stage\nThe draw for the second stage of season took place on 19 February 2013 and only for the top six teams of each group from the first stage. The second stage will commence 6 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Second stage\nThe Favbet tournament for Groups 3 and 4 was announced on 4 April 2013 for teams that did not qualify for Group 1 or Group 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Favbet tournament\nDue to a number of withdrawals during the winter break it necessitated that the PFL change the competition structure for the Second Stage for Groups 3 and 4. On 4 April 2013 a draw took place for clubs that placed at bottom halves after the autumn half of season. For sponsorship purposes the tournament titled as the Favbet Tournament and as previously planned is composed of two groups. The changes were reviewed and accepted by the FFU Executive Committee on 3 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Favbet tournament\nThe four teams in Group 3 will not have their points transferred from the first stage of the competition, while the Group 4 teams will continue on with the points they gained in the first stage. The paragraph 17 of the Article 13 about relegation of teams from the Second League was suspended. Games in both Groups (3 and 4) are scheduled to resume on 13 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Championship matches\nThe title of the Second League Champion will be played by the Group 1 and Group 2 winners at the end of the season. The matches will be played in a home and away series. The draw for the matches was made on 6 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231249-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nA promotion/relegation home and away play-off were played by the 2nd team in Group 1 and 2 of 2012\u201313 Ukrainian Second League against the 15th and 16th placed teams of the 2012\u201313 Ukrainian First League competition. Dynamo-2 Kyiv and FC Odesa qualified for the play-off. The draw for the play-off matches was held on 7 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga\nThe 2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga was the 24th season of top-tier football in Georgia. The season began on 10 August 2012 and ended on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga, Teams, Stadiums and locations\nDinamo Batumi play their home matches in Kobuleti and WIT Georgia in Mtskheta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga, First phase\nThe league began with a regular double-round robin schedule on 8 August 2012. The best six teams qualified for the championship round, which will determine the Georgian champions and the participants for the 2013\u201314 European competitions. The remaining six teams play in the relegation group, where the top four free will secure places in the 2013\u201314 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga, Second phase\nThis phase began on 9 March 2013 and will end on 18 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga, Second phase, Championship round\nDinamo Tbilisi, Dila Gori, Torpedo Kutaisi, Chikhura Sachkhere, Zestafoni and Baia Zugdidi ended the first phase in the top six positions of the table and thus entered the championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga, Second phase, Championship round\nThe results of the matches among these teams will be used as a base ranking. Each team will then play another double round-robin schedule against every other team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga, Second phase, Promotion/relegation round\nMetalurgi Rustavi, Merani Martvili, WIT Georgia, Sioni Bolnisi, Dinamo Batumi and Kolkheti Poti and finished seventh through twelfth and thus entered the promotion/relegation round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231250-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Umaglesi Liga, Second phase, Promotion/relegation round\nEach team will play another double round-robin schedule against every other team. The last two teams of this round will play in the Pirveli Liga in the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231251-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Counties League\nThe 2012\u201313 United Counties League season (known as the 2012\u201313 ChromaSport & Trophies United Counties League for sponsorship reasons) was the 106th 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, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231251-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Counties League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 17 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231251-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Counties League, Division One\nDivision One featured 14 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231252-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Sikkim F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 United Sikkim F.C. season will be the club's third season since their formation in 2008 and their first season ever in the I-League which is India's top football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231252-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Sikkim F.C. season, Background\nThe road to the 2012 I-League 2nd Division did not start well for United Sikkim. On 11 June 2011 it was announced that Johnny Menyongar would leave the club to join I-League team Shillong Lajong as well as Indian internationals Renedy Singh and NS Manju in January 2012. However, after firing coach Stanley Rozario, United Sikkim signed Belgian Philippe De Ridder as coach of the team. The club the re-signed Nigerian Daniel Bedemi and Quinton Jacobs for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231252-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Sikkim F.C. season, Background\nThe club then began there charge for the I-League for the second season in a row with a 3\u20132 victory over Bhawanipore F.C. at the Satindra Mohan Dev Stadium in Assam on 2 February 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231252-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Sikkim F.C. season, Background\nThe club then went on to win three more matches during the first round of the I-League 2nd Division against Eagles, Southern Samity, and Ar-Hima in order to qualify for the 2012 I-League 2nd Division Final Round in which the club won promotion on the last day of the season on 17 April 2012 at the Paljor Stadium in Gangtok, Sikkim in front of 30,000 fans as United Sikkim drew Mohammedan 1\u20131 with Daniel Bedemi scoring the goal for United Sikkim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231252-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Sikkim F.C. season, Competitions, Federation Cup\nUnited Sikkim entered the 2012 Indian Federation Cup automatically following promotion to the I-League. They were placed in Group D along with Salgaocar, Pune, and Prayag United and their matches were played in Jamshedpur. The tournament did not end well for United Sikkim as they lost all three of their matches, finishing with 0 points, 0 goals scored and 6 conceded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231252-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United Sikkim F.C. season, Competitions, I-League\nUnited Sikkim began their first I-League campaign of 2012\u201313 at home on 6 October 2012 against the champions of the 2010-11 season, Salgaocar and took the victory 3\u20132 in what is considered an early upset in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231253-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer\nThe 2012\u201313 US Open Arena Soccer Championship is the fifth edition of an open knockout style tournament for arena/indoor soccer. In this edition, teams from the Professional Arena Soccer League, Premier Arena Soccer League, and other independent indoor soccer teams participate in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231253-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer, Qualifying\nRocky Mountain Qualifying - Sat. Dec. 1, 2012 (@ Monument, CO)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231253-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States Open Cup for Arena Soccer, Qualifying\nHarrisburg Qualifying - Sat. Dec. 29, 2012 (@ Harrisburg, PA)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231254-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States network television schedule\nThe 2012\u201313 network television schedule for the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers primetime hours from September 2012 through August 2013. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231254-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States network television schedule\nNBC was the first to announce its fall schedule on May 13, 2012, followed by Fox on May 14, 2012, then ABC on May 15, 2012, CBS on May 16, 2012 and The CW on May 17, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231254-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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. The CW is not included on weekends, when it does not offer network programming. Ion Television airs primarily syndicated reruns, along with new episodes of The Listener from Canada's CTV and professional wrestling program WWE Main Event. MyNetworkTV also offers syndicated reruns, with no original programming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231254-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States network television schedule\nAll times given are in U.S. Eastern Time and Pacific Time (except for some live events or specials). Subtract one hour for Central and Mountain times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231254-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States network television schedule\nThe National Football League moved the start of late afternoon games from 4:15PM Eastern/3:15PM Central to 4:25PM Eastern/3:25PM Central. CBS responded by moving its Sunday night start time for 60 Minutes to 7:30PM Eastern/6:30PM Central, with the following shows likewise starting on the half hour on weeks when CBS carries a late afternoon game. The start times on other weeks, and in the west, remain as shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231254-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231254-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States network television schedule, Friday\nNote: Community and Whitney were originally scheduled, respectively, to air at 8:00 PM and 8:30 PM on NBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231255-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States network television schedule (daytime)\nThe 2012\u201313 daytime network television schedule for four of the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the weekday daytime hours from September 2012 to August 2013. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, and any series canceled after the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231255-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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 Fox (as the network does not air a daytime network schedule or network news), MyNetworkTV (as the programming service also does not offer daytime programs of any kind), and Ion Television (as its schedule is composed mainly of syndicated reruns).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231256-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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, 2012 to August, 2013. 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, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231256-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 United States network television schedule (late night), Schedule\nNOTE: On January 8, 2013, ABC moved Jimmy Kimmel Live! to 11:35 pm and moved Nightline to 12:35 am. NOTE: On July 27, 2013, Fox launched Animation Domination High-Def.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231257-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 University of North Dakota men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 University of North Dakota men's basketball team represented the University of North Dakota during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by seventh year head coach Brian Jones, played their home games at the Betty Engelstad Sioux Center and were first year members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 16\u201317, 12\u20138 in Big Sky play to finish in third place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big Sky Tournament where they lost to Weber State. They were invited to the 2013 CIT, their third straight CIT appearance, where they lost in the first round to Northern Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231258-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 University of North Dakota men's ice hockey team\nThe University of North Dakota men's ice hockey team competed in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231259-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 University of North Dakota women's ice hockey season\nThe University of North Dakota women's ice hockey team represents the University of North Dakota in the WCHA women's ice hockey conference. The team will attempt to qualify for the NCAA Frozen Four for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231259-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 University of North Dakota women's ice hockey season, Awards and honors\nMeghan Dufault, WCHA Rookie of the Week (Week of January 9, 2013)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 79], "content_span": [80, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231260-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uruguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season\nThe 2012\u201313 Liga Profesional de Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, also known as the 2012\u201313 Copa Uruguaya or the 2012\u201313 Campeonato Uruguayo, was the 109th season of Uruguay's top-flight football league, and the 82nd in which it was professional. Nacional was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231260-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uruguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Teams\nSixteen teams will compete in the Primera Divisi\u00f3n this season. Thirteen teams remained from the 2011\u201312 season. Rentistas, Rampla Juniors, and Cerrito were relegated after accumulating the fewest points in the relegation table. They were replaced by Central Espa\u00f1ol, Juventud, and Progreso, the 2011\u201312 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n winner, runner-up, and playoff winner, respectively. All of the new teams are making repeat appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231260-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uruguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Championship playoff\nPe\u00f1arol and Defensor Sporting qualified to the championship playoffs as the Apertura and Clausura winners, respectively. Additionally, Pe\u00f1arol re-qualified as the team with the most points in the season aggregate table. Given this situation, an initial playoff was held between the two teams. Pe\u00f1arol would become the season champion with a win; Defensor Sporting needed to win the playoff to force a two-legged final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231261-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uruguayan Segunda Divisi\u00f3n Amateur season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Frietjes (talk | contribs) at 23:30, 22 November 2019 (expand templates per Fb team TfD outcome and Fb competition TfD outcome and Fb cl TfD outcome and Fb rbr TfD outcome). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231261-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uruguayan Segunda Divisi\u00f3n Amateur season\nThe 2012\u201313 Uruguayan Segunda Divisi\u00f3n is the season of second division professional of football in Uruguay. A total of 12 teams will compete; the champion team is promoted to the Uruguayan Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231262-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Uruguayan Segunda Divisi\u00f3n season\nThe 2012\u201313 Uruguayan Segunda Divisi\u00f3n is the season of the professional second division of football in Uruguay. A total of 14 teams will compete; the top two teams and the winner of the Championship play-offs are promoted to the Uruguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n. The club in last position is relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231263-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Utah Jazz season\nThe 2012\u201313 Utah Jazz season was the franchise's 39th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 34th season of the franchise in Salt Lake City. Despite a 43-39 record, the Jazz missed the playoffs. Had the Jazz been in the weaker eastern conference, they would have been the 7th seed over the 41-40 Boston Celtics and the 38-44 Milwaukee Bucks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231264-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Utah State Aggies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Utah State Aggies men's basketball team represented Utah State University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This was head coach Stew Morrill's fifteenth season at Utah State. The Aggies played their home games at the Smith Spectrum and were in their final year as members of the Western Athletic Conference. In July 2013, the Aggies will become full members of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 21\u201310, 11\u20137 in WAC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the WAC Tournament to Texas\u2013Arlington. With over 20 wins, they Aggies would have been considered to participate in the CBI or CIT. However, citing injuries, the Aggies chose not to play in a postseason tournament ending a streak of 13 straight postseason appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231265-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Utah Utes men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Utah Utes men's basketball team represented the University of Utah during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They play their home games at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, and were a member of the Pac-12 Conference. They were led by their second year head coach Larry Krystkowiak. They finished the season 15\u201318, 5\u201313 in Pac-12 play to finish in tenth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Pac-12 Tournament where they lost to Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231265-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Utah Utes men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nAll home games and conference road games will be broadcast on television on FSN, ESPN Networks, or Pac-12 Rocky Mountain with a tape delay and sometimes live broadcast on the national Pac-12 Network. All games will be broadcast on the radio and streamed online by KALL 700 Sports, home of the Utah Utes, unless the November 23 game interferes with the football broadcast. That game could be broadcast on KUDE Rock 99.1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231266-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Utah Valley Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Utah Valley Wolverines men's basketball team represented Utah Valley University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. This was head coach Dick Hunsaker's eleventh season at UVU. The Wolverines played their home games at the UCCU Center and were members of the Great West Conference. They finished the season 14\u201318, 3\u20135 in Great West play to finish in a three way tie for third place. They lost in the first round of the Great West Tournament to Houston Baptist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231266-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Utah Valley Wolverines men's basketball team\nThis was Utah Valley's final season in the Great West. The Wolverines will join the WAC starting in the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231267-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 V AFG\nThe 2012\u201313 V AFG season was the 63rd season of the Bulgarian V AFG, the third tier of the Bulgarian football league system. The winners of each of the four regional groups progressed to the 2013\u201314 B PFG and up to four teams from each group were relegated to regional amateur championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231267-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 V AFG, Changes from the 2011\u201312 season, Movement between B PFG and V AFG\nThe champions of the four 2011\u201312 V AFG divisions were promoted to the 2012\u201313 B PFG: Shumen 2010 from V AFG North-East and Rakovski 2011 from V AFG South-East, Spartak 1919 Pleven from V AFG North-West and Pirin Razlog from V AFG South-West. This season the B Grupa will be consisting of one division, so all third division champions will play against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 80], "content_span": [81, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231267-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 V AFG, Changes from the 2011\u201312 season, Movement between B PFG and V AFG\nIn return, Dorostol Silistra canceled their participation during the East B PFG championship and dissolved as club. Dobrudzha Dobrich and Nesebar finished at the bottom two places and relegated to the North-East and South-East division. Additionally Chernomorets Pomorie canceled their East B PFG participation after the end of the last season and dissolved as club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 80], "content_span": [81, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231267-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 V AFG, Changes from the 2011\u201312 season, Movement between B PFG and V AFG\nFrom West B PFG relegated also four teams - Chavdar Byala Slatina canceled its participation during the season and dissolved as club, Slivnishki Geroi will play in the South-West V AFG, Malesh Mikrevo declined its further participation in the third division and Akademik Sofia have not received a professional licence, but due financial difficulties they canceled its participation in the South-West V AFG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 80], "content_span": [81, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231268-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 V-League (South Korea)\nThe 2012-13 V-League season was the 9th season of the V-League, the highest professional volleyball league in South Korea. The season started on 2 November 2012 and finished on 31 March 2013. Daejeon Samsung Bluefangs were the defending champions in the men's league and Daejeon KGC the defending female champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231268-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 V-League (South Korea), Season 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231269-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VCU Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 VCU Rams men's basketball team represented Virginia Commonwealth University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. It was the 45th season of the University fielding a men's basketball program. Led by fourth-year head coach Shaka Smart, they played their home games at the Stuart C. Siegel Center. This was the Rams inaugural season in the Atlantic 10 Conference (A10), after spending the past 17 years in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 27\u20139, 12\u20134 in A10 play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the 2013 Atlantic 10 Tournament where they lost to Saint Louis. They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, their third straight NCAA Tournament appearance, where they defeated Akron in the first round before losing in the third round to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231269-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VCU Rams men's basketball team, Preseason\nVCU was predicted to finish third in the Atlantic 10 preseason polls, which was released October 4, 2012 in Brooklyn, New York. Junior forward Juvonte Reddic was selected to the preseason Atlantic 10 third team, sophomore guard Briant\u00e9 Weber was selected to the preseason Atlantic 10 All-Defensive team and freshman guard Melvin Johnson was selected to the preseason Atlantic 10 All-Rookie team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231269-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VCU Rams men's basketball team, Offseason\nIncoming Freshman Jordan Burgess and Mo Alie-Cox were ruled ineligible to play in the 2012-13 season by NCAA because they were deemed to be partial qualifiers. Burgess was allowed to practice with the team while Alie-Cox was not. Both were able to remain on scholarship and will be eligible to play in 2013-14 as sophomores. The school never gave specifics as to why they were ruled ineligible by the NCAA. Guard Reco McCarver transferred from VCU to Campbell University. Heath Houston also left the team due to knee injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231269-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VCU Rams men's basketball team, Accolades, Honors and awards\nSophomore guard Briant\u00e9 Weber was named the Atlantic 10 Defensive Player Of The Year. Junior forward Juvonte Reddic and Sophomore guard/forward Treveon Graham were named to the Second Team All Atlantic 10. Weber and Senior guard Darius Theus were named to the Atlantic-10 All-Defensive Team. Freshman guard Melvin Johnson was named to the Atlantic 10 All-Rookie Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231270-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VCU Rams men's tennis team\nThe 2012\u201313 VCU Rams men's tennis team will represent Virginia Commonwealth University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's tennis season. It will be the Rams' first season playing in the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231271-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 VHL season was the third season of the Russian Major League. It started 9 September 2012 and ended on April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231271-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VHL season, Regular season\nStarting with this season the VHL abandoned its previous conference structure. All teams played their regular seasons in a round robin format with two games (home and away) against every team of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231272-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VMI Keydets basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 VMI Keydets basketball team represented the Virginia Military Institute in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Keydets were coached by Duggar Baucom, in his 8th year. They played their home games at the 5,800 seat Cameron Hall. They were a member of the North Division of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 8\u20138 in Big South play to finish in second place in the North Division. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big South Tournament where they fell to Charleston Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League\nThe VTB United League 2012\u201313 was the fourth complete season of the VTB United League, which is Northern and Eastern Europe's top-tier level men's professional club basketball competition. The tournament featured 20 teams, from 10 countries. CSKA Moscow won its 4th VTB title, by beating Lokomotiv-Kuban Krasnodar, 3\u20131, in a best-of-five Finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League, Playoffs, Round of 16\nThe teams that finished third, fourth, fifth and sixth in the other group in a Best-Of-3 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League, Playoffs, Quarterfinals\nThe teams that finished first and two in the other group battled with 1/8 final winners in a Best-Of-5 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League, Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe teams that won in 1/4 final, battled with other 1/4 final winner in a Best-Of-5 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League, Playoffs, Final\nThe teams that won in 1/2 final, battled with other 1/2 final winner in a Best-Of-5 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League, Playoffs, Final, Rosters\nChampion: Milo\u0161 Teodosi\u0107, Vladimir Micov, Aleksandr Gudumak, Aaron Jackson, Dmitry Sokolov, Nenad Krsti\u0107, Sonny Weems, Aleksei Zozulin, Zoran Erceg, Evgeny Voronov, Andrey Vorontsevich, Sasha Kaun, Victor Khryapa, Anton Ponkrashov, Theo Papaloukas (Coach: Ettore Messina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League, Playoffs, Final, Rosters\nRunner-up: Maxim Grigoryev, Derrick Brown, Richard Hendrix, Alexey Savrasenko, Mantas Kalnietis, Sergey Bykov, Valeriy Likhodey, Simas Jasaitis, James Baron, Andrey Zubkov, Aleks Mari\u0107, Nick Calathes, Maksym Sheleketo (Coach: Evgeniy Pashutin)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231273-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VTB United League, Awards, Nationality awards\nFor the first time, awards were handed out to the best player by nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF season\nThe 2012\u201313 Valencia CF season was the club's 95th season in existence and its 26th consecutive season in La Liga, the top flight of Spanish football. The season marked the coaching debut of Mauricio Pellegrino, who assumed coaching of the club after the four-year tenure of Unai Emery. Pellegrino was sacked on 1 December and replaced with Ernesto Valverde. Manuel Llorente resigned after almost four years as Valencia president on 5 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF season, Players, From Valencia Mestalla\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, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF season, Players, 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF season, Players, Detailed squad information\nNotes: (d), debut in first team in an official match", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nSource: Match reports in La Liga Matches, Copa del Rey Matches, UEFA Champions League Matches and , Ordered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231274-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valencia CF season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nNote: BATE Borisov played their home matches at Dynama Stadium, Minsk instead of their own Haradski Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 76], "content_span": [77, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231275-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Valparaiso Crusaders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Valparaiso Crusaders men's basketball team represented Valparaiso University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cruasaders, led by second year head coach Bryce Drew, played their home games at the Athletics\u2013Recreation Center and were members of the Horizon League. The season finished with 26\u20138 in overall, 13\u20133 in Horizon League to become Horizon League Regular Season Champions. They were also champions of the Horizon League Tournament, defeating Wright State in the championship game, for the first Horizon League title in school history. They received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, their first tournament bid in 9 years, where they received a 14 seed and lost to 3 seed Michigan State in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season\nThe 2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season was the team's 43rd season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The Canucks won their fifth-straight Northwest Division title and finished third in the Western Conference. In the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs, Vancouver was swept by the San Jose Sharks in the first round. Shortly after the Canucks' playoff elimination, head coach Alain Vigneault was fired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season\nPrior to the beginning of the season the NHL Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) expired, resulting in a lockout. The season was threatened with cancellation before the lockout ended, ultimately the length of the labor dispute resulted in the reduction of games from the standard 82 to a shortened 48. Cory Schneider entered the season as the team's new starting goaltender, while the Canucks attempted to trade incumbent Roberto Luongo. The two goaltenders battled for playing time early in the season resulting in a goaltender controversy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season\nAfter a six-game winning streak to start February, the Canucks dealt with multiple injuries and suspensions resulting in the team slumping. In late March Schneider captured the starters job starting seven consecutive games helping the team to a second six-game winning streak. Vancouver dueled the Minnesota Wild in the standings before pulling away in April and winning the division. Led by Henrik and Daniel Sedin, the Canucks' power play struggled dropping from 4th the previous season to 23rd, with the Sedin twins' point production declining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0001-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season\nDerek Roy was brought in through a trade to help deal with injuries at centre in the team's only trade of the year. Schneider was injured late in the season and missed the first two games of the playoffs. Vancouver lost the fourth game of their playoff series on a controversial call on Daniel Sedin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season\nThree franchise records were set during the season. Henrik Sedin became the Canucks all-time leading scorer, surpassing Markus Naslund. Alex Burrows scored six seconds into a game making it the fastest goal to start a game for Vancouver. Alain Vigneault became the all-time leader in games coached. As a way of celebrating 100 years of hockey in British Columbia, the Canucks wore a special patch on their jerseys with the logo of the Vancouver Millionaires, the first professional team in the city. They also wore replica jerseys of the Millionaires for one game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season\nFollowing an early exit from the 2012 Stanley Cup playoffs, the off-season began with speculation that head coach Alain Vigneault might be fired. There were also rumors that general manager (GM) Mike Gillis could be removed from his position. After an end of the year meeting with team owner Francesco Aquilini, Gillis signed a new five-year contract. Fifteen days after his new contract, Gillis signed Vigneault to a new two-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season\nThe Canucks announced that they would be celebrating 100 years of hockey in British Columbia during the season. To that end, they would wear a special patch on their jerseys with the logo of the Vancouver Millionaires, the first professional team in the city. They also would wear replica jerseys of the Millionaires for their March 16 game against the Detroit Red Wings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season\nAfter being replaced as starter for the final three playoff games, Roberto Luongo said that he would be willing to waive his no-trade clause if asked. Following the re-signing of Cory Schneider to a three-year $12\u00a0million extension, trade rumors increased. It was later reported that Luongo wanted to be traded and that \"it was time to move on\". Though as training camp approached, Luongo had not been traded. He indicated that he would have no issues returning to the Canucks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season\nGillis further stated that although he had received several \"strong\" offers, the Canucks were not having a \"fire sale\" for Luongo. Doug MacLean on Sportsnet's Hockey Central reported that a trade was in place to send Luongo to the Toronto Maple Leafs. However, Luongo, believing the Florida Panthers, his preferred destination, were going to make a deal for him, refused to waive his no-trade clause. Luongo later said that he never turned down a trade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, 2012\u201313 lockout\nPrior to the NHL Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) expiring in September, teams reassigned players on two-way or entry-level contracts to minor league affiliates. The Canucks assigned 27 players, including Christopher Tanev, Eddie Lack, Zack Kassian and 2012 second-round draft pick Alexandre Mallet to the Chicago Wolves, while first-round pick Brendan Gaunce was sent to his junior team, the Belleville Bulls. When the CBA expired on September 15, the NHL enforced a lockout until a new agreement could be reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, 2012\u201313 lockout\nCanucks management posted a message from the team to the fans stating that they would continue with community initiatives throughout the lockout, which they hoped would be resolved as soon as possible, and thanked fans for their loyalty and patience. They also reduced their employees work week to four days and instituted a 20% pay reduction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, 2012\u201313 lockout\nFour days into the lockout, the NHL cancelled all pre-season games before September 30, cutting the first four games from Vancouver's schedule. A week later, with no further talks between the two sides, the remainder of the preseason was canceled. With no movement on a new deal, the NHL cancelled its first set of regular season games on October 4. Games continued to be cancelled in blocks culminating in their cancellation through January 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, 2012\u201313 lockout\nAs the lockout dragged on, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman gave a self-imposed a deadline of January 11 to agree to terms on a new CBA or the entire season would be cancelled. As the deadline approached, Bettman and the head of the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA), Donald Fehr, engaged in a 16-hour negotiation session that produced a tentative agreement to end the lockout. Both sides ratified the deal and a memorandum of understanding was signed on January 12. This officially ended the lockout and allowed training camps to open the following day. Due to the length of the lockout, the NHL announced a new scheduled for a shortened 48-game season after it ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, Training camp\nUnder the prior CBA, players could not be traded until after the lockout was resolved, meaning Roberto Luongo could not be moved. Once a new CBA was reached, the trade rumors returned, including one that alleged Maple Leafs GM Brian Burke was fired in order to help facilitate a trade. For his part, Luongo reiterated that he was willing to remain with the Canucks for the shortened season, but did not want to remain long-term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, Training camp\nWith training camp starting on January 13, 2013, Vancouver recalled 12 players from the Wolves. They also bolstered their defence corp by signing NHL veterans Jim Vandermeer and Cam Barker to one-year contracts. At the forward position, the Canucks were dealing with injuries to their second line. Centre Ryan Kesler, who was recovering from off-season surgeries to his shoulder and wrist, would be unable to start the season; it was unknown how long he would be out rehabbing the injuries. Winger David Booth was injured during the team's physicals to start camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, Training camp\nAfter having an MRI done on his injury, it was announced that Booth would miss four to six weeks recovering. Alain Vigneault stated that he hoped to keep his third and fourth lines intact, leaving the possible replacements as, Andrew Ebbett, Jordan Schroeder and Zack Kassian. Schroeder was a first-round draft pick for Vancouver in 2009, but had never played in an NHL game. Ebbett a utility, journeyman forward played in 18 games for Vancouver in 2011\u201312. While the second-year Kassian produced only four goals in his rookie campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Off-season, Training camp\nVancouver elected to start the season with Ebbett and put Kassian on their second line. In order to keep defensive depth, the Canucks decided to keep nine defenceman. Schroeder was sent back to the minors in order to comply with the 23-man roster and because he would not need to clear waivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, January\nAfter winning back to back Presidents' Trophies in prior seasons the Canucks were projected as Stanley Cup contenders. The prediction was based on Vancouver's team depth, the offense provided by Daniel and Henrik Sedin, the two-way play of Kesler and Alexandre Burrows, plus the versatility of the Canuck's top four defenceman. The Hockey News predicted that the Canucks would win the Northwest Division and finish as the second place team in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, January\nSchneider began the year as the team's starting goaltender. In his first game against the Anaheim Ducks, Schneider allowed five goals on 14 shots and was pulled midway through the second period. When Luongo entered the game he was given a standing ovation from the crowd. Luongo gave up another two goals as the Canucks lost 7\u20133. In the post-game interview, Schneider took the blame for the loss, saying, \"It was unacceptable to play that way and to put my team in that situation and not even give them a chance to win.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, January\nHe also stated he would work hard to fix the mistakes, while Luongo said of his ovation that it was \"a fun moment.\" The situation quickly led to a goalie controversy. Luongo made the start the following night against the Edmonton Oilers. According to Vigneault, he had already determined the starting assignments for the opening two games, and Schneider did not factor into Luongo's start. In the game, Luongo allowed two goals after Vancouver had taken a 2\u20130 lead. The Canucks lost the game 3\u20132 in a shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, January\nLuongo failed to stop either of the two shooters he faced, while Vancouver did not score. After losing their first two games, Vancouver added to their forward depth recalling Jordan Schroeder from the AHL and assigning Jim Vandermeer to the Wolves. Schroeder took over the second line duties after Andrew Ebbett went pointless in the first two contests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, January\nSchneider started Vancouver's next game against the Calgary Flames. For the second-straight game, Vancouver lost a two-goal lead in a game which eventually went to a shootout. In contrast to his first start, Schneider had a strong game, making 34 saves by the end of overtime. In the shootout, he stopped four of the five shooters he faced, earning the Canucks their first win of the season. Two nights later, as they began their first road trip, the Canucks played a rematch with the Ducks in Anaheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, January\nSchneider made the start and earned some redemption, stopping all 30 Anaheim shots, helping the Canucks to the 5\u20130 win and earning his fifth career shutout. Following the win, Schneider started the next game, a 4\u20131 loss to the San Jose Sharks. Luongo started the next four games, finishing off the month of January and beginning February. Vigneault joked that he was making his starting goaltender decisions based on coin tosses. He further noted that the two goaltenders were team guys and they would do what was asked of them and never complain. The coin became a running joke for Vigneault and the Canucks in general, as Ryan Kesler stated he flipped it before announcing his return from injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nAt forward, Kassian began the year on the top line with the Sedin twins. Kassian scored five goals in the first seven games of the season. Partway through the Canucks' second game of February, Kassian was replaced on the top line by Alexandre Burrows. Kassian was dropped to the third line. Despite Kassian surpassing his goal total from his rookie season, the Sedins started the year with their lowest output in nearly ten years, combining for 14 points in the first 10 games. Coinciding with the line changes, Vancouver went on a six-game winning streak between the end of January and their February 12 game. After the last game of their winning streak, the Canucks were expecting Kesler to return to the line-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nAs Kesler was returning from injury, Vancouver placed centre Manny Malhotra on injured reserve (IR) for the remainder of the season. In regards to the move, Gillis stated he felt Malhotra was vulnerable to serious injury because of an eye injury he suffered in 2011. The decision was made despite Malhotra playing in 78 games in the 2011\u201312 season and nine games in 2013. Gillis further noted that he had reservation about him playing in the previous season, but wanted to give Malhotra a chance to adapt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nAfter watching him play, Gillis did not see the types of changes that would not put him at a higher risk of injury. Upon placing Malhotra on IR, Gillis called it the hardest thing he had done as a GM. NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly released a statement on the situation, saying \"the League is satisfied and has approved the team's and player's joint decision to discontinue the player's participation in NHL games at this time on the basis of the player's current medical condition and the risk of injury that such condition poses.\" The Canucks also announced that Malhotra would remain with the team in some capacity, but would not return to the ice including in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nKesler played his first game of the season on February 15 against the Dallas Stars. The game was also witness to a piece of Canucks history as Henrik Sedin recorded two assists to pass Markus Naslund as the franchise's all-time leading scorer, with 757 points. After recording the record setting point, Sedin was given a standing ovation that carried on as play continued. After three minutes the play stopped, and Sedin saluted the crowd. During a commercial break, the Canucks ran a tribute video for the accomplishment, featuring congratulations from Naslund and Trevor Linden, the third-leading scorer in team history. As for Kesler, he registered an assist and blocked three shots in over 17 minutes of ice time of the 4\u20133 loss. After experiencing some discomfort in his right foot, Kesler had X-rays taken. The X-rays were negative and he continued to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nFour days after Kesler's return, Jannik Hansen was involved in a controversial hit on the Chicago Blackhawks' Marian Hossa. As both players went up for an airborne puck, Hansen struck Hossa in the back of the head with his forearm and elbow. Hossa then laid on the ice for a few minutes, during which time the training staff examined him before he was able to leave under his own power. Hansen was given a two-minute minor for roughing and Hossa did not return to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nOpinions of the hit varied with former NHL referee Kerry Fraser, stating that he did not believe that there was any deliberate or malicious intent, and that he would be surprised if Hansen received a suspension for the play. Meanwhile, former Blackhawks analyst Ed Olczyk stated, \"there's no doubt in my mind, once he didn't play the puck, he had one thing in his mind, and that was to put his forearm or elbow in the back of the head of Marian Hossa,\" and he would be surprised if Hansen was not suspended. Hossa returned to practice the following day. Hansen was suspended for one game due to what Brendan Shanahan called \"the carelessness and force of which the blow was delivered.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nWith Kesler back in the lineup, the Canucks were inconstant posting a 2\u20133\u20132 record. Kesler registered five points in the seven games, but was playing with the discomfort steaming from a blocked shot in his first game back against Dallas. He was given a CT scan for his peace of mind. The results of the scan revealed a fracture in his foot. Though no time table for his return was given, the expectation was that he would be out of the line-up for four-to-six weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, February\nLate in the month, Kevin Bieksa suffered a groin injury in a game versus the Nashville Predators. He missed the next two games as Vancouver finished the month with back-to-back losses. After being reunited with Burrows, the Sedin twins registered a combined 18 points in the final six games of February, while Kassian tallied only three assists in the 11 games after his demotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, March\nBieksa returned for the first game in the month of March, a 5\u20132 win over the Los Angeles Kings. During the game, he re-aggravated the injury and was listed as day-to-day. With Bieksa and Kesler out, Vancouver slumped dropping three straight games going 0\u20131\u20132. Entering their March 10 game against the Minnesota Wild, the lead for the Northwest Division was at stake. A regulation win for the Wild would give them the lead based on tie breakers. Vancouver lost the game 4\u20132 and dropped to sixth place in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, March\nThe Canucks reclaimed the division lead two days later with a win over the Columbus Blue Jackets. In the March 16 game against Detroit, Alexandre Burrows set a franchise record when he scored six seconds into the game, making it the fastest goal to start a game in team history. Vancouver failed to capitalize on the early lead, losing the game 5\u20132 and falling back into a tie with the Wild. The Canucks re-matched the Wild two days later with a chance to take sole possession of the division lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0018-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, March\nVancouver took the lead in the second scoring on the power play. The goal marked the first power play tally in 11 games, ending a 0\u201336 slump, the worst in franchise history. Much like the Detroit game, the Canucks failed to take advantage of the early lead and lost the game 3\u20131 and fell to seventh in the Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, March\nSchneider started Vancouver's next game and earned the win against the St. Louis Blues. The win marked the beginning of a six-game winning streak with Schneider as the starting goaltender each game. He allowed a total of six goals during the steak and posted two shutouts. The wins put the Canucks back into first in the Northwest. In the second game of their winning streak, defenceman Alexander Edler collided with Phoenix Coyotes' goaltender Mike Smith and was given a five-minute major for charging. The following day, Edler was given a two-game suspension for his actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, March\nAlso during the Canucks' winning streak, they began to have injury problems. Booth suffered a leg injury that required surgery which ended his season. In 12 games played, Booth scored only a single goal into an empty net. Winger Dale Weise injured a shoulder. Kassian suffered a back injury, and Steve Pinizzotto missed games due to an illness. With the forward corps depleted, defenceman Keith Ballard was moved to forward. He continued to play upfront until he suffered a broken foot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, March\nIn his seventh consecutive start, Schneider gave up two early goals to the Edmonton Oilers and was pulled in favor of Luongo. The goals were scored on Edmonton's first two shots. Goals continued to come in quick succession as Taylor Hall scored his second goal, Edmonton's third, 2:34 into the game, setting an Oilers franchise record for the fastest three goals to start a game. Hall set another Edmonton record minutes later when he completed the hat-trick at 7:58 in the first. It marked the fastest hat-trick to start a game, surpassing Wayne Gretzky's previous record. Vancouver did not allow another goal, but failed to score, losing 4\u20130. They were again passed by Minnesota for the division lead and finished March as the fourth-placed team in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, April\nIn their first game of April, Vancouver attempted to improve its offensive production by re-calling their 2011 first round draft choice, Nicklas Jensen, and forward Bill Sweatt. The recalls failed to produce, however, as the Canucks lost to the San Jose Sharks 3\u20132. The following day, the Canucks acquired centre Derek Roy from the Dallas Stars for Kevin Connauton and a second-round draft pick. The trade was believed to be an attempt to fill a hole at centre while Kesler was out with an injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, April\nThe expectation was that Roy would become the team's third line center once Kesler returned to the line-up, though the possibility of the two playing together was proposed. At the NHL trade deadline, Vancouver failed to trade Luongo. They were reportedly close to a deal with the Toronto Maple Leafs, which eventually fell through. In response to finding out that he would not be traded, Luongo stated, \"My contract sucks \u2013 that's what's the problem,\" and would \"scrap it if I could now.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0021-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, April\nThe Canucks felt they needed more size and grit in their line-up and attempted to add some though trades. However, they missed out on acquiring Ryane Clowe and Raffi Torres. Clowe chose to waive his no-trade clause to go to the New York Rangers so he could play in the Eastern Conference. The Coyotes traded Torres to the Sharks, as they considered San Jose's third-round pick more attractive than the Canucks' third-rounder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, April\nIn his first game as a Canuck, Roy tallied an assist helping Vancouver to a 4\u20130 win. The win moved the Canucks passed Minnesota for the division lead. The shutout marked Schneider's fourth of the season, which doubled his career total. Two games later, Schneider registered his fifth shutout of the season in a 2\u20130 over the Coyotes, tying him for the League lead. The game also marked the return of Kesler, who scored the game-winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, April\nMinnesota slumped towards the end of the season and the Canucks won their fifth-straight Northwest Division title with a 2\u20131 victory over the Blackhawks. In the game, Schneider suffered a groin injury and was unable to play the last two games of the season; he was listed by the Canucks as day-to-day with a \"body\" injury. With Schneider out, the Canucks lost their final two regular season games. In their final loss, Vigneault rested many of his regulars, though he received criticism for playing Henrik Sedin for only 22 seconds. Furthermore, Sedin left the bench after his one shift.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0022-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, April\nThe Los Angeles Times' Helene Elliott called it a cheap way of keeping Sedin's ironman streak intact. For his part, Henrik Sedin told Vigneault that \"he would be okay with sitting out the game\" and to him the streak is just \"a number in the paper.\" Vigneault responded by telling Sedin that \"he's not going to be the one that breaks the streak,\" and he gave him the choice to remain on the bench or return to the locker room. Sedin felt remaining on the bench would have been a further distraction and chose to leave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0022-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, April\nBy season's end, the Sedin twins' point production dropped from the previous years. Henrik's point points-per-game average was the lowest it had been since 2007\u201308, while Daniel's was his worst since 2003\u201304. The Cauncks' power play also struggled throughout the year dropping from fourth in 2011\u201312 to 23rd in the League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nVancouver entered the playoffs as the Western Conference's third seed by virtue of winning the Northwest Division. As a result, they faced the sixth-seeded San Jose Sharks. The series was a rematch of the 2011 Western Conference Finals, in which Vancouver defeated the Sharks in five games to advance to the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals. However, the Sharks had won all three of the regular season games during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nWith Schneider still injured, Luongo started the first game of the series. There was concern that Kesler would also be unable to play in Game 1. When asked about Kesler, Vigneault joked, \"We've got him locked in a back room. We're feeding him raw meat. The beast will be ready tonight.\" Luongo started strong, holding the Sharks scoreless in the first period despite the Canucks being outshot 6\u20131 in the first 4:06 of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nVancouver took a 1\u20130 lead midway through the second, though San Jose tied the game shortly after and added two more goals in the third to win the game 3\u20131. Luongo finished with 25 saves, Kesler played over 21 minutes, registering only two shots and finishing as a \u20131. Leading up to Game 2, Kesler vowed to be better. It was also rumored he had the flu in Game 1. Schneider was still unable to play, and there were concerns he would not be traveling with the team to San Jose for Game 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0024-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nIn Game 2, the Canucks trailed 1\u20130 after two periods of play. In the third period, Kesler scored a power play goal to tie the game and six minutes later, capitalized on a Sharks turnover to put Vancouver up 2\u20131. With Canucks leading late, San Jose pulled their goaltender for the extra attacker. With the net empty, Jannik Hansen had a chance to put the game away but missed the net. Shortly after with the play in Vancouver's end, Henrik Sedin attempted to make a pass to the middle of the ice which resulted in a turnover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0024-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nOn the ensuing play, a Dan Boyle shot deflected off Alexander Edler and through the pads of Luongo. The puck stopped short of the goal line, but Patrick Marleau tapped the puck in to tie the game. In overtime, a blocked shot led to an odd man rush for the Sharks, resulting in Raffi Torres scoring the game-winning goal. The loss put the Canucks down 2\u20130 in the series. Vancouver had never won a series after losing the first two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nSchneider returned from injury to play in Game 3 after missing two weeks. After the first two periods, the Canucks trailed 2\u20131. The Sharks scored quickly in the third period and by the 4:07 mark had scored three goals to make it a 5\u20131 game. After the fifth goal, Schneider was pulled and replaced by Luongo. Vancouver eventually lost the game 5\u20132, with Schneider making 23 saves on 28 shots. Luongo stopped all 10 shots he faced. In the post-game press conference, Schneider stated he felt good, but did not do enough to help out his teammates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0025-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nLater, questions were raised about who would be the starter for Game 4. Luongo stated he would be ready if asked to play, but also stated he would be supportive of Schneider if he was the starter. Sharks' centre Joe Thornton stated that San Jose felt Luongo had played great in the first two games, and they were lucky not to have to face him in Game 3. In Game 4, Schneider made the start and after two periods, the Canucks trailed 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0025-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nMidway through the third period, Vancouver had taken the lead, but late in the period, San Jose tied the game with a power play goal to force overtime. In the extra period, Daniel Sedin checked Tommy Wingels, which sent the Sharks winger's head into the boards. Sedin was given a controversial boarding penalty on the play. On the ensuing power play, San Jose scored to win the game and complete the series sweep. After the goal was scored, Daniel voiced his opinion of the call to the referees and was given a game misconduct penalty for abusive language.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0025-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs\nWhen asked about the call after the game, he replied, \"It's the playoffs. It's shoulder to shoulder,\" and it was a bad call, though he further noted that the Canucks did not lose the series on the call. Brother Henrik noted that it was \"a bullshit call\" also pointing out that it was shoulder to shoulder. Referee Kelly Sutherland explained the call by stating he deemed it a violent shove into the boards where the player could not defend himself. For his part, Schneider made 43 saves on 47 shots in Game 4, he stated that he was 100% healthy and his groin injury was not a factor in his play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Post-season\nAt an end of the season press conference, GM Mike Gillis stated the Canucks would \"hit the reset button on a number of different fronts.\" Days later Vigneault was fired, along with assistant coaches, Rick Bowness and Newell Brown. Vigneault left as the all-time winningest coach in Canucks history, while winning two Presidents' Trophies and six Northwest Division titles. A month later, John Tortorella was hired as the new head coach. Tortorella had been fired by the New York Rangers earlier in the off-season following a second round playoff loss to the Boston Bruins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Post-season\nAfter the coaching situation had been settled, Gillis next turned his attention back to trading Luongo. The Canucks were hoping to make a deal at the 2013 NHL Entry Draft. As the draft approached, it was reported the Canucks were also shopping Schneider. Originally, it was believed the rumors were an attempt by Gillis to gain leverage for any potential Luongo deals. However, in a surprise move, Schneider was trade to the New Jersey Devils for the ninth overall pick in the draft, which Vancouver used to select Bo Horvat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Post-season\nFans, as well as both Luongo and Schneider, were shocked by the news. Luongo stated, \"I have to let this sink in and figure out what I'm going to do.\" While Schneider stated he was not sure what to say or think and he was speechless, adding, \"it was nice to have resolution to the situation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Traded to Canucks mid-season. Stats reflect time with Canucks only. \u2021Traded to another team mid-season. Stats reflect time with Canucks only. Bold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Transactions\nDuring the off-season, Vancouver signed defenceman Jason Garrison to a six-year contract worth $27.6\u00a0million. While the Canucks brought in Garrison, they lost longtime defenceman Sami Salo. The Canucks wanted to re-sign Salo, though they were unwilling to sign him to a two-year contract and offered only a one-year deal. Salo chose to leave and signed a two-year, $7.5\u00a0million contract with the Tampa Bay Lightning. It was believed that Garrison would step in and contribute to the power play and replace the departed Salo, who had performed a similar role. However, he struggled to adjust with his new team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0030-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Transactions\nHe was taken off the power play unit and dropped to the third pairing within the first month. After the injuries to Bieksa, Garrison was moved from left defenceman to the right side pairing with Dan Hamhuis. The coaching staff came to consider this pairing to be the best and most trusted. Garrison finished the season with eight goals and eight assists, scoring three goals and three assists on the power play, and registering a +18 rating. His plus-minus was second on the team and led all defenceman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Draft picks\nThe 2012 NHL Entry Draft was held on June 22\u201323, 2012, at the Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In the first round, the Canucks drafted Brendan Gaunce, a two-way centre with size. Leading up to the draft, Gaunce was ranked 13th among North American skaters by the NHL's scouting department, and was the top-ranked Canadian forward. Projected to be a mid-first-round pick, he dipped slightly to 26 where he was selected by the Canucks. general manager Mike Gillis stated that going into the draft, they had targeted Gaunce, and if he had not been available, Vancouver would have traded down to add extra picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Draft picks\nWith their second pick, the Canucks selected Alexandre Mallet, a gritty centreman who was passed over in his first year of draft eligibility. Mallet's section was the first in a series \"late-bloomer\" picks aimed at acquiring players who were either ready for the NHL or going to college. Fifth-round selection Ben Hutton was heading to the University of Maine. Sixth-round pick Wesley Myron, the first British Columbia native to be drafted by the Canucks in four years, was going to Boston University, while seventh-rounder Matthew Beattie would attend Yale University. In their yearly draft assessment, The Hockey News gave the Canucks a D grade for drafting Gaunce, who's stock was falling, as well as four players who had not been selected in prior drafts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Farm team\nThe Canucks completed their second season with the Chicago Wolves as American Hockey League affiliate, the final one under the two teams' contract. The Wolves started the season by winning their first four games for the second time in franchise history. The following games were not as fruitful as they lost five of their next six games and their starting goaltender Eddie Lack suffered a hip injury. The injury required surgery, and Lack missed the remainder of the season. With Lack out the Wolves finished fifteenth in the league for fewest goals allowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0033-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Farm team\nThe previous season they allowed the fifth fewest goals in the league. Lack and back-up Matt Climie set a franchise record for lowest team goals against average. With the league's nineteenth best offense, the Wolves were unable to overcome the goals against them and finished fourth in their division. Thus missing the playoffs. It was the second time in three years that the Wolves missed the playoffs, but only the fourth time in franchise history. Despite missing the playoffs, Chicago finished second in league attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Farm team\nLate in the season, reports began to surface that the Canucks would be purchasing their own AHL team and relocating it. Vancouver wanted to have more control over personnel decisions for their farm team and bought the Peoria Rivermen. The Canucks had originally hoped to move the franchise to nearby Abbotsford, British Columbia, which was home of the Calgary Flames AHL affiliate the Abbotsford Heat. Calgary indicated they would be willing to move their franchise, but a deal between the Canucks and the city of Abbotsford was unable to be reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0034-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Farm team\nWith the Abbotsford deal not working out, the Canucks set out to find a new home for their affiliate. They considered moving the team to Vancouver and sharing Rogers Arena, but the city was within the 50-mile territorial radius provided by the AHL. They next considered moving the team to Seattle, Washington, but were not allowed by the NHL. Seattle was a candidate to land the Phoenix Coyotes if a lease agreement could not be reached with the city of Glendale. Eventually, the Canucks decided to relocate their franchise to Utica, New York, creating the Comets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231276-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vancouver Canucks season, Notes\n1: The NHL uses a point system for their standings that awards two points for a win and one point an overtime or shootout loss. The denotation of a team's record is wins-losses-overtime/shootout losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231277-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team will represent Vanderbilt University in the 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The team's head coach is Kevin Stallings, in his fourteenth season at Vanderbilt. The team plays their home games at Memorial Gymnasium in Nashville, Tennessee, as a member of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231277-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team, Previous season\nAfter a 21\u201310 regular season that fell short of lofty preseason expectations, the Commodores captured their first SEC Tournament Championship in 61 seasons on March 11, 2012, by defeating top-ranked Kentucky in the SEC Tournament Finals. The Commodores advanced to their third consecutive NCAA Tournament where they defeated Harvard in the second round before falling the third round to Wisconsin to finish the season 25\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231277-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team, Previous season, Departures\nVanderbilt suffered devastating personnel losses after the 2011\u201312 season; of their six leading scorers, five graduated and the other declared for the 2012 NBA Draft. In all, the Commodores lost 88.1% of their scoring from 2011\u201312. Also, the Commodores' returning players had started a total of three games in the 2011\u201312 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231277-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team, Previous season, Departures\nOf the 14 SEC teams in the 2012\u201313 season, Vanderbilt was one of only three that did not return a player who averaged double figures in points in the previous season, and the only team that returned fewer starts was Kentucky, which did not return a single player who had started a game in 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231277-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team, Previous season, Departures\nIn addition, for the second straight offseason, a Vanderbilt assistant accepted a Division I head coaching position. In the 2011 offseason, King Rice left to become the head coach at Monmouth. This offseason, Dan Muller returned to his alma mater of Illinois State. Stallings chose not to hire a new assistant. Previously, he had rotated the administrative role of director of basketball operations among his assistants. This season, he named former Commodores player Dan Cage as director of basketball operations and removed that role from his assistants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231278-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season\nThe 2012\u201313 Primera Divisi\u00f3n season was the 31st professional season of Venezuela's top-flight football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231278-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Teams\nEighteen teams participated this season, sixteen of whom remain from the previous season. Carabobo and Tucanes were relegated after accumulating the fewest points in the 2011\u201312 season aggregate table. They will be replaced by Atl\u00e9tico Venezuela and Portuguesa, the 2011\u201312 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n winner and runner-up, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231278-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Torneo Apertura\nThe Torneo Apertura was the first tournament of the season. It began on August 2012 and ended on December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231278-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Torneo Clausura\nThe Torneo Clausura was the second tournament of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231278-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Serie Final\nDeportivo Anzo\u00e1tegui and Zamora qualified to the Serie Final, which was contested on a home and away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231278-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Serie Sudamericana\nOther than the teams which already qualify for the Copa Libertadores (Apertura and Clausura champions and the best-placed team in the aggregate table) and the Copa Sudamericana (Copa Venezuela champion and the second best-placed team in the aggregate table), the eight best-placed teams in the aggregate table will contest in the Serie Sudamericana for the remaining two berths to the Copa Sudamericana, which qualify the two winners to the First Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231278-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Serie Sudamericana\nFor the two second round winners, the team with the better record in the aggregate table will receive the Venezuela 3 berth, while the other team will receive the Venezuela 4 berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231279-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vermont Catamounts men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Vermont Catamounts men's basketball team represented the University of Vermont during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Catamounts, led by second year head coach John Becker, played their home games at Patrick Gym and were members of the America East Conference. They finished the season 21\u201312, 11\u20135 in America East play to finish in a tie for second place. They advanced to the championship game of the America East Tournament where they lost to Albany. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Santa Clara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231280-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart II season\nThe 2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart II season is the season for the reserve team for VfB Stuttgart. The season began on 21 July 2012 and will end on 18 May 2013. They are participating in the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231280-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart II season, Review and events\nThe season began on 21 July 2012 with a loss against 1. FC Saarbr\u00fccken and will end on 18 May 2013 against Borussia Dortmund II. They are participating in the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231281-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart season\nThe 2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart season was the 120th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313, the club contested the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It was Stuttgart's 36th consecutive season in the league, since having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231281-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart season, Review and events\nThe club finished in sixth place in the 2011\u201312 season. Therefore, the club participates in the 2012\u201313 edition of the UEFA Europa League, and also participates in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231281-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart season, VfB Stuttgart II\nThe 2012\u201313 VfB Stuttgart II season pertains to the reserve team for VfB Stuttgart. The season began on 21 July 2012 and ended on 18 May 2013. They are participating in the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231282-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Bochum season\nThe 2012\u201313 VfL Bochum season is the 75th season in club history. In 2012\u201313 the club plays in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It is the clubs third consecutive season in this league, having played at this level since 2010\u201311, after it was relegated from the Bundesliga in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231282-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Bochum season, Review and events\nOn 28 October 2012, Andreas Bergmann was sacked and replaced by Karsten Neitzel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231282-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Bochum season, Review and events\nMarcel Maltritz set a new record for the number of 2. Bundesliga appearances for the club. After Maltritz tied Dariusz Wosz's old record of 107 appearances on 1 December 2012 against 1. FC Union Berlin, he broke it on 16 December 2012 with his appearance against SC Paderborn 07.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231282-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Bochum season, Review and events\nDuring the winter break, the club mourned the death of long-time club official Werner Altegoer, who died on 9 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231282-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Bochum season, Review and events\nOn 8 April 2013, after a string of bad results and the danger of relegation, Peter Neururer replaced Neitzel as the manager of VfL Bochum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231282-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Bochum season, Squad, Trials\nCarlos da Silva (FC Lugano) and Sehar Fejzulahi (free agent) had trial spells with Bochum during the summer transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231283-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Osnabr\u00fcck season\nThe 2012\u201313 VfL Osnabr\u00fcck season was the 114th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the 3. Liga, the third tier of German football. It was the club's second consecutive season in this league, having been relegated from the 2. Bundesliga in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231283-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Osnabr\u00fcck season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the Lower Saxony Cup, having reached the quarter finals against fourth division side TSV Havelse after a 3\u20132 win over SV Meppen. In the quarter finals, they won against TSV Havelse 6\u20135 by penalties to reach the semi finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231283-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Osnabr\u00fcck season\nThey finished the 2012\u201313 season in third position, gaining the spot to play in the 2. Bundesliga relegation playoff game. They faced Dynamo Dresden but lost in the away leg, making the aggregate score of 1\u20132, thus making them still in the 3. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231284-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Wolfsburg season\nThe 2012\u201313 VfL Wolfsburg season was the 68th season in the club's football history. In 2012\u201313 the club played in the Bundesliga, the top tier of German football. It was the club's 16th consecutive season in this league, having been promoted from the 2. Bundesliga in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231284-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfL Wolfsburg season\nThe club also took part in the 2012\u201313 edition of the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the semi-finals before losing to eventual champion Bayern Munich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231285-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfR Aalen season\nThe 2012\u201313 VfR Aalen season was the 92nd season in the club's football history. The club competed in the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of German football. It was the club's first-ever season in this league, having won promotion from the 3. Liga in 2011\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231285-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 VfR Aalen season\nThe club also took part in the DFB-Pokal, the German Cup, where it reached the second round, losing 4\u20131 to Bundesliga side Borussia Dortmund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be Videoton FC's 44th competitive season, 13th consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 71st year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231286-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Videoton FC season, Europa League\nThe First and Second Qualifying Round draws took place at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland on 25 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231287-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Vijay Hazare Trophy was the eleventh 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 February and finishing in March 2013. In the final, Delhi beat Assam by 75 runs to win their maiden title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231288-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team represented Villanova University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Villanova was led by head coach Jay Wright, who was in his 12th season. The Wildcats participated in the Big East Conference and played their home games at The Pavilion with some select home games at the Wells Fargo Center. They finished the season 20\u201314, 10\u20138 in Big East play to finish in a tie for seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big East Tournament to Louisville. They received an at large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231288-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team\nThis was Villanova's final season as a member of the original Big East Conference. The so-called Catholic 7 schools joined together with Butler, Creighton and Xavier to form a new conference that kept the Big East Conference name, but as an entirely new conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231289-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Villarreal CF season\nThe 2012\u201313 Villarreal CF season was the 82nd season in club history and the first back in the second division of Spanish football following relegation at the end of the 2011\u201312 La Liga season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231289-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Villarreal CF season, Squad, Squad, matches played and goals scored\nThe numbers are established according to the official website: and", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231289-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Villarreal CF season, Squad, Squad, matches played and goals scored\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, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231289-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Villarreal CF 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231290-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team represented the University of Virginia during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cavaliers, led by fourth year head coach Tony Bennett, played their home games at John Paul Jones Arena and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 23\u201312, 11\u20137 in ACC play to finish in a tie for fourth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament where they lost to NC State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231290-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nThey received an invitation to the 2013 NIT where they defeated Norfolk State and St. John's to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Iowa. The 2012\u20132013 Cavaliers set a school record with 18 regular season home wins, finishing with an overall home record of 20\u20132 and a perfect 9\u20130 in ACC play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231290-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cavaliers finished the 2011\u201312 season with a record 22\u201310 overall, 9\u20137 in ACC play and lost in the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament to NC State. They were invited to the 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament where they lost in the second round to Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231291-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Virginia Tech Hokies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Virginia Tech Hokies men's basketball team represented Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hokies, led by first year head coach James Johnson, played their home games at Cassell Coliseum and were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 13\u201319, 4\u201314 in ACC play to finish in last place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Tournament to NC State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231292-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Volleyleague (Greece)\nThe 2012\u22122013 Volleyleague is the 45th season of the Greek national volleyball league. Olympiacos was the winner beating Pamvochaikos in the finals. This was Olympiacos' 26th Championship. The teams that were relegated were Iraklis Thessaloniki (because of financial problems) and AONS Milon. The MVP of championship was awarded to Olympiacos' Boyan Yordanov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231292-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Volleyleague (Greece), Notes\nIraklis Thessaloniki was relegated to A2 division due to debts, after the decision of Greek sport court (\u0391\u03a3\u0395\u0391\u0394).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231293-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 W-League\nThe 2012\u201313 W-League season was the fifth season of the W-League, the Australian national women's football (soccer) competition. The season consisted of twelve matchdays followed by a finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231293-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 W-League\nThis season saw the addition of a new team, the Western Sydney Wanderers, to the W-League (paralleling the club also fielding new teams in the A-League and Youth League) bringing the competition back up to eight teams. This means each matchday involved all eight teams, resulting in the regular season increasing from ten games to twelve for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231293-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 W-League, Clubs, Foreign players\nThe following do not fill a Visa position:AAustralian citizens who have chosen to represent another national team;BThose players who were born and started their professional career abroad but have since gained Australian citizenship;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231293-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 W-League, Regular season, Leading scorers\nGoal scored from penalty kick \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Two goals scored from penalty kick", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231293-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 W-League, International competition\nThe winners of the 2011\u201312 season Canberra United participated in the 2012 International Women's Club Championship, known as the Mobcast Cup for sponsorship reasons, the first edition of this tournament hosted by the JFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231293-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 W-League, International competition\nCanberra United finished in fourth place (out of four teams), suffering two losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231294-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WA Tlemcen season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season, WA Tlemcen is competing in the Ligue 1 for the 28th season, as well as the Algerian Cup. It is their 4th consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football. They will be competing in Ligue 1, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231294-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WA Tlemcen season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 18 November 2012.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, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231294-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WA Tlemcen 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-00231295-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WBFAL\n2012\u201313 WBFAL was the first edition of Women Basketball Friendship Adriatic League. Participated six teams from three countries, champion became the team of Budu\u0107nost Podgorica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231295-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WBFAL, Final four\nFinal Four to be played from 4\u20135 March 2013 in Igalo, Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231296-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WCHA women's ice hockey season\nThe 2012\u201313 WCHA women's ice hockey season marked the continuation of the annual tradition of competitive ice hockey among Western Collegiate Hockey Association members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231297-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WHL season\nThe 2012\u201313 WHL season is the 47th season of the Western Hockey League (WHL). The regular season began in September 2012 and ended in March 2013. The playoffs began in late March 2013 following the regular season and ended in mid-May 2013, with the Portland Winterhawks winning the Ed Chynoweth Cup and a berth in the 2013 Memorial Cup hosted by the Saskatoon Blades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231297-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WHL season, Standings, Statistical leaders, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts. = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 67], "content_span": [68, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231297-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WHL season, Standings, Statistical leaders, Goaltenders\nThese are the goaltenders that lead the league in GAA that have played at least 1440 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231297-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WHL season, Standings, Statistical leaders, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games played; Mins = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime losses; SOL = Shootout Losses; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231297-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WHL season, Playoff scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231297-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WHL season, Playoff leading goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; Mins = Minutes Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Allowed; SO = Shutouts; SV& = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231298-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WNBL season\nThe 2012\u201313 WNBL season was the 33rd season of competition since the Women's National Basketball League's establishment in 1981. A total of nine teams contested the league. The regular season was played between 5 October 2012 and 16 February 2013, followed by a post-season involving the top five on 23 February 2013 until 10 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231298-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WNBL season\nBroadcast rights were held by free-to-air network ABC. ABC broadcast one game a week, at 3 pm at every standard time in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231298-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WNBL season\nSpalding provided equipment including the official game ball, with Champion supplying team apparel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231299-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 WPI Engineers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 WPI Engineers men's basketball team represented Worcester Polytechnic Institute during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division III men's basketball season. They were coached by a 15-year coaching veteran, Chris Bartely. The Engineers played their home games at Harrington Auditorium in Worcester, Massachusetts and were a part of the New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231300-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wagner Seahawks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Wagner Seahawks men's basketball team represented Wagner College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Seahawks were led by the youngest men's head coach in NCAA Division I, Bashir Mason, who was 28 when he was elevated from an assistant position in March 2012 following the departure of Dan Hurley for Rhode Island. The Seahawks played their home games at Spiro Sports Center and were members of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 19\u201312, 12\u20136 in NEC play to finish in a three-way tie for second place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Northeast Tournament where they lost to Long Island. For the second consecutive year, despite a winning record, Wagner choose not to participate in a post season tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231301-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team represented Wake Forest University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Jeff Bzdelik, who was coaching in his third season at Wake Forest. The team played its home games at the Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and was a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 13\u201318, 6\u201312 in ACC play to finish in a tie for ninth place. They lost in the first round of the ACC Tournament to Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231301-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team, Previous season\nWake finished the 2011\u201312 season 13\u201318, 4\u201312 in ACC play tied for 9th place and lost in the first round of the ACC Tournament. The end of the season was highlighted by the sudden outgoing transfer of 3 players off the Wake Forest Men's Basketball team following Athletic Director Ron Wellman's announcement that Head Coach Jeff Bzdelik would be returning for another season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231302-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Walsall F.C. season\nDuring the 2012-13 season, the British football club Walsall F.C. was managed by Dean Smith. The captain was Andy Butler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231302-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Walsall 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-00231302-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Walsall 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-00231303-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season\nThe 2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season was the franchise's 39th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231303-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season, Off-season\nOn June 26, 2012, the Capitals announced the hiring of Adam Oates as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231303-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season, Regular season\nThe Capitals scored the most power-play goals in the NHL during the regular season with 47. They also had the best power-play percentage at 27.65% (47 for 170).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231303-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season, Playoffs\nThe Washington Capitals ended the 2012\u201313 regular season as the Southeast Division champions and therefore as the Eastern Conference's 3rd seed. They faced the #6 seed New York Rangers in the first round, losing 4 games to 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231303-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Capitals. Stats reflect time with the Capitals only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231303-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season, Transactions\nThe Capitals have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231303-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Capitals season, Draft picks\nWashington Capitals' picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231304-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Washington Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Washington in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Lorenzo Romar's 11th season at Washington. The Huskies played their home games at Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion as members of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 18\u201316, 9\u20139 in Pac-12 play to finish in a four-way tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament to Oregon. They were invited to the 2013 NIT where they lost in the first round to BYU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231305-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team represented Washington State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cougars played their home games on Jack Friel Court at Beasley Coliseum in Pullman, Washington and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. They were led by fourth year head coach Ken Bone. They finished the season with a record of 13\u201319 overall, 4\u201314 in Pac-12 play to finish in a last place tie with Oregon State. They lost in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament to in-state rival Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231306-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Wizards season\nThe 2012\u201313 Washington Wizards season was the 52nd season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 40th in the Washington, D.C. area. Jason Collins was on this team when he became the first active NBA player to publicly come out as gay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231306-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Washington Wizards season, Injuries and surgeries\nOn September 28, 2012, the Wizards announced that John Wall would be sidelined for about eight weeks after being diagnosed with the early stages of what could become a stress fracture in his left knee. No surgery was required, but Wall had to begin rehabilitation immediately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season\nWatford Football Club is a football club from Watford, Hertfordshire, England. The club played in the 2012\u201313 Football League Championship for the sixth consecutive season since relegation from the Premier League in 2006\u201307. The club also competed in the FA Cup and the Football League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season\nDespite guiding the club to an 11th-placed finish in 2009\u201310, the club's 3rd highest points tally for 9 years, manager Sean Dyche was dismissed and replaced by Gianfranco Zola following the club's takeover by Udinese and Granada owner Giampaolo Pozzo. The club captain was central midfielder John Eustace, although due to injury, Goalkeeper Manuel Almunia was captain for the majority of the season. During the summer transfer window, the club sold two key first team players; academy graduate Adrian Mariappa and goalkeeper Scott Loach. To replace them, Watford brought in two experienced players in Manuel Almunia and Fitz Hall. All other incoming transfers were loan players, mainly from Udinese and Granada. Zola later revealed that the club only loaned the players due to the short time scale between the completion of the take over and the transfer deadline day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season\nWatford had a relatively poor start to the season, losing 7 of their first 13 games, including a heavy 5\u20131 loss to Derby County F.C.. In the subsequent months however, Watford began to win more matches and started to climb the table, rising to hold the 6th position by the end of 2012. Towards the end of the season, Watford were in contention for an automatic promotion spot together with Hull.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season\nOn a dramatic final day of the regular season, Hull failed to guarantee their automatic promotion by only drawing to league champions Cardiff, however Watford were unable to capitalise against Leeds and finished the season in 3rd place, entering the play-offs. Over two games, Watford beat Leicester City on aggregate in a dramatic semi-final that saw them face Crystal Palace in the play-off final at Wembley where Crystal Palace won and sealed promotion to the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Background\nSean Dyche replaced Malky Mackay as Watford manager at the end of the 2010\u201311 season. Following the departures of Mackay, Danny Graham, Will Buckley and Don Cowie, Watford were tipped for relegation in 2011\u201312 by some bookmakers and media organisations. However, Watford finished the season in 11th place with 64 points; Watford's third highest points tally since the departure of Graham Taylor as manager in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Background\nAt the end of the season, it was confirmed that Rene Gilmartin, Michael Bryan, Josh Walker, Chez Isaac and Tom James would be released \u2013 their contracts expired at the end of the 2011\u201312 season. Former manager Graham Taylor stepped down as chairman shortly before UEFA Euro 2012, indicating that he felt the timing was right and that he was keen to pursue other interests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Takeover\nIn June 2012, Laurence Bassini indicated that he was looking to sell the club. Amid reports that the club's bondholders had called in the debt due to an act of default, Bassini stressed that the decision to sell was his alone, motivated by a wish to spend more time with his family. A company owned by Giampaolo Pozzo and his family completed the takeover of Watford on 29 June 2012. The management structure of the club changed significantly in the following weeks, with Rafaelle Riva appointed chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Takeover\nFormer West Ham United chief executive Scott Duxbury and technical director Gianluca Nani took up similar roles with Watford, while ex-West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola replaced Sean Dyche. The club also stated an intention to make use of the Pozzo family's scouting network, which identifies players for Udinese in Serie A and Granada in La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Pre season\nWatford did not make any signings prior to the start of their pre-season campaign, but their first two games against local featured triallists Daniel Pudil and Almen Abdi. In both matches \u2013 away to Boreham Wood and Wealdstone \u2013 Watford changed all eleven players at half time. Both games finished as 1\u20131 draws. The team's first win of pre-season came in a visit to Irish side Cork City, and was followed by an 8\u20130 win in a match against Barnet at Watford's training ground in London Colney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Pre season\nWatford's only pre-season game at Vicarage Road was a testimonial match for defender Lloyd Doyley, who started his professional career at the club in 2001. Before the start of the game, Doyley entered the pitch to a guard of honour, and when he was substituted with 15 minutes remaining he was given a standing ovation by supporters. However, a goal from Tottenham's Jermain Defoe gave the visitors a 1\u20130 victory. Watford finished their pre-season schedule with a 3\u20130 win at Gillingham, with two goals from Mat\u011bj Vydra and one from Piero Mingoia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Football League Cup\nThe Football League Championship season started later than usual, due to the Olympic games being held in London. Thus, Watford's first competitive game was in the League Cup, at home to League Two side Wycombe Wanderers. The game saw few chances, and was goalless after 90 minutes. Substitute Chris Iwelumo scored the winner for Watford in extra time, assisted by debutant Mat\u011bj Vydra. In the next round, Watford again hosted League Two opposition in the form of eventual cup runners up Bradford City. After a goalless first half, Ikechi Anya put Watford into the lead in the 71st minute, on his first start for the club. However, Bradford scored two late goals to win the match 2\u20131. Both of Bradford's goals were scored shortly after direct free kicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, FA Cup\nPremier League and Championship clubs enter the FA Cup at the third round stage, where they are joined by the 20 winners from the second round for a total of 64 teams. The draw took place on 2 December 2012. Watford were drawn away to 2011 winners and eventual finalists Manchester City where Manchester City won thanks to goals from Tevez, Barry and Lopes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Players, Statistics\nJoined club = Year that player became a Watford first team player", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Players, Statistics\nAge = Age at end of season (27 May 2013)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Players, Transfers\nUnless a country is specified, all clubs play in the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Players, Transfers, In\nThe transfer window opened on 1 July, but Watford did not make any signings in the early part of pre-season, amid reports that the club was under a transfer embargo due to an administrative error. The club confirmed seven signings at the end of July, five of which were season long loans from other clubs owned by the Pozzo family. The permanent transfers were goalkeeper Manuel Almunia and centre back Fitz Hall, following the departures of Scott Loach and Adrian Mariappa in their respective positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Players, Transfers, Out\nAt the end of the 2011\u201312 season, the club announced that five players would be released at the end of their contracts. The summer transfer window opened on 1 July, and two high-profile departures followed during pre-season. 2011\u201312 Player of the Season Adrian Mariappa joined newly promoted Premier League side Reading on 17 July. Two days later, Scott Loach \u2013 the team's most-used goalkeeper from the previous season \u2013 transferred to Ipswich Town, the club he supported as a child. The club's final sale of the summer was Martin Taylor to Sheffield Wednesday. Taylor extended his contract shortly before Sean Dyche's departure from the club, and captained the team during his final two games under Gianfranco Zola, but was allowed to leave on the final day of the transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Players, Loans, In\nWatford signed 14 players on season-long loans in the summer transfer window. 12 players joined from clubs also owned by the Pozzo family; 10 from Udinese and 2 from Granada. Watford also signed Nathaniel Chalobah and Geoffrey Mujangi Bia from Chelsea and Standard Li\u00e8ge respectively. Jean-Alain Fanchone returned to Udinese in January, while Fernando Forestieri also signed a permanent contract with Watford that month. The club added a 15th loan player in March, with Matthew Briggs joining from Fulham until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231307-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Watford F.C. season, Reserves and academy\nIn addition, defender Matt Bevans had his scholarship from the previous year extended by a number of months after an injury kept him out for most of the previous season. In July 2011, Mensah signed a contract that saw him turn professional on his 17th birthday, later signing an extended contract in January 2013. In June 2013 O'Nien signed a one-year professional deal with the club, while Connolly, Wilmore, Eaton and English were released. Westlake was offered an extension to his scholarship of six months after missing a large period of the season through injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231308-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Weber State Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Weber State Wildcats men's basketball team represented Weber State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wildcats, were led by seventh year head coach Randy Rahe and played their home games at the Dee Events Center. They were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 30\u20137, 18\u20132 in Big Sky play to finish in second place. They advanced to the championship game of the Big Sky Tournament where they lost to Montana. They were invited to the 2013 CIT where they defeated Cal Poly, Air Force, Oral Roberts and Northern Iowa to advance to the championship game where they lost to East Carolina. They set a school record for wins in a season with 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231309-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wellington Phoenix FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the Wellington Phoenix's sixth season in the A-League. Many pegged the club to be a strong contender in the 2012\u201313 season, but the Phoenix finished in last place with points equal to Melbourne Heart, but with an inferior goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231309-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wellington Phoenix FC 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-00231309-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wellington Phoenix FC 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-00231309-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wellington Phoenix FC season, Statistics, Appearances\nPlayer Started \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Subbed In \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Suspended \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Injured/sick \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player on International Duty \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Player Left Club/Not Signed/Loan Expired", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231310-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Alliance League\nThe 2012\u201313 Welsh Alliance League, known as the Lock Stock Welsh Alliance League for sponsorship reasons, is the 29th season of the Welsh Alliance League, which consists of two divisions: the third and fourth levels of the Welsh football pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231310-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Alliance League\nThere are fifteen teams in Division 1 and thirteen teams in Division 2, with the champions of Division 1 promoted to the Cymru Alliance and the bottom team relegated to Division 2. In Division 2, the champions, and runners-up are promoted to Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231310-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Alliance League\nThe season began on 10 August 2012 and concluded on 11 May 2013 with Caernarfon Town as Division 1 champions and Llangefni Town relegated to Division 2. In Division 2, Llandyrnog United were champions with Llanfairpwll as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231310-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Alliance League, Division 1, Teams\nHolyhead Hotspur were champions in the previous season and were promoted to the Cymru Alliance. They were replaced by Llangefni Town who were relegated from the Cymru Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231310-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Alliance League, Division 1, Teams\nLlanfairpwll and Caernarfon Wanderers were relegated and replaced by Division 2 champions, Glantraeth and runners-up, Llanberis, who were promoted to Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231310-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Alliance League, Division 2, Teams\nGlantraeth were champions in the previous season and were promoted to Division 1 along with runners-up, Llanberis. They were replaced by Gwynedd League champions, Penrhyndeudraeth and Vale of Clwyd and Conwy Football League runners-up, Meliden who were promoted to Division 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 FAW Welsh Cup was the 126th season of the annual knockout tournament for competitive football teams in Wales. The 2012\u201313 tournament commenced on 18 August 2012, and will run until the final in May 2013. The winner of the Cup qualifies to the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup, Qualifying Round One\nQualifying Round One will be played on either Saturday 18th or Sunday 19 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup, Qualifying Round Two\nQualifying Round Two will be played on either Saturday 8th or Sunday 9 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup, Round one\nRound One will be played on either Saturday 6th or Sunday 7 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup, Round two\nRound Two was played on either Saturday 10th or Sunday 11 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup, Round three\nRound Three will be played on either Saturday 8th or Sunday 9 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup, Round Four\nRound Four will be played on either Saturday 26th or Sunday 27 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231311-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe Quarter-finals were played on 1 and 2 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231312-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Football League Division One\nThe 2012\u201313 Welsh Football League Division One began on 10 August 2012 and ended on 18 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231312-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Football League Division One, Team changes from 2011\u201312\nMonmouth Town, Tata Steel and Caerleon were promoted from the Welsh Football League Division Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231312-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Football League Division One, Team changes from 2011\u201312\nCaerau (Ely), Cardiff Corinthians, Cwmaman Institute were relegated to the Welsh Football League Division Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231312-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Football League Division One, Team changes from 2011\u201312\nBarry Town withdrew from the division and were adopted to the Welsh Football League Division Three under name Barry Town United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231313-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh League Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Welsh League Cup was the 21st season of the Welsh League Cup, which was established in 1992. A new format was introduced with eight feeder league clubs involved for the first time. The winners progressed into the second round, alongside the twelve Welsh Premier League clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231314-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League, known as the Corbett Sports Welsh Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the 21st season of the Welsh Premier League, the highest football league within Wales since its establishment in 1992. The season began on 17 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231314-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League, Teams\nFollowing a decision by UEFA not to allow Neath F.C. a license to compete both domestically and in continental competitions, it was ruled that they would be relegated no matter where in the league they finished. Bottom club Newtown were spared relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231314-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League, Teams\nGap Connah's Quay finished first in the 2011\u201312 Cymru Alliance to return to the Welsh Premier League after a two-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231314-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League, Llanelli A.F.C.\nOn 22 April 2013, Llanelli A.F.C. were liquidated by HM Revenue and Customs at the High court in London with debts of \u00a321,000; this did not affect the final league table as the club had already played all their league fixtures prior to the ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231314-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League, Results\nTeams will play each other twice on a home and away basis, before the league is split into two groups at the end of January 2013 - the top six and the bottom six. Clubs in these groups will play each other twice again to bring the total fixture count to 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231314-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League, UEFA Europa League play-offs\nTeams who finished in positions third through eighth at the end of the regular season will play-off to determine the second participant for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231315-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier Women's League\nThe 2012\u201313 Welsh Premier League was the fourth season of the Welsh Premier League (women), Wales' premier football league. It is the first season to feature a single division league. The season starts on 16 September 2012 and ended on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231315-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier Women's League\nAfter several high defeats Cearphilly Castle withdrew from the league after ten matches. All results including them were then wiped from the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231315-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier Women's League\nThe title was won by Cardiff City for the first time. They finished ahead of reigning champions Cardiff Met. on superior goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231315-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Premier Women's League, Results\nNewcastly Emlyn set a Premier League record win when they defeated Caerphilly Castle 36\u20130 on 12 January 2013. On that day Bethan Davies also set the record for most goals scored in a match with ten. Both records were later broken by Cardiff Met. Ladies, when then won 43\u20130 at Caerphilly Castle, with Emily Allen and Adele Hooper scoring 15 and 12 goals respectively. Those records are void now after the withdrawal of Caerphilly Castle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231316-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Women's Cup\nThe 2012/13 FAW Women's Cup was the 21st season of Wales' national association football knock-out competition. It saw 28 clubs apply for entry, three less than previous season. In the same final as last year, Cardiff City Ladies defended their title by winning 3\u20131 over Cardiff Met. Ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231316-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Women's Cup, Format\nPlay is a straight knock-out. The four semi finalists from the previous season were given a bye to the second round. They are holders Cardiff City Ladies, runners up Cardiff Met. Ladies (formerly UWIC), as well as semi-finalists Swansea City and Port Talbot Town (formerly Trefelin).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231316-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Women's Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first round is regionalised between North and South Wales . Bye to second round: Cardiff City Ladies, Cardiff Met. Ladies, Swansea City and Port Talbot Town North:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231316-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Women's Cup, First round\nGame was originally drawn to be played at Cyncoed Ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231316-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Women's Cup, Second round\nRound was played on 21 and 28 October 2012. The match between Caernarfon Town and Llanidloes has been switched to a home tie at Llanidloes after it was postponed to 4 November due to bad weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231316-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Welsh Women's Cup, Final\nBoth teams played last year's final, which Cardiff City won in a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231317-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wessex Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Wessex Football League (known as the Sydenhams Football League (Wessex) for sponsorship reasons) was the 27th season of the Wessex Football League since its establishment in 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231317-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wessex Football League\nThe league consisted of two divisions: the Premier Division and Division One. Both divisions this season consisted of fewer teams than last season \u2013 the Premier Division had 21 teams and Division One had 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231317-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wessex Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 21 teams, reduced from 22 the previous season, after Winchester City were promoted to the Southern League, Laverstock & Ford were relegated to Division One, and Brading Town withdrew from the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231317-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wessex Football League, Premier Division\nTwo new teams joined the Premier Division, both promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231317-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wessex Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 16 teams, reduced from 18 the previous season after AFC Portchester and Verwood Town were promoted to the Premier Division, and Warminster Town transferred to the Western League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231318-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Bank Premier League\nThe 2012\u201313 West Bank Premier League was the 10th season of the top division in the West Bank, Palestine, and the 5th since the league became a yearly competition in 2008. It started on 31 August 2012 and finished on 4 May 2013. The defending champions are Hilal Al-Quds, who won their first title the season before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231318-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Bank Premier League, Teams\nThis season, the league has expanded from 10 to 12 teams. As a result, 4 teams (Ahli Al-Khaleel, Hilal Areeha, Islami Qalqilya and Jenin) were promoted from the West Bank First League while only 2 teams (Thaqafi Tulkarem and Markaz Tulkarem) were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231319-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was West Bromwich Albion's third consecutive season in the Premier League, and their seventh in total. During the season, they also competed in the League Cup and the FA Cup. The club enjoyed their best ever season in the Premier League, finishing eighth in the league with a club record 49 points and 14 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231319-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season\nTheir manager for the season was Steve Clarke, after former manager Roy Hodgson left to manage the England national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231319-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231319-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231320-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Coast Conference men's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 West Coast Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2012 and ended with the 2013 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament at the Orleans Arena March 6\u201311, 2013 in Las Vegas. The regular season began in November, with the conference schedule starting at the end of December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231320-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Coast Conference men's basketball season\nThis was the 62nd season for the conference, and the 24th under its current name as \"West Coast Conference\". The conference began as the California Basketball Association in 1952, became the West Coast Athletic Conference in 1956, and dropped the word \"Athletic\" in 1989. After having no changes from 1980 until 2011, the conference will have its second change in three years in 2013. Original conference founder, and a fellow faith-based, private school Pacific will rejoin the conference. Pacific will come from the Big West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231320-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Coast Conference men's basketball season, Conference games, Composite Matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. (x) indicates games remaining this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 89], "content_span": [90, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231321-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Coast Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2012\u201313 West Coast Conference women's basketball season began with practices in October 2012 and ended with the 2013 West Coast Conference Women's Basketball Tournament at the Orleans Arena March 6\u201311, 2013 in Las Vegas. The regular season began in November, with the conference schedule starting at the end of December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231321-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Coast Conference women's basketball season\nThis season was the 28th for WCC women's basketball, which began in the 1985\u201386 season when the league was known as the West Coast Athletic Conference (WCAC). It was also the 23rd season under the West Coast Conference name (the conference began as the California Basketball Association in 1952, became the WCAC in 1956, and dropped the word \"Athletic\" in 1989). After having no changes from 1980 until 2011, the conference will have its second change in three years in 2013. Original conference founder, and a fellow faith-based, private school Pacific will rejoin the conference. Pacific will come from the Big West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231321-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Coast Conference women's basketball season, Conference games, Composite Matrix\nThis table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. (x) indicates games remaining this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 91], "content_span": [92, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231322-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Ham United F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was West Ham United's first season back in the Premier League after a one-year absence. West Ham gained promotion by winning the 2012 Championship play-off final against Blackpool at the end of the 2011\u201312 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231322-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Ham United 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-00231322-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Ham United F.C. 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, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231323-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Midlands (Regional) League\nThe 2012\u201313 West Midlands (Regional) League season was the 113th 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-00231323-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Midlands (Regional) League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 19 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-00231324-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team represented West Virginia University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Mountaineers were led by sixth year head coach Bob Huggins and played their home games at WVU Coliseum. This was the Mountaineers first season as members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 13\u201319, 6\u201312 in Big 12 play to finish in eighth place. They lost in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament to Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231324-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team, Before the Season, Recruits\nElijah Macon has committed to West Virginia, but he is doing a Post-Graduate year at Brewster Academy and won't join the Mountaineers until the 2013-14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 85], "content_span": [86, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231325-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West of Scotland Super League Premier Division\nThe 2012\u201313 West of Scotland Super League Premier Division was the eleventh Super League Premier Division competition since the formation of the Scottish Junior Football Association, West Region in 2002. The season began on 18 August 2012. The winners of this competition gain direct entry to round one of the 2013\u201314 Scottish Cup. The two last placed sides were relegated to the Super League First Division. The third-bottom placed side entered the West Region league play-off, a two-legged tie against the third placed side in the Super League First Division, to decide the final promotion/relegation spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231325-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West of Scotland Super League Premier Division, Member clubs for the 2012\u201313 season\nGlenafton Athletic and Shotts Bon Accord were promoted from the Super League First Division, replacing Largs Thistle and Kilbirnie Ladeside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 91], "content_span": [92, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231325-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West of Scotland Super League Premier Division, Member clubs for the 2012\u201313 season\nPollok had retained their place in the league after defeating Renfrew in the West Region League play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 91], "content_span": [92, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231325-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 West of Scotland Super League Premier Division, Results, West Region League play-off\nLargs Thistle, who finished third in the Super League First Division, defeated Ashfield 4 \u2013 3 on penalty kicks after a 7 \u2013 7 draw on aggregate in the West Region League play-off. Largs will replace Ashfield in the 2013\u201314 West of Scotland Super League Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231326-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Western Carolina Catamounts men's basketball team represented Western Carolina University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Catamounts, led by eighth year head coach Larry Hunter, played their home games at the Ramsey Center and were members of the North Division of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 14\u201319, 9\u20139 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for third place in the North Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the SoCon Tournament to the College of Charleston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231327-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Football League\nThe 2012\u201313 Western Football League season (known as the 2012\u201313 Toolstation Western Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 111th in the history of the Western Football League, a football competition in England. Teams were divided into two divisions; the Premier and the First. The season began on 4 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231327-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Football League\nThe league champions for the first time in their history were Bishop Sutton. The champions of Division One were Sherborne Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231327-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured five new clubs in a league of 20, increased from 18 the previous season after Merthyr Town were promoted to the Southern League, and Corsham Town and Sherborne Town were relegated to the First Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231327-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Football League, First Division\nThe First Division featured five new clubs in a league of 21, increased from 19 the previous season after Cadbury Heath, Melksham Town and Gillingham Town were promoted to the Premier Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231328-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Illinois Leathernecks men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Western Illinois Leathernecks men's basketball team represented Western Illinois University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Leathernecks, led by fifth year head coach Jim Molinari, played their home games at Western Hall and were members of The Summit League. They finished the season 22\u20139, 13\u20133 in Summit League play to claim a share of the regular season conference title. They advanced to the semifinals of The Summit League Tournament where they lost to North Dakota State. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they lost in the first round to Purdue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231329-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers men's basketball team represented Western Kentucky University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hilltoppers were led by head coach Ray Harper which was his first full year after coaching the final 19 games in 2011\u201312. They played their home games at E. A. Diddle Arena and were members of the East Division of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 20\u201316, 10\u201310 in Sun Belt play to finish in fourth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231329-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers basketball team\nThey were champions of the Sun Belt Tournament, winning the championship game over FIU, to earn an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Kansas. T. J. Price and George Fant made the All-Conference Team; Fant and Brandon Harris were selected to the SBC Tournament Team, and Price was tournament MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231330-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball team represented Western Michigan University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Broncos, led by tenth year head coach Steve Hawkins, played their home games at the University Arena and were members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 22\u201313, 10\u20136 in MAC play to be champions of the West Division. They advanced to the semifinals of the MAC Tournament where they lost to Ohio. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they defeated North Dakota State and Wyoming to advance to the semifinals where they lost to George Mason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WDM10 (talk | contribs) at 21:19, 6 April 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season was the club's inaugural season since its establishment in 2012. The club participated in the A-League for the first time, winning the competition and finishing as runner-up in the 2013 A-League Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 4 April 2012, Western Sydney Wanderers was established by FFA as a Western Sydney based club to compete in the A-League. On 17 May, Tony Popovic was announced as inaugural head coach. Popovic joined the club on a four-year deal after requesting to be released from the final year of his contracted role as assistant manager of Crystal Palace. On 22 May, Ante Milicic joined the club as assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 25 June, the first players to sign to the new club were announced, these were Aaron Mooy from St Mirren, Tarek Elrich from Newcastle Jets and Kwabena Appiah-Kubi from Central Coast Mariners. All three players signed a one-year contract, as would all players in the inaugural squad, with exception of two (Beauchamp and Ono). On 30 June, Sydney players Michael Beauchamp, Mark Bridge and Shannon Cole, as well as Nikolai Topor-Stanley from Newcastle Jets FC all signed for the club. Beauchamp was the first player to sign past the inaugural season, with a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0002-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 2 July, Ante \u010covi\u0107 joined the squad from Melbourne Victory and Labinot Haliti joined from Newcastle Jets. On 25 July, after just two months of developing a squad, the club played its first friendly match against local club, Nepean. The game ended in a 0\u20135 win for Wanderers, with Haliti scoring one and Gibbs scoring four in front of a crowd of 3,500. On 31 July, Adam D'Apuzzo signed to the new club from APIA Leichhardt Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0002-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 2 August, Jerrad Tyson joined the squad from Gold Coast United, Jason Trifiro joined the squad from South Melbourne and Reece Caira joined from Aston Villa. On 8 August, Tahj Minniecon joined the squad from Gold Coast United. On 13 August, Dino Kresinger joined the squad from Cibalia and Mateo Poljak joined from Dinamo Zagreb. On 21 August, J\u00e9rome Polenz joined the squad from Union Berlin. On 11 September, Iacopo La Rocca joined the squad from Grasshoppers and Youssouf Hersi joined from Alki Larnaca. On 28 September, Japanese midfielder Shinji Ono became the club's International Marquee player, signing to the club for two years from J. League Division 1 team Shimizu S-Pulse. On 3 October, Joey Gibbs joined the squad from Marconi Stallions FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 6 October, Western Sydney Wanderers played their first competitive match of any kind against Central Coast Mariners in the first round of the A-League season. The match, played in front of a home crowd, ended in a 0\u20130 draw. On 12 October, Wanderers lost to Adelaide United by a score of 1\u20130. On 20 October, Wanderers lost to Sydney by a score of 0\u20131 in front of a sell out crowd in the first ever Sydney Derby match. On 22 October, Wanderers defeated Brisbane Roar 0\u20131 with Bridge scoring to secure the team's first competitive win of any kind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 2 November, Wanderers defeated Melbourne Heart 2\u20131 at home with a goal from Bridge and an own goal from Gerhardt. On 10 November, Wanderers lost to Newcastle Jets by a score of 1\u20132 with Gibbs providing the only goal. On 18 November, a 10-manned Wanderers defeated Perth Glory 0\u20131 with Hersi sent off on the 38th minute after a goal scored by La Rocca. On 24 November, Wanderers lost to Melbourne Victory by a score of 0\u20132. On 2 December, Wanderers lost to Wellington Phoenix by a score of 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 9 December, Wanderers defeated Brisbane Roar 1\u20130 with a goal by Ono. On 15 December, Wanderers defeated Sydney 0\u20132 in the second Sydney Derby match of the season, with goals from Hersi and Beauchamp. On 21 December, Wanderers defeated Adelaide United 6\u20131 with a hat-trick from Bridge, as well as goals from Kresinger, Ono and Gibbs. On 27 December, Wanderers drew against Perth Glory 1\u20131 with a goal by Haliti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 1 January 2013, Wanderers defeated Melbourne Victory 2\u20131 with Ono scoring both goals. The result saw Wanderers overtake Melbourne Victory for third place in the league. On 3 January, defenders Adam D\u2019Apuzzo and Shannon Cole extended their contracts with the club for a further one year until 2014. On 6 January, a ten manned Wanderers lost to Central Coast Mariners by a score 0\u20132 with Trifiro sent off early in the second half. On 9 January, Rocky Visconte signed a short-term contract with the club until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 13 January, Wanderers bounced back with a 0\u20132 win over Wellington Phoenix with Topor-Stanley and Haliti scoring. On 20 January, Wanderers continued their winning ways, defeating Brisbane Roar 1\u20132 with goals from Bridge and Hersi. On 26 January, Wanderers defeated Melbourne Heart 1\u20130 with a goal by Ono after Polenz was sent off early in the first half. On 3 February, Wanderers defeated Adelaide United 2\u20134 with goals by from Hersi and one each from Bridge and Poljak. On 9 February, Wanderers defeated Newcastle Jets 2\u20131 with two goals from Hersi and Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0004-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nThe win took Wanderers to second place in the league. On 16 February, Wanderers defeated Melbourne Victory 1\u20132 with goals from La Rocca and Ono. On 23 February, Wanderers defeated Perth Glory 1\u20130 with a goal by Mooy. On 2 March, Wanderers defeated Central Coast Mariners 0\u20131 with a goal by Haliti. The win saw Wanderers overtake Central Coast Mariners for first place in the league. On 7 March, Josh Barresi signed to the club on a two-year first team professional contract as an injury replacement for Tahj Minniecon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0004-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 10 March, Wanderers defeated Wellington Phoenix 2\u20131 with Ono and Bridge both scoring penalty kicks to set an A-League record of nine straight match wins. On 16 March, Wanderers defeated Melbourne Heart 1\u20133 with two goals from Haliti and one from La Rocca. On 22 March, goalkeeper Carlos Saliadarre signed a short-term contract with Wanderers from Blacktown Spartans until the end of the season as an injury replacement for Jerrad Tyson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0004-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 23 March, Wanderers broke their 10-game winning streak after a 1\u20131 draw against Sydney in the third Sydney Derby match of the season in front of a sold out crowd. Cole scored Wanderers only goal shortly after Sydney received a red card, with La Rocca also receiving a red card later in the game. On 29 March, Wanderers ended their debut A-League season on a high after defeating Newcastle Jets 0\u20133 with two goals from Bridge and one from Visconte. The win secured Wanderers first place in the league, with the team winning the Premiers' Plate, as well as an A-League Finals position and a 2014 AFC Champions League spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231331-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC season, Season overview\nOn 12 April, Wanderers defeated Brisbane Roar 2\u20130 at home in the semi-final match of the A-League Finals, to secure a place in the Grand Final. Kresinger and Ono supplied the goals before Hersi was sent off after receiving a second yellow card. On 21 April, Wanderers played against Central Coast Mariners in the 2013 A-League Grand Final. The match, played at Sydney Football Stadium in front of a full crowd, saw Wanderers lose 0\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231332-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers W-League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers FC W-League season was the club's inaugural season. The club participated in the W-League for the first time, placing sixth in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231332-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Western Sydney Wanderers W-League 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231333-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team represented Wichita State University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Charles Koch Arena, which has a capacity of 10,506. They played one home game at Intrust Bank Arena. They were in their 68th season as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference and 107th season overall. They were led by sixth-year head coach Gregg Marshall. They finished the season 30\u20139, 12\u20136 in Missouri Valley play to finish in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231333-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wichita State Shockers men's basketball team\nThey advanced to the championship game of the Missouri Valley Tournament where they lost to Creighton. They received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. They received a 9 seed in the West Region, where they defeated 8 seed Pittsburgh and 1 seed Gonzaga to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. In the West Region semifinals they defeated 13 seed La Salle and 2 seed Ohio State in the regional finals to be crowned West Region Champions and advance to the Final Four for the second time in school history and first time since 1965. In the Final Four they lost to Louisville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231334-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wichita Thunder season\nThe 2012\u201313 Wichita Thunder season was the 21st season of the Central Hockey League (CHL) franchise in Wichita, Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231334-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wichita Thunder season, Off-season\nThe Wichita Thunder announced that the contract for Head Coach Kevin McClelland was extended through the 2014-15 CHL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231334-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wichita Thunder season, Transactions\nThe Thunder have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231335-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wigan Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 English football season was Wigan Athletic's eighth consecutive season in the Premier League. The club competed in the League Cup and reached both the semi-finals and the final of the FA Cup for the first time in their history. They beat Everton 3\u20130 at Goodison Park, with all three goals scored within a four-minute spell, to progress to the semi-final, and defeated Millwall at Wembley Stadium to reach the final. On 11 May, the club won their first ever FA Cup after a 1\u20130 win against Manchester City in the final. The club then went on to set the unwanted record of becoming the first ever team to win the FA Cup and be relegated in the same season, going down after a 4\u20131 defeat to Arsenal on 14 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231336-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team represented The College of William & Mary during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Tribe, led by tenth year head coach Tony Shaver, played their home games at Kaplan Arena and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the regular season 13\u201316 overall and 7\u201311 in CAA conference play to finish in eighth place. They lost to James Madison in the quarterfinals of the CAA Tournament. Following the season, sophomore guard Marcus Thornton was named to the second team all-CAA while junior forward Tim Rusthoven was named to the third team all-CAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231336-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team, Preseason\nThe CAA coaches preseason poll, released on October 16, predicted William & Mary to finish in ninth place in the CAA. Guard Marcus Thornton, a sophomore, was selected to the preseason all conference second team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231337-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Winnipeg Jets season\nThe 2012\u201313 Winnipeg Jets season was the 14th season for the National Hockey League franchise and the second in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The franchise played in Atlanta since the 1999\u20132000 NHL season, and relocated to Winnipeg following the conclusion of the 2010\u201311 NHL season. The regular season was reduced from its usual 82 games to 48 due to a lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231337-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Winnipeg Jets season, Regular season\nThe Jets struggled on the power play during the regular season and finished 30th overall in power-play percentage at 14.09% (21 for 149).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231337-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Winnipeg Jets season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Jets. Stats reflect time with the Jets only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231337-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Winnipeg Jets season, Transactions\nWinnipeg has been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231337-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Winnipeg Jets season, Draft picks\nWinnipeg's picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231338-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Winthrop Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Winthrop Eagles men's basketball team represented Winthrop University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by first year head coach Pat Kelsey, played their home games at the Winthrop Coliseum and were members of the South Division of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 14\u201317, 6\u201310 in Big South play to finish in fifth place in the South Division. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big South Tournament to Charleston Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231339-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was Bo Ryan's 12th season as head coach at Wisconsin. The Badgers played their home games at the Kohl Center and were members of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 23\u201312, 12\u20136 in Big Ten play to tie for fourth place. The team advanced to the championship game of the 2013 Big Ten Tournament where it lost to Ohio State. Wisconsin received an at-large bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament where the team lost in the second round to Ole Miss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231340-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey season\nThe Wisconsin Badgers represented the University of Wisconsin in WCHA women's ice hockey. The Badgers attempted to win the NCAA tournament for the fifth time, in the school's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231341-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Wofford Terriers men's basketball team represented Wofford College during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Terriers, led by 11th year head coach Mike Young, played their home games at the Benjamin Johnson Arena and were members of the South Division of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 13\u201319, 7\u201311 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for third place in the South Division. they lost in the first round of the SoCon Tournament to Georgia Southern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 114th season of competitive league football in the history of English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers. The club competed in the second tier of the English football system, the Football League Championship. They had returned to the second level having been relegated from the Premier League after three seasons during the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nNorwegian manager St\u00e5le Solbakken was appointed to begin the season as the club's manager, but he was sacked on 5 January with the team in 18th place and having been eliminated from the FA Cup by a non-league club. He was swiftly replaced by former Doncaster Rovers manager Dean Saunders who oversaw the remaining twenty games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nAfter Saunders failed to bring any upturn, the club suffered relegation for a second successive season to drop into the third level for the first time since 1988\u201389. This made them the only club to twice experience back-to-back relegations from the top flight, having already suffered this previously in the mid 1980s. Three days after their relegation was confirmed, Saunders was fired having held the post for only four months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nHaving been relegated from the Premier League after three seasons, the club sought to put a new playing style in place under new manager St\u00e5le Solbakken who officially became the permanent replacement for Mick McCarthy on 1 July. In contrast to McCarthy's preference for British and Irish players, the Norwegian used the foreign market for all of his summer signings, with Bakary Sako, Razak Boukari, Bj\u00f6rn Sigur\u00f0arson and Georg Margreitter signing permanent deals as well as the loan captures of Tongo Doumbia and S\u0142awomir Peszko. Despite these incomings, the transfer window saw the sale of several key players with leading goalscorer Steven Fletcher exiting for a club record \u00a314 million fee, and both Matt Jarvis and Michael Kightly also remaining in the Premier League with new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nThe players began pre-season training on 9 July, which featured a week at a training camp in Ireland. After four pre-season matches, their first competitive game of the campaign saw the team narrowly win a League Cup tie against Aldershot after a penalty shootout. League football began on 18 August with a 0\u20131 defeat at Leeds, before the team registered their first victory at Molineux in nine months by beating Barnsley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nAfter an inconsistent start September brought a run of four consecutive victories to lift the team up the table. Victory at fellow newly relegated club Blackburn in early October placed Wolves in third place, which was to be their highest position of the season. These results came at a price as their injury list grew with Razak Boukari, Stephen Hunt and S\u0142awomir Peszko all sidelined with long-term problems. Winger Jermaine Pennant was therefore loaned to help but the team hit a poor run of form and failed to win any of their next ten fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nDecember began with a halting of this poor sequence as three wins were recorded from four games, but their three games over the festive period were all lost, leading Solbakken to declare that they were \"in a crisis\". When the following game - a loss at Luton - brought their first exit from the FA Cup to a non-league side since 1986, he was fired as manager after six months in the role. He later expressed disappointment at owner Steve Morgan offering him such a limited period of time to oversee a reshaping of the club's playing culture and identity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nIn contrast to the club's \"drawn-out\" recruitment process after the dismissal of Mick McCarthy, Solbakken's replacement was swiftly announced within two days as former Doncaster Rovers' manager Dean Saunders was unveiled on 7 January as Wolves' fourth different manager within twelve months. Steve Morgan defended the changes and stated that he hoped Saunders would be with the club \"for a long period of time\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nAt the time of Saunders' first game at the helm, the team sat in 18th position six points clear of the relegation zone and nine points from the play-off places. He said that, while he believed promotion still remained possible, \"the more likely scenario is we\u2019re going to creep up the league.\" He soon used the January transfer window to make two loan signings as defenders Kaspars Gork\u0161s and Jack Robinson were brought in from the top flight. The manager's first game brought a 1\u20131 draw against Blackburn, which was to be the first of nine winless games under his command.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nSaunders' first win arrived at the start of March, by which time the team had slumped into the Championship relegation zone for the first time since October 1999. An upturn in form brought four wins from five games but the form of the other relegation-battling sides meant that Wolves were never any more than a single point above the relegation zone. Injuries to both of their leading goalscorers, Sylvan Ebanks-Blake and Bakary Sako, further endangered their risk of losing their Championship status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nShorn of attacking options, their final six games brought five defeats which meant relegation for a second consecutive season. A home loss to Burnley in their penultimate match effectively consigned the club to their fate, and led to some supporters storming the pitch at full-time to show their anger at the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nOnly victory on the final day, coupled with defeats for both Barnsley and Peterborough and a five-goal swing in goal difference would have prevented relegation, but in the event, Wolves lost their game at Brighton to become the first club to twice be relegated from the top division to the third level within two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season review\nAlthough Saunders initially spoke of his hopes to be allowed to rebuild the team in League One, three days later it was announced that he had become the fourth Wolves manager in fifteen months to leave his post. The club announced it would be taking an indefinite time to seek a \"head coach\" rather than a manager as it sought to restructure in preparation for their first season outside the top two divisions since 1988\u201389.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, Pre season\nThe final pre-season friendly was scheduled to be held on 11 August against Aston Villa, but was cancelled to allow Wolves to instead take up the option of playing their League Cup tie on this date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, Pre season\n\"Wolves Development XI\" pre season results: vs Leyton Orient (25 July), vs Kidderminster Harriers (27 July), vs Birmingham (1 August), vs Telford United (3 August), vs Wigan (8 August)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, Football League Championship\nA total of 24 teams competed in the Football League Championship in the 2012\u201313 season. Each team played 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, Football League Championship\nThe provisional fixture list was released on 18 June 2012, 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, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231342-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231342-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231342-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Kit\nThe season brought both new home and away kits manufactured, for the final year of their contract, by BURRDA. The new home kit featured the club's traditional gold and black colours, with the shirt having a gold collar. The away kit was a teal kit, reviving the colours used in their 1996\u201397 change strip. Both shirts featured the internet gambling company Sportingbet.com as sponsor for the final time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 48], "content_span": [49, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231343-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's CEV Cup\nThe Women's CEV Cup 2012\u201313 is the 41st edition of the European CEV Cup volleyball club tournament, the former Top Teams Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231343-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's CEV Cup, Main Phase, 1/16 Finals\nThe 16 winning teams from the 1/16 Finals will compete in the 1/8 Finals playing Home & Awaymatches. The losers of the 1/16 Final matches will qualify for the 3rd round in Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231344-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's EHF Cup\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's EHF Cup was the 32nd edition of the competition, running from 13 October 2012 to May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231344-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's EHF Cup\nTeam Tvis Holstebro defeated Metz Handball in the final overcoming a home 4-goals loss to win its first international trophy and the third win for Denmark in four years. Metz, which defeated the previous season's runner-up HC Zal\u0103u in the semifinals, was the first French team to reach the competition's final since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231345-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League was the inaugural edition of the women's field hockey national team league series. The tournament started in August 2012 in Prague, Czech Republic and finished in December 2013 in San Miguel de Tucum\u00e1n, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231345-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League\nThe Semifinals of this competition also served as a qualifier for the 2014 Women's Hockey World Cup as the 6 highest placed teams apart from the host nation and the five continental champions qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231345-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League\nThe Netherlands won the tournament's Final round for the first time after defeating Australia 5\u20131 in the final match. England won the third place match by defeating host nation Argentina 4\u20132 on a penalty shootout after a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231345-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League, Qualification\nEach national association member of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) had the opportunity to compete in the tournament, and after seeking entries to participate, 51 teams were announced to compete. However, for different reasons, the final count of participating teams was 45.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231345-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League, Qualification\nThe 8 teams ranked between 1st and 8th in the FIH World Rankings current as of April 2011 received an automatic bye to the Semifinals while the 8 teams ranked between 9th and 16th received an automatic bye to Round 2. Those sixteen teams, shown with qualifying rankings, were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231345-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League, Final ranking\nFIH issued a final ranking to determine the world ranking. The final ranking was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231346-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Final\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Final was the 1st edition of the Finals of the FIH Hockey World League for women. It was held from 30 November to 8 December 2013 in San Miguel de Tucum\u00e1n, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231346-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Final\nThe Netherlands won the tournament for the first time after defeating Australia 5\u20131 in the final. England won the third place match by defeating host nation Argentina 4\u20132 on a penalty shootout after a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231346-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Final, Qualification\nThe host nation qualified automatically in addition to 7 teams qualified from the Semifinals. The following eight teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament. These were not the rankings used to allocate teams to the pools as they were announced five days before the tournament started, but the previous update released on 30 June 2013, after the completion of the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231346-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Final, Umpires\nBelow are the 10 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231346-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Final, Statistics, Final ranking\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, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231347-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 1\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 1 was held from August to December 2012. A total of 28 teams competing in 6 events took part in this round of the tournament playing for 15 berths in the Round 2, played in February and March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231347-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 1, Qualification\nEach national association member of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) had the opportunity to compete in the tournament. Teams ranked 17th and lower in the FIH World Rankings current at the time of seeking entries for the competition were allocated to one of the Round 1 events. The following 28 teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231348-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 2\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 2 was held from February to March 2013. A total of 22 teams competed in 4 events were part in this round of the tournament playing for 8 berths in the Semifinals, played in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231348-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 2, Qualification\n8 teams ranked between 9th and 16th in the FIH World Rankings current at the time of seeking entries for the competition qualified automatically. As Canada and Ukraine withdrew from participating, only 13 teams qualified from Round 1. Additionally one nation that did not meet ranking criteria and was exempt from Round 1 hosted a Round 2 tournament. The following 22 teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231348-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 2, Valencia, Results, Fixtures\n1The match Belarus\u2013Czech Republic was suspended due to heavy rain in the first half (1\u20130). The matchday was cancelled and moved a day back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 76], "content_span": [77, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231348-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Round 2, Goalscorers\nThere were 258 goals scored in 50 matches, for an average of 5.16 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231349-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals took place in June 2013. A total of 16 teams competing in 2 events were part in this round of the tournament playing for 7 berths in the Final, played from 30 November to 8 December 2013 in San Miguel de Tucum\u00e1n, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231349-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals\nThis round also served as a qualifier for the 2014 Women's Hockey World Cup as the six highest placed teams apart from the host nation and the five continental champions qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231349-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals, Qualification\n8 teams ranked between 1st and 8th in the FIH World Rankings current at the time of seeking entries for the competition qualified automatically, in addition to 8 teams qualified from Round 2. The following sixteen teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231349-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals, Rotterdam, Umpires\nBelow are the 10 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231349-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals, London, Umpires\nBelow are the 10 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231349-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's FIH Hockey World League Semifinals, Goalscorers\nThere were 207 goals scored in 48 matches, for an average of 4.31 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 63], "content_span": [64, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231350-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's LEN Trophy\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's LEN Trophy will be the fourteenth edition of LEN's second-tier competition for women's water polo clubs. It will be contested by thirteen teams from eight countries. The group stage was played between 22 \u2013 25 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231351-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's National Cricket League season\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's National Cricket League season was the 17th season of the Women's National Cricket League, the women's domestic limited overs cricket competition in Australia. The tournament started on 13 October 2012 and finished on 13 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231351-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's National Cricket League season\nThe New South Wales Breakers won the tournament after topping the ladder at the end of the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231352-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's National League (Ireland)\nThe 2012\u201313 Women's National League was the second season of the Women's National League. This season was again sponsored by Bus \u00c9ireann. The six founding members of the league \u2013 Peamount United, Castlebar Celtic, Cork Women's F.C., Raheny United, Shamrock Rovers and Wexford Youths \u2013 were joined for the second season by DLR Waves. Raheny United won their first of two WNL titles. They also complete a league and cup double after already winning the 2012 FAI Women's Cup. Peamount United won the 2013 WNL Cup with a 6\u20133 win over Castlebar Celtic. Sara Lawlor of Peamount United was the top league goalscorer with 28 goals. She also won a second consecutive Player of the Season award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231353-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Women's Volleyball Thailand League\nThe Women's Volleyball Thailand League is the highest level of Thailand club volleyball in the 2012\u201313 season and the 8th edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231354-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 World Series Hockey\n2012\u201313 World Series Hockey was supposed to become the second season of the hockey tournament World Series Hockey, a professional league for field hockey in India. The tournament was scheduled to take place from 15 December 2012 to 20 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231355-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 World Series of Boxing\nThe 2012\u201313 World Series of Boxing was the third edition of the World Series of Boxing since its establishment in 2010 and runs from November 2012 to May 2013. The event is organised by the International Boxing Association (AIBA). The twelve teams, divided into two groups of six, contain a majority of boxers from the country in which they are based along with a smaller number of overseas boxers. The Team final bouts will be hosted in Astana, Kazakhstan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231355-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 World Series of Boxing, Competition format\nEach team competes in home and fixtures against the others in their group. The top four teams from each group will qualify for the knock-out stages. The quarter and semi-finals will also take place on a home and away basis but the final will be held at a neutral venue over two days. Each fixture consists of five fights (five rounds of three minutes) at the following weights:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231355-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 World Series of Boxing, Draft\nA 118 fighters enters the International boxers draft with just 27 being picked by the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231356-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wright State Raiders men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Wright State Raiders men's basketball team represented Wright State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Raiders, led by third year head coach Billy Donlon, played their home games at the Nutter Center and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 23\u201313, 10\u20136 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for third place. They advanced to the championship game of the Horizon League Tournament where they lost to Valparaiso. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Tulsa and Richmond to advance to the semifinals where they lost to Santa Clara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231357-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 Football League Two was Wycombe Wanderers' 125th season in existence and their nineteenth season in the Football League. This page shows the statistics of the club's players in the season, and also lists all matches that the club played during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231357-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season\nWycombe Wanderers ended the season strongly and finished in 15th place in League Two, after a poor start to the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231357-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season\nThe end of the season also saw the retirement of Gareth Ainsworth (Wycombe's player-manager). Ainsworth's career had spanned 18 years and saw him play for 10 different clubs. He made his final appearance in Wycombe's 1\u20131 draw with Port Vale on 27 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231357-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\n*Beavon left the club before the end of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231358-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Wyoming Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Wyoming Cowboys basketball team represented the University of Wyoming during the 2012\u20132013 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Larry Shyatt in his second year. They played their home games at the Arena-Auditorium in Laramie, Wyoming. The Cowboys were a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished with a record of 20\u201314 overall, 4\u201312 in Mountain West play for an eighth-place finish. They lost in the quarterfinals to New Mexico in the Mountain West Tournament. They were invited to the 2013 College Basketball Invitational where they defeated Lehigh in the first round before losing in the quarterfinals to Western Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231359-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team represented Xavier University during the 2012-13 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Chris Mack. The Musketeers competed in the Atlantic 10 Conference and played their home games at the Cintas Center. They finished the season 17\u201314, 9\u20137 in A-10 play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the first round of the A-10 Tournament to Saint Joseph's. This was the first time since the 2004\u201305 season that Xavier failed to make the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231359-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team\nThe season marked Xavier's final season as a member of the A-10 as they departed to join the new Big East Conference in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231359-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Musketeers finished the 2011\u201312 season with a record of 23\u201313, 10\u20136 in A-10 play finishing in a tie for third place. They lost to St. Bonaventure in the championship of the A-10 Tournament. They received a bid to the NCAA Tournament where they defeated Notre Dame and Lehigh before losing to Baylor in the Sweet Sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231360-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Xerez CD season\nThe 2012\u201313 Xerez CD season is the 66th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231361-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yale Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Yale Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Yale University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Bulldogs, led by 14th year head coach James Jones, played their home games at John J. Lee Amphitheater of the Payne Whitney Gymnasium and were members of the Ivy League. They finished the season 14\u201317, 8\u20136 in Ivy League play to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231362-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey season\nThe 2012\u201313 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey team represented Yale University in the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. The Bulldogs were coached by Keith Allain who was in his seventh season as head coach. His assistant coaches were Red Gendron and Dan Muse. The Bulldogs played their home games in Ingalls Rink and competed in the ECAC Hockey conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231362-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey season\nThe Bulldogs posted a regular season record of 16 wins, 10 losses, and 3 ties. They were seeded third for the 2013 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, winning their quarterfinal series, but losing in the semifinals to eventual champion Union. Yale was invited to the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament as the tournament's 15th overall seed out of 16 teams, and the 4th seed in the west regional. In their first game in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the Bulldogs defeated Minnesota, 3\u20132, on a Jesse Root goal 9 seconds into overtime. In the second round against North Dakota, Yale trailed most of the game, before netting 4 goals in the final 8 minutes to win 4\u20131 and advance to the school's first Frozen Four since 1952.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231362-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yale Bulldogs men's ice hockey season\nIn the Frozen Four at Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh, the Bulldogs scored 2 goals in the first period against UMass Lowell, before the River Hawks answered with 2 goals in the second. After a scoreless third period, captain Andrew Miller scored 6:59 into overtime to send the Bulldogs to the national championship against Quinnipiac, setting up an all-ECAC and all-Connecticut matchup. In the final, goaltender Jeff Malcolm stopped all 36 Quinnipiac shots, and the Bulldogs scored 4 to win their first national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231363-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yale Bulldogs women's ice hockey season\nThe Yale Bulldogs represented Yale University in ECAC women's ice hockey. The Bulldogs will attempt to win the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 10th season in the Football League and the 8th consecutive season at the third tier of English football 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, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nManager Gary Johnson signed nine players before the close of the summer transfer window. The season started promisingly with the club briefly topping the Football League One table in August before a 6-match losing run in September and October saw them drop in to mid-table. Having stood 12th in the league table after Boxing Day, Yeovil went on an 8-match run winning run which transformed them into promotion candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nThe signing of Paddy Madden permanently in January saw Yeovil win 11 of their final 20 games, and the team finished the season 4th in the table, a new record high finishing position, and qualified for the play-offs. Where they faced Sheffield United in the semi-final, a 1\u20130 away defeat in the first leg before a late Ed Upson goal gave Yeovil a 2\u20130 victory in the home leg. Brentford faced Yeovil in the 2013 Football League One play-off Final at Wembley Stadium, Yeovil won 2\u20131 courtesy of goals from Madden and Dan Burn and were promoted to the second-tier of English football for the first time in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nYeovil's first fixture of the season came in the League Cup first round, beating Colchester United before being defeated by Premier League side West Bromwich Albion in the second round. They were knocked out of the FA Cup by Preston North End in the first round, and reached the Southern Area semi-finals of the Football League Trophy before being beaten by Leyton Orient. Paddy Madden was the club's and League One top scorer with 23 goals, with all but one of these coming in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nThe 2011\u201312 season was the club's seventh consecutive in the third tier of the English football league system, it was Terry Skiverton's third full season in charge as manager. Yeovil started the season slowly winning only two of their first ten matches and picking up only 8 points, the sluggish form continued and by the middle of October they had slipped to the foot of the table with just 11 points from 15 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nTwo consecutive victories over Hartlepool United and Notts County were followed with the embarrassment of their FA Cup second round home replay defeat against Conference National side Fleetwood Town. With two defeats over Christmas and a draw against relegation rivals Exeter City in early January, Yeovil were still in the bottom four having picked up 21 points from 24 matches. On 9 January 2012, the club announced the return of Gary Johnson as manager and the demotion of Skiverton to the role of assistant manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nJohnson transformed Yeovil's form as they picked up 25 points from a possible 36 and the club briefly entered the top half of the table in March, with a brief blip in form in April when the club suffered their record Football League defeat 0\u20136 at home to Stevenage but the club secured their League One status with two matches to spare and finished the season in 17th position with 54 points from 46 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nThe end of the season featured another large turnover of players with eight being released, these included defenders Kelly Youga and Alistair Slowe, midfielder Billy Gibson, forwards Kieran Agard and Steve MacLean who were all released and the three first-year professionals Rhys Baggridge, Lewis Clarke and Rob Clowes were released without making a first team appearance. Seven players were offered new contracts and two contracts were also offered to Middlesbrough loanees Jonathan Grounds and Jonathan Franks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Background\nVice-captain Luke Ayling and midfielder Ed Upson agreed to new two years contracts whereas Dominic Blizzard, Richard Hinds and Gavin Williams all agreed new one-year deals. But top scorer Andy Williams and captain Paul Huntington both rejected offers of new contracts, joining Swindon Town and Preston North End respectively. Middlesbrough duo Grounds and Franks also both rejected Yeovil's approaches. Player-coach Nathan Jones left the club after seven years and 211 matches, three years of which were spent as assistant manager to Terry Skiverton, to take up a role at Charlton Athletic as their Under-21 Professional Development Coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe squad returned for pre-season training on 2 July. The squad was joined by five players who were signed during the off season, former Bristol City and Scotland international full-back Jamie McAllister, released Oldham Athletic duo Keanu Marsh-Brown and Reuben Reid, former Doncaster Rovers forward James Hayter and attacking midfielder Sam Foley after he rejected a new contract with Conference side Newport County. Midfielder Michael Woods was invited back for pre-season training after a non-contract spell at the end of last season, but did not return and Oxford City full-back James Clarke was also invited for a pre-season trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe first day of pre-season saw the signing of versatile left sided player Nathan Ralph following his release from Peterborough United and former Northampton Town winger Lewis Young. These two new players were supplemented by trialists including Clarke, Canadian goalkeeper Lucas Birnstingl, former Kilmarnock midfielder Ross Lindsay and former Southampton trainee Aarran Racine. On 4 July 2012, despite being half way through his two-year contract defender Bondz N'Gala left the club for fellow League One side Stevenage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nCentral defender Byron Webster, who had been released by Northampton Town earlier in the day, was signed on a two-year contract and the following day the club sign former loan goalkeeper Marek \u0160t\u011bch on a two-year contract. On 13 July 2012, Chelsea youngster Rohan Ince signed on a six-month loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nYeovil faced rivals Hereford United at Edgar Street on 14 July, included in the team were three more trialists; former Swansea City youngsters Casey Thomas and Joe Walsh, and Salif Ciss\u00e9, the brother of former Bristol City midfielder Kalifa. The game ended in a 1\u20131 draw with Ed Upson scoring for Yeovil. The subsequent friendly away against Southern League side Poole Town saw a cull of trialists with only Ciss\u00e9 and Racine remaining in the side, although Clarke's absence was due to injury, they were joined by former Chesterfield defender Aaron Downes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe game ended in a 2\u20130 for Yeovil thanks to a brace from Marsh\u2013Brown. On 19 July, young forward Gozie Ugwu arrived on a six-month loan from Reading making him Yeovil's eleventh signing of the summer. The same day the club confirmed that Racine and Ciss\u00e9's trials had been terminated, the club also revealed that previous shirt sponsors Jones Building Contractors had chosen not to take up the option to extend their deal and so the club were in negotiations with businesses to become the club's main sponsor for the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0006-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nMidfielder Dominic Blizzard missed the first six pre-season friendlies having suffered a broken hand in training. On 21 July, Yeovil faced League Two side Plymouth Argyle at the home of Dorchester Town The Avenue Stadium due to problems with the Huish Park pitch, Yeovil strolled to a 5\u20130 win with a hat-trick from Reuben Reid and goals from Hayter and Marsh-Brown. On 24 July, trialist Aaron Downes signed for League Two side Torquay United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0006-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe same day Yeovil faced Dorchester Town in an away friendly and beat the Conference South side 3\u20130 with a brace from Reading loanee Gozie Ugwu and a goal from Lewis Young. The following day long term transfer-listed midfielder Anthony Edgar left the club for League Two side Barnet. Yeovil did suffer their first defeat of pre\u2013season on 26 July but in a Twenty20 cricket match against North Perrott Cricket Club losing the contest heavily by 71 runs. The following day Yeovil played their first home friendly against Bristol Rovers and despite taking the lead through Rohan Ince the game ended in a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe club then embarked on a brief pre\u2013season tour to southern Wales commencing with a friendly against Welsh Premier League side Llanelli on 31 July. Trialist James Clarke returned to the club after injury and in a high scoring encounter Yeovil triumphed 5\u20133 courtesy of a brace from James Hayter, and goals from Ince, Sam Foley and Gozie Ugwu. Later in the week the side embarked on a team\u2013building white water rafting exercise, before their second friendly against Conference side Newport County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nThe match allowed a return to Newport for Sam Foley, as Yeovil's good pre\u2013season form continued with a 3\u20131 victory courtesy of goals from Reid, Nathan Ralph and Gozie Ugwu. Following the match, Johnson announced the departure of final trialist James Clarke after failing to earn a contract. Following the lack of interest in a new shirt sponsorship deal, the players were convinced by manager Gary Johnson to take part in a topless photo call to fuel interest. On 7 August, Yeovil faced their only pre\u2013season match against higher league opposition in the shape of Premier League side Stoke City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, Pre-season\nYeovil took the lead through a Reuben Reid penalty with Stoke equalising through a Kenwyne Jones header nine minutes later and the match finished 1\u20131. With national press coverage for the squad photo publicity stunt, on 10 August, the club announced a deal had been agreed with W+S Recycling to be the club's new shirt sponsor, and on the same day it was announced that local Italian restaurant chain Tamburino's had agreed a deal to have their logo on the rear of Yeovil's shirts. Yeovil completed their pre\u2013season preparation the following day with a 2\u20132 draw against Exeter City with goals from Upson and Reid, pre\u2013season finished with an unbeaten record in all nine matches with five victories and four draws, scoring 23 goals and conceding just nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nYeovil's season began with a Football League Cup first round home tie against Colchester United on 14 August. A first half brace from centre back Richard Hinds and a debut goal from winger Keanu Marsh-Brown helped Yeovil to a comfortable 3\u20130 victory over their League One rivals. The draw for the second round of the League Cup took place the following day and presented Yeovil with a home tie against Premier League side West Bromwich Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nPrior to the first match of the league season, on 18 August, the Football League Trophy draw took place on Soccer AM with Yeovil drawn away against Bristol Rovers in the first round of the competition. Later in the day, in Yeovil's opening league match against Coventry City the club fell behind early from a Cody McDonald header, before Richard Hinds scored his third goal in a week as the game ended in a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0008-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nThe following Tuesday, Yeovil's first away game saw a trip to Brentford in an eventful game Yeovil ran out 3\u20131 victors thanks to a brace from James Hayter and a penalty save from Marek \u0160t\u011bch. Hinds's goal scoring form and impressive performances earned him a place in the League One Team of the Week. On 23 August, Chelsea youngster Archange Nkumu joined the club on a one-month loan deal as cover for injured fellow Chelsea loanee Rohan Ince, and Curtis Haynes-Brown left the club to join League Two side AFC Wimbledon on a one-month loan deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0008-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nYeovil's next away trip saw a match against bottom of the League side Scunthorpe United and courtesy of a first half goal from Keanu Marsh-Brown and second half goals from Reuben Reid and a brace from Gozie Ugwu gave Yeovil a 4\u20130 away victory. The result sent Yeovil to the top of League One for the first time in their history, the result saw four players receive recognition from the Football League Team of the Week goalkeeper Marek \u0160t\u011bch was joined by full backs Luke Ayling and Jamie McAllister along with midfielder Ed Upson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0008-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, August\nOn 28 August in the League Cup second round tie against West Brom despite an impressive performance and a brace from forward Reuben Reid, the match saw Yeovil eventually overpowered to lose 4\u20132. Yeovil's performances in the month of August led to the nomination of Gary Johnson for Manager of the Month and defender Richard Hinds for Player of the Month, both though lost out to Ronnie Moore and Andy Robinson, both of Tranmere Rovers, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, September\nDespite a 2\u20131 over Doncaster Rovers, courtesy of goals from Hayter and Ugwu, Yeovil dropped to second in the league table on goal difference. The performance of centre back Richard Hinds saw him named in the Football League One Team of the Week for the second time in three weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, September\nThe Football League Trophy match against Bristol Rovers saw a sluggish performance from Yeovil but despite a red card for captain Jamie McAllister, for an off the ball incident with former team-mate David Clarkson, Yeovil won 3\u20130 with two goals from free-kicks from Ed Upson and a first goal for Sam Foley proving the difference. The club also received a team performance of the round award for their victory over Bristol Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, September\nOn 8 September, on Soccer AM, Yeovil were drawn away against Torquay United in the second round of the Football League Trophy, later in the day saw a tired performance in the club's first league defeat 1\u20130 at home against Bournemouth. On 15 September, Norwich City midfielder Korey Smith joined Yeovil on an emergency loan deal for the maximum period of 93 days, he made his debut as a substitute that afternoon in the 1\u20130 away defeat against MK Dons as Yeovil slipped to a second consecutive defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0009-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, September\nThe following Tuesday saw Yeovil travel to play Leyton Orient and with a frail defensive display Yeovil suffered a heavy 4\u20131 defeat, with the only positive a first league goal for Sam Foley and slipped to 11th in the table. On 21 September, versatile full\u2013back Joe Edwards, who had a loan spell with the club last season, resigned from Bristol City on loan. Yeovil's dismal form continued with another home defeat this time a 1\u20130 reverse against Sheffield United, on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0009-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, September\nOn 25 September, Rohan Ince returned to Chelsea following an unsuccessful loan spell, but signed 6\u00a0ft 6in defender Dan Burn from Fulham on a youth loan deal for an initial month . Despite taking a sixth minute lead through a Gavin Williams penalty against Preston North End more poor defending and the sending off of midfielder Ed Upson led to a second half turnaround and a 3\u20132 defeat, with debutante Dan Burn scoring at both ends. This defeat saw Yeovil finish the month of September setting a new unwanted club record in the Football League for most consecutive defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nYeovil's dismal run of form continued into October, and despite a Reuben Reid penalty the club suffered a 2\u20131 home defeat against Portsmouth, their sixth consecutive defeat as the club slid to 16th in the League One table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nThe game proved more costly for Yeovil than merely a defeat with injuries to both Lewis Young, ankle ligament damage and Gozie Ugwu, recurrence of a hamstring injury, ruling them both out for the month of October, in an attempt to arrest this run of form and as cover for those injuries, on 4 October, Gary Johnson completed the loan signing of Republic of Ireland U21 striker Paddy Madden from Carlisle United. The move worked with immediate effect with Madden scoring a brace on his debut and Hayter adding a third in a 3\u20131 victory over Colchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nThe poor run of form though was reflected by the Colchester United match being the club's lowest ever Football League attendance of just 3,002. This improved performance led to a double nomination in the Football League's Team of the Week with Irish duo Madden and winger Sam Foley both represented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nOn 9 October, Yeovil's away Football League Trophy tie against Torquay United was postponed due to a waterlogged pitch at Plainmoor, with the match rescheduled for the following week on the following Saturday the winner of the tie was given the reward of a home Area Quarter-final tie against Wycombe Wanderers in the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nAnother encouraging performance away at league leaders Tranmere Rovers saw Yeovil take a 2\u20130 lead after half an hour thanks to goals from Madden and Foley, but another second half collapse saw Tranmere comeback to win the game 3\u20132 with Yeovil's plight not aided by having Joe Edwards sent off for two yellow cards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nIn their rearranged tie on 16 October, Yeovil salvaged a 2\u20132 draw against Torquay United with a stoppage time equaliser from James Hayter, to add to his earlier goal, with Yeovil winning the tie 5\u20134 on penalties, having scored all five of their spot kicks and keeper Marek \u0160t\u011bch having saved Torquay's Thomas Cruise's effort. The victory confirming Yeovil's progress to the Area Quarter-final stage of the Football League Trophy, for the first time in five years, with a home tie against Wycombe Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nAn unconvincing 2\u20131 victory over a ten-man Bury followed courtesy of goals from Byron Webster and Foley, the performance of midfielder Korey Smith earned him recognition in the League One Team of the Week. That weekend in the draw for the FA Cup First Round Proper Yeovil were given an away tie against fellow League One side Preston North End, to be played on 3 November. On 23 October, with injuries continuing to hamper the squad young Jamaican-born midfielder Daniel Johnson joined the club on a month-long youth loan deal from Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0010-0007", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, October\nThat evening Yeovil strolled to a 3\u20131 victory over Shrewsbury Town courtesy of a brace from Paddy Madden and a goal from top scorer Hayter who took his tally for the season to seven, Daniel Johnson made his debut as a second-half substitute but had the ignominy of giving away a penalty. Yeovil ended the month with a third consecutive victory this time a 1\u20130 away win against Crewe Alexandra thanks to a second goal in a week for defender Byron Webster, the result was also only Yeovil's second clean sheet in the League that season. After a two-month loan spell at AFC Wimbledon, defender Curtis Haynes-Brown returned to the club having made six appearances for the Dons. Webster's winning goal and the club's second league clean sheet of the season led to his inclusion in the Football League's Team of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, November\nOn 1 November, after lengthy negotiations with Carlisle United the club agreed to extend the loan of striker Paddy Madden until January, the Irish forward having scored five goals in his five appearances in the first month of his loan deal. Gary Johnson also did not rule out a permanent deal for the Carlisle striker suggesting it was part of the discussions to extend his loan deal. On 3 November, Yeovil's FA Cup ended with a first round away defeat at Preston North End.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, November\nThe 3\u20130 lacklustre defeat was not helped by the sending off of Ed Upson, who coincidentally was sent off in the corresponding league fixture in September. Yeovil's three game winning run in the league came to an abrupt end with a 3\u20131 home defeat against high flying Stevenage despite a further goal by inform loan striker Paddy Madden early in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, November\nThe club though got back to winning ways the following on 10 November, courtesy of a goal from Bristol City loanee Joe Edwards after seven minutes to give the side a 1\u20130 win over bottom of the league side Hartlepool United. The same day youth team goalkeeper Matt Cafer joined Sherborne Town on a work-experience loan deal. Luke Ayling's performance in the victory over Hartlepool United led to his inclusion in the Football League Team of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0011-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, November\nYeovil's inconsistent form continued throughout November with a 4\u20131 defeat at the hands of Swindon Town, including a goal from former striker Andy Williams, followed, on 20 November, by an impressive 1\u20130 away win against Cralwey Town. The conclusion of the loan transfer window saw Yeovil extend the loan of defender Dan Burn until January, and bring in Watford defender Dale Bennett on loan also until the new year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0011-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, November\nMeanwhile Daniel Johnson returned to Aston Villa, and defender Curtis Haynes-Brown was sent out on loan again this time to Conference National side Cambridge United, it was also announced the club had taken former Canadian international winger Jaime Peters on trial. The team ended the month in 12th place following a 3\u20131 home defeat at the hands of Carlisle United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, December\nYeovil began the month with a home Football League Trophy tie against Football League Two side Wycombe Wanderers, courtesy of first-half goals from midfielders Ed Upson and Sam Foley Yeovil recorded a comfortable 2\u20130 victory. The victory meant that Yeovil had qualified for the Southern Area Semi-finals the furthest they had ever reached in the competition, in the draw for this match on 8 December Yeovil were drawn away against League One rivals Leyton Orient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, December\nThe same day Yeovil faced Notts County at home and despite multiple chances and saves forced from visiting keeper Bartosz Bia\u0142kowski were forced to be content with a 0\u20130 draw. Manager Gary Johnson announced after the match that Watford defender Dale Bennett had returned to his parent club a month early after just one substitute appearance due to a back injury. On 15 December, Yeovil faced an away game against Walsall and recovered from 2\u20130 down to draw thanks to a goal from substitute Reuben Reid and a last minute equaliser from Sam Foley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0012-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, December\nFor the Football League Trophy tie with Leyton Orient in January the club offer fans free transport to the match in an attempt to get 500 away travelling supporters, with these coaches funded by the chairman John Fry, joint owner Norman Hayward, directors, vice-presidents, manager Gary Johnson and the playing squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0012-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, December\nOn 22 December, despite conceding the opening goal in only the third minute against Oldham Athletic the team turned the game around thanks to two goals from Gavin Williams, the second a superb 30-yard strike, and two late goals from Hayter and Madden seeing Yeovil to a 4\u20131 victory their largest home victory of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0012-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, December\nYeovil's Boxing Day fixture saw them face a short trip to Bournemouth without Foley with a hamstring injury and Korey Smith and Joe Edwards both of whom had returned to their parent clubs due to their loan spells having been completed, a stretched squad suffered a 3\u20130 reverse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0012-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, December\nFollowing the game Johnson confirmed that the January transfer window would see an overhaul of the squad with the hope of helping Yeovil move up the table in the second half of the season, Johnson confirmed two of these signing would be likely to be the permanent acquisition of Paddy Madden and the signing of Irish trialist Kevin Dawson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0012-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, December\nOn 29 December, Yeovil visited Fratton Park for the first time in their history to take on Portsmouth the Glovers won the game 2\u20131 thanks to two first half goals from set-pieces ending the calendar year in 12th place in the League One table with 36 points from 25 matches played. Present at the game were two trialists captain of Middlesbrough under\u201321 side's Matthew Dolan and former Chelsea trainee Aliu Djal\u00f3 with a view to them signing on loan and permanently respectively in the January transfer window. Defender Byron Webster received recognition for his goal and impressive performance in the League One Team of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nThe opening of the January transfer window saw Yeovil complete the free transfer of Irish midfielder Kevin Dawson on a contract until the end of the season from League of Ireland side Shelbourne, the signing came too late for Dawson to be permitted to feature in Yeovil's New Year's Day fixture against Leyton Orient. A brace from Paddy Madden and a goal for top scorer James Hayter led Yeovil to a 3\u20130 victory over Leyton Orient, the result saw Yeovil climb to 9th place in the League One table and to within three points of the play-off positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nFollowing the game the club confirmed the permanent signing of Carlisle United loanee Madden on two-and-a-half-year deal for an undisclosed fee following the completion of his highly successful loan spell scoring nine goals in sixteen appearances for the Glovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nYeovil completed their third signing of the transfer window with the addition of left sided midfielder Matthew Dolan on a one-month loan deal from Middlesbrough, but the day also saw the departure of left-back Curtis Haynes-Brown on a free transfer to Football Conference side Cambridge United on a free transfer, Haynes-Brown having only appeared in thirteen matches in eighteen months for Yeovil still had six months left to run on his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nPrior to the Football League Trophy Southern Area semi-final tie against Leyton Orient, Yeovil confirmed that Fulham defender Dan Burn had extended his youth loan until the end of the season with an agreement for a further extension should Yeovil be involved in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nWith the club funding free transport for away fans to travel to Leyton Orient for the Football League Trophy area semi-final the game saw Yeovil supported by 815 travelling fans for the trip to London, but the match ended in disappointment for the away side with a late Dave Mooney header condemning Yeovil to defeat despite having a man advantage for the last fifteen minutes. On 12 January, Yeovil recorded their first victory over Sheffield United, courtesy of a brace from Paddy Madden on his permanent debut for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nThe 2\u20130 victory at Bramall Lane saw Yeovil climb to eighth in the league table and to within a point of the play-off positions. Impressive performances from midfielders Kevin Dawson and Matthew Dolan on their league debuts at Sheffield United and in recognition of Paddy Madden's brace all three were included in the League One Team of the Week. On 17 January, Yeovil confirmed the signing of versatile defender/midfielder and former loanee Joe Edwards, from Bristol City on an 18-month contract for an undisclosed fee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0006", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nEdwards's permanent debut was delayed due to Yeovil's league game against Preston North End, on 19 January, being postponed due to health and safety problems in the area surrounding the stadium because of heavy snowfall in the Yeovil area. On 25 January, out of favour striker Reuben Reid joined his former club Football League Two side Plymouth Argyle on loan for an initial month. Later that day out of favour winger Keanu Marsh-Brown also left the club having his contract cancelled by mutual consent, having not featured in the club's matchday squads since Boxing Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0007", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nOn 28 January, Yeovil made their fifth signing of the transfer window with Crystal Palace striker Kwesi Appiah joining the club on a month's loan. Yeovil ended their extended break from match action due to postponements with a crucial 2\u20131 victory over play-off chasers Milton Keynes Dons, on 29 January. A third consecutive brace from Paddy Madden saw the Glovers to victory over the 10-man Dons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0013-0008", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, January\nThe result saw Yeovil end the month in seventh place just one position and three points outside the play-offs, the month seeing them win all three of their league matches and top scorer Paddy Madden scoring six goals in just three appearances. Despite a 100% winning record in the league manager Gary Johnson being lost out in the race for Manager of the Month to Walsall manager Dean Smith, but striker Paddy Madden's six goals were enough to secure him the Player of the Month award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, February\nYeovil began the month with a home fixture against fellow play-off chasers Brentford, Yeovil won the game 3\u20130 courtesy of a fourteenth goal of the season for Paddy Madden, superb 25-yard second from Ed Upson on his 100th appearance for the club and a volley from centre back Dan Burn. Both Upson and Burn's performances were recognised with places in the League One Team of the Week. On 5 February, Yeovil were due to play their rearranged fixture against Oldham Athletic but the game was postponed for a second time this time due because of snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, February\nThe following Saturday, Yeovil visited Coventry City searching for their sixth consecutive league victory and this was achieved thanks to a goal in first half injury time from in-form Irish striker Paddy Madden. This sound defensive display led to Dan Burn being included in the Team of the Week for the second consecutive week. On 12 February, Yeovil matched their club record for consecutive wins in the Football League with their seventh consecutive victory after coming from behind against Preston North End.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0014-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, February\nThe Glovers were trailing to Chris Beardsley's goal at half time, but scored three second-half goals without reply from Hayter, Nathan Ralph and top scorer Paddy Madden with his ninth goal in just six appearances. Yeovil extended their winning run to eight league games with a 3\u20130 victory over Scunthorpe United, courtesy of goals from Byron Webster, James Hayter and Paddy Madden as Yeovil move up to third place in the League One table. Both Webster and Madden's performances were recognised with places in the League One Team of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0014-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, February\nThe club's record Football League winning run was ended with a 1\u20131 draw away at Doncaster Rovers, despite an early Madden goal. With Paddy Madden scoring in his eighth consecutive league game he broke a 50-year-old club record previously held by Dennis Coughlin, but the club's nine game unbeaten run came to an abrupt end with a 2\u20130 defeat against relegation threatened Colchester United. On 28 February, Burnley striker Wes Fletcher joined the club on a one-month loan deal to provide attacking cover at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0014-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, February\nThe club finished the month in sixth place in the league table, and a record of four wins, one draw and one defeat was enough for Gary Johnson to be nominated for Manager of the Month but was beaten by Hartlepool United's John Hughes, and Paddy Madden's five goals in six games was enough for a nomination for the Player of the Month award but lost out to fellow Hartlepool player Peter Hartley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, March\nYeovil began the month with a crucial home fixture against fellow play-off chasers Tranmere Rovers, Yeovil won the game 1\u20130 thanks to a well-executed free-kick from Ed Upson overtaking Tranmere in the process up to fifth place in the League One table. Ed Upson's fifth goal of the season was enough to see him included in the League One Team of the Week for the second time this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, March\nFollowing the game it was reported that The Football Association were investigated an incident at the end of the match between Yeovil captain Jamie McAllister and Tranmere winger and former Yeovil player Abdulai Bell-Baggie, with the papers claiming that Bell-Baggie had been racially abused by McAllister. Manager Gary Johnson told the BBC that captain Jamie McAllister was \"upset\" to be the subject of an inquiry by the Football Association, and would deny any allegations against him. On 9 March, Yeovil played out a goalless draw away at relegation threatened Hartlepool United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0015-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, March\nOn 11 March, Yeovil signed ex-Chelsea full-back and left sided player Ben Gordon on one-month contract as cover for captain Jamie McAllister. Gordon made his full debut the following day replacing the injured Sam Foley, despite taking a two-goal lead after just 18 minutes thanks to goals from Byron Webster and top goalscorer Paddy Madden, a second half turnaround from Crawley Town rescued them a 2\u20132 draw and ended Yeovil's seven game home winning run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0015-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, March\nOn 14 March, Yeovil Town announced that the club had recorded a profit of \u00a353,379 for the year ended 30 June 2012, with turnover up by 5% at \u00a33.1m. Prior to the clash with Swindon, Yeovil completed the loan signings of Latvian international defender Vit\u0101lijs Maksimenko from Brighton & Hove Albion and forward Jordan Cook from Charlton Athletic. The next day Yeovil played Swindon Town at Huish Park live on Sky Sports, The Glovers suffered a 2\u20130 defeat at the hands of their promotion rivals and slipped out of the play-off places on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0015-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, March\nOn 23 March, Yeovil faced Carlisle United at Brunton Park despite leading 3\u20131 with seconds left of normal time courtesy of a first goal for Yeovil from Kevin Dawson and goals from Paddy Madden and James Hayter, they conceded two late goals to draw 3\u20133. On 26 March, Queens Park Rangers left winger and striker \u00c1ngelo Balanta joined the club on loan until the end of the season to provide attacking cover at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0015-0005", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, March\nKevin Dawson's performance in the Carlisle game was enough to earn him a second nomination of the season to the Football League Team of the Week. On 27 March, Matthew Dolan unexpectedly returned to the club on loan from Middlesbrough until the end of the season, and the following day it was confirmed Reuben Reid would remain at Plymouth Argyle on loan until the end of the season as well. Yeovil played fellow play-off chasers Walsall at home on Good Friday, but both sides lacked attacking quality as a game of few chances ended goalless. The result meant Yeovil had won just one of their last eight games but still remained seventh just a point outside the play-off positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, April\nYeovil began April, with an Easter Monday fixture away at Notts County, Yeovil claimed a crucial 2\u20131 victory which reinvigorated their play-off aspirations courtesy of goals from topscorer Paddy Madden and a quality free-kick from Middlesbrough loanee Matthew Dolan on his first start of his second loan spell. On 4 April, the club announced that it would axe its youth academy at the end of the season, citing expense and a lack of progress on a proposed Huish Park development plan as reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, April\nThis followed the closure of the Centre of Excellence at the end of the 2011\u201312 season which had been closed because the investment and facilities required by the Premier League's Elite Player Performance Plan scheme were not available. On 6 April, Yeovil faced Shrewsbury Town at home and won a tight game 2\u20131 thanks to a James Hayter penalty and a \"stunning solo effort\" from top goalscorer Paddy Madden. Madden's performance against Shrewsbury earned him a place in the Football League One Team of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0016-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, April\nThe following week Yeovil faced Stevenage away from home, before the game it was announced that left-sided player Ben Gordon's short term deal had not been renewed so had left the club after only three appearances. A much improved second half performance against Stevenage saw the Glovers run out convincing 2\u20130 victors, with Sam Foley and Hayter's 15th goal of the season the difference, the victory confirmed Yeovil's place in the end of season play-offs. Foley was recognised for his performance against Stevenage with a place in the League One Team of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0016-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, April\nOn 16 April, Gary Johnson faced his son Lee's Oldham Athletic side, they became only the second father and son to face each other as opposing managers in the Football League. Oldham won the match 1\u20130 courtesy of a goal from Matt Smith. Yeovil faced Crewe Alexandra in their final home match of the league season, a game which Yeovil won 1\u20130 thanks to an early Joe Edwards goal, goalkeeper Marek \u0160t\u011bch's man of the match performance was recognised in the League One Team of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0016-0004", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, April\nThe final game of the regular season saw a trip to already relegated side Bury, a disappointing first half performance saw Yeovil lose the game 3\u20132, despite the defeat Yeovil confirmed their record high finishing position of 4th in League One and confirmed they would face Sheffield United in the League One play-offs. Another solid run of form in April earning 12 points from a possible 18, and a record of four wins, one draw and one defeat was enough for Gary Johnson to be nominated for Manager of the Month, but lost out to Bournemouth manager Eddie Howe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, May\nThe first-leg of the play-offs saw Yeovil face Sheffield United at Bramall Lane, on 3 May. Yeovil's defence was strengthened by the return of captain Jamie McAllister and centre backs Byron Webster and Dan Burn from injury, after a cagey first half Sheffield United took the lead just 52 seconds into the second half through teenager Callum McFadzean and held the lead until the final whistle. The return leg at Huish Park was played on 6 May, in front of the club's largest crowd in five years an attendance of 8,152. An early Kevin Dawson goal levelled the tie on aggregate before a late header from Ed Upson sent Yeovil to Wembley, the 2\u20130 home victory giving Yeovil a 2\u20131 aggregate victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Review, May\nThe semi-final victory set up a showdown with Brentford, on 19 May, in the League One play-off Final at Wembley Stadium. In front of a crowd of 41,955, around 18,000 of them Yeovil fans, Yeovil named an unchanged side for the final and started brightly with a sixth minute goal from top scorer Paddy Madden. Fulham loanee Dan Burn doubled the late in the first half, before Brentford pulled a goal back through Harlee Dean, but Yeovil held out to win promotion to the Championship for the first time in the club's history. It was also manager Gary Johnson's third promotion as Yeovil manager coming on the 10th anniversary of the club's promotion to the Football League. Following the play-off final victory manager Gary Johnson was recognised by the League Managers Association and was awarded League One Manager of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Summary and aftermath\nYeovil only occupied a play-off position from the middle of February, having briefly risen as high as first place during the first month of the season while dropping to 16th in October. The team won 13 matches, drew 4 and lost 6 at home, compared to winning 10, drawing 4 and losing 9 away from home. Marek \u0160t\u011bch was an everpresent recording the highest number of appearances during the season, appearing in all 56 of Yeovil's games. Paddy Madden was top scorer in all competitions with 23 goals, followed by James Hayter with 16 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Summary and aftermath\nPrior to the club's first season in the Football League Championship, Yeovil released Dominic Blizzard, Richard Hinds and Gavin Williams. Manager Gary Johnson and his backroom staff of Terry Skiverton and Darren Way signed new two-year deals to confirm they would lead Yeovil in the Championship. Goalkeeper Matt Cafer was promoted to the first team squad after signing a six-month professional contract with the club. Ahead of the new season midfielders Kevin Dawson and Sam Foley signed new two-year contracts, while defender Nathan Ralph and midfielder Lewis Young were invited back to pre-season training by Gary Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Club\nAfter returning to the club in January 2012 manager Gary Johnson, Yeovil's backroom staff remained the same for the 2012\u201313 season, with former manager Terry Skiverton as his assistant, former player Darren Way continuing as technical coach, Gareth Stewart as goalkeeping coach and Mike Micciche as physiotherapist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Club\nOn 17 May 2012, the club revealed their kits for the new season designed by Vandanel for the fifth successive season. For the first time, Yeovil's away kit was hooped, a style introduced to the home kit after Yeovil achieved promotion to the Football League 2003. The kits commemorated the tenth anniversary club's promotion to the Football League with lettering around the club crest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Club\nAfter struggling to find a new shirt sponsor the club announced a deal had been agreed with W+S Recycling to be the club's new shirt sponsor, the rear of the shirts displayed the logo of local Italian restaurant chain Tamburino's and the rear of the shorts the logo of Westbury Packaging On 8 May 2013, a new kit was revealed for the 2013 Football League One play-off Final designed by Vandanel's sister company Sondico, with the design now boasting white sleeves and an entirely white back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Club, Kit\nSupplier: Vandanel (Home & Away), Sondico (Play-off Final)Sponsor(s): W+S Recycling", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231364-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 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-00231365-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yokohama FC Hong Kong season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Yokohama FC Hong Kong's debut season in the Hong Kong First Division League. They will be competing in the Hong Kong First Division League, Senior Challenge Shield and the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231365-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yokohama FC Hong Kong 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231365-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yokohama FC Hong Kong season, Players, Transfers, In\nPlayers who played for Sham Shui Po last season were not listed in the table below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231365-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Yokohama FC Hong Kong season, Matches, Competitive, First Division League\nRemarks:1 Home matches against Kitchee and South China are played at Mong Kok Stadium instead of their usual home ground Siu Sai Wan Sports Ground. 2 Away match against Sunray Cave JC Sun Hei was originally played on 2 March 2013 but was postponed and rescheduled on 23 March 2013. 3 The match was abandoned after 28 minutes due to adverse weather and bad pitch conditions. 4 The replay of week 15 match against Yokohama FC Hong Kong was scheduled to be played at Siu Sai Wan Sports Ground on 4 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 81], "content_span": [82, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 91st season of competitive association football and 76th season in the Football League played by York City Football Club, a professional football club based in York, North Yorkshire, England. Their promotion via the Conference Premier play-offs in 2011\u201312 meant they played in League Two, after an eight-year absence from the Football League. The season ran from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season\nManager Gary Mills signed eight players before the close of the summer transfer window. Having stood 14th in the league table on New Year's Day, York were on an 11-match run without a win when Mills was dismissed in March 2013. He was replaced by former Northern Ireland manager Nigel Worthington, who led York to safety from relegation on the final day of the season. Having won four of their last five matches, the team finished the season 17th in the table. They lost in their opening round matches in both the 2012\u201313 FA Cup and the League Cup, and were eliminated in the second round of the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season\n36 players made at least one appearance in nationally organised first-team competition, and there were 12 different goalscorers. Goalkeeper Michael Ingham played in all 50 first-team matches over the season. Ashley Chambers finished as leading scorer with 10 goals, all scored in the league. The winner of the Clubman of the Year award, voted for by the club's supporters, was Daniel Parslow, who became the first player to win the award for a third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nThe 2011\u201312 season was Gary Mills' first full season as York City manager, having taken over the role in October 2010. York finished the season with two major trophies after victories in the 2012 FA Trophy Final and the 2012 Conference Premier play-off Final, both of which were staged at Wembley Stadium. The FA Trophy victory represented York's first piece of silverware in 19 years and was achieved with a 2\u20130 victory over York's Conference Premier rivals Newport County. With goals from Ashley Chambers and Matty Blair, York beat Luton Town 2\u20131 in the play-off final to return to the Football League after an eight-year absence with promotion to League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nFollowing the previous season's conclusion Moses Ashikodi, Matthew Blinkhorn, Eugen Bopp and Scott Brown were released, while James Meredith, Adriano Moke and Danny Pilkington departed for Bradford City, Cambridge United and Kidderminster Harriers respectively. Jon Challinor, Chambers, Chris Doig, Jamal Fyfield, Michael Ingham, Scott Kerr and Daniel Parslow signed new contracts with York. New players signed ahead of the start of the season were defender Danny Blanchett from Burton Albion, midfielders Lee Bullock from Bradford City, John McReady from Darlington 1883 and Jonathan Smith from Swindon Town, winger Michael Coulson from Grimsby Town and striker Oli Johnson from Oxford United. Midfielder Tom Platt, the previous season's youth-team captain and Youth Team Player of the Year, entered the first-team squad after agreeing a professional contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nThe team adopted new home and away kits, with the home kit featuring red shirts with white sleeves, light blue shorts and white socks. The away kit comprised light blue shirts with white sleeves, white shorts and light blue socks. This was accompanied by a change in shirt sponsor, with Benenden Health's name becoming present on the team kits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, August\nYork started the season away to League One club Doncaster Rovers in the first round of the League Cup. Debutant Coulson gave York the lead with a long-range strike in the 65th minute before Chris Brown equalised for Doncaster, scoring a penalty kick nine minutes later. The match finished 1\u20131 after extra time and York went on to lose the penalty shoot-out 4\u20132. York's Football League return ended in defeat, being beaten 3\u20131 at home to Wycombe Wanderers. Wycombe took a three-goal lead before Jason Walker scored York's consolation in the 54th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, August\nYork recorded their first point of the season after drawing 2\u20132 away to Morecambe, with Chris Smith and Chambers scoring the team's goals in the second half. This was followed by their first league victory, with Parslow, Chambers and Coulson scoring in the first half away to Barnet in a 3\u20131 win. Two days before the transfer deadline York signed three new players; defender Clarke Carlisle and striker Scott Dobie signed on free transfers and Charlie Taylor came on loan from Leeds United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, September\nCoulson scored after 15 seconds to give York the lead at home to league leaders Oxford United, and with further goals from Chambers and Paddy McLaughlin the team went on to win 3\u20131. York won 1\u20130 away in their first round match of the Football League Trophy against Rotherham United, with Blair scoring an 80th-minute winner. Walker's equaliser in the fifth minute of stoppage time secured a 2\u20132 draw at home to Chesterfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, September\nThere had been three goals scored in a five-minute period in the first half; Chesterfield opened the scoring through Sam Hird and Coulson equalised for York before Craig Westcarr restored the visitors' lead. York drew their next match 1\u20131 away to Exeter City, having taken the lead through Coulson in the 52nd minute before the home team equalised when John O'Flynn scored in the 83rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0007-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, September\nThe team's first away defeat of the season came with a 3\u20131 defeat away to Burton Albion; after McLaughlin gave York a ninth-minute lead, Burton went on to win with goals from Lee Bell, Calvin Zola and Matt Paterson. A third draw in four matches came after York drew 0\u20130 at home to Cheltenham Town. Platt and Liam Henderson were sent out to Harrogate Town and Gainsborough Trinity on three-month and one-month loans respectively, while Dobie was released and Taylor had his loan extended for a second month. York's run of four matches without victory came to an end after a 2\u20130 win away to Aldershot Town, with Blair and Walker scoring in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, October\nThe previous season's Conference Premier champions Fleetwood Town defeated York 2\u20130 at home, with goals in each half scored by Junior Brown and Steven Gillespie. Peterborough United midfielder Daniel Kearns was signed on a one-month loan and made his debut as a substitute in York's 0\u20130 home draw with Rotherham. York were knocked out of the Football League Trophy in the second round after being beaten 4\u20130 at home by League One team Coventry City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, October\nChambers scored the opening goal for York away to Bradford in the first derby match between the teams in 16 years, but with Bradford scoring through Zavon Hines the match finished a 1\u20131 draw. Chambers and Blair scored as York beat Dagenham & Redbridge 3\u20132 at home, which was the team's first win in four league matches. York recorded a second successive victory away to Accrington Stanley, with Walker scoring an 83rd-minute winner in a 1\u20130 win. Bullock was loaned out to Gateshead of the Conference Premier for a month, with his appearances in the team being limited. A 0\u20130 draw away to Southend United saw York's run of victories come to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, November\nCoulson was ruled out for the season with a cruciate ligament injury, while Kearns' loan was extended for a further two months. York conceded an 80th-minute equaliser at home to AFC Wimbledon in the first round of the FA Cup, with Charlie Strutton the scorer, after substitute Jamie Reed had earlier given York the lead. Jonathan Smith was loaned to Conference Premier club Luton until January 2013, having not started a match since September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, November\nBlair gave York the lead at home to Northampton Town, and despite playing most of the match with ten men, the away team equalised through Adebayo Akinfenwa. Winger Alex Rodman, who had previously played under Mills at Tamworth, was signed on a two-month loan from Aldershot. He made his debut in York's home league match against AFC Wimbledon, which finished as a 3\u20130 defeat, with the visitors scoring their goals in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, November\nYork were knocked out of the FA Cup after a 4\u20133 extra time defeat away to AFC Wimbledon in a first round replay. Jamie Reed scored in the 89th minute to hand York a 2\u20132 draw away to Port Vale, after Rodman had scored his first goal for the club earlier in the second half. Carlisle was loaned to divisional rivals Northampton ahead of a permanent transfer in January 2013, while Henderson joined Gateshead on loan and Bullock had his loan extended. York fell to a second successive home defeat after being beaten 2\u20130 by Torquay United, the away team scoring in each half through Danny Stevens and Joe Oastler. Despite his loan earlier being extended until January 2013, Kearns was recalled by Peterborough, having made 12 appearances for York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, December\nYork recorded their first win in eight matches after defeating Rochdale 3\u20132 away, with Michael Potts scoring twice and Walker scoring once in the first half. Youth-team defender Tom Allan signed a one-and-a-half-year professional contract with the club, with Mills saying, \"Tom has come on unbelievably in the last 12 months and thoroughly deserves his first professional contract\". York fell to a 2\u20130 defeat away to Plymouth Argyle, with Fyfield scoring an own goal in the 45th minute and Nick Chadwick scoring in the 90th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, December\nJonathan Smith and Bullock were recalled from their loans ahead of York's home match against Bristol Rovers. York scored four first half goals to beat Bristol Rovers 4\u20131, with Garry Kenneth scoring an own goal, Chambers scoring twice and Walker scoring once. A second successive away defeat came away to Chesterfield on Boxing Day when York were beaten 3\u20130, with the home team scoring their goals during the second half. This run ended after a 0\u20130 draw away to Fleetwood, in which York missed a number of chances to score in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, January\nJonathan Smith made a permanent move to Luton for a fee of \u00a350,000 shortly after the transfer window opened. York won 3\u20130 in their New Year's Day home fixture against Burton, with Walker, McLaughlin and Blair scoring. Carlisle completed a permanent transfer to Northampton after the conclusion of his loan, while Henderson signed for Gateshead permanently after an agreement was reached over the remainder of his York contract. York were beaten 2\u20131 at home to Exeter, with a Rodman own goal giving the visitors the lead in the 14th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, January\nPotts equalised for York five minutes later, before Exeter scored the winning goal on 53 minutes through Jimmy Keohane. Rodman's loan from Aldershot was extended until the end of the season. Walker scored in the 84th minute to secure York a 1\u20131 draw away to Cheltenham, who had taken the lead in the 67th minute through Shaun Harrad. Striker Ben Everson, who last played for Brei\u00f0ablik in the \u00darvalsdeild karla, was signed on a contract for the rest of the season. Platt was loaned out for the second time in a season, joining Conference North club FC Halifax Town for one month. Everson made his debut as a 71st-minute substitute in a 0\u20130 draw at home to Aldershot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, January\nBlackburn Rovers defender Jack O'Connell was signed on a one-month loan, while Salford City defender Jameel Ible was signed on a contract for the rest of the season. Blanchett was released after his contract was cancelled by mutual consent. York were leading Gillingham 1\u20130 away before the home team equalised five minutes from time through Cody McDonald, with York having taken the lead in the 17th minute through a McLaughlin goal straight from a corner kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, January\nStriker David McDaid was signed from League of Ireland Premier Division club Derry City on a one-and-a-half-year contract for a small compensation fee, while defender Curtis Obeng was signed on a one-month loan from Premier League club Swansea City after Lanre Oyebanjo was ruled out for around six weeks with a fractured skull.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, February\nYork were beaten 4\u20131 at home to Morecambe, with Walker scoring York's only goal with a first half penalty, before enduring their largest defeat of the season after losing 4\u20130 away to Wycombe. Jamie Reed was loaned to Cambridge United for the rest of the season, with his opportunities in the team limited. Burton midfielder John McGrath and Aldershot striker Michael Rankine were signed on loan, with the former joining for one month and the latter for the rest of the season. Both started in York's 0\u20130 draw at home to Gillingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0014-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, February\nYork opened the scoring against Barnet at home through a David Stephens own goal, although goals from Andy Yiadom and Jake Hyde saw the away team win 2\u20131. Everson was loaned out to Gateshead for a month, having struggled for opportunities in the team, and Platt returned to Harrogate on loan for the remainder of the season. York drew 0\u20130 away to Oxford, with the best chance of the match falling to Blair when he headed straight at goalkeeper Luke McCormick. O'Connell's loan was extended until the end of the season. Daniel Nardiello scored a stoppage-time equaliser for Rotherham when York were leading 1\u20130, after the away team had taken the lead through Blair earlier in the second half. Johnson was released after making seven appearances for the club, having been hindered during the season by stomach and groin problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, March\nMills was dismissed after nearly two and a half years in charge on 2 March 2013 after York were beaten 2\u20130 at home to Bradford, with the team sitting four points above the relegation zone after an 11-match run without a win. Former Northern Ireland manager Nigel Worthington was appointed as his successor two days later, with Fred Barber joining from Bury as his assistant. Mills' remaining coaching staff of Darron Gee, Des Lyttle and Paul Musselwhite left the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, March\nFollowing his appointment, Worthington indicated the players out on loan would return to the club, saying, \"It's only right that contracted players should be in and around the club over the next 10 matches as York City are paying their salaries and they should be part of anything that is going on in the next two months\". Worthington's first signing was Sheffield Wednesday goalkeeper Arron Jameson, who joined on an emergency loan for the remainder of the season, while McGrath had his loan extended until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, March\nWorthington's first match in charge was a 3\u20132 defeat away to AFC Wimbledon, in which Chris Smith scored twice, before Harry Pell scored the home team's winner in the 79th minute. York picked up their first point under Worthington after a 0\u20130 home draw with Rochdale, with both teams having few opportunities to score. Ipswich Town midfielder Josh Carson was signed on a one-month loan, while Bullock was loaned to Stockport County of the Conference Premier for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0016-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, March\nCarson made his debut in York's 2\u20130 home defeat to Port Vale, who scored in each half through Jennison Myrie-Williams and Lee Hughes. Former York striker Richard Cresswell, who became the club's record sale in 1999, was signed from Sheffield United on a one-month loan. He scored a penalty in the team's 2\u20131 defeat away to Torquay, a result that saw York drop into the second relegation spot. Sunderland midfielder Adam Reed was signed on a one-month loan, while Ible was released. Adam Reed made his debut as York drew 0\u20130 away to Bristol Rovers, in which the home team's goalkeeper Steve Mildenhall made a number of saves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, April\nYork recorded their first win in 17 matches after beating Plymouth 2\u20130 at home, with Chambers and Cresswell scoring in the first half. McGrath, Rankine and Rodman were sent back to their parent clubs, having become surplus to requirements under Worthington. The team were denied a second successive win after Peter Murphy scored a stoppage-time equaliser for Accrington, with the match finishing a 1\u20131 home draw, after Adam Reed had given York the lead in first half stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0017-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, April\nCarson and Kerr were ruled out for the remainder of the season through injury, with the former returning to parent club Ipswich after the expiration of his loan. York recorded a second victory in three matches after winning 2\u20130 away to Northampton, who had been on a run of ten consecutive home wins, with Chambers scoring in the first half and John Johnson scoring an own goal in the second half. This result saw York rise out of the relegation zone by moving up to 20th place in the table, having occupied 23rd place following the previous four results. Cresswell was recalled from his loan by new Sheffield United caretaker manager Chris Morgan, after making an important contribution for York in their battle against relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Review, April\nYork picked up a third win in five matches by defeating Southend 2\u20131 at home with first half goals from Adam Reed and Blair. They remained in 20th position in the league following positive results for most of the teams surrounding them, meaning their relegation fight would not be concluded until after the last match of the season. Before the Southend match Parslow was named Clubman of the Year, voted for by the York supporters, becoming the first player to win the award on three occasions. York avoided relegation on the final day of the season after beating Dagenham 1\u20130 away, with Chris Smith scoring the only goal. This meant York finished their first season back in the Football League in 17th place in League Two, four points clear of the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Summary and aftermath\nYork spent most of the season in midtable, rising as high as seventh place in September 2012 and dropping as low as 23rd in March 2013. The team recorded the second lowest number of wins in the League Two season with 12; bottom-placed Aldershot were the only team to win fewer matches with 11 victories. Ingham was the only ever-present player for York, appearing in all 51 matches. Chambers was top scorer with 10 goals in the league, being the only player to reach double figures, and was followed by Walker with nine goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Summary and aftermath\nAhead of the new season, York released Bullock, Challinor, Doig, Everson, Kerr, McDaid, McLaughlin, Potts, Jamie Reed and Walker, while Blair left to sign for Fleetwood. David McGurk, Oyebanjo, Parslow, Platt and Chris Smith signed new contracts with the club. The club signed goalkeeper Chris Kettings on loan from Blackpool, defender Ben Davies on loan from Preston North End, midfielders Craig Clay from Chesterfield and Lewis Montrose from Gillingham, winger Sander Puri from St Mirren and strikers Ryan Bowman from Hereford United, Cresswell from Sheffield United, Wes Fletcher from Burnley and Ryan Jarvis from Torquay. Defender Mike Atkinson and striker Chris Dickinson entered the first-team squad from the youth team after agreeing professional contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231366-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 York City F.C. season, Match details\nLeague positions are sourced by Statto, while the remaining information is referenced individually.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231367-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team\nThe 2012\u201313 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team represented Youngstown State University during the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Penguins, led by eighth year head coach Jerry Slocum, played their home games at the Beeghly Center and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 18\u201316, 7\u20139 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Horizon League Tournament to Wright State. They were invited to the 2013 CIT, the programs first ever Division I postseason tournament appearance, where they defeated Oakland in the first round before losing in the second round to Canisius in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season\nThe 2012\u20132013 season was Zamalek Sporting Club's 102nd season of football and 57th consecutive season in the Egyptian Premier League. The club also played in the CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season, Team kit\nThe 2012-2013 home kit was the classic Zamalek home kit, which featured golden trims and two parallel horizontal red lines. The away kit was all pink with grey trims, and grey shorts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season, Squad\nEgyptian Football Association (EFA) rules are that a team may only have 3 foreign born players in the squad. The Squad Has 25 Players Registered as Professionals and 5 Players Registered (-U23) and 2 Players of the Youth academy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season, Egyptian Premier League, Group 2, Results summary\nLast updated: 22 Mar 2013. Source: 2012\u201313 Egyptian Premier League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season, Egyptian Premier League, Group 2, Matches\nNote: The rest of the tournament was Cancelled due to 2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season, Egypt Cup\nNote: The rest of the tournament was held during the following season due to 2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season, CAF Champions League, Preliminary round\nZamalek won 7\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231368-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 Zamalek SC season, CAF Champions League, First round\nZamalek won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231369-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 curling season\nThe 2012\u201313 curling season began at the end of August 2012 and ended in April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231369-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 curling season\nNote: In events with two genders, the men's tournament winners is listed before the women's tournament winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231369-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 curling season, CCA-sanctioned events\nThis section lists events sanctioned by and/or conducted by the Canadian Curling Association (CCA). The following events in bold have been confirmed by the CCA as are part of the 2012\u201313 Season of Champions programme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231369-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 curling season, Other events\nNote: Events that were not placed on the CCA's list of CCA-sanctioned events are listed here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231369-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 curling season, The Dominion MA Cup\nThe Dominion MA Cup (presented by TSN) was contested in the 2012\u201313 season. The Cup was awarded to the Canadian Curling Association Member Association (MA) who has had the most success during the season in CCA-sanctioned events. Events included the Canadian mixed championship, men's and women's juniors championships, the Scotties, the Brier, the men's and women's senior championships and the national wheelchair championship. Points were awarded based on placement in each of the events, with the top association receiving 14 points, the 2nd place team with 13, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231370-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 cyclo-cross season\nThe 2012\u20132013 cyclo-cross season consists of three international series conducted in the bicycle racing discipline of cyclo-cross:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231370-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 cyclo-cross season\nThe season began on 7 October with the Cyclo-cross Ruddervoorde, won by Sven Nys. It is scheduled to end on 24 February 2013. The season will also include the 2013 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships on 2 February in Louisville, Kentucky, the first edition of that event to be held outside of Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season\nThe 2012\u201313 figure skating season began on July 1, 2012, and ended on June 30, 2013. During this season, elite skaters from men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance competed on the International Skating Union (ISU) Championship level at the 2013 European, Four Continents, World Junior, and World Championships. They also competed in elite events such as the Grand Prix series and Junior Grand Prix series, culminating in the Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Season notes\nThe 2012\u20132013 pattern dance in the short dance was the Yankee Polka on the senior level and Blues on the junior level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Season notes\nOne accident occurred at a competition \u2013 at the 2012 Cup of China, the United States' Adam Rippon collided with China's Song Nan who sustained a concussion and withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Season notes, Age eligibility\nSkaters competing on the junior level were required to be at least 13 but not 19 \u2013 or 21 for male pair skaters and ice dancers \u2013 before July 1, 2012. Those who turned 14 before that date were eligible for the senior Grand Prix series and senior B internationals. Those who turned 15 before July 1, 2012 were also eligible for the senior World, European, and Four Continents Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Season notes, Minimum scores, Grand Prix\nIn order to compete in the Grand Prix series, skaters were required to reach the minimum total score at an accepted ISU event:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Season notes, Minimum scores, ISU Championships\nIn June 2012, the International Skating Union increased the minimum technical scores for ISU Championships, reserving the right to revise the scores if they resulted in too few or too many entries. The decision followed a vote to eliminate the preliminary (qualifying) round. Midway through the season, the ISU confirmed the season's minimums for the European, Four Continents and World Junior Championships, but lowered the singles and pairs minimums for the senior World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Season notes, Minimum scores, ISU Championships\nTo be eligible to compete at the European, Four Continents, Junior World, or World Championships, skaters were required to achieve the following scores in a prior ISU-recognized event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Season notes, Partnership changes\nSome skaters announced the dissolution of a partnership or formation of a new one. Listed are changes involving at least one partner who competed at Worlds, Europeans, Four Continents, Junior Worlds or the senior Grand Prix, or who medaled on the Junior Grand Prix circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231371-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 figure skating season, Competitions\nNational skating associations may have held pre-season camps for members of their national team, during which skaters presented their programs and received feedback in preparation for the season. U.S. Figure Skating held its annual Champs Camp in August, while the Russian Skating Federation had test skates in August and September. In 2013, the ISU introduced the World Development Trophy for developing skating nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231372-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 film awards season\nThe 2012\u201313 film awards season began in November 2012 and ended in February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231373-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Algerian football\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be the 52nd season of competitive association football in Algeria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231374-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Argentine football\n2012\u201313 season of Argentine football is the 122nd season of competitive football in Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231374-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Argentine football, National teams, Men's\nThis section covers Argentina men's matches from August 1, 2012 to July 31, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231375-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Australian soccer\nThe following article is a summary of the 2012\u201313 soccer season in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231375-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Australian soccer, International club competitions, AFC Champions League, Brisbane Roar\nBrisbane Roar qualified for a playoff spot as winners of the 2012 A-League Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 98], "content_span": [99, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231375-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Australian soccer, International club competitions, AFC Champions League, Central Coast Mariners\nCentral Coast Mariners entered in the Group stage as 2011\u201312 A-League Premiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 107], "content_span": [108, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231375-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Australian soccer, International club competitions, International Women's Club Championship\nThe winners of the 2011-12 season Canberra United participated in the 2012 International Women's Club Championship, known as the Mobcast Cup for sponsorship reasons, the first edition of this tournament hosted by the JFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 102], "content_span": [103, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231375-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Australian soccer, International club competitions, International Women's Club Championship\nCanberra United finished in fourth place (out of four teams), suffering two losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 102], "content_span": [103, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231376-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Belgian football\nThe 2012\u201313 football season in Belgium, which is the 110th season of competitive football in the country and runs from July 2012 until June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231376-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Belgian football, National team football, Men's national football team\nWith no less than four players winning individual awards as best player in their league following conclusion of the 2011\u201312 season, namely Eden Hazard (in France), Vincent Kompany (in England), Kevin Mirallas (in Greece) and Jan Vertonghen (in the Netherlands), questions were raised how it was possible that Belgium had not managed to qualify for the UEFA Euro 2012 tournament. Moreover, this raised the belief that Belgium would qualify for the 2014 FIFA World Cup, even with rather inexperienced head coach Marc Wilmots in charge after Georges Leekens quit in May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231376-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Belgian football, National team football, Men's national football team\nIn a friendly before the actual qualifying campaign, the Red Devils managed to beat the Netherlands by a score of 4-2, with Dries Mertens the man of the match, scoring once and giving two assists. For once, a decent start was made, as Belgium won in Wales and kept Croatia to a 1-1 draw at home. The team continued on their good spirits, following up with a 0-3 win in Serbia, the biggest ever loss for the Serbian team, and a 2-0 win at home against Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231376-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Belgian football, National team football, Men's national football team\nThis left Belgium and Croatia together in the lead with 10 points out of 12 and with the other four teams trailing 6 or more points behind it already looked like they would be battling it out for first place. Also, by November Belgium moved into position 20 on the FIFA World Rankings, their highest position since 2004. Belgium finished the year 2012 with a 2-1 friendly loss in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231376-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Belgian football, National team football, Men's national football team\nIn 2013, Belgium started with a 2-1 win against Slovakia, due to a last minute goal by Dries Mertens, before winning twice against Macedonia to keep their unbeaten status in the FIFA World Cup qualifying campaign. In June, while having risen to a record high 12th position in the FIFA World Rankings, Belgium first beat United States 2-4 in a friendly in Cleveland, before winning their final qualifying match at home against Serbia 2-1. At the same time, Croatia lost at home to Scotland, allowing Belgium to take a three-point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231376-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Belgian football, League competitions, Belgian Third Division, Third division play-off\nOnly Verbroedering Geel-Meerhout succeeded in being promoted to the 2013\u201314 Belgian Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 97], "content_span": [98, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231376-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Belgian football, European Club results\nChampions Anderlecht and runners-up Club Brugge start in the qualifying rounds of the Champions League, while league numbers three and four, Genk and Gent play in the Europa League together with cup winners Lokeren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231377-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Cape Verdean football, Diary of the season\nIn the 2012\u201313 season of competitive football (soccer) in Cape Verde:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231377-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Cape Verdean football, Final standings, Cape Verdean Football Championships\nDesportivo da Praia had the most points numbered thirteen and scored twelve goals, Mindelense was second in Group A. In Group B, Acad\u00e9micas Fogo and Porto Novo, the first had eleven points and the second had ten. Mindelense advanced to the finals with two over Acad\u00e9mica Fogo while Acad\u00e9mica Porto Novo had two over Desportivo Praia. With a total of five goals scored in the two matches, Mindelense won their ninth title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231377-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Cape Verdean football, Final standings, Cape Verdean Super Cup\nThe Cape Verdean Super Cup took place in late 2012 and featured the Onze Unidos and the champion Sporting Clube da Praia. It was one of the recent to have its own super cup competitions added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231377-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Cape Verdean football, Final standings, Island or regional competitions, Regional Super Cups\nThe 2012 champion winner played with a 2012 cup winner (when a club won both, a second place club competed).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 103], "content_span": [104, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231377-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Cape Verdean football, Transfer deals, Summer-Fall transfer window\nThe September/October transfer window runs from the end of the previous season in September up to October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231378-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Croatian football\nThe following article presents a summary of the 2012\u201313 football season in Croatia, which is the 22nd season of competitive football in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231379-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Danish football\nThe 2011\u201312 season is the 123rd season of competitive football in Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231379-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Danish football, Club football, Domestic football, Superliga\nThe 23rd edition of the Danish Superliga began on 13 July 2012 and ended on 20 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231379-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Danish football, Club football, Cup\nThe Cup is scheduled to play its first round matches on 14\u201316 August 2012 and hold its final on 9 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 133rd season of competitive football in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football\nThe season began on 4 August 2012 for The Football League, 11 August 2012 for the Football Conference and 18 August 2012 for the Premier League. The regular season of the Football Conference season ended on 20 April 2013 followed by League One and League Two both ending on 27 April 2013 whilst The Championship ended on 4 May 2013 and finally the Premier League on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Premier League\nIn Sir Alex Ferguson's final season as manager, Manchester United comfortably won their 13th Premier League title and their 20th overall, topping the table in mid-November and never surrendering their lead, though a run of just three wins in their last eight matches meant that they squandered the chance to become the first ever top-flight side to earn a hundred points in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Premier League\nNeighbours and defending champions Manchester City finished in second place, though they never looked like seriously challenging for a second successive title, and this, combined with a humiliating FA Cup final defeat by Wigan Athletic, cost Roberto Mancini his job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0002-0002", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Premier League\nDespite enduring a turbulent season in which Champions League-winning manager Roberto Di Matteo was dismissed early in the campaign and replaced by the extremely unpopular appointment of former Liverpool boss Rafael Ben\u00edtez on an interim basis, Chelsea did improve on the previous season's finish by three places and 11 points, and also won the Europa League for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0002-0003", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Premier League\nThe final Champions League spot was taken by Arsenal; despite being well off the pace for much of the season following the \u00a324\u00a0million departure of Robin van Persie in the summer, they managed to snatch fourth place with an excellent late run of form, consigning rivals Tottenham Hotspur to the Europa League once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Premier League\nDavid Moyes ended 11 years in charge of Everton by guiding the Toffees to a solid finish of sixth place, finishing two points ahead of arch rivals Liverpool, who hit the headlines again for all the wrong reasons when striker Luis Su\u00e1rez received a lengthy ban after biting Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovi\u0107 during a league game. Swansea City qualified for the Europa League by winning the League Cup, becoming the first Welsh club to qualify for a major European club competition, whilst West Bromwich Albion finished eighth, their best finish in the Premier League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Premier League\nWest Ham United fared the best out of the three promoted teams, losing just four home games all season and finishing impressively in tenth place, despite repeated speculation that manager Sam Allardyce would be sacked and replaced with a manager with a reputation for a more attractive style of play. Southampton finished four places below them, flirting with relegation all season before Nigel Adkins was sacked and replaced by the relatively unknown Mauricio Pochettino, who guided the Saints to 19 points from their remaining 16 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Premier League\nAt the bottom of the table, Queens Park Rangers were relegated after a thoroughly dismal campaign in which they recorded the worst start in Premier League history, not winning a league game until December, and with not even Harry Redknapp's appointment as manager and a substantial investment in players during the January transfer window significantly improving their fortunes. Reading, who never quite adjusted to the pace of the top-flight after being promoted as champions the previous year, fared little better and were relegated in second-bottom place. Both Reading and QPR were relegated on the same day after a 0-0 draw against each other. Despite winning the FA Cup (and thereby qualifying for the following season's Europa League), Wigan Athletic finally succumbed to relegation after eight years of battling against the odds in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 902]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Championship\nAfter a decade of trying and play-off heartbreak, Cardiff City finally secured their long-awaited promotion to the Premier League, leading the division for nearly the entire season and being promoted as champions. Hull City finished the season as runners-up under manager Steve Bruce, returning to the top-flight after an absence of three years. This was despite a shaky end to the season which saw them fail to win any of their last four fixtures. Ian Holloway made it two promotions in three attempts as Crystal Palace were promoted through the play-offs, earning a record-breaking fourth promotion to the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Championship\nThe Eagles' success ensured that they became the first club to win the second-tier play-off final four times, and also the first club to win the play-off final at four separate venues \u2013 at home at Selhurst Park in a two-legged final format in 1989, the old Wembley in 1997, the Millennium Stadium in 2004 and the new Wembley in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Championship\nBolton Wanderers fared the best out of the newly relegated clubs and looked good value to secure a play-off place throughout the season, but narrowly missed out after drawing their final game and Leicester's last minute win at Nottingham Forest. Blackburn Rovers in contrast, despite a strong start to the season spent the latter part of it battling relegation, with indifferent spells of form during the season and the presence of three permanent managers seeing them slide towards the bottom 3 before finally pulling away under the caretaker management of Gary Bowyer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Championship\nBristol City, who had been in a gradual downward spiral since failing to win promotion to the Premier League in 2008, were relegated in bottom place after a dismal end to the season. The arrival of Sean O'Driscoll and a run of 5 home victories from 6 failed to save them. Making even bigger headlines were Wolverhampton Wanderers, who suffered their second successive relegation, giving them the unwanted distinction of having suffered successive relegations from the top and second tiers on two separate occasions (the first being in the 1983\u201384 and 1984\u201385 seasons). The final relegation spot was filled by Peterborough United, who despite recovering well from seven consecutive losses at the start of the season, ended up being relegated with the joint-highest ever points total for a relegated team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Championship, League table\nA total of 24 teams contest the division: 18 sides remaining in the division from last season, three relegated from the Premier League, and three promoted from the League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League One\nDespite the departure of manager Dean Saunders, Doncaster Rovers made an immediate return to the Championship, winning the title in dramatic fashion on the final day of the season. Bournemouth were promoted as runners-up; they had initially looked set to battle relegation this season following an awful start under previous manager Paul Groves, but the decision to re-employ successful former manager Eddie Howe paid off handsomely, and saw them promoted to the second tier for only the second time in their history, and the first time since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0010-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League One\nYeovil Town won promotion through the play-offs, entering the Championship for the first time ever, and also meaning that manager Gary Johnson (who returned for his own second spell late in the previous season) had earned his third promotion with the club, having gotten them promoted from the Football Conference and League Two in 2003 and 2005 respectively. None of the three promoted clubs had ever played in the top flight at the time, be it the old Football League First Division or the current Premier League. The previous time this had happened was in 1979, when Shrewsbury Town, Watford and Swansea City were promoted (the latter two eventually competed in the top flight under both denominations).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League One\nFinancially stricken Portsmouth finally hit rock-bottom, and were relegated to the Football League's lowest tier for the first time since 1980, just five years after winning the FA Cup, and three years after playing in the Premier League. They were consigned to bottom place after their second ten-point deduction in as many seasons, though unlike the previous season would have been relegated even without the deduction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League One\nHartlepool United were relegated in second-bottom place, mostly due to a dreadful first half of the season which saw them win just once in their first 23 games, bringing an end to what had been the club's longest spell outside the bottom tier. Bury, who suffered their own financial problems and never quite recovered from the loss of manager Richie Barker days before the season began, also suffered relegation, and only finished above Hartlepool on goals scored. Scunthorpe United occupied the final relegation spot, being relegated for the second time in three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League One, League table\nA total of 24 teams contest the division: 17 sides remaining in the division from last season, three relegated from the Championship, and four promoted from League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League Two\nGillingham won the division and returned to League One after a three-year absence, as Martin Allen's appointment as manager brought immediate success. Rotherham United celebrated their return to their hometown (after four years of playing in Sheffield) by winning promotion as runners-up. Port Vale, whose promotion challenge had been derailed by a ten-point administration penalty in the previous season, took the final automatic promotion spot. The play-offs were won by Bradford City, who were victorious in their second Wembley appearance this season (their first being in the League Cup final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League Two\nAldershot Town were relegated back to the Football Conference after five years, experiencing relegation for the first time since the club's formation in 1992. After surviving relegation on the last day for three seasons in a row, Barnet's luck finally ran out (despite their best points total in four years and the high-profile appointment of Edgar Davids as player-manager) and they were relegated from the Football League for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, League Two, League table\nTwenty-four teams contest the division: 18 sides remaining in the division from last season, four relegated from League One, and two promoted from Conference National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Football Conference Top Division\nPromoted as champions of the Football Conference were Mansfield Town, who coincidentally were one of the teams replaced by Aldershot at the end of the 2007\u201308 season. They were joined by 2013 Conference National play-off Final winners Newport County, who joined the Football League for the first time as the current incarnation of the club (their forerunners last played in the League in 1988). The play-off final between Newport County and Wrexham was the first Wembley Stadium final to feature two Welsh clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Football Conference Top Division\nAFC Telford United were relegated in bottom place after a terrible run of form which saw them win just one of their last 30 matches, along with getting through four different managers during the course of the season. Ebbsfleet United finished second-bottom amid financial worries caused by the collapse of their MyFootballClub ownership scheme. Barrow occupied third-bottom place, ultimately being cost dearly by their poor goalscoring record. Stockport County were the final relegated side, being relegated to the Conference North just three years after being in League One, and eleven years after being in the second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231380-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in English football, Diary of the season, Welsh success\nThe 2012\u201313 season was one of particular success for Welsh clubs playing in the English league system. Swansea City of the Premier League became the first Welsh club to win the Football League Cup; Cardiff City gained promotion to the Premier League by winning the Football League Championship; Newport County and Wrexham reached the final of the Football Conference play-offs, with Newport winning to gain promotion to the Football League, while Wrexham gained a measure of consolation by winning the FA Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 108th overall season of football and the 80th season of competitive professional football in France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football\nThe France men's national team began play on 15 August 2012, contesting a friendly match against Uruguay. The team also began contesting qualification matches for the 2014 FIFA World Cup. The men's youth international teams also began playing qualification matches for their yearly European Championship tournament. Les Espoirs concluded its qualification campaign for the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, while the under-19 and under-17 teams played qualification matches for the 2013 UEFA European Under-19 Football Championship and 2013 UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football\nSimilarly, the women's team concluded its qualification campaign for UEFA Women's Euro 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football, News, Broadcast rights\nOn 23 June 2011, the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP) confirmed that French television channel Canal+ had acquired four television packages for the next four seasons beginning with the 2012\u201313 and ending with the 2015\u201316 season. The organization also announced that independent broadcaster Al Jazeera had acquired two packages. The combined deals are valued at \u20ac510\u00a0million per season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football, News, Schedule\nTo coincide with the new television rights deal, the LFP announced that the match days would be re-arranged. Beginning with the 2012\u201313 season, there will be one match played on Friday night at 21:00. On Saturday, a match will be contested at 17:00. At 19:00, four matches will be played and that will be followed by a match at 21:00. On Sunday, the early match will be played at 14:00. This will be followed by a match at 19:00. Finally, at 21:00, the match day will conclude with the showcase match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football, News, Supercup in the United States\nOn 5 April 2012, the LFP announced that, for the fourth consecutive season, the Troph\u00e9e des champions will be held on international soil. The match will be played in Harrison, New Jersey, at the Red Bull Arena and will be contested by the winner of Ligue 1 and the winner of the Coupe de France. The match will be played on 28 July 2012. Like the previous three years, the idea will be to promote French football abroad, but this time more specifically in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football, DNCG rulings, Ligue 2\nOn 11 July 2012, following a preliminary review of each club's administrative and financial accounts in Ligue 2, the DNCG ruled that Le Mans would be relegated to the Championnat National. Following the announcement, Le Mans club president Henri Legarda announced that the club would appeal the decision, stating the \"shareholders will play their part and the club will go after every possible step to restore its rightful place in the sport\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231381-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in French football, DNCG rulings, National\nOn 12 June 2012, following a preliminary review of each club's administrative and financial accounts in the Championnat National, the DNCG ruled that Cherbourg would be relegated to the Championnat de France amateur due to the club possessing a financial debt of \u20ac200,000. Following the announcement, Cherbourg president G\u00e9rard Gohel announced that the club would appeal the decision. On 5 July, the DNCG reversed its decision to relegate Cherbourg after the club gained the \u20ac200,000 required to remain in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231382-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in German football\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 103rd season of competitive football in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 111th season of competitive football in Hong Kong, starting in July 2012 and ending in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, 2013 EAFF East Asian Cup qualification\nThe qualification stage (semi-final competition) of the 2013 EAFF East Asian Cup will be held from 1 December to 9 December 2012 in Hong Kong. Hong Kong will play against Australia, Chinese Taipei, Guam and North Korea. Winner of the group qualifies and advances to the final competition held in South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 101], "content_span": [102, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, 2015 AFC Asian Cup qualification\nThe draw for the group stage of qualification was held in Australia on 9 October 2012. Hong Kong was drawn with Uzbekistan, United Arab Emirates and Vietnam. Hong Kong will start their 2015 Asian Cup qualifying campaign in February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, 2013 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nThis is a tournament between two teams representing Hong Kong and Guangdong Province of China respectively. The first leg will take place in Huizhou, Guangdong, being held in Huizhou Olympic Stadium, and the second leg took place in Hong Kong, being held in Mong Kok Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, 2013 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nGuangdong took the 1\u20130 lead in the first leg, thanks to Yin Hongbo's goalscoring penalty before the end of match. However, Hong Kong levelled the game in the second leg, with Bai He's and Lee Wai Lim's header, while Guangdong's Shi Liang scored once. After 120 minutes of play, the scoreline levels in 2\u20132, thus the game proceeded to penalty shoot-out stage. Both team scored 8 out of 8 penalties perfectly, and Wisdom Fofo Agbo scored the ninth penalty for Hong Kong. However, Guangdong's Shi Liang, who scored once in the tournament, missed the kick as Yapp Hung Fai saved. Hong Kong won the champions of the 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, Friendly matches in first half season\nAn away friendly match for Hong Kong is proposed. Hong Kong will play against Singapore in August. The match was originally proposed to play at Bishan Stadium in Bishan, but then changed to Jurong West Stadium in Jurong West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 100], "content_span": [101, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, Friendly matches in first half season\nAccording to the official website of the FIFA, Hong Kong will play a home match against Malaysia on 16 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 100], "content_span": [101, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, Friendly matches in first half season\nAccording to the official website of the FIFA, Hong Kong will play an away match against Malaysia on 14 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 100], "content_span": [101, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong, Friendly matches in second half season\nAccording to the official website of the FIFA, Hong Kong will play a home match against the Philippines on 4 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 101], "content_span": [102, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Representative team, Hong Kong Under-21, Friendly matches in first half season\nThe Hong Kong Football Association has organised a friendly match between the Hong Kong U-21 and Australia U-19 on 29 August 2012 at Mong Kok Stadium, Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 109], "content_span": [110, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, First Division League, Monthly awards\nThe monthly awards are organised by the Hong Kong Sports Press Association. 20 journalists who specialise in football in Hong Kong will vote their best player of the month. Player with the highest number of votes wins the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231383-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Hong Kong football, Exhibition matches, Arsenal's Asia Tour 2012 against Kitchee\nEnglish Premier League side Arsenal played against Hong Kong First Division League champions Kitchee on Sunday, 29 July 2012 at the Hong Kong Stadium as part of Arsenal's Asia Tour 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231384-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Indian football\nThe 2012\u201313 season is the 134th season of Indian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231385-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Italian football\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 111th season of competitive football in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231385-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Italian football, National teams, Italy national under-21 football team\nThe draw will take place in Israel at 28 November 2012. Italy is in Pot 3 with Germany, Russia and Norway; in Pot 1 there is Israel (assign to A1) and Spain (assign to B1) and in Pot 2 there is England and Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231385-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Italian football, National teams, Italy women's national football team, UEFA Women's Euro 2013\nThe final draw took place on 9 November 2012 at the Swedish Exhibition & Congress Centre in Gothenburg. Italy is in Pot 2 with England and Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 105], "content_span": [106, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231386-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Pakistani football\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 64th season of competitive football in Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231387-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Russian football\nThe following is a summary of the 2012\u201313 season of competitive football in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231388-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Scottish football\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 116th season of competitive football in Scotland. The season began on 28 July 2012, with the start of the Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231388-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Scottish football, League competitions, Scottish Premier League\nRangers' participation in the SPL was dependant upon the successful transfer of their membership share of the League to the new company that had bought the club, which would be decided by a vote of the SPL clubs. Eight clubs publicly declared that they would oppose the membership transfer, which would mean that they could not play in the SPL. The vote took place on 4 July 2012, and Rangers were refused re-entry to the SPL by a 10-1 majority. Dundee, who had finished second in the 2011\u201312 Scottish First Division, were invited to replace Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231388-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Scottish football, Honours, Individual honours, PFA Scotland awards\nThe PFA Scotland awards took place in Glasgow on 5 May 2013, with the following winners:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231388-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Scottish football, Women's football, Individual honours, SWF awards\nThe SWF awards evening took place at Hampden Park, Glasgow on 23 November 2012 and the winners were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football\nThe 2012\u201313 season was the 109th season of competitive football in Spain. It started officially on 1 July 2012 and ended on 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football, Competitions dates\nLa Liga and Segunda Divisi\u00f3n started for its first time around middle August, after previous season it was frustrated because of strike. All competitions made a break during Christmas holidays between 24 December 2012 and 3 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football, Transfer windows, Retirements\nThe following players retired from association football at the end of 2011\u201312 season or during this season, being the last club a member of 2012\u201313 La Liga or 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football, National team\nThe home team is on the left column; the away team is on the right column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football, National team, FIFA World Cup qualifiers\nSpain was in Group I of the 2014 World Cup qualification process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football, National team, FIFA Confederations Cup\nSpain participated in the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup. Spain was in Group B and was winner in this group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football, Spanish friendly tournaments\nList of some friendly matches or short tournaments celebrated in Spain, mainly at summer as part of pre-season, which participated La Liga and Segunda Divisi\u00f3n teams. Other historical tournaments are also included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231389-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Spanish football, Spanish friendly tournaments, Other unofficial/friendly tournaments\nOther unofficial major tournaments or friendly matches celebrated in Spain were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 96], "content_span": [97, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231390-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Swiss football\nThe following is a summary of the 2012\u201313 season of competitive football in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231390-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Swiss football, Men's national team\nThe home team is on the left column; the away team is on the right column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231390-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Swiss football, Men's Olympic national team\nThe home team is on the left column; the away team is on the right column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231390-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Swiss football, Women's national team\nThe home team is on the left column; the away team is on the right column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231391-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Uruguayan football, Clubs in international competitions, Defensor Sporting\nDefensor Sporting is already qualified for the 2012 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 85], "content_span": [86, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231391-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in Uruguayan football, National teams, Senior team\nThis section covers Uruguay's senior team matches from the end of the 2012 Summer Olympics until the end of the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231392-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 in skiing\nFrom August 22, 2012 to March 27, 2013, the following skiing events took place at various locations around the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231393-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 snooker season\nThe 2012\u201313 snooker season was a series of snooker tournaments played between 16\u00a0May 2012 and 6\u00a0May 2013. The season featured two new ranking events: the Wuxi Classic and the International Championship. The tour had a record five ranking events in China, and three new PTC events in Asia. The tour also visited Bulgaria for the first time in its history, and returned to Poland, Belgium and Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231393-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 snooker season\nBefore the start of the season World Snooker requested every player to sign a players contract, that would allow players to choose which events they want to enter \u2013 no player was forced to play in any event. At the end of the season Mark Selby was named the World Snooker Player of the Year, the Snooker Writers' Player of the Year and the Fans' Player of the Year and Ian Burns the Rookie of the Year. Ronnie O'Sullivan received the \"Performance of the Year\" for winning his fifth World title after playing just one competitive match during the season. Jimmy Robertson's 57 break in just 130 seconds at the Snooker Shoot Out received the \"Magic Moment of the Year\" award. Terry Griffiths, Joe Johnson, Peter Ebdon, Ken Doherty, Graeme Dott, Shaun Murphy and Neil Robertson were inducted into the Hall of Fame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231393-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 snooker season\nThe season had a total of \u00a37.1 million of prize money. The World Championship, the UK Championship, the International Championship and the Masters were the four biggest tournaments in terms of prize money with the total pot being over half a million pounds at each event. A further \u00a35,000 was on offer at the televised stages of each ranking event for any player who compiled a maximum break and this prize rolled over from one tournament to the next if not won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231393-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u201313 snooker season\nA \u00a3500 rolling prize was given to any player who completed the feat in the qualifying stages of ranking events. A separate \u00a3500 rolling prize was also available in all the PTC events, but this prize was excluded from the Asian PTCs. If at any tournament a 147 was made by more than one player, then the prize was equally shared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231393-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 snooker season, New professional players\nThe 2012/2013 season was made up of 99 professional players. The top 64 players after the 2012 World Championships automatically qualified for the 2012/2013 season as did the top eight who were not in the top 64 from the Players Tour Championship Order of Merit. Another twelve places were available through Q School; the rest of the places on to the tour came from amateur events and national governing body nominations. All players except those in the top 64 received a tour card for two seasons. Listed below are the players who qualified for the 2012/2013 and 2013/2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231393-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 snooker season, Calendar\nThe following table outlines the results and dates for all the ranking and major invitational events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231394-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 synchronized skating season\nThe 2012\u201313 synchronized skating season began on July 1, 2012, and ended on June 30, 2013. 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 2013 World and World Junior Championships. They also competed at various other international as well as national competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest FC season\nThe 2012\u201313 season will be \u00dajpest FC's 107th competitive season, 101st consecutive season in the OTP Bank Liga and 127th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest FC 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest FC season, Statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231395-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u201313 \u00dajpest FC season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis\nThe 2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis was an economic crisis in the Republic of Cyprus that involved the exposure of Cypriot banks to overleveraged local property companies, the Greek government-debt crisis, the downgrading of the Cypriot government's bond credit rating to junk status by international credit rating agencies, the consequential inability to refund its state expenses from the international markets and the reluctance of the government to restructure the troubled Cypriot financial sector.sopalsuemae", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis\nOn 25 March 2013, a \u20ac10 billion international bailout by the Eurogroup, European Commission (EC), European Central Bank (ECB) and International Monetary Fund (IMF) was announced, in return for Cyprus agreeing to close the country's second-largest bank, the Cyprus Popular Bank (also known as Laiki Bank), imposing a one-time bank deposit levy on all uninsured deposits there, and possibly around 48% of uninsured deposits in the Bank of Cyprus (the island's largest commercial bank).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis\nA minority proportion of it held by citizens of other countries (many of whom from Russia), who preferred Cypriot banks because of their higher interest on bank account deposits, relatively low corporate tax, and easier access to the rest of the European banking sector. This resulted in numerous insinuations by US and European media, which presented Cyprus as a 'tax haven' and suggested that the prospective bailout loans were meant for saving the accounts of Russian depositors. No insured deposit of \u20ac100,000 or less would be affected, though 47.5% of all bank deposits above \u20ac100,000 were seized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis\nNearly one-third of Rossiya Bank's cash ($1 billion) was frozen in Cypriot accounts during this crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Context\nThe United States' subprime mortgage crisis in 2007\u20132008 led to a domino effect of negative consequences in the global economy including the European Union. The Cypriot economy went into recession in 2009, as the economy shrank by 1.67%, with large falls specifically in the tourism and shipping sectors which caused rising unemployment. Economic growth between 2010 and 2012 was weak and failed to reach its pre-2009 levels. Commercial property values declined by approximately 30%. Non -performing loans rose to a reported 6.1% in 2011, increasing pressure on the banking system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Context\nWith a small population and modest economy, Cyprus had a large offshore banking industry. Compared to a nominal GDP of \u20ac19.5bn ($24bn) the banks had amassed \u20ac22 billion of Greek private-sector debt with bank deposits $120bn, including $60bn from Russia business corporations. Russian oligarch Dmitry Rybolovlev owned a 10% shareholding of Bank of Cyprus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Context\nCyprus banks first came under severe financial pressure as bad debt ratios rose. Former Laiki CEO Efthimios Bouloutas admitted that his bank was probably insolvent as early as 2008, even before Cyprus entered the Eurozone. The banks were then exposed to a haircut of upwards of 50% in 2011 during the Greek government-debt crisis, leading to fears of a collapse of the Cypriot banks. The Cypriot state, unable to raise liquidity from the markets to support its financial sector, requested a bailout from the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Context\nProgress on fiscal and structural reforms was slow and following a serious, accidental explosion in July 2011 at the Evangelos Florakis Naval Base the major credit rating agencies downgraded the country's rating in September. Yields on its long-term bonds rose above 12% and there was concern that the country would be unable to stabilize its banks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Response, Emergency loan (2012)\nSince January 2012, Cyprus had been relying on a \u20ac2.5bn (US$3.236 billion) emergency loan from Russia to cover its budget deficit and refinance maturing debt. The loan has an interest rate of 4.5%, with no amortization/repayment until its maturity ends after 4.5 years, and no penalty if repayment at that point of time will be delayed, in the event of a persisting lack of access for Cyprus to cover its financial needs through the normal funding markets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Response, Emergency loan (2012)\nThe received loan was expected to cover all refinancing of maturing government debt and the amount needed for the government's continued budget deficits, until the first quarter of 2013. But the received loan did not include any funds for the recapitalization of the Cypriot financial sector. Looking further ahead, it was generally expected Cyprus would need to apply for an additional bailout loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Criticism\nThe Cypriot deal has no coherence in the larger context. The euro crisis has been in abeyance for a few months, thanks largely to the readiness of the European Central Bank to intervene to help struggling countries. The ECB's price for helping countries is to insist they go into a bail-out programme. The political price of going into a programme has just gone up, so the ECB's safety net looks a little thinner. The bail-out appears to move Europe further away from the institutional reforms that are needed to resolve the crisis once and for all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0007-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Criticism\nRather than using the European Stability Mechanism to recapitalise banks, and thereby weaken the link between banks and their governments, the eurozone continues to equate bank bail-outs with sovereign bail-outs. As for debt mutualisation, after imposing losses on local depositors, the price of support from the rest of Europe is arguably costlier now than it ever has been.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Criticism\nIn strategic terms the EU hurt not only Cyprus and itself, but also the interests of the US and other allies in the West. Europe pushed Cyprus directly into the arms of the Russian government. Not only did this hurt the prospects for its own deal, but it gave leverage to Moscow in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Criticism\nMore important still, however, by forcing Anastasiades between the rock of a forced bank levy and the hard place of seeking assistance from Moscow, the EU seriously undermined him domestically precisely when the West was about to reap the benefits at long last of a fairly pro-Western Cypriot president, crucially necessary to overcome sour relations with Turkey that continue to undermine NATO relations, EU relations, NATO-EU relations, and US relations with both.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Criticism\nTo top it all off, a peace deal along the lines of the Annan Plan for a final resolution of the 40-year-old Cypriot divide \u2013 the prospects for which had improved with the election of Anastasiades \u2013 has seen its prospects diminished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Criticism\nThis is blackmail. This is basically the officials of the banks and the political leaders going to the mass of people and saying to them, \"This awful deal that makes you, who have nothing to do with the crisis and didn't get any bailout, pay the costs of the crisis and the bailout. You must do this, because if you don't, we will do even more damage to you and your economy. So give us your deposits, give us your money, pay more taxes, suffer fewer social programs, because if you don't, we will impose even worse on you.\" It's the basic idea of austerity across the board and in our country, too. And I think it's the confrontation of a system that does not work with the mass of the people, saying, \"We will go down and take you with us, unless you bail us out.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Local reaction\nCyprus has seen a number of reactions and responses towards the austerity measures of the bailout plan. On 8 November 2012, the Cypriot far-left party Committee for a Radical Left Rally (ERAS) organized the first protest against austerity while the Troika negotiations were still taking place. Protesters were gathered outside the House of Representatives holding banners and shouting slogans against austerity. Leaflets with alternative proposals for the economy were distributed in the protest, with proposals including the nationalization of banking, the reduction of the army and the freezing of the army budget, and the increase of the corporate tax. Members of the New Internationalist Left (NEDA) also participated in the protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Local reaction\nOn 14 November the New Internationalist Left organised an anti-austerity protest outside the Ministry of Finance in Nicosia together with the Alliance Against the Memorandum. In the protest NEDA gave out leaflets, which expressed the view that \"the EU is trying to burden the workers with the debts from the collapse of the bankers\" and that \"if this happens, the Cypriot economy and the future of the new generations will then be mortgaged to local and foreign profiteers and usurious bankers\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Local reaction\nContract teachers protested outside the House of Representatives on 29 November against austerity measures that would leave 992 of them without a job next year. The teachers stormed the building and bypassed the policemen, entering the parliament. The teachers shouted against the banks and poverty. A protest by investors was staged on the morning of 11 December outside the House of Representatives, with protesters again storming parliament and bypassing the police. The storming of the parliament led to the interruption of the discussions of the parliamentary committee of customs. The protesters were asked to leave so that the committee could continue its work, and the protesters left half an hour later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Local reaction\nA number of protests took place on 12 December. Members of large families protested outside the House of Representatives against cuts in the benefits given by the state to support large families. Protesters threw eggs and stones at the main entrance of the parliament, and a number of protesters tried to enter the building, but were blocked by the police force that arrived to handle the protest. It was reported that a woman fainted during the incidents. The protesters shouted for the MPs to come out but no response was given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Local reaction\nThe protesters were joined by members of KISOA (Cypriot Confederation of Organisations of the Disabled, \u039a\u03c5\u03c0\u03c1\u03b9\u03b1\u03ba\u03ae \u03a3\u03c5\u03bd\u03bf\u03bc\u03bf\u03c3\u03c0\u03bf\u03bd\u03b4\u03af\u03b1 \u039f\u03c1\u03b3\u03b1\u03bd\u03ce\u03c3\u03b5\u03c9\u03bd \u0391\u03bd\u03b1\u03c0\u03ae\u03c1\u03c9\u03bd), who marched from the Ministry of Finance to the House of Representatives to protest against cuts in benefits for people with disabilities. Later in the day members of public school teachers' trade unions protested outside the Ministry of Finance against the cuts in education spending which could result in the firing of teachers. The unions staged another protest the next day near the House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Local reaction\nHaravgi, a far left-wing newspaper reported that just before bank deposits were blocked a number of companies belonging to family of president Nikos Anastasiadis have transferred over $21m outside of Cyprus. Anastasiadis has denied these allegations. Also a number of loans issued to members of political parties or public administration officers were fully or partially written off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Non-EU bank depositors\nNon -resident investors who held deposits prior to 15 March 2013 when the plan to impose losses on savers was first formulated, and who lost at least three million euros would be eligible to apply for Cypriot citizenship. Cyprus's existing \"citizenship by investment\" program would be revised to reduce the amount of investment required to be eligible for the program to three million euros from the previous ten million euros. \"These decisions will be deployed in a fast-track manner\", Anastasiades said in an address to Russian business people in the port city of Limassol in 2013. Other measures were also under consideration, he said, including offering tax incentives for existing or new companies doing business in Cyprus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Distressed investing\nFrozen deposits in Cyprus banks attracted interest from specialized distressed assets investors and brokers. Among firms reported to be dealing in Cyprus bank debt was London-based Exito Partners (formerly \u00c9xito Capital) and Swiss-based Black Eagle Litigation Fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231396-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Cypriot financial crisis, Analysis\nA team of 16 Cypriot economists, organized by the citizens group Eleutheria (\"Freedom\"), attributed the crisis to sliding competitiveness, increasing public and private debt, exacerbated by the banking crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nThe 2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests (sometimes called the Hirak Uprising) were part of the crisis in Egypt including the June 2013 protests, the July 2013 coup d'\u00e9tat, and part of the post-coup unrest. They saw varying opposition against three contiguous heads of state; namely, SCAF, Muslim Brotherhood, and the de facto ruling Egyptian Armed Forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nBeginning with the anniversary of the 2011 Egyptian revolution, small-scale protests took place in January demanding the military to step away from power. Those protests saw at least 7 protesters killed. Increasing violence, however, began in February 2012 with the massacre of Port Said, where 74 people (72 of which being Al-Ahly fans) were killed and hundred were injured by purported fans who were armed with knives, batons and swords, while the sparse security present stood idly. The lack of police intervention and alleged political involvement sparked a number of protests. Subsequent protests in March saw 1 killed after demands for the return of football matches for El Masry after the riots last month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nMass demonstrations in April demanding a transfer of power were attacked by the military. In June, riots and violent demonstrations against the delay of the trial of those responsible for the killings of protesters since 2011 took place and demands for the parliament to be dissolved was heard. From 16 June-30 July, strikes and major protests against the continued lack of freedom of speech and the apparent power grab by the SCAF. Workers protested in major strikes in July against unemployment and the economic situation. Protests against the film discriminating Islam took place from 11-14 September. It was suppressed. Doctors and nurses protested in October for weeks demanding better wages. Protests against the resignations of members of the armed forces in august were carried out by supporters of the military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nDuring Morsi's reign, the demonstrations were organized by Egyptian opposition organizations and individuals, mainly liberals, leftists, secularists and Christians. They resulted in violent clashes between pro- and anti-Morsi protesters, with dozens of deaths and hundreds of injuries. Demonstrators gathered outside the Heliopolis Palace, which in turn was surrounded by tanks and armored vehicles of the Republican Guard. The anti-Morsi protesters in Cairo were estimated at 200,000, while over 100,000 supporters of Morsi gathered in Cairo to show support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nA number of Morsi's advisers resigned in protest, and many judges spoke out against his actions as well. Resignations were tendered by the director of state broadcasting, Rafik Habib (Christian vice president of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party), and Zaghloul el-Balshi (general secretary of the commission overseeing the planned constitutional referendum). Seven members of Morsi's 17-member advisory panel resigned in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nOn 8 December 2012, Morsi annulled his temporary decree which had expanded his presidential authority and removed judicial review of his decrees, an Islamist official said, but added that the results of the temporary declaration would still stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nOn 22 December, the Constitution supported by Morsi was approved in a national referendum by 64% of the voters, with 33% of the electorate voting. The opposition claimed fraud in the process and called for an inquiry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nOn 30 June 2013, prior to the anti-government protests, Morsi supporters gathered in Rabaa el-Adaweya square to celebrate the one-year anniversary of Morsi's inauguration. In turn, tens of thousands of Morsi opponents massed in Tahrir Square and outside the Heliopolis palace demanding Morsi's resignation and pre-term presidential elections. Demonstrations were also reported in 18 locations across Cairo and in other different locations across the country including Alexandria, El-Mahalla and cities in the Suez Canal region. Various political organizations supported the demonstrations, including the Tamarod movement formed by members of the Egyptian Movement for Change, which claimed to have collected 22 million signatures calling for Morsi's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nOn 3 July 2013 the Egyptian Armed Forces released a statement announcing the end of Morsi's presidency, following a 48-hour deadline demanding that Morsi \"responds to the demands of the people.\" In the same statement, the military announced the constitution was suspended for amendments and that new elections would be held at a future date. The chief justice of the constitutional court, Adly Mansour, became head of a transitional government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests\nProtesting Morsi's overthrow, his supporters staged large demonstrations in the Nasr City district of Cairo, and in Alexandria, Luxor, Damanhour, and Suez. In the aftermath, massacres were perpetrated during clashes between Morsi supporters and Egyptian soldiers and security forces, including the Rabaa massacre and the Republican Guard clashes. In many cases, the Armed Forces denied shooting at demonstrators with live ammunition, contrary to claims by the Brotherhood, its supporters, and several Western media outlets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Background\nOn 22 November 2012, Morsi issued a constitutional declaration purporting to protect the Constituent Assembly of Egypt from judicial interference. The declaration stated that it only applied until a new constitution was ratified. The declaration also required new trials for people acquitted of Mubarak-era killings of protesters, and extended the mandate of the constituent assembly by two months. Additionally, the declaration authorized Morsi to take all measures necessary to these ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Background\nIn effect, the declaration made all constitutional declarations, laws and decrees made since Morsi assumed power immune to appeal by any individual, political or governmental body. Demonstrations both in support of and opposing Morsi broke out around Egypt after the declaration was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2012\nOn 1 February 73 people were killed at a football game, in a stadium in Port Said. The riots began when fans of the team El Masry invaded the stadium, some of them carrying knives, and attacked fans of the rival team, Al Ahly. Initial media reports stated that more than 70 people were killed, with the death toll rising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2012\nNumerous protests then took place, following this event. On Thursday, 2 February, protesters took to the streets of Cairo, enraged by the fact that the lax security had failed in preventing this tragedy from happening. Some of the protesters were heard chanting that Tantawi should be executed. The police then deployed tear gas, on the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, March 2012\nOn 24 March, numerous protesters took to the streets, angry that the football team El-Masry was banned for two more seasons, following the riots last month. The army then attacked the protesters. At least one person was killed, and at least 18 others were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, April 2012\nOn 20 April, hundreds, possibly thousands, of protesters re-assembled in Cairo's Tahrir Square, demanding that the country's military rulers transfer power to a civilian government, sooner. They also wanted the Field Marshal, and leader of Egypt's military, Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, to step down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, April 2012\nOn 14 April, several candidates in the upcoming presidential election were disqualified, for various reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, May\nOn 23\u201324 May, the first round of voting in the presidential elections took place. Many people went to the polls, to vote. The two candidates with the highest number of votes were the Muslim Brotherhood's replacement candidate, Mohamed Morsi, and Hosni Mubarak's last Prime Minister, Ahmed Shafik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, May\nOn 31 May, the decades-old State of Emergency was finally completely lifted, in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June\nOn 2 June, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was sentenced to life in prison, for complicity in the killings of protesters by police, during the revolution that eventually toppled him, in 2011. However, the judge also found him not guilty, on corruption charges. This, and the fact that he had not received the death penalty, led numerous protesters to immediately take to the streets, directly after the verdict was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June\nOn 14 June, Egypt's Constitutional Court ruled that a law preventing members of Hosni Mubarak's former government from running for President was unconstitutional, therefore letting Ahmed Shafik remain in the presidential race. The court also ruled that the mainly Islamist-led Parliament, should be dissolved. Both of these verdicts also led to protests, as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June\nOn 16\u201317 June, the second round of voting in the presidential elections took place. Both candidates claimed that they had won the election, and each accused the other of cheating. The results of the presidential election were initially going to be officially announced, on Thursday, 21 June. However, this date was later postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June\nOn 18 June, the Muslim Brotherhood announced that its candidate, Morsi, had won the election. On the same day, the ruling military junta, (which is scheduled to transfer power to the newly elected President on 30 June), made a statement, in which they severely restricted the powers, of the Presidency. This led to huge protests in Tahrir Square, the biggest since those that eventually ousted Mubarak, more than a year earlier. Many of the protesters were members of the Muslim Brotherhood. On 19 June, the protests continued. Protesters rallied in Tahrir Square in Cairo, accusing the SCAF of planning a coup, and demanding that it back down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June\nThe results of the presidential election were officially announced on 24 June 2012. It was announced that Morsi had narrowly beat Shafik, gaining 52% of the votes, while Shafik got 48% of them. Right after the announcement, Morsi supporters in Tahrir Square celebrated their victory. It has also been noted that this is the first time since Hosni Mubarak's resignation, on 11 February 2011, that celebrations of this magnitude have occurred, in Egypt. However, even after the results of the presidential election were announced, numerous protesters still remained, in Tahrir Square. They were protesting the apparent power grab by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June\nOn 30 June 2012, Morsi was sworn in as the fifth President of Egypt. This marked the first time in Egypt's history that a civilian president has been elected by the people. In the past, all of the other presidents were either from the military or had a military background.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June\nThe inauguration of Morsi led to the third wave of the revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 8 July, Mohamed Morsi issued a decree calling back into session the dissolved parliament for 10 July 2012. Morsi's decree also called for new parliamentary elections to be held within 60 days of the adoption of a new constitution for the country, which was tentatively expected for late 2012. A constitutional assembly selected by the erstwhile parliament had been formed and had begun the work of drafting the constitution. The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) held an emergency meeting in response to the decree, but adjourned the meeting without making an announcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 9 July, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi's order to reconvene parliament was rejected by Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court which said after meeting on 9 July 2012 that all its rulings and decisions, including its judgement that part of the election for parliament was unconstitutional and which led in return to the assembly's dissolution by the SCAF, are final, not subject to appeal and binding for all state institutions. With its ruling the court asserted that Morsi had no right to reconvene parliament after the court ordered it dissolved in June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0026-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nThough the constituent assembly tasked with drawing up Egypt's new constitution was functioning, after being selected by the dissolved parliament, the SCAF also gave itself the power to choose a new assembly if the current one ran into any problems according to Al Jazeera. In its 9 July statement the military council said its constitutional declaration which gave it broad powers \"came as a result of the political, legal and constitutional circumstances that the country was facing\" and added that the declaration \"ensures the continuity of state institutions and the [military council] until a new constitution is drafted\". The military said it was \"confident\" that all state institutions will respect constitutional declarations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 10 July, Egypt's parliament convened despite dissolution, but the session was adjourned by Speaker Saad al-Katatni after the members of parliament approved Katatni's proposal that the parliament seek legal advice from the Court of Cassation on how to implement the supreme court's ruling. Thousands gathered in Cairo in protest of a ruling by Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court to freeze the decree issued by President Mohamed Morsi to reinstate the Islamist-led parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0027-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nWhile the Supreme Constitutional Court ruled that Morsi did not have the right to reconstitute the body, it also threatened the new president with the equivalent of contempt of court if he continued to reject its decisions. Parliament asked Egypt's Court of Cassation to essentially overrule the aspect of the Supreme Constitutional Court's decision holding that the whole Parliament must be immediately dissolved because of flaws in the electoral system used to fill a third of the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0027-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nThe Administrative Court (whose function is the review of executive actions), besides the Supreme Constitutional Court (whose function is the review of statutes) and Court of Cassation (whose function is the handling of appeals of lower court rulings) one of the three highest Courts in Egypt, was also weighing that question and has said it would issue its own ruling on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 11 July, Egypt's President Mohamed Morsi declared he would seek dialogue with political forces and judicial authorities to resolve the row over the dissolved parliament. He also said that he would respect Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court ruling that blocked his decision to call the nation's parliament back into session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 14 July, the parliament's request to examine Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court ruling that dissolved the Islamist-led assembly was rebuffed by the Court of Cassation. Egypt's highest appeals court unanimously ruled on 14 July 2012 it had no jurisdiction over the implementation of the 14 June 2012 constitutional court ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 16 July, more than 20000 workers at Egypt's largest textiles manufacturing company, which saw major strikes in 2006 and 2008, began their first day of strikes demanding an increase in wages and more government investment in their sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 19 July, the Administrative Judiciary Court of the State Council put on hold all appeals against the formulation of the Constituent Assembly, tasked with drafting a new constitution, until the court decided on 30 July 2012 on suits calling for a change of the judge presiding over the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nThe court was also looking at a case filed against the supplementary constitutional decree released by the Supreme Council of Armed Forces days before President Mohamed Morsi's inauguration, and another against the president's decision to bring back the People's Assembly, parliament's lower house that SCAF dissolved after the Supreme Constitutional Court ruled the parliamentary elections law unconstitutional. The court ruled lack of jurisdiction on both cases and referred the latter back to the Supreme Constitutional Court. Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi ordered to release 572 people detained by the Egyptian military in the 2011 protests, and reduced the sentence of 16 others from life sentence to seven years in jail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2012\nOn 30 July, the Administrative Judiciary Court of the State Council ruled on 30 July to postpone the case calling for the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly to 24 September, giving the assembly enough time to complete the drafting of Egypt's new constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nOn 2 August, the first Cabinet under President Mohamed MorsI headed by Prime Minister Hesham Kandil was sworn in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nOn 5 August the 2012 Egyptian\u2013Israeli border attack took place. Following this event Egypt's President Morsi fired his intelligence chief, the head of the military police, several Interior Ministry officials, the head of the presidential guard and the governor of North Sinai, while the President during a trip to the border region vowed with respect to the victims of the attack. \"We will never, ever rest until we take revenge and bring back justice to those killed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nOn 8 August, following the 2012 Egyptian\u2013Israeli border attack Egyptian forces launched aerial strikes on militants in response to a series of attacks by masked gunmen on military checkpoints as part of a broader operation against Islamist militant organizations in the Sinai Peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nOn 12 August, Morsi asked Mohamad Hussein Tantawi, head of the country's armed forces, and Sami Anan, the Army chief of staff, to resign and Morsi assumed legislative powers. Morsi's spokesman, Yasser Ali, announced that both Tantawi and Anan would remain advisers to the president. Tantawi and Anan were kept on as \"special counsels to the president\" with undisclosed roles and were given Egypt's highest state honour, the Grand Collar of the Nile. Morsi named Abdul Fatah al-Sisi, who served as chief of military intelligence until 2014, as Egypt's new defense minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0036-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nHe also replaced Egypt Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Sami Hafez Anan with General Sedki Sobhi. General Mohamed al-Assar, a member of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, was named an assistant defense minister. Morsi also pushed out the chiefs of the navy, the air force and the air defense branch of Egypt armed forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0036-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nMore specifically Vice Admiral Mohab Mamish, Commander of the Egyptian Navy; Lieutenant General Abd El Aziz Seif-Eldeen, Commander of the Egyptian Air Defense Forces; and Air Marshal Reda Mahmoud Hafez, Commander of the Egyptian Air Force were relieved from duty and moved on to civilian roles. Morsi said his decisions had not been intended to humiliate the military. \"I never meant to antagonize anyone,\" Morsi said. \"We go on to new horizons, with new generations, with new blood that has long been awaited.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0036-0003", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\n\"I want the armed forces to devote themselves to a mission that is holy to all of us, which is protecting the nation,\" he said in a televised address. \"The decisions I took today were not meant ever to target certain persons, nor did I intend to embarrass institutions, nor was my aim to narrow freedoms,\" he said. \"I did not mean to send a negative message about anyone, but my aim was the benefit of this nation and its people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0036-0004", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nMorsi also announced that the constitutional amendments passed by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) that had gutted the authority of his office, and replaced it with his own declaration, one that gave him broad legislative and executive powers and a decisive role in the drafting of Egypt's still unfinished new constitution. In addition Morsi appointed a senior judge and Muslim Brotherhood favorite, Mahmoud Mekki, as his vice president. The new constitutional decree Morsy released was made up of just four articles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0036-0005", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nAmong the powers Morsi assumed was the power to select a new panel to write Egypt's constitution, if the current panel could finish its work, and the full power to author, approve, and promulgate legislation. This marked the \"completion of Egyptian revolution,\" said an unidentified spokesman according to the Jerusalem Post. The New York Times described the move as an \"upheaval\" and a \"stunning purge\", given the power that SCAF had taken after the fall of Mubarak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0036-0006", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nMorsi's moves triggered support for and protest against his 12 August decisions, while legal experts questioned legitimacy of Morsi's constitutional changes and conflicting reports emerged from military officials over whether Morsi consulted with the armed forces regarding his decision to retire Tantawi and Anan. Al Jazeera described it as \"escalating the power struggle\" between the president and military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nOn 14 August 2012, Mohamed Salem, an Egyptian lawyer, filed a legal challenge over Morsi's removal of Tantawi and Anan, arguing that Morsi planned to bring back the totalitarian regime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, August 2012\nOn 23 August, Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi issued a new law cancelling the Mubarak-era practice of temporarily detaining journalists for so-called \"publication offences,\" including the charge of \"offending the president of the republic.\" With this law Morsi outlawed the pretrial detention of people accused of press crimes. A Constitutional Declaration issued by Morsi earlier in August 2012 gave the president full legislative powers, which he will command until the election of a new parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, September 2012\nOn 8 September, the Administrative Court of the State Council postponed its decision on the constitutionality of Egypt's Constituent Assembly until 2 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, September 2012\nOn 11 September, a protest was organized by Wesam Abdel-Wareth, a Salafist leader and president of Egypt's Hekma television channel, who called for a gathering at 5\u00a0pm in front of the United States Embassy, to protest against a film that he thought was named Muhammad's Trial, which is actually called Innocence of Muslims. After the trailer for the film began circulating, , the Egyptian Salafist Nour Party's spokesman, and Muhammad al-Zawahiri, the brother of al-Qaeda leader Ayman al Zawihiri, called for Egyptians to assemble outside of the American embassy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0040-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, September 2012\nAbout 3,000 demonstrators, many of them from the ultraconservative Salafist movement, responded to his call. A dozen men were then reported to have scaled the embassy walls, after which one of them tore down the flag of the United States of America and replaced it with a black Islamist flag with the inscription of the shahada: \"There is no god but God and Muhammad is the messenger of God\". Some of the protesters also wrote \"There is no God but Allah\" on the compound walls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0040-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, September 2012\nAccording to Sherine Tadros of Al Jazeera, the protesters demanded that the film be taken \"out of circulation\" and that some of the protesters would stay at the site until that happens. Thousands of Egyptian riot police were at the embassy following the breach of the walls; they eventually persuaded the trespassers to leave the compound without the use of force. After that, only a few hundred protesters remained outside the compound. During the entry into the embassy grounds United States Marines were not allowed to carry live ammunition by the State Department. Egypt's prime minister Hesham Kandil said \"a number\" of protesters later confessed to getting paid to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, September 2012\nOn 14 September, in the town of Sheikh Zuwayed in the Sinai Peninsula, protesters stormed a compound of the Multinational Force and Observers, designed to monitor the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel. The peacekeeping force opened fire on the protesters. Two members of the peacekeeping force were wounded. Ahmad Fouad Ashoush, a Salafist Muslim cleric, said: \"I issue a fatwa and call on the Muslim youth in America and Europe to do this duty, which is to kill the director, the producer and the actors and everyone who helped and promoted the film.\" Another Muslim cleric, Ahmed Abdullah (aka Abu Islam) tore up the Bible and threw the torn pages on the ground during 11 September embassy attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, September 2012\nOn 22 September, Egypt's Supreme Administrative Court upheld an earlier Supreme Constitutional Court ruling, which had ordered the dissolution of the lower house of Egypt's parliament (People's Assembly) based on the unconstitutionality of some of the parliamentary elections law. The administrative court said that since the electoral laws on which the People's Assembly was elected were found to be unconstitutional, the entire composition of the assembly is invalid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, September 2012\nOn 23 September, Egypt's Supreme Administrative Court issued a verdict supporting the right of former members of the now-defunct National Democratic Party (NDP), which was formally disbanded by an administrative court in April 2011, the NDP to run in parliamentary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 1 October, Egypt's doctors began a partial strike that lasted for weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 2 October, The Administrative Court of the State Council postponed its decision on the constitutionality of Egypt's Constituent Assembly until 9 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 8 October, Egyptian president Morsi ordered a pardon for all persons who already had convictions and those who were still under investigation or who were on trial for deeds \"committed with the aim of supporting the revolution and bringing about its objectives.\" The decree included felonies and misdemeanors committed to support the uprising to achieve its goals from 25 January 2011 until 30 June 2012 except crimes of first degree murder. It abided the general prosecutor and the military attorney general. Each one in his field was to publish a list for those given amnesty in the official newspaper. The persons missed could submit a complaint within a month of the date of publication, and one or more committees would be formed to consider the complaints under the presidency of the head of court of cessation within thirty days of the date of the complaints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 9 October, The Administrative Court of the State Council postponed its decision on the constitutionality of Egypt's Constituent Assembly until 16 October 2012 in order to review more documents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 10 October, Egypt's prosecutor general Abdel-Maguid Mahmoud failed to win a conviction of two dozen Mubarak allies charged with orchestrating an attack by thugs on the protesters who ousted Mubarak. Some of the thugs were mounted, and the resulting melee became known as 2 February 2011 Battle of the Camels where men riding horses and camels charged into crowds on Cairo's Tahrir Square, setting off two days of clashes that ended with killing of nearly a dozen people. Activist groups and political parties called for a nationwide protest on 12 October 2011 after a court acquitted all 24 people charged with involvement in the Battle of Camels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 11 October, despite the fact that Egyptian law protects the prosecutor general from being ousted by the president, President Morsi ordered Egypt's prosecutor general Abdel-Maguid Mahmoud to leave his position to defuse public anger over acquittals in the Battle of the Camels case. Mahmoud, however, refused to step down and become Egypt's ambassador to the Vatican.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 12 October, critics and supporters of President Morsi clashed in Cairo's Tahrir Square during a rally, as liberal and secular activists erupted with anger accusing the Muslim Brotherhood of trying to take over the country. The rally sharpened the nation's tensions over its political direction and the failure to bring loyalists of the former government to justice for their actions during Battle of the Camels The clashes erupted between two competing rallies in Tahrir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0050-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOne was by liberal and secular activists to criticize Morsi's failure to achieve promises he had made for first 100 days in power and to demand greater diversity on the panel tasked with writing Egypt's new constitution, the other had been called by Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood to call for judicial reforms and to support the move by Morsi on 11 October 2012 to remove the prosecutor-general. The secular camp accused the Brotherhood of holding the gathering to \"hijack\" the square from their anti-Morsi protest. The violence erupted when Morsi supporters stormed a stage set up by the rival camp, angered by chants they perceived as insults to the president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 13 October, Morsi backed down from his decision to remove the country's top prosecutor Abdel-Maguid Mahmoud, keeping him in his post and sidestepping a potential clash with the country's powerful judiciary. The two-day standoff between Morsi and Prosecutor General Mahmoud escalated with a backlash from a powerful group of judges who said Morsi's move had infringed upon their authority and on the judiciary's independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0051-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nEgypt's Vice President Mahmoud Mekki told reporters after meeting the prosecutor that the president agreed to suspend the decision to make Mahmoud Egypt's ambassador to the Vatican following a request from the country's Supreme Judicial Council. Mekki said the presidency had announced the decision to make Mahmoud Egypt's ambassador to the Vatican after initially understanding that Mahmoud had agreed to step down as Prosecutor General. After meeting Morsi and his advisers, Mahmoud told The Associated Press that \"a misunderstanding\" had been resolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 16 October, The Administrative Court of the State Council postponed its decision on the constitutionality of Egypt's Constituent Assembly until 23 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nOn 23 October, Egypt's Supreme Administrative Court referred the law regulating the Constituent Assembly to the Supreme Constitutional Court and hence suspended the hearing of lawsuits that sought the dissolution of the assembly charged with drafting the new constitution. Plaintiffs from 48 lawsuits demanded the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly claiming the Assembly failed to proportionately represent various social sectors, and violated the interim constitution by including MPs as members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0053-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nMore specifically, the Administrative Court referred Law 79/2012, which granted the assembly immunity from dissolution, to the Supreme Constitutional Court, which will rule on the law based on the Constitutional Declaration that has governed the country since the fall of former President Mubarak. The parliament had approved the law on the same day of its formation two days before Parliament was dissolved. However, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces refused to pass the law. After decreeing the return of the People's Assembly, President Morsy approved the stalled law to prevent the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0053-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, October 2012\nJudge Nazih Tangho of the High Administrative Court referred the case to the Constitutional Court to look into the law that gave the constitutional panel legal immunity, a clause he said needed vetting because no one should be above legal supervision. \"The law was meant to prevent the High Administrative Court from looking into appeals ... against the panel,\" he said. Muslim Brotherhood lawyer Abdel Moneim Abdel Maqsoud stated that the Supreme Constitutional Court needed at least two months to rule on the case, citing the law that obliged it to consider the cases 45 days after its referral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nSometime between 18 and 21 November, secular groups walked out of the constitutional constituent assembly because they believed that it would impose strict Islamic practices, while members of the Muslim Brotherhood supported Morsi and denied such allegations. Protesters battled the police in Cairo's Mohamed Mahmoud Street over the slow pace of change in Egypt, after thousands of protesters had returned to the streets around Tahrir Square demanding political reforms and the prosecution of officials blamed for killing demonstrators as well as to protest against Morsi and the growing influence of the Muslim Brotherhood. The protests held to commemorate four days of street fighting between protesters and security forces in November 2011 had already turned violent on 19 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 22 November, Morsi issued a constitutional declaration and dismissed Egypt's prosecutor general Abdel Maguid Mahmoud who was replaced by Talaat Ibrahim Abdullah. This caused a disagreement amongst Egyptian judges and condemnation from various organizations. His decree was called \"an unprecedented attack on judicial independence\" by the Supreme Council of the Judiciary. Morsi said that the decree was made to prevent the courts from dissolving the Constitutional Assembly. Three protests were held outside the court building. Mohamed ElBaradei, a former UN diplomat, called for withdrawal of the decree. While the declaration was immediately criticized by Morsi opponents, his supporters defended Morsi's move. Morsi's declaration contained the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0056-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 23 November, protests erupted in Cairo, the port city of Alexandria and elsewhere around Egypt, as opponents of Morsi clashed with his supporters over his 22 November declaration. Protesters torched the offices of Egypt's ruling Islamist party, the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, in Suez, Alexandria and other cities. Essam el-Erian, a leading figure of Morsi's FJP, condemned attacks on party property. Media organizations noted that the events showed Egypt was a divided country. Morsi defended amid the protests before his supporters his declaration stating that he was working to secure a strong and stable nation and leading Egypt on a path to \"freedom and democracy\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0057-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 24 November, the Supreme Judicial Council lambasted the president's constitutional declaration and called it an \"unprecedented attack on the independence of the judicial branch\". The leadership of the Egypt Judges Club, an association of judges from across the country, called for a nationwide strike in all courts and prosecution offices to protest the president's declaration. State news media reported that judges and prosecutors had already declared a strike in Alexandria. MENA news agency reported that Egyptian human rights agencies filed a lawsuit at the Court of Administrative Justice calling for the declaration to be annulled. There were also clashes in Cairo between protesters and security forces, between opponents and supporters of the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0058-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 25 November, shares on Egypt's stock market plunged almost 10%. Trading was suspended for 30 minutes as shares slumped in the first session since the president's 22 November constitutional declaration. The Muslim Brotherhood had called for nationwide protests on 25 November in support of Morsi's declaration. Judges in two of the country's 27 provinces, including Alexandria, heeded the call to strike while those elsewhere in the country were meeting to decide their response. After a meeting with Egypt's justice minister, Ahmed Mekki urged judges not to disrupt their work by joining in a proposed strike over the decree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0058-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nBut the council also urged the president to scale back his writ, to limit the immunity from judicial review he decreed for \"laws and decisions issued by the president as sovereignty acts\", a reference to Egyptian legal precedents that could justify such executive action in certain circumstances. The Muslim Brotherhood's party offices in Damanhour, Alexandria, Mansoura, Suez and Cairo were ransacked and damaged in the wake of the 22 November constitutional declaration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0058-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nFive hundred people were injured in clashes with the police, and 15-year-old Islam Fathi Masoud died after being hit on the head with a club wielded by one of dozens of men who attacked the MB's offices in the northern city of Damanhour. The Al-Ahram state newspaper said that three women were victims of sexual assault during an anti-Morsi demonstration. Egypt state news media reported that Morsi advisers who had resigned over the decree included Samir Morqos, one of the few Christians in the administration; Sekina Fouad, one of the few women, and Farouk Guweida, a poet and intellectual.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0059-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 26 November, The Court of Administrative Justice said it would hold a first hearing on 4 December in a case brought by lawyers and activists against the declaration. Morsi met with representatives of the Supreme Judicial Council in an effort to settle the crisis over the extent of his powers following his 22 November constitutional declaration. He agreed to limit his decree on his decisions related to \"sovereign matters\" only. Morsi \"did not give himself judicial power\" but did provide \"immunity for his presidential decisions,\" said Jihad Haddad, a senior adviser in the Freedom and Justice Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0059-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nHaddad added that \"the president himself (is) not immune from judicial oversight,\" though it wasn't clear in what circumstances that might apply, or if there was anything preventing Morsi from issuing a new decree to forestall that. According to Al-Jazeera \"sovereign matters\" were widely interpreted to cover the declaration of war, imposition of martial law, breaking diplomatic relations with a foreign nation, or dismissing the cabinet. Activists on Monday camped in Cairo's Tahrir Square for a fourth day, blocking traffic with makeshift barricades to protest against what they said was a power-grab by Morsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0059-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nNearby, riot police and protesters clashed intermittently. In addition to popular outbursts on the street, Egypt's judges reacted. All but seven of Egypt's 34 courts and 90% of its prosecutors went on strike Monday in protest, according to Judge Mohamed al-Zind of the Egyptian Judge's Club. Muslim Brotherhood supporters staged a counter-demonstration, while they were relocated from central Cairo to a location in front of Cairo University in Giza. Egypt's stock market, which had seen a fall of almost 10% on 25 November 2012, recovered some ground on Monday morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0059-0003", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nIslam Fathy Massoud member of the Muslim Brotherhood was killed during protests in Damanhour. Gaber Salah, a member of the April 6 Youth Movement, was pronounced dead. He had received a rubber bullet shot at close range during clashes with riot police in downtown Cairo. The funeral of Islam Fathy Massoud, who died in the Nile Delta town of Damanhour in a clash between the president's supporters and opponents, was held on Monday, while in Cairo thousands of people marched through Tahrir Square for the funeral of Gaber Salah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0060-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 27 November, tens of thousands of people held protests in Cairo against Morsi demanding that their first freely elected leader respect their wishes either to roll back his 22 November constitutional declaration or to resign. At least one demonstrator died in early clashes with authorities before Tuesday night's massive rally. The opposition Popular Alliance Party said the protester died after inhaling excessive amounts of tear gas, which police used in numerous scuffles with rock-throwing protesters on the side streets leading to the square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0060-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nAnd in the Nile Delta city of Mahalla, police reported dozens of injuries when demonstrators stormed and destroyed the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood. Protests were also held in Alexandria and other cities. FJP offices in Alexandria and Mansoura were stormed, with the latter set ablaze. The Muslim Brotherhood scrapped its own demonstration to show support for Morsi \u2013 also scheduled for 27 November 2012 \u2013 \"to avoid any problems due to tension in the political arena,\" according to spokesman Mahmoud Ghozlan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0061-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 28 November, in an interview with TIME magazine Morsi said of his 22 November constitutional declaration: \"If we had a constitution, then all of what I have said or done last week, will stop. ... when we have a constitution, what I have issued will stop immediately. ... \" The Constituent Assembly of Egypt rushed to finish its work amid widespread protests against Morsi and his declaration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0061-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nThe rush toward a new constitution spurred a walkout among its drafters, i.e. liberals, human rights activists, and others who were unsatisfied with a range of provisions dealing with the role of religion in the state, the status of women, and the privileges accorded to the country's army. According to the BBC's Jon Leybe the move was designed to preempt a ruling by Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court on 2 December, which might once again dissolve the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0061-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nThe Brotherhood hoped that the decree replaced by a completely new constitution would be approved on a referendum and put an end to the unrest. Low-level rallies continued in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Wednesday. Dozens of police officers, backed by trucks firing tear gas, arrested numerous protesters, some of whom were beaten by officers as others continued to throw stones at police. The Brotherhood organized counter-demonstrations, including one in Egypt's second city, Alexandria, which attracted a few thousand participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0061-0003", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nAs protests mounted over Morsi's decision to grant himself sweeping powers until the text of the constitution was ratified in a referendum, the panel tasked with writing the constitution wrapped up its deliberations on Wednesday and readied for a vote on Thursday. By 28 November two more people were killed and hundreds more injured. Egypt Independent reported that one of the dead was Fathy Ghareeb, a founder of the Socialist Popular Alliance Party, who died by suffocation caused by the tear gas fired by the Central Security Forces (CSF) in Tahrir Square. Egypt's Court of Cassation, the country's highest appeals court, the Cairo Appeals Court, and other appeals courts suspended their work until Morsi's decree was rescinded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0062-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 29 November, voting on the new constitution by the Constituent Assembly of Egypt began, and continued through Thursday night. There were protests against Morsi outside the presidential palace and a small protest supporting Morsi in Giza on the outskirts of Cairo. The new constitution adopted the first part of the draft that included the Sharia as the main source of legislation and making Islam a state religion. Egyptian State TV reported that Christianity and Judaism would be the main source for legislation for Christians and Jews. The liberals, left-wing, and Christians boycotted the assembly and accused the Islamists of trying to impose their vision; they also accused them of trying to limit freedom of speech as well as not including articles establishing equality between men and women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0063-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, November 2012\nOn 30 November, racing against the threat of dissolution by Supreme Constitutional Court judges appointed by the ousted Mubarak, quickly defusing anger about Morsi's 22 November declaration granting himself expanded presidential powers and ignoring howls of protest from secular opponents, the Islamists drafting the new constitution voted on 29 November 2012 to approve the 2012 Draft Constitution of Egypt that human rights groups and international experts said was full of holes and ambiguities and that was criticized by secular, liberal and Coptic Egyptians. Thousands of Egyptians took to the streets in various governorates to denounce the constitutional declaration issued on 22 November, as well as the final draft of the constitution approved by the Islamist-dominated Constituent Assembly. In Alexandria, anti-Morsi protesters clashed with Morsi's supporters, but no injuries were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 954]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0064-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 1 December, Morsi announced that a constitutional referendum on the 2012 Draft Constitution of Egypt would be held on 15 December 2012. Islamist backers of Morsi held mass rallies at Cairo University and other cities to support his sweeping new powers and the drafting of a constitution, while several thousand of Morsi's opponents rallied in Tahrir Square to oppose the draft constitution and what they described as Morsi's power grab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0065-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 2 December, the Supreme Constitutional Court put off its much-awaited ruling on the legitimacy of the constituent assembly that passed the draft constitution, and on a separate but related decision about whether to dissolve the Shura Council, Egypt's upper house of parliament. It said it was halting all work indefinitely in protest against the \"psychological pressure\" it had faced, after Islamist protesters earlier prevented the judges from meeting in Cairo. Anti - Morsi protesters continued to occupy Tahrir Square. Leaders of the Judges Club, a powerful but unofficial body which represents judges across the country, announced that its members would refuse to perform their customary roles as election supervisors and would thus try to block a referendum on the new constitution scheduled for 15 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0066-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 3 December the Supreme Judicial Council, said that judges and prosecutors would supervise the constitutional referendum to be held on 15 December despite the Judges Club strike announcement from 2 December. In addition, seven cases against Morsi's call for the referendum were filed in an administrative court", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0067-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 4 December, police fought the demonstrators in front of the Presidential Palace in Cairo. Demonstrators proclaimed a march to the Presidential Palace, calling it \"the last warning.\" The demonstrators cut through a barbed-wire barrier near the Palace, after which police fired tear gas at them as Morsi fled. More violence broke out at the headquarters of the Freedom and Justice Party in Menia, south of Cairo, where the front of the party headquarters was damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0067-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nEgypt Independent, the English-language sister publication of the country's largest independent daily, Al Masry Al Youm, and 10 others did not publish to protest limits on the draft constitution's protections for freedom of expression and freedom of the press. Prosecutor General Talaat Ibrahim Abdallah filed a complaint charging former presidential candidates Moussa and Sabbahi, as well as El-Baradei, Wafd Party president El-Sayyid el-Badawi, and Judges Club head Ahmed al-Zend with espionage and inciting to overthrow the government. The lawyer who filed the report, Hamed Sadeq, claimed that Moussa met with former Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and agreed with her to fabricate a crisis. It was further alleged that all of politicians named in the complaint met at the Wafd Party headquarters to execute the \"Zionist plot.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0068-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 5 December 100,000 people were estimated to have protested at the Presidential Palace and at Tahrir Square against Morsi's constitution, asserting it represented an effort to seize control of the judiciary. Many began demanding the \"fall of the regime\" as they fought running battles with police who deployed tear gas before retreating from the area, outnumbered by protesters. Supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood attacked 300 of Morsi's opponents during a sit-in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0068-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nMembers of the Egyptian Popular Current Mohamed Essam and Karam Gergis were killed in the clashes surrounding Heliopolis Palace between protesters against the new Constitution and Muslim Brotherhood members, which attacked the demonstrators with molotov cocktails. The Health Ministry reported four were killed and 271 were injured. Masked men set fire to Muslim Brotherhood offices in Suez, Ismailia and Zagazig.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0069-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 6 December, supporters of Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood held counter protests the next day at the Presidential Palace, and clashed with anti-Morsi protesters in street battles that saw seven people killed and more than 650 injured. Morsi met with Abdul Fatah al-Sisi, chief of the Egyptian Army, and with his cabinet ministers, to discuss a \"means to deal with the situation on different political, security, and legal levels to stabilize Egypt and protect the gains of the revolution.\" Soldiers backed by tanks moved in to restore order as the death toll began to rise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0069-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nWhile addressing the nation, Morsi criticized the opposition \"for trying to incite violence\" against his legitimacy. During his speech he invited his opponents to a common dialogue, but they rejected it because Morsi remained determined to press forward with the referendum on the Islamist-backed draft constitution that had plunged Egypt into a political crisis. Meanwhile, the government imposed a curfew after the military sent tanks and armored vehicles into Cairo. Morsi's family was forced to evacuate their home in Zagazig, 47 miles (76\u00a0km) northeast of Cairo. Four of Morsi's advisers resigned their posts in protest against the violence, which they claimed was orchestrated by the Muslim Brotherhood supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0070-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 7 December, Morsi supporters and anti-Morsi demonstrators continued their protests in different cities including Cairo, Alexandria, and Assiut. Demonstrators in Assiut chanted \"No Brotherhood, no Salafis, Egypt is a civic state.\" Dozens of protesters threw rocks and glass bottles at Morsi's home in Sharkia province and tried to push aside a police barrier. Advisers and Brotherhood leaders acknowledged that outside his core base of Islamist supporters Morsi felt increasingly isolated in the political arena and even within his own government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0070-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOpposition leaders said in a statement that Morsi's 6 December dialogue offer failed to meet \"the principles of real and serious negotiations\" and displayed \"the complete disregard\" for the opposition's demands. They said they would not negotiate with Morsi until he canceled his 22 November decree and called off the 15 December referendum on the draft constitution. Opposition protesters marched on the presidential palace and breached a security perimeter built by the military's elite Republican Guard \u2013 charged with protecting the palace \u2013 which withdrew behind the palace walls. The Egyptian newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm also reported that individuals suspected of protesting against the Muslim Brotherhood were being tortured and beaten in a facility run by the Brotherhood in Heliopolis, a Cairo suburb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0071-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 8 December, The Egyptian Army issued its first statement since the protests erupted, stating that it would protect public institutions and innocent people and not allow the events to become more serious. The Qandil Cabinet also authorized the army to help Egypt's police maintain security. Egypt state news media reported that Morsi was moving toward imposing a form of martial law to secure the streets and allow the vote on the draft charter constitutional referendum. Morsi annulled his decree which had expanded his presidential authority and removed judicial review of his decrees. In addition the mostly annulled November 2012 constitutional declaration would be replaced by a modified one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0072-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 9 December, confusion and disarray pervaded the ranks of Egypt's opposition after Morsi rescinded his 22 November constitutional declaration a day earlier. Despite the declaration's annulment the general prosecutor, who was dismissed, will not be reinstated, and the retrial of the former regime officials will go ahead. Opposition leaders also called for more protests after Morsi refused to cancel the constitutional referendum in the wake of the declaration's annulment. In response, the Alliance of Islamist Forces, an umbrella group that includes Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, said it would hold rival demonstrations. The group said its rallies would support of the referendum and the president under the slogan \"Yes to legitimacy\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0073-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, December 2012\nOn 10 December, the opposition group, the National Salvation Front, announced that it would organize a rally on 11 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0074-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nOn the second anniversary of the beginning of the 2011 revolution, protests again erupted in cities across the country, following occasional skirmishes between protesters and police in Cairo the day before. Tens of thousands of people gathered in Tahrir Square during the day, with clashes between police forces and protesters occurring around the city at the Interior Ministry headquarters, state media offices and the presidential palace. Security forces fired tear gas at protesters trying to force their way into the presidential palace and state television offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0074-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nIn the city of Suez, five people were killed by gunfire \u2013 four protesters and one security trooper. Protests also took place in Alexandria, Ismailia, Damanhur, and Port Said, many of which were focused on local government buildings. Tear gas use by police was reported in Alexandria, while protesters in that city and Suez burned tires. By the end of 25 January, about 280 protesters and 55 security personnel had been injured across the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0075-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nOn 26 January, the sentencing to death of 21 people for their roles in the Port Said Stadium disaster sparked further unrest in Port Said that resulted in 16 fatalities. The number of people killed in the city was 33. Many of them were killed by police snipers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0076-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nOn 27 January, Egypt's government was reported to have lost control of Port Said as a result of the protests and attacks. The same day seven more people died from gun shots in the clashes during the funerals for 33 people who had been killed on 26 January in the city. There were also deadly clashes in Suez and Ismailia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0076-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nAs a result, Morsi announced a state of emergency in Suez Canal cities (namely Ismailia, Port Said and Suez) for 30 days, with a curfew from 9:00 p.m to 6:00 a.m, effective Monday, 28 January m. Morsi also invited eleven political parties, as well as four major political leaders, to talks concerning the unrest, but the leading opposition party, the National Salvation Front, refused to begin discussions until a new government was put in place and the country's constitution modified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0077-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nOn 28 January, further demonstrations and clashes took place in eleven cities, including those in the Suez Canal, Alexandria, Monufia and Cairo. The clashes resulted in six deaths. Thousands of people gathered in the Tahrir Square to show their solidarity with those killed over the weekend early in the day. Police fired tear gas at protesters near the Qasr al-Nil Bridge, while further violence spread along the Nile. Protesters also set fire to security vehicles and detained a police officer. The Shura Council approved the President state of emergency decision as per the Constitution requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0077-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nAnd to aid the police, it approved a law granting judicial seizure powers to the Army. A funeral procession in Port Said devolved into a street battle between mourners and police, with security troops firing tear gas and live ammunition at crowds from police buildings across the city; protesters threw rocks, explosives and gas canisters back at police, and by the end of the day civilians across the city were seen carrying guns. A Ministry of the Interior spokesman, however, denied that police had fired on protesters, and said that tear gas had been used only briefly. By the end of the day, a total of 50 people were estimated to have died since the January protests began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0078-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nOn 29 January, Egypt's defense minister Abdul Fatah al-Sisi warned both pro- and anti-Morsi groups, arguing \"their disagreement on running the affairs of the country may lead to the collapse of the state and threatened the future of the coming generations.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0079-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, January 2013\nOn 30 January, two protesters were shot dead by unknown assailants in Cairo, near Tahrir square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0080-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2013\nOn 1 February, protesters gathered in front of the presidential residence in Cairo and clashed with riot police officers. President Morsi blamed police officers due to clashes. One protester was shot and killed next to Ettehadiya Palace, and ninety one were injured around the country according to the official sources. One of the wounded protesters who had been hit by birdshot died on 3 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0081-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2013\nThe Egypt Independent reported that police forces dragged a protester, stripped him naked, beat him up with batons, and took him to a security truck. The incident sparked criticism against the administration of Morsi for tolerating the security force's excessive use of force. The presidency said it \"was pained by the shocking footage of some policemen treating a protester in a manner that does not accord with human dignity and human rights.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0081-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2013\nState television reported that the 48-year-old beaten man, from a police hospital and without a lawyer present, said that the police had in fact saved him from thieving protesters. The man's daughter, who says she was present at the scene of the attack, said that her father is simply \"afraid to talk\", while his nephew said \"he is lying because there is a lot of pressure on him.\" In a new twist, Hamada Saber finally retracted his earlier testimony: \"I told [prosecutors] today that [police] shot me in the leg, beat me and dragged me,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0081-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2013\n\"When I resisted, they tore off my shirt. After I resisted some more, they tore off my pants and underpants. They kept telling me to stand up and I kept telling them I was injured\". \"Now my family has disowned me; my wife and kids won't talk to me. The whole country is angry at me for [giving false testimony],\" Saber added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0082-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2013\nEgypt's interior minister, Mohamed Ibrahim, said he would leave if it was in the wishes of the people. Minister of Culture Mohamed Arab resigned from his post in protest at the police assault on protesters, being the third Culture Minister to resign from office since the beginning of the 2011 Egyptian uprising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0083-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2013\nOn 4 February, Mohamed el-Gendy, a member of the Popular Current tortured by the police following his arrest at Tahrir Square on 27 January, died in the Helal hospital due to his?injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0084-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, February 2013\nOn 11 February, the second anniversary of the former president Mobarak's ouster, people gathered outside the presidential palace, protesting Morsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0085-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, March 2013\nOn 3 March, clashes erupted in Port Said when police fired teargas at demonstrators opposed to the Interior Ministry's decision to transfer 39 detainees from Port Said to the Wadi Natroun Prison, in the Beheira governorate. The clashes took the lives of five peoples, including two policemen and three civilians. News outlets reported that police forces and army troops exchange fire, what was denied by the Egyptian armed forces official spokesperson. Over 500 persons were injured only in Port Said that day, with 39 with bullet wounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0086-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, March 2013\nOn 5 March, protester Mohamed Hamed Farouk died from head wounds caused by gas canisters fired by police during protests in Port Said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0087-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, March 2013\nOn 9 March, three protesters died (one of them an eight-year-old boy) in clashes between demonstrators and police at Qasr al-Nil Bridge, near Tahrir Square. In addition, the headquarters of the Ittihad El-Shorta (the Egyptian National Police football club) and the Egyptian Football Association were torched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0088-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, March 2013\nOn 30 March, an arrest warrant was issued for Bassem Youssef, host of the satirical news program El Bernameg, for allegedly insulting Islam and Morsi. The move was seen by opponents as part of an effort to silence dissent against Morsi's government. Youssef confirmed the arrest warrant on his Twitter account and said he would hand himself in to the prosecutor's office, jokingly adding, \"Unless they kindly send a police van today and save me the transportation hassle.\" The following day, he was questioned by authorities before being released on bail of 15,000 Egyptian pounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0088-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, March 2013\nThe event sparked international media attention as well as a segment on Jon Stewart's The Daily Show in which he declared his support for Youssef, calling him a \"friend\" and \"brother\" and saying to Morsi: \"What are you worried about? You're the President of Egypt! You have an army! Youssef's got puns and a show; you've got tanks and planes.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0089-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, April 2013\nIn April 2013, protesters fled to Tahrir Square after riot police chased them off with tear gas and pepper spray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0090-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, May 2013\nDuring Morsis's last days and after the ouster of his regime, the Sinai Peninsula witnessed an ongoing insurgency with several attacks perpetrated by Islamist militants mainly in the North Sinai governorate. Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood's biggest ally outside of Egypt, is being widely blamed by Egyptians for the attacks in the region although no solid evidence proves it. The reason for Hamas being blamed was the increasing activity in the smuggling tunnels from the Gaza Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0090-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, May 2013\nA case that received wide controversy was the possible involvement of Hamas in the orchestrated attacks on prisons throughout the country on the night of 28 January during the 2011 uprising against Mubarak. In the prison breaks, more than 30 leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood who were imprisoned by Mubarak in the outbreak of revolution, escaped including Mohamed Morsi himself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0091-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, May 2013\nOn 16 May, seven Egyptian soldiers were kidnapped by unknown militants in the Sinai demanding the release of members of an Islamist group detained for almost two years. One week later, they were reportedly released and handed over to the army in an area south of Rafah after talks mediated by tribal chiefs in the region with president Morsi greeting them upon their arrival at Cairo's airport. The real issue though is Morsi's way of dealing with the crisis with most actions taken by the government to solve the problem receiving wide criticism. Such reactions include Morsi's call for a national dialogue instead of either fighting or negotiating with the kidnappers and for also appearing as being concerned for the safety of the kidnapped soldiers and their kidnappers equally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0092-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, May 2013\nMohamed Sayed Abu-Shaqra, a security officer, was assassinated more than a week later by suspected jihadists near El-Arish while investigating the identity of the kidnappers and their location. During his funeral, relatives and colleagues started chanting against the president forcing the Interior minister to leave the military ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0093-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nOn 17 June, Morsi appointed Adel el-Khayat, an Islamist possibly linked to the Luxor massacre where at least 58 tourists were brutally killed by al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya gunmen, as governor of Luxor with 17 other provincial governors. The move sparked protests by tourism workers and activists in Luxor outside el-Khayat's office forcing him to finally resign a week later in order to prevent bloodshed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0094-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nOn 23 June, four Shia Muslims were attacked by an angry mob led by Salafist preachers. The attackers numbering at least several hundred surrounded the house and demanded Hassan Shehata, a local Shia leader, and his followers who were attending a worshiping ceremony to leave the house before storming it with molotov cocktails. Images showed the attackers beating them to death, lynching and later dragging them through the streets. The tragedy came only a few days after a conference in support of the Syrian uprising that was attended by Morsi and leading Islamist figures. During the conference, Sheikh Mohamed Hassan and al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya's Mohamed Abdel-Maqsoud used sectarian speech against the Shias. Morsi was present during the event so he was heavily criticized by the media for not reacting against the hate and sectarianism used by both clerics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 911]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0095-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nOn 26 June, Morsi delivered a two-hour-and-forty-minute speech to the nation. It was supposed to be a re-conciliatory speech but was widely viewed as provocative and full of threats and accusations targeted against his opponents including media presenters and Ahmed Shafik, his former rival in the 2012 Egyptian presidential elections. He used questionable statistics to describe accomplishments made by his administration in tourism and unemployment. After the speech the opposition stated that it is even more determined to take to the streets on the planned 30 June uprising against the president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0096-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nOn 28 June, three individuals were killed during clashes between pro- and anti-Morsi protesters in the city of Alexandria, including 21-year-old Andrew Pochter, an American student who was reportedly stabbed to death as he observed the demonstrations. On 29 June 2013, thousands of Egyptians converged on Tahrir Square in Cairo to demonstrate against the Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, demanding his resignation from office. The demonstrators used the slogan \"the people demand the ouster of the regime\", used in the protests that led to the ouster of Mubarak in the 2011 revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0097-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nBy 30 June, thousands of protesters surrounded the presidential palace in the Heliopolis suburb. Demonstrations were reported to be in progress in 18 locations across Cairo and in other different locations across the country including Alexandria, El-Mahalla and cities of the Suez Canal. The demonstrations are described as being backed by multiple entities, including the Tamarod movement formed by members of the Egyptian Movement for Change in April 2013 that claims to have collected 22 million signatures calling for President Morsi's resignation. Opponents of Morsy claimed Google Earth had published figures suggesting 33 million demonstrators were on the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0097-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nResponding to the claims that it recorded 33 million protesters in Tahrir Square, Google confirmed that its engines do not have the ability to estimate numbers of rallies or protests on the ground. Furthermore, it insisted that it does not publish live imaging of protests or any other events on planet earth. Although sources estimate as many as 14 million people roamed the streets of the country, which means about one of every six people of the nation of 84 million took part in Sunday's demonstrations in sweltering heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0097-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nLater, pro-Morsi Qatari based Aljazeera News Channel also broadcast a documentary suggesting through calculations and experts analysis that the number of those who protested against Morsi in Cairo couldn't have exceeded 800,000 in Cairo and 4 Millions across Egypt, despite the pro-Morsi Aljazeera channel claiming two years before that Tahrir Square alone had more than one million and up to 2 million people during the 25 January revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0098-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, June 2013\nConcurrently with these anti-Morsi demonstrations, supporters of Morsi held demonstrations mainly in Rabaa Square in Cairo. The number of pro-Morsi counter-protesters has been estimated to be about 100,000 people on 21 June (though it's not clear whether as many were on the streets in the period between 30 June and 3 July).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0099-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nOn the morning of 1 July, anti-Morsi protesters ransacked the national headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo. Protesters threw objects at windows and looted the building, making off with office equipment and documents. The health ministry confirmed the deaths of eight people who had been killed in clashes around the headquarters in Mokattam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0100-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nHours later, the Egyptian Armed Forces issued a 48-hour ultimatum which gave the country's political parties until 3 July to meet the demands of the Egyptian people. The military also threatened to intervene if the dispute is not resolved by them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0100-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nFour Ministers also resigned on the same day: Tourism Minister Hisham Zazou (who previously offered to resign a few months ago after Morsi appointed an Islamist linked to the group that attacked tourists as governor of Luxor), Communication and IT Minister Atef Helmi, State Minister for Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Hatem Bagato and State Minister for Environmental Affairs Khaled Abdel Aal, leaving the government with members of the Freedom and Justice Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0101-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nOn 2 July Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr resigned as well in support of the anti-government protesters. The presidency rejected the Egyptian Army's 48-hour ultimatum vowing that the president is sticking with his own plans for national reconciliation to resolve the political crisis. Defense Minister General Abdul Fatah al-Sisi was also said to have told Morsi that he would impose a military solution if a political one could not be found by the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0102-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nIncidentally the Court of Cassation ordered the reinstatement of former general prosecutor Abdel Maguid Mahmoud who was replaced with Talaat Abdallah following the constitutional declaration on 22 November 2012. The Presidency spokesman and the spokesman for the cabinet resigned as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0103-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nThe newspaper Al-Ahram reported that if there was no resolution the military would suspend the constitution of Egypt and appoint a new council of experts to draft a new one, institute a three-person executive council and appoint a prime minister from the military. Morsi's military advisor, Sami Hafez Anan, also resigned and said that the army would not \"abandon the will of the people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0104-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nMorsi declared, in a late-night television address, that he would \"defend the legitimacy of his elected office with his life\". He added that \"there is no substitute for legitimacy\" as he vowed not to resign. Morsi accused supporters of Hosni Mubarak of exploiting the wave of protests to topple the government and fight democracy. SCAF leaders also issued a statement entitled \"The Final Hours\" in which they said that the military is willing to shed its blood \"to protect the people against terrorists and fools\" following Morsi's refusal to step down from his elected office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0105-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nOn 3 July, unknown gunmen opened fire on a pro-Morsi rally in Cairo, killing 16 and wounding 200. As the 16:35 deadline set by the army approached, military leaders met for emergency talks with the army expected to issue a statement when the deadline passes. Mohamed El-Baradei, who was chosen to represent the National Salvation Front, was also said to have met army chief General Abdul Fatah al-Sisi. On 3 July, just before the deadline approached, Morsi offered to form a consensus government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0105-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nAn army statement read: \"The General Command of the Armed Forces is currently meeting with a number of religious, national, political and youth icons... There will be a statement issued from the General Command as soon as they are done.\" At the same time the Freedom and Justice Party's senior leader, Waleed al-Haddad, said: \"We do not go to invitations (meetings) with anyone. We have a president and that's it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0106-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nThe head of the Egyptian Armed Forces and Defense Minister Abdul Fatah al-Sisi spoke at night from Cairo and said that the army was standing apart from the political process but was using its vision as the Egyptian people were calling for help and discharged its responsibility. Morsi was removed from power, the draft constitution was suspended and Chief Justice Adli Mansour was named interim president. Mohammed el-Baradei says the roadmap was to rectify the issues of the revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231397-0106-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Egyptian protests, Timeline, July 2013 (ousting of Morsi)\nThe Grand Sheikh of Al Azhar Ahmed el-Tayeb, the Coptic Pope Tawadros II as well as opposition leader Mohamed El Baradei and a youth member of the Tamarod movement, who were present during the statement, spoke in support of the 3 July coup. The move led to continuous civil unrest in Egypt until the present day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests\nThe 2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests started on 21 December 2012 following a raid on the home of Sunni Finance Minister Rafi al-Issawi and the arrest of 10 of his bodyguards. Beginning in Fallujah, the protests afterwards spread throughout Sunni Arab parts of Iraq. The protests centered on the issue of the alleged sectarianism of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Pro -Maliki protests also took place throughout central and southern Iraq, where there is a Shia Arab majority. In April 2013, sectarian violence escalated after the 2013 Hawija clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0000-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests\nThe protests continued throughout 2013, and in December Maliki used security forces to forcefully close down the main protest camp in Ramadi, killing hundreds of civilian protesters in the process. Sunni groups, such as the Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order, took up arms in response, and joined forces with the General Military Council for Iraqi Revolutionaries (GMCIR), a militant group made up of former Ba'athists, to conduct a military campaign against the Iraqi government. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) would later grow out of this civil conflict, escalating into a full-scale war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Background\nIraqi Sunni minority traditionally held power in Iraq, but the Sunni-dominated Ba'ath party was overthrown by the United States Armed Forces during the 2003 invasion, and Shia majority gained power. The majority of Iraqis are Shiites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Background\nUnlike the protests in 2011, which revolved around issues of corruption and national security, the new protests were driven by Sunni Arabs who felt marginalized in the post-Saddam Iraq, and who claimed that anti-terrorism laws were allegedly being abused and used to arrest and harass Sunnis. The growth of the protests, however, led the initial demands to be expanded, and eventually one of the main requests of the protesters was the resignation of Prime Minister Maliki. Other issues often cited were the alleged abuse of De-Baathification laws and unfair confiscation of property of former Baathists, and alleged Iranian interference in Iraqi affairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2012, December\nThe protests began on 21 December 2012 following a raid on the home of Sunni Finance Minister Rafi al-Issawi and the arrest of some of his bodyguards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2012, December\nFollowing the arrest several thousand protesters took to the streets of Fallujah following Friday prayers to condemn the arrests. The protesters blocked a highway in Fallujah and demanded Prime Minister Maliki's resignation, waving banners reading: \"Resistance is still in our veins.\" 23 December also saw protesters begin the barricading of the main highway at Ramadi, thereby disrupting a key Iraqi trade route to Jordan and Syria. The protests also spread from Al Anbar Governorate to other Sunni parts of Iraq including Mosul, Samarra Tikrit, and the Adhimiya district of Baghdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2012, December\nAs the protests in Anbar grew, delegations were sent to support to the protests from Baghdad and Saladin Governorate, with smaller delegations coming from the southern Iraqi governorates of Maysan and Basra. In order to try to prevent the further spread of the protests, the Iraqi Army established a cordon in Nineveh Governorate on 27 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2012, December\n28 December saw the protests increase in size, with tens of thousands taking part in the \"Friday of Honour\" protests against perceived government sectarianism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2012, December\nIn their second week, the protests spread to Saladin and Diyala Governorates for the first time. During the week protests took place in Mosul, Kirkuk, Baiji, Tikrit, al-Daur, Ishaqi, Samarra, Jalawla, Dhuluiyah, Baquba, Ramadi, Fallujah, Baghdad, Albu Ajil, and Nasiriyah. The sit-in at Ramadi, blocking the highway, continued, and was visited from Amman by Sunni Iraqi Cleric Abdul Malik al-Saadi on 28 December. Tribal delegations traveled to Ramadi from Kirkuk, Karbala, and Muthanna, to support the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2012, December\nOn 4 January the Baghdad Operations Command ordered the 6th Division to secure the Adhamiyah bridge to prevent sympathetic demonstrators from West Baghdad joining the anti-government demonstrations in the Adhamiyah district of East Baghdad. There were also reports of Iraqi Army units preventing delegations and media personnel from visiting Anbar from Baghdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2012, December\nOn 30 December Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq, a Sunni and critic of Maliki, travelled to Ramadi to attempt to address the protesters. Mutlaq's convoy was pelted with bottles and stones, and protesters chanted for him to leave, with some being angry that Mutlaq had taken a week to support the protesters, believing that he had come to undermine the protests. Bodyguards for Mutlaq wounded two people when they fired warning shots. Mutlaq's office described the incident as an attempted assassination by rogue elements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, January\nThe week of 5 January saw continuing anti-government protests in Mosul, Kirkuk, Tikrit, al-Daur, Samarra, Dhuluiyah, Ramadi, Fallujah, Abu Ghraib, and the Baghdad districts of Adhamiya and Ghazaliyah. The week also saw the emergence of pro-government protests, taking place in Baghdad, along with the southern Shiite cities of Karbala, Kut, Najaf, Diwaniyah, Samawa, and Basra. The week also witnessed renewed government efforts to contain and deter protests, mostly through heightened security and deployments of military units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, January\nSince the beginning of the protests, the Ninewa Operations Command of the Iraqi Army had been attempting to close Ahrar square, which was the site of the majority of anti-government protests in Mosul. Clashes between protesters and army units erupted on 7 January when army vehicles ran over several protesters, wounding 4, in an attempt to disperse the protester in the square. On 8 January four more protesters were wounded when Iraqi military units opened fire in the square. The clashes led to security for eastern Mosul being taken from the military and given to the Iraqi Federal Police 3rd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, January\nThe Baghdad Operations Command also implemented a cordon in Al Tarmia, a town north of Baghdad, on 7 January in order to prevent protesters from blocking either highway leading north from Baghdad. The Baghdad to Mosul highway was eventually closed near Taji on January 11 by Iraqi army units. The Baghdad Operations Command deployed units on the eastern edge of Fallujah on 9 January. Security within the Adhamiya district of Baghdad was also tightened on 11 January in an effort to deter protests. The 11th Iraqi Army Division was deployed north of Tikrit by the Tigris Operations Command on January 11 to prevent protests in Hawija.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, January\nIn the west of Iraq units from the 29th Mechanised Brigade of the 7th Army Division closed the Jordan-Iraqi border crossing at Trebil due to unspecified security concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, January\nThousands of pro-Maliki demonstrators took to the streets in at least 5 governorates on Tuesday 8 January to voice support for Maliki and oppose an attempts to change the de-Baathification laws. Protesters also voiced opposition to any return of the Baath party or the dividing of Iraq along sectarian or ethnic lines. Protests took place in Basra, Diwaniyah, Karbala, Al Muthanna and Babil Governorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, January\nOn 25 January, several protests were held across Anbar Governorate, with other protests also appearing in Samarra, Baqubah, Kirkuk, Mosul, Baghdad, and Hawija, as part of \"No Retreat Friday.\" The protests turned deadly in Fallujah, as soldiers opened fire on a crowd of rock-throwing demonstrators, killing 7 and injuring more than 70 others. Three soldiers were later shot to death in retaliation for the incident, and clashes erupted in Askari, on the eastern outskirts of Fallujah. Security forces were placed on high alert as a curfew and vehicle ban were brought into effect. In a statement, Maliki urged both sides to show restraint and blamed the incident on unruly protesters. He also warned that it could lead to a \"rise in tension that al-Qaida and terrorist groups are trying to take advantage of\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, January\nThousands of people attended the funerals of the slain protesters on 26 January, some carrying Saddam-era Iraqi flags. The government responded to the shooting by pulling out most Army forces from the city and replacing them with federal police. In a statement read at Fallujah's main square, Sheikh Ahmed Abu Risha announced that the tribal leaders had given the government one week to bring the perpetrators of the shooting to justice. If this demand is not met, the Sheikh, who is the chairman of the Anbar Salvation Council, promised to \"launch jihad against army units and posts in Anbar\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, February\nOn 22 February thousands of protesters took to the streets of Ramadi, Baghdad, Mosul, and Fallujah following Friday prayers in order to continue the demonstrations against the Iraqi government, calling for Maliki to step down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, February\nThe day also saw seven members of a Sahwa militia killed in Tuz Khormato by armed men wearing military uniforms. The assailants asked a local militia leader to accompany them to a checkpoint manned by a Sahwa militia, at which point the uniformed group overpowered the leader and members of the Sahwa militia before executing them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, March\nOn 8 March police fired on Sunni demonstrators in Mosul, killing 1 protester and injuring 5 others. Police claimed that they fired into the air to disperse stone throwing protesters. In response to the shooting the Minister of Agriculture, Izz al-Din al-Dawla, hosted a televised news conference where he announced his resignation from his cabinet post to protest the killings. Dawla therefore became the second minister of resign as part of the protests, after Rafi al-Issawi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, March\nOn 10 March Bunyan Sabar al-Obeidi, an anti-government protest organiser and spokesman for the Sunni protests in Kirkuk, was shot and killed whilst driving his car in Kirkuk in a drive-by shooting by unknown gunmen. Obeidi had escaped an assassination attempt the previous week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nFollowing four months of protests, on Friday 19 April, an Iraqi officer was killed in clashes between security forces and protesters in Hawija, a town west of Kirkuk. Following the refusal of residents to hand over suspected perpetrators the security forces sought; Hawija was then put under siege.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nOn the morning of 23 April, a security forces operation in Hawija resulted in the deaths of about 20 protesters and 3 Iraqi soldiers. Over a hundred people were injured. The clashes erupted after security forces entered the area that was being used as a sit-in by Sunni protesters against the government. Sheikh Abdullah Sami al-Asi, a Sunni provincial official, said the violence resulted from the security forces entering the area and trying to make arrests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nThere was also retaliatory violence in the surrounding Sunni-majority region where other gunmen attacked police checkpoints in Riyadh and Rashad until a military counterattack a few hours later. On the same day, at least 21 others were killed as they left Sunni mosques in Baghdad and Diyala. Following the raid, Sunni tribal leaders called for a revolt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nThe next day revenge attacks continued against the police action. The north of the country featured more violence between security forces and protesters. In Sulaiman Bek, north of Baghdad, gunmen killed five soldiers and wounded five of their colleagues, while gunmen attacked a Sahwa militia checkpoint in Khales and killed four of the militiamen and wounding another person. Total deaths over the two days are believed to be over 100. The Iraqi government also set up a commission to investigate the previous day's incidents, that is to be led by Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq. On 25 April, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki warned of a sectarian war and blamed \"remnants of Baath Party for violence.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nFollowing the clashes in Suleiman Bek the Iraqi Army withdrew from the town, with an officer claiming the move was to allow for civilians to leave the town before the army began a counter-offensive. However, clashes and protests continued across the country with renewed protests by Sunni Arabs calling for the prime minister's resignation and an end to alleged discrimination against them. Violence also continued with the death toll reaching 200 after five days. The violence also included attacks on Sunni mosques. Sunni Arabs formed the Army of Pride and Dignity as the sectarian clashes escalated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nOn 27 April, the Iraqi government banned 10 satellite channels, including Al Jazeera and Iraq's Al Sharqiya. Mujahid Abu al-Hail of the Communications and Media Commission said: \"We took a decision to suspend the licence of some satellite channels that adopted language encouraging violence and sectarianism. It means stopping their work in Iraq and their activities, so they cannot cover events in Iraq or move around.\" Two days later, five car bombs blew up in Shia-majority areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0023-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nIn Amara town in Maysan Governorate killing 15 people and wounding 45 others; in Al Diwaniyah a bomb exploded near a restaurant, killing three people and wounding 25 others; while in Karbala a car bomb explosion killed three civilians and wounded 12 others; and another car bomb exploded in the Shia-majority neighbourhood of the Sunni-majority town of Mahmoudiya killing three people and wounding 15 others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0023-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, April\nThe same day, the Iraqiya's Sunni Arab Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi called for the resignation of the government to be replaced by a smaller cabinet of independents, who would not compete in the next election, and for the electoral commission to prepare for an early national election with parliament to be dissolved. On 1 May, more attacks took place against a Sunni group of fighters backed by the government and in a Shia area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, May\nOn 17 May, at least 72 deaths were reported in several cities, including the capital, on Sunni targets. Attacks continued the next day, amid warning of a civil war after four days of violence resulted in over 140 deaths. On 20 May, bombs in Baghdad and Basra targeting Shias resulted in at least 68 deaths. It also hit Sunni areas such as Samarra. Following a previous week attack on alcohol shops that killed 12 people, the mixed Sunni-Shia area of Zayhouna in Baghdad was attacked again, resulting in the deaths of seven women and five men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, May\nOn 27 May, over 50 deaths were reported in Shia areas of Baghdad. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki later vowed to hunt down the outlaws. On 31 May, following Friday prayers, a bomb exploded outside Baghdad's Sunni Omar mosque killing four people and wounding 11 other worshippers. The UN also noted the death toll for May being the highest in five years with Al Jazeera attributing it to increased sectarianism. Additionally, the government banned cars with common temporary licence plates to try to avoid car bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, June\u2013November\nFollowing the April Hawija clashes, the number of protesters diminished, and sectarian violence increased. In July however, as Ramadan began, the protests intensified for a time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, June\u2013November\nProvincial elections took place in Anbar in June 2013, and afterwards the new governor, Ahmad Khalaf al-Dhiyabi of the Muttahidoon coalition, began seeking ways to reconcile with Maliki. With the approval of protesters, Dhiyabi began negotiations with the Maliki government on 7 October. On 25 November, Dhiyabi led a delegation to meat with Maliki in Baghdad once again. Maliki agreed to many of the protesters' demands, but reiterated that the protests should be stopped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, December\nBy late December Prime Minister Maliki was claiming that the Ramadi protest camp had been turned into a headquarters for the leadership of al-Qaeda. Simultaneously the Iraqi army was conducting an offensive in Al Anbar Governorate against al-Qaeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, December\nOn Saturday 28 December MP Ahmed al-Alwani was arrested in a raid on his home in Ramadi. During the raid Alwani's brother, as well as 5 of his guards were killed. Eight other guards were wounded, whilst 10 members of the security forces were also wounded. Alwani was a prominent supporter of an anti-government protest camp situated on a highway near Ramadi. Reacting to his arrest, influential Sunni cleric Sheik Abdul Malik Al-Saadi urged Sunni protesters to defend themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, December\nThe following evening, on Sunday 29 December, an Iraqi defense ministry spokesperson claimed on state TV that local Sunni leaders and clerics had agreed to peacefully end the 12 month sit in at the Ramadi protest camp after the Iraqi government had warned them that the camp was a potential shelter for al-Qaeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, December\nThe following day Iraqi security forces dismantled the Ramadi protest camp, however police special forces units claimed they came under fire when trying to enter the camp. At least ten people were killed and a number of police vehicles were attacked and burned, whilst Iraqi government helicopters supported security forces moving in on the camp. Loudspeakers from some Mosques in Ramadi reportedly exhorted people to \"go to jihad.\" A doctor at Ramadi hospital claimed that 10 gunmen had been killed and 30 wounded, whilst 3 policemen were killed and some four police vehicles destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, December\nSeveral hours later, in reaction to the violence in Ramadi, some 40 Sunni MP's offered their resignations. The MP's demanded the withdrawal of the army from Ramadi and the release of Ahmed al-Alwani. The MP's resignations however will not have effect unless accepted by the parliaments speaker, Usama al-Nujayfi. Sunni politician Saleh al-Mutlaq called for all politicians from the Iraqi National Movement to withdraw from the political process, which he claimed had hit a \"dead end.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Timeline, 2013, December\nSheik Abdul Malik Al-Saadi denounced the move against the protest camp, and called on security forces to immediately withdraw in order to avert further bloodshed. Saadi also called the Maliki led Iraqi government a \"sectarian government that wants to smash and eradicate the Sunni people in its country,\" and urged on Sunni politicians to resign from their posts and abstain from the political process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Aftermath\nFollowing the December 2013 clashes, ISIL launched a campaign in Anbar, taking control of Fallujah and temporarily occupying parts of Ramadi. Tribal militias fought alongside ISIL, and according to Sheikh Ali Hatem al-Suleiman of the Dulaim tribe, ISIL constituted only 5\u20137% of the anti-government forces. Fighting continued in 2014 and by June, the conflict escalated into a full-scale war, with ISIL controlling 40% of Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231398-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests, Responses, Domestic, Government\nThe Iraqi government took steps to appease the protesters. On 29 January 2013 the Iraqi government announced that it would raise the salaries of Sahwa militia members by two-thirds, due to higher wages for Sahwa militia members, along with their incorporation into the security services and civil service being one of the demands of the protest movement. In February 2013 Deputy Prime Minister Hussein al-Shahristani's announced that 3,000 prisoners had been released over the past month and that all female prisoners had been transferred to prisons in their home provinces. Shahristani had previously publicly apologised in January 2013 for holding detainees without charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231399-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Israel Football League season\nThe 2012\u20132013 Israel Football League was the sixth season of the Israel Football League (IFL). The league expanded to 11 teams as the Rehovot Silverbacks became the newest expansion franchise. The Tel Aviv-Jaffa Sabres became the first team in IFL history to go undefeated throughout the regular season and postseason and the season concluded with the Sabres defeating the Judean Rebels in Israel Bowl VI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231399-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Israel Football League season, Regular season\nThe regular season consisted of 10 games for each team and the division format was left behind in favor of a schedule in which every team played every other team once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231399-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Israel Football League season, Playoffs\nThe wild card round saw both underdog teams come out victorious, including the Kings' Hail Mary pass to beat the Hammers. In the semifinals, the Sabres crushed the Kings and the Rebels upset the Pioneers in 100+ degree heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231399-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Israel Football League season, Israel Bowl VI\nThe Sabres and Rebels went toe-to-toe in Israel Bowl VI, but the Sabres pulled away midway through the third quarter, and held on for their second straight title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231400-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Israeli Basketball Super League Final\nThe 2012\u20132013 BSL final was the championship game of 2012\u20132013 Israeli Basketball Super League played at the Romema Arena in Haifa on 13 July between defending champion Maccabi Tel Aviv and home team Maccabi Haifa. Maccabi Haifa won their first ever title after an 86\u201379.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests\nThe 2012\u20132013 Maribor protests are part of the 2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests against the Slovenian political elite members, including the mayor Franc Kangler, the right-wing government leader Janez Jan\u0161a, and the opposition leader Zoran Jankovi\u0107. In 2013 all three were officially accused of corruption by the Commission for the Prevention of Corruption of the Republic of Slovenia. The protests began on 2 November 2012 in the city of Maribor, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests\nDespite being predominantly peaceful in nature, the protests have not been without violent clashes between security forces and protesters. In late November 2012, the protests spread to cities and towns throughout the country, where the people are demanding resignations and prosecutions of politicians and other members of the \"elite\", accused of corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Background, Political situation in Maribor\nFranc Kangler became the mayor of Maribor after winning the elections in December 2006, and again in October 2010 when he was re-elected. He won his second mayoral term in the first round and secured a strong coalition in the City Council. During his six-year tenure he has become notorious after being involved in multiple affairs and scandals, resulting in a number of criminal investigations and indictments, none in which he has been found guilty to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Background, Political situation in Maribor\nHe has been frequently accused by both the media and his opposition of political corruption, favouritism, clientelism, misguided budgetary policy and failed or semi-finished projects, the biggest one being the unsuccessful organization of the 2013 Winter Universiade for which the City Municipality of Maribor now faces a multi-million euros lawsuit from the FISU. Kangler rejects the blame for the failed project and argues that his organizing committee has done everything in their power to host the event and that the blame lies on the shoulders of the Government and the \"third-rate state bureaucrats\". To date, the Commission for Prevention of Corruption in Slovenia has issued multiple opinions in which they labeled some of Kangler's actions as \"corrupt\". Because of his crude language and alleged eluding of the law, critics have dubbed Kangler the \"Maribor sheriff\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 947]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Background, Political situation in Maribor\nCritics say that Kangler's downfall began in October 2012, when he signed a controversial public\u2013private partnership with the company Iskra Sistemi for the implementation of a stationary radar system with the intended purpose of ensuring greater traffic safety within the city limits. Iskra Sistemi was granted permission to install 46 speed radars, 30 of which were operational by the end of October, and within the first few days the system detected almost 25,000 traffic offenses, the majority of which were minor. Kangler soon faced accusations about the financing of the project and alleged irregularities within the contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Background, Political situation in Maribor\nIn the initial plan the cost of the system was set at around five million euros, which then skyrocketed to 30 million. The fact that Iskra Sistemi receives 92% of all collected fines and the City Municipality receives only 8% was questioned by the Information Commissioner of Slovenia, who stated that she doubts that a private company would want to ensure greater road safety when their primary motive is making profit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0003-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Background, Political situation in Maribor\nWhen told in what percentage the money from traffic fines was divided, a representative of a Dutch company, which has manufactured the radars, expressed his surprise and said that the Maribor case is unusual for them, stating that their systems in Europe are always commissioned by either the state or by the provincional governments. Faced with pressure from the media and the people, Kangler then pardoned all drivers who had committed minor traffic offenses. The speed radar system was strongly opposed by the people of Maribor from the start and within the first weeks of their implementation 10 out of 30 operational speed radars were damaged or destroyed, with the total damage cost exceeding 300,000 euros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Background, Political situation in Slovenia\nGovernment under the right-wing leader Janez Jan\u0161a responded to the weakening of the Slovenian economy during the global economic crisis and European sovereign-debt crisis with opening up old ideological fronts against the liberal media and the public sector, especially the educational and cultural sectors, accusing them of being under the influence of members of the old regime called Udbomafia and \"Uncles from Behind the Scenes\" (In Slovene: \"strici iz ozadja\") and against anyone who doubted that the austerity measures that have been forced upon Slovenia are the right ones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 21 November 2012 (\"The first Maribor uprising\")\nOn 21 November 2012 election for the National Council was held in Maribor Town Hall, with Kangler being one of the candidates. It is speculated that the sole reason for Kangler's candidature for the Council was the fact that elected councillors receives immunity from prosecution during the duration of their five-year term. However, Kangler has denied these claims and stated, one day before the election, that he waives his immunity in case he gets elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 94], "content_span": [95, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 21 November 2012 (\"The first Maribor uprising\")\nMost of the 38 electors were proposed and named by the City Municipality of Maribor and at around 18:15 CET they elected Kangler with a majority vote (25). Upon hearing the result, the crowd of about 1,000 non-violent protesters blocked the entrance to the Town Hall, preventing Kangler to leave. Kangler then phoned his friend and former kickboxing champion Toma\u017e Barada in order to escort him to safety. At around 20:00 CET, Barada, who is also a member of the Maribor City Council, appeared at the protest concealed with a hoodie and accompanied by about a dozen of masked friends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 94], "content_span": [95, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0005-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 21 November 2012 (\"The first Maribor uprising\")\nThe group then unsuccessfully tried to force their way into the Town Hall only to be pushed back by the police, which was securing the entrance. Violence erupted, with two protesters and two members of the police reportedly suffering minor injuries. Escorted and under protection of the police, Franc Kangler then left the building and was driven to safety in a police van.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 94], "content_span": [95, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0005-0003", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 21 November 2012 (\"The first Maribor uprising\")\nIt is speculated that the actions of Barada and the group of his friends were pre-organized in order to turn the protest into a violent one, which would give the police a legitimate reason to forcibly disperse the protesters and clear the way for Kangler's exit. Claims were later denied by Barada, who said that he only wanted to help his friend, the mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 94], "content_span": [95, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0005-0004", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 21 November 2012 (\"The first Maribor uprising\")\nSeveral hours before the protest, a Facebook group, which calls Kangler to step down from office, posted a message on its wall, that they have received reliable anonymous tip that Kangler has enlisted a group of hooligans with the sole reason to turn the protest into a violent one, and urged protesters to be peaceful and to obey the instruction given by the police. During Franc Kangler's last mayoral term, Barada's school of martial arts BB Hwarang received over 150,000 euros of donations from the City Municipality of Maribor. After the protests, the Slovenian People's Party revoked Kangler's membership and excluded him from their political party. In a press conference one day later, Kangler regretted the decision of the party and stated that he has no intentions of stepping down from office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 94], "content_span": [95, 898]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nDanilo T\u00fcrk, incumbent President of Slovenia, a native of Maribor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nAljo\u0161a Planteu, coach of Filip Flisar, a renowned freestyle skier and Olympian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nThe third protest occurred on 26 November 2012, starting at 16:30 CET, when about 10,000 people gathered on the Liberty square (Trg svobode). Demonstrations started peacefully, with protesters chanting slogans against Kangler and setting ablaze his pictures, a life-size model of the mayor and a cardboard model of one of the speed radars. However, about two hours into the protests they turned violent when a group of several thousand decided to move in front of a building, the seat of the City Municipality of Maribor, located about 200 meters to the north of the square, which was heavily protected by the police forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nReports on what triggered the violence vary, however, the area was quickly a scene of a massive riot with heavy clashes that erupted between hundreds of protesters and members of the police. Reporters present at the protests described the scenes that followed as \"a war zone\" and as unprecedented in the history of Slovenia, since its independence in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nThe violence started at around 18:15 CET and escalated after the use of force and tear gas by the police, which scattered the crowd into a number of smaller groups and fighting continued for several hours on different locations within the city centre. Clashes occurred on most of Maribor's town squares, with particularly heavy fighting on Rudolf Maister square (Trg Generala Maistra), Castle square (Grajski trg) and the Main square (Glavni trg), the site of the protests on 21 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0009-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nThe police used all means available to them using tear gas, police dogs and even mounted police, which was indiscriminately charging into the protesters and even the journalists. Overlooking the sky was a police helicopter, which helped throw tear gas into the streets. At around 22:00 CET the situation had stabilized and Maribor streets were left deserted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nThe fighting led to several dozen arrests and injured people. In total 31 protesters were arrested and 22 people injured (11 protesters and 11 police officers). Everyone that sought and received medical treatment suffered minor injuries, however, two police officers and one protester had to spend a night in the hospital. In addition, there were also 14 police vehicles that were damaged during the riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nAt 22:15 CET a press conference was held by the Maribor Police Department and Vinko Gorenak, Minister of the Interior, who immediately went from Ljubljana to Maribor, driving when the fighting in the city streets was still occurring. The last time a Minister of the Interior had to intervene and come Maribor unexpectedly was after the assassination of Ivan Kramberger in 1992. At the press conference the Minister stated that although some claims and demands of the protesters seems legitimate, the protests itself are not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0011-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nGorenak dubbed the protests as \"illegal, not registered and not allowed\" and stated that the intervention of the police was correct and within the authorized limits. Gorenak also stated that the police will do everything in their power to hunt down the anonymous organizers of the protests, and held them accountable for the violence and damage caused by the rioters. He also called out on the media for reliable and objective reporting, pointing out the \"inaccuracies of the emergency rooms being full of injured people\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0011-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nGorenak's claims, that a protest has to be registered and officially announced to be legal, were later denied and dismissed as unfounded by Miro Cerar Jr., a professor of law at the University of Ljubljana. Danijel Lorbek, Director of the Maribor Police Department, stated that the police force and tear gas was used only after the violent protesters assaulted officers who were guarding the main building of the Municipality. He dismissed claims of excessive use of force as unfounded, stating that it was the protesters who violently opposed the orders given by the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 26 November 2012 (\"The second Maribor uprising\")\nEven during the protests reports were made, by the reporters covering the event live, that the police had exceeded their authority and used excessive force. The protest was non-violent and escalated only after the police threw tear gas into the peaceful crowd and decided to disperse the crowd by force. YouTube videos emerged, showing the excessive force used by the police officers. One of the videos even shows how peaceful sitting protesters are being sprayed with tear gas in order to forcibly disperse. Some reporters described the events as police brutality and unprecedented in the history of Slovenia, since its independence in 1991, stating how the police did not use such measures against its own people even during the period of socialist Yugoslavia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 3 December 2012 (\"The third Maribor uprising\")\nThe largest protest thus far was on 3 December 2012 when about 20,000 people reportedly gathered in Maribor squares. Again starting at 16:30 CET the protest started peacefully and continued this way until the demonstrators moved from Liberty square to the nearby Rudolf Maister square and in front of the Municipal building. There the protesters where throwing rocks and pyrotechnics into the building. At about 19:00 CET the violence escalated after the use of force by the police officers who clashed with the protesters and arrested some of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 3 December 2012 (\"The third Maribor uprising\")\nThe police then secured the entrance to the building, however, they were soon pushed back after the protesters charged into them and returned to their previous position. Shortly thereafter, a police helicopter began overflying the area and soon found itself under fire by some of the protesters, who targeted it with rockets. Similar to the protest on 26 November, the fighting between the police and the protesters then spread across the city centre and continued for several hours, with tear gas circulating through the air after another extensive use.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0013-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 3 December 2012 (\"The third Maribor uprising\")\nThe gas was mixed with clouds of smoke from fires, alight by some of the protesters. A day after the protest Aleksander Ogrizek, President of the Union of Professional Firefighetrs, stated that the Maribor fire department had 25 interventions during four hours, some of which were life-threatening for the firefighters involved in putting out the fires. He has also stated that the scenes reminded him of Beirut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231401-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Maribor protests, Protests, Maribor, 3 December 2012 (\"The third Maribor uprising\")\nThe fighting has led to a total of 39 people who sought medical treatment; 14 protesters and 25 police officers. Most of the injuries sustained were minor, however, one protester suffered a broken jaw and was subjected to surgery. The violence has also led to 119 arrests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 93], "content_span": [94, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought\nThe 2012\u20132013 North American drought, an expansion of the 2010\u20132013 Southern United States drought, originated in the midst of a record-breaking heat wave. Low snowfall amounts in winter, coupled with the intense summer heat from La Ni\u00f1a, caused drought-like conditions to migrate northward from the southern United States, wreaking havoc on crops and water supply. The drought inflicted significant economic ramifications for the affected states. It exceeded, in many measures, the 1988\u20131989 North American drought, the most recent comparable drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought\nThe drought affected most of the U.S., parts of Mexico, and central and Eastern Canada. At its peak in July 2012, it covered approximately 81 percent of the contiguous United States with at least abnormally dry (D0) conditions. Out of that 81%, 64% was designated as at least moderate drought (D1) conditions. Its area was comparable to the droughts in the 1930s and 1950s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought\nDrought continued in parts of North America through 2013. Beginning in March 2013, improved rainfall across the Midwest, southern Mississippi Valley, and Great Plains began gradually alleviating drought in these areas, while drought continued to intensify in the Western United States. Heavy rains across previously drought-stricken areas resulted in widespread flooding in portions of the Midwest, a phenomenon which was named \"weather whiplash\". By June 2013, approximately the eastern half of the United States was drought-free, while conditions continued to gradually improve across the Plains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought\nModerate to severe drought continues to impact and worsen throughout the western United States, with some portions of the United States being afflicted by the drought for over three years. Through the winter of 2013\u20132014, California continued to receive record low rainfall. For many locations, the calendar year of 2013 was the driest year in over 130 years. Some locations received less than half of their previous record low rainfall amounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Meteorological background\nThe drought was set in motion when strongly positive Arctic oscillation and North Atlantic oscillation conditions removed winter storms from the U.S. the winter of 2011\u20132012. When spring arrived, very little snow existed to melt and moisten the ground, and thus very little water to evaporate and create rainfall. The effects of the lack of snow were immediate. Dry conditions could be noticed immediately, and contributed to a weak tornado season in the U.S. The strongest tornado outbreak of 2012 occurred on March 2, after most snow had melted. The drought continued to steadily intensify along with a decline in rainfall which is still ongoing. The Summer 2012 North American heat wave caused further evaporation of groundwater, lakes, reservoirs, and rivers and streams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Meteorological background\nAs moisture has continued to decline, the conditions are becoming self-sustaining (i.e. a lack of rainfall means that less moisture is available to promote additional rainfall, in a vicious cycle). In many areas, the only way for drought conditions to be significantly alleviated in the short-term would be for a discrete, long-lived, and large system (such as a tropical cyclone) to impact the area. Soil hardening due to the drought means that even if a large amount of rain falls in a short time, most of it will run off quickly causing flash floods rather than drought relief. The June 2012 North American derecho and other strong storms in late June and early July did not appear to ease drought conditions, as the rainwater ran off rapidly from the affected areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Meteorological background\nThe drought continued and intensified into the end of November 2014 for a large part of the country. Although drought/dry conditions are likely to drop at least one category level in the Southwest, Southeast, Northeast, and Northern Plains as well as portions of the Ohio River Valley, it is expected to have both short-term and long-term impacts across nearly the entire affected area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Meteorological background\nA study by Utah State University analyzed the 2011 Missouri River Flooding and predicted that \"a prominent teleconnection forcing in driving the wet/dry spells in the (Missouri River Basin)... implies persistence of dry conditions for the next 2 to 3 years\", which coincides with the 2012\u201315 drought. That analysis was based upon a marked variability at the 10\u201315-\u2009year time scale that is coincident with the water storage increase in the Missouri River Basin. The study found that precipitation over the MRB undergoes a profound modulation during the transition points of the Pacific quasi-decadal oscillation and associated teleconnections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States\nThe drought cost more than $35 billion in the Midwest, and may have reduced the gross domestic product by 0.5\u20131% of the U.S. as a whole, equating to a loss of $75 to $150 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States\nCrops, particularly strains grown in the most heavily affected regions (such as corn and soybeans), were noted to be failing or yielding very low in 2012 due to the drought's presence in farming areas. This increase in cost moved up the feeding chain and resulted in raised prices for meat, dairy, and processed food products. Food prices increased as a result of the consequent supply shortfall. The price of farm equipment, on the other hand, decreased as farmers were forced to sell off their equipment and machinery to cope with decreased incomes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States\nWater levels on parts of the Mississippi River plummeted, affecting trade and commerce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States\n1,692 counties across 36 states in the U.S. were legally declared primary natural disaster areas in August 2012 as the drought covered over 62% of the contiguous U.S. Hundreds of additional counties bordering the primary disaster areas were designated as \"contiguous\" disaster areas, and are also eligible for federal aid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States\nThe number of cattle in the U.S. decreased to the lowest in 60 years due to drought impacts, with 69% of cattle located in areas that faced drought conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States, California\nCalifornia had been experiencing a drought since 2011. In 2013 the total rainfall was less than 34% of what was expected. Many regions of the state accumulated less rainfall in 2013 than any other year on record. As a result of this, many fish species were threatened. Streams and rivers were so low that fish couldn't get to their spawning grounds, and survival rates of any eggs that are laid were expected to be low. Lack of rainfall had caused the mouths of rivers to be blocked off by sand bars which further prevents fish from reaching their spawning grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States, California\nStafford Lehr, Chief of Fisheries within the California Department of Fish and Wildlife says that 95% of winter run salmon didn't survive in 2013. Not only did the drought severely affect fishing, but also agriculture. Decreasing rainfall amounts and increasing temperatures cause agriculture to be much more challenging due to increasing rates of evapotranspiration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States, California\nIn response to heightening drought conditions, California tightened fishing restrictions in many areas of the state. Streams and rivers on the northern coast had unprecedented amounts of fishing bans. In February 2015 the California Fish and Game Commission voted unanimously to further tighten regulations on both recreational and commercial fishing. The U.S. Endangered Species Act listed steelhead as threatened and coho salmon as endangered. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife closed dozens of streams and rivers to fishing in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States, California\nLehr said that he fears coho salmon may go completely extinct south of the Golden Gate Bridge in the near future. In early 2014 the main stems of the Eel, Mad, Smith, Van Duzen, and Mattole rivers were closed pending additional rainfall. Large areas of the Russian and American rivers were closed indefinitely. Most rivers in San Mateo, Santa Cruz and Monterey counties were also closed pending further rainfall. Other actions were also taken, such as releasing more water from the Kent Dam in hopes of raising the levels in the Lagunitas Creek watershed \u2013 one of the last spawning grounds that wild coho can still reach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, United States, California\nProtesters said that banning fishing will disrupt the economy and threaten the livelihoods of individuals who rely on salmon fishing during the winters. Officials felt that it will help prevent species that are already in trouble from slipping to extinction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231402-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 North American drought, Impacts, Canada\nThe drought affected Canada mainly in the east in Ontario, Quebec, and the Atlantic provinces where there was record setting heat and very little rainfall. Summer crops in these areas were affected and the price of produce, particularly corn and soybeans, was expected to increase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231403-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests\nThe 2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests were a series of anti-establishment and anti-government protests. Protesters expressed disapproval with the country's ruling political elite, including Maribor mayor Franc Kangler, prime minister Janez Jan\u0161a, and parliamentary opposition leader Zoran Jankovi\u0107 (all of whom stood accused of corruption by Commission for the Prevention of Corruption).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231403-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests\nProtests began on 2 November 2012 as the 2012\u20132013 Maribor protests against the city's mayor Franc Kangler and subsequently spread to other cities across the country, with protesters demanding resignations and prosecution of politicians and other members of the elite, accused of corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231403-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests, Background\nGovernment under the right-wing leader Janez Jan\u0161a responded to the weakening of Slovenian economy during the global economic crisis and European sovereign-debt crisis with opening up old ideological fronts against liberal media, and against public sector - especially educational and cultural sectors, accusing them of being under influence of members of old regime (called Udbomafia and \"Uncles from Behind the Scenes\" (In Slovene: \"strici iz ozadja\")) and against everyone who doubted that austerity measures forced upon Slovenia are right ones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231403-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests, Background\nIn relation to the allegations made by official Commission for the Prevention of Corruption, Jan\u0161a's party sent letters to the right-wing European Parliament members, discrediting the Commission's report as part of \"the communist campaign that begun in 1983 with the aim to remove Jan\u0161a from politics\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231403-0003-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests, Background\nSince Jan\u0161a was ignoring the report and his party didn't offer any replacement for him, all three coalition parties and their leaders left the government within weeks and were subjected to ad hominem attacks by Janez Jan\u0161a who accused the SLS's leader Radovan \u017derjav of being \"the worst (economics) minister in history of Slovenia\", while the leader of the Civic List Gregor Virant has been mocked by Jan\u0161a as engaging in \"virantovanje\" (a play on words with kurentovanje, a Slovenian carnival festival).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231403-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Slovenian protests, Reception, Reception by public intellectuals\nThe cause for demonstrations has been attributed by some public intellectuals to misunderstanding of post-socialist political elite who rejected \"collectivism as socialist pattern\" while, according to notable Slovene anthropologist Vesna V. Godina it is in fact a \"pre-socialist pattern\", originating from the way the traditional Slovene rural community was functioning much longer than in other \u2013 mainly Protestant and to much lesser degree in the mainly Catholic \u2013 modern nations, who have replaced traditional political culture earlier in history by the modern representative democracy and individualism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes\nIn August 2012, a series of ethnic clashes between the Orma and Pokomo peoples of Kenya's Tana River District resulted in the deaths of at least fifty-two people. The violence was the worst of its kind in Kenya since the country's 2007\u201308 crisis, which left 118 people dead and more than 13,500 displaced - over 50% of the 13,500 were children, women and the elderly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, Background\nThe major ethnic groups of the Tana River District are the Pokomo, many of whom are farmers along the Tana River, and the Orma, who are predominantly a cattle-herding nomadic people. The district is generally dry and prone to drought, with erratic rainfall during the March\u2013May and October\u2013December rainy seasons. The climate has sparked numerous clashes between farmers and nomadic peoples over access to water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, Background\nApproximately ten days before the ethnic clash on 22 August 2012, three Pokomo people were killed by members of the Orma community. In retaliation, the Pokomo people raided Orma villages and burned more than one hundred houses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, 22 August incident\nOn 22 August 2012, in the worst violent incident in Kenya since 2007, at least 52 people were killed in ethnic violence in the Tana River District between the Orma and Pokomo groups. The violence occurred in southeast Kenya, in the Reketa area of Tarassa, near the coast and approximately 300 kilometres (190\u00a0mi) from the capital, Nairobi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, 22 August incident\nThe ethnic violence was the result of a dispute over land rights for the tribes' chickens. Police believe that the attack was carried out by the Pokomo people, who attacked the Orma, following an Orma invasion of farms belonging to the Pokomo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, 22 August incident\nThe attackers were armed with machetes, bows and arrows, spears and handguns. Thirty-one women, eleven children, and six men were killed during the violence. Of these, thirty-four people were hacked to death with machetes, while fourteen people were burned to death. Four other Kenyans later died from injuries sustained during the attack. In addition, the Pokomo captured approximately two hundred cattle belonging to the Orma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, September incident\nOn 7 September, at around 3\u00a0a.m., 12 people were killed by the Orma. The Capital FM stated that police and the Kenya Red Cross said the attacks occurred at Tarasaa where houses were burnt, in what is believed to be retaliatory attacks by the Orma people against the Pokomos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, September incident\nKenya Red Cross stated that over 300 cattle and 400 goats were raided, and houses torched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, September incident\nOn 10 September, 38 people were killed by the Pokomo, including 9 police officers. The deceased include 16 men, five women, nine police officers and eight children. The officers included five GSU, two Administration Police and two regular police officers. The violence occurred at Kilelengwani Village.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, September incident\nOn the next morning, 11 September, three people were killed by the Orma at Semikaro, Laini, Nduru and Shirikisho villages of Tana Delta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, September incident\nOn 13 September, more than 1300 paramilitary police officers were sent to quell unrest in Tana River.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, September incident\nOn 17 September, at around 5.45\u00a0a.m., 67 houses were torched at Ozi Village - there were no casualties reported. The next day, MP Mungatana claimed that the houses were torched by GSU, sent there earlier from Nairobi to quell the violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, September incident\nThe same day police found a suspected mass grave. Police were issued with a court order to dig up the suspected grave, but found nothing apart from part of a human leg. A member of Red Cross reported a strong stench from the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, December incident\nOn Friday, 21 December 2012, renewed fighting ensued, with initial reports indicating the deaths of over 27 people. The brutal raid was carried out in the small hours of the morning. Subsequent reports confirmed that thirty-nine people were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2012, December incident\nAmong the dead were assailants whose corpses were burnt in anger by residents. Police also arrested over 65 suspects in the aftermath of the killings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2013, January\nOn 9 January 2013, 11 people were killed in fresh fighting when Suspected Pokomo raiders attacked Nduru Village killing six Ormas. Villagers countered the attackers, killing two raiders on the spot, and two more as they pursued them. Another assailant died from injuries while fleeing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, 2013, January\nDawn attacks on 10 January 2013 resulted in the death of 11 people at the Pokomo community Village of Kibusu. The dead included three women, three men and five children. The attack also resulted in the burning of 19 homes in the village, which is approximately 20\u00a0km from Nduru village which had been attacked a day earlier. The Kenya Red Cross also indicated that over 112,000 people had been displaced since the fighting begun despite deployment of 2,000 law enforcement officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, State reaction\nThe Galole Legislator and an Assistant Livestock Minister Dhadho Godhana was arrested and charged with incitement, but was released with a cash bail of Kshs. 500,000.00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, State reaction\nThe same day Kenyan parliament passed a motion urging the executive to send Kenyan defence forces to Tana River. The motion was introduced by Garsen MP Danson Mungatana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, Judicial inquiry\nOn 22 September, the government set up a Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Tana River clashes, chaired by High Court judge Grace Nzioka. The full membership of the commission appointed by President Mwai Kibaki is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231404-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Tana River District clashes, Casualties statistics\nThe following is a table of casualties as captured by Kenya Red Cross as at 12 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests\nThe Togolese protests of 2012\u20132013 were mass uprisings against the long presidency of Faure Gnassingb\u00e9 in Togo. Many were killed in the suppression of demonstrations. These protests coincided with the Arab Spring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Movement in 2012\u20132013\nIn early June 2012, the Togolese parliament amended the country's electoral code. The opposition criticised these changes, saying they favoured the ruling party. Thousands of protesters gathered in Lom\u00e9 on 12\u201314 June 2012, forcing the city's main market to close. Protesters threw stones and vandalized buildings, and police fired tear gas at them. At least 27 people, including policemen and protesters, were injured during the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Movement in 2012\u20132013\nHundreds of supporters of the Let's Save Togo campaign protested against the Togolese government on 5 July 2012 in front of the French embassy in Lom\u00e9. The police fired tear gas on the protesters again, forcing them to disperse. The opposition held protests on 21\u201323 August 2012. On the first day, protesters planned to march from B\u00e9 to the commercial area Deckon, an area the government prohibited protesters from entering. Togolese authorities fired tear gas on the protesters ten minutes after it started. According to Let's Save Togo, more than 100 people were injured, and more than 125 people were arrested during the rallies. Thousands of opposition supporters participated in peaceful protests on 24\u201325 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Movement in 2012\u20132013\nThousands of people attended a Let's Save Togo rally in Lom\u00e9 on 26 August 2012 which encouraged Togolese women to participate in a week-long sex strike to galvanize men ito participation in the opposition movement against Gnassingb\u00e9. Opposition leader Isabelle Ameganvi said this was inspired by the 2003 sex strike of Liberian women led by Ellen Johnson Sirleaf which pushed for peace during the Second Liberian Civil War against Charles Taylor. Protesters gathered in B\u00e9 on 28 August 2012 and prepared to march against the government. Before they could start marching, Togolese security forces fired tear gas on them. The opposition held organized sit-ins, and the security forces fired tear gas on them on 6 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Government response\nIn response to these protests, the government passed another electoral reform in September 2012. Opposition groups boycotted the talks because they believed the proposed term limits would allow Gnassingb\u00e9 to potentially stay in office until at least 2025. On 15 September 2012, a mob armed with sticks and machetes entered an area where opposition supporters planned to protest. The mob prevented the opposition protest from proceeding and prevented journalists from taking photographs. Several ambassadors from Western countries expressed \"deep concern\" over the mob violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Government response\nThousands of women wearing red participated in a peaceful march organised by Let's Save Togo on 20 September 2012. The colour red was chosen to protest the precarious economic situation of women in Togo, as Togolese women traditionally made and sold red garments at the country's markets. Let's Save Togo held an opposition rally on 5 October 2012, the anniversary of the 1990 demonstration against Eyad\u00e9ma. Security forces fired tear gas on them, injuring several people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Journalists protest\nAt an opposition protest in Lom\u00e9 on 10 January 2013, several journalists were reportedly targeted during the protests, and at least four of them were injured. In late February 2013, three opposition supporters were charged with involvement in the fires that destroyed two Togolese markets in January 2013. On 12 March 2013, while Jean-Pierre Fabre was being questioned in Lom\u00e9, hundreds of his supporters tried to block the building's entrance. The police fired tear gas on them as the protesters threw stones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Journalists protest\nOn 14\u201317 March 2013, Togolese journalists held sit-ins to protest recently adopted media regulations which gave the government authority to shut down news outlets. On the first and last day of these protests, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowd. Gnassingb\u00e9 requested the amendments go through a constitutional review, and Togo's Constitutional Court declared them unconstitutional on 20 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Teachers strike\nIn April 2013, Togolese teachers went on strike to call for higher wages, and students protested in support of their teachers. The government temporarily closed its primary and secondary schools, citing property damage from the student protests. Two students were killed as a result of police efforts to disperse protests on 15 April in Dapaong. The government re-opened its schools on 22 April, though many teachers continued their strike and told their students to return home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Teachers strike\n\u00c9tienne Yakanou, one of the opposition leaders detained in connection to the Lom\u00e9 market fire, died on 10 May 2013. According to the government he died from malaria. The National Alliance for Change (ANC) accused the Togolese government of committing a \"political assassination\" by deliberately withholding treatment from Yakanou, and Amnesty International called for an investigation into his death. On 18 May 2013, a group of women from Let's Save Togo participated in topless protests inspired by the Ukrainian feminist organization FEMEN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231405-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Togolese protests, Teachers strike\nThe opposition protests delayed the parliamentary election, which were originally scheduled for October 2012, to 25 July 2013. Gnassingb\u00e9's party won the majority of seats in the election, and the opposition declared that the results were fraudulent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231406-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 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 7th edition of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231406-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Summary\nThe 2012 Vend\u00e9e Globe started on 10 November 2012. The race saw the 24-hour singlehanded distance record repeatedly reset by several competitors. Armel Le Cl\u00e9ac\u2019h (Banque Populaire) set a new race record for shortest time to the longitude of the Cape of Good Hope, and Fran\u00e7ois Gabart (Macif) set new race records for shortest time to the longitude of Cape Leeuwin in Australia and to Cape Horn. On 27 January 2013, Gabart set a new Vend\u00e9e Globe record with just over 78 days to complete the circumnavigation. The interval of 3h 17\u2019 between the arrivals of the first and second contenders is also the shortest in the race's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231406-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Summary\nRace Director for this edition was Denis Horeau who heads the event management team having done the role for the 1989, 2004 and 2008 editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231406-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Incidents, Other Incidents\nJean Piere Dick finished the Vendee Globe without the keel attached as a remarkable piece of seamanship meant he sailed the final 2650 nautical miles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231406-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Competitor, Gallery of Sailors\nBertrand De Broc\u00a0(FRA)Votre Nom autour du Monde avec EDM Projets", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nThe 2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian Civil War refers to the third phase of the Syrian Civil War, which gradually escalated from a UN-mediated cease fire attempt during April\u2013May 2012 and deteriorated into radical violence, escalating the conflict level to a full-fledged civil war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nFollowing the Houla massacre of 25 May 2012, in which 108 people were summarily executed, and the subsequent Free Syrian Army (FSA) ultimatum to the Syrian Ba'athist government, the ceasefire practically collapsed as the FSA began nationwide offensives against government troops. On 1 June 2012, President Bashar al-Assad vowed to crush the anti-government uprising. On 12 June 2012, the UN for the first time officially proclaimed Syria to be in a state of civil war. The conflict began moving into the two largest cities, Aleppo and Damascus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nFollowing the failure of another ceasefire in October 2012, during the winter of 2012\u20132013 and early spring of 2013 the rebels continued advances on all fronts. In mid-December 2012, American officials said that the Syrian military began firing Scud ballistic missiles at rebel positions in Syria. On 11 January 2013, Islamist groups, including the al-Nusra Front, took full control of the Taftanaz air base in the Idlib Governorate, after weeks of fighting. In mid-January 2013, as clashes re-erupted between rebels and Kurdish forces in Ras al-Ayn, YPG forces moved to expel government forces from oil-rich areas in the Hasakah Governorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nBy 6 March 2013, the rebels had captured the city of Raqqa, making it the first provincial capital to be lost by the Assad government. In early April 2013, having expanded into Syria, one of the strongest jihadist insurgent groups, the Islamic State of Iraq, adopted the new name ad-Dawlah al-Isl\u0101miyah f\u012b 'l-\u02bfIr\u0101q wa-sh-Sh\u0101m (\u0627\u0644\u062f\u0648\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0633\u0644\u0627\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0627\u0642 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0634\u0627\u0645\u200e), variously translated as \"Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham\", \"Islamic State of Iraq and Syria\" (both abbreviated as ISIS), or \"Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant\" (abbreviated as ISIL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nThe rebel advances were finally stopped in April 2013, as the Syrian Arab Army reorganized and then initiated offensives. On 17 April 2013, government forces breached a six-month rebel blockade on the Wadi Deif base near Idlib. Heavy fighting was reported around the town of Babuleen after government troops attempt to secure control of a main highway leading to Aleppo. The break in the siege also allowed government forces to resupply two major military bases in the region which had been relying on sporadic airdrops. In April 2013, government and Hezbollah forces, who have increasingly become involved in the fighting, launched an offensive to capture areas near al-Qusayr. On 21 April, pro-Assad forces captured the towns of Burhaniya, Saqraja and al-Radwaniya near the Lebanon\u2013Syria border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nFrom July 2013, the situation became a stalemate, with fighting continuing on all fronts between various factions with numerous casualties, but without major territorial changes. On 28 June 2013, rebel forces captured a major military checkpoint in the southern city of Daraa. Shortly after, some Syrian rebel groups declared war on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant which was becoming increasingly dominant. A major advance took place on 6 August 2013, as rebels and ISIL captured Menagh Military Airbase after a 10-month siege.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0004-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nOn 21 August a chemical attack took place in the Ghouta region of the Damascus countryside, leading to thousands of casualties and several hundred dead in the opposition-held stronghold. The attack was followed by a military offensive by government forces into the area. The attack, largely attributed to Assad forces, caused the international community to seek the chemical disarmament of the Syrian Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war\nLate 2013 was marked by increased initiative on the part of the Syrian Army, which led offensives against opposition groups on several fronts. The Syrian Army along with its allies, Hezbollah and the al-Abas brigade, launched an offensive on Damascus and Aleppo in November. Fighting between Kurdish forces, rebels and al-Nusra front continued in other locations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Background\nOn 23 February 2012, the evening before an international \"Friends of Syria\" conference organised by the Arab League in Tunisia, The United Nations and the Arab League together appointed Kofi Annan as their envoy to Syria. 70 nations were present on the conference, Russia and China not among them; Syria called those nations attending \"historic enemies of the Arabs\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Background\nOn 16 March, Kofi Annan submitted a six-point peace plan to the UN Security Council (see below), basically asking the Syrian government \"to address the legitimate aspirations and concerns of the Syrian people\", stop fighting, pullback military concentrations from towns, while simultaneously the Envoy would seek similar commitments from the Syrian opposition and other \u201celements\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Background\nOn 5 April 2012, Annan told the UN General Assembly that the cease-fire deadline for the Syrian government would be 6 a.m. local time on Tuesday 10 April, and for the rebels 6 a.m. on 12 April. On 12 April 2012, both sides, the Syrian Ba'athist government and rebels of the FSA and some other factions, entered a UN-mediated ceasefire period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Ceasefire attempt (April\u2013May 2012)\nOn 14 April 2012, the UN Security Council meeting adopting Resolution 2042 stated that the Envoy (= mr. Annan) assessed that \u201cas of 12 April, the parties appeared to be observing a cessation of fire\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Ceasefire attempt (April\u2013May 2012)\nThe UN-mediated cease fire attempt had eventually turned into a failure, with infractions of the ceasefire by both sides resulting in several dozen casualties. Acknowledging its failure, Annan called for Iran to be \"part of the solution\", though the country has been excluded from the Friends of Syria initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Ceasefire attempt (April\u2013May 2012)\nFollowing the Houla massacre of 25 May 2012, in which 108 people were summarily executed, and the subsequent FSA ultimatum to the Syrian Ba'athist government, the ceasefire practically collapsed, as the FSA began nationwide offensives against government troops. The peace plan practically collapsed by early June and the UN mission was withdrawn from Syria. Annan resigned in frustration on 2 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), June\nOn 1 June 2012, President Assad vowed to crush the anti-government uprising. On 5 June 2012, fighting broke out in Haffa and nearby villages in the coastal governorate of Latakia Governorate. Government forces were backed by helicopter gunships in the heaviest clashes in the governorate since the revolt began. Syrian forces seized the territory following days of fighting and shelling. On 6 June, 78 civilians were killed in the Al-Qubeir massacre. According to activist sources, government forces started by shelling the village before the Shabiha militia moved in. UN observers headed to Al-Qubeir in the hope of investigating the massacre, but they were met with a roadblock and small arms fire and were forced to retreat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), June\nOn 12 June 2012, the UN for the first time officially proclaimed Syria to be in a state of civil war. The conflict began moving into the two largest cities, Damascus and Aleppo. In both cities, peaceful protests \u2013 including a general strike by Damascus shopkeepers and a small strike in Aleppo were interpreted as indicating that the historical alliance between the government and the business establishment in the large cities had become weak. On 22 June, a Turkish F-4 fighter jet was shot down by Syrian government forces, killing both pilots. Syria and Turkey disputed whether the jet had been flying in Syrian or international airspace when it was shot down. Bashar al-Assad publicly apologised for the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), July\nBy 10 July 2012, rebel forces had captured most of the city of Al-Qusayr, in Homs Governorate, after weeks of fighting. By mid-July, rebels had captured the town of Saraqib, in Idlib Governorate. By mid-July 2012, with fighting spread across the country and 16,000 people killed, the International Committee of the Red Cross declared the conflict a civil war. Fighting in Damascus intensified, with a major rebel push to take the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0013-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), July\nOn 18 July, Syrian Defense Minister Dawoud Rajiha, former defense minister Hasan Turkmani, and the president's brother-in-law General Assef Shawkat were killed by a suicide bomb attack in Damascus. The Syrian intelligence chief Hisham Ikhtiyar, who was injured in the same explosion, later succumbed to his wounds. Both the FSA and Liwa al-Islam claimed responsibility for the assassination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), July\nIn mid-July, rebel forces attacked Damascus and were repelled over two weeks, although fighting still continued in the outskirts. After this, the focus shifted to the battle for control of Aleppo. On 25 July, multiple sources reported that the Assad government was using fighter jets to attack rebel positions in Aleppo and Damascus, and on 1 August, UN observers in Syria witnessed government fighter jets firing on rebels in Aleppo. In early August, the Syrian Army recaptured Salaheddin district, an important rebel stronghold in Aleppo. In August, the government began using fixed-wing warplanes against the rebels. On 19 July, Iraqi officials reported that the FSA had gained control of all four border checkpoints between Syria and Iraq, increasing concerns for the safety of Iraqis trying to escape the violence in Syria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 927]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), September\nOn 6 September 2012 Kurdish activists reported that 21 civilians were killed in the Kurdish neighborhood of Sheikh Maqsud in Aleppo, when the Syrian Army shelled the local mosque and its surroundings. Despite the district being neutral during the Battle of Aleppo and free of government and FSA clashes, local residents believed that the district was shelled as retaliation for sheltering anti-government civilians from other parts of the city. In a statement released shortly after the deaths, the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) vowed to retaliate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 103], "content_span": [104, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0015-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), September\nA few days later, Kurdish forces killed 3 soldiers in Afrin (Kurdish: Efr\u00een\u200e) and captured a number of other government soldiers in Ayn al-Arab (Kurdish: Koban\u00ee\u200e) and Al-Malikiyah (Kurdish: D\u00earika Hemko\u200e) from where they drove the remaining government security forces. It was also reported that the government had begun to arm Arab tribes around Qamishli in preparation for a possible confrontation with Kurdish forces, who still did not completely control the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 103], "content_span": [104, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), September\nOn 19 September 2012, rebel forces seized a border crossing between Syria and Turkey in Raqqa Governorate. It was speculated that this crossing could provide opposition forces with strategic and logistical advantages due to Turkish support of the rebels, whose headquarters subsequently relocated from southern Turkey into northern Syria. At least 8 government soldiers were killed and 15 wounded by a car bomb in the al-Gharibi district of Qamishli on 30 September 2012. The explosion targeted the Political Security branch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 103], "content_span": [104, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Renewed fighting (June\u2013October 2012), October\nIn October 2012, rebel forces seized control of Maarat al-Numan, a town in Idlib Governorate on the highway linking Damascus with Aleppo and captured Douma, marking increased influence in Rif Dimashq. Lakhdar Brahimi arranged for a ceasefire during Eid al-Adha in late October 2012, but it quickly collapsed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nAfter Brahimi's ceasefire agreement ended on 30 October 2012, the Syrian military expanded its bombing campaign in Damascus. The district of Jobar suffered the first bomb hit from a fighter jet in Damascus. The following day, Syrian Air Force commander Gen. Abdullah Mahmud al-Khalidi was assassinated by opposition gunmen in the Damascus district of Rukn al-Din. In early November 2012, rebels made significant gains in northern Syria. The rebel capture of Saraqib in Idlib Governorate, which lies on the M5 highway, further isolated Aleppo. Due to insufficient anti-aircraft weapons, rebel units attempted to nullify the government's air power by destroying landed helicopters and aircraft on air bases. On 3 November, rebels launched an attack on the Taftanaz air base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 18 November 2012, rebels took control of Base 46 in the Aleppo Governorate, one of the Syrian Army's largest bases in northern Syria, after weeks of intense fighting. Defected General Mohammed Ahmed al-Faj, who commanded the assault, stated nearly 300 Syrian troops had been killed and 60 had been captured, with rebels seizing large amounts of heavy weapons, including tanks. On 22 November, rebels captured the Mayadin military base in the country's eastern Deir ez-Zor Governorate. Activists said this gave the rebels control of much territory east of the base, stretching to the Iraqi border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0019-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 29 November, at approximately 10:26 UTC, the Syrian Internet and phone service was shut off for two days. Syrian officials blamed the blackout on terrorists having cut \"a main fiber optic cable connecting Damascus to the rest of the world\"; Edward Snowden in August 2014 claimed that this Internet breakdown had been caused, though unintendedly, by hackers of the NSA during an operation to intercept Internet communication in Syria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nIn mid-December 2012, American officials said that the Syrian military had fired Scud ballistic missiles at rebel fighters inside Syria. Reportedly, six Scud missiles were fired at the Sheikh Suleiman base north of Aleppo, occupied by rebel forces. It is unclear whether the Scuds hit the intended target. The government denied this claim. Later that month, a further Scud attack took place near Marea, a town north of Aleppo near the Turkish border, apparently missing its target, and the FSA penetrated into Latakia Governorate's coast through Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nIn late December, rebel forces pushed further into Damascus, taking control of the adjoining Yarmouk and Palestine refugee camps, pushing out pro-government Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command fighters with the help of other factions. Rebel forces launched an offensive in Hama Governorate, later claiming to have forced army regulars to evacuate several towns and bases, and stating that \"three-quarters of western rural Hama is under our control.\" Rebels also captured the town of Harem near the Turkish border in Idlib Governorate, after weeks of heavy fighting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 11 January 2013, Islamist groups, including al-Nusra Front, took full control of the Taftanaz air base in the Idlib Governorate, after weeks of fighting. The base had been used by the Syrian military to carry out helicopter raids and deliver supplies. The rebels claimed to have seized helicopters, tanks and rocket launchers, before being forced to withdraw by a government counter-attack. The leader of the al-Nusra Front said the amount of weapons they took was a \"game changer\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0021-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 11 February, Islamist rebels captured the town of Al-Thawrah in Raqqa Governorate and the nearby Tabqa Dam, Syria's largest dam and a key source of hydroelectricity. The next day, rebel forces took control of Jarrah air base, located 60 kilometres (37\u00a0mi) east of Aleppo. On 14 February, al-Nusra Front fighters took control of Shadadeh, a town in Al-Hasakah Governorate near the Iraqi border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 20 February 2013, a car bomb exploded in Damascus near the Ba'ath Syrian Regional Branch headquarters, killing at least 53 people and injuring more than 235. No group claimed responsibility. On 21 February, the FSA in Quasar began shelling Hezbollah positions in Lebanon. Prior to this, Hezbollah had been shelling villages near Quasar from within Lebanon. A 48-hour ultimatum was issued by a FSA commander on 20 February, warning the militant group to stop the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 2 March 2013, intense clashes between rebels and the Syrian Army erupted in the city of Raqqa, with many deaths reported on both sides. On the same day, Syrian troops regained several villages near Aleppo. By 3 March, rebels had overrun Raqqa's central prison and freed hundreds of prisoners, according to the SOHR. The SOHR also stated that rebel fighters had taken control of most of an Aleppo police academy in Khan al-Asal, and that over 200 rebels and government troops had been killed fighting for control of it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nBy 6 March 2013, the rebels had captured the city of Raqqa, effectively making it the first provincial capital to be lost by the Assad government. Residents of Raqqa toppled a bronze statue of his late father Hafez al-Assad in the centre of the city. The rebels also seized two top government officials. On 18 March, the Syrian Air Force attacked rebel positions in Lebanon for the first time, at the Wadi al-Khayl Valley area, near the town of Arsal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 21 March, a suspected suicide bombing in the Iman Mosque in Mazraa district killed as many as 41 people, including the pro-Assad Sunni cleric, Sheikh Mohammed al-Buti. On 23 March, several rebel groups seized the 38th division air defense base in southern Daraa Governorate near a highway linking Damascus to Jordan. On the next day, rebels captured a 25-kilometre (16-mile) strip of land near the Jordanian border, which included the towns of Muzrib, Abdin, and the al-Rai military checkpoint. On 25 March, rebels launched one of their heaviest bombardments of Central Damascus since the revolt began. Mortars reached Umayyad Square, where the Ba'ath Party headquarters, Air Force Intelligence and state television are located.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nOn 26 March 2013, near the Syrian town of al-Qusayr, rebel commander Khaled al Hamad, who commanded the Al Farooq al-Mustakilla Brigade and is also known by his nom de guerre Abu Sakkar, ate the heart and liver of a dead soldier and said \"I swear to God, you soldiers of Bashar, you dogs, we will eat from your hearts and livers! O heroes of Bab Amr, you slaughter the Alawites and take out their hearts to eat them!\" in an apparent attempt to increase sectarianism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0025-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nVideo of the event emerged two months later and resulted in considerable outrage, especially from Human Rights Watch which classified the incident as a war crime. According to the BBC, it was one of the most gruesome videos to emerge from the conflict to-date. On 29 March, rebels captured the town of Da'el after fierce fighting. The town is located in Daraa Governorate, along the highway connecting Damascus to Jordan. On 3 April, rebels captured a military base near the city of Daraa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nIn mid-January 2013, as clashes re-erupted between rebels and Kurdish forces in Ras al-Ayn, YPG forces moved to expel government forces from oil-rich areas in Hassakeh Province. Clashes broke out from 14 to 19 January between the army and YPG fighters in the Kurdish village of Gir Z\u00eero (Tall Adas), near al-Maabadah (Kurdish: Girk\u00ea Leg\u00ea\u200e), where an army battalion of around 200 soldiers had been blockaded since 9 January. YPG forces claimed to have expelled government after the clashes. One soldier was reportedly killed and another eight injured, while seven were captured (later released) and 27 defected. Fighting at the oil field near Gir Z\u00eero ended on 21 January, when government forces withdrew after receiving no assistance from Damascus. In Rumeilan, directly west of al-Maabadah, another 200 soldiers had been surrounded by YPG forces, and 10 soldiers were reported to have defected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 997]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nFrom 8 to 11 February 2013, heavy clashes broke out between the YPG and government troops in the PYD/YPG-held district Ashrafiyah where, according to SOHR, at least 3 soldiers and 5 pro-government militiamen were killed. The fighting followed deadly shelling on 31 January on Ashrafiyah, in which 23 civilians were killed after FSA units moved into the Kurdish sector of Aleppo. According to its own reports, the YPG lost 7 of its members in the fighting, while also claiming that 48 soldiers were killed and 22 captured, and a further 70 injured. In early March, YPG forces established full control of oil fields and installations in north-east Syria after government forces posted there surrendered. Also, YPG assaulted government forces and took control of the towns of Tall \u02bfAdas, which is adjacent to Rumeilan oil fields, and Al-Qahtaniya (Kurdish: Tirbesp\u00ee\u200e).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 967]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Rebel offensives (November 2012 \u2013 April 2013)\nIn April 2013, having expanded into Syria, the group adopted the name ad-Dawlah al-Isl\u0101miyah f\u012b 'l-\u02bfIr\u0101q wa-sh-Sh\u0101m (\u0627\u0644\u062f\u0648\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0633\u0644\u0627\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0627\u0642 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0634\u0627\u0645\u200e). As al-Sh\u0101m is a region often compared with the Levant or Greater Syria, the group's name has been variously translated as \"Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham\", \"Islamic State of Iraq and Syria\" (both abbreviated as ISIS), or \"Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant\" (abbreviated as ISIL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (April\u2013June 2013)\nOn 17 April 2013, Ba'athist government forces breached a six-month rebel blockade in Wadi al-Deif, near Idlib. Heavy fighting was reported around the town of Babuleen after government troops attempt to secure control of a main highway leading to Aleppo. The break in the siege also allowed government forces to resupply two major military bases in the region which had been relying on sporadic airdrops. On 18 April, the FSA took control of Al-Dab'a Air Base near the city of al-Qusayr. The base was being used primarily to garrison ground troops. Meanwhile, the Syrian Army re-captured the town of Abel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0029-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (April\u2013June 2013)\nThe SOHR said the loss of the town would hamper rebel movements between al-Qusayr and Homs city. The capture of the airport would have relieved the pressure on the rebels in the area, but their loss of Abel made the situation more complicated. The same day, rebels reportedly assassinated Ali Ballan, who was a government employee, in the Mazzeh district of Damascus. On 21 April, government forces captured the town of Jdaidet al-Fadl, near Damascus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (April\u2013June 2013)\nIn April 2013, government and Hezbollah forces launched an offensive to capture areas near al-Qusayr. On 21 April, pro-Assad forces captured the towns of Burhaniya, Saqraja and al-Radwaniya near the Lebanese border. By this point, eight villages had fallen to the government offensive in the area. On 24 April, after five weeks of fighting, government troops re-took control of the town of Otaiba, east of Damascus, which had been serving as the main arms supply route from Jordan. Meanwhile, in the north of the country, rebels took control of a position on the edge of the strategic Mennagh Military airbase, on the outskirts of Aleppo. This allowed them to enter the airbase after months of besieging it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (April\u2013June 2013)\nOn 2 May 2013, government forces captured the town of Qaysa in a push north from the city's airport. Troops also retook the Wadi al-Sayeh central district of Homs, driving a wedge between two rebel strongholds. SOHR reported a massacre of over 100 people by the Syrian Army in the coastal town of Al Bayda, Baniyas. However, this could not be independently verified due to movement restrictions on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0031-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (April\u2013June 2013)\nYet the multiple video images that residents said they had recorded \u2013 particularly of small children, were so shocking that even some government supporters rejected Syrian television's official version of events, that the army had simply \"crushed a number of terrorists.\" On 15 June, the Syrian Army captured the Damascus suburb of Ahmadiyeh near the city's airport. On 22 June, the Syrian Army captured the rebel stronghold town of Talkalakh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 95], "content_span": [96, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 28 June 2013, rebel forces captured a major military checkpoint in the city of Daraa. On 12 July FSA reported that one of its commanders, Kamal Hamami, had been killed by Islamists a day before. The rebels declared that the assassination by the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant, was tantamount to a declaration of war. On 17 July, FSA forces took control of most of the southern city of Nawa after seizing up to 40 army posts stationed in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0032-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 18 July, Kurdish YPG forces secured control of the northern town of Ras al-Ayn, after days of fighting with the al-Nusra Front. In the following three months, continued fighting between Kurdish and mainly jihadist rebel forces led to the capture of two dozen towns and villages in Hasakah Governorate by Kurdish fighters, while the Jihadists made limited gains in Aleppo and Raqqa governorates after they turned on the Kurdish rebel group Jabhat al-Akrad over its relationship with the YPG. In Aleppo Governorate, Islamists massacred the Kurds leading to a mass migration of civilians to the town of Afrin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 22 July 2013, FSA fighters seized control of the western Aleppo suburb of Khan al-Asal. The town was the last government stronghold in the western portion of Aleppo Governorate. On 25 July, the Syrian Army secured the town of al-Sukhnah, after expelling the al-Nusra Front. On 27 July, after weeks of fighting and bombardment in Homs, the Syrian Army captured the historic Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque, and two days later, captured the district of Khaldiyeh. On 4 August, around 10 rebel brigades, launched a large-scale offensive on the government stronghold of Latakia Governorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0033-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nInitial attacks by 2,000 opposition members seized as many as 12 villages in the mountainous area. Between 4 and 5 August 20 rebels and 32 government soldiers and militiamen had been killed in the clashes. Hundreds of Alawite villagers fled to Latakia. By 5 August, rebel fighters advanced to a position 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Qardaha, the home town of the Assad family. However, in mid-August, the military counter-attacked and recaptured all of the territory previously lost to the rebels in the coastal region during the offensive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0033-0002", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nA Syrian security force source \"told AFP the army still had to recapture the Salma region, a strategic area along the border with Turkey.\" According to a Human Rights Watch report 190 civilians were killed by rebel forces during the offensive, including at least 67 being executed. Another 200 civilians, primarily women and children, were taken hostage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 6 August 2013, rebels captured Menagh Military Airbase after a 10-month siege. The strategic airbase is located on the road between Aleppo city and the Turkish border. On 21 August a chemical attack took place in the Ghouta region of the Damascus countryside, leading to thousands of casualties and several hundred dead in the opposition-held stronghold. The attack was followed by a military offensive by government forces into the area, which had been hotbeds of the opposition. On 24 August, rebels captured the town of Ariha. However, government forces recaptured Ariha on 3 September. On 26 August, rebel forces took over the town of Khanasir in Aleppo Governorate which was the government's last supply route for the city of Aleppo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 8 September 2013, rebels led by the al-Nusra Front captured the Christian town of Maaloula, 43 kilometres (27 miles) north of Damascus, The Syrian Army launched a counterattack a few days later, recapturing the town. On 18 September, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) overran the FSA-held town of Azaz in the north. The fighting was the most severe since tensions rose between militant factions in Syria earlier in the year. Soon after ISIS captured Azaz, a ceasefire was announced between the rival rebel groups. However, in early October, more fighting erupted in the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 20 September 2013, Alawite militias including the NDF killed 15 civilians in the Sunni village of Sheik Hadid in Hama Governorate. The massacre occurred in retaliation for a rebel capture of the village of Jalma, in Hama, which killed five soldiers, along with the seizure of a military checkpoint which killed 16 soldiers and 10 NDF militiamen. In mid-September, the military captured the towns of Deir Salman and Shebaa on the outskirts of Damascus. The Army also captured six villages in eastern Homs. Fighting broke out in those towns again in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0036-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 28 September, rebels seized the Ramtha border post in Daraa Governorate on the Syria Jordan crossing after fighting which left 26 soldiers dead along with 7 foreign rebel fighters. On 3 October, AFP reported that Syria's army re-took the town of Khanasir, which is located on a supply route linking central Syria to the city of Aleppo. On 7 October, the Syrian Army managed to reopen the supply route between Aleppo and Khanasir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nOn 9 October 2013, rebels seized the Hajanar guard post on the Jordanian border after a month of fierce fighting. Rebels were now in control of a swath of territory along the border from outside of Daraa to the edge of Golan Heights. The same day, Hezbollah and Iraqi Shiite fighters, backed up by artillery, air-strikes and tanks, captured the town of Sheikh Omar, on the southern outskirts of Damascus. Two days later, they also captured the towns of al-Thiabiya and Husseiniya on the southern approaches to Damascus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0037-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Continued fighting (July\u2013October 2013)\nThe capture of the three towns strengthened the government hold on major supply lines and put more pressure on rebels under siege in the Eastern Ghouta area. On 14 October, SOHR reported that rebels captured the Resefa and Sinaa districts of Deir ez-Zor city, as well as Deir ez-Zor's military hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (October\u2013December 2013)\nThe Syrian Arab Army along with its allies, Hezbollah and the al-Abas brigade, launched an offensive on Damascus and Aleppo. On 16 October, AFP reported that Syrian troops recaptured the town of Bweida, south of Damascus. On 17 October, the Syrian government's head of Military Intelligence in Deir ez-Zor Governorate, Jameh Jameh, was assassinated by rebels in Deir ez-Zor city. SOHR reported that he had been shot by a rebel sniper during a battle with rebel brigades. On 24 October, the Syrian Army retook control of the town of Hatetat al-Turkman, located southeast of Damascus, along the Damascus International Airport road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (October\u2013December 2013)\nOn 26 October 2013, Kurdish rebel fighters seized control of the strategic Yarubiya border crossing between Syria and Iraq from al-Nusra in Al Hasakah Governorate. Elsewhere, in Daraa Governorate, rebel fighters captured the town of Tafas from government forces after weeks of clashes which left scores dead. On 1 November, the Syrian Army retook control of the key city of Al-Safira and the next day, the Syrian Army and its allies recaptured the village of Aziziyeh on the northern outskirts of Al-Safira. From early to mid-November, Syrian Army forces captured several towns south of Damascus, including Hejeira and Sbeineh. Government forces also recaptured the town of Tel Aran, southeast of Aleppo, and a military base near Aleppo's international airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (October\u2013December 2013)\nOn 10 November 2013, the Syrian Army had taken full control of \"Base 80\", near Aleppo's airport. According to the SOHR, 63 rebels, and 32 soldiers were killed during the battle. One other report put the number of rebels killed between 60 and 80. Army units were backed-up by Hezbollah fighters and pro-government militias during the assault. The following day, government forces secured most of the area around the airport. On 13 November, government forces captured most of Hejeira. Rebels retreated from Hejeira to Al-Hajar al-Aswad. However, their defenses in besieged districts closer to the heart of Damascus were still reportedly solid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (October\u2013December 2013)\nOn 15 November 2013, the Syrian Army retook control of the city of Tell Hassel near Aleppo. On 18 November, the Syrian troops stormed the town of Babbila. On 19 November, government forces took full control of Qara. The same day, the Syrian Army captured al-Duwayrinah. On 23 November, al-Nusra Front and other Islamist rebels captured the al-Omar oil field, Syria's largest oil field, in Deir al-Zor Governorate causing the government to rely almost entirely on imported oil. On 24 November, rebels captured the towns of Bahariya, Qasimiya, Abbadah, and Deir Salman in Damascus's countryside. On 28 November, the Syrian Army recaptured Deir Attiyeh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231407-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 escalation of the Syrian civil war, Timeline, Government offensives (October\u2013December 2013)\nOn 2 December 2013, rebels led by the Free Syrian Army recaptured the historic Christian town of Ma'loula. After the fighting, reports emerged that 12 nuns had been abducted by the rebels. However, the FSA disputes this and said that the nuns had been evacuated to the nearby rebel held town of Yabrud due to the Army shelling. In early December, the Islamic Front seized control of Bab al-Hawa border crossing with Turkey, which had been in hands of FSA. The groups also captured warehouses containing equipment delivered by the U.S. In response, the U.S. and Britain said they halted all non-lethal aid to the FSA, fearing that further supplies could fall in hands of al-Qaeda militants. On 9 December, the Army took full control of Nabek, with fighting continuing in its outskirts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231408-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 flu season\nThe 2012\u20132013 flu season was an epidemic flu season in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231408-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 flu season, United States\nBy the week ending 29 December 2012, the CDC reported that 29 U.S. states had high numbers of reports of flu. By 13 January, nearly all U.S. states had experienced elevated influenza levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231408-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 flu season, United States\nIn 9 January after the city of Boston received reports of 700 cases of flu and 4 deaths, the city declared a public health emergency. Boston Mayor Thomas Menino said that \"people should take the threat of flu seriously\" and that people should receive the influenza vaccine and practice health safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231408-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 flu season, United States\nBy 7 January 2013, there were 15,000 cases of flu reported in the state of New York. In the previous year's entire flu season, there were only 4,400 cases in the same region. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo declared a Public Health Emergency, relaxing regulations as to whom pharmacists can immunize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231408-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 flu season, United States, Vaccination\nThe U.S. Centers for Disease Control recommends that all persons in the United States receive an annual influenza vaccine. In January 2013, the CDC reported that the vaccine available in the United States had a 62% vaccine efficacy with a 95% confidence interval of 51%-71%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231408-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 flu season, China\nInfluenza A virus subtype H3N2 infections have predominated in China, which since November has reported low levels of flu infection", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231408-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132013 flu season, European Union\nThe European Union reported low but increasing levels of flu infection in the first week of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231409-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup First Division\nThe 2012\u201314 European Nations Cup First Division is the premier rugby union competition below the Six Nations Championship in Europe. It is divided into two tiers; Division 1A and Division 1B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231409-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup First Division\nThe divisions play on a two-year cycle with the teams playing each other both home and away. From 2009 onward, the title is awarded according to a one-year ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231409-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup First Division\nThe competition has been slightly altered for the 2012\u201314 edition. The top tier Division 1A has seen the relegation of Ukraine to Division 1B. They have been replaced with Belgium, who finished at the top of Division 1B in the 2010\u201312 season. The bottom tier division 1B has seen the relegation of the Netherlands to the European Nations Cup Second Division. They have been replaced by Sweden who won promotion from Division 2A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231409-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup First Division\nThe champions of 1B will be promoted to Division 1A for the 2015\u201316 season, while the last placed team in each division will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231409-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup First Division, 2015 Rugby World Cup qualifying\nAs with the 2008\u20132010 tournament, this edition will also serve a role in the qualification process for the 2015 Rugby World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231409-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup First Division, 2015 Rugby World Cup qualifying\nThe top two teams at the end of the overall ENC Division 1A 2013\u201314 tournament will qualify directly for the 2015 Rugby World Cup. The third placed team will enter a playoff series against the champions of Division 1B and the leaders of the four levels of the ENC Second Division as of the end of the 2012\u20132013 season. The winner of this playoff will advance to the repechage playoff against teams from other continents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division\nThe 2012\u201314 European Nations Cup Second Division is the third tier rugby union in Europe behind the Six Nations Championship and the 2012-2014 European Nations Cup First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division\nThe second division comprises four pools (2A, 2B, 2C, and 2D). Teams within each division play each other in a home and away round robin schedule over a two-year period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division\nAt the end of every season a champion was declared according but for relegation and promotion only the two years ranking are considered. The first in the 2012\u20132014 ranking of each pool will be promoted while last place teams will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division\nWinners of pool 2A, will be promoted to division 1 pool B for the 2014\u201316 edition while the last place team in pool 2A will be relegated to pool 2B. Likewise, winners of 2B will be promoted to 2A, last place in 2B will be relegated to 2C, winner of 2C will be promoted to 2B, last place of 2C will be relegated to 2D, winner of 2D will be promoted to 2C and last place of 2D will be relegated to 3; The winner of 3 replacing the relegated 2D team. Additionally, there will be playoff matches between second place teams and fourth place teams between pools. Winners of these playoffs will determine if additional promotions/relegation occur. There will no playoff between the fourth of 2D and the second of 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division\nIn addition to the season competitions, the 2012\u20132013 seasons in all four pools doubles as a 2015 Rugby World Cup qualifier. The winning teams in each pool will play off for the chance to challenge the Division 1 teams for the repechage place for Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division, Promotion/Relegation Playoffs, Division 2A-Division 2B\nDivision 2B's 2nd placed Latvia hosted Division 2A's 4th placed Croatia. Croatia won and retained their place in the ENC Division 2A for 2014\u20132016, while Latvia will play in the ENC Division 2B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 102], "content_span": [103, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division, Promotion/Relegation Playoffs, Division 2B-Division 2C\nDivision 2C's 2nd placed Hungary were due to host Division 2B's 4th placed Denmark. However, Denmark chose not to play the match, and therefore Hungary were promoted to Division 2B for 2014\u201316, while Denmark was relegated to Division 2C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 102], "content_span": [103, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231410-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Second Division, Promotion/Relegation Playoffs, Division 2C-Division 2D\nDivision 2D's 2nd placed Bosnia and Herzegovina hosted Division 2C's 4th placed Austria. Austria won and retained their place in the ENC Division 2C for 2014\u20132016, while Bosnia and Herzegovina will remain in the ENC Division 2D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 102], "content_span": [103, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231411-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThe 2012\u201314 European Nations Cup Third Division is the fourth tier of rugby union in Europe behind the Six Nations Championship and the 2012-2014 European Nations Cup First Division and the 2012\u201314 European Nations Cup Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231411-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThis will be the first tournament for Turkey, while returning from the 2010-2012 European Nations Cup Third Division are Slovakia and Azerbaijan. The winning team will be promoted to Division 2D of the European Nations Cup for the 2014\u20132016 cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231411-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThis tournament, unlike the 1st and 2nd division tournaments, does not form part of the 2015 Rugby World Cup qualification system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231411-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 European Nations Cup Third Division, Division 3A, 2012\u201313\nGame was stopped after 65 minutes due to fights breaking out between players from Azerbaijan and local crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231412-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Montenegrin municipal elections\nMontenegrin municipal elections were held in all 23 municipalities, between March 2012 and May 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231412-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Montenegrin municipal elections, Results, Herceg Novi\nTurnout - 68.2% Elected mayor - Nik\u0161a Gojkovi\u0107 (The Choice - DPS coalition)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231412-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Montenegrin municipal elections, Results in rest of municipalities\nAt elections in the rest of municipalities ruling DPS stay in power in most municipalities. It held an absolute majority in Bar, \u017dabljak, Budva and Bijelo Polje, formed ruling coalitions with SDP in Danilovgrad, Pljevlja, Andrijevica, \u0160avnik, Tivat, Cetinje, Kotor and Mojkovac and with Bosniak Party in Plav, Ro\u017eaje, Petnjica and Gusinje, and in Herceg Novi, where DPS-SDP coalition formed majority with local parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231412-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Montenegrin municipal elections, Results in rest of municipalities\nThe opposition won only in Plu\u017eine, where the local SNP won absolute power, in Berane, where the opposition formed a joint coalition at the local level and in Kola\u0161in where SDP form an post-election coalition with opposition to form local government. While in Ulcinj, the local government formed the Albanian minority parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas\nThe 2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas are an ongoing series of protests in major Romanian cities against exploitation of shale gas through controversial method of hydraulic fracturing. The main causes of these protests are the pollution of groundwater and environment, but also the threat of generating earthquakes. The protesters claim the resignation of Prime Minister Victor Ponta, because he suddenly changed his position on the project. Before the electoral campaign of 2012, he opposed shale drilling, and today he supports it with any risks, on the grounds that Romania's energy independence is a national project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas\nThe protests began with peaceful movements against shale drilling organized on social networking websites. The protests degenerated in fierce clashes between law enforcers and demonstrators, with dozens of people injured on both sides. According to different sources, these are the most violent events in Romania since the 2012 anti-presidential protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Background, Potential reserves of shale gas\nThe U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates that Romania has technically recoverable shale gas reserves (undiscovered, that could be accessed with existing technology) of 51,000 cubic feet, namely 1,444 billion cubic meters. According to the EIA report, Romania ranks third in EU shale gas reserves, after Poland (4,190 billion cubic meters) and France (3,879 billion cubic meters). This quantity could cover the national consumption of gas for 100 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 90], "content_span": [91, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Background, Potential reserves of shale gas\nA study by the Romanian National Committee of World Energy Council shows that Romania has a high potential for shale gas discoveries in the Eastern Carpathians, the Moldavian Platform, the B\u00e2rlad Plateau and the Romanian Plain, with its expansion of Southern Dobruja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 90], "content_span": [91, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Background, Changing positions of Prime Minister\nPonta had numerous positions on shale gas exploitation. Before the 2012 legislative elections, he was a fervid opponent of shale gas. On 5 June 2012, he even received the \"Young ecologist hope\" prize during the 2012 Green Awards Gala that took place at Green Hours, Bucharest. After being confirmed as prime minister, he suddenly changed his position on shale drilling in Romania, stating in a TV show that \"Now I'm fighting for shale gas, and I think I'm doing a good thing. I'm not anti-Russian [...], but I would like to stop importing from Gazprom\". This change of heart of the Prime Minister sparked the indignation of environmentalists and activists. After that, many of his former supporters started to request his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 95], "content_span": [96, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Background, Effects of shale drilling\nMass demonstrations in B\u00e2rlad, Vaslui County, were mainly triggered by the harmful effects of hydraulic fractionation used in shale drilling. The hydraulic fractionation is a method of shale gas extraction, that involves pumping water, sand and additives deep in the lithosphere, to break the layer of rock and release the gas. The additives used include about 750 compounds, some of which are carcinogenic. Environmentalists claim that the exploitation through hydraulic fractionation pollute groundwater. Moreover, it is possible that earthquake activity increases, after destabilization of rock layers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Background, Effects of shale drilling\nIn this way, American director Josh Fox created in 2010 the documentary \"Gasland\". The film, nominated for Oscars and screened at Sundance Film Festival, shows the size of shale drilling danger to the community and the environment. The film sparked thousands of negative reactions from the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Background, Effects of shale drilling\nIn several European countries, including Bulgaria, France, Netherlands, Luxembourg and Czech Republic, this method of gas extraction was prohibited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Background, Effects of shale drilling\nIn 2011, a court in Ecuador fined Chevron $8.6 billion for pollution of the Amazon rainforest. Chevron has also violated foreign governments environmental laws in Brazil, Angola and Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2012 protests, B\u00e2rlad demonstrations\nThe protests in B\u00e2rlad started with a 5,000-large manifestation in Central Square, on 22 March 2012. The protest was preceded by a march that started on two fronts. The event was attended by students, teachers, employees of factories in the city, local authorities and priests, some of them taking the word at the rostrum placed in front of the City Hall. Four days after the protest, Chevron Corporation representatives expressed their official position regarding the techniques they will use in exploration and exploitation of shale gas in northeastern Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0009-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2012 protests, B\u00e2rlad demonstrations\n\"We understand the concerns about shale gas production in Romania and we believe that after Chevron will present accurate information resulting from research, Romanians will understand that natural shale gas is a clean energy source, which can be produced responsibly and safely\", said in a press release Tom Holst, Chevron Romania country manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2012 protests, B\u00e2rlad demonstrations\nThe protests continued in the following months. Thus, on 26 April, thousands of people gathered in B\u00e2rlad Civic Center to protest against Chevron presence in the country. During protest, priests sang the Paschal greeting, and people sang the anthem of Romania. The protesters were mobilised on social networking websites. On 8 September, 2,000 people marched peacefully with lit candles and lamps, led by priests in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2012 protests, B\u00e2rlad demonstrations, Proclamation of B\u00e2rlad\nOn 22 March 2012, residents of B\u00e2rlad municipality drew up a proclamation that includes an elaborate list of harmful effects of shale gas exploitation through hydraulic fracturing, but also a series of strict claims. They ask the Government of Romania to impose the National Agency for Mineral Resources the immediate cancellation or suspension of concession petroleum agreements for exploration/exploitation of liquid or gaseous hydrocarbons through hydraulic fracturing method of rocks. Another claims include prohibiting the use of this method in Romania and completing environmental legislation with necessary measures to avoid the risk of pollution resulted from exploitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 107], "content_span": [108, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests\nOn 27 February 2013, at the call of the Civil Society Initiative Group of B\u00e2rlad, about 8,700 people took to the streets to shout \"No to exploitation of shale gas\". The event was attended by people of all ages from all Vaslui County, but also from Constan\u021ba, Gala\u021bi, Buz\u0103u and Bucharest. Those attending the event shouted slogans against the current government and cataloged local politicians as traitors. To avoid any incidents, 80 gendarmes, which were joined by local police crews, assured the public policy measures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests\nOn 4 April, with the occasion of \"Global Anti- Fracking Day\", in 28 localities in the country were held protests and demonstrations against exploitation of shale gas through hydraulic fracturing. Likewise, the Romanians in Strasbourg and Copenhagen have joined the protests, as well as activists from the Czech Republic, from four cities in Bulgaria and Australia. A similar protest took place in 2014. This was larger and was attended by thousands of people in 100 localities in Romania and 10 abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests\nOn 27 May, at least 10,000 locals protested in B\u00e2rlad, dissatisfied that the Environment Ministry has issued permits for gas exploration in B\u00e2rlad, Costine\u0219ti and Vama Veche. They also expressed anger against Prime Minister Victor Ponta, accusing him of flip-flopping on his position regarding the shale gas. On Facebook were created dozens of pages against exploitation of shale gas, joined by tens of thousands of people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests\nOn 1 September, B\u00e2rlad Initiative Group of Civil Society organized a meeting against starting the exploration of shale in EV2 area, attended by more than 4,000 people. The gendarmes intervened to release traffic in St. Elias Square, blocked by protesters. All those present chanted messages against the current government, but also against mayor Constantin Constaninescu, who was accused that refused to approve certain routes for the protest march and agreed to conduct this meeting in an isolated area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti\nThe Revolt of Punge\u0219ti (Romanian: Revolta de la Punge\u0219ti) erupted a few days after Chevron obtained a building permit for the location of first derrick for shale drilling in Vaslui County. More than that, the company has received all necessary approvals from state authorities for soil exploration in a perimeter within the Sili\u015ftea village in Punge\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 14\u201316 October 2013\nThe manifestations started with 150 protesters, on 14 October 2013, blocking the access of Chevron machineries to install the derrick. Protests have escalated in the next three days. Thus, on 16 October, more than 500 villagers of Punge\u0219ti and surrounding localities, joined by activists from B\u00e2rlad, Ia\u0219i and Bucharest, formed a human shield in front of the bulldozers. On the spot were mobilised over 200 gendarmes, because the Vaslui\u2013G\u00e2rceni county road was blocked by angry protesters. Likewise, the gendarmes formed a cordon meant to release the traffic. The protesters tried to break the cordon, but the gendarmes intervened in force. In fierce clashes between protesters and gendarmes 10 people were injured, including an 81 years old man that suffered a panic attack. According to journalists from Realitatea TV, the old man died a few hours later at Vaslui County Emergency Hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 993]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 14\u201316 October 2013\nThe protesters installed tents and gathered food and warm clothes, as they continued their protest overnight. They also created an Internet TV channel, TV Punge\u0219ti, that covers 24 hours of 24 the events on the protest camping site. Even if it doesn't appear on the TV program grid, TV Punge\u0219ti amassed up to 75,000 views in a month and a half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nAfter Chevron representatives announced the suspension of works in the area, civil conflicts have subsided. This period of lull lasted only a month. On 2 December, when Chevron decided to resume exploration operations, an impressive convoy of gendarmes, police and firefighters went to the area before the break of dawn to secure the movement of Chevron machineries. Gendarmes occupied the village, blocking all access points, preventing entry or exit from the perimeter for 24 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nEarly in the morning, about 100 villagers blocked the road, trying to obstruct the access of Chevron equipment on the concessioned land. Hundreds of gendarmes were mobilised on the spot and ordered the protesters to clear the way. While activists claim that around 1,000 law enforcers were taking part in the operation, police put the number at 300. Journalists were reportedly not permitted to get to the scene. Witnesses said the gendarmes used excessive force to restain some protesters. In the ensuing clashes, two people were injured and 30 were loaded into vans and transported to the police station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0020-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nVictor Ponta congratulated the gendarmes for the way they acted, saying that energy independence is a major national project. \"We won't accept for 20, 30, 50, 70 people to break the law! \", transmitted the Premier. But others are demanding investigation. Maria-Nicoleta Andreescu, executive director of the Helsinki Committee Association for the defence of human rights in Romania, said: \"There are important signs that indicate that the gendarmes' actions were at least abusive if not illegal. It is very clear is [sic] that by restricting the access of the press in the area the authorities did not allow the public to be informed\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nThe protests continued in the following days. On 7 December, despite very low temperatures, nearly 600 people from several cities of the country protested against Chevron and its intention to exploit the potential reserves of shale gas. At the spot were sent intervention troops of the Gendarmerie, fact that angered the protesters. People posed in front of them and shouted \"Revolution\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nProtests escalated, and elders, women and children rushed to fight against the gendarmes, throwing firecrackers. Security forces used tear gas and formed a human shield around the plot of land where Chevron would install the first derrick in Romania. Protesters broke the cordon of gendarmes and penetrated into the land concessioned to Chevron. Angry people threw stones at gendarmes and knocked down the entire perimeter fence installed by the U.S. company workers. Gendarmes regrouped and responded in force. A young man of about 25 years was hit in the head during clashes between law enforcers and demonstrators. He was transported to the Vaslui Emergency Hospital by a SMURD ambulance. The vans with the 22 people arrested during altercations were stopped by 50 protesters that laid on the roadway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 905]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nOn 8 December, Chevron announced that it has resumed work in the commune of Punge\u0219ti, after, the day before, they suspended operations because of violent demonstrations. As a result, activists tried to recoil and protest in neighboring localities, but their demarches have been hampered by the gendarmes. They studded the area, patrolled and organized filters from 100 to 100 meters, legitimating everyone trying to get out of Punge\u0219ti. Moreover, gendarmes raided the impromptu camp of protesters, because of some pyrotechnic materials they found there. A team of public television journalists was assaulted by gendarmes and was banned from filming in the area. Villagers say they were aggressed by law enforcers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nThe leadership of Vaslui Police issued a disposition according to which the commune of Punge\u0219ti becomes \"special area of public safety\" (comparable to a state of emergency), fact that requires strict control of people and vehicles crossing the locality. Former Minister of the Environment, Sulfina Barbu, pointed out that the actions of authorities against protests in Punge\u0219ti are anti-democratic. \"Since the Government makes such extreme and anti-democratic measures (setting up a special safety area in Sili\u0219tea-Punge\u0219ti \u2013 n.r. ), I think that we're discussing about restrictions of civil rights\", she said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0024-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nOn 26 March 2014, the Ombudsman sent a recommendation to the Minister of Internal Affairs on the respecting of citizen rights and freedoms, in the context of establishing a \"special area of public safety\". IA showed that tensions in Punge\u0219ti and attempts of unauthorized demonstrations continue, prerequisites for the establishment of special area of public safety remaining valid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 2\u201331 December 2013\nOn 24 December, 40 villagers of Punge\u0219ti and activists went on hunger strike. Locals have raised more tents and announced that they go on an indefinitely-long hunger strike, stating that they were tired of aggressive monitoring and surveillance of gendarmes that continually harass them and question them every time they leave the house and go through the village. Their action is a gesture of solidarity with Alexandru Popescu, a 45-year-old antiquarian from B\u0103rc\u0103ne\u0219ti, Prahova County, who is on a hunger strike in Bucharest's University Square since 21 December. Two strikers needed medical attention and called an ambulance. The perimeter was surrounded by gendarmes, protesters accusing aggression by law enforcers. After 10 days of hunger strike, protesters were forced to renounce to this form of protest, because, they say, were banished by the gendarmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 964]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 1 January \u2013 1 May 2014\nOn 2 January, hundreds of villagers from Sili\u0219tea organized a rally and then a protest march to the Punge\u0219ti Town Hall to demand the resignation of Mayor Mircia Vlas\u0103 and the stoppage of shale gas exploration in the area. Citizens were joined by Vaslui MP Tudor Ciuhodaru, local councilors from several communes in the county and the Mayor of \u0218uletea, Ciprian Tama\u0219. Ten people received warning for participating in an unauthorized protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 104], "content_span": [105, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 1 January \u2013 1 May 2014\nOn 5 January, around 100 protesters gathered at an anti-Chevron encampment near Punge\u0219ti, to pray and perform religious rituals in an attempt to drive out Chevron. Priest Gheorghe Tomozei described Chevron's operations as \"a Satanic invasion\". After a short religious service, protesters walked to a police checkpoint that separates the village from the Chevron site but were stopped by riot police as they attempted to enter the area. Protesters shouted \"Thieves\" and \"Down with Chevron\", and later demonstrated near the town hall calling for the mayor's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 104], "content_span": [105, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 1 January \u2013 1 May 2014\nOn 8 April, up to 200 villagers from Punge\u0219ti and neighboring communes gathered near the Chevron site to protest against company's intention to begin shale gas exploration. Protesters threw eggs and apples at Chevron coach and thrust with law enforcers. The same month, on 25, another incident occurred in Punge\u0219ti. Then, the mayor of the commune was hiding in his office in the city hall, while an angry crowd demanded his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 104], "content_span": [105, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, 1 January \u2013 1 May 2014\nDuring the rustic celebration of 1 May, a child was beaten by gendarmes after a group of protesters approached the land owned by Chevron. He was taken by ambulance to Vaslui County Hospital with a fracture of the right arm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 104], "content_span": [105, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, Reactions\nProtests of solidarity took place in Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca, Timi\u0219oara, and Sibiu. In Bucharest, more than 4,000 people gathered in University Square, from where they marched to the Government headquarters in Victory Square. During the manifestation, the traffic was blocked and directed on detour routes. Column of demonstrators was accompanied at all times by gendarmes. In an attempt to release the Victory Square, things were precipitated. The protesters clashed with gendarmes, and a woman fainted. They demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Victor Ponta, accusing him of treason and falsehood. They threatened to radicalize the rallies using the Greek model and chanted slogans like \"Last resort, another revolution\" and \"Ponta and B\u0103sescu near Ceau\u0219escu\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, Reactions\nIn a document signed and initialed by Director of School no. 1 of Punge\u0219ti, it appears that the leadership of Vaslui County School Inspectorate prohibits teachers and students from leaving classes to attend the protest against shale gas. During a meeting of local councilors it was agreed to hold a local referendum about the use or banning of shale gas exploration and exploitation in the commune. Furthermore, one of the councilors demanded the resignation of the mayor be added to that referendum. The prime minister called for a report from the Minister of Internal Affairs Radu Stroe about how the gendarmes acted in Punge\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, Reactions\nRepresentatives of the Chevron company announced, on 17 October, the suspension of work on shale gas exploration in Sili\u0219tea, Punge\u0219ti commune. The company also said it plans to pursue other exploration operations, and did not rule out the possibility of returning to Punge\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, Reactions\nThe Royal House of Romania issued a press release in which it deplores the situation of Punge\u0219ti locals and condemns the violence against \"citizens of the Romanian state\". The communiqu\u00e9 also notes, \"Sovereignty belongs to the people, and the citizens must be consulted and listened to for any decision that may affect their right to health and future\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, Reactions\nOn 14 December, the Romanian Ombudsman took a stand about the situation in Punge\u0219ti. Institution representatives went to the area to talk to local officials, Gendarmerie representatives and participants in the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Revolt of Punge\u0219ti, Reactions\nA group of eleven Green MEPs from six countries (France, Germany, United Kingdom, Spain, Belgium and Luxembourg) sent an open letter to the President of the European Parliament, Martin Schulz, notifying on and condemning the manner in which the Government from Bucharest acts abusively against citizens of a community in Romania (Punge\u0219ti), because of the interests of a private company. They claim violation of the rule of law and violation of rights and freedoms of European citizens including: right to physical integrity, right to private property, freedom of movement, freedom of expression and right to be informed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Resistance of Mo\u0219na\nSeveral villagers from Mo\u0219na, Sibiu County, revolted against the intention of Prospec\u021biuni S.A. employees to drill for potential shale gas reserves without the approval of the landowners. The company belongs to Ovidiu Tender, an influential Romanian businessman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Resistance of Mo\u0219na\nWilly Schuster, a German resident from Mo\u0219na, accused company employees that violated his household, trespassed and destroyed his goods. In May\u2013June 2012, the dairy producer from Mo\u0219na, one of the leaders of the ecological farming movement in Romania, gathered tens of meters of cable on land he owns, all assembled by employees of the company that makes prospections in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Resistance of Mo\u0219na\nOn 16 November, more than 100 activists from the counties of Ia\u0219i, Harghita, Sibiu, Bra\u0219ov and Hunedoara joined the revolted villagers and protested against abuse of private property of residents. People also said that substances used in exploitation affect bio cultures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Resistance of Mo\u0219na\nAn SUV of Prospec\u021biuni was surrounded by protesters, after the vehicle tried to enter the property of Willy Schuster. Police intervened and settled the conflict. The villagers removed cables from their lands. The director of seismic works, Gheorghe D\u0103ianu, threatened with violence and insulted protesters. D\u0103ianu attempted to recover the cables from the Cultural House of Alma Vii, but barely escaped the fury of the crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Resistance of Mo\u0219na\nLocal television station Nova TV from Media\u0219 reported that 17 cars of Prospec\u021biuni company were found with cut tires, in front of the hotel where the employees were staying. The activists denied involvement in the incident, showing that their protest was peaceful and aimed solely against abuse of private property of residents from Mo\u0219na and Alma Vii. There were even some who have suggested that company employees could have cut their own tires, in an attempt to \"victimize\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Resistance of Mo\u0219na\nMihail Mitroi, vice-president of Prospec\u021biuni S.A., said that the company decided to stop work in the Mo\u0219na area after the protests of residents. Mitroi asserted that the company had suffered damages of 50,000 euros after actions of activists and mentioned that Prospec\u021biuni S.A. will act judicially for the recovery of damages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Resistance of Mo\u0219na\nProspec\u021biuni S.A. is now prosecuted by Sibiu County Police Inspectorate for trespassing, because of stretched cables with sensors for exploration on Willy Schuster's lands, without his consent. Tender's company is accused of violating several normative acts, including the Constitution, which guarantees the right to property.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Protests for saving B\u0103ile Felix\nB\u0103ile Felix is a thermal spa resort of national interest. It risks to be closed after the Ponta Government approved the exploitation of shale gas in the area. According to the decision taken on 26 November 2013, the Government approved oil concession agreement for exploration, development and exploitation in the 3 B\u0103ile Felix perimeter by the East West Petroleum Corporation, a Canadian company with operations in United States, India, New Zealand and Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 93], "content_span": [94, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Protests for saving B\u0103ile Felix\nOn 21 December, nearly 1,000 people protested in the Central Park of the commune of S\u00eenmartin for fear that, after the installation of derricks, the B\u0103ile Felix resort will be destroyed. The meeting was held under the supervision of police and gendarmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 93], "content_span": [94, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2013 protests, Protests for saving B\u0103ile Felix\nIn the commune of S\u00eenmartin, authorities started a campaign to collect signatures against shale drilling, with over 4,000 signatures having been collected so far.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 93], "content_span": [94, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2014 protests, Arad County demonstrations\nOn 1 February 2014, over 1,500 residents of Curtici and other 11 nearby localities attended a public meeting of protest against shale gas exploration in the area. The meeting was attended, among others, by Dimitrie Musc\u0103, Director of the Curtici Agroindustrial Complex, Nicolae A. Ani\u021bei, Mayor of Curtici, mayors of other localities in the area, Orthodox priests and pastors of neo-Protestant churches in the area. To avoid the eventual occurrence of unwanted events, in the area were deployed forces of gendarmes and policemen ready to intervene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2014 protests, Arad County demonstrations\nA similar protest took place in Macea, on 16 February, and was attended by more than 1,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2014 protests, Arad County demonstrations\nThe protests are a reaction to the decision of Hungarian company Panfora Oil to start the search of petroleum and natural gas in the area. Contrary to those declared by the Hungarian company, locals say that the searches are actually targeting the shale gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, 2014 protests, Other protests\nOn 28 April, over 400 people from the villages of Cuci, B\u0103ce\u0219ti and P\u0103ltini\u0219 attended a protest march against Chevron's intention to install new wells for shale gas exploration. During the march, a fight between locals and supporters of the mayor occurred. Around 100 gendarmes intervened in 3\u20134 minutes after the onset of the incident \u2013 led to some exchanges of punches \u2013 and arrested one of the demonstrators in the column, subsequently released at the request of the crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Consequences\nIn April 2012, less than three months after it took office, Romania's Ungureanu government has fallen. The centre-right administration, led by Mihai R\u0103zvan Ungureanu, a former foreign-intelligence chief, lost a no-confidence vote filed by the left-wing opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Consequences\n\"Today there was justice\", said Victor Ponta, after securing 235 votes in favour of his motion, four more than he needed. \"We don't want any more dubious firms, no more selling under the market price and huge bribes\", he said in a five-hour-long debate that preceded the vote. He was referring, in part, to the government's granting of shale gas concessions to Chevron. In the motion of censure that overthrew the Ungureanu Government, Ponta and USL MPs accused the power of signing contracts only with the U.S. company, although \"there were other companies that would have wanted to enter into such agreements with the Romanian authorities\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Reaction of authorities\nFormer Environment Minister Sulfina Barbu accused the government of \"lying\" about shale gas. She said that protests in B\u00e2rlad on shale gas are \"people's reaction to babbling and lies of USL Government\". According to protesters, Liviu Dragnea and Victor Ponta provide misinformation about the risks of shale drilling, and the Environment Minister Rovana Plumb argues that environmental permits are not even required in order to start exploration. In a television broadcast, the Economy Minister Varujan Vosganian said that \"the shale gas can not be exploited without huge risks\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0052-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Reaction of authorities\nIn another train of thoughts, Prime Minister Victor Ponta supports shale gas exploration, but in compliance with European and international standards for environmental protection. PNL senator for Bra\u0219ov, Sebastian Grapa, called for the establishment of a parliamentary commission of inquiry about the effects of shale drilling, given that Prime Minister Victor Ponta said he would \"beat\" for the use of these resources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0053-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Reaction of authorities\nIn the United States of America, the most important center for strategic studies in Washington, CSIS, released a report entitled \"Hidden war against the exploitation of shale gas\". Americans' conclusion was that the Russians staged uprisings against shale gas and they would directly or indirectly finance the so-called environmental organizations that protest. The American report bears the signature of the most important U.S. energy analyst, Keith Smith. The report indicates that Romania is in the midst of a campaign of manipulation and diversion, with huge political and economic stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0054-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Reaction of authorities\nIn several dozen communes in the Vaslui County, mayors and local councils have banned shale gas exploitation, arguing that it would harm the environment, or drinking water. The decisions approved by local councils and supported by resident population are considered out-of-scope (and thus not legally binding) by the Government. In this way, the communes were urged to revoke bans on shale gas exploitation. More than that, Vaslui County Prefecture brought to court 11 decisions made by local councils, that disagree with the exploitations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0054-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Reaction of authorities\nThe Prefecture invokes an article of the Constitution, according to which deposits are owned by the state and local council approval is not required. In reply, mayors of the communes where derricks will be installed say they will not abandon the idea of banning the Canadian company's presence in the areas they lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231413-0055-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Romanian protests against shale gas, Reaction of authorities\nPresident Traian B\u0103sescu also had a reaction on this issue. In a press conference in June 2013, he said that he supports the projects related to shale gas. Likewise, he said that shale gas exploitation is a matter of confidence from the Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences\nThe 2012\u201314 Super League licences were awarded following the second round of licensing for the Super League rugby league competition. Successful applicants were given a three-year licence to compete in Super League, the premier rugby league competition in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Applications\nApplications for licences were accepted from all Super League clubs and Championship clubs could apply if they met certain criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Applications\nApplications were made in 2011, and the Rugby Football League, operators of Super League, announced that at least one applicant from the Co-operative Championship would be accepted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Applications\nEligible applicants from the Championship were: Halifax, Barrow Raiders, Featherstone Rovers, Widnes Vikings and Batley Bulldogs. Of these, only Halifax, Widnes and Barrow applied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, 2009\u201311 commitments\nTalking about the progress of some clubs towards fulfilling their commitments to either upgrade their stadium facilities and move to new ones during the 2009\u201311 three year licence period, Gary Tasker warned of \"the potential implications [of] any failure to do so may have on their next application. Clubs need to be aware that we are raising the bar for the next licence period.\" \"Showcasing Super League in high quality stadium facilities remains a key objective,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, 2009\u201311 commitments\nIn July 2009, the RFL was reported to have warned Salford City Reds, Castleford Tigers and Wakefield Trinity Wildcats, of which none had started construction on a new stadium, that progress must be made in order to avoid jeopardising their chances of obtaining a second Super League licence. St Helens RLFC and Celtic Crusaders (later Crusaders Rugby League) were also warned, but were reported to have a likely chance of having a new stadium by 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, 2009\u201311 commitments\nThe news came just over a week after Widnes Vikings, who already had a new stadium, won their Northern Rail Cup Final against Barrow Raiders; a key criterion for non-Super League clubs to obtain a first licence. Following this report, all of the named Super League teams made moves to address stadium concerns:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Number of teams\nNo upper limit on the number of Super League licences awarded had initially been set by the RFL, the option remained open to expand again in the future. Increasing the number of teams in the competition without changing the competition's format would be at odds with recent RFL and Super League decisions and reports. The RFL's plan for international success, which was the result of an inquiry into England's poor performance at the 2008 World Cup, states an intention to work with clubs to limit the number of games top players can take part in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0006-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Number of teams\nThe Magic Weekend event has allowed for a reduction in the number of games each club plays to 27, from 28; although a reason for the desire to reduce games in this case was to reduce the number of times Super League sides played each other more than twice in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Number of teams\nRFL Chief Executive Nigel Wood said, \"The best performing [Championship] club will be guaranteed admission to Super League, either at the expense of the worst performing club or by expanding the competition,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Number of teams\nOn 4 August 2010, the RFL announced that the number of licences would remain at 14. Once Widnes were granted a licence, the RFL's decision meant that at least one existing Super League club would be left out of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Number of teams\nThe final Super League lineup for the 2012\u201314 period was set on 26 July 2011, when Crusaders announced that they had withdrawn their application for a licence, believing that they were not financially able to sustain themselves in Super League in the near future. The club had gone into administration after the 2010 season, This decision provided a reprieve for Wakefield Trinity, who had been expected to be denied a licence after also going into administration in the 2010\u201311 close season. Crusaders' former place in Super League was filled by Widnes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Outcome\nA summary of licence applications was released with a grading of each club's application by the RFL on 8 September 2011. Clubs were graded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Outcome\nUsing the RFL criteria, there has been an increase in the standard of Super League clubs on the previous licensing period. Wigan Warriors improved from a B to an A licence. Catalans Dragons, Hull Kingston Rovers and Huddersfield Giants improved from a C to a B licence. There were three additional applications, with only one not meeting minimum requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, Results, Outcome\nOn 31 March 2011, Widnes were granted a licence for the 2012-2014 Super League seasons. Halifax had also met the requirements for a licence, but were not awarded one. Barrow had failed with their licence bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, The future: 2015\u201317 licences\nPlanning for the next licence period, 2015\u201317, began in 2009. The RFL is working with its members in Super League and the Championship to agree minimum standards in Business Management, Facilities, Finance, Commercial/Marketing/Community and Playing Strength/Performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, The future: 2015\u201317 licences\nGary Tasker, the RFL's Director of Development, reiterated: \"Clubs need to be aware that we are raising the bar for the next licence period and showcasing the Super League competition in high quality, 21st Century stadium facilities remains a key strategic objective.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231414-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132014 Super League licences, The future: 2015\u201317 licences\nThis was, however, a complete waste of time as the RFL decided on a completely new structure for the 2015 Super League season which included bringing back promotion and relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania\nThe 2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania refers to a prolonged period of civil unrest and political scandals in Romania, which took magnitude after the second half of the 2000s. The wave of civil demonstrations started in January 2012, once with the introduction of a new health reform legislation. The protests were fueled by the austerity measures applied in May 2010, but also by the unpopularity of B\u0103sescu-backed Boc government. The demonstrations were characterized by widespread rioting and acts of vandalism. The political situation precipitated, so Prime Minister Emil Boc decided to step down on 6 February 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania\nIn the first six months of the year, three governments have been changed. The summer of 2012 was marked by a large-scale political crisis, fed by accusations of plagiarism to PSD-backed Prime Minister Victor Ponta and culminating with the suspension of President Traian B\u0103sescu. Although the presidential impeachment referendum showed that over 80% of the voters wanted his dismissal, the referendum was invalidated by the Constitutional Court due to presence below 50% at polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0001-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania\nDuring this period, Romania was warned by Western powers about the state of democracy, inasmuch as the dismissal of the presidents of the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies was made in a shady manner, and prominent figures of PSD, including Vice-President Liviu Dragnea, were accused of vote rigging in the referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania\nAfter sweeping victory in legislative election on 9 December 2012, Victor Ponta \u2013 supported by the Social Liberal Union \u2013 was named Prime Minister of Romania. His mandate was marked by corruption scandals and street protests. The demonstrations had various causes, among them the tax hikes, the exploitation of shale gas through hydraulic fracturing and the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project. Hundreds of thousands of people, including doctors, teachers, students and laborers, took to the street to shout their dissatisfaction regarding his policies. Employees in transport and health system triggered several strikes in this period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0002-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania\nAlthough mainly peaceful, the protests degenerated in some cases in clashes between demonstrators and law enforcers. Ponta Government was accused by national and international organizations of excessive use of force in the Revolt of Punge\u0219ti. Ethnic Hungarians started a series of protests for the autonomy of Szeklerland, while the unionist movements (see Action 2012) demanded the unification of Romania and Moldova, both in Romania and over the Prut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania\nIn the winter of 2014, the ruling alliance collapsed, after internal tensions between PSD and PNL. The National Liberal Party left the alliance and merged with the Democratic Liberal Party to form the largest right-wing party in Romania in the post-revolutionary period. In the summer of the same year, Victor Ponta from PSD and Klaus Iohannis from PNL launched their candidatures for the presidential election. To everyone's surprise, ethnic German Klaus Iohannis won the election. Ponta's failure was mainly due to irregularities concerning the voting process in diaspora and numerous corruption scandals involving figures from the party he leads. During the electoral campaign, people protested against Victor Ponta and members of his government, inasmuch as thousands of Romanian citizens in diaspora were prevented from exercising their right to vote due to bad organization of the election process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 932]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Background, Social issues\nRomania is the country with the highest poverty levels in the European Union. More than 30% of the population lives on less than $5 per day. In a report conducted by the Presidential Commission for the Analysis of Social and Demographic Risks is specified that there are visible discrepancies between social strata, privileged groups benefiting of higher wages and pensions in comparison with the rest of the population. Bankruptcy of many companies thickens the unemployment rate, in July 2013 reaching the value of 7.6%, highest since onset of the economic crisis in 2010. Other companies, including state companies \u2013 Romanian Post, Romanian Railways, are on the verge of bankruptcy, being forced to make cutbacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Background, Social issues\nAfter application of drastic austerity measures in 2010, the Romanian economy recovered. Thus, in 2013, Romania recorded the highest economic growth in the EU. Despite this growth, the standard of living is decreasing, many Romanians being unable to endure everyday expenses. Poor working conditions, mass layoffs and tax hikes displease the population that is filling the squares of main cities to shout their grievances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Background, Political turmoil\nOver the past 25 years, Romania has experienced a complex process of democratization with moments of crisis, economic stagnation, radical nationalism and extreme polarization. Despite Romania's admission into NATO in 2004, and into the European Union in 2007, the political situation remained unstable, with recurrent institutional clashes between the President, Prime Minister and Parliament, such as in 2007 and 2012 and tough austerity measures that fuelled social tensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Mid-January 2012 riots\nThese were the first events of the two-year civil unrest. They were triggered by the introduction of a new health reform legislation and worsening standard of life. President Traian B\u0103sescu's popularity collapsed mainly after imposing austerity measures in 2010, year when Romania also confronted with short living but large street demonstrations. The attempted privatization of SMURD and the denigration by Traian B\u0103sescu of Raed Arafat, its founder, was vehemently criticized by people on the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Mid-January 2012 riots\nThe protests started with a 3,000-large demonstration in T\u00e2rgu Mure\u0219 on 12 January, as a sign of solidarity with Raed Arafat. In the following weeks, protests spread to other sixty Romanian cities and dozens of cities in the Romanian diaspora. In Bucharest, the largest protest took place on 19 January, when up to 20,000 people expressed their disagreements with B\u0103sescu regime. Several days, Bucharest faced widespread rioting and acts of vandalism. Thousands of policemen and gendarmes were deployed on the streets to confront angry demonstrators that stoned the vehicles of the law enforcers, vandalized shops and burned cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0008-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Mid-January 2012 riots\nRiot police used tear gas and flares to repel demonstrators who blocked traffic in the center of Bucharest. According to the Gendarmerie, destructions were caused by football ultras infiltrated among peaceful demonstrators. During these days of turmoil, several protesters entered the Romanian Television headquarters to blame the broadcaster for censorship. Official figures indicated over 60 injuries during clashes between police and protesters, while up to 283 arrests were made. Several journalists were injured while transmitting live the events. South East Europe Media Organisation, a NGO that has its headquarters in Vienna, expressed concern about the level of violence against reporters who covered the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Mid-January 2012 riots\nOn the morning of 6 February 2012, Prime Minister Emil Boc announced his resignation, in an attempt \"to ease the social situation\". During weeks of protests, B\u0103sescu stated nothing and didn't appear in public. Emil Boc was replaced by Mihai R\u0103zvan Ungureanu, former Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis\nSoon after government led by Mihai R\u0103zvan Ungureanu fell in no confidence vote, Victor Ponta took in office. Ponta is an ardent B\u0103sescu's opponent. In June 2012, they were the protagonists of a major political crisis, starting with conflicting views on Romania's representative to the European Council reunion of 28 June and escalating with the suspension of President Traian B\u0103sescu. In the same period, Prime Minister Victor Ponta was accused of plagiarism in his doctoral thesis. These accusations fed the political instability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis\nOn 3 July, the Romanian Parliament, at the proposal of majority represented by Social Liberal Union, voted the dismissal of President of the Senate and President of the Chamber of Deputies. Through an Emergency Ordinance, the government restricted the attributions of the Constitutional Court, restoring them to the 2010 status. Likewise, USL leaders Victor Ponta and Crin Antonescu started procedures to dismiss President Traian B\u0103sescu. These measures irritated the international politicians which expressed concerns over the state of democracy and the rule of law in Romania. On 6 July, B\u0103sescu was suspended after the impeachment motion filed by the ruling coalition passed the Parliament's vote. The motion passed with 256 votes, 39 more than the minimum required. USL leaders argued their action by saying that President Traian B\u0103sescu has breached the Constitution and overstepped his authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 977]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis\nOn 9 July, the Constitutional Court ascertained President B\u0103sescu's suspension and confirmed Crin Antonescu as Interim President. Therewith, Constitutional Court rejected complaints formulated by Vasile Blaga and Roberta Anastase, supported by PDL, regarding removal from office of President of the Senate and President of the Chamber of Deputies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0012-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis\nOn 20 July, USL laid down, at the Office of the High Court of Cassation and Justice, a penal complaint against suspended President Traian B\u0103sescu and other 14 people, for \"spreading false information, for defamation of the country and the nation and for endangering safety of the national economy and currency stability\", given that B\u0103sescu cataloged the events as a \"coup d'\u00e9tat\". In the following days, Crin Antonescu cut B\u0103sescu's special phone line, after the Senate's Defence Committee found out that the Special Telecommunication Agency illegally deployed the secret phone line at B\u0103sescu's office. B\u0103sescu accused USL of dismantling all national security institutions and cataloged them as \"a gang of traitors\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0013-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis\nThe presidential impeachment referendum took place on 29 July. On 21 August, the Constitutional Court decided that the referendum is invalid due to presence under 50%. However, 87.52% of those present in the referendum voted for B\u0103sescu's impeachment. PDL boycotted the referendum, while the Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orb\u00e1n exhorted ethnic Hungarians in Romania to stay away from the polls, fact that explains the low turnout in Hungarian majority counties of Harghita and Covasna. There were rumors regarding vote rigging. In October 2013, Deputy Prime Minister Liviu Dragnea and 74 others were accused of falsifying data to sway the vote's outcome. On 22 April 2016, Liviu Dragnea was sentenced to two years probation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0014-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis, Related protests\nThe summer of 2012 in Romania was marked not only by political instability, but by civil unrest. In early July, on the background of plagiarism scandal, demonstrations took place in several locations in Bucharest. The demonstrations, entitled suggestively the \"Protest of inverted commas\" (Romanian: Protestul ghilimelelor), were attended by hundreds of people, among them former Prime Minister Ungureanu, aiming Victor Ponta's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0015-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis, Related protests\nIn the pre-referendum period, several demonstrations in support of President Traian B\u0103sescu took place throughout the country. In Arad and Timi\u0219oara, clashes between pro- and anti-B\u0103sescu demonstrators erupted, but were quickly dispersed by gendarmes. On 6 July, 2,000 people gathered at a rally in Bucharest to support President B\u0103sescu. The rally was attended by prominent members of PDL and degenerated towards evening in altercations with anti-B\u0103sescu demonstrators that infiltrated among supporters of the president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0016-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis, Related protests\nMajor political rallies were organized by USL in the most important cities in the country, within the campaign to dismiss the suspended president: Bucharest (50,000 participants, 26 July), Craiova (18,000 participants, 20 July), Ia\u0219i (15,000 participants, 22 July), Oradea (8,000 participants, 24 July), Pite\u0219ti (7,000 participants, 25 July), Bra\u0219ov (5,000 participants, 17 July), Alexandria (1,500 participants, 25 July) and R\u00e2mnicu V\u00e2lcea (700 participants, 27 July). On the other side, large pro-B\u0103sescu meetings were organized in several Romanian cities, at different dates, to avoid potential conflicts between demonstrators: Bucharest (15,000 participants), Ia\u0219i (10,000 participants), Cluj-Napoca (10,000 participants), Slatina (100 participants).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0017-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2012 political crisis, Related protests\nInvalidation of the referendum infuriated B\u0103sescu's opposers that gathered in their thousands in front of the Bucharest National Theatre. Protesters shouted messages against CCR decision to invalidate the referendum and asked Traian B\u0103sescu to resign. Likewise, many people have come up with anti-US placards, considering that B\u0103sescu was reinstated at Americans desire. Towards evening things got out of control, people breached fences and entered on the carriageway, blocking traffic. Next day, the Gendarmerie fined or queried 106 people for disturbing public peace and destruction of public domain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0018-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests\nWorsening working conditions, mass layoffs and poor payroll have taken to the streets thousands of employees even in the early days of 2013. Probably the most dramatic and publicized case is Oltchim R\u00e2mnicu V\u00e2lcea, one of the largest chemical companies in Romania. The company recorded losses of \u20ac90.3\u00a0million in the fourth quarter of 2011, thus ending the year with a negative result of 270 million lei. The company's leadership was forced to reduce expenses and liabilities, even without announcing employees. The deplorable situation of the company triggered mass unrest, also fueled by several failed attempts to privatize the plant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0018-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests\nProtests took place throughout the year, one of the largest being organized on 28 March, when nearly 1,500 employees refused to start work and blocked the traffic on national road DN64. The unrest escalated with the storming of company's headquarters on 4 July, while in the subsequent months, some employees launched a hunger strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0019-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, CFR crisis\nThe deplorable situation of the national railway company took to the streets thousands of employees under the threat of job loss or salary reduction. In 2013 and 2014, the company was shaken by two major strikes. On 16 January 2013, thousands of employees triggered a spontaneous strike, 138 trains being blocked for several hours in major railway stations in the country, including Bucharest, Craiova, Cluj-Napoca, Ia\u0219i, Gala\u021bi and Constan\u021ba. The Minister of Transport Relu Fenechiu said that he will make an analysis and those responsible will pay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0020-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, CFR crisis\nA larger strike took place on 23 April 2014, when, for two hours, rail traffic was paralyzed in major train stations in the country. According to syndicalists, the protest took place after failed negotiations on a new collective agreement. About 400 passenger trains and 200 freight trains stood in the stations or on route.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0021-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Protests of teachers and students\nProtests and strikes were launched by teachers and students throughout the year, centered mainly on Ponta's poor policies regarding education. They claim that the education system is underfunded and require allocation of at least 6% of GDP to education. High school students also protested for bad settlement of commuting subscriptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 108], "content_span": [109, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0022-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Protests of teachers and students\nOn 21 May, over 2,000 students in Covasna County went on Japanese strike, inasmuch as the Ministry of Education hasn't settled, since October 2012, money for commuting subscriptions. Those 2,000 students that went on Japanese strike, wearing white banderoles on arm, are from 15 high schools in the cities of Sf\u00e2ntu Gheorghe, T\u00e2rgu Secuiesc, Covasna and Baraolt. Furthermore, students in Covasna organized a protest meeting. The Ministry of Education has accumulated, from October to March, a debt of more than 1.6\u00a0million lei for settlement of students commuting subscriptions in Covasna County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 108], "content_span": [109, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0022-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Protests of teachers and students\nLikewise, around 150 students from high schools throughout the Mure\u0219 County went on indefinitely Japanese strike, in solidarity with the colleagues which were not settled money for commuting subscriptions. The same measure of protest was adopted by hundreds of students in Constan\u021ba County, according to that were violated the rights under the Education Act through art. 84 (3). In Cluj County, Ministry of Education didn't settle any money for seven months. Accumulated debts amount to more than 3.5\u00a0million lei, 3,100 commuter students being affected by this situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 108], "content_span": [109, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0023-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Protests of teachers and students\nOn 13 November, thousands of students from 11 universities in Bucharest, Timi\u0219oara, Cluj-Napoca, Ia\u0219i, Constan\u021ba, Gala\u021bi, Baia Mare, Sibiu, Suceava, Oradea and Alba Iulia took to the streets to protest the underfunding of the education system. In solidarity with the students, pupils from dozens of schools and high schools went on Japanese strike. Students chanted slogans against the Government and demanded allocation of 6% of GDP for education: \u201eWe want a school for all, not a Government of mobsters\", \u201eFinance the education or leave the Government\". According to the Romanian press, the event is one of the largest student movements in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 108], "content_span": [109, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0024-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Protests of teachers and students\nTeachers' wages is a problem wherewith the education system confronts. In Romania, a teacher is paid 9.3 lei net (2.09 euros) per hour, compared to other European countries, where wages are up to 40 times higher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 108], "content_span": [109, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0025-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Protests of teachers and students\nIn May 2015, starting from Timi\u0219oara, Gala\u021bi and Constan\u021ba, students have occupied university amphitheatres, protesting \"the disaster in academic environment and the lack of respect with which students were treated in decisions regarding the higher education system\". Triggered by the National Alliance of Student Organizations in Romania, After failed negotiations with the Minister of Education Sorin C\u00eempeanu, protests spread to other universities in Bucharest, Ia\u0219i, Cluj-Napoca, Re\u0219i\u021ba, Oradea and Suceava. Students are also dissatisfied with university tuition fees, invoking a university dropout rate of 40%. The events are known in Romanian press as Occupy University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 108], "content_span": [109, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0026-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Doctors' strike\nSituation in hospitals, poor payroll and lack of staff pushed the doctors to launch an ample program of protests aimed to alarm the minister Eugen Nicol\u0103escu over collapse of Romanian health system. In September were held for two weeks picketings in front of the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Finance. The protests are the largest since 1998 and are known in local media as \"Protest of white robes\" (Romanian: Protestul halatelor albe).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 90], "content_span": [91, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0027-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Doctors' strike\nOn 2 November, nearly 7,000 doctors, nurses and dentists marched on Victory Avenue, towards the Palace of the Parliament. The manifestation, called \"March of Silence\" (Romanian: Mar\u0219ul T\u0103cerii), was joined by medical staff across the country. Demonstrators leaned against the wall of the Palace of the Parliament a cross and nearly 20 wreaths, thus suggesting the \"death of health\" in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 90], "content_span": [91, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0028-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Doctors' strike\nAfter three rounds of failed negotiations with the Minister of Health, on 25 November, more than 130,000 health professionals from across the country have triggered a warning strike between 8 and 10 o'clock. During this time, polyclinics were closed, and hospitals operated only in medical emergencies. Marius Sepi, first vice-president of Sanitas Federation, stated that the strike was affected by some hospital managers that threatened the protesters. Even the Minister of Health, Eugen Nicol\u0103escu, considered the strike illegal and said he didn't know if it's possible to increase wages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 90], "content_span": [91, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0029-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Doctors' strike\nDespite major changes on Romanian political scene in early 2014, the new health minister could not cope with the demands of health professionals. In this regard, doctors picketed between 23 June and 4 July the headquarters of Ministry of Health, Ministry of Labour and Ministry of Public Finance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 90], "content_span": [91, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0030-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Duty of 7 cents\nThere was a rough dispute between President B\u0103sescu and Premier Ponta on fuel price rise by 7 cents, measure adopted since 1 April 2014. The head of state asked Victor Ponta to waive the fee he deems an unnecessary and discriminatory tax burden. Likewise, Traian B\u0103sescu is convinced that the measure will lead to tax evasion. The measure was also criticized by opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 90], "content_span": [91, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0030-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Duty of 7 cents\nThus, on 15 March, between 8,000 and 10,000 people, members or supporters of the People's Movement Party, protested in Bucharest's George Enescu Square against Ponta's poor economic policies and wave of taxes that will be introduced once with 1 April. Romania figures among the countries with the most expensive gasoline in the world, at $7.38 per gallon (\u20ac1.41 per litre).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 90], "content_span": [91, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0031-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2013 social protests, Duty of 7 cents\nProtests related to fuel overtaxing also took place a few months before the implementation of this measure. On 9 December 2013, over 86,000 lorry drivers across the country went on strike and blocked for several hours the traffic on ring roads of major cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 90], "content_span": [91, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0032-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project\nThe Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, a mining project aimed to bring to the surface 350 tonnes of gold and 1,500 tonnes of silver, met a significant resistance from environmental groups in Romania and neighbouring countries. Among the dissatisfactions of environmentalists are the pollution by cyanidation and the extremely low percentage of which Romania will benefit from this exploitation. A concern was the fact that the legislation would give the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Gold Corporation the right to give compulsory purchase orders to the residents of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 who refused to sell their houses and lands. The draft law also sets time limits for the state authorities to grant all permits, regardless of potential infringements of national legislation or of court rulings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 95], "content_span": [96, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0033-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project\nThe wave of protests started on 1 September 2013 with a national mobilization and continued until late-December. The protests attracted up to 200,000 demonstrators in 50 Romanian cities and 30 cities in Romanian diaspora. Largest demonstrations were organized in Bucharest (20,000 people), Cluj-Napoca (10,000 people), C\u00e2mpeni (4,000 people), and Ia\u0219i (1,500 people). In Bucharest, Timi\u0219oara and Ia\u0219i, protesters created \"tent cities\", paralyzing traffic on major arteries of circulation. The protests, dubbed by international media the \"Romanian Autumn\", have taken many forms: human chains around the Palace of the Parliament, flash mobs, roadblocks and scuffles with police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 95], "content_span": [96, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0033-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project\nAlthough the protests were mainly peaceful, there were reports of serious incidents. On 13 September, Minister of Culture Daniel Barbu was attacked with tomatoes in Cluj-Napoca. In November, protesters in Bucharest, Bra\u0219ov and Cluj-Napoca were aggressed and sprayed with irritant substances by gendarmes, in the capital 62 people being fined for blocking traffic. Likewise, on 9 December, about 50 Greenpeace activists from 10 countries who were protesting in the courtyard of the Parliament building, were seized by gendarmes and led to the police stations. Protesters also accused the poor coverage of the protests by Romanian media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 95], "content_span": [96, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0034-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, Protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project\nThere were also protests in support of the mining project. Organized only in the exploitation area, the largest protest attracted up to 5,000 locals and 33 miners blocked underground, who were fighting for the jobs promised by Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Gold Corporation, inasmuch as the unemployment rate in the area is very high. In an attempt to defuse the tense situation of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103, Prime Minister Victor Ponta descended into the underground to discuss with miners. However, during massive protests against Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Ponta \u2013 main target of protests \u2013 didn't conduct any conversation with the representatives of the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 95], "content_span": [96, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0035-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests\nThe Chamber of Deputies passed, on 10 December 2013, a draft law containing multiple amendments to the Penal Code, which would grant \"super-immunity\" to MPs and the president, as they would be taken out of the \"public servant\" category stipulated in the Code. Moreover, the amendments would protect politicians from the investigation of bodies of anti-corruption struggle (National Anticorruption Directorate, National Integrity Agency) and would remove the conflict of interest from the list of misdemeanors. After the Romanian Parliament passed the amendments, media outlets marked the day as the \"Black Tuesday\" of Romanian democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0036-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests\nOn 14 December, nearly 1,500 people attended a meeting organized by People's Movement Party, in sign of protest against new Penal Code. The next day, a similar protest took place in Bucharest and was attended by more than 2,000 people. Unlike the previous, this was more violent. A large number of police forces were deployed on the spot. They formed cordons to prevent protesters moving towards the Government headquarters. Angry crowd broke the cordons, and gendarmes used tear gas to avoid blocking traffic. After the altercations, four protesters were seized by gendarmes and taken to the police station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0036-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests\nThey were questioned and fined for disturbing public peace and order. One of the protesters was transported to the Floreasca Hospital with a wound to the head. On 21 December, more than 5,000 people attended a protest in Bucharest against all political classes and new Penal Code. The protest was held under the slogan 21\u201322 we want the democracy back (Romanian: 21\u201322 vrem democra\u021bia \u00eenapoi). Mobilized on social networks, protesters demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Victor Ponta and President Traian B\u0103sescu, but also the dissolution of Parliament. Throughout the protest, demonstrators lit candles in memory of victims of the 1989 Revolution. There were deployed hundreds of gendarmes, equipped for intervention, with batons and tear gas guns, vans and water cannons. Protesters threw stones and bottles at vehicles of the Gendarmerie and accused the gendarmes of defending thievery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 989]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0037-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests, Reactions\nAmendments to the Penal Code were strongly contested by President Traian B\u0103sescu, who said that he will return to the Parliament the law through which the president and MPs are removed from the category of civil servants. The Head of State said that the amendments to the Penal Code adopted by the Chamber are \"dramatic\" and \"tear down ten years of work and activity of anticorruption institutions\" such as National Anticorruption Directorate (DNA) or National Integrity Agency (ANI). The President mentioned in a TV show about the dissolution of Parliament, invoking the breach of the Copenhagen criteria through these amendments to the Penal Code.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0038-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests, Reactions\nThe National Anticorruption Directorate showed that, following the changes to the Penal Code, lawmakers indicted for corruption or similar to that misdemeanor might be acquitted, and those detained through final sentence might be set free. President of the National Integrity Agency, Horia Georgescu, also said that, following the changes, \"will be created a super-immunity\", and \"the history of ANI cases will be thrown up for 25 MPs\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0039-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests, Reactions\nThe Superior Council of Magistracy has criticized changes to the Penal Code, emphasizing that it hadn't receive them for approval, as required by law. Legal Committee of the Chamber of Deputies said in a statement that it had no obligation to seek the opinion of SCM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0040-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests, Reactions\nThe Democratic Liberal Party submitted, on 12 December, to the Constitutional Court, two notices about the changes adopted Tuesday by the Chamber of Deputies to the Penal Code, one aimed at defining civil servant and the other one referring to the conflict of interest. Likewise, the High Court of Cassation and Justice notified the Constitutional Court on the same subject. The concerns expressed by about 50 PDL lawmakers were confirmed by the Constitutional Court of Romania. So, on 15 January 2014, the members of the Constitutional Court unanimously decided that the amendments to the Penal Code are unconstitutional. CCR judges decided that the article which removes the officials from the category of public servants breaches several articles of the Constitution concerning the rule of law, the equal rights of citizens and the Romanian State's obligation to fulfill in good faith its obligations in international treaties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 1034]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0041-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, \"Black Tuesday\" and subsequent protests, Reactions\nIn a press conference, PSD deputy Eugen Nicolicea rejected accusations on new Penal Code, saying that press masked the truth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0042-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions\nIn mid-February 2014, the Romanian government entered into deadlock after PNL, constituent party of the government, announced the reshuffling of four ministers. Victor Ponta repeatedly refused Klaus Iohannis' proposal as Deputy Premier and Minister of Interior, fact that inflamed the spirits inside PNL. Thus, on 25 February, PNL decided in an overwhelming majority to leave the ruling coalition. A day later, all PNL ministers resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0043-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions\nA major political conflict also erupted in August, when the Parliament adopted an emergency ordinance allowing local authorities to switch between political parties without sanctions. The event, marked in Romanian press as \"Black Thursday\" \u2013 in analogy with \"Black Tuesday\", was criticized by embassies of United States and United Kingdom, but especially by opposition that accuses Victor Ponta of trying to defraud presidential election in November, reason for that the Liberal Christian Alliance, supported by the People's Movement Party, threatens the government with a motion of censure. According to those who initiated this law, the party switching is a solution to institutional stalemate after breakage of the USL in February. However, the GEO was declared by CCR unconstitutional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0044-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, \"War of the palaces\"\nKnown in Romanian press as \"War of the palaces\" (Romanian: R\u0103zboiul dintre palate) was a prolonged conflict between President Traian B\u0103sescu and Prime Minister Victor Ponta, the representatives of Cotroceni Palace and Victoria Palace, respectively. In April 2014, conflict between the two has deepened and escalated to threats of imprisonment from both of them. President Traian B\u0103sescu said that if Victor Ponta will try to interfere in the justice risks ending up in the hands of prosecutors, who will not tolerate that.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0044-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, \"War of the palaces\"\nHe also stated that Ponta is deeply corrupt, and his election as president would be a great drama for Romania. In reply, Victor Ponta stated: \u201e(...) I am absolutely convinced that Traian B\u0103sescu will go to jail. I, who know that I have always respected the law, I have no fear\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0045-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, \"War of the palaces\"\nIn a TV show, President Traian B\u0103sescu reacted to declarations of PSD senator, Gabriela Firea, stating: \u201eShe better stays in her seat and would handle what happens on the estate of her husband. Because she could no longer find him at home, if she is not careful. I understand that in his parish enough bad things happen\". Victor Ponta quickly reacted to these statements by drawing up a penal complaint against President Traian B\u0103sescu. In this complaint, the President is accused of blackmail and threat. European Socialist leader Sergey Stanishev condemned the statements made by Traian B\u0103sescu, claiming that declarations to Gabriela Firea are provocative and inflammatory, and the suggestion that her husband could \"disappear\" is beyond the limits of decency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0046-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, \"War of the palaces\"\nAfter the scandal of Mehedin\u021bi County Council chairman, Adrian Duicu, where prosecutors say Duicu made influence peddling from Victor Ponta's office at Victoria Palace, in the presence of Interior Minister Radu Stroe, the Premier decided to move his office to the Ministry of National Defence, with \"military security\". Victor Ponta vehemently denied his involvement in this case, claiming that this scandal is only a frame-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0046-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, \"War of the palaces\"\nJournalists criticized the stultification of the scandal involving Prime Minister Victor Ponta, accusing him that he tries to move the discussion from concrete facts reported by DNA prosecutors in the plan of political conflict with Traian B\u0103sescu and \"press staging\". Victor Ponta's movement from the Victoria Palace to the Ministry of Defence was also criticized by PNL President Crin Antonescu, claiming that the Prime Minister \"has lost control\" and \"mocks the country's institutions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0047-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Presidential election protests\nAn apparent discrepancy between the number of polling stations and the estimated voters in most European countries (in Germany only five stations were open for more than 200,000 expats), voters saw this as an ideologically selective denial of exercising the right to vote. This fact attracted Romanians' angry at Ponta's policies, who began a \"campaign\" of protests and civil demonstrations within the country and abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 113], "content_span": [114, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0047-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Presidential election protests\nProtests first broke out on 8 November when thousands gathered in city squares in support of compatriots living abroad who were turned away as they tried to vote in the first round, prompting Romania's foreign minister Titus Corl\u0103\u021bean to resign. Long queues and bureaucratic hurdles made the voting process lengthy at Romanian embassies across the European Union and elsewhere in the first round. Many were unable to cast their ballots before voting ended. The government has taken measures to ensure 16 November vote runs smoothly, increasing the number of voting booths and staff abroad. But it has not increased the number of polling stations, as Romanian diaspora groups had demanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 113], "content_span": [114, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0048-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Presidential election protests\nA day before the presidential runoff, large demonstrations were held across the country, with 15,000 attendees in Cluj-Napoca and 5,000 in Timi\u0219oara. The protests targeted PSD candidate and PM Victor Ponta, blamed for poor organization of the voting process in diaspora. The irregularities in the first round repeated in the runoff. Then, tens of thousands of Romanians abroad were attacked with batons and tear gas by law enforcers, while voters forced the entrance into embassies to cast their vote. In Bucharest, up to 20,000 people gathered to protest against Victor Ponta, destroying the electoral posters with him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 113], "content_span": [114, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0048-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Presidential election protests\nTo everyone's surprise, ethnic German candidate Klaus Iohannis from PNL won the election with a comfortable margin, despite the fact that Victor Ponta surpassed Iohannis in all polls. Iohannis celebrated the victory with demonstrators in University Square. The result of the vote was seen in media as a \"small revolution\", given that Victor Ponta controlled the government since 2012, and PSD is the largest party in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 113], "content_span": [114, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0049-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Protests against MP immunity\nIn March 2015, a dispute arouse between ruling alliance PSD\u2013UNPR\u2013PC and main opposition party, PNL. PSD majority in the Senate rejected the solicitation of DNA prosecutors of arresting PSD MP Dan \u0218ova in a corruption case. Although the vote was detrimental to \u0218ova (79 to 67), PSD senators made use of a provision in the Rules of the Senate, ignoring the Constitution. The Rules of the Senate say that a decision is taken by majority of all members, not by the majority of members present. Thus, by this interpretation, DNA needed 85 votes in favor. The interpretation of the law by PSD senators defies the Constitution, namely Article 76, which states that \"Ordinary laws and resolutions shall be passed by a majority vote of members present in each Chamber\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 111], "content_span": [112, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0050-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Protests against MP immunity\nIn this context, the National Liberal Party intends to appeal to the Constitutional Court the decision of the Senate, also demanding early elections. The Constitutional Court was also appealed by President Klaus Iohannis and the National Anticorruption Directorate. George Kent, main coordinator of anticorruption programs in the Bureau for Europe and Eurasia of the U.S. State Department, criticized the decision, pointing that \"justice must be able to judge\". Moreover, British Embassy in Bucharest expressed its concern about vote in the case of Dan \u0218ova, stressing that \"no one is above the law\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 111], "content_span": [112, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0050-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Protests against MP immunity\nThe same position was taken by Klaus Iohannis, also stating that \"quality of deputy, senator or minister should not give anyone immunity to justice\". Netherlands Embassy stated that follows \"with concern and surprise\" developments concerning parliamentary immunity, especially in a context where political parties have pledged to fight corruption. Cultural figures of Romania, among them writer Mircea C\u0103rt\u0103rescu, demanded early elections and expressed their dissatisfaction with the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 111], "content_span": [112, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0051-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, 2014\u20132015 political tensions, Protests against MP immunity\nFollowing a complaint lodged by PNL, judges of the Constitutional Court ascertained, on 6 May, that the Senate decision in \u0218ova case is unconstitutional, because it was adopted pursuant to legal and regulation dispositions which contravened the provisions of Article 76 paragraph 2 of the Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 111], "content_span": [112, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231415-0052-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132015 unrest in Romania, Timeline of the events, November 2015 protests\nIn 2015, following the Colectiv nightclub fire, a series of protests were held across Romania. These resulted in the resignation of the Prime Minister at that time, Victor Ponta. Afterwards, on 10 November 2015, President Klaus Iohannis nominated Dacian Ciolo\u0219 to be prime minister. On 17 November 2017 the Parliament voted in favour of the nomination, which marked the beginning of the Ciolo\u0219 Cabinet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231416-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Mississippi Legislature\nThe Mississippi Legislature met in multiple sessions in the 2012-2016 term. They were from: January 3-May 3, 2012; January 8 - April 4, 2013; April 26, 2013; June 27-28, 2013; January 7-April 6, 2014; May 8, 2014; and January 6-April 5, 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231416-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Mississippi Legislature, Composition\nThe following composition reflects the balance of power after the 2011 elections, which was the first election since Reconstruction to give a majority of seats in the State House to the Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231416-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Mississippi Legislature, Composition, House\nWith the February 2009 party switch of Billy Nicholson from Democrat to Republican, the composition became 73 Democrats and 49 Republicans. This also meant that for the first time in the history of Mississippi, the majority of the Democratic members of the House were African-Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes\nThe 2012-16 Sanamayn clashes was a military confrontation in the city of Sanamayn between the Syrian Arab Army, supported by Hezbollah, and local Syrian opposition fighters during the Syrian civil war. The battle lasted roughly three years until December 2016, and ended with opposition fighter inside the city laying down their weapons and settling their status with the Syrian government. The battle typically consisted of small clashes and skirmishes between the two sides as well as shelling of each other's positions. On occasion, the Syrian army would carry out raids against the rebel-held areas, some having lead to significant civilian casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes\nThe Syrian Army imposed a siege against the rebel held areas first in late 2015, leading to a ceasefire between the two sides, and again in 2016, leading them to sign reconciliation agreements, ending fighting in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, Background\nDuring March 2011, Sanamayn, like other towns and cities across Syria, became the site of protests against the government of Bashar al-Assad. On one occasion, up to 20 protesters were killed after setting a statue of Hafez al-Assad on fire. Late in the year, the first rebel groups in the city appeared, and more would follow in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0003-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nIn late 2012, the first rebel group in the town, the \"Al-Sanamayn Revolutionaries Battalion\" was formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0004-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nIn early 2013, a rash of defections took place in the town, which was located on a strategic highway. Rebels would take over multiple areas of the city. The Syrian government remained in control of the military and security branches, main roads, heavily defended checkpoints such as the Qiyetah junction, and all military sites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0005-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nOn 10 April 2013, the Syrian Army launched an assault on the city targeting the southern areas. The Syrian armed targeted the city with artillery and rocket fire from barracks outside the city as they prepared to storm the city with heavy weapons. All roads leading in and out of the city were closed. The Syrian Army, accompanied by Hezbollah and pro-government militias, stormed the town and battled their way to the city center, forcing rebel forces to withdraw from the areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0005-0001", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\n20 houses were destroyed and at least 45 people were killed in Sanamayn alone in what was described as a massacre by opposition activists. The town of Ghabagheb, north of Sanamayn, was also stormed. 16 rebels were killed in fighting in the two towns according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Some listed the death count in Sanamayn as high as 60.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0006-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nDespite the operation, rebels would continue to have a presence in Sanamayn. More groups would emerge in the town with light and medium weapons. Although the rebels were present in multiple areas of the city, the Syrian government once again remained in control of the important military checkpoints and sites, such as the base of the 9th Division, and the roads passing through the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0007-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nTwo local councils would be formed by the opposition in rebel-held areas of the town. The first was announced in August 2013, and later joined the Union of Local Councils in Daraa Province. The second was announced in November, headed by Yassin al-Atmeh, and linked through connections with other Daraa councils to the Syrian Interim Government. Despite this, the rebel-held neighborhoods of Sanamayn were mainly reliant on the Syrian government for most public services, with the local councils only able to oversee the distributions of gifts and aid on certain occasions. Due to this, and to the fact that the number of opposition fighters in the city was very small, the rebels in Sanamayn failed to play a significant role in the Daraa Governorate campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0008-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nSkirmishes and clashes would take place between the two sides, with rebels launching attacks on the military and security sites, leading on occasion to escalations such as shelling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0009-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nIn December 2015, four civilians were reportedly killed in the town due to shelling, although it could not be verified whether or not this came from the Syrian Army or rebels in the Southern Front targeting pro-government sites in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0010-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nIn December 2015, the Syrian Army imposed a blockade on the rebel-held neighborhoods of Sanamayn in response for the factions carrying out an attack on a car carrying an officer and several soldiers. Negotiations took place between the Syrian Army and rebel factions resulting in a ceasefire between the two sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0011-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nIn December 2016, in response to the theft of government property by a corrupt leader of a rebel faction, the Syrian Army once again besieged the rebel-held neighborhoods of Sanamayn and pressed for a reconciliation agreement. Under the terms, the rebels were to confiscate their weapons and pledge not to carry out any attacks, as well as join the regular forces or the Russian-led 5th corps. The rebels were divided on whether to negotiate or respond militarily to the Syrian Army's actions. During the siege, rebel fire from the Southern Front targeted government-held areas, leading to civilian casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231417-0012-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132016 Sanamayn clashes, History\nIn the end, 510 people, including 150 rebels, accepted the reconciliation agreement, and Sanamayn came under full government control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231418-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132017\n2012\u20132017 is the third studio album by American electronic music artist Nicolas Jaar, under the moniker A.A.L. (Against All Logic), later referred to only as Against All Logic. It was released on February 17, 2018, by Other People. The album, a collection of tracks produced by Jaar in the period between 2012 and 2017, was released with little warning, and does not feature Jaar's name on the cover or Other People's online store The album, seen by some as a compilation, received critical acclaim upon its release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231418-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132017, Critical reception\nAt Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, 2012\u20132017 received an average score of 82, based on 5 reviews, indicating \"universal acclaim\". Writing for Pitchfork, Andrew Gaerig wrote that \"Jaar lets loose a surprise release of sample-heavy cuts both bolder and more refined than his early club tracks\", giving the album the site's \"Best New Music\" designation. Clash's Matthew Cooper positively reviewed 2012\u20132017, describing it as \"[having] an instant impact as Jaar substitutes avant-garde dystopian techno with the most off kilter time signatures for something much more predictable\". Reviewing the album for AllMusic, Fred Thomas compared it to Jaar's previous work, stating \"it's easily the most carefree and inviting of his work. No previous knowledge of his catalog is necessary to get happily lost in the blissful layers of 2012/2017.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 29], "content_span": [30, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231419-0000-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132018 ICC World Cricket League\nA series of ICC World Cricket League tournaments and the 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier were played between 2012 and 2018 and formed part of the Cricket World Cup qualification process for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. It was the third time the World Cricket League was used for World Cup qualification. At the conclusion of the previous cycle, the competition was composed of eight divisions but in 2014, ICC reduced Division 7 and Division 8. In addition, a series of qualifying regional tournaments were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231419-0001-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132018 ICC World Cricket League, Background\nOn 28 January 2015, the ICC announced that the leading two associate sides, Ireland and Afghanistan, would be promoted to the ICC ODI Championship for the period until the 2019 World Cup. This promotion guaranteed both associate sides entry to the final Cricket World Cup qualifier, and an opportunity to qualify directly through the ODI championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231419-0002-0000", "contents": "2012\u20132018 ICC World Cricket League, Background\nAs a consequence, both teams were removed from the World Cricket League one-day programme, and Kenya and Nepal, who had missed out on promotion to World Cricket League Championship days before, were promoted to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231420-0000-0000", "contents": "2013\n2013 (MMXIII) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2013th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 13th year of the 3rd\u00a0millennium, the 13th year of the 21st\u00a0century, and the 4th year of the 2010s decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 4], "section_span": [4, 4], "content_span": [5, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231421-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 $45-million ATM cyber looting\nIn December 2012 and February 2013, a cyber-ring of criminals, operating in more than 24 countries, stole $45 million from thousands of Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) in an ATM looting. Roughly $5 million was stolen around the world on December 21, 2012. Success led to expansion of the crime, when an additional $40 million was stolen on February 19, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231421-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 $45-million ATM cyber looting\nThe thefts included $2.4 million withdrawn from almost three thousand ATMs in New York City in a matter of hours during the February 2013 theft. Eight suspects were charged in May 2013 for the New York portion of the thefts \u2013 though one of the eight had already been found dead in the Dominican Republic, the previous month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231421-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 $45-million ATM cyber looting\nThe thefts were reported to be based on a sophisticated computer hacking procedure, whereby prepaid debit card information was stolen from the computers of financial institutions. The cards were then adjusted to have unlimited balances, so that gangs of criminals across the world could use the cards to withdraw the maximum amount the ATMs would allow in their target region. By using prepaid debit cards rather than customer bank cards or customer credit cards, the criminals were able to avoid the alarms or suspension-of-activity that might happen with these other types of cards. The resulting $45 million theft was from the accounts of financial institutions themselves, rather than customer accounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231422-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 (song)\n\"2013\" is a song by the band Primal Scream. It was released as a single on 25 March 2013 as the first single off of the band's tenth album, More Light. Produced by David Holmes, the title of the song is a nod towards The Stooges' habit of naming tracks after their year of composition (\"1969\" in The Stooges and \"1970\" from Fun House). The music video directed by Rei Nadal features scenes of taxidermy, sequin gimp masks, bondage, and psychiatric patients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231423-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 1. deild karla\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Frietjes (talk | contribs) at 21:05, 14 April 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231423-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 1. deild karla\nThe 2013 1. deild karla (English: Men's First Division) is the 59th season of second-tier Icelandic football. Twelve teams will contest the league. The fixtures for the 2013 campaign were released by the KS\u00cd on 10 November 2012. Play began on 9 May and is scheduled to conclude on 21 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231423-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 1. deild karla, Teams\nThe league will be contested by twelve clubs, eight of which had played in the 2012 season. There were four new clubs from the previous campaign:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231423-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 1. deild karla, Results\nEach team plays every opponent once home and away for a total of 22 matches per club, and 132 matches altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231424-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 1. divisjon (women)\nThe 2013 1. divisjon (women) is the second tier of Norwegian women's football in 2013. The season kicked off on 13 April 2013, and was finished on 19 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231424-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 1. divisjon (women)\nThe top placed team was promoted to the 2014 Toppserien. The second placed team contested a playoff against the eleventh-placed team from this year's Toppserien for the right to play in Toppserien next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231424-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 1. divisjon (women), Participating teams\n2012 champions Avaldsnes were promoted to the Toppserien at the end of the 2012 season. They were replaced by Fart, who were relegated from the 2012 Toppserien. Alta and Voss were relegated at the end of the 2012 season after finishing in the bottom two places of the table. They were replaced by the two playoff-winners Kaupanger and Lyn. In January 2013, Toppserien-club Kattem withdrew from the league. Their place in the 2013 Toppserien was first offered to Fart, who declined, and then to Medkila, who accepted. Alta were then offered Medkila's place in the 2013 1. divisjon, but declined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231424-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 1. divisjon (women), Participating teams\nThe offer then went to Voss, who accepted, and took their place in the 2013 1. divisjon despite finishing last in 2012. Subsequently, Sola withdrew their team from the 2013 1. divisjon. The football association decided not to offer Sola's place to another team. The season will therefore be played with only 11 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231425-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 1000 Guineas\nThe 2013 1000 Guineas Stakes was a horse race held at Newmarket Racecourse on Sunday 5 May 2013. It was the 200th running of the 1000 Guineas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231425-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 1000 Guineas\nThe winner was Ben Keswick's Sky Lantern, a three-year-old grey filly trained at East Everleigh in Wiltshire by Richard Hannon Sr. and ridden by Richard Hughes. Sky Lantern'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-00231425-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 1000 Guineas, The contenders\nThe race attracted a field of fifteen runners, ten trained in the United Kingdom, three in Ireland and two in France. The favourite was the Henry Cecil-trained Hot Snap, who had won the Nell Gwyn Stakes by two and a quarter lengths on 17 April. Sky Lantern, the runner-up in the Nell Gwyn Stakes had won the Moyglare Stud Stakes in Ireland in 2012. The French challenge was led by What A Name, who had won the Prix La Rochette and finished second in the Grand Crit\u00e9rium as a two-year-old before winning the Prix Imprudence on her three-year-old debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231425-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 1000 Guineas, The contenders\nThe Irish runners were Moth and Snow Queen from Aidan O'Brien's Ballydoyle stable and the Dermot Weld-trained Rasmeyaa. The other contenders included Maureen, who had won the Fred Darling Stakes from Agent Allison, the Prestige Stakes winner Ollie Olga and Winning Express, runner-up in the Cheveley Park Stakes. Hot Snap headed the betting at odds of 5/2 ahead of What A Name (7/2) and Just The Judge (7/1) with Sky Lantern and Moth on 9/1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231425-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 1000 Guineas, The race\nThe 100/1 outsider Masarah broke quickly and set the pace from Celtic Filly, Winning Express, Rasmeyaa and Just The Judge. Instead of splitting into groups on the wide Newmarket course, the runner clustered and raced down the middle of the track. Winning Express moved to the front approaching the final quarter mile but was soon challenged by Just The Judge as the favourite Hot Snap began to struggle and Sky Lantern began to make rapid progress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231425-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 1000 Guineas, The race\nJust The Judge took the advantage inside the final furlong and looked likely to win but was caught fifty yards from the finish by Sky Lantern, who won by half a length. Moth, who had been hampered when attempting to make her challenge, finished strongly to take third place by a nose from Winning Express. Of the other fancied runners, Maureen finished sixth, What A Name seventh, and Hot Snap ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231426-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 12 Hours of Sebring\nThe 61st Mobil 1 12 Hours of Sebring was an endurance sports car race held on March 16, 2013 at the Sebring International Raceway in Florida, United States. It was the last edition under the American Le Mans Series rules, marking the last year for the P1/LMP1 class at Sebring. The 2014 event was raced under the United SportsCar Racing brand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231426-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 12 Hours of Sebring, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231426-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 12 Hours of Sebring, Race, Race result\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of their class winner's distance are marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231427-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 18U Baseball World Cup\nThe 2013 18U Baseball World Cup was an international baseball competition held in Taichung, Taiwan from August 30 to September 8, 2013. There were no games played on August 30 and August 31, due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231427-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 18U Baseball World Cup, Teams\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.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231428-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 2. deild karla\nThe 2013 2. deild karla (English: Men's Second Division) is the 48th season of third-tier football in Iceland. Twelve teams will contest the league, which as of 2013 is no longer the lowest national division in Iceland following the restructuring of the league pyramid. The fixtures for the 2013 campaign were released by the KS\u00cd on 10 November 2012; play began on 10 May and concluded on 21 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231428-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 2. deild karla\nThe league champions were HK, who finished ahead of second-placed KV on goal difference. Both clubs were therefore promoted to the 1. deild for the 2014 season. At the other end of the table, Hamar and H\u00f6ttur were both relegated to the 2014 3. deild karla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231428-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 2. deild karla, Teams\nThe league will be contested by twelve clubs, eight of which played in the division during the 2012 season. There are four new clubs from the previous campaign:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231428-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 2. deild karla, Results\nEach team plays every opponent once home and away for a total of 22 matches per club, and 132 matches altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231429-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 2. divisjon\nThe 2013 2. divisjon (often referred to as Oddsen-ligaen for sponsorship reasons) was a Norwegian football league that started on 13 April 2013 and ended on 19 October 2013. The league consisted of 56 teams divided into 4 groups of 14 teams. The four group-winners, B\u00e6rum, Alta, Nest-Sotra and Tromsdalen was promoted to the 1. divisjon, while the bottom three teams in each groups was relegated to the 3. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231429-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 2. divisjon, Teams\nAlta, Notodden, B\u00e6rum and Tromsdalen were relegated from the 2012 1. divisjon, while Elverum, Kristiansund, Vard Haugesund and Follo were promoted to the 2013 1. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231429-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 2. divisjon, Teams\n\u00d8rn-Horten, Lillehammer, Brumunddal, Skeid, Buvik, Aalesund 2, Jerv, Mandalskameratene, Randaberg, Mj\u00f8lner, Finnsnes and Stab\u00e6k 2 were relegated from 2012 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231429-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 2. divisjon, Teams\nDr\u00f8bak/Frogn, Skedsmo, Lyn, Eidsvold Turn, Arendal, Viking 2, Arna-Bj\u00f8rnar, F\u00f8rde, Skarb\u00f8vik, Strindheim, Harstad and Bossekop were promoted from 2012 3. divisjon as winners of their groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231429-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 2. divisjon, Teams\nThe 4 teams relegated from the 1. divisjon and the 12 teams promoted from the 3. divisjon, will join the 40 teams positioned in 2nd to 11th place in last season's 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231429-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 2. divisjon, Tables\nThe league consisted of 56 teams divided into 4 groups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231430-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 2000 Guineas Stakes\nThe 2013 2000 Guineas Stakes was the 205th running of the 2000 Guineas Stakes horse race. It was run over one mile at Newmarket Racecourse on 4 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231430-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 2000 Guineas Stakes, Full result\n* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths or shorter \u2013 nk = neck", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231430-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 2000 Guineas Stakes, Reaction\nDawn Approach's jockey Kevin Manning said after the race: \"He's a very special horse. He's done it very easy and travelled very well throughout the race.\" When asked about whether the colt would run in the Derby, Jim Bolger said: \"He's got a fantastic temperament. He was cruising here and he's very easy to switch off in a race. If he's going to get the trip, he's got the temperament for it\" and added \"I don't know about the Derby, Sheikh Mohammed and myself said we would sleep on it and take it from there.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231430-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 2000 Guineas Stakes, Form analysis, Two-year-old races\nNotable runs by the future 2000 Guineas participants as two-year-olds in 2012:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231430-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 2000 Guineas Stakes, Form analysis, The road to Newmarket\nEarly-season appearances in 2013, prior to running in the 2000 Guineas:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231430-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 2000 Guineas Stakes, Form analysis, Subsequent Group 1 wins\nGroup 1 / Grade I victories after running in the 2000 Guineas:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231430-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 2000 Guineas Stakes, Subsequent breeding careers\nDawn Approach (1st) \u2013 Musis Amica (2nd Prix De Diane 2018), Mary Tudor (3rd Irish Oaks 2018), Madhmoon (2nd Epsom Derby 2019)Toronado (4th) \u2013 Tactical (1st July Stakes 2020), Affair To Remember (3rd Australasian Oaks 2020)Garswood (7th) \u2013 Cala Tarida (1st Prix des R\u00e9servoirs 2018), Little Kim (1st Prix du Bois 2018)Don't Bother Me (8th) \u2013 Exported to AustraliaLeitir Mor (9th) \u2013 Exported to IndiaGeorge Vancouver (10th) \u2013 Sired minor flat and jumps winnersMoohaajim (12th) \u2013 Minor flat winners, exported to Denmark", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231431-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Daytona\nThe 2013 Rolex 24 at Daytona was a long-distance motor race for sports cars conforming to the regulations of the Grand-Am Road Racing series. The 51st edition was raced between January 26 and 27. Michael Shank Racing is the defending champion in DP class and Magnus Racing in GT class. It was also the debut of the GX class for \"purpose built, series produced and modified replicas of series produced automobiles that are not eligible for the GT class.\" It was the last time the 24 Hours of Daytona was part of the Rolex Sports Car Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231431-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Daytona, The \"Roar Before the Rolex 24\"\nCanadian driver Michael Valiante made the fastest lap of the \"Roar\" in the final session (1:42.058). Valiante raced in the #6 Ford/Riley of Michael Shank Racing. Dane Cameron in the Sahlen's #42 BMW/Riley set the second time in 1:42.101. In the GT the #73 Porsche GT3 was the fastest and clocked a 1:48.569. Shane Lewis was the fastest in the new GX category. 1:56.167 was the time for Lewis in a Porsche Cayman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231431-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nThe qualifying was performed this Thursday, 24. DP session started at 5:40 EST and finished at 15:55 ET. GT and GX qualified between 16:10 ET and 16:25 ET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231431-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Daytona, Qualifying\nScott Pruett took the pole position in the #01 Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates Riley-BMW. Nick Tandy in the GT performed the fastest lap in a Porsche GT3. Shane Lewis made the first pole in the GX category with a Porsche Cayman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231431-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Daytona, The race\nThe race started at 3:30 (EST) on Saturday, January 26, 2013 and ended at 3:30 (EST) on Sunday, January 27, 2013. The first two hours were dominated by #01 Chip Ganassi, driven by Scott Pruett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe 81st 24 Hours of Le Mans (French: 81e 24 Heures du Mans) was an 24 hour automobile endurance racing event for Le Mans Prototype and Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance cars held from 19 to 23 June 2013 at the Circuit de la Sarthe close to Le Mans, France. It was the 81st running of the event, as organised by the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) since 1923. The race was the third and the premier round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, with 32 of the race's 56 entries contesting the championship. A test day was held two weeks prior to the race on 9 June. Approximately 245,000 spectators attended the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe race was won by a Audi R18 e-tron quattro shared by Dane Tom Kristensen, Brit Allan McNish and Frenchman Lo\u00efc Duval after it led the last 248 laps, taking the manufacturers' twelfth victory at Le Mans since its first in the 2000 edition. It was Kristensen's ninth victory, McNish's third and Duval's first. The car started from pole position but lost the lead at the start to the sister No. 1 Audi of Andr\u00e9 Lotterer, Marcel F\u00e4ssler and Beno\u00eet Tr\u00e9luyer who traded the position with the No. 8", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans\nToyota TS030 Hybrid of Anthony Davidson, St\u00e9phane Sarrazin and S\u00e9bastien Buemi under pit stop rotation until it was forced into the pit lane in the seventh hour with a crankshaft position sensor fault. Buemi, Davidson and Sarrazin finished second and Lucas di Grassi, Marc Gen\u00e9 and Oliver Jarvis in the No. 3 Audi completed the race podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) category finished with the No. 35 OAK Racing Morgan car of Bertrand Baguette, Martin Plowman and Ricardo Gonz\u00e1lez ahead of the sister No. 24 entry of Alex Brundle, David Heinemeier Hansson and Olivier Pla by a distance of one lap. The class podium was completed by the No. 42 Greaves Motorsport Zytek Z11SN, driven by Michael Krumm, Jann Mardenborough and Lucas Ord\u00f3\u00f1ez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe No. 92 Porsche Manthey Racing 991 RSR of Romain Dumas, Marc Lieb and Richard Lietz won the Le Mans Grand Touring Professional (LMGTE Pro) class and the sister No. 91 vehicle of J\u00f6rg Bergmeister, Timo Bernhard and Patrick Pilet in second. Porsche also won the Le Mans Grand Touring Amateur (LMGTE Am) category with the No. 76 IMSA Performance Matmut car of Raymond Narac, Christophe Bourret and Jean-Karl Vernay, earning the marque its 100th class victory at Le Mans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe result elevated Kristensen, McNish and Duval to the top of the Drivers' Championship with 94 points. The championship leaders going into the race, Lotterer, F\u00e4ssler and Tr\u00e9luyer fell to second while Davidson, Sarrazin and Buemi maintained third due to the trio's second-place finish. Di Grassi, Gen\u00e9 and Jarvis moved from sixth to fourth and the duo of Alexander Wurz and Nicolas Lapierre rounded out the top five. With 102 points, Audi increased their lead over Toyota in the Manufacturers' Championship to 35 points with five rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background\nThe 2013 24 Hours of Le Mans was moved forward one week after a request was filed by the world governing body of motorsport, the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), in order to harmonise the 2013 motor racing calendar. It was the 81st annual edition of the event, as well as the third of eight automobile endurance races in the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background\nGoing into the race, Audi Sport Team Joest drivers Andr\u00e9 Lotterer, Marcel F\u00e4ssler and Beno\u00eet Tr\u00e9luyer led the Drivers' Championship with 44 points, one ahead of their teammates Allan McNish, Tom Kristensen and Lo\u00efc Duval in second. Anthony Davidson, St\u00e9phane Sarrazin and S\u00e9bastien Buemi of Toyota were third with 27 points. Rebellion Racing's Neel Jani, Nico Prost and Nick Heidfeld were fourth with 20 points, and their teammates Andrea Belicchi, Mathias Beche and Cheng Congfu were fifth with 16 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Audi (with 51 points) led their rivals Toyota by 20 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Balance of Performance changes\nThe FIA Endurance Committee altered the balance of performance in three of the four categories to try and create parity in the classes. All hybrid and non-hybrid petrol powered LMP1 (Le Mans Prototype 1) cars received an additional 3\u00a0l (0.66\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 0.79\u00a0US\u00a0gal) of fuel capacity for improved fuel mileage, allowing the Toyota TS030 Hybrid to run with a 76\u00a0l (17\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 20\u00a0US\u00a0gal) fuel tank and the Rebellion Racing Lola B12/60s and the Strakka Racing HPD ARX-03c had 80\u00a0l (18\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 21\u00a0US\u00a0gal) fuel tanks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Balance of Performance changes\nPorsche received an increase in performance by allowing a 0.3\u00a0mm (0.012\u00a0in) larger air restrictor on the air intake of their engines in the Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Professional (LMGTE Pro) and Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Amateur (LMGTE Am) classes. Aston Martin had 10\u00a0kg (22\u00a0lb) of ballast added to its LMGTE Pro Vantage while the Chevrolet Corvette C6.R received a 25\u00a0kg (55\u00a0lb) reduction in weight. The Ferrari 458 Italia and the SRT Viper GTS-R had no performance changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries\nThe automotive group Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) granted 56 invitations to the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Entries were divided between the LMP1, LMP2 (Le Mans Prototype 2), LMGTE Pro and LMGTE Am categories. By the deadline for entries on 16 January, 71 applications had been filed with the ACO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nAutomatic entries are earned by teams which won their class in the previous running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans, or have won Le Mans-based series and events such as the American Le Mans Series (ALMS), European Le Mans Series (ELMS), and the Petit Le Mans. Some second-place finishers are also granted automatic entries in certain series. Entries are also granted for the winners of the Michelin Energy Endurance Challenge in the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nA final entry is granted to the champion in the Formula Le Mans category of the Le Mans Series, with the winner receiving their invitation in LMP2. For the first time, champions in the American Le Mans Series or at the Petit Le Mans did not automatically receive an entry. Instead, the American Le Mans Series was given three \"at-large\" entries, which the series awarded to teams interested in participating at Le Mans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nAs automatic entries were granted to teams, the teams were allowed to change their cars from the previous year to the next, but were not allowed to change their category. However, automatic invitations in the two GTE categories could be swapped between the two based on the driver line-ups chosen by these teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nOn 14 November 2012, the list of automatic entries was announced by the ACO. JMB Racing and Conquest Racing were the two teams who chose not to accept their automatic invitations as they did not run in any series during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list\nIn conjunction with the announcement of entries for the FIA World Endurance Championship and the European Le Mans Series, the ACO announced the full 56 car entry list and ten vehicle reserve list during a press conference at the Eurosites George V in Paris on 1 February. In addition to the 32 guaranteed entries from the WEC, ten entries came from the ELMS and eight from the ALMS, while the rest of the field was filled with one-off entries competing only at Le Mans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Garage 56\nThe ACO continued the Garage 56 concept that was started in the 2012 race. Garage 56 allows a 56th entry to the race, using the rigors of the 24 Hours of Le Mans to test new technology. The ACO announced during 2012 that the Swiss-developed GreenGT vehicle had been granted the Garage 56 entry for the 2013 edition. The GreenGT LMP-H2 utilizes a hydrogen fuel cell to run electric motors within an open-top Le Mans Prototype style body. Three weeks before the race, GreenGT withdrew their entry, citing a lack of time to complete the complex fine-tuning of the hydrogen fuel cell system. No reserve was available for the 56th garage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Reserves\nTen reserves were initially nominated by the ACO, limited to the LMP2 and both of the LMGTE categories. Extreme Speed Motorsports withdrew their Ferrari 458 Italia on 1 March, following a late switch to the ALMS' P2 category. This promoted the No. 98 Aston Martin Racing Vantage to the race entry as a result and the car was moved from LMGTE Am to the LMGTE Pro class to bring the number of Aston Martins in the event to five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Reserves\nTwo weeks later, S\u00e9bastien Loeb Racing withdrew its Oreca 03-Nissan because of financial troubles, promoting the No. 34 Race Performance Oreca-Judd entry from the reserves. Starworks Motorsport, defending champions of Le Mans and the FIA WEC in the LMP2 category, withdrew their HPD-Honda entry on 9 April due to a lack of funding from sponsors, promoting Morand Racing's Morgan-Judd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Reserves\nTen days later, Gulf Racing Middle East withdrew the second of its Lola-Nissan B12/80s and DKR Engineering's Lola-Judd replaced the entry. On 21 May, the ACO released a revised entry list that confirmed the withdrawal of Extreme Speed Motorsport's Ferrari 458 Italia, S\u00e9bastien Loeb Racing's Oreca 03-Nissan, Starworks Motorsports' HPD-Honda and Gulf Racing Middle East's Lola-Nissan B12/80 from the 24 Hours of Le Mans. On 1 June, GreenGT Technologies announced the withdrawal of the Garage 56 entry, with Prospeed Competition's LMGTE Am Porsche 911 GT3 RSR being announced as its replacement. By the start of the event, only a single reserve entry had not been promoted to the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing and practice\nA test day was held on 9 June, two weeks prior to the race, and required all entrants for the race to participate in eight hours of track time divided into two sessions. All 56 entries were involved as well as a fourth Audi R18 e-tron quattro driven by Marco Bonanomi for 2014 tyre testing, a Signatech Alpine A450 for Paul-Loup Chatin and Tristan Gommendy and a spare Level 5 Motorsports HPD ARX-03b tested by Scott Tucker. Two Team Endurance Challenge-entered Le Mans Prototype Challenge Oreca-FLM09s also participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing and practice\nWet weather swept the area during the day and had Audi set the fastest time with a 3 minutes, 22.583 seconds lap from Duval in the No. 2 car at the end of the second session. Lucas di Grassi in the sister No. 3 entry followed in second and Lotterer completed an all-Audi top three lockout in third. Toyota placed fourth and sixth with its best times coming from Sarrazin and Alexander Wurz; they were separated by Bonanomi's Audi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing and practice\nDuring the first session, Duval was distracted by an unidentified object hitting his windscreen and heavily damaged the No. 2 car in the wall alongside the track at Tertre Rouge corner. Olivier Pla's OAK Racing Morgan-Nissan was the fastest LMP2 car with a late second session effort of 3 minutes, 38.801 and he was eight-tenths of a second faster than Nelson Panciatici's Signatech Alpine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0013-0003", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing and practice\nLMGTE Pro was topped by Peter Dumbreck for Aston Martin Racing while Jamie Campbell-Walter also helped the marque lead in LMGTE Am. Crashes from Tracy Krohn of Krohn Racing at the right of Mulsanne corner, AF Corse's Giancarlo Fisichella leaving the same turn and Dominik Kraihamer for Lotus in the Porsche Curves led to stoppages during both sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing and practice\nTwo days after the test day, Audi and Signatech Alpine held two half an hour practice sessions in the morning and the afternoon on the shorter and permanent Bugatti Circuit in wet weather conditions to ensure that car components worked efficiently before the race. Official practice was held on 19 June with the full 56-car field on track for four hours. A torrential rain shower fell at Le Mans in the early afternoon but it tapered off before practice commenced and the track dried up during the session although light rain returned midway through and some cars spun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing and practice\nAudi again led from the start with Tr\u00e9luyer's No. 1 car setting a benchmark time until Duval went quickest with a 3 minutes, 25.514 seconds lap. Marino Franchitti's No. 33 Level 5 Motorsports car was the early LMP2 pace setter until Alex Brundle's No. 24 OAK Racing Morgan moved to first but it was Bertrand Baguette's sister No. 35 entry who was fastest with a lap of 3 minutes, 42.813 seconds. He was a second faster than Maxime Martin's No. 46 Thiriet by TDS Racing Oreca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing and practice\nAn hour into the session, Eric Lux crashed the No. 41 Graves Motorsport car heavily into a barrier entering the second Mulsanne chicane and the session was stopped due to debris on the track. Lux was unhurt. The LMGTE Pro class lead constantly changed amongst the field with Richard Lietz's No. 91 Porsche 911 RSR fastest with Kamui Kobayashi's No. 71 AF Corse Ferrari two-tenths of a second slower in second. Kristian Poulsen's No. 95 Aston Martin was quickest in the LMGTE Am category. Krohn had a high speed accident at the downhill Dunlop Esses and his car was launched about 20\u00a0ft (6.1\u00a0m) into the air before landing in a gravel trap, bringing an early end to practice due to a large amount of damage to the barriers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThe first dry session of the week occurred on Wednesday night in the first of three qualifying sessions. Audi again led from the outset with Duval's early lap of 3 minutes, 23.169 seconds which he then improved to 3 minutes, 22.349 seconds. The lap was not bettered for the remainder of the session, giving the No. 2 car provisional pole position. Marc Gen\u00e9's sister No. 3 car followed in second and Lotterer's No. 1 vehicle was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThe two Toyotas replicated their test day results of fourth and sixth with drivers Kazuki Nakajima and Buemi although the former was second early in qualifying and a driveline problem curtailed the No. 8 Toyota's session at Arnage corner; they were separated by the leading LMP1 privateer, the No. 12 Rebellion. John Martin's No. 26 G-Drive Oreca set the only lap under 3-minute, 40 seconds in LMP2 with the best class lap of 3 minutes, 39.535 seconds, ahead of Franck Mailleux's No. 43 Morand Racing Morgan-Nissan and Brundle's No. 24 OAK Racing car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nPierre Thiriet had a heavy accident at the second Mulsanne chicane, denting the barriers alongside the track, and ending the session 15 minutes early because repairs could not be completed in time. The professional category of LMGTE was dominated by Aston Martin who took three of the first four places with the best time coming from Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Makowiecki's No. 99 car as less than a second separated the top seven. Allan Simonsen helped Aston Martin to be fastest in LMGTE Am and he narrowly eclipsed Paolo Ruberti's No. 88 Proton Porsche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThursday's first qualifying session was affected by a waterlogged track after a short torrential downpour fell minutes before it commenced. Track conditions improved progressively as it dried but all lap times were slower than on Wednesday evening. The best overall lap time of the session came from Davidson in the No. 7 Toyota with a time of 3 minutes, 42.507 seconds and the fastest Audi was the No. 3 entry of di Grassi in second. The second Audi driven by F\u00e4ssler was third-fastest and the quickest privateer team was the No. 12 Rebellion in fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nDavidson's No. 8 Toyota rounded out the top five. In LMP2, John Martin kept the No. 26 G-Drive car leading the category while Tom Kimber-Smith drove the No. 41 Greaves Motorsport Zytek-Nissan on its first laps since it was repaired and was second-fastest in its class during the session and was provisionally 19th overall. The sister No. 42 Greaves car was third in the hands of Jann Mardenborough. The No. 40 Boutsen Ginion Oreca-Nissan of Matt Downs crashed heavily into the inside barrier entering Indianapolis corner with its front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nDowns was unhurt but qualifying ended early because repairs to the wall ran until after the session. The LMGTE Pro class was led by Jan Magnussen's No. 73 Chevrolet Corvette C6.R while the LMGTE Am category was topped by the No. 96 Aston Martin of Stuart Hall with his teammate Poulsen in second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nWith the stoppage in the second qualifying session, the third session was expanded by half an hour to give teams more time on the circuit. The track continued to be wet but it dried sufficiently enough to allow for an improvement to lap times with 20 minutes left as on-track grip continued to improve. Two stoppages curtailed running in the session: the first was triggered for ten minutes when Christophe Bourret removed the left-front wheel off the No. 77 IMSA Performance Matmut car in an impact with the wall at the first Mulsanne chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nJonny Kane in the No. 21 Strakka Racing HPD ARX-03c caused the second red flag after he heavily clouted a barrier and littered debris at the second Mulsanne chicane. Lotterer and his teammate di Grassi could not usurp Duval's time from Wednesday evening because they were caught out by damp patches on the circuit and the No. 2 started from pole position in the first Audi top three lockout on the Le Mans grid since the 2002 edition. Toyota could not challenge Audi but Sarrazin improved the No. 8 car's best lap in the final seconds of qualifying to start fourth and Nakajima's sister No. 7 vehicle qualified fifth. The No. 12 Rebellion Lola of Jani was the highest-placed privateer in sixth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nLMP2 continued to be led by G-Drive because of John Martin's lap from first qualifying until Pla's No. 24 OAK Racing Morgan pushed hard in clear air to clinch the pole position in the category with a time of 3 minutes, 38.621 seconds recorded at the end of the session. The car was a second faster than the No. 26 G-Drive Oreca which began from the second position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nOliver Turvey found improved pace in the No. 38 Jota Sport Zytek Nissan and bettered the car's best time to start third and the top three in LMP2 were represented by three manufacturers. Stefan M\u00fccke got the No. 97 Aston Martin to provisional pole position in LMGTE Pro but his teammate Makowiecki in the sister No. 99 car responded immediately to retake the position with a lap of 3 minutes, 54.635 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThe No. 91 Porsche of Marc Lieb bettered the car's fastest lap time on the final lap of the third qualifying session to take third place on the starting grid. The lead in LMGTE Am remained with the No. 95 Aston Martin as Simonsen improved his own provisional pole lap to a 3 minutes, 57.776 seconds to go more than a second faster than Proton Competition's Porsche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying, Qualifying results\nPole positions in each class are denoted 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, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nThe cars took to the circuit on Saturday morning for a 45-minute warm-up session in dry and clear weather. The No. 7 Toyota of Nicolas Lapierre set the team's fastest lap time of the weekend so far at 3 minutes, 26.227 seconds. McNish's No. 2 Audi was 0.504 seconds adrift in second and third was occupied by his teammate F\u00e4ssler in the sister No. 1 car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nThe fastest LMP2 lap was set by John Martin's No. 26 G-Drive Oreca with a time of 3 minutes, 43.158 seconds, almost nine-tenths of a second faster than Brendon Hartley in the No. 48 Murphy Prototypes vehicle and Archie Hamilton's No. 25 Delta-ADR car was third. Porsche and AF Corse exchanged first in LMGTE Pro before Toni Vilander's No. 71 Ferrari set the best time in the category, while Patrick Long, driving the No. 77 Dempsey Proton Porsche, was fastest in LMGTE Am and second quickest amongst all LMGTE cars. Several drivers went off the track during the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nKristensen hit the No. 67 IMSA Performance Matmut car of Pascal Gibon at Indianapolis turn and yellow flags were waved in the area because Kristensen was stranded in the grass to the left of the circuit. Philippe Dumas crashed the No. 70 Larbre Comp\u00e9tition Corvette into a tyre barrier at the Dunlop chicane halfway through the session and the No. 25 G-Drive car of Tor Graves blew its right-rear tyre on the run to the Porsche Curves and veered heavily into the inside barriers and debris was littered on the track. Graves was unhurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nApproximately 245,000 spectators attended the event on race day. The weather at the start was damp and overcast. The air temperature throughout ranged from 12.8 to 18.3\u00a0\u00b0C (55.0 to 64.9\u00a0\u00b0F) and the track temperature was between 15.5 to 21.8\u00a0\u00b0C (59.9 to 71.2\u00a0\u00b0F). The race began at 15:00 Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00), with Grand-Am Road Racing founder and NASCAR vice-chairman Jim France waving the French tricolour to signal the start the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nLotterer moved past McNish for the lead and then Lapierre overtook McNish for second place at the second Mulsanne chicane but he lost the position at the exit of the corner. Lapierre then reclaimed second from McNish on the approach to Mulsanne turn. Davidson overtook di Grassi for second through the Ford chicane as Darren Turner's No. 97 Aston Martin took the lead of LMGTE Pro from his Aston Martin teammate Bell in the No. 95 car. Lapierre was closing on Lotterer when the safety cars were deployed for an accident at Tetre Rouge corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nLMGTE Am leader Allan Simonsen had pulled clear of the class field when nine minutes into the race the rear-left corner of his car lost traction on a kerb leaving Tetre Rouge corner. When he attempted to correct, his car veered left and he collided heavily with a left-hand armco barrier at a near head-on trajectory. The impact crushed the roof of the car and its supporting roll cage; its force launched it slowly back onto the circuit with a wheel and its doors detached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nMedical personnel were swift to tend to Simonsen, who was reported to be conscious and talking to officials before going into unconsciousness. He was extricated from the car and transported to the infield medical centre after about 20 minutes. Simonsen was later declared dead from his injuries at the infield medical centre. His partner Catrina requested that Aston Martin Racing continue racing. The safety cars remained on track for 58 minutes in which the LMGTE Pro order was divided into two-halves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nWhen racing resumed, Davidson and the Audi duo of McNish of di Grassi overtook Lapierre to demote him to fifth. Davidson took the overall lead for the first time on pit stop cycle rotation due to Toyota's better fuel economy over the Audis and kept it until the end of lap fifteen. Lieb moved to the front of LMGTE Pro by passing the Aston Martins of Rob Bell and Turner but the No. 91 Porsche lost the first position to Turner halfway through the second hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nAt the start of the third hour, Lotterer was demoted to second when Lapierre moved past him on the exit to Mulsanne corner but he was not recorded as the leader because he entered the pit lane at the end of lap twenty-seven. Rain returned to the track at this time as Turvey and Maxime Martin moved in front of Pierre Kaffer's No. 49 Pecom Racing Oreca for second and third in LMP2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nLapierre stopped at the side of the Mulsanne Straight with a fuel pressure fault for half a minute before resuming in fifth. At the close of hour three, Gibon's No. 67 IMSA Performance Matmut car blew its left-rear tyre and lost the lead of LMGTE Am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nThe rain later eased and Audi re-established its advantage in the top three overall while Brundle extended the No. 24 OAK Racing car's gap in LMP2 over Mike Conway after he went into the gravel trap at Mulsanne corner while lapping Hall's No. 99 Aston Martin and Matt Griffin assumed the lead in LMGTE Am. The main on-track action involved Lucas Luhr who ran wide in the Porsche Curves and glanced an inside barrier alongside the track but he continued without significant damage to the No. 38 Jota Sport Zytek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0023-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nMakowiecki moved past his Aston Martin teammate M\u00fccke for the LMGTE Pro lead and Oliver Jarvis was delayed by the No. 39 DKR Engineering Lola through the Porsche Curves and lost third to Buemi. He retook the position from Buemi on the next lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0023-0003", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nLater, Bill Auberlen relieved M\u00fccke in the No. 97 Aston Martin and he was overtaken by Patrick Pilet's No. 92 Porsche for second in LMGTE Pro. Seven minutes into the sixth hour, the left-rear tyre of Gommendy's No. 36 Signatech Alpine blew and disintegrated entering the Mulsanne Straight as he hit the barrier at Tetre Rouge turn. The safety cars were dispatched for 15 minutes for debris removal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nAs the safety cars were recalled, David Heinemeier Hansson in the No. 24 OAK Racing Nissan collided with Duval's leading No. 2 Audi in the Porsche Curves, losing him the LMP2 lead to the No. 26 G-Drive car of Roman Rusinov. The safety cars were once again required for a short period of time as Kraihamer's No. 32 Lotus T128 shed its rear bodywork on the Mulsanne Straight and nullifying Tr\u00e9luyer and Jarvis' advantage because Duval returned to second after he made a pit stop during the period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nWhen racing resumed, Duval reset the fastest lap of the race to 3 minutes, 23.269 seconds as Bruno Senna's No. 99 Aston Martin traded the lead of LMGTE Pro with Dumbreck's No. 97 car for two laps. Two of the three contenders for the outright victory had trouble soon after. Jarvis' No. 3 Audi made contact with slower traffic and his right-rear tyre was punctured and spun under the Dunlop Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0024-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nThe tyre carcass fell off as he returned to the pit lane though repairs to the rear of the car were deemed unnecessary by his crew and the car returned to the circuit in fourth overall. Later, the No. 1 Audi of Tr\u00e9luyer was forced into the garage for 43 minutes to replace a failed crankshaft position sensor and gave the lead back to the sister No. 2 Audi of Duval and Sarrazin's No. 8 Toyota took over second. Darryl O'Young had been the fastest driver in LMGTE Am at the time and brought the No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari into the class lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nJohn Martin's No. 26 G-Drive entry ceded the lead of LMP2 to Baguette's No. 35 OAK Racing car when he was instructed to enter the pit lane to have an illuminated door number panel repaired, which took two laps to complete. The safety cars were deployed for a fourth time after 8 hours and 50 minutes when Graves spun the No. 25 Delta-ADR vehicle into the barriers at the Porsche Curves and scattered debris on the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nIn the outright lead, the safety cars divided the field into two with Kristensen increasing his lead to three minutes and seven seconds over Sarrazin. Safety cars were required once again at the close of the ninth hour when Krohn spun and crashed his Ferrari in the Porsche Curves and retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0025-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nRacing resumed ten minutes into hour ten with Gianluca Roda beaching the No. 88 Porsche into the gravel trap at the Dunlop Bridge and allowing actor Patrick Dempsey in the No. 77 Dempsey Proton car into the lead of LMGTE Am. Turner ran the No. 97 Aston Martin into the gravel at Mulsanne corner, allowing Lieb's No. 91 Porsche to pass him for second in LMGTE Pro. In LMGTE Am, Lorenzo Case's No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari returned to the category lead when Dempsey made a scheduled pit stop for fuel. For 21 minutes, safety cars were needed as Tony Burgess destroyed the rear of the No. 30 HVM Status Lola in the Porsche Curves. Burgess was unhurt and he was transported to hospital for a precautionary check-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nAs the race approached its halfway point, Howard Blank significantly damaged the No. 54 AF Corse Ferrari as well as the catchfencing at the Dunlop Esses and Tetre Rouge corner, causing an event record seventh safety car period. Blank was unhurt and attempted a return to the pit lane but he could not do so and retired. During the safety car period, the No. 99 Aston Martin had its brake discs changed and gave the LMGTE Pro lead to the No. 92 Porsche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nThe safety cars were due to be withdrawn just before the conclusion of hour 13 but heavy rain over much of the circuit extended it by nine minutes and several teams installed wet-weather tyres on their cars. Two laps after racing resumed, Lapierre's No. 7 Toyota got ahead of his teammate Buemi for second overall and he maintained it until Buemi retook the position. Before the close of the 14th hour, Kane spun and beached the No. 21 Strakka car in the gravel trap at the Ford Chicane but got the car back onto the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0026-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nRomain Brandela's No. 39 DKR Engineering Lola piled into the No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari and the No. 88 Proton Porsche before swerving in the front of Buemi's No. 8 Toyota at the Dunlop chicane. Luhr's No. 38 Jota Sport Zytek bowed out of a battle with the No. 42 Greaves Zytek of Michael Krumm for third in LMP2 when he entered the garage for repairs to his front wheel bearing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIn the 16th hour, Richard Lietz brought the No. 92 Porsche to the pit lane and had its brake discs changed in four minutes, giving the lead of LMGTE Pro to Senna's No. 99 Aston Martin, which held a three-quarters of a minute advantage over him but Lietz lowered it to six seconds by the hour's end. Light rain returned during the 17th hour but it was not heavy enough to affect the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIn LMGTE Am, Bourret led in the No. 76 IMSA Performance Matmut Porsche by a lap over Lorenzo Case's No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari while Dempsey in his No. 77 Porsche was being closed on by Marco Cioci's No. 61 car. The 18th hour commenced with Auberlen's No. 98 Aston Martin emitting smoke from the car and leaking a large amount of oil down the Mulsanne Straight before stopping at Mulsanne corner. The safety cars were dispatched for 25 minutes to allow the oil to be dried by track marshals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0027-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nRacing resumed for only half a minute as the safety cars were needed to tend to repairs to a heavily damaged trackside barrier exiting the second Mulsanne chicane; Belicchi was about to lap a slower GTE Porsche but lost traction at the rear of the No. 13 Rebellion and veered right into a barrier. He returned to the pit lane for extensive repairs to the car's front. When racing resumed, Lietz retook the LMGTE Pro lead. He held it until his spin at the Dunlop chicane delayed Dumbreck, allowing Senna in the class lead and Timo Bernhard's No. 91 Porsche into second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nAfter the safety cars were withdrawn, Makowiecki relieved Senna in the No. 99 Aston Martin and pulled away from Lieb's No. 92 Porsche. Rain again fell on the circuit with five hours and fifteen minutes to go and some cars were caught out in the change of weather. Makowiecki veered to the left coming out of the second Mulsanne chicane and collided with a barrier head-on. That ricocheted the car back to the centre of the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nMakowiecki was unhurt but the safety cars were again required as repairs were made to the wall and Lieb became the new LMGTE Pro leader. After racing continued, Nakajima's No. 7 Toyota cut the Dunlop chicane and launched over the kerb and spun backwards across the circuit. He rejoined without losing third. The rain eased and track conditions improved as Turner reduced Lieb's advantage at the front of LMGTE Pro to 8.8 seconds by the end of the 20th hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0028-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIn the 21st hour, a miscommunication with the mechanics of Matteo Malucelli's No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari in his pit box released him with the fuelling hose attached to the car and into a collision with the No. 45 OAK Racing Morgan of Philippe Mondolot. Rain returned to the circuit during the hour. The No. 1 Audi of Lotterer aquaplaned into a gravel trap and narrowly avoided piling into Davidson's No. 8 Toyota on the Mulsanne Straight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nThe No. 3 Audi of Jarvis moved past Lapierre's No. 7 Toyota for third during pit stop rotation and Lapierre went off at the exit of Indianapolis corner as he battled to retake the position. Kristensen's No. 2 Audi made a pit stop for a slow puncture as heavy rain returned with 90 minutes left and several cars aquaplaned on the saturated circuit. Lapierre's No. 7 Toyota had no grip on the run into the Porsche Curves and veered deep left into the tyre wall at high speed. He exited the car but returned to it after two minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nBaguette had an anxious moment going into Indianapolis turn in the No. 24 OAK Racing car but kept the LMP2 lead over his teammate Pla's sister No. 25 car. The safety cars were again dispatched as the LMGTE Pro lead returned to Lieb's No. 91 Porsche from M\u00fccke's No. 97 Aston Martin in pit stop rotation. During the safety car period, Pla's No. 25 OAK Racing entry was separated from his teammate Baguette and was four minutes behind as the No. 6 Toyota was repaired in its garage and returned in fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nJust before the safety cars entered the pit lane with half an hour to go, the No. 97 Aston Martin made a pit stop for tyres and made the LMGTE Pro battle against the two lead Porsches. More rain began to fall 15 minutes later and it turned into a deluge over the entire circuit as Kristensen's No. 2 Audi began the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nThe No. 2 Audi of Kristensen, Duval and McNish led the final 248 laps to claim the manufacturer's twelfth victory at Le Mans since its first at the 2000 race. It was Kristensen's ninth overall victory, McNish's third and Duval's first. Buemi unlapped himself from Kristensen in the final half an hour but fell back a lap soon after. He, Davidson and Sarrazin's No. 8 Toyota finished second and the No. 3 Audi of di Grassi, Jarvis and Gen\u00e9 completed the overall podium in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nOn the podium, the Danish flag was flown at half-mast in memory of Simonsen and Kristensen dedicated the victory to him. The No. 21 Strakka HPD ARX-03c of Kane, Danny Watts and Nick Leventis was unhindered after the demise of Rebellion and won the privateer LMP1 category in sixth overall. OAK Racing won the LMP2 class with the No. 35 Morgan of Baugette, Ricardo Gonz\u00e1lez and Martin Plowman and the team's second car of Pla, Heinememer Hansson and Brundle was a lap behind for a second-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0030-0002", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nJohn Martin, Conway and Rusinov finished third in class in the No. 26 G-Drive Oreca but the car was disqualified because its fuel tank was found to be over the mandated limit of 75\u00a0l (16\u00a0imp\u00a0gal; 20\u00a0US\u00a0gal), promoting the No. 42 Greaves Zytek of Mardenborough, Krumm and Lucas Ord\u00f3\u00f1ez to the category podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0030-0003", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nIn LMGTE Pro, Porsche Manthey Racing claimed the category win on the Le Mans debut of the new 991-generation race car with drivers Lieb, Lietz and Romain Dumas in the No. 92 car, while the LMGTE Am class increased Porsche's total class victories at Le Mans to 100 with the No. 76 IMSA Performance entry of Jean-Karl Vernay, Raymond Narac and Bourret winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nAllan Simonsen was mourned by the motorsport community. A memorial foundation was established in his honour by the Danish Automobile Sports Union and he was given a funeral in his hometown of Odense in Southern Denmark on 2 July. Following Simonsen's death, the ACO announced the improvements to several sections of the circuit in December 2013. Tertre Rouge was re-profiled and new barriers and tire walls were added at the corner's exit onto the Mulsanne Straight. Run-off areas in the Corvette corners were expanded, and TecPro barriers were added behind the tire walls at the start of the Porsche corners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nLarge kerbs were added to the paved run-off at the second Ford chicane to deter cars from cutting the corner. A new safety system was implemented, which allowed for the intervention of safety vehicles on a particular section of the circuit without the need for neutralising the entire race with safety cars. The system, termed a slow zone, requires cars to slow and maintain a speed of 60\u00a0km/h (37\u00a0mph) within a specific zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race\nWith their victory, Kristensen, McNish and Duval became the new leaders of the Drivers' Championship with 94 points. Lotterer, F\u00e4ssler and Tr\u00e9luyer fell to second and were thirty points behind their teammates. Davidson, Sarrazin and Buemi's second-place result enabled the trio to remain in third while di Grassi, Gen\u00e9 and Jarvis' third-position result allowed them to advance from sixth to fourth. Wurz and Lapierre rounded out the top five drivers in the championship standings. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Audi kept their lead with 102 points but increased it to thirty-five points over Toyota with five rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231432-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Le Mans, Post-race, Race results\nClass winners are marked in bold. Cars failing to complete 70 per cent (244 laps) of winner's distance are marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231433-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring\nThe 2013 ADAC Zurich 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring was the 41st running of the 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring. It took place over May 19\u201320, 2013. The race was suspended for over 9 hours due to heavy rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231433-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of N\u00fcrburgring\nThe #9 Black Falcon team won the race on a Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG. DTM legend Bernd Schneider also won the Dubai 24 Hour, the Bathurst 12 Hour and the Spa 24 Hours the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231434-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Spa\nThe 2013 Total 24 Hours of Spa was the 65th running of the 24 Hours of Spa. It was also the fourth round of the 2013 Blancpain Endurance Series season and was held on 27 and 28 July at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium. The race was won by the German trio of Bernd Schneider, Maximilian Buhk, and Maximilian G\u00f6tz of HTP Motorsport in their Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3. The victory was the third ever for Mercedes-Benz, their previous win dating back to 1964.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231434-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 24 Hours of Spa, Support races\nLamborghini Super Trofeo, Cooper Tires British Formula 3 Championship, Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup and Belgian Racing Car Championship + GT4 European Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231435-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Fuji\nThe 2013 3 Hours of Fuji was the second round of the 2013 Asian Le Mans Series season and the seventh points scoring race for GT300 cars in the 2013 Super GT season. It took place on September 22, 2013 at the Fuji Speedway in Oyama, Shizuoka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231436-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Imola\nThe 2013 3 Hours of Imola was an auto racing event held at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola, Italy on 17\u201318 May 2013, and served as the second round of the 2013 European Le Mans Series season. Defending ELMS champions Pierre Thiriet and Mathias Beche of Thiriet by TDS Racing won the race over the Signatech Alpine. Paul-Loup Chatin and Gary Hirsch held the LMPC category lead from start to finish, while Johnny Mowlem and Matt Griffin earned RAM Racing their first victory in only their second LMGTE race. Fabio Babini, Viktor Shaitar, and Kirill Ladygin won the GTC class on their debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231436-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Imola, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231436-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Imola, Race, Race result\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, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231437-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Inje\nThe 2013 3 Hours of Inje was the first round of the 2013 Asian Le Mans Series season and the first Asian Le Mans Series race since the 2009 1000 km of Okayama. It took place on August 4, 2013, at the Inje Speedium in Inje County, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231438-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Red Bull Ring\nThe 2013 3 Hours of Red Bull Ring was an auto racing event held at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Styria, Austria on 19\u201320 July 2013. It was the third round of the 2013 European Le Mans Series season, and the series' first visit to the Red Bull Ring. Thiriet by TDS Racing, with drivers Pierre Thiriet and Mathias Beche, won the race over Signatech Alpine, while the LMPC category was led by Paul-Loup Chatin and Gary Hirsch. Ram Racing's Matt Griffin and Johnny Mowlem led the LMGTE category, while Fabio Babini, Kirill Ladygin, and Viktor Shaitar of SMP Racing won the GTC class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231438-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Red Bull Ring, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231438-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Red Bull Ring, Qualifying, Qualifying result\n\u2013 The No. 36 Signatech Oreca-Nissan had its qualifying times nullified after it set its fastest qualifying lap while a sector of the track was under yellow flag conditions. The team was allowed to start from the back of the LMP2 class grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231438-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Red Bull Ring, Race, Race result\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, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231439-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Sepang\nThe 2013 3 Hours of Sepang was the fourth and final round of the 2013 Asian Le Mans Series season. It took place on December 8, 2013 at the Sepang International Circuit in Selangor, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231440-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Silverstone\nThe 2013 3 Hours of Silverstone was an auto racing event held at the Silverstone Circuit near Silverstone, England, on 12\u201313 April 2013. The event was the opening round of the 2013 European Le Mans Series season, in a weekend shared with the FIA World Endurance Championship and the FIA European Formula 3 Championship. Heavy rains during the race forced the event to be cut short, with only two and a quarter hours being run before Britons Simon Dolan and Oliver Turvey of Jota Sport were declared the winners. Soheil Ayari and Anthony Pons led the LMPC category, Christian Ried, Gianluca Roda, and Nick Tandy won the LMGTE class, and Andrew Smith, Ollie Millroy, and Alisdair McCaig were the GTC class victors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231440-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231440-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race result\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, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231441-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3 Hours of Zhuhai\nThe 2013 3 Hours of Zhuhai was the third round of the 2013 Asian Le Mans Series season. It took place on October 13, 2013, at the Zhuhai International Circuit in Zhuhai, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231442-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3. deild karla\nThe 2013 3. deild karla (English: Men's Third Division) was the 32nd season of fourth-tier football in Iceland. Ten teams contested the league, which as of 2013 is no longer the lowest division in Iceland following the restructuring of the league pyramid. The fixtures for the 2013 campaign were released by the KS\u00cd on 10 November 2012; play began on 17 May and concluded on 14 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231442-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 3. deild karla, Previous season\nThe previous season the division was the lowest one in Iceland, but starting this season the 4. deild will be beneath the 3. deild. As a result, the 30 teams competing in the division last season were not just competing for two promotion places to 2. deild, but also for eight offered places in the 2013 season of the 3. deild. As a result, the remaining 20 teams were \"relegated\" to the new 4. deild for the 2013 season, although a couple of teams quit and a few new ones joined, as had always been the case with the 3. deild when it was the lowest division in Iceland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231442-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 3. deild karla, Teams\nThe league was contested by ten clubs, eight of which played in the division during the 2012 season. There are two new clubs from the previous campaign, with eight remaining of the 30 teams that competed last year, with those not mentioned below either competing in the new 4. deild or not competing this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231442-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 3. deild karla, Statistics, Results\nEach team plays every opponent once home and away for a total of 18 matches per club, and 90 matches altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231443-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 3. divisjon\nThe 2013 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-00231443-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 3. divisjon\nBetween 22 and 26 games (depending on group size) are played in 12 groups, with 3 points given for wins and 1 for draws. Twelve group winners are promoted to the 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231444-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 4 Nations Cup\nThe 2013 4 Nations Cup was a women's ice hockey tournament held in Lake Placid, New York, United States. It was the 18th edition of the 4 Nations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km\nThe 2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km was the fifth round of the 2013 Super GT season and the 42nd running of the 1000 km Suzuka event. It took place on August 18, 2013 at the Suzuka Circuit in Suzuka City, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Background\nTeam Kunimitsu drivers Takuya Izawa and Takashi Kogure led the GT500 championship standings by one point over Lexus Team DENSO SARD's Juichi Wakisaka and Hiroaki Ishiura, while Team Mugen led the GT300 championship over Autobacs Racing Team Aguri in the second Honda CR-Z.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Background\nFollowing the SUGO race, the Japan Automobile Federation adjusted the Balance of Performance for Suzuka. The fuel tanks on the FIA GT3 cars were increased in capacity from a maximum of 100L to 110L. The minimum ground clearance for the JAF-GT cars was increased from 45mm to 53mm and a fuel flow restrictor was added to the fuel rigs for JAF-GT teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Background\nTeam Mach returned to the championship at Suzuka, however they had swapped their Ferrari 458 Italia GT3 they started the season with, replacing it with a Nissan GT-R GT3. Tomei Sports Nissan GT-R GT3 was not entered for the race, nor was the Dijon Racing Callaway Corvette Z06.R GT3 which had competed in two of the four rounds in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Background\nWith Suzuka being the longest race on the championship calendar, bonus points would be awarded for all 10 points scoring positions. Instead of 20 points being awarded for the win, 25 points were awarded to the winner of the race. With the race also being the longest on the calendar, 15 of the 23 GT300 teams elected to run a third driver in their car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Background\nGran Turismo Academy winner Lucas Ord\u00f3\u00f1ez was entered in the race with NDDP Racing while former World Touring Car Championship and American Le Mans Series driver J\u00f6rg M\u00fcller was entered as a third driver for the GSR Hatsune Miku team. As in the 2012 race, 2013 All-Japan Formula Three champion Yuichi Nakayama was the third driver for apr, while Carlo van Dam returned to Super GT with the Cars Tokai Dream28 McLaren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Qualifying\nQualifying was held on August 17, 2013 with the first of the sessions for the GT300 cars. Tetsuya Yamano was the fastest GT300 driver in the first session, breaking the track record with a 2:01.481, a record set by Yamano's teammate Kota Sasaki in the practice session earlier that day. The teams ranked 1st, 3rd, 5th and 6th in the GT300 championship prior to Suzuka weren't fast enough to qualify for the second session. The #87 JLOC Lamborghini Gallardo GT3 with Hiroki Yoshimoto driving had technical trouble and only ran one lap and was off the pace. In the first GT500 class session Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Makowiecki set the fastest laptime in the first session, who set the fastest time on his last lap of the session, beating the #6 Lexus Team LeMans ENEOS being driven by Yuji Kunimoto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Qualifying\nIn the second GT300 qualifying session for the thirteen fastest cars in the first qualifying session, Kota Sasaki wasn't able to beat his teammate's Q1 time but was still able to get their fourth pole position of the 2013 season with a 2:01.693, 0.782 seconds faster than Daiki Sasaki in the #3 NDDP Racing Nissan GT-R GT3. The #50 Arnage Racing Aston Martin V12 Vantage GT3 that won the 2012 race and finished second in the GT300 championship qualified third fastest with Hideto Yasuoka driving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Qualifying\nIn the final session, for the eight fastest GT500 cars, Ronnie Quintarelli in the #23 NISMO Nissan GT-R did a 1:52.157 early on in the session, which was fast enough for pole position. The #18 Weider Dome Racing Honda HSV-010 GT that was fastest in Q1 with Makowiecki driving was second fastest in Q2 with Naoki Yamamoto driving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nThe race was held on August 18, 2013. The race started at 12:35pm and all cars racing made clean starts, with Quintarelli and Sasaki leading the race from their respective pole positions. Kazuki Nakajima managed to overtake Yamamoto for 2nd place on the opening lap, but as the leaders caught up to the slower GT300 cars Yamamoto re-passed Nakajima for 2nd. On lap 20 after GT300 cars slowed Quintarelli and Yamamoto managed to overtake him for the overall race lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nThe #61 Subaru BRZ led from pole position and was able to consistently lap faster than the field, after one-third race distance Sasaki and Takuto Iguchi who drove the 2nd stint in the car was 90 seconds ahead of the #4 GSR Hatsune Miku BMW. However, as the overall leaders were on their 66th lap, the #86 JLOC Lamborghini Gallardo GT3 with Shinya Hosokawa driving blew a tyre and from the resulting damage there was a small fire on the Lamborghini. The safety car was deployed and many teams elected to make their second of four compulsory pitstops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nThe #1 MOLA GT-R, #24 Kondo Racing GT-R and the #38 Cerumo SC430 along with many GT300 competitors (the #2 McLaren, the #3 GT-R, the #5 GT-R, the #9 Porsche, and the #87 Lamborghini) were all judged to be in violation of the safety car regulations and all were given 90 second stop-go penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nFollowing the #1 car serving its penalty and due to the timing of the safety car Ronnie Quintarelli in the #23 NISMO Nissan GT-R was back into the lead of the GT500 class while the #61 R&D Sport Subaru BRZ was still leading GT300, now with Tetsuya Yamano driving. Masataka Yanagida had a close call after colliding with a slower GT300 car on his outlap in the #23 GT-R, but the incident allowed Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Makowiecki to close in. Makowiecki ended up passing Yanagida for the lead on lap 116.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nFurther behind in the GT500 class Seiji Ara had brought the #19 SC430 from 12th on the grid to 4th place and in a battle with Tsugio Matsuda for 3rd place. However Ara ran wide after trying to pass a GT300 car and dropped to 6th place, behind both the TOM's cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nThe #61 R&D Sport Subaru BRZ was again leading GT300 by a large margin but with around 30 laps left in the race the rear diffuser on the car was damaged from an earlier incident and had now caused aerodynamic issues as well as damage to the right-rear tyre from bodywork rubbing on it. Sasaki slowed his pace down and Nobuteru Taniguchi in 2nd and Naoya Gamou in 3rd both improved their laptimes to try to catch Sasaki before the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nSasaki ended up pitting the car and the team worked on the car fast enough for Sasaki to rejoin just behind Taniguchi who inherited the lead. With fresher rear tyres and more fuel on board Sasaki was able to push again and with 14 laps left overtook Taniguchi for the race lead, and held him off to win the GT300 class, the first win for the Subaru BRZ in Super GT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nIn the GT500 class, both the leading #18 HSV-010 and the #23 GT-R made their last pitstop at the end of lap 139. Yamamoto took over the wheel of the #18 and managed to stay in front of Quintarelli in the pitstops, and over the course of the final stint was able to hold him off for the GT500 race win, and the first time both Yamamoto and Makowiecki won in Super GT. the #36 Lexus Team Petronas TOM'S entry of Kazuki Nakajima and James Rossiter finished in 3rd place after Jo\u00e3o Paulo de Oliveira ran off course with 3 laps to go and dropped the #12 Calsonic Team Impul Nissan GT-R to 4th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231445-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 42nd International Pokka Sapporo 1000km, Report, Race\nThe #4 GSR Hatsune Miku BMW that finished 2nd in the GT300 class was later disqualified after it failed post-race inspections. The #52 OKINAWA-IMP RACING with SHIFT Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 inherited 2nd place and the #62 Leon Racing Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 was given 3rd place. 32 of the 38 starters managed to complete enough laps to be classified in the final race result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231446-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Bahrain\nThe 2013 6 Hours of Bahrain was an endurance auto race held at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain on 30 November 2013. The race was the eighth and final round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship season. The race was won by S\u00e9bastien Buemi, St\u00e9phane Sarrazin and Anthony Davidson driving the No.8 Toyota TS030 Hybrid of Toyota Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231446-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Bahrain, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231446-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Bahrain, Race, Race result\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, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231447-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Circuit of the Americas\nThe 2013 6 Hours of Circuit of the Americas was an endurance auto race held at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas on 20\u201322 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231447-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Circuit of the Americas, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231447-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Circuit of the Americas, Race, Race result\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231448-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Fuji\nThe 2013 6 Hours of Fuji was intended to have been an automobile endurance race held at the Fuji Speedway, Oyama, Japan on 20 October 2013. The race was the sixth round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship season. Heavy rains forced race officials to start the race under safety car conditions, completing eight laps before the race was temporarily stopped due to no improvement in track conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231448-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Fuji\nFollowing a two-hour delay the race was restarted once more under the safety car, lapping another eight circuits before officials stopped the race again and eventually called an end to the event. The No. 7 Toyota was declared the race winner, gaining the lead following a pit stop under caution from the Audi which started on pole position, while the majority of the field finished in the same position they started the race. Only half points were awarded towards the various championships being held under the WEC umbrella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231448-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Fuji\nAs a result of the race, which did not take the green flag, the FIA imposed a rule change effective 2014 where points are only scored if two laps are run under green flag conditions to prevent a repeat of what happened in Fuji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231448-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Fuji, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231448-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Fuji, Race, Race result\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231449-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Shanghai\nThe 2013 6 Hours of Shanghai was an endurance auto race held at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai, China on 9 November 2013. The race was the seventh round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231449-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Shanghai\nThe race was won by Andr\u00e9 Lotterer, Beno\u00eet Tr\u00e9luyer and Marcel F\u00e4ssler of Audi Sport Team Joest. Allan McNish, Tom Kristensen and Lo\u00efc Duval won the World Drivers' Championship at the event after finishing in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231449-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Shanghai, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231449-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Shanghai, Race, Race result\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, 43], "content_span": [44, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231450-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Silverstone\nThe 2013 6 Hours of Silverstone was an auto racing event held at the Silverstone Circuit, near Silverstone, England on 12\u201314 April 2013. The event was the opening round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship season, and served as the annual award for the Royal Automobile Club's Tourist Trophy. Briton Allan McNish, Dane Tom Kristensen, and Frenchman Lo\u00efc Duval won the race for Audi, just over three seconds ahead of their teammates. The British Delta-ADR team were victorious in the LMP2 category, while Aston Martin Racing secured both the LMGTE Pro and LMGTE Am classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231450-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Silverstone\nThe event weekend was shared with the European Le Mans Series, which ran the 3 Hours of Silverstone, and the FIA European Formula 3 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231450-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying\nThe 6 Hours of Silverstone was the first instance in which the WEC utilized a new qualifying procedure in which two drivers were required to set laps during the qualifying session. The grid would then be determined by averaging the total of the two best laps set by each of the drivers. Following the Silverstone qualifying session, several drivers felt the new format was too risky as all teams only had enough time to set four laps during the wet session. The FIA later announced that qualifying would be extended by ten minutes for the next round at Spa to allow teams more leeway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231450-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Silverstone, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231450-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Silverstone, Race, Race result\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, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231451-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps\nThe 2013 WEC 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps was an endurance race held at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium on 3\u20144 May 2013, and the annual running of the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps. It was the second round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship season. Defending World Champions Andr\u00e9 Lotterer, Beno\u00eet Tr\u00e9luyer and Marcel F\u00e4ssler led a clean sweep of the overall race podium for Audi, while Pecom Racing were victorious in the LMP2 category. The No. 51 car of AF Corse won the LMGTE Pro class, and 8 Star Motorsports won in LMGTE Am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231451-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231451-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, Race, Race result\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, 52], "content_span": [53, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231452-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of S\u00e3o Paulo\nThe 2013 6 Hours of S\u00e3o Paulo was an endurance auto race held at the Aut\u00f3dromo Jos\u00e9 Carlos Pace, S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil on 30 August \u2013 1 September 2013. The race was the fourth round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship and the second consecutive running of the 6 Hours of S\u00e3o Paulo. Audi continued their streak of four overall victories following an accident for the sole Toyota in LMP1, with Andr\u00e9 Lotterer, Marcel F\u00e4ssler, and Beno\u00eet Tr\u00e9luyer leading the Joest Racing duo to the checkered flag. G-Drive Racing earned their first victory in the LMP2 category ahead of OAK Racing, while AF Corse Ferrari led home Aston Martin Racing in the LMGTE Pro class by a gap of less than two seconds. Aston Martin however prevailed in LMGTE Am, ahead of the 8 Star Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231452-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of S\u00e3o Paulo, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231452-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 6 Hours of S\u00e3o Paulo, Race result\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, 38], "content_span": [39, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231453-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 A Lyga\nThe 2013 A Lyga, also known as SMSCredit.lt A Lyga for sponsoring purposes, is the 24th season of the A Lyga, the top-tier association football league of Lithuania. The season starts on 9 March 2013 and ends on 10 November 2013. FK Ekranas are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231453-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 A Lyga, Changes from 2012\nThe league changed its number of teams for the fourth time in a row, reducing it from ten teams in 2012 A Lyga to nine sides. As a consequence, the schedule reduced from 36 to 32 matches per team, with each team playing every other team four times in total, twice at home and twice away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 30], "content_span": [31, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231454-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League All Stars Game\nThe 2013 A-League All Stars Game was a football match that took place on 20 July 2013 at ANZ Stadium in Sydney, contested between the A-League All Stars and English Premier League champions Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231454-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League All Stars Game, Background\nTickets which went on sale earlier in the year sold out in minutes. A Manchester United training session which was open to the public attracted 22,000 people at Allianz Stadium. It is the first time since 1999 that Manchester United have visited Australia. On 18 March 2013, it was announced Melbourne Victory coach Ange Postecoglou will coach the all-stars squad, chosen by fans who voted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231454-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League All Stars Game, Background\nSome A-League players, including Alessandro Del Piero and Emile Heskey, were not able to play due to other commitments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231454-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League All Stars Game, Broadcasting\nIn Australia, the match was broadcast live by the Seven Network, after they secured the rights to the inaugural A-League All Stars game on 23 May 2013. In the UK, the match was broadcast live on Manchester United's subscription television channel MUTV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final\nThe 2013 A-League Grand Final was the eighth A-League Grand Final, which took place at Allianz Stadium, Sydney on 21 April 2013. The match was won by Central Coast Mariners, who beat Western Sydney Wanderers 2\u20130, in front of 42,102 people. This was the first time the Central Coast Mariners became champions of Australia, after losing three previous grand finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Route to the final\nBoth teams came into the final in good form, the Wanderers undefeated in 13 games and the Mariners having won their past 4 A-League games in a row. The sides had previously met three times over the course of the season, with each team winning one match as well as one draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Route to the final\nIn their inaugural season, Wanderers performed strongly. Mixed early results were followed by a streak of 12 undefeated games, including a run of 10 wins in a row, which saw the side top the regular season table, winning the A-League premiership. In the semi-final, the Wanderers beat Brisbane Roar 2-0, scoring a goal in each half to qualify for the grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Route to the final\nEntering the season as reigning A-League premiers, the Mariners had a strong season, highlighted by the fact that they lost only one match at their home ground, Bluetongue Stadium- against the Wanderers. After finishing second in the regular season, the Mariners played Melbourne Victory in the semi-final, winning 1-0 through a Daniel McBreen goal and so qualifying for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Route to the final\nThe top six teams from the 2012\u201313 season qualified for the finals series, with the top two receiving byes into the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nIt was announced by the FFA, following Western Sydney Wanderers earning the right to host the grand final, that the match would be played at the Sydney Football Stadium due to its greater capacity than the Wanderers usual home ground, Parramatta Stadium. The match was played in front of a sold-out crowd of 42,102 at the Sydney Football Stadium- the largest crowd of the 2012\u201313 A-League. In Australia, it was shown live on Fox Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nThe first clear-cut chance of the match came when Trent Sainsbury played a ball over the top for Mile Sterjovski. Sterjovski got in behind the defence and chipped over Wanderers' 'keeper Ante Covic, only for his shot to hit the crossbar and bounce out for a goal kick. Shortly before half-time, the Mariners took the lead. Michael McGlinchey's corner found Patrick Zwaanswijk at the near post, whose powerful header put the Mariners ahead going into half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nSoon after play resumed, both Shinji Ono and Sterjovski had attempts on goal from attacking positions for their respective sides, but neither was able to put their shot on target. Midway through the half, the Mariners were awarded a penalty. It came after Daniel McBreen retrieved a ball deep inside the penalty area and cut back the bouncing ball, only for it to hit the arm of J\u00e9rome Polenz, leading Peter Green to award a penalty. From the resultant penalty, McBreen sent Covic the wrong way, powering his shot into the top left corner and giving the Mariners a two-goal advantage which they retained until the final whistle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231455-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 A-League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nDaniel McBreen was awarded the Joe Marston Medal as man of the match. The win marked the Central Coast Mariners' first A-League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400\nThe 2013 AAA 400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race held on September 29, 2013, at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware, United States. Contested over 400 laps on the 1\u2013mile (1.6 km) oval, it was the 29th race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship, and the third race in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his fifth win of the season and record eighth win at Dover, while Dale Earnhardt, Jr. finished second. Joey Logano, Jeff Gordon, and Kyle Busch rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Background\nDover International Speedway is a four-turn short track oval that is 1 mile (1.6\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at twenty-four degrees. The front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at nine degrees with the backstretch. The racetrack has seats for 113,000 spectators. Brad Keselowski was the defending race winner after winning the event in the 2012 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Matt Kenseth was leading the Drivers' Championship with 2,111 points, while Kyle Busch stood in second with 2,097 points. Jimmie Johnson followed in third with 2,093, 18 ahead of Carl Edwards in fourth, and 20 ahead of Greg Biffle in fifth. Kevin Harvick, with 2,072, was in sixth; one ahead of Kurt Busch, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Jeff Gordon was five points ahead of Ryan Newman and six ahead of Clint Bowyer in ninth and tenth. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. was eleventh with 2,049, seven points ahead of Joey Logano in twelfth. Kasey Kahne completed the first thirteen positions with 2,040 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Toyota and Chevrolet were tied for the lead with 188 points. Ford was third with 149 points before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, held on September 27, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held a day later on September 28, 2013, were 55 and 50 minutes long. During the first practice session, Kenseth was quickest with a time of 22.556, ahead of Martin Truex, Jr. and Logano in second and third. Kurt Busch followed in the fourth position, ahead of Kyle Busch in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-three cars were entered. Earnhardt, Jr. clinched his second pole position of the season, with a lap time of 22.243 seconds, setting a new track record. He was joined on the front row of the grid by Kenseth. Newman qualified third, Edwards took fourth, and Aric Almirola started fifth. Keselowski, Jamie McMurray, Johnson, Kurt Busch, and Truex, Jr. completed the first ten positions on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Kahne was quickest, ahead of Earnhardt, Jr. and Gordon in second and third. Kurt Busch and Kenseth followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Johnson, Kyle Busch, Bowyer, Juan Pablo Montoya, and Truex, Jr. rounded out ten quickest drivers in the session. In the final practice session for the race, Keselowski was quickest with a time of 23.027 seconds. Johnson followed in second, ahead of Kenseth and Newman in third and fourth. Earnhardt, Jr. managed fifth in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Race\nFollowing the green flag, Earnhardt, Jr. gained a large lead over the rest of the pack. His lead narrowed as he caught up to the slower cars toward the back of the pack. Kenseth took the lead from Earnhardt, Jr. on lap 26. Earnhardt, Jr. regained the lead on lap 31 as Kenseth struggled to get around slower cars. The first caution of the race occurred for debris in turn 3 on lap 38. During this caution, Kyle Busch took over the race lead after the leaders made pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Race\nKyle Busch continued to lead the race following the restart, gaining a large lead over the rest of the field. Kyle Busch's lead eventually shrunk and on lap 71, Newman passed him for the lead. Earnhardt, Jr. took back the race lead on lap 76. During a round of green-flag pit stops, Earnhardt, Jr. missed the commitment line attempting to make his stop and was forced to do another lap before pitting. This cost him the race lead, which was taken over by Johnson on lap 120. Johnson continued to lead the race after the round of pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Race\nKurt Busch was forced to make an unscheduled pit stop because of a loose rear wheel. The second caution of the race came out on lap 166 due to debris in turn 1. The leaders came to pit road under this caution and Kenseth won the battle off pit road. Kenseth maintained the race lead following this caution. Kenseth led for multiple laps until he was held up by slower traffic. Johnson regained the lead from Kenseth on lap 198.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Race\nJohnson held the lead heading into the second half of the race. Keselowski had to come to pit road after fluid was coming from his car. On lap 229, the third caution was brought out from the fluid dropped by Keselowski. Johnson maintained the lead following this caution. He continued to lead following a cycle of green-flag pit stops. At this point, the lead lap cars did not have enough fuel to make it to the finish except for Bowyer. On lap 371, the fourth and final caution of the race occurred for debris in turn 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231456-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 AAA 400, Report, Race\nDuring this caution, the leaders came to pit road, with Johnson winning the battle off pit road by taking two tires ahead of Earnhardt, Jr. who took four tires. Johnson maintained the lead after the restart and continued on to win the race. This was Johnson's fifth win in 2013 and eighth career win at Dover, setting the track record for most wins by breaking a tie with Richard Petty and Bobby Allison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231457-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA Texas 500\nThe 2013 AAA Texas 500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on November 3, 2013, at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231457-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA Texas 500, Summary\nContested over 334 laps, it was the thirty-fourth, and the eighth race in the Chase for the Sprint Cup during the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his sixth win of the season, while Dale Earnhardt, Jr. finished second and Joey Logano finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231457-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA Texas 500, Summary\nKyle Busch, Jimmie Johnson and Matt Kenseth were considered the most likely to win this race according to the pundits while Brad Keselowski, Elliott Sadler and Juan Pablo Montoya were considered the extreme underdogs. Some of the racing experts predicted that Jeff Gordon, Denny Hamlin and Greg Biffle would initially make great lap times during the race but would ultimately falter in the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231457-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AAA Texas 500, Summary\nBefore the race, the championship lead would be split between Kenseth and Johnson. With three racing remaining, it looked like a tiebreaker would have been needed if the stalemate had carried over into Homestead-Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231458-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AAMI Classic \u2013 Draw\nThe 2013 AAMI Classic took place between 9\u201312 January 2013, at the Kooyong Stadium in Melbourne, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231459-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL Playoffs\nThe 2013 ABL Playoffs is the postseason of the 2013 ABL Regular Season which began on Saturday, 23 May 2013, and concluded on 12 June 2013 when the San Miguel Beermen were crowned the 2013 ABL Finals Champions after sweeping the Indonesia Warriors in the 2013 ABL Finals. The four teams with the best regular season record qualified for the playoffs; the team with the higher seed was awarded the home court advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231459-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL Playoffs\nThe semifinals were in a best-of-5 format; the team that first won thrice advanced to the next round. The venues alternated between the opposing teams; the higher seed hosting Game 1, 2 and 5 (if necessary), while the lower seed hosted Game 3 and 4 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231460-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL season\nThe 2013 ASEAN Basketball League Regular Season was the fourth season of competition of the ASEAN Basketball League (ABL) since its establishment. A total of six teams competed in the league. The regular season began on 11 January 2013 and ended on 19 May 2013. Two teams from the previous season, inaugural champions AirAsia Philippine Patriots and Bangkok Cobras did not return for the current season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231460-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL season, Preseason\nThe ABL underwent contraction after it was announced that the Bangkok Cobras and the AirAsia Philippine Patriots would not be returning for the current season. The Brunei Barracudas, who were on leave for the 2012 season, were not announced to the list of active teams for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231460-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL season, Preseason\nA new format was announced for the regular season, where the teams will play each four times, twice at home and twice away, a deviation from the earlier seasons where teams played each other thrice. Also, the league added Hoops Fest to the regular season schedule. The mid-season tournament was played over two days and the two games played by each team counted towards their regular season records. The playoff format was also changed: both the semifinals and the finals will be best-of-five series, instead of best-of-three in the previous seasons (in the inaugural season, the finals was a best-of-five series).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231460-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL season, Results, ABL Hoops Fest\nThe first ever ABL Hoops Fest, an annual mid-season showcase of the league, was added in the 2013 ABL season on 4 March 2013. All six teams will converge on a host city for the three-day contest, which will also include a slam dunk and three point shootout contest. The matchups are made via a random draw during the pre-season. Points obtained during Hoops Fest will count towards the teams\u2019 total points for the regular season. Saigon, Vietnam was chosen as the host for the first edition of the competition, which was held 15 March 2013 to 17 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231460-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL season, Playoffs\nThe 2013 ABL Playoffs started on 23 May 2013 and concluded with the San Miguel Beermen sweeping the Indonesia Warriors in the 2013 ABL Finals to claim the team's first ever ABL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231460-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL season, Playoffs, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals is a best-of-five series, with the higher seeded team hosting Game 1 and 2, and 5, if necessary. {{ThreeLegStart|legs=5", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231460-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 ABL season, Playoffs, Finals\nThe Finals is a best-of-five series, with the higher seeded team hosting Game 1 and 2, and 5, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231461-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament\nThe 2013 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament (or Rotterdam Open) was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It took place at the Rotterdam Ahoy arena in the Dutch city of Rotterdam, between 11 and 17 February 2013. It was the 41st edition of the Rotterdam Open, whose official name is the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament. The competition was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. Second-seeded Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231461-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231461-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231462-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nMicha\u00ebl Llodra and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 were the defending champions but decided not to participate together. Llodra was scheduled to play alongside Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro but withdrew from the first round while Zimonji\u0107 partnered up with Robert Lindstedt and successfully defended the title, defeating Thiemo de Bakker and Jesse Huta Galung in the final 5\u20137, 6\u20133, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231463-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Julien Benneteau. Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro won the title, defeating Benneteau in the final 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231465-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ACB Playoffs\nThe 2013 ACB Playoffs was the final phase of the 2012\u201313 ACB season. It started on May 23 and ended on June 19. FC Barcelona Regal were the defending champions, and Real Madrid took the 2013 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231466-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Championship Game\nThe 2013 ACC Championship Game was the eighth football championship game for the Atlantic Coast Conference. It featured the Florida State Seminoles, winners of the ACC's Atlantic Division, and the Duke Blue Devils, winners of the ACC's Coastal Division. Duke is the first team other than Georgia Tech or Virginia Tech to represent the Coastal in the ACC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231466-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Championship Game\nThis was the game's fourth consecutive year at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231466-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Championship Game\nA 45-7 Florida State win cemented a position for the Seminoles in the national championship game while Duke settled for the Chick-fil-A Bowl. Jameis Winston, quarterback of the Florida State Seminoles, accounted for four total touchdowns (3 passing, 1 rushing) and Devonta Freeman paced the rushing attack with 91 yards on 18 carries and a touchdown in the dominating victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231466-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Championship Game\nFlorida State defeated Auburn in the national championship game on January 6, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231466-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Championship Game, Scoring summary\n1st quarter scoring:There were no points scored in the 1st quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231467-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Emerging Teams Cup\nThe 2013 ACC Emerging Teams Cup was the first edition of the ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup was held in Singapore. Eight teams participated in the tournament, comprising four under-23 teams from Test nations and four top associate teams from Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231468-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 14\u201317 at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina. For the second consecutive year, a team from the state of Florida captured its first-ever ACC Men's Basketball Tournament title, as the Miami Hurricanes won the championship. The 2013 tournament was the final ACC Tournament with 12 teams, as Pittsburgh, Syracuse, and Notre Dame joined the ACC for the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231468-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament, Broadcasting\nGames were broadcast on both the networks of ESPN and over-the-air in ACC markets via Raycom Sports' ACC Network. Due to ESPN's new contract with the conference, the ACC Network no longer had exclusivity in broadcasting the tournament in ACC markets, allowing ESPN's feed to be carried.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231468-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nTeams are seeded based on the final regular season standings, with ties broken under an ACC policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231469-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was the 27th edition of the ACC Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the Atlantic Coast Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. Held at the Maryland SoccerPlex, the Maryland Terrapins, the defending champions, successfully defended their title against their rivals, the Virginia Cavaliers, 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231469-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament, Qualification\nFor the first time since 2001, not every ACC team earned a berth into the tournament. Instead, the top eight teams in the conference based on their conference record earned qualification into the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231470-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Twenty20 Cup\nThe 2013 ACC Twenty20 Cup was a cricket tournament held between March 26 and April 3 in Nepal. The tournament served as a qualifying tournament for the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. Afghanistan has already qualified as an ODI nation while UAE has already qualified as host for the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. Hence, the tournament will, in reality, serve as qualifier for other top two teams from Asian region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231470-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Twenty20 Cup, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five highest run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231471-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Women's Championship\nThe 2013 ACC Women's Championship was an international women's cricket tournament held in Chiang Mai Province, Thailand, from 23 to 31 January 2013. It was organised by the Asian Cricket Council (ACC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231471-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Women's Championship\nUnlike the two previous ACC women's tournaments, where matches were played using the Twenty20 format, matches at the 2013 event were played over 25 overs. Eleven teams participated in the tournament, up from ten at the previous edition. Iran and Qatar returned to the competition for the first time since the 2009 tournament, while Oman did not return. The teams were divided into uneven groups of five and six, with the top two teams in each group progressing to the final. China, undefeated in the group stages, eventually met Thailand in the final, but were defeated by 17 runs. Thailand consequently qualified for the 2013 World Twenty20 Qualifier in Ireland, which was the qualification tournament for the 2014 World Twenty20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231471-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Women's Championship, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231471-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ACC Women's Championship, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231472-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ADAC Formel Masters\nThe 2013 ADAC Formel Masters was the sixth season of the ADAC Formel Masters series, an open-wheel motor racing series for emerging young racing drivers based in Germany. The season began on 27 April at Motorsport Arena Oschersleben and finished on 29 September at Hockenheim after eight race weekends, totalling 24 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231472-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ADAC Formel Masters\nADAC Berlin-Brandenburg e.V. driver Alessio Picariello dominated the battle for the drivers' championship from start to finish taking twelve wins from the 24 races on his way to the championship title. Other race wins were shared between his teammates Maximilian G\u00fcnther and Hendrik Grapp, Schiller Motorsport drivers Jason Kremer and Fabian Schiller, Neuhauser Racing drivers Nicolas Beer and Marvin Dienst, Lotus drivers Indy Dontje and Beitske Visser, as well as Team KUG Motorsport driver Ralph Boschung, who inherited his first win after Picariello was penalised at the Automotodr\u00f3m Slovakia Ring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231473-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ADAC GT Masters\nThe 2013 ADAC GT Masters season was the seventh season of the ADAC GT Masters, the grand tourer-style sports car racing founded by the German automobile club ADAC. It began on 27 April at Motorsport Arena Oschersleben and finished on 29 September at Hockenheim after eight double-header meetings. Diego Alessi and Daniel Keilwitz claimed the championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231474-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ADAC Procar Series\nThe 2013 ADAC Procar Series season was the nineteenth season of the ADAC Procar Series, the German championship for Super 2000 touring cars. The season consisted of eight separate race weekends with two races each, spread over eight different tracks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231475-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship was a continental beach soccer tournament which took place from 22 to 26 January 2013, at a temporary stadium and adjacent pitch on Katara Beach in Doha, Qatar. The stadium will have a capacity of 3,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231475-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship\nThe two finalists and the third place play-off winner earned qualification to represent Asia at the 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in Papeete, Tahiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231475-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Participating teams\nSixteen teams have been confirmed to be taking part in the tournament, a record number, surpassing that of the eleven teams that competed in the 2011 qualifiers. The first 13 participating teams are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231475-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Participating teams\nThe organizers left three slots available and would announce who the three teams would be inside of two weeks after the draw. It was learned on 8 January 2013 that the Philippines have fielded a team to participate in the Asian qualifier. It was also learned that Afghanistan and Thailand will also participate. These newly-known entries have been indicated with a *.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231475-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nThe draw to divide the teams into the following four groups was conducted on December 20, 2012, in Doha. The subsequent fixtures were determined on 10 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231475-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nAll kickoff times are listed as Qatar local time (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231475-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Beach Soccer Championship, Playoff stage\nAfter the group stage had concluded, a draw was held at 21:30 to determine the match-ups for all 16 teams, including the group winners, based on where the teams place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League\nThe 2013 AFC Champions League was the 32nd edition of the top-level Asian club football tournament organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), and the 11th under the current AFC Champions League title. The defending champions, Ulsan Hyundai, failed to qualify for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League\nIn the final, Chinese team Guangzhou Evergrande defeated South Korean team FC Seoul on away goals to win their first title, becoming the first Chinese team to win the AFC Champions League (and the second Chinese team to be crowned Asian club champions after Liaoning FC), and qualified for the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Allocation of entries per association\nThe AFC laid out the procedure for deciding the participating associations and the allocation of slots, with inspection of the associations interested in participating in the AFC Champions League to be done in 2012, and the final decision to be made by the AFC in November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Allocation of entries per association\nThe following criteria for participation in the AFC Champions League were proposed by the AFC in July 2012:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Allocation of entries per association\nOn 29 November 2012, the AFC Executive Committee approved the slots for the 2013 edition of the AFC Champions League. However, this final allocation of slots did not fully follow the proposal above.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Teams\nIn the following table, the number of appearances and last appearance count only those since the 2002\u201303 season (including qualifying rounds), when the competition was rebranded as the AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws held at AFC headquarters in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Schedule, Format changes\nThe following changes in the format of the competition were made compared with the previous year:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Qualifying play-off\nThe draw for the qualifying play-off was held on 6 December 2012. Each tie was played as a single match, with extra time and penalty shoot-out used to decide the winner if necessary. The winners of each tie advanced to the group stage to join the 29 automatic qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 6 December 2012. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group. Each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage\nIn the knock-out stage, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament. Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. The away goals rule, extra time (away goals do not apply in extra time) and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage, Round of 16\nIn the round of 16, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group in the same zone, with the group winners hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231476-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals, semi-finals, and final (to decide the order of two legs) was held on 20 June 2013. In this draw, teams from different zones could play each other, and the \"country protection\" rule was applied: if there are exactly two teams from the same association, they may not play each other in the quarter-finals; however, if there are more than two teams from the same association, they may play each other in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final\nThe 2013 AFC Champions League Final was the final match of the 2013 AFC Champions League, the thirty-second round of the top grade Asian club football tournament. It was organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). It was the eleventh round under the title of AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final\nThe final match was contested in a two-legged home-and-away format between FC Seoul of South Korea and Guangzhou Evergrande of China. The first leg was hosted by FC Seoul at the Seoul World Cup Stadium in Seoul on 26 October 2013, while the second leg was hosted by Guangzhou Evergrande at the Tianhe Stadium in Guangzhou on 9 November 2013. The winner would represent the AFC at the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup, beginning at the quarterfinal stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Outcome\nThe first leg ended with a 2 all draw. Goals were scored by Sergio Escudero and Dejan Damjanovi\u0107 for FC Seoul, and Elkeson and Gao Lin for Guangzhou Evergrande. The second leg ended with a 1 all draw. Goals in this game were made by Elkeson for Guangzhou Evergrande, and Dejan Damjanovi\u0107 for FC Seoul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Outcome\nGuangzhou Evergrande won the match and was awarded the premiership. This was their first premiership win on the away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Venues\nAfter the 2012 AFC Champions League Final took place at the home of one of the finalists, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) announced that the following year's competition final would be contested in a two-legged home-and-away format. It was the first time since 2008 that the AFC had adopted such an arrangement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Venues\nFC Seoul's home venue, Seoul World Cup Stadium, Seoul is a 66,806 seated stadium located in the capital city. It is also the home ground of the Korea Republic national football team, and was the opening venue of the 2002 FIFA World Cup. It is the third largest soccer stadium in Asia after Azadi Stadium and Salt Lake Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Venues\nGuangzhou Evergrande's home venue, Tianhe Stadium, is a 58,500 seated stadium located in the city of Guangzhou. It hosted the 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup and the football matches of the 2010 Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Venues\nIn the history of the competition, five finals have been held in South Korea but this was the first one in Seoul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Background\nNeither FC Seoul nor Guangzhou Everard had won the AFC club premiership before. The predecessors of FC Seoul, the Anyang LG Cheetahs, finished as runners-up of the 2001\u201302 Asian Club Championship. It was also sixteenth time a Korean club had reached the final and the fourth time a Chinese club had done so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Background\nChoi Yong-Soo was manager of an experienced Korean side. A Korean side had won the AFC Champions League premiership four times in the previous five years. FC Seoul had represented Korea in the final games for five consecutive seasons. They had been defeated in the quarter-finals in 2009 and 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Background\nGuanghzhou's head coach from May 2012 was Marcello Lippi. Lippi had won the UEFA Champions League with Juventus in 1996 and the 2006 FIFA World Cup with the Italy national football team. Guangzhou won the Chinese Super League premiership in 2010 and 2011 and had reached the quarter-finals of the 2012 AFC Champions League. Guangzhou, like FC Seoul, had lost just once en route to the final, having scored 14 goals in their last four games. Choi had the full Italian squad at his disposal. The last time China had won the premiership was in 1990 with the Liaoning team. In 1998, Dalian Wanda had lost the premiership to the Pohang Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Road to final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Rules\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. This was a change from the previous year when the final had been played as a single game. The order of the legs was decided by a draw. The away goals rule, extra time (away goals do not apply in extra time) and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Team news\nFC Seoul's squad featured veterans of its previous campaigns, and a Colombian midfielder, Mauricio Molina. Molina had won the 2010 AFC Champions League premiership title as part of Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma. FC Seoul was without its defender, Cha Du-ri, for the first leg of the final due to his suspension. A veteran Brazilian, Adilson dos Santos replaced him. dos Santos was expected to play at right-back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Team news\nGuanghzhou's Brazilian striker, Muriqui, was the leading scorer in the competition. He had made 13 goals prior to the final. Dario Conca and Elkeson, both from South America had also made significant contributions. Lippi confirmed that right-back Zhang Linpeng and midfielder Zhao Xuri had recovered from injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Summary\n55,501 patrons attended the first game at the Seoul World Cup Stadium. Sergio Escudero for FC Seoul, scored in the eleventh minute of the match. However, fifteen minutes before half time, Elkeson (who had scored four goals in the previous four games) scored at the equalizer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Summary\nThe China international, Gao Lin, then added to the Brazilian's header a minute before the hour mark, and despite Montenegrin striker Damjanovic equalizing with seven minutes remaining, Guangzhou headed into the next month's second leg in pole position. Guangzhou came close to a breakthrough after eight minutes as Dario Conca's shot was palmed back out towards the penalty spot only for Huang Bowen to blaze over the crossbar. But just two minutes later FC Seoul took the lead as Guangzhou's defence failed to deal with a quickly taken free-kick and Escudero held off Feng Xiaoting before coolly beating the goalkeeper, Zeng Cheng, with a low shot from just inside the penalty area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Summary\nAt twenty minutes, Gao made a goal for Guangzhou: his angled strike from inside the area was kicked away by FC Seoul goal keeper, Kim Yong-Dae, before Elkeson fired over from Zhang Linpeng's cross. Guangzhou were back on level terms 16 minutes before half-time as Huang's left wing corner was met by the unmarked Elkeson and the Brazilian's downward header from the edge of the six yard area gave Kim little chance despite a despairing dive from the FC Seoul goalkeeper. Guangzhou finished the first half strongly and almost completed the comeback in stoppage time as Kim had to be on his toes to push a rising strike from Conca away at his near post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Summary\nFC Seoul striker Damjanovic made a strike at goal seven minutes into the second half. One minute before the hour mark, Guangzhou took the lead as FC Seoul's defence failed to fully clear the danger inside their penalty area and Sun Xiang's low drilled cross was diverted into the back of the net at the near post when Gao Lin poked it in. Damjanovic again went close to making another goal for FC Seoul after 66 minutes only to be denied by a last-ditch block by Sun Xiang before Koh Myong-Jin fired into the side netting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Summary\nGuangzhou should have added a third point with seven minutes remaining as Elkeson fired a tame effort straight at Kim from a promising position. FC Seoul took full advantage less than a minute later as substitute Yun Il-Lok found Escudero in space on the left and Yun's cut back found Damjanovic, who calmly swept the ball past Zeng from inside the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Summary\nThe last play of the match fell to FC Seoul as a counter-attack quickly established itself between FC Seoul's striking partnership of Damjanovic and Escudero. However, Damjanovic's shot was blocked by Zeng Cheng before the whistle blew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Details\nAFC Man of the Match: Dejan Damjanovi\u0107 (FC Seoul)Fans' Man of the Match: Sergio Escudero (FC Seoul)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Reactions\nAfter the first game, the FC Seoul head coach, Choi Yong-Soo was confident his team could secure the win needed in the second leg to claim the AFC Champions League premiership. He said, \"It was a tough match, as you expect to see in the AFC Champions League final. We always prepare to win but we drew in our home game. But we have an opportunity to win the game in the second leg; we're never going to give up and we can do it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, First leg, Reactions\nMarcello Lippi rued a string of missed opportunities. He said, \"The match was well fought throughout. The game was quite balanced between both teams. It\u2019s been a period when we\u2019ve had a couple of players out injured and this was their first match for 20 days. But FC Seoul are a good team and they attack well and Damjanovic defends the ball well with his body.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Team news\nAt the time of the second game, the Guangzhou Evergrande squad was fit. Lippi left Muriqui and right-back Zhang Linpeng out of his side for the Chinese Super League crown 5-0 win over Wuhan Zall. Lippi said, \"We are all ready. All of our injured players are ready for tomorrow\u2019s match.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Team news\nFor Soul FC, right-back Cha Du-ri returned after missing the first game due to suspension. The left-back Kim Chi-Woo was injured. The former Germany-based defender, Cha, was recalled to the side for the win over Suwon at the expense of Choi Hyo-Jin. The veteran Brazilian defender, Adilson retained his place ahead of Kim. The midfielder, Yun Il-Lok started ahead of Go Yo-Han in the win over Suwon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Summary\nGuangzhou Evergrande became the first Chinese club to win the AFC Champions League premiership since the creation of the League format in 2002. Guangzhou secured the premiership on the away goals ruling after a 1-1 draw at Tianhe Stadium securing an aggregate 3-3 over the two legs of the final against FC Seoul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Summary\nGuangzhou Evergrande started with one change as Zhao Xuri replaced Gao Lin thus moving Conca as a false nine. This move shocked many experts due to Gao's influential role in the season. FC Seoul, swapped Cha Du-Ri in for Choi Hyo-Jin due to Cha getting a yellow card in both matches against Esteghlal during the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Summary\nBrazilian striker Elkeson gave Guangzhou the lead in the 58th minute with his sixth goal in six AFC Champions League games. Dejan Damjanovic levelled the score four minutes later. FC Seoul could not find their way through the home defence to claim the goal needed to keep the premiership. Guangzhou were deserved winners, having dominated throughout. FC Seoul was unable to register a first half chance of note as the home team controlled the tempo during the majority of the opening period. Zhao Xuri headed Sun Xiang\u2019s cross from the left over the bar in the 11th minute after an impressive build-up by the home side. Five minutes later, Dario Conca's shot on the turn clipped the base of the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Summary\nGuangzhou dominated possession, forcing the FC Seoul to sit deep. Guangzhou created an increasing number of chances for their side and spurned those of FC Seoul. Conca\u2019s shot from long range was just wide. Kim Yong-Dae dropped to his right to push Elkeson\u2019s effort away for a corner. Elkeson\u2019s attempt at a scissor kick also failed to hit the target in the 27th minute. Zhang Linpeng, who delivered the cross for the Brazilian\u2019s effort, was booked six minutes later for an over-exuberant challenge. Zhang was joined in the book on the stroke of halftime by FC Seoul captain Ha Dae-Sung, who was sanctioned for persistent fouling. Elkeson had earlier spurned an opening when he headed straight at Kim following Sun\u2019s deflected cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Summary\nFive minutes into the second half, Muriqui forced Kim into a reflect save with his feet after being put through on goal by Huang Bowen. Huang\u2019s shot from range, less than a minute later, was straight at the FC Seoul keeper. Seven minutes later, Guangzhou secured their advantage. Muriqui slipped the ball through the middle of the FC Seoul defence. Elkeson\u2019s deft first touch put him in position to stroke the ball beyond Kim and into the bottom corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Summary\nGuangzhou's lead lasted four minutes. Sergio Escudero held off the Guangzhou defence releasing Damjanovic who, having barely seen sight of the goal all the game, finished with conviction to Zeng Cheng\u2019s right to put the game in the balance once more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Summary\nBoth sides pushed for a second in the final half-hour of the game but, despite increasingly frantic action, neither goalkeeper was troubled, and Guangzhou held on. The crowd of over 42,000 fans became deliriously happy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Details\nAFC Man of the Match: Dar\u00edo Conca (Guangzhou Evergrande)Fans' Man of the Match: Zheng Zhi (Guangzhou Evergrande)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Details\nAssistant referees:Yasser Tulefat (Bahrain)Ebrahim Sabt Saleh (Bahrain)Fourth official:Ali Abdulnabi (Bahrain)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Match details, Second leg, Reactions\nMarcello Lippi hailed his team's win and defended the nature of its win on away goals, claiming that the success was deserved based on the team's performance throughout the competition, FC Seoul's head coach, Choi Yong-Soo was magnanimous in defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231477-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League Final, Television coverage\nThe first leg of the final at Seoul World Cup Stadium averaged 17.42 million viewers in China, the second highest figure for that year for a sporting event. CCTV-5 contributed 14.83 million viewers to the average live audience. In China, the game had 62.62 million viewers across six channels. The average viewer figure was forty-three percent higher than the previous best which was recorded for Guangzhou's semi-final second leg win over Japan's Kashiwa Reysol. The second leg attracted an average audience of 23.68 million viewers on CCTV-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231478-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League group stage\nThe group stage of the 2013 AFC Champions League was played from 26 February to 1 May 2013. A total of 32 teams competed in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231478-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 6 December 2012, 16:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231478-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe following 32 teams (16 from West Zone, 16 from East Zone) were entered into the group stage draw, which included the 29 automatic qualifiers and the three qualifying play-off winners, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231478-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231478-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231478-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 26\u201327 February, 12\u201313 March, 2\u20133 April, 9\u201310 April, 23\u201324 April, and 30 April\u20131 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage\nThe knock-out stage of the 2013 AFC Champions League was played from 14 May to 9 November 2013. A total of 16 teams competed in the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the eight groups in the group stage qualified for the knock-out stage. Both West Zone and East Zone had eight teams qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Format\nIn the knock-out stage, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament. Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. The away goals rule, extra time (away goals do not apply in extra time) and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Bracket\nIn the round of 16, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group in the same zone, with the group winners hosting the second leg. The matchups were determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Bracket\nThe draw for the quarter-finals, semi-finals, and final (to decide the order of two legs) was held on 20 June 2013, 16:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. In this draw, teams from different zones could play each other, and the \"country protection\" rule was applied: if there are exactly two teams from the same association, they may not play each other in the quarter-finals; however, if there are more than two teams from the same association, they may play each other in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 14 and 15 May 2013, and the second legs were played on 21 and 22 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 21 August 2013, and the second legs were played on 18 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 25 September 2013, and the second legs were played on 2 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231479-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League knockout stage, Final\nThe first leg was played on 26 October 2013, and the second leg was played on 9 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231480-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League qualifying play-off\nThe qualifying play-off of the 2013 AFC Champions League was played on 9 and 13 February 2013, to decide three of the 32 places in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231480-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League qualifying play-off, Draw\nThe draw for the qualifying play-off was held on 6 December 2012, 16:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 51], "content_span": [52, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231480-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League qualifying play-off, Draw\nThe following six teams (four from West Zone, two from East Zone) were entered into the qualifying play-off draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231480-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Champions League qualifying play-off, Format\nEach tie was played as a single match, with extra time and penalty shoot-out used to decide the winner if necessary. The winners of each tie advanced to the group stage to join the 29 automatic qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup\nThe 2013 AFC Cup was the tenth edition of the AFC Cup, a football competition organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for clubs from \"developing countries\" in Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup\nIn an all-Kuwait final, defending champions Al-Kuwait defeated Al-Qadsia 2\u20130 to win their third AFC Cup title in five years, and became the first team to win the AFC Cup three times. Both finalists also qualified for the 2014 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Allocation of entries per association\nThe AFC laid out the procedure for deciding the participating associations and the allocation of slots, with the final decision to be made by the AFC in November 2012. The following changes to the list of participating associations may be made from the 2012 AFC Cup if the AFC approved the following applications made by any association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 51], "content_span": [52, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Allocation of entries per association\nThe following changes in the participating associations were made compared to the previous year:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Teams\nAl-Muharraq (Bahrain) withdrew after the draw was held. As a result, Regar-TadAZ (Tajikistan), which were initially to enter the qualifying play-off, instead directly entered the group stage, and only two teams participated in the qualifying play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 19], "content_span": [20, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws held at AFC headquarters in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 22], "content_span": [23, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Schedule\nFor 2013, the round of 16 continued to be played as a single match instead of over two legs on a home-and-away basis as originally planned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 22], "content_span": [23, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Qualifying play-off\nThe draw for the qualifying play-off was held on 6 December 2012. Each tie was played as a single match, with extra time and penalty shoot-out used to decide the winner if necessary. The winner advanced to the group stage to join the 31 automatic qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Qualifying play-off\nDue to the withdrawal of Al-Muharraq after the draw was held, Regar-TadAZ, which were initially drawn to play the winner between Al-Wahda and Al-Ahli Taizz for a place in the group stage, were directly entered into Group A, while the winner between Al-Wahda and Al-Ahli Taizz would be entered into Group B to replace Al-Muharraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 33], "content_span": [34, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 6 December 2012. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group. Each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Knock-out stage\nIn the knock-out stage, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament. In the quarter-finals and semi-finals, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, while in the round of 16 and final, each tie was played as a single match. The away goals rule (for two-legged ties), extra time (away goals do not apply in extra time) and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 29], "content_span": [30, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Knock-out stage, Round of 16\nIn the round of 16, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group in the same zone, with the group winners hosting the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 42], "content_span": [43, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231481-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup, Knock-out stage, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals, semi-finals, and final (to decide the host team) was held on 20 June 2013. In this draw, teams from different zones could play each other, and the \"country protection\" rule was applied: if there are two teams from the same association, they may not play each other in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final\nThe 2013 AFC Cup Final was the final of the 2013 AFC Cup, the 10th edition of the AFC Cup, a football competition organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for clubs from \"developing countries\" in Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final\nThe final was contested as a single match between two Kuwaiti teams, Al-Qadsia and Al-Kuwait. The match was hosted by Al-Qadsia at the Al-Sadaqua Walsalam Stadium in Kuwait City on 2 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final\nDefending champions Al-Kuwait defeated Al-Qadsia 2\u20130 to claim their third AFC Cup title in five years, and became the first team to win the AFC Cup three times. Both finalists also qualified for the 2014 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final, Venue\nThe Al-Sadaqua Walsalam Stadium, also known as the Peace and Friendship Stadium, is located at Kuwait City and holds 21,500 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final, Venue\nThis was the third AFC Cup final held in Kuwait. The 2009 AFC Cup Final was hosted by Al-Kuwait at the Al Kuwait Sports Club Stadium, while the 2010 AFC Cup Final was hosted by Al-Qadsia at the Jaber Al-Ahmad International Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final, Background\nAl-Kuwait were the defending champions, and had played in three previous finals, winning twice in 2009 and 2012 and losing in 2011, while Al-Qadsia had lost their only previous final in 2010. In fact, since 2009 when Kuwaiti clubs first entered the AFC Cup, this was the fifth straight single-match finals that featured either Al-Kuwait or Al-Qadsia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final, Background\nThe two teams also met in the round of 16 of the 2011 AFC Cup and 2012 AFC Cup, with Al-Kuwait eliminating Al-Qadsia both times on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final, Road to final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final, Rules\nThe final was played as a single match, with the host team decided by draw. If tied after regulation, extra time and, if necessary, penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231482-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup Final, Match\nAssistant referees:Tang Yew Mun (Singapore)Jeffrey Goh (Singapore)Fourth official:Muhammad Taqi Al-Jaafari Jahari (Singapore)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231483-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup group stage\nThe group stage of the 2013 AFC Cup was played from 26 February to 1 May 2013. A total of 32 teams competed in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231483-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 6 December 2012, 15:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four. Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231483-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup group stage, Draw\nThe following 32 teams (16 from West Asia Zone, 16 from East Asia Zone) were entered into the group stage draw, which included the 31 automatic qualifiers and the qualifying play-off winner, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231483-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup group stage, Draw\nAl-Muharraq (Bahrain) withdrew after the draw was held. As a result, Regar-TadAZ (Tajikistan), which were initially to enter the qualifying play-off, instead directly entered the group stage, and only two teams participated in the qualifying play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231483-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231483-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231483-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 5\u20136 March, 12\u201313 March, 2\u20133 April, 9\u201310 April, 23\u201324 April, and 30 April\u20131 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage\nThe knock-out stage of the 2013 AFC Cup was played from 14 May to 2 November 2013. A total of 16 teams competed in the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the eight groups in the group stage qualified for the knock-out stage. Both West Asia Zone and East Asia Zone had eight teams qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage, Format\nIn the knock-out stage, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament. In the quarter-finals and semi-finals, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, while in the round of 16 and final, each tie was played as a single match. The away goals rule (for two-legged ties), extra time (away goals do not apply in extra time) and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage, Bracket\nIn the round of 16, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group in the same zone, with the group winners hosting the match. The matchups were determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage, Bracket\nThe draw for the quarter-finals, semi-finals, and final (to decide the host team) was held on 20 June 2013, 15:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. In this draw, teams from different zones could play each other, and the \"country protection\" rule was applied: if there are two teams from the same association, they may not play each other in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage, Round of 16\nThe matches were played on 14 and 15 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 17 September 2013, and the second legs were played on 24 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231484-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 1 and 2 October 2013, and the second legs were played on 22 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231485-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup qualifying play-off\nThe qualifying play-off of the 2013 AFC Cup was played on 9 February 2013, to decide one of the 32 places in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231485-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup qualifying play-off, Draw\nThe draw for the qualifying play-off was held on 6 December 2012, 15:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231485-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup qualifying play-off, Draw\nThe following three teams (all from West Asia Zone) were entered into the qualifying play-off draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231485-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup qualifying play-off, Draw\nDue to the withdrawal of Al-Muharraq after the draw was held, Regar-TadAZ, which were initially drawn to play the winner between Al-Wahda and Al-Ahli Taizz for a place in the group stage, were directly entered into Group A, while the winner between Al-Wahda and Al-Ahli Taizz would be entered into Group B to replace Al-Muharraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231485-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Cup qualifying play-off, Format\nEach tie was played as a single match, with extra time and penalty shoot-out used to decide the winner if necessary. The winner advanced to the group stage to join the 31 automatic qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231486-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship\nThe 2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship was the 4th AFC Futsal Club Championship. It was held in Nagoya, Japan between 27 Aug and 1 Sep, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231486-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Draw\nThe draw for the finals of the AFC Futsal Club Championship Japan 2013 will be held on Friday, June 14 and will take place at the Petaling Jaya Hilton Hotel in Malaysia. Eight teams are in the fray including host club Nagoya Oceans and defending champions Giti Pasand Isfahan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231486-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Draw\nThe 8 teams were drawn in two groups, each group with four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231486-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship, Qualification\nThe national league champions of the three best placed teams in the 2012 Championship received a bye to the final as well as the host nation's champion. The remaining four spots were decided in two Asian qualifying tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231487-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship qualification\nThe 2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship qualification were held to determine 5 spots to the final tournament. The teams finishing first, second and third in the 2012 AFC Futsal Club Championship, receive automatic byes to the final round. It will between 11 and 24 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231487-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship qualification, Format\nSixteen teams registered in qualifying action for 5 places in the finals. Reigning champions Iran, runners-up Uzbekistan, Japan have direct entry into the tournament proper. The remaining Thirteen team will play in the qualification rounds. The result of the draw for the groups was announced on 13 February 2013. Zone 1 teams will play a round-robin groupstage, with the top two teams qualifying to the semi-finals. The winner of both semi-finals will the prograss to the final tournament as well. Zone 2 will play a round-robin groupstage, with the top two teams qualifying to the semi-finals. A total of three teams from Zone 2 qualifiers will qualify for the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231487-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship qualification, Zones, West, South and Central Asian (Zone 1)\nThe matches will be played in Panasonic Sports Complex, Shah Alam, Malaysia from April 19 to 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 94], "content_span": [95, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231487-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC Futsal Club Championship qualification, Zones, ASEAN/East (Zone 2)\nThe matches will be played in Panasonic Sports Complex, Shah Alam, Malaysia from April 11 to 16, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 75], "content_span": [76, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup\nThe 2013 AFC President's Cup was the ninth edition of the AFC President's Cup, a football competition organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for clubs from \"emerging countries\" in Asia. Istiqlol were the defending champions, but did not enter the tournament as teams from Tajikistan no longer entered the AFC President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup\nIn the final, Balkan of Turkmenistan defeated KRL of Pakistan 1\u20130, and became the first team from Turkmenistan to win the AFC President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup, Teams\nThe AFC laid out the procedure for deciding the participating associations, with the final decision to be made by the AFC in November 2012. The following changes to the list of participating associations may be made from the 2012 AFC President's Cup if the AFC approved the following applications made by any association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup, Teams\nThe following changes in the participating associations were made compared to the previous year:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup, Teams\nEach participating association was given one entry. The following teams entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 19 March 2013, 15:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The twelve teams were drawn into three groups of four. Each group was played on a single round-robin basis at a centralized venue, with Cambodia, Nepal, and the Philippines selected by the AFC to host the groups. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup, Final stage\nThe final stage was played at a centralized venue. The matches were played at Malacca, Malaysia, from 23 to 29 September 2013 (all times UTC+8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231488-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC President's Cup, Final stage\nThe draw for the final stage was held on 31 July 2013, 15:00 UTC+8, at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The six teams were drawn into two groups of three. Each group was played on a single round-robin basis, with the same ranking rules as the group stage. The winners of each group advanced to the final. The final was played as a single match, with extra time and penalty shoot-out used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231489-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship\nThe 2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship was the 5th edition of the tournament. The tournament was held from 26 September to 6 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231489-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship\nThe tournament was played in Nanjing, China, just as the 2011 edition. The top three teams qualify for the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231489-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Qualification\nFour teams were directly qualified by their 2011 performance, the others had to enter qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231489-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Format\nThe twelve teams are drawn into four groups of three teams. After playing each other once the group winner advances to the semi-finals. The draw was held on 26 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231489-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship, Format\nIf two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231490-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification\nThe 2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification is the qualification stage of 2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship. The first matches were played on 6 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231490-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Format\nThere is only one qualification round. Teams are divided into four regional groups. After playing each other once the group winners and second placed teams qualify for final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231490-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-16 Women's Championship qualification, Format\nIf two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231491-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship\nThe AFC U-19 Women's Championship 2013 is the seventh edition of the AFC U-19 Women's Championship. It was played from 11 to 20 October 2013. The top three teams (South Korea, North Korea, and China PR) qualified for the 2014 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231491-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Seedings\n3 groups of 4 teams, hosted by Malaysia, Jordan, and Philippines", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231491-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Seedings\n2 groups of 4 teams, and a play-off between each group winner hosted by Vietnam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231491-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Qualification\nFirst qualification round took place from 17 to 24 October 2012. The second round was played from 2 to 9 December 2012. Myanmar won the only qualification spot to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231491-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Format\nThe teams play each other once. There is no knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231491-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship, Format\nIf two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification\nThe 2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification was a women's under-19 football competition which decided final participating team of the 2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification\nOnly one team qualified to play in the final tournament, including South Korea, North Korea, China PR, Australia, and Japan, who qualified directly as the top 5 finishers of the 2011 AFC U-19 Women's Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification\nThe top three teams of the final tournament qualified for the 2014 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Competition format\n3 groups of 4 teams, hosted by Malaysia, Jordan, and Philippines", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Competition format\n2 groups of 4 teams, and a play-off between each group winner hosted by Vietnam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Competition format\nThe draw for the first and the second qualification round is conducted in March 2012 at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Competition format\nIf two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, First round\nTop two teams of each group will advance to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Second round\nTop two teams of each group in first qualification round would join Thailand and Vietnam in the second round. Group winners in the groups would play a play-off match where the winner will qualify for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231492-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualification, Second round\nAll matches were held in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam (UTC+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231493-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship squads\nThe 2013 AFC U-19 Women's Championship took place in 11\u201320 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship\nThe 2013 AFC U-22 Championship (also known as the 2013 AFC U-22 Asian Cup) was the first edition of the AFC U-22 Championship. The hosting rights for the tournament was awarded to Oman. It was set to take place between 23 June and 7 July 2013 but was postponed to be held between 11 and 26 January 2014 due to the 2013 EAFF East Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship, Host selection\nThe AFC Competitions Committee awarded the hosting rights of the 2013 finals to Oman on 18 July 2012. Oman and Thailand were the only nations that came forward wanting to host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship, Qualification\nThe draw for the group stage of qualifying took place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on 14 February 2012. 41 national teams are taking part in qualifying. All group matches were set to be held from 23 June to 3 July 2012 but were later changed to June 2\u201310, 2012 due to Nepal's request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship, Squads\nOnly players born on or after 1 January 1991 were eligible to compete in the 2013 AFC U-22 Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship, Group stage\nThe draw for the tournament was conducted on 24 August 2013 in Muscat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship, Group stage\nIf two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out are used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231494-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship, Goalscorers, 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231495-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship Final\nThe 2013 AFC U-22 Championship Final was a football match that took place on 26 January 2014 at the Seeb Stadium in Seeb, Oman, to determine the winners of the 2013 AFC U-22 Championship. The match was contested by Iraq and Saudi Arabia, the winners of the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231495-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship Final\nIraq beat Saudi Arabia and took the first AFC U23 Championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231496-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification\nThe 2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification was the qualification tournament for the inaugural edition of the AFC U-22 Asian Cup. The qualifiers took place from 23 June to 3 July 2012, but were later changed to 2\u201310 June for Group D, due to Nepal's request. The matches were later rescheduled to start from 16 June and 3 July for Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231496-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification, Player eligibility\nPlayers born before 1 January 1991 are not eligible to compete in the 2013 AFC U-22 Asian Cup qualification tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231496-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification, Format\nForty-one member associations entered the qualification to grab 15 spots in the final tournament The qualifiers were to be held in seven centralized venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231496-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification, Format\nThe teams were divided into six groups of six teams each and one group of five. They played in a single round-robin format and the top two teams qualifying for the tournament proper along with the best third-placed team from all the groups. The hosts of the Finals got a direct berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231496-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification, Format\nWith the AFC Competitions Committee awarding the hosting rights of the 2013 Finals to Oman on 18 July 2012 and with Oman being the best third placed side, this enabled the 2nd best third placed team, Yemen, to enter the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231496-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification, Tiebreakers\nIf two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231496-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship qualification, Teams\nThe countries which are qualified for the final tournament are emboldened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231497-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship squads\nThe 2013 AFC U-22 Championship was an age restricted association football tournament that took place during January 2014 in Oman. It was the first U-22 age group competition organised by the Asian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231497-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFC U-22 Championship squads\nEach nation was required to name 23 players in their national team squad. The full squad listings are below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231498-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF Futsal Championship\nThe 2013 AFF Futsal Championship is the tenth edition of the tournament which was held in Bangkok, Thailand from 19 to 27 October 2013. Ten from twelve member nations of the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) have entered all matches were played at the Chanchai Acadium in Bangkok Thonburi University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231499-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF U-16 Youth Championship\nThe 2013 AFF U-16 Youth Championship is the 9th edition of the AFF U-16 Youth Championship, organised by the ASEAN Football Federation for the men's under-16 national teams of Southeast Asia. It will be hosted by Myanmar. It will be played between 20 August to 2 September 2013. A total of 10 teams will play in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231499-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF U-16 Youth Championship\nMalaysia beat Indonesia 3\u20132 through penalty shoot-out in the final for their first title in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231499-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF U-16 Youth Championship, Participant teams\nAll eleven member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation were set to take part in the tournament but Thailand and Timor-Leste withdrew. Australia was invited by the AFF, they were omitted and the AFF reverted to two groups featuring five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231499-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF U-16 Youth Championship, Group stage\nThe official draw was made on the twenty-seventh of February 2013. Thailand and Timor-Leste withdrew. Australia was invited by the AFF. The group stage consisted of 2 groups of 5 teams with the top 2 of each group qualifying for the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231500-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF U-19 Youth Championship\nThe 2013 AFF U-19 Youth Championship were held from 9 September to 22 September 2013, hosted by Indonesia. 11 members of the ASEAN Football Federation were divided into two groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231500-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF U-19 Youth Championship\nAustralia, originally drawn in Group A, withdrew on 8 September 2013, citing lack of preparations. Indonesia won the tournament after defeating unbeaten team, Vietnam, through a penalty shoot-out. This was also their first final edition since the tournament held in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231501-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF Women's Championship\nThe 2013 AFF Women's Championship, known as the 2013 AFF AYA Bank Women's Championship for sponsorship reasons, was the 7th edition of the tournament, the women's football championship of Southeast Asia. It was held from 9 September to 22 September 2013 in Yangon, Myanmar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231501-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF Women's Championship\nThough not an AFF member nation, a Japanese selection side was invited to the tournament. They won the final over Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231502-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF Women's Championship squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2013 AFF Women's Championship, hosted by Myanmar, which is took place between 9 and 22 September 2013. 10 teams took part in the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231502-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFF Women's Championship squads, Group B, Indonesia\nCaps and goals counted for the 2013 AFF Women's Championship only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231503-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Europe Championship\nThe 2013 AFL Europe Championship was a 16-a-side Australian rules football competition held in Dublin, Ireland between European countries. This was the second AFL Europe Championship, run by AFL Europe. Matches were played at DCU Sportsground in northern Dublin. Contested between six national teams, the Championships were won by Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final\nThe 2013 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between Hawthorn Football Club and Fremantle Football Club at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 28 September 2013. It was the 117th annual grand final of the Australian Football League (formerly the Victorian Football League), staged to determine the premiers for the 2013 AFL season. The match, attended by 100,007 spectators, was won by Hawthorn by a margin of 15 points, marking the club's eleventh VFL/AFL premiership victory. Hawthorn's Brian Lake was awarded the Norm Smith Medal as the best player on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Background\nHawthorn entered the 2013 season having lost the 2012 Grand Final to Sydney, and for most of the season was seen as the favourites for the premiership. After losing to Geelong in Round 1, Hawthorn compiled a 12-match winning streak, until this streak was ended with another loss to Geelong in Round 15. The club's only other loss came against Richmond in Round 19, and it finished with a record of 19\u20133 to win the minor premiership for the second consecutive year. They defeated Sydney in the qualifying final by 54 points and earned a week off. They ended an 11-match losing streak against Geelong since the 2008 AFL Grand Final to win by five points in the preliminary final. The match was Hawthorn's third grand final appearance in six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Background\nFremantle entered the 2013 season having come off a semi-final loss to Adelaide in the previous year's finals series. After winning their first two matches of the season by 28 points, the Dockers lost back-to-back matches against Essendon and Hawthorn to be 2\u20132 after Round 4 \u2013 this was the only time they lost consecutive matches during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Background\nFremantle recorded its largest ever victory when they defeated Greater Western Sydney in Round 20, then, with a finals berth guaranteed, Ross Lyon rested half of his regular side ahead of its final regular season match against St Kilda; the result was a 71-point defeat, which marked the worst defeat in Lyon's coaching career. The team finished third at the end of the home-and-away season, and compiled a club-best record of 16\u20135\u20131. They unexpectedly defeated Geelong in Geelong by 15 points in the first week of the finals, which earnt them a week off and a home preliminary final. Fremantle defeated the reigning premiers, Sydney, by 25 points in the preliminary final. The match was Fremantle's first grand final in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Background\nThe two teams met once during the regular season, in Round 4 at Aurora Stadium; Hawthorn won by 42 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Media Coverage\nThe match was televised by the Seven Network. The primary match commentary was provided by Bruce McAvaney and Dennis Cometti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Pre-match entertainment\nTwo Australian bands, Birds of Tokyo and Hunters & Collectors performed before the game and at half time, respectively. The Australian national anthem was sung by Tina Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, First quarter\nFremantle won the coin toss and chose to kick towards the City End of the MCG in the first quarter. However, it was Hawthorn who got off to a good start, with Jack Gunston kicking the first goal before Lance Franklin kicked the Hawks' second after Luke McPharlin gave away a 50-metre penalty for stepping over the mark. Hawthorn then had a few chances to extend their margin, however a rushed behind and missed opportunities by Shaun Burgoyne and Isaac Smith, had little influence on the scoreboard. Meanwhile, Fremantle were held goalless in the opening quarter with Hayden Ballantyne and Nick Suban missing relatively easy shots on goal whilst Nathan Fyfe missed two shots completely with both going out on the full. At quarter time, the Hawks had a 12-point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Second quarter\nHawthorn started off the quarter strongly, taking a stranglehold of the game against the Dockers. Jack Gunston kicked his second goal on the run from just inside 50 before Cyril Rioli through his manic forward pressure, got himself on the board after catching Lee Spurr for holding the ball, taking the Hawks to a massive 24-point lead. Finally at the 12-minute mark, Tendai Mzungu kicked the Dockers' first goal, before Ryan Crowley kicked yet another behind for Fremantle. This was quickly followed by Jack Gunston slotting his third goal after outpositioning Fremantle's Zac Dawson. The two teams then exchanged behinds with Rioli and Brad Sewell for Hawthorn and Matthew Pavlich and Nat Fyfe for Fremantle all registering minor scores as Hawthorn enjoyed a 23-point lead at half time. Fremantle's first half score of 1.6 (12) was the lowest in a grand final since 1960.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 925]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Third quarter\nAfter failing to capitalise on their chances in the first half, Fremantle began a comeback in the third quarter. Within a minute, Fremantle captain Matthew Pavlich kicked his first goal, however this was later cancelled out by a goal to Jarryd Roughead. This was followed by 3 goals in succession to Femantle with goals to Pavlich, Michael Walters, a massive 55-metre set shot bomb from Chris Mayne and a behind from David Mundy to take the Dockers within 3 points of the Hawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Third quarter\nThe Hawks tried to respond with a flurry of their own, however missed opportunities to Roughead and Cyril Rioli only made little difference to the margin. Roughead later managed to kick his second goal after he was pushed in the back, but Fremantle replied as behinds to Stephen Hill and Michael Barlow and Walters kicking his second goal once again allowed them to close within 3 points. Moments later, Hawthorn replied again as Jack Gunston kicked his fourth goal. Gunston then has another opportunity through a set shot but misses it to the right as the Hawks entered the three-quarter-time break ten points ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Final quarter\nAs much as the majority of the 3rd quarter was dominated by Fremantle, the first half of the fourth quarter was dominated by the Hawks as they booted 3 unanswered goals to take themselves to a match winning 31-point lead. Jarryd Roughead missed a shot with his snap going wide before Isaac Smith slotted a massive goal from a set shot 55 metres out in similar fashion to Chris Mayne's goal in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Final quarter\nAdditional goals to Luke Breust and Bradley Hill and behinds from Roughead and Lance Franklin put the result beyond doubt, stretching their lead to 31 points. During Hawthorn's period of dominance, Brian Lake, a recently recruited defender from the Western Bulldogs, was instrumental in shutting down Fremantle's attacks, taking two critical contested marks from opposing kicks to help his team to victory. Fremantle tried to make a final comeback with two late goals to Danyle Pearce and Matthew Pavlich to give the Dockers some hope.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Final quarter\nHowever, the Dockers' inability on the day to convert their opportunities was summed up as Hayden Ballantyne and Pavlich missed two crucial shots on goal, whereas another opportunity was rushed through for a behind. Fremantle then had one last opportunity to get themselves back into the game. With 90 seconds remaining, Ryan Crowley had a running shot on goal in an open paddock which would\u2019ve bought the Dockers to within 2 kicks of the Hawks, however, he was run down and tackled by Ben Stratton, with the ensuing kick missing to the right. Hawthorn were then able to hold on to win the grand final by 15 points, avenging their grand final loss the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Overall report\nHawthorn led the match from start to finish, but were outplayed for significant periods. It is the only grand final which Champion Data have assessed as having been won by the poorer side on the day, as Fremantle were left to rue their opportunities they were unable to convert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Overall report\n2013 remains the only time the Fremantle Dockers have appeared in an AFL Grand Final since joining the league in 1995 (and hence the closest they have come to an AFL Premiership). Two years later in 2015, Fremantle won the minor premiership for finishing on top of the AFL ladder at the end of the home & away season, but they failed to convert that achievement into another grand final appearance, losing to Hawthorn in the Preliminary Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Norm Smith Medal\nBrian Lake took ten marks of which seven were intercept marks to repel the Dockers attack. He took two crucial marks in the final quarter which sealed his Norm Smith Medal win. Lake finished with 12 votes, just edging out teammate Jack Gunston with 11 votes who was also crucial on the day with his straight kicking, booting 4 goals. David Mundy polled 4 votes, while Luke Hodge and Nat Fyfe polled 2 and 1 votes respectively. Lake subsequently accepted a four match suspension for deliberately elbowing opponent Michael Walters in the jaw during the third quarter, making him the first Norm Smith Medalist to have committed a reportable offence during a grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Norm Smith Medal\nChaired by Brendan McCartney, the voters and their choices were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Teams\nThe umpiring panel for the grand final comprised nine match day umpires and three emergencies. Among the umpires were four grand final debutants: field umpire Mathew Nicholls, boundary umpires Michael Marantelli and Michael Saunders, and goal umpire Adam Wojcik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Teams\nNumbers in brackets represent the number of grand finals umpired; this number includes 2013 and does not include times selected as an emergency umpire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231504-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Grand Final, Tribunal\nThe following Monday, the Match Review Panel adjudicated on two offences incurred by Hawthorn's Brian Lake and Cyril Rioli, both of which carried the double points loading of due to being incurred during a grand final. The third offence of misconduct against Fremantle's Nick Suban was referred directly to the Tribunal for assessment, which determined the incident was improper but not grievous. Suban pleaded guilty to the incident and apologized for what he felt to be an accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231505-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Mark of the Year\nThe Australian Football League celebrates the best mark of the season through the annual Mark of the Year competition. In 2013, this is officially known as the Lifebroker AFL Mark of the Year. Each round three marks are nominated and fans are able to vote online for their favourite here .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231506-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Rising Star\nThe NAB AFL Rising Star award is given annually to a stand out young player in the Australian Football League. The winner for 2013 was Jaeger O'Meara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231506-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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 nomination, a player must be under 21 on 1 January of that year and have played 10 or fewer senior games before the start of the season; a player who is suspended may be nominated, but is not eligible to win the award. At the end of the year, one of the 23 nominees is the winner of award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231507-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Under 18 Championships\nThe 2013 NAB AFL Under 18 Championships was the 18th 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 five rounds, in seven states and territories, across two divisions. In the first two rounds of the competition, the second-division teams crossed over and played the division one sides, while the final three rounds of matches were played between the teams in each the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231507-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 AFL Under 18 Championships\nSouth Australia and Tasmania were the Division 1 and Division 2 champions, respectively. The Larke Medal (for the best player in Division 1) was awarded to Western Australia's Dom Sheed, and the Hunter Harrison Medal (for the best player in Division 2) was shared between three players\u2014Queensland's Liam Dawson and Tasmania's Kade Kolodjashnij and Toby Nankervis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231507-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL Under 18 Championships, All-Australian team\nThe 2013 Under 18 All-Australian team was named on 9 July 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231508-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL draft\nThe 2013 AFL draft consisted of six opportunities for player acquisitions throughout the 2013\u201314 Australian Football League (AFL) off-season. This included the 2013 free agency period (4\u201318 October), 2013 trade period (7\u201325 October), three separate delisted player free agency periods (1\u201325 November), the 2013 national draft held at the Gold Coast Convention Centre (21 November), as well as the 2014 pre-season and rookie drafts (27 November).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231508-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL draft, Player movements, Free agency\nThe following compensation draft picks were dispensed to four clubs by the AFL based on all restricted and unrestricted free agency transfers during the initial transfer window:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231508-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL draft, Player movements, Trades\nNote: The numbering of the draft picks in this trades table is based on the original order at the time of the trade. The number of the pick may have changed due to the allocation of Free Agency compensation picks or clubs not using later picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231508-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL draft, 2013 national draft\nFollowing the completion of the free agency and trade periods, as well as the distribution of compensation picks to qualifying clubs, the final selection order for the 2013 National Draft was confirmed by the AFL on 18 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series\nThe 2013 Australian Football League finals series determined the winner of the 2013 AFL season. The series ran from the 6th to 28 September and culminated in the 117th AFL/VFL Grand Final, held between Fremantle and Hawthorn, which Hawthorn won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series\nThe top eight teams from the home and away season qualified for the finals series. The top four teams (Hawthorn, Geelong, Fremantle and Sydney) all made the preliminary finals. Both Carlton and Port Adelaide made the semi-finals, while Collingwood and Richmond lost their respective elimination finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series\nAFL final series have been played under the current format since 2000. The higher a team finishes on the ladder, the more advantages they get. First and second get a \"double chance\" and a home final. Third and fourth also get a \"double chance\" but have to play away. Fifth to eighth play elimination finals where the loser's season is over. Fifth and sixth play their elimination finals at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series\nEssendon originally finished seventh but were disqualified due to an Australian Sports Anti- Doping Authority (ASADA) investigation into their possible use of un-approved supplements during the 2012 season. This promoted Carlton to eighth and Port Adelaide to seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series\n2013 saw the first time Kardinia Park had hosted a final and only the second time a final had been hosted in Geelong, the previous occurrence being in 1897 at Corio Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series, The finals system\nSince 2000, AFL finals series have been round under the current format. The top eight teams from the home and away season qualify for the four-round finals series. The higher a team finishes, the more advantages they receive. The advantages are: \"Double chances\", home games, longer recovery time between games and easier lower-ranked opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series, The finals system, Qualifying finals\nThe top four teams in the eight receive what is popularly known as the \"double chance\" when they play in round-one qualifying finals. The team that finishes first on the ladder, play the fourth placed team at the first placed team's home ground. This is referred to as the first qualifying final but it is sometimes played after the second qualifying final which is between second and third on the ladder at the second placed team's home ground. Both qualifying finals are played before the elimination finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 60], "content_span": [61, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series, The finals system, Qualifying finals\nWinners of qualifying finals go straight through to the preliminary finals and get a week off. The losers of the qualifying finals play the winners of the elimination finals the next round in semi-finals. All teams in the qualifying finals play their next game at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 60], "content_span": [61, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series, The finals system, Elimination finals\nTeams fifth to eighth on the ladder play elimination finals in the first round. Fifth plays eighth in the first elimination final at the fifth placed team's home ground and sixth and seventh play in the second elimination final at the sixth placed team's home ground. The winners of elimination play in the semi-finals in round two. The winner of the first elimination final play the loser of the first qualifying final (first or fourth) and the winner of the second elimination final play the winner of the second qualifying final (second or third). Both elimination final winners are the away teams in the semi-final. The losers of both elimination finals are eliminated and that is the end of their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series, The finals system, Semi-finals\nSemi-finals are the only finals played in the second round of the finals. The first semi-final is between the loser of the first qualifying final and the winner of the first qualifying final. The game is held at the loser of the first qualifying final's home ground. The second semi-final is between the loser of the second qualifying final and the winner of the second elimination final at the second qualifying final loser's home ground. The winners of the semi-finals play the winners of the qualifying finals. The winners of the first and second qualifying finals play the winners of the first and second preliminary finals respective. The winners of both Semi-finals play as the away team. The losers of semi-finals are eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series, The finals system, Preliminary finals\nPreliminary finals are held to see which teams make the Grand Final. They are held between the winners of qualifying finals and semi-finals. The winners of the second semi-final and first preliminary final play each other as do the winners of the first semi-final and second preliminary final. The winners of the qualifying finals play at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231509-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL finals series, The finals system, Grand Final\nThe Grand Final is typically played at 2:30 PM on the last Saturday of September at the MCG in Melbourne, Victoria. Normally there is pre-match entertainment where notable Australian performers perform for the crowd of up to 100,000. After the game the winning team is presented with the premiership cup and the winning players are presented with medallions. Winning the AFL Grand Final is the pinnacle of Australian rules football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season\nThe 2013 Australian Football League season was the 117th season of the elite Australian rules football competition and the 24th 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-00231510-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season\nThe season opened on 22 March, with Adelaide hosting Essendon, and concluded on 28 September with Hawthorn defeating Fremantle in the AFL Grand Final. It was Hawthorn's eleventh VFL/AFL premiership, and Fremantle's first grand final appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season\nThe season was marred by a series of off-field controversies, with three clubs penalised in 2013 for separate infractions which had taken place over previous years: Essendon, following an investigation into irregularities in the club's supplements program; Adelaide, after illegal payments and draft tampering charges relating to Kurt Tippett's 2009 contract extension; and Melbourne, after an investigation into allegations that the club had intentionally lost matches towards the end of the 2009 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Pre-season, All Stars game\nThe biennial All Star game played in the Northern Territory, featuring an AFL team and the Indigenous All Stars team, made up of some of the best Indigenous players in the game, returned for the 2013 pre-season. Richmond were selected as the AFL team to partake in the game, which was played at Traeger Park in Alice Springs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Pre-season, NAB Cup\nThe 2013 NAB Cup was won by the Brisbane Lions, their first ever win preseason competition win, when they defeated Carlton by 40 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Premiership season\nThe full fixture was released on Wednesday 31 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Win/loss table\nBold\u00a0\u2013 Home gameX\u00a0\u2013 ByeOpponent for round listed above margin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Post-season, International Rules Series\nThe International Rules Series was played between Australia and Ireland for the first time since 2011. For the first time, the Australian team was represented by the Indigenous All Stars. As in previous years, two test matches were played, and the series was decided on aggregate. The series was held in Ireland, and was won by Ireland 2-0 and on an aggregate margin of 173-72 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 56], "content_span": [57, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Adelaide Crows\u2013Kurt Tippett contract scandal\nDuring the trade period leading up to the 2013 season, Adelaide Crows forward Kurt Tippett sought to be traded. During trade negotiations, information was uncovered which brought into question the legality under AFL rules of Tippett's 2009 contract extension with Adelaide. The AFL investigated Tippett's contract during October and November, and charged Tippett and Adelaide with a total of eleven charges relating to draft tampering and breaching the total player payments, including:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 95], "content_span": [96, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Adelaide Crows\u2013Kurt Tippett contract scandal\nAdelaide was considered likely to incur a loss of draft picks, among other penalties, if found guilty, but the AFL Commission was yet to complete its hearing into the matter when the National Draft was held on 22 November 2012, so the club was permitted to participate in the draft as normal. However, on the day before the draft, the club voluntarily relinquished its highest two remaining selections (No. 20 and 54) as a \"gesture of goodwill\" ahead of the hearing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 95], "content_span": [96, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Adelaide Crows\u2013Kurt Tippett contract scandal\nThe final hearing took place on 30 November, and Adelaide and Tippett pleaded guilty to all charges. Adelaide was stripped of its first and second round draft picks, and banned from taking any father-son selections, in the 2013 National Draft, and received a $300,000 fine. Tippett was suspended for the 2013 NAB Cup and 11 premiership matches, with a further suspended sentence of 11 matches, and received a $50,000 fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 95], "content_span": [96, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Adelaide Crows\u2013Kurt Tippett contract scandal\nSeveral senior Adelaide personnel were also punished by the league: chief executive Steven Trigg and former football manager John Reid were each fined $50,000 and banned from AFL functions for six months (with a further suspended sentence of six months), and current football manager Phil Harper was banned from AFL functions for two months with a four-month suspended sentence. In a separate hearing in January 2013, the AFL Players' Association revoked the accreditation of Tippett's manager, Peter Blucher, for at least one year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 95], "content_span": [96, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Melbourne Football Club tanking scandal\nThroughout the 2012/13 offseason, the league investigated the Melbourne Football Club over allegations that it had tanked during the latter part of the 2009 season \u2013 that is, that it had intentionally lost matches near the end of the season so that it would finish with no more than four wins, and therefore receive a priority draft pick. The league released its findings in February 2013, and found the club not guilty of tanking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 90], "content_span": [91, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Melbourne Football Club tanking scandal\nHowever, it did find two of Melbourne's then-senior staff members \u2013 senior coach Dean Bailey and general manager of football operations Chris Connolly \u2013 guilty of \"acting in a manner prejudicial to the interests of the competition\". This related most specifically to a meeting in July 2009, which became known colloquially as \"the vault\", in which Connolly allegedly openly discussed the potential benefits to the club of tanking. The guilty parties received the following penalties:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 90], "content_span": [91, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Essendon Football Club supplements controversy\nOn 5 February the Essendon Football Club asked the Australian Sports Anti- Doping Authority (ASADA) to investigate the concerns over the clubs possible use of un-approved supplements during the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 97], "content_span": [98, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Essendon Football Club supplements controversy\nAn internal independent review conducted by Dr. Ziggy Switkowski regarding the Essendon Football Club governance processes was released to the public on 6 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 97], "content_span": [98, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Essendon Football Club supplements controversy\nWhile ASADA investigated the legality of the supplements, the AFL separately investigated the administration of the club's supplements program, and charged the club and senior staff with bringing the game into disrepute. The charges focussed on the poor business practices within the program, including allowing \"a culture of frequent, uninformed and unregulated use of the injection of supplements\" at the club, incomplete record keeping which had made it impossible to determine with certainty whether or not players had been administered banned supplements, and for failing to guarantee the health and safety of its players in its program. On 27 August, five days before round 23 and after two days of discussions between the club and the league, the following penalties were imposed relating to these charges:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 97], "content_span": [98, 911]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Essendon Football Club supplements controversy\nThe scandal was investigated over the following years, and ended with 34 players who were on the 2012 Essendon list being suspended for the entire 2016 AFL season as part of a partially offset two-year suspensions for using thymosin beta-4 during the scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 97], "content_span": [98, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Adam Goodes\u2013Eddie McGuire racism controversy\nLate in the final quarter of the round 9 match between Collingwood and Sydney, Adam Goodes became the target of racial abuse in which a 13-year-old Collingwood supporter called him an \"ape\". Goodes pointed the supporter out to security following the incident, who subsequently evicted her from the ground; after the match, Collingwood president Eddie McGuire visited the Swans' rooms to apologise \"on behalf of football\", and stamped out that racism would not be tolerated by the Collingwood Football Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 95], "content_span": [96, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231510-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL season, Notable events and controversies, Adam Goodes\u2013Eddie McGuire racism controversy\nFive days later, McGuire was involved in another controversy involving Goodes on his Triple M Melbourne breakfast show, when he joked that Goodes could be used to promote the King Kong musical that was to be held in Melbourne, quickly apologising on air after making the reference. McGuire initially defended his comments by saying that the remark was simply \"a slip of the tongue\", but admitted to vilifying Goodes in an interview later in the day, albeit unintentionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 95], "content_span": [96, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231511-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AFL women's draft\nThe 2013 AFL women's draft was the inaugural national women's draft organised by the Australian Football League, held to select Melbourne and Western Bulldogs players for the Hampson-Hardeman Cup, an exhibition match. It was conducted on 15 May and consisted of 50 picks, with the odd-numbered picks selected by Melbourne, and the even-numbered picks selected by the Bulldogs. The order was decided by a coin toss on the night. Darebin Falcons player Daisy Pearce was selected by Melbourne with the first pick. Darebin provided the most players in the draft, with 10 selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231512-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships\nThe 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships were held at the Baluan Sholak Palace of Culture and Sports in Almaty, Kazakhstan from 14 to 26 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231513-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Bantamweight\nThe Bantamweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 17\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a maximum of 56 kilograms in body mass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231514-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Flyweight\nThe Flyweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 14\u201326 October 2013. Boxers are limited to a maximum of 52 kilograms in body mass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231515-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Heavyweight\nThe Heavyweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 14\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a weight of 91 kilograms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231516-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light flyweight\nThe Light flyweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 16\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a maximum of 49 kilograms in body mass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231517-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light heavyweight\nThe Light heavyweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 16\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a weight of 81 kilograms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231518-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Light welterweight\nThe Light welterweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 15\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a weight of 64 kilograms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231519-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Lightweight\nThe Lightweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 15\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a weight of 60 kilograms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231520-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Middleweight\nThe Middleweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 17 to 26 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a weight of 75 kilograms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231521-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Super heavyweight\nThe Super Heavyweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 19\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were not limited to a maximum weight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231522-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships \u2013 Welterweight\nThe Welterweight competition at the 2013 AIBA World Boxing Championships was held from 16\u201326 October 2013. Boxers were limited to a weight of 69 kilograms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season\nThe 2013 AIHL season was the 14th season of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL). It ran from 20 April 2013 until 1 September 2013, with the Goodall Cup finals following on the 7 and 8 September. The Sydney Ice Dogs won both the H Newman Ried Trophy for finishing first in the regular season, and the Goodall Cup after defeating the Newcastle North Stars in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, Teams\nIn 2013 the AIHL had 8 teams competing in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, League business\nIn October 2012 it was announced that the 2013 season would be played with eight teams as the Gold Coast Blue Tongues' licence was suspended due to the team being unable to secure a home venue for 2013. The Blue Tongues were forced out of their arena during the 2012 season when the AIHL deemed it to not be up to specifications for the league forcing the team to temporarily relocate to Brisbane for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, League business\nIt was also announced that the suspension on the Sydney Ice Dogs had been lifted allowing the team to ice four imports again. The Ice Dogs were restricted to three for the 2012 season by the league due to breaches of the league's code of conduct. Following the Annual General Meeting (AGM) it was announced that the third period of play has been increased from 15 minutes to 20 minutes, while the first two remain 15 minutes in length.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, League business\nThe change was in response to fans calling for the league to align itself with international hockey which plays three 20 minute periods. The Melbourne Mustangs revealed their new logo and jerseys for the start of the season featuring a redesigned mustang horse, holding an ice hockey stick. The new jerseys include a white home jersey, a black away jersey and an orange third jersey which is being released as off-ice apparel only. The Sydney Ice Dogs also revealed their new jerseys with an aqua green away jersey and a white home jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0002-0003", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, League business\nThe change in colours was made as part of a deal with corporate naming sponsor Reach Crane Trucks and will be in place for three years, the duration of their deal with Reach Crane Trucks. Their previous colours of maroon, yellow, blue, black and white will remain as the team's corporate colours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, League business\nOn 17 February the AIHL announced that it had entered into a partnership with Fox Sports in which a game of the week will be aired on the network as part of a 60-minute program which also includes league and state federation news and AIHL highlights. The Canberra Knights held an exhibition game on 23 March 2013 with the team competing against a team of former Knights' players for the Soldier On charity. The Knights won the game 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, League business, Personnel changes\nFollowing the AGM the AIHL announced that Tyler Lovering had been re-elected to the commission as Assistant Commissioner until 2014. Ben Kiely and Alexandra Lata had both received a one-year extension to their terms on the commission, with Lata being appointed Deputy Commissioner. The AIHL have also elected Robert Bannerman and Joshua Chye to the commission to serve as Commissioner and Assistant Commissioner respectively. In December 2012 the Melbourne Mustangs announced that they had appointed Brad Vigon as head coach, replacing Steve Laforet who had been fired at the end of the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, League business, Personnel changes\nFollowing the end of the 2012 season the Melbourne Ice announced that both president Andy Lamrock and head coach Paul Watson had stepped down from their positions. In November 2012 the Ice announced that former Ice Hockey Victoria president Emma Poynton as successor to Lamrock as the club's president. In February 2013 the Ice appointed assistant coach Sandy Gardner to the head coach position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, Regular season\nThe regular season started on 20 April 2013 and ran through to 1 September 2013 before the top four teams compete in the Goodall Cup playoff series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, Regular season\nThe Sydney Ice Dogs won the H Newman Reid Trophy after finishing the regular season with the most points, 61. Newcastle North Stars' Jeff Martens won the Most Valuable Player award, after finishing as the league's top scorer with 67 points. Anthony Kimlin of the Sydney Ice Dogs was named the Australian Player of the Year and Best Goaltender, finishing with a save percentage 0.919. The Sydney Bears' Cameron Todd won the award for Best Rookie and John Gordon of the Melbourne Ice was named Best Defenceman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the ten top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 61], "content_span": [62, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage with a minimum 40% of the teams ice time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231523-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 AIHL season, Goodall Cup playoffs\nThe 2013 playoffs started on 7 September 2013, with the Goodall Cup final held on 8 September. Following the end of the regular season the top four teams advanced to the playoff series. All three games were held at the Medibank Icehouse in Docklands, Victoria, the home of the Melbourne Ice and Melbourne Mustangs. The series was a single game elimination with the two winning semi-finalists advancing to the Goodall Cup final. The Sydney Ice Dogs won the Goodall Cup (2nd title) with a 6-2 victory over the Newcastle North Stars. Anthony Kimlin\u2019s defensive efforts for the Ice Dogs earned him the award of Most Valuable Player (MVP) for the finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231524-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIK Fotboll season\nThe 2013 season is AIK's 122nd in existence, their 85th season in Allsvenskan and their 8th consecutive season in the league. The team will be competing in Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231524-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AIK Fotboll season, Current squad, 2013 Squad\nAs of 5 August 2013Note: 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, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231524-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AIK Fotboll season, Current squad, Players in/out, Out\nFor season transfers, see transfers winter 2012\u201313 and transfers summer 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231524-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AIK Fotboll season, Death of Ivan Turina\nOn 2 May 2013, AIK's Croatian goalkeeper Ivan Turina died while sleeping in his apartment. His wife did not realize that he was dead until she woke up. He left one-year-old twins and his pregnant wife.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231524-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AIK Fotboll season, Death of Ivan Turina\nAll matches in Allsvenskan and Superettan will honour Turina with one minute of silence, and in most of the matches, the game will be stopped in the 27th minute for one minute's applause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231524-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AIK Fotboll season, Death of Ivan Turina\nTurina's first professional club, Dinamo Zagreb, played a charity game against AIK at Friends Arena outside Stockholm. All money received during this game was given to Turina's family. The game was played in 2x27 minutes to honor Turina who wore number 27 while he played for AIK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231525-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AIM Malaysian-Indian Awards\nThe 2013 AIM Malaysian Indian were held on 12 October 2013 at the Setia City Convention Centre, Shah Alam, Selangor. Marking the debut and first instalment of the award show. The inaugural AIM Malaysian-Indian music awards show, sponsored by the Ministry of Information, Communications & Culture (MICC). The award is to recognise and honouring Malaysian based Indian artist talents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231525-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AIM Malaysian-Indian Awards\nThe awards nominations are open to albums, singles and music videos released in Malaysia during the period from 1 January 2010 to 31 December 2012 except for the category of Best New Artiste which is only for first album/single released during the period from 1 January 2012 to 31 December 2012. The award show were telecast on Astro Vaanavil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231526-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AMA National Speedway Championship\nThe 2013 AMA National Speedway Championship Series was staged over three rounds, which were held at Ventura (June 19), Victorville (September 22) and Auburn (September 27). Billy Janniro took the title, his fourth in total, winning two of the rounds in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231526-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AMA National Speedway Championship, Event format\nOver the course of 20 heats, each rider raced against every other rider once. The top eight scorers then reached the semi-finals, with first and second in those semi-finals reaching the final. Points were scored for every ride taken, including the semi-finals and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231527-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AMA Pro American Superbike Championship\nThe 2013 AMA Pro American Superbike Championship was the 38th running of the AMA Superbike Championship. The championship covered 8 rounds beginning at Daytona International Speedway on March 16 and concluding at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca on September 29. The champion was Josh Herrin riding a Yamaha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231528-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AMF Futsal Women's World Cup\nThe 2013 AMF Futsal Women's World Cup was the 2nd edition of the AMF Futsal Women's World Cup. The tournament was held in Colombia from 7 to 16 November in Barrancabermeja. Sixteen national teams from all confederations participated in the tournament. Colombia won the tournament by defeating Venezuela 3\u20132 in the final, achieving its first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231528-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AMF Futsal Women's World Cup, Group stage\nThe group winners and runners up advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231529-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic\nThe 2013 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic was held from September 19 to 22 at the Brockville Country Club in Brockville, Ontario as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. Both the men's and women's events was held in a round robin format. The purse for the men's event was CAD$45,400, while the purse for the women's event was CAD$18,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231529-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic\nIn the men's final, Brad Jacobs of Northern Ontario defeated Jeff Stoughton of Manitoba with a score of 7\u20135 after stealing a point in the last end of an otherwise tight game. In the women's final, Mirjam Ott of Switzerland defeated Ontario's Rachel Homan with a score of 8\u20135 in seven ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231530-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ANO 2011 leadership election\nA leadership election for ANO 2011 was held on 2 March 2013. Andrej Babi\u0161 was reelected as party's leader. Babi\u0161 was nominated by the most of regional organisations. He received 169 wotes of 172. He was the only candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231531-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ANZ Championship season\nThe 2013 ANZ Championship season was the sixth season of the ANZ Championship. The 2013 season began on 24 March and concluded on 14 July. With a team captained by Natalie von Bertouch and featuring Erin Bell, Carla Borrego, Renae Hallinan, Rebecca Bulley and Sharni Layton, Adelaide Thunderbirds won both the minor premiership and the overall championship. Having previously won the 2010 ANZ Championship, Thunderbirds became the first team to win a second championship. Thunderbirds secured the minor premiership with a 64\u201348 win over Northern Mystics in Round 13. They subsequently defeated Melbourne Vixens 49\u201339 in the major semi-final and\tQueensland Firebirds 50\u201348 in the grand final to win the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231531-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ANZ Championship season, Salary cap\nIn October 2012, Netball New Zealand, the five New Zealand ANZ Championship franchises and the New Zealand Netball Players\u2019 Association agreed a new collective agreement to take effect for the 2013 ANZ Championship season. This saw introduction of a $380,000 salary cap. Teams were permitted to contract between 12 and 14 players in their squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231531-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ANZ Championship season, Melbourne Vixens Summer Challenge\nThe main pre-season event was the Summer Challenge, hosted by Melbourne Vixens at the State Netball Hockey Centre on 23 and 24 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231531-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ANZ Championship season, Media coverage\nNetball Australia signed a new TV rights agreement with\tFox Sports and SBS. All 69 games, including the play offs were broadcast live by Fox Sports. SBS 2, replacing Network 10, broadcast a live Sunday match as well as providing coverage of the play offs on its free-to-air television network. Sky Sport continued to broadcast live games in New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231532-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AON Open Challenger\nThe 2013 AON Open Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Genoa, Italy between 2 and 8 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231532-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AON Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231532-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AON Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231533-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AON Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nDaniele Bracciali and Oliver Marach won the title, beating Marin Draganja and Mate Pavi\u0107 6\u20133, 2\u20136, [11\u20139]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231534-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AON Open Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAlbert Monta\u00f1\u00e9s is the defending champion but lost in the first round to Gianluca Naso. Dustin Brown defeated Filippo Volandri 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards\nThe 2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards were held on Tuesday 15 October 2013 at Vector Arena in Auckland, celebrating excellence in New Zealand songwriting. This is the first year the ceremony was held at Vector Arena, moving from its previous location of the Auckland Town Hall in order to accommodate more of APRA's 8000 New Zealand members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards\nThe Silver Scroll award was presented to Ella Yelich-O'Connor and Joel Little for \"Royals\" by Lorde, and singer-songwriter Dave Dobbyn was inducted into the New Zealand Music Hall of Fame. The award for The Most Performed Work Overseas went to Brooke Fraser and Scott Ligertwood for \u201cSomething in the Water\u201d, ending the 13-year run of Neil Finn's Crowded House song \"Don't Dream It's Over\". Brenda Makamoeafi and Hassanah Iroegbu of 1990s hip hop duo Sisters Underground reunited to perform their 1994 hit \"In the Neighbourhood\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards, Silver Scroll award\nThe Silver Scroll award celebrates outstanding achievement in songwriting of original New Zealand pop music. The evening's music performances were produced by musician Godfrey De Grut. Each of the nominated songs were covered in a new style by another artist. The Silver Scroll award was presented by 1996 winner Bic Runga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards, Silver Scroll award, Longlist\nIn July 2013, a top-20 longlist was announced. From this list APRA members voted to decide the year's shortlist. The voting period ran from 25 July to 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards, New Zealand Music Hall of Fame\nMusician, singer-songwriter and producer Dave Dobbyn was inducted into the New Zealand Music Hall of Fame. He is a three-time recipient of the Silver Scroll award. He was inducted by musician Warren Maxwell, along with performances of three Dobbyn songs: \"Language\" by Tami Nielson, \"It Dawned On Me\" by Mark Vanilau and Scribe, and \"Be Mine Tonight\" by Shihad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards, Other awards\nFour other awards were presented at the Silver Scroll Awards: APRA Maioha Award (for excellence in contemporary Maori music), SOUNZ Contemporary Award (for creativity and inspiration in composition) and two awards acknowledging songs with the most radio and television play in New Zealand and overseas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards, Other awards\nThe APRA Maioha Award-winning song \"Ruaimoko\" was performed by Tama Waipara with the University of Auckland percussion ensemble, and the SOUNZ Contemporary Award-winning composition \"Lightbox\" was performed by the MPC Trio (Jeremy Toy, Lewis McCallum, and Johnnie Fleury).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards, APRA song awards\nOutside of the Silver Scroll Awards, APRA presented four genre awards in 2013. The APRA Best Pacific Song was presented at the Pacific Music Awards, the APRA Best Country Music Song was presented at the New Zealand Country Music Awards and the APRA Children's Song of the Year and What Now Video of the Year were presented at StarFest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231535-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 APRA Silver Scroll Awards, APRA Professional Development Awards\nAwarded biennially, the Professional Developments Awards is a cash prize given three artists to help build their musical career. Grants are awarded in three categories: pop/contemporary, film and television, and classical. In 2013, $12,000 and professional services were awarded to each recipient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231536-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ARCA Racing Series\nThe 2013 ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards was the 61st season of the ARCA Racing Series. The season began on February 16 with the Lucas Oil 200 presented by MAVTV American Real and ended on October 4 with the Kansas ARCA 150. James Hylton retired from driving at the end of the season at the age of 79.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231536-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ARCA Racing Series, Teams and drivers\nTHIS TABLE IS UNDER CONSTRUCTION / A WORK IN PROGRESS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231537-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ASB Classic\nThe 2013 ASB Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 28th edition of the ASB Classic, and was part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland, New Zealand, from 31 December 2012 to 6 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231537-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ASB Classic, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231538-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ASB Classic \u2013 Doubles\nAndrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 were the defending champions, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231538-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ASB Classic \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Anastasia Rodionova won the title, defeating Julia G\u00f6rges and Yaroslava Shvedova in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231539-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ASB Classic \u2013 Singles\nZheng Jie was the defending champion, but she lost in the first round to Jamie Hampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231539-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ASB Classic \u2013 Singles\nAgnieszka Radwa\u0144ska won the title, defeating Yanina Wickmayer in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231540-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ASP World Tour\nThe ASP World Tour is a professional competitive surfing league run by the Association of Surfing Professionals. Men and women compete in separate tours with events taking place from late February to mid-December, at various surfing locations around the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231540-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ASP World Tour\nSurfers receive points for their best events. The surfer with the most points at the end of the tour is announced the ASP World Tour Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231540-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ASP World Tour\nFor the 2013 season, the champions were Mick Fanning (men) and Carissa Moore (women).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231540-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ASP World Tour, ASP Women\u2019s World Championship Tour, Event Schedule\n[ 1] Roxy Pro was originally scheduled for July 10-14 in Biarritz, but due to poor surf it was cancelled. The event was rescheduled for September in Hossegor in conjunction with the Men's event", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231541-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AT183\n2013 AT183 is a large trans-Neptunian object from the outermost region of the Solar System, currently 62.87 AUs from the sun, with a 61.7 AU semimajor axis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231542-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour\nThe Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Challenger Tour is the secondary professional tennis circuit organized by the ATP. The 2013 ATP Challenger Tour calendar comprised 149 tournaments, with prize money ranging from $35,000 up to $220,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231542-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour, Statistical information\nThese tables present the number of singles (S) and doubles (D) titles won by each player and each nation during the season. The players/nations are sorted by: 1) total number of titles (a doubles title won by two players representing the same nation counts as only one win for the nation); 2) a singles > doubles hierarchy; 3) alphabetical order (by family names for players).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231542-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour, Statistical information\nTo avoid confusion and double counting, these tables should be updated only after an event is completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals\nThe 2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals is a tennis tournament played at the Sociedade Harmonia de T\u00eanis in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil, between 13 and 17 November 2013. It will be the third edition of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals\nIt is run by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and is part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. The tournament serves as the season ending championships for players on the ATP Challenger Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals\nThe venue went from Gin\u00e1sio do Ibirapuera to Sociedade Harmonia de T\u00eanis, because of the change of venue, the tournament will be played in outdoor clay courts for the first time. In the previous editions, it was played in indoor hard courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Format\nThe seven best players of the season and a wild card awardee qualify for the event and are split into two groups of four. During this stage, players compete in a round robin format (meaning players play against all the other players in their group).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Format\nThe two players with the best results in each group progress to the semifinals where the winners of a group face the runners-up of the other group. The winners of the semifinals reach the tournament final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Points and prize money\nThe total prize money for the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals was US$220,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualification\nThe top seven players with the most points accumulated in ATP Challenger tournaments during the year plus one wild card entrant from the host country qualified for the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals. Countable points include points earned in 2013 until 21 October, plus points earned at late-season 2012 Challenger tournaments. However, players were only eligible to qualify for the tournament if they played a minimum of eight ATP Challenger Tour tournaments during the season. Moreover, the accumulated year-to-date points were only countable to a maximum of ten best results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nThe tournament line-up was initially announced on 23 October 2013 at the tournament's website, based on the 2013 ATP Year-To-Date Challenger Rankings up to that date. On 28 October 2013, the ATP announced the same line-up at its website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nAlejandro Gonz\u00e1lez, Jesse Huta Galung, Filippo Volandri, and Teymuraz Gabashvili qualified directly in the event. Dudi Sela, Jiri Vesely, Pablo Carre\u00f1o Busta, and Mikhail Kukushkin chose not to compete that gave spots to Aleksandr Nedovyesov, Adrian Ungur, and Andrej Martin. Brazilian Guilherme Clezar was given the eight spot as a wildcard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nTeymuraz GabashviliGabashvili also a former fourth rounder of a slam, also at French Open, but this time in 2010, where he upset Andy Roddick in the third round as a qualifier. The Russian won two Challenger titles in the year both coming in Uzbekistan, at the Karshi Challenger and Samarkand Challenger defeating Radu Albot and Aleksandr Nedovyesov, respectively in straight sets. He also reached the final of the Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra retiring a game away from losing to Dominic Thiem. In his third Challenger final in Uzbekistan at the Tashkent Challenger, he lost this time to Israeli Dudi Sela. At the ATP World Tour, the Russian reached the quarterfinals of his home tournament of Kremlin Cup losing to world no. 10 Richard Gasquet", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nFilippo VolandriVolandri is the elder statesman in the draw, at age 32. A two-time champion on the ATP World Tour and has formerly reached the fourth round of the 2007 French Open defeating a then world no. 7 Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107 em route. In the ATP Challenger Tour, the Italian reached five finals all finished in straight sets. He won two titles both in his home country of Italy in the Aspria Tennis Cup defeating Andrej Martin and the Trofeo Stefano Bellaveglia defeating Pere Riba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nThe other three finals, he was a runner-up to Alja\u017e Bedene at the Roma Open, to Marco Cecchinato at the San Marino CEPU Open and to Dustin Brown at the AON Open Challenger. The 32 year-old also reached the quarterfinals of the Brasil Open in ATP World Tour losing to Mart\u00edn Alund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nAleksandr NedovyesovThe 2009 National Player of the Year at Oklahoma State University, has a huge climb in the ranking starting outside the top 200 to entering the top 100. He reached his first Challenger singles final at the Samarkand Challenger losing to Teymuraz Gabashvili. However, he won his next three Challenger finals at the Prague Open over Spaniard Javier Mart\u00ed, at the Pekao Szczecin Open over another Spaniard Pere Riba, and at the Kazan Kremlin Cup over Andrey Golubev all in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nJesse Huta GalungAt the age of 28, the Dutchman has discovered the best form of his career in 2013, after being below 300 at a point to breaking into the top 100 for the first time in his career in August. Huta Galung had a 4-1 record in the finals of the ATP Challenger Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nThree of his titles came against French players, against Vincent Millot at the Challenger La Manche in straight sets, at the Open Harmonie mutuelle against Kenny de Schepper in a tight three setter winning it in a tie-break, and at the Tampere Open against Maxime Teixeira in straight sets. He won another title, in his home country in Netherlands at the Sport 1 Open against compatriot Robin Haase in three sets. He also reached another final at the Maserati Challenger losing to Czech Jan H\u00e1jek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nHe also earned a top 30 win in a dead rubber at the Davis Cup World Group Play-offs against Austria defeating J\u00fcrgen Melzer in three sets. He also reached the doubles final of the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament in the ATP World Tour, pairing with Thiemo de Bakker but lost to Robert Lindstedt and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 but lost in a Match Tie Break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nAlejandro Gonz\u00e1lezThe 24-year-old Colombian is enjoying a career year on the ATP Challenger Tour, qualifying for the year-end championships after reaching five finals and ascending to a career-high Emirates ATP Ranking of 106 in late September. In the five finals he reached, he won three, his first coming in the Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso defeating Renzo Olivo in a third set tie-break. He followed it up with wins against another two Argentinian in Guido Andreozzi and Eduardo Schwank in straight sets at the Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Medell\u00edn and S\u00e3o Paulo Challenger de T\u00eanis respectively. He then lost the other two finals at the Visit Panama Cup barely losing to Rub\u00e9n Ram\u00edrez Hidalgo in a third set tie-break and at the Aberto Rio Preto to Jo\u00e3o Souza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nAdrian UngurThe defending ATP Challenger Tour Finals runner-up is back in S\u00e3o Paulo. The only former contestant in the field, the Romanian fell in a third-set tie-break to Guido Pella in last year's title bout. Ungur claimed two titles in the Challenger Circuit at the Tunis Open defeating Diego Sebasti\u00e1n Schwartzman in three sets dropping only 2 games in the final 2 sets at his home crowd at the BRD Arad Challenger over compatriot Marius Copil in two tight sets. He then fell into the final of the Arimex Challenger Trophy losing to Julian Reister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nAndrej MartinThree years removed from his maiden ATP Challenger Tour title, Martin clinched his second in late April, defeating Adrian Mannarino at the Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest in three sets. He also lifted another trophy at the Banca dell\u2019Adriatico Tennis Cup defeating Jo\u00e3o Sousa. He also reached two other finals, losing to Mannarino at the Internationaux de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie and to Filippo Volandri at the Aspria Tennis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Qualified players\nGuilherme ClezarThe youngest player in the field, Clezar was awarded the tournament's wild card. The 20-year-old Brazilian is also the lowest ranked, at World No. 177. He won his second title at the Challenger level Tetra Pak Tennis Cup defeating Facundo Bagnis in the final, and did not drop a set all tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231543-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals, Player head-to-heads\nThese were the head-to-head records between the qualified players, immediately before the tournament. Head to head includes challengers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231544-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals \u2013 Singles\nGuido Pella was the champion in 2013, but did not qualify for the event in 2013, since he played mostly ATP World Tour tournaments in that season. Filippo Volandri has won the tournament by defeating Alejandro Gonz\u00e1lez 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final. For the third consecutive year since the tournament's inception, the finalists played a rematch of their previous round-robin stage encounter, in which the champion was defeated by the runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231544-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals \u2013 Singles, Draw, Green 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231544-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Challenger Tour Finals \u2013 Singles, Draw, Yellow 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231545-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP China International Tennis Challenge \u2013 Anning\nThe 2013 ATP China International Tennis Challenge \u2013 Anning was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Anning, China between 29 April and 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231545-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP China International Tennis Challenge \u2013 Anning, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 98], "content_span": [99, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231545-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP China International Tennis Challenge \u2013 Anning, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 98], "content_span": [99, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231546-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP China International Tennis Challenge \u2013 Anning \u2013 Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana were the defending champions, but they lost to Victor Baluda and Dino Marcan in the first round. Baluda and Marcan defeated Samuel Groth and John-Patrick Smith 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20134, [10\u20137] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231547-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP China International Tennis Challenge \u2013 Anning \u2013 Singles\nGrega \u017demlja was the defending champion but chose not to compete. M\u00e1rton Fucsovics won the title by defeating James Ward 7\u20135, 3\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231548-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Roller Open\nThe 2013 ATP Roller Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in P\u00e9tange, Luxembourg between 9 and 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231548-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Roller Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231548-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Roller Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players got into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231549-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Roller Open \u2013 Doubles\nChristopher Kas and Dick Norman were the defending champion, but Norman chose to compete. Kas chose to compete with Paul Hanley, but they lost in the first round to Niels Desein and Tim P\u00fctz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231549-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Roller Open \u2013 Doubles\nKen and Neal Skupski won the title, defeating Benjamin Becker and Tobias Kamke in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231550-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Roller Open \u2013 Singles\nTobias Kamke was the defending champion and successfully defended his title, defeating Paul-Henri Mathieu in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231551-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag\nThe 2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 24th edition of the ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the International Tennis Center in Umag, Croatia, from 18 July until 28 July 2013. Fifth-seeded Tommy Robredo won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231551-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231551-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231552-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Doubles\nDavid Marrero and Fernando Verdasco were the defending champions, but Verdasco decided not to participate. Marrero successfully defended the title alongside Martin Kli\u017ean, defeating Nicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler in the final, 6\u20131, 5\u20137, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231553-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Singles\nMarin \u010cili\u0107 was the defending champion, but withdrew with a knee injury before the tournament began. Tommy Robredo won the title, defeating Fabio Fognini in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231553-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour\nThe 2013 ATP World Tour was the global elite professional tennis circuit organized by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2013 tennis season. The 2013 ATP World Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the ATP World Tour Masters 1000, the ATP World Tour 500 series, the ATP World Tour 250 series, the Davis Cup (organized by the ITF) and the ATP World Tour Finals. Also included in the 2013 calendar is the Hopman Cup, which was organized by the ITF and does not distribute ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Schedule\nThis is the complete schedule of events on the 2013 calendar, with player progression documented from the quarterfinals stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Statistical information\nThese tables present the number of singles (S), doubles (D), and mixed doubles (X) titles won by each player and each nation during the season, within all the tournament categories of the 2013 ATP World Tour: the Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP World Tour Finals, the ATP World Tour Masters 1000, the ATP World Tour 500 series, and the ATP World Tour 250 series. The players/nations are sorted by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Statistical information, Titles information\nThe following players won their first main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Statistical information, Titles information\nThe following players defended a main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, ATP rankings\nThese are the ATP rankings of the top 20 singles players, doubles players, and the top 10 doubles teams on the ATP Tour, at the current date of the 2013 season. Players on a gold background have qualified for the Year-End Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n1 Wild cards who lose at their first round matches at Grand Slam and ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events are not awarded ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n2 Only applicable to the Wimbledon Championships, which is the only tournament in the entire ATP World Tour to feature a qualifying stage for doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n3 Any player who reaches the second round of a tournament by drawing a bye and then loses is given first round loser's points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\nThe Davis Cup World Group and World Group Play-Off matches awarded ATP Ranking points from 2009 to 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\nOnly live matches earn points; dead rubbers earn no points. If a player does not compete in the singles of one or more rounds he will receive points from the previous round when playing singles at the next tie. This last rule also applies for playing in doubles matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n1 A player who wins a singles rubber in the first day of the tie is awarded 5 points, whereas a singles rubber win in tie's last day grants 10 points for a total of 15 available points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n2 For the first round only, any player who competes in a live rubber, without a win, receives 10 ranking points for participation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n3 Team bonus awarded to a singles player who wins 7 live matches in a calendar year and his team wins the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n4 Performance bonus awarded to a singles player who wins 8 live matches in a calendar year. In this case, no Team bonus is awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Point distribution\n5 Team bonus awarded to an unchanged doubles team who wins 4 matches in a calendar year and his team wins the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World 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 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231554-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour, Comebacks\nFollowing are notable players who will comeback after retirements during the 2013 ATP Tour season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals\nThe 2013 ATP World Tour Finals, also known as the 2013 Barclays ATP World Tour Finals for sponsorship reasons, was a men's tennis tournament that was played on indoor hard courts at the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom, between 4 and 11 November 2013. It was the season-ending event for the best singles players and doubles teams of the 2013 ATP World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Tournament\nThe 2013 ATP World Tour Finals took place from 4 to 11 November at the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Tournament\nIt was the 44th edition of the tournament (39th in doubles). The tournament was run by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and was part of the 2013 ATP World Tour. The event took place on indoor hard courts. It served as the season-ending championships for players on the ATP Tour. The eight players who qualified for the event were split into two groups of four. During this stage, players competed in a round-robin format (meaning players played against all the other players in their group). The two players with the best results in each group progressed to the semifinals, where the winners of a group faced the runners-up of the other group. This stage, however, was a knock-out stage. The doubles competition used the same format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Tournament, Format\nThe Barclays ATP World Tour Finals had a round-robin format, with eight players/teams divided into two groups of four. The eight seeds were determined by the ATP Rankings and ATP Doubles Team Rankings on the Monday after the last ATP World Tour tournament of the calendar year. All singles matches were the best of three tie-break sets, including the final. All doubles matches were two sets (no ad) and a Match Tie-break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Tournament, Draw\nThe top seeded players/teams were placed in Group A and the second seeded player/team were placed in Group B. Players/teams seeded 3 and 4, 5 and 6, 7 and 8, were then drawn in pairs with the first drawn placed in Group A. Each player/team played the three other players/teams in his group. The winner of each group (best overall record) was placed in separate semi-final brackets, with the top player/team in Group A playing the runner-up in Group B, and vice versa. Ties were broken by the Tie-Break Procedure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualification\nThe top eight players (or teams) with the most countable points accumulated in Grand Slam, ATP World Tour, and Davis Cup tournaments during the year qualify for the 2013 ATP World Tour Finals. Countable points include points earned in 2013, plus points earned at the 2012 Davis Cup final and the late-season 2012 Challengers played after the 2012 ATP World Tour Finals. To qualify, a player who finished in the 2012 year-end top 30 must compete in four Grand Slam tournaments and eight ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments during 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualification\nThey can count their best six results from ATP World Tour 500, ATP World Tour 250 and other events (Challengers, Futures, Davis Cup, Olympics) toward their ranking. To count their best six, players must have fulfilled their commitment to 500 events \u2013 4 total per year (at least 1 after the US Open). Additionally, commitment players will no longer need to enter the 500 events 12 weeks in advance but instead go back the normal 6-week entry deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualification\nIf eligible to play in one of the Grand Slam or ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments, a player must count the points from these tournaments, even if it is 'a zero pointer' because he missed the event. Just as in Formula One and numerous other sports, if a competitor misses a race or an event, he loses his chance to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0005-0003", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualification\nPlayers with direct acceptance who do not play an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournament will be suspended from a subsequent ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event, which will be the next highest points earned ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event within the next 12 months. If an injured player is on site within the first three days of a tournament to conduct promotional activities over a two-day period, a suspension will not be enforced but a 0-pointer will be counted on a player's ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0005-0004", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualification\nIf a player does not play enough ATP 500 events and does not have an ATP 250 or Challenger appearance with a better result, the Davis Cup is counted in the 500s table (if the player entered or achieved better results). If a player does not play enough ATP 250 or Challenger events, the World Team Championship is counted in the 250s table (if the player entered or achieved better results). If a player could not be present in all required tournament classes (i.e. because of an injury), all uncounted ATP 250 or Challenger results are eligible to be included in his 18 valid tournaments. In teams rankings, Challenger points are excluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualification\nA player who is out of competition for 30 or more days, due to a verified injury, is not penalized. The 2013 ATP World Tour Finals counts as an additional 19th tournament in the ranking of its eight qualifiers at season's end, while the Davis Cup Final points count towards the next year's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 10 June, following his record-breaking eighth title at the French Open, Rafael Nadal became the first to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nRafael Nadal had one of his strongest starts to an ATP World Tour season, reaching nine finals in as many tournaments after having been sidelined for seven months with a knee injury that forced him to miss the majority of the 2012 season. He began his year at the VTR Open after missing the Australian Open due to illness. He reached the final before being defeated by Horacio Zeballos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nThis was followed up by winning three consecutive tournaments, at the Brazil Open defeating David Nalbandian., the Abierto Mexicano Telcel defeating world No. 4 David Ferrer, losing just two games in the match, and at BNP Paribas Open defeating Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro. At Monte-Carlo Masters, Nadal made it to his ninth consecutive final at the event, and fifth of the year, where he met world no. 1 Novak Djokovic, Nadal lost in straight sets, recording his first defeat at the event since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nNadal then went on to defend his titles at the Barcelona Open defeating Nicolas Almagro, Internazionali BNL d'Italia defeating Roger Federer, and the French Open defeating David Ferrer for Nadal's record 8th Roland Garros title, as well as winning the title at the Mutua Madrid Open defeating Stanislas Wawrinka. However at Wimbledon, Nadal suffered his earliest ever defeat at a Grand Slam tournament, losing to Belgian Steve Darcis in the first round. He then returned to form, winning for the third time at the Rogers Cup defeating Canadian Milos Raonic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0008-0003", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe then became only the fourth player to win Canada & Cincinnati in the same year, beating American John Isner in the final of Western & Southern Open. Nadal then defeated Djokovic in the final of the US Open for his second title at the event. Nadal lost his first hardcourt match of the season at the final of the China Open to Djokovic, but still claimed the number 1 ranking from Djokovic. This is the ninth time Nadal has qualified for the ATP finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 19 August, defending champion Novak Djokovic was announced as the second to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nNovak Djokovic began the year by reaching the final of the Hopman Cup with Ana Ivanovic but lost to Anabel Medina Garrigues and Fernando Verdasco. He then won his third consecutive title at the Australian Open defeating Andy Murray in four sets, becoming the first man in the open era to win three consecutive times in Melbourne. Djokovic won his fourth title at the Dubai Tennis Championships defeating Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nDjokovic won his first ATP Masters 1000 event of the year, defeating Rafael Nadal in the final of the Monte-Carlo Masters, ending the Spaniards 8-year unbeaten run at the event, and becoming the first man in history to win 8 of the 9 Masters series events. At the French Open, Djokovic made it to the semifinals for the 3rd straight year, however lost to Nadal in a 5 set epic 9\u20137 in the fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt Wimbledon, Djokovic made it to his second final at the event, but lost to Andy Murray in straight sets, the first time since 2010 that he had failed to win a set in a Grand Slam match. Djokovic then reached his fourth straight US Open final but for the third time he ended up losing, this time to Nadal in four sets. Djokovic then remained undefeated at the China Open defeating Nadal in straight sets, claiming his fourth title in five years and his first title in over 6 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nDjokovic then defended his Shanghai Rolex Masters title by defeating del Potro in a third set tiebreak, thus having a 20 match winning streak in China. He won his third consecutive title at the BNP Paribas Masters defeating world no. 3 David Ferrer in the final, his sixth title of the year and extends his winning streak to 17. Djokovic represented the Serbia Davis Cup team in 2013 and was instrumental in their push to the final against Czech Republic. This is Djokovic's seventh straight appearance at the year-end finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 10 September, following the conclusion of the US Open, Andy Murray became the third player to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAndy Murray started his year strongly, defending his title at the Brisbane International defeating Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov, and reaching the final of the Australian Open, losing to defending champion Novak Djokovic in 4 sets. He won his second title of the year at the Sony Open Tennis, defeating David Ferrer in the final, saving match point in the process. He then pulled out of the French Open after a difficult clay court season, citing a back injury. This was the first time he'd missed a Grand Slam event since 2007, when he had to miss both Roland Garros and Wimbledon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nFollowing his return from injury, Murray came back strong, and had his best ever grass court season, winning the AEGON Championships defeating defending champion Marin \u010cili\u0107, and then going on to end a 77-year wait for a British male singles champion at Wimbledon, defeating Djokovic in straight sets to clinch his second major trophy, and maintain his 18-match winning streak on grass. The recurrence of his back injury meant that Murray struggled during the North American hard court season, exiting the Rogers Cup and Western & Southern Open in the third round and quarterfinals respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nMurray entered the US Open as defending champion, however fell at the quarterfinal stage to Stanislas Wawrinka in straight sets, after having struggled against his previous three opponents. This is Murray's sixth consecutive time to qualify for the season finale, however following surgery on a long-standing back problem, Murray withdrew in order to recover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 7 October, after the conclusion of the China Open, David Ferrer was announced as the fourth qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nDavid Ferrer had a breakthrough in 2013 reaching his first slam final and reaching a career high ranking of number 3. He began his year by winning the Heineken Open for the fourth time and third consecutive year defeating Philipp Kohlschreiber in straight sets. At the Australian Open, he reached the semifinals but lost to world no. 1 Novak Djokovic in three easy sets. Ferrer then won his second title of the year at the Copa Claro defeating Stanislas Wawrinka in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the Abierto Mexicano Telcel as the defending champion, he fell in the final to Rafael Nadal winning just two games. He then reached the final of the Sony Open Tennis but fell to Andy Murray in a third set tie-break despite having a match point. Ferrer reached his fifth final of the year at the Portugal Open facing Wawrinka, but this time falling in straight sets to the Swiss. At the French Open, Ferrer reached his first slam final facing compatriot Nadal, in the first all-Spanish slam final since 2002, but lost in three straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt Wimbledon, he fell to Argentinian Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro in three sets. At the US Open, he lost for the first time to Richard Gasquet in the quarterfinals in five sets despite taking the 3rd and 4th sets, in his first loss since 2008 to the Frenchman. He then reached another final, at the If Stockholm Open facing Grigor Dimitrov but lost in three sets, to hand the Bulgarian his first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0014-0003", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nFerrer then followed it up with another final appearance at the Valencia Open 500, where he is the defending champion, however he fell to Russian Mikhail Youzhny in straight sets. He reached his third final in as many weeks at the BNP Paribas Masters, where he is the defending champion after defeating world no. 1 Rafael Nadal, ending his 9 match losing streak to the Spaniard. However, he lost to Novak Djokovic in straight sets, despite serving for each set in the tenth game. This is Ferrer's 7th consecutive loss in a final. This is fifth time Ferrer has qualified for the Tour Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 12 October, Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro qualified as a result of reaching the final of the Shanghai Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro had a shaky start to the season, losing in the third round of the Australian Open in five sets to J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy. However he rebounded from this loss to win the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, defeating Frenchman Julien Benneteau in the final in straight sets. He then made it to his second Masters 1000 final at the BNP Paribas Open defeating Andy Murray and Djokovic, ultimately losing to Spaniard Rafael Nadal in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nA virus hampered the majority of his clay court season, leading to him pulling out of both the Madrid Masters and the French Open. He rebounded well, having his best run at Wimbledon Championships defeating David Ferrer en route to the semifinals, but lost Djokovic in five sets in what was the longest ever semifinal at Wimbledon, surpassing the record set by Boris Becker and Ivan Lendl in 1989. In the American hard court swing, del Potro began strongly by winning the Citi Open, defeating American John Isner in the final from a set down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the US Open, del Potro lost in the second round to former no. 1 Lleyton Hewitt. He won his third title of the year in Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships, defeating Canadian Milos Raonic in the final. At the Shanghai Rolex Masters, he reached the final but lost again to Djokovic in a third set tie-break. In a repeat of previous year's final at the Swiss Indoors, del Potro faced Roger Federer in the final, and replicated the result winning in three sets. This is the fourth time del Potro has qualified for the year-end finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 23 October, Top ranked Czech Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych was announced as the fifth qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nTom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych broke into the top 5 for the first time in his career. Berdych failed to win a title in the year, but reached three finals. He made back-to-back finals at the Open 13 and at the Dubai Tennis Championships losing to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in three sets despite having match point and to Novak Djokovic in straight sets, respectively. He reached his third final at the PTT Thailand Open falling to Canadian Milos Raonic in two tight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the slams, his best performance are at the quarterfinals of the Australian Open and Wimbledon Championships losing to Djokovic in both occasions, in four and three sets respectively. At the US Open, he reached the fourth round losing to Stanislas Wawrinka in four sets. At the French Open, he was upset in the first round by Frenchman Ga\u00ebl Monfils 5-7 in the fifth set. He also helped the Czech Davis Cup team to go through to the final, to have a shot at their second consecutive title. This is the fourth consecutive year Berdych has qualified for the year-end finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 30 October, following his second round victory in Paris, Roger Federer became the sixth player to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nRoger Federer began the year as the world number 2, and began his year strongly, making it to the semifinals at the Australian Open before losing to Andy Murray in a 5-set thriller, despite coming back twice from a set down. However, he didn't reach his first final of the season until the Internazionali BNL d'Italia, losing to Rafael Nadal in straight sets. At the French Open, Federer reached the quarterfinals but was upset by Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nDuring the grass court season, Federer won his only title of the season, defeating Mikhail Youzhny in the final of the Gerry Weber Open in three sets. However at Wimbledon, where Federer was defending champion, the Swiss suffered his worst Grand Slam defeat in over a decade, falling to world number 116 Sergiy Stakhovsky in the second round, bringing an end to his record streak of 36 consecutive quarterfinal appearances in slams. As a result of this loss, Federer fell outside of the top 4 for the first time since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nAt the US Open, Federer reached the fourth round before losing to Tommy Robredo in straight sets, this is Federer's first loss to Robredo after 10 consecutive wins and the first year since 2002 that Federer did not reach a slam final. Federer reached his third final of the season at the Swiss Indoors, in a repeat of the previous years final against Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro. Despite coming back form a set down, Federer ultimately fell to del Potro in the final set. This is the 12th straight year Federer has qualified for the year-end finals, tying with Ivan Lendl for the most consecutive appearances, and second most appearances in total at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nOn 31 October, following the defeats of Milos Raonic to Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych, Stanislas Wawrinka and Richard Gasquet took the final two spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nStanislas Wawrinka is having his best year on the ATP Tour to date, reaching a career high ranking of number 8 in the world. He began the year with a fourth round showing at the Australian Open, losing in a 5 set thriller against Novak Djokovic losing 12-10 in the fifth, in a match that lasted over five hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHe also reached his first slam semifinal at the US Open defeating defending champion Andy Murray in the quarterfinals in straight sets, before losing to world no. 1 Djokovic in a tightly contested 5 setter despite having a two sets to one lead. He also reached the quarterfinals of the French Open losing to eventual champion Rafael Nadal, winning only 6 games. The Swiss won his lone title of the year at the Portugal Open, defeating Spaniard David Ferrer in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nWawrinka reached his first Masters 1000 final since 2008 at the clay courts of Mutua Madrid Open losing to Nadal. He also reached the finals of the Copa Claro and the Topshelf Open losing to Ferrer in three sets and Nicolas Mahut in straight sets, respectively. At Wimbledon, the Swiss drew former world no. 8 J\u00fcrgen Melzer in the first round and lost 8-6 in the final set. This is Wawrinka's first ever appearance at the season finale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nRichard Gasquet is having a resurgence in 2013. He began the year by winning the Qatar Open defeating Russian Nikolay Davydenko from a set down. At the Australian Open but lost to compatriot Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in four sets. However, he followed it up with another title at Open Sud de France over another Frenchman in Beno\u00eet Paire in straight sets. At the French Open, he reached another fourth round falling to Stanislas Wawrinka in a tough 5 setter, with the Swiss taking the fifth set 8-6, despite Gasquet taking the first two sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHis 6 consecutive fourth round appearance at a slam ended at Wimbledon, when he fell into the third round to Australian Bernard Tomic in four tight sets. At the US Open, the Frenchman reached his first slam semifinal since 2007 Wimbledon, when he defeated David Ferrer in five sets, in his first win over the Spaniard in five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0023-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nHowever, he lost in the final four to eventual champion Rafael Nadal in straight sets He won his third title of the year at the Kremlin Cup defeating Mikhail Kukushkin, this the most he has won since winning three as well in 2006. This is the Frenchman's second appearance at the Tour Finals, his first since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nThe first of the alternate spots went to Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. Tsonga reached two finals in the year both in France at the Open 13 where he defeated Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych in three sets and at the Moselle Open where he lost to compatriot Gilles Simon in straight sets. Tsonga reached his first French Open semifinal defeating Roger Federer in straight sets, before losing to David Ferrer in straight sets. The second alternate spot was occupied by Canadian Milos Raonic, who broke through the top 10 for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Singles\nThe Canadian won two titles in the year at the SAP Open defeating Tommy Haas for his third consecutive title at the event and at the PTT Thailand Open defeating Berdych, both wins were in straight sets. He reached his first Masters 100 final at the Rogers Cup losing to Rafael Nadal, winning just two games each set. He reached his fourth final at Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships, but lost to Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro in two tight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nThe first team that qualified was the team of Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan on 10 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nBob Bryan & Mike Bryan began the year winning back-to-back titles in the Apia International Sydney over Mirnyi/Tec\u0103u and the Australian Open over Dutch pairing of Haase/Sijsling, making a record of most slams by a doubles team. They then won consecutive titles at the U.S. National Indoor Tennis Championships defeating compatriot Blake/Sock and BNP Paribas Open defeating Huey/Janowicz in a match tie-break. They then reached the final of the U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships and the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters, losing to Murray/Peers and Benneteau/Zimonji\u0107, respectively in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nThey then went on to a 25 match winning streak, capturing five titles in the process. They won title at the Mutua Madrid Open beating Peya/Soares, Internazionali BNL d'Italia beating Indian pairing of Bhupathi/Bopanna, French Open beating Frenchmen Llodra/Mahut in a third set tie-break, AEGON Championships beating Peya/Soares, and Wimbledon beating Dodig/Melo in four sets, giving them the Golden Slam, being the holder of all four slams and the Olympic gold simultaneously. Their streak ended in the quarterfinals of the Rogers Cup losing to Nestor/Lindstedt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0026-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nThey then won their tenth title at the Western & Southern Open defeating the Spanish pair of Granollers/L\u00f3pez Coming into the US Open, the Bryans were aiming to be the first team since Ken McGregor and Frank Sedgman in 1951 to win the \"calendar year grand slam\", however they lost in the semifinals to Paes/\u0160tep\u00e1nek ending their 28 match winning streak in slams. They then reached their 12 final of the year at the Valencia Open 500 but lost to defending champions Peya/Soares in a Match tie-break despite having 4 match points. They won their 11th title of the year at the final Masters event at the BNP Paribas Masters defeating Peya/Soares in straight sets. This is the 10th time the Bryan Brothers have qualified for the year-end finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nOn 10 September, US Open finalists Alexander Peya & Bruno Soares, and Leander Paes & Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek were announced as next two qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nAlexander Peya & Bruno Soares produced a breakthrough year in 2013. They won their first title of the year at the Brasil Open defeating \u010cerm\u00e1k/Merti\u0148\u00e1k They then won the Barcelona Open defeating Lindstedt/Nestor saving 1 match point. They then reached their 3rd and 4th final losing to Bryan/Bryan at the Mutua Madrid Open and the AEGON Championships respectively. They then claimed their third title of the year at AEGON International against the British team of Fleming/Marray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nAfter losing in the third round of Wimbledon, the pair reached the final of the International German Open losing to Poland's Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski. Soares and Peya won their first Masters title, both individually and as a team, at the Rogers Cup over British pair of Colin Fleming and Andy Murray. At the US Open, the pair reached their first Grand Slam final, however fell to established doubles partnership Leander Paes and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0028-0002", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nThe Austrian-Brazilian team defended their title at the Valencia Open 500 defeating the world no. 1 Bryan/Bryan in three sets of tie-break and saving four match points in the match tie-break. They then reached the final of the BNP Paribas Masters once again facing the Bryan/Bryan, but this time lost in straight sets. Soares paired with Colin Fleming in February to win the Heineken Open, beating Brunstr\u00f6m/Nielsen, and also reached the Mixed Doubles final of Wimbledon with Lisa Raymond, losing to Daniel Nestor and Kristina Mladenovic This is the first appearance at the event for both men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nLeander Paes & Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek did not play a lot of events as a team in 2013. They won their only title of the year at the US Open, ending the Bryan Brothers' hope of winning a calendar year Grand Slam in the semifinals and defeating Peya/Soares in the final to capture their second Grand Slam as a team. They also reached the semifinals of Wimbledon. Paes teamed with Daniel Nestor to win the Winston-Salem Open, defeating Huey/Inglot. \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek, on the other hand, reached the final of Citi Open with Mardy Fish, but lost to Benneteau/Zimonji\u0107. It's the second year the pair have qualified together, Stepanek's second appearance, and Paes's 13th overall appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nOn 21 October, debutants Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo and defending doubles champions Marcel Granollers and Marc L\u00f3pez were announced as qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nIvan Dodig & Marcelo Melo formed their partnership earlier in the year and had significant success. They won their biggest title of their careers at the Shanghai Rolex Masters, defeating the Spanish team of Marrero/Verdasco in three tie-breaks. They also reached their first Grand Slam final as a team and as individuals at Wimbledon, losing to the Bryans in four sets, after taking the first set. They followed that up with a semifinal showing at the US Open, losing to Peya/Soares in straight sets. Melo also won a title paired with Tommy Robredo at the Brisbane International, defeating Butorac/Hanley. Dodig reached the final of the PBZ Zagreb Indoors with Mate Pavi\u0107, but fell to Knowle/Pol\u00e1\u0161ek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nMarcel Granollers & Marc L\u00f3pez continued their partnership from 2012 after winning the World Tour Finals. The pair began the year by reaching the semifinals of the Australian Open, but were defeated by surprise finalists Haase/Sijsling. The pair reached their first final of the season at the Western & Southern Open; however, they fell to the number 1 team of Bob and Mike Bryan in the final. This is the second straight year Granollers and Lopez have qualified for the year-end finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nOn 31 October, with the defeat of Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski, two of the three spots were filled by the teams of Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer, and David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nAisam-ul-Haq Qureshi & Jean-Julien Rojer in the second year of their team-up enjoyed relative success. They won their biggest title as a team in Miami, defeating the Polish team of Fyrstenberg/Matkowski. They won their second title of the year at the If Stockholm Open over the Swedish pairing of Bj\u00f6rkman/Lindstedt. They also reached two other finals, but lost, at the Open 13 to the Indian-British pair of Bopanna/Fleming and at the Portugal Open to Gonz\u00e1lez/Lipsky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nDavid Marrero & Fernando Verdasco made their doubles breakthrough in 2013, each reaching a career-high ranking this year. They reached their first doubles Masters final at the Shanghai Rolex Masters facing Dodig/Melo losing in three sets of tie-break, including a third set match tie-break. They won their lone title of the year at the St. Petersburg Open defeating the British-Uzbek team of Inglot/Istomin. Marrero also won two other titles with different partners at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel with \u0141ukasz Kubot defeating Italians Bolelli/Fognini and at the ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag with Martin Kli\u017ean defeating Monroe/Stadler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nOn 2 November, after the defeat of Max Mirnyi and Horia Tecau, the Polish team Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski took the final spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Qualified players, Doubles\nMariusz Fyrstenberg & Marcin Matkowski continues there success as a team in 2013. They reach their first final of the year at the Sony Open Tennis losing to Qureshi/Rojer in straight sets. They won their lone title of the year at the International German Open defeating Peya/Soares in a match tie-break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Singles\nGroup A is composed of French Open finalists Rafael Nadal and David Ferrer. They are joined by Czech Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych and debutant Stanislas Wawrinka. Against the rest of their group Nadal is 47\u20138, Ferrer is 19\u201327, Berdych is 11\u201330, and Wawrinka is 11\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Singles\nNadal leads every match\u2013up he has on his group. He is 20\u20135 against his compatriot Ferrer, they met 5 times in 2013 with Nadal leading 4\u20131, however, Ferrer won their last meeting at the semifinals of the BNP Paribas Masters in straight sets. Nadal also leads Berdych 16\u20133, including the last 15 with four of them coming in 2013, their last match at the semifinals of China Open, where Nadal won when Berdych retired in the first set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Singles\nAgainst Wawrinka, Nadal has a perfect 11\u20130 record, with the last win coming at the Shanghai Rolex Masters quarterfinals, 1 of 3 wins of Nadal in 2013. Against the remaining member of his Group, Ferrer has the advantage. Ferrer leads Berdych 7\u20133, including a win in their only match at quarterfinals of the BNP Paribas Masters. Against Swiss Wawrinka, Ferrer lead 7\u20134, splitting their two matches in 2013 both in the final, with Ferrer winning at the Copa Claro and Wawrinka winning at the Portugal Open. At the final match\u2013up, Wawrinka lead Berdych 7\u20135, winning 2 of their 3 matches in 2013, including their last encounter at the Round of 16 at the US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Singles\nGroup B is led by reigning Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic. He is joined by 2009 US Open winner Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro, 17 time grand slam champion Roger Federer, and Richard Gasquet. Against the rest of the group Djokovic is 33\u201320, del Potro is 13\u201325, Federer is 40\u201321 and Gasquet is 4\u201322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Singles\nDespite not being the top ranked in his group, Federer leads every head\u2013to\u2013head in the group. Federer against group B leader Djokovic has a 16\u201314 record; however, Djokovic won their last meeting and lone meeting in 2013 at the BNP Paribas Masters semifinals, coming back from a set down. Against the Argentine del Potro, the Swiss is 14\u20135; however, del Potro has won three of the last four. The pair splits their matches in 2013, with del Potro winning in the final of the Swiss Indoors and Federer winning in the quarterfinals of BNP Paribas Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Singles\nFederer also leads Frenchman Gasquet 10\u20132, their last meeting coming in the third round of the 2012 Mutua Madrid Open, with Federer winning in straight sets. World no. 2 Djokovic has the lead against the other two member of his group. The Serb is 10\u20133 against del Potro, leading their 2013 match\u2013up 3\u20131, winning their most recent match at the Shanghai Rolex Masters final in a third-set tie\u2013break. Djokovic has an almost perfect record against Gasquet at 9\u20131, including winning the last seven matches and 15 straight sets. Djokovic won their two meeting in 2013, including their last meeting at the semifinals of the China Open. In the final head\u2013to\u2013head in group B, del Potro leads Gasquet 5\u20131, winning the last five, the last meeting being at the 2012 Swiss Indoors Basel semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Doubles\nGroup A is led by the dominant team of the year, twins Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan. They are joined by the teams of Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo, Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer, and Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski. Against their group Bryan/Bryan are 26\u20139, Dodig/Melo is 2\u20133, Qureshi/Rojer is 3\u20139, and Fyrstenberg/Matkowski is 9\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Doubles\nThe Bryans lead every match\u2013up in their group. They are 5\u20131 against Dodig/Melo, being 2\u20131 in the year, with the twins winning their last meeting at the semifinals of the BNP Paribas Masters. Against the team of Qureshi/Rojer they lead 7\u20131, having met once this year at the quarterfinals of the BNP Paribas Masters, with Bryan/Bryan winning. Finally, against the Polish duo of Fyrstenberg/Matkowski they lead 16\u20137, winning their only meeting in 2013 at the 2nd round of the BNP Paribas Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Doubles\nIn the match\u2013up between Dodig/Melo and Qureshi/Rojer, Dodig/Melo won their only meeting and that was at the Shanghai Rolex Masters in 2013. Against Fyrstenberg/Matkowski, Qureshi/Rojer has two wins each, meeting three times in 2013, with Qureshi/Rojer leading 2\u20131 and winning their last encounter at the second round of Shanghai Rolex Masters. On the final match\u2013up, Fyrstenberg/Matkowski and Dodig/Melo have never met before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Doubles\nGroup B is composed of US Open finalists Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares, and champions Leander Paes and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek. The group is completed by Spanish teams of Marcel Granollers and Marc L\u00f3pez, and David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco. In their match\u2013up against their group Peya/Soares 5\u20134, Granollers/L\u00f3pez is 1\u201310, Marrero/Verdasco is 8\u20133, and Paes/\u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek is 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Doubles\nPeya/Soares has a decent record against each member of their group. Against Granollers/L\u00f3pez they lead 2\u20131, winning their two meeting in 2013 with the last one at the semifinals of the Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell. In the other two match\u2013ups, the Austrian\u2013Brazilian pairing has an even record, having two wins a piece against Marrero/Verdasco and one win a piece against Paes/\u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek. Marrero/Verdasco leads 2\u20131 in their 2013 matches, including their last match at the second round of the Internazionali BNL d'Italia, while Paes/\u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won their only meeting in 2013 against the Austrian\u2013Brazilian duo in the final of the US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0045-0001", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Groupings, Doubles\nGranollers/L\u00f3pez has never won a match against the other two teams. Marrero/Verdasco won all their six matches against their compatriots, including three this year, with the last one at the quarterfinals of the Shanghai Rolex Masters. Paes/\u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek on the other hand is 2\u20130 against Granollers/L\u00f3pez, with their latest encounter being at last year's ATP World Tour Finals in the round robin. In the final head\u2013to\u2013head Paes/\u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won their only match against Marrero/Verdasco at the quarterfinals of the BNP Paribas Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231555-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals, Champions, Doubles\nDavid Marrero / Fernando Verdasco def. Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan, 7\u20135, 6\u20137(3\u20137), [10\u20137]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231556-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals \u2013 Doubles\nMarcel Granollers and Marc L\u00f3pez were the defending champions, but were knocked out in the round robin stage. David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco won the title, defeating Bob and Mike Bryan in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20137(3\u20137), [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231556-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals \u2013 Doubles, Draw, Group A\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, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231556-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals \u2013 Doubles, Draw, Group B\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, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231557-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals \u2013 Singles\nDefending champion Novak Djokovic successfully defended his title, defeating Rafael Nadal in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134 to win the Singles tennis title at the 2013 ATP World Tour Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231557-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals \u2013 Singles, Draw, Group A\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 initially to sort out a superior/inferior player, then head-to-head records; 5) ATP rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231557-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Finals \u2013 Singles, Draw, Group B\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 initially to sort out a superior/inferior player, then head-to-head records; 5) ATP rankings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231558-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ATP World Tour Masters 1000\nThe twenty-fourth edition of the ATP Masters Series. The champion of each Masters event is awarded a 1,000 rankings points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231559-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AVP Pro Beach Volleyball Tour\nThe 2013 AVP Pro Beach Volleyball Tour was a domestic professional beach volleyball circuit organized in the United States by the Association of Volleyball Professionals (AVP) for the 2013 beach volleyball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231559-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AVP Pro Beach Volleyball Tour, Schedule\nThis is the complete schedule of events on the 2013 calendar, with team progression documented from the semifinals stage. All tournaments consisted of single-elimination qualifying rounds followed by a double-elimination main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231559-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AVP Pro Beach Volleyball Tour, Awards\nThe 2013 AVP year-end award winners were announced on November 19. The season's top performers were chosen based on statistics, player votes and AVP national ranking points earned during the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231560-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AZ60\n2013 AZ60 is a small Solar System body (extended centaur) from the scattered disk or inner Oort cloud. 2013 AZ60 has the 8th-largest semi-major axis of a minor planet not detected outgassing like a comet (2013 BL76, 2005 VX3 and 2012 DR30 have a larger semi-major axis).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231560-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AZ60\n2013 AZ60 came to perihelion in November 2014 at a distance of 7.9\u00a0AU from the Sun (inside of the orbit of Saturn). With an absolute magnitude (H) of 10.2, 2013 AZ60 has an estimated diameter of 40\u00a0km. Comet Hale\u2013Bopp, which is roughly the same size, was not discovered until it was 7.2\u00a0AU from the Sun and had started outgassing CO. 2013 AZ60 may be discovered to be cometary as it comes to perihelion. It comes to opposition at the start of April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231560-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AZ60\nAfter leaving the planetary region of the Solar System, 2013 AZ60 will have a barycentric aphelion of 827\u00a0AU with an orbital period of 8500 years. In a 10 million year integration of the orbit, one of the 3-sigma clones is ejected from the Solar System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231560-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AZ60, Physical characteristics and orbit\nA 2016 study found 2013 AZ60 to have a comet-like albedo of 2.9% (darker than any other known ejected centaur) and a color typical of D-type asteroids. It is unknown if it is a so-called \"super comet\" or an extinct comet, considering its large distance from the Sun. It was also determined that 2013 AZ60 has a diameter of 62.3\u00b15.3 kilometers, larger than initially believed. A light curve analysis found it to have a rotation period of 9.39\u00b10.22 hours, typical of asteroids its size. No significant satellites were detected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 45], "content_span": [46, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231560-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AZ60, Physical characteristics and orbit\nIt was also found that 2013 AZ60 is on an extremely unstable orbit, with a ~64% chance of being ejected from the Solar system in 1 million years, and a ~25% chance of being ejected in the next 500,000 years, as well as a 4.2% chance of its orbit venturing into the neighborhood of Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 45], "content_span": [46, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231561-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aalesunds FK season\nThe 2013 season was Aalesund's 7th consecutive year in Tippeligaen, and their first season with Jan J\u00f6nsson as the club's manager. Aalesund competed in the Tippeligaen, finishing 4th, and the cup where they reached the third Round, losing to Ranheim of the Adeccoligaen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231561-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aalesunds 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231561-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aalesunds FK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231561-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aalesunds FK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231561-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Aalesunds FK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231561-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Aalesunds FK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499\nThe 2013 Aaron's 499 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on May 5, 2013, at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama, United States. Contested over 192 laps on the 2.66\u2013mile (4.28\u00a0km) tri-oval, it was the tenth race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. David Ragan of Front Row Motorsports won the race, his second career Sprint Cup win. Teammate David Gilliland finished second, while Carl Edwards, Michael Waltrip, and Jimmie Johnson rounded out the Top 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499\nThe race weekend was marred by rain, with qualifying being rained out. During the race, the event was stopped for three hours due to the weather at the track. Edwards, Johnson and Matt Kenseth battled for the win, but on the green\u2013white\u2013checker finish, Ragan and Gilliland claimed the lead during the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Background\nTalladega Superspeedway is a four turn tri-oval track that is 2.66 miles (4.28\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 33 degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is 18 degrees. The back stretch, opposite of the front, is at only two degrees. The racetrack has a seating capacity for 109,000 spectators. Brad Keselowski was the defending race winner after winning the event during the 2012 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 343 points, while Carl Edwards stood in second with 300 points. Kasey Kahne and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. followed in the third and fourth position with 297 points each, seven ahead of Clint Bowyer in fifth. Keselowski, with 284, was in sixth; six points ahead of Kyle Busch. Eighth-placed Greg Biffle was one point ahead of Kevin Harvick and Paul Menard in ninth and tenth, and fourteen ahead of Aric Almirola in eleventh. Jamie McMurray completed the first twelve positions with 245 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 64 points, five points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third after recording only 43 points during the first nine races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Background\nThere were 45 cars on the initial entry list, though it was reduced to 44 after Mike Bliss withdrew. All but four teams had entered the first nine races of the season; Elliott Sadler was attempting his second race of the season, Trevor Bayne was attempting his third, while Scott Speed (six) and Michael McDowell (eight) were also part-timers attempting the race. Sadler had to qualify for the race on speed due to being too low in owners points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Practice and qualifying\nTwo practice sessions were held in preparation for the race; both on Friday, May 3. The first session lasted for 45 minutes, while second session was 60 minutes long. During the first practice session, Edwards, for the Roush Fenway Racing team, was quickest ahead of Truex, Jr. in second and Marcos Ambrose in third. Joey Logano was scored fourth, and Ryan Newman managed fifth. Matt Kenseth was sixth, while Denny Hamlin and his relief driver Brian Vickers were scored seventh. Johnson. Jeff Gordon, and Kahne rounded out the top ten quickest drivers in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Practice and qualifying\nKeselowski was quickest in the second and final practice session, ahead of David Stremme in second and Kahne in third. Almirola was fourth quickest, and Travis Kvapil took fifth. Tony Stewart, Gordon, McMurray, Bobby Labonte, and Edwards followed in the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Practice and qualifying\nQualifying was affected by wet weather soaking the track, therefore canceling the session and making first practice times determine the qualifying grid. Edwards, after finishing the first practice in first, was rewarded the pole position. He was joined on the front row of the grid by Truex, Jr. Ambrose was third, Logano took fourth, and Newman started fifth. Kenseth, Hamlin, Johnson, Gordon and Kahne rounded out the first ten positions. The only driver who failed to qualify for the race was Elliott Sadler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nThe green flag flew at 12:10 PM CDT (1:10 PM EST) Martin Truex, Jr. led the first five laps, but Matt Kenseth took the lead on lap six to begin his domination of the race. The first caution flew for fluid on the track on lap 23 after Trevor Bayne had blown an engine. During pit stops, Denny Hamlin climbed out of his car to surrender the rest of his day to Brian Vickers. Under NASCAR rules, Hamlin started the race and was credited with any results earned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nThe second caution flew on lap 43 for The Big One: which occurred when Kyle Busch touched Kasey Kahne entering turn 1, and collected an additional twelve cars, including Truex, Vickers, Kevin Harvick, Tony Stewart, Jamie McMurray, Greg Biffle, Marcos Ambrose, Jeff Burton, David Stremme, Kurt Busch, David Reutimann, Casey Mears, Scott Speed, Clint Bowyer and Jeff Gordon. After the crash, Kyle Busch stated, \"I was trying to go to the outside of him, but he just moved up in front of me and I wasn't expecting it. I tried to go to the outside of him and before I could get to the outside of him, I got in the back of him.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nMatt Kenseth continued to lead most of this stretch, with Jimmie Johnson close behind in second. On lap 124, the third caution flew for rain. Just before the caution, Kenseth and Johnson had been shuffled back by Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. and his teammate Carl Edwards. Edwards made a move for the lead and beat Stenhouse by one-half-an-inch for the lead when the third yellow came out. As the rain quickly intensified over the speedway, the red flag flew for 3 hours and 36 minutes as the track was dried. The initial shower was brief, but just as the track was almost dried, a heavier thunderstorm soaked the speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nHours later after the track was dried, the restart began and Kenseth regained the lead. The race ran green through a round of green-flag pit stops. Johnson took the lead after pit stops, hoping to become the first driver since himself in 2006 to win the Daytona 500 and the spring Talladega race in the same year. Kenseth, who had the best car, was in the mix as well, along with Edwards, Kurt Busch, Michael Waltrip, and Bowyer in a six-car breakaway. The fourth caution then came out on lap 175 when Michael McDowell hit the wall in turn 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nWith ten laps left in the race, darkness was creeping in. On lap 182, the fifth caution of the race came out for a large crash on the backstretch. It started when Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. tried to squeeze between the outside wall and J.J. Yeley. Yeley got loose, shot across the track, turned across the front of Marcos Ambrose and into the right-rear of Kurt Busch, collecting another ten cars, including Ryan Newman, Danica Patrick, Terry Labonte, Clint Bowyer, McMurray, Bobby Labonte, Waltrip, David Stremme, Truex and Gordon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nBusch took the worst hit as his car turned sideways, flipped over once and landed on top of Newman, then was struck by Bobby Labonte and Bowyer after landing back on the ground. It marked the first time the Gen-6 car had rolled over. When interviewed Newman angrily said to reporters that NASCAR should not have ordered them to race in the dark conditions by saying that if they could not finish the race in daylight, they should call it official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nWith two laps to go and with darkness imminent, NASCAR cancelled the three green-white-checker rule for the race and announced a decision to only have one attempt to finish under green, which it had also done the night before in the Nationwide race. On the restart, Kenseth, Johnson, and Edwards battled for the lead and their struggle allowed Front Row Motorsports drivers David Ragan and David Gilliland to slip by on the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nRagan cleared the leaders in turn 3 and held off both Johnson, Gilliland, Edwards, and Michael Waltrip to take his second career win, his first since winning the 2011 Coke Zero 400. It was the first win in NASCAR for FRM. With Ragan's teammate Gilliland finishing 2nd, Front Row Motorsports received a stunning 1\u20132 finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231562-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Aaron's 499, Report, Race summary\nThere were five cautions for 31 laps and 30 lead changes between 17 different drivers throughout the course of the race. The race took seven hours to complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231563-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberdeen Donside by-election\nThe Aberdeen Donside by-election, 2013 is a by-election that was held for the Scottish Parliament constituency of Aberdeen Donside on Thursday 20 June, following the death from cancer of the constituency's MSP, Brian Adam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231563-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberdeen Donside by-election\nThe seat was created as Aberdeen North following the establishment of the Scottish Parliament in 1999. In the first election to the Scottish Parliament the seat was won by the Scottish Labour Party, but was gained by Brian Adam (who had contested, but lost, the seat in 1999) for the Scottish National Party in the next election. He held the seat in 2007 and 2011 with increased majorities. In the last election, Adam held the seat with a majority of 7,175 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231563-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberdeen Donside by-election\nIn the 2011 Scottish Parliament election, the SNP became the first ever majority government of the Scottish Parliament, winning 69 seats out of 129. Prior to Adam's death, however, the SNP only held a majority of one (following the election of Tricia Marwick as presiding officer and the departure of three other MSPs). This meant that if the SNP lost the by-election then the government would lose its overall majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231563-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberdeen Donside by-election\nSNP list MSP for the North-East region, Mark McDonald, resigned his seat to contest the constituency by-election. McDonald held the seat for the SNP, but with a significantly reduced majority on a lower turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231563-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberdeen Donside by-election, Election\nNine candidates contested the election, with their detail published on 17 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231563-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberdeen Donside by-election, Scottish Parliament Election result, 2011\nBlue background denotes the winner of the electorate vote. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list. Yellow background denotes an electorate win by a list member, or other incumbent. A Y or N denotes status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231564-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto Rio Preto\nThe 2013 Aberto Rio Preto was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in S\u00e3o Jos\u00e9 do Rio Preto, Brazil between 7 and 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231564-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto Rio Preto, ATP 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-00231564-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto Rio Preto, ATP entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players got into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231565-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto Rio Preto \u2013 Doubles\nFrederico Gil and Jaroslav Posp\u00ed\u0161il won the last edition of the event in 2011, but chose not to compete. Colombians Nicol\u00e1s Barrientos and Carlos Salamanca defeated Brazilians Marcelo Demoliner and Jo\u00e3o Souza 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231566-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto Rio Preto \u2013 Singles\nRicardo Mello was the last champion of the event in 2011, but decided not to compete. Jo\u00e3o Souza won the title 7\u20136(7\u20130), 6\u20133 against Alejandro Gonz\u00e1lez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231567-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de S\u00e3o Paulo\nThe 2013 Aberto de S\u00e3o Paulo was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 13th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil between 31 December 2012 and 6 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231567-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de S\u00e3o Paulo, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231567-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de S\u00e3o Paulo, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231568-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de S\u00e3o Paulo \u2013 Doubles\nFernando Romboli and J\u00falio Silva were the defending champions but Romboli decided not to participate. Silva played alongside Thiago Alves but they lost in the first round. James Cerretani and Adil Shamasdin won the final 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20131, [11\u20139] against Federico Delbonis and Renzo Olivo to capture the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231569-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de S\u00e3o Paulo \u2013 Singles\nThiago Alves is the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Gast\u00e3o Elias. Horacio Zeballos defeated Rog\u00e9rio Dutra da Silva 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20132 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231570-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul\nThe 2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul was a professional tennis tournament played on Clay. It was the Second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Porto Alegre, Brazil between 23 and 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231570-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231570-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players used Protected Ranking to gain entry into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231570-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players used Special Exempt to gain entry into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231571-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul \u2013 Doubles\nMarcelo Demoliner and Jo\u00e3o Souza were the defending champions but decided not to compete together. Souza teamed up with V\u00edctor Estrella, but lost in the final. Demoliner teamed up with Thiemo de Bakker but lost in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231571-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul \u2013 Doubles\nGuillermo Dur\u00e1n and M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez won the title, defeating Estrella and Souza in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231572-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul \u2013 Singles\nSimon Greul was the defending champion, but chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231572-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aberto de T\u00eanis do Rio Grande do Sul \u2013 Singles\nFacundo Arg\u00fcello won the title, defeating M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231573-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Abierto Mexicano Telcel\nThe 2013 Abierto Mexicano Telcel was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 20th edition of the men's tournament (13th for the women), and part of the 2013 ATP World Tour and the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Acapulco, Mexico between 25 February and 2 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231574-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Doubles\nDavid Marrero and Fernando Verdasco were the defending champions but Verdasco decided not to participate. Marrero successfully defended the title alongside \u0141ukasz Kubot, defeating Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231575-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Singles\nDavid Ferrer was the three-time defending champion, but he lost to Rafael Nadal in the final, 0\u20136, 2\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231576-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSara Errani and Roberta Vinci were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino and Arantxa Parra Santonja won the title, defeating Catalina Casta\u00f1o and Mariana Duque Mari\u00f1o in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20131).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231577-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Singles\nSara Errani was the defending champion and she retained her title, beating Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231578-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team represented Abilene Christian University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Wildcats played their first transition season of at the FCS level. However, they were not considered a FCS team for scheduling purposes until 2014. They were led by second-year head coach Ken Collums. Home games were played at Shotwell Stadium. This was a transition season for the Wildcats. As a transitioning school from D2 to D1, the Wildcats were ineligible for the FCS Playoffs and the D2 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231578-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team\nThey played a mixed schedule of schools from the FBS, FCS, NAIA, and D-II. The Wildcats joined the Southland Conference for football in the 2014 season, and it counted as the 2nd year in a 4-year transition into the Division I level that will make them eligible for the FCS Playoffs in 2017\u201318. They finished the season 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231578-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team, Broadcasts\nAll Abilene Christian games were broadcast on KTLT, also known as , and in Dallas on as part of the Abilene Christian Wildcats Cumulus radio network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231578-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team, Broadcasts\nAudio and video of all home games is being offered live through Stretch Internet via . Audio of all road games is also available through ACU TV. Locally Wildcats home games are shown on KTES-LP This TV tape delayed Tuesday nights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race that was held at the Yas Marina Circuit on 3 November 2013. The race was the seventeenth round of the 2013 season, and marked the 5th running of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix\nThe race, contested over 55 laps, was won by Sebastian Vettel, driving a Red Bull. Mark Webber finished second, and by Nico Rosberg driving a Mercedes was third. Vettel won the race 30.8s ahead of his Red Bull teammate Mark Webber. Vettel's victory equalled Alberto Ascari and Michael Schumacher's record in 1953 and 2004 record for most consecutive wins in a season. This was Red Bull's 100th podium. Adrian Sutil scored his last World Championship points at this race, as well as Paul di Resta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Background, Partial solar eclipse\nDuring the race it was possible to observe a partial solar eclipse from 17:22 local time to 17:39 local time when the Sun set, and this was shown briefly during the race live broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Background, Tyres\nLike the 2012 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, tyre supplier Pirelli brought its white-banded medium compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the yellow-banded soft compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Free Practice\nRomain Grosjean and Lewis Hamilton were top in the first practice session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Free Practice\nRed Bull drivers were fastest in the second practice session with Vettel leading Webber by a tenth of a second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Free Practice\nDuring third practice Mercedes and Red Bull were close at the top and the session ended with Vettel two-tenths of a second ahead of Webber who in turn was less than a hundredth of a second faster than Hamilton's Mercedes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nWebber qualified in pole position ahead of his Red Bull teammate Vettel who qualified in second. The Mercedes drivers of Hamilton and Rosberg qualified on the second row of the grid. Fernando Alonso was the highest placed driver in the World Championship standings who failed to qualify for the final round of qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nJules Bianchi was penalised before the start of qualifying five places on the grid for an unscheduled gearbox change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Post-qualifying\nKimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was excluded from qualifying and was relegated to twenty-second place on the grid having originally qualified fifth place on the grid after his car failed a floor deflection test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe race began with Vettel in second on the grid overtaking Webber into the first corner and then leading until the chequered flag. Rosberg moved up to second position, while Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, starting from the back of the grid, broke his front-right suspension after contact with Giedo van der Garde, causing R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen to retire from the race. German Nico H\u00fclkenberg, during his first pit-stop was deemed to have been unsafely released and was given a drive through penalty. Grosjean, advanced from sixth on the grid to fourth after the start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Race\nDuring the first half of the race, Felipe Massa led his team-mate Alonso, but was overtaken by Alonso in the latter stages of the race. After Alonso's second pit-stop, he came out of the pitlane and moved around backmarker Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne, going off the racetrack with all four wheels in a move that consequently caused Massa to run wide into turn five. Vettel won the race by 30.8s over Webber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Post race\nDuring the cool down lap Vettel and Webber performed doughnuts. As Vettel had done one after the previous race in India, this time he incurred no penalty from the stewards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Report, Post race\nAlonso was sent for precautionary medical checks after a kerb impact measured at 25g.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231579-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Classification, Qualifying\nNotes: \u00a0- Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen qualified fifth, but was disqualified from qualifying when his car failed a floor deflection test. - Jules Bianchi qualified twentieth, but penalised five grid places for an unscheduled gearbox change and started from twenty-first after R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was disqualified from qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake\nThe 2013 Aceh earthquake struck the Indonesian island of Sumatra on July 2 with a moment magnitude of 6.1 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). The strike-slip earthquake killed at least 35 people and injured 276 others in the province of Aceh (on the northern end of Sumatra) where approximately 4,300 homes were damaged or destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake, Background\nEarthquakes are common in Sumatra as it lies at the convergent boundary where the Sunda Plate is subducting beneath the Indo-Australian Plate. The plates are converging obliquely at a rate of 60\u00a0mm per year and the right lateral component is accommodated by strike-slip faulting within Sumatra, mainly on the Great Sumatran fault. In 2004, Sumatra was devastated by the Sumatra\u2013Andaman earthquake and resulting tsunami that killed tens of thousands in the area and 230,000 people around the Indian Ocean. In 2009, an earthquake near Padang on Sumatra killed more than 1,000. In April 2012, an 8.6-magnitude quake killed five people in Aceh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake, Earthquake characteristics\nAt 2:37pm local time (07:37 UTC) on July 2, 2013, a 6.1 magnitude earthquake struck at a depth of 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi) with an epicenter near Sumatra's northwestern tip, 55 kilometres (34\u00a0mi) south of Bireun. It occurred on the Semangko Fault. The quake lasted approximately 15 seconds and was felt from regional capital Banda Aceh to Bener Meriah. The quake was powerful enough to cause concern in Banda Aceh, 320 miles (510\u00a0km) from the epicenter, and shaking was felt as far as Malaysia. At least fifteen aftershocks occurred, with three powerful ones registering magnitudes of 4.3, 5.5 and 5.2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake, Damage\nAs of July 5, the official death toll stood at 35, with eight people still missing. A further 276 people were injured. The Bener Meriah and Central Aceh districts were hardest hit by the quake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake, Damage\nIn Bener Meriah, nine deaths were reported. More than 100 people were hospitalized due to their injuries and 537 houses were badly damaged in the district. A further 252 houses suffered minor damage. Several hundred residents slept outdoors the night of July 2, afraid to return to their homes for fear of aftershocks. \"There were strong aftershocks last night and people didn\u2019t want to go back home, so they stayed in the open overnight,\" commented an official, \"but we don\u2019t have enough tents\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake, Damage\nIn Central Aceh, 26 deaths were reported. A mosque collapse killed six children and trapped 14 others. Rescuers dug through the rubble throughout the night of July 2\u20133, but did not locate any of the trapped children. Numerous landslides occurred in the district and 1,368 houses were destroyed. A further 2,135 houses suffered minor damaged. On July 3, a local official commented \"People are still frightened, especially after the aftershocks last night. Nobody dared to stay at home. Everyone slept on the roads or in car parks.\" The main hospital was overcrowded with patients, causing tents to be set up outside to handle the overflow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake, Response\nA government plane and helicopter were sent in to assist local police and soldiers in rescue efforts. Several roads were destroyed in the quake or blocked by landslides, hampering rescue efforts. Power and cell phone tower outages made communications difficult. Three truckloads of bottled water, food, and other supplies were dispatched to the region. The Aceh Disaster Mitigation Office said more help would be provided when they had better data on what was needed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231581-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Aceh earthquake, Response\nOn July 3, 40 billion rupiah (approximately US$4 million) was allocated for emergency relief efforts. A one-week emergency response period, which can be extended if necessary, was enacted in Bener Meriah. Five shelters were set up in Bener Meriah and 10 in Central Aceh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231582-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Acrobatic Gymnastics European Championships\nThe 26th Acrobatic Gymnastics European Championships was held in Odivelas, Portugal 16\u201328 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231583-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Acropolis International Basketball Tournament\nThe Acropolis International Tournament 2013 was a basketball tournament held in OAKA Indoor Hall in Athens, Greece, from August 27 until August 29, 2013. It was the 26th edition of the Acropolis International Basketball Tournament. The four participating teams were Greece, Italy, Lithuania, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231584-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Acropolis Rally\nThe 2013 Acropolis Rally was the sixth round of the 2013 World Rally Championship season. The event was based in Loutraki, Corinthia, and started on 31 May and was concluded on 2 June after fourteen special stages, totaling 306 competitive kilometres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231584-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Acropolis Rally, Report\nJari-Matti Latvala took his first win of the 2013 season, and his first win for Volkswagen on the Acropolis Rally. The opening forty-seven kilometre stage proved to be difficult, claiming three high-profile victims in S\u00e9bastien Ogier, Mads \u00d8stberg and Mikko Hirvonen in short order, and Evgeny Novikov emerged as the surprise early leader, building up a thirty-second advantage at the end of the first leg. The Russian's lead was short-lived, as he developed a puncture early in the second leg and was forced to limp back to the service park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231584-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Acropolis Rally, Report\nLatvala took control of the rally while Andreas Mikkelsen in the third factory-supported Polo R began to work his way up through the points-paying positions. He ultimately missed out on a podium finish of his own, as Dani Sordo and Thierry Neuville each took their second podium finish of the season with second and third place respectively. Latvala's result was briefly challenged by Citro\u00ebn, who believed his car was in violation of the technical regulations, but the protest was dismissed and Latvala's result was confirmed, allowing him to secure second place in the drivers' championship standings behind team-mate Ogier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231584-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Acropolis Rally, Entry list\nEleven World Rally Cars were entered into the event, as were sixteen WRC-2 entries and tend for the JWRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival\nThe 6th Adelaide Film Festival took place in Adelaide, Australia, from 10 to 20 October 2013. This was Amanda Duthie's first year as Festival Director (after eight years at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and eight years at the Special Broadcasting Service during the 1990s), having taken over from Katrina Sedgwick. Margaret Pomeranz and David Stratton served as the festival's patrons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival\nScott Hicks received the 2013 Don Dunstan Award for his contribution to the Australian film industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival\nThe poster this year depicts Screen Worship, which celebrates work for all screens\u2014cinema, television, phone and computer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nThe 2013 festival \"ran alongside the Adelaide Festival of Ideas for the first time, with a move from 'mad March' to mid October\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nThe festival featured 166 titles from 48 countries, including 28 world premieres, 47 Australian premieres and 34 South Australian projects. The line-up included 14 works (including seven features) which were supported by the Adelaide Film Festival Investment Fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nThe festival opened with Tracks and \"with no less than two camels on the red carpet with Robyn Davidson, the author of the book on which John Curran\u2019s film is based\". The festival closed with A Story of Children and Film directed by Mark Cousins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nThe Turkish film Jin, directed and written by Reha Erdem, was the winner of the Foxtel Movies International Award for Best Feature Film. This was the first time the Adelaide Film Festival offered a Best Documentary Award. It was sponsored by Flinders University and the inaugural award went to Blush of Fruit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Competition, Juries\nThe following people were selected for the Foxtel Movies International Feature Jury:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Competition, In Competition\nThe following films were selected for the In Competition section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Awards\nThe International Award for Best Feature Film was won by the Turkish film Jin, directed and written by Reha Erdem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Awards\nThe Best Documentary Award was won by the Vietnamese/Australian film Blush of Fruit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Awards\nThe Audience Award for Most Popular Feature was won by Charlie's Country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Awards\nThe Audience Award for Most Popular Documentary was won by Once My Mother.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231585-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Film Festival, Awards\nThe Audience Award for Most Popular Short was won by The Gallant Captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231586-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Football Club season\nThe 2013 AFL season was the 22nd season in the Australian Football League contested by the Adelaide Crows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231587-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Thunderbirds season\nThe 2013 Adelaide Thunderbirds season saw Adelaide Thunderbirds compete in the 2013 ANZ Championship. With a team captained by Natalie von Bertouch and featuring Erin Bell, Carla Borrego, Renae Hallinan, Rebecca Bulley and Sharni Layton, Adelaide Thunderbirds won both the minor premiership and the overall championship. Having previously won the 2010 ANZ Championship, Thunderbirds became the first team to win a second championship. Thunderbirds secured the minor premiership with a 64\u201348 win over Northern Mystics in Round 13. They subsequently defeated Melbourne Vixens 49\u201339 in the major semi-final and\tQueensland Firebirds 50\u201348 in the grand final to win the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231587-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Thunderbirds season, Players, 2013 roster\nManager: Catherine ForemanOperations Manager:Rebekah WebsterPhysiotherapist: Andrew HopkinsStrength and conditioning: Andrew MaynardDamian MaynardPerformance Analysis:Tim RawlinsDoctor:Dr Angela MoranDietician:Natalie von Bertouch Chaplain:Emma GeorgeLeadership Coordinator:Karen Betro", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231587-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Adelaide Thunderbirds season, Melbourne Vixens Summer Challenge\nThe main pre-season event was the Summer Challenge, hosted by Melbourne Vixens at the State Netball Hockey Centre on 23 and 24 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta)\nThe 2013 AdvoCare 500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on September 1, 2013, at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia, United States. Contested over 325\u00a0laps on the 1.54-mile (2.48\u00a0km) quad-oval, it was the twenty-fifth race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Kyle Busch of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his fourth win of the season, while Joey Logano finished second. Martin Truex, Jr., Kurt Busch, and Ryan Newman rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Background\nAtlanta Motor Speedway is a four-turn quad-oval track that is 1.54 miles (2.48\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at twenty-four degrees, while the 2,332-foot (711\u00a0m) front stretch, the location of the finish line, and the 1,800-foot (550\u00a0m) back stretch are banked at five. The track's racing surface width varies from 55 feet to 60 feet. Denny Hamlin was the race's defending winner after winning the event in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 821 points, while Clint Bowyer stood in second with 803 points. Carl Edwards followed in the third with 768, eight points ahead of Kevin Harvick and twenty-nine ahead of Kyle Busch in fourth and fifth. Matt Kenseth, with 730, was in sixth; twenty-two ahead of Dale Earnhardt, Jr., who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Kasey Kahne was three points ahead of Greg Biffle and sixteen ahead of Joey Logano in ninth and tenth. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 168 points, eleven points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third with 124 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, scheduled on August 30, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held a day later on August 31, 2013, were 55 and 50 minutes long. In the first practice session, Brad Keselowski was the quickest with a best lap time of 29.168 seconds. Edwards followed in second, ahead of Juan Pablo Montoya and Kurt Busch in third and fourth. Bowyer was scored fifth-quickest with a best lap time of 29.491, more than three-tenths slower than Keselowski. Logano, Martin Truex, Jr., Mark Martin, Biffle, and Kenseth completed the top-ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring the qualifying session, Rookie of the Year contender, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. recorded his first Sprint Cup Series career pole position with a lap time of 29.227 seconds and a speed of 189.688\u00a0mph (305.273\u00a0km/h). Edwards, who completed his lap in 29.330 seconds, will start alongside Stenhouse on the grid, in front of Montoya, Hamlin, and Jeff Gordon. Kenseth, with a lap time of 29.492 seconds, was scored sixth ahead of Truex and Earnhardt in seventh and eighth. Kyle Busch and Johnson completed the first ten grid positions with lap times of 29.570 and 29.572 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the first Saturday session, Edwards was quickest with a fastest lap time of 30.224 seconds, six-thousandths of a second faster than Kahne in second. Keselowski managed to be third-quickest with a fastest lap time of 30.290. Bowyer and Kenseth followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Johnson, Kyle Busch, Montoya, Harvick, and Biffle completed the first ten positions. In the final practice session, Johnson was quickest with a time of 29.735 seconds and a best speed of 186.447\u00a0mph (300.057\u00a0km/h). Bowyer followed in second, ahead of Edwards and Montoya in third and fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Practice and qualifying\nKahne, who was second-quickest in second practice, managed fifth. In the second session, Harvick had the quickest ten consecutive lap average with a speed of 176.789 miles per hour (284.514\u00a0km/h), while Edwards had the best average in the final session with a speed of 179.527 miles per hour (288.921\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Race, Start\nThe race went underway at 7:30 p.m. EDT, with Juan Pablo Montoya leading the field to the green flag, A couple of laps later, the first caution came out on lap 25, this was a scheduled competition caution, the race restarted on lap 30 and the second caution came out for a one car wreck in the entrance of pit road by Kasey Kahne, the race restarted on lap 39, with Carl Edwards, the race leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231588-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Atlanta), Report, Race, Second half\nDebris on the track brought out the third caution on lap 58, the race restarted on lap 63 with Jeff Gordon the race leader, A couple of laps later, the fourth caution came out on lap 193 when Clint Bowyer blew an engine, the race restarted on lap 198, The fifth caution came out on lap 206 when Denny Hamlin spun out in the back straightaway, the race restarted on lap 212 with Joey Logano the race leader, the sixth caution came out with 42 laps to go when Jimmie Johnson spun out, the race restarted with 33 laps to go, the seventh caution came out when Brian Vickers caught the grass, with 31 laps to go, the race restarted with 28 laps to go, the eighth caution came out for a two-car wreck involving Jeff Burton and Austin Dillon, the race restarted with 22 laps to go with Martin Truex Jr. the race leader, Kyle Busch won his race at Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231589-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare 500 (Phoenix)\nThe 2013 AdvoCare 500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on November 10, 2013, at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Arizona. Contested over 312 laps, it was the thirty-fifth as well as the ninth race in the Chase for the Sprint Cup during the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. The race was won by Kevin Harvick for Richard Childress Racing. Kasey Kahne finished second, and Jimmie Johnson clinched third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231590-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare V100 Bowl\nThe 2013 AdvoCare V100 Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 31, 2013 at Independence Stadium in Shreveport, Louisiana. The 38th edition of the game otherwise known as the Independence Bowl, it matched up the Boston College Eagles from the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Arizona Wildcats from the Pac-12 Conference. The game kicked off at 11:30\u00a0a.m. CST and aired on ESPN. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. Arizona defeated Boston College by a score of 42\u201319. This was the final edition with nutritional supplement company AdvoCare as the title sponsor, and the only edition not to include \"Independence Bowl\" in the official name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231590-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare V100 Bowl, Teams\nBoston College finished the regular season with a record of 7\u20135 (4\u20134 ACC). Arizona's record was 7\u20135 (4\u20135 Pac-12).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231590-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 AdvoCare V100 Bowl, Teams\nThe game featured the nation's top two running backs in BC's Andre Williams who was the 2013 Doak Walker Award winner and a Heisman Trophy finalist and in Arizona's Ka'Deem Carey who was also a finalist for the Doak Walker Award. Williams and Carey were FBS ranked first and second respectively in yards per game and both were consensus 2013 All-Americans, with Williams being a unanimous choice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231591-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships\nThe 2013 Aegon Championships (also known traditionally as the Queen's Club Championships) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 111th edition of those championships and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Queen's Club in London, United Kingdom, in the club's 127th year between 10 and 16 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231591-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231591-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231591-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships, Rally against cancer\nFollowing the finals on the last day, Andy Murray took part in a charity event called \"Rally against Cancer\" alongside former British no. 1 Tim Henman, in which they faced off against Murray's coach, former world no. 1 and 8-time Grand Slam champion Ivan Lendl, and world number 6 Tomas Berdych. The event was organised in order to raise money for the Royal Marsden Cancer Charity, after British Davis Cup player Ross Hutchins was diagnosed with Hodgkins Lymphoma at the end of 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231591-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships, Rally against cancer\nFollowing the one set affair, in which the Brits emerged victorious, Murray and Henman then teamed up with a number of British celebrities, including comedians Jimmy Carr, Michael McIntyre and Jonathan Ross, actor Eddie Redmayne, businessman Sir Richard Branson and mayor of London Boris Johnson. The initial target for the event was \u00a3100,000, however this was exceeded by over \u00a350,000 during the event. Furthermore, Murray donated his entire prize money pot of around \u00a373,000 towards the charity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231592-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships \u2013 Doubles\nMax Mirnyi and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions, but Mirnyi decided not to participate. Nestor played alongside Robert Lindstedt, but lost to Marin \u010cili\u0107 and Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro in the second round. Bob and Mike Bryan won the title after defeating Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20133] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231593-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships \u2013 Singles\nMarin \u010cili\u0107 was the defending champion, but was defeated 7\u20135, 5\u20137, 3\u20136 in the final by Andy Murray. Winning in the final meant Murray became the first British player to win three titles at the Queen's Club since Arthur Lowe in the 1920s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231593-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231593-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Championships \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nThe top six seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231594-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Classic\nThe 2013 Aegon Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 32nd edition of the event. It took place at the Edgbaston Priory Club in Birmingham, United Kingdom, between 10 and 16 June 2013. Unseeded Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231594-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Classic, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231595-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Classic \u2013 Doubles\nT\u00edmea Babos and Hsieh Su-wei were the defending champions, but Babos decided not to participate. Hsieh played alongside Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1, but they withdrew in the quarterfinals due to Hsieh upper respiratory illness. Third seeded Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua won the final over Cara Black and Marina Erakovic with the score of 7\u20135, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231596-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Classic \u2013 Singles\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Alexxbrookss (talk | contribs) at 19:00, 13 March 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231596-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Classic \u2013 Singles\nMelanie Oudin was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Ajla Tomljanovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231596-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Classic \u2013 Singles\nDaniela Hantuchov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Donna Veki\u0107 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231596-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231597-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple\nThe 2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $75,000 in prize money. It took place in Barnstaple, United Kingdom, on 28 October\u20133 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231597-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231597-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry by a lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231598-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple \u2013 Doubles\nAkgul Amanmuradova and Vesna Dolonc were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231598-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple \u2013 Doubles\nNaomi Broady and Krist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 won the tournament, defeating Raluca Olaru and Tamira Paszek, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231599-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple \u2013 Singles\nAnnika Beck was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but retired after losing the first set of her semifinal against Krist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231599-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple \u2013 Singles\nMarta Sirotkina won the tournament, defeating Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20133, 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231600-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International\nThe 2013 Aegon International was a combined men's and women's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 39th edition of the event for the women and the 5th edition for the men. It was classified as a WTA Premier tournament on the 2013 WTA Tour and as an ATP World Tour 250 series on the 2013 ATP World Tour. The event took place at the Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club in Eastbourne, United Kingdom from 17 June through 22 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231600-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231600-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231601-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nColin Fleming and Ross Hutchins were the defending champions, but could not compete together this year due to Hutchins being out with ongoing illness. Fleming competed alongside fellow Brit Jonathan Marray but lost in the final against top seeds Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [8\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231602-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndy Roddick was the defending champion, but he retired from professional tennis in September 2012. Feliciano L\u00f3pez won the title beating in the final Gilles Simon, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20130 for the third title of his career, first since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231602-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231603-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNuria Llagostera Vives and Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ednez S\u00e1nchez were the defending champions, but they chose not to compete this year. First seeded Nadia Petrova and Katarina Srebotnik defeated Monica Niculescu and Kl\u00e1ra Zakopalov\u00e1 in the final with the score 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231604-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International \u2013 Women's Singles\nTamira Paszek was the defending champion, but retired in the first round with a thigh injury against Caroline Wozniacki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231604-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon International \u2013 Women's Singles\nElena Vesnina won the title, defeating Jamie Hampton in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231605-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy\nThe 2013 Aegon Trophy was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit. It took place in Nottingham, United Kingdom, on 3\u20139 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231605-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy, ATP entrants, Singles, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231605-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy, ATP entrants, Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231605-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy, ATP entrants, Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pair received entry from the qualification into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 56], "content_span": [57, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231605-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231606-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy \u2013 Men's Doubles\nTreat Huey and Dominic Inglot were the defending champions but they decided not to participate. Jamie Murray and John Peers defeated Ken and Neal Skupski 6\u20132, 6\u20137(3\u20137), [10\u20136] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231607-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy \u2013 Men's Singles\nBenjamin Becker was the defending champion but lost to Matthew Ebden 5\u20137, 6\u20134, 5\u20137 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231608-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEleni Daniilidou and Casey Dellacqua are the defending champions, having won the event in 2012. Dellacqua chose not to defend her title; Daniilidou partnered up with Coco Vandeweghe, but they lost in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231608-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy \u2013 Women's Doubles\nMaria Sanchez and Nicola Slater won the title, defeating Gabriela Dabrowski and Sharon Fichman in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231609-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy \u2013 Women's Singles\nUrszula Radwa\u0144ska is the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231609-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aegon Trophy \u2013 Women's Singles\nPetra Marti\u0107 won the title, defeating Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231610-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships\nThe 8th Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships was held in Arques, France November 4\u201310, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231610-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships\nChampionships was also qualification event for 2015 European Games in mixed pairs and groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231611-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan Premier League\nThe 2013 Afghan Premier League was the second season of Afghan Premier League, the Afghan league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2012. The season began on 22 August 2013 with the group stage and ended the season with the final on 11 October 2013. Toofaan Harirod head into the season as the defending champions. In the final, Shaheen Asmayee F.C. won their first title, beating Simorgh Alborz F.C., 3\u20131, in extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231611-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan Premier League, Format\nFor the second season of the Afghan Premier League the Afghanistan Football Federation and Moby Group, the co-founders and the organizers of the league, decided to have the league start in three stages. To expand the league to the Provinces of Afghanistan the organizers decided to have stage one begin with regional tournaments which would eventually provide team selection for the eight Afghan Premier League teams. In total there will be eight different regional tournaments in May and June 2013 with each tournament featuring around four to six teams. Along with the Afghan-based regional teams there will also be one team on Afghan refugees from Iran and one team of Afghan refugees from Pakistan entering the regional round in the Center and East tournaments respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231611-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan Premier League, Format\nThe idea of the regional tournaments is to allow younger players a chance at becoming a professional footballer. At the end of the regional tournaments the best 26 players from the participating teams in each region will be selected to the Afghan Premier League team that is based in that specific region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231611-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan Premier League, Format\nFinally in order to select the final 18-man squad for the official Afghan Premier League season, a special televised tournament during the holy month of ramadan called Maidan-e-Sabz will air in which judges, coaches, and even the voting fans will decide who will be the final 18 players for each team. Before this stage begins, at the beginning of ramadan, the coaches and trainers from each team will select the best 15 players out of 26 players in which during the holy month the best 15 players will play against the remaining non-selected 11 players in intra-squad matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231611-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Afghan Premier League, Format\nAt the end of each week's show the television audience will be asked to send in their votes for their top player in each position and those results will be taken into consideration by the judges. The judges for this show will be certified coaches from the Afghanistan Football Federation; they will decide their top 3 players from the 11 players for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231611-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan Premier League, Format\nFinally, the second edition of the Afghan Premier League will officially kick-off on 22 August 2013 at the Afghanistan Football Federation Stadium with the group stage going on till 27 September 2013. The semi-finals will be played in a two-legged format in October with the Final taking place on 11 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231611-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan Premier League, Teams\nA total of 8 teams will contest the league. All 8 teams are spread out across Afghanistan, but all the matches would be played at the Afghanistan Football Federation stadium in Kabul. The eight teams were divided into 2 groups of 4 in the 18 game total league which will conclude on 19 October 2012 with the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231612-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan presidential palace attack\nThe 2013 Afghan presidential palace attack occurred on 25 June 2013, in a highly secure zone of Kabul, the capital city of Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231612-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan presidential palace attack\nThe attack, claimed to be carried out by the Taliban, occurred at the eastern gate of the presidential palace around 6:30\u00a0a.m. AFT, where a group of reporters were gathering for security checks ahead of a presidential news conference. Between seven and eight explosions, alleged to be suicide bombers by the Taliban, occurred outside the palace. The explosions were later followed with an intense exchange of gunfire between the three or four Taliban fighters, and Afghan security officials, which lasted 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231612-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Afghan presidential palace attack\nObtaining fake identification, badges and vehicle passes, five of the eight Taliban members were able to clear high-level security clearances, driving two Land Cruisers similar to those used by international soldiers to penetrate the heavily fortified security zone in Kabul. All insurgents were killed in the ensuing battle with security forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231612-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan presidential palace attack\nThe United States Central Intelligence Agency's Afghanistan station located nearby the presidential palace was also struck by two rocket-propelled grenades during the attack. Targeting the CIA's office in the Ariana Hotel, the Taliban attacked inside one of the most heavily restricted areas of Afghanistan, in downtown Kabul where the U.S. Embassy and the headquarters of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force are located. The headquarters of the Afghan Ministry of Defense was also targeted in the Taliban attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231612-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Afghan presidential palace attack\nWith no immediate reports of civilian casualties, it remains unclear whether several Afghan schoolchildren who were caught in the crossfire between the Taliban and security forces were harmed. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who was inside the palace at the time, was not injured. The attack resulted in the deaths of three palace security guards, and all eight of the Taliban fighters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup\nThe 2013 Africa Cup was the thirteenth edition of the Africa Cup, an annual international rugby union tournament for African nations organised by the Confederation of African Rugby (CAR). This tournament, as well as the 2012 and 2014 editions of it, served as the qualifiers for the 2015 Rugby World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 1A\nDivision 1A was held between 10 and 14 July 2013, at the Mahamasina Municipal Stadium in Antananarivo, Madagascar. The competing teams will be (pre-tournament IRB World Rankings in parentheses:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 1A\nDue to losing the third place playoff, Uganda will be demoted to 2014 Africa Cup Division 1B, and was eliminated from 2015 Rugby World Cup qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 1B\nDivision 1B was held between 11 and 15 June 2013, at the Iba Mar Diop Stadium in Dakar, Senegal. The competing teams were (pre-tournament IRB World Rankings in parentheses):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 1B\nNamibia won the tournament, and will be promoted to Division 1A in the 2014 Africa Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 1C\nDivision 1C was held between 22 and 29 June 2013, at the Ecole Sup\u00e9rieur des Travaux Publics - Institut National Polytechnique F\u00e9lix Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny Sud in Yamoussoukro, Ivory Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 1C\nIvory Coast won the tournament, and will be promoted to Division 1B in the 2014 Africa Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 2\nStarting in 2013, Division 2 was divided into North and South Groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 2, North\nThe North Group tournament was held in Niamey, Niger between 3 and 10 June 2013. Due to winning, Niger qualified for the Division 1C tournament which took place three weeks following.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 2, South\nThe South Group tournament was held in Rwanda on 22 June 2013. In addition to Rwanda and Burundi, it was supposed to also feature Swaziland and Tanzania, however they were unable to attend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 2, South\nRather than a full tournament, a single game was held at Stade Amahoro, with Rwanda defeating Burundi with a score of 22 - 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 3\nStarting in 2013, there is now at third division, split into North and Central groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 3, Central\nThe Central Group tournament was to be held in Democratic Republic of the Congo between 26 and 31 August 2013. However, 26 August came and went with no information about fixtures, and none of the games were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231613-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup, Division 3, North\nThe North Group tournament was to be held in Egypt between 10 and 13 October 2013. However, no games were scheduled by October 8, and no news about rescheduling was ever released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations\nThe 2013 Africa Cup of Nations, also known as the Orange Africa Cup of Nations South Africa 2013 for sponsorship reasons, held from 19 January to 10 February 2013, was the 29th Africa Cup of Nations, the football championship of Africa organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). Starting from this edition, the tournament was switched to being held in odd-numbered years instead of even-numbered years so that it does not clash with the FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations\nSouth Africa hosted the tournament for the second time, after previously hosting the 1996 African Cup of Nations. The 2013 tournament is the highest attended edition of the Africa Cup of Nations under the current, 16-team format. The South African team was eliminated in the quarter-finals by Mali, following a penalty shoot-out. Zambia were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations\nNigeria won its third Africa Cup of Nations championship with a 1\u20130 victory over Burkina Faso in the final. Nigeria participated in the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup in Brazil as the representative from CAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nOn 4 September 2006, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) approved a compromise between rival countries to host the Africa Cup of Nations after it ruled out Nigeria. CAF agreed to award the next three editions from 2010 to Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Libya respectively. They assigned Angola in 2010, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon, which submitted a joint bid in 2012, and Libya for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nThis edition was awarded to Libya for the second time after 1982 African Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nTwo-time former host Nigeria is the reserve host for the 2010, 2012 and 2014 tournaments, in the event that any of the host countries fails to meet the requirements established by CAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection\nThe 2014 tournament was pushed forward to 2013 and subsequently held in odd-numbered years to avoid year-clash with the FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Host selection, Libyan withdrawal\nDue to the Libyan Civil War, Libya traded years with South Africa, so that South Africa hosted in 2013 and Libya will be hosting in 2017. This was ratified in September 2011 at CAF's Executive Committee in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Qualification\nA total of 47 countries entered the qualification, including South Africa, which automatically qualified. Libya was not allowed to keep its automatic qualification after being stripped of its hosting rights due to the Libyan Civil War. Many teams made their return to the finals in this tournament. The hosts, South Africa returned after a 4-year absence. Ethiopia appeared for the first time since 1982 (a 31-year absence). Other teams absent from the 2012 finals that featured in 2013 were Nigeria, Togo, DR Congo, and Algeria. Cape Verde made its finals debut. Teams that didn't qualify for this tournament from the 2012 African Cup of Nations were both co-hosts, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea, Libya, Senegal, Sudan, Guinea and Botswana. South Sudan was ineligible to participate as the qualifying competition had already started by the time its membership of CAF was confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Venues, Host cities\nThe South African Football Association opened bidding to all 2010 FIFA World Cup host cities however a maximum of seven venues would be used. The final list of stadiums was initially to be announced by 30 March, but was pushed back to 4 April, 20 April, and then 3 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Venues, Host cities\nThe venues were announced on 4 May 2012. FNB Stadium hosted the opening match and the final. The other venues selected for matches were Mbombela Stadium, Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, Royal Bafokeng Stadium and Moses Mabhida Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Venues, Host cities\nThe average daytime temperature of the host cities ranges from 25.0\u00a0\u00b0C (77.0\u00a0\u00b0F) to 30.3\u00a0\u00b0C (86.5\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Match ball\nThe official match ball for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations was manufactured by Adidas and named the Katlego, which means \"success\" in Sotho language. The name was chosen by African football fans via an online voting competition where it beat alternate names, Khanya (light) and Motswako (mixture).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Mascot\nThe official mascot of the tournament was Takuma, a hippo wearing sports kit in South Africa's official yellow and green. The mascot was designed by Tumelo Nkoana, a 13-year-old South African student from Hammanskraal in Gauteng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe draw for the final tournament took place on 24 October 2012 in Durban. Positions A1 and C1 were already assigned to the hosts (South Africa) and holders (Zambia) respectively. The other 14 qualified teams were ranked based on their performances during the last three Africa Cup of Nations, i.e. the 2008, 2010 and 2012 editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nMoreover, a weighted coefficient on points was given to each of the last three editions of the Africa Cup of Nations as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe teams were then divided into four pots based on the ranking. Each group contained one team from each pot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nSouth Africa (host; assigned to A1)\u00a0Zambia (title holder; assigned to C1)\u00a0Ghana (22 pts)\u00a0Ivory Coast (22 pts)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nMali (12 pts)\u00a0Tunisia (10 pts)\u00a0Angola (9 pts)\u00a0Nigeria (8 pts)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nAlgeria (6 pts)\u00a0Burkina Faso (5 pts)\u00a0Morocco (4 pts)\u00a0Niger (3 pts)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Draw\nTogo (2 pts)\u00a0Cape Verde (0 pts)\u00a0DR Congo (0 pts)\u00a0Ethiopia (0 pts)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Match officials\nThe following referees were chosen for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Group stage\nThe schedule of the final tournament was released on 8 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Group stage\nIf two or more teams end the group stage with the same number of points, their ranking is determined by the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Knockout phase\nIn the knockout stages, if a match is level at the end of normal playing time, extra time shall be played (two periods of 15 minutes each) and followed, if necessary, by kicks from the penalty mark to determine the winner, except for the play-off for third place where no extra time shall be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Team statistics\nUpdated to games played on 10 February 2013. Team(s) rendered in italics represent(s) the host nation(s). The competition's winning team is rendered in bold. (1) \u2013 Total games lost not counted in total games played (total games lost = total games won)(2) \u2013 Total number of games drawn (tied) for all teams = Total number of games drawn (tied) \u00f7 2 (both teams involved)(3) \u2013 As 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231614-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations, Media\nSouth African public broadcaster SABC was the host broadcaster of the tournament. It paid R65 million (US$7.5 million) for the rights, which entitle it to transmit all of the games across its radio and television platforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final\nThe 2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final was a football match that took place on 10 February 2013 to determine the winner of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations, the football championship of Africa organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). The match was held at the FNB Stadium in Johannesburg which also hosted the 1996 Africa Cup of Nations Final and the 2010 FIFA World Cup Final. The tournament's closing ceremony was held just prior to kick-off. The decision was announced in May 2012. The final was contested between Nigeria and Burkina Faso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final\nSunday Mba scored the only goal as Nigeria won the final 1\u20130. Hence, Nigeria then represented CAF at the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nNigeria won the Africa Cup of Nations in 1980 and 1994, and were losing finalists in 1984, 1988, 1990 and 2000. Despite this, Nigeria were not favorites coming into the tournament due to a decline in its fortunes, as a result of which Nigeria did not even qualify for the tournament in 2012. New coach Stephen Keshi had brought young, home-based players such as Sunday Mba and Godfrey Oboabona, and foreign-based players like Victor Moses, Vincent Enyeama, Emmanuel Emenike, Brown Ideye, Mikel John Obi and Uwa Elderson Echi\u00e9jil\u00e9 who were crucial to Nigeria's run in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nTheir first match was a 1\u20131 draw to Burkina Faso, where Nigeria scored through Emenike but Burkina Faso's Alain Traor\u00e9 cancelled out the lead with moments to go. They then drew with defending champions Zambia 1\u20131, as another late goal from a Penalty kick by Zambian goalkeeper Kennedy Mweene cancelled out Emenike's second goal of the tournament. In their last group game against Ethiopia, they were going out to Zambia for a worse booking record, but thanks to Chelsea F.C. midfielder Moses, the Nigerians won 2\u20130 and advanced at the expense of the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nIn the quarters, they defeated pre-tournament favorites Ivory Coast 2\u20131 in a shocking upset where Emenike and Mba scored goals. Keshi's gamble of including six home-based players in the squad paid further dividends as Nigeria crushed Mali 4\u20131 in the semis (goalscorers Echiejele, Ideye, Musa and Emenike) If the disputed goal is included, Emenike will be the tournament's joint top scorer with four goals along with Ghana's Mubarak Wakaso coming into the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nOn the other hand, Burkina Faso had reached the semi-finals of the tournament once when they hosted in 1998, but they had never won an away match in AFCON and had a winless streak of 26 matches. In addition to that, in 2012, they exited at the group stage of the AFCON without a win, and were almost eliminated by the Central African Republic in qualifying, before Alain Traore saved them from elimination. Traore also saved them from a defeat against Nigeria in the opening Group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nThe turnaround came with a 4\u20130 thrashing of Ethiopia, where Traore, Jonathan Pitroipa and Djakaridja Kone all scored, before drawing with Zambia 0\u20130 to send the reigning champions home for the first time since 1992. In a difficult pitch in Nelspruit, Pitroipa's extra time goal brought a 1\u20130 victory over Togo in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nIn a stadium which had virtually become Burkina's home ground after playing four matches there, they defeated Ghana in the semis through penalties after Aristide Bance and Ghana's Mubarak Wakaso both scored in a 1\u20131 draw, and underdogs Burkina Faso under Belgian coach Paul Put had qualified to their maiden final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nAs statistics stood after the semifinals, Emenike was Nigeria's top scorer with 4 goals and Traore was Burkina Faso's top scorer with 3 goals, but he had been ruled out of the tournament after the group stages due to thigh injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Background\nOn 8 February 2013, after receiving a protest made by the Football Association of Burkina Faso, the Africa Cup of Nations Organizing Committee ruled to overturn the second yellow card received by Burkina Faso forward Jonathan Pitroipa in the semifinal, meaning he was eligible to play in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Match, Summary\nDespite the narrow margin of victory, Nigeria's win was considered a comfortable one, and the outsiders Burkina Faso were described as looking tired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Match, Summary\nEarly play in the match was characterised by bursts down the wings from Victor Moses, and two close chances for the Super Eagles. The first was a seventh-minute header from Efe Ambrose off a Moses' free kick, and the second a Brown Ideye shot that flew over the crossbar. Burkina Faso showed little threat in the first half, and spent a lot of time in their own territory. Sunday Mba scored the only goal of the game after 40 minutes, when he collected a deflected shot, flicked the ball over Mohamed Koffi with his right foot, then volleyed the goal with his left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Match, Summary\nNigeria had several chances to extend their lead in the second half, but none were converted. In the 77th minute, Wilfried Sanou forced a fingertip save from Nigerian goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama to prevent an equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Post-match\nBurkina Faso head coach Paul Put conceded that his team \"showed Nigeria a bit too much respect in the first half\", but contended that \"The whole of Burkina Faso can be proud of their players.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231615-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Final, Post-match\nNigeria head coach Stephen Keshi declared \"Winning this is mainly for my nation\". Looking forward to the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup he said \"To represent Africa in Brazil at the Confed Cup is an honour for Nigeria.\" This victory made Keshi the second man, after Mahmoud El-Gohary, to win the Cup of Nations as both player and coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231616-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group A\nGroup A of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations ran from 19 January until 27 January. It consisted of South Africa (hosts), Angola, Morocco and Cape Verde. The matches were held in the South African cities of Johannesburg, Durban and Port Elizabeth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231616-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, South Africa vs Cape Verde\nAssistant referees:Felicien Kabanda (Rwanda)Songuifolo Yeo (Ivory Coast)Fourth official:Noumandiez Dou\u00e9 (Ivory Coast)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231616-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, Angola vs Morocco\nAssistant referees:Djibril Camara (Senegal)El Hadji Samba (Senegal)Fourth official:Koman Coulibaly (Mali)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231616-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, Morocco vs Cape Verde\nAssistant referees:Malik Alidu Salifu (Ghana)David Laryea (Ghana)Fourth official:Slim Jedidi (Tunisia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231616-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group A, Matches, Morocco vs South Africa\nAssistant referees:Y\u00e9o Songuifolo (Ivory Coast)Jean-Claude Birumushahu (Burundi)Fourth official:Mohamed Benouza (Algeria)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231617-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group B\nGroup B of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations ran from 20 January until 28 January. It consisted of Ghana, Mali, Niger and Congo DR. The matches were held in the South African cities of Port Elizabeth and Durban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231617-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Ghana vs. Congo DR\nAssistant referees:Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)Marwa Range (Kenya)Fourth official:Gehad Grisha (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231617-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Mali vs. Niger\nAssistant referees:Bechir Hassani (Tunisia)Anouar Hmila (Tunisia)Fourth official:Boucha\u00efb El Ahrach (Morocco)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231617-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Ghana vs. Mali\nAssistant referees:Y\u00e9o Songuifolo (Ivory Coast)Jean-Claude Birumushahu (Burundi)Fourth official:Mohamed Benouza (Algeria)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231617-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Niger vs. Congo DR\nAssistant referees:Redouane Achik (Morocco)Ali Waleed Ahmed (Sudan)Fourth official:Eric Otogo-Castane (Gabon)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231617-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Niger vs. Ghana\nAssistant referees:Djibril Camara (Senegal)Ars\u00e9nio Chadreque Marengula (Mozambique)Fourth official:Rajindraparsad Seechurn (Mauritius)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231617-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group B, Congo DR vs. Mali\nAssistant referees:Redouane Achik (Morocco)Jerson Emiliano Dos Santos (Angola)Fourth official:Sylvester Kirwa (Kenya)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231618-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group C\nGroup C of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations ran from 21 January until 29 January. It consisted of Zambia (holders), Nigeria, Burkina Faso and Ethiopia. The matches were held in the South African cities of Nelspruit and Rustenburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231618-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group C, Nigeria vs. Burkina Faso\nAssistant referees:Redouane Achik (Morocco)Jerson Dos Santos (Angola)Fourth official:Hamada Nampiandraza (Madagascar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231618-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group C, Burkina Faso vs. Ethiopia\nAssistant referees:Peter Edibe (Nigeria)Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)Fourth official:Bakary Gassama (Gambia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231618-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group C, Ethiopia vs. Nigeria\nAssistant referees:F\u00e9licien Kabanda (Rwanda)Anouar Hmila (Tunisia)Fourth official:Noumandiez Dou\u00e9 (Ivory Coast)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231619-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group D\nGroup D of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations ran from 22 January until 30 January. It consisted of Ivory Coast, Tunisia, Algeria and Togo. The matches were held in the South African cities of Rustenburg and Nelspruit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231619-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group D, Ivory Coast vs. Tunisia\nAssistant referees:Djibril Camara (Senegal)El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)Fourth official:Daniel Bennett (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231619-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group D, Algeria vs. Ivory Coast\nAssistant referees:Angesom Ogbamariam (Eritrea)Malik Alidu Salifu (Ghana)Fourth official:Gehad Grisha (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231619-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations Group D, Togo vs. Tunisia\nAssistant referees:Marwa Range (Kenya)Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)Fourth official:Bernard Camille (Seychelles)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231620-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations ran from 2 February, and ended with the final on 10 February. The matches were held in the South African cities of Port Elizabeth, Durban, Rustenburg, Nelspruit, and Johannesburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231620-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe top two placed teams from each of the four groups advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231620-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Ghana vs. Cape Verde\nAssistant referees:Y\u00e9o Songuifolo (Ivory Coast)Jean-Claude Birumushahu (Burundi)Fourth official:Gehad Grisha (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 79], "content_span": [80, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231620-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Ivory Coast vs. Nigeria\nAssistant referees:Redouane Achik (Morocco)Jerson Emiliano Dos Santos (Angola)Fourth official:Boucha\u00efb El Ahrach (Morocco)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231620-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Burkina Faso vs. Togo\nAssistant referees:Djibril Camara (Senegal)El Hadji Malick Samba (Senegal)Fourth official:Bernard Camille (Seychelles)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231620-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage, Semi-finals, Burkina Faso vs. Ghana\nAssistant referees:B\u00e9chir Hassani (Tunisia)Anouar Hmila (Tunisia)Fourth official:Bouchaib El Ahrach (Morocco)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification\nThe 2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification was the qualification process for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations, the 29th edition of the Africa Cup of Nations tournament. South Africa automatically qualified as the host country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nA total of 47 countries entered the competition, including South Africa, which automatically qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nThe remaining 46 teams competed in the qualifiers. In each of the three rounds, teams were drawn into two-legged home-and-away knock-out ties. Aggregate goals are used to determine the winner. If the sides are level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule is applied, and if still level, the tie proceeds directly to a penalty shootout (no extra time is played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nThe 15 winners of the second round qualified for the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nThe draw for the preliminary round and the first round was made on 28 October 2011 in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea. The draw for the second round was made on 5 July 2012 in Johannesburg, South Africa, after the first round was completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nAngola\u00a0Botswana\u00a0Burkina Faso\u00a0Ivory Coast\u00a0Equatorial Guinea\u00a0Gabon\u00a0Ghana\u00a0Guinea\u00a0Libya\u00a0Mali\u00a0Morocco\u00a0Niger\u00a0Senegal\u00a0Sudan\u00a0Tunisia\u00a0Zambia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nAlgeria\u00a0Benin\u00a0Burundi\u00a0Cameroon\u00a0Cape Verde\u00a0Central African Republic\u00a0Chad\u00a0Congo\u00a0DR Congo\u00a0Egypt\u00a0Ethiopia\u00a0Gambia\u00a0Guinea-Bissau", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Format\nKenya\u00a0Liberia\u00a0Madagascar\u00a0Malawi\u00a0Mozambique\u00a0Namibia\u00a0Nigeria\u00a0Rwanda\u00a0Sierra Leone\u00a0Tanzania\u00a0Togo\u00a0Uganda\u00a0Zimbabwe", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Preliminary round\nS\u00e3o Tom\u00e9 and Pr\u00edncipe won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the First round against Sierra Leone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Ethiopia won on the away goals rule and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nNigeria won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nUganda won 5\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Zimbabwe won on the away goals rule and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nAlgeria won 6\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Togo won on the away goals rule and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nSierra Leone won 5\u20134 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nCameroon won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nMalawi won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nCongo DR won 7\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Mozambique won the penalty shootout and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nCentral African Republic won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nCape Verde won 7\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, First round\nLiberia won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Seeding\nThe 30 teams which qualified for the second round were ranked based on their performances during the last three Africa Cup of Nations, i.e. the 2008, 2010, and 2012 editions. For each of the last three African Cup of Nations final tournaments, the following system of points is adopted for the qualified countries:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Seeding\nMoreover, a weighted coefficient on points was given to each of the last three editions of the Africa Cup of Nations as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Seeding\nIf two countries are equal in the number of points in the above classification the number of points that they have accumulated throughout all their matches played in the last 3 final tournaments of the CAN determined their ranking (on the basis of 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw and 0 for a match lost).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Seeding\nThe teams were divided into two pots based on the ranking. Each tie contained one team from each pot. The order of legs for each tie was determined by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nMali won 7\u20131 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\n3\u20133 on aggregate. Angola won on the away goals rule and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nGhana won 3\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nNigeria won 8\u20133 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Zambia won the penalty shootout and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nCape Verde won 3\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nMorocco won 4\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Tunisia won on the away goals rule and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nNiger won 2\u20131 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\n5\u20135 on aggregate. Ethiopia won on the away goals rule and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nAlgeria won 3\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nIvory Coast won 6\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nCongo DR won 5\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nTogo won 3\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231621-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualification, Second round, Matches\nBurkina Faso won 3\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231622-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations squads\nThe 2013 Africa Cup of Nations was an international football tournament held in South Africa from 19 January until 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231622-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations squads\nThe Confederation of African Football confirmed 9 January as the deadline for final squad submissions ahead of the tournament. The African confederation wanted all 23-man squad lists sent to its Cairo headquarters by midnight GMT on 9 January. Failing to do so would result in a fine and infringing countries will only be allowed to take a 22-man squad to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231622-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations squads\nAlong with their 23-man squads, countries were allowed to bring a delegation of 17 officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231622-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations squads, Group D, Algeria\nA 40-man provisional squad was announced on 10 December 2012. A 24-man list was announced on 18 December 2012, with Ishak Belfodil, Mokhtar Benmoussa, Antar Boucherit, Madjid Bougherra, Hamza Boulemda\u00efs, Isma\u00ebl Bouzid, Farouk Chafa\u00ef, Abdelmoumene Djabou, Moustapha Djallit, Rafik Djebbour, Ahmed Gasmi, Abderahmane Hachoud, F\u00e9thi Harek, Hamza Koudri and Mohamed Zemmamouche being left out of the team. On 22 December 2012, Djamel Abdoun dropped out of the squad after an injury, thus leaving the team with a final 23-man squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231623-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards\nThe 2013 Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards were held on 9 March 2014 and co-hosted by Big Brother Africa presenter IK Osakioduwa and StarGist\u2019s host, Vimbai Mutinhiri. Ivie Okujaiye and Olu Jacobs were honored with the TrailBlazer and Industry Merit Awards respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231624-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Badminton Championships\nThe 2013 African Badminton Championships or African Badminton Cup of Nations was held in Rose Hill, Mauritius between 14-20 August and organised by the Badminton Confederation of Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231625-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Fencing Championships\nThe 2013 African Fencing Championships were held in Cape Town, South Africa from 25 to 29 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231626-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Handball Champions League\nThe 2013 African Handball Champions League was the 35th edition, organized by the African Handball Confederation, under the auspices of the International Handball Federation, the handball sport governing body. The tournament was held from October 3\u201312 in Marrakech, Morocco, contested by 11 teams and won by Esp\u00e9rance Sportive de Tunis of Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231626-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Handball Champions League\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis qualified for the 2014 IHF Super Globe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231626-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African Handball Champions League, Draw\nAljazeera Sports Club Esp\u00e9rance de Tunis Kano Pyramid HC Mouloudia Primeiro de Agosto Stade Mandji", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231626-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 African Handball Champions League, Draw\nAl Ahly SC Al-Hilal SC Club Africain FAP Yaound\u00e9 Wydad Smara", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231627-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Handball Cup Winners' Cup\nThe 2013 African Handball Cup Winners' Cup was the 29th edition, organized by the African Handball Confederation, under the auspices of the International Handball Federation, the international handball sport governing body. The tournament was held from April 19\u201327, 2013 in Hammamet, Nabeul and Tazarka, in Tunisia, contested by 13 teams and won by Al Ahly of Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231627-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Handball Cup Winners' Cup, Preliminary rounds, Group B\n* Note: \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Advance to quarter-finals\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Relegated to 9-12th classification** Penalty for failing to pay participation fees", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231628-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Judo Championships\nThe 2013 African Judo Championships were the 34th edition of the African Judo Championships, and were held in Maputo, Mozambique from 18 April to 19 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231629-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Junior Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 African Junior Athletics Championships was the eleventh edition of the biennial, continental athletics tournament for African athletes aged 19 years or younger. It was held at the Germain Comarmond Stadium in Bambous, Mauritius from 29 August \u2013 1 September. A total of 223 athletes from 29 nations competed. Neither pole vault event was held, due to a lack of entries, and the decathlon and heptathlon competitions were also not contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231629-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Junior Athletics Championships\nOriginally scheduled to be held in South Africa, a dispute between Athletics South Africa and the national sports ministry resulted in the cancellation of holding rights in June 2013. Bambous, the 2009 host, stepped in at short notice to hold the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231629-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African Junior Athletics Championships\nThe medal table was a closely contested affair. Nigeria had the most gold medals with nine in its haul of 19 medals. South Africa had seven golds, but had the highest overall total with 24 medals. Ethiopia also had seven golds, and had the second highest medal haul with 22. Egypt (five golds, 11 in total) and Kenya (four golds, 17 in total) were the next best performing nations. Of the 29 participating nations, 15 reached the medal table. Nigeria performed well in the sprinting events, Ethiopia and Kenya shared most of the middle- and long-distance running medals, while South Africa and Egypt took many medals in the field events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231629-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 African Junior Athletics Championships\nWind affected most of the sprints and jumps events, slowing the track times and carrying the jumpers to further distances. Two championship records were improved during the competition: Sabelo Ntokozo Ndlovu cleared 15.92\u00a0m (52\u00a0ft 2\u00a03\u20444\u00a0in) in the men's triple jump and Ahmed Hassan set a new standard of 19.59\u00a0m (64\u00a0ft 3\u00a01\u20444\u00a0in) in the men's shot put.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231629-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 African Junior Athletics Championships\nSeveral athletes won multiple individual medals. Among them, Martin Moses Kurong was the men's 10,000\u00a0m winner and 5000\u00a0m bronze medallist, Geraldine Ann Duvenhage and Mohamed Kalifa were double silver medallists in the men's and women's shot put and discus throw events, and Tegest Tamangnu Yuma was runner-up in both the women's short sprints. South Africa's Duwayne Boer was the long jump winner and took bronze in the triple jump. Nigeria's Ese Brume was the women's long jump winner and triple jump runner-up, as well as a gold medallist in the 4\u00d7100 metres relay. South Africa's Megan Wilke won the javelin throw and surprisingly she also took the high jump silver medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231629-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 African Junior Athletics Championships\nNigeria's 200\u00a0m champion, Divine Oduduru, progressed to the junior level after his sprint double at the 2013 African Youth Athletics Championships. The Ethiopian duo Tigist Gashaw and Dawit Seyaum were first and second in the women's 1500 metres, switching their placings from the 2013 World Youth Championships in Athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231630-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Rally Championship\nThe 2013 African Rally Championship is the 33rd season of the African Rally Championship (ARC). This Championship is the FIA regional rally championship for the African continent. The season began March 1 in C\u00f4te d'Ivoire, and is scheduled to end November 3 in Madagascar, after eight events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231630-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Rally Championship\nUgandan driver Jas Mangat leads the championship by eight points over Zambian driver Mohamed Essa and ten over Zambian driver Jassy Singh. Mangat won the Tanzania Rally, was third in the Zambia International Rally and was the second ARC competitor to finish in the Safari Rally. Essa won the Zambia Rally and was the first ARC driver to finish the Safari Rally. Singh has two second places in the ARC from rallies in South Africa and Tanzania. The points victors of Rallye Bandama Cote d'Ivoire and Rally South Africa have had no other finishes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231631-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship\nThe 2013 African U-17 Championship was a football competition organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). The tournament took place in Morocco from 13 to 27 April. The top four teams qualified for the 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231631-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship, Qualification\nThe qualifiers began on 7 September 2012 with the preliminary matches taking place, while the final round matches were played on 2 December 2012. At the end of the qualification, seven teams joined the hosts, Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231631-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship, Draw\nThe draw for the tournament was held on 9 December 2012 in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231631-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship, Squads, MRI controversy\nAll players in the competition went through a mandatory MRI test which investigates bony fusion of the left distal radius (wrist). Several players were considered to be over-age by CAF and they were not eligible for the competition. The tests took place on 12 April, one day before the competition began leaving no time for a replacement players to be found. Ivory Coast, Congo and Nigeria each had three players found to be ineligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231631-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship, Squads, MRI controversy\nCAF released the names of the players who were found to be over-age:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231632-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship qualification, Preliminary round\nThe first leg matches were played on either 7, 8 or 9 September 2012. The second leg matches were played on either 21, 22 or 23 September 2012. The winners advanced to the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231632-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship qualification, First round\nThe first leg matches were played on either 12, 13 or 14 October 2012. The second leg matches were played on either 26, 27 or 28 October 2012, except for the Congo vs Zimbabwe match, which was played on 6 November. The winners advanced to the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231632-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Championship qualification, Second round\nThe first leg matches were played on either 16, 17 or 18 November 2012. The second leg matches were played on either 31 November, 1 or 2 December 2012. The winners advanced to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231633-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament\nThe 2013 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament was the 4th edition of the African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament, the biennial international youth football competition organised by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to determine which women's under-17 national teams from Africa qualify for the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231633-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament\nThe tournament was played on a home and away knockout basis. 10 teams entered the competition. The pairings were released in late June 2013. The first round's many withdrawal of teams was openly criticised by FIFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231633-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament\nThe top three teams of the tournament Ghana, Nigeria and Zambia qualified for the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in Costa Rica as the CAF representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231633-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament, First round\nMatches are played in the first week of August and September. Nigeria and South Africa received a bye this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 70], "content_span": [71, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231633-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament, Second round\nNigeria and South Africa were the top seeded teams and received a bye to the first round. Matches were played in November. The three winners qualified to the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup. Nigeria due to withdrawal of South Sudan from the Competition. Ghana on a 5\u20132 aggregate against Equatorial Guinea. Zambia booked their world cup ticket after a 3\u20131 win against South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 71], "content_span": [72, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231634-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship\nThe 2013 African U-20 Championship officially known as the Orange African U-20 Championship, Algeria 2013 was the 19th edition of the African U-20 Championship. The competition was held in Algeria in the cities of Oran and A\u00efn T\u00e9mouchent from March 16 to 30 March 2013. The semifinalists will participate in 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231634-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship, Venues\nIn March 2012, the Algerian Football Federation announced that Algiers and Oran were the two candidate cities to host the competition. In May, Algiers was initially chosen as the host city of the competition. However, in August, the Algerian Football Federation announced that Oran and A\u00efn T\u00e9mouchent would replace Algiers as the host cities, due to the lack of available stadiums in the latter city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231634-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship, Draw\nThe draw for the tournament was held on 9 December 2012 in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231634-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship, Countries to participate in 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nThe top four teams qualified for 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231635-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship qualification\nThe 2013 African U-20 Championship qualification phase consisted of three rounds of two-legged matches. Some countries had a bye to the First Round. The winners of the Second Round matches qualifies for the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231635-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship qualification, Preliminary round\nThe first legs were played on 20, 21 and 22 April, and the second legs on 4, 5 and 6 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231635-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship qualification, First round\nThe first legs were played on 27, 28 and 29 July, and the second legs on 10, 11 and 12 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231635-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship qualification, First round\n1 The Benin v C\u00f4te d'Ivoire (1st leg) was postponed to 5 August 2012. 2 Gambia withdrew following the first leg. 3 Zimbabwe withdrew following the first leg. 4 Lesotho withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231635-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship qualification, Second round\nThe first legs have been played on 21, 22, 23 September 2012, and the second legs on 5, 6, 7 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231636-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship squads\nThe 2013 African Youth Championship is an international football tournament to be held in Algeria from 16 March until 30 March 2013. The semi-finalists of the competition qualify for the age restricted 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup which requires players to be born on or after 1 January 1993. The regulations of the African Youth Championship omit any age restrictions in what appears to be an administrative error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231636-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship squads\nThe 8 national teams involved in the tournament were required to submit a list of up to 40 players to the CAF administration on or before 4 February 2013 (sixty days before the first game of the final tournament).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231636-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African U-20 Championship squads\nOnly 21 of the 40 players listed are authorised to take part in the final tournament. The final squad of 21 players must be submitted on or before 6 March 2013 (ten days before the first game of the final tournament). The regulations require that three of the 21 players must be goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231637-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Volleyball Championship U21\nThe 2013 African Volleyball Championship U21 will be held in Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia from 2 to 9 March 2013. The semi-finalists will qualify for the 2013 World Junior Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231637-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Volleyball Championship U21, Final standing\nTeam RosterTa\u00efeb Korbosli (L), Khaled Ben Slimene, Oussema Mrika, Montassar Ben Braham, Malek Chekir, Elyes Garfi, Adem Oueslati, Mohamed Amine Htira, Wassim Ben Tara, Mohamed Brahem, Sahbi Belkahla, Karim MselmaniHead Coach: Fethi Mkaouar", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231638-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Volleyball Clubs Champions Championship\nThe 2013 African Volleyball Clubs Champions Championship was the 32nd edition of African's premier club volleyball tournament held in Tripoli, Libya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231640-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Handball Champions League\nThe 2013 African Women's Handball Champions League was the 35th edition, organized by the African Handball Confederation, under the auspices of the International Handball Federation, the handball sport governing body. The tournament was held from October 3\u201312 in Marrakech, Morocco, contested by 9 teams and won by Atl\u00e9tico Petr\u00f3leos de Luanda of Angola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231640-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Handball Champions League, Draw\nAfrica Sports National Inter Club Brazzaville Nairobi Water Petro Atl\u00e9tico Stade Mandji", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231640-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Handball Champions League, Draw\nDesportivo ABC FAP Yound\u00e9 Primeiro de Agosto Progresso do Sambizanga", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231641-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Handball Cup Winners' Cup\nThe 2013 African Women's Handball Cup Winners' Cup was the 29th edition, organized by the African Handball Confederation, under the auspices of the International Handball Federation, the handball sport governing body. The tournament was held from April 18\u201327, 2013 in Hammamet, Tunisia, contested by 9 teams and won by Atl\u00e9tico Petr\u00f3leos de Luanda of Angola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231642-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Junior Handball Championship\nThe 2013 African Women's Junior Handball Championship was the 20th edition of the African Women's Junior Handball Championship. The event, organized by the African Handball Confederation, under the supervision of the International Handball Federation, took place in the Republic of the Congo, in one host city, Oyo, from September 1 to 8. Seven teams participated on the tournament. Angola, dethroned defending champion Congo thus securing its 7th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231642-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Junior Handball Championship\nAngola were the champions and the top three teams qualified for the 2014 Women's Junior World Handball Championship, in Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231642-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Junior Handball Championship, Preliminary round\nThe seven teams were split into two groups. The top two teams from each group advanced to the semi-finals while the last three played for the 5th to 7th places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231643-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Youth Handball Championship\nThe 2013 African Women's Youth Handball Championship was the 8th edition of the African Women's Youth Handball Championship. The event, organized by the African Handball Confederation, under the supervision of the International Handball Federation, took place in the Republic of the Congo, in one host city, Oyo, from August 24 to 30. Seven teams participated on the tournament. Angola, the defending champion, retained its title, by beating Tunisia 29-18 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231643-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Youth Handball Championship\nThe tournament also served as the qualification for the 2014 Women's Youth World Handball Championship, in Macedonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231643-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African Women's Youth Handball Championship, Preliminary round\nThe seven teams were divided into two groups. Top two teams from each group advanced to the semi-finals while the last three played for the 5th to 7th places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231644-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 African Youth Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 African Youth Athletics Championships were the first edition of the biennial athletics competition for African athletes aged fifteen to seventeen. It was held in Warri, Nigeria, on 28\u201331 March. A total of 40 events were originally scheduled but only 36 went ahead, 17 for boys and 19 for girls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231644-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 African Youth Athletics Championships\nThe Warri Township Stadium in Nigeria's Delta State, underwent significant renovation for the competition. The stadium was expanded to accommodate an international standard track and field and the installation of a Timetronics EDM (Electronic Distance Measurement) system was the first of its kind in the country. Emmanuel Uduaghan, the Delta State Governor, urged further use of the stadium for national and international events, as well as underlining the importance of good facilities to assist future generations of Nigerian athletes to attain an elite standard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231644-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 African Youth Athletics Championships\nThe girls' pole vault competition was cancelled as there were only two entrants and the walk events were rescheduled to take place as road, instead of track, events. The South African delegation was absent due to a lack of funds to attend to the event. The boys' hammer throw, 400 metres hurdles and pole vault were not contested despite some entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231644-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 African Youth Athletics Championships\nNigeria topped the medals table with twelve gold medals and 33 medals overall (after doping disqualifications). The next most successful countries were Egypt (eight golds and 16 in total) and Ethiopia (26 medals, seven of them gold). Kenya placed fourth with five golds and eleven medals. Sixteen nations reached the medal table. Egyptian discus thrower Amira Khaled Mohammed was the first ever gold medallist of the championships. Nigeria was dominant in the sprint events, while Egypt performed best in the throwing events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231644-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 African Youth Athletics Championships\nDivine Oduduru and Adewunmi Deborah Adewale of Nigeria completed 100/200 metres sprint doubles in the boys' and girls' sections, respectively. Kenyan Robert Biwott claimed both boys' middle-distance titles. His teammates Edwin Melly and Daisy Jepkemei achieved the same feat of winning the steeplechase and being runner-up in the 3000 metres. Egypt had the top two places in the boys' shot put and discus events as Mohamed Magdi Hamza and Sherif Adel Salem Ahmed gained a gold and a silver each. Uruemu Theophilus Ejovi won an unusual medal combination by taking bronze in the high jump and triple jump disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231644-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 African Youth Athletics Championships\nSeveral athletes at the competition went on to win medals at the 2013 World Youth Championships in Athletics held that July. Biwott won the world 1500\u00a0m youth title, Hamza was a shot put bronze medallist and Daisy Jepkemei won the world youth steeplechase silver medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231645-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale season\nThe 2013 season for the Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale cycling team began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231646-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Air Force Falcons football team\nThe 2013 Air Force Falcons football team represented the United States Air Force Academy in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Falcons were led by seventh-year head coach Troy Calhoun and played their home games at Falcon Stadium. They were a member of the Mountain West Conference in the Mountain Division. They finished the season 2\u201310, 0\u20138 in Mountain West play to finish in last place in the Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231647-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aircel Chennai Open\nThe 2013 Aircel Chennai Open was a 2013 ATP World Tour tennis tournament, played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 18th edition of the only ATP tournament taking place in India and took place at the SDAT Tennis Stadium in Chennai, India. It was held from 31 December to 6 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231647-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aircel Chennai Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231647-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aircel Chennai Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231648-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aircel Chennai Open \u2013 Doubles\nLeander Paes and Janko Tipsarevi\u0107 were the defending champions but Tipsarevi\u0107 decided not to participate. Paes played alongside Edouard Roger-Vasselin, but they lost in the first round. Beno\u00eet Paire and Stanislas Wawrinka defeated Andre Begemann and Martin Emmrich 6\u20132, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231649-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aircel Chennai Open \u2013 Singles\nMilos Raonic was the defending champion, but chose to compete in Brisbane instead. Janko Tipsarevi\u0107 won the title, defeating Roberto Bautista-Agut 3\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231649-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aircel Chennai Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign\nAkbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (Persian: \u200c\u0627\u06a9\u0628\u0631 \u0647\u0627\u0634\u0645\u06cc \u0631\u0641\u0633\u0646\u062c\u0627\u0646\u06cc\u200e, Akbar H\u0101shem\u012b Rafsanj\u0101n\u012b, Hashemi Bahramani \u0647\u0627\u0634\u0645\u06cc \u0628\u0647\u0631\u0645\u0627\u0646\u06cc) served as the fourth president of Iran from 1989 until 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign\nOn 11 May 2013 he entered the race for the June 2013 presidential election. \"I came to serve. It is the right of the people to choose me or not,\" Iranian media quoted him as saying as he registered. Rafsanjani signalled few days before registration that he would not run without Khamenei's consent. It was unclear on Saturday whether the supreme leader had in fact intervened in the final hours before registration drew to a close. As early consequences merchants cut prices as the slumping Iranian currency clawed back about 4 percent against the U.S. dollar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign\nA few days after his registration, a group of hardline Iranian lawmakers, about 100 out of 290 parliamentarians, has urged the country\u2019s constitutional watchdog to disqualify Hashemi Rafsanjani and Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign\nOn 21 May Hashemi Rafsanjani was barred from standing for president by the Guardian Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign, Registration\nThe emergence of two-term former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Ahmadinejad\u2019s top aide, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, dramatically changed the landscape of an election that until recently most observers thought would be fought between conservative candidates loyal to Iran\u2019s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Amid tight security, Rafsanjani made his way through the crowd to the registration center. As he arrived at the designated desk, it became clear that Mashaei, flanked by Ahmadinejad, was registering simultaneously just a few feet away. \"I came to serve. It is the right of the people to choose me or not. \", Rafsanjani said. Rafsanjani endorsed the opposition Green Movement during the last election in 2009, when Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the outgoing president, won a disputed contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign, Endorsements\nMohammad Khatami, former president of Iran supported Rafsanjani to sign on for election. In response to calls to nominate himself, Khatami issued a statement on his website, saying, \"Even if we get a chance to run in the election, we won\u2019t have the right to receive more than a certain number of votes\". Khatami said: \"He is the most suitable person who is able to solve complicated problems of the country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign, Endorsements\nReformist presidential hopeful Mohammad Shariatmadari withdrew his candidacy from the presidential elections in support of former president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign, Endorsements\nPro -reform Islamic Iran Participation Front and the Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution of Iran Organization whose many members were arrested and jailed because of protests after the previous presidential election in 2009 have declared they will support Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani in the 2013 presidential election. The Islamic Revolution Mojahedin Organization front has said in a statement that \"the gap between the government and the public has reached its peak, so that distrust toward the administration has never been so high.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign, Endorsements\nAli Mazrooei, former parliamentarian supported him and said: \"Rafsanjani will be able to get most of the votes at the elections, because he, among other candidates, will succeed the most at improving the current situation in Iran\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 65], "content_span": [66, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign, Statements, Statement No.1\nIn one of his first statements since joining the race he spoke in general terms of seeking a new \"economic and political\" rebirth in a time of \"foreign threats and sanctions.\" Rafsanjani emphasized the necessity of promoting moderation, national unity, and public confidence in the system, expressing hope that the upcoming election would open a new chapter in Iran\u2019s contemporary history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 79], "content_span": [80, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231650-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani presidential campaign, Statements, Statement No.2\nAyatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, expounded his plans in the second statement and said: \"He will place special emphasis on the country\u2019s development plan in order to overcome the ongoing economic vows, while pledging to boost national unity and cooperation in Iran.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 79], "content_span": [80, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231651-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Akron Zips football team\nThe 2013 Akron Zips football team represented the University of Akron in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Terry Bowden and played their home games at InfoCision Stadium\u2013Summa Field. They were a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference and finished the season with a 5\u20137 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231652-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Akron Zips men's soccer team\nThe 2013 Akron Zips men's soccer team represented the University of Akron during the 2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The Zips enter the season as the defending MAC Regular Season and Tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231653-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Ain bus accident\nThe 2013 Al Ain bus accident occurred on 4 February 2013 when a bus carrying 46 people from Pakistan, India and Bangladesh, collided with another vehicle in the Zakhir district of the city of Al Ain, Abu Dhabi (emirate). At least 22 people died and another 24 were injured in the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election\nThe Al Anbar governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 June 2013 alongside elections for Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Background\nWhilst elections for 13 of Iraq's 18 governorates were held on 20 April, elections in the governorates of Al Anbar and Nineveh were delayed due to security concerns arising from the ongoing insurgency and Sunni-led protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Campaign, Entities\nA total of 17 political parties and coalitions contested the election, fielding a total of 548 candidates. The top four most popular groups were;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Campaign, Entities, Mutahidun (The United)\nMutahidun is a major political force in Ninewa and Anbar, including in its ranks former finance minister Rafia al-Issawi's Future Gathering and tribal leader Ahmed Abu Risha's Awakening (Sahwa) Conference in addition to the Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP). The main leaders of the Mutahidun List were the two Nujaifi brothers; Usama and Atheel. The Nujaifis are not from Al Anbar, however, and so had formed these political alliances to garner more votes. In Anbar, tribal dynamics and locale trump politics and ideology, which, by contrast, are more prominent in Nineveh. The groups composing the Uniters List in Anbar had collectively won 14 seats in the 2009 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Campaign, Entities, Aabiroun Coalition\nAabiroun looked likely to win seats in the run up to the election. Led by then incumbent governor Mohammed Qassim al-Fahdawi, the coalition was composed of nine groups and mostly relied on popular appeal deriving from Fahdawi's tenure as governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Campaign, Entities, Arabian Al Iraqia\nDeputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq competed under the Arab Iraqiyya coalition, consisting of six groups. The al-Hal movement ran as part of the coalition in both Anbar and Ninawa. The two groups had won a total of 9 seats at the previous election, however in the run up to the election Mutlaq had suffered from a declining popularity in Anbar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Campaign, Entities, Al Iraqia National and United Coalition\nThe Al Iraqia National and United Coalition is led by former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi and consists of 19 groups. The coalition won two seats in the 2009 elections. The elections will indicate Allawi\u2019s political longevity among Iraqi Sunnis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 95], "content_span": [96, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Results\nAn IHEC spokesman announced the results on 27 June 2013, with the United List led by Iraqi parliamentary speaker Usama al-Nujayfi coming first, with 8 of the 30 seats. The Aabiroun Coalition; a bloc backed by Prime Minister Nour al-Maliki, came second with 5 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Results\nMuhammad Mahdi al-Salih, the former Minister of Trade under Saddam Hussein, was rumoured to be a candidate supported by the Uniters List for the position of Governor of Anbar. The Uniters List later denied the rumours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231654-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Anbar governorate election, Results\nAhmed Khalaf Dheyabi, a protest organizer from the Iraqi Islamic Party and a member of the Uniters List, was eventually chosen as the new Governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231655-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge\nThe 2013 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fifteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $75,000 in prize money. It took place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on 11\u201317 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231655-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231656-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nMaria Elena Camerin and Vera Dushevina were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Dushevina chose not to participate in 2013. Camerin partnered up with Tadeja Majeri\u010d, but they lost in the first round to Elena Bogdan and Valeria Savinykh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231656-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nVitalia Diatchenko and Olga Savchuk won the tournament, defeating Lyudmyla and Nadiya Kichenok in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231657-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Singles\nKimiko Date-Krumm was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to compete in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231657-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge \u2013 Singles\nTop seed Jana \u010cepelov\u00e1 won the tournament, defeating wild card Maria Elena Camerin in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231658-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Al Muthanna governorate election\nThe Muthanna governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231659-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Al-Q\u0101disiyyah governorate election\nThe Al-Q\u0101disiyyah governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231660-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team represented Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University (Alabama A&M) in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bulldogs were led by 12th-year head coach Anthony Jones and played their home games at Louis Crews Stadium. They were a member of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference and finished the season with a 4\u20138 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231660-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama A&M Bulldogs football team\nAt SWAC Media Day, the Bulldogs were picked to finish third in the division. Additionally 5 Bulldogs players: Montaurius Corey Johnson, Reginald Bailey, Justin Goodrich, and Derrick Harris, were selected to the SWAC 2nd-team All-Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231661-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team\nThe 2013 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team represents the University of Alabama in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Crimson Tide play their home games in Sewell-Thomas Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231661-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team, Schedule and results\n\u2020 Indicates the game does not count toward the 2013 Southeastern Conference standings. *Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the Baseball America poll the week Alabama faced each opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231661-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team, Rankings\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, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231661-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team, Alabama Crimson Tide in the 2013 MLB Draft\nThe following members of the Alabama Crimson Tide baseball program were drafted in the 2013 MLB Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe 2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team represented the University of Alabama in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the Crimson Tide's 119th overall season, 80th as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and its 22nd within the SEC Western Division. The team was led by head coach Nick Saban, in his seventh year, and played its home games at Bryant\u2013Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. They finished the season with a record of eleven wins and two losses (11\u20132 overall, 7\u20131 in the SEC) and with a loss in the 2014\u00a0Sugar\u00a0Bowl to Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nAfter they captured the 2012 national championship, the Crimson Tide signed a highly rated recruiting class in February 2013 and completed spring practice the following April. With thirteen returning starters from the previous season, Alabama entered the 2013 season as the two-time defending national champions, ranked as the number one team in the nation and as a favorite to win the Western Division, the SEC and national championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe Crimson Tide opened the season with eleven consecutive victories that included one over Virginia Tech at a neutral site, against Texas A&M in a game that saw many team records broken and an emotional victory over LSU at Bryant\u2013Denny Stadium. In their twelfth game, Alabama was upset by Auburn. The loss, in a game known since as \"Kick Six,\" kept the Crimson Tide out of the SEC Championship Game. Although they did not qualify to play for their third consecutive national championship with a final BCS ranking of third, Alabama did accept an invitation to play in the Sugar Bowl. Against Oklahoma, the Crimson Tide lost 45\u201331 despite being 17\u00bd point favorites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nAt the conclusion of the season, Alabama's defense was nationally ranked near the top in total defense, scoring defense, rushing defense and ranked passing defense. Offensively, the Alabama offense ranked 17th in scoring offense, 24th in rushing offense, 33rd in total offense and 49th in passing offense. Additionally, several players were recognized for their individual accomplishments on the field. C. J. Mosley won the Butkus Award as the top collegiate linebacker; A. J. McCarron won both the Maxwell Award as the overall player of the year and the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award as the top senior quarterback. Also, four players were named to various All-America Teams with C. J. Mosley being a unanimous selection and Ha Ha Clinton-Dix and Cyrus Kouandjio being consensus selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, Previous season\nIn 2012, Alabama came into the season ranked No. 2 in both preseason polls. After their week-one victory over Michigan, the Crimson Tide moved into the No. 1 spot in both polls, and then proceeded to win their next eight games that included a victory at LSU. However, the next week, Alabama was upset by Johnny Manziel and the Texas A&M Aggies and dropped to the No. 4 position. Alabama bounced back and won its remaining games to clinch the SEC Western Division and secured a spot in the 2012 SEC Championship Game against Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, Previous season\nThe Crimson Tide then defeated the Bulldogs and captured the SEC Championship. The next day, Alabama finished No. 2 in the final BCS rankings and would play Notre Dame in the 2013 BCS National Championship Game. In the game, Alabama defeated the Fighting Irish 42\u201314 and captured their 15th national championship and made Nick Saban the only coach in college football to win four BCS Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, February player arrests\nIn February 2013 Tuscaloosa Police arrested four football players from the 2012 season: Brent Calloway, Tyler Hayes, D. J. Pettway and Eddie Williams. Williams was involved in four separate incidents on February 10 and 11. On February 10 he had a dispute with a gas station clerk about paying for gas and said he had to get something in the trunk of his car. The clerk called the police, the police arrested Williams with carrying a pistol without a license, but Williams was released later that day on a $500 bond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, February player arrests\nLater that night around 12:30\u00a0a.m., Williams attacked an Alabama student with Hayes and Pettway and they stole the student's backpack. In a separate incident almost an hour later, Williams attacked another student while Hayes and Pettway waited in a car. Later Williams used one of the students' credit cards. Calloway was also arrested after he used a victim's student debit card with knowledge it was stolen. Following the arrests, Alabama suspended all four from the football team. Alabama also prohibited Hayes, Pettway and Williams from entering campus. On February 27, Alabama dismissed all four players from the university after completing a judicial review.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nAlabama started spring practice on March 16 and concluded 15 practices later on April 20 with the annual A-Day game. In the annual A-Day game at the conclusion of spring practice, the White team composed of offensive starters defeated the Crimson team of defensive starters 17\u201314. The White team opened on offense and scored a touchdown on their first possession on a 40-yard A. J. McCarron pass to Kenny Bell. After Nick Perry intercepted a Blake Sims pass on the first Crimson possession, the White team extended their lead to 10\u20130 on a 29-yard Adam Griffith field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nBoth offenses then struggled for the remainder of the first half with turnovers for the Crimson team coming on a second Perry interception of a Sims pass, an Alec Morris fumble recovered by Dillon Lee, and on a Cooper Bateman pass intercepted by Landon Collins. The White team had turnovers on a Kenny Bell fumble recovered by C. J. Mosley and on the last play of the first half when a McCarron pass was intercepted by Vinnie Sunseri and returned 86-yards for a touchdown that made the halftime score 10\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nThe offensive struggles continued into the second half with neither team scoring any points in the third quarter. In the fourth, the Crimson team took a 14\u201310 lead after Ha'Sean Clinton-Dix recovered a Brian Vogler fumble and returned it 55-yards for a touchdown. The White team responded on their next possession with a seven-yard T. J. Yeldon touchdown run for a 17\u201314 victory. For his performance, Ryan Kelly earned the Dwight Stephenson Lineman of the A-Day Game Award. On offense, Yeldon earned the Dixie Howell Memorial Most Valuable Player of the A-Day Game Award for his 129 all-purpose yards on the day that included 69 rushing and 60 receiving, and game-winning touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, Fall camp\nBy August, Alabama had a combined 31 players on 14 different preseason award watch lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Before the season, Fall camp\nThese players included C. J. Mosley, Ha'Sean Clinton-Dix and Deion Belue for the Chuck Bednarik Award; Amari Cooper and Kevin Norwood for the Fred Biletnikoff Award; Adrian Hubbard and Mosley for the Butkus Award; Cooper, A. J. McCarron, Mosley and T. J. Yeldon for the Walter Camp Award; Hubbard, Mosley, Cyrus Kouandjio and Anthony Steen for the Lombardi Award; Christion Jones for the Paul Hornung Award; Brian Vogler for the John Mackey Award; Cooper, McCarron, Mosley and Yeldon for the Maxwell Award; Belue, Clinton-Dix, Hubbard and Mosley for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy; McCarron for the Davey O'Brien Award; Kouandjio and Steen for the Outland Trophy; Ryan Kelly for the Rimington Trophy; Clinton-Dix for the Jim Thorpe Award; and Yeldon for the Doak Walker Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Coaching staff\nAlabama head coach Nick Saban completed his seventh year as the Crimson Tide's head coach for the 2013 season. During his previous six years with Alabama, he led the Crimson Tide to an overall record of 63 wins and 13 losses (63\u201313) and the 2009, 2011 and 2012 national championships. On January 9, 2013, former Colorado defensive coordinator Greg Brown was hired as the successor for Jeremy Pruitt as secondary coach. On February 18, former Florida International head coach Mario Cristobal was hired as Jeff Stoutland's replacement for offensive line coach. On February 21, former Florida State tight ends coach and recruiting coordinator Billy Napier was hired as Mike Groh's replacement as wide receivers coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, Returning starters\nAlabama had six returning players on offense and seven on defense that started games in 2012. Another notable player that returned for 2013, but did not start in 2012, was running back T. J. Yeldon, who appeared in all 14 Alabama games in 2012 as the backup for Eddie Lacy. Additionally, four first-year players in 2012 made the SEC Coaches' All-Freshman Team: Amari Cooper, Ryan Kelly, D. J. Pettway and Yeldon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, Depth chart\nDue to varying circumstances throughout the season, several players were rotated in and out of starting positions throughout Alabama's depth chart. Below is a listing of at what times during the season players were substituted as starter or saw increased playing time. On the offensive side of the ball, freshman Grant Hill split time with starter Austin Shepherd at right tackle against Kentucky. Kellen Williams was listed on the depth chart as a backup at left tackle and guard; however, coach Saban mentioned Williams as being the sixth starter who can fill in at all the offensive line positions. After the Ole Miss, Williams was listed as the back-up center to Chad Lindsay after an injury to starter Ryan Kelly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, Depth chart\nOn the defensive side of the ball, reserve Nick Perry sustained a shoulder injury in practice prior to the Colorado State game that ended his season. On October 2, Nick Saban announced the indefinite suspension of Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, and indicated Landon Collins and Geno Smith would play more in Clinton-Dix's absence. Clinton-Dix's eligibility was reinstated by the NCAA on October 18 after he served a two-game suspension for receiving an improper benefit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, Depth chart\nThe depth chart listed below shows starters and backups as announced in August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, 2013 recruiting class\nPrior to National Signing Day on February 6, 2013, nine players enrolled for the spring semester in order to participate in spring practice (six former high school seniors on scholarship, one former junior college player on scholarship, one walk-on from professional baseball and one walk-on from high school). The early enrollments from high school included quarterbacks Cooper Bateman and Parker McLeod, wide receiver Raheem Falkins, running back Derrick Henry, offensive lineman Brandon Hill and tight end O. J. Howard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, 2013 recruiting class\nLineman Brandon Hill spent a post-graduate high school year at Hargrave Military Academy, and did not have the option to take a redshirt year, but still had four years of playing eligibility. Offensive tackle Leon Brown enrolled at Alabama after he transferred from junior college and would be eligible to play in the 2013 season and for a maximum of two seasons. Four of the eight players who were early enrollees in 2012 saw playing time in the 2012 season: Amari Cooper, Dillon Lee, T. J. Yeldon and Deion Blue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, 2013 recruiting class\nHenry and Howard entered school as two of the top 100 recruits in the country. Henry was the No. 1 ranked \"athlete\" according to 247Sports Composite Rankings based on his potential to make an immediate impact at either running back or outside linebacker, but he had commented that he planned to compete at running back. Henry broke the national high school record for career yards, and in his 2012 high school season he averaged 328 yards per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, 2013 recruiting class\nIn addition to those scholarship recruits that signed early, former professional baseball player Jai Miller and high school quarterback Luke Del Rio enrolled in order to compete for roster spots as invited walk-ons. Miller was a 28-year-old who out of high school signed to play baseball and football at Stanford, but ended up playing professional baseball out of high school after being drafted by the Florida Marlins in 2003. Based on the terms of his original contract, the Marlins would pay for Miller's tuition at Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Players, 2013 recruiting class\nOn National Signing Day, Alabama signed 18 additional players out of high school that completed the 2013 recruiting class. The class was highlighted by fourteen players from the \"ESPN 150\": No. 9\u00a0Derrick Henry; No. 16\u00a0Reuben Foster; No. 25\u00a0Robert Foster; No. 26\u00a0Dee Liner; No. 28\u00a0Jonathan Allen; No. 32\u00a0Alvin Kamara; No. 36\u00a0Tim Williams; No. 44\u00a0Cooper Bateman; No. 45\u00a0O. J. Howard; No. 63\u00a0Tyren Jones; No. 81\u00a0Altee Tenpenny; No. 84\u00a0Maurice Smith; No. 86\u00a0Grant Hill and No. 105\u00a0A'Shawn Robinson. Alabama signed the No. 1 recruiting class according to Rivals.com and the No. 3 recruiting class according to Scout.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Schedule\nThe 2013 schedule was officially released on October 18, 2012. The 2013 schedule was developed as a \"bridge\" schedule for only the 2013 season, as a permanent system was developed by the conference in spring 2013. Alabama faced all six Western Division opponents: Arkansas, Auburn, LSU, Mississippi State, Ole Miss, and Texas A&M. They also faced two Eastern Division opponents: official SEC rival Tennessee and Kentucky. Alabama was not scheduled to play SEC opponents Georgia, Missouri, South Carolina, Florida or Vanderbilt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Schedule\nThey also played four non-conference games: Virginia Tech of the Atlantic Coast Conference, Colorado State of the Mountain West Conference, Georgia State of the Sun Belt Conference and Chattanooga of the Southern Conference. The Crimson Tide had two bye weeks: their first was before they faced Texas A&M, and their second before they faced LSU. On December 9, Alabama was selected as an at-large BCS selection to compete in the Sugar Bowl against Oklahoma of the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Virginia Tech\nOn July 7, 2011, officials from both Alabama and Virginia Tech announced the Crimson Tide and the Hokies would meet to open the 2013 season in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game at Atlanta. In the game, the offense struggled, but Christion Jones became the first Alabama player to score two non-offensive touchdowns in a single game and led the Crimson Tide to a 35\u201310 victory at the Georgia Dome. After the Hokies were held to a three-and-out, Christion Jones gave Alabama a 7\u20130 lead with his first touchdown on a 72-yard punt return. The teams then traded a series of punts before T. J. Yeldon extended the Alabama lead to 14\u20130 with his two-yard touchdown run that capped a 49-yard drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Virginia Tech\nVirginia Tech responded on the possession that ensued with their only touchdown of the game on a 77-yard Trey Edmunds touchdown run that cut the lead to 14\u20137. Early in the second quarter, Vinnie Sunseri intercepted a Logan Thomas pass and returned it 38-yards for a touchdown and a 21\u20137 lead. The teams then again traded punts before Kyle Fuller intercepted an A. J. McCarron pass that set up an eventual 29-yard Cody Journell field goal. On the kickoff that ensued, Jones scored his second non-offensive touchdown of the game on a 94-yard return that made the halftime score 28\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Virginia Tech\nNeither team scored again until late in third quarter when McCarron Connected with Jones on a 38-yard touchdown pass that made the final score 35\u201310. For his three touchdown and 256 all-purpose yardage performance, Jones was recognized as the Walter Camp National Player of the Week. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Hokies to 12\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nIn the first conference game of the 2013 season, Alabama defeated the Texas A&M Aggies at College Station, 49\u201342. Texas A&M opened the game with a pair of touchdowns on their first two offensive possessions and took a 14\u20130 lead. After they received the opening kickoff, the Aggies scored on their first possession when Johnny Manziel threw a one-yard touchdown pass to Cameron Clear and on their second possession on a one-yard Ben Malena touchdown run. Alabama responded with their first of five consecutive touchdowns on their next possession and cut the A&M lead to 14\u20137 when A. J. McCarron threw a 22-yard touchdown pass to Kevin Norwood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nAfter the Crimson Tide defense held the Aggies to a punt, McCarron threw his second touchdown pass of the afternoon on the drive that ensued early in the second quarter on a 44-yard flea flicker pass to DeAndrew White that tied the game 14\u201314. On the next drive, Cyrus Jones intercepted a Manziel pass in the end zone for a touchback and an Alabama possession. McCarron then threw his third touchdown pass on the game from 51\u00a0yards to Kenny Bell and gave the Crimson Tide their first lead of the game, 21\u201314. Alabama then closed the first half with an 11-play, 93-yard drive capped with a four-yard T. J. Yeldon touchdown run for a 28\u201314 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nAfter the A&M defense forced a punt on the opening possession of the third quarter, Vinnie Sunseri intercepted the first Manziel pass of the second half and returned it 73\u00a0yards for a touchdown and extended the Alabama lead to 35\u201314. The Aggies responded on the drive that followed with a 14-yard Manziel touchdown pass to Malcome Kennedy which was followed with a three-yard Kenyan Drake touchdown run that made the score 42\u201321 in favor of the Crimson Tide at the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nIn the fourth, the Aggies scored first on a 12-yard Kennedy touchdown reception, and Alabama looked like they were about to respond with a touchdown as well, but Yeldon fumbled at the two-yard line that was recovered by A&M. Three plays later, Manziel threw a 95-yard touchdown pass to Mike Evans that cut the Crimson Tide lead to 42\u201335. Alabama rebounded on their next drive that was capped with a five-yard McCarron touchdown pass to Jalston Fowler that extended their lead to 49\u201335. A four-yard touchdown pass from Manziel to Kennedy in the last 0:20 made the final score 49\u201342. Alabama recovered the ensuing onside kick to seal the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nThe 628 yards of total offense by A&M were the most ever surrendered by an Alabama defense in the history of the program. For his career-high 334 yards on 20 of 29 passing and four touchdowns, McCarron was recognized as the SEC Offensive Player of the Week. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Aggies to 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Colorado State\nOn December 13, 2012, officials from both Alabama and Colorado State announced the Crimson Tide and the Rams would meet each other for the first time in the third game of the 2013 season. Although Alabama was a 40-point favorite as they entered the game, the Rams played the Crimson Tide close through the fourth quarter when a pair of late touchdowns gave Alabama a 31\u20136 victory. After both teams traded punts on their opening pair of possessions, Alabama took a 7\u20130 lead on a three-yard Kenyan Drake touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Colorado State\nDrake was able to score the first touchdown as he was the starting running back in the game due to T. J. Yeldon being suspended for the first quarter by Nick Saban for his unsportsmanlike conduct penalty against A&M the week before. They extended their lead to 14\u20130 early in the second quarter when Drake blocked a Rams punt that was returned 15-yards by Dillon Lee for a touchdown, and then to 17\u20130 at halftime when Cade Foster connected on a 46-yard field goal late in the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Colorado State\nAfter Bernard Blake intercepted an A. J. McCarron pass on Alabama's first possession of the second half, Jared Roberts kicked a 45-yard field goal on the drive that ensured that made the score 17\u20133. Roberts then scored the Rams' only other points on their next possession with his 31-yard field goal. Early in the fourth quarter, Trey DePriest both forced and recovered a Garrett Grayson fumble. On the next play, Alabama scored on a 30-yard McCarron touchdown pass to DeAndrew White for a 24\u20136 lead. The Crimson Tide then made the final score 31\u20136 with a 15-yard Blake Sims touchdown pass to Chris Black. In the game, the Rams were led by former Crimson Tide offensive coordinator Jim McElwain and received $1.5 million to play the game at Bryant\u2013Denny Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nIn their first home conference game of the 2013 season, Alabama shutout the Ole Miss Rebels 25\u20130 at Tuscaloosa. After the Crimson Tide defense forced a punt on the Rebels' first possession, A. J. McCarron led the Alabama offense on an 11 play, 61-yard drive that ended with a 3\u20130 lead after a 28-yard Cade Foster field goal. Each team played strong defense for the remainder of the quarter with an Eddie Jackson interception of a Laquon Treadwell sideline pass for Alabama being the major play. Alabama then extended their lead in the second quarter to 9\u20130 at halftime after Foster connected on field goals of 53 and 42-yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nOn the second play of the third quarter, Alabama scored their first touchdown of the game. It came on a 68-yard T. J. Yeldon run and gave the Crimson Tide a 16\u20130 lead. Each team again traded punts before the Alabama defense stopped an Ole Miss scoring opportunity on a fourth-and-two play from their own seven-yard line that kept the score 16\u20130. In the fourth, Cody Mandell had a punt downed at the Rebels' one-yard line and on the next play, C. J. Mosley sacked Ole Miss quarterback Bo Wallace for a safety and an 18\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nOn the next offensive play for Alabama after they received the safety kick, Kenyan Drake scored on a 50-yard touchdown run that made the final score 25\u20130. The shutout was the first for the Rebels since their loss against Arkansas in 1998. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Rebels to 47\u20139\u20132 (51\u20138\u20132 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Georgia State\nIn their fifth game of the 2013 season and their second home game, Alabama defeated the Georgia State Panthers 45\u20133. A. J. McCarron led a 71-yard drive capped off with an eight-yard touchdown pass to Christion Jones for a 7\u20130 lead. On their first possession, Georgia State gained one first down but was quickly driven back by Alabama's defense who forced a punt. Alabama's next drive saw it lean more on the running game, and T. J. Yeldon scored on a four-yard touchdown run for a 14\u20130 Crimson Tide lead. On the kickoff that ensued, Dee Hart forced a fumble that Crimson Tide linebacker Dillon Lee recovered and returned to the Panthers' 10-yard line. On the next play, McCarron completed a touchdown pass to DeAndrew White that increased Alabama's lead to 21\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Georgia State\nThe Crimson Tide scored on its next two possessions as well, and McCarron completed touchdown passes to running backs Kenyan Drake and Jalston Fowler. With the lead at 35\u20130 late in the second quarter, Alabama played its reserves for much of the remainder of the game. After the Crimson Tide defense forced another punt from the Panthers, McCarron was replaced by backup quarterback Blake Sims. On his first possession at the helm of Alabama's offense, Sims led the team to the Georgia State one-yard line, but a pair of false starts forced Alabama to settle for a field goal that increased the lead to 38\u20130 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Georgia State\nGeorgia State opened the second half with a drive to the Alabama 36-yard line to set up a school record 53-yard field goal by Wil Lutz. Alabama responded with a 68-yard march that ended in a touchdown pass from Blake Sims to Chris Black for a 45\u20133 lead. With the score at 45\u20133, neither team scored again. After a Panthers punt, Alabama's next drive ended with Crimson Tide backup kicker Adam Griffith missing a 30-yard field goal. Before his exit late in the second quarter, McCarron set the Alabama record for passing accuracy at 93.75%, going 15\u201316 and surpassed the previous record of 84.2% held by Ken Stabler. With the win, Alabama improved its all-time record against Georgia State to 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nFor the first time since 2009, Alabama played Kentucky at Lexington, and in the game Alabama defeated the Wildcats 48\u20137. Although the Crimson Tide defense opened the game strong and forced Kentucky to punt after they held the Wildcats to a series of three-and-outs on their initial possessions, the Alabama offense did not see the same on-field success. After they were held to a punt on their first possession, fumbles by Kenyan Drake and T. J. Yeldon on the next two Crimson Tide possessions inside the Wildcats' 15-yard line kept the game scoreless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nAfter a scoreless first quarter, Alabama took a 3\u20130 lead early in the second quarter on a 25-yard Cade Foster field goal. On their next possession, the Crimson Tide scored their first touchdown on a two-play drive that saw a 42-yard Kevin Norwood reception and a one-yard Drake touchdown run for a 10\u20130 lead. Alabama then extended their lead to 24\u20130 at halftime after touchdown runs of 24-yards from Yeldon and one-yard from Drake on their final two possessions of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nOn their first possession of the second half, the Crimson Tide extended their lead further to 31\u20130 after Yeldon scored on a three-yard run that capped a drive that featured a 34-yard Yeldon run and 42-yard Amari Cooper reception. On the Kentucky possession that ensued, the Wildcats scored their only points of the game on a 30-yard Maxwell Smith touchdown pass to Javess Blue that made the score 31\u20137. The touchdown was the first allowed by the Alabama defense since the Texas A&M game and ended a 14-quarter touchdown-free streak for the Crimson Tide. A 20-yard Foster field goal then made the score 34\u20137 as they entered the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nIn the fourth, the Crimson Tide scored touchdowns on both of their offensive possessions and made the final score 48\u20137. The first came on a 20-yard A. J. McCarron pass to Kevin Norwood and the second on a seven-yard Altee Tenpenny run. Offensively, McCarron threw for 359 yards and Drake and Yeldon ran for 106 yards and 124 respectively. This marked the first time in team history that Alabama had a 300-yard passer and two 100-yard runners in a single game. For his performance, right guard Anthony Steen was recognized as SEC Offensive Linemen of the Week. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Wildcats to 36\u20132\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nIn what was the first Bret Bielema coached team to play against the Crimson Tide, Alabama shut out the Arkansas Razorbacks 52\u20130 at Bryant\u2013Denny Stadium. Alabama took a 7\u20130 lead on their first possession with a four-yard A. J. McCarron touchdown pass to Jalston Fowler and extended it to 14\u20130 on their second with a one-yard Kenyan Drake touchdown run. Later in the first, HaHa Clinton-Dix intercepted a Brandon Allen pass in what was his return to the team after he served a two-game suspension for a violation of NCAA rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nAfter the Crimson Tide defense forced a punt on the first Razorback possession of the second quarter, Drake extended the Alabama lead to 21\u20130 with his 46-yard touchdown run. Arkansas responded on their next possession with their longest drive of the game. However, they were unable to score any points as Deion Belue blocked a 41-yard Zach Hocker field goal that preserved the shutout. On the next possession, Alabama closed the first half with a 30-yard McCarron touchdown pass to Amari Cooper that made the halftime score 28\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nOn the opening kickoff of the second half, Derrick Henry forced a Keon Hatcher fumble that was recovered by Eddie Jackson for the Crimson Tide. Three plays later, Alabama led 35\u20130 after McCarron threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to O. J. Howard. On their next offensive drive, T. J. Yeldon scored on a 24-yard touchdown run that extended the Crimson Tide lead to 42\u20130. The Alabama defense then had their second Allen interception of the evening on the Razorbacks possession that ensued with Cyrus Jones' play at the 47-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nWith the offensive reserves in the game, Blake Sims led the team to a 45\u20130 lead after Cade Foster connected on a 48-yard field goal. Henry then made the final score 52\u20130 in the final minute of play with his 80-yard touchdown run. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Razorbacks 14\u20138 (17\u20137 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Tennessee\nIn their annual rivalry game, Alabama defeated the Tennessee Volunteers 45\u201310 at Tuscaloosa. The Crimson Tide took a 21\u20130 lead after they scored touchdowns on all three of their first quarter possessions. The first came on a 54-yard A. J. McCarron pass to Amari Cooper, the second on a one-yard T. J. Yeldon run and the third on a 22-yard McCarron pass to Kevin Norwood. After Alabama extended their lead to 28\u20130 early in the second quarter on Yeldon's second one-yard run of the game, the defense made their first turnover when Deion Belue intercepted a Justin Worley pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Tennessee\nHowever, the Crimson Tide were unable to capitalize on the drive that ensued after Kenyan Drake fumbled the ball at the goal line and was recovered by the Vols' Cameron Sutton. Looking to score before halftime, Tennessee drove from their one-yard line to the Alabama 24 before Worley threw his second interception of the game. This time Landon Collins made the play at the 11-yard line and returned it 89-yards for a touchdown and a 35\u20130 halftime lead. Tennessee opened the second half with their first points on a 37-yard Michael Palardy field goal that made the score 35\u20133. The Crimson Tide responded later in the third with Yeldon's third one-yard touchdown run of the game and extended their lead to 42\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Tennessee\nIn the fourth, the Vols scored their only touchdown on a three-yard Rajion Neal run and Adam Griffith then kicked his first field goal for the Crimson Tide and made the final score 45\u201310. For his six tackle performance and long interception return, Collins was recognized as the SEC Defensive Player of the Week. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Volunteers to 50\u201338\u20137 (51\u201337\u20138 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, LSU\nIn their annual rivalry game, Alabama defeated the LSU Tigers at Tuscaloosa 38\u201317. After LSU forced an Alabama punt on their first possession, they proceeded to drive 79-yards to the Crimson Tide three-yard line. On the next play, Tana Patrick forced a J. C. Copeland fumble at the one-yard line that prevented a Tigers' score. The ball was recovered by Landon Collins and gave the Crimson Tide possession at their 10-yard line. After the LSU defense forced a second punt, their offense had their second turnover of the game when a Zach Mettenberger fumble was recovered by Trey DePriest at the Tigers' 27-yard line. Four plays later, Alabama took a 3\u20130 lead on a 41-yard Cade Foster field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, LSU\nOn their next possession, LSU responded with their first touchdown and a 7\u20133 lead on a three-yard Jeremy Hill run early in the second quarter. Alabama then retook a 10\u20137 lead on the next possession when O. J. Howard took a short slant pass from A. J. McCarron 52-yards for a touchdown. After the Crimson Tide defense forced a punt, their offense extended their lead to 17\u20137 on a nine-yard McCarron pass to Kevin Norwood. LSU then made the halftime score 17\u201314 after Mettenberger threw a six-yard touchdown pass to Travin Dural.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, LSU\nAfter the Tigers' tied the game 17\u201317 on a 41-yard Colby Delahoussaye field goal to open the second half, the Crimson Tide went on their first of three consecutive touchdown drives. Their first touchdown came on a four-yard T. J. Yeldon run that capped a 14 play, 79-yard drive that included a successful fake punt. On their next possession, Yeldon scored on a one-yard touchdown run that extended Alabama's lead to 31\u201317. Odell Beckham Jr. then returned the kickoff that ensued 82-yards to the Crimson Tide 18-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0045-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, LSU\nHowever, the offense was unable to capitalize on the good field position as the Alabama defense forced a turnover on downs. The Crimson Tide then drove 78 yards in eight plays, capping the drive with a three-yard McCarron touchdown pass to Jalston Fowler that made the score 38\u201317. The Alabama defense then closed the game with three consecutive sacks of Mettenberger, winning 38\u201317. For his 12 tackle performance, C. J. Mosley was recognized as both the SEC Defensive Player of the Week and as the Lott IMPACT National Player of the Week. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Tigers to 48\u201325\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nIn their annual rivalry game, Alabama defeated the Mississippi State Bulldogs 20\u20137 at Starkville despite having four turnovers. Alabama won the coin toss and elected to receive the ball to start the game. They then scored on a 33-yard Cade Foster field goal for an early 3\u20130 lead. Both teams then traded punts for their next six combined possessions before the Bulldogs missed a 23-yard field goal midway through the second quarter. On the Alabama drive that ensued, the Crimson Tide had their first of four turnovers on a Taveze Calhoun interception of an A. J. McCarron pass. Alabama rebounded on their next possession with an 18-yard touchdown pass from McCarron to Brian Vogler that made the halftime score 10\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nAfter the Crimson Tide defense forced a State punt to open the third quarter, Kendrick Market forced a T. J. Yeldon fumble that was recovered by Beniquez Brown at the State 49-yard line. The Bulldogs scored on their drive that ensued after Charles Siddoway recovered a Tyler Russell fumble in the endzone that made the score 10\u20137. Alabama responded on their next possession with an 11-yard McCarron touchdown pass to Kevin Norwood that extended their lead to 17\u20137. After the State possession that followed, HaHa Clinton-Dix intercepted a Tyler Russell pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nFoster then made the score 20\u20137 with his 35-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter. The Crimson Tide then had a difficult time closing the game as turnovers on consecutive possessions on a McCarron interception and a Kenyan Drake fumble. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Bulldogs to 76\u201318\u20133 (78\u201317\u20133 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Chattanooga\nIn the final non-conference game the 2013 season, Alabama shutout the Chattanooga Mocs of the Southern Conference 49\u20130 on senior day at Bryant\u2013Denny Stadium. After the Alabama defense forced a Mocs three-and-out on the first possession of the game, Christion Jones fumbled the punt that ensued with Sema'je Kendall for Chattanooga making the recovery at the Alabama 34-yard line. The Alabama defense once again held strong and Trey DePriest ended the possession with his interception at the 17-yard line on fourth down. The Crimson Tide offense then took the ball 83-yards on its first possession with Kenyan Drake making the score 7\u20130 on his 13-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Chattanooga\nDerrick Henry scored Alabama's next touchdown early in the second quarter on a five-yard run that extended their lead to 14\u20130. On the next Chattanooga possession, Alabama again forced a punt, but this time Jones returned it 75-yards for a touchdown and a 21\u20130 lead. The Mocs responded with their best drive of the game; however, A'Shawn Robinson blocked a 48-yard Nick Pollard field goal attempt that kept Chattanooga scoreless. The Crimson Tide then closed the half with a 28-yard A. J. McCarron touchdown pass to Kevin Norwood that made the halftime score 28\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Chattanooga\nAlabama continued their scoring into the third quarter with touchdowns on their first two possessions of the half. The first came on a 38-yard McCarron pass to Amari Cooper on a drive that also saw McCarron complete a pass to his brother Corey McCarron. The second came on a 31-yard Chris Black run that made the score 42\u20130. With the Crimson Tide significantly up, mostly back-up players completed the fourth quarter. After a long drive stalled at the Mocs' 23-yard line, Eddie Jackson returned a C. J. Board fumble caused by Jonathan Allen to the Chattanooga six-yard line. On the next play, Dee Hart made the final score 49\u20130 with his six-yard touchdown run. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Mocs to 12\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nIn the final regular season game the 2013 season, Alabama lost 34\u201328 to the Auburn Tigers after Chris Davis returned a missed Adam Griffith field goal 109-yards for the game-winning score with no time left on the clock in a game since dubbed \"Kick Bama Kick\". Going into the game, Alabama had been ranked atop the polls all season, while Auburn was fourth in all major polls, making this the highest combined ranking ever in the Iron Bowl. With the victory, Auburn won the SEC West division title and prevented Alabama from potentially playing for their third consecutive national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nAfter Alabama failed to score on the first drive when Cade Foster missed a 44-yard field goal attempt, Auburn took a 7\u20130 lead on their second offensive possession on a 45-yard Nick Marshall touchdown run. The Crimson Tide responded early in the second and tied the game 7\u20137 on a three-yard A. J. McCarron touchdown pass to Jalston Fowler. Alabama's Landon Collins both forced and recovered a Tre Mason fumble on the Tigers' possession that ensued. Four plays later Alabama took a 14\u20137 lead on a 20-yard McCarron pass to Kevin Norwood. The Crimson Tide then went ahead 21\u20137 on a one-yard T. J. Yeldon touchdown run, but Auburn responded with a late Mason touchdown run that made the halftime score 21\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nThe Tigers tied the score 21\u201321 on their first possession of the third quarter when Marshall threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to C. J. Uzomah. Early in the fourth Foster missed a 33-yard field goal attempt, but on their next possession McCarron connected with Amari Cooper for a 99-yard touchdown reception and a 28\u201321 lead. Late in the game, Ryan Smith blocked a 44-yard Foster field goal attempt, and on the Auburn possession that ensued Marshall threw a 39-yard touchdown pass to Sammie Coates that tied the game 28\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nWith seven seconds left in regulation and the score tied at 28, Yeldon made a long run as time expired. The play was reviewed from the replay booth, and one second was put back on the clock after the referees determined Yeldon had stepped out of bounds just before time expired. Alabama then opted to attempt a game-winning 57-yard field goal, but chose freshman kicker Adam Griffith over Foster due to Foster's woes that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0054-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nAlabama failed its fourth field goal of the day with Griffith's attempt falling short, but Auburn's Chris Davis fielded it nine yards deep in his own end zone, and with no Crimson Tide skill players in his path (the field goal unit was made up almost entirely of offensive linemen), sprinted for a 109-yard touchdown return and a 34\u201328 Auburn win. Under NCAA scoring rules, Davis was only credited for 100 yards on the play. The loss brought Alabama's all-time record against the Tigers to 42\u201335\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOn December 9, Alabama was selected as an at-large BCS participant to play in the Sugar Bowl against Oklahoma. Against the Sooners, the Crimson Tide were upset 45\u201331 against an upstart Oklahoma squad. Alabama opened the game with a four play, 75-yard touchdown drive that saw A. J. McCarron complete a 53-yard pass to Amari Cooper and T. J. Yeldon score on a one-yard run for a 7\u20130 lead. On the first Oklahoma possession of the game, Landon Collins intercepted a Trevor Knight pass that halted the Sooners' drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0055-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nHowever, on the Alabama play that ensued, McCarron threw an interception to Gabe Lynn, and Oklahoma responded on their next play with a 45-yard Knight pass to Lacoltan Bester that tied the game 7\u20137. Alabama retook a 10\u20137 lead on a 27-yard Cade Foster field goal, but the Sooners again responded and took a 14\u201310 lead at the end of the first quarter when Knight threw an eight-yard touchdown pass to Jalen Saunders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nEarly in the second quarter, McCarron threw a 67-yard touchdown pass to DeAndrew White for a 17\u201314 lead. However, this would be the last time the Crimson Tide led in the game as a pair of turnovers by the Crimson Tide later in the quarter directly resulted in a pair of Oklahoma touchdowns. After the Sooners tied the game with a 47-yard Michael Hunnicutt field goal, Geneo Grissom recovered a Yeldon fumble at their eight-yard line and returned it to the 34. Seven plays later Knight threw a 43-yard touchdown pass to Saunders for a 24\u201317 Oklahoma lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0056-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nOn the next offensive series, McCarron threw his second interception of the game to Zack Sanchez who returned it to the Alabama 13-yard line. On the next play, Sterling Shepard extended the Sooners' lead to 31\u201317 with his 13-yard touchdown run. The Crimson Tide was able to get into field goal range late, but Foster missed an attempt from 32-yards as time expired for the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nAfter the teams traded punts to open the second half, Derrick Henry made the score 31\u201324 with his 43-yard touchdown run for the only points scored in the third quarter. Oklahoma next scored on their opening possession of the fourth quarter on a nine-yard Knight touchdown pass to Shepard that capped an eight-play drive. Later in the quarter, Henry scored his second long touchdown of the game for Alabama on a 61\u2014yard reception from McCarron that cut the Oklahoma lead to 38\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nHowever, the Sooners closed the game with a long drive that ran down the clock and in the final minute, an Eric Striker sack of McCarron caused a fumble that Grissom recovered and returned eight-yards for a touchdown and made the final score 45\u201331. The loss brought Alabama's all-time record against the Sooners 1\u20133\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Rankings\nAs they entered the 2013 season, the Crimson Tide were ranked No. 1 in both the AP and Coaches' Preseason Polls. As they were still undefeated at the time of the initial Bowl Championship Series (BCS) standings, the Crimson Tide were ranked first by the BCS on October 21. Alabama remained in the No. 1 position through their final regular season game against Auburn. After their 34\u201328 loss against the Tigers, Alabama dropped to No. 4 in all of the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0058-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Rankings\nThe Crimson Tide closed the regular season in the No. 3 position in all of the standings and failed to qualify for their third consecutive BCS National Championship Game. In the final poll of the season, Alabama dropped into the No. 7 position in the AP and No. 8 position in the Coaches' Polls after their loss against Oklahoma in the Sugar Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Final statistics\nAfter their loss to Oklahoma in the Sugar Bowl, Alabama's final team statistics were released. Nationally, Cody Mandell led the nation with an average of 42.43 net yards per punt. On the defensive side of the ball, of the 124 FBS teams, the Crimson Tide was ranked near the top of all major defensive categories both nationally and in conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0059-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Final statistics\nThey ranked fourth nationally and first in conference scoring defense (13.9 points per game), fifth nationally and first in conference in total defense (286.50 yards per game), seventh nationally and first in conference in rushing defense (106.2 yards per game) and eleventh nationally and second in conference in passing defense (180.3 yards per game). Individually, C. J. Mosley led the team with 108 total tackles, 61 of which were assisted, and 47 solo tackles. Mosley also led the team with 8 tackles for loss. A'Shawn Robinson led the team with 5.5 quarterback sacks. Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Landon Collins, Cyrus Jones and Vinnie Sunseri tied for the team lead in interception with each having made two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Final statistics\nOn offense, of the 124 FBS teams, Alabama ranked 17th nationally and fourth in conference in scoring offense (38.2 points per game), 24th nationally and fourth in conference in rushing offense (205.6 yards per game), 33rd nationally and sixth in conference in total offense (454.1 yards per game) and 49th nationally and seventh in conference in passing offense (248.5 yards per game). A. J. McCarron led the team in passing offense and completed 226 of 336 passes for 3,063 passing yards and 28 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0060-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Final statistics\nAmari Cooper led the team with 45 receptions for 736 yards and Kevin Norwood led the team with seven touchdown receptions. T. J. Yeldon led the team with 207 rushing attempts for 1,279 yards and 14 touchdown runs. Kenyan Drake was second on the team with 92 rushing attempts for 694 yards and 8 touchdown runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Awards\nAfter the SEC Championship Game, multiple Alabama players were recognized for their on-field performances with a variety of awards and recognitions. At the team awards banquet on December 8, A. J. McCarron C. J. Mosley and Kevin Norwood were each named the permanent captains of the 2013 squad. At that time Mosley was also named the 2013 most valuable player with Mosley and HaHa Clinton-Dix named defensive players of the year and A. J. McCarron and T. J. Yeldon named offensive players of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Awards, Conference\nThe SEC recognized several players for their individual performances with various awards. On December 11, C. J. Mosley was named SEC co-Defensive Player of the year with Michael Sam of Missouri, and Christion Jones was named SEC Special Teams Player of the Year. On December 9, Cyrus Kouandjio, Cody Mandell, Mosley and Anthony Steen were named to the AP All-SEC First Team. HaHa Clinton-Dix, Landon Collins, Christion Jones, Trey DePriest and T. J. Yeldon were named to the AP All-SEC Second Team; Brandon Ivory, A. J. McCarron and Vinnie Sunseri were named to the AP All-SEC Honorable Mention Team. Clinton-Dix, Jones, Kouandjio, Mosley and Yeldon were named to the Coaches' All-SEC First Team. Mandell, McCarron, Steen and Ed Stinson were named to the Coaches' All-SEC Second Team. A'Shawn Robinson was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Awards, National\nAfter the season, a number of Alabama players both won and were named as national award winners and finalists. Finalists for major awards from the Crimson Tide included: C. J. Mosley for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy, Chuck Bednarik Award and the Lombardi Award and A. J. McCarron for the Davey O'Brien Award. Mosley won the Butkus Award as the top collegiate linebacker and McCarron won both the Maxwell Award as the overall player of the year and the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award as the top senior quarterback. McCarron also finished second behind Jameis Winston in voting for the Heisman Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Awards, National\nFor their individual performances during the regular season, several players were named to various national All-American Teams. Cyrus Kouandjio, A. J. McCarron and C. J. Mosley were named to the Walter Camp All-America First Team (WC). HaHa Clinton-Dix and Mosley were named to the Sporting News (TSN) All-America Team. Kouandjio and Mosley were named to the Associated Press All-American First Team; Clinton-Dix and McCarron were named to the Associated Press All-American Second Team. Clinton-Dix, Kouandjio and Mosley were named to the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) All-America Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Awards, National\nThe NCAA recognizes five All-America lists in the determination of both consensus and unanimous All-America selections: the AP, AFCA, the FWAA, TSN and the WC. In order for an honoree to earn a consensus selection, he must be selected as first team in three of the five lists recognized by the NCAA, and unanimous selections must be selected as first team in all five lists. As such, for the 2013 season Mosley was a unanimous selection and Clinton-Dix and Kouandjio were consensus selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Awards, All-star games\nSeveral Alabama players were selected by postseason all-star games. Kenny Bell and John Fulton were selected to play in the College All-Star Bowl. Cody Mandell, C. J. Mosley, Kevin Norwood and Ed Stinson all accepted invitations to play in the Senior Bowl. Adrian Hubbard was also invited to compete in the game as fourth-year junior and became only the third non-senior to participate in the Senior Bowl. Invitations were also extended to Deion Belue and A. J. McCarron to participate in the game. Alabama did not have players participate in the East\u2013West Shrine Game or the NFLPA Collegiate Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 81], "content_span": [82, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Coaching changes\nIn the weeks that followed the conclusion of the season, several changes were made to the Alabama coaching staff. On January 9 offensive coordinator Doug Nussmeier was officially hired in the same capacity at Michigan as the replacement for Al Borges. On January 10, former Oakland Raiders, Tennessee and USC head coach Lane Kiffin was hired as the replacement for Nussmeier as both offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. On January 11, it was announced defensive line coach Chris Rumph had resigned and took the same position on the Texas staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0067-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Coaching changes\nOn January 13 USC defensive line coach Bo Davis was hired as Rumph's replacement. Davis previously coached defensive line at Alabama from 2007 to 2010 and had also served under Saban at LSU and with the Miami Dolphins. On February 12, Greg Brown resigned to become the safeties coach at Louisville. Two days later, Kevin Steele was promoted from Alabama's director of player personnel to inside linebackers coach. Steele previously served as a defensive assistant for Saban at Alabama in 2007 and 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, NFL Draft\nOf all the draft-eligible juniors, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Adrian Hubbard, Cyrus Kouandjio, Jeoffrey Pagan and Vinnie Sunseri declared their eligibility for the 2014 NFL Draft. At the time of their announcement, Clinton-Dix and Kouandjio were projected to be first-round picks and both Hubbard and Pagan were projected to be no lower than third-round picks. With their departures it marked the first time during the Saban era that more than three juniors declared early for the NFL Draft. In February 2014, twelve Alabama players, seven seniors and five juniors, were invited to the NFL Scouting Combine. The invited players were offensive linemen Cyrus Kouandjio and Anthony Steen, safeties Ha Ha Clinton-Dix and Vinnie Sunseri, linebackers Adrian Hubbard and C. J. Mosley, defensive ends Jeoffrey Pagan and Ed Stinson, quarterback A. J. McCarron, wide receiver Kevin Norwood, cornerback Deion Belue and punter Cody Mandell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 989]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231662-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, NFL Draft\nIn the first round, two Crimson Tide players were selected: Mosley (17th Baltimore Ravens) and Clinton-Dix (21st Green Bay Packers). Kouandjio was selected in the second round (44th Buffalo Bills); Norwood (123rd Seattle Seahawks) was selected in the fourth round; Stinson (160th Arizona Cardinals), McCarron (164th Cincinnati Bengals) and Sunseri (167th New Orleans Saints) were selected in the fifth round; and Pagan (177th Houston Texans) was selected in the sixth round. In the days after the draft, several players from the 2013 squad that were not drafted signed as undrafted free agents. These players included Hubbard (Green Bay Packers), Steen (Arizona Cardinals), Mandell (Dallas Cowboys), John Fulton (Philadelphia Eagles), Tana Patrick (Chicago Bears) and Belue (Miami Dolphins).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231663-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Crimson Tide softball team\nThe 2013 Alabama Crimson Tide softball team is an American softball team, representing the University of Alabama for the 2013 NCAA softball season. The Crimson Tide played its home games at Rhoads Stadium. After winning the 2012 National Championship, the 2013 team looks to make the postseason for the 15th straight year, and the Women's College World Series for ninth time. This season represents the 17th season of softball in the school's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231664-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Hammers season\nThe 2013 Alabama Hammers season was the third season for the professional indoor football franchise and their second in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). The Hammers were of seven teams that competed in the PIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231664-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Hammers season\nThe team played their home games under head coach Dean Cokinos at the Von Braun Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The Hammers earned a 9\u20132 record, placing first in the league, winning PIFL Cup II 70\u201344 over the Richmond Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231664-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama Hammers season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated June 15, 201319 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231665-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama State Hornets football team\nThe 2013 Alabama State Hornets football team represented Alabama State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Hornets were led by seventh year head coach Reggie Barlow and played their home games at The New ASU Stadium. They were a member of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) and finished the season with a 8\u20134 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231665-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama State Hornets football team\nThe Hornets entered the season with a new defensive coordinator, Kevin Ramsey, who joined the team from Texas Southern. The Hornets also come into the season having been picked to win the SWAC Eastern Division and with 7 players having been selected for the SWAC Pre-Season All-Conference team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis\nOn January 29, 2013, a hostage crisis, lasting almost seven days, began in the Wiregrass Region near U.S. Highway 231 in Midland City, Alabama. Jimmy Lee Dykes, a 65-year-old Vietnam War-era veteran, boarded a Dale County school bus, killed the driver, and took a five-year-old boy hostage. On the afternoon of February 4, law enforcement agents entered the bunker, killed Dykes, and rescued the child.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Details, Bus driver slaying\nJust after 3:30\u00a0p.m., Dykes boarded a Dale County school bus that was stopped in Midland City and told the driver that he wanted to take two children, six and eight years old, both boys, from the bus. The school bus driver, 66-year-old Charles Albert Poland, Jr., refused to let him take the children and challenged Dykes to shoot him. He blocked access to the aisle of the bus while Dykes continued to argue with him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Details, Bus driver slaying\nDykes fired five shots, killing Poland, and left the bus taking Ethan Gilman, a five-year-old student from Midland City Elementary School who has autism, with him. After he had left the bus with Gilman, the students on the bus left through the front door, having to pass by the body of Poland, whom many of them had known for years. Authorities indicated that there was no pre-existing relationship between Dykes and the hostage. Fifteen-year-old Tre' Watts, who was present on the bus, was the first person to call 911; he began the call when Dykes boarded the bus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Details, Child abduction\nAfter the shooting, Dykes took Gilman to a 6-foot by 8-foot underground bunker on his property. The bunker contained homemade bombs and was equipped with a PVC ventilation pipe. Hostage negotiators cooperated with Dykes in an attempt to obtain Gilman's release and to bring the situation to a favorable conclusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Details, Negotiations\nSoon after the shooting and abduction, Dykes called 911 and gave instructions on how to communicate with him. FBI hostage negotiators arrived at the bunker and began communicating with Dykes through the ventilation pipe, as he instructed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Details, Negotiations\nBecause Gilman had Asperger's syndrome and ADHD, Dykes accepted medication for him, sent through the PVC pipe along with a coloring book and crayons. It was later confirmed that Dykes wanted a female reporter to broadcast him live in the bunker, and that he would commit suicide on live television. Investigators also revealed that he had been \"training\" Gilman to detonate the improvised explosive devices inside the bunker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Details, Rescue\nOn February 4, 2013, at 3:12\u00a0p.m. CST, the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team breached the roof of the bunker using explosive charges after negotiations began to break down and they saw, using a hidden camera, Dykes holding a gun. The agents threw stun grenades into the bunker before exchanging gunfire with Dykes, killing him, and rescuing the boy. Gilman was taken to the hospital and was reported to be in good condition. According to sources, two improvised explosive devices were discovered, one inside the PVC pipe, the other inside the bunker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, The perpetrator\nJimmy Dykes, a decorated Vietnam War Navy veteran, was identified as the gunman. He lived in isolation and supposedly lost contact with his two daughters, years before the incident, according to people who lived near him. He previously lived in Florida, where he was arrested for brandishing a gun in 1995. In 2000, he was arrested for marijuana possession charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, The perpetrator\nHe moved to Midland City, where he beat a neighbor's dog to death with an iron pipe when it walked onto his property, warned children not to enter his property, and built a speed bump to prevent motorists from driving too fast down the street. Dykes was also known to have patrolled his property at night with a shotgun and a flashlight. The day prior to the standoff, he was due in court for a hearing on a menacing case in which he allegedly fired a gun at neighbors. Dykes had cleared a path on his property for school buses to take, and he had started speaking to Charles Poland weeks prior to the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Aftermath\nThe following week, Phil McGraw interviewed Gilman and his mother. On February 26, the bunker where Dykes held him captive was demolished by officials, who stated that it posed \"a biological risk\". Gilman was later adopted by local Reverend Brandon Turner in 2016 and his name was changed to Ethan Turner, and was reported to be attending elementary school in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231666-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama bunker hostage crisis, Aftermath\nAlabama Code Title 13A. Criminal Code \u00a7 13A-7-4.2, known as the Charles \"Chuck\" Poland, Jr. Act, forbids trespass into a school bus. It was named for Charles Poland, Jr., the school bus driver killed by Dykes. The Act was signed into law by Governor Robert J. Bentley in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231667-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alabama's 1st congressional district special election\nA special election for Alabama's 1st congressional district was held following the resignation of Jo Bonner on August 2, 2013, to become vice chancellor for the University of Alabama. Primary elections were held on September 24. A runoff in the Republican primary took place on November 5 and the general election was pushed back to December 17. Republican Bradley Byrne won the election by a wide margin in the strongly conservative district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231668-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alamo Bowl\nThe 2013 Alamo Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 30, 2013, at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. The 21st edition of the Alamo Bowl, it featured the Texas Longhorns from the Big 12 Conference and the Oregon Ducks from the Pac-12 Conference. It was telecast at 5:45\u00a0p.m. CST on ESPN. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The game was sponsored by the Valero Energy Corporation and was officially known as the Valero Alamo Bowl. Oregon defeated Texas by a score of 30\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231668-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alamo Bowl\nTexas finished the regular season with a record of 8\u20134 (7\u20132 Big 12), tied for second place in the Big 12. Oregon, ranked number 10 in the BCS, finished the regular season with a record of 10\u20132 (7\u20132 Pac-12), co-champions of the Pac-12 North Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231668-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alamo Bowl, Teams, Texas\nTexas was selected to represent the Big 12 after an 8\u20134 season, finishing third overall in the conference. Starting the season ranked 15th in both major polls, Texas would start the season disappointingly by going 1\u20132 against non-conference opponents with a win over New Mexico State and losses to BYU and Ole Miss. They would eventually contend for the Big-12 Championship by starting their conference schedule at 6\u20130 with wins over Kansas State, Iowa State, Oklahoma, TCU, Kansas and West Virginia. They would finish their remaining conference slate with a home loss to Oklahoma State, rebound to beat Texas Tech after a bye week and finish the season with a road loss to Baylor, finishing the season unranked in the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231668-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alamo Bowl, Teams, Oregon\nOregon was selected to represent the Pac-12 after a 10\u20132 regular season, finishing second overall in the conference. In their first season with new head coach Mark Helfrich after Chip Kelly's departure to the NFL, they started the season ranked third in both major polls, and won their first eight games over Nicholls State, Virginia, Tennessee, California, Colorado, Washington, Washington State and UCLA. Going into November sitting at 8\u20130 and contending for the a slot in the BCS National Championship Game they finished the season 2\u20132 with road losses to Stanford and Arizona and home wins against Utah and arch-rival Oregon State finishing the season ranked tenth in the AP and BCS polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231669-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian Supercup\nThe Albanian Supercup 2013 was the 20th edition of the Albanian Supercup since its establishment in 1989. The match was contested between the 2012\u201313 Albanian Cup winners KF La\u00e7i and the 2012\u201313 Albanian Superliga champions Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb. The cup was won by Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb after penalties (4\u20133), since regular and extra time ended in a 1\u20131 draw. This was the first Supercup trophy for Sk\u00ebnderbeu Kor\u00e7\u00eb, having lost two previous finals against KF Tirana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231670-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian demonstrations in Macedonia\nThe 2013 Albanian demonstrations in Macedonia was a wave of violent protests and a period of ethnic tensions among the Albanian minority in Macedonia in March 2013 over an controversial appointment of former ethnic Albanian guerrilla commander Talat Xhaferi as the country\u2019s defence minister. 22 were injured during fighting between demonstrators and police as the military was sent in to quell the rioting and ethnic tensions that flared over the next few days. Protests rocked villages and Albanian-majority streets, where demonstrators threw stones at police who later fired Tear gas to disperse protesters. Rallies, Demonstrations, Marches and Protest unrest was organised among Albanian youths and young people. Rioters set fire on stations and pelted stones after reports that ethnic Albanians were attacked during youth-led protests in Macedonia against he appointment of the Albanian defence minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 951]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231670-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian demonstrations in Macedonia\nThick plum of smoke arose in Skopje after cars was set alight and protesters was attacked by the military. Rioters was met with Tear gas and live shots, tanks pushed protesters off the streets. Mobs kept attacking the police cars and ethnic Macedonians staged protests and thousands participated in rival rallies and demonstrations in the country. Protesters continued protests and rioting over the next few days amid violence and widespread attacks by police and violence between police and ethnic groups on both sides. Albanian demonstrators said their were hooligans who staged rallies for the days before the uprising but protesters (Macedonians) said they were ordinary youth. 1 was critically wounded and 22 were injured in the battles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231671-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian local elections\nAlbanian partial local elections of 2013 were held on September 1, 2013, and November 3, 2013. Following the Parliamentary Elections in June, and the new Albanian Government composition announced on July 31, 2013, there were reelections in four municipalities, three of them rural. The elections were administrated by the Central Election Commission of Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231671-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian local elections, September 1, 2013\nTurnout: 34% (of which less than 38% were women). Results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231672-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Albania on 23 June 2013. The result was a victory for the Alliance for a European Albania led by the Socialist Party and its leader, Edi Rama. Incumbent Prime Minister Sali Berisha of the Democratic Party-led Alliance for Employment, Prosperity and Integration conceded defeat on 26 June, widely viewed as a sign of growing democratic maturity in Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231672-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian parliamentary election, Background\nThe previous parliamentary elections were held on 28 June 2009 and resulted in a victory for the Democratic Party of Albania-led Alliance of Change, which received 46.92 of the vote, winning 70 of the 140 seats. The opposition Union for Change headed by Edi Rama of the Socialist Party received almost 45.34% of the vote and won the other 66 seats. The Democratic Party led by Sali Berisha formed the government with Berisha as Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231672-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 140 members of Parliament were elected in twelve multi-member constituencies based on the twelve counties using closed list proportional representation with an electoral threshold of 3% for parties and 5% for alliances. Seats were allocated to alliances using the d'Hondt method, then to political parties using the Sainte-Lagu\u00eb method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231672-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian parliamentary election, Alliances\nPrior to the election two major coalitions were formed, whilst four parties and two independent candidates ran alone. In total there were 66 parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231672-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian parliamentary election, Conduct\nThe Central Election Commission was criticised for not replacing three of the seven member committee who had resigned in April following a dispute between the government and the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231672-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian parliamentary election, Conduct\nOn election day, a shootout occurred in La\u00e7 resulting in the death of the LSI activist Gjon Pjeter Gjoni and injuring the PD candidate Mhill Fufi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231672-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Albanian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nEarly on election day both Sali Berisha and Edi Rama claimed victory. On 25 June, Edi Rama gave his victory speech saying, \"I will be your prime minister, but also your prime servant. The duty will be mine; the authority will be yours.\" On 26 June, after vote counting was finally complete, the outgoing Prime Minister, Sali Berisha, publicly accepted the result, took responsibility for the loss, resigned from his functions in the Democratic Party, and wished his opponent well in his new duties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231673-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Albany Great Danes football team\nThe 2013 UAlbany Great Danes football team represented the University at Albany, SUNY in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by Bob Ford, who was in his 41st and final season as head coach, and played their first season at the new Bob Ford Field, named after the coach. The Great Danes were in their first season as a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 1\u201311, 0\u20138 in CAA play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231674-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Albany Panthers season\nThe 2013 Albany Panthers season was the fourth season as a professional indoor football franchise and their second in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). The 2013 season ended up being the final season for the Panthers, who lost their lease at the James H. Gray Civic Center following the season. One of 7 teams competing in the PIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231674-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Albany Panthers season\nThe team played their home games under head coach Lucious Davis at the James H. Gray Civic Center in Albany, Georgia. The Panthers earned a 7-5 record, placing 4th in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231674-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Albany Panthers season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated July 1, 201318 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231675-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Alberta's women's provincial curling championship, was held from January 23 to 27 at the Lethbridge Curling Club in Lethbridge, Alberta. The winning Kristie Moore rink from Grande Prairie went on to represent Alberta at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231675-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification\nTwelve teams will qualify for the provincial tournament through several berths. The qualification process is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231675-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Knockout Results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Standard Time (UTC\u22127).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231675-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification events, Northern Alberta Curling Association\nThe Northern Alberta Curling Association qualification event for the 2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts took place from January 3 to 6 at the Cold Lake Curling Club in Cold Lake. The event qualified three teams to the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231675-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification events, Southern Alberta Curling Association\nThe Southern Alberta Curling Association qualification event for the 2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts is taking place from January 3 to 6 at the Glencoe Curling Club in Calgary. The event will qualify three teams to the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231675-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification events, Peace Curling Association\nThe Peace Curling Association qualification event for the 2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts took place from January 4 to 6 in Dawson Creek, British Columbia. The event qualified two teams to the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231675-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification events, Peace Curling Association, Results\nMoore and DeJong played a two-game series to determine the ranking they would receive in the provincials, which affects the placement of teams in the provincials draw. Moore won the first game with a score of 8\u20136, but DeJong won the second game with a score of 12\u20132. The two teams then played a skills competition, which Moore won, giving her the A ranking and DeJong the B ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 100], "content_span": [101, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods\nIn the days leading up to June 19, 2013, Alberta, Canada, experienced heavy rainfall that triggered catastrophic flooding described by the provincial government as the worst in Alberta's history. Areas along the Bow, Elbow, Highwood, Red Deer, Sheep, Little Bow, and South Saskatchewan rivers and their tributaries were particularly affected. A total of 32 states of local emergency were declared and 28 emergency operations centres were activated as water levels rose and numerous communities were placed under evacuation orders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods\nFive people were confirmed dead as a direct result of the flooding and over 100,000 people were displaced throughout the region. Some 2,200 Canadian Forces (CF) troops were deployed to help in flooded areas in addition to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Alberta Sheriffs Branch response. Total damage estimates exceeded C$5 billion and in terms of insurable damages, made the 2013 Alberta floods the costliest disaster in Canadian history at $1.7 billion, until the occurrence of the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire. Receding waters gave way to a mammoth cleanup of affected areas, aided by a spontaneous volunteer campaign in which many homeowners were assisted by complete strangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Meteorology\nSituated east of the Canadian Rockies, southern Alberta is a semi-arid region that does not usually receive high amounts of rainfall. A high-pressure system in northern Alberta blocked the passage to a low-pressure area to the south, 19-21 June. This blocked circulation and easterly winds pumped humidity on the rising slopes of the Rocky Mountains foothills, causing heavy rain into the province with rainfall amounts of over 200 millimetres (7.9\u00a0in) to fall in less than two days in many regions of the province, particularly west and southwest of Calgary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Meteorology\nIn Canmore, a town in Alberta's Rockies, over 220 millimetres (8.7\u00a0in) fell in just 36 hours, nearly half of the town's annual average rainfall. In the town of High River, rainfall amounts at one weather station recorded 325 milimetres (12.8\u00a0in) in less than 48 hours. The rain falling on already saturated ground, coupled with the steep watershed and heavy snow loads remaining in the front ranges of the Rocky Mountains, resulted in a rapid increase in the size and flow of several rivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Meteorology\nAt the peak of the flooding, the Bow and Elbow rivers were flowing through Calgary at three times their peak levels from a 2005 flood that caused C$400 million in damages. Within 48 hours, by 8 a.m. MDT on June 21, the flow rate on the Bow River had reached 1,458 cubic metres (51,489 cubic ft.) per second (m3/s), five times its normal rate for this time of the year. The Elbow and Highwood rivers reached flow rates of 544 m3/s (inside Calgary) and 734 m3/s respectively, ten times their averages for this time of year. According to data tracked by Alberta's Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Resource Development, \"in the space of a day or two, the flows of the three rivers rocketed up five to 10 times their normal rates.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact\nGovernment officials called the flooding the worst in Alberta's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact\nBy June 24, 2013, some 2,200 Canadian Forces (CF) troops had been deployed to help in flooded areas. Land Force Western Area brought in Coyote reconnaissance vehicles, Bison armoured vehicles, G-Wagen Jeeps, and other military vehicles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact\nAs communities began to flood and people became displaced, area residents mobilized to offer support and assistance to evacuees and emergency response personnel. Some volunteers and several police officers worked up to 20 hours to help evacuation efforts despite knowing their own homes had been damaged or completely washed away. While coverage of the flooding spread throughout social media sites, many people and businesses also took to Facebook and Twitter to open their homes up to neighbours and strangers who did not have other places to stay or offer whatever support they could.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nIn Calgary, Alberta's largest city, 26 neighbourhoods in the vicinity of the Bow and Elbow rivers were placed under a mandatory evacuation order on June 20 and 21 as the rivers spilled over their banks and flooded communities. Affecting 75,000 people, it was the largest evacuation order in the city's history. The city's downtown core was among the areas evacuated, as officials called for a \"Neighbour Day\" on June 21 and requested people to stay home, particularly the 350,000 people who work downtown. All schools in both the public and Catholic school districts were closed and officials urged residents to avoid unnecessary travel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nOn June 21, the Bow River had reached a record high water level of 4.09\u00a0m (13.4\u00a0ft). That same day, the river also reached a record high flow rate of 1,750\u00a0m3/s (62,000\u00a0cu\u00a0ft/s).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nThrough social media, websites and blogs with a constant stream of updated contributions from the Calgary's mayor, numerous city councillors, the Calgary Police, media at all levels, and numerous Calgarians with Twitter, Flickr and Facebook accounts, the flood was extremely well-covered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nThe city's largest indoor arena, the Scotiabank Saddledome, was among the facilities damaged as flood waters were reported to have filled up to the first ten rows of the lower seating bowl. The Calgary Stampede grounds adjacent to the arena were also severely flooded, less than two weeks before the scheduled opening of the annual exhibition and rodeo, however officials vowed the event would go on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nWhile emergency officials began to announce the partial lifting of some evacuation orders on June 22, Mayor Naheed Nenshi stated that it would be several days before power could be restored to the downtown core. City workers, assisted by Canadian Forces personnel from The Calgary Highlanders, reinforced a particularly large erosion of river bank near 8th Avenue S.E., which endangered several houses in the neighbourhood of Inglewood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nCalgary's central business district, home to many of Canada's oil company headquarters, remained inaccessible until June 26. A spokesman for Imperial Oil, Canada's second-largest producer and refiner, said the company was working on plans to maintain essential operations, including allowing employees to work from other locations. Shorcan Energy Brokers, which provides live prices for many Canadian crude grades, operated out of Toronto on June 21 rather than at its usual Calgary base, although no trades in either Western Canada Select heavy blend or light synthetic crude from the oil sands were executed. Net Energy Inc, the other main Calgary crude broker, was closed on Friday, June 21, and there was no trading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nAs the water began to recede, the city lifted evacuation orders for several communities. It allowed 65,000 residents to return to their homes and business on June 23 to assess for damage, but parts of 14 communities remained off-limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Calgary\nOn June 27, the Bonnybrook Bridge collapsed under the weight of a Canadian Pacific Railway freight train. One of the pilings of the 101-year-old rail bridge had been scoured by floodwaters on the Bow River and undermined. CPR officials said that because the scour occurred underwater, they had not been able to inspect it, due to river conditions. However, rail regulations require the ability to inspect underwater. The buckled bridge caused the train to derail. As the train was carrying hazardous petrochemicals, an evacuation was ordered for the local area and regions downstream, and the train was slowly pumped dry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, High River\nSouth of Calgary, the town of High River was evacuated after flooding of the Highwood River caused water to rise over the top of vehicles in the town's main streets and necessitated the rescue of over 150 people from the rooftops of their homes. 350 Canadian Forces personnel and 80 Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers were dispatched to assist with rescue efforts. Members of the Alberta Sheriffs Branch were also involved in this effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, High River\nAll 13,000 residents of High River were ordered to evacuate on June 20, and the community was largely abandoned within three days as the town suffered what local officials called \"unprecedented\" damage. Among internationally recognized sites flooded in High River was the \"Maggie's Diner\" standing set for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) series Heartland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, High River\nDuring the state of emergency in High River, the RCMP entered numerous homes in the area and seized hundreds of firearms, along with magazines and ammunition. Although the RCMP claimed that it only seized firearms that were in plain view, many residents have complained that their firearms were well hidden, and that the RCMP caused significant damage inside homes while searching for firearms. There are further complaints that RCMP members subjected homes to second or even third searches in their quest for firearms in plain view.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, High River\nThe Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP concluded that the RCMP had exceeded its authority by seizing firearms that were properly secured or not in plain view, by not keeping proper records of the damage caused when they broke into homes, and by failing to report the seizure of firearms to a justice of the peace. The report concluded that, although they were not legally required to do so, communicating adequately with the public during the crisis would have prevented much confusion among partners and anger among residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, High River\nWhile residents of other communities were returning and beginning their cleanup, High River remained off limits a week after the flooding first hit. Residents grew increasingly frustrated at what they perceived as a lack of communication from local officials, particularly the lack of a timeline to return. Officials argued the town remained unsafe; some residences remained accessible only to divers, while E. coli had been discovered in the water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, High River\nThe neighbourhood of Beechwood estates, with many luxury homes worth over a million dollars, was among those hard hit by the flood. The Province of Alberta decided to purchase the 94 homes, demolish most of them and return the area to its natural state as a floodplain. Twenty-six of the houses were auctioned off for relocation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Southern Alberta\nThe mountain towns of Banff and Canmore, west of Calgary, were cut off from neighbouring communities after flooding and mudslides forced the closure of the Trans-Canada Highway. Several homes were swept away in Canmore by the rise of Cougar Creek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Southern Alberta\nIn addition to Calgary, High River and Canmore, nine other municipalities, including the City of Lethbridge; the towns of Black Diamond, Cochrane, Sundre and Turner Valley; the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass; Rocky View County; and the municipal districts of Bighorn No. 8, Pincher Creek No. 9 and Foothills No. 31, had declared states of emergency on June 20 due to flooding and some communities had evacuated residents. Additionally, the City of Red Deer declared a state of emergency over the potential of flooding ahead of a planned release of water from the Dickson Dam into the Red Deer River. Another dozen communities have declared a state of emergency on June 21, including several First Nation reserves; the Siksika First Nation, east of Calgary evacuated 1,000 residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Southern Alberta\nThe city of Medicine Hat, located on the South Saskatchewan River downstream from the confluence of the Bow and Oldman rivers was also hit with significant flooding. The city evacuated 10,000 residents ahead of the flooding, and facilities including the Medicine Hat Arena had begun to flood late Sunday evening, June 23. The South Saskatchewan River peaked at 5,460m3/s, which was below earlier predictions of 6,000m3/s, but exceeded the highest recorded rate of 5,100m3/s in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Impact, Saskatchewan and Manitoba\nOfficials in the neighbouring provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba were bracing for potential flooding along the South Saskatchewan and Saskatchewan rivers, into which many of the affected rivers in Alberta drain. The South Saskatchewan River reached record levels through Saskatoon, but the city did not experience significant flooding. 2,200 people were evacuated from the Cumberland House area in eastern Saskatchewan. In Manitoba, flood warnings were issued for The Pas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 54], "content_span": [55, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Fatalities\nFour people are confirmed to have died as direct result of the flooding. Three people drowned in the Highwood River near High River, while an elderly woman drowned in her ground-floor apartment in Calgary's Mission neighbourhood. Additionally, Okotoks resident Robert David Nelson was killed in an ATV rollover while checking a neighbour's home for flood damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Estimated costs\nOn June 24, 2013 although total damage caused by the flooding remained unknown, Alberta Premier Alison Redford, predicted it would surpass the $700 million caused by the Slave Lake fire, with much of the cost likely to be uninsurable. In a report issued on June 24, 2013, Tom MacKinnon, BMO Capital Markets insurance analyst, suggested an early estimate of between $3 billion and $5 billion of total damages to \"homes, businesses, vehicles and other private property.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 58], "content_span": [59, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Estimated costs\nThat would be \"20 to 30 times\" the amount of damage caused by southern Alberta's 2005 major flood, and the second costliest natural disaster in Canadian history. The Province of Alberta estimated in August that the cost of repairing the damage would exceed $5 billion. The Insurance Bureau of Canada stated in September that insurable losses had exceeded $1.7 billion, making it the costliest disaster in Canadian history in terms of insured damages (and without accounting for inflation), surpassing the $1.6 billion cost of the North American Ice Storm of 1998. The bureau called the cost \"staggering\", and said the figure continued to rise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 58], "content_span": [59, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Estimated costs\nThe Albertan government granted the Siksika nation $93M to rebuild their communities; $10M of this grant would be used to train and upgrade the vocational skills needed to perform construction repairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 58], "content_span": [59, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Municipal level\nAlberta's Minister of Municipal Affairs, Doug Griffiths, announced that a task force that represents numerous government agencies and which earned praise for its coordination of recovery efforts following the 2011 Slave Lake wildfire would be reconvened. John McGowan, CEO of the Alberta Urban Municipalities Association (AUMA) described how AMSC is applying what they learned from the $700-million clean-up process following the Slave Lake fire in 2011 in their response to the flood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 58], "content_span": [59, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Municipal level\nMcGowan explained how the AUMA's subsidiary Alberta Municipal Services Corporation (AMSC) will provide a wide variety of services which include general insurance to the approximately 278 cities, towns and villages in Alberta affected by the flood. Damaged public buildings, vehicles and key public infrastructure, including subsidiary damage such as, structural damage to bridges or tunnels, need to be repaired or replaced in the \"biggest cleanup in provincial history\". \"Neighbours, strangers, friends, and friends-of-friends-of-friends\" helped those whose homes were damaged in Calgary's flood. Calgary's first official call, early on the morning of June 24, for 600 volunteers resulted in an estimated 2,500 people arriving ready to work. Calgary Emergency Management Agency director Bruce Burrell said that the City of Calgary hired contractors on larger infrastructure repairs but volunteers were needed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 58], "content_span": [59, 969]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Provincial level\nUpon touring the affected areas, Alberta Premier Alison Redford who represents the Calgary-Elbow riding, promised provincial assistance in recovery efforts. The Alberta Treasury board met early on June 24 to approve a preliminary $1 billion emergency fund for the disaster recovery program, covering immediate clean-up and repair costs. Losses to homeowners and municipalities caused by overland flooding, not covered by regular insurance, will be covered by the province. While making the funding announcement Premier Redford cautioned that it could take up to ten years to fully recover from the disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 59], "content_span": [60, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Federal level\nPrince William and his wife sent on June 24, via the Canadian Secretary to the Queen, a message of support, expressing their \"best wishes to the Lieutenant Governor and Premier of Alberta and to the brave emergency services and all those volunteering to help their neighbours during this ongoing period of intense efforts.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Federal level\nHis father, Prince Charles also, following the destruction of Lac-M\u00e9gantic, Quebec, on July 8, issued a statement mentioning both that disaster and the Alberta floods, saying \"this has been a most testing time for Canadians\" and praising the \"extraordinary efforts which have led to the Calgary Stampede being opened on time\" as demonstration that \"it is only too clear how courageous and resourceful Canadians are, and we have nothing but the greatest admiration for such determination and resilience in the face of terrible adversity.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0028-0002", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Federal level\nPrime Minister Stephen Harper, who also represents the Calgary Southwest riding, toured the flooded area and promised federal assistance in recovery efforts. Harper, Redford and Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi took a helicopter tour of flood-damaged areas on the afternoon of June 21, and discussed the trilateral co-operation to the flood response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Federal level\nIt was announced in 2013 that $2 billion was earmarked from the government's Disaster Financial Assistance Arrangements for the province and that the government was seeking a $689-million increase in funding for the program from parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, First Nations\nA state of emergency for Siksika First Nation, east of Calgary, was declared in the evening of June 20 with approximately one thousand people evacuated from their homes. By June 23, with 200 homes still underwater, Chief Fred Rabbitcarrier told CTV that there was a \"feeling of hopelessness.\" However, as news outlets began to cover the story and a account, set-up using a cellphone, helped coordinate relief efforts, donations and volunteers have responded to the community's call for help.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Volunteering\nSoon after the flood started to recede, volunteer efforts began to help clean up the aftermath of the flood in Calgary. Thousands of people descended on heavily hit areas to help neighbours and strangers clean up in the aftermath. Buses were organized to transport volunteers into High River, where the majority of residents were expected to require assistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Cleanup and recovery, Flood mitigation\nIn November 2013, the Government of Alberta announced various projects to mitigate future flooding within Calgary and High River. The projects include construction of a channel to divert water around High River and a dry dam for the Elbow River west of Bragg Creek, which is upstream of Calgary. A grant was also announced for Calgary to investigate construction of a 5\u00a0km (3.1\u00a0mi) tunnel to divert Elbow River flood waters away from neighbourhoods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 59], "content_span": [60, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Calgary flooding 2013\nLooking toward Downtown Calgary from Riverfront Avenue during the 2013 Alberta floods (June 21, 2013)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nFlood waters rush by the Okotoks 32nd Street bridge on the evening of June 20, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nFlood waters rush in from the Sheep River into a local Okotoks campground (June 20, 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nFlood waters from the Sheep River in Okotoks rush into the local campground (June 20, 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nViewpoint is on the south edge of the River Valley looking towards Okotoks library (June 20, 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nFrom the viewpoint of the north bank of the Sheep River, just east of the Okotoks library (June 23, 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nThe picnic and day use area of an Okotoks campground, once a grassy meadow, now in some places buried several feet deep in silt and rocks (June 23, 2013)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nSwingset at Rich's Playground in Okotoks campground after flood waters receded (June 23, 2013)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231676-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta floods, Gallery - Okotoks flooding 2013\nRich's Playground at Okotoks campground after flood water receded (June 23, 2013)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231677-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal censuses\nAlberta has provincial legislation allowing its municipalities to conduct municipal censuses between April 1 and June 30 inclusive. Municipalities choose to conduct their own censuses for multiple reasons such as to better inform municipal service planning and provision, to capitalize on per capita based grant funding from higher levels of government, or to simply update their populations since the last federal census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231677-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal censuses\nAlberta had 358 municipalities between April 1 and June 30, 2013, down from 359 during the same three-month period in 2012. At least 40 of these municipalities (11.2%) conducted a municipal census in 2013. Alberta Municipal Affairs recognized those conducted by 38 of these municipalities. By municipal status, it recognized those conducted by 8 of Alberta's 17 cities, 16 of 108 towns, 5 of 94 villages, 1 of 51 summer villages and 8 of 64 municipal districts. In addition to those recognized by Municipal Affairs, censuses were conducted by the Town of Swan Hills and the Municipal District of Greenview No. 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231677-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal censuses\nSome municipalities achieved population milestones as a result of their 2013 censuses. The cities of Lethbridge and Lloydminster surpassed the 90,000 and the 30,000 marks respectively. Furthermore, the Alberta and Saskatchewan portions of Lloydminster exceeded the 20,000 and 10,000 milestones respectively as well. Okotoks, Alberta's largest town, surpassed 25,000 residents, while the Town of Whitecourt became eligible for city status by eclipsing 10,000 people. The Town of Blackfalds and the Municipal District of Taber each surpassed the 7,000-mark and the Town of Wainwright grew beyond 6,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231677-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal censuses, Municipal census results\nThe following summarizes the results of the numerous municipal censuses conducted in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231677-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal censuses, Breakdowns, Lloydminster\nThe following is a breakdown of the results of the City of Lloydminster's 2013 municipal census by provincial component.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231677-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal censuses, Breakdowns, Hamlets\nThe following is a list of hamlet populations determined by 2013 municipal censuses conducted by three municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231677-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal censuses, Shadow population counts\nAlberta Municipal Affairs defines shadow population as \"temporary residents of a municipality who are employed by an industrial or commercial establishment in the municipality for a minimum of 30 days within a municipal census year.\" Numerous municipalities conducted shadow population counts at the same time as their municipal censuses in 2013. The following presents the results of those municipalities that conducted shadow population counts and compares them with their municipal census results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections\nMunicipal elections were held in Alberta, Canada on Monday, October 21, 2013. Mayors (reeves), councillors (aldermen), and trustees were elected to office in 16 of the 17 cities, all 108 towns, all 93 villages, all 5 specialized municipalities, all 64 municipal districts, 3 of the 8 improvement districts, and the advisory councils of the 3 special areas. The City of Lloydminster is on the Saskatchewan schedule (quadrennial), and held elections on October 24, 2012, while 5 improvement districts (Nos. 12, 13, 24, 25, and 349) have no councils and are led solely by the Minister of Municipal Affairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections\nSince the 2010 municipal elections, portions of Lac La Biche County and the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo formed Improvement District No. 349, and the villages of New Norway and Tilley were dissolved. From 1968 to 2013, provincial legislation has required every municipality to hold elections every three years. The Alberta Legislative Assembly passed a bill on December 5, 2012, amending the Local Authorities Election Act. Starting with the 2013 elections, officials are elected for a four-year term, and municipal elections are moved to a four-year cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities\nThe following are the elections for all Alberta cities. Bold indicates elected, and incumbents are italicized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Airdrie\nCitizens of Airdrie will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Peter Brown being acclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Brooks\nCitizens of Brooks will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Calgary\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of Calgary elected one mayor, 14 councillors (one from each of 14 wards), the seven Calgary School District trustees (each representing 2 of 14 wards), and five of the seven Calgary Catholic School District trustees (each representing 2 of 14 wards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Camrose\nCitizens of Camrose will elect one mayor and eight at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Cold Lake\nCitizens of Cold Lake will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Craig Copeland being acclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Edmonton\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of Edmonton elected one mayor, 12 councillors (one from each of 12 wards), seven of the nine Edmonton Public Schools trustees (one from each of nine wards), and the seven Edmonton Catholic School District trustees (one from each of seven wards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Fort Saskatchewan\nCitizens of Fort Saskatchewan will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Grande Prairie\nCitizens of Grande Prairie will elect one mayor and eight at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Lacombe\nCitizens of Lacombe will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Leduc\nCitizens of Leduc will elect one mayor and six at large aldermen (councillors).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Lethbridge\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of Lethbridge elected one mayor, eight councillors (all at large), the seven Lethbridge School District No. 51 trustees, and five of the Holy Spirit Roman Catholic Separate Regional Division No. 4's nine trustees (as Ward 2). This election marks a change of title for council members from \"alderman\" to \"councillor\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Medicine Hat\nCitizens of Medicine Hat will elect one mayor and eight at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Red Deer\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of Red Deer elected one mayor, eight councillors (all at large), the seven Red Deer School District No. 104 trustees (at large), and five of the Red Deer Catholic Regional Division No. 39's seven trustees (as Red Deer Ward). They also voted to not implement a ward system in a plebiscite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Spruce Grove\nCitizens of Spruce Grove will elect one mayor and six at large aldermen (councillors).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, St. Albert\nCitizens of St. Albert will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Cities, Wetaskiwin\nCitizens of Wetaskiwin will elect one mayor and six at large aldermen (councillors).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns\nThe following are the elections for Alberta towns with a population over 5,000. Bold indicates elected, and incumbents are italicized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Banff\nCitizens of Banff will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Beaumont\nCitizens of Beaumont will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Blackfalds\nCitizens of Blackfalds will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Bonnyville\nCitizens of Bonnyville will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Canmore\nCitizens of Canmore will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Chestermere\nCitizens of Chestermere will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Patricia Matthews being acclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Coaldale\nCitizens of Coaldale will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Cochrane\nCitizens of Cochrane will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Cochrane\nMorgan Justice Nagel was also elected as the youngest of the six councillors, of 13 candidates, becoming the youngest councillor in Cochrane at 23 years old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Devon\nCitizens of Devon will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Drayton Valley\nCitizens of Drayton Valley will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Drumheller\nCitizens of Drumheller will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Terry Yemen being acclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Edson\nCitizens of Edson will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, High River\nCitizens of High River will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Hinton\nCitizens of Hinton will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Innisfail\nCitizens of Innisfail will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Brian Spiller being acclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Morinville\nCitizens of Morinville will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Okotoks\nCitizens of Okotoks will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Olds\nCitizens of Olds will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Peace River\nCitizens of Peace River will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Ponoka\nCitizens of Ponoka will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Redcliff\nCitizens of Redcliff will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Rocky Mountain House\nCitizens of Rocky Mountain House will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Slave Lake\nCitizens of Slave Lake will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Tyler Warman being elected with no opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Stettler\nCitizens of Sttetler will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Dick Richards being elected with no opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Stony Plain\nCitizens of Stony Plain will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to William Choy being acclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, St. Paul\nCitizens of St. Paul will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Glenn Andersen being elected with no opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Strathmore\nCitizens of Strathmore will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Sylvan Lake\nCitizens of Sylvan Lake will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Taber\nCitizens of Taber will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Vegreville\nCitizens of Vegreville will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Wainwright\nCitizens of Wainwright will elect six at large councillors. No mayoral election will be held due to Brian Bethune being elected with no opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Towns, Whitecourt\nCitizens of Whitecourt will elect one mayor and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Specialized municipalities\nThe following are the elections for Alberta specialized municipalities with a population over 5,000, which include the urban service areas of Fort McMurray and Sherwood Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Specialized municipalities, Crowsnest Pass\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of Crowsnest Pass will elect one mayor, and six at large councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Specialized municipalities, Mackenzie County\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of Mackenzie County were to elect ten councillors (one from each of ten wards). As six of them were acclaimed, citizens of wards 1, 3, 7 and 9 will elect the remaining four councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Specialized municipalities, Strathcona County\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of Strathcona County elected one mayor, eight councillors (one from each of eight wards), five of the Elk Island Public Schools Regional Division No. 14's nine trustees (three from Sherwood Park, one from Strathcona County north, and one from Strathcona County south), and four of the Elk Island Catholic Separate Regional Division No. 41's seven trustees (supporters in Sherwood Park).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Specialized municipalities, Wood Buffalo\nIn the 2013 elections, the citizens of the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo elected one mayor, ten councillors (from four wards), the five Fort McMurray Public School District trustees (in Fort McMurray), five of the Northland School Division No. 61's 22 school boards (outside Fort McMurray, three or five trustees each), and the five Fort McMurray Catholic School District trustees (in Fort McMurray).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Municipal districts\nThe following are the election results for Alberta municipal districts (counties) with a population over 5,000 and have an elected mayor or reeve position. Bold indicates elected, and incumbents are italicized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Municipal districts, Bonnyville No. 87\nCitizens of the Municipal District of Bonnyville No. 87 will elect six councillors from six wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Municipal districts, Brazeau County\nCitizens of Brazeau County will elect six councillors from six divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Municipal districts, Lac La Biche County\nCitizens of Lac La Biche County will elect seven councillors from seven wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Municipal districts, Red Deer County\nCitizens of Red Deer County will elect six councillors from six divisions. No mayoral election will be held due to Jim Wood being acclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Municipal districts, St. Paul County No. 19\nCitizens of the County of St. Paul No. 19 will elect six councillors from six divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231678-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Alberta municipal elections, Municipal districts, Yellowhead County\nCitizens of Yellowhead County elected eight councillors from eight wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231679-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Albuquerque mayoral election\nThe Albuquerque mayoral election of 2013 occurred on October 8, 2013. The candidate that garnered more than 50% of the vote was elected Mayor. Otherwise, the two candidates with the most votes would advance to a runoff, scheduled for November 19, 2013. The election is officially nonpartisan but candidates receive support and endorsements from their respective parties or affiliated organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231679-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Albuquerque mayoral election\nIncumbent Republican Mayor Richard J. Berry ran for re-election to a second term in office, and won the election with 68% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231680-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alcorn State Braves football team\nThe 2013 Alcorn State Braves football team represented Alcorn State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Braves were led by second year head coach Jay Hopson and played their home games at Casem-Spinks Stadium. They are a member of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). The Braves finished the season with a 9\u20133 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231680-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alcorn State Braves football team\nOn Media Day, Alcorn State was picked to finish fifth in the Eastern Division of the SWAC. They had one player, defensive back Jamison Knox, that was picked to the Pre-season All-SWAC 2nd Team Defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231681-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup\nThe 2013 Algarve Cup was the twentieth edition of the Algarve Cup, an annual invitational women's football tournament hosted by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231681-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup, Teams\nThe following teams were taking part. There were no debutantes, as all teams played in previous editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231681-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup, Format\nThe twelve invited teams were divided into three groups, and played in a round-robin tournament format within each group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231681-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup, Format\nGroups A and B contained the strongest ranked teams, and were the only ones in contention to win the title. The group A and B winners contested the final \u2013 to win the Algarve Cup. The runners-up played for third place, and those that finish the group third played for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231681-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup, Format\nThe teams in Group C played for places 7\u201312. The 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, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231681-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup, Format\nPoints awarded follow the standard soccer formula of three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. If two teams were tied with the same number of points in a group, their head-to-head result determined the final standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231682-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup squads\nThis article lists the squads for the 2013 Algarve Cup, held in Portugal. The 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, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231682-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Algarve Cup squads\nPlayers marked (c) were named as captain for their national squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231683-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Algerian Cup Final\nThe 2013 Algerian Cup Final was the 49th final of the Algerian Cup. The final took place on May 1, 2013, at Stade 5 Juillet 1962 in Algiers with kick-off at 16:00. USM Alger beat MC Alger 1-0 to win their eighth Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231683-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Algerian Cup Final\nAlgerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 clubs MC Alger and USM Alger will contest the final, in what will be the 92nd edition of the Algiers derby. The competition winners are awarded a berth in the 2014 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231683-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Algerian Cup Final, Pre-match\nMC Alger were appearing in an Algerian Cup final for a seventh time. They had won the cup six times previously (in 1971, 1973, 1976, 1983, 2006, 2007) and had never lost in the final, with four of their six final wins came against USM Alger. USM Alger were appearing in a final a record seventeenth time and had won the cup seven times previously (in 1981, 1988, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2004).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231684-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Algerian Super Cup\nThe 2013 Algerian Super Cup is the 7th edition of Algerian Super Cup, a football match contested by the winners of the Ligue 1 and 2012\u201313 Algerian Cup competitions. The match was scheduled to be played on 11 January 2014 at Stade Mustapha Tchaker in Blida between 2013-14 Ligue 1 winners ES S\u00e9tif and 2012\u201313 Algerian Cup winners USM Alger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231685-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza Lima season\nThe 2013 season is Alianza Lima's 112th in existence and the club's 96th season in the top flight of Peruvian football. The season marks the return of manager Wilmar Valencia, who assumed management of the club first in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231685-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza Lima 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary\nThe presidential primaries of the Alliance of 2013 were the method of election of the presidential candidate of such Chilean center-right coalition, for the presidential election of 2013. On that same date the conglomerate would also realize its parliamentary primaries in the districts but the UDI decided not to participate in them, being reduced to the candidates of National Renewal (RN).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary\nIt was the first time that the Alliance held primary elections in its history, since its origins as the Democracy and Progress pact in 1989, joining the process just established by the law of primaries approved during 2012.]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary\nUDI candidate Pablo Longueira managed to obtain 51.37% of the votes of the primary, surpassing the representative of RN Andr\u00e9s Allamand. Yet, soon after he resigned due to a diagnosis of clinical depression. Labor Minister Evelyn Matthei was then nominated as the Alliance's candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, History and development\nThe right-wing coalition (which has had various names such as Democracia y Progreso, Alianza por Chile and Coalici\u00f3n por el Cambio) has never held primary elections to define its presidential candidate. In some elections, such as those of 1989, 1999 and 2009, a consensus was reached between the two main parties of the coalition (National Renewal and Independent Democrat Union), while in the 2005 elections both parties preferred to bring their two candidates up to the first round instead of performing primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Definition of applications\nWith a view to the presidential elections of 2013, the Alliance focused its expectations on the ministers of the government of Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era with greater popularity. The independent Laurence Golborne had a rapid rise in the polls in 2010 after successfully achieving the rescue of the 33 miners trapped in Atacama while he served as Minister of Mining, later going to the Ministry of Energy and then to Public Works.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Definition of applications\nHistorical senators of the Right wing that sounded like potential successors of Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era were incorporated during 2011 to the cabinet of Pi\u00f1era to reinforce it before the different crises that its government lived: in January entered Andam Allamand (RN) and Evelyn Matthei (UDI) to the ministries of Defense and Labor, Respectively, while Pablo Longueira (UDI) would do to Economy in late June. Although the three appeared with presidential options, Allamand managed to stand out especially after the work of rescue of the accident of the C-212 Aviocar of the Air Force of Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Definition of applications\nLaurence Golborne, who was the Minister of Mining, Energy and Public Works of the government of Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era, was the most competitive letter to face the presidential elections.4 Despite the initial support of the UDI, finally had to leave his candidacy and give way to Pablo Longueira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Definition of applications\nAlready in 2012, Allamand and Golborne looked like those destined to be the candidates for the Alliance, and the prospect of a primary school was envisaged, boosted by the fact that the primary law was passed, which would give them official status for the first time. Following the strong electoral defeat that the ruling party experienced in the October municipal elections, it was decided to specify the departure of the cabinet of both figures on November 5 to boost their campaigns and avoid a victory of the Concertaci\u00f3n in the following elections. Two days later, both ministers announced their respective candidatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Golborne fall and replacement by Longueira\nAlthough most polls ranked Laurence Golborne as the best card to face Michelle Bachelet's potential bid in the November 2013 elections, the idea began that Andr\u00e9s Allamand had considerably reduced his distance from Laurence Golborne, who Faced his first election to a popular position and that had been chosen as candidate of the UDI although he was not affiliated to that party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Golborne fall and replacement by Longueira\nA few days after the official registration of the candidates for the primary elections, a succession of conflicts sullied Golborne's candidacy.8 At the end of April 2013, a ruling by the Supreme Court of Chile condemned Cencosud-holding That Golborne was former general manager to be minister - by unilateral rises in the commissions of the credit card of the company; Golborne said that the increases, made during his term, had been approved by the board of the company and that he had only complied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Golborne fall and replacement by Longueira\nThe UDI candidate's response was widely disputed by Allamand, who took the opportunity to give a major blow to his opponent's candidacy: he said that Cencosud's attitude had been \"abusive\" and that Golborne had to decide whether to defend or not the consumers. Allamand's strategy outraged the UDI, putting even the completion of the primaries in check, but also raised strong criticism of Golborne's wrong reaction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Golborne fall and replacement by Longueira\nIn the same days, the estate declaration was made public when he was a minister, omitting a company owned by him that was registered in the Virgin Islands, known as a tax haven.9 10 Although Golborne defended himself by saying that society was Declared as part of another and that his existence was not an irregularity, the information was fatal for his candidacy. An important number of historical militants expressed their dissatisfaction with having a candidate who did not come from their ranks, who did not share the values of the UDI and lost ground to Allamand. The bench of deputies requested to lower the candidacy of Golborne and to take a proper candidacy to the first return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Golborne fall and replacement by Longueira\nIn the midst of this crisis, the UDI board decided in a few hours to withdraw its support for Laurence Golborne's candidacy and to define a new candidate. After shuffling the name of Evelyn Matthei, finally they decided to bet for Pablo Longueira, one of the personages more respected by the militants of the UDI. Golborne resigned his candidacy on April 29, stating that \"I am here for the people, but people are not enough, the support of a cohesive, organized and well-led party is needed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Golborne fall and replacement by Longueira\nLongueira quickly assumed his new position, Resigning his ministerial position and ensuring the realization of primaries, before the attempts to cancel them and go to the first round. UDI president Patricio Melero said days later that they would not participate in parliamentary primaries (a mechanism that would use RN) to \"concentrate all our energies on Pablo Longueira being the candidate of the Alliance\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Reactions\nThe participation in the primary of the Alliance was considerably smaller than that of the New Majority, center-left coalition; Three out of four votes went to the latter. This caused some sectors of the Alliance to be very self-critical with this result, especially the candidate for Senator Manuel Jose Ossand\u00f3n, who affirmed that \"the Government and the Alliance were the culprits of the results\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Reactions\nOn the night when the results of the primary were announced, Andr\u00e9s Allamand attended the UDI headquarters to congratulate Longueira for the triumph, but the meeting was not public; At that moment Allamand would have rebuked the Longueira's Generalissimo, Joaquin Lavin, who was accused of humiliating him. Lavin, in the days that followed, apologized to Allamand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231686-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Alianza presidential primary, Reactions\nOn July 17, 2013, in a surprise decision even within the Alliance, the family of Pablo Longueira announced that he was lowering his candidacy for a depression that had been medically diagnosed.19 With this, and according to the primary election legislation, Parties of the Alliance could nominate their own candidate for the election, or decide to appoint a candidate in common.20 Shortly afterwards, on Saturday 20 of the same month, Labor Minister Evelyn Matthei was nominated by the UDI as her presidential candidate.21 On August 10 he received the support of National Renewal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231687-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All England Super Series Premier\nThe 2013 All England Super Series Premier was the third super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament was held in Birmingham, England from 5\u201310 March 2013. A qualification was held to fill four places in all five disciplines of the main draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231688-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships was a professional tennis tournament played on Carpet. It was the 17th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Kyoto, Japan between 4 and 10 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231688-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 90], "content_span": [91, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231688-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 86], "content_span": [87, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231688-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received entry as an alternate into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 86], "content_span": [87, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231688-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships, Champions, Doubles\nPurav Raja / Divij Sharan def. Chris Guccione / Matt Reid, 6\u20134, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231689-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Purav Raja and Divij Sharan defeated Chris Guccione and Matt Reid 6\u20134, 7\u20135 in the final, to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231690-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All Japan Indoor Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nTatsuma Ito was the defending champion but decided to participate at the 2013 BNP Paribas Open instead. In the final, fourth seeded John Millman outlasted second seeded Marco Chiudinelli in 2 hours and 26 minutes to claim the title with a scoreline of 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231691-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All Stars match\nThe 2013 All Stars Match was the fourth of the annual representative exhibition matches played between the Indigenous All Stars and the NRL All Stars team which was held on 9 February 2013. Once again the players were selected through a voting scheme which over 40,000 fans polled their selections over the two online voting stages. Final stage voting for both sides were closed on the midnight 14 January. After the success of the previous three events the match was moved from Gold Coast's Skilled Park to the larger capacity Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231691-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 All Stars match\nThe Indigenous All Stars won the match 32\u20136 to even the ledger with two wins from the four games played so far. Both Ben Barba and Reece Robinson became the first players to score a hat-trick in an All Stars match. The preceding game included a Women's All Stars exhibition match which was won by the NRL Women's All Stars 22-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231691-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All Stars match, Teams\nBenji Marshall (New Zealand captain) and Cameron Smith (Australian captain) were automatic selections for the NRL All Stars side whilst Johnathan Thurston was made captain and an automatic pick for his Indigenous side. After the 16 best voted players for each side were selected by their respective coaches, the coaches were then allowed to personally pick further players to complete their 20-man squads. An asterisk(*) next to a player's name represents debutants for their respective sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231691-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All Stars match, Teams\n1 - Dave Taylor was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury. He was replaced by Ashley Harrison. 2 - Billy Slater was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury. He was replaced by Jarryd Hayne whilst Justin O'Neill filled Hayne's spot on the bench. 3 - Cooper Cronk was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury. He was replaced by Shaun Johnson. 4 - Anthony Watmough was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury. He was replaced by Kieran Foran. 5 - Paul Gallen was originally selected to play but withdrew due to injury. He was replaced by Chris Heighington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231691-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All Stars match, Women's All Stars match\nThe NRL announced the Women's and Indigenous Women's All Stars teams to take the field as part of the Harvey Norman Rugby League All Stars match on Saturday 9 February in Brisbane. This was the Second Women's rugby league match for the women as part of the fixture, with the level of competition stepping up again the following year, thanks to increased women's pathways nationally and female participation levels across the game at an all-time high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231691-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All Stars match, Women's All Stars match, Women's Teams\nThe two teams were selected and announced in November for the match in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231692-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All Thailand Golf Tour\nThe 2013 All Thailand Golf Tour is the 15th 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, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231693-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Australian team\nThe 2013 All-Australian team represents the best performed Australian Football League (AFL) players during the 2013 season. It was announced on 16 September as a complete Australian rules football team of 22 players. The team is honorary and does not play any games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231693-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Australian team, Selection panel\nThe selection panel for the 2013 All-Australian team consisted of chairman Andrew Demetriou, Mark Evans, Kevin Bartlett, Luke Darcy, Danny Frawley, Glen Jakovich, Mark Ricciuto and Cameron Ling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231693-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Australian team, Team, Initial squad\nAt the conclusion of the 2013 AFL home and away season, a provisional squad of 40 players was chosen. The most controversial omissions were Tom Liberatore, who led the league for clearances, Steve Johnson and Pearce Hanley, as well as no selections from finalists Richmond or Carlton. 25 players in the squad had not previously been selected in an All-Australian team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231693-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Australian team, Team, Final team\nGeelong had the most selections, with four players. Geelong captain Joel Selwood was announced as the All-Australian captain and Gold Coast star Gary Ablett Jr. was announced as vice-captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231693-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Australian team, Team, Final team\nNote: the position of coach in the All-Australian team is traditionally awarded to the coach of the premiership team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231694-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Big 12 Conference football team\nThe 2013 All-Big 12 Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big 12 Conference players for the 2013 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-00231694-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231695-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Big Ten Conference football team\nThe 2013 All-Big Ten Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big Ten Conference players for the 2013 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). Only one Big Ten player, Darqueze Dennard of Michigan State, was also selected as a consensus first-team player on the 2013 College Football All-America Team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231695-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Big Ten Conference football team, Key\nBold = Consensus first-team selection by both the coaches and media", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 46], "content_span": [47, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231696-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 30th staging of the All-Ireland hurling championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1961. The championship began on 2 June 2013 and ended on 31 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231696-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship\nTipperary were the defending champions and successfully retained the title after defeating Kilkenny by 2\u201314 to 2\u201311 in the All-Ireland final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231697-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship is the premier \"knockout\" competition for under-18 competitors who play the game of Gaelic football in Ireland. The games are organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association. The 2013 series of games started in May with the majority of the games played during the summer months. The All-Ireland Minor Football Final took place on the 22 September in Croke Park, Dublin, preceding the Senior Game. In 2013 the title sponsor is Electric Ireland. Mayo won the title after a 2-13 to 1-13 win against Tyrone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231698-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship (also known as the Electric Ireland GAA Hurling All-Ireland Minor Championship for sponsorship reasons) was the 83rd staging of the All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1928. The championship began on 11 April 2013 and ended on 8 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231698-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nTipperary entered the championship as the defending champions; however, they were beaten by Limerick in the Munster semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231698-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nOn 8 September 2013 Waterford won the championship following a 1-21 to 0-16 defeat of Galway in the All-Ireland final. This was their 3rd All-Ireland title overall and their first since 1948.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231698-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nWaterford's Patrick Curran was the championship's top scorer with 3-56.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231699-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\u2014known as the Liberty Insurance All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship for sponsorship reasons\u2014 is the premier competition of the 2013 camogie season. It commenced on 22 June 2013 and ended with the final on 15 September won by Galway. Nine county teams compete in the Senior Championship out of twenty-seven who compete overall in the Senior, Intermediate and Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231699-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Structure\nThe nine teams are drawn into two groups, one of five teams (Group 1) and one of four (Group 2). All the teams play each other once, scoring two points for a win and one for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231700-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final was the eighty-second All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 2013 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, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship final was a hurling match played at Croke Park on 17 March 2013 to determine the winners of the 2012\u201313 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, the 43rd 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 Kilcormac/Killoughey of Offaly and St. Thomas' of Galway, with St. Thomas' winning by 1\u201311 to 1\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe All-Ireland final between Kilcormac/Killoughey and St. Thomas' was a unique occasion as it was the first ever championship meeting between the two teams. Similarly, both sides were appearing in their first ever All-Ireland decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nIn the week before the final Kilcormac/Killoughey suffered a huge blow with injury to key attacker Dan Currams, however, they started well thanks to the accuracy of Ciar\u00e1n Slevin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe game was extremely tight in the opening ten minutes with Kilcormac/Killoughey taking the lead three times with St. Thomas' drawing level on each occasion. The Galway side claimed the lead for the first time in the 16th minute following a Conor Cooney pointed free. Immediately from Conor Slevin's puck out Kilcormac/Killoughey moved the ball up field with a high-ball delivered on top of their full-forward line, and former Tipperary hurler Trevor Fletcher kicking it to the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nSt. Thomas's remained composed and after a Conor Cooney point, they took the lead in the 24th minute when Richie Murray followed up a Cooney effort to push the Galway side into a 1\u20135 to 1\u20133 lead. Kilcormac/Killoughey fought back but St. Thomas's led by 1\u20137 to 1\u20135 at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nWith heavy rain prevailing and the skies becoming dusky Croke Park officials opted to turn on the floodlights for the second half. Ciaran Slevin opened the second half account in the 35th minute. Two further scores followed from Slevin to push Kilcormac 1\u20138 to 1-7 ahead, with a Fletcher point extending that lead to two points by the 42nd minute. The Offaly champions were dealt a major blow in the 51st minute after Killian Leonard was shown a straight red card after lashing out on the advancing Darragh Burke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nSt. Thomas' took the lead a minute later after Conor Cooney fired his fourth point, and although there were chances for Kilcormac/Killoughey to take scores, they failed to convert them. Kilmartin followed Leonard in being sent off, after receiving his second yellow card with two minutes remaining. Cooney sealed victory in injury time with his fifth point and a 1\u201311 to 1\u20139 victory for St. Thomas'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231701-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nSt. Thomas' All-Ireland victory was their first ever. They became the 24th club to win the All-Ireland title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship was the 127th edition of the GAA's premier inter-county Gaelic football tournament, played between 31 counties of Ireland (excluding Kilkenny), London and New York. The 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was contested by Dublin and Mayo at Croke Park on 22 September 2013, with Dublin winning by 2:12 to Mayo's 1:14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nSeveral historic events of note occurred in the 2013 Championship. London won a Connacht Championship game for the first time in 36 years by defeating the Sligo side in the first round of the Connacht Senior Football Championship. They went on to reach the Connacht Final which they lost to Mayo, before progressing to play at Croke Park in a Round 4 All-Ireland Qualifier at which point they exited after the longest Championship run in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nHawk-Eye was introduced for Championship matches at Croke Park and was first used to confirm that Offaly substitute Peter Cunningham's attempted point had gone wide 10 minutes into the second half of a game against Kildare. 2013 also brought the first Friday night game in the history of the Championship \u2013 a first round qualifier between Carlow and Laois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThe game of the Championship was the second All-Ireland semi-final, contested by Dublin and Kerry. The game featured six goals, three of which were scored by Kerry in the first half, two of these in the first eleven minutes of the game. Dublin also scored three goals, one in the first half and two in the second half, the second half goals coming in the final moments, to send them through to an All-Ireland final against Mayo, despite having been behind for much of the game. Many people hailed it as the greatest game of the modern era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Teams\nA total of 33 teams contested the championship. These included 31 teams from Ireland, as well as London and New York. As in previous years, Kilkenny decided not to field a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Referees\nAhead of the 2013 Championship, one referee was dropped for his incompetence: Michael Collins, the 2001 All-Ireland final referee, of Cork. Syl Doyle of Wexford had also chosen to step away the previous January. Their replacements were David Gough, who refereed the 2013 All-Ireland U21 final, of Meath and Fergal Kelly of Longford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Referees\nPadraig Hughes of Armagh remained injured after running into Eamonn Doherty and collapsing during live play in the NFL Division 1 clash between Donegal and Dublin in Ballybofey. Ciar\u00e1n Brannigan of Down took the place of Hughes until his return to fitness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Team summaries\nAgainst New York, Leitrim record their easiest win in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nThe All-Ireland Senior Football Championship of 2013 was run on a provincial basis as usual. It was a knockout tournament with pairings drawn at random in the respective provinces \u2013 there were no seeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nEach match was played as a single leg. If a match was drawn there was a replay. If that match ended in a draw a period of extra time was played; however, if both sides were still level at the end of extra time another replay would have taken place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nQuarter-finals: (3 matches) These were three matches between six of the Connacht teams drawn first. The three winning teams advanced to the semi-finals, while the three losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nSemi-finals: (2 matches) The winners of the three quarter-final games joined the other two Connacht teams to make up the semi-final pairings. The two winning teams advanced to the final, while the two losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nFinal: (1 match) The winners of the two semi-finals contested this game. The winning team advanced to the All-Ireland quarter-final, while the losing team entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nPreliminary Round: (3 matches) These were three matches between six of the Leinster teams drawn first. The three winning teams advanced to the quarter-finals, while the three losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nQuarter-finals: (4 matches) The winners of the three preliminary round games joined the other five Leinster teams to make up four quarter-final pairings. The four winning teams advanced to the semi-finals, while the four losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nSemi-finals: (two matches) The four winners of the quarter-finals made up the semi-final pairings. The two winning teams advanced to the final, while the two losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nFinal: (one match) The winners of the two semi-finals contested this game. The winning team advanced to the All-Ireland quarter-final, while the losing team entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nQuarter-finals: (two matches) These were two matches between four of the Munster teams drawn first. The two winning teams advanced to the semi-finals, while the two losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nSemi-finals (two matches): The winners of the two quarter-final games joined the other two Munster teams to make up the semi-final pairings. The two winning teams advanced to the final, while the two losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nFinal (one match): The winners of the two semi-finals contested this game. The winning team advanced to the All-Ireland quarter-final, while the losing team entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nPreliminary Round: (1 match) This was a lone match between two of the Ulster teams drawn first. The winning team advanced to the quarter-finals, while the losing team entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nQuarter-finals: (4 matches) The winners of the lone preliminary round game joined the other seven Ulster teams to make up four quarter-final pairings. The four winning teams advanced to the semi-finals, while the four losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nSemi-finals: (2 matches) The four winners of the quarter-finals made up the semi-final pairings. The two winning teams advanced to the final, while the two losing teams entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nFinal: (1 match) The winners of the two semi-finals contested this game. The winning team advanced to the All-Ireland quarter-final, while the losing team entered the All-Ireland qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nThe qualifiers gave teams defeated in the provincial championships another chance at winning the All-Ireland title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nRound 1 (8 matches): the sixteen teams who failed to reach a provincial semi-final entered the qualifiers at this stage (New York do not compete). An open draw was made to determine the eight match pairings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nRound 2 (8 matches): the eight teams who failed to progress from their provincial semi-finals entered the qualifiers at this stage. They were paired with the eight winners from round 1 of the qualifiers. An open draw was made to determine the eight match pairings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nRound 3 (4 matches): the eight teams from round 2 of the qualifiers were paired against each other. An open draw was made to determine the four match pairings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nRound 4 (4 matches): the four teams who lost their provincial finals entered the qualifiers at this stage. They were paired with the four winners from round 3 of the qualifiers. An open draw was made to determine the four match pairings. The four winners advanced to the All-Ireland quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nQuarter-finals: (4 matches) the four teams from round 4 of the qualifiers were paired against the four provincial winners. An open draw was made to determine the four match pairings. The four winning teams advanced to the semi-finals, while the two losing teams were eliminated from the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nSemi-finals: (2 matches) The four winners of the quarter-finals make up the semi-final pairings. The two winning teams advanced to the final, while the two losing teams were eliminated from the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Championship format\nFinal: (1 match) The winners of the two semi-finals contested this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 1\nThe first round consisted of all teams that failed to reach their respective provincial semi-finals. The following 16 teams entered the first round of the qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 1\nThe draw for the first round took place on Monday 17 June. It was aired on RT\u00c9 Radio 1's Morning Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 2\nThe second round saw the addition of teams beaten in the provincial semi-finals. The teams added were;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 2\nThe draw for the second round took place on Monday 1 July, and was broadcast on TV3's Ireland AM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 3\nThe third round saw the teams that had made it through Round 2 play against each other. The draw for the third-round games took place on Monday 15 July and, as with the Round 1 draw, was aired on RT\u00c9 Radio 1's Morning Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 4\nThe fourth round was contested by all the teams that made it through the third round and the beaten finalists of each provincial championship. The beaten finalists were;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 4\nThe draw for Round 4 took place on Monday 15 July along as with the Round 3 draw, with the teams in Round 3 knowing who they would face if they progressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Fixtures and results, All-Ireland series\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place live draw on RT\u00c9 Radio 1 on Saturday 27 July, immediately after the last of the Round 4 Qualifiers concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Awards\nThe Sunday Game team of the year was picked on 22 September, the night of the final and included six of Dublin's winning team. Dublin's Michael Darragh MacAuley was named as the Sunday Game player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Awards\nOn 8 November, the All Star football team for 2013 was announced and the players were presented with their awards at Croke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231702-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Media\nIn December 2013, SAM 13 a double DVD was released containing highlights of the 2013 football championship season along with full match coverage of the final and Dublin v Kerry semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Football Final, the 126th event of its kind and the culmination of the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, was played between Dublin and Mayo at Croke Park, Dublin on 22 September 2013. Mayo were defeated by Dublin by a single point on a scoreline of 2-12 to 1-14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nDublin went into the final looking for their second All-Ireland in three seasons. Mayo entered the 2013 final without a title since 1951, amassing a trail of six finals losses since then, most recently in the previous decider against Donegal. They continued their losing streak for a seventh time, adding Dublin to a list of teams to have defeated them on All-Ireland final days of recent times, among them Donegal, Kerry, Meath and Cork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nThe game was televised nationally by RT\u00c9 Two as part of The Sunday Game live programme, presented by Michael Lyster from Croke Park, with studio analysis from Joe Brolly, Pat Spillane, and Colm O'Rourke. Match commentary was by Ger Canning, with colour commentary by Martin Carney. It received a 74% audience share on television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Paths to the final\nDublin defeated Westmeath, Kildare and Meath to win the Leinster Senior Football Championship. Their defeat of Kildare was their biggest Championship win over the team since 1897. Dublin defeated Cork in the All-Ireland quarter-final and Kerry in the semi-final. Many people hailed the Dublin versus Kerry semi-final as the greatest game of the modern era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Paths to the final\nMayo defeated Galway, Roscommon and London to win the Connacht Senior Football Championship. They overcame Donegal in the All-Ireland quarter-final and Tyrone in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Pre-match, Tickets and betting odds\nTickets for the match sold for more than \u20ac500 each. On Facebook, people were selling tickets for \u20ac1000 each. There were reports of people buying tickets for 10 times the face value and arriving at the gates to be told the ticket was counterfeit. Dublin were priced at evens to win the match with Mayo at 11/10 and the draw at 9/1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 88], "content_span": [89, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Pre-match, Football Stars of the 1980s Team\nThe GAA announced on 10 September that a special Football Stars of the 1980s team, a specially-chosen line-up of players who were unsuccessful in winning an All-Ireland medal would be acknowledged before the senior final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 96], "content_span": [97, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Pre-match, Team selection\nDublin made one change to the starting team from the semi-final with Philly McMahon replacing Kevin O'Brien at right corner back. The Mayo team was unchanged from the semi-final win against Tyrone with Cillian O'Connor named at corner forward after recovering from a dislocated shoulder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 78], "content_span": [79, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Pre-match, Minors\nEarlier on the day of the senior final, Mayo won the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship final, defeating Tyrone by 2-13 to 1-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match, Summary, First half\nJoe McQuillan of Cavan refereed the game. Mayo won the toss and elected to play into the canal end goals for the first half. Andy Moran, Lee Keegan, Keith Higgins and Cillian O'Connor all scored points to give Mayo a lead of 0-4 to Dublin's 0-1. Bernard Brogan equalised for Dublin by scoring his and the game's first goal, a deft flick of the ball over Mayo's Ger Cafferkey and goalkeeper Rob Hennelly at the hill 16 end. At the half-time interval Mayo were ahead at 0-8 to 1-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 79], "content_span": [80, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nAndy Moran scored a goal in the 50th minute to draw Mayo level, beating Cluxton with a low shot under his body. Bernard Brogan then scored his second goal, and the game's third in the 54th minute, to give Dublin a lead of 2-9 to 1-9. Denis Bastick sprinted forward and hand-passed to the unmarked Brogan who flicked the ball two handed to the back of the net for his second goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nDublin players Eoghan O'Gara had a hamstring injury and Rory O'Carroll had concussion after a collision and so were effectively out of the game but still on the pitch due to Dublin using all of their substitutes by the 53rd minute. Mayo were two points behind heading into stoppage time. Cillian O'Connor had a free and, instead of going for the goal that would have won Mayo the game, he kicked it over the bar. The referee blew his whistle to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Trophy presentation\nDublin captain Stephen Cluxton accepted the Sam Maguire cup from GAA president Liam O'Neill in the Hogan Stand and gave a speech in which he thanked the Dublin panel, selectors, and back room team for their work throughout the year. He also thanked Mayo for a competitive game and said that their time will come.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 84], "content_span": [85, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nMayo player Andy Moran afterwards claimed that the referee had told his teammate Cillian O'Connor there was another 30 seconds left when he scored the late free that left a point between the sides. Referee Joe McQuillan said after the match that he told O'Connor \"there's 30 seconds left, There was absolutely no suggestion that it would be after the kick-out or anything like that, Immediately after the game some Mayo players said to me that 'you said there was going to be another play', but I never said that because there is no such thing as that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nSpeaking in November 2013, Cillian O'Connor said that he assumed that the 30 seconds would be incorporated after Stephen Cluxton's kick-out and acknowledged that it was a mix-up for which Joe McQuillan wasn't culpable for. \"If I could go back now knowing that the game would be blown from the restart, obviously I would have thrown caution to the wind and tried to go for the goal,\" \u201cThe way it went, I thought there might be one more passage of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nMy understanding was that there would be another little bit of time, and if we had maybe won the kickout, and scored an equaliser . . . I\u2019m just saying it would have looked like a good decision. But if I knew there was as little time as there was I would have gone for the goal.\u201d he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nMayo manager James Horan felt that basic errors cost his team saying \"We had enough ball to win the game but we made too many basic mistakes, Our handpassing let us down, Quite simply the ball has to stick, Coughing up needless possession is killing in an All-Ireland final, We created the chances, but we didn't get the return that was required.\" Dublin manager Jim Gavin felt that the players deserve great credit saying \"It's not about the manager or the management team - it's about the players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nIt's about, commitment, resolve and self-sacrifice that they have shown to help their county this year, There is great spirit and a collective will within the group. Five or six players were up in the stand today that didn't feature - but they are just as important as those down on the pitch and on the bench.\" Gavin was also critical of the high number of frees given against Dublin, 32 against Dublin (12 against Mayo) saying \"Not only were we playing Mayo but we were playing the referee as well,\". James Horan expressed amazement at Gavin's comments about frees saying \"I find that amazing. I find that absolutely amazing if that was the comment. I know Jim made another interesting comment \u2013 that he'd walk away if his team were cynical, so maybe that's another comment Jim should look at.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nMan of the Match, Bernard Brogan speaking about scoring two goals in the final said \u201cObviously it\u2019s nice to get a goal in the All-Ireland final but it\u2019s about winning medals and that\u2019s the second one there, I\u2019ve one more to go to catch my dad, that\u2019s the next one, any day you win an All-Ireland is a special day. But there\u2019s a whole new group of lads in there and you just saw how much it meant to them after the final whistle, it\u2019s a special day and hopefully we\u2019ve another couple left in us, please God.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nRT\u00c9 analyst Joe Brolly was disappointed with what he called \"appalling cynicism\" in the game's last quarter where Dublin picked up four yellow cards in the final 10 minutes, saying via Twitter \"So much for Dublin's 'playing the game the right way' philosophy. Their last quarter display was a master class in cynicism\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Reaction\nIn December 2013, Dublin manager Jim Gavin speaking after receiving the 2013 Philips Sports Manager of the Year award revealed that the most enjoyable moment after the final was that brief interlude, when the dressing room doors were closed, and the room contained only the people who were most involved in the 2013 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Awards\nOn The Sunday Game programme later that night, Bernard Brogan was named as the man of the match for his overall contribution of 2-3. Kevin McStay, Eamonn O'Hara and Ciar\u00e1n Whelan picked the winner from three candidates which also included Lee Keegan from Mayo and Michael Darragh MacAuley. The award was presented by GAA President Liam O'Neill and Michael Lyster at the Dublin team's celebration banquet at the Gibson Hotel. The Sunday Game panel also picked their 2013 Team of the Year on the Sunday night programme, with five members of the Dublin team and four members of the Mayo team included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231703-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, Post-match, Celebrations\nThe Dublin team celebrated on the Monday night after the final at a victory party at Merrion Square in Dublin with a crowd of up to 35,000 present. The homecoming celebration was hosted by Lord Mayor of Dublin Ois\u00edn Quinn and Dublin City Council. The Sunday Game presenter Des Cahill was the MC for the proceedings which started at 7pm and finished shortly after 8.30pm, with Ryan Sheridan entertaining the crowd before the Dublin team were presented on stage. Following the conclusion of the event, the players and management boarded an open top bus to Parnells GAA Club, the home club of Dublin captain Stephen Cluxton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 126th staging of the All-Ireland championship since its establishment in 1887. The draw for the 2013 fixtures took place on 4 October 2012. The championship began on 5 May 2013 and ended on 28 September 2013 with Clare winning their fourth All Ireland title after a 5\u201316 to 3\u201316 win against Cork in the replayed final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nKilkenny were the defending champions. However, they were knocked out of the Leinster Championship by eventual Leinster champions Dublin at the semi-final stage and Cork saw them off in the All-Ireland quarter-final. Limerick won the Munster Championship for the first time since 1996. Cork defeated Dublin and Clare defeated Limerick in the All-Ireland semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Championship has been described by many as one of the best ever. In February 2014, the GAA announced that both the 2013 football and hurling Championships brought in \u20ac11.9m in gate receipts, an increase of \u20ac1.3m for the hurling championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nThe introduction of Hawk-Eye for Championship matches at Croke Park fell foul in a high-profile blunder by the computer system which led to use of Hawk-Eye being suspended during the All-Ireland semi-finals on 18 August. During the minor game between Limerick and Galway, Hawk-Eye ruled a point for Limerick as a miss although the graphic showed the ball passing inside the posts, causing confusion around the stadium - the referee ultimately waved the valid point wide provoking anger from fans, viewers and TV analysts covering the game live.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nThe system was subsequently stood down for the senior game which followed, owing to \"an inconsistency in the generation of a graphic\". Hawk-Eye admitted they were to blame and as a result Limerick, who were narrowly defeated after extra-time, announced they would be appealing over Hawk-Eye's costly failure. The incident drew attention from the UK, where Hawk-Eye had made its debut in English soccer's Premier League the day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams\nAll teams from the 2012 championship continued to line out in hurling's top tier in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams\nKilkenny were installed as the favourites to retain the All-Ireland title for a third consecutive year and to secure a remarkable tenth championship in fourteen seasons. Tipperary and Galway, the last two teams to beat Kilkenny in championship hurling, were regarded as the two teams most likely to provide the strongest challenge to Kilkenny's supremacy once again. Limerick were ranked at 20/1 as they hoped to end a forty-year wait for the Liam MacCarthy Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams\nWaterford, a team who won four Munster titles between 2002 and 2010, were seen as a team to have missed out on their chance at an All-Ireland title and were ranked at 25/1. London, the winners of the 2012 Christy Ring Cup, availed of their automatic right to promotion to the top tier and joined the Leinster championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams\nPrior to the championship draw it emerged that Croke Park officials had written to the Laois County Board inviting the county hurlers to participate in the 2013 Christy Ring Cup. This was prompted by Laois's poor results during the previous few seasons. In spite of these concerns Laois decided to remain in hurling's top tier and subsequently won two Leinster Championship matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Broadcasting\nRT\u00c9 and TV3 provide live coverage and highlights of matches in Ireland on The Sunday Game Live and Championship Live respectively, with RT\u00c9 showing the All-Ireland Final live. Setanta Sports and TG4 show highlights of matches in Ireland also. Setanta Sports broadcasts live Championship matches in Australia. Also Setanta Sports provides live matches in Asia. The Championship Live live programme was presented by Matt Cooper, usually from an on-pitch studio with analysis from Daith\u00ed Regan, Jamesie O'Connor, and Nicky English.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Broadcasting\nThe Sunday Game live programme was presented by Michael Lyster with analysis usually from Cyril Farrell, Ger Loughnane, Liam Sheedy, and Tom\u00e1s Mulcahy. Highlights of all games were shown on The Sunday Game programme which aired usually at 9:30pm on Sundays on RT\u00c9 Two and was presented by Des Cahill with analysis from Eddie Brennan and Donal \u00d3g Cusack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Broadcasting\nTelevision coverage, in particular that of the Leinster Hurling Championship has been criticised in some circles. Neither RT\u00c9 or TV3 decided to broadcast both Leinster Hurling Championship semi-finals. Both channels also declined the offer from the Leinster GAA to reschedule the Dublin - Kilkenny semi-final replay in order for it to be broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Qualifiers\nTeams eliminated prior to the semi finals of their provincial championship compete in the Preliminary rounds and Phase 1. Teams eliminated in the provincial semi finals take part in Phase 2. Phase 3 sees the winners of Phase 1 take on the winners of Phase 2, with the winners advancing to the All Ireland Quarter Finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\n2013 will be remembered as a year that the traditionally weaker counties made an impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nLimerick who hadn't been in an All-Ireland Final since 2007 beat reigning Munster Champions Tipperary by 3 points, 1\u201318 to 1\u201315 in a Munster semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nClare under David Fitzgerald held off Waterford in a Munster Quarter-final winning by 2\u201320 to 1-15. They were overcome by a stronger Cork side in the Munster Semi-final losing 0\u201323 to 0-15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nLaois made it to the Leinster semi-final where they put it up to Galway even leading by a point at half time [0-08 - 0-07], but Galway's physicality helped them run out 7 point victors [2-17 - 1-13].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nDublin came into the season after a disappointing 2012 season and a hammering by Tipperary in the league semi-final [4-20 0-17]. In their Leinster Quarter-Final they drew with Wexford, 1-17 - 1-17 but in the replay ran out easy 8 point winners, 1-17 - 0-12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nOffaly jumped to a 1\u201301 to 0\u201300 start against Kilkenny in their Quarter-Final clash. They led at half time by 2\u201306 to 0-11 but failed to stop Kilkenny, although they managed to score 4 goals as Kilkenny won 0\u201326 to 4-09.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nIn their semi-final Dublin ran at Kilkenny and held out for a draw in the match, 0-17 - 1-14. In the replay Dublin raced to a 0\u201304 to 0\u201301 lead after 10 mins and lead 0\u201311 to 0\u201307 at half time. They ran out 3 point winners, 1-17 0-17. Dublin made it to a Leinster final while Kilkenny where exiled to the qualifiers for a second year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nKilkenny fought hard against Tipperary and sent them out of the Championship, winning by three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nDublin beat Galway by 12 points to claim their first Leinster title in 52 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nKilkenny knocked out Waterford in the final stage of the Qualifiers after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nCarlow lead Wexford for most of their game in the qualifiers, until a late goal sent them out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nAt the quarter-final stage, Cork knocked out Championship favourites and title holders, Kilkenny. Clare knocked out Galway, the previous year's runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nBoth Provincial Champions were beaten in the semi-finals. Cork defeated Dublin after the game of the season by 1\u201324 to 1-19, and Clare beat Limerick by 1\u201322 to 0-18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Statistics, Notable matches\nThe 2013 Championship was described by many as one of the best ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Awards\nThe Sunday Game team of the year was picked on 28 September, which was the night of the final replay. Clare's victorious All-Ireland winning side had seven players in the hurling team of the year. Tony Kelly of Clare was also picked as The Sunday Game player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Awards\nThe 2013 All-Star hurling team were announced on 6 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Awards\nSpeaking at the announcement, GAA President Liam O'Neill said \"This year's hurling selection was of particular interest to hurling followers everywhere after the incredible year we had, the players who have made the final cut can take particular satisfaction on doing so in a season of stiff competition as new teams and players emerged - something evidenced in the final make up of the team, I congratulate all 15 players - and those who were nominated too - as their inclusion further underlines their roles as excellent ambassadors through their commitment and dedication to the pursuit of excellence.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Awards\nTony Kelly of Clare was named Young Hurler of the Year and Hurler of the Year for 2013 at the All Stars award ceremony on 8 November at Croke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Media, DVD release\nIn December 2013, LIAM 13 a double DVD was released containing highlights of the 2013 hurling championship season along with full match coverage of the final and final replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231704-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Media, Documentary\nA documentary called The Magic of Hurling aired on 27 December 2013 on RT\u00c9 Two. This documentary featured Davy Fitzgerald, Anthony Daly and Ger Loughnane talking to Ger Canning about the 2013 year in hurling and discussing the tactics that brought the All-Ireland title to Clare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, the deciding game of the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, was played on 8 September 2013 at Croke Park, Dublin. For the second straight year, the final ended in a draw, requiring a replay that was held on 28 September 2013 at Croke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nIn the replay Clare beat Cork 5-16 to 3-16 to claim their fourth All Ireland title. The replay has been described by some as one of the greatest finals of all time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe game between Cork and Clare was an all Munster All-Ireland for the second time ever, the first having been in 1997 between Clare and Tipperary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe drawn final was shown live in Ireland on RT\u00c9 Two as part of The Sunday Game live programme, presented by Michael Lyster from Croke Park, with studio analysis from Cyril Farrell, Liam Sheedy, and Eddie Brennan and pre-match comments from Tom\u00e1s Mulcahy and Ger Loughnane. Match commentary was provided by Ger Canning with analysis by Michael Duignan. The replay was shown live in Ireland on RT\u00c9 Two as part of The Saturday Game live programme, presented by Michael Lyster from Croke Park, with studio analysis from Cyril Farrell, Liam Sheedy, and Eddie Brennan. Match commentary was provided by Ger Canning with analysis by Michael Duignan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe drawn match was preceded by the Galway against Waterford minor hurling final which started at 1.15pm and was won by Waterford, their first minor title in 65 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nA peak Irish television audience of 1.3 million people watched RT\u00c9's coverage of the drawn final with an average audience of 885,000 viewers, a 64% share of the available television audience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Background\nThis All-Ireland final was the 50th championship meeting of Cork and Clare; however, it was their first meeting in an All-Ireland decider. Cork held the balance of power in all previous meetings between the two, having recorded 34 championship victories to Clare's eleven. There had been four drawn games. Both sides last met in the 2013 Munster semi-final, when Cork recorded a 0-23 to 0-15 victory. It was their seventh successive championship defeat of Clare, extending the record which stretches back to the 1998 Munster semi-final when Clare last defeated Cork. In total it was the fifth meeting between the counties in 2013, with Clare having won the first three before Cork prevailed in the Munster semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Background\nCork, who last played in the final in 2006 when they lost by three points to Kilkenny, were bidding to win the title for the first time since 2005 while Clare, who last reached the final in 2002, had won their last All-Ireland in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Drawn game, Build-up\nIn Ennis a big screen was erected at Abbey Street car park in the town centre to screen live coverage of the final. Bookmakers made Cork slight favorites to win at 5/6 with Clare at 6/5. Before the 2013 Munster championship started Cork were priced at 16/1, and Clare at 22/1 to win the All-Ireland Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Drawn game, Hurling Stars of the 1980s Team\nThe GAA announced on 26 August that a special Hurling Stars of the 1980s team, a specially-chosen line-up of players who were unsuccessful in winning an All-Ireland medal would be acknowledged on finals day before the senior final. The names of the players were put forward by a panel of All-Star and former All-Star selectors who covered Gaelic games for the print and broadcast media during the 1980s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 107], "content_span": [108, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Drawn game, Referee\nOffaly based referee Brian Gavin was named as the referee for the 2013 All-Ireland final on 26 August. The Clara native took charge of his second final after having previously taken charge of the 2011 Final, and also the All-Ireland championship final at minor level in 2004 and under-21 level in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 83], "content_span": [84, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Drawn game, Team news\nCork made one change to the team that played in the semi-final against Dublin with Brian Murphy returning from injury and being named in the wing-back position, with Tom Kenny being omitted. Murphy had been out of action since June when he suffered a collarbone injury in a club match. Clare stated the game with the same fifteen which started the semi-final win over Limerick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 85], "content_span": [86, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match details - Drawn game, Summary\nClare got the opening score of the third minute with a point from Darach Honan. and were ahead by 0-12 to 0-10 at half time. After 40 minutes Conor Lehane scored the opening goal of the game with a shot past the goalkeeper from the right and into the net to make the score 1-10 to 0-14. Cork got a second goal in the 57th minute when goalkeeper Anthony Nash hit a 20-yard free to the net after Luke O'Farrell had been fouled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 87], "content_span": [88, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match details - Drawn game, Summary\nWith seven minutes left on the clock, Cork captain Patrick Cronin hit a shot to the top left corner of the net to level the game. Patrick Horgan looked to have won it for Cork with a point in the last minute. Added on time of two minutes was already up when Clare right-back Domhnall O'Donovan received the ball out on the left before hitting the ball over the bar just as he was tacked to tie up the match. The referee blew the final whistle after 2 minutes and 38 seconds to bring the match to a replay three weeks later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 87], "content_span": [88, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nClare captain Pat Donnellan said that he was \"delighted to have another day out, With ten or 15 seconds to go, we thought we were coming home with nothing. We're just delighted to have another day out and we'll look forward to it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nHighlights of the final were shown on The Sunday Game programme which aired at 9:30pm that night on RT\u00c9 Two and was presented by Des Cahill with analysis from Donal \u00d3g Cusack, Ger Loughnane, and Ollie Moran. Also in that programme, Cork manager Jimmy Barry-Murphy and captain Pa Cronin were interviewed by Michael Lyster from the Cork team hotel, the DT hotel in Dublin. Marty Morrissey who was at the Clare team hotel, the Clyde Court Hotel, interviewed Clare manager Davy Fitzgerald and captain Pat Donnellan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Replay, Build-up\nThe replay match was fixed for Saturday 28th rather than a traditional Sunday because the ladies Gaelic football finals are scheduled for the following Sunday, the 29th and are not going to be moved to another date which happened in 2012. The GAA have predicted that the replay will be a sell-out even with the 5pm throw-in time and it will be the first senior final to be played under floodlights. The GAA confirmed that there will be ticket reductions for the replay similar to the 2012 replay with stand tickets priced at \u20ac50 (down from \u20ac80) and terrace tickets at \u20ac25 (down from \u20ac40).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Replay, Build-up\nCork manager Jimmy Barry-Murphy commented on the replay saying \u201cIt\u2019s more of a game now than it is a final.\" The replay will be the sixth time that the sides have played each other in 2013. Clare selector Louis Mulqueen thinks that if Clare seize moment in the replay they can kickstart a golden era for the county saying \"I still think if they could win the All-Ireland on Saturday we'd be talking about the golden era. But they still have to make the breakthrough and the quicker they make that breakthrough the better.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Replay, Build-up\nClare manager Davy Fitzgerald is concerned about the number of games the team has played in 2013 saying \"\"Since the start of February we've been flat out because we played the league campaign at a championship pace, So, I'd be saying to myself: 'Will these games catch up on them?' That's the only concern, but it doesn't seem to have. They seem to be good. I think the only really flat game we had was that Tipperary league game.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Replay, Referee\nJames McGrath was named as the referee for the replay on 18 September. It will be McGrath's second final after he was in charge of the 2012 Replay final between Kilkenny and Galway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match - Replay, Team news\nThe Cork team for the replay was named on 25 September with Cian McCarthy being named in place of Jamie Coughlan in the half forward line. Clare named an unchanged team for the replay and also for the third game in succession. There had been speculation that Darach Honan could be replaced before throw-in after he failed to make an impact in the drawn game. A couple of hours before the start of the match, Shane O'Donnell was told that he would be starting the match in place of Darach Honan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 81], "content_span": [82, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match details - Replay, Summary\nJohn Conlon got the opening score of the game, a point in the second minute. A hat-trick of goals in the 6th, 14th and 19th minutes at the hill 16 end from late call-up Shane O'Donnell put Clare on the way to a four-point lead of 3-9 to 1-11 at half time. Anthony Nash had blasted a 20-metre free past 12 Clare players on the line for a goal that brought Cork back to within three points in the 16th minute. Clare then led by eight points but Cork had drawn level, 1-16 to 3-10, by the 52nd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 83], "content_span": [84, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match details - Replay, Summary\nWith 18 minutes left the scores were level at 1-16 to 3-10 and they were level again with ten minutes left when S\u00e9amus Harnedy scored with a low shot to the net to make the score 2-16 to 3-13. In the 61st minute, Clare's Conor McGrath ran at goals and fired the ball high to the left corner of the net for Clare's fourth goal. Darach Honan, who came on as a second-half substitute, got Clare's fifth goal in the 71st minute after he received the ball on the right and managed to get as far as the Cork goals before pushing the ball past the goalkeeper with the ball rolling over the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 83], "content_span": [84, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match details - Replay, Trophy presentation\nClare captain Patrick Donnellan accepted the Liam MacCarthy Cup from GAA president Liam O'Neill in the Hogan Stand and gave a speech in which he thanked the Clare panel, selectors, and back room team for their work throughout the year. The Clare team then embarked on a lap of honor around Croke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 95], "content_span": [96, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nClare manager Davy Fitzgerald felt Clare were the better team over the two games saying \" In my opinion over the two days we were the better team, I think Cork are a fantastic hurling team, but I really believe that we were the better team over the two days, We\u2019re 2013 All-Ireland champions and it feels so good. I\u2019m so proud of them young boys. They did it and fair play to them.\u201dFitzgerald speaking the morning after the game said \u201cI suppose it still has not sunk in, but it is one of immense satisfaction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nI am still the same. I am still so thrilled for the lads.\" Fitzgerald also said that it hurt that people did not trust him saying \"My one objective was for Clare to win. I wasn't trying to do anything else, only to try and make sure Clare would win. It does hurt when people would cut your throat and knife you in the back. It isn't nice.\" Seven members of Clare's All-Ireland winning side were picked in The Sunday Game hurling team of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nMan of the match Shane O'Donnell who got 3-3 said the county's win means \u201cabsolutely everything\u201d revealing that he did not know he was starting until hours before the game. O'Donnell was named by The Sunday Game as the man of the match for the replay on the night of the match. At the teams celebration banquet at the Clyde Court Hotel in Dublin, he received his award from GAA President Liam O'Neill and Michael Lyster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0021-0003", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nCork manager Jimmy Barry-Murphy acknowledged Clare's win saying \"There is no disgrace in getting beaten by a team like Clare, you have to acknowledge they deserved their victory\". Former Waterford hurler, John Mullane writing in the Irish Independent praised Clare manager Davy Fitzgerald and said \"starting with Shane O'Donnell was a masterstroke\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0021-0004", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nJamesie O'Connor also writing in the Irish Independent believes that Clare have reached the summit earlier than expected saying \"With the way Clare finished the year I think the consensus now is that the best team in the country came out on top, it's hard to believe that the hurling year gave us what it did, especially with the old order contesting the league final back in April. They will be back in 2014 but on a far more level playing pitch. Roll on 2014.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nFormer Offaly All Ireland winner and hurling analyst Daith\u00ed Regan thinks that the Clare system was the key as best team of the summer won out, saying \"The big question now is, how many can Clare win with this crop of young lads. I was talking to Jamesie O\u2019Connor after the game about what we can expect from this side over the next few years. He made the point that it\u2019s a high-octane, high-energy game that Clare play. And it takes its toll and makes demands on players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nBut they\u2019re at such an age profile at the moment that they\u2019ll want more. When the celebrations die down, they\u2019ll go back at it and you know I think because of their age profile they\u2019ll be hungry and burnout won\u2019t be an issue.\" Double All Ireland winning manager Ger Loughnane is confident that this is the start of a golden era for hurling in Clare, saying \"\u201cThis has been a magical year \u2013 the best year I can remember for hurling, but you know we have the prospect that next year and the year after will be even better.\" British newspaper The Guardian in its editorial section, hailed the 'ancient Irish' game of hurling as a beacon of sporting courage and commitment, Hopefully the Gaelic Athletic Association will do all sports fans everywhere a massive favour and produce DVD copies of this memorable game, where Clare emerged victorious.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 904]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nIn 2017, after three years of under-performing, former Clare manager Ger Loughnane criticized the team that won the title saying \"it was the greatest fluke of all time, they didn't beat either Tipperary or Kilkenny - the Litmus test in this era, until they show consistency and beat a big team in a big game, you'd have to say that this Clare team are over-rated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Homecoming\nThe Clare team arrived back in Ennis at 9.30pm on the day after the game on an open top bus. The team traveled by train from Heuston Station in Dublin to Limerick and then by bus to Ennis. En route they stopped at Cratloe, Sixmilebridge, Newmarket on Fergus, and Clarecastle. There was a reception held at Tim Smyth Park in Ennis which was attended by 30,000 people. Both sets of players, the senior panel and the under 21 winning panel were introduced on stage by MC's Syl O'Connor of Clare FM and RT\u00c9's Marty Morrissey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Homecoming\nOn 2 October, a Clare 'A' team played a Clare 'B' team in the annual GOAL challenge which was played in Sixmilebridge. The match was a 13 a side game with the 'A' team winning by 7-3 to 6-4. A crowd of 6,000 fans attended the match where Shane O\u2019Donnell required a Garda escort to get him to the team bus after the game. On 4 October, Clare manager Davy Fitzgerald along with players Shane O'Donnell and Patrick Donnellan and the Liam MacCarthy Cup appeared as guests on The Late Late Show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Awards\nThe nominations for the 2013 GAA-GPA Hurling All-Stars were announced on 2 October with Clare receiving thirteen nominations with Cork receiving nine. Cian Dillon and Patrick O\u2019Connor were the only Clare players not nominated. The final team selection was made on 6 November before the team were presented with their awards two days later at a banquet at Croke Park. Clare's won eight places on the All-Stars team with David McInerney, Brendan Bugler, Pat Donnellan, Colm Galvin, Conor Ryan, Tony Kelly, P\u00e1draic Collins and Conor McGrath all winning awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Awards\nCork won three awards with Anthony Nash, S\u00e9amus Harnedy and Patrick Horgan being named on the team. The three nominations for the GPA Hurler of the Year were Tony Kelly and P\u00e1draic Collins of Clare, and Anthony Nash of Cork. Also announced were the three nominations for the GPA Young Hurler of the Year which were Tony Kelly, P\u00e1draic Collins, and David McInerney from Clare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231705-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Awards\nTony Kelly of Clare was named Young Hurler of the Year and Hurler of the Year for 2013 at the All Stars award ceremony on 8 November at Croke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231706-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship was the 40th edition of the Ladies' Gaelic Football Association's premier inter-county Ladies' Gaelic football tournament. It was known for sponsorship reasons as the TG4 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship. It was won by Cork, who defeated Monaghan in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231707-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final featured Cork and Monaghan. This was the third of three All-Ireland Ladies' football finals between 2008 and 2013 that saw Cork play Monaghan. They had also met in the 2011 final. Cork claimed their eighth All-Ireland title in nine years after they got the better of Monaghan by 1\u201310 to 1\u20139. Cork led 1\u20136 to 0\u20136 at half-time thanks to a Valerie Mulcahy goal. A second half penalty goal from their goalkeeper, Linda Martin, helped Monaghan lead by a point with eight minutes remaining but Juliet Murphy and Mulcahy added late points as Cork edged it by a solitary point. The match was broadcast live on TG4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231707-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nTeam:1 Elaine Harte2 Ann Marie Walsh (c)3 Angela Walsh4 Br\u00edd Stack5 Briege Corkery6 Rena Buckley7 Geraldine O'Flynn8 Deirdre O'Reilly9 Juliet Murphy10 Nollaig Cleary11 Annie Walsh12 Doireann O'Sullivan13 Ciara O'Sullivan14 Valerie Mulcahy 15 Rhona N\u00ed Bhuachalla", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231707-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes: Orlagh Farmer for N\u00ed Bhuachalla (half time)Orla Finn for Annie Walsh (49)Rhona N\u00ed Bhuachalla for Farmer (52)A Barrett for Ann Marie Walsh (60)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231707-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nTeam:1 Linda Martin2 Grainne McNally3 Sharon Courtney4 Christina Reilly5 Laura McEnaney 6 Ellen McCarron7 Aoife McAnespie8 Amanda Casey9 Y. Connell 10 Therese McNally (c)11 Caoimhe Mohan 12 Cora Courtney 13 Catriona McConnell14 Eileen McKenna15 Ciara McAnespie", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231707-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes:Eileen McElroy for Aoife McAnespie (half time)Niamh Kindlon for Mohan (56)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231708-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship\nThe All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship 2013 was the 50th staging of the All-Ireland championship since its establishment in 1964. The draw for the 2013 fixtures took place in October 2012. The championship began 31 May 2013 and ended on 14 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231708-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship\nClare were the defending champions and retained their title after defeating Antrim 2-28 to 012 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231709-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship final was a hurling match that was played at Semple Stadium, Thurles on 14 September 2013 to determine the winners of the 2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship, the 50th 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 Clare of Munster and Antrim of Ulster, with Clare winning by 2-28 to 0-12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231709-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nThe All-Ireland final between Clare and Antrim was their second ever championship meeting and their first in an All-Ireland final. Clare were appearing in their third final in five years, while Antrim were lining out in their first ever All-Ireland decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231709-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nClare went two points ahead after five minutes, with Cathal O'Connell scoring two early frees. Conor McCann opened Antrim's account after seven minutes, and although the score line stood at 0-4 to 0-2 after 11-and-a-half minutes, Antrim failed to score again for a further 13 minutes. Antrim's use of the short puck-out strategy was not proving a success with the Saffrons particularly caught in the 20th minute, as Davy O'Halloran controlled possession from Ger Dixon's puck-out and fired the reigning champions to a 0-13 to 0-2 lead. O'Halloran fired Clare's opening goal in the 23rd minute. Further points were added before Shane O'Donnell's 27th-minute goal gave Clare a 2-16 to 0-3 lead. Antrim added another point before the short whistle to reduce the deficit to 18 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231709-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nAntrim were sluggish after the restart with Kelly and O'Halloran scoring points for Clare inside the opening minute. Ciaran Clarke forced Clare goalkeeper Ronan Taaffe into a great save in the 35th minute, however, scores from O'Connell and O'Halloran handed Clare a 22-point lead in the 37th minute. Clarke, Chris McGuinness and Niall McKenna pegged back points for the Saffrons, while at the opposite end it could have been worse for the Ulster side but for the brilliance of Dixon who pulled off fine saves in the 46th and 56th minutes. Antrim worked hard late on with Clarke and substitute Michael Bradley taking scores, but it was too little too late as Clare powered to a 22-point win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231710-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Pac-12 Conference football team\nThe 2013 All-Pac-12 Conference football team consists of American football players chosen by various organizations for All-Pac-12 honors for the 2013 Pac-12 season. The Stanford Cardinal won the conference, defeating the Arizona State Sun Devils 38 to 14 in the Pac-12 Championship game. Stanford then lost to the Big Ten champion Michigan State Spartans in the Rose Bowl 20 to 14. Arizona running back Ka'Deem Carey was voted Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Year. Arizona State defensive tackle Will Sutton was voted Pat Tillman Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231711-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Pro Team\nThe 2013 All-Pro Teams were named by the Associated Press (AP) the Pro Football Writers of America (PFWA), and the Sporting News (SN) for performance in the 2013 NFL season. While none of the All-Pro teams have the official imprimatur of the NFL (whose official recognition is nomination to the 2014 Pro Bowl), they are included in the NFL Record and Fact Book. Any player selected to any of the teams can be described as an \"All-Pro\". The AP team, with first-team and second-team selections, was chosen by a national panel of fifty NFL writers. The Sporting News All-NFL team is voted on by NFL players and executives and was released January 28, 2014. The PFWA team is selected by its more than 300 national members who are accredited media members covering the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231711-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-Pro Team, Key\nAP = Associated Press All-Pro teamAPt = Tied for First-team All-Pro in the AP voteAP-2 = Associated Press Second-team All-ProAP-2t = Tied for Second-team All-Pro in the AP voteAP = AP chose no separate punt returnerAP = AP chose no separate special teams playerx-one voter selected only one running back. y-one voter did not select a fullback. PFWA = Pro Football Writers Association All-NFL teamSN = Sporting News All-Pro teamKR = Kick returnerPR = Punt returner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 22], "content_span": [23, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231712-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 All-SEC football team\nThe 2013 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 2013 Southeastern Conference football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231712-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 All-SEC football team\nThe Auburn Tigers won the conference, beating the Missouri Tigers 59 to 42 in the SEC Championship. Auburn then lost the national championship to the ACC champion FSU Seminoles 34 to 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231712-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 All-SEC football team\nAuburn running back Tre Mason, a unanimous AP selection, was voted the SEC Offensive Player of the Year. Missouri defensive end Michael Sam, also a unanimous AP selection, was voted the AP SEC Defensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231712-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231713-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Allan Cup\nThe 2013 Allan Cup was the 2013 Canadian Grand National Championship of Senior ice hockey. This was the 105th year the trophy will be awarded. The 2013 Allan Cup was contended in Red Deer, Alberta, hosted by the Bentley Generals of Hockey Alberta from April 15 to April 20, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231713-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Allan Cup, Notes\nLate in the third period of the round robin game between Bentley and Rosetown, the Generals were leading 1-0 with less than a minute to play. Generals goalie Dan Bakala shot the puck the length of the ice into an empty net to score a goal. It is unknown if this rare event is the first in Allan Cup history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan\nThe 2013 Allsvenskan, part of the 2013 Swedish football season, was the 89th season of Allsvenskan since its establishment in 1924. The 2013 fixtures were released on 14 December 2012. The season started on 31 March 2013 and ended on 3 November 2013. IF Elfsborg were the defending champions, having won their sixth title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan\nMalm\u00f6 FF won the Swedish championship this season, their 20th Allsvenskan title and 17th Swedish championship overall, in the 29th round on 28 October 2013 when they won 2\u20130 in the away fixture against reigning champions IF Elfsborg at Bor\u00e5s Arena. This was Malm\u00f6 FF's third Swedish championship of the 21st century having won their last title in the 2010 Allsvenskan season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan\nA total of 16 teams contested the league: 13 returning from the 2012 season and three that were promoted from Superettan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Background\nThe annual pre-season kick-off meeting was held in Stockholm on 25 March 2013. All managers accompanied with a key player for their team were interviewed by the two hosts Petter Johansson and Jens Fjellstr\u00f6m about the upcoming season and their expectations as well as what team they held as favourites to win the title. Hans Backe acted as a commentator and did a short analysis after each of the teams presentation. Only Malm\u00f6 FF's Rikard Norling held his own team as the title favourite. Eight managers out of 16 believed that IF Elfsborg would win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Background\nThe remaining managers placed their bets on AIK (three votes), Malm\u00f6 FF (two votes), IFK G\u00f6teborg (two votes) and BK H\u00e4cken (one vote). The entire attendance consisted of the clubs' managers, key players and media experts. When asked about Elfsborg's chances to defend their title, only 36.5% of the audience believed that they could. The attendance voted IF Elfsborg as the title favourites (29.7% of the votes) with Malm\u00f6 FF (22.4% of the votes) and AIK (14.5% of the votes) closely after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Background\nThe attendance also predicted that Syrianska FC (33.4% of the votes) and IF Brommapojkarna (30.1% of the votes) were the two favourites to be relegated. When asked about the top goalscorer, a majority of the audience voted for Djurg\u00e5rdens IF's Erton Fejzullahu. For the top assisting player the audience placed their bets on BK H\u00e4cken's Martin Ericsson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nThe season started on 31 March 2013 with three fixtures. The first match to be played was the Gothenburg derby between BK H\u00e4cken and IFK G\u00f6teborg which was moved to Ullevi for this specific match, the match ended in a 3\u20130 win for last years 7th positioned IFK G\u00f6teborg. The remaining five fixtures of the first week were played on 1 April 2013 with the match between the reigning champions IF Elfsborg against one of the title favourites AIK at Bor\u00e5s Arena as the most prominent fixture that day, the matched in a 2\u20132 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nEarly on IFK G\u00f6teborg established themselves in first position after a win in the second round and didn't lose a match until in the seventh round in the away game against AIK, this match was also the first league match AIK won at their new home ground Friends Arena. Helsingborgs IF overtook G\u00f6teborg as leaders in the same round. Until the seventh round the main top teams had been Malm\u00f6 FF who had held onto second position from the third round, Helsingborg, and surprisingly Mj\u00e4llby AIF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nThe reigning champions and title favourites Elfsborg started the season with four drawn matches in a row before finally managing a win in the fifth round against Djurg\u00e5rdens IF. The remaining title favourites AIK and H\u00e4cken were positioned 9th and 7th respectively after seven rounds. The teams that were voted most likely to be relegated Syrianska FC and IF Brommapojkarna were positioned 14th and 15th respectively after seven rounds with under-performing Djurg\u00e5rdens IF occupying 16th and last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nAfter the seventh round Helsingborg continued their streak of wins which ensured them to stay in pole position after ten matches had been played. A draw in the Scanian derby against Malm\u00f6 FF on 29 May ended their winning run of six matches, this was also Malm\u00f6's fifth match without winning since their win against \u00d6sters IF in the fifth round. This streak of matches made Malm\u00f6 FF drop to fourth place in the league after ten rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nIn the same time IFK G\u00f6teborg had continued to collect points despite their loss against AIK and were two points after leaders Helsingborg in second place. Elfsborg had also overtaken Malm\u00f6 FF after four straight wins after their four initial draws in the start of the league. AIK and H\u00e4cken were still stuck in no man's land in the middle of the table after ten rounds, positioning themselves 10th and 9th respectively. In the other end of the table Syrianska and Brommapojkarna had managed to improve their form and were positioned 13th and 12th respectively. The two last teams after ten rounds were \u00d6ster and Djurg\u00e5rden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nIn the coming ten rounds a quartet of teams would establish themselves as favourites for the league title. The positions in the top started to change around the 16th round of games when AIK managed to gain contact with the top teams and cling on to a third position in the table, passing IFK G\u00f6teborg in the process. Malm\u00f6 FF gained momentum in the top and rose to a second place while Helsingborg where still top of the table. Elfsborg dropped to a fifth place. After the 20th round the same four teams still topped the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nMalm\u00f6 FF passed Helsinborg in the same round and took the lead for the first time this season, three points ahead of Helsingborg. IFK G\u00f6teborg and AIK were placed third and fourth respectively on the same number of points as Helsingborg, 38 points, although with lesser goal difference. Elfsborg followed in fifth place, seven points after Helsingborg, IFK G\u00f6teborg and AIK and ten points after Malm\u00f6 FF. One of the biggest upsets this far in the season was last years runners up and one of the title favourites, H\u00e4cken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nH\u00e4cken was twenty points behind Malm\u00f6 FF at this point of the season and in 12th position with only three points ahead of the relegation zone. In the battle to avoid relegation Syrianska and Brommapojkarna were placed 15th and 16th respectively in the relegation positions with Halmstad in 14th place. Syrianska had only managed to collect ten points at this point and were eight points behind Brommapojkarna and Halmstad who both had 18 points. Djurg\u00e5rden who had started the season in the relegation zone managed to escape upwards in the table in the 11th week of games and were placed 10th after 20 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nDuring the last ten rounds of the league Malm\u00f6 FF, Helsingborg, IFK G\u00f6teborg and AIK continued to battle for the title. The most important developments happened in the 24th and 25th round when IFK G\u00f6teborg first defeated AIK at home and in the next week Malm\u00f6 FF proceeded to win against Helsingborg away. Malm\u00f6 had also defeated IFK G\u00f6teborg at home in the 21st round. At this point Malm\u00f6 was one point ahead of IFK G\u00f6teborg, six points ahead of Helsingborg and eight points ahead of AIK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nAlthough it seemed obvious that Malm\u00f6 FF and IFK G\u00f6teborg were the only title contender left at this point, AIK would continue to chase the two teams while Helsingborg would continue to drop. In the other end of the table Syrianska was confirmed for relegation after a loss against fellow relegation competitor Brommapojkarna in the 26th round. \u00d6sters IF was dragged into the relegation battle as Brommapojkarna rose up the table. In the last round Halmstad drew against Brommapojkarna to confirm the relegation of \u00d6ster, Halmstad qualified for the relegation play-offs against GIF Sundsvall who finished third in 2013 Superettan and Brommapojkarna managed to stay in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nBoth Malm\u00f6 FF and IFK G\u00f6teborg lost their matches in the 27th round while Helsingborg and AIK won their matches, making the title race live into the last rounds. However, as Malm\u00f6 FF still held the lead they had a chance to secure the title with two wins in the last three rounds. After winning at home against Brommapojkarna in the 28th round after a late goal Malm\u00f6 travelled to reigning champions Elfsborg in Bor\u00e5s to clinch the title in the 29th round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nUp until this point AIK had continued to win while Helsingborg and IFK G\u00f6teborg had staggered making AIK the only title contender left. It was highly uncertain if the match in Bor\u00e5s would be played as the St Jude storm had made weather conditions in the south west of Sweden unfit for football. However the match was played and Malm\u00f6 FF won the match and thus the league title with a 2\u20130 result after two goals by Guillermo Molins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nThis result also confirmed AIK as runners-up and the last round of the league would only determine which of IFK G\u00f6teborg, Helsingborg and Kalmar FF would take the third and final European qualifier position in the table. IFK G\u00f6teborg managed to finished third by winning for the first time in five rounds. Kalmar passed Helsingborg in the last round to claim the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Season overview\nReigning champions Elfsborg finished sixth and BK H\u00e4cken, previously one of the favourites for the title prior to the season, finished 10th. Helsingborgs Imad Khalili, who had belonged to IFK Norrk\u00f6ping for half of the season, became top scorer with 15 goals as he scored on a penalty in the 90th minute of the last match. The favourite to become top scorer prior to the season, Djurg\u00e5rdens Erton Fejzullahu, scored seven goals. Malm\u00f6 FF's Magnus Eriksson made the most assists with 14, Eriksson also made the most points with 25, this included 11 goals and 14 assists. BK H\u00e4cken's Martin Ericsson, who was the favourite prior to the season to make the most assists, finished the season with four assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Summary, Allsvenskans stora pris\nFor the first time in the league's history, the broadcaster of Allsvenskan, C More Entertainment, hosted an award ceremony where they presented seven awards and two special awards to the players and staff of the 16 Allsvenskan clubs, the award ceremony was held on 8 November 2013. Usually some of the awards from the annual \"Fotbollsgalan\" hosted by the Swedish Football Association included Allsvenskan players. \"Fotbollsgalan\" also introduced an \"Allsvenskan player of the year\" award in recent years, however that award will no longer be awarded due to the introduction of Allsvenskans stora pris. The nominations for the 2013 season were officially announced on 6 November 2013. Nominees are displayed below, the winners are marked in bold text.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Teams\nA total of sixteen teams contested the league, including thirteen sides from the 2012 season and three promoted teams from the 2012 Superettan. One of the two promoted teams for the 2012 season managed to stay in the league, \u00c5tvidabergs FF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Teams\n\u00d6rebro SK and GAIS were relegated at the end of the 2012 season after finishing in the bottom two places of the table. They were replaced by 2012 Superettan champions \u00d6sters IF and runners-up IF Brommapojkarna. \u00d6ster returned to Allsvenskan after five seasons after their relegation in 2006, two which were spent in the third tier. Brommapojkarna participated in their fourth Allsvenskan season, they last played in Allsvenskan during the 2010 season. This was notably the first time Brommapojkarna were promoted directly without play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Teams\nGIF Sundsvall as 14th-placed team lost their Allsvenskan spot after losing to third-placed Superettan team Halmstads BK 6\u20134 on aggregate in a relegation/promotion playoff. This was the first time since 2008 that the Superettan team beat the Allsvenskan team and only the fourth time since the play-offs between Allsvenskan and Superettan was introduced in 2000. Halmstad made their Allsvenskan return after only one season in Superettan, having been relegated at the end of the 2011 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Suspended matches\nThe 2013 Allsvenskan season encountered one incident involving thrown items and supporter violence, with that match needing to be suspended. This was the first time an Allsvenskan match was suspended since the troublesome 2011 Allsvenskan season when three matches had to be suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Suspended matches, Djurg\u00e5rdens IF vs. Mj\u00e4llby AIF\nThe match on 8 April 2013 at Stockholms Stadion between Djurg\u00e5rdens IF and Mj\u00e4llby AIF was suspended after 37 minutes of play, after Mj\u00e4llby had scored the first goal of the match. Following the goal, several supporters started throwing items on the pitch. Mj\u00e4llby defender Gbenga Arokoyo was hit in the stomach by a pear thrown by a supporter while celebrating Mj\u00e4llby's goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 67], "content_span": [68, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, Suspended matches, Djurg\u00e5rdens IF vs. Mj\u00e4llby AIF\nOn 12 April 2013 the Swedish Football Association (SvFF) announced that the match would continue at a later date and that play would resume at the specific minute and with the standing result when the original match was suspended. No attendance would have been allowed. Djurg\u00e5rden was also given a 15,000 SEK fine. Mj\u00e4llby filed an appeal for a 3\u20130 fixed result in their favour on 26 April 2013, and on 7 May 2013 the SvFF decided to award Mj\u00e4llby a 3\u20130 fixed-result victory for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 67], "content_span": [68, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231714-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Allsvenskan, League table, Positions by round\nNote: Some matches were played out of phase with the corresponding round, positions were corrected in hindsight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231715-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Alsace single territorial collectivity referendum\nThe Alsace single territorial collectivity referendum (French: r\u00e9f\u00e9rendum sur la Collectivit\u00e9 territoriale d'Alsace) was a referendum held on Sunday, 7 April 2013 in Alsace, France, which aimed at the creation of the single territorial collectivity of Alsace through the merging of the regional council of Alsace and the departmental councils of Bas-Rhin and Haut-Rhin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231715-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Alsace single territorial collectivity referendum\nEven though there was a 57.65% majority of \"Yes\" votes, the project was not approved: indeed, the \"Yes\" side needed to win in both departments (and at least 50% overall) with at least a 25% share of the vote from eligible voters (188,027 votes in Bas-Rhin and 130,439 votes in Haut-Rhin). The project was rejected by 55.74% of the voters in Haut-Rhin, whereas the \"Yes\" side won only a 22.90% share from eligible voters in Bas-Rhin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231715-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Alsace single territorial collectivity referendum, Opinions, Political parties\nNB: These are the opinions expressed by the national boards of each party, even if there might be different opinions inside the parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 83], "content_span": [84, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231716-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 America East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 America East Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22\u201326. The top four regular season finishers of the league's six teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at Edward A. LeLacheur Park in Lowell, Massachusetts. This is the first year that the event was held at a pre-determined neutral site since 2001. UMass Lowell, which would join the conference following the season and was a tenant of the park, served as the host of the tournament. Second-seeded Binghamton defeated first-seeded Maine in the championship game, which was played at Rhode Island's Bill Beck Field due to scheduling issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231716-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 America East Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top four finishers from the regular season were seeded one through four based on conference winning percentage only. The teams played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231717-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 America East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 America East Men's Basketball Tournament began on March 9 and concluded with the championship game on March 16. The quarterfinals and semifinals were played on March 9 and 10 at SEFCU Arena in Albany, NY, while the 2013 championship game was held on March 16 at the home of the highest remaining seed. The winner earned an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231717-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 America East Men's Basketball Tournament\nAlthough the conference had nine members, only eight participated in that year's tournament. Boston University, which left the America East after the season to join the Patriot League, had been barred from conference postseason play. America East bylaws allowed the conference to prevent a departing member from participating in its postseason tournaments, and the America East chose to enforce this rule against Boston University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231718-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 America East Men's Lacrosse Tournament\nThe 2013 America East Men's Lacrosse Tournament was the 14 edition of the America East Conference Men's Lacrosse Tournament and took place from May 2 to May 4 at Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium in Stony Brook, New York. The winner of the tournament received the America East Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship. Four teams from the America East conference will compete in the single elimination tournament. The seeds were based upon the teams' regular season conference record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231718-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 America East Men's Lacrosse Tournament, Standings\nOnly the top four teams in the America East conference advanced to the America East Conference Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup\nThe 34th America's Cup was a series of yacht races held on San Francisco Bay, in September 2013. The series was contested between the defender Oracle Team USA representing the Golden Gate Yacht Club, and the challenger Emirates Team New Zealand representing the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron. Oracle Team USA defended the America's Cup by a score of 9 to 8, after winning eight consecutive races from Race 12 onwards. Team New Zealand won the right to challenge for the cup by winning the 2013 Louis Vuitton Cup. The 34th America's Cup's race sequence was the longest ever, by both number of days and races, and the first since the 25th America's Cup to feature both teams in a match point situation. For the first time since 1995, the format changed to the best-of-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Background\nThe Golden Gate Yacht Club defeated Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 Nautique de Gen\u00e8ve in the 2010 America's Cup to become the Defenders of the America's Cup. The first Challenger of Record for the 34th Cup was Club Nautico di Roma, and a joint press conference was held on May 6, 2010 to plan for the event. The planning process was to include definition of new rules, an independent management team, definition of a new class of boats created in conjunction with all teams, regular racing in multiple venues and provision for increased television and online coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol\nThe Protocol for the 34th America's Cup was published on September 13, 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol, Boats\nTwo new classes of boat were announced. AC72 wing-sail catamarans are being used for the America's Cup races and the AC45 class, a scaled-down one-design version of the AC72, was used for the preliminary training and racing until boats built to the AC72 rules became available. The amended AC72 Class Rule version 1.1 was published on February 22, 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol, Boats\nThe AC72 can reach speeds averaging about 30 knots (56\u00a0km/h; 35\u00a0mph) with peaks over 40 knots (74\u00a0km/h; 46\u00a0mph); that speed can be as much as 1.8 to slightly over twice the actual wind speed. This is significantly faster than the previous ACC boats that reached speeds of 11 to 13 knots (20 to 24\u00a0km/h; 13 to 15\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol, America's Cup World Series\nIn order to increase global awareness, and hence attract sponsors for the teams, an America's Cup World Series was held over the 2011\u201312 and 2012\u201313 seasons. The winner of each annual series was declared the America's Cup World Series Champion for that season. There were three regattas in 2011, five in 2012, and two in 2013. Each regatta lasted for one week and had approximately 6 days of racing, including official practice. Each AC World Series regatta was a combination of match and fleet racing. AC45 one-design catamarans were used for each World Series regatta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol, Cost reduction\nOfficials adopted rules for the 2013 America's Cup to reduce costs and thereby attract more challengers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol, Cost reduction\nDespite these measures, the cost of mounting a competitive challenge likely exceeds US$100 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol, Youth America's Cup\nIn addition to using the AC45 catamarans for the initial world series races, they are used in the nationality-based 'Youth America's Cup' (YAC). The smaller scaled down AC45 version of the AC72 with similar characteristics to the AC72 enables younger competition sailors to master the techniques used to sail this style of catamaran before they progress to the AC72 boats. The YAC began in 2013, when both first and second places were taken by New Zealand entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Protocol, Youth America's Cup\nThe winning team included Peter Burling, Blair Tuke, Jono Spurdle, Sam Meech, Andy Maloney, Jason Saunders and Guy Endean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Venue\nOn July 8, 2010, Oracle Team USA announced that San Francisco was \"the only city in the USA under consideration to host the 34th America's Cup\u201d match. At the time, KGO-TV and Gazzetta dello Sport, an Italian sports newspaper, reported that Rome-Fiumicino, Italy was challenging San Francisco to host the event. Oracle Team USA confirmed that San Diego, Newport and Long Beach were considered earlier as possible venues for this event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Venue\nA key parameter in deciding the venue was reliability of the wind and weather patterns so that pre-published television schedules would be virtually guaranteed to show racing rather than suffering endless postponements which was a significant problem for TV audiences watching the 2010 America's Cup. In early December 2010, BMW Oracle Racing became concerned that a full and final agreement with San Francisco would not be completed in time to comply with the requirement to announce the location of the cup venue on December 31, 2010. As a result, negotiations were activated with Newport, Rhode Island, as a potential venue for the cup. However, on December 31 San Francisco was officially awarded the right to host the 2013 America's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Teams\nInitially, fourteen yacht clubs submitted notices of entry within the deadline, but two were declined and ten withdrew. Club Nautico di Roma was originally named as the Challenger of Record, but after their team Mascalzone Latino withdrew, the Challenger of Record became the Royal Swedish Yacht Club, sponsoring Artemis Racing. Other notable teams that withdrew included former Cup holder Alinghi and the Energy Team from Yacht Club de France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Teams\nOn August 2, 2012, the America's Cup Event Authority announced that four challenging teams would compete for the right to challenge Oracle Team USA, the only team that represented the defending Golden Gate Yacht Club. These teams were Artemis Racing (the Challenger of Record) representing Kungliga Svenska Segels\u00e4llskapet, Emirates Team New Zealand representing the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron, Luna Rossa Challenge representing Circolo della Vela Sicilia and the White Tiger Challenge representing Sail Korea Yacht Club. Luna Rossa, a late entry, formed a partnership with Team New Zealand where they would share design and testing information. Following Sail Korea's withdrawal in March 2013, the number of challengers dropped to three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Course\nThe course for the 34th America's Cup was specially designed to take advantage of the San Francisco Bay, to bring the racing within easy viewing of the shore for the first time. The starting area was furthest away from the shore, close to the Golden Gate Bridge. The boats were only allowed to enter the starting box two minutes before the usage of the starting gun. The boat entering on port tack was allowed to enter ten seconds before the starboard tack boat. This is to reduce the danger of having two boats travelling at up to 40 knots (74\u00a0km/h; 46\u00a0mph) heading towards each other into the starting area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Course\nThe length of the course varies, but is around 10 nautical miles (19\u00a0km; 12\u00a0mi) and generally takes about 25 minutes to complete. During the 2013 Louis Vuitton Cup on the same course, some races were raced with an extra lap around the leeward and windward gates. This seven leg course is around 16 nautical miles (30\u00a0km; 18\u00a0mi), taking approximately 45 minutes to sail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Course\nThe racecourse is delineated by a boundary. Going outside of the boundary draws a penalty which is indicated by blue lights on board the boats. The green lights on board the boats will flash whenever the boat is within three boatlengths of the boundary, or a mark. Whichever boat enters the three boatlength circle around a mark, they will generally have mark rights and be allowed to round without worrying about the other boat. The exception is when there is an overlap between the two boats. If an overlap exists, room must be made to ensure both boats round the mark safely. The maximum time for a race is 40 minutes after which the race is stopped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Course\nIf a penalty is awarded against a boat, a moving penalty line is calculated and placed two boat lengths behind them, advancing on a direct heading to the mark or the wind (depending which leg). The penalised boat must slow their Velocity Made Good such that their boat falls behind the penalty line. This is calculated in real time by computers, and indicated to the teams on the water via the lights and direct radio communication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Course\nAlcatraz Island is a unique part of the racecourse for this event. For the first week of the event, San Francisco Bay experienced flood tides during the America's Cup races. As water flowed into the bay, there was a cone close to the Island where the incoming tide was noticeably less than the rest of the racecourse. On the upwind leg, when boats have to sail against the flood tide, tactical use of this cone was crucial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Results, Challenger determination\nThe challenger was determined in the 2013 Louis Vuitton Cup challenger selection series. Emirates Team New Zealand won the Louis Vuitton Cup and therefore the right to challenge Oracle Team USA in the America's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Results, Cheating penalty\nAn international jury found Oracle Team USA guilty of cheating during the America's Cup World Series warmup event in 2012 when they placed bags of lead pellets in their 45-foot catamarans to add additional weight outside of allowed areas. Penalties imposed included expelling three team members, a $250,000 fine, and a one-point penalty for each of the first two races of the Match in which they would otherwise score a point. This last penalty meant that Oracle had to win 11 races to retain the trophy, while New Zealand only needed to win 9 races to lift the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Results, Cup matches\nThe 34th America's Cup was held between challenger Team New Zealand and defender Oracle Team USA on a five-leg course on San Francisco Bay. One point was awarded for winning a race, and a total of nine points were needed to win the cup. Due to the two race penalty assessed on Oracle Team USA, they needed 11 wins to defend the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Results, Cup matches\n1 Oracle's victories in races 4 and 8 did not award points, due to the penalty imposed by the jury. 2 Oracle used their postponement card after race 5, canceling the second race scheduled for September 10. 3 With Team New Zealand leading during the third leg, the second race on September 14 was abandoned by the race committee due to the wind exceeding the allowed maximum. 4 Both races on September 17, and the second races on both September 18 and September 19, were postponed due to the wind exceeding the allowed maximum beyond a reasonable start time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Results, Cup matches\n5 With Team New Zealand well ahead in light winds near the end of the fourth leg, the first race on September 20 was abandoned by the race committee due to the race exceeding the 40-minute time limit. 6 Both races on September 21 were postponed by the race committee due to the wind direction not permitting a fair laying of the race course. 7 Due to the late start of race 16, a second race was not sailed on September 23 due to the 2:40pm cutoff time for racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 1: September 7\nThe 34th America's Cup began in stark contrast to the one-sided races that dominated the 2013 Louis Vuitton Cup. Team New Zealand, skippered by Dean Barker, led at the first mark, and held the lead for the second leg, which was the first leg to be facing downwind. Oracle Team USA was 4 seconds behind Team New Zealand at the bottom mark, and during the upwind third leg the lead changed several times. Team New Zealand led at the top mark by 25 seconds, and kept the lead until the finish line, winning by 36 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 1: September 7\nRace two began as the previous one ended, with Team New Zealand in front, despite the aggressive prestart by Oracle's skipper Jimmy Spithill. Team New Zealand led the whole race, and completed the victory by 52 seconds to lead 0\u20132 in the overall scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 2: September 8\nOracle Team USA had better luck in the initial stages of Race three, as Spithill luffed Team New Zealand at the reach mark to successfully draw a penalty. Oracle held the lead for the first downwind leg, and were 18 seconds to the good heading into the upwind third leg. The pivotal moment of the race occurred when Barker brought the New Zealand boat back on port tack within three boat lengths of the boundary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 2: September 8\nOracle was forced to tack away due to the boundary rights, even though they were on starboard, which would have otherwise have had right of way. The 29 second lead at the top mark was held by Team New Zealand all the way to the finish. They ultimately crossed the finish line 28 seconds ahead of Oracle, making the scoreline 0\u20133 to Team New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 2: September 8\nRace four again started well for Oracle, leading around the reach mark by 6 seconds. Although Barker pushed hard for the whole race, Spithill was able to hold off Team New Zealand, resulting in a finish 8 seconds ahead of Barker. Due to the penalty imposed by the International Jury, Oracle did not score a point, leaving the New Zealand remaining 3 points ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 63], "content_span": [64, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 3: September 10\nOracle's defeat in race five by one minute and five seconds was so emphatic that the Americans played their one and only Postponement Card to call off the scheduled second race. Team New Zealand had once again been behind from the start all the way to the bottom of the race course. Once heading back upwind however, the New Zealand boat was noticeably faster and gained the lead with ease. A top mark delta of 1:17 effectively ended the race, and gave Spithill plenty of time to consider his options. The score at the end of the day was 0\u20134, to Team New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 4: September 12\nDay four opened with the news that Oracle had changed their tactician. John Kostecki, who had raced on San Francisco Bay for decades, was dropped, and Sir Ben Ainslie, the skipper of Oracle's backup boat was brought on in his place. Another change was the noticeably lighter winds compared to the earlier days of racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 4: September 12\nRace six followed a familiar refrain, with Oracle ahead at the start and holding that lead to the bottom of the downwind leg. After rounding the mark 12 seconds behind, Team New Zealand once again took over sailing into the wind. The highest number of tacks seen thus far was unable to prevent Team New Zealand from gaining 55 seconds during the third leg, and the 44 second lead at the top mark was extended to 47 seconds at the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 4: September 12\nTeam New Zealand led from start to finish in Race 7. After a run of being behind at the start, Barker was strong in the windward position off the line and was able to beat Oracle Team USA by a substantial amount at the reach mark. Along with another substantial gain during the third leg, Oracle Team USA could not counter Team New Zealand's progress and finished a 1:06 behind. Team New Zealand closed the day in a dominant position of 0\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 5: September 14\nRace eight brought Team New Zealand to the brink of disaster. Leading from the start to midway up the third leg, Team New Zealand was tacking back to starboard to once again cover Oracle. However, a lack of hydraulic power at a crucial moment during the turn meant that the large wingsail did not move in time. The boat's starboard hull rose out of the water and Aotearoa, Team New Zealand's boat, came within a degree of capsizing. To add insult to injury, Barker was penalised for failing to give way to Oracle, who was on starboard tack at the time. The New Zealand boat followed Spithill to finish 52 seconds behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 5: September 14\nOracle's victory completed the penalty imposed by the International Jury, allowing them to accrue points for any subsequent victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 5: September 14\nTeam New Zealand were ahead during the third leg of the day's second race, but it was abandoned by the Race Committee due to the wind exceeding the 22.6-knot (41.9\u00a0km/h; 26.0\u00a0mph) allowable maximum (23 knots (43\u00a0km/h; 26\u00a0mph) minus the 0.4 knots (0.74\u00a0km/h; 0.46\u00a0mph) tide).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 6: September 15\nRace nine showed Oracle Team USA at their best. Spithill again won the start, and extended the lead at every mark including for the first time, a notable gain against the Kiwi boat on the upwind leg. Recording consecutive victories for the first time allowed Oracle to obtain a point, with the score at 1\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 6: September 15\nTeam New Zealand won race ten by 16 seconds, in what was widely reported as one of the most exciting America's Cup races of all time. Barker looked to have been left behind by Spithill at the startline, but just managed to hold an overlap as the AC72s entered the three boat length circle at the reach mark. Team New Zealand took the 3 second lead, and increased it to 11 seconds at the second mark. Oracle again showed their new competitiveness during the upwind beat, and the lead changed three times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 6: September 15\nAs the boats approached the top mark on split tacks, Barker slowed the boat, and then aimed down to pass under Oracle at speed. The top mark split was only 1 second as Oracle rounded in front of the shore, and Aotearoa rounded the other mark. With the race still too close to call during the downwind leg, Spithill made the call to dip behind Team New Zealand rather than jibe. The gap almost instantly became 100 metres. Barker was able to hold this lead to the finish to take the series to 1\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 6: September 15\nIn the post race press conference Barker said \u201cIf you didn\u2019t enjoy today\u2019s racing you should probably watch another sport.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 7: September 17\nHigh winds postponed racing on day seven. Both teams were keen to race, and headed out to the starting area. However the start time for the first race was pushed back several times due to the 20.1-knot (37.2\u00a0km/h; 23.1\u00a0mph) wind limit, and with the wind continuing to increase, at 1:31 pm the Race Committee made the postponement official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 8: September 18\nTeam New Zealand led all the way to win race eleven by 15 seconds, to move to match point in the race for the Cup. During the pre-start, Barker maneuvered in front of Spithill and then delayed both boats from crossing the start line until well after the gun had gone. Oracle performed well on the upwind beat, but Team New Zealand covered well, and the boats rounded opposite marks 17 seconds apart. At the final mark, Barker kept Aotearoa between Oracle and the mark, and the rounding was well below the usual speed. Team New Zealand were able to accelerate away leaving Oracle almost stationary in the water on the sprint to the finish line, taking the score to 1\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 8: September 18\nThe second race of the day suffered a 15-minute wind delay postponement. The postponement came at the same as the boats hit the start line. Barker had perfected a time on distance sprint to the line, to obtain a lead on the way to the reach mark. The boats made their way back to the starting area, but the wind and the strong outgoing tide combined to confirm the postponement of racing for the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 9: September 19\nBarker was aggressive in the pre-start phase of the first race of Day 9. It did not pay off, and Spithill was able to get into a position where Team New Zealand was forced to keep clear. From that lead off the start line, Oracle led the whole race to win race twelve by 31 seconds. During the upwind leg, Oracle's performance was excellent. They were able to sail on their foils at speeds approaching 32 knots (59\u00a0km/h). Oracle gained their second point to take the score to 2\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 9: September 19\nThe start time for the second race of the day was pushed back several times due to the wind exceeding the allowed limit. At one point the teams were able to enter the starting box, but the wind then exceeded the limit again. Racing was then postponed for the day, allowing Oracle to keep alert for another day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 10: September 20\nDay ten brought the lightest winds seen in the 34th America's Cup. The start of the first race was pushed back by five minutes, due to the need to shift one of the marks on the start line. Oracle had the better start in the 8-knot (15\u00a0km/h; 9.2\u00a0mph) winds, and luffed Team New Zealand at the reach mark. The first downward leg was very different from the rest of the racing, as neither boat was able to sail on its foils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 10: September 20\nAotearoa appeared to be the stronger boat in the light breeze, and rounded the leeward gate 1:42 ahead of the Americans. The New Zealand boat continued to extend their lead during the third leg and the main concern turned to whether they would be able to cross the finish line within the 40 minute race limit. Unfortunately for them, despite being ahead by more than 1,000 metres in winds of between 7 and 11 knots (13 and 20\u00a0km/h; 8.1 and 12.7\u00a0mph) near the end of the fourth leg, with 90% of the race complete, the time expired forcing the abandonment of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 10: September 20\nThe resail of race thirteen began at 2:33pm in 12 knots (22\u00a0km/h; 14\u00a0mph) of wind. Spithill attempted to hook Barker during the pre start to gain advantage, but Barker managed to prevent Oracle from gaining the overlap. Team New Zealand led over the line, and took a 3-second lead around the reach mark. The pivotal moment of the race came towards the end of the second leg. Team New Zealand were slightly ahead and tried to cross in front of Oracle who had the starboard tack advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 10: September 20\nSpithill had to evade the Kiwi boat, and gained a penalty for the infraction. With the boats still close heading into the leeward gate, Barker fluffed his lines, and Aotearoa ended up being forced to jibe twice in quick succession. Oracle sped away to begin the third leg leaving the Kiwis almost non-moving. That effectively caused the result the race, and Oracle confirmed their third point by 1:24 at the finish. The New Zealanders' largest defeat of the Cup to date brought the score to 3\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 11: September 21\nIt had rained earlier in the day, with wind from the south, about 90 degrees from the desirable direction, at the time day eleven racing was scheduled to be undertaken. The race committee pushed the start back several times, hoping that the wind would turn enough to allow racing. This did not happen by the start cut off time, and weather again forced postponement of the day's racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 12: September 22\nRacing on the 22nd of September brought the America's Cup into its third week, equalling the previous longest regatta in Cup history, the 31st America's Cup. A whale was also spotted in San Francisco Bay, bringing enough of a concern that it was tracked to ensure it would not affect racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 12: September 22\nRace fourteen was another start-to-end win by Oracle. Starting in the leeward position, Spithill again luffed Barker hard substantially past the reach mark. This set up a strong lead for the first downwind beat. On the upwind leg Team New Zealand were able to close the lead, and at one point had to dip under the American boat. However, they could not utilise the advantage to enough effect, and Oracle led well around the top mark. Team New Zealand once again closed the lead about halfway down the fourth leg, but could not make the pass. Oracle won by 23 seconds, to bring the score to 4\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 12: September 22\nTeam New Zealand led off the line for race fifteen, but the leeward position of the Oracle Team USA boat allowed them to round the reach mark first. A huge downwind leg from the American boat saw them round the leeward gate 1 minute ahead of Team New Zealand. Team New Zealand did not give up, and were able to cut Oracle's lead in half by the windward gate, but were unable to make up the rest of the gap. Oracle had their best day in the race yet, winning both races to bring the score to 5-8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 13: September 23\nThe start of race sixteen was delayed for 30 minutes while the race committee waited for the wind to increase. Emirates Team New Zealand took the leeward position at the start line but Oracle Team USA was able to sail on their foils, and sailed over on top of the New Zealand boat to lead by five seconds at the reach mark. At the second mark, the New Zealand team were 13 seconds behind Oracle and after a tacking duel upwind to the third mark, Oracle was able to obtain the wind advantage for the downwind leg. Oracle sailed conservatively downwind gaining a 21-second lead for the fourth mark, which they extended to 33 seconds by finish line. The score was now 6\u20138. It was Oracle's 5th straight win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 13: September 23\nThe earlier delay meant no second race for the day, as it would have exceeded the cutoff time of 2:40pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 14: September 24\nRace seventeen saw two penalties at the start against Emirates Team New Zealand. During the prestart, Dean Barker made his move too early, allowing Spithill to hook Barker. Oracle then took full advantage of their windward-leeward right of way, forcing Barker to attempt to stay out of the way. Due to the extremely low boat speed at the time, Team New Zealand was unable to avoid the American boat, and there was contact between the two AC72s as a second penalty was awarded against the New Zealand boat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 14: September 24\nBy the time the penalties had been completed, Oracle had accelerated away to find themselves ahead by 18 seconds at the reach mark. Oracle built on this to obtain a 29-second lead to leeward gate, although this was trimmed to 19 seconds at the end of the third leg. Oracle went on to win by 27 seconds and cut Team New Zealand's lead to 7\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 14: September 24\n\"We're not going to stop--we're going to keep going all the way to the end\", said Spithill. \"We really want this. You can sense it on board\". Barker called this defeat \"an absolute shocker\" as he ended in \"a really dead spot\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 14: September 24\nIn race eighteen the New Zealand boat led at the start and up to the first mark. They set the speed record of the series, reaching 47.57 knots (24\u00a0m/s; 88\u00a0km/h; 55\u00a0mph) as they rounded the mark, to lead by 5 seconds. They kept the lead during the first downwind run, but Oracle took the lead at the first crossing on the upwind leg, after Team New Zealand made a poor tack. Team New Zealand had starboard tack advantage and the lead at the time, but did not properly cover Oracle. The American boat was sailing on their foils, and was able to sail past Team New Zealand without much difficulty. Oracle went on to lead by 57 seconds at the windward gate and kept the lead for the rest of race, winning by 54 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 14: September 24\nThis result tied the series 8\u20138 and forced a winner-take-all race. Spithill called this win \"very impressive\" and said, \"It gives us a lot of confidence going into tomorrow\", saying that Wednesday will be \"the most exciting day in the history of our lives. We wouldn't want to be anywhere else\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 15: September 25\nThe final day of the 34th America's Cup brought only the third winner-takes-all match in Cup history (previous such matches had occurred in 1920 and 1983). Barker and Spithill had also both moved into the top 5 all time America's Cup skippers during this regatta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 15: September 25\nTeam New Zealand had port entry advantage, and were able to convert this into the leeward position at the start line and a lead around the reach mark. Oracle had a moment where both bows dipped into the water, slowing them to open some separation between the two boats. The first downwind leg saw both boats foiling at around 40 knots (74\u00a0km/h; 46\u00a0mph), at times well within 100 metres (330\u00a0ft) of each other. Team New Zealand took the lead into the upwind third leg, but were unable to hold it. Oracle once again showed their upwind foiling ability and were able to pass with ease. Team New Zealand and Barker refused to give up, but in the absence of any mistakes from Oracle, they confirmed their victory 9\u20138 by 44 seconds on the line to the cheers of the crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Progress of the regatta, Day 15: September 25\nAt the press conference following the race, Barker said his team was \"[feeling] pretty smashed, they are feeling it pretty bad\", whilst Spithill said Team New Zealand were a \"tough team\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 65], "content_span": [66, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Safety issues concerning the AC72\nThe power and speed of the catamarans used in the America's Cup has attracted criticism since the AC72 rule was announced. Oracle's first AC72 pitch-poled in October 2012 after only eight days of sailing. Though there were no injuries to the crew, the yacht was heavily damaged as the tide pulled it outside the bay into the Pacific Ocean. On May 9, 2013, Swedish team Artemis' first AC72 yacht flipped, resulting in the death of Olympic gold medalist Andrew James Simpson. Stephen Barclay, CEO of the America's Cup Event Authority, promised a full inquiry into the events leading to Simpson's death and appointed a review committee to investigate both the Oracle and Artemis accidents, and to make recommendations for increasing the safety of the sailors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Broadcasting\nThe NBC Sports Group acquired the American television broadcast rights in 2012, making it the first time the race would be on network TV since 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Broadcasting\nThe first two races aired on NBC with subsequent races airing live on NBC Sports Network. The races were also broadcast live and available on demand on the official America's Cup YouTube channel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Broadcasting\nTo enhance television coverage, America's Cup officials developed LiveLine, a system that inserts graphics into live shots from helicopters similar to the first down line graphics system used on American football broadcasts. LiveLine would be used to show distance between boats, boat speed, course boundaries and marks, boat paths, wind speed and ocean current direction. Race yachts carried military grade GPS tracking and telemetry systems to enhance the accuracy of measurements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, Broadcasting\nThe system, developed by Sportvision, Inc., the America's Cup Event Authority, and NBC Sports Network, won the George Wensel Outstanding Technical Achievement Award at the 33rd Sports Emmy Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, 35th America's Cup\nOnly moments after the win by Oracle Team USA, Hamilton Island Yacht Club in Queensland, Australia issued a challenge for the 2017 America's Cup. The challenge was accepted by the Golden Gate Yacht Club, which remained defender. Australian billionaire Bob Oatley was said to be financially backing the Hamilton Island Yacht Club as the Challenger of Record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231719-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 America's Cup, 35th America's Cup\nHIYC withdrew its challenge on 18 July 2014 and in November 2014 it was announced that Bermuda would host the 2017 America's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231720-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was the first postseason tournament in men's soccer for the American Athletic Conference (The American) following the 2013 split of the original Big East Conference along football lines. The \"Big East\" name was purchased by the seven non-FBS football schools of the original conference, while the Big East charter was retained by the FBS schools now operating as The American. Including the history of the original Big East, which is jointly claimed by both successor conferences, this was The American's 18th men's soccer tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231720-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe tournament decided the American Athletic Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. Held at the Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas, the South Florida Bulls won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season\nThe 2013 American Athletic Conference football season was the 23rd NCAA Division I FBS football season of the American Athletic Conference (The American). The season was the first after the breakup of the former Big East Conference, which lasted in its original form from its creation in 1979 until July 2013. The charter of the former Big East was retained by The American, henceforth the legal status as the 23rd season overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season\nUCF as The American's Champion earned the league's last automatic berth for a BCS Bowl Game. Following the 2013 college football season, the BCS (1998\u20132013) will be replaced by a four team playoff system. Starting in 2014, The American will lose its Automatic Qualifier (AQ) status, and fall into the \"Group of Five\" with Conference USA, the Mid-American Conference, Mountain West Conference, and the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season\nIn its first year, the conference consisted of 10 football members: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Houston, Louisville, Memphis, Rutgers, SMU, South Florida, Temple, and UCF. Conference members began regular-season play on August 29 when UCF hosted Akron. Conference play started on September 7 when Temple hosted Houston. The regular season concluded on December 7. The following match-ups were not seen in conference play in 2013: Cincinnati\u2013UCF, Connecticut\u2013Houston, Louisville\u2013SMU, Memphis\u2013Rutgers, and South Florida\u2013Temple. Louisville\u2013SMU and Memphis\u2013Rutgers will not be seen in any year in The American play as Louisville and Rutgers are leaving for the ACC and Big Ten, respectively, in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Previous season\nOn February 28, 2013, ESPN reported that the conference's seven schools that did not play FBS football, which had announced plans to leave the conference as a bloc no later than July 2015, had reached an agreement to leave in July 2013, and would keep the \"Big East\" name when they formed a new conference at that time. As a result, the football schools retained the original Big East charter and would operate under a new name in the 2013 football season. The new conference name was officially announced on April 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Previous season\nCincinnati, Louisville, Rutgers, and Syracuse were co-champions with identical 5\u20132 records. Louisville received the Big East BCS bid. As the Big East BCS representative, the Cardinals defeated Florida 33-23 in the 2013 Allstate Sugar Bowl. In other bowl games, Cincinnati defeated Duke 48-34 in the Belk Bowl 48-34 with interim coach Steve Stripling. Rutgers lost to Virginia Tech 13-10 in the Russell Athletic Bowl, while Syracuse in their final game as a Big East member defeated former Big East member West Virginia 38-14 in the Pinstripe Bowl. In Pittsburgh's final game as a Big East member, the Panthers lost to Ole Miss 38-17 in the BBVA Compass Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Preseason, Coaching changes\nThree teams have new head coaches for the 2013 season. Tommy Tuberville replaces Butch Jones at Cincinnati, Willie Taggart replaces Skip Holtz at South Florida and Matt Rhule has taken over for Steve Addazio at Temple.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Preseason, Preseason Poll\nThe 2013 American Athletic Conference Preseason Poll was announced at the 2013 American Athletic Conference Media Day in Newport, Rhode Island on July 30, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Bowl Games\nNote: The American Athletic Conference did not have enough bowl eligible teams to send a representative to the Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Players of the week\nFollowing each week of games, American Athletic Conference officials select the players of the week from the conference's teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, Conference awards\nThe following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the American Athletic Conference football coaches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 87], "content_span": [88, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, Conference awards\nWR - Deontay Greenbury HoustonWR - DeVante Parker, LouisvilleOT - Eric Lefeld, ^ CincinnatiOT - Jamon Brown, LouisvilleOG - Jordan McCray, UCFC - Jake Smith, LouisvilleTE - Blake Annen, CincinnatiTE - Tyler Kroft, RutgersQB - Blake Bortles, UCFRB - Storm Johnson, ^UCFRB - Paul James, RutgersK - Jake Elliot, MemphisRS - Ralph David Abernathy IV, CincinnatiRS - Demarcus Ayers, Houston", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 87], "content_span": [88, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, Conference awards\nDL - Jordan Stepp, CincinnatiDL - Marcus Smith, LouisvilleDL - Martin Ifedi, MemphisDL - Aaron Lynch, USFLB - Terrance Plummer, UCFLB - Yawin Smallwood, UConnLB - Tyler Matakevich, TempleCB - Jacoby Glenn, UCFCB - Charles Gaines, LouisvilleS - Calvin Pryor, LouisvilleS - Hakeem Smith, LouisvilleP - Tom Hornsey, Memphis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 87], "content_span": [88, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, Conference awards\nWR - Anthony McClung, CincinnatiWR - J.J. Worton, UCFWR - Jeremy Johnson, SMUOT - Chris Martin, UCFOT - DeAnthony Sims, HoustonOG - Sam Longo, CincinnatiOG - John Miller, LouisvilleC - Betim Bujari, RutgersQB - Teddy Bridgewater, LouisvilleTE - Mike McFarland, USFRB - William Stanbeck, UCFRB - Marcus Shaw, USFK - Shawn Moffitt, UCFRS - Janarion Grant, Rutgers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 87], "content_span": [88, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231721-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference football season, Awards and honors, Conference awards\nDL - Silverberry Mouhon, CincinnatiDL - Shamar Stephen, UConnDL - Lorenzo Mauldin, LouisvilleDL - Luke Sager, USFLB - Greg Blair, CincinnatiLB - Preston Brown, LouisvilleLB - DeDe Lattimore, USFCB - Deven Drane, CincinnatiCB - Zach McMillian, HoustonCB - Kenneth Acker, SMUS - Clayton Geathers, UCFP - Trevon Stewart, HoustonP - Richie Leone, Houston", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 87], "content_span": [88, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231722-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season is the 18th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference originally known as the Big East Conference. Following a period of turmoil and near-constant turnover of membership, culminating in a split into two leagues along football lines, the schools that sponsor FBS football sold the Big East name to the non-FBS schools, which began operating as the Big East Conference in July 2013. The FBS schools are operating under the original Big East charter with the new name of American Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231722-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Athletic Conference men's soccer season\nThis was the final season n the Big East/American for two member schools. Louisville and Rutgers will leave in 2014, respectively for the ACC and Big Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231723-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Express \u2013 TED Open\nThe 2013 American Express \u2013 TED Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Istanbul, Turkey between 9 and 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231723-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Express \u2013 TED Open, 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-00231723-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American Express \u2013 TED Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231724-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Express \u2013 TED Open \u2013 Doubles\nThe defending champions were Karol Beck and Luk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd decided not to participate. Jamie Delgado and Jordan Kerr won the title, defeating James Cluskey and Adri\u00e1n Men\u00e9ndez-Maceiras 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231725-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Express \u2013 TED Open \u2013 Singles\nDmitry Tursunov was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Mikhail Kukushkin won the title, defeating Illya Marchenko 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231726-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Indoor Football season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinker (talk | contribs) at 15:40, 18 January 2020 (remove unused closing center tag). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231726-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Indoor Football season\nThe 2013 American Indoor Football season was the eighth season of American Indoor Football (AIF). The Harrisburg Stampede defeated the Cape Fear Heroes 57-42 to win the 2013 AIF Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231727-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Monterey\nThe 2013 American Le Mans Series Monterey was an auto racing event held at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, near Monterey, California on May 9\u201311, 2013. The four-hour race was the third round of the 2013 American Le Mans Series season. Germans Klaus Graf and Lucas Luhr defended their 2012 Monterey win with overall victory for Muscle Milk Pickett Racing, while Luhr became the winningest driver in American Le Mans Series history. Scott Tucker and Marino Franchitti took P2 honors for Level 5 Motorsports, while Mike Gausch and Luis D\u00edaz won the PC category. Corvette Racing's Jan Magnussen and Antonio Garc\u00eda led GT and Henrique Cisneros, Jr. and Nick Tandy won in GTC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231727-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Monterey, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231727-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Monterey, Race, Race result\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of their class winner's distance are marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series\nThe 2013 American Le Mans Series was the fifteenth and final season of the International Motor Sports Association GT Championship being labeled as the American Le Mans Series, before merging up with the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series\nAs the IMSA and Grand-Am merger was announced on September 5, 2012, between NASCAR Holdings (Grand-Am's owner) and Panoz Motorsports, the 2013 season was the transition season as both series were now held under the NASCAR Holdings banner. As such, this is the 43rd season of the series dating back to the 1971 IMSA GT Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series\nIt began on March 16 with the 61st running of the 12 Hours of Sebring and ended with the 16th running of the Petit Le Mans on October 19. At the seventh round in Baltimore, Muscle Milk Pickett Racing successfully defended their 2012 Prototype One championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series, Calendar\nThe calendar was announced October 18, 2012. The race at the Circuit of the Americas near Austin, Texas, was previously announced in June 2012, and a combined event with the Rolex Sports Car Series at Road America was announced on September 28, 2012. The event at Mid-Ohio, a joint weekend with the IndyCar Series, was not renewed. The event at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca was initially scheduled on May 18. However, with this date conflicting with the 24 Hours N\u00fcrburgring, the series opted to move the event up one week to May 11. The event was also shortened from 6 hours to 4 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series, Championships\nPoints were awarded to the top ten cars and drivers which complete at least 70% of their class winner's distance. Teams with multiple entries only score the points of their highest finishing entry in each race. Drivers were required to drive a minimum of 45 minutes to earn points, except for the Long Beach event which required only 30 minutes. Drivers are required to complete a particular amount of the minimum number of laps in order to earn points. The number of laps vary depending on the course size.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series, Championships, Team championships\nTeams with full season entries are awarded points in the team championships. Teams which participated in a partial season or on a race-by-race basis are not included in these championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series, Championships, Team championships, PC standings\nAll teams utilize the Oreca FLM09 chassis with Chevrolet LS3 engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series, Championships, Team championships, GTC standings\nAll teams utilize variations of the Porsche 997 GT3 Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series, Championships, Driver championships\nDrivers who participated in races but failed to score points over the course of the season are not listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231728-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series, Championships, Driver championships, PC standings\nDrivers in the PC category are allowed to drive for more than one car during an event. If a driver is in each car for a minimum of two hours each, he is allowed to score the points from whichever car he chooses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231729-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series at Long Beach\nThe 2013 Tequila Patr\u00f3n American Le Mans Series at Long Beach was an auto race held on the Long Beach road course in Long Beach, California on April 20 and 21, 2013. The seventh running of the Long Beach event for the American Le Mans Series, this was the second round of the 2013 season. The race weekend was shared with the IndyCar Series, which ran the Grand Prix of Long Beach. Germans Klaus Graf and Lucas Luhr of Muscle Milk Pickett Racing won the race for the third year in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231729-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series at Long Beach\nThe PC category was led by Colin Braun and Jon Bennett of CORE Autosport, while Scott Sharp and Guy Cosmo's Extreme Speed Motorsports entry was victorious in the P2 class. The BMW Team RLL squad scored a one-two victory, led by Bill Auberlen and Maxime Martin; Henrique Cisneros, Jr. and Sean Edwards won the GTC class for NGT Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231729-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series at Long Beach, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231729-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American Le Mans Series at Long Beach, Race, Race result\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of their class winner's distance are marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series\nThe 2013 American League Championship Series was a best-of-seven playoff pitting the Boston Red Sox against the Detroit Tigers for the American League pennant and the right to play in the 2013 World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals. The Red Sox won the series 4 games to 2. The series was the 44th in league history, and was the first postseason meeting between the two teams. Fox aired all games in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series\nTo reach the 2013 ALCS, the Red Sox (East Division champions, 97\u201365) defeated the AL Wild Card Game-winning Tampa Bay Rays in the ALDS, 3 games to 1. The Tigers (Central Division champions, 93\u201369) defeated the AL West Champion Oakland Athletics in the ALDS, 3 games to 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series\nThe Red Sox would go on to defeat the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series, winning their eighth World Series championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nSaturday, October 12, 2013 \u2013 8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nFive Tiger pitchers (An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez, Al Alburquerque, Jos\u00e9 Veras, Drew Smyly and Joaqu\u00edn Benoit) combined to strike out 17 and hold the Red Sox hitless for 8+1\u20443 innings. Starter S\u00e1nchez struck out 12 and walked six through six shutout innings, but was lifted after throwing 116 pitches. Daniel Nava broke up the no-hitter with a one-out single in the ninth off Benoit. He was then lifted for a pinch-runner, former Tiger Quintin Berry, who stole second base with two outs but was stranded there when Xander Bogaerts popped to shortstop to end the game. Benoit lost the no-hitter, but he earned the save, and the Tigers held on to win 1\u20130. The only run of the game scored in the sixth when Jhonny Peralta, the only player with multiple hits in the game (three), drove in Miguel Cabrera with an RBI single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nSunday, October 13, 2013 \u2013 8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nTiger starters continued their mastery of Red Sox hitters, this time with Max Scherzer on the mound. Scherzer no-hit Boston through the first 5+2\u20443 innings, struck out 13, and allowed just one run on two hits overall, leaving the game after seven innings with a 5\u20131 lead. The Tigers got a run in the second inning, when V\u00edctor Mart\u00ednez doubled, went to third on a Jhonny Peralta single, and scored on a single by Alex Avila. In the top of the sixth, the wheels came off for Red Sox starter Clay Buchholz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nMiguel Cabrera hit a one-out home run over the left-field wall to start the scoring. Prince Fielder followed with a double off the left-field wall, then Mart\u00ednez hit his second double of the night to score Fielder. One out later, Alex Avila hit a two-run homer to right, making the score 5\u20130. Scherzer allowed his lone run in the bottom of the frame, when Dustin Pedroia doubled to drive in Shane Victorino. That ended a string of 23 consecutive scoreless innings by Tiger pitching, going back to Game 5 of the ALDS against Oakland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nTiger manager Jim Leyland used four relief pitchers in the bottom of the eighth inning, none of whom was very effective. Jos\u00e9 Veras allowed a one-out double to Will Middlebrooks, and Drew Smyly was brought in to face Jacoby Ellsbury, whom he promptly walked. Al Alburquerque struck out Victorino for the second out of the inning, but Pedroia followed with a single to load the bases. Leyland went to his closer, Joaqu\u00edn Benoit, to face David Ortiz. On a first-pitch changeup, Ortiz hit a grand slam to tie the game at 5\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0006-0003", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nTorii Hunter, in pursuing it to try to make the catch, flipped over the east side of the low Fenway Park bullpen wall at right field where the Nikon advertising sign was, as bullpen cop Steve Horgan raised his arms in celebration slightly behind him, while 2 other Red Sox catchers inside the bullpen had a shock on their faces on Hunter's injury. Hunter had injured himself while trying to make the play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0006-0004", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nOther teammates from both teams rushed inside the Red Sox bullpen including some teammates from the Tigers, while bullpen cop Steve Horgan held the bullpen door open for the teammates to check on him. Hunter later got up and reports that he is doing alright as he left the bullpen. Meanwhile, after Koji Uehara pitched a perfect ninth, Boston scored the winning run in the bottom of the frame. Jonny Gomes led off with an infield single-off reliever Rick Porcello, and advanced to second on a throwing error by Tiger shortstop Jos\u00e9 Iglesias. Porcello threw a wild pitch, allowing Gomes to reach third. Jarrod Saltalamacchia followed with a walk-off RBI single to left, giving the Red Sox a wild 6\u20135 comeback win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nTuesday, October 15, 2013 \u2013 4:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nIn the bottom of the second, an electrical problem sidelined the game for 17 minutes. However once the game resumed, Game 3 resembled Game 1, featuring outstanding pitching from both teams. Boston's John Lackey gave up four hits and no runs in 6+2\u20443 innings and struck out eight. Detroit's Justin Verlander, who had not yet allowed a run in the postseason, pitched 6+1\u20443 shutout innings before allowing a home run to left field off the bat of Mike Napoli. Verlander would exit after eight innings pitched, giving up four hits and striking out ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nBoston escaped a jam in the bottom of the eighth inning when a walk to Austin Jackson and a single by Torii Hunter put runners on first and third with one out. But Red Sox reliever Junichi Tazawa struck out slugger Miguel Cabrera, then Koji Uehara came on and struck out Prince Fielder on three pitches to end the threat. Uehara then completed the ninth inning to earn the save. For Cabrera, this was the first time in 33 career postseason games that he failed to reach base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nWednesday, October 16, 2013 \u2013 8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe Red Sox sent Jake Peavy to the mound looking to build a commanding 3\u20131 series lead. However, Peavy struggled in his only start of the series. After a scoreless first inning, Peavy gave up a leadoff single to V\u00edctor Mart\u00ednez to start the second inning. He then walked both Jhonny Peralta and Alex Avila to load the bases. After Omar Infante was robbed on a diving catch by right fielder Shane Victorino, Austin Jackson walked on four pitches to give the Tigers a 1\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nJos\u00e9 Iglesias then hit a potential double-play grounder to second, but Dustin Pedroia bobbled the ball and was only able to force Jackson at second, allowing Peralta to score. Torii Hunter then doubled to score Avila and Iglesias. Hunter would then score on a single to center field by Miguel Cabrera, making the score 5\u20130 after two innings. In the fourth inning, the Tigers chased Peavy from the game with a ground-rule double by Infante and an RBI single by Jackson. Brandon Workman then replaced Peavy on the mound. After Jackson stole second base, Iglesias sacrificed him to third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nOne out later, Cabrera singled to score Jackson and make the score 7\u20130. For the Tigers, Doug Fister scattered eight hits over six innings, striking out seven and giving up only one run on a series of hits in the sixth, capped by an RBI single from Jarrod Saltalamacchia. Shane Victorino and Jacoby Ellsbury would later plate runs of their own off the Tiger bullpen, but it was not enough and the Tigers took Game 4 by a score of 7\u20133 to even the series at two games apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nTiger leadoff hitter Austin Jackson, struggling with an .091 postseason batting average coming into the game (3\u2013for\u201333) was dropped to eighth in the batting order by manager Jim Leyland. He responded by reaching base four times (two hits and two walks) while driving in two runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nThursday, October 17, 2013 \u2013 8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nDetroit threatened early against Boston starter Jon Lester. With two on and two out, Jhonny Peralta singled to left field, but Jonny Gomes threw out Miguel Cabrera, who was attempting to score from second base. The Red Sox offense scored early against Tiger starter An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez, who had baffled them in Game 1. Mike Napoli led off the second inning with a massive home run that landed in the ivy well beyond the 420-foot (130\u00a0m) center field wall at Comerica Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nJonny Gomes then reached on a fielding error by third baseman Miguel Cabrera, and went to third on a one-out double by Xander Bogaerts. Gomes scored on a double by David Ross, making the score 2\u20130, though Bogaerts only reached third base after he went back to tag up at second. Jacoby Ellsbury then lined a ball off the glove of S\u00e1nchez, which trickled away for an infield single, allowing Bogaerts to score the third run of the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nRoss was then thrown out at the plate by Omar Infante, attempting to score on a ground ball to second by Shane Victorino. On the play, Ross collided with Tigers catcher Alex Avila, injuring Avila's knee. Avila would stay in the game for two more innings while apparently wincing as he moved about. He was eventually pinch hit for by backup catcher Brayan Pe\u00f1a. In the third inning, the Red Sox went up 4\u20130, when Napoli doubled, went to third on a ground out, and scored on a wild pitch by S\u00e1nchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0013-0003", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nAfter holding the Tigers scoreless for 4+2\u20443 innings, Lester allowed a two-out RBI single by Miguel Cabrera, scoring Austin Jackson from second. Lester then allowed two baserunners in the Tiger sixth before being pulled for reliever Junichi Tazawa. Pe\u00f1a then greeted Tazawa with first-pitch single that plated Victor Martinez, making the score 4\u20132. The Tigers closed the gap to 4\u20133 in the seventh, when Jos\u00e9 Iglesias scored on a double-play grounder by Cabrera. Boston closer Koji Uehara would enter with one out in the eighth inning, recording a perfect 1+2\u20443 innings, earning a save, and sending the Red Sox back home with a 3\u20132 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nSaturday, October 19, 2013 \u2013 8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nGame 6 was originally scheduled for the afternoon, but with the NLCS having ended the night before, MLB and Fox moved the game into primetime. The first pitch came at 8:07\u00a0p.m. EDT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nBoth starters, Max Scherzer and Clay Buchholz, were very strong in the early innings. After 4+1\u20442 scoreless innings, during which Dustin Pedroia missed a home run off the left field foul pole by inches in the third, Boston drew first blood against Scherzer. Xander Bogaerts smacked a two-out double off the Green Monster and scored on a single by Jacoby Ellsbury. Ellsbury, who had only been caught stealing four times out of 56 attempts during the regular season, then tried to swipe second but was thrown out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nBuchholz allowed Torii Hunter and Miguel Cabrera to reach base in the top of the sixth and was relieved by Franklin Morales. Morales did not record a single out, walking Prince Fielder and allowing a two-run single by V\u00edctor Mart\u00ednez to make the score 2\u20131. Brandon Workman then came in and induced a bizarre double play in which Martinez was tagged by Dustin Pedroia, followed by Fielder getting caught between third and home in a rundown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nJonny Gomes led off the seventh with a double and after a Stephen Drew strikeout and a walk by Bogaerts, Ellsbury hit a ground ball that popped out of the glove of Jos\u00e9 Iglesias for an error. That brought up Shane Victorino, who coming into this at bat was 2\u2013for\u201323 in the series. Victorino crushed an 0\u20132 Jos\u00e9 Veras curveball over the Green Monster for a grand slam and a 5\u20132 Red Sox lead. After Craig Breslow tossed a perfect eighth, Koji Uehara, who would receive MVP honors, earned the save by pitching a scoreless ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231730-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nWith the victory, the Red Sox won their third pennant in a span of ten years and set a Fall Classic rematch with the St. Louis Cardinals, whom they swept in 2004 to win their first World Series in 86 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series\nThe 2013 American League Division Series were two best-of-five-game series to determine the teams that would participate in the 2013 American League Championship Series. The three divisional winners (seeded 1-3 based on record) and a fourth team \u2014 the winner of a one-game Wild Card playoff \u2014 played in two series. TBS carried most of the games, with some on MLB Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series\nThis was the 2nd time the Rays and Red Sox have faced each other in the postseason. The only other time was the 2008 ALCS which was won by the Rays 4 games to 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series\nThis was the 4th time the Tigers and the A's have faced each other in the postseason. The Tigers and the A's faced each other in the 1972 ALCS (A's won 3\u20132), in the 2006 ALCS (Tigers won 4\u20130) and in the 2012 ALDS (Tigers won 3\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series\nThe Red Sox went on to defeat the Tigers in the ALCS, then win the 2013 World Series over the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 1\nIn Game 1, Jon Lester of the Red Sox pitched 7+2\u20443 innings, allowing home runs to Sean Rodriguez in the second and Ben Zobrist in the fourth. The only other hit he allowed was a one-out single to Delmon Young in the fourth. Trailing 2\u20130, the Red Sox' offense ignited in the bottom of the fourth inning off of Matt Moore. After a leadoff single and ground-rule double. Jonny Gomes tied the game with a one-out double to center field. One out later, Stephen Drew's single and Will Middlebrooks's double scored a run each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 1\nAfter Jacoby Ellsbury reached on a strike-three wild pitch, Shane Victorino capped the inning's scoring with an RBI single that put the Red Sox up 5\u20132. Next inning, after a one-out double and intentional walk, Jarrod Saltalamacchia's two-run double made it 7\u20132 Red Sox and knock Moore out of the game. Wesley Wright relieved Moore and after a strikeout and intentional walk, Ellsbury's RBI single made it 8\u20132 Red Sox. In the eighth, Ellsbury hit a leadoff single off of Jamey Wright, stole second and scored on Victorino's single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 1\nA single and walk loaded the bases before Mike Napoli walked to force in a run, Gomes hit into a double play to score another, and Saltalamacchia's RBI single capped the game's scoring at 12\u20132 Red Sox. Junichi Tazawa and Ryan Dempster provided effective relief pitching in the eighth and ninth to seal the Game 1 victory for the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 2\nGame 2 featured a match up between David Price, and John Lackey. In the first inning, Jacoby Ellsbury hit a blooper-single before stealing second and moving to third on a missed throw-out attempt. Dustin Pedroia got the sac-fly to bring him home. Ortiz, who had never hit a home run off Price, hit a home run into the bullpen to give the Red Sox an early 2\u20130 lead. The next inning, Tampa's Delmon Young hit a sacrifice fly of his own with two on to make it 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 2\nIn the third, back-to-back leadoff doubles by David Ross and Ellsbury made it 3\u20131 Red Sox. After a Shane Victorino single, Dustin Pedroia's RBI groundout made it 4\u20131 Red Sox. Next inning, Mike Napoli drew a leadoff walk and scored on Stephen Drew's two-out triple to make it 5\u20131 Red Sox. In the fifth, James Loney hit a two-run double to cut the lead to 5\u20133. In the bottom of the fifth, a Pedroia line drive double scored Ellsbury from first, who singled to lead off, to make it 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 2\nIn the sixth, Desmond Jennings hit a leadoff single, moved to second on a groundout and scored on Yunel Escobar's single to make it 6\u20134. In the bottom eighth David Ortiz hit a deep solo homer off of Price to make it 7\u20134. Koji Uehara pitched a perfect ninth for a save. Lackey allowed four runs while coming through in clutch situations to keep the Sox in the lead throughout the game. According to Joe Maddon after the game, Price did not pitch badly even though he gave up seven earned runs. During Price's post-game interview, he claimed it was a lucky win for the Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 3\n6:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 3\nDustin Pedroia started Game 3 with an RBI groundout off of Alex Cobb in the first which scored Jacoby Ellsbury after a single and hit-by-pitch. In the top of the fifth, an Ellsbury double and Shane Victorino single was followed by a wild pitch and RBI single by David Ortiz. In the bottom of the fifth, Evan Longoria hit a three-run home run off of Clay Buchholz to tie the game at three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 3\nThe Rays took the lead in the eighth on Delmon Young's bases loaded groundout off of Brandon Workman, the run charged to Franklin Morales, but the Red Sox tied the game in the ninth on Pedroia's groundout with runners on second and third off of Fernando Rodney. Tampa Bay's Jos\u00e9 Lobat\u00f3n hit a home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning off of Koji Uehara into the Rays Touch Tank to beat the Red Sox 5\u20134 and keep the series alive. This was the Rays first postseason win at home since Game 2 of the 2008 World Series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 4\n8:37\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 4\nCraig Breslow came out of the bullpen to send the Red Sox into the AL championship series for the first time in five years. Breslow relieved Red Sox starter Jake Peavy in the sixth inning and struck out his first four batters. The Rays struck first off of Peavy when Yunel Escobar hit a leadoff double in the sixth, moved to third on a groundout, and scored on David DeJesus's single, but in the seventh, the Red Sox got runners on first and third with two outs off of Jake McGee, who was relieved by Joel Peralta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Game 4\nA wild pitch to Shane Victorino scored a run before Victorino singled to score another. The Red Sox loaded the bases off of Fernando Rodney on two walks and a hit-by-pitch before Dustin Pedroia's sacrifice fly gave them an insurance run. Koji Uehara pitched a perfect bottom half for the save and with the series win, the Red Sox improved to 6\u20134 all-time in ALDS play; the Rays fell to 1\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Boston vs. Tampa Bay, Composite line score\n2013 ALDS (3\u20131): Boston Red Sox over Tampa Bay Rays", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 1\nBartolo Col\u00f3n surrendered three runs in the first inning. After a double by Austin Jackson, Colon hit Torii Hunter with a pitch and Miguel Cabrera followed with an RBI single that sent Hunter to third. Prince Fielder grounded into a double play, with Hunter scoring on the play. After a Victor Mart\u00ednez double, Alex Avila grounded a seeing-eye single to right, which gave Detroit an early 3\u20130 lead. Max Scherzer struck out 11 and gave up one hit through the first six innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 1\nIn the bottom of the seventh, Yoenis C\u00e9spedes hit a two-run home run to trim the Tigers lead to 3\u20132. Joaqu\u00edn Benoit got Josh Donaldson to pop out to first to end the eighth inning, and he then struck out the side in the ninth to close out the win. A's hitters fanned 16 times off three Tigers pitchers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 2\nGame 2 was a fierce pitching duel between both teams. Oakland Athletics rookie starter Sonny Gray matched Detroit Tigers veteran Justin Verlander with eight shutout innings and nine strikeouts. Verlander was dominant as well, with seven shutout innings and 11 strikeouts. Both teams' bullpens carried the game scoreless into the bottom of the ninth. A's leadoff batter Yoenis C\u00e9spedes started the inning with a ground ball single into left field. Seth Smith followed up with a ground ball single into right field, moving C\u00e9spedes over to third base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 2\nTigers reliever Al Alburquerque then intentionally walked Josh Reddick to load the bases. With no outs in the bottom of the ninth, Alburquerque was lifted for Rick Porcello. A's catcher Stephen Vogt greeted Porcello with a line-drive single to left field, driving in C\u00e9spedes for the walk off win and tying the series at one game apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 3\nThe A's scored six runs (five earned) off 2013 AL ERA leader An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez. The first run was unearned, when Yoenis C\u00e9spedes hit a sharp grounder to third that Miguel Cabrera mishandled for an error, allowing Coco Crisp to score from second. In the top of the fourth, Josh Reddick led off with a home run. Stephen Vogt followed with a triple, and scored on a sacrifice fly by Crisp, making the score 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 3\nThe Tigers tied the game off Jarrod Parker in the bottom of the fourth, on an RBI double by Victor Mart\u00ednez and a two-run single by Jhonny Peralta. This ended a streak of 20 consecutive scoreless innings by A's pitchers. The A's quickly went back on top by three runs in the fifth, on a homer from Brandon Moss and a two-run shot by Seth Smith. In the bottom of the ninth inning, A's pitcher Grant Balfour got into a heated argument with Detroit batter V\u00edctor Mart\u00ednez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 3\nThe argument included a profane exchange between Martinez and Balfour, caught by MLB Network's on-field microphones, and caused the benches to empty. No injuries were reported and no ejections were made because of the incident, and Balfour went on to earn the save. Because MLB Network is a cable channel not under FCC purview, no action could be taken against them, though the game announcers apologized for the profanity shortly after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 4\nThe A's took another early lead on the Tigers, when Coco Crisp led off the game with a triple off Doug Fister and scored on a Jed Lowrie single. The A's extended the lead to 3\u20130 in the top of the fifth, when Lowrie hit a two-run homer to right field. It looked like the Tiger hitters, who had struggled to put up runs all series long, were on their way to another frustrating evening when starter Dan Straily no-hit them through the first four innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 4\nBut Prince Fielder led off the bottom of the fifth with a bloop single to left, Victor Mart\u00ednez grounded a single to right, and Jhonny Peralta followed with a three-run homer to left to tie the game. Tiger manager Jim Leyland went to Game 1 starter Max Scherzer as a reliever in the top of the seventh, and Oakland promptly went up 4\u20133 when Coco Crisp drove in Stephen Vogt with a single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 4\nOn a controversial play, the Tigers managed to tie the game in the bottom of the inning, when Victor Mart\u00ednez hit the ball to the right-center field wall and a fan reached into the field of play and disrupted its trajectory. The call on the field was a home run for Mart\u00ednez. Umpires reviewed the play because the fan had clearly interfered with the path of the ball, but they let the home run stand after concluding that there was not enough video evidence to determine if right fielder Josh Reddick would have made a leaping catch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0014-0003", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 4\nLater in the inning, Austin Jackson gave the Tigers a 5\u20134 lead on a broken-bat RBI single that scored pinch runner Andy Dirks. Scherzer nearly gave the lead back when he loaded the bases with no outs in the top of the eighth, but he struck out Reddick and Vogt before getting pinch hitter Alberto Callaspo on a line out to center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0014-0004", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 4\nThe Tigers got three additional runs in the bottom of the inning, when pinch runner Hern\u00e1n P\u00e9rez scored on a bases-loaded wild pitch by Brett Anderson, and Omar Infante followed with a two-run double to make the score 8\u20134. The A's made it interesting in the top of the ninth, getting the tying run to the plate after a two-run single by Yoenis C\u00e9spedes, but Joaqu\u00edn Benoit struck out Seth Smith to prevent any further damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 5\nHaving used Max Scherzer in relief during Game 4, Jim Leyland sent Game 2 starter Justin Verlander to the hill. A's manager Bob Melvin also chose to go with his Game 2 starter, Sonny Gray, who had befuddled the Tigers for eight shutout innings earlier in the series. Gray looked solid again, surrendering only a walk through the first three innings. Torii Hunter got the Tigers' first hit in the fourth, a one-out single up the middle, then Gray made a mistake on an inside fastball to Miguel Cabrera that the slugger hit for a two-run homer to left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 5\nIt was Cabrera's first extra-base hit of the series and only his second home run since August. The Tigers got a third run with one out in the sixth inning. With runners on first and third, Omar Infante hit a potential inning-ending double play ball to third off reliever Dan Otero, but Josh Donaldson bounced his throw to second baseman Alberto Callaspo. Callaspo corralled the ball for a force out but had no chance to get Infante at first, and Victor Mart\u00ednez scored on the play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 5\nVerlander, who threw a four-hit shutout in Game 5 of the 2012 ALDS, also in Oakland, was brilliant again. He retired the first 16 Oakland batters before giving up a one-out walk to Josh Reddick in the sixth inning. He lost his no-hit bid with two outs in the seventh, when Yoenis C\u00e9spedes hit a hard single to center, but escaped the inning with no damage. Verlander would leave after eight shutout innings, surrendering two hits and one walk, while striking out ten. Closer Joaqu\u00edn Benoit surrendered a two-out double to Jed Lowrie and hit C\u00e9spedes with a pitch to bring the tying run to the plate for the second straight game. But he got Seth Smith to fly out to short right field, ending the game and the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 5\nVerlander's effort gave him 30 straight scoreless innings against the A's in the playoffs, breaking the record for scoreless innings against one team in the postseason set by Christy Mathewson (28). The A's also struck out 57 times in the series, breaking the old record for a best-of-five playoff series of 55 strikeouts set by the 2010 Tampa Bay Rays. Both Austin Jackson of the Tigers and Brandon Moss of the A's fanned 13 times in the series, setting an ALDS record for an individual player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231731-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Division Series, Oakland vs. Detroit, Game 5\nThe Tigers made it to the ALCS for the third straight season, becoming the first team to do so since the 1998\u20132001 New York Yankees made four straight appearances. The Athletics have now lost their last six winner-take-all Game 5s, the last two at the hands of the Tigers (2012 and 2013). They are now 1\u201312 in playoff-clinching games since 2000, the only win coming in 2006 when they swept the Minnesota Twins in the ALDS. As of 2021, this is the most recent time that a Detroit-based team advanced in a major league postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231732-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card Game\nThe 2013 American League Wild Card Game was a play-in game during Major League Baseball's (MLB) 2013 postseason played between the American League's (AL) two wild card teams, the Cleveland Indians and the Tampa Bay Rays (the latter winners of a one-game tie-breaker against the Texas Rangers). It was held at Progressive Field in Cleveland, Ohio, on October 2, 2013. The Rays won by a 4\u20130 score and advanced to the AL Division Series to face the Boston Red Sox, who went on to become the World Series champion of that year. The game was televised on TBS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231732-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card Game, Game results, Line score\nRays starting pitcher Alex Cobb recorded 6+2\u20443 shutout innings and five strikeouts and three relievers pitched 2+1\u20443 shutout innings. Delmon Young led off the top of the third inning with a home run and Desmond Jennings hit a two-run double in the fourth off of Danny Salazar. Yunel Escobar had an RBI single in the ninth off of Joe Smith, the run charged to Cody Allen. Rays manager Joe Maddon and Indians manager Terry Francona would meet each other again three years later in the 2016 World Series, with Maddon, as manager of the Chicago Cubs, winning 4\u20133. The Indians also became the first team in MLB history to be eliminated from the postseason without scoring a run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game\nThe 2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game was a one-game extension to Major League Baseball's (MLB) 2013 regular season, played between the Texas Rangers and Tampa Bay Rays to determine the second participant in the 2013 American League (AL) Wild Card Game. It was played at the Globe Life Park in Arlington on September 30, 2013. The Rays defeated the Rangers, 5\u20132, and advanced to the AL Wild Card Game against the Cleveland Indians at Progressive Field, which they won 4\u20130; the Rangers failed to qualify for the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game\nThe tie-breaker game was necessary after both teams finished the season with win\u2013loss records of 91\u201371 and thus tied for the second Wild Card position in the AL. The Rangers were awarded home field for the game, as they won the regular season series against the Rays, 4\u20133. The game was televised on TBS. It was the fourth tie-breaker in MLB history for a Wild Card spot, although it was the first since MLB adopted its current format of two Wild Card teams playing in a Wild Card Game in 2012. The tie-breaker counted as the 163rd regular season game for both teams, with all events in the game added to regular season statistics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Background\nIn Major League Baseball the two teams with the best record in each league who do not win a division play in the Wild Card Game. A number of teams were in competition for these Wild Card spots, along with their divisional competition. The Rangers spent over 80 days leading the American League West and shared the lead as late as September 4. The Rays spent only a few days leading the American League East, but held a share of the lead as late as August 24. The Cleveland Indians did not lead the American League Central after July 2 but remained close throughout the season and ultimately finished just a single game back of the Central champion Detroit Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Background\nAlthough other teams including the Kansas City Royals, Baltimore Orioles, and New York Yankees had vied for a Wild Card spot, the Indians, Rangers, and Rays all remained in contention until the end of the season. Entering the final day of the scheduled regular season, on which all three teams played, the Indians had a 91\u201370 record while both the Rangers and Rays had 90\u201371 records. These were the best non-division-leading records in the American League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Background\nThus, the possibility existed (had the Indians lost and the Rays and Rangers won) for a three-way tie for the two Wild Card spots, which would have required several tie-breaker games to settle. However, all three teams won, leaving the Indians definitively in the Wild Card Game at 92\u201370 and the Rays and Rangers tied at 91\u201371 for the second spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Background\nThe Indians finished the season strong, winning their last 10 games to clinch their Wild Card berth. The Rays were 16\u201312 in September, winning 8 of their last 10. The Rangers were just 12\u201315 in September, although they also won eight of their final 10 games. Home field advantage for the tie-breaker game was awarded to the Rangers, as they had won the season series against the Rays 4 games to 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Game summary\nDesmond Jennings opened the first inning with a single, but was thrown out at second base trying to stretch the hit into a double. Wil Myers then walked, advanced to third base on singles by Ben Zobrist and Evan Longoria, and finally scored on a sacrifice fly by Delmon Young. Rays starter David Price struck out leadoff batter Ian Kinsler, then allowed a walk to Elvis Andrus but picked him off and finished the inning by retiring Alex R\u00edos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Game summary\nThe score remained 1\u20130 until the top of the third inning, when Jennings drew a walk and scored on a home run by Longoria to give the Rays a 3\u20130 lead. The Rangers struck right back in the bottom half, as Craig Gentry led off the inning with a single. After advancing to second on a Leonys Mart\u00edn groundout, he scored on a single to right field by Kinsler. The Rays scored again in the sixth, as Longoria doubled to lead off the inning, and advanced to third base on a groundout by Young. The next batter, David DeJesus, hit a double to right field that scored Longoria and put the Rays ahead, 4\u20131. Rangers reliever Alexi Ogando entered the game with one out and recorded the final two outs to end the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Game summary\nAfter a single and a stolen base from Andrus, R\u00edos doubled in the bottom half of the sixth to cut the score to 4\u20132. A small controversy arose in the top of the seventh inning. Longoria and Myers were on first and second base respectively with two outs when Young hit a line drive to center field. Replays showed that the ball bounced into Leonys Mart\u00edn's (the Rangers' center fielder) glove after hitting the ground, making it a trap and therefore should have been a hit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Game summary\nHowever, the umpires ruled the play an out, ending the inning without a run scoring. Ultimately, the issue did not affect the outcome. The Rays added onto their lead in the ninth inning when Sam Fuld stole third and a scored on a throwing error from Rangers reliever Tanner Scheppers, extending their lead to 5\u20132. Price closed the game in the ninth, recording three straight outs and finishing off a complete game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Aftermath\nThe Rays' win clinched the team's fourth post-season berth in franchise history. The Rays advanced to the AL Wild Card Game, in which they defeated the Cleveland Indians. They would then lose the ALDS to the eventual World Champion Boston Red Sox, 3 games to 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231733-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 American League Wild Card tie-breaker game, Aftermath\nThe game counted as a regular season game in baseball statistics. For example, Evan Longoria's third-inning home run broke Stan Musial's record for the most home runs in the last game of the season, setting the mark at seven. He went 3-for-4 with a double, a home run, and two RBI in the game overall. This left him 11-for-19 with seven home runs and ten RBIs in season finales from 2009\u20132013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231734-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Society of Cinematographers Awards\nThe 28th American Society of Cinematographers Awards were held on February 1, 2014, at the Hollywood & Highland Ray Dolby Ballroom, honoring the best cinematographers of film and television in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231734-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Society of Cinematographers Awards\nThe film nominees were announced on January 8, 2014. A three-way tie boosted the number of film nominees to seven. Sean Bobbitt, Philippe Le Sourd, and Phedon Papamichael received their first nominations in the film category (though Papamichael has received prior nominations for his TV work).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231734-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 American Society of Cinematographers Awards\nThis year also marked the inaugural Spotlight Award \"to recognize outstanding cinematography in features and documentaries typically screened at film festivals, internationally or in limited theatrical release\". The nominees were announced on January 14, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231734-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 American Society of Cinematographers Awards\nWith his third win in the film cinematography category, Emmanuel Lubezki joined Roger Deakins and Conrad L. Hall as the only cinematographers to have won the award more than twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231735-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 American Ultimate Disc League season\nThe 2013 American Ultimate Disc League season was the second season for the league. Each team played a 16-game schedule. The Toronto Rush won the AUDL Championship II over the Madison Radicals in Chicago, IL. The Rush completed the first undefeated season in AUDL history, going 16-0 in the regular season and winning both playoff games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231735-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 American Ultimate Disc League season, Standings, Midwestern Division\nT indicates top seed in the playoffs. P indicates a team advanced to the playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231736-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Americas Rugby Championship\nThe 2013 Americas Rugby Championship season was the fourth season of the Americas Rugby Championship. It took place between 11 and 19 October 2013 in Langford, British Columbia. The tournament featured the same teams as in the 2012 version, Argentina Jaguars, Canada Selects, USA Selects, and Uruguay. Uruguay qualified by placing second, behind Argentina, at the 2013 edition of the South American Rugby Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231737-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Amstel Cura\u00e7ao Race\nThe 2013 Amstel Cura\u00e7ao Race was the 12th edition of the Amstel Cura\u00e7ao Race and takes place on Cura\u00e7ao, an island off the Venezuelan coast, on 2 November 2013. The course is 73.6\u00a0km (45.7\u00a0mi). It is the only road bicycle race in which men and women compete against each other in the same race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231738-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Amstel Gold Race\nThe 2013 Amstel Gold Race was the 48th running of the Amstel Gold Race, a single-day cycling race. It was held on 14 April 2013 over a distance of 251.8 kilometres (156.5 miles) and it was the eleventh race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231738-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Amstel Gold Race, Teams\nAs the Amstel Gold Race is a UCI World Tour event, all 19 UCI ProTeams were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad. Six other squads were given wildcard places into the race, and as such, formed the event's 25-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231739-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election\nThe 2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election occurred in Nigeria on November 16, 2013. The APGA nominee Willie Obiano won the election, defeating Tony Nwoye of the PDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231739-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election\nWillie Obiano emerged APGA candidate after defeating 4 other candidates. He picked Nkem Okeke as his running mate. Tony Nwoye was the PDP candidate with Amamchukwu Ezike as his running mate. 23 candidates contested in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231739-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election, Electoral system\nThe Governor of Anambra State is elected using the plurality voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231739-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election, Primary election, APGA primary\nThe APGA primary election was held on August 26, 2013. Willie Obiano won the primary election polling 870 votes against 4 other candidates. His closest rival was Uche Ekwunife, who came second with 150 votes. Others were Paul Odenigbo, Emeka Nwogbo and John Nwosu. Prince John Emeka and Patrick Obianwu withdrew from the election. Willie Obiano picked Nkem Okeke as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231739-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election, Primary election, PDP primary\nThe PDP primary election was held on August 24, 2013. Tony Nwoye emerged the party's flag bearer after polling 498 votes against 13 other candidates. His closest rival, Nicholas Ukachukwu, who polled 357 votes while Alex Obiogolu came third with 13 votes. Tony Nwoye picked Amamchukwu Ezike as his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231739-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election, Results\nA total number of 23 candidates registered with the Independent National Electoral Commission to contest in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231739-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Anambra State gubernatorial election, Results\nThe total number of registered voters in the state was 1,776,167, while 465,891 voters were accredited. Total number of votes cast was 442,242, while number of valid votes was 425,254. Rejected votes were 16,988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season\nThe 2013 Andy Murray tennis season officially began at the Brisbane International where he was the defending champion. He successfully defended that title, defeating Grigor Dimitrov in straight sets in the final. After a quarterfinal showing at Indian Wells, where he lost to Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro in 3 sets, Murray recovered to win the Miami Masters for the second time, defeating David Ferrer in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season\nWinning in Miami meant that Murray overtook Roger Federer as World No. 2, the first time Murray had held the ranking since September 2009, meaning that neither Federer nor Rafael Nadal were ranked in the top 2 for the first time since the end of 2003. During the summer Murray won his first Wimbledon title, defeating Novak Djokovic in the final in straight sets to end Britain's 77-year wait for a home grown men's champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0000-0002", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season\nIt was Murray's second major title, and third consecutive title on grass, after winning at the Olympics the previous year, meaning he extended his winning streak on grass to 18 matches. In the summer hard court season, Murray failed to defend his US Open title, losing to Stanislas Wawrinka in the quarterfinals. Following the Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, during which Murray won both his singles and the doubles rubber, he ended his season prematurely in order to undergo surgery on a long-standing back problem that had caused him trouble for over a year and a half. He ended the season ranked number 4 in the world, behind Nadal, Djokovic and Ferrer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Australian Open series, Brisbane International\nMurray began his season at the 2013 Brisbane International, where he was the top seed. He defeated Australian John Millman, Denis Istomin of Uzbekistan and Kei Nishikori of Japan (retired) en route to reaching the final for the second consecutive year. Here he faced Bulgarian young gun Grigor Dimitrov, who was competing in his first tour-level final. Despite being broken in the first set, Murray came back to dominate the tiebreak, winning 7 points in a row, then proceeding the second set by 6 games to 4, thus successfully defending his Brisbane title. The victory in Brisbane took Murray's career titles tally to 25, and at the trophy ceremony, Murray dedicated the victory to close friend and Davis Cup teammate Ross Hutchins, who at the time had just been diagnosed with Hodgkin's Lymphoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Australian Open series, Australian Open\nMurray next competed at the 2013 Australian Open, where he was the No. 3 seed. He made light work of his first two matches, defeating Dutchman Robin Haase and Portugal's Jo\u00e3o Sousa respectively, each in straight sets, to set up a third round meeting with his practice partner Ri\u010dardas Berankis of Lithuania, who had qualified for the tournament the previous week. Despite having his service broken several times, Murray managed to defeat Berankis in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 87], "content_span": [88, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Australian Open series, Australian Open\nHe next faced French 14th seed Gilles Simon in the fourth round, winning in straight sets and subsequently advancing to the quarter-finals for the ninth straight Grand Slam tournament, and without dropping a set. In the semifinals, Murray met Roger Federer in their first Grand Slam semifinal and fourth Grand Slam meeting overall, their previous three meetings all having come in finals. After exchanging sets over the first four, including Federer taking the second and fourth each in tiebreaks, Murray eventually prevailed in five sets to set up a second consecutive final against Novak Djokovic. In beating Federer, Murray also matched Fred Perry's Grand Slam match win total of 106. In the final against Djokovic, Murray took the first set in a tiebreak, but ultimately lost in four sets, an untimely double fault in the second set proving fatal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 87], "content_span": [88, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Spring American hardcourt season, Indian Wells\nFollowing his final defeat in Melbourne, Murray took a six-week break in order to train for the first two Masters 1000 series tournaments of the year. He entered the 2013 BNP Paribas Open having not won a match since 2010, when he reached the quarterfinals, so had minimum points to defend. After receiving a bye into round two, the Scot faced Russian Evgeny Donskoy, the first meeting between the two. Murray dropped the first set in the 12th game, however then went on to win the next two sets for the loss of just 4 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Spring American hardcourt season, Indian Wells\nHe won both of his next two matches in straight sets, against Chinese Taipei's Yen-hsun Lu and Argentine Carlos Berlocq respectively to set up a quarterfinal clash with Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro. Despite holding a strong advantage in their head-to-head, having won 5 out of 6 meetings, Murray wasn't able to capitalise on winning the opening set in a tiebreaker, losing in three sets to the eventual finalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Spring American hardcourt season, Miami Masters\nFollowing his defeat in Indian Wells, Murray returned to Miami for the Sony Open Tennis tournament. Murray faced two potentially tricky opponents in young up-and-comers Bernard Tomic of Australia, and Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov respectively, however overcame both in straight sets. He backed this up with an 84-minute victory over Italian Andreas Seppi, making it to his fourth straight quarterfinal of the year, where he faced Marin \u010cili\u0107 of Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Spring American hardcourt season, Miami Masters\nDespite a considerable number of lengthy games and rallies, including nine breaks of serve, one game that lasted over 15 minutes, and seven match points, Murray triumphed in just over an hour and a half in straight sets, to reach the semifinals of the Miami Masters for the fourth time. In the semifinals, Murray faced Frenchman Richard Gasquet, who had beaten fourth seed Tomas Berdych in the last 8. Murray lost the first set in a tiebreak, despite serving for the set at 5-4, before taking the second and third sets for the loss of just three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Spring American hardcourt season, Miami Masters\nIn the final Murray faced Spaniard David Ferrer, the second time the two have met in a final at a Masters 1000 tournament. After losing the first five games of the match, Murray eventually won in three sets, after saving a match point at 6\u20135 down on serve in the final set, following which he dominated the tiebreak to win his second Miami title, and 9th masters 1000 title overall. Following this victory, Murray moved up to No. 2 in the world rankings for the first time since September 2009, thus marking the first time in almost ten years in which neither Roger Federer or Rafael Nadal was ranked inside the top two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, European clay court season\nFollowing a two-week break, Murray headed to Monaco for the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters, where Spaniard Rafael Nadal was 8-time defending champion. After receiving a bye into the second round, Murray won his opening match against qualifier Edouard Roger-Vasselin of France in straight sets, before being defeated by Swiss number 2 Stanislas Wawrinka, who had previously won both of their previous meetings on clay. Due to this, Murray dropped to World No. 3 in the week starting 22 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, European clay court season\nAt the Mutua Madrid Open, Murray faced Florian Mayer of Germany in the second round, after a first round bye. Despite facing several set points, the Scot overcame the German number 3 in straight sets to record his 400th career win. He faced Frenchman Gilles Simon in round three, and needed three hours, three sets and 6 match points to record his 11th straight victory over Simon, and reach his first clay court quarterfinal of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, European clay court season\nHe will next play against the 2012 runner-up Tomas Berdych, whom Murray has defeated three times in their past four meetings, however has yet to record a victory over the Czech on clay. Murray will also return to the number 2 ranking after the tournaments conclusion, following a defeat of Roger Federer by Japanese rising star Kei Nishikori in the third round. In the quarter-finals, Murray lost to Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, European clay court season\nAt the Rome Masters, Murray recovered from a set and a double break down against Marcel Granollers to level the match in a tie-break, only to retire before the start of the third set, citing a back injury. This was the first time Murray had retired mid-match since Hamburg in 2007, when he withdrew from his match against Filippo Volandri during the first set, despite being a double break up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, European clay court season\nThe back injury he suffered in Rome ultimately forced him to withdraw from the French Open, making this the first Grand Slam tournament since Wimbledon in 2007 that he has missed due to injury. Despite aiming to improve his clay court results, Murray only managed to gain 10 points more than 2012 in the lead up to the French Open, as over-preparation ultimately lead to him aggravating a recurring back injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season, Queen's Club Championships\nMurray entered the grass court season having won 12 of his previous 13 matches on grass, spanning back to last year's Wimbledon, and having not lost since the final. His first tournament after missing the French Open was at the Queen's Club Championships, where he was the top seed. After receiving a first round bye, Murray's first match in the second round pitted him against Nicolas Mahut, who had knocked him out at the same stage the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season, Queen's Club Championships\nDespite not having competed for a month, Murray overcame Mahut in straight sets, which he followed up with straight sets wins over Marinko Matosevic and Benjamin Becker respectively. His first match against a top 10 opponent came in the form of Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, whom Murray had defeated in the final two years previously. He overcame a slow start that saw him lose the first set to win in three, and set up a clash with 5th seed and defending champion Marin \u010cili\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season, Queen's Club Championships\nOnce again Murray had to recover from a set down, and went on to defeat \u010cili\u0107 in three sets to win his third Queen's title, becoming the first British man since Arthur Gore to win the tournament three times. The final was followed by a charity doubles match with Tim Henman, fellow top 10 player Tomas Berdych and former world no. 1 and Murray's coach Ivan Lendl. The match was organised to raise money for the Royal Marsden Cancer Charity, after Murray's Davis Cup teammate and close friend Ross Hutchins was diagnosed with Hodgkins Lymphoma in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season, Wimbledon\nAt Wimbledon, Murray made it through his first three matches without losing a set, his first round match, in which he defeated German Benjamin Becker, whom he had defeated at Queen's Club just weeks earlier, took Murray's Grand Slam match wins total to 107, surpassing Fred Perry's total, making Murray the British player with most all time match wins at Grand Slam tournaments. Murray then beat Lu Yen-hsun of Chinese Taipei in round two, and Spanish 32nd seed Tommy Robredo in the third, against whom Murray hadn't played since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season, Wimbledon\nIn the fourth round match Murray beat Russian Mikhail Youzhny in straight sets despite going 5-2 down in the second set (which, like the previous round, was also the first meeting between the two since 2009). In the quarterfinals, Murray met left-hander Fernando Verdasco of Spain, who had beaten Murray in their previous Grand Slam meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season, Wimbledon\nVerdasco won the first two sets, before Murray raised his level of play considerably, eventually coming through to win in five sets and reach his fifth consecutive Wimbledon semifinal, tying him with John McEnroe in fourth place for most consecutive semifinals at Wimbledon behind Roger Federer, Jimmy Connors and Bj\u00f6rn Borg. Murray faced Jerzy Janowicz of Poland in the semifinals, against whom Murray lost in the 2012 Paris Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0009-0003", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season, Wimbledon\nDespite dropping the opening set in a tiebreak, the Scot eventually prevailed in four to set up a fourth Grand Slam final against Novak Djokovic, the second meeting between the two at SW19, and the first at the Championships. Murray defeated Djokovic in straight sets (6-4, 7-5, 6-4) to become the first British man to win Wimbledon since 1936, the first Scot of either sex to win a Wimbledon singles title since 1896, as well as becoming the 7th man in the open era to complete the Queen's/Wimbledon double. With the win, Murray extended his winning streak on grass to 18 matches, his previous loss coming at the 2012 Wimbledon Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open Series, Rogers Cup\nFollowing a break of around 4 weeks, Murray's next tournament was the Canada Masters held in Montreal. He was aiming to win his third title at the event, second masters 1000 title of the year and 10th masters series title of his career. His first opponent was Spaniard Marcel Granollers, who had won the title in Kitzb\u00fchel, whom Murray defeated in straight sets to set up a clash with Ernest Gulbis of Latvia. Despite having lost all 5 of their previous meetings, Gulbis took advantage of Murray's lack of competitive play and defeated the Scot in straight sets, his first loss since he retired at the Rome Masters in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open Series, Rogers Cup\nIn the doubles competition, Murray partnered fellow Scot Colin Fleming, due to the absence of Jonathan Marray from the draw. The pair opened with a victory over Frenchman Julien Benneteau and former world no. 1 Nenad Zimonjic of Serbia. They then went on to defeat three seeded teams, including two former world no. 1's. The pair defeated 2012 Australian Open champions Leander Paes and Radek Stepanek, fourth seeds Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi & Jean-Julien Rojer, and 8 time Grand Slam champion Daniel Nestor & three-time Wimbledon finalist Robert Lindstedt to reach their first doubles final at a Masters 1000 tournament. In the final they faced third seeds Alexander Peya & Bruno Soares, however were defeated in straight sets, despite holding two set points in the second set. As a result of his run to the final, Murray will return to the top-100 in doubles for the first time since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 961]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open Series, Western & Southern Open\nMurray opened his bid for a third Cincinnati title with two strong wins, defeating Russian Mikhail Youzhny and Julien Benneteau of France each in straight sets, for the loss of just 9 games between them. He then went on to meet Tomas Berdych in the quarterfinals, however was unable to maintain his level of play against the Czech and went out in straight sets, the second time in a row Murray had lost to Berdych without winning a set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 87], "content_span": [88, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open Series, US Open\nMurray dropped to number 3 in the rankings prior to the US Open, meaning he would potentially have to face both Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal in order to defend his title. He was made to wait until the third day of play to begin his title defence, however opened strongly with a straight sets win over Frenchman Micha\u00ebl Llodra. The next round proved slightly tougher, as Argentine Leonardo Mayer took him to four sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open Series, US Open\nHis next match was against German Florian Mayer, whom he defeated in straight sets, winning the last two comfortably after being taken to a tiebreaker in the first. He faced Denis Istomin of Uzbekistan in the fourth round, who also took Murray to four sets, taking the first in a tiebreak before Murray upped his level and won the next three comfortably to set up a quarterfinal clash with ninth seed Stanislas Wawrinka. In what was anticipated as a tough match, Wawrinka controlled the match throughout, sending a below par Murray out in straight sets. Murray shortly after flew to Croatia to begin preparations for the Davis Cup World Group Play-offs on clay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Indoor Season\nAfter a disappointing American hardcourt season, Murray took the decision to undergo surgery on his lower back, in the hope of fixing a disc problem that had caused him pain since early 2012. Whilst problems in his lower back seemingly subsided since Wimbledon 2012, Murray revealed that it flared up again during the clay court season, and also caused him discomfort during the US Open Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly summary, Indoor Season\nAs a result, he stated that he would definitely miss the Asian swing of tournaments, pulling out of events in Bangkok, Tokyo and Shanghai, and subsequently from the Paris Masters and the World Tour Finals. It was announced that it was likely he would return to action at the beginning of the 2014 season at the Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, All matches\nThis table chronicles all the matches of Murray in 2013, including walkovers (W/O) which the ATP does not count as wins. They are marked ND for non-decision or no decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231740-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season, Yearly Records, Head-to-head matchups\nOrdered by number of wins(Bold denotes a top 10 player at the time of match, Italic means top 50)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231741-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Angeles City local elections\nLocal elections were held in the city of Angeles in Pampanga on May 13, 2013, in conjunction with the 2013 Philippine midterm elections. Registered voters of the city will be electing candidates for the following elective local posts: city mayor, city vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231741-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Angeles City local elections\nAs Angeles City is a highly urbanized city, its voters do note vote for Pampanga elective officials; however, they participate in electing the province's first district representative. That district also includes the city of Mabalacat and the municipality of Magalang, all component local government units of the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231741-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Angeles City local elections, Results\nThe candidates for mayor and vice mayor with the highest number of votes win their respective seats. They are elected separately; therefore, they may be of different parties when elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231741-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Angeles City local elections, Results, Mayor\nEdgardo Pamintuan Sr. is the incumbent. he is challenge by 1st District Congressman Carmelo Lazatin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231741-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Angeles City local elections, Results, Vice Mayor\nMaria Vicente Vega-Cabigting is the incumbent. Her opponents is 2 councilors Joseph Alfie Bonifacio and Jesus Sangil, Barangay Balibago Chairman Rodelio Mamac, Sr. and Mark Allen Sison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231741-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Angeles City local elections, City Councilors\nVoting is via plurality-at-large voting: Voters will vote for ten (10) candidates and the ten candidates with the highest number of votes are elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231742-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Angola Cup\nThe 2013 Ta\u00e7a de Angola was the 32nd edition of the Ta\u00e7a de Angola, the second most important and the top knock-out football club competition in Angola, following the Girabola. Petro de Luanda beat Desportivo da Hu\u00edla 1\u20130 in the final to secure its tenth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231742-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Angola Cup\nThe winner and the runner-up qualified to the CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231743-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Angola Second Division Basketball Championship\nThe 2013 Angola 2nd Division Basketball Championship (1st edition), was a basketball tournament held in Lubango, Angola, from November 16 to 23, 2013. The tournament, organized by the Angolan Basketball Federation, qualified the two top teams for the 2013\u201314 BAI Basket and was contested by 8 clubs split into 2 groups, that played in a round robin system followed by the knock-out stages (quarter, semis and final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231744-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Angola Super Cup\nThe 2013 Superta\u00e7a de Angola (26th edition) was contested by Recreativo do Libolo, the 2012 Girabola champion and Petro de Luanda, the 2012 Angola cup winner. It was the last such competition to be played in a two leg format. On home court, Petro beat Libolo 1\u20130 to secure their 1st title as the away match in Calulo ended in a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231744-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Angola Super Cup, Match details, Second Leg\nSquad: Acheampong, Bastos, Ben Traor\u00e9, Borges, Bu\u00e1, Cassoma, Chara, Dany, Di\u00f3genes, Eddie, Etah, F.Katongo, Filh\u00e3o, Fl\u00e1vio, Isaac, Job, Jotab\u00e9, Kembua, Keita, Lam\u00e1, Lelo, Lol\u00f3, Lumeca, Mabin\u00e1, Mabululu, Manguxi, Mano, Mateus, Mig, Miguel, Mira, Nari, Nelson, Os\u00f3rio Head Coach: Miller Gomes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231745-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ankara Cup\nThe 2013 Ankara Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Ankara, Turkey, on 16\u201322 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231745-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ankara Cup, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231746-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ankara Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMagda Linette and Katarzyna Piter were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Piter chose not to participate in 2013. Linette partnered up with Naomi Broady, but lost to Yuliya Beygelzimer and \u00c7a\u011fla B\u00fcy\u00fckak\u00e7ay in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231746-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ankara Cup \u2013 Doubles\nBeygelzimer and B\u00fcy\u00fckak\u00e7ay won the tournament, defeating Eleni Daniilidou and Aleksandra Kruni\u0107 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231747-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ankara Cup \u2013 Singles\nAna Savi\u0107 was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but did not participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231747-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ankara Cup \u2013 Singles\nVitalia Diatchenko won the tournament, defeating Marta Sirotkina in the all-Russian final, 6\u20137(3\u20137), 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting\nOn the night of 16 September 2013, Austrian police received a call about a suspected poacher in the woods near Annaberg, Lower Austria. Police officers sought to inspect the vehicle of 55-year-old Alois Huber, but he sped off and later crashed his car in a ditch near Annaberg. While on the run, Huber killed several police officers and a Red Cross paramedic. He also kidnapped another officer while fleeing to his house in Melk. There, a standoff with the police occurred with about a hundred police and military officers present in armored vehicles. After the house was searched on 17 September, a fire was discovered burning in a secret basement, with the charred remains of a man in it; the body is suspected to be that of Huber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Details, Prior to the shootings\nSince 2008, reports of poaching had occurred in Annaberg, with eight cases of poaching being reported. In March 2011, a poacher was caught in the act by a hunter, but the poacher attacked the hunter and managed to escape. An investigation was launched, but the identity of the poacher remained unknown. Huber was known to be a poacher and had left dead animal heads on the roads to defy police and legal hunters. His hunting license was said to have been revoked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Details, Shooting spree\nOn the night of 16 September 2013, Austrian police received a call about a suspected poacher in the woods near Annaberg, Lower Austria. Police officers sought to inspect the vehicle of 55-year-old Alois Huber, but he sped off upon spotting them and later crashed his car in a ditch near Annaberg. Huber then proceeded on foot and shot two police officers posted near a checkpoint in Annaberg. A Red Cross paramedic was also shot while providing aid to a casualty. One of the officers and the paramedic later died in the hospital, while the other officer survived his wounds. At another checkpoint, Huber shot and killed another officer while taking a fourth hostage. He then stole a police car and drove it to his farmhouse near Melk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Details, Standoff\nA standoff began as Huber had fled to his house. Austrian police had the area surrounded at 07:00 on 17 September. A hundred police officers were located to the scene and shots were sporadically fired by Huber, who was suspected of having stocked up a large supply of arms and ammunition there, as he owned several hunting weapons legally. It was also reported that children of Huber's might be at the location. Police sought to make contact with Huber, using his relatives to aid them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Details, Standoff\nAt 13:38, Austrian police requested the assistance of the Austrian army, which sent in three armored vehicles. As police moved closer to the house, they found the stolen police car at around 15:00, with the dead body of the kidnapped officer inside. At 17:30, Huber fired his last shot at police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Details, Standoff\nOn the night of 17 September, at 18:20, Austria's anti-terrorism police unit EKO Cobra investigated the farmhouse. A hidden basement was found with the burned body of a man inside; the fire seemed to have been started by the man himself. Police suspected it to be the body of Huber, although DNA research still needs to confirm this. Earlier reports that Huber had been shot in the abdomen during the standoff by police have not yet been confirmed. No further persons were found at the premises.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Details, Victims\nThe three police officers were aged between 38 and 51. The paramedic was identified as 70-year-old Johann Dorfwirth from the Austrian Red Cross; he was a longtime paramedic with the organisation who had received several awards for his service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Perpetrator\n55-year-old Alois Huber was tentatively identified as the suspected perpetrator of the shootings by police. He was single and the owner of a transport company. He was also known to be a poacher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231748-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Annaberg shooting, Reactions\nOn 17 September, around 16:00, Fritz Neugebauer, Second President of the National Council of Austria, interrupted the parliament hearing to inform the deputies of the incident. They then had several minutes of silence for the fallen victims. The Interior Minister of Austria, Johanna Mikl-Leitner, gave her condolences to the families of the victims. She said that the shooting had no precedent in the history of Austrian police. She thanked the police present for the solving of the case. The provincial government of Lower Austria ordered that black flags would be flown for the victims of the shooting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231749-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Antigua Barracuda FC season\nThe 2013 Antigua Barracuda FC season was the club's third and final season in existence, playing in the USL Pro, which at the time was the third division in the United States soccer pyramid. The regular season began on 6 April 2013 and concluded on 31 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231749-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Antigua Barracuda FC season\nDuring the 2013 season, Antigua Barracuda played all of their matches on the road, thus being a travelling team. The team became the first team in the history of United States soccer leagues to lose every single one of their matches, amassing a record of 0-26-0, scoring 11 goals and conceding 91.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231749-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Antigua Barracuda FC season\nOutside of USL Pro, Antigua Barracuda played in the 2013 CFU Club Championship, being a club based in a CFU-member nation. There, they finished in third place in their group, losing one match and tying another. Barracuda did not participate in the Antigua and Barbuda FA Cup, and did not qualify for the USL Pro Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231749-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Antigua Barracuda FC season\nFollowing the conclusion of the 2013 season, Antigua Barracuda FC folded due to financial difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231749-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Antigua Barracuda FC season, Statistics\nWhere a player has not declared an international allegiance, nation is determined by place of birth. Squad correct as of July 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231750-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Antipolo local elections\nLocal elections were held in Antipolo, Rizal on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters will elect for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the 2 congressmen, and the councilors, eight in each of the city's 2 legislative districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231750-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Antipolo local elections, Mayoral election results\nDanilo Leyble is running for reelection, incumbent Danilo O. Leyble is running for mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231750-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Antipolo local elections, Board Member elections\nAll two legislative districts of Antipolo will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests\nThe 2013 Anti\u2013 Sri Lanka protests are a series of student protests and agitations initiated by the Students Federation for Freedom of Tamil Eelam in Tamil Nadu, India, against war crimes committed against Sri Lankan Tamil people by Sri Lankan army during the Eelam War IV. The protesters demanded that the Government of India vote in support of a United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution censuring the Government of Sri Lanka for war crimes. Some radical groups even demanded the prosecution of the President of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapakse for his role in the alleged genocide of Sri Lankan Tamils. Apart from college students, doctors, film personalities and employees of IT companies also participated in the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Protests in Tamil Nadu\nThe agitations started on 11 March 2013 when eight students of Loyola College, Chennai, who fasted in condemnation of alleged atrocities committed on Tamils in Sri Lanka were arrested by the Tamil Nadu police. The arrest was criticised by student organisations as well as the Loyola College management and nine colleges across the city went on strike. The following protests see students from all over Tamil Nadu take into streets, it was a massive outrage of Tamil Nadu people and students against sinhala government after 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Protests in Tamil Nadu\nFrom school to colleges a mass number of students participated in the protest. Students from other states lik who are studying in Tamil Nadu colleges too participated. Numerous protests, rallies held in marina beach which saw huge number of students. The anger and anguish of students turned against DMK and Congress which is the ruling party during 2009 Eelam war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Protests in Tamil Nadu\nA statewide general strike declared on 12 March 2013 by the Tamil Eelam Supporters Organisation (TESO) evoked a mixed response with most of the political parties in the state keeping aloof alleging inaction on the part of the main participant Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) which was in power during the decisive stages of Eelam War IV. Student organisations called for statewide agitations on Monday, 18 March, forcing arts and science colleges in the state to close down for an indefinite period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0001-0003", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Protests in Tamil Nadu\nAs colleges and schools remained closed student groups organised protest through social media, Tamilandu people who themselves are sympathetic towards Sri Lankan Tamils sent their children to take part in the protests. As protests peaked in Tamil Nadu national and international media provided good coverage. One remarkable effect of this protest is DMK chief Karuna fearing students outrage pulled out of congress alliance, On 19 March DMK chief announced withdrawal from UPA alliance citing Congress disregard to the suffering of Eelam Tamil. When DMK pulled out of UPA it was well received by DMK supporters. Congress was isolated in Tamil Nadu in 2014 general elections it contested in 40 seats alone and lost in all constituencies. But ironically DMK formed alliance with congress again in May 2016 Tamil Nadu state elections showing its own colors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Protests in Tamil Nadu\nOn 18 March 2013, large-scale agitations were held outside Raj Bhavan, Chennai resulting in the arrest of over 500 students. A Sri Lankan Buddhist monk was attacked in the Brihadeeswara Temple, Thanjavur on 16 March 2013 and another at Chennai Central on 17 March 2013. The Government of Tamil Nadu declared the indefinite closure of 525 engineering colleges affiliated to the Anna University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Protests in Tamil Nadu\nOn 2 April 2013, actors from Tamil film industry staged a one-day token fast in support of student protests in Tamil Nadu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Tamil Nadu Assembly Resolution\nThe Tamil Nadu State Legislative Council passed legislation on 27 March 2013 urging the Indian Government to slap economic sanctions on Sri Lanka and demand for the formation of a separate state for the Tamils of Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Tamil Nadu Assembly Resolution\nThe resolution which was proposed by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalitha was unanimously passed at the Assembly. The resolution was passed following the debate in the Council regarding the ongoing statewide students protests in Tamil Nadu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Tamil Nadu Assembly Resolution\nThe resolution demanded the formation of a separate state in Sri Lanka, through the means of a referendum by a resolution at the UN Security Council which should be conducted among Tamils in Sri Lanka and other displaced Tamils across the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Tamil Nadu Assembly Resolution\nMoving the resolution, Jayalalithaa said the ongoing students protest was reflective of her government's initiative on the Sri Lankan issue even as she requested them to withdraw the stir and resume classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, Tamil Nadu Assembly Resolution\nThe resolution also called on the Indian Government to stop considering Sri Lanka as a 'friendly country' and impose economic sanctions, as well as calling for an international inquiry in \"genocide and war crimes\" against Sri Lankan Tamils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231751-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Anti\u2013Sri Lanka protests, In United Kingdom\nOn 20 June 2013, during 2013 ICC Champions Trophy semi final match between India and Sri Lanka at the SWALEC Stadium in Cardiff, Tamil Eelam supporters invaded the pitch with the flags of the Tamil Eelam. After the match, at least 400 protesters held up the Sri Lankan team bus and raised anti-Sri Lankan government slogans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231752-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Antrim Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Antrim Senior Hurling Championship was the 113th staging of the Antrim Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1901. The championship began on 4 August 2013 and is ended on 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231752-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Antrim Senior Hurling Championship\nLoughgiel Shamrocks were the reigning champions, and successfully defended their title following a 3-14 to 2-6 defeat of Ruair\u00ed \u00d3g, Cushendall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231753-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Anzac Test\nThe 2013 ANZAC test (also known as the VB Test due to sponsorship by Victoria Bitter) was the 14th annual Anzac test, and was not only the first time the Australian Kangaroos played at Canberra Stadium, but the first time they had played in the Australia's capital city. They defeated New Zealand 32-12 in the Test match which was played on 19 April 2013 before a crowd of 25,628.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231754-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Apatin Open darts\n2013 Apatin Open is a darts tournament, which took place in Apatin, Serbia in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231755-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney\nThe 2013 Apia International Sydney was a joint ATP and WTA tennis tournament, that was played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 121st edition of the Apia International Sydney, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour, and of the WTA Premier tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the NSW Tennis Centre in Sydney, Australia, from 6 January to 12 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231755-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231755-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231755-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231755-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231756-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan successfully defended the title by beating Max Mirnyi and Horia Tec\u0103u 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231757-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney \u2013 Men's Singles\nJarkko Nieminen was the defending champion, but lost to eventual champion Bernard Tomic in the quarterfinals. It was Tomic's first ATP title and his first final; he defeated Kevin Anderson 6\u20133, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231758-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKv\u011bta Peschke and Katarina Srebotnik were the defending champions, but decided not to participate together. Peschke played alongside Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld, but lost to Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci in the quarterfinals, while Srebotnik partnered up with Nadia Petrova. Srebotnik successfully defended her title, defeating Errani and Vinci in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231759-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney \u2013 Women's Singles\nVictoria Azarenka was the defending champion, but chose not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231759-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Apia International Sydney \u2013 Women's Singles\nAgnieszka Radwa\u0144ska won the title, defeating Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20130. This was only the eighth WTA singles final to be won with a 6\u20130, 6\u20130 (a \"double bagel\") scoreline in history, and the first since Marion Bartoli won the 2006 Challenge Bell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231760-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team\nThe 2013 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team represented Appalachian State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Scott Satterfield and played their home games at Kidd Brewer Stadium. They were a member of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138, 4\u20134 in SoCon play to finish in a four way tie for fourth place. This was their last season in the SoCon and in the FCS as they moved to FBS and the Sun Belt Conference in 2014. They would be ineligible for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231761-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Arab Athletics Championships was the eighteenth edition of the international athletics competition between Arab countries that took place in Doha, Qatar from 21\u201324 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231761-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Athletics Championships\nSyria was excluded from the event because of the ongoing civil war and Libya did not send a team. Morocco topped the medals table with eleven gold medals in its total of 22, which it won mainly in the women's section of the competition. Algeria placed second with eight golds among its 19 medals. Bahrain had the greatest medal count overall with 22, and ranked third as it only claimed five golds. Egypt, Qatar and Tunisia each took four gold medals at the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231762-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Handball Championship of Winners' Cup\nThe 2013 Arab Handball Championship of Club Winners' Cup is the 10th edition of the Arab Handball Championship of Winners' Cup, it's concerne Arab world's premier club handball tournament held in Marrakesh, Morocco. Al Ahly SC is the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231763-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab League summit\nThe 2013 Arab League Summit was held in Doha, Qatar from 21 to 27 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231763-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab League summit\nOn 26 March, the League recognised the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, as the legitimate representatives of the Syrian people. The National Coalition was henceforth granted Damascus' seat at the summit. This act of recognition was opposed by Algeria, Iraq & Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231764-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Volleyball Clubs Champions Championship\nThe 2013 Arab Clubs Championship was the 31st edition of the Arab Clubs Championship for volleyball tournament. It was held in Beirut, Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231765-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Arab Youth Athletics Championships was the fourth edition of the international athletics competition for under-18 athletes from Arab countries. Organised by the Arab Athletic Federation, it took place in the Egyptian capital Cairo from 21\u201323 June. A total of forty events were contested, of which 20 by male and 20 by female athletes. The girls' steeplechase was contested for the first time, making the programme match that of the 2013 World Youth Championships in Athletics. The racewalking events were held on roads, rather than the usual track surface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231765-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nEgypt topped the medal table for a third straight edition through a total of 42 medals, thirteen of them gold. Algeria also won thirteen gold medals and had the second-highest total with 25. Tunisia ranked third with seven golds in its haul of 17, while Qatar was the next most successful nation with four golds in a total of twelve. Out of the fourteen participating nations, twelve of them reached the medal table. The competition had reduced participation, with Sudan, Syria, Jordan and all absent and Saudi Arabia sending a smaller contingent as compared to the 2009 edition, although Bahrain and Palestine returned at this event. Regional athletics power Morocco continued its hiatus since the first edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231765-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nThree athletes completed individual doubles at the competition, all of them from the boys' side. Mahmoud Hamoudi won both the 100 metres and 200 metres, becoming the second male to do so after Abdullah Al-Sooli (2004). His Algerian teammate Yasser Mohamed Tahar Triki won both the long jump and triple jump, repeating the 2007 achievement by Ismail Al Saffar. Egypt's Mohamed Magdi Hamza claimed both the shot put and discus throw titles \u2013 a double Hamid Mansour had first completed in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231765-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nA total of ten new championship records were set at the competition. This included Hamza's shot put record of 21.22\u00a0m (69\u00a0ft 7\u00a01\u20444\u00a0in), which improved the previous mark by over three metres and ranked him the fourth best youth athlete in the world that year. Qatar sent its first female athlete, Sara Al Manai Ahmed, to the competition and she was runner-up in the javelin. Arab youth throws champion Mohamed Magdi Hamza went on to take a bronze medal at the 2013 World Youth Championships later that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231766-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arabian Gulf Futsal Cup\nThe 2013 GCC Futsal Cup (Arabic: \u0643\u0623\u0633 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0644\u064a\u062c \u0644\u0644\u0635\u0627\u0644\u0627\u062a\u200e) was the first edition of the biennial Futsal competition. It took place in Qatar in 2013. The competition was originally scheduled to be hosted in the city of Bahrain, but was moved to Bahrain in October 2012 to ensure that they could suitably host the competition in the 2 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231766-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arabian Gulf Futsal Cup, Tournament\nThe five teams in the tournament played a single round-robin style competition. The team achieving first place in the overall standings was the tournament winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231767-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aragon motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Aragon motorcycle Grand Prix was the fourteenth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Ciudad del Motor de Arag\u00f3n in Alca\u00f1iz on 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231767-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aragon 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231768-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Archery World Cup\nThe 2013 Archery World Cup was the eighth edition of the annual Archery World Cup, organised by the World Archery Federation. Four stages were held from May to August 2013, in Shanghai, Antalya, Medellin and Wroclaw, in which archers in the recurve and compound disciplines acquired qualifying points based on their performance. The top mixed team and the top seven individual archers over the course of the four stages (with no more than two from one nation) joined the leading non-qualified host nation archer for the finals at the Fontaines du Trocad\u00e9ro in Paris on 21\u201322 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231768-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Archery World Cup\nIn recurve, South Korea was the most successful nation, with Olympic champion Oh Jin-Hyek and Yun Ok -Hee winning both the individual and the team competition. The compound competition saw Martin Damsbo and newcomer Alejandra Usquiano win the individual competitions, and hosts France win the mixed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231768-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Archery World Cup, Competition rules and scoring\nThe compound legs consisted of a 50m qualification round of 72 arrows, followed by the compound round at 50m on a 6-zone target face, using cumulative scoring for all individual, team and mixed competitions. The top seven individual performers (with no more than two from each country,) plus one host nation representative if not already qualified, proceeded to the finals; the top mixed team performer proceeded to face the host nation at the finals, which were the same competition format as the legs. The team competition was not competed at the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231768-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Archery World Cup, Competition rules and scoring\nThe recurve legs consisted of a FITA qualification round, followed by a 72m Olympic set system. The top seven individual performers (with no more than two from each country), plus one host nation representative if not already qualified, proceeded to the finals; the top mixed team performer proceeded to face the host nation at the finals, which were the same competition format as the legs. The team competition was not competed at the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231768-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Archery World Cup, Competition rules and scoring\nThe scores awarded in the four stages were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231768-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Archery World Cup, Qualification, Women's individual compound\n1. Qualified for final as leading non-qualified archer from host country", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231769-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arena Football League season\nThe 2013 Arena Football League season was the 26th season in the history of the league. The regular season began on March 23, 2013, with a five-game slate, the first of which to kick off being between the Utah Blaze and the Pittsburgh Power, and ended on July 27, 2013, with the Utah Blaze and Cleveland Gladiators as the last game to kick off. The Arizona Rattlers defeated the Philadelphia Soul by a 48\u201339 score in ArenaBowl XXVI to conclude the league's playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231769-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arena Football League season, League business, Teams\nThe league dropped to 14 teams during the offseason. The Kansas City Command ceased operations on August 23, 2012, as well as the Georgia Force on October 14, 2012. The Milwaukee Mustangs suspended operations for 2013, eyeing a return to play in the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231769-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arena Football League season, League business, Television\nIt was announced on November 13, 2012, that the league had reached an agreement with CBS Sports Network to air 19 regular-season games, as well as two playoff games. The network was scheduled to air the league's \"game of the week\" each Saturday. The main CBS network was to televise ArenaBowl XXVI on August 17, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231769-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arena Football League season, Regular season standings\nEight teams qualify for the playoffs: four teams from each conference, of which two are division champions and the other two have the best records of the teams remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231769-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Arena Football League season, Regular season standings\nKey: \u00a0Conference and division champion\u00a0 \u2022 \u00a0Division champion\u00a0 \u2022 \u00a0Clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods\nBetween 1 and 3 April 2013, the northeastern section of Buenos Aires Province, Argentina, experienced several flash floods that claimed the lives of 101 people. Greater La Plata was hardest hit with 91 reported deaths, and Greater Buenos Aires reported 10 deaths. The flooding was the result of extremely heavy rainfall and is said to be the worst flooding in La Plata's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods\nThree days of national mourning were declared on 3 April. Two days later, government benefits for flood victims were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Storm\nOn the evening of Monday, 1 April 2013, a severe storm moved into the northeast of Buenos Aires Province. It began to rain heavily, peaking between 3:00am and 5:30am. During the storm's peak, visibility was only 500 metres (1,600\u00a0ft). In total the storm dumped between 160 and 190\u00a0mm (6.3\u20137.5\u00a0in) of rain on Buenos Aires, the heaviest April rainfall on record. Buenos Aires city typically averages 96\u00a0mm (3.8\u00a0in) of rain for the entire month of April. In nearby La Plata, the capital city of Buenos Aires Province, approximately 400\u00a0mm (16\u00a0in) of rain fell over a two-hour time span on Tuesday evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Storm\nThe heavy rainfall led to flash floods and widespread power outages. In Greater La Plata, an estimated 3,000 people were evacuated, many after waiting hours for rescue in trees and on roof tops of flooded homes. Half of the city lost power and vast portions were underwater. TV footage of the disaster showed people wading through waist-deep water and cars almost completely underwater. The city's oil refinery caught fire due to \"an extraordinary accumulation of rainwater and power outages\" and was shut down. Flood waters encircled the La Plata suburb of Tolosa, rendering 50 vehicles immobile. Santiago Martorelli, cabinet chief of La Plata partido (department), called the storm \"a catastrophe without precedent.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Storm\nIn Buenos Aires, more than a quarter of a million people were without power by Wednesday. Key transportation routes were submerged, and mass transit services disabled. A local reporter described the situation in Buenos Aires: \"A record torrential rainstorm unleashed all its might\u00a0... turning the city into a macabre version of Venice rather than the dry capital of Argentina.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Storm\nRain continued to fall throughout the region on 3 April, worsening the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Consequences\nIn Buenos Aires city, power shortages lasted as long as 15 hours in at least 11 Barrios (neighborhoods), affecting 70,000 households at its peak. Two hospitals were among those who lost power in La Plata. Buenos Aires Metro and rail systems were halted or limited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Consequences\nThe Chief of Government of Buenos Aires (city mayor), Mauricio Macri, was on vacation at the time of the flood, and returned in the evening. The same situation was for La Plata's city mayor Pablo Bruera, who first falsely claimed that he was assisting the evacuated people during the floods. President Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner visited the affected area on 3 April surveying the damage by helicopter and meeting with victims in Tolosa, Greater La Plata, where she was born and raised; and Barrio Mitre, a villa miseria (slum) in Buenos Aires city northside. Rescue efforts focused on finding victims still trapped in their homes to prevent further fatalities. Local charities sought donations of food, water, diapers and mattresses. Hepatitis shots were available at evacuation centers, and four mobile hospitals were set up to treat victims and distribute food and water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 913]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Consequences\nAt that time, at least 51 people were known to have died in Greater La Plata, and six deaths had been reported in Buenos Aires. Two additional deaths were reported in Greater Buenos Aires. Many victims died by drowning, while others were electrocuted by downed power lines (including a Metro worker who was electrocuted in Los Incas station). Many deaths in La Plata were not discovered until after the flood waters started to recede. \"The bodies began to appear as the water subsided,\" said the Governor of Buenos Aires Province, Daniel Scioli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Consequences\nNumerous families lost all their possessions in the floods, while shopkeepers reported losses of their merchandise. Business losses were estimated at 530.6 million pesos (US$104 million). Schools and government offices were closed across La Plata. As of 4 April, there were reportedly still 20 people missing and 1,200 evacuated in La Plata. More than two months later, it was officially reported that 78 was the number of deaths in Greater La Plata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Consequences\nPoliticians were quick to blame one another for the disaster. The Minister of Federal Planning and Public Utilities, Julio de Vido, claimed that Buenos Aires city officials knew that the rains were coming and had failed to prepare for them. Macri, a vocal opponent of President Kirchner, accused the national government of preventing the city from getting World Bank loans to finance infrastructure improvements. According to official data, the government of the City of Buenos Aires Mauricio Macri had not implemented any development works in stormwater infrastructure, while related works Brook Maldonado, had only 14 percent of budget execution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Consequences\nResidents of Barrio Mitre blamed the drainage system of a large shopping mall built nearby in 2009 for the heavy damage in their area. On Wednesday afternoon and on Thursday morning, Kirchner met with Scioli to coordinate the rescue and emergency efforts in Greater La Plata. Fear remained high as reports of looting and clashes with police officers spread. The Argentine army mounted an industrial kitchen and ten field kitchens to prepare hot meals 8000 and 1500 cold rations per day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Consequences\nThree days of national mourning were declared on 3 April. On 5 April, Kirchner announced government benefits for the victims, including doubled pensions for some 70,000 elderly people and for an estimated 16,000 families receiving five other social subsidies, free replacement ID cards, new car licenses, and low-cost housing loans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Causes\nThe general causes of the floods were the absence of drainage works, the urban development without environmental control and climate change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Causes\nAccording to a report based on official data that the Buenos Aires Government delivered each quarter, the Mayor of the city of Buenos Aires, Mauricio Macri, made no inversion in stormwater infrastructure development works, while works annexed to the Maldonado stream are only 14% of the authorized budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231770-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentina floods, Causes\nA report issued in August 2012 by the Buenos Aires audit indicated that the works to reduce flooding in the neighborhoods of Belgrano, Villa del Parque, Villa Ortuzar, Agronom\u00eda and Parque Chas had been paralyzed for 3 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Argentina on 27 October 2013. Open primary elections (PASO) were previously held on 11 August 2013 to determine eligible party lists for the general election. As in 2011 \u2013 when such primaries were held for the first time \u2013 each party list had to reach a 1.5% threshold at the provincial level in order to proceed to the 27 October polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election\nThe elections renewed half of the members of the Chamber of Deputies for the period 2013\u20132017 and a third of the members of the Senate for the period 2013\u20132019. Chamber of Deputies (Lower House) elections were held in every district; Senate elections were, in turn, held in the provinces of Chaco, Entre R\u00edos, Neuqu\u00e9n, R\u00edo Negro, Salta, Santiago del Estero, and Tierra del Fuego, as well as in the City of Buenos Aires. Corrientes Province held the only elections for governor in 2013, doing so on 15 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election\nThese elections included two significant novelties. Following the enactment of a law to that effect in 2012, voluntary suffrage was extended to voters age 16 and 17, which increased eligible voters by 4.5% or about 1.2 million; of this total, approximately 600,000 registered to vote. Argentine voters in 2013 also parted with the traditional election-day seal stamped on National Identity Documents (DNI) by election officials, receiving instead a ballot stub with a bar code and serial number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Background\nPresident Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner was reelected in 2011, and the Kirchnerist Front for Victory (FpV) rode her coattails in gubernatorial and congressional races alike. Following the elections, however, foreign exchange controls, austerity measures, persistent inflation, and downturns in Brazil, Europe, and other important trade partners, resulted in a sudden downturn and a consequent erosion of the president's popularity. A series of cacerolazos organized by opponents of the government took place during 2012 and 2013 (13S, 8N, 18A, and 8A).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Background\nThe recession was shorter and shallower than much of the local media had predicted, however; and while the FpV entered the 2013 campaign season with sounder footing on pocketbook issues, they were dogged by ongoing speculation that its caucus sought a two-thirds majority in the Lower House with the goal of amending the Constitution to allow the president to seek a third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Background\nA survey conducted in June 2013 by the consulting firm CEIS gave the Front for Victory (the majority party in Congress, as well as the party in power since 2003) 30.3% in the City of Buenos Aires and 39.7% in the Province of Buenos Aires (the largest electoral district). The right-wing PRO polled at 23.4% and 16.7%, respectively; the Federal Peronists and other PJ party lists opposed to Kirchnerism, 10.3% and 16.7%; the centrist Civic Coalition, 9.2% and 5.0%; and the center-left UCR, 7.4% and 8.0%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Background\nThe FpV, moreover, had the advantage of having relatively few Lower House seats at stake in 2013. Congressmen in Argentina serve four-year terms, and gains for the various opposition parties in 2009 meant that 2013 put a disproportionate number of their Lower House seats at stake: while the FpV contested 38 of its 116 Lower House seats, a full 76 of 118 opposition seats were at stake this year (a further 13 seats of the 23 belonging to minor parties allied with the FpV were at stake).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe PASO primaries were held on Sunday, 11 August, amid high turnout consistent with recent past elections and estimated by Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo at over 70%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe Province of Buenos Aires, the largest electoral district and home to 3 out of 8 Argentines, dominated campaign news much as it has in every mid-term election in recent years. As the party list filing deadline on 22 June drew near, the spotlight focused on the popular mayor of Tigre, Sergio Massa. Massa had been elected mayor on the FpV slate, and had served in a number of high-ranking posts in the administrations of both Cristina Kirchner and her predecessor and husband, the late N\u00e9stor Kirchner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nHis relationship with the Kirchners had been a difficult one, however, and though polling gave him better prospects running for Congress under the FpV party list than on a separate slate, Massa ultimately opted to form his own Frente Renovador (Renewal Front) ticket with the support of the 'Group of 8' Buenos Aires Province Mayors and others, notably former Argentine Industrial Union president Jos\u00e9 Ignacio de Mendiguren (an ally of Kirchnerism).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nMassa's decision to run as an opponent deprived the FpV of a key ally and he moved quickly to consolidate the center-right vote in Buenos Aires Province by obtaining the endorsement of the PRO (which ran on the Renewal Front list headed by Massa rather than on its own).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nFederal Peronist Congressman Francisco de Narv\u00e1ez, who would be in direct competition with the Renewal Front for the province's large center-right Peronist vote, believed that the charismatic Massa was in reality a \"trojan horse\" for the FpV; Renewal Front congressmen, per his reasoning, would run against Kirchnerism only to vote with them once elected to Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe Renewal Front, in any case, ultimately defeated the FpV list headed by Lomas de Zamora Mayor Mart\u00edn Insaurralde by about 35% to 30%, with the Progressive, Civic and Social Front (FPCyS) list headed by Congressmen Margarita Stolbizer and Ricardo Alfons\u00edn and Congressman de Narv\u00e1ez's Front for Union and Work list receiving about 11% each; were this result to be mirrored in October, de Narv\u00e1ez would lose four of eight congressmen he led in 2009 on the successful Uni\u00f3n/PRO list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe centrist Civic Coalition ARI, for its part, arguably achieved its most significant political victory in four years when Congressman Alfonso Prat-Gay forged the Civic Coalition-led Juntos UNEN (Together They Unite) alliance with UCR Congressional caucus leader Ricardo Gil Lavedra, leftist Proyecto Sur leader Pino Solanas, former Civic Coalition head Elisa Carri\u00f3 (who left the CC in 2012 following a poor showing in the 2011 presidential race), and Victoria Donda of the leftist Freemen of the South Movement in January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nPrat-Gay was nominated as the lead UNEN candidate for a seat in the Argentine Senate for the City of Buenos Aires (where the alliance was strongest), and Gil Lavedra the lead UNEN candidate for the Lower House; former Economy Minister Mart\u00edn Lousteau (who fell out with President Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner after his 2008 dismissal) joined Gil Lavedra and Carri\u00f3 on the UNEN Lower House list for the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe City of Buenos Aires, ruled since 2007 by a PRO mayor, handed the rightist PRO an upset by giving UNEN standard-bearers Prat-Gay and Solanas the two Senate seats (out of three) accorded to the winning list in each district, edging out former Vice-Mayor Gabriela Michetti (who would obtain the third seat) and current City Environment Minister Diego Santilli, and costing FpV Senator Daniel Filmus his own seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe PRO party list for the city's delegation to the Lower House, headed by Rabbi Sergio Bergman (a member of the Buenos Aires City Legislature) and Bank of the City of Buenos Aires director Federico Sturzenegger, was likewise defeated by the UNEN list headed by Congressmen Gil Lavedra and Carri\u00f3. The FpV list led by Legislator Juan Cabandi\u00e9, came in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nC\u00f3rdoba Province, where Governor Jos\u00e9 Manuel de la Sota broke with the president after being elected with her endorsement, is where the acrimony between these Peronist factions was probably most acute. De la Sota fielded former Governor Juan Schiaretti as the head of his Lower House party list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nTheir Union for C\u00f3rdoba list bested the UCR list headed by Congressman Oscar Aguad, the PRO list headed by former football referee H\u00e9ctor Baldassi, the FpV list headed by former National University of C\u00f3rdoba rector Carina Scotto, and the \"It's Possible\" list headed by former Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo with the support of neighboring San Luis Province Senator Alberto Rodr\u00edguez Sa\u00e1 (a Federal Peronist). Cavallo, who ran as a conservative and lost much of his political base as economy minister during the 2001 crisis, failed to reach the requisite 1.5% threshold to advance to the 27 October general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nSanta Fe Province voted in the PASO election amid mourning for the 15 or more fatal victims claimed by the Rosario gas explosion on 6 August. Voters there gave the Progressive, Civic and Social Front list headed by former Governor Hermes Binner a victory over the PRO list headed by comedian Miguel del Sel and the FpV list headed by former Governor Jorge Obeid; the Socialist Party, to which Binner and the current governor, Antonio Bonfatti, belongs, is strongest in this province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nMendoza Province gave the UCR list headed by former Governor and Vice President Julio Cobos a victory over the FpV list headed by Guaymall\u00e9n Department Mayor Alejandro Abraham. Cobos is probably best remembered for his surprise, tie-breaking vote in 2008 against a bill raising oilseed export taxes; though not an oilseed-producing province, conservative politics have historically been strong in Mendoza, and Cobos' unexpected axing of the measure was widely supported in his province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe PASO primaries thus gave congressional candidates on the Front for Victory (FpV) list a much reduced share of the popular vote (around 30%, compared to 57% in 2011), and the FpV led in only 10 of 23 provinces. They retained a plurality of the vote, however, and by virtue of having only 37 Lower House seats at stake, will likely increase their parliamentary majority by two. The UCR and FPCyS together totaled around 24%, with the latter likely losing around 5 seats due to the large number of seats at stake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Primaries\nThe FpV fared better in most Senate races, losing only in the City of Buenos Aires while winning in Chaco, Entre R\u00edos, R\u00edo Negro, Salta, Santiago del Estero, and Tierra del Fuego Provinces; like in the Lower House races, their popular vote for Senate races fell sharply (from 54% to 34%), but their 8% advantage over the UCR and FPCyS combined and their improved showing in Tierra del Fuego compensated their loss of support elsewhere. The Neuqu\u00e9n People's Movement that has dominated politics in Neuqu\u00e9n Province since the 1960s and caucuses with the FpV in Congress, won in a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Results\nThe second and final round, held on 27 October, closely mirrored the 11 August results. The Renewal Front (center/center-right Peronists) received a plurality of votes in Buenos Aires Province (the nation's largest), while the Front for Victory (left-wing Peronists) and allies maintained their majority in both houses of Congress with minimal changes in the party composition of either chamber. Turnout was high, and was estimated to have reached 76%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231771-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine legislative election, Results\nCristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner, serving a second presidency, is constitutionally barred from standing in the 2015 election, and the Front for Victory lacks the special two-thirds majority needed for a constitutional amendment. The support for Front for Victory dropped from 54% in 2011 to 33% in 2013. The government faces increasing popular discontent, and the vice-president Amado Boudou (currently acting as president while Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner recuperates after surgery) is under investigation for the so-called Boudougate. Analysts for the BBC consider the poll results suggest Sergio Massa, Mauricio Macri and Daniel Scioli are likely candidates for the presidency in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231772-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Argentine provincial elections\nThere were elections in the provinces in Argentina in 2013, for two governors and 13 provincial legislatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231773-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Argos\u2013Shimano season\nThe 2013 season for the Argos\u2013Shimano began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231774-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arimex Challenger Trophy\nThe 2013 Arimex ATP Challenger Trophy was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the TC EMPIRE in Trnava, Slovakia from 14 to 22 September 2013, including the qualifying competition on the first two days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231774-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arimex Challenger Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231775-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arimex Challenger Trophy \u2013 Doubles\nNikola \u0106iri\u0107 and Goran To\u0161i\u0107 were the defending champions, but chose not to compete this year. The top two seeds competed for the title, where Marin Draganja and Mate Pavi\u0107 defeated Alja\u017e Bedene and Jaroslav Posp\u00ed\u0161il 7\u20135, 4\u20136, [10\u20136]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231776-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arimex Challenger Trophy \u2013 Singles\nAndrey Kuznetsov was the defending champion, but lost to finalist Adrian Ungur in the quarterfinals, who lost to Julian Reister in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231777-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe 2013 season was the Arizona Cardinals' 94th in the National Football League, their 26th in Arizona and their first under head coach Bruce Arians. The team finished with a 10\u20136 record, which was the second time in 37 years that the team finished with at least 10 wins. The Cardinals doubled their win total from 2012, and were in playoff contention heading into the Week 17 regular season finale, but missed the playoffs for a fourth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231777-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Cardinals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Tennessee Titans\nWith the win, the Cardinals were the only NFC West team to defeat all of their AFC South opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231777-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Cardinals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nThe Cardinals finished their regular season at home against the San Francisco 49ers in hopes of making the playoffs with not only a win over the 49ers, but also a long shot win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New Orleans. After being behind 17\u20137 at halftime, the Cardinals were ultimately shut down by their division rivals and put in 3rd place, barely missing out as they needed to beat the 49ers to win the NFC's last playoff spot. However, even if they had won, their spot depended on the outcome of the game between the New Orleans Saints and the Buccaneers. They would finish their season 10\u20136, becoming the league's only team with a winning record to not make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231777-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Cardinals season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nWith the loss, the Cardinals finished the season by 10\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231778-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe Arizona Diamondbacks' 2013 season, was the franchise's 16th season in Major League Baseball and also their 16th season at Chase Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231778-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe Diamondbacks played 25 extra inning games during the season, the most of any MLB team in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231778-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Diamondbacks 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231778-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Diamondbacks 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; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231779-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Rattlers season\nThe 2013 Arizona Rattlers season was the 22nd season for the franchise Arena Football League, coming off of their victory in ArenaBowl XXV. The team was coached by Kevin Guy and played their home games at the US Airways Center. With a 15\u20133 record, the Rattlers won their fourth consecutive division title to qualify for the playoffs. The Rattlers successfully defended their championship in ArenaBowl XXVI by once again defeating the Philadelphia Soul by a 48\u201339 score to win their fourth ArenaBowl championship in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231779-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Rattlers season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated August 7, 201323 Active, 13 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231779-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Rattlers season, Standings\nz - Clinched division and conference's best recordx - Clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231779-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Rattlers season, Regular season schedule\nThe Rattlers began the season at home against the Philadelphia Soul on March 23 in a rematch of ArenaBowl XXV. They closed the regular season on the road against the Iowa Barnstormers on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team\nThe 2013 Sun Devils football team represented Arizona State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by second-year coach Todd Graham and played their home games at Sun Devil Stadium. They were a member of the South Division of the Pac-12 Conference. The Sun Devils had their best season since 2007, finishing 10\u20134 and earning a spot in the Pac\u201312 Championship Game. They also increased their win total and played in a bowl game for the third consecutive season. During the season, the team was featured on The Drive, a weekly documentary series on the Pac-12 Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Previous season\nThe 2012 Sun Devils finished 8\u20135 (5\u20134 in the Pac-12) in Todd Graham's first season as head coach. They were invited to the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl where they defeated Navy. It was the first time the Sun Devils won a bowl game since the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Sacramento State\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 De'Marieya Nelson 16 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Kevin Ozier 41 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Sacramento State\n2nd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 6 yard run (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Jaelen Strong 24 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Chris Coyle 33 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 26 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Sacramento State\n3rd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 40 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Michael Eubank 4 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Sacramento State\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 29 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 34 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\n2nd quarter scoring: WIS \u2013 Jacob Pedersen 2 yard pass from Joel Stave (French kick); WIS \u2013 Beau Allen 0 yard fumble recovery (French kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); Zane Gonzalez 19 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\n3rd quarter scoring: WIS \u2013 Melvin Gordon 80 yard run (French kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 1 yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\n4th quarter scoring: WIS \u2013 Kyle French 34 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 2 yard run; ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 12 yard run (Gonzalez kick); WIS \u2013 Melvin Gordon 1 yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, Controversial last play (kneel) of the game\n[ [ File:Joel Stave kneel vs ASU.jpg|thumb|right|390px|An ESPN camera angle of Stave's kneel from the Wisconsin endzone.] ]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 115], "content_span": [116, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, Controversial last play (kneel) of the game\nAfter a couple more completions, the Badgers had the ball at the Sun Devil 13-yard line for 1st and 10. The Badgers were in possession of the football with 18 seconds left, hoping to kick a game-winning field goal. Upon the hike Quarterback Joel Stave knelt in the middle of the field to center the ball for their kicker. Stave then placed the ball quickly on the ground after the play was blown dead by the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 115], "content_span": [116, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, Controversial last play (kneel) of the game\nReplays showed that Stave did get his knee down for a brief second, however Arizona State believed that it was a fumble, and ASU Anthony Jones dove on top of the ball, with the game clock running. At this point Badgers players signalled to the officials, pointing out the delay of game penalty by ASU due to Anthony being top of the football. Umpire Jack Folliard motioned to Stave acknowledging his knee, however the rest of the officiating crew allegedly did not see this signal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 115], "content_span": [116, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, Controversial last play (kneel) of the game\nThe umpire then spotted the ball after a significant delay, but told the Wisconsin offensive line to wait to line up, even though the clock continued to run. Finally, with approximately 2 seconds remaining, the umpire rushed behind the defensive line as Wisconsin tried to run a play to spike the ball and stop the clock but the clock reached zero before the ball was snapped and the game was over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 115], "content_span": [116, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, Controversial last play (kneel) of the game\nInitially after the game ASU coach Todd Graham stated \"The quarterback put the ball on the ground while he was still standing up, he hadn't been tackled,\" and \"So that should have been a turnover. That should have ended the game.\" And after watching the footage after the game he acknowledged the officiating error when he stated \"You win or you lose. We won and let's move onto the next deal. Obviously, that was a very unusual deal.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 115], "content_span": [116, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, Controversial last play (kneel) of the game\nThe next day saw sports commentators and articles who reported on the \"bizarre end\" of the game in Tempe. Some even stated that Stave's knee did not touch the ground or that he crouched. This was later countered by other sports commentators, notably columnist Dennis Dodd of CBS Sports that the NCAA handbook states that one simply has to assimilate a kneeling motion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 115], "content_span": [116, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin, Controversial last play (kneel) of the game\nUltimately the Pac-12 reprimanded the officiating crew two days after the game ended, deeming that the officials had not acted with enough urgency during the end of the game. Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott made a statement when announcing the reprimand; \"After a thorough review, we have determined that the officials fell short of the high standard in which the Pac-12 games should be managed. We will continue to work with all our officials to ensure this type of situation never occurs again.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 115], "content_span": [116, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n1st quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Ty Montgomery 17 yard pass from Kevin Hogan (Williamson kick); STAN \u2013 Tyler Gaffney 1 yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n2nd quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Anthony Wilkerson 12 yard run (Williamson kick); STAN \u2013 Ty Montgomery 30 yard pass from Kevin Hogan (Williamson kick); STAN \u2013 Luke Kaumatule punt block for safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n3rd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 2 yard run (Gonzalez kick); STAN \u2013 Jordan Williamson 20 yard kick; STAN \u2013 Tyler Gaffney 16 yard run (Williamson kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Chris Coyle 45 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Jaelen Strong 27 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 6 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); STAN \u2013 Jordan Williamson 24 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, USC\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Michael Eubank 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); USC \u2013 Justin Davis 26 yard run (Heidari kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, USC\n2nd quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Tre Madden 10 yard pass from Cody Kessler (Heidari kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 11 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 28 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 21 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, USC\n3rd quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Tre Madden 24 yard run (Heidari kick); ASU \u2013 D. J. Foster 74 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Alden Darby 46 yard interception return (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 8 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 9 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, USC\n4th quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Tre Madden 48 yard pass from Cody Kessler; USC \u2013 Justin Davis 15 yard run (Heidari kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 28 yard run (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Deantre Lewis 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); USC \u2013 Justin Davis 58 yard run (Heidari kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\n2nd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 40 yard kick; Zane Gonzalez 27 yard kick; ND \u2013 Ben Koyack 19 yard pass from Tommy Rees (Brindza kick); Jaelen Strong 36 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); TJ Jones 8 yard pass from Tommy Rees (Brindza kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\n3rd quarter scoring: ND \u2013 Kyle Brindza 53 yard kick; ND \u2013 Troy Niklas 21 yard pass from Tommy Rees (Brindza kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Osahon Irabor 37 yard interception return (Gonzalez kick); ND \u2013 Kyle Brindza 33 yard kick; ASU \u2013 De'Marieya Nelson 21 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ND \u2013 Kyle Brindza 25 yard kick; ND \u2013 Dan Fox 14 yard interception return (Brindza kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 16 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Colorado\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Jaelen Strong 69 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 8 yard run (Jaelen Strong pass from Mike Bercovici); ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 26 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Colorado\n2nd quarter scoring: COL \u2013 Nelson Spruce 10 yard pass from Sefo Liufau; ASU \u2013 Davon Coleman 1 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Davon Coleman sack for safety; ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 41 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 27 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Taylor Kelly 17 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Colorado\n3rd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 R.J. Robinson 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Colorado\n4th quarter scoring: COL \u2013 Christian Powell 8 yard run (Oliver kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington\n1st quarter scoring: WASH \u2013 Bishop Sankey 1 yard run (Coons kick); ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 26 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington\n2nd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 15 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 22 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 36 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Taylor Kelly 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Chris Coyle 14 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington\n3rd quarter scoring: WASH \u2013 Kevin Smith 70 yard pass from Keith Price (Coons kick); ASU \u2013 Taylor Kelly 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); WASH \u2013 Travis Coons 27 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 21 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); WASH \u2013 Austin Seferian-Jenkins 20 yard pass from Keith Price (Coons kick); ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 14 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Taylor Kelly 7 yard run (Gonzalez kick); Taylor Kelly 6 yard run (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Jaelen Strong 11 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n2nd quarter scoring: WSU \u2013 Gabe Marks 34 yard pass from Connor Halliday (Furney kick); ASU \u2013 D.J. Foster 7 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Richard Smith 51 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Chris Coyle 8 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick); WSU \u2013 Rickey Galvin 15 yard pass from Connor Halliday (Furney kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n3rd quarter scoring: WSU \u2013 Jeremiah Laufasa 4 yard run (Furney kick); ASU \u2013 D.J. Foster 23 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 37 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 36 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Utah\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Taylor Kelly 10 yard run (Gonzalez kick); UTAH \u2013 Dres Anderson 8 yard pass from Travis Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Utah\n2nd quarter scoring: UTAH \u2013 Andy Phillips 51 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Utah\n3rd quarter scoring: UTAH \u2013 Andy Phillips 43 yard kick; UTAH \u2013 Sean Fitzgerald 12 yard pass from Travis Wilson (Phillips kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Utah\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Taylor Kelly 2 yard run (Gonzalez kick); Richard Smith 14 yard pass from Taylor Kelly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Oregon State\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 D.J. Foster 8 yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Oregon State\n2nd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Marion Grice 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); OSU \u2013 Trevor Romaine 22 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Oregon State\n3rd quarter scoring: OSU \u2013 Caleb Smith 6 yard pass from Sean Mannion (Romaine kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Oregon State\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 18 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Robert Nelson 23 yard interception return (Gonzalez kick); OSU \u2013 Connor Hamlett 29 yard pass from Sean Mannion (Romaine kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Taylor Kelly 3 yard run (Gonzalez kick); UCLA \u2013 Devin Lucien 42 yard pass from Brett Hundley (Fairbarin kick); UCLA \u2013 Ka'imi Fairbairn 48 yard kick; ASU \u2013 D.J. Foster 3 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n2nd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Carl Bradford 18 yard interception return (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 Michael Eubank 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); UCLA \u2013 Ka'imi Fairbairn 23 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Jaelen Strong 19 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n3rd quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Myles Jack 3 yard run (Fairbairn kick); UCLA \u2013 Paul Perkins 1 yard run (Fairbairn kick); ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 28 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n4th quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Shaquelle Evans 27 yard pass from Brett Hundley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, UCLA\nArizona State clinched the Pac-12 South Division Title with this win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n1st quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 38 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 21 yard kick; ASU \u2013 Darwin Rogers 38 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n2nd quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 D.J. Foster 14 yard run (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 De'Marieya Nelson 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick); UA \u2013 B.J. Denker 1 yard run (Smith kick); ASU \u2013 Zane Gonzalez 23 yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n3rd quarter scoring: UA \u2013 Ka'Deem Carey 8 yard run (Smith kick); ASU \u2013 Damarious Randall 64 yard interception return (Gonzalez kick); UA \u2013 Garic Wharton 4 yard fumble recovery (Smith kick); ASU \u2013 Jaelen Strong 61 yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n4th quarter scoring: ASU \u2013 D.J. Foster 7 yard run (Gonzalez kick); ASU \u2013 De'Marieya Nelson 1 yard run (Gonzalez kick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Stanford (Pac-12 Championship Game)\n1st quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Tyler Gaffney 69-yard run (Jordan Williamson kick); ASU \u2013 D. J. Foster 51-yard run (Zane Gonzalez kick); STAN \u2013 Gaffney 1-yard run (Williamson kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Stanford (Pac-12 Championship Game)\n2nd quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Ty Montgomery 22-yard run (Williamson kick); STAN \u2013 Gaffney 1-yard run (Williamson kick); ASU \u2013 Foster 65-yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231780-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona State Sun Devils football team, Game summaries, Stanford (Pac-12 Championship Game)\n4th quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Montgomery 24-yard pass from Kevin Hogan (Williamson kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 96], "content_span": [97, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231781-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats baseball team\nThe 2013 Arizona Wildcats baseball team represented the University of Arizona in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Wildcats played their home games for the 2nd season at Hi Corbett Field. The team was coached by Andy Lopez in his 12th season at Arizona. The program was coming off of a season that saw them win their first College World Series title since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wildcats played their home games at Arizona Stadium in Tucson for the 85th straight year. The 2013 season was Arizona's third in the South Division of the Pac-12 Conference and the second for head coach Rich Rodriguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Before the season, Previous season\nIn the 2012 season, head coach Rich Rodriguez's first at Arizona, the Wildcats went 8\u20135 overall and 4\u20135 in Pac-12 play. The team defeated Nevada 49\u201348 in the 2012 New Mexico Bowl after trailing 48\u201335 with 1:48 remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Before the season, Previous season\nNo Arizona player was taken in the NFL Draft for the first time since 2005, although three signed with teams as free agents. Quarterback Matt Scott signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars, center Kyle Quinn signed with the Philadelphia Eagles, and wide receiver Dan Bucker signed with the Arizona Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nArizona held fifteen spring practices from March 12 through April 13 including an hour-long scrimmage at Phoenix College on March 29. The team's defense won the scrimmage by one point after stopping the offense on its final drive. Quarterback B.J. Denker threw for four touchdowns and 176 yards. Javelle Allen had 57 yards passing and 50 through the air. Coach Rodriguez rested all-American running back Ka'Deem Carey, who appeared for only one series. Several key defensive players were held out entirely, including Jake Fischer, Marquis Flowers, Jonathan McKnight, Shaquille Richardson, C.J. Dozier, Jourdon Grandon and Dan Pettinato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nArizona's offense won the 2013 spring game, held on April 13 in front of 4,095 at the program's practice facility, Kindall/Sancet Stadium, and televised on Pac-12 Arizona. Carey and Fischer again sat out, among others. Denker went 13\u201320, 246 yards, 4 touchdowns, and 1 interception; Jesse Scroggins went 6\u201314, 44 yards, 2 touchdowns, and 1 interception; and Jack Nykaza went 8\u201312, 89 yards, and 2 touchdowns. Dakota Conwell and Shane Wilson led the defense with 5 tackles apiece. Dame Ndiaye had 4 tackles, 1 sack (\u221210 yards), 1 tackle-for-loss (\u22121), a pass-broken-up, and a forced-fumble. William Parks and Tra'mayne Bondurant each made an interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Schedule\nArizona played six of twelve regular season games at home: two of three non-conference games and four of nine Pac-12 games. The Cats played neither Oregon State nor Stanford in both 2013 and 2014. They played the Boston College Eagles in the 2013 AdvoCare V100 Bowl to conclude the season, which they won 42\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Northern Arizona\nIn the first non-conference game of the 2013 season, Arizona will play the Northern Arizona Lumberjacks at Tucson. In their previous meeting in 2011, Arizona defeated the Northern Arizona 41\u201310 and Arizona lead the all-time series 11\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UNLV\nJunior RB Ka\u2019Deem Carey, the nation\u2019s leading rusher and a consensus All-American in 2012, rushed 16 times for 171 yards (averaging 10.7 yards per carry) as Arizona routed the UNLV Rebels in a 58\u201313 road victory at Sam Boyd Stadium. Carey saw his first action of the season after serving a one-game suspension related to offseason off-the-field issues. His first carry was a 58-yard touchdown run, early in the second quarter, which set the tone for the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UNLV\nDefensively, Arizona also showed solid performance; senior LB Jake Fischer intercepted UNLV QB Nick Sherry midway through the second quarter and returned it 49 yards for a touchdown; soon afterward, safety Tra\u2019Mayne Bondurant picked off Sherry and ran 52 yards for a touchdown, his second in as many weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UNLV\nThe Cats excelled with their ground game, finishing with 68 carries for 397 yards and five touchdowns. Arizona, up 45\u20136 at halftime, attempted only four passes after the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UNLV\nArizona senior QB B.J. Denker also had two rushing scores in the first half. He scored from 35 and 4 yards in the first quarter. Denker finished the game with 60 yards on 16 carries, but only passed for 81 yards on 8-of-21 passing. For the second straight game, Denker was interception-free.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UNLV\nIn their previous meeting in 2001, Arizona defeated the Rebels 38\u201321 and Arizona leads the all-time series 2\u20130. Arizona has also won the Maaco Bowl Las Vegas at Sam Boyd Stadium in 2008, defeating BYU 31\u201321 under then-head coach Mike Stoops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UTSA\nIn their third and final non-conference game, Arizona defeated the UTSA Roadrunners at home by a score of 38\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Washington\nIn the fourth and first road conference game of the 2013 season, Arizona will play the Washington Huskies at Seattle. In their previous meeting, Arizona defeated Washington 52\u201317, and Washington leads the all-time series 18\u201310\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, USC\nIn their fifth game, Arizona will play the USC Trojans in Los Angeles. In their previous meeting, Arizona defeated USC 39\u201336, and USC leads the all-time series 28\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Utah (Family Weekend)\nIn their sixth and first home conference game of the 2013 season, Arizona will play the Utah Utes in Tucson. In their previous meeting, Arizona defeated Utah 34\u201324, and Utah leads the all-time series 20\u201316\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Colorado\nIn their seventh game, Arizona will play the Colorado Buffaloes in Boulder. In their previous meeting, Arizona defeated Colorado 56\u201338, and Colorado leads the all-time series 13\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, California\nIn their eighth game, Arizona played the California Golden Bears in Berkeley. In their previous meeting, in 2010, Arizona defeated California 10\u20139 and tied the all-time series 14\u201314\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, California\n1st quarter scoring: CAL \u2013 Khalf Muhammad 11-yard pass from Jared Goff (Vincen D'Amato kick); ARIZ \u2013 B. Denker 9-yard run (J. Smith kick); ARIZ \u2013 Team safety", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, California\n2nd quarter scoring: ARIZ \u2013 Smith 53-yard field goal; ARIZ \u2013 N. Phillips 21-yard pass from Denker (Smith kick);CAL \u2013 Kenny Lawler 17-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, California\n3rd quarter scoring: ARIZ \u2013 Denker 1-yard run (Smith kick); CAL \u2013 Lawler 3-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick); ARIZ \u2013 Denker 14-yard run (Smith kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, California\n4th quarter scoring:CAL \u2013 Lawler 29-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UCLA (Homecoming)\nIn their ninth game Arizona will play the UCLA Bruins in Tucson. In their previous meeting, Arizona defeated by UCLA 66\u201310 and UCLA leads the all-time series 20\u201315\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UCLA (Homecoming)\n1st quarter scoring: ARIZ \u2013 Jake Smith 44-yard field goal; UCLA \u2013 Shaquell Evans 66-yard pass from Brett Hundley (Kaim Fairbairn kick); UCLA \u2013 Hundley 15-yard run (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UCLA (Homecoming)\n2nd quarter scoring: ARIZ \u2013 Ka\u2019Deem Carey 4-yard run (Smith kick); UCLA \u2013 Evans 4-yard pass from Hundley (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UCLA (Homecoming)\n3rd quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Fairbairn 34-yard field goal; ARIZ \u2013 Smith 27-yard field goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UCLA (Homecoming)\n4th quarter scoring: ARIZ \u2013 N. Phillips 15-yard pass from B. Denker (2-point conversion failed); UCLA \u2013 Myles Jack 66-yard run (Fairbairn kick); ARIZ \u2013 Phillips 14-yard pass from Denker (Smith kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Washington State\nIn their tenth game, Arizona will play the Washington State Cougars in Tucson. In their previous meeting, first time since in 2010, Arizona defeated Washington State 24\u20137, and Arizona leads the all-time series 25\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nIn the final home game the 2013 season, Ka'Deem Carey ran for 206 yards and four touchdowns while becoming Arizona's all-time leading rusher, and the Wildcats pulled off a monumental upset by taking advantage of numerous miscues, shocking the fifth-ranked Oregon Ducks 42\u201316 in Tucson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nArizona was coming off consecutive home losses, the most disappointing being the previous week's tough loss against Washington State, a team the Wildcats were expected to defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nThe Wildcats jumped out to a quick 14\u20130 lead and kept going for their first win over a top-five team since knocking off the same Oregon team, then number 2, in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nCarey, a junior RB, was the workhorse for Arizona as he has been all season, carrying a school-record 48 times while scoring on runs of 6, 1, 9 and 2 yards to break Art Luppino's career record of 48 total touchdowns set from 1953\u20131956. Carey also reached 3,913 career yards rushing, breaking the mark of 3,824 set by Trung Canidate from 1996\u20131999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nSenior QB B.J. Denker, who was 19 of 22 passing, threw for 178 yards and two touchdowns, ran for 102 more. As a team, Arizona had 304 yards rushing against Oregon, a season-high. This was Denker's final home game as a Wildcat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nOregon sputtered most of the day, showing only flashes of the offensive brilliance that had them No. 2 in total offense and third in scoring entering the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nDucks QB Marcus Mariota, widely considered a contender for the Heisman Award, threw for 308 yards and two touchdowns, but also had two interceptions, his first since Nov. 17, 2012, against Stanford (the Cardinal, with this Oregon loss and their rout of traditional rival California 63\u201313 at Stanford Stadium in the Big Game, clinched a spot in the Pac-12 championship game, and a chance at the Rose Bowl, that many thought was the Ducks' for the taking.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nSenior LB Jake Fischer, who like Denker was playing in his final game at Arizona Stadium, led the team with 14 tackles. Fischer led an Arizona defense that held an Oregon offense that came into the game averaging 50.9 points per game to just 16. Fischer now has 75 tackles on the season and 259 for his career. This was Fischer\u2019s first-ever win against the Ducks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oregon\nThis win brings the Wildcats' overall win total to seven games, strengthening their chances at a post-season bowl game invitation, possibly to the Alamo Bowl, the Sun Bowl or several others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Arizona State (Territorial Cup)\nIn the 2013 edition of the Territorial Cup and final road game of the 2013 season, Arizona played the Arizona State Sun Devils in Tempe. In their previous meeting, Arizona State defeated Arizona 41\u201334. Arizona leads the all-time series 47\u201339-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Boston College (AdvoCare V100 Bowl)\nIn the 2013 AdvoCare V100 Bowl and final game the season, Arizona played the Boston College Eagles in Shreveport, Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231782-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Arizona Wildcats football team, After the season, Players Drafted\nThe following Arizona players were selected in the 2014 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231783-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas 7A High School Football Season\nThe 2013 Arkansas 7A High School Football Season began in the fall of the 2013\u20132014 school year. The first conference game was played Thursday, September 5, 2013 with the Catholic Rockets taking on the Hall Warriors. The season ended with the championship game on Friday, December 13, 2013, at War Memorial Stadium, during which the Bentonville Tigers defeated the Cabot Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231783-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas 7A High School Football Season, Conference Alignment\nThe 2013 football season was the second under the 2012 - 2014 classification cycle. In an effort to reduce travel costs, the sixteen 7A teams were distributed among four conferences along with the sixteen 6A teams. However, only 7A teams are taken into account when determining 7A state playoff berths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231783-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas 7A High School Football Season, State Playoffs\nPower rankings determined seeding and thus which teams qualified to the state playoffs. 6A members were dropped out of the rankings. Bryant was considered a west team for seeding purposes, whereas the four 7A teams from the 7A/6A East conference were considered central teams. Six teams from the west and six from the central advanced to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231784-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 6A Boys Soccer Season\nThe 2013 Arkansas High School 6A Boys Soccer Season was part of the 16th high school soccer season in the state of Arkansas. The season officially began February 25 although 6A conference matches did not begin until March 7. The season concluded May 17 with the championship match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231784-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 6A Boys Soccer Season, Conference Alignment\nThe 2013 soccer season was the first under the 2012 - 2014 classification cycle. Hall was moved back down to the 6A classification, whereas Van Buren was moved back up to the 7A classification. In an effort to reduce travel costs, the sixteen 6A teams were distributed among four conferences along with the sixteen 7A teams. However, only 6A teams were taken into account when determining 6A state playoff berths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231784-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 6A Boys Soccer Season, Regular season\nTeams in the 7A/6A West and 7A/6A South conferences played a single round-robin of seven games, playing once against each opponent. Teams in the 7A/6A Central and 7A/6A East played each other home-and-away in a double round-robin of fourteen games. Matches finishing in a draw after 80 minutes were sent directly to a penalty shootout. The winner of the shootout was awarded a win, whereas the loser was awarded a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231784-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 6A Boys Soccer Season, Regular season\nIf two or more teams were equal on wins and losses at the end of conference play, the following criteria was used to determine the final standings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231784-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 6A Boys Soccer Season, State Playoffs\nPower rankings determined seeding and thus which teams qualified to the state playoffs. 6A members were dropped out of the rankings. Siloam Springs was considered a south team for seeding purposes, whereas the four 7A teams from the 7A/6A Central conference were considered east teams. Six teams from the south and six from the east advanced to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231785-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 7A Boys Soccer Season\nThe 2013 Arkansas High School 7A Boys Soccer Season was the 16th season of the highest classification of high school boys soccer in Arkansas since being sanctioned by the Arkansas Activities Association. The season officially began February 25, although 7A conference matches did not begin until March 7, 2013. The season concluded May 17, 2013 with the championship match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231785-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 7A Boys Soccer Season, Conference Alignment\nThe 2013 soccer season was the first under the 2012 - 2014 classification cycle. Hall was moved back down to the 6A classification, whereas Van Buren was moved back up to the 7A classification. In an effort to reduce travel costs, the sixteen 7A teams were distributed among four conferences along with the sixteen 6A teams. However, only 7A teams were taken into account when determining 7A state playoff berths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231785-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 7A Boys Soccer Season, Regular season\nTeams in the 7A/6A West and 7A/6A South conferences play a single round-robin of seven games, playing once against each opponent. Teams in the 7A/6A Central and 7A/6A East play each other home-and-away in a double round-robin of fourteen games. Matches finishing in a draw after 80 minutes go directly to a penalty shootout. The winner of the shootout is awarded a win, whereas the loser is awarded a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231785-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 7A Boys Soccer Season, Regular season\nIf two or more teams are equal on wins and losses at the end of conference play, the following criteria is used to determine the final standings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231785-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas High School 7A Boys Soccer Season, State Playoffs\nPower rankings determined seeding and thus which teams qualified to the state playoffs. 6A members were dropped out of the rankings. Bryant was considered a west team for seeding purposes, whereas the four 7A teams from the 7A/6A East conference were considered central teams. Six teams from the west and six from the central advanced to the playoffs. Power ratings were calculated using the following procedures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231786-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team\nThe 2013 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team represented the University of Arkansas in baseball at the Division I level in the NCAA for the 2013 season. Dave van Horn is the coach and completed his eleventh year at his alma mater. During the season, he won his 1,000th game as a collegiate head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231786-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, February, Western Illinois\nThe Razorbacks began the 2013 campaign with a 9\u20131 victory over the Western Illinois Leathernecks at Baum Stadium. First baseman Eric Fisher, a redshirt sophomore, hit his first collegiate home run in the game, with Jacob Mahan and Brian Anderson both going 2 for 2 at the plate. The following day, the Razorbacks took a 7\u20132 victory over the Leathernecks with starting pitcher Barrett Astin getting the win. Matt Vinson and Joe Serrano each had 2-RBI singles. Sophomore pitcher Jalen Beeks made his first appearance for the Razorbacks in relief. Trent Daniel gave up six runs (three earned) and received the loss as Western Illinois took the third game, 7\u20135. The Razorbacks subsequently dropped from #1 in the Baseball America, Collegiate Baseball, and NCBWA polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231786-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, February, New Orleans\nAlthough scheduled to be a two-day series, the Razorbacks and New Orleans Privateers decided to reschedule and play a doubleheader on February 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231786-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, Rankings\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, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231787-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas Razorbacks football team\nThe 2013 Arkansas Razorbacks football team represented the University of Arkansas during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Razorbacks played their home games at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville and War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock, Arkansas. They played as a member of the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231787-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas Razorbacks football team, Preseason\nBret Bielema was hired as Arkansas's head football coach on December 4, leaving the same position with the Wisconsin Badgers. The move surprised many, including Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez. It was announced Wisconsin defensive coordinator Chris Ash would take the same position at Arkansas on December 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231788-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas State Red Wolves football team\nThe 2013 Arkansas State Red Wolves football team represented Arkansas State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. For the third consecutive season, the Red Wolves were led by a first-year head coach, with Bryan Harsin, previously offensive coordinator at Texas, taking over from Gus Malzahn, who left to become head coach at Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231788-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas State Red Wolves football team\nShortly after the end of the regular season, Harsin would himself leave Arkansas State, moving to Boise State, his alma mater and a program where he had served as an assistant from 2001 to 2010, after Chris Petersen left for Washington. Harsin did not coach Arkansas State in the GoDaddy Bowl; Arkansas State named defensive coordinator John Thompson as interim head coach for the bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231788-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas State Red Wolves football team\nThe Red Wolves, members of the Sun Belt Conference, played their home games at Liberty Bank Stadium (renamed after the 2013 season to Centennial Bank Stadium) in Jonesboro, Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231789-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team\nThe 2013 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team represents the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Golden Lions are led by sixth year head coach Monte Coleman and play their home games at Golden Lion Stadium as a member of the West Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). They came into the 2013 season as the defending SWAC Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231789-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Arkansas\u2013Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team, Media\nEvery Golden Lions football games will be broadcast on KUAP 89.7 FM. Select games will also air on various ESPN Networks and Comcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 58], "content_span": [59, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231790-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Arlington mayoral election\nThe 2013 Arlington mayoral election was held on May 11, 2013 to elect the mayor of Arlington, Texas. 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, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231790-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231791-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Armed Forces Bowl\nThe 2013 Armed Forces Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 30, 2013, at Amon G. Carter Stadium on the campus of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas. The eleventh edition of the Armed Forces Bowl (which was originally known as the Fort Worth Bowl), it featured the Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders of Conference USA against the Navy Midshipmen, an independent team. It began at 10:45\u00a0a.m. CST and aired on ESPN. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The game was sponsored by Bell Helicopter and was officially known as the Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl. Navy defeated Middle Tennessee by a score of 24\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231791-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Armed Forces Bowl\nThe Midshipmen accepted their invitation after earning a 6\u20134 record in their first ten games of the season, while the Blue Raiders accepted their invitation after earning an 8\u20134 record in theirs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231791-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Armed Forces Bowl, Team selection, Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders\nThe Blue Raiders' first season as a member of Conference USA saw them continue their winning ways as they finished 8\u20134 overall and 6\u20132 in conference play (tied with the East Carolina Pirates for second in the C-USA East Division). At season's end, bowl director Brant Ringler extended an invitation to the Blue Raiders to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 69], "content_span": [70, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231791-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Armed Forces Bowl, Team selection, Navy Midshipmen\nIn April 2009, organizers announced that they had reached a deal with Navy to play in the 2013 edition of the Armed Forces Bowl. After defeating the South Alabama Jaguars for their sixth win of the season on November 16, bowl director Brant Rigler extended an invitation to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231791-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Armed Forces Bowl, Team selection, Navy Midshipmen\nThis was Navy's first Armed Forces Bowl, making them the last of the FBS' three service academies to reach the bowl (Air Force reached the bowl in 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2012, with Army reaching the bowl in 2010).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231792-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian local elections\nLocal elections was held in Armenia on 26 May, 17 November and 8 December. The 5 May elections included the elections for Yerevan City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Armenia on 18 February 2013. In the run-up to the elections, Armenian's first President Levon Ter-Petrosyan and one of the richest men in the country Gagik Tsarukyan, leader of the second largest parliamentary party Prosperous Armenia, withdrew from the race in December 2012. Many believed that no candidate would be able to challenge incumbent President Serzh Sargsyan, others stated that people see \"absence of alternatives\" and these factors caused great apathy among the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election\nOn 31 January 2013, candidate Paruyr Hayrikyan was shot, but he recovered soon and urged two other main opposition candidates Raffi Hovannisian and Hrant Bagratyan to unite around a single opposition candidate, in order to defeat President Sargsyan. On 10 February, he appealed to the Constitutional Court with a request to postpone the election for 14 days and stated that he will take it back in case the three main opposition candidate decide to unite around a single candidate, but he withdrew the appeal the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election\nThe elections resulted in a victory for incumbent President Sargsyan, who received 59% of the vote. Hovannisian came second with 37%, while the other candidates earned less than 4% of the total vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election\nSargsyan's main opponent Raffi Hovannisian claimed victory due to alleged electoral fraud. In days following the election, mass protests take place both in Yerevan (Freedom Square in particular) and other cities and towns throughout Armenia. Hovannisian urged Sargsyan to accept \"people's victory\" and concede his defeat. Hovannisian called the movement 'Barevolution', a portmanteau of 'barev' (\u0562\u0561\u0580\u0587, 'hello') and 'revolution', referring to his habit of walking up to people and greeting them during the election campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election\nAlthough many powers (including the US, Russia, France, Iran, Turkey) have congratulated Sargsyan on winning reelection, a number of influential politicians and parties in Armenia (including the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, former Prime Ministers Aram Sargsyan and Hrant Bagratyan who came in third, former Minister of Foreign Affairs Vartan Oskanian, MP Nikol Pashinyan, Andrias Ghukasyan who came in fifth during the election) have publicly stated that Hovannisian had won the election and the official results are a product of electoral fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election\nOn 10 March 2013, Hovannisian started a hunger strike in the Freedom Square. On 14 March 2013, the Constitutional Court of Armenia issued a verdict confirming the victory of President Sargsyan. Hovannisian ended his hunger strike on 31 March 2013. A clash occurred between Hovannisian's supporters and the police forces on Baghramyan Avenue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Background\nThe previous presidential election in Armenia was held in February 2008. Sargsyan was announced president with 52.8% of the popular vote. Armenia's first president, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, finished second with 21.5%. Immediately after the results were announced, thousands of Ter-Petrosyan's supporters gathered in Yerevan's Freedom Square to protest against electoral fraud. Eventually, the police and the army (allegedly) clashed with the protesters, resulting in the death of ten people (eight protesters and two policemen).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Background\nLess than a year earlier\u2014in May 2012\u2014Armenians voted in the parliament election. The ruling Republican Party of Armenia of President Sargsyan won majority and formed the government. Besides RPA's close partner Rule of Law, the other four parties that won seats at the parliament, did not recognize the legitimacy of the May election. On December 15, 2012, the Republican Party officially nominated Serzh Sargsyan as the party candidate. In December 2012, the second and third largest parties represented in the National Assembly announced that they will not nominate candidates, nor will support candidates in the upcoming election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Background\nFirst on December 12, 2012, Prosperous Armenia, the second largest party in the parliament, announced about their decision, While on December 25, 2012, Armenia's first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan announced that he will not participate in the upcoming election, thought it was initially announced that Ter-Petrosyan will be the candidate of the Armenian National Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Background\nOn December 26, 2012, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation announced their decision not to nominate a candidate. Thus, three major non-government parties\u2014the ARF, ANC and PAP\u2014did not participate in this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Background\nMeanwhile, the Green Party of Armenia endorsed Hrant Bagratyan for the presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nThe campaign started on 21 January 2013 and ended on 16 February. 17 February was an election silence day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 8 February 2013, Aram Harutyunyan, the leader of the National Conciliation Party, after one-day hunger strike, submitted a withdrawal statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nOne of the candidates, Andrias Ghukasyan started a hunger strike in front of the National Academy of Sciences building on January 21, 2013, demanding to \"Stop Fake Elections\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 31 January 2013, just before midnight, candidate Paruyr Hayrikyan was shot in his right clavicle. He was taken to hospital. The doctors saved his life and two days later he was already able to give an interview in the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nPresident Sarksyan stated that \"those who were behind this crime aimed to affect the natural flow of elections\", and continued that \"this outrageous crime is directed not only against presidential candidate and statesman Hayrikyan but against our security.\" Hayrikyan, who was campaigning on a platform of taking a more pro-Western foreign policy accused a foreign secret service agency of the attack, possibly Russia, the country's traditional supporter. \"I suspect a secret service of a foreign country... I said clearly that there was no alternative for us and we should move closer to Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nWe've had more harm than advantage from imperialistic Russia... I suggest that the assassination attempt is linked to these statements.\" The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) expressed concern over the incident. Ambassador Janez Lenarcic, the Director of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, said: \"This attack is deeply distressing in view of the electoral process already under way, and I urge all stakeholders to refrain from any actions that might further aggravate the situation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nThe election could have been postponed by two weeks according to the Electoral Law of Armenian, but on 5 February 2013, Hayrikyan made it clear that he will not appeal to the Constitutional Court with such request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 9 February 2013, the injured presidential candidate Paruyr Hayrikyan announced about his decision to postpone the election for 14 days, using his right given by the Armenian Constitution. He called two other major opposition candidates Raffi Hovannisian and Hrant Bagratyan to unite around a single opposition candidate. Hayrikyan stated that \"if I postpone the elections for 14 days, we will still have the chance to propose a common candidate, to develop the final points of the pre-election projections and to present ourselves in the public ten more days like a unity. And in that case, our common percentage will reach not only 70%, but even more\u201480%.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nDespite his previous statements, presidential candidate Paruyr Hayrikyan, who was shot on 31 January 2013, appealed to the court on 10 February 2013. His aide stated \"We've applied the Constitutional Court with a request to postpone the election for two weeks due to Paruyr Hayrikyan's health problems and the fact that he can't campaign.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nWhile filing the request, Hayrikyan stated that in case Raffi Hovannisian and Hrant Bagratyan come together and decide to unite, he will take his request back. He in particular said \"Should it happen [the unification] my right to equal competition would be breached, but it would be compensated by the creation of a united team. Moreover, the state would avoid additional expenses and the timetable of numerous observers would not be disrupted, otherwise I am obliged to hold a complete campaign during those two weeks along with the other candidates\u2019 participation.\" The court will make a decision in four days. The Constitutional Court must rule within four days on whether to delay the vote - a decision which will largely depend on doctors' evaluation of whether the candidate is well enough to campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 11 February 2013, however, Hayrikyan took his application back form the Constitutional Court of Armenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Campaign\nSeveral journalists were physically attacked while reporting on the electoral campaign. Nobody was prosecuted by the police, due to \"lack of evidence\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Opinion polls, Criticism\nMany have questioned the reliability of opinion polls in Armenia, including the three main opposition candidates Raffi Hovannisian, Hrant Bagratyan, Paruyr Hayrikyan. For instance, Bagratyan called the Gallup International Association \"fake Gallup\" (\u057d\u0578\u0582\u057f\u056b \u0533\u0565\u056c\u0561\u0583) in the interview to the Armenian service of the Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, making a reference to the organization's dispute with Gallup, Inc. over the name. The comedy show ArmComedy, named their 79th episode \"Albert Adibunts\", referring to the head of Sociometer center, Aharon Adibekyan, who is often criticized by opposition politicians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Opinion polls, Open-access polls\nSeveral open-access polls (such as online polls) were conducted in this election. A special website was created for this purpose, . According to the results there, of more than 4,700 voters, President Sargsyan had only 15% of the total vote, while his main opponent Raffi Hovannisian had about 40%, Hrant Bagratyan 11% and Paruyr Hayrikyan 4%. The epic poetry expert Vardan Sedrakyan got 26% of the vote, mainly by people who don't prefer any of the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Opinion polls, Open-access polls\nAnother poll was conducted in the of Aravot daily. In the poll there, Sargsyan had 12% of the vote, while Hovannisian had 32%, Bagratyan 17%, Hayrikyan 4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Opinion polls, Exit polls\nThe Baltic Surveys/The Gallup Organization held an exit poll, the results were: 58% Sargsyan, 32% Hovannisian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Results\nThe main support of Hovannisian was in urban areas, particularly second and third largest cities of Armenia, Gyumri and Vanadzor, where Hovannisian won overwhelming support of the voters. He also won in the cities of Ashtarak, Ijevan, Armavir, Ejmiatsin, Nor Hachn, Abovyan, Spitak, Akhuryan, Artik, Kapan, Yeghegnadzor, Noyemberyan. Besides provincial towns, Hovannisian also won in three districts of Yerevan: Avan, Arabkir and Ajapnyak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Results\nThe picture in rural areas was the opposite. There, Sargsyan won by far. Sargsyan received major support from Yerevan\u2019s Erebuni and Nubarashen districts where an army unit is located.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Claims of electoral irregularities\nThe opposition politicians claimed about speculations with the voting list. Raffi Hovannisian talked about the high possibility of fraud, caused by the fact that \"700,000 Armenian citizens are on voter lists in the country, but work outside this impoverished nation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Claims of electoral irregularities\nBefore the election campaign, the OSCE/ODIHR mission recommended the authorities to \"toughen legal punishment for vote buying and other irregularities and make voter lists more accurate.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Claims of electoral irregularities\nDuring and after the election, numerous cases of violation of Armenian electoral code were reported. Raffi Hovannisian's campaign headquarters reported over 100 violations, including open ballot (non-secret) voting, voter pressuring, multiple voting, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Claims of electoral irregularities\nOne of the local observer organizations \"iDitord\" created an online map of about 400 documented irregularities before and during the election day and vote counting. These include vote buying, voter intimidation, inconsistencies in voter lists, violations of voting procedures and other fraudulent activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Claims of electoral irregularities\nAmnesty International issued a public statement listing numerous irregularities during the elections and saying \"Amnesty International calls on the relevant authorities to carry out prompt and impartial investigations into all allegations of rights violations during the elections and hold those responsible to account. The authorities must also guarantee the safety of participants at post-election protests and public meetings.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Claims of electoral irregularities, OSCE observation mission\nOn 2 March 2013, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe election observers' report pointed out that there is \"a correlation between very high turnout and the number of votes for the incumbent\", which \"raises concerns regarding the confidence over the integrity of the electoral process.\",. The mission stated that in many precincts, mainly in rural areas, the turnout was \u201cimplausibly high\u201d. The opposition claims that this is a result of excessive use of administrative resources in remote rural areas and a fact that \"mayors kept villagers in total fear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 97], "content_span": [98, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Claims of electoral irregularities, OSCE observation mission\nOn March 5th, Ireland's former Minister for Justice, OSCE observer, Dermot Ahern wrote a letter where he talked about an evident discrepancy between the results he personally witnessed during the vote counting in Precinct 26/1 and the final official results. Among other inconsistencies he noted \"I could not understand then and still now how invalid votes can become valid.\" Which made him to conclude that \"I feel that full re-examination of this count should take place.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 97], "content_span": [98, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Reaction, Hovannisian\nRunner-up Raffi Hovannisian didn't recognize the legitimacy of the election and on late night of 18 February 2013, he claimed victory in a press conference, stating \"We all know that we have won\", continuing \"for the first time in 20 years the citizens have said yes to our constitution, to the rule of law, to democracy and our future.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Reaction, Hovannisian\nThe mass rallies continue, while on 10 March Hovannisian started a hunger strike calling Sargsyan to resign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Reaction, Armenian diaspora\nGroups of Armenian diaspora protested the results and alleged fraud in front of the Armenian consulates in New York, Los Angeles, Paris, Brussel and other major American and European cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Reaction, Armenian diaspora\nSerj Tankian, lead singer of Grammy award-winning Armenian-American rock band System of a Down, wrote an open letter to incumbent Sargsyan saying \"it's time for change\" after non-government organizations reported widespread voting fraud. \"Citizens across Armenia are protesting the outcome of the elections and the injustice inherent in the political establishment.\" He also urged Sargsyan to protect the country from its enemies as \"Those who steal elections from my people are domestic enemies that need to be punished.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Reaction, International\nOther heads of states who congratulated Sargsyan include President of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko, President of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskait\u0117, President of Lebanon Michel Suleiman, President of Slovakia Ivan Ga\u0161parovi\u010d, President of Egypt Mohamed Morsi,President of Israel Shimon Peres, President of the Swiss Confederation Ueli Maurer, President of the Hellenic Republic Karolos Papoulias, President of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam Truong Tan Sang, President of Uzbekistan Islam Karimov, President of Tajikistan Emomali Rahmon, former President of Slovenia Danilo T\u00fcrk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231793-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian presidential election, Reaction, International, Criticism\nHovannisian, who disputes the election's legitimacy, denounced the congratulatory messages of foreign countries, stating that they \"can say whatever they want\" and that he will allow nobody to \"teach me lessons of American, Western or Russian democracy and law because the Armenian citizens are the masters of our country.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests\nVarious political and civil groups staged anti-government protests in Armenia in 2013. The first series of protests were held following the 2013 presidential election and were led by the former presidential candidate Raffi Hovannisian. Hovannisian, who, according to official results, lost to incumbent Serzh Sargsyan, denounced the results claiming they were rigged. Starting on 19 February, Hovannisian and his supporters held mass rallies in Yerevan's Freedom Square and other cities. On 10 March, Hovannisian started a hunger strike, calling elected President Sargsyan to resign before 9 April, the inauguration day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests\nHovannisian called \"for the solution of this unprecedented pan-national fundamental issue before April 9.\" During an interview on 18 March 2013, Sargsyan said he would not visit Hovannisian and described his claims as \"arrogant phrases seasoned with obscenities\". Sargsyan was inaugurated on 9 April 2013, while Hovannisian and thousands of people gathered in the streets of Yerevan to protest it, clashing with the police forces blocking the way to the Presidential Palace. Hovannisian's movement was dubbed \"Barevolution\", a portmanteau of barev (\u0562\u0561\u0580\u0587, \"hello\") and revolution, referring to Raffi Hovannisian's habit of walking up to people and greeting them during the election campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests\nSince early May 2013, a number of non-formal opposition groups, such as veterans of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, have protested against the government of Serzh Sargsyan. The Pre-Parliament civil initiative also held a number of rallies in Yerevan and other cities calling for alternative struggle against the government. Following an announcement on 20 July 2013 of increases in public transportation fares, young activists (mostly students) held various kinds of protests throughout central Yerevan against the decision. It was described as the first ever act of civil disobedience in independent Armenian history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests\nOn 5 November, a small violent protest took place in central Yerevan organized by opposition activist Shant Harutyunyan and calling for an overthrow of the government. A series of rallies were held against Armenia's future membership of Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia, including on 2 December during Russian President Vladimir Putin's visit and on 23 December against the gas deal with Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Background\nThe runner-up Raffi Hovannisian didn't recognize the legitimacy of the election and on late night of 18 February 2013, he claimed victory in a press conference, stating \"We all know that we have won\", continuing \"for the first time in 20 years the citizens have said yes to our constitution, to the rule of law, to democracy and our future.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Background\nHowever, the international observers gave an overall positive assessment of the conduct of the presidential elections in which Serzh Sargsyan was reelected for the second term. Sargsyan also received congratulations from EU, Council of Europe, NATO as well as from the presidents of major powers such as United States, Russia, United Kingdom, France, Iran, Turkey and many others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 19 February, a mass of his supporters gathered in Yerevan's Freedom Square, where Hovannisian urged President Sargsyan to accept \"people's victory\" and concede his defeat. Armenia's former PM Hrant Bagratyan, who came in the third place, claimed that \"authorities tried to stop Hovannisian from winning\" and the next day, he urged Hovannisian and Sargsyan to sit at the negotiating table, stating that the election was \"not free and unfair\" and saw \"willing to hold talks\". He called on \"Raffi Hovannisian and Serzh Sargsyan to sit at the negotiating table and try to find the way out of the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOtherwise, it will be impossible to avoid further escalation and clashes.\" On 19 February 2013, several activists broke into press conference held by OSCE PA election observers and screamed \"Stop Legitimizing Fraudulent Elections in Armenia\". The observers walked out of the hall and asked for a written statement by the activists in Armenian or English.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 20 February 2013, Hovannisian and his supporters gathered in the Freedom Square. Hovannisian once gain claimed victory and called the people to stay in the square until tomorrow and meet President Sargsyan whose ruling party is expected to hold a rally there. Opposition politician Nikol Pashinyan joined Hovannisian and addressed the people in Freedom Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 21 February 2013, Hovannisian and Sargsyan met in the Presidential Palace in Yerevan. First, he told a group of his supporters that he was heading for negotiations with Sargsyan, then marched up to the Presidential Palace on Baghramyan Street. The meeting with incumbent President lasted for more than two hours. According to Hovannisian they discussed ways to end the post-election dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nAfter Hovannisian left the palace, he said to the gathered crowd of his supporters that \"It is not Serzh versus Raffi\" and continued that \"We are committed to our victory and the Armenian people will have their victory tomorrow.\" He later announced to his supporters in Freedom Square that he will disclose the details of the meeting tomorrow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nThe demonstrations continued on 22 February 2013, with Raffi Hovannisian announcing about yesterday's meeting with incumbent president Serzh Sargsyan. According to Hovannisian, he demanded Sargsyan to accept the will of the people and Sargsyan said \"no\". Armen Martirosyan, a former MP from Hovannisian's Heritage party, claimed that Ashot Giziryan, the Republican governor of Shirak Province, where Hovannisian won the biggest support, had resigned because of \"not enough electoral fraud\", while Giziryan himself said \"I conceded my defeat and tendered resignation. Let Raffi now concede his defeat.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nAnother major opposition party, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, joined Hovannisian's rally. ARF Council member Armen Rustamyan addressed the crowd saying that \"this is an unstoppable movement to establish the rule of the people.\" Andrias Ghukasyan, one of the candidates, who did not actively participate in the election, because he was performing a hunger strike against \"fake elections\", later joined the rally and stated that \"the fake elections showed that state cannot be fair, but people displayed their will and came to congratulate Raffi Hovannisian who managed to consolidate Armenian society.\" Famous Armenian singer-songwriter Ruben Hakhverdyan was also present at the rally. In particular, his statements such as \"I don't care for the opinion of those at the top\" sparked enthusiasm among the crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nAt the end, Hovannisian called the crowd to continue the \"peaceful and constitutional struggle\" and informed that he and his supporters will be touring throughout Armenia \"to take the victory and greetings.\" He said they will be in Ashtarak, Vanadzor and Gyumri. The rally ended with a march.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 23 February 2013, Hovannisian traveled throughout Armenia. He visited the cities of Gyumri, Vanadzor, Ashtarak, Spitak, Aparan where thousands gathered to hear his speech and the \"victory celebration\". In Gyumri, Armenia's second largest city, where Hovannisian defeated Sargsyan by over 40%, he claimed that he is \"not issuing ultimatums but it must be evident to the third president [Sargsyan] respected by me that it's time to transfer power to the people of Armenia.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 23 February 2013, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the first President and the leader of the Armenian National Congress, declared that \"the results are obvious to me: [President] Serzh Sargsyan was not elected and the winner is Raffi Hovannisian. I have no doubts whatsoever.\" He also talked about the possibility of joining the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 24 February 2013, a short rally took place in the Freedom Square, where thousands of his supporters were gathered. He in particular announced that \"Freedom Square recognizes no party any more, since here stand Armenian people, who in the past elections voted for the Heritage, Armenian National Congress, Prosperous Armenia and even for the Republican Party.\" Hovannisian claimed that \"our only salvation is in our unity.\" Nikol Pashinyan, one of Hovannisian's main supporting opposition politicians, urged Hovannisian to for a new government that would be confirmed by direct democratic practices on the Freedom Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 25 February 2013, Hovannisian held a press conference, where he talked about the current situation in Armenia. He said there is a possibility of appealing the election results in the Constitutional Court. He also claimed that Sargsyan offered him to wait until 2017 and 2018, which was rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 25 February 2013, several hundred university students declared a student strike against electoral fraud during the election. Students from the Yerevan State University started the strike, later students from the Yerevan State Medical University and Armenian National Agrarian University joined them. The student strikes continued on the following days. The Ministry of Education and Science announced that \"political activities and propaganda within the premises of educational institutions is prohibited by law.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 26 and 27 February 2013, Hovannisian visited the cities and towns in the Ararat plain and Syunik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 28 February 2013, Hovannisian and his supporters once again gathered in the Freedom Square to protest the election results. Famous French-Armenian actor Vardan Petrosyan had arrived in Yerevan a day earlier to address the crowd. He in particular stated that the movement was a victory that took place in \"the mind, in the heart, in one's very soul.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nThe mass rallies were disrupted on 1 March 2013, to commemorate the memory of the 10 victims of the 2008 Armenian presidential election protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 2 March 2013, the mass rallies in Freedom Square continued. Hovannisian set a new \"deadline\" for the authorities to start \"handing over power to the people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 3 March 2013, Hovannisian met with Prosperous Armenia leader Gagik Tsarukyan and discussed the ongoing situation in the country. PAP had earlier stated that they are \"next to the people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 4 March 2013, Hovannisian submitted an appeal to the Constitutional Court. His claim will be considered by the court and the court will issue a verdict in 10 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 5 March 2013, despite the snow, another rally was held in the Freedom Square. Hovannisian once again stated that there's no way back. He pointed out that \"now we have nothing to say [to them], we have to act and we won't get diverted from our path.\" The Armenian Revolutionary Federation representative Armen Rustamyan urged the opposition parties to consolidate around the upcoming Yerevan City Council election in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 6 March 2013, Hovannisian traveled in Tavush Province. His supporters gathered in the cities of Dilijan, Ijevan, Noyemberyan and Berd to hear Hovannisian's speech and congratulations on \"people's victory.\" On 7 March 2013, Hovannisian continued his tour throughout Armenia's northern and central provinces. He visited Chambarak, Talin, Artik, Vanadzor, Gyumri, Spitak, Aparan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 8 March 2013, on the International Women's Day, the rally in support of Raffi Hovannisian was also dedicated to Armenian women. Among other, Hovannisian's wife Armenouhi also addressed the crowd in Freedom Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March)\nOn 9 March 2013, Hovannisian concluded his visits to the provinces of Armenia in Gegharkunik. Hovannisian stopped in the towns Vardenis, Martuni, Gavar, and Sevan. In Sevan, a small incident occurred involving the mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March), In the Armenian diaspora\nGroups of Armenian-Americans protested the results in front of the Armenian consulates New York on February 22 and Los Angeles on 24 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 100], "content_span": [101, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March), In the Armenian diaspora\nOn 26 February 2013, prominent Armenian American rock singer, Serj Tankian (lead singer of System of a Down) sent an open letter to President Sargsyan, in which he congratulated on reelection, but also questioned the fairness of the past election. He wrote to incumbent Sargsyan saying \"it's time for change\" after non-government organizations reported widespread voting fraud. \"Corruption, injustice, emigration, lawlessness and falsified elections\" are prompting Armenians to emigrate, Tankian wrote. \"Citizens across Armenia are protesting the outcome of the elections and the injustice inherent in the political establishment.\" He also urged Sargsyan to protect the country from its enemies as \" Those who steal elections from my people are domestic enemies that need to be punished.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 100], "content_span": [101, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Early stage (19 February\u201310 March), In the Armenian diaspora\nOn 8 March 2013, a group of French Armenians gathered in front of the Armenian embassy in Paris to protest the alleged rigged election results. On 10 March 2013, a similar protest was held by Armenian community members in Brussels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 100], "content_span": [101, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nOn 10 March 2013, after addressing his supporters in Freedom Square, Hovannisian announced about his decision to start a hunger strike. He urged President-elect Serzh Sargsyan to resign. According to Hovannisian, \"this is not just a hunger strike, but a boycott against lies and fraud.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nAt the end, he stated that \"[i]f on April 9 [the inauguration date] he [Serzh Sargsyan] gives a pseudo-oath on the Constitution and the Holy Bible and the Supreme Patriarch blesses it and thus defiles the Bible, they will do it on my dead body.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nOn 11 March 2013, after the first day of the hunger strike, Hovannisian described his action as \"the new milestone of registering the de jure victory of the Armenian people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nSeveral notable politicians visited Hovannisian the next day. Among them former Prime Minister Aram Sargsyan, 2003 Presidential candidate Stepan Demirchyan, former Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, former Speaker of the National Assembly Tigran Torosyan, MP Nikol Pashinyan and Andrias Ghukasyan. That day, talking about a possible solution of the conflict, Hovannisian also stated that the solution \"should be a complex, integral, immediate and guaranteed\" one \"that I will be able to report to the people to end this standoff.\" His request to put up a tent was rejected by the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nOn 14 March 2013, the Constitutional Court of Armenia issued a verdict confirming the victory of President Sargsyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nOn 15 March 2013, Hovik Abrahamyan, the Speaker of the National Assembly, visited Hovannisian. Abrahamyan stated that they \"have not come to any common denominator, but I think that most likely we will meet again to discuss these issues.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nHovannisian later announced about holding civil forums at the Freedom Square. By 21 March 2012, five such events were held with the presence of Nikol Pashinyan, Andrias Ghukasyan, Tigran Khzmalyan and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nOn 22 March 2013, thousands gathered at Freedom Square to hear Hovannisian's speech. He proposed Sargsyan a \"last and minimum level\" compromise, which called for a \"comprehensive power sharing\" with the authorities. His proposal includes two options. The first is \"immediate conduct of new presidential elections.\" Hovannisian's second option is \"the sharing of power between the authorities and the people\" by holding snap parliamentary elections by the end of the year and replacing key regional governors and government members candidates proposed by Hovannisian. Hovannisian later signed it in front of the crowd ready to be sent to President Serzh Sargsyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nOn 25 March 2013, President Sargsyan responded to Hovannisian's proposal, urging Hovannisian to \"stop the hunger strike, recuperate for a day or two\" and then the two \"will start working seriously together.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nIn the days following, Hovannisian and Sargsyan sent each other letters to start a dialogue. Sargsyan insisted that Hovannisian stop the hunger strike and visit the Presidential Palace, while Hovannisian proposed several times for Sargsyan to go to the Freedom Square and start a negotiation process there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Hunger strike (10\u201331 March)\nOn 29 March 2013, Hovannisian declared that he will end the hunger strike on the Easter day on 31 March and start to visit the regions. As promised, Hovannisian ended his hunger strike on 31 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Later developments (1\u20138 April)\nStarting on 1 April 2013, Hovannisian started to visit towns and villages of Armenia. Hovannisian announced on 2 April 2013, that he will try to overshadow Serzh Sargsyan inauguration on 9 April, by holding a similar event in either Freedom Square or Republic Square in Yerevan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Later developments (1\u20138 April)\nOn 3 April 2013, talking about the future plans of the movement in Martuni, Hovannisian stated that \"Now, you have to decide whose citizens you are \u2013 of the Republic of Armenia or of the former president, former governor, chief of police, and I don't know who else.\" Hovannisian claimed that he visits the provinces \"to recruit citizens for the April 9 inauguration of a new Armenia.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Later developments (1\u20138 April)\nApril 7 marked the start of the 2013 Yerevan City Council election. Hovannisian joined Barev Yerevan alliance's first-day campaign with tree planting in central Yerevan. Barev Yerevan is made up of mostly his Heritage party members and activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', 9 April\nOn 9 April 2013, the officially elected president, incumbent Serzh Sargsyan was inaugurated as president of Armenia at the Karen Demirchyan Complex. On the same day, Sargsyan accepted the resignation of the last cabinet in order to form a new one in the upcoming days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', 9 April\nIn the meantime, thousands of people gathered in the Freedom Square to witness Raffi Hovannisian's \"inauguration of a new Armenia.\" After the formal ceremony in the square, Hovannisian and his supporters hold a \"rally of victory\" in the streets of central Yerevan. After rallying through several streets Hovannisian and the protesters came back to the Freedom Square at around 6 p.m. and with the demand of the crowd yelling \"Hima, hima!\" (Now, now! ), Hovannisian headed to Baghramyan Avenue, where the Presidential Palace is located. The riot police armed with batons and shields blocked the Baghramyan Avenue. The protesters clashed with the police, resulting in few injuries, including Armen Martirosyan who led the Heritage party list for the 2013 Yerevan City Council election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Decline\nOn 12 April 2013, Hovannisian and few thousand of his supporters gathered in the Freedom Square. Hovannisian pledged to continue the struggle and stated that \"In the coming weeks and months we will not give rest to this government and will continue our struggle in Yerevan and other cities and towns.\" On 19 April 2013, Hovannisian pronounced to the Heritage party members and their supporters about the civic alliance, which he said should be above partisanship. Armenian Revolutionary Federation was also present at the meeting, where they presented their own future plan as proposal for Hovannisian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Decline\nThe Yerevan City Council election took place on 5 May 2013. The Republican Party of Armenia won absolute majority, while all opposition parties denounced the election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Decline\nOn 9 May 2013, Raffi Hovannisian addressed his supporters on Freedom Square claiming that the \"struggle will continue\" and invited all political parties to a meeting on 19 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Decline\nOn 15 June 2013, Hovannisian held a small meeting with his supporters. He assured that \"What we initiated 6 months ago is still in force. The main task of the Heritage is to restore the faith of people\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Decline\nOn 23 August, Hovannisian held the biggest rally in months on the 23rd anniversary of Armenia's Declaration of independence. Thousands gathered, while Hovannisian promised a series of anti-government protests in the upcoming month of September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, 'Barevolution', Decline\nOn 20 September 2013, the day before marking the 22nd year of Armenia's independence, Raffi Hovannisian along with former Soviet dissident Paruyr Hayrikyan held a rally at Freedom Square. Hovannisian stated that \"Independence Day is not only a national holiday, but also responsibility. Today, on the eve of the holiday, we have gathered here to say that our statehood is in danger.\" Hovannisian's Heritage party was one of the only parties in Armenia to openly oppose President Sargsyan's decision to join the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests\nOn 16 May 2013, a small crowd gathered at the Republic Square in front of the government building in Yerevan to protest the possible 65% increase in Russian gas price.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests\nOn 18 May 2013, hundreds protested the death of 19-year-old soldier named Lyuks Stepanyan killed in Tavush Province on 15 May in front of the government building at the Republic Square. They claimed there is a lack of attention from the military authorities for the death of the soldier. A clash occurred on Yerevan-Sevan highway the same day. Allegedly, police cars were smashed in order to open up the way to Yerevan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests\nOn 16 June 2013, a group of veterans of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War held a rally in Freedom Square. They called on the Armenian government to improve their social condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests\nOn 5 July Karabakh War veterans held a rally in Freedom Square with similar demands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Pre-Parliament\nPre -Parliament started a series of protests in Armenia's second largest city of Gyumri on 9 May 2013. Pre -Parliament members and their supporters held 'protest walks' in Yerevan on 11 and 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Pre-Parliament\nOn 17 May 2013, the Pre-Parliament held a rally on Freedom Square. Notable speakers included Karabakh War veteran Jirair Sefilian, former ASALA member Alexander Yenikomshian and filmmaker Tigran Khzmalyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Pre-Parliament\nOn 28 May 2013, the Pre-Parliament held a rally in Gyumri, while on 29 May they gathered in Armenia's third largest city of Vanadzor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Pre-Parliament\nOn 31 May 2013, a rally was held in Yerevan's Freedom Square. Colonel Varuzhan Avetisyan stated at the rally that Jirair Sefilian, one of the leaders of the Pre-Parliament had received death threats in the past days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Pre-Parliament\nOn 14 June 2013, a public discussion (forum) of Pre-Parliament took place in Freedom Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Pre-Parliament\nOn 25 June 2013, Pre-Parliament held a small rally in southern Armenian city of Kapan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Pre-Parliament\nOn 12 July 2013, Pre-Parliament held a rally in Freedom Square. According to the police, around 500 people gathered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Public transportation fare increase protests (20\u201325 July)\nSince 20 July 2013, the tariffs for minibuses (marshrutkas) and trolleybuses were increased by 50% and 100% respectively. The new fares were set to be 150 drams (~35 US cents) for minibuses and 100 drams (~25 cents) for trolleybuses. According to Henrik Navasardyan, the head of the Yerevan Mayor's Office Transport Department said that the \"increase in public transport fares is connected not only with the recent rise in natural gas and electricity tariffs, but is also prompted by other business considerations. Thus, he said, the new fare rates will enable companies to upgrade their vehicles and improve the quality of service.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 97], "content_span": [98, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Public transportation fare increase protests (20\u201325 July)\nAccording to a study, this would effect around 65% of Yerevan residents as most of them use public transportation. Days after the new fare was in effect, many passengers still refuse to pay the new tariffs. Armen Poghosyan, the chairman of the Armenian Consumers' Association, said that the \"most important decision for the society was made without any public discussion.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 97], "content_span": [98, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Public transportation fare increase protests (20\u201325 July)\nOn 19 July 2013, tens of protesters performed a sit-in against the fare increase on the steps of the Yerevan City Hall. On 20 July 2013, hundreds of young activists throughout central Yerevan called on people not to pay the new fares. The same day, 3 protesters were detained. Similar protests were held in the following days. On 23 July 2013, protests continued throughout central Yerevan. Protests continued in Yerevan on 24 July, especially in Kentron district, some protesters tried to block the streets and clashed with policemen. Four activists were detained and later released. As young activists walked urging people to pay the old fares, ordinary people joined them to show solidarity. According to a survey of Aravot among bus drivers, more and more people who use public transportation refused to pay the new fares.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 97], "content_span": [98, 924]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Public transportation fare increase protests (20\u201325 July)\nBesides ordinary citizens performing acts of civil disobedience, several celebrities, comedians, actors, TV people, journalists joined the protests by offering free rides to people. On 24 July, a video (see external link on the right) appeared on YouTube showing a number of Armenian celebrities and public figures, including comedian Hayko, Garik and Vache of Vitamin Club, actors Lala Mnatsakanyan, Segey Danielyan, TV commentator Petros Ghazaryan, show host Lusine Badalyan and others announcing solidarity with the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 97], "content_span": [98, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Public transportation fare increase protests (20\u201325 July)\nOn 25 July 2013, after days of mass protests, Mayor of Yerevan Taron Margaryan issued a statement canceling the new fares. Thousands of Yerevan residents celebrated their \"victory\" until midnight. On 26 July smaller protests continued near the City Hall. They demanded resignation of the Yerevan Transportation Department Head Henrik Navasardyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 97], "content_span": [98, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Against Armenia's entry to the Customs Union\nOn 3 September 2013, during his visit to Moscow Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan stated that Armenia will join the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia, despite the fact that it was expected that Armenia was going to sign the European Union Association Agreement. On 4 September, a number of protesters gathered in front of the Presidential Palace on Baghramyan Avenue. Some demonstrators were detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 84], "content_span": [85, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Against Armenia's entry to the Customs Union\nOn 21 September 2013, the 22nd anniversary of Armenia's independence, thousands poured into streets to protests Armenia's government decision to join the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia. Minor clashes took place between the protesters with policemen, who blocked the Baghramyan Avenue near the Presidential Palace. The rally began in Freedom Square and was not organized by any political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 84], "content_span": [85, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Against Armenia's entry to the Customs Union\nOn 29 November Soviet era dissident Paruyr Hayrikyan held a rally in Yerevan's Freedom Square against Armenia's decision to join the Russian led Customs Union. During his speech Hayrikyan denounced the move and stated \"What else do the Russian imperialists have to do for us to realize they are our greatest enemies?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 84], "content_span": [85, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Against Armenia's entry to the Customs Union\nOn 2 December, during Russia's President Vladimir Putin's visit 500 to 1,000 protesters marched through central Yerevan against Armenia's plan to join the Customs Union. Their march to the Presidential Palace was blocked by the riot police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 84], "content_span": [85, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Against Armenia's entry to the Customs Union\nOn 23 December, hundreds of protesters gathered in front of the National Assembly building in Baghramyan Avenue. The ruling Republican party ratified the gas deal with Russia by which \"Gazprom will gain full control of Armenia's natural gas distribution company ArmRosgazprom\" and \"will also control all of Armenia's gas imports until 2043.\" The four opposition parties boycotted the voting by leaving the chamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 84], "content_span": [85, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Shant Harutyunyan (5 November)\nOn 31 October 2013 Shant Harutyunyan, a \"flamboyant\" opposition activist, began a sit-in in the Freedom Square openly calling for a revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Shant Harutyunyan (5 November)\nOn 5 November 2013 (the Gunpowder Plot day), Shant Harutyunyan addressed tens of his supporters (many wearing Guy Fawkes masks) who gathered at the Freedom Square. He openly called for the seizure of the Presidential Palace and other key government buildings. Armed with wooden sticks and magnesium flash bombs, Harutyunyan led his supporters to the Presidential Palace on Baghramyan Avenue. Just outside the Freedom Square, on Yerevan's central-most Mashtots Avenue, the riot police reacted by arresting the protesters \"as a result of the scuffle that ensued and in which the homemade explosives and flares were used by the protesters.\" Around twenty people were detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231794-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Armenian protests, Other protests, Shant Harutyunyan (5 November)\nThe ruling Republic party condemned the act, while Armen Martirosyan of the opposition Heritage party said that the \"society is greatly unhappy with the authorities and that discontent is slowly yielding extreme results.\" Armenian National Congress speaker Levon Zurabyan said that \"there is nothing surprising about the fact that there will be people who would consider solving the issue by the rule of law to be impossible and would look for other ways.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231795-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Armor All Gold Coast 600\nThe 2013 Armor All Gold Coast 600 was a motor race for the Australian sedan-based V8 Supercars racing cars. It was the eleventh event of the 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship. It was held on the weekend of 25\u201327 October at the Surfers Paradise Street Circuit on the Gold Coast, Queensland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231795-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Armor All Gold Coast 600\nThe twelfth event on the Gold Coast saw Craig Lowndes take the championship lead from Triple Eight Race Engineering teammate Jamie Whincup after Whincup and co-driver Paul Dumbrell failed to finish the Saturday race, with Dumbrell causing a heavy crash for Greg Murphy before suffering a drive-train failure. Lowndes and co-driver Warren Luff won the race from pole ahead of Shane van Gisbergen and Jeroen Bleekemolen, the first Dutchman to stand on a V8 Supercar podium, and Mark Winterbottom and Steven Richards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231795-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Armor All Gold Coast 600\nDavid Reynolds won the first race of his career in the Sunday race, with he and co-driver Dean Canto winning from pole. Fabian Coulthard and Luke Youlden finished second ahead of Russell Ingall and Ryan Briscoe, Briscoe's first podium finish and Ingall's first since 2009. James Courtney and Murphy looked set to take victory until a steering problem put them out of the race. Whincup and Dumbrell finished fourth while Lowndes and Luff were eighth, leaving Lowndes with a six-point championship lead. Lowndes and Luff won the Endurance Cup ahead of Whincup and Dumbrell and Winterbottom and Richards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231796-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Army Black Knights football team\nThe 2013 Army Black Knights football team represented the United States Military Academy as an independent in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Black Knights were led by fifth-year head coach Rich Ellerson and played their home games at Michie Stadium. Following the loss to Navy on December 14 and finishing the season 3\u20139, Ellerson was fired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231797-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aruban general election\nGeneral elections were held in Aruba on 27 September 2013. The result was a victory for the ruling Aruban People's Party, which won 13 of the 21 seats in the Estates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231797-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aruban general election, Electoral system\nThe 21 members of the Estates were elected by open list proportional representation in a single nationwide constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series\nThe 2013 Ashes series was a series of Test cricket matches contested between England and Australia for the Ashes. It formed part of the 2013 Australian tour of England, which also included the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy, five One Day Internationals and two Twenty20 Internationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series\nThe 2013 series was the first of two back-to-back Ashes series. With the intent of breaking the cycle of Ashes series being held directly before Cricket World Cups, the Ashes were brought forward in the schedule by one year, starting with the 2013\u201314 series in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series\nEngland won the series 3\u20130, with wins at Trent Bridge, Lord's and the Riverside Ground; the matches at Old Trafford and The Oval finished as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Venues\nThe five venues used in the series were Trent Bridge, Lord's, Old Trafford, the Riverside Ground and The Oval. There were questions as to whether Lord's would host an Ashes match \u2013 it would have been the first time since 1882 that Lord's had not hosted an Ashes Test \u2013 but the venues were eventually confirmed to include Lord's on 22 September 2011. On 1 June 2012, it was announced that the first Test was scheduled to take place at Trent Bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Venues\nIt was the first Ashes series held in England since 1977 not to include a match at Edgbaston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Squads\nThe Australia squad was announced on 24 April 2013. The squad included players for the entire Australian tour of England and Scotland, including the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy, the T20I series against England, and the ODI series against both England and Scotland. Among those selected were 35-year-old opening batsman Chris Rogers, five years after his only other Test cap, and uncapped all-rounder James Faulkner. Despite having played in nine of the last 10 Ashes Tests, seamer Mitchell Johnson was omitted from the squad, as was the highly rated, Pakistan-born leg spinner, Fawad Ahmed, who had not yet received his Australian passport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Squads\nAll-rounder Steve Smith was added to the squad on 23 June after captain Michael Clarke suffered injury concerns, while left-arm orthodox spinner Ashton Agar was called up as back up for Nathan Lyon after taking six wickets for Australia A in three matches against Scotland, Ireland and Gloucestershire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Squads\nHaving been suspended until the start of the first Test for punching Joe Root on a night out during the Champions Trophy, opening batsman David Warner was sent on the Australia A tour of southern Africa to regain match experience; during the tour, which lasted from 18 to 27 July, Warner remained part of the Australian Ashes squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Squads\nThe England squad for the first Test was announced on 6 July 2013, the most notable absentee being batsman Nick Compton, who had opened the batting with captain Alastair Cook in each of the nine Tests since the retirement of former captain Andrew Strauss; Compton was replaced in the opening partnership by 22-year-old Joe Root. Middle-order batsman Kevin Pietersen and spinner Graeme Swann were included after overcoming injury troubles from earlier in the year, while Tim Bresnan, Steven Finn and Graham Onions were all selected as competition for the third seam bowling spot alongside James Anderson and Stuart Broad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Squads\nAfter naming an unchanged squad for the first two Tests, England were forced into a change for the third Test after Pietersen suffered a calf injury on the third day at Lord's. After much speculation regarding his replacement, Nottinghamshire batsman James Taylor was called up on the back of an unbeaten century against the Australians in a tour match against Sussex, for whom he was making a guest appearance. The England selectors also made the decision to allow Finn and Onions to return to their clubs, to be replaced by seamer Chris Tremlett and another spin option in Monty Panesar. Following the fourth Test at Chester-le-Street, Tim Bresnan was ruled out for the summer, so Simon Kerrigan and Chris Woakes were given surprise call-ups and would both go on to make their debuts in the fifth Test at The Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, First Test\nThe first Test was noted as a dramatic match with the advantage swinging between the two sides, culminating in a close result. England's opening innings of 215 all out was considered disappointing, however Australia seemed to be heading to a significant deficit after being reduced to 117/9 in the following innings. The record-breaking 10th-wicket stand revived the tourists to an unexpected 65-run lead by the end of the innings. England reclaimed the upper hand in the third innings, with Ian Bell's century contributing to a total of 375, setting Australia a target of 311 to win the Test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, First Test\nEngland looked to be in a strong position, as there had been only 10 recorded successful fourth-innings run chases of over 300 in Test history. However, Australia had a strong showing with the bat and were only 15 runs short of victory by the time the final partnership was broken in the afternoon session of the fifth day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test\nIn comparison to the close first Test, the second match of the series was a much easier victory for England. Though losing their first three wickets for just 28 runs England managed 361 by the time their final wicket fell in the morning session on day two. Australia only managed a response of 128, their lowest total at Lord's since 1968, with the second innings ending before the end of the day's play. With a lead of over 200 runs, England captain Alastair Cook had the option of making the Australians follow-on, but elected not to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, Second Test\nIn the third innings, Australia managed to reduce England to 30/3, but from then on, England were dominant, with Joe Root scoring 180 in 338 balls and 466 minutes at the crease. Immediately following Root's dismissal early on the fourth day, Cook declared at 349/7. England managed to dismiss Australia before the end of the day's play, securing a 2\u20130 lead in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test\nEngland went into the third Test needing only a draw to retain the Ashes. In the opening innings the English bowlers were ineffective against the Australian batsmen, with captain Michael Clarke scoring 187 runs. Australia ended up batting for most of the first two days before declaring on 527/7. England's second innings batting response was slow, scoring 368 all out at an average run rate of just 2.63 runs per over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, Third Test\nHowever England critically managed to avoid the follow-on and consumed much of the time remaining in the game; Australia began the third innings shortly before lunch on the fourth day. Australia quickly scored 172 runs at a run rate of 4.77 runs per over, and elected to declare overnight, hoping to bowl England out on the final day to win the game. However rain and poor light meant that only 20 overs were played. With the match declared a draw England retained the Ashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, Fourth Test\nHaving already at least drawn the series, England's first innings was slow with an average run rate of only 2.58 per over. England managed to hit 149/2 before succumbing to a run total of 238 early on the second day of the test. Australia's response was marginally better, with Chris Rogers hitting a century to contribute to his team's 270-run innings despite bad light. In the third innings, Australia were unable to prevent Ian Bell from securing his third century of the series by the close of the third day. England made 330 all-out, leaving a target of 299. In the fourth innings, England dismissed Australia for 224 by the end of the fourth day to secure an unassailable 3\u20130 lead in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, Fifth Test\nAustralia started strongly with both Shane Watson and Steven Smith hitting centuries in their first innings. Australia captain Michael Clarke opted to declare for 492/9 on the second day of the test. As in the previous test, England's first innings was slow with an average run rate of 2.6 per over. With rain forcing play to be abandoned on the fourth day, England managed to push to 377 all out just after lunch on the fifth day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Matches, Fifth Test\nAustralia added 111/6 in less than two hours before declaring, setting England a target of 227 from 44 overs; the run chase ended in a draw when play was called off due to bad light at 7:36pm, with England needing 21 runs from the final four overs. The umpires' decision to end the game early was controversial, with commentator Jonathan Agnew declaring it an \"absolute disgrace\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Decision Review System\nThe implementation of DRS in this series resulted in several controversies, mostly relating to the use of the Hot Spot technology. The most high-profile occurred in the first innings of the third Test: Usman Khawaja was given out caught-behind by on-field umpire Tony Hill, and reviewed the decision; Hot Spot showed no sign of an edge, and many observers noted that visual evidence also appeared to show that Khawaja did not edge the ball, but the decision was not overturned. Cricket Australia requested a formal explanation of the decision from the ICC following the match, and the decision was heavily criticised in Australian media. Kevin Pietersen was dismissed in similar circumstances in the second innings of the same match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Decision Review System\nAfter the third Test, allegations were made by Australian broadcaster Channel Nine that batsmen were trying to avoid Hot Spot detections by applying silicone tape to their bats. While such a practice would have been technically legal under the laws of cricket, Kevin Pietersen, who was specifically named in the claims, angrily denied the allegations, and the ICC did not investigate the claims. In October 2013, Pietersen won libel damages from Specsavers after they ran an advert that implied that he had tampered with his bat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231798-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Ashes series, Broadcasters\nThe Australian live television rights to the series were shared by the Nine Network and Fox Sports, and the British rights by Sky Sports with daily highlights broadcast on Channel 5. Live radio commentary in the UK was provided by BBC Test Match Special, which was syndicated on ABC Radio Grandstand in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231799-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia Series\nThe 2013 Asia Series was the seventh and final edition of the Asia Series, the premier Asian club baseball tournament, and the ninth time national champions from Asian leagues have competed against each other. The tournament was held in Taichung and Taoyuan, Taiwan, starting on 15 November with the final held on 20 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231799-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia Series\nIn addition to teams from Nippon Professional Baseball, the Chinese Professional Baseball League, the Korea Baseball Organization, and the Australian Baseball League, this tournament was the first to include a team from Europe. Fortitudo Baseball Bologna was invited to participate as the winners of the 2013 European Cup, a similar tournament in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231799-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia Series\nThe Canberra Cavalry from Australia defeated the Uni-President 7-Eleven Lions of Taiwan 14\u20134 in the tournament final for their first Asia Series title. It was the first time that an Australian team had won the tournament, as well as the first time the tournament had been won by a team from outside of either Japan or South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231799-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia Series, Game-fixing allegation\nAfter the conclusion of the series, Canberra Cavalry player Matt Blazynski claimed that he was offered $30,000 to fix the final game with Uni-President 7-Eleven Lions. Blazynski claimed that he was approached by an individual with an unspecified amount of cash at a night club, and was promised $30,000 in return for fixing the game on the next day. The claim was investigated by both the police of Taiwan and the CPBL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231799-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia Series, Game-fixing allegation\nOn December 16, CPBL issued a statement and demanded a public apology from ABL. In the statement, CPBL explained that its investigation revealed several inconsistencies between Blazynski's claim and the CCTV footage provided by the night club's security team. For example, Blazynski claimed he was approached by a male individual who showed him a stack of cash. The footage obtained by CPBL shows him approaching a group of three individuals, including two males and one female, and there is no evidence any of them produce the money Blazynski mentioned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231799-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Asia Series, Game-fixing allegation\nThese individuals were also interviewed by either the police or CPBL, and there is no evidence suggesting any criminal connection. Furthermore, contrary to his claim that he returned to the hotel at 2:30AM, CCTV footage provided by the hotel reveals that he returned to the hotel around 4:00 with a female individual, who left the hotel approximately two hours later. CPBL also claimed that Blazynski has refused or is unwilling to provide any evidence to substantiate his claim or to explain the inconsistencies between his claim and the recording at the night club. CPBL stated that it is suspending any ongoing cooperation or exchange programs with ABL until the demand of apology is met.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231800-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nThe 2013 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship season is an international rally championship sanctioned by the FIA. The championship is contested by a combination of regulations with Group N competing directly against Super 2000 cars for points. A new rally was added to the calendar, the first since Rally of Queensland in 2009, in the Thailand Rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231800-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nIndian driver Gaurav Gill won the Asian-Pacific championship after many years in the series. Gill won the championship despite his Finnish team mate Esapekka Lappi winning more events. Gill wrapped the title up early as the only rival outside of the Team MRF squad, Subaru driver Sanjay Takle, did not attend the final round at the China Rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231800-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nAustralian driver Simon Knowles won the Pacific Cup held over the three Pacific ocean events. The Asia Cup was held over three of the four Asian events, with the China Rally being left out in favour of candidate rally, the Thailand Rally. The Asia Cup was won by New Zealand driver Michael Young.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231800-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship, Championship standings\nNote: 1 \u2013 12 refers to the bonus points awarded for each leg of the rally for the first five place getters, 1st (7), 2nd (5), 3rd (3), 4th (2), 5th (1). There are two bonus legs for each rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231801-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Acrobatic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Acrobatic Gymnastics Championships were the 8th edition of the Asian Acrobatic Gymnastics Championships, and were held in Pavlodar, Kazakhstan from April 25 to April 30, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231802-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Airgun Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Airgun Championships along with 25 m and 50 m Rifle and Pistol were held at Azadi Sport Complex, Tehran, Iran between 18 and 26 October, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231803-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe 27th edition of the Men's Asian Amateur Boxing Championships was held from June 30 to July 9, 2013 in Amman, Jordan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231804-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Archery Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Archery Championships was the 18th edition of the Asian Archery Championships. The event was held in Taipei, Taiwan from October 29 to November 2, 2013 and was organized by Asian Archery Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Athletics Championships were the 20th edition of the biennial athletics competition between Asian nations. It was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex in Balewadi, Pune, India between July 3\u20137. Around 522 athletes from 42 nations competed at the event. It was the first time since 1989 that India had hosted the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships\nPrior to the competition, the election of the Asian Athletics Association president was convened in Pune. Qatar's Dahlan Jumaan al-Hamad (an IAAF vice-president) defeated the incumbent, Suresh Kalmadi of India, by a margin of 20 votes to 18. Kalmadi, on bail for corruption charges stemming from the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi, did not attend the championships. The Chief Minister of Maharashtra, Prithviraj Chavan, declared the event open at the championships opening ceremony", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships\nChina, the traditional regional leader at the competition, easily took the top spot in the medal rankings with sixteen gold medals and 27 medals in total. This maintained its streak as the best nation of the tournament \u2013 a run dating back to the 1983 edition. Second-placed Bahrain took five golds and fifteen medals overall (although Ali Khamis Khamis, the 400 metres runner-up, was their only native-born medallist). Japan placed third in the medal rankings with four golds and had the second greatest overall haul with 20 medals. In fifth place the hosts India had the next biggest haul, with 17 medals in total, although Saudi Arabia and Uzbekistan had a greater number of gold medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships\nThe overall quality of the competition was reduced as several top Asian athletes were absent. Mutaz Essa Barshim was the only Asian 2012 Olympic medallist who intended to participate, but he withdrew due to a back injury. Thirteen champions from 2011 were present and six of them (Su Bingtian, Yousef Masrahi, Dejene Regassa, Shitaye Eshete, Satomi Kubokura, and Wassanee Winatho) successfully defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships\nA total of eight championships records were bettered at the competition: Shitaye Eshete broke the longest-standing of these by winning the women's 10,000 metres in 32:17.29 minutes, breaking Zhong Huandi's time from 1989. The organisers used a performance-based points system to assign the titles of best athlete at the championships: Saudi 400 metres champion Yousef Masrahi was the best male with 1172 points while Bahrain's steeplechase winner Ruth Jebet was the best female with 1142 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships\nThe Athletics Federation of India withdrew an unnamed female shot putter from their squad for a failed doping test one day before the opening of the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships, Hosting issues\nThe competition was originally set to take place in Chennai, Tamil Nadu. Jayalalithaa, the Chief Minister of the state, ordered the removal of Sri Lanka from the competition on the grounds of war crimes committed during the Sri Lankan Civil War. This request was ignored by the Athletics Federation of India and in February 2013 Chennai withdrew as hosts of the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231805-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships, Hosting issues\nThe federation approached the state governments of Jharkhand and Delhi, with the venues of Ranchi and New Delhi being suggested, but both states refused the host duties. Finally, in May the Maharashtra government agreed to host the event in Pune on the same dates agreed for the Chennai event. Pune already had a suitable track and field stadium that had recently played host to the Commonwealth Youth Games in 2008. The budget given for the championships, however, was significantly reduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231806-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231807-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on 3 and 4 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231807-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advanced to the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231807-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind: Heat 1: -0.2\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +0.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: -0.3\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: +0.1\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231807-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Semi-finals\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the final. Wind: Heat 1: -1.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.5\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231808-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex. The final took place on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231808-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nFirst 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231808-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nWind: Heat 1: +0.3\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.4\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +0.5\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231809-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex. The final took place on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231809-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 5 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231810-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231810-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231810-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind: Heat 1: -0.4\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.6\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +1.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: -0.4\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231810-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Semi-finals\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231811-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe men's 3000 metres steeplechase at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231812-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 6, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231812-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231813-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shiv Chhatrapati Stadium in Pune, India on 7 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231814-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex. The final took place on July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231814-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231814-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Semi-finals\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231815-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex. The final took place on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231815-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nFirst 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231816-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5000 metres at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231817-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on 9 and 10 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231817-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231818-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe men's decathlon at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231819-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231820-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe men's hammer throw at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231821-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231822-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231823-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex. The final took place on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231824-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231825-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231826-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231827-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres\nThe women's 10,000 metres at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231828-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231828-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231828-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind: Heat 1: -0.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.4\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: -0.5\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231829-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex. The final took place on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231829-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231830-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231831-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231831-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231831-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind: Heat 1: -0.2\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +0.4\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +0.2\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231832-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe women's 3000 metres steeplechase at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231833-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231834-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shiv Chhatrapati Stadium on 7 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231835-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex. The final took place on July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231835-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231836-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe women's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231837-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5000 metres at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231838-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231839-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231840-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe women's hammer throw at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231841-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe women's heptathlon at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231842-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231843-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe Women's Javelin throw at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on 6 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231844-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231845-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231846-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231847-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump at the 2013 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex on July 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231848-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Beach Volleyball Championships\nThe 2012 Asian Beach Volleyball Championship was a beach volleyball event, that was held from November 7 to 10, 2013 in Wuhan, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231849-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Canoe Slalom Championships were the 8th Asian Canoe Slalom Championships and took place from May 23\u201326, 2013 in Shuili River, Shuili, Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231850-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Canoe Sprint Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Canoe Sprint Championships were the 15th Asian Canoe Sprint Championships and took place from September 26\u201329, 2013 in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231851-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Cycling Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Cycling Championships took place at the Indira Gandhi Velodrome in New Delhi, India from 7 to 17 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231852-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Development Tour\nThe 2013 Asian Development Tour was the fourth season of the Asian Development Tour, a second-tier tour operated by the Asian Tour, and the first season in which Official World Golf Ranking points were offered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231852-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Development Tour, Order of Merit\nThe top three players on the Order of Merit earned Asian Tour cards for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231853-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Fencing Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Fencing Championships was held in Shanghai, China from 4 June to 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231854-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Five Nations\nThe 2013 Asian Five Nations, known as the 2013 HSBC Asian 5 Nations due to the tournament's sponsorship by the HSBC, was the 6th series of the Asian Five Nations rugby union tournament. Japan was again crowned champion. The UAE finished last and is relegated for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231855-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Five Nations division tournaments\nFor main Top 5 Division, see: 2013 Asian Five Nations", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231855-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Five Nations division tournaments\nThe 2013 Asian Five Nations division tournaments, known as the 2013 HSBC Asian 5 Nations due to the tournament's sponsorship by the HSBC, referred to the divisions played within the tournament. This was the 6th series of the Asian Five Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231855-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Five Nations division tournaments, Teams\nThe teams involved, with their world rankings pre tournament, were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231855-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Five Nations division tournaments, Division 1\nDivision one will be held in a round-robin format. All games will be played at Havelock Park in Sri Lanka between March 31 and April 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231856-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Formula Renault Series\n2013 Asian Formula Renault Series (aka AFR Series) is the 14th season since its being created by FRD back in 2000. The Series bases the races in Zhuhai International Circuit as 4 rounds of races to be held there. For 3 of them, AFR joined Pan Delta Racing Festival and for the season finale, it will be a support race of the Zhuhai 500\u00a0km Endurance Race. Moreover, the AFR series will return to Shanghai for this season as the series holds a round of races on May 1\u20132 at Shanghai International Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231856-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Formula Renault Series\nThis year's AFR Series will see drivers to be divided in 3 categories \u2013 International, Asian and Masters Class. The International Class will include drivers who are the front runners of previous AFR seasons or other national races. Asian Class will consist of the up-and-coming Asian drivers. Meanwhile, Masters Class will be the battlefield for experienced drivers who are 35 or above. The points scoring system is twisted by a bit this year as well, as the championship will count towards the best 8 rounds out of 10. This change shall stimulate the battle for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231856-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Formula Renault Series, Teams and drivers\nI = International ClassA = Asian ClassM = Master Class", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231857-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games\nThe 4th Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games (Korean: 2013\ub144 \uc2e4\ub0b4 \ubb34\ub3c4 \uc544\uc2dc\uc548 \uac8c\uc784), which is also counted as the 4th Asian Indoor Games and designated as AIGs 4, was held in Incheon, South Korea, from 29 June to 6 July 2013, despite the ongoing 2013 Korean crisis. It was initially slated for Doha, Qatar, after the country cancelled the last edition of Asian Indoor Games in 2011. However, Incheon was chosen as a replacement instead by the OCA. This event also acted as a test event and a prelude to the 2014 Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231857-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, Venues\nNine different venues were used for these Games: Most of the following would also be used for the 2014 Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231857-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, Participating nations\nAll 45 member countries of the Olympic Council of Asia were invited to compete at these Games, with only 43 OCA countries taking pare in the 2013 games. North Korea and Timor-Leste declined to send their athletes to these Games. Indian athletes participated the Games under the Olympic flag because the Indian Olympic Association was suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231857-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, Sports\nA total of twelve sports were approved for the 2013 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231857-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, Doping\nWhat follows is a list of all the athletes that have tested positive for a banned substance during the Games. Any medals listed were revoked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231858-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Judo Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Judo Championships were the 20th edition of the Asian Judo Championships, and were held in Bangkok, Thailand from April 19 to April 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231859-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships is an Asia continental junior championships to crown the best U-19 badminton players across Asia. It was held in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia from 7\u201314 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231859-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships, Tournament\nThe 2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships organized by the Sabah Badminton Association, Badminton Association of Malaysia, and Badminton Asia Confederation. This tournament consists of mixed team competition, which was held from 7\u201310 July, as well as the five individual events started from 10\u201314 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231859-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships, Tournament, Venue\nThis tournament was held at Likas Indoor Stadium in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231859-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships, Medalists\nIn the mixed team event, China claim the title after defeat South Korea with the score 3\u20131. In the individuals event, China ensure two titles after won the men's and women's doubles event. Malaysia, Japan, and South Korea seize a title by winning the men's singles, women's singles and mixed doubles events respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231860-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships \u2013 Boys doubles\nThe Boys' Doubles tournament of the 2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships was held from July 10\u201314 in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia. The defending champion of the last edition were Arya Maulana Aldiartama and Edi Subaktiar from Indonesia. Aldiartama this time teamed-up with Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo, and standing in the top seeds. The final turned into all-Chinese final after Li Junhui / Liu Yuchen faced their fellow countrymen Huang Kaixiang / Zheng Siwei in the finals that won by Li and Liu in straight games 21\u201315, 21\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231861-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships \u2013 Boys singles\nThe Boys' Singles tournament of the 2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships was held from July 10\u201314 in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia. The defending champion of the last edition was Kento Momota from Japan. Thammasin Sitthikom of Thailand who standing in the top seeds was defeated by the No.5 seeded Soo Teck Zhi of Malaysia in the semifinals, while the second seeded Soong Joo Ven of Malaysia fell in the quarterfinals to Jeon Hyuk-jin of South Korea. Soo Teck Zhi emerged as the champion after beat Jeon Hyuk-jin in the finals with the score 21\u201317, 13\u201321, 21\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231862-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships \u2013 Girls doubles\nThe Girls' Doubles tournament of the 2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships was held from July 10\u201314 in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia. South Korean pair Lee So-hee and Shin Seung-chan were the gold medalist in the last edition. The top two seeded Lam Narissapat / Puttita Supajirakul of Thailand and Chae Yoo-jung / Kim Ji-won of South Korea finished in the semifinals round, and settle for the bronze medal. The gold medal went to Chinese pair Huang Dongping and Jia Yifan after an all-Chinese final versus their teammates Chen Qingchen and He Jiaxin that they won by 21\u201319, 21\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231863-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships \u2013 Girls singles\nThe Girls' Singles tournament of the 2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships was held from July 10\u201314 in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia. The defending champion of the last edition was P. V. Sindhu from India. Busanan Ongbumrungpan, Hana Ramadhini, and Aya Ohori were the top 3 seeded this year. Ohori emerged as the champion after defeat Ongbumrungpan of Thailand in the finals with the score 21\u201311, 16\u201321, 21\u201313. It was the first time ever for Japan to win the gold medal in the girls' singles event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231864-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nThe Mixed Doubles tournament of the 2013 Asian Junior Badminton Championships was held from July 10\u201314 in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia. The defending champion of in this event were Choi Sol-kyu and Chae Yoo-jung of South Korea. Choi and Chae successfully claim the title back to back after beating Chinese pair, the second seeded Liu Yuchen and Huang Dongping in the finals with the score 21\u201311, 19\u201321, 21\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231865-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships\nThe 19th Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships 2013 were held in Doha, Qatar, from 30 August \u2010 3 September 2013. It was organised by the Qatar Table Tennis Association under the authority of the Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231866-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Karate Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Karate Championships are the 12th edition of the Senior Asian Karate Championships and 13th edition of the Cadet, Junior & U21 Asian Karate Championships and were held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates from December 5 to December 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series\nThe 2013 Asian Le Mans Series was the second season of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest's Asian Le Mans Series endurance auto racing championship. The series was initially launched in 2009 at the 1000\u00a0km of Okayama, but did not resume the following year. The project was reinitialized by the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) in 2012, with the Chinese S2M Group serving as the series promoter and TS Motorsport serving as organizer. It is the fourth 24 Hours of Le Mans-based series created by the ACO, following the American Le Mans Series, European Le Mans Series, and FIA World Endurance Championship. The four event season began in Inje, South Korea on 4 August and ended in Selangor, Malaysia on 8 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series, Regulations\nThe Asian Le Mans Series follows much of the format utilized by the American and European Le Mans Series. Four categories of cars are eligible for the series: Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), Le Mans Prototype Challenge (LMPC), GT Challenge (GTC), and GT Challenge Amateur (GTC Am). The GTC category is open to FIA GT3 category cars, cars from one-make series, and unique to the Asian series, JAF-GT, a road-derived variant car taking part in the GT300 category of the Japanese Super GT series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series, Regulations\nAll four categories require at least one amateur driver and one professional driver in each car, although teams are allowed a maximum of three drivers per car. In order to boost Asian participation in the series, all cars must also have at least one driver of Asian nationality. An LMGTE category, identical to that used at Le Mans, was considered but later dropped for the 2013 season. For the 3 Hours of Fuji, an SGT class is added into the race, which is an optional point-scoring round of the GT300 class of the 2013 Super GT season. Entrants must keep their original driver lineup in order to be eligible for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series, Regulations\nThe team champions in the LMP2 will each automatic invitations in their category to the 2014 24 Hours of Le Mans, while the top two GTC class teams will earn invitations in the LMGTE Amateur category at Le Mans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series, Calendar\nAn initial six race 2013 calendar was revealed during the 2012 6 Hours of Shanghai, although several circuits had previously announced contracts with the series. The first half of the season was exclusively in China, with the Zhuhai International Circuit, Shanghai International Circuit, and Ordos International Circuit playing host. Following an agreement between the teams and organisers to delay and compress the 2013 season, the Shanghai and Ordos rounds were cancelled, and the season now begins in South Korea at the new Inje Speedium which was completed early in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series, Calendar\nFuji Speedway in Japan hosts the second round a month before the 6 Hours of Fuji World Endurance Championship event. Zhuhai, the sole remaining Chinese round, is moved back to October for the third race of the year. The Sepang International Circuit in Malaysia will serve as the finale for the season, replacing the initially scheduled Sentul International Circuit of Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series, Calendar\nAll events on the calendar will have practice sessions held on Friday, qualifying on Saturday, and the three-hour race on Sunday. Unlike the American and European Le Mans Series, the Asian Le Mans Series will not share any race weekends with the FIA World Endurance Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231867-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Le Mans Series, Teams Championships\nThe winners of the LMP2 championship and the top two finishers in the GTC championship earn automatic entry to the 2014 24 Hours of Le Mans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231868-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship was the 14th staging of the AVC Club Championships. The tournament was held in Azadi Indoor Stadium, Tehran, Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231868-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2012 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231868-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nIran (Host & 3rd) Kuwait (14th) * United Arab Emirates Chinese Taipei", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231869-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship was held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates from 28 September to 6 October 2013. 24 teams entered for the tournament which 3 of them withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231869-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are distributed according to their position in the FIVB World Rankings as of 23 January, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231869-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\n* Jordan, Indonesia and Pakistan withdrew, Uzbekistan moved to Pool A to balance the number of teams in each pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231870-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 6th Rhythmic Gymnastics Asian Championships was held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan from 5\u20138 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231871-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Shotgun Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Shotgun Championships were held in Almaty, Kazakhstan between October 1 and October 10, 2013 at the Asanov Shooting Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231872-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships were held in Busan, South Korea from June 30 to July 7, 2013. The Championships were the 21st edition of the Asian Table Tennis Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231873-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nSingles matches were best of 7 games in the main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231874-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Team\nThe Men's team tournament of the 2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships was held from June 30 to July 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231875-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nSingles matches were best of 7 games in the main draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 62], "content_span": [63, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231876-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Team\nThe Women's team tournament of the 2013 Asian Table Tennis Championships was held from June 30 to July 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231877-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Tour\nThe 2013 Asian Tour was the 19th season of the modern Asian Tour, the main men's professional golf tour in Asia excluding Japan, since it was established in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231877-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231877-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Tour, Tournament results\nOnly 50% of the prize money from major championships and World Golf Championships are counted towards the Order of Merit, but are not shown below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231877-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231878-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Weightlifting Championships was held in Astana, Kazakhstan from June 21 - 26, 2013. It was the 44th men's and 25th women's championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231878-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231879-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Asian Women\u2019s Club Volleyball Championship was the 14th staging of the AVC Club Championships. The tournament was held in Bu\u00f4n Ma Thu\u1ed9t, \u0110\u1eafk L\u1eafk Province, Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231879-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2012 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231880-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Women's Junior Handball Championship\nThe 2013 Asian Women's Junior Handball Championship (12th tournament) took place in Almaty from June 23\u201329. It acts as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2014 Women's Junior World Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231881-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship was held in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand from September 13 to September 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231881-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams were seeded based on their final ranking at the 2011 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231881-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Final standing\nWanna Buakaew, Piyanut Pannoy, Thatdao Nuekjang, Pleumjit Thinkaow, Onuma Sittirak, Wilavan Apinyapong, Amporn Hyapha, Tapaphaipun Chaisri, Nootsara Tomkom, Malika Kanthong, Pornpun Guedpard, Ajcharaporn Kongyot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231882-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship\nThe 2013 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship (5th tournament) took place in Bangkok, Thailand from 7 September\u201315 September. It acts as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2014 Women's Youth World Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231883-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Wrestling Championships\nThe 2013 Asian Wrestling Championships were held at the Indira Gandhi Sports Complex in New Delhi, India. The event took place from April 18 to April 22, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231884-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Games\nThe 2013 Asian Youth Games or AYG 2013 (Chinese: 2013\u4e9a\u6d32\u9752\u5e74\u8fd0\u52a8\u4f1a, Li\u01cengqi\u0101nl\u00edngsh\u00eds\u0101n Y\u00e0zh\u014du Q\u012bngni\u00e1n Y\u00f9nd\u00f2nghu\u00ec), officially the 2nd Asian Youth Games (Chinese: \u7b2c\u4e8c\u4e9a\u6d32\u9752\u5e74\u8fd0\u52a8\u4f1a, D\u00ec\u00e8r Y\u00e0zh\u014du Q\u012bngni\u00e1n Y\u00f9nd\u00f2nghu\u00ec) and commonly as Nanjing 2013 (Chinese: \u5357\u4eac2013, N\u00e1nj\u012bng Li\u01cengqi\u0101nl\u00edngsh\u00eds\u0101n), were held in Nanjing, China from August 16\u201324, 2013. Just like the inaugural edition, the games served as a dress-rehearsal for the upcoming 2014 Summer Youth Olympics, which was also held in the same city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231884-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Games, Mascot\nThe mascot for the 2013 Asian Youth Games was unveiled in Nanjing on 31 October 2012. The mascot is called Yuan Yuan, is based on the image of Eosimias sinensis, the earliest higher primate to date found in Jiangsu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231884-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Games, Sports\nOfficially, there were a total of 112 events in 16 sports, 6 more than that of the previous edition held at Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231884-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Games, Participating nations\nThe 2013 Asian Youth Games saw 2404 athletes from all 45 competed. According to the Games' official website, Indian athletes participated the Games under the Olympic flag because the Indian Olympic Association was suspended due to political interference in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231885-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Para Games\nThe 2013 Asian Youth Para Games (Malay: Sukan Para Remaja Asia 2013), officially known as the 2nd Asian Youth Para Games, was an Asian youth disabled multi-sport event held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia from 26 to 30 October 2013. Around 1200 athletes from 29 participating nations participated at the games which featured 14 sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231885-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Para Games\nThis was the first time Malaysia hosted the games. Malaysia is the second nation to host the Asian Youth Para Games after Japan. The games was opened and closed by Khairy Jamaluddin at the Putra Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231885-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Para Games\nThe final medal tally was led by Japan, followed by China, Iran, and host Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231885-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Para Games, Organisation, Development and preparation\nThe Malaysia Asian Youth Para Games Organising Committee (MAYPGOC) was formed to oversee the staging of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231885-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Para Games, Organisation, Venues\nThe 2nd Asian Youth Para Games had 15 venues for the games, 13 in Kuala Lumpur and 2 in Selangor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231885-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Para Games, Marketing, Logo\nThe 2013 Asian Youth Para Games logo is a bold, freestyle font image which represents the courageous and outgoing nature of youth. The red letters on the logo are outlined in blue with red represents the ambitious nature of these youthful athletes and their determination to succeed while the blue represents the spirit of togetherness and sportsmanship. The white dot of the letter \u2018i\u2019 represents the target or goal to be achieved by the athletes, officials and volunteers. The word \u2018Malaysia\u2019 represents the host nation of the games, Malaysia itself, while the Asian Paralympic Committee logo above the logo represents both the Asian Paralympic Committee and the Asian Youth Para Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231885-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Asian Youth Para Games, Marketing, Mascot\nThe mascot of the 2013 Asian Youth Para Games is a mousedeer named, \"Ujang\". It is said that the mousedeer is a native animal in Malaysia locally known as pelanduk or kancil which is shy, but very agile and quick thinking. It is a favourite character in local folktales commonly known as \"Sang Kancil\", noted for its intelligence, wit, cunning feints and quick reaction to escape from all kinds of danger, especially from its enemies. The adoption of mousedeer as the games' mascot is to represent the courage of the Paralympic athletes in overcoming challenges and the odds. The name of the mascot, Ujang is a common nickname for local Malay youths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231886-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI\nThe 2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the eighth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Milan, Italy between 17 and 23 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231886-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231886-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231887-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI \u2013 Doubles\nNicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler were the defending champions, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231887-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI \u2013 Doubles\nMarco Crugnola and Daniele Giorgini won the final against Alex Bolt and Peng Hsien-yin 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231888-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI \u2013 Singles\nTommy Robredo was the defending champion, but decided no to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231888-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Aspria Tennis Cup \u2013 Trofeo CDI \u2013 Singles\nFilippo Volandri won the final against Andrej Martin 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231889-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos season\nThe 2013 season was Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos' ninety second season in existence and the club's second consecutive season in the top flight of Brazilian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231889-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos 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, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231889-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos season, Players, Squad information, 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, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231889-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos season, Players, Appearances and goals, Goalscorers\nLast updated: 17 November 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 91], "content_span": [92, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231889-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos season, Players, Transfers, 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, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231889-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos season, Players, 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, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231889-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Associa\u00e7\u00e3o Portuguesa de Desportos season, Competitions, Copa Sudamericana, 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, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231890-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Astana season\nThe 2013 season for the Astana cycling team began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231891-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atimonan road crash\nThe 2013 Atimonan road crash was a road accident involving three buses and five other vehicles which occurred on a zigzag diversion in Maharlika Highway in Barangay Santa Catalina, Atimonan, Quezon province. The road accident killed 20 people and another 54 were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231891-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atimonan road crash, Background\nThe site of crash, the zigzag diversion in Maharlika Highway in Atimonan Quezon is a notorious site for road accidents. The site is poorly lit and lacks sufficient traffic signs due to suspected sign theft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231891-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atimonan road crash, Background\nInvestigators confirmed that the accident happened at 1:00 am on October 19 when a truck carrying hog feed crashed into a Super Lines passenger bus at the descending diversion road in Maharlika Highway in Santa Catalina Atimonan which triggered more collisions. The passenger bus in turn collided into six other vehicles: two buses, two cargo trucks, a trailer truck and a van which were driving from the opposite direction. The vehicles were toppled and the accident resulted to many fatalities. The investigation also confirmed based on the Super Lines bus driver's testimony that the truck involved in the first collision experienced a mechanical failure causing it to crash to the Super Lines bus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231891-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Atimonan road crash, Background\nThe Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) imposed a 30-day preventive suspension on the three bus lines involved. According to the LTFRB Chairman Atty. Winston Ginez, 35 units of Super Lines, 6 units of Isarog Bus Line and 20 units of Del Monte Land Transport Bus Company will be suspended. The bus lines involved will be given a chance to appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231891-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Atimonan road crash, Background\nThe bus lines involve will also be required to attend a road worthiness seminar, have all their units undergo a vehicle check and all their drivers should undergo a drug testing. The LTFRB also sent an investigation team to the crash site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231891-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Atimonan road crash, Background\nThe driver of the truck involved in the first collision died in the accident. Albert Nava the driver of the Super Lines bus was charged with reckless imprudence resulting in multiple homicide, multiple serious physical injuries and damage to property. The driver maintains that he was innocent and that he was one of the victims of the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season\nThe 2013 Atlanta Braves season was the Braves' 17th season of home games at Turner Field, 48th season in Atlanta, and 143rd season overall. The Atlanta Braves were the 2013 National League Eastern division champions 28th a record of 96-66. The Braves won their first game of the season (7\u20135) against the Philadelphia Phillies on April 1. They finished the season 96-66 and first place in the National League East, but lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the Division Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason\nThe Braves began the offseason with some major holes to fill. The Braves were losing future Hall of Famer Chipper Jones to retirement, and centerfielder and lead-off man Michael Bourn was lost to free agency. The idea going into the offseason was to get a centerfielder and either a thirdbaseman or left fielder, with Mart\u00edn Prado playing either third base or left field depending which way they decided to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason\nThe Braves signed B. J. Upton to a 5-year $75.25 million contract very early in the offseason, filling the need in centerfield. In January, they then acquired B.J. 's brother Justin Upton, a left fielder from the Diamondbacks, along with third baseman Chris Johnson, in exchange for Prado, Randall Delgado, and three minor league prospects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason\nThe Braves also traded Tommy Hanson to the Angels for relief pitcher Jordan Walden, signed back-up infielder Ramiro Pena, and signed Gerald Laird to replace back-up catcher David Ross, who signed with the Red Sox as a free agent. They also brought back a former teammate by claiming outfielder Jordan Schafer off waivers from the Houston Astros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason, Offseason subtractions and additions\nOn November 16, 2012, the Atlanta Braves signed free agent C Gerald Laird to a two-year deal worth $3M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason, Offseason subtractions and additions\nOn November 29, the Braves signed free agent CF B.J. Upton to a five-year deal worth $75.25M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason, Offseason subtractions and additions\nOn November 30, the Braves traded RHP Tommy Hanson to Los Angeles Angels for RHP Jordan Walden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason, Offseason subtractions and additions\nOn December 6, the Braves signed free agent LF Reed Johnson to a one-year deal worth $1.6M with the possibility to earn $150k in incentives, as well as a 2014 club option worth $1.6M or a $150K buyout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason, Offseason subtractions and additions\nOn December 7, the Braves signed free agent SS Ramiro Pena to a one-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Offseason, Offseason subtractions and additions\nOn January 24, 2013, the Atlanta Braves traded 3B Mart\u00edn Prado, RHP Randall Delgado, RHP Zeke Spruill, SS Nick Ahmed and 3B Brandon Drury to the Arizona Diamondbacks for LF Justin Upton and 3B Chris Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn April 6, down 5-4 in the ninth Melvin Upton Jr. (then known as B.J. Upton) hit a solo homerun off of Carlos M\u00e1rmol to tie the game at 5-5. His brother Justin came up 3rd in the inning and he hit the walk-off homerun to dead center and the Braves won 6-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn April 23, 2013 against the Colorado Rockies, the Upton brothers hit back-to-back home runs, the first to do so since 1938.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn May 21 down 4-3 in the bottom of the 9th inning, Evan Gattis hit a two-out, solo homerun to tie the game. In the 10th inning, Freddie Freeman hit a bloop single scoring Jason Heyward from second base to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn June 1 against the Nationals, with the game tied at 1-1 in the 9th inning, the Nationals had runners at 3rd and 2nd with no outs and Craig Kimbrel pitching. Kimbrel came through, though. Ian Desmond struck out looking, Roger Bernadina hit a chopper to third, Chris Johnson fielded and threw Ryan Zimmerman out at home. Finally, Danny Espinosa flew out to Justin Upton to end the inning. In the bottom of the 10th, Melvin Upton Jr. singled and Jordan Schafer scored just ahead of Bernadina's throw for the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn June 4 against the Pirates, Andrelton Simmons hit a walk off triple in the 10th inning off of Mark Melancon for the 5-4 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn June 17 Dillon Gee took a shutout into the 9th inning. Looking for his first career complete game shutout, Freddie Freeman ruined the shutout bid with a walk off two-run homerun with one out to win the game 2-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn July 29 the Braves beat the Rockies 9-8 in an epic game. The Rockies beat up Brandon Beachy who was making his first start since July 2012 due to Tommy John surgery. Down 5-0 in the bottom of the 3rd, the Braves struck for 6 runs to take a 6-5 lead. The Rockies scored two more in the fourth to retake the lead. In the Bottom of the 5th the Braves retook the lead at 8-7 on a Dan Uggla RBI double and a Joey Terdoslavich RBI single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nIn the top of the 9th the Rockies rallied to tie the game when Carlos Gonz\u00e1lez hit an RBI single off of Jordan Walden to score Dexter Fowler. With the bases loaded newly acquired reliever Scott Downs threw one pitch to Todd Helton. He hit a line-drive right back to Downs who speared it to end the inning. In the bottom of the 10th, Andrelton Simmons hit a triple scoring Dan Uggla for a 10-9 Braves win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn August 16 Justin Upton hit a walk off homerun in the bottom of the 10th off of current Brave Ian Krol to win the game 3-2. It was his 23rd homerun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn August 28 against the Indians with the game tied at 2-2 in the bottom of the 9th inning Schafer stood at 2nd and Freeman at 1st with Chris Johnson at the plate. He hit the walk off single on a 2-2 count to score Schafer and win the game 3-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn August 31 Melvin Upton Jr. went 4 for 6 with the walk off single in the bottom of the 11th to win the game 5-4. He struck out in his first two at-bats before getting hits in the next four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn September 14 Craig Kimbrel broke his personal single-season saves record of 46 with his 47th in a 2-1 win over the Padres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn September 22 the Braves clinched the NL East with the Nationals loss to the Marlins. The Braves beat the Cubs that day 5-2. It was their first NL East title since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn September 24 Andrelton Simmons hit the walk off single with two outs in the bottom of 9th over Carlos G\u00f3mez to score Justin Upton and win the game 3-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nThe Braves lead the league with 24 wins in their last at-bat. They led the National League with 44 come-from-behind wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nWith the Braves opening day win they shared a tie with the Nationals for first place. The Braves shared at least a tie of first place every day from April 7 on and with their win over the Nationals on April 13 had sole possession of first place in the NL East for the rest of the season. On top of that, the Braves overall record was never at or under .500 at any point in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nThe Braves lead the majors in team ERA at 3.18. Their bullpen lead the majors in bullpen ERA at 2.46 while their starters were at 3.51.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nThe Atlanta Braves won their 10th straight game with a 6\u20133 victory over the Kansas City Royals on April 16, their longest winning streak since the club won 15 straight between April 15 \u2013 May 2, 2000. With a 12\u20131 record up to that point, the Braves were off to their best start since they began the 1982 season 13\u20131. They also outhomered opponents 25\u20137 and outscored opponents 68\u201325 for the best run differential in the majors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nAfter the Braves and Royals had a day off on April 15, players, managers and coaches for both teams wore No. 42 on their jerseys to honor Jackie Robinson on April 16. Like many teams, the Braves also held a moment of silence before the game for victims of the Boston Marathon bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nWith Wade Davis pitching 7 scoreless innings, the Royals beat the Braves 1\u20130 on April 17 to end Atlanta's 10-game winning streak. Atlanta's 10-game winning streak, was one of only five such stretches within the first 13 games of a season since 1900. (2013 Braves 10 / 1982 Braves 13 / 1962 Pirates 10 / 1955 Dodgers 10 / 1938 Giants 11)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn April 26, against the Detroit Tigers, Tiger pitcher An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez struck out seventeen Atlanta Braves' batters, setting a franchise record previously set by Tigers' left-hander Mickey Lolich in 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn April 30, Braves pitcher Tim Hudson became the 113th major league pitcher and to reach 200 wins. Hudson also went two for three in the game, hitting a home run and a double as the Braves beat the Washington Nationals 8\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn June 5, Julio Teher\u00e1n pitched into the eighth inning with two outs without giving up a hit to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Teher\u00e1n gave up the first (and only) hit of the game to Pirates pinch hitter Brandon Inge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nOn July 24, Tim Hudson was pitching a 4-hit shutout against the New York Mets when Eric Young, Jr. accidentally stepped on Hudson's ankle, resulting in a right ankle fracture that ended Hudson's 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Notable Moments\nFrom July 26 \u2013 August 9 the Braves won 14 straight games (including four consecutive series sweeps) and were one game away from tying the franchise record of 15 set in 2000; the winning streak was snapped after a 0\u20131 loss to the Miami Marlins on August 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Post-season, Division Series, Game 1, October 3\nBraves ace Kris Medlen struck out the side in the first inning, getting Carl Crawford looking and Mark Ellis and Hanley Ram\u00edrez swinging, throwing Turner Field into a frenzy. That would be the highlight of the night for the Braves as Medlen fell apart after the first and Clayton Kershaw dominated the strikeout-prone Braves racking up 12 while allowing only one run and hurling a complete-game. The Braves went down in order in the first. Kershaw struck out Jason Heyward and their leading offensive power Freddie Freeman to end the first. In the second inning the Dodgers got going.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Post-season, Division Series, Game 1, October 3\nAfter an Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez line out controversial, rookie phenom Yasiel Puig singled followed by a single from Juan Uribe putting runners at 3rd and 1st. Skip Schumaker then hit a sac-fly to Jason Heyward scoring Puig and Uribe tagging to 2nd base with two outs. Next, Catcher A.J. Ellis smashed a double, scoring Uribe. Kershaw grounded out to first to end the top half of the second inning. Evan Gattis (the Braves feel-good story of 2013) led-off the bottom half of the 2nd with a single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0033-0002", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Post-season, Division Series, Game 1, October 3\nUnfortunately, after a Brian McCann fly-out, surprise slugger Chris Johnson, who finished second in the National League Batting Race, flew out to Puig. This time Gattis came too far off first base and he was thrown out for an inning-ending double play. The situation only got worse in the third inning for the Braves. Crawford hit an infield single and advanced to second. It looked like the Braves might escape unscathed after getting Ellis and Ram\u00edrez to pop out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0033-0003", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Post-season, Division Series, Game 1, October 3\nHowever, on the first pitch of his at-bat, Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez hammered a two-run homerun, extending the Dodgers lead to 4-0 and basically ending the game. Kershaw kept the Braves quiet in the third inning, while Mark Ellis drove in A.J. Ellis who hit his second double, making the score 5-0. Finally, the Braves broke through against Kershaw in the bottom of the fourth inning. After Justin Upton grounded out to Kershaw for the second time, Freeman singled and Gattis walked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0033-0004", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Post-season, Division Series, Game 1, October 3\nMcCann filed out, but Chris Johnson, who finished third in the league in batting average with runners in scoring position and two-outs, singled scoring Freeman for their only run of the game. Andrelton Simmons struck out next to end the inning. After a Gonz\u00e1lez lead-off single and Puig hit-by-pitch, Braves manager Fredi Gonz\u00e1lez pulled Medlen for break out, lefty Luis Avil\u00e1n. After a sacrifice bunt by Uribe and intentional walk of Schumaker, Avil\u00e1n struck out A.J. Ellis and Clayton Kershaw to end the threat. However, Kershaw struck out the side in the bottom half of the fifth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0033-0005", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Post-season, Division Series, Game 1, October 3\nGetting Elliot Johnson and B.J. Upton (pinch-hitting for Avil\u00e1n) looking and Jason Heyward swinging. Jordan Walden relieved Avil\u00e1n in the sixth inning. Crawford grounded out to lead-off the inning, but Mark Ellis singled and Hanley Ram\u00edrez doubled to score Ellis, to close the scoring at 6-1. Kershaw shut down Atlanta over the next three innings. With the win the Dodgers took a 1-0 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231892-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Braves season, Player statistics\nStatistics updated after game on September 4, 2013.\u2020 denotes player is on 15-day disabled list. \u2021 denotes player is on 60-day disabled list. * denotes player is active, but on the inactive roster. x denotes player was traded mid-season and is no longer in the organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231893-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Dream season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 6th season for the Atlanta Dream of the Women's National Basketball Association. The Dream finished second in the Eastern Conference with a 17-17 record, and won the Eastern Conference Finals, sweeping the Indiana Fever to earn their third trip in four years to the WNBA Finals, where they were swept by the Minnesota Lynx in three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231893-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Dream season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Dream's selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season\nThe 2013 Atlanta Falcons season was the franchise's 48th season in the National Football League and the sixth under head coach Mike Smith. The Falcons entered the season as one of the Super Bowl favorites; However, due to multiple key injuries to the team, the Falcons failed to improve on their 13\u20133 season from 2012, after a 23\u201330 loss to the New England Patriots in week 4 and failed to match their 13\u20133 record from last year as a result of a 28\u201330 week 5 loss against the New York Jets. They were mathematically eliminated from postseason contention for the first time since 2009 and secured the Falcons\u2019 first losing season since 2007, after a 13\u201317 week 12 loss to the New Orleans Saints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: at New Orleans Saints\nThe Falcons would travel to New Orleans to open their season. The Falcons would carry a 17-13 lead into the fourth quarter, but the Saints would score a touchdown with 6:22 remaining. The Falcons would try to rally, but the comeback fell short, as the Saints would add a field goal to win 23-17. With the loss, the Falcons started their season 0-1 for the second time in 3 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. St. Louis Rams\nThe Falcons would return to Atlanta for their home opener against the Rams. The Falcons would have a big first half, cruising to a 24-3 lead at halftime. St. Louis would try to come back, and outscored Atlanta 21-7 in the second half, but it was not enough as the Falcons held on for the win. With the win, the Falcons evened their record at 1-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Falcons would lead the entire game until the Dolphins went down to score the game-winning touchdown with 38 seconds remaining. The Falcons would try to go down to the end zone to pull out the win, but they would not, and the Falcons would lose 27-23 to the Miami Dolphins. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 1-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. New England Patriots\nThe Falcons would go back home for a Sunday Night Football game against the New England Patriots. The Falcons would put up a good fight, but they would lose a close shootout against the undefeated Patriots. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 1-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New York Jets\nThe Falcons would go down the field to score with 1:54 remaining on a Matt Bryant field goal. However, the Jets would go down and kick a field goal as time expired to give the Jets the win. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 1-4 for the first time since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Falcons would stay home for a divisional game against winless Tampa Bay. The Falcons would never trail during the game, and they would win this game 31-23. The Falcons cruised to a 24-10 lead at halftime, and held off a second half Tampa Bay rally for the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nWith the win, the Falcons improved to 2-4 while sending Tampa Bay to 0-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Arizona Cardinals\nThe Falcons would travel to Arizona to take on the Cardinals. The Falcons would struggle all game, committing 4 turnovers (all interceptions by Matt Ryan) as they lost 27-13. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 2-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at Carolina Panthers\nThe Falcons would go to Carolina for a showdown with the Panthers. The Falcons would once again struggle as they would commit 4 turnovers for the second straight week as they lost 34-10 to Carolina. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 2-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nIn a rematch of last seasons divisional game, the Falcons went down easily this time to Seattle, losing 33-10. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 2-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Falcons traveled to Tampa Bay for game 2 against the Bucs. The Falcons would suffer a mountain of embarrassment, as they lost 41-28 to the one-win Buccaneers. It was the most points the Buccaneers had scored in a single game all season, and the most points the Falcons had surrendered in a single game all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. New Orleans Saints\nWith the loss, coupled with wins by the Cardinals, 49ers and the Panthers, the Falcons were the first team this season to be eliminated from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Buffalo Bills\nIn this game, the Falcons would travel to Toronto for their game against the Bills, as it was the Bills Toronto game for the 2013 season. The Bills would lead 31-24 during the 4th quarter, but the Falcons would go down and score the game-tying touchdown with 1:28 remaining in regulation. In overtime, the Falcons would win on a Matt Bryant field goal to give the Falcons the win. With the win, the Falcons would end their 5-game losing streak and improve to 3-9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Falcons would travel to Green Bay for a game against the Packers. The Falcons had a lot of chances to try and get the lead in the fourth quarter, but the Packers would ultimately hold a 22-21 lead for the final 12:01 as the Falcons failed to score in the fourth quarter. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 3-10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins\nThe Falcons would go home for a battle against 3-10 Washington. The Falcons would win the game 27-26. The Redskins would go down to score with 18 seconds remaining, but mainly since they were 3-10, they tried to go for 2 and give them the lead and ultimately the win. However, the attempt was no good and the Falcons held on. With the win, the Falcons improved to 4-10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 87], "content_span": [88, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at San Francisco 49ers\nThe Falcons would travel to San Francisco for a Monday Night game against the 49ers. The Falcons had a shot at getting the lead in the 4th quarter, but NaVorro Bowman would return an interception 89 yards for a touchdown to put the game away. With the loss, the Falcons fell to 4-11. The loss also allowed the 49ers to clinch a playoff berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231894-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Falcons season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Carolina Panthers\nWith the loss, the Falcons finished their season 4-12 being swept by the Panthers for the first time since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season\nThe 2013 season will be the Atlanta Silverbacks's seventeenth season of existence, and their third consecutive season playing in the North American Soccer League, the second division of the American soccer pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Background\nThe Atlanta Silverbacks' 2012 season was a tale of two halves. In their first 15 games they only managed 8 points, through 1 win, 5 draws and 9 losses. In their final 13 games they gather 22 points in 6 wins, 4 draws and 3 losses (a league best).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Background\nThey had mixed results in U.S. Open Cup, winning their first match against fourth division opponent Georgia Revolution 1\u20130. Then losing to MLS side Seattle Sounders 5-1 a week later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Background\nOn May 2, 2012 first-year head coach Alex Pineda Chac\u00f3n was replaced by interim head coach Eric Wynalda. Wynalda announced Brian Haynes would replace him as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Club, Roster, 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Competitions, NASL, Spring season\nLast updated: April 21, 2013. Source: Spring season 2013 results", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Statistics, Goals\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Statistics, Assists\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total assists are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231895-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta Silverbacks season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231896-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlanta mayoral election\nThe 2013 mayoral election in Atlanta, Georgia took place on November 5, 2013 alongside other Atlanta municipal races. Incumbent Mayor Kasim Reed faced no serious opposition and was re-elected with 84% of the vote. He was sworn in for his second term on January 6, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231897-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament was the postseason baseball tournament of the NCAA Division I Atlantic 10 Conference. It took place from May 22\u201325. The top seven regular season finishers of the league's fifteen teams met in the double-elimination tournament to be held at newly renovated Robert and Mariam Hayes Stadium on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in Charlotte, North Carolina. In the championship game, first-seeded Saint Louis defeated second-seeded Charlotte, 7-4, to win its third tournament championship (its second under head coach Darin Hendrickson). Saint Louis earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. As a team, SLU collected 92 hits in six days (.395 average), shattering the previous A-10 Tournament record of 65.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231897-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nIn an expansion from previous years, the top seven finishers from the regular season were seeded one through seven. The top seed received a single bye while remaining seeds played on the first day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231897-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nAlex Kelly was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Kelly was a senior outfielder for Saint Louis who set tournament records for hits (12) and RBI (13).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 90], "content_span": [91, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231898-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season will be the 18th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The season will mark the first for the incoming George Mason Patriots. The venue for the 2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament was Baujan Field at the University of Dayton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231898-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season champions are the Charlotte 49ers who left the Atlantic 10 to join Conference USA as part of the 2010\u201313 NCAA conference realignment. The Saint Louis Billikens are the defending tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231898-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Conference men's soccer season, A10 Tournament\nThe format for the 2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament will be announced in the Fall of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231899-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament was played on March 14\u201317 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn. The top 12 teams in the final standings qualified for the tournament, The 2013 championship game was nationally televised on CBS.As the tournament champion, Saint Louis received the Atlantic 10 Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231899-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top twelve teams qualified for the tournament. Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231899-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nEliminated from Conference Tournament: St. Bonaventure (7\u20139), Rhode Island (3\u201313), Fordham (3\u201313), Duquesne (1\u201315)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231900-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament was the eighteenth edition of the tournament. Held from Nov. 14-17, it determined the Atlantic 10 Conference's automatic berth into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The George Mason Patriots defeated the defending champions, the Saint Louis Billikens in the final, thus advancing to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231900-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe tournament was hosted by the University of Dayton and all matches were contested at Baujan Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231900-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament, Qualification\nThe top eight teams in the Atlantic 10 Conference based on their conference regular season records qualified for the tournament. The top seeded teams included George Mason, Saint Louis, VCU and La Salle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231901-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 26 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. Top seeded North Carolina won the tournament and received the league's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was North Carolina's sixth ACC Tournament win. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2012\u201313 academic year. This was the sixth time the ACC hosted its baseball championship in Durham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231901-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nPrior to this year, the tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning nine championships, most of any team. Georgia Tech, last year's winner, has claimed eight tournament wins. Charter league members Duke and Maryland, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech and Boston College have never won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231901-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe winner of each six team division and the top six other teams based on conference winning percentage, regardless of division, from the conference's regular season were seeded one through eight. Seeds one and two were awarded to the two division winners. The tournament used the same format adopted in the 2007 event, with the teams divided into two pools of four. Each pool will play a round-robin set of games over the first four days of the event. The teams with the best record in each pool then meet in a single championship game on Sunday, May 26. This was the final season of this format, as the tournament will expand to ten teams beginning in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231901-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament, Schedule and results\nNotes\u2020 \u2013 Denotes extra innings\u2021 \u2013 Denotes game shortened due to mercy rule", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231901-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nCody Stubbs was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Stubbs was a first baseman for North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231902-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference football season\nThe 2013 Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) football season was an NCAA football season that was played from August 29, 2013, to January 7, 2014. It was the first season of play for former Big East Conference members Pittsburgh and Syracuse. Syracuse plays in the Atlantic Division, while Pittsburgh plays in the Coastal Division. It was also the last season for Maryland in the ACC as they will move to the Big Ten Conference in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231902-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference football season\nThe Atlantic Coast Conference consists of 14 members in two divisions. The Atlantic division consists of Boston College, Clemson, Florida State, Maryland, North Carolina State, Syracuse, and Wake Forest. The Coastal division consists of Duke, Georgia Tech, Miami, North Carolina, Pittsburgh, Virginia, and Virginia Tech. The division champions, Duke and Florida State, met in December in the 2013 ACC Championship Game, located in Charlotte, North Carolina at Bank of America Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231902-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Preseason, Preseason Poll\nThe 2013 ACC Preseason Poll was announced at the ACC Football Kickoff meetings in Greensboro, NC on July 22. Miami was voted to win Coastal division while Clemson was voted to win the Atlantic division and the conference. Tajh Boyd of Clemson was voted the Preseason ACC Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231902-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Coaches\nThree universities hired new coaches for the 2013 football season. NC State hired Dave Doeren from Northern Illinois after he led the Huskies to back-to-back MAC championships. With this hire, Doeren was made the second highest paid coach in the ACC (behind Florida State's Jimbo Fisher) and the 27th highest paid coach in the country. Boston College also changed coaches, hiring Steve Addazio from Temple. Addazio had only been a head coach for 2 years, however, Boston College athletic director Brad Bates stated that he has had Addazio on his short list of coaches for years. Syracuse promoted their defensive coordinator, Scott Shafer, of the previous 4 years to head coach after their previous head coach, Doug Marrone, left for a job coaching the Buffalo Bills of the NFL. They will join Paul Chryst of Pittsburgh (due to conference realignment) as new coaches in the ACC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 934]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231902-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, Coaches\nNOTE: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231902-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference football season, 2014 NFL Draft\nN.B: In the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2014 Draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231903-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season is the 27th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The season will mark the first for the incoming Notre Dame Fighting Irish, Pittsburgh Panthers and Syracuse Orange, as well as the last ACC season for Maryland, which is leaving for the Big Ten. The 2013 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament will run from November 12\u201317, with quarterfinals at campus sites followed by the semifinals and final at the Maryland SoccerPlex in Boyds, Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231903-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season and tournament champions are the Maryland Terrapins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231903-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season, ACC Tournament\nThe 2013 ACC Men's Soccer Tournament, as noted above, will have quarterfinals held at campus sites, with the semifinals and final at the Maryland SoccerPlex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231904-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Hockey Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic Hockey Tournament is the 10th Atlantic Hockey Tournament. It will be played between March 8 and March 23, 2013 at campus locations and at the Blue Cross Arena in Rochester, New York, United States. The winner of the tournament will earn Atlantic Hockey's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231904-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament features four rounds of play. In the first round the fifth and twelfth, sixth and eleventh, seventh and tenth, and eighth and ninth seeds, as determined by the conference regular season standings, play a best-of-three series with the winners advancing to the quarterfinals. The top four teams from the conference regular season standings receive a bye to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231904-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Hockey Tournament, Format\nThere, the first seed and lowest-ranked first-round winner, the second seed and second-lowest-ranked first-round winner, the third seed and second-highest-ranked first-round winner, and the fourth seed and the highest-ranked first-round winner play a best-of-three series, with the winners advancing to the semifinals. In 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. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231904-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Hockey Tournament, Format, Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231905-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Melching Field at Conrad Park on the campus of Stetson University in DeLand, FL from May 22 through 25. East Tennessee State won their first tournament championship and claimed the Atlantic Sun Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The Buccaneers joined the conference in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231905-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2013 tournament was an 8-team double-elimination tournament. The top eight teams (based on conference results) from the conference earned invitations to the tournament. Northern Kentucky was not eligible for the tournament while it was reclassifying from Division II. Kennesaw State claimed the sixth seed over Lipscomb by tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231905-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nKerry Doane was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Doane was a pitcher for East Tennessee State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 91], "content_span": [92, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231906-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Atlantic Sun Conference men's soccer season will be the 35th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. It will be the last A-Sun season for East Tennessee State and Mercer, both of which will move to the Southern Conference in July 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231906-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season and tournament champions are the Florida Gulf Coast Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231906-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Conference men's soccer season, A-Sun Tournament\nThe format for the 2013 Atlantic Sun Conference Men's Soccer Tournament will be announced in the Fall of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231907-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 6 \u2013 March 9, 2013 at Hawkins Arena in Macon, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231907-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe A-Sun Championship was a four-day single-elimination tournament. The top eight teams (with the exception of Northern Kentucky) competed in the championship. As part of their transition to Division I from Division II, Northern Kentucky was not be eligible for post season play until 2017, including the A-Sun tournament. The winner of the tournament earned the A-Sun's automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231907-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nDefending champion Belmont was not in the tournament, as they moved to the Ohio Valley Conference for the 2012-13 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231908-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic Sun Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Atlantic Sun Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was the 35th edition of the tournament. The tournament decided the Atlantic Sun Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. Held at the FGCU Soccer Complex, the East Tennessee State Buccaneers won the title against the North Florida Ospreys", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe 2013 Atlantic hurricane season was a well below average Atlantic hurricane season and the first since 1994 with no major hurricanes. It was well below average for both hurricanes and major hurricanes but it was a slightly above average for named storms. It was also the first season since 1968 with no storms of at least Category 2 intensity on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale. The first tropical cyclone of the season, Andrea, developed on June 5, while the final cyclone, an unnamed subtropical storm, dissipated on December 7. Throughout the year, only two storms\u2014Humberto and Ingrid\u2014reached hurricane intensity; this was the lowest seasonal total since 1982.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe season's impact was minimal; although 15 tropical cyclones developed, most were weak or remained at sea. Tropical Storm Andrea killed four people after making landfall in Florida and moving up the East Coast of the United States. In early July, Tropical Storm Chantal moved through the Windward Islands, causing one fatality, but minimal damage overall. Tropical storms Dorian and Erin and Hurricane Humberto brought only squally weather to the Cape Verde Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season\nMexico, where Hurricane Ingrid, Tropical Depression Eight, and tropical storms Barry and Fernand all made landfall, was the hardest hit; Ingrid alone caused at least 32 deaths and $1.5 billion (2013 USD) in damage. In early October, Karen brought showers and gusty winds to the central Gulf Coast of the United States, before impacting the U.S. East Coast as a long-lived nor'easter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season\nAll major forecasting agencies predicted an above-average season. All reduced their seasonal predictions in early August, but even the revised predictions were too high. The lack of activity was primarily caused by an unexpected significant weakening of the Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation between winter and spring. This resulted in continuation of the spring weather pattern over the Atlantic Ocean, with strong vertical wind shear, mid-level moisture, and atmospheric stability, which suppressed tropical cyclogenesis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nIn advance of, and during, each hurricane season, several forecasts of hurricane activity are issued by national meteorological services, scientific agencies, and noted hurricane experts. These include forecasters from the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)'s National Hurricane and Climate Prediction Center, Tropical Storm Risk, the United Kingdom's Met Office, and Philip J. Klotzbach, William M. Gray and associates at Colorado State University (CSU). The forecasts include weekly and monthly changes in significant factors that help determine the number of tropical storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes within a particular year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nAccording to NOAA and CSU, the average Atlantic hurricane season between 1981 and 2010 contained roughly 12 tropical storms, six hurricanes, three major hurricanes, and an accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index of 66\u2013103 units. Broadly speaking, ACE is a measure of the power of a tropical or subtropical storm multiplied by the length of time it existed. Therefore, a storm with a longer duration, such as Humberto, will have high values of ACE. It is only calculated for full advisories on specific tropical and subtropical systems reaching or exceeding wind speeds of 39\u00a0mph (63\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nAccordingly, tropical depressions are not included here. After the storm has dissipated, typically after the end of the season, the NHC reexamines the data, and produces a final report on each storm. These revisions can lead to a revised ACE total either upward or downward compared to the operational value. NOAA typically categorizes a season as either above-average, average, or below-average based on the cumulative ACE Index, but the number of tropical storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes within a hurricane season are considered occasionally as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nMultiple agencies predicted above-average activity, citing forecasts for slower-than-average trade winds, warmer-than-normal sea surface temperatures, abnormally low wind shear, and the unlikelihood of an El Ni\u00f1o developing prior to the peak of the season. On December 5, 2012, Tropical Storm Risk (TSR), a public consortium consisting of experts on insurance, risk management, and seasonal climate forecasting at University College London, issued an extended-range forecast. In its report, the organization called for 15.4 (\u00b14.3) named storms, 7.7 (\u00b12.9) hurricanes, 3.4 (\u00b11.6) major hurricanes, and a cumulative Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) index of 134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nWhile no value was placed on the number of expected landfalls during the season, TSR stated that the landfalling ACE index was expected to be above average. Four months later, on April 5, Tropical Storm Risk issued its updated forecast, continuing to call for an above-average season with 15.2 (\u00b14.1) named storms, 7.5 (\u00b12.8) hurricanes, 3.4 (\u00b11.6) major hurricanes, and an ACE index of 131; the landfalling ACE index was once again forecast to be higher than normal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nMeanwhile, on April 8, Weather Services International (WSI) issued its first forecast for the hurricane season. In its report, the organization forecast 16 named storms, nine hurricanes, and five major hurricanes. On April 10, Colorado State University (CSU) issued its first forecast for the season, calling for a potentially hyperactive season with 18 named storms, nine hurricanes, four major hurricanes, and an ACE index of 165. The probabilities of a major hurricane hitting the Gulf Coast and East Coast were well above average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nOn May 15, the United Kingdom Met Office (UKMO) predicted 14 named storms, with a 70% chance that the number would be between 10 and 18, and nine hurricanes with a 70% chance that the number would be between 4 and 14. It also predicted an ACE index of 130 with a 70% chance that the index would be in the range 76 to 184.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nOn May 23, 2013, NOAA issued its first seasonal outlook for the year, stating there was a 70% likelihood of 13 to 20 named storms, of which seven to eleven could become hurricanes, including three to six major hurricanes; these ranges are greater than the seasonal average of twelve named storms, six hurricanes and three major hurricanes. On May 30, the Florida State University Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies, FSU COAPS, issued its first and only prediction for the season. The organization called for 12 to 17 named storms, of which five to ten would further intensify into hurricanes; no forecast was given for the number of major hurricanes. In addition, an ACE index of 135 units was forecast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Mid-season outlooks\nIn June, predictions from CSU and TSR were similar to pre-season forecasts due to the a lack of an El Ni\u00f1o and warmer-than-average sea surface temperatures across the Atlantic Ocean. However, by July and August, CSU and TSR all adjusted their forecasts downward because of predictions of cooler-than-average sea surface temperatures and above-average wind shear. NOAA also decreased the amount of activity in its final outlook, despite predicting a wetter-than-average western Africa and above-average sea surface temperatures in its report. On June 3, CSU issued its first mid-season prediction for the remainder of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Mid-season outlooks\nIn its report, the organization continued to predict well above-average activity, with eighteen named storms, nine hurricanes, four major hurricanes, and an ACE index of 165 units. CSU stated that there was a 72% chance of at least one major hurricane impacting any stretch of the United States coastline; the chances of a major hurricane hitting the East Coast and Gulf Coast were 48% and 47%, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Mid-season outlooks\nThe following day, Tropical Storm Risk issued its third forecast for the 2013 Atlantic hurricane season, calling for sixteen named storms, eight hurricanes, four major hurricanes, and an ACE of 134 units; this activity was predicted to be roughly 30% above the 1950\u20132012 long-term mean. TSR gave a 65% probability that the landfalling ACE index would be above-average. A month later, TSR lowered its numbers to 15 named storms, seven hurricanes, and three major hurricanes. On August 2, Colorado State University issued another update for the season, lowering its numbers slightly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0006-0003", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Mid-season outlooks\nHowever, the organization continued to state that there was an above-average probability of a United States and Caribbean major hurricane landfall. Finally, on August 8, NOAA issued its second and final outlook for the season, predicting 13 to 19 named storms, six to nine hurricanes, and three to five major hurricanes; these numbers were down slightly from its May outlook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Post-season review\nWith 14 tropical storms, two hurricanes, and no major hurricanes, activity fell far below most predictions. Brian McNoldy at the University of Miami noted several reasons why NOAA should not cease seasonal predictions, including the variability of hurricane seasons and the value of supplementing climatology with seasonal forecasts. Further, McNoldy argued that forecasting a hurricane season \"challenges us to better understand how the atmosphere works.\" On November 29, Dr. Phil Klotzbach of CSU noted that \"[Dr. Gray and I] have been doing these forecasts for 30 years and that's probably the biggest forecast bust that we've had.\" The program, which had already lost contributions from an insurance company in June, was defunded further following the botched season forecasts. However, Gray and Klotzbach were able to issue predictions for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 932]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1, 2013. It was a below average season in which 14 tropical cyclones and one subtropical cyclone formed. Thirteen of the fifteen designated cyclones attained tropical storm status. However, only two of those became hurricanes, the fewest since 1982; neither of these intensified into a major hurricane, the first such occasion since 1994. 2013 was also the most active season without a major hurricane. By default, 2013 extended the period without major hurricane landfalls in the United States to eight years since Hurricane Wilma in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nFurther, neither hurricane exceeded Category 1 intensity for the first time since 1968. Throughout the season, NOAA and the United States Air Force Reserve flew a total of 45 reconnaissance missions over the Atlantic basin, totaling 435 hours; this was the lowest number of flight hours since 1966. One hurricane and three tropical storms made landfall during the season, causing 56 deaths and about $1.51 billion in damage. The last storm of the season dissipated on December 7, a week after the official end of hurricane season on November 30, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nActivity was primarily suppressed by significant weakening of the Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation (THC) early in the year, representing the largest reduction in strength of the THC since NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis began. The weakening of the THC was possibly the result of lowered ocean salinity and a decrease in North Atlantic Deep Water formation. Oceanic and atmospheric gyres were able to strengthen in the subtropical Atlantic, allowing southward advection of cold air and water. Consequently, there was a significant cooling of sea surface temperatures over portions of the north Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThis resulted in a continuation of the spring weather pattern over the Atlantic Ocean, with strong vertical wind shear, reduced mid-tropospheric moisture, and high atmospheric stability. The weak THC also resulted in slightly stronger trade winds and less wind convergence and rainfall in the Intertropical Convergence Zone, with an increase in upper-level zonal winds and higher environmental air pressures. Collectively, these factors worked to suppress tropical cyclogenesis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nTropical cyclogenesis began in early June, with the development of Tropical Storm Andrea in the Gulf of Mexico on June 5. Twelve days later, Tropical Storm Barry formed in the northwestward Caribbean Sea. Two named storms originated during the month of July\u2014tropical storms Chantal and Dorian. Similarly, there were two tropical storms in August, Erin and Fernand. In September, four tropical cyclones formed, three of which strengthened into tropical storms; two of those reached hurricane status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe most intense tropical cyclone\u2014Hurricane Humberto\u2014peaked with maximum sustained winds of 90\u00a0mph (140\u00a0km/h) on September 11, which is a Category 1 on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale. The other hurricane, Ingrid, was the most devastating storm of the season and peaked at slightly less intensity. Activity began to slow in October, with the development of only two tropical storms, Karen and Lorenzo. Tropical cyclogenesis then halted for almost a month, until Tropical Storm Melissa formed over the eastern Atlantic Ocean on November 18. This was the only tropical cyclone in the month of November. The final system was an unnamed subtropical storm that developed south of the Azores on December 5. After meandering for two days, it degenerated into a remnant low-pressure area on December 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe season's activity was reflected with an accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) rating of 36. This was well below the 1981\u20132010 median of 92, and the lowest value since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Andrea\nAn area of low pressure in the eastern Gulf of Mexico developed into Tropical Storm Andrea on June 5. Despite strong wind shear and an abundance of dry air, the storm strengthened while initially heading north-northeastward, before turning northeastward later that day. Andrea intensified and peaked as a strong tropical storm with winds at 65\u00a0mph (105\u00a0km/h) on June 6. A few hours later, the storm weakened slightly and made landfall near Steinhatchee, Florida. It began losing tropical characteristics while tracking across Florida and Georgia. Andrea transitioned into an extratropical cyclone over South Carolina on June 7, though the remnants continued to move along the East Coast of the United States until being absorbed by another extratropical storm off Maine on June 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Andrea\nThe precursor to Andrea dropped nearly 12\u00a0in (300\u00a0mm) of rainfall on the Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula. In Cuba, the storm brought flooding, with over 1,000 people fleeing their homes, mainly along the Cuyaguateje River in Pinar del R\u00edo Province. In the area, five tornadoes were spawned, one of which damaged three homes. In Florida, the storm brought heavy rainfall to some areas, causing localized flooding. There were 10 tornadoes, the worst of which touched down in The Acreage. The twister downed power lines and trees, causing significant roof damage to several houses; there was also one injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Andrea\nA surfer went missing in South Carolina and was presumed to have drowned. The remnants of Andrea spawned one tornado in North Carolina, though damage was minor. Additionally, flooding was reported in some areas of the Northeastern United States. Three fatalities occurred due to weather-related traffic accidents in Virginia and New Jersey. The remnants of Andrea brought gusty winds to Atlantic Canada, causing thousands of power outages in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Barry\nA tropical wave emerged into the Atlantic Ocean from the west coast of Africa on June 8. The system moved westward and an area of low pressure developed over the southwestern Caribbean Sea on June 16. The low then moved across Honduras, where heavy rainfall triggered flooding that damaged 60 homes and affected 300 people. The low later re-emerged into the Caribbean Sea and developed into a tropical depression at 12:00 UTC on June 17, while situated 60\u00a0mi (97\u00a0km) east of Monkey River Town. About 10 hours later, it made landfall near Big Creek, Belize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Barry\nIn that country, an estimated 10\u00a0in (250\u00a0mm) of rain fell in 24 hours, causing several rivers to overflow their banks. In some areas, culverts were washed away. At least 54 people living along Hope Creek were relocated to shelters. In El Salvador, flooding and lightning caused one fatality each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Barry\nDespite decreasing wind speeds as the storm crossed land, the circulation became better-defined. Early on June 19, the depression emerged into the Bay of Campeche and began strengthening due to warm sea surface temperatures. Around 12:00 UTC, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Barry. After about 12 hours, Barry attained its peak intensity with maximum sustained winds of 45\u00a0mph (72\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 1,003\u00a0mbar (29.6\u00a0inHg). At 11:15 UTC on June 20, Barry made landfall near Veracruz at the same intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Barry\nThe storm rapidly weakened and degenerated into a remnant low early on June 21. In the Mexican state of Yucat\u00e1n, wind gusts up to 48\u00a0mph (77\u00a0km/h) and heavy rains downed trees and power lines. More than 26,000 residents temporarily lost power after lightning struck a nearby power station, leading to a fire. Four deaths were reported in Mexico due to drowning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Chantal\nA large tropical wave emerged into the Atlantic Ocean from the west coast of Africa on July 4. The system moved rapidly westward under the influence of a subtropical ridge. Scatterometer passes indicating a closed circulation confirmed that Tropical Storm Chantal had developed by 12:00 UTC on July 7, while located about 1,250\u00a0mi (2,010\u00a0km) east-southeast of Barbados. Chantal continued to move swiftly west-northwestward and was one of the fastest moving tropical cyclones in the deep tropics during the satellite era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Chantal\nWhile approaching the Lesser Antilles, it became disorganized due to wind shear, but at 12:00 UTC on July 9, Chantal peaked with sustained winds of 65\u00a0mph (105\u00a0km/h). Shortly thereafter, it crossed through the Lesser Antilles and continued weakening in the Caribbean Sea. By late on July 10, Chantal degenerated into a tropical wave while located south of Hispaniola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Chantal\nThe storm brought heavy rainfall to the Lesser Antilles. In Dominica, several mudslides were reported. Wind gusts up to 48\u00a0mph (77\u00a0km/h) were observed on the island, de-roofing houses and causing power outages. Strong winds were reported on Martinique, with gusts up to 76\u00a0mph (122\u00a0km/h) observed in Fort-de-France. Trees were knocked onto roads and power lines, leaving about 33,000 homes without electricity. Elsewhere, damage reported in the Lesser Antilles was minimal, and there were no casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Chantal\nAlthough sustained winds in Puerto Rico remained below tropical storm force, a weather station at Las Mareas in Guayama observed a wind gust of 51\u00a0mph (82\u00a0km/h) late on July 9. Winds toppled trees and power lines, blocking several roads. In Hispaniola, heavy rains caused flooding over portions of the island, but the fast-moving nature of the system precluded a more severe flooding event. In the Dominican Republic, a firefighter from the community of Maimon was killed as he was swept away by flood waters while attempting to clear a clogged storm drain. Chantal's remnant moisture interacted with a surface boundary over northeastern Florida, contributing to widespread thunderstorms that produced locally heavy rainfall and gusty winds. Overall, the storm caused at least $10 million in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Dorian\nEarly on July 22, a tropical wave with an associated low-pressure area emerged off the western coast of Africa. Based on satellite data, the wave was upgraded to a tropical depression at 18:00 UTC on July 23 while located about 175\u00a0mi (282\u00a0km) south of the Cape Verde Islands, and further intensified into Tropical Storm Dorian by 06:00 UTC the following day. The storm tracked swiftly west-northwest over warm ocean temperatures and within an environment of low wind shear initially, allowing it to attain peak winds of 60\u00a0mph (97\u00a0km/h) by July 25. However, the entrainment of drier mid-level air and cooler ocean waters caused a weakening trend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Dorian\nLate on July 27, a closed low-level circulation ceased to exist and Dorian degenerated into an open tropical wave. The remnants continued west-northwest until August 1, at which time the disturbance reached the western extend of a ridge and curved northward. Despite continued unfavorable wind shear, a broad area of low pressure formed off the east coast of Florida and became increasingly better defined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Dorian\nThe convection gained enough organization for the system to be re-designated as a tropical depression by 18:00 UTC on August 2. However, strong northerly winds caused the depression to deteriorate into a remnant low about 24 hours later, southeast of Charleston, South Carolina. On August 4, the remnant low was absorbed into a trough off the coast of North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Erin\nA tropical wave, accompanied by a misshapen area of surface low pressure and a large area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms, emerged from the west coast of Africa on August 15. The wave moved west-northwestward along the southern periphery of a ridge to its north. The system quickly organized and its circulation became more defined, warranting its classification as a tropical depression early on August 15. At the time, the depression was situated about 70\u00a0mi (110\u00a0km) south of Praia, Cape Verde, prompting the issuance of tropical storm warnings for the southernmost islands. Deep convection continued to develop over the center and the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Erin six hours after its initial designation. However, dry air quickly became entrained into the circulation and convection waned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Erin\nOperationally (in real time), Erin was briefly downgraded to a tropical depression on August 16, though post-storm analysis indicated it retained tropical storm intensity that day. Early on August 17, the ship British Cygnet measured 44\u00a0mph (71\u00a0km/h) winds in relation to the cyclone; around this time, it was estimated that Erin attained its peak intensity with sustained winds of 45\u00a0mph (72\u00a0km/h) and a barometric pressure of 1,006 millibars (29.7\u00a0inHg). A temporary northwesterly turn occurred around this time as the storm moved through a weakness in the ridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Erin\nLater on August 17, increasing wind shear took its toll on Erin and convection became displaced from the center. The following day, Erin degenerated into a remnant low about halfway between the Lesser Antilles and the west coast of Africa. The remnants proceeded westward on the low-level trade winds before opening up into a trough early on August 20, and ultimately dissipated several days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Fernand\nOn August 10, a tropical wave emerged into the Atlantic Ocean from the west coast of Africa. Another tropical wave, which spawned Tropical Storm Erin, emerged into the Atlantic on August 13. The waves moved westward and merged into a single area of disturbed weather east of the Lesser Antilles. Further development did not occur until it crossed the Caribbean Sea and reached the Bay of Campeche on August 25. A tropical depression formed around 12:00 UTC that day, about 40\u00a0mi (64\u00a0km) north-northeast of Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz. Six hours later, the depression deepened into Tropical Storm Fernand. Early on August 26, Fernand peaked with sustained winds of 60\u00a0mph (97\u00a0km/h). At 04:45 UTC, the storm made landfall near Zempoala, Veracruz, at the same intensity. Fernand weakened to a tropical depression later on August 26, hours before dissipating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Fernand\nOn August 25, a tropical storm warning was posted for the Gulf Coast of Mexico from Veracruz northward to Tampico. Warnings were canceled north of Barra de Nautla, Veracruz early on August 26, and discontinued entirely after Fernand weakened to a tropical depression. The Mexican Navy helped people in Veracruz evacuate their homes efficiently. Classes at all levels of education in the state were closed during the storm's passage. Impact from the storm in Mexico was most severe in Veracruz, where 13 people were killed by landslides: nine in Yecuatla, three in Tuxpan, and one in Atzal\u00e1n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Fernand\nIn the city of Veracruz, heavy rainfall flooded roads, while downed trees caused power outages. In Boca del R\u00edo, flooding stranded people at a shopping plaza. Damage was reported in 19 municipalities, mostly in northern and central Veracruz. The storm damaged 457 homes and caused 4 rivers to overflow. In Oaxaca, a man died after being swept away by a swollen river. After the storm, Veracruz governor Javier Duarte declared a state of emergency for 92 municipalities, which allowed farmers who sustained damage to receive aid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gabrielle\nIn late August, a tropical wave accompanied by a broad area of low pressure exited the west coast of Africa. While the wave was south of Puerto Rico, another tropical wave reached the system and enhanced deep convection. Late on September 4, a tropical depression developed about 115\u00a0mi (185\u00a0km) south-southeast of Puerto Rico. Operationally, the depression was upgraded to Tropical Storm Gabrielle early on September 5. However, in post-analysis, it was determined that Gabrielle was never a tropical storm in the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gabrielle\nThe depression moved west-northwestward and lost its closed circulation near the eastern tip of Hispaniola late on September 5. During a 48-hour period, the disturbance brought 6 to 8\u00a0in (150 to 200\u00a0mm) of rain to some areas of Puerto Rico. A mudslide detached part of a small bridge on Highway 184. On Saint Croix, minor street flooding was reported, and several trees were downed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gabrielle\nThe remnant system was monitored for regeneration. By September 9, wind shear began decreasing and the system re-developed into a tropical depression early on September 10. Six hours later, the depression moved northward and strengthened into Tropical Storm Gabrielle. By 12:00 UTC on September 10, it peaked with maximum sustained winds of 65 miles per hour (105\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 1,003\u00a0mbar (29.6\u00a0inHg). The storm passed about 25\u00a0mi (40\u00a0km) east of Hamilton, Bermuda early on September 11. Strong winds on the island downed trees branches, caused minor infrastructural damage, and left minor power outages. After marked oscillations in intensity on September 12, Gabrielle finally succumbed to wind shear midway between Bermuda and Cape Cod.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Eight\nThe eighth tropical depression of the season originated from a tropical wave that crossed the western coast of Africa on August 23. Tracking westward, the wave reached the Caribbean Sea and became increasingly ill-defined while in the central Caribbean. An increase in convection was observed on September 1 and the subsequent day as the wave entered the western Caribbean. After moving into the Bay of Campeche, a broad low-pressure area formed in association with the system on September 5. An increase in deep convection on September 6 led to the formation of a tropical depression by 12:00 UTC, located approximately 30\u00a0mi (48\u00a0km) east-northeast of Tampico, Mexico. The cyclone then moved west-southwest under the influence of an anticyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Eight\nAround 18:00 UTC on September 6, the depression made landfall near Tampico. Once inland, the depression quickly diminished to a remnant low by 06:00 UTC on September 7. It dissipated six hours later. Heavy rains across Tamaulipas and Veracruz triggered flooding in areas that had been affected by Tropical Storm Fernand just two weeks prior. The most significant effects were in Veracruz where hundreds of homes were inundated. Record-breaking rains in Mexico City, falling at rates of 3.3\u00a0in (84\u00a0mm) per hour, caused significant flooding. Many streets were inundated, paralyzing traffic and prompting water rescues. An estimated 20,000 homes were damaged by the floods and officials opened four shelters in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nA tropical wave exited the west coast of Africa on September 7 and spawned a low-pressure area by the following day. At 18:00 UTC on September 8, a tropical depression developed about 225\u00a0mi (362\u00a0km) west-southwest of Dakar, Senegal. The depression moved steadily westward and intensified into Tropical Storm Humberto early on September 9. Despite moderate wind shear, Humberto continued to strengthen while passing south of Cape Verde, due to a moist atmosphere and warm ocean temperatures. The storm brought squalls to Cape Verde. The southwestern islands experienced wind gusts exceeding 35\u00a0mph (56\u00a0km/h) which downed several trees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nHeavy rains in many areas triggered flooding that washed out roads and damaged homes. Offshore, the freighter Rotterdam went missing with a crew of six amid 10-to-16-foot (3 to 5\u00a0m) swells. The vessel eventually reached S\u00e3o Tom\u00e9 and Pr\u00edncipe, though that country's port institute and coast guard denied her entrance. Later on September 10, the storm's deepening briefly halted as it curved northwest in response to a developing mid-level trough over the central Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nAt 12:00 UTC on September 11, Humberto reached hurricane status while turning northward. About six hours later, it peaked with sustained winds of 90\u00a0mph (140\u00a0km/h). By late on September 12, increasing wind shear, cooling sea surface temperatures, and a more stable atmosphere led to a weakening trend of the storm. Around 12:00 UTC on the next day, Humberto fell to tropical storm intensity, while curving west-northwestward in the low-level flow south of the Azores surface high pressure. Early on September 14, the storm degenerated into a remnant low. However, deep convection began re-developing later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Humberto\nAt 00:00 UTC on September 15, Humberto regenerated into a tropical storm about 1,095\u00a0mi (1,762\u00a0km) southwest of Ponta Delgada, Azores. An approaching mid- to upper-level cyclone began to capture Humberto, causing the storm to decelerate between late on September 16 and early on September 17. When Humberto's low-level circulation became vertically stacked under the non-tropical cyclone, the system transitioned into a subtropical storm on September 17. Humberto then weakened to a subtropical depression early the next day, about 1,120\u00a0mi (1,800\u00a0km) south of Ponta Delgada. The subtropical depression continued north-northwestward until degenerating into an open trough, and was soon absorbed by a cold front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ingrid\nA tropical wave spawned an area of low pressure in the Bay of Campeche early on September 12. Several hours later, it matured into a tropical depression about 170\u00a0mi (270\u00a0km) east-southeast of the city of Veracruz. Initially, the depression moved slowly due to weak steering currents. Around midday on September 13, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Ingrid. After initially moving westward toward Veracruz, the storm turned northeastward away from the coast. Favorable conditions allowed it to attain hurricane status on September 14, and the next day Ingrid attained peak winds of 85\u00a0mph (137\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ingrid\nSubsequently, heightened wind shear eroded the storm's convection. Caught between a trough over eastern Mexico and a ridge over the Southeastern United States, the storm turned sharply northwestward and later to the west. On September 16, Ingrid made landfall just south of La Pesca, Tamaulipas in northeastern Mexico as a strong tropical storm. Early on September 17, the storm weakened to a tropical depression, shortly before degenerating into an area of low pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ingrid\nIngrid struck shortly after Hurricane Manuel on Mexico's Pacific coast, creating the first instance of two landfalling tropical cyclones in the nation within the same 24-hour period since 1958. The combined impacts of hurricanes Ingrid and Manuel affected two-thirds of Mexico, killing 192 people and causing $75 billion pesos (MXN, US$5.7 billion) in damage. Most of the destruction has been attributed to Manuel, but Ingrid was directly responsible for at least 23 deaths and $20 billion pesos (MXN, US$1.5 billion) in losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ingrid\nThe two storms produced approximately 5.7 trillion cubic feet (160 billion m3) of rainwater, equivalent to the combined volume of every reservoir in Mexico. Rainfall from the storm peaked at 20.1\u00a0in (510\u00a0mm) in Tuxpan, Veracruz. The rains caused widespread flooding that damaged at least 14,000 houses and hundreds of roads and bridges. In Tamaulipas, where the storm made landfall, the rainfall damaged crops and flooded rivers. The effects of the storm spread into southern Texas, causing high tides and some flooding. After Ingrid's onslaught, the Mexican government declared states of emergency in several municipalities. Relief agencies distributed food and other aid to the hardest hit areas, though in Tamaulipas, residents had to rely on assistance from the local Gulf Cartel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Jerry\nA tropical wave exited the west coast of Africa on September 24. Interaction with a mid- to upper-level low pressure forced the wave to split, with the southern portion spawning Tropical Storm Octave in the eastern Pacific Ocean on October 12. As evidenced by scatterometer wind data, the northern portion moved north-northwestward and transitioned into a low-pressure area early on September 28. After convection gradually became better organized, a tropical depression developed early on September 29, about 910\u00a0mi (1,460\u00a0km) east-northeast of the Leeward Islands. The depression moved northeastward and initially struggled to intensify due to the presence of dry mid-level air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Jerry\nHowever, early on September 30, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Jerry while curving eastward. Shortly thereafter, vigorous deep convection developed, allowing the storm to deepen further. At 00:00 UTC on October 1, Jerry attained its peak intensity with sustained winds of 50\u00a0mph (80\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 1,005\u00a0mbar (29.7\u00a0inHg). However, strong wind shear soon weakened Jerry. Later on October 1, a blocking high pressure ridge briefly impeded the storm's northeastward motion, but it resumed moving in that direction by the following day. After losing all deep convection late on October 3, Jerry became extratropical at about 770\u00a0mi (1,240\u00a0km) southwest of the central Azores. The remnants persisted for a few days, until being absorbed by a larger extratropical low on October 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nOn September 16, a tropical wave emerged into the Atlantic from the west coast of Africa. Minimal development occurred until the wave reached the western Caribbean Sea on September 27. Around that time, the wave encountered an upper-level trough, generating deep convection over the region. On September 28, a broad area of low pressure formed southeast of Jamaica. Based on surface observations, it is estimated that Tropical Storm Karen developed near the northeastern tip of the Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula early on October 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nDespite a deteriorating cloud pattern, Karen deepened and peaked with winds of 65\u00a0mph (105\u00a0km/h) later that day. Wind shear and dry air caused the storm to weaken beginning early on October 4. Throughout the day, only sporadic bursts of deep convection occurred. The storm moved northwestward at inconsistent forward speeds around a low- to mid-level ridge. Early on October 6, Karen weakened to a tropical depression, and several hours later disintegrated into an open trough off the coast of Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nSince the beginning of reconnaissance flights in 1943, Karen was one of few named storms to dissipate in the Gulf of Mexico without making landfall. While the storm was threatening the Gulf Coast of the United States, the NHC issued several tropical cyclone warnings and watches as Karen approached. Additionally, states of emergency were issued in portions of Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Florida. The mayor of the town of Grand Isle, Louisiana evacuated the island on October 4, while residents were also ordered to flee Lafourche and Plaquemines parishes. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the United States Department of the Interior called back workers, furloughed because of the government shutdown, to assist state and local agencies. Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal authorized the mobilization of the state's National Guard members to active duty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 942]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Karen\nAbnormally high tides were reported along the coast of Louisiana. At Grand Isle, tar balls from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010 were washed ashore. In Texas, the storm brought minor coastal flooding to Brazoria County. Additionally, the moisture associated with the remnants of Karen was absorbed into a frontal system and caused minor flooding in a few states, including Delaware, Georgia, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lorenzo\nA tropical wave exited the west coast of Africa and entered the Atlantic on October 11. Four days later, a mid- to upper-level trough increased convection along the northern portion of the wave. The southern portion of the wave continued westward, while the northern portion moved slowly west-northwestward and developed into a surface trough after interacting with a second mid to upper-level low. Eventually, the system transitioned into a broad surface low. Despite southwesterly vertical shear, deep convection began to increase by late on October 20. After becoming better defined, the system developed into a tropical depression at 06:00 UTC on October 21 while located about 620\u00a0mi (1,000\u00a0km) east-southeast of Bermuda. Six hours later, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Lorenzo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lorenzo\nOn October 21, the storm moved north-northeastward around the northwestern periphery of a mid-level ridge. Lorenzo strengthened further and peaked with sustained winds of 50\u00a0mph (80\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 1,000\u00a0mbar (30\u00a0inHg) at 12:00 UTC on October 22. Around that time, satellite imagery indicated increased banding and an eye-like feature. The cyclone then turned eastward in weak westerly low- to mid-level flow. Early on October 23, strong wind shear began impacting Lorenzo, causing the circulation to become exposed to deep convection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lorenzo\nAt 00:00 UTC on the following day, Lorenzo weakened to a tropical depression and dissipated into a remnant low 12 hours later. The low persisted for a few days, until it degenerated into an open trough on October 26. The remnants of Lorenzo fueled the St. Jude storm, which struck northern Europe with hurricane-force winds on October 27 and October 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Melissa\nEarly on November 17, an extratropical low developed along a stationary front over the central Atlantic. It moved northward and became co-located with an upper-level low. After the fronts dissipated, deep convection began to initiate near the center. As a result, Subtropical Storm Melissa developed at 12:00 UTC on November 18, about 720\u00a0mi (1,160\u00a0km) east-southeast of Bermuda. Melissa moved generally northward and strengthened slightly on November 19, but weakened later that day after convection diminished. Early on November 20, convection increased again, and after the storm acquired a warm core, it was reclassified as a tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Melissa\nAfter becoming a tropical cyclone on November 20, Melissa accelerated northeastward and slowly strengthened. Later that day, the storm attained its peak intensity with sustained winds of 65\u00a0mph (105\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 980\u00a0mbar (29\u00a0inHg). Amid colder ocean temperatures, Melissa lost all of its deep convection and transitioned into an extratropical cyclone at 00:00 UTC on November 22, at about 140\u00a0mi (230\u00a0km) north-northeast of Flores Island, Azores. The remnants merged with another system several hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Unnamed subtropical storm\nIn early December, an upper-level trough became trapped in steering currents near the British Isles. When an upper-level low strengthened to its west, an extratropical cyclone formed in response on December 3. The cyclone then completed a counter-clockwise loop in response to the blocking area of high pressure to its north that would have otherwise caused the storm to move towards mainland Europe. Shortly thereafter, the radius of maximum winds\u2014which are usually large in extratropical cyclones\u2014began to contract, signifying the onset of a subtropical transition, despite being over 72\u00a0\u00b0F (22\u00a0\u00b0C) sea surface temperatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Unnamed subtropical storm\nLow wind shear in the area allowed the system to transition into a subtropical storm on December 5 on 00:00 UTC. However, the National Hurricane Center did not initiate advisories, particularly due to predictions of stronger wind shear and decreasing sea surface temperatures preventing additional development. The storm continued to show more signs of becoming tropical; however, it failed to complete the transition. By December 7, stronger wind shear and cooler waters took its toll on the system, and it weakened to a remnant low, dissipating shortly afterwards. The storm produced sustained winds of 37\u00a0mph (60\u00a0km/h) on Santa Maria Island in the Azores, with gusts to 54\u00a0mph (87\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Unnamed subtropical storm\nThis was the first post-season subtropical or tropical storm since Tropical Storm Olga in 2007. Had the storm been named operationally, it would have received the name Nestor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names\nThe following list of names was used for named storms that formed in the North Atlantic in 2013. The names not retired from this list were used again in the 2019 season. This was the same list used in the 2007 season, with the exceptions of Dorian, Fernand, and Nestor, which replaced Dean, Felix, and Noel, respectively. The names Dorian and Fernand were used for the first time this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nOn April 10, 2014, at the 36th session of the RA IV hurricane committee, the World Meteorological Organization retired the name Ingrid from its rotating name lists due to the number of deaths and amount of damage it caused, and it will not be used again for another Atlantic hurricane. Ingrid was replaced with Imelda for the 2019 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231909-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Atlantic hurricane season, Season effects\nThe following table lists all of the storms that have formed in the 2013 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 2013 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Gus Malzahn, who was in his first season as head coach at Auburn, although he served as offensive coordinator from 2009 to 2011. The Tigers played their home games at Jordan\u2013Hare Stadium in Auburn, Alabama and competed in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team\nThe 2013 season saw one of the biggest single-season turnarounds in college football history. Only a year after their worst season in 60 years\u2014including only their third winless record in SEC play\u2014the Tigers won their eighth SEC title and third of the championship game era, tallying a record of 12\u20132 (7\u20131 in SEC play). The season also contained two of the greatest winning plays in college football history for Auburn in games against Georgia and Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Preseason\nAfter Gene Chizik's termination on November 25, 2012, Athletic Director Jay Jacobs formed a search committee headed by former Auburn Heisman Trophy winners Bo Jackson and Pat Sullivan along with fellow former player Mac Crawford to find the program's next head coach. The committee unanimously selected Arkansas State University head coach Gus Malzahn. On December 4, 2012 it was announced that Malzahn was the new head coach at Auburn University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Preseason\nOn April 20, 2013, Auburn played their Spring game, known as the A-day game. 83,401 people attended the game at Jordan\u2013Hare Stadium, breaking the previous record of 83,217 set in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Washington State\nThe Auburn Tigers got the Gus Malzahn era off to a winning start with a 31\u201324 victory over the Washington State Cougars. The Tigers forced three turnovers and were able to hang on late in the fourth quarter for the win. They were without defensive starter Dee Ford, Jeff Whitaker and Justin Garrett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Washington State\nThe Tigers' passing offense didn't wow in Malzahn's debut as head coach, but Auburn 3 headed rushing attack amassed 297 yards on the ground. Tre Mason also returned a kickoff 100 yards for a score while Corey Grant broke free for a 75-yard touchdown run. Nick Marshall finished 10-of-19 for 99 yards in his Auburn debut with 31 yards on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Washington State\nStar Robensen Theirize filling in for injured starter Justin Garrett won SEC Defensive Player of the week with 7 tackles and 2 interceptions, the last one preventing the game from going to overtime. Freshman DT Montravius Adams recorded a sack on his first play from scrimmage and halted several Halliday passes from his pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas State\nQB Nick Marshall found his passing game early going 4 for 5 on his opening drive and hitting freshman wide out Marcus Davis for his first touchdown pass of his Auburn career. Arkansas State marched down the field but Auburn halted them for a field goal then the offense once again marched down the field and scored on a 17 yard touchdown run by running back Corey Grant. The offense hit a lull but Auburn's defense played bend but not break stopping them on 2 consecutive 4th down tries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas State\nBefore the half after missing receiver Sammie Coates several times, Marshall connected on a 68 yard streak pass for a touchdown to build the lead to 21\u20133 at the half. Out of the locker room once again the Red Wolves marched the field, but Auburn's red zone defense held up and held them to a field goal. On Auburn's following possession, Marshall fumbled the ball at the Auburn 17 yard line. A big play by reserve end Justin Delaine once again forced a field goal making it 21\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas State\nThat boosted the defense confidence has they shut down the Red Wolves from then out collecting 23 QB Hurries, 13.5 tackles for loss, two sacks and a fumble recovery. Cameron Artis Payne and Tre Mason punched in touchdowns. Payne had 19 touches for 102 yards and Mason at 14 touches for 99 yards. Corey Grant finished with 40 yards on 8 touches. Nick Marshall finished 10 of 17 for 167 yards and 2 touchdowns with 53 yards rushing. He was sacked twice and fumbled the ball away once but still had no interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0007-0003", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas State\nChris Davis lead the team on defense with 10 tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss and 3 pass break ups. Highly touted end Carl Lawson recorded his first sack and a forced fumble that was recovered by LB Jake Holland. LB Kris Frost was ejected for targeting on the QB Adam Kennedy, he played a good game after a poor game vs Washington State, he had 5 tackles at the time. Left tackle Shon Coleman after sitting out three years from a battle with leukemia came in late in the 4th quarter. Auburn outgained Arkansas State 468\u2013422. The Red Wolves were penalized for their uniforms before kickoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nAuburn overcame a 3-point deficit with 2:06 remaining in the game after QB Nick Marshall and WR Marcus Davis lead them down the field. Marshall went 6 for 8 on the final drive hitting Davis 4 times and he picked up a first down on a 3rd and 10 to set up the final play. An 11 yard touchdown grab by TE CJ Uzomah in the back on the end zone to go up 24\u201320. The defense held up for one more play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nMarshall started off the game hot going 11 for 15 for 151 yards that included a 74-yard bomb to WR Quan Bray leading to a touchdown. The offense lost their rhythm and Mississippi St was able to overcome an 11\u20130 deficit to come back and take the lead early in the 3rd Qtr 20\u201314. After that the defense held Mississippi St to 23 yards on 6 possessions. Marshall got his own pass in the 3rd qtr for 37 yards after the ball got batted in the air and he spun around the defender down the sideline. Auburn's ground game was shut down only registering 120 yards as Mississippi St loaded the box. This ended Auburn's 10 game SEC losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, LSU\nTwo 1st quarter turnovers put Auburn in a hole 14\u20130 in at a wet Death Valley. Auburn trailed 21\u20130 at halftime but a quick interception lead to a Tre Mason touchdown run. The teams went back and forth but when it appeared place kicker Cody Parkey recovered his onside kick the refs overturned it ending it for Auburn 35\u201321. LSU's Jeremy Hill rushed for a career-high 184 yards and 3 rushing touchdowns. Auburn's Tre Mason had 132 yards rushing in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nQB Nick Marshall rushed for 140 yards and 2 touchdowns and threw for 93 yards as Auburn held on after nearly blowing a big lead. Auburn raced to a 27\u20139 lead before Marshall injured his knee. Auburn had back to back fumbles by Tre Mason and Cameron Artist Payne, letting Ole Miss close the game to 27\u201322. Safety Ryan Smith with Ole Miss driving intercepted the pass and Auburn raced down the field for a field goal to go up 30\u201322. Auburn finished off Ole Miss with back to back sacks by DT Gabe Wright and DE Carl Lawson. Robensen Theirize had a pick six in the 1st Quarter and freshman phenom Carl Lawson recorded 6 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss and 2 sacks. The Auburn defense finished with 6 sacks has DE Dee Ford and Gabe Wright also had 2 sacks a piece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Western Carolina\nFreshman QB Jeremy Johnson earned his first start for an injured Nick Marshall. In 2 1/2 quarters he threw for 201 yards with 4 touchdowns and a pick and he rushed for 26 yards. Auburn amassed a school record 712 yards against an overmatched Western Carolina. TE Brandon Fulse and RT Patrick Miller were suspended prior to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nAuburn's defense came up with a huge final stand to upset 7th rank Texas A&M. With 1:19 left in the game Auburn held a 45\u201341 lead. A&M's QB Johnny Manziel completed two big pass plays to WR Mike Evans to get it down to Auburn's 18 yard line. DE Dee Ford had with an 8-yard sack then Manziel threw an incompletion. On the next play Manziel tried to run but was horse-collar tackled by LB Kris Frost. Then on 4th and long Auburn Dee Ford sacked Manziel once again ending the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nQB Nick Marshall passed for 236 yards and two touchdowns, ran for 100 yards and two touchdowns, and had one fumble. Tre Mason added 178 yards rushing on 27 carries and 1 touchdown. The defenses recorded 7 tackles for loss, 3 sacks and 2 interceptions on the 3rd best offense in the nation. Ryan White who moved to safety that morning after Josh Hosley was injured recorded 5 tackles and an interception without knowing the proper alignments. Auburn's DE LaDarius Owens injured Johnny Manziel early in the 4th Quarter and he missed a series. Auburn vaulted to No. 11 in the first BCS poll of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nAt the coin toss, Texas A&M won the toss and elected to receive to open the game. After a 6-play, 67-yard drive, A&M scored the first touchdown of the game on a 26-yard screen pass from Johnny Manziel to Mike Evans. Auburn countered that score with a 10-play, 86-yard drive on a 16-yard touchdown run by Nick Marshall. After an interception by Auburn S Ryan Smith, K Cody Parkey kicked a 27-yard field goal to take a 10-7 lead. However, in just two plays and 75 yards, Mike Evans caught another screen pass from Manziel for a 64-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nIn the second quarter, the Aggies were threatening, but Auburn CB Ryan White picked off Manziel's second interception of the game at the 4-yard line. On 4th & goal, Auburn was at the Texas A&M 5-yard line, and Tre Mason made an effort run to give Auburn a 1st & goal at the 1. After a sack by A&M, on 3rd & goal at the 13-yard line, Nick Marshall threw a strike a WR Quan Bray for a touchdown. Auburn led 17-14 after a 12-play, 96-yard drive. After a few missed opportunities by Auburn, the Aggies tacked on a 37-yard field goal by K Josh Lambo, and with :24 left in the half, Johnny Manziel threw a 42-yard touchdown to Evans to take a 24-17 lead at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nIn the third quarter, Auburn was able to tie the game again at 24-24 on a 43-yard screen pass from Marshall to WR Sammie Coates, after a 6-play, 65-yard drive. However, once again, Manziel threw a 33-yard pass to Mike Evans for another touchdown. With the score at 31-24 at the beginning of the 4th and the Aggies threatening again, Auburn DE Ladarius Owens tackles Manziel at the Auburn 2, and Manziel injures his right shoulder. Backup QB Matt Joeckel comes into the game, and A&M is held to a 20-yard field goal by Josh Lambo for a 34-24 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nAfter a 7-play, 75-yard drive made a 13-yard touchdown run by Nick Marshall, Auburn cuts the score to 34-31. The Aggies are held to a three-and-out, and Auburn caps off a 5-play, 69-yard drive with a 2-yard touchdown run by RB Cameron Artis-Payne to take a 38-34 lead. After that score, the Tigers reached over 300 yards rushing in the game. With 5:05 to go in the 4th quarter, Manziel runs in for a 1-yard touchdown run to give the Aggies a 41-38 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nThen, in front of the 12th man, the Tigers ran the ball into a 9-man A&M defense and score on a 5-yard touchdown run by Tre Mason on a 13-play, 75-yard drive. At first, it was called as a 1st & goal, but after the booth review, Mason reach the ball over the front of the goal line, and Auburn took a 45-41 lead with 1:19 left in the game. On 4th & 13, Johnny Manziel was sacked for a 22-yard loss by Auburn DE Dee Ford, and #24 Auburn pulled the upset against the #7 Texas A&M Aggies 45-41. The Tigers topped the Aggies in yardage as well with 615 yards of offense to 602. Auburn advanced to 6-1 (3-1) and #11 in the Top 25, while A&M fell to 5-2 (2-2) and #16 in the Top 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida Atlantic\nFresh off an upset win at then 7th ranked Texas A&M, the Tigers came back home and got somewhat of a break against Carl Pelini's Florida Atlantic Owls. Nick Marshall got injured in the 1st quarter and Jeremy Johnson came out for the Tigers. Even with a backup quarterback, the 11th ranked Tigers dominated a horribly overmatched Florida Atlantic team. The final score was Auburn 45, Florida Atlantic 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nAuburn came to Fayetteville with their first AP Top 10 ranking since 2010. Their opponent was Arkansas, who was on a five-game losing streak. Tre Mason earned SEC Offensive Player of the Week honors for his performance, which consisted of 32 carries for 168 yards and four touchdowns. Arkansas never lead during that game, as Auburn lead 14-3 at halftime and cruised to a 35-17 win. Referee Matt Loeffler got hurt late in the game, so Ken Williamson took over for the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Tennessee\nAfter being ranked in the AP Top 10 the previous week, Auburn finally got into the BCS Top 10 after a 35-17 win over Arkansas. Their next contest was a trip to Tennessee. After a shaky 1st quarter, which was tied 6-6 at the end, Auburn dominated the last 3 quarters of the game, outscoring Tennessee 49-17 in that period. The final score was Auburn 55, Tennessee 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Georgia\nThe #7 Auburn Tigers hosted the #25 Georgia Bulldogs in Auburn. Auburn led 37\u201317 in the 4th quarter, but Georgia quarterback Aaron Murray led the Bulldogs to three straight touchdowns to take the lead 38\u201337 with less than 2 minutes to go. On 4th and 18, Auburn quarterback Nick Marshall, who was a defensive back for Georgia during the 2011 season, threw a Hail Mary pass, which was tipped by Georgia safety Josh Harvey-Clemons, right into the hands of Auburn sophomore wide receiver Ricardo Louis, scoring the game-winning touchdown with 25 seconds to go. Auburn's defense then held off Murray's late rally to win the game, 43\u201338.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Georgia\nRod Bramblett, radio personality and voice of the Auburn Tigers, made the following call:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Georgia\n\"Here's your ballgame. Nick Marshall stands in, steps up. Gonna throw down field just a home run ball and, uh, it is tip upped\u2014and Louis caught it on the deflection! Louis is gonna score! Louis is gonna score! Louis is gonna score! Touchdown Auburn! Touchdown Auburn! A miracle in Jordan\u2013Hare! A miracle in Jordan\u2013Hare! 73 yards! And the Tigers with 25 seconds to go lead 43 to 38!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Alabama\nIn what has been dubbed \"The Kick 6\" Auburn was looking to avenge two consecutive losses to Alabama. The Tigers had lost 14\u201342 in 2011 and 0\u201349 in 2012. Going into the game, Alabama had been ranked atop the polls all season, while Auburn was fourth in all major polls, making this the highest combined ranking ever in the Iron Bowl. Alabama struggled in the field goal kicking game all day, with kicker Cade Foster missing from 44 yards and 33 yards, and having one partially blocked from 44.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Alabama\nWith seven seconds left in regulation and the score tied at 28, Alabama's T. J. Yeldon made a long run as time expired. The play was reviewed from the replay booth, and one second was put back on the clock after finding Yeldon had actually gone out of bounds just before the end of regulation. Alabama opted to attempt a game-winning 57-yard field goal, but chose Freshman kicker Adam Griffith over Foster due to Foster's woes that day. Alabama missed its fourth field goal of the day with Griffith's attempt falling short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Alabama\nAuburn's Chris Davis fielded it nine yards deep in his own end zone, and with no Crimson Tide skill players in his path (the field goal unit was made up almost entirely of offensive linemen), sprinted for a 109-yard touchdown and a 34\u201328 Auburn win. Under NCAA scoring rules, Davis was only credited for 100 yards on the play. The win gave the Tigers the SEC West title and completed one of the biggest single-season turnarounds in SEC history; they had gone 0\u20138 in conference play a year earlier. It also all but ended Alabama's hopes for a third straight national title. With this win, Auburn clinched the SEC West and kept their national championship hopes alive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Missouri (SEC Championship Game)\nAuburn's offense ran all over Missouri in a back and forth ball game, until Mizzou ran out of gas in the 4th Qtr. Auburn ran for a SEC Title game record of 536 yards on the ground. RB Tre Mason set all rushing records with 304 yards on 46 touches with 4 touchdowns. QB Nick Marshall added 101 yards on the ground. Auburn opened the game with the ball but after a 1st down Marshall was stripped by Kony Ealy setting up Mizzou to go up 3-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Missouri (SEC Championship Game)\nAuburn came right back quickly with a 38-yard strike to WR Sammie Coates for a touchdown. Missouri answered with a 28 yard strike to Dorial Green-Beckham; a catch that was dropped but Auburn never challenged. Auburn quickly answered after a 54-yard jailbreak screen to Sammie Coates and a 9 yard Marshall touchdown run. Kony Ealy stripped Marshall again and cornerback E.J. Gaines returned the fumble for a touchdown to go up 17-14. Auburn marched right down the field and scored on a 7-yard run by Mason. Missouri kicked a field goal to make the score 21-20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Missouri (SEC Championship Game)\nBut Mason took off for a 52-yard run and finished up the scoring drive with a 3 yard run. Missouri struck right before the half, as Green-Beckham got loose to make it 28-27. Missouri took a 34-31 lead in the 3rd quarter, but then Auburn took over the game by outscoring them 28-8. Corey Grant scored on an 8-yard run after a 42-yard run by Marshall. Auburn's defense forced a 3-and-out, and Cameron Artis-Payne scored on a 15 yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0022-0003", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Missouri (SEC Championship Game)\nMissouri scored quickly after a 65 yard run by Henry Josey and completed the two point conversion to make it 45-42. Auburn struck quickly again with a 43-yard run by Grant and 23 yard pass to Trovon Reed that was capped by 1 yard touchdown run by Mason. Mason's final touchdown run the game on ice, 59-42. Later that night Michigan State defeated Ohio State, making it possible for Auburn to play Florida State for the national title. Auburn was the lowest rated pre-season team to ever make it to the title. They were not even in the top 50 and many pundits predicted only 4 to 6 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida State (BCS National Championship Game)\nThe BCS National Title Game featured the Auburn Tigers, and the Florida State Seminoles. Despite Florida State taking a 3-0 lead early, Auburn was dominant most of the first half. With the help of a well-executed play action pass game, Auburn was able to throw against Florida State's top-ranked defense in the first half. A screen to Tre Mason, a deep pass to Melvin Ray and a Nick Marshall run put the Tigers up 21-3.However, the Seminoles scored on their last drive of the half, after a fake punt and Jameis Winston scramble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida State (BCS National Championship Game)\nDevonta Freeman ran it in for a 1-yard touchdown. Florida State also scored the only points of the third quarter, a Roberto Aguayo field goal. Early in the fourth, a Nick Marshall pass was intercepted, resulting in a ten-yard touchdown pass from Winston to Chad Abram. Auburn responded however, taking a 4-point lead after a Cody Parkey field goal. Then in a shocking turn of events, Levonte Whitfield ran the following kickoff back 100 yards to give the Seminoles a 27-24 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231910-0023-0002", "contents": "2013 Auburn Tigers football team, Game summaries, Florida State (BCS National Championship Game)\nThree minutes later, Auburn's Tre Mason broke away on stretch play making it 31-27 with 1:19 left on the clock. Florida State went 57 yards on two plays, both Winston passes to Rashad Greene. After moving the ball closer to the endzone, Florida State found themselves at a 3rd and 8. Winston's pass was incomplete, but a penalty was called on Chris Davis that gave Florida State a 1st and goal. The following play, Jameis Winston completed a 2-yard pass to Kelvin Benjamin for a touchdown. Auburn was unable to score on the next drive and Florida State won, ending Auburn's dream season as well as the SEC's streak of seven consecutive BCS titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231911-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland Open (darts)\n2013 Auckland Open was a darts tournament that took place in Auckland, New Zealand on 21 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231912-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland local board elections\n149 members were elected to local boards in the 2013 Auckland local board elections, an election held as part of the 2013 New Zealand local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231912-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland local board elections, Local Board elections\nThis table shows a summary of the results (excluding Whau):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231913-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland local elections\nThe 2013 Auckland local elections took place between 20 September and 12 October and were conducted by postal vote. The elections were the second since the merger of seven councils into the Auckland Council, which is composed of the mayor and 20 councillors, and 149 members of 21 local boards. Twenty-one district health board members and 41 licensing trust members were also elected. The previous elections were in 2010. Early (not final) voting figures are below. The overall effect of the election was a shift of the Auckland Council to the right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231913-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland local elections, Council ward elections\n20 members were elected to governing body of the Auckland Council across thirteen wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231914-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland mayoral election\nAn election was held for the office of Mayor of Auckland on 12 October 2013. It was one of many triennial local elections that took place in Auckland and throughout New Zealand at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231914-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland mayoral election, Background\nBrown appeared at number seven by the City Mayors Foundation's 2012 World Mayor list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231914-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland mayoral election, Campaign\nBrown's priority for the city was the funding and commencement of the City Rail Link, which had 63% public support in June 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231914-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland mayoral election, Campaign\nPalino ran on a conservative policy platform, and his campaign was managed by Communities and Residents president and former National Party president John Slater. He opposed the urban intensification of some Auckland communities, including those on the North Shore, instead proposing a second central business district model based in Manukau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231914-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Auckland mayoral election, Opinion polling\n\u2013 Some polls were taken after voting began on 20 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231915-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Cup\nThe 2013 Audi Cup was the third edition of the Audi Cup, a two-day association football tournament that featured four teams, and was played at the Allianz Arena in Munich, Germany. The competition hosted the 2009 Audi Cup winners Bayern Munich, the 2012 Copa Sudamericana champions S\u00e3o Paulo, the 2011\u201312 Premier League champions Manchester City and perennial Serie A contenders Milan. The English and Brazilian clubs made their first appearances in the competition, while Bayern, as hosts, and Milan have been present in every Audi Cup so far. The winners of the tournament were Bayern Munich, who beat Manchester City 2\u20131 in the final. Milan defeated S\u00e3o Paulo 1\u20130 in the third place play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231915-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Cup\nPrior to the semi-final match between Bayern Munich and S\u00e3o Paulo, as the Bayern goalkeepers were warming up, advertising billboards located around the field were showing fan messages published via their Twitter profiles using the hashtag #HelloAudiCup. One of the displayed messages stated, \"Ei, Douglas, vai tomar no cu\" (\"Hey, Douglas, go fuck yourself!\"). It was sent by @DarkFabuloso, a fake profile that satirizes S\u00e3o Paulo player Lu\u00eds Fabiano, and was inadvertently approved by the staff responsible for selecting and displaying the messages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231915-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Cup, Competition format\nThe competition took the format of the latter stages of a regular knock-out competition. The winners of each of the two matches on the first day competed against each other for the Audi Cup, whilst the two losing sides playing in a third-place match. The trophy was contested over two days, each day seeing two matches played back-to-back. The official matchups were announced on 19 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231916-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic\nThe 2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It is the eighth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Indian Harbour Beach, Florida, United States, on April 29\u2013May 5, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231916-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231917-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nMaria Fernanda Alves and Jessica Moore were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but they lost in the quarterfinals to Jan Abaza and Louisa Chirico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231917-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nJulia Cohen and Tatjana Maria, originally seeded second, withdrew before the tournament began and were not replaced. As a result, their opponents Shelby Rogers and Nicola Slater were given a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231917-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nAbaza and Chirico won the tournament, defeating Asia Muhammad and Allie Will in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231918-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nGrace Min was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231918-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Audi Melbourne Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nPetra Rampre won the tournament, defeating Dia Evtimova in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231919-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Austin 400\nThe 2013 Austin 400 was a motor race meeting for the Australasian sedan-based V8 Supercars. It was the fifth event of the 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship. Four races were held during the race meeting. It was the first V8 Supercar event to be held in North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231919-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Austin 400\nJamie Whincup, driving for Triple Eight Race Engineering, dominated the event, continuing his strong form from the previous round at Barbagallo Raceway. Whincup won three of the four races and scored three pole positions. Brad Jones Racing's Fabian Coulthard was the only driver to beat Whincup, taking one pole position and one race win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231919-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Austin 400\nThe event took place on a short version of the Circuit of the Americas, 2.3\u00a0mi (3.7\u00a0km) long instead of 3.426\u00a0mi (5.513\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231920-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Austin Peay Governors football team\nThe 2013 Austin Peay Governors football team represented Austin Peay State University during the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Governors were led by first-year head coach Kirby Cannon, played their home games at Governors Stadium, and were a member of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 0\u201312, 0\u20138 in OVC play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231921-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours 2013 were announced on 26 January 2013 by the Governor-General of Australia, Quentin Bryce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231921-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours, the first major honours list for a calendar year, are announced on Australia Day (26 January) every year, 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, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231922-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia Open Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 Australia Open Grand Prix Gold was the third Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre, Sydney, Australia April 2 until April 7, 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy\nThe 2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy was a rugby union tour between the away team Australia and the homes teams of England, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales. They also played an additional Test match against New Zealand, which acted as the third and final Bledisloe Cup match for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [81, 81], "content_span": [82, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy\nAs part of the tour, they attempted their first Grand Slam tour of the Home Nations since 2009 following their 2\u20131 defeat to the British & Irish Lions in June 2013. However, their first Grand Slam victory since 1984 was not possible, following their 20\u201313 defeat to England in the opening week of their tour, which also meant they were unable to retain the Cook Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [81, 81], "content_span": [82, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy\nThe Wallabies became the first team to score 33 points against New Zealand in New Zealand during the third Bledisloe Cup match, and were also able to retain the Lansdowne Cup against Ireland. They also reclaimed back the Hopetoun Cup for the first time since 2006, after losing it in 2009 and unable to reclaim it in 2012. Australia also won the James Bevan Trophy for the eighth time and for the sixth time in a row in the closing match of their tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [81, 81], "content_span": [82, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Matches, New Zealand\nTouch judges:Jaco Peyper (South Africa)Stuart Berry (South Africa)Television match official:Vinny Munro (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 103], "content_span": [104, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Matches, England\nTouch judges:Romain Poite (France)Dudley Phillips (Ireland)Television match official:Marshall Kilgore (Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 99], "content_span": [100, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Matches, Italy\nTouch judges:Romain Poite (France)John Lacey (Ireland)Television match official:Graham Hughes (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 97], "content_span": [98, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Matches, Ireland\nTouch judges:Romain Poite (France)Stuart Berry (South Africa)Television match official:Geoff Warren (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 99], "content_span": [100, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Matches, Scotland\nTouch judges:Pascal Gauz\u00e8re (France)Francisco Pastrana (Argentina)Television match official:Geoff Warren (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 100], "content_span": [101, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Matches, Wales\nTouch judges:Alain Rolland (Ireland)John Lacey (Ireland)Television match official:Jim Yuille (Scotland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 97], "content_span": [98, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Squad\nHead Coach Ewen McKenzie named a 32-man squad on 11 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 88], "content_span": [89, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Squad\nOn 15 October, Peter Betham was added to the squad for the Bledisloe Cup match on 19 October to cover the injured Chris Feauai-Sautia and Joe Tomane, who were ruled out of that test \u2013 Betham will not tour Europe. On 20 November, Peter Betham was re-added to the squad following the 5-week ban Tevita Kuridrani received after he was red carded against Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 88], "content_span": [89, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Squad\nNote: Caps and date of ages are to opening tour match on 19 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 88], "content_span": [89, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231923-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national rugby union team tour of Great Britain, Ireland and Italy, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 81], "section_span": [83, 88], "content_span": [89, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231924-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national soccer team season\nThis page summarises the Australia national soccer team fixtures and results in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231924-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nThe team played their final four World Cup qualification matches. The two draws and two victories placed Australia second in the group to qualify for their fourth World Cup and the third in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231924-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nAustralia then participated in the East Asian Cup for the first time. Due to the timing of the event Australia's first choice players were not available so a largely A-League based squad was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231924-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nThe team played a number of friendly matches towards the end of the year however successive 6\u20130 defeats resulted in coach Holger Osieck losing his job. He was replaced by Ange Postecoglou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason\nThe 2013 Australian Baseball League (ABL) postseason was held from 2 to 9 February 2013. It was scheduled to start on 1 February, but the first game of the preliminary final series was postponed due to wet weather, and was the first game of a doubleheader the following day. The postseason was contested by three of the six teams participating in the regular season, with the teams with the best winning percentages qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason\nThe preliminary final series was hosted by the Sydney Blue Sox at Blue Sox Stadium in Sydney, against the Perth Heat. The Heat won the series two games to nil, to then face the Canberra Cavalry at Narrabundah Ballpark in Canberra in the championship series. Canberra defeated Perth two games to nil to win their first ABL championship and be awarded the Claxton Shield. It was the first time a team from the Australian Capital Territory won the Claxton Shield", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason, Format\nAt the conclusion of the regular season, the postseason will involve the teams in a two-round structure. Each round will consist of a best-of-three game series between the respective teams. The first-placed team will directly qualify for the championship series, and the second- and third-placed teams will play each other in the preliminary final series, the winner of which will qualify for the second place in the championship series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason, Bracket, Qualification\nThe Sydney Blue Sox were the first team to clinch a postseason berth, when they defeated the Brisbane Bandits in the first game of their second series at Blue Sox Stadium in Sydney, the final series of the regular season. In the second game of the same series the following night, the Blue Sox clinched a home postseason series by beating the Bandits again. The Canberra Cavalry clinched their first ABL postseason berth that same night, when they defeated the Adelaide Bite at Norwood Oval in Adelaide. The win also guaranteed a regular season finish no lower than second, and like the Blue Sox assured the Cavalry oh hosting a home postseason series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason, Bracket, Qualification\nThe final makeup of the postseason bracket was not determined until the final day of the regular season. The Cavalry guaranteed themselves first place and a place in the championship series when they beat the Bite in their final game. This win also confirmed the Blue Sox would finish in second place and host the preliminary final series. The Perth Heat qualified for the final postseason position when they defeated the Melbourne Aces at Baseball Park in Perth in their final game. The win eliminated the Bandits from contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason, Preliminary final\nThe Sydney Blue Sox hosted the Perth Heat in the preliminary final series at Blue Sox Stadium. The Blue Sox and Heat split their season series 4\u20134. The four game series played in Sydney in November 2012 was also split 2\u20132. Over the three ABL seasons played up until this series, Perth has the better record head-to-head against Sydney, with a record of 18\u20139. The two teams have met in one postseason series before, in the 2011 major semi-final: the Perth Heat won the series 2\u20130 in Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason, Preliminary final\nThe first game of the series was scheduled to be played on 1 February, but was postponed due to wet weather. It was rescheduled to be the first game of a doubleheader the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231925-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Baseball League postseason, Championship series\nThe Canberra Cavalry will host the Perth Heat in the championship series at Narrabundah Ballpark. The Cavalry won their season series against the Heat 6\u20132. The four game series played in Canberra in January 2013 was won by Canberra 3\u20131. Over the three ABL seasons played up until this series, Canberra has the better record head-to-head against Perth, with a record of 13\u201312. The two teams have not previously met in a postseason series; Canberra qualified for the postseason for the first time in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231926-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Carrera Cup Championship\nThe 2013 Australian Carrera Cup Championship was a CAMS sanctioned Australian motor racing title open to Porsche 911 GT3 Cup cars. The title, which was the ninth Australian Carrera Cup Championship, was won by Craig Baird.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231926-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Points system\nChampionship points were awarded to the first 25 finishers in each race as per the following table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231926-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Points system\nIn addition to contesting the outright championship, each driver was classified as either Professional or Elite and competed for the relevant class title. Points were awarded for class places in each race on the same basis as for the outright championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231926-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Points system\nThe results for each round were determined by the number of championship points scored by each driver at that round, with both the Professional and Elite class having round winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231926-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Points system\nThe driver gaining the highest points total over all rounds was declared the winner of the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231927-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Drivers' Championship\nThe 2013 Formula 3 Australian Drivers' Championship was a CAMS sanctioned Australian motor racing title, the winner of which was awarded the 2013 CAMS Gold Star. It was the 57th Australian Drivers' Championship and the ninth to be contested with open wheel racing cars constructed in accordance with FIA Formula 3 regulations. The championship began on 29 March at the Mount Panorama Circuit and ended on 17 November at Sandown Raceway after seven rounds across five different states and territories. Formula 3 Management Pty Ltd was appointed by CAMS as the Category Manager for the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231927-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Drivers' Championship\nWith nine victories and nine second places, Tim Macrow won his second Australian Drivers' Championship title by 32 points ahead of seven-time race winner John Magro, while Nick Foster rounded out the top three placings, with two race victories to his name. The only other race winners during the season were Nathan Morcom and James Winslow, who each won a race at the Mount Panorama round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231927-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Drivers' Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers contested the 2013 Australian Drivers' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231927-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Drivers' Championship, Points system\nPoints towards the National Class award were allocated on the same basis as used for the outright championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231927-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Drivers' Championship, Results, Australian Drivers' Championship\nRace 2 at the Mount Panorama round was stopped due to rain after eight of the scheduled thirteen laps had been completed and half points were awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231927-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Drivers' Championship, Results, National Class\nThe National Class award was won by Arrie Maree (247 points) from Todd Hazelwood (214.5), Jon Collins (192) and Nathan Gotch (24).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231927-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Drivers' Championship, Results, Invitation Class\nNo drivers earned points in the Invitation Class at any round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231928-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Formula Ford Championship\nThe 2013 Australian Formula Ford Championship was a CAMS sanctioned Australian motor racing title for drivers of Formula Ford racing cars. It was the 44 national series for Formula Fords to be held in Australia and the 21 to carry the Australian Formula Ford Championship name. CAMS filled the role of Category Manager for the championship. The championship was contested over a seven round series which began on 5 April at the Symmons Plains International Raceway and ended on 8 December at the Homebush Street Circuit. It was won by Anton de Pasquale, driving a Mygale SJ13a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231928-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers contested the 2013 Australian Formula Ford Championship. Each car was powered by a 1600cc Ford Duratec engine, as mandated by the category regulations. All drivers were Australian-registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231928-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Points system\nChampionship points were awarded on a 20\u201316\u201314\u201312\u201310\u20138\u20136\u20134\u20132\u20131 basis to the top ten classified finishers in each race. An additional point was awarded to the driver achieving the fastest lap in qualifying at each round of the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231928-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Points system\nThe results for each round of the Series were determined by the number of points scored by each driver at that round. The driver gaining the highest points total over the seven rounds was declared the winner of the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231929-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian GT Championship\nThe 2013 Australian GT Championship was a CAMS sanctioned national motor racing championship open to GT style closed production based sports cars which were either approved by the FIA for GT3 competition or approved by CAMS as Australian GTs. It was the 17th Australian GT Championship, the twelfth to be contested over a multi-event championship, and the eighth to be contested since the title was revived in 2005. The championship was won by Klark Quinn, driving a Porsche 911 GT3-R Type 997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231929-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian GT Championship, Race calendar\nThe results for each round of the Championship were determined by the number of points scored by each driver within their division at that round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231929-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian GT Championship, Race calendar\nDuring each race in Rounds 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the Championship, each automobile was required to complete one compulsory pit stop during a prescribed pit stop window. During the compulsory pit stop, each automobile was required to remain stationary for a prescribed minimum time plus any additional time required dependent on Driver Classification (i.e. Pro, Master or Gold).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231929-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian GT Championship, Race calendar\nRound 1 at Mount Panorama was contested over the first 50 minutes of the 2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour race. With no compulsory pit stop at the event, time was added to the race time of each automobile, equivalent to double the time prescribed for the Driver Classification of the driver that started the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231929-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian GT Championship, Points system\nChampionship points were awarded to each eligible Driver, based on their qualifying position at each round of the Championship and on their finishing position in each race of the Championship, relative to the other Drivers within their division, in accordance with the following table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231929-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian GT Championship, Points system\nEach Competitor who had registered for the entire series could nominate one Round for each automobile, selected from Rounds 2, 3, 4 or 5 only, where double points would be awarded to each Driver entered in that automobile for that Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231930-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Goldfields Open\nThe 2013 Australian Goldfields Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 8\u201314 July 2013 at the Bendigo Stadium in Bendigo, Australia. It was the second ranking event of the 2013/2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231930-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Goldfields Open\nMichael White attempted a maximum break in his qualifying match against Nigel Bond, but he missed the final black at 140. With this he became the fifth player along with Mark Selby, Ken Doherty, Barry Pinches and Robin Hull to do so in a professional tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231930-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Goldfields Open\nShaun Murphy criticised his fellow professionals after eight of the top 16 players and reigning world champion Ronnie O'Sullivan decided not to register for the event. Another top 16 player, Ding Junhui, withdrew from the tournament at the last minute due to a passport issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231930-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Goldfields Open\nBarry Hawkins was the defending champion, but he lost 4\u20135 against Tom Ford in the last 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231930-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Goldfields Open\nMarco Fu won his second ranking title by defeating Neil Robertson 9\u20136 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231930-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Goldfields Open, Prize fund\nThe total prize money of the event was raised to $445,000 from the previous year's $435,000. The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231930-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Goldfields Open, Qualifying\nThese matches were held between 30 May and 3 June 2013 at The Capital Venue in Gloucester, England. In the match between Barry Pinches and Simon Bedford a 19-year-old record from the qualifying stage of the 1994 British Open was broken. The match lasted 449 minutes and 46 seconds, the longest ever best-of-nine-frame match in the history of professional snooker. The previous record was 434 minutes and 12 seconds in the match between Ian Williamson and Robby Foldvari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Australian Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 Rolex Australian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 17 March 2013 as the opening round of the 2013 World Championship. The race was held at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit in the Melbourne suburb of Albert Park. It was the 78th race in the combined history of the Australian Grand Prix \u2013 which dates back to the 100 Miles Road Race of 1928 \u2013 and the 18th time the event has been held at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit. The race was won by Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen with Fernando Alonso coming second and Sebastian Vettel coming third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix\nThis was the last time a Formula One race was won by a driver from a team other than Mercedes, Ferrari or Red Bull, until Pierre Gasly won the 2020 Italian Grand Prix driving for Scuderia AlphaTauri, 147 races later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix\nIt was also Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's last race victory until the 2018 United States Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nFollowing the collapse of HRT F1 in December 2012, the grid for the season was reduced to twenty-two entries, necessitating changes to the structure of qualifying. The three-round knockout system introduced in 2006 remained in place, but only six cars, instead of seven, were eliminated during the first period of qualifying, with six more eliminated at the end of the second period. The third qualifying period remains unchanged with the ten fastest drivers all advancing to the final ten minutes of qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nDuring the winter off-season, the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile introduced new rules restricting the use of the Drag Reduction System during free practice and qualifying, limiting its use to the circuit's designated DRS zones. However, during Friday practice, the race stewards encountered a technical glitch in the telemetry system that controlled the availability of DRS, meaning that the system would be completely unrestricted. This forced the stewards to rely on drivers to use the system honestly, threatening penalties to any driver caught using DRS outside the designated areas. The same error meant that the stewards would be unable to notify drivers via telemetry of warning flags, instead relying on marshalls around the circuit to display them and teams to warn drivers up upcoming flags during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nTyre supplier Pirelli provided teams with the super-soft and medium compound tyres for the race, compared to the soft and medium selection offered in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nPrior to the first qualifying session of the season, Melbourne had experienced a record heatwave and no rain for almost the entire month of March. These dry conditions, however, did not prevail with precipitation occurring over free practice, turning into heavy rainfalls just before qualifying. After an initial thirty-minute postponement from the official 17:00 (local time) start, the first session of qualifying eventually started and was held in wet conditions with all drivers on wet tyres. Conditions were tricky, resulting in some drivers taking off-field excursions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nLewis Hamilton lost control of his car during turn 2 and slid into the wall. He was able to reverse back onto the circuit and continue, albeit with minor damage to his rear wing. Felipe Massa also spun into the wall after turn 14, escaping with only a broken front wing. As the track dried out, however, drivers switched to intermediate tyres and lap times began dropping for over the remainder of the session. Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez spun at the same place as Massa had previously, stalling the engine. The incident ended his qualifying session and prejudiced the lap times of others drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nAt the end of Q1, six drivers were eliminated. Pastor Maldonado qualified seventeenth after going off the circuit, whilst Guti\u00e9rrez's crash meant that the Mexican was unable to continue and was subsequently eliminated in eighteenth place. Marussia's Jules Bianchi (on his Formula One debut) and Max Chilton qualified nineteenth and twentieth respectively, ahead of the Caterhams of Giedo van der Garde and Charles Pic. The latter failed to set a lap time within 107% of the fastest time, set by Nico Rosberg, meaning his participation in the race depended on dispensation from the race stewards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nWith debris from several accidents during Q1 scattered across the track, the break between Q1 and Q2 was extended to allow marshalls to clean up. Over this period, however, rain intensified forcing a postponement of the session. Marshalls resorted to brooms in a bid to remove puddles forming on the poorly drained public road surface. With qualifying and the race being run late in the afternoon to accommodate European television audiences, twilight approached and the stewards tried to schedule a restart at 18:30 and then finally 18:50. The rain continued, albeit very lightly, and stewards ultimately chose to suspend qualifying. The final two sessions (Q2 and Q3) were thus rescheduled for Sunday morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nThe Q2 session was scheduled to begin at 11:00 (local time) while the weather was cool and cloudy with an air temperature of only 15\u00a0\u00b0C (59\u00a0\u00b0F). The track remained damp from overnight rain and was also cool 13\u00a0\u00b0C (55\u00a0\u00b0F); humidity was hovering around 63%. In the end, it was Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Adrian Sutil, Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne, Daniel Ricciardo, Sergio P\u00e9rez and Valtteri Bottas who failed to make it through to Q3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nThe Red Bulls locked out the front row with Sebastian Vettel on pole and Mark Webber on second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe race began at 17:00 local time, with Nico H\u00fclkenberg unable to take part in the race due to worries over a fuel feed problem in his Sauber C32. Sebastian Vettel got a perfect start from pole and went into the first corner unchallenged, but the same could not be said of teammate Mark Webber who started alongside him, as a problem with an ECU meant that he could not use his KERS off the start line and he ended up dropping down to seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe chief beneficiaries of this were the Ferraris, with Felipe Massa moving from fourth to second and Alonso to third after overtaking Lewis Hamilton around the outside of Turn 3. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen moved up to fifth ahead of Nico Rosberg and Webber and on the second lap took fourth from Hamilton by passing him at Turn 11. His Lotus teammate Romain Grosjean went backwards from eighth to eleventh, losing places to Paul di Resta, Jenson Button and Adrian Sutil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAll the jostling behind Vettel helped him to gain a two-second lead by the end of the first lap. That was soon erased out by Massa and Alonso who rapidly caught up. Jenson Button made his first pit stop to switch from the super-softs to the medium tyres after just four laps and was followed by many others. Webber lost even further time and places during this period with a slow pitstop due to an issue with his jacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe leaders elected to stay longer than the others, Vettel waiting for seven laps before pitting, Massa eight and Alonso and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen two laps further. The quartet rejoined in the same order, but more spread out due to Vettel and Massa gaining an extra lap on the new set of tyres. Hamilton and Rosberg, having realized that they did not have the pace of those in front, ran till lap 13 and 14 respectively in order to attempt a two-stop strategy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThis left Sutil and Sergio P\u00e9rez, two of the drivers who elected to start the race on mediums out in front ahead of Vettel, Massa, Alonso and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. P\u00e9rez was unable to make the mediums last and was quickly dispatched by the quartet on fresher mediums. Sutil was a totally different prospect. Vettel was unable to pass him despite having closed rapidly and this soon helped bring Massa and Alonso back on to his tail. Neither of them were able to make any direct impression. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen began to rapidly close in as well. Neither Webber nor Grosjean had got out of the midfield after their poor starts, with the former in ninth and the latter in eleventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 20, Alonso decided to make an early second pitstop for new tyres. Sutil and Vettel came in a lap later, but the lap on fresh tyres was enough for the Spanish driver to jump both Germans. Massa stayed out for too long and dropped to the back of the group. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Hamilton and Rosberg now held the top three places, all three of them attempting two-stop strategies. Alonso was fourth, Vettel fifth having passed Sutil and Massa dropped to seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe two Mercedes started to experience a drop-off in their lap times but R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was still able to drive at a consistent speed despite having pitted for the tyres four laps before the Mercedes drivers. The tyre issue became academic for Rosberg when he retired close to half-distance with an electrical failure. Hamilton was now vulnerable to the drivers with newer tyres. Alonso attacked and passed Hamilton on lap 32 despite his best efforts to defend. The Briton flatspotted his tyre and had to pit immediately and rejoined in sixth place just ahead of di Resta and Webber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nWith a clear track in front of him, Alonso now started to rapidly close in on R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's 16 second lead. The Finn responded by making his second pitstop on lap 34, rejoining in fifth. During this stint, Alonso was able to drop Vettel and build a five-second gap over the German driver, who in turn was building a similar gap to Sutil. Massa, like Vettel earlier, was held up behind Sutil unable to pass despite having a faster car. The frustrated Brazilian made his final pit stop early as a result on lap 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel followed suit to cover him next lap, whereas Alonso, now having the cushion of a gap was able to wait until lap 39. On the same lap, after releasing Button from 11th place, Daniel Ricciardo was forced to retire with a broken exhaust. Sutil now led from R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Alonso but could do little to keep them behind with older tyres. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen took full advantage when Alonso got held up behind Sutil as the Finn had a seven-second gap to the Spaniard. Hamilton decided that a two-stop strategy was not going to work once Vettel and Massa passed him. He made a third stop for fresh tyres, again rejoining in front of di Resta and Webber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nWhen Sutil made his final pitstop on lap 46 while running third, he had to switch to the super-soft tyres as he had started on the mediums unlike the leaders. He rejoined fifth, but quickly found out that the super-softs wore out rapidly. Sutil was defenseless when first Hamilton and then a recovering Webber attacked him on lap 51. Despite the newer tyres, neither Alonso nor Vettel were able to make an impression on leader R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen hammered the point home by setting the fastest lap of the race on lap 56, which was the 23rd lap on the same set of tyres. Alonso backed off and settled for second after almost crashing into the back of Charles Pic while lapping the Caterham driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen won from Alonso and Vettel completed the podium. Massa was fourth after having to back off in the latter stages to conserve his tyres. Hamilton fifth ahead of Webber. Sutil, despite the badly worn super-softs, still held on for seventh ahead of his teammate di Resta. The battle for ninth was ultimately won by Button, with Grosjean taking the final point, holding off P\u00e9rez and Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne. Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez was the best placed rookie in 13th, one place ahead of Valtteri Bottas. Jules Bianchi was 15th, comfortably ahead of his teammate and the two Caterhams. Ferrari took the lead in the Constructor's Championship, with Lotus-Renault second and Red Bull-Renault third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231931-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe win was the twentieth of R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's career, tying him with Finnish compatriot Mika H\u00e4kkinen. It was also his last until the 2018 United States Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231932-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship\nThe 2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship was an Australian motor racing series for modified production touring cars. It comprised two CAMS sanctioned national championship titles, the Australian Manufacturers\u2019 Championship (for automobile manufacturers) and the Australian Production Car Championship (for drivers). The 2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship was the 28th manufacturers title to be awarded by CAMS and the 19th to be contested under the Australian Manufacturers' Championship name. The 2013 Australian Production Car Championship was the 20th Australian Production Car Championship. The Manufacturers title was awarded to Mitsubishi and the Australian Production Car Championship to Garry Holt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231932-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship\nAustralian Manufacturers Championship Pty Ltd was appointed by CAMS as the Category Manager for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231932-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship, Points system\nEach manufacturer scored points towards the Australian Manufacturers' Championship title from the two highest placed automobiles of its make, in any class (excluding Class I). The title was awarded to the manufacturer that scored the highest total number of class points over all rounds of the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231932-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship, Points system\nPoints towards the Australian Production Car Championship outright title were awarded to drivers based on outright finishing positions attained in each race. Points were awarded using the same two scales as used for the Australian Manufacturers' Championship with the addition of two points for the driver setting the fastest qualifying lap in each class at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231932-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship, Points system\nPoints towards the Australian Production Car Championship class titles were awarded to drivers based on class finishing positions attained in each race. Points were awarded using the same two scales as used for the Australian Manufacturers' Championship with the addition of two points for the driver setting the fastest qualifying lap in each class at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open\nThe 2013 Australian Open was a tennis tournament that took place in Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, from 14 to 27 January 2013. It was the 101st edition of the Australian Open, and the first Grand Slam event of the year. The tournament consisted of events for professional players in singles, doubles and mixed doubles play. Junior and wheelchair players competed in singles and doubles tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open\nAll four of the main events in singles and same-sex doubles were won by the top seeds\u2014Novak Djokovic in men's singles, Victoria Azarenka in women's singles, Bob and Mike Bryan in men's doubles, and Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci in women's doubles. This year's Australian Open was the first Grand Slam event since that tournament's 2004 edition in which the women's singles and doubles were won by the top seeds, and the first Grand Slam event since the 1997 Wimbledon Championships in which the men's and women's singles and doubles were all won by the top seeds. In addition, this year's Australian Open remains the most recent Grand Slam where the men's and women's singles titles were both successfully defended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Point and prize money distribution, Point distribution\nBelow is a series of tables for each of the competitions showing the ranking points on offer for each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Point and prize money distribution, Prize money\nThe 2013 Australian Open featured a significant increase in prize money in comparison with previous years, with all players competing for a share of AUD$30 million, becoming the highest paying tournament of all time. This was the result of an ATP players' meeting, primarily focusing on the money received by players who exit the competition in the earlier rounds. All prize money is in Australian dollars (AUD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 69], "content_span": [70, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Seniors, Men's Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Robin Haase / Igor Sijsling, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Seniors, Women's Doubles\nSara Errani / Roberta Vinci defeated Ashleigh Barty / Casey Dellacqua, 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Seniors, Mixed Doubles\nJarmila Gajdo\u0161ov\u00e1 / Matthew Ebden defeated Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 / Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k, 6\u20133, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Juniors, Boys' Doubles\nJay Andrijic / Bradley Mousley defeated Maximilian Marterer / Lucas Miedler 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Juniors, Girls' Doubles\nAna Konjuh / Carol Zhao defeated Oleksandra Korashvili / Barbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 5\u20137, 6\u20134, [10\u20137]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Wheelchair tennis, Wheelchair Men's Doubles\nMicha\u00ebl Jeremiasz / Shingo Kunieda defeated Stefan Olsson / Adam Kellerman 6\u20130, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Wheelchair tennis, Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nJiske Griffioen / Aniek van Koot defeated Lucy Shuker / Marjolein Buis 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 78], "content_span": [79, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Champions, Wheelchair tennis, Wheelchair Quad Doubles\nDavid Wagner / Nicholas Taylor defeated Andrew Lapthorne / Anders Hard 6\u20132, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 75], "content_span": [76, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Players, Seniors, Singles Seeds\nSeeds and Rankings are as of 7 January 2013 and Points are as of 14 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Players, Seniors, Main Draw Qualifiers Entries\nThe following players received entry from a lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 68], "content_span": [69, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Protected ranking\nThe following players were accepted directly into the main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231933-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open, Withdrawals\nThe following players were accepted directly into the main tournament, but withdrew with injuries or personal reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231934-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nLiam Broady and Joshua Ward-Hibbert won the event in 2012. Jay Andrijic and Bradley Mousley won this year's edition 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20133) against Maximilian Marterer and Lucas Miedler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231935-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nLuke Saville was last year's champion; however, being no longer a junior player, he did not defend his title. Compatriots to Saville and home players, Nick Kyrgios and wildcard Thanasi Kokkinakis played off in the final. Kyrgios, who was also a winner of Roland Garros and Wimbledon in junior doubles, defeated Hopman Cup player Kokkinakis, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries\nThe 2013 Australian Open described in detail, in the form of day-by-day summaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 1 (14 January)\nIn men's singles, on the opening day, play began with the defending champion and world no. 1, Novak Djokovic, dismantling Frenchman Paul-Henri Mathieu. The other top seeds cruised through with 4th-seed David Ferrer winning over Olivier Rochus and 5th-seed Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych over Michael Russell. Last year's quarterfinalist Kei Nishikori also came through over Victor H\u0103nescu. Former finalist Marcos Baghdatis struggled to get past Spaniard Albert Ramos, winning in five sets; another seed in Fernando Verdasco, who was a former semifinalist, was also pushed to his limits, winning in 5 over David Goffin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 1 (14 January)\nAll other seeds came through with the exception of 11th seed Juan M\u00f3naco who lost to Andrey Kuznetsov after suffering from a back injury. The Australians didn't have a good day with all three that competed in the day losing. The first of which was Matthew Ebden falling to 23rd seed Mikhail Youzhny despite leading 2 sets to 0. His exit was followed by Australian wildcard John Millman who fell also in five to Tatsuma Ito. In the final men's match of the day, 8th seed Janko Tipsarevi\u0107 defeated former world no. 1 Lleyton Hewitt in three tight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 1 (14 January)\nIn women's singles, world no. 2 and last year's finalist Maria Sharapova defeated compatriot Olga Puchkova in 55 minutes. 4th seed Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska struggled but got through Australian wild card Bojana Bobusic to protect her record of 10\u20130 matches won all in straight sets in 2013. Other Australians fell as well with Ashleigh Barty losing to 15th seed Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1, Casey Dellacqua losing to Madison Keys, Sacha Jones losing to Krist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1, and Olivia Rogowska losing to Vesna Dolonc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 1 (14 January)\nThe only Australian to win in the day was 9th seed Samantha Stosur, ending her six-match losing streak in Australia to Chang Kai-chen. Venus Williams cruised past her first-round match over Galina Voskoboeva. Li Na, the 2011 finalist and 6th seed, also won over Sesil Karatantcheva. 11th seed Marion Bartoli needed an hour and forty minutes in a win over Anabel Medina Garrigues. The only seed to fall was 32nd seed Mona Barthel losing to Ksenia Pervak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 2 (15 January)\nIn Men's Singles, World no. 3 and US Open champion Andy Murray started things off in his half with an over Robin Haase. world no. 2 and Wimbledon champion Roger Federer made quick work of Beno\u00eet Paire. Other top seeds, 7th seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and 6th seed Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro also got through over Frenchmen Micha\u00ebl Llodra and Adrian Mannarino, respectively. Other seeds also came through with 9th seed Richard Gasquet winning over Albert Monta\u00f1\u00e9s, 12th seed Marin \u010cili\u0107 defeating Marinko Matosevic, and 13th seed Milos Raonic winning over Jan H\u00e1jek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 2 (15 January)\nAustralians Luke Saville and John-Patrick Smith fell to Go Soeda and to Jo\u00e3o Sousa. In the battle of the Aussie wildcards James Duckworth outlasted compatriot Ben Mitchell. Australian hope Bernard Tomic made quick work of Leonardo Mayer. Many seeds fell in the day; 18th seed Alexandr Dolgopolov losing to Ga\u00ebl Monfils, and was joined by 19th seed Tommy Haas, 27th seed Martin Kli\u017ean, and 29th seed Thomaz Bellucci.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 2 (15 January)\nIn Women's Singles, day two play began with the defending champion and top seeded, Victoria Azarenka came through with a victory over the often-unpredictable Monica Niculescu. Serena Williams continued her good form with a win over Edina Gallovits-Hall, despite twisting her ankle at the 5th game of the first set. 8th seed Petra Kvitov\u00e1 struggled to get past Francesca Schiavone, winning. 10th seed and former world no. 1 Caroline Wozniacki also needed 3 sets against Sabine Lisicki winning despite being down 0\u20133 in the third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 2 (15 January)\nOther seeds Maria Kirilenko and Sloane Stephens got through with wins over Vania King and Simona Halep respectively. 20th seed Yanina Wickmayer ended the hopes of Australian Jarmila Gajdo\u0161ov\u00e1 with a win. The biggest upset of the day and the tournament so far was when 7th seed and last year's quarterfinalist Sara Errani fell to Spaniard Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro. Another major upset was when Kimiko Date-Krumm became the oldest woman in the Open era to win a main draw match at the Australian Open with a victory over 12th seed Nadia Petrova. Other upsets included 24th seed and Brisbane finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova losing to Lesia Tsurenko, 28th seed Yaroslava Shvedova losing to Annika Beck, and 31st seed Urszula Radwa\u0144ska to Jamie Hampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 3 (16 January)\nIn Men's Singles, It was 4th seed David Ferrer who started things off with a win over American lucky loser Tim Smyczek. He was joined in the third round by 5th seeded Czech Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych, who defeated Guillaume Rufin. Two other seeded Spaniards came through with 10th seed Nicol\u00e1s Almagro defeating compatriot Daniel Gimeno-Traver and former semifinalist Fernando Verdasco who came through with ease against Xavier Malisse. Japanese Kei Nishikori triumph against opponent Carlos Berlocq to advance to the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 3 (16 January)\nIn the battle of the Americans Sam Querrey took on Brian Baker and won when Baker retired when he was leading. Cypriot Marcos Baghdatis came back against Tatsuma Ito recovering from a slow start. The only seed to fall was 23rd seed Mikhail Youzhny, when he lost to compatriot Evgeny Donskoy. In the final match of the day, 2-time defending champion Novak Djokovic made quick work of American Ryan Harrison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 3 (16 January)\nIn Women's Singles, Angelique Kerber was the first to advance to the 3rd round with a victory over Czech Lucie Hradeck\u00e1. She was joined by Wimbledon finalist Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska who remains undefeated in 2013 defeating Irina-Camelia Begu. Serbians 13th seed Ana Ivanovic and 22nd seed Jelena Jankovi\u0107 both won against\tChan Yung-jan and Maria Jo\u00e3o Koehler respectively to set up a third round clash. Julia G\u00f6rges is also quietly going about the draw with a win over Romina Oprandi 2nd seed Maria Sharapova won 24 straight games with another win over Misaki Doi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 3 (16 January)\nVenus Williams also got through easily over France's Aliz\u00e9 Cornet to set up a third-round meeting with Sharapova. However, Australia's hope Samantha Stosur wasn't so fortunate leading the falling seeds when she lost to Zheng Jie after leading and serving for the match at 5\u20132 in the third set. Stosur was joined by other seeds Sydney finalistDominika Cibulkov\u00e1, Kl\u00e1ra Zakopalov\u00e1, Tamira Paszek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 4 (17 January)\nIn Men's Singles, day four play began with British Andy Murray having an easy win over Portuguese Jo\u00e3o Sousa. Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga overcomes Japanese Go Soeda in three tight sets, while compatriot Richard Gasquet made quick work of Alejandro Falla. Big serving Canadian and 13th seed Milos Raonic stormed pass Luk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol. The Australians had mixed results with James Duckworth falling to Bla\u017e Kav\u010di\u010d in a tight five setter and with Bernard Tomic winning in a tight four setter over German qualifier Daniel Brands. Sixth seed Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro continues with ease winning over Benjamin Becker. 17-time slam champion Roger Federer defeated a resurgent Nikolay Davydenko. Two seeds fell, with 25th seed Florian Mayer losing convincingly to Lithuanian qualifier Ri\u010dardas Berankis, and 30th seed Marcel Granollers falling to J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy. Frenchman Ga\u00ebl Monfils outlasted Chinese Taipei's Lu Yen-hsun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 974]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 4 (17 January)\nIn Women's Singles, day four play began with the defending champion and top seeded Belarusian Victoria Azarenka dismantling Greek Eleni Daniilidou. Russian 14th seed Maria Kirilenko also got through with a win over Peng Shuai. American and third seed Serena Williams made quick work of Spaniard Garbi\u00f1e Muguruza; however, Williams had another incident when she hit her face with a racket. Another American Sloane Stephens also got through the 3rd round win over fellow 19-year-old Kristina Mladenovic. Former world no. 1 Caroline Wozniacki also got through with a win over 16-year-old Donna Veki\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 4 (17 January)\nForty-two-year-old Kimiko Date-Krumm continued her run defeating Shahar Pe'er. In the final match of the day 8th seed Petra Kvitov\u00e1 continues her bad form falling to Australian-born Brit Laura Robson in a match that had 30 doubles faults combined 18 from the Czech and 12 from the Brit. Other seeds that fell were 17th seed Lucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1, 21st seed Varvara Lepchenko, and 26th seed Hsieh Su-wei all falling in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 5 (18 January)\nIn Men's Singles, day five play began with the defending champion and top seeded Serbian Novak Djokovic who was tested by Czech Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek in three sets. His fellow Serb and 8th seed Janko Tipsarevi\u0107 was pushed by Frenchman Julien Benneteau but won in 5 sets. 16th seed Kei Nishikori cruised pass Evgeny Donskoy after a sluggish start winning in straights. 10th seed Nicol\u00e1s Almagro made to work hard as well in three over 24th seed Jerzy Janowicz. Swiss Stanislas Wawrinka ended the hopes of American tennis in the men's side when he defeated Sam Querrey in tight three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 5 (18 January)\nSouth African Kevin Anderson was the only lower ranked player in the day to win when he defeated 22nd seed Fernando Verdasco. At the night session, 5th seed Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych continues to cruise, winning over J\u00fcrgen Melzer. In the final match of the day Spaniard David Ferrer got into the third round winning over former finalist Marcos Baghdatis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 5 (18 January)\nIn Women's Singles, day five play began with Polish Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska defeating British Heather Watson to continue her undefeated 2013 run. Celebrating her birthday Angelique Kerber got a great present defeating American wildcard Madison Keys. Another German Julia G\u00f6rges got through the fourth round with a win over Zheng Jie after coming from 4\u20135 down with Zheng serving for the match. world No.19 Ekaterina Makarova downed French world No.11 Marion Bartoli in three tight sets. In the battle of the Serbs and former world no. 1's Ana Ivanovic dispatched Jelena Jankovi\u0107. China's Li Na continues her good 2013 run with a win over Romania's Sorana C\u00eerstea. Belgium's Kirsten Flipkens defeated Russia's Valeria Savinykh to advance to her first slam fourth round. In the blockbuster match of the tournament so far, it saw Maria Sharapova defeating Venus Williams with relative ease.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 947]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 6 (19 January)\nIn the Men's Singles, Frenchman Richard Gasquet who got to the fourth round in the bottom half first when he defeated Ivan Dodig. He was followed by Olympic gold medalist Andy Murray who defeated Lithuanian qualifier Ri\u010dardas Berankis in three tight sets. It was followed by the biggest upset of the tournament so far when 6th seed Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro fell to unseeded Frenchman J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy. It was followed by another upset when 21st Andreas Seppi eliminating 12th seed Marin \u010cili\u0107. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga then made quick work of Slovenian Bla\u017e Kav\u010di\u010d to face Gasquet in the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 6 (19 January)\nCanadian Milos Raonic defeated Philipp Kohlschreiber. In the night session, in the anticipated match between Roger Federer and the only Australian to get to the third round Bernard Tomic, Federer came through. In the most dramatic match of the tournament so far it was a battle of sheer guts and determination as both struggled with injury as two Frenchmen Gilles Simon who struggled through leg and forearm cramps, while Ga\u00ebl Monfils battled hand blisters. The match saw a 71-shot rally, one of the many long rallies in the match. Simon outlasted Monfils winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 6 (19 January)\nIn the Women's Singles, it was 14th seed Russian Maria Kirilenko was the first victor of the day when she defeated 20th seed Belgian Yanina Wickmayer. Another Russian in Svetlana Kuznetsova got through the 4th round defeating Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro World no. 1 and defending champion Victoria Azarenka got her first challenge in the match in American Jamie Hampton winning in three sets. Serena Williams continues her winning streak defeating Ayumi Morita, winning the last 6 games and saw Williams serve her second 207\u00a0km/h serve in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 6 (19 January)\nAnother Russian made it through the 4th round in Elena Vesnina when she upset 16th seed Roberta Vinci, making it 5 Russians in the fourth round. Dane Caroline Wozniacki is slowly getting into the draw with a win over Qualifier Lesia Tsurenko. In the battle of the youngsters American Sloane Stephens defeated Brit Laura Robson. The dream run of 42-year-old Kimiko Date-Krumm came to an end in the third round, with 21-year-old Bojana Jovanovski taking her out with a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 7 (20 January)\nIn the Men's Singles, It was a battle of last year's quarterfinalists 4th seed David Ferrer and 16th seed Kei Nishikori, Nishikori lead the head-to-head 2\u20131, but Ferrer proved to be too strong as he won easily. Ferrer will now face compatriot Nicol\u00e1s Almagro who advance to the quarterfinals after Janko Tipsarevi\u0107 retired when Almagro was leading with a left foot injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 7 (20 January)\n5th seed Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych continues his good run and hasn't drop a set in the tournament with a win over Kevin Anderson The final match of the day was a marathon battle of wills between world no. 1 and defending champion Novak Djokovic and the no. 2 Swiss and 15th seed Stanislas Wawrinka. It went to five hour and two minutes before seeing Djokovic outlast Wawrinka, and has been rated the match of the tournament so far. Djokovic, showing great stamina, finally got hold of the match in a grueling last set. Wawrinka winning the first set 6\u20131, proved to be an unexpected competitor to Novak Djokovic. But, in the end, his sustenance was declined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 7 (20 January)\nIn the Women's Singles, last year's quarterfinalist Ekaterina Makarova provided the upset of the day after defeating 5th seed Angelique Kerber to reach her second straight quarterfinal at the Australian Open. world no. 2 Maria Sharapova continues her dominant force in the tournament with a victory over unseeded Kirsten Flipkens, which meant she has only lost 5 games en route to the quarterfinals, the fewest since 1988. China's Li Na reaches her first slam quarterfinal since her win at the 2011 French Open when she beat German Julia G\u00f6rges. 4th seed Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska continues her undefeated run in 2013 when she got through 13th seed Ana Ivanovic in another straight sets win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 8 (21 January)\nIn the Men's Singles, It was a match between Frenchman J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy and Italian Andreas Seppi, who are both trying to reach the quarterfinals of a slam for the first time. It was Chardy who came through in four sets, dominating the final three sets He was followed by compatriots 7th seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and 9th seed Richard Gasquet in an all French fourth round, where Tsonga came through in four sets as well. 3rd seed Andy Murray made quick work of a clearly hampered Gilles Simon winning. In the night match, Roger Federer took on another up-and-comer in Milos Raonic, the two battled it out in the first two sets with both going to Federer. Federer then cruised through the final set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 8 (21 January)\nIn the Women's Singles, former world no. 1 Caroline Wozniacki took on 2-time slam champion Svetlana Kuznetsova in a heavily contested match, which saw Kuznetsova prevailing in three sets to be the only woman in quarterfinals not to be seeded. After her third round scare, defending champion Victoria Azarenka made quick work of Russia's Elena Vesnina with a win in just 57 minutes. In a bother of the youngsters it was 19 year old Sloane Stephens and 21 year old Bojana Jovanovski, where the American Stephens came through against Serb Jovanovski in three sets. In the night match it was Serena Williams who claimed her 20th straight victory with a win over Maria Kirilenko, serving an impressive 87% of first serves in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 9 (22 January)\nIn the Men's Singles, The first quarterfinal match of the tournament, between Spaniards 4th seed David Ferrer and 10th seed Nicol\u00e1s Almagro in the third all-Spanish quarterfinal in the Australian Open. The higher-ranked Spaniard Ferrer came through despite Almagro serving for the match three times at 5\u20134 in the third, 5\u20134 in the fourth, and 6\u20135 in the fourth, though not having match points. In the night match, world no. 1 and 2-time defending champion Novak Djokovic scraped through in 4 sets against 5th seed Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 9 (22 January)\nIn the Women's Singles, the opener saw Poland's Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska take on China's Li Na. It was Li who took control of the match and advance to the semifinals with a win to end Radwa\u0144ska's 13 match winning streak. In the second quarterfinals, it featured an all-Russian affair with a repeat of last year's quarterfinal between Maria Sharapova and Ekaterina Makarova, with Sharapova once again coming through with relative ease with a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 10 (23 January)\nIn the Men's Singles, The first match saw US Open champion Andy Murray took on the only unseeded quarterfinalist J\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy in which the Brit came out comfortably 6\u20134, 6\u20131, 6\u20132 to advance to the semifinals. In the last quarterfinals of the tournament, second seed Roger Federer took on seventh seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in a tough match that went 5 sets and the two players trading sets, which saw Federer coming through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 10 (23 January)\nIn the Women's Singles, the play began with two slam champions Victoria Azarenka and Svetlana Kuznetsova taking on each other. Kuznetsova took a 4\u20131 lead in the first, but Azarenka took 12 of the last 14 games winning the match. In the other quarterfinal, it was an all-American clash between Serena Williams and Sloane Stephens, providing the upset of the tournament when Stephens defeated Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 11 (24 January)\nIn the Men's singles, 2-time defending champion Novak Djokovic took on 4th seed David Ferrer. Djokovic made quick work of defeating Ferrer. Djokovic made 30 winners to 16 unforced errors, while Ferrer made 11 winners to 32 unforced errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 11 (24 January)\nIn the Women's singles, the first semifinal featured two of the most recent French Open champions 2012 winner Maria Sharapova and 2011 winner Li Na. Li came through comfortably winning to advance to her second Australian Open final. Li made 21 winners and 18 unforced errors to Sharapova's 17 winners and 32 unforced errors. In the second semifinals defending champion from Belarus Victoria Azarenka took on American Sloane Stephens. Azarenka came through also with ease winning in her sixth match point despite failing to convert five match points and to serve it out at 5\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 12 (25 January)\nIn the Men's Singles, it was Wimbledon champion Roger Federer taking on US Open champion Andy Murray. Murray took a two sets to one lead and served for the match at 6\u20135 in the fourth but Federer broke back and won the tie-break to take it to a fifth. Murray won the fifth set, defeating Federer for the first time in a slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 12 (25 January)\nIn the Women's doubles, the no. 1 team of Italians Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci took on Australian wildcard Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua and won in three sets to win 3 of the last 4 slams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 13 (26 January)\nDay 13 saw the finals of the Girls', Boys' and Women's singles as well as the Men's doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 13 (26 January)\nAna Konjuh, who had already won the Girls' Doubles with partner Belinda Bencic, defeated Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 in straight sets to take the Girls' singles title. In doing so Konjuh took the No. 1 junior ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 13 (26 January)\nAlso in straight sets, Australian Nick Kyrgios defeated compatriot Thanasi Kokkinakis to take the Boys' Singles title having not lost a set all tournament. Scans the previous day had discovered a stress fracture in the left side of Kokkinakis' back, and his movement during the final was reported to be evidently hampered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 13 (26 January)\nIn the Women's final, due to her controversial medical time-out in her semifinal match, defending champion Victoria Azarenka's reception onto the Rod Laver Arena was much more subdued than that of her opponent Li Na. The opening set saw seven breaks of serve in total, with Li Na winning 6\u20134. During the second set, with Azarenka 3\u20131 up, Li twisted her left ankle and called the first of two 10-minute medical time-outs. Li was not able to undo her opponent's advantage, Azerenka won the set 6\u20134 to level the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 13 (26 January)\nThe match was also interrupted at the beginning of the third set due to Australia Day fireworks. Li rolled her left ankle once again on the first point after play resumed, this time also heavily knocking the rear of her head on the court, thus incurring another 10-minute medical time-out. Azarenka broke in the fifth game and maintained the advantage to take the set 6\u20133 and win the match two sets to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 13 (26 January)\nThe victory was Azarenka's second Australian Open title. In post-match interviews she declared that \"This one is way more emotional\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 13 (26 January)\nTop seeds Bob and Mike Bryan defeated Robin Haase and Igor Sijsling to claim their 6th Men's Doubles Australian Open title and their 13th Grand Slam, surpassing John Newcombe and Tony Roche's record for the most doubles majors. Though Haase and Sijsling broke the serve in the opening game, the match was won by the Bryans in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 14 (27 January)\nIn the Mixed Doubles final, Australian wildcard entries Jarmila Gajdo\u0161ov\u00e1 and Matthew Ebden defeated the Czech pair of Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k in straight sets. Two breaks of the Hradeck\u00e1 serve gave the Australians the first set. In the second set Gajdo\u0161ov\u00e1 and Ebden were a break up, but the Hradeck\u00e1 and \u010cerm\u00e1k managed to break back. The advantage was recovered in the 11th game, and the Australians won the second set 7\u20135 after a long return from Cermak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 14 (27 January)\nDefending Champion Novak Djokovic defeated Andy Murray in four sets to take his third consecutive Australian Open title, being the first man in the Open Era to do so. Murray and Djokovic took the first and second sets respectively, both on tiebreaks. The first break of serve came when Djokovic took the eighth game of the third set. In post-match interviews Djokovic stated he tried to be more aggressive in the third and fourth sets, coming to the net more often. The match was Djokovic's 21st successive victory at the Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231936-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Day-by-day summaries, Day 14 (27 January)\nThough Murray received treatment for a blister after the first set, he insisted it had no impact on the result. After the match, Djokovic was quoted as saying \"I'm full of joy right now. It's going to give me a lot of confidence for the rest of the season.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231937-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nGabrielle Andrews and Taylor Townsend were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231937-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nAna Konjuh and Carol Zhao won the tournament, defeating Oleksandra Korashvili and Barbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20134, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231938-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nTaylor Townsend was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231938-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nAna Konjuh won the tournament, defeating Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231939-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries\nThe 2013 Australian Open Wildcard Playoffs and Entries were a group of events and internal selections to choose the eight men and women wildcard entries for the 2013 Australian Open. Tennis Australia awarded eight wildcards for the men's and women's professional singles and doubles competitions. In an agreement with the United States Tennis Association and the French Tennis Federation, Tennis Australia gave one man and one woman from the United States and France each a wildcard into the Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231939-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries\nA wildcard was awarded to the winner of the Australian Open wildcard playoff, a tournament between Australian players, who do not receive direct entry into the draw. The Australian Open were promoted as \"the Grand Slam of Asia/Pacific\"; one male and one female player from this geographical area were awarded a wildcard. This was decided through the Asia Pacific Australian Open Wildcard Playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231939-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Main Draw Wildcard Entries, Wildcard Entries\nThese are the wildcard qualifiers, from both internal selections and playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231940-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nLeander Paes and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Kevin Anderson and Jonathan Erlich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231940-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan won the title by defeating Robin Haase and Igor Sijsling 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final. The win was their 13th Grand Slam men's doubles title, giving them sole possession of the all-time record for a doubles team. The twins had previously been tied with Australians John Newcombe and Tony Roche. Additionally, this was the Bryan's 5th consecutive Australian Open final and 9th in the past decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231941-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Legends' Doubles, Draw, Group A\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, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231941-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Legends' Doubles, Draw, Group B\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, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231942-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nTwo-time defending champion Novak Djokovic successfully defended his title, defeating Andy Murray in the final 6\u20137(2\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133, 6\u20132 to win the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2013 Australian Open. In winning the title, Djokovic became the first man in the Open Era to win the Australian Open three consecutive times, and the third man after Roger Federer and Andre Agassi to win the title four times overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231942-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nDjokovic and Federer were in contention for the ATP number 1 ranking. Djokovic retained the top ranking by reaching the semifinals after Federer failed to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231943-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the Men's singles at the 2013 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231944-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nBethanie Mattek-Sands and Horia Tec\u0103u were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231944-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nJarmila Gajdo\u0161ov\u00e1 and Matthew Ebden won their first mixed doubles title, defeating Hradeck\u00e1 and Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135. This would be Gajdo\u0161ov\u00e1's only Grand Slam title before her retirement in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231945-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Doubles\nThe 2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Doubles was a tennis tournament featuring 8 paraplegic men tennis players, which was part of the NEC Tour. The tournament took place at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, from 25 January to 28 January 2012. It was the 10th edition of the Australian Open men's wheelchair event and the first Grand Slam event of 2013. The tournament was played on Plexicushion Prestige AO hard courts, which was rated a medium-fast pace by the ITF. The competition was organised by the International Tennis Federation and Tennis Australia. Michael Jeremiasz and Shingo Kunieda defeated Stefan Olsson and Adam Kellerman 6\u20130, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231946-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Singles\nThe 2013 Australian Open Wheelchair Men's Singles (Also known as the Optius Australian Open Wheelchair Men's Singles for sponsorship reasons) draw, feature eight players with two seeds and a wildcard. Maikel Scheffers of the Netherlands was the defending champion. All matches were best of three sets. Shingo Kunieda won the final 6\u20132, 6\u20130 against St\u00e9phane Houdet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231947-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Doubles\nAndrew Lapthorne and Peter Norfolk were the defending champions but Norfolk did not participate, whereas Andrew Lapthorne competed with Anders Hard. They lost in the final to David Wagner and Nicholas Taylor 2\u20136, 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231948-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Singles\nPeter Norfolk was the defending champion, but decided not to participate. David Wagner won the title, defeating Andrew Lapthorne in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231948-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Quad Singles, Draw, Round Robin\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, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231949-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nThe 2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Doubles was a tennis tournament featuring 8 paraplegic women tennis players, which was part of the NEC Tour. The tournament took place at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, from 25 January to 28 January 2012. It was the 10th edition of the Australian Open men's wheelchair event and the first Grand Slam event of 2013. The tournament was played on Plexicushion Prestige AO hard courts, which was rated a medium-fast pace by the ITF. The competition was organised by the International Tennis Federation and Tennis Australia. Jiske Griffioen and Aniek van Koot defeated Lucy Shuker and Marjolein Buis 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231950-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Singles\nThe 2013 Optus Australian Open Wheelchair Women's Singles featured eight players and had two seeds and one wild card. All matches were the best of three sets. Esther Vergeer was the defending champion but she decided not to participate. Aniek van Koot of the Netherlands won the title as the top seed, defeating Sabine Ellerbrock in the final, 6\u20131, 1\u20136, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231951-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nRussian pair Svetlana Kuznetsova and Vera Zvonareva were the defending champions, but Zvonareva decided not to participate due to injury. Kuznetsova partnered up with Yanina Wickmayer but they lost in the second round to Nuria Llagostera Vives and Zheng Jie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231951-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nTop seeds Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci won the title, defeating wild cards Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua in the final, 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231952-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Legends' Doubles, Draw, Round Robin\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, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231953-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nVictoria Azarenka was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, defeating Li Na in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133 to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2013 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231953-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nAzarenka, Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams were in contention for the WTA No. 1 ranking at the start of the tournament. Azarenka retained the top ranking at the end of the tournament by winning the title after Sharapova and Williams lost in the semifinals and quarterfinals, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231954-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the women's singles event at the 2013 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231955-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Rally Championship\nThe 2013 East Coast Bullbars Australian Rally Championship is the 46th season of the Australian Rally Championship, one of the world's oldest continuously run rally championships. The season began 1 March at the newly revived National Capital Rally, and is scheduled to end 16 November at Rally Victoria, after six events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231955-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Rally Championship\nThe championship incorporates two international events, Round 5 is a World Rally Championship event, Rally Australia, while Round 4, the International Rally of Queensland is a round of the Asia-Pacific Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231955-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Rally Championship\nEach domestic rally is contested over two heats, with three or four components to the two international events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231955-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Rally Championship\nWith the championship now awarded specifically to two-wheel-drive cars exclusively has seen an influx of European and Asian Super 2000 and Super 1600 cars as well as a revival of older rear-wheel-drive performance cars. While most of the top drivers have moved out of the Mitsubishi Lancer and Subaru Impreza 4WD turbos, they remain competitive with reigning Western Australian rally champion Alex Stone winning a heat at the Forest Rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231955-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Rally Championship\nBetween Honda Jazz driver Eli Evans and Renault Clio driver Scott Peddar have dominated the 2013 season, winning all bar one heat and taking eleven of the 18 top three positions. Evans leads the championship by 29 points over Peddar. Peddar's teammate Tom Wilde is 88 points behind Evans in third. Mazda 2 driver Brendan Reeves, who is also racing in the NACAM Rally Championship is fourth a distant 119 points from Peddar. Proving the flexibility of the new regulations, Jack Monkhouse is fifth in the championship driving a 1999 model Nissan Silvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231956-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Swimming Championships\nThe 2013 Australian Swimming Championships were held from 26 April until 3 May 2013 at the South Australia Aquatic and Leisure Centre in Adelaide, South Australia. They doubled up as the national trials for the 2013 World Aquatics Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231956-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Swimming Championships, Qualification criteria\nBelow were the entry qualifying times for each event that had to be achieved after 1 January 2012 in a 50m pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231956-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Swimming Championships, Qualification criteria\nBelow were the FINA A and B qualifying times for the 2013 World Aquatics Championships for each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231956-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Swimming Championships, Medal winners, Men's events\nLegend: WR \u2013 World record; CR \u2013 Commonwealth record; OR \u2013 Oceanian record; AR \u2013 Australian record; ACR \u2013 Australian All Comers record; Club \u2013 Australian Club record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231956-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Swimming Championships, Medal winners, Women's events\nLegend: WR \u2013 World record; CR \u2013 Commonwealth record; OR \u2013 Oceanian record; AR \u2013 Australian record; ACR \u2013 Australian All Comers record; Club \u2013 Australian Club record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231957-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian V8 Ute Racing Series\nThe 2013 Australian V8 Ute Racing Series was an Australian motor racing competition for modified V8 engined production utilities. It was sanctioned by the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS) as a National Series with Australian V8 Ute Racing Pty Ltd appointed as the Category Manager. Promoted as the 2013 Auto One V8 Ute Racing Series protected by Armor All, it was the 13th annual Australian V8 Ute Racing Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231957-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian V8 Ute Racing Series\nThe series was won by Ryal Harris driving a Ford FG Falcon Ute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231957-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian V8 Ute Racing Series, Points system\nSeries points were awarded on the following basis for each qualifying session and each race in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231957-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian V8 Ute Racing Series, Points system\nThe results for each round were determined by the number of points scored by each driver at that round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231957-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian V8 Ute Racing Series, Points system\nThe driver gaining the highest points total over all rounds was declared the winner of the Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231958-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Youth Olympic Festival\nThe 2013 Australian Youth Olympic Festival was the fifth edition of the Australian Youth Olympic Festival. It was held from 16\u201320 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231958-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian Youth Olympic Festival, Participant nations\nThere were 30 teams that participated in the games. They were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget\nThe 2013 Australian federal budget for the Australian financial year ended 30 June 2014 was presented on 14 May 2013 by the Treasurer of Australia, Wayne Swan, the sixth federal budget presented by Swan. The 2013 budget estimated total revenue of A$387.7\u00a0billion and spending of A$398.3\u00a0billion, a deficit of A$18\u00a0billion, with a return to surplus expected in the 2015 Australian federal budget (FY 2015/16). Some of the measures in the budget had been announced by various Ministers before the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget\nAccording to Swan the budget was being impacted by both global economic uncertainty and the high Australian dollar. It features significant spending on disability services and a school improvement program based on the Gonski Report. In an unusual step the election year budget contains 10-year forward estimates for the school and disability programs in an attempt to ensure funding is available. To pay for DisabilityCare Australia the Medicare levy was increased from 1.5 to 2% of taxable income from 1 July 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget\nThe budget was described as big spending but low taxing. It lacked any big surprises or so-called election sweeteners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Forecasts, Deficit\nThe budget was not expected to decrease government spending dramatically in an effort to quickly return to surplus. Swan has claimed that such a move would result in rising unemployment and slowing economic growth. A collapse in the price of carbon under the European Union Emission Trading Scheme means a return to surplus is unlikely in the following two federal budgets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Forecasts, Deficit\nThe forecasted current account deficit is lower than the average for the past couple of decades allowing Standard and Poor's assessment of Australia's bond credit rating to remain at the AAA rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Forecasts, Shortfall\nTax revenue declines made it clear in late 2012 that the Gillard Government's promised 2013 budget surplus would not eventuate. In the lead up to the budget announcement an estimate of a $17.5\u00a0billion decline in forecast revenue was calculated after Finance Minister Penny Wong released government figures. Most of this shortfall was attributed to company tax and the mining tax.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Forecasts, Shortfall\nA deficit of up to $10\u00a0billion in the 2013\u201314 financial was predicted by some economists. In early May 2013, the Parliamentary Budget Office forecast that the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) would only raise $800\u00a0million this year instead of $3\u00a0billion which was originally expected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Revenues, Taxation\nIn March 2013, Prime Minister Julia Gillard indicated an increase on the tax on superannuation contributions was likely. On 1 May 2013, Gillard announced a 0.5% increase of the Medicare levy to fund DisabilityCare Australia which will take effect on 1 July 2014, and which is expected to raise $11\u00a0billion over four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Revenues, Taxation\nThe budget included measures to counter tax avoidance by closing a loophole in which companies claim large tax deductions after increasing their Australian operations with debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Revenues, Taxation\nA$2,000 cap on tax deductions for work-related education expense was introduced in the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, General government\nA few days before the budget was delivered, Treasurer Swan announced the public service was to receive a $580\u00a0million reduction in funding over four years. Expenditure on asylum seekers was forecast to be $2.9\u00a0billion, an increase of $930\u00a0million over previous year, as arrivals were expected to reach a record high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Social security and welfare\nIncluded in the introduction of the Minerals Resource Rent Tax was an increase in the Family Tax Benefit Part A scheme. Finance Minister Penny Wong announced the cancellation of the increase prior to the release of the 2013 budget. It was intended to be a measure that would spread the wealth of the mining boom, however as revenue from that tax was significantly lower than expected, the payment had to be scrapped. The increase in the benefit was expected to go to around 1.5\u00a0million families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Social security and welfare\nThe baby bonus was abolished and replaced with a family tax benefit equivalent to less than half of the then-current payment. The payment was to cease on 1 March 2014, reducing expenditure by $1.1\u00a0billion over five years, and being replaced with an increase in family tax benefits which will be means-tested and limited to $2,000 for the first born and $1,000 for subsequent children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Social security and welfare\nThe budget didn't contain a raise in the Newstart Allowance despite widespread calls for its increase. Instead the amount of money the unemployed may earn before it affects welfare payments was increased. The change was estimated to cost $258\u00a0million over four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Social security and welfare\n$99.4\u00a0million was provided for a new Farm Household Allowance for eligible farmers facing hardship, replacing the previous Exceptional Circumstances Relief Payment and Transitional Farm Family Payment. The payment will begin on 1 July 2014 and be equivalent to the Newstart Allowance. A farm finance scheme is to be introduced which will support farmers in debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Infrastructure, transport and energy\n$400\u00a0million was provided for the construction of an eight\u00a0km tunnel linking the Sydney\u2013Newcastle Freeway and M2 Hills Motorway in Sydney. $3\u00a0billion worth of funding out of a total cost of $8\u00a0billion for the Melbourne Metro Rail Project rapid transit rail project was allocated in the budget on the condition that Victoria fund an equal amount. $715\u00a0million was committed to the Cross River Rail project in Brisbane. Queensland's Transport Minister Scott Emerson was expecting twice as much for a 50\u201350 cost shared between federal and state governments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 81], "content_span": [82, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Education\nThe Australian Indigenous Education Foundation was provided with an additional $22\u2009\u00a0million. Bonuses paid to those who pay their HECS debts up-front or voluntarily will cease, saving $237\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Defence\nThe budget provided funding for new 12 radar-jamming Growler Super Hornet fighter aircraft. Overall spending on defence is up $10\u00a0billion compared to the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Health\nThe net medical expenses tax offset is to be phased out over two years. A total of $14.3\u00a0billion worth of new funding was allocated to DisabilityCare Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Expenditure, Community services and culture\nThe cost of 457 temporary skilled migrant visas was doubled to $900.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Opposition and crossbench response\nOpposition treasury spokesman Joe Hockey described the budget as \"fundamentally dishonest\". Tony Abbott claimed Julia Gillard was in denial over whether or not there was a spending problem. Australian Greens leader Christine Milne said the budget lacked vision and was a disappointment to rural communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Reception\nEven before the budget was released the business community, as represented by the Business Council of Australia, the Australian Industry Group, the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Minerals Council of Australia, complained the budget would be lacking in both transparency and credibility and was achieved without genuine consultation. Australian Education Union President Angelo Gavrielatos praised the school reforms saying they would benefit children and the nation as a whole. The Federation of Ethnic Communities Councils of Australia supported the governments intention to maintain permanent migration and humanitarian intake levels as they were. Asylum seekers advocates questioned the expense of off-shore detention centres and processing. Indigenous organisations reacted with a mixed response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231959-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal budget, Reception\nSome columnists questioned whether the forecast revenue would be as high as predicted especially considering the effect of a high Australian dollar. The assumption that Australia's gross domestic product will grow by 5% per year was also questioned. Representatives from the National Welfare Rights Network and the National Council of Single Mothers and their Children criticised the lack of an increase in dole payments, particularly after many single mothers were transferred to Newstart in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election\nThe 2013 Australian federal election to elect the members of the 44th Parliament of Australia took place on 7 September 2013. The centre-right Liberal/National Coalition opposition led by Opposition leader Tony Abbott of the Liberal Party of Australia and Coalition partner the National Party of Australia, led by Warren Truss, defeated the incumbent centre-left Labor Party government of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd by an 18-seat 3.6 percentage point two-party swing resulting in a landslide win for the Coalition. Labor had been in government for six years since first being elected in the 2007 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election\nThis election marked the end of the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd Labor government and the start of the current (as of 2021) Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Liberal-National Coalition government. Abbott was sworn in by the Governor-General, Quentin Bryce, as Australia's new Prime Minister on 18 September 2013, along with the Abbott Ministry and the members of the House of Representatives. The 44th Parliament of Australia opened on 12 November 2013, which is taken to be the commencement of the term of members of the House of Representatives. The new senators were sworn in by the next Governor-General Peter Cosgrove on 7 July 2014, with their six-year terms commencing on 1 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election\nThe proclamation dissolving the House of Representatives and formally beginning the election period had been issued by Governor-General Bryce on 5 August 2013. The writs of election were subsequently issued by Bryce for the election of members of the House of Representatives and the state governors for the senators for each state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election\nVoting in Australia's federal elections has been compulsory since 1925. For the House of Representatives, a preferential ballot system has been in use since 1919, in single-member seats. For the Senate\u2014the proportionally representative upper house\u2014a single transferable vote system has been in use since 1949, with optional group voting tickets since 1984. Elections are conducted by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election\nA special half-Senate election was conducted on 5 April 2014 in Western Australia as a result of 1,375 lost ballot papers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate\nThe Senate has 76 seats. Forty seats were up for election; six in each of the six states, two for the ACT and two for the Northern Territory. The terms of the four senators from the territories commenced on election day. The terms of the six longest-serving state senators ended on 30 June 2014; the terms of the new state senators commenced on 1 July 2014, and were originally supposed to end on 30 June 2020\u2014however, the entire Senate was dissolved at the double-dissolution 2016 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate\nThe Senate saw the Coalition government on 33 seats with the Labor opposition on 25 seats, the Greens on 10 seats and a crossbench of eight\u2014Palmer United on three seats, with other minor parties and independents on five seats (the LDP's David Leyonhjelm, Family First's Bob Day, Motoring's Ricky Muir and incumbents Nick Xenophon and the DLP's John Madigan). Muir announced he would vote in line with Palmer United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate\nThe initial election saw Wayne Dropulich of the Australian Sports Party win a seat in Western Australia, but the subsequent voiding of the result and ensuing special election saw the Palmer United Party gain a third seat. The Coalition government required the support of at least six non-coalition Senators to pass legislation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate\nA record number of candidates stood at the election. Group voting tickets came under scrutiny because multiple candidates were provisionally elected with the vast majority of their 14.3 per cent quotas coming from the preferences of other parties across the political spectrum. \"Preference whisperer\" Glenn Druery organised tight cross-preferencing between over 30 minor parties as part of his Minor Party Alliance. Sports' Wayne Dropulich won a Senate seat on a record-low primary vote of 0.2 per cent in Western Australia, his party placing 21st out of 28 groups on primary votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate\nMotoring's Ricky Muir won a senate seat on a record-low primary vote of 0.5 per cent in Victoria. Family First's Bob Day won a seat on a primary vote of 3.8 per cent in South Australia. All three were involved with the Minor Party Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate\nPrevious examples of winning with low vote shares include Family First's Steve Fielding in 2004 on 1.9 per cent in Victoria, the Nuclear Disarmament Party's Robert Wood in 1987 on 1.5 per cent in New South Wales, and the DLP's John Madigan won his seat in 2010 on a primary vote of 2.3 per cent in Victoria. Xenophon and larger parties including the incoming government announced they would look at changes to the GVT system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate, Western Australia special Senate election\nMost Senate votes cast in Western Australia were subject to a formal recount. During the recount it was determined that 1,375 WA Senate ballot papers could not be located. After the final recount the result was duly declared which changed the last two predicted WA Senate spots from Palmer and Labor back to Sports and Green. Mick Keelty, a former AFP Commissioner, was requested by the AEC to investigate the issue of the misplaced ballot papers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate, Western Australia special Senate election\nOn 15 November, the AEC petitioned the High Court, acting as the Court of Disputed Returns, to seek an order from the court that the WA Senate election of all six senators (3 Liberal, 1 Labor, 1 Green, 1 Sport) be declared void. On 18 February 2014, it was announced that the Court of Disputed Returns had found that the result of the Western Australia Senate election should be voided, meaning a fresh election for all six senate vacancies would be required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate, Western Australia special Senate election\nThe AEC notes that the Court has advised in its written decision issued today that it finds that the only relief appropriate is for the 2013 Western Australian Senate election result to be declared void....... In accordance with the Australian Constitution and the requirements of the Western Australian Election of Senators Act 1903, an election of six senators for Western Australia would occur once a writ has been issued by His Excellency Mr Malcolm McCusker AC CVO QC, the Governor of Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Senate, Western Australia special Senate election\nOn 28 February 2014 it was announced that the half-Senate election in Western Australia would take place on 5 April, which returned 3 Liberal, 1 Labor, 1 Green, 1 Palmer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Results, Divisions changing hands\nMembers in italics did not re-contest their House of Representatives seats at this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Key dates\nOn 30 January 2013, the then Prime Minister Julia Gillard had announced the election would be held on 14 September. However, following a leadership ballot in June 2013, she was replaced as leader and Prime Minister by Rudd, who then abandoned the originally planned date. A referendum on amending the constitution to allow the federal government to directly fund local councils, which was initially planned to be held on the same day as the federal election, could not go ahead on the date announced by Rudd. This is because Section 128 of the Constitution of Australia requires that a referendum be submitted to electors between two and six months after its passage through Parliament. As early voting started on 20 August it could not be submitted then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, House of Representatives\nAt the 2010 federal election, Labor and the Liberal/National Coalition each won 72 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives, four short of the requirement for majority government, resulting in the first hung parliament since the 1940 federal election. On the crossbench, one member of the Australian Greens, one member of the National Party of Western Australia and four independent members held the balance of power. After gaining the support of the Greens and three independents on confidence and supply votes, Labor was able to form a minority government with 76 seats, the smallest possible margin in the 150-seat House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, House of Representatives, Changes in House numbers\nOn 24 November 2011, Harry Jenkins resigned as Speaker of the House of Representatives and returned to the Labor backbench. Later, that day, Deputy Speaker Peter Slipper was elected Speaker and quit the Liberal National Party to become an independent. This changed nominal confidence and supply numbers on the floor of the house from 75\u201374 to 76\u201373. In January 2012, Andrew Wilkie withdrew his guarantee of confidence to the incumbent government, changing numbers to 75\u201373 in the event of his abstention, or 75\u201374 in the event of his support for a vote of no confidence in the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, House of Representatives, Changes in House numbers\nIn April 2012, Labor's Craig Thomson moved to the crossbenches as an independent MP, and in May, WA National Tony Crook moved from the crossbenches to the Nationals, but did not join the Coalition. Changes brought the government to 71 seats, the Coalition 72 seats and seven crossbenchers. On 9 October 2012, after an unsuccessful vote of no confidence in the speakership, Slipper resigned as Speaker and was replaced by Labor Deputy Speaker Anna Burke. Slipper remained an independent MP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, Senate\nBefore the election, the 76-seat Senate was made up of senators from the Coalition (34), Australian Labor Party (31), Australian Greens (9), Democratic Labour Party (1) and one independent senator, Nick Xenophon. The Greens held the sole balance of power. Previously the Greens had held a shared balance of power with the Family First Party and Xenophon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, Senate\nOf the 76 Senate seats, 40 are contested. This corresponds to half of each state's allocation as well as both senators from the two major territories. Newly elected state senators commenced their terms on 1 July 2014 and the senators of the territories began their terms immediately after their elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, Election period\nOn 30 January 2013, at a speech at the National Press Club, Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced the election would be held on Saturday 14 September 2013, although the Governor-General was not formally advised and no writ of election was issued. Kevin Rudd succeeded Julia Gillard as Prime Minister on 27 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, Election period\nThe Broadcasting Services Act 1992 was checked by various commercial broadcasting media outlets and media councils as a result of Gillard's announcement. The Act says, in part,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, Election period\n\"Election period\" means:(a) in relation to any other election to a Parliament \u2013 the period that starts on:\u2013 (i) the day on which the proposed polling day for the election is publicly announced; or- (ii) the day on which the writs for the election are issued;whichever happens first, and ends at the close of the poll on the polling day for the election;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, Election period\nPART 2b. (i) If, during an election period, a broadcaster broadcasts election matter, the broadcaster must give reasonable opportunities for the broadcasting of election matter to all political parties contesting the election, being parties which were represented in either House of the Parliament for which the election is to be held at the time of its last meeting before the election period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, 43rd Parliament, Election period\nThis is interpreted as \"equal time, over time\" rather than equal time in the same broadcast, and that this requirement began with the announcement on 30 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Retiring MPs and senators\nThe terms of Members of the House of Representatives who did not renominate ended at the dissolution of the parliament (5 August 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Retiring MPs and senators\nThe terms of Senators who did not renominate ended on 30 June 2014, unless they represented the Australian Capital Territory or the Northern Territory, in which case their term ended on the day before polling day (6 September 2013). That date also applies to territory senators who contest the election but are defeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Retiring MPs and senators\nMembers and senators who chose not to renominate are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Campaign\nThe incumbent Labor-led government argued for a need for a \"safe pair of hands\" to manage an economic shift from mining-oriented growth to something else; while the opposition said that it would prevent a recession that could be caused by a budget deficit. The Sydney Morning Herald suggested both arguments hedged on the mining boom going bust. Rudd officially began the campaign season on 1 September in his hometown of Brisbane. At the rally, he promised tax breaks for small businesses and more work for local contractors on infrastructure projects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Campaign\nHe said: \"In this election, we are now engaged in the fight of our lives. It is a fight about the values that underpin Australia's future, a fight about our vision for Australia's future. It's a fight about how we go about building Australia's future, a future for the many, not just for the few.\" He also dismissed the opinion polls that showed him trailing to Abbott in gaining a parliamentary plurality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements\nThe press overwhelmingly favoured the Coalition over Labor, with all of News Corp's publications endorsing Tony Abbott's opposition over Kevin Rudd's government, as well as Fairfax's publications such as The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Canberra Times, backing the Coalition over Labor. Fairfax's newspapers, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Canberra Times both considered the need for political stability a primary reason for supporting the Coalition, as well as criticising Labor's continuing infighting and scandals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements\nThe Age backed Labor, praising Labor's stewardship of the economy during the global financial crisis and noting that, of the two parties, they were the one with a vision for Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0025-0002", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements\nThe Sunday Age, however, supported the Coalition, rejecting their daily counterpart's editorial that Labor had vision and that the election amounted to choosing a lesser evil, noting that during the election campaign a \"genuine contest of ideas [had] not materialised\", that \"the campaign [had] contained no vision or policy clarion call commanding our attention and demanding our vote\" and subsequently that \"in the absence of policies and detailed economic information, voter decisiveness will depend on one issue: trust.\" During this period, various News Corp's papers published numerous front-page articles supporting The Coalition and denigrating Labor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0025-0003", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements\nDuring the campaign, The Daily Telegraph ran front pages depicting Labor as Nazis, displaying a picture of Rudd above a headline telling readers to \"Kick this mob out, and, on election day, ran the headline \"After 33 days campaigning, 18 babies kissed, 104,275\u00a0km flown and six years of an incompetent Labor government, now it's... your turn.\" The Sunday Telegraph, meanwhile, printed an front-page editorial with the headline \"Australia needs Tony\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0025-0004", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Newspaper endorsements\nAdditionally, The Courier-Mail used a front page to depict Labor as clowns, and ran a headline of \"Does This Guy Ever Shut Up\" alongside a photo of Rudd during a debate. Similarly, in the weeks preceding the election, the Herald Sun ran the headline \"Trust Me\" alongside a photo Abbott and on the day of the election ran a front page consisting of the headline \"It's Tony's Time\" alongside another photo of Abbott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Result commentary\nThe Labor Party recorded its lowest two-party preferred vote since 1996 and lowest primary vote since 1931. Kevin Rudd announced his resignation as party leader and confirmed he would not run again in the subsequent leadership election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Result commentary\nWith Nova Peris's victory in the Senate election in the Northern Territory, she became the first Aboriginal woman to be elected to parliament. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange failed to be elected to the Senate after running in Victoria, with his WikiLeaks Party garnering 0.62% of the popular vote. Former Queensland Premier Peter Beattie, standing in the Liberal-held seat of Forde, also failed to enter parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Result commentary\nIn an unprecedented outcome in Australian electoral history, the Senate result in Western Australia was declared void after the loss of over 1,300 ballot papers, necessitating a fresh election for the Senate in that state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231960-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian federal election, Aftermath\nThe Coalition had campaigned on a tough stance on asylum seekers who came to Australia by boat (as had the Labor Party in the final weeks leading up to the election). Immediately after the election, Abbott reiterated his party's promise and announced that his new government would begin Operation Sovereign Borders\u2014which would turn back any vessels carrying asylum seekers\u2014as soon as possible. He also confirmed he would abolish the carbon price that was introduced by the Gillard Government, as well as lower foreign aid by A$4.5\u00a0billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds\nAustralia is home to four professional football codes. This is a comprehensive list of crowd figures for Australian football codes in 2013. It includes several different competitions and matches from association football, Australian rules football, rugby league and rugby union (international rules football is a code of football played by Australian rules footballers). Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane have teams represented in all four codes. Hobart and Darwin are Australia's only capital cities without a professional football team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Included competitions, National competitions\nSeveral football codes have national (domestic) competitions in Australia, the following are taken into consideration:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 82], "content_span": [83, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Included competitions, National competitions\nTwo of these leagues, specifically the NRL and A-League, have one club each in New Zealand, while only five of the fifteen Super Rugby franchises are located in Australia, with the other ten split evenly between New Zealand and South Africa. Attendance figures for non-Australian clubs are not taken into account in the figures on this page.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 82], "content_span": [83, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Included competitions, National competitions\nIn addition, one St Kilda AFL match held in Wellington is also not included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 82], "content_span": [83, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Included competitions, Other competitions\nOther competitions, such as international and representative competitions, included are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Included competitions, Other competitions\nNote: For these competitions, only figures for games that take place in Australia are taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Included competitions, Other competitions\nNo Rugby League Four Nations competition is scheduled for 2013, England and Wales will host in October the 2013 Rugby League World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Included competitions, Non-competition games\nSome non-competition matches (such as friendly and exhibition matches) are also included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 82], "content_span": [83, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Attendances by Code\nIn order to directly compare sports, the total attendances for each major code are listed here. The colour-coding of the different codes is used throughout the article.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Attendances by Code\nNote that only the competitions that appear on this page excluding those specifically not included are considered, there are many other (generally smaller) competitions, leagues and matches that take place for all of the football codes, but these are not included. The following are included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231961-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231961-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Attendances by Match\nAttendances for single matches are listed here. Note that not all matches are necessarily included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Attendances by Match, Representative Competitions\nThese are matches that are part of a regular representative competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 87], "content_span": [88, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231961-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian football code crowds, Attendances by Match, Single matches\nThese are one-off matches, that aren't part of any regular league competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231962-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix was the sixteenth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit in Phillip Island on 20 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231962-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe MotoGP race was originally scheduled to run over 27 laps, but was shortened to 19 laps after Bridgestone announced that the safety of its tyres on the newly resurfaced track could not be guaranteed after 10 laps. Riders were required to make a pitstop to swap bikes or change tyres at least once during the race, and no rider was permitted to use the same set of tyres for more than 10 laps. Marc M\u00e1rquez and Bryan Staring were both disqualified for riding an 11-lap stint without pitting. Jorge Lorenzo won the race and closed up the gap to M\u00e1rquez in the championship to 18 points. The Moto2 race distance was also shortened, from 25 to 13 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231962-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Australian 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231963-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian Darts Open\nThe 2013 Austrian Darts Open was the fourth of eight PDC European Tour events on the 2013 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Arena Nova in Wiener Neustadt, Austria, from 31 May\u20132 June 2013. It featured a field of 64 players and \u00a3100,000 in prize money, with \u00a320,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231963-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian Darts Open\nMichael van Gerwen won his second European Tour title by beating Mervyn King 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231963-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian Darts Open, Qualification\nThe top 32 players from the on the 29 April 2013 automatically qualified for the event. The remaining 32 places went to players from three qualifying events - 20 from the UK Qualifier (held in Wigan on 3 May), eight from the European Qualifier and four from the Host Nation Qualifier (both held at the venue in Wiener Neustadt on 30 May).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231963-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian Darts Open, Qualification\nSimon Whitlock, Adrian Lewis and Phil Taylor all withdrew before the event started. Two additional places were therefore available in the European Qualifier and one extra place was available in the Home Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231964-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Austrian Figure Skating Championships (German: \u00d6sterreichischen Staatsmeisterschaften im Eiskunstlauf 2013) took place between 19 and 22 December 2012 at the Albert-Schultz-Eishalle 3 in Vienna. 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 Austrian teams to the 2013 World Championships and the 2013 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231965-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian conscription referendum\nA non-binding referendum on ending conscription was held in Austria on 20 January 2013. The proposal was supported by the Social Democratic Party and the Green Party and opposed by the Austrian People's Party and the FP\u00d6. Though constitutionally not obliged to act on, both parties in government have stated that they will honour the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231965-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian conscription referendum\nThe motion to end conscription and introduce a professional army was rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Austria on 29 September 2013 to elect the 25th National Council, the lower house of Austria's bicameral parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election\nThe parties of the ruling grand coalition, the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6) and Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP), suffered losses, but placed first and second respectively and retained their combined majority. The Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6) won 20.5%, an increase of three percentage points, and The Greens achieved their best result up to this point with 12.4% and 24 seats. With the collapse of the Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZ\u00d6), which fell below the 4% electoral threshold and lost all its seats, two new parties entered the National Council: Team Stronach with 5.7% and NEOS \u2013 The New Austria with 5.0%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election\nThe election saw considerable change in the composition of the National Council; the ruling grand coalition won its lowest combined share of the popular vote in history. The coalition was nonetheless renewed, and Werner Faymann of the SP\u00d6 remained Chancellor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election, Overview\nThe government is a grand coalition between Austria's two largest parties, the SP\u00d6 and \u00d6VP, who rule with the SP\u00d6's Werner Faymann as Chancellor. Support for both governing parties has fallen marginally since the 2008 election. The Freedom Party (FP\u00d6) and Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZ\u00d6) made significant gains in the previous election, but while the FP\u00d6 gained support after the 2008 election, the BZ\u00d6 shrank after the death of its founder J\u00f6rg Haider and taking a turn toward liberalism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election, Overview\nAdditionally, nine of the BZ\u00d6's 21 elected members to the National Council changed their party affiliation during the term: five members joined the Team Stronach, while four joined the FP\u00d6. Team Stronach, funded by Austrian-Canadian businessman Frank Stronach, has emerged as an anti-euro alternative and eventually started to hurt the FP\u00d6's standing in the polls. The Greens have solidified their position as the fourth-largest party in opinion polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 24th National Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election, Contesting parties, Qualified parties\nIn addition to the parties already represented in the National Council, nine parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot. Four of these were cleared to be on the ballot in all states, five of them only in some.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election, Campaign\nIssues included corruption scandals across the main parties and Austria's relative financial stability facing a probable crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election, Results, Preference votes\nAlongside votes for a party, voters were able to cast a preferential votes for a candidate on the party list. The ten candidates with the most preferential votes on a federal level were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231966-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Austrian legislative election, Government formation\nThe \"grand coalition\" of SP\u00d6 and \u00d6VP retained their majority. While the SP\u00d6 were keen to renew the coalition, the \u00d6VP also considered the possibility of a coalition with the FP\u00d6 and another smaller party. On October 14, the SP\u00d6 and the \u00d6VP agreed to start coalition talks with each other, and on December 16, the second Faymann cabinet was formed by the SP\u00d6 and the \u00d6VP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400\nThe 2013\u00a0Auto\u00a0Club\u00a0400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on March 24, 2013, at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, United States. Contested over 200\u00a0laps on the 2-mile (3.2\u00a0km) asphalt D-shaped oval, it was the fifth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Kyle Busch of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his first of the season, and the first Sprint Cup win at Auto Club for Joe Gibbs, completing a weekend sweep, while Dale Earnhardt, Jr. finished second. Joey Logano, Carl Edwards and Kurt Busch rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Background\nAuto 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. The track has a seating capacity of 92,100 people. The race consists of 200 laps, which is equivalent to a race distance of 400 miles (640\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Brad Keselowski was leading the Drivers' Championship with 166 points, while Dale Earnhardt, Jr. stood in second with 157 points. Jimmie Johnson followed in the third position, 23 points ahead of Clint Bowyer and 25 points ahead of Greg Biffle in fourth and fifth. Denny Hamlin, with 125, was one point ahead of Kasey Kahne and Carl Edwards, as Paul Menard was three points ahead of Kyle Busch and Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. in tenth and eleventh. Joey Logano completed the first twelve positions with 104 points. The defending winner of the race was Tony Stewart, who won the race in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, held on March 22, 2013, was 60 minutes long. The second and third were held on March 23, and were 55 and 50 minutes long. During the first practice session, Bowyer was quickest with a time of 38.832, ahead of Hamlin and A. J. Allmendinger in second and third. Kyle Busch followed in the fourth position, ahead of Logano in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Biffle was quickest, ahead of Allmendinger and Busch in second and third. Hamlin and Kurt Busch followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Bowyer, Mark Martin, Earnhardt, Jr., Martin Truex, Jr., and Logano rounded out the first ten positions. In the final practice session for the race, Martin was quickest with a time of 39.269 seconds. Bowyer followed in second, ahead of Matt Kenseth and Johnson in third and fourth. Keselowski, who was eighteenth quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-three cars were entered, meaning all of the cars were able to start because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Hamlin clinched his twelfth career pole position, with a time of 38.410 seconds. After his qualifying run, Hamlin commented,\u201cHonestly, I think our car was really fast. I knew, talking to a few people in my motor home... it\u2019s cocky to say, but I said, \u2018Man, I can almost guarantee a pole, if we have a late draw.\u2019 When they told me we were third, I was like, \u2018OK. Well, just never mind. Forget that.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Biffle. Keselowski qualified third, Kyle Busch took fourth, and Kenseth started fifth. Logano, Truex, Jr., Tony Stewart, Martin, and Kurt Busch completed the first ten positions on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Race\nWith seven laps to go, Joey Logano took the lead after a brief duel with former teammates Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin. Hamlin and Logano had been involved in an incident the previous race at Bristol, with the sentiments carrying over to this race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Race\nHamlin chased Logano down and the two were side-by-side for most of the final lap, but Logano attempted to block Hamlin in the final turn and was sent up into the outside wall, while Hamlin came off the banking and smashed head-on into the inside concrete retaining wall, allowing Busch to pass both cars on the high side and take the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Race\nAlthough Hamlin climbed out of the car right after the crash, he immediately collapsed and lied on the track. He was airlifted to the hospital as a precaution. It was announced the next day that Hamlin had suffered a massive L1 compression fracture, or a collapsed vertebra, likely because the area where his car hit the wall was lacking a SAFER barrier. The resulting injuries forced Hamlin to miss the next four races. Mark Martin filled in for Hamlin at Martinsville while Brian Vickers filled in at Texas, Kansas, and Richmond. Hamlin did not start another race until Talladega in May, although the team arranged for Vickers to take over at the first caution flag pit stop. Hamlin did not return full-time to his race car until the following week at Darlington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Race\nIn response to the accident, for 2014, Auto Club Speedway installed an additional 1,000 foot SAFER barrier along the wall where Hamlin's car had impacted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231967-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto Club 400, Report, Race\nFollowing the finish, Logano was also involved in an altercation with Stewart after a blocking move made by Logano on Stewart during the final restart. Stewart ended with a 22nd-place finish following the incident. Stewart went on to confront Logano in the pit lane and who had to be restrained by crews from Danica Patrick's team after Logano threw a water bottle at Stewart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231968-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto GP Series\nThe 2013 Auto GP Series was the fourth year of the Auto GP series, and the fifteenth season of the former Euroseries 3000. The championship began on 23 March at Monza in Italy and finished on 6 October at Brno in the Czech Republic, after eight double-header rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231968-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Auto GP Series, Race calendar and results\nThe provisional calendar for the 2013 season was released on 17 January 2013. But on 7 February 2013 was revealed that Moscow Raceway were dropped from schedule due to cost reasons. Silverstone Circuit will take Moscow Raceway's place in the calendar. On 24 April 2013, the calendar was altered again, with dropping Zandvoort due to clash with German GP2 Series and Formula One rounds and changing to Mugello Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231969-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao general election\nThe 2013 general election in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) were held on May 13, 2013. Originally scheduled for October 2011, this was the first ARMM election that was synchronized with the general elections in the Philippines; previously, ARMM elections were held outside the general election day. When the elected officials of the 2008 ARMM elections ended their terms in 2011, President Benigno Aquino III appointed officers-in-charge until the officials elected in 2013 can take their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231969-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao general election\nThe governor and vice governor are elected via first past the post system; they are elected separately and may come from different parties. Elections for the regional assembly are via plurality-at-large voting, with each assembly district (coextensive with legislative districts as used in House of Representatives elections) having three seats. A voter has can vote for up to the three candidates, with the candidates with the three highest total number of votes being elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231969-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao general election, Results, Regional assembly\nThese figures came from the COMELEC \"Transparency\" server and are therefore partial and unofficial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 86], "content_span": [87, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231970-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Autopolis GT 300km\nThe 2013 Autopolis GT 300\u00a0km was the seventh round of the 2013 Super GT season and the 8th points scoring race for GT300 cars. It took place on October 6, 2013 at Autopolis near Kamitsue, Oita, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231970-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Autopolis GT 300km, Background\nDome Racing drivers Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Makowiecki and Naoki Yamamoto were tied on 46 points for the championship lead with Impul's Jo\u00e3o Paulo de Oliveira and Tsugio Matsuda. Following their win in at the 3 Hours of Fuji Team Mugen extended their championship lead in GT300 to 16 points over the Gainer Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 of Katsuyuki Hiranaka and Bj\u00f6rn Wirdheim. With Autopolis being the 2nd last round of the season, instead of having weight ballast equal to twice the number of points scored in the season, teams that competed in all previous 6 races had their weight ballast reduced to the number of points they scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231970-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Autopolis GT 300km, Background\nAfter running a 2013-spec Porsche 997 GT3, Team Taisan reverted to running a 2012-spec Porsche for balance of performance reasons. The GTA adjusted the balance of performance for both JAF-GT and FIA GT3 cars. For the JAF-GT cars the air restrictor sizes were reduced in an effort to reduce power, however The Toyota Prius was not given any adjustments. The Nissan GT-R GT3 was given a slight increase in boost pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231970-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Autopolis GT 300km, Background\n39 cars were entered for the race, the only change from the previous round was that the Dijon Racing Callaway Corvette Z06.R GT3 did not enter Autopolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231970-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Autopolis GT 300km, Report, Practice\nThe practice session began in wet conditions. The #36 Lexus Team Petronas TOM'S Lexus SC430 was the fastest car in GT500 and the #10 Gainer Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 was the fastest GT300 car. The session was red flagged 13 minutes in after Naoki Yamamoto spun off-road and crashed. The session resumed 9 minutes later but due to worsening conditions few teams completed laps on the circuit. The session was later red flagged 48 minutes in and not restarted due to poor visibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231970-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Autopolis GT 300km, Report, Qualifying\nQualifying was scheduled to be held on October 5, 2013, but due to the heavy rain and fog that cancelled the practice session, qualifying was cancelled and rescheduled to October 6. Instead of the standard 15 and 8 minute knockout sessions for both GT500 and GT300 cars, there would only be a single 25 minute session for both classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231971-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Avonair Cash Spiel\nThe 2013 Avonair Cash Spiel was held from October 4 to 6 at the Avonair Curling Club in Edmonton, Alberta as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231972-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijan Supercup\n2013 Azerbaijan Supercup (Azerbaijani: 2013 Futbol \u00fczr\u0259 Az\u0259rbaycan Superkuboku) was the 4th edition of the Azerbaijan Supercup since its establishment in 1992. The match was contested between the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Premier League champions Neftchi Baku and the 2012\u201313 Azerbaijan Cup finalists Khazar Lankaran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Azerbaijan on 9 October 2013. The result was a victory for incumbent President Ilham Aliyev, who received 84.5% of the vote, whilst leading opposition candidate Jamil Hasanli finished second with 5.5% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election\nThe election was marred by claims of irregularities; official results were accidentally released by the government's Central Election Commission through a mobile app before voting began, giving incumbent Aliyev a victory with 72.76% of the vote. The commission later recalled the results, claiming that they were taken from the 2008 elections. This claim has been disputed, given that the results accidentally released included the candidates from the 2013 elections, and that the percentages differed from the 2008 results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election\nOSCE monitors reported candidate and voter intimidation and a restrictive media environment, including arrests and the use of force against journalists and activists. 92% of the coverage on the six main TV channels were dedicated to the incumbent president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Background\nAll previous elections in Azerbaijan observed by OSCE fell short of meeting international standards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Background\nIn 2009 an amendment was made to the Constitution of Azerbaijan, which abolished the limit of two consecutive presidential terms and allowed incumbent Aliyev, who had already served for two terms, to run for president for unlimited number of times. The constitutional amendment was condemned by the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe, which stated that \"the abolition of existing limits preventing the unlimited re-election of a President is a step back, in terms of democratic achievements\". The amendment was also criticized by the Azerbaijani opposition. On the basis of the amendment in 2013 Ilham Aliyev ran for president for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Background\nAfter his visit to Azerbaijan the President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Jean-Claude Mignon called on the authorities to fully respect their obligations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Background\nHowever, overall, in 2013 elections the Central Election Commission (CEC) demonstrated efficiency in administrative preparations for the elections and observed the legal deadlines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Candidates\nOn 7 June 2013 the New Azerbaijan Party nominated incumbent President Ilham Aliyev as their official presidential candidate. MP Mubariz Gurbanli announced that according to the Election Code of Azerbaijan Republic, the party had not only filled its signature requirements but could get more than the minimum 40,000 required signatures. He said: \"The signature lists have been ready for already 4-5 days, but they can be submitted to the Central Election Commission starting from 20 August, that is, 50 days before the elections under the legislation. So, our employees will submit the signature lists to CEC tomorrow. Under the law, the CEC will issue a document confirming the candidate\u2019s participation in the elections after it reviews them.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Candidates\nIn the meantime, playwright Rustam Ibragimbekov was chosen as the leader of the newly created National Council of Democratic Forces. The NCDF brought together main opposition forces, including Musavat, the Azerbaijani Popular Front Party, Open Society, Forum of Intellectuals. The alliance set as its main goal the \"peaceful transition to democracy.\" Ibragimbekov was denied registration by the Central Election Commission because he \"along with the citizenship of Azerbaijan, also of Russian citizenship and his commitment to the Russian Federation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Candidates\nIn late August, the united opposition picked historian Jamil Hasanli as its candidate. During the rally on September 28, Hasanli called on people to vote for him to \"end the dictatorship of one family in Azerbaijan.\" A day before the election, main opposition candidate Jamil Hasanli stated that he is \"running in this election with the paramount aim of ending 20 years of the Aliyev dynasty's misrule of my country, and restoring Azerbaijani democracy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Conduct\nAn official smartphone app run by the Central Election Commission inadvertently released final election results a day before polls had opened. The results showed Ilham Aliyev having won with 72.76% of the recorded votes, while the nearest opposing candidate, Jamil Hasanli, tallied just 7.4%. The data was recalled, with an official claim that the app's developer had mistakenly tested the app with the 2008 election results, but the data released did not match the voter totals nor percentages of the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Conduct\nOn 10 October Hasanli called for the results to be annulled due to vote-rigging, claiming the elections were not free and fair because of electoral fraud and government control of all television channels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Reactions\nAzerbaijani officials have bashed those who criticizes their elections. The Chief of Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan Ramiz Mehdiyev, accused the US officials in recommending them to rig the elections to show that the incumbent President Ilham Aliyev was winning with 75% of the votes and to give 25% to the opposition candidate, to make it look believable. Mehdiyev also attempted to deflect the international condemnation by claiming the U.S. elections are illegitimate. The United States denied these accusations, terming them \u201ccompletely false\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Reactions, International scandal\nThe controversial assessments by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe/European Parliament and OSCE/ODIHR sparked a major scandal, as for the first time the reports of these authoritative European organizations openly contradicted one other. Further, many European experts and parliamentarians, among them also deputies of the European Parliament, harshly criticized the reports of the European Parliament and PACE as being biased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Reactions, International scandal\nThe Socialist Group in the European Parliament has distanced itself from the words of the observer mission EP / PACE, stating that the differences between the findings of the delegation of parliamentarians and the OSCE are so far away that it cannot be supported at all. The Greens/EFA Group of the European Parliament said that they do not endorse the statements made by the EP delegation. The Green foreign affairs spokesperson Werner Schulz said,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Reactions, International scandal\nThe shortcomings of EP's own election observation mission to Azerbaijan call into question the existence of such short-term missions in general... The European Parliament loses credibility with statements ignoring the reality of the situation in the country. A handful of MEPs are endangering the European Parliament's reputation in fighting for human rights, democracy and rule of law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Reactions, International scandal\nEuropean Stability Initiative (ESI) think tank has published a detailed report on observation missions participating in Azerbaijani elections 2013 titled \"Disgraced: Azerbaijan and the end of election monitoring as we know it\". The report, which was the third one of its kind on Azerbaijan issued by ESI, highlighted the drawbacks of international short-term observer missions, bringing up facts on that many election observers were either bribed by the Azerbaijani government or had some other vested interest in praising the fraudulent elections. Other attempts to investigate the sources of funding of the organizations that observed the elections in Azerbaijan, have proved to be futile, which further reinforced the suspicion that their \"experts\" were funded by Azerbaijan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231973-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Azerbaijani presidential election, Aftermath\nOn 12 October around 4,000 people protested against the election results. About ten protesters were arrested, while others were beaten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231974-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 B.G. Sports Club season\nThe 2013 season is B.G. Sports Club's 1st season in the Dhivehi League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231974-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 B.G. Sports Club season, Month by Month review, November\nBG completed their first signing for the upcoming 2013 Dhivehi League season, Mohamed Shaffaz of Victory Sports Club for one year. BG also completed the signing of VB Addu FC's defenders Ahmed Ashfan, Faruhad Ismail and Club Eagles' striker Ahmed Rilwan and goalkeeper Mohamed Yamaan. Maldives national football team player Ashad Ali, who signed to New Radiant from VB Addu FC for the 2013 season was also released to BG under his request to the New Radiant management. He signed a one-year deal with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231974-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 B.G. Sports Club season, Month by Month review, December\nBG agreed to sell Maldives national under-23 football team defender Ahmed Nooman to Club Eagles. BG started strengthening their team by signing New Radiant young striker Mohamed Imran and midfielder Mohamed Hussain, VB Addu FC's Adam Fazeeh, Victory's defender Ibrahim Sinaz and Valencia goalkeeper Ibrahim Ifrah Areef. Moreover, Vyansa's Ahmed Zaad and Mazhar Abdulla also completed their signing to BG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231974-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 B.G. Sports Club season, Month by Month review, January\nBG confirmed that Mohamed Shaazly will continue coaching to the club, and appointed Victory's former player and Club Eagles' former assistant coach Ismail Anil as the assistant coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231975-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BB&T Atlanta Open\nThe 2013 BB&T Atlanta Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament, which was part of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at Atlantic Station in Atlanta, United States between 20 and 28 July 2013. It was the men's first event of the 2013 US Open Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231975-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BB&T Atlanta Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231975-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BB&T Atlanta Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231976-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Doubles\nMatthew Ebden and Ryan Harrison were the defending champions, but Ebden decided not to participate. Harrison played alongside his brother Christian Harrison, but lost in the first round to Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo. \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin and Igor Sijsling won the title, defeating Colin Fleming and Jonathan Marray in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231977-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Singles\nAndy Roddick did not defend his title as he had retired from professional tennis in September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231977-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Singles\nJohn Isner won the title after two previous final appearances, defeating Kevin Anderson in the final, 6\u20137(3\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20132), 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231977-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BB&T Atlanta Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award\nThe 2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award was presented on 15 December from the First Direct Arena in Leeds. It was the 60th presentation of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award. Awarded annually by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), the main titular award honours an individual's British sporting achievement over the past year, with the winner selected by public vote from a ten-person shortlist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award\nThe event was presented by Gary Lineker, Clare Balding and Gabby Logan with musical performances from John Newman and Russell Watson. Sue Barker decided to step down as a presenter after 19 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award\nThe winner of the main award was tennis player Andy Murray. Former Manchester United manager, Sir Alex Ferguson won the special BBC Sports Personality Diamond Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, Basis of nominations\nPrior to 2012, a panel of thirty sports journalists each submit a list of ten contenders. From these contenders a shortlist of ten nominees is determined\u2014currently, in the event of a tie at the end of the nomination process, a panel of six former award winners determined the nominee by a Borda count. The shortlist was announced at the beginning of December, and the winner was determined on the night of the ceremony by a public telephone vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, Basis of nominations\nIn 2011 the shortlist produced only contained male competitors, which caused media uproar. The selection process for contenders was changed for the 2012 (and future) awards as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, Basis of nominations\nThe BBC introduced an expert panel who were asked to devise a shortlist that reflected UK sporting achievements on the national and/or international stage, represented the breadth and depth of UK sports and took into account \"impact\" within and beyond the sport or sporting achievement in question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, Nominees\nThe nominees for the 2013 award and their share of the votes cast were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231978-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, Other awards\nIn addition to the main award as \"Sports Personality of the Year\", several other awards were also announced:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231979-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BBL Champions Cup\nThe 2013 BBL Champions Cup was the eighth edition of the super cup game in German basketball, and was played on September 28, 2013. The game was played in the O2 World in Berlin. Defending Basketball Bundesliga champions Brose Baskets took on BBL-Pokal winners Alba Berlin. Brose Baskets' Rakim Sanders was top scorer in the game, with 19 points. Alba Berlin won its first ever Champions Cup after winning the game 78\u201379.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231980-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BBL-Pokal\nThe 2013 BBL-Pokal \u2013 officially named 2013 Beko BBL-Pokal because of sponsorship reasons \u2013 was the 46th season of the German Basketball Cup. It was the 4th season as the League Cup for the BBL. The Final Four was held at the O2 World in Berlin, which gained ALBA Berlin automatic qualification for the tournament. The other 6 participating teams were selected through the standings of the first half of the 2012\u201313 Basketball Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231980-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BBL-Pokal\nHome team ALBA Berlin won the BBL-Pokal, by beating ratiopharm Ulm 85\u201367 in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231980-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BBL-Pokal, Participants\nThe following six teams qualified based on their standings in the 2012\u201313 Basketball Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231980-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BBL-Pokal, Participants\nALBA Berlin was qualified because the Final Four was played at their home court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231981-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BBVA Compass Bowl\nThe 2013 BBVA Compass Bowl, the seventh edition of the game, was a post-season American college football bowl game, held on January 5, 2013 at Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama as part of the 2012\u201313 NCAA Bowl season. The game, which was telecasted at 12:00 p.m. CT on ESPN, featured the University of Pittsburgh Panthers of the Big East Conference versus the University of Mississippi Rebels of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231981-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 BBVA Compass Bowl\nThis was Pittsburgh's third consecutive appearance in the game, as well as its final game as a member of the Big East before they join the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2013. The announced attendance for the game was a BBVA Compass Bowl record 59,135, eclipsing the previous attendance record of 42,610 in the 2010 edition. The University of Mississippi defeated the University of Pittsburgh 38\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231982-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BC Lions season\nThe 2013 BC Lions season was the 56th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 60th overall. On September 27, the Lions defeated the Winnipeg Blue Bombers to clinch a playoff spot for the 17th straight season, tying the mark for the third longest playoff streak in CFL history. The Lions finished the season in 3rd place in the West Division with an 11\u20137 record, but lost to the Saskatchewan Roughriders in the West Semi-Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231982-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BC Lions season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2013 CFL Draft took place on May 6, 2013. The Lions had seven selections in the draft, including three positions higher in rounds two and three after completing trades with Edmonton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231982-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BC Lions season, Team, Roster\nItalics indicate import players. updated 2013-12-16 \u2022 46 active, 8 inactive, 8 practice roster", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game\nThe 2013 Discover BCS National Championship Game was a postseason college football bowl game that took place on Monday, January 7, 2013, at Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida. It featured the No. 1 ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish and No. 2 Alabama Crimson Tide. The Alabama Crimson Tide defeated the Notre Dame Fighting Irish 42\u201314 for the national championship and took home the Championship Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game\nAlabama was the defending champion and represented the Southeastern Conference, which had participated in and emerged victorious from every standalone BCS Championship Game (since the format was introduced in the 2006\u20132007 season). Notre Dame did not belong to a conference and was the first independent team to play in the National Championship game since the start of the BCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game\nThe National Championship game between Alabama and Notre Dame was anticipated as an historical matchup with a rich tradition in college football. Going into the holiday season after Alabama was assured a spot in the National Championship after beating Georgia in the SEC Championship, sportscasters from both sides weighed in on who was most likely to win. Despite the historical record of, at the time, 5\u20131 in favor of Notre Dame many sports betting centers had Alabama as a heavy favorite with point spreads favoring Alabama as high as ten points over Notre Dame. Many prominent sports writers predicted Notre Dame to win based on several factors including strong overall defense, an inconsistent Alabama team (often cited as being \"exposed\" against LSU and Texas A&M), and various intangibles such as destiny and generalized fatigue from the dominant performances of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 934]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game\nIn the aftermath of an Alabama 42 to 14 victory (with the score being 35 to 0 at one point in the game), the BCS National Championship game was considered by Sports Illustrated's Michael Rosenberg to have failed to live up to its hype despite dominating television ratings. Mark Schlabach of ESPN expressed the wish that a playoff system had been in place wherein Oregon or Florida would have played against Alabama. Tom Coyne of Associated Press concluded that Alabama was more talented and physical with better preparation and execution of its game plan than Notre Dame. Specifically, inconsistent tackling, blown coverages, and porous defense were cited by Aaron Ellis of Forbes.com as major detriments to Notre Dame's efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game\nWith the win, Alabama won their second straight BCS championship, their third championship in four years, and their ninth AP championship overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game, Point spread\nWhile Notre Dame came into the game undefeated and ranked No. 1 in the country, as of January 3, 2013, the point spread on the game according to leading Las Vegas casinos projected Alabama to win by between 9.5 and 10 points. Two billion dollars were expected to be wagered on the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game, Teams\nIt was the seventh meeting between Alabama and Notre Dame, but the teams' first since 1987. Heading into the game, Notre Dame led the series 5-1-0, which included two bowl victories. The two teams first met in the 1973 Sugar Bowl, with the Irish defeating the Crimson Tide, 24\u201323. Following the game, Notre Dame was voted national champions by the Associated Press while Alabama had been declared the champion by UPI in a poll taken prior to this Sugar Bowl contest, the last time the final U.P.I./Coaches poll was announced before the bowl games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game, Teams, Alabama\nDuring the regular season, Alabama led the nation in total defense, giving up 246.00 yards per game, and in rushing defense by allowing 79.77 yards per game. The team also led the SEC in scoring defense (10.7 points per game) and rushing defense (79.9 yards per game), was second in scoring offense (38.5 points per game) and rushing offense (224.62 yards per game).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game, Teams, Alabama\nKey players for the Crimson Tide were quarterback A. J. McCarron, who led the nation in passing efficiency with a 173.08 rating; cornerback Dee Milliner, a Nagurski Award finalist; linebacker C.J. Mosley, a finalist in the Butkus Award; and center Barrett Jones, the National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete/William V. Campbell Trophy recipient and the Rimington Trophy winner. McCarron gained 5,655 yards for Alabama, which include 5,692 passing yards and losing 37 rushing yards. Alabama averaged 224.6 rushing yards per game without allowing a sack all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game, Teams, Notre Dame\nDuring the regular season, Notre Dame was the national leader in scoring defense (10.3 points per game) and sixth in total defense (286.83 yards per game).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game, Teams, Notre Dame\nKey players for the Fighting Irish were freshman quarterback Everett Golson, who passed for 2,135 yards for 11 touchdowns and rushed for 305 yards for five touchdowns; senior linebacker and Heisman trophy finalist Manti Te'o, who had 103 tackles and seven interceptions, his third-straight 100-plus tackle season for a career 427 tackles; defensive end Stephon Tuitt, who ranked seventh with others in sacks/game (1.00) and needed two sacks to become the school's single-season record holder; guard Mike Golic Jr., who helped the team averaging more than 200 yards per game in both passing and rushing; and tight end Tyler Eifert, the John Mackey Award winner who caught 44 passes for 624 yards and four touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231983-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 BCS National Championship Game, Starting lineups\nSelected in an NFL Draft (number corresponds to draft round)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship\nThe 2013 Lakeside World Professional Darts Championship was the 36th World Championship organised by the British Darts Organisation, and the 28th staging at the Lakeside Country Club at Frimley Green. Christian Kist was the defending men's champion, having won the title for the first time in 2012, but was knocked out in the first round against Robbie Green. Scott Waites, the third seed and pre-tournament favourite, won his first world championship by defeating Tony O'Shea 7\u20131, who became the first man to lose his first three BDO World Championship finals. Anastasia Dobromyslova defended her world title by defeating Lisa Ashton & in doing so, won the world championship for the 3rd time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship\nPlayers from around the globe competed to reach the BBC and ESPN televised finals, which ran from 5 to 13 January at Frimley Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, Format and qualifiers, Men's\nThe televised stages featured 32 players. The top 16 players in the BDO rankings over the 2011/12 season were seeded for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, Format and qualifiers, Women's\nThe televised stages featured 8 players. The top 2 players in the WDF/BDO rankings over the 2011/12 season were seeded for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, Prize money\nThe prize money was \u00a3258,000 for the men's event and \u00a316,000 for the women's event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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 \u00a33,000 per event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, Results bracket, Men's\nThe draw for the tournament was made on 13 October 2012 live on ESPN. Final set of the game must be won by two clear legs, in case of a 5-5 a sudden-death leg is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, TV coverage, BBC Sport\nBBC Sport coverage is presented by Colin Murray and Bobby George who will present live coverage and highlights. Rob Walker returns as Darts Extra host and reporter during the live coverage. Commentary comes from Tony Green, Vassos Alexander and Jim Proudfoot who replaces David Croft who moved to Sky F1 for 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, TV coverage, ESPN UK\nESPN coverage is presented by Ray Stubbs who returns to host his 11th Lakeside after previously hosting from 2001 to 2009 on the BBC. He will host with BDO players; Nat Coombs will be relief host and reporter. Commentary is shared with the BBC and comes from Green, Alexander and Proudfoot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, TV coverage, ESPN UK\nBoth channels coverage comes from IMG Sports Media who provide the equipment, build the set, commentary boxes etc. and supply the output for both broadcasters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, Statistics, Men\nLast updated: 12 January 2013Source: Match reports from the main draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231984-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 BDO World Darts Championship, Statistics, Women\nLast updated: 13 January 2013Source: Match reports from the main draw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231985-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BEC Tero Sasana F.C. season\nThe 2013 season is BEC Tero Sasana's 17th season in the Thai Premier League of BEC Tero Sasana Football Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231986-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BFL season\nThe 2013 season of the Belgian Football League (BFL) is the regular season played in the Belgium. The championship game is the Belgian Bowl XXVI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231986-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00231987-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BGL Luxembourg Open\nThe 2013 BGL Luxembourg Open was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts sponsored by BNP Paribas. It was the 18th edition of the BGL Luxembourg Open, and part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It was held in Kockelscheuer, Luxembourg from 14 October until 20 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231987-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BGL Luxembourg Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231987-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BGL Luxembourg Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231988-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BGL Luxembourg Open \u2013 Doubles\nAndrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 were the defending champions, but chose not to participate. Stephanie Vogt and Yanina Wickmayer won the title, defeating Kristina Barrois and Laura Thorpe in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231989-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BGL Luxembourg Open \u2013 Singles\nVenus Williams was the defending champion, but decided not to participate. Caroline Wozniacki won the title, defeating Annika Beck in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231990-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BH Telecom Indoors\nThe 2013 BH Telecom Indoors was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina between 11 and 17 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231990-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BH Telecom Indoors, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231990-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BH Telecom Indoors, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231991-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BH Telecom Indoors \u2013 Doubles\nDustin Brown and Jonathan Marray were the defending champions but Marray decided not to participate. Brown played alongside Christopher Kas, but lost in the quarterfinals to Mirza Ba\u0161i\u0107 and Tomislav Brki\u0107. Ba\u0161i\u0107 and Brki\u0107 defeated Karol Beck and Igor Zelenay 6\u20133, 7\u20135 in the final to continue their run as a wildcard pair, to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231992-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BH Telecom Indoors \u2013 Singles\nJan Hernych was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Pierre-Hugues Herbert. Adrian Mannarino defeated Dustin Brown 7\u20136(7\u20133), 7\u20136(7\u20132) in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231993-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BL76\n2013 BL76 is a trans-Neptunian object and centaur from the scattered disk and Inner Oort cloud approximately 30 kilometers in diameter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231993-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BL76\nUsing an epoch of February 2017, it is the minor planet with the 5th largest heliocentric semi-major axis in the Solar System (larger ones include 2014 FE72, 2012 DR30, and 2005 VX3). 2013 BL76 has a barycentric semi-major axis of ~964\u00a0AU, which is the third largest barycentric semi-major axis of any minor planet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231993-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BL76, Possible comet\nWith an absolute magnitude (H) of 10.8 and an unknown albedo, the object has an estimated diameter of 15\u201340\u00a0km. Since it has not been seen out-gassing, it is not known if it is a comet or not. It might also be a damocloid, a type of minor planet that was originally a comet but lost most of its near-surface volatile materials after numerous orbits around the Sun. It also might be a dormant comet that simply has not been seen outgassing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 25], "content_span": [26, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231993-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BL76, Orbit\n2013 BL76 came to perihelion 8.3\u00a0AU from the Sun on 27 October 2012, when it reached an apparent magnitude of about 20. In 1927, when it was 100\u00a0AU from the Sun, it had an apparent magnitude of about 30.8. For comparison dwarf planet 90377 Sedna had an apparent magnitude of 21.7 when it was 100\u00a0AU from the Sun. It comes to opposition at the start of September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231993-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 BL76, Orbit\nIt will not be 50\u00a0AU from the Sun until 2045. After leaving the planetary region of the Solar System, 2013 BL76 will have a barycentric aphelion of 1920\u00a0AU with an orbital period of 29900 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231993-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 BL76, Orbit\nThe orbit of 2013 BL76 currently comes closer to Saturn than any of the other giant planets. In a 10 million year integration of the orbit, the nominal (best-fit) orbit acquires a perihelion point of 0.5\u00a0AU (inside the orbit of Venus), and one of the 3-sigma clones acquires a perihelion point of only 0.008\u00a0AU (1,200,000\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231993-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 BL76, Orbit\n2013 BL76 travels in a technically retrograde orbit around the Sun. It is actually orbiting in a plane nearly perpendicular to that of the ecliptic. It has the 55th highest inclination of any known asteroid, after 2010 GW147 and before 2014 HS150.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231994-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BMC Racing Team season\nThe 2013 season for the BMC Racing Team began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231995-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BMW Open\nThe 2013 BMW Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 98th edition of the event, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the MTTC Iphitos complex in Munich, Germany, from 29 April through 5 May 2013. Third-seeded Tommy Haas won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231995-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BMW Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231996-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BMW Open \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek were the defending champions, but decided not to participate together. \u010cermak played alongside Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k, but lost in the first round to Marcos Baghdatis and Eric Butorac, while Pol\u00e1\u0161ek teamed up with Julian Knowle and lost in the semifinals to Jarkko Nieminen and Dmitry Tursunov. Nieminen and Tursunov went on to win the title, defeating Baghdatis and Butorac in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231997-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BMW Open \u2013 Singles\nPhilipp Kohlschreiber was the defending champion but lost in the final to Tommy Haas, 3\u20136, 6\u20137(3\u20137).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231997-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BMW Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231998-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BMW PGA Championship\nThe 2013 BMW PGA Championship was the 59th edition of the BMW PGA Championship, an annual golf tournament on the European Tour, contested 23\u201326 May at Wentworth Club in Surrey, England. Matteo Manassero of Italy won the tournament on the fourth hole of a sudden-death playoff with Simon Khan and Marc Warren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231999-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Katowice Open\nThe 2013 BNP Paribas Katowice Open was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor clay courts. It was the 1st edition of the BNP Paribas Katowice Open, in the International category of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at Spodek arena in Katowice, Poland, from April 8 through April 14, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231999-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Katowice Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00231999-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Katowice Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232000-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Katowice Open \u2013 Doubles\nLara Arruabarrena and Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino won the first edition of the tournament, defeating Raluca Olaru and Valeria Solovyeva in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232001-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Katowice Open \u2013 Singles\nRoberta Vinci won the first edition of the tournament, defeating Petra Kvitov\u00e1 in the final, 7-6(2), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232002-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Masters\nThe 2013 BNP Paribas Masters was a professional tennis tournament that was played on indoor hard courts. It was the 41st edition of the tournament, which is part of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris, France, between 28 October and 3 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232002-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Masters, Singles main draw entrants, Singles seeds\nThe following are the seeded players. Ranking and seeding are according to ATP rankings on 21 October 2013. Accumulated points are according to ATP website on 28 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232002-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Masters, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232002-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Masters, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232003-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Rohan Bopanna were the defending champions, but Bhupathi decided not to participate. Bopanna played alongside \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232003-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won the title for a third time, defeating Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232004-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Singles\nNovak Djokovic defeated the defending champion David Ferrer in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20135, to win the Singles title at the 2013 Paris Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232005-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open\nThe 2013 BNP Paribas Open (also known as the 2013 Indian Wells Masters) was a professional tennis tournament that was played at Indian Wells, California, in March 2013. It was the 40th edition of the men's event (25th for the women), known as the BNP Paribas Open, and was classified as an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2013 ATP World Tour and a Premier Mandatory event on the 2013 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, United States, from March 7 through March 17, 2013, and were played on outdoor hard courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232005-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open, Points and prize money, Prize money\nThe 2013 BNP Paribas Open will feature a significant increase in prize money from the previous year, with all players competing for a share of $5,244,125. All prize money is in US Dollars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232005-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open, Players, Men's Singles, Other entrants\nThe following players got wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232005-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open, Players, Men's Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232005-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open, Players, Women's Singles, Other entrants\nThe following players got wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232005-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open, Players, Women's Singles, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232005-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open, Players, Women's Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232006-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMarc L\u00f3pez and Rafael Nadal were the defending champions, but Nadal decided not to participate this year. L\u00f3pez played alongside Marcel Granollers, but lost in the second round to Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232006-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan won the title, defeating Treat Conrad Huey and Jerzy Janowicz 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final. With the win, the Bryan brothers became the first team to achieve all nine ATP Masters 1000 events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232007-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRafael Nadal defeated Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134 to win the Men's Singles title at the 2013 Indian Wells Masters. It was Nadal's third singles title at Indian Wells, his record 22nd ATP Masters 1000 title, and his 53rd title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232007-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but lost to Nadal in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232008-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions but chose not to play together. Huber partnered up with Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ednez S\u00e1nchez, but lost in the first round to Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Anabel Medina Garrigues, whilst Raymond played alongside Samantha Stosur, but lost in the second round to Kimiko Date-Krumm and Casey Dellacqua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232008-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEkaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina won the title, defeating Nadia Petrova and Katarina Srebotnik 6\u20130, 5\u20137, [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232009-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nVictoria Azarenka was the defending champion, but withdrew before her quarterfinal match against Caroline Wozniacki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232009-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nMaria Sharapova won her second Indian Wells title, defeating Wozniacki in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232010-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux\nThe 2013 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bordeaux, France between 13 and 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232010-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232010-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232010-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232011-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux \u2013 Doubles\nThe defending champions are Martin Kli\u017ean and Igor Zelenay, but Kli\u017ean decided to compete in the 2013 Internazionali BNL d'Italia instead. Christopher Kas and Oliver Marach defeated Nicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler 2\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20131] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232012-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BNP Paribas Primrose Bordeaux \u2013 Singles\nMartin Kli\u017ean is the defending champion, but decided to compete in the 2013 Internazionali BNL d'Italia instead. Ga\u00ebl Monfils defeated Micha\u00ebl Llodra in the final 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20135) to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232013-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Arad Challenger\nThe 2013 BRD Arad Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Arad, Romania between 3 and 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232013-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Arad Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232013-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Arad Challenger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232014-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Arad Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nNikola Mekti\u0107 and Antonio Vei\u0107 were the defending champions but Mekti\u0107 chose to not competeVei\u0107 chose to compete with Franko \u0160kugor and won the title, defeating Facundo Bagnis and Julio C\u00e9sar Campozano 7\u20136(7\u20135), 4\u20136, [11\u20139] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232015-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Arad Challenger \u2013 Singles\nFacundo Bagnis was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals. Adrian Ungur won the Romanian final against Marius Copil 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232016-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger\nThe 2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger was a professional tennis tournament, played on clay courts, that took place in Bra\u0219ov, Romania from 2 to 8 September, 2013. It was the 18th edition of the BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger tournament and part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232016-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger\nIn singles, Austrian player Andreas Haider-Maurer defeated fellow Austrian Gerald Melzer. In doubles, Ukrainian Aleksandr Nedovyesov and Jaroslav Posp\u00ed\u0161il of the Czech Republic defeated Romanian players Teodor-Dacian Cr\u0103ciun and Petru-Alexandru Luncanu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232016-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232016-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a lucky loser the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232017-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nMarius Copil and Victor Crivoi were the defending champions but Copil decided not to participate. Crivoi played alongside Patrick Ciorcil\u0103, but lost to Jamie Delgado and Jordan Kerr in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232017-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nOleksandr Nedovyesov and Jaroslav Posp\u00ed\u0161il defeated Teodor-Dacian Cr\u0103ciun and Petru-Alexandru Luncanu in the finals 6\u20133, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232018-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Bra\u0219ov Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAndreas Haider-Maurer is the defending champion, and successfully defended his championship by defeating Gerald Melzer in all-Austrian final by a score of 6\u20137(9\u201311), 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232019-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy\nThe 2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts and held in Bucharest, Romania, from 21 to 28 April 2013. It was the 21st edition of the BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy tournament, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. The total financial commitment by this tournament was \u20ac 467,800.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232019-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy\nIt was an anniversary edition of the tournament, celebrating 40 years since Ilie N\u0103stase became the first ever No. 1 player in the ATP Rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232019-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232019-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232020-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy \u2013 Doubles\nRobert Lindstedt and Horia Tec\u0103u were the defending champions, but Lindstedt decided to participate in Barcelona instead. Tec\u0103u successfully defended the title alongside Max Mirnyi, defeating Luk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd and Oliver Marach in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232021-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy \u2013 Singles\nGilles Simon was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Luk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol. Rosol went on to win his first ATP World Tour title of his career, defeating Guillermo Garc\u00eda-L\u00f3pez in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232021-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD N\u0103stase \u021airiac Trophy \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232022-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Timi\u0219oara Challenger\nThe 2013 BRD Timi\u0219oara Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Timi\u0219oara, Romania between 30 June and 9 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232022-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Timi\u0219oara Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232022-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Timi\u0219oara Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232023-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Timi\u0219oara Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nGoran To\u0161i\u0107 and Denis Zivkovic were the defending champions; however, To\u0161i\u0107 did not participate. Zivkovic teamed up with Vahid Mirzadeh and lost to Radu Albot and Victor Crivoi in the Quarterfinals. Jonathan Eysseric and Nicolas Renavand defeated Ilija Vu\u010di\u0107 and Miljan Zeki\u0107 6\u20137(8\u20136), 6\u20132, [10\u20137] in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232024-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRD Timi\u0219oara Challenger \u2013 Singles\nVictor H\u0103nescu was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Andreas Haider-Maurer defeated Rub\u00e9n Ram\u00edrez Hidalgo 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20134 in the final to take the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232025-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BRDC Formula 4 Championship\nThe 2013 BRDC Formula 4 Championship was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across England. The championship features a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers competing in 2 litre Duratec single seat race cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. The 2013 season was the inaugural BRDC Formula 4 Championship organized by the British Racing Drivers' Club in the United Kingdom. The season began at Silverstone Circuit on 27 April and ended on 29 September at Donington Park. The series had eight triple header events all held in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232025-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BRDC Formula 4 Championship\nJake Hughes became the first drivers' champion after taking four race wins. He finished ahead of HHC Motorsport's driver Charlie Robertson, who won in Brands Hatch and Donington Park. Hillspeed's driver Seb Morris completed the top three in the drivers' standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232025-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BRDC Formula 4 Championship, Calendar and results\nThe Brands Hatch (18\u201319 May) and Snetterton (15\u201316 June) weekends were in support of the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters and British GT respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232025-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BRDC Formula 4 Championship, Standings, \"Who zooms\" award\nThis award was for the driver who made the most passes over the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232026-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BS45\n2013 BS45 (also written 2013 BS45) is a horseshoe companion to the Earth like 3753 Cruithne. Like Cruithne, it does not orbit the Earth in the normal sense and at times it is on the other side of the Sun, yet it still periodically comes nearer to the Earth in sort of halo orbit before again drifting away. While not a traditional natural satellite, it does not quite have normal heliocentric orbit either and these are sometimes called quasi-satellties or horseshoe orbits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232026-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BS45, Discovery, orbit and physical properties\n2013 BS45 was discovered by James V. Scotti on 20 January 2013, observing for the Spacewatch project from Kitt Peak (KPNO). Its orbit is characterized by low eccentricity (0.084), low inclination (0.77\u00ba) and a semi-major axis of 0.993\u00a0AU; it is the most Earth-like among those of asteroids moving in Earth-like orbits. Upon discovery, it was classified as an Aten asteroid but also an Earth crosser by the Minor Planet Center. Its orbit is well determined; as of 26 August 2015, its orbit is based on 96 observations spanning a data-arc of 375 days. 2013 BS45 has an absolute magnitude of 25.9 which gives a characteristic diameter of 30\u00a0m. Radar observations indicate that it may be a very rapid rotator with a period of just a few minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232026-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BS45, Horseshoe companion to the Earth and orbital evolution\nRecent calculations indicate that it follows a horseshoe orbit with respect to the Earth. Its orbital evolution is highly chaotic and its orbit is difficult to predict beyond a few thousand years. As for the available data, it had its closest encounter ever with Earth on 12 February 2013 at 0.013\u00a0AU, closer than in 1934, the previously closest approach at 0.014\u00a0AU. The next approach closer than 0.020\u00a0AU will take place on 2 September 2090 at 0.016\u00a0AU. Its orbit matches the expected properties of that of an object in the Arjuna class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 65], "content_span": [66, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232026-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BS45, Origin\n2013 BS45 may have originated within the Venus-Earth-Mars region; alternatively, it may have come from the main asteroid belt like other Near-Earth Objects, then transitioned to an Amor-class asteroid before entering Earth's co-orbital region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 17], "content_span": [18, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232027-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BSWW Mundialito\nThe 2013 BSWW Mundialito was a beach soccer tournament that took place at Praia de Canide Norte in Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal, from 26 July to 28 July 2013. This competition with 4 teams was played in a round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232028-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix\nThe 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix is the seventh season of the BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232028-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix, Results, Performance by countries\nTabulated below are the Grand Prix performances based on countries. Only countries who have won a title are listed:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232029-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships\nThe 2013 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships were held from 5 to 10 November 2013 in Dortmund, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232030-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF Super Series\nThe 2013 BWF Super Series is the seventh season of the BWF Super Series. The season started with Premier series in Korea and ended in Hong Kong. The Masters Finals was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232030-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF Super Series, Results, Performance by countries\nTabulated below are the Super Series performances based on countries. Only countries who have won a title are listed:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232031-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF Super Series Finals\nThe 2013 BWF Super Series Finals was a top level badminton competition which was held from December 11 to December 15, 2013 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The final was held by Badminton Association of Malaysia and sponsored by Malaysia. It was the final event of the BWF Super Series competition on the 2013 BWF Super Series schedule. The total purse for the event was $500,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232031-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF Super Series Finals, Representatives by nation\n\u00a7: Christinna Pedersen from Denmark, Pia Zebadiah Bernadeth from Indonesia and Ma Jin from China were the players who played in two categories (women's doubles and mixed doubles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232032-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships\nThe 2013 BWF World Championships were held on 5\u201311 August 2013 at the Tianhe Sports Center in Guangzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232032-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships, Host city selection\nCopenhagen, Guangzhou, and Macau submitted bids for this edition of championships. On 9 December 2011, Badminton World Federation decided to award the championships to Guangzhou during a meeting in Queenstown, New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232032-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships, Draw\nThe draw was held on 22 July at Guangzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232032-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships, Schedule\nAll five events started on the first day and concluded with the final on the last day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232032-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships, Participating countries\n345 players from 49 countries participated at this year's edition. The number in parentheses indicate the player contributed by each country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232033-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's doubles\nThe Men's Doubles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Championships was held from August 5\u201311. Cai Yun and Fu Haifeng were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232033-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's doubles\nIndonesians Mohammad Ahsan and Hendra Setiawan defeated Danes Mathias Boe and Carsten Mogensen 21\u201313, 23\u201321 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232033-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World 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-00232034-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's singles\nThe Men's Singles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Championships was held from August 5\u201311. Lin Dan was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232034-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Men's singles\nLin Dan defeated Lee Chong Wei 16\u201321, 21\u201313, 20\u201317r in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232034-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World 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-00232035-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nThe Mixed Doubles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Championships was held from August 5\u201311. Zhang Nan and Zhao Yunlei were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232035-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nTontowi Ahmad and Lilyana Natsir defeated Xu Chen and Ma Jin 21\u201313, 16\u201321, 22\u201320 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232035-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World 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-00232036-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Women's doubles\nThe Women's Doubles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Championships was held from August 5\u201311. Wang Xiaoli and Yu Yang were the defending champions. Wang Xiaoli and Yu Yang defeated Eom Hye-won and Jang Ye-na 21\u201314, 18\u201321, 21\u20138 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232036-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World 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-00232037-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Championships \u2013 Women's singles\nThe Women's Singles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Championships was held from August 5\u201311. Wang Yihan was the defending champion. Ratchanok Inthanon defeated Li Xuerui 22\u201320, 18\u201321, 21\u201314 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232037-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World 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-00232038-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships\nThe 2013 BWF World Junior Championships were held in Bangkok, Thailand from October 23 to November 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232039-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys doubles\nThe Boys Doubles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships was held from October 29 until November 3. Last year tournament won by Hong Kong pair Lee Chun Hei and Ng Ka Long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232039-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys doubles\nIn the all-Chinese final this year, Li Junhui and Liu Yuchen took the gold medal after beating their compatriots Huang Kaixiang and Zheng Siwei 14-21, 21-13, 22-20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232040-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys singles\nThe Boys Singles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships was held from October 29 until November 3. Last year champion, Kento Momota couldn't defend his title due to the age eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232040-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Boys singles\nSouth Korean Heo Kwang-hee won the gold medal after beating Wang Tzu-wei from Chinese Taipei 21-11, 21-12 in the final. It was first boys single gold medal for South Korea after 7 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232041-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls doubles\nThe Girls Doubles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships was held from October 29 until November 3. South Korean pair Lee So-hee and Shin Seung-chan won the tournament for the last 2 editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232041-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls doubles\nSouth Korea continued their domination in girls doubles after Chae Yoo-jung and Kim Ji-won won the final match 21\u201319, 21\u201315 against Chen Qingchen her partner He Jiaxin from China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232042-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls singles\nThe Girls Singles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships was held from October 29 until November 3. The winner of last edition was Nozomi Okuhara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232042-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Girls singles\nAkane Yamaguchi who lost in the final last year, made a redemption this year, after beating her compatriot Aya Ohori in the all-Japanese final 21-11, 21-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232043-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nThe Mixed Doubles tournament of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships was held from October 29 until November 3. Edi Subaktiar and Melati Daeva Oktaviani from Indonesia won the tournament last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232043-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Mixed doubles\nThis year, Chinese pair Huang Kaixiang / Chen Qingchen took the gold medal, beating The Indonesian's Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo and Masita Mahmudin by 21-18, 20-22, 23-21 in the thriller and classic final match that ended after about an hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232044-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Team event group stage\nThis article lists the complete results of the group stage of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event in Bangkok, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232045-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Team event knockout stage\nThis article lists the complete results of the knock out stage of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event in Bangkok, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232046-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Team event play offs stage\nThis article lists the complete results of the play offs stage of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event in Bangkok, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232047-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event\nThe Team event tournament of the 2013 BWF World Junior Championships was the fifteenth tournament of the BWF World Junior Championships. It was held from October 23\u201327, 2013 in Bangkok, Thailand. According to the Badminton World Federation (BWF) 32 teams have confirmed their participation. The winner of the tournament would have Suhandinata Cup for about a year until the next BWF World Junior Championships Team Event is held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232047-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF World Junior Championships \u2013 Teams event, Seedings\nThe seedings for teams competing in the tournament were released on October 11, 2013. It was based on aggregated points from the best players in the world junior ranking. The tournament was divided into four groups, with China and South Korea were the two top seeds, and 2 teams (Indonesia and Japan) in the seeded 3-4 were also put into the same group. another 4 teams were put in the second groups. Eight teams (seeded 9-16) were seeded into third groups and the last sixteen teams were seeded into last groups. The draw was held on the same day in Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232048-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF season\nThe 2013 BWF Season was the overall badminton circuit organized by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) for the 2013 badminton season to publish and promote the sport. Besides the BWF World Championships, BWF promotes the sport of badminton through an extensive worldwide programme of events in four structure levels. They were the individual tournaments called Super Series, Grand Prix Events, International Challenge and International Series. Besides the individual tournaments, team events such as Thomas Cup & Uber Cup and Sudirman Cup are held every other year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232048-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF season\nThe 2013 BWF season calendar comprised the World Championships tournaments, the Sudirman Cup, the BWF Super Series (Super Series, Super Series Premier, Super Series Finals), the Grand Prix (Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix), the International Series (International Series and International Challenge), and Future Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232048-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BWF season, Schedule\nThis is the complete schedule of events on the 2013 calendar, with the Champions and Runners-up documented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232049-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars baseball team\nThe 2013 BYU Cougars baseball team represented Brigham Young University in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. Mike Littlewood was in his 1st season as head coach of the Cougars. BYU's baseball team came off a 2012 season in which they were 22\u201327. The Cougars played their home games at Larry H. Miller Field, part of the Miller Park Baseball/ Softball Complex. Picked to finish sixth in the WCC, BYU stunned most people and finished in a 3-way tie for second place. The Cougars won the #3 seed in the WCC Tournament where they knocked out #1-seed Gonzaga. BYU lost twice to eventual tournament champion San Diego to finish the season 32\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232049-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars baseball team, TV & Radio Information\nAll conference games, most home games, and select road games (at Utah, UNLV, and Utah Valley) were broadcast on KOVO with Brent Norton (play-by-play) calling the games for his 24th consecutive season. A rotating selection of analysts was used. Jeff Bills acted as analyst for games in California, Nevada, & Utah while Gary Pullins called the games in Oregon & Washington. Pullins was used as the sole analyst for the WCC Tournament. Many of these broadcasts were also broadcast on BYU Radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232049-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars baseball team, TV & Radio Information\nBYUtv broadcast 9 home games (Mar. 21 vs. Kansas, Mar. 29 vs. Pepperdine, Apr. 2 vs. Utah Valley, Apr. 12 vs. Portland, May 10\u201311 vs. San Francisco, and May 16\u201318 vs. Saint Mary's). BYUtv used a broadcast team of Robbie Bullough as play-by-play man on weekday games, Dave McCann as play-by-play man on Saturday's, and Gary Sheide as the analyst. The WCC Tournament games were broadcast on with a team of Andy Masur (play-by-play), Keith Ramsey (analyst), and (reporter).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232049-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars baseball team, Post-season awards\n4 BYU Cougars- Jaycob Brugman, Jacob Hanneman, Adam Law, and Brock Whitney were selected to the 2013 All-Conference Baseball Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232049-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars baseball team, Post-season awards\n4 members of the 2013 BYU Cougars baseball team, and 1 incoming Junior College Player, were drafted in the 2013 Major League Baseball draft. NCAA Rules allow players drafted to return as long as they don't sign a contract with the team that has drafted them. Should they do so, they will be eligible to be drafted again next season as rights last only for 1 year for members who don't sign a contract with the team who drafts them. All the drafted Cougar players would sign the contracts and go professional instead of returning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team\nThe 2013 BYU Cougars football team represented Brigham Young University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Cougars, led by head coach Bronco Mendenhall, played their home games at LaVell Edwards Stadium. This was the third year BYU competed as an independent. They finished the season 8\u20135. They were invited to the Fight Hunger Bowl where they lost to Washington, 31\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nAfter the 2012 Poinsettia Bowl, longtime assistant coach Lance Reynolds announced his retirement after 33 years of service at BYU (29 years as a coach and 4 years as a player). To fill the vacancy, BYU looked to an old face. Longtime assistant Robert Anae was brought back from the University of Arizona as the new offensive coordinator. In addition to his position as the offensive coordinator, Anae was given the responsibility of helping Bronco evaluate the entire offensive staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nOn January 8, Mark Weber left BYU for Utah State after six years with the Cougars. Weber was hired by the Aggies as the new assistant head coach and as the offensive line coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nOn Monday, January 14, Coach Mendenhall informed running backs coach and recruiting coordinator Joe DuPaix and tight ends Coach Ben Cahoon that their contracts would not be renewed for the 2013 season. It was also revealed that Brandon Doman's status with the university was uncertain for 2013. BYU announced they had interviewed Max Hall, Paul Peterson (Sacramento State offensive coordinator), and Steve Clark (Southern Utah offensive coordinator) for the position of quarterback coach for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nOn Tuesday, January 15, BYU announced that two coaches had been hired as part of the new offensive staff for the 2013 season. Garett Tujague was hired and Mark Atuaia was moved from the athletic director's office as the assistant to the AD over to the football coaching staff. BYU's official press release said that positions wouldn't be announced until the staff was finalized, but common rumors stated that Tujague would become the offensive lines coach and Atuaia would become the running backs coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nOn Wednesday, January 16, BYU announced that Aaron Roderick had been hired as an assistant coach on the offensive side at BYU. Roderick was to join the Cougars after 8 years of service at Utah, and it was believed that he would serve as the receivers coach. Less than 24 hours after accepting the position at BYU, Roderick changed his mind and decided to return to the Utes for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nThe final coaching staff members were announced on Friday, February 15. Jason Beck was hired as the quarterback coach and Guy Holliday was hired as the wide receiver coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nOn February 28, Bronco Mendenhall announced that Nick Howell had been promoted to the defensive coordinator position, Robert Anae was assistant head coach, and Kelly Popinga would serve as special teams coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, 2013 recruits\nDeBeikes, England, Laulu-Pututau, Shumway, and Tapusoa served church missions right after graduation and did not join the BYU team until the 2015 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, 2013 returning missionaries\nEight return missionaries, 4 on the offensive side and 4 on the defensive side, returned and played their first action with BYU during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, 2013 departures\nThe following Cougars graduated, transferred, or chose to serve two-year church missions after the 2012 season and didn't return to the team in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Before the season, Spring Game\nThe annual Spring Game was held on Saturday, March 30, 2013. Instead of doing a traditional 20-minute scrimmage with 5 minutes per quarter, the Cougars held a 50-play scrimmage that became more of a 75-play scrimmage. More than 12,000 fans turned out to see the first team offense and second team defense (titled BYU West) take on the second team offense and first team defense (BYU East). Several expected starters, including QB Taysom Hill, who had not been cleared for full contact, were held out of the scrimmage. The offense scored four touchdowns and added one field goal in a 15\u201313 victory by the West team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Media, 2013 Media Day\nFootball Media Day was held on Wednesday, June 26, at 10 AM MDT. BYU announced a 2-for-1 series with USC scheduled to begin in 2019, a 2015 affiliation with the Poinsettia Bowl, and the 3-year extension of head coach Bronco Mendenhall, pushing his contract through the 2016 season. New BYUtv Sports reporter Spencer Linton conducted webchats with some of BYU's returning starters, new starters, and head coaches. Trevor Matich returned from ESPN to act as a special analyst alongside BYUtv analysts Blaine Fowler, Jan Jorgensen, and Brian Logan. A TV special titled LaVell Edwards and the BYU Quarterback Factory was also held. Dave McCann acted as the panel host alongside LaVell Edwards, Robbie Bosco, Ty Detmer, Gifford Nielsen, Steve Sarkisian, Gary Sheide, Marc Wilson, Steve Young, Jim McMahon, and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Media, Cougar IMG Sports Network affiliates\nKSL 102.7 FM and 1160 AM- Flagship Station (Salt Lake City/ Provo, UT and ksl.com)BYU Radio- Nationwide (Dish Network 980, Sirius XM 143, and byuradio.org)KIDO- Boise, ID [football only]KTHK- Blackfoot/ Idaho Falls/ Pocatello/ Rexburg, IDKMGR- Manti, UTKSUB- Cedar City, UTKDXU- St. George, UTKSHP- Las Vegas, NV [football only]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Schedule\nBYU faced schools from every BCS conference except the SEC: the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, and the AAC. Additional Top 25 opponents were found in Notre Dame and Boise State as well as traditional rival Utah State. BYU played in the 2013 Fight Hunger Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nBYUtv Panel: Alema Harrington, Brian Logan, David Nixon, and Andy Boyce. Sideline Reporters: Dave McCann and Blaine Fowler", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nBYU and Virginia entered into the game with both teams debuting new offenses and hoping for the best. Bad news occurred for Cougar fans before game time as it was revealed Cody Hoffman had an ankle sprain and would be unable to play. The first quarter saw BYU's total yardage as nearly quadruple that of Virginia's, but neither team was able to score. As the two teams got ready to start the second quarter, lightning struck within 15 miles of the stadium. Both teams were sent to their locker rooms, and a two-hour lightning delay began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nThe lightning also caused havoc with the TV arrangements. ESPNU had another game to start broadcasting at 7 PM, but BYU at Virginia would only be in the second quarter. As a result, ESPN decided to move the entire nation, except for those in the states of Virginia and Utah, to the Washington State/ Auburn ESPNU game while the markets of Utah and Virginia would remain with the BYU/ Virginia game. The game would be made available on ESPN3 for the rest of the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nHowever viewers on DirecTV and Dish Network had no choice but to move to the next game as they couldn't put in territorial restrictions. Dish Network was able to air the remainder of the game on Channel 147, an ESPN alternate station, but DirecTV fans were to go unhappy, unless they had internet access to ESPN3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nThe Cougars were able to strike first in the second quarter, and it provided hope for the Cougars as the Cougars had only lost three times in the Bronco Mendenhall era when BYU scored first. However a 53-yard field goal and a blocked punt gave Virginia the momentum, and they never looked back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nWeather continued to cause problems for BYU and Virginia as the third quarter began. A heavy rain storm began, and while the degrees of heaviness would rotate throughout the remainder of the game, the rain would cause both teams to shift to a ground and pound attack strategy. Virginia would score 12 unanswered points, culminating in a great toe drag by Darius Jennings to give the Cavaliers the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nDespite the toe drag, it would be the Virginia defense that would save the day for the Cavaliers. On a 3rd and 7 Hill threw the ball to sophomore running back Jamaal Williams, but the slickness of the ball and the continual rain caused it to slip from his hands. The ball would land in the hands of Virginia safety Anthony Harris. After a quick lateral Williams was able to bring the Cavs down at BYU's 13 yard line, but one play later Virginia would score the game's final touchdown. The Cougars would complete a 50-yard pass on the last play of the game, but it was too little, too late.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nJamaal Williams led the Cougars with 33 carries for 144 yards. Taysom Hill carried the ball 11 times for 42 yards and a touchdown. He would also throw the ball 13 times for 175 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nBYU owned every statistical category with 187 yards rushing compared to Virginia's 109. They would also out pass Virginia 175 to 114. However Virginia's wise ball control (34:09 to BYU's 25:51) allowed them to control the clock for 3 out of 4 quarters, and in the end it was the ball control, special teams blunders, a safety, and an interception that gave the Cavaliers a narrow 19 to 16 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nDespite the loss, BYU did manage to compile one award for the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Texas\nAt first many fans thought the game would be a repeat of last week as a severe thunderstorm hit Provo at 4 PM. Kickoff was immediately postponed from 5:06 PM as a 55-minute warmup was still required for both teams. Some of the players were able to go to the fans and interact with them before heading back to the locker room during the delay, giving the fans additional motivation. Nearly an hour after the storm hit, a start time of 6:52 was announced, resulting in a 1-hour, 46 minute lightning delay. The rain would continue on and off throughout the rest of the game, but no one expected the performance BYU put up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Texas\nSophomore Quarterback Taysom Hill found lane after lane and was able to dominate the Texas line, setting a BYU record with 15.2 yards per rush, but he wasn't alone. For the second consecutive game Jamaal Williams would go over the century mark, and Paul Lasike would also add 86 rushing yards. It was part of a record performance for BYU- 550 rushing yards, which also became the most rushing yardage Texas has ever given up. For individual totals Hill had 259 yards rushing, the second highest rushing total for a BYU QB, and Williams had 182 yards rushing. Hill's passing yardage was less than impressive (9\u201326 with 129 yards and 1 interception), but with the running lanes throughout BYU was able to dominate and shock the #15 ranked Longhorns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Texas\nAfter the game, BYU swept the FBS Independent Player of the Week Awards and won a lot of other national attention awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Utah\nThe week of the game, BYU linebacker Spencer Hadley was suspended 5 games for an honor code violation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee\nComing into the game, it was bad news for BYU from the start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nBYUtv Panel: Dave McCann, Alema Harrington, Brian Logan, and Blaine Fowler. Sideline Reporter: Spencer Linton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech\nOn Friday it was announced that Spencer Hadley's suspension had been reduced to 3-games, and that he would be eligible to play against the Yellow Jackets if the coach would put him in. The news was only a small spark for the Cougars as they headed into the game. Running back's Jamaal Williams and Algernon Brown would run for their first TD's of the season, and Taysom Hill showed his passing performance against the Aggies wasn't a fluke, hitting Cody Hoffman for a 45-yard touchdown on their first possession of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech\nHill would later add a rushing touchdown of his own. The Cougars got out to an early 24\u201310 lead on the Yellow Jackets, and that lead would not let up. Hadley would play the entire second half, getting some 3rd down conversion sacks and tackles that prevented the Yellow Jackets from rallying. In the end BYU's defense would hold their 12th straight opponent under 21-points, and the Cougars would pick up their 3rd consecutive win. Hill completed 19/27 for 244 yards and a touchdown. Williams carried the ball 17 times for 89 yards while Hill added 15 carried for 87 yards. Hoffman led the Cougars receiving with 99-yards, and Falslev joined him with 69-yards. The Cougars D would score a touchdown for the third-consecutive game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Houston\nA high flying first half led to a number of new records for the BYU football team. The two sets of Cougars combined for 701 yards of offense and 72 points in the first half (456 for BYU, 245 for Houston). With his first reception of the game, Cody Hoffman became the all-time leading receiver in BYU history, surpassing TE Dennis Pitta. With his touchdown reception, Hoffman tied Austin Collie for the most touchdown receptions made by a receiver at BYU. Taysom Hill became the first person to rush for more than 100 yards against Houston this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232050-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 BYU Cougars football team, Game summaries, Houston\nBYU ran a record 115 plays, tying the all-time number of plays run in a FBS game by one-team and shattering their previous record of 95-plays in a game. BYU also made 41-first downs in the game, a new mark for most first downs in a game, and the 76-yard touchdown pass to Daniel Spencer became the most yardage the Cougars have given up in a pass this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232051-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Babao Coal Mine explosions\nThe 2013 Babao Coal Mine explosions occurred in the Babao Coal Mine (\u516b\u5b9d\u7164\u77ff) in Jiangyuan District of the Baishan City, Jilin, China. A total of 53 people lost their lives in the explosions. The Babao Coal Mine is a state-owned colliery under the Tonghua Mining (Group) Co., Ltd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232051-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Babao Coal Mine explosions\nThe first explosion occurred on March 29, 2013 at about 22:36 local time. The explosion caused 36 people dead. 13 people were rescued. The original report of the first explosion was found to have hidden the death of 7 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232051-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Babao Coal Mine explosions\nThe second explosion occurred on April 1, 2013 at about 10:00 local time. Preliminary report said that 6 people died and 11 were missing in the explosion. Later news coverage reported that all the 17 people had died in the explosion. It was reported that the second accident occurred when a rescue team was despatched without waiting for instructions and having a sound plan and should have been preventable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232052-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Babil governorate election\nThe Babil governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232053-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baden Masters\nThe 2013 Baden Masters were held from August 30 to September 1 at the Curling Center Baden Regio in Baden, Switzerland. The event was held in a round robin format, and the purse for the event was CHF 32,500, of which the winner, Brad Gushue, received CHF 11,000. Gushue defeated Thomas Ulsrud with a score of 4\u20133 in the final in an extra end to win his third Baden Masters title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232054-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Badminton Asia Championships\nThe 2013 Badminton Asia Championships was the 33rd edition of the Badminton Asia Championships. It was held in Taipei, Taiwan, from April 16 to April 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre\nThe Baga massacre began on 16 April 2013 in the village of Baga, Nigeria, in Borno State, when as many as 200 civilians were killed, hundreds wounded, and over 2,000 houses and businesses worth millions of Naira were destroyed. Refugees, civilians officials, and human rights organizations accused the Nigerian Military of carrying out the massacre; some military officials blamed the insurgent group Boko Haram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Background\nThousands of people have died in fighting in Nigeria since the beginning of 2009 Boko Haram uprising, which began in northern Nigeria. The leader of the uprising, Mohammed Yusuf, was killed in Maiduguri of Borno State in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Background\nAccording to The New York Times, the Nigerian military has employed \"scorched-earth standards\" in their fight against Boko Haram, with civilians routinely killed during operations in poor neighborhoods. Massacres prior to the Baga massacre were commonly employed as punitive measures against the civilian population, without legal consequences in Nigeria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Background\nThe commander of the Multinational Joint Task Force Brigadier General Austin Edokpaye accused residents of Baga of shielding Boko Haram members prior to the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Background\nBaga is a small fishing village on the banks of lake Chad, near the borders of Chad and Niger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Events\nOn the evening of 16 April, members of Boko Haram engaged government soldiers at a military post outside Baga, killing one of them. According to residents, soldiers returned with reinforcements supported by armored vehicles. Soldiers then allegedly doused homes in Baga with gasoline and set fire to the village, shooting villagers who attempted to flee. Some attempting to escape into Lake Chad drowned there, while others were able to escape into the surrounding bush. According to residents, the soldiers continued burning homes in Baga on April 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Events\nBrigadier General Austin Edokpaye stated that only six civilians and one soldier were killed, while the army killed 30 \"Boko Haram terrorists.\" He further stated that only 30 \"thatched houses\" were burned and that the fires were started by Boko Haram's weapons. Residents and civilian officials alleged that as many as 200 people were killed and more than 2,000 homes were burned. Casualties were reported to be especially high among children and the elderly. By April 17, 193 wounded victims had been admitted to a local health clinic. Satellite images analyzed by Human Rights Watch indicate that at least 2,275 buildings were destroyed and another 125 buildings were severely damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Reactions\nFollowing the massacre, the Nigerian government came under intense pressure from international governments and media, leading the Nigerian national assembly to call for an investigation. Journalists attempting to independently access the village were blocked by the Nigerian military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Reactions, Nigerian army denial\nBrigadier General Chris Olukolade stated that anyone blaming Nigerian soldiers sympathized with Boko Haram, which he said was responsible for the massacre and had shot at government soldiers from the village.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Reactions, U.S. Government condemnation\nThe United States's acting deputy State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell, on 22 April 2013, condemned the clash between the Nigerian security forces and Boko Haram militants in Baga, urging authorities to respect human rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Reactions, Nigeria orders probe\nNigeria\u2019s President Goodluck Jonathan through his special adviser on media and publicity, Reuben Abati, ordered a full-scale investigation into the civilian casualties in the war between Boko Haram and Nigeria\u2019s soldiers at the weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232055-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Baga massacre, Reactions, National Human Rights Commission investigation\nNigeria's National Human Rights Commission announced on April 29 2013 that it would conduct an investigation into the incident. In June 2013, the commission released an interim report. The report noted that the commission had been unable to visit Baga because of the inability of the security forces to guarantee the safety of commission personnel. The report, however, cited a police incident report that found that soldiers in Baga \"started shooting indiscriminately at anybody in sight\" and that five wards in Baga were \"completely razed down by the soldiers.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 77], "content_span": [78, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232056-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baghdad Christmas Day bombings\nOn 25 December 2013, three bombings occurred in two locations in Baghdad, Iraq. They targeted Christians, killing 38 people and wounding 70 others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232056-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baghdad Christmas Day bombings, Bombings\nTwo bombs first exploded simultaneously in an outdoor market in the Christian section of Athorien in Baghdad. The market attack killed 11 people and wounded 14 others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232056-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baghdad Christmas Day bombings, Bombings\nA few minutes later, about half a mile away, a car bomb went off near St. John's Roman Catholic Church in Baghdad's southern Dora neighborhood. According to officials, \"The bomb detonated at the end of Christmas prayers as worshippers were leaving the church.\" This bombing killed 27 and wounded another 56.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232056-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baghdad Christmas Day bombings, Bombings\nIn total, the bombings targeting the two Christian-populated sites killed 38 and wounded 70. No group claimed responsibility for the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232057-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baghdad governorate election\nThe Baghdad governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232058-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahamian gambling referendum\nA referendum on legalising web shops and establishing a national lottery was held in the Bahamas on 28 January 2013. Both proposals were rejected by voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232058-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahamian gambling referendum, Background\nGambling is currently illegal for Bahamian citizens. However, illegal gambling establishments known as \"web shops\" allow betting on American lottery numbers. The referendum had been a campaign promise of the Progressive Liberal Party prior to the 2012 general elections. After winning the elections, plans were announced in Parliament on 1 November 2012 to hold a referendum on legalising web shops on 3 December. However, on 16 November a further announcement was made that the national lottery question would also be asked and a new date of 28 January 2013 was proposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232058-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahamian gambling referendum, Background\nLegalising and regulating the web shops was supported by Prime Minister Perry Christie, who claimed it could raise $20 million a year in tax revenues. However, religious groups opposed the move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232058-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahamian gambling referendum, Results\nDo you support the regulation and taxation of Web Shop gaming?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round\nThe 2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round was a pair of motor races held on 20 and 21 April 2013 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain as part of the GP2 Series. It was the second round of the 2013 GP2 Series and was run in support of the 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix. The first race, a 32-lap feature event, was won by Racing Engineering driver Fabio Leimer from pole position. Stefano Coletti finished second for Rapax and Caterham Racing driver Alexander Rossi took third. Sam Bird won the following day's 30-lap sprint race for Russian Time, with Carlin's Felipe Nasr second and Coletti third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round\nLeimer held off the fast-starting Coletti to keep the lead and pulled out an significant gap in the following laps before ceding the lead to Adrian Quaife-Hobbs for ten laps after a mandatory pit stop for tyres. Leimer retook first place after Quaife-Hobbs's pit stop and held the position to win the race. Tom Dillmann started from pole position in the sprint race but lost the lead to teammate Bird before the end of the first lap. Coletti and Nasr gained on Bird in the final two laps as his tyres were worn. Coletti bowed out after running wide and lost second to Nasr before the final lap and Bird held off Nasr to win the race by 0.080 seconds, the closest margin of victory in GP2 Series history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round\nLeimer's feature race win was his second of the season and Bird's sprint event victory was the first for Russian Time after it took over from ISport International. Leimer lowered Coletti's lead in the Drivers' Championship to one point Nasr maintained third position and Bird's victory moved him to fourth. James Calado performed poorly and fell to fifth. Carlin lowered Rapax's lead in the Teams' Championship to two points. Racing Engineering fell to third and Russian Time moved to fourth with nine rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Background\nThe 2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round was the second of eleven scheduled events in 2013. It was held on 20 and 21 April 2013 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, and supported the 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix. Tyre supplier Pirelli brought the yellow-banded soft compound tyres and the orange-banded hard dry compound tyres to the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Background\nBefore the race Rapax driver Stefano Coletti led the Drivers' Championship with 36 points, eleven ahead of Fabio Leimer in second, who in turn, was a further point in front of Felipe Nasr in third. James Calado was fourth on 18 points and St\u00e9phane Richelmi in fifth was six points behind him. Rapax led the Teams' Championship on 42 points; Racing Engineering was seven points behind in second and Carlin were in third with 32 points. ART Grand Prix were in fourth position with 18 points and Arden International were one point behind in fifth. Leimer and Coletti had won the season's previous two races in the opening round in Sepang three weeks prior. Calado and Nasr each took one second-place finish and Mitch Evans had finished in third once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Background\nA total of 26 drivers making up 13 teams were entered for the round with all of them piloting the Dallara GP2/11 car. There were two driver changes for the round. Having been in one of the Caterham Racing cars in the preceding round in Sepang, Ma Qinghua was replaced by the former Formula Renaullt 3.5 Series driver Alexander Rossi for the rest of the year. Robin Frijns, the reigning Formula Renault 3.5 Series champion and test and reserve driver for Sauber, was employed by Hilmer Motorsport to drive in lieu of Conor Daly who left the team after Sepang since he was on a one-round contract with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nOne half an hour practice session was held on Thursday before the two races. Leimer for Racing Engineering set a benchmark which led the sole practice session\u2014held in variable weather and on a warm track\u2014at 1 minute, 41.361 seconds on the hard compound tyres, a second faster than any one else. His closest challenger was Sam Bird for Russian Time in second in front of third-placed Coletti. Rossi, Marcus Ericsson of DAMS, Nasr, Calado, Russian Time's Tom Dillmann, Johnny Cecotto Jr. of Arden International and Daniel Abt for ART Grand Prix were in positions four to ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nFrijns spun early on but recovered without external assistance. Smoke bellowed out of Cecotto's car at high-speed and he locked his tyres at turn one, overshooting into the sand. Juli\u00e1n Leal stalled at the exit of the pit lane and the stewards investigated whether his mechanics restarted the car outside the pit lane. Leal then narrowly avoided running into the rear of Rossi's car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nFriday afternoon's 30-minute qualifying session saw the drivers' fastest lap times determine the starting order for the first race. The pole position winner was awarded four points for the Drivers' and Teams' Championships. Qualifying began in cloudy weather and most of the field drove onto the track when it started. Rainfall after the first five minutes was not heavy enough to affect the track. Simon Trummer was the early pace setter but was soon eclipsed by his teammate Coletti, who in turn, was suppressed by Ericsson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nLeimer then set a new GP2 Series lap record of the track, which he lowered to a 1 minute, 39.427 seconds lap to take pole position. Ericsson appeared to challenge Leimer for pole but slowed after losing time in the final third of the lap to join him on the grid's front row with a time almost a second slower. Nasr equalled his qualifying result from the 2012 round in third. Coletti improved his own fastest lap to go fourth. Dillmann was best of the late improvers and qualified fifth. Richelmi was close by in sixth. Rossi was in the top three early on but fell to seventh by the end. Adrian Quaife-Hobbs (MP Motorsport) locked his tyres on his lap and took eighth. Bird improved late in the session to secure ninth and Frijns took tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nCalado was the fastest driver not to qualify in the top ten and was demoted ten places on the grid for causing an accident at the previous round in Sepang. Trummer moved to eleventh and Palmer twelfth, followed by Cecotto and Abt. Sergio Canamasas (Caterham Racing) set the 16th-fastest lap but was sent to the back of the grid after being adjudged by the race stewards to have deliberately forced Trident's Kevin Ceccon off the track while attempting to pass him after qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nKevin Giovesi (Lazarus) was also penalised after the stewards ruled that he impeded Cecotto between turns nine and ten and dropped three places on the grid. Mitch Evans (Arden International) was the only driver to be affected by electrical problem in his car and pulled off onto a run-off area. Evans was restricted to starting 16th. The rest of the field lined up as Ceccon, Leal, Ren\u00e9 Binder (Lazarus), Jake Rosenzweig (Addax), Nathana\u00ebl Berthon (Trident), P\u00e5l Varhaug (Hilmer Motorsport), Rio Haryanto (Addax) and Dani\u00ebl de Jong (MP Motorsport).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races\nThe first race was held over 170\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi) or 60 minutes (which ever came first) and all drivers were required by regulations to make one pit stop. The first ten finishers scored points, with two given to the fastest lap holder. The grid for the second race was determined by the finishing order of the first but the first eight drivers were in reverse order of where they finished. It was run for 120\u00a0km (75\u00a0mi) or 45 minutes (which ever came first). In contrast to the prior race drivers were not required to make pit stops. The top eight finishers earned points towards their respective championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nThe first race commenced on 15:45 Arabia Standard Time (UTC+03:00) on 20 April. The weather at the start was dry and sunny with an air temperature of 33\u00a0\u00b0C (91\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature of 41\u00a0\u00b0C (106\u00a0\u00b0F). Ericsson stalled on the grid while the field began the formation lap and had to begin from the pit lane. As the five red lights went out to begin the race, Leimer held off the fast-starting Coletti to lead the field in the opening sequence of corners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nColetti had forced Leimer to defend the lead at turn four and drew alongside through turns five and six but failed to overtake. Bird made a quick start, overtaking Rossi and Quaife-Hobbs on the centre of the circuit for third position. Palmer also made a fast getaway and ran in fifth place after passing Rossi on the main straight. De Jong became the first retirement after the first lap was over when he limped back to the pit lane. He was joined by Varhaug on lap five who had mechanical trouble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nOnce the race had calmed down, Leimer was able to lead Coletti by two seconds by the start of lap five and set what was at that point the race's fastest lap. Both were also focused on ensuring their soft tyres lasted for as long as possible. The mandatory pit stops for the switch to the hard compound tyres began on the following lap when several drivers entered the pit lane. Quaife-Hobbs and Dillmann elected to run on an alternative strategy with the latter falling from fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nDuring the pit stop sequence, Rossi re-passed Palmer and Frijns battled Leal for tenth and later Giovesi before his own stop. Canamasas was penalised for the second day running as the stewards imposed a drive-through penalty on him, deeming him to have deliberately forced Calado off the circuit. Bird and Nasr had slow pit stops and both drivers fell down the order. Leimer and Coletti made their stops from the top two at the end of the 10h lap and emerged ahead of those who had already made their pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nLeimer's advantage over Coletti had dwindled to 1.3 seconds but he regained some of that lead by overtaking the battling Evans and Giovesi at turn four. Coletti was then delayed by the same traffic jam and was three seconds adrift of Leimer. The yet-to-stop Quaife-Hobbs led and was followed by Dillmann, Leal and Giovesi. Dilmann made his pit stop on the 18th lap and Leal followed on the next lap; Leal stalled as he drove away from his pit box and required assistance from mechanics to restart his car. He subsequently received a penalty for pit lane over-speeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nOn the 20th lap and having led the last ten laps, Quaife-Hobbs was the last driver to enter the pit lane and Leimer regained first. Quaife-Hobbs fell behind Dillmann but re-passed him after getting his tyres up to temperature. Frijns moved to the inside of Richelmi on lap 21 into turn one but went into the side of Richelmi's car, damaging his front wing. Frijns drove slowly to the pit lane for repairs but Richelmi had to abandon his damaged car on the circuit. Evans became the race's final retirement on the 25th lap when he stopped on a run-off area with smoke bellowing from his car due to debris penetrating the radiator and overheating the engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nAttention focused on a battle for seventh between Quaife-Hobbs, Dillmann and Trummer, which saw Trummer passed by the other cars in quick succession on lap 28. Nasr passed teammate Palmer for fifth on lap 30. Leimer held the lead for the rest of the race to achieve his second victory of 2013 and the fourth of his career. Coletti followed 1.9 seconds later in second and Rossi took third. Off the podium, Nasr finished close behind Rossi in fourth place with his teammate Palmer in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nBird slowed in the closing laps but held on to take sixth and fellow Brit Quaife-Hobbs was seventh. Dillmann came in eighth and secured the pole position for the sprint race. Trummer and Cecotto finished ninth and tenth. Outside the top ten, Ceccon finished eleventh having moved up six from his starting position and Calado came twelfth. Ericsson recovered from his formation lap stall to take 13th. Abt, Haryanto, Rosenzweig, Berthon, Binder, Leal, Canamasas and Frijns rounded out the 21 classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nThe second race began at 10:50 local time on 21 April. The weather t the start were dry and sunny with an air temperature of 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature at 42\u00a0\u00b0C (108\u00a0\u00b0F). On the grid, pole position starter Dillmann made a clean getaway to hold off Quaife-Hobbs and keep the lead into the first corner. Quaife-Hobbs attempted to steer onto the inside but ran wide which contributed to some contact within the field. Coletti made a fast start and moved from seventh to third by driving on the outside at turn one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nBird initially got away from his starting position slowly but Quaife-Hobbs's blocked Coletti and allowed him into second place on the inside. Rossi was clipped by Nasr into the first corner, breaking Rossi's front wing. Leimer was on the inside into turn one and Rossi's nose cone made contact with the sidepod and the turning vane of Leimer's car. This affected Leimer for the rest of the event as debris was lodged in his car's sidepod. Haryanto and Ericsson both sustained damage after they hit each other and went to the pit lane before resuming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nBird drew close to teammate Dillmann and overtook him for the lead exiting the final corner. Dillmann fought back against Bird driving towards the first turn and the two went alongside each other. The two made minor contact in turns one and two, allowing Coletti to get a run on Dillmann and passed him for second. On the next lap, Nasr went to the inside of Dillmann into the first corner and took over third. Calado lost seventh to Palmer on lap four and withstood Abt, his teammate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nThe field settled down as drivers looked to conserve their tyres, and the top three pulled away from Dillmann. On the sixth lap, Bird came upon a large chunk of debris intto the first corner and locked his tyres trying to avoid running over it. Bird appeared to escape unhindered and the debris was removed by a trackside marshal. Further down the field, a battle for fifth place involved Quaife-Hobbs, Leimer and Palmer. By lap seven, one second covered the trio and Leimer looked for a way past Quaife-Hobbs but was cautious not to allow Palmer to take advantage of the situation. Further back, Berthon lost two positions after Evans and Leal overtook him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nThe damage to Ericsson's car became too problematic for him and became the race's sole retirement at its midway point while Binder visited the pit lane twice, putting him a lap behind the leader. Tyres began to show signs of degradation during this period and more action was observed: Ceccon passed Rosenzweig for 11th and caught Cecotto. Canamasas battled with Trummer over who would be the first driver to pass the ailing Berthon who elected to make a pit stop for new tyres. Frijns appeared to falter and fell behind Richelmi, Evans and Leal in quick succession to 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nQuaife-Hobbs was inexperienced in tyre management in GP2 and him delaying Leimer meant the latter came under pressure. On the 19th lap, Palmer overtook Leimer on the inside at turn one for sixth after the latter ran wide in an attempt to defend position. Calado followed through for seventh at the fourth corner. Quaife-Hobbs's tyres were heavily worn and fell to eighth position when Calado, Palmer and Abt overtook him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nAs the race entered its final two laps, Coletti and Nasr gained on Bird whose tyres were worn out. The pressure on Bird was temporarily relieved when Coletti locked his tyres heading towards the tenth corner and then braked deep for the final turn. He overshot the corner and allowed Nasr through to second. Coletti appeared to have flat-spotted his tyres as a consequence and could not remain on the track and his chances for the victory were over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nNasr appeared to manage his tyre life better than other drivers and quickly drew close to Bird on the final lap and pulled alongside him under braking for the final turn. Bird went defensive and controlled the wheelspin in his tyres. Nasr got out of Bird's slipstream but could not pass Bird who held on to win the race. The margin of victory was 0.080 seconds, the closest in GP2 Series history. Coletti took third with a comfortable margin over Dillmann in fourth. Calado was fifth, Palmer sixth, Abt seventh and Quaife-Hobbs eighth. Leimer, Ceccon, Canamasas, Cecotto, Richelmi, Trummer, Evans, Leal, Giovesi, De Jong, Rosenzweig, Rossi, Varhaug, Berthon, Frijns, Haryanto and Binder were the final classified finishers. Bird's victory was the first for Russian Time after it took over ISport International.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Post-race\nThe top three drivers of both races appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and to participate later in a press conference. Leimer revealed his objective for the feature race was to execute a fast start but in spite of struggling which almost lost him a position to Coletti, declared himself \"very happy\" as he had waited for some time to achieve another victory in the GP2 Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Post-race\nWhen asked if he was not worried about heavy overtaking and tyre management, he replied yes, \"but I was much quicker than them so I was not using my tyres that much. It\u2019s not the perfect situation for the tyres, but I still managed to save them.\" Coletti said he was happy with his team but felt he could have pushed harder earlier in the race due to the fear of wearing his tyres and decided to not take the risk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Post-race\nHe commented that he did not inform his team he observed Leimer entering the pit lane on the same lap as him and believed he could have stayed on track for one additional lap. Rossi revealed his apprehension about how his tyres would behave and was uncertain on how to push it but was happy to finish third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Post-race\nBird said his victory in the sprint race felt \"fantastic\", \"Being back in GP2 is already feeling very good, being back in the feeder series to Formula One is a great place to be. To win for RUSSIAN TIME after only four races of existence is a very good feeling.\" He believed that he may have pushed too hard in the wrong time of the race, \"it was just a case of keeping it on the racing line and hoping they'd battle it out behind me. Felipe's car was like a rocket at the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Post-race\nBig thanks to my new team: to win in our fourth race, with no pre-season testing, is amazing.\" Nasr spoke about car management and maintaining the pace levels with the leaders and believed he could have won in an alternative situation, adding, \"But anyway, it\u2019s still a good result. We came here to score big points and it\u2019s quite good to go back to Europe knowing that we have a good car, a good team. It keeps getting better and better. I\u2019m feeling quite confident.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Post-race\nColetti believed his third-place finish contributed towards \"a good weekend\" for himself and commented that entering the season's European leg leading in points had given him more motivation and hoped to compete at the front of the field in Barcelona, \"We\u2019re still a few points ahead \u2013 ten I think. But like I said, we need to score big points in Race 1 and I think that in Barcelona we\u2019ll be in the front.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232059-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Post-race\nAfter the round, Coletti still led the Drivers' Championship but Leimer lowered his lead to one point less than it had been before the round. Nasr remained in third place on 48 points. After being in ninth beforehand, Bird moved to fourth position with 33 points while Calado fell to fifth on 24 points. Rapax kept the lead of Teams' Championship although their lead over Carlin was cut to two points. Racing Engineering's results dropped them to third while Russian Time were now in fourth having moved up from seventh. Arden International was fifth with nine rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 21 April 2013 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain. Mercedes' Nico Rosberg started the race from pole. Sebastian Vettel won the race, with Lotus F1 drivers Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Romain Grosjean completing the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix\nContested over 57 laps, it was the fourth round of the 2013 season, and the ninth time that the Bahrain Grand Prix had been held as a round of the Formula One World Championship. The controversial race went ahead despite ongoing protests which had been taking place since the cancellation of the 2011 event. This race also marked the 200th Grand Prix for Mark Webber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix\nThis was also the last Bahrain Grand Prix to take place during the daytime, as the event switched to a night race from the 2014 race onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Background\nTyre supplier Pirelli had originally planned to bring their hard and soft compounds of tyre to the race, to be designated as the prime and the option respectively. However, the teams experienced problems with the soft compound at the Chinese Grand Prix, with the tyres degrading after just seven laps, which prompted Pirelli to alter their allocation for the Bahrain Grand Prix, changing the options from the soft compound to the medium. Before the race, a minute of silence was held as a mark of respect for those who had lost their lives in the Boston Marathon bombings six days earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Background, Anti-government protests\nIn the context of the ongoing Bahraini uprising, public protests also occurred over the 2013 staging of the race, after the 2011 event was cancelled and the 2012 event went ahead despite efforts by demonstrators to disrupt the race. According to Reuters, the race went ahead \"largely unhindered\" by the protests. Reflecting on the changes in the government strategy compared to 2012, they concluded that the public relations battle over this year's race had produced a stalemate, reflecting the situation in the opposition movement generally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAt the start, Nico Rosberg kept his lead into the first corner, with Vettel and Alonso keeping close company. On the second lap, Vettel went into the lead, and Alonso went into second place. Around the same time, Adrian Sutil, Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne and Giedo van der Garde were involved in a collision. Vergne eventually retired on lap 16, with damage caused by a puncture. Sutil would remain in 13th place, stuck behind Nico H\u00fclkenberg for most of the race. Meanwhile, Fernando Alonso was complaining about his DRS system not working properly. It was in fact stuck open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nHe pitted to get the wing fixed. However, when trying to overtake, it got stuck open again, and was forced to remain without DRS for the rest of the race. He eventually finished 8th as a result. There was drama between the two McLarens of Jenson Button and Sergio P\u00e9rez. The two went onto the radio, and complained about each other battling aggressively for the past few laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nButton fell to 10th by the closing stages, while P\u00e9rez managed to get into 6th, only two seconds ahead of Webber and Alonso, and only 6 tenths behind Lewis Hamilton at the finish. Rosberg had fallen rapidly down the field, and would barely finish in the points, in 9th. Paul di Resta on the other hand, was more successful. He was running in third place at the finishing stages, before Romain Grosjean took the honours with just a few laps remaining. Grosjean's teammate Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen managed to get into second place, and stay there until the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232060-0005-0003", "contents": "2013 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel was challenged by him, but he held his own until the flag had fallen, taking his second victory of the season. Felipe Massa on the other hand, had a disappointing weekend. He qualified well in 4th place, but during the race, dropped to 15th place due to two tyre failures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232061-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahrain national football team results\nThis article details the fixtures and results of the Bahrain national football team in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232062-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahraini King's Cup\nThe Bahraini King's Cup is a cup competition involving teams from the Bahraini Premier League and 2nd tier. Al-Muharraq SC are the current holders of the King's Cup, having defeated their arch-rivals Riffa S.C. 3-1 in last year's final. They have won four of the past five editions of the tournament, with Riffa claiming the crown in between in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232062-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahraini King's Cup, Draw, Organisation\nThe opening phases of the cup took place on 22 and 26 February 2013. The quarter-finals took place on March 26 and 27, followed by the semi-finals on April 14. The final took place on April 18, with the king, Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa attending the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232062-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bahraini King's Cup, Preliminary round\nThe winners of the preliminary round qualify for the last 16 elimination round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232063-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku Cup\nThe 2013 Baku Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. This was the third edition of the tournament, which was part of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Baku, Azerbaijan between 22 and 28 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232063-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232063-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku Cup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232064-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku Cup \u2013 Doubles\nIrina Buryachok and Valeria Solovyeva were the defending champions, but Solovyeva decided not to participate. Buryachok successfully defended the title alongside Oksana Kalashnikova, defeating Eleni Daniilidou and Aleksandra Kruni\u0107 in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20133), [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232065-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku Cup \u2013 Singles\nBojana Jovanovski was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Ons Jabeur. Elina Svitolina won the title, defeating Shahar Pe'er in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232066-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku protests\nA protest took place on January 12, 2013 in Baku, Azerbaijan after Azerbaijani Army soldier Ceyhun Qubadov was found dead on January 7, 2013. It was first reported that the cause of death was heart attack. Qubadov's family asked for an investigation as they believed it was a murder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232066-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku protests\nOn January 10, 2013, a Facebook event was created. A day later about 13,600 joined it, the next day the number of users joined was 20,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232066-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku protests\nHundreds of protesters gathered at the Fountains Square on January 12 with demands of resignation of Safar Abiyev, the Azerbaijani Defense Minister. They held slogans such as \"Stop killing our soldiers\" and \"You must answer to us.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232066-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baku protests, Aftermath\nImmediately after the investigation the Azerbaijani Defense Minister Safar Abiyev was fired by the order of the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev. Colonel General Zakir Hasanov took his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232067-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Balkan Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Balkan Athletics Championships was the 66th edition of the annual track and field competition for athletes from the Balkans, organised by Balkan Athletics. It was held at Beroe Stadium in Stara Zagora, Bulgaria on 27 and 28 July. Romania topped the medal table with eleven gold medals among a total haul of 26. The host nation Bulgaria had the second highest number of gold medals, with nine in a total of 21, while Turkey had the second highest medal total with 23. Turkey won the men's side of the competition while Romania won the women's side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232067-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Balkan Athletics Championships\nAmela Terzi\u0107 of Serbia was the only athlete to win multiple individual events, taking the women's 1500 metres and 3000 metres titles. Bulgaria's Ivet Lalova and Romania's Adelina Pastor took gold for their countries in both individual and relay events over 100 metres and 400 metres, respectively. The other multiple individual medallists were Turkey's Elif Karabulut (twice runner-up behind Terzi\u0107), sprint and hurdles medalist Vania Stambolova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232068-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships\nThe 2013 Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships was the 18th edition of the annual indoor track and field competition for athletes from the Balkans, organised by Balkan Athletics. It was held on 23 February at the Atak\u00f6y Athletics Arena in Istanbul, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232069-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ball Hockey World Championship\nThe 2013 Ball Hockey World Championship was the tenth ball hockey world championship held by ISBHF in St.John's, Canada. Slovakia won their second title. Canada captured the bronze medal with a 7 \u2013 3 victory over the Portugal. The Canada women's national ball hockey team captured the gold medal in women's play, avenging the silver medal from 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232070-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ball State Cardinals football team\nThe 2013 Ball State Cardinals football team represented Ball State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Pete Lembo and played their home games at Scheumann Stadium. They were a member of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 10\u20133, 7\u20131 in MAC play to finish in second place in the West Division. They were invited to the GoDaddy Bowl where they lost to Arkansas State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232070-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ball State Cardinals football team, Broadcasts\nAll Ball State games will be carried by the Ball State Radio Network on WLBC 104.1 FM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes\nThe 2013 Balochistan earthquakes took place in late September in southwestern Pakistan. The mainshock had a moment magnitude of 7.7 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of IX (Violent). At at least more than 1,000 people were killed and hundreds more were injured. On 28 September, a M6.8 aftershock occurred to the north at a depth of 14.8 kilometres (9.2 miles), killing at least 22 people. These earthquakes occurred in a sparsely populated region of Pakistan and this reduced the number of casualties significantly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Tectonic setting\nOn a broad scale, the tectonics of southern and central Pakistan reflect a complex plate boundary where the India plate slides northward relative to the Eurasia plate in the east, and the Arabia plate subducts northward beneath the Eurasia plate in the Makran (western Pakistan). These motions typically result in north\u2013south to northeast\u2013southwest strike-slip motion at the latitude of the 24 September earthquake that is primarily accommodated on the Chaman Fault, with the earthquake potentially occurring on one of the southernmost strands of this fault system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Tectonic setting\nFurther, more in-depth studies will be required to identify the precise fault associated with this event. Although seismically active, this portion of the Eurasia plate boundary region has not experienced large damaging earthquakes in recent history. In the past 40 years, only one significant event has occurred within 200 kilometres (120\u00a0mi) of this event, which was a Mw\u00a06.1 earthquake in July 1990 that killed six people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake\nThe United States Geological Survey reported that the earthquake took place on Tuesday 24 September 2013 at 11:29:48\u00a0UTC. The depth was reported to be 15 kilometres (9.3\u00a0mi). The earthquake reportedly lasted about a minute, causing panic in cities of southern Pakistan such as Karachi and Hyderabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake\nThe earthquake in occurred as the result of oblique-strike-slip type motion at shallow crustal depths. The location and mechanism of the earthquake are consistent with rupture within the Eurasia plate above the Makran Trench subduction zone. The event occurred within the transition zone between northward subduction of the Arabian plate beneath the Eurasia plate and northward collision of the India plate with the Eurasia plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake, Damage\nThe earthquake killed at least 825 people and injured hundreds of others. The earthquake struck a sparsely populated region of Pakistan. Most homes and buildings in the region are constructed of mud bricks and collapsed during the earthquake and aftershocks. An official in the Balochistan province claimed that 80 percent of the homes in the Awaran District had collapsed or were damaged. In the regional capital Quetta, some areas appeared to be badly damaged. Officials from the Balochistan government estimated that at least 21,000 houses had been completely destroyed by the tremor, while some areas remained beyond the reach of rescue services 48 hours after the initial quake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake, Damage\nPAGER impact estimates from the United States Geological Survey included a red alert level for initial shaking-related fatalities (35% chance of 1,000\u201310,000 fatalities, 27% chance of 10,000\u2013100,000 fatalities) and an orange alert level for economic impact (35% chance of US$100\u00a0million\u2013$1\u00a0billion, 26% chance of US$1\u201310 billion).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake, Damage\nThe earthquake was felt in major cities across Pakistan, including Karachi, Hyderabad, Rawalpindi/Islamabad, Larkana, and Lahore. The quake was also felt in Delhi, India, where some buildings shook, and Muscat, Oman\u2014800 kilometres (500\u00a0mi) from the epicenter\u2014where mild tremors shook tables and cabinets. The earthquake shook in the parts of UAE, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran and as far as Qatar. The earthquake also shook Saravan, Iran without causing any damage or casualties. There were also minor tremors and aftershocks in the United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake, Ground effects\nThe earthquake was apparently powerful enough to raise a small island, later dubbed Zalzala Jazeera, meaning \"quake island\", in the Arabian Sea, variously reported as being 350 metres (1,150\u00a0ft) to 1 kilometre (0.62\u00a0mi) off the shore of Gwadar. The island is partially composed of rock, but mostly consists of mud and sand. The oval-shaped island was 60\u201370 feet (18\u201321\u00a0m) high and about 200\u2013300 feet (61\u201391\u00a0m) long according to local people that visited the island the day after it appeared. They noticed a smell of gas and managed to ignite it, later extinguishing it with difficulty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake, Ground effects\nThe island is believed to be the result of a mud volcano. In the region, deposits of frozen gas hydrates\u2014which have a large methane content\u2014exist beneath 300\u00a0to 800 metres (980\u20132,620\u00a0ft) of compressed sediment. After such a large earthquake, the gas hydrates converted from frozen to gaseous form through the heat of friction and either raised the overlaying sediment enough to create fissures through which it escaped or rose through fissures resulting from the earthquake itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Earthquake, Ground effects\nAnother possible contributing factor in the island's creation was the liquefaction of the seabed, which allowed finer, loosely packed sediments to become liquid-like and squeeze up through fissures in overlying compressed sediment. Locals who ventured to the island shortly after it formed heard a hissing noise at one end and started a fire which was difficult to extinguish. There are several mud volcanoes inland near Zalzala Jazeera and they are common in the vicinity of subducting plate boundaries; in fact, similar islands have appeared in the same region following earthquakes in 1945, 1999, 2001, and 2010. Because of its composition of softer sediments, the sea was predicted to erode the island completely within a few months. By the end of 2016, the island had completely disappeared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232071-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan earthquakes, Aftermath\nOn 26 September, two days after the disaster, two rockets were fired at a helicopter carrying Maj. Gen. Muhammad Saeed Aleem, the National Disaster Management Authority chairman, as well as other officials and members of the media. Government sources blamed Balochi separatists, who are very active in the Awaran area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232072-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan provincial election\nProvincial elections were held in the Pakistani province of Balochistan on 11 May 2013, alongside nationwide general elections and three other provincial elections in Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab. The remaining two territories of Pakistan, Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, were ineligible to vote due to their disputed status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232072-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan provincial election, Background\nThe 2013 elections resulted in a hung parliament, before Pakistan Muslim League (N), National Party, and Pashtunkhwa Milli Awami Party joined hands to form a coalition government. A power-sharing agreement was also brokered between PML-N and NP where the province's Chief Ministership tenure would be bifurcated between the two parties. In consequence, NP's Abdul Malik Baloch served as chief minister from 2013 to 2015 before he was replaced by PML-N's Sanaullah Khan Zehri at the end of 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232072-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Balochistan provincial election, Background\nHowever, Zehri couldn't complete his term as on 2 January 2018, a number of dissident members from the ruling PML-N colluded with opposition lawmakers to submit a no-confidence motion against him. Seeing that he has lost the majority of the house's support in the ensuing turmoil, Zehri resigned from his post before a no-confidence vote could take place. Pakistan Muslim League (Q)'s, Abdul Quddus Bizenjo, an opposition lawmaker and one of the leaders of the no-confidence bloc, was elected as the province's 15th Chief Minister. He secured 41 of the 65 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232073-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltic Chain Tour\nThe 2013 Baltic Chain Tour was the third edition of the Baltic Chain Tour road cycling race. It was held over a period of six days between 19 and 25 May 2013. The race was a part of the 2013 UCI Europe Tour with a race classification of 2.2. General classification was won by German cyclist Philipp Walsleben of BKCP\u2013 Powerplus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232073-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltic Chain Tour, Stages, Stage 2\n20 August 2013 \u2013 Tallinn to Viljandi, 193.9\u00a0km (120.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232073-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltic Chain Tour, Stages, Stage 3\n21 August 2013 \u2013 Viljandi to Otep\u00e4\u00e4, 171.1\u00a0km (106.3\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232073-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltic Chain Tour, Stages, Stage 4\n22 August 2013 \u2013 Smiltene to Sigulda, 179.0\u00a0km (111.2\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232073-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltic Chain Tour, Stages, Stage 5\n24 August 2013 \u2013 Panev\u0117\u017eys to Utena, 154.1\u00a0km (95.8\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232073-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltic Chain Tour, Stages, Stage 6\n25 August 2013 \u2013 Utena to Vilnius, 152.4\u00a0km (94.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232074-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltic Futsal Cup\nThe 2013 Baltic Futsal Cup was held from December 6 to 8, 2013 in Latvia. Latvia won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season\nThe 2013 Baltimore Orioles season was the 113th season in franchise history, the 60th in Baltimore, and the 22nd at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. The Orioles began the 2013 season on April 2 against the Tampa Bay Rays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season\nThe Orioles set team fielding records in the modern era, with the fewest errors in a 162-game season (54) and highest team fielding percentage (.991).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season, Spring training\nThe Orioles finished preseason spring training with a 19\u20139 win\u2013loss record, the best record in the Grapefruit League. This excludes four tie games, which did not count toward the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season, Roster, Accolades\nThe following players represented the Orioles in the 2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season, Roster, Accolades\nThe following players received Gold Glove Awards for the 2013 MLB season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season, Roster, Accolades\nThe following player received the American League Platinum Glove Award for the 2013 MLB season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season, Roster, Accolades\nThe following players received Silver Slugger Awards for the 2013 MLB season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season, Roster, Accolades\n1st baseman Chris Davis won the American League home run championship (53) and RBI championship (138), and set franchise records for home runs and extra-base hits (96).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232075-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Orioles season, Roster, Accolades\nThe Orioles set a major league record for fewest errors in a full season with 54.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season\nThe 2013 Baltimore Ravens season was the franchise's 18th season in the National Football League and the sixth under head coach John Harbaugh. The Ravens entered the season as the defending Super Bowl champions from the previous year, but failed to improve on their 10\u20136 record from 2012, and missed the playoffs for the first time since 2007 and for the first time in the Harbaugh/Flacco era. For the first time in franchise history, Ray Lewis was not on the roster, as he announced his retirement before the playoffs began the year prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season\nHe retired as a champion of Super Bowl XLVII and was the last remaining player from the team's inaugural season. Lewis also helped the Ravens win Super Bowl XXXV over the New York Giants and is believed by many as the greatest Baltimore Raven of all time. Including Lewis, the team parted ways with a record eight starters from the Super Bowl-winning squad; no other defending Super Bowl champion had lost more than five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Denver Broncos\nDue to a conflict involving the Orioles' schedule, the Ravens opened the regular season on the road against the Broncos, the first time a defending Super Bowl champion team had done so since the Buccaneers in 2003 when they opened their regular season against the Eagles. This was be a rematch of the previous year's AFC Divisional game also known as the Mile High Miracle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Denver Broncos\nThe Ravens drew first blood when Joe Flacco found Vonta Leach on a 2-yard touchdown pass to take the lead 7\u20130 in the first quarter for the only score of the period. The Broncos tied the game in the 2nd quarter with Peyton Manning finding Julius Thomas on a 24-yard pass to take the game to 7\u20137. The Ravens moved back into the lead when Ray Rice ran for a 1-yard touchdown to make the score 14\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Denver Broncos\nPeyton found Julius again on a 23-yard pass to make the score 14\u201314 for another tie before the Ravens kicker Justin Tucker nailed a 25-yard field goal to make the score 17\u201314 at halftime. In the 3rd quarter, the Broncos went right back to work as Peyton found Andre Caldwell on a 28-yard touchdown pass to take a 21\u201317 lead followed up with finding Wes Welker on 2 consecutive passes from 5 yards and 2 yards out for an increase in the lead first to 28\u201317 and then to 35\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Denver Broncos\nLater on in the quarter, Peyton found Demaryius Thomas on a 26-yard pass to increase the lead to 42\u201317. The Ravens tried to rally a comeback in the last quarter, with Flacco finding Marlon Brown on a 13-yard pass to shorten the Broncos' lead 42\u201324 followed up by Tucker's 30-yard field goal to make the score 42\u201327. However, the Broncos wrapped things up in the game when Peyton found D. Thomas again on a 78-yard pass to make the final score 49\u201327. The Ravens began their season 0\u20131 for the first time under John Harbaugh as head coach and Joe Flacco as their starter. They also lost their first regular season opening game since 2007 as well as becoming the 2nd straight defending Super Bowl champion team to lose their season opener.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Cleveland Browns\nWith their 11th straight win over the Browns, the Ravens improved to 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Houston Texans\nDespite playing without star running back Ray Rice and a few other key starters, the Ravens were able to hold Houston to just 9 points, despite several trips on Baltimore's side of the field, including three red zone trips. With the win, the Ravens avenged their 30-point blowout last year to Houston, improved to 2\u20131 overall and 7\u20131 all time against the Texans, including playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Ravens won on the road for the first time in their 2013 season and improved to 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThis was the first loss against the Steelers at Heinz Field since the 2010\u201311 NFL playoffs. With the loss, the Ravens headed into their bye week at 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Ravens lost their third straight game and fell to 3\u20135. It also snapped the team's 11-game winning streak over the Browns. Harbaugh and Flacco's records against the Browns dropped to 11\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Ravens were ahead 17\u20130 at half time, but the Bengals scored 17 unanswered points in the second half to force overtime. At the end of the fourth quarter, Andy Dalton threw a 51-yard Hail Mary that was first tipped by Ravens defender James Ihedigbo at the goal line, but eventually found A. J. Green in the end zone. However, about five minutes into overtime, Justin Tucker kicked the winning field goal (46 yards), and the Ravens improved to 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Chicago Bears\nThe game was interrupted in the first quarter for about two hours as a result of a torrential downpour at Soldier Field. After a slow start to the season, Ray Rice rushed for 131 yards and a touchdown. The Ravens were able to get the game to overtime, but the Bears won on a Robbie Gould field goal. The Ravens fell to 4\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Ravens won consecutive games for the first time since September and improved to 6\u20136. Additionally, they also improved to 2\u20130 in Thanksgiving Day games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nControversy erupted in the third quarter when Steelers' head coach Mike Tomlin stood on the field along the his team's sideline as Jacoby Jones broke free on a kickoff return for a potential game breaking touchdown. Tomlin, with his back to the approaching play, appeared to glance over his shoulder then place his foot briefly onto the field as he jumped out of the way, causing Jones to veer inside where he was tackled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nSeveral Ravens players claimed Tomlin had intentionally interfered with Jones; if officials had agreed, a touchdown could have been awarded to the Ravens based on the palpably unfair act. However, no penalty was called for interference or for standing in the white border area reserved for the officiating crew. On December 4, 2013, the NFL fined Tomlin $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nIn an eventful game, Vikings running back Adrian Peterson appeared to injure his ankle in the second quarter, and did not return to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nIn the fourth quarter there were six lead changes, with five touchdowns scored in the final 125 seconds. Marlon Brown caught a nine-yard pass from Joe Flacco with four seconds remaining, and the Ravens improved to 7\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Detroit Lions\nJustin Tucker scored six field goals, including a franchise record (and career long) 61-yard field goal with 38 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter. The Ravens won their fourth straight game and improved to 8\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. New England Patriots\nWith the loss, the Ravens fell to 8\u20137 and back to seventh place in the playoff hunt, enabling their division rivals Bengals to secure the AFC North title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 95], "content_span": [96, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232076-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Cincinnati Bengals\nWith this defeat, the Ravens were eliminated from post-season contention, assuring the NFL of a new Super Bowl Champion for the ninth straight year. The Ravens finished the season with a record of 8\u20138. This was also the last NFL game for running back Ray Rice as he was indefinitely suspended by the NFL and released by Ravens the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232077-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Banca dell'Adriatico Tennis Cup\nThe 2013 Banca dell\u2019Adriatico Tennis Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in San Benedetto del Tronto, Italy between 8 and 14 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232077-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Banca dell'Adriatico Tennis Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232078-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Banca dell'Adriatico Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nBrydan Klein and Dane Propoggia were the defending champions, but Klein chose not to compete. Propoggia chose to compete with Stefano Ianni but lost in the first round to Alessandro Motti and Matteo Volante. Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Maxime Teixeira defeated Alessandro Giannessi and Jo\u00e3o Sousa 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232079-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Banca dell'Adriatico Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nGianluca Naso was the defending champion but lost to David Guez in the first round. Andrej Martin defeated top-seeded Jo\u00e3o Sousa 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election\nA mayoral election was held in Bandung on 23 June 2013, in order to elect the mayor of Bandung for a five-year term between 2013 and 2018. It was the second direct mayoral election in the city's history. Eight candidates vied for the mayoral seat, four of which are not backed by any political parties. Incumbent mayor Dada Rosada did not participate, having served two full terms as mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election\nThe election followed a first past the post system, in which the winner might have only a plurality of the votes. Architect Ridwan Kamil won the election with about 45 percent of the votes - over double the nearest competitor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election, Timeline\nIndependent candidates were required to submit proof of popular support between 10 and 14 February 2013, with party-backed candidates being allocated a week between 11 and 17 March in order to register. The campaign period was officially set to be between 6 and 19 June, with the voting process taking place on 23 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election, Timeline\nThere were 4,119 ballot locations accommodating 1,658,808 eligible voters. According to Law No. 12 of 2008 on regional governance, a second-round election is required if the winning candidate earns less than 30 percent of the votes. If that was the case, the second round voting would be held on 24 August, with the final winner being officially made mayor on 16 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election, Issues\nDue to rapid urbanization, Bandung encountered problems such as economic and social inequality, corruption, traffic jams and environmental degradation. The candidates held a public debate in June, during which multiple incidents of provocative speech was done by supporters. Following the debates, an observer from Padjadjaran University remarked that \"only two pairs are actually qualified to lead Bandung\" and that the others were just \"trying their luck\", although he did not specify which.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election, Results\nEarly exit polls were in favor of Ridwan-Oded's victory, with a turnout of about 57 percent. Chief of the local KPU noted the low turnout, stating that he was \"disappointed\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election, Results\nThere were also 43,494 votes which were invalidated due to the ballot paper not being used or used more than once. On 28 June, Ridwan Kamil-Oded M Danial were declared winners of the election, having won in all 30 subdistricts (kecamatan) of the city. Following the announcement, six of the seven other candidate pairs (i.e. all except Iswara-Asep) objected to the result, citing irregularities in the election process. The objections were raised to the Constitutional Court on 2 July, and on 23 July the court upheld the election results. Ridwan was formally sworn in as mayor on 16 September, as scheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232080-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandung mayoral election, Results, Analysis\nObservers noted the presence of Ridwan Kamil and his campaign team on social media, especially Twitter, as a contributing factor to his victory. Other candidates were also associated with corruption cases. Despite PKS being embroiled in a scandal during the election period, Ridwan's strong figure was postulated to have overshadowed this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232081-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandy World Championship\nThe 2013 Bandy World Championship was an edition of the top annual event in international bandy, held between January 23 and February 3, 2013, in Norway and Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232081-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandy World Championship\n14 countries participated in the 2013 championships: Belarus, Finland, Kazakhstan, Norway, Russia, Sweden (group A), Canada, Estonia, Japan, Hungary, Latvia, the Netherlands, Ukraine and the United States (group B). The B-group Championship was played in Sapa Arena in Vetlanda. The B-Group games were only played 2x30 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232081-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandy World Championship, Division B, Group 1\nNote - Matches were of 60 minutes duration rather than the standard 90 minutes in Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232081-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandy World Championship, Division B, Group 2\nNote - Matches were of 60 minutes duration rather than the standard 90 minutes in Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232081-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bandy World Championship, Division B, Final standings\nThe USA will replace Belarus in group A next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing\nA bomb explosion known as the 2013 Bangalore bombing occurred on 17 April 2013 in Bangalore, India, at 10:30 (IST) near the Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) Karnataka New State Office Jagannath Bhawan, on Temple Street 11th Cross, Malleswaram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing\nSixteen people were reported to have been injured. The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) confirmed that the latest Bangalore blast was a terror attack. Syed Ali and Jahan Aamir were arrested by the Bangalore Police for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n(Timeline displayed in reverse chronological order)A motorcycle was parked in between two cars near the BJP Karnataka State Office Jagannath Bhawan. The blast ripped apart the motorcycle and gutted both cars. Windows of nearby houses and vehicles were also reported to have been shattered due to the shock-wave from the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 at 3:00 pm \u2013 Security was stepped up in New Delhi in the wake of the Bangalore blast with special checking of inbound and outbound vehicles. Personnel were deployed across the national capital but police said there was no reason to panic. Vigilance was also stepped up at railway stations, airports, Metro stations, market places and other public places in the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 2:45 pm \u2013 Eleven policemen were reportedly injured in the blast, sources said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 2:30 pm \u2013 Union Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde spoke on the Bangalore blast in Kolkata on Wednesday. He said he had already constituted a probe into the Bangalore blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 2:06 pm \u2013 An NSG team is set to leave for Bangalore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:54 pm \u2013 Another blast was reported by the local media from Hebbal. Police, however, denied such reports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:47 pm \u2013 NIA and sleuths were probing the blast site. Karnataka has been put on high alert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:45 pm \u2013 Bangalore Police was alerted about possible disruptive activities a couple of days ago. On Tuesday, Bangalore hosted an IPL match and the security was expected to be high with elections around the corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:40 pm \u2013 BJP spokesperson Meenakshi Lekhi condemned the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:38 pm \u2013 The Ind-Suzuki motorcycle in which the explosive (500 grams) was placed had a Tamil Nadu registration number and was parked there since yesterday, sources said. The explosion was carried out with a timer, it was learnt. The two-wheeler was a stolen one, reports said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:36 pm \u2013 Senior BJP leader Venkaiah Naidu condemned the incident and hoped that the center and the government of Karnataka probed the incident in proper coordination. He said they would wait for the outcome of the probe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:15 pm \u2013 Reports confirmed that IED was used to trigger the Malleshwaram blast in Bangalore on Wednesday morning. 1:10 pm \u2013 R Ashoka, Karnataka deputy chief minister and home minister said the BJP will not be deterred by such cowardly acts. He said it was clearly an act of terror.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 1:05 pm \u2013 A female victim admitted in the hospital said she fell down after hearing a massive explosion and seeing fire. \"I don't remember anything after that,\" she said. Meanwhile, officials said none of the vehicles that were present at that Bangalore blast site had a LPG kit. Karnataka Police DGP Lalrokhuma Pachau said the motorcycle and a van were damaged the most in the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 12:44 pm \u2013 Home Secretary RPN Singh appealed for peace and calm. Police said the nature of the injuries in the blast were not very serious and the injured were undergoing treatment at KC Hospital. Singh said the Karnataka Police will be given all possible help in probing the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 12:33 pm \u2013 Police were suspecting whether the blast targeted at the BJP office. The entire area has been cordoned off. The toll of injured touches 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 12:23 pm \u2013 The injured in the blast included a CRPF jawan and an 18-year-old PU student who was on her way to the tutorial. They were being treated at KC Hospital in Malleshwaram. Two teenage girls were among the injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 12:13 pm \u2013 An NIA team was rushed to the blast spot. Although initially it was said that the NIA's assistance would not be required to probe the case. A forensic team had also reached the spot to probe the incident. The bomb squad was also expected to arrive at the spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 12:09 pm \u2013 BJP spokesperson Ashwatnarayana said they had come out in the street after hearing a huge blast. \"We had first thought it to be a transformer blast,\" he said. \"Thanks to good old trees on Bevinamarada Raste the damage is minimal,\" the BJP man told OneIndia News. If the blast near BJP's office in Banglore is a terror attack, it will certainly help the BJP politically on the eve of election. BJP leader Balbir Punj had said earlier that he hoped that it was not a terror attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 11:45 am \u2013 Commissioner of Police Raghavendra Auradkar said the explosion was caused by a motorcycle bomb. The police said the explosives were placed on the motorcycle. The police, however, said there was no need to seek NIA help in the probe at the moment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Event description and timeline\n17 April 2013 \u2013 11:30 am \u2013 Karnataka Chief Minister Jagadish Shettar said it was too early to make any statement on whether it was a terror attack. He said the officials were investigating it thoroughly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Investigation\nAccording to police chief of Karnataka, Lalrokhuma Pachau, the material that was used for explosion was ammonium nitrate which is easily available in the market and frequently used by terrorist groups The motorbike used for the purpose was reported to have been stolen from Hyderabad while the number plate bearing Tamil Nadu registration number TN22R3769 was also recovered from the spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Investigation\nA team from the National Investigation Agency has arrived from Delhi to investigate into the matter. A team of the National Security Guard has also left for Bangalore to aid the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Investigation\nSo far no one has claimed responsibility for the bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Victims\n16 people, 8 policemen and 8 civilians, are reported to have been injured in the blast. All the victims were rushed to KC General Hospital. According to director general of police (DGP) Lalrokhuma Pachau none of the victim suffered serious injuries. The eight civilians include three women and two teenagers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Victims\nA number of vehicles and nearby houses also bore the brunt of the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232082-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangalore bombing, Victims\nWith State elections due in Karnataka on 5 May 2013, the BJP State HQ was busy with many visitors. The injured policemen were on security duty at close proximity to the BJP office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232083-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangkok by-election\nBangkok by-election in 2013 were held on 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232084-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangkok gubernatorial election\nThe tenth election for the governorship of Bangkok took place on 3 March 2013. The election was won by incumbent governor MR Sukhumbhand Paribatra of the Democrat Party. Twenty-five candidates contested the election. Pol Gen Pongsapat Pongcharoen, representing the Pheu Thai Party, was regarded as the other major contender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232084-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangkok gubernatorial election\nThe election was scheduled to take place sixty days after Sukhumbhand resigned on 9 January 2013, his second-to-last day of office. (Resignation, as opposed to completion of the term, effectively extended the election deadline for another fifteen days.) The Election Commission accepted registrations on 21\u201325 January, although unofficial campaigning had begun earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232084-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangkok gubernatorial election\nThe election was viewed as a sharp contest between the Democrat Party, whose candidates had held the governorship since 2004, and the Pheu Thai Party, which lead the current national government. While Bangkok is regarded as a traditional stronghold of the Democrat Party, Sukhumbhand faced low public approval ratings. Prior to endorsing Sukhumbhand, the party faced internal controversy over the candidacy. Sukhumbhand's first-term performance was generally viewed as poor, a fact some have attributed to partisan conflicts between the city and national governments. The Pheu Thai Party picked up on this dissatisfaction and campaigned on \"seamless coordination\" between the governments. Its candidate, Pongsapat, previously served as spokesman of the Royal Thai Police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232084-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangkok gubernatorial election\nThe highlight of the election was also other candidates who ran independently, including:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232084-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangkok gubernatorial election\nSukhumbhand won the election with 1,256,349 votes, or 47.75% percent of votes cast. Pongsapat won 1,077,899 votes (40.97%). Voter turnout was 63.98 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232085-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Championship League\nThe 2013 Premier Bank Bangladesh Championship League started on 11 February 2013 where 8 clubs competed with each other on home and away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232085-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Championship League, Teams and locations\nThe following 8 clubs competed in the Bangladesh Championship League during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232086-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Federation Cup\nThe 2013 Bangladesh Federation Cup was the 26th edition to be played and was known as the Walton Federation Cup due to sponsorship reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232086-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Federation Cup\nThe competition started on 21 November and finished with the final at the Bangabandhu National Stadium on 9 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232086-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Federation Cup\nTwelve teams took part with the first round being played as a group stage; all groups contained three teams. The top two sides from each group qualified for the knock-out stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final\nThe 2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final was a day/night Twenty20 cricket match played between the Dhaka Gladiators and the Chittagong on 19 February 2013 at the Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka to determine the winner of the 2013 Bangladesh Premier League, second season of a professional Twenty20 cricket league in Bangladesh. It ended as the Gladiators defeated the Kings by 43 runs. It was the second consecutive final and title for the Gladiators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final\nThe Gladiators, captained by Mashrafe Mortaza, topped the group stage table, whereas the Kings, led by Mahmudullah, stood at the third position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final\nWinning the toss, Kings' captain Mahmudullah opted to field first. The Gladiators scored 172 runs in 20 overs with a loss of 9 wickets. Batting at number 3, Wicket-keeper Anamul Haque top scored for the Gladiators with 58 runs. Shakib Al Hasan scored 41 for Gladiators. Kings' bowler Rubel Hossain took four wickets for 44 runs. The Kings failed to build a good opening partnership when their opener Shehan Jayasuriya got out at 26. After this there was no big partnerships expect the 37 runs partnership at 6th wicket which was their highest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final\nHowever, the other opener Jason Roy and skipper Mahmudullah scored 40 and 44 respectively to get to the target. But lack of good partnerships and contributions the Kings' innings ended as 129 all-out. Gladiators won the match by 43 runs and earned the 2013 Bangladesh Premier League title. Mosharraf Hossain of Gladiators was named the man of the match for his three wickets for 26 runs in bowling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Group stage\nThe Gladiators started their campaign with three straight wins. However they lost to the Royals at their fourth match. Then they won two consecutive matches before they lost against the Kings. They again won three straight matches before the last match. Their loss to Barisal Burners wasn't too much effective as they went to beat the Kings at their last group stage match to top the points table of group stage. The campaign of Chittagong started with two straight defeats against Duronto and Rangpur Riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Group stage\nThey won just one match in their first five matches which came against the Burners while they lost to Royals and Burners in other matches. But from there they got four consecutive wins to get a position in the points table. Though in last three matches they only won against Duronto with losses against Riders and Gladiator. Still Kings qualified for the playoffs by securing the third place at the points table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Group stage\nThe two teams faced each other in two matches of the group stage, where both teams won a match each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Play-Off Stage\nFrom 2013 edition of Bangladesh Premier League the knock-out stage format went through a change. The format was first and second place holder of the points table would play the first match of knockout stage called Race to the Final. While the third and fourth placed team at points table would play the second match of knockout stage called Elimination Final. Winner of Race to the Final would qualify for final and loser of Elimination Final would get eliminated from the tournament. Then the loser of the Race to the Final and winner of the Elimination Final would play the Semi-Final. Winner of Semi-Final would join the winner of Race to the Final in the Final of Bangladesh Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Play-Off Stage\nIn the points table Dhaka Gladiators were the top placed team, then Sylhet Royals, Chittagong Kings and Duronto Rajshahi were in the second, third and fourth position respectively. So, Gladiators and Royals fought each other in the Race to the Final. In the match after winning the toss Royals captain Mushfiqur Rahim decided to field first. Royals bowlers bowled well as only two players of Gladiators could score more than 20 runs. But one of that innings were of 114 off 51 balls smashed by Chris Gayle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Play-Off Stage\nGayle's 114 and 38 from Shakib Al Hasan helped Gladiators to reach 197 for 9 wickets in 20 overs. Sajedul Islam took three wickets for 23 runs in 4 overs. In reply Royals fought well with the skipper Rahim scoring 86 runs from 44 balls. But still they fell short of 4 runs and scored 193 for 6 in allotted 20 overs. Gladiators won the match by 4 runs and qualified for the final. While Royals had to play the Semi-Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Play-Off Stage\nKings and Duronto who were the third and fourth placed team at points table respectively had to face each other in the Eliminator Final. Winning the toss Muktar Ali the skipper of Duronto Rajshahi opted to bat first. They could score 107 run with the loss of 6 wickets in their 20 overs. Sean Ervine scored unbeaten 47 runs. Kings bowler Taskin Ahmed took 4 wickets for 31 runs. In reply Kings reached the target easily with four wickets in hand and 16 balls to spare. Ravi Bopara scored unbeaten 34 runs for the Kings. As a result of this match Duronto were eliminated from the tournament while Kings qualified for the Semi-Final where their opponent was the Royals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Play-Off Stage\nThe final qualifier of the knockout stage was contested by the Sylhet Royals and Chittagong Kings. Royals lost to Gladiators in the Race to the Final while Kings beat Duronto in the Eliminator Final to keep their hopes alive. The match was originally scheduled to play at 17 February 2016. But rain washed the game out and the game was decided to play on the next day which was also the rest day. Chittagong skipper Mahmudullah won the toss of the semifinal and asked Royals to bat first. Royals scored 149 for 7 wickets in 20 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232087-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League Final, Route to the final, Play-Off Stage\nElton Chigumbura scored the highest score of unbeaten 42 while skipper Rahim scored 36. Their partnership of 58 in the fifth wicket helped Kings to post 149 on board. Enamul Haque jnr. and Kevon Cooper took two wickets each for Kings. Kings' start for the chase of 150 wasn't good as 2 wickets fallen just for 4 runs. But later on score of 44 and 33 from Ryan ten Doeschate and Nurul Hasan respectively helped Kings to chase down the target with three wickets in hand and five balls to spare. As a result of this match Royals were eliminated from the tournament and Kings joined Glaidiators in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232088-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League player auction\nThe players auction for the 2013 Bangladesh Premier League was held on December 20, 2012 at the Radisson Blu Water Garden Hotel, Dhaka. Domestic players were set a base price between $10,000 and $50,000, while international players were set a base price between $15,000 and $75,000.No Indian players included in 2013 BPL edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232088-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League player auction, Player list, Domestic players\nDomestic players within the top three categories for the auction are listed below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232088-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League player auction, Player list, International players\nInternational players in of the two top categories for the auction are listed below. Players with a strike through their name were withdrawn on the day of the auction. Yasir Arafat, Ryan ten Doeschate and Peter Trego were added to Category A on auction day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232088-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League player auction, Unsold players\nThe following is a list of players who remained unsold in the auction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232088-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League player auction, Post-auction signings\nFranchises are able sign players after the BPL auction, as replacement of contracted players who are not available to play due to injuries and national commitments. Under BPL rules, the replacements have to be chosen from the pool of players who went unsold in the auction, and cannot be paid more than the players they are replacing, though they can be paid less. The Pakistan Cricket Board refused to issue No Objection Certificates (NOC) to any of its player who were selected by the BPL franchises and therefore Pakistani cricketers will not take part in the 2013 Bangladesh Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232089-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League squads\nThe Bangladesh Premier League (BPL) is a professional Twenty20 league in Bangladesh. The league consists of 7 teams for the first time from seven different cities. This is a list of the squads of all franchise for the 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence\nOn 28 February 2013, the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, the vice-president of the Jamaat-e-Islami to death for war crimes committed during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War. Following the sentence, activists of Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir attacked Hindus in different parts of the country. Hindu properties were looted, Hindu houses were burnt into ashes and Hindu temples were desecrated and set on fire. While the government has held the Jamaat-e-Islami responsible for the attacks on minorities, the Jamaat-e-Islami leadership has denied any involvement. Minority leaders have protested the attacks and appealed for justice. The Supreme Court of Bangladesh has directed law enforcement to start suo motu investigation into the attacks. The US Ambassador to Bangladesh expressed concern about attacks by Jamaat on the Bengali Hindu community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 945]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Background\nAttacks on Hindu minorities have been the work of extremists supported by the Jamaat and Bangladesh National Party (BNP). After the Judge's decision to give the death sentence to Delwar Hossain was released, the Jamaat and BNP burst into riots against governments, as well as attacking minorities and local police. The attacks destroyed thousands of Hindu houses and temples. These attacks have been heavily criticised by the United States Government, as well as India and other peace-demanding nations and organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks\nAfter the verdict, the Jamaat-e-Islami took to the streets in protest against the verdict. They attacked the establishment including the police, fire brigade, disrupted the traffic and set vehicles on fire. They attacked specially the Hindu minorities, destroyed their houses and businesses, vandalised their temples and set them on fire. According to community leaders, more than 50 Hindu temples and 1,500 Hindu homes were destroyed in 20 districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Chittagong Division\nThe Jihadi Groups who are responsible for these attacks are groups that are funded by Langley and includes the more notorious Hefazate Islam, Jamaati Islami and BNP. BNP and Jamaati Islami has been funding these extremist groups. This was portrayed in an article by a Pakistani Journalist in the International Herald Tribune. In Noakhali District several Hindu homes and temples came under the attack of the Islamists. On the morning of 28 February, the activists of Jamaat-e-Islami and Islami Chhatra Shibir began to gather near Rajganj Bazar in Begumganj Upazila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Chittagong Division\nAt around 2\u00a0pm, immediately after the verdict, the activists armed with sticks, started a procession in protest against the verdict. The procession vandalised the Kali temple at Rajganj Bazar and the temple near Bainnabari. Then they attacked the Hindus in nearby Tongipar and Aladinagar villages. They vandalised eight Hindu households and looted all the valuables including money and jewellery. The temple of Bhuiyan house in Tongipar village was vandalised. Six people were injured in the attacks. The violence continued in phases till the evening. Around 6\u201330 p.m. Rapid Action Battalion was deployed to bring the situation under control. On 23 March, Islamic extremists vandalised and looted a temple at Companiganj Upazila On 26 March, miscreants set fire in a Hindu house at Zirtali union belonging to Begamganj Upazila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Chittagong Division\nIn Lakshmipur District, five Hindu-owned jewellery shops were looted and one Hindu temple attacked and looted in Chandraganj. After the midnight of 28 February, one Hindu temple has been on fire in Gaiyarchar in Raipur Upazila. The police prevented the rioters from setting fire to another temple. Two Hindu monasteries were set on fire. On 1 March, the miscreants set fire to a Hindu house in Char Sita area of Ramgati Upazila. On 11 May, Miscreants set fire on a Hindu Temple at Ramganj Upazila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Chittagong Division\nOn 28 February, in the afternoon Jamaat-e-Islami and Islami Chhatra Shibir activists attacked the Hindus in Chittagong District. In Banshkhali Upazila, the attackers set fire to Hindus houses in Dakshin Jaldi area of Jaldi Union. 20 houses were gutted. 16 Hindus were injured in the arson, two of the died. A 65-year-old Hindu was killed in the attacks. On early morning of 5 March at around 2\u201330 a.m., the Sarbajaneen Magadeshwari Mandir at East Rupkania of Satkania Upazila was torched. At around 3:30\u00a0am the Khetrapal Temple was burned to ashes and money from donation box was looted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Chittagong Division\nIn Cox's Bazar, the Jamaat activists destroyed three Hindu temples. In Kutubdia Upazila, thousands of Jamaat-e-Islami and Islami Chhatra Shibir activists gathered before the Upazila Parishad office around 9\u00a0pm. Around 10 p.m. they set fire to Hindu temples, after vandalising government offices and an Awami League party office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Chittagong Division\nIn Comilla District, image of a Hindu deity was vandalised in Brahmanpara Upazila. On 1 March at around 11\u00a0pm, eleven shops including four owned by the Hindus were set on fire in Kheora Bazar in Kasba Upazila of Brahmanbaria District. On the early morning of 6 March, some time after 2:30 a.m., unidentified miscreants set fire to Sarbajanin Kali Mandir after vandalising five idols at Chapatali village under Mohammadpur East Union in Daudkandi Upazila of the district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Chittagong Division\nIn Rangamati District, Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh activists set fire in a temple at Bagahichari Upazila on 28 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Khulna Division\nOn the night of 28 February, miscreants vandalised a Hindu temple in Pingjour village under Chingrikhali Union in Morrelganj Upazila of Bagerhat District. The Dumuria Sharbajaneen temple under Ramachandrapur Union too was set on fire. Two Hindu houses, one belonging to a local Awami League leader, were set on fire in Banogram Union. On 3 April, Miscreants torched a Hindu temple after vandalism of its three idols of god and goddess in the same place again. In Satkhira, Jamaat and Shibir activists attacked Hindu houses and business establishments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Khulna Division\nIn Kadamtala, City College More and Abader Hat areas of Satkhira municipality more than hundred Hindu residences and business establishments were looted and destroyed. The District Magistrate of Satkhira District promulgated Section 144 in Satkhira and certain areas of Assasuni Upazila. On 5 March, Jamaat-Shibir and BNP activists set eight Hindu houses on fire in Khulna. On 12 March around midnight, miscreants vandalised 23 idols of Shiva at a temple at the Angita cremation ground in Kaliganj Upazila of Jhenaidah District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Khulna Division\nOn 18 March, more than 150 armed assailants attacked and vandalised the Pabla Sarbajanin Kalibari Temple in Khulna city's Banikpara around 9:30\u00a0pm. After blasting incendiaries, they ransacked the houses and shops of Hindus in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Rangpur Division\nOn 28 February, activists of Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir attacked a Hindu temple and destroyed Hindu-owned business establishments in Gaibandha District. In the evening, they vandalised some houses in the Shobhaganj Union. The Hindu community leaders complained that the attackers had vandalised the central Kali temple at Mithapukur Upazila in Rangpur District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Rangpur Division\nShortly after the midnight of 2 March, around 30\u201340 miscreants, shouting abuses and threatening the Hindus, attacked their homes at Uttar Maheshpur village in Raniganj area of Dinajpur Sadar Upazila of Dinajpur District. They set fire to the homes and haystacks of 12 Hindu peasant families, as they barely managed to escape alive. At around 1 a.m. two fire brigade units from Dinajpur arrived and doused the fire. By that time, the homes were completely reduced to ashes. Jamat-Shibir activists also blocked the Joypurhat-Bogra highway for three hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Rangpur Division\nOn 5 March, the Sree Sree Shoshan Kali Mandir at Rotherpar village in Aditmari upazila of Lalmonirhat District was vandalised. On 7 March, fanatics set fire to an Hindu temple after destroying goddess Kali idol at Hatibandha upazila of Lalmonirhat. Sree Sree Kali Mandir at Bejgram village was also burnt down at night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Rangpur Division\nOn 8 March, a Radha Gobinda temple is burnt down in Rangpur city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Barisal Division\nIn Barisal District, a Hindu temple was set on fire in Nalchira Union of Gaurnadi Upazila. The Pinglakathi Sarbajaneen Durga Mandir was vandalised. On 5 March, miscreants tried to set fire to the Guthia Sarbajaneen Kali Mandir under Guthia union in Wazirpur Upazila. On the early hours of 6 March, a Kali temple was vandalised in Pakshia Union under Burhanuddin Upazila in Bhola District. The images of Kali and Mahadev were destroyed. In the evening at around 7:30\u00a0pm, a Radha Krishna temple was set on fire in Batajor Village under Bamna Upazila in Barguna District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Barisal Division\nOn 12 March at around 2:45\u00a0am, two Hindu houses on New Vatikhana Road in Barisal were set ablaze by unknown criminals. Locals doused the flames before spreading. In the early hours, burglars broke open a Radha Govinda temple in Kuripaika village of Patuakhali Sadar Upazila in Patuakhali District and stole the Madanmohan idol and 2.5 bharis of gold. On 4 April, Islamic fanatics torched down a Hindu temple at Kathalia Upazila under Jhalokati District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Rajshahi Division\nOn 7 March, an idol of the Hindu Goddess Kali was destroyed and a Hindu temple was set on fire at Hatibandha Upazila of Lalmonirhat. Early in the morning on 3 March at around 3\u00a0am, unidentified miscreants set fire to the Sarbajanin Puja Sangha Mandir in the Natun Alidanga Bara Pekurtala locality of Shibganj municipality under Shibganj Upazila in Chapainawabganj District. A portion of the temple was gutted in the fire. After the incident, the local Hindus were living in fear. On the night of 12 March, miscreants broke into a Hari temple in Pakuria village under Singra Upazila of Natore District and destroyed the idol. On 19 March, Miscreants desecrated idols in four Hindu temples of Gabtali Upazila in Bogra District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Dhaka Division\nOn 3 March, in Lohajang Upazila of Munshiganj District a Kali Temple was set on fire by fanatics. On the same day, in Kotalipara Upazila of Gopalganj District, a Hindu temple is burnt down. Six people including a Jamaat leader were arrested on charges of torching this temple. Early in the morning on 6 March, Ananda Ashram Mandir of Fulbaria village under the Ballabhdi Union in Faridpur District was set on fire. On 8 March, Islamist extremists vandalised a Kali Temple at Sashangaon village under Sirajdikhan Upazila in Munshiganj District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Dhaka Division\nOn 11 March, a temple at Fulbaria Upazila in Mymensingh District was vandalised. Six idols were destroyed at Kafilabari Durga temple in Kotalipara Upazila of Gopalganj at the same night. On the night of 15 March, unidentified miscreants vandalised the image of Saraswati in a 77-year-old Hindu temple in Madhabpur area of Sherpur municipality in Sherpur District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Dhaka Division\nOn 18 March, seven idols in Harimandir in Netrokona Sadar upazila's Bobahala have been desecrated by smashing them to pieces. On the same day in Gazipur District, the attackers damaged six idols in a Hindu temple at Dakhkhin Marta of Sreepur. On 22 March, unidentified miscreants set fire to a Lakshmi temple at Gazipur Sadar Upazila in Gazipur District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Dhaka Division\nOn 2 April, religious fanatics set the largest Hindu temple at Bhuiyanpur upazila in Tangail District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Dhaka Division\nOn 5 April, unidentified miscreants vandalised the Kali Mandir, Panchmandir and Shiv Mandir in Mirzapur of Tangail District. On the same day a Hindu temple was vandalised at Rajoir under Madaripur District during the clash of two political parties. On 19 April, Unidentified miscreants torched a Hindu temple at Mahendri village in Rajoir upazila of Madaripur District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Dhaka Division\nOn 8 April, religious fanatics vandalised a Hindu temple in Jamalpur District. On the same day religious fanatics vandalised a Hindu temple at Fulbaria under Mymensingh District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Dhaka Division\nOn 29 May, senior artist cum audio-visual officer of the National Museum of Science and Technology, Shyamal Bashak was assaulted by Islamic fundamentalist co-workers in attempt to purge prominent Hindus from the National Science Museum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Attacks, Sylhet Division\nOn 12 March, miscreants set fire around a temple at Juri Upazila in Maulvi Bazar District. But the people living around the temple quickly took the fire under control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Domestic\nThe leaders of the Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council and the Bangladesh Puja Udjapan Parishad held a human chain at the National Press Club in Dhaka and Chittagong on 2 March in protest of the atrocities on minorities in Bangladesh. At the meeting, the Hindu leaders expressed deep concerns in the recent developments and stated that the Jamaat-e-Islami had once again engaged in extermination of the minorities from Bangladesh as it did in 1971.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Domestic\nOn 3 March, the Bangladesh High Court directed the Government to ensure security of the Hindus in Noakhali District and repair the temples and houses of the Hindus destroyed in the attacks. It also issued suo moto notice to the Noakhali District police, the district administration and the Inspector General of Police to take action against the persons involved in the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Domestic\nKhaleda Zia, the chairperson of opposition party BNP, also expressed her concern about communal attack on Hindus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Domestic\nOn 6 March, Hindus across the country protested against the violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Foreign\nIn India, activists of Gairik Bharat burned an effigy of Sheikh Hasina in Silchar, in protest against her failure to protect the Hindu minorities in Bangladesh. The Bharatiya Janata Party, West Bengal unit demands the central government to create pressure on Bangladesh government to protect the Hindus from Islamic extremism. In Rajya Sabha, the upper house of Indian parliament, main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party demanded that an all-party delegation be sent to Bangladesh to assess the \"atrocities on Hindus\" by Jamaat-e-Islami. On the other hand, Muslim radicals of West Bengal stand for Delwar Hossain Sayeedi and Jamaat-e-Islami with conviction. Expressing serious concern on the continued attacks on the Hindus in Bangladesh the South Assam Bengali Hindu Association demanded the intervention of the Indian President Pranab Mukherjee in stopping the atrocities on Hindus in Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Foreign\nThe British High Commissioner in Dhaka, Mr. Robert Gibson expressed his deep concern and resentment upon the attack upon the religious places and the recent attacks in a press conference on Sunday 3 March held in Dhaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Foreign\nOn 4 March, the United States Department of State expressed concerns over the attacks on Hindu temples and homes in Bangladesh. Dan Mozena US Ambassador to Bangladesh express concern about attack of Jamaat on Bengali Hindu community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Foreign\nThe Amnesty International has called upon the Bangladesh government for giving better protection to the minority Hindus in the country. In a 6 March report, titled 'Bangladesh: Wave of Violent Attacks Against Hindu Minority', the Amnesty said as many as 40 Hindu temples were vandalised in attacks by supporters of an Islamic party. Several hundred were rendered homeless as shops and houses belonging to the Hindu community were burnt down over the past week, it said. The report gave Bangladesh's war crimes trial as the \"context\" to the violence against the Hindus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Foreign\nAt the House of Lords in the British Parliament, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi condemned the attacks on minorities and their places of worship in Bangladesh. She stated that 24 places of worship, 112 homes and about a dozen business establishment belonging to the minority Hindus came under attack. According to Lord Avebury , the recent attacks are recurrence of the 2001 attack on the Hindus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232090-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh anti-Hindu violence, Reactions, Foreign\nAlthough, there was local reporting of the anti-Hindu atrocities, there was little to no exposure from international media, but images from the attacks continued to be spread on social media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement\nThe 2013 Bangladesh Quota Reform Movement was a movement against incumbent government policies regarding jobs in the government sector in the country. The movement began in the same location that saw the 2013 Shahbag protests in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Although initially confined to the locality of Shahbag and Dhaka University campus, it eventually spread to other parts of Bangladesh. It attained popularity as students of different universities in various parts of the country brought out processions of their own while demonstrating in solidarity with the main protest movement and pressing forward with similar demands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Causes and demands\nUnder the current BCS examinations system, 30 per cent of the seats are reserved for children of freedom fighters and 10 per cent for women. A further 10 per cent is reserved for districts, 5 per cent for national minorities and 1 per cent for people with disabilities. As a result, only 44 percent of the examinees are able to secure positions on the basis of merit, causing discontent among a large section of general students who say that they are deprived despite scoring higher than candidates who fall under any quota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Causes and demands\nProtesters formed a 10-member committee known as \u2018Medhamullayon Mancha\u2019 and said Abdur Rahim, student of University of Dhaka would act as convener of the committee. They have called for the re-evaluation of results of the 34th BCS preliminary examination and the cancellation of quota system in all public examinations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 10 July\nOn Wednesday, 10 July 2013, hundreds of Bangladesh Civil Service examinees began protests demanding an immediate cancellation of all sorts of quota in public service recruitment. Several hundred job-seekers who did not pass the 34th BCS preliminary exam had gathered in the Shahbagh crossing, blocking the roads passing through, till 10:00 pm for more than 10 hours demanding the re-evaluation of answer scripts claiming that they had not been selected even after doing good in the exam and the cancellation of the quota system. The Bangladesh Public Service Commission later in the evening said that it would review the preliminary test results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 11 July\nOn Thursday, 11 July 2013, the students, who gathered at Shahbagh intersection for the 2nd day demanding cancellation of the quota system in recruitment to government jobs, were forced to leave the place as police charged baton and lobbed teargas shells on them. In a short time, the clashes spread throughout the Dhaka University campus area. Protesters alleged that ruling party Chhatra League activists joined the police in attacking protesters on the Dhaka University campus and beat them up with lethal weapons, sticks and iron rods. The demonstrators vandalised several vehicles, including two cars of private TV channels, DU registrar building, proctor office and sociology department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 11 July\nNews reports gave information of about 15 persons arrested while more than 55 students were injured in the clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 12 July\nPolice and activists of Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL), foiled attempts by protesters to hold prescheduled processions by BCS job seekers on the campuses of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET), Dhaka Medical College Hospital and Dhaka University on Friday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 12 July\nTwo cases were filed against 1,700 unidentified government job seekers in connection with the violence on the 11th of July in the city's Shahbagh area. Officer-in-charge of Shahbagh Police Station Sirajul Islam said that police had filed both the cases \u2014 one against 500 people and another against 1,200 \u2014 under the Bangladesh Penal Code Act with the police station. Besides, security official of Dhaka University, SM Quamrul Ahsan, also filed a case at Shahbagh police station against 500 students accusing them of vandalism on the campus on Monday night, bringing the total number of accused to 2,200 job seekers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 12 July\nPolice detained 34 people in connection with the violence at Dhaka University on Friday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 13 July\nResuming the ongoing agitation over job reservations, a group of students held a demonstration in front of Dhaka University Central Library, demanding revocation of the quota system. Witnesses said leaders of the DU chapter of the Chhatra League disbanded the protesters when they tried to stage a rally on the campus. Soon after the first group dispersed, another group took out a procession holding the banner \"Amra Muktijoddhar Shontan\". Meanwhile, over 1,000 students of Rajshahi University (RU) demonstrating against the quota provision in public service recruitment blocked the Dhaka-Rajshahi highway since Saturday morning. They started the protest in front of the university's main gate around 11:00am, halting traffic movement on the highway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 13 July\nThe protesters in a press release announced to observe strike in all educational institutions across the country on Sunday to press home their demands, including cancellation of quota system in all government jobs, withdrawal of lawsuits, unconditional release of detained and arrested persons and justice for the Chhatra League attack on peaceful protesters upon probe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Timeline of protests, 14 July\nAnti Quota protests continued at Dhaka University (DU), Chittagong University(CU), Shahjalal University of Science and Technology (SUST) and Rajshahi University(RU). Thousands of students participated in the demonstrations and classes and exams were reportedly suspended at CU and SUST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Spread of protests nationwide\nFrom 11 June onwards, the protests spread to other parts of the country as students of Jahangirnagar University, Shahjalal University of Science & Technology at Sylhet, Bangladesh Agricultural University (BAU) (Mymensingh), Rajshahi University, Chittagong University, Islamic University, Kushtia decided to express solidarity with Dhaka University-based protesters. Students of public universities outside Dhaka took to the streets and formed human chains. They also chanted slogans, blocked highways and held placards and festoons to press home their demands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 11 July\nThe protests have sparked a lot of debate on various social media platforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 11 July\nThe prime minister's public administration adviser HT Imam, on speaking with the media said,\u2018The government has no plans to reform the existing quota system in the civil service exams.'", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 11 July\nDhaka University Proctor Amzad Ali flanked by ruling party Chhatra League men, said, \u201cWhen they began demonstration yesterday (Wednesday), we were sympathetic to their demand, but today (Thursday) what they are doing indicates that some other forces, maybe from Jamaat-Shibir, have infiltrated them and doing the damage working from inside. These kind of activities are quite unacceptable.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 12 July\nCondemning the violence on general students and expressing support with the demands of the anti-quota demonstrators, opposition party BNP acting secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir said in a statement. \u201cThe government has become so desperate that it does not hesitate to let loose police and Jubo League and Chhatra League cadres to attack students instead of taking their justified demand into consideration,\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 12 July\nAn organization called 'Amra Muktijoddhar Sontan' on Friday took stance against the anti-quota protests when it claimed that the anti quota movement was being influenced by Jamaat-e-Islami and Islami Chatra Shibir. \u201cWe have taken to the streets to voice our demand for fulfilling quotas in all cadre posts of special BCS (Bangladesh Civil Service). We will not go back until our demands are satisfied,\u201d added the organization's president Humayun Kabir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 13 July\nActing Jamaat-e-Islami Secretary Rafiqul Islam Khan, while expressing support for the protests said, \"The number of meritorious educated unemployed are rising in the country due to the quota system being effective and acute frustration is forming among the meritorious students and youths. Accepting the demand of the protesting students and youths, this problem should be solved swiftly. But attacking them by police and party cadres without considering their rational demands is very sad and painful. We think quota system needs to be annulled to create skilled and competent administrative leadership.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 13 July\nThe Public Service Commission (PSC) on Saturday said the reviewed results of the 34th BCS preliminary test would be published on Sunday. The Commission decided to reverse the decision to apply the quota policy at the 34th BCS preliminary result. However, the quota would still be applied in the later stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 14 July\nThe Public Service Commission (PSC) on Sunday came up with a reviewed list of 46,250 successful candidates, the highest so far. \u201cThese 46,250 candidates include the 12,033 whom we announced as successful in our previous list (earlier published on Tuesday, 9th of July),\u201d said PSC Exam Controller (cadre) AYM Nesar Uddin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 18 July\nPrime Minister Sheikh Hasina said that her government will make sure that those who were engaged in vandalism demanding cancellation of quota system in public service recruitment will not get any government jobs in future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232091-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh quota reform movement, Reactions, 18 July\n\u201cWe\u2019ve the pictures, we\u2019ll place them before the PSC before the viva-voce examinations so that these notorious elements can\u2019t get government jobs,\u201d she said in her introductory speech at the Awami League Central Working Committee (ALCWC) meeting at her official residence Ganobhaban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence\n2013 Bangladesh violence refers to the political instability, increase in crime and widespread attacks of minorities and opposition activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Clashes after Delwar Hossain Sayidee verdict, Verdict on Delwar Hossain Sayidee\nOn 28 February 2013, Thursday, the ICT, found Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami leader Delwar Hossain Sayeedi guilty of 8 out of 20 charges leveled against him including murder, rape and torture during the 1971 war of independence", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Clashes after Delwar Hossain Sayidee verdict, Clashes\nOn Sunday and Monday, 3 and 4 March, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami enforced a 48-hour hartal. Protests led by Jamaate Islami activists and Sayeedi supporters were carried out during these strikes. Bangladesh Nationalist Party supported the strike and called for another daylong strike on 5 March. Police shot dead 31 protestors during the initial clashes. According to Human Rights Watch, members of the Border Guards Bangladesh, and the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) shot live ammunition and rubber bullets into unarmed crowds, which included children, conducted sweeping arrests and used other forms of excessive force during and after protests. One eyewitness recalling the death of his 17-year-old family member described how he was shot after walking back from afternoon prayers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Clashes after Delwar Hossain Sayidee verdict, Clashes\nI saw [him] on the ground with blood coming from his head. I tried to drag his body to the side. It was the first time I had seen a dead body so I was in shock. They were still shooting, so I ran down the road. \u2026 When the RAB officers stopped shooting they dragged [him] like a carcass and flung him into the car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Clashes after Delwar Hossain Sayidee verdict, Clashes\nDuring the clashes a total of 80 individuals were shot dead by police. Police says that it did all these killings in \"self defense.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Clashes after Delwar Hossain Sayidee verdict, Lawsuits\nPolice sued 98,000 people for committing violence and imposed Section 144 in several districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Anti-Hindu Riot\nAfter the verdict of Delwar Hossain Sayidee, attacks on Hindu community occurred in several districts of Bangladesh including Noakhali, Lakshmipur, Chittagong, Comilla, Brahmanbaria, Cox's Bazar, Bagerhat, Gaibandha, Rangpur, Dinajpur, Lalmonirhat, Barisal, Bhola, Barguna, Satkhira, Chapainawabganj, Natore, Sylhet, Manikganj, Munshiganj. Several temples were vandalized. 2 Hindus died due to injuries in the violence. In a BBC News report, Anbarasan Ethirajan wrote that \"the recent violence is mainly blamed on the opposition Jamaat-e-Islami party, whose leaders are facing war crimes at the tribunal. But the party - which opposed Bangladesh's independence from Pakistan - denies the charges.\" Amnesty International expressed concern on the anti-Hindu attacks and urged the government of Bangladesh to provide them with better protection. Abbas Faiz, Bangladesh Researcher of Amnesty International has said that, since the obvious risks the Hindu minority face in Bangladesh, these attacks were predictable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 1053]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, 2013 Shapla Square protests\nOn 5 May, mass protests took place at Shapla Square in the Motijheel area of capital Dhaka. The protests were organized by the Islamist pressure group, Hefazat-e Islam, who were demanding the enactment of a blasphemy law. The government responded to the protests by cracking down on the protesters using a combined force drawn from the police, Rapid Action Battalion and paramilitary Border Guard Bangladesh to drive the protesters out of Shapla Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, 2013 Shapla Square protests\nFollowing the events at Motijheel, protests in other parts of the country also broke out, during which 27 people died, although different sources report casualty numbers ranging from 20 to 61. The opposition party BNP initially claimed thousands of Hefazat activists were killed during the operation, but this was disputed by the government. Human Rights Watch and other human rights organizations put the total death toll at above 50, but rights groups have termed the events as a massacre. Initial attempts to dispute the chain of events were thwarted due to the government closure of two television channels, Diganta Television and Islamic TV, which were live telecasting the operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Attacks by Islamic extremists in Bangladesh\nFrom 2013, attacks number of secularist writers, bloggers, and publishers and members of religious minorities such as Hindus, Buddhists, Christians, and Shias were killed or seriously injured in attacks that are believed to have been perpetrated by Islamist extremists. These attacks have been largely blamed by extremist groups such as Ansarullah Bangla Team and Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, 2013\u20132014 Satkhira clashes\nA joint operation by Border Guards Bangladesh, Rapid Action Battalion and Bangladesh police took place in different places of Satkhira district to hunt down the activists of Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami. They began on 16 December 2013 and continued after the 2014 Bangladesh election. There are allegations that various formations of the Indian military participated in the crackdown, an allegation that Bangladesh government denies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Reactions, Domestic\nBangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has strongly condemned the action of law enforcement forces. The chairperson of BNP, Khaleda Zia, has termed the spate of deaths across the country as \"genocide\" and accused the government of oppressing the opposition parties. The BNP Acting Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir blamed the government for the ongoing hate attacks on the minorities (i.e. Hindu community) across Bangladesh. On the other hand, Bangladesh Foreign Minister Dipu Moni condemned reports of Jamaat-e-Islami activists attacking minority Hindus and their temples in different parts of the country. She said, \"It is unfortunate and deplorable. The (Bangladesh) government will not tolerate any attempt to destabilize the country, or allow any breach of communal harmony.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Reactions, International\nSeveral international organizations have expressed their concern over the recent violence in Bangladesh as an aftermath of the verdict. Human Rights Watch urged restraint on all sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Reactions, International\nRecognizing the right of the people to protest, the United Nations deputy spokesman Eduardo del Buey said, \"The Secretary-General [of the U.N.] recognizes the right of people to protest, and it's the responsibility of both the authorities and the people protesting to assure this is done in a very peaceful manner.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Reactions, International\nThe United Kingdom has expressed sadness over the violence and the number of senseless and unnecessary deaths that have taken place across Bangladesh during the past few days. The British High Commissioner to Bangladesh, Robert Gibson, said, \"I deplore the cruel and unwarranted attacks on places of worship and private property.\" He added, \"This great achievement risks being undermined by the callous and unacceptable actions of a few. While every citizen has the right to mount a peaceful protest, intimidation and imposition of strikes disrupts the lives of all citizens and hampers the operation of legitimate business.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232092-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Bangladesh violence, Reactions, International\nThis is sending a negative signal to the international community and those wishing to invest in Bangladesh.\" Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird also expressed Canada's concern for Bangladesh. The United States has also expressed their concern over the attacks on homes, temples and shops owned by Hindu community in Bangladesh and called government to ensure safety of its citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232093-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladeshi presidential election\nIndirect presidential elections were held in Bangladesh on 22 April 2013 following the death of Zillur Rahman on 20 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232093-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladeshi presidential election, Background\nPresident Zillur Rahman died on 20 March in Singapore after being flown there with an illness. Parliamentary speaker Abdul Hamid took over in an interim capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232093-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladeshi presidential election, Background\nAt that time, Social protests had turned deadly in Bangladesh as a result of delayed prosecutions and convictions for war crimes committed during the Bangladesh War of Independence. The 2014 general election was also going to be on the new president's agenda. The opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its allies said they would boycott the election if it was not held under a neutral interim government. However, the ruling Awami League's leader Sheikh Hasina said her government would preside over the electoral process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232093-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bangladeshi presidential election, Election\nHamid won the election unopposed through a parliamentary vote. S.M. Asaduzzman, a director of the election commission, said: \"Abdul Hamid has won the election uncontested. The chief election commissioner declared him as the winner today.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232094-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bani Yas International Tournament\nThe Bani Yas International Tournament is a yearly football tournament that takes place in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates that began in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232095-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Banja Luka Challenger\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Hugo999 (talk | contribs) at 00:11, 18 November 2019 (removed Category:September 2013 sports events; added Category:September 2013 sports events in Europe using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232095-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Banja Luka Challenger\nThe 2013 Banja Luka Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina from 7 to 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232095-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Banja Luka Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232096-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Banja Luka Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nMarin Draganja and Nikola Mekti\u0107 won the title, beating Dominik Meffert and Oleksandr Nedovyesov 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [10\u20136]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232097-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Banja Luka Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAlja\u017e Bedene took the title, beating Diego Schwartzman 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232098-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of America 500\nThe 2013 Bank of America 500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on October 12, 2013, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Contested over 334 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4 km) asphalt quad-oval, it was the thirty-first race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season, as well as the fifth race in the ten-race Chase for the Sprint Cup, which ends the season. Brad Keselowski won the race, his first of the season, while Kasey Kahne finished second and Matt Kenseth finished third. This was the first time since October 2011 that a Chase race was \"spoiled\" by a non-Chase driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232098-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of America 500, Race summary\nDale Earnhardt, Jr. helped to enhance fuel injection research for NASCAR as he was leading lap 34 out of 334. His contribution to the fledgling technology came in the form of driving the one-millionth mile with an electronic fuel injection system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232099-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic\nThe 2013 Bank of the West Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 42nd edition of the tournament, which was part of the WTA Premier tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Stanford, California, United States between 22 and 28 July 2013. It was the first event on the 2013 US Open Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232099-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232099-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232100-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Doubles\nMarina Erakovic and Heather Watson were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears won the title, defeating Julia G\u00f6rges and Darija Jurak in the final, 6-2, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232101-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles\nSerena Williams was the two-time defending champion, but she decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232101-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles\nDominika Cibulkov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232101-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232101-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nThe top six seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232102-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Barbadian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Barbados on 21 February 2013. They were the first post-independence elections where the election date was announced five years after the last general election. The ruling Democratic Labour Party was re-elected with a reduced majority, winning 16 of the 30 seats in the House of Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232102-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Barbadian general election, Background\nAccording to the Constitution of Barbados, elections must take place no longer than every five years from the first sitting of Parliament. The last general election was held on 15 January 2008, while the first sitting of the current session of Parliament was held on 12 February 2008. After the dissolution of Parliament, the Governor-General of Barbados, on behalf of the Crown in Right of Barbados, must issue a writ for a general election for members to the House of Assembly and for appointment of Senators to the Senate within 90 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232102-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Barbadian general election, Background\nThe election and nomination dates were announced by Prime Minister Freundel Stuart on 29 January 2013. The nomination deadline for candidates to register was scheduled for 6 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232103-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell\nThe 2013 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell (also known as the Torneo God\u00f3) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 61st edition of the event and it was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Real Club de Tenis Barcelona in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, from 20 April through 28 April 2013. Rafael Nadal won his record 8th title at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232103-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232104-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 Doubles\nMariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski were the defending champions, but lost to David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco in the quarterfinals. Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares won the tournament, defeating Robert Lindstedt and Daniel Nestor in the final, 5\u20137, 7\u20136(9\u20137), [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232105-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Barcelona Open Banco Sabadell \u2013 Singles\nTwo-time defending champion Rafael Nadal successfully defended his title, defeating Nicol\u00e1s Almagro in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133. It was his record-extending eighth Barcelona Open title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232106-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baringo local elections\nLocal elections were held in Baringo County on 4 March 2013 to elect a Governor and County Assembly. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232106-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baringo local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232107-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Barum Czech Rally Zl\u00edn\nThe 2013 Barum Czech Rally Zl\u00edn, formally the 43. Barum Czech Rally Zl\u00edn, was the eighth round of the 2013 European Rally Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nElections to the Baseball Hall of Fame for 2013 took place according to rules most recently revised in July 2010. As in the past, the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) voted by mail to select from a ballot of recently retired players, with results announced on January 9, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nThe Pre-Integration Era Committee, the last of three new voting committees established during the July 2010 rules change to replace the more broadly defined Veterans Committee, convened early in December 2012 to select from a ballot of players and non-playing personnel who made their greatest contributions to the sport prior to 1947, called the \"Pre-Integration Era\" by the Hall of Fame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nFor the first time since 1996, and just the third time since 1960, the BBWAA election resulted in no selections. As the ballot featured numerous strong candidates, the result was widely viewed as a reflection of the deep controversy over players who were primarily active during a period when the sport was riddled with rumored use of performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs), and candidates appeared to have suffered in the voting regardless of whether they had been closely tied to any such rumors. The controversy's first major impact on the Hall of Fame ballot was seen in 2007, and the arrival in future years of additional candidates with either alleged or actual links to PED use suggested that the issue would be significant in Hall voting for at least several more years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nFor the first time since 1965, there were no living inductees. The induction class of 2013 consisted of the three deceased individuals elected by the new Pre-Integration Era Committee: player Deacon White, umpire Hank O'Day, and executive Jacob Ruppert, all of whom died in the 1930s. As was the case following the 1965 election\u2013which also resulted only in the induction of a member deceased for over 60 years, and led to the resumption of annual BBWAA elections\u2013the voting results led to calls for revision of the voting rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nThe induction ceremonies were held on July 28, 2013, at the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. On July 27, the Hall of Fame presented two annual awards for media excellence\u2014its own Ford C. Frick Award for broadcasters and the BBWAA's J. G. Taylor Spink Award for writers, and also honored sports medicine pioneer Dr. Frank Jobe and filmmaker Thomas Tull, producer of the 2013 film 42.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nThe BBWAA ballot was announced on November 28, 2012. The BBWAA was authorized to elect players active in 1993 or later, but not after 2007; the ballot included candidates from the 2012 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 2007. All 10-year members of the BBWAA were eligible to vote, and had until December 31, 2012, to return their ballots to the Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nThere were 37 candidates on the ballot, 13 who last played from 1993 to 2006 and received at least 5% support in the 2012 election plus 24 first-time candidates (). Voters were instructed to support as many as ten candidates; write-in votes were not permitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nResults of the 2013 election by the BBWAA were announced on January 9, live on the MLB Network and streamed on the Hall's website. A total of 569 ballots were cast, with 427 votes required for election. A total of 3,756 individual votes were cast, an average of 6.6 per ballot- the highest per-ballot average since 2003 (also 6.6), and the first average of over six per ballot since 2007 (6.58). The 24 first-time candidates () last played during the 2007 major league season. Eighteen received less than 5% support (*) and were thus eliminated from BBWAA consideration; six newcomers scored 5% support or more, the largest number since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nNo player received the 75% support needed for election, the first such shutout since 1996 and only the eighth in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nDale Murphy was on the ballot for the 15th and final time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nThe newly eligible candidates included 29 All-Stars, seven of whom were not on the ballot, representing a total of 104 All-Star selections, a record, and over three times the number of 2012's class (33 All-Star selections among newly eligible candidates); until this year, only the class of 2007 had ever breached 100 selections (103).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nAmong the candidates were 14-time All-Star, 7-time MVP and holder of both the single-season (73) and career (762) home run records Barry Bonds; 12-time All-Star Mike Piazza; 11-time All-Star and 7-time Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens; 7-time All-Stars Craig Biggio and Sammy Sosa; and 6-time All-Stars Sandy Alomar, Jr., Kenny Lofton and Curt Schilling. The field included two Rookies of the Year, both catchers (Alomar and Piazza), three MVPs (in addition to Bonds' seven, Clemens and Sosa each won one apiece) and a Cy Young Award winner (Clemens).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nBonds and Clemens, with seven apiece, hold the records for MVPs and Cy Young Awards won, respectively. The field included two candidates with at least five Gold Glove Awards: Bonds (seven in left field) and Steve Finley (five in center). It also included five candidates with at least five Silver Slugger Awards: Bonds (twelve in left field), Piazza (ten at catcher), Sosa (six in right field), Biggio (five total- four at second base and one at catcher) and Julio Franco (five total- four at second base and one at DH). Bonds holds the record for Silver Sluggers in the outfield, while Piazza holds the record at catcher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nAs in recent years, the controversy over use of performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) dominated the elections. ESPN.com columnist Jim Caple noted in the days before the announcement of the 2012 results that the PED issue, combined with the BBWAA's limit of 10 votes per ballot, was likely to result in a major backlog in upcoming elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nDue to the steroid issue and a general lack of consensus, the following players will probably be on the ballot in three years: Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Pedro Mart\u00ednez, Randy Johnson, Sammy Sosa, Jeff Bagwell, John Smoltz, Edgar Mart\u00ednez, Mark McGwire, Mike Mussina, Jeff Kent, Larry Walker, Alan Trammell, Fred McGriff, Rafael Palmeiro, Lee Smith, Tim Raines, Gary Sheffield, Mike Piazza, Curt Schilling and, of course, Bernie [Williams]. That's 21 players who warrant serious consideration. And that's not counting Barry Larkin, who might be [Ed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\n\u2013 and was] elected this year, and also assuming Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, Craig Biggio and Frank Thomas make it their first years on the ballot. Finding room for Bonds, Clemens, Pedro, Johnson and others means I'll have to dump more good players from my ballot than the Marlins dumped after winning the 1997 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nAnother ESPN.com writer, Tim Kurkjian, added that the 2013 ballot would include several new candidates who either tested positive or were strongly linked to PEDs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nThe next Hall of Fame ballot will include Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Sammy Sosa, Mike Piazza, Curt Schilling, Craig Biggio, and Kenny Lofton. They all have Hall of Fame numbers, some stronger than others, but Bonds, Clemens, Sosa and Piazza certainly are not going to be elected on the first ballot \u2014 and in the case of Bonds, Clemens and Sosa, they might not make it to Cooperstown for many, many years to come.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nSeveral other players returning from the 2012 ballot with otherwise strong Hall credentials have been linked to PEDs, among them Mark McGwire (who admitted to long-term steroid use in 2010), Jeff Bagwell (who never tested positive, but was the subject of PED rumors during his career), and Rafael Palmeiro (who tested positive for stanozolol shortly after publicly denying that he had ever used steroids).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nPlayers who were eligible for the first time who were not included on the ballot were: Antonio Alfonseca, Tony Batista, Mark Bellhorn, Hector Carrasco, Alberto Castillo, Rheal Cormier, Juan Encarnaci\u00f3n, Robert Fick, Steve Kline, Ricky Led\u00e9e, Mike Lieberthal, John Mabry, Tom Martin, Damian Miller, Doug Mirabelli, Mike Myers, Orlando Palmeiro, Neifi P\u00e9rez, Desi Relaford, Paul Shuey, Scott Spiezio, Kelly Stinnett, John Thomson, Jos\u00e9 Valent\u00edn, John Wasdin, Rick White, Bob Wickman, Preston Wilson, Jay Witasick, and Jaret Wright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Pre-integration Committee\nIn keeping with the new voting procedure by eras, the BBWAA-appointed Historical Overview Committee, made up of 11 BBWAA members, identified ten Pre-Integration candidates who were judged to have made their greatest contributions prior to 1947. Along with the era, these rules defined the consideration set:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Pre-integration Committee\nHowever, due to the passage of time, the only listed criteria that materially restricted the field from which the candidates were selected were years of service and presence on baseball's ineligible list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Pre-integration Committee\nThe eleven BBWAA-appointed Historical Overview Committee members were Dave Van Dyck (Chicago Tribune); Bob Elliott (Toronto Sun); Rick Hummel (St. Louis Post-Dispatch); Steve Hirdt (Elias Sports Bureau); Bill Madden (New York Daily News); Ken Nigro (formerly The Baltimore Sun); Jack O'Connell (BBWAA secretary/treasurer); Tracy Ringolsby (Root Sports Rocky Mountain/MLB.com); Glenn Schwarz (formerly San Francisco Chronicle); Claire Smith (ESPN); and Mark Whicker (Orange County Register).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Pre-integration Committee\nThe Pre-Integration ballot for election by the Pre-integration Committee was released on November 1, 2012, and the Hall of Fame announced the results on December 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Pre-integration Committee\nThe Pre-Integration Committee's 16-member voting electorate, appointed by the Hall of Fame's Board of Directors, was announced at the same time as the ballot of 10 candidates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Pre-integration Committee\nThe Pre-Integration Committee which elected three candidates to the Hall of Fame at the 2012 winter meetings in Nashville on December 2\u20133, with 75% or 12 of 16 votes required for election, convened at the July 28, 2013 induction. Ruppert, O'Day and White were elected. Dahlen received 10 of 16 votes, the highest total of anyone not elected; no one else received more than three votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nThe J. G. Taylor Spink Award has been presented by the BBWAA at the annual summer induction ceremonies since 1962. Through 2010, it was awarded during the main induction ceremony, but is now given the previous day at the Hall of Fame Awards Presentation. It recognizes a sportswriter \"for meritorious contributions to baseball writing\". The recipients are not members of the Hall of Fame but are featured in a permanent exhibit at the National Baseball Museum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nThe three nominees for the 2013 award were selected by a BBWAA committee and announced on July 10, 2012, at the BBWAA's annual All-Star Game meeting. They were Paul Hagen of MLB.com; Jim Hawkins, formerly of the Detroit Free Press; and Russell Schneider, formerly of The Plain Dealer of Cleveland. It was the second consecutive nomination for both Hagen and Schneider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nFollowing the announcement of the nominees, the entire BBWAA membership voted in fall 2012 to determine the recipient. Under BBWAA rules, the winner was to be announced either during the 2012 World Series or at the 2012 winter meetings; in keeping with the practice of recent years, the announcement was made at the winter meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nOn December 4, Hagen was announced as the recipient, having received 269 of the 421 possible votes (including five blank ballots). Hawkins received 87 votes and Schneider 60. Hagen began his career in 1974 with the San Bernardino Sun, covering the Los Angeles Dodgers. He moved in 1977 to Dallas\u2013Fort Worth, covering the Texas Rangers first for the Dallas Times Herald and later the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. From there, he moved to Philadelphia in 1987, covering the Phillies for the Philadelphia Daily News before becoming that paper's national baseball columnist in 2002. After a 25-year career at the Daily News, he joined MLB.com in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nThe Ford C. Frick Award, honoring excellence in baseball broadcasting, has been presented at the induction ceremonies since 1978. Through 2010, it had been presented at the main induction ceremony, but is now awarded at the Awards Presentation. Recipients are not members of the Hall of Fame but are permanently recognized in an exhibit at the museum. To 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nThe honor is based on four criteria: longevity; continuity with a club; honors, including national assignments such as the World Series and All-Star Games; and popularity with fans. The recipient was announced on during the 2012 winter meetings, following a vote by the same committee that selected seven of the finalists (below).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nTen finalists were announced on October 9, 2012. In accord with guidelines established in 2003, seven were chosen by a committee composed of the living recipients along with broadcasting historians and columnists. Three were selected from a list of candidates by fan voting at the Hall's Facebook page from August 20 to September 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nSix candidates were living when the ballot was announced\u2014the active Doucet, Nadel, Ortega, Shannon, and Staats; and the retired Gordon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nOn December 5, Cheek, the lead radio play-by-play announcer for the Toronto Blue Jays from the team's establishment in 1977 until his retirement in 2004, was named the recipient. During this tenure he had a 27-year streak of 4,306 consecutive games plus 41 post-season games called, which lasted from the first ever Blue Jays game on April 7, 1977, to June 3, 2004, when he traveled to Salinas, California, for his father's funeral. Cheek was forced to retire shortly after the funeral when he discovered he had a brain tumor, and he died in 2005. The 2013 balloting marked the ninth consecutive year that Cheek had been named among the 10 finalists for the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232108-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nCheek became the second Frick Award recipient to have worked primarily for a Canadian team, after 2011 honoree Dave Van Horne; the award was his third for broadcasting excellence from a sports hall of fame. In 2001, while active with the Blue Jays, he received the Jack Graney Award, given irregularly for excellence in either writing or broadcasting, from the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame. Just before his death in 2005, Canada's Sports Hall of Fame created the Tom Cheek Media Leadership Award, with Cheek as its first recipient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232109-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Basilicata regional election\nThe Basilicata regional election of 2013 took place on 17\u201318 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232109-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Basilicata regional election\nA snap election was called upon the resignation of the incumbent President, Vito De Filippo of the Democratic Party (PD), on 24 April 2013 and the subsequent dissolution of the Regional Council. Several regional ministers and councillors had been involved in an expenses scandal (and one minister and two councillors had been arrested).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232109-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Basilicata regional election\nBasilicata is a traditional stronghold of the PD, thus Marcello Pittella (a former Socialist and brother of Gianni Pittella, Vice President of the European Parliament) was elected President by a landslide 59.6% of the vote. Its main opponent, Tito Di Maggio of Civic Choice (supported by the whole centre-right, comprising The People of Freedom and the Union of the Centre), gained a mere 19.4%. The PD was the most voted party with 24.8%, followed by Pittella's personal list with 16.0%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232110-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Basra governorate election\nThe Basra governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232110-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Basra governorate election, Local government formation\nOn 13 June 2013 Majid al-Nasrawi of the Citizen's Alliance was elected as the new Governor of Basra. Khalaf Abdul Samad, of the State of Law Coalition, was elected as Chairman of the Basra Provincial Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing\nOn 22 December 2013, at approximately 2:30 pm, a pressure cooker bomb exploded on a public bus in Bat Yam, Israel. All casualties were averted because a few minutes earlier, a passenger on the bus had examined the contents of an unattended bag, and saw what looked like a bomb inside, which led all passengers and the driver to exit the vehicle. The bombing shattered or blew out all windows on the bus, and significantly damaged the interior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing\nOn 2 January 2014, the Shin Bet announced it had arrested four Palestinian Islamic Jihad operatives for the bombing, including one individual who was a Palestinian Authority police officer. The Islamic Jihad cell had reportedly been planning a larger bombing in Tel Aviv as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing\nIt was the first terrorist bombing in Israel since the November 21, 2012 bus bombing in Tel Aviv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Bombing\nIn the early afternoon of 22 December 2013, a young boy on public bus Dan No. 240 in Bat Yam remarked aloud that there was an unattended bag sitting near him. Passenger David Papo, who overheard the boy, alerted bus driver Michael Yoger, who asked the passengers whose bag it was, but received no affirmative answer. Papo then opened the large, black bag and found \"what he said looked like a pressure cooker with a red wire coming out of it.\" He told people to get off the bus, and when the driver stopped the vehicle at the corner of Mivtza Sinai st. and Katznelson st. in Bat Yam, all the passengers and the driver exited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Bombing\nThe Israeli police received a call at 2:20pm about a bomb on a bus in Bat Yam. The device then detonated, three minutes after the last passengers had been evacuated. All the windows on the bus \"were either blown out or shattered\" by the explosion and \"seats were mangled.\" It was the first terrorist bombing in Israel since a November 21, 2012 bus bombing in Tel Aviv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Bombing\nAccording to Israel's internal security service Shin Bet, the bomb \"consisted of two kilograms of improvised explosives surrounded by nails and screws and stuffed into a pressure cooker.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Bombing\nThe Jerusalem Post commented, \"Like in many past bombings in Israel, tragedy was prevented by the actions of everyday citizens, who helped clear other passengers away from the blast.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Capture of suspects\nAfter a news blackout was lifted late on 2 January 2014, Israel's Shin Bet announced it had arrested \"four Islamic Jihad operatives from Bethlehem and 10 other people,\" including a Bedouin citizen of Israel. The four operatives \"were named as Yusef Salamah, 22, Shehada Ta\u2019amri, 24, Hamdi Ta\u2019amri, 21 and Sami Harimi, 20.\" Shehada and Hamdi are brothers. At the time of the bombing, Hamdi was serving as \"a Palestinian Authority police officer and \"was in the middle of officer's candidate school in Jericho.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Capture of suspects\nAccording to the Shin Bet, the bomb was built by Salamah and the two brothers. On the morning of 22 December, Harimi traveled south from Bethlehem, carrying the bomb in a black bag. In the southern Hebron hills, Harimi crossed into Israel through a hole in the Israeli West Bank barrier along with a group of Palestinian workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Capture of suspects\nOnce in Israel, Harimi received a ride to Jaffa from \"a Bedouin citizen of Israel, who earned money transporting illegals into Israel to work.\" Before the bombing, Harimi had illegally worked at the Abulafia Bakery in Jaffa. Once in Jaffa, according to the Shin Bet, Harimi first prayed in a mosque and then boarded the 420 bus. He left the bag with the bomb in the center of the vehicle and then got off the bus. A few minutes later, around 2:30 pm, Harimi called the cellular device attached to the bomb and it detonated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Capture of suspects\nAccording to The Times of Israel, the bomb design was similar to that used in the Boston Marathon bombings earlier that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232111-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bat Yam bus bombing, Capture of suspects\nDuring his interrogation, Harimi said that the cell was planning a larger bombing in Tel Aviv. 25 kilograms of explosive material were confiscated when the cell was arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections\nLocal elections was held in the Province of Batangas on May 13, 2013 as part of the 2013 general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the four districts of Batangas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, Provincial elections\nThe candidates for governor and vice governor 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, Congressional elections\nEach of Batangas's four legislative districts will elect each representative to the House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, Congressional elections, 1st District\nTomas Apacible is the incumbent. He will be facing off against Reynaldo Albajera, former representative Eileen Ermita-Buhain and Dr. Luisito L. Ruiz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, Congressional elections, 2nd District\nIncumbent Hermilando Mandanas, who had earlier resigned from the Liberal Party is term limited. The Liberals nominated actor and incumbent board member Christopher de Leon, with the United Nationalist Alliance nominating former Board Member Godofredo Berberabe. Berberabe died on March 4, 2013; he was substituted by his brother, Danilo Berberabe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, Congressional elections, 3rd District\nSonny Collantes is the incumbent. He will be facing-off against former congresswoman Victoria Hernandez-Reyes, Tanauan City Mayor Sonia Aquino and Nicomedes Hernandez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, Congressional elections, 4th District\nMark L. Mendoza is the incumbent. He will be facing off against Bernadette Sabili, wife of Lipa City Mayor Meynardo Sabili (Liberal), running as independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan elections\nAll 4 Districts of Batangas will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections\nAll municipalities of Batangas, Batangas City, Lipa City and Tanauan City will elect mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty and vice-mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Balayan\nIncumbent Mayor Emmanuel Fronda is running for reelection and incumbent Vice Mayor Romel Castelo is not running for re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Calaca\nIncumbent Mayor Sofronio Ona, Jr. and vice mayor Larry Atienza are term limited. Atienza is running for mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Calatagan\nIncumbent Mayor Sophia Palacio is running for reelection. Incumbent Vice Mayor Lenie Pantoja is running for mayor. All women will be eyeing the mayoral seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Lemery\nIncumbent mayor Eulalio Alilio is considered term limited because his first term started in 2006 after winning his electoral protest. Incumbent Vice Mayor Honorlito Solis is running for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Lian\nIncumbent mayor Osita Vergara is term limited. Incumbent vice mayor Benito Magbago is running for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Nasugbu\nIncumbent vice mayor Apolo Villafania is term limited and is running for Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Taal\nIncumbent mayor Michael Montenegro and vice mayor Fulgencio Mercado is running for reelection", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Tuy\nIncumbent Mayor Jose Jecerell Cerrado is running for reeelection. Incumbent vice mayor Emmanuel Calingasan is not running", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232112-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Batangas local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Batangas City\nIncumbent Mayor Vilma Dimacuha is not running for reelection. His husband, Eduardo Dimacuha is running for Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232113-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bauer Watertechnology Cup\nThe 2013 Bauer Watertechnology Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on carpet courts. It was the 17th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Eckental, Germany between October 28 and November 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232113-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bauer Watertechnology Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232114-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bauer Watertechnology Cup \u2013 Doubles\nJames Cerretani and Adil Shamasdin were the defending champions but lost in the first round to German Wildcards Kevin Krawietz and Hannes Wagner. The title went to the 2nd seeded Germans Dustin Brown and Philipp Marx defeating Poles Piotr Gadomski and Mateusz Kowalczyk 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232115-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bauer Watertechnology Cup \u2013 Singles\nDaniel Brands was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Top seed Benjamin Becker won title defeating Ruben Bemelmans 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232116-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bavarian state election\nThe 2013 Bavarian state election was held on 15 September 2013 to elect the 180 members of the 17th Landtag of Bavaria. It was held one week before the 2013 German federal election. The CSU regained the absolute majority it had lost in 2008, while the Free Democratic Party (FDP), a member of the outgoing governing coalition, fell below the 5% electoral threshold and lost all its seats. Minister-President Horst Seehofer continued in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232116-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bavarian state election\nAs of 2021, this is the latest state or federal election in which a party managed to get an absolute majority. The CSU previously held an absolute majority, and therefore governed alone, from 1966 to 2008 and again from 2013 to 2018. Previously, even in the late 1990s, it was common that either the CDU/CSU or the SPD got an absolute majority in a state election. For example, this happened in Brandenburg in 1994, 1998 in Lower Saxony and 1999 in Saxony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232116-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bavarian state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 16th Landtag of Bavaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232116-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bavarian state election, Election result\nThe CSU regained an absolute majority of the seats, which they had lost in the 2008 election after 50 years of single-party government. The FDP, which had governed with the CSU since 2008, fell below the 5% threshold and lost all its seats. SPD, the Greens and Free Voters remained in opposition. A record number of 14.1% of the votes cast went unrepresented in the Landtag because of the 5% threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232117-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt\nThe 2013 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt was the 34th edition of the Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt, an annual cycling road race. Departing from on 22 May, it concluded on 26 May. The stage race was part of the 2013 UCI Europe Tour, and was rated as a 2.HC event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232117-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt, Stages, Stage 1\n22 May 2013 \u2013 Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm to M\u00fchldorf, 193.1\u00a0km (120.0\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232117-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt, Stages, Stage 2\n23 May 2013\u00a0\u2013 M\u00fchldorf to Viechtach, 192.6\u00a0km (119.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232117-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt, Stages, Stage 3\n24 May 2013\u00a0\u2013 Viechtach to Kelheim, 196.8\u00a0km (122.3\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232117-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt, Stages, Stage 4\n25 May 2013\u00a0\u2013 Schierling, 31.2\u00a0km (19.4\u00a0mi) individual time trial (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232117-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt, Stages, Stage 5\n26 May 2013\u00a0\u2013 Kelheim to Nuremberg, 169.8\u00a0km (105.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team\nThe 2013 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bears, coached by Art Briles, were playing their 115th football season; this year was the team's 64th and final season at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. The Bears were members of the Big 12 Conference. The conference slate began with a home game against the West Virginia Mountaineers, and concluded at home against the Texas Longhorns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team\nThe 2013 season was arguably the best in Baylor's history. After being ranked as high as third in the nation, the Bears went on to a school-record 11 wins and their first Big 12 title\u2014their first outright conference title since winning their last outright Southwest Conference title in 1980. They represented the Big 12 in the 2014 Fiesta Bowl\u2014their first appearance in the Bowl Championship Series, and their first major bowl game since the 1981 Cotton Bowl Classic. It was also their fourth straight bowl appearance, a school record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Wofford\nBaylor opened its final season in Floyd Casey Stadium at home against the Wofford Terriers, a late addition to the 2013 schedule after SMU canceled their 2013 matchup against the Bears. In keeping with the Bears' fast-paced reputation, Baylor dashed out to a 28\u20130 lead in the first quarter with touchdown rushes by Lache Seastrunk and Glasco Martin IV, an Antwan Goodley touchdown reception from Bryce Petty, and an interception returned for a score by defensive lineman Chris McAllister. Seastrunk would add a second touchdown rush in the second quarter and finished the night with 111 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Wofford\nPetty also added another passing touchdown, this time to Tevin Reese, and finished with 290 passing yards in his first career start. In backup duty, running back Shock Linwood rushed for a 19-yard score, and quarterback Seth Russell accounted for two more touchdowns, one passing and one rushing. Baylor's defense shut down the Terrier's triple-option attack, limiting Wofford to 173 rushing yards on the night, forcing three turnovers, allowing no touchdowns, and giving up only a field goal in the 3rd quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Wofford\nBaylor's 69 points surpassed the school's modern-era single-game scoring record, a 68\u201313 victory over Northwestern State in 2009, and were the most points scored since an 88\u20130 victory in 1929 over Stephen F. Austin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Buffalo\nOne week after playing creditably against #2 Ohio State in Columbus, the Buffalo Bulls traveled to Waco to take on the #23 Baylor Bears. Buffalo drew first blood, capitalizing on a 54-yard completion from Joe Licata to Alex Neutz on the first play from scrimmage and subsequently scoring on a 1-yard Branden Oliver rush. Later in the 1st quarter, Buffalo would score once more, while Baylor would score 4 touchdowns in 4 drives, the lengthiest of which took 1:16 of gametime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Buffalo\nThe Baylor defense would not allow another Buffalo score the rest of the game, forcing two turnovers and accounting for 7 of Baylor's 56 first-half points when linebacker Bryce Hager returned a fumble 91 yards for a touchdown. Lache Seastrunk added to his resume with 150 rushing yards and 3 rushing touchdowns, while Bryce Petty rushed for a touchdown and passed for 338 yards and 2 touchdowns to Tevin Reese and Antwan Goodley. The barrage of Baylor points subsided in the 2nd half: in the 3rd quarter Shock Linwood posted his second rushing touchdown of the day, and in backup duty Seth Russell completed a touchdown pass to Jay Lee in the 4th quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Buffalo\nAfter having set a modern-era school scoring record the previous week against Wofford, the Bears topped that record by 1 point, scoring 70 against the Buffalo Bulls. The game also saw Baylor post a school-record 781 total yards of offense and score a modern-era school-record 56 points in the first half. The Bears have not posted less than 400 yards of offense in a game since the 2011 season and have scored 40+ points in 16 of their last 19 games. Individually, Lache Seastrunk extended his streak of consecutive games with 100+ rushing yards to 6, both a school record and the nation's longest active streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Louisiana-Monroe\nBaylor continued its torrid offensive pace against Louisiana-Monroe. After winning a hard-fought game in Monroe the year before, the Bears put the game out of reach quickly, racking up 21 offensive and 14 defensive points (interceptions returned by cornerback Joe Williams and safety Terrell Burt) in the first quarter to become the first FBS or FCS team in the BCS era to score 28+ points in the first quarters of three consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Louisiana-Monroe\nBryce Petty contributed to all of the offensive points in the 1st quarter with two touchdown passes (to Antwan Goodley and Tevin Reese) and a 2-yard touchdown rush. Goodley would catch his second touchdown pass of the day from Petty in the 2nd quarter before ULM scored their only points of the day, a 9-yard touchdown pass from Kolton Browning that made the score 42\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Louisiana-Monroe\nThereafter the scoreboard belonged to the Bears: Clay Fuller caught Petty's 4th touchdown pass of the day late in the 2nd quarter, and early in the 3rd Lache Seastrunk picked up 75 of his 156 rushing yards on the day with a touchdown rush. Shock Linwood added a 10-yard rushing touchdown, and backup quarterback Seth Russell found Levi Norwood for a 65-yard touchdown midway through the 3rd for the final points of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Louisiana-Monroe\nWith the win, Baylor became the first team since LSU in 1930 to score 60+ points in its first three games of the season. After breaking school records for points scored and yards gained in their previous game against Buffalo, the Bears matched those records exactly with another 70 points and 781 total offensive yards. The victory extended Baylor's streak of games with more than 400 yards of total offense to 30, the longest current streak in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Louisiana-Monroe\nIndividually, Bryce Petty finished with a career-high 351 yards passing and has thrown for 300+ yards and at least 2 touchdowns in all three career starts. Before Petty exited in the 3rd quarter with the game well in hand, the Bears scored touchdowns on 7 of 10 offensive drives; those scoring drives combined took a total of 6 minutes. Lache Seastrunk extended his streak of games with 100+ rushing yards to 7, the nation's current longest streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nOne year after the high-scoring first meeting of the two programs in Morgantown, the Bears and Mountaineers renewed their incipient rivalry in Waco. The superlative performance of the Baylor offense continued in record-setting fashion as the Bears yet again scored 28 points in the first quarter and then added another 4 touchdowns in the second. QB Bryce Petty accounted for 3 of the 1st quarter touchdowns, 2 passing (to Antwan Goodley and Tevin Reese) and 1 rushing; Lache Seastrunk posted the other touchdown of the 1st quarter on an 80-yard rush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nAll four Baylor touchdowns in the 2nd quarter came on the ground: Seastrunk added a second touchdown on a 19-yard rush, Shock Linwood added a scoring rush to his season totals, and Glasco Martin IV returned from an ankle injury in fine fashion, punching in two scores from the 2 yard line. In the first half Baylor's defense allowed only one WVU touchdown, a Clint Trickett pass to Kevin White; WVU's other touchdown of the first half came when the Mountaineers recovered a muffed punt in the endzone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nIn the second half Baylor went to its backups on offense and defense, with RB Devin Chafin and QB Seth Russell posting rushing touchdowns and Aaron Jones kicking a field goal to bring the final Baylor score to 73. The Mountaineers scored one touchdown early in the 3rd quarter on a rush by RB Charles Sims, West Virginia QB Paul Millard passed for two touchdowns in the 4th quarter, and the WVU defense accounted for one final touchdown, returning one of Russell's two interceptions on the day for a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nIn advancing to 4\u20130 for the first time since 1991, Baylor finished the day with 864 yards of total offense, breaking the Big 12 record (807 yards) held by WVU (set by the Mountaineers against the Bears in their previous meeting). Of that yardage, 369 came in the first quarter, and 617 came in the first half; both totals represent the most by a team in a single quarter and in a first half, respectively, in the last decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nThe 73 points scored by Baylor set a Big 12 record for a head-to-head Big 12 matchup and again broke the school's modern-era scoring record. Baylor became the only team to score at least 66 points in 4 consecutive games based on data kept since 1980 and posted at least 28 points in the first quarter of their fourth straight game; no FBS or FCS team had scored 28 points or more in the first quarter of three consecutive games since 1996. With their 4th consecutive game of 60+ points, the Bears closed to within 1 game of the streak set by Oklahoma in 2008 of five such consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nIndividually, Bryce Petty completed 17 of 25 attempts for 347 yards, 2 touchdowns, and 1 interception. Petty has thrown for at least 300 yards and 2 touchdowns in all four of his career starts, and he added 23 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown to finish with 370 total yards and 3 touchdowns. Lache Seastrunk assured his 8th consecutive game of more than 100 yards rushing in the first quarter; he finished with 172 yards on 15 carries. Through the first 4 games of the season, Seastrunk has averaged 11.1 yards per carry. Tevin Reese's 61 yard touchdown reception represented his 18th 40+ yard touchdown reception, the most in the BCS era for an FBS receiver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nIn their first road game of the season, the Baylor Bears traveled to Manhattan, KS to take on the Kansas State Wildcats. Prior to the game, Baylor had never won at Kansas State, and once again Kansas State proved a tough test for the Bears, holding Baylor to its lowest offensive output of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nBaylor received the ball to open the game and scored on a 12-play, 59 yard drive that was kept alive by a crucial penalty on KSU defender Randall Evans, who hit QB Bryce Petty out of bounds on a 3rd and 11 play. The Wildcats drove deep into Baylor territory on their ensuing drive but turned the ball over on downs inside the Bears' 10-yard line. After then forcing a Baylor punt, Kansas State embarked upon a drive that left them on the Baylor 1 yard line at the close of the 1st quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nWildcat QB Daniel Sams then punched the ball in for a touchdown on the first play of the 2nd quarter to tie the game at 7\u20137. After the next Baylor and KSU possessions stalled, the Wildcats pinned Baylor on the Bears' 5 yard line with a Mark Krause punt. Two plays later Bryce Petty found Tevin Reese for a 93-yard touchdown reception to put the Bears back in the lead. After Kansas State settled for a field goal on their next possession, Petty hit Antwan Goodley for a 72-yard touchdown and the teams entered the half with Baylor leading 21\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nKansas State, under the guidance of veteran coach Bill Snyder, refused to panic in the 2nd half. The Wildcats received the ball to open the half and drove to set up a field goal to cut Baylor's lead to 8; during this drive Kansas State used two of their three second-half timeouts. On the subsequent Baylor drive, Kansas State forced a punt which the Wildcats then blocked to set up a 19-yard touchdown drive; Daniel Sams again rushed in for the touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nKSU attempted a 2-point conversion which failed; crucially, Sams was forced to use Kansas State's third and final timeout prior to the 2-point attempt at 6:54 in the 3rd quarter. Two plays into the ensuing Baylor possession Bryce Petty was sacked and fumbled. The Wildcats recovered the ball and Daniel Sams once more shouldered the load, rushing in for another score to give KSU the lead 25\u201321. Again Kansas State went for two, and again the Wildcats failed to convert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nTrailing in the 2nd half for the first time all season, Baylor answered with a 5 play, 71-yard touchdown drive highlighted by Tevin Reese's second TD catch of the day, this time a 54-yard reception from Petty. Two possessions later, with Baylor still leading 28\u201325, the Wildcats drove into Baylor territory again; however, the drive stalled and KSU kicker Jack Cantele missed a 41-yard field goal which would have tied the game. After Baylor's subsequent drive ended in a punt, Kansas State took possession at their own 20 yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0013-0003", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nDaniel Sams rushed for an 8-yard gain on 1st down, but Bears safety Ahmad Dixon intercepted Sams on the next play to set up a 39-yard Baylor scoring drive. RB Glasco Martin IV picked up all 39 of those yards on 5 rushing attempts. With 1:16 left in the game and no timeouts remaining, the Wildcats drove into Baylor territory on their final possession, but Bears lineman Chris McAllister sacked KSU QB Jake Waters on the penultimate play of the game, and the Baylor defense forced an incomplete pass as time expired to preserve a 35\u201325 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nWith the victory, Baylor moved to 5\u20130 for the first time since 1991. Following the game, the Bears moved to #12 in the AP Poll, their highest ranking in the Art Briles era and their highest ranking in that poll since October 1991, when Baylor was ranked #8. In the Coaches' Poll, Baylor was also ranked #12, tying the Bears' high mark in that poll set at the end of the 2011 season. With Oklahoma being upset in the Red River Shootout by the Texas Longhorns on the same weekend, Baylor also became the highest ranking Big 12 team in both polls for the first time in league history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas State\nBryce Petty finished the day with 342 passing yards, 3 passing touchdowns, and a rushing touchdown. Tevin Reese added two more 40+ yard touchdown receptions to bring his career total to 20 such touchdowns, and Reese finished as the Bears' leading receiver with 184 yards on the day. On an uncharacteristically quiet day for the Baylor offense, Lache Seastrunk saw his streak of consecutive 100+ rushing yards games snapped; he finished with 54 yards on the ground. Glasco Martin IV finished as Baylor's top rusher with 70 yards and a touchdown. Defensively, Ahmad Dixon tallied his 4th career interception, Chris McAllister had his 11th career sack, and linebacker Bryce Hager recorded a career-high 18 tackles with 1 sack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nBack in Waco after their first road game of the season, the Baylor Bears hosted Iowa State as part of the nation's oldest Homecoming celebration. Baylor received the ball to open the game and the Cyclones forced an uncharacteristic punt from the Bears on the opening drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nThe Bears would, however, shortly resume their offensive fireworks, scoring on each of their next eight drives: during that eight drive stretch Lache Seastrunk provided two rushing touchdowns, Bryce Petty rushed for one touchdown, Antwan Goodley received two touchdown passes from Petty, and Aaron Jones kicked three field goals, including a 51-yarder to end the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nBaylor would ultimately score 64 unanswered points behind a scoring punt return from Levi Norwood, a 40-yard rushing touchdown from backup QB Seth Russell, and a 21-yard rushing touchdown from backup RB Devin Chafin before Iowa State found the endzone with 47 seconds left in the game. The Bears would immediately answer, as Corey Coleman returned the ensuing kickoff 97 yards for a touchdown to give Baylor its 4th game of the season with 70 or more points scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nIndividually, Bryce Petty continued his streak of games with 300 or more passing yards and two or more passing touchdowns; he finished with 342 yards passing, two passing touchdowns, and one rushing touchdown. After having his streak of consecutive games with 100+ rushing yards broken against Kansas State, Lache Seastrunk posted 112 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns. Kicker Aaron Jones successfully converted his 155th consecutive point-after attempt, a school record. Defensively, Sam Holl and Joe Williams recorded interceptions and Chris McAllister posted his 12th and 13th career sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nAs a team Baylor recorded 714 yards of total offense, its 4th 700+ yard game of the season and 33rd consecutive game with more than 400 offensive yards dating back to the Bears' Alamo Bowl appearance in 2011. On the other side of the ball, the Bears' defense held Iowa State to only 174 yards of total offense. The 64-point margin of victory was the Bears' largest ever in conference play, including Baylor's stint in the Southwest Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nThe win represented Baylor's 10th consecutive win, which tied a school record set over the 1936\u201337 seasons; at the time, this streak was tied with Alabama for the nation's 2nd longest win streak. The undefeated start to the season marked the first time since the Bears' conference-winning season of 1980 that Baylor was 6\u20130, and the Bears advanced to 3\u20130 in conference play for the first time since the formation of the Big 12. With the win, the Bears became bowl eligible for the 4th consecutive year for the first time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nDuring the weekend, half of the teams ranked above #12 Baylor in the AP and Coaches' polls suffered losses, including #11 South Carolina (to Tennessee), #9 UCLA (to #13 Stanford), #8 Louisville (to UCF), #7 Texas A&M (to #24 Auburn), #6 LSU (to Ole Miss), and #3 Clemson (to #5 Florida State). Following the weekend's games, Baylor rose to #6 in the AP poll and #5 in the Harris and Coaches' polls. In the first edition of the season's BCS standings released that week, Baylor was ranked #8, the program's highest BCS ranking ever (the previous high mark was set in the final BCS standings of 2011, when the Bears were ranked #12 prior to their Alamo Bowl victory).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas\nIn Kansas for the second time in three weekends, Baylor took on the Kansas Jayhawks in their first game after receiving a top 10 ranking. After Kansas forced punts on the Bears' first two offensive possessions, Baylor went on to score on 7 of their 9 subsequent drives. The Bears racked up 500 yards of offense and took at 38\u20130 lead into the half behind two touchdown receptions by Tevin Reese from Bryce Petty; three touchdown rushes, one each by Petty, Lache Seastrunk, and Glasco Martin IV; and a field goal from Aaron Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas\nPetty would add a third touchdown pass to Corey Coleman in the 3rd quarter before Baylor began pulling its starters. In backup duty, Shock Linwood provided the final two Baylor touchdowns of the day with rushes of 4 and 68 yards for scores. The defense shut out the Jayhawk offense in the first half; Kansas would eventually get on the scoreboard with a 22-yard rush off an option pitch in the 3rd quarter and would add a passing touchdown in the 4th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas\nBryce Petty finished the day with 430 yards passing, 3 passing touchdowns, and a rushing touchdown. Seastrunk again rushed for more than 100 yards, finishing with 109 yards and a touchdown. Tevin Reese's touchdown receptions moved him to 3rd most in Baylor history with 24; he had averaged 50.6 yards per touchdown reception over his career to date. Defensive end Chris McAllister recorded his 14th career sack to move into a tie for 2nd most all-time for Baylor, 1 short of the record held by Daryl Gardner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ Kansas\nWith their 11th consecutive win, the Bears set a new school record, breaking the 76-year-old record of 10 consecutive wins set over the 1936\u201337 seasons. The streak represented the 3rd longest in the nation at the time, behind Ohio State (19) and Alabama (12). The 7\u20130 start is only the second such start in Baylor history, the previous coming during the Bears' 1980 SWC championship season. Following the win, Baylor moved to #5 in the AP Poll, the Bears' highest ranking in that poll since being ranked #3 during the 1953 season. Baylor remained at #5 in the Coaches' Poll, moved to #6 in the BCS rankings, and remained the highest-ranked Big 12 team in the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nFeaturing two BCS top-10 match-ups (No. 3 Oregon at No. 5 Stanford and No. 10 Oklahoma at No. 6 Baylor), the night of November 7 was tabbed by some in the media as the biggest Thursday night in college football history. The first quarter and a half of the Baylor\u2013Oklahoma ballgame proved to be a low-scoring, defensive struggle. Baylor won the coin toss and elected to receive; the Bears' first offensive possession ended in a punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nBaylor's defense subsequently forced a 3-and-out, and Aaron Jones put the Bears ahead with a 29-yard field goal on Baylor's second possession of the game. The Bears again forced a Sooners 3-and-out on Oklahoma's next possession, but Baylor's ensuing drive was stopped by the Oklahoma defense. Following a Spencer Roth punt, the Sooners took possession at their own 29 yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0023-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nAlthough Oklahoma could not pick up a first down against the Baylor defense, the Sooners nonetheless found themselves with first down and goal from the Baylor 7-yard line following 53 penalty yards against Baylor; 38 of those yards came on a single play in which KJ Morton was flagged for targeting and Ahmad Dixon was hit with two flags for unsportsmanlike conduct. Baylor's defense subsequently turned in a goal-line stand, resisting two Blake Bell rushes from inside the Bears' 2-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0023-0003", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nKJ Morton (whose targeting ejection had been overturned on review) brought Bell down on fourth and goal to force the turnover on downs. However, after Baylor's offense took possession under the shadow of their own goalposts, the Sooner defense put up Oklahoma's first points of the game two plays later, sacking QB Bryce Petty in the endzone for a safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0023-0004", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nJalen Saunders returned the ensuing Baylor free kick to the Bears' 12 yard line, but the Baylor defense again stood firm, forcing a 3-and-out and holding the Sooners to a field goal that gave Oklahoma its first lead of the game. Both teams would end their next possessions with missed field goals before Baylor scored the first touchdown of the night on a 5-yard Bryce Petty rush. Oklahoma would be forced to punt on their next possession and the ensuing 93-yard Baylor drive would end with a second rushing touchdown from Petty. On the Sooners' next play from scrimmage, linebacker Eddie Lackey picked off Blake Bell to set up a touchdown pass from Petty to Antwan Goodley with 13 seconds remaining in the 2nd quarter. The teams entered the half with Baylor leading 24\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nOklahoma received the ball to start the second half; the Sooners' first two possessions of the second half ended in punts, as did Baylor's first. Petty then found Levi Norwood in the end zone for a 17-yard touchdown pass to put Baylor ahead 31\u20135 before Oklahoma scored its only touchdown of the game on a 10-yard pass from Bell to Roy Finch. On the next Baylor possession, Aaron Jones kicked his second field goal of the night to extend the Bears' lead to 34\u201312, and the Baylor defense forced another turnover on downs on the Sooners' next possession. Two offensive series later, Petty again hit Antwan Goodley for a touchdown, this time a 25-yard reception. The Bears' defense subsequently halted Oklahoma's final two offensive drives, intercepting Bell once more and preserving the 41\u201312 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nBaylor's victory came despite multiple injuries, most significantly a dislocated wrist suffered by WR Tevin Reese, which forced him to miss the rest of the regular season. Guard Cyril Richardson exited the game briefly in the third quarter. RBs Glasco Martin IV and Lache Seastrunk suffered knee and groin injuries, respectively, which caused them to miss much of the game. Filling in for the injured RBs, Shock Linwood shouldered the load of Baylor's ground game, racking up 182 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nBryce Petty was held to under 300 passing yards for the first time all season, finishing with 204 yards through the air; however, he accounted for all five of Baylor's touchdowns, rushing for two scores and throwing three TD passes to Antwan Goodley and Levi Norwood. Defensively, Eddie Lackey and Demetri Goodson recorded their 5th and third career interceptions, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, No. 12 Oklahoma\nBaylor recorded 459 yards of total offense, extending their streak of games with 400 or more offensive yards to 35, the longest in the nation at that time. The Bears' defense limited Oklahoma to 87 rushing yards on the night and forced 6 three-and-outs against Oklahoma; coming into the game, the Baylor defense averaged 7 three-and-outs forced per game, good for first in the nation. With Stanford defeating Oregon later on Thursday night, Baylor moved to No. 4 in the AP and Coaches' polls and attained a No. 5 BCS ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, vs. Texas Tech\nA week after the program's second-ever win over Oklahoma, undefeated Baylor faced Texas Tech in Cowboys Stadium in the 5th neutral-site game of their rivalry. Playing inspired football, the Red Raiders received the ball first and quickly attained a 14-point lead behind a pair of touchdown passes to TE Jace Amaro (the first from RB Kenny Williams, and the second from QB Baker Mayfield) on their opening offensive possessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, vs. Texas Tech\nBaylor's offense cut the deficit to 7 on its second possession when QB Bryce Petty hit WR Levi Norwood for a 40-yard touchdown pass, but Texas Tech immediately went back up 20\u20137 when Mayfield found WR Eric Ward in the end zone for a 5-yard touchdown reception. However, Red Raider kicker Ryan Bustin missed the PAT, and the Texas Tech lead remained at 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0027-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, vs. Texas Tech\nThe Bears' offense stalled on their subsequent possession, but the Baylor defense forced a three-and-out on the Red Raiders' ensuing drive and Levi Norwood returned a Ryan Erxleben punt 48 yards for a touchdown to pull Baylor to within 6. The next Texas Tech possession was cut short by an athletic interception at the line of scrimmage by blitzing cornerback KJ Morton, setting up a 1-play Baylor scoring drive when Petty hit WR Antwan Goodley for a 31-yard touchdown. The next Texas Tech and Baylor possessions would end in a punt and a missed field goal, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0027-0003", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, vs. Texas Tech\nFollowing Aaron Jones' missed field goal, Baker Mayfield was sacked on the Red Raiders' first play from scrimmage and fumbled the ball; S Ahmad Dixon recovered the fumble to set up a 43-yard Baylor scoring drive capped by a 3-yard Devin Chafin touchdown rush. Texas Tech's subsequent drive ended in a punt, but the Red Raiders forced a Bryce Petty fumble at the Baylor 13 yard line and scored on a 3rd Mayfield touchdown pass to make the score 28\u201327 in favor of the Bears. Baylor again answered with a big play, this time a 58-yard touchdown reception by Norwood from Petty, and the teams entered the half with Baylor leading 35\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, vs. Texas Tech\nBaylor received the ball to open the 2nd half and extended its lead on a Bryce Petty keeper on a read option from the 6 yard line. After Texas Tech turned the ball over on downs on its ensuing drive, the Bears went ahead 49\u201327 on Devin Chafin's second TD rush of the night, this time a 47-yard scoring run. Two possessions later, Mayfield would throw his 4th touchdown pass of the night, this time to Reginald Davis, to make the score 49\u201334. That would prove to be the Red Raiders' final points of the night, however; Petty and RB Shock Linwood would each add rushing touchdowns for the Bears to make the final score 63\u201334.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, vs. Texas Tech\nPetty finished the night with 335 passing yards, 3 passing touchdowns, and two rushing touchdowns. With starting RBs Martin and Seastrunk out, Shock Linwood posted 187 yards and a touchdown on 29 carries. Devin Chafin rushed for 100 yards and 2 touchdowns, marking the third game of the season that Baylor had multiple 100-yard rushers in one game. Kicker Aaron Jones broke the NCAA record of career PATs made (253), finishing the night with 260; he ended the evening with 419 career points, further extending his school record. Levi Norwood became the first Baylor player to record 2 punt returns for TD and finished with 156 receiving yards and an additional two receiving touchdowns. CB KJ Morton recorded his 6th career interception to go with a forced fumble, a sack, and 9 tackles including 3 tackles-for-loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, vs. Texas Tech\nThe victory extended Baylor's school-record streak of 13 consecutive wins and took the Bears to 9\u20130 on the season for the first time in school history. In amassing 675 total offensive yards, Baylor also extended its streak of consecutive games with more than 400 total offensive yards to 36, the longest in the nation at the time. Following the win, Baylor leapfrogged unbeaten Ohio State in the AP Poll to attain a #3 ranking, matching the program's highest-ever ranking in that poll (1953), and remained at #4 in the Coaches' Poll. Baylor also advanced in the BCS rankings to #4, displacing Stanford after the Cardinal suffered their second loss of the season at unranked Southern Cal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ #11 Oklahoma State\nBaylor's winning streak came to an end at the hands of Oklahoma State on a frigid night in Stillwater, OK. After both teams' opening drives stalled, the Bears drove deep into Oklahoma State territory behind a Bryce Petty run which saw him stumble at the OSU 1-yard line. That stumble would prove fatal when the Cowboys forced a fumble at the goalline from Shock Linwood two plays later. Oklahoma State subsequently put together a 99-yard scoring drive to go ahead 7\u20130, which score would hold until midway through the second quarter when the Cowboys tacked on a second touchdown. Baylor put together a drive at the end of the first half to set up an Aaron Jones field goal as time expired, and the teams went into the half with the Cowboys leading 14\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ #11 Oklahoma State\nOklahoma State opened the second half with a 76-yard touchdown drive to increase their lead to 21\u20133; the Cowboys would force a Baylor turnover on downs and immediately score again to hand the Bears a 25-point deficit with just over 10 minutes remaining in the 3rd quarter. The high-flying Baylor offense continued to struggle on its ensuing drives, fumbling once more and turning the ball over on downs twice before Oklahoma State would again strike to make the score 35\u20133 at the end of the 3rd quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ #11 Oklahoma State\nBaylor would finally put together a scoring drive to open the 4th when Petty found Antwan Goodley for a 24-yard touchdown pass, and the Bears' offense looked to cut the Oklahoma State lead even further on their next drive, taking the ball to the Oklahoma State 2-yard line. However, a botched snap was recovered by Cowboy CB Tyler Patmon and returned 78 yards for a touchdown. Both teams would add a passing touchdown late in the 4th quarter, and Oklahoma State ran out the final two minutes of the game on their final possession to drop the Bears to 9\u20131 on the season with a 49\u201317 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ #11 Oklahoma State\nThe loss snapped Baylor's school record 13-game winning streak, including a school record 9-game Big 12 conference game winning streak. Despite the uncharacteristically poor showing of the Bears' offense, Baylor amassed 453 yards of total offense in the game to continue their 37-game streak of 400+ total offensive yard games. With 359 passing yards and 2 passing touchdowns, Bryce Petty had thrown for 200+ yards and 2+ touchdowns in all 10 career starts. Antwan Goodley finished the night with 118 receiving yards to move to 3rd place all-time in the school single-season receiving list. Defensively, Chris McAllister recorded his 15th career sack to move into a tie for the school record for career sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ #11 Oklahoma State\nWith the defeat, the Bears lost control of their destiny in the Big 12, needing victories in their last two games and an Oklahoma State loss in Bedlam (the Cowboys' only remaining game of the regular season) to clinch an outright Big 12 title and automatic BCS bowl berth. Following the loss, Baylor dropped to #9 in the BCS and AP Poll rankings and to #8 in the Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nLooking to rebound from their first loss of the season, the 9th ranked Bears traveled to Fort Worth to face one of their most-played rivals, the TCU Horned Frogs. Baylor received the ball to open the game and drove to set up an Aaron Jones field goal to take the lead 3\u20130. TCU would tie the game at three before the Bears scored the first touchdown of the day, a diving 18-yard reception by Clay Fuller from Bryce Petty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nAfter forcing a TCU punt, Aaron Jones would kick his second field goal of the day to give the Bears a 13\u20133 lead at the start of the second quarter. TCU would respond with 14 unanswered points to take a 17\u201313 lead with just over 6 minutes remaining in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0035-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nWith the Baylor offense stymied by a stout TCU defense, the Bears defense rose to the challenge: a BJ Catalon fumble was recovered by DT Beau Blackshear at the TCU 1-yard line to set up a Petty rushing touchdown, and S Orion Stewart returned a Casey Pachall interception 82 yards for a touchdown. The Bears entered the half leading TCU 27\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nThe Baylor defense would continue its opportunistic play as LB Eddie Lackey intercepted Pachall on TCU's opening possession of the second half and returned the interception 54 yards for another Baylor defensive score. The Horned Frogs would immediately respond, however, again scoring 14 unanswered points to pull to within 3 of Baylor. Bryce Petty subsequently hit Levi Norwood for a 33-yard touchdown pass late in the 3rd quarter to make the Baylor lead 41\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nOn the next Baylor possession, Petty threw only his second interception of the season to set up a Horned Frog touchdown on the opening play of the 4th quarter. The remainder of the game became a defensive struggle as neither offense proved able to successfully drive for a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0036-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nOn their final possession with under two minutes remaining in the game, the Horned Frogs put together a 50-yard drive that brought them to first down at the Baylor 23 yard line, in range for a game-tying field goal and with time for multiple strikes to the end zone to score a game-winning touchdown. However, with 11 seconds remaining in the game, Pachall threw a pass to the end zone that was tipped by LB Sam Holl and intercepted by S Terrell Burt to seal the Baylor victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nQB Bryce Petty again topped 200 passing yards and 2 passing touchdowns, finishing the day with 209 yards passing. Prior to throwing the 3rd quarter interception, Petty had attempted 229 passes without an interception, breaking Robert Griffin III's previous mark of 209 attempts. RB Lache Seastrunk, seeing his first action since the Oklahoma game, posted 94 yards rushing on 24 attempts. RB Shock Linwood had one carry for 7 yards, bringing his total yardage on the season to 848, breaking the Baylor freshman rushing record also formerly held by Robert Griffin III (843 yards in 2008). Defensively, S Orion Stewart, S Terrell Burt, and LB Eddie Lackey recorded their first, second, and sixth career interceptions, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, @ TCU\nThe win moved Baylor to 10\u20131 on the season, marking only the second time in school history that the program had recorded a 10-win regular season (1980). The win in the 109th meeting of Baylor and TCU tied the programs' all-time record against each other at 51\u201351\u20137. The 609 points scored and 82 touchdowns scored on the season broke previous school records set in 2011. Following the victory, Baylor remained at #9 in the AP Poll and BCS rankings and advanced to #7 in the Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nIn a clash of top 25 teams, the Baylor Bears and the Texas Longhorns faced off in the final game in the 64-season history of Floyd Casey Stadium. As both teams entered the game having only lost in conference play to Oklahoma State, the winner of the matchup was assured at least a share of the Big 12 championship. Shortly before kickoff, the announcement of the Oklahoma Sooners' 33\u201324 victory over Oklahoma State elicited cheers from both Baylor and Texas partisans, as Oklahoma's victory elevated the Baylor\u2013Texas matchup to the de facto Big 12 championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nWith temperatures at 24 degrees Fahrenheit at kickoff and hovering well below freezing for the entire game, both offenses sputtered in the first half. On their first possession, the Bears managed to drive to within the range of K Aaron Jones, who put the Bears ahead 3\u20130 with a 22-yard field goal. The Longhorns would do the same on their subsequent drive, but K Anthony Fera's 44-yard field goal attempt was blocked by DE Shawn Oakman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nBaylor and Texas both turned the ball over on downs on their next possessions; Baylor would then miss a field goal and a Texas drive into Baylor territory would be turned away by a KJ Morton interception of a Case McCoy pass at the Baylor 10 yard line. In the second quarter, the teams would trade punts before Aaron Jones missed a second field goal attempt; the teams would again trade punts before Anthony Fera would post the final score of the first half, tying the game at 3\u20133 with a 42-yard field goal with 4:31 remaining in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nBaylor received the ball to open the second half and promptly put together a deliberate 14-play, 77-yard drive capped by an 11-yard, one-handed touchdown reception by WR Antwan Goodley from QB Bryce Petty. With S Ahmad Dixon eligible to play (Dixon was serving a one-half suspension for a targeting penalty committed during the third quarter of the TCU game), the Baylor defense forced a Longhorn punt, and the Bears again marched down the field for a second touchdown, the score this time coming on a 6-yard pass from Petty to WR Levi Norwood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nThe Baylor defense would again force a Texas punt, and the Bears offense would score for a third time on their third possession of the second half when Aaron Jones converted a 42-yard field goal. The score would remain 20\u20133 until early in the 4th quarter, when McCoy, scrambling in the backfield on a broken play, found RB Malcolm Brown in the back of the end zone for a 2-yard touchdown pass. The Bears would respond on their next drive with another field goal to make the score 23\u201310 in favor of Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0041-0002", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nBoth teams' ensuing drives would stall before Texas took possession with just over 5 minutes remaining, still down 13. The Longhorns drove into Baylor territory, but McCoy was again intercepted by CB KJ Morton, who returned the interception for an apparent touchdown. However, the score was overturned due to a penalty and Baylor took possession inside the red zone. On the next play from scrimmage, RB Glasco Martin IV broke free for an 18-yard touchdown rush to put the Bears ahead 30\u201310. That touchdown would prove to be the final scoring play in the history of Floyd Casey Stadium: the Baylor defense forced a Longhorn punt on Texas' final possession, and the Bears' offense ran out the clock to spark a celebration at midfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nIn his first regular season as the Bears' starting quarterback, Bryce Petty topped 200 yards passing and 2+ passing touchdowns in all 12 games. Petty finished the season 3rd in school single-season passing yards (3,844), 3rd in school single-season passing TDs (30), and 3rd in school single-season total offense (4,036). Glasco Martin finished the day with 102 yards on the ground and added a crucial 25-yard reception on a 3rd-and-11 play, his first reception of the year. His rushing touchdown was the 24th of his career, tying him for 5th on the school all-time rushing TD list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nAntwan Goodley's touchdown reception was his 12th of the season, good for 2nd on the school single-season touchdown reception list behind Kendall Wright's 14 touchdown receptions in 2011. Aaron Jones set a single-season consecutive PAT conversion record with his 78th conversion of the season; Jones had made 185 consecutive PATs and moved to 2nd on the all-time NCAA career kicking points list with 447. KJ Morton's two interceptions were the 7th and 8th of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nThe victory gave Baylor its first 11-win season in program history and guaranteed the Bears a share of the Big 12 championship; due to the Oklahoma State loss, Baylor ended the season as outright conference champions for the first time since winning the Southwest Conference in 1980. As sole Big 12 champion, Baylor also received its first BCS berth (to the Fiesta Bowl) and its first major bowl berth since the 1981 Cotton Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232118-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Baylor Bears football team, Game summaries, #23 Texas\nBaylor closed its final season in Floyd Casey Stadium with a crowd of 51,728 to set an all-time Floyd Casey Stadium single-game record; records for total season attendance (321,639) and season average attendance (45,948) were also set during the 2013 campaign. The Bears posted a perfect 7\u20130 record at home during the 2013 season to bring the program's all-time record at Floyd Casey Stadium to 191\u2013146\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232119-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2013 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup was the third edition of the tournament, Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup. It took place at Jumeirah Beach in Dubai, United Arab Emirates from 19 to 23 November 2013. Eight teams participated in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232119-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Rule change\nThere was a new rule change made known during this tournament. It was made known that if a match goes to penalties after extra time, it is no longer sudden-death. It is now the best of three penalty kicks per side. It is only sudden death if each side is level after the three PK rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232119-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Rule change\nThis rule change was instituted after the completion of the 2013 Mundialito de Clubes tournament and will apparently be permanent for all BSWW-sanctioned tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232119-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Group stage\nThe draw to divide the eight teams into two groups of four was conducted on 10 October 2013. The subsequent schedule was released on 29 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232119-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Soccer Intercontinental Cup, Group stage\nAll matches are listed as local time in Dubai, (UTC+4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232120-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Volleyball World Championships\nThe 2013 FIVB Beach Volleyball Swatch World Championships was a beach volleyball double-gender event, held from 1 to 7 July 2013 in Stare Jab\u0142onki, Poland. The FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships are organized every two years, and Poland hosted the event for the first time. 48 teams per gender entered the competition making 96 total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232120-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Volleyball World Championships, Men's event, Round Robin, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe eight best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 98], "content_span": [99, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232120-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Beach Volleyball World Championships, Women's event, Round Robin, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe eight best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 100], "content_span": [101, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl\nThe 2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 23, 2013 at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida. Sponsored by the Beef 'O' Brady's restaurant franchise, it was the sixth edition of the game formerly known as the St. Petersburg Bowl. It featured the Ohio Bobcats of the Mid-American Conference against the East Carolina Pirates of Conference USA. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The game began at 2:00\u00a0p.m. EST and aired on ESPN. East Carolina defeated Ohio, 37\u201320, by scoring 20 points in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Teams\nThis was the first Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl for both Ohio and East Carolina. It was the third meeting between the two schools, both of the previous of which East Carolina won, the most recent of which occurred in 1998. It was the last time a team from the Mid-American Conference went to the game, as the third tie-in will go to the Atlantic Coast Conference from 2014 until at least 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Pregame buildup\nEast Carolina was heavily favored to win the game, including predictions from all six CBS Sports panelists, ESPN writers, Bleacher Report, and Dr. Saturday, a feature from Yahoo Sports, as Ohio had fallen apart in the latter half of the season, and ECU's offense was very explosive offensively. One Yahoo Sports preview commented that it was a strength on strength game: \"It's a game of strength vs. strength. East Carolina's passing attack is ranked 11th in the country at 331 yards per game. Ohio has given up 212 passing yards per game. The Bobcats are much worse against the run, but East Carolina runs the ball poorly. The Pirates are 101st in the nation in rushing offense ... I like ECU's strength much more than I like Ohio's strength.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Pregame buildup, Ohio\nThe Bobcats continued their recent winning ways, finishing 7\u20135 overall and 4\u20134 in-conference (tied with the Akron Zips for third place in the MAC East Division). After their season, bowl director Brett Dulaney extended an invitation to play in the game. After starting their season 4\u20131 (the loss in the opener to number nine Louisville), the Bobcats lost a close game against Central Michigan, and then won two more games before losing three consecutive games, including being shut out 49\u20130 against Bowling Green, before resoundingly defeating UMass in their season's final game. In addition to being the Ohio's first Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl and their fifth consecutive bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Pregame buildup, Ohio, Offense\nCoordinated by Tim Albin, Ohio's offense, which averaged 238.5 passing yards per game (58th in FBS), 136.3 rushing yards per game (96th in FBS), and 28.0 points per game (72nd in FBS), relied heavily on senior quarterback Tyler Tettleton \u2013 in games during which he threw for more than 200 yards, Ohio was 6\u20131, but when he did not, they were just 1\u20134. His up-and-down season totaled 2623 passing yards, 20 touchdowns, and 9 interceptions. Sophomore Derrius Vick also contributed, predominantly as a rushing quarterback, totaling 28 rushes for 68 yards and 1 touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Pregame buildup, Ohio, Offense\nLeading the Bobcats' rushing attack, however, was senior Beau Blankenship, who \"trudged through a letdown of a season\" after entering the season with significant hype; he ultimately totaled 844 rushing yards and 5 touchdowns, eclipsing 100 yards in a game just twice. The backup was fellow senior Ryan Boykin, who rushed for 399 yards and a team-leading 7 rushing touchdowns. Sophomore Daz'mond Patterson was also a contributor in both the rushing and receiving games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Pregame buildup, Ohio, Offense\nThe Bobcats' leading receiver was second team all-conference honoree Donte Foster, who caught 63 passes for 858 yards and 6 touchdowns. Upperclassmen wide receivers Chase Cochran and Matt Waters were second and third respectively in receiving yards, recording 656 and 446 respectively. At tight end, senior Troy Hill caught 19 passes for 253 yards and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Pregame buildup, Ohio, Offense\nWalk-on sophomore Josiah Yazdani took over the kicking duties a few games into the season, and was a perfect 12 of 12 on his field goal tries (with a long of 49 yards), one of only four FBS kickers to be perfect, and 28 of 28 on his extra point attempts; he achieved second team all-conference honors. Ohio's offensive line was anchored by fifth-year seniors Jon Lechner, a right guard, and Ryan McGrath, a right tackle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Pregame buildup, East Carolina\nThe Pirates continued their recent success, finishing 9\u20133 overall and 6\u20132 in-conference, but their \"devastating\" 59\u201328 loss to the Marshall Thundering Herd kept them from the 2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, and dampened their overall season success. At season's end, bowl director Brett Dulaney extended an invitation to play in the game. In addition to being the East Carolina's first Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, it was also the Pirates' final game as a member of Conference USA before moving to the American Athletic Conference as part of the 2010\u201313 Big East Conference realignment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Broadcast\nBroadcast on ESPN, Beth Mowins handled the play-by-play duties, Joey Galloway was the analyst, and Paul Carcaterra was the sideline reporter. On ESPN Radio, the game's broadcasters were Eamon McAnaney (play-by-play), Anthony Becht (analyst), and Ian Fitzsimmons (sideline).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nEast Carolina (ECU) got the ball to start the game, and promptly went three-and-out, ultimately punting. Ohio achieved a few first downs, however quarterback Tyler Tettleton threw an interception to Michael Dobson, setting ECU up with good field position around midfield. On the ensuing possession, ECU drove down the field on 5 plays for 55 yards, with the drive culminating in a 5-yard pass from Shane Carden to Cam Worthy, taking a 7\u20130 lead. Ohio failed to respond, and punted on their next drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nWhen ECU regained possession of the ball, they embarked on a drive that was highlighted by a 39-yard rush by Vintavious Cooper, as well as a 15-yard pass to Justin Hardy on which he broke the career receiving yard record, but failed to score when Ohio stopped ECU on a fourth down conversion attempt in the red zone. Ohio could not capitalize, and ultimately punted. ECU subsequently embarked on an 11-play drive that covered 76-yards and took up 3:40, and culminated with a 2-yard run by Breon Allen for a touchdown. Ohio's offense finally came to life on their next drive, which culminated in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nAt the end of the first quarter, Ohio embarked on a drive during which they gained 26 yards on a flea flicker pass from Tettleton to Daz'mond Patterson, gained 15 more thanks to a personal foul on ECU, and then scored on a 17-yard swing pass from Tettleton to Patterson, making the score 14\u20137 ECU. ECU's offense took the field and used predominantly a no huddle offense that once caused an illegal substitution penalty on Ohio, however they committed a delay of game penalty when there was confusion on a play call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nOn that drive, they stalled around midfield and punted for a touchback. Ohio's subsequent drive lasted only one play \u2013 an 80-yard touchdown pass from Derrius Vick, Ohio's second quarterback, whom they previously used predominantly for running, to Donte Foster that tied the game at 14. As happened in the first quarter, ECU stalled in the red zone on their ensuing drive, failing to convert a fourth down, but Ohio went three-and-out, thus negating their momentum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nECU, relying predominantly on their running game (seven of nine plays) again approached scoring territory, but when faced with a 3rd down and 15, failed to convert the first down, and settled for a field goal try for Warren Harvey, who made a 41-yard attempt, taking the lead for the Pirates, 17\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nOhio received the opening second half kickoff, but failed to avenge the first half time of possession deficit (ECU possessed the ball for more than 20 of the 30 minutes in the first half), and quickly punted the ball to ECU, but the Pirates also punted after an ineffective series. On Ohio's ensuing drive, Tettleton took off running on one play, and exited the game with an apparent ankle injury; Vick subsequently entered the game for one play before Tettleton's return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nLater on the drive, Ohio converted a fourth down to advance into the red zone; Josiah Yazdani subsequently attempted a 29-yard field goal, which he made, tying the game, to culminate a 16-play, 60-yard drive. After exchanging punts, ECU advanced into Ohio territory on a drive highlighted by a 37-yard pass from Carden to Worthy, but that was decimated once deep in Ohio's territory by a chop block penalty, ultimately forcing the Pirates to settle for a 29-yard field goal attempt that Harvey missed wide right. At the end of the quarter, the game was tied at 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nEarly in the quarter, Ohio took its first lead of the game when Yazdani made a 28-yard field goal that culminated a 6-play, 69-yard drive. They surprised ECU on the ensuing kickoff, by attempting an onside kick, which they recovered around midfield. On their subsequent drive, Ohio drove down the field, but stalled around the 30-yard line, and settled for a 45-yard field goal attempt for Yazdani, which he missed, his first miss of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nOn the ensuing drive, ECU took advantage of two 15-yard penalties on Ohio (a personal foul and a pass interference), and Cooper rushed for a touchdown, putting ECU back on top, 24\u201320. Ohio failed to move the ball on their next drive, and their punt was fair caught in their own territory, setting ECU up with excellent field position, from which they embarked on a drive that culminated when, on a trick play, Carden caught a 14-yard touchdown pass from Worthy, putting ECU up 31\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nTettleton threw an interception on Ohio's ensuing drive that again set up ECU in Ohio's territory, however this time, they did not convert a third down when at their 38-yard line, after which they took a delay of game penalty to give ECU five more yards' room to pin Ohio deep on the punt, but only managed to pin them at their own 16-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232121-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nOn Ohio's next drive, Tettleton rushed for 17 yards on 3rd and 16 to convert for a first down, however on the following series, Tettleton threw another interception; on the return, Ohio committed a personal foul, giving ECU another drive to start in Ohio's territory. Cooper subsequently rushed for a 22-yard touchdown, giving him 198 rushing yards on the day, a career-best. The extra point was blocked, and as such, the game's final score was 37\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting\nThe 2013 Beersheba shooting was a mass shooting that occurred in a Bank Hapoalim branch located in Beersheba, Israel. Itamar Alon, an Israeli citizen, entered into the bank and opened fire, killing four and wounding five. He then took a woman hostage and killed himself when police arrived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting, Background\nThe shooter, Itamar Alon, was a 39 year old Beersheba resident. He had done his mandatory military service in the Israel Defense Forces in the Combat Engineering Corps, and he rose to become an officer. He later transferred to the Israel Border Police, and participated in joint patrols with Palestinian police in the Tulkarm area. After completing his active service, he began working as a security guard for educational institutions and the Beersheba municipality, and served as a platoon commander in a reserve battalion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting, Background\nIn 2002, he was caught in a shooting attack by two Palestinian militants in which two Israeli soldiers were killed, and killed one of the militants with his pistol. He was awarded a medal by Beersheba mayor Yaakov Turner. That same year, he was fired by the municipality at the end of his trial period of employment due to poor relations with co-workers. He was also transferred from his position as a reserve platoon commander to command a rearguard battalion in the IDF Home Front Command due to aggressive behavior and poor judgement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting, Background\nIn 2011, the Israel Police requested that Alon be stripped of his private gun license after he had been involved in a dispute with his neighbors and suspicions over him committing violence against his parents had emerged. After a court hearing, Alon was allowed to keep his gun license.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting, Background\nIn May 2013, Alon's credit card was cancelled after he had accumulated a debt of about NIS 6,000, and the card was swallowed by an ATM when he tried to use it. On May 23, 2013, he visited the Bank Hapoalim branch in the Neve Ze'ev neighborhood of Beersheba requesting a debt settlement, and was refused. A few hours later, he returned to commit the shooting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting, The shooting\nAt around 1:00 p.m., Alon returned to the Bank Hapoalim branch armed with a .45-caliber Glock 21 semiautomatic pistol and sat down together with other people waiting for services. He then got up and opened fire. The branch's manager, Avner Cohen and his deputy Meir Zeitun were killed, as were two customers, Idan Sabri and Anat Even-Haim. According to eyewitness accounts, Alon shot the two bank employees who were shot multiple times to ensure that they were dead. Five other people were wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting, The shooting\nAlon then took a woman, Miri Cohen, an employee of the bank, as a hostage, and barricaded himself with her in a bathroom. Within three minutes of the start of the shooting, the police arrived, with one policeman shooting a flowerpot as a deterrent as officers entered, and began searching for the shooter. One of the wounded victims was temporarily handcuffed after being mistaken for the shooter by police. After it became known that the shooter was in a bathroom together with a hostage, a police officer fired a single shot into the bathroom. The police negotiated with Alon until he shot himself. He was taken to Soroka Medical Center, where he died. Police officials stated that there was no security guard at the bank at the time of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232122-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Beersheba shooting, Reactions\nIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the shooting \"a terrible tragedy\". He said he does not remember such an event and that it is a phenomenon that is not common in Israel. During meeting with officials, Avigdor Lieberman said that the event is a terrorist attack by all means and that \"there is no doubt it affects everything, and makes it clear what the right priorities are\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232123-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing Capital International Airport bombing\nThe 2013 Beijing Capital International Airport bombing occurred at 6:24 pm on Saturday, July 20, 2013, near the Exit B at the second floor of Terminal 3 in Beijing Capital International Airport in Beijing, China. The blast only injured the bomber Ji Zhongxing (Chinese: \u5180\u4e2d\u661f) himself. No flights were affected, according to airport officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232123-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing Capital International Airport bombing, Attack\nThe bomb exploded near the Exit B at the second floor of Terminal 3 in Beijing Capital Airport. Ji was distributing flyers and was then stopped from doing so by the police; after, he detonated the device. Witness exclaimed to have seen a man in wheelchair warning them to step back before the explosion. The man then took the bomb out of a bag with him and set it off, although the police were trying to stop him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232123-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing Capital International Airport bombing, Attack\nThe explosion only injured the bomber himself, who was taken to a hospital soon after, but shocked travelers and sent authorities scrambling. The exit was then closed temporarily. Less than two hours after the explosion, airport officials said operations are back to normal and no flights were affected. At the hospital, doctors amputated his left hand and has since been formally charged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232123-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing Capital International Airport bombing, Investigation\nThe bomber was later identified as Ji Zhongxing (Chinese: \u5180\u4e2d\u661f) by the police, was born in 1979 and from the city of Heze in Shandong province. Police said Zhongxing is a petitioner, a citizen with a grievance against government officials or police. He exclaimed that he was beaten by the security officers in Dongguan, Guangdong in 2005, breaking his back and paralyzing him from waist down. He began his petition after losing the lawsuits against local government while confined to his home with his father. Officials in Dongguan claimed that he was compensated with 100,000 RMB but has been contradicted by Ji's personal blog. The Department of Public Security of Guangdong has already required the government of Dongguan to investigate the concerning case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232123-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing Capital International Airport bombing, Sentencing\nOn October 15, 2013, Ji Zhongxing was sentenced to six years in prison. On March 22, 2018, Ji Zhongxing was released from prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232124-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing Guoan F.C. season\nThe 2013 Beijing Guoan F.C. season was their 10th consecutive season in the Chinese Super League, established in the 2004 season, and 23rd consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. They competed at the Chinese Super League, AFC Champions League and Chinese FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232124-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232125-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger\nThe 2013 Beijing International Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, both offering a total of $75,000 in prize money. It took place in Beijing, China, on 8\u201314 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232125-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger, ATP entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232125-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232125-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as Lucky Losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232126-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana are the defending champions, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232126-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nToshihide Matsui and Danai Udomchoke defeated the Chinese pairing of Gong Maoxin and Zhang Ze 4\u20136, 7\u20136(8\u20136), [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232127-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger \u2013 Men's Singles\nGrega \u017demlja was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Top seeded Lu Yen-Hsun beat Go Soeda 6\u20132, 6\u20134, to claim the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232128-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLiu Wanting and Sun Shengnan were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012. Liu partnered up with Yang Zhaoxuan, but lost in the quarterfinals; Sun partnered up with Chan Chin-wei, but they lost in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232128-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLiu Chang and Zhou Yimiao won the title, defeating Misaki Doi and Miki Miyamura in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232129-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger \u2013 Women's Singles\nWang Qiang was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she lost in the first round to Zhang Ling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232129-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beijing International Challenger \u2013 Women's Singles\nZhang Shuai won the title, defeating Zhou Yimiao in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232130-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian First League\nThe 2013 Belarusian First League is the 23rd season of 2nd level football in Belarus. It started in April and finished in November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232130-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2012 season\nThe winners of last season (Dnepr Mogilev) were promoted to Belarusian Premier League. No teams relegated directly from the Premier League as it was expanded from 11 to 12 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232130-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2012 season\nThe runners-up of last season (Gorodeya) lost the promotion/relegation play-off to Torpedo-BelAZ Zhodino (11th-placed Premier League team) and both clubs stayed in their respective leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232130-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2012 season\nOne team that finished at the bottom of 2012 season table (Rudensk) relegated to the Second League. To compensate for Premier League and First League club withdrawals from last year, they were replaced by three best teams of 2012 Second League (Smolevichi-STI, Slonim and Isloch Minsk Raion) and the league was expanded from 15 to 16 clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232130-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2012 season\nDSK Gomel withdrew from the league and disbanded due to lack of financing. They were replaced by Minsk-2, who finished 5th in last year's Second League. Gomelzheldortrans, Second League 4th team, declined invitation due to insufficient financing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232130-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian First League, League table, Promotion play-offs\nThe 11th placed team of 2013 Premier League Dnepr Mogilev played a two-legged relegation play-off against the runners-up of 2013 Belarusian First League Gorodeya for one spot in the 2014 Premier League and won the series 3\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League\nThe 2013 Belarusian Premier League was the 23rd season of top-tier football in Belarus. It began in April 2013 and ended in November 2013. BATE Borisov are the defending champions, having won their 9th league title the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Format change\nStarting with this season, the league will be played in two phases. The first phase will consist of a regular double-round robin tournament between 12 teams. The best six teams will qualify for the championship round, which will determine the champions and the participants for the 2014\u201315 European competitions. The remaining six teams play in the relegation group, where the top four teams will secure places in the 2014 competition, the fifth team (11th overall) will play a two-legged relegation play-off against the runners-up of the First League, and the sixth team (12th overall) will be automatically relegated. All points collected during the first phase will count for the second phase as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Teams\nNo teams were relegated to the First League after the 2012 season since the number of teams was shortened from 12 to 11 at the last moment in early 2012. Dnepr Mogilev, the champions of 2012 First League, were promoted to the Premier League after 1 season's absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Teams\nTorpedo-BelAZ Zhodino, as the 11th-placed team in the 2012 Premier League, had to compete in the relegation/promotion playoffs against First League runners-up Gorodeya. Torpedo-BelAZ Zhodino won the playoff, 4\u20131 on aggregate, and both teams retained positions in their respective leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Teams\nBrest reverted their name back to Dinamo Brest a week before the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, First phase, Results\nEach team will play twice against every other team for a total of 22 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Championship round, Results\nThe best six teams of the first phase will play twice against every other team for a total of 10 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Relegation group, Results\nThe last six teams of the first phase will play twice against every other team for a total of 10 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Relegation playoffs\nThe 11th place finisher of this competition will play a two-legged relegation play-off against the runners-up of the 2013 Belarusian First League for one spot in the 2014 Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232131-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Premier League, Relegation playoffs\nDnepr Mogilev won 3\u20131 on aggregate and remain in this division for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232132-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belarusian Super Cup\nThe 2013 Belarusian Super Cup was held on 17 March 2013 between the 2012 Belarusian Premier League champions winners BATE Borisov and the 2011\u201312 Belarusian Cup winners Naftan Novopolotsk. BATE won the match 1\u20130 and won the trophy for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots\nThis article covers rioting in July and August. For riots linked to the City Hall protests, see Belfast City Hall flag protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots\nThe 2013 Belfast riots was a series of riots taking place in Belfast in Northern Ireland. They came months after the Belfast City Hall flag protests ignited rioting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots, July riots\nRioting broke out following the 12 July Orange Order parade, when local Orangemen were barred from returning via their traditional route via the Catholic-populated Ardoyne in north Belfast, which ignited protests from loyalists. Trouble also spread to south and east Belfast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots, July riots\nThe Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) fired about 20 plastic baton rounds at rioters and used two mobile water cannons. For several hours they dealt with loyalists and nationalists exchanging missiles across the police line, and at one point a group of loyalists used ceremonial swords to attack the police lines. Nigel Dodds, the unionist MP for Belfast North, was injured and hospitalised when struck in the head by a missile when he was trying to negotiate with police officers in Woodvale Avenue. 32 officers were hurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots, July riots\nThe PSNI Chief Constable called 400 extra police officers from England, Scotland and Wales to deal with the situation - more than 600 from the British mainland were already supporting the PSNI beforehand. It was an unprecedented move - in the past, and during the Troubles, the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) never called in extra police but used the British Army soldiers, who withdrew from Northern Ireland in 2007. By the end of August, 106 arrests were made and 77 were charged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots, August riots\nViolent clashes broke out on the evening of Friday 9 August when loyalists attempted to prevent a parade of 5,000 Irish republican marking the anniversary of internment in 1971 through the city centre. The parade was a joint alliance of dissident groups which included the 32 County Sovereignty Movement, the political wing of the New IRA. It was legally given permission but up to 1,000 loyalists blocked their route at around 6 pm and attacked riot police around Royal Avenue/North Street, and clashes between loyalists and nationalists took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots, August riots\nBy an hour later, PSNI officers and armoured vehicles blocked the republican parade in North Queen Street in New Lodge. This would become a second stand-off from the one around Royal Avenue involving loyalists. The parade organisers decided to avoid Royal Avenue and take a route via Carrick Hill and Millfield, near the city centre, towards west Belfast. \"Serious disorder\" took place on these roads as riot police separated the two groups. The protesters were then pushed back towards the Shankill Road area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots, August riots\nThe PSNI fired 26 plastic baton rounds and deployed two water cannons. Michael Copeland, an Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) politician, claimed that he and his family members were assaulted by police in Royal Avenue. In total, 56 police officers and two civilians were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232133-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Belfast riots, August riots\nNorthern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers described the violence as \"shameful\". Within four days the PSNI arrested 90 people of which 66 were charged, and released photos of other wanted offenders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232134-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Cup Final\nThe 2013 Belgian Cup Final, named Cofidis Cup after the sponsor, took place on 9 May 2013 between Genk and Cercle Brugge. It was the 58th Belgian Cup final and was won by Genk, with two late goals by Bennard Yao Kumordzi and Jelle Vossen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232135-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Belgian Figure Skating Championships (Dutch: Belgisch Kampioenschap 2013; French: Championnat de Belgique 2013) took place between 23 and 24 November 2012 in Deurne. Skaters competed in the discipline of ladies' singles on the senior level and men's and ladies' singles across the junior, advanced novice, as well as the age-group levels of minime/miniem A, B, and C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Belgian Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 Shell Belgian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race on 25 August 2013 at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps in Spa, Belgium. It was the eleventh round of the 2013 season, and the 69th running of the Belgian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix\nThe race was won by Sebastian Vettel in a Red Bull-Renault in a time of 1:23:42, registering an average speed of 220.80\u00a0km/h, thus extending his championship lead to 46 points. Second was Fernando Alonso in a Ferrari, and third was Lewis Hamilton (who had started from pole) in a Mercedes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nLike the 2012 Belgian Grand Prix, tyre supplier Pirelli brought its orange-banded hard compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the white-banded medium compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nMercedes had taken 7 of the last 8 poles, but in practice, Red Bull had appeared to be the fastest team. A rain shower hit the track right before qualifying got underway, dropping the air temperature to only 22\u00a0\u00b0C and mixing things up even further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nAll the drivers started the session with intermediates, Lewis Hamilton set the first benchmark of 2:07.008. As the track continued drying, Nico Rosberg, Mark Webber, and Sebastian Vettel all hit the front briefly. After the midpoint, most drivers pitted for a new set of intermediate tyres while Giedo van der Garde took a gamble to switch onto the slicks. As times passing by, lap times improved rapidly, nearly pushed both Ferraris out of Q2. But Fernando Alonso managed to set the fastest time at the last moment and his team-mate Felipe Massa also made it into the next session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nVan der Garde's decision proved a big success, for he impressively finished 3rd. In fact, three of the four drivers from Caterham and Marussia squeezed into Q2, the only one that failed to do so was Charles Pic, who started the race from the last place on the grid. Also eliminated were the Williams duo, the two Toro Rossos, and the Sauber of Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nAt the beginning of the 15 minutes period, drivers were divided into 2 groups, most of them used mediums, while several others including Webber and Alonso chose the hards. In the opening phase, Webber and Alonso were fighting for the top spot, their gap being merely two thousandths of a second. At the same time, Vettel and Hamilton stayed in the pits until there were about 7 minutes left on the board. After that it was time for mediums, first the two Lotuses, then Sebastian Vettel, all challenging for the first place. But finally Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen put the fight to an end with a 1:48.296. Eliminated in Q2 were Sauber's Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Force India's Adrian Sutil, McLaren's Sergio P\u00e9rez, Caterham's Giedo van der Garde who achieved the team's best qualifying result ever, and both the Marussias.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nIn fear of the incoming shower, all bar Paul di Resta queued at the pit exit with medium tyres. However just moments later, the Force India driver opted to use the inters. It soon turned out that the latter was right, as the other 9 drivers didn't even start a flying lap as the track was too wet for slicks and they had to pit immediately. Di Resta then set the fastest lap time, with Felipe Massa in second. Just when it looked like he was going to take his maiden pole position, the track started to dry out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nAs there was 3 minutes left, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen gave the first shot to come to 3rd, ahead of Alonso. And Rosberg behind them posted a 2:02.251 to take the provisional pole. But none of them could cross the line before the chequered flag. With the ever-improving track, polesitter would be decided among three that still had one timed lap to go\u2014Webber, Vettel, and Hamilton. Webber finished first to reduce the quickest time by almost a second. Then Vettel beat his teammate by a further one tenth of a second, Lewis Hamilton subsequently secured his fourth successive pole. The Lotuses and the Ferraris had to settle in rows 4 and 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMark Webber suffered clutch problems right from the start and fell from third to sixth after one lap. On the other hand, Jenson Button and Fernando Alonso both enjoyed a great getaway, running in fourth and fifth places respectively. Sebastian Vettel had a great run up Eau Rouge and overtook pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton down Kemmel Straight on the first lap and quickly took a commanding lead over the Mercedes duo. Alonso and Webber both passed Button and the Spaniard continued to fight his way up the field, overtaking Nico Rosberg for third place. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was also working his way up the field, but excessive brake dust was coming out of the Finn's left front wheel at an early stage in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn the eighth lap, Sergio P\u00e9rez was handed a drive through penalty for forcing Romain Grosjean off the track. As a result, Grosjean had to straightline Les Combes and fell from eight to tenth as Felipe Massa took advantage. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's brakes ultimately failed as the Finn went off massively at the Chicane, nearly collecting Massa in the process. The Lotus driver retired the car, which meant that his record run of consecutive points finishes ended at 27. It was later discovered that a loose visor tear-off got stuck inside the left front brake duct, causing the disc to overheat. After the first round of pit stops, Hamilton successfully retained second place from Alonso, but the latter quickly found his way through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFurther down the order, a battle involving Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez, Pastor Maldonado and the Force India duo was raging. As the four cars were approaching the final chicane, the young Mexican successfully made his move on both Adrian Sutil and Maldonado. The German tried to follow, but clipped the Williams driver's front wing. Maldonado dove for the pits only to collect the second Force India of Paul di Resta. As a result, the Venezuelan had to pit for a new front wing and received a ten seconds stop-and-go penalty while di Resta retired his car on the spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel won the race, ahead of Alonso and Hamilton. Nico Rosberg successfully fought off Webber for fourth, finishing less than three seconds behind his teammate. Button took sixth for McLaren, while the race-long scrap between Massa and Grosjean ended with the Brazilian in front for seventh. Sutil and Daniel Ricciardo took ninth and tenth respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232136-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Grand Prix, Greenpeace protest\nGreenpeace used the Belgian Grand Prix as a main point of protests against Shell, a principal sponsor of the race. Greenpeace activists went to the track and put up a number of banners protesting against Shell drilling in the Arctic. These included two remote controlled banners which scrolled up in front of the podium celebrations, which were quickly disposed of by security, and a large banner on the main grandstand. The official world feed broadcast did not show any banner in detail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232137-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgian Super Cup\nThe 2013 Belgian Super Cup was a football match that was played on 21 July 2013, between 2012\u201313 Belgian Pro League winners Anderlecht and 2012\u201313 Belgian Cup winners Genk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232138-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgium Tour\nThe 2013 Lotto-Belisol Belgium Tour is the second edition of the Lotto-Belisol Belgium Tour, previous called Lotto-Decca Tour, a women's cycle stage race in Belgium. The tour will be held from 23 to 26 August 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 2.2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting\nThe 2013 Belgorod shooting was a mass murder that occurred on April 22, 2013, in Belgorod, Russia, where six people were killed. 31-year-old Sergey Pomazun shot three people at a gun store and three people on the street outside with a semi-automatic rifle in downtown Belgorod before fleeing to Kursk Oblast, where he was apprehended the next day after an extensive manhunt. Pomazun, an army veteran with a history of petty crime and unstable behavior, confessed to the killings, and in his widely covered trial claimed to have murdered many more innocent people during the Second Chechen War in classified missions as an agent of the GRU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting\nOn August 23, 2013, Pomazun was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nSergey Aleksandrovich Pomazun (\u0421\u0435\u0440\u0433\u0435\u0301\u0439 \u0410\u043b\u0435\u043a\u0441\u0430\u0301\u043d\u0434\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0438\u0447 \u041f\u043e\u043c\u0430\u0437\u0443\u0301\u043d) was born on June 3, 1981, in Kupino, a village in Shebekinsky District, Belgorod Oblast, Soviet Union. His father, Alexander Pomazun, was a long-time employee at a fertilizer factory until leaving in the 1990s due to a serious salary delay, and ran a private hunting farm in the Shebekinsky district. His mother, Lyudmila Pomazuna, worked as an accountant in the local department of education. Pomazun attended Belgorod secondary school No. 42, where he was recorded as having poor grades at academic subjects but strong grades at practical subjects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nIn 1996, he entered the vocational school No. 33 training to be an auto mechanic. In 1999, Pomazun was conscripted into the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation and approved for service by the military medical board, who placed him into Category \"A\" \u2013 those deemed fully mentally and physically fit without restrictions to their service. Pomazun was designated to an electronic warfare battalion in Belgorod Oblast, where he was appointed an electrician at the battalion's headquarters. According to colleagues, Pomazun was considered strange and people rarely noticed him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nIn 2002, Pomazun and an accomplice were found guilty of stealing two VAZ-2107 cars from private garages and scrapping them for private gain. He was sentenced to two years probation and ordered to pay 2000 rubles in compensation. In 2003, Pomazun was found guilty of stealing a VAZ-21213 car from a Belgorod hospital parking lot and a VAZ-2106 car from a private garage, scrapping them for profit, and during his arrest striking the arresting police officer in the ear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nPomazun received a 5-year and 1-month sentence at a low-security penal colony, but required only serving during weekdays and was allowed weekend furloughs at home. In September 2007, he was denied parole. In 2008, Pomazun was found guilty of stealing two cars, a Mazda 6 and a Lada 111, during his weekend breaks. On June 17, 2008, a court sentenced him to an additional 5-years and 4-months in a high-security penal colony, but an appeal on July 23, 2008, led to the sentence reduced to 4-years 10-months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nPomazun was sent to a penal colony in Belgorod before being transferred to one in Valuyki, where he had a record of bad behavior and received 29 individual penalties. According to his father, Pomazun had intentionally violated prison rules to be placed into the isolation ward to get away from the other inmates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nOn December 20, 2012, Pomazun was released from prison, moving in with his parents and living in a largely asocial life playing video games. Alexander Pomazun stated: \"He began to notice that when deciding tickets, he began to talk. He repeated the same word five or six times. On many occasions he read aloud the same ticket, and then he was psychologically and swore with obscene language. He switched on and off the switch in the kitchen about 40 times in a row, talked to himself with a whisper, began to wander aimlessly around the room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nHe took out all our family photo albums, as well as his army photos, and burned them. When asked why he did this, he replied that they interfere, they are from a past life.\" Eventually, Pomazun decided to upgrade the vehicle category of his drivers license with the intention of becoming a taxicab driver and passed the theory test, but in April 2013 he failed the practical test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nAccording to Alexander Pomazun, he had begun to behave aggressively returning from the test, and upon arriving home shouted about Chechnya and the GRU then attacked his father with a knife which he had previously purchased. Alexander fended off Pomazun, receiving only minor wounds and the next day handed him in to the local police station. Pomazun was not charged and was given advice by a police officer before being released, after which he failed the taxi practical test two more times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0004-0003", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nUpon failing his third test, Pomazun threatened to kill the instructor and their children, and began shouting about Chechnya and the GRU. Lyudmila Pomazuna appealed to the Belgorod Oblast branch of the Ministry of Internal Affairs about her son's behavior, but her application was reject. She instead contacted a psychological clinic, but was told they had no right to compulsory treatment of patients (Pomazun rejected treatment) and advised her to contact the police again. On April 19, 2013, Lyudmila Pomazuna appealed to the Belgorod Oblast state police but received no response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Perpetrator\nAround this time, Pomazun had conflict with a security guard that had insulted him and thrown him out of a department store in Belgorod. Pomazun decided to take revenge by planning to kill the guard, and even prepared for a possible shootout with guards of the store's private security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Shooting\nOn the morning of April 22, 2013, after Pomazun's parents had left for work, he broke into his father's safe which contained numerous guns, including a Saiga semi-automatic rifle, IZH-27E and IZH-58 hunting rifles, and 144 rounds. Pomazun stole the Saiga and his father's BMW X5, recently bought earlier by the family on credit. He drove to Belgorod city center, parked the car and wrapping the gun in a cloth. At about 14:16 (UTC+3) Pomazun went to the Okhota hunting store located near the intersection of Popova Street and Narodny Boulevard, where he demanded they sell him ammunition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Shooting\nAfter receiving a refusal, he shot two sales assistants and a customer, then broke into a display cabinet and stole two carbines, as well as more than 250 rounds of different calibers. Pomazun then exited the store and in broad daylight shot three random people that were walking by, with two of them, a man and a 14-year-old schoolgirl, dying at the scene. The third, a 16-year-old schoolgirl, was wounded and died in a hospital an hour later. The four other victims were all males aged between 28 and 49.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Shooting\nPomazun escaped from the scene in the BMW X5, which was later abandoned, and quickly was identified along with his three previous convictions. He drove to the edge of forest on the outskirts of Belgorod and abandoned the car, then walked several kilometers into the woods where he changed his clothes and buried the gun he had used in the shooting. A combined force of around 2,000 policemen started an extensive manhunt searching for Pomazun, with Belgorod authorities offering a reward of 3 million rubles for his capture. All available policemen from Belgorod Oblast, the neighboring regions of Kursk Oblast and Voronezh Oblast, as well as an OMON detachment from Moscow, joined the search.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Shooting\nOn April 23, the night after the shooting, Pomazun was arrested near a railway station in Kursk Oblast where he was attempting to flee on a freight train. Four Kursk Oblast police officers were wounded when Pomazun attacked them with a knife, and claimed he had been shooting \"into hell\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath\nIn response to the shooting, April 23 and 24 were declared days of mourning in Belgorod Oblast, and the authorities promised to give out a million rubles to each of the victims' families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath, Trial\nPomazun underwent extensive psychiatric analysis, where he was found fit to stand trial. His trial began with preliminary hearings on June 22, 2013, with the prosecutor demanding life in prison. Pomazun confessed to the shooting, but expressed no remorse for the shooting spree as he said it was an accidental occurrence in the course of \"a special operation\" that went wrong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath, Trial\nPomazun testified that he plotted to kill the security guard who had insulted him, and that he only intended to steal more weapons and ammunition from the gun store to be better prepared for a possible firefight with the intervening police following the planned murder. He claimed that the initial shooting was sparked by his spotting what he thought was a plain-clothed policeman reaching for a concealed weapon, and reacted by shooting people to clear a path to his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath, Trial\nPomazun claimed to the court that, during his service in the Russian armed forces, he had developed a tolerance to killing civilians after being involved in war crimes while fighting in the Second Chechen War between 1999 and 2001, first as a conscript with the regular Russian Army and then as a sharpshooter in a unit of the secretive Spetsnaz GRU. Pomazun claimed that his battalion participated in a series of special operations in Chechnya in order to intimidate the population, where they killed nearly a thousand innocent people \"all the way from Mozdok to Khasavyurt\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath, Trial\nHe claimed Chechen civilians were crushed under tanks and that women and children were being beheaded, something that he says has since plagued him in his nightmares. But according to court documents, Pomazun never saw combat in the military and has never been to the North Caucasus, to which Pomazun replied that his service and missions were classified and refused to provide any more details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath, Trial\nPomazun's lawyer, Viktor Yeremeyev, asked the court for only a 25-year prison sentence due to his poor mental state, and for him to be incarcerated in the Black Dolphin Prison. On August 23, the court under judge Nikolai Kudinov found Pomazun guilty of murdering six people, illegal weapons possession, taking weapons by force and assaulting a police officer. Pomazun was sentenced to life imprisonment in a high-security penal colony, and was ordered to pay 3 million rubles in compensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath, Trial\nWhen the verdict was read out Pomazun reacted aggressively: he started swearing and threatened to kill those present in court, and promised to squeeze out the eyes of the court photographer. Viktor Yeremeyev attempted to appeal the verdict, stating that Pomazun required further psychological testing before being convicted and that the first investigation was superficial with little regard for his poor mental state, but this was declined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232139-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Belgorod shooting, Aftermath, Trial\nSince January 28, 2014, Pomazun has been held at the Snowy Owl Prison in Kharp, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl\nThe 2013 Belk Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 28, 2013, at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The twelfth edition of the Belk Bowl, it featured the Cincinnati Bearcats of the American Athletic Conference against the North Carolina Tar Heels of the Atlantic Coast Conference. It began at 3:20\u00a0p.m. EST and aired on ESPN. The game was sponsored by the Belk department store company. North Carolina defeated Cincinnati by a score of 39\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl\nThe Bearcats accepted their invitation after earning a 9\u20133 record for the season, while the Tar Heels accepted their bid after going 6\u20136 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Teams, Cincinnati Bearcats\nThe Bearcats continued their winning ways in the American Athletic Conference, finishing at 9\u20133 overall and 6\u20132 in the American. After a 31\u201324 overtime defeat at home against the rival Louisville Cardinals (which saw Louisville retain The Keg of Nails for the foreseeable future), bowl director Will Webb extended an invitation to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Teams, Cincinnati Bearcats\nThis will be Cincinnati's second consecutive (and overall) Belk Bowl; the Bearcats had previously won the game in 2012, defeating the Duke Blue Devils by a score of 48\u201334. It will also end the Belk Bowl's six-year partnership with The American (formerly the Big East, as that tie-in will go to the Southeastern Conference from 2014 through at least 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Teams, North Carolina Tar Heels\nCollege football analyst Phil Steele and CBS Sports writer Jerry Palm (as of December 6) projected that the Tar Heels would be the other team invited to play in the game. This was confirmed on December 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Teams, North Carolina Tar Heels\nThe Tar Heels are only the sixth team since the regular season expanded to 12 games in 2006 to start the season 1\u20135 and be invited to a bowl. They reeled off five consecutive wins, including four straight conference wins, to become bowl eligible. This will be North Carolina's fourth appearance in what is now the Belk Bowl. They previously appeared in the game in 2004 (losing to Boston College), 2008 (losing to West Virginia) and 2009 (losing to Pittsburgh).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Teams, North Carolina Tar Heels\nThe 2004 appearance came when the bowl was known as the Continental Tire Bowl; the 2008 and 2009 appearances came when it was the Meineke Car Care Bowl. The Tar Heels have accounted for two of the largest crowds in the bowl's history. The 2008 game attracted a crowd of 73,712, the most in the bowl's history. The 2004 game attracted a crowd of 70,412. Charlotte is only two hours south of Chapel Hill, and the Tar Heels have a large alumni and fan base in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nAfter receiving the opening kickoff, the Tar Heels of North Carolina (UNC) went three-and-out and punted, but on the return, Cincinnati's (CINCY) Anthony McClung fumbled the return, giving UNC the ball back and the CINCY 34. However, UNC was forced to settle for a 40-yard field goal try that Thomas Moore missed. CINCY took possession of the ball at their own 23-yard line, and achieved a first down before a sack that lost 18 yards decimated the drive, and they ultimately punted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nUNC was first to the scoreboard on their subsequent drive, scoring on a 2-yard touchdown run by Romar Morris after 11 plays for 68 yards. CINCY failed to execute on their next drive, punting, and UNC's Ryan Switzer returned the punt for 33 yards (the punt went 34 yards), but the return was called back due to a holding penalty, negating the Tar Heels' good field position, instead putting them back at their own 35-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nOn UNC's ensuing drive, they went three-and-out, and during the drive, senior offensive lineman James Hurst went down with an apparent left leg injury, exiting the game; UNC punted. The punt pinned CINCY inside their own 10-yard line, and on their possession, linebacker Kareem Martin and ram back Brandon Ellerbe sacked quarterback Brendon Kay in the end zone for a safety. UNC returner T. J. Logan returned the ensuing free kick 78 yards for a touchdown, making the score 16\u20130, UNC. CINCY started their subsequent drive at their own 35-yard line after the kickoff went out of bounds. At the end of the first quarter, they were amidst a drive, approaching the red zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nCINCY kicker Tony Miliano, who entered the attempt having made just 6 of 15 attempts on the season, made a 34-yard field goal attempt within the first minute of the quarter to make the score 16\u20133. After that, UNC once again embarked on a long drive that lasted 12 plays for 76 yards and 4:01 and culminated with a Jack Tabb 3-yard touchdown reception from Marquise Williams, making the score 23\u20133. Later in the quarter, Miliano missed a 46-yard field goal attempt, and subsequently the teams exchanged punts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nUNC punted on their next drive after failing to convert a third and ten, instead losing five yards to knock them out of field goal range; the punt was downed at the CINCY 6-yard line. CINCY did not attempt to score particularly vigorously, not running any pass plays, and ultimately heading into the half trailing by 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nCincinnati received the opening kickoff of the second half, and exclusively ran the ball on the first several plays of the drive, even to the extent that Shaq Washington replaced Kay at quarterback, the latter of whom lined up at wide receiver; on third down and nine, however, Kay returned to quarterback on a passing play, but was sacked for the fifth time of the game, and the Bearcats were forced to punt, and Switzer tied the NCAA-record with his fifth punt return touchdown of the season, recording an 86-yard touchdown; the extra point was no good.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nCINCY finally scored a touchdown on their subsequent drive, via a 15-yard rush by Ralph Abernathy, making the score 29\u201310. On the ensuing kickoff, CINCY kicked the ball out of bounds, setting up UNC with solid field position at their own 35-yard line. Early in the drive Eric Ebron, hurdled a defender and hit the ground hard, but quickly re-entered the game, and caught another pass just a few plays later. Later in the drive, Switzer made a catch that converted a fourth down in the red zone; moments later, Morris rushed for a 1-yard touchdown. This time, the extra point was good to culminate a 13-play, 65-yard drive that encapsulated 4:36. CINCY's ensuing drive stalled, and they punted; Switzer made a fair catch. In the waning seconds of the quarter, CINCY entered the red zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nUtilizing the wildcat formation, Shaq Washington rushed for a touchdown within the first minute of the final quarter of play, pulling the Bearcats within 19. On the ensuing kickoff, CINCY recovered a fumble from T. J. Logan, fueling momentum for the Bearcats, who started at the 6-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThey started in the wildcat, but when faced with third and goal at the eight-yard line, Kay returned at quarterback and completed a pass, but it was short of the end zone; the Bearcats went for it on fourth down, and Kay threw a pass that bounced off the hands of his intended target, and thus, they turned the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232140-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Belk Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nLooking to milk the clock on their ensuing drive, UNC achieved a first down prior to losing six yards on a rush to set up third down and long; a pass interference bailed them out on the third and long play, as though the pass was incomplete, the 15-yard penalty gave them an automatic first down. They succeeded in their endeavor to drain time from the clock, ultimately executing a 14-play drive that gained 74 yards and lasted 9:19, and culminated with a 40-yard field goal to complete the scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232141-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belkin Pro Cycling season\nThe 2013 season for the Belkin Pro Cycling team began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232141-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belkin Pro Cycling season\nHaving lost the sponsorship of Rabobank after seventeen years in the sport, the team were able to compete during the 2013 season due to Rabobank funding. As a result, the team ran as the Blanco Pro Cycling team for the first half of the season. Prior to the Tour de France, it was announced that Belkin, an American manufacturer of consumer electronics, acquired title sponsorship of the team in a \u200b2\u00a01\u20442-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232142-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Belmont Stakes\nThe 2013 Belmont Stakes was the 145th running of the Belmont Stakes, the third jewel in the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing. The race was held on June 8, 2013. For the third consecutive year, the race was run without the Triple Crown being at stake as 2013 Kentucky Derby winner Orb was defeated in the 2013 Preakness Stakes by Oxbow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232142-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Belmont Stakes\nThe race was won by Palace Malice in 2:30.70. Oxbow finished second, Orb third, Incognito fourth, Revolutionary fifth and the filly Unlimited Budget was sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232142-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Belmont Stakes, Field\nBoth the Kentucky Derby winner Orb and the Preakness Stakes winner Oxbow entered the race. This was the 21st time that the winner of the Kentucky Derby and the winner of the Preakness Stakes competed in the race. A total of fourteen horses entered the race, tying for the second-largest field for the third time in the race's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232142-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Belmont Stakes, Field\nOrb was the morning line favorite. Trainer Todd Pletcher entered a record 5 horses in the race, including the filly Unlimited Budget who was attempting to become the second filly to win the race in the modern era after Pletcher's 2007 winner Rags to Riches. Ridden by Rosie Napravnik, who in doing so, became the first woman jockey to ride all three Triple Crown races in a single year, the filly-and-female-jockey story garnered considerable press.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232142-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Belmont Stakes, Race\nOxbow held the lead late into the race until Palace Malice passed him with a quarter-mile to go. Palace Malice eventually won by \u200b3\u00a01\u20444 lengths. Orb made a run from back in the pack and finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232143-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (1)\nThe 2013 Bendigo Women's International (1) was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Bendigo, Australia, on 21\u201327 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232143-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (1), WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232144-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (1) \u2013 Doubles\nAshleigh Barty and Sally Peers were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Barty decided not to participate this year. Peers partnered up with Stephanie Bengson, but lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232144-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (1) \u2013 Doubles\nErika and Yurika Sema won the tournament, defeating Monique Adamczak and Olivia Rogowska in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20132, [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232145-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (1) \u2013 Singles\nArina Rodionova was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but lost in the semifinals to Noppawan Lertcheewakarn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232145-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (1) \u2013 Singles\nCasey Dellacqua won the tournament, defeating Lertcheewakarn in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232146-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (2)\nThe 2013 Bendigo Women's International (2) was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament (second of the year) which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Bendigo, Australia, on 28 October\u20133 November 2013. Rodionova, Barty and Peers were listed as the defending champions as they were the champions of the event last year, as there were two events in 2013 they are listed as defending champions for both editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232146-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (2), WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232147-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (2) \u2013 Doubles\nThis is the doubles draw for the second Bendigo Women's International of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232147-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (2) \u2013 Doubles\nMonique Adamczak and Olivia Rogowska won the tournament, defeating Stephanie Bengson and Sally Peers in the all-Australian final, 6\u20133, 2\u20136, [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232148-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (2) \u2013 Singles\nThis is the singles draw for the second Bendigo Women's International of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232148-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bendigo Women's International (2) \u2013 Singles\nCasey Dellacqua won the tournament, defeating Tammi Patterson in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20131. Dellacqua also won the first edition of the Bendigo Women's International one week previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232149-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bengali blog blackout\nOn 4 April 2013 (0700 GMT) all Bengali blogs were blacked out for an indefinite time to protest the arrest of four bloggers in Bangladesh (Moshiur Rahman Biplob, Rasel Parvez, Subrata Adhikari Shuvo and Asif Mohiuddin). The blackout was to back a demand for the unconditional release of the arrested bloggers. A fundamentalist group named Hefajat-e-Islam Bangladesh started a campaign to hang freethinking bloggers, and demanding tough blasphemy laws. In response, the government started monitoring Bengali blog sites and sending letters to their authorities to terminate the alleged \"anti-religious\" blogs and provide information about the alleged \"anti-religious\" bloggers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232149-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Bengali blog blackout\nIndividual bloggers showed their solidarity with this blackout by changing their profile photos on Facebook and by tweeting with the #MuzzleMeNot hashtag. Different international organizations expressed deep concern about taking free-thinking bloggers into custody. After 92 hours of blackout, blogs returned online by publishing a press release on their central Facebook page.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232149-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bengali blog blackout, Background\nFrom the beginning of the Shahbag protest, bloggers came out on the streets to demand capital punishment of Abdul Quader Molla, a war criminal of the Bangladesh liberation war and a leader of Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami. During the protests, a controversial author, pro-Shahbag blogger and online activist Sunnyur Rahman, popularly known as 'Nastik Nobi' (Atheist Prophet) in the blog community, was stabbed on 7 March 2013. Another pro-Shahbag blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider who was critical of Jamaat-e-Islami, was killed by a few Jamaat activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232149-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Bengali blog blackout, Background\nAfterwards, a Jamaat backed Islamic fundamentalist organisation started a violent protest demanding the death penalty for all allegedly \"anti-Islamic\" bloggers, and they termed all participants of the Shahbag movement as atheist. The spokesperson of the Shahbag movement Imran H. Sharkar said, Hifazat-e-Islam is desperate to thwart the war crimes trial and the process of banning Jamaat-e-Islami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232149-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bengali blog blackout, Background\nAfterwards, the government of Bangladesh started monitoring the blogosphere and sent letters to the Bengali blog authorities to terminate the alleged \"anti-religious\" blogs and to provide information about the alleged \"anti-religious\" bloggers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232149-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bengali blog blackout, Background\nOn the night of 1 April 2013, three bloggers were arrested by the detective branch (DB) police. Blogger Rasel Pervez, a prominent physicist and blogger and Mashiur Rahman Biplob were arrested on 1 April 2013 from their house. Subrata Adhikari Shuvo, who is a masters student of the Bengali department at the University of Dhaka, was also arrested on the same day from his university dormitory. Another blogger Asif Mohiuddin was called to the police station on 3 April 2013, and when he went there, he was arrested. Earlier, the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission forced the Bengali blog somewhereinblog.net to remove all writings of Asif Mohiuddin. The move was criticized by Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Center for Inquiry, Reporters Without Borders, Committee to Protect Journalists, and several other bodies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict\nThe 2013 Benghazi conflict is a part of the aftermath of the Libyan civil war, that began after clashes erupted between protesters and militants from the Libya Shield brigade on 8 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Background\nSince the Libyan Civil War that toppled the Muammar Gaddafi, there has been factional fighting occurring around Libya, in particular in Benghazi (where the first protests began in 2011). The city had been the scene of a number of attacks prior to these events, including some related to the ongoing factional fighting, as well as an attack against the U.S. consulate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, June\nOn 8 June, at least 31 people were killed and 100 wounded in clashes in Benghazi between protesters and a militia operating with Defence Ministry approval. Most of the dead were civilians, with only 5 soldiers and one militia member reported killed. and one was a militiaman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, June\nOn 15 June, In the early hours of 15 June, hundreds of plain-clothed gunmen attacked several security installations across the city, at one point even forcing members of the First Infantry Brigade to abandon parts of their base as they stormed the main gate and torched parts of the building. At least six Libyan soldiers were killed during the assault \u2013 four by sniper fire and two from stabbing wounds. All of the dead were members of an elite Libyan Army unit called Saaqa. Eleven people were injured during the attacks, including several assailants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, June\nClashes were reported near the road leading to the airport, forcing its closure. Government reinforcements were reportedly sent from the capital Tripoli. The head of Benghazi's Counter Crime Agency has suggested that Qaddafi elements were in fact behind the attacks. Colonel Sulaiman Abu-Wishah told Benghazi Radio that two members of a Qaddaf Al-Dam sabotage group have been arrested. He claimed that the group was professional, its task to cause dissension and unrest, and that it was believed to be behind a number of other attacks in Benghazi. The members of the group were believed to be supporters of the former regime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, June\nOn 19 June, a huge explosion totally flattened the police station in the Al-Hadayeq (the gardens) district of Benghazi early this morning, but miraculously there are no casualties being reported. The sound of the explosion at about 2.30 am was so loud that it was reportedly heard across most of the districts of Benghazi. It is thought that there were no casualties within the police station because the station had been closed down after an earlier attack in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, June\nSamir Al-Lamamy, a witness and resident of the Al-Hadayeq district told Libya Herald that \"the explosion led to the complete destruction of the police station leveling it to the ground\".Al-Lamamy also speculated that \"there might have been more than one bomb planted in the police station because the explosion was so strong that it totally destroyed it\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, July\nOn 2 July, A car bomb exploded at a checkpoint that was being manned by special military forces, injuring four soldiers and at least three civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, July\nOn 26 July, Muslim Brotherhood critic Abdelsalam al-Mosmary was fatally shot after leaving a mosque following Friday prayers during Ramadan. In the aftermath protesters attacked Muslim Brotherhood property in both Benghazi and the capital Tripoli. Two days later, buildings used by the judiciary were bombed and was then followed by clashes between an unnamed militia and the military special forces. On 29 July, an unidentified militia also attacked the Tripoli headquarters of the al-Watan party, led by Abdelhakim Belhadj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Timeline, July\nThe head of the party's political office, Jamal Ashour, said: \"They smashed windows, shot at the door locks to open them and threw Molotov cocktails inside. The damage is serious. No one was injured.\" The same day, in Benghazi a car bomb exploded and injuring a navy colonel in what was termed an \"attempted assassination;\" Prime Minister Ali Zeidan also said that he would reshuffle his cabinet soon. \"Today we chose a figure for the defence portfolio and tomorrow [Tuesday] or the day after we are going to present a list of ministers to the General [National] Congress.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232150-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Benghazi conflict, Aftermath\nAccording to The Economist, following the June fighting \"Libya's leaders are celebrating what they herald as the beginning of the end of militia rule and the restoration of a functioning state\", while Libya's liberals \"cheer the demise of what they have seen as the armed wing of their Islamist foes. \".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232151-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Beni special gubernatorial election\nThe 2013 Beni special gubernatorial election was held on 20 January 2013. The elections were held to replace the interim governor of Beni Department with an elected executive who will serve until 2015. Numerous observers described the election as an important test of political strength in eastern Bolivia: a MAS victory would signal the retreat of the Media Luna right-wing alliance to Santa Cruz department alone; while a Beni First victory would dash MAS' political ambitions in the department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232151-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Beni special gubernatorial election\nPrior to the election, Beni had an interim governor, Haysen Ribera Leigue, who was selected by the Departmental Legislative Assembly on 16 December 2011. Governor Ernesto Su\u00e1rez Sattori, who was elected on 4 April 2010, was suspended following his indictment for irregular expenditures related to a power plant in San Borja, Beni, in compliance with a Bolivian legal mandate that indicted officials may not continue to serve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232151-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Beni special gubernatorial election\nEarly unofficial results, tabulated by the exit poll firm IPSOS, gave Carmelo Lens of Beni First a first-round victory with 52.6%, ahead of Jessica Jordan (44.1%), Pedro Nuni (2.4%) and Ademirzon Algara\u00f1az (0.9%). While Lens and his supporters celebrated victory, Jordan pledged to await official results. On January 22, Evo Morales and the national leadership of the MAS\u2013IPSP conceded defeat. Since Lens won more that a 50% majority, there will not be a two-candidate runoff on March 21. Lens was scheduled to be sworn in on March 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232151-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Beni special gubernatorial election\nFinal results were released on February 3, 2013 by the Plurinational Electoral Organ (nearly complete results with 997 of the 1000 electoral tables reporting had been released earlier). They showed that Carmelo Lens won 71,161 votes, a 52.27% majority and well ahead of Jessica Jordan's 60,382 votes (44,35%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232151-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Beni special gubernatorial election, Political parties and candidates\nFour political parties chose nominees by the deadline. They are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232152-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin Marathon\nThe 2013 Berlin Marathon was the 40th edition of the Berlin Marathon, held in Berlin, Germany. It took place on Sunday, 29 September. The race was sponsored by BMW, being officially titled the BMW Berlin Marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232152-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin Marathon\nThe men's race was won by Wilson Kipsang of Kenya in a world record time of 2:03:23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232152-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin Marathon\nThe women's race was won by Florence Kiplagat of Kenya in a time of 2:21:13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232152-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin Marathon\nThe 20th-place finisher in the men's race, Miguel \u00c1ngel Gamonal, tested positive for Clenbuterol and was disqualified and banned for two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232152-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin Marathon\nAlthough Kipsang's world record was obviously the major historical event of the race, it later became notable for being Eliud Kipchoge's only loss at the marathon distance in an otherwise spotless competitive record spanning 2013 to 2019. His next loss would not occur until the 2020 London Marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232153-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin energy referendum\nA referendum on the recommunalization of the energy supply in Berlin was held on 3 November 2013. Prompted by the Neue Energie f\u00fcr Berlin (New Energy for Berlin) citizens' initiative in June 2013, it was approved by 83% of those who voted. However, the referendum failed due to insufficient voter turnout. 24.2% of Berlin voters voted in favor, but the quorum required 25% or more to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232153-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin energy referendum, Draft legislation\nThe New Energy for Berlin draft law aimed for the recommunalization of Berlin's energy supply that was privatized in 1997, when the city of Berlin sold its municipal infrastructure and services company Bewag to the Swedish power company Vattenfall. It also demanded economically democratic control of the supply and a fast transition to 100% renewable energy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232153-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin energy referendum, Initiators\nThe referendum on New Energy for Berlin was initiated by the Berlin Energy Table (German: Berliner Energietisch), a non-partisan alliance of about 55 organizations, initiatives, and individual activists aiming for the recommunalization of the municipal energy supply. The alliance was founded in 2011 as an open platform for all those lobbying for a socially just, ecologically sustainable, and economically democratic energy, gas, and heating supply in Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232153-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin energy referendum, Initiators\nMembers of the alliance include the Berlin sections of attac, BUND, People's Solidarity, the Education and Science Workers' Union (GEW) as well as community organizations for affordable housing and the left-wing initiative FelS. While being non-partisan, the alliance is supported by the federal sections of major parties such as the SPD, Alliance '90/The Greens, and Die Linke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232153-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin energy referendum, Course of events\nBetween 11 February and 10 June 2013, the initiators collected 227,748 valid signatures of Berlin citizens, around 50,000 more than necessary to qualify for a referendum (Volksbegehren).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash\nOn 21 March 2013, two helicopters of the German Federal Police collided while landing in front of Berlin Olympic Stadium, Germany, in whiteout conditions. One crew member was killed and nine other people, both on board the helicopters and on the ground, were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Background\nDuring a large police exercise against football hooliganism on 21 March 2013 at the Olympic Stadium of Berlin, three helicopters of the federal German police force were scheduled to land on the Maifeld sports field in front of the stadium. Their task was the delivery of reinforcements for police at the nearby railway station. The flight comprised two Eurocopter AS332 Super Pumas and one Eurocopter EC 155.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Background, Meteorological conditions\nVisibility of 1,800 metres (5,900\u00a0ft) had been reported at 10:20\u00a0a.m. from Tegel Airport, three nautical miles from the stadium. Cloud coverage was broken with winds of 5 knots (9.3\u00a0km/h; 5.8\u00a0mph) from 310 degrees. Air temperature was \u22121\u00a0\u00b0C (30\u00a0\u00b0F), air pressure was 1015 hPa. Investigators measured a layer of snow of 17 centimetres (6.7\u00a0in) outside the crash site. During the morning, the air temperature had further decreased, so that the old snow cover was frozen with fresh snow lying on top. The total snow thickness at the crash site was recorded as 15 centimetres (5.9\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Accident\nThe final investigation report describes the event as follows: The first aircraft, an EC 155, landed successfully around 10:28 CET but raised large amounts of snow from the ground. This helicopter carried the pilot, an engineer, seven police officers, and one journalist. It was followed by the Super Puma, which approached the landing zone at a steep angle and hovered back and forth above the ground for about 30 seconds, raising ever more snow that fully engulfed the first helicopter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Accident\nDuring this manoeuvre, the third helicopter, also a Super Puma, approached the landing zone, carrying the pilot, an engineer, and 13 officers. This third aircraft also raised a large cloud of snow from the ground while landing, causing the pilot to lose sight of the marshalling officer on the ground. The third helicopter then touched the ground which caused the aircraft to roll over. Thereby its main rotor and tail section collided with the EC155's main rotor. The pilot of the EC155 was killed by a piece of rotor blade. Apart from a landing report made by helicopter number one and a brief report on changing positions during the landing approach of aircraft number two and three, no radio communication took place between the three aircraft during the entire landing phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Accident\nHelicopter No. 1 (EC 155) was equipped with a cockpit voice recorder and a flight data recorder. The crashed Super Puma was equipped with a cockpit voice recorder but did not carry a flight data recorder since that was not a legal requirement when the type was first certified in 1989. Voice recorder data did not indicate any warnings about potential technical problems during the landing approach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Reactions\nAfter the disaster, the police exercise was criticised by members of the state parliament of Berlin. Delegates of Alliance '90/The Greens and The Left questioned the use of helicopters during the bad weather conditions on the day of the exercise, and called the training scenario \"unrealistic\" and \"disproportionate\". Members of the Federal Police and politicians of the SPD and CDU stated that such exercises were useful, since real missions still have to be carried out in bad weather. The Greens and The Left also announced that they would debate the topic in the interior committee of the state parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Reactions\nHans-Peter Friedrich, Federal Minister of the Interior, and Berlin senator of the interior Frank Henkel visited the site of the crash on 21 March and offered their condolences to the victims and their families. Chancellor Angela Merkel announced her commiserations via her press officer Steffen Seibert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Reactions\nWolfgang Bosbach, head of the interior commission of the parliament of Germany, announced that the helicopter crash would be added to the list of subjects in a planned debate about the future structure of the federal police forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Investigation\nThe German Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Investigation and federal attorneys investigated the accident, and a special homicide commission was routinely established at the Berlin State Office of Criminal Investigation. In the night of 22 March, the wrecked aircraft were hauled to a police facility in Ruhleben. A post-mortem examination of the dead pilot concluded that he had obviously been killed by extraneous causes resulting from the crash. Following these findings, the special homicide commission was dissolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Investigation\nA first report by the Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Investigation was published in May 2013. It listed the known facts of the accident without identifying a cause. The cause of the accident was still unclear as of September\u00a02013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Investigation, Final report and criticism\nThe final investigation report was published in September 2014. The investigators stated that all pilots had ample flying experience including landings in snow, dust and sand. The pilot of helicopter No. 2 had also been flying search-and-rescue missions in mountainous areas so he was familiar with landing on unprepared snowy ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Investigation, Final report and criticism\nAccording to the investigation, a number of circumstances led to the fatal crash: the federal police aviation did not have any distinctive procedure for landings on snowy ground, the distances between the three individual aircraft during the landing phase had been too small, and communication between the personnel involved in the landing operation had been too scarce. The final investigation report also criticised that while the German federal police helicopter squadron was the nation's biggest non-military helicopter operator, it was not bound to the legal framework of similar civilian aviation companies. Notably European Union directive No. 216/2008 was criticised for exempting police aviation from such legal control. Also safety recommendations for police helicopter aviation issued by the Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accidents Investigation to the federal ministry of transport in 2006 had not been legally implemented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 1004]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Investigation, Final report and criticism\nThe president of the German federal police rejected the report and claimed that own investigations had shown different results. The distance between the aircraft had been sufficient, and the communication had been reduced to a minimum according to the planned mission. Police pilots unofficially criticised the chief investigator who is a military pilot and had allegedly used inapplicable standards for the investigation. A motion to disqualify the investigator was however rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232154-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Berlin helicopter crash, Aftermath\nFollowing the crash, the federal police introduced special training units and new rules for helicopter landings in snow. In February 2017, it was reported that NATO was prompted by the 2013 Olympiastadion crash to initiate a multinational trials campaign for new technologies in low-visibility helicopter flights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232155-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Best of Nollywood Awards\nThe 5th Best of Nollywood Awards was held at Dome, Asaba, Delta State on December 5, 2013. Several notable personalities like Juliet Ibrahim, Omoni Oboli and Richard Mofe Damijo were in attendance. The Dark Comedy film Confusion Na Wa won the category Movie of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232156-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet Hip Hop Awards\nThe 2013 BET Hip Hop Awards was held on October 15, 2013 at Atlanta Civic Center in the ATL. Snoop Dogg was the event's host for the first time. Kendrick Lamar leads the nominations with 14. Drake had the second most at 13, while J. Cole picked up 10 nods. Kendrick Lamar won the most awards with 5 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232156-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet Hip Hop Awards\nThere was some controversy as Toronto battle rapper Charron won Freestyle Friday's March Mayhem Tournament, which guaranteed him a spot in the 2013 BET Hip Hop Awards cypher as one of the prizes for his victory. However, once it came time to film the cyphers, Charron was excluded. He responded with the \"BET Cypher Verse\" where he disses BET, Murda Mook, Gucci Mane, Soulja Boy, Lil Twist, Rick Ross, Kendrick Lamar and Chief Keef, among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232156-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet Hip Hop Awards, Nominations, Track of the Year\nOnly the producer of the track nominated in this category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232157-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzb\u00fchel\nThe 2013 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzb\u00fchel was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 69th edition of the Austrian Open Kitzb\u00fchel, as part of the World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Tennis stadium Kitzb\u00fchel in Kitzbuehel Austria, from July 28 through August 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232157-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzb\u00fchel, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232157-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzb\u00fchel, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232158-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Julian Knowle were the defending champions but decided not to participate together. Knowle teamed up with Leonardo Mayer, but lost in the first round to Daniel Brands and Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k. \u010cerm\u00e1k played alongside Luk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd, but lost in the final to Martin Emmrich and Christopher Kas, 4\u20136, 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232159-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Singles\nRobin Haase was the two-time defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Marcel Granollers. Granollers went on to win the title, defeating Juan M\u00f3naco in the final, 0-6, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232159-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzb\u00fchel \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232160-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats football team represented Bethune-Cookman University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Brian Jenkins and played their home games at Municipal Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). Bethune-Cookman finished the season 10\u20133, 7\u20131 in MEAC play to win a share of the conference championship with South Carolina State. Due to their win over South Carolina State, they received the conference's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs, where they lost in the first round to Coastal Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232161-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutan National League\nThe 2013 Bhutan National League started on 14 September 2013 and ended on 23 November 2013 and was the second time that a true national league competition was held in Bhutan, following from the inaugural season the previous year. Again the A-Division served as a qualifying round for teams based in Thimpu, who were then joined by regional teams for the national stage. Yeedzin won the A-Division, but were beaten into second place in the National League by Ugyen Academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232161-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutan National League, A-Division\nThe 2013 tournament started on 19 May 2013 and ended on 15 June 2013. Yeedzin FC qualified along with Thimphu City (known in previous seasons as Zimdra) and Dzongree. Dzongree were meant to play-off against Druk Pol (who were exempted from the A-Division competition as, being the national police force team, they were on duty during the Bhutan elections) for the final berth in the National League, but the playoff did not take place and both teams entered the National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232161-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Bhutan National League, A-Division\nDruk United and Druk Star entered a round robin relegation play-of competition with the top two teams in the B-Division, Motithang FC and BMW FC. The full results are not known but it appears that either the two A-Division teams were successful or the round robin was not completed as both teams participated in the A-Division the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232161-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutan National League, National League, Teams\nA total of six teams competed in the league: three teams representing Thimphu, and three teams representing other districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election\nNational Assembly elections were held in Bhutan on 31 May and 13 July 2013. The result was a victory for the opposition People's Democratic Party (PDP), which won 32 of the 47 seats. The elections were the second general elections to occur in Bhutan since former King Jigme Singye Wangchuck ushered in democratic reforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Background\nBy law, the National Assembly is required to be reconstituted within 90 days of its previous term expiring. As the term of the Assembly elected in 2008 expired on 20 April 2013, this meant that the new Assembly would need to have been elected by 20 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Electoral system\nThe election was held in two rounds. In the first round every party contested all 20 Dzongkhags (the administrative and judicial districts of Bhutan). The parties with the two highest vote tallies progressed to the second round, in which they put forward candidates in each of the 47 National Assembly constituencies. In the first round of the elections, the Bhutan Peace and Prosperity Party had received roughly 40% of votes and the People's Democratic Party receiving approximately 30%, with two other parties sharing the other 30% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Electoral system\nA total of 381,790 voters were registered for the election. The election date for the first round was made a public holiday, with all businesses required to close on the day. Over 4,000 electronic voting machines were provided by India for the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Campaign\nFour parties contested the election; the ruling Bhutan Peace and Prosperity Party (DPT), the main opposition People's Democratic Party, and two new parties, Druk Nymrub Tshogpa and Druck Chirwang Tshogpa. A fifth party, the Bhutan Kuen-Nyam Party, attempted to participate in the election, but failed to field a university-educated candidate in Gasa District in the northern part of the country. Consequently, the Bhutanese Elections Commission disqualified the party, even though each of the four other parties had made official requests to the commission to allow the Bhutan Kuen-Nyam Party to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Campaign\nThe head of the party, Sonam Tobgay, stated that \"Four parties appealing for the fifth party, who couldn\u2019t qualify, is something unprecedented universally and internationally, something special and noble.\" The DPT campaigned for the support of rural communities having improved access to roads, mobile phone networks and electricity during its tenure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Campaign\nTies with India had recently come under strain after it cut subsidised cooking gas and kerosene to Bhutan, viewed as a punishment for developing ties with China. This tripled the cost of fuel and made relations between the two neighbours a major electoral issue. The consequent rise in fuel prices was coupled with a credit crunch and import restrictions after the country ran short of foreign exchange reserves of the Indian rupee. The People's Democratic Party had campaigned on a platform of stronger relations with India and a decentralisation of powers, devolving control through local government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Results\nThe voting process was a challenge due to the mountainous terrain as officials had to trek for seven days to set up some polling stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Results\nAs a result of the election, Tshering Tobgay is expected to be named Prime Minister of the new government, to form once a 10-day \"petition period\" for electoral complaints to be heard has finished. Three women were elected, with Dorji Choden of the PDP expected to be Bhutan's first female minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Results, Reactions and analysis\nPrime Minister of India Manmohan Singh sent the PDP a message of congratulations, assuring Bhutan of India's \"steadfast and unflinching support.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 74], "content_span": [75, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232162-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Assembly election, Results, Reactions and analysis\nThe PDP victory was considered an upset by the media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 74], "content_span": [75, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232163-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Council election\nNational Council elections were held in Bhutan on 23 April 2013. All candidates ran as independents, as National Council members were prohibited from belonging to a political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232163-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Council election, Electoral system\nThe 20 members of the National Council were elected in single-member constituencies equivalent to the country's twenty Dzongkhags. A further five members were appointed by the Druk Gyalpo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232163-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Council election, Electoral system\nCandidates had to register by 31 March, whilst the campaigning period lasted from 1 to 21 April. A total of 67 candidates registered to run in the election, although the Dagana and Trashigang dzongkhags had only one candidate each. In those dzongkhags voters were given the choice of voting against the only candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232163-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Council election, Electoral system\nElection day was a public holiday, and the country's borders were closed for the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232163-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bhutanese National Council election, Aftermath\nFollowing the election Druk Gyalpo Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck appointed Dasho Karma Yezer Raydi, Kuenlay Tshering, Karma Damcho Nidup, Tashi Wangmo and Tashi Wangyal to the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232164-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament will be held from May 22 through May 26 at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Big 12 Conference for college baseball. The winner of the event earns the league's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232164-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe tournament has been held since 1997, the inaugural year of the Big 12 Conference. Among current league members, Texas has won the most championships with four. TCU and West Virginia, new members of the league, are eligible for their first tournaments. Only Baylor and Kansas State have never won the event. Iowa State discontinued their program after the 2001 season without having won a title. Last year's champion, Missouri and three time champion Texas A&M departed the conference for the Southeastern Conference after the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232164-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament\nFourth-seeded Oklahoma defeated sixth-seeded Kansas in the championship game to claim their second Big 12 Baseball Conference Tournament title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232164-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nDue to the 2013 Moore tornado, just outside the Oklahoma City site of the Tournament, the Big 12 announced a delay in the start of the event and a change in format from the planned double-elimination tournament. Instead, the eight teams will be divided into two pools who will play a round-robin format. The winners of each pool will then play a single championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232165-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big 12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, known for sponsorship reasons as the 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Women's Basketball Championship, was the 2013 edition of the Big 12 Conference's championship tournament. The tournament was held at the American Airlines Center in Dallas from March 5\u20138, 2013. The quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals were televised on Fox Sports Net. The championship game was held on March 11, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232166-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big 12 Conference held on November 6, 8 and 10, 2014. The seven-match tournament was held at the Swope Soccer Village in Kansas City, Missouri with a combined attendance of 2,787. The 8-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The West Virginia Mountaineers defeated the Oklahoma State Cowgirls in the championship match to win their first conference tournament since joining the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232167-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference football season\nThe 2013 Big 12 Conference football season will be the 18th season for the Big 12, as part of the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232167-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Big 12 Teams\nThe Big 12 Conference coaches voted for the All-Big 12 teams after the regular season concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232167-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-Big 12 Teams\nCoaches were not permitted to vote for their own players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232167-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Conference football season, 2014 NFL Draft\nN.B: In the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2014 Draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232168-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Men's Basketball Championship was held at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri from March 13 - March 16, 2013. This tournament marked the debut of TCU and West Virginia in the event. First round games were aired on the Big 12 Network, Quarterfinal games were aired on ESPN2 and the Big 12 Network. Semifinal games were available in the conference footprint on the Big 12 Network and outside league markets on ESPNU. All games were carried on WatchESPN, with most also available via ESPN Full Court. The Kansas Jayhawks defeated the Kansas State Wildcats 70-54 in the Championship game, which was televised by ESPN, to receive the Big 12's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. All 10 teams qualified for the tournament, with ties broken by using a tiebreaker system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232168-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeding\nThe Tournament consisted of a 10 team single-elimination tournament with the top 6 seeds receiving a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232169-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Bright House Field in Clearwater, Florida from May 22 through May 26. The event, held at the end of the conference regular season, determined the champion of the Big East Conference for the 2013 season. Eight seeded Connecticut won their third tournament championship to claim the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232169-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament\nIt was also the last tournament for the original Big East Conference. Following several years of instability, culminating in a split of the conference along football lines, the seven member schools that did not sponsor Division I FBS football purchased the \"Big East\" name and formed a new Big East in July 2013. The FBS schools that had not moved to other conferences by that time joined with several new members and reorganized as the American Athletic Conference, retaining the charter of the original Big East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232169-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe tournament used a double-elimination format, with the field divided into two brackets. The winners of each bracket faced off in a single championship game. Seton Hall claimed the second seed over Pittsburgh and St. John's took the sixth seed over Notre Dame by tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232169-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, Bracket\n*Indicates game required 12 innings. \u2020 - Indicates game required 10 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232169-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nBilly Ferriter was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Ferriter was an outfielder for Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 87], "content_span": [88, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232170-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Big East Men's Soccer Tournament was the inaugural men's soccer tournament of the new Big East Conference, formed in July 2013 after the original Big East Conference split into two leagues along football lines. Including the history of the original conference, it was the 18th edition of the Big East tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232170-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nHeld from November 15\u201317 at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania, it determined the Big East Conference champion, and the automatic berth into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The defending champions, the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, left the original Big East at the time of the conference split to join the Atlantic Coast Conference. The tournament was won by the Marquette Golden Eagles who defeated the Providence Friars in the Big East final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232171-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Big East Conference men's soccer season is the inaugural season for the newly formed offshoot of the original Big East Conference. The \"new\" Big East consists of the seven members of the original Big East that did not sponsor Division I FBS football (the so-called \"Catholic 7\"), plus invited founding members Butler, Creighton, and Xavier. The FBS schools sold the \"Big East\" name to the \"Catholic 7\" and are operating as the American Athletic Conference under the original Big East charter. Including the history of the original Big East, this will be the 18th season of men's soccer under the \"Big East\" name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232171-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending champions are the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, who moved to the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232172-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, officially known as the 2013 Big East Championship, was the 34th annual Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, deciding the champion of the 2012\u201313 Big East Conference men's basketball season. For the 31st consecutive season, the tournament was held at Madison Square Garden in New York City, from March 12\u201316, 2013. The tournament only featured 14 teams due to Connecticut being given a one-year postseason ban due to APR penalties. This would have been the last year with as many as 16 teams participating in the Big East tournament, but Connecticut was ineligible and West Virginia moved to the Big 12 before the beginning of the season. The conference tournament champion received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232172-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament\nFollowing a period of turnover in the conference membership, the Big East name, its logos, and its tournament history were assumed by schools of the original Big East that do not sponsor FBS football. The reconfigured Big East continues to hold its tournament at Madison Square Garden. The FBS schools formerly in the Big East play under a new name, the American Athletic Conference; its first conference tournament was played in Memphis, Tennessee and that event has since alternated between Hartford, Connecticut and Orlando, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232172-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll teams except for Connecticut (due to Academic Progress Rate violations) qualified for the tournament; seeds 11-14 played a first round game, while teams five through ten received byes to the second round. The top four seeds received double-byes to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232172-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nTeams were seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232172-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule\nAll tournament games were nationally televised on an ESPN network:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232173-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big League World Series\nThe 2013 Big League World Series took place from July 24\u201331 in Easley, South Carolina, United States. Greenville County, South Carolina defeated Maracaibo, Venezuela in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232174-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament ran from March 14\u201316, 2013. The champion of the tournament, Montana, received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232174-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nUnlike most Division I conference tournaments in basketball, the Big Sky tournament did not involve all of the conference's teams. With the addition of North Dakota and Southern Utah to the conference for the 2012\u201313 season, expanding the number of teams from 9 to 11, the tournament expanded from six teams to seven. As in previous years, qualifying was based on overall conference record. The number of teams that fail to qualify also increased by one, going from three to four. All tournament games were played at the site of the regular-season champion. The men's tournament also returned to a Thursday-Friday-Saturday format. The field was re-seeded after the first round so the #1 seed played the lowest remaining seed, while the highest remaining seeds met in the other semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232174-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nSacramento State, Eastern Washington, Portland State & Idaho State failed to qualify. All times listed are Mountain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232175-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21\u201325. The top eight regular season finishers of the conference's twelve teams met in the double-elimination tournament, which was held at Liberty Baseball Stadium on the campus of Liberty University in Lynchburg, VA. In the championship game, fifth-seeded Liberty defeated first-seeded Campbell, 2-1, to win its fourth tournament championship. As a result, Liberty earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232175-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nWith the introduction of division play in 2013, the division winners were seeded one and two, and the next six finishers from the regular season, regardless of division, were seeded three through eight based on conference winning percentage only. The teams played a two bracket, double-elimination tournament, with the winners of each bracket facing off in a single elimination final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232175-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nLiberty outfielder/pitcher Ashton Perritt was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232176-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big South Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Big South Conference that took place from March 5\u201310, 2013, at the brand new HTC Center in Conway, South Carolina. Both semifinal games were broadcast on ESPN3, and the championship game was televised on ESPN2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232176-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nBoth the men's and women's tournaments were held together at the HTC Center. The conference hadn't held combined men\u2019s and women\u2019s tournaments since 2001\u201302 when both events were played at the Roanoke Civic Center The tournament was won by the fifth-seeded North Division Liberty Flames, their third conference title, and first since 2004. With four wins in the tournament, including two over both divisions' top seeds, Liberty won the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, becoming only the second 20-loss team in the tournament's history (the other being Coppin State in 2007\u201308).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232176-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nWith the addition of Longwood, and Presbyterian completing its Division I transition, all 12 teams were eligible for the 2013 tournament. Seeding was decided by divisions - the top two teams with the best overall conference records in each division received the top four seeds in the championship and first-round byes. The remaining seeds were determined based on division finish. In the event of a tie for a particular seed, the seed was determined within each division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232177-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Big South Conference Men's Soccer Tournament will be the 30th edition of the tournament. Held from Nov. 14-17, it will determine the Big South Conference champion, and the automatic berth into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The Winthrop Eagles are the defending men's soccer champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232178-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference football season\nThe 2013 Big South Conference football season began on Thursday, August 29 and concluded in December with the 2014 NCAA Division I Football Championship. The regular season concluded on November 23, and Coastal Carolina won the conference's regular season championship and automatic bid to the playoffs. The Chanticleers defeated Bethune-Cookman in the first round and Montana in the second round before falling to eventual champion North Dakota State in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232178-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference football season, Preseason Poll Results, Preseason All-Conference Teams\nOffensive Player of the Year: Lorenzo Taliaferro, Sr., RB (Coastal Carolina)Defensive Player of the Year: Quinn Backus, Jr., LB (Coastal Carolina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 97], "content_span": [98, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232179-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Big South Conference men's soccer season will be the 30th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. It will be the final Big South season for VMI, which will return to the Southern Conference in July 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232179-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season champions are the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers, while the defending tournament champions are the Winthrop Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232179-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big South Conference men's soccer season, Changes from 2012\nNo schools entered or left the Big South Conference after the 2012 season, nor did any member school begin or drop men's soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232180-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big Ten Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Target Field in Minneapolis, MN from May 22 through 25. The six team, double-elimination tournament determined the league champion for the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. Indiana won the tournament to claim the Big Ten Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The event was aired on the Big Ten Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232180-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2013 tournament was a 6-team double-elimination tournament. The top six teams based on conference regular season winning percentage earned invites to the tournament. The top two seeds received a single bye into the semifinals (2nd Round). The 1 seed played the lowest seeded Round 1 winner, while the 2 seed played the highest seeded Round 1 winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season\nThe 2013 Big Ten Conference football season was the 118th season for the Big Ten. The conference began its season on Thursday, August 29, as Minnesota and Indiana began their 2013 season of NCAA Division I FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) competition. Michigan State began their season the following day, and the rest of the conference began their season on September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season\nThis was the league's final season as a 12-team conference before Maryland and Rutgers join the Big Ten Conference for the 2014 season. It was also the final season with the \"Leaders\" and \"Legends\" divisions; when Maryland and Rutgers join, the conference will reorganize its divisions on a pure geographic basis. The six schools in the Central Time Zone will be joined by Purdue in the new West Division, with the other schools making up the East Division. Under the new setup, the only protected cross-division rivalry game will be Indiana\u2013Purdue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season\nMichigan State upset undefeated Ohio State to win the Big Ten Championship Game. The B1G put seven teams into bowl games, including two into the BCS with Michigan State going to the Rose Bowl and Ohio State to the Orange Bowl. The B1G went 2-5 in bowl games with the only wins coming from Michigan State in the Rose Bowl and Nebraska in the Gator Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, Bowl games\nThe Big Ten did not have enough teams available to fill the Heart of Dallas Bowl and Little Caesars Pizza Bowl due to landing two teams in the BCS and also a lack of bowl eligible teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, All-Conference Players\nHONORABLE MENTION:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, All-Conference Players\nIllinois: Jonathan Brown, Steve Hull, Nathan Scheelhaase; Indiana: Ted Bolser, Tevin Coleman, Cody Latimer, Jason Spriggs; Iowa: Austin Blythe, Conor Boffeli, Christian Kirksey, B.J. Lowery, Tanner Miller, Louis Trinca-Pasat; Michigan: Jibreel Black, Michael Schofield; Michigan State: Jack Allen, Fou Fonoti, Dan France, Jeremy Langford, Marcus Rush, Trae Waynes; Minnesota: Caleb Bak, Aaron Hill, Peter Mortell, Eric Murray; Nebraska: Jason Ankrah, Kenny Bell, Corey Cooper, Andrew Rodriguez, Jeremiah Sirles; Northwestern: Ibraheim Campbell, Tyler Scott, Brandon Vitabile; Ohio State: C.J. Barnett, Drew Basil, Joey Bosa, Doran Grant, Marcus Hall, Jeff Heuerman, Cameron Johnston, Devin Smith; Penn State: Adrian Amos, Glenn Carson, Christian Hackenberg, Ty Howle, Jordan Lucas, C.J. Olaniyan, Donovan Smith; Purdue: Ricardo Allen; Wisconsin: Beau Allen, Rob Havenstein, Tyler Marz, Pat Muldoon, Jacob Pedersen, Dezmen Southward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 996]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, All-Conference Players\nCoaches selected six players as First Team All-Conference defensive backs and two players as First Team punters which resulted in less second team selections", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, All-Conference Players\nHONORABLE MENTION:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, All-Conference Players\nIllinois: Houston Bates, Steve Hull; Indiana: Tim Bennett, Ted Bolser, Tevin Coleman, Mitch Ewald, Collin Rahrig, Jason Spriggs; Iowa: Austin Blythe, Conor Boffeli, Carl Davis, Anthony Hitchens, Christian Kirksey, Casey Kreiter, John Lowdermilk, Tanner Miller, Louis Trinca-Pasat; Brett Van Sloten; Michigan: Jibreel Black, Frank Clark, Devin Gardner, Brendan Gibbons, Raymon Taylor; Michigan State: Connor Cook, Fou Fonoti; Dan France, Michael Geiger, Jeremy Langford, Isaiah Lewis, Marcus Rush, Trae Waynes; Minnesota: Caleb Bak, Josh Campion, Zac Epping, Peter Mortell, Eric Murray, Brock Vereen; Nebraska: Jason Ankrah, Kenny Bell, Cole Pensick, Andrew Rodriguez, Jeremiah Sirles, Pat Smith; Northwestern: Chi Chi Ariguzo, Ibraheim Campbell, Damien Proby, Brandoo Vitabile; Ohio State: C.J. Barnett, Drew Basil, Joey Bosa, Corey Brown, Doran Grant, Marcus Hall, Jeff Heuerman, Cameron Johnston; Penn State: Glenn Carson, Sam Ficken, Christian Hackenberg, Ty Howle, Jesse James, Jordan Lucas, C.J. Olaniyan, Donovan Smith; Wisconsin: Beau Allen, Michael Caputo, Tyler Marz, Pat Muldoon, Jacob Pedersen, Sojourn Shelton, Dezmen Southward, Joel Stave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 1216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, All-Americans\nThere are many outlets that award All-America honors in football. The NCAA uses five official selectors to also determine Consensus and Unanimous All-America honors. The five teams used by the NCAA to compile the consensus team are from the Associated Press, the AFCA, the FWAA, The Sporting News and the Walter Camp Football Foundation. A point system is used to calculate the consensus honors. The point system consists of three points for first team, two points for second team and three points for third team. No honorable mention or fourth team or lower are used in the computation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, All-Americans\nThe teams are compiled by position and the player accumulating the most points at each position is named a Consensus All-American. If there is a tie at a position in football for first team then the players who are tied shall be named to the team. A player named first-team by all five of the NCAA-recognized selectors is recognized as a Unanimous All-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, Academic All-Americans\nOnce again the Big Ten led all conferences with eight student-athletes being named to the Capital One Academic All-America first or second teams as announced by CoSIDA. The Big Ten has now led all FBS conferences in Academic All-America selections for nine straight seasons, with a total of 72 honorees over that time span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, Academic All-Americans\nFirst Team: Mark Murphy, Indiana; James Morris, Iowa; Max Bullough, Michigan State; Mike Sadler, Michigan State; Spencer Long, Nebraska; John Urschel, Penn State; Second Team: Jake Long, Nebraska; C.J. Zimmerer, Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, 2014 NFL Draft\n30 Big Ten athletes were drafted in the 2014 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, 2014 NFL Draft\nN.B: In the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2014 Draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232181-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference football season, 2014 NFL Draft, NFL Draft Selections by NCAA Conference\nSEC - 49ACC - 42Pac-12 - 34Big Ten - 30Big 12 - 17Mountain West - 16American - 12C-USA - 9Independents - 9MAC - 8Sun Belt - 4", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 96], "content_span": [97, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232182-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season was the 23rd season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232182-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season champions, Penn State Nittany Lions successfully defended their title. The Indiana Hoosiers won the 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Soccer Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232182-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Changes from 2012\nNo new teams joined the conference in 2013; however, 2013 was the final season with seven schools competing, as Rutgers and Maryland joined in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232182-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Conference men's soccer season, Preseason\nDefending national champion Indiana was picked to win the conference ahead of Michigan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game\nThe 2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game was a college football game that was played on December 7, 2013, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana. It was the third annual Big Ten Football Championship Game, and determined the 2013 champion of the Big Ten Conference (B1G). The game featured the Leaders Division champion Ohio State Buckeyes against the Legends Division champion Michigan State Spartans. Michigan State defeated Ohio State 34\u201324, to win the Big Ten Championship, and represent the conference in the 100th Rose Bowl game on January 1, 2014. The upset loss kept Ohio State out of the BCS National Championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game\nAfter 2013, a Michigan State\u2013Ohio State match-up in the conference championship game would no longer be possible, as a result of both schools becoming part of the newly-formed East Division of the Big Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, History\nThe 2013 Championship Game was the third held in the Big Ten Conference in the Big Ten's 118-year history. The previous season, the unranked Wisconsin Badgers represented the Leaders division, despite having a worse record than fellow division members Ohio State and Penn State, both of which were banned from post-season play. The #14 ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers represented the Legends division, having only lost one game to undefeated Ohio State. That game ended 70\u201331 in Wisconsin's favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, History\n2013 marked the first appearance of Ohio State to the conference championship game, whereas it was Michigan State's second appearance. Prior to this game, the Leaders division was undefeated. Conversely, the lower-ranked opponent had won both prior matchups. After this season, the Legends and Leaders divisions were replaced with Eastern and Western divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams, Ohio State\nOhio State came into 2013 ranked the #2 team in the nation, and their regular season results supported that claim. Having gone undefeated in 2012 but being denied a chance to compete for the Big Ten title or the BCS National Championship due to NCAA sanctions, Ohio State took care of business in 2013 by going 12\u20130 in regular season play. Many of their wins were by large margins, including a 76\u20130 win over Florida A&M, a 56\u20130 victory against Purdue, and a 63\u201314 triumph over Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams, Ohio State\nThat result was the most points Penn State had allowed since giving up 64 to the Duquesne Athletic Club in 1889, and the Ohio State offense set a new record for yards gained against Penn State with that game. In addition, Ohio State overcame ranked opponents in two consecutive weeks\u2014first defeating #23 Wisconsin in Columbus, then traveling to Evanston, Illinois, to upend #16 Northwestern in a thriller under the lights. In their final game of the season, Ohio State defeated rival Michigan, surviving a last-second two-point conversion attempt by the Wolverines to hang on for a 42\u201341 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams, Ohio State\nThe Buckeyes were led by their high-scoring offense. Ohio State averaged 48.2 points per game, the highest total in the Big Ten, and third highest in the NCAA. Their offensive strength was their rushing game, which ranked second nationally and first in the Big Ten with 321.3 yards per game. Overall, the offense averaged 530.5 yards per game, sixth-best in the NCAA and again leading the Big Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams, Ohio State\nRunning back Carlos Hyde, who was suspended from the first three games of the season, finished the season with 1,290 yards, the first running back under Urban Meyer to top 1,000 yards in a season. Quarterback Braxton Miller also contributed heavily to the Buckeye rushing attack; Miller and Hyde combined for over 1,000 yards rushing and 13 touchdowns in the last three games of the season. Receivers Corey Brown and Devin Smith both had over 600 receiving yards to round out the Ohio State offense, which set a new school record with 35 passing touchdowns in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232183-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, Teams, Ohio State\nDefensively, Ohio State was also very strong, particularly against the run. Coming into the game, Ohio State was one of two teams to not allow an opposing player to rush for 100 or more yards (the other being Syracuse). The total average yards per game allowed by opposing rushers was 100.0 at the end of the regular season, the fifth best total in the NCAA. Not only did Ryan Shazier led the Buckeye defense as a junior linebacker, he also led the Big Ten in tackles, tackles for loss, and forced fumbles. Noah Spence was second in sacks in the Big Ten with 8 coming into this game. All-American cornerback Bradley Roby anchored the Buckeye backfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232184-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held from March 14 through March 17 at United Center in Chicago, Illinois. The tournament was the 15th annual Big Ten Tournament and second to feature 12 teams. The championship was won by Ohio State who defeated Wisconsin in the championship game. As a result, Ohio State received the Big Ten's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The win marked Ohio State's fifth tournament championship, though one championship has since been vacated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232184-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 12 Big Ten schools participated 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 four teams received a first-round bye. Tiebreaking procedures were unchanged from the 2012 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232184-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nSeeding for the tournament was determined at the close of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232185-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was the 23rd postseason tournament to determine the champion of the Big Ten Conference. The defending champion was Michigan State. The tournament was held from November 13\u201317, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232186-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Softball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big Ten Softball tournament was held at Bowlin Stadium on the campus of University of Nebraska\u2013Lincoln in Lincoln, Nebraska from May 9 through May 12, 2013. As the tournament winner, Wisconsin earned the Big Ten Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232187-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big Ten Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was held from March 7 through March 12 at the Sears Centre Arena in Hoffman Estates, Illinois. The Big Ten Network carried all games except the championship game which was aired by ESPN2. Purdue won the tournament and received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232187-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll 12 Big Ten schools participated in the tournament. Teams were seeded by 2012\u201313 Big Ten Conference women's basketball season record. The top four teams received a first round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232188-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place March 14\u201316, 2013 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California. The Tournament was previously held at the Anaheim Convention Center. The winner of the tournament received the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232188-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe top eight teams qualified for the 2013 Big West Tournament. In the Semifinals the highest seed played the lowest seed, while the remaining two teams matched up. UC Riverside was ineligible for postseason play, and did not compete in the tournament. Cal State Northridge finished 9th so they didn't qualify to play in the Big West Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232189-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bihar flood\nThe monsoon season in the northern areas of Bihar, continuing rain in Himalayas, and a rise in water levels of the Ganges, Kosi, Gandak, Baghmati, and the Punpun gave rise to anticipated flooding for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232189-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bihar flood, Flooding\nThe 2013 Bihar flood started in the month of July. The Flood caused a huge loss in the terms of life and property. According to State Government estimate 201 people lost their lives. Over 20 districts have been affected by the Flood. It is the most disastrous flood in the state after 2008 Bihar flood. More than 5.9 million people in 3,768 villages in 20 districts have been affected, officials say.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232189-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bihar flood, Rescue Operations\nBihar CM Nitish Kumar himself supervised the Flood Relief Operations. The State Health Department started 306 Health Check Up Camps and 128 Veterinary Camps in the Flood affected areas. 22,623 tonnes of solid food items and 25 Crores of Cash was distributed among the victims of Flood, according to a Statement released by Bihar Government. A total of 50,550 polythene sheets was distributed among the flood-affected people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232190-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bikini Basketball Association season\nThe 2013 Bikini Basketball Association season was the first season of the Bikini Basketball Association. The regular season began on June 22 and ended on August 17 with a championship series on September 21. While the Miami Spice went 5\u20130 to claim the regular season crown they were defeated by the Illinois Heart in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232190-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bikini Basketball Association season, Regular season\nThe league began its inaugural season on June 22, 2013, with five teams of women selected for looks, personality, and playing ability. In late June 2013, the Philadelphia Diamonds shut down before their inaugural game. This reduced the league to four teams playing a combined total of 12 games over 10 weeks. The Miami Spice went 5\u20130, the Illinois Heart went 3\u20132, the Houston Inferno struggled to a 1\u20134 finish, and the Las Vegas Fantasy went 0\u20133 before folding in late July 2013. The Las Vegas collapse further reduced the number of completed games in the inaugural regular season to 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232190-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bikini Basketball Association season, Playoffs\nSeveral weeks after the regular season ended, the league announced that the three surviving teams would compete in a two-game single-elimination tournament at the Kroc Center in Chicago on September 21, 2013. The Illinois Heart defeated the Houston Inferno 94\u201377 to advance to the championship later that day. Illinois defeated the regular season champion Miami Spice 96\u201389 to claim the league championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nThe 2013 Bilderberg Conference took place June 6\u20139, 2013, at The Grove hotel in Watford, Hertfordshire, England. It was the first Bilderberg Group conference to be held in the United Kingdom since the 1998 meeting in Turnberry, Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nThe Daily Telegraph likened the annual conference to \"a political version of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, which draws members of high society to discuss business and the economy.\" A British Member of Parliament and former Bilderberg attendee quoted by the Independent on Sunday also likened the annual conference to the World Economic Forum, and said it was \"...not that exciting, in fact it's a bit run of the mill\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nAround 140 participants are expected to participate in the meetings annually. Attendance to the event is by invitation only. No delegates pay to attend the conferences, and no delegates attend by conference phone or satellite. The conference programme never includes entertainment or performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nThe confidential nature of Bilderberg led to criticism of the group's lack of transparency and accountability, along with concerns about potential lobbying. Outside the 2013 meeting, Labour MP Michael Meacher said, \"If there is any conference which required transparency, which required democratic accountability, it is the Bilderberg conference because this is really where the top brass of Western finance capitalism meet ... including government ministers.\" Conservative MP Douglas Carswell was also concerned about the privacy of the meetings, by saying \"...you would have thought the least our ruling elite could do is discuss these issues in public.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nThere has also been speculation from conspiracy theorists about the purpose of the meetings. The secretive approach to staging the conferences has led to the younger generation of Bilderberg attendees being uncomfortable with the policy of total media exclusion, as reported by the Independent on Sunday. A previous attendee told the Independent that he sympathised with \"those who tell us the confidentiality policy only encourages the conspiracy theorists. It does.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nOf the format and outcome of the conference, the Bilderberg website said, \"There is no detailed agenda, no resolutions are proposed, no votes are taken, and no policy statements are issued.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nA Bilderberg Fringe Festival was held near the conference. The festival featured speakers, comedy, music, workshops, arts and entertainment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference\nThe Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, David Cameron, attended the conference on 7 June. Cameron attended in a private capacity and was not accompanied by civil servants, even though it is customary for the Prime Minister to be accompanied by civil servants when he meets business leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference, Press coverage\nJournalists were banned from attending the event, with the exception of Lilli Gruber, although a press office was provided by the Bilderberg Group. The group is represented by a German corporate communications firm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference, Press coverage\nThe meeting was well covered by the British media, with frequent Bilderberg writer Charlie Skelton noting the presence of Reuters, the Associated Press, Channel 4 News, The Times and the Press Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference, Agenda\nA list of key topics for discussion at the 2013 Bilderberg conference was published on the Bilderberg website shortly before the meeting. Topics for discussion included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference, Delegates (alphabetical)\nFor the first time, a list of expected delegates was published by the Bilderberg Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference, Policing\nA private security company provided security at the hotel; in addition, the Bilderberg Group agreed to contribute toward the policing costs of the event. The local police force, Hertfordshire Police, were in talks with the Home Office about a grant for potential \"unexpected or exceptional costs\". The grant is provided if the costs threaten the \"stability of their policing budget\". A combined force of Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, and Cambridge constabularies prepared for the conference, with the assistance of specialist officers from the Metropolitan Police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference, Policing\nFive rugby pitches belonging to the Fullerians RFC were hired by police for the duration of the event. The police operation for the Bilderberg conference was called Operation Discuss, and had been running for eighteen months prior to the start of the conference. The cost of policing was revealed after the conference to have been in the region of \u00a31.3 million, with \u00a3500,000 having been offered to the police by the Bilderberg Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232191-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bilderberg Conference, Policing\nThe mayor of Watford, Dorothy Thornhill, said that she had concerns that the conference \"does attract people who can and do cause violence and disturbance\" but was confident that the police will \"be able to minimise that and give them their right to protest\". She was additionally \"ambivalent about whether this is a good thing. It's potentially a positive thing as long as things don't kick off.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232192-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bill Beaumont Cup\nThe 2013 Bill Beaumont Cup, also known as Bill Beaumont Cup Division One, was the 113th version of the annual, English rugby union, County Championship organized by the RFU for the top tier English counties. Each county drew its players from rugby union clubs from the third tier and below of the English rugby union league system (typically National League 1, National League 2 South or National League 2 North). The counties were divided into two regional pools with the winners of each pool meeting in the final held at Twickenham Stadium. New counties to the competition included Durham County (north) and Kent (south) who won their respective groups in the 2012 County Championship Plate. Hertfordshire were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232192-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bill Beaumont Cup\nThe northern group was won by last year's runners up, Lancashire, who booked a place in their fifth successive final in what was a very close group, edging Cheshire and Yorkshire by virtue of a superior bonus points record. They were joined by southern group winners, Cornwall, who were appearing in their first Twickenham final since 1999. Cornwall had perhaps an easier route through to the final, winning all three games, but looked very impressive in their six try demolition of last year's winners, Hertfordshire, in their final pool game to book their place. Both promoted counties, Durham County and Kent, were relegated to the 2014 County Championship Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232192-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bill Beaumont Cup\nOver 10,000 Cornish fans made the journey to Twickenham but were unable to help their team to victory as Lancashire emerged victorious by defeating Cornwall, 35 - 26, in what was an exciting game. Lancashire's Nick Royle had an excellent tournament by finishing top try scorer with 5 including 1 in the final, while Cornwall's Paul Thirlby was the tournament's top scorer with 47 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232192-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bill Beaumont Cup, Competition format\nThe competition format was two regional group stages divided into north and south, with each team playing each other once. This meant that two teams in the pool had two home games, while the other two had just one. The top side in each group went through to the final held at Twickenham Stadium on 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232193-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Billboard Music Awards\nThe 2013 Billboard Music Awards ceremony was held on May 19, 2013 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was aired on ABC at 8:00/7:00 PM central. The show was hosted by Tracy Morgan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232193-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Billboard Music Awards, Live-GIFs\nTumblr chose the 2013 Billboard Music Awards as the basis for their first live TV integration. Creative agency Deckhouse Digital was hired for the event, designing an innovative live-gif system which allowed them to produce animated GIFs during the broadcast, and post them directly to Billboard's tumblr page in real time. Users of the blogging site were able to view and share animated images of events unfolding on stage just minutes after watching them live on ABC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232194-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bintaro train crash\nThe Bintaro rail crash occurred on 9 December 2013 when a KRL Commuterline train crashed into a Pertamina gasoline tanker at a railroad crossing in Bintaro, Jakarta, Indonesia on Monday morning, causing at least one female-only carriage to overturn and burst into flames. At least 7 people were killed (including the three train drivers) and another 63 were wounded in the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours\nThe 2013 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. The Queen's Birthday Honours were announced on 15 June 2013 in the United Kingdom, on 10 June 2013 in Australia on 3 June 2013 in New Zealand, on 15 June 2013 in Grenada, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia and Belize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours\nThe recipients of honours are displayed as they were styled before their new honour 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. Civil, Diplomatic and Military as appropriate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, United Kingdom\nThe 2013 Queen's Birthday Honours list was published on 15 June 2013 by The London Gazette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, Australia\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours 2013 for Australia were announced on 10 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, Grenada\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours List for 2013 was announced in the London Gazette on 15 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, Papua New Guinea\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours List for 2013 was announced in the London Gazette on 15 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, Solomon Islands\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours List for 2013 was announced in the London Gazette on 15 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, Tuvalu\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours List for 2013 was announced in the London Gazette on 15 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, Saint Lucia\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours List for 2013 was announced in the London Gazette on 15 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232195-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours, Belize\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours List for 2013 was announced in the London Gazette on 15 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232196-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Birthday Honours (New Zealand)\nThe 2013 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 3 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232196-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232197-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Biryulyovo riots\nOn 13 October 2013, riots in Biryulyovo Zapadnoye, a district in southern Moscow, erupted. The riots were in response to news that Egor Shcherbakov, a 25-year-old man who was killed on 10 October, had allegedly been attacked by a migrant who \"might have come from Central Asia or the Caucasus\". The footage of Shcherbakov being stabbed was circulated by news agencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232197-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Biryulyovo riots\nThe police announced a reward of 1 million rubles (~$30,975) for any information about the suspect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232197-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Biryulyovo riots\nOn 14 October, the police arrested more than 1,200 migrant workers where the killer allegedly lived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232197-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Biryulyovo riots\nOn 15 October, Orkhan Zeynalov, an Azerbaijani citizen, was arrested in Kolomna as a suspect in the killing of Shcherbakov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232197-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Biryulyovo riots\nVostryakovsky Lane where the murder occurred and the initial gatherings begun", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232197-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Biryulyovo riots\nBulatnikovskaya Street, the location of most major events of 13 October 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232198-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bitburger Open Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 Bitburger Open Grand Prix Gold was the fourteenth Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Saarlandhalle, Saarbr\u00fccken, Germany October 29 until November 3, 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232199-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bi\u00f1an local elections\nLocal elections was held in Bi\u00f1an City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232199-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bi\u00f1an local elections, Overview\nIncumbent Mayor Marlyn \"Len-Len\" Alonte-Naguiat decided to run as a re-electionist under the Liberal Party, her opponents are Reynaldo Carde\u00f1o, NPC's nominee and Joaquin Borja an independent candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232199-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bi\u00f1an local elections, Overview\nMayor Marlyn's running mate is Walfredo Dimaguila, Jr. also under the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232199-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bi\u00f1an local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232199-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bi\u00f1an local elections, Results, City Council\nVoters will elect ten (10) councilors to comprise the City Council or the Sangguniang Panlungsod. Candidates are voted separately so there are chances where winning candidates will have unequal number of votes and may come from different political parties. The ten candidates with the highest number of votes win the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232200-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes\nThe 2013 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes was the 89th running of the Black-Eyed Susan Stakes. The race took place on May 17, 2013, and was televised in the United States on the NBC Sports Network. Ridden by jockey Joel Rosario, Fiftyshadesofhay won the race by a scant neck over runner-up Marathon Lady. Approximate post time on the Friday evening before the Preakness Stakes was 4:47 p.m. Eastern Time. The Maryland Jockey Club raised the purse to $500,000 for the 89th running. This made The Black-Eyed-Susan Stakes the third highest payout for a race restricted to three-year-old fillies. The race was run over a fast track in a final time of 1:52.73. The Maryland Jockey Club reported total attendance of 39,957. The attendance at Pimlico Race Course that day was a record crowd for Black-Eyed Susan Stakes Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232201-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series\nThe 2013 Blancpain Endurance Series season was the third season of the Blancpain Endurance Series. The season commenced on 14 April at Monza and ended on 22 September at the N\u00fcrburgring. The season featured five rounds, with each race lasting for a duration of three hours besides the 24 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps and the 1000 km N\u00fcrburgring events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232201-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series, Calendar\nIn July 2012, the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation announced the 2013 calendar. The calendar did not differ much from the previous season. Only the event at Navarra was discontinued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232201-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series, Entry list\nOn 8 April 2013, SRO released the provisional entry list for the first round at Monza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232201-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first ten positions in each Championship Race. Entries were required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers were required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race. There were no points awarded for the Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232201-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded after six hours, after twelve hours and at the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232202-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series Monza round\nRound 1 of the 2013 Blancpain Endurance Series season took place at Monza, Italy on 14 April 2013. A field of 60 GT3 cars competed in the 3-hour endurance race. The race was won by the Ferrari 458 Italia GT3 of Kessel Racing, driven by Daniel Zampieri, C\u00e9sar Ramos and Davide Rigon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232202-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series Monza round, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232203-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series Silverstone round\nRound 2 of the 2013 Blancpain Endurance Series season took place at Silverstone Circuit on 2 June 2013. A field of 57 GT3 cars competed in the 3-hour endurance race. The race was won by the Aston Martin V12 Vantage GT3 of Aston Martin Racing, driven by Darren Turner, Fred Makowiecki and Stefan Mucke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232203-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Blancpain Endurance Series Silverstone round, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232204-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bloomington Edge season\nThe 2013 Bloomington Edge season was the team's seventh overall, second as the Bloomington Edge and first as a member of the Champions Professional Indoor Football League (CPIFL). One of ten teams in the CPIFL for the inaugural 2013 season, the Edge finished the regular season with a 5-7 record, failing to qualify for the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232204-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bloomington Edge season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated July 10, 201326 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232205-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Blossom Cup\nThe 2013 Blossom Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Quanzhou, China, on 7\u201313 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232205-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Blossom Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232206-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Blossom Cup \u2013 Doubles\nChan Hao-ching and Rika Fujiwara were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232206-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Blossom Cup \u2013 Doubles\nIrina Buryachok and Nadiya Kichenok won the tournament, defeating Liang Chen and Sun Shengnan in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, [12\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232207-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Blossom Cup \u2013 Singles\nKimiko Date-Krumm was the defending champion, but chose to compete at the 2013 Apia International Sydney instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232207-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Blossom Cup \u2013 Singles\nVaratchaya Wongteanchai won the tournament, defeating Nadiya Kichenok in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season\nThe 2013 Blues season will be the team's 18th season in the Super Rugby competition. The Blues' pre-season began on February 2, and the regular season began on February 23. The team played 16 regular season matches, with byes in rounds 5 and 10. They did not play in rounds 1 and 17, which was only be contested by Australian teams as a result of the 2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia. The Blues played all teams within the New Zealand conference twice, and all other teams once, with the exception of the Western Force and Southern Kings. The 2013 team was captained by Ali Williams and coached by Sir John Kirwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Pre-season\nThe first of three pre-season fixtures was on the 2nd of February against the Queensland Reds in Toowoomba. This was followed by a home match against the New South Wales Waratahs at Toll Stadium on February 9 and a final match on February 15 against the Highlanders at Queenstown Events Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Regular season\nThe Blues regular season will begin on February 23 with an away fixture against the Hurricanes, and will finish on July 13, with a home fixture against the Chiefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Tour Matches\nOn the 4th of April it was announced that the Blues would play a one-off match against France as a midweek fixture during their tour of New Zealand in June. The match was held on June 11 at North Harbour Stadium and was the first time a New Zealand-based Super Rugby team has played against an international side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Player Summary\nPlayer statistics through round five of the 2013 Super Rugby season are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Player Summary, Overall Summary\nLegend: Apps. = Appearances, Cons. = Conversions, Pens. = Penalties, Drps. = Drop Goals, Pts. = Total points, W.C. = White cards, Y.C. = Yellow cards, R.C. = Red cards", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Standings\nThe standings through the final round of the 2013 season are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Standings\nSource: Legend: Pos = Position, Rnd = Round, W = Win, D = Draw, L = Loss, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, PD = Points Difference, TB = Four-try bonus points, LB = Close loss bonus points, Pts = Competition Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232208-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Blues season, Round by Round Result Summary\nLegend: H = Home, A = Away, W = Win, D = Draw, L = Loss, B = Bye, Pos = Position, Conf = Conference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232209-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bob and Mike Bryan tennis season\nThe 2013 Bob and Mike Bryan tennis season officially commenced on 31 December 2012 with the start of the 2013 ATP World Tour. However, they did not choose to compete until a week later at Apia International Sydney, which started on January 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232209-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bob and Mike Bryan tennis season, Year in detail, Early Hardcourt events, Australian Open\nThe Bryans further cemented their legacy in tennis history at the season's first Grand Slam event, the Australian Open. Their victory in Melbourne was their 13th Grand Slam men's doubles title, the all-time record for a men's doubles team. They had previously been tied with Australians John Newcombe and Tony Roche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 94], "content_span": [95, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232209-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bob and Mike Bryan tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court events, French Open\nThey claimed their 14th Grand Slam win at the French Open, which just happened to be their second at the event, but in the interim had three final appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232209-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bob and Mike Bryan tennis season, Year in detail, Grass court events, Wimbledon\nThe Bryans won their 15th Grand Slam title, becoming the first men's doubles team ever in the Open era to hold all four Grand Slam titles at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232209-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bob and Mike Bryan tennis season, All matches\nThis table chronicles all the matches of Bob and Mike Bryan in 2013, including walkovers (W/O) which the ATP does not count as wins. They are marked ND for non-decision or no decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232210-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bocaue local elections\nLocal elections were held in Bocaue on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and eight councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232210-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bocaue local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nIncumbent Mayor Eduardo \"Jon Jon\" Villanueva Jr. decided to seek reelection under Liberal, however he is still member of Bangon Pilipinas, he faced incumbent vice mayor Jose Santiago, Jr. of PMP, former Mayor Serafin Dela Cruz under Lakas-CMD, and Independent Candidates Rodolfo Dela Cruz and Gregorio Dela Cruz, Sr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232210-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bocaue local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nVillanueva's running mate was Councilor Dioscoro Juan, Jr., son of a former Bocaue Mayor Dioscoro Juan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232210-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bocaue local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232210-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bocaue local elections, Municipal Council election\nVoting is via plurality-at-large voting: Voters vote for eight candidates and the top eight candidates with the highest number of votes are elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232210-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bocaue local elections, Municipal Council election, Results\nThe top eight winning councilors duly elected on May 13, 2013 elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding\nIn 2013, the second year of service for the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, a widebody jet airliner, several aircraft suffered from electrical system problems stemming from its lithium-ion batteries. Incidents included an electrical fire aboard an All Nippon Airways 787 and a similar fire found by maintenance workers on a parked Japan Airlines 787 at Boston's Logan International Airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding\nThe United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ordered a review into the design and manufacture of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, followed by a full grounding of the entire Boeing 787 fleet, the first such grounding since that of the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 in 1979. The plane has had two major battery thermal runaway events in 52,000 flight hours, which was substantially less than the 10 million flight hours predicted by Boeing, neither of which were contained safely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding\nThe National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) released a report on December 1, 2014, and assigned blame to several groups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nOn January 7, 2013, a battery overheated and started a fire in an empty 787 operated by Japan Airlines (JAL) at Boston's Logan International Airport. On January 9, United Airlines reported a problem in one of its six 787s. The wiring was located in the same area as where the battery fire occurred on JAL's airliner; subsequently, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board opened a safety probe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nOn January 11, 2013, the FAA announced a comprehensive review of the 787's critical systems, including the aircraft's design, manufacture and assembly. U.S. Department of Transportation secretary Ray LaHood stated the administration was \"looking for the root causes\" behind the recent issues. The head of the FAA, Michael Huerta, said that nothing found so far \"suggests [the 787] is not safe\". Japan's transport ministry also launched an investigation in response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nOn January 16, 2013, an All Nippon Airways (ANA) 787 made an emergency landing at Takamatsu Airport on Shikoku Island after the flight crew received a computer warning of smoke present inside one of the electrical compartments. ANA said that there was an error message in the cockpit, citing a battery malfunction. Passengers and crew were evacuated using the emergency slides. There are no fire-suppression systems in the electrical compartments holding batteries, only smoke detectors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nU.S.-based aviation regulators' oversight into the 2007 safety approval and FAA certification of the 787 came under scrutiny, as a key U.S. Senate committee prepared for a hearing into the procedures of aviation safety certification \"in coming weeks\". However, an FAA spokesperson defended their 2007 safety certification of the 787 by saying, \"the whole aviation system is designed so that if the worst case happens, there are systems in place to prevent that from interfering with other systems on the plane.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nOn February 12, 2013, the Wall Street Journal reported that \"Aviation safety investigators are examining whether the formation of microscopic structures known as dendrites inside the Boeing Co. 787's lithium-ion batteries played a role in twin incidents that prompted the fleet to be grounded nearly a month ago.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nOn January 14, 2014, Japan Airlines said a maintenance crew at Narita Airport discovered smoke coming from the main battery of one of its Boeing 787 jets, two hours before the plane was due to fly to Bangkok from Tokyo. Maintenance workers found smoke and unidentified liquid coming from the main battery, and alarms in the cockpit indicated faults with the power pack and its charger. The airline said no other equipment was affected by the incident. The cause was not immediately known, and the airline investigated the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nSoon after this incident, The Guardian noted that \"The [U.S. Federal Aviation Administration] also launched a review of the design, manufacture, and assembly of the 787 in January last year and said its report would be released last summer, but it has so far not released the report and has not responded to questions about when it will be finished.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Timeline\nOn November 13, 2017, a United Airlines Boeing 787 had a lithium-ion battery experience overheating on approach to Charles de Gaulle Airport. A spokesman for Boeing said, \"the plane experienced a fault with a single cell\", adding that it was not a safety of flight issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nOn January 16, 2013, both major Japanese airlines ANA and JAL announced that they were voluntarily grounding or suspending flights for their fleets of 787s after multiple incidents involving different 787s, including emergency landings. These two carriers operated 24 of the 50 Dreamliners delivered to that date. It was estimated the grounding could cost ANA over $1.1 million a day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nOn January 16, 2013, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued an emergency airworthiness directive ordering all U.S.-based airlines to ground their Boeing 787s until yet-to-be-determined modifications were made to the electrical system to reduce the risk of the battery overheating or catching fire. This was the first time that the FAA had grounded an airliner type since 1979. The FAA also announced plans to conduct an extensive review of the 787's critical systems. The review's focus was on the safety of the lithium-ion batteries that use lithium cobalt oxide(LiCoO2) as the positive electrode.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nThese electrodes are known for their thermal runaway hazard and provide oxygen for a fire. The 787 battery contract was signed in 2005, when LiCoO2 batteries were the only type of lithium aerospace battery available. Still, since then, newer and safer types (such as LiFePO4) and LiMn2O4 (lithium manganate), which provide less reaction energy during thermal runaway, have become available. The FAA approved a 787 battery in 2007 with nine \"special conditions\". A battery approved by the FAA (through Mobile Power Solutions) was made by Rose Electronics using Kokam cells, but the batteries installed in the 787 were made by Yuasa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nOn January 20, the NTSB declared that overvoltage was not the cause of the Boston incident, as voltage did not exceed the battery limit of 32 V, and the charging unit passed tests. The battery had signs of short-circuiting and thermal runaway. Despite this, on January 24, the NTSB announced that it had not yet pinpointed the cause of the Boston fire; the FAA would not allow U.S.-based Dreamliners to fly again until the problem was found and corrected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nIn a press briefing that day, NTSB Chairwoman Deborah Hersman said that the NTSB had found evidence of the failure of multiple safety systems designed to prevent these battery problems and stated that fire must never happen on an aircraft. The Japan Transport Safety Board (JTSB) has said on January 23 that the battery in ANA jets in Japan reached a maximum voltage of 31 V (lower than the 32 V limit like the Boston JAL 787), but had a sudden unexplained voltage drop to near zero. All cells had signs of thermal damage before the thermal runaway. ANA and JAL had replaced several 787 batteries before the mishaps. As of January 29, 2013, JTSB approved the Yuasa factory quality control while the American NTSB continues to look for defects in the Boston battery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nIndustry experts disagreed on the consequences of the grounding: Boeing's competitor Airbus was confident that Boeing would resolve the issue and that no airlines would switch to a different type of aircraft, while other experts saw the problem as \"costly\" and \"could take upwards of a year.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nOnly two U.S.-based airlines operated the Dreamliner at the time \u2013 United Airlines and American Airlines. Chile's Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGAC) grounded LAN Airlines' three 787s. The Indian Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) directed Air India to ground its six Dreamliners. The Japanese Transport Ministry made the ANA and JAL groundings official and indefinite following the FAA announcement. The European Aviation Safety Agency also followed the FAA's advice and grounded the only two European 787s operated by LOT Polish Airlines. Qatar Airways announced it was grounding its five Dreamliners. Ethiopian Air was the final operator to announce temporary groundings, of its four Dreamliners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Groundings\nAs of January 17, 2013, all 50 of the aircraft were grounded. On January 18, Boeing announced that it was halting 787 deliveries until the battery problem was resolved. On February 4, 2013, the FAA permitted Boeing to conduct test flights of 787 aircraft to gather additional data.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Solution\nThe Federal Aviation Administration decided on April 19, 2013, to allow U.S. Dreamliners to return to service after changes were made to their battery systems to contain battery fires better. Japanese authorities announced they were doing the same for their airplanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Solution\nIn 2013 concern remained that the solutions put in place by Boeing will not be able to cover the full range of possible failure modes. These include problems that may arise from poor systems integration between the engine indicating and crew alerting system (EICAS) and the battery management system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Solution\nA report adopted November 21, 2014, by the National Transportation Safety Board determined that \"the probable cause of this incident was an internal short circuit within a cell [cell 5 or cell 6] of the auxiliary power unit (APU) lithium-ion battery, which led to a thermal runaway that cascaded to adjacent cells, resulting in the release of smoke and fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Solution\nThe incident resulted from Boeing's failure to incorporate design requirements to mitigate the most severe effects of an internal short circuit within an APU battery cell and the Federal Aviation Administration's failure to identify this design deficiency during the type design certification process.\" The report also made recommendations to the FAA, Boeing, and the battery manufacturer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232211-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Boeing 787 Dreamliner grounding, Solution\nThe Japan Civil Aviation Bureau was reported to have called for Boeing to redesign the battery \"beyond the recommendations from two previous investigations about the 2013 battery incidents by the Japan Transportation Safety Board (JTSB) and the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).\" The Boeing's enclosure had to add 185\u00a0lb (84\u00a0kg) heavier, negating the lighter battery potential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232212-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boels\u2013Dolmans season\nThe 2013 women's road cycling season was the fourth for the Boels Dolmans Cycling Team, which began as the Dolmans Landscaping Team in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232212-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boels\u2013Dolmans season, Roster\nAs of 1 January 2013. Ages as of 1 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232212-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boels\u2013Dolmans season, UCI World Ranking\nThe team finished eleventh in the UCI ranking for teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake\nThe 2013 Bohol earthquake occurred on October 15 at 8:12:31 PST in Bohol, an island province located in Central Visayas, Philippines. The magnitude of the earthquake was recorded at Mw 7.2, with epicenter 6 kilometres (3.7\u00a0mi) S 24\u00b0 W of Sagbayan, and its depth of focus was 12 kilometres (7.5\u00a0mi). It affected the whole Central Visayas region, particularly Bohol and Cebu. The earthquake was felt in the whole Visayas area and as far as Masbate island in the north and Cotabato provinces in southern Mindanao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake\nAccording to official reports by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), 222 were reported dead, 8 were missing, and 976 people were injured. In all, more than 73,000 structures were damaged, of which more than 14,500 were totally destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake\nIt was the deadliest earthquake in the Philippines in 23 years since the 1990 Luzon earthquake. The energy released by the quake was equivalent to 32 of the bombs dropped in Hiroshima. Previously, Bohol was also hit by an earthquake on February 8, 1990 that damaged several buildings and caused a tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake\nOn November 7, just three weeks after the earthquake, Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) struck the region. Although the storm's eye missed the area affected by the earthquake, it sent some 40,000 Boholanos still living in temporary shelters back to evacuation centers and disrupted relief efforts in the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Geology\nInitially it was thought that the epicenter was 2 kilometres (1.2\u00a0mi) east of Carmen, Bohol, triggered by the East Bohol Fault. But according to the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS), the 7.2 earthquake may have been caused by a previously undiscovered fault transecting Bohol running ENE-WSW parallel to the island's northwest coast. This was apparent in the pattern of epicenters of the subsequent aftershocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Geology\nThe 15 October 2013 magnitude (Mw) 7.2 Bohol earthquake produced an approximate 50 kilometres (31\u00a0mi) long, 12 kilometres (7.5\u00a0mi) wide northeast trending zone of uplift with an approximate 8 kilometres (5.0\u00a0mi) long discontinuous ground rupture indicating predominantly reverse\u2010slip movement on a southeast dipping fault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Geology\nDisplacement along the northeastern segment of the NBF in Inabanga is significantly larger in the northeast than in the southwest. In the northeast, the displacement is mostly 2 metres (6\u00a0ft 7\u00a0in) and reaches a maximum of 5 metres (16\u00a0ft), while in the southwest, the displacement is mostly less than 1 metre (3\u00a0ft 3\u00a0in). The maximum and average displacements, which were measured along the nearly continuous approximately 2 kilometres (1.2\u00a0mi) long ground rupture in Sitio Cumayot, Barangay Anonang, Inabanga, are around 5 and 2 metres (16.4 and 6.6\u00a0ft), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Geology\nDocumentation of the nearly continuous northern terminus of the 2013 Bohol earthquake ground rupture revealed its association to preexisting scarps of the previously unmapped, Quaternary\u2010active North Bohol Fault. Trenching across the rupture at four sites not only reveals the geometry and kinematics of the fault but also shows at least one or two pre\u20102013 surface rupturing events. Onshore geologic mapping and offshore seismic reflection profiles demonstrate the presence of an island\u2010wide, northeast\u2010southwest trending fold\u2010and\u2010thrust belt through which deformation related to the regional shortening across the Visayan Sea Basin in the central Philippines is likely distributed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Geology, North Bohol Fault\nPHIVOLCS reported that the North Bohol Fault (NBF), which generated the Mw 7.2 earthquake, is a northeast\u2013southwest trending reverse fault along the western sector of Bohol island. Surface ruptures ranging from 0.10 metres (3.9\u00a0in) to as high as 5 metres (16\u00a0ft) in vertical displacements were exposed in barangay Anonang in Inabanga, Bohol. The mapped surface of NBF is 6 kilometres (3.7\u00a0mi) long from barangay New Anonang in Buenavista to barangay Napo in Inabanga and generally trends 40 degrees northeast and dips at 50 degrees southeast. The team continues to map its probable extension of NBF northeast of Inabanga towards Getafe and southwest towards Loon and Maribojoc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Geology, North Bohol Fault\nThe longest, continuous individual trace mapped by the team is approximately 2 kilometres (1.2\u00a0mi) in Anonang. In this barangay, surface rupture trends 40 degrees northeast. The surface rupture manifested as prominent fault scarps, which range from 2 metres (6\u00a0ft 7\u00a0in) to 5 metres (16\u00a0ft) of vertical displacements. Other geomorphic manifestations observed in Anonang include 2.5 metres (8\u00a0ft 2\u00a0in) vertical displacement of Cawasan Creek in Sitio Calubian, producing a small waterfall at the point where the fault transects the creek. Other typical features associated with reverse faulting, such as scallops, bulges and warps, were also observed in the deformation zone, which extended as wide as 30 metres (98\u00a0ft) in some places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Geology, Aftershocks\nAftershocks continued to rattle Bohol Island and Cebu for several months. By December 6, 2013, 4,026 aftershocks were recorded, 114 of which were felt. Included in the aftershocks was the 5.3 magnitude tremor experienced at 12:59\u00a0a.m. on October 26, and another 4.8 magnitude quake at 1:28\u00a0p.m. on November 12, centered at San Isidro, Bohol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Warnings\nThe Pacific Tsunami Warning Center did not issue a Pacific-wide tsunami threat. The United States Geological Survey issued a yellow warning, saying \"some casualties and damage are possible and the impact should be relatively localized. Past yellow alerts have required a local or regional level response.\" SHOA, of the Chilean Navy, stated the earthquake would not affect national or South American coasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage\nThe earthquake struck as the Philippines was observing the Muslim holiday of Eid-al-Adha. The public holiday had closed schools, some businesses, and offices which helped reduce the number of casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage\nA total of \u20b12.25 billion worth of damage to public buildings, roads, bridges, and flood controls was reported in Bohol and Cebu. A total of 671,103 families or more than 3.2 million people were affected by the quake. Out of the total number of affected, 71,822 families or more than 348,000 people were displaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Bohol\nBy far the most casualties and damage occurred in Bohol. A total of 209 people were confirmed dead, 877 people were confirmed injured, and 8 confirmed missing. A rough estimate of the damage is expected to be at least at \u20b12.2 billion. The town of Loon had the largest number fatalities (67). Also, a total of 1,255,128 people (the province's entire population) were affected by the quake. Nearly 71,900 residential houses were damaged (out of which 14,480 were totally destroyed), with the towns of Loon, Tubigon, Carmen, and Calape among the worst affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 66], "content_span": [67, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Bohol\nA building at the Tagbilaran Port Terminal and a ceiling of the second floor and the airport tower of Tagbilaran Airport in Tagbilaran collapsed. Loboc Church, Loon Church and Maribojoc Church collapsed; the fa\u00e7ade of Baclayon Church and its bell tower were totally damaged. Other churches, including those in Loay, Dauis, Dimiao, and Tubigon were also severely damaged. In Carmen, a freestanding bell tower and an observation deck in the island's renowned Chocolate Hills were destroyed, with some hills themselves damaged by landslides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 66], "content_span": [67, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Bohol\nSeveral government buildings and numerous schools in the province were also partially or totally damaged, including the municipal halls of twelve towns. The provincial district hospital in Loon collapsed, trapping and killing an unknown number of patients. Some 32 bridges, including many along the National Road, and 13 road sections were damaged and impassable, hampering aid efforts. Energy services in the province were also cut off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 66], "content_span": [67, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Cebu\nIntensity 5 to 6 was experienced at Metro and Southern Cebu, while the rest of Cebu experience intensity 6. 12 people were confirmed dead, 96 people injured, and a total of 404,107 families or more than 1.9 million people were affected by the quake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Cebu\nSeveral structures in Cebu City incurred total and partial damage. A building in Pasil Fish Port in Cebu City collapsed killing five people and injuring seven people. The Basilica Minore del Santo Ni\u00f1o's bell tower also collapsed. Cebu Provincial Capitol was badly hit by the quake. Several hospitals such as Cebu Doctors' University Hospital and St. Vincent Hospital incurred damage. A stampede in a Cebu gym caused five deaths and injured eight. A part of Mandaue City Public Market also collapsed, reportedly killing a vendor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Other Visayas islands\nIntensity VI was recorded in Hinigaran, Negros Occidental; intensity V in Iloilo, Bacolod, La Carlota, Guimaras, Abuyog, Baybay, and Bato in Leyte, Hinunangan, Saint Bernard, Maasin and Macrohon in Southern Leyte, and Sibulan in Negros Oriental; intensity IV in Roxas City, Masbate, Bulusan in Sorsogon, Patnongon and San Jose in Antique, Leon in Antique, Tacloban in Leyte, Tabon, and Borongan in Samar\u00a0; Intensity IV and V at various towns in Aklan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 82], "content_span": [83, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Other Visayas islands\nIn Negros Occidental, several private buildings incurred damage. In Iloilo, the administration office of Iloilo Airport was slightly damaged. In Siquijor, one person had died and three people were injured from the quake. Two people, one from Negros Oriental and one from Iloilo, were also injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 82], "content_span": [83, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Casualties and infrastructure damage, Mindanao\nThe quake was felt in intensity V in Cagayan de Oro and Gingoog in Misamis Oriental, Surigao and Butuan in Agusan del Norte; intensity IV in Davao City, Cotabato, Zamboanga, Bukidnon, Zamboanga del Norte and Tacurong but no people were reported dead. There were no casualties, and damage to properties and infrastructures in Mindanao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Effects, Transportation\nSeveral flights from Cebu and Bohol airports and the airport operations itself were put on hold as response to check the safety status of the airport buildings. Mactan International Airport in Mactan was later opened before midday, flights between Manila and Bohol were delayed due to temporary suspension of operations in Tagbilaran Airport for about 3 hours. By October 17, all operations of seaports in Bohol and Cebu were back to normal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Effects, Health\nMany Bohol residents were left without adequate safe drinking water and sanitary facilities after the quake. Consequently, serious public health issues arose such as cases of diarrhea and water-borne diseases. Worst affected were the municipalities closest to the epicenter, such as Sagbayan, San Isidro, Calape, Tubigon, Clarin and Catigbian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Effects, Health\nThere were also threats to public health. Community health centers and hospitals were rendered useless, resulting in the use of makeshift wards outside the affected buildings. Food supply was also disrupted with many markets unable to operate a week after the quake. Furthermore, prolonged periods of aftershocks forced the population to take residence in makeshift shelters, afraid to go inside weakened buildings, and causing psychological trauma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Effects, Power and water supply\nOne in every five households in Bohol had electrical power disruption a week after the earthquake hit. In terms of number of barangays, according to the Department of Energy, 91 percent of 602 villages had their power restored. On October 24, Tagbilaran City was the only town in the province where energy was fully restored. By November 3 nearly all electrical power had been restored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Effects, Power and water supply\nBy October 20, the water supply in 42 towns of Bohol was restored but the towns of Calape, Cortes, Loon, Maribojoc, and Sagbayan still had a problem with their water supply.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Effects, Power and water supply\nAs a result of Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), the province of Bohol suffered another round of power outages since the main source of electricity comes from a power plant in Leyte. This power plant, along with transmission lines, were damaged by the storm. Massive brownouts and blackouts lasted for several weeks, even affecting the water supply. Electrical power was restored to all municipalities by November 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Effects, Postponement of 2013 barangay elections in Bohol\nOn October 16, 2013, the provincial government of Bohol asked to the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) for the postponement of the barangay elections after the province was heavily devastated by the quake. The following day, Bohol governor Edgar Chatto announced during the Presidential visit that the provincial board will submit a resolution to the COMELEC postponing October 28 elections. The same day COMELEC visited the province and evaluated the safety conditions of polling centers. On October 22 COMELEC officially announced the postponement of elections in Bohol citing safety issues and the integrity of the buildings being used as polling centers. The elections in the province was rescheduled on November 25 and synchronized with the affected barangays of Zamboanga City, which was affected by the armed conflict against the Moro National Liberation Front on September 9 to 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 80], "content_span": [81, 976]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Government response and aid\nStates of calamity were issued by Cebu and Bohol provincial governments on October 15. The National Commission for Culture and the Arts, National Historical Commission of the Philippines, and the National Museum have expressed their commitment to rehabilitate the ten heritage churches damaged by the quake. Many of the churches destroyed are iconic and are historical landmarks. One was the Basilica Minore del Santo Ni\u00f1o which is the oldest church in the Philippines. PHIVOLCS continuously monitors the geological activity of the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Government response and aid\nThe Philippine National Police declared a full alert status and deployed 271 personnel and 27 vehicles in Bohol and Cebu and has continuously monitored the effects of the earthquake. The Armed Forces of the Philippines coordinated with local governments and provincial disaster management units for updates on the situation and for damage assessments. The Department of Health placed the affected region into code red alert status. On October 16, the regional consular office of the Department of Foreign Affairs in Cebu suspended its operations in order to inspect for damage at its offices. All services will resume once public safety is ensured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Government response and aid\nPhilippine President Benigno Aquino III visited the provinces of Cebu and Bohol on October 16, and assessed the damage caused by the quake. Minutes upon his arrival in Tagbilaran, Bohol, a 5.1 magnitude aftershock occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Government response and aid\nThe Department of Social Welfare and Development released \u20b110 million for the purchase of relief goods for displaced families. The Department is planning to distribute two thousand family packs and 100 rolls of laminated sacks which will be airlifted by the Philippine Air Force's C130. It has allocated \u20b198 million (US$2.2 million) in standby funds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Government response and aid\nThe city government of Davao City also pledged at least \u20b13 million of cash assistance. Cities of Ormoc and Baybay, Leyte will donate \u20b12.1 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Government response and aid\nAs a post-earthquake effect, several local businesses and tourist resorts had a very difficult time in the months after the earthquake, caused by fear from tourists that such event might occur again. After a year, positive signs of recovery thrived for Bohol Island amid rehabilitation efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, International response and aid\nThe Spanish government sent messages of sympathy and solidarity to the Philippine government. Spain also cited the damage and destruction of the churches, which they consider as part of their historical heritage during the Spanish colonial period. New Zealand's Prime Minister John Key also sent a letter to President Aquino expressing their heartfelt sympathies to the people affected by the disaster. Canada, through Foreign Minister John Baird, also offered sympathies and stated that his country is ready to help the Philippines. Japan, through ambassador Toshinao Urabe, wrote a letter to the President extending the people's and government's sympathies to the quake hit victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, International response and aid\nJapan delivered emergency relief goods (150 tents and 485 plastic sheets) worth approximately $383,000 for the victims, and later decided to extend additional assistance of $3.5 million through the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). The government of Taiwan has provided funds worth $100,000. Malaysia donated RM100,000 for the children affected by the disaster. The United States, through the US Agency for International Development (USAID), donated $50,000 worth of non-food relief items and 6,000 hygiene kits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, International response and aid\nThe South Korea government donated $300,000 of funds to help rehabilitate the provinces of Bohol and Cebu. On October 21, the German government extended their sympathies to the people of the Philippines affected by the disaster. The German government also pledged \u20b113.7 million and will be coursed through German humanitarian organization Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe. On October 25, the Australian Government will provide of \u20b1124 million funds to the quake hit areas for humanitarian needs. \u20b144 million will be funded for family survival kits containing sleeping mats, mosquito nets and water containers direct from the Philippine Red Cross, rice direct from the World Food Programme, and kits for women direct from United Nations Population Fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Aid from organizations\nThe United Nations' World Food Program has prepositioned a thousand metric tons of rice, 15 metric tons of high energy biscuits and other non-food items to the affected areas in the provinces of Bohol and Cebu. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations' Coordinating Center for Humanitarian Assistance has also delivered relief supplies to Bohol. Philippine Red Cross (PRC) donated relief operations, and deployed volunteers and rescue teams to the depressed areas. Singapore Red Cross (SRC) donated $100 thousand worth of relief goods, and deployed a team of volunteers in the affected areas on October 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Aid from organizations\nSRC volunteers also assisted surgeons conducting surgical operations in Tagbilaran City. On October 18, Oxfam International deployed a team of experts in order to assess the health and sanitation conditions in Bohol, and donated 400 water treatment solutions which will be distributed to various health centers of the said province. On October 25, the United Nations called to the international community to raise a $46.8 million of aid to the quake affected areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Aid from organizations\nA 2014 report indicated that Bohol residents impacted by the quake have taken up mushroom farming, for which they are paid in rice, as part of a \"Food-For-Work programme implemented in partnership with the Bureau of Fisheries and Agriculture and the Philippine Coconut Authority.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232213-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol earthquake, Response, Other charity and fundraising activities\nGMA Network's Kapuso Foundation and ABS-CBN's Sagip Kapamilya Foundation aided the victims of the quake by providing relief items such as food and bottled water. A benefit concert called #BangonSugBohol was also held in Cebu. Some private individuals from the least affected Tagbilaran City mobilized and provided aid by distributing relief goods and used clothing. Different local and foreign companies also donated different relief items. Different local religious, civic, and humanitarian groups also conducted relief operations in Bohol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections\nLocal elections were held on May 13, 2013 in the Province of Bohol as part of the 2013 Philippine General election. Registered voters elected local positions, which were 386 city and municipal councilors, 48 city and town mayors and vice-mayors, 10 provincial board or Sangguniang Panlalawigan members, one governor and vice-governor, and one representative for each of the three districts of Bohol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections\nThe registration ended in October 2012, with registered 775,785 voters, a 45,871 or 6.28% increase from the 729,914 registered voters in 2010. With the use of PCOS machines, the former 4,718 precincts were compressed into 2,473 clustered precincts to accommodate voters in the entire province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections\nAt the end of the filing of certificates of candidacy issued by Comelec on October 5, 2012, a total of 1,132 hopefuls had filed certificates of candidacy for 497 elective positions. Based on the official list of provincial Commission on Elections, 881 aspirants ran for councilors, 108 for mayors, 107 for vice mayors, 23 for provincial board members, 4 for governor, 3 for vice governor, and six for congress in three districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election Results\nThe governor and vice governor with the highest number of votes won the seat. However, they were voted separately, so they could be from different parties when elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election Results, Governor\nParties below were as stated in certificates of candidacies. The total number of voters was 559,983 (72.18% of total registered voters).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election Results, Vice-Governor\nParties were stated in certificate of candidacies. The total number of voters was 559,983 (72.18% of total registered voters).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election Results, Sangguniang Panlalawigan\nBoth the 1st and 2nd Districts of Bohol elected three Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members. The 3rd District, with highest population, elected four board members. The candidates with the highest number of votes won the seats allocated for each district, with the number of winning candidates per district equal to the number of seats that district sent to the provincial legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election Results, Sangguniang Panlalawigan, 1st District\nParties were stated in certificate of candidacies. The total number of voters was 192,410.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election Results, Sangguniang Panlalawigan, 2nd District\nParties were stated in certificate of candidacies. The total number of voters was 196,879.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Provincial Election Results, Sangguniang Panlalawigan, 3rd District\nParties were as stated in certificate of candidacies. The total number of voters was 170,694.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 95], "content_span": [96, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Congressional election results\nEach of Bohol's three legislative districts elected representative to the House of Representatives. The candidate with the highest number of votes won the seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Congressional election results, 1st District, Congressman\nRene Relampagos was the incumbent. The mayor of Tagbilaran City, Dan Neri Lim, challenged him for the congressional seat. Parties were as stated in certificate of candidacies. The total number of voters was 192,410.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Congressional election results, 2nd District, Congressman\nIncumbent Erico B. Aumentado died while in office on December 25, 2012. The Nationalist People's Coalition replaced him with a substitute against his perennial rival, former three-term congressman and by then, incumbent Trinidad mayor Roberto Cajes. Forty days after his father's death, Aumentado's youngest son and acting congressman Erico Aristotle filed his certificate of candidacy. Parties below were as stated in certificate of candidacies. The total number of voters was 196,879.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, Congressional election results, 3rd District, Congressman\nArthur Yap of Loboc was the incumbent. Last term Loboc Mayor Leon Calipusan filed his CONA under the administration ticket. However, on January 9, 2013, Calipusan filed an affidavit of withdrawal, indicating family and health reasons. It made Arthur Yap unopposed for two consecutive elections. Parties were stated in certificate of candidacies. The total number of voters was 170,694.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results\nAll municipalities of Bohol and Tagbilaran City elected mayors, vice-mayors, and councilors. The mayor and vice mayor with the highest number of votes won the seat. They were voted separately, and therefore could be from different parties when elected. Below is the list of mayoralty and vice-mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, First District, Tagbilaran City\nParties were stated on certificates of candidacy. The total number voters was 40,548, equivalent to 78.79% of 51,462 registered voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 97], "content_span": [98, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, First District, Antequera\nMunicipal Councilor Simeon Leo Jadulco ran unopposed for vice mayor under the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, First District, Calape\nBrothers Sulpicio Yu and Nelson Yu sought re-election as mayor and vice mayor, respectively, under the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, First District, Corella\nTotal number of voters was 4,327, out of 4,898 registered voters, or 88.34%", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, First District, Sikatuna\nIncumbent Mayor Jose Ellorimo Jr. ran unopposed under the Liberal Party (LP) ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, Third District, Alicia\nIncumbent Mayor Marilou Ayuban and Vice Mayor Basilio Balahay ran unopposed under the Liberal Party (LP) ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, Third District, Batuan\nRe -electionist and incumbent Vice Mayor Antonino Jumawid ran unopposed under the Liberal Party (LP) ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232214-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Bohol local elections, City and Municipal Elections Results, Third District, Lila\nIncumbent Mayor Regina Salazar ran unopposed under the Liberal Party (LP) ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team\nThe 2013 Boise State Broncos football team represented Boise State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Broncos were led by eighth year head coach Chris Petersen and played their home games at Bronco Stadium. They were members of the Mountain West Conference in the Mountain Division. They finished the season 8\u20135, 6\u20132 in Mountain West play to finish in second place in the West Division. They were invited to the Hawaii Bowl where they were defeated by Oregon State. The 5 losses matched the total of losses that the Broncos had posted in the five previous seasons combined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team\nOn December 6, it was announced that head coach Chris Petersen would resign to take the head coaching job at Washington. In eight seasons at Boise State, he posted a record of 92\u201312, won five conference titles and two BCS games. Assistant head coach Bob Gregory served as Boise State's interim head coach in their bowl game. On December 11, The Broncos hired former offensive coordinator and Arkansas State head coach Bryan Harsin as their permanent head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team, Conference shuffle\nBoise State was originally set to join the Big East Conference, along with fellow Mountain West member San Diego State, for football in 2013; however, after the Big East announced a split between its FBS members (which eventually became the American Athletic Conference) and its non-FBS schools (which kept the Big East name), Boise State announced on December 31, 2012 that it would stay in the Mountain West Conference. San Diego State would later announce they would stay in the Mountain West as well, making the Mountain West a 12 team conference. The Mountain West formed divisions for the first time, with Boise State as part of the Mountain Division, and will conduct a conference championship game for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team, Conference shuffle\nAs part of the conditions for Boise State to stay in the conference, the Mountain West lifted the ban on the Broncos wearing their all blue uniforms at home during conference games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team, Game summaries, at Washington\nThis was the second consecutive meeting between the Broncos and the Huskies as they met at the end of the 2012 season in the Maaco Bowl Las Vegas. The 32-point loss is the worst loss under Chris Petersen. The previous highest margin of defeat was 14, also coming against Washington in 2007, Petersen's second year as head coach. Prior to this game, the Broncos' previous five losses had been by a combined 11 points. It was the Broncos worst loss since a 35-point loss to Georgia to open the 2005 season. This was also the first time the Broncos failed to score a touchdown since a 58\u20130 loss to Washington State in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team, Game summaries, Air Force\nQuarterback Joe Southwick set a Boise State and Mountain West record for completion percentage completing 27 of 29 passes (93.1%). The Broncos were allowed to wear their all blue uniforms for the first time during a home conference game since joining the Mountain West in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team, Game summaries, at Utah State\nUtah State chose to wear white at home. The win was the Broncos 21st straight win over a team from Utah with the last loss coming in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team, Game summaries, at BYU\nThe loss to BYU ended a 21-game winning streak against teams from the state of Utah dating back to a 1997 loss to Utah State. It was also the Broncos first loss in the month of October since a loss to Rice in 2001, a span of 50 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232215-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Boise State Broncos football team, Game summaries, at San Diego State\nThis loss marked the first time that Boise State lost to the same opponent in consecutive years since losing to Washington State in 2000 and 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232216-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bojangles' Southern 500\nThe 2013\u00a0Bojangles'\u00a0Southern\u00a0500, the 64th running of the event, was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on May 11, 2013, at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina, United States. The race was contested over 367 laps on the 1.366\u2013mile (2.198\u00a0km) oval, it was the eleventh race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Matt Kenseth of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his third win of the 2013 season, while his teammate Denny Hamlin finished second. Jeff Gordon grabbed his 300th top 5 finish in his 700th Sprint Cup start, while Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232216-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bojangles' Southern 500\nThere were five cautions for 25 laps and nine lead changes between four different drivers throughout the course of the race. The result moved Kenseth to the third position in the Drivers' Championship, 59 points behind Jimmie Johnson in first and five ahead of Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in fourth. Chevrolet maintained its lead in the Manufacturers' Championship, two points ahead of Toyota and 18 ahead of Ford, with 25 races remaining in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232216-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bojangles' Southern 500, Report, Background\nDarlington Raceway is a four-turn 1.366\u00a0mi (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. Jimmie Johnson was the defending race winner after winning the event during the 2012 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232216-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bojangles' Southern 500, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 383 points, while Carl Edwards stood in second with 342 points. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. followed in the third with 324, seven ahead of Matt Kenseth in fourth, and eight ahead of Clint Bowyer in fifth. Brad Keselowski, with 314, was in sixth; fifteen points ahead of Kasey Kahne. Eighth-placed Aric Almirola was three points ahead of Paul Menard and eight ahead of Kyle Busch in ninth and tenth. Greg Biffle was eleventh with 280, while Kevin Harvick completed the first twelve positions with 279 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 68 points, five points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third after recording only 52 points during the first ten races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232216-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bojangles' Southern 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nTwo practice sessions were held in preparation for the race; both on Friday, May 10, 2013. The first session lasted for 120 minutes, while second session was 45 minutes long. During the first practice session, Menard, for the Richard Childress Racing team, was quickest ahead of Bowyer in second and McMurray in third. Earnhardt, Jr. was scored fourth, and Edwards managed fifth. Kyle Busch, Martin Truex, Jr., Juan Pablo Montoya, Kenseth, and Biffle rounded out the top ten quickest drivers in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232216-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bojangles' Southern 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nMontoya was quickest in the second and final practice session, ahead of Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. in second and Edwards in third. Jeff Burton was fourth quickest, and Kurt Busch took fifth. Biffle, Kenseth, Jeff Gordon, Truex, Jr., and Kyle Busch followed in the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232216-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bojangles' Southern 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-three cars were entered. Kurt Busch clinched his first pole position of the season, with a record time of 27.032 seconds. After his qualifying run, Kurt Busch commented, \"Wow, what an incredible lap. The way the team gave me the confidence right when we first unloaded, the team deserves all the credit. This gives me a great shot to stay ahead of the field and win by two-thousandths of a second this time.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Johnson. Kyle Busch qualified third, Kahne took fourth, and Truex, Jr. started fifth. Denny Hamlin, Kenseth, Gordon, Biffle, and Harvick completed the first ten positions on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232217-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivarian Games\nThe 2013 Bolivarian Games (Spanish: Juegos Bolivarianos), officially the XVII Bolivarian Games, was a major international multi-sport event that was held from November 16\u201330, 2013, in Trujillo, Peru, with some events held in Lima and Chiclayo. Approximately 4,500 athletes from 11 nations participated in 44 sports. These Games was the third Bolivarian Games that was hosted by Peru. Previously, Peru hosted the 1947\u201348 Bolivarian Games and the 1997 Bolivarian Games. Since 2011, Trujillo was preparing the sport buildings for the Bolivarian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232217-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivarian Games\nThe 2013 Bolivarian Games was the first one to have athletes from 11 countries, instead of the usual 6 members of the Bolivarian Sports Organization (ODEBO).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232217-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivarian Games, Host city election\nThe Bolivarian Sports Organization (ODEBO) selected initially Panama City as the host for the 17th Bolivarian Games on May 5, 2010. ODEBO selected the city, after both opposing bids from Venezuela and Ecuador were dismissed. Venezuela's bid fell through, due to not getting general support from then Venezuelan President Hugo Ch\u00e1vez. Ecuador's bid was just not handed in on time, in order to be an official one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232217-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivarian Games, Host city election\nOn October 20, 2010, ODEBO decided to withdraw Panama City as host, .ODEBO explained that Panama's Olympic Committee has actually two committees with two co-presidents in conflict, Miguel Vanegas and Miguel S\u00e1nchiz, one recognized by Panama's Supreme Court of Justice and the other one recognized by IOC. Ricardo Martinelli, Panama's president, commented: \"I'm going to kill both of them... I will publicly ask both of them to hand over their resignations for the good of this country and stop with their petty personal interests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232217-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivarian Games, Host city election\nEarly 2011, Trujillo began to bid, to replace Panama City, as host of the 2013 Bolivarian Games. ODEBO's Games commission traveled to the Peruvian city to make a visual inspection of its facilities. The review found that Trujillo is capable of hosting the Games and unofficially stated that the city will host the 2013 Bolivarian Games. The official announcement was given on February 7, 2012, in Rio de Janeiro. Trujillo city will house about 4000 athletes from 11 countries in a modern sports complex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232217-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivarian Games, Participating teams\nAll 6 nations of ODEBO competed in these Games. For the first time in Games' history, five non-ODEBO teams was given permission to participate as well. Number in parentheses represents number of athletes for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232217-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivarian Games, Sports\nFor the 2013 Bolivarian Games, 561 events in 44 sports was contested here. These Games was the first time that rugby was played at the Bolivarian Games. Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of medal events contested in each sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232218-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bolivian special municipal elections\nThe 2013 Bolivian special municipal elections were held on 13 January 2013 in the municipalities of Punata (in Cochabamba Department) and Bermejo (in Tarija Department. Newly elected mayors will receive their credentials from the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, after which they may be sworn in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232219-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bomet local elections\nLocal elections were held in Bomet County on 4 March 2013 to elect a Governor and County Representatives. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232219-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bomet local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232220-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bonnaroo Music Festival\nThe 2013 Bonnaroo Music Festival was held June 13\u201316, 2013 in Manchester, Tennessee and marked the 12th time the festival has been held since its inception in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232221-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boodles Challenge\nThe 2013 Boodles Challenge was an exhibition tennis tournament held before Wimbledon to serve as a warm-up to players. Taking place from 18 to 22 June 2013 at Stoke Park in Buckinghamshire, it was the 12th edition of the Boodles Challenge. Viktor Troicki won the title, defeating Robin Haase 7-5, 6-4 in a thrilling encounter. Novak Djokovic and Grigor Dimitrov delighted the crowd with a strip-tease during their exhibition match on the third day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232222-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Borazjan earthquake\nThe 2013 Dashtestan earthquake struck near the city of Borazjan (the capital of Dashtestan County, Bushehr Province) in southern Iran on November 28 at a depth of 16.4\u00a0km (10.2\u00a0mi). The shock had a moment magnitude of 5.6 on the Richter scale and a maximum perceived intensity of VII (Very strong) on the Mercalli intensity scale. The earthquake killed at least 7 people and another 45 were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final\nThe 2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final was the 18th final of the Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, the highest football cup competition in Bosnia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final\nThe date of both 2013 Final matches, as in all the recent years, was set so that it avoids clashes with Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina fixtures. Both matches took place on Tuesday, between two rounds of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final\nThe current holders, \u017deljezni\u010dar were not able to defend their title with \u0160iroki Brijeg bringing a trophy home after six years of drought after they won 5\u20134 on penalties (both legs finished 1\u20131).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final, Route to the Final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final, Pre-match\nThis final marked the ninth appearance in final of Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup for \u017deljezni\u010dar and tenth final in domestic cups, since they were once in final of Yugoslav Cup. They had won the cup five times (in 2000, 2001, 2003, 2011 and 2012) and have been beaten in 4 occasions (in 1981, 1997, 2002 and 2010). On the other side, this was the fifth final for \u0160iroki Brijeg and they won it once (in 2007), with three finals lost (in 2005, 2006 and 2012). This was the second consecutive time these two clubs met each other in the final of this competition, while it was the sixth overall encounter in this competition (they met each other before once in final, three times in semi-finals and once in quarter-finals).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final, Pre-match\nOn 9 April 2013, a draw to decide who will be the first host was held with \u017deljezni\u010dar hosting the first leg on 30 April at 18:00 CEST and \u0160iroki Brijeg the rematch two weeks later on 14 May at 19:00 CEST, with both matches aired on BHT1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final, Pre-match\nUnlike the two last finals, in which \u017deljezni\u010dar also played, this time the ticket price wasn't raised but rather remained the same as the prices for the regular tickets for the league matches, which were \u20ac2.50 for the south stand (the stand were The Maniacs are), \u20ac4 for the north stand and \u20ac5 for the west stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final, Pre-match\nThe kick-off for the second leg was set at 19:00 CEST, on Tuesday, 14 May. Before the match, \u017deljezni\u010dar was in a more-than-four-year unbeaten streak in national cup, with the last lost match dating to 24 September 2008 against Zvijezda in the first round of the 2008\u201309 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup. Since then, they have played 35 matches in the national cup, winning in 22 of those matches and drawing 13, with a goal difference of 61 to 10. They won three of the last four national cups, since they lost the final in 2009\u201310 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup to Borac on an aggregate score of 3:3 after two draw matches. Borac won the cup because of more scored away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final, Matches, Report for the first leg, Details for the first leg\nAssistant referees:Sreten Udovi\u010di\u0107 (Prijedor)Senad Ibri\u0161imbegovi\u0107 (Travnik)Fourth official:Edin Jakupovi\u0107 (Biha\u0107)Additional assistant referees:Vladimir Bjelica (I. Sarajevo)Muamer Burekovi\u0107 (Zenica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 108], "content_span": [109, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232223-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup Final, Matches, Report for the second leg, Details for the second leg\nAssistant referees:Adnan Alispahi\u0107 (Zenica)\u017deljko Mari\u0107 (Doboj)Fourth official:Tomislav \u010cui\u0107 (Duvno)Additional assistant referees:Darko Obradovi\u0107 (Stolac)Goran Para\u0111ik (Ljubu\u0161ki)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 110], "content_span": [111, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232224-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Breakers season\nThe 2013 Boston Breakers season, is the club's eighth overall year of existence, fourth consecutive year, and first year as a member of the National Women's Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232224-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Breakers season, Background\nThe foundation of the league was announced on November 21, 2012, with Boston selected as a host for one of the eight teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232224-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Breakers season, Background\nLisa Cole was announced as the head coach on December 7, 2012 returning after leading the Breakers during a successful run in the Women's Premier Soccer League Elite the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232224-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Breakers 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232224-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Breakers season, Standings, Results summary\nLast updated: August 17, 2013Source: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, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232224-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Breakers season, Squad statistics\nKey to positions: FW \u2013 Forward, MF \u2013 Midfielder, DF \u2013 Defender, GK \u2013 Goalkeeper", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232224-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Breakers season, Squad statistics\nNote: jersey numbers were reassigned during the season, when a player left and another joined", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232225-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Cannons season\nThe 2013 Boston Cannons season was the 13th season for the Boston Cannons of Major League Lacrosse. The Cannons tried to build on their 9\u20135 playoff season in 2012 after winning their first Steinfeld Cup in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232226-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston City Council election\nBoston City Council elections were held on November 5, 2013. Twelve seats (eight district representatives and four at-large members) were contested in the general election, as the incumbent in district 3 was unopposed. Eight seats (the four at-large members, and districts 1, 4, 5, and 8) had also been contested in the preliminary election held on September 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232226-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston City Council election, At-large\nCouncillors Ayanna Pressley and Stephen J. Murphy were re-elected, while the seats formerly held by John R. Connolly and Felix G. Arroyo were won by Michael F. Flaherty and Michelle Wu. Connolly and Arroyo did not seek re-election, as they ran for Mayor of Boston; Arroyo was eliminated in the preliminary election, while Connolly was defeated by Marty Walsh in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232226-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston City Council election, District 5\nThe seat formerly held by Robert Consalvo was won by Timothy McCarthy. Consalvo did not seek re-election, as he was running for Mayor of Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232226-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston City Council election, District 8\nThe seat formerly held by Michael P. Ross was won by Josh Zakim. Ross did not seek re-election, as he was running for Mayor of Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team\nThe 2013 Boston College Eagles football team represented Boston College as a member of the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Steve Addazio and played their home games at Alumni Stadium. They finished the season 7\u20136 overall and 4\u20134 in ACC play to tie for third place in the Atlantic Division. They were invited to the AdvoCare V100 Bowl, where they were defeated by Arizona, 42\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Villanova\nIn Steve Addazio's first game as head coach and season opener for the Eagles, Boston College took on their historical foe, the Villanova Wildcats for the first time since 1980. Ranked #5 in the FCS polls, Villanova had a strong potential to upset an FBS team coming off a trying 2\u201310 year. The upset looked imminent as the Wildcats led 14\u20137 at halftime, the first score of which came on a spectacular 4th down field goal fake on the first drive of the game. However, the Eagles came out of the half energized and turned the game around to win 24\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Wake Forest\nIn the ACC opener for both teams, the Eagles took on the Demon Deacons on ESPN2 College Football Friday Primetime. BC's defense stifled the Deacons' option attack all game, while churning out scores on a 204-yard performance by senior running back Andre Williams, as the Eagles went 2\u20130 for the first time since 2010, and matched their win total from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ USC\nThe Eagles first loss of the season came at USC, as the Trojans dominated both sides of the ball in only the teams' fourth ever meeting. USC is 4\u20130 in games against Boston College. Coming into the game, BC had the potential to upset USC, who was coming off a 10\u20137 loss at Washington State, along with quarterback drama and dysfunctional leadership under head coach Lane Kiffin (who was fired later in the month). However, the hostile environment proved too much for Boston College and could not come up with an upset, let alone a fighting chance at winning the game, as they lost 35\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Florida State\nFlorida State visited the Heights ranked eighth in the country, but Boston College was determined to prove they were a different team than last year's 2\u201310 squad. The Eagles came out hot, taking a 17\u20133 lead before FSU mounted a late first half-comeback. The Seminoles finished the half with a crowd-stunning last second Hail Mary pass to take a 24\u201317 lead into the locker room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Florida State\nThe second half was a back and forth affair, with the Eagles' offense desperately trying to catch up in vain, as ultimately FSU's offense proved mightier, and the Seminoles escaped Chestnut Hill with a 48\u201334 victory. This victory proved pivotal for FSU, as they finished the season undefeated and ranked #1 in the national polls, and will be playing in the BCS National Championship game. In fact, FSU's game against Boston College was the last time in the 2013 season they trailed the other team during a game, and the last time they won a game with less than a 15-point victory margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Army\nThe Eagles bounced back from consecutive losses to strong teams with a solid 48\u201327 win over Army. Boston College did not take the Black Knights lightly, however, as they took revenge for a 34\u201331 comeback win by Army in the previous year at West Point. Running back Andre Williams ran for 263 yards and 5 touchdowns, 1 yard short of the school's single-game record, and tied the record for most rushing scores in a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Clemson\nIn another meeting against a top-10 conference foe, Boston College took the trip to Death Valley to take on the rival #3 Tigers. The Eagles were energized and effective, forcing turnovers and holding Clemson to only a field goal in the first half, and then took a 14\u201310 into the fourth quarter. However, even with the huge road upset within grasp, BC's defense could not hold off the Tigers, and lost the game 24\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ North Carolina\nAfter nearly upsetting the #3 Tigers, Boston College took the trip to Chapel Hill with hopes off \"going 1\u20130\" to start the second half of the season, against an uncharacteristically underachieving 1\u20135 UNC team. However, the Tar Heels had different hopes, as they were in danger of becoming bowl-ineligible. The Eagles played poorly as they lost their 9th consecutive road game, 34\u201310. The win for the Tar Heels started a 6-game winning streak to turn around their 1\u20135 season into a 6\u20136 bowl eligible one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Virginia Tech\nAfter nearly upsetting two top-10 teams earlier in the season, the Eagles finally managed one (although not a top-10 opponent) against the Hokies in an exciting back and forth 34\u201327 victory. In their characteristically strong home-field performance, the Eagles defense managed four turnovers against a 6\u20132 Virginia Tech team, who was coming off a disheartening 13\u201310 home loss against Duke. The win was only their 7th all time in 22 meetings against the Hokies and stopped a 5-game winning streak by them, which includes two ACC-Championship games. The win also got the Eagles back to .500 and doubled their win total from the previous season, while giving them a strong chance to become bowl eligible for the first time since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ New Mexico State\nIn the team's first-ever meeting, the Eagles and Aggies had a surprisingly closer game than anticipated. New Mexico State, one of the worst-ranked teams in all of the FBS and holding the dead-last rushing defense in the league, was going up against a revived and energized Eagles team coming off an upset victory against Virginia Tech and having the nation's second-leading rusher in Andre Williams. The game was supposed to be a pushover for the Eagles, but NMSU proved otherwise. Aggies Head coach Doug Martin was the Eagles' offensive coordinator in 2012, and used his knowledge of BC's personnel effectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ New Mexico State\nThe game was a back-and-forth affair, with both defenses struggling to keep their opposing offense from making big plays and scoring. However, as the game wore on and the depth of the teams became prominent, BC pulled away in the 4th off of two huge Andre Williams rushes for touchdowns, one 80-yard run, his season high, and another 47-yard to pull two scores away. Despite the closeness of the game, both teams put up huge numbers offensively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ New Mexico State\nAndre Williams set a new single-game school record with 295 yards rushing and 2 touchdowns, after nearly breaking the record earlier in the year against Army. Chase Rettig threw for 230 yards and 3 touchdowns. Alex Amidon, who also set a new school record for career yards received, caught 88 yards and 1 touchdown. True freshman Myles Willis returned a 98-yard kickoff for a touchdown in the 4th quarter. On the Aggies side, quarterback Andrew McDonald threw 384 yards with 3 touchdowns and 1 interception, while wide receiver Austin Franklin caught 145 yards and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0009-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ New Mexico State\nThe win ended a 9-game losing streak on the road for the Eagles, their first road win since 2010, while handing the Aggies their 9th loss of their season. BC looks to win their third straight next week against struggling North Carolina State at home, and become bowl eligible for the first time since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, NC State\nOn senior day, BC's final home game of the season, the Eagles beat NC State 38\u201321 and became bowl-eligible for the first time since 2010 due to a record-setting performance by the nation's leading rusher and Doak Walker candidate Andre Williams. After breaking the single-game rushing record the previous week at New Mexico State, Williams broke his own record by rushing for 339 yards on 42 carries, scoring 2 touchdowns. The single-game performance is also the ACC's single-game rushing record, breaking John Leach of Wake Forest's record of 329 yards in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, NC State\n339 yards was also the highest single-game performance by any FBS running back during the season. Williams also surpassed Mike Cloud's single-season BC record of 1,726 yards and put himself 385 yards shorts of BC's career rushing record owned by Montel Harris' 3,757 yards. Kicker Nate Freese also set a record, becoming the school's all-time leading scorer, with 299 points. The win tripled the previous season's win total and guaranteed at least a .500 record for the first time since 2010. After the game ended, the students and alumni rushed the field to celebrate with the team. The Boston Red Sox's 2013 World Series trophy was on display during the game as it toured various professional and collegiate teams in the Boston area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Maryland\nThe Eagles won their fourth consecutive victory and second road victory of the season the week after both BC and Maryland became bowl-eligible. It was an exciting back and forth affair, as Heisman candidate Andre Williams and the Eagles battled back every time the Terrapins pulled away. After Maryland took a 24\u201313 lead in the 4th quarter, Andre Williams ran for a 72-yard touchdown on the first play of the following drive to pull within 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Maryland\nOn the play, he passed 2,000 yards rushing for the season, becoming only the 16th player in NCAA history to pass the 2,000 mark, finishing the game 12th on the list for most rushing yards in a season. The Eagles' next drive resulted in Rettig throwing a 74-yard play action touchdown pass to Alex Amidon to take the 26\u201324 lead. However, on the PAT attempt, Nate Freese's kick was blocked and was recovered by Maryland while the ball was still live, and returned for a 2-point conversion to tie the game at 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Maryland\nThe blocked extra point was the first missed PAT or Field Goal of the season for Freese. With around 5:00 minutes remaining, Maryland attempted to drive down the field and take the lead back but was stopped and forced to punt, giving BC the ball at their 20 and a chance to win with less than 1:30 to play. A 36-yard run by Andre Williams put the Eagles within field goal range as head coach Steve Addazio elected to run the clock down and take a chance with Freese for the game winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Maryland\nFrom 52 yards away, Freese lined up to kick and win the game, but missed wide left. However, Maryland head coach Randy Edsall called a timeout before the kick to ice Freese, which none of the players heard. Freese was granted another chance, and didn't miss again. BC won the game 29\u201326. This was the final meeting between the teams in ACC conference play, as Maryland leaves for the Big Ten conference next season. Andre Williams continued his torrid pace, rushing for 263 yards and two scores, maintaining his NCAA lead in rushing yards and yards per game, all while continuing to gain support for Heisman candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Syracuse\nIn their final regular season game of the 2013 season, the Eagles fell in a closely fought battle with former Big East rival Syracuse. The Eagles took a 7\u20130 lead in the 1st on a 24-yard touchdown run by Heisman candidate Andre Williams, but let up 21 straight points in the 2nd quarter before answering with a touchdown in the final minute before going to the locker room. The Eagles got the ball to start the 2nd half but Williams left early in the opening drive with an injury to his right shoulder and did not return to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Syracuse\nTrue Freshman Myles Willis took over Williams' place and helped BC fight back and take a 28\u201324 lead in the 4th. Syracuse managed to kick a field goal to pull within a point but threw an interception on their next drive. The Eagles could only manage a field goal to push their lead back to four and gave Syracuse the ball with 2:08 with no timeouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Syracuse\nThe Orange drove 75 yards down the field in 2:01 and scored a touchdown with 0:06 left on the clock to seal the game, winning their 6th of the season and becoming the 11th bowl-eligible team in the ACC. Williams' injury and the loss effectively ended his chances at winning the Heisman trophy, but he was nonetheless named one of six finalists and finished 4th in the voting. For his performance, Williams was awarded the 2013 Doak Walker Award and was named a unanimous All-American. The Eagles finished the regular season at 7\u20135 and 4\u20134 in ACC play, a remarkable turnaround from the 2\u201310 performance in 2012. The Eagles will play in their 23rd bowl game on December 31, 2013, in the 2013 AdvoCare V100 Independence Bowl against the Arizona Wildcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Arizona\nThe Eagles final game of the season came against the Arizona Wildcats in the 2013 AdvoCare V100 Independence Bowl in Shreveport, LA. The game started close, as both teams traded turnovers on their opening drives. The score was 7\u20136 before Arizona scored 35 unanswered points as the BC defense could not prevent Ka'Deem Carey and the Arizona offense from scoring while the Eagles struggled to gain any offense of their own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232227-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston College Eagles football team, Game summaries, Arizona\nAndre Williams was kept in check with only 75 yards and 1 touchdown rushing on the day, but he finished the season with 2,177 yards, good for 5th most all-time in the NCAA. The Eagles finished the season 7\u20136 (4\u20134 ACC), poised to continue their improvement next season with a ripe group of incoming freshman and the leadership of Coach Steve Addazio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon\nThe 2013 Boston Marathon was the 117th running of the annual marathon race in Boston, United States, which took place on April 15, 2013. Organized by the Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A. ), it hosted the second of the World Marathon Majors to be held in 2013 with over 23,000 runners participating. Lelisa Desisa won the men's race with a time of 2:10:22, and Rita Jeptoo won the women's with a time of 2:26:25. Hiroyuki Yamamoto won the men's wheelchair race in 1:25:32 and Tatyana McFadden won the women's in 1:45:25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon\nThe event was disrupted by a terrorist attack in which two consecutive explosions on the sidewalk, near the finish line, killed three spectators and injured 264 other people. The competition became suspended and many runners were unable to participate in the remainder of the competition. The attack received widespread international media attention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Course\nThe marathon distance is officially 42.195 kilometres (26.219\u00a0mi) long as sanctioned by World Athletics (IAAF). The Boston Marathon course has been the same since the inaugural race in 1897. The start is in the town of Hopkinton and the first 6 miles (9.7\u00a0km) are downhill through Ashland and into the city of Framingham. Leaving Framingham, the runners enter the town of Natick, before passing through the 'Scream Tunnel' at mile 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Course\nThis area is filled with a 'tunnel' of young women from the nearby Wellesley College who request kisses from runners, a tradition that has been in place for more than 100 years. At mile 15, there is a large downhill section, followed by a 0.75-mile (1.21\u00a0km) climb at mile 16 crossing the Yankee Division Highway. The runners take a right turn onto Commonwealth Avenue in Newton before starting the first of the four 'Newton Hills'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Course\nThe first hill is a steep 1,200-yard (1,100\u00a0m) climb, the second about 0.25 miles (0.40\u00a0km), the third a steep 800 yards (730\u00a0m) before the runners start the infamous 'Heartbreak Hill' at just after mile 20. At half a mile long and with a 3.3% percent incline, it is not especially difficult, but due to the hill being 20 miles (32\u00a0km) into the race, it is still feared as the runners' legs are usually tired at this point. The course is mostly downhill to the end, and passes through Boston College before entering Cleveland Circle then Kenmore Square where there are many spectators. The final mile has a slight incline, before it flattens off to finish on Boylston Street.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Field\nThe fastest competitor in the women's race was Meseret Hailu who had run 2:21:09 to win the 2012 Amsterdam Marathon and 1:08:55 to win the 2012 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships. 2011 Frankfurt Marathon winner Mamitu Daska, runner-up at the 2012 Berlin Marathon Tirfi Tsegaye, and winner of the 2012 Chicago Marathon Rita Jeptoo were also racing. 2012 champion Sharon Cherop returned to defend her title. Reigning wheelchair champions Joshua Cassidy and Shirley Reilly returned to defend their titles in their respective categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Field\nWesley Korir returned to defend his 2012 title in the men's race. He had most recently finished fifth in the 2012 Chicago Marathon. Also competing were 2013 Dubai Marathon winner Lelisa Desisa, 2012 Boston Marathon runner-up Levy Matebo Omari, 2011 Los Angeles Marathon winner Markos Geneti, 2011 New York City Marathon winner Gebre Gebremariam, and 2010 Boston Marathon winner Robert Kiprono Cheruiyot. In total, there were nine sub-2:07 runners in the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Field\nThe wheelchair race began at 9:17 EDT (UTC-4), the women's at 9:32 EDT and the men's at 10:00 EDT. In the men's and women's races, the winner received $150,000, with second and third receiving $75,000 and $40,000, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nAfter 26 seconds of silence to honor the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, the marathon got underway with 53 wheelchair competitors leaving Hopkinton. The temperature at start time was in the upper 40\u00a0\u00b0F (8\u201310\u00a0\u00b0C) range and rose to 54\u00a0\u00b0F (12\u00a0\u00b0C) at the finish. Hiroyuki Yamamoto of Japan aimed to make a move at the 5-kilometre (3.1\u00a0mi) mark, and at 8 miles (13\u00a0km) into the race had built up a lead of 200 yards (180\u00a0m), which he held until the end to win in a time of 1:25:32. This was the first time that Yamamoto, aged 46, had competed in the Boston Marathon. He beat South African Ernst Van Dyk by 39 seconds. In the women's weelchair race, Tatyana McFadden, who was also competing in the race for the first time, won in a time of 1:45:25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nIn the women's race, a small pack broke away from the main pack early on. All the runners but Yolanda Caballero dropped back to the main pack while Caballero continued on past half-way. She was eventually caught when Ana Dulce F\u00e9lix increased the pace and broke away from the main pack to gain a lead of 76 seconds. She was caught in 3 miles (4.8\u00a0km) by a group comprising Jeptoo, Cherop, Hailu and Shalane Flanagan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nJeptoo managed to break away from the others after 40 kilometres (25\u00a0mi) when climbing an overpass to cross the Massachusetts Turnpike, and finished in a time of 2:26:25. She finished 33 seconds ahead of Hailu, who took second place. Cherop took third, 3 seconds behind Hailu and Flanagan finished fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nIn the men's race, Jason Hartmann and Fernando Cabada led during the early miles before a group of nine caught up before half-way. The pack of eleven passed half-way in a slow time of 1:04:44, before Robin Watson, Geneti, Micah Kogo, and Dickson Chumba made surges. However, it was Chumba's surge that broke up the pack; only Desisa, Matebo Omari, Geneti, and 2009 winner Deriba Merga remained, with Gebremariam, Kogo, Raji Assefa, and Korir falling a few seconds behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nDesisa made a surge in the 24th mile to further reduce the pack to just himself, Kogo and Gebremariam (who had both caught back on). In the final mile, Desisa was able to pull away in a sprint to win in 2:10:22. Kogo finished five seconds back in 2:10:27 and Gebremariam finished a second behind Kogo in 2:10:28, with Hartmann taking fourth, as he did in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Race summary\nIn total, 23,336 competitors, from all 50 states plus Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico, and from 92 countries, started the marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Bombing\nAt 2:49 EDT, race clock time 4:09.43, almost two hours after the winners had completed, two explosions occurred near the finish line. Three spectators were killed and 264 others injured. Among the injured, 17 were reported in critical condition, with at least 14 people requiring amputations. The race was halted 8 minutes after the explosions; runners east of Massachusetts Avenue were diverted into Boston Common, while those west of it were diverted to Kenmore Square. Over 5,000 participants who were unable to finish due to the race being halted were given medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232228-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Marathon, Bombing\nOn May 16, the Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) gave participants who ran at least half the distance but were not able to complete the 2013 Marathon early entry into the 2014 race. The B.A.A. agreed to allow these 5,633 runners entry in August, compared to September for regular entrants. Qualifying standards were also waived for them. A memorial was erected in August 2019 on Boylston Street. It was built by sculptor Pablo Eduardo and consists of bronze spires surrounding two granite pillars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232229-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Pizza Cup\nThe 2013 Alberta Boston Pizza Cup, the men's provincial curling championship for Alberta, was held from February 6 to 10 at the Leduc Recreation Centre in Leduc, Alberta. The winner of the Boston Pizza Cup represented Alberta at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232229-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Pizza Cup, Qualification process\nTwelve teams qualified for the provincial tournament through several methods. The qualification process is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232230-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Pizza Cup \u2013 Qualification\nQualification for the 2013 Boston Pizza Cup consisted of both direct and indirect qualification. The defending champion and the highest-ranked team on the Canadian Team Ranking System qualified directly, as do two teams from the Alberta Curling Federation based on their performance on the \u0307World Curling Tour. Eight more teams qualified through qualification events hosted by the constituent associations of the Alberta Curling Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232230-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Pizza Cup \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Peace Curling Association\nThe Peace Curling Association qualifier was held from January 4 to 6 at the Dawson Creek Curling Club in Dawson Creek, British Columbia. The qualifier was held as a double knockout tournament, with the winners of the tournament qualifying to the provincials. Kurt Balderston and Graham Powell qualified their teams to the provincials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 86], "content_span": [87, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232230-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Pizza Cup \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Northern Alberta Curling Association\nThe Northern Alberta Curling Association qualifier was held from January 17 to 20 at the Ottewell Curling Club in Edmonton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232230-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Pizza Cup \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Southern Alberta Curling Association\nThe Southern Alberta Curling Association qualifier was held from January 18 to 21 at the Brooks Curling Club in Brooks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season\nThe 2013 Boston Red Sox season was the 113th season in the franchise's Major League Baseball history. Under new manager John Farrell, the Red Sox finished first in the American League East with a record of 97 wins and 65 losses. In the postseason, the Red Sox first defeated the AL wild card Tampa Bay Rays in the ALDS. In the ALCS, the Red Sox defeated the American League Central champion Detroit Tigers in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season\nAdvancing to the World Series, the Red Sox defeated the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals in six games, to capture the franchise's eighth championship overall and third in ten years. The Red Sox became the second team to win the World Series the season after finishing last in their division; the first had been the 1991 Minnesota Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, Opening Day\nThe 2013 Red Sox season opened on April 1, with an afternoon road game against the New York Yankees. Jon Lester went five innings, leading to an 8\u20132 win for the Red Sox. This was Boston's first Opening Day victory since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nFollowing their Opening Day triumph, the Red Sox improved to 2\u20130 on Wednesday, April 3, in the second tilt of the three-game series, in a game that saw offseason acquisition Joel Hanrahan rack up his first save as a Red Sox. Boston failed to complete the sweep, however, with starting pitcher Ryan Dempster relinquishing a 4\u20132 defeat in his Red Sox debut the following evening. In Toronto, the Sox split the first two games of a series against the Blue Jays on April 5 and 6, winning 6\u20134 in the first frame and falling 5\u20130 in the second. Boston was then victorious in the rubber game, shutting out the Jays 13\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nThe Red Sox won their fourth straight against the Cleveland Indians on April 16. The Red Sox and Indians wore black armbands to honor the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing. A giant American flag flew at half-mast before the series opener with a moment of silence prior to the first pitch. A young Indians fan presented the Red Sox with a sign he wrote in red ink and ornamented with hearts. The note, which was hung in Boston's dugout, read: \"From our city to your city: Our hearts and prayers go out to you, Boston. Love, Cleveland.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nFor the entire game, a jersey with No. 617 (one of Boston's area codes), displaying \"Boston\" above the numerals and \"Strong\" below them, hung in the Sox' dugout. Additionally, to commemorate Jackie Robinson Day, both teams wore No. 42 jerseys. The Red Sox also placed closer Joel Hanrahan on the disabled list with a hamstring injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nThe Red Sox swept two consecutive series between April 13\u201318. One at home against the Tampa Bay Rays and another on the road against the Cleveland Indians, resulting in a six-game winning streak which improved their record to 11\u20134, and put them in first place in the American League East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nThe Red Sox had a scheduled weekend series against the Kansas City Royals during April 19\u201321. The immediate Greater Boston area went on a citywide lockdown in search of a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombing on the morning of April 19 and the first game of the weekend was postponed. The Red Sox reported the decision was made \"to support efforts of law enforcement officers.\" A make-up date for the game was not immediately announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nHowever, with the second suspect captured that same evening and Fenway Park under tight security, play resumed Saturday, April 20 with a win of 4\u20133 by Boston over the Royals (assisted by a go-ahead three-run home run by Daniel Nava). Both teams honored the victims of the bombing tragedy by wearing special uniforms/logos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nThe Red Sox wore white home jerseys with \"Boston\" on the front instead of the customary \"Red Sox\" while Kansas City players and staff wore a \"B Strong\" patch on the front of their jerseys, with the shirts being auctioned off for funds to support victims of the bombing. Following a pregame ceremony, the Red Sox won their sixth straight game, their best start in 11 years with the win against Kansas City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nDavid Ortiz was bothered by inflammation in both heels during spring training and didn't play in any exhibition games, but he was 2 for 4 in his return, tying the score 1-all with a sixth-inning RBI single off James Shields. The Red Sox later announced Friday's (April 19) game would be made up as part of a day-night doubleheader on Sunday (April 21). The regularly scheduled game took place at 1:35\u00a0p.m., and a nightcap at 7 p.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nOn April 21, Kansas City ended Boston's seven-game winning streak with a 4\u20132 win over the Red Sox in the opener of a day-night doubleheader. The Royals ended a season-opening streak of 16 games by Red Sox starters allowing three runs or less, tying an AL record achieved by the Oakland Athletics in 1978 and 1981. Red Sox RF Shane Victorino missed his first game of the season after leaving the game on April 20 with back spasms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nIn the second game of the doubleheader, Kansas City narrowly beat Boston 5\u20134 in 10 innings to win the weekend series (and sweep the doubleheader), as a result of Lorenzo Cain walking with two outs and bases loaded in the 10th inning. Even with both wins against the Red Sox on April 21, Boston remained in first place in the AL East as did Kansas City in the AL Central.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nDustin Pedroia reached base in all their first 18 games, the most consecutive games to start a season by a Red Sox 2B (breaking the record set by Pete Runnels in 1959). Koji Uehara went 18 1/3 scoreless innings before allowing Billy Butler's homer in the eighth inning of the night game. In his first two at bats on the day game, Jonny Gomes used a bat with the words \"Boston Strong\" on it as well as the names of the four people killed in the bombing and its aftermath. He popped out and grounded out, then said he planned to auction off the bats for charity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nOpening a new series against Oakland, the Red Sox came out victorious (9\u20136) in the first game on April 22. They were defeated (13\u20130) in a rain-shortened 7-inning game on April 23. Boston proceeded to win the rubber game of the series on April 24 by a score of 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nThe Red Sox swept a four-game home stand on April 25\u201328 against the Astros, their first series against Houston since the Astros moved to the American League West. The sweep improved Boston's record to 18\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, April\nThe Red Sox closed April by falling, 9\u20137, on the road to the Blue Jays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, May\nBoston opened the month of May in the middle of a three-game road series against Toronto. Having lost the first game on April 30, the Red Sox won the next two games 10\u20131 and 3\u20131 on May 1 and 2. Traveling to Texas to take on the Rangers, the team was shut out for the third time of the season, relinquishing 7 runs and 18 hits to Texas on May 3. The Rangers took the next two games, on May 4 and 5, by respective scores of 5\u20131 and 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, May\nThis marked the first time Boston was swept in the 2013 season. The Red Sox' May slide continued when they lost three of four games at home against Minnesota from May 6\u20139. They closed out their weeklong homestand by losing 2 of 3 to the Blue Jays from May 10\u201312. On Sunday, May 12, the Red Sox' new 2013 starting pitcher, Ryan Dempster, fell to 2\u20134 in a game in which Boston relinquished 12 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, May\nTraveling to Tampa Bay, the Red Sox recovered by taking two of three games from the Rays from May 14\u201316. Boston scored three runs in the top of the 9th inning on May 16. Opening a weekend series in Minnesota against the Twins, the Red Sox posted another come-from-behind victory on May 17, tying the game in the 7th inning and scoring the winning run in the 10th. Boston swept the series with 12\u20135 and 5\u20131 triumphs on May 18 and 19, improving their winning streak to five games and their record to 27\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, May\nBoston then closed out their road trip with a three-game series against the Chicago White Sox. The Red Sox lost the first two games on May 20 and 21, but avoided the sweep in a 6\u20132 victory on May 22 that brought starting pitcher Clay Buchholz's record to 7\u20130. The Red Sox welcomed 2004\u201311 manager and two-time World Series champion manager Terry Francona back to Fenway Park on May 23 as they hosted Francona's new team, the Cleveland Indians. Francona received a standing ovation in the first game of the four-game series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, May\nBoston fell to Cleveland in a lopsided 12\u20133 loss on May 23, but proceeded to triumph in the following three matches on May 24, 25 and 26 to win the four-game series. On Memorial Day, May 27, the Red Sox opened a four-game home-and-home series against Philadelphia, the team's first interleague series of 2013. The Phillies are considered Boston's interleague \"rival\", playing the Red Sox every season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0013-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, May\nThe first two games of the series were held at Fenway Park, with the Red Sox winning on May 27 but then losing, 3\u20131, on May 28, in a game in which former Boston closer Jonathan Papelbon was awarded a save. Papelbon repeated the feat again on May 29 as the series shifted to Philadelphia. These were Papelbon's second and third saves against the Red Sox since leaving the team; he recorded the other on May 18, 2012. Boston evened the four-game series with a 9\u20132 victory on Thursday, May 30. Center fielder Jacoby Ellsbury set a Red Sox record with five stolen bases in the game. The Red Sox closed out the month of May with a road loss against the archrival Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, June\nBoston's series in the Bronx continued on June 1 and 2, and the Red Sox racked up two victories to take the three-game series. The Sox pounded the Yankees, 11\u20131, on June 1, and prevailed, 3\u20130, in a rain-shortened six-inning game on June 2 that was eventually called due to thunderstorms. Clay Buchholz's record remained spotless at 8\u20130. Coming home to Fenway Park, the Red Sox took 2 of 3 games from the Texas Rangers from June 4\u20136, including a 17\u20135 romp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, June\nOn June 8, Boston faced the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in a day-night doubleheader, losing the first game but winning the second as Buchholz's aforementioned perfect record improved to 9\u20130. To close out the series, the Red Sox gave Angels starting pitcher Joe Blanton his tenth loss of the season in a 10\u20135 victory on June 9. The condensed two-day series and day-night doubleheader were necessitated by effects from Tropical Storm Andrea which rained out the scheduled Friday, June 7 game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, June\nHeading back out on the road, the Red Sox played a 14-inning game on national television as ESPN's Monday Night Baseball covered the 10\u20138 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field. This was the second longest game by time in Rays history. The Red Sox gave up a 6\u20130 lead after a first inning in which the first eight Boston batters all reached base, and then Andrew Bailey had a blown save in the 10th inning, giving up two Tampa Bay runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, June\nEventually, well after midnight, the Red Sox scored two runs in the top of the 14th which were unanswerable by the Rays in the bottom half of the inning. The Red Sox then split the two remaining games of the series to win 2 of its 3 games. Boston lost 3 of 4 games in a road series against Baltimore from June 13\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, June\nAfter losing 3 out of 4 in a tough series to the Detroit Tigers, the Red Sox would go to win 5 of their next 6 in June and extending that streak for 9 out of 10 into July, which included a walk-off home run against the San Diego Padres by Jonny Gomes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nAfter sweeping the San Diego Padres the Red Sox headed west for a 10-game road trip and extended the winning streak to 5 games with a win against the Los Angeles Angels. On the following day Boston dropped a 4-run lead with 2 outs in the bottom of the 9th against the Halos, with Koji Uehara's second blown save out of six save opportunities since taking over the closer role from Andrew Bailey on June 21, and ultimately lost the game 9\u20137 in the 11th inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nBoston then lost the following 2 games against Los Angeles (splitting the season series 3\u20133 in the process) and the Seattle Mariners before starting a 4-game winning streak, taking 3 out of 4 games against the M's and the first game of the series against the A's. The 4 game series in Seattle saw the first Major League win for Pitcher Steven Wright and the first appearance of Brandon Workman in the big leagues. Workman had his first start only 4 days later against the Oakland Athletics, taking a no-hit bid to the 7th inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nIn Oakland the Red Sox bats went cold, scoring only 6 runs in 3 games, and losing the remaining 2 games which led to a season series split of 3\u20133. Boston headed with a 58\u201339 record to the All-Star break, leading the AL with 1 game ahead of the Athletics (56\u201339) and with most wins in the majors, just ahead of the St. Louis Cardinals with 57\u201336, who entered the break with the best record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nFollowing the All-Star break the Red Sox played the Yankees for the first time at Fenway in 2013. Like the previous two series in the Bronx, Boston could take 2 out of 3 games against New York. Mike Napoli secured the series win in the rubber match with a walk-off home run in the bottom of the 11th. With 1.5 games behind Boston, Tampa Bay visited the Fens for their third and final time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nThe Rays took game one and shrunk the lead to just .5 games, the smallest margin since Boston took over the lead in the AL East on May 27. In game 2 the Red Sox put themselves back to a 1.5 game lead, including Shane Victorino's steal of home in a delayed double steal with Dustin Pedroia, who agreed to a seven-year contract extension through the 2021 season a day later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nTampa Bay threatened the AL East lead again by taking game 3 but game 4 was rain delayed and later postponed to the scheduled off day on July 29, after Boston's 3 game road trip to Camden Yards and Rays' trip to the Bronx.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0017-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nIn game one against Baltimore, the only team in the AL East Boston had a losing record against at that time, the Red Sox were shut out for the fourth time in July (with four shutouts in all of April, May and June combined) and lost the AL East top spot for the first time since May 27. Boston battled back and took game 2 with Stephen Drew going yard twice for the second time in his career in a single game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0017-0004", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nGame 2 also saw the ejection of David Ortiz in the top of the 7th, following an argument over balls and strikes with homeplate umpire Tim Timmons and the destruction of a dugout phone with his bat. In the rubber match, Big Papi homered for the 20th time that season, his 12th consecutive season with 20+ home runs and his 11th with Boston, joining Dwight Evans and Jim Rice but still behind Ted Williams, who accomplished this feat in 16 seasons with the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0017-0005", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nJon Lester earned his 10th individual win, the first Red Sox pitcher to reach that mark in 2013, and Boston were able to shut out the Orioles and reclaimed the AL East lead just to give it back the next day to the Rays in the makeup match of the 4 game series in which the Red Sox fell victim to a controversial call at home plate. Umpire Jerry Meals incorrectly ruled Daniel Nava out which would have tied the game in the 8th inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0017-0006", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, July\nThe Red Sox wrapped up the month of July at home with back-to-back wins against the Mariners, including a 15 inning game (the longest season game to date for the Red Sox). Both games saw the first major league wins for Brandon Workman, in his third start, and Drake Britton respectively. On July 30, Boston acquired starting pitcher Jake Peavy from the White Sox in a three-way deal, sending infielder Jos\u00e9 Iglesias to the Tigers and Avisa\u00edl Garc\u00eda from Detroit to Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, August\nAugust started just like July ended, with a walk-off win against the Mariners. In the series finale, the Red Sox were trailing by five in the ninth, but scored six runs for their 11th walk-off win in 2013. This was the biggest ninth inning come from behind victory since the 2007 Mother's Day Miracle against the Orioles and the biggest eighth inning comeback, trailing by 6, since July 3, 1940, against the Athletics, at that time still located in their origin city Philadelphia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, August\nDespite winning the first two series against the Diamondbacks and the Astros the Red Sox played .500 ball for the first 3+1\u20442 weeks of August. The interleague series against Arizona saw the first start for newly acquired starting pitcher Jake Peavy, who tied the series with a strong performance after the D-Backs took game one, with the winning run driven in by former Red Sox player Cody Ross. In a combined effort of Doubront and the bullpen, Boston shut-out the team from the NL West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, August\nWith no off-day the Red Sox headed west to play the Astros for the first time in Minute Maid Park as a team of the American League. In a slugging fest, with 25 runs and 26 hits of both teams combined, Boston took game two after completely failing to score in game one and took the series in game three with a come from behind victory in the ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0018-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, August\nSlowly crawling their way back east the Red Sox stopped for a four-game series in Kansas City dropping 3 games before heading to Toronto, dropping two out of three against the AL East rival but still maintaining a 2-game lead over the Rays. On their second visit to Boston, the Yankees clinched their first series of the season against the fierce rival by taking two games out of three. Red Sox lost their season tying three series in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, August\nThe tides turned when Boston headed to the west coast for a three-game series against the 2012 World Series champion San Francisco and the, to that time, red hot Dodgers. Lester with the help of Workman shut-out the Giants in game one before the Red Sox dropped game two and giving the AL East lead to the Rays but earning the lead back holding San Francisco to a single run in game three. In game one in Los Angeles Boston could not score but were able to take game two and three, inflicting the Dodgers first series loss since June 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, August\nBack home in Boston the Red Sox took two out of three against Baltimore and the two remaining games in August against the White Sox for their 28th series win that season and a 4+1\u20442-game lead over the Rays in the AL East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nBoston swept the White Sox and extended the AL East lead to 5+1\u20442 games but ended a streak of 11 games allowing only three runs or less. Another streak however continued in game one of the home series against the Tigers. John Lackey received absolutely no run support for the fifth time of his last 11 starts and four or less runs in the ninth game over the same stretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nAllowing only one run and handing Max Scherzer just his second loss of the season, the Red Sox took game two and exploded in game three, scoring 20 runs, a season high amongst all Major League teams, on 19 hits including 8 long balls. On their last trip to the Bronx, Boston headed into the seventh with a five-run lead, but the combination of Peavy, Thornton and Tazawa could not stop the Yankees from scoring 6 runs. Down on their last strike, Boston scored against New York's closer Mariano Rivera in the ninth and took game one in extra frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nDown by five, Boston scored nine runs in two innings, including a grand slam by Mike Napoli and took game two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0021-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nIn search for run support the offense gave Lackey 13 runs in game three, the most in any start for him this season, to extend the winning streak to five and extending the lead in the AL East to a season-high 8+1\u20442 games but failed to sweep the four-game set when Workman gave up a walk-off wild pitch in the bottom of the ninth after Rivera suffered his second blown save in the series while trying for a two-inning save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0021-0004", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nBuchholz returned to the rotation three months after his last start on June 8 and protected his undefeated season record in game one of a three-game series in St. Peterburg by allowing, with the help of the relievers, no runs. In game two Mike Carp hit a game-deciding pinch-hit grand slam in the tenth but Boston failed to sweep the Rays in the series finale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nBack at Fenway Park for the last regular season home stand, Jarrod Saltalamacchia became the third Red Sox player within a week to hit a grand slam, breaking a tie in the seventh against the Yankees, and Koji Uehara set a new franchise record by retiring his 37th consecutive batter. Jon Lester and Clay Buchholz then secured the series sweep by back-to-back strong outings. Lester allowed only one run on three hits, while Buchholz allowed only one unearned run on two hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nStruggling again against the Orioles, Boston dropped the first two games before John Lackey posted a two hit gem and the Red Sox clinched a spot in the postseason. With a Tampa Bay loss, the Red Sox cut the magic number for winning the division down to 1. A day later the Red Sox clinched their first AL East title since 2007 by beating the Toronto Blue Jays 6\u20133. In game two Buchholz suffered his first loss of the season, albeit allowing only three runs, two of them earned. Boston secured the series with a 5\u20132 win on their last regular season home game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nOn their last interleague trip, the Red Sox split the two-game series against the Colorado Rockies, losing game one but winning game two, scoring 15 runs. Will Middlebrooks posted two home runs, including the fifth grand slam in the month of September for Boston, and David Ortiz collected his 100th RBI on the season. On September 27, the Red Sox secured home field advantage for the American League Division Series by beating the Orioles 12\u20133. Ortiz hit his 30th home run of the season, making it his seventh season with 30 HR/100 RBI, tying Ted Williams for the club record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Regular Season highlights, September\nA day later, the Red Sox secured home field advantage throughout the playoffs thanks to a 7\u20135 loss by the Oakland A's to the Seattle Mariners, making the last two games virtually pointless. Boston lost both games, giving up a 5\u20130 lead in the fifth in game three. The Red Sox headed into the postseason with the best record in the majors, tied with the St. Louis Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 1, October 4\nThe Red Sox had a shaky opening in Game 1, with Jon Lester surrendering solo home runs to Sean Rodriguez and Ben Zobrist. However, the Red Sox' offense ignited in the bottom of the fourth inning, with several doubles combining with poor Tampa Bay fielding to stitch together a five-run frame. Boston then tacked on three more in the bottom of the 5th and four more in the bottom of the 8th. Jon Lester pitched 7 2/3 innings, having surrendered only 3 hits and 2 earned runs. Junichi Tazawa and Ryan Dempster provided effective relief pitching in the eighth and ninth to seal the Game 1 victory for the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 2, October 5\nDavid Ortiz had his first multi-home run postseason game to lead the Red Sox to victory, smashing solo blasts in the 1st and 8th innings. Tampa Bay starter David Price had a rough outing, being charged with all seven of Boston's runs. The Rays attempted to catch up with the Red Sox with significant offense in the 2nd, 5th, and 6th innings, but their efforts were fruitless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 2, October 5\nIn the 7th and 8th innings, the Rays threatened with two runners on base, but in each frame no runners could score for Tampa Bay due to inning-ending 4\u20136\u20133 double plays to conserve the Sox' two-run lead, which stretched to a three-run gap with Ortiz's home run. In the top of the ninth, closer Koji Uehara struck out the first two batters he was facing and the game ended with an unassisted ground out by Mike Napoli to secure the 2\u20130 series lead. Throughout the game, fans at Fenway Park heckled Wil Myers, a Tampa Bay right fielder who made a critical error that had helped open up scoring for the Red Sox in Game 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 3, October 7\n6:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 3, October 7\nThe Red Sox jumped on the scoreboard early in Game 3, with a one-run top of the 1st inning, but Rays starter Alex Cobb kept the Rays in the game. In the top of the 5th inning, Boston added two more runs, giving them a three-run cushion, but their lead was shattered in the bottom half of the frame with one swing, a three-run home run by Evan Longoria. Neither team scored again until the bottom 8th, when Delmon Young drove in a go-ahead RBI. The Red Sox battled back in the top of the 9th inning, tying the game with runners on second and third base, and closer Koji Uehara's efforts retired two batters easily in the bottom of the 9th, until Tampa Bay catcher Jos\u00e9 Lobat\u00f3n suddenly crushed a walk-off solo home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 4, October 8\n8:37\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 4, October 8\nStarter Jake Peavy pitched 5 2/3 solid innings for Boston, but the Rays got on the board first in the bottom of the fifth with a deep outfield RBI double by David DeJesus. This, however, would prove to be Tampa Bay's lone run. Boston threatened early with two walks and a single, which could not score David Ortiz from second, in the top of the second. With the bases loaded the Rays pulled their struggling starter Jeremy Hellickson, responsible for all three runners, and Jamey Wright successfully pitched out of the jam with a strike out and a double play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 4, October 8\nTampa Bay sent a postseason record nine pitchers to the mound in the course of the game, emptying their bullpen, and scheduled game five starter David Price was warming in the pen. In the top of the seventh, with two on and two outs, Jacoby Ellsbury stole second base, his fourth steal of the series, and advanced to third on a wild pitch, which scored Xander Bogaerts from third. Shane Victorino legged out the two out infield hit to score the runner from third and gave the Red Sox the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Division Series vs. Tampa Bay Rays, Game 4, October 8\nIn the top of the ninth, a melting Rays closer Fernando Rodney walked two of the first three batters he faced and drilled Victorino on a two strike pitch. This was the fourth time Victorino was hit by a pitch in this series. With the bases loaded Dustin Pedroia delivered a sacrifice fly which scored Bogaerts to add some insurance for Boston. Closer Koji Uehara came into the game with two outs in the bottom of the eighth and successfully racked up the four-out save. Uehara struck out Evan Longoria, who had hit a game-tying home run in Game 3, to send the Rays home and to secure a spot in the 2013 American League Championship Series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 120], "content_span": [121, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 1, October 12\nBoston's bats were ice cold in Game 1, nearly ceding a combined no-hitter to the Tigers. The Red Sox saved themselves from the embarrassment of being no-hit with a Daniel Nava single in the bottom of the ninth inning, but Boston failed to rally further to make up the one-run gap. Detroit had scored the game's lone run by virtue of a Jhonny Peralta RBI in the sixth inning. While Red Sox starter Jon Lester allowed only one run, he did give up nine hits and struck out six batters, whereas Detroit's An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez struck out twelve. S\u00e1nchez walked six batters, but those who were fortunate enough to get on base could never stitch together any runs. Ultimately, Boston's disgruntled offense would strike out 17 times, an ALCS record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 2, October 13\nTiger pitching again came out strong, with starter Max Scherzer holding the Red Sox hitless through five innings. At the end of the fifth inning, the Red Sox had not recorded a base hit but had held Detroit to only one run, making the game look very similar circumstantially to Game 1. However, Red Sox starter Clay Buchholz gave up home runs to Miguel Cabrera and Alex Avila in the top of the 6th, widening the Tigers' lead to five runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 2, October 13\nThe Red Sox scrounged out one run in the bottom of the 6th, a Dustin Pedroia RBI double which seemed insignificant at the time but would prove crucial later. Neither team scored in the seventh inning. In the bottom of the eighth inning, the Red Sox were able to load the bases, and David Ortiz crushed a two-out grand slam to tie the score at 5\u20135 off the first pitch from new Detroit pitcher Joaqu\u00edn Benoit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0031-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 2, October 13\nThe home run provided one of the 2013 season's most enduring images, when Tigers outfielder (and Ortiz's close friend) Torii Hunter dove over the wall into the Red Sox' bullpen in an attempt to catch the ball, resulting in his legs being completely vertical while Boston Police officer Steve Horgan lifted his arms in celebration. Following the home run, Mike Napoli struck out to stop the bleeding for the Tigers. Boston closer Koji Uehara held Detroit hitless in the top of the ninth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0031-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 2, October 13\nJonny Gomes started off the Red Sox offense in the bottom of the ninth with a single. Gomes was then able to advance to second base on a flubbed fielding play. Gomes then took third base on a Rick Porcello wild pitch, and easily scored the winning run on a walk-off hit from Jarrod Saltalamacchia, capping the stunning comeback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 2, October 13\nEarlier in the day, the New England Patriots had a stunning comeback of their own, with quarterback Tom Brady throwing a touchdown with 5 seconds left to beat the New Orleans Saints at home by a score of 30\u201327. The dual-victory was renowned as one of the most sensational days in Boston sports history, and will be remembered for some time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 3, October 15\nMike Napoli's one-out, seventh-inning solo home run was one of only four hits surrendered by Detroit starter Justin Verlander, and yet it was enough to lift the Red Sox to victory. The Tigers outhit the Red Sox, and Detroit had several prime scoring opportunities, especially in the first and eighth innings, but all were stanched by effective pitching from starter John Lackey, relievers Craig Breslow and Junichi Tazawa, and closer Koji Uehara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 3, October 15\nAlthough there was still daylight present, Game 3 temporarily ceased in the middle of the second inning due to a light failure at Comerica Park which commenced at 4:42\u00a0p.m. EDT and lasted for seventeen minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 4, October 16\nBoston starter Jake Peavy melted early, surrendering a five-run second inning to the Tigers. Detroit added two more in the fourth inning before being relieved by Brandon Workman, and that was all the Tigers would need to coast to a 7\u20133 victory. Boston scratched out runs in the sixth, seventh, and ninth innings, but could never ignite an offensive rally as they did in Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 4, October 16\nWith the loss, the series was guaranteed to return to Boston for Game 6 at Fenway Park on Saturday, October 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 5, October 17\nMike Napoli hit a 445\u00a0ft blast of a solo home-run off of Detroit's An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez (who had surrendered no hits to the Red Sox in Game 1), igniting a 3-run second inning that saw David Ross and Jacoby Ellsbury also drive in runs. Boston added an important insurance run in the third, which turned out to be the difference in game five, with Mike Napoli scoring on a wild pitch by S\u00e1nchez. The Red Sox allowed Detroit to stay in the game, however, surrendering a run each in the fifth, sixth, and seventh innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 5, October 17\nIn the seventh, the Tigers scored on a double play, bringing them within a run. Craig Breslow pitched to only one batter in the bottom of the eighth inning, and then closer Koji Uehara again worked his magic to secure the win for Boston, striking out two batters and earning a five-out save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, American League Championship Series vs. Detroit Tigers, Game 6, October 19\nThe Red Sox scored first, but, with the bases loaded and nobody out, the Tigers took the lead on a two-run single off the Green Monster. Reliever Brandon Workman stopped the bleeding and in the bottom of the seventh inning, Shane Victorino's one-out grand slam home run off of Detroit reliever Jos\u00e9 Veras launched the Red Sox into a 5\u20132 lead, which they maintained to finish off the Tigers in six games and head to the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, who had punched their ticket to the Fall Classic a day earlier by defeating the Dodgers. Victorino's grand slam was the second in the ALCS by the Red Sox, which was the first time that a team hit more than one grand slam in the same series in the postseason since the Atlanta Braves in the 1998 NLDS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 125], "content_span": [126, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 1, October 23\nJon Lester pitched a gem, going 7 2/3 shutout innings as the Red Sox started early with a bases clearing 3-run double by Mike Napoli in the first. They extended their to lead to 5\u20130 in the second, during which Carlos Beltr\u00e1n robbed David Ortiz of a second postseason grand slam, injuring himself on the play. Ortiz later put an exclamation mark on the game with a 2-run shot to right in the 7th, for his 4th HR of the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 1, October 23\nMatt Holliday prevented a shutout by hitting a solo shot into the Green Monster in the top of the 9th off Ryan Dempster. Dating back to 2004, the Red Sox have scored a run in the first inning for five straight games against the Cardinals in postseason play and have won nine straight World Series games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 2, October 24\nThe Red Sox suffered their first World Series loss since 1986 in that year's Game 7. Down 1\u20130 in the sixth inning, further long-ball theatrics were showcased by David Ortiz, who hit a two-run home run with Dustin Pedroia on base to give Boston a 2\u20131 lead. However, it all went to naught for the Red Sox in the seventh inning when two fielding errors on the same play gave St. Louis the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 2, October 24\nWith the bases loaded with one out and Craig Breslow pitching in relief, Matt Carpenter hit a fly ball to left field, but the runner on third beat the throw home, tying the game. Catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia then flubbed the ball, which was retrieved by the pitcher Breslow. Breslow then made an errant throw to third base, allowing Jon Jay to score as well, giving St. Louis a 3\u20132 advantage. Carlos Beltr\u00e1n then singled to bring in a fourth Cardinals run. The Red Sox' subsequent comeback attempts failed, and Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal struck out the side in the bottom of the ninth to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 3, October 26\n7:30\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 3, October 26\nSt. Louis took early advantage of starter Jake Peavy, who gave up two runs on four hits in the first inning. After that Peavy settled in and pitched himself out of a bases loaded, nobody out situation in the fourth. Boston tied the game after a leadoff triple by rookie Xander Bogaerts who scored on a fielders choice at second by Mike Carp in the fifth and Daniel Nava drove in Shane Victorino, who reached base on a leadoff walk in the sixth and was advanced to third by a David Ortiz base hit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 3, October 26\nF\u00e9lix Doubront pitched two scoreless innings and Craig Breslow took over in the seventh but was quickly replaced by Junichi Tazawa after giving up a hit and drilled Carlos Beltr\u00e1n. Both inherited runners scored on a double by Matt Holliday. The Red Sox came back again in the eighth after a leadoff single by Jacoby Ellsbury and Shane Victorino was hit by reliever Carlos Mart\u00ednez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0042-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 3, October 26\nDustin Pedroia advanced the runners on a ground out, Ortiz was intentionally walked to load the bases and Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal took over for a 5 out save which he ended up blowing after Nava reached on a force out at second, scoring Ellsbury and a single by Bogaerts, scoring Victorino. In the bottom of the ninth with one out, Koji Uehara took the mound and gave up a double on his first pitch to Allen Craig which advanced Yadier Molina, who singled earlier in the inning, to third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0042-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 3, October 26\nOn a ground ball to Pedroia, who was playing the infield grass, Molina was tagged out at home by Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who fired to third to try to get Craig. Will Middlebrooks was not able to field the ball cleanly and it got away from him. Craig stumbled over the fallen Middlebrooks and Daniel Nava, who backed up the play, quickly fired to home but third base umpire Jim Joyce called obstruction and gave Craig home plate, scoring the first obstruction walk-off win in a World Series ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 4, October 27\n8:00\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 4, October 27\nLike in the last two games, St. Louis scored first. Matt Carpenter singled in the third and advanced on a fielding error by Jacoby Ellsbury. Carlos Beltr\u00e1n drove in the run on a base hit, unearned for starter Clay Buchholz. David Ortiz lead off the fifth on a double, followed by back-to-back walks by Jonny Gomes on 10 pitches and Xander Bogaerts. Stephen Drew scored Ortiz on a sacrifice fly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 4, October 27\nWith two outs in the sixth, Dustin Pedroia singled and Ortiz drew a four pitch walk before Gomes hit a three-run shot into the Red Sox bullpen, his first hit of this World Series. F\u00e9lix Doubront, who relieved Buchholz after four innings, pitched 2 2/3 innings before giving up his only hit, a double by Shane Robinson. Craig Breslow gave up a hit against Carpenter, scoring the sixth of seven inherited runners in this series by Boston relievers, and a walk to Beltr\u00e1n. He was immediately relieved by Junichi Tazawa who stranded both runners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0044-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 4, October 27\nIn the eighth, after his third hit on three at bats that night, Ortiz was pinched run for by Quintin Berry who stole the first Red Sox base on the very first attempt in the series against the Cardinals. John Lackey took the mound in the bottom of the eighth. With one out Yadier Molina reached base and advanced to second on a throwing error by Bogaerts and even took third on a wild pitch but St. Louis could not bring him home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0044-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 4, October 27\nIn the bottom of the ninth Red Sox closer Koji Uehara took over, giving up a one out long single to Allen Craig. Uehara ended the game by picking off pinch runner Kolten Wong, earning his first save of the series and the sixth in this postseason. This was the first time a World Series game ended on a pickoff. Red Sox pitching struck out five batters, all looking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 5, October 28\n7:30\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 5, October 28\nGame 5 saw a battle of the aces with Adam Wainwright on the short end as Lester pitched another gem of 7 2/3 innings. Boston struck first on back-to-back one out doubles by Dustin Pedroia and David Ortiz, who continued his monstrous tear, hitting .733 in the series. Wainwright ended up striking out the side in the first two innings before Jon Lester broke the streak with a groundout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0046-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 5, October 28\nSt. Louis had back-to-back leadoff singles in the second and third by Carlos Beltr\u00e1n and David Freese, latter advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Pete Kozma but was left in scoring position. In the fourth Ortiz tied a World Series record by Billy Hatcher on a hit, reaching base in nine consecutive plate appearances, but failed to set a new record by flying out to center field in the sixth. With one out in the bottom of the fourth, Matt Holliday hit a solo shot to center field to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0046-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 5, October 28\nBoston threatened in the fifth after a leadoff hit by Xander Bogaerts and a one out single by David Ross but Wainwright struck out Lester and Ellsbury to strand both runners. After a leadoff single by Bogaerts, Stephen Drew walked and Ross drove in one run on a ground rule double to left field. With two runners in scoring position Ellsbury's single scored Drew but Ross was tagged out at home plate on the throw by Shane Robinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0046-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 5, October 28\nIn the bottom of the eighth Lester allowed a one out double against Freese and Koji Uehara took over the mound for a four out save after Kozma hit a fly ball to left field for the second out of the inning. Uehara struck out pinch hitter Matt Adams on three pitches for the third out. The Red Sox closer struck out Matt Carpenter, grounded out pinch hinter John Jay and Holliday flew out to right field to earn the save in back-to-back games. This was the first game of this series neither team committed an error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nSt. Louis threatened first with back-to-back hits in the second by Allen Craig, who hit a wallball leadoff single, and Yadier Molina with another single to left field. John Lackey induced two flyouts against Matt Adams and David Freese, before the runners advanced on a wild pitch, but Lackey ended the threat by striking out Jon Jay. In the same inning the first two batters for the Red Sox reached base, a single by Jonny Gomes and a walk by Shane Victorino, but after back-to-back popouts into foul territory by Xander Bogaerts and Stephen Drew, David Ross struck out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nJacoby Ellsbury lead off the third inning with a single and Pedroia advanced him to second on a groundout. With first base open, Michael Wacha intentionally walked David Ortiz, Ortiz's second walk of the game, and struck out Mike Napoli but then drilled Gomes and with the bases loaded Victorino hit a double off the Green Monster, his first hit in this series, scoring all three runners. Victorino just missed his second grand slam of this postseason but Wacha's streak ended, who to this point had not allowed a hit with runners in scoring position this October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0047-0002", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nBogaerts lined out to third base to end the inning. In the top of the fourth, the just awarded AL Golden Glove winner on second base, Dustin Pedroia, committed a fielding error on a possible double play ball with one out and Craig on first. Lackey pitched out of the jam on a flyout by Adams and striking out Freese. On the first pitch in the bottom of the fourth, Drew homered into the Red Sox bullpen and Ellsbury followed him with a double. After a flyout by Pedroia which advanced Ellsbury to third, Ortiz was again intentionally walked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0047-0003", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nCardinals manager Mike Matheny tried to stop the bleeding and replaced his rookie starter with game 4 losing pitcher Lance Lynn, who quickly warmed up after Drew went yard earlier in this inning. Lynn could not make an out as Napoli drove in Ellsbury on a single, Gomes drew a walk to load the bases and Victorino collected his fourth RBI on a base hit which scored Ortiz from third. Seth Maness relieved Lynn and ended the inning by striking out Bogaerts. Michael Wacha left the game with six earned runs in 3 2/3 innings of work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0047-0004", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nPrior to this game he posted a 1.00 ERA in the postseason. The Cardinals threatened again in the fifth after a leadoff hit by John Jay, a one out single by Carpenter and a flyout to right field by Carlos Beltr\u00e1n, which advanced Jay to third. But Lackey induced another flyout against Matt Holliday. St. Louis brought in their fourth arm of the night in the bottom of the fifth, Kevin Siegrist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0047-0005", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nAfter two quick outs, Ellsbury reached on a fielding error by Matt Carpenter and was then in a rundown, after he took off too early on a steal attempt. Siegrist misplayed his position on first base, standing too far away, and Ellsbury safely returned to the bag. Lackey got two quick outs in the top of the seventh, before Daniel Descalso hit a long single into right field and Carpenter followed him with a double to left field, advancing the runner to third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0047-0006", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nBeltr\u00e1n drove in the Cardinal's first run on a left field single into the shift and advanced on a wild pitch. Lackey walked Holliday to load the bases before he was relieved by Junichi Tazawa. He induced a ground ball against Allen Craig to first base, Mike Napoli bobbled the ball but could recover in time and Tazawa, covering first base, got the out. With Ellsbury on first, Pedroia grounded into a fielder's choice in the bottom of the eighth, which ended his streak of reaching base safely in 20 consecutive postseason games at home. In a non-save situation, the Red Sox brought in their closer Koji Uehara, in relief of Brandon Workman, who worked a quiet eighth inning. John Jay flew out to Gomes, Descalso popped out to Gomes and Carpenter struck out and the Red Sox clinched their eighth World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 923]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nJohn Lackey became the first pitcher in MLB history to win two World Series clinching games with two different teams. Lackey won the series clincher with the Los Angeles Angels in 2002 as a rookie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nDavid Ortiz was named 2013 World Series MVP for the first time in his career with 2 HRs, 6 RBIs, .688 batting average and 1.948 OPS. He is the first non-Yankee to win three rings with one team since Jim Palmer did it for the 1966-70-83 Baltimore Orioles. He is also only the 2nd exclusive designated hitter to be awarded the World Series MVP (2009-Hideki Matsui). The Red Sox are also the first team to win three Championships after 2000, having previously been the first to win two Championships after 2000, when they won in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Postseason highlights, 2013 World Series vs. St. Louis Cardinals, Game 6, October 30\nThis was the first World Series victory clinched at Fenway Park by the Boston Red Sox in 95 years, having won their 2004 and 2007 titles on the road, and the first time a World Series was won at Fenway since 1975 (when the Cincinnati Reds defeated the Red Sox).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 112], "content_span": [113, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Beards\nThroughout the regular season, numerous Red Sox players sported considerable facial hair, which drew media attention and later drove team marketing. The trend began during spring training, when outfielder Jonny Gomes arrived considerably unshaven. This caught the eye of first baseman Mike Napoli and catcher David Ross, who decided to also stop shaving. With time, other players joined, including second baseman Dustin Pedroia; designated hitter David Ortiz; outfielders Mike Carp and Shane Victorino; pitchers Brandon Workman, Ryan Dempster, John Lackey, and Clay Buchholz; and catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia. Other players joined from time to time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Beards\nThe trend grabbed the attention of the audience, who started wearing real and fake beards to the stadium in support of the team. Team marketing started campaigns to take advantage of the beards' popularity. They even gave nicknames to each player's beards such as \"The Ironsides\" (Gomes), \"The Siesta\" (Napoli), or \"The Saltine\" (Saltalamacchia). Steve Rushin wrote an article and interview for Sports Illustrated, \"The Hirsute of Happiness\", exploring how the beard trend had helped unite the team. The team has also developed the custom of tugging each other's beards to celebrate a hit or home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Beards\nAfter the team won the World Series, some of the players decided to shave their beards. Victorino and Ortiz shaved theirs during a charity event sponsored by Gillette. At the event, the Boston company donated $100,000 to One Fund Boston, a charity dedicated to the victims of the April 2013 Boston Marathon bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232231-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston Red Sox season, Game log, Postseason game log\n* *The winner of the 2013 American League Division Series plays the Red Sox in the ALCS. The ALDS was contested from October 4 to 10 between the Oakland Athletics and the Detroit Tigers. The Tigers won the series 3\u20132. * **The winner of the 2013 National League Championship Series plays the Red Sox in the WS. The NLCS was contested from October 11 to 18 between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Cardinals won the series 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232232-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston mayoral election\nThe Boston mayoral election of 2013 occurred on Tuesday, November 5, 2013, between state representative Marty Walsh and city councilor John R. Connolly. Walsh was elected to his first term, and was inaugurated on Monday, January 6, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232232-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston mayoral election\n38% 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-00232232-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston mayoral election\nA non-partisan preliminary election was held on Tuesday, September 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232232-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor Thomas Menino had declined to run for re-election to a sixth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232232-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston mayoral election, Background\nIncumbent mayor Thomas Menino had held office ever since ascending to the mayoralty following the resignation of Raymond Flynn in 1993. In 2013, Menino opted against seeking what would have been his sixth elected term as mayor. He announced his decision not to seek reelection on March 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232232-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boston mayoral election, Background\nWithout an incumbent seeking reelection, this made the 2013 election the first open election since 1984, thirty years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232233-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boucherville municipal election\nThe 2013 Boucherville municipal election was an election that was held on the 3rd of November 2013 to elect Boucherville's mayor and eight councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232233-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boucherville municipal election\nJean Martel and his party's eight candidates were elected. The voter turnout was 53.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232233-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boucherville municipal election\nThe election results were made available on the website of Qu\u00e9bec's Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232234-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bowling Green Falcons football team\nThe 2013 Bowling Green Falcons football team represented Bowling Green State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Through the 2013 MAC Championship Game, the Falcons were led by fifth-year head coach Dave Clawson. On December 10, Clawson left to become the new head coach at Wake Forest; the school named special teams coordinator Adam Scheier as interim head coach for the 2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232234-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bowling Green Falcons football team\nThe Falcons played their home games at Doyt Perry Stadium. They were a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232235-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Box Office Entertainment Awards\nThe 44th Guillermo Mendoza Memorial Scholarship Foundation Box Office Entertainment Awards (GMMSF-BOEA) is a part of the annual awards in the Philippines held on May 19, 2013. The award-giving body honors Filipino actors, actresses and other performers' commercial success, regardless of artistic merit, in the Philippine entertainment industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232235-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Box Office Entertainment Awards, Winners selection\nThe winners were chosen from the Top 10 Philippine films of 2012, top-rating shows in Philippine television, top recording awards received by singers, and top gross receipts of concerts and performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232235-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Box Office Entertainment Awards, Award ceremony\nOn May 19, 2013 at AFP Theatre in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City, Philippines, the 44th Box Office Entertainment Awards night was held. The awards night was organized by the Guillermo Mendoza Memorial Scholarship Foundation, Inc. (GMMSFI). The event aired a week later on May 26, as the \"Sunday's Best\" offering of ABS-CBN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232235-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Box Office Entertainment Awards, Multiple awards, Companies with multiple awards\nThe following companies received two or more awards in the television category:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 85], "content_span": [86, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232236-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boyd Tinsley Women's Clay Court Classic\nThe 2013 Boyd Tinsley Women's Clay Court Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, United States, on April 22\u201328, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232236-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boyd Tinsley Women's Clay Court Classic, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232237-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boyd Tinsley Women's Clay Court Classic \u2013 Doubles\nMaria Sanchez and Yasmin Schnack were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Schnack chose not to defend her title. Sanchez paired up with Irina Falconi, but lost in the first round to Kate\u0159ina Kramperov\u00e1 and Ilona Kremen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232237-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boyd Tinsley Women's Clay Court Classic \u2013 Doubles\nNicola Slater and Coco Vandeweghe won the title, defeating Nicole Gibbs and Shelby Rogers in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232238-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boyd Tinsley Women's Clay Court Classic \u2013 Singles\nMelanie Oudin was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232238-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boyd Tinsley Women's Clay Court Classic \u2013 Singles\nShelby Rogers won the title, defeating Allie Kiick in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232239-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship. Qualification was played in the Czech Republic, Latvia, Slovakia, Turkey and Hungary from January 3 to 7, 2013. The final round (group round and play-off) was contested between April 12 and 21, 2013. The top six teams qualified for the 2013 Youth World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232240-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Qualification\nThe qualification for the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship was held from January 8\u201311, 2015. 31 teams are split into eight groups of 3 or 4 teams. The group winners and second placed teams were qualified for the 2015 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads\nThis article shows all participating team squads at the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship, held in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina from 12\u201321 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Austria\nThe following is the Austria roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Belgium\nThe following is the Belgium roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe following is the Bosnia and Herzegovina roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Bulgaria\nThe following is the Bulgaria roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Finland\nThe following is the Finland roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, France\nThe following is the France roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italy roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 63], "content_span": [64, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Poland\nThe following is the Poland roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russia roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Serbia\nThe following is the Serbia roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Slovenia\nThe following is the Slovenia roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232241-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship Squads, Turkey\nThe following is the Turkey roster in the 2013 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232242-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brabantse Pijl\nThe 2013 Brabantse Pijl was the 53rd edition of the Brabantse Pijl cycle race and was held on 10 April 2013. The race started in Leuven and finished in Overijse. The race was won by Peter Sagan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season\nThis article details the Bradford Bulls rugby league football club's 2013 season, the 18th season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nIt was announced that academy product Tom Burgess would be joining his brothers (Luke Burgess, Sam Burgess and twin brother George Burgess) at NRL side South Sydney Rabbitohs on a two-year deal. Meanwhile, young halfback Kyle Briggs announced he had signed for former club Featherstone Rovers on a two-year deal. Kyle had spent the entire 2012 season on loan at Featherstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nSeptember was a positive month in terms of off-field problems as local businessman Omar Khan agreed to purchase the Bulls for \u00a3150,000 with an additional \u00a3100,000 to be paid in 2015. This move took the Bulls out of administration however their Super League status is still in jeopardy and must go through a mini-licensing process against Championship clubs Halifax, Leigh Centurions and Featherstone Rovers. Ben Jeffries announced that he was returning home to Australia at the end of the season to become a miner and play part-time for the Kurri Kurri Bulldogs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nVeteran second-rower Ian Sibbit announces that he will retire from rugby at the end of the season. Second rower Olivier Elima signs a 2 Year Deal with his former club Catalans Dragons as he wishes to live in his home country and send his children to a French school. Fullback Brett Kearney scooped up Player of the Year at the awards evening. However Prop Bryn Hargreaves announced his retirement to take up a degree at university. Australian coach Mick Potter announces that he will return home to his native land after working without pay at the Bulls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nGood news soon followed though as the Rugby Football League (RFL) released a statement providing the Bulls with a 1-year probationary licence which means the Bulls will have to face a review at the end of the 2013 season. Francis Cummins was announced as the head coach and signs a 3 Year Deal for the job. Winger and academy product Jason Crookes Finally made his move to Hull F.C. on a 3 Year Deal after months of rumours. Utility player Chev Walker signed a 1-year extension to his contract with the Bulls. It was announced at the annual awards evening that Mick Potter won Coach of the Year for his efforts at Bradford during a hard 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nPaul Sykes signs a 1 Year Deal with Wakefield Trinity Wildcats after spending most of the 2012 season on loan at the West Yorkshire club. After much rumour and speculation Bradford born youngster John Bateman signs an improved 3 Year Extension with the Bulls keeping him at Odsal until 2015. Leeds based Hunslet Hawks announce the signing of Bulls academy product Callum Windley on a 1 Year Deal after he was released due to the U20's being scrapped and replaced by the U23's and U19's competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nCoach Francis Cummins released winger Karl Pryce, prop Phil Joseph and also youngster Alex Ball. Bradford's first signing of the new season came in the form of Warrington Wolves centre Matty Blythe on a 1 Year Loan Deal after Francis Cummins was heavily recommended to Blythe by Wolves coach Tony Smith. Young fullback Curtis Naughton (3 Year Deal), centre Sam Wood (2 Year Deal) and second rower Oliver Roberts (3 Year Deal) were all give professional contracts and promoted to the first team. Halfback Luke Gale signs a 3 Year extension to his contract keeping him at Bradford until 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nTongan prop Manase Manuokafoa signed a 2 Year Extension to his contract. October kept on being productive with the announcement that Maltese halfback Jarrod Sammut signed a 2 Year Extension with the club subject to acquiring a working visa. Academy product Danny Addy also signed a 1 Year Extension to his contract. It was announced that popular winger Shaun Ainscough would leave the Bulls after being offered less money to play, he will join the South City Bulls in New South Wales, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0003-0003", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nMeanwhile, Rajas (a fast food chain) becomes the first major sponsorship by an Asian businessman in the club's history. Bradford announced that they had signed a 4-year deal with kit maker ISC who supply 7 other Super League teams with kits, this brings an end to a 5-year deal with Kooga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe Bulls announce their 2nd capture of the season, Warrington Wolves prop Ben Evans on a 1 Year loan deal, he is the twin brother of Wolves centre Rhys Evans. Bradford also signed St. Helens youngster Jamie Foster on a 1 Year permanent deal. On the 9th Bradford announced a record breaking sponsorship with loan firm Provident Financial, this sponsorship will be worth \u00a31.2 million over a period of 4 years making it the biggest ever sponsorship in the Super League history, on the same day the Bulls also previewed the 2013 home shirt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nYoung loose-forward James Donaldson signed a 1-year extension to his contract. A couple of days before the fixtures were due to be released clubs were allowed to tweet their first home and away game of the season, Bradford announced they will kick off the 2013 season at home against Wakefield Trinity Wildcats with their second game at the KC Stadium to play Hull FC. The squad numbers were released and youngster John Bateman was handed the number 11 shirt from Olivier Elima whilst Jarrod Sammut will wear the number 6 jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nIt was a pretty quiet month for the Bulls except for the announcement that Salford City Reds prop Adam Sidlow had signed for Bradford on a two-year deal and would wear the number 27 for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nOn loan prop Ben Evans had to have surgery on his shoulder and he was out for four months. Also former player Ian Sibbit returned to be a part of coach Francis Cummins's backroom staff. Bradford's first pre-season game saw them beat local team Dewsbury Rams 48-6; Elliott Whitehead was the star of the game, scoring 4 tries. Heath L'Estrange, Matty Blythe, Matt Diskin and Manase Manuokafoa also scored tries whilst Jamie Foster enjoyed a good performance with the boot kicking all 8 goals. The week after businesswoman of the year Kate Hardcastle joined the Bulls in a non-executive role. In their final pre-season game the Bulls drew 24-24 with Leeds Rhinos for Danny McGuire's testimonial, Jarrod Sammut and Brett Kearney both scored 2 tries each and Jamie Foster kicked 4 goals. Bradford also showed off their new purple, white and green away kit for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 902]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe Bulls announced that their entire squad barring Matty Blythe and Ben Evans (who are on loan) have been dual registered with Dewsbury Rams; this means that anybody who doesn't get into Bradford's game day squad is available to play for the Rams. Bradford kicked off 2013 with a 40-6 win over Wakefield Trinity Wildcats; Michael Platt opened the scoring and then Matty Blythe and Adam Sidlow both scored on debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nJarrod Sammut then grabbed a brace of tries whilst Jamie Foster and Brett Kearney also crossed to score, Foster added 6 goals to ensure the Bulls started with a win. That same weekend James Donaldson and Adam O'Brien featured for Dewsbury Rams under the dual registration and O'Brien scored 2 tries to help the Rams to an opening round victory. Bradford were due to play Hull F.C. away on 8 February but due to an accident on the M62 the game was postponed until the 10th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe Bulls were poor against a strong Hull side but Matty Blythe and Brett Kearney both managed to score in the 28-12 loss with Jamie Foster also kicking 2 goals. Bradford got back to winning ways as a Brett Kearney hat-trick helped them to a 38-12 win over Castleford Tigers. Adam Sidlow, Matty Blythe and Chev Walker also scored tries and Jamie Foster slotted over 7 goals. February finished on a sour note as the Bulls went down 36-10 to St Helens R.F.C., the Bulls were never at the races but managed to grab two late tries from Brett Kearney and Elliot Kear with former Saints player Jamie Foster kicking a goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe Bulls soon got back to winning ways as they bounced back and hammered Huddersfield Giants 43-18. Jarrod Sammut had a hat-trick whilst Matty Blythe, Danny Addy, Brett Kearney and Adam O'Brien (his first Super League try) all crossed to score. Jamie Foster kicked 7 goals and Sammut slotted over a drop goal to ensure the points came to Bradford. The Bulls backed this great performance with a 22-22 draw against Widnes Vikings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nGareth Hock was sent off before halftime when the Bulls were 20-4 in front however the 12 man Widnes side fought back an appalling 2nd half Bradford to claim a point of the Bulls. Bradford's tries came from Jamie Langley, Brett Kearney, Matt Diskin and Keith Lulia whilst Jarrod Sammut kicked 3 goals. The Bulls depleted side beat a travelling Hull Kingston Rovers side 34-12 with Jamie Foster, Brett Kearney, Elliot Kear, John Bateman and Jarrod Sammut (2 tries) all scoring, Jamie Foster kicked 5 goals to ensure that the Bulls took the points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nAustralian centre Adrian Purtell made his comeback after suffering a heart attack against Leeds Rhinos last season. The Bulls lost away to Catalans Dragons for the second year running as Elliot Kear and John Bateman's tries weren't enough to stop the French side beating Bradford 30-10, Jamie Foster also kicked a goal. Bradford finished March with an 18-18 draw against arch rivals Leeds Rhinos, Adrian Purtell and Tom Olbison gave the Bulls a 12-12 halftime score. However Leeds fought back to lead 18-12 but a late Adam Sidlow try helped secure a point for the Bulls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe Bulls started April with an average performance as they beat Salford City Reds 36-24, John Bateman, Adrian Purtell, Brett Kearney and Jamie Langley all scored a try each and Jarrod Sammut scored a double. Jamie Foster added 4 goals before going off injured and Sammut added a further 2 goals. Bradford continued their impressive run of form with a 46-20 win against London Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nJarrod Sammut was once again the star of the game as he ran in four second half tries and landed 6 goals to keep the Bulls in 3rd place, Elliott Whitehead also crossed for 2 tries with Danny Addy and Chev Walker each grabbing a try. Bradford were brought back down to earth with a dismal first half performance which led to a 36-6 defeat at the hands of Wigan Warriors, all six points came from Jarrod Sammut. Bradford started their Challenge Cup run with a 70-10 thrashing of lower league Rochdale Hornets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nSam Wood scored a try on his debut whilst Luke Gale and Jarrod Sammut scored 2 each. Elliott Whitehead grabbed himself a hat-trick while Jamie Langley, Chev Walker, John Bateman and Michael Platt also crossed for a try each, Jamie Foster added 2 goals before going off injured and Sammut booted a further 9 goals. They finished the month with a 32-4 loss to Warrington Wolves with the Bulls only points coming from an Adrian Purtell try.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe Bulls had a disappointing start to May as they were well beaten at home (42-22) by arch-rivals Leeds Rhinos, on loan Ben Evans opened the scoring for Bradford as he crossed for his 1st try for the Bulls. Further tries were added by Brett Kearney and a double from Elliot Kear, Jarrod Sammut also kicked 3 goals in Jamie Foster's absence. Bradford's season got worse as they were beaten 25-16 in the 5th Round of the Challenge Cup by London Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nJarrod Sammut, Nick Scruton and Elliot Kear scored for the Bulls as they were knocked out of the cup with Sammut also kicking 2 goals. Young winger Jamie Foster re-signed with the Bulls for a further 2 years. Due to an injury crisis in the pack Francis Cummins brought in Jacob Fairbank from Huddersfield Giants on a one-month loan. The Bulls overcame this defeat by beating struggling Salford City Reds 28-7 with Matty Blythe scoring 2 tries with Luke Gale, Adrian Purtell and Matt Diskin also scoring tries. Sammut added 4 goals to give the Bulls a much needed win. The last game of May saw the Bulls face Huddersfield Giants at the Magic Weekend, Bradford had an injury hit side and were out-muscled by a large Giants pack who won the game 42-6 with Jamie Foster scoring the Bulls only points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nJune started off bad for the Bulls as they lost 28-18 to playoff rivals Hull Kingston Rovers. Jarrod Sammut, Keith Lulia and Michael Platt all scored a try with Sammut kicking 2 goals and Luke Gale kicking another, however Hull KR won the game in the last 10\u201315 minutes with 2 breakaway tries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThis defeat was followed up by the news that young second-row Tom Olbison had signed a new 2-year deal at the club keeping him until 2015, however the good news was short lived after it was announced that homegrown second-row Elliott Whitehead had handed in a transfer request as he wishes to play at a top 4 side. Coach Francis Cummins stated at the time that Whitehead has been put on indefinite leave and will play no further part in the Bulls season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe Bulls then faced an out of form St Helens R.F.C. side, however Cummins men were not up to the task and lost 30-18 with Brett Kearney, Matty Blythe and Elliot Kear scoring for the Bulls. Gale also kicked 3 goals in the defeat. One of the positive points in that game is that young second-rower Oliver Roberts was handed his debut off the bench. News surrounding the club increased in the lead up to Bradford's first home game in over a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe first bit of news was that veteran second-rower Chev Walker had signed a new 1-year deal with an option of another. Then it was announced that the Bulls had signed Warrington Wolves and England RL prop Gareth Carvell had signed with the Bulls on a 2 Year Deal which will add a bit of size to the relatively small Bradford pack. However bad news was soon to follow as Keith Lulia is set to go back home to Australia at the end of the year and youngster Danny Addy has rejected a new deal that was offered to him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0011-0004", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nFrench based Catalans Dragons announced that they had signed Elliott Whitehead on a 2 and a half year deal. It was also announced that hooker and captain Matt Diskin signed a 1 Year Extension to his contract. Bradford also revealed that legend and fan favourite Robbie Paul would be returning to the club as deputy director. Bradford finished the month with a 26-12 loss to Warrington Wolves the Bulls scored late tries through Walker and Donaldson but it wasn't enough to come back and beat the Wolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe month started off with some good news as Huddersfield Giants second-row Dale Ferguson was announced as the Bulls 2nd new signing for the 2014 season. Ferguson was signed on a 2 Year Deal after other clubs such as Hull Kingston Rovers had also offered deals. In addition to this it was also announced that prop Manase Manuokafoa had signed a 2 Year Extension to his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nBradford travelled to Wigan Warriors where they suffered a 26-20 defeat after letting go of an 18-4 lead, the Bulls scored through Michael Platt, Adam Sidlow and John Bateman while Jamie Foster added 4 goals. Bradford managed to beat Hull F.C. 19-12 to get back on the road to the playoffs. The Bulls tries came from Jarrod Sammut, Elliot Kear and Matt Diskin whilst Jamie Foster kicked 3 goals and Luke Gale slotted a drop goal. Recruitment for the 2014 season continued as the Bulls announced that they had signed Luke George on a 2 Year Deal from Huddersfield Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nIt was announced that loan signing Matty Blythe had signed a permanent 3 Year Deal with the Bulls from Warrington Wolves. Bradford's push for the playoffs received a huge boost as they beat Wakefield Trinity Wildcats 26-24 with Keith Lulia scoring 2 tries, Brett Kearney, Tom Olbison and Jamie Foster all scored a try each too while Foster kicked 3 goals. The following week saw the Bulls lose 23-22 to Catalans Dragons. Lulia once again scored 2 tries with Kearney adding another, Adrian Purtell also crossed for a try while Foster kicked 3 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nThe game was lost in controversial fashion as Kearney was sin-binned with 7 minutes to go for a professional foul on Elliott Whitehead and Ian Henderson crossed the try line to draw before Thomas Bosc slotted the decisive drop goal to win. Bradford's playoff hopes were ended as they lost 46-34 to Castleford Tigers, Jarrod Sammut scored 2 tries whilst Brett Kearney, Nick Scruton, Elliot Kear and Danny Addy also scored tries. Jamie Foster added 5 goals but it wasn't enough and the Bulls were out of the playoffs for the 5th year in a row. Some positive news followed as youngster James Donaldson re-signed with the Bulls for another year. Danny Addy also signed a 2 Year Extension with the Bulls. The Bulls announced that they had signed young Stand Off Lee Gaskell on a 2 Year Deal from St. Helens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232243-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bradford Bulls season, Season Review\nAfter all the good news off the pitch that August brought there was bad news on the pitch in September. The Bulls puck in a lackluster performance against London Broncos and lost 20-10, Keith Lulia and Danny Addy scored for the Bulls while Jamie Foster kicked a goal. The Bulls finished the season with a 58-6 win against a young Huddersfield Giants side. Jarrod Sammut grabbed 4 tries whilst Lulia signed off with a hat-trick. Danny Addy, Jamie Foster and Elliot Kear also scored tries, Jamie Foster kicked 9 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232244-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Open\nThe 2013 Brasil Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor clay courts. It was the 13th edition of the event known as the Brasil Open, and is part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place from February 11 through February 17, 2013, in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232245-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Open \u2013 Doubles\nEric Butorac and Bruno Soares were the defending champions but Butorac decided not to participate this year. Soares played alongside Alexander Peya and successfully defended the title, defeating Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k in the final 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20132, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232246-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles\nNicol\u00e1s Almagro was the two-time defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to David Nalbandian. Rafael Nadal won the title, defeating Nalbandian in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232247-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Tennis Cup\nThe 2013 Brasil Tennis Cup is a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 1st edition of the Brasil Tennis Cup since 2002, and is on the International category of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Florian\u00f3polis, Brazil, from February 24 through March 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232247-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Tennis Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232247-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Tennis Cup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232248-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\n2013 Brasil Tennis Cup - Doubles was the first edition of a new event on the WTA Tour. Anabel Medina Garrigues and Yaroslava Shvedova won the title, defeating Anne Keothavong and Valeria Savinykh in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232249-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nThis was the first edition of the tournament since 2002. Venus Williams was the top seed, but lost in the semifinals to Olga Puchkova. Monica Niculescu won the title, defeating Puchkova in three sets, 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232249-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasil Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nThe top three seeds received a bye into the qualifying competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232250-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brasileiro de Marcas\nThe 2013 Brasileiro de Marcas season (officially the 2013 Copa Petrobr\u00e1s de Marcas) was the third season of the Brasileiro de Marcas. It began on April 7 at Interlagos and ended on December 1 at Curitiba, after sixteen races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232251-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Brazilian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Grande Pr\u00eamio Petrobras do Brasil 2013) was a Formula One motor race that was held at the Aut\u00f3dromo Jos\u00e9 Carlos Pace, in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil on 24 November 2013. The race marked the 42nd running of the Brazilian Grand Prix. The race was the nineteenth and final round of the 2013 Formula One World Championship. This was also the last race for the 2.4-litre V8 naturally-aspirated engines that were introduced at the 2006 Bahrain Grand Prix; they were replaced in 2014 with 1.6-litre V6 turbocharged engines with energy recovery systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232251-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThe race, contested over 71 laps, was won by Sebastian Vettel, his ninth straight Grand Prix victory, driving a Red Bull. His teammate Webber finished in second place on his final race, and Fernando Alonso finished third for Scuderia Ferrari. Vettel established the then gargantuan records of 397 points total and 155 points margin to second-placed Alonso, the latter of which still stands today. Red Bull-Renault won the Constructors' Championship with a record difference of 236 points to second-placed Mercedes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232251-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThis was the final race for two previous race winners in the form of Heikki Kovalainen and Mark Webber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232251-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThis also marked the last race for Cosworth as an engine supplier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232251-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Brazilian Grand Prix, Report, Background, Tyres\nLike the previous Brazilian Grand Prix, tyre supplier Pirelli provided its orange-banded hard compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the white-banded medium compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232251-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Brazilian Grand Prix, Report, Background, Tyres\nThe teams also tested the company's new tyres for 2014 in the Friday Free Practice sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232251-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Brazilian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nAll qualifying sessions were held in wet conditions. Intermediate tyres were mainly used for Q1 and Q2. Q3 was delayed 45 minutes because of rain, and all drivers started with full-wet tyres, but they ended the session with the intermediate tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232252-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup\nThe 2013 Breeders' Cup World Championships was the 30th edition of the premier event of the North American thoroughbred horse racing year. It took place on November 1 and November 2 at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California. 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 2013 Breeders' Cup results were highly influential in the Eclipse Award divisional championship voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232252-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup, Breeders' Cup Challenge series\nThe Breeders' Cup Challenge is a series of races that provide the winners of designated races with automatic \"Win and You're In\" berths in a specified division of the Breeders' Cup. For qualifying horses, the Breeders' Cup organization covers the entry fee and provides a travel allowance of up to $40,000 for the connections of horses from overseas. Thirty-six horses entered in the Breeders' Cup races qualified via the challenge series, including four of the winners. These were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232252-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup, Results\nThe two-day attendance for the Breeders' Cup was 94,628, up 5% over 2012, with a Saturday crowd of 58,795, up 7%. Wagering was also up 7% over 2012, though down from the record levels at the 2010 Breeders' Cup at Churchill Downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232252-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup, Results\nFive Breeders' Cup races were held on Friday, with British-trained horses winning three: London Bridge in the Marathon, Outstrip in the Juvenile Turf and Chriselliam in the Juvenile Fillies Turf. Goldencents won the Turf Sprint for the second year in a row, while Beholder won at the Breeders' Cup for the second time in a row, following up her 2012 win in the Juvenile Fillies with a victory in the Distaff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232252-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup, Results\nThe highlights of the Saturday card were wins by Mucho Macho Man in the Classic and Wise Dan in the Mile. Mucho Macho Man won by a nose over Will Take Charge, while the favorite Game On Dude finished ninth. Kathy Ritvo became the first female trainer to win the Classic. In the Mile, Wise Dan closed from seventh to win by \u200b3\u20444 lengths. His regular jockey John Velazquez was injured in an earlier race so Jose Lezcano was a late substitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232252-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup, Results\nIn the Turf, the only two European-based horses in the field finished one-two, with the longshot Magician prevailing over favorite The Fugue. It was Magician's first race since June and his first start at the distance of \u200b1\u00a01\u20442 miles. The Juvenile Fillies was marred by the breakdown of Secret Circle and then a controversial disqualification of She's A Tiger for bumping in the stretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232252-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup, Results\nIn the 2013 Eclipse Award voting, six of the eleven flat racing categories were awarded to horses who won at the Breeders' Cup: Wise Dan was named Horse of the Year, Champion Older Male and Champion Male Turf Horse, Beholder was Champion Three-Year-Old Filly, Dank was Champion Female Turf Horse and Groupie Doll was Champion Female Sprinter. In addition, She's A Tiger was voted Champion Two-Year-Old Filly despite her disqualification in the Juvenile Fillies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232253-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Challenge series\nThe 2013 Breeders' Cup Challenge series provided winners of the designated races with an automatic \"Win and You're In\" Berth in the 2013 Breeders' Cup. Races were chosen by the Breeders' Cup organization and included key prep races in the various Breeders' Cup divisions from around the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232253-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Challenge series\nFor 2013, nine races were added to the series: the Triple Bend Handicap, Bing Crosby, Yorkshire Oaks, Lowther Stakes, Pat O\u2019Brien, Juvenile Trial, Pocahontas, Iroquois and Canadian Stakes. A number of races that had previously been part of the series were dropped, including the Metropolitan Handicap, Hollywood Gold Cup, Delaware Handicap, Pretty Polly, Greenwood Cup, San Diego, Turf Monster, Hopeful, Del Mar Futurity, Gallant Bloom, Fillies Mile, Beresford, Middle Park (since its Breeders' Cup race, the Juvenile Sprint, had been eliminated), Canadian International and E.P. Taylor Stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232253-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Challenge series\nThirty-six horses entered in the Breeders' Cup races qualified via the challenge series, including four of the winners. These were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232253-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Challenge series\nThe winners of the 2013 Breeders' Cup Challenge series races are shown below. The last column shows whether the horse was subsequently entered in the Breeders' Cup, and if so, whether they achieved a top three finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic\nThe 2013 Breeders' Cup Classic was the 30th running of the Breeders' Cup Classic, part of the 2013 Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships program. It was run on November 2, 2013 at Santa Anita race track in Arcadia, California for a purse of $5,000,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic\nIn a photo finish that was later voted the NTRA Moment of the Year, Mucho Macho Man held off late charges from Will Take Charge and Declaration of War to win by a nose. Favored Game On Dude finished ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic\nThe Classic is run on dirt at one mile and one-quarter (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, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Contenders\nGame On Dude was the favorite for the Classic after winning six straight starts leading up to the race, including California's three most prestigious races for older horses \u2013 the Santa Anita Handicap, Hollywood Gold Cup and Pacific Classic. A win at the Breeders' Cup would have made Game On Dude the favorite for Horse of the Year honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Contenders\nThe second choice was Mucho Macho Man, who had finished second in the 2012 Classic. He was pulled up in his first start of 2013, suffering from what was later determined to be a respiratory illness. He missed months of training while recovering, then returned in the summer with two third place finishes on the East Coast. Shipping to California to prep for the Classic, Mucho Macho Man posted an impressive win in the Awesome Again Stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nGame On Dude went to the early lead, joined by Fort Larned and longshot Moreno. Setting a brisk pace, the three exchanged leads for the first three-quarters of a mile before first Moreno, then Game On Dude started to fall back. Meanwhile, Mucho Macho Man raced a few lengths behind until starting his move while racing wide on the final turn, moving to the lead with a quarter of a mile to go. As they entered the stretch, Declaration of War failed to change leads but still moved into second, slowly closing ground on the leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nWill Take Charge also started making up ground on the turn while running six wide. As they approached the finish, the gap between the three horses narrowed until the final stride, where the result was too close to call with the naked eye. A photo finish showed Mucho Macho Man had held on to win by inches, with Will Take Charge a head (roughly a foot) in front of Declaration of War. The finish was later named the NTRA Moment of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nIt was the first Classic win for jockey Gary Stevens, who had resumed racing in 2013 at age 50 after having retired seven years earlier due to a series of injuries. \"This is a dream come true,\" he said. \"This is the one race missing from my r\u00e9sum\u00e9.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nKatherine Ritvo became the first female trainer to win the Classic, an especially noteworthy feat for a woman who had undergone a heart transplant in 2008. Ritvo gave credit to the horse and rider. \"When Gary waved the stick (after the finish), I figured he won,\" she added. \"He got a great trip. Gary did a fantastic job. When he used 'Macho,' 'Macho' showed up. He is a good horse. I'm excited. If I didn't have the support of my family, I wouldn't be here.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race description\nMucho Macho Man was later awarded the Eclipse Award for Champion older male horse, although he lost out in Horse of the Year balloting to turf horse Wise Dan. Will Take Charge's second place finish helped him earn the title for Champion three-year-old colt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232254-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Breeders' Cup Classic, Results\nTimes: \u200b1\u20444 \u2013 0:23.39; \u200b1\u20442 \u2013 0:46.36; \u200b3\u20444 \u2013 1:10.23; mile \u2013 1:34.84; final \u2013 2:00.72. Fractional Splits: (:23.39) (:22.97) (:23.87) (:24.61) (:25.88)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232255-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brickyard 400\nThe 2013 Crown Royal Presents the Samuel Deeds 400 at the Brickyard, the 20th running of the event, was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on July 28, 2013, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. Contested over 160\u00a0laps, it was the twentieth race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Ryan Newman of Stewart-Haas Racing won the race, his first of the season, while Jimmie Johnson finished second. Kasey Kahne, Tony Stewart, and Matt Kenseth rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232255-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brickyard 400, Report, Background\nIndianapolis Motor Speedway 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 track's front and back straightaway are both 3,300\u00a0ft (1,000\u00a0m), while the short straightaways between turn one and two, as well as between turn three and four are 660 feet (200\u00a0m) long. The racetrack has seats for more than 250,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232255-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brickyard 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 696 points, while Clint Bowyer stood in second with 640 points. Carl Edwards followed in third with 623, one point ahead of Kevin Harvick and forty-five ahead of Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in fourth and fifth. Matt Kenseth, with 576, was in sixth; tied with Kyle Busch, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Greg Biffle was sixteen points ahead of Brad Keselowski and twenty-two ahead of Kasey Kahne in ninth and tenth. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 134 points, nine points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third with 95 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232255-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Brickyard 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nTwo practice sessions are scheduled to be held in preparation for the race. The first session, held on July 26, 2013, was 85 minutes long, while second session was held on the following day and was 120 minutes long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232255-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Brickyard 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring the first practice session, Juan Pablo Montoya, for the Earnhardt Ganassi Racing team, was quickest ahead of Kurt Busch in second and Austin Dillon in third. Paul Menard was scored fourth, and Kahne managed fifth. Joey Logano, Harvick, Martin Truex, Jr., Kenseth, and Earnhardt, Jr. rounded out the top ten quickest drivers in the session. In the final practice session for the race, Kurt Busch was the quickest of the forty-five drivers who participated. Kahne followed in second, ahead of Montoya and Johnson in third and fourth. Marcos Ambrose, who was twenty-second quickest in second practice, managed fifth. Kahne had the best ten\u2013lap consecutive average with a speed of 182.419 miles per hour (293.575\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232255-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Brickyard 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-five cars were entered, meaning two cars were bumped from the race because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Ryan Newman clinched his fiftieth career pole position, with a record speed of 187.531 miles per hour (301.802\u00a0km/h). After the qualifying session ended, Newman said, \"I'll admit I was emotional, for me. Especially because it was the Brickyard and I hadn't won a pole here before, and I've won so many poles. It's been so long since I've won a pole people ask me if I've run out of fuel for the rockets.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232255-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Brickyard 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nHe was joined on the front row of the grid by Johnson. Edwards qualified third, Denny Hamlin took fourth, and Tony Stewart started fifth. Kurt Busch, Kahne, Montoya, Jeff Gordon, and Ambrose completed the first ten positions on the grid. The two drivers who failed to qualify for the race were Mike Bliss and Scott Speed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232256-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane Broncos season\nThe 2013 Brisbane Broncos season was the 26th in the club's history. Coached by Anthony Griffin and captained by Sam Thaiday, they competed in the NRL's 2013 Telstra Premiership. Brisbane finished the regular season in 12th (out of 16), thus failing to qualify for the finals for the first time since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232256-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane Broncos season\nAccording to a 2013 report, the Brisbane Broncos had the highest brand equity of any Australian sporting brand. 2013 was however their worst season ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232256-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane Broncos season, Representatives\nThe following players have played a representative match in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232257-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International\nThe 2013 Brisbane International was a joint 2013 ATP World Tour and 2013 WTA Tour tennis tournament, played on outdoor hard courts in Brisbane, Queensland. It was the 5th edition of the tournament and took place at the Queensland Tennis Centre in Tennyson. It was held from 30 December 2012 to 6 January 2013. It was part of the Australian Open Series in preparation for the first Grand Slam of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232257-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232257-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232257-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232257-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw: \u2212", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232258-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMax Mirnyi and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions, but decided not to participate. Unseeded pair Marcelo Melo and Tommy Robredo won the title, defeating Eric Butorac and Paul Hanley in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20131, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232259-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndy Murray was the defending champion, and successfully defended his title, defeating Grigor Dimitrov in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20130), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232259-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232260-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNuria Llagostera Vives and Arantxa Parra Santonja were the defending champions but they decided not to participate together. Llagostera Vives partnered Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1 and Parra Santonja partnered up with Alicja Rosolska. Both of them were beaten in the first round. Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Sania Mirza won the title against Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld and Kv\u011bta Peschke after defeating them 4\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20137] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232261-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Singles\nKaia Kanepi was the defending champion, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232261-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane International \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams won the title, defeating Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232262-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brisbane Lions season\nThis article covers the 2013 AFL season results for the Brisbane Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232263-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bristol City Council election\nElections for one third (23 seats) of Bristol City Council were held on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. No party gained overall control of the chamber, although administrative power rested with the Mayor of Bristol, who had been first elected in November 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232263-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bristol City Council election\nThe Liberal Democrats, who had been the largest party on the council, lost 10 seats and conceded largest party status to Labour. The Green Party also gained 2 new seats, whilst Independents for Bristol gained their first seat on the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232264-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brit Awards\nThe 2013 Brit Awards were held on 20 February 2013. This was the 33rd edition of the British Phonographic Industry's annual pop music awards. The awards ceremony was held at The O2 Arena in London, and was presented for the third time in three years by James Corden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232264-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brit Awards\nLeading the nominations were Mumford & Sons and Emeli Sand\u00e9 with four nominations each, but Sand\u00e9 and Ben Howard ended up as the most successful winners, with two awards each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232264-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brit Awards\nThe statue for 2013 was designed by Damien Hirst. Coverage on ITV attracted more than 6.5 million viewers, with a peak of 7.5 million, the biggest audience for the awards in ten years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232264-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Brit Awards, Winners and nominees\nThe nominations were announced on 10 January 2013 during the 2013 BRIT Awards Launch at the Savoy Hotel in London. The event was hosted by Nick Grimshaw", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia\nThe 2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia was a rugby union tour during June and July 2013. The British & Irish Lions played ten matches - a three-test series against Australia, and matches against the five Australian Super Rugby sides, a Combined New South Wales\u2013Queensland Country team, and a match en route to Australia against the Barbarians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia\nThe Lions won the test series 2\u20131. The first test was won by the Lions 23\u201321, the second by Australia 16\u201315, and the final test by the Lions 41\u201316. The victory was the Lions' first test series win since defeating South Africa in 1997. Aside from the second test, the Lions' only loss was 14\u201312 to the Brumbies in Canberra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia\nWales head coach Warren Gatland was the Lions' head coach, and their tour captain was Sam Warburton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Schedule\nAhead of the tour of Australia, the Lions played the Barbarians in Hong Kong on 1 June to mark the 125th anniversary of the first Lions tour. They then played the five Australian Super Rugby teams, a Combined Country team and three tests in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Test series\nThe Lions won the best-of-three test series 2\u20131, after a convincing victory in the deciding third test followed narrow victories for both teams in the preceding two matches. The teams competed for the Tom Richards Cup, which was first presented in 2001, the last time the Lions toured the country. Australia won the 2001 test series 2\u20131. Before the start of the 2013 series, the Lions had won 15 of their 20 tests against Australia dating back to 1899.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Test series, First test\nThe Lions won the first test 23\u201321. Australia's Christian Lealiifano, making his debut, had to be replaced after just 52 seconds when he was knocked out attempting to tackle Jonathan Davies. Australia recovered from that setback to score the opening try, Israel Folau scoring on his debut with a sprint to the line after a chip through by scrum-half Will Genia. George North then added to a Leigh Halfpenny penalty with a try of his own, evading Pat McCabe and James O'Connor on his way to the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Test series, First test\nHe might have had a second a few minutes later, but the television match official deemed him to have been in touch before grounding the ball, meaning that the Lions had to settle for another penalty. Instead it was Folau who picked up a second try, beating Jonathan Sexton and Halfpenny to cut the Lions' lead to a single point at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Test series, First test\nAfter two more Australian backs \u2013 Berrick Barnes and McCabe \u2013 suffered injuries, Michael Hooper had to move into the centres, and Liam Gill took his place in the back row. The Lions took advantage of Hooper's unfamiliar position and Alex Cuthbert scored under the posts. An exchange of penalties left Australia within two points of the Lions going into the last five minutes. Kurtley Beale had two late penalty opportunities for Australia, but missed twice, slipping as he made his second attempt with the last kick of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Test series, Second test\nAustralia won a close game. Leigh Halfpenny's penalty kicking gave the Lions the lead, but the Wallabies scored the only try of the game through Adam Ashley-Cooper in the 74th minute, eventually winning 16\u201315. In the last minute of the game, a Leigh Halfpenny penalty kick that would have won the game for the Lions dropped short of the posts, meaning that the series would be decided by the final test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Test series, Third test\nThe Lions made six changes to their starting team. Tour captain Sam Warburton and 2009 captain Paul O'Connell were both injured. Pre -game controversy focused on the decision of the Lions coaches to drop experienced centre Brian O'Driscoll, who had been widely expected to take over the captaincy, in favour of the Welsh combination of Jamie Roberts and Jonathan Davies. The Lions' starting team included 10 Welshmen in all. Australia were unchanged except for the selection of George Smith, returning from international retirement, at openside flanker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Test series, Third test\nAustralia gave away possession at the kick-off, and Alex Corbisiero scored an early try for the Lions. The Lions extended this lead through four penalties from Leigh Halfpenny. The Wallabies conceded several penalties, as well as a sin-binning, at the scrum, although in the period either side of half-time, they recovered to trail only 19\u201316. The Lions, however, scored three further tries to win 41\u201316, thus recording the most points by a Lions side in a test match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nTour manager Andy Irvine announced an initial squad of 37 on 30 April 2013, made up of 15 players from Wales, 10 from England, nine from Ireland and three from Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nWales' Sam Warburton was named captain; at the age of 24, he was the youngest man to lead the Lions. Warburton was captain of Wales during their Six Nations Grand Slam in 2012, and during the 2011 World Cup, where they finished fourth. Previous Lions captains Paul O'Connell (from 2009) and Brian O'Driscoll (2005) were also chosen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nDylan Hartley was initially selected but was removed from the squad before the squad departed, after being suspended for 11 weeks for abusing a referee. Rory Best replaced Hartley later that day, meaning that the squad that set off to Hong Kong on 27 May consisted of 15 Welsh, 10 Irish, nine English and three Scottish players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nAlex Corbisiero was called up to the squad to replace Cian Healy, who suffered ankle ligament damage in the match against the Western Force, while Ryan Grant was called up to replace the injured Gethin Jenkins. Tommy Bowe broke his hand against the Queensland Reds, and Simon Zebo was brought into the squad. England's Brad Barritt, Christian Wade and Billy Twelvetrees were called in to provide further cover for the backs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nGatland made a surprise selection on 16 June, calling up former Wales wing Shane Williams for the game against the Brumbies. Williams, playing club rugby in Japan, was already due to travel to Australia as a radio commentator, and was brought into the squad for only three days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nIreland prop Tom Court was called up on 23 June before the final mid-week fixture against Melbourne Rebels, allowing Mako Vunipola to miss that match. Alex Corbisiero had injured his calf in the first test, so the Lions faced a shortage of props. Court was already in Australia visiting his home town of Brisbane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nO'Connell and Warburton were injured in the first and second tests respectively, ruling them out of playing in any more games in the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions\nNotes: Ages listed are as of the first tour match on 1 June. Bold denotes that the player was selected for a previous Lions squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions, Management and staff\nAndy Irvine is the Lions' tour manager, having succeeded Gerald Davies, who became Lions chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Lions, Management and staff\nAlthough Irvine originally stated that it was unlikely that a current coach of one of the Home unions would be appointed to coach the Lions, New Zealander Warren Gatland was offered the role in March 2012 with the Welsh Rugby Union's support, before being confirmed in September 2012. Gatland promised impartial selection and said he believed that Graham Henry in 2001 picked too many Welsh players who were not good enough to go on the tour. Gatland signed a 10-month contract with the Lions, taking a sabbatical from coaching Wales, although he would coach his Welsh team against Australia and New Zealand in autumn 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Australia\nAustralia head coach Robbie Deans selected a 31-man squad for the test series against the Lions, to be captained by James Horwill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Australia\nLuke Morahan was added to the squad following an injury Joe Tomane sustained in training.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Squads, Australia\nFollowing the first test, George Smith, Jesse Mogg and Ben Tapuai were called up to the squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa)Angus Gardner (Australia)Television match official:Matt Goddard (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Jaco Peyper (South Africa)Garratt Williamson (New Zealand)Television match official:Glenn Newman (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:J\u00e9r\u00f4me Garc\u00e8s (France)Garratt Williamson (New Zealand)Television match official:Glenn Newman (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Angus Gardner (Australia)James Leckie (Australia)Television match official:Matt Goddard (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:J\u00e9r\u00f4me Garc\u00e8s (France)Glen Jackson (New Zealand)Television match official:Keith Brown (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Glen Jackson (New Zealand)Jaco Peyper (South Africa)Television match official:Keith Brown (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Craig Joubert (South Africa)Romain Poite (France)Television match official:Vinny Munro (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Romain Poite (France)Craig Joubert (South Africa)Television match official:Ben Skeen (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Chris Pollock (New Zealand)Romain Poite (France)Television match official:Ben Skeen (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Match details\nTouch judges:Chris Pollock (New Zealand)Craig Joubert (South Africa)Television match official:Vinny Munro (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Attendances\nThe tour drew record attendances to several of the 10 matches. The Lions opened the tour in front of 28,643 for a game against the Barbarians at the Hong Kong Stadium. Their first game in Australia attracted 35,103 to Patersons Stadium for their opening match in Australia against the Western Force, while their next game against the Queensland Reds at Suncorp Stadium attracted a record Reds home attendance of 50,136. The game against the ACT Brumbies attracted 21,655 to Canberra Stadium for the Lions first loss of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Attendances\nThree days before the game against the Brumbies, 40,805 saw the Lions thrash the New South Wales Waratahs 47\u201317 at the Sydney Football Stadium. In the only tour game played after the test series had started, the Lions attracted a rugby union record crowd of 28,648 to AAMI Park where they defeated the Melbourne Rebels 35\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Attendances\nThe test series against Australia was even more successful and drew the record sporting attendance to each stadium used. The first test saw 52,499 at Suncorp Stadium, the second test drew 56,771 to Melbourne's Etihad Stadium, while 83,704 attended the third and deciding test at the ANZ Stadium in Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Broadcasting\nFox Sports and Network Ten televised the tour in Australia, and in the UK and Ireland the games were shown by Sky Sports. Talksport provided live UK radio commentary of all matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Broadcasting\nSky Sports NZL covered the tour in New Zealand and SuperSport in South Africa. In Europe, Sky Italia showed the tour in Italy, Vatican City and San Marino while Canal+ covered it in France, Andorra and Luxembourg. The tour was covered by Setanta Sports Asia across most of Asia and the Pacific Islands and J Sports showed fixtures in Japan. Gulf DTH covered the Arabic countries in Asia. ESPN Latin America showed the tour in South America and DirecTV in America (on Channel 490) and Setanta Sports Canada in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232265-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, Sponsors\nHSBC is the main sponsor of the Lions, having also sponsored their 2009 tour to South Africa. Adidas are the playing and training supplier and have been since the 1997 tour, while Rhino supply training aids. Microsoft are the Lions' technology partners and Thomas Pink supply the official formal and evening wear for the team. Qantas are the official airline of the tour, as well as the main sponsors of the Wallabies. DHL are the sponsors of the tour itself and Gilbert provide all match balls. Specsavers are the sponsors of all match officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232266-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland Awards\nThe 2013 British Academy Scotland Awards were held on 17 November 2013 at the Radisson Blu Hotel in Glasgow, honouring the best Scottish film and television productions of 2013. Presented by BAFTA Scotland, accolades are handed out for the best in feature-length film that were screened at British cinemas during 2012. The Nominees were announced on 23 October 2014. The ceremony was broadcast online via YouTube and was hosted by Edith Bowman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232266-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland Awards\nRichard Wilson, Kirsty Wark, Steve Begg and Rockstar North were honoured with Outstanding Contribution awards at this ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232266-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland Awards, Winners and nominees\nBank of Dave - Fighting The Fat Cats \u2013 (Channel 4)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232266-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland Awards, Winners and nominees\nComic Relief Does Glee Club Live Final \u2013 (CBBC), (BBC Scotland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232266-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland Awards, Winners and nominees\nCoolson's Artisanal Chocolate Alphabet \u2013 Things Made Out of Other Things", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232267-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland New Talent Awards\nThe 2013 British Academy Scotland New Talent Awards were held on 21 March 2013 at the Oran Mor in Glasgow. Presented by BAFTA Scotland, the accolades honour the best upcoming talent in the field of film and television in Scotland. The Nominees were announced on 7 March 2013. The ceremony was hosted by Muriel Gray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232267-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland New Talent Awards, Winners and nominees\nDaniel Kerr \u2013 The Wee Man as Young Paul Ferris", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232267-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland New Talent Awards, Winners and nominees\nThe State of Greenock \u2013 Gavin Grant, David Newman, Pamela Barnes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232267-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Scotland New Talent Awards, Winners and nominees\nMr Montgomery's Debonair Facial Hair \u2013 Ronan Quigley, Nikita Bewley, Ellis Armstrong, Charlie McFadden, Stuart Martin, Alex Hopkins, Allan Robertson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232268-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Television Awards\nThe 2013 British Academy Television Awards nominations were announced on 9 April 2013. The award ceremony was held at the Royal Festival Hall in London on 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232269-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Television Craft Awards\nThe 14th Annual British Academy Television Craft Awards were presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) on 28 April 2013, with Stephen Mangan presiding over the event. The awards were held at The Brewery, City of London, and given in recognition of technical achievements in British television of 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232269-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Academy Television Craft Awards, Winners and nominees\nWinners are listed first and highlighted in boldface; the nominees are listed below alphabetically and not in boldface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232270-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 British Athletics Championships was the national championship in outdoor track and field for athletes in the United Kingdom, held from 12\u201314 July at Alexander Stadium in Birmingham. It was organised by UK Athletics. It served as a selection meeting for the 2013 World Championships in Athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232271-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Champions Series\nThe 2013 British Champions Series was the third annual British Champions Series for Thoroughbred racehorses, comprising 35 of the country's top flat races. It was sponsored by Qatari investment company, QIPCO. As with both previous Champions Series, it was split into five divisions. The horse rankings in each division were determined by the horses' performance ratings (as assessed by the British Horseracing Authority Official Handicapper) in QIPCO British Champions Series races throughout the season. There were also rankings for jockeys and trainers based on a points system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232272-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the women's provincial curling championship for British Columbia, was held from January 14 to 20 at the Cloverdale Curling Club in Cloverdale, British Columbia. The winning team represented British Columbia at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232272-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Process\nTen teams qualified for the provincial tournament through several methods. The qualification process is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232272-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Pacific Standard Time (UTC-8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232272-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Rounds, Round 1\nThe first qualification round for the 2013 British Columbia Scotties took place from November 16 to 18, 2012 at the Vernon Curling Club in Vernon. The qualifier was held in a double knockout format, and qualified three teams for the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232272-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Rounds, Round 2\nThe second qualification round for the 2013 British Columbia Scotties took place from November 30 to December 2, 2012 at the North Shore Curling Club in North Vancouver, British Columbia. The qualifier was held in a double knockout format, and qualified three teams for the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232272-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Rounds, Round 3\nThe third qualification round for the 2013 British Columbia Scotties took place from December 14 to 16, 2012 at the Prince George Curling Club in Prince George, British Columbia. The qualifier was held in a double knockout format, and qualified two teams for the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 82], "content_span": [83, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232272-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Rounds, Round 3, Results\nFox played Hicks for the first spot in the provincials. Hicks played Olsen for the second spot after losing to Fox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election\nThe 2013 British Columbia general election took place on May 14, 2013, to elect the 85 members of the 40th Parliament of British Columbia to the Legislative Assembly in the Canadian province of British Columbia. The British Columbia Liberal Party (BC Liberals) formed the government during the 39th Parliament prior to this general election, initially under the leadership of Premier Gordon Campbell then after his resignation, Christy Clark. The British Columbia New Democratic Party (BC NDP) under the leadership of Carole James, and then Adrian Dix, formed the Official Opposition. The BC Green Party under the leadership of Jane Sterk and the BC Conservative Party under John Cummins were also included in polling, although neither party had representation at the end of the 39th Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election\nThe Liberal Party won its fourth straight majority; Clark was defeated in her riding, but she was re-elected to the legislature in a subsequent by-election in Westside-Kelowna on July 10, 2013, after Liberal MLA Ben Stewart stepped down on her behalf. The NDP remained the official opposition, losing two seats, and the Green Party won its first seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election\nDespite their victory, the Liberals had been consistently several points behind the opposition New Democrats in every public opinion poll throughout the campaign. Even poll results released on the last day of the campaign suggested that the New Democrats had an eight to nine percentage point margin over the Liberals. Only one pollster, Forum Research, had released a poll which suggested that the Liberals were close enough that a victory was even possible for them, although even that poll had the New Democrats ahead by two percentage points. The Liberals' upset victory led to significant media debate about the quality of opinion polling in Canadian elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election, Timing\nSection 23 of British Columbia's Constitution Act provides that general elections occur on the second Tuesday in May of the fourth calendar year after the last election. As an election was held on May 12, 2009, the next election was scheduled for May 14, 2013. The same section, though, makes the fixed election date subject to the Lieutenant Governor's right to dissolve the Legislative Assembly as he or she sees fit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election, Timing\nThe writs were dropped April 16, 2013, and the general election was held on May 14, 2013, with advance voting made available on May 8 through 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election, Background\nAfter leading the BC Liberals for 17 years, Gordon Campbell announced he would resign as Premier and party leader in November 2010. This was seen as the result of opposition to the Harmonized Sales Tax, which was very unpopular with voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election, Background\nIn the ensuing leadership campaign, Christy Clark, the eventual winner, suggested she would prefer to hold an election earlier than 2013 to secure her own mandate. She was believed to be preparing her party for an election as early as autumn 2011. However, due to the unfavourable result from the HST referendum, she decided to rule out an early election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election, Political parties\nThis is a list of political parties who ran candidates in the 2013 election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election, Voter turnout\nVoter turnout was 57.1%, but varied from riding to riding. 10 of the 85 ridings had less than 50% voter turnout. Richmond and Kelowna were the only major cities with under 50% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232273-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 British Columbia general election, Candidates\nThe following is a list of candidates, as shown on the list of candidates that have officially registered as noted by Elections BC's for more details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232274-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 British Figure Skating Championships was held from 26 November to 2 December 2012 in Sheffield. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior, junior, and novice levels. The results were among the criteria to determine the British teams for the 2013 World Championships, 2013 European Championships, and 2013 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232275-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula 3 International Series\nThe 2013 Cooper Tires British Formula 3 International Series season was the 63rd British Formula Three Championship season. The series, promoted by the St\u00e9phane Ratel Organisation, began on 25 May at Silverstone and ended on 22 September at the N\u00fcrburgring after twelve races to be held at four meetings. The championship was won by Jordan King.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232275-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula 3 International Series, Regulation changes\nAfter all races awarded equal championship points during the 2012 season, the 2013 season saw the re-introduction of fewer points awarded to drivers in the second race. The first and third races awarded points using the same system as used in Formula One\u00a0\u2013 with twenty-five points for the winner, down to one point for tenth place\u00a0\u2013 with the reverse-grid race offering twelve points for the winner down to half a point for tenth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232275-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula 3 International Series, Regulation changes\nA five-race \"mini-series\" for older-specification Formula Three cars was also scheduled to be introduced for the 2013 season, after only two drivers competed in a full-season campaign in the Rookie class, in 2012. However, with the championship realignment in January 2013, older-specification cars were able to compete at every meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232275-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula 3 International Series, Race calendar and results\nA provisional ten-round calendar was announced on 28 July 2012. This was later revised down to nine rounds\u00a0\u2013 with series organisers SRO open to the addition of a tenth meeting\u00a0\u2013 on 18 December 2012. In January 2013, SRO reduced the calendar yet further, to just four triple-header meetings; two events in the United Kingdom and two overseas, in Belgium and Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232276-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula Ford Championship\nThe 2013 Dunlop MSA Formula Ford Championship of Great Britain was a multi-event, open-wheel single seater motor racing championship held across England and Scotland. The championship featured a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers, competing in Formula Ford cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. This season saw the championship adopt a single class format, with all drivers using the latest cars built to the Formula Ford EcoBoost specification. There was also an award for the highest placed rookie. It was the 37th British Formula Ford season and returned to the TOCA tour to form 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, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232276-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula Ford Championship\nThe season commenced on 31 March at Brands Hatch\u00a0\u2013 on the circuit's Indy configuration\u00a0\u2013 and concluded on 13 October at the same venue, utilising the Grand Prix circuit, after thirty races to be held at ten meetings, all in support of the 2013 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232276-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula Ford Championship, Championship changes\nAlong with the move to support the BTCC, the championship underwent several other technical changes. The championship adopted the new Formula Ford EcoBoost 200 regulations, which included an increase in the EcoBoost engine power from the previous season, along with the new addition of a fully adjustable aerodynamic package which includes front and rear wings previously never seen before in the British Formula Ford Championship. In late October 2012, the series organisers announced that from this season Duratec class cars will be ineligible for the championship, leaving only the EcoBoost class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232276-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Formula Ford Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe provisional calendar was announced by the BTCC organisers on 29 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232277-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British GT Championship\nThe 2013 Avon Tyres British GT season was the 21st season of the British GT Championship. The season began on 30 March at Oulton Park and finished on 6 October at Donington Park, after ten rounds held over seven meetings. Beechdean Motorsport team principal Andrew Howard won the GT3 category in an Aston Martin V12 Vantage GT3, Optimum Motorsport's Ryan Ratcliffe and Rick Parfitt Jr. won the GT4 championship, driving a Ginetta G50 while Paul Bailey and Andy Schulz took the GTC title in a Ferrari 458 Challenge, driving for Horsepower Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232277-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British GT Championship, Entry list\nThe SRO released the entry list on 7 March at the season launch, containing 27 GT3 and 6 GT4 full season entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232277-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British GT Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe 2013 calendar was announced on 13 September 2012. A revised calendar was released on 6 December 2012, with Zandvoort replacing the N\u00fcrburgring. All races except Dutch round at Zandvoort, were held in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix\nThe 2013 British Grand Prix (formally the 2013 Formula 1 Santander British Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Silverstone Circuit in Silverstone, England, United Kingdom, on 30\u00a0June 2013 before 120,000 spectators. It was the eighth round of the 2013 Formula One World Championship and the 64th\u00a0British Grand Prix to be held as part of the series. Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg won the 52-lap race starting from second position. Mark Webber of the Red Bull team finished second and Fernando Alonso took third in a Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix\nLewis Hamilton, Rosberg's teammate, won the pole position by setting the fastest lap in qualifying. He led for the first eight laps until his car's left-rear tyre failed on lap eight, promoting Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel to the lead. Two more left-rear tyre failures for Ferrari's Felipe Massa and Toro Rosso driver Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne led to race director Charlie Whiting deploying the safety car. The race was restarted at the end of lap\u00a021 with Vettel leading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix\nHe led for the next 20\u00a0laps before a gearbox failure forced him to retire on the 41st\u00a0lap and cause a second safety car deployment. Rosberg took the lead, and held off Webber for the rest of the race to win. It was Rosberg's second victory of the season and the third of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix\nA total of six tyre failures occurred during the race and supplier Pirelli modified them to make them less susceptible to punctures for the following German Grand Prix as a stop-gap solution before introducing a new tyre at the Hungarian Grand Prix. Pirelli investigated the incidents and concluded there was no single cause. As a result of the race, Alonso moved to within 21\u00a0points of the World Drivers' Championship leader Vettel. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen of the Lotus team finished fifth to remain in third and Hamilton maintained fourth place. In the World Constructors' Championship, Mercedes overtook Ferrari, moving to within 48\u00a0points behind Red Bull with eleven rounds remaining in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nThe round was the eighth of the 19\u00a0races in the 2013 FIA Formula One World Championship, and the 64th\u00a0British Grand Prix as part of the series. It was held at the 18-turn 5.891\u00a0km (3.660\u00a0mi) Silverstone Circuit in Silverstone, Northamptonshire, England, on 30\u00a0June. Tyre supplier Pirelli brought the white-banded medium and the orange-banded hard compound dry tyres and the green-banded intermediate and dark blue-banded full wet tyres to the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nThe drag reduction system (DRS) was expanded from one to two activation zones for 2013: one was on the Wellington Straight on the entry to Brooklands corner and the second was on the Hangar Straight linking Chapel and Stowe turns. For the race, several drains to improve circuit drainage and prevent water accumulation were installed, and the outside tyre wall at the exit to Chapel Curve was extended by 50\u00a0m (160\u00a0ft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nBefore the race, Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel led the World Drivers' Championship with 132\u00a0points, ahead of Ferrari's Fernando Alonso with 96\u00a0points and Lotus' Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen with 88\u00a0points. Lewis Hamilton of the Mercedes team was fourth with 77\u00a0points and Vettel's teammate Mark Webber was fifth with 69\u00a0points. Red Bull led the World Constructors' Championship with 201\u00a0points; Ferrari and Mercedes were second and third respectively, with 145\u00a0and 134\u00a0points. Lotus were fourth with 114\u00a0points and Force India were fifth with 51\u00a0points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nVettel won the preceding Canadian Grand Prix from Alonso, but did not want to speculate on the outcome at Silverstone or the championship. \"Fernando was a little bit unlucky here and there and we were able to beat him, so we were able to come back but this was ten races from where we are now so I think there are so many things that can happen at that stage of the championship.\" Alonso said Ferrari could not make more errors and lose extra points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nHe was confident about his prospects at Silverstone because of Ferrari's recent competitiveness there saying, \"We have an interesting weekend ahead of us, but we can approach it with confidence, knowing we have a good opportunity.\" Stirling Moss, the 1955 British Grand Prix winner for Mercedes, felt Hamilton could possibly win the race and Hamilton himself wanted to win at Silverstone for the second time. Hamilton said he was looking forward to learning how his car would perform and felt Mercedes would be competitive at Silverstone. His teammate Nico Rosberg commented his aim was to score points at the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nThe second mid-season test of 2013 was held at the circuit three weeks after the race. Auto GP driver Kimiya Sato and GP3 Series racers Daniil Kvyat and Carlos Sainz Jr. made their first appearances in a Formula One test session for the Sauber and Toro Rosso teams respectively, while World Series by Renault driver Will Stevens drove a Caterham. The Marussia team entered Tio Ellinas from the GP3\u00a0Series, and Susie Wolff drove a Williams car, becoming the first woman to drive a Formula One car in an official session since Giovanna Amati in 1992. The Mercedes team were not allowed to enter the test because the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA; Formula One's governing body) International Tribunal concluded they broke the regulations by running its 2013 car in an illegal test session with Pirelli at the Circuit de Catalunya a month prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 894]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nThe Grand Prix saw 11 teams (each representing a different constructor) entering two drivers each for a total of 22 competitors and there were no changes from the season-entry list. James Rossiter, Force India's simulator driver, was due to drive a VJM06 car in lieu of Adrian Sutil during the first free practice session to gather simulation data until inclement weather cancelled the plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Background\nSome teams modified their cars for the race. Ferrari introduced a new rear wing featuring an alteration in its vertical slot in the F138's endplate's lower front. Mercedes installed a cable-free thermic sensor on the F1\u00a0W04's front wing to monitor the front tyres. Lotus used a \"double DRS\" system on R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's E21\u00a0car to direct airflow and lower downforce for the first time in a race after evaluating it in Friday practice sessions in 2012 and the 2013 pre-season test session. The team also modified the car's suspension system, introduced a new front wing and multiple aerodynamic upgrades in anticipation of improving performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Practice\nPer the regulations for the 2013 season, three practice sessions were held, two 90-minute sessions on Friday and another 60-minute session on Saturday. The first session occurred in wet weather, which had moved in on Thursday afternoon. Water streams formed across some turns and several drivers lost control of their cars. No one set a fast lap until after 75 minutes since teams were reluctant to send drivers onto the wet track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Practice\nDaniel Ricciardo of the Toro Rosso team set the fastest lap, a 1-minute, 54.249 seconds, ahead of Sauber's Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Williams driver Pastor Maldonado, Hamilton, Sauber's Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez and Maldonado's teammate Valtteri Bottas in positions two to six. Charles Pic lost control of the rear of his Caterham and collided with the barrier at Club turn, removing the front wing. Guti\u00e9rrez aquaplaned at the first corner but regained control of his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Practice\nConditions improved as the rain showers eased up. The GP2 Series practice session removed some standing water, allowing drivers to head out as the second session began. Drivers used intermediate tyres early on, but used dry tyres after ten minutes. Rosberg recorded the day's fastest lap, a 1-minute, 32.248 seconds, with 40 minutes to go. The Red Bull duo of Webber and Vettel, Force India's Paul di Resta, Hamilton, Ricciardo and his Toro Rosso teammate Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne, Sutil, Lotus' Romain Grosjean and Alonso followed in positions two to ten. Felipe Massa was limited to seven timed laps because he lost control of the rear of his Ferrari on a damp area at the exit of Stowe corner, damaging the front suspension sliding across the inside tyre barrier before stopping at the pit lane entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Practice\nAfter the session, Hamilton was summoned to the stewards and received his first reprimand of the season for not complying with their instructions to remain to the right of a bollard for safety reasons entering the pit lane. In the final session, which took place in clear and warmer weather and saw both dry compound tyres used, Rosberg was again fastest with a 1-minute, 31.487 seconds lap. Hamilton, Vettel, Webber, Grosjean, Ricciardo, Alonso, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Sutil and Di Resta completed the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Practice\nMcLaren's Sergio P\u00e9rez sustained a left-front tyre puncture at the exit to Copse turn, which was caused by an unidentified object creating a large cut in the wheel's sidewall and damaging the car's floor. Officials stopped the session briefly after 13 minutes to clean the track. P\u00e9rez's car was repaired for him to drive the final ten minutes before spinning backwards at Becketts Curve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Qualifying\nSaturday afternoon's qualifying session was divided into three parts. The first 18-minute session eliminated cars that finished 17th or lower. The 107%\u00a0rule was in effect, requiring drivers to reach a time within 107 per cent of the quickest lap to qualify. The second 15-minute session eliminated cars that finished 11th to 16th. The final ten-minute session determined pole position to tenth. Cars that progressed to the final session were not allowed to change tyres for the race's start, using the tyres with which they set their quickest lap times in the third session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Qualifying\nHamilton took his second pole position of the season and the 28th of his career with a time of 1 minute, 29.607 seconds on his final lap. He was joined on the grid's front row by his teammate Rosberg, who battled his teammate for pole position. Mercedes took its first front row lockout at Silverstone since Juan Manuel Fangio and Moss in 1955 and its third of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Qualifying\nVettel took third and Webber was fourth after an error braking for Club corner lost him time. Di Resta and Sutil for Force India took fifth and seventh on a new set of medium tyres; Ricciardo separated the duo in sixth. Grosjean in eighth had an understeer on his final timed lap at turn 15, and his teammate R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in ninth had issues on the medium tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Qualifying\nAlonso, tenth, switched from the hard to the medium compound tyres with the intention of entering the pit lane if his lap was poor. Button took 11th after not progressing to the final session by one-tenth of a second because he required a hard out-lap to generate tyre temperature. 12th-placed Massa was unable to set a fast enough lap after the loss of track time changing his engine after his crash the day before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Qualifying\nVergne, 13th, ran wide at the exit of Becketts Curve on his fastest lap, possibly because of the aerodynamic turbulence of airflow over Vettel's car removing downforce and causing the error. P\u00e9rez, 14th, had irrecoverable tyre temperature from being randomly instructed to drive onto the FIA weighbridge and traffic slowing him. H\u00fclkenberg took 15th on his final lap ahead of the Williams duo of Maldonado and Bottas. Guti\u00e9rrez in 18th lost time exiting the corners. An improved car balance put Pic 19th, and Marussia's Jules Bianchi drove his improved car to 20th. Van Der Garde and Marussia's Max Chilton were 21st and 22nd respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Qualifying, Post-qualifying\nAfter the session, the FIA technical delegate Jo Bauer found Di Resta and his Force India car without fuel to be 1.5\u00a0kg (3.3\u00a0lb) under the minimum weight limit of 642\u00a0kg (1,415\u00a0lb) and reported this to the stewards. They decided Force India broke series' regulations and ordered Di Resta to start from 22nd. The Force India team did not appeal the decision. Van Der Garde was demoted five grid positions after the stewards concluded he had collided with H\u00fclkenberg at the preceding Canadian Grand Prix. A second five-place grid penalty was imposed on him because Caterham broke a seal to change his gearbox layshaft after qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying classification\nThe fastest lap in each of the three sessions is denoted in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nThe 52-lap race took place in the afternoon of 30 June from 14:00 local time. The weather at the start was clear with the air temperature between 21 to 22\u00a0\u00b0C (70 to 72\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature from 29 to 34\u00a0\u00b0C (84 to 93\u00a0\u00b0F); a gusty wind was present, and no rain was forecast. 120,000 attended the event. The first nine starters began on the medium compound tyres. The optimum strategy was for a driver to make three pit stops because it was faster and not be impeded by slower traffic. Hamilton made a brisk start to lead the field into the first corner. Vettel overtook the slow-starting Rosberg for second. Webber and Grosjean made contact through Abbey corner, damaging the former's carbon fibre front wing, and driving onto the run-off area and fell to 14th\u00a0position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nSutil progressed from sixth to fourth place, and Massa moved through traffic to go from eleventh to fifth. Driving towards Stowe turn, Alonso overtook Button on the inside for ninth. Hamilton led Vettel by eight-tenths of a second by the end of the first lap, with Rosberg third and Sutil fourth. Hamilton began to pull away from Vettel, his car was faster all round the track. Alonso discovered his Ferrari was better in cooler weather because of a favourable car balance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nHe passed Grosjean for eighth at the exit of Woodcote corner at the start on lap two after Grosjean ran wide at turn three, the result of his contact with Webber. Hamilton was two seconds ahead of Vettel by lap five, preventing Vettel from using DRS and allowing Hamilton to react a pit stop without losing position. That same lap, Alonso switched lines in an unsuccessful attempt to pass Ricciardo into Stowe corner and Grosjean caught up to him. By lap seven, Webber had recovered from 14th to 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nAfter exiting turn five on lap eight, Hamilton's rear left tyre punctured and rapidly deflated on the Wellington Straight. Tyre rubber flew off the wheel and littered the track as Vettel swerved to avoid hitting it and took over the lead. Hamilton drove slowly to the pit lane for a replacement wheel and checks to his car; the wheel's sidewall stayed intact and fibres flailed on it. He rejoined the race on the hard compound tyres in 22nd; yellow flags were waved to warn drivers about on-track debris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nOne lap later, Alonso exited Stowe corner with a punctured right-rear tyre that did not delaminate, causing him to enter the pit lane for the hard compound tyres, falling to 11th. His teammate Massa, in fourth, sustained the race's third tyre failure on lap ten when his left rear wheel deflated in Aintree corner, spinning onto the run-off area. Massa entered the pit lane cautiously for a new set of tyres and fell to 22nd. Because of debris on the Wellington Straight, DRS was disabled on lap 11, and it was around this point that FIA race director Charlie Whiting considered stopping the race but decided not to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nPirelli technicians took the rear tyre rubber to their garage for analysis, advised teams to raise pressures to 24\u00a0psi (170\u00a0kPa) and told drivers to avoid mounting the kerbs. Between laps\u00a012 and\u00a013, Alonso overtook the Lotus duo of R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Grosjean on the Hangar Straight and Vergne into Brooklands corner to move into sixth. Grosjean blocked his teammate R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen from passing him at Maggots corner. Red Bull called Vettel into the pit lane for his first pit stop on the 13th\u00a0lap and retained the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap\u00a014, the Lotus team asked Grosjean to allow his teammate R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen into sixth. As he did so on the Hangar Straight linking Stowe corner, Vergne's left-rear tyre failed at 180\u00a0mph (290\u00a0km/h) and littered debris on the circuit. A large piece of tyre landed on R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's helmet, without causing him injury. Vergne entered the pit lane to switch to a new set of hard compound tyres. This fourth tyre failure along with tyre debris on the circuit caused Whiting to deploy the safety car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nAs track marshals checked and cleared on-track debris with road clearing trucks, Vettel was told by radio the inside of his left-rear medium compound tyre that he began the race on had sustained cuts to it. Teams sought to lessen the amount of time spent on their tyres when the switch to making three stops became common. The safety car was withdrawn at the end of the 21st\u00a0lap, and racing resumed with Vettel leading Rosberg and Sutil. P\u00e9rez overtook Webber on the inside into Abbey corner for eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nWebber, whose front wing was changed earlier, retook eighth from P\u00e9rez on the inside at Brooklands turn. On lap 28, Ricciardo turned left into the same turn and passed Grosjean for sixth place. Guti\u00e9rrez front-left tyre's was punctured from a cut on the Hangar Straight linking Stowe corner on lap\u00a028. The tyre, which did not delaminate, damaged his front wing, and left carbon fibre debris on the track. Alonso, who was close by Sutil, swerved to avoid the debris. On that lap, Webber overtook Grosjean into Brooklands corner for seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nThe second round of pit stops commenced on the 30th\u00a0lap. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Grosjean and Alonso were the first of the leaders to enter the pit lane for the hard compound tyres. As he was released, Alonso was forced to brake to avoid hitting Grosjean's car as he entered his pit stall, allowing R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen past him. Over laps\u00a031 and 32, Hamilton attempted two unsuccessful passes on Di Resta on the main straight and into Brooklands corner. Sutil and Rosberg made their second pit stops for the hard compound tyres over laps\u00a033 and\u00a034.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap\u00a035, Webber used DRS on the Hangar Straight into Stowe corner to pass Alonso for fourth position. Vettel made his second pit stop from the lead on the same lap for hard compound tyres. He retained the lead. On the 36th\u00a0lap, Di Resta and H\u00fclkenberg made contact in turn tree, damaging the former's front wing. After Hamilton exited the pit lane on the next lap, Di Resta passed him. Hamilton attempted to pass Di Resta again before Stowe corner. Instead, he narrowly avoided a rearward collision with the rear of Di Resta's car on lap\u00a037. That same lap, Toro Rosso retired Vergne in the pit lane with significant damage to his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nHamilton overtook Di Resta for 11th at the exit of turn three on the following lap. Button passed Grosjean into Brooklands corner for ninth on lap\u00a039. Ricciardo attempted to pass Sutil into Copse corner for sixth but Sutil blocked him by switching lines, slowing Ricciardo. On lap 41, Hamilton used DRS to pass Grosjean on the Hangar Straight for tenth On that lap, Vettel went to change to fifth gear into Vale corner when he lost drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nHe drove slowly round Club turn and stopped at the side of the main straight next to pit wall to retire for the first time in 2013. This promoted Rosberg to the lead, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen to second and Webber to third. With Vettel's car deemed to be in a dangerous position, the safety car was deployed for the second time to allow his car to be moved safely from the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nThe safety car created a situation in which teams had to decide whether to make a pit stop to keep or gain position with nine laps to go. Rosberg and Webber made their stops at the end of\u00a0lap 42 for the hard and medium tyres, respectively. Rosberg retained the lead as Webber fell to fifth. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Sutil and Ricciardo in positions two to four remained on the circuit. Rosberg was informed by radio of an issue with the centre of his left-rear tyre. Racing resumed at the conclusion of lap\u00a045 when the safety car entered the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nWebber overtook Ricciardo into Brooklands turn for fourth on lap\u00a046, and Alonso passed Button for seventh into Copse turn. Entering the Hangar Straight, Alonso was slipstreaming P\u00e9rez at 179\u00a0mph (288\u00a0km/h) when Perez's left-rear tyre failed without warning and damaged his floor. Alonso turned right to avoid tyre debris from P\u00e9rez's car littering the track, as McLaren retired the latter in the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nOn lap\u00a047, Hamilton overtook Button for seventh and Webber deployed DRS to pass Sutil for third. Webber passed R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen with DRS for second at Copse corner on the following lap, just as Ricciardo lost fourth to Alonso. On the 49th\u00a0lap, Alonso and Hamilton demoted Sutil to fifth. Alonso had DRS available on lap\u00a050 and used the extra grip in his tyres to pass R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen for third. On the next lap, Hamilton used DRS to pass R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Race\nOn the final lap, the Lotus team retired Grosjean in the pit lane because of front wing damage slowing him, just as Massa overtook Sutil for sixth. Rosberg held off Webber to take his second victory of the season and the third of his career, by seven-tenths of a second. Alonso took third, with Hamilton, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Massa, Sutil and Ricciardo in fourth to eighth. Di Resta was ninth after a late-race error, and H\u00fclkenberg tenth after a slow puncture required him to make a pit stop earlier than scheduled. The final finishers were Maldonado, Bottas, Button, Guti\u00e9rrez, Pic, Bianchi, Chilton and Van Der Garde.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race\nAt the podium interviews, conducted by 1996 world champion Damon Hill, Rosberg called it \"a very, very special day\" because of the progress the Mercedes team had made over the season. Webber said his team would have to investigate his slow start to the race and would have preferred more laps to have a chance of winning it. Alonso said he felt it was a lucky race for his team due to the loss of position after making a pit stop during the second safety car period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race\nIn the post-race press conference, Rosberg said he would not been able to catch and pass Vettel had the latter not retired due to a lack of overall speed. Webber said he was happy with his own performance and was looking forward to the next round. Alonso called the finish \"a fantastic result for our very difficult weekend\" because his car was inconsistent during a meeting\u2014slow in qualifying but fast in a race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race\nRosberg was summoned to the stewards to explain a perceived non-compliance of rules for not slowing enough for waved yellow flags and not overtaking early in the race between turns three and five. They reviewed telemetry and broadcast footage and imposed a reprimand on Rosberg. Vettel was disappointed to lose a potential victory with his gearbox failing late in the race, saying: \"These things unfortunately happen but fortunately we've got the next race coming up next week so we can try again.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen said his team Lotus had made a strategy error dropping him from second to fifth in the final laps: \"It's three races now where we haven't had the result we maybe expect, but hopefully if we can have a bit more luck and also get rid of some of the mistakes we'll be able to get back to the front.\" The team's head of trackside operations Alan Permane confirmed they had made an strategy error. Di Resta believed his team Force India would be happy to finish ninth and Ricciardo saw his eighth-place finish as \"a missed opportunity to score more points\" due to the fast pace of his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race\nButton on used, cold tyres said he was \"a sitting duck\" because he was vulnerable to being overtaken after the safety car was deployed: \"I was just waiting for people to pass me. It was tough.\" The race result kept Vettel atop the World Drivers' Championship with 132 points. Alonso's third-place finish allowed him to close up to 21 points. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen maintained third position, Hamilton fourth, and Webber fifth. Red Bull maintained their lead in the World Constructors' Championship with 219 points. The points Mercedes had accrued at Silverstone allowed them to overtake Ferrari for second position. Lotus maintained fourth place and Force India were in fifth with eleven races of the season remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race, Tyre concerns\nThe number of tyre failures during the race overshadowed Rosberg's victory. The press likened the situation to the 2005 United States Grand Prix, when seven teams running Michelin tyres were required to withdraw over safety concerns because their tyres were deemed unusable for racing, leaving six Bridgestone-shod cars to compete. A total of 20\u00a0tyre failures during the season caused the Grand Prix Drivers' Association to write a letter to Jean Todt, the FIA president, demanding action. Button, Vettel and Ferrari test driver Pedro de la Rosa met Todt to express their concerns to him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race, Tyre concerns\nAfter several drivers and senior Formula One personnel asked for further action to be taken and had raised their concerns to the media, Todt ordered tyre supplier Pirelli to be present at a meeting of the Sporting Working Committee with team principals at the N\u00fcrburgring on 3\u00a0July to propose new measures to prevent similar incidents from reoccurring in the long-term. He had already asked Pirelli Motorsport director Paul Hembery, racing manager Mario Isola and Whiting to attend a meeting in the Silverstone paddock on the night after the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race, Tyre concerns\nPirelli agreed to increase the strength of its tyres by changing the internal belts material from steel to flexible reinforced kevlar fibre to lessen the possibility of a puncture as a stop-gap solution for the following German Grand Prix. The company received permission to introduce a new tyre featuring a combination of compound from 2012 and one from 2013 in time for the Hungarian Grand Prix. The FIA restricted the practice of changing the left- and right-hand tyres around and limited camber and tyre pressures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232278-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 British Grand Prix, Post-race, Tyre concerns\nAt its headquarters in Milan, Pirelli conducted its own investigation into the tyre failures observed during the race. The company concluded the failures were caused by incorrectly mounted rear tyres to attempt to regulate wear, low enough pressures subjecting tyres to additional stress, extreme camber angles on the suspension of cars and aggressive high kerbs. Pirelli emphasised the practice of incorrectly mounted tyres was not forbidden by the company but underestimated by all. It asked an FIA delegate to ensure teams did not under-inflate tyres and add excess camber angles on all cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232279-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 British Indoor Athletics Championships was the 7th edition of the national championship in indoor track and field for the United Kingdom. It was held from 9\u201310 February 2013 at the English Institute of Sport, Sheffield, England. A total of 24 events (divided evenly between the sexes) were contested over the two-day competition. It served as the selection meet for Great Britain at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships\nThe 2013 British National Track Championships were a series of track cycling competitions held from 25-29 September 2013, at the Manchester Velodrome. They were organised and sanctioned by British Cycling, and were open to British cyclists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships, Competition\nSeparate competitions were held for both men and women, and certain events were also included for paracyclists and juniors. No events were held in Women's Omnium or Men's Madison; otherwise the men's and women's programme was broadly identical, and matched the programme of the UCI World Track Cycling Championships, with the addition of a women's madison race. The women's team pursuit was held over 4000m for four cyclists for the first time following modifications to the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships, Competition\nOpen to British cyclists, the winners of each event are entitled to wear the national champion's jersey - a white jersey with a red, white and blue front stripe - for the next year when competing in that discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships, Competition\nThe 2013 event was dominated by established Olympic cyclists, the most successful of which was Double Olympic champion Laura Trott, winning four titles (two in team events) and a silver medal; only a surprise win in the scratch race for Corrine Hall prevented a clean sweep of 5 endurance titles. Jessica Varnish did complete a sprint sweep of 4 titles, including the team sprint with Dannielle Khan. Trott, with Danielle King, Joanna Rowsell and Elinor Barker also set a new world record on the way to achieving the gold medal in the recently revised women's team pursuit. The previous world record, over a shorter distance and for three riders, is also held by Trott, Rowsell and King.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships, Competition\nThe medals were more evenly distributed among the men, as several endurance events went uncontested by established talent, and so provided opportunities for up and coming riders. Jason Kenny won three, and Kian Emadi won two, of the sprint disciplines, while Matthew Crampton won a medal in all four, including gold in the team sprint with Emadi and Kenny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships, Competition\nAlso noteworthy was the unusual double almost achieved by Ed Clancy, winning gold in the individual pursuit, and silver in the Kilo, normally considered a time trial for sprint athletes only. Clancy also won gold in the points race and silver in the scratch, but did not contest the team pursuit, in which discipline he was reigning Olympic champion. Other noteworthy performances included several medal rides in sprint disciplines by converted heptathlete Katy Marchant in her first major event. Although double World champion Becky James did not compete, her sister Rachel did attend, winning a pair of medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships, Medal summary, Para-cycling Events\nA series of para-cycling national championships were also held over combined categories using a points system. Tandem events were held for blind and visually impaired cyclists which other categories were put together in weighted mixed events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232280-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 British National Track Championships, Medal summary, Under 16 Madison Events\nThe British Under 16 Madison championships were also held as part of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232281-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Rally Championship\nThe 2013 MSA British Rally Championship season was the 55th season of the British Rally Championship. The season began on 6 April in Welshpool and ended on 18 October in Poole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232281-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Rally Championship, Season summary\nFinnish driver Jukka Korhonen lead the championship after four events having taken two victories and a second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232281-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Rally Championship, Drivers championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the highest placed registered driver on each event as follows: 20, 18, 16, 15, and so on deleting one point per placing down to one single point for all finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232282-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Rowing Junior Championships\nThe 2013 British Rowing Junior Championships were the 42nd edition of the National Junior Championships, held from 20\u201321 July 2013 at the National Water Sports Centre in Holme Pierrepont, Nottingham. They were organised and sanctioned by British Rowing, and are open to British junior rowers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232283-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Rowing Senior Championships\nThe 2013 British Rowing Senior Championships were the 42nd edition of the National Senior Championships, held from 19\u201320 October 2013 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, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232284-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Speedway Championship\nThe 2013 British Speedway Championship was the 53rd edition of the British Speedway Championship. The Final took place on 13 May at Monmore Green in Wolverhampton, England. The Championship was won by Tai Woffinden, who beat defending champion Scott Nicholls, Chris Harris and Craig Cook in the final heat. It was the first time Woffinden had won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232284-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Speedway Championship, Results, The 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232285-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Superbike Championship\nThe 2013 British Superbike season was the 26th British Superbike Championship season. Shane Byrne stayed in the championship to defend his title from the previous season on the Paul Bird Kawasaki; Ryuichi Kiyonari returned to the championship on board the Samsung Honda to challenge for his fourth British Superbike Championship, with new team mate Alex Lowes looking to win his first championship after showing his pace at the end of the previous season. Josh Brookes stayed on board the Tyco Suzuki and James Ellison returned to try to win the illusive British title riding the Milwaukee Yamaha in what was billed to be the biggest title fight for years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232285-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Superbike Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe 2013 MCE Insurance British Superbike Championship calendar was announced on 10 October 2012 by MSVR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232286-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Supersport Championship\nThe 2013 British Supersport season is the 26th British Supersport Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232286-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Supersport Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe 2013 MCE Insurance British Superbike Championship calendar has been announced on 10 October 2012 by MSVR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship\nThe 2013 Dunlop MSA British Touring Car Championship was a multi-event motor racing championship for production-based touring cars held across England and Scotland. The championship features a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded amateur drivers competing in highly modified versions of Family cars which are sold to the general public and conform to the technical regulations for the championship. It is one of the most popular domestic motor racing series in the United Kingdom, with an extensive program of support categories built up around the BTCC centrepiece. It was the 56th British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship\nThis was the third season that cars conforming to the Next Generation Touring Car (NGTC) specification will be allowed to compete and the first season since the end of the phased transition from the Super 2000 specification which saw the organising body, TOCA, maintain a performance equalisation between the two chassis specifications. The season saw teams compete with car chassis built to either NGTC or S2000 specification although the NGTC cars had a significant performance advantage over the S2000 cars by giving NGTC cars a significant increase in the turbo boost pressures which they are allowed to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship\nAll teams used the NGTC 2.0 litre turbocharged engine. Teams with S2000 cars were eligible for the newly introduced S2000 trophy named after the winner of the inaugural British Saloon Car Championship in 1958, Jack Sears, known as the Jack Sears Trophy, of which Sears himself awarded to the top S2000 finisher of the year\u00a0\u2013 Lea Wood\u00a0\u2013 at the final round at Brands Hatch based on the number of S2000 wins (known as 'cups') over the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nQualifying for the first race of 2013 started in sunny and cold conditions. The low track temperature caused a few early warm up incidents with several cars sliding off the track culminating in a red flag, after two minutes, for a collision between the spun Colin Turkington and Jack Goff. As the session restarted and drivers began to get heat into the tyres, the times started to tumble with Andrew Jordan setting the fastest time which would become the first pole position of the season after deteriorating track conditions due to a snow shower prevented drivers from improving their times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nThe opening race of the season saw a race long battle between Jason Plato and Andrew Jordan which culminated in Jordan making a last lap dive up the inside of Plato on the final corner. Both Plato and Jordan went off into the gravel, however both drivers were able to recover with Plato winning from Jordan and the fast starting Rob Austin rounding off the podium. Elsewhere the championship campaign got off to a bad start for the Honda pair, after both Matt Neal and Gordon Shedden had to make unscheduled pit stops, finishing out of the points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nRace two was also won by Jason Plato, with Andrew Jordan repeating his race 1 second place and Jordan's Pirtek Racing teammate Jeff Smith rounding off the podium. Shedden had originally finished the race third, however post race scrutineers found that he was running below the minimum ride height. Race three began with a big crash for Rob Austin on lap two after Dave Newsham spun coming down Paddock Hill Bend, tagging the back of Austin's Audi and sending him spinning into the barrier. After a safety car period, Matt Neal took the lead and went on to win the race from his teammate Shedden who had to race through from the back of the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, Liam Griffin took two wins with James Kaye taking the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nQualifying was between two drivers, Gordon Shedden and Frank Wrathall with both drivers swapping fastest lap times in the last minutes of the session. Shedden though was able to beat Wrathall's fastest time as the session came to a close to claim his first pole position since Oulton Park in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nThe day's first race was a lights to flag victory for Shedden who was pushed all the way however by Andrew Jordan who finished second. Third was Matt Neal, making it a Honda Civic lock-out of the podium. Race two of the day had two very special milestones for two drivers. Jason Plato celebrated his 400th race in the BTCC, whilst Matt Neal celebrated his 500th race. Both Plato and Neal ran the numbers 400 and 500 respectively in this race, which was won by Andrew Jordan, from Plato and Shedden. The reverse grid of race three allowed front row starter Colin Turkington take his first win since Snetterton in 2009 and the maiden win for the new eBay Motors BMW 125i. Shedden and Neal finished second and third respectively whilst Plato struggled with the softer tyre, finishing down in eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, James Kaye took his second cup of the season, whilst Joe Girling and Lea Wood both took their first cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nAndrew Jordan secured his second pole position of the year at the track where he also claimed pole 12 months ago, whilst Gordon Shedden and Matt Neal made it a Honda lock-out of the first three grid slots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nRace seven of the season took place in hot and sunny conditions. There was an opening lap mishap for Shedden, when he made contact with Jason Plato at the complex, sending him slamming into the barrier. Despite this, Shedden was able to continue and finished the race at the back of the field. Pole sitter Andrew Jordan lead from the start and looked good for the win. However, with half a lap to go, his front left tyre suffered a puncture sending him off into the grass and having to limp home to finish 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nThis promoted Matt Neal to the lead and gave him his second win of the season. Plato finished second with a hard charging Tom Onslow-Cole finishing third in his Volkswagen CC. Race two was also won by Matt Neal after leading from the start. Onslow-Cole improved to second place, achieving PPCGB.com/Kraftwerk Racing's best result to date. Shedden and Jordan both recovered from starting down the field to finish third and fourth respectively with Plato in fifth. The final race of the day had more tyre troubles for the race leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nWith two laps to go, Jason Plato's MG6 GT suffered a puncture which would see him drop to the back of the field. This allowed Shedden to take his first win of the day ahead of Matt Neal and Andrew Jordan. This meant that Matt Neal left Thruxton the championship leader, with Andrew Jordan and Jason Plato in second and third ahead of defending champion Gordan Shedden in fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, Lea Wood took two class wins to add to his Donington win with Liam Griffin taking a class win, extending his tally to three cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the buildup to round four, AmD Tuning.com announced that Aaron Mason would make his BTCC debut, replacing James Kaye who had a business commitment. Qualifying for race ten of the season saw the MG KX Momentum Racing team secure a front row lock-out with team leader Jason Plato starting on pole from rookie teammate Sam Tordoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nAfter such a strong qualifying, in came as no surprise that the MG pair we able to convert their front row lock-out into a one-two lights to flag victory for Plato, with Tordoff second in race ten. During the second race of the day, Plato was able to once again win with another lights to flag run, this time ahead of Gordon Shedden and Colin Turkington respectively. However, Tordoff was unable to replicate his first race form.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nAfter choosing the soft tyre, he quickly lost grip and stated dropping down the order to finish outside the points, after contact with Mat Jackson. The final race of the day saw action from the very start. The first half of the race saw a fight for the lead between Rob Austin and Jeff Smith, with Austin taking an early lead until lap 8 when Smith passed him after some contact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nHowever, problems for the title contenders began on lap 4 with Plato retiring in the pits with an engine fire and a lap later, Shedden's hopes of a strong finish were dashed after his Honda Yuasa Racing Team Civic suffered a puncture. Smith looked like he could take his first win until on lap 12, he lost it under braking at Knickerbrook, spinning the car round. This allowed his Pirtek Racing teammate, Andrew Jordan, to take his second win of the season, narrowly beating home eBay Motors Colin Turkington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, Lea Wood took another two class wins with Liam Griffin again taking a class win, extending his tally to four cups, one behind leader Wood on five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the buildup to Croft, Addison Lee Racing announced two driver changes. Jake Hill replaced Liam Griffin for this round, who had business commitments, and he was joined by Michael Caine in a brand new NGTC Ford Focus. Colin Turkington took his first pole position since his last back in 2009 at the same venue and the first pole for the new BMW 125i M Sport. He narrowly beat Jason Plato in a red flag affected session caused by the returning Joe Girling, who crashed at the chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nThe first race of the day saw Turkington convert his pole into a dominant lights to flag victory ahead of the Honda pairing of Matt Neal and Gordon Shedden respectively. Rain fell during the buildup to the day's second race, leading to a mix of tyre strategies on the grid. At the start, the MG KX Momentum Racing, running on wet tyres, took a large lead from the slick shod cars around them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nHowever, it soon became apparent that the track was not getting wetter, but was starting to dry and as the cars running slicks gained heat and confidence in the tyres, they soon caught and passed Plato and Sam Tordoff who slowly dropped down to finish outside the points. At the front, it was Turkington who once again mastered the tricky conditions to win the race from Shedden in second and Tom Onslow-Cole in an impressive third for PPCGB.com/Kraftwerk Racing. The weather would again affect the final race of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nHowever this time, there was no doubt which tyres you needed to be on, after heavy rain began to fall. Matt Neal won the race after taking the lead from Nick Foster on lap three, however it was not plain sailing. On the final lap, Neal ran wide at two corners, allowing the hat-trick searching Colin Turkington to close right up onto the back bumper of Neal's Honda Civic leaving Neal a winning margin of only 0.6 seconds over Turkington. Andrew Jordan rounded out the podium in third with Shedden a distant fourth. Plato and Tordoff recovered from the poor tyre choice in race two to finish sixth and seventh respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, debutant Jake Hill scored a class win in his maiden outing. David Nye's hard work this year was rewarded by a win in race two and Lea Wood extended his cup lead with victory in the final race of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nDuring the summer break, there were several team changes announced for Snetterton. James Kaye and Warren Scott remained with their respective teams, but changed cars. Kaye swapped his Volkswagen Golf for a Super 2000 Honda Civic. Scott, traded in his S2000 SEAT Le\u00f3n for a Next Generation Touring Car Volkswagen CC. Andy Neate finally made his season debut with his home run NGTC Chevrolet Cruze. after several aborted debuts during the season. American Robb Holland also returned, at the circuit he made his BTCC debut in 2012, with RCIB Insurance Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nSam Tordoff took his first pole position in the British Touring Car Championship with Jason Plato second making it a MG KX Momentum Racing front\u2013row lock-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nTordoff converted his first pole position into his first race victory in the first race of the day, leading home teammate Plato. Andrew Jordan took a controversial win in race two when he made contact with then race leader Colin Turkington to take the lead. Matt Neal finished second behind his nearest championship rival while Aron Smith claimed the first podium of the season for Airwaves Racing. Plato had led early on before he retired with fuel pump problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nGordon Shedden won race three in equally controversial circumstances, Turkington had again found himself leading the race when he was tapped into a spin by Shedden. Plato had a dramatic end to his weekend when he spun off on the approach to Hamilton, clipping the barrier and barrel rolling his MG. Jordan and Shedden later had points added to their licences for their moves on Turkington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, Lea Wood claimed victory in all three races to extend his lead in the trophy standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nRCIB Insurance Racing brought in Scottish Legends racer Kieran Gallagher to replace Jack Goff who was missing the Knockhill round for financial reason. Paul O'Neill made his return to the championship in the car raced by Robb Holland at Snetterton. Renault Clio Cup United Kingdom driver Mike Bushell made his championship with Team Club 44, replace team owner Andy Neate. Finesse Motorsport entered the championship with a Super 2000 Chevrolet Cruze LT for series newcomer Aiden Moffat who at 16 years, 10 months and 28 days would become the youngest starter in the British Touring Car Championship, beating the record set by Tom Chilton in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nRob Austin claimed his first British Touring Car Championship pole position, edging out eBay Motors' Colin Turkington. Andrew Jordan qualified third but took a six\u2013place grid penalty for accumulating three reprimands during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nColin Turkington took victory in race one having passed Austin, who went on to finish third behind local hero Gordon Shedden, on the opening lap. Turkington took victory again in race two with Austin second ahead of Shedden. Jordan won from pole in race three to beat his championship rival Matt Neal who was second. Neal's teammate Shedden retired from the race when he was running fifth when his car caught fire due to an engine failure. Turkington was later excluded from race three when his car was found to have exceeded the maximum boost allowance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, Liam Griffin took class wins in the first two races, he retired from the third race allowing Lea Wood to add to his tally of cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nOn the championship's return to England, Jack Goff returned to RCIB Insurance Racing with Howard Fuller returning to the team at the track where he made his championship debut in 2012. Tom Onslow-Cole left Team HARD. to join Airwaves Racing, his seat in the Volkswagen CC was taken by VW Cup racer Andy Wilmot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nJason Plato led an MG KX Momentum Racing 1\u20132 in qualifying with Knockhill pole\u2013sitter Rob Austin in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nPlato had a slow start away from pole and Andrew Jordan made a good start from fourth to jump up into the lead at the first hairpin. Jeff Smith went off the track further around the opening lap while up ahead there was a collision when Will Bratt spun and collected Adam Morgan, there was then a separate collision between Daniel Welch, Tom Onslow-Cole and Andy Neate which saw Howard Fuller go off the track to avoid the stranded cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nWhen the race resumed after the safety car period on lap 7, Matt Neal spun on the restart to drop towards the back of the field and climbed back up to 14th but lost the championship lead to race winner Jordan. In race two Austin jumped ahead of Jordan and Mat Jackson at the start and led every lap to claim his first race win in the British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0027-0002", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nJordan was struggling with the extra weight in the car following his race one victory, he dropped down the order and was running behind championship rival Neal until both Rob Collard and Neal went off at the first hairpin. Neal retired from the race and the title advantage returned to Jordan and Shedden who was running second. Jordan was drawn on pole position for the final race of the day, he held the lead at the start of the race as Turkington moved up into 7th place. The first lap saw Jack Goff slide and take out Collard while trying to avoid an also sliding Jeff Smith, bringing out the safety car. After the safety car restart Jordan held on to win the race, Neal climbed from the back of the grid to finish 7th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, Lea Wood deprived David Nye of victory in race one on the final lap after starting from the pit lane. Wood claimed victory again in race two and race three to secure the Jack Sears Trophy for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nAiden Moffat returned to the championship having missed the previous round, he joined PPCGB.com/Kraftwerk Racing to drive their Volkswagen CC for the final two rounds of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nAs was the case at Rockingham, qualifying saw Jason Plato lead an MG KX Momentum Racing 1\u20132 on the grid for race one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nThe MG drivers converted their front row lock-out into first and second in the race, Plato leading home Sam Tordoff. The race was interrupted by a safety car period early on after a collision at the end of the first lap between Andy Neate, Nick Foster and Will Bratt. Race two saw Plato claim his 80th BTCC victory in another safety car interrupted race, championship leader Andrew Jordan on soft tyres finished a close 2nd after starting 6th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nJordan briefly held the lead before Plato fought back and retook the place, Aron Smith meanwhile closed in on both of them to finish third. Matt Neal was on pole for race three but he was quickly passed by Colin Turkington who started second. Turkington led until the race restarted after a one\u2013lap safety car period to recover debris on the circuit when Gordon Shedden and Aron Smith got past. Turkington's race ended on lap 21 when he spun at Copse and broke the rear suspension on his BMW. Shedden claimed victory to ensure he stayed in contention to retain his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Season report\nIn the Jack Sears Trophy, provisional champion Lea Wood claimed victory in all three races; he was the only entrant in race three when Liam Griffin was unable to start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe entry list for the season was released on 21 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Race calendar\nThe provisional calendar was announced by the championship organisers on 29 August 2012, with no major changes from 2012. All races were held in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232287-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 British Touring Car Championship, Championship standings\nThe 2012 season introduced a revised championship points system in which the top 15 cars will score championship points, this will continue in the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232288-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 British motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 British motorcycle Grand Prix was the twelfth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Silverstone Circuit in Silverstone on 1 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232288-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 British 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232289-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brown Bears football team\nThe 2013 Brown Bears football team represented Brown University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 16th year head coach Phil Estes and played their home games at Brown Stadium. They were a member of the Ivy League. They finished with a record of 6\u20134 overall, 3\u20134 in Ivy League play for a 3 way tie finish for 4th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232290-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brownlow Medal\nThe 2013 Brownlow Medal was the 86th year the award was presented to the player adjudged the fairest and best player during the Australian Football League (AFL) home and away season. Gary Ablett of the Gold Coast Football Club won the medal for the second time by polling twenty-eight votes during the 2013 AFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232290-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brownlow Medal\nThe 16 votes collected by Melbourne players is the lowest ever by any team in a single season under a multiple voting system, including the shortened 2020 season. The entire top ten (see below) outpolled the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232290-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brownlow Medal, Leading vote-getters\n* The player was ineligible to win the medal due to suspension by the AFL Tribunal during the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232290-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232290-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232291-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brussels Open\nThe 2013 Brussels Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the third and last edition of the Brussels Open, and was part of the Premier-level tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. The event took place at the Royal Primerose Tennis Club in Brussels, Belgium, from May 18 through May 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232291-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brussels Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232291-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brussels Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232292-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brussels Open \u2013 Doubles\nBethanie Mattek-Sands and Sania Mirza were the defending champions but Mattek-Sands decided not to participate. Mirza played alongside Zheng Jie, but lost in the semifinals to Gabriela Dabrowski and Shahar Pe'er. Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld and Kv\u011bta Peschke won the title, defeating Dabrowski and Pe'er in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232293-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Brussels Open \u2013 Singles\nAgnieszka Radwa\u0144ska was the defending champion but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232293-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Brussels Open \u2013 Singles\nKaia Kanepi won the title, defeating Peng Shuai in the final, 6\u20132, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232293-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Brussels Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232294-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bryant Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Bryant Bulldogs football team represented Bryant University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by tenth year head coach Marty Fine and played their home games at Bulldog Stadium. They were a member of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 3\u20133 in NEC play to finish in a three way tie for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election\nAn election to Buckinghamshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 49 councillors were elected from electoral divisions which returned one county councillor each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. Following a boundary review, the size of the council was reduced from 57 to 49 members for this election. No elections were held in Milton Keynes, which is a unitary authority outside the area covered by the County Council. The council continues to be administered on the Leader and Cabinet model. The Conservative Party won a reduced majority on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Summary\nSuffering the loss of 335 of 1451 councillors in simultaneous elections across England, the Conservative Party won 36 seats, and saw their majority on the council cut from 17 seats to 11. Meanwhile, the main opposition group on the council altered from the Liberal Democrats to UKIP who won their highest percentage of the vote since their 1993 formation, at 27%. The Labour Party won its first seat here since the 2005 election, in Buckingham West. Seven of twelve Liberal Democrats lost their seats, to Conservative, UKIP and Labour candidates. An independent candidate won the West Wycombe electoral division that replaced Stokenchurch, Radnage & West Wycombe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Results\nThe overall turnout was 30.2% with a total of 116,182 valid votes cast. A total of 533 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Council Composition\nFollowing the last election in 2009 the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Council Composition\nLib Dems - Liberal Democrats L - Labour PartyI - Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Amersham and Chesham Bois\nMartin Phillips previously served as councillor for Amersham prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 85], "content_span": [86, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Aston Clinton and Bierton\nBill Chapple previously served as councillor for Aston Clinton prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 85], "content_span": [86, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Aylesbury North\nRaj Khan previously served as councillor for Aylesbury East prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Aylesbury North West\nNiknam Hussain previously served as councillor for Aylesbury North prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Aylesbury South East\nBrian Roberts previously served as councillor for Aylesbury South prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Aylesbury South West\nFreda Roberts previously served as councillor for Aylesbury West prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Bernwood\nMargaret Aston previously served as councillor for Haddenham prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Booker, Cressex & Castlefield\nZahir Mohammed previously served as councillor for Downley, Disraeli, Oakridge & Castlefield prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 89], "content_span": [90, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Chalfont St Giles\nTimothy Butcher previously served as councillor for The Chalfonts & Seer Green prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Chesham\nMohmammad Bhatti previously served as Conservative councillor for Chesham East prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Cliveden\nDev Dhillon previously served as councillor for Taplow, Dorney & Lent Rise prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Denham\nRoger Reed previously served as councillor for Gerards Cross & Denham North prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Downley\nWendy Mallen previously served as councillor for Downley, Disraeli, Oakridge & Castleford prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Farnham Common & Burnham Beeches\nLin Hazell previously served as councillor for Burnham Beeches prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 92], "content_span": [93, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Flackwell Heath, Little Marlow & Marlow South East\nDavid Watson previously served as councillor for Thames prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 110], "content_span": [111, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Gerrards Cross\nPeter Hardy previously served as councillor for Bulstrode prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Little Chalfont & Amersham Common\nMartin Tett previously served as councillor for The Chalfonts & Seer Green prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 93], "content_span": [94, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Penn Wood & Old Amersham\nDavid Schofield previously served as councillor for Penn, Coleshill & Holmer Green prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 84], "content_span": [85, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Ridgeway East\nDavid Carroll previously served as councillor for Hazlemere prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Ridgeway West\nCarl Etholen previously served as councillor for The Risborough prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Ryemead & Micklefield\nJulia Wassell previously served as councillor for Bowerdean, Micklefield & Totteridge prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Stoke Poges & Wexham\nTrevor Egleton previously served as councillor for Stoke Poges & Farnham Common prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, The Wooburns, Bourne End & Hedsor\nMichael Appleyard previously served as councillor for Thames prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 93], "content_span": [94, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Totteridge & Bowerdean\nChaudhary Ditta previously served as councillor for Bowerdean, Micklefield & Totteridge prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232295-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results, Tylers Green & Loudwater\nDavid Shakespeare previously served as councillor for Ryemead, Tylers Green & Loudwater prior to the boundaries being changed before this set of elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 84], "content_span": [85, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232296-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bucknell Bison football team\nThe 2013 Bucknell Bison football team represented Bucknell University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Joe Susan and played their home games at Christy Mathewson\u2013Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 6\u20135, 3\u20132 in Patriot League play to finish in a three way tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232297-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Budapest Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Budapest Grand Prix was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 19th edition of the Budapest Grand Prix, an International-level tournament on the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the R\u00f3mai Tennis Academy in Budapest, Hungary, from 8 to 14 July 2013. The organisers decided to hold the tournament despite the recent floods in Hungary, but canceled the qualifying rounds (the top four alternates entered the main draw automatically) and reduced the doubles draw from 16 teams to eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232297-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Budapest Grand Prix, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232297-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Budapest Grand Prix, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry from the alternates list (qualifying was canceled to allow courts to recover from recent flooding):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232297-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Budapest Grand Prix, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232298-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Budapest Grand Prix \u2013 Doubles\nJanette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 and Magdal\u00e9na Ryb\u00e1rikov\u00e1 were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 won the title, defeating Nina Bratchikova and Anna Tatishvili in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232299-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Budapest Grand Prix \u2013 Singles\nSara Errani was the defending champion, but chose to compete in Palermo instead. Simona Halep won the title, defeating Yvonne Meusburger in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232300-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Budweiser Duels\nThe 2013 Budweiser Duels were a pair of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car races that were held on February 21, 2013, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Both contested over 60\u00a0laps, were the qualifying races for the 2013 Daytona 500. The first race was won by Kevin Harvick for the Richard Childress Racing team. Greg Biffle finished second, while Juan Pablo Montoya, Jimmie Johnson, and Kurt Busch rounded out the top five. Afterward, the second race was won by Kyle Busch. Kasey Kahne followed in the second position, while Austin Dillon, Clint Bowyer, and Matt Kenseth rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232300-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Budweiser Duels, Report, Background\nDaytona International Speedway is one of six superspeedways to hold NASCAR races, the others being Michigan International Speedway, Auto Club Speedway, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Pocono Raceway and Talladega Superspeedway. The standard track at Daytona International Speedway is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 31\u00a0degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at 18\u00a0degrees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232300-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Budweiser Duels, Report, Races, Race 1\nIn the first Duel, consisting of cars that had qualified in an odd-numbered position, 2011 Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne dominated the race until Denny Hamlin lost control of his car on lap 53, crashing into Montoya, Edwards, and Bayne, ending their races. After the caution and green flag pit stops. Kevin Harvick took over the race lead and captured the first Duel, with Scott Speed taking the transfer spot. Brian Keselowski would be the only car in the first Duel that failed to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232300-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Budweiser Duels, Report, Races, Race 2\nThe second duel was dominated by Jeff Gordon. With no cautions, Kyle Busch took the lead after crew chief Dave Rogers made the call to take only fuel. Busch would hold off Kasey Kahne and Austin Dillon to take his second Duel win. Mike Bliss was the second driver to miss the Daytona 500 after getting a window net penalty early.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash\nThe Buenos Aires train crash occurred on October 19, 2013 when a passenger train failed to stop at a terminal station in Buenos Aires, Argentina, injuring 105 people. As of October 2013, the causes of the accident were under investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Antecedents\nThe Sarmiento railway line had similar accidents in the previous months. The 2012 rail disaster took place on February 22, 2012, and caused 52 deaths and 700 injuries. The ensuing political scandal led to the demotion of Transportation Secretary Juan Pablo Schiavi, and a trial for the causes of the accident that is still open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Antecedents\nThe line's private operator, TBA, had its concessions to operate the Mitre and Sarmiento lines revoked on May 24, 2012. Both lines were operated by the private consortium UGOMS at the time of the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Accident\nAt 07:35 local time (10:35 UTC), a passenger train failed to stop at Once Station in Buenos Aires, colliding with the buffer stop. The lead car jumped the retaining wall and landed on the platform. More than 99 people were reported injured, five seriously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Accident\nThe driver, who was among the injured, was confronted by a number of passengers who yelled \"Murderer!, Murderer!\" at him. He was rescued by police and taken to hospital. The driver, Julio Ben\u00edtez, was arrested after he was found with the train event recorder hidden in his backpack; Ben\u00edtez had attempted to destroy the device. The police recovered the hard drive. He is currently detained at the hospital, under isolation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Accident\nA minor riot broke out outside the station, which was quelled by the police. A fleet of 30 ambulances and two helicopters took the injured to around a dozen different hospitals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Cause\nAs of October 2013, the cause of the accident had not been determined. Pablo Gunning, spokesman of the Sarmiento Line, said that there were no reported problems in the train, and that it would not be advisable to speculate a reason only a few hours after the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Cause\nA witness claimed that the train had problems stopping at the two previous stations to Once; another one said a similar thing about the Ciudadela station several miles to the west. Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo reported that the train entered Once Station at a speed of 22 kilometres per hour (14\u00a0mph) instead of the regulatory 12 kilometres per hour (7.5\u00a0mph). Randazzo also stated that, according to the GPS, the train stopped at all the stations without problems. He said that the unit had undergone general maintenance on October 15, and that the alcohol test on the motorman had a negative result. He pointed out as well that the motorman had not called to report any problem during the journey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Cause\nSeveral new trains were purchased in China a few months before, but the train that crashed was one of the older ones. At the time of the accident the new trains were only used from Monday to Friday; the accident took place on Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Political reactions\nActivist Luis D'El\u00eda stated that the accident was the result of a conspiracy to undermine Front for Victory candidates in the mid-term legislative elections scheduled for October 27 (a week after the incident). He accused Congressman Fernando Solanas and the union leader Rub\u00e9n Sobrero of being involved. D'El\u00eda had said similar things about the Castelar rail accident, which took place in June along the same line. Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo was asked about this, and did not dismiss any potential cause. The Secretary of Public Security, Sergio Berni, made a similar statement, adding that the investigation led by Judge Ariel Lijo will clarify the causes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Political reactions\nPresident Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner had been operated from a subdural hematoma a few days before. Still in post-operative care, she was not informed of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Political reactions\nFernando Solanas, candidate for Senator, blamed Minister Florencio Randazzo for the accident. He considers him responsible for the poor maintenance of the railways. Congresswoman Margarita Stolbizer asked that Randazzo and Planning Minister Julio de Vido resign. The Mayor of Tigre and candidate for Congress on the opposition Renewal Front ticket, Sergio Massa, preferred to wait for the investigations before making opinions, and criticized the lack of long term policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232301-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Buenos Aires train crash, Aftermath\nSome of the relatives of the deceased in the 2012 accident repudiated this new incident. They considered that there is no proof of any sabotage, and pointed to the already manifested concerns about the condition of the specific unit that crashed. Gregorio Dalb\u00f3n, hired to represent a number of the victims in this new incident, asked that the driver, Julio Ben\u00edtez, be detained by Judge Lijo on the charges of gross negligence, destroying evidence and obstruction of justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232302-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bandits season\nThe Buffalo Bandits are a lacrosse team based in Buffalo, New York playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2013 season was their twenty-second season in the NLL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232302-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bandits season\nThe Bandits started the season with a fairly strong 5-3 record, with wins over their division rivals the Toronto Rock and Philadelphia Wings and two wins over the defending champion Rochester Knighthawks. But for the second straight season, the Bandits lost six in a row to put their playoff hopes in jeopardy. They finished the season 6-10 and out of the playoffs for the first time since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232302-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bandits season\nAfter the season, long-time coach Darris Kilgour was fired by the Bandits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232302-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bandits season, 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, 38], "content_span": [39, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232302-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bandits season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nThe 2012 NLL Entry Draft took place on October 1, 2012. The Bandits made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season\nThe 2013 Buffalo Bills season was the franchise's 44th season in the National Football League and the first under head coach Doug Marrone. It was also the final season under the ownership of Ralph Wilson, who died in March 2014 at the age of 95. The team equaled their record from 2012 and missed the playoffs, increasing their playoff drought to 14 seasons. This was the first year of renewed leases on Ralph Wilson Stadium and for the Bills Toronto Series, both of which were signed in the preceding offseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season\nThe Toronto series was originally set to expire in 2017, but was cancelled in December 2014; the lease on Ralph Wilson Stadium expires in 2022 and will presumably be the last agreement with the aging stadium, as the lease specifies that the process of exploring a new stadium begins during the lease period. The Bills also started the 2013 season with a new starting quarterback, first-round draft pick EJ Manuel, after previous starter Ryan Fitzpatrick refused a pay cut and was subsequently released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. New England Patriots\nStephen Gostkowski kicked a 35-yard field goal with five seconds left to give the Patriots the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Carolina Panthers\nBuffalo trailed for most of their Week 2 game against the Panthers but took the lead with two seconds left after Stevie Johnson caught a 2-yard touchdown pass from EJ Manuel. Dan Carpenter kicked the extra point to give the Bills a 24\u201323 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Bills defense intercepted Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco five times in this game, as Flacco completed only 50% of his passes. Despite the five turnovers, the game was still somewhat close, but the Bills won the game 23\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: at Cleveland Browns\nEJ Manuel left the game for the Bills with a knee injury, and was replaced by Jeff Tuel. The Bills had a 24\u201317 lead in the third quarter, but the Browns, who also lost quarterback Brian Hoyer, won the game with Brandon Weeden at the helm. T. J. Ward returned an interception 44 yards to seal the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Bills trailed 24\u201310 in the fourth quarter, but came back to tie the game after Marquise Goodwin caught a 40-yard touchdown pass from Thad Lewis and force overtime. In the extra period, the Bills got the ball first, but were forced to punt after they went three-and-out. The Bengals returned the punt 39 yards to set them up in field goal range. A couple of plays later, Mike Nugent kicked the game winning 43-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at New Orleans Saints\nThis marked the Bills' only game outside of the Eastern time zone during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Jacksonville Jaguars\nWith the win, the Bills improved to 5\u20139, but were eliminated from playoff contention with the Miami Dolphins' win over the New England Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232303-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: at New England Patriots\nWith the loss, the Bills ended their season at 6\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team\nThe 2013 Buffalo Bulls football team represented the University at Buffalo in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Jeff Quinn and played their home games at University at Buffalo Stadium. They completed as a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 8\u20135, 6\u20132 in MAC play to finish in second place in the East Division. They were invited to the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, only the second bowl game in school history, where they were defeated by San Diego State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, @ Ohio State\nIn their first game of the season, the Bulls lost, 40\u201320 to the Ohio State Buckeyes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, @ Baylor\nIn their second game of the season, the Bulls lost, 70\u201313 to the Baylor Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, Stony Brook\nIn their third game of the season, the Bulls won, 26\u201323, in 5 overtimes, over the Stony Brook Seawolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, UConn\nIn their fourth game of the season, the Bulls won, 41\u201312 over the UConn Huskies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, Eastern Michigan\nIn their fifth game of the season, the Bulls won, 42\u201314 over the Eastern Michigan Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, @ Western Michigan\nIn their sixth game of the season, the Bulls won, 33\u20130 over the Western Michigan Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, Massachusetts\nIn their seventh game of the season, the Bulls won, 32\u20133 over the Massachusetts Minutemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, @ Kent State\nIn their eighth game of the season, the Bulls won, 41\u201321 over the Kent State Golden Flashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, Ohio\nIn their ninth game of the season, the Bulls won, 30\u20133 over the Ohio Bobcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, @ Toledo\nIn their tenth game of the season, the Bulls lost, 51\u201341 to the Toledo Rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, @ Miami (OH)\nIn their eleventh game of the season, the Bulls won, 44\u20137 over the Miami RedHawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nIn their twelfth game of the season, the Bulls lost, 24\u20137 to the Bowling Green Falcons. The game was promoted as the \"Clash at the Ralph,\" returning college football to the 70,000+ seat Ralph Wilson Stadium for the first time since the 1970s. (The stadium was nowhere near filled to capacity, but ticket sales were roughly on par with the Bulls' games at UB Stadium.) Had the Bulls won this game, they would have qualified for the MAC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232304-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Bulls football team, Game summaries, Famous Idaho Potato Bowl\nIn their thirteenth game of the season, the Bulls lost, 49\u201324 to the San Diego State Aztecs in the 2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl in Boise, Idaho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl\nThe 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 28, 2013 at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona. The 25th annual Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl featured the Michigan Wolverines of the Big Ten Conference and the Kansas State Wildcats of the Big 12 Conference. The game was telecast at 8:15\u00a0p.m. MST on ESPN. It is one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The game was sponsored by the Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl\nKansas State defeated Michigan by a score of 31\u201314, breaking the Wildcats' five-game bowl losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Teams\nThis postseason game was the first meeting of the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Teams, Michigan\nThe Michigan Wolverines represented the University of Michigan during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wolverines played in the Legends Division of the Big Ten Conference and played their home games at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The team was led by head coach Brady Hoke, who was in his third season. The season ended with a record of 7-6 overall (3-5 in conference play).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Teams, Michigan\nThe Wolverines won 6 of their first 7 games including a 41\u201330 victory over rival #14 Notre Dame. After defeating the Indiana Hoosiers 63\u201347, Michigan only won one more game and lost four more heading in to this bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Teams, Kansas State\nThe Kansas State Wildcats represented Kansas State University for the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wildcats played their home games at Bill Snyder Family Stadium in Manhattan, Kansas as they had done since 1968.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Teams, Kansas State\nThe Wildcats were led by head coach Bill Snyder in his 22nd overall and fifth straight season since taking over his second tenure in 2009. Kansas State began their season with four losses in their first six games, including a 24\u201321 season opener against North Dakota State Bison, a program that competed in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. North Dakota State went on to finish the season undefeated with a record of 15\u20130 and won their third consecutive FCS Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Teams, Kansas State\nAs a member of the Big 12 Conference, the team began conference play with a loss to the Texas Longhorns. The regular season ended with a win over in-state rival Kansas in the Sunflower Showdown. The Wildcats completed their regular season with a 7\u20135 record (5-4 in conference play) by winning five of their final six regular season games, including a 49\u201326 win over #25 Texas Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Scoring summary\nKansas State scored first with a touchdown pass from Jake Waters to Tyler Lockett in the first quarter and K-State's kicker Ian Patterson made good on the extra point to take the lead 7\u20130. Kansas State maintained the lead for the remainder of the game. At halftime, Kansas State led 21\u20136 with Tyler Lockett receiving three touchdown passes from Jake Waters and Michigan succeeding with two field goals. After no score in the third quarter, Michigan's Fitzgerald Toussaint ran the ball three yards for a touchdown while Kansas State's Patterson made a field goal and John Hubert ran in a touchdown for 1 yard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Results\nKansas State won the game by a score of 31\u201314. Many sportswriters determined that Kansas State controlled the Michigan team through the entire game and one wrote \"Kansas State dominates Michigan in Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl\" to summarize the results. Another wrote that \"K-State could be a 2014 Big 12 title contender\" after the results of the game. Supporters of Michigan used the results to highlight high hopes for the upcoming seasons with comments such as \"The young guys are the bright spot for this team.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Results\nKansas State's Tyler Lockett was named the offensive MVP. Lockett finished the game with ten catches for 116 yards and three touchdowns to tie the Bowl record. Kansas State safety Dante Barnett was awarded the Defensive MVP. Barnett recorded a team-high eight tackles and an interception with a 51-yard return to the Michigan seven-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Results\nKansas State quarterback Jake Waters was named the overall Most Valuable Player of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Viewing issue at Buffalo Wild Wings\nThroughout Michigan, Wolverine fans decided to visit their local Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant to watch the game. However, upon arrival they learned that the restaurants were featuring UFC 168: Weidman vs. Silva 2, a mixed martial arts event held roughly that same time at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232305-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, Viewing issue at Buffalo Wild Wings\nIn the state of Michigan, customers were reduced to watching the bowl game on a small number of televisions with no sound. A corporate officer of Buffalo Wild Wings welcomed viewers to the game and encouraged people to watch a bowl game at one of their restaurants and at the same time disgruntled fans at the restaurants reported via Twitter that they were in the wrong place to watch the game on big screens and with sound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election\nThe 2013 election for Mayor of Buffalo, New York took place on November 5, 2013. Two-term incumbent Mayor Byron Brown, a Democrat, faced Republican challenger Sergio Rodriguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Background\nThe 2013 Buffalo mayoral race is notable as the first mayoral election in Buffalo's history to not feature any white, non-Hispanic candidates in either the primary or the general elections. A Buffalo News editorial noted that despite the historic racial aspect of the election, Buffalo voters that year tended to be more concerned with traditional issues such as crime and education, in sharp contrast to the deep ethnic divisions that have normally characterized city politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Background, Candidates, Democratic Party\nBrown was challenged in the Democratic primary by Bernard Tolbert, the former Special Agent-in-Charge of Buffalo's FBI field office, the former Vice-President of Security for the National Basketball Association, and a former executive with the Coca-Cola Company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Background, Candidates, Republican Party\nRodriguez, a 32-year-old, Dominican-born Marine Corps veteran, small business owner, and Medaille College administrator, ran unopposed as Buffalo's first Republican mayoral candidate since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Background, Candidates, Other potential candidates\nEarly in 2013, City Comptroller Mark Schroeder was rumored to be considering a campaign for mayor. However, he declined to run and later endorsed Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Background, Candidates, Other potential candidates\nLocal businessman Matthew Ricchiazzi was reported in June 2013 to be circulating petitions for a possible mayoral campaign. If a Ricchiazzi campaign had actually materialized, it would have touched off a rare Republican primary between him and Rodriguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nLeading up to the primary elections on September 10, Brown, Tolbert and Rodriguez participated in three televised debates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nThe first mayoral debate took place on August 14, 2013 at the Buffalo News auditorium, sponsored by the Buffalo Association of Black Journalists and moderated by Al Vaughters of WIVB-TV. The dominant issue at the first debate was crime, with Rodriguez disputing Brown's assertion that crime has decreased in the city since the previous election; Brown rebutted by calling Rodriguez's statistics \"absolutely false\" and \"nonsense\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nIn addition, both Tolbert and Rodriguez claimed that Buffalo's police department is understaffed and inefficient, with Brown disputing Tolbert's specific claims that there has been a net loss in officers employed by the Buffalo Police since Brown's mayoral tenure began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nOther issues that were debated included unemployment, with Brown forced to defend his administration in the face of statistics cited by Rodriguez showing that the unemployment rate in Buffalo rose from 6.3% to 10% during Brown's two terms as mayor, and low graduation rates in the Buffalo Public Schools, with Tolbert calling for more involvement by the mayor's office in the school system and Rodriguez going even further, favoring complete mayoral control of the school board as is the case in New York City and Yonkers, while Brown reaffirmed his commitment to cooperation with the Board of Education but denied he had the authority to directly participate in school-district policymaking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nThe second debate was held on August 22, 2013 at St. Mary's School for the Deaf, sponsored by the Parkside Community Association and moderated by Buffalo News reporter Brian Meyer, with questions fielded directly from the audience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nThe beleaguered state of the Buffalo Public Schools was the dominant topic in the second debate, with Tolbert elaborating on his earlier position regarding mayoral involvement in the school board by proposing that three of the nine school board members, as well as the school superintendent, be appointed directly by the mayor, while Rodriguez repeated his earlier call for direct mayoral control of the schools. Brown, for his part, touted his success in restoring music programs to Buffalo city schools as well as the hiring of more school security officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nIn addition, the Brown administration's record on economic development was attacked by both challengers, with Brown's boasts of $1.7 billion in development projects currently underway in the city countered by Tolbert's criticism that Brown allowed the Buffalo Economic Renaissance Corporation to fold under his watch, as well as his characterization of economic development in Buffalo as concentrated in downtown at the expense of the neighborhoods. As well, Rodriguez cited statistics showing that Buffalo's employment base has been reduced by 10,000 people since Brown took office in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nThe third and final mayoral debate was held on August 27, 2013 at WNED-TV studios. The candidates reiterated the points covered in the first two debates on police department staffing issues, unemployment, economic development, and problems in the Buffalo Public Schools. On the subject of crime, both Rodriguez and Tolbert derided Brown's use of gun buyback programs as a remedy for crime, with Tolbert characterizing the buybacks as \"stunts\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Debates\nAlso in the third debate, Tolbert was put on the defensive when he was asked about a sexual harassment lawsuit that had been filed against him while he was an executive at the National Basketball Association, while Brown was compelled to deny reports that his administration was rewarding campaign donors with patronage jobs as a quid pro quo and described a lawsuit filed against the city by a housing development company alleging a pay-to-play policy for awarding contracts as \"baseless\" and \"absolute nonsense\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Democratic primary, Campaigning\nThough praised for his experience in crimefighting and community service and his \"straight-shooting vibe\", Tolbert was criticized for waiting until relatively late in the election to announce his candidacy, spending many months courting potential backers and conspicuously attending community events as speculation grew, but not establishing a campaign finance committee until April 2 nor officially entering the race until May 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Democratic primary, Campaigning\nIn the run-up to the primary, a Siena College poll commissioned by the Buffalo News and WGRZ-TV and conducted between August 11 and 13, 2013 favored Brown to win the Democratic primary election against Tolbert by a margin of 61-32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Democratic primary, Campaigning\nAccording to a Buffalo News editorial published on August 17, though his fundraising prowess, his name recognition and the other benefits of incumbency, and the great progress in waterfront development that took place during his administration would have made any primary challenge difficult, Brown's especially formidable lead was described as first and foremost a product of the shortcomings of his opponent's campaign, an anemic one by a political novice whose muddled message has failed to resonate with voters, and particularly with the African-American community whose loyalty to Brown Tolbert had hoped to challenge. For his part, Tolbert accused Brown of pressuring city workers to donate to his campaign as a condition of continued employment as well as engaging in intimidation tactics against volunteers on opposing campaigns, the latter of which was echoed by Rodriguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 945]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Democratic primary, Campaigning\nDespite an impressive performance by Tolbert in the three mayoral debates that frequently put Brown on the defensive, a subsequent Siena College poll taken three weeks after the aforementioned one showed that Brown had widened his lead over Tolbert by four points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Democratic primary, Election returns\nThe Democratic primary election was held on September 10, 2013. Brown won the election, earning 14,022 votes (68.1%) to Tolbert's 6,577 (31.9%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Democratic primary, Election returns\nCommenting on Brown's official nomination the day after the election, a Buffalo News editorial reiterated the points made in the August 17 editorial regarding Brown's name recognition and the capital investments on the waterfront, also opining that the incumbent benefited from an electorate that largely believed Buffalo is heading in the right direction despite the problems facing the city school system, on which Tolbert tried and failed to capitalize. The editorial also mentioned the ample airtime on local television the Brown campaign purchased with its massive \"fundraising war chest\" for its commercial, which prominently featured President Barack Obama's praise of the sitting mayor during a visit to the University at Buffalo on August 22, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Democratic primary, Election returns\nContrary to predictions, turnout in the primary was historically low, with roughly 20% of registered Democrats voting. This apathy was attributed variously to Brown's perceived invincibility given his overwhelming lead in the polls, or to a failure by both Brown and Tolbert to inspire enthusiasm among city voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Conservative primary, Campaigning\nIn July 2013, under the terms of New York State's electoral fusion law, Rodriguez announced plans to mount a write-in candidacy as a Conservative to challenge that party's official endorsement of Brown, much as 2005 Republican candidate Kevin Helfer did, and also to circulate petitions for a possible independent run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Conservative primary, Campaigning\nRodriguez was indeed able to collect the required number of valid signatures to run as a Conservative, but the Erie County Conservative Party, who had earlier endorsed Brown, vigorously sought to fend off Rodriguez's challenge by distributing a mailer to Conservative-registered city voters assailing Rodriguez for his support of the NY SAFE Act and his past unpaid student loans, a move Rodriguez described as \"ugly, dirty, slanderous and baseless politics that people have grown to detest\" employed in order \"to deny voters a choice\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Conservative primary, Campaigning\nThe party also legally challenged all of the petitions collected by Rodriguez based on a little-known stipulation that the notaries public who distribute Opportunity To Ballot petitions must swear in the signers; this effort was dismissed by Erie County Supreme Court Justice John Michalek, setting the stage for a Conservative primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Conservative primary, Election returns\nThe Conservative primary was held on September 10, 2013. Brown captured 70 of the votes cast, while Rodriguez captured 44 and Tolbert 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Republican campaign\nRodriguez officially announced his candidacy on February 6, 2013. His robust campaign featured an active social media presence and an emphasis on grassroots campaigning as exemplified by his \"30 Day Every Neighborhood Tour\" in September and October, which saw the candidate go door-to-door interacting with and fielding questions from residents of all parts of the city. Nonetheless, it was remarked in the Buffalo News that although Rodriguez has generated some buzz among Buffalo Hispanics, he has as yet failed to unite the city's Latino community in support of his long-shot candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Republican campaign\nIn addition to his pursuit of the Conservative line, Rodriguez's petitions for an independent run also bore fruit with his announcement on September 25 that he would be running on a new ballot line, dubbed the Progressive Party. The party's name and platform make direct reference to the Progressive or \"Bull Moose\" Party founded by Theodore Roosevelt in 1912, with a stated goal of reforming city government by transcending partisan divisions and \"making governmental changes parallel with the changing needs of its people... with a dignity defined by moral strength and urgency\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Endorsements\nBrown received the endorsement of the Erie County Democratic Party, and also of the Erie County Conservative, Working Families, and Independence parties. He was also endorsed by, among others, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins, New York State Senator Tim Kennedy, Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz, New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, New York State Assemblypeople Crystal Peoples-Stokes, Sean Ryan, and Michael Kearns (the latter of whom had been his primary challenger in the previous election), the Buffalo Niagara Partnership, and the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Endorsements\nTolbert, whose criticism of Brown in the months leading up to the Democratic primary largely centered on the incumbent mayor's crime-fighting efforts, received the endorsement of the Buffalo Police Benevolent Association in July 2013. Tolbert also received the endorsement of Challenger Community News, one of Buffalo's two African-American community newspapers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232306-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Buffalo mayoral election, Endorsements\nRodriguez received the endorsement of the City of Buffalo Republican Committee. However, the Erie County Republican Party has declined to endorse Rodriguez, amid accusations from Rodriguez's camp that county Republican officials have pressured him to drop out of the race for fear that increased voter turnout in heavily Democratic Buffalo could be a detriment to Republican candidates for countywide office. Rodriguez also received the endorsement of \"The Griffin\", the Canisius College student paper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections\nLocal elections were held in the Province of Bukidnon on May 13, 2013 as part of the 2013 general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the four districts of Bukidnon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, Provincial Elections\nThe candidates for governor and vice governor 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, Provincial Elections, Candidates for Governor\nIncumbent Gov.Alex Calingasan is running for Vice Governor. former Gov.Jose Maria Zubiri, Jr. is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, Provincial Elections, Candidates for Vice-Governor\nIncumbent Vice Governor Jose Maria Zubiri, Jr. is running for Governor. Incumbent Gov.Alex Calingasan is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, Provincial Elections, Congressional Election\nBukidnon was redistricted into four districts after the candidacies were submitted. As a result, the Commission on Elections (Philippines) will take into account the places where the nominees are registered to determine on what district they are running under.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, Provincial Elections, Congressional Election, 3rd District\nIncumbent from the predistricted third district Jose Ma. Zubiri III found himself running at the redistricted 3rd district. His Bukidnon Paglaum party is in an electoral alliance with the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, Provincial Elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections\nAll 4 Districts of Bukidnon will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections\nAll cities and municipalities of Bukidnon will elect mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 1st District, Malitbog\nMayor Aida dela Rosa is no longer seeking reelection but her husband, former mayor Munding Dela Rosa is vying for the seat again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 1st District, Sumilao\nRey Baula is the incumbent. he is challenge by councilor Dante Cuevas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 1st District, Talakag\nNestor Macapayag is the incumbent. Vice Mayor Renato Sulatan is his main opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Malaybalay City\nIgnacio Zubiri is the incumbent. Vice Mayor Victor Aldeguer is his main opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Impasugong\nMario Okinlay is the incumbent. he is challenge by Former Bukidnon Second Electric Cooperative board member Oliver Aldovino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 85], "content_span": [86, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, San Fernando\nIncumbent Laurencia Edma is no longer running. his husband Vice Mayor Levi Edma, Sr. is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, Dangcagan\nIncumbent Edilberto Ayuban is term-limited and running for vice mayor instead. Vice Mayor Dodong Dandasan is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, Kibawe\nMinerva Casinabe is the incumbent. she is oppose by Coun.Rodulfo Jurado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, Kitaotao\nIncumbent Rodito Rafisura is term-limited. his party nominate Vice Mayor Tata Gawilan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, Quezon\nGregorio Gue is the incumbent. he will challenge by John John Fortich who is member of Fortich clan who ruled Bukidnon for several decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 4th District, Valencia City\nLeandro Jose Catarata is the incumbent. he is oppose by his political rival Jose Galario, Jr. and 2 city councilors Arlyn Ayon and Baby Mabao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232307-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bukidnon local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 4th District, Kalilangan\nIncumbent Nenita Suyao is term-limited and running for Provincial Board Member instead. her party nominate Raymon Charl Gamboa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 85], "content_span": [86, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections\nLocal elections was held in the province of Bulacan on May 13, 2013 as part of the 2013 general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the four districts of Bulacan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, Provincial Elections\nThe candidates for governor and vice governor 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, Provincial Elections\nIncumbent Governor Wilhelmino Sy-Alvarado of NUP is running for his reelection unopposed, his running mate is Incumbent Vice Governor and Actor Daniel Fernando.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, Provincial Elections, Congressional Election\nEach of Bulacan's four legislative districts will elect each representative to the House of Representatives. The candidate with the highest number of votes wins the seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, Provincial Elections, Congressional Election, 2nd District\nIncumbent Pedro Pancho is term limited; his son Gavini is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, Provincial Elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan Elections\nAll 4 Districts of Bulacan will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members. The first (including Malolos) and fourth (including San Jose del Monte) districts sends three board members each, while the second and third districts sends two board members each. Election is via plurality-at-large voting; a voter can vote up to the maximum number of board members his district is sending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 86], "content_span": [87, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections\nAll cities and municipalities of Bulacan will elect mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 1st District, City of Malolos\nChristian Natividad is the incumbent, his opponent is former mayor Danilo Domingo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 1st District, Calumpit\nJames P. De Jesus (The Brother of Jess P. De Jesus) is the incumbent mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 1st District, Paombong\nIncumbent Donato Marcos withdrew his candidacy, he was substitute by his wife Maryanne Marcos. Her opponent is councilor Gani Castro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 1st District, Pulilan\nIncumbent Vicente Esguerra running for his reelection unopposed and independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Balagtas\nRomeo Castro is the incumbent. his opponent is Gina Estrella of UNA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Baliuag\nIncumbent Romeo Estrella is term-limited, Provincial league of Barangays President Ferdie Estrella is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Bocaue\nJon-Jon Villanueva is the incumbent, his main opponents are vice mayor Jose Santiago, Jr. and former mayor Serafin Dela Cruz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Bustos\nArnel Mendoza is the incumbent, he will face again former mayor Carlito Reyes, on 2010 election Mendoza defeated Reyes with margin of 3442.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Guiguinto\nIsagani Pascual is the incumbent, his opponent is former mayor Ambrosio Cruz, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 83], "content_span": [84, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Pandi\nEnrico Roque is the incumbent, his opponent is vice mayor Rachel Oca. Rachel is widow of former mayor Roberto Oca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Pandi\nIt was alleged that Dra. Rachel Santos Oca's Legal team have some proof of election vote-buying violations. Voters were allegedly required to wear yellow baller by the one who was the recipient of this vote-buying activity. Pandi is known for rampant vote-buying activities in the past elections but just like what the Honorable current COMELEC head said, not a single violator has been imprisoned yet in any of this democratic processes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 2nd District, Plaridel\nIncumbent Anastacia Vistan is term-limited, her daughter Jocell Vistan is her party's nominee. her main opponent is vice mayor Leo Yap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, Angat\nGilberto Santos is the incumbent, his opponent is former mayor Leonardo De Leon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, Do\u00f1a Remedios Trinidad\nRonaldo Flores is the incumbent, his opponent is Pangko Sembrano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 96], "content_span": [97, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, Norzagaray\nFel Legaspi is the incumbent, his opponent is Alfredo \"Fred\" De Guzman Germar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, San Ildefonso\nIncumbent Carla Paula Galvez-Tan withdrew her candidacy to give way to her father former mayor Edgardo Galvez, former mayor Edgardo Galvez opponent is his nephew Gerald Galvez. Gerald is son of former mayor Gener Galvez, former mayor Gener is brother of Edgardo Galvez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, San Miguel\nRoderick Tiongson is the incumbent, his opponent is Brgy. Sta. Ines Captain John \"Bong\" Alvarez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 3rd District, San Rafael\nLorna Silverio is the incumbent, her opponent is vice mayor Goto Viologo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 4th District, Marilao\nIncumbent Epifanio Guillermo is term-limited, his party nominate vice mayor Tito Santiago. his opponents is Henry Lutao and Ruperto Montaos, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 4th District, Meycauayan City\nJoan Alarilla is the incumbent, his opponent is former vice mayor Salvador Violago, Sr. on 2010 election. Alarilla defeated Violago with a margin of 10493 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 4th District, Obando\nOrencio Gabriel is the incumbent, his opponents are vice mayor Danilo De Ocampo and Edwin Santos. on 2010 election Gabriel defeated Santos with a margin of 7857 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 4th District, Santa Maria\nBartolome Ramos is the incumbent, his opponent is Rogelio Barcial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232308-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulacan local elections, City and Municipal Elections, 4th District, San Jose del monte City\nReynaldo San Pedro is the incumbent, his main opponents are former mayor Angelito Sarmiento and Rida Robes, the wife of incumbent Congressman Arthur Robes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 97], "content_span": [98, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232309-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian Cup Final\nThe 2013 Bulgarian Cup Final was the 73rd final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between Beroe Stara Zagora and Levski Sofia on 15 May 2013. The match finished in a 3\u20133 draw, but Beroe clinched their second ever Bulgarian Cup title by winning 3\u20131 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232309-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian Cup Final, Pre-match\nBeroe reached the final for the second time in the last 3 years. The last time being in 2010 when they celebrated their first and only trophy in the competition. Levski on their side reached their first Bulgarian Cup final since 2007. The blues also hold the record in the tournament by winning 25 cups. This will be the second final in history held between these two clubs. The first one being in 1979 won by Levski with 4-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232309-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian Cup Final, Pre-match\nThe final will take place at Lovech Stadium in Lovech. The stadium has more than 8100 seating places with pitch dimensions of 105 x 68 metres. Each of the two teams was allocated 3,700 tickets for the final, while the remainder went to the grassroots football community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232310-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian Supercup\nThe 2013 Bulgarian Supercup was played on 10 July 2013 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia, between the winners of the previous season's A group and Bulgarian Cup competitions. The match was contested by the champions of the 2012\u201313 A PFG, Ludogorets Razgrad, and the 2013 Bulgarian Cup winners, Beroe Stara Zagora.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232310-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian Supercup\nThis was the second Supercup final for both teams with Ludogorets winning their first one against Lokomotiv Plovdiv in 2012 and Beroe losing to Litex Lovech in 2010 after extra time. Beroe won their first ever Supercup after defeating Ludogorets on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232311-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian nuclear power referendum\nA referendum on building a new nuclear power plant was held in Bulgaria on 27 January 2013. Whilst it was not explicitly mentioned in the question, it was widely acknowledged that the referendum was about restarting construction at the Belene Nuclear Power Plant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232311-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian nuclear power referendum\nAlthough the proposal was approved in all 31 electoral divisions, turnout did not pass the required 60% threshold, resulting in the referendum becoming non-binding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232311-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian nuclear power referendum, Background\nConstruction on the Belene Nuclear Power Plant began in the 1980s, but was later frozen. The Bulgarian government was also forced to close four nuclear reactors as a condition of joining the European Union in 2007. In 2008 the Socialist Party government approved a contract for restarting construction. However, in March 2012 the GERB-led government scrapped plans to continue building the plant, claiming that it could not afford to invest a further \u20ac10 billion, after \u20ac1 billion had already been spent on the project, and that the electricity produced would be too expensive. According to some analysts however, electricity produced by Belene would be cheaper than current sources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232311-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian nuclear power referendum, Background\nThe Socialist Party claimed that it would only cost between \u20ac4 and \u20ac6 billion. They started a petition, and collected over 500,000 signatures, enough to force a referendum. Although the petition called for a referendum on the future of the Belene NPP project, the word \"Belene\" was subsequently removed from the question on insistence by the ruling GERB party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232311-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian nuclear power referendum, Electoral system\nThe referendum requires a turnout of at least 60% for the referendum to be valid. Voters were asked the question \"Should nuclear energy be developed in Bulgaria through construction of a new nuclear power plant?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232311-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian nuclear power referendum, Campaign\nSupporters of the plant argued that it would mean the country would not have to buy electricity from Romania and Turkey, whilst opponents have claimed that it would increase the country's energy dependence on Russia, as the Russian firm Atomstroyexport had been contracted to build the plant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Bulgaria on 12 May 2013, two months ahead of schedule. Protests had forced the resignation of the GERB government in February, leading to the election being moved up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election\nThe elections resulted in a minority parliament, with no party winning a majority of seats. Furthermore, voter turnout was at its lowest since the end of the Communist era. For the first time since the return to democracy in 1990, a political party (GERB) won two elections in a row. Despite emerging victorious, GERB's leader, Boyko Borisov, called for the election results to be annulled, claiming that there had been \"illegal campaigning\" on the day before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Background\nHigh electricity prices and poverty ignited mass protests in February 2013, eventually leading to the resignation of the GERB government and early elections. The elections were originally scheduled to be held in July, but had to be brought forward. The government resigned the day after clashes between the police and protesters led to bloodshed and a number of civilians being badly injured. \u0410 caretaker government was appointed on 13 March 2013 by President Rosen Plevneliev to serve until the elections. On 28 February, Plevneliev announced the earliest possible date for the election would be 12 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 240 members of the National Assembly were elected by closed-list proportional representation in 31 multi-member constituencies. Parties had to receive at least 4% of the national vote to win any of the proportional seats, which were distributed using the largest remainder method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nParties that failed to pass the 4% threshold, but received more than 1% of the national vote were to be allocated annual state subsidies to the amount of 12 leva (\u20ac6) per vote received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Campaign\nAs a result of the protests over electricity prices, the distribution license for Czech utility company \u010cEZ was revoked. President Rosen Plevneliev told parliament: \"I believe that the necessary key changes in the laws should be decided by a new parliament. The decision is to hold elections.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Campaign\nFormer European Commissioner Meglena Kuneva broke from the National Movement for Stability and Progress, formed around Simeon Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. She claimed her new party would have significant support even though opinion polls indicated otherwise. She also indicated that it was likely her civil society organisation, Movement \"Bulgaria of the Citizens\", would become a party as it was \"the only way to participate in elections.\" Rumours suggested she could be a coalition partner to GERB, but she played down such suggestions. In the Socialist party there was infighting over whether Sergei Stanishev or Georgi Parvanov would lead the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Campaign\nSeveral of the parties were newly formed by citizens, resulting from the public discontent from the 2013 Bulgarian protests and the months leading up to them. One such party is People's Voice, formed by Hipodil frontman Svetlio Vitkov. Others were led by citizens using the ticket of parties which were already in existence, as they had not managed to fulfill the strict registration requirements in the two months between the government's resignation and the elections \u2013 one such party is the Democratic Citizens' Initiative. In all cases, the citizens' parties still needed to collect the 7,000 signatures necessary for participating in the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Campaign, Controversy\nAl Jazeera reported voter apathy due to scandals and disappointment with politicians. During the campaign there were also allegations of fraud and an illegal wiretapping scandal. The day before the election, a printing press in Kostinbrod was raided and 350,000 alleged illegally printed ballots were recovered. BSP leader Sergey Stanishev said that this was preparation for fraud with 10 percent of the electoral turnout being falsified for about 25 constituencies. He said: \"This is a scandal unseen in Bulgaria so far.\" There was also allegations of illegal wiretapping of politicians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Campaign, Controversy\nProsecutors suggested former Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov was responsible with media revealing Borisov's alleged summons of Sofia's chief prosecutor to discuss details of the bribery probe. The OSCE's monitoring delegation member Eoghan Murphy said of the fraudulent ballot papers: \"It's not for us to investigate these matters. It is for the Bulgarian authorities, but we will be interested in their assessment of the situation and how they deal with the matter as reported.\" In their post-election press-conferences and press interviews, many of the parties stated that the vote should be invalidated because of the so-called \"ballot-gate\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Campaign, Controversy\nThe revelation of the illegal ballots was made on the day before the election, designated \"day for thought\", when no political campaigning is allowed. Most of the major parties held press conferences immediately after the revelation, after which the Prosecutor's office made a formal announcement on the matter. The Prosecution was then accused by GERB that their announcement \"cost them 5-6% of the vote\", and four days later, in their first press conference since election night, Borisov stated that he will officially ask for an invalidation of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Results\nThere were 6.9 million eligible voters. Voting ended at 21:00. There were also over 250 international electoral monitors. Turnout was 51.3%. Four parties passed the electoral threshold, winning seats in parliament. These four parties account for only 75.76% of all valid ballots cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Reactions\nThe election was noted for its low voter turnout. After voting finished, about 50 protesters congregated outside the election centre at the Palace of Culture in Sofia demanding GERB not be given a chance to form a new government. The protesters chanted \"mafia\" and were involved in brief scuffles with the police. Sergei Stanishev, leader of the second-place Bulgarian Socialist Party, dismissed GERB's chances of forming a government and expressed willingness to negotiate with the other two parties. GERB set a precedent by not holding the traditional post-election press conference for elected parties, and they stayed out of the media for four days until the finalized results came out on Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232312-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Government formation\nOn 24 May, Borisov returned the president's mandate to try and form a government. President Rosen Plevneliev then invited the BSP to form a government. Reuters speculated that the BSP and the DPS will put together a cabinet of non-partisan specialists. That will be approved if some of Attack's 23 MPs boycott the vote, as they did for the election of the new speaker, Mihail Mikov. Former Finance Minister Plamen Oresharski was nominated for the post of prime minister by the BSP and, after a meeting with the Movement for Rights and Freedoms, was appointed on 29 May. About his new cabinet, Oresharski said: \"I have always been skeptical towards the division between leftists and rightists. There are some situations in which the most important thing is a rational and pragmatic approach. The main criterion for the composition of the cabinet is expertise.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet\nThe 2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet were civil demonstrations against high electricity and hot water bills resulting from monopolism in the sphere that began in Blagoevgrad on 28 January 2013, and subsequently spread to over 30 cities in Bulgaria that ended with the resignation of the Boyko Borisov government on 20 February 2013. They were caused by abnormally high electricity bills, but later turned into a mass non-partisan movement against the government and the political system. The events were marked by seven self-immolations (five of them fatal), spontaneous demonstrations and a strong sentiment against political parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet\nAs a result of the demonstrations, the centre-right government of Boyko Borisov resigned and a caretaker cabinet led by Marin Raykov was appointed. The demands of protesters, however, were not addressed, and demonstrations continued throughout the country, calling for a change of the political model and nationalisation of strategic economic sectors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nElectrical power distribution in Bulgaria was managed by a state-owned monopoly until 2005, when the government sold 67% of it to three foreign power companies - German E.ON, Austrian EVN Group and Czech \u010cEZ Group. In 2011, E.ON sold its Bulgarian branch to Energo-Pro, a private Czech power company, and on the next year the state sold its stakes in CEZ. EVN, \u010cEZ and Energo-Pro virtually operate as private regional monopolies whose activities are overseen by the State Commission for Energy and Water Regulation (SCEWR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nThe state also sold its power distribution infrastructure to these private distributors, thus losing control over the management of profits. The main energy companies are believed to have acquired debts in the four years preceding the demonstrations, which partly contributed to a rather unbalanced situation in the energy sphere. In addition, residents of Sofia have been voicing their concerns for years against the city's district heating provider \u2013 Toplofikatsiya Sofia, which has a monopoly on heat distribution in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nDiscontent has been created by very high prices and the fact that the company only reviews readings from customers' calorimetres once a year and the rest of the time it forms bills using \"estimates\", the complex and allegedly illegal formulas the company uses for calculating the bills and the lack of accountability and the practices of the so-called \"heating accountancy firms\", which act as middle-men between Toplofikatsiya and its customers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nAt the same time, Bulgaria has a rapidly expanding renewable energy market. Growth in the sector has surpassed forecasts and has notably increased prices and strain on the electrical grid in the past few years. Investment in wind and solar power installations between 2008 and 2012 in Bulgaria is estimated at more than 4 billion euros, which needs to be repaid by surcharges on electricity prices over the next years. Since 2005, electricity prices for industrial consumers, along with other utilities, have doubled or tripled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nIn 2011, SCEWR rejected demands by regional monopolies to increase power prices, but a string of severe price spikes occurred in 2012 as a consequence of renewable energy charges. In response, the government drastically cut preferential feed-in tariffs for solar power with 50%, and with 22% for wind power. SCEWR also increased power transmission fees by 50 per cent in an attempt to curb green energy production. These measures led to a drop in electricity exports and withdrawal of investment projects, but prices continued to rise slowly in the following months. Subsequent inflation caused by higher production costs was recorded as the highest for the past four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nElectricity costs are one of the main expenditures for Bulgarian citizens. Local analysts estimated that with rising living costs, almost 100 per cent of the average Bulgarian household's monthly income would be spent on utilities, food, transportation, healthcare and education. Currently 85 per cent of household monthly incomes are spent on basic necessities. Prices in Bulgaria amount to 49 per cent of the European Union average, At the same time average salaries are the lowest among European Union members at 768 leva (393 euro) for September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nThe minimum wage is ten times lower than that of some member states, amounting to 310 leva (159 euro), or about 1 euro per hour. Twenty-two per cent of the labour force are employed on a minimum wage. For the past three years, incomes have marked almost no change, while prices have increased significantly. Austerity measures encouraged by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund during the recession have resulted in \"catastrophic\" social consequences according to the International Trade Union Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Background\nThe government of Boyko Borisov strictly imposed austerity measures and sustained fiscal stability, but also delayed government payments to private companies, and was criticised for worsening corruption and media freedom indicators, political authoritarianism and general economic stagnation. As a consequence, the support for Borisov and his centre-right Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria (GERB) party has been steadily declining since 2010. A major blow to GERB's popularity came after their decision to cancel the Belene Nuclear Power Plant project, which was believed to be a way to reduce electricity costs and create jobs. Mass protests for political or social causes are relatively uncommon in Bulgaria, but have become more frequent since 2007, when the issue of the preservation of Strandzha Mountain nature areas came to the forefront.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 69], "content_span": [70, 927]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Initial phase\nIn late January 2013, protests occurred in Blagoevgrad after consumers received electricity bills that were two times higher than those for the previous month. Protesters symbolically burned their bills. A protester explained that her bill amounted to 310 leva, of which only 128 leva were for electricity consumption and the remainder were various tariffs and taxes. Some of the earliest protests also took place in Sandanski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 84], "content_span": [85, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Initial phase\nOn 10 February, demonstrations occurred in Sofia, Plovdiv, Varna, Burgas, Ruse, Veliko Tarnovo, Shumen, Blagoevgrad, Sandanski, Silistra, Yambol, Gotse Delchev, Belene, Montana, Pazardjik, Dobrich and Kardzhali. The same day, two EVN utility vehicles were set ablaze in Plovdiv. Demonstrators in Sofia gathered in front of the Ministry of Economy, Energy and Tourism and threw snowballs at minister Delyan Dobrev. One protester was stabbed in Varna on 13 February 2013. The authorities of Kranevo also voiced discontent at the electricity prices, after communal services costs almost doubled in comparison to the same period of the previous year. The mayor of Kranevo said that his village was not an exception, and most localities in the municipality had the same issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 84], "content_span": [85, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Initial phase\nBy mid-February tens of thousands of people were on the streets, demanding nationalisation of the private regional monopolies, removal of subcontractors, assigning traffic and distribution to NEK EAD (the state-owned power distribution company), declassifying all contracts between the state and energy companies and more liberal combined heat and power usage laws, among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 84], "content_span": [85, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Initial phase\nOn 17 February, a fictitious declaration supposedly written by the three foreign power companies and dismissing the protester demands while calling on them to accept their own responsibility for the situation that had transpired, was circulated in the social media and caused further anger against the energy providers. According to analysts, in the initial phase of the demonstrations, more than 50% of the discontent was fuelled by the supposed abuses of the monopol companies, with only 15% traceable to anti-government feelings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 84], "content_span": [85, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nOn 17 February, a national demonstration against monopolies gathered 10,000 people in Plovdiv, 8,000 (up to 30,000 by other estimates) in Varna and a smaller number in other cities. In total, 100,000 people protested all over the country in 35 cities and towns. Key motorways and transport routes in the country were blocked; rocks, bottles and eggs were thrown against Gendarmerie units, the Ministry of Economy and the National Assembly in the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nPeople chanted \"mafia\" and \"resignation\", and carried slogans such as \"This is not a protest, it's a process - the struggle for a new Bulgaria\", \"Down with GERB\" and \"Janissaries, the end is coming\". They gave the government one more week to respond to their demands. Clashes occurred near \u010cEZ's headquarters in Sofia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nSome media sources and protesters have used the term \"Bulgarian Spring\" as a moniker for the demonstrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nOn 18 February mass demonstrations continued all over the country. In Sofia, they escalated into civil resistance and protesters attempted to attack the National Assembly. The crowds were pushed back to Eagles' Bridge (the starting point of the protest), and after their demands to begin immediate talks with government representatives remained unanswered, they moved towards the National Palace of Culture. Clashes with police and Gendarmerie units on Hristo Botev boulevard left two police officers injured and six patrol vehicles were damaged. Eleven people were arrested. In Veliko Tarnovo, one man set himself on fire and later died in a hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nThe same day Boyko Borisov dismissed finance minister Simeon Dyankov, although this did not reduce public tensions. Dyankov was unpopular among the population because of his abrupt manners and strong insistence on austerity. According to some commentators, football fans gradually started to dominate the demonstrations and contributed to their escalation by steering them in a chaotic and violent direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nOn the same date, around 30 people led by members of the \"No to the EU\" coalition (Bulgarian: \u041a\u043e\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0446\u0438\u044f \u201e\u041d\u0435 \u043d\u0430 \u0415\u0421\") gathered in Sofia and burned a European Union flag, protesting against the EU's supposed discriminatory treatment of Bulgarians and its \"toleration of the ethnic minorities in the country\", expressing the sentiment that the country needs to exit the economic and political union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nOn 19 February, which marked 140 years of national hero Vasil Levski's execution, violent clashes between protesters and police occurred in Sofia. Seven people, including two Gendarmerie officers, were injured during a police charge on protesters at Eagles' Bridge. 25 people were arrested, with the four minors among them quickly released. According to eyewitness accounts, a group of around 20 hooded provocateurs inflamed the situation by throwing firecrackers and rocks at police officers. In the ensuing commotion, the police is alleged to have retaliated against peaceful protest participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nSome pundits have made claims that the agent provocateurs were actually doing GERB's bidding, with the heads of police and the Interior Ministry deliberately attempting to spark a confrontation. President Rosen Plevneliev was booed at during his speech at the Levski Monument. For the first time in history civilians were not allowed to lay flowers at the site. The number of demonstrators in Varna was around 8,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nOn 20 February, on the 11th day of the protests, Boyko Borisov announced that his cabinet would resign, expressing shock due to the violent scenes between protesters and police that he had witnessed and stating that he would never feel comfortable remaining in charge when there is such tension between regular citizens and police. The resignation was put to a vote in Parliament on the next morning, with 209 MPs voting \"for\" and 5 \"against\". A rally gathered in front of the Parliament building in support of Borisov and his government during the debates. Information surfaced in the media that the rally was staged, although GERB's press centre denied the allegations. Borisov expressed gratitude to his sympathizers, but also requested them to discontinue further demonstrations, so that social harmony is not compromised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nAccording to analysis conducted by the information agency BGNES, Borisov is the first Bulgarian prime minister (since Zhan Videnov in 1997) to step down due to hunger fuelled discontent and protests related to the general state of the economy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nThe assessments of political scientists and sociologists regarding Borisov's choice to relinquish power have been mixed. Evgeniy Daynov was critical, maintaining that the timing and the way in which Borisov went about his decision were ill-chosen, creating the impression of a weak and indecisive leader in addition to allowing him to refrain from addressing potentially valid demands. Others such as Kantcho Stoychev characterized it as the only correct and wise move given the difficult circumstances and were optimistic regarding Borisov's chances to retain his influence in politics and continue to work for the betterment of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nBoriana Dimitrova and other analysts emphasized that Borisov's resignation was reflective of a good intuitive reading of the situation and caught analysts, political parties and even the protesters themselves by surprise, with the forces in opposition suffering from their own legitimacy issues which would make them ill-equipped to provide quick solutions to the systemic crisis. In Nikolov's contention, the stepping down of Borisov essentially turned the social crisis into a political one. Klisarov has ascribed more cynical motives to Borisov's quick resignation, viewing it largely as a matter of preserving GERB's power base and the particized status quo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Anti-government movement\nThroughout the crisis Borisov retained the support of the European People's Party and he was endorsed by them for the 2013 parliamentary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nInitiative committees by citizens form around the country. On 23 February coordinators of demonstrations gathered in Sliven to discuss further actions after the resignation of the government. Several members of different political parties who were present at the gathering were expelled. Demands for a change of the political system, a ban on all political parties in power, abolishment of value added tax on electricity production and state ownership of natural resources and strategic sectors were added to the original calls for nationalisation of the power companies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nTIM, a semi-legal company, was reported to have organised a crackdown on an initiative committee gathering in Varna. Protesters holding banners against TIM are alleged to have been beaten, with the police choosing not to intervene. The \"Rakovski Legion\", an organisation of military officers and supporters of the Bulgarian Army, have joined the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nInternational demonstrations occurred 24 February in all major Bulgarian cities, as well as in Vienna, Munich, Paris, London, Barcelona, D\u00fcsseldorf, Frankfurt, Athens, Berlin, Madrid, Dublin and many other major cities all over the world, where the Bulgarian diaspora gathered in front of the Bulgarian embassies and consulates. IMRO leaders organized a march in the capital on that day and joined the demonstrations. President Rosen Plevneliev met with some of the protesters in Sofia and was presented with a list of demands. Non", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\n-mainstream nationalist organizations such as the Bulgarian National Front (Bulgarian: \u0411\u044a\u043b\u0433\u0430\u0440\u0441\u043a\u0438 \u041d\u0430\u0446\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430\u043b\u0435\u043d \u0424\u0440\u043e\u043d\u0442) and Bulgarian National Union (Bulgarian: \u0411\u044a\u043b\u0433\u0430\u0440\u0441\u043a\u0438 \u043d\u0430\u0446\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430\u043b\u0435\u043d \u0441\u044a\u044e\u0437) have also been supportive of the demonstrations, while sharply distancing themselves from what they view as anti-patriotic entities such as the Open Institute and the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee. The protest wave subsequently continued, albeit with a lower intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nGatherings of citizen committees were scheduled to move to Plovdiv in response to Interior Minister in resignation Tsvetan Tsvetanov's accusations that protest leaders belong to organised crime and drug smuggling circles. Yanko Petrov, a protest coordinator, explained in an interview that members of the committees expect to be framed for drug distribution by the authorities. Borisov has been critical of the role played by BSP and MRF during the protests, believing them to have made use of the discontent among the poor in order to topple his government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nHe has also expressed disappointment with some of the media, who had allegedly been overly praiseworthy of him (in order to be able to discredit him with the European Union by creating the false impression that they were under his control) before changing their tune. Borisov also revealed that the protests against his government may have been a factor in the postponement of Bulgaria's entry into the Schengen Area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nIn late February 2013, doctors and medical personnel also voiced dissatisfaction, demanding an urgent meeting with Rosen Plevneliev, due to the limits on their freedom to practice their occupation and see patients that had been imposed by the National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nIn March 2013, Sergei Stanishev accused the Borisov government of monitoring the e-mail accounts and text messages of the protest leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nOn 4 March, a protest tent city was erected in front of the National Parliament by some of the Eagles' Bridge protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Escalation, Post-resignation actions\nThe early elections did not bring about political stability or increased trust in the political institutions of the country. By the end of July 2013, anti-government protesters but this time against the new government of Plamen Oresharski were still out in force, protesting peacefully in Sofia, with Reuters recording the 24 July 2013 as the 41st straight day of peaceful protests. The protesters were demanding the resignation of the Socialist-led government of Oresharski and more than 100 lawmakers, ministers and journalists spent the night besieged inside parliament before police evacuated them. Boyko Borisov returned to power as Prime Minister in November 2014 after his party won the 2014 Bulgarian parliamentary election, forming a coalition government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 95], "content_span": [96, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Public reactions to the protests\nWhile the anti-monopoly and anti-austerity protests enjoyed a high degree of popular support (with over 90% of Bulgarian citizens expressing approval of them in a Gallup poll prior to Borisov's resignation and 77% lauding them in a summer 2013 poll administered by the same company), there was less of a consensus regarding the exact culpability of the Borisov cabinet, with 47% demanding that Boyko Borisov stepped down and 39% believing that he did not need to tender his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Public reactions to the protests\nAlpha Research provided figures suggesting an even greater parity in viewpoints, with 50% approving of Borisov's resignation and 47% disagreeing with the Prime Minister's decision. As a result of this, public enthusiasm for continued demonstrations remained high (around 70%) in the aftermath of Borisov's announcement that he did not intend to stay on. Alpha Research (in its regular survey administered in the period between 22 March and 27 March), confirmed that over 90% of Bulgarians declare support for economically-oriented demands (though only about 20% would be inclined to back up manifestly political ones).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0024-0002", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Public reactions to the protests\nAccordingly, a higher proportion of respondents - 67% - credited the protests for bringing about economic changes (like the reduction in electricity prices), with the number of those well-disposed towards the political transformations as a result of the demonstrations (such as the preliminary elections) a lower one - 47%. 55% expressed full approval for the \"voice of the street\", while 38% were partially supportive of street protests. 14% of Bulgarian citizens affirmed that they would cast their vote for a \"protest party\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Public reactions to the protests\nSurveys generally indicated a higher support for the anti-monopoly protests among younger people in the smaller cities, as opposed to those in Sofia or Plovdiv. Varna constituted the major exception, with the protests labeled by Anna Krasteva as the Varna Spring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Public reactions to the protests\nYoung people as well as the age cohorts between 30-44 and 45-59 constituted a substantial percentage of those who took part in the protest marches. Elderly people were much more visible in the ranks of the protesters in comparison to previous demonstrations for environmental causes. People with primary or no education were almost absent during the protest activities. Self-identified BSP and MRF sympathizers did not have a significant presence at the demonstrations, with 3.5% and 3.3% respectively declaring to have participated in them. 7.45% of self-described GERB supporters were at some point in the streets during the protest activities (presumably only in the initial anti-monopoly phase of the demonstrations). Members of the nationalist Attack had an active involvement in the demonstrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Public reactions to the protests\nEven though the February crisis has been described as \"an element in the political strategy of BSP\", in the immediate aftermath of the protests, electoral support for GERB actually went up (in part due to increased consolidation within the party and mobilization of its voters), with the most recent party in governance increasing its lead over BSP in comparison to the standings in January. The Attack benefited the most as a result of the accumulated protest potential, raising its electoral appeal from 1.9% to 5.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Political events\nThe Prime Minister Boyko Borisov resigned in response to the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Political events\nOn 6 March 2013, mayor of Varna, Kiril Yordanov, also announced his resignation, triggered by the anti-government protest wave in general and the self-immolation of Plamen Goranov in particular. The government (while still formally in charge of the country) declared 6 March to be a day of national mourning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Political events\nPresident Rosen Plevneliev was tasked with giving a mandate to one of the major political parties to form a caretaker government. GERB, the Socialist Party and the Movement for Rights and Freedoms returned the mandate. Early elections became scheduled to take place on 12 May 2013. The caretaker government under Marin Raykov assumed power on 13 March, on the same day in which the date for the early elections was set. It attracted criticism from the Attack party, which questioned its impartiality, regarding it as an instrument of GERB that could help hide any evidence of the former governing party's alleged abuses of power. Businessman and direct democracy proponent Petar Klisarov labeled the Raykov government as \"GERB's \"B\" team\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Political events\nIn March 2013, Rosen Plevneliev approached protest organizers to form a public advisory body that would operate together with the caretaker government, but there was a breakdown in the talks. Plevneliev and the main political parties have been blamed by some sources for allegedly only feigning interest in the protesters' concerns and not acting to change the electoral rules prior to the Parliament's dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Political events\nOn 16 March, a number of the protesters established the political movement \"Liberation\" (Bulgarian: \u043f\u043e\u043b\u0438\u0442\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u043e \u0434\u0432\u0438\u0436\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u201e\u041e\u0441\u0432\u043e\u0431\u043e\u0436\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435\u201d) with the intention of taking part in the upcoming elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Political events\nIn the Parliamentary election in May, all major parties, especially the ruling GERB, received a severe blow (despite obtaining the highest number of popular votes and seats in the National Assembly), with the notable exception of the Socialist Party, which got a major boost in both votes and seats. Due to GERB's political isolation and what Borisov characterized as \"his unwillingness to take part in unprincipled coalitions\", the party did not attempt to form a government by subjecting its chosen cabinet to a vote in the National Assembly and the president passed on the baton to BSP. The citizen energy generated as a result of the February protests did not lead to a high voter turnout and the election campaign is evaluated as having remained largely insulated from the protests, with no political movement incorporating a significant number of protester demands emerging as an electoral challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 983]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Political events\nLeading figures of the party Bulgaria Without Censorship (Bulgarian: \"\u0411\u044a\u043b\u0433\u0430\u0440\u0438\u044f \u0431\u0435\u0437 \u0446\u0435\u043d\u0437\u0443\u0440\u0430\"), which was officially established on 25 January 2014, have made statements suggesting that the majority of the February protesters eventually flocked to them. Angel Slavchev, dubbed as one of the \"faces of the February demonstrations\", started his own show on the News7 channel, which was regarded as closely affiliated with Barekov's party. Slavchev also took part in the 2014 European elections on the ticket of Barekov's party, though he is no longer affiliated with BWS after criticizing the party leader and being expelled in July 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 75], "content_span": [76, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Repercussions in the energy sector\nOn the day before its resignation, the government announced that it would revoke \u010cEZ's licence. Following the statement, the Bulgarian Stock Exchange suspended trading in the shares of \u010cEZ and its subordinate companies. The company's shares declined for several consecutive days on the Prague Stock Exchange. In early March 2013, mayor Rositsa Yanakieva revealed that 288 separate lawsuits against \u010cEZ (pertaining to disputes surrounding the ownership of power substations) had been filed by the Pernik municipality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Repercussions in the energy sector\nTwo weeks after the government announced its resignation (but before it had taken effect), the Electricity Systems Operator announced that the total energy production in the country was estimated at well below 50% of the full capacity, with the country's second-largest power station, the Varna TPP, having been completely shut down. This was surprising for people who had been paying high bills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Repercussions in the energy sector\nA week later, the energy minister Delyan Dobrev revealed that energy contracts signed by previous governments in 2002 and 2005 contained secret clauses about the construction and exploitation of the Maritza East 1 and Maritza East 3 power stations, totalling over 13 billion BGN (nearly 7 billion euro). Dobrev said that, according to the clauses, the American companies AES and ContourGlobal, which own the power stations, would receive a guaranteed minimum monthly sum of money from customers, whether they were using electricity or not. On 14 November 2013, the Commission for Energy and Water Regulation (Bulgarian: \u041a\u043e\u043c\u0438\u0441\u0438\u044f \u0437\u0430 \u0435\u043d\u0435\u0440\u0433\u0438\u0439\u043d\u043e \u0438 \u0432\u043e\u0434\u043d\u043e \u0440\u0435\u0433\u0443\u043b\u0438\u0440\u0430\u043d\u0435) discontinued the procedure of revoking the license of \u010cEZ Electro Bulgaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Repercussions in the energy sector\nMany of the problems in the energy sector that triggered the protests remain unsolved as of September 2014. National Electric Company continues to accumulate deficits, demanding further rises in the consumer prices of electricity. A large part of the NEC deficit comes from the long-term contracts of renewable energy producers and AES Maritza East 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Effects on political protests outside of Bulgaria\nThe wave of government change from Bulgaria went as far as Slovenia, where the government was forced to resign as a result of similar protests by the Slovenian people affected by the Slovenian government austerity measures. At the end of February demonstrations against high electricity prices occurred in Estonia, following the Bulgarian example.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 108], "content_span": [109, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nThe demonstrations have been characterized as an authentic expression of the desperation of the less affluent Bulgarians, to a large extent motivated by feelings of absolute and relative deprivation and as being dominated by socially oriented demands, associated with the traditional left. While some analysts have labeled them a \"revolt of the poor\", others have regarded the people from the middle class social stratum (specifically the now defunct citizen movement \"Power\" (Bulgarian: \u0433\u0440\u0430\u0436\u0434\u0430\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e \u0434\u0432\u0438\u0436\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0421\u0418\u041b\u0410), members of which had organized demonstrations in Sandanski and Blagoevgrad, as the driving force behind the early unrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nPolitician Edvin Sugarev has criticized a number of media sources, especially Bivol, for publishing unproven information about Borisov's alleged links with the Ministry of the Interior's CSBOP (Bulgarian: \u0426\u0421\u0411\u041e\u041f), where the Prime Minister is purported to have worked as an informer (his file was supposedly called the \"Buda dossier\"), which he sees as having played a pivotal role in the radicalization of the protest by turning the anger away from the monopolism of energy companies and against Borisov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0040-0002", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nHe compared the situation to the atmosphere in January 1997 (but this time with BSP reaping dividends from it), an opinion shared by Evgeniy Daynov who also drew parallels with the 1990 protests in terms of the volatility of the situation. According to the French ambassador to Bulgaria, Philippe Auti\u00e9, the protests stemmed from a lack of sufficient trust in the political class and Bulgarian elites as in general as well as the ability of \"private and non-transparent stakeholders\" to frequently hijack and negatively affect the post-1989 transition processes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0040-0003", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nPolitical scientist Vasil Garnizov similarly regards the protests as reflective of the widespread societal sentiment that there is something wrong when it comes to the political and economic structuring of society (as well as the links between the political and economic spheres) - this attitude is thought to have been pervasive since the early 1990s. The need for increased citizen control over political decision-making has also been identified as a key (but sometimes forgotten) demand of the protest movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0040-0004", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nParvan Simeonov sees the fall-out from the February protests as in indication that the second Bulgarian party system after 1989 (the charismatic one that followed the bipolar model of the 1990s), which began with Simeon Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and continued with Borisov, has now come to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0040-0005", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nIn the view of political anthropologist and journalist Dostena Lavern, the February demonstrations were an indication that \"Bulgaria is fully on track to reach an equalization of its social and political realities with those of the other EU countries\", with the protest motivations linked to EU-wide negative trends such as the threat posed by financial neoliberalism to the democratic fundamentals of countries (in both Eastern and Western Europe). Economist Georgi Angelov from the Sofia Open Society Institute, commenting on the situation one day prior to Borisov's resignation, explained that the country's stability on the global financial markets and bankruptcy indicators have not been seriously affected due to the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nIn addition to the lack of unity issues among the protest leaders (believed to have played a part in discrediting them with citizens), in part exemplified by the split between the \"green\" and the \"other\" protesters, as well as their limited familiarity with politics, some commentators have criticized the supposed prominence in the media of leftist spokespeople for the demonstrators and the demand for the creation of a system without political parties, viewing it as unrealistic and non-constructive as well as likely to encourage the promotion of non-democratic ideas, akin to the councils that had been implemented in the Soviet Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nAccording to Daniel Smilov and Toni Nikolov, in the aftermath of Borisov's resignation, a political power vacuum and an escalation of anti-party sentiments persisted for a short while, with party leaders largely removing themselves from the public sphere. In that moment in time the think tanks, non-governmental organizations and their networks are gauged to have been the only actors willing to speak up in defense of the constitutional system of governance and party democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nFormer Bulgarian Prime Minister Ivan Kostov insists that both the February demonstrations and the subsequent anti-Oresharski ones remained relatively ineffective due to the lacking political leadership in their ranks. Also, from a utilitarian standpoint, a very limited number of the protester demands are believed to have been achieved seven months after Borisov's resignation - 17 out of 20 issues raised by the protesters are thought not to have been tackled in full or in part by the relevant political actors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nAntoniy Galabov maintains that while the initial demonstrations were against high utility bills, with the implicit hope that Borisov could rectify the situation, the protests were subsequently taken over by new participants with a different profile, often driven by corporate interests. The demonstrators' demands are believed to have become overly abstract, with the finger being pointed at the whole political system and the nature of the democratic transition; this is thought to have essentially forced all the mainstream parties to incorporate populism into their platforms in order to portray themselves as allies of the people on the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0042-0002", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nPolitical scientist Deyan Kyuranov regards the initial preeminence of economic grievances as a particular strength of the protest, but believes that the protesters were ill-advised to attempt change the focal point in the direction of a political demonstration and thus caused the collapse of what started off as a promising popular movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0042-0003", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nA number of analysts have also subscribed to the viewpoint that the accusations levelled against GERB (for its supposed authoritarianism and violation of democratic norms) have been without sufficient merit and the party was not even close to creating a state within a state during Borisov's time in power. According to a report generated by the \"Media Democracy\" foundation, the general coverage of the demonstrations by the major media outlets (even those previously considered to be favourable to the Borisov administration) was almost universally pro-protest, with the main media's nature of reporting turning markedly against the government on 17 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0042-0004", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nDespite the calls for greater accountability in politics during the course of the protests, leadership hierarchies and inner party consensus within BSP and GERB are believed to have become more entrenched in the months following the end of the demonstrations, with the status quo parties never facing a serious challenge as a result of the demonstrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0042-0005", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Analysis and political commentary\nThe Internet is believed to have played an important role when it comes to many aspects of the protest movement, and its effectiveness is believed to have been bolstered by the \"media revolution\" in Bulgaria, as evidenced by the increased prominence of online newspapers, on-site reporting by protest leaders as well as a tendency to treat platforms such as Facebook news as primary sources of information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 92], "content_span": [93, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Conspiracy theories\nA minority of anti-protest commentators have taken the stance that the demonstrations were orchestrated by pro-Russian circles in order to bring down the Borisov government (seen as unfavourable to Russian energy interests and Russian lobbies in Bulgaria as a whole) and from the very beginning had an explicitly political dimension. They note that the most intense protests largely subsided after Borisov's resignation even though the economic demands remained mostly unaddressed. The role of the Bulgarian Socialist Party in hijacking the protests has also been emphasized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Conspiracy theories\nSuch pundits tend to characterize the February demonstrations as a coup attempt with the alleged heavy involvement of pro-communist activists, because of the Russophilic sentiments of some of the informal leaders of the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232313-0043-0002", "contents": "2013 Bulgarian protests against the first Borisov cabinet, Conspiracy theories\nIn subsequent interviews, some of the leading figures behind the February demonstrations such as Yanko Petrov, Doncho Dudev and Yoanna Ivanova countered the allegations of a major shift in the direction of the protest in an anti-Borisov fashion by claiming that the largest protest \u0430ctivities actually occurred in the aftermath of Borisov's resignation (with the anti-monopoly sentiments remaining key) and emphasizing that the three of them were also active in demonstrating against Delyan Peevski's short-lived DANS appointment by the Oresharski government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232314-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bungoma local elections\nLocal elections were held in Bungoma County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC)which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232314-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bungoma local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232315-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Burkinab\u00e9 Premier League\nBurkinab\u00e9 Premier League is the top division of the Burkinab\u00e9 Football Federation. It was created in 1961. A total of 16 teams contested the league in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232316-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Busan Open Challenger Tennis\nThe 2013 Busan Open Challenger Tennis was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Busan, South Korea between 13 and 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232316-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Busan Open Challenger Tennis, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232316-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Busan Open Challenger Tennis, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232317-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Busan Open Challenger Tennis \u2013 Doubles\nYuki Bhambri and Divij Sharan were the defending champions. Bhambri decided not to participate whereas Sharan competed with Purav Raja, but they lost to Alex Bogomolov, Jr. and Dudi Sela in the first round. Peng Hsien-yin and Yang Tsung-hua defeated Jeong Suk-young and Lim Yong-kyu 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232318-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Busan Open Challenger Tennis \u2013 Singles\nTatsuma Ito was the defending champion, but lost to Dudi Sela in the quarterfinals. Sela went on to win the title by defeating Alex Bogomolov, Jr. 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake\nThe 2013 Bushehr earthquake occurred with a moment magnitude of 6.3 on April 9 in Iran. The shock's epicenter was in the province of Bushehr, near the city of Khvormuj and the towns of Kaki and Shonbeh. At least 37 people were killed, mostly from the town of Shonbeh and villages of Shonbeh-Tasuj district, and an estimated 850 people were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Tectonic setting\nIran lies within the complex zone of collision between the Arabian Plate and the Eurasian Plate. The rate of convergence between the plates near the epicentre is about 30 millimetres (1\u00a0in) per year, of which only part is taken up within the Zagros fold and thrust belt. The earthquake was the result of thrust faulting on a NW-SE trending fault plane, consistent with continuing shortening of the Arabian Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Earthquake\nAt 16:22 IRDT (11:52 UTC) on April 9, 2013, an earthquake with a magnitude of 6.3 struck the southwestern coast of Iran, in Bushehr Province. It struck at a depth of 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi), near the towns of Khvormuj and Kaki. \"Dozens\" of aftershocks followed, most within the first hour of the main quake. The strongest aftershock had a magnitude of 5.6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Earthquake\nThe area is home to ten thousand people and fifty villages. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) estimated that 80,000 people experienced strong tremors while several million felt light shaking. The earthquake was felt in many countries around the Persian Gulf, including Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Damage\nAt least 37 people were killed and an estimated 850 were injured by the earthquake. Most of those killed were in the town of Shonbeh and villages of Shonbeh-Tasuj District. Of the injured, 100 required hospitalization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Damage\nTwo villages in the Khvormuj district were reported to have been \"levelled\". Landslides caused by the earthquake were reported in Kaki City. According to provincial governor Fereydun Hasanvand, 700 homes were damaged, affecting 200 families. Many residents in the Shonbeh District lost power and water services. Residents took to the streets in search of safety as aftershock after aftershock hit. A report by Iran's International Institute of Earthquake Engineering and Seismology stated that most of the buildings damaged were adobe buildings constructed in the last 50 years; and that 100 houses were destroyed, 1,000 people were left homeless, and that about $50 million in damage occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Damage\nThe Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant was not damaged, according to its operator and the governor of the province. It was built to withstand a magnitude 8 earthquake, according to an official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Aftermath\nIran's Red Crescent Society and the Iranian Navy sent teams to Bushehr Province on the first night to deliver first aid. Several helicopters from nearby provinces helped airlift in emergency supplies. Temporary shelters were erected in the first week after the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232319-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Bushehr earthquake, Aftermath\nThree days of national mourning were announced on April 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232320-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Busia local elections\nLocal elections were held in Busia County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232320-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Busia local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232321-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Butler Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Butler Bulldogs football team represented Butler University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Jeff Voris and played their home games at the Butler Bowl. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League, a conference allowed to compete in the FCS playoffs for the first time in 2013. They finished the season 9\u20134, 7\u20131 in PFL play to share the league title with Marist. Butler and Marist did not play each other in the regular season, so the PFL used the College Sporting News' Gridiron Power Index to determine who would receive the league's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs. Bulter was selected and lost in the first round to Tennessee State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232322-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Butler Bulldogs women's soccer team\nThe 2013 Butler Bulldogs women's soccer team represented Butler University in the 2013 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. Their head coaches were Tari St. John, serving her 7th year, and Rob Alman, serving his 1st year. The Bulldogs played their home games at the Butler Bowl. This was the first year that Butler competed in the Big East Conference, as they moved from the Atlantic 10 Conference following the 2012\u201313 academic year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232322-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Butler Bulldogs women'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, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232323-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Colonial Athletic Association Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 9\u201311 at the Richmond Coliseum in Richmond, VA. The champion, James Madison, received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232323-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 tournament featured only seven teams due to UNC-Wilmington and Towson ineligible for postseason play as a result of low APR scores, and Old Dominion and Georgia State being banned from the CAA tournament due to bylaws that deny access to championships that provide automatic NCAA bids to schools that have announced they will depart the league. Old Dominion and Georgia State were still eligible for an at-large bid to other postseason tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232324-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAA Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Colonial Athletic Association Women's Basketball Tournament was held March 14\u201317 at the Show Place Arena in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. Champion Delaware University received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232325-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2013 CAF Beach Soccer Championship took place from 22 May to 26 May 2013, in El Jadida, Morocco, for the first time. It is the second time in Morocco, following Casablanca hosting the previous qualification tournament in 2011. It was originally scheduled for 10\u201314 April and then for 29 May - 2 June 2013. The two finalists of the championship qualified for the 2013 World Cup and went on to represent Africa in Tahiti in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232325-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Beach Soccer Championship\nAll matches were held at the Mazagan Beach Resort in El Jadida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232325-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Beach Soccer Championship, Participating teams\nThere was to have been a team from Uganda taking part in the tournament, but they were forced to withdraw due to a lack of funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232325-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Beach Soccer Championship, Draw\nThe draw to divide the eight teams into two groups of four and the determination of the subsequent schedule was held at the Mazagan Beach Resort in El Jadida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232325-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nAll match times are correct to that of local time in El Jadida, being Western European Summer Time, (UTC +1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League\nThe 2013 CAF Champions League (also known as the 2013 Orange CAF Champions League for sponsorship reasons) was the 49th edition of Africa's premier club football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and the 17th edition under the current CAF Champions League format. The winner qualified for the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup, and earned the right to play in the 2014 CAF Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League\nIn the final, defending champions Al-Ahly of Egypt defeated Orlando Pirates of South Africa, and were crowned African club champions for a record eighth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Association team allocation\nAll 56 CAF member associations may enter the CAF Champions League, with the 12 highest ranked associations according to their CAF 5-Year Ranking eligible to enter two teams in the competition. The title holders could also enter if they had not already qualified for the CAF Champions League. As a result, theoretically a maximum of 69 teams could enter the tournament \u2013 although this level has never been reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Association team allocation\nFor the 2013 CAF Champions League, the CAF used the 2007\u20132011 CAF 5-Year Ranking, which calculated points for each association based on their clubs\u2019 performance over those 5 years in the CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup. The criteria for points were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Association team allocation\nThe points were multiplied by a coefficient according to the year as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Teams\nThe following teams entered the competition. Teams in bold received a bye to the first round. The other teams entered the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Teams\nAssociations are shown according to their 2007\u20132011 CAF 5-Year Ranking \u2013 those with a ranking score have their rank and score indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Teams\nThe following associations did not enter a team: Cape Verde, Djibouti, Eritrea, Guinea-Bissau, Malawi, Mauritania, Mauritius, Namibia, R\u00e9union, Somalia, South Sudan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws held at CAF headquarters in Cairo, Egypt).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds\nThe draw for the preliminary, first and second qualifying rounds was held on 9 December 2012, and the fixtures were announced by the CAF on 10 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds\nQualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Second round\nThe losers of the second round entered the 2013 CAF Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 14 May 2013. The eight teams were drawn into two groups of four. Each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Knock-out stage\nKnock-out ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Knock-out stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the group A winners played the group B runners-up, and the group B winners played the group A runners-up, with the group winners hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232326-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League, Knock-out stage, Final\nIn the final, the order of legs was decided by a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final\nThe 2013 CAF Champions League Final was the final of the 2013 CAF Champions League, the 49th edition of Africa's premier club football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and the 17th edition under the current CAF Champions League format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final\nThe final was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Orlando Pirates of South Africa and Al-Ahly of Egypt. The first leg was hosted by Orlando Pirates at the Orlando Stadium in Johannesburg on 2 November 2013, while the second leg was hosted by Al-Ahly at the Osman Ahmed Osman Stadium in Cairo on 10 November 2013. The winner earned the right to represent the CAF at the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup, entering at the quarterfinal stage, as well as play in the 2014 CAF Super Cup against the winner of the 2013 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final\nAfter the first leg ended in a 1\u20131 draw, Al-Ahly won the second leg 2\u20130, and were crowned African club champions for a record eighth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232327-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Background\nAl-Ahly were the defending champions, and also the most successful club in the African Champions Cup/CAF Champions League, reaching a total of nine finals, winning seven (1982, 1987, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2012) and losing two (1983, 2007).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Background\nOrlando Pirates were the only South African club to have been crowned African club champion, having won the final in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Background\nThe two teams had met in the group stage, with Orlando Pirates winning in Egypt 3\u20130, then earning a goalless draw at home on the last matchday against an already-qualified Al-Ahly to clinch a spot in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Orlando Stadium\nOrlando Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium, in Soweto, a suburb of Johannesburg, in Gauteng province in South Africa. It is home venue for Orlando Pirates Football Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Orlando Stadium\nIt is currently used mostly for football matches, as the home stadium of Orlando Pirates FC of the Premier Soccer League, and was intended to be utilized, as a training field, for teams participating in the 2010 FIFA World Cup after it was completely rebuilt and reopened on 22 November 2008. In addition to the stadium capacity of 36,761 people, there is an auditorium for 200 people, 120 hospitality suites, a gymnasium and a conference centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Orlando Stadium\nThe stadium was originally built for the Johannesburg Bantu Football Association and it had a seating capacity of 24,000 and cost \u00a337,500 to construct. It was opened by the Minister for Bantu development, MC de Wet Nel, and Ian Maltz who was then Mayor of Johannesburg on 2 May 1959.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Orlando Stadium\nAlthough intended for football the stadium has been used for concerts by the Jazz musicians Molombo and by the O'Jays. Boxing matches were also staged including the 1975 victory of Elijah \u2018Tap Tap' Makhathini over the world welterweight and middleweight champion Emile Griffith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Osman Ahmed Osman Stadium\nOsman Ahmed Osman Stadium, also known as the Arab Contractors Stadium or Al Mokawloon Al Arab Stadium, is a multi-use stadium in Cairo, Egypt. It is currently used mostly for football matches. It is the home stadium of Al Mokawloon Al Arab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Osman Ahmed Osman Stadium\nIn fact, Al Ahly\u2019s management decided to play the match in this stadium because the El Gouna Stadium in which it played its previous matches was not eligible to host the Champions League final, in addition to the Egyptian authorities \u2019decision not to play the game in the Cairo International Stadium due to the Port Said Stadium riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Road to final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232327-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League Final, Format\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232328-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League group stage\nThe group stage of the 2013 CAF Champions League was played from 20 July to 22 September 2013. A total of eight teams competed in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232328-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 14 May 2013, 14:00 UTC+2, at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt. The eight winners of the second round were drawn into two groups of four. Each group contained one team from Pot 1, one team from Pot 2, and two teams from Pot 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232328-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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 runners-up of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232328-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232328-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 19\u201321 July, 2\u20134 August, 16\u201318 August, 30 August\u20131 September, 13\u201315 September, and 20\u201322 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232328-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League group stage, Groups, Group A\nNote: The Zamalek v Al-Ahly match was postponed due to security concerns in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232328-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League group stage, Groups, Group B\nNote: The Coton Sport v S\u00e9w\u00e9 Sport match of Matchday 1 was postponed due to FIFA's suspension on 4 July 2013 of the Cameroonian Football Federation, which was lifted on 22 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage\nThe knock-out stage of the 2013 CAF Champions League was played from 5 October to 10 November 2013. A total of four teams competed in the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the two groups in the group stage qualified for the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Format\nKnock-out ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the group A winners played the group B runners-up, and the group B winners played the group A runners-up, with the group winners hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Semi-finals\nNote: The first leg was originally played on 5 October 2013, 15:00 UTC+1, but was abandoned with the score 0\u20130 in the 65th minute due to a waterlogged pitch. The match was replayed the next day in its entirety according to the competition regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Semi-finals\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Al-Ahly won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Semi-finals\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Orlando Pirates won on the away goals rule and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232329-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the order of legs was decided by a draw. The draw was held on 14 May 2013, 14:00 UTC+2, at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds\nThe qualifying rounds of the 2013 CAF Champions League were played from 15 February to 5 May 2013, to decide the eight teams which advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Draw\nThe draw for the preliminary, first and second qualifying rounds was held on 9 December 2012, at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt, and the fixtures were announced by the CAF on 10 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 49], "content_span": [50, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Format\nQualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round included the 48 teams that did not receive byes to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nZamalek won 7\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAS Vita Club won 5\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nSaint George won 8\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nNote: Al-Ittihad played their home match in Morocco due to security concerns in Libya. CA Bizertin won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nDynamos won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nTusker won 7\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nZanaco won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nOrlando Pirates won 9\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nMochudi Centre Chiefs won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Vital'O won on the away goals rule and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nEnugu Rangers advanced to the first round after Sporting Clube do Pr\u00edncipe failed to show up for the first leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nRecreativo do Libolo won 5\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nJSM B\u00e9ja\u00efa won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAsante Kotoko won 8\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nPrimeiro de Agosto won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n2\u20132 on aggregate. FUS Rabat won on the away goals rule and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nUnion Douala won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nS\u00e9w\u00e9 Sport won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAFAD Dj\u00e9kanou won 6\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n0\u20130 on aggregate. Coton Sport won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Casa Sports won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nKano Pillars won 5\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAC L\u00e9opards won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n2\u20132 on aggregate. ASFA Yennenga won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nThe first round included 32 teams: the 24 winners of the preliminary round, and the 8 teams that received byes to this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nZamalek won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nSaint George won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nCA Bizertin won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nAl-Ahly won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nOrlando Pirates won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nTP Mazembe won 7\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nEnugu Rangers won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nRecreativo do Libolo won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\n1\u20131 on aggregate. JSM B\u00e9ja\u00efa won on the away goals rule and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nFUS Rabat won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nS\u00e9w\u00e9 Sport won 5\u20134 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nCoton Sport won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nStade Malien won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\n4\u20134 on aggregate. AC L\u00e9opards won on the away goals rule and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, First round\nES S\u00e9tif won 5\u20134 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\nThe second round included the 16 winners of the first round. The winners of each tie advanced to the group stage, while the losers entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\n3\u20133 on aggregate. Zamalek won on the away goals rule and advanced to the group stage. Saint George entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\nAl-Ahly won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage. CA Bizertin entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\nOrlando Pirates won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage. TP Mazembe entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\nRecreativo do Libolo won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage. Enugu Rangers entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\nEsp\u00e9rance de Tunis won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage. JSM B\u00e9ja\u00efa entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\n1\u20131 on aggregate. S\u00e9w\u00e9 Sport won on the away goals rule and advanced to the group stage. FUS Rabat entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\nCoton Sport won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage. Stade Malien entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232330-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Champions League qualifying rounds, Second round\n4\u20134 on aggregate. AC L\u00e9opards won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the group stage. ES S\u00e9tif entered the Confederation Cup play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup\nThe 2013 CAF Confederation Cup (also known as the 2013 Orange CAF Confederation Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 10th edition of the CAF Confederation Cup, Africa's secondary club football competition organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). The winner earned the right to play in the 2014 CAF Super Cup. The defending champions AC L\u00e9opards did not enter the tournament as they qualified for the 2013 CAF Champions League and reached the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup\nIn the final, CS Sfaxien of Tunisia defeated TP Mazembe of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and were crowned CAF Confederation Cup champions for a record third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Association team allocation\nAll 56 CAF member associations may enter the CAF Confederation Cup, with the 12 highest ranked associations according to their CAF 5-Year Ranking eligible to enter two teams in the competition. The title holders could also enter if they had not already qualified for the CAF Champions League or CAF Confederation Cup. As a result, theoretically a maximum of 69 teams could enter the tournament (plus eight teams eliminated from the CAF Champions League which entered the play-off round) \u2013 although this level has never been reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Association team allocation\nFor the 2013 CAF Confederation Cup, the CAF used the 2007\u20132011 CAF 5-Year Ranking, which calculated points for each association based on their clubs\u2019 performance over those 5 years in the CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup. The criteria for points were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Association team allocation\nThe points were multiplied by a coefficient according to the year as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Teams\nThe following teams entered the competition. Teams in bold received a bye to the first round. The other teams entered the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Teams\nAssociations are shown according to their 2007\u20132011 CAF 5-Year Ranking \u2013 those with a ranking score have their rank and score indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Teams\nThe following associations did not enter a team: Zimbabwe (11th \u2013 13 pts), Cape Verde, Comoros, Djibouti, Eritrea, Guinea-Bissau, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritania, Mauritius, Namibia, R\u00e9union, Somalia, Uganda, Zanzibar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Teams\nMoreover, the eight losers of the 2013 CAF Champions League second round entered the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws held at CAF headquarters in Cairo, Egypt).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds\nThe draw for the preliminary, first and second qualifying rounds was held on 9 December 2012, and the fixtures were announced by the CAF on 10 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds\nQualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 7 May 2013. The winners of the Confederation Cup second round were drawn against the losers of the Champions League second round, with the former hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 14 May 2013. The eight teams were drawn into two groups of four. Each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Group stage\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Knock-out stage\nKnock-out ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Knock-out stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the group A winners played the group B runners-up, and the group B winners played the group A runners-up, with the group winners hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232331-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup, Knock-out stage, Final\nIn the final, the order of legs was decided by a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final\nThe 2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final was the final of the 2013 CAF Confederation Cup, the 10th edition of the CAF Confederation Cup, Africa's secondary club football competition organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final\nThe final was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between CS Sfaxien of Tunisia and TP Mazembe of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The first leg was hosted by CS Sfaxien at the Stade Olympique de Rad\u00e8s in Rad\u00e8s on 23 November 2013, while the second leg was hosted by TP Mazembe at the Stade TP Mazembe in Lubumbashi on 30 November 2013. The winner earned the right to play in the 2014 CAF Super Cup against the winner of the 2013 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final\nCS Sfaxien won the first leg 2\u20130, and despite losing the second leg 2\u20131, they were crowned CAF Confederation Cup champions for a record third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Background\nCS Sfaxien had previously reached three CAF Confederation Cup finals, winning twice (2007, 2008) and losing once (2010), while this was the first CAF Confederation Cup final for TP Mazembe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Road to final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Rules\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Matches, First leg\nAssistant referees:Th\u00e9ophile Vinga (Gabon)Jean Christian Engone Bibang (Gabon)Fourth official:Yves Gaston Roponat Mbourou (Gabon)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232332-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup Final, Matches, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)Marwa Range (Kenya)Fourth official:Victor Gomes (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232333-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup group stage\nThe group stage of the 2013 CAF Confederation Cup was played from 19 July to 22 September 2013. 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-00232333-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held on 14 May 2013, 14:00 UTC+2, at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt. The eight winners of the play-off round were drawn into two groups of four. There were no seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232333-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Draw\nThe following eight teams were entered into the draw (their identity was not known at the time of the draw as it was held before the play-off round was played):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 44], "content_span": [45, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232333-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232333-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232333-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Groups\nThe matchdays were 19\u201321 July, 2\u20134 August, 16\u201318 August, 30 August\u20131 September, 13\u201315 September, and 20\u201322 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232334-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage\nThe knock-out stage of the 2013 CAF Confederation Cup was played from 6 October to 30 November 2013. A total of four teams competed in the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232334-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the two groups in the group stage qualified for the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232334-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Format\nKnock-out ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232334-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, the group A winners played the group B runners-up, and the group B winners played the group A runners-up, with the group winners hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232334-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals\nCS Sfaxien won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232334-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals\nTP Mazembe won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232334-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup knockout stage, Final\nIn the final, the order of legs was decided by a draw. The draw was held on 14 May 2013, 14:00 UTC+2, at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds\nThe qualifying rounds of the 2013 CAF Confederation Cup were played from 16 February to 2 June 2013, to decide the eight teams which advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Draw\nThe draw for the preliminary, first and second qualifying rounds was held on 9 December 2012, at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt, and the fixtures were announced by the CAF on 10 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 50], "content_span": [51, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Format\nQualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule was applied, and if still level, the tie proceeded directly to a penalty shoot-out (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round included the 38 teams that did not receive byes to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nGor Mahia won 5\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nSuperSport United won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nLiga Mu\u00e7ulmana won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAS Douanes Lom\u00e9 advanced to the first round after Mogas 90 withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nRail Club du Kadiogo won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nLLB Acad\u00e9mic won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nPanth\u00e8re du Nd\u00e9 won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nUS Bitam won 17\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nDedebit won 5\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n3\u20133 on aggregate. TCO Boeny won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nGamtel won 5\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Diables Noirs won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nThe Panthers won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nRecreativo da Ca\u00e1la won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nUS Bougouni won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nOnze Cr\u00e9ateurs won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nBarrack Young Controllers II won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nAzam won 8\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\nNote: Al-Nasr played their home match in Tunisia due to security concerns in Libya. Al-Nasr won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nThe first round included 32 teams: the 19 winners of the preliminary round, and the 13 teams that received byes to this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nENPPI won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nSuperSport United won 2\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nLiga Mu\u00e7ulmana won 8\u20134 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nWydad Casablanca won 4\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nNote: Order of legs reversed after original draw, since two other teams from C\u00f4te d'Ivoire were playing CAF Champions League first legs at home on the same weekend. ASEC Mimosas won 3\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nNote: Second leg postponed after three players of DC Motema Pembe were killed in a car accident. LLB Acad\u00e9mic won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nUSM Alger won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nUS Bitam advanced to the second round after Heartland arrived late for the second leg, as per ruling made by the CAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nAl-Ahly Shendi won 1\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nIsmaily won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nCS Sfaxien won 7\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nDiables Noirs won 6\u20131 on aggregate and advances to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nRecreativo da Ca\u00e1la won 6\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\n\u00c9toile du Sahel won 5\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nAzam won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, First round\nFAR Rabat won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\nThe second round included the 16 winners of the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\nENPPI won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\n3\u20133 on aggregate. Liga Mu\u00e7ulmana won on the away goals rule and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\n1\u20131 on aggregate. LLB Acad\u00e9mic won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\nUS Bitam won 3\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\n0\u20130 on aggregate. Ismaily won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\nCS Sfaxien won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\n\u00c9toile du Sahel won 7\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Second round\nFAR Rabat won 2\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe play-off round included 16 teams: the eight winners of the Confederation Cup second round and the eight losers of the Champions League second round. The winners of each tie advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nThe draw for the play-off round was held on 7 May 2013, 12:00 UTC+2, at the CAF Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt. The winners of the Confederation Cup second round were drawn against the losers of the Champions League second round, with the former hosting the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nFour ties contained a seeded loser of the Champions League second round (Pot A) and an unseeded winner of the Confederation Cup second round (Pot B), and the other four ties contained a seeded winner of the Confederation Cup second round (Pot C) and an unseeded loser of the Champions League second round (Pot D).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nStade Malien won 6\u20130 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nCS Sfaxien advanced to the group stage after Enugu Rangers, which had originally won 1\u20130 on aggregate, was ruled by the CAF to have fielded an ineligible player in the second leg and thus disqualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nFUS Rabat won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nCA Bizertin won 3\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\n2\u20132 on aggregate. ES S\u00e9tif won the penalty shoot-out and advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\n\u00c9toile du Sahel won 4\u20133 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nTP Mazembe won 5\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232335-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Confederation Cup qualifying rounds, Play-off round\n3\u20133 on aggregate. Saint George won on the away goals rule and advanced to the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232336-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Super Cup\nThe 2013 CAF Super Cup (also known as the 2013 Orange CAF Super Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 21st CAF Super Cup, an annual football match in Africa organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), between the winners of the previous season's two CAF club competitions, the CAF Champions League and the CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232336-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Super Cup\nThe match was contested between Al-Ahly of Egypt, the 2012 CAF Champions League winner, and AC L\u00e9opards of the Republic of the Congo, the 2012 CAF Confederation Cup winner. It was hosted by Al-Ahly at the Borg El Arab Stadium in Alexandria on 23 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232336-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Super Cup\nAl-Ahly won the match 2\u20131 to claim their 5th CAF Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232336-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CAF Super Cup, Rules\nThe CAF Super Cup was played as a single match, with the CAF Champions League winner hosting the match. If the score was tied at the end of regulation, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (no extra time was played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games\nThe 2013 CARIFTA Games took place between March 30-April 1, 2013. The event was held at the Thomas Robinson Stadium in Nassau, Bahamas. A report of the event was given for the IAAF. The games mark the seventh time in which the event was held in The Bahamas. The other years being 1976, 1978, 1981, 1984, 1992 and 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Bidding Process\nBidding took place during the 2012 CARIFTA Games held in Bermuda. Initially four countries, namely the Bahamas, Barbados, the Cayman Islands and Martinique, had showed some interest in hosting the games. But ultimately Martinique withdrew its bid in favour of the Bahamas, and Barbados did not come forward with an official bid. The Bahamas was eventually chosen over the Cayman Islands to host the event. This was attributed to a myriad of reasons such as the newly constructed Thomas Robinson Stadium, the Bahamas's fortieth independence celebrations in 2013, and the fact that the country hadn't host the event in ten years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Venue\nThe 2013 Games will be staged in the 15,000 seater, thirty million dollar Thomas A. Robinson National Stadium. Fifty million dollars are being spent to beautify the area and upgrade utilities around the stadium, which is the Queen Elizabeth Sports Centre, in time for both the CARIFTA games and the IAAF World Relays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Austin Sealy Award\nThe Austin Sealy Trophy for themost outstanding athlete of the games was awarded to Shaunae Miller, Bahamas. She won three gold medals (200 m, 400 m, and 4x100metres relay) in the junior (U-20) category setting a new 200m games record in22.77s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Records\nA total of 7 new championship records (CR) were set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Medal summary, Boys under 20 (Junior)\n\u2020: Open event for both junior and youth athletes. \u2021: Exhibition event (no medals).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Medal summary, Girls under 20 (Junior)\n\u2020: Open event for both junior and youth athletes. \u2021: Exhibition event (no medals).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Medal table (official)\nThe official count is in accordance with the medal count published by Carifta 2013's Local Organizing Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232337-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CARIFTA Games, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count (without relays and special olympics), 423 athletes from 25 countries participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232338-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2013 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 42nd Central Collegiate Hockey Association men's ice hockey tournament, and also the last for the original version of the conference. The tournament was played between March 8 and March 24, 2012 at campus locations and at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan. The tournament was won by the Notre Dame Fighting Irish\u2014winning the Mason Cup and earning the CCHA's automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232338-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe CCHA will be revived in the 2021\u201322 season with eight members, with the tournament resuming at that time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232338-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured four rounds of play. In the first round the sixth and eleventh, seventh and tenth, and eighth and ninth seeds as determined by the final regular season standings played a best-of-three series, with the winners advancing to the quarterfinals. There, the first seed and lowest-ranked first-round winner, the second seed and second-lowest-ranked first-round winner, the third seed and second-highest-ranked first-round winner, and the fourth seed and the fifth seed played a best-of-three series, with the winners advancing to the semifinals. In the semifinals, the highest and lowest seeds and second-highest and second-lowest seeds played a single game, with the winner advancing to the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232338-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Regular season 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, 71], "content_span": [72, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup\nThe 2013 CECAFA Cup (known as the GOtv CECAFA Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 37th edition of the annual CECAFA Cup, an international football competition consisting of the national teams of member nations of the Council for East and Central Africa Football Associations (CECAFA). The tournament was held in Kenya from 27 November to 12 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup\nContested by twelve national teams, the tournament had Zambia invited as a guest nation to fill in for Djibouti, who failed to participate for a second consecutive year. This followed the tournament's recent tradition of inviting other African nations to take part once a CECAFA nation pulled out; Malawi were invited to take part in the previous edition held in Uganda, while they and Zimbabwe took part in 2011 after Eritrea withdrew from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup\nHosts Kenya ran out 2\u20130 winners in the final against three-time champions Sudan, with a brace from Allan Wanga securing the Harambee Stars their sixth title after losing to previous hosts Uganda at the same stage the previous year. The third place playoff was won by guests Zambia, who beat Tanzania 6\u20135 on penalties after playing out to a 1\u20131 draw after 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Background and sponsorship\nOn 25 November 2012, it was announced that Kenya was chosen to host the tournament after bids were placed by the host nation as well as Rwanda. However, their hosting of the tournament was not confirmed until a congress meeting for the Confederation of African Football held in Marrakesh, Morocco on 11 March 2013, after it was announced that the Football Kenya Federation had met all the requirements for hosting the tournaments with support from the Kenyan government. The capital city Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Machakos and Nakuru were identified as host cities for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Background and sponsorship\nOn 21 November 2013, CECAFA announced that GOtv would be the title sponsors of the tournament, having committed Ksh. 11.25 million towards the organisation of the event and a further Ksh. 45 million towards the broadcasting of all 26 matches. Other companies that were sponsoring the tournament were Coca-Cola, who committed Ksh. 6.5 million, and UAP Insurance, who committed Ksh. 5.5 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Background and sponsorship\nOf Ksh. 8.7 million (approx. US$ 100,000) that was allocated for prize money, the winners were to receive Ksh. 5.6 million, while the runners-up were to take home Ksh. 2.5 million. The third place playoff winners were to receive Ksh. 600,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 43], "content_span": [44, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Participants\nThe draw for teams to participate in the tournament was held during the tournament's launch on 15 November 2013. Alongside the 12 member nations of CECAFA, Ivory Coast, Malawi and Zambia were initially mooted as invitees for the tournament. However, CECAFA decided against inviting the Ivory Coast, with Secretary-General Nicholas Musonye saying that flying in Les \u00c9l\u00e9phants and keeping them in the country would cost the organisers over US$ 25,000. The Football Association of Malawi decided not to enter a team for the tournament due to a lack of funds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Participants\nThe following teams were confirmed to participate in the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Match officials\nThe following 18 officials were appointed by CECAFA to participate in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Group stage\nThe group stage began on 27 November and ended on 5 December. The matchdays were 27\u201329 November, 30 November\u20132 December and 3\u20135 December. If two or more teams were equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria were applied to determine the rankings (in descending order):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Group stage, Group A\nSince Kenya and Ethiopia had the same statistics at the end of the group stage, a coin toss was used as the drawing of lots to determine the winner of Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Group stage, Third place qualification\nIn addition to the group stage winners and runners-up, the two best third-placed teams will be ranked at the end of the group stage to determine who will qualify for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Knockout stage\nThe knockout stage began on 7 December with the quarter-finals and ended on 12 December with the final. In this stage, teams played against each other once, with the losers of the semi-finals playing against each other in a third place playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Final rankings\nTeams are ranked using the same tie-breaking criteria as in the group stage, except for the top four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232339-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup, Final rankings\nUpdated to games played on 12 December 2013. Team(s) rendered in italics represent(s) the host nation(s). The competition's winning team is rendered in bold. (1) \u2013 Total games lost not counted in total games played (total games lost = total games won)(2) \u2013 Total number of games drawn (tied) for all teams = Total number of games drawn (tied) \u00f7 2 (both teams involved)(3) \u2013 As 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, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final\nThe 2013 CECAFA Cup Final was a football match that took place on Thursday, 12 December 2013 at the Nyayo National Stadium in Nairobi to coincide with Kenya's 50th Jamhuri Day celebrations. It was contested by the hosts Kenya and Sudan to determine the winner of the 2013 CECAFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Background\nPrior to the match, the two nations had 8 titles between them, with Kenya claiming 5 titles, 8 less than the record 13 titles held by Uganda, who were knocked out by Tanzania in the quarter-finals. This was Sudan's first participation in a CECAFA Cup final since 2007, when they beat Rwanda 1\u20130 to clinch their 3rd title. This was also the first time the two nations faced each other in a final, and was Kenya's first win in 11 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Kenya\nKenya, who were hosting the tournament as part of its celebrations of 50 years of independence, were drawn into Group A alongside Ethiopia and South Sudan, whom they were with in the same group the previous year, as well as Zanzibar. They began their campaign against Ethiopia on 27 November, with whom they drew 0\u20130 despite both teams having several chances to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Kenya\nThe next match against South Sudan proved to be a relatively easier affair for the Harambee Stars, who won the game 3\u20131 at the Nyayo National Stadium thanks to goals from Jockins Atudo, 2013 Kenyan Premier League top scorer Jacob Keli and David Owino, despite Atudo's goal being cancelled out by Richard Justin in the 26th minute. Kenya beat Zanzibar 2\u20130 in their last group stage match at the Afraha Stadium in Nakuru, through Jockins Atudo's second goal from the penalty spot and a stunning strike from the edge of the penalty box by A.F.C. Leopards striker Allan Wanga. Since Ethiopia finished their group stage campaign with the same number of points, goal difference and goals as Kenya, a coin toss was decided on to determine the winner of Group A. Kenya won the toss and booked themselves a match against Rwanda in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Kenya\nIn the quarter-finals, Rwanda proved to be very tough opposition for Kenya, who narrowly managed to grab a win through a penalty kick from Jockins Atudo, after the ball was handled in the box by Michel Rusheshangoga. The goal was Atudo's third goal of the tournament, his third from the penalty spot, making him Kenya's top scorer of the tournament and sending Kenya through to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Kenya\nIn their semi-final clash against Tanzania, Kenya won the game in the 3rd minute, after Thika United's Clifton Miheso pounced on a ball that was punched into his path by Gor Mahia's Ivo Mapunda. However, the Taifa Stars could've rescued their efforts in the 89th minute, but TP Mazembe's Mbwana Samatta had his shot go just above the crossbar, much to the relief of the Kenyan fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Sudan\nSudan were drawn into Group C alongside Eritrea, Rwanda and defending champions Uganda, who have won the tournament a record 13 times. Eritrea were Sudan's first assignment of their campaign, and easily saw them off with a 3\u20130 rout through first-half goals from Salah Ibrahim, who scored a brace, and Muhannad El Tahir. Megweya Omer pulled one back for Eritrea in the 73rd minute, but his goal was ruled offside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Sudan\nSudan sealed their place in the quarter-finals in their second match of the group stage, where they beat Rwanda with a solitary goal in the 29th minute from Salah Ibrahim, which made him the tournament's top scorer. However, the Falcons of Jediane fell in their last match of the group stage, after being beaten 1\u20130 by Uganda thanks to a goal from Tusker's Khalid Aucho in the 58th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Sudan\nHaving finished in second place in Group C, Sudan booked a quarter-final match against Group A runners-up Ethiopia. Saladin Bargecho made the task at hand easier for Sudan, when he put the ball into his own net from a corner in the 22nd minute. Salah Ibrahim's fourth strike of the tournament in the 69th minute sealed the win for Sudan and a place in the semi-finals against 2012 Africa Cup of Nations champions Zambia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Road to the final, Sudan\nSudan's semi-final proved to be a very tough task, and 30 minutes of extra time were needed to determine the winner of the match. Reynold Kampamba gave Chipolopolo the lead in the 113th minute and the match seemed to have been tipped in Zambia's favour, but incredibly Miaaz Abdelrahim salvaged the game for Sudan with an equaliser just 2 minutes to the end of the match. Just when it seemed that a penalty shoot-out was in the offing, Salah Ibrahim stepped up for the fifth time to send Sudan to the final in dramatic fashion, after slotting the ball past goalkeeper Toaster Nsabata into the net just seconds to the final whistle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nKenya were in control of possession for most of the match, and in the 35th minute skipper Allan Wanga gave the hosts the lead with a thundering header past goalkeeper Abdel Rahman Ali Ibrahim from a David Owino cross. The game remained open for the remainder of the first half and the beginning of the second half, but Wanga stepped forward again to seal the win for the Harambee Stars. In the 69th minute, Wanga beat El Tahir El Hag to get on the end of a low cross from his A.F.C. Leopards teammate James Situma and slot it into the far post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232340-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe match, alongside Sudan's quarter-final clash against Ethiopia, produced the highest number of yellow cards in the tournament, with the highlights being Amir Kamal's 44th-minute yellow card for a blatant push on Aboud Omar, who was booked in the 38th minute, and Paul Kiongera's booking just seconds after coming on for Francis Kahata, 4 minutes into added time, for dissent. After the match, Wanga received the Man of the Match award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232341-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup group stage\nThe group stage of the 2013 CECAFA Cup began on 27 November and ended on 5 December. The matchdays were 27\u201329 November, 30 November\u20132 December and 3\u20135 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232341-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup group stage\nThe group stage featured 11 CECAFA associations and COSAFA member Zambia as the invited association. Teams were drawn into groups of four, where the top two teams from each group and the two best third-placed teams would advance to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232341-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup group stage\nGroup stage matches were scheduled to be held in Nairobi, Machakos and Nakuru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232341-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup group stage, Fixtures, Tiebreakers\nThe order of tie-breakers used when two or more teams have equal number of points is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232341-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup group stage, Fixtures, Group A\nSince Kenya and Ethiopia could not be separated using the tie-breaking criteria, a coin toss was used as the drawing of lots to determine the winner of Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232341-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup group stage, Fixtures, Third place qualification\nIn addition to the group stage winners and runners-up, the two best third-placed teams will be ranked at the end of the group stage to determine who will qualify for the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232342-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2013 CECAFA Cup began on 7 December with the quarter-finals and ended on 12 December with the final. Matches were played at the Mombasa Municipal Stadium in Mombasa and the Nyayo National Stadium in Nairobi. The Moi Stadium in Kisumu was originally scheduled to host the semi-finals, but the matches were moved to the Kenyatta Stadium in Machakos and the Mombasa Municipal Stadium to allow the stadium to be completely refurbished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232342-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup knockout stage, Format\nThe knockout stage involves the eight teams which advanced from the group stage: the top two teams from each group and the two best third-placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232342-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup knockout stage, Format\nIn this stage, teams play against each other once. The losers of the semi-finals play against each other in the third place playoff where the winners are placed third overall in the entire competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232342-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup knockout stage, Format\nOf the Ksh. 8.7 million (approx. US$ 100,000) that has been allocated for prize money, the winners will receive Ksh. 5.6 million, while the runners-up will take home Ksh. 2.5 million. The third place playoff winners will receive Ksh. 600,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232343-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup statistics\nThe following article contains statistics for the 2013 CECAFA Cup, which took place in Kenya from 27 November to 12 December 2013. Goals scored from penalty shoot-outs are not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232343-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CECAFA Cup statistics, Overall statistics\nUpdated to games played on 12 December 2013. Team(s) rendered in italics represent(s) the host nation(s). The competition's winning team is rendered in bold. (1) \u2013 Total games lost not counted in total games played (total games lost = total games won)(2) \u2013 Total number of games drawn (tied) for all teams = Total number of games drawn (tied) \u00f7 2 (both teams involved)(3) \u2013 As 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232344-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CELAC summit\nThe I CELAC summit or 2013 CELAC summit was the first ordinary heads of state summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States. It was held on 27 and 28 January 2013 in Santiago, Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232344-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CELAC summit\nAll CELAC member states participated except Paraguay. Following the impeachment of Fernando Lugo in 2012, Paraguay was excluded from Mercosur and Unasur meetings. While Paraguay was not officially sanctioned or suspended by CELAC, the government decided not to attend the summit, claiming that it had not been invited to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232344-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CELAC summit\nOn 28 January 2013, the President of Cuba Ra\u00fal Castro succeeded President of Chile Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era as the pro tempore president of the CELAC. This was criticized Cuban exile organizations Cuban American National Foundation, Cuban Democratic Directorate, Assembly of the Resistance, Cuban Liberty Council, as well as the Politically Persecuted Venezuelans Abroad (Veppex).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232344-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CELAC summit, I EU-CELAC summit\nOn 26 January 2013, before the I CELAC summit, the I EU-CELAC summit was held. It was the 7th bi-regional summit and the first to have the CELAC as the European Union counterpart in Latin America and the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232345-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CEMAC Cup\nThe 2013 CEMAC Cup is the eighth edition of the CEMAC Cup, the football championship of Central African nations. The tournament was held in Franceville and Bitam of Gabon from December 9\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232346-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CEMAC Cup squads\n2013 CEMAC Cup was the eighth edition of the CEMAC Cup, the football championship of Central African nations. The tournament was held in Franceville and Bitam of Gabon from December 9\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232347-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CERH European Roller Hockey U-17 Championship\nThe 2013 CERH European Roller Hockey U-17 Championship was the 32nd edition of the CERH European Roller Hockey Juvenile Championship. It was held in Alcobendas, Spain from 1 to 7 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232348-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CERH Women's Euro\nThe CERH Women's Euro 2013 or 2013 CERH Women's Championship was the 12th edition of the CERH European Women's Roller Hockey Championship, held between 17 and 21 December, in Mieres, Asturias, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232348-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CERH Women's Euro\nThe tournament was initially dated for 9 to 14 September, but was suspended as there were not at least five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232349-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CEV Moto3 season\nThe 2013 CEV Moto3 season was the second season using Moto3 bikes, the title was claimed by 14-year-old Frenchman Fabio Quartararo by a single point from Marcos Ram\u00edrez. Mar\u00eda Herrera became the first female rider to win a CEV race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232349-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CEV Moto3 season, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232350-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Draft\nThe 2013 CFL Draft took place on Monday, May 6, 2013 at 12:00 PM ET on TSN. 60 players were chosen from among eligible players from Canadian Universities across the country, as well as Canadian players playing in the NCAA. The Montreal Alouettes had the most selections with nine, followed by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats with eight. Each of the West Division teams had seven picks while Winnipeg had six. The defending Grey Cup champion Toronto Argonauts had five picks and Ottawa chose four players from NCAA schools that would play another year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232350-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 CFL Draft\nA total of 16 trades were made involving draft picks from this year, including two made on draft day itself, with 12 being made by the Edmonton Eskimos. Of the 60 draft selections, 44 players were drafted from Canadian Interuniversity Sport institutions, which is the highest number of CIS players taken since the 1987 CFL Draft when 50 of 72 were taken. It is also the highest percentage (73.3%) of CIS players taken since 2009 (38 of 48, 79.1%, were selected then).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232350-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Draft\nThe Ottawa expansion team was scheduled to pick last in the first four rounds of the 2012 CFL Draft, with selections being limited to NCAA redshirt juniors. Due to stadium delays, Ottawa will join the Canadian Football League in 2014, and participated in this year's draft instead. 18 players were classified as redshirt juniors with 12 being selected in this year's draft. The draft also expand to seven rounds this year for the first time since 1996, with the CFL citing stronger Canadian talent as a reason for the expansion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232350-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Draft\nThe first two rounds were broadcast live on TSN with CFL Commissioner Mark Cohon announcing each selection. The production was hosted by Rod Black and featured the CFL on TSN panel which includes Duane Forde, Chris Schultz, Paul LaPolice, Dave Naylor, Stefan Ptaszek, Brian Dobie, and Danny Maciocia who analyzed the teams' needs and picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232350-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Draft, Top prospects\nA total of 55 Canadian prospects participated in the 2013 CFL Combine. The official CFL Scouting Bureau rankings are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 29], "content_span": [30, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232350-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Draft, Trades\nIn the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232351-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Expansion Draft\nThe 2013 Canadian Football League Expansion Draft was a three-round CFL Draft that took place on Monday December 16, 2013. It was designed to assign players from existing CFL teams to the expansion Ottawa Redblacks. The structure of the draft was announced on January 19, 2011, which described one round for selecting import players and two rounds for selecting non-import players. Additionally, the Redblacks were given the last pick in each of the first four rounds of the 2013 CFL Draft and will also be given the first pick in every round of the 2014 CFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232351-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Expansion Draft\nOverall, 24 players were selected in the draft, including two quarterbacks, three receivers, one running back, two fullbacks, six offensive linemen, six defensive linemen, three linebackers, and one defensive back. Only one pending free agent was selected, with Rory Kohlert's contract expiring February 15, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232351-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Expansion Draft\nThe draft was originally planned for 2012, but with lawsuits and delays pushing the opening day of the remodeled Frank Clair Stadium back to at least 2014, the draft was postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232351-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Expansion Draft, Rules of the Draft\nOttawa had the right to select three players from each of the eight existing teams for a total of 24 players. These selections were composed of eight import players and 16 non-import players with quarterbacks, kickers and punters eligible within their respective import/non-import categories. Ottawa was able to select a maximum of two quarterbacks and one kicker/punter, but could not select any of these three players from the same team. The CFL Commissioner would resolve any dispute related to player eligibility for the Expansion Draft process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232351-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Expansion Draft, Round one: Import Draft\nExisting teams were able to protect one quarterback and ten additional import players, while Ottawa was only being able to select, at maximum, two quarterbacks in the draft. If a quarterback was selected from a team, that team could protect an additional two non-import players in the first round of the Non-Import Draft. If a kicker or punter was selected from a team, that team could protect one additional non-import player in the first round of the Non-Import Draft. Ottawa selected one import player from each existing team in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232351-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Expansion Draft, Round two: Non-Import Draft\nExisting teams were able to protect six total non-import players, including the team's one protected quarterback and one protected kicker/punter. If a quarterback was selected in the Import Draft, eight total non-import players could be protected. If a kicker or punter was selected in the Import Draft, seven total non-import players could be protected. If a non-import kicker or punter was to be selected, it must be done in this round and, if so, that team was able to protect an additional two non-import players in the second round of the Non-Import Draft. Ottawa selected one non-import player from each existing team in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232351-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL Expansion Draft, Round three: Non-Import Draft\nExisting teams were able to protect six more non-import players in addition to those that were protected in the second round. If a kicker or punter was selected in the Non-Import Draft, eight more non-import players could be protected. Ottawa selected one non-import player from each existing team in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season\nThe 2013 Canadian Football League season was the 60th season of modern Canadian professional football. Officially, it was the 56th season of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season\nThe pre-season began on June 12, 2013 and the regular season began on June 27, 2013. Regina, Saskatchewan hosted the 101st Grey Cup on November 24, with the Cup won by the Saskatchewan Roughriders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Salary cap\nAccording to a new collective bargaining agreement, the 2013 salary cap was set at $4,400,000. As per the agreement, the cap is fixed and does not vary with league revenue performance. The minimum team salary was set at $4,000,000, with individual minimum salaries set at $45,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Season schedule\nThe 2013 season schedule was released on March 5, 2013, with the regular season opening on June 27 at the new Investors Group Field in Winnipeg, Manitoba. This was the first time Winnipeg had opened the regular season since 1998 and the first brand new Canadian stadium in the CFL since Toronto's SkyDome opened in 1989 (the Alamodome opened in 1993 with the now defunct San Antonio Texans playing there in 1995).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Season schedule\nFor the second time in three years, the Toronto Argonauts and Hamilton Tiger-Cats did not play in their Labour Day Classic matchup, due to scheduling conflicts for both teams. Following the previous year's experiment, the league held all division matchups not only in the last week, but for the final four weeks in total, hoping for a tight playoff race. There were 15 double headers, with one on a Thursday, three on Fridays, nine on Saturdays, one on a Sunday, and the traditional Thanksgiving contests on a Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Bye weeks\nFor the second consecutive year, the teams' bye weeks occurred in the sixth and seventh weeks of the season, earlier than the usual eighth and ninth week setup that had been in place since 2007. These began over the August Civic Holiday, suggesting that this was done to accommodate for fans' vacation plans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Stadium changes\nThe Hamilton Tiger-Cats played 2013 home games at Alumni Stadium in Guelph, with the exception of Touchdown Atlantic (see below). The team's previous venue, Ivor Wynne Stadium, was demolished during the offseason, and its replacement, Tim Hortons Field, would not be ready until at least 2014. For the first time in decades, the Tiger-Cats did not host the Labour Day Classic and instead traveled to Vancouver to face the BC Lions that weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Stadium changes\nBecause Ontario University Athletics (of which Alumni Stadium's primary tenants, the Guelph Gryphons, are a member) also has a tradition of playing football games on Labour Day, finding a suitable venue within Southern Ontario would have been impossible. The Toronto at Hamilton matchup was instead played as the nightcap in the 2013 Thanksgiving Day Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Stadium changes\nThe Winnipeg Blue Bombers finally took residence at the new Investors Group Field. The stadium was supposed to have been readied in 2012, but construction delays pushed back the opening to the 2013 season. The Toronto Argonauts hosted the Montreal Alouettes at the University of Toronto's Varsity Stadium for their preseason game, the first Argonauts game at Varsity Stadium in 55 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Return of Touchdown Atlantic\nAfter a one-year hiatus in 2012, Touchdown Atlantic returned for the 2013 season with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats hosting the Montreal Alouettes on September 21, 2013. This was the third regular season instalment of the game and the second to feature the Tiger-Cats. This was the first appearance for the Alouettes and it was also the first matchup to feature division opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 63], "content_span": [64, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Media\nOn March 21, 2013, the CFL announced it had renewed its exclusive contract with TSN to televise all CFL games through 2018; the contract included the national radio rights to the Grey Cup, which would air on TSN Radio and The Team. The contract had originally been set to expire at the end of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Media\nAs with the previous contract, the league had no games broadcast on terrestrial television, prolonging an absence dating to 2007 and making it the largest league in North America without over-the-air television broadcasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Media\nOn June 21, 2013, the CFL announced it had renewed its distribution deal with NBC Sports Network for United States broadcasts and that ESPN2 would also pick up five additional games for live broadcast. ESPN3 continued to serve as the league's online broadcaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Rule changes\nOn April 10, 2013 the CFL Board of Governors approved 2 new rules. The first stated that coaches would be allowed to challenge the result of a field goal attempt or extra point attempt. The second rule gave coaches more flexibility on when they can use their timeouts. Coaches could now use both of their time outs at any point during regulation time of a game, as long as they didn't use more than one after the three-minute warning was sounded in the second half of the game. In the past coaches were only allowed to use one time out per half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Coaching changes\nImmediately following the close of the 2012 CFL season it seemed probable that there would be no head coaching changes in the off-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Coaching changes\nHowever, after a disappointing 6\u201312 regular season the Hamilton Tiger-Cats fired George Cortez. The expectations on the Ticats were very high after the off-season acquisitions of Henry Burris and Andy Fantuz which Cortez failed to live up to. The Tiger-Cats replaced Cortez with Kent Austin. Austin, who won the 95th Grey Cup with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, had been the offensive coordinator at the University of Mississippi and the head coach of Cornell University for 3 years each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Coaching changes\nIn mid-January, 2013, the Montreal Alouettes lost their head coach Marc Trestman to the Chicago Bears of the NFL. Trestman won two Grey Cups in five seasons as the head coach of the Alouettes from 2008 to 2012. On February 19 the Alouettes announced that Dan Hawkins would be the new head coach. Hawkins had been the head coach of Willamette University, Boise State and University of Colorado from 1993 to 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Coaching changes\nDan Hawkins was fired on August 1, 2013, after a 2\u20133 start to the season. Longtime general manager Jim Popp was interim head coach for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Coaching changes\nTim Burke was fired on November 12, 2013 after the Winnipeg Blue Bombers finished last in the league with a dismal 3\u201315 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL news in 2013, Trade deadline\nThe deadline for teams to complete trades was Wednesday October 9 at 3:59pm EDT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, Regular season, Structure\nTeams played eighteen regular season games, playing two of the three divisional opponents three times, the other four times, and teams from the opposing division twice. Teams were awarded two points for a win and one point for a tie. The top three teams in each division qualified for the playoffs, with the first place team gaining a bye to the divisional finals. A fourth place team in one division could qualify ahead of the third place team in the other division (the \"Crossover\"), if they earned more points in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, Regular season, Structure\nIf two or more teams in the same division were equal in points, the following tiebreakers applied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, 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, 42], "content_span": [43, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL playoffs\nThe Calgary Stampeders were first to clinch a playoff berth, in Week 12 of the schedule. Toronto and BC followed in Week 14, followed by Saskatchewan and Hamilton in Week 15, and the final playoff spot was clinched by Montreal in Week 17. Three of the four home playoff hosts were determined in Week 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232352-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 CFL season, CFL playoffs\nThe Saskatchewan Roughriders won their fourth Grey Cup championship on home turf at Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field by defeating the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, 45\u201323. Roughriders' running back Kory Sheets was named the MVP, while Roughriders' slotback, Chris Getzlaf was named the Grey Cup's Most Valuable Canadian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232353-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CFU Club Championship\nThe 2013 CFU Club Championship was the 15th edition of CFU Club Championship, the annual international club football competition in the Caribbean region, held amongst clubs whose football associations are affiliated with the Caribbean Football Union (CFU). The top three teams in the tournament qualified for the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232353-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CFU Club Championship, Participating teams\nA total of seven teams from five CFU associations took part in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232353-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CFU Club Championship, First round\nThe seven teams were divided into one group of three teams and one group of four teams. Each group was played on a round-robin basis at a centralized venue. The winners from each group qualified directly to the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League, while the runners-up advanced to the playoff round to determine the third entrant to the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232353-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CFU Club Championship, Playoff round\nThe playoff between the two group runners-up was played on two-legged basis, with both matches held in Trinidad and Tobago (all times UTC\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232353-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CFU Club Championship, Playoff round\nCaledonia AIA won 3\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash\nOn 23 August 2013, a Eurocopter AS332 Super Puma helicopter belonging to CHC Helicopters crashed into the sea 2 nautical miles (3.7\u00a0km; 2.3\u00a0mi) from Sumburgh in the Shetland Islands, Scotland, while en route from the Borgsten Dolphin drilling rig. The accident killed four passengers; twelve other passengers and two crew were rescued with injuries. A further passenger took his own life in 2017 as a result of PTSD caused by the crash. An investigation by the UK's Air Accident Investigation Branch was carried out. The public inquiry concluded in October 2020 that the crash was primarily caused by pilot error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Flight history\nThe weather conditions were a light breeze (17 knots) with mist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Accident\nThe helicopter was on an otherwise normal approach to Sumburgh Airport, when at 18:17\u201318:20 local time, the aircraft lost contact with air traffic control. No mayday was sent out by the pilots as they attempted to make a controlled ditching into the North Sea, 1.5-2\u00a0nm west from Sumburgh. The helicopter fell into the sea and then turned upside down during the evacuation. The helicopter was found broken into several pieces up against rocks at Garths Ness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Accident\nRecovered flight data noted by the Air Accident Investigation Branch suggests that the helicopter engines remained powered until impact. The manufacturer's initial analysis based on that data indicated that a combination of factors had placed the helicopter into a vortex ring state at low altitude which made impact \"unavoidable\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Rescue operations\nThe Lerwick and Aith Royal National Lifeboat Institution lifeboats and the Sumburgh based Coastguard helicopter were sent to find the downed helicopter. Two helicopters from Bond Offshore Helicopters, an RAF helicopter from RAF Lossiemouth, the passenger ferry MS\u00a0Hjaltland and a cargo ship, the MS\u00a0Helliar also joined in the search. Coastguard Rescue Teams from Sumburgh, Lerwick, West Burra Isle, Bressay and Walls were involved in the transfer of casualties to the ambulance service, the search for missing casualties and the logging of washed up wreckage on the days following the crash. The helicopter was found;12 passengers and two crew were rescued and sent to Gilbert Bain Hospital in Lerwick, Shetland Islands. One of the rescued passengers died from their injuries whilst being transported to the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Rescue operations\nTwo bodies floated free of the aircraft and were recovered by Lifeboat. Another was recovered later from the wreckage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Aftermath\nA day after the accident CHC helicopter temporarily suspended all Super Puma L2 flights worldwide. The Helicopter Safety Steering Group said that all four different models of the Super Puma should be grounded over safety concerns. On 10 September 2013, the Transport Select Committee began an inquiry into the safety of offshore helicopters in the North Sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Investigation\nThe Police Scotland and Air Accidents Investigation Branch launched investigations into the cause of the accident. On 5 September 2013, the Air Accidents Investigation Branch special bulletin reported that there is no evidence of a causal technical failure that could have led to the crash. Both the wreckage and black boxes were still being examined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232354-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CHC Helicopters Eurocopter AS332 crash, Investigation\nIn October 2020, an inquiry led by Sheriff Principal Derek Pyle concluded that the crash was predominantly caused by pilot error. The inquiry had been delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232355-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CIK-FIA Karting European Championship\nThe 2013 CIK-FIA European Championship was the 42nd edition of the CIK-FIA Karting European Championship, holding championships in the KZ, KZ2, KF, KFJ and Superkart classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232355-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CIK-FIA Karting European Championship, KF Class results, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top 15 classified finishers in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232355-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CIK-FIA Karting European Championship, KFJ Class results, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top 15 classified finishers in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232356-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS Men's Basketball Championship\nThe 2013 CIS Men's Final 8 Basketball Tournament was held March 8\u201310, 2013 in Ottawa, Ontario. It was the first of two consecutive CIS Championships to be held at Scotiabank Place (renamed July 2013 as Canadian Tire Centre) after the tournament was held in Halifax in 2011 and 2012. This was the fourth time Carleton University has hosted the tournament, with the most recent being in 2009. Carleton was joined by six other qualifiers and one wild card team. The Carleton Ravens won their ninth title in eleven years. In the process they set a new record for the most CIS Men's basketball championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup\nThe 2013 CIS Men's University Cup Hockey Tournament (51st Annual) was held March 14\u201317, 2013. It was the first of two consecutive CIS Championships to be held at the Credit Union Centre in Saskatoon hosted by the University of Saskatchewan. The defending champions were the McGill Redmen, but they would not be able to defend their title having been eliminated in the first round of the OUA-East playoffs by the Nipissing Lakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup\nThe best team in each Pool advances to the final. All pool games must be decided by a win, there are no ties. If a pool has a three-way tie for 1st (all teams have 1-1 records) than GF/GA differential among the tied teams is the first tie-breaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Road to the Cup, AUS playoffs\nThe AUS playoffs were held from February 13 to March 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Road to the Cup, OUA playoffs\nThe OUA playoffs were held from February 13 to March 9, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Road to the Cup, OUA playoffs\nNote 1: The Queen's Cup championship game must be held in Ontario (part of the arrangement when the RSEQ hockey league merged with the OUA). When a Quebec based OUA-East representative is the higher seed and should 'host' the game - the game shall be hosted by the OUA-West team instead, but the OUA-East team shall be the 'home' team and have last change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Road to the Cup, OUA playoffs\nNote 2: Since the University Cup wild-card spot was allocated to the AUS Conference, the OUA did not hold a 3rd Place/Bronze medal game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, University Cup\nThe six teams to advance to the tournament are listed below. The wild-card team was selected from the AUS Conference as the OUA was provided the wild-card in 2012 and CW teams are ineligible as they are the host conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, University Cup, Pool A - Afternoon\nNote: Saint Mary's becomes the 4th team to advance to the Championship Final with a 1-1 record (Alberta-2008, Western-2009 and McGill-2011).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 59], "content_span": [60, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Championship Final\nBench assignments for the championship finals are based on each advancing team's 2 pool games, not their tournament seed. UNB was determine the home team with a record of 2-0 versus Saint Mary's with a record of 1-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Fewest Goals\nThe 2 goal aggregate in the Championship final represented the lowest ever to date - one lower than the previous record of 3 (1990, 2-1 and 2003 3-0). The shutout was the fourth shutout in a Championship final (1972, 2003, 2011 & 2013) and the first time a team has accomplished it twice (UNB's 4th Championship title in 2011 was a 4-0 shutout of McGill).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Tournament All-Stars\nTyler Carroll, from the UNB Varsity Reds, was selected as the Major W.J. 'Danny' McLeod Award for CIS University Cup MVP. Carroll led all players in goals (4) and was second in points with 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232357-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS University Cup, Tournament All-Stars\nJoining Carroll on the tournament all-star team were:Forward: Nick MacNeil (UNB Varsity Reds)Forward: Cory Tanaka (Saint Mary's Huskies)Defenseman: Jesse Craige (Alberta Golden Bears)Defenseman: Marc-Antoine Desnoyers (UNB Varsity Reds)Goalie: Dan LaCosta (UNB Varsity Reds)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232358-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS Women's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 CIS Women's Volleyball Championship was held February 28, 2013 to March 2, 2013, in Sherbrooke, Quebec, to determine a national champion for the 2012\u201313 CIS women's volleyball season. The tournament was played at the Univestrie Pavilion at the Universit\u00e9 de Sherbrooke. It was the second time that Sherbrooke had hosted the tournament with the first time occurring in 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232358-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS Women's Volleyball Championship\nThe gold medal match featured a rematch of the previous year's final, which had not occurred since the 1995 and 1996 games between the Pandas and the Rouge et Or. In this match, the top-seeded UBC Thunderbirds won their sixth consecutive national championship in their 3\u20130 match victory over the Alberta Pandas. This tied the record for consecutive national championships with the Winnipeg Wesmen (1983-1988) and Alberta Pandas (1995-2000). The Thunderbirds finished the season on a 25-game winning streak and the gold medal win was the program's CIS-leading 10th national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232359-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS football season\nThe 2013 CIS football season began on August 25, 2013, with ten Ontario University Athletics teams playing that day. The season concluded on November 23 with the 49th Vanier Cup championship in Quebec City, won by the Laval Rouge et Or after they defeated the Calgary Dinos 25\u201314. This year, 27 university teams in Canada played Canadian Interuniversity Sport football, the highest level of amateur Canadian football. The Carleton Ravens football team re-joined the CIS after a 14-year absence, increasing the number of OUA teams to 11 and necessitating the use of bye weeks in that conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232359-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS football season, Regular season standings, Top 10\nRanks in italics are teams not ranked in the top 10 poll but received votes. NR = Not Ranked, received no votes. Number in parentheses denotes number votes, after the dash number of first place votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232359-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS football season, Championships\nThe 49th Vanier Cup is played between the champions of the Mitchell Bowl and the Uteck Bowl, the national semi-final games. In 2013, according to the rotating schedule, the Atlantic conference Loney Bowl champions will host the Dunsmore Cup Quebec championship team for the Uteck Bowl. The winners of the Canada West conference Hardy Trophy will host the Ontario conference's Yates Cup champion for the Mitchell Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232360-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CIS/CCA Curling Championships\nThe 2013 CIS/CCA Curling Championships were held from March 20 to 24 at the Kamloops Curling Club in Kamloops, British Columbia. The host university of the event was Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232361-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CME Group Titleholders\nThe 2013 CME Group Titleholders was the third CME Group Titleholders, a women's professional golf tournament and the season-ending event on the U.S.-based LPGA Tour. It was played November 21\u201324 at the Gold Course of Tibur\u00f3n Golf Club in Naples, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232361-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CME Group Titleholders\nThe top three finishers who were LPGA members from each official LPGA tournament, not otherwise qualified, earned a spot in the Titleholders. If tied, the player with the lower final round score qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232361-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CME Group Titleholders\nShanshan Feng posted rounds of 67 and 66 on the weekend to win with a score of 273 (\u221215), one stroke ahead of runner-up Gerina Piller. The winner's share was the largest of the year at $700,000, 35% of the $2 million purse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232361-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CME Group Titleholders, Qualifiers\nNote: The following qualifiers did not play in the event: Christel Boeljon, Nicole Castrale, Mina Harigae, Haeji Kang, Teresa Lu, Haru Nomura, Se Ri Pak, Jiyai Shin, Yani Tseng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232362-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CMT Music Awards\nThe 2013 CMT Music Awards is a music award ceremony that was held on June 5, 2013 at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee. CMT. The show was hosted by Kristen Bell and Jason Aldean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232363-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Awards\nThe 2013 CONCACAF Awards were the first year for CONCACAF's awards for the top region football players, coaches and referees of the year. The results were announced on 13 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232363-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Awards, Award winners and shortlists, Goal of the Year\nThis award applies only to goals scored during CONCACAF official competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 68], "content_span": [69, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232364-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship took place from 8\u201312 May 2013, in Nassau, Bahamas, for the first time. This will also be the first time that the qualifiers have been held in the Caribbean. The two finalists of the championship qualified for the World Cup and represented North America in Tahiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232364-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship\nAll matches took place at the new Malcolm Park Beach Soccer and Futsal Facility in Nassau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232364-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Participating teams\nThe original record total of 11 teams were revealed on April 19, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232364-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Participating teams\nA team from Guyana was scheduled to participate, but withdrew from the tournament on 7 May 2013 due to administrative reasons. Guyana was scheduled to compete in Group B. Due to Guyana's withdrawal, the schedule was slightly modified as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232364-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nThe draw to determine the groupings was conducted at the Atlantis Paradise Island Hotel in Nassau, the Bahamas, on 23 April 2013 at 1 PM EDT. The subsequent schedule was released two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232364-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nAll match times are correct to that of local time in Nassau, being Eastern Daylight Time, (UTC -4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232364-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship, Knockout stage\nAfter the group stage matches were completed, a draw was held after the last match to determine the semifinal matchups involving the group winners and the best second-place team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final\nThe 2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final was the final of the 2012\u201313 CONCACAF Champions League, the 5th edition of the CONCACAF Champions League under its current format, and overall the 48th edition of the premium football club competition organized by CONCACAF, the regional governing body of North America, Central America, and the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final\nThe final was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between two Mexican teams, Santos Laguna and Monterrey. The first leg was hosted by Santos Laguna at Estadio Corona in Torre\u00f3n on April 24, 2013, while the second leg was hosted by Monterrey at Estadio Tecnol\u00f3gico in Monterrey on May 1, 2013. The winner earned the right to represent CONCACAF at the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup, entering at the quarterfinal stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final\nThe first leg ended in a 0\u20130 draw. Monterrey won the second leg 4\u20132 after overcoming a two-goal deficit, winning the final 4\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Background\nFor the fourth time in five seasons of the CONCACAF Champions League, the final was played between two Mexican sides. This guaranteed a Mexican champion for the eighth straight year and 29th time since the confederation began staging the tournament in 1962 (including the tournament's predecessor, the CONCACAF Champions' Cup). The final was also a repeat of previous year's final, won by Monterrey over Santos Laguna 3\u20132 on aggregate. Monterrey were the two-time defending champions, having also won the final in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Background\nSantos Laguna finished top of Group 1 ahead of Toronto FC and \u00c1guila in the group stage, and were seeded second for the championship stage, where they eliminated Houston Dynamo in the quarterfinals and Seattle Sounders FC in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Background\nMonterrey finished top of Group 7 ahead of Municipal and Chorrillo in the group stage, and were seeded first for the championship stage, where they eliminated Xelaj\u00fa in the quarterfinals and Los Angeles Galaxy in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Rules\nThe final was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. The away goals rule was used if the aggregate score was level after normal time of the second leg, but not after extra time, and so the final was decided by penalty shoot-out if the aggregate score was level after extra time of the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232365-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Champions League Final, Matches, First leg\nAssistant referees:Alberto Mor\u00edn (Mexico)Jos\u00e9 Luis Camargo (Mexico)Fourth official:Jos\u00e9 Alfredo Pe\u00f1aloza (Mexico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nThe 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup was the 12th CONCACAF Gold Cup competition and the 22nd CONCACAF regional championship overall in CONCACAF's fifty years of existence. The United States was the host nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nThe competition began on 7 July 2013 at the Rose Bowl, and ended with the final on 28 July 2013 at Soldier Field, with the United States defeating Panama 1\u20130. In this edition of the Gold Cup, Mexico participated with an alternative squad due to the main players competing at the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup prior to the Gold Cup. Despite not playing with their full squad, they successfully reached the semi-finals where they lost to eventual runners-up Panama with a score of 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nUnited States won the tournament, which qualified them for a play-off match against the champions of the 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup, to decide which team would represent CONCACAF in the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup in Russia. The playoff was played in a single match held on 10 October 2015, which Mexico won 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Qualified teams\nA total of 12 teams qualified for the tournament. Three berths were allocated to North America, five to Central America, and four to the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Qualified teams\nBold indicates that the corresponding team was hosting the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Venues\nThirty venues across the United States participated in the start of the stadium selection process with Soccer United Marketing, the event partner for the CONCACAF Gold Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Venues\nCONCACAF announced the 13 host cities and venues for the tournament on 23 January 2013. Each venue will host two matches, with the final being held at Chicago's Soldier Field:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Squads\nEach team can register a squad of 23 players; 3 of them must be goalkeepers. Any team that qualifies for the knockout stage may replace up to four players in the squad after completion of the group stage, where the new players must come from a provisional list of 35 players chosen before the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Match officials\nEach CONCACAF federation submitted a list of match officials to the CONCACAF Referee's Commission for the 2013 Gold Cup Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Group stage\nCONCACAF announced the groups, where the twelve teams were divided into three groups of four teams, and the match schedule for the 2013 Gold Cup on 13 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Group stage\nIn the group stage, if two or more teams are equal on points (including among third-placed teams in different groups), the ranking of teams will be determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Group stage\nThis was changed from previous tournaments, where head-to-head record was used as the primary tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stages, if a match is level at the end of normal playing time, extra time shall be played (two periods of 15 minutes each) and followed, if necessary, by penalty shoot-out to determine the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Awards, Individual awards\n1 Award is shared between the three players. It was the third time that Landon Donovan has been the competition's top scorer and also the third time he has shared the award with others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Official song\n\"Cups\" by actress Anna Kendrick (from the film Pitch Perfect) is the official song of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232366-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Marketing\nIn December 2012, Traffic Sports USA were awarded the rights to manage the marketing of the tournament, which continued a relationship between CONCACAF and the parent company Traffic Sports Marketing. In 2015, this business deal led to charges in the 2015 FIFA corruption case, which identified bribes given from top Traffic officials to CONCACAF chairman, Jeffrey Webb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final\nThe 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final was the 12th final of the CONCACAF Gold Cup, the international championship tournament for CONCACAF, the governing body of soccer in North and Central America. The match took place on 28 July 2013 at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The final was between the United States and Panama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final\nThe match was a rematch of the 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final. This was first time since 2005 that the Gold Cup Final did not include Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final\nWith the win, the United States advanced to the one-game playoff played on October 10, 2015 against the champion of the 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup, which turned out to be Mexico. The winner of the play-off would qualify to represent CONCACAF in the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nThe host started well in the tournament, trashing debutant Belize with 6\u20131. Three goals came from striker Chris Wondolowski in the first half. In the second game, the U.S. fell behind after Jos\u00e9 Ciprian Alfonso converted a cross from Ariel Mart\u00ednez. After left-back Edgar Castillo was tripped by Y\u00e9nier M\u00e1rquez in the injury time of the second half, Donovan scored from the penalty spot to make it 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nJoe Corona gave the U.S. the lead with a shot from just outside the box in the 57th minute and Wondowlowski, coming on as a substitute, added two more goals, making the final score 4\u20131. In the final group game, the U.S. faced Costa Rica in order to determine the group winner. Substitute Brek Shea scored the only goal of in the match in the 82nd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nIn the quarterfinal, the U.S. faced El Salvador who had qualified as one of the two best third-placed teams. Defender Clarence Goodson gave the hosts the lead in the 21st minute. Goalkeeper Nick Rimando made two fine saves against L\u00e9ster Blanco and Richard Menjivar before Joe Corona scored a second goal for the United States. Rodolfo Zelaya converted a penalty after he was fouled by U.S. Captain DaMarcus Beasley in the 39th minute, making it 2\u20131 at half-time. Only seconds after coming in, Eddie Johnson headed in a corner by Landon Donovan in the 60th minute. Donovan and Mix Diskerud added two more goals, giving the U.S. a clear 5\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, United States\nIn the semifinal, the hosts had to defeat Honduras in order to advance to the Chicago final. Eddie Johnson scored an early goal and Donovan doubled the lead in the 27th minute. In the second half, a header by Nery Medina brought hope for Honduras, but once again Donovan netted in to make it 3\u20131. It was the final goal of the game. Late in the Honduras match, U.S. manager J\u00fcrgen Klinsmann was sent off for arguing a foul on DaMarcus Beasley, which, by rule, meant a one-match suspension. Attempts to appeal by the U.S. Soccer Federation were unsuccessful; the U.S. was forced to replace Klinsmann with assistant Andreas Herzog and scout Martin Vasquez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Panama\nPanama surprised at the opening game by beating reigning champions Mexico. Gabriel Torres converted a penalty to make it 1\u20130 in the 7th minute after Ra\u00fal Jim\u00e9nez brought down Alberto Quintero inside the penalty box. Mexico equalized through Marco Fabi\u00e1n seconds before halftime. Gabriel Torres scored the winning in the 48th minute after a cross from Alberto Quintero. In the second match against Martinique, Panama had to wait long for the lead. When Martinique was down to ten men due to the dismissal of Jacky Berdix, substitute Jairo Jim\u00e9nez was fouled by S\u00e9bastien Cr\u00e9tinoir inside the penalty box. Again Gabriel Torres scored the winning goal by converting the penalty in the 85th minute. In the final group game, a nearly complete different team played out a goalless draw against Canada. The result was enough to see Panama through as winner of Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Panama\nIn the quarterfinal, Panama played against Cuba, who had trashed Belize 4\u20130 to make it through as one of the two best third-ranked teams. Panama initially fell behind when Jos\u00e9 Ciprian Alfonso converted a chip pass by Jaime Colom\u00e9 in the 21st minute. However, when Cuban defender Renay Malblanche blocked a shot from Marcos S\u00e1nchez with his hand inside the penalty box, referee Mark Geiger gave Panama a penalty kick. Once again Gabriel Torres stepped up and made it 1\u20131 only four minutes after the Cuban goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Panama\nIn the 37th minute, Torres scored another goal, this time after a headed pass by his co-striker Blas P\u00e9rez. In the second half, Cuba was decimated after Ariel Mart\u00ednez was sent off after a high challenge on Blas P\u00e9rez. Panama went on to score four more times, making the final result 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Route to the final, Panama\nIn the semifinal, the Canaleros once again faced title defender Mexico. Panama took an early lead through a goal from Blas P\u00e9rez in the 13th minute, but Luis Montes equalized for El Tri midway through the first half. In the 61st minute, Panama skipper Rom\u00e1n Torres headed in a corner by Gabriel Torres, once again giving his team the lead. This time, it lasted till the final whistle, despite several good opportunities for the Mexicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Summary\nBefore the match, suspended U.S. manager J\u00fcrgen Klinsmann was escorted to a suite inside Soldier Field to watch the match. During some cuts in between stoppages on FOX, Klinsmann could be visibly seen reacting to every missed chance by the U.S. In the 19th minute, Stuart Holden suffered a sprained knee on a collision with Alberto Quintero and was substituted by Mix Diskerud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe only goal of the game came from Brek Shea in the 69th minute when he touched into an open net from inches out with his left foot after a cross from the right by Alejandro Bedoya had passed Panama's goalkeeper Jaime Penedo. Shea scored after only entering the game as a substitute for Joe Corona 42 seconds earlier. The win gave the United States its fifth Gold Cup championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232367-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final, Match, Summary\nAssistant referees: Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador) Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica) Fourth official: Enrico Wijngaarde (Suriname) Fifth official: Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232368-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A\nGroup A of the 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup was one of three groups competing of nations at 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The group's first round of matches were played on July 7, with the final round played on July 14. All six group matches were played at venues in the United States, in Pasadena, California, Seattle and Denver. The group consisted of six-time (and defending) Gold Cup champions, Mexico, as well as 2000 Gold Cup champion Canada, Martinique and Panama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232368-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Canada vs Martinique\nAssistant referees:Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador)Christian Ram\u00edrez (Honduras)Fourth official:Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232368-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Mexico vs Panama\nAssistant referees:Sean Mark Hurd (United States)Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)Fourth official:Mark Geiger (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232368-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Panama vs Martinique\nAssistant referees:Christian Ram\u00edrez (Honduras)Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)Fourth official:Mark Geiger (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232368-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Mexico vs Canada\nAssistant referees:William Torres Mej\u00eda (El Salvador)Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador)Fourth official:Marcos Brea (Cuba)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232368-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Panama vs Canada\nAssistant referees:Christian Ram\u00edrez (Honduras)Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)Fourth official:Marcos Brea (Cuba)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232368-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group A, Martinique vs Mexico\nAssistant referees:Sean Mark Hurd (United States)William Torres Mej\u00eda (El Salvador)Fourth official:Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232369-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B\nGroup B of the 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup was one of three groups competing of nations at 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The group's first round of matches were played on July 8, with the final round played on July 15. All six group matches were played at venues in the United States, in Harrison, NJ, Miami Gardens, FL and Houston. The group consisted of Haiti, Honduras, El Salvador and Trinidad and Tobago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232369-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, El Salvador vs Trinidad and Tobago\nAssistant referees:Marcos Quintero (Mexico)Marvin Torrentera (Mexico)Fourth official:Jair Marrufo (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232369-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Haiti vs Honduras\nAssistant referees:Philippe Bri\u00e8re (Canada)Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica)Fourth official:Javier Santos (Puerto Rico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232369-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Honduras vs El Salvador\nAssistant referees:Eric Boria (United States)Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica)Fourth official:Javier Santos (Puerto Rico)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232369-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, El Salvador vs Haiti\nAssistant referees:Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica)Philippe Bri\u00e8re (Canada)Fourth official:Jair Marrufo (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232369-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group B, Honduras vs Trinidad and Tobago\nAssistant referees:Eric Boria (United States)Marvin Torrentera (Mexico)Fourth official:Hugo Cruz Alvarado (Costa Rica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232370-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C\nGroup C of the 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup was one of three groups competing of nations at 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The group's first round of matches were played on July 9, with the final round played on July 16. All six group matches were played at venues in the United States, in Portland, Oregon, Sandy, Utah and East Hartford, Connecticut. The group consisted of host, and four time Gold Cup champions, United States, as well as Belize, Costa Rica and Cuba. Three members of the Belizean team told FIFA officials that they were offered a bribe to throw their match against the United States. They declined the offer and a subsequent offer to not report the bribery attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232370-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Costa Rica vs Cuba\nAssistant referees:Joe Fletcher (Canada)Graeme Browne (St. Kitts and Nevis)Fourth official:David Gantar (Canada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232370-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Belize vs United States\nAssistant referees:Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)Ramon Ricardo Louisville (Suriname)Fourth official:Courtney Campbell (Jamaica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232370-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, United States vs Cuba\nAssistant referees:Joe Fletcher (Canada)Garnet Page (Jamaica)Fourth official:Elmer Arturo Bonilla (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232370-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Costa Rica vs Belize\nAssistant referees:Ramon Ricardo Louisville (Suriname)Graeme Browne (St. Kitts and Nevis)Fourth official:H\u00e9ctor Rodr\u00edguez (Honduras)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232370-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, Cuba vs Belize\nAssistant referees:Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)Graeme Browne (St. Kitts and Nevis)Fourth official:H\u00e9ctor Rodr\u00edguez (Honduras)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232370-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup Group C, United States vs Costa Rica\nAssistant referees:Garnet Page (Jamaica)Joe Fletcher (Canada)Fourth official:Elmer Arturo Bonilla (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232371-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup disciplinary record\nIn the 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup the main disciplinary action taken against players comes in the form of red and yellow cards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232371-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup disciplinary record\nAny player picking up a red card is expelled from the pitch and automatically banned for his country's next match, whether via a straight red or second yellow. After a straight red card, FIFA will conduct a hearing and may extend this ban beyond one match. If the ban extends beyond the end of the finals (i.e. if a player is sent off in the match in which his team was eliminated), it must be served in the team's next competitive international match(es).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232371-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup disciplinary record, Sanctions, By match\nNote: In this table the \"Yellow\" column counts only the first yellow card given to a player in a match. If a player receives a second yellow in the same match this is counted under \"Second yellow\". This second yellow is not counted as a \"Straight Red\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup started on July 20 and ended with the final on July 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Qualified teams\nThe group winners and runners-up and the two best third-placed teams from the group stage advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Panama vs Cuba\nAssistant referees:Joe Fletcher (Canada)Eric Boria (United States)Fourth official:Jair Marrufo (United States)Fifth official:Christian Ram\u00edrez (Honduras)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Mexico vs Trinidad and Tobago\nAssistant referees:Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador)Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)Fourth official:W\u00e1lter Quesada (Costa Rica)Fifth official:Christian Ram\u00edrez (Honduras)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, United States vs El Salvador\nAssistant referees:Marvin Torrentera (Mexico)Ramon Ricardo Louisville (Suriname)Fourth official:Dave Gantar (Canada)Fifth official:Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Honduras vs Costa Rica\nAssistant referees:Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica)Garnet Page (Jamaica)Fourth official:Marco Rodr\u00edguez (Mexico)Fifth official:Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 77], "content_span": [78, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, United States vs Honduras\nAssistant referees: Octavio Jara (Costa Rica) Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala) Fourth official: Jeffrey Solis Calder\u00f3n (Costa Rica) Fifth official: Garnet Page (Jamaica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 77], "content_span": [78, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Panama vs Mexico\nAssistant referees: Joe Fletcher (Canada) Ramon Ricardo Louisville (Suriname) Fourth official: Elmer Arturo Bonilla (El Salvador) Fifth official: Garnet Page (Jamaica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232372-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees: Juan Francisco Zumba (El Salvador) Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica) Fourth official: Enrico Wijngaarde (Suriname) Fifth official: Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232373-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads\nEach team can register a squad of 23 players, three of whom must be goalkeepers. Between the completion of the group stage and the start of the knockout stage, teams which reach the quarter-finals can replace up to four players in their squads but must be drawn from a provisional list of 35 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232373-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads\nA list of provisional squads featuring 35 players, consisting of short-listed players, was released on 31 May 2013. The statistics in the tables below represent player profiles as of the beginning of the tournament. See individual player articles for current statistics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232374-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship\nThe 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship was a North American international association football tournament that determined the 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup participants from the CONCACAF region. The 2013 edition of the competition was held in Panama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232374-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Qualified teams\nThree teams will qualify through the Central American qualifying tournament and five will qualify through the Caribbean qualifying tournament. Hosts Panama automatically qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232374-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Group stage\nTiebreakersa. Greater number of Points in matches between the tied teams. b. Greater Goal Difference in matches between the tied teams (if more than two teams finish equal on points). c. Greater number of goals scored in matches among the tied teams (if more than two teams finish equal on points). d. Greater Goal difference in all group matches. e. Greater number of goals scored in all group matches. f. Drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232374-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship, Countries to participate in 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup\nThe 4 teams which qualified for the 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232375-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying\nThe 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualification tournaments took place in 2012 to qualify national teams for the 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232375-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying, Caribbean zone, First round, Group 5\nAt Basseterre, St. Kitts. Grenada were also drawn into this group but later withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232375-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship qualifying, Central American zone\nGuatemala will host the qualifying group, matches will take place between 7\u201315 December. Panama qualify automatically as hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232376-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship\nThe 2013 CONCACAF Under-20 Championship was an association football tournament that took place between February 18 and March 3, 2013. The CONCACAF U-20 Championship determined the four CONCACAF teams that would participate at the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232376-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship, Qualified teams\nFour teams qualified through the Central American qualifying tournament and five qualified through the Caribbean qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232376-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship, Qualified teams\nNote: no titles or runners-up between 1998 and 2007. Bold indicates that the corresponding team was hosting the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232376-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was made on 21 November 2012. All times listed are local time, (UTC\u221206:00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232376-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship, Final Ranking\nNote: Per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-out are counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232376-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship, Countries to participate in 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nThe four semi-finalist teams qualified for the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying\nThe qualifying stage of the 2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship competition is handled by two regional bodies; the Caribbean Football Union (Caribbean zone) and the UNCAF (Central American zone).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying\nFour teams from Central America and five from the Caribbean will qualify to the 2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship to be played in Mexico. In addition to hosts Mexico, the United States and Canada will automatically qualify for the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Caribbean zone\nThe qualification for the Caribbean Nations is organised by the Caribbean Football Union. In total five nations will qualify from the Caribbean zone for the 2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Caribbean zone, First Round, Group A\nThe group was hosted in Antigua and Barbuda and games were played the 8 to 12 August 2012. In addition to Antigua and Barbuda, the group will include Cura\u00e7ao, Grenada and Dominica. Grenada were originally scheduled to host the group's games but the Grenadian FA could not afford it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Caribbean zone, Final Round\nThe final round will take place during 3\u201311 November 2012. It will be hosted in Jamaica. This second qualifying round has been referred to as the Caribbean Under 20 Finals by CONCACAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Caribbean zone, Final Round\nFive of the eight teams who reach this round will qualify for the 2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Caribbean zone, Final Round, Best runner-up from Final round\nAs Cura\u00e7ao and Antigua and Barbuda both had equal goal difference and points, Damien Hughes of the CFU tossed a coin to decide which team would participate in the Championship during half-time of the final Jamaica vs Cuba game in Group B. Cura\u00e7ao won the toss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 104], "content_span": [105, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Central American zone\nThe qualification for the Central American Nations is organised by UNCAF. The top two nations in each group will qualify for the 2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship. Belize chose not to participate. The schedule was published on 25 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Central American zone, Group A\nThis group is to be hosted in Honduras and games are scheduled for 17 to 21 July 2012. In addition to Honduras, the group will include Costa Rica and Nicaragua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Central American zone, Group B\nThis group is to be hosted in Guatemala and games are scheduled for 25 to 29 July 2012. In addition to Guatemala, the group will include El Salvador and Panama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232377-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship qualifying, Central American zone, Group B\nEighteen players were banned for a combined 94 games for their actions following the Panama's 1\u20130 win over Guatemala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232378-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship squads\nBelow are the rosters for the 2013 CONCACAF U-20 Championship held in Mexico from February 18 \u2013 March 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232379-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Under-15 Championship\nThe CONCACAF Under-15 Championship was a scheduled a youth association football competition, the first edition of the CONCACAF Under-15 Championship. It took place 13\u201325 August 2013. The competition was hosted on Grand Cayman Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232380-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship\nThe 2013 CONCACAF Under-17 Women's Championship is the fourth edition of the U-17 women's championship in football for the CONCACAF region. The tournament was hosted by Jamaica from 30 October to 9 November 2013. The United States were the defending champions. All matches were played in Montego Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232380-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship\nThe two finalists, alongside hosts Costa Rica, qualify for the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232380-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship, Qualified teams\nThe qualification process for the 2014 tournament started on 25 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232380-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match is level at the end of normal playing time, penalty shoot-out is used to determine the winner (no extra time is played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232380-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship, Knockout stage\nThe winners of the two semifinal matches qualify for the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup held in Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232381-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship qualifying\nThe qualification progress to the 2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship is a series of association football matches to determine the teams joining automatic qualified Canada, Mexico and USA in the final tournament. There are to separately organized tournaments, one by the Caribbean Football Union, CFU, and one by the Central American Football Union, UNCAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232381-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship qualifying, CFU, First round\nThe first round is played from 5 to 26 August 2013 in the US Virgin Islands. Four teams played in each group. The top two team, plus the best two third-placed teams advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232381-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship qualifying, CFU, First round, Group I\nPlayed from 5 to 12 August in Puerto Rico. Originally Aruba was drawn into this group, they apparently withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232381-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship qualifying, CFU, First round, Group II\nGroup 2 is played in Trinidad and Tobago from 12 to 19 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232381-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship qualifying, CFU, First round, Group III\nPlayed from 19 to 26 August in the Dominican Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232381-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship qualifying, CFU, Second round\nThe final round is played from 20 to 29 September 2013 at Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Eight teams will take part and three will move on to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232381-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship qualifying, UNCAF\nIn Central America four teams were drawn into two matches. El Salvador and Guatemala qualified to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232382-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship squads\nThis article lists the squads for the 2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship, to be held in Jamaica. The 8 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 20 players; only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232382-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship squads\nPlayers marked (c) were named as captain for their national squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232383-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup\nThe 2013 COSAFA Cup, sponsored by South African Breweries and officially named the 2013 COSAFA Castle Cup, was the 14th edition of the COSAFA Cup, an international football competition consisting of national teams of member nations of the Council of Southern Africa Football Associations (COSAFA). It was hosted by Zambia in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232383-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup, Participants\nComoros and Madagascar did not enter for unknown reasons. While Kenya and Tanzania, both members of the Council for East and Central Africa Football Associations (CECAFA) were invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232383-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup, Participants\nOn 17 May 2013, Tanzania withdrew, citing conflicting schedules with African Nations Championship qualifiers and the Kagame Interclub Cup. The Tanzanian and Ugandan Federations were unable to agree on a new date for the African Nations Championship qualifying game due to a conflict with the FUFA elections. Tanzania were replaced with Equatorial Guinea, a member of the Central African Football Federations' Union (UNIFFAC), but they withdrew from the competition on 24 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232383-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup, Participants\nThe FIFA World Rankings from 11 April 2013 were used to decide which teams receive a bye to the quarter-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232383-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup, Venues\nPrior to the start of the competition, the Zambian government did not provide funds to make the Godfrey 'Ucar' Chitalu 107 Stadium in Kabwe suitable for the competition. As a result, those games were relocated to the Nkana Stadium in Kitwe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232383-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup, Group stage, Group B\n\u2020This fixture was originally scheduled to take place on 7 July at 15:00 (UTC+2). However, Kenya's arrival at the tournament was delayed due to the players' league commitments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232383-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup, Knockout stage\nZambia, South Africa, Angola, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Malawi all received a bye to this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232384-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2013 COSAFA Cup, which took place from 6 July to 20 July 2013. The player's age and clubs are as of the opening day of the tournament. Players marked (c) were named as captain for their national team for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232384-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA Cup squads, Angola\nFor the development of Angola's Olympic team, all players for this tournament are under-23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232385-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA U-20 Cup\nThe 2013 COSAFA U-20 Cup was the 22nd edition of the COSAFA U-20 Challenge Cup, an international youth competition open to national associations of the COSAFA region. It was the first time since 2011 that the competition took place, as the 2012 event was cancelled while COSAFA concentrated their effort into organising a football competition as part of the Zone Six Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232385-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA U-20 Cup\nLesotho was the host nation of the competition. It took place between 3 and 14 December. The host cities were Maseru and Mafeteng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232385-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA U-20 Cup\nThe competition was open to players born on or after 1 January 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232385-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA U-20 Cup, Format\nThere were four groups where each group was decided on a round-robin base. All four group winners advanced to the semi-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232385-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 COSAFA U-20 Cup, Format\nThe draw for the first round group stages took place in Maseru October 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup was an international championship for men's national 7-a-side association football teams. CPISRA stands for Cerebral Palsy International Sports & Recreation Association. Athletes with a physical disability competed. The Championship took place in the Sant Cugat del Vall\u00e8s from 27\u00a0July to 10\u00a0August\u00a02013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup\nFootball 7-a-side was played with modified FIFA rules. Among the modifications were that there were seven players, no offside, a smaller playing field, and permission for one-handed throw-ins. Matches consisted of two thirty-minute halves, with a fifteen-minute half-time break. The Championships was a qualifying event for the 2015 IFCPF CP Football World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, The draw\nDuring the draw, the teams were divided into pots because of rankings. Here, the following groups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 95], "content_span": [96, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nGeorge Van Altena (GK)Stephan LokhoffGerad ArendsJoey MenseLars ConijnMinne de VosPeter KooijRik RondenburgPawel StatemaJohn Swinkels (FW)Daan DikkenIljas ViskerMyron GebbinkStefan Boersma (GK)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nRoss RussellCraig ConnellBlair GlynnJamie TrevitJonathan PatersonMark RobertsonMartin HickmanScott MartinJames RichmondThomas BrownAnton ClarkJaime MitchellJonathan O'HaraScott Troup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nYuri Woodfall (GK)Derek WhitsonJohn PhillipsLiam StanleySamuel CharronDustin HodgsonMatthew BrownStiles TrevorChris DuehrsenJamie AckincloseGeoff WakefieldKyle PayneMatthew GilbertSean Freeman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nJorge PeleteiroCarlos RodriguezRam\u00f3n del PinoAitor Ari\u00f1oCarlos AntonDaniel Manj\u00f3nSergio ClementeNoe AdellRa\u00fal PachecoLeandro P\u00e9rezDaniel PalauEmilio RibeiroEnrique TejerinaSergio \u00c1lvarez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nEduard RamonovViacheslav LarionovAslanbek SapievZaurbek PegaevLasha MurvanadzeAleksandr KuliginVladislav RaretskiyMamuka DzimistarishviliAleksey TumakovAlexey ChesminIvan PotekhinGuram ChkareuliAlexander LekovGeorgiy Albegov", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nJoseph MarkeyLuke EvansDaragh SnellRyan NolanDaragh ByrneGary MessetSimon Le'StrangeTom BadunDillon SheridanAaron TierBrian McGillivaryEric O'FlahertyPedraig LaceyPeter Cotter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nGeorge FletcherMatthew DimbylowMartin SinclairNicholas FishEmyle RudderMichael BarkerHarry BakerAlexander MullinJack RutterRyan KayOliver NugentRyan TaylorKarl TownshendThomas Smith", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nBrayan Andr\u00e9s Moreno\u00c1ngel Evelio MolinaWilman Jes\u00fas OrtegaFrank Ren\u00e9 PinedaSaul Eliecer TorresDaniel Enrique S\u00e1nchezJos\u00e9 Leonardo GimonLuis Alfredo GutierrezMarcos Tulio C\u00e1rdenasWuarion Jes\u00fas MendozaAngel FinaloIsmar Johan CasaresJose CarapaicaMarlon Alexander BelloYonfer Orladno Zamora", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nKostyantyn SymashkoVitaliy TrushevBohdan KulinichTaras DutkoIvan ShkvarloDenys PonomaryovDmytro HetmanDmytro MolodtsovIvan DotsenkoMykola MikhovychOleksandr DevlyshVolodymyr AntonyukVitalii RomanchukYevhen Zinoviev", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nKeith JohnsonChris AhrensBryce BoarmanVincent JuarezSyllebram DiazGavin SibayanAlexander HendricksMarthell VazquezJackson McCabeRene RenteriaNick CreasyJosh McKinneyMoises MoralesTyler Bennett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nRui RochaVitor VilarinhoAndr\u00e9 Ricardo Silva FerreiraRuben OliveiraTiago CarneiroPedro SantosTiago RamosAurelio RibeiroNuno BogasPedro Nuno Machado SilvaFernando da SilvaFrancisco DiasS\u00e9rgio BarrosTiago Correira", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nChris Barty (GK)David Barber (DF)Jack Williams (DF)Thomas Goodman (DF)Ben Atkins (MF)Chris Pyne (MF)Connor Marsh (MF)James Turner (MF)Michael Debenham (MF)Ryan Kinner (MF)Scott Kennedy (MF)Beau Menzies (FW)Jarrod Larkins-Law (FW)Ned McCabe (FW)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nMarcos Ferreira (GK)Wanderson Silva de OliveiraJose Carlos GuimaraesCleiton OliveiraRonaldo de Souza AlmeidaJan Francisco CostaFernandes VieiraYurig RibeiroLuciano SilvaAntonio SilvaEvandro SouzaJoao Batista Ara\u00fajoMarcos Yuri CostaMoises Silva (GK)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nSergio Nahuel Gutierrez (GK)Rodrigo Eloy Lugr\u00ednEzequiel Anival JaimeClaudio Omar FigueraMariano Andr\u00e9s MoranaRodrigo Adolfo LuquezFabricio Gabriel AlvarezMatias FernandezMaximiliano FernandezFabio Miguel CoriaBrian David VivotEzequiel HeflingGustavo Diego NanuelquinHoracio NetchovitchJuan Albert Alabarce", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nJordan KearnsChristian CanningRyan WalkerCormac BirtDarren LemonDavid LeavyStephen HalpinAdam CarsonAndrew YoungDean FeganJonathan PrenterMarc SmithThomas McCormickWilliam Hamilton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Participating teams and officials, Squads\nYuki SomaKodai NakaokaTsukasa KawanoTaisei TaniguchiTatsuhiro UraKenji FukuokaRyuta YoshinoHisato OzakiTakashi Kashimura", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 93], "content_span": [94, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Venues\nThe venues to be used for the Intercontinental Cup were located in Sant Cugat del Vall\u00e8s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Format\nThe first round, or group stage, was a competition between the 16 teams divided among four groups of four, where each group engaged in a round-robin tournament within itself. The two highest ranked teams in each group advanced to the knockout stage for the position one to eight. the two lower ranked teams plays for the positions nine to 16. Teams were awarded three points for a win and one for a draw. When comparing teams in a group over-all result came before head-to-head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Format\nIn the knockout stage there were three rounds (quarter-finals, semi-finals, and the final). The winners plays for the higher positions, the losers for the lower positions. For any match in the knockout stage, a draw after 60 minutes of regulation time was followed by two 10 minute periods of extra time to determine a winner. If the teams were still tied, a penalty shoot-out was held to determine a winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Format\nClassificationAthletes with a physical disability competed. The athlete's disability was caused by a non-progressive brain damage that affects motor control, such as cerebral palsy, traumatic brain injury or stroke. Athletes must be ambulant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Format\nTeams must field at least one class C5 or C6 player at all times. No more than two players of class C8 are permitted to play at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232386-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 CPISRA Football 7-a-side Intercontinental Cup, Group stage\nThe first round, or group stage, have seen the sixteen teams divided into four groups of four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season\nThe 2013 season was Club de Regatas Vasco da Gama's 115th year in existence, the club's 98th season in existence of football, and the club's 42nd season playing in the Brasileir\u00e3o S\u00e9rie A, the top flight of Brazilian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season\nThe club could not play in the Copa Sudamericana due to fixture conflicts with the Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season, Players, Current squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Squad correct as of 19 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season, Match results, Preseason, Pedrinho's farewell\nVasco da Gama's only preseason friendly in 2013 was against Ajax. The friendly was the last match of Pedrinho, one of Vasco da Gama's revered players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season, Squad statistics, Appearances and goals\nPlayers in italics have left the club during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season, Squad statistics, Goalkeeper statistics\nUpdated to match played 8 December 2013Source:Italic: denotes player is no longer with team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season, Squad statistics, Clean sheets\nThis list includes all competitive matches and is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232387-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CR Vasco da Gama season, Squad statistics, Starting eleven\nLast updated: 8 December 2013Source: Squad statistics 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232388-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThe 2013 CSIO Gij\u00f3n was the 2013 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-00232388-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThis edition of the CSIO Gij\u00f3n was held between August 28 and September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232388-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Nations Cup\nThe 2013 FEI Nations Cup of Spain was the sixth competition of the European Division 2 in the 2013 Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup and was held on Saturday, August 31, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232388-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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 eight teams of the eleven which participated were allowed to start in the second round. The competition was endowed with \u20ac67,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232388-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix\nThe Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix, the Show jumping Grand Prix of the 2014 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, was the major show jumping competition at this event. The sponsor of this competition was Banco Sabadell Herrero. It was held on Monday 2 August 2013. 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, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232389-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CSU\u2013Pueblo ThunderWolves football team\nThe 2013 CSU\u2013 Pueblo ThunderWolves football team represented Colorado State University\u2013Pueblo in the 2013 NCAA Division II football season. They were led by sixth year head coach John Wristen and played their home games at Neta and Eddie DeRose ThunderBowl. They were a member of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232390-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CWHL Draft\nThe 2013 CWHL Draft was held in August 2013. Jessica Wong became the first visible minority selected with the first pick overall. Wong was also part of another unique piece of draft history. Her teammate from the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs, Katie Wilson, was picked second overall. It marked the first time that two NCAA teammates were selected first and second overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232390-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CWHL Draft\nIn addition, Blake Bolden became the first ever African American picked in the first round of said draft. Georgia Moore, a member of the Australian national women's team became the first Australian born player selected in the draft. Along with Julie Paetsch, both had experience competing in women's tackle football in the Western Women's Canadian Football League. Moore spent one season with the Okotoks Lady Outlaws, while Paetsch enjoyed multiple seasons with the Saskatoon Valkyries. It marked the first time that two WWCFL players were selected in the CWHL Draft. Of note, Delayne Brian was the first goaltender selected in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections\nLocal elections was held in Cabuyao City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The total number of voters registered in the City of Cabuyao is 135,713 in 586 voting precincts. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections\nCabuyao is a newly created city in the province of Laguna by virtue of Republic Act No. 10163 or the \"\" ratified on August 4, 2012 by its people. Voters will no longer vote for eight councilors but they will elect ten city councilors as prescribed in the charter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections, Overview\nIncumbent Mayor Isidro \"Jun\" L. Hemedes Jr. decided to run for re-election under the Nacionalista Party, he was elected as Mayor since 2007 after defeating former Mayor Proceso \"Etok\" Aguillo in 2007 local elections. His opponent was former Mayor Nila Aguillo, the wife of Etok Aguillo, she is under the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections, Overview\nHemedes' running mate is the incumbent Vice-Mayor Rommel \"Mel\" Gecolea. His opponent is city councilor Maria Wanda Alimagno, the running mate of Nila Aguillo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections, Overview\nEach team had their own set of ten candidates for city council. Nacionalista Party/Administration team was composed of five re-election candidates, Barangay Pulo Chairman Odilon I. Caparas and Barangay Marinig Chairman Emiliano T. Lirio and three other candidates. Under the Liberal Party/Opposition team were two re-election candidates, former vice-mayor Benjamin C. del Rosario, Barangay Sala Chairman Amelito G. Alimagno, Barangay Mamatid Councilor Gabriel Bariring. Notable candidates for Cabuyao City council were Anna Liza Baldonado or popularly known as \"Milagring\" of the defunct TV program Wowowee and 6 Cycle Mind lead vocalist Tutti Caringal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections, Results, Mayoral elections\nThe candidates for 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections, Results, Vice-mayoral elections\nThe candidates for 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232391-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cabuyao local elections, Results, City Council Elections\nVoters elected ten councilors to comprise the City Council or the Sangguniang Panlungsod. Candidates were voted separately so there are chances where winning candidates will have unequal number of votes and may come from different political parties. The ten candidates with the highest number of votes win the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232392-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cachant\u00fan Cup\nThe 2013 Cachant\u00fan Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Santiago, Chile between 4 and 10 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232392-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cachant\u00fan Cup, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232392-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cachant\u00fan Cup, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232392-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cachant\u00fan Cup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232393-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cachant\u00fan Cup \u2013 Doubles\nPaul Capdeville and Marcel Felder were the defending champions, but they lost in the quarterfinals to Federico Delbonis and Diego Junqueira. Marcelo Demoliner and Jo\u00e3o Souza defeated Delbonis and Junqueira 7\u20135, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232394-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cachant\u00fan Cup \u2013 Singles\nPaul Capdeville was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Marco Trungelliti. Facundo Bagnis won the title by defeating Thiemo de Bakker 7\u20136(7\u20132), 7\u20136(7\u20133) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232395-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cactus Pheasant Classic\nThe 2013 Cactus Pheasant Classic was held from October 24 to 27 at the Brooks Curling Club in Brooks, Alberta as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was in a triple knockout format, and the purse for the event was CAD$70,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232395-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cactus Pheasant Classic\nWinnipeg's Mike McEwen defeated Switzerland's Sven Michel in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232396-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caesar & Imperial Cup\nThe 2013 Caesar & Imperial Cup is a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It is the second edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It takes place in Taipei, Taiwan, on 28 October\u20133 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232396-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Caesar & Imperial Cup, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232397-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caesar & Imperial Cup \u2013 Doubles\nChan Chin-wei and Caroline Garcia were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Garcia decided not to participate. Chan partnered up with Hsu Wen-hsin but lost in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232397-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Caesar & Imperial Cup \u2013 Doubles\nLesley Kerkhove and Arantxa Rus won the title, defeating Chen Yi and Luksika Kumkhum in the final, 6\u20134, 2\u20136, [14\u201312].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232398-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caesar & Imperial Cup \u2013 Singles\nZheng Saisai was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided to participate at the 2013 Nanjing Ladies Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232398-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Caesar & Imperial Cup \u2013 Singles\nPaula Kania won the title, defeating Zarina Diyas in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232399-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cal Poly Mustangs football team\nThe 2013 Cal Poly Mustangs football team represented California Polytechnic State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Mustangs were led by fifth year head coach Tim Walsh and played their home games at Alex G. Spanos Stadium. They were members of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 5\u20133 in Big Sky play to finish in a four-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232400-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team\nThe 2013 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team represents California State University, Fullerton in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Titans play their home games at Goodwin Field and are members of the Big West Conference. The team is coached by Rick Vanderhook in his 2nd season at Cal State Fullerton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232400-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team, Ranking movements\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, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232401-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Calamba local election\nLocal elections were held in Calamba City on May 13, 2013, within the Philippine general election, for posts of the mayor, vice mayor and ten councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232401-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Calamba local election, Overview\nThe incumbent mayor, Joaquin \"Jun\" Chipeco, Jr., decided to run for the position of representative of the 2nd District of Laguna under the Liberal Party. His son, Justin Marc SB Chipeco, the incumbent Laguna's 2nd district representative ran for mayor of Calamba under Nacionalista Party. His opponent was the former vice-mayor Severino Lajara under PDP-Laban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232401-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Calamba local election, Results\nThe candidates for mayor and vice mayor with the highest number of votes win. They are voted for separately. Therefore, they may be of different parties when elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232401-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Calamba local election, Results, City Council elections\nVoters elected ten councilors to comprise the City Council or the Sangguniang Panlungsod. Candidates are voted for separately so winning candidates may come from different political parties. The ten candidates with the highest number of votes win the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232401-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Calamba local election, Protests\nSupporters of the mayoral candidate Severino Lajara stormed city hall to protest against the suspension of the canvassing votes. They believed the results of the elections were being manipulated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232401-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Calamba local election, Protests\nThe mayoral race in Calamba was neck and neck between Lajara and Chipeco. Police kept a close watch on the Commission on Elections (Comelec) office in Calamba City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232402-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Calder Cup playoffs\nThe 2013 Calder Cup playoffs of the American Hockey League began on April 26, 2013, with the same playoff format that was introduced in 2012. The sixteen teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played a best-of-five series in the conference quarterfinals, and the playoffs continued with best-of-seven series for the conference semifinals, conference finals and Calder Cup finals. The Grand Rapids Griffins defeated the Syracuse Crunch in six games to win the Calder Cup for the first time in Grand Rapids' franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232402-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the 2012\u201313 AHL regular season, 16 teams qualified for the playoffs. The top eight teams from each conference qualifies for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232402-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Calder Cup playoffs, Conference semifinals, Eastern Conference, (1) Providence Bruins vs. (5) Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins\nThe Penguins became the third team in AHL history, along with the 1960 Rochester Americans and 1989 Adirondack Red Wings to come back from a 0\u20133 series deficit and win a best of seven playoff series, and the first team to then win Game 7 on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 129], "content_span": [130, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232402-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Calder Cup playoffs, Conference finals, Western Conference, (3) Grand Rapids Griffins vs. (5) Oklahoma City Barons\nThe game scheduled for May 31 was postponed to June 1 because of dangerous weather conditions around the Cox Convention Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 119], "content_span": [120, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232402-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232402-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232402-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 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 360 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-00232402-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232403-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary Roughnecks season\nThe Calgary Roughnecks are a lacrosse team based in Calgary playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2013 season was the 12th in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232403-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary Roughnecks season\nFor the third straight season, the Roughnecks finished the season first in the west, but ran into trouble in the playoffs. Calgary defeated the Colorado Mammoth 15-10 in the division semi-finals but in a thrilling division final game, the Washington Stealth held on to win 14-13 and end the Roughnecks season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232403-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232403-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary Roughnecks season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nThe 2012 NLL Entry Draft took place on October 1, 2012. The Roughnecks made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232404-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary Stampeders season\nThe 2013 Calgary Stampeders season was the 56th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 79th overall. The Stampeders attempted to win their 7th Grey Cup championship, but fell in the West Final to the eventual champion Saskatchewan Roughriders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232404-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary Stampeders season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2013 CFL Draft took place on May 6, 2013. The Stampeders had seven selections in the seven-round draft, with an additional pick in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232405-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary municipal election\nThe 2013 Calgary municipal election was held Monday, October 21, 2013, to elect a mayor and 14 councillors to the city council, the seven trustees to the Calgary School District (each representing two of 14 wards), and five of the seven trustees to the Calgary Catholic School District (each representing two of 14 wards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232405-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary municipal election\nFrom 1968 to 2013, provincial legislation required every municipality to hold elections every three years. The 28th Alberta Legislature introduced the Election Accountability Amendment Act (Bill 7) which among other reforms to provincial and municipal elections, amended the Local Authorities Election Act to extend the terms of local authorities including municipalities and school boards from three years to four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232405-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary municipal election\nThe 14 electoral wards were once again each represented by a single member on council, although the wards were changed slightly from the previous term. The neighbourhood of Martindale was moved from ward 3 to ward 5, and the community that expanded the neighbourhood of Cougar Ridge into ward 1 was with the rest of the neighbourhood in ward 6. This election also marked a change in title for council members, from \"Alderman\", to \"Councillor\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232405-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Calgary municipal election\nNaheed K. Nenshi was elected mayor with large majority of votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team\nThe 2013 California Golden Bears football team represented the University of California, Berkeley in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. This was Cal's first year of being led by the head coach Sonny Dykes. Cal's athletic director Sandy Barbour stated that it was his emphasis on offense that was the primary factor in the decision. Dykes was hired from Louisiana Tech, and was known for his reliance on the pass heavy and high scoring Air Raid offense, that utilized a shotgun formation with four wide receivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team\nCal finished this season with a 1\u201311 record, with Dykes becoming the first head coach since the University began playing football in 1886 to fail to defeat a single D-1 opponent in a season that has lasted at least five games. The Bears lost to Stanford by 50 points, the largest margin ever in the 119-year history of the Big Game. During the season, the team was featured on The Drive, a weekly documentary series on the Pac-12 Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team\nOne of the season's few positives was the performance of true freshman Jared Goff as the starting quarterback. Under Dyke's Air Raid offense, Goff delivered a record-breaking season, setting Cal single-season records for passing yards (3,508), yardage gained (3,508), total offense (3,446), passes completed (320), and passes attempted (530).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Washington State\nCal holds a 44\u201325\u20135 record in the series and had won the last eight meetings. This was the Cougar's first victory against the Golden Bears in 11 years. Their last victory occurred in 2002 where the Cougars beat the Golden Bears 48-18 at Memorial Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n1st quarter scoring: WSU \u2013 Vince Mayle 35-yard pass from Connor Halliday (Andrew Furney kick); WSU \u2013 Jeremiah Laufasa 5-yard run (Furney kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n2nd quarter scoring: CAL \u2013 Deandre Coleman 2-yard safety on Teondray Caldwell; CAL \u2013 Vincenzo D'Amato 35-yard field goal; CAL \u2013 Chris Harper 89-yard pass from Jared Goff (D'Amato kick); WSU \u2013 Marcus Mason 68-yard from Halliday (Furney kick); CAL \u2013 D'Amato 43-yard field goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n3rd quarter scoring: WSU \u2013 Teondray Caldwell 10-yard run (Furney kick); WSU \u2013 Vince Mayle 72-yard pass from (Furney Kick); CAL \u2013 James Grisom 53-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Washington State\n4th quarter scoring: WSU \u2013 Furney 44-yard field goal; WSU \u2013 Furney 41-yard field goal; WSU \u2013 Furney 28-yard field goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, UCLA\nCalifornia is 32\u201350\u20131 against UCLA since the series began in 1933. This was Sonny Dykes first year taking on the Bruins as California's head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n1st quarter scoring: UCLA\t\u2013 Ka'imi Fairbairn 24-yard field goal; UCLA \u2013 Devin Fuller 18-yard pass from Brett Hundley (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n2nd quarter scoring: UCLA\t\u2013 Paul Perkins 1-yard run (Fairbairn kick); CAL\t\u2013 Vincenzo D'Amato 51-yard field goal; \tCAL \u2013 Daniel Lasco 6-yard run (D'Amato Kick); UCLA \u2013 Thomas Duarte 27-yard pass from Hundley (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n3rd quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Fairbairn 22-yard field goal; UCLA \u2013 Fairbairn 27-yard field goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n4th quarter scoring: UCLA\t\u2013 Shaquelle Evans 22-yard pass from Hundley (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n1st quarter scoring: CAL \u2013 Khalf Muhammad 11-yard pass from Jared Goff (Vincen D'Amato kick); ARIZ \u2013 B. Denker 9-yard run (J. Smith kick); ARIZ \u2013 Team safety", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n2nd quarter scoring: ARIZ \u2013 Smith 53-yard field goal; ARIZ \u2013 N. Phillips 21-yard pass from Denker (Smith kick);CAL \u2013 Kenny Lawler 17-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n3rd quarter scoring: ARIZ \u2013 Denker 1-yard run (Smith kick); CAL \u2013 Lawler 3-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick); ARIZ \u2013 Denker 14-yard run (Smith kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Arizona\n4th quarter scoring:CAL \u2013 Lawler 29-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, USC\n1st quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Nelson Agholor 75-yard punt return (Andre Heidari kick); USC \u2013 Silas Redd 12-yard pass from Cody Kessler (Heidari kick); USC \u2013 Javorius Allen 43-yard (Heidari kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, USC\n2nd quarter scoring: CAL \u2013 Kenny Lawler 4-yard pass from Jared Goff (Vincen D'Amato kick)\u00a0; CAL \u2013 Darius Powe 24-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick); USC \u2013 Allen 57-yard pass from Kessler (Heidari kick); USC \u2013 Josh Shaw 86-yard punt return (Heidari kick); USC \u2013 Agholor 93-yard punt return (kick missed)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, USC\n3rd quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Allen 79-yard run (Heidari kick); USC \u2013 Ty Isaac 4-yard run (Heidari kick); CAL \u2013 Khalfani Muhammad 7-yard run (D'Amato kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, USC\n4th quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Isaac 37-yard run (Heidari kick); CAL \u2013 Lawler 4-yard pass from Goff (D'Amato kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Stanford\nIn a 63\u201313 victory, #10 Stanford broke the record for most points scored in a Big Game and for the largest margin of victory. With the victory, Stanford clinched the Pac-12 North Division Championship while Cal ended their season at 1\u201311, the most losses in one season in Cal football history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n1st quarter scoring: STAN - T. Montgomery 31-yard run (J. Williamson kick) CAL - Maurice Harris 15-yard pass from Goff, Jared (Vincen D\u2019Amato kick); STAN - Montgomery 50-yard pass from K. Hogan (Williamson kick); STAN - Montgomery 12-yard pass from Hogan (Williamson kick); CAL - D\u2019Amato 29-yard field goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n2nd quarter scoring: STAN - Montgomery 72-yard pass from Hogan (Williamson kick); STAN \u2013 M. Rector 45-yard pass from Hogan (Williamson kick); CAL - D\u2019Amato 47-yard field goal; STAN - Montgomery 9-yard pass from Hogan (Williamson kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n3rd quarter scoring: STAN - Gaffney,T 58-yard run (C. Ukropina kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232406-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 California Golden Bears football team, Game summaries, Stanford\n4th quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 K. Young 27-yard run (Ukropina kick); STAN \u2013 F. Owusu 14-yard pass from E. Crower (Ukropina kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike\nThe 2013 California prisoner hunger Strike started on July 8, 2013 involving over 29,000 inmates in protest of the state's use of solitary confinement practices and ended on September 5, 2013. The hunger strike was organized by inmates in long term solitary in the Security Housing Unit (SHU) at Pelican Bay State Prison in protest of inmates housed there that were in solitary confinement indefinitely for having ties to gangs. Another hunger strike that added to the movement started the week before in High Desert State Prison. The focus of the High Desert State Prison hunger strike was to demand cleaner facilities, better food and better access to the library.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike\nDue to the two-month hunger strike, lawmakers agreed to hold public hearings on the conditions within California's maximum security prisons where this prolonged solitary confinement has taken place. Following this announcement, a week later on September 4, 2013, there were 100 inmates in two prisons on a hunger strike; 40 of them had been on a hunger strike continuously since July 8. All remaining hunger strikers, in light of the lawmaker's promise, resumed eating on September 5, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Human rights concerns and solitary confinement\nHealth and human rights concerns surrounding California's use of solitary confinement are not a new phenomenon. Questions regarding both the mental and physical health of prisoners kept in solitary confinement have been prevalent since the practice began in the early 1800s. Solitary confinement in United States' prisons is the practice of detaining prisoners in a single cell for between 22 and 24 hours a day. The majority of prisoners confined in solitary confinement in California are contained to 11-foot-by-7-foot windowless concrete cells.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 86], "content_span": [87, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Human rights concerns and solitary confinement\nThese cells generally contain a toilet, shower, a slot in the door large enough for a food tray, and a bed. California opened Corona and Pelican Bay State prisons in the late 1980s, which were two of the first and largest supermax prisons to be erected. In the case of Madrid v. Gomez in 1995, the U.S. district court for Northern California determined that a significant number of inmates held in SHU units within Pelican Bay prison suffered from mental health issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 86], "content_span": [87, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Human rights concerns and solitary confinement\nCalifornia law allows for any prisoner to be placed into an SHU unit for an indefinite amount of time, so long as they are suspected to be active within a gang. The prisoners' release from the SHU unit can only be reviewed every six years. In Madrid the court determined that the Pelican Bay prison was failing to provide adequate mental and physical care for prisoners, and that the Pelican Bay SHU was in a state of a \"mental health crisis\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 86], "content_span": [87, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0002-0003", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Human rights concerns and solitary confinement\nThe Madrid case also brought to light the violence and cruel and unusual punishment that guards were inflicting upon inmates within the SHU unit of the prison, including acts such as caging inmates outside during inclement weather. The Supreme court in 2011 declared that the California prisons were overcrowded to the point of it being considered cruel and unusual punishment, effectively violating the 8th amendment. The supporting opinion on this bipartisan and landmark decision described that the California prison system had failed to meet the minimum requirements needed for the mental and physical health of prisoners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 86], "content_span": [87, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0002-0004", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Human rights concerns and solitary confinement\nOne year after the supreme court decision in 2011, California still had more than 10,000 inmates confined to solitary confinement, with 1,557 inmates having been kept in solitary confinement for at least 10 years. No state besides California is believed to have held such high numbers of prisoners in solitary confinement for such a prolonged period of time. Human Rights Watch, an independent organization that focuses on human rights, found that prolonged use of solitary confinement is inconsistent with respecting the inmates humanity. Amnesty International, a global human rights NGO, voiced support for the hunger striker's concerns as well as saying that California has fallen short of international law and the necessary standards for humane treatment due to California's use of solitary confinement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 86], "content_span": [87, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Organization of the strike\nThe Hunger strike began in early July 2013 by inmates across prisons in California in an effort to protest solitary confinement and inhumane conditions within the prisons. The strike began and was led by inmates within the Pelican Bay Prison's SHU unit. The leaders of the strike formed the Pelican Bay State Prison SHU Short Corridor Collective in 2011 to protest prolonged solitary confinement and debriefing practices that were common within the prison. At its peak 6,600 prisoners across 13 California jails participated in the 2011 hunger strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Organization of the strike\nThe 2011 hunger strike was ended by the organizers after approximately a month because of the agreement by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to make reforms. The 2013 strike began because the Corridor Collective felt as if the CDCR had not kept their promises to them, and the Corridor Collective also announced that they had successfully gotten all racial groups to agree to band together to fight for better prison conditions. The creators of the Corridor Collective and also the leaders behind the strike were Todd Ashker, Arturo Castellanos, Ronnie Dewberry, and Antonio Guillen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Organization of the strike\nEach of the leaders were prisoners within the Pelican Bay Prison SHU, with Ashker being a member of the Aryan Brotherhood, Castellanos belonging to the LA street gang Florencia 13, Dewberry being in the Black Guerrilla Family, and Guillen in the Nuestra Familia gang. The four men who collaborated to begin the strike had been placed within the short corridor section of the SHU due to the guard's belief that they were influential within the prison gangs, and the want to isolate them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0003-0003", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Organization of the strike\nEffectively, placing these men within the same pod made it possible for them to communicate with each other by yelling between their cells in order to coordinate the massive hunger strike. The men used their family and neighborhood networks to spread the message both inside and outside of the prison system of the upcoming strike, also sending letters to multiple prison solidarity groups in order to get the word out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0003-0004", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Organization of the strike\nPrisoners within the SHU unit also used methods such as speaking through the toilet drains, writing ghost messages in library books, or sending coded messages through family members in order to communicate with each other. The strikers made multiple demands of the prisons, including asking for an end to long-term solitary confinement along with group punishments, better and more nutritious food, along with ending policies surrounding the identification and treatment of suspected gang members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0003-0005", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Organization of the strike\nOne of these specific practices is referred to as the \"debriefing\" policy, where California places suspected gang members into solitary confinement, and only agrees to place them back into general population if they provide the identities of other gang members. Along with the hunger strike, many inmates also began refusing to attend work and classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Health concerns\nAfter a few days of refusing food, the body stops feeling hungry and begins to break down proteins within muscle to create glucose according to the California Correctional Health Care Services. After two weeks of refusing food, people on hunger strike will begin to lose coordination and have difficulty standing and begin feeling overwhelmingly cold and sluggish. Once an individual has not eaten for 45 days or beyond, the risk of death due to cardiac arrest is very high. Prisoners' attorneys and doctors expressed concern over the strikers' potential health risks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Health concerns\nPrison officials, however, implemented inhumane tactics in an attempt to force prisoners to end their strike. Prisoners were denied access to their medications, and were denied medical oversight. Some of the prisoners were only refusing solid foods, and they were denied access to any liquid substance other than water. These cruel methods of punishment received an abundance of backlash from the medical community, and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) was heavily criticized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Health concerns\nAs a result, the plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit about medical care in state prisons, the federal receiver in charge of prison health care and the CDCR jointly submitted a request to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California on August 19, 2013, for an order authorizing the refeeding under specified conditions of inmate-patients who were participating in the hunger strike. Judge Thelton E. Henderson granted the order the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0004-0003", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Health concerns\nThe process of force-feeding, often referred to as \"refeeding\" within the prison system, can be as severe as inserting feeding tubes into prisoner's noses or stomach. Previously to this order, prisoners who had signed orders not to be resuscitated were not allowed to be force-fed based on California policy. Officials cited concerns over prisoners being coerced into participating in the hunger strike by gangs as a reason to force-feed them, which Judge Henderson agreed to ignore the signed \"do-not resuscitate\" orders of the prisoners due to these concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0004-0004", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Health concerns\nDespite the concerns by the CDCR that inmates were being coerced into participating, only one instance of explicit coercion was ever recorded by prison officials. By the time the order was put into effect, there were less than 200 prisoners still fasting, and numerous others had been hospitalized. There was only one fatality from the strike. Billy \"Guero\" Sell died on July 22, 2013 after requesting medical attention for seven days leading up to his death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232407-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 California prisoner hunger strike, Legal actions\nThe lawsuit, Todd Ashker, et al., vs. Governor of the State of California, et al., was brought by 10 Pelican Bay State Prison inmates who were housed in the Security Housing Unit (SHU). The lawsuit alleged that long-term confinement in the SHU violated the Eighth Amendment's prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment as well as the Fourteenth Amendment's clause for due process. The court case on September 1, 2015 was settled resulting in the termination of indeterminate solitary confinement in California and greatly reducing the number of individuals in solitary confinement as a whole. The court ruled in January 2019 that California continues to make constitutional violations, and that there will be an additional year of monitoring. Many prisoners feel that there is still much change needed as the debriefing process for gang affiliated prisoners was not revised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232408-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 California wildfires\n9,907 wildfires burned at least 601,625 acres (2,434.69\u00a0km2) of land in the state of California during 2013. The wildfires injured at least 125 people and killed at least 1. They also caused over $218.15 million (2013 USD) in damage. These included several large, notable wildfires, including the Rim Fire, which became California's 3rd largest wildfire. Another wildfire was ignited by the plane crash of the Asiana Airlines Flight 214 on July 6, 2013, which burned around 1 acre of land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232408-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 California wildfires, Fires\nBelow is a list of all fires that exceeded 1,000 acres (400\u00a0ha) during the 2013 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, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections\nLocal elections in Caloocan was held on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the two Congressmen, and the councilors, six in each of the city's two legislative districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nThe Incumbent Mayor Enrico Echiverri is term-limited and ineligible for reelection, and running for Congress instead, his son League of the Barangay National President RJ Echiverri is his party's nominee. RJ is running under Liberal Party with his running mate former vice mayor Luis Varela who serve as vice mayor 2001-2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\n1st District Representative Oscar Malapitan, who term-limited and ineligible for reelection, announce his bid in mayoralty race under the UNA and his running mate is businessman Antonio \"Nani\" Almeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nOther for mayor is Independent candidates Macario Asistio, Jr. who became mayor from 1988 until 1995 and Diony Guillarte. Other candidate for Vice Mayor is Rey Malonzo, who became vice-mayor of the city from 1992 until 1995 then mayor from 1995 until 2004, Councilor Maca Asistio who run under PMP and Independent Mariano Yu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections, Congressional Election\nThere will be two candidates for the congressman or district representative post of each of the districts of Caloocan. The city is divided into two congressional districts: the first district and the second district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections, Congressional Election\nThe Incumbent First District Representative Oscar Malapitan is term-limited and running for mayoral race instead. Oscar Malapitan son incumbent Coun. Dale Gonzalo \"Along\" Malapitan, is the UNA candidate for 1st district congressional seat. He will facing off with incumbent Mayor Enrico \"Recom\" Echiverri who term-limited in Mayor and candidate of Liberal. Other is the Following Independent Candidate, Roberto Guanzon who became representative from 1995 until 1998, Maria Hernando, Milagros Libuton, Sandro Limpin, Imelda Pengson and Sirgea Villamayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections, Congressional Election\nFor the second district, The incumbent Rep. Mitzi Cajayon is running under NUP bolted from Lakas-CMD, her opponents is Luis Asistio who became 2nd District representative from 1992 until 2001 and 2001 until 2004 and running under NPC. another is incumbent Vice Mayor Edgar Erice who became representative from 2001-2004 and running under Liberal. Other candidates are Carlos Cabochan of Kapatiran and independent Adoracion Garcia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232409-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Caloocan local elections, Results, City Council elections\nEach of Caloocan's two legislative districts elects six councilors to the City Council. The six candidates with the highest number of votes wins the seats per district. Some who are running are the same names from 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide\nOn 25 December 2013, Christmas Day, a landslide occurred in the village of Calstock in the county of Cornwall, United Kingdom. The landslide, which hit late in the morning, was believed to have been caused by a burst of heavy rainfall and numerous village wells surrounding the landslide. The landslide collapsed the road of Lower Kelly, which was a vital and only road connection to the town of Calstock, trapping forty cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Cause\nThis landslide took place next to five old village drinking wells. This water for centuries had eroded the foundations of the road since its 18th-century construction, then in an heavy burst of rainfall caused by the 2013\u201314 United Kingdom winter floods led to the collapse of the road over a 30 foot drop, to the river bank with the River Tamar. Over Christmas morning the road continued to collapse, the local fire service and police were called to the scene. Local residents were evacuated immediately, as it was feared that the landslide could also collapse the nearby Georgian terrace. It was feared that the foundations of Calstock Viaduct might also collapse and Tamar Valley Line services were cancelled until 28 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Management\nOn 30 December 2013, five days after the landslide, Calstock Parish Council held a local residents' meeting, chaired by Dorothy Kirk. At this meeting numerous proposals were made and rejected. As the meeting began to close a proposal was made by a local ten year old boy, Charlie Southcott. He proposed that the Royal Marines who were based nearby could rescue the trapped cars using landing crafts to ferry the trapped cars, between the Calstock Boatyard slipway and Cotehele Quay slipway. Charlie was also an acquaintance of the then commander of the HMNB Devonport, Commodore Graeme Little, whom he had met the previous week at the Babcock Christmas Carol Service, held on Christmas Eve. Young Southcott then also presented the parish council with Commodore Little's telephone number and contact details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Royal Marine rescue\nCalstock Parish Council contacted Cmdre Little and it was arranged that the Royal Marine's 1st Assault Group would leave HMNB Devonport, travel up the River Tamar to Calstock on 15 January 2014 to ferry the forty cars over two days. The day was chosen because of the favourable neap tides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Royal Marine rescue\nUpon assessment and Charlie's recommendations the Royal Marines would land and cars could embark from Calstock Boat Yard and travel 1 mile down the River Tamar to Cotehele Quay, a National Trust property nearby, to disembark the cars. In total the Royal Marines provided four LCVP Mk5 and one Offshore Raiding Craft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Royal Marine rescue\nThe Royal Navy is delighted to come to the aid of the civilian authorities", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Royal Marine rescue\nThe slipway used at Calstock was constructed by the American Army in the Second World War to embark US Army troops into Landing craft bound for Utah Beach, as part of the Normandy Landings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Royal Marine rescue\nCalstock Primary School children, including Charlie Southcott, were given the day off to watch the unfolding military operation. The event was Calstock's largest peacetime military operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Aftermath\nAfter the Royal Marine rescue Cornwall Council began rebuilding the collapsed wall. This was done by constructing a tall wall of large cement block and then an exterior of natural stone, imitating the original design and in keeping with the rest of the unclasped wall. The road was reopened on 19 May 2014 and a village street party was held to celebrate. The road since then has been in constant use and remains structurally intact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Damaged property\nThe road had also collapsed onto a riverside shed and the shed was also rebuilt by Cornwall Council once the road was completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Gallery\nCalstock Boatyard Slipway, RM landing craft loading a Massey Ferguson 135 Tractor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232410-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Calstock landslide, Gallery\nRM landing craft loaded with a Massey Ferguson 135 Tractor travelling down the River Tamar", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232411-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian League\n2013 Cambodian League is the 29th season of the Cambodian League. A total of 10 teams are competing in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232411-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian League\nThe regular season will be played from January 12 to June 2 and will once again feature playoffs at the end of the season to determine the league champions. The season has been brought forward by 2 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232411-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian League, Personnel and sponsoring, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is restricted to five per team. A team can use three foreign players on the field in each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Cambodia on 28 July 2013. The National Election Committee (NEC) announced that some 9.67 million Cambodians were eligible to cast their ballots to elect the 123-seat National Assembly. Voter turnout was reported to be 69.6%, a record low for a general election. Polling precincts opened 7:00\u00a0a.m. and closed at 3:00\u00a0p.m. The Cambodian Minister of Information, Khieu Kanharith announced in preliminary results that the Cambodian People's Party won 68 seats and the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party won all the remaining 55 seats. This election marked the largest seat loss by the Cambodian People's Party to date, and their lowest share of seats since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Background\nThe previous general elections in 2008 were won by the Cambodian People's Party, which managed to secure an absolute majority of the seats: 90 out of 123. Despite winning a parliamentary majority, the CPP chose to form a coalition with the royalist FUNCINPEC, which won 2 seats. The opposition Sam Rainsy Party and Human Rights Party won a combined total of 29 seats. In 2012, the two parties merged to form the Cambodian National Rescue Party. However, party leader Sam Rainsy was barred from running as a candidate because he was not registered to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Background\nThe voter roll was finalised on 31 December 2012, at which time Rainsy was living abroad after being controversially convicted in 2010 of making changes to a map to suggest the country was losing land to neighbouring Vietnam. Rainsy returned to Cambodia in July 2013 after he received a royal pardon from King Norodom Sihamoni, but Rainsy failed to have his name reinstated on the voter roll and was not eligible for candidacy in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Debates\nCambodia had its first televised debate on 20 and 21 July. The US-funded National Democratic Institute also sponsored nine town hall-style debates with provincial candidates from almost all parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Conduct, Voting eligibility issues\nSince Cambodia had had no official population count for the last five years, the country's population figure is merely guesswork, which has led to incorrect projections of possible voters \u2013 making it difficult for the National Election Commission to ascertain the number of actual voters that should be listed in Cambodia's voting rolls. The lack of actual population count could have led to fraudulent voting, such as voters voting in multiple precincts using different names. According to the opposition CNRP, between 1.2 and 1.3 million names were omitted from voting rolls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Conduct, Voting eligibility issues\nMigrant Vietnamese have also allegedly been able to register as voters due to lax identification policies in Cambodia. The opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party played up this anti-Vietnamese rhetoric in campaigning leading up to the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Conduct, Indelible ink\nOne of the controversies that beset the Cambodian election before it even began was the use of an ostensibly indelible ink that was used to mark which voters had already voted. The ink had previously been donated by the Indian Embassy in Cambodia. Documentation by poll monitors before the election demonstrated the ink could simply be washed off using bleach or lime juice in minutes upon drying. The ink used could have perhaps allowed voters to vote more than once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Results\nThe ruling CPP party received 48.83% of the votes, earned 68 seats, while the CNRP party won 55 seats with 44.46% of the vote. By losing 22 seats from the previous election, the CPP earned the fewest percentage of seats that it has had in the National Assembly since 1998. Other parties, including the Funcinpec Party and League for Democracy Party combined for 0 seats on 6.3% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Reactions\nThe CPP claimed victory in the election. The E.U. and U.S. expressed concern about possible irregularities, with the latter's State Department Spokeswoman Jen Psaki saying that \"we call for a transparent and full investigation of all credible reports of irregularities. We urge all parties and their supporters to continue to act in an orderly and peaceful manner in the post-election period.\" Vietnam congratulated Cambodia on the success of its 5th General Elections. French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott sent their letter of endorsement, congratulating Hun Sen on his election win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Aftermath\nThough there were claims that the election would be \"worthless\" even before voting started, after the election, there were complaints of election fraud. Sam Rainsy, the leader of the CNRP, declared that \"We will not accept the result \u2013 we cannot accept the result... The party in power cannot ignore us anymore.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Aftermath\nThe international non-governmental organisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) issued a statement that read that \"the ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP) appears to have been involved in electoral fraud\" and called for an \"independent commission\" to investigate \"allegations of election fraud and other irregularities, including bias in the election machinery\". Brad Adams, HRW's Asia Director, further stated that some of the fraud consisted of \"senior ruling party officials appear to have been involved in issuing fake election documents and fraudulently registering voters in multiple provinces.\" The Cambodian government denied calls by international organisations for an independent election review, while the government rejected calls for a review and the National Election Committee (NEC) denied irregularities. There were also claims of voter intimidation as the ruling party controlled the apparatus of state control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 966]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232412-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambodian general election, Aftermath\nThousands of CNRP supporters gathered in Phnom Penh in September to protest the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232413-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridge, Massachusetts municipal election\nThe Cambridge, Massachusetts municipal election of 2013 took place on Tuesday, November 5, 2013, to elect the nine members of the Cambridge City Council, and the School Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232413-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridge, Massachusetts municipal election\nCambridge has a city government led by a mayor and nine-member city council. There is also a six-member School Committee which functions alongside the Superintendent of public schools. The councilors and school committee members are elected every two years using the single transferable vote system. Once a laborious process that took several days to complete by hand, ballot sorting and calculations to determine the outcome of elections are now quickly performed by computer, after the ballots have been optically scanned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232413-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridge, Massachusetts municipal election, City Council candidates\nVoters indicated order of preference (first choice, second choice, etc.). for the 25 candidates. Seven of the 25 candidates were members of the outgoing council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 73], "content_span": [74, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election\nAn election to Cambridgeshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 69 councillors were elected from 60 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 the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in Peterborough, which is a unitary authority outside the area covered by the County Council. The election saw the Conservative Party lose overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Previous composition, Changes between elections\nIn between the 2009 election and the 2013 election, the following council seats changed hands:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 92], "content_span": [93, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Summary\nIn total 292 candidates stood in the election. Only the Labour Party and the Conservative Party contested all 69 seats on the council. The Liberal Democrats stood 61 candidates, not standing in four divisions in Fenland and only contesting one seat in some two-member divisions. The United Kingdom Independence Party stood 52 candidates, including a full slate in Huntingdonshire, although two nominated candidates in Fenland withdrew before the deadline and did not appear on the ballot. The Green Party stood 25 candidates, mostly in Cambridge and South Cambridgeshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Summary\nThe English Democrats stood two candidates in Whittlesey, while the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition stood two candidates in the Godmanchester & Huntingdon East division. The Official Monster Raving Loony Party stood two candidates in St Ives and in Bar Hill divisions, and one candidate stood for the Cambridge Socialists in Romsey. There were also nine independent candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Summary\nThe United Kingdom Independence Party made substantial gains, taking 11 seats from the Conservatives mostly in Fenland and northern Huntingdonshire. Southern Huntingdonshire saw the Conservatives lose a seat to the Liberal Democrats in the Godmanchester & Huntingdon East division, as well as two seats to independents in the St Neots Eaton Socon & Eynesbury division. The Labour Party gained seats in Cambridge from the Liberal Democrats and the Green Party, including Arbury which Labour had won in a 2011 by-election, winning half of the city's 14 county council divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Summary\nIn East Cambridgeshire, the Conservatives gained both divisions in Ely from the Liberal Democrats but lost Littleport to UKIP. In South Cambridgeshire, Conservative council leader Nick Clarke lost his seat in Fulbourn to the Liberal Democrats. The Liberal Democrats however lost four other seats in the district including in Linton, where the Conservative candidate won by a single vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Summary, Aftermath\nThe Conservatives will continue to run the council however they will do so in a minority, with Whittlesey councillor Martin Curtis as council leader. In addition the council structure will switch from a cabinet system to a committee system, starting from May 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Results summary, Election of Group Leaders\nMartin Curtis (Whittlesey North) was elected leader of the Conservative Group, Maurice Leeke (Waterbeach) challenged the incumbent Kilian Bourke (Romsey) for the leadership of the Liberal Democratic Group and won, and Paul Sales (Arbury) was elected leader of the Labour Group. In mid 2015 deputy Lib Dem leader Lucy Nethsingha (Newnham) was elected leader and deputy leader Ashley Walsh (Petersfield) replaced Sales as Labour leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Results summary, Election of Group Leaders\nIn December 2013 Peter Reeve (Ramsey) stood down as UKIP group leader to be replaced by Paul Bullen (St Ives) with Simon Bywater(Sawtry and Ellington) as his deputy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Results summary, Election of Leader of the Council\nMartin Curtis the leader of the conservative group was duly elected leader of the council and formed a conservative administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 95], "content_span": [96, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232414-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Results summary, Election of Leader of the Council\nAfter less than a year as leader Curtis resigned and was succeeded by Steve Count (March North)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 95], "content_span": [96, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232415-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cameron Highlands mud floods\nThe 2013 Cameron Highlands mud floods took place on 23 October 2013. Three people died while another was missing due to the mud flood in Bertam Valley, Cameron Highlands, Pahang, Malaysia. Heavy rain had occurred continuously since 7:00pm the day before, creating a need to alleviate the water in the dam the morning of the flood. The water from in the dam was released three times starting with the first at midnight, then another at 1:00am, and finally again at 2:45am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232415-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Cameron Highlands mud floods\nThe flash flood occurred at 1:00am as a result of the release of the water from the Sultan Abu Bakar dam in Ringlet that forced the Bertam River to suddenly rise and breach its banks. In the aftermath, around 10 kongsi houses that were on the banks of the river were destroyed, roughly 80 houses were damaged, some of which were 3\u00a0km away, and 100 vehicles suffered damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232415-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cameron Highlands mud floods, Causes of mud floods\nThe Cameron Highlands are susceptible to flash floods that carry silt because of the human involvement in the area. The deforestation of the area causes the water runoff and is one of the main reasons they have flash floods. One of the effects of the clearing of land for agriculture use is the heavy soil erosion that occurs in the Cameron Highlands. This is a contributing factor to the floods because as the people illegally clear the land, the runoff can carry more silt with it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232415-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Cameron Highlands mud floods, Causes of mud floods\nThis places large amounts of silt into the rivers making them shallower and easier to fill which causes floods. On top of this, the rivers are narrow due to the structures built on the banks and even illegal extensions into the river. Another issue contributing to the water runoff is the use of plastic roofing over plots of vegetation. These areas would normally offer some buffer to flooding by absorbing water. Instead, the plastic used by many people in the area speeds up the rainwater running off into the rivers which can lead to the floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232416-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cameroonian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Cameroon on 30 September 2013, alongside local elections. They were originally scheduled for July 2012, February 2013 and July 2013, but were repeatedly postponed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232416-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cameroonian parliamentary election, Background\nFollowing a controversial presidential election in 2011, Islamic and Christian leaders met with Samuel Fonkam Azu'u, the head of the electoral commission ELECAM, in order to push for reforms demanded by the opposition. The measures included: biometric registration of voters as the previous election had multiple and non-existing voters, a single ballot paper for presidential elections, eligibility of independent candidates, eligibility of 18-year-olds to vote from the current 20 minimum requirement, recompilation of voter registers, two-round presidential election, establishing an electoral calendar, \"harmonisation\" of electoral laws and a \"truly independent\" electoral commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232416-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Cameroonian parliamentary election, Background\nAzu'u and Prime Minister Philemon Yang then worked with leaders of various political parties, religions, traditional groups' leaders and foreign service officers to create an electoral code. Modibo Bouba Bello, the vice president of the Islamic Council, said that \"it is our duty as servants of Allah to ensure that truth, transparency and justice reigns in our country, and this begins with elections in which every ballot counts,\" while he was supported by Reverend Sebastian Wongo Behong, the secretary general of the Cameroon Episcopal Conference, and Reverend Robert Ngoyek, the president of the Council of Protestant Churches. Behong said that \"many democratising countries have frequently gone into chaos because of badly-organized elections. [ The] electoral malpractices that are frequently observed in Cameroon could be leading the country towards a precipice.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 923]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232416-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cameroonian parliamentary election, Results\nOfficial results were announced on 17 October 2013, showing that the ruling Cameroon People's Democratic Movement (RDPC) had again won an overwhelming majority of seats in the National Assembly. The RDPC won 148 out of 180 seats, a slight decrease from the number of seats it won in 2007, while the main opposition party, the Social Democratic Front, won 18 seats, a slight increase. The National Union for Democracy and Progress (UNDP) won five seats and the Cameroon Democratic Union (UDC) won four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232416-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Cameroonian parliamentary election, Results\nThe Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC) and the Movement for the Defense of the Republic (MDR), two smaller parties which had been absent from the National Assembly for a time, regained representation; the UPC won three seats and the MDR obtained a single seat. One seat was also won by the Cameroon Renaissance Movement, which obtained parliamentary representation for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232416-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cameroonian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nWhen the National Assembly began meeting for its new parliamentary term, Cavaye Yegui\u00e9 Djibril, an RDPC deputy, was re-elected as President of the National Assembly on 4 November 2013. Cavay\u00e9 received the votes of 150 deputies, while 23 deputies cast invalid votes. Hilarion Etong, another RDPC deputy, was also re-elected as First Vice-President. Jean-Bernard Ndongo Essomba was retained in his post as President of the RDPC Parliamentary Group, while Joseph Banadzem was retained in his post as President of the SDF Parliamentary Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232416-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Cameroonian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nThe remainder of the National Assembly's bureau was elected on 5 November: five vice presidents, four quaestors, and 12 secretaries. Four of the vice presidents were RDPC deputies, while one was an SDF deputy. Three of the quaestors were RDPC deputies, while one was an SDF deputy. 10 of the secretaries were RDPC deputies, while one was a UNDP deputy and one was a UDC deputy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232417-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Camp Ashraf massacre\nThe 2013 Camp Ashraf massacre (also referred to as the September 1 massacre) was a suspected terrorist attack on the Camp Ashraf refugee camp of the People's Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI/MEK), leaving 52 PMOI members dead and 7 missing. Iraqi security forces were believed to be responsible for the assault, with guidance and support from the Iranian government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232417-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Camp Ashraf massacre\nOn 17 December 2013, Foreign Policy magazine revealed that \"U.S. intelligence officials believe that Iranian commandos took part\" in the attack \"and then spirited seven members of the group back to Iran.\" Specifically, U.S. officials say that members of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps \"helped plan and direct the assault on the camp... Gunmen from two of Tehran's Iraqi-based proxies, Kata'ib Hezbollah and Asaib Ahl al-Haq, then carried out the actual attack.\" Regarding Iraqi involvement, a U.S. official said, \"Iraqi soldiers didn't get in the way of what was happening at Ashraf, but they didn't do the shooting.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232418-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campbell Fighting Camels football team\nThe 2013 Campbell Fighting Camels football team represented Campbell University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Mike Minter and played their home games at Barker\u2013Lane Stadium. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 3\u20139, 2\u20136 in PFL play to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232419-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Acreano\nThe 2013 Campeonato Acreano was the 67th season of the Campeonato Acreano, the top professional football league of the state of Acre. Pl\u00e1cido de Castro were champions for the 1st time. The championship started 17 February 2013, and ended on 26 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232419-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Acreano, Format\nThe first stage is in double round-robin. The best four teams qualify to Final Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232419-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Acreano, Format\nThe champion and the runner-up qualify to the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The champion also qualifies to the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232419-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Acreano, Format\nAs Independ\u00eancia withdrawn its participation, they were replaced by Alto Acre Futebol Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232419-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Acreano, Final stage\nRio Branco and Pl\u00e1cido de Castro qualified for 2013 Copa do Brasil", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232420-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Alagoano\nThe 2013 Campeonato Alagoano de Futebol was the 83rd season of Alagoas's top professional football league. The competition began on January 12 and ended on May 19. CRB were the champions for the 27th time. Sport Atalaia and Uni\u00e3o were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232420-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Alagoano, Format\nIn the first stage consists of a double round-robin format. The four teams who place the highest will qualify for the \"Hexagonal\". CRB and ASA are directly qualified for the \"Hexagonal\" as Copa do Nordeste participants. The best four teams of the \"Hexagonal\" advance to the playoffs. The worst four teams from the first stage will play in the Torneio da Morte, a relegation round where the two worst teams in this round will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232420-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Alagoano, Format\nIf CRB or ASA finished 6th they will play an extra relegation playoff will be held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232420-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Alagoano, Format\nThe best team which is not in Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C will qualify to the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D. The three best teams qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232421-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amapaense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Amapaense de Futebol is the 68th edition of the Amap\u00e1's top professional football league. The competition began on July, and ended on October 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232421-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amapaense, Format\nOn the first stage all teams play against each other once. The two best teams play against each other to find the round's winner, and the six best advance to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232421-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amapaense, Format\nOn the second stage, all six teams from the first stage play against each other once. The two best teams play against each other to find the second round's winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232421-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amapaense, Format\nOn the final stage, the winner of the first stage play against the winner of the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232421-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amapaense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Brasil and the 2014 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232422-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amazonense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Amazonense de Futebol was the 97th season of Amazonas' top professional football league. The competition began on February 16, and ended on May 26. Princesa do Solim\u00f5es won the championship by the first time, while Rio Negro and Tarum\u00e3 were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232422-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amazonense, Format\nThe tournament consists of a double round-robin format, in which all twelve teams play each other twice, with classification split in two stages. Each round counts as one stage. The four better-placed teams of each stage will face themselves in playoffs matches, and the first stage champion will face the second stage champion. If the same team win both stages, it will be considered the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232422-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amazonense, Format\nThe bottom two teams on overall classification will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232422-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amazonense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion qualifies to 2014 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D. The champion and the runner-up qualify to the 2014 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232422-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Amazonense, Final stage\nPrincesa do Solim\u00f5es is the champion of 2013 Campeonato Amazonense", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232423-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby\nThe 2013 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby , the maximum rugby union interprovincial tournament in Argentina, and older national tournament was played between 2 and 30 November. The tournament return to be played at the end of the year. As usual the teams were divided in 3 division\u00a0: \"Campeonato\", \"Ascenso\", \"Desarollo\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232423-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby\nEight teams divided in two poola, with the first two of the pool to semifinals, and the other two the two triangulars (\"permanence\") with the winner of the two pools of \"Ascenso\", to determine relegation for 2014 championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232424-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Baiano\nThe 2013 Campeonato Baiano de Futebol was the 109th season of Bahia's top professional football league. The competition began on January 20 and ended on May 19. Vit\u00f3ria won the championship by the 27th time, while Fluminense de Feira and Atl\u00e9tico Alagoinhas were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232424-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Baiano, Format\nThe championship has three stages. On the first stage, all teams except those who are playing in the 2013 Copa do Nordeste play a single round-robin. The best five teams qualifies to the second stage. Also, the best team in this stage qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Nordeste, and the second best qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The two worst teams in this stage are relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232424-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Baiano, Format\nOn the second stage, the teams are joined by the clubs from Bahia who were playing in Copa do Nordeste. The teams are put in two groups. The clubs from each group faces all clubs in the other group. The two best teams in each group qualify to the Final stage. In the final stage, it's a playoff with four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232424-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Baiano, Format\nThe best team who is not in Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualifies to S\u00e9rie D. The champion also qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232424-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Baiano, Second stage\nTeams from each group face the teams in the other group twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nThe 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A was the 57th edition of the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, the top-level of professional football in Brazil. Fluminense come in as the defending champions, having won the title in the 2012 season. On 13 November 2013, Cruzeiro won the title for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nFor the first time since the league adopted the 20-team, double round-robin format, all four teams promoted from S\u00e9rie B survived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format and results\nFor the eleventh consecutive season, the tournament was played in a double round-robin system. In a fashion similar to its second title in 2003, Cruzeiro led the rankings for most of the tournament, declared champion in the fifth to last round. The bottom four teams, Fluminense, Vasco, Ponte Preta and Nautico were relegated to play in the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B in the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format and results\nThe tournament had a one-month interruption between June 9 and July 6 due to the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, which took place in Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format and results\nAlthough Flamengo finished the championship just above the relegation positions, it was punished by the Superior Court of Sport Justice for irregularly calling in a player during a match against Cruzeiro - Andr\u00e9 Santos, who was suspended for a red card received at his previous Copa do Brasil match. The team lost four points - three for the irregular usage of a player and a fourth one which the team won due to the game resulting in a tie - and ended up temporarily being relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format and results\nHowever, Portuguesa had also irregularly called in a player against Gr\u00eamio - H\u00e9verton the day after. The team also lost four points - three for the irregular usage of a player and a fourth one which the team won due to the game resulting in a tie - and ended up being relegated. This way, with both punishments, Fluminense FC managed to finish the championship above the relegation positions and was spared from having to compete in the next year's second division for the third time on the last 2 decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format and results\nPortuguesa's irregular usage of a player raised many suspicions, both from Flamengo's - who had also used an irregular player the day before - and Fluminense's side. Even though Portuguesa's former president Ilidio Lico admitted selling the S\u00e9rie A spot, no clue to whom it was sold was found, so the Court's decision stood. This relegation was a downhill for Portuguesa, as the team was relegated to Brazilian Third Division - S\u00e9rie C the next year, after playing S\u00e9rie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232425-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format and results, International qualification\nThe S\u00e9rie A served as a qualifier to CONMEBOL's 2014 Copa Libertadores. Cruzeiro and Gremio qualified to the Second Stage of the competition, while Atletico Paranaense qualified to the First Stage. Botafogo qualified to the First Stage as well since Ponte Preta lost the 2013 Copa Sudamericana Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232426-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nThe Serie B of the Brazilian Championship 2013 was a football competition held in Brazil, equivalent to the second division. It is contested by 20 clubs, between May 24 and November 30. The top four teams will have access to S\u00e9rie A in 2014 and the last four will be relegated to S\u00e9rie C in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232426-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nThe games had a break during the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, which was held between June and July in Brazil. The competition was played for six rounds before the stoppage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232427-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nThe 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, the third level of the Brazilian League, was contested by 21 clubs, and started on June 1 and ended on December 1, 2013. The four teams in the semifinals were promoted to the 2014 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B, and the worst three teams in Group A and the two worst teams in Group B were relegated to the 2014 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232428-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D\nIn 2013, the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, the fourth division of the Brazilian League, will be contested for the fifth time in history. It will be contested by 40 clubs, four of which will eventually qualify to the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C to be contested in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232428-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Competition format\nThe 40 teams are divided in eight groups of 5, playing within them in a double round-robin format. The two best ranked in each group at the end of 10 rounds will qualify to the Second Stage, which will be played in home-and-away system. Winners advance to Third Stage. The quarterfinal winners will be promoted to the S\u00e9rie C 2014. As there is no S\u00e9rie E, or fifth division, technically there will be no relegation. However, teams who were not promoted will have to re-qualify for S\u00e9rie D 2014 through their respective state leagues. The competition can also be considered as 4 mini-tournaments (Group 1+2;3+4;5+6;7+8) because according to the playoff-structure, exactly one team of each \"mini-tournament\" will be promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232428-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D, Final Stage\n* Aparecidense was excluded by STJD, due to in the second leg against Tupi, the Aparecidense's masseuse invaded the field to save a goal at minute 89.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232429-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro de Turismo season\nThe 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro de Turismo (Brazilian Touring Championship) (officially the 2013 Trof\u00e9u Dolly) also known as Stock Car Brasil Light was the first season of the new Stock Car Brasil second tier championship replacing Copa Chevrolet Montana. The chassis, designed by JL company is similar that used in Stock Car Brasil with V8 engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232429-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasileiro de Turismo season, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar was released on 11 February 2013. All races were held in Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Brasiliense de Futebol was the 38th edition of the Distrito Federal's top professional football league. The competition began on January 19, and ended on May 19. Brasiliense won the championship by the 8th time, while Botafogo and Brazl\u00e2ndia were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense, Format\nThe tournament has two stages. On the first stage, all teams are split in two groups. In first round, each team plays against all other teams in the team's same group. In the second round, each team plays against all other teams in the other group. In both rounds, the two best teams in each group advances to a playoff, where the four teams play to find the team who wins the round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense, Format\nOn the second stage, the winner of the first round plays against the winner of the second round. If the same team wins both rounds, that team is the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense, Format\nThe bottom two teams on overall classification will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion, the runner-up and the third place in overall standings qualify to 2014 Copa do Brasil. The best team who isn't playing on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualifies to the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense, Participating teams\nThe Federa\u00e7\u00e3o Brasiliense de Futebol allows teams from neighbouring states to play in its competition, with the condition that they are sited in cities no farther than 200km from Bras\u00edlia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense, First round (Ta\u00e7a JK), Playoffs, Finals\nBras\u00edlia won the First round and qualifies to the Final stage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232430-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Brasiliense, Second round (Ta\u00e7a Man\u00e9 Garrincha), Playoffs, Finals\nBrasiliense won the Second Round and qualifies to the Final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232431-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Capixaba\nThe 2013 Campeonato Capixaba de Futebol was the 97th season of Esp\u00edrito Santo's top professional football league. The competition began on January 25 and ended on May 19. Ferrovi\u00e1ria was the champion by the 17th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232431-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Capixaba, Format\nThe tournament consists of a double round-robin format, in which all ten teams play each other twice. The four better-placed teams will face themselves in playoffs matches. The bottom two teams on overall classification will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232431-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Capixaba, Format\nOnly the champion will qualify for the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The best team on the first stage qualifies to the S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232432-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Carioca\nThe 2013 Campeonato Estadual da Serie A de Profissionais do Rio de Janeiro was the 112th season of the top tier football of FFERJ (Federa\u00e7\u00e3o de Futebol do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, or Rio de Janeiro State Football Federation). The competition began on 19 January and ended on 19 May. Botafogo won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232432-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Carioca, Format\nThe sixteen clubs were divided into two groups that played in two tournaments. In the first tournament, the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara, the teams played a match with each teams in the other group in a single round-robin format. The two best teams from each group advanced to the playoffs. In the second tournament, the Ta\u00e7a Rio, the teams from one group will played within their group in a single round-robin tournament. The two best teams from each group advanced to the playoffs. The winner of both the Ta\u00e7a Guanabara and Ta\u00e7a Rio played for the state championship. If the same team won both tournament, they were automatically declared the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232432-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Carioca, Format, Qualifications\nThe best four teams not qualified to 2014 Copa Libertadores qualified for 2014 Copa do Brasil. The best team not playing in Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, B, or C qualified for 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232432-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Carioca, First phase (Ta\u00e7a Guanabara)\nThe 2013 Ta\u00e7a Guanabara began on January 19 and ended on March 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232432-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Carioca, Second phase (Ta\u00e7a Rio)\nThe 2013 Ta\u00e7a Rio began on March and ended in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232432-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Carioca, Torneio Super Cl\u00e1ssicos\nThe Torneio Super Cl\u00e1ssicos concerned all regular games between the four \"big\" clubs: Botafogo, Flamengo, Fluminense and Vasco da Gama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232433-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Catarinense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Catarinense - Divis\u00e3o Principal was the 90th season of Santa Catarina's top professional football league. The competition began on 19 January and ended on 19 May. Crici\u00fama won the championship by the 10th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232434-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Cearense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Cearense de Futebol was the 99th season of top professional football league in the state of Cear\u00e1, Brazil. The competition began on January 5 and ended on May 19. Cear\u00e1 won the championship for the 42nd time and 3rd since 2011, while S\u00e3o Benedito and Maracan\u00e3 were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232434-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Cearense, Format\nThe championship has three stages. On the first stage, all teams excluding those who are playing in 2013 Copa do Nordeste play a double round robin. The best six teams qualifies to the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232434-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Cearense, Format\nOn the second stage, the teams are joined by the clubs from Cear\u00e1 who were playing on Copa Nordeste. The teams then play a double round robin again, where the best four teams qualifies to the final stage. In the final stage, it's a playoff with four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232434-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Cearense, Format\nThe champion and the best team on first stage qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The champion and the runner-up qualify to the 2014 Copa do Nordeste. The best team who isn't on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualifies to S\u00e9rie D. The two worst teams in first stage will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232434-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Cearense, Second stage\nThe six teams from the First stage are joined by Cear\u00e1 and Fortaleza who were playing on 2013 Copa do Nordeste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232435-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A\nThe 2013 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol de la Serie A (officially known as the Copa Pilsener Serie A for sponsorship reasons) was the 55th season of the Serie A, Ecuador's premier football league. Barcelona was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232435-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Format\nOn the night of January 8, 2013, the Ecuadorian Football Federation determined that the format for 2013 would be the same as the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232435-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Teams\nTwelve teams will compete in the 2013 Serie A season, ten of whom remain from the previous season. T\u00e9cnico Universitario and Olmedo were relegated last season after accumulating the fewest points in the 2012 season aggregate table. They will be replaced by Universidad Cat\u00f3lica and Deportivo Quevedo, the 2012 Serie B winner and runner-up, respectively. Both teams are making returns to the Serie A. Universidad Cat\u00f3lica is returning after two seasons, while Deportivo Quevedo is returning after seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232435-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, First stage\nThe first stage (Spanish: Primera Etapa) began on January 25 and ended on June 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232435-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Second stage\nThe second stage (Spanish: Segunda Etapa) began on July 5 and will end on December 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232435-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Third stage\nThe Third Stage (Spanish: Tercera Etapa) was not played as Emelec won both the first stage and second stage, and were crowned champions automatically. They earned the Ecuador 1 berth in the 2014 Copa Libertadores and the Ecuador 1 berth in the 2014 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232436-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ga\u00facho\nThe 2013 Campeonato da Primeira Divis\u00e3o de Futebol Profissional da FGF, better known as the 2013 Campeonato Ga\u00facho, was the 93rd season of Rio Grande do Sul's top-flight football league. The season began on 19 January and ended on 5 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232436-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ga\u00facho, Format\nThe sixteen clubs were divided into two groups. In the first stage, called Ta\u00e7a Piratini 2013, teams played against teams from the other group. In the second stage, called Ta\u00e7a Farroupilha 2013, clubs play teams from their own group. In both stages, the top four teams from each group qualified to the play-offs. The winners of each stage play off for the overall title. The bottom three teams in the overall standings will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232436-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Ga\u00facho, Overall table\nThe overall table considers only the matches played during the first stage of both Ta\u00e7as and will define the two teams that will be relegated to play lower levels in 2014. The Ta\u00e7a Champions are placed on the top of the table. The best placed team not playing in Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A (Gr\u00eamio, Internacional), B or C (Caxias) will be \"promoted\" to 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D. The best three teams not qualified to 2014 Copa Libertadores will qualify for 2014 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232437-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Goiano\nThe 2013 Campeonato Goiano de Futebol was the 70th season of Goi\u00e1s' top professional football league. The competition began on January 20 and ended on May 19. Goi\u00e1s were the champion by the 24th time. Rio Verde and Itumbiara were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232437-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Goiano, Format\nThe tournament consists of a double round-robin format, in which all ten teams play each other twice. The four better-placed teams will face themselves in playoffs matches. The bottom two teams on overall classification will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232437-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Goiano, Format\nThe top 3 will qualify for the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The two best teams that aren't on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualify to the S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232438-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos\nThe 2013 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Santos, Brazil between 15 and 21 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232438-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 92], "content_span": [93, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232438-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 92], "content_span": [93, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232438-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 92], "content_span": [93, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232439-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos \u2013 Doubles\nAndr\u00e9s Molteni and Marco Trungelliti were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Pavol \u010cerven\u00e1k and Matteo Viola defeated Guilherme Clezar and Gast\u00e3o Elias 6\u20132, 4\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232440-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Internacional de Tenis de Santos \u2013 Singles\nIvo Min\u00e1\u0159 was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Gast\u00e3o Elias won the title by defeating Rog\u00e9rio Dutra da Silva 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232441-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Maranhense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Maranhense de Futebol was the 96th edition of the Maranh\u00e3o's top professional football league. The competition began on February 17, and ended on June 12. Maranh\u00e3o Atl\u00e9tico Clube won the championship for the 14th time, while S\u00e3o Jos\u00e9 and Americano were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232441-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Maranhense, Format\nIn the first stage, there are two rounds. Each round is a round-robin. The four best teams in each round advances to a playoff, so the winner of the round can be determined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232441-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Maranhense, Format\nIn the final stage, each round winner plays in the final. If the same team wins both rounds, that team is the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232441-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Maranhense, First round, Playoffs, Finals\nSociedade Imperatriz de Desportos won the first round and qualifies to the Final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232441-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Maranhense, Second round, Playoffs, Finals\nMaranh\u00e3o Atl\u00e9tico Clube won the second round and qualifies to the Final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232442-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Mato-Grossense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Mato-Grossense de Futebol was the 71st edition of the Mato Grosso's top professional football league. The competition began on January 20, and ended on May 5. Cuiab\u00e1 Esporte Clube won the championship by the 4th time, while Vila Aurora was relegated. Atl\u00e9tico Campoverdense withdrawn their spot on the championship, so the championship had only one relegation spot and nine teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232442-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Mato-Grossense, Format\nOn the first stage, all teams play against each other in a double round-robin. The worst team is relegated, and the top four teams qualify to the playoffs. The playoffs are two-leg matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232442-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Mato-Grossense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The best team who isn't on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualifies to the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232443-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Mineiro\nThe 2013 Campeonato da Primera Divis\u00e5o de Profissionais - M\u00f3dulo I (official name: Campeonato Mineiro Chevrolet 2013), better known as 2013 Campeonato Mineiro, was the 99th season of Minas Gerais' top-flight football league. The season began on January 27 and ended on May 19. Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro were the champions for the 42nd time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232443-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Mineiro, Format\nThe format is the same from the previous season. The first stage is a single round robin. The top four teams will be qualified to the playoffs, and the bottom two teams will be relegated to the 2014 M\u00f3dulo II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232444-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Paraense de Futebol was the 101st edition of Par\u00e1's top professional football league. The competition began in November 10, 2012 and ended on May 12, 2013. Paysandu won the championship by the 45th time, while Abaet\u00e9 and Bragantino were relegated due to withdrawing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232444-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraense, Format\nThe competition has three stages. On the First stage, 8 teams play a single round-robin. The two teams with the worst campaign on this stage are relegated to the state's second division. Due to the withdrawal of Abaet\u00e9 and Bragantino, both teams were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232444-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraense, Format\nOn the Second stage, there are two rounds. Each round is a round-robin. The four best teams in each round advances to a playoff, so the winner of the round can be found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232444-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraense, Format\nOn the Final stage, each round winner plays in the final. If the same team wins both round, that team is the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232444-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraense, Format\nThe champion, the runner-up and the 3rd-placed team qualify to the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The best team who isn't on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualifies to S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232444-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraense, Second stage, First round (Ta\u00e7a Cidade de Bel\u00e9m), Playoffs\nPaysandu won the First round and Ta\u00e7a Cidade de Bel\u00e9m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 84], "content_span": [85, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232444-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraense, Second stage, Second round (Ta\u00e7a Estado do Par\u00e1), Playoffs\nParagominas won the Second round and Ta\u00e7a Estado do Par\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 84], "content_span": [85, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232445-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraibano\nThe 2013 Campeonato Paraibano de Futebol was the 103rd edition of the Para\u00edba's top professional football league. The competition began on January 06, and ended on May 30. Botafogo won the championship by the 26th time. while Para\u00edba and Cruzeiro were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232445-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraibano, Format\nIn the first stage all teams except Campinense and Sousa played against each other twice. The six best teams advanced to the second stage, and the two worst teams were relegated. Also, the two best teams qualified for the final stage, but they still had to play the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232445-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraibano, Format\nIn the second stage, the six teams were joined by Campinense and Sousa. All teams played against each other twice. The two best teams advanced to the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232445-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraibano, Format\nThe four teams in the final stage played the semifinals, with the winners of each match contesting the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232445-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraibano, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion qualified for the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The best team who isn't on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B and S\u00e9rie C qualified for the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D. The two best teams qualified for the 2014 Copa do Nordeste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232445-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paraibano, Second stage\nThe six teams from first stage are joined by Campinense and Sousa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232446-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paranaense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Paranaense de Futebol Profissional da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o was the 98th season of Paran\u00e1's top professional football league. The competition began on January 20 and ended on May 12. Coritiba won the championship for the 37th time, while Paranava\u00ed and Nacional were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232446-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paranaense, Format\nThe tournament consists of a double round-robin format, in which all twelve teams play each other twice, with classification split in two stages. Each round counts as one stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232446-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paranaense, Format\nThe better-placed teams of each stage will face themselves in a two-legged tie, with the team with the most points in the overall classification playing the second leg home, the winning team will then be declared champion. In case of a tie in number of points and goal balance, the advantage is for the best campaign team. If the same team is best-placed on both stages, it will automatically be declared champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232446-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paranaense, Format\nThe best two-placed teams in the overall classification not advancing to the finals and not from Curitiba will face themselves in a two-legged tie competing for the Torneio do Interior. The team with the most points will play the second leg home. The bottom two teams on overall classification will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232447-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista\nThe 2013 Campeonato Paulista de Futebol Profissional da Primeira Divis\u00e3o - S\u00e9rie A1 (officially the Paulist\u00e3o Chevrolet 2013 for sponsorship reasons ) was the 112th season of S\u00e3o Paulo's top professional football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232447-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista\nIt was won for the 27th time by Corinthians, after beating Santos at the finals, the defending champions from the previous three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232447-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista, Format\nThe top eight teams in the First Stage qualifies to the Quarter-Finals. The bottom four teams will be relegated to the S\u00e9rie A2. Quarter and Semi-Finals will be played in one-legged matches. The best-four teams not qualified to the Semi-Finals not from the city of S\u00e3o Paulo or Santos FC, will compete in the Campeonato do Interior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232447-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista, Awards, Team of the year\nThe Young Player of the Year was awarded to Rodrigo Biro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232447-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista, Awards, Team of the year\nThe Countryside Best Player of the Year was awarded to Roni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232447-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista, Awards, Team of the year\nThe top scorer of the season was William, who scored 13 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232448-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2013 Campeonato Paulista began on 27 April with the quarter-finals and concluded on 19 May 2013 with the final at Vila Belmiro in Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232448-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista knockout stage, Round and draw dates\nAll draws held at Federa\u00e7\u00e3o Paulista de Futebol headquarters in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232448-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Paulista knockout stage, Format\nThe quarter-finals are played in one match at stadium of the best teams in the first phase. The 1st placed confronts the 8th, 2nd against the 7th, the 3rd against 6th and 4th against 5th. If no goals are scored during the match, the tie is decided by penalty shootout. The semi-finals are played in the same way of the quarter-finals. The final matches are played over two legs, with the best campaign team in previous stages playing the second match at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232449-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Pernambucano\nThe 2013 Campeonato Pernambucano, named Pernambucano Coca-Cola 2013 - S\u00e9rie A1 for sponsorship reasons, was the 99th edition of the state championship of Pernambuco. With the return of Copa do Nordeste in 2013 and the participation of three teams from the state (Santa Cruz, Sport and Salgueiro), the formula of this edition was not the same as the previous championship. The competition is started on January 20 and concluded on May 19. Santa Cruz won their 27th championship, with Sport as runner-up. Petrolina and Belo Jardim were relegated to the second division of Campeonato Pernambucano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232449-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Pernambucano, Format\nIn the first stage, the championship will be played in two rounds. In the first round nine clubs (excluding the teams participating in the 2013 Copa do Nordeste) play each other once. The team that finishes first gains a place in the 2014 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232449-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Pernambucano, Format\nThe second round will feature twelve clubs, with the inclusion of Santa Cruz Futebol Clube, Sport Club do Recife and Salgueiro Atl\u00e9tico Clube, who play each once. The top four teams qualify for the semifinals. The eight remaining teams will play each other in a play out, where the last two are demoted to S\u00e9rie A2 in 2014. In the semifinals the top four teams compete against each other in a two-game format (number one plays number four, number two plays number three). The winners of the semifinals qualify for the final which will be played over two games to decide the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232450-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Piauiense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Piauiense de Futebol was the 73rd edition of the Piau\u00ed's top professional football league. The competition began on January 26, and ended on May 19. Parnahyba won the championship by the 5th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232450-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Piauiense, Format\nOn the first stage, all teams play against each other in a double round-robin. The best four teams advances to the semifinals. The semifinals and the finals are played in two-legged ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232450-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Piauiense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion qualifies to the S\u00e9rie D and Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232450-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Piauiense, Final stage, Finals\nParnahyba Sport Club is the champion of the 2013 Campeonato Piauiense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar\nThe 2013 Campeonato Potiguar de Futebol was the 93rd edition of the Rio Grande do Norte's top professional football league. The competition began on January 13, and ended on May 19. Potiguar de Mossor\u00f3 won the championship by the 2nd time, while Potyguar de Currais Novos was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar, Format\nOn the first stage, all teams excluding those who aren't playing on Copa do Nordeste play against each other team twice. The best six teams qualify to the next stage, and the worst team is relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar, Format\nOn the second teams, the six teams from the first stage are joined by Am\u00e9rica and ABC. The eight teams play against all other in each round. The four best teams in each round advance to the round's final. Each round winner advance to the championship's final. If the same team win both rounds, that team is the championship winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar, Format, Qualifications\nThe best team who isn't on Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, S\u00e9rie B or S\u00e9rie C qualifies to the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D. The best three teams qualify to the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The best team in the first stage qualifies to the 2013 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar, Second stage\nThe six teams from the first stage are joined by ABC and Am\u00e9rica-RN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar, Second stage, First round (Copa Rio Grande do Norte), Finals\nAm\u00e9rica Futebol Clube is the champion of the first round and qualifies to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 86], "content_span": [87, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar, Second stage, Second round (Copa Cidade de Natal), Finals\nAssocia\u00e7\u00e3o Cultural e Desportiva Potiguar is the champion of the second round and qualifies to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 83], "content_span": [84, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232451-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Potiguar, Final stage\nAssocia\u00e7\u00e3o Cultural e Desportiva Potiguar won the 2013 Campeonato Potiguar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232452-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Rondoniense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Rondoniense de Futebol was the 23rd edition of the Rond\u00f4nia's top professional football league. The competition began on March 17, and ended on June 1. Vilhena won the championship by the 4th time. while Ji-Paran\u00e1 was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232452-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Rondoniense, Format\nOn the first stage, all teams play against each other in a double round-robin. The best four teams advances to the semifinals. The semifinals and the finals are played in two-legged ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232452-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Rondoniense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion qualifies to the Copa do Brasil. The team with the best record in the championship qualify to the S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232452-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Rondoniense, Participating teams\nMoto Esporte Clube withdrawn its participation because its stadium was not fit for matches, according to the city's firefighters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232452-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Rondoniense, Final stage, Finals\nVilhena Esporte Clube is the champion of the 2013 Campeonato Rondoniense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232453-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Roraimense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Roraimense de Futebol was the 54th edition of the Roraima's top professional football league. The competition began on April 6, and ended on May 29. N\u00e1utico won the championship by the 2nd time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232453-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Roraimense, Format\nOn the first stage, all teams play against each other in a double round-robin. The best team in each round advance to the finals. The finals are played in two-legged ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232453-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Roraimense, Format\nThe first round is named Ta\u00e7a Boa Vista and the second round is named Ta\u00e7a Roraima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232453-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Roraimense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion qualify to the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D and the 2014 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232453-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Roraimense, Final stage\nN\u00e1utico Futebol Clube is the champion of the 2013 Campeonato Roraimense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232454-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sergipano\nThe 2013 Campeonato Sergipano de Futebol was the 90th edition of the Sergipe's top professional football league. The competition began on January 13, and ended on May 19. Sergipe won the championship by the 33rd time, while Boca J\u00fanior and Am\u00e9rica-SE were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232454-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sergipano, Format\nAll teams except Confian\u00e7a and Itabaiana are split in two groups. Each team plays twice against the other teams in the same group. The two best teams in each group advances to the semifinal. The teams who win the semifinals then advance to the final. The team who wins the final is the champion of the first stage, which is called Copa Governo do Estado de Sergipe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232454-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sergipano, Format\nOn the second stage, the eight teams are joined by Confian\u00e7a and Itabaiana, who were playing in the 2013 Copa do Nordeste. The ten teams play against each other in a double round-robin. The four best teams advance to the semifinals. The semifinals and the finals are played in two legs. The two worst teams in this stage are relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232454-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sergipano, Format, Qualifications\nThe winner of the first stage and the champion qualifies to the 2014 Copa do Brasil. The champion also qualify to the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232455-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sudamericano de GT season\nThe 2013 Campeonato Sudamericano de GT season (Southamerican GT Championship) was the final season of Campeonato Sudamericano de GT replacing the Campeonato Brasileiro de GT. The season began on May 4 at Anhembi Circuit and ended on November 3 at Juan y Oscar G\u00e1lvez. This year the series has a class for a mixed team of professional and amateur (GT3 Pro- Am), and a class for gentleman drivers (GT3 GTR). The Brazilian Auto Racing Confederation ranking system for drivers was utilized in determining what class each entry was eligible for. The GT4 category remained its own class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232455-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sudamericano de GT season, Race calendar and results\nAll races were held in Brazil, excepting the round at Aut\u00f3dromo Juan y Oscar G\u00e1lvez, that was held in Argentina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232456-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sul-Mato-Grossense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Sul-Mato-Grossense de Futebol was the 35th edition of the Mato Grosso do Sul's top professional football league. The competition began on January 19, and ended on May 5. CENE won the championship by the 5th time, while SERC and Corumbaense were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232456-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sul-Mato-Grossense, Format\nOn the first stage, all teams are split in two groups. Each team plays twice against all teams in their own group. The worst team from each group is relegated, and the top four teams from the group qualify to the quarterfinals. The playoffs are two-leg matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232456-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Sul-Mato-Grossense, Format, Qualifications\nThe champion and the runner-up qualify to the 2014 Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232457-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Tocantinense\nThe 2013 Campeonato Tocantinense was the 21st edition of the Tocantins' top professional football league. The competition began on March 2, and ended on June 8. Interporto won the championship by the 2nd time, while Tocantins and Guara\u00ed were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232457-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Tocantinense, Format\nOn the first stage, there are two rounds. Each round is a round-robin. The two best teams in each round advances to the round's final, so the winner of the round can be determined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232457-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato Tocantinense, Format\nOn the final stage, each round winner plays in the final. If the same team wins both round, that team is the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232458-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Campeonato da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o do Futebol\nThe 2013 Campeonato da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o do Futebol started on 11 January 2013 and ended on 23 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301\nThe 2013 Camping World RV Sales 301 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on July 14, 2013, at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire, United States. Contested over 302\u00a0laps, it was the nineteenth race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Brian Vickers of Michael Waltrip Racing won the race, his third career and final Sprint Cup win, while Kyle Busch finished second. Jeff Burton, Brad Keselowski, and Aric Almirola rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301, Report, Background\nNew Hampshire Motor Speedway opened on June 5, 1990, as a four-turn oval track, 1.058 miles (1.703\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at two to seven degrees, while the front stretch, the finish line, and the back stretch are banked at one degree and are 1,500 feet in length. The track has a grandstand seating capacity of 93,521 spectators. Kasey Kahne was the defending race winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 658 points, while Clint Bowyer stood in second with 609 points. Carl Edwards followed in third with 587, two points ahead of Kevin Harvick and thirty-nine ahead of Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in fourth and fifth. Matt Kenseth, with 540, was in sixth; seven points ahead of Kyle Busch, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Greg Biffle was fifteen points ahead of Kurt Busch and seventeen ahead of Tony Stewart in ninth and tenth. Martin Truex, Jr. was eleventh with 493, while Kahne completed the first twelve positions with 490 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 128 points, twelve points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third with 91 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, scheduled on July 12, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held a day later on July 13, 2013, were 55 and 60 minutes long. In the first practice session, Brad Keselowski was the quickest with a best lap time of 28.111 seconds. Kyle Busch followed in second, ahead of Denny Hamlin and Jamie McMurray in third and fourth. Earnhardt, Jr. was scored fifth quickest with a best lap time of 28.369, 258 thousandths of a second slower than Keselowski. Gordon, Johnson, Kurt Busch, Edwards, and Bowyer completed the top-ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring the qualifying session, Keselowski recorded his third career pole position with a lap time of 28.022 seconds and a speed of 135.922\u00a0mph (218.745\u00a0km/h). Johnson had the second best lap time, but was disqualified because his car didn't meet height requirements, prompting him to start last of the forty-three car field. Kurt Busch, who completed his lap in 28.040 seconds, will start alongside Keselowski on the grid, in front of Earnhardt, Jr., Kyle Busch, and Gordon. Edwards, with a lap time of 28.112 seconds, was scored sixth ahead of Hamlin and Kahne in seventh and eighth. Jeff Burton and Juan Pablo Montoya completed the first ten grid positions with lap times of 28.162 and 28.191.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Kurt Busch was quickest with a fastest lap time of 28.531 seconds, six-thousandths of a second faster than Kenseth in second. Kyle Busch managed to be third quickest with a fastest lap time of 28.563, 0.032 slower than his brother Kurt. Bowyer and Edwards followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Johnson, Joey Logano, Hamlin, Truex, Jr., and Montoya completed the first ten positions. In the final practice session for the race, Brian Vickers was quickest with a time of 28.548 seconds and a best speed of 133.417\u00a0mph (214.714\u00a0km/h). Earnhardt, Jr. followed in second, ahead of Kenseth and Bowyer in third and fourth. Johnson, who was sixth quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301, Report, Race\nThe second half of the season started with Brad Keselowski clinching the pole. Jimmie Johnson (who qualified second) was sent to the rear of the field for failing post-qualifying inspection. Keselowski led the first few laps, but relinquished the lead to Kyle Busch, who, in turn, lost it to Kurt Busch. As drivers came into and fell out of the top ten due to pit strategy, both Kurt and Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, Tony Stewart, and others took turns at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232459-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 301, Report, Race\nStewart led the majority of the last 100 laps, but Brian Vickers passed both Stewart and Kyle Busch with about 15 laps left. The race saw an unusually high amount of cautions, with the 12th of the day coming out with four to go to set up a green-white-checker finish. On the restart, Vickers held the lead over Stewart and Busch, but coming to the white flag, Stewart ran out of fuel. This allowed Vickers to take his third career win over Kyle Busch, Jeff Burton, Keselowski, and Aric Almirola. Morgan Shepherd, who qualified and finished 41st, became the oldest driver to compete in the Sprint Cup Series at age 71.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232460-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 500\nThe 2013 Camping World RV Sales 500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race held on October 20, 2013, at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama. Contested over 188 laps on the 2.66 mile superspeedway, it was the 32nd race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship, and the sixth race in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. Jamie McMurray of Earnhardt Ganassi Racing won the race, breaking a 108 race winless streak, while Dale Earnhardt, Jr. finished second. Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., Paul Menard, and Kyle Busch rounded out the top five. The race had two caution flags, 20 leaders, and 52 lead changes, both of them season highs. This was the second straight Chase race to be won by a non-Chaser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232460-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 500, Report, Background\nTalladega Superspeedway is a four turn tri-oval track that is 2.66 miles (4.28\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 33 degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is 18 degrees. The back stretch, opposite of the front, is at only two degrees. The racetrack has a seating capacity for 109,000 spectators. Matt Kenseth was the defending race winner after winning the event during the 2012 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232460-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nRain cancelled qualifying and Aric Almirola was awarded the pole based on his practice speed. Sam Hornish, Jr. did not qualify due to lack of attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232460-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Camping World RV Sales 500, Report, Race summary\nJamie McMurray passed Jimmie Johnson with 15 laps to go. For the final 15 laps McMurray stumped runner-up Dale Earnhardt Jr. holding Earnhardt off for the rest of the race. Austin Dillon spent most of the final 50 laps in third place. On the final lap Dillon got tapped from behind by Ricky Stenhouse Jr.. Dillon cart-wheeled over Casey Mears. Dale Earnhardt Jr. made a pass on Jamie McMurray and finished first, but McMurray took the win as Earnhardt had completed his pass after the caution came out. Officials confirmed 30 minutes after the race was over that McMurray was leader at the moment of caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232461-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canad Inns Prairie Classic\nThe 2013 Canad Inns Prairie Classic was held from October 18 to 21 at the Portage Curling Club in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple-knockout format, and the purse for the event was CAD$60,000, of which the winner, Mike McEwen, received CAD$18,000. McEwen defeated Glenn Howard in the final with a score of 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232462-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Open Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Canada Open Grand Prix was the eighth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Richmond Olympic Oval, Richmond, Canada July 16 until July 21, 2013 and had a total purse of $50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232462-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Open Grand Prix, Men's doubles\nManeepong Jongjit and his former partner, Bodin Issara, had a brawl during the change of ends during the men's doubles final between Jongjit, partnered with Nipitphon Puangpuapech, and Issara and his new partner, Pakkawat Vilailak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232462-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Open Grand Prix, Men's doubles\nThe former partners who had unresolved issues with each other, verbally abused each other during the first game, being warned by the umpire. The abuse continued at the end of the game, leading Issara to chase Jongit across the arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232462-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Open Grand Prix, Men's doubles\nIn an act of self-defense while running away from Issara, Jongit swung his racquet and hit Issara in the side of the head, which left Issara bleeding from his right ear and requiring stitches, before Issara caught up with Jongit - who fell to the floor on the adjacent court - and began hitting, punching and kicking him. The two were eventually broken up by Issara's partner and their coach before police and security intervened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232462-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Open Grand Prix, Men's doubles\nAfter the fight, the tournament referee showed Issara and Vilailak a black card, meaning they were ejected from the tournament, which was awarded to Jongjit and Puangpuapech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232462-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Open Grand Prix, Men's doubles\nBoth Issara and Jongjit received sanctions from the Badminton World Federation and from the Badminton Association of Thailand: Issara, who was deemed to be the instigator and more physically abusive, was banned for two years from participating in any international tournaments, while Jongjit, who had provoked Issara during the match, was banned for three months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232463-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Summer Games\nThe 2013 Canada Summer Games is a national multi-sport event that was held in Sherbrooke, Quebec from August 2, 2013 to August 17, 2013. These Games were the first Canada Summer Games to be held in Quebec, and third overall after the inaugural Canada Winter Games in Quebec City in 1967 and the 1983 Canada Winter Games in Saguenay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232463-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Summer Games, Medal table\nThe following is the medal table for the 2013 Canada Summer Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232463-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Summer Games, Medal table, Sports\n269 events in 17 different sports will be contested. The only change at these Games is rugby sevens has been dropped and replaced with fencing (which has moved over from the Canada Winter Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232463-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada Summer Games, Medal table, Sports\nNumbers in parentheses indicate the number of medal events proposed to be contested in each sport/discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232464-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canada World Kabaddi Cup\nThe Canada World Kabaddi Cup was held on September 21, 2013. It was organized by the Metro Punjab Sports Club. The tournament was the 23rd edition of the Canada World Kabaddi Cup. Six countries participated in the Tournament. It was held at the Powerade Centre in Brampton, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232465-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Championship\nThe 2013 Canadian Championship (officially the Amway Canadian Championship for sponsorship reasons) was a soccer tournament hosted and organized by the Canadian Soccer Association that took place in the cities of Edmonton, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver in 2013. As in the previous tournament, participating teams included FC Edmonton, Montreal Impact, Toronto FC and Vancouver Whitecaps FC. The Montreal Impact won the Voyageurs Cup and became Canada's entry into the Group Stage of the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League. It was the sixth edition of the annual Canadian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232465-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Championship, Matches, Bracket\nThe teams were seeded based on 2012 league results. The three Major League Soccer teams were seeded No. 1, No. 2, and No. 3 based on their final regular season position during the 2012 Major League Soccer season, while the sole North American Soccer League team received the No. 4 seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232466-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship\nThe 2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship was held from February 6 to 10 at the Parksville Curling Club in Parksville, British Columbia. The winner of the BC Men's Curling Championship will represent British Columbia at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232466-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship, Qualification process\nSixteen teams will qualify for the provincial tournament through several methods. The qualification process is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 83], "content_span": [84, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232467-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship \u2013 Qualification\nQualification for the 2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship consisted of both direct and indirect qualification. The defending champion and the highest-ranked team on the Canadian Team Ranking System qualified directly. Fourteen more teams qualified through playdown events and qualification events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [76, 76], "content_span": [77, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232467-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Kootenay Inter-regional qualifier\nThe Kootenay Inter-regional qualifier was held from December 7 to 9, 2012 at the Trail Curling Club in Trail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 133], "content_span": [134, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232467-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Thompson/Okanagan Inter-regional qualifier\nThe Thompson/Okanagan Inter-regional qualifier was held from December 7 to 9, 2012 at the Kelowna Curling Club in Kelowna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 142], "content_span": [143, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232467-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Island Playdown qualifier\nThe Island Playdown qualifier was held from December 7 to 9, 2012 at the Alberni Valley Curling Club in Port Alberni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 125], "content_span": [126, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232467-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Lower Mainland Playdown qualifier\nThe Lower Mainland Playdown qualifier was held from December 14 to 16, 2012 at the Chilliwack Curling Club in Chilliwack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 133], "content_span": [134, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232467-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Direct Insurance BC Men's Curling Championship \u2013 Qualification, Qualification events, Open Qualification Round\nThe Open Qualification Round was held from January 4 to 6 at the Golden Ears Winter Club in Maple Ridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 124], "content_span": [125, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships were held from January 13 to 20, 2013 at the Hershey Centre in Mississauga, Ontario. The event determined the national champions of Canada and was organized by Skate Canada, the nation's figure skating governing body. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior, junior, and novice levels. Although the official International Skating Union terminology for female skaters in the singles category is ladies, Skate Canada uses women officially. The results of this competition are among the selection criteria for the 2013 World Championships, 2013 Four Continents Championships, and the 2013 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nPatrick Chan won his sixth national title. Kevin Reynolds won the silver medal with a free skating that included a 4T, 4S, 4T+3T, and 3A+3T.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nKaetlyn Osmond won her first national title. Gabrielle Daleman and Alaine Chartrand joined her on the podium while the defending champion, Amelie Lacoste, finished just off the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nMeagan Duhamel / Eric Radford defended their title in a close race with Kirsten Moore-Towers / Dylan Moscovitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nTessa Virtue / Scott Moir won their fifth national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nPolice were called to break up a scuffle among a group of skaters after the event. A Skate Canada representative said no top skaters were involved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, Four Continents Championships\nSkate Canada announced the Canadian team to the 2013 Four Continents Championships on January 20, 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 104], "content_span": [105, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Junior Championships\nSkate Canada announced the Canadian team to the 2013 World Junior Championships on January 20, 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 101], "content_span": [102, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Championships\nSkate Canada announced part of the Canadian team to the 2013 World Championships on January 21, 2013, leaving the third men's and ice dancing spots to be determined following Four Continents Championships. In February, 2013, Skate Canada announced that Andrei Rogozine took the third men's spot and Kaitlyn Weaver and Andrew Poje took the third ice dancing spot of the Canadian world team roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232468-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Team Trophy\nSkate Canada announced part of the Canadian team to the 2013 World Team Trophy on March 26, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Canadian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Grand Prix du Canada 2013) was a Formula One motor race that took place on 9 June 2013 at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The race was the seventh round of the 2013 season, and marked the 50th running of the Canadian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix\nAfter taking pole position, Sebastian Vettel took his and Red Bull's first victory at the Canadian Grand Prix, just over 14 seconds ahead of second-placed Fernando Alonso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix\nThe event was marred by the death of track marshal Mark Robinson, who was run over by a recovery vehicle. The accident happened while marshals were removing the Sauber of Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez after the Mexican had spun off during the closing stages of the race. Robinson died later in hospital, and became the first trackside death in Formula One since that of marshal Graham Beveridge at the 2001 Australian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nTyre supplier Pirelli brought its white-banded medium compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the red-banded supersoft compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre, as opposed to the previous year where soft and supersoft selection were provided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe three qualifying sessions were held on 8 June. All qualifying was rain-affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nForce India's Paul di Resta, Caterham's Charles Pic, Lotus F1 Romain Grosjean Marussia's Jules Bianchi and Max Chilton, and Caterham's Giedo van der Garde were all knocked out in Q1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nSauber's Nico H\u00fclkenberg, McLaren's Sergio P\u00e9rez, Williams' Pastor Maldonado, McLaren's Jenson Button, Sauber's Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez, and Ferrari's Felipe Massa were all eliminated in Q2. Massa caused a red flag after crashing into the barriers in turn 3. Williams' Valtteri Bottas became the first rookie driver in 2013 to make it into Q3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nRed Bull's Sebastian Vettel took pole position for the Canadian Grand Prix with a time of 1:25.425, beating Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton by 0.087 seconds. Williams' Valtteri Bottas was a surprise third. At the time, Williams hadn't scored a single point in their 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nKimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Daniel Ricciardo were given two-place penalties for not lining up in the designated 'fast lane' at the pit exit in the rush to get out after the Q2 red flag. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen would start from 10th and Ricciardo 11th on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel led away at the start with Hamilton trailing in his wake, in turn Hamilton held off his teammate Nico Rosberg, behind them was Mark Webber and Fernando Alonso. At the first round of pit stops Mercedes chose to fit super-softs to Lewis Hamilton while Webber and Alonso fitted the more durable medium tyres and they soon caught and passed Hamilton. However, Webber then damaged his car when lapping the Caterham of Giedo van der Garde, the latter was given a 10 second stop-and-go penalty, Webber continued but was then passed by Alonso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232469-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAfter the second round of pit stops Alonso was again behind Lewis Hamilton but on Lap 63 he passed the Mercedes driver to claim 2nd behind a dominant Vettel, Hamilton held onto 3rd place. Near the end of the race Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez spun off and track worker Mark Robinson, who had fallen over trying to pick up a radio he dropped, was run over by the recovery vehicle. He later died from his injuries in hospital, several drivers led tributes to the track worker on Twitter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232470-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships\nThe 2013 M&M Meat Shops Canadian Junior Curling Championships were held from January 31 to February 10 at the Suncor Community Leisure Centre at MacDonald Island Park and at the Oilsands Curling Club in Fort McMurray, Alberta. Alberta last hosted the junior championships in Calgary in 2011. The winners will represent Canada at the 2013 World Junior Curling Championships in Sochi, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232470-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Nova Scotia\nThe 2013 AMJ Campbell NS Junior Provincials were held December 27\u201331, 2012 at the Chester Curling Club in Chester, Nova Scotia. The event was a triple knock-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232470-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Quebec\nThe event is a triple knock-out with a page playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232470-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nThe Pepsi Ontario Junior Curling Championships were held January 2\u20136 at the Highland Country Club in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232470-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Manitoba\nThe Canola Junior Provincial Championships are being held January 3\u20137 at the Brandon Curling Club in Brandon, Manitoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232470-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, British Columbia\nThe Tim Hortons Junior Provincial Championships are being held January 2\u20136 at the Coquitlam Curling Club in Coquitlam, British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232471-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe men's tournament of the 2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships was held from January 31 to February 10 at the Suncor Community Leisure Centre at MacDonald Island Park and at the Oilsands Curling Club in Fort McMurray, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232471-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Competition format\nAll of the teams will compete in a round robin tournament consisting of two pools of seven teams each. At the conclusion of the preliminary round robin, the top four teams in each pool advance to the championship pool, while the rest of the teams move to the seeding pool. The teams in both the championship and seeding pools will play against the teams from their other pools. At the conclusion of the championship and seeding pools, the win-loss records of both pools will be combined for the final ranking. The top three teams in this ranking advance to the playoffs, where the second- and third-ranked teams will play in the semifinal, and the winner of the semifinal will play the first-ranked team in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 81], "content_span": [82, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232471-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Standard Time (UTC\u22127).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 82], "content_span": [83, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232472-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe women's tournament of the 2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships was held from January 31 to February 10 at the Suncor Community Leisure Centre at MacDonald Island Park and at the Oilsands Curling Club in Fort McMurray, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232472-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Competition format\nAll of the teams will compete in a round robin tournament consisting of two pools of seven teams each. At the conclusion of the preliminary round robin, the top four teams in each pool advance to the championship pool, while the rest of the teams move to the seeding pool. The teams in both the championship and seeding pools will play against the teams from their other pools. At the conclusion of the championship and seeding pools, the win-loss records of both pools will be combined for the final ranking. The top three teams in this ranking advance to the playoffs, where the second- and third-ranked teams will play in the semifinal, and the winner of the semifinal will play the first-ranked team in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 83], "content_span": [84, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232472-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Junior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Standard Time (UTC\u22127).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232473-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Masters Curling Championships\nThe 2013 Canadian Masters Curling Championships were held from April 8 to 14 at the Port Arthur Curling Club in Thunder Bay, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232473-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Masters Curling Championships, Men, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232473-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Masters Curling Championships, Women, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232474-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship was held from November 15 to 24, 2012 at the Town of Mount Royal Curling Club in Mount Royal, Quebec. This edition marked the fiftieth edition of the Canadian Mixed Curling Championship and the third time that the province of Quebec has hosted the Canadian Mixed Championship. This edition also marked the first time that the qualifying round for relegated teams was implemented in the championship. In the final, Ontario, skipped by Cory Heggestad, defeated Nova Scotia, skipped by Brent MacDougall, with a score of 10\u20133 in eight ends. Heggestad and his team won their first Canadian Mixed title, and Ontario won its third title in the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232474-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe four winning players were invited to play as two separate pairs at the inaugural 2013 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials, though they did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232474-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, Qualifying Round\nFour associations did not automatically qualify to the championships, and participated in a qualifying round. Two qualification spots were awarded to the two winners of a double knockout round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232474-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, Qualifying Round, Knockout Results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232474-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232474-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, Awards and honors, All-star team\nThe all-star team was chosen based on the highest player percentage for players at each position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232474-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, Awards and honors, Sportsmanship Awards\nThe sportsmanship awards were given based on votes from all of the players at the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232475-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials\nThe 2013 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials was held from March 14 to 17 at the Leduc Recreation Centre and the Leduc Curling Club in Leduc, Alberta. The winning team of the trials will represent Canada at the 2013 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship. It is the first ever Canadian Mixed Doubles championship. Previously, two players from the Canadian Mixed Curling Championship winning team were selected to play at the World Mixed Doubles championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232475-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials\nThe various curling members associations scrambled to hold provincial qualifying tournaments. In addition to 12 provincial champion teams, 20 open entries were also invited to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232475-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials, Teams\nThe teams are listed as follows. Twelve teams qualified through provincial and territorial championships, and the rest will be participating as open entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232475-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Daylight Time (UTC\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232476-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Pre-Trials\nThe qualification event for the 2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, known and advertised as the Capital One Road to the Roar, was held from November 5 to 10 at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex in Kitchener, Ontario. The Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex, colloquially known as \"The Aud,\" has previously been host to major curling events, most recently the 2003 Scott Tournament of Hearts. The top two finishers of the men's and women's events qualified to participate in the 2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232476-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Pre-Trials\nThe teams played in a triple-knockout tournament where four teams qualified for the playoff round. The first two qualifiers and second two qualifiers played against each other, and the winner of the first game advanced to the Trials. The loser of the first game then played the winner of the second game to determine the second team that would advance to the Trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232476-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Pre-Trials, Qualification\nTwelve teams qualified for the pre-Trials based on the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232476-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Pre-Trials, Men, Knockout Results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u22125).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232476-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Pre-Trials, Women, Knockout Results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u22125).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232477-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials\nThe 2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials were held from December 1 to 8 at the MTS Centre in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The event is also known and advertised as the Tim Hortons Roar of the Rings. The winners of the men's and women's events were chosen to represent Canada at the 2014 Winter Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232477-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, Qualification process\nThe qualification process for the 2013 Olympic trials differed slightly from the process used at the 2009 trials. For both the men's and women's categories, a pool of eighteen teams is designated as eligible to represent Canada at the 2014 Olympics, based on rankings from the Canadian Team Ranking System (CTRS). From the pool of eighteen, six teams are selected to qualify directly for the 2013 Canadian Curling Trials in December. The remaining twelve teams will compete in a pre-trials tournament, and the top two teams will qualify for the eight-team trials. The winner of each trials will represent Canada at the 2014 Winter Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232477-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, Qualification process\nSix teams qualified directly into the Olympic Trials based on the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232477-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, Pre-trials\nThe pre-trials tournament took place from November 5 to 10 at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex (also known as \"The Aud\") in Kitchener, Ontario. The top two finishers of the men's and women's events qualified to participate in the Trials. On the men's side, the qualifiers were John Morris and Brad Jacobs, and on the women's side, the qualifiers were Ren\u00e9e Sonnenberg and Val Sweeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232477-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, Men, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232477-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, Women, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232478-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Open of Curling\nThe 2013 Canadian Open of Curling was held from November 13 to 17 at Medicine Hat Arena in Medicine Hat, Alberta as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was the second men's Grand Slam event of the season. The event was held in a round robin format, and the purse for the event was CAD$100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232478-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Open of Curling, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Standard Time (UTC\u22127).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232479-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Rugby Championship\nThe 2013 Canadian Rugby Championship was the 5th season of the Canadian Rugby Championship. The BC Bears re-enter the tournament after being represented by the Pacific Tyee last season. Continuing with the pattern established previous seasons, home field advantage has switched. The Western teams have three home games, while the Eastern teams only have two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232479-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Rugby Championship, Regular season, Fixtures\nAll times local to where the game is being played", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232480-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships\nThe 2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships were held from March 16 to 24 at the Silver Fox Curling & Yacht Club in Summerside, Prince Edward Island. Summerside last hosted the Canadian Senior Championships in 2009. The winners of the championships will go on to represent Canada at the 2014 World Senior Curling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232481-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe men's tournament of the 2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships was held from March 16 to 24 at the Silver Fox Curling & Yacht Club in Summerside, Prince Edward Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232481-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Qualifying Round\nFour associations did not automatically qualify to the championships, and participated in a qualifying round. Two qualification spots were awarded to the winners of the double knockout round, Nova Scotia and the Northwest Territories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 79], "content_span": [80, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232481-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Atlantic Daylight Time (UTC-3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 82], "content_span": [83, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232482-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe women's tournament of the 2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships was held from March 16 to 24 at the Silver Fox Curling & Yacht Club in Summerside, Prince Edward Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232482-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Qualifying Round\nFour associations did not automatically qualify to the championships, and participated in a qualifying round. Since Nunavut withdrew from competition, British Columbia, the Northwest Territories, and Yukon played in a double knockout to determine the two qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 81], "content_span": [82, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232482-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Senior Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Atlantic Daylight Time (UTC-3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season\nThe 2013 Canadian Soccer League season was the 16th since its establishment where a total of 21 teams from Ontario took part in the league. The season began on May 3, 2013, and concluded on November 3, 2013. SC Waterloo captured their first championship in a 3\u20131 victory over regular season champions Kingston FC in the CSL Championship final at Kalar Sports Park in Niagara Falls, Ontario. Waterloo became the first club to win both the First & Second Division championships in one season. While Toronto Croatia B won the second division regular season title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season\nThe 2013 season was a controversial year where the Canadian Soccer Association unexpectedly and immediately de-sanctioned the CSL, which was a member in good standing without due process just two months before the commencement of their season. The CSA`s stated reasons were in order to implement the James Easton Report (Rethink Management Group Report) for the adoption of a new semi-professional soccer structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season\nIn response to the move conducted by the CSA the league appealed to the Sport Dispute Resolution Centre of Canada (SDRCC), where the sport arbitrator ruled that the CSA have the right to de-sanction the CSL, but ruled that the immediate decisions and actions conducted by the CSA were unreasonable and coercive. Which forced the governing body to reinstate sanctioning to the CSL until the next season in order for the CSA to work with all existing leagues to fairly implement the Easton Report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season\nAnother controversial moment occurred when before any official CSA or CSL news statement was released the CBC issued an article written by Ben Rycroft which contained only anonymous sources that the CSA decided to no longer sanction the CSL primarily based on the alleged reports of match fixing in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0001-0003", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season\nDuring the SDRCC hearing a notable admission was done by CSA president Victor Montagliani, where he stated that the decision to de-sanction the CSL was not made on any alleged grounds of match fixing in the CSL but strictly on the decision made by the CSA board of directors to adopt a new soccer structure in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season\nThe aftermath of the sanctioning issue resulted in a decrease in teams in both the first & second divisions as the two MLS academy clubs along with Brantford Galaxy, Mississauga Eagles FC, and SC Toronto left the league after the confusion and damage done by the CSA in their immediate de-sanctioning of the CSL. Though the league did return to the Halton region with the addition of Burlington SC. Both Rogers TV and Cogeco TV continued broadcasting CSL matches throughout Southern Ontario. The CSL youth development system continued its success with four Montreal Impact Academy players being signed to the first team in the MLS before their departure from the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season, First Division, Teams\nOut of the 12 teams this season, 11 returned from the 2012 season. The only expansion team was Burlington SC. The academy clubs of Toronto FC and Montreal Impact, as well as SC Toronto, quit the league, while two teams - Mississauga Eagles FC and Brantford Galaxy - will skip the current season, but retained their membership and hope to rejoin the league in 2014. While North York Astros merged with Toronto Vasas to form Astros Vasas FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season, First Division, Bracket\nThe top 8 teams will qualify for the one-game quarter final, and a one-game semi-final leading to the championship game to be played on November 3 at Kalar Sports Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season, First Division, Individual awards\nThe annual CSL awards ceremony was held at the Sheraton on the Falls Hotel in Niagara Falls, Ontario on November 2, 2013. The majority of the awards went to regular season champions Kingston FC. Guillaume Surot became the first player in CSL history to claim three individual awards in a season. The Frenchman took home the MVP, Golden Boot, and the Rookie of the Year. While head coach Colm Muldoon with coaching credentials from Ireland was given the Coach of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232483-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season, First Division, Individual awards\nAfter establishing the best defensive record within the league Antonio Illic and Sven Arapovic of Toronto Croatia were voted the Goalkeeper and Defender of the Year for the second time in their careers. The league champions SC Waterloo received their first Fair Play and Respect award. Former Toronto Croatia club executive and CSL league administrator Pino Jazbec was given the Harry Paul Gauss award for his years of commitment and allegiance to the league. The CSL Referee Committee voted in favor of Justin Tasev as the best match official throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232484-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Track and Field Championships\nThe 2013 Canadian Track and Field Championships was the year's national championship in outdoor track and field for Canada. It was held from 20 to 23 June at Moncton Stadium in Moncton, New Brunswick. It served as the selection meeting for the 2013 World Championships in Athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232485-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship\nThe 2013 Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship was held from March 24 to 31 at the RA Centre in Ottawa, Ontario. Quebec, skipped by Benoit Lessard, won their first Canadian wheelchair title by defeating British Columbia, skipped by Paralympian Gary Cormack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232485-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232485-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship, Awards\nThe awards and the all-star team are listed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232486-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian electoral calendar\nThis is a list of elections in Canada in 2013. 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, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget\nThe Canadian federal budget for fiscal year 2013\u20132014 was presented to the House of Commons of Canada by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty on 21 March 2013. The budget bill was tabled in the legislature on 29 April 2013 as the Economic Action Plan 2013 Act, No. 1. A second budget bill will be tabled in the autumn, which will include elements excluded from the first bill, such as the Canada Job Grant. The deficit was projected to be $18.7 billion for the fiscal year 2013-2014, however this was adjusted to $8.1 billion by end of the fiscal year and once the Auditor General's recommendations on the Government's unfunded pension obligations were taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation\nThere were no new tax measures or tax reductions in the proposed budget bill, but some tax loopholes were eliminated, which is expected to generate an additional $880 million in tax revenues annually.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Tariffs\nAs a result of the 2013 budget, import tariffs for 37 goods were eliminated\u2014specifically sporting goods (excluding bicycles) and baby clothing made of \"cotton, synthetic fibres, textile materials, wool or fine animal hair\". Such cuts were expected to result in decreased tax revenues of $76 million for the Government of Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Tariffs\nTariffs on other goods in 1290 product classes were increased owing to a change in status classification of 72 trading nations from \"developing\" status to \"fully developed\". Imports from nations including Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, and Russia were affected by reclassification, as they were no longer subject to the general preferential tariff (GPT). The average increase was 3%, and would result in $333 million annually in additional tax revenues for the Canadian government. The tariffs took effect 1 January 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Tariffs\nDoug Porter, the chief economist of the Bank of Montreal, expressed concern about adverse effects, commenting that such increases would widen the disparity in prices of goods in Canada compared to the same goods in the United States, which may aggravate cross-border shopping. The budget also provided that rules of origin would be amended \"to ensure imported textiles and apparel from poorer nations\" would not be affected if their manufacture requires materials from promoted nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Tariffs\nSome goods affected by these tariff increases included solid-state drives and USB devices (from no tariff to 6%), most of which are imported from China, South Korea, Thailand and Malaysia, four of the nations losing GPT status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Tax evasion\nThe budget proposal included a reward system for individuals who report Canadians with an offshore account, and eliminated the tax deduction for leasing a safe deposit box. The Stop International Tax Evasion Program enabled the Canada Revenue Agency to reward informants up to 15% of taxes collected if it exceeds $100,000. Critics complained that a planned $60 million cut of the CRA budget and its limited resources imply the CRA would not be able to investigate or pursue tax evaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Tax evasion\nAnother criticism was that the reward may be too small, or that most rewards may be accrued by non-Canadians working in offshore institutions. Walid Hejazi of the Rotman School of Management said that the program is unlikely to generate much revenue, but may act as a deterrent for some potential tax evaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Personal taxes\nThere was an increase in the lifetime capital gains exemption to $800,000, which was indexed to inflation, a reduction of the dividend tax credit, and elimination of the use of financial strategies such as loss trading and synthetic disposition. The budget introduced measures requiring financial institutions to report any electronic fund transfer exceeding $10,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Taxation, Corporate taxes\nThe capital cost allowance (CCA) for manufacturing and processing equipment was extended to the end of 2015. The budget also allocated $60 million over five years for use by incubator and accelerator investment organizations, and $70 million over three years to create 5,000 internship positions for recent post-secondary graduates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures\nThe Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario had its funding renewed for another five years, averaging about $184 million annually.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Borders\nThe budget proposal approved projects related to information-sharing and infrastructure for the \"Beyond the Border\" perimeter security program undertaken with the United States. This included upgrading border posts at Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle (Quebec), Landsdowne (Ontario), Emerson (Manitoba), and North Portal (Saskatchewan), implementation of a cargo security program for port facilities in Vancouver and Montreal, and $19 million toward the Detroit River International Crossing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Borders\nPrivacy advocates and civil liberties groups criticized the data sharing arrangement, in which Canada and the United States share with each other information about land entry and exit of individuals, to be used for immigration, refugee, and visa programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Borders\nIn order to cover the costs associated with processing visa claims and immigration applications, the budget proposal allocated an additional $42 million for visa and $44 million for citizenship programs. This was expected to reduce the backlog of almost 320,000 unprocessed citizenship applications. The costs for submitting an application were also increased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Infrastructure spending\nThe proposal allocated about $2 billion annually from gasoline tax revenues to municipalities for infrastructure development and maintenance, including public transit, under the Community Improvement Fund starting in 2014\u20132015. It replaced the similar fund introduced in the 2005 budget by the 38th Canadian Parliament, and increased by 2% annually. Infrastructure projects that may use such funding include highways, short-line rail, regional and local airports, short-sea shipping, broadband internet connectivity, redevelopment of brownfields, disaster mitigation, and those involving culture, tourism, or sport and recreation. Municipalities will receive funding for projects on a per capita basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Infrastructure spending\nThe Building Canada Fund managed by Infrastructure Canada was renewed for ten years, receiving $210 million in 2014-2015, and increasing annually to $2.1 billion in 2021-2022. About $4 billion over ten years was allocated for projects of national significance, including development and expansion of public transit and roads, and $155 million to be used for First Nations infrastructure programs. The fund was also extended for use by educational institutions and airports. The Goods and Services Tax rebate for municipalities was also extended for 10 years, by which municipalities will be able to collectively claim about $1 billion annually via the GST Rebate for Municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Environment\nIn a press release on 21 March 2013, the Nature Conservancy of Canada supported the $20 million, one-year extension of the Natural Areas Conservation Program, a national public-private partnership by which ecologically sensitive lands are acquired and conserved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Environment\nSustainable Development Technology Canada, a government-funded venture capital firm, was allocated to receive $325 million over eight years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Culture\nGovernment event promotion and execution, such as activities related to Canada Day and Winterlude, were transferred from the National Capital Commission to the Department of Canadian Heritage, which also resulted in the transfer of up to 80 employees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Culture\nThe budget allocated $8 million to renovate Massey Hall in Toronto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Canada Job Grant\nThe budget established the Canada Job Grant, which provides $5,000 for an individual's training in trades and skills, requiring matching funds from provincial governments and the individual's employer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Canada Job Grant\nThe Canada Job Grant is a training fund, that was established in 2014 via the budget, which will enable individuals to receive up to $15,000 in training services, funded equally by the federal government, a provincial government, and the individual's employer. The federal government expects to fund the $300 million program by renegotiating the Labour Market Agreement it has with each of the provinces, which expired in 2014. The program will train 130,000 individuals annually when it is fully operational.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Canada Job Grant\nBrad Duguid, Ontario's minister of training, colleges, and universities, stated that the program will shift $194 million from programs \"that target our most vulnerable and have the greatest barriers to entering the workforce\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Canada Job Grant\nQuebec's Minister of Finance, Nicolas Marceau, stated that the federal government was \"undoing and sabotaging what Quebec has long been doing\". On 22 March 2013, Labour Minister Agnes Maltais of the Government of Quebec formally requested exclusion from the program. It prefers to operate its own program, instead of participating in a joint federal-provincial program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Canada Job Grant\nObjections were also raised by First Nations about a five-year $241 million skills training program available only to reserves which make it \"mandatory for those receiving income assistance payments to be retrained\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Expenditures, Canada Job Grant\nProvincial government officials also stated that it removed full control of spending of the funds by the provinces. Marceau described it as \"economic sabotage\". At the July 2013 Council of the Federation at Niagara-on-the-Lake, premiers unanimously opposed the Canada Job Grant, and Ontario premier Kathleen Wynne stated \"It's not going to work the way it is\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Other impacts of the federal budget\nApproximately 12,000 government services employees were laid-off, and 7,000 jobs were eliminated via attrition. the budget enabled a government official to sit at any collective bargaining negotiation between a Crown corporation and its employees, and the government must approve the terms of such negotiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Other impacts of the federal budget\nThe budget bill also called for administrative changes to government operations. It merged the Canadian International Development Agency into the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Other impacts of the federal budget\nThe budget discontinued funding for mixed police squads, that is police squads composed of members from police services of more than one municipality. This funding had been used in Quebec to fund regional police services \"to help fight organized crime\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Other impacts of the federal budget\nThe opposition parties have complained that the budget bill is an omnibus bill, like the 2012 budget, containing non-budgetary items.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Other impacts of the federal budget\nThe government invested $23 million over two years to attract foreign students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Reactions\nThe budget was poorly received by the general public. A pan-canadian poll carried out by Leger Marketing showed that 52\u00a0% of Canadians were dissatisfied with the federal budget (of which 23\u00a0% were not satisfied at all) and only 29\u00a0% were satisfied. Satisfaction was highest in Alberta (51\u00a0%) and the lowest in Quebec (15\u00a0%) and the Atlantic provinces (16\u00a0%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Provinces\nNicolas Marceau, Quebec's Finance Minister, severely criticized the federal budget as a frontal attack on Quebec and an economic sabotage undertaking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232487-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Provinces\nRaymond Bachand, Liberal MNA and predecessor of Nicolas Marceau as Quebec's Finance Minister, regretted that the budget plans the phase-out of the Labour-sponsored funds tax credit between 2015 and 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232488-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian honours\nThe following are the appointments to various Canadian Honours of 2013. Usually, they are announced as part of the New Year and Canada Day celebrations and are published within the Canada Gazette during year. This follows the custom set out within the United Kingdom which publishes its appoints of various British Honours for New Year's and for monarch's official birthday. However, instead of the midyear appointments announced on Victoria Day, the official birthday of the Canadian Monarch, this custom has been transferred with the celebration of Canadian Confederation and the creation of the Order of Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232488-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian honours\nHowever, as the Canada Gazette publishes appointment to various orders, decorations and medal, either Canadian or from Commonwealth and foreign states, this article will reference all Canadians so honoured during the 2013 calendar year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232488-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canadian honours\nProvincial Honours are not listed within the Canada Gazette, however they are listed within the various publications of each provincial government. Provincial honours are listed within the page.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232489-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canary Wharf Squash Classic\nThe Canary Wharf Squash Classic 2013 is the 2013's Canary Wharf Squash Classic, which is a tournament of the PSA World Tour event International (Prize money: $50,000). The event took place at the East Wintergarden in London in England from 18 March to 22 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232489-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canary Wharf Squash Classic, Prize money and ranking points\nFor 2013, the prize purse was $50,000. The prize money and points breakdown is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232490-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canberra Raiders season\nThe 2013 Canberra Raiders season was the 32nd in the history of the Canberra Raiders. Coached by David Furner and then Andrew Dunemann, and captained by Terry Campese, the club competed in the National Rugby League's 2013 Telstra Premiership, finishing the regular season 13th (out of 16 teams) and thus failing to make the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232490-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canberra Raiders season\nThe Canberra Raiders started the 2013 NRL season with what was considered especially strong young talent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232490-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canberra Raiders season\nAfter the loss to the Bulldogs in Round 23, Canberra's coach David Furner was sacked amidst rumours of player dissatisfaction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232490-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canberra Raiders season\nThe club's top try scorer in 2013 was Blake Ferguson, and their top point scorer was Jarrod Croker. The 2013 season's Mal Meninga Medal for player of the season was awarded to Anthony Milford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival\nThe 66th Cannes Film Festival took place in Cannes, France, from 15 to 26 May 2013. Steven Spielberg was the head of the jury for the main competition. New Zealand film director Jane Campion was the head of the jury for the Cin\u00e9fondation and Short Film sections. French actress Audrey Tautou hosted the opening and closing ceremonies. Actress Kim Novak was named guest of honour and introduced a new restored version of Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival\nThe festival opened with The Great Gatsby, directed by Baz Luhrmann and closed with Zulu, directed by J\u00e9r\u00f4me Salle. The film poster for the festival featured husband and wife actors Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. The Bling Ring, directed by Sofia Coppola, opened the Un Certain Regard section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival\nThe French film Blue Is the Warmest Colour won the Palme d'Or. In an unprecedented move, along with the director, the Jury decided to take \"the exceptional step\" of awarding the film's two main actresses, Ad\u00e8le Exarchopoulos and L\u00e9a Seydoux, with the Palme d'Or.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival\nOn the occasion of 100 Years of Indian Cinema, India was the Official Guest Country at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. Seven Indian feature films were premiered among various sections on the festival. Actress Vidya Balan was one of the official Jury of the festival. The first Incredible India Exhibition, a joint participation of the Ministry of Tourism and Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Republic of India was inaugurated by Indian delegate Chiranjeevi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Independent juries\nThe following independent juries awarded films in the frame of the International Critics' Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, In competition - Feature films\nThe following films have been selected for the In Competition section. The Palme d'Or winner has been highlighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Un Certain Regard\nThe following films have been selected in the Un Certain Regard section. The Un Certain Regard Prize winner has been highlighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Films out of Competition\nThe following films were selected to play out of competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Special screenings\nThe following films were presented in the Special screenings section:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cin\u00e9fondation\nThe Cin\u00e9fondation section focuses on films made by students at film schools. The following 18 entries (14 fiction films and 4 animation films) were selected, out of 1,550 submissions from 277 different schools. One-third of the films selected represented schools competing for the first time. It was also the first time for a Chilean film to be selected in Cin\u00e9fondation. The winner of the Cin\u00e9fondation First Prize has been highlighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Short film competition\nOut of 3,500 submissions, the following films were selected to compete for the Short Film Palme d'Or. The Short film Palme d'Or winner has been highlighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cannes Classics\nThe Festival uses Cannes Classics to place the spotlight on rediscovered or restored masterworks from the past, or ones that have been re-released in theatres or on DVD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cin\u00e9ma de la Plage\nThe Cin\u00e9ma de la Plage is a part of the Official Selection. The outdoors screenings at the beach cinema of Cannes are open to the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 65], "content_span": [66, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, International Critics' Week\nThe line-up for the International Critics\u2019 Week was announced on 22 April at the section's website. The following films were selected:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, International Critics' Week\nFeature films - The winner of the Grand Prix Nespresso has been highlighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, International Critics' Week\nShort films - The winner of the Canal+ Award has been highlighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, Directors' Fortnight\nThe line-up for the Directors' Fortnight was announced at a press conference on 23 April with the following films being selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, Directors' Fortnight\nFeature films - The winner of the Art Cinema Award (and the Prix SACD) has been highlighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Awards, Official awards\nThe French film Blue Is the Warmest Colour, directed by Abdellatif Kechiche, won the Palme d'Or. In a first for the competition, the jury decided to award the Palme d'Or to Kechiche and the actresses who star in the film: Ad\u00e8le Exarchopoulos and L\u00e9a Seydoux. Blue Is the Warmest Colour is a coming-of-age film that tells the story of a lesbian relationship between a 15-year-old girl and an older woman. It has shocked some critics with its graphic and controversial sex scenes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Awards, Official awards\nA reporter for the Radio France Internationale stated that Kechiche paid tribute to the \"Tunisian revolution\" and \"the right to love freely\" during his acceptance speech. The president of the jury, Steven Spielberg, said \"The film is a great love story \u2026 We were absolutely spellbound by the two brilliant young actresses, and the way the director observed his young players.\" The Grand Prix was won by the Coen brothers's Inside Llewyn Davis, while Bruce Dern and B\u00e9r\u00e9nice Bejo were awarded Best Actor and Best Actress respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232491-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannes Film Festival, Awards, Official awards\nThe following films and people received the 2013 Official Selection awards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots\nThe 2013 Canning riots were riots against Bengali Hindus by Bengali Muslims in the Indian state of West Bengal on 21 February 2013. The riots occurred in the Canning subdivision, after a Muslim cleric was killed by unidentified assailants. Following this incident, Muslim mobs burned down over 200 Hindu homes in the villages of Naliakhali, Herobhanga, Gopalpur and Goladogra villages in the Canning police station area. 24 (Two dozen) Hindu-owned shops were looted in Jaynagar police station area under Baruipur subdivision. Incidents of violence were reported from Canning, Jaynagar, Kultali and Basanti police station areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Background\nOn 19 February 2013, shortly after midnight, Indian Standard Time, a Muslim Imam from Ghutiari Sharif in Canning subdivision was returning from a religious congregation at Jamtala in Jaynagar, in a motorcycle along with a colleague. When they reached Naliakhali around 2 a.m., they were intercepted by a gang of waylayers, who robbed the cleric and shot him. According to police sources the cleric was reportedly carrying \u20b9 1,150,000 in cash that was looted by the unidentified gunmen. The altercation resulted in the death of the Imam, although his companion managed to flee after sustaining injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Background\nAt dawn, the driver of the first bus from Golabari to Canning discovered the body and intimated the Canning police station. Several other bus drivers travelling on that route communicated their findings to the police station. The police initially took the incident casually and made no effort to visit Naliakhali. Police has so far not been able to trace the culprits or even the motive behind the murder and with the murder of another Muslim cleric with large followers in the same district emotionally charged the locals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Violence\nNaliakhali is a Hindu majority village in the Gopalpur panchayat that fell under the executive jurisdiction of the Canning police station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Violence\nA crowd gathered at the site of the attack and rumors began to spread that the killers were from the village of Naliakhali. Thousands of people from neighbouring areas, such as Canning, Jibantala, Sarengabad, Jhorormore, Narayanpur and Dhoaghata gathered on the site and refused to part with the body of cleric. When the police tried to take away the body of the cleric for processing, the mob attacked the police with brickbats. Anup Kumar Ghosh, the sub-inspector of the police station at Canning, was injured and had to be admitted to the Canning Sub-divisional Hospital. Seven policemen were injured in the attack. The mob also attacked and damaged police vehicles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Violence\nIn the meantime, neighbors of the killed cleric were transported to Canning from Kolkata in trucks. A local school principal reportedly incited the mob into violence. At around 10 a.m., a heavily armed mob of at least 10,000 began an attack upon Naliakhali. They ransacked and looted the homes of Bengali Hindus as the residents fled for their lives. The rioters hurled bombs, doused the houses with petrol and set them on fire. Violence and arson spread to nearby locations such as Dhopar More and Bangalpara. Hindu homes and places of business were ransacked in Gopalpur, Goladogra and Herobhanga. The crowd blocked the road at Bhangankhali, Priyor More, Hospital More and Natunhat. Protesters also staged a rail blocked at Ghutiari Sharif station in the Sonarpur-Canning section of the Sealdah South lines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Violence\nAt around 11 a.m., the South 24 Parganas District Superintendent of Police Praveen Kumar Tripathi, reached the spot along with a massive riot squad and Rapid Action Force battalions. They resorted to a lathi charge in order to pacify and disperse the mob. The body of the Imam was then sent for an autopsy. In the late afternoon reinforcements from the Bidhannagar Police Commissionerate and the Howrah Police Commissionerate reached with water cannons to douse the flames of the burning village. The police evoked Section-144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and established a curfew in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Aftermath\nIn the violence, more than 200 houses were burnt in several villages that came under the jurisdictions of the Canning, Jaynagar, Kultali and Basanti police stations, displacing more than 2,000 people. Some of the displaced people took shelter in makeshift relief camps while others had to live on the road. The state government announced a compensation of \u20b9 300,000 to the family of the murdered cleric and \u20b9 10,000 to each of the 93 families displaced by the violence. 52 people were arrested by the police in connection with the violence. Some NGOs have provided food and medicine to the affected region in Naliakhali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232492-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Canning riots, Aftermath\nWest Bengal Minister of State for Minority Affairs and Trinamool Congress MLA. from Magrahat West constituency Giasuddin Molla accused the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and Indian National Congress of fomenting trouble in the state before the panchayat elections. The Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has appealed for peace and promised a special investigation into the murder case. Political observers have linked the violence to the forthcoming panchayat elections in the region, where the Trinamool Congress and the Communist Party of India (Marxist) are trying to woo Muslim voters in the district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232493-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cannondale season\nThe 2013 season for Cannondale began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232494-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Marathon European Championships\nThe 2013 Canoe Marathon European Championships were the tenth edition of the Canoe Marathon European Championships, which took place between 7 and 9 June 2013 in Vila Verde, Portugal. The competition was staged on the C\u00e1vado river and consisted of fifteen events \u2013 ten in kayak and five in canoe \u2013 divided in junior, under\u201323 and senior categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup\nThe 2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of five races in 5 canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 26th edition. The team events were held as part of the world cup program for the first time in history, but no points were awarded for them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Calendar\nThe series opened with World Cup Race 1 in Cardiff, Wales (June 21\u201323) for the second year in a row and ended with the World Cup Final in Bratislava, Slovakia (August 23\u201325), also for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Final standings\nThe winner of each race was awarded 60 points. Points for lower places differed from one category to another. Every participant was guaranteed at least 2 points for participation and 5 points for qualifying for the semifinal run. If two or more athletes or boats were equal on points, the ranking was determined by their positions in the World Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 1\nThe opening race of the series took place at the Cardiff International White Water facility in Wales from 21 to 23 June. It featured the team events for the first time at a world cup meeting. The organizers experienced water pump problems during the C1 final which caused a lack of water on the course and a 30-minute delay of competition. Great Britain topped the medal table in the individual events with 2 golds, 1 silver and 1 bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 2\nAugsburg Eiskanal hosted the second world cup race of the season from 28 to 30 June. France won 2 golds and 1 bronze in the individual events to top the medal table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 3\nThe third world cup race took place at the site of the 1992 Olympic race, the Segre Olympic Park in La Seu d'Urgell from 5 to 7 July. Slovenia won the medal table in the individual events with 2 golds and 1 bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 4\nThe penultimate world cup race took place in Tacen, Slovenia from 16 to 18 August. The organizers were forced to re-run the final races of the women's K1 event and the men's C2 event due to troubles with the water level. For the same reason the team events in these 2 disciplines have been cancelled. The women's C1 team event did not take place due to lack of participating teams. Slovenia won 2 golds and 2 bronzes in the individual events which was enough to win the medal table. Jessica Fox won both the K1 and the C1 event, becoming the first female paddler to win both events at one world cup race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232495-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Final\nThe world cup final took place in Bratislava, Slovakia from 23 to 25 August. The home paddlers won the individual medal table with 2 golds, 1 silver and 1 bronze. Michal Martik\u00e1n made his first competitive appearance since the London Olympics and he won the C1 event. The women's C1 team event did not take place. Both teams which entered the competition (Germany and Great Britain) did not start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232496-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canoe Sprint European Championships\nThe 2013 Canoe Sprint European Championships were the 25th edition of the Canoe Sprint European Championships, an international canoe and kayak sprint event organised by the European Canoe Association, and the 15th edition since its revival in 1997. They were held for the first time in Portugal, at the Center for High Performance in Montemor-o-Velho, between 14 and 16 June 2013. As in the previous edition, the competition comprised 26 events, of which 16 were for men and 10 for women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232497-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canon Media Awards\nThe 2013 Canon Media Awards were presented on Friday 10 May 2013 at the Pullman Hotel in Auckland, New Zealand. Awards were made in the categories of photography, online, magazines, newspapers, and general. Organisers received more than 1400 entries. The awards were judged by 26 industry experts from New Zealand, Australia and Asia. The New Zealand Herald was awarded Newspaper of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232498-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs season\nThe 2013 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs season is the 79th in the club's history. Coached by Des Hasler and captained by Michael Ennis, they competed in the National Rugby League's 2013 Telstra Premiership. Finishing the regular season in 6th place (out of 16), they thus reached the finals for the second consecutive year. The Bulldogs were then knocked out in the first week of the finals by the Newcastle Knights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232498-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs season, Squad\nJim Dymock \u2013 Assistant CoachHarry Harris \u2013 High Performance CoachTony Grimaldi \u2013 Head ConditionerTony Ayoub \u2013 PhysiotherapistDr Joe Lombardo \u2013 Club DoctorJohn Novak \u2013 Head of Mind Management Brett Kimmorley \u2013 Specialist CoachFred Ciraldo \u2013 Team ManagerGarry Carden \u2013 Assistant Strength & Conditioning CoachSteve McCullagh \u2013 Assistant PhysiotherapistLarry Britton \u2013 Head TrainerDr Hugh Hazzard \u2013 Medical ConsultantAndy Patmore \u2013 NYC Coach & Manager Coaching and DevelopmentBarry Ward \u2013 NSW Cup Coach", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232499-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cape Verdean Football Championships\nThe 2013 Cape Verdean Football Championship season was the 34th of the competition of the first-tier football in Cape Verde. Its started on 11 May and finished on 13 July, slightly earlier than last year. The tournament was organized by the Cape Verdean Football Federation. CS Mindelense won the ninth title. They did not participate in the 2014 CAF Champions League. In 2014, Mindelense would become the second and most recent club to win both the cup and the super cup title in the same season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232499-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nSporting 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. More than three clubs shared the same club name starting with Acad\u00e9mic- numbering four out of twelve, one less than last season. Half of Group B clubs would bear the first club name but only half would bear the name in the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232499-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nThe biggest win was Mindelense who scored 4-0 over Ultramarina, other matches that finished with four goals who scored by Desportivo Praia (1-4 over Ultramarina), Solpontense and Acad\u00e9mico 83 with four and Desportivo Praia (1-4 over Juventude da Furna).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232499-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nThe season would have one of fewest goals in history after the expansion of the clubs to over ten. Week one had only one victory of each of six matches, five games were tied, one being one and the remaining zero and made it the worst of any soccer week in Cape Verdean football (soccer) history. Week two had no points higher than two scored, the remaining three weeks were better, week four had only one and four points of each of the four matches while two games were finished without a single goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup\nClubs affiliated with Capital Football in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) \u2013 and surrounding areas of New South Wales \u2013 competed in 2014 for the Capital Football Federation Cup. Teams from the same Club playing in multiple divisions were allowed to compete. This knockout competition was won by Tuggeranong United, their 4th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup\nWinning the 2013 Federation Cup also entitled Tuggeranong United to become the ACT's sole qualifier for the 2014 FFA Cup, entering at the Round of 32. The original intention from Capital Football was that the Federation Cup would be the qualifying tournament to determine the ACT qualifier, but match scheduling issues meant the 2014 winner would not be decided until after the qualifier needed to be named. To overcome this Capital Football announced that the 2014 winner of the ACT's pre-season competition was to be the ACT's qualifier in 2014 , but Tuggeranong United successfully appealed to qualify them as the ACT's FFA Cup entrant for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup, First round\n22 teams from various divisions of the ACT State Leagues, as well as 4 Masters teams, entered into the competition at this stage. Matches in this round were played on 6 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup, Second round\nMatches in this round were played on 13 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup, Third round\n8 Clubs from the ACT National Premier League (Tier 2) entered into the competition at this stage. Matches in this round were played on 2\u201323 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup, Quarter finals\nAll matches in this round were completed by 3 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup, Semi finals\nMatches in this round were played on 25 July\u20131 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232500-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football Federation Cup, Final\nThe winner also qualified for the 2014 FFA Cup Round of 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232501-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football season\nThe 2013 Capital Football season was the first season under the new competition format in the Australian Capital Territory. The competition consisted of two divisions across the ACT, created from the teams in the previous structure. The overall premier for the new structure qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232501-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football season, League Tables, 2013 National Premier League ACT\nThe 2013 National Premier League ACT season was played over 25 rounds, from March to August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232501-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football season, League Tables, 2013 ACT Capital League\nThe 2013 ACT Capital League was the first edition of the new Capital League as the second level domestic association football competition in the ACT. 12 teams competed, all playing each team in their pool twice and the other pool once for a total of 16 rounds. Canberra FC B withdrew during the season, leaving Pool B with only five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232501-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football season, League Tables, 2013 Capital Football Division 2\nThe 2013 ACT Capital Football Division 2 was the first edition of the new Capital League Division 2 as the third level domestic association football competition in the ACT. 12 teams competed, all playing each team in their pool twice and the other pool once for a total of 16 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232501-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital Football season, Cup Competitions, 2013 Federation Cup\n2013 was the 51st edition of the Capital Football Federation Cup. In 2013, the Federation Cup, which is open to all senior men's teams registered with Capital Football, consisted of three rounds, quarter-finals, semi-finals and a final. NPL clubs entered the tournament in the third round. The Cup ran from 6 April 2013 (first round) till 28 August 2013 (final). Tuggeranong United clinched the 2013 Cup with a 3\u20132 victory in extra time over Cooma Tigers. Although not originally intended, the 2013 Federation Cup became the qualifying tournament to determine the FFA Cup ACT representative for the inaugural 2014 FFA Cup after holders Tuggeranong lodged a successful official appeal, supported by the other NPL clubs, to Capital Football in early 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232502-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital One Bowl\nThe 2013 Capital One Bowl, the 67th edition of the game, was a post-season American college football bowl game, held on January 1, 2013 at the Florida Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida as part of the 2012\u201313 NCAA Bowl season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232502-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital One Bowl\nThe game, which was broadcast at 1:00\u00a0p.m. EST on ABC, featured the #7 (BCS) Georgia Bulldogs from the Southeastern Conference versus the #16 (BCS) Nebraska Cornhuskers from the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232502-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital One Bowl\nEntering the game both teams suffered a loss at their respective conference championship games. The Georgia Bulldogs, winners of the SEC Eastern Division, were ranked #3 in the BCS going into the game. They lost to #2 Alabama 32\u201328. Meanwhile, the Nebraska Cornhuskers, winners of the Big Ten Legends Division, were ranked #12 going into the game. They lost to unranked Wisconsin 70\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232502-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Capital One Bowl\nPrior to this bowl, Nebraska had played Georgia just once in football. During the 1969 Sun Bowl, the 9\u20132 Nebraska Cornhuskers defeated the 5\u20135\u20131 Georgia Bulldogs by a score of 45\u20136. This season was of note in that it featured 31-year-old Tom Osborne in his first year as an offensive coordinator for Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232503-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caribbean Premier League\nThe 2013 Caribbean Premier League season was the inaugural season of the Caribbean Premier League, established by the West Indies Cricket Board. The tournament began on 30 July and ended on 24 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232503-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Caribbean Premier League, Format\nThe tournament has six teams and is divided into a group stage and a knockout stage. The group stage comprises 21 matches, with each team playing 7 matches. The knockout stage features two semi-finals and a final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232504-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caribbean Premier League squads\nThis is a list of the squads of the teams that participated in the 2013 Caribbean Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232505-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caribbean Series\nThe fifty-fifth edition of the Caribbean Series (Serie del Caribe) was played in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232505-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Caribbean Series\nThe Series was held from February 1 through February 7, featuring the champion teams of the 2012\u20132013 season in the Dominican Winter League (Leones del Escogido), Mexican Pacific League (Yaquis de Obreg\u00f3n), Puerto Rican Professional Baseball League (Criollos de Caguas), and Venezuelan Professional Baseball League (Navegantes del Magallanes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232505-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Caribbean Series\nThe format consisted of twelve games, in a double round-robin format with each team facing each other twice, while the championship game was played between the two best teams of the round robin. All of the games were played at Estadio Sonora in Hermosillo, Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232505-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Caribbean Series, Scoreboards, Game 10, February 5\n* Tejada extended an all-time home run record (15) in the Series he already held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232506-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Carinthian state election\nThe 2013 Carinthian state election was held on 3 March 2013 to elect the members of the Landtag of Carinthia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232506-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Carinthian state election\nThe election saw a massive shift in Carinthian politics, which had been dominated by the Freedom Party in Carinthia (FPK) and Governor J\u00f6rg Haider since the 1990s. After Haider's death in 2008, he was succeeded by Gerhard D\u00f6rfler. After winning the 2009 election, D\u00f6rfler's government suffered a string of scandals and the FPK's popularity plummeted. Ultimately, they suffered a catastrophic loss of 28 percentage points, the worst ever suffered by a party in post-war Austria. They finished on 16.8%, a distant second place behind the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6), which won 37.1%. The Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) retained third place, but declined to 14.4%. Apart from the SP\u00d6, other beneficiaries of the FPK's collapse were The Greens, Team Stronach, and Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZ\u00d6), who each made significant gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232506-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232506-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Carinthian state election, Background\nIn 2005, then-Governor and former federal leader of the Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6) J\u00f6rg Haider split from the party due to internal disputes, and founded the Alliance for the Future of Austria (BZ\u00d6). The Freedom Party in Carinthia, then the FP\u00d6's state branch and led by Haider, changed its allegiance and became the Carinthian branch of the BZ\u00d6. The large majority of its leadership and structure followed, with only a small minority defecting to the FP\u00d6's new Carinthian branch. Shortly after the 2008 federal election, Haider was killed in a car accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232506-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Carinthian state election, Background\nHe was succeeded by Gerhard D\u00f6rfler, who became the new Governor of Carinthia and leader of the FPK. In the 2009 Carinthian state election, D\u00f6rfler led the party to a strong victory under the name \"Freedom Party in Carinthia \u2013 BZ\u00d6 List J\u00f6rg Haider\". The FP\u00d6's new state branch won 3.8%, failing to enter the Landtag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232506-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Carinthian state election, Background\nIn December 2009, the FPK split from the BZ\u00d6 in protest of new federal leader Josef Bucher's policies, becoming an independent party operating in Carinthia. The party announced it would support the FP\u00d6 on a national level, while the FP\u00d6's state branch would be dissolved. The FP\u00d6 and FPK compared their new relationship to that of the CDU/CSU in Germany. The BZ\u00d6 subsequently founded a new Carinthian branch to compete with the FPK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232506-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Carinthian state election, Background\nBetween 2009 and 2013, D\u00f6rfler's government suffered a string of scandals involving current and former government officials, including the late Haider. In January 2010, Vice Governor Uwe Scheuch was exposed for offering Austrian citizenship to a Russian investor in exchange for investments in Carinthia and donations to the then-BZ\u00d6. Scheuch resigned from all political positions in mid-2012 and was found guilty in December. In July 2012, a government tax consultant was caught up in a corruption scandal involving the FPK and BZ\u00d6, which led to an early election being scheduled for March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232506-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232506-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232506-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Carinthian state election, Contesting parties\nIn addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, six parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232507-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Carleton Ravens football team\nAfter a 15-year hiatus, the Carleton University Ravens Canadian football team returned to Canadian Interuniversity Sport play, as part of the 2013 CIS football season. The season began on Labour Day (Sept 2) with a 71-4 loss to the Western Mustangs. The season wrapped up on October 19 when McMaster Marauders defeated Carleton 45-3 at home at Keith Harris Stadium in Ottawa. The team was winless in their 8 games and was outscored 95-390. The team finished last, in 11th place in the OUA conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232507-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Carleton Ravens football team, Regular season\nThe Ravens play an 8-game schedule, playing all but two OUA football teams, the Laurier Golden Hawks and the Queen's Golden Gaels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232507-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Carleton Ravens football team, Game Summaries, Vs. Ottawa\nThe Panda Game returns for the first time since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232508-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Cannes heist\nThe Cannes jewel heist was an armed robbery at the Carlton Intercontinental Hotel in Cannes, a city on the French Riviera. The thief stole gemstones and watches ultimately valued at $136 million (\u20ac103 million/\u00a389 million). (Initial estimates had only reached $53 million (\u20ac37\u201338 million/\u00a333-34 million), as they had not taken into account another room in the hotel.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232508-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Cannes heist, Theft\nThe valuables were stolen from a private hotel salon, which was very poorly guarded, the guards having no weapons. The jewels were present due to a display by Lev Avnerovich Leviev, the Israeli billionaire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232508-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Cannes heist, Theft\nThe armed thief was described as having a baseball cap and scarf, carrying a handgun. The theft initiated a manhunt but no arrests were made. Milan Poparic, a known member of the Pink Panthers, an organized crime gang, has been suggested as a potential suspect, having escaped prison days before the heist. According to reporting by investigative journalist Ryan Jacobs, most believe the thief was unlikely to be acting on his own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232508-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Cannes heist, Theft\nThe thief, carrying an automatic pistol, entered the salon through a french door, which might have been forced or left open, and picked up a sack containing 72 jewels, 34 of which have been described as exceptional, in a suitcase. The heist has been called the biggest heist ever in France, and possibly the biggest heist of all time. The theft was at the same hotel where Alfred Hitchcock's 1955 film To Catch a Thief was set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232508-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Cannes heist, Theft\nThe robbery was the third in the Riviera over a short period, following the theft from the Cannes Film Festival of jewels worth $1.4 million, and the theft of a $1.9 million necklace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232508-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Cannes heist, Theft, Reward\n10 days after the heist SW Associates, working for the insurers Lloyd's of London, offered a $1.3 million (\u20ac1 million) reward to the first person to give information leading to recovery of the stolen items, and released images of some of the stolen jewellery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season\nThe 2013 AFL season was the 117th season in the Australian Football League contested by the Carlton Football Club. It was the first season coached by new coach Mick Malthouse, who replaced Brett Ratten after the club failed to reach the finals in 2012. Carlton finished sixth out of eighteen teams for the season, after finishing eighth after the home-and-away season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nThe 2013 AFL season was the 117th season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it was also the 117th season contested by the Carlton Football Club. As in previous years, the club's primary home ground was Etihad Stadium, with home games expecting to draw larger crowds played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, and with traditional home ground Visy Park serving as the training and administrative base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nThe club's two joint major sponsors, car manufacturer Hyundai and confectionery company Mars, and the club extended its deal with Mars for a further three years. Carlton continued its alignment with the Northern Blues in the Victorian Football League, allowing Carlton-listed players to play with the Northern Blues when not selected in AFL matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nThe club adopted a new clash guernsey design for 2013, which was predominantly white with navy blue monogram, numbers, shoulders and waist; the new guernsey replaced the predominantly sky blue clash guernsey which had been in use for the previous two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Club summary\nThe club used the membership campaign slogan \"I am Carlton\" for the second consecutive season, after having success with the personalisable slogan in the 2012 season. The club set a new membership record of 50,564, breaking by more than 10% the previous record of 45,800 set in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nThere were several changes to Carlton's senior coaching panel after the 2012 season. Brett Ratten, who had coached the club since late 2007, was sacked with one year remaining on his contract after Carlton underperformed in the 2012 season, finishing tenth when a top four finish had been expected. Shortly after the season, Ratten was replaced in the role by experienced coach Mick Malthouse, who was signed to a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nMalthouse was at the time a three-time premiership coach at West Coast (in 1992 and 1994) and Collingwood (in 2010), with twenty-eight seasons and 662 games of VFL/AFL coaching experience with Footscray, West Coast and Collingwood; he had last coached in 2011, and had spent the 2012 season as part of the Seven Network's football commentary team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nSeveral of Ratten's assistants also departed after 2012, and Malthouse restructured the coaching panel. Senior assistant coach Alan Richardson and midfield assistant coaches Mark Riley and Paul Williams were all sacked with time remaining on their contracts, and development coach and Northern Blues senior coach Darren Harris left the club to pursue a career in leadership consulting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nWestern Australian state Under-16s coach Robert Wiley, who had previously worked as an assistant coach under Malthouse at West Coast, joined the club in the new role of Director of Coaching and Development, and recently retired Melbourne player Brad Green joined the club as a midfield development coach. Development coach Luke Webster took on the additional responsibility as Northern Blues coach for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nChris Judd opted to step down from the role of club captain, having served in the role for five seasons from 2008 until 2012; he was replaced in the role by Marc Murphy, with Kade Simpson and Andrew Carrazzo named as vice-captains. The leadership group was reduced from nine players to five, with Murphy, Carrazzo, Simpson and Jarrad Waite all holding their places from 2012 and Nick Duigan being elevated to the group for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Senior Personnel\nFormer club champion Stephen Kernahan continued as club president in the 2013 season, a position he had held since August 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Squad for 2013\nStatistics are correct as of end of 2012 season. Flags represent the state of origin, i.e. the state in which the player played his Under-18s football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Playing list changes\nThe following summarises all player changes between the conclusion of the 2012 season and the conclusion of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Playing list changes\nThe 2012/13 offseason was the first in league history to allow players to switch clubs as free agents. Two players who qualified for unrestricted free agency \u2013 Jordan Russell and Bret Thornton \u2013 announced their intentions to seek other clubs following the 2012 season. Russell moved to Collingwood in the club's only transaction during the initial free agency and trade period; Thornton was delisted, and ultimately recruited by Greater Western Sydney in the preseason draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Season summary\nDuring November 2012, the playing list attended a high-altitude training camp in Arizona. New coach Mick Malthouse had taken his team to several such training camps in Arizona while coaching at Collingwood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Season summary, Pre-season matches\nCarlton won three of its four preliminary matches; due to its strong percentage, the club finished second on the NAB Cup ladder to qualify for the Grand Final, to play against Brisbane Lions, the only undefeated team in the preliminary rounds. Brisbane then defeated Carlton in the Grand Final by 40 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Season summary, Home and away season\nCarlton finished the season with a win-loss record of 11\u201311, the ninth-best record in the league. In summary:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Season summary, Home and away season\nComing into the last two rounds of the season, Carlton needed to win both of its games to qualify for the finals; so, when Essendon won in Round 22 by six points, Carlton was eliminated from finals contention. However, during the season, Essendon was investigated over irregularities in its supplements and sports science program, and three days after the Round 22 match, the AFL excluded Essendon from the 2013 finals series (relegating it to ninth) as part of the penalties handed down over the scandal, promoting Carlton to eighth place. Carlton then needed to win or draw, or lose and see other results fall favourably, in the final round to hold onto eighth place \u2013 and succeeded, overcoming a 39-point third quarter deficit to record a one-point victory against Port Adelaide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Season summary, Finals\nIn the elimination final, Carlton faced Richmond, which was in its first finals match since 2001. Carlton trailed by 32 points early in the third quarter, before an eight-minute purple patch in which it kicked five consecutive goals to bring the margin back to one point; Carlton went on to kick six goals to two in the final quarter to win by 20 points. Sydney was a comfortable winner in the semi-final, leading by 54 points at three-quarter time before finishing with a 24-point win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Leading Goalkickers\nJeff Garlett was Carlton's leading goalkicker for the season, with 43 goals. It was the first time Garlett had won Carlton's goalkicking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards and records, John Nicholls Medal\nThe Carlton Football Club Best and Fairest awards night took place on 1 October. The John Nicholls Medal, for the best and fairest player of the club, as well as several other awards, were presented on the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards and records, John Nicholls Medal\nThe winner of the John Nicholls Medal was Kade Simpson, who polled 92 votes. It was Simpson's first John Nicholls Medal. Simpson won ahead of Andrew Walker and Lachlan Henderson. The top ten is given below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards and records, John Nicholls Medal\nThe following other awards were presented on John Nicholls Medal night:-", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Individual awards and records, AFLPA Awards\nFor each of the AFLPA awards, one or three Carlton players were nominated following internal vote of Carlton players; Marc Murphy was also nominated for the Best Captain award by default. Kade Simpson finished fifth for the Robert Rose Awards; no other Carlton player finished in his respective top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Northern Bullants\nThe Carlton Football Club had a full affiliation with the Northern Blues during the 2011 season. It was the eleventh season of the clubs' affiliation, which had been in place since 2003. Carlton senior- and rookie-listed players who were not selected to play in the Carlton team were eligible to play for either the Northern Bullants seniors or reserves team in the Victorian Football League. As in 2012, home games were shared between the VFL club's traditional home ground, Preston City Oval, and Carlton's traditional home ground, Visy Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232509-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Carlton Football Club season, Northern Bullants\nThe Northern Blues finished 9th out of 14 in the VFL, missing the final eight by four premiership points and percentage; there had been speculation that the Northern Blues could have been promoted to the eighth if the AFL and AFL Victoria had decided to exclude the eighth-placed Essendon reserves team from the VFL finals as part of the punishments for the club's supplements scandal, but the league did not apply this punishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232510-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Challenge Cup\nThe 2013 Carolina Challenge Cup was the 10th staging of the tournament. The tournament began on February 16 and concluded on February 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232510-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Challenge Cup\nD.C. United were the three-time defending champions of the preseason tournament, but did not participate in this year's edition of the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232510-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Challenge Cup\nChicago Fire has won the 2013 Carolina Challenge Cup. It was the club's first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season\nThe 2013 season was the Carolina Panthers' 19th in the National Football League and their third under head coach Ron Rivera. NFL.com ranked the Panthers' schedule as the strongest in the league, with opponents having a combined 2012 record of 138\u2013116\u20132 and a winning percentage of .543.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season\nAfter starting the season 1\u20133, the Panthers went 11\u20131 the rest of the way, including a then-record eight-game winning streak, securing their first winning season and playoff appearance since 2008, the first winning season under Rivera and the fifth in franchise history. During Week 12, they defeated the Miami Dolphins, also a franchise first for the Panthers. They also notched their third NFC South title, their first since 2008 and their fourth division title overall. The Panthers' season ended in the Divisional round of the playoffs with a 23\u201310 loss to the San Francisco 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Draft\nNote: The Panthers did not have selections in the third or seventh rounds. The team traded its third-round selection (74th overall) and a 2012 sixth-round selection to the San Francisco 49ers in exchange for the 49ers' 2012 fourth-round selection, as well as its seventh-round selection (219th overall) to the Oakland Raiders in exchange for wide receiver Louis Murphy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nThe Panthers opened up the regular season at home in an NFC battle with the Seattle Seahawks. Seattle got on the board first with Steven Hauschka hitting a 27-yard field goal in the second quarter. The Panthers gained the lead when quarterback Cam Newton made a 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Steve Smith with 3:13 left in the first half. The Seahawks cut the Panthers lead to one point when Hauschka put through a 40-yard field goal in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nThe Seahawks continued to dominate the second half when quarterback Russell Wilson threw a 43-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Jermaine Kearse in the fourth quarter with 10:13 remaining in the game. The Panthers were on the verge of scoring, however running back DeAngelo Williams fumbled the ball at the Seattle 8-yard line with 5:25 left in the game and the Seahawks recovered. Seattle went on to run out the rest of the clock and go to 1\u20130 while the Panthers fell to 0\u20131 for the fifth consecutive year. Also, the team dropped to 10\u20134 when Newton does not have a turnover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: at Buffalo Bills\nThe Panthers came into Buffalo looking to recover from a close loss in Seattle the previous week. In the third quarter Cam Newton bombed a 40-yard touchdown pass to Ted Ginn, giving the Panthers a 14\u20136 lead. Fred Jackson then ran in a 4-yard touchdown to put the Bills behind 14\u201312. The Bills converted the two-point conversion, putting the score at 14\u201314. The Panthers stalled twice in the red zone, forcing them to kick field goals to make the score 20\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: at Buffalo Bills\nAfter a Dan Carpenter 48-yard kick, the Panthers got the ball back, marched down the field, but were stuffed on 4th and 1 at the Bills' 22. The Panthers decided to kick the field goal to put them up 23\u201317. EJ Manuel and the Bills got the ball back and march down the field. With 20 seconds remaining in the game from the Panthers' 31, Manuel threw an interception, but it was called back due to Luke Kuechly, the linebacker, committing pass interference. With 2 seconds remaining from the Panthers' 2-yard line, Manuel hit wide receiver Stevie Johnson in the back of the end zone for the score. With the loss, the Panthers fell to 0\u20132, and 3\u201317 when Newton had at least a turnover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. New York Giants\nAt 0\u20132, the Panthers came onto their home turf desperate for a win. The Panthers romped the Giants (0\u20133) 38\u20130 behind seven defensive sacks and the flashy play of offensive weapons like Cam Newton and DeAngelo Williams. This was the largest margin of victory in Panthers history and this gave Giants' head coach Tom Coughlin his largest margin of defeat in his history of coaching the Giants. With the win, the Panthers increased to 1\u20132 and 4\u201317 when Newton turns the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Arizona Cardinals\nWith the loss, the Panthers dropped to 1\u20133. The team also dropped to 4\u201318 when Newton turns the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Minnesota Vikings\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Minnesota Vikings\nWith the win, the Panthers improved to 2\u20133 and also 11\u20134 in games where Newton does not commit a turnover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: vs. St. Louis Rams\nWith the win, the Panthers improved to 3\u20133 and 12\u20134 when Newton doesn't have a turnover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nWith the win, the Panthers improved to 4\u20133, and 13\u20134 when Newton does not turn the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nFor the first time in franchise history the Panthers scored 30 or more points in four consecutive games, routing NFC South rival Atlanta Falcons 34\u201310. With the win, Carolina increased to a 5\u20133 record. The team also improved to 5\u201318 when Newton turns the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 10: at San Francisco 49ers\nPutting two of the NFL's best defenses against each other, the game indeed proved to be a defensive battle. The reigning NFC champions San Francisco, coming off a bye, only managed three field goals, partly due to the absence of start wide receiver Michael Crabtree and an early injury to tight end Vernon Davis. The 49ers received the opening kickoff and drove to the Carolina 33, where, on 3rd-and-2, Frank Gore was tackled for a 1-yard loss. Phil Dawson kicked a 52-yard field goal for the early 3\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 10: at San Francisco 49ers\nPunts filled the rest of the quarter, with less than a minute left in the first quarter, Drayton Florence muffed the punt with Eric Reid recovering for San Francisco. The 49ers converted that into a 43-yard field goal for a 6\u20130 lead. After both teams swapped punts, Cam Newton was intercepted by Tramaine Brock at the 49ers 35 who returned it 41 yards to the Panthers 24. The 49ers drove to the Panthers 7 and Dawson kicked his third field goal, connecting from 25 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 10: at San Francisco 49ers\nThe Panthers finally responded on their next drive, storming 80 yards in just 8 plays with DeAngelo Williams bursting through for a 27-yard touchdown run, trimming the score to 9\u20137 at halftime. On the Panthers second drive of half they drove, 59 yards taking 5:44 off the clock, but Graham Gano missed a 48-yard field goal. The 49ers responded by driving to the Panthers 39, but Kendall Hunter was stripped by linebacker Thomas Davis and Quintin Mikell recovered for Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0012-0003", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 10: at San Francisco 49ers\nAfter both teams swapped punts again, Gano drilled a 53-yard field goal for a 10\u20139 Panthers lead, their first of the game. After both teams punted on their next two drives, Drayton Florence made up for his earlier mistake with an interception with 0:37 left to seal the 10\u20139 Carolina statement victory. The Panthers snapped the 49ers' five-game winning streak, extended their own winning streak to five, and further increased their record to 6\u20133. Also, the team's record when Newton commits at least one turnover increased to 6\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: vs. New England Patriots\nWith Monday Night Football back in Charlotte for the first time since 2008, it pitted the Panthers against the 7\u20132 New England Patriots, who were coming back from a bye. Down 17\u201320 with less than a minute left, Panthers quarterback Cam Newton threw a 25-yard touchdown to wide receiver Ted Ginn Jr., bringing Carolina up 24\u201320. The Patriots received the ball back, and with only three seconds remaining, Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was intercepted by Panthers safety Robert Lester in the endzone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: vs. New England Patriots\nHowever, a flag was thrown by back judge Terrence Miles just after the ball was intercepted because Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski, the intended target, was wrapped up by Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly. The officials initially called pass interference on Kuechly. With no time left, this would have resulted in an untimed first-and-goal from the one-yard line. However, after the officials talked it over, they picked up the flag and ruled that the pass was uncatchable due to it being underthrown, and the game ended in a Panthers win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: vs. New England Patriots\nThe prime time victory, before one of the largest crowds in franchise and Bank of America Stadium history, extended the Panthers' winning streak to six, increased their record to 7\u20133 and improved to 14\u20134 when Newton does not turn the ball over. Both teams ended the game with identical records of 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: at Miami Dolphins\nFor the first time during the season, the Panthers allowed a touchdown drive in the first quarter, and were down 16\u20136 at halftime to the 5\u20135 Miami Dolphins. However, Carolina came back in the second half and ultimately held the Dolphins scoreless. Trailing 13\u201316 with two minutes remaining, quarterback Cam Newton converted a fourth-and-10 from the Panthers' own 20 with a completion to wide receiver Steve Smith, and a touchdown pass to tight end Greg Olsen with 43 seconds left won the game for the Panthers, 20\u201316. Carolina extended their winning streak to seven (tying the franchise record), extended their record to 8\u20133 and also improved 7\u201318 when Newton turns the ball over. It was also the first time in their franchise history the Panthers defeated the Dolphins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nWith the win, the Panthers broke their franchise record winning their 8th straight game improving to 9\u20133 in the process giving the team their first winning season since 2008 and also improving to 8\u201318 when Newton turns the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: at New Orleans Saints\nWith the loss, the Panthers fell to 2nd place in the NFC South sitting at 9\u20134 as they also dropped to 14\u20135 when Newton doesn't turn the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 93], "content_span": [94, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: vs. New York Jets\nWith the win, the Panthers improved to 10\u20134 and also came out to 15\u20135 when Newton doesn't turn the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Panthers came into the game hoping to avenge their loss to the Saints two weeks prior, with the winner taking first place in the NFC South. In the second quarter, a strong rain blanketed the stadium, reminiscent of a similar storm in 2011 against Jacksonville. New Orleans scored late to go up 13\u201310 with less than two minutes to play. Cam Newton led the offense down the field and into the red zone on the following possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. New Orleans Saints\nWith under a minute to play, Newton threw the game-winning touchdown pass to receiver Domenik Hixon, who was replacing an injured Steve Smith. It was later reported the stadium's press box shook when Hixon caught the touchdown. Carolina's defense was able to prevent the Saints from completing a last-second Hail Mary. With the win, the Panthers clinched a playoff spot and improved to 11\u20134. The team also improved to 9\u201318 when Newton turns the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Atlanta Falcons\nDespite sacking Matt Ryan nine times\u2014a single-game franchise record\u2014the Panthers were not assured of a win until the final seconds. With 31 seconds to go and trailing 21\u201320, the Falcons were driving in hopes of setting up a game-winning field goal. However, center Joe Hawley snapped the ball before Ryan was ready. The ball sailed back 16 yards to the Atlanta 27. Hawley later said that he was distracted by the noise from a large number of Panther fans who made the five-hour drive to Atlanta, and thought Ryan was calling for the ball. With the win, the Panthers clinched the NFC South, the #2 seed and a first-round bye, finishing 12\u20134 in the progress while going 10\u201318 when Newton turned the ball over. They swept the Falcons for the first time since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232511-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, NFC Divisional Playoff Game: vs. #5 San Francisco 49ers\nThe Panthers played at home against the #5 seed 49ers. The 49ers led for most of the game and eventually won, ending the Panthers' season and dropping them to a 12\u20135 total. Also, Cam Newton went 0\u20131 as a starter for the Panthers in the playoffs while the team went 10\u201319 when he turned the ball over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232512-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Carolina RailHawks FC season\nThe 2013 Carolina RailHawks FC season was the club's seventh season of existence, and their third season in the North American Soccer League, the second division of American soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232513-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Castelar rail accident\nThe 2013 Buenos Aires rail disaster occurred on 13 June 2013 at about 07:30 local time (10:30 UTC), in Castelar, Buenos Aires Province, about 30km (19 miles) west of Buenos Aires, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232513-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Castelar rail accident\nA passenger train travelling in the morning rush hour hit a stationary train that was empty. At least 3 people were killed and another 315 were injured. This crash took place on the Sarmiento line between Once railway station and Moreno, the same line which was the scene of the 2012 Buenos Aires rail disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232513-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Castelar rail accident\nFollowing official investigations which determined that the brakes were in working order and that the conductor sped through three warning signals without attempting to apply them, the conductor, Daniel L\u00f3pez, was formally charged with negligent homicide on October 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232514-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Castilla y Le\u00f3n Cup\nThe 2013 Castilla y Le\u00f3n Cup (Spanish: Copa Castilla y Le\u00f3n 2013) is the fifth edition of this football trophy in its renewed version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232514-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Castilla y Le\u00f3n Cup, Competition format\nValladolid, as La Liga team, and Mirand\u00e9s as defending champion are directly qualified to semifinals. The other 12 teams are divided into four groups of three teams, where the top teams will qualify to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232514-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Castilla y Le\u00f3n Cup, Competition format\nEvery team will play two matches in the group stage and until the final, every match will be played in the field of the team of lower category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232515-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix was the sixth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona on 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232515-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, Report\nDani Pedrosa took his second consecutive MotoGP pole position ahead of Cal Crutchlow and Jorge Lorenzo. Pedrosa set a new circuit record for MotoGP with a 1:40.893, which beat his former teammate Casey Stoner's record of 1:41.186 set in 2008. Lorenzo went on to win the race, ahead of pole sitter Pedrosa, and Marc M\u00e1rquez. Valentino Rossi finished in fourth place, after the collision with \u00c1lvaro Bautista in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232515-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, Report\nTurn 10, a right hander after the back straight, had caught out many riders due to the hot temperatures on race day and caused many retirements during the first few laps of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232515-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, Report\nIn Moto2, Pol Espargar\u00f3 took pole position, and went on to win the race, ahead of Esteve Rabat and Switzerland's Thomas L\u00fcthi, who took his first podium of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232515-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, Report\nIn Moto3, Luis Salom took his second successive victory from pole position, ahead of \u00c1lex Rins and Maverick Vi\u00f1ales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232515-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, Classification, MotoGP\nHiroshi Aoyama was replaced by Javier del Amor after the third practice session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232515-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232516-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalans Dragons season\nThis article details the Catalans Dragons rugby league football club's 2013 season. This is the 18th season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232517-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalunya GP2 and GP3 Series rounds\nThe 2013 Catalunya GP2 Series round was a GP2 Series motor race held at the Circuit de Catalunya in Montmel\u00f3, Spain on 11 and 12 May 2012 as the fourth round of the 2013 GP2 Series season. The weekend also saw the first round of the 2013 GP3 Series season, and the debut of the GP3 Series' second-generation chassis, the Dallara GP3/13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232517-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalunya GP2 and GP3 Series rounds\nRobin Frijns took his\u2014and team Hilmer Motorsports'\u2014maiden GP2 Series victory in the feature race, ahead of Felipe Nasr. Stefano Coletti took his second race win of the season in the sprint race, beating Frijns by six-tenths of a second and further secured his championship lead with the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232517-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Catalunya GP2 and GP3 Series rounds\nTio Ellinas inherited pole position in the GP3 Series feature race when pole-sitter Kevin Korjus was given a grid penalty, and he went on to win the race. Aaro Vainio won the sprint race, leading home team-mate Korjus to give team Koiranen GP the lead in the teams' championship in after their first GP3 Series round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season\nThe 2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season (officially known as the 2013 Liga Postob\u00f3n season for sponsorship reasons) was the 66th season of Colombia's top-flight football league. Millonarios came in as the defending champions having won the title in the 2012 Finalizaci\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Format\nBoth the Apertura and Finalizaci\u00f3n had an identical format. Each championship was divided into three stages. The First Stage was contested on a home-and-away basis, with each team playing the other teams once and playing a regional rival once more. The top eight teams after eighteen rounds advanced to a semifinal round, of two groups of four playing once more on a home-and-away basis. The winner of each semifinal group advanced to the final of the tournament, which was played as a double-legged series. The winner of the final was declared the tournament champion and participated in the 2014 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Apertura, First Stage\nThe First Stage began in January and consisted of eighteen rounds and a series of regional rivalries on the ninth round. The top eight teams out of this stage advanced to the Semifinals. The first stage ended in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Apertura, Semifinals\nThe Semifinal stage began on June 15 and ended on July 7. The eight teams that advanced were sorted into two groups of four teams. The winner of each group advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n, Semifinals\nThe Semifinal stage began on November 16 and will end on December 8th. The eight teams that advanced were sorted into two groups of four teams. The winner of each group will advance to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Relegation\nA separate table is kept to determine the teams that get relegated to the Categor\u00eda Primera B for the next season. The table includes an average of all first stage games played for the current season and the previous two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Relegation\nRules for classification: 1st average; 2nd goal difference; 3rd number of goals scored; 4th away goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232518-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Aggregate table\nAn aggregate table including all games that a team plays during the year is used to determine First Stage berths to both the Copa Libertadores and the Copa Sudamericana. The best-placed non-champion will go to the first stage of the 2014 Copa Libertadores and the 2nd and 3rd best-placed non-champions will go to the first stage of the 2014 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232519-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera B season\nThe 2013 Categor\u00eda Primera B season was the 24th season since its founding and was officially called the 2013 Torneo Postob\u00f3n for sponsorship reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232519-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Format\nThe season consisted of two tournaments: the 'Torneo Apertura' and the 'Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n'. Each tournament will have an identical format of eighteen rounds with a round of regional derbies in the ninth round. At the end of the first eighteen rounds, the eight best-placed team will advance to the Semifinal round where teams will be sorted into groups and play a short double Round-robin tournament group stage. The winner of each group will advance to the Final round, which will consist of two legs. The winner will advance to the season final at the end of the Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n, with its winner being promoted to the Categor\u00eda Primera A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232519-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Torneo Apertura, Semifinals\nThe Semifinal stage began on June 2 and ended on June 23. The eight teams that advanced were sorted into two groups of four teams. The winner of each group advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232519-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Torneo Finalizaci\u00f3n, Semifinals\nThe Semifinal stage began on October 26 and ended on November 18. The eight teams that advanced were sorted into two groups of four teams. The winner of each group advanced to the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232519-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Categor\u00eda Primera B season, Promotion/relegation Playoff\nAs the second worst team in the relegation table, C\u00facuta Deportivo had to play a two-legged tie against Fortaleza, the 2013 Categor\u00eda Primera B runner-up. As the Primera A team, C\u00facuta played the second leg at home. Fortaleza won the tie and as a result were promoted to the Primera A for the 2014 season, while C\u00facuta Deportivo were relegated to the Primera B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232520-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship\nThe Cavan Intermediate Football Championship is an annual Gaelic Athletic Association club competition between Intermediate Cavan Gaelic football clubs. It was first competed for in 1925. The winners get to represent their county in the Ulster Club Championship and in turn, go on to the All-Ireland Intermediate Club Football Championship. Lacken have won the most titles, having been victorious 4 times. The current Intermediate football champions are Lacken who defeated Cootehill Celtic in the 2012 decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232520-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship, Format\n14 teams will contest the Hotel Kilmore Intermediate Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232520-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship, Format\n4 teams will play in a Preliminary Round, the 2 winners will enter Round 1 while the two losers will enter the \"back door side\" of the draw. 12 teams, made up of the 2 Preliminary Round winners and the 10 teams already through to Round, 1 will compete in Round 1 with 6 winners qualifying for the quarter final (Round 4). The 6 losers from Round 1 will join the 2 losers from the preliminary round on the \"back door\" side of the draw. These 8 teams will then be drawn against each other in Rounds 2 & 3 with the eventual two winners qualifying for the quarter final (Round 4). From Round 4 on (quarter finals) the competition will be \"knock out\". Quarter Final/Semi-final pairings will be based on an open draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232520-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Intermediate Football Championship, Format\nThe Preliminary Round & Round 1 are Championship proper while Rounds 2 & 3 are \"back door\" Rounds", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232521-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Junior Football Championship\nThe Cavan Junior Football Championship is an annual Gaelic Athletic Association club competition between the third-tier Cavan Gaelic football clubs. It was first competed for in 1913. The winner qualifies to represent their county in the Ulster Club Championship and in turn, go on to the All-Ireland Junior Club Football Championship. The current champions are Laragh United, who defeated Mountnugent in the 2012 decider on a scoreline of 0\u201310 to 2\u201303.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232521-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Junior Football Championship, Format\n10 teams will contest the Hotel Kilmore Junior Championship in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232521-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Junior Football Championship, Format\nTeams have been drawn into 3 groups, one 4 team (Group 1) and two 3 teams, (Group 2 & 3). The group stages will be played on a league basis. Where teams finish on equal points group placings will be decided in accordance with rule 6.20 of the GAA Official Guide 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232521-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Junior Football Championship, Format\nThe top team in each group will qualify for the semi-finals. The runner up in group 2 and 3 will play off (Round 4(a)), with the winner qualifying to play in a further play off against the runner up in group 1 (Round 4(b)). The winner of this play off will qualify for the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232522-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Cavan Senior Football Championship was the 105th edition of Cavan GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded teams in County Cavan, Ireland. The tournament consists of 17 teams, with the winner going on to represent Cavan in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232522-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nMullahoran were the defending champions after beating Kingscourt Stars after a replay the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232522-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nLacken made their return to the senior grade this year after winning the Cavan Intermediate Football Championship in 2012, while Crosserlough also returned to Senior ranks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232522-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Senior Football Championship\nBallinagh defeated a fancied Cavan Gaels side in the final to claim their 1st Senior title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232522-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Senior Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2013 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232523-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavan Under-21 Football Championship\nThe Cavan Under-21 Football Championship is an annual Gaelic Athletic Association club competition between Cavan Under 21 Gaelic football clubs. It was first competed for in 1975. Ramor United have won the most titles, having been victorious 5 times. 3 of these titles came when they amalgamated with Munterconnaught. The 2012 Under-21 football champions were Cavan Gaels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections\nLocal elections were held in the Province of Cavite on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. Voters selected candidates for all local positions: a mayor, vice mayor, councilors, members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the seven districts of Cavite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections\nIncumbent Juanito Victor C. Remulla of the Nacionalista Party, Lakas\u2013CMD and the local party Partido Magdalo ran for a second term and defeated 3rd District Representative Ayong Maliksi, his gubernatorial predecessor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections\nRemulla and Maliksi's running mates are both sons of incumbent senators. Remulla ran with actor and Liga ng mga Barangay (League of Barangays) Provincial Chapter President Jolo Revilla of Lakas\u2013CMD, son of senator Bong Revilla, while Ronald Jay Lacson, son of outgoing senator Panfilo Lacson, ran with Maliksi. Revilla went on to defeat Lacson by a comfortable margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Opinion polling, Gubernatorial election\nAccording to a survey conducted on 1,300 respondents by the Laylo Research Strategies (LRS) on April 14\u201321, Remulla led Maliksi by 14% or about 148,000 votes. The exact percentage of the respondents who will vote for the candidates was not shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Provincial elections\nThe candidates for governor and vice governor 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Provincial elections, Gubernatorial election\nJuanito Victor C. Remulla is the incumbent. Although he ran under the Alyansang Lakas at Magdalo (Alliance of Lakas and Magdalo), which was dominated by Lakas\u2013CMD candidates, he was still a member of the Nacionalista Party, which was affiliated with the Liberal coalition to which Maliksi belonged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Provincial elections, Vice-gubernatorial election\nIncumbent Recto Cantimbuhan, who was replaced as the Liberal Party's candidate by Lacson, ran as Independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections\nEach of Cavite's seven legislative districts elected a representative to the House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 1st District\nThe seat was vacated when Joseph Emilio Abaya was appointed as DOTC Secretary. His brother Francis \"Blue\" Abaya is his party's nominee for the seat. He ran against former Kawit Mayor Federico \"Hit\" Poblete of the Nacionalista Party. Director Joel Lamangan, who was going to run under the local party Partido Magdalo, withdrew his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 2nd District (Bacoor City)\nLani Mercado-Revilla is the incumbent. She faced off against former Bacoor Mayor Jessie Castillo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 3rd District (Imus City)\nIncumbent Ayong Maliksi ran for Governor. Former Board Member Alex Advincula is his party's nominee for the seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 4th District (Dasmari\u00f1as)\nElpidio Barzaga, Jr. is the incumbent and was also nominated by the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 5th District\nRoy Loyola is the incumbent and ran unopposed, his opponent Silang Mayor Clarito \"Areng\" Poblete (Lakas) did not run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 6th District\nIncumbent Antonio Ferrer ran for Mayor of General Trias; his brother, incumbent General Trias mayor Luis Ferrer IV is the party's nominee for the seat, he is also nominated by their old party, Lakas CMD. He squared off against former vice governor Dencito Campa\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Congressional elections, 7th District\nJesus Crispin Remulla is in his third consecutive term and is ineligible to run; his brother, former representative Gilbert Remulla is his party's nominee for the seat, and also nominated by Lakas. Remulla squared off against Tagaytay mayor Abraham Tolentino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Provincial Board elections\nAll 7 Districts of Cavite elected Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members. The first two candidates who obtained the highest number of votes were elected. Names in italics denote the incumbents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, Provincial Board elections, 4th District (Dasmari\u00f1as)\nIncumbents Teofilo Lara and Raul Rex Mangubat ran unopposed. Parties are as stated in their certificate of candidacies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections\nAll cities and municipalities of Cavite elected a mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty and vice-mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district. Names in italics denote the incumbents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232524-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Cavite local elections, City and municipal elections, 7th District, Bailen\nNote: Bailen was listed as General Emilio Aguinaldo, its former name, in the ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Cayman Islands on 22 May 2013. The incumbent United Democratic Party (UDP) government fell on a motion of non-confidence in December 2012 and was replaced by an interim government made up of former UDP members who formed the People's National Alliance (PNA). The main competition in the election was between the People's Progressive Movement (Progressives) and the UDP, with the PNA and a new political group the Coalition for Cayman (C4C) presenting an insufficient number of candidates to win a majority government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election\nThe Progressives won half of the seats (9), with the UDP and C4C taking 3 each, and outgoing Premier of the Cayman Islands Juliana O'Connor-Connolly holding the only seat for the PNA. The two incumbent independents were also re-elected. Progressive leader Alden McLaughlin formed a new government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Background\nIn the 2009 elections, the United Democratic Party led by its founder and former Premier McKeeva Bush won a majority government. Bush returned to office as Premier until December 2012, when he lost a motion of confidence in the legislature. The confidence motion was triggered by a criminal investigation of Bush and was supported by the opposition People's Progressive Movement and dissident members of his own party, including members of the cabinet. A new government was formed by these dissidents, led by Bush's former deputy Juliana O'Connor-Connolly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Background\nBush would later be charged with four counts of breach of trust, and five counts of theft. Bush continued to lead his party. O'Connor-Connolly and her cabinet formed their own party called the People's National Alliance, but only the five incumbent cabinet ministers stood as candidates under its banner. A fourth party, the Coalition for Cayman, put forward seven candidates, whilst 17 independents also contested the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Electoral system\nThe outgoing Legislative Assembly had 18 members, of which three were appointed (the Chief Secretary, the Attorney-General and the Financial Secretary) and 15 were elected. However, under constitutional changes passed in 2009, the new assembly will have 18 elected members. George Town gained 2 new seats, and Bodden Town gained one new seat. Each of the six districts forms a constituency, with six members elected in George Town, four each in West Bay and Bodden Town, two in Cayman Brac and Little Cayman and one in North Side and East End. The members of the multi-member districts are elected by plurality-at-large voting, where every voter can vote for as many candidates as there are seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Results\nThe opposition Progressives more than doubled their seat count to 9, bringing them one seat short of an overall majority. Progressive leader Alden McLaughlin has said he will talk with Change for Cayman (C4C) and independent MLAs about the possibility of supporting his government. Another option would be having an opposition member become speaker, which would give the Progressives a majority of 9-8 among voting members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Results\nThe opposition United Democratic Party (UDP) lost 1 seat but was down 6 from their 2009 result, and failed to sweep the West Bay district for the first time in 12 years. The governing People's National Alliance, a breakaway group from the UDP, lost 4 of its 5 seats. C4C, a new political organization, won 3 seats, while incumbent independents Ezzard Miller and Arden McLean (a former Progressive) held their seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Government formation\nNo party won an overall majority, but with the Progressives winning half of the seats and three times more seats than any other grouping, they're expected to form the government, either on their own or in coalition with independent members. It is expected that the government will be formed within a week of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Government formation\nIndependent members-elect from the C4C group and others had held preliminary talks among themselves to see about forming a coalition government with the Progressives. However, Alden McLaughlin's Progressives have secured a workable majority in the legislature by getting the agreement of outgoing premier Juliana O'Connor-Connolly to serve as speaker, leaving the Progressives a 9-8 majority of ordinarily voting members. McLaughlin held a news conference on Saturday May 25 naming the Progressives that would sit in cabinet and also indicating that he had asked C4C-backed MLA Tara Rivers to join the cabinet, which would give the government a 10-7 working majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Government formation\nThereafter, Rivers held a public meeting to assess her constituents views on whether to join the cabinet, the public was nearly unanimous in supporting her to join. Following Rivers public meeting, the two other C4C MLAs indicated that they would reconsider their previous announcement not to join the government. As a result, McLaughlin cancelled a planned morning news conference on Tuesday May 28 in order to have further discussions with the C4C MLAs with an eye to a potential Progressives/C4C coalition government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Government formation\nLater Tuesday, it was announced that O'Connor-Connolly would join the Progressive caucus despite earlier statements that she would not do so when she was announced as speaker. As a result, the Progressives have a true majority of 10-8 allowing them to be appointed to government by the Governor of the Cayman Islands without a vote of the legislature. Thereafter, McLaughlin announced the full make-up of his cabinet, including a portfolio for C4C MLA Tara Rivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Government formation\nMcLaughlin also announced that C4C MLA Winston Connolly would sit in the government caucus and play a role in Rivers' ministry in a non-cabinet position and that the government would support the other C4C MLA Roy McTaggart for chair of the Public Accounts Committee. Two weeks after the election, McTaggart crossed the floor to sit with his C4C colleagues in the government caucus, accordingly he will have to step down from his position as Chairman of Public Accounts, a post always occupied by an opposition member. This leaves the government with a 13-5 majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Electoral reform\nThis will be the last election under the block voting system as a result of the election of the Progressives. Progressive leader Alden McLaughlin reiterated his commitment after the election to move to a \"one man one vote\" system with a single-member electoral districts. McLaughlin will use the result of the non-binding 2012 referendum on such a system rather than holding a new referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Eligibility challenges\nAfter the results of the vote, the husband of the fifth-place finisher in the West Bay electoral district Velma Powery-Hewitt, filed a suit in the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands challenging the eligibility of Tara Rivers to have run and serve in the legislative assembly. Had the challenge been successful, Powery-Hewitt stood to take Rivers' seat in the legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Eligibility challenges\nThe Cayman Islands constitution forbids election to the legislative assembly to a person:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Eligibility challenges\nThe challenger argued that Rivers had been absent to the UK for more than 400 days where Rivers worked at a law firm. Rivers argued that her work at the law firm included extensive training and that it should be deemed \"attendance as a student at (an) educational establishment\" as permitted by the constitution. The challenger also argued that by applying for and receiving a U.S. passport, to which Rivers was entitled by virtue of having been born there, she was express allegiance to the United States and was therefore ineligible under the restrictions against dual citizenship. Rivers argued that no allegiance was given in exchange for the passport and that she was required by law as a U.S. citizen to enter the U.S. using a U.S. passport, not the passport of another country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232525-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Caymanian general election, Aftermath, Eligibility challenges\nThe court ruled with Rivers and she was allowed to keep her seat. This prompted some complaint from others who did not present themselves as candidates though they had the same qualifications as Rivers but were advised they were ineligible to run by elections officials, and by an individual who had renounced her U.S. citizenship believing she had to do so to run. Powery-Hewitt's husband later attempted to appeal the decision, but as the Constitution states that electoral questions are the sole jurisdiction of the Grand Court, the Court of Appeal declined to hear the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232526-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu City local elections\nLocal elections were held in Cebu City on May 13, 2013 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-00232526-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu City local elections, Mayoralty and vice mayoralty elections, Mayor\nMichael Rama ran for his second term as the Mayor of Cebu City under his newly-formed group Team Rama facing off against his former partymate in Bando Osme\u00f1a \u2013 Pundok Kauswagan (BO\u2013PK), Tomas Osme\u00f1a, whom he served with as vice mayor from 2001 to 2010. Rama went on to defeat Osme\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232526-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu City local elections, Mayoralty and vice mayoralty elections, Vice Mayor\nJoy Augustus Young ran for his second term as the Vice Mayor of Cebu City and was defeated by a slim margin against incumbent Cebu City Councilor for the North District Edgardo Labella, who also left BO\u2013PK to join Rama's group. It was Labella's first time to run for the said position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232526-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu City local elections, District representatives, 1st District\nIncumbent representative Rachel Marguerite del Mar, who was still eligible for a second term, decided against running for re-election to give way to her father Raul del Mar. The elder Del Mar defeated actress and talent manager Annabelle Rama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232526-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu City local elections, District representatives, 2nd District\nIncumbent representative Tomas Osme\u00f1a, who was still eligible for a second term, decided against running for re-election to reclaim his old post as Mayor of Cebu City. Incumbent Cebu City Councilor for the South District Rodrigo Abellanosa defeated lawyer Aristotle Batuhan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections\nLocal elections was held in the Province of Cebu last May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the six districts of Cebu. Incumbent governor Gwendolyn Garcia is barred for seeking another term because she is limited to three terms only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn April 27, 2012, incumbent governor Gwendolyn Garcia announced her intention to run for senator. She also announced that her brother incumbent 3rd District Representative Pablo John Garcia will be running as governor of the province. On September 1, 2012, One Cebu announced that former Danao City vice mayor Ramon \"Boboy\" Durano IV as Garcia's running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn May 12, 2012, businessman Glenn Soco announced his intention to run for vice governor. He ran for that position in 2010 as running mate of Garcia. However, he lost to incumbent Greg Sanchez. He filed a protest, but Sanchez died on April 29, 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn May 25, 2012, Garcia joined PDP-Laban and was included in the senatorial line-up of the United Nationalist Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn September 20, 2012 Vice President Jejomar Binay announced that Garcia withdrew her senatorial bid and will run for the House of Representatives instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn September 28, 2012, Hilario Davide III, was announced by the Liberal Party as its candidate for governor. Davide first ran in 2010, but was defeated by Garcia. His running-mate is incumbent vice governor Agnes Magpale of the Barug Alang sa Kauswagan ug Demokrasya or Bakud. Magpale assumed as vice governor upon the death of former vice governor Greg Sanchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn December 17, 2012, Incumbent governor Gwendolyn Garcia ordered a six-month suspension. (See full description about the suspension here)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Provincial Elections\nThe candidates for governor and vice governor 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Provincial Elections, Candidates for Governor\nIncumbent Gwendolyn Garcia is on her third term and is ineligible to run. She is running for congresswoman. Her brother, incumbent congressman Pablo John Garcia is running in her place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Provincial Elections, Candidates for Vice-Governor\nAgnes Magpale is the incumbent after vice governor Gregorio Sanchez (+) died, she is running against businessman Glenn Soco and former Danao city vice mayor Ramon Durano IV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections\nEach of Cebu's Six and 3 others legislative districts will elect each representative to the House of Representatives. The candidate with the highest number of votes wins the seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections, 1st District\nIncumbent Eduardo Gullas is term limited; he will run for mayor of Talisay City. His party nominated his grandson, Gerald Anthony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections, 3rd District\nIncumbent Pablo John Garcia is running for governor instead. His sister Incumbent Governor Gwendolyn Garcia is party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections, 5th District\nIncumbent Ramon Durano VI is term-limited and running for Danao city vice mayor instead, his brother former tourism secretary Joseph Ace Durano is running under Liberal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections, 6th District\nGabriel Luis Quisimbing is the incumbent, his opponent is former congresswoman Nerissa Corazon Soon-Ruiz running under UNA", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections, Cebu City, 1st District\nIncumbent Rachel del Mar is not running to give way to her father, former congressman Raul del Mar who is vying for seat again, he will face actress and manager Annabelle Rama-Gutierrez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections, Cebu City, 2nd District\nIncumbent Tomas Osme\u00f1a is running for mayor against incumbent Cebu City mayor Mike Rama, his party nominated Rodrigo Abellanosa for south district congressional post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Congressional elections, Lapu-Lapu City\nIncumbent Arturo Radaza is not running, his daughter Aileen Radaza is party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan elections\nAll 6 Districts of Cebu will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections\nAll municipalities and City of Cebu will elect mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty and vice-mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 1st District, Mayoral election, Carcar City\nNicepuro Apura is the incumbent. his primary opponent is councilor Roberto Aleonar, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 100], "content_span": [101, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 1st District, Mayoral election, Talisay City\nIncumbent Socrates Fernandez is not running. Congressman Eduardo Gullas is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 101], "content_span": [102, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 1st District, Mayoral election, Minglanilla\nIncumbent Eduardo Selma is not running, His party nominate vice mayor Elanito Pe\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 100], "content_span": [101, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Alcantara\nPrudencio Barino, Jr. is the incumbent. his opponent is councilor Fredo Ca\u00f1ete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 98], "content_span": [99, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Alcoy\nNick Delo Santos is the incumbent. his opponent is councilor Ompong Delo Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 94], "content_span": [95, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Alegria\nIncumbent Emelita Guisadio is not running, her husband Raul Guisadio is running for her place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 96], "content_span": [97, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Badian\nRobburt Librando is the incumbent. he will face vice mayor Fructouso Caballero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 95], "content_span": [96, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Boljoon\nIncumbent Teresita Delis is not running, vice mayor Merlou Derama is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 96], "content_span": [97, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Dalaguete\nIncumbent Ronald Allan Cesante is running for her reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 98], "content_span": [99, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Ginatilan\nIncumbent Antonio Singco is term-limited, vice mayor Dean Michael Singco is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 98], "content_span": [99, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Malabuyoc\nIncumbent Daisy Creus is not running, vice mayor Lito Creus is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 98], "content_span": [99, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Oslob\nRonald Guaren is the incumbent. his opponent is vice mayor Jun Tumulak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 94], "content_span": [95, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 2nd District, Mayoral Election, Samboan\nRaymond Joseph Calderon is the incumbent. his primary opponent is vice mayor Boy Capa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 96], "content_span": [97, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 3rd District, Mayoral Election, Toledo City\nRudy Espinosa is the incumbent. his opponent is former senator John Henry Osme\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 100], "content_span": [101, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 3rd District, Mayoral Election, Aloguinsan\nIncumbent Augustus Moreno is swapping post to her wife vice mayor Cynthia Moreno. Cynthia challenger is councilor Malou Ripdos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 99], "content_span": [100, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 3rd District, Mayoral Election, Barili\nTeresito Mari\u00f1as is the incumbent. his opponent is vice mayor Marlon Garcia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 95], "content_span": [96, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 3rd District, Mayoral Election, Pinamungajan\nIncumbent Geraldine Yapha is running for Congress, Estralla Yapha is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 101], "content_span": [102, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 4th District, Mayoral Election, Bogo City\nCelestino Martinez, Jr. is the incumbent. his opponent is daughter of Congressman Benhur Salimbangon, Marie Daphne Salimbangon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 98], "content_span": [99, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 4th District, Mayoral Election, Bantayan\nIncumbent Ian Christopher Escario is running for his reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 97], "content_span": [98, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 4th District, Mayoral Election, Daanbantayan\nMaria Luisa Loot is the incumbent. his opponent is Augusto Corro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 101], "content_span": [102, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 4th District, Mayoral Election, San Remigio\nJay Olivar is the incumbent. he will face former mayor Mariano Martinez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 100], "content_span": [101, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 4th District, Mayoral Election, Tabogon\nIncumbent Eusebio Dungog is not running, Roland Quinain is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 96], "content_span": [97, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 4th District, Mayoral Election, Tabuelan\nRex Casiano Gerona is the incumbent. his opponent is vice mayor Wilma Zamora.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 97], "content_span": [98, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 5th District, Mayoral Election, Danao City\nRamon Durano, Jr. is the incumbent. he will face his brother vice mayor Ramon Durano III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 99], "content_span": [100, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, 5th District, Mayoral Election, Poro\nIncumbent Luciano Rama, Jr. is running for his reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 93], "content_span": [94, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, Cebu City Mayoral Election\nMike Rama is the incumbent. He faced off 2nd District Congressman Tomas Osme\u00f1a, who served as mayor from 2001 until 2010. He is the brother of Senator Serge Osme\u00f1a and grandson of former president Sergio Osme\u00f1a Sr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232527-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Cebu local elections, City and Municipal elections, Lapu-Lapu City Mayoral Election\nPaz Radaza is the incumbent. She faced Liberal Party bet Jun Pelaez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232528-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cedar Rapids Titans season\nThe 2013 Cedar Rapids Titans season was the second season of the Cedar Rapids Titans as a football franchise in the Indoor Football League (IFL). One of just nine teams competing in the IFL for the 2013 season, the Cedar Rapids Titans were members of the league's United Conference. The team played their home games at the Cedar Rapids Ice Arena in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The Titans had been scheduled to play this season in the renovated U.S. Cellular Center but construction delays kept that building from re-opening during the 2013 IFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232528-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cedar Rapids Titans season, Off-field moves\nAll Titans games, home and away, were broadcast live on WMT-FM (95.7 FM) this season. Play-by-play duties were split by local radio hosts Dan Egger and Jon Swisher plus Jarod Aarons doing color commentary during home games. In addition, home games were televised on a tape-delay via Mediacom's MC22 with Rob Brooks and Jerry Kiwala calling the action. Local media coverage included a weekly wrap-up show titled Titans Extra hosted by Rob Brooks, head coach Mark Stoute, and general manager Chris Kokalis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232528-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cedar Rapids Titans season, Off-field moves\nShortly before the 2013 season began, the owner of the Cheyenne Warriors died and the IFL revised its schedule to accommodate the now 9-team league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232528-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cedar Rapids Titans season, Off-field moves\nOn March 4, 2013, minority owner Mike Polaski placed an advertisement on Craigslist offering his 20 percent stake in the Titans for sale. The restaurateur cited a \"downturn in [his] core business\" for seeking $80,000 for his fifth of the team's shares. The ad was taken down after local media reports about the sale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232528-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cedar Rapids Titans season, Roster moves\nThe coaching staff for 2013 included head coach Mark Stoute and assistant coaches Sean Ponder, Michael Custer, and Ed Flanagan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232529-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Championships in Athletics\nThe 24th Central American Championships in Athletics were held at the Estadio de Atletismo del Instituto Nicarag\u00fcense de Deportes in Managua, Nicaragua, between June 21\u201323, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232529-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Championships in Athletics\nA total of 43 events were contested, 22 by men and 21 by women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232529-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Championships in Athletics, Team trophies\nCosta Rica won the team trophies in all three categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232529-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Championships in Athletics, Participation\nAn unofficial count yields the participation of about 226 athletes from 7 countries:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232530-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Games\nThe 2013 Central American Games, the X edition of the Central American Games, were celebrated in San Jos\u00e9, Costa Rica from 3 to 17 March 2013. It was largest multi-sport event organized in Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232530-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Games\nThe games were officially opened by Costa Rican president Laura Chinchilla. Torch lighter was swimmer Sylvia Poll, who won the silver medal at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232531-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics\nThe 2013 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics took place on May 24\u201326, 2013. The event was held at the Estadio Nacional in San Jos\u00e9, Costa Rica. Organized by the Central American Isthmus Athletic Confederation (CADICA), it was the 26th edition of the Junior (U-20) and the 21st edition of the Youth (U-18) competition. A total of 83 events were contested, 20 by junior boys, 21 by junior girls, 21 by youth boys, and 21 by youth girls. A total of 22 new championship records were set. Overall winner on points was Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232531-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Medal summary\nComplete results can be found on the CADICA and FECOA webpages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232531-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Medal summary, Youth, Girls (U-18)\n\u2020: Event without points for team score. \u2021 : This year, a 500g javelin (rather than 600g as before) was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 101], "content_span": [102, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232531-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232531-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Participation\nA total number of 247 athletes and 43 officials were reported to participate in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232532-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Age Group Championships in Athletics\nThe 15th Central American and Caribbean Age Group Championships in Athletics were hosted by the Cura\u00e7aose Atletiek Bond (CAB), and were held at the Sentro Deportivo Korsou in Brievengat, Cura\u00e7ao between July 29\u201330, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232532-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Age Group Championships in Athletics, Participation\nThe published competition results report the participation of 156 athletes in 23 teams from 22 countries. The announced athletes from the Cayman Islands, Dominica, and Honduras did not appear in the results lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 87], "content_span": [88, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232533-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics\nThe 24th Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics were held at the Pista de Atletismo \"Ernesto Canto\" del Complejo Ol\u00edmpico Bicentenario in Morelia, Michoac\u00e1n, Mexico, between July 5\u20137, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232533-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics\nA total of 44 events were contested, 22 by men and 22 by women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232533-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics\nA detailed analysis of the championships was published by Javier Clavelo Robinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232533-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics, Records\nTwo new Central American and Caribbean Championships records and a couple of other (mainly national) records were set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232533-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics, Medal summary, Women\n\u2020: In women's 10000 m, some athletes were invited to start out of competition. Martha Iris V\u00e1zquez from \u00a0Mexico came in second in 35:49.23 min, and Violeta G\u00f3mez, also from \u00a0Mexico, came in 4th in 37:14.57 min.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 84], "content_span": [85, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232533-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics, Participation\nThe published competition results report the participation of about 338 athletes from 28 countries. Colombia, Panama and Suriname sent their athletes to the South American Championships held in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia at the same weekend. Aruba, Belize and Nicaragua did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232534-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results\nThese are the results of the 2013 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics which took place on July 5\u20137 in Morelia, Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232535-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Arkansas Bears football team\nThe 2013 Central Arkansas Bears football team represented the University of Central Arkansas in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bears were led by 14th-year head coach Clint Conque and played their home games at Estes Stadium. They were a member of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232535-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Arkansas Bears football team, Media\nAll Central Arkansas games can be listened to on KHLR 106.7 FM and are streamed online through the station's website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232536-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team\nThe 2013 Central Connecticut Blue Devils football team represented Central Connecticut State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth year head coach Jeff McInerney and played their home games at Arute Field. They were a member of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138, 2\u20134 in NEC play to finish in a tie for sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232537-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Java gubernatorial election\nThe 2013 Central Java gubernatorial election was held on 26 May 2013 to elect the Governor of Central Java for a five-year term, from 2013 to 2018. Three candidates contested the election, incumbent governor Bibit Waluyo as a member of the Democratic Party, Ganjar Pranowo of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), and Hadi Prabowo of the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS). The election was won by Ganjar Pranowo, who won with 6,962,417 (48.82%) votes in accordance with the Central Java Provincial General Election Commission decision on June 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232537-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Java gubernatorial election, Candidates\nThis general election was contested by three candidates. Incumbent, Bibit Waluyo, ran for re-election with Sudijono, the Chancellor of the State University of Semarang. The PDI-P (who had supported Waluyo in the 2008 election), brought Ganjar Pranowo, a member of the People's Representative Council as a candidate, together with Heru Sudjatmoko who was serving as the Regent of Purbalingga. Interestingly, the deputy governor of Central Java, Rustriningsih which had been predicted to be promoted by the PDI-P, was not nominated. According to some the PDI-P considered that Rustri was not polite in politics. Meanwhile Hadi Prabowo, the Regional Secretary of Central Java ran with the Regent of Sumedang, Don Murdono.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232538-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central League Climax Series\nThe 2013 Central League Climax Series (CLCS) consisted of two consecutive series, Stage 1 being a best-of-three series and Stage 2 being a best-of-six with the top seed being awarded a one-win advantage. The winner of the series advanced to the 2013 Japan Series, where they competed against the 2013 Pacific League Climax Series (PLCS) winner. The top three regular-season finishers played in the two series. The CLCS began on with the first game of Stage 1 on October 12 and ended with the final game of Stage 2 on October 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232539-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Michigan Chippewas football team\nThe 2013 Central Michigan Chippewas football team represented Central Michigan University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Dan Enos and played their home games at Kelly/Shorts Stadium. They were a member of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 5\u20133 in MAC play to finish in a tie for third place in the West Division. Despite being bowl eligible, they were not invited to a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232540-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Oklahoma Bronchos football team\nThe 2013 Central Oklahoma football team represented the University of Central Oklahoma during the 2013 NCAA Division II football season, and the 108th season of Broncho football. The Bronchos played their five home games at Wantland Stadium in Edmond, Oklahoma, which had been Central Oklahoma's home stadium since 1965. The 2013 team was coming off a 2-8 record in 2012. The 2013 team was headed by second year head coach Nick Bobeck. 2013 was the Bronchos 2nd as a member of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232540-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Oklahoma Bronchos football team, Preseason outlook\nThe Central Oklahoma Bronchos began the season expected to finish near the bottom of the MIAA; 11th in the media poll and 10th in the coaches poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232540-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Oklahoma Bronchos football team, Media\nEvery Central Oklahoma game will be broadcast on KZLS AM 1640 and KNAH 99.7 F.M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232540-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Oklahoma Bronchos football team, Coaching staff\nCentral Oklahoma head coach Nick Bobeck is in his second year as the Bronchos\u2019 head coach for the 2013 season. During his previous year with Central Oklahoma, he led the Bronchos to a record of 2 wins and 8 losses (2\u20138).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232540-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Central Oklahoma Bronchos football team, Game summaries, Missouri Southern State\nThis was the second ever meeting of the Lions and Bronchos. The Lions began the game with a 14-0 lead with only five minutes left in the first quarter. Lions quarterback Jay McDowell was 10 for 11 for 232 yards and ran for an additional 121 yards and 2 TDs. Broncho running Back Joshua Birmingham ran for 169 yards and 4 TDs. But the Lions large lead to begin the game proved too much for UCO to overcome. The Bronchos fell in their season opener for the sixth year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 85], "content_span": [86, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election\nThe 2013 Old Royal Capital Cetinje municipal elections was held in Montenegro on Saturday, November 16, 2013 to elect representatives in the City Parliament of the Old Royal Capital Cetinje. All 33 seats were up for elections. In the previous mandate (2010 - 2013), Cetinje was governed by Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS), with mayor Aleksandar Bogdanovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election\nThere was eight parties which participated in the elections, and DPS won the absolute majority or 19 seats in City Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Election Law\nUnder Montenegrin Election Law, lists and parties on the local elections must require support 3% of voters to gain one seat in the City Parliament. On every list, there must be 33 candidates for deputies or less.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Election Law\nDeputies in the City Parliament are voting for new mayor, with minimum support of 51 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Parties and campaign\nBefore campaign started, eight different parties signed their candidatures for the elections. City Elections' Commission verified all the lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Parties and campaign, Participants\nOfficially, participants of the Cetinje municipal elections 2013 were sorted by order and names from the next list:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Parties and campaign, Campaign\nCampaign for the local elections started during the first half of October 2013. During that period, the governing DPS with the slogan \"Simply Better!\" highlighted the results of local government's work during the previous mandate as the guarantee of good work in the future. Leader of DPS list was Mayor of the Old Royal Capital Cetinje Aleksandar Bogdanovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Parties and campaign, Campaign\nOpposition parties criticized projects and priorities of the local government from the past period. During the finish of campaign, opposition parties announced their past-elections coalition if they gain majority of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Parties and campaign, Opinion polls\nOne week before elections, few medias reported about public opinion poll (). The results indicated a big majority for the Democratic Party of Socialists - Da pobijedi Cetinje! - Milo \u0110ukanovi\u0107(48.5%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Voters and poll\nOn the Cetinje municipal elections 2013, voting right had 14,868 citizens from the whole territory of the Old Royal Capital Cetinje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232541-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cetinje local election, Results\nOn the election day, ruling Democratic Party of Socialists won the absolute majority (51%) of votes and gained 19 of 33 seats in the City Parliament. Four other lists also gained the seats in the City Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232542-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt\nThe 2013 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt was an attempted coup d'\u00e9tat against Chadian President Idriss D\u00e9by that was foiled on May 1, 2013. Clashes in military barracks east of the capital N'Djamena, as well as in residential area in the capital occurred on afternoon of May 1st, during the clashes in military barracks between 4 and 8 people were killed. Moussa Tao Mahamat, a former rebel leader was alleged of being the leader of the coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, he was arrested on the day coup was foiled. Four MPs, two generals, one journalists and several members of military were arrested on charges of participating in the coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232543-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chaguanas West by-election\nA by-election was held in the Trinidad and Tobago constituency of Chaguanas West on July 29, 2013 following the forced resignation of Jack Warner just three months prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232544-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell\nThe 2013 Challenge Bell was a tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 21st edition of the Challenge Bell, and was part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the PEPS de l'Universit\u00e9 Laval in Quebec City, Canada, from September 9 through September 15, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232544-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232544-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232544-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell, Champions, Doubles\nAlla Kudryavtseva / Anastasia Rodionova def. Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 / Lucie Hradeck\u00e1, 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232545-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell \u2013 Doubles\nTatjana (Malek) Maria and Kristina Mladenovic were the defending champions, but decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232545-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell \u2013 Doubles\nAlla Kudryavtseva and Anastasia Rodionova won the title, defeating Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232546-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell \u2013 Singles\nKirsten Flipkens was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Polona Hercog.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232546-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Bell \u2013 Singles\nLucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Marina Erakovic 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232547-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Chateau Cartier de Gatineau\nThe 2013 Challenge Chateau Cartier de Gatineau was held October 24 to 27, 2013 at the Buckingham Curling Club in Buckingham, Quebec and the Centre Sportif Robert Rochon in Masson, Quebec as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The purses for the men's and women's were CAD$42,500 and CAD$15,000, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232547-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Chateau Cartier de Gatineau\n2006 Olympic gold medalist Brad Gushue of Newfoundland defeated Guelph, Ontario's Robert Rumfeldt in the men's final. Toronto's Lisa Farnell won the women's event, defeating her third (Erin Morrissey)'s younger sister Katie Morrissey of Ottawa in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup\nThe 2013 Challenge Cup (also known as the Tetley's Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 112th staging of the most competitive European rugby league tournament at club level and was open to teams from England, Wales, Scotland and France. It began its preliminary stages in October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup\nWarrington were the reigning champions, but lost 12\u201316 to Hull F.C. in the semifinal, who would go on to lose the final 0\u201316 to Wigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, First qualifying round\nThe draw for the First Qualifying Round was made on Wednesday 10 October 2012 at Carrwood Park in Leeds, and took place on the weekend of 27/28 October 2012. A total of 40 teams played in the Qualifying Rounds. The clubs involved included 22 NCL Divisions 1 and 2, 5 regional league winners, the Yorkshire and Lancashire County Cup winners, 1 Cumberland ARL nomination and the British Police. Also in the draw were the Scottish champions and a Welsh representative, 4 teams from the 2011 Rugby League Conference National, 6 Student teams and a North West League representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, First qualifying round\nThe teams were drawn out by Damian Clayton MBE, the representative for the Armed Forces on the Community Board, and Martin Coyd, the Tier 4 representative. A total of 57 community teams were involved in the 2013 competition which culminated at Wembley in August; the three Armed Services teams and 14 Conference League Premier teams entered the competition at a later stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, First qualifying round\nA. Game switched to Recreation Ground (Whitehaven). B. Withdrew from Challenge Cup due to player shortages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Second qualifying round\nThe Draw for the Second Qualifying Round was made on Wednesday 10 October at Carrwood Park in Leeds, and the ties took place on 3/4 November 2012. The 20 winners from the first qualifying round were involved with the three Armed Services teams and 14 Conference League Premier teams entering the competition at a later stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first round of the 2013 Challenge Cup was held at the RFL's Red Hall headquarters in Leeds on 29 October. The home teams were drawn by Paul Kilbride, a former professional rugby league footballer who has been supported by the RL Benevolent Fund since suffering a serious injury while playing, and the away teams were drawn by Rugby League Cares General Manager Chris Rostron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, First round\nThe first round took place on the weekend of 1 and 2 December 2012, although the match between Bradford Dudley Hill and Leeds Met was played on 10 November. The match between Millom RLFC and Blackbrook Royals eventually had to be cancelled as the tie had been postponed four times and the away team, Blackbrook received a bye to Round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round of the 2013 Challenge Cup was held at Millom Rugby League Club on 18 January. The draw involved 14 Conference League Premier clubs, the three Armed Services teams and the five clubs that had progressed from the first round. The balls were drawn by Millom club stalwart Gary Kelly and Workington Town player Peter Lupton, who played for Millom as a junior before signing professional terms at London Broncos. The second round took place on the weekend of 9/10 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Third round\nThe draw for the third round was hosted in the Rugby Pavilion at the home of Oxford RL, the historic Iffley Road sports ground in Oxford on 13 March 2013 at 13:00 GMT. The draw was made by the actor Kevin Whately, who starred in TV series of Inspector Morse and its spin-off show Lewis, and Bruce Ray, the communications director of Carlsberg UK, who own the Tetley's brand that sponsors the 2013 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Third round\nThe third round of the Challenge Cup had the entry of the 23 Kingstone Press Championship and Championship One clubs, which for the first time in the competition, included Oxford, Hemel Stags and the Gloucestershire All Golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Third round\nThe third round matches took place on the weekend of 6 and 7 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Third round\nNotes:D. Match moved to Wilderspool in WarringtonE. Match moved to St. Helens's Langtree ParkF. Match move to Hull RUFCG. Match move to Laund Hill", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round of the 2013 Challenge Cup took place on 8 April 2013 at 15:30 BST at the Halliwell Jones Stadium in Warrington. The draw saw the 14 Super League teams joined by the 18 winning teams from the third round. The draw was made by Rugby League Hall of Fame member Alex Murphy and Bruce Ray, who is Communications Director of Carlsberg UK, the parent company of title sponsors Tetley's and was broadcast on BBC Radio 5 Live. Matches took place on 19, 20 and 21 April 2013 with the Hull Kingston Rovers vs St. Helens match being shown live on BBC One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Fifth Round\nThe draw for the fifth round of the 2013 Challenge Cup took place on Monday 22 April 2013 at 15:30 BST on BBC Radio 5 Live with ex-Wigan player Billy Boston making the draw. Matches were played on 10, 11 and 12 May 2013 with the Huddersfield-Leeds match shown live on BBC One on 11 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on 18 May with the draw shown on BBC Breakfast on BBC One by presenters Louise Minchin and Charlie Stayt. Matches took place over four days between 12 and 15 July 2013 with matches on Saturday 13 and Sunday 14 July shown live on BBC Two and the matches on Friday 12 and Monday 15 July shown live by Sky Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semifinals of the 2013 Challenge Cup took place on 14 July on BBC Two after the televised Warrington-Huddersfield match on the same channel and was made by Des Drummond and Henderson Gill. The matches took place on 27 and 28 July 2013 at neutral venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Final\nThe final of the 2013 Challenge Cup took place on 24 August 2013 at Wembley Stadium with the match kicking off at 15:00 BST. The match was shown live on BBC One with Wigan winning 16\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Final\nHull: Jamie Shaul, Jason Crookes, Ben Crooks, Kirk Yeaman, Tom Briscoe, Daniel Holdsworth, Jacob Miller, Mark O'Meley, Danny Houghton, Liam Watts, Gareth Ellis, (captain) Danny Tickle, Joe Westerman. Coach: Peter Gentle", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Final\nWigan Warriors: Sam Tomkins, Josh Charnley, Darrell Goulding, Iain Thornley, Pat Richards, Blake Green, Matty Smith, Ben Flower, Michael McIlorum, Lee Mossop, Harrison Hansen, Liam Farrell, Sean O'Loughlin (captain). Coach: Shaun Wane", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, Final\nReplacements: Gil Dudson, Scott Taylor, Chris Tuson, Logan Tomkins. Tries: Thornley (1), S Tomkins (1) Goals: Richards (4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, UK Broadcasting rights\nThe tournament was jointly televised by the BBC and Sky Sports on the second of their five-year contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232548-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup, UK Broadcasting rights\nSky Sports televised the other two quarter final matches live. The first on Friday July 12 between Sheffield Eagles and London Broncos and the second on Monday July 15 between Warrington Wolves and Huddersfield Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232549-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup Final\nThe 2013 Challenge Cup Final was the 112th cup-deciding game of the rugby league 2013 Challenge Cup Season. It was held at Wembley Stadium in London on 24 August 2013, kick off 15:00. The final was contested by Hull F.C. and Wigan Warriors. The game saw Wigan Warriors beat Hull F.C. by 16 points to nill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232549-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup Final, Background\nThe 2013 Challenge Cup Final marks Wigan Warriors's fifth final of the Super League era and Hull F.C. 's third. In addition it is the third time the two sides had met in the competition, with Wigan Warriors winning in both previous meatings during the 1958\u201359 Challenge Cup Final and 1984\u201385 Challenge Cup Final. Wigan had previously won a record 18 challenge cup finals compared to Hull's four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232549-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup Final, Route to the final, Hull F.C.\nAs a 2012 Super League team, Hull F.C. entered in at the fourth round. They drew eventual Championship 1 champions North Wales Crusaders thrashing them by 62 points to 6. The fifth round saw Hull face Super League side Wakefield Trinity, beating them comfortably 24 points to 6. The quarter finals saw them face Catalans Dragons winning 24\u201313. The semi-finals saw Hull F.C. draw eventual Super League runners-up Warrington Wolves, winning by a tight margin of 16\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232549-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Warriors\nAs a 2012 Super League team, Leeds Rhinos also entered in at the fourth round. A fourth round thrashing of Leigh Centurions 60 points to 10 placed them in the fifth round where a comfortable victory over Super League side Hull KR, beating them 46 points to 14. Warriors faced Widnes Vikings in the quarter finals, thrashing them 48 points to 4 Wigan then faced London Broncos in the semi-finals, nilling them by 70 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232549-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup Final, Pre-match\nThe pre-match entertainment was headlined by British classical crossover band BLAKE, who also sang the Challenge Cup and FA Cup Final anthem - \"Abide with Me\". At the end of their set, BLAKE were joined on the field by British soprano Natalie Coyle to sing the national anthem - \"God Save the Queen\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232549-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Cup Final, Post match\nWigan's win meant that their record Challenge Cup titles was extended to 19 wins in the competition since their first win in 1923\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232550-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Tour\nThe 2013 Challenge Tour was a series of professional golf tournaments collectively known as the Challenge Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232550-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Tour\nThe Challenge Tour is Europe's official developmental tour and is organised by the PGA European Tour. It was introduced in 1986 and was originally called the Satellite Tour, before being renamed with its present title in 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232550-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Tour, Tournament schedule\nThe 2013 schedule is set out below. The numbers in brackets after winners' names show the player's total number of wins on the Challenge Tour including that event. It is rare for someone to accumulate many wins on the Challenge Tour because success at this level soon leads to promotion to the European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232551-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Tour graduates\nThis is a list of players who graduated from the Challenge Tour in 2013. The top 15 players on the Challenge Tour's money list in 2013 earned their European Tour card for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232551-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Tour graduates\n* European Tour rookie in 2014T = Tied \u00a0 The player retained his European Tour card for 2016 (finished inside the top 110). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2016, but retained conditional status (finished between 111\u2013147). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2015 (finished outside the top 147).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232551-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Tour graduates\nKoepka earned a direct promotion to the European Tour after his third win of the season in June. Pavan and Otaegui regained their cards for 2015 through Q School.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232552-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenge Trophy\nThe 2013 Challenge Trophy was hosted in Halifax, Nova Scotia. In the final Glouchester Celtic (Ontario) defeated Surrey United Firefighters (British Columbia).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232553-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso\nThe 2013 Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 18th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Salinas, Ecuador between February 25 and March 3 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232553-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232553-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232554-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso \u2013 Doubles\nMart\u00edn Alund and Horacio Zeballos were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232554-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso \u2013 Doubles\nSergio Gald\u00f3s and Marco Trungelliti won the title, defeating Jean Andersen and Izak van der Merwe 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232555-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger ATP de Salinas Diario Expreso \u2013 Singles\nGuido Pella was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Alejandro Gonz\u00e1lez defeated Renzo Olivo 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(9\u20137) in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232556-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby\nThe 2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 20th edition, for men, and 3rd edition, for women, of the tournament and part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering totals of $50,000, for men, and $25,000, for women, in prize money. It took place in Granby, Quebec, Canada between July 15 and July 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232556-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232557-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Doubles\nPhilip Bester and Vasek Pospisil were the defending champions but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232557-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Doubles\n\u00c9rik Chvojka and Peter Polansky won the title, defeating Adam El Mihdawy and Ante Pavi\u0107 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232557-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Doubles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds received a bye into the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232558-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Singles\nVasek Pospisil was the defending champion but chose to compete at the 2013 Claro Open Colombia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232558-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Men's Singles\nFrank Dancevic defeated first seed Luk\u00e1\u0161 Lacko 6\u20134, 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232559-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSharon Fichman and Marie-\u00c8ve Pelletier were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232559-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLena Litvak and Carol Zhao won the tournament, defeating Julie Coin and Emily Webley-Smith in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232560-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Singles\nEugenie Bouchard was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232560-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Granby \u2013 Women's Singles\nRisa Ozaki won the tournament, defeating Samantha Murray in the final, 0\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232561-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Rimouski\nThe 2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Rimouski was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 7th edition of the tournament and part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour, offering a total of $35,000 in prize money. It took place in Rimouski, Canada between March 18 and March 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232561-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Rimouski, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232562-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Rimouski \u2013 Doubles\nTomasz Bednarek and Olivier Charroin were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Sam Groth and John-Patrick Smith defeated Philipp Marx and Florin Mergea 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20136(9\u20137) in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232563-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Rimouski \u2013 Singles\nVasek Pospisil was the defending champion but lost the final 6\u20137(6\u20138), 4\u20136 to quailificant Rik de Voest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232564-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay\nThe 2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 8th edition of the tournament and part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Saguenay, Quebec, Canada between October 21 and October 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232564-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232565-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Doubles\nGabriela Dabrowski and Alla Kudryavtseva were the defending champions, but Kudryavtseva decided not to participate. Dabrowski partnered with Maria Sanchez but lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232565-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Doubles\nSecond seeds Marta Domachowska and Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Fran\u00e7oise Abanda and Victoria Duval in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232566-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Singles\nMadison Keys was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232566-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Banque Nationale de Saguenay \u2013 Singles\nOns Jabeur won the tournament, defeating Coco Vandeweghe in the final, 6\u20137(0\u20137), 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232567-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil\nThe 2013 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil was a professional clay-court tennis tournament. It was the ninth edition of the tournament, which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Guayaquil, Ecuador between 11 and 17 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232567-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232568-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil \u2013 Doubles\nMart\u00edn Alund and Facundo Bagnis were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Dutch team of Stephan Fransen and Wesley Koolhof won their first title as a team defeating Roman Borvanov and Alexander Satschko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232569-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger Ciudad de Guayaquil \u2013 Singles\nLeonardo Mayer defended his title over Portuguese Pedro Sousa 6\u20134, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232570-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger La Manche\nThe 2013 Challenger La Manche was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 20th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cherbourg, France between February 25 and March 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232570-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger La Manche, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232570-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger La Manche, 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-00232571-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger La Manche \u2013 Doubles\nLaurynas Grigelis and Uladzimir Ignatik were the defending champions, but chose not to compete. Sanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana defeated Philipp Marx and Florin Mergea 7\u20135, 6\u20134 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232572-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger La Manche \u2013 Singles\nJosselin Ouanna was the defending champion, but withdrew from the tournament due to illness. Jesse Huta Galung defeated Vincent Millot 6\u20131, 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232573-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger of Dallas\nThe 2013 Challenger of Dallas was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 16th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Dallas, United States between 4 and 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232573-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger of Dallas, 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-00232573-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger of Dallas, 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-00232574-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger of Dallas \u2013 Doubles\nChris Eaton and Dominic Inglot were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Alex Kuznetsov and Mischa Zverev defeated Tennys Sandgren and Rhyne Williams 6\u20134, 6\u20137(7\u20134), [10\u20135] in the final to capture the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232575-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challenger of Dallas \u2013 Singles\nJesse Levine was the defending champion, but lost to Frank Dancevic in the quarterfinals. Rhyne Williams defeated Robby Ginepri 7\u20135, 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232576-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Challengers League\nThe 2013 Challengers League was the seventh season of the Challengers League. Playoff systems were expanded to six clubs and league was divided two groups and play with home and away each other, with top three of each group will be advancing to the post-season championship playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232576-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Challengers League, Competition format\nThe 2013 season run from March 2 through November 9. The 18 teams in the league are divided into the Group A and Group B \u2014 nine in the Group A, nine in the Group B. Each team competes against the other team in same group twice, home and away, the other group's team once, home or away, for a total of 25 games. The top three of each groups qualify to the Championship playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232576-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Challengers League, League standing, Group A\nLeague standing is calculated by group A result (16 round) plus inter league (9 round) result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232576-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Challengers League, League standing, Group B\nLeague standing is calculated by group A result (16 round) plus inter league (9 round) result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232576-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Challengers League, League standing, Inter League\nInter League was scheduled from May 19 to August 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232577-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chambani by-election\nThe Chambani by-election was a by-election held for the Tanzanian parliamentary constituency of Chambani. It was triggered by the death of Salim Khamis, the previous Member of Parliament (MP) who had held the seat for the Civic United Front (CUF) since 2010. The by-election took place on 16 June 2013 and the CUF candidate won by a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232578-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion Hurdle\nThe 2013 Champion Hurdle was a horse race held at Cheltenham Racecourse on Tuesday 10 March 2013. It was the 83rd running of the Champion Hurdle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232578-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion Hurdle\nThe winner was George Creighton & Rose Boyd's Hurricane Fly, a nine-year-old gelding trained in Ireland by Willie Mullins and ridden by Ruby Walsh. The horse had previously won the race in 2011 with the same owner, trainer and rider, and became only the second horse to regain the title after the 1973 and 1975 champion Comedy of Errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232578-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion Hurdle\nHurricane Fly won by two and a half lengths from Rock On Ruby, who had beaten him into fourth place in the 2012 running of the race. The 2010 winner Binocular finished fifth. Six of the nine runners completed the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232579-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion Stakes\nThe 2013 Champion Stakes was the 137th running of the Champion Stakes horse race. It was run over one mile and two furlongs at Ascot Racecourse on 19 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232579-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion Stakes, Full result\n* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232579-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion Stakes, Form analysis, Previous Group 1 wins\nGroup 1 victories prior to running in the 2013 Champion Stakes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 58], "content_span": [59, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232580-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion of Champions\nThe 2013 888casino Champion of Champions was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament held between 19 and 24 November 2013 at the Ricoh Arena in Coventry, England. This was the first time that 888casino sponsored the event, which was broadcast live on ITV4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232580-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion of Champions\nThe event was last held in 1980, when Doug Mountjoy won in the final 10\u20138 against John Virgo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232580-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion of Champions\nRonnie O'Sullivan won his 52nd professional title by defeating Stuart Bingham 10\u20138 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232580-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion of Champions, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232580-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Champion of Champions, Players\nPlayers qualified for the event by winning important tournaments from the start of the 2012-13 season to the 2013 Indian Open. The important events included all rankings events and winners the following non-rankings events: 2012 Premier League Snooker, 2013 Masters, 2013 Players Championship Grand Final and 2013 Championship League. With only 14 different players winning one of the qualifying events, the remaining two places were allocated to the highest ranked players who had not already qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20\nThe 2013 Champions League Twenty20 (CLT20) was the fifth edition of Champions League Twenty20, an international Twenty20 cricket tournament. It was held in India from 17 September to 6 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20\nSydney Sixers were the defending champions but they failed to qualify for the event. During the finals on 6 October 2013, in a re-match of the opening game, the Mumbai Indians won their 2nd CLT20 title after bowling out the Rajasthan Royals, defeating them by 33 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Background\nDomestic Twenty20 competitions faced several setbacks in 2013. The Bangladesh Premier League included a spot-fixing scandal where seven individuals were charged. Their problems with franchises missing their payments to players also continued and resulted in five franchises having their contracts conditionally terminated. The Indian Premier League also included a spot-fixing case where three players were among the 39 charged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Background\nThis year's Sri Lanka Premier League was cancelled after all franchises refused to pay their bank guarantees. All franchises had lost interest in participating in the tournament after they all made losses from the inaugural season. As a replacement, Sri Lanka Cricket created the Super 4's Twenty20 and its four participating teams specifically for determining their representation in the CLT20. It was the first time where a team is neither a club nor a franchise and, as such, the first time where a cricketing board directly receives the proceeds from the CLT20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Background\nIn Australia, the Big Bash League continued to be a success and led to more public interest in cricket, especially amongst families. The Caribbean Premier League was created and had its first season in August 2013. Billed as the \"ultimate cricket carnival\", its major attraction was its unique party atmosphere and it was an immediate success with high attendance for all matches. Another attraction was the involvement of legends of West Indies cricket in coaching roles and Hollywood stars taking equity interests in the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Background\nThe Big Bash League introduced to the game the Zing wicket system, with LED lights on the stumps and bails that light up at almost the instant the wicket is broken, and the umpire cam, a camera attached to the caps worn by the umpires. Both features were also used in the Caribbean Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Format\nThe tournament features a qualifying stage and group stage. The qualifying stage consists of four teams playing a round-robin tournament from which the top two teams qualify for the group stage. These two teams join the eight teams that received direct entry in the group stage. The group stage has the teams divided into two groups of five teams and each group plays a round-robin tournament. The top two teams of each group advances to the knockout stage. The knockout stage consists of two semi-finals, with the top team of one group facing the second from the other. The winners of the semi-finals play the grand final to determine the winners of the competition. Matches ending with the scores level are decided by a Super Over, where the winners of the Super Over are declared winners of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Format, Prize money\nThe winners of champions league got 1.5 million US dollars while the runners up got 1 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Qualification\nEngland teams have indefinitely refused participation in the tournament starting with this edition due to its dates clashing with the end of the County Championship. England teams had previously missed the 2010 edition due to similar scheduling problems. Contrary to the previous two seasons, Trinidad and Tobago received direct qualification on account of their good past performances. They were also chosen ahead of the winners of the newly created Caribbean Premier League. This edition was the second to feature a team from Pakistan and the first for editions held in India. The strained ties between the Indo-Pak governments and establishments had been the primary reason for Pakistan's exclusion before 2012. The winners of the Sri Lanka Premier League were originally scheduled to participate in the qualifying stage before the tournament was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Teams\nDue to the tournament format restricting player contracts from the 2011\u201312 (first) season to only be for that season, all teams of the Big Bash League underwent many changes to their squads. New contracts, however, could be multi-year agreements. The Sydney Sixers, winners of the 2012 edition, failed to qualify. Pakistan sent a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Squads\nThis edition saw the first instance of a player choosing his home team over his IPL team after qualifying with both. Of the 12 players named in the preliminary squads of more than one team, Kumar Sangakkara chose to play for the Kandurata Maroons instead of the Sunrisers Hyderabad from the IPL. In doing so, Sangakkara, per his contract, forfeited 20% of his IPL salary ($140,000). Sri Lanka Cricket would not receive the $150,000 compensation they would have otherwise received for not having Sangakkara. The decision came after long discussions between the two parties. The issue also raised questions of loyalty and money amongst the public. Sangakkara criticised SLC for how the affair was presented as such, saying \"I am the one who suffers\" regardless of his choice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Statistics, Most runs\nThe following are the top five highest run scorers in the main tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Statistics, Most runs\nThe leading run-scorer of the main tournament wins the Golden Bat award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe following are the five leading wicket-takers of the main tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232581-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe leading wicket-taker of the main tournament wins the Golden Wicket award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232582-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions League Twenty20 squads\nThis is a list of the squads that qualified for the 2013 Champions League Twenty20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232583-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions Tour\nThe 2013 Champions Tour was the 34th 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 26 official money events with purses totaling $50,750,000, including five majors. Bernhard Langer topped the end-of-season money list, winning $2,448,428. This was his second straight money title and fifth overall. Kenny Perry won the most tournaments, three. Fred Couples led the tour in scoring average for the second straight year and third time overall. The tournament results, leaders, and award winners are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232583-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Champions Tour, Tournament results\nThe following table shows all the official money events for the 2013 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-00232584-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1\nThe 2013 Championship 1, known as the Kingstone Press Championship 1 for sponsorship reasons, was a semi-professional rugby league football competition played in England and Wales, the third tier of the sport in the country. The 2013 season will see three new teams enter the division alongside the six remaining teams that were not promoted during the 2012 season. Coventry, who had been considered for entry into the division for 2013, will enter the division in 2014. This means that the 2013 Championship 1 season will consist of 9 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232584-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1\nThe promotion/relegation positions and the play-off format also revert to the normal formats, following the change for the 2012 season to allow the top four teams to be promoted to the Rugby Football League Championship and the champions of the division to be decided by a six-team play-off. This will mean two teams relegated from the 2013 RFL Championship and two teams promoted from Championship 1, which will be the team who finishes top of the league and winner of the play-offs. There is no relegation from this league as it is the lowest tier of professional rugby league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232584-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1\nAll of the teams will competed in the 2013 Challenge Cup and the 2013 National League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232584-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1, 2013 structure\nThe competition features the six teams that did not win promotion in 2012. They are Gateshead Thunder, London Skolars, North Wales Crusaders, Oldham, Rochdale Hornets and South Wales Scorpions. The four teams who were promoted, Barrow Raiders, Doncaster, Whitehaven and Workington Town are replaced by three new teams, which are Hemel Stags, Oxford RLFC and University of Gloucestershire All Golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232584-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1, 2013 structure\nA fourth team had been originally planned for entry for the 2013 to be the tenth team of the division. Northampton Rebels had been the original first team chosen in December 2011 to enter the division for 2013 but withdrew on 26 August 2012, due to Northampton Town FC (who were setting up and running the team) not wanting to launch a team that they thought had no chance of success. Coventry Bears, who was part of the application process for entry to Championship 1, was chosen to be the tenth team in September 2012, however the club will enter in 2014, to be given more time to prepare for entry to a semi-professional competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232584-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1, Season table\nThis table is correct as of 1 September 2013. Source: and .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232584-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1, Season table\nClassification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232584-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1, Season results\nThe regular league season sees the 9 teams play each other twice (one home, one away) over 16 matches, which will be played over 18 rounds, with each team getting two rounds off. The team that finishes first will be promoted to the Championship, while the teams who finish second to sixth at the end of the regular season goes through to the play-offs to determine the second promotion place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232585-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1 season results\nThis is a list of the 2013 Championship 1 season results. Championship 1 is the third-tier rugby league competition in the United Kingdom. The 2013 season starts on 29 March (Good Friday) and ends on 29 September with the Grand Final at Leigh Sports Village in Leigh, Greater Manchester, which replaces the previous venue of the Halliwell Jones Stadium in Warrington. It is the first season in the Rugby Football League for three teams, Hemel Stags, Oxford Rugby League and University of Gloucestershire All Golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232585-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1 season results\nThe 2013 season consists of two stages. The regular season was played over 18 round-robin fixtures, in which each of the nine teams involved in the competition played each other once at home and once away. This means that teams will play 16 games and will have two bye-rounds, where they will not play a game. In the Championship 1, a win was worth three points in the table, a draw worth two points apiece, and a loss by less than 12 points during the game earned one bonus point. Defeats by more than 12 points yielded no points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232585-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1 season results\nAt the end of the regular season, the team finishing first in the table will be crowned Championship and will be promoted to the Championship. The teams who finish the regular season between second and sixth will enter the play-offs with the winner claiming the second promotion place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232585-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1 season results, Play-offs\nThe play-offs will commence following the conclusion of the regular season and include the teams who finished second to fifth in the league and uses a 5 team play-off system, culminating in the grand final at Leigh Sports Village in Leigh, home of Championship sides Leigh Centurions and Swinton Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232585-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship 1 season results, Notes\nA. Match moved from Gateshead International Stadium to Filtrona Park, South Shields B. Match re-arranged 14 July due to Gloucestershire All Golds having ineligible doctor on original date of game C. Match moved from Prince of Wales Stadium, Cheltenham to Regentsholme, Lydney", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232586-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship Cup\nThe 2013 Championship Cup, (known for commercial reasons as the Northern Rail Cup), was the 12th and last season of the rugby league football competition for clubs in Great Britain's Championship and Championship 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232586-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship Cup\nLeigh beat Sheffield 43-28 in the final, which was played at Halifax's The Shay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232586-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship Cup, Format\nFor 2013, the format of the competition was changed to coincide with the expansion of the Championship from 10 to 14 teams. The competition began on 3 March with a group stage containing eight teams from the 2013 Championship 1 split into two groups. Each team played four games (two home, two away) with three of the games being played against the other teams in the group and the fourth game being played against a team from the other group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232586-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship Cup, Format\nFollowing the completion of the group stage, the teams finishing first in each group progressed to the knock-out stages where they join the 14 teams from the Championship to make up 16 teams. There were three knock-out rounds (play-off, quarter final, semi final) before the final on 20 July 2013 at The Shay in Halifax. The final took place after the inaugural Northern Rail Bowl final, involving the two highest-ranked teams from the group stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232586-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship Cup, 2013 Competition Results, Group Stage, Tables\nTables are correct as of 23 April 2013. Source: and . Classification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference. Competition Points: For win = 3; For draw = 2; For loss by 12 points or fewer = 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232586-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship Cup, Notes\nA. Game switched from Thunderdome to Craven Park due to Stan Calvert Cup match between Northumbria University and Newcastle University B. Game switched from Thunderdome to Blaydon RFC due to poor conditions of pitch at Gateshead C. Match originally postponed on 24 March due to snow", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League\nThe 2013 Championship League was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that was played from 7 January to 21 March 2013 at the Crondon Park Golf Club in Stock, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League\nDing Junhui was the defending champion. but he lost 0\u20133 against Martin Gould in the semi-finals of the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League\nGould won his fourth professional title by defeating Ali Carter 3\u20132 in the final, and earned a place at the 2013 Champion of Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Group one\nGroup one matches were played on 7 and 8 January 2013. John Higgins was the first player to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Group two\nGroup two matches were played on 9 and 10 January 2013. Ali Carter was the second player to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Group three\nGroup three matches were played on 21 and 22 January 2013. Ding Junhui was the third player to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Group four\nGroup four matches were played on 23 and 24 January 2013. Mark Allen was the fourth player to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Group five\nGroup five matches were played on 4 and 5 February 2013. Martin Gould was the fifth player to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Group six\nGroup six matches were played on 6 and 7 February 2013. Barry Hawkins was the sixth player to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Group seven\nGroup seven matches were played on 18 and 19 March 2013. Marco Fu was the last player to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232587-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League, Winners group\nThe matches of the winners group were played on 20 and 21 March 2013. Martin Gould won his first Championship League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts\nThe 2013 Championship League Darts was the sixth and last edition of a darts competition \u2014 the Championship League Darts. The competition was organised and held by the Professional Darts Corporation, with the 2013 edition having a prize fund over \u00a3200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts\nThe format of the tournament is similar to the Premier League Darts tournament, also organized by the PDC, except it is contested by a larger pool of players who are split up into a number of groups. Phil Taylor was the defending champion and won his fourth Championship League title with a 6\u20133 defeat over Michael van Gerwen in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Format\nThe first group consists of the top eight players from the PDC Order of Merit. These eight players will play each other over the course of a day, receiving two points for each win. All matches were contested over a maximum of 11 legs with a player winning the match on reaching six legs. After all players play each other, the four players with the most points will progress to the semi-finals with the winners of those matches progressing into the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Format\nThe winner of the final advances to the winners group which will take place at the end of the competition. The runner-up, losing semi-finalists and the players finishing fifth and sixth move into group two, where they will be joined by the next three players in the Order of Merit. The format of the second group was the same as the first group with players moving into the third group. In total there are eight groups before the final group takes place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Format\nThis format ensures that all players who do not win the group or finish in the last two positions have another chance to qualify for the winners group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Prize money\nThe Championship League Darts awards prize money per leg won, as well as to the eventual winner, runner-up and semi-finalists of the entire tournament. The amount of prize money awarded per leg won is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Prize money\nThe amount of prize money awarded to the winner, runner-up and semi-finalists of the tournament is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Tournament dates\nThe tournament takes place over nine days throughout September and October 2013. One group is played on each day. The dates are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Tournament dates\nThe tournament takes place at the Crondon Park Golf Club in Essex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Tournament dates\nNote: Raymond van Barneveld (10) and Vincent van der Voort (29) chose not to compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 1\nPlayed on Tuesday 24 September and was won by Phil Taylor. He also hit a nine-dart finish during a 6\u20135 league stage defeat to Adrian Lewis. Simon Whitlock and James Wade were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 2\nPlayed on Wednesday 25 September and was won by Andy Hamilton. Robert Thornton and Justin Pipe were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 3\nPlayed on Thursday 26 September and was won by Wes Newton. Brendan Dolan and Adrian Lewis were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 4\nPlayed on Tuesday 15 October and was won by Terry Jenkins. Mervyn King and Michael van Gerwen threw nine-dart finishes during the day. Dave Chisnall and Kevin Painter were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 5\nPlayed on Wednesday 16 October and was won by Michael van Gerwen. Mark Webster and Ronnie Baxter were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 6\nPlayed on Thursday 17 October and was won by Ian White. Kim Huybrechts threw a nine-darter in the league stage. Mervyn King and Colin Lloyd were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 7\nPlayed on Tuesday 22 October and was won by Richie Burnett. Jamie Caven and John Part were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Group stage, Group 8\nPlayed on Wednesday 23 October and was won by Kim Huybrechts. Colin Osborne and Mark Walsh were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232588-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Championship League Darts, Winners Group\nPlayed on 24 October and was won by Phil Taylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232589-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es Film Festival\nThe second edition of the Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es Film Festival was held from 12 to 18 June 2013, with actors Olivier Martinez and Julie Gayet presiding. Struck by Lightning, by Brian Daddelly, was screened at the Opening Ceremony, while Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini's Imogene was shown at the Closing Ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232589-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es Film Festival\nAlong with its competitive Official Selections for American feature-length films, American Shorts and French Shorts, the Festival presented a wide selection of important American and French movie premieres, a 7-film Brad Pitt retrospective to mark the release of World War Z and The TCM Cinema Essentials, a thirteen-film selection of American and French classics. Three Audience Prizes (Best American Feature-Length Film, Best American Short Film, Best French Short Film) were presented during the Closing Ceremony, held at the Publicis Cinema.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232589-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es Film Festival, Official Selection of Short Films, American Shorts Competitive Selection\nNew York University Tisch School of the Arts Shorts Selection", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 107], "content_span": [108, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232590-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chang-Sat Bangkok Open\nThe 2013 Chang-Sat Bangkok Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bangkok, Thailand between 26 August and 1 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232590-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chang-Sat Bangkok Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232590-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chang-Sat Bangkok Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as a lucky loser into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232591-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chang-Sat Bangkok Open \u2013 Doubles\nDivij Sharan and Vishnu Vardhan were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Chen Ti and Huang Liang-Chi won the title over Jeong Suk-young and Nam Ji Sung 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232592-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chang-Sat Bangkok Open \u2013 Singles\nDudi Sela was the defending champion but chose to participate at the 2013 US Open instead. Top seed Bla\u017e Kav\u010di\u010d won the title over surprise finalist Jeong Suk-Young 6\u20133, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident\nThe 2013 Chapramari Forest train accident occurred on 13 November 2013 in the eastern area of the Chapramari Wildlife Sanctuary, Jalpaiguri district, West Bengal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident\nThe accident killed or injured 17 Indian elephants and has been described as the worst of its kind in recent history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Background\nThe Wildlife Protection Society of India reported that 20 elephants were killed in 2007. In 2013, the tally on the Chapramari track, specifically, reached 17 including those killed by 13 November accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Background\nThe number of wild elephants in all of India is thought to be about 26,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Accident\nAt approximately 17:40 on 13 November, an Assam-bound passenger train travelling through the Chapramari Forest, Jaipur-Kamakhya Kavi Guru Express (19709), approached the Jaldhaka River Bridge at ~80\u00a0km/h and collided with a herd of 40\u201350 Indian elephants, killing five adults and two calves and injuring ten others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Accident\nSurviving elephants fled but soon returned to the scene of the accident and remained there until being dispersed by officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Aftermath\nAdditional Divisional Railway Manager B. Lakra stated, \"We have heard of the accident. All necessary actions are being taken. Special relief train has been sent and all Assam bound trains are being deviated through alternate route.\" The track was reopened for service after 12 hours. A meeting to discuss future prevention was held between forest and railway officials on 14 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Aftermath\nAccording to a telephone interview of Jalpaiguri divisional forest officer Bidyut Sarkar conducted by The New York Times, \"one female elephant, whose leg was fractured by the train and was unable to stand, fell into a ravine below the track, unreachable by cranes or trucks, so veterinarians descended and set up a camp near her to provide treatment\". The remains of one elephant were caught up in the structure of the bridge and necessitated disintegration for removal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Aftermath, Jalpaiguri protest\nA protest seeking better regulation for trains passing through the wildlife sanctuary occurred on 14 November in Jalpaiguri. In an unrelated statement by West Bengal's forest minister, Hiten Burman, it was noted that official requests to a similar effect have been disregarded by railway authorities in the past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Aftermath, Repercussions\nThe accident reignited discussion over the history and administration of the 168\u00a0km track, which spans New Jalpaiguri to Alipurduar and also passes through Buxa Tiger Reserve. Animesh Basu, a coordinator for the Himalayan Nature and Adventure Foundation, criticised the government's response to the issue of its national heritage animal being frequently hit by trains, highlighting the irony of Indian Railways' use of an elephant calf as its mascot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Aftermath, Repercussions\nElectric fencing, stationary lighting, and motion sensors have each been proposed as technical measures to prevent similar incidents in the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Investigation\nOfficials plan to launch an investigation into the causes of the accident. Speeding is suspected as a possible contributing factor. The train was traveling at 80\u00a0km/h and guidelines specify a limit of 40\u00a0km/h.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232593-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chapramari Forest train accident, Reaction\nMinister of State for Railways Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury stated that the accident \"happened outside the area which has been earmarked as elephant corridor\" and that it \"is the responsibility of the state government to protect the wildlife [because] railway officials cannot\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232594-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles Sturt Adelaide International\nThe 2013 Charles Sturt Adelaide International was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Adelaide, Australia between 4 and 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232594-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles Sturt Adelaide International, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232594-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles Sturt Adelaide International, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232594-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles Sturt Adelaide International, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232595-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles Sturt Adelaide International \u2013 Doubles\nSamuel Groth and Matt Reid won the first edition of the tournament 6\u20132, 6\u20134 against James Duckworth and Greg Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232596-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles Sturt Adelaide International \u2013 Singles\nMatthew Barton won the first edition of the event 6\u20132, 6\u20133 against James Ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232597-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles University Rector election\nThe Charles University Rector election, 2013 was held when term of the incumbent Rector V\u00e1clav Hampl ended. Former Dean of First Faculty of Medicine, Tom\u00e1\u0161 Zima was elected the new Chancellor. Hampl was ineligible to run for another term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232597-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles University Rector election, Voting\nChancellor was elected by academic senate that consists of 36 lecturers and 34 students. Candidate needed 36 votes to be elected. Micha Stehl\u00edk was considered front-runner but was eliminated in the first round. Zima was elected in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232597-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Charles University Rector election, Voting\nCzech President Milo\u0161 Zeman confirmed the election on 21 January 2014 and appointed Zima the new Rector . Zima stated that he wants less Bachellor students but more students of Magister degree. He also stated that he wants to defend academic freedoms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232598-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charleston Battery season\nThe 2013 Charleston Battery season will be the club's 21st season of existence. It is the Battery's fourth consecutive year in the third tier of American soccer, playing in the USL Professional Division for their third season. Charleston is entering the season as the defending USL Pro champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232599-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team\nThe 2013 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team represented Charleston Southern University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Jamey Chadwell and played their home games at Buccaneer Field. They were a member of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 10\u20133, 3\u20132 in Big South play to finish in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232599-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Charleston Southern Buccaneers football team, Game summaries, @ Colorado\nColorado's game vs Fresno State on September 14 was cancelled due to flooding, making Colorado need to add a 12th game. On September 30, Charleston Southern was granted a waiver to play a 13th regular season game to be able to play Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team\nThe 2013 Charlotte 49ers football team represented the University of North Carolina at Charlotte (also called Charlotte or UNC Charlotte) in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. 2013 was the inaugural season for 49ers football and they were classified as an FCS independent school, meaning they had no athletic conference affiliation for the 2013 season. The team was led by first time head coach Brad Lambert and played its home games on campus at the newly built Jerry Richardson Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. As the team was in their two-year transition period before reclassifying to the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), they were ineligible to participate in the FCS playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Recruiting, Recruiting classes\nCharlotte's first recruiting class was signed in 2012. The entire first recruiting class was red-shirted, as the 49ers would not play until the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Recruiting, Recruiting classes\nThe following recruits signed their letters of intent with the Charlotte 49ers football program for the 2013 recruiting year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Players, Player notes\nStarting redshirt freshman quarterback Matt Johnson of Maiden, North Carolina was named to the Jerry Rice Award Watch List.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Television\nLocal TV coverage was provided on WCCB with Sam Smith calling play-by-play. Former Carolina Panther Quarterback Brett Basanez and Jeff Zell with color commentary; and Brandon Davidow from the sideline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Radio\nRadio coverage for all games was broadcast by IMG College through the Charlotte 49ers Radio Network flagship station WZGV ESPN 730. The radio announcers were Matt Swierad with play-by-play, former Carolina Panther Kevin Donnalley with color commentary, and Bobby Rosinski with sideline reports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Campbell Fighting Camels\nTo open their inaugural season, Charlotte faced the Campbell Fighting Camels. Charlotte dominated the game, winning 52\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Campbell Fighting Camels\nCharlotte opened the scoring in the first quarter when Mark Hogan returned an interception 32 yards for a touchdown, marking the first points in Charlotte 49ers football's history. Justin Bolus scored the 49ers' first offensive touchdown on a 1-yard pass from Matt Johnson. That was followed by the 49ers' first two-point conversion on a rush by C. J. Crawford. Austin Duke caught another touchdown pass from Matt Johnson followed by the first of Blake Brewer's four successful point-after attempts that day, to close out the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Campbell Fighting Camels\nBrewer opened the second quarter scoring on the 49ers' first three-point kick from 35 yards out. Kalif Phillips added to the 49ers' point total with a 15-yard touchdown run. Campbell scored their only points of the day on a 1-yard touchdown run by Dakota Wolf, and a successful point-after kick by Alex Biby. Charlotte ended the first half by scoring on a 20-yard Blake Brewer kick with no time left on the clock. Charlotte led Campbell at the half, 35\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Campbell Fighting Camels\nCharlotte received the ball to open the second half and concluded the opening drive on Blake Brewer's third and final three-point conversion of the day, a successful 40-yard field goal. Trent Bostick closed the third-quarter scoring with a 47-yard passing touchdown from Matt Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Campbell Fighting Camels\nThe fourth quarter featured only one scoring drive, as Corey Nesmith Jr. ran in a 33-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Campbell Fighting Camels\nTop performers for the game included Charlotte quarterback Matt Johnson, who passed for 282 yards and 3 touchdowns. Charlotte running back Kalif Phillips had 9 carries for 66 yards and a touchdown. Charlotte receiver Trent Bostick had 4 receptions for 83 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, (DII) Chowan Hawks\nIn their second home game Charlotte faced the Chowan Hawks. Charlotte got their second victory in dominating fashion, winning 47\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, (DII) Chowan Hawks\nCharlotte opened the scoring in the first half on an Austin Duke 10-yard touchdown reception from Matt Johnson. Charlotte scored the first safety in program history late in the first quarter. Blake Brewer added a 27-yard field goal, followed by a Kalif Phillips 40-yard touchdown reception from Matt Johnson to end the first-quarter scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, (DII) Chowan Hawks\nChowan opened the second quarter scoring with a 35-yard touchdown reception for Antjuan Randall off a pass from Cameron Stover for Chowan's only points of the day. On the subsequent kickoff return Mikel Hunter returned the kick 96 yards for a touchdown, marking the longest scoring play in Charlotte's program history and ending the first-half scoring with Charlotte having a 26\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, (DII) Chowan Hawks\nTrent Bostick opened the third-quarter scoring with a 30-yard passing touchdown from Matt Johnson. Austin Duke closed the quarter with a 7-yard touchdown reception from Johnson as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, (DII) Chowan Hawks\nThe fourth quarter featured only one scoring drive, as Corey Nesmith Jr. caught in a 10-yard touchdown pass from Johnson, marking Matt Johnson's fifth touchdown pass of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, (DII) Chowan Hawks\nTop performers for the game once again included Charlotte Quarterback Matt Johnson, who passed for 256 yards and 5 touchdowns. Charlotte Running Back Alan Barnwell had 14 carries for 80 yards. Charlotte Receiver Austin Duke had 7 receptions for 83 yards and two touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, NCCU Eagles\nIn their third home game Charlotte faced the NC Central Eagles. Charlotte suffered the first loss in program history as well as their first ever home loss, defeated soundly by the Eagles, 40\u201313", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, NCCU Eagles\nNC Central opened the scoring in the first half on two Oleg Parent field goals, the first from 39 yards and the second from 20 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, NCCU Eagles\nNC Central scored the first touchdown of the game late in the second quarter on a Deyonta Wright 4-yard run. NC Central took a 13\u20130 lead into halftime, holding the Charlotte 49ers to their first scoreless half of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, NCCU Eagles\nCentral took the opening second-half kickoff in on Adrian Wilkins 100-yard kickoff return. Midway through the third quarter a Tony Williams IV 48-yard interception of a Matt Johnson pass was returned for another Central touchdown. Idreis Augustus added a late third quarter score on a 2-yard run, holding the 49ers pointless going into the final quarter of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, NCCU Eagles\nThe 49ers avoided their first shutout after an Alan Barnwell 2-yard run gave them their first score of the game. Central responded on an Idreis Augustus 5-yard run. On the final play of the game the 49ers scored their second touchdown on a Lee McNeill 10-yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, NCCU Eagles\nDespite his 5 interceptions thrown in the game, Charlotte quarterback Matt Johnson passed for over 335 yards, setting a new personal best. NC Central running back Idreis Augustus had 16 carries for 80 yards and 2 touchdowns. Charlotte receiver Austin Duke had 7 receptions for 97.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #15 James Madison Dukes\nJames Madison was a late addition to the Charlotte 49ers' 2013 football schedule. Originally Charlotte had been scheduled to play future C-USA opponent ODU in 2013 and 2014. ODU, having secured a game against Vanderbilt during the summer, dropped the return game at Charlotte in 2014. Needing a short notice replacement home game for the next season, Charlotte reached out to JMU. JMU agreed to add an away game against Charlotte in 2014 in exchange for a home game in 2013. Subsequently, Charlotte dropped the ODU game in 2013 and replaced them with the game at JMU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #15 James Madison Dukes\nThis was not only the first away game in Charlotte 49ers football history, but also the first night game and the first road loss. In addition, James Madison was ranked 15th in the Week 3 FCS polls at the time, making them Charlotte's first ranked opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #15 James Madison Dukes\nCharlotte recovered a JMU fumble on the opening kickoff, which set up a touchdown two plays later as Matt Johnson ran it in from 8 yards out. This early lead proved to be Charlotte's only scoring drive of the game. JMU answered on a 13-play scoring drive that concluded with a Dae'Quan Scott 9-yard rushing touchdown. Charlotte's next drive included 12 plays and got the 49ers to the JMU 1 yard line, but Charlotte turned the ball over on downs after being unable to break the plane of the goal line. JMU's next drive ended in a score as Dea'Quan Scott ran the ball in from 20 yards out for his second touchdown of the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #15 James Madison Dukes\nThe only score of the second quarter was a Michael Birdsong 37-yard pass to Quinton Hunter for a touchdown. Charlotte attempted a 58-yard field goal at the end of the half but missed. The halftime score was JMU up, 20\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #15 James Madison Dukes\nThe only score of the third quarter came on a Rashard Davis 36-yard rushing touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #15 James Madison Dukes\nThe final score of the game came in the fourth quarter as Khalid Abdullah ran in a touchdown from 2 yards out. The game ended in a JMU 34 to 7 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #15 James Madison Dukes\nTop performers for the game were all from JMU. Quarterback Michael Birdsong passed for 201 yards and 2 touchdowns, with only 1 interception. JMU running back Dae'Quan Scott had 35 carries for 176 yards and 2 touchdowns. JMU receiver Quinton Hunter had 3 receptions for 63 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Presbyterian Blue Hose\nCharlotte returned to their previous high-scoring ways on their second road game in program history. Presbyterian was the first of Charlotte's four games of the season against Big South Conference opponents. This would mark Charlotte's first ever away win. This would also be Charlotte's first nationally available game as part of ESPN3's broadcast package.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Presbyterian Blue Hose\nPresbyterian would score first on their second drive of the game. A Kaleb Griffin rushing touchdown from the 1-yard line. Charlotte would answer on the next drive with a Matt Johnson 3-yard scoring pass to Austin Duke for a touchdown. Presbyterian would take a 7-point lead into the second quarter after a Demarcus Wilson 1-yard rushing touchdown to close out the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Presbyterian Blue Hose\nKalif Phillips started a dominating Charlotte performance in the second quarter with a 1-yard rushing touchdown on the first drive of the quarter to tie the game. Charlotte would turn the ball over on an interception early in their next drive, but Presbyterian would be unable to convert the first down. Charlotte's next drive included 16 plays and resulted in an Alan Barnwell 1-yard touchdown to give Charlotte its first lead of the game. Charlotte would take a 14-point lead into the half after a Matt Johnson 53-yard pass to Mikel Hunter resulted in 7 more points. The halftime score was Charlotte up 28 to 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Presbyterian Blue Hose\nCharlotte continued their dominance into the second half as the 49ers ended their first drive of the half with a 23-yard Trent Bostick touchdown pass from Matt Johnson. Later in the half Kalif Phillips would get his second rushing touchdown of the day from 7 yards out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Presbyterian Blue Hose\nBlake Brewer would add 3 points off a 30-yard field goal after the first Charlotte drive of the fourth quarter stalled. Presbyterian's next drive resulted in a Demarcus Rouse's second touchdown of the day from 2 yards out. Charlotte won the game 45 to 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Presbyterian Blue Hose\nTop performers for the game were Charlotte Quarterback Matt Johnson, who passed for 269 yards and 3 touchdowns, with only 1 interception. Presbyterian Running Back Demarcus Rouse had 18 carries for 79 yards and 2 touchdowns. Presbyterian Receiver Toby Antigha had 6 receptions for 100 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Gardner-Webb Running Bulldogs\nCharlotte returned home from its two-game road trip for Military Appreciation Day to face their second ranked opponent and second Big South team of the year, the one-loss Gardner-Webb Runnin' Bulldogs. Gardner-Webb would score first, completing a Jordan Day 22-yard field goal after a 15-play drive. Lucas Beatty would complete a 3-yard pass to Kenny Cook for the Bulldogs' first touchdown. Charlotte scored their first touchdown of the day on a Kalif Phillips 6-yard run. The Bulldogs closed the first-quarter scoring on another Lucas Beatty pass to Kenny Cook for a 20-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Gardner-Webb Running Bulldogs\nThe 49ers would open the second quarter with a touchdown drive that would be completed with a Matt Johnson 16-yard pass to C.J. Crawford. Gardner-Webb would respond on the next drive with a Lucas Beatty 3-yard touchdown pass to Earnest Harmon. Blake Brewer added 3 more 49ers' points on a 43-yard field goal. On the final 49ers' drive of the half Matt Johnson completed a 26-yard pass to Austin Duke to tie the game at the half, 24 all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Gardner-Webb Running Bulldogs\nThe Bulldogs broke the halftime tie on their first drive of the second half, with Lucas Beatty completing another touchdown pass to Earnest Harmon from the 1-yard line. Gardner-Webb dominated the third quarter, adding two more touchdowns. The second score of the quarter would come after Blake Brewer's 48-yard field goal attempt was blocked by Drew White and recovered by the Bulldogs. On the same play Charlotte was penalized twice for unsportsmanlike conduct. The result was a Juanne Blount 1-yard touchdown run on the next play. The third GWU touchdown of the quarter would come on their next drive. Richard Jules would complete a 27-yard pass to Mike Estes. Blake Brewer would miss a 39-yard field goal to close out the half, with Gardner-Webb having a lead, 45\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Gardner-Webb Running Bulldogs\nCharlotte's fortunes would turn around dramatically in the fourth quarter, starting with a Matt Johnson 5-yard touchdown pass to C.J. Crawford. After a 3-and-out series for the Bulldogs, the 49ers would block the punt return and GWU would down it in the end zone for a safety. Charlotte would score again on the next drive of the quarter, a Matt Johnson 21-yard touchdown pass to Austin Duke. After another Bulldog's 3-and-out, Charlotte kick returner Mikel Hunter would return the ball to Gardner-Webb's 48 yard line. On the next play Matt Johnson would complete a 48-yard touchdown pass to Trent Bostick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Gardner-Webb Running Bulldogs\nThe result was the 49ers' third touchdown of the fourth quarter and their first lead of the day. The two-point conversion attempt to give the 49ers a 3-point lead failed. On Gardner-Webb's second play after getting the ball back the 49ers' Caleb Clayton-Moby would force GWU's Juanne Blount to fumble, leading to 49er Mark Hogan recovering the ball for Charlotte. On the very next play Alan Barnwell scored a 54-yard rushing touchdown to put the 49ers up by 8 points with 3 minutes left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Gardner-Webb Running Bulldogs\nWith time running out, Gardner-Webb put together a 14-play drive that resulted in a Juanne Blount 1-yard rushing touchdown. The Bulldogs' attempted 2-point conversion to tie the game failed. Gardner-Webb attempted an on-sides kick recovery, but Charlotte recovered the ball for the come-from-behind victory, winning 53 to 51 and the first victory in program history over a ranked opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Gardner-Webb Running Bulldogs\nTop performers for the game were Charlotte quarterback Matt Johnson, who passed for 342 yards and 5 touchdowns. Gardner-Webb running back Juanne Blount had 32 carries for 133 yards and 2 touchdowns. Gardner-Webb receiver Kenny Cook had 10 receptions for 132 yards and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #13 (DII) UNC Pembroke Braves\nCharlotte would hold its first football Homecoming game against the #13 ranked team in DII, the senior laden UNC Pembroke Braves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #13 (DII) UNC Pembroke Braves\nThe Braves would take an early lead on their first drive of the game, scoring 7 points on a Rontonio Stanley 2-yard rushing touchdown. Charlotte would respond on the next drive, resulting in a Matt Johnson 2-yard touchdown pass to Mikel Hunter. The successful two-point conversion by Lee McNeill would give the 49ers a 1-point lead. Rontonio Stanley would score another 2-yard rushing touchdown to close out the first quarter scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #13 (DII) UNC Pembroke Braves\nPembroke would score the only points of the second quarter on a Luke Charles pass to Te\u2019well Williams for 23 yards for a touchdown. The Braves would go into Halftime with a 21 to 8 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #13 (DII) UNC Pembroke Braves\nPembroke would complete the opening drive of the second half with Elliot Powell 5-yard rushing touchdown. On the Braves next drive Luke Charles would pass again to Te\u2019well Williams for 23 yards for a touchdown. Connor Haskins would add 3 more points to Pembroke's total on a 46-yard field goal. The 49ers would end their scoring drought on the last drive of the third quarter when Matt Johnson would successfully complete a 4-yard pass to C.J. Crawford for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #13 (DII) UNC Pembroke Braves\nPembroke would conclude its scoring campaign for the day on their first drive of the fourth quarter. Luke Charles would complete his third touchdown pass of the day, when he connected on an 8-yard touchdown pass to B.J. Bunn. The 49ers would score late in the half on a Matt Johnson 17-yard touchdown pass to C.J. Crawford. The game would end with the Braves upsetting the 49ers' inaugural football Homecoming Game, 45 to 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #13 (DII) UNC Pembroke Braves\nTop performers for the game were Charlotte Quarterback Matt Johnson, who passed for 278 yards, 3 touchdowns and 1 interception. Charlotte Running Back Alan Barnwell had 9 carries for 49. Charlotte Receiver Austin Duke had 9 receptions for 128 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #13 (DII) UNC Pembroke Braves\nCharlotte would enter its first of two bye weeks in the season with a 4 to 3 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Charleston Southern Buccaneers\nCharlotte would face their third ranked opponent of the season, and their third Big South opponent in the Charleston Southern Buccaneers. The game was Charleston Southern's homecoming, and their on-the-field performance would reflect a desire to please the returning alumni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Charleston Southern Buccaneers\nCharlotte would strike first in the game with a Kalif Phillips' 7-yard rushing touchdown. On the next series Charleston Southern would miss a Mark Deboy 29-yard field goal to close out the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Charleston Southern Buccaneers\nThe Buccaneers would find the end zone for the first time in the day on a Kyle Copeland 3-yard touchdown run. Copeland would also score the subsequent two-point conversion to give the Buccaneers a 1-point lead. Daniel Croghan III would complete a 39-yard pass to Kevin Glears for the final points of the half. Charleston Southern would lead at halftime, 15 to 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Charleston Southern Buccaneers\nOn their first drive of the second half, the Buccaneers would conclude with a Daniel Croghan 14-yard touchdown pass to Chris Theodore. Charlotte would respond on the next drive with 13 plays ending in a 14-yard Kalif Phillips rushing touchdown. The 49ers would end the half down only by 7 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Charleston Southern Buccaneers\nDesmond Cooper would recover a Daniel Croghan fumble on Charlotte's 3-yard line to end a Charleston Southern drive. Two plays later Alan Barnwell would be tackled in the end zone by Caleb Batchelor for a safety. Charleston Southern would then attempt an onsides kick, by the 49ers would recover the ball. Charleston Southern would pad their lead with two late touchdowns. The first on a Kyle Copeland's third rushing touchdown of the day, this time from the 5-yard line. Zac Bumgardner would recover an Alan Barnwell fumble on Charlotte's Next play from scrimmage. Three plays later the Buccaneers would score the final points of the game on a Mike Holloway 5-yard rushing touchdown. The game would end in a Buccaneer home victory of 35 to 14, and the Charlotte 49ers' second road loss of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 887]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #24 Charleston Southern Buccaneers\nTop performers for the game were Charleston Southern Quarterback Daniel Croghan III, who passed for 173 yards and 2 touchdowns. Charleston Southern Running Back Christian Reyes had 26 carries for 181 yards. Charlotte Receiver Trent Bostick had 5 receptions for 114 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #3 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers\nCharlotte would face their fourth and final ranked opponent of the season, and their fourth and final Big South opponent in the #3 ranked Coastal Carolina Chanticleers. The Chanticleers would be the 49ers' highest ranked opponent of the season. The game was Coastal Carolina's homecoming, making the third homecoming game in a row for the 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #3 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers\nLorrenzo Taliaferro would score the first points of the day on a 5-yard touchdown run on Coastal's second drive of the game. Charlotte would respond on a 16 play drive with a Blake Brewer 30-yard field goal. Coastal would add its second touchdown of the quarter on an Alex Ross 5-yard pass to Matt Hazel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #3 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers\nThe 49ers would close the score to within 3 points on their first drive of the second quarter. Matt Johnson would score a 9-yard rushing touchdown followed by a successful Mark Pettit two-point conversion. Coastal would answer quickly on an Alex Ross 39-yard touchdown pass to DeMario Bennett. Coastal would later in the quarter go on a 20 play drive that ended in an Alex Catron 29-yard field goal. Charlotte would respond on the next drive with an Alan Barnwell 8-yard rushing touchdown to bring the score back to within 6 points. Taliaferro would tie the Big South Conference single season rushing touchdown record on a 3-yard run. Coastal would go to the half with a 30 to 18 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #3 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers\nDe'Angelo Henderson would stretch Coastal's lead on the opening drive of the second half with a 2-yard rushing touchdown. Charlotte would get to the Coastal 19 yard line on the next series before LaDarius Hawthorne would intercept a Matt Johnson pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #3 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers\nOn the first drive of the fourth quarter Lorrenzo Taliaferro would score his final touchdown of the day from 4 yards out to set the Big South Conference single season rushing touchdown record. Brian Cass would add another 2-yard rushing touchdown to pad Coastal's substantial lead. Kalif Phillips would give the 49ers 2-yard rushing touchdown, but it would not be enough to overcome the point deficit. Coastal won the game 50 to 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #3 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers\nTop performers for the game were Coastal Carolina Quarterback Alex Ross, who passed for 237 yards and 2 touchdowns. Coastal Carolina Running Back Lorenzo Taliaferro had 24 carries for 139 yards and 3 touchdowns. Charlotte Receiver Mikel Hunter had 5 receptions for 89 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #20 (DIII) Wesley College Wolverines\nCharlotte returned home on November 9 for their 6th and final home game of season against ranked DIII opponent Wesley College. It was also the inaugural football Senior Day for the 49ers. The Niners said good bye and thanks to six of the players from the inaugural team; Mark Hogan, C.J. Crawford, Brandon Strupp, Alex Petzke, Zeb Little and Mikel Hunter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #20 (DIII) Wesley College Wolverines\nWesley would strike first in the first half with a Joe Callahan 1-yard run for a touchdown. The Wolverines would hold the 49ers scoreless in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #20 (DIII) Wesley College Wolverines\nWesley would strike first again midway through the second quarter when Joe Callahan would connect on a 2-yard pass to Kyle George for 7 more points after Jon Storck's successful Point-After attempt. Charlotte would finally find the endzone on the next series on a Kalif Phillips 12-yard rushing touchdown. The score at the half would be Wesley up 14 to 7 on the 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #20 (DIII) Wesley College Wolverines\nCharlotte would open the second half by recovering a forced fumble on the opening kickoff at the Wesley 22 yard line. They'd line up for a field goal attempt after gaining no yards on a 3-and-out series, but backup quarterback and place holder Lee McNeill would throw the snapped ball to Mark Pettit, who was waiting for it in the endzone for a touchdown. After Wesley went 3-and-out on their next series, Charlotte would gain the lead for the first time in the day off a Matt Johnson 3-yard touchdown pass to C.J. Crawford. Later in the quarter the Wolverines would tie the score again on a Rick Jackson 2-yard rushing touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #20 (DIII) Wesley College Wolverines\nCharlotte would score on the opening play of the fourth quarter on a Kalif Phillips 1-yard rushing touchdown. Three series later Joe Callahan would connect with Bryce Shade for a 17-yard passing touchdown to tie the score for the third time in the day. With 2 and a half minutes left on the clock Wesley would retake the lead on a Joe Callahan 1-yard rushing touchdown. Charlotte would put together a 12 play drive to get to the Wesley 28 yard line, but Charlotte Quarterback Matt Johnson would be unable to connect on three subsequent passing plays and would turn the ball over on downs. Wesley would then take a knee to win 35 to 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, #20 (DIII) Wesley College Wolverines\nTop performers for the day would include Wesley Quarterback Joe Callahan, who passed for 317 yards and 2 touchdowns, with 2 interceptions. Charlotte Running Back Kaliff Phillips would rush for 93 yards and two touchdowns. Wesley Wide Receiver Kyle George would get 8 receptions for 143 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Morehead State Eagles\nFollowing their second and final bye week of the 2013 season, Charlotte would end their inaugural season on the road facing the first opponent they ever scheduled, the Morehead State Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Morehead State Eagles\nMorehead St. would score on their first drive of the game on a Brandon Bornhauser 1-yard touchdown run to take the early lead. On their third offensive series the 49ers would tie the game on a Matt Johnson 33-yard touchdown pass to senior receiver C.J. Crawford. On their next offensive series on the second play the 49ers would take the lead on a Kalif Phillips 50-yard rushing touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Morehead State Eagles\nOn the first play of the second quarter Charlotte rusher Alan Barnwell would extend the 49ers' lead on a break-away 70-yard touchdown run. The Eagles would put together an 11 play drive to get into 49ers' territory on the next series, but the 49ers' Caleb Clayton-Mobly would intercept a pass from Eagles quarterback Austin Gahafer and return it 70 yards for another 49ers' touchdown. On the 49ers' next series Kaliff Phillips would get his second rushing score of the day on a 4-yard touchdown score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0070-0001", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Morehead State Eagles\nMorehead St. would put together a 13 play series late in the half that ended in a Luke Boyd 35-yard field goal. On the ensuing kick return Charlotte returner Justin Bridges-Thompson would return the kick 64 yards to the Morehead St. 12 yard line. On the next play Kalif Phillips would get his third rushing touchdown on a 12-yard run. At the half Charlotte lead the Eagles 41 to 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Morehead State Eagles\nAfter the high scoring second quarter, the third quarter would only yield one score. Morehead St. would attempt a 44-yard Luke Boyd field goal to end their first drive of the second half, but would miss. Charlotte would cap their final drive of the quarter on a Matt Johnson, 68 yard quarterback-keeper rushing touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Morehead State Eagles\nThe Eagles would find the end zone on their first series of the fourth quarter on an Austin Gahafer pass to Justin Cornwall for a 19-yard touchdown in the corner of the end zone. The 49ers would cap their next possession on a Blake Brewer 41-yard field goal. On their first play of the next series the 49ers' Kendal Parker forced Brandon Reeves of Morehead St. to fumble the ball, which resulted in Charlotte's Greg Cunningham Jr. recovering the ball for the 49ers. Their resulting next drive was capped by a Blake Brewer 40-yard field goal. After a Morehead St. four-and-out the 49ers scored the final points of the game on a Damarrell Alexander 51-yard rushing touchdown, to get the 49ers over the 60-point scoring threshold for the first time in program history. The final score was Charlotte 61 and Morehead State 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Game summaries, Morehead State Eagles\nTop performers for the day were Charlotte quarterback Matt Johnson, who passed for 141 yards and ran in a touchdown. Charlotte running back Kaliff Phillips rushed for 86 yards and three touchdowns. Charlotte Wide receiver C.J. Crawford made 5 receptions for 68 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Attendance\nThe largest crowd for a Charlotte football game at Jerry Richardson Stadium was 16,630. The 49ers hit that figure three times during the 2013 season including the Inaugural Game. This figure is the current maximum standing room capacity of Jerry Richardson Stadium. They also exceeded the stadium's maximum seating capacity 4 times during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232600-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte 49ers football team, Statistics\nAs the 49ers inaugural season, team and individual records were set for the first time in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232601-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte Eagles season\nThe 2013 Charlotte Eagles Season will be the club's 21st year of professional soccer. It will be the team's third consecutive season in the USL Professional Division and the team will look to build on its 2012 Open Cup run from a year ago where they reached the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232602-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte Hounds season\nThe 2013 Charlotte Hounds season is the second season for the Charlotte Hounds of Major League Lacrosse. The Hounds improved vastly upon their 5-9 2012 season. They clinched their first playoff spot in team history on August 3 by defeating the Hamilton Nationals, 14-11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232603-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte mayoral election\nThe biennial Charlotte mayoral election was held on Tuesday, November 5, 2013. Primary elections were held on Tuesday, September 10, 2013. Unaffiliated voters were allowed to vote in either the Democratic or Republican primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232603-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte mayoral election\nOn July 2, 2013, Anthony Foxx, a Democrat, announced that he would resign as mayor to become United States Secretary of Transportation. District 1 city councilperson Patsy Kinsey, also a Democrat, was named interim mayor the same day with the understanding that she would not stand in the mayoral election in November. Kinsey instead ran to regain the council seat she had vacated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232603-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlotte mayoral election\nDemocratic Party nominee Patrick Cannon, another member of the city council, won the general election to become the 55th mayor of Charlotte. However, only under four months into his term, on March 26, 2014, Cannon was arrested by the FBI on charges of accepting bribes (to which he later pleaded guilty) and resigned later that day, prompting the City Council to elect Dan Clodfelter to serve for the remainder of Cannon's term as the 57th Mayor of Charlotte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232604-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger\nThe 2013 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Charlottesville, United States between October 28 and November 3 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232604-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232605-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nJohn Peers and John-Patrick Smith but Peers chose not to compete. Smith chose to compete with Samuel Groth and lost to eventual champion Steve Johnson and Tim Smyczek. They defeated Jarmere Jenkins and Donald Young 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232606-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Charlottesville Men's Pro Challenger \u2013 Singles\nDenis Kudla was the defending champion but chose not to compete. Michael Russell defeated Peter Polansky in the singles final, 7\u20135, 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup\nThe 2013 ASB Chatham Cup was New Zealand's 86th knockout football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup\nThe 2013 competition had a qualification round and four rounds proper, before quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Competition was run in three regions (Northern, Central, Southern) until the quarter-finals, from which stage the draw was open. In all, 132 teams entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, The 2013 final\nThe final was played in front of a crowd of 2,000 spectators. Cashmere Technical took an early lead in the 5th minute when Julyan Collett was fouled in the penalty area and Danny Boys sent Waitakere City goalkeeper Eamon Goodin the wrong way. The lead was short lived when just 10 minutes later, Cashmere conceded their first and what would be their only goal of the whole campaign. Waitakere won a free kick 25 metres out and Jake Butler lined up his shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, The 2013 final\nIt went straight into the defensive wall but from the rebound his follow up put the ball past Cashmere keeper Shaun Roberts. It didn't take long for Cashmere to restore there lead when Stu Kelly was rewarded for his hard work, sloting the ball home in the 23rd minute. From there both teams had their chances but the result was finally put beyond doubt in injury time when, spotting the keeper off his line, Dan Ede put in a deft long-range lob and the game finished 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, The 2013 final\nThe Jack Batty Memorial Cup for the final's most valuable player was awarded to Cashmere Technical's Andy Pitman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Qualification round\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review, and New Zealand Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Qualification round\nAll teams listed below received byes to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Qualification round\nAll teams listed below were seeded to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Qualification round\nAll teams listed below were seeded to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 1\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review and New Zealand Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 2\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review and New Zealand Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 3\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review and New Zealand Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Round 4\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review and New Zealand Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review and New Zealand Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Semi-finals\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review and New Zealand Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232607-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Chatham Cup, Results, Final\nAll fixtures, results and dates are taken from the following sources: The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website, RSSSF, Capital Football Season Review and New Zealand Football. Team lists and numbers taken from NZ Football on Youtube.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232608-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chattanooga Mocs football team\nThe 2013 Chattanooga Mocs football team represented the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon). The Mocs were led by fifth-year head coach Russ Huesman and played their home games at Finley Stadium in Chattanooga, Tennessee. They finished the season 8\u20134 overall and 6\u20132 in SoCon play to share the conference championship with Samford and Furman. Chattanooga not receive the conference's automatic bid to the FCS playoffs and did not receive an at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232609-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen\nThe 2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on August 11 at Watkins Glen International in Watkins Glen, New York. Contested over 90 laps on the 2.45-mile (4.023\u00a0 km) road course, it was the twenty-second race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Kyle Busch of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his third of the season, while Brad Keselowski finished second. Martin Truex, Jr., Carl Edwards and Juan Pablo Montoya rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232609-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen\nThis is the first NASCAR race since the 1998 NAPA 500 without Five-Time Watkins Glen winner Tony Stewart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232609-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Report, Background\nWatkins Glen International is one of two road courses to hold NASCAR races, the other being Sonoma Raceway. The standard short road course at Watkins Glen International is a 7-turn course that is 2.45 miles (3.94\u00a0km) long; the track was modified in 1992, adding the Inner Loop, which lengthened the long course to 3.4 miles (5.5\u00a0km) and the short course to the current length of 2.45 miles (3.94\u00a0km). Marcos Ambrose was the defending race winner after winning the race in 2011 and 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232609-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Report, Background\nOn August 6, it was announced that Tony Stewart would not be participating after breaking both bones in his right leg in a Sprint car accident at Southern Iowa Speedway in Oskaloosa, Iowa, on the night of August 5. Instead, road racing veteran Max Papis would step in and replace Stewart for the Watkins Glen event, with future drivers to be decided for the next four or five oval races. This marked the first race since his debut in the 1999 Daytona 500 that a Sprint Cup race did not have Stewart in the field, ending a streak of 521 straight starts for Stewart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232609-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Report, Race, Start\nThe race was scheduled to start at 1:18 p.m. EDT, Marcos Ambrose led the field to the green flag on lap 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232609-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Report, Race, 1st caution, restart and wreck\nThe first caution came out on lap 15 for a crash by Jeff Gordon in the back straightaway, the race restarted on lap 19, a couple of laps later, the second caution came out for a multi-car crash in the straightaway, by lap 41, the race was red flagged for seven minutes for cleanup on the track, the race restarted on lap 43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232609-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Report, Race, Quarter mark\nThe third caution came out when Kyle Busch spun into the tires, and was out of gas, the race restarted on lap 63, A couple of laps later, the fourth caution came out for a wreck again on lap 80, some cars were involved in the crash, the race restarted on lap 86, and the fifth caution came out on lap 85 for a crash by Marcos Ambrose, The race restarted on lap 88, and Kyle Busch won his race at Watkins-Glen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232610-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nThe 2013 Cheltenham Gold Cup (known as the Betfred Gold Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 85th annual running of the Cheltenham Gold Cup horse race held at Cheltenham Racecourse on 15 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232610-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nNine horses ran and the steeplechase was won by 11/4 favorite Bobs Worth, who was trained by Nicky Henderson and ridden by Barry Geraghty. Bobs Worth won by a distance of 7 lengths from second-placed Sir Des Champs, with Long Run in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232610-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nThe race was shown live on Channel 4 in the UK and Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232610-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cheltenham Gold Cup, Full result\n* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths or shorter. shd = short-head.\u2020 Trainers are based in Great Britain unless indicated. PU = pulled-up. NR = non runner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka\nAn industrial chemical accident occurred on August 6, 2013 at the private limited company Concern Stirol JSC, part of Ostchem Holding AG, in the city of Horlivka, Ukraine. Ammonia was released in the air and five people were killed and 23 people were injured from exposure to the gas. Of these, 22 people were hospitalized burns and poisoning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Before the accident\nConcern Stirol, JSC, was founded in 1933. It is the largest mineral fertilizer producer in Ukraine. In September 2010, Concern Stirol became part of OSTCHEM holding controlled by Group DF founded and owned by Ukrainian businessman Dmitry Firtash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Before the accident\nOn May 26, 2013 a fire took place in a workshop for the compression of ammonia at the plant, destroying 100 square meters of floor structure and damaging one gas compressor. The fire was extinguished within 1.5 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, The accident\nAt 14:00 on August 6, 2013, during the overhaul of plant \u21161 at the Stirol chemical plant, while depressurizing an ammonia reservoir, a liquid ammonia pipe with a diameter of 150\u00a0mm and a working pressure of 12 atmospheres was damaged and gas ammonia escaped. A white cloud appeared at the plant and quickly spread.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, The accident\nAccording to witnesses, there was a panic in the workshop after the accident because people were unable to wear masks, which were rated for only 5 minutes of breathing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, The accident\nThe company Rescue Service completely stopped ammonia output within 20 minutes. The accident released 600\u00a0kg of ammonia into the air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Consequences, Accident victims\nAccording to initial reports, 2 people were killed, three were injured. The final death toll was 5, including a foreman\u2013fitter, 3 fitters and an electric and gas welder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Consequences, Accident victims\nOverall 23 people underwent medical care, with 22 admitted to two city hospitals (\u2116 2 and \u2116 3) of Horlivka. Later, 5 people were transferred for treatment to the Donetsk Regional Clinical Territorial Medical University. At the same time the Head of the Donetsk Regional State Administration Andriy Shishatskiy said that 21 people were hospitalized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Consequences, Accident victims\nAmong the residents of Horlivka there were no medical consultations regarding ammonia toxicity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Consequences, The ecological situation\nIn the first hours after the accident in the city an unpleasant ammonia smell was reported. People began to take shelter indoors and shut windows, but no official information had been received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Consequences, The ecological situation\nLater, Directorate of Civil Protection of Horlivka City Council published information that the accident didn't pose a threat to people. Later the Horlivka sanitary and epidemiological station confirmed that the maximum permissible concentration of ammonia in air was not exceeded at 500 and 1000 meters from the plant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Investigation\nProsecutor of Horlivka Oleg Kolesnyk and an investigative team went to the site of the accident. According to preliminary data, a rupture of an ammonia pipeline occurred. Criminal proceedings under Chapter 2 of Article 272 (violation of safety rules during work with high-risk) of the Criminal Code of Ukraine was started. The public prosecutor's office of Horlivka provides procedural guidance for the course of preliminary investigations. Violation of this article carries a maximum punishment of eight years in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Investigation\nAfter the accident, Deputy Prime Minister Yuriy Boyko and Minister of Environment and Natural Resources Oleh Proskuryakov, Deputy Attorney General Anatolyi Pryshko and representatives of Ministry of Internal Affairs and Security Service of Ukraine went to Horlivka. Also the situation was monitored under the control of the President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Investigation\nDuring the pipeline inspection a crack length of 10\u00a0cm was revealed, through which ammonia had leaked. Also three basic versions of the causes of the accident was formulated: incorrect operation of equipment, safety violations or human negligence. In addition, the company did not immediately notify the appropriate authorities of the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Investigation, Estimates of the accident\nProsecutor of Horlivka, Oleg Kolesnyk, on the day of the accident said that all causes should be considered, including the human factor, or a violation of a process. He added that it was too early to say what was the cause. A similar view was expressed by the chairman of the State Emergency Service Mykhaylo Bolotskykh. He added that there is no threat to people or the environment. According to the Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Oleh Proskuryakov, the first conclusions of the Commission on the causes of the accident would be announced by the end of the week. Concern Stirol will provide UAH 5 million in compensations to the families of the five company employees and cover all cost associated with treatment and rehabilitation of all employees affected by the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Reaction\nThe President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych expressed his condolences to the families of those killed and ordered the government to provide victims with all necessary relief and take steps to improve safety at industrial enterprises of Ukraine", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Reaction\nOn 7 August 2013 the Prime Minister of Ukraine Mykola Azarov said that all victims will receive assistance and Social Policy Minister Nataliya Korolevska will go to Horlivka to determine the cause of the accident, then a separate meeting of the Cabinet of Ministers will be devoted to this issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Reaction\nHead of Donetsk Regional State Administration Andriy Shishatskiy said that there is no reason to panic because the allowable ammonia concentration was not exceeded, and the accident will not affect the work of the plant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232611-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Chemical accident in Horlivka, Follow-up\nOn Oct 7th, Concern Stirol JSC announced plans to diagnose 14\u00a0km of its ammonia pipelines and to conduct major repairs and modernization at the No.1 Ammonia Shop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232612-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cherryville Bushfire\nThe 2013 Cherryville Bushfire occurred on 9\u201311 May 2013 near the Adelaide Hills townships of Cherryville, Marble Hill and Basket Range, South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232612-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cherryville Bushfire\nMore than 250 Country Fire Service volunteers and four aerial water bombers were deployed to fight the fire. One house was destroyed, and the area burnt exceeded 650 hectares (1,600 acres). It began at about 2:30p.m. on Thursday 9 May amid unseasonably warm weather when a private burn-off north of Cherryville became out of control and began to burn east into inaccessible country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232612-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cherryville Bushfire\nWarm temperatures, high winds, and heavy fuel loads contributed to the spread of the fire. Firefighters were initially unable to fight the fire directly, due to the inaccessibility of the terrain. Firefighters eventually managed to contain the fire around 5p.m. on 11 May, assisted by a change in the weather which brought approximately 10mm of rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232612-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cherryville Bushfire\nThe fire was notable in that it began over a week after the official fire-ban season ended. This prompted calls for the season to be extended into May; the Government announced on 12 May that a review of the policy would be conducted. However, concerns were raised that this would limit the ability of residents and the CFS to conduct fuel-reduction burns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232613-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chesapeake Bayhawks season\nThe 2013 Chesapeake Bayhawks season was the 13th season for the Chesapeake Bayhawks of Major League Lacrosse. The Bayhawks concluded the year with a 9\u20135 record, good for 2nd place in the MLL and defeated the Charlotte Hounds 10\u20139 in the MLL Championship Game to win the franchise's fifth Steinfeld Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232614-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit was the first doubleheader in IndyCar Series history, hosting Rounds 6 and 7 of the 2013 IndyCar Series season. Mike Conway won Race 1, and Simon Pagenaud won Race 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232614-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix, Race 1\nDario Franchitti got the pole for race 1, but was given a grid penalty. E.J. Viso would start 1st. Mike Conway won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232614-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix, Race 1\nMike Conway started on pole for race 2, attempting to sweep the weekend, but he finished 3rd. Simon Pagenaud won Race 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232614-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix, Race 1\nPoints include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232614-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix, Race 2\nPoints include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250\nThe 2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250 was a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race held on September 1, 2013. Contested over 64 laps, the race was the inaugural running of the Chevrolet Silverado 250 at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ontario, and the fourteenth of the 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season. The race was the first Truck race in Canada and the first road course race since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250\nJames Buescher of Turner Scott Motorsports won the pole position, while Hendrick Motorsports' Chase Elliott won the race in controversial fashion, when he turned Ty Dillon in the final turn on the last lap. Afterwards, Mike Skeen and Max Papis were involved in a post-race incident where Skeen's girlfriend slapped Papis for contact on the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Background\nOpened in 1961, Canadian Tire Motorsport Park is 2.61 miles (4.20\u00a0km) long and features 10 turns. has held NASCAR races before, with the Canadian Tire Series' Clarington 200 since 2007. On November 28, 2012, it was announced that the track would host a Truck Series race on Labour Day weekend, the second addition to the 2013 schedule after the Mudsummer Classic at Eldora Speedway. The Chevrolet Silverado 250 marked the first Truck race in Canada and the first road course race since 2000 at Watkins Glen International.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Background\nThe driver age restriction was reduced from 18 to 16 years for tracks like CTMP. Among the drivers entered for the event included Mike Skeen, who won the previous four Pirelli World Challenge GT Series races at the track, along with Canadian Tire drivers Martin Roy and Alex Guenette. To practice for the event, Jeb Burton, Ty Dillon and James Buescher also ran the CTS race at the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Background\nEntering the race, Matt Crafton led the points standings with 498 points, followed by Buescher and Burton, who had 449 and 445 points, respectively. Dillon and Timothy Peters comprised the top five with 440 and 426 points each, while the top ten featured Miguel Paludo (422), Ryan Blaney (421), Brendan Gaughan (418), Johnny Sauter (409) and Joey Coulter (399).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Qualifying\nFour practice sessions were held on August 30; the first two were dominated by Mike Skeen, while the third and fourth were led by Chase Elliott. 30 drivers entered the race, with qualifying taking place on August 31. Skeen, Elliott, Chris Lafferty and Jennifer Jo Cobb were required to qualify on time. James Buescher won the pole position with a lap speed of 109.189 miles per hour (175.723\u00a0km/h), his second pole of 2013 and fifth of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Qualifying\nSkeen, Elliott, Miguel Paludo and Ty Dillon rounded out the top five, while the top ten included Max Papis, Chad Hackenbracht, Darrell Wallace Jr. and Brendan Gaughan. The top-qualifying Canadian driver was Alex Guenette, who qualified 14th. Bryan Silas was ordered to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Race\nPole-sitter James Buescher led for the first two laps before Chase Elliott took the lead, leading for 23 laps until lap 26, when Ryan Blaney claimed it, leading for two laps until it was relinquished to Ty Dillon. Germ\u00e1n Quiroga and Miguel Paludo also led laps, the former leading laps 34\u201336 and the latter leading 37\u201346; Dillon took the lead again on lap 48.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Race\nPrior to lap 48, three cautions were waved: on lap 8 for Max Gresham stalling in turn 5, on lap 33 for Jennifer Jo Cobb's stall in turn 2, and on lap 47 with Alex Guenette also stalling in turn 4. Dillon continued to lead for 17 laps from lap 47 to 63, and on lap 58, Johnny Sauter stalled in turn 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Race\nIn the final turn of the last lap, Elliott turned Dillon into the tire barrier, which brought out the caution, to claim his first career NASCAR win in his sixth series start, becoming the youngest Truck Series race winner at 17 years, 9 months, 4 days. Followed by Elliott was Chad Hackenbracht, Paludo, Darrell Wallace Jr., Ron Hornaday Jr., Max Papis, Ross Chastain, Timothy Peters, Buescher and Matt Crafton. Derek White (rear hub), Guenette (oil line), Brennan Newberry (transmission), Sauter (gas line), Carl Long (brakes) and Chris Lafferty (clutch) failed to finish the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Race\nThe race featured seven lead changes, six different leaders and five caution periods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Post-race\n\"We only have so many shots to win these things. I really hate to win them like that, I really do. That's not how I race and that's never been how I've raced before. I had a shot. I was up next to Ty and I knew he was going to try and chop me off. I tried to make up the difference. ... Sometimes you've got to do what you've got to do to get to victory lane.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Post-race\nMeanwhile, Dillon, who finished 17th, said, \"You've got to show respect. I hope he runs Iowa (next week). He won't finish the race.\" The following week at the Fan Appreciation 200, Elliott crashed on lap 35, finishing 31st.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Post-race\nAlso on the final lap, Max Papis and Mike Skeen battled for second when they made contact in the final turn, and after the race, Skeen's pit crew, along with Skeen's girlfriend, attacked Papis. Papis later accused Skeen's girlfriend of dislocating his jaw, saying, \"This crazy lady comes shouting at me, and I had no idea, didn't even understand her, she just started shouting. And all the sudden, she took a full hand \u2013 and she slapped me so hard. I'm not kidding. My jaw got dislocated and my left ear is still ringing, big time.\" Papis later redacted his statements, citing language barriers. On September 4, 2013, NASCAR suspended Skeen's girlfriend indefinitely from all NASCAR events, while crew chief Bryan Berry was fined $2,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232615-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chevrolet Silverado 250, Post-race\nAnother post-race altercation involved Germ\u00e1n Quiroga and crews for James Buescher after the two and Ron Hornaday tangled in the final laps. Quiroga was spun out on the final lap and tried to confront Buescher in the pits before being restrained by NASCAR officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232616-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly election\nChhattisgarh Legislative Assembly election 2013 was held in two phases on 11 and 19 November in Chhattisgarh state of India. The result was announced on 8 December. Incumbent ruling party BJP and Chief Minister Raman Singh retained the majority in assembly and formed government consequently for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232616-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly election, Polls\nVoter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) along with EVMs was used in 1 assembly seat in Chhattisgarh elections. The first phase in the Naxal-affected areas of Bastar, consisting 18 constituencies, voted on 11 November and had a 75.53% voter turnout. The second phase in the other 72 constituencies was held on 19 November and had a 74.7% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232616-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly election, Polls, Security\nThe Hindu reported that 32 battalions of central paramilitaries were added to the 117,000 security force personnel in the area. Another almost 25,000 Chhattisgarh Police were stations in south Chhattisgarh. As a result, the Gond tribal region would consist of approximately 143,000 armed security personnel. The Hindu stated that after the mobilization of 600 companies of paramilitary forces in the tribal region, it was \"one of the most militarized zones in the world.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232616-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly election, Results\nResults were declared on 8 December 2013. Bharatiya Janata Party won 49 seats while the Indian National Congress won 39 seats. OneIndependent and one Bahujan Samaj Party candidate also won. BJP retained majority in state legislative assembly for consequently third time and Raman Singh sworn in as a Chief Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season\nThe 2013 Chicago Bears season was the franchise's 94th season in the National Football League. The season was the first year under head coach Marc Trestman, as Lovie Smith was fired on December 31, 2012. The team played at Soldier Field for the 11th season since its reconstruction in 2001. The Bears failed to qualify for the playoffs with an 8\u20138 record, the sixth time in seven years since the Super Bowl XLI loss in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season\nThe Bears started the regular season by winning their first three games before losing in weeks four and five to the Detroit Lions and New Orleans Saints, respectively. The following game after winning against the New York Giants, quarterback Jay Cutler suffered a groin injury against the Washington Redskins, as the Bears entered the bye week at 4\u20133. With Cutler out, Josh McCown stepped in against the Green Bay Packers in week nine, leading the Bears to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season\nCutler returned in the next game against the Lions, but injured his ankle in the loss, and McCown filled in for the next four games; during the four-game span under McCown, the Bears went 2\u20132, while McCown excelled, throwing thirteen touchdowns and one interception. When Cutler returned in week fifteen against the Cleveland Browns, controversy arose over who should be the starter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season\nAfter winning against Cleveland, the Lions lost the following day, allowing the Bears the opportunity to clinch the NFC North in week sixteen with Packers and Lions losses grouped with a victory over the Philadelphia Eagles. However, the Bears lost 54\u201311 against the Eagles, and in week seventeen against the Packers, the Bears were eliminated from playoff contention with a 33\u201328 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nOn December 31, 2012, nine-year head coach Lovie Smith was fired. After Smith's firing, the Bears requested interviews with thirteen coaches, twelve from the NFL and Montreal Alouettes (of the Canadian Football League) head coach Marc Trestman. The hunt later narrowed down to Trestman, Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell and Indianapolis Colts offensive coordinator Bruce Arians. Ultimately, Trestman was hired on January 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nAfter Trestman's hiring, he hired New Orleans Saints' offensive line coach Aaron Kromer as offensive coordinator, and the Dallas Cowboys later reported that Joe DeCamillis, who had been among the Bears' 13 head coaching candidates, would join the Bears as the team's assistant head coach/special teams coordinator. Trestman also hired Andy Bischoff and Michael Sinclair as tight ends and defensive line coaches, respectively; both coaches had worked with Trestman in Montreal. Alouettes offensive coordinator Pat Meyer also joined the Bears as offensive line coach, along with Purdue defensive coordinator and colleague of Trestman, Tim Tibesar, as linebackers coach. Former Alouettes coaches Brendan Nugent and Carson Walch were hired as offensive quality control assistants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nOn January 15, special teams coordinator Dave Toub announced that he is leaving the Bears for the Kansas City Chiefs. Two days later, it was announced that defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli would not return to the team. Eight assistants were also dismissed: quarterbacks coach Jeremy Bates, running backs coach Tim Spencer, wide receivers coach Darryl Drake, tight ends coach Mike DeBord, offensive line coach Tim Holt, linebackers coach Bob Babich, defensive backs coach Gill Byrd, and offensive coordinator Mike Tice. To replace Bates and Spencer, Chicago hired Matt Cavanaugh and Skip Peete as quarterbacks and running backs coach, respectively. To take Marinelli's place, the Bears hired Jacksonville Jaguars' defensive coordinator Mel Tucker. On February 21, Trestman's staff was completed after the Bears hired Alabama coach Mike Groh as wide receivers coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nOn January 19, Bears director of physical development Rusty Jones announced his retirement after 28 years in the NFL. He was eventually replaced by Mike Clark. On January 28, Chicago hired former Bears safety Chris Harris as defensive quality control, with Sean Desai serving the same position, along with Dwayne Stukes as assistant special teams coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nOn May 3, Bears pro scouting director Chris Ballard, who had been hired by general manager Phil Emery, left the team for the Chiefs, and was replaced by assistant director of college scouting Kevin Turks. Regional scout James Kirkland was also let go. On May 6, executive director and Southeastern Conference overseer Ted Monago joined the St. Louis Rams. On the same day, Kevin Turks and Dwayne Joseph were promoted to director of pro personnel and assistant director of pro personnel, respectively; Chiefs area scout Ryan Kessenich was also hired as a scout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Organizational changes\nChicago also hired Jay Muraco as scout of the East Coast and Andre Odom as a scouting assistant. The Bears also promoted Breck Ackley to South Central area scout and Sam Summerville to scout the Southeast area and David Williams to player personnel and scout. On May 16, the Bears promoted Southeast area scout Mark Sadowski to senior national scout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes\nThe Bears entered free agency with 16 unrestricted free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Acquisitions\nThe first addition of 2013 by the Bears was defensive end Cheta Ozougwu on January 2, followed by Brittan Golden two days later. On January 7, quarterback Matt Blanchard and receiver Terrence Toliver were signed; the next three days involved the signings of Patrick Trahan, Brody Eldridge, Fendi Onobun and Lawrence Wilson, respectively. On January 28 and 29, Cyhl Quarles and Tom Nelson were signed, respectively. The lone acquisition of February occurred on February 11 with cornerback LeQuan Lewis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Acquisitions\nNFL free agency opened on March 12, with the Bears signing New York Giants tight end Martellus Bennett and New Orleans Saints offensive lineman Jermon Bushrod on that day. From March 20 to 24, the Bears signed at least one player per day, starting with Turk McBride. Steve Maneri (March 21), D. J. Williams (March 22), Tom Zbikowski (March 23), and James Anderson (March 24). Offensive lineman Matt Slauson was signed on March 29. On April 9, Andre Fluellen, Kyle Moore and Taylor Boggs were signed. Offensive lineman Eben Britton was signed on April 16, followed by kicker Austin Signor three days later. The only signing in May was undrafted rookie Maurice Jones on May 12. On June 10, the Bears signed Devin Aromashodu, Jerrell Jackson and Tony Fiammetta, followed by Sedrick Ellis the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Departures\nThe first departure of the team was receiver Johnny Knox on February 12, who had suffered a serious injury in 2011 and missed the entire 2012 season. On March 13, tight ends Kellen Davis and Matt Spaeth were waived. The single departure of April occurred on April 2, with the release of defensive lineman Matt Toeaina. On June 9, offensive lineman and the team's first-round draft pick in 2011 Gabe Carimi was traded to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for a sixth-rounder in the 2014 draft. The following day, Evan Rodriguez, Dale Moss and Demetrius Fields were waived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Roster changes, Departures\nEleven of the Bears' UFAs did not return, nine of whom joining other teams, starting with linebacker Geno Hayes' signing with the Jacksonville Jaguars on March 13. The Bears lost another linebacker in Nick Roach on March 15, when he joined the Oakland Raiders, and another defensive player was lost when cornerback D. J. Moore was signed by the Carolina Panthers four days later. On March 20, eight-time Pro Bowler and 13-year linebacker Brian Urlacher was not retained for the 2013 season. Six days later, Jason Campbell was signed by the Cleveland Browns, and the next day, Lance Louis joined the Miami Dolphins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, 2013 draft class\nThe Bears entered the draft with needs at positions including offensive lineman, linebacker, defensive lineman and cornerback. In the first round, with the twentieth pick, the Bears selected Oregon offensive tackle Kyle Long. Long, the son of Pro Football Hall of Famer Howie Long and younger brother of St. Louis Rams' defensive end Chris Long, played in only 21 games while starting 15 with Oregon. In the second round, with the fiftieth pick, the Bears selected Jon Bostic, a linebacker from Florida, who recorded 68 tackles with the nation's fifth-ranked defense in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, 2013 draft class\nTwo rounds later, the Bears used their 117th overall pick on Rutgers linebacker Khaseem Greene, who holds the NCAA record for career forced fumbles with 15. In the fifth round, the Bears traded down ten spots with the Atlanta Falcons to draft Louisiana Tech offensive tackle Jordan Mills, marking the first time the team selected two offensive linemen in the same draft since 2002. In the sixth round, Chicago selected Georgia Bulldogs defensive end Cornelius Washington, who led linebackers in the bench press at the NFL Combine with 36 repetitions at 225 pounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, 2013 draft class\nUsing a seventh-rounder acquired in the trade with Atlanta, the Bears drafted wide receiver Marquess Wilson, who left the Washington State football team, citing abuse from head coach Mike Leach despite setting team records with 82 receptions for 1,388 yards and 12 touchdowns in 2011, followed by 52 receptions for 813 yards and five touchdowns in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, 2013 draft class\nThe Bears draft class received average grades, with questions from some graders questioning the selections of Long and Bostic, including Jason Cole of Yahoo! Sports, who gave the class a grade of \"C+\". Yahoo! Sports writer Billy Grayson ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper, Jr. stated that he \"wasn't in love with the value\" of Long's talent, classifying the draft class as a \"C+\", while Sports Illustrated writer Chris Burke asked why Chicago selected Bostic over Kansas State linebacker Arthur Brown. However, Burke praised Washington's selection as a potential steal, giving a grade of \"B-\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, 2013 draft class\nThad Novak of the International Business Times gave Long the lowest grade of the players drafted by Chicago with a \"C-\", considering him a \"raw\" player; Mills was awarded a \"C+\", due to not blocking against many top defenders in college. Washington and Wilson were given a \"B-\" and \"B+\", respectively, the former despite being a linebacker, could adjust into the Bears' 4-3 defense. Linebackers Bostic and Greene were given an \"A\" and \"A+\", the latter being considered a steal that could add depth to the linebacking corps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, 2013 draft class\nVinny Iyer of Sporting News gave the class a \"C\", stated Long should start as a guard before switching to tackle, which would be filled by Mills; Iyer also considered Bostic a \"textbook replacement\" for Brian Urlacher, while Greene can replace Nick Roach as a strong-side linebacker. After the 2013 season, Kiper improved the Bears' class to a \"B\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, 2013 draft class\nAll six players drafted agreed to four-year contracts. Mills and Washington were the first players to sign on May 1, followed by Greene and Wilson the following day. Bostic was the next player to sign, agreeing to a contract on May 9, and Long was the final player to sign, signing his contract on May 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Undrafted free agents\nAfter the draft's conclusion, the Bears announced that they had come to terms with ten undrafted free agents: LSU running back and center Michael Ford and P. J. Lonergan, respectively, Rutgers receiver Mark Harrison, Oklahoma cornerback and punter Demontre Hurst and Tress Way, respectively, Iowa State receiver Josh Lenz, Montana State linebacker Zach Minter, Memphis receiver Marcus Rucker, Georgia Southern defensive tackle Brent Russell, and NC State cornerback C. J. Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nOn April 2, the Bears began a voluntary offseason program, and because they had a new head coach, the Bears were given a two-week earlier start than teams that did not hire a new head coach. For the first two weeks of the program, the only activities allowed were strength and conditioning and rehabilitation, and only strength and conditioning coaches are allowed to be on the field with the players. On the third week, a voluntary minicamp was held, and all coaches were permitted to work. From April 16\u201318, the Bears held two-hour non-contact drills, and held ten organized team activities (OTAs) during May 13 \u2013 June 6, followed by a mandatory minicamp from June 11\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nThe Bears started the first of ten OTAs on May 13. Rookie Kyle Long did not attend due to the University of Oregon having final examinations running through June 14. Gabe Carimi was the lone eligible player to not attend the workouts on the first day, as he stated that he was training in Arizona. Despite being expected to attend the team's mandatory minicamp, on June 9, Carimi was traded to the Buccaneers for an unconditional sixth-round draft pick in the 2014 draft. Long returned to workouts on June 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities\nOn the first day of the mandatory minicamp, offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer did not attend the on-field segment due to hip surgery. A. J. Lindeman and Willie Carter tried out with the team during the day. Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffery skipped the next day's workout, due to a hip surgery and a hamstring injury suffered during the previous week's OTAs, respectively. Lindeman would be signed during the day, while Maurice Jones would be released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities, Rookie minicamp\nThe Bears opened rookie minicamp at the Walter Payton Center on March 10, and concluded on May 12. A total of 59 players participated, which includes the six draft picks, nine of the ten undrafted free agents (Mark Harrison was going to be signed, but failed his physical as he was recovering from a broken fifth metatarsal), kicker Austin Signor, ten veteran players, and 33 tryout players. Following minicamp, on May 13, the Bears signed receiver Demetrius Fields, defensive tackles Corvey Irvin and Christian Tupou, and cornerback Maurice Jones, while releasing Dom DeCicco and LeQuan Lewis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities, Rookie minicamp\nVeterans in both italics and boldDrafted players in boldUndrafted signees in italics", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities, Training Camp\nTraining Camp took place from July 25 to August 14 at Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais, Illinois for the twelfth consecutive year. The team used the newly built Student Life Recreation Center as a weight room, indoor walk-through and personnel meeting building. On August 12, the Bears and ONU agreed to extend the camp through 2022. Practice with full pads on was held on July 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities, Training Camp\nOn the first day of Training Camp, Sedrick Ellis did not report, and eventually announced his retirement. On June 29, newcomer Turk McBride suffered a ruptured Achilles tendon, and was out for the season; McBride would be released two days later. During the day, Jermon Bushrod suffered a mild calf sprain, and was replaced by Jonathan Scott during practices. On the same day, Cheta Ozougwu did not practice due to a hamstring strain. However, Scott eventually injured his calf, so Eben Britton and Cory Brandon took first team reps. Anderson (knee), D. J. Williams (calf) and Corey Wootton (hip) also were forced to miss practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities, Training Camp\nThe team hosted the annual Family Fest at Soldier Field on August 3 in front of a crowd of 29,000. At the event, Kelvin Hayden tore his left hamstring, and was ruled out for remainder of the season. Hayden would be placed on injured reserve on August 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Offseason activities, Training Camp\nThe first acquisition of Training Camp occurred on the first day, with Jamaal Anderson being signed to replace Ellis. After McBride's release, Josh Williams was signed. On August 2, Austin Signor was released, and Andrew Starks was signed. The next day, the Bears signed Leonard Pope, and released Brody Eldridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Schedule\nThe Bears' preseason opponents and schedule was announced on April 4. Chicago would open the preseason on the road against the Carolina Panthers, followed by an ESPN-televised game against the San Diego Chargers. The Bears would then visit the Oakland Raiders, for whom head coach Marc Trestman, offensive coordinator/offensive line coach Aaron Kromer and running backs coach Skip Peete worked for during its run to Super Bowl XXXVII, before ending the preseason against frequent preseason opponent Cleveland Browns, the tenth consecutive meeting between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nAgainst the Panthers, the Bears' defense forced three turnovers in the first half, which included a 51-yard interception return for touchdown by Jon Bostic, followed by Zack Bowman intercepting Derek Anderson and Sherrick McManis forcing Kenjon Barner to fumble; the Bears recorded a total of four takeaways in the game. However, the offense allowed seven sacks and had three turnovers, one of which was a fumble by Armando Allen. Panthers cornerback Josh Norman had two interceptions, one of which set up the first score of the game via Cam Newton's three-yard touchdown pass to Brandon LaFell early in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nBostic's pick-six tied up the game, followed by Robbie Gould's 35-yard field goal in the second quarter. With 18 seconds left in the first half, Carolina scored again on Kenjon Barner's 5-yard touchdown run; the Panthers scored the lone points of the third quarter after Norman intercepted Matt Blanchard, scoring on the 60-yard return. Though the Bears retaliated after Blanchard threw a 58-yard pass to Marquess Wilson to Carolina's 4-yard line, followed by Michael Ford's touchdown run, Graham Gano's 50-yard field goal was the final score of the game, as the Panthers triumphed 24\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nPlaying San Diego, Chicago opened with touchdowns by Brandon Marshall and Matt Forte, and led 20\u20130 late in the second quarter. The defense forced four turnovers in the first half off Chris Conte's interception, Major Wright's fumble recovery, Blake Costanzo recovering a muffed punt, and Corvey Irvin's recovery of a blocked punt. The Chargers began to rally, scoring on Fozzy Whittaker's rushing touchdown in the second quarter, followed by two more touchdowns in the third quarter, which Chicago countered with Michael Ford's 100-yard kickoff return to San Diego's 4-yard line. Afterwards, Michael Bush ran for a 3-yard touchdown, and while San Diego managed to score two more touchdowns, but the Bears held on to win 33\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nAgainst Oakland, the Bears scored 23 unanswered points in the first half, along with outgaining the Raiders 222 yards to 34 with a little over 10 minutes remaining in the first half. The Bears scored first off Forte's 32-yard touchdown, followed by Bush scoring two rushing touchdowns of ten and one yard each, and the first half ended with a 27\u20133 lead for Chicago. Meanwhile, the defense forced four turnovers off Tim Jennings and Isaiah Frey intercepting Matt Flynn and C. J. Wilson and Jerry Franklin intercepting Matt McGloin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nAs for Oakland, Terrelle Pryor replaced Flynn in the second half, and led the Raiders to two touchdowns and a field goal to narrow the gap to 27\u201320. The Bears retaliated with Michael Ford scoring a 15-yard touchdown, and the Raiders responded with McGloin's 5-yard touchdown pass to Jaime Olawale, but failed the two-point conversion, and the Bears sealed the game with Franklin's interception to win 34\u201326.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Preseason, Game summaries\nIn Cleveland, the Bears started strong after Demontre Hurst intercepted Brian Hoyer's pass, which led to Robbie Gould's field goal, followed by Jordan Palmer's touchdown pass to Joseph Anderson, which Cleveland retaliated with James Michael-Johnson intercepting Trent Edwards and scoring. Late in the game, the Bears led 16\u20139, and Sherrick McManis intercepted Hoyer, who made up for the pick by throwing a touchdown pass to Dan Gronkowski. Later, Armonty Bryant forced Harvey Unga to fumble, which was recovered by Cleveland's L. J. Foyt, which led to Spencer Lanning kicking the go-ahead field goal to put the Browns up 18\u201316. With a little over a minute left in the game, Gould missed a 57-yarder wide left, giving Cleveland the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Schedule\nThe Bears' schedule was released on April 18, 2013. Aside from the six games against their NFC North rivals, the Bears had the AFC North and NFC East on the schedule, along with two intraconference games against opponents with the same division placing as the Bears in the previous season. As a result, the Bears were assigned the St. Louis Rams and New Orleans Saints. NFL.com ranked the Bears' schedule as the sixteenth-strongest in the league, with all opponents having a combined 2012 record of 128\u2013127\u20131, and a winning percentage total of .502.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Bears kicked off the regular season at home against the Cincinnati Bengals. The game was the teams' first meeting since 2009, in which the Bengals won 45\u201310. Since 2001, the Bears dropped two of three games to the Bengals, winning 24\u20130 in 2001, while losing 24\u20137 in 2005 and 45\u201310 in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe two teams entered with defenses that ranked in the top six in 2012, but the Bears were ranked 16th in scoring at 23.4 points per game and 28th overall on offense, while the Bengals had an average score of 24.4 PPG and were 22nd in total offense. Among the Bears' strategies that should be utilized include trying to protect Jay Cutler, as six of the Bengals' linemen had combined for 129 career sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0032-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Bears' offensive line allowed 44 sacks in 2012, and as a result, changed the line by adding veterans Jermon Bushrod and Matt Slauson to supplement Roberto Garza on the left, while rookies Kyle Long and Jordan Mills joined Garza on the right side, marking the first time the Bears offensive line featured two rookies since Jim Covert and Rob Fada in 1983. The Bears' defense had to apply pressure to Andy Dalton, whose quick release led to four play-action touchdown passes to A. J. Green in 2013, the third most in the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0032-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nBears' radio announcer Jeff Joniak wrote, \"Marc Trestman owns the element of surprise, a true asset in Week 1. There is not much tape on Trestman for the Bengals to game plan from. It's old tape with very different personnel from a different time and place in the NFL. Trestman will try to use this asset to his advantage and a quick strike early in the game will jack up the crowd, and give the team a foundation to build on.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0032-0004", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Bears captains team captains for the season, starting with the Bengals game, were Cutler and Roberto Garza on offense, Lance Briggs and Julius Peppers on defense and Patrick Mannelly on special teams. 2013 was Mannelly's sixth consecutive season as captain, the fifth season for Cutler, third for Garza, fourth for Peppers and first for Briggs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nChicago struck first with Charles Tillman intercepting Dalton, which was followed with Cutler's eight-yard touchdown pass to Martellus Bennett, which the Bengals responded with a two-yard touchdown pass to Green. On the Bengals' first drive of the second quarter, Green was stripped by Tim Jennings, but the fumble went out of bounds. However, Dalton would be intercepted again by Tillman, his career-high second pick of the game, but the Bears failed to capitalize, and the Bengals scored again on Dalton's 45-yard touchdown pass to Greene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Bears' Robbie Gould connected on a team record 58-yard field goal to close out the first half. In the second half, the Bengals scored again, after Tillman was penalized for pass interference, via BenJarvus Green-Ellis' 5-yard touchdown run, which the Bears retaliated with Matt Fort\u00e9's one-yard touchdown run. In the fourth quarter, Cutler was intercepted by Vontaze Burfict, but the Bears got the ball back after Jennings forced Mohamed Sanu to fumble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0033-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nOn the next drive, the Bears converted a fourth down and Cutler threw the go ahead and eventual game-winning 19-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Marshall with 8:06 remaining. The Bengals failed to score on the next drive with 6:38 left, and the Bears clinched the game after Rey Maualuga was called for a personal foul after Michael Bush was stopped on third down. The Bears were able to run out the clock due to Cincinnati mis-using its time-outs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nWith the win, Trestman became the fourth head coach in franchise history to win his head coaching debut, after George Halas, Neill Armstrong and Dick Jauron. The Bears comeback in the second half marked the first time since 1980 the Bears came back from an 11-point deficit to win with two touchdown drives of 80 yards or more. The offense allowed zero sacks, the first time the Bears didn't allow a sack in a season opener since 1998 against the Jacksonville Jaguars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nIn week two, the Bears donned their 1940s alternate uniforms against rival Minnesota, in the second home game of the season, marking the first time since 1999 that the Bears hosted the first two games of the regular season. During the two games played between the rivals last season, the Bears won the first game 28\u201310, while the Vikings won the second 21\u201314. Since 2001, the Bears led the series 16\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nESPN writes that the Bears could capitalize on the Vikings' tendency to turn the ball over, as they gave away the ball to the Detroit Lions four times in week one. Chicago's defense should also prevent NFL MVP Adrian Peterson, who had been struggling when playing the Bears at Soldier Field. Since 2009, Peterson has been able to record only 73 rushing yards per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Bears fell behind early after Cordarrelle Patterson's 105-yard kickoff return for a touchdown. Devin Hester attempted to respond on the ensuing kickoff, but was pushed out of bounds at the Vikings' 32-yard line. The Bears fought back with a one-yard touchdown pass by Jay Cutler to Martellus Bennett, which Chicago added to with Cutler's touchdown pass to Brandon Marshall. In the second quarter, Jared Allen stripped the ball from Cutler, and Brian Robison returned the fumble 61 yards for a touchdown with 7:34 to go in the half. Afterwards, Hester returned the kickoff 80 yards to Minnesota's 23-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Bears offense later reached Minnesota's one-yard line, but Cutler had his pass intercepted by Kevin Williams in the end zone for a touchback. The Vikings failed to capitalize on the turnover after Tim Jennings intercepted Christian Ponder and scored on a 44-yard interception return. Minnesota retaliated with Ponder's 20-yard touchdown pass to Kyle Rudolph with 1:11 remaining, and the half ended with the Bears settling for a field goal. In the second half, the Vikings scored two field goals from Blair Walsh to take the 30\u201324 lead. However, the Bears scored on Cutler's 16-yard touchdown pass to Bennett, and ultimately prevailed after recovering a fumbled squib kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe win marked the second time in franchise history that the Bears won their first two games after trailing in the fourth quarter, the first being in 1971. During halftime, the team honored the 1963 Bears, two days following the death of running back Rick Casares, who was the team's leading rusher until Walter Payton surpassed him. When asked about Casares, defensive end Ed O'Bradovich stated, \"Oh my God, I think when you talk to my fellow teammates over here, what was all right, true and good about professional football was embodied in Rick Casares. Nobody loved the game more than him.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Bears travelled to Heinz Field to face the winless Pittsburgh Steelers in their first NBC Sunday Night Football matchup of the season. Pittsburgh had lost the previous week to Cincinnati to fall to 0\u20132 for the first time in 11 years. In the last game between the two in 2009, the Bears triumphed 17\u201314. The Bears were the 1-point favorites; eight CBSSports.com experts voted on their predictions for the game, with a 5\u20133 result favoring Chicago, while four ESPN analysts predicted that the Steelers would win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nOne of the goals of the defense was to contain Ben Roethlisberger in the passing pocket, especially as the offensive line suffered the loss of center Maurkice Pouncey. Additionally, the Steelers also had the 31st-ranked rushing offense and had yet to score a rushing touchdown, who was expected to regain first-rounder Le'Veon Bell. Alan Rubenstein of ChicagoNow writes that the Bears should attempt to improve their pass rush, which was only able to record two sacks in the last two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0038-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nMarc Trestman cited the weather as a factor for the poor performance, stating, \"It's tough to rush the passer in wet weather... For both sides. It's tough to get a pass rush with a soggy field and a wet field. It's an advantage throwing the football. On a rainy day (versus) no rain, really the advantage goes to the offense. Because we can sit back there and protect. And it's really hard to configure a pass rush to get close.\" On offense, the Bears should attempt to attack the Steelers' 14th-ranked rush defense. A key matchup was the WR-CB duel between Brandon Marshall and Ike Taylor; Taylor contained Bengals receiver A. J. Green, who recorded 162 yards against the Bears in week one, to just six catches for 41 yards in week two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nChicago started the game with Robbie Gould's field goal, followed by Matt Fort\u00e9 and Michael Bush's touchdown runs to take a 17\u20130 lead in the first quarter. Pittsburgh then scored on Shaun Suisham's 27-yard field goal, but the Bears then scored after Major Wright returned Roethlisberger's interception 38 yards for a touchdown for the 24\u20133 lead at halftime. In the second half, the Steelers began to rally with Roethlisberger throwing two touchdown passes of 33 and 21 yards to Antonio Brown, followed by Suisham kicking two more field goals to narrow the margin to 27\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nHowever, Jay Cutler threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to Earl Bennett; the pass was initially ruled as incomplete, but was reversed. Eventually, Lance Briggs stripped Roethlisberger, and Julius Peppers returned the fumble 42 yards for a touchdown. Although the eventual extra point by Gould was blocked by Troy Polamalu, the Bears finished the game with Chris Conte intercepting Roethlisberger with 1:39 left in the game for the fifth takeaway by Chicago on the night and the 40\u201323 win, dropping the Steelers to 0\u20133 for the first time since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nThe second divisional game of the year for the 3\u20130 Bears, looking for their first 4\u20130 start in seven seasons, took place at Ford Field against the 2\u20131 Detroit Lions. Since 2001, the Bears had won 17 of the meetings between the two, compared to Detroit's 9. The Bears defense, ranked 19th in scoring defense with 24.7 points per game and 25th in yards allowed with 383.0, had to keep up with the Lions' 4th-ranked offense, who recorded 410.7 yards per game 27.3 PPG, sixth in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nThe Lions also had running back Reggie Bush return from a knee injury; Bush had recorded 260 yards and a touchdown in the first two games. However, the Lions' leading receiver Nate Burleson broke his arm in a car accident, which meant additional focus on Calvin Johnson for the Bears. Expectations were for Charles Tillman to cover Johnson, who was limited by Tillman to 15 catches, no touchdowns and an average of 62.3 receiving yards in the last three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0040-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nAlthough Tillman had suffered groin and knee injuries that left him questionable for the game, he was later listed as active against the Lions. However, Johnson recorded 40 catches for 20+ yards in 2012, and the Bears allowed the Steelers to gain 20 yards or more in nine plays. To attempt to combat Johnson, the Bears switched from the pressure defense run in the first three games to the cover 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0040-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nIn the battle on the line of scrimmage, the Bears had to contain Ndamukong Suh and Nick Fairley, while the Lions had to protect Matthew Stafford from Julius Peppers and Corey Wootton. Offensively, the Bears also had to survive the crowd, who helped the Bears commit nine false start penalties in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nNeither team scored a touchdown in the first quarter, instead both scoring field goals, which extended into the first score of the second quarter. Later in the quarter, Matt Fort\u00e9 scored on a 53-yard run, allowing the Bears to take the 10\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nHowever, after a David Akers field goal, the Lions would score three unanswered touchdowns, all within 3 minutes, 26 seconds: Micheal Spurlock's 57-yard punt return led to Matthew Stafford's 1-yard run, while Jay Cutler was intercepted by Glover Quin, which set up Stafford's 2-yard pass to Calvin Johnson; finally, the Lions scored after Reggie Bush found a hole and hurdled over Bears' safety Major Wright en route to a 37-yard touchdown. The 27 points scored in the quarter was the most by the Lions since September 30, 2007 against the Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0041-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nThe Bears ended the half with a field goal, but continued to trail 30\u201313. After the Bears kicked a field goal in the third quarter, Cutler was intercepted again, this time by Louis Delmas. However, Chicago regained possession after Stafford's pass to Johnson was kicked and caught by Wright. Three plays later, Cutler was sacked by Ndamukong Suh, and fumbled; the ball was picked up by Nick Fairley, who ran four yards for the touchdown. In the fourth quarter, Akers kicked another field goal to put the Lions up 40\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0041-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nAfterwards, the Bears began to mount a charge, with Cutler throwing a 14-yard touchdown pass to Alshon Jeffery with less than four minutes in the game, followed by a two-point conversion on another pass to Jeffery. With 43 seconds remaining, a ten-yard pass to Earl Bennett and a two-point conversion off a throw to Brandon Marshall drew the Bears within eight points, but the eventual onside kick was recovered by Lions receiver Kris Durham, allowing the Lions to clinch the 40\u201332 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Detroit Lions\nStatistically, the Bears offense struggled. Cutler completed 27 of 47 passes for 317 yards, two touchdowns, three interceptions and a 65.6 passer rating. Cutler's three interceptions and fumble tied his turnover amount in the first three games. The offense also had trouble on third down; despite being ranked ninth in third down efficiency, the Bears failed to convert until there were 47 seconds left in the game to end the game converting just 1 of 13 third downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Bears entered week six against the undefeated New Orleans Saints, the team Marc Trestman and offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer worked for. The previous meeting between the two teams occurred in 2012, with the Saints winning 30\u201313. As a result, offensively, the two teams were similar conceptually. For the Bears' offense, a challenge exists in the Saints' 3\u20134 defense, which ranked sixth in yards allowed at 304.5 per game and fifth in points with 13.8. Additionally, Cameron Jordan and Junior Galette had four and three sacks, respectively, while seven other Saints had a combined total of 12 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints\nAlso, Saints tight end Jimmy Graham, the defending NFC Player of the Month, had six touchdowns on the season, and was one touchdown away from tying Mike Ditka and Antonio Gates for the most touchdowns in the first five games by a tight end. Jeff Joniak writes that Soldier Field's Kentucky bluegrass could also serve as an advantage for the Bears, as Drew Brees was 0\u20134 in Chicago, but those losses occurred in December and January, when the climate was much colder. In the last three meetings in Chicago, the Saints committed a total of nine turnovers (4 in the 2006 NFC Championship game, 3 in 2007, and 2 in 2008), which Joniak considered \"may be the only thing slowing down the Saints.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints\nAfter the Bears punted, Garrett Hartley kicked a 47-yard field goal. On the ensuing possession, Malcolm Jenkins forced Jay Cutler to fumble, and Cameron Jordan recovered the loose ball and reached the Bears' 6-yard line. After failing to score a touchdown, Hartley kicked a 19-yard field goal. In the second quarter, the Saints scored off Drew Brees' two-yard screen pass to Pierre Thomas to increase the lead to 13 points. On Chicago's next drive, the offense traveled 70 yards within eight plays, which ended in Jay Cutler's three-yard touchdown pass to Alshon Jeffery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe final score of the half was by Thomas, who caught a 25-yard pass from Brees. In the third quarter, after Hartley kicked a 36-yard field goal, the Bears traveled 71 yards to the Saints' 5-yard line. However, a penalty on Kyle Long for being an ineligible downfield player, followed by three consecutive incomplete passes forced Robbie Gould to kick a 27-yard field goal. Early in the following quarter, Chicago reached New Orleans' 25-yard line, but turned the ball over on downs after Cutler's pass to Earl Bennett on 4th and 2 was dropped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0044-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints\nOn the Saints' next drive, a neutral zone infraction penalty by Lance Briggs on 4th and 1 allowed Hartley to kick a 48-yard field goal to extend the Saints' lead to 26\u201310. However, the Bears attempted to rally, with Cutler throwing three consecutive passes to Jeffery, the final throw going 58 yards to the Saints' 2-yard line, where Brandon Marshall scored. Matt Fort\u00e9's two-point conversion allowed the Bears to narrow the gap to eight points, but the onside kick was recovered by the Saints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0044-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints\nAlthough the Saints were forced to punt, with 21 seconds remaining, Cutler could only manage to throw a pass to Jeffery which reached the Bears' 41-yard line, as time ran out, giving the Saints the 26\u201318 win. The win marked the first time the Saints defeated the Bears in an away game since 2002, although that game occurred at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints\nJeffery broke the franchise record for most receiving yards in franchise history with 218, which surpassed Harlon Hill's 214 yards against the San Francisco 49ers in 1954. Meanwhile, Marshall was targeted only five times during the game (15 percent of targets on the Bears), the lowest since Marshall's arrival in Chicago; the Bears fell to 0\u20134 in games when Marshall's target percentage is less than 20 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nIn week six, the Bears and the winless New York Giants met on Thursday night. The Bears and Giants had split the last four meetings since 2004, with Chicago winning the first two in 2004 and 2006, but losing in 2007 and 2010; they had also won the last four games between the teams at Soldier Field. Among the keys to victory for Chicago was to force turnovers, as the Giants led the league in giveaways with 20, while the Bears were ranked second in forced turnovers with 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0046-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nAdditionally, the Giants had the worst third-down offense, and averaged only 3.3 yards per carry. Chicago also had to attack Eli Manning, who had 12 interceptions entering the game, and was sacked 15 times, the fourth-most in the league; Manning also held a 658 passer rating, one of the lowest in the NFL. However, the Bears' pass defense allowed 278.8 yards per game, which is about 65 yards greater than the previous season's average. The Giants' offense was also returning from a strong game the previous week against the Philadelphia Eagles after scoring three touchdowns and 383 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nOn the third play from scrimmage, Zack Bowman intercepted Manning's pass intended for Rueben Randle at New York's 36-yard line and reached the 12-yard line, but Jay Cutler threw an incomplete pass to Brandon Marshall on fourth-and-two, giving the ball back to the Giants. On the eventual drive for the Giants, Tim Jennings intercepted Manning and scored the first touchdown of the night on a 48-yard interception return. The Giants eventually scored on Brandon Jacobs' 4-yard run after an 80-yard drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nOn the Bears' next possession, Marshall scored on a 10-yard touchdown catch, which New York answered with Randle's 37-yard touchdown reception. Afterwards, Marshall caught a 3-yard pass to increase the score to 21\u201314, which was extended by Robbie Gould's 40-yard field goal with two seconds remaining in the half. On the first possession of the second half, Gould scored on a 52-yarder, his twelfth-consecutive 50+-yard field goal, tying Viking Blair Walsh's record. New York later engineered a 91-yard drive, which ended in Jacobs scoring on a 1-yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0047-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nJacobs ended the night with 106 rushing yards, his first 100-yard rushing game since week fourteen of 2011. After getting the ball back, the Giants reached the Bears' 35-yard line, but with 1:35 to go, Manning's pass to Brandon Myers was overthrown, and was tipped off his fingers towards Jennings for Manning's third interception of the night. The Bears ran out the clock to claim the victory, snap their two-game losing streak and gave the Giants their first 0\u20136 start since 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nThe Bears recorded a season-high 26 first downs, and didn't allow a sack nor a turnover in a game for the first time since December 23, 2007 against Green Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nIn week seven, the Bears traveled to Landover, Maryland's FedExField to play the 1\u20134 Washington Redskins. Since 2001, the Redskins had won five of the previous seven meetings, including the last four games. However, the Redskins were 0\u20132 at home in 2013, and were hoping to avoid going 0\u20133 at home since 1998. The Bears' third-ranked scoring offense was a potential factor against the Redskins' defense, which allowed 395.0 yards and 28.6 points per game, two of the worst percentages in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0049-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nOn offense, Jeff Joniak writes that Chicago had to protect Jay Cutler and the ball, as Washington's 3\u20134 defense led to 75 quarterback blitzes, eight sacks, two interceptions, and four touchdowns. On the defensive side, the Bears looked to contain Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III and the read option. Additionally, the Redskins recorded 399.2 yards per game, the fourth best in the NFL. In the special teams phase, the Bears' 23 kick returns were a league-high, which led to an NFL-leading 24.6-yard starting spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0049-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nMeanwhile, the Redskins struggled the previous week against the Dallas Cowboys, allowing Dwayne Harris to score on an 86-yard punt return, and allowing him to return a kickoff 90 yards; they ranked last in the league in punt coverage with 19.1 yards allowed per return and 28th in kickoff coverage with 26.4. In the punting game, Adam Podlesh showed improvement in his punting hang time, with five of 26 punts returned, the second-fewest in the NFL. For Washington, punter Sav Rocca had the lowest gross and net averages in punting, and was one of seven punters to have a punt blocked in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nThe Redskins struck first with Kai Forbath's 38-yard field goal, which was answered by Robbie Gould's 47-yarder. On Washington's ensuing drive, Griffin was intercepted by Charles Tillman, who returned the pick to the Redskins' 10-yard line, which set up Matt Fort\u00e9's two-yard touchdown run. In the following quarter, Roy Helu scored on a 14-yard run to tie the game, and Washington pulled ahead after Brian Orakpo intercepted Cutler, scoring on the 29-yard return. Cutler later tore a groin muscle after getting sacked by Chris Baker, and Josh McCown took his role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nAfterwards, Devin Hester returned a punt 81 yards for the touchdown, tying Deion Sanders' record for the most return touchdowns all-time with 19. However, the Redskins ended the first half as the leader after Griffin threw a three-yard touchdown pass to Jordan Reed. On the Bears' first drive of the second half, Gould missed a field goal wide right, but Chicago compensated for the miss with Fort\u00e9's 50-yard touchdown run. Washington ended the third quarter with Helu's three-yard touchdown run to lead 31\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0050-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nOn Chicago's next drive, the Bears were forced to kick a field goal after blitzes rendered the Bears unable to score a touchdown. Afterwards, the Bears successfully converted an onside kick, but were offsides, and were forced to kick off. Fort\u00e9 scored again on a six-yard run, which Griffin answered with a 45-yard touchdown pass to Aldrick Robinson. The Bears then pulled ahead with McCown's seven-yard touchdown pass to Martellus Bennett. With 3:57 left, the Redskins successfully reached the Bears' three-yard line, where Helu scored again with 45 seconds remaining. On the final play of the game, McCown was sacked by Barry Cofield and Ryan Kerrigan, ending the game with a 45\u201341 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nThe game marked the first time in team history that the Bears have allowed 21 points or more in their first seven games, and the first time since 1969 that Chicago has allowed at least 40 points in two consecutive away games. Cutler was projected to be out for the next four weeks, with McCown serving as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Washington Redskins\nStatistics-wise, Cutler struggled, completing 3 of 8 passes for 28 yards with one interception and an 8.3 passer rating, while McCown completed 14 of 20 passes for 204 yards with one touchdown and a 119.6 passer rating. On the ground, Fort\u00e9 became the first Bears running back since Rashan Salaam to score three rushing touchdowns in a game. On defense, James Anderson was the only Bear to record a sack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: Bye week\nThe Bears entered their bye week in third in the division behind Green Bay and Detroit. The team was attempting to recover from the injuries suffered by seven players in the previous week against the Redskins. Jay Cutler and Lance Briggs were projected to be out for four weeks, while Brandon Marshall, Alshon Jeffery, Charles Tillman, Major Wright and Blake Costanzo, the other five players hurt, used the bye to heal. Marc Trestman preferred to use the week to rest his players, stating, \"I think we did a good thing by letting these guys rest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0053-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: Bye week\nThey came back with a lot of energy [at practice Monday]. There was very little rust in terms of executing and getting through the practice.\" During Trestman's tenure with the Montreal Alouettes, the Alouettes were 5\u20134 (.556) in games after bye weeks, and 3\u20131 (.750) in the postseason after byes. At practice on October 28, rookie Khaseem Greene filled in for Briggs, and was expected to start against the Packers. Greene and fellow rookie Jon Bostic eventually started for the Bears against the Packers. Lorin Cox of Pro Football Central predicted the Bears would finish the second half of the season with a 4\u20135 record, and a final record of 8\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nComing off their bye week, the Bears traveled to Lambeau Field to play the Green Bay Packers in the 189th meeting between the two rivals. The Bears had struggled regarding scoring against Green Bay in the last nine games between the two prior to 2013, and including the 2010 NFC title game, had scored 127 points, an average of 14.11 points. The two teams entered with among the top three scoring offenses, with Chicago and Green Bay ranked second and third, respectively, with 30.4 and 30.3 points per game, both of which rank behind the Denver Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0054-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nAmong the weapons of the Packers offense that the Bears must attempt to hinder was the running game, as Green Bay's rookie running back Eddie Lacy has recorded over 100 yards per game in the previous six during the season, along with quarterback Aaron Rodgers. One of Rodgers' skills is passing balls longer than 20 yards, and was 16 of 32 on these attempts, which was tied with Russell Wilson of the Seattle Seahawks for the highest percentage in the league; the Bears allowed 57 percent of opponents to throw for the aforementioned distance, the second-worst score in the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0054-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nHowever, both teams ranked in the bottom five in the NFL in pass rush, with the Bears being in last with only nine sacks. For Chicago, Matt Fort\u00e9 had gained 533 yards along with averaging 4.6 yards per run, while Josh McCown filled in for Jay Cutler. Since 2009, Bears quarterbacks besides Cutler had thrown a combined eight touchdowns and 21 interceptions against the Packers; in McCown's last start in 2011 against the Packers, he threw for 242 yards, a touchdown and two interceptions in a 35\u201321 losing effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nOn the Packers' first drive, Rodgers failed to recognize the Bears' zone defense, having expected a man-to-man defense, and Shea McClellin escaped Don Barclay's block and, along with Isaiah Frey, pulled Rodgers down, who landed on his shoulder and injured his left collarbone, and was replaced by Seneca Wallace for the remainder of the game. Afterwards, Mason Crosby kicked the 30-yard field goal to give the Packers the lead. On Chicago's first drive, McCown escaped pressure from Mike Neal and threw towards Brandon Marshall for the 7\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0055-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nOnce the Packers got the ball back, Wallace's pass for Jordy Nelson was tipped and intercepted by Julius Peppers, and was returned 14 yards to Green Bay's 45-yard line, but after the Bears failed to convert on third down, Adam Podlesh's punt was blocked by Jamari Lattimore. Eventually, James Starks ran 32 yards for the touchdown. However, the Bears traveled 60 yards on two plays, and Fort\u00e9 scored on the 1-yard run. The Bears ended the first half with Robbie Gould's 24-yard field goal to expand the lead to 17\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0055-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nIn the third quarter, the Packers forced the Bears to punt, and Lacy ran 56 yards to the Bears' 1, and scored on the ensuing play. On the eventual kickoff, the Packers successfully attempted a surprise onside kick, which was recovered by Lattimore. Crosby kicked a 23-yarder on the drive. On the Bears' next drive, McCown threw a six-yard pass to Alshon Jeffery, whose size kept the ball from being knocked away by Davon House. After both teams exchanged punts in the fourth quarter, on the Bears' next drive, began attempting to run out the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0055-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nOn 4th and 1 at the Bears' 32 with 7:50 remaining, Fort\u00e9 ran three yards for the conversion and continuing the drive, which ended with Gould's 27-yard field goal. The drive lasted 18 plays and took up 8:58, leaving only 50 seconds remaining in the game. Despite a 15-yard pass by Wallace to Nelson, sacks by Corey Wootton and McClellin ended the game with a 27\u201320 victory for the Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Green Bay Packers\nMcCown ended the night completing 22 of 41 passes for 272 yards and two touchdowns, while Wallace completed 11 of 19 for 114 yards and an interception. The win marked the first time the Packers lost at home to an NFC North opponent since 2009, and the first win for the Bears at Lambeau Field since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nWeek ten featured the Bears attempting to avoid suffering the first sweep by the Lions since 2007, while also trying to claim the division lead; the last time the two teams faced each other in a late-season game for the division lead was in 1991, which ended in a Chicago 20\u201310 win. However, the Bears had won the last five games against the Lions at Soldier Field. On November 7, Marc Trestman announced that Jay Cutler has been cleared by doctors to return against Detroit, despite having been projected to be out for approximately four weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nAgainst the Lions, Cutler was 7\u20132, and won all four home games. On the offensive side, Jeff Joniak states that the Lions defensive line \"are ferocious up the middle, they are physical, and they make you pay for poor technique,\" but that \"there is growing confidence that the Bears offense is a resilient one;\" the Bears had the fewest pre-snap penalties in the league, and only one false start. The Bears could also seize the Lions' cornerback corps, which struggled during the season, allowing 11 plays of 40 yards or more, along with 4.7 yards per carry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0057-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nDefensively, Sports Illustrated writers Chris Burke and Doug Farrar wrote the Bears must attempt to hinder Reggie Bush, and improve their performance from the previous week, when the Packers' running game ran for 190 yards and two touchdowns. The Bears also had to prevent Calvin Johnson from excelling; against the Dallas Cowboys, Johnson recorded 329 receiving yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nChicago scored first after Cutler's 32-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Marshall capped a 65-yard drive that took just 2:23. However, the Lions would travel 85 yards to tie on Matthew Stafford's 5-yard pass to Kris Durham. In the following quarter, the Bears reached the Lions' 4-yard line, but Cutler's pass was tipped by Ndamukong Suh, and intercepted by DeAndre Levy in the endzone; both teams would fail to score in the quarter. During the quarter, Cutler began showing signs of struggling due to an ankle injury. In the third quarter, the Lions would score on Stafford's four-yard touchdown to Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0058-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nAfterwards, the Bears were forced to settle for a 25-yard field goal, narrowing the gap to one point. In the fourth, Stafford was intercepted by Chris Conte, who reached Detroit's 9-yard line, and Cutler would then throw a 14-yard touchdown pass to Alshon Jeffery, which was eventually nullified. After an incomplete pass, Gould kicked a 32-yard field goal to draw the score to 14\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0058-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nHowever, Johnson would catch a 14-yard pass from Stafford to increase the lead to 21\u201313, and with 2:22 remaining, Josh McCown entered the game in favor of Cutler, and guided the Bears' offense 74 yards, culminating in McCown's 11-yard touchdown pass to Marshall with 40 seconds to go. On the two-point conversion, McCown's pass to tight end Dante Rosario fell incomplete, but Willie Young was penalized for roughing the passer, allowing the Bears a second chance, which failed after Matt Fort\u00e9 was tackled by Nick Fairley in the backfield. The Bears' onside kick would backfire, as Joique Bell recovered, sealing a season sweep for the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nDespite stating he was \"100 percent\" healthy after the groin injury suffered two games prior, it appeared the injury was still lingering; after throwing a pass during the third quarter, Cutler fell down and grabbed his groin, before standing back up. Regarding the injuries, Cutler stated, \"It held up OK. It's all on the same leg so I think that was a problem. But the groin, you take the ankle out of the equation and I would have been fine, I think.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0059-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Detroit Lions\nCutler ended the game having completed 21 of 40 passes for 250 yards with a touchdown, interception and a 69.8 passer rating. Despite x-rays on his ankle being negative, Cutler was ruled out of the next week's game against the Baltimore Ravens with a high ankle sprain. During the second quarter, Charles Tillman was also injured, suffering a torn right triceps brachii muscle, and was placed on injured reserve with the designation to return, allowing him to practice after six weeks and play in games two weeks after; as a result, Tillman missed the entire regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAgainst the Baltimore Ravens in week twelve, the Bears wore their 1940s alternate uniforms. The Bears last played the Ravens in 2009, which ended with a Baltimore 31\u20137 victory. With Jay Cutler still out, Josh McCown continued to play as quarterback for the Bears, who had the eighth-best passing offense in the league with 261.7 yards per game, which competed against the Ravens' 18th-ranked pass defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0060-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nOn the ground, the Ravens had the tenth-best rushing D with 102.6 rushing yards allowed per game, but offensively, had the 30th-ranked rushing offense, averaging just 73.1 yards per game, going against Chicago's defense which allowed 129.4 rushing yards per game. Against Joe Flacco, the Bears had the opportunity to force turnovers, as Flacco had thrown eleven interceptions in the previous nine games. For the Bears on offense, a liability was to protect McCown from Terrell Suggs and Elvis Dumervil, who combined for 17 of 32 sacks by the Ravens. Two parties had the majority favoring the Bears for the game: 10 of 13 ESPN analysts predicted a Bears victory, with Ron Jaworski, Seth Wickersham and Cris Carter being the only three to predict a win for Baltimore. CBS Sports analysts predicted the Ravens would win in a 5\u20134 vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Ravens opened the game with Ray Rice gaining a 47-yard run, his longest of the year up to that point (his previous highest in 2013 was 14 yards), which led to Rice's 1-yard run with 9:58 in the first. The Ravens added to the score with Justin Tucker's 52-yarder, bringing the score to 10\u20130. With 4:51 left in the first quarter, the game was suspended due to inclement weather, which included a tornado watch, which was eventually elevated to a tornado warning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0061-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nFans were ordered to evacuate the stands and enter the covered concourses, while the teams returned to the locker rooms. The evacuation marked the first time Soldier Field had an evacuation since the stadium's opening in 1921. The game resumed play at 3:25\u00a0pm. ET, after a 1-hour, 53-minute-delay. In the second quarter, Robbie Gould kicked a 20-yard field goal, and eventually, rookie defensive end David Bass escaped a chop block by Rice and intercepted Flacco, scoring on a 24-yard return and tying the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0061-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Ravens eventually scored on Torrey Smith's five-yard touchdown catch, and after Flacco had a pass intercepted by Jon Bostic, Gould ended the half kicking a 46-yarder. After a scoreless third period, Matt Fort\u00e9 caught a 14-yard pass from McCown and scored with 10:33 in the fourth, the Bears finally taking the lead 20\u201317. Now behind by three, the Ravens engineered an 82-yard drive to Chicago's 2-yard line, but Rice failed to score twice, and a botched snap from Gino Gradkowski slowed down the Ravens, and Flacco's pass towards Smith was overthrown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0061-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAs a result, the Ravens resorted to a 21-yard field goal with three seconds in regulation to force overtime. In overtime, Flacco's pass for Tandon Doss fell incomplete, and the Ravens punted to the Bears. McCown then completed a 43-yard pass to Martellus Bennett, and Gould kicked the game-winning 38-yard field goal with 8:41 remaining to win the game 23\u201320, which lasted five hours, 16 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nThe Bears visited Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis to play the Rams, again without Jay Cutler. However, the Rams were also without starting quarterback Sam Bradford, and instead had Kellen Clemens as backup. The Bears had won four consecutive games against the Rams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0062-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nTwo rookie players the Bears' defense had to contain were running back Zac Stacy, who recorded an average of 107.7 yards and three touchdowns in the previous three games, along with ranking second among rookie running backs with 537 rushing yards; and receiver Tavon Austin, who recorded 314 yards against the Indianapolis Colts in the previous week. Additionally, the Rams' offense was ranked fourth in the NFL with 54.6 percent of yardage occurring after the catch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0062-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nFor the Bears' offense, Jeff Joniak wrote they needed to avoid attempting to score in the red zone; in the previous three games, the Bears had 12 drives in the red zone, but managed to score only four touchdowns, while also allowing a turnover, and was ranked 13th after scoring 55 percent. Meanwhile, the Rams had forced quarterbacks to record only a 45.8 passer rating when in the red zone, along with the second lowest completion percentage, and the third fewest completions recorded. Also, St. Louis led the league in red zone interceptions with six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0062-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nFinally, the Rams led the league in overall sack percentage with 9.4, while defensive end Robert Quinn had the most knockdowns and hurries in the NFL, and was second in sacks with 12. An advantage Chicago had, however, was the second-most passing touchdowns in the NFL with 15, while Josh McCown's average gain per pass is higher than Cutler's, with a 7.47 to 7.20. The Rams also did not have the capable secondary to cover the trio of Martellus Bennett, Alshon Jeffery and Brandon Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nSt. Louis scored first on Austin's 65-yard run, and would reclaim the ball after James Laurinitis stripped Matt Fort\u00e9, leading to Stacy's one-yard touchdown run. The Bears would then score on McCown's seven-yard touchdown pass to Bennett, but the Rams ended the quarter with a 21\u20137 lead after Clemens' six-yard touchdown pass to Jared Cook. In the second quarter, McCown threw an incomplete pass, which appeared to be a fumble, and after Rams cornerback Trumaine Johnson picked up the ball, Bears fullback Tony Fiammetta pulled him to the ground by the facemask.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0063-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nKyle Long would then be involved in an incident with Rams defensive lineman William Hayes, which led to Long kicking Hayes, causing Long's brother Chris Long to restrain Kyle, who would then be penalized for a personal foul. McCown and Fiammetta would also be penalized, for intentional grounding and facemasking, respectively. Halfway through the quarter, Chicago scored after McCown threw a three-yard pass to Marshall, but Greg Zuerlein would score on a 29-yard field goal to give the Rams a 24\u201314 lead at halftime. The lone score of the third quarter was Zuerlein's 40-yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0063-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nEarly in the fourth quarter, Hester recorded a 62-yard punt return for a touchdown, which was overruled by Craig Steltz's holding penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0063-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nthe Bears reached the Rams' one-yard line, but required eight plays: Michael Bush's run went for no gain; McCown's pass to Jeffery was incomplete, but a holding penalty on Brandon McGee gave the Bears a first down; Bush lost two yards on the following run; McCown's touchdown pass to Bennett was nullified by Jermon Bushrod's holding penalty; McCown's 13-yard touchdown pass to Fort\u00e9 was also nullified, after Fort\u00e9 failed to break the plane, instead placing the Bears back on the one-yard line; McCown was then sacked by Michael Brockers, but Brockers was penalized for roughing the passer; Bush failed to gain a yard on the next play; the Bears finally scored on the drive on Bush's one-yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0063-0004", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nOn the Rams' ensuing drive, Benny Cunningham gained 27 yards, while the offense gained 48 yards from Clemens' 19 and 29 yards passes to Chris Givens and Cook, respectively. Four plays later, Cunningham scored on a nine-yard run, while Isaiah Pead scored on the two-point conversion. Devin Hester would fumble on the following kickoff, but recovered at the Bears' ten-yard line. After the Bears' offense reached their own 39-yard line, Quinn stripped McCown, and scored on the following fumble return. The game marked the third time the Bears allowed 40 points during the season for the first time since 1964.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at St. Louis Rams\nMcCown set the team record for most completions with 36, two greater than Jim Miller's and Brian Griese's 34 set on November 14, 1999 and September 30, 2007, respectively. Fort\u00e9 recorded 77 yards in the game, adding to 6,178 career rushing yards, surpassing Neal Anderson to become the second-highest rushing leader in team history. The Bears' defense recorded the second-worst defensive output in 2013, with a negative-11.4, making the team's defense the second-worst in the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nIn week thirteen, the Bears visited the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome to play the Vikings, whom the Bears trailed 50\u201353\u20132 in the all-time series. Josh McCown was given the start for the third straight week, with an expectation that Jay Cutler would return the following week. McCown entered the game having a 65.5 completion percentage for 1,106 yards, seven touchdowns, an interception, and a 100.8 passer rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0066-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nAs a result, McCown had an advantage over the Vikings' pass defense, which ranked 29th in the league with 282 passing yards allowed, while also allowing quarterbacks to record a 65 completion percentage, 40 attempts per game, and a 97.7 passer rating. Also, the Vikings allowed 31.5 points per game, the worst in the NFL, while recording only 14 turnovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0066-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nHowever, the Bears' defense was a weakness, ranking last in rushing yards allowed per game (145.2), total yards (1,597) and first-downs allowed (89); the defense was 31st in the NFL in yards per carry (4.9), first-down percentage (27.1) and 20-plus yard runs (12). Additionally, the defense allowed running backs in the previous five games to rush for 999 yards, average 5.8 yards per carry, and 197 yards per game. Adrian Peterson ran for an average of 108 yards per game in his career against the Bears, including 120.6 in the last three meetings between the two. Minnesota's rushing game also ran for a year-best 232 yards in the previous week. Cutler, Lance Briggs, Major Wright, Anthony Walters, James Brown, Jonathan Scott, and Cornelius Washington were inactive for the Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nIn the first quarter, McCown had a pass intercepted by Chad Greenway, but an offsides penalty on Robert Blanton nullified the play; the drive would end with the only score of the first quarter via Robbie Gould's 30-yard field goal. In the second quarter, Cordarrelle Patterson's 33-yard touchdown run gave the Vikings the lead; Gould would subsequently kick a 40-yard field goal. Before the half ended, Christian Ponder suffered from symptoms of a concussion and left. On the Bears' first drive of the second half, McCown threw an 80-yard touchdown pass to Alshon Jeffery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0067-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nAfter the Vikings responded with Blair Walsh's 32-yard field goal, Jeffery caught a 46-yard touchdown pass over Viking cornerback Chris Cook to give Chicago the lead 20\u201310; Cook would eventually be ejected from the game for shoving side judge Laird Hayes. On Minnesota's first possession of the final quarter, Matt Cassel threw an eight-yard touchdown to Greg Jennings, and on Chicago's next drive, McCown's flip pass for Kyle Long was deflected and stripped by Audie Cole, with Marvin Mitchell recovering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0067-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nDespite starting the drive in the Bears' red zone and reaching the six-yard line, Cassel's pass for Rhett Ellison was tipped and intercepted by Khaseem Greene. After the Bears punted, Cassel fumbled on the first play, but recovered. Afterwards, the Vikings drove from their own six-yard line to the Bears' 12, where Walsh tied the game with a 30-yard field goal, making the score 20\u201320. On the final play of regulation, Gould's attempted 66-yard field goal fell short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0067-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nIn overtime, the Bears' opening drive ended after McCown was sacked by Jared Allen and fumbled, with Jermon Bushrod recovering, prompting the Bears to punt. On the Vikings' first drive of the period, Walsh's 39-yard field goal was overruled by Ellison's facemasking penalty; Walsh would miss the eventual 57-yarder. The Bears would reach the Vikings' 29-yard line, and on second down, Gould missed the 47-yard kick wide right. The Vikings would reach Chicago's 16-yard line, allowing Walsh to kick the game-winning 34-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Minnesota Vikings\nMarc Trestman received criticism for calling Gould to attempt the 47-yard field goal on second down, with the Chicago Sun-Times calling the choice \"an indefensible case of playing scared.\" Trestman responded by stating he did not want to lose a fumble or suffer a penalty. Jeffery set the team record for the most receiving yards in one game with 249, surpassing his previous record set against the Saints in week 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Bears announced on May 24, 2013, that they would retire former tight end and head coach Mike Ditka's number 89 jersey at the Bears-Cowboys halftime ceremony. The number was the last to be retired by the organization, with team chairman George McCaskey stating, \"If there is going to be a last one, there is no more appropriate one than 89.\" During the ceremony, players from the 1985 Bears congratulated Ditka through messages on the videoboard. Ditka concluded his speech by saying, \"Thank you, thank you, thank you. Go Bears!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe two teams had split their meetings 2\u20132 since 2004, Dallas winning in 2004 and 2007, and Chicago winning in 2010 and 2012. Among the players the Bears had to contain is Cowboys running back DeMarco Murray, who averaged 5 yards per carry. The Bears had the worst-ranked rushing defense in the league with 153.6 yards allowed per game, but the Cowboys ranked last in rushing attempts with 249. ESPN Chicago's Michael C. Wright writes that the Bears could use its sixth-ranked passing offense to attack the Cowboys' 31st-ranked passing defense, which has allowed 294.9 yards per game. The Cowboys' defense also allowed a league-worst 422 yards per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nDallas opened the game with a 12-play, 75-yard drive ending with Tony Romo's 2-yard touchdown pass to Dez Bryant. The Bears scored the final touchdown of the first quarter on Josh McCown's 4-yard pass to Earl Bennett, the result of a 78-yard drive. With 8:58 left in the first half, McCown scored on a 7-yard run to take the lead 14\u20137, which the Cowboys answered with Romo's 10-yard pass to Jason Witten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0071-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nAfter Robbie Gould kicked a 27-yard field goal, the Bears scored again after McCown threw a 25-yard touchdown pass to Alshon Jeffery, who caught the ball over B. W. Webb in the back of the endzone with 0:17 left in the half. On the first drive of the third quarter, Gould kicked a 34-yard field goal, which was bolstered by Matt Fort\u00e9's 5-yard touchdown catch and Brandon Marshall scoring on a 2-point conversion to increase the score to 35\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0071-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nIn the fourth quarter, Michael Bush scored on a 17-yard touchdown reception, and the Cowboys responded with a 9-yard touchdown catch by Cole Beasley. Gould eventually kicked a 23-yarder, while the Cowboys scored Joseph Randle's 1-yard run with six seconds to go. On the ensuing onside kick, the ball was recovered by Marshall, and McCown ran the clock out to seal the 45\u201328 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nJay Cutler made his return to action against the 4\u20139 Cleveland Browns, a move that was criticized by fans. In November, a poll conducted by the Chicago Sun-Times revealed that fans favored Josh McCown with 66.87 percent, with Cutler earning 29.31 percent. On December 9, ESPN analyst Skip Bayless tweeted, \"As much as I've supported Vanderbilt's own Jay Cutler, I must admit Josh McCown runs this offense like he owns it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0072-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nBleacher Report's Dilan Ames stated that although Cutler is the better quarterback, his injury tendencies and inability to play a full season since 2009 had affected him, along with the statistics comparison between the two quarterbacks: Cutler has recorded 1,908 yards, 13 touchdowns and eight interceptions, while McCown has thrown for 1,809 yards, 13 touchdowns and one interception. However, Brandon Marshall defended Cutler's status as the starter, stating:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\n\"Yes, Josh is doing well. You have to give him credit \u2013 he's playing lights out \u2013 one of the best quarterbacks playing right now. But Jay Cutler, he's a special guy. There are some things he can do that other quarterbacks can't. That's the physical part. But I put Jay Cutler in any room in the NFL, and he's the smartest guy in the room. So he brings a lot to the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nMcCown also acknowledged his backup position on the team, and told the Chicago Tribune, \"The way that I serve my team is to play when the starter is not healthy. Jay is our starting quarterback, there is no doubt about that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nSeven CBS Sports analysts predicted a Bears victory, with Pete Prisco being the only one to favor the Browns. Jeff Joniak stated that the Bears had to attack the Browns' 3\u20134 defense, who ranked third in yards per pass attempt allowed at 5.32, with their fifth-ranked passing offense. Chicago's wide receiver duo of Marshall and Alshon Jeffery should also be utilized, as Joe Haden and Buster Skrine are at a size mismatch (Marshall is 5 inches and 40 pounds larger than Haden, while Jeffery is 6 inches and 30 pounds heavier than Skrine).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0075-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nBrowns offensive coordinator Ray Horton commented, \"This team, Chicago, is a lot like Detroit in that they have weapons at every position. Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffery have the most catches in the league. They have the most combined yards in the league. They are both, in our mind, No. 1 receivers. They present a challenge that you can't double everybody. You can't roll up to one guy because the other guy's open.\" On defense, the Bears had to contain Josh Gordon and Jordan Cameron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0075-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nGordon ranks second in yards after catch, while leading all receivers with 71 for an average of 19.7 yards. Cameron leads all tight ends with 23 third down catches. The Bears' worst-ranked run defense also has to defend against the Browns, which had the third-fewest rushing attempts in the league with 290 with an average of 3.78 yards, which is one of the bottom six in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Bears' opening drive ended at Cleveland's 14-yard line when Cutler had his pass tipped in the endzone by T. J. Ward and intercepted by Tashaun Gipson. The Browns then scored on Billy Cundiff's 35-yard field goal, which was tied by Robbie Gould kicking a 23-yarder. Eventually, the Bears reached the Browns' 24-yard line on another drive, and after a penalty on Alshon Jeffery forced the Bears to kick a 46-yard field goal, the score was nullified by Corey Wootton's holding penalty, forcing Chicago to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0076-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nWith 8:01 in the first half, Cutler was again intercepted by Gipson, who returned the pick 44 yards for a touchdown and the 10\u20133 lead. With 24 seconds remaining in the half, Cutler connected on a 5-yard touchdown pass with Marshall to close the half at 10\u201310. Cutler ended the first half with 13 of 19 passes completed for 168 yards, a touchdown and two interceptions. Early in the third quarter, Jason Campbell's pass for Greg Little was intercepted by Zack Bowman and returned 43 yards for the score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0076-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nCleveland's Edwin Baker eventually scored his first career NFL touchdown on a 2-yard run, and the Browns added to the score when Billy Winn punched the ball from Martellus Bennett, and Ward returned the fumble 52 yards for the 24\u201317 advantage. Eventually, Cutler guided the Bears from their own 5-yard line, culminating in a 45-yard touchdown pass to Jeffery after Gipson made an ill-timed leap and Julian Posey being unable to interrupt the play with 10:59 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0076-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nWith 5:41 left in the game, Cutler threw a 5-yard pass to Earl Bennett to take the 31\u201324 lead, which was extended by Michael Bush on a 40-yard touchdown run. Cutler's touchdown pass to Bennett was the twenty-ninth passing touchdown of the season, which ties the team record set in 1947 and 1995. With 1:03 to go, Campbell threw a 43-yard touchdown pass to Josh Gordon, but the Bears recovered the ensuing onside kick to seal the victory, 38\u201331. The win marked the third time since 1970 that the Bears won all four games against an AFC division, and the first since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Cleveland Browns\nThe following night, the Bears would jump to first place of the NFC North after the Lions were defeated by the Ravens. The Bears had the opportunity to clinch the division in week sixteen by defeating the Philadelphia Eagles, in addition to losses by the Packers and Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nChicago entered week sixteen with a chance to clinch the NFC North in the event that the Packers and Lions lost. The Packers and Lions eventually lost to the Steelers and Giants, respectively, putting the Bears in position to win the division by defeating the Eagles. The last game between the Bears and Eagles was in 2011, when the Bears won 30\u201324; the Bears also lead the all-time series 30\u201312\u20131, though the Eagles had won six of the last ten meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0078-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nHowever, the Bears had won four of five meetings between the two teams in the last six years, but all by less than six points. One of the Bears' keys to victory is to prevent LeSean McCoy from dominating; the Bears had the worst run defense in the league, while McCoy leads the league in rushing. Chicago's defense also must contain the Eagles' fast-scoring offense: the Eagles had the lowest average time of possession per drive at 2:24, while the league average is 3:27. Philadelphia also is the only team in the league to score in fewer than seven plays per drive. In the passing game, Chicago had the fourth-best passing offense, while the Eagles were 26th in pass defense. However, the Eagles are ranked sixth in rushing defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0079-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Bears fell behind early in the first quarter when Nick Foles threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Riley Cooper with 9:54 to go, followed by Devin Hester getting the ball stripped on the ensuing kickoff and Cary Williams recovering the loose ball. LeSean McCoy eventually scored on a 1-yard run with 7:44 in the first, and Philadelphia added to the scoring with Foles throwing a 10-yard touchdown pass to Brent Celek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0079-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nAfter Alex Henery kicked a 49-yard field goal, the Bears scored their first points of the game with Robbie Gould's 50-yard field goal on the last play of the first half. In the second half, the Eagles scored off a safety after Cedric Thornton tackled Matt Fort\u00e9. Philadelphia scored again after McCoy recorded another rushing touchdown. The Bears scored their first touchdown after Jay Cutler threw a 6-yard pass to Brandon Marshall, followed by a two-point conversion off Cutler's pass to Earl Bennett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0079-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nWith 11:19 remaining, Chris Polk scored on a 10-yard run to increase the score to 40\u201311, added by Brandon Boykin intercepting Cutler and scoring on a 54-yard return. Afterwards, Josh McCown filled in for Cutler. The Eagles scored again after Bryce Brown ran 65 yards for the touchdown to make the final score 54\u201311, the biggest blowout since a 47\u20130 loss to the Houston Oilers in 1977 and the second-most points allowed in team history, behind a 55\u201320 loss to Detroit in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0080-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Bears failed to score 18 points for the first time in 2013, while allowing a season-high five sacks. Chicago also allowed two 100-yard rushers in the same game for the first time since 1976 against the Denver Broncos, with Norris Weese (120 yards) and Ottis Anderson (116 yards) guiding the Broncos to 28\u201314 win. After the game, Marc Trestman stated, \"We are a team that was ready to play this game and we played a terrible football game for lack of a better word. I'm not going to use any word other than that. We were terrible in all three phases. We didn't play well in any phase of football.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0081-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nIn the season-ender against the Packers for the NFC North title, Aaron Rodgers made his return to action for the first time since week 9 against the Bears, who intend to sweep the Packers for the first time since 2007. The Packers had fallen to 2\u20135\u20131 without Rodgers, and entered the game with a 7\u20137\u20131 record. However, Green Bay did not have Clay Matthews in the lineup, which ESPN wrote could provide an advantage for Jay Cutler, who had a 1\u20138 record against the Packers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0081-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nThe Packers had won seven of the last nine games between the rivals, while winning 21\u201313 in 2012's game at Soldier Field; Green Bay had won the last three games at Soldier Field. Rodgers' absence had improved the Packers' rushing offense, which ranked seventh with 131.7 yards per game, which played against the Bears' worst-ranked rush defense, having allowed 161.5 rushing yards per game, 25.6 yards greater than the 31st-ranked team. Also, the Bears had allowed 5.4 rushing yards per carry, the worst in the league since the 1961 Vikings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0081-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nFor the Bears' offense, the team had to utilize Matt Fort\u00e9 against a Packers defense that allowed 4.61 yards per run. Quarterbacks against the Packers had a 95.5 passer rating, recording 7.70 yards per pass, and a 1.9 interception percentage. However, the offensive line had to protect Cutler against the pass rush, with Green Bay ranked eighth in the NFL with 43 sacks, with 25 of them from blitzes. The game marked the first time since the NFL realigned with eight divisions in 2002 that the NFC North did not feature a division champion with at least ten wins. The Packers were the favorite by \u22123.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0082-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nAfter the Bears punted on the opening drive, the Packers reached Chicago's five-yard line, but Rodgers was intercepted by Chris Conte. Chicago scored on the following possession with Fort\u00e9's four-yard run. In the second quarter, Rodgers was intercepted by Tim Jennings. After the Packers scored on Mason Crosby's 33-yard field goal, Devin Hester fumbled on the kickoff, but recovered; the Bears would be forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0082-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nAfter Green Bay reached Chicago's 17-yard line, Rodgers was hit by Julius Peppers, with the ball leaving his hand as his arm went forward; the players did not attempt to recover the ball, as if it was an incompletion, but the referees did not consider the play dead. Jarrett Boykin subsequently picked up the ball, and scored on the play. On the Bears' next drive, Cutler's pass to Alshon Jeffery was stripped by Tramon Williams, and was recovered by Morgan Burnett. Crosby scored the final score of the first half with a 27-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0082-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nIn the third quarter, the Bears regained the lead with Fort\u00e9's five-yard touchdown run. Both teams exchanged scores on the next two drives of the game, with the Packers scoring on Rodgers' seven-yard touchdown throw to Randall Cobb, followed by Fort\u00e9's one-yard touchdown run, ending the quarter with the Bears leading 21\u201320. On the first play of the final quarter, Cutler threw a five-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Marshall, which the Packers retaliated with Eddie Lacy's six-yard touchdown run. After the Bears punted, the Packers reached the Bears' 48-yard line with 48 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0082-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nDefensive coordinator Mel Tucker called a blitz, but Conte failed to apply man-to-man coverage, allowing Cobb to score the game-winning touchdown. However, the Packers failed the two-point conversion, making the score 33\u201328. The Bears received the ball with 38 seconds left, and reached the Packers' 45-yard line, where Cutler's Hail Mary pass for Marshall was intercepted by Sam Shields as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0083-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Green Bay Packers\nThe season marked the sixth time in the previous seven years the Bears missed the playoffs. Despite forcing two turnovers, the Bears defense allowed the Packers to record 473 yards, convert 9 of 18 third down plays, a 35:09 time of possession and run 76 plays in comparison to Chicago's 49.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0084-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Statistics\nStatistically, the Bears offense greatly improved from its 2012 counterpart. The 2013 offense ended the year with the second-best scoring offense with 445 points, behind the Denver Broncos; the previous year ranked 16th at 375 total points and 23.4 PPG. The 2012 team also was ranked 29th in passing yards with 2999, while the following year improved to fifth with 4281 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0084-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Statistics\nThe offense also broke team records in total yards (6,109), passing yards (4,450), passing touchdowns (32), first downs (344) and passer rating (96.9), while falling short of the 1985 team's record of points scored in a season by 11, ending with 445. However, the defense struggled mightily throughout the season, ranking 30th in the NFL, with injuries ending the seasons of five players: defensive tackles Henry Melton and Nick Collins, cornerbacks Kelvin Hayden and Charles Tillman, and linebacker D. J. Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0084-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Statistics\nAfter having the fifth-ranked defense in the league in 2012, the team allowed franchise-records in yards allowed with 6,313, rushing yards allowed (2,583) and points with 478 in 2013 (also ranking 29th in the NFL in points allowed per game with 29.9), while allowing a league-worst 5.35 rushing yards per carry; the Bears were the only team in the NFL to allow five yards per carry during the year. In third-down stops, the Bears ranked 25th. Additionally, the defense tied the Jacksonville Jaguars for the fewest sacks in the league with 31. Regarding the defense, Chicago Tribune writer Steve Rosenbloom wrote, \"Under Angelo and Smith, the Bears couldn't win enough games where they needed only three offensive touchdowns. Under Emery and Trestman, the Bears couldn't win enough games where they needed to hold opponents to only three offensive touchdowns.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0085-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Statistics, Position reviews\nTogether, quarterbacks Jay Cutler and Josh McCown broke team records in touchdown passes, passing yards, completion percentage and passer rating with 32, 4,450, 64.4 and 96.9, respectively. Individually, in eleven games, Cutler completed 63.1 percent of his passes for 2,621 yards with 19 touchdowns, 12 interceptions and a career-high 89.2 passer rating. In the other five games, McCown completed 66.8 percent of passes for 1,829 yards, 13 touchdowns, an interception and a 109 passer rating, which ranked third in the NFL behind Denver's Peyton Manning and Philadelphia's Nick Foles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0085-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Statistics, Position reviews\nRunning back Matt Forte had 1,339 rushing yards, a career-high, while wide receivers Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffery had 1,200 receiving yards each, as the Bears became the first team to accomplish the feat since the 2002 Buffalo Bills. Marshall was also ranked the best receiver by Pro Football Focus with a score of 37.8, 13.1 higher than Green Bay's Jordy Nelson. The offensive line was also drastically changed from its 2012 counterpart, allowing the fourth-lowest sacks in the league with 30, compared to allowing the eighth-most in 2012 with 44.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0086-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Statistics, Position reviews\nOn special teams, Robbie Gould tied his team record for the highest field goal percentage with 89.7 by converting 26 of 29 field goals. Gould also became the second player in franchise history to reach 1,000 career points during the season. However, punter Adam Podlesh ranked 33rd in the league in gross average punting yards with 40.6. In comparison with his 2012 stats, Podlesh was 18th in the league in net punting average with 39.4 yards, 34 punts landing inside the 20-yard line with 6 touchbacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0086-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Statistics, Position reviews\nIn 2013, he dropped to 29th in the former category with 37.9 yards, 27 punts inside the 20 and four fewer touchbacks. The punting corps also ranked last in the league in gross punting with 40 yards. In the return game, Devin Hester led the league in kickoff return yards with 1,442 and was fifth in kickoff return average with 27.7 yards. Linebacker Blake Costanzo led all Bears gunners with 17 tackles. Cornerback Sherrick McManis ranked second with 15, followed by safety Craig Steltz (14), receiver Eric Weems (13) and safety Anthony Walters (10). Ultimately, the Bears' special teams ranked 23rd in the NFL, leading the league in kickoff coverage after allowing 18.7 yards per return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0087-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Awards and records, Awards\nOn December 27, Brandon Marshall and Matt Forte were named to the 2014 Pro Bowl, the fewest Bears sent since 2009, when two were also sent, and the first time a Bears defensive player was not invited since 2004. On January 14, 2014, Marshall and Forte were named to the Pro Football Writers Association's All-NFC Team. On January 3, 2014, the Associated Press released its annual All-Pro team, with no Bears named. On January 9, 2014, Alshon Jeffery was named to the Pro Bowl after an injury to Calvin Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0087-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Awards and records, Awards\nJeffery was later named the PFWA's Most Improved Player on January 17. On January 20, Tim Jennings and Kyle Long were named to the Pro Bowl, replacing Richard Sherman of the Seattle Seahawks, who advanced to Super Bowl XLVIII and Mike Iupati suffered an injury, respectively. Long's invitation marked the first time a Bears rookie was invited since special teamer Johnny Knox in 2009, and the first offensive rookie since Gale Sayers in 1965.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0087-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Awards and records, Awards\nThe four offensive Pro Bowlers are the most sent by the Bears since 1985, when Jim McMahon, Walter Payton, Jay Hilgenberg and Jim Covert were invited to the game. Forte, Marshall and Jeffery's invitations also marked the first time since 1985 the Bears sent multiple skill position players, and the most sent by the team since 1963 with Bill Wade, Joe Marconi and Mike Ditka. Forte, Marshall and Jeffery were eventually drafted in the fantasy draft by Team Rice, while Long and Jennings were assigned to Team Sanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0087-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Awards and records, Awards\nIn the 22\u201321 victory for Team Rice, Forte ran for 31 yards on six attempts while catching three passes for 24 yards. Jeffery and Marshall recorded two and one catch for 22 and 21 yards, respectively. For Team Sanders, Jennings recorded three tackles, while Long assisted in shoving Cam Newton into the endzone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232617-0088-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Bears season, Awards and records, Awards\nOn January 8, 2014, Long was named to the Pro Football Focus All-Rookie Team. On January 15, Gil Brandt named Long to the NFL.com All-Rookie Team. On January 24, Josh McCown and Matt Slauson were named to the USA Today All-Joe Team, which honors players who have never been invited to a Pro Bowl. Prior to the 3rd Annual NFL Honors, Matt Forte was nominated for FedEx Ground Player of the Year against Philadelphia's LeSean McCoy and Kansas City's Jamaal Charles, but lost to McCoy. During the show, Charles Tillman was awarded the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award for his charitable work in the Chicago area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232618-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Cubs season\nThe 2013 Chicago Cubs season was the 142nd season of the Chicago Cubs franchise, the 138th in the National League and the 98th at Wrigley Field. The Cubs finished fifth and last in the National League Central with a record of 66\u201396. The Cubs began the season on April 1 at the Pittsburgh Pirates and finished the season on September 29 at the St. Louis Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232618-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Cubs season\nThe season marked the second year of the Cubs rebuild under President of Baseball Operations Theo Epstein and General Manager Jed Hoyer which would result in the Cubs breaking their 108-year World Series drought and lead the Cubs to the 2016 World Series championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232618-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Cubs season\nThe season was the last season with the Cubs for manager Dale Sveum as he was fired following the season. The season was also the last season with the Cubs for slugger Alfonso Soriano who would be traded at the trade deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232618-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Cubs season\nDuring the season, the Cubs drafted future Rookie of the Year, MVP, and All Star Kris Bryant with the second overall pick of the 2013 Draft. The Cubs would also acquire other players that would play important roles during their 2016 World Series season: H\u00e9ctor Rond\u00f3n was selected from the 2012 rule 5 draft from the Cleveland Indians on December 6, 2011, Jake Arrieta and Pedro Strop were acquired via trade with the Baltimore Orioles on July 2, and Carl Edwards Jr. and Justin Grimm were acquired via trade with the Texas Rangers on July 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232618-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Cubs season, Statistics, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; R = Runs Scored; H = Hits; 2b = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home Runs; Avg. = Batting Average; RBI = Runs Batted In; SB = Stolen Bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232618-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Cubs season, Statistics, 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; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season\nThe 2013 Chicago Fire season was the club's 18th year of existence, as well as their 16th season in Major League Soccer and their 16th consecutive year in the top-flight of American soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season\nChicago Fire began the regular season on March 3, 2013 with an away match against the defending champions Los Angeles Galaxy. The Men in Red concluded the regular season on October 27, 2013 with an away match against New York Red Bulls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season\nThe Fire finished the regular season with a 14-13-7 record, but narrowly missed the playoffs, losing the spot to the Montreal Impact on second tiebreaker. On October 30, 2013, the club has announced the head coach Frank Klopas and the president of soccer operations Javier Leon have stepped down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season\nOn December 5, 2013 the club's forward Mike Magee was named the MLS Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Player movement, In\nPer Major League Soccer and club policies terms of the deals do not get disclosed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Player movement, Loans, Out\nPer Major League Soccer and club policies terms of the deals do not get disclosed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Standings, Conference tables\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Standings, Overall table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Standings, Results summary\nLast updated: October 27, 2013Source: 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Recognition, Team annual award winners\nForward Mike Magee was named the team's Most Valuable Player, as well as the Golden Boot winner. Goalkeeper Sean Johnson was named the Defender of the year. These annual team award winners were selected by local media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Recognition, Team annual award winners\nDaniel Paladini won the club's Goal of the Year award via online fan voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Recognition, MLS season award winners\nForward Mike Magee was named to the MLS Best XI and won the MLS Most Valuable Player Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Kits, Third kit\nOn October 8, 2013 the club unveiled the third kit to be worn in the 2014 season. The municipal-themed design named \"Heart on Your Sleeve\" incorporated the city flag as well as the iconic Chicago skyline. The winning design was selected via a fan vote online.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Miscellany, International roster slots\nOn January 4, 2013 Chicago has traded a 2013 International Roster Slot to New York Red Bulls in exchange for the midfielder Joel Lindpere. On January 16, 2013 Chicago has traded another 2013 International Roster Slot to Colorado Rapids in exchange for Jeff Larentowicz, 11th pick in the 2013 MLS SuperDraft and allocation money. Subsequently, Chicago Fire had six MLS International Roster Slots for use in the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Miscellany, Future draft pick trades\nFuture picks acquired: 2014 MLS SuperDraft round 4 pick from Real Salt Lake in exchange for Kwame Watson-Siriboe. Future picks traded: 2014 MLS SuperDraft second-round pick and allocation money to Philadelphia Union in exchange for defender Bakary Soumar\u00e9. 2014 MLS Supplemental Draft round 1 (which later was merged into 2014 MLS SuperDraft and became round 3) pick to Toronto FC in exchange for Quincy Amarikwa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232619-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Fire season, Miscellany, MLS rights to other players\nOn February 4, 2013 Chicago Fire acquired the MLS rights to Robbie Rogers from Columbus Crew and subsequently traded them to Los Angeles Galaxy in exchange for Mike Magee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232620-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Marathon\nThe 2013 Chicago Marathon was the 36th edition of the Chicago Marathon, held each year in Chicago, Illinois, and took place on Sunday, October 13. The elite races were won by Kenyan athletes Dennis Kipruto Kimetto (2:03:45) and Rita Jeptoo (2:19:57).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232620-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Marathon\nIt had 39,122 finishers, (21,618 male, 17,504 female), and an average finishing time of 4:32:23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season\nThe 2013 Chicago Red Stars season is the fifth season of the soccer club and its first season in National Women's Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season, Major events\nIn November 2012, it was announced that there would be eight teams in a new women's professional soccer league, the National Women's Soccer League will be subsidized by the USSF, the Canadian Soccer Association (CSA) and the Mexican Football Federation (FMF). The three federations would pay the salaries of their national team players (24 from the US, 16 from Canada, and 12 from Mexico) to aid the teams in creating world-class rosters while staying under the salary cap. The players would be distributed evenly (as possible) among the eight teams in an allocation process. USSF would run the league offices and set the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season, Current 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season, Current squad, Second-team squad/Injured\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, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season, Player movement, In\nPer NWSL and club policies terms of the deals do not get disclosed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season, Regular-season standings, Results summary\nLast updated: 18 August 2013Source: 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232621-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Red Stars season, Squad statistics, Top assists\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total assists are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232622-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Rush season\nThe 2013 Chicago Rush season was the 12th season for the franchise in the Arena Football League. The team was coached by Bob McMillen and played their last few home games at BMO Harris Bank Center. The team's first five home games were played at Allstate Arena. The Rush won their division with a 10\u20138 record, but fell in the conference semifinals by a 69\u201347 score to the Spokane Shock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232622-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Rush season, Ownership\nOn November 12, 2012, the Chicago Rush were purchased by a group, headed by Julee White of Testarossa Entertainment, but the purchase was terminated by the AFL three months later due to the ownership's failure to meet league obligations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232622-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Rush season, Ownership\nOn February 7, 2013, the Rush were purchased by Star Rush Football, LLC, an ownership led by private-equity firm manager David Staral Jr. Weeks later, they finalized a deal with Allstate Arena in Rosemont to play all but two home games. The other two home games (June 8 against the Utah Blaze and June 15 versus the San Antonio Talons) will be played at the BMO Harris Bank Center in Rockford, Illinois, which hosted the first \"test game\" for the AFL in 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232622-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago Rush season, Ownership\nOne week before the season opener, the new ownership group introduced the team's new logo and uniforms, which removed the gray from the logo and replaced it with red. It was reported on May 7, 2013 that Staral Jr. had been ordered by the league to leave the team for not paying league dues, causing the league to take ownership of the Rush yet again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232622-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Rush season, Ownership\nIt was announced on May 24 that the Rush would not play either of its final two home games at Allstate Arena. The league announced on May 30 that the game scheduled for July 13 against the Cleveland Gladiators would be played at BMO Harris Bank Center, while the team's final regular season game against the San Jose SaberCats was changed to a road game to be played at HP Pavilion at San Jose, the home of the SaberCats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232622-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Rush season, Regular season schedule\nThe Rush began the season by hosting the Iowa Barnstormers on March 23. They closed the regular season against the San Jose SaberCats on the road on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232622-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Rush season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated August 2, 201324 Active, 14 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 8th season for the Chicago Sky of the Women's National Basketball Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season\nWith the addition of Elena Delle Donne, expectations were high for the Sky to finally reach the playoffs. Delle Donne, along with Sylvia Fowles, Epiphanny Prince, Courtney Vandersloot, and Swin Cash finished the regular season with the best record in the Eastern Conference - thus giving the Sky, their first regular season Conference title and the first seed in the 2013 WNBA Playoffs. The Sky were ultimately swept in the Conference Semifinals by the Indiana Fever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Sky's selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Transactions, Trades\nNo trades were made by the Sky during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nWNBA All-Stars - Elena Delle Donne, Epiphanny Prince, Sylvia Fowles", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Player of the Month - July - Sylvia Fowles", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Player of the Month - August - Sylvia Fowles", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Player of the Month - September - Sylvia Fowles", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Rookie of the Month - June - Elena Delle Donne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Rookie of the Month - July - Elena Delle Donne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Rookie of the Month - August - Elena Delle Donne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Rookie of the Month - September - Elena Delle Donne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232623-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Sky season, Awards and honors\nEastern Conference Player of the Week - Elena Delle Donne (4 times), Sylvia Fowles (2 times)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232624-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Slaughter season\nThe 2013 Chicago Slaughter season was the team's seventh season as a football franchise and fourth in the Indoor Football League (IFL). One of just nine teams competing in the IFL for the 2013 season, the Chicago Slaughter were members of the United Conference. Led by longtime head coach Steve \"Mongo\" McMichael, the team played their home games at the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232624-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Slaughter season\nThe team earned a 9\u20135 regular season record but struggled financially. Delayed paychecks led coach McMichael and several players to refuse the final road game of the season, forcing the Slaughter to fill out their roster with semi-pro players from Wisconsin and former members of the Green Bay Blizzard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232624-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Slaughter season, Off-field moves\nPromotional events scheduled for the 2013 season include a \"red out\" with fans encouraged to wear red to the home opener on February 24, a Star Wars theme night on March 2, a St. Patrick's Day celebration on March 17, a \"Halfway to Halloween\" event with fans encouraged to wear costumes and trick-or-treating for children on April 6, \"Heroes and Villains\" night with appearances by comic book characters on April 27, Military Appreciation Night on May 11th, and Fan Appreciation Night at the final home game on May 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232624-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Slaughter season, Off-field moves\nShortly before the 2013 season began, the owner of the Cheyenne Warriors died which forced that team to suspend operations and the IFL to revise its schedule to accommodate the now 9-team league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232624-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago Slaughter season, Off-field moves\nIn August 2012, Slaughter head coach Steve \"Mongo\" McMichael declared his candidacy for mayor of Romeoville, Illinois. After a difficult campaign, McMichael was defeated in the April 2013 election by incumbent mayor John Noak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season\nThe 2013 Chicago White Sox season was the club's 114th season in Chicago and 113th in the American League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Offseason\nWhite Sox promoted Kenny Williams to Executive Vice President; Rick Hahn became the team's new General Manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, April\nThe Sox won the opening series against the Royals, including a 1\u20130 victory on Opening Day and then won the series against the Mariners to complete their first homestand of the season. In the finale of that series, the Sox achieved their first walk-off win of the season in extras. Last season, the Sox did not achieve their first walk-off win until June 7. Since 2008, the Sox went 19\u20134 at home against Seattle. The Sox went to Washington, D.C. where they took on one of the World Series contending teams, the Nationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, April\nThe Sox were unsurprisingly been swept and fall to 4-5 all time against the Nationals. Until 2013, April was the only baseball month when Sox never faced NL teams along with all other AL teams. The Sox swept the Nationals in their last visit to D.C. in 2010. The Sox went to Cleveland where they lost two of three to that upgraded team. The Sox went to Toronto where they faced the top favorite in the AL East, the Blue Jays. The Sox would split the four-game series, winning in second and third games. That was the seventh consecutive seasons that they played four-game series in Toronto, and the Sox are 9\u201319 in that span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, April\nThe Sox went to the homestand for the second time this season. Friday's game against the Twins was postponed due to cold and the three-game series was reduced to two-game series. The Sox were swept in that short series. In the next home series against another division rival, the Indians. The scheduled three-game series was against reduced to two-game series as one of the games was postponed due to rain. This series has a different result as they split the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, April\nThe Sox would go on to play the series against the Rays for as many games as against the division rivals in this homestand. The Sox resulted in the split, winning in first two games before losing final two. They went back on the road to play the Rangers, Royals, and Mets, though only the first game was played in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nThe Sox lost the first game of the series in Texas before winning the final two. The Rangers suffered only their first series loss of the 2013 season. The team went straight to Kansas City, but the opening game was postponed due to rain. Next day, the Sox were shut out against Jeremy Guthrie, 2\u20130. Guthrie set the franchise record at 17 consecutive starts without a loss. Before the game, it was announced that Gavin Floyd would undergo Tommy John surgery and miss 14\u201319 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nIn the following game, the Sox led after eight innings but went on to lose in extras. In the series finale, which was a make-up game from three days earlier, Alexei Ram\u00edrez hit a long ball that was ruled foul but video showed it was actually a home-run that would have given the Sox the lead. The Sox trailed at that point until they tied it in the ninth of that same batter. In the eleventh inning, Jordan Danks hit the solo shot for a 2-1 Sox lead and went on to win by that score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nDanks' first two career homers were game-winning. The Sox went on to play the Mets for the first time since 2002. In the first of two-game set against them, the Sox went almost offenseless as only one batter reached base via an infield single by Alex R\u00edos in the seventh. Mets ace Matt Harvey shut down the Sox lineup for nine innings, striking out a career-high twelve batters. The Sox played extra innings for a third consecutive game, tied 0-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0004-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nIn the bottom of the tenth, Mike Baxter hit a walk-off single for the Sox's third walk-off loss of the year in their first ever visit to the Queens. In the second game of the set, the Sox's offense broke through with six runs on 13 hits as the Sox defeated the Mets 6\u20133 for the series split. The Sox then came home for a three-game series with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. After losing the first two games of the series, on May 12, the Sox avoided a sweep with the help of Chris Sale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0004-0004", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nSale pitched a one-hit complete game shutout. He had a perfect game with one out in the seventh inning when Mike Trout singled up the middle. Trout was the lone base runner in the game as Sale had 7 strikeouts and walked none. This occurred just five days after team's offense was held to one hit and one base runner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nThe Sox then went on a seven-game road trip, three against the Twins and four against the Angels. The Sox lost the opener of the series and then won final two to win the series. The Sox won first two against the Angels and then lost the final two for a split. The Sox went on to their 8-game homestand, five against last place teams in respective divisions. But first, they played three against the Red Sox, who were near the top of the AL East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nIn the series, White Sox beat Red Sox twice, including one when Jos\u00e9 Quintana took his no-hitter into the seventh inning until David Ortiz ended it with a single. After the series win, the Sox played three against the Marlins, who at the time had the worst record in baseball. The Sox swept that series against the Marlins, including two on walk-offs and one in extra innings. The Sox then played consecutive home-and-home series against the crosstown rival Cubs, starting with two in the South Side and finishing with two at Wrigley Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, May\nThe Sox lost the first game at the \"Cell\", 7\u20130, and the second game was postponed due to rain. Then the Sox lost both games at Wrigley Field, getting outscored 17\u20136. In the final game of the month, the Sox got shut out in Oakland 3\u20130 by former Sox pitcher Bartolo Col\u00f3n. Despite a four-game losing streak to close out the month, the Sox finished the month with a winning record of 14\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, June\nThe Sox started June getting swept by Athletics and losing two of three against the Mariners in the West. In the third game of that series on June 5, neither team scored runs until the 14th inning when Sox scored five runs in the top half, but the Mariners tied it in the bottom half with a grand slam by Kyle Seager. The Sox went on to win 7\u20135 in 16 innings. It was the first time in MLB history that each team scored five or more runs while neither team scored during the regulation (first nine innings). The Sox then played the A's again, this time at home where the Sox split the four-game series after winning the final two games of the series. The Sox split a short, two-game series against the Blue Jays that was cut short due to finale being rained out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, June\nThe Sox went on a lengthy, 10-game road trip. First stop was Houston, first visit there since winning the 2005 World Series. However, the Sox did not fare well as they lost the first three games of the series, but managed to win the series finale. Next stop was Minnesota, where they were swept in the three-game series. The final stop was south to Kansas City, where they took the first two games from the Royals. In the third game, the Sox lost 7\u20136 with three of those runs given up were unearned in the 8th inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, June\nJesse Crain gave up runs (all unearned) for the first time since April 12, snapping the franchise record 29 straight scoreless appearances. In the next series, the Sox split a two-game series against the Mets at home. In the first game, Addison Reed blew his save in the ninth when Daniel Murphy hit a popup, Gordon Beckham ran towards the territory where Reed and Conor Gillaspie were calling for but Beckham got in the way and no one caught the ball. The game was then tied at four as David Wright scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, June\nHowever, in the bottom of the ninth inning Alexei Ram\u00edrez hit a walk-off single, scoring Jeff Keppinger for a 5\u20134 Sox win. In the next game, the Sox were shutout 3\u20130, they were tied for the AL lead in shutouts as a result. Shawn Marcum picked up his first win of the season after starting the season 0\u20139. Marcum is now 4\u20130 with a 1.99 ERA in six career starts against the Pale Hose. The Sox played their consecutive doubleheader on June 28 against the Indians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0007-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, June\nIn Game 1, the Sox lost 19\u201310, it was the first time the Sox lost a game despite scoring 10 or more runs since July 13, 2008, when they lost 12\u201311 to the Randers. Game 1 lasted nearly four hours, their longest 9-inning game this season. In Game 2, the Sox led 8\u20135 going to the ninth inning but Reed blew his second straight save by allowing four runs including game-winning solo home run by former Sox Nick Swisher and went on to lose 9\u20138. The Sox closed out the month by losing the final two games of the series by the final scores of 4\u20133 and 4\u20130. The Sox had the worst record in baseball for the month of June with a record of 8\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nThe Sox kicked off July by winning the series at home against the Orioles which began on July 2, including a walk-off win on Fourth of July by a home run by Adam Dunn, his ninth career. Ironically, the Sox had a walk-off win on Fourth of July in three straight years, last year was a single by Kevin Youkilis against the Rangers and the year before was a balk with Dunn at the plate against the Royals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nAfter that series win, they headed to St. Pete where they get swept by Rays scoring only 4 runs during the three-game sweep. The Sox then played the makeup game with the Cubs that got rained out on May 28. The Sox lost the game 8\u20132 to complete the Cubs 4-game sweep of the Sox. The Sox were outscored 32\u20138 during the Cubs Crosstown Classic sweep. In the first game of a three games series in Detroit, the Sox scored a season high eleven runs during an 11\u20134 victory over the Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nThe Sox also had a season-high 23 hits and Alex R\u00edos went 6 for 6 with a triple and five singles during the game. The six hits by Rios tied a franchise and American League record for most hits during a 9-inning game. The last White Sox player to have six hits in a 9-inning game was Lance Johnson on September 23, 1995, against the Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0008-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nThe Sox lost game two of the series vs. the Tigers but won the overall series due to a grand slam by rookie catcher Josh Phegley in the third and final game of the series. Phegley became the first Sox player with three home runs in his first five games since Magglio Ord\u00f3\u00f1ez in 1997. The Sox then opened up a three-game series with the Philadelphia Phillies in Philadelphia. Just before the series began, Matt Thornton and cash was traded to the Boston Red Sox for minor leaguer Brandon Jacobs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0008-0004", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nAfter the first games was postponed due to the rain the Sox split a doubleheader with the Phillies with both games going into extra innings and each team winning by one run. The Sox lost the final games of the series once again in extra innings and lost by one run. The Sox were off from July 15\u201318 because of the All-Star break. Chris Sale and Jesse Crain were both All-Stars for the White Sox. Crain did not play in the All-Star game because of an injury and Sale was the winning pitcher in the game pitching two scoreless innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nAfter the All-Star break, the Sox started a 10-game homestand starting with a three-game series against the Atlanta Braves, their final series against the National League this season. The Sox lost the first game, 6-4 but won the final two games of the series, 10\u20136 and 3\u20131 respectively. The Sox played the Tigers for four games losing the first three but salvaging the series with a win in the fourth game over Justin Verlander. The Royals then came to Chicago where the Royals swept the Sox, first Royals sweep in Chicago since April 9\u201311, 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nThe Sox only scored three runs during the three games series losing 5\u20131 in game 1, 1\u20130 in game 2 and 4\u20132 in twelve innings in game 3. The Sox traveled to Cleveland for a four-game series. Before the series against Cleveland, the Sox traded Jesse Crain to the Tampa Bay Rays for players to be named later and/or cash considerations. In game one, the Sox lost 3-2 due to a pinch-hit walk-off homer by 42-year-old veteran Jason Giambi. Giambi became the oldest player to hit a walk-off homer. Hank Aaron previously held the record set in 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, July\nThe Sox went on to lose the second game of the series, 7\u20134. After that game, the Sox traded Jake Peavy to the Boston Red Sox in part of a three-way trade with the Tigers. The Sox acquired Avisa\u00edl Garc\u00eda from the Tigers and J.B. Wendelken, Francelis Montas and Cleuluis Rondon from the Red Sox. The Sox lost third of a four-game set against the Indians, 6\u20135 in 10 innings on July 31. It was their sixth straight loss and the White Sox closed out the month of July with a record of 8-18, the worst in baseball for the second straight month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nThe Sox began the month with one more game against the Indians, who completed their four-game sweep of the Sox. The Sox would then get swept by Tigers to finish the road trip with a record of 0\u20137, their first win less road trip of at least seven games in franchise history. They have also lost 10 in a row, their longest since June 11\u201320, 1976. As a result, the team carried their worst record (40-69) after 109 games since 1970. The Sox then welcomed into town the New York Yankees for a three-game series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nBefore the first game of the series, it was announced that Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez was given a 211-game suspension for his part in the Biogenesis baseball scandal. Rodriguez appealed the suspension and therefore was activated from the disabled list before the game with the Sox. Rodriguez singled on his first plate appearance of the season and finished the game batting 1 for 4. The Sox beat the Yankees in game 1, 8\u20131 breaking their 10-game skid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nThe Sox won game 2 of the series, 3\u20132 and it was their first 2-game winning streak since July 20\u201321 when the Sox won two in a row against the Braves. The Sox finished off the series with a 6\u20135 victory in 12 innings and three-game series sweep of the Yankees. This was the final game at U.S. Cellular Field for Yankees closer Mariano Rivera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nRivera came into the game in the bottom of the 9th inning to try and close the game but the Sox scored sending the game into extras giving Rivera only his third blown save of the season and the first time since 2006 that Rivera had blown a save against the White Sox. The three-game sweep of the Yankees was the first since the Sox swept the Miami Marlins on May 24\u201326. The Sox then opened up a four games series with the Twins starting with a doubleheader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0004", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nBefore the doubleheader, Alex R\u00edos was claimed off waivers by the Rangers for Leury Garc\u00eda. The Sox lost both games of the doubleheader by scores of 5\u20137 and 2\u20133 in 10 innings. They won the third game but lost the fourth game of the series. The Sox then took two of three at home against the division leading Tigers. The Sox traveled to Target Field for a four-game series with the Twins. After losing the first game of the series, the Sox won the next three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0005", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nIt was the first time the Sox won three straight road games since May 15\u201317 when the Sox defeated the Twins once and then two straight against the Angels. The closed out the road trip with three in Kansas City. The Sox won the first two games of the series by scores of 2\u20130 and 5\u20132. After the 5\u20132 win, the Sox had their longest win streak of the season, 5 games. The Sox finished of with a sweep of the Royals with a 4\u20133 victory in 12 innings and their 6th straight win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0006", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nIn that game, pitcher Jake Petricka made his MLB debut and also got his first major league victory and Conor Gillaspie hit the game-winning home run in the top of 12th. During the six game win streak, closer Addison Reed saved all six games. The last time a pitcher got a save in six straight games was in 2003 when \u00c9ric Gagn\u00e9 of the Los Angeles Dodgers accomplished the feat. The Sox returned home for a three-game series with the Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0007", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nAfter losing the first game 11\u20135, the Sox and Rangers played in the Civil Rights Game in game two which the Sox won 3\u20132 on a walk-off base hit by rookie catcher Josh Phegley. The Sox then won the rubber match with a 5\u20132 victory. During the Sox 5\u20132 victory over the Rangers, pitcher John Danks earned the victory and his younger brother, Jordan Danks, hit the go-ahead home run in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0008", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nAccording to Elias Sports Bureau, it was the first time since June 5, 1955, that a player homered in support of his brother on the mound, when Kansas City Athletics catcher Billy Shantz homered for his brother Bobby Shantz. The Sox then took two of three against the Houston Astros at home. The Sox finished the month on a 10-game road trip on the east coast starting with three in Boston. The Sox lost their final two games of the month to the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0010-0009", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, August\nThe first game they lost by a score of 3\u20134 to former Cubs pitcher Ryan Dempster and lost the second game to Jake Peavy, who the Sox traded to Boston a month earlier, by a score of 2\u20137. Despite losing the final two games of the month, the Sox still finished with a winning record during the month with a record of 16\u201313. It was only their second winning record during a month and their first since May when they went 14\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, September\nThe Sox started the month of September with the last game of a three-game series with the Red Sox. The Sox lost the game 7-6 and got swept by the Red Sox. The Sox then traveled to the Bronx for a three-game series where they were swept by the Yankees. The Sox finished off their 10-game road trip with four in Baltimore. The Sox lost the first three games of the series but won the last game to stop a 9-game losing streak and finished the road trip with a putrid record of 1\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, September\nThe Sox returned home to face the division-leading Tigers. The Sox won the first game of the series with Chris Sale outdueling Max Scherzer and prevented Scherzer from reaching his 20th victory of the season. The Sox would go on to lose the final two games of the series. The Sox would then get swept in a four-game series at home against the Indians for the second time this season and third overall. The Sox becomes the first MLB team to get swept in four-game series by a same team three times in one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, September\nThe Sox closed out their home stand taking two of three from Minnesota. The Sox traveled to Detroit for a three-game series and lost two of three. In the second game of the series in Detroit, the Sox had a 6\u20130 lead going to the bottom of the ninth inning before giving up six runs that tied the game. They went on to lose in 12 innings. It was the first time in franchise history that Sox had a lead by six or more runs in the ninth inning or later and lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, September\nThey then returned home for one game, a makeup game with the Blue Jays. The Sox won that game 3\u20132, backed by the first major league home run by Marcus Semien. The Sox closed out their road schedule with a quick two-game series in Cleveland. The Sox lost both games to finish with the franchise-worst 26\u201355 road record, and finished with a record of 2\u201317 vs. the Indians this season; they extended their losing streak to 14 straight against the Indians, franchise record against one team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0011-0004", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Monthly summaries, September\nThe Sox closed out the 2013 season with a four-game series at home against the Royals. The Sox lost three of four and finished with the third worst record during the 2013 season, with a record of 63\u201399. It was only the fifth time in White Sox history that they finished with 98 or more losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232625-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Chicago White Sox season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\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, 67], "content_span": [68, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232625-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232626-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl\nThe 2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 31, 2013, at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. With sponsorship from Chick-fil-A, it was the 46th edition of the game known throughout most of its history as the Peach Bowl. The game featured the Duke Blue Devils from the Atlantic Coast Conference against the Texas A&M Aggies from the Southeastern Conference. It began at 8:00 p.m. EST and was aired on ESPN. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232626-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl\nIn a contest dominated by both teams' offensive units, Duke scored first and stayed ahead for most of the game. But with a little more than a minute left in regulation, Texas A&M returned an interception for a touchdown, and ended up winning by a score of 52\u201348. Although 67,496 tickets were distributed, the crowd was far less than capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232626-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl\nDuke finished the regular season with a record of 10\u20133 (6\u20132 ACC) and a BCS ranking of #24. Texas A&M had a record of 8\u20134 (4\u20134 SEC) and a BCS ranking of #21. The 2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl was the first-ever meeting of the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232626-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl, Teams\nThe 2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl was the very first meeting between Duke and Texas A&M, as well as both programs' first appearance in the bowl. Both teams were ranked #21 in the Coaches' Poll coming into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232627-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chiefs season\n2013 was a successful year for the Chiefs rugby team winning 12 of their Super rugby games to top the table and then went on to beat Crusaders in the Semi-final and Brumbies in the final. The Chiefs also became the New Zealand Conference winners and take out the BNZ Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232627-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chiefs season, Standings\nThe final standings of the 2013 Super Rugby season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232627-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chiefs season, Results\nThe results of the Chiefs during the 2013 Super Rugby season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232627-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chiefs season, Squad\nThe Chiefs squad for the 2013 Super Rugby season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232627-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chiefs season, Player statistics\nThe Chiefs players' appearance and scoring statistics for the 2013 Super Rugby season are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election\nGeneral elections were held in Chile on 17 November 2013, including presidential, parliamentary and regional elections. Voters went to the polls to elect:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election\nAll the newly elected authorities began their terms on 11 March 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election\nIn the presidential election, former president Michelle Bachelet fell short of the absolute majority needed for an outright win. In the runoff election, held on 15 December, she beat former senator and Minister of Labor Evelyn Matthei with over 62% of the vote, with turnout significantly lower than in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election\nIn the parliamentary elections, the New Majority coalition (backing Bachelet's candidacy) won back control of both chambers of Congress, winning 12 of the 20 contested seats in the Senate, for a total of 21 out of 38 total seats, and 67 of the 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election\nThese were the first presidential and parliamentary elections in which all eligible voters were automatically enrolled, and where voting was no longer mandatory. Members of the regional boards were directly elected for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Presidential primaries\nIn December 2012 a law was published allowing political parties or coalitions to define their candidates for president in government-run primary elections. The two main political groups agreed to choose their candidates this way. Former president Michelle Bachelet won the New Majority primary with 73% of the vote, while former senator and minister Pablo Longueira won the Alliance primary with 51%. Longueira subsequently quit the race and was replaced with Evelyn Matthei. Sitting president Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era did not stand for re-election due to term limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Presidential candidates\nList of candidates who officially registered their candidacies at the Electoral Service. All candidacies were accepted on 28 August 2013. Bachelet's candidacy was automatically accepted after she was proclaimed the winner of her primary by the Election Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Presidential campaign, Debates, First round\nThe first debate was organized by ANP (National Press Association) and CNN Chile and took place in Coquimbo's Enjoy Casino on 9 October. It ran from 20:00-22:00 with all candidates \u2014except Bachelet, citing a prior commitment\u2014 participating. It was moderated by CNN Chile anchor Daniel Matamala. There were four other journalists from regional media present who asked the candidates two randomly selected questions. Matamala also asked two questions, which were the same to all eight candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Presidential campaign, Debates, First round\nA radio debate organized by the Radio Broadcasters Association of Chile (Archi), took place on 25 October 2013 at the Gabriela Mistral Cultural Centre (GAM) in Santiago. The debate, which featured all nine candidates for the first time, was broadcast by over 600 radio stations across the country. It started at 8 AM and lasted for about 140 minutes. It was moderated by Archi president Luis Pardo and included four radio journalists: Sergio Campos (Cooperativa), Cony Stipicic (Duna), Mauricio Bustamente (Infinita) and Alejandro de la Carrera (Agricultura).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Presidential campaign, Debates, First round\nA series of two consecutive televised debates were organized by the National Television Association (Anatel) and broadcast by all national terrestrial television stations. All nine candidates participated, as well. The first part of the debate aired on 29 October 2013, with a second part transmitted the next day. Both shows took place at TVN's studios in Santiago, beginning at 10 PM and running for over two hours. Former Anatel president Bernardo Donoso served as moderator. The journalists for the first day were Constanza Santa Mar\u00eda (Canal 13), Soledad Onetto (Mega) and Claudio El\u00f3rtegui (UCV-TV); while the journalists for the second day were Beatriz S\u00e1nchez (La Red), Iv\u00e1n N\u00fa\u00f1ez (Chilevisi\u00f3n) and Mauricio Bustamante (TVN).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Presidential campaign, Debates, Runoff\nA radio debate on 6 December 2013 was organized by Archi. A television debate organized by Anatel was held 10 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Results, President\na Turnout figures differ from total votes. The former is derived from electoral rolls, while the latter from vote counting, which is error-prone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Results, Senate\nSenators are elected for eight-year mandates, and roughly half of the Senate is renewed every four years. On this election, ten out of 19 senatorial constituencies were contested. As each constituency elects two representatives, this results in 20 new senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Results, Regional boards\nNote: There were 41,349 ballot boxes for the regional boards election. The results above are a revised count made by the polling officers the following day. a The New Majority coalition split into two lists for this election. The names in Spanish are similar and both translate as \"New Majority for Chile\". The list obtaining the most votes is called Nueva Mayor\u00eda para Chile, while the other list is called Nueva Mayor\u00eda por Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Reactions\nFollowing the result of the first round election, Bachelet said: \"We knew that it would be tough to win on the first round, we worked really hard, and we almost did it. We did win tonight, and we are going to work hard to win comfortably in December.\" Following the first round, both candidates offered no change in aggressive campaigning for the second round except to include young MPs elected in their campaign. Matthei did however compare her politices that of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Bachelet's to that of the former East Germany. While Green Ecologist Party's candidate Alfredo Sfeir was the only losing first-round candidate to back one of the two second-round candidates, in his case Michelle Bachelet, independent candidate Franco Parisi said \"Bachelet will be a great President, (...) Matthei would do bad for Chile, she is not to be trusted.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Reactions\nU.S. President Barack Obama spoke with Bachelet, while the White House issued a statement that read: \"The President expressed his desire to continue strengthening the relationship between the United States and Chile, building on the close partnership he enjoyed with President-elect... The President looks forward to working closely with President-elect Bachelet to advance our shared interests in the years ahead.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Reactions, Analysis\nThough Bachelet's New Majority gained a majority of seats in the legislature, it failed to gain a four-sevenths majority required to pass legislation for her cornerstone education reform, which was the reason for mass mobilisation amidst the ongoing 2011\u201313 Chilean student protests. They also failed to get a two-thirds majority to restructure the 1981 constitution of Chile enacted during the Augusto Pinochet regime. Wake Forest political science Professor Peter Siavelis suggested: \"The [congressional elections] result will surely be disappointing for Bachelet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232628-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Chilean general election, Reactions, Analysis\nSocial movements that have spilled onto the streets are demanding reform, yet the limits of the institutional structure of Chile are going to limit her capacity to engage in reform. Even though Bachelet may be the winner tonight she is not in an enviable position.\" The Washington Post said that Bachelet's \"legacy now rides on her ability to craft a coalition for far-reaching structural and particularly political reform.\" It also questioned what a low turnout could mean for her mandate, which it said was not clear enough as she had to go to a second round. The Huffington Post drew the 40th anniversary of the 11 September coup as a more than subtle backdrop to the election while saying the election was a referendum on Pinochet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232629-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean presidential primaries\nThe Chilean presidential primaries of 2013 were held in Chile on Sunday 30 June 2013. It was the first such election to be run by the government under a new primary law published in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232629-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean presidential primaries\nAccording to the law, primaries are voluntary, but its results are binding. The two main political coalitions decided to participate: Former president Michelle Bachelet won the Nueva Mayor\u00eda primary with 73% of the vote, while former senator and minister Pablo Longueira won the Alianza primary with 51%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232629-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean presidential primaries\nLongueira withdrew on 17 July and was replaced by Evelyn Matthei, who had not participated in the primaries. Bachelet defeated Matthei in the runoff election held on 15 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232629-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean presidential primaries, Candidates, Alianza candidates\nBoth candidates were officially registered on 1 May 2013. Affiliates from both Alianza parties (RN and UDI) plus independent electors were allowed to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232629-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean presidential primaries, Candidates, Nueva Mayor\u00eda candidates\nAll four candidates were officially registered on 30 April 2013. Affiliates from all Nueva Mayor\u00eda parties plus independent electors were allowed to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232629-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chilean presidential primaries, Candidates, Nueva Mayor\u00eda candidates\nA primary was held on 19 January 2013 to determine the Christian Democratic Party's pre-candidate for the presidency. This primary was organized by the party and not under the new primary law. The contenders were Claudio Orrego and Ximena Rinc\u00f3n. Orrego won the primary with 59% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232630-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chill Perth 360\nThe 2013 Chill Perth 360 was a motor race meeting for the Australasian sedan-based V8 Supercars. It was the fourth event of the 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship. Three races were held during the race meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232630-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chill Perth 360\nTriple Eight Race Engineering dominated the event, taking all three race wins. Craig Lowndes won the 60/60 Sprint race on Saturday with team-mate Jamie Whincup winning the remaining two races on Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232631-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China League One\nThe 2013 China League One is the tenth season of the China League One, the second tier of the Chinese football league pyramid, since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232631-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 China League One, Teams, Name changes\nFujian Smart Hero moved to the city of Shijiazhuang and changed their name to Shijiazhuang Yongchang Junhao in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232631-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 China League One, Clubs, Foreign players\nRestricting the number of foreign players strictly to three per CL1 team. A team could use three foreign players on the field each game. Players came from Hong Kong, Macau and Chinese Taipei were deemed as native players in CL1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232631-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 China League One, Clubs, Foreign players\nHong Kong/Macau/Taiwan players (doesn't count on the foreign player slot)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232631-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 China League One, Awards\nThe awards of 2013 China League One were announced on 19 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232631-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 China League One, League Attendance\nUpdated to games played on Nov. 2nd, 2013Source: (in Chinese)Notes:\u2020 Teams played previous season in CSL.\u2021 Teams played previous season in CL2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232632-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China League Two\nThe 2013 Chinese Football Association Division Two League season is the 24th season since its establishment in 1989. It is divided into two groups, North and South. There are 15 teams participating in the league, 8 teams in North Group and 7 teams in South Group. The league is made up of two stages, the group stage and the play-off. The group stage is a double round-robin format. Each team in the group will play the other teams twice, home and away. It will start on May 4 and end on September 22. The play-off stage is a two-legged elimination. It will start in October 8. At the end of the season, the two finalists of the play-off will qualify for promotion to 2014 China League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232632-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 China League Two, Team changes, Promotion and relegation\nGuizhou Zhicheng as the 2012 season champion and Hubei China-Kyle as runner-up earned promotion to the 2013 China League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232632-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 China League Two, Team changes, Promotion and relegation\nHohhot Dongjin were relegated from 2012 China League One to 2013 China League Two North Group as the last placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232632-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 China League Two, Team changes, Name changes, North Group\nHohhot Dongjin relocated to Shenyang during the season (in July 2013) and changed its name back to Shenyang Dongjin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232632-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 China League Two, Team changes, Name changes, South Group\nDongguan Nancheng relocated to Mei County on December 12, 2012 and changed its name to Meixian Hakka. Kunming Ruilong relocated to Dali and changed its name to Dali Ruilong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232632-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 China League Two, Team changes, New entries\nThere are six new teams participating in 2013 China League Two. They are Gansu Aoxin, Liaoning Youth, Qingdao Hainiu, Shandong Tengding, Lijiang Jiayunhao and Meizhou Kejia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232633-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Masters Super Series\nThe 2013 China Masters Super Series will be the seventh super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament will be held in Changzhou, China from 10\u201315 September 2013 and will have a total purse of $250,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232634-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (snooker)\nThe 2013 Bank of Beijing China Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 25 and 31\u00a0March 2013 at the Beijing University Students' Gymnasium in Beijing, China. It was the tenth ranking event of the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232634-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (snooker)\nPeter Ebdon was the defending champion, but he lost 3\u20135 against Marcus Campbell in the last 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232634-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (snooker)\nMark Selby attempted a maximum break in his last 32 match against Mark King, but missed the final black at 140. Thus he became the fourth player along with Ken Doherty, Barry Pinches and Robin Hull to do so in a professional tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232634-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (snooker)\nNeil Robertson won his seventh ranking title by defeating Selby 10\u20136 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232634-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232634-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (snooker), Wildcard round\nThese matches were played in Beijing on 25 and 26 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232634-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (snooker), Qualifying\nThese matches took place between 9 and 12 January 2013 at the World Snooker Academy in Sheffield, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232635-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (tennis)\nThe 2013 China Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 15th edition of the China Open for the men (17th for the women), and part of the ATP 500 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour, and of the Premier Series of the 2013 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events were held at the National Tennis Center in Beijing, China, from September 28 till October 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232635-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (tennis), ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232635-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (tennis), ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232635-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (tennis), WTA singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232635-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open (tennis), WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232636-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open Super Series Premier\nThe 2013 China Open is a top level badminton competition which took place on November 12-17, 2013 in Shanghai, China. It was the eleventh BWF Super Series competition on the 2013 BWF Super Series schedule. The total purse for the event is $450,000. A qualification round was held for three of the five disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232637-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, but decided to compete in Tokyo instead. Max Mirnyi and Horia Tec\u0103u won the title, defeating Fabio Fognini and Andreas Seppi in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232638-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nNovak Djokovic was the defending champion and retained his title by defeating Rafael Nadal in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134. By reaching the final, Nadal regained the World No. 1 ranking from Djokovic for the first time since July 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232639-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEkaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina were the defending champions, but Makarova withdrew due to injury. Vesnina was scheduled to partner with Marina Erakovic, but Erakovic withdrew before the first round for personal reasons. Cara Black and Sania Mirza won the title, defeating Vera Dushevina and Arantxa Parra Santonja in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232640-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nVictoria Azarenka was the defending champion, but lost to Andrea Petkovic in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232640-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nWorld No. 1 Serena Williams won the title, defeating Jelena Jankovi\u0107 in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232640-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232640-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe four Tokyo semifinalists received a bye into the second round. They were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232641-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China Women's Sevens\nThe 2013 China Women's Sevens was the first edition of the China Women's Sevens tournament, and the third of four tournaments in the 2012\u201313 IRB Women's Sevens World Series. New Zealand won the final, defeating England by 19\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232641-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 China Women's Sevens, Format\nTeams are drawn into three pools of four teams each. Each team plays every other team in their pool once. The top two teams from each pool advance to the Cup/Plate brackets along with the top two third place teams. The rest of the teams go to the Bowl bracket", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232641-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 China Women's Sevens, Teams\nA total of twelve teams competed, the six \"core\" teams and six invited teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods\nDuring mid-August 2013 parts of eastern Russia and northeastern China were stricken by heavy flooding. At least 85 people died from the floods and more than 105 others were left missing as of August 19. More than 60,000 homes were destroyed and 840,000 people evacuated from Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Liaoning provinces due to flooding which happened at the same time as flooding in China's southern Guangdong province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods, Floods and damage\nFrom the end of July to mid-August 2013, unusually heavy rainfall occurred near the Amur River, which marks the dividing line between China and Russia. Starting on August 10, 2013, areas of northeastern China began to experience flooding. From August 15 to 17, heavy rainfall worsened the problem, causing the worst flooding in the region in more than a decade. Nankouqian Township, one of the hardest-hit areas, saw 44.9 centimetres (17.7\u00a0in) of rain, half the average annual total, on August 16 alone. By August 18, water levels at 61 reservoirs surpassed the \"danger\" level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods, Floods and damage\nFushun city in the Liaoning province was especially hard hit as rainstorms caused several rivers in the city to overflow. Across the border in eastern Russia, heavy flooding was also reported, with Amur Oblast, Jewish Autonomous Oblast and Khabarovsk Krai the hardest hit. More than 140 towns were affected by what Russia authorities described as the worst flooding in 120 years. The Amur River reached a record 100.56 metres (329.9\u00a0ft), surpassing the previous record set in 1984, and was still rising as of August 19, threatening to flood the major city of Komsomolsk-on-Amur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods, Floods and damage\nIn China, more than 60,000 homes were destroyed and numerous roads were blocked or damaged. More than 787,000 hectares of farm land were ruined in the region which depends heavily on farming. Power and communications lines were downed in several townships. Total damaged was estimated at 16.14 billion yuan (approx. US$2.6 billion/\u20ac1.94 billion). In Russia, 3.2 billion rubles (approx. US$97 million/\u20ac73 million) was allocated for relief efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods, Casualties\nChina's Liaoning province was the hardest hit with 54 reported deaths and 97 people missing as of August 19, 2013. In Jilin province, 16 deaths were reported. Heilongjiang province experienced 11 deaths. Across the region 360,000 people were displaced and 3.74 million affected in some way. No casualties were reported in Russia, but 20,000 people were evacuated. Two captive brown bears were rescued via helicopter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods, Casualties\nUnrelated flooding resulting from Typhoon Utor in south China occurred simultaneously, causing the death tolls from the two floods to be combined in official reports. Typhoon Utor floods killed at least 33 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods, Relief efforts and aftermath\nIn Russia, more than 30,000 volunteers helped distribute 53 tons of food and supplies to flood victims. Officials are considering delaying the mayoral elections in Amur which are scheduled for September 8. A decision on the elections will be made August 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232642-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 China\u2013Russia floods, Relief efforts and aftermath\nChinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping called for \"all-out efforts\" as relief work got underway. More than 120,000 people, including 10,000 soldiers, helped with relief and rescue efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232643-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 Chinese Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held from 8 May to 12 May 2013 in Dalian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232644-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese FA Cup\nTOSHIBA 2013 Chinese FA Cup (Chinese: \u4e1c\u829d2013\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u676f) is the 15th edition of Chinese FA Cup. The match of first round was kicked off on 31 March 2013, and finished on 7 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232644-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese FA Cup, Participants, China League Two & amateur team\n16 teams from 2013 China League Two, 2012 China Amateur Football League Final stage, Chinese Collegiate Football League and the Vision China Championship were selected to take part in 2013 CFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232645-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese FA Super Cup\nThe 2013 Chinese FA Super Cup (Chinese: 2013\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u8d85\u7ea7\u676f) was the 11th Chinese FA Super Cup. The match was played at the Tianhe Stadium on 3 March 2013, contesting by Super League and FA Cup double winners Guangzhou Evergrande and Super League runners-up Jiangsu Sainty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232645-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese FA Super Cup\nJiangsu Sainty defeated Guangzhou Evergrande 2\u20131, thus winning their first ever Chinese FA Super Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232646-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Chinese Figure Skating Championships (Chinese: 2012/2013\u5e74\u5ea6\u5168\u56fd\u82b1\u6837\u6ed1\u51b0\u9526\u6807\u8d5b) was held between December 20 and 21, 2012 in Harbin. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Chinese Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 UBS Chinese Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 14 April 2013 at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai, China. The race was the third round of the 2013 season, and marked the tenth running of the Chinese Grand Prix as a round of the Formula One World Championship. The race was won by Fernando Alonso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Background\nLike the 2012 Chinese Grand Prix, tyre supplier Pirelli brought its white-banded medium compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the yellow-banded soft compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nAs in previous qualifying sessions, the Caterham and Marussia cars were eliminated in the first round of qualifying. Sauber's Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez and Williams's Valtteri Bottas were also eliminated. The fastest time of 1:35.793 was posted by Lewis Hamilton. All cars were comfortably within the 107% cutoff time of 1:42.498.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nMark Webber, who had posted the 4th fastest time in Q1, ran out of fuel during his second attempt to post a time. Unable to provide the required 1 litre fuel sample, he was penalised by being forced to start at the back of the grid. As they did with Sebastian Vettel when he ran out of fuel during qualifying for the 2012 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the Red Bull team opted to change the gearbox on Webber's car to improve his overtaking ability, thereby obliging him to start from pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nEliminated from qualifying were Vergne, Maldonado, Webber, Sutil, P\u00e9rez and di Resta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nLewis Hamilton in the Mercedes once again posted the fastest time of the session to take pole position. Lotus Renault's Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was second and Ferrari's Fernando Alonso was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nH\u00fclkenberg opted to preserve his tyres and did not post a time for Q3. Vettel also failed to log a time, aborting his attempt after a braking problem. Jenson Button did a token lap to secure the eighth qualifying position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nLewis Hamilton led from the start, ahead of Fernando Alonso, Felipe Massa and a slow-starting Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. Mark Webber was forced to pit for new tyres at the end of the first lap. Paul di Resta and Adrian Sutil lightly collided, with no damage suffered on either cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 4, Alonso and Massa both passed Hamilton at exactly the same time on the first corner. Daniel Ricciardo was forced to pit a short time before. Nico Rosberg pitted on lap 5. On this same lap, Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez misjudged his braking into the hairpin at the end of the very long back straight, and went straight into the back of Adrian Sutil. Guti\u00e9rrez was out straight away, while Sutil was able to make it back to the pits. However, as he came in to try and fix the damage, his exhaust caught fire, and he retired from the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn laps 6 and 7, the pit lane was full of chaos, as Alonso, Massa, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Jules Bianchi, Giedo van der Garde, Max Chilton, Romain Grosjean, and Pastor Maldonado were all forced to pit due to heavy tyre degradation. Nico H\u00fclkenberg found himself leading the race afterwards, ahead of Sebastian Vettel, Jenson Button, Sergio P\u00e9rez, and Paul di Resta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nEventually on lap 14, Vettel, H\u00fclkenberg, and di Resta pitted. At the same time, Mark Webber hit Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne, with both Vergne and Webber being forced to pit. Webber's troubles were not over however, because on the next lap, while driving around the hairpin on the back straight, his right rear wheel came off, and he was forced out. Then moments later, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen nudged the back of P\u00e9rez's McLaren, and damaged his Lotus's front wing. However, it wasn't damaged enough for him to pit, and he was able to continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn the 19th lap, Massa and Rosberg came in again to change their tyres, leaving Alonso and Button 1st and 2nd. Two laps later, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Hamilton pitted, but Nico Rosberg's race was over due to problems with his suspension. Alonso, Button, Grosjean, Ricciardo, Maldonado and P\u00e9rez pitted on lap 23, with Vettel taking the lead of the race. Alonso then set the fastest lap of the race, and began to reduce Vettel's lead, and Vettel was told on the radio to not resist an attack by Alonso. On lap 28, Alonso took the lead from Vettel. Both Vettel and H\u00fclkenberg pitted on the next lap, for new hard compound tyres. Di Resta stopped 3 laps later, while R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Valtteri Bottas pitted on lap 34. They were followed two laps later by H\u00fclkenberg and Massa, and finally Hamilton, Grosjean and Vergne one lap later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAlonso pitted for the last time on lap 41, while R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Hamilton no longer needed to pit. However, Button and Vettel still had one pit stop to go. Button pitted on lap 49, Vettel on lap 51, and also di Resta on lap 53. There was an exciting duel between Hamilton and Vettel for the final podium slot, as Vettel reduced a 10-second gap, to only a few tenths within five laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232647-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Chinese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAlonso finally crossed the line to score his 31st grand prix victory on his 200th grand prix start, 10 seconds ahead of R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, while Hamilton managed to hold off Vettel for third place. Jenson Button finished fifth, Massa finished sixth, while Daniel Ricciardo drove an outstanding race to finish seventh, his best ever Formula One result. The final points positions were taken by di Resta, Grosjean and H\u00fclkenberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232648-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Super League\nThe 2013 Chinese Super League was the tenth season since the establishment of the Chinese Super League, the 20th season of a professional football league and the 52nd top-tier league season in China. Guangzhou Evergrande won their third consecutive title with an 18-point advantage ahead of runners-up Shandong Luneng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232648-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Super League, Clubs, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is restricted to five per CSL team, including a slot for a player from AFC countries. A team can use four foreign players on the field in each game, including at least one player from the AFC country. Players from Hong Kong, Macau and Chinese Taipei are deemed to be native players in CSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232648-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Super League, Clubs, Foreign players\nHong Kong/Macau/Taiwan players (doesn't count on the foreign player slot)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232648-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Super League, League Attendance\nUpdated to games played on Nov. 3rd, 2013Source: (in Chinese)Notes:\u2020 Teams played previous season in CL1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232649-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chinese Taipei Open Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 Chinese Taipei Open Grand Prix Gold was the ninth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Hsing Chuang Gymnasium, Taipei, Chinese Taipei September 3 until September 8, 2013 and had a total purse of $200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232650-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chivas USA season\nThe 2013 Chivas USA season was the club's ninth season of existence, and their ninth season in Major League Soccer, the top tier of the American and Canadian soccer pyramids. Chivas USA looked to rebound off a disappointing season, which saw the club finish at the bottom of the Western Conference table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232650-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chivas USA season, Competitions, MLS, League Table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232650-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Chivas USA season, Competitions, MLS, Results summary\nLast updated: October 26, 2013Source: 2013 Major League Soccer seasonPld = 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, 58], "content_span": [59, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232651-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cholet Pays de Loire Dames\nThe 2013 Cholet Pays de Loire Dames was the 10th edition of a one-day women's cycle race held in Cholet, France on March 17 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race was won by Emma Johansson of the Australian-based team, Orica-AIS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election\nA by-election was held in the New Zealand electorate of Christchurch East on 30 November 2013. The seat was vacated following the resignation of Lianne Dalziel of the Labour Party from parliament, who contested and won the Christchurch mayoralty in October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election\nThe electorate is regarded as a safe Labour seat; the party has, apart from the 50-year gap when the electorate was abolished, held the electorate since the 1922 election, although significant population changes since the 2011 Christchurch earthquake had made this allegiance to Labour less certain. Prior to the election, National's top party official in Canterbury had conceded that the by-election was \"very, very hard for [National] to win\". The by-election was won by Labour's Poto Williams, who prior to her selection as Labour's candidate was virtually unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Background\nFollowing months of speculation, The Press reported on 20 April 2013 that Lianne Dalziel would challenge Bob Parker for the Christchurch mayoralty. On 19 June Dalziel formally confirmed that she would contest the mayoralty, also announcing that she would resign from Parliament, which would cause a by-election in the Christchurch East electorate. Dalziel's resignation took effect on 11 October, the day before the announcement of the mayoralty election-results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Poto Williams (Labour)\nThe Labour Party nominated Poto Williams for the by-election. In a surprise move, then Labour leader David Shearer appointed former MP Jim Anderton as the party's by-election campaign manager. Anderton, who was first elected to Parliament in 1984 for Labour in Sydenham, left the party in 1989 over policy differences and, until his retirement as MP in 2011, led his own parties (the NewLabour Party and Jim Anderton's Progressive Party). The Labour Party nomination process started in August and Deon Swiggs was the first person to declare his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Poto Williams (Labour)\nSwiggs, a 26-year-old who developed a profile following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, has been a Labour supporter since age 15. A day later, James Caygill confirmed his candidacy to represent the Labour Party. He is the son of former Minister of Finance David Caygill. The third person to join the Labour candidacy race was Tina Lomax, who is the principal of Kingslea School and who, from 2004 to 2010, was a Burwood-Pegasus Community Board member.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Poto Williams (Labour)\nKaren Hayes is a registered nurse and midwife, Christina Laalaai-Tausa is a PhD candidate at the University of Canterbury, and the sixth candidate was Poto Williams, the regional manager of St John of God Hauora Trust. Clayton Cosgrove, an existing list MP who had lost the Waimakariri electorate to National's Kate Wilkinson at the last election, had considered standing in the by-election, but in the end decided not to put his name forward for the Labour nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Matt Doocey (National)\nThe National Party nominated political newcomer Matt Doocey for the by-election, who is a manager for the Canterbury District Health Board. The party's Canterbury Westland Regional Chair, Roger Bridge, noted that a sitting government has never won a by-election in an electorate that it did not already hold. Bridge later conceded that it would be \"very, very hard for us to win\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Matt Doocey (National)\nWhen Kate Wilkinson, National MP for the Waimakariri electorate, announced in early November 2013 that she would retire at the end of the term of the 50th Parliament, rumours immediately surfaced that Doocey would replace her as National's Waimakariri candidate, and the Christchurch East by-election would help him gain experience in contesting an election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Matt Doocey (National)\nDoocey is a member of the well-known Carter family. Family patriarch Maurice Carter, a Christchurch City Councillor for over 30 years (1956\u20131989), was his grandfather, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, David Carter, is his uncle. Doocey grew up in Christchurch and attended St Bede's College for his secondary schooling. The Dooceys bought their current home in Redwood, which currently falls into the Waimakariri electorate, in April 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, David Moorhouse (Green)\nThe Green Party nominated software developer David Moorhouse for the by-election. He stood for the party in Christchurch Central electorate at the 2011 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Other candidates\nGareth Veale was the candidate for the ACT Party. Veale is a 24-year-old earthquake claims specialist whose campaign is focusing on issues of crime and property rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Other candidates\nPaula Lambert was the candidate for the Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Other candidates\nThe Conservative Party nominated Leighton Baker, a future leader of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Other candidates\nThe Democrats for Social Credit nominated Jenner Lichtwark, a novelist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Other candidates\nThree people were contesting the by-election as independent candidates. One, Adam Holland, previously contested the Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, and says that he will be running on \"a platform of donating the entirety of my parliamentary salary to the region\". The other independent candidates are Ian Gaskin and Sam Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Candidates, Other candidates\nBlair Anderson, a former deputy leader of the Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party, considered standing as an independent, but did not put a nomination forward. He had previously stood unsuccessfully for the Christchurch mayoralty on several occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East by-election, Results\nThe following table shows the final results of the by-election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232652-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch East 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election\nThe 2013 Christchurch mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections and was won by former MP Lianne Dalziel. The elections were held on 12 October 2013 for the Mayor of Christchurch plus other local government roles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election\nIncumbent Bob Parker announced 14 months prior to the election that he would seek a third term as mayor. There was much speculation for many months over who would challenge Parker. Dalziel's name was persistently mentioned, but she denied any interest, declaring instead that the job that she really wanted is Gerry Brownlee's as Earthquake Recovery Minister, rather than Bob Parker's. Three first term councillors were also rumoured, with Tim Carter seen as the most likely to come forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election\nIn April 2013, Christchurch's main newspaper, The Press, announced that Dalziel would stand, having asked Student Volunteer Army organiser Sam Johnson to be her running mate. This caused surprise since Dalziel and Johnson are from opposite ends of the political spectrum, but he declined the invitation anyway. It was not until mid June that Dalziel confirmed her candidacy. At the same time, serious problems developed at Christchurch City Council (CCC) over building consent issues, which led to Parker withdrawing his candidacy and council's chief executive, Tony Marryatt, losing his job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election\nIn early August, central city retail manager Paul Lonsdale announced his candidacy and was immediately credited by The Press as the most viable alternative to Dalziel, but senior journalist Lois Cairns predicted the following day that Lonsdale \"will come in a distant second\". Dalziel, the former Labour Party MP for Christchurch East and up to the election the representative of the Christchurch East electorate, had been in Parliament since 1990 and was considered the top favourite. Of the remaining ten candidates, The Press labelled them a mixture of eccentrics, tryers and also-rans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election\nDalziel won the election with nearly a 50,000 votes margin and a majority of 48%, with Lonsdale receiving nearly 23,000 votes. Lonsdale also stood for a position as city councillor and was successful on that front. The third placed mayoral candidate received a mere 1,000 votes. Dalziel and the new council were sworn in on 24 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nSince the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake, there were persistent rumours that Labour Party MP Lianne Dalziel would contest the 2013 Christchurch mayoralty. Dalziel had first been elected to Parliament in the 1990 election, representing first Christchurch Central and since 1996 the Christchurch East electorate. In May 2012, Dalziel tried to put an end to the rumours by announcing: \"The job I really want is Gerry Brownlee's, rather than Bob Parker's.\" Brownlee was Earthquake Recovery Minister, whilst Parker was then Mayor of Christchurch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nIn August, Parker announced that he would seek a third term as mayor. Due to the controversy caused during his mayoralty, the general expectation had been that he would not seek re-election. There was confidence in the neighbouring areas that Selwyn District and Waimakariri District Councils had responded well to the earthquakes, but the same could not be said for Christchurch City Council (CCC). Former National Party cabinet minister Philip Burdon called Christchurch Council's response a \"dysfunctional failure\". CCC had commissioned an external communications review in 2012, which found that the council was seen as having a \"can't do attitude\", and that it was commonly agreed that the organisation was not customer focussed. The report concluded:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nChristchurch City Council is an isolated \"fortress\" which is \"culturally reluctant\" to communicate openly with its city's inhabitants", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nAt the time of Parker's announcement, the main Christchurch newspaper, The Press, published a list of other likely candidates. Dalziel was understood to be backing prominent businessman Humphry Rolleston. Rolleston was on the board of several companies that were listed on the stock exchange and until 2004 had been in business with Allan Hubbard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nIn the second half of the year, former mayor Garry Moore actively sought media exposure and when asked about his career aspirations replied: \"I spent 15 years of my life on the council and it worries me where democracy is heading in Christchurch.\" The Press listed three sitting councillors who had possible mayoral aspirations: Peter Beck, Tim Carter, and Glenn Livingstone. All three were in their first term, with Beck first elected in a February 2012 by-election. In a follow-up article in November, The Press added Canterbury Employers' Chamber of Commerce chief executive Peter Townsend and radio host Mike Yardley to the list of potential mayoral candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nIn the February 2013 reshuffle of opposition portfolios, Dalziel dropped out of the top 20; only the first 20 positions are ranked by the Labour Party. An editorial in The Press speculated that she might reconsider her political future:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nThe demotion is bound to concentrate Dalziel's mind on whether she should run for the Christchurch mayoralty. As things stand, a place for her in a Labour cabinet as minister for the earthquake recovery looks unlikely, but she would be a strong candidate for mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nBy March, Parker was still the only person who had declared their candidacy. An editorial in The Press discussed two possible opponents: Tim Carter and Lianne Dalziel. Carter is from Christchurch's richest family, with his father Philip topping the local rich-list, and there has been a long-running political interest in his family. Philip Carter was a Christchurch city councillor from 1989 to 1995, David Carter, a brother of Philip Carter, is the current Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives, and their father Maurice Carter was a Christchurch city councillor from 1956 to 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nOn 10 April, Carter was hosted by The Press for a livechat event, where questions put to Carter by readers were answered online by him. Whilst Carter said that he would only make a decision whether to stand in the coming weeks, the newspaper commented that his answers were campaign-style, that he used \"fait accompli-language\", and that he had \"launched a pre-election broadside at mayoral incumbent Bob Parker\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nThe Press reported on 20 April that Lianne Dalziel will challenge Parker for the mayoralty, and that she had asked Student Volunteer Army organiser Sam Johnson to be her running mate, with a view of Johnson becoming deputy mayor. The newspaper expressed surprise by this pairing, given that Dalziel is a Labour Party member, and Johnson is a member of the Young Nats, the youth arm of the National Party. Johnson declined the invitation, and Dalziel maintained that she was not yet committed to standing, saying that it required the right team to be formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nSpeaking at the annual general meeting of the Christchurch East Labour Party electoral committee some days later, she expressed her disappointment at Johnson having declined her invitation. Meanwhile, Labour's deputy leader, Grant Robertson, confirmed that Dalziel had been open to the party hierarchy about considering the Christchurch mayoralty, and that the party had giving her the freedom to make any decision about her future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nCarter announced on 24 April that he would not contest the mayoralty, but that he would endorse Dalziel instead. This followed several meetings between him and Dalziel that \"left him convinced she was the best person for the job\". Dalziel, meanwhile, had still not confirmed that she would stand in the election. Carter reiterated in mid-July that he would not stand for the mayoralty, and announced that he may indeed retire from the city council altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nVicki Buck and Garry Moore, the only two ex-mayors alive, were reported in early June as both considering running as councillors in the local elections, but both ruled out standing for the mayoralty; Buck also ruled out standing for the deputy-mayoralty. Buck confirmed that she had been meeting regularly with Dalziel, and Moore commented of Dalziel announcing her mayoralty bid as \"reasonably high\". Moore and Buck both expressed dissatisfaction with the performance of the current council, with Moore saying:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nVicki and I have been sitting weeping into our coffees for the last couple of years. We have looked at all our hard work and thought: 'My God, what's happening?' This is not a place for show ponies, it's a time for carefully thought through strategic thinking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nMoore's comment was a swipe at Parker, who is by many referred to as a \"show pony\". Parker, meanwhile, was rumoured by The Sunday Star-Times to retire at the end of the term, which he immediately denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nOn 19 June, Dalziel formally confirmed that she would contest the mayoralty, also announcing that she would resign from Parliament with effect from the day prior to the mayoral election, which would cause a by-election in the Christchurch East electorate. Dalziel stated that she would not run for Labour, but that she would contest the election as an Independent. Despite Dalziel's earlier claims that she had to form a strong team first before she would stand, she declared that she would not form a team and did not have a 'running mate', i.e. deputy mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nAfter a troublesome period starting in mid-June, Christchurch City Council lost its accreditation with International Accreditation New Zealand (IANZ) for issuing building consents, and council's CEO, Tony Marryatt, was placed on indefinite leave on 3 July. On Friday morning, 5 July 2013, The Press was working on a feature article for the first opinion poll and phoned Parker and Dalziel for their reactions on the 30% and 70% respective poll results. Later that afternoon, Parker gave an exclusive interview to John Campbell in which he announced that he would not stand for re-election. The interview was screened on Campbell Live that evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nOn 1 August, Hugo Kristinsson joined the mayoralty contest. He was an IT specialist from Iceland who came to Christchurch in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nOn 9 August, Christchurch businessman Paul Lonsdale announced his candidacy for a position as councillor in the Hagley-Ferrymead ward, and as mayor. Lonsdale was regarded by the local paper, The Press, as \"the most viable alternative yet to Lianne Dalziel\" and was endorsed by Parker for his \"many fine qualities\". Lonsdale was best known as the driving force behind the Re:START mall project, and was previously the manager of Riccarton Mall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nLonsdale works closely with property developer Antony Gough, who is the current chairman of the Central City Business Association, and Gough's preference was for Lonsdale to only contest a city council position, as Dalziel \"is the frontrunner by a country mile\". In an opinion piece, senior journalist Lois Cairns credited Lonsdale as the person with the best name recognition yet who can challenge Dalziel, but that he was not likely to be able to keep up with her campaign: \"In all likelihood Lonsdale will come in a distant second.\" The Press asked candidates about their five key issues, to which 10 of the 12 nominated candidates replied. In a commentary, the newspaper stated:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates\nWith sitting Mayor Bob Parker out of the contention, the contest is effectively Lianne Dalziel's to lose. She faces some competition in the form of prominent business figure Paul Lonsdale, but the other 10 candidates are a mixture of eccentrics, tryers and also-rans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Candidates, List of candidates\nWhen nominations closed, there were twelve candidates for the Christchurch mayoralty:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Campaign\nOn 19 September, six of the candidates held an open-air forum on the corner of Fitzgerald Avenue and Ferry Road. It was organised by Wakeman, Anderson, and Tindall over concerns that the lesser candidates do not receive enough attention from the media. In addition to the organisers, Cattermole, Kristinsson, and Maxwell attended in front of 20 members of the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Campaign\nOn 23 September, The Press editor Joanna Norris moderated a debate between the two top candidates, Dalziel and Lonsdale, at the Cardboard Cathedral. The sold-out event was attended by 450 members of the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Campaign\nOn 25 September, the Canterbury Employers' Chamber of Commerce hosted Dalziel and Lonsdale to address about 50 of their members. There was much common ground between the speakers, and both advocated closer ties to neighbouring councils Selwyn, Waimakariri, and Hurunui, with Lonsdale suggesting that conversations about an Auckland-style \"super city\" should be had.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Campaign\nOn 3 October, eight of the candidates participated in a debate at the University of Canterbury, organised by the university's political science club and moderated by the political science lecturer, Lindsey MacDonald. About fifty people attended the debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Opinion polls\nThe Press published its first opinion poll on 6 July, but as the main event of the day was Parker's announcement to withdraw from the race, more detailed results were only published two days later on 8 July. Of the decided voters, 70% supported Dalziel and 30% supported Parker. 32% of those polled had yet to decide whom to vote for. The survey work was carried out between 30 June and 3 July, and the poll had a margin of error of 3.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Opinion polls\nThe Press published its second opinion poll on 21 September. It had Dalziel on 75% of the decided voters, with Lonsdale on 21% in second place. None of the other candidates polled above 1%. 17% of voters had not decided whom to vote for. The survey work was carried out in late August and early September, and the poll had a margin of error of 5.2%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Opinion polls\nThe Press published its third opinion poll on 30 September. It had Dalziel on 78% of the vote, with Lonsdale on 19% in second place. Hansen and Maxwell both received 1% of the support, and the remaining candidates a combined 2%, whilst 1% did not know whom to vote for. The poll was carried out between 17 and 25 September, questioned 541 people, and had a margin of error of 3.49%. In addition, a further 190 respondents stated that they would not vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Opinion polls\nPolitical scientist Bronwyn Hayward, a lecturer at the University of Canterbury, predicted a poor turnout based on the one-sidedness of the race, and tiredness of the voting populations due to earthquake-induced stress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Timeline and election\nLocal elections happen across New Zealand on the same day. Under section 10 of the Local Electoral Act 2001, a \"general election of members of every local authority or community board must be held on the second Saturday in October in every third year\" from the date the Act came into effect in 2001, meaning 12 October 2013. The local elections include District Health Board members. In 2013, Christchurch voters thus voted for a mayor, city councillors, community board members, and District Health Board members. All elections were conducted by postal ballot. Like most other local authorities, Christchurch City Council used the first-past-the-post (FPP) voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Timeline and election\nKey dates for the election as set out by the Electoral Commission were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Results\nDalziel was elected, and preliminary results saw her having received some 48,000 more votes than her nearest rival, Lonsdale. Final results were published on 17 October, and declared in a public notice on 19 October, with the margin between the top contenders having increased to 49,745 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Results\nUnlike Dalziel, who contested the mayoralty only, Lonsdale also stood for a position as a city councillor and came second in the two-member Hagley-Ferrymead ward, and was thus confirmed elected. As The Press had predicted, the remaining mayoral candidates received a low number of votes, with only Cattermole gaining just over 1,000 votes. The mayor and councillors were sworn in on 24 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232653-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Christchurch mayoral election, Voting statistics\nParticipation in local elections had been falling for years to a low in 2004. In the 2013 local election, 42.56% of registered voters cast their vote, which is significantly lower than the 2010 election, when the increased interest was caused by the 2010 Canterbury earthquake just prior to the election. The following table shows the voting statistics since the 1989 local elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232654-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 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 8 June 2013. Pavel B\u011blobr\u00e1dek was reelected as the leader of KDU-\u010cSL. Zuzana Roithov\u00e1 and Marian Jure\u010dka were nominated for the position but both of them withdrew from election. B\u011blobr\u00e1dek ran unopposed and received 244 of 272 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 85], "section_span": [85, 85], "content_span": [86, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232655-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Christmas Cup\nThe 2013 Christmas Cup was the 4th edition of Tuvalu's national football knockout tournament. The tournament began 8 November 2013 and finished 6 December 2013. Six clubs participated. Defending champions were Manu Laeva A. The tournament was played at the Tuvalu Sports Ground, the only football field in Tuvalu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232655-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Christmas Cup\nManu Laeva were the champions, winning the final 2-1 against Tofaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232656-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Christmas Cup (women)\nThe 2013 Christmas Cup (women) was the first edition of the Christmas Cup. The tournament began on 8 November 2013 and finished on 6 December 2013. Five clubs participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232657-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup\nThe 2013 Christy Ring Cup was the ninth staging of the Christy Ring Cup hurling championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 2005. The cup competition began on 4 May 2013 and ended on 8 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232657-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup\nLondon were defending champions, however, they were promoted to the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship. Down won the title following a 3-16 to 2-17 victory over Kerry in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232658-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup Final\nThe 2013 Christy Ring Cup final was a hurling match played at Croke Park on 8 June 2013 to determine the winners of the 2013 Christy Ring Cup, the 9th 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 Kerry of Munster and Down of Ulster, with Down winning by 3\u201316 to 2-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232658-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup Final\nThe Christy Ring Cup final between Down and Kerry was the 5th championship meeting between the two teams. Kerry were appearing in their second final in three years and were hoping to win their second cup title. Down were appearing in their third final, having lost the deciders of 2005 and 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232658-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup Final\nA blistering start saw both sides hit the net inside the opening three minutes. First Gareth Johnson drilled home a Down goal before P\u00e1draig Boyle flashed an angle shot to the net at the other end. Kerry took the lead in the 15th minute with a goal from Shane Nolan, who had moments earlier had a point awarded on a Hawk-Eye call. Kerry eased into a five-point lead, but only after a let-off which saw Johnson flash a first-time shot just wide. Down were awarded a penalty in the 29th minute after a run by Michael Ennis was illegally halted, but Paul Braniff drilled over the bar. Down continued to press in the closing stages of the half, cutting the deficit further with three more points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232658-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup Final\nKerry still held on to a narrow 2\u20136 to 1\u20138 lead at the interval, and they pushed on with three quick points after the restart. Down kept in touch through Conor Woods and in the 48th minute their challenge was given fresh impetus when substitute Scott Nicholson grabbed their second goal. Kerry restored their three points advantage, however, Nicholson continued to make an impact with two more points, and it was another sub, Johnny McCusker, who brought the sides level with four minutes to play. P\u00e1draig Boyle's 70th minute point appeared likely to be the decisive score, however, Braniff gambled with a long punt in the direction of Johnson, who worked his magic with a deft flick that deflected the ball past Bernard Rochford for a two-point win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232658-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup Final\nDown's Christy Ring Cup victory was their very first. They became the 6th team to win the Christy Ring Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232658-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Christy Ring Cup Final\nKerry's Christy Ring Cup defeat was their second having already lost the final in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232659-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chrono Champenois \u2013 Troph\u00e9e Europ\u00e9en\nThe 2013 Chrono Champenois \u2013 Troph\u00e9e Europ\u00e9en is the 24th running of the Chrono Champenois - Troph\u00e9e Europ\u00e9en, a women's individual time trial bicycle race in France and was held on 15 September 2013 over a distance of 33.40 kilometres (20.8 miles). It was one of the few single time trial events on the 2013 women's cycling calendar and was the last test before the time trial at the 2013 UCI Road World Championships. It is rated by the UCI as a 1.1 category race. The time trial started and finished in Betheny and the course went through: Bourgogne, Fresne, Pomacle, Caurel, Berru and Witry-l\u00e8s-Reims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232659-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chrono Champenois \u2013 Troph\u00e9e Europ\u00e9en\nEllen van Dijk from the Netherlands won the time trial ahead of Specialized\u2013lululemon teammate Carmen Small from the United States. Shara Gillow from Australia finished in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232660-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chrono Gatineau\nThe 2013 Chrono Gatineau was a one-day women's cycle race held in Canada on May 20 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.1. The race was won by the Carmen Small of Velocio\u2013SRAM Pro Cycling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232661-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chrono des Nations\nThe 2013 Chrono des Nations was the 32nd edition of the Chrono des Nations individual time trial cycle race and was held on 20 October 2013. The race started and finished in Les Herbiers. The race was won by Tony Martin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232662-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Chrono des Nations (women's race)\nThe 2013 Chrono des Nations Women's Elite time trial was part of a series of one day time trials held at the end of the 2013 season. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.1. The race was won by the Ukrainian Hanna Solovey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232662-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Chrono des Nations (women's race)\nIt was announced that after winning the time trial at the 2013 UCI Road World Championships, world champion Ellen van Dijk would not start in this last time trial of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232663-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bearcats football team\nThe 2013 Cincinnati Bearcats football team represented the University of Cincinnati in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bearcat football team played their home games at Nippert Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio. The 2013 college football season was their first season as a member of the American Athletic Conference. The Bearcats were led by first year head coach Tommy Tuberville. They finished the season 9\u20134, 6\u20132 in American Athletic play to finish in third place. They were invited to the Belk Bowl where they lost to North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season\nThe 2013 Cincinnati Bengals season was the franchise's 44th season in the National Football League, the 46th overall, and the 11th under head coach Marvin Lewis. The Bengals improved on their 10\u20136 regular season record from 2012 and clinched the AFC North division title. However, the Bengals lost 27\u201310 to the San Diego Chargers in the playoffs \u2013 the third consecutive season that the Bengals had lost in the Wild Card round. Their training camp was featured on the HBO show Hard Knocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Chicago Bears\nThe Bengals would build a 21-10 lead, but it would vanish as the Bears would rally to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Chicago Bears\nWith the loss, the Bengals started 0-1 for the second straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith their second straight victory over the Steelers, the Bengals went to 1-1, and beat the Steelers at home for the first time since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Green Bay Packers\nThe Bengals defeated the Green Bay Packers 34\u201330, and also became the first team in NFL history to lead by 14 points, then trail by 16 and eventually win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: vs. New England Patriots\nThe Bengals improved to 3-2. They also defeated Tom Brady for the first time ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 96], "content_span": [97, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Buffalo Bills\nMike Nugent would kick the game-winning field goal in overtime to seal the game for the Bengals. With the win, the Bengals went to 4-2 and picked up their first win in Buffalo since 1985, snapping their 6-game road losing streak against the Bills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at Detroit Lions\nMike Nugent would come through with the clutch as the Bengals won 27-24 for the second week in a row. With their 5th straight win in Detroit, the Bengals went to 5-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: vs. New York Jets\nWith the easy win, the Bengals improved to 6-2. This win also remains the largest in the Marvin Lewis era, as of 2016. The 49 points were also the most scored by the Bengals since 2009 against the Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: at Miami Dolphins\nAndy Dalton would have a rough night, as he was intercepted 3 times. The game would end with him getting sacked in the end zone by Cameron Wake. This was also the first overtime game to end on a safety since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 10: at Baltimore Ravens\nDespite out gaining Baltimore in total yardage, 364-189, and a hail mary at the end of regulation to force overtime, Andy Dalton threw 3 interceptions in the loss. With the loss, the Bengals fell to 6-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe Bengals set a franchise record for most points scored in 1 quarter with 31 in this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at San Diego Chargers\nThe Chargers opened the game by driving 45 yards to the Bengals 31, but on 3rd-and-10, Philip Rivers completed a 13-yard pass to Antonio Gates who was stripped by Reggie Nelson with George Iloka recovering for Cincinnati. After both teams swapped punts, the Bengals marched 67 yards in 10 plays with BenJarvus Green-Ellis rushing for a 4-yard touchdown on the first play of the 2nd quarter. The Bengals responded on their very next drive, driving 78 yards in only 8 plays with Rivers bombing a 30-yard touchdown pass to Ladarius Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at San Diego Chargers\nAfter both teams swapped punts again, Andy Dalton was intercepted by Eric Weddle who returned it 21 yards to the Chargers 45. The game was a 7-7 deadlock at halftime. However, on the Chargers opening drive of the second half Rivers was intercepted by Dre Kirkpatrick at the Bengals 25. The Bengals responded by driving 59 yards on a 10-play drive with Dalton connecting with superstar receiver A. J. Green on a 21-yard touchdown pass for a 14-7 lead. The Chargers drove to the Bengals 31, but were forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at San Diego Chargers\nBut the Bengals drove 61 yards before Mike Nugent booted a 47-yard field goal, extending the lead to 17-7. On their next drive, Rivers hit Keenan Allen for 14 yards, but Iloka forced Allen to fumble and Vincent Rey recovered for the Bengals. The Bengals took over at the Chargers 34. Two plays later Dalton threw a short pass to for 5 yards, but was stripped by Marcus Gilchrist with Weddle recovering and returning the ball 27 yards to the Bengals 43. The Chargers reached the Bengals 30 and Nick Novak made it a 7-point game at 17-10 with his 48-yard field goal. The Bengals ended the game with a Green-Ellis 5-yard run to the Chargers 3-yard line with less than two minutes remaining. With the win the Bengals improved to 8-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith the loss, the Bengals fell to 9\u20135 and enabled their division rival Ravens in the running for the AFC North title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nWith the win, the Bengals improved to 10\u20135, and with the Ravens' loss to the Patriots later in the evening, they clinched the AFC North title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nWith the win, the Bengals surpassed their win total from 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232664-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Bengals season, Game summaries, Postseason, AFC Wild Card Playoff Game: vs. #6 San Diego Chargers\nThe Bengals lost the AFC Wild Card playoff game against the Chargers, 27\u201310, thus eliminating them. This loss also gives the team their 6th straight playoff loss dating back to the 1990 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 113], "content_span": [114, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232665-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Reds season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Newfiebluejay (talk | contribs) at 21:04, 25 June 2021. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232665-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Reds season\nThe 2013 Cincinnati Reds season was the 124th season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 11th at Great American Ball Park. During the 2013 season, the Reds returned to the playoffs for a second straight season, after a 97\u201365 season in 2012, in which they lost in 5 games in the NLDS. On September 23, due to the Washington Nationals' loss to the St. Louis Cardinals, the Reds clinched a spot in the post-season. They entered the playoffs as a Wild Card team, becoming the first team to qualify for the postseason after finishing third in their respective division. They lost in the 2013 National League Wild Card Game to the Pittsburgh Pirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232665-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Reds season, Player statistics\n\u2013 Qualified for batting title (3.1 plate appearances per team game)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232665-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Reds season, Player statistics\n\u2013 Qualified for ERA title (1 inning pitched per team game)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232665-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati Reds season, Player statistics\n* not on active roster\u2020 on 15-day disabled list\u2020\u2020 on 60-day disabled list", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232666-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati mayoral election\nThe 2013 Cincinnati mayoral election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the Mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio. The election was officially nonpartisan, with the top two candidates from the September 10 primary advancing to the general election, regardless of party. One of the biggest issues for this election was the proposed streetcar (now known as the Cincinnati Bell Connector) which Cranley opposed and Qualls supported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232666-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cincinnati mayoral election\nWhile the election was officially nonpartisan, Cranley and Qualls were both known ]Democrats, while Jim Berns Sandra and Queen Noble, who were both eliminated in the primary, were known Libertarians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open\nThe 2013 Citi Open (known as such for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 45th edition (for the men) and the 3rd edition (for the women) of the event known that year as the Citi Open (previously known on the men's tour as the Legg Mason Tennis Classic), and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour, and of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., United States, from July 27 to August 4, 2013. Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro and Magdal\u00e9na Ryb\u00e1rikov\u00e1 won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wild cards into the main singles draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry from the singles qualifying draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wild cards into the main singles draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry from the singles qualifying draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, Finals, Men's singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro defeated John Isner, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, Finals, Men's doubles\nJulien Benneteau / Nenad Zimonji\u0107 defeated Mardy Fish / Radek \u0160tep\u00e1nek, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232667-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open, Finals, Women's doubles\nShuko Aoyama / Vera Dushevina defeated Eugenie Bouchard / Taylor Townsend, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 39], "content_span": [40, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232668-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nTreat Conrad Huey and Dominic Inglot were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Julien Benneteau and Nenad Zimonji\u0107. Benneteau and Zimonji\u0107 went on to win the title, defeating Mardy Fish and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232669-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nAlexandr Dolgopolov was the defending champion, but lost to Indian qualifier Somdev Devvarman in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232669-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro won his third Citi Open title and second title of the year, defeating John Isner in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232670-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nShuko Aoyama and Chang Kai-chen were the defending champions but Chang chose not to participate. Aoyama successfully defended the title alongside Vera Dushevina, defeating Eugenie Bouchard and Taylor Townsend in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232671-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citi Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nMagdal\u00e9na Ryb\u00e1rikov\u00e1 was the defending champion, and she successfully defended her title, defeating Andrea Petkovic in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132). This was Ryb\u00e1rikov\u00e1's final WTA singles title before her retirement in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232672-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citizens' Action Party presidential primary\nPAC\u2019s second presidential primary (known as Citizens' National Convention or Convenci\u00f3n Nacional Ciudadana) was held on July 21, 2013 in order to elect the party\u2019s presidential nominee for the 2014 Costa Rican general election. Unlike the previous election, this was an open primary and every citizen was able to vote as far as pledge written membership to the party before casting the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232672-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Citizens' Action Party presidential primary\nThree-time candidate and party\u2019s founder Ott\u00f3n Sol\u00eds declined run for president for the fourth time opening the opportunity for new leaderships and the presidential nomination in one of Costa Rica\u2019s major parties. Four candidates were able to enroll their names; former deputy and vice presidential candidate Epsy Campbell, then deputy and former President of the Legislative Assembly Juan Carlos Mendoza, former deputy Ronald Sol\u00eds and college professor Luis Guillermo Sol\u00eds. None of the Solis were related. Other aspirants were businesswoman and former vice presidential nominee Monica Segnini, lawmaker Claudio Monge and former candidate in the previous primary and future ambassador in Washington Rom\u00e1n Macaya, but all dropped their candidacies for different reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232672-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Citizens' Action Party presidential primary\nContrary to all expectations Luis Guillermos Sol\u00eds won the election with 35% of the votes, only 113 votes more than Mendoza. Campbell, who was by far the frontrunner in all previous polls, achieved only 25% of the vote, and Sol\u00eds Bola\u00f1os received 4%. Sol\u00eds was declared PAC\u2019s presidential candidate and would eventually won the 2014 presidential race in both rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232673-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta\nThe 2013 Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 15th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Caltanissetta, Italy between 3 and 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232673-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232673-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232673-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232674-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta \u2013 Doubles\nMarcel Felder and Antonio Vei\u0107 were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Dominik Meffert and Philipp Oswald won the title by defeating Alessandro Giannessi and Potito Starace 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232675-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta \u2013 Singles\nTommy Robredo was the defending champion, but competed in the 2013 French Open. Du\u0161an Lajovi\u0107 defeated Robin Haase 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232676-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger\nThe 2013 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the eight edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Como, Italy between 26 August and 1 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232676-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232676-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232676-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as an lucky loser into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232677-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nPhilipp Marx and Florin Mergea were the defending champions but Mergea decided not to participate. Marx played alongside Dustin Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232678-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Citt\u00e0 di Como Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAndreas Haider-Maurer was the defending champion but had to compete at the 2013 US Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232679-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 City of London Corporation election\nThe 2013 City of London Corporation election took place on 21 March 2013 to elect members of the Court of Common Council in the City of London Corporation, England. These elections take place every four years. As in the previous election, the vast majority of Council members were elected as independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232679-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 City of London Corporation election, By-elections\nIn a subsequent by-election in the Portsoken ward in 2014 the Labour party won its first ever councillor in the Corporation: William Campbell-Taylor, an Anglican priest who had campaigned for higher ethical standards in the City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232680-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Clare Senior Hurling Championship is the 115th staging of the Clare Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1887.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season\nThe 2013 season was Davy Fitzgerald's second year as manager of the Clare senior hurling team. Clare went on to win their fourth All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship after a 5-16 to 3-16 win against Cork in the final on 28 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 Waterford Crystal Cup\nClare faced defending champions Tipperary in the final under lights in Thurles on 9 February, with Clare winning by 1-21 to 1-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 Waterford Crystal Cup\nP Kelly D McInerney, J McInerney, C Cooney B Bugler, P Donnellan, P Kelly (Clarecastle) N O\u2019Connell, C Ryan F Lynch, T Kelly, E Barrett D O\u2019Halloran, A O\u2019Neill, C O\u2019Connell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 Waterford Crystal Cup\nD Tuohy D O\u2019Donovan, C Duggan, B O\u2019Connell B Bugler, P Donnellan, P O\u2019Connor N O\u2019Connell, S Morey C Ryan, P Collins, E Barrett S O\u2019Donnell, A O\u2019Neill, J Clancy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 National Hurling League\nOn 14 April, Clare defeated Cork by two points after extra-time in the League Division 1A relegation playoff to retain their league status in division 1. Speaking after the game manager Davy Fitzgerald said \"It\u2019s a good win, we beat Cork in a relegation play-off \u2013 that\u2019s it, we\u2019re not going to get carried away by it, we won\u2019t beat the likes of Waterford with so many wides. Cork could just as easily have won that game, we know there\u2019s still a long road to go.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Final Drawn Game\nClare got the opening score of the third minute with a point from Darach Honan. and were ahead by 012 to 0-10 at half time. After 40 minutes Conor Lehane scored the opening goal of the same with a shot past the goalkeeper from the right and into the net to make the score 1-10 to 0-14. Cork got a second goal in the 57th minute when goalkeeper Anthony Nash hit a 20-yard free to the net after Luke O'Farrell had been fouled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 113], "content_span": [114, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Final Drawn Game\nWith seven minutes left on the clock, Cork captain Patrick Cronin hit a shot to the top left corner of the net to level the game. Patrick Horgan looked to have won it for Cork with a point in the last minute. Added on time of two minutes was already up when Clare right-back Domhnall O'Donovan received the ball out on the left before hitting the ball over the bar just as he was tacked to tie up the match. The referee blew the final whistle after 2 minutes and 38 seconds to bring the match to a replay three weeks later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 113], "content_span": [114, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Final Replay\nJohn Conlon got the opening score of the game, a point in the second minute. A hat-trick of goals in the 6th, 14th and 19th minutes at the hill 16 end from late call-up Shane O'Donnell put Clare on the way to a four-point lead of 3-9 to 1-11 at half time. Anthony Nash had blasted a 20-metre free past 12 Clare players on the line for a goal that brought Cork back to within three points in the 16th minute. Clare then led by eight points but Cork had drawn level, 1-16 to 3-10, by the 52nd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 109], "content_span": [110, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, All-Ireland Final Replay\nWith 18 minutes left the scores were level at 1-16 to 3-10 and they were level again with ten minutes left when S\u00e9amus Harnedy scored with a low shot to the net to make the score 2-16 to 3-13. In the 61st minute, Clare's Conor McGrath ran at goals and fired the ball high to the left corner of the net for Clare's fourth goal. Darach Honan, who came on as a second-half substitute got Clare's fifth goal in the 71st minute after he received the ball on the right and managed to get as far as the Cork goals before pushing the ball past the goalkeeper with the ball rolling over the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 109], "content_span": [110, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, Awards\nThe nominations for the 2013 GAA-GPA Hurling All-Stars were announced on 2 October with Clare receiving thirteen nominations. Cian Dillon and Patrick O\u2019Connor were the only Clare players not nominated. The final team selection was made on 6 November before the team being presented with their awards two days later at a banquet at Croke Park. Clare's won eight places on the All-Stars team with David McInerney, Brendan Bugler, Pat Donnellan, Colm Galvin, Conor Ryan, Tony Kelly, P\u00e1draic Collins and Conor McGrath all winning awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, Awards\nClare had two of the three nominations for the GPA Hurler of the Year, Tony Kelly and P\u00e1draic Collins of Clare. All three nominations for the GPA Young Hurler of the Year were from Clare, Tony Kelly, P\u00e1draic Collins, and David McInerney from Clare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, Awards\nTony Kelly was named Young Hurler of the Year and Hurler of the Year for 2013 at the All Stars award ceremony on 8 November at Croke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, DVD release\nOn 29 November, a behind-the-scenes documentary on the Clare hurling team during 2013 called Behind the Banner was released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232681-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Clare county hurling team season, Team holiday\nAn 80-strong party of Clare hurlers, their partners and officials flew out in early January 2014 for a 10-day end of year holiday taking in Boston, Cancun in Mexico and New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232682-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clarkson Cup\nThe 2013 Clarkson Cup is a women's ice hockey tournament that was contested in Markham, Ontario to determine the champion of the Canadian Women's Hockey League from March 20 to March 23, 2013. The Boston Blades defeated the Montreal Stars by a 5-2 tally to claim their first title in team history. The tournament was played at Markham Centennial Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232683-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia\nThe 2013 Claro Open Colombia was a men's professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament, which was part of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia at Centro de Alto Rendimiento, between 15 and 21 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232683-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia\nThe Croatian Ivo Karlovic was crowned first winner of the Claro Open Colombia after beating the Colombian Alejandro Falla in the final by 6-3 7-6(4) in a game that lasted one hour and 18 minutes. Karlovic was the surprise package of the 2013 edition, in a tournament that boasted the likes of the Serbian Janko Tipsarevic and the South African Kevin Anderson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232683-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia\nIn the doubles, the Indian couple formed by Purav Raja and Divij Sharan were crowned winners after defeating the Dutch Igor Sijsling and the French \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin by 7-6(4) and 7-6(3) in an hour and 30 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232683-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232683-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232684-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia \u2013 Doubles\nPurav Raja and Divij Sharan won the first edition of the tournament, defeating \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin and Igor Sijsling in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232685-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia \u2013 Singles\nIvo Karlovi\u0107 won the first edition of the tournament, defeating Alejandro Falla 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232685-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Claro Open Colombia \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nAll seeds, along with four other players, received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232686-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Classica Citta di Padova\nThe 2013 Classica Citta di Padova was the 5th edition of a one-day women's cycle race held in Padova, Italy on February 27 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.1. The race was won by the Italian Giorgia Bronzini racing for Wiggle High5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team\nThe 2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team was the varsity intercollegiate baseball team representing Clemson University in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Tigers competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and were led by twentieth-year head coach Jack Leggett. Clemson played its home games at Doug Kingsmore Stadium in Clemson, South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, Preseason\nClemson announced its 2013 baseball schedule in November 2012. Clemson's non-conference schedule included two series against SEC teams\u2013 a three-game weekend rivalry series against South Carolina and a two-game midweek series against Georgia. Also in non-conference play, it included weekend series against William & Mary, Wright State, and Georgia Southern, along with midweek games against other mid-major programs. In ACC play, it included home series against Virginia, Duke, Wake Forest, Georgia Tech, and Maryland, and road series against NC State, North Carolina, Boston College, Miami (FL), and Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, Preseason\nAfter having many players from the 2012 team turn professional, graduate, or transfer, 19 first-year players joined Clemson for the 2013 season. Clemson's recruiting class was ranked fifth in Division I baseball and first in the ACC. It included 16 high school players, two junior college transfers, and one Division I transfer. Three players in the recruiting class\u2013 Tyler Krieger, Kevin Bradley, and Clate Schmidt\u2013 were selected in the 2012 Major League Baseball draft but chose to attend college.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, Preseason\nTwo Clemson players received individual accolades prior to the start of the season. Junior infielder Steve Wilkerson was named to both the Collegiate Baseball Preseason All-America Third Team and the College Baseball Insider Preseason All-America Honorable Mention Team. Senior pitcher Scott Firth was named to the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA) Stopper of the Year Award Watchlist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, Preseason\nFirth, senior outfielder Thomas Brittle, junior first baseman Jon McGibbon, and senior bullpen catcher Marcus Curry were named Clemson's captains for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, Preseason\nAt the January American Baseball Coaches Association Convention and throughout the season, head coach Jack Leggett received media attention for his support of proposals to adopt a new baseball for NCAA play. Such a baseball would be modeled after the ball used in minor league baseball; it would have flat seams and a harder core that would allow it to travel farther off the bat. Leggett and other head coaches supported the new baseball in response to the drop in offense following the adoption of BBCOR bats in the 2011 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, Preseason\nIn the preseason ACC coaches' poll, released in late January, Clemson was picked to finish third in the six-team Atlantic Division. The team received one first-place vote. NC State was picked to finish first in the Atlantic Division and to win the ACC. The Tigers began the preseason on the fringe of the national rankings, #27 in the Collegiate Baseball poll, #28 in the NCBWA poll, and unranked in the Coaches' Poll and the Baseball America poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, Preseason\nIn early February, the team's regular season television schedule was announced. Ten games were planned to be televised on one of ESPNU, CSS, and RSN. 35 additional games were planned to be webcast on ESPN 3 or Clemson's athletic website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, February\nClemson's opening weekend rotation consisted of sophomore Daniel Gossett, sophomore Patrick Andrews, and senior Scott Firth. Its opening day lineup was as follows: senior center fielder Thomas Brittle, sophomore left fielder Tyler Slaton, junior second baseman Steve Wilkerson, junior designated hitter Shane Kennedy, junior first baseman Jon McGibbon, sophomore third baseman Jay Baum, freshman right fielder Steve Duggar, freshman shortstop Tyler Krieger, and sophomore catcher Garrett Boulware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, February\nOn opening weekend, Clemson won two of three games at home against William & Mary. In Friday's opening day game on February 15, Clemson won, 2\u20130, as a result of Kennedy's two-run home run in the bottom of the eighth. On Saturday, Clemson lost, 11\u20132, when starter Andrews gave up four earned runs in three innings. Relievers Matthew Crownover, Mike Kent, and Brody Koerner each gave up multiple runs, as well. Clemson won the series with a 12\u20132 win on Sunday. The Tigers scored all 12 runs after the fifth inning, and Firth was credited with a win in his first start since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, February\nIn the second weekend of the season, Clemson swept a three-game home series against Wright State. After the series's Friday game was postponed due to rain, Clemson swept a Saturday doubleheader, 5\u20133 and 6\u20130. In the first game, Wilkerson homered and Matt Campbell was credited with his second save of the season. In the second, Clate Schmidt, who had replaced Andrews in the rotation, threw four scoreless innings. On Sunday, in the series's final game, Firth pitched eight scoreless innings, and Clemson won, 7\u20130. With the 6\u20130 and 7\u20130 wins, Clemson recorded back-to-back shutouts for the first time since shutting out Presbyterian and USC Upstate on consecutive days in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, February\nClemson's final game of the month came against Winthrop on February 27. Crownover started the game to become Clemson's first left-handed starting pitcher in 101 games. Winthrop won the game, 3\u20132 in 11 innings, scoring the go-ahead run on a Clay Altman sacrifice fly in the top of the 11th. The Tigers finished the month with a 5\u20132 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nClemson's first three games of March were a rivalry series against #7 South Carolina. Entering the series, Clemson held a 169\u2013129\u20132 lead in the all-time series. South Carolina entered with an 18\u20137 record in the previous five seasons. In 2012, Baseball America writer Aaron Fitt called the two teams' rivalry \"far and away the most compelling rivalry college baseball has to offer.\" In addition to Clate Schmidt's joining the weekend rotation, the lineup changed slightly, with freshman outfielder Maleeke Gibson appearing in more games in left field than sophomore Tyler Slaton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nIn game one at Clemson home field Doug Kingsmore Stadium on Friday, March 1, South Carolina won, 6\u20130. South Carolina starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery pitched eight scoreless innings. Clemson had only three hits and committed three errors, including a dropped fly ball by Shane Kennedy in South Carolina's three-run seventh inning. Five of the six runs the Tigers' pitching staff allowed were unearned. The game one attendance of 6,016 spectators was Clemson's highest home attendance mark to that point in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nGame two was played at a neutral site, Greenville, South Carolina's Fluor Field; Clemson won, 6\u20133, to break a three-game losing streak against South Carolina. Schmidt, in his second start, gave up two runs in seven innings to earn his second win, and Matt Campbell got his third save. Duggar had two hits and two RBI. Clemson lost the series with an 8\u20130 loss in Sunday's game three, played at Carolina Stadium. Similarly to Friday's loss, Clemson's offense had only three hits, and five of the six runs given up by starter Scott Firth were unearned. South Carolina starter Nolan Belcher pitched a complete game shutout. A total of 21,383 spectators attended the series's three games. In the week three polls conducted following the series, Clemson was not ranked by any of the four national polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nThrough ten games, several young pitchers performed well for the team. Neither sophomore transfer Kyle Schnell (in 6.0 innings) nor freshman Zack Erwin (in 2.1 innings) gave up a run. Freshman Matthew Crownover gave up one in his only appearance. Crownover started a midweek game on March 6, in which Clemson defeated Wofford, 9\u20132. Duggar had four RBI in the game, and Kennedy had three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nIn the season's fourth weekend, the team started Atlantic Coast Conference play with a three-game series at #8 NC State. Clemson won the series, two games to one. In game one, Clemson won, 10\u20135, against left-handed pitcher Carlos Rodon (named 2012 National Freshman of the Year by Baseball America), despite having struggled against left-handed pitching early in the season. Sophomore catcher Garrett Boulware hit two home runs in the game, while batting sixth in the lineup. Boulware had begun the season batting ninth, but because of strong performances was moved to the cleanup spot by the end of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nIn game two, Clemson won the series with a 7\u20134 win. Thomas Brittle second-inning grand slam gave Clemson an early lead. Starter Schmidt pitched only 3.2 innings, and senior right-hander Jonathan Meyer gave up two runs in relief. Schnell, after pitching 2.1 innings on Friday, threw 2.2 scoreless innings in the sixth, seventh, and eighth to set up Campbell's fourth save. Clemson lost game three, 4\u20131. Clemson's offense had ten hits, but left ten runners on base, and Firth took his second loss after giving up two runs (one earned) in 6.2 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nAfter not being ranked following the South Carolina series, Clemson was ranked #26 by Collegiate Baseball following the series win over NC State. Through the end of the NC State series, Clemson's starting pitching had been strong\u2013 each of the team's three weekend starters (Gossett, Schmidt, and Firth) had an earned run average of less than 2.00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nClemson won a March 13 midweek game against Charleston Southern, 3\u20131, to make Clemson's all-time record against the Buccaneers 17\u20130. Crownover pitched 6.0 scoreless innings to earn the win, and Schnell pitched 1.1 scoreless innings to earn his first save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nThe team played its first home conference series from March 15\u201317 against #12 Virginia; Clemson lost the series, two games to one. Tyler Slaton returned to the starting lineup for two of the three games against Virginia, and he started and batted leadoff for much of the rest of the season. In game one, Clemson held a 5\u20132 lead entering the ninth inning, in part because of a three-RBI game by Kennedy. Daniel Gossett gave up only two runs in 7.0+ innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nHowever, Virginia tied the game with three runs in the ninth off of Campbell and Schnell, then took the lead and eventually won, 6\u20135, on a Mike Papi home run in the top of the eleventh. Clemson won game two, 7\u20136. Although Schmidt gave up five runs in four innings, Zack Erwin pitched five innings of one-hit, one-run relief to earn his first win. Boulware, who had a triple, home run, and three RBI, scored Thomas Brittle with a walk-off single in the bottom of the ninth. On Sunday, Virginia won the series with an 8\u20135 win. Firth gave up six runs in five innings to take his third loss of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nOn March 19 and 20, Clemson swept Morehead State in a non-conference two-game series. The Tigers won the first game, 10\u20135; Boulware hit his fourth home run and had four RBI, and Mike Kent threw three scoreless innings of relief to get his first win. In game two, Clemson won, 5\u20132; first baseman Jon McGibbon had three RBI, and senior reliever Jonathan Meyer pitched four scoreless innings to earn his first win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nIn the team's third conference series, it won two of three games at home against Duke. In game one, Gossett pitched a complete game shutout, and Clemson won, 7\u20130, scoring in each of the last five innings. The two teams then played a Saturday doubleheader, due to rain expected on Sunday. In both games of the doubleheader, Slaton led off and Duggar batted second in a lineup that the team used often for the remainder of the season. In the first game of the doubleheader, Clemson had an 8\u20134 win. Zack Erwin gave up no runs in 4.1 innings of relief pitching to get his second win. Duke won the series's final game, 13\u20131, after starter Firth and reliever Campbell combined to give up 11 earned runs in 3.2 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nOn March 26 and 27, Clemson split its annual home-and-home midweek series with Georgia. Georgia entered the series having lost eight straight games. Clemson won, 9\u20131, in game one at Georgia's Foley Field. Duggar homered, Slaton went 4\u20135, and Crownover allowed one run in five innings to earn his third win. The Tigers lost game two, 5\u20133, at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. Georgia scored two runs in the first off of freshman starter Brody Koerner (in his second start of the season) and led for the entire game. The Bulldogs hit three home runs in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nFrom March 30 \u2013 April 1, the team played a conference road series against #1 North Carolina, who entered the series with a 23\u20131 record; Clemson lost two of three games in the series. In game one, Gossett allowed eight runs in three innings, and Clemson lost, 10\u20133. Clemson lost again in game two, 6\u20132, in a game that was started on Sunday evening, delayed by rain, and completed on Monday afternoon. In Monday night's game three, televised on ESPNU, Clemson won, 5\u20134 in 11 innings. Crownover, in his first conference start, gave up three runs in 4.2 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nLosing 3\u20131 after five innings, Clemson took a 4\u20133 lead in the sixth after Brittle hit a two-RBI single and Tyler Krieger scored on a wild pitch. North Carolina tied the game in the seventh on a run given up by Firth but charged to Schnell. The game was still tied, 4\u20134, into the top of the eleventh inning, when an RBI groundout by Boulware scored Jay Baum. North Carolina got two runners on base in the eleventh, but Firth, who had been taken out of the starting rotation after a poor start against Duke, retired the Tar Heels to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, March\nAt the end of the North Carolina series, Clemson was 17\u201311 (6\u20136 ACC), after going 11\u20139 in March and splitting the two games completed on April 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, April\nIn an April 3 midweek game against Gardner-Webb, Meyer started his first game of the season. He went 7.0 innings and gave up one run, as Clemson won, 4\u20131. Boulware drove in two runs, and Campbell pitched a scoreless ninth inning for his fifth save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, April\nFrom April 5\u20137, the team took its longest road trip of the season to play a three-game series at Boston College. Boston College entered the series without having won an ACC game, and Clemson won all three games. Gossett started game one, which Clemson won, 7\u20135. After being down 2\u20130 early in the game, Clemson scored once in the sixth and six times in the seventh to take a 7\u20132 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, April\nGossett gave up three runs in the bottom of the seventh, but Schnell got out of the inning without giving up more runs, and Erwin pitched 1.2 scoreless innings to earn his second save. Junior designated hitter Joe Costigan, who had had only eight at-bats entering the series, drove in three runs. Clemson won game two, 9\u20132. Schmidt started and gave up two runs in seven innings, and Boulware and Kennedy each drove in two runs. In game three, Clemson won, 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0024-0002", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, April\nMcGibbon drove in the game's only run in the sixth, and Crownover and Campbell combined to hold Boston College scoreless. Wilkerson started at designated hitter in the game, his first start since game two of the North Carolina series due to a cut on his finger. The win was Clemson's fifth consecutive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, April\nClemson played a pair of midweek games in the following week, travelling to Western Carolina on Tuesday, April 9 and hosting Presbyterian on Wednesday, April 10. Clemson defeated Western Carolina, 12\u20139. Clemson led, 9\u20133, entering the seventh, but Erwin and Schnell combined to give up six runs in the bottom of the seventh, four of which were unearned due to an error by Wilkerson. The Tigers retook the lead in the ninth, due to an RBI single by McGibbon, a double steal on which Krieger scored, and an RBI single by Slaton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Season, April\nFirth pitched a scoreless ninth inning to earn his first save. Clemson also won against Presbyterian, 5\u20134. The Blue Hose led, 4\u20133, entering the eighth, but Clemson scored a run in both the eighth and ninth to win. In the eighth, Krieger tripled and scored on a wild pitch to tie the game. In the ninth, he hit a two-out, bases-loaded single to give the team its seventh consecutive win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232687-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers baseball team, Rankings\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, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232688-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Clemson Tigers football team represented Clemson University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tigers were led by head coach Dabo Swinney in his fifth full year and sixth overall since taking over midway through 2008 season. They played their home games at Memorial Stadium, also known as \"Death Valley\". They were members of the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 11\u20132, 7\u20131 in ACC play to finish in second place in the Atlantic Division. They were invited to the Orange Bowl where they defeated Ohio State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232688-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers football team, 2014 NFL draft\nClemson had five players selected in the 2014 NFL draft. Sammy Watkins went in the first round as the fourth overall pick, tied for the highest NFL draft pick in Clemson football history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232688-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers football team, 2014 NFL draft, Undrafted signees\nAlong with the five draft picks, Clemson had four more players make the NFL as undrafted free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232689-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team\nThe 2013 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team was the college's 53rd season of playing organized men's college soccer, and their 26th season playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Tigers were led by fourth-year head coach Mike Noonan, and played their home games at Riggs Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232689-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232689-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers men's soccer team, Draft picks\nThe Tigers had one player drafted in the 2014 MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232690-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers women's soccer team\nThe 2013 Clemson Tigers women's soccer team represented Clemson University during the 2013 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Tigers were led by head coach Ed Radwanski, in his third season. They played home games at Riggs Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232690-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Clemson Tigers women'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, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season\nThe 2013 Cleveland Browns season was the franchise's 65th season as a professional sports franchise and its 61st season as a member of the National Football League. They failed to improve on their 5\u201311 record from 2012, finishing the year at 4\u201312 their sixth consecutive 11+ loss season. They also extended their franchise record playoff drought to 11 years. This was the first season under head coach Rob Chudzinski (who was later fired after the season) and new general manager Michael Lombardi (who was later fired in February 2014). This also marked the first full season under owner Jimmy Haslam. The Browns played all of their home games at the newly renamed FirstEnergy Stadium (formerly known as Cleveland Browns Stadium).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Front office changes\nOn December 31, 2012, the Browns fired general manager Tom Heckert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Coaching staff changes\nOn December 31, 2012, the team fired head coach Pat Shurmur. In two seasons as Browns' head coach, Shurmur posted a record of 9\u201323, including a disappointing 2\u201310 mark within the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Coaching staff changes\nUniversity of Oregon head coach Chip Kelly emerged as the favorite to replace Shurmur after a lengthy interview on January 4, however talks between the two sides broke down and Kelly decided to go to the Philadelphia Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Coaching staff changes\nOn January 10, the Browns hired former Carolina Panthers' offensive coordinator Rob Chudzinski as head coach. Chudzinski, who spent the 2011 and 2012 seasons with the Panthers, also previously served as an assistant coach with the Browns and the San Diego Chargers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Coaching staff changes\nBesides Chudzinski and Kelly, the Browns also interviewed former Arizona Cardinals' head coach Ken Whisenhunt and defensive coordinator Ray Horton, Syracuse University head coach Doug Marrone, Penn State head coach Bill O'Brien, Montreal Alouettes head coach and former Browns' assistant coach Marc Trestman, and Cincinnati Bengals' defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Coaching staff changes\nOn January 17, the Browns hired former San Diego Chargers' head coach Norv Turner as offensive coordinator. Turner, who served as Chargers' head coach from 2007 to 2012, was also the head coach of the Washington Redskins (1994\u20132000) and Oakland Raiders (2004\u20132005), and has served as an NFL coach in some capacity since 1985. Turner replaces Brad Childress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Coaching staff changes\nOn January 17, the Browns also added Mike Sullivan as offensive line coach, Scott Turner, the son of Norv Turner, as wide receivers coach, and Brad Roll as strength and conditioning coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Offseason, Personnel changes, Coaching staff changes\nOn January 18, the Browns hired Horton, who previously interviewed for the head coaching position, as defensive coordinator. Horton, a former defensive back, has served as the Cardinals' defensive coordinator the past two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Browns opened their 2013 season at home against the Dolphins. The Dolphins struck first in the first quarter when Caleb Sturgis kicked a 45-yard field goal for a 3\u20130 lead. They increased their lead in the 2nd quarter when Sturgis nailed a 49-yard field goal for a 6\u20130 lead. The Browns got on the board and took the halftime lead 7\u20136 after Jordan Cameron caught a 7-yard TD pass from Brandon Weeden. The Dolphins retook the lead in the 3rd quarter when Brian Hartline caught a 34-yard TD pass from Ryan Tannehill to make the score 13\u20137. The Browns came within 3 as Billy Cundiff kicked a 39-yard field goal for a 13\u201310 game. In the 4th quarter, the Phins sealed the game as Daniel Thomas ran for a 1-yard TD for a 20\u201310 game followed up by Sturgis kicking a 36-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Miami Dolphins\nWith the loss, the Browns start the season 0\u20131 and pick up their 9th straight regular season opening loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Baltimore Ravens\nAfter a tough loss at home, the Browns traveled to Baltimore to take on the Ravens. The Browns scored all the points in the first half; both of them with field goals in both quarters from Billy Cundiff from 21 yards out in the first quarter and 51 yards out in the 2nd making the score 3\u20130 and eventual halftime score 6\u20130. The Ravens got on the board in the 3rd quarter as Bernard Pierce ran for a 5-yard TD to take the lead 7\u20136. In the 4th quarter, the Ravens moved ahead by 8 as Joe Flacco found Marion Brown on a 5-yard TD pass for a final score of 14\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Baltimore Ravens\nWith the loss, the Browns dropped to 0\u20132. The team also lost their 11th straight game against the Ravens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings\nAfter a tough road loss, the Browns traveled northwest to take on the Vikings. The Vikes would score first as AP ran for a 2-yard TD for a 7\u20130 lead. The Browns managed to tie it as 2nd-string QB Brian Hoyer found Josh Gordon on a 47-yard TD pass for a 7\u20137 game. The Browns took the lead in the 2nd quarter as Hoyer found Jordan Cameron for a 19-yard TD pass and a 14\u20137 lead. The Vikes tied the game as Christian Ponder ran for a 6-yard TD to make the score 14\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings\nThe Browns moved back into the lead as Billy Cundiff kicked a 38-yard field goal for a 17\u201314 lead and increased it with a trick play as Spencer Lanning found Cameron on an 11-yard TD pass for increasing the score to 24\u201314. Blair Walsh managed to get the Vikes within 7 after he kicked a 43-yard field goal for a 24\u201317 halftime lead. After the break, Ponder ran for another TD from 8 yards out tying the game 24\u201324. They retook the lead in the 4th quarter as Walsh nailed a 30-yard field goal for a 27\u201324 lead. Hoyer found Cameron with less than a minute left in the game for a final score of 31\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings\nWith the win, not only did the Browns improve to 1\u20132, but they also snapped a 7-game losing streak against NFC teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nAfter a tough win over the Vikings, the Browns returned home for a game against the Bengals in Round 1 of the Battle of Ohio. In the first quarter, the Browns scored first as Brian Hoyer found Jordan Cameron on a 2-yard pass for a 7\u20130 lead. In the second quarter, the Bengals scored when Mike Nugent nailed a 25-yard field goal for the eventual halftime score of 7\u20133. In the third quarter, the Browns scored a field goal of their own when Billy Cundiff nailed one from 51 yards out giving them a 10\u20133 lead. The Bengals once again came within 4 as Nugent kicked another field goal from 46 yards out for a 10\u20136 game. In the fourth quarter, it was all Browns as Hoyer found Chris Ogbonnaya on a 1-yard pass for the eventual final score of 17\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills\nAfter a win over the Bengals, the Browns stayed home for a Thursday Night duel against the Bills. The Bills scored first when Fred Jackson ran for a 1-yard touchdown for a 7\u20130 lead followed up by Dan Carpenter nailing a 52-yard field goal increasing their lead to 10\u20130. In the second quarter, it was all Browns as Billy Cundiff kicked a 33-yard field goal for a 10\u20133 game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThey eventually tied the game up and moved into the lead when Willis McGahee ran for a 1-yard touchdown for a 10\u201310 game followed up by Travis Benjamein returning a punt 79 yards for a touchdown for a halftime score of 17\u201310. In the third quarter, the Bills tied it up and took the lead back when C.J. Spiller ran for a 54-yard touchdown for a 17\u201317 game followed up by McGahee running for another 1-yard touchdown for a 24\u201317 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThe Browns however later on in the quarter, tied it back up as Brandon Weeden hooked up with Josh Gordon for a 37-yard pass for a 24\u201324 game. In the fourth quarter, it was all Browns as Cundiff made field goals from 24 and 44 yards out for leads of 27\u201324 and 30\u201324 before sealing the game when T.J. Ward returned an interception 44 yards for a touchdown and for the final score of 37\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills\nWith their 3rd straight win, the Browns improved to 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Detroit Lions\nAfter a big win over the Bills, the Browns would remain at home for the third week in a row this time taking on the Lions. The Lions scored first in the first quarter when Joseph Fauria caught a 1-yard pass from Matthew Stafford for a 7\u20130 lead. In the second quarter, it was all Browns when Brandon Weeden found Chris Ogbonnaya on a 4-yard pass tying the game up 7\u20137 and taking the lead when Weeden found Greg Little on a 2-yard pass for a 14\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Detroit Lions\nThis was followed up by Billy Cundiff nailing a 40-yard field goal as the Browns lead 17\u20137 at halftime. In the second half however, it was all Lions starting in the third quarter when Stafford found Reggie Bush on an 18-yard pass to come within 3, 17\u201314. In the fourth quarter, they took the lead back when Stafford found Fauria on a 23-yard pass for a 21\u201317 lead followed up by David Akers nailing a 51-yard field goal for a 24\u201317 lead and finally Stafford and Fauria hooking up again on a 10-yard pass for the final score of 31\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Detroit Lions\nWith their 3-game winning streak snapped, the Browns fell to 3\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Green Bay Packers\nAfter a tough loss at home, the Browns traveled to take on the Packers. In the first quarter, it was all Packers as Aaron Rodgers found Jermichael Finley on a 10-yard pass taking a 7\u20130 lead followed up by Eddie Lacy running for a 1-yard touchdown for a 14\u20130 lead. In the second quarter, the Browns got on the board as Billy Cundiff kicked a 46-yard field goal 14\u20133 game. Though the Packers moved ahead by 2 touchdowns at halftime when Mason Crosby nailed a 26-yard field goal for a 17\u20133 game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Green Bay Packers\nIn the third quarter, the Browns would score the only points when Cundiff kicked another field goal this time from 44 yards out for a 17\u20136 game. In the fourth quarter, the Packers went back to work as Rodgers found Jordy Nelson on a 1-yard pass for a 24\u20136 game. The Browns came within 11 again as Brandon Weeden found Jordan Cameron on a 2-yard pass for a 24\u201313 game. The Packers would later on seal the game when Rodgers found Jarrett Boykin on a 20-yard pass for the eventual final score 31\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Kansas City Chiefs\nAfter a tough loss on the road, the Browns traveled again to take on the Chiefs. In the first quarter, it was all Chiefs as Ryan Succop nailed 2 field goals from 42 and 35 yards out for leads of 3\u20130 and 6\u20130. In the second quarter, Alex Smith found Anthony Sherman on a 12-yard pass for a 13\u20130 game. The Browns finally got on the board when Jason Campbell found Josh Gordon on a 39-yard pass for a 13\u20137 game. Though the Chiefs pulled away as Smith found Dexter McCluster on a 28-yard pass for a 20\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Browns wrapped things up with Billy Cundiff's 44-yard field goal giving the Chiefs a 20\u201310 lead at halftime. In the third quarter the Browns came within 3 when Campbell found Fozzy Whittaker on a 17-yard pass for a 20\u201317 game for the only score of the period. In the fourth quarter, the Chiefs wrapped the scoring up when Succop nailed a 40-yard field goal for the eventual final score of 23\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Kansas City Chiefs\nWith the loss and 3-game losing streak, the Browns dropped to 3\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAfter a tough loss on the road, the Browns returned home to take on the Ravens. They would score first in the first quarter when Jason Campbell found Davone Bess on a 1-yard pass for a 7\u20130 lead. The Ravens would shorten the lead when Justin Tucker nailed a 51-yard field goal to make it 7\u20133. In the second quarter, the Browns moved ahead by double digits when Campbell found Bess again this time on a 20-yard pass for a 14\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Ravens came within 4 again when Joe Flacco found Marlon Brown on a 19-yard pass for a 14\u201310 game at halftime. In the third quarter, the Browns moved ahead by double digits again when Campbell found Gary Barnidge on a 4-yard pass to lead 21\u201310 for the quarter's only score. In the fourth quarter, the Ravens drew closer as Flacco found Brown again on a 7-yard pass for a 21\u201318 game. Though later on, the Browns wrapped up the scoring when Billy Cundiff kicked a 22-yard field goal for a 24\u201318 final score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nWith the win and 3-game losing streak snapped, the Browns went into their bye week 4\u20135. They would also defeat the Ravens for the first time since 2007 and also snapped their 11-game losing streak against them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Browns came back from their bye week and traveled to Cincinnati to take on the Bengals in the year's Battle of Ohio Round 2. The Browns put up 13 points in the first quarter before the Bengals put up 31 in the second quarter and led 31\u201313 at halftime. They tried to rally in the third quarter coming within 11, 31\u201320. But 10 points in the fourth quarter would assure the game for the Bengals as they would win 41\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at New England Patriots\nCleveland squandered a 26\u201314 lead that they had at the two-minute warning in the fourth quarter as Tom Brady and the Patriots scored two unanswered touchdowns followed by a missed game-winning field goal by Cundiff. The Browns dropped to 4\u20139, clinching their sixth consecutive losing season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232691-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Browns season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Chicago Bears\nWith the loss, the Browns fell to 4\u201310 (a 3\u20135 home record) and were eliminated from postseason contention for the eleventh straight season, extending their franchise record for most consecutive seasons without a playoff berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232692-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Gladiators season\nThe 2013 Cleveland Gladiators season was the 14th season for the franchise in the Arena Football League, and the fifth while in Cleveland. The team was coached by Steve Thonn and played their home games at the Quicken Loans Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232692-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Gladiators season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated July 25, 201323 Active, 12 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232692-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Gladiators season, Regular season schedule\nThe Gladiators began the season by hosting the Spokane Shock on March 24. They closed the regular season on July 27, on the road against the Utah Blaze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season\nThe 2013 Cleveland Indians season was the 113th season for the franchise. The team, managed by Terry Francona, began their season on April 2. They advanced to the postseason and lost to the Tampa Bay Rays in the 2013 American League Wild Card Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Offseason, Departures\nInfielder Brent Lillibridge refused assignment and became a free agent on November 25, 2012. The Indians did not tender contracts to infielder Jack Hannahan, Rafael Perez and Chris Seddon, making them free agents. All three went on to sign with other clubs. In a three-team trade on December 11, the Indians traded Shin-Soo Choo, Jason Donald, Tony Sipp and Lars Anderson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Offseason, Arrivals\nFollowing the firing of three-year manager Manny Acta, the Indians signed former Boston Red Sox manager, Terry Francona to a four-year deal on October 6, 2012. Francona and Sandy Alomar Jr. were the only candidates for the position. Francona previously had a history with the Cleveland Indians as a front office advisor in 2001. Also, Francona and his dad, Tito, both played in the Major Leagues for the Indians. He stated that he is close with Indians president, Mark Shapiro and general manager, Chris Antonetti and that's what intrigued him the most.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Offseason, Arrivals\nOn November 2, Blake Wood was claimed off waivers from Kansas City. The next day, Mike Avil\u00e9s and Yan Gomes were acquired in a trade with Toronto. Mike McDade was also claimed off waivers from Toronto about a month later. On December 9, the Indians signed Mark Reynolds to a one-year, $6 million contract. Two days later, the Indians made their biggest trade of the offseason. They acquired Drew Stubbs from Cincinnati and Trevor Bauer, Bryan Shaw, and Matt Albers from Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Offseason, Arrivals\nIn one of the biggest signings of the offseason, the Indians signed Nick Swisher to a four-year, $56 million on December 23. Brett Myers agreed to a 1-year, $7 million deal January 1, 2013. After signing Michael Bourn to a four-year $48 million contract, the Indians finished the offseason with spending $117 million on free agents after spending just $8 million the past two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Offseason, Arrivals\nThe busy offseason left many fans and writers saying the Indians will be the most improved team in 2013 and \"if there was an offseason championship, the trophy would be heading to Cleveland\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Spring training\nOn November 29, the Indians announced their spring training schedule. Pitchers and catchers reported to spring training on February 10, 2013. The first full team workout took place on February 15 and the first game took place on February 22 against the Cincinnati Reds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Spring training, Injuries\nMichael Brantley was accidentally spiked by Oakland Athletics third basemen Josh Donaldson on February 25 at spring training. He received 15 stitches and was expected to be out 10 days. Chris Perez also sprained his shoulder during spring training and was expected to be out three to four weeks. The Indians had several players on the Disabled List (DL) to start the season; Frank Herrmann, Blake Wood and Josh Tomlin started the season on the 60-day DL after having Tommy John surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season\nThe Indians started the regular season in Toronto against the Blue Jays on April 2. Their home opener, which was on April 8, sold out in 6 minutes; one of the fastest sell outs in Indians history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, April\nFor the second straight year, the Indians opened the season against the Toronto Blue Jays, this time in Toronto. Unlike the 2012 opener, the Indians won the game 4\u20131 with ace Justin Masterson going eight dominant innings and closer Chris Perez picking up the save. Despite this win, the Tribe started the season slowly, at just 8\u201313. The Indians' struggles during April included a crushing 11\u20136 defeat by the New York Yankees in the team's home opener, and a 3-game sweep at the hands of the Boston Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, April\nThe Indians' fortunes turned around late in the month. Beginning with the second game of an April 28 doubleheader against the Kansas City Royals, the Indians won six straight games and 18 of 22 going through the middle of May. On April 30, the Indians tied a team record with seven home runs in a game, as they defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 14\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, May\nThe Indians started May on a high note, winning 15 of their first 19 games of the month. This included four-game sweeps of the defending AL West champion Oakland Athletics and the Seattle Mariners, the latter of which featuring three walk-off hits. After the Seattle series, however, the Indians struggled for the rest of the month and into early June, losing 16 of their next 20, including a May 26 loss to the Boston Red Sox, in which the Indians blew a 5\u20132 9th inning lead and closer Chris Perez left the game with a shoulder injury. Perez would be out until late June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, May\nDuring April and May, the Indians defeated seven former Cy Young Award winners: R. A. Dickey (April 2), David Price (April 7), Roy Halladay (April 30), Cliff Lee (May 1), Bartolo Col\u00f3n (May 9), Justin Verlander (May 11), and F\u00e9lix Hern\u00e1ndez (May 19). Also, slugger Mark Reynolds was among the league leaders with 14 home runs at the end of May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, June\nJune started slowly for the Indians as they lost eight straight games from June 2\u201310. After that losing streak, however, the Indians would go 14\u20135 the rest of the month. Vinnie Pestano filled the role of closer as Chris Perez was on the disabled list for most of the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, June\nSecond baseman Jason Kipnis was named the American League Player of the Month for June. During the month, he hit .419 with 12 doubles, four home runs, and 25 RBI. He also stole nine bases and received Player of the Week honors twice during June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, July\non July 6, second baseman Jason Kipnis and starting pitcher Justin Masterson were named to the American League All-Star team. This marked the first All-Star selection for both Kipnis and Masterson. Kipnis had an RBI double in the game, as the American League won 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, July\nThe Indians started July by losing 5 of 7 to division rivals Kansas City and Detroit, before finishing the first half on a strong note, taking five of six from Toronto and Kansas City. Late July was highlighted by an eight-game winning streak, which included sweeps of the then AL West leading Texas Rangers and the Chicago White Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, July\nThe sweep of Chicago was the Tribe's second four-game sweep over the White Sox of the season, marking the first time since 1960 that the Indians swept two four-game series from the same club. On the July 29 win over the White Sox, slugger Jason Giambi became the oldest player ever to hit a walk-off home run at 42 years and 202 days. Chris Perez regained his closing duties in July and saved eight games. Meanwhile, late reliever Vinnie Pestano had struggled throughout the month and was sent to AAA Columbus on July 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, August\nOn August 5, the Indians began a key four-game home series against the Detroit Tigers just three games behind Detroit for the division lead. Taking a 2\u20130 lead into the 9th inning of game 1, Chris Perez gave up four runs en route to a 4\u20132 loss. The Tigers ended up sweeping the series and leaving Cleveland with a 7-game lead. The Indians went on to lose their next two games \u2013 to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim \u2013 and were in danger of finishing their homestand 0\u20137, which would be their first winless homestand since 2004. They managed to win that final game 6\u20135 after trailing 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, August\nThe team's struggles continued throughout the month, as they finished August 12\u201316, their worst month of the season. The Indians lost their final 5 games of the month to playoff contenders Atlanta and Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, September\nOn September 1, the Indians salvaged their final game of the season against Detroit, 4\u20130 on a Mike Avil\u00e9s grand slam, but the Tigers won the season series 15\u20134 and had a commanding lead in the division. The next day, all-star starter Justin Masterson left the game against the Baltimore Orioles with an oblique injury. The Indians lost that game and sat 31\u20442 games out of a wild card spot without their top pitcher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, September\nIndians #2 starter Ubaldo Jim\u00e9nez stepped up in Masterson's absence, going 4\u20130 with a 1.09 ERA during the month of September. He was named American League Pitcher of the Month. The Indians played some of their best baseball of the season in September, going 21\u20136 in the month including a 10-game winning streak to close the season. Throughout the month, the Indians closed the gap on the Texas Rangers and Tampa Bay Rays, and took the lead for one of the wild card spots with about a week left in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, September\nThe Indians needed this strong month to clinch a Wild Card spot, as they were not able to clinch until the final game of the season, a 5\u20131 victory over the division rival Twins. The Indians finished the season 92\u201370, which was good enough for the top wild card spot, which meant they would host the 2013 American League Wild Card Game at Progressive Field. This was the Indians' first playoff appearance since 2007. They finished one game better than both Texas and Tampa Bay, who would face off in a tie-breaker game. Tampa Bay won this game, and the Wild Card playoff was set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232693-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland Indians season, Regular season, September\nAlso of note during the month, the Indians swept the Chicago White sox in a four-game series for the third time this season, a first in franchise history and the first time since 1963 that any team accomplished this feat. The Indians finished the season 17\u20132 against the White Sox. On September 24, Jason Giambi hit a walk-off home run against the White Sox, again becoming the oldest player ever to hit a walk-off home run at 42 years and 259 days, breaking the record he set less than two months earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232694-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland mayoral election\nThe 2013 Cleveland mayoral election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio. Usually a nonpartisan primary is held where the top two candidates move on to the general election, however, incumbent mayor Frank G. Jackson and businessman Kenneth A. Lanci were the only two candidates to file, so no primary election was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232694-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cleveland mayoral election\nWhile the race was officially nonpartisan, both candidates were Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232695-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clio Cup China Series\nThe 2013 Clio Cup China Series is a multi-event, one make motor racing championship held across China. The championship features a mix of professional motor racing drivers and gentlemen drivers in the region, competing in a Clio Renault Sport 200 that conform to the technical regulations for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232695-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Clio Cup China Series\nThis season will be the 5th Clio Cup China Series season. The season started on 9 June at Shanghai Tianma Circuit and concluded on 13 October at Zhuhai International Circuit after 10 races to be held at 5 meetings. 4 race meetings were in support of the 2013 China Touring Car Championship and a round in Chengdu Goldenport Circuit was a supporting race for Sichuan Touring Car Elites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232695-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Clio Cup China Series, Race calendar and results\nChampionship is counted towards the best 8 rounds out of 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232695-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Clio Cup China Series, Championship Standings\nChampionship is count towards the 8 best results from 10 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232695-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Clio Cup China Series, Championship Standings\nNotes: \u00a0\u2014 Max Wiser was the winner of R1 and R2, but he was ineligible for points or prizes. Points in brackets are dropped as Championship only counts towards the 8 best results out of 10 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232696-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clipsal 500 Adelaide\nThe 2013 Clipsal 500 Adelaide was a motor race for V8 Supercars held on 2 and 3 March 2013. The event was held at the Adelaide Street Circuit in Adelaide, South Australia, and consisted of two races of two hundred and fifty kilometres in length.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232696-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Clipsal 500 Adelaide\nIt was the first round of the 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, and marked the racing debuts of the Holden VF Commodore, Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG, and Nissan Altima L33, all of which were entered in the series under the brand-new \"Car of the Future\" regulations; Ford continued to use the FG Falcon model raced in previous years, but built to Car of the Future specifications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232697-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cloverdale Cash Spiel\nThe 2013 Cloverdale Cash Spiel was held from September 20 to 22 at the Cloverdale Curling Club in Surrey, British Columbia as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. Both the men's and women's events were held in a round robin format, and the purses for the men's and women's events were CAD$8,050 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232698-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clube Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro season, 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232699-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season\nThe 2013 season is the 118th year in the club's history, the 102nd season in Clube de Regatas do Flamengo's football existence, and their 43rd in the Brazilian S\u00e9rie A, having never been relegated from the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232699-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Club, First-team squad\nAs of 9 July 2014, according to combined sources on the official website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232699-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Club, 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, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232699-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Club, 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232699-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo season, Transfers, 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232699-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Clube de Regatas do Flamengo 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232700-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda\nThe 2013 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda was the 28th edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda cycle race and was held on 24 February 2013. The race started in Roquetas de Mar and finished in Almer\u00eda. The race was won by Mark Renshaw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232701-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n\nThe 2013 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n was the 33rd edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n, a single-day cycling race. It was held on 27 July 2013, over a distance of 232\u00a0km (144.2\u00a0mi), starting and finishing in San Sebasti\u00e1n, in the Basque Country, Spain. It was the nineteenth event of the 2013 UCI World Tour season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232701-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n\nThe race was won by RadioShack\u2013Leopard's Tony Gallopin, after he made a solo attack on the race's final climb\u00a0\u2013 the Alto de Arkale\u00a0\u2013 and was able to hold off the remainder of the field, to take the biggest win of his career. Second place went to Movistar Team's Alejandro Valverde, 28 seconds behind Gallopin, while the podium was completed by Saxo\u2013Tinkoff rider Roman Kreuziger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232701-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n, Teams\nAs the Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n was a UCI World Tour event, all 19 UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. Caja Rural\u2013Seguros RGA were given a wildcard place to form a 20-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232702-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team\nThe 2013 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team represented Coastal Carolina University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Joe Moglia and played their home games at Brooks Stadium. They were a member of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 12\u20133, 4\u20131 in Big South play to share the conference title with Liberty. Due to their win over Liberty, they received the conference's automatic bid to the FCS playoffs. They defeated Bethune-Cookman and Montana to advance to the quarterfinals, where they lost to North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600\nThe 2013\u00a0Coca-Cola\u00a0600, the 54th running of the race, was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on May 26, 2013, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina, United States. Contested over 400 laps on the 1.5\u2013mile (2.4\u00a0km) oval, it was the twelfth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Kevin Harvick of Richard Childress Racing won the race, his second win in the Coca-Cola 600 and in the 2013 season. Kasey Kahne followed in the second while Kurt Busch, Denny Hamlin, and Joey Logano rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600\nThere were 11 cautions for 61 laps and 24 lead changes between 12 different drivers throughout the course of the race. One of the most significant stoppages came from a fallen skycam cable that damaged several cars and injured spectators. The result moved Harvick to the seventh position in the Drivers' Championship, 83 points behind Jimmie Johnson in first and 15 ahead of Paul Menard in eighth. Chevrolet maintained its lead in the Manufacturers' Championship, five points ahead of Toyota and thirteen ahead of Ford, with 24 races remaining in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Background\nCharlotte Motor Speedway is a four-turn quad-oval track that is 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at twenty-four degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is five degrees. The back stretch, opposite of the front, also had a five degree banking. The racetrack has seats for 134,000 spectators. Kasey Kahne was the defending race winner after winning the event in the 2012 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 423 points, while Carl Edwards stood in second with 379 points. Matt Kenseth followed in the third with 364, five ahead of Dale Earnhardt Jr. in fourth, and fifteen ahead of Clint Bowyer in fifth. Kahne, with 326, was in sixth; tied with Brad Keselowski, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Kyle Busch was eight points ahead of Aric Almirola and ten ahead of Kevin Harvick in ninth and tenth. Paul Menard was eleventh with 315, while Jeff Gordon completed the first twelve positions with 311 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 74 points, two points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third after recording only 56 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Background\nThe Coca-Cola 600 was conceived by race car driver Curtis Turner, who built the Charlotte Motor Speedway. It was first held in 1960 in an attempt by NASCAR to stage a Memorial Day weekend race to compete with the open-wheel Indianapolis 500; the two races were held together on the same day starting from 1974. The race is the longest in terms of distance on the NASCAR calendar and is considered by several drivers to be one of the sport's most important races alongside the Daytona 500, the Brickyard 400 and the Southern 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Background\nThe long distance makes it the most physically demanding event in NASCAR, and teams adapt to changing track conditions because the race occurs between late afternoon and evening. It was known as the World 600 until 1984 when The Coca-Cola Company purchased the naming rights to the race and renamed it the Coca-Cola World 600 in 1985. It has been called the Coca-Cola 600 every year since 1986 except for 2002 when the name changed to Coca-Cola Racing Family 600.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, held on May 23, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held on May 25, 2013, were 60 minutes long. During the first practice session, Kurt Busch was quickest with a time of 28.295, ahead of his brother Kyle and Kahne in second and third. Johnson followed in the fourth position, ahead of Almirola in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-four cars were entered, meaning only one car was bumped from the race because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Hamlin clinched his fourteenth career pole position, with a record-setting lap time of 27.604 seconds. After his qualifying run, Hamlin commented, \"Proud to be back on the racetrack. We're really getting things going right now.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Darlington polesitter Kurt Busch. Kenseth qualified third, Mark Martin took fourth, and Kahne started fifth. Greg Biffle, Kyle Busch, Jamie McMurray, Ryan Newman, and Earnhardt Jr. completed the first ten positions on the grid. The driver who failed to qualify for the race was Mike Bliss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Kahne was quickest, ahead of Kurt and Kyle Busch in second and third. Earnhardt Jr. and Johnson followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Biffle, Hamlin, Kenseth, Menard, and McMurray rounded out the first ten positions. In the final practice session for the race, Kahne remained quickest with a time of 28.633 seconds. Kurt Busch followed in second, ahead of Hamlin and Kenseth in third and fourth. Biffle, who was sixth quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nAs it was Memorial Day weekend, NASCAR's pre-race would pay tribute to American war veterans. After the invocation was delivered by Duck Dynasty's Willie Robertson, Grand Marshal Sergeant Aaron Causey, with his wife and United Service Organizations' Alan Reyes delivered the command to start engines. Denny Hamlin started on pole but was quickly passed for the lead by Matt Kenseth. Kasey Kahne took the lead on lap 24 and continued to lead through a round of green flag pit stops and until the first caution came out for debris on lap 68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nKahne continued to lead through pit stops and on the restart on lap 74 until Kyle Busch passed him on lap 75. Kahne retook the lead on lap 78 and quickly pulled away. Kahne continued to lead until the second caution on lap 112 for debris after Casey Mears hit the wall. Busch was first off of pit road and led on the restart on lap 119. The third caution came out on lap 122 when a cable that suspended a FOX Sports television camera over the frontstretch of the track snapped and fell on the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nSeveral cars ran over the cable, but only two sustained major damage: Kyle Busch, whose car had caused it to snap in the first place, and Marcos Ambrose. The red flag then came out on lap 126 as track officials cleaned up the cables. After a delay of 10 minutes and 40 seconds, NASCAR brought the cars down pit road and gave each team 15 minutes to look over their cars and do repairs if needed. Ten spectators were injured as a result of the cable failure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0008-0003", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nBusch continued to lead on the restart on lap 131 and led until green flag pit stops. When he made a pit stop on lap 177, Brad Keselowski and Danica Patrick each led one lap before the lead cycled back to Kenseth with Busch in 2nd on lap 179. Kenseth led until lap 222, when he made another green flag pit stop. Kenseth cycled out with a lead of over six seconds and had lapped all but 15 cars when the caution came out for debris on lap 241. Kenseth continued to lead on the restart (after pit stops).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0008-0004", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nKyle Busch's car started to slow and on lap 257, both his and Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s cars lost their engines. Earnhardt's car dropped oil on the track in turn three and Greg Biffle slipped in it, then hit the wall, along with Dave Blaney and Travis Kvapil. Another red flag waved as crews worked to clean up oil around the track. After everyone but Kenseth made pit stops, Kenseth led on the restart on lap 266", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nNevertheless, Kenseth pulled away but was caught and passed by Kahne on lap 273. Kahne led until the sixth caution came out on lap 303 for debris in turn one. The caution trapped several drivers one lap down, most notably Kenseth, Jimmie Johnson (who got the free pass), and Jeff Gordon. Kahne led on the lap 309 restart, but the seventh caution quickly waved on lap 311 for debris once again. All the lead lap cars pitted, allowing Kenseth and Gordon to get back on the lead lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nKahne led at the lap 318 restart, as well as the lap 323 restart after Ricky Stenhouse Jr. got into Patrick and shot her up in front of Keselowski (putting them both in the wall). Kurt Busch took the lead after Kahne had a bad restart. The ninth caution quickly came out on lap 325 when Aric Almirola made in three-wide on the frontstretch with Mark Martin and Jeff Gordon. Martin backed out and barely clipped Almirola, sending him head-on into the wall right in front of Gordon. Six cars sustained damage from the crash: Almirola, Martin, Gordon, Stenhouse, Bobby Labonte, and Casey Mears. Another red flag waved as cars were removed from the track. Busch's car battery went dead, and, while it was being replaced, Kevin Harvick took the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nThe restart came on lap 330 with Harvick leading, but the tenth caution waved on lap 332 as Johnson and Martin Truex Jr. traded paint. Johnson got loose and spun out. Kenseth, who was behind Johnson, slowed down to avoid him, but was hit from behind by Juan Pablo Montoya and Tony Stewart who couldn't slow up in time. Both Johnson and Montoya would fall several laps behind after multiple repairs and/or flat tires. Kenseth remained on the lead lap, but would later fall a couple laps down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nHarvick led on the restart on lap 339 but was passed ten laps later by Kahne, who then pulled away. Kahne made a pit stop on lap 364, giving the lead to Harvick, who then pitted on lap 367. Ryan Newman took the lead on lap 368, but pitted and handed to lead to Stewart. Stewart made a pit stop on lap 374 and gave the lead to Carl Edwards, who then pitted himself on lap 381. Paul Menard led one lap before pitting and giving the lead back to Kahne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Report, Race\nThe eleventh and final caution waved on lap 385 for debris on the frontstretch. Everyone pitted except for raceleader Kahne, and on the restart on lap 389, Harvick got by Kahne. Harvick pulled away from Kahne and third-place Kurt Busch over the last ten laps to pick up his 21st career win and his second Coca-Cola 600 in three years. Kahne finished second despite suffering from influenza, Kurt Busch finished third, while Denny Hamlin, and Joey Logano rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232703-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Coca-Cola 600, Results, Race results\nPoints include 3 Chase for the Sprint Cup points for winning, 1 point for leading a lap, and 1 point for most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232704-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship\nThe 2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship season was an international rally championship sanctioned by the FIA and run by the Confederacion Deportiva Automovilismo Sudamericana (Codasur). The championship is contested over four events held in four countries across South America, running from May to November. The championship was won by Paraguayan driver Gustavo Saba driving a \u0160koda Fabia. It was Saba's third consecutive title and he became the first three-time champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232704-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship\n2013 saw a reduced calendar with Argentine event Rally de Misiones Posadas removed from the calendar and a much later start to the season with the Rally de Erechim in Brazil in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232704-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship\nReigning champion Gustavo Saba won all four events in his new car, a Super 2000 specification \u0160koda Fabia which replaced his Group N Mitsubishi Lancer. Mitsubishi Lancer driver Eduardo Peredo finished second in both the Rally de Santa Cruz and Rally de Minas while Ford Fiesta driver Miguel Zaldivar was second in both the Rally de Erechim and the Rally Transitapua. Peredo finished runner up in the championship ahead of Zalvidar on the basis of their other results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232704-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe 2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232704-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship, Championship standings\nThe 2013 Codasur South American Rally Championship points are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400\nThe 2013 Coke Zero 400 powered by Coca-Cola was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on July 6, 2013, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Contested over 161\u00a0laps, it was the eighteenth race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his fourth win of the season and his first Coke Zero 400 win, rendering him the first driver since Bobby Allison in 1982 to sweep the Daytona 500 and Coke Zero 400 in the same year. Tony Stewart finished second while Kevin Harvick, Clint Bowyer, and Michael Waltrip rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Background\nDaytona International Speedway is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 31\u00a0degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at 18\u00a0degrees. The backstretch, which has a length of 3,000 feet, has minimal banking that is used for drainage. Tony Stewart was the defending race winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 610 points, while Carl Edwards stood in second with 572 points. Bowyer followed in the third with 569, twenty-five points ahead of Kevin Harvick and forty-one ahead of Matt Kenseth in fourth and fifth. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., with 512, was in sixth; twelve ahead of Kyle Busch, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Martin Truex, Jr. was one point ahead of Greg Biffle and eleven ahead of Joey Logano in ninth and tenth. Kasey Kahne was eleventh with 478, while Jeff Gordon completed the first twelve positions with 477 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 119 points, nine points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third with 87 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nTwo practice sessions were held on July 4, 2013, in preparation for the race. The first session lasted for 80 minutes, while second session was 85 minutes long. Prior to the first practice session, NASCAR officials discovered illegal roof flaps in 16 cars. Every Joe Gibbs Racing, Roush Fenway Racing, Michael Waltrip Racing and Penske Racing cars were involved, along with Jamie McMurray, Marcos Ambrose, Casey Mears, Aric Almirola and Trevor Bayne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring the first practice session, A.J. Allmendinger, for the Phoenix Racing team, was quickest ahead of Bowyer in second and Edwards in third. Juan Pablo Montoya was scored fourth, and Earnhardt, Jr. managed fifth. Paul Menard, Danica Patrick, Denny Hamlin, Ambrose, and Johnson rounded out the top ten quickest drivers in the session. In the final practice session for the race, David Reutimann was the quickest of the seventeen drivers who participated. David Ragan followed in second, ahead of Ambrose and Jeff Gordon in third and fourth. Michael Waltrip, who was thirty-sixth quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, Kyle Busch clinched his thirteenth career pole position with a lap time of 46.458 seconds and a speed of 193.723\u00a0mph (311.767\u00a0km/h). After his qualifying run, Kyle Busch said, \"I've not had many opportunities for me to win poles at restrictor-plate races, so I've got to thank the team, all the guys at Joe Gibbs Racing that did such a good job building a slick race car. It's a team effort coming to these places and having great race cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nI'm really excited to be starting up front, especially with my teammate Matt Kenseth on the front row with us.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Kenseth. Bowyer qualified third, Kahne took fourth, and Truex, Jr. started fifth. Menard, Waltrip, Johnson, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., and Biffle completed the first ten positions on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Race\nKyle Busch started on pole, but Matt Kenseth led the first lap. Busch would then re-take the lead and lead the next 30 laps. The first caution waved on lap 24 when Paul Menard blew an engine. Jimmie Johnson took the lead on the restart at lap 32, as Busch started to drift back in the outside line. Johnson led until lap 70 when the caution came out as Joey Logano hit the wall in the middle of a round of green-flag pit stops. Johnson had not yet pitted and would have to restart 17th behind the cars that had already made pit stops, giving the lead to Denny Hamlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Race\nNonetheless, Johnson would draft back up to the front and push Jamie McMurray past Hamlin to take the lead on lap 94. The third caution waved on lap 101 as Martin Truex, Jr. got sideways and collected Hamlin and Juan Pablo Montoya, also giving Busch some significant front damage. Truex would be the only one to retire following the crash. Johnson took the lead on the restart and held it all the way until the fourth caution waved on lap 126 for a crash involving David Stremme, Aric Almirola, Greg Biffle, and A. J. Allmendinger in the tri-oval. Both Stremme and Almirola would retire from the race. Following the lap 133 restart, Johnson held the lead and was joined at the front by teammate Kasey Kahne (who was subsequently passed by both Kevin Harvick and Tony Stewart).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Race\nOn lap 148, the fifth caution of the race came out for a large crash in the tri-oval. It started when Denny Hamlin lost control near the entrance of pit road and turned up the track. He went head-on into the wall and was hit by A.J. Allmendinger and Dave Blaney, almost causing Hamlin to flip. Matt Kenseth, who swerved while trying to avoid Hamlin, cut down and collected Jeff Gordon and David Reutimann, totalling six cars in all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Race\nThe red flag was displayed for nine minutes to allow for cleanup and the race restarted on lap 154, with Johnson and Kahne jumping ahead of Harvick and Stewart. As they began lap 156, Johnson moved up to block a fast-approaching Marcos Ambrose and nearly lost the lead. However, Johnson blocked Ambrose out of turn two, which caused Ambrose to swerve and knock Kahne into the inside wall, bringing out another caution. Ambrose would subsequently have to pit for repairs as Johnson held the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Race\nThe race restarted on lap 160 (going past the scheduled distance of 160 laps and eventually ending after 161 laps) for a green-white-checker attempt with Johnson and Stewart holding the lead over Harvick and Clint Bowyer. As the field worked through turn one, Carl Edwards was turned around by Scott Speed in turn one, collecting Marcos Ambrose, Bobby Labonte, Joe Nemechek, and Landon Cassill. No caution was thrown for this wreck, which happened behind the leaders, and the field continued racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Race\nApproaching the tri-oval, as Johnson held off Stewart to win his fourth race of the season, Danica Patrick cut down the track and was turned by David Gilliland, collecting Ryan Newman, Kyle Busch, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., Casey Mears, Greg Biffle, Jeff Burton, Terry Labonte, and more. Harvick, Bowyer, and Michael Waltrip rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232705-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Coke Zero 400, Report, Race\nOf note, by winning this race, Johnson became the first driver in 31 years (since Bobby Allison in 1982) to win the Daytona 500 and the Coke Zero 400 in the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232706-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fifteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $75,000 in prize money. It took place in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States, on September 16\u201322, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232706-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232706-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232707-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Yasmin Schnack were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012. Schnack decided not to participate while Muhammad played alongside Allie Will. They lost, however, in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232707-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nEleni Daniilidou and Coco Vandeweghe won the tournament, defeating Melanie Oudin and Taylor Townsend in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232708-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sanchez was the defending champion, but she lost in the first round to Anna Tatishvili.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232708-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coleman Vision Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nShelby Rogers won the tournament, defeating Anna Tatishvili in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232709-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colgate Raiders football team\nThe 2013 Colgate Raiders football team represented Colgate University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 18th-year head coach Dick Biddle and played their home games at Andy Kerr Stadium. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 4\u20138, 3\u20132 in Patriot League play to finish in a three way tie for second place. Biddle retired at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232710-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 College Baseball All-America Team\nThis is a list of college baseball players named first team All-Americans in 2013. The NCAA recognizes four different All-America selectors for baseball: 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, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232711-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 College Basketball Invitational\nThe 2013 College Basketball Invitational (CBI) was a single-elimination tournament of 16 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I teams that did not participate in the NCAA Tournament or the NIT. The opening games were held on Tuesday, March 19. A best-of-three championship series between the final two teams was held on April 1, April 3, and April 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232711-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 College Basketball Invitational, Participants\nNorth Dakota State and College of Charleston each had 24 wins going into this tournament, which is the most since Akron and IUPUI in 2009 (24 wins each). Texas and Purdue were teams invited despite having records under .500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232712-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 College Football All-America Team\nThe 2013 College Football All-America Team includes those players of American college football who have been honored by various selector organizations as the best players at their respective positions. The selector organizations award the \"All-America\" honor annually following the conclusion of the fall college football season. The original All-America team was the 1889 College Football All-America Team selected by Caspar Whitney and Walter Camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232712-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 College Football All-America Team\nIn 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau, which is the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) service bureau, compiled the first list of All-Americans including first-team selections on teams created for a national audience that received national circulation with the intent of recognizing selections made from viewpoints that were nationwide. Since 1957, College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) has bestowed Academic All-American recognition on male and female athletes in Divisions I, II, and III of the NCAA as well as National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics athletes, covering all NCAA championship sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232712-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 College Football All-America Team\nThe 2013 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following College Football All-American first teams chosen by the following selector organizations: Associated Press (AP), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Walter Camp Foundation (WCFF), The Sporting News (TSN), Sports Illustrated (SI), USA Today (USAT) ESPN, CBS Sports (CBS), College Football News (CFN), Scout.com, and Yahoo! Sports (Yahoo! ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232712-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 College Football All-America Team\nCurrently, the NCAA compiles consensus all-America teams in the sports of Division I-FBS football and Division I men's basketball using a point system computed from All-America teams named by coaches associations or media sources. The system consists of three points for a first-team honor, two points for second-team honor, and one point for third-team honor. Honorable mention and fourth team or lower recognitions are not accorded any points. Football consensus teams are compiled by position and the player accumulating the most points at each position is named first team consensus all-American. Currently, the NCAA recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine Consensus and Unanimous All-Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232713-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament\nThe 2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT) was a postseason single-elimination tournament of 32 NCAA Division I teams. Games took place throughout March 2013. The semifinals were played on March 30 with the championship game played on April 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232713-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament\n31 participants who are not invited to the 2013 NCAA Tournament, the 2013 National Invitation Tournament, or the 2013 College Basketball Invitational made up the field, as well as the winner of the Great West conference tournament winner, Chicago State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232713-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament\nAll games, except for the championship game, were streamed online through the CollegeInsider.com Game of the Week platform powered by NeuLion at . Free registration was required to view the games. The championship game was broadcast by new partner CBS Sports Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232713-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament\nThe tournament was won by East Carolina who defeated Weber State in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232713-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Participating teams\nThe following teams received an invitation to the 2013 CIT. The Great West Conference Tournament Champion, Chicago State, received an automatic bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232713-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Format\nThe fifth annual CIT will once again use the old NIT model in which matchups in future rounds will be determined by the results of the previous round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232713-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, Bracket\nBracket is for visual purposes only. The CIT does not have a set bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232714-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Collegiate Rugby Championship\nThe 2013 USA Sevens Collegiate Rugby Championship was a rugby sevens tournament. The tournament was held on May 31 - June 2 at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania. It was the fourth annual Collegiate Rugby Championship and the third consecutive year that the tournament was held at PPL Park. For 2013, USA Sevens LLC expanded the tournament from 16 to 20 teams in order to include additional local Philadelphia-area teams, inviting Temple, Kutztown, Penn, and Saint Joseph's. Another local team, Villanova, was later chosen as a replacement for Army. Villanova was outscored 184-0 over four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232714-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Collegiate Rugby Championship\nLarry McManus was an integral part of Villanova Rugby regaining its status a recognized club sport. Due to his passion for the game and great senior leadership from then captain Goose, Nova Rugby was reestablished as a collegiate club. Larry\u2019s involvement in the sport and relationships with other Philadelphia schools, Villanova was awarded the opportunity to participate in the CRC tournament. Unfortunately, Larry was fired from Villanova after the NCAA investigated him for leaving an upper-decker at PPL Park. Rabbit Muldoon was named interim coach, but went on maternity leave after giving birth to a goat on the pitch. The goat's name is Larry, and he has become an integral part of the #MeToo movement among goats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232714-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Collegiate Rugby Championship\nIn the CRC's first three years, 16 teams were evenly divided into Championship and Challenger tournaments after the pool stage. This year was the first one in which the CRC utilized Cup, Plate, Bowl, and Shield tournaments. The teams that qualified for the Cup were the five pool winners and the top three second-place teams. All 20 teams participated in the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232714-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Collegiate Rugby Championship\nCalifornia defeated Life 19-14 in the Cup finals for their first CRC championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232714-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Collegiate Rugby Championship, Pool stage\nThe 8 teams highlighted in green reached the quarterfinals. Delaware and Notre Dame finished second in their pools, but did not reach the quarterfinals due to their points differentials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232714-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Collegiate Rugby Championship, Players\nThe following 14 players were selected by Rugby Mag to the All-CRC team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232715-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Collingwood Football Club season\nThe 2013 Collingwood Football Club season is the club's 117th season of senior competition in the Australian Football League (AFL). The club also fielded its reserves team in the VFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232715-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Collingwood Football Club season\nThe club signed a total of 80,456 members for the 2013 season, setting a new VFL/AFL record for total club membership in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes\nOn 20 July 2013, two clashes occurred in Colombia between government forces and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas. Nineteen soldiers were killed in the deadliest day since peace talks began in November 2012. The conflict came one day after a FARC-EP officer Alejandra had detained with a chain around the neck a vacationing U.S. Army Combat Engineer (12B) veteran, Kevin Scott Sutay including for his 27th birthday in the jungle on October 13 to try and further anger him intentionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes\nFormer US Army Specialist Sutay walked alone from San Jos\u00e9 Del Guaviare to El Retorno, then proceeded on foot alone enjoying the jungle for another 50 to 60 kilometers SSE wearing flip-flops for the first 25 kilometers switching to tennis shoes after they broke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes\nKevin encountered FARC-EP whom provided rubber boots and a mosquito net for Kevin and noticed they were headed in the same direction. Kevin began to travel together with FARC-EP unrestricted for approximately 2 weeks and approximately another 200 kilometers by foot and boat until the FARC-EP officer Alejandra arrived and insisted Kevin be disarmed of his machete and karambit knife, personal belongings be withheld, and he be detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes\nHis detention was in conjunction with accusations of being either CIA, active military, possible espionage or a mercenary for the remainder of his stay in the jungle. Kevin desired to continue his journey towards Puinawai and In\u00edrida including after his release four months later but FARC-EP insisted he leave the jungle with the International Red Cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes, Background\nSince the 1960s, the Colombian government has been in periodic conflicts with Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels. An estimated 600,000 people have died in the 50-year-long conflict, with an additional 3.7 million people displaced. In November 2012, peace negotiations between the two sides began in Oslo, Norway and Havana, Cuba. At the time of the 20 July attacks, negotiations were ongoing. A few days prior, FARC's chief negotiator said the conflict was nearing its end. Three previous attempts to peacefully end the conflict failed. The Colombia government estimates that FARC has 8,000 active fighters, down from 16,000 in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes, Attacks\nIn southern Colombia, FARC said it had detained a former U.S. Army soldier far outside El Retorno whom was traveling alone on foot towards Colombia's Puinawai(mother of creation/first mother) Natural Reserve which included 3 exclusive mountains on 19 July, but was willing to release him to senator Piedad Cordoba to show commitment to the peace talks. A statement by the U.S. government said the man was in the area as a tourist, not as a part of a military mission. Historically, the United States has aided the Colombian military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes, Attacks\nIn the town of El Doncello in southwest Colombia, a battle between the army and FARC left 4 soldiers and 6 FARC members dead on 20 July. Three other soldiers were injured and two rebel fighters were captured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes, Attacks\nHours later, about 70 rebels ambushed a group of government soldiers guarding an oil pipeline on 20 July in El Mordisco, a rural area of Arauca in eastern Colombia. Fifteen soldiers were killed in the attack and twelve rebels were captured. The government attributed the attack to FARC activity. Overall 20 July was the deadliest day since peace talks began also known as the Colombian Independence day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes, Response and aftermath\nColombia's president Juan Manuel Santos traveled to Arauca to the site of the ambush. There, he promised to retaliate with \"the entire machinery\" of war. \"Just as we have extended our hand and are in negotiations, so do we have a big stick. We have decisive military force and will apply it,\" he said. He did, however, reiterate that the government was optimistic about the peace talks and said he hoped \"the guerrillas will come to their senses\" and continue with the talks. Santos also stated that he would not allow the FARC rebels to make a media circus of the release of the American soldier that was detained after the group \"flagrantly violated\" a promise to end the kidnappings before peace talks began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes, Response and aftermath\nOn 22 July, two FARC members were killed during a military operation in southwest Cauca. The same day, FARC offered to arm coca farmers that have been protesting against coca eradication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232716-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian clashes, Response and aftermath\nPeace talks between FARC and the Colombian government are expected to resume on 28 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232717-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian coffee growers strike\nThe 2013 Colombian coffee growers strike was a cessation of activities of the Colombian coffee economic sector, carried out with the realization of different mobilizations in several municipalities of the country, and consequently, the blocking of roads and riots between peasants and the Mobile Anti- Disturbance Squadron (ESMAD). The strike began on 25 February 2013, and on 2 March, despite reaching agreements between the government and the representatives of the coffee growers, the strike continued. Finally, on the 8th of the same month, the parties reached an agreement, through which improvements will be recognized to the exercise of coffee growing, and therefore, the end of the strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232717-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian coffee growers strike\nThe protests of the coffee growers took place after they considered that the national government was not helping them to face the economic difficulties of the time. According to the farmers, coffee growing, emblematic in Colombia, stopped being a profitable business because production had fallen considerably.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232717-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Colombian coffee growers strike\nFor its part, the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia (FEDECAF\u00c9), the highest body promoting coffee production in the country, at the head of its manager, Luis Genaro Mu\u00f1oz, together with the National Coffee Committee, expressed strong rejection to the strike, arguing their non-sympathy and suggesting the participation of illegal armed organizations in the events. The President of Colombia, Juan Manuel Santos, and his ministers, apart from agreeing with what FEDECAF\u00c9 and the Committee said, went further, calling the strike unjustified and urging the peasants to \"defend the institutionality of the grain\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232717-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian coffee growers strike\nThis strike is not justified, if something has helped the country is the institutionality of coffee, the producers of the grain should defend that. As we had already announced, this strike has political ingredients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232717-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colombian coffee growers strike\nThe strike ended on 8 March after an agreement between both parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232718-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament was held at Eagle Field at Veterans Memorial Park in Harrisonburg, VA from May 22\u201325. In the championship game, fourth-seeded Towson defeated second-seeded William & Mary, 5-2, to win its first tournament championship. As a result, Towson earned the Colonial Athletic Association's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232718-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nContinuing the format adopted in 2012, the top six finishers from the regular season competed in the double-elimination tournament. The top two seeds received a single bye to the second round. Due to their planned departure from the CAA after this season, Old Dominion and Georgia State were not eligible for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 74], "content_span": [75, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232718-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nTowson's Zach Fisher was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player. In the tournament, Fisher batted .476 with three home runs and 10 RBI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 97], "content_span": [98, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232719-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season was the 18th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The season marked the first for the incoming Charleston Cougars. The 2013 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament was played at Vidas Field on the campus of regular-season champion Drexel in Philadelphia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232719-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season champions were the Drexel Dragons. The Northeastern Huskies were the defending tournament champions. Drexel successfully defended its regular-season title from last season, and also added the conference tournament crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232719-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colonial Athletic Association men's soccer season, CAA Tournament\nThe format for the 2013 CAA Men's Soccer Tournament will be announced in the Fall of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232720-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colonial Square Ladies Classic\nThe 2013 Colonial Square Ladies Classic was held from November 15 to 18 at the Nutana Curling Club in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. It was the fourth of five women's Grand Slam events of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple knockout format with 32 teams and the purse for the event was CAD$50,000. Winnipeg's Jennifer Jones would win the event, defeating Switzerland's Mich\u00e8le J\u00e4ggi in the final. The win would be Jones' second Grand Slam win of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team\nThe 2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team represented the University of Colorado at Boulder during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Led by first-year head coach Mike MacIntyre, the Buffaloes played their home games on-campus at Folsom Field in Boulder and were members of the Pac-12 Conference. Head coach Mike MacIntyre was hired after the firing of Jon Embree concluding the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Previous season\nColorado finished the 2012 season with a record of 1\u201311, 1\u20138 in Pac-12 play, and last place in the South Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Previous season, Recruiting\nNational Signing Day was on February 6, 2013 and Colorado signed high school athletes from around the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Game summaries, Charleston Southern\nColorado's game vs Fresno State on September 14 was canceled due to flooding, making Colorado need to add a 12th game. On September 30, Charleston Southern was granted a waiver to play a 13th regular season game to be able to play Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n1st quarter scoring: COLO \u2013 Will Oliver 23-yard field goal; UCLA \u2013 Devin Fuller 76-yard pass from Brett Hundley (Ka'imi Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n2nd quarter scoring: COLO \u2013 Paul Richardson 7-yard pass from Sefo Liufau (Will Oliver kick); UCLA \u2013 Hundley 11-yard run (Fairbairn kick); UCLA \u2013 Devin Fuller 6-yard pass from Hundley (Fairbairn kick); COLO \u2013 Oliver 47-yard field goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n3rd quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Hundley 1-yard run (Fairbairn kick); UCLA \u2013 Damien Thigpen 5-yard run (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232721-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Game summaries, UCLA\n4th quarter scoring: COLO \u2013 Tony Jones 2-yard run (Oliver kick); UCLA \u2013 Fairbairn 45-yard field goal; UCLA \u2013 Oliver 37-yard field goal; UCLA \u2013 Fuller 8-yard run (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232722-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Ice season\nThe 2013 Colorado Ice season was the team's seventh season as a football franchise and fifth in the Indoor Football League (IFL). Founded in 2007 as part of United Indoor Football, the Colorado Ice became charter members of the IFL when the UIF merged with the Intense Football League before the 2009 season. One of just nine teams that competed in the IFL for the 2013 season, the Fort Collins-based Colorado Ice were members of the Intense Conference. In their second season under head coach Heron O'Neal, the team played their home games at the Budweiser Events Center in Loveland, Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232722-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Ice season, Off-field moves\nShortly before the 2013 season began, the owner of the Cheyenne Warriors died which forced that team to suspend operations and the IFL to revise its schedule to accommodate the now 9-team league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232722-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Ice season, Off-field moves\nIn late May 2013, the team extended the contract of head coach Heron O'Neal through the 2017 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232722-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Ice season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated March 26, 201337 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232723-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Mammoth season\nThe Colorado Mammoth are a lacrosse team based in Denver, Colorado playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2013 season was the 27th in franchise history and 11th as the Mammoth (previously the Washington Power, Pittsburgh Crossefire, and Baltimore Thunder).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232723-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Mammoth season\nThe Mammoth survived a 2-7 start to the season, finishing strong and ending up at 7-9, good for 4th place in the West. But for the third straight year, they were ousted in the first round of the playoffs, this time by the Calgary Roughnecks, 15-10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232723-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232723-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Mammoth season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nThe 2012 NLL Entry Draft took place on October 1, 2012. The Mammoth made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season\nThe 2013 Colorado Rapids season was the club's eighteenth season of existence, and their eighteenth season in Major League Soccer, the top tier of the American and Canadian soccer pyramids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review\nThe 2013 Colorado Rapids would see massive changes made to the team. All-time leading goal scorer Conor Casey was released and Omar Cummings would be traded during the offseason, the Forward duo combining for 89 goals in the Rapids' careers. The Midfield pairing of Jeff Larentowicz and long-time Captain Pablo Mastroeni would be broken up, as well. Larentowicz was traded in the offseason and Mastroeni was traded during the summer of 2013. With the majority of the 2010 MLS Champions team gone (only 5 players remaining on the squad), the team looked considerably different.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review\nCoach Oscar Pareja wanting a squad of younger, more athletic players. Colorado brought in US National Team Forward Edson Buddle, along with several South American players who had played for their National Teams. 2013 would also see Rapids' Homegrown Player, 19-year-old Shane O'Neill, become a valuable member of the US U-20 National Team leading up to and during the 2013 U-20 World Cup in Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\nThe Colorado Rapids' offseason began with the release of 9 players in November. Forward Conor Casey, Midfielders Edu and Joseph Nane, Defenders Tyson Wahl, Hunter Freeman, and Luis Zapata, and Goalkeeper Ian Joyce all had their options declined. Tyrone Marshall and Scott Palguta's contracts expired and they were not re-signed. Midfielder Jamie Smith's contract also expired, however, he returned to the Rapids' preseason training camp and then was re-sign by Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\nThe Rapids' added several players during the offseason via trade, including Forward Atiba Harris from Vancouver Whitecaps FC for a 2015\u20132016 International Roster Spot. Colorado also traded their 1st Round 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft pick to the LA Galaxy for US International Forward Edson Buddle. Later in December, Forward Omar Cummings was traded to the Houston Dynamo for Nathan Sturgis and allocation money. Cummings narrowly missed being reunited with fellow 2010 Cup Champion, Macoumba Kandji, who had been traded to Houston the previous year. Kandji refused a contract extension in order to play in Europe. At the 2012 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Colorado selected Eric Avila with the 6th pick of the 1st round in the 2nd stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\nIn January, on the day before the 2013 MLS SuperDraft, Midfielder Jeff Larentowicz was traded to the Chicago Fire. The trade would involve an exchange of draft picks, Colorado receiving the 11th overall pick and Chicago receiving the 30th overall pick. Chicago had traded the 30th overall pick to Colorado during the 2012 MLS season for Wells Thompson. The following day, the Rapids drafted Forward Deshorn Brown (6th overall), Midfielder Dillon Powers (11th overall from Chicago), and Defender Kory Kindle (25th overall). Ecuadorian International Defender Diego Calder\u00f3n and Chilean International Midfielder Kevin Harbottle were signed to International Roster Spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\nDillon Serna was signed as the Rapids' 3rd Homegrown Player in the lineup, joining US Youth International Shane O'Neill and Davy Armstrong. Colorado traded the rights to Eric Avila to Chivas USA, in exchange for the rights to Nick LaBrocca. Having originally been drafted by Colorado in 2007, LaBrocca would eventually sign with the Rapids for a second time. During the 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft, Colorado selected Brenton Griffiths with the 25th overall pick. Though he was drafted on January 22, Griffiths didn't sign with the Rapids until April 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\nOn January 25, Colorado announced the signing of Cameroonian Youth International Charles Eloundou on a one-year loan from AS Fortuna de Mfou in Cameroon. Colorado had won the rights to sign Eloundou in a weighted lottery. Eloundou has yet to wear a Rapids' jersey, however, undergoing a lengthy battle with the Cameroonian side over the loan deal. The ordeal would later cost the Rapids even more. After several weeks of training with the club during the summer, US Youth International Conor Doyle tried to sign with Colorado on loan from Derby County in England. MLS decided that Doyle must enter a weighted lottery and that Colorado was ineligible due to winning the lottery rights to Eloundou. The weighted lottery rights to Doyle would be won by D.C. United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\nIn February, Colorado added Goalkeeper Clint Irwin on a free transfer from the Charlotte Eagles. The Rapids also added the 1st overall 2010 MLS SuperDraft pick Danny Mwanga in a trade with the Portland Timbers for a 1st round 2015 MLS SuperDraft pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\nA series of injuries started the season off on the wrong foot for the Rapids. New Forward Edson Buddle injured his knee during training with the US Men's National Team in January. The injury would cause him to miss the start of the MLS season. Starting Goalkeeper Matt Pickens, who was injured at the end of the 2012 season, would miss the start of 2013, as well. The Rapids' 2012 assists leader, Martin Rivero, broke his foot during the first preseason game of 2013 in Tucson. He would return to the lineup mid-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, Offseason\n2012 leading goal scorer, Jaime Castrill\u00f3n, required knee surgery and would be out until July. The Rapids had initially been excited about the return of Pablo Mastroeni, agreeing to play on more season after missing almost all of 2012 with concussion symptoms. His return was short lived, however, battling several injuries and seeing limited time before being traded to LA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, March\nThe 2013 MLS season got off to a bad start with a 1\u20130 loss away to FC Dallas. The deciding goal came early on a goalkeeping error by backup Steward Ceus. The following week's home opener was delayed 1 day due to snow. Colorado dropped the game 2\u20131 in their first ever loss to the Philadelphia Union. Although recently signed by Philadelphia, Conor Casey did not play for his former team due to injury. Colorado got their first point of the season on March 16, when they drew away to arch-rival Real Salt Lake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, March\nDuring the Rocky Mountain Rivalry matchup at Real Salt Lake, Matt Pickens suffered a broken forearm in the 3rd minute of the game. Twenty-one-year-old Clint Irwin would step into the starting Goalkeeper position in his absence. Irwin would go on to set a record for facing a Penalty Kick in each of his 1st four MLS games, allowing only 2 goals. Irwin would also tie the MLS record for allowing only 5 goals in his first 10 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, March\nThe Rapids lost the following game at LA Galaxy on a Mike McGee PK following a Drew Moor red card early in the 2nd half. Diego Calder\u00f3n injured his knee after he slid into the goal post clearing a shot off the goal line. The injury would require surgery and several months to heal. The injury would allow 23-year-old Chris Klute, on loan from the Atlanta Silverbacks (NASL), to step in and solidify the back line. Klute would start 16 straight games at the Left Back Position, the first Rapids' player to do so since the start of 2010. On March 28, Colorado traded Andre Akpan to the New York Red Bulls for a conditional pick in 2015 MLS SuperDraft. Colorado finished the month with a 2\u20132 home draw to Portland Timbers, the draw marked the first ever points dropped at home to Portland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, April\nApril began with Colorado's first win of the season, 1\u20130 over Real Salt Lake at home with Atiba Harris scoring his first Rapids' goal. The Rapids would make it 2 straight wins the next week after defeating Chivas USA 1\u20130 in LA on rookie Deshorn Brown's first goal. The streak came to an end the following game as the Rapids lost to Seattle Sounders FC for a 7th consecutive time, losing 1\u20130 at home. Colorado finished the month 2\u20131\u20131 after a 1\u20131 draw away to Houston Dynamo. Once again, the Rapids missed facing one of their former stars as Omar Cummings missed the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, May\nMay began with a 1\u20130 home win over Toronto FC with Edson Buddle collecting his first goal in a Rapids' uniform. Buddle made it 2 in a row the following week in a 2\u20130 win at Columbus Crew. Colorado snapped a 3-game losing streak to San Jose Earthquakes with a 1\u20131 draw in San Jose on May 18. Colorado rounded out the month with a 2\u20130 home win over Chivas USA. Colorado finished May with an unbeaten record of 3\u20131\u20130, outscoring their opponents 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, June\nShane O'Neill left the Rapids during June to Participate in the 2013 U-20 World Cup in Turkey. On June 17, the Rapids traded long-time Captain Pablo Mastroeni to the LA Galaxy for a 2nd round pick in the 2014 MLS SuperDraft and an International Roster Spot through the 2014 season. Mastroeni is the Rapids all-time leader in Games and Minutes Played. Colorado continued their unbeaten streak on June 1, with a 2\u20132 home draw with FC Dallas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, June\n3 straight loses would follow, 2\u20131 home loss to San Jose Earthquakes, 2\u20131 away loss to Chicago Fire, and a 3\u20130 defeat away to Portland Timbers. On June 29, Colorado beat Montreal 4\u20133 in their first ever meeting in Montreal. The game featured 2 MLS Goal of the Week nominees by Montreal and would be considered by many as a Game of the Year nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, July\nColorado beat New York Red Bulls 2\u20130 on July 4, improving their all-time record to 12\u20133\u20133 in July 4 games. They continued their 4-game Eastern Conference swing with a 0\u20130 draw at home to D.C. United and a 2\u20131 victory at home over New England Revolution. On July 20, Colorado drew at Seattle Sounders FC, taking their first ever point from CenturyLink Field. July 27 would mark Pablo Mastroeni's bittersweet return to Colorado. He received a warm reaction from the crowd, but his new club, LA Galaxy, fell 2\u20130. Colorado would finish the month unbeaten, going 3\u20132\u20130, while scoring 7 goals and conceding 2. The Rapids released Kevin Harbottle at the end of July. The midfielder had been battling injury problems and had played in only 4 games since he was signed in the offseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, August\nTaking a 6-game unbeaten streak (4\u20132\u20130) into August, the Rapids took back the Rocky Mountain Cup from Real Salt Lake after a 2\u20132 draw on August 3. The game would also feature a 62-minute lightning delay during a heavy thunderstorm. On August 6, Colorado signed Vicente S\u00e1nchez, a veteran of Mexican and German soccer, as an International Player. On August 8, Colorado signed Gabriel Torres, who was coming off a very successful 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup, as the club's first ever Designated Player. The Rapids drew away to Chivas USA 1\u20131 on August 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, August\nThe draw snapped the Rapids' 4 game winning streak at Chivas, in which they had shut out Chivas in all 4 games. Vicente Sanchez made his MLS debut during the Chivas game. Sanchez and Torres would both get their 1st MLS starts against Vancouver Whitecaps FC on August 17. Colorado defeated Vancouver 2\u20130 in a battle of teams tied for 2nd place in the Western Conference Standings. The win would also extend the Rapids unbeaten streak to a club record-tying 9 games. The unbeaten streak would come to an end on the final day of August with a 2\u20131 defeat at Sporting Kansas City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, September\nThe Rapids began September with a 1\u20130 victory over the Los Angeles Galaxy, who were missing several players due to international duty. Edson Buddle scored his 98th career MLS goal against his former club. Clint Irwin tied the club record for shutouts in a single MLS season with 10. On September 14, Colorado saw Vicente S\u00e1nchez open his Rapids account in a 2\u20131 victory over FC Dallas. Colorado lost the next game 1\u20130 away to Portland Timbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, October\nColorado began October with a 5\u20131 victory over Seattle Sounders FC, Colorado had only won once in 11 games against Seattle previously. The game began with Deshorn Brown scoring his first of 2 goals on the night after just 13 seconds. It was the fastest goal in Rapids history (passing Conor Casey's 16 second goal against LA in 2009) and the 2nd fastest goal in MLS history (Dwayne De Rosario scored in 11 seconds for San Jose against Dallas in 2003). The game was finished with Gabriel Torres scoring his first MLS goal in stoppage time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, October\nIt was the most goals ever allowed by Seattle Sounders FC in an MLS game and most goals scored by Colorado since a 5\u20134 victory over New York Red Bulls in 2008. Colorado followed that great performance with a terrible showing in a 1\u20130 defeat away to San Jose Earthquakes, leaving San Jose with a chance to overtake Colorado for the 5th and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. Colorado rebounded with a 3\u20132 win over Vancouver Whitecaps FC, eliminating Vancouver from playoff contention. New Rapids Forward Gabriel Torres scored twice, including the game winner in the 77th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Review, October\nThe win game Colorado its highest point total in club history and most wins and most goals scored since 1999 and 1998, respectively. Colorado finished the regular season with a 9-game unbeaten streak at home (7W, 2D). The 2013 Regular Season went out on a sour note, losing 3\u20130 in Vancouver behind a Camillo Sanvezzo hat trick. It meant Colorado finished the regular season losing 3 straight road games, all by shutouts. As a result, Colorado finished 5th in the Western Conference and had to travel to Seattle for the Knockout Round of the 2013 MLS Cup Playoffs. Colorado would fall to Seattle 2\u20130 to end their 2013 MLS Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Competitions, MLS Cup Playoffs, Standings\nNote: the table below has no impact on playoff qualification and is used solely for determining host of the MLS Cup, certain CCL spots, and 2014 MLS draft. The conference tables are the sole determinant for teams qualifying to the playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Competitions, MLS Cup Playoffs, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by position, and then shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232724-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rapids season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: October 28, 2013Source: Competitive matchesOrdered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card. Last updated: October, 2013Source: Competitive matchesOnly competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232725-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado Rockies season\nThe 2013 Colorado Rockies season was the franchise's 21st in Major League Baseball. The season marked the Rockies' 18th season of playing their home games at Coors Field. It was Todd Helton's 17th and final season with the Rockies and Walt Weiss' first season as Manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232725-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232725-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232725-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232725-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232725-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232726-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado State Rams football team\nThe 2013 Colorado State Rams football team represented Colorado State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Rams were led by second-year head coach Jim McElwain and played their home games at Sonny Lubick Field at Hughes Stadium. They were members of the Mountain Division of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 8\u20136, 5\u20133 in Mountain West play to finish in third place in the Mountain Division. They were invited to the New Mexico Bowl where they defeated Washington State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods\nThe 2013 Colorado floods were a series of natural disasters occurring in the U.S. state of Colorado. Starting on September 11, 2013, a slow-moving cold front stalled over Colorado, clashing with warm humid monsoonal air from the south. This resulted in heavy rain and catastrophic flooding along Colorado's Front Range from Colorado Springs north to Fort Collins. The situation intensified on September 11 and 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods\nBoulder County was worst hit, with 9.08 inches (231\u00a0mm) recorded September 12 and up to 17 inches (430\u00a0mm) of rain recorded by September 15, which is comparable to Boulder County's average annual precipitation (20.7 inches, 525\u00a0mm). This event has also been referred to as the 2013 Colorado Front Range Flood, reflecting a more precise geographic extent in and along the Colorado Front Range mountains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods\nThe National Weather Service's Hydrometeorological Design Studies Center stated in a document that the annual exceedance probability (AEP) for the entire rainfall event was as low as 1/1000 (0.1%) in places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods\nThe flood waters spread across a range of almost 200 miles (320\u00a0km) from north to south, affecting 17 counties. Governor John Hickenlooper declared a disaster emergency on September 12, 2013, in 14 counties: Adams, Arapahoe, Broomfield, Boulder, Denver, El Paso, Fremont, Jefferson, Larimer, Logan, Morgan, Pueblo, Washington and Weld. By September 15, federal emergency declarations covered those 14 counties as well as Clear Creek County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Background\nThe state of Colorado had been experiencing varying levels of drought prior to the week of storms starting on September 9. The U.S. Drought Monitor stated that \"The combination of ample Gulf and Pacific tropical moisture (in part from Tropical Storms Manuel (Pacific) and Ingrid (Gulf) which inundated Mexico), stalled frontal systems, and upsloping conditions produced the widespread rainfall [along Colorado's Front Range].\" This resulted in rainfall totals exceeding 20 inches in parts of Boulder County, along with numerous flash floods, property destruction and loss of life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Historical flooding\nThe earliest recorded flood in Boulder was the great flood of 1894 which came down Boulder Canyon. It wiped out Canyon Street, then known as Water Street, and flooded most of the downtown area. In 1965 another flood hit Colorado. Colorado is a semi arid state and has had a history of flash floods. The Big Thompson River begins around Estes Park in northern Colorado and flows east through the state into Big Thompson Canyon. On July 31, 1976, the Big Thompson Flood of 1976 struck .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Historical flooding\nIn the first hour alone, 8 inches of rainfall was recorded for a total of 12 inches during the first three hours. The flash flooding killed 144 people and caused $35 million worth of damage in 1977 US dollar values, or roughly $140 million in 2013. Comparatively, the 2013 Flooding was caused by approximately 15 inches of rainfall over the span of a week which killed 8 people and caused $2 billion in damage. The rainfall in 2013 was clearly more than that in 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Historical flooding\nHowever, the flooding was more intensive in 1976 because the rainfall that fell occurred in a much shorter time frame and caught many people off guard. In 2013, The Big Thompson River experienced peak flow rates near Loveland, CO of 4,500 CFS (127.43 cubic meters per second) before the measuring gauge was destroyed by floodwaters. In 1976, the same area of the river saw peak flow rates of 31,200 cubic feet per second (883.49 cubic meters per second). As a result, this is not the worst flooding Colorado has seen, but it is the heaviest rainfall Colorado has seen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact\nAt least eight deaths were reported by the Colorado Office of Emergency Management, with two more missing and presumed dead and hundreds remaining unaccounted for. More than 11,000 were evacuated. The town of Lyons in Boulder County was isolated by the flooding of St. Vrain Creek, and several earth dams along the Front Range burst or were over-topped. On September 12, Boulder Creek was reported to have exceeded 5,000 cubic feet (140\u00a0m3) of water per second. Boulder Creek regularly flows around 150\u2013200 cubic feet (4.2\u20135.7\u00a0m3) per second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact\nThis caused serious damage to buildings along the creek and the creek path such as Boulder High School. As of late September 13, according to the Office of Emergency Management, there were 172 people unaccounted for and at least three dead in flood areas of Boulder County. By September 14, the death toll had reached five and more than 500 were unaccounted for, but not necessarily considered missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact\nAt least 1,750 people and 300 pets have been rescued by air and ground. Rescue efforts were hampered by continuing rain and a low cloud ceiling, which grounded National Guard helicopters September 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact\nNearly 19,000 homes were damaged, and over 1,500 were destroyed. The Colorado Department of Transportation estimates that at least 30 state highway bridges were destroyed and an additional 20 are seriously damaged, with repairs for damaged bridges and roads expected to cost many millions of dollars. Miles of freight and passenger rail lines were washed out or submerged, including a section servicing Amtrak's iconic California Zephyr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact\nRainfall totals recorded by the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS) from September 9\u201315, 2013 show significant totals in the Aurora, Boulder and Estes Park areas with several locations in the city of Boulder recording 15 to 20 inches (380 to 510\u00a0mm) of rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Economic impact\nLower-lying agricultural land in northeast Colorado was affected as flood waters surged down rivers and creeks, inundating fields and pastures. Significant crop damage is expected from standing water that has no way to drain from fields.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Economic impact\nHundreds of oil and gas wells were shut down in the Denver Basin, many of which were under rushing water, and reports of broken lines and storage tanks swept away by the flood waters raised concerns of contamination. A spill from flood-damaged storage tanks in Milliken was reported September 18, which released 5,250 US gallons (19,900\u00a0l; 4,370\u00a0imp\u00a0gal) of crude oil into the South Platte River.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Economic impact\nThe IRS announced that it would extend filing and payment deadlines for flood victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Hazardous impacts\nStructures located in high risk flood zones were soon inundated. Sewage treatment plants affected by the flood waters released 20 million gallons of raw sewage as well as 150\u2013270 million gallons of partially treated sewage, as estimated by the State health department. What resulted is higher levels of E. coli, some as high as 472\u2013911 colonies per millimeter of water (126 colonies per millimeter of water is considered unsafe). The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC) reports that oil lines and containment facilities failed and leaked a total of 1,027 barrels (viz. 43,134 gallons) of oil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Hazardous impacts\nThe COGCC is monitoring 13 substantial leaks as of October 8, 2013. The COGCC is also monitoring 17 substantial leaks of produced water, or water that is used in the refinement of oil products and is considered waste water. The COGCC reports that 26,385 gallons of such water has leaked into flood waters. Over 50,000 fracking wells \u2013 a mining process utilized in the extraction of oil form the Earth \u2013 operate in the state of Colorado and 1,900 fracking wells were flooded at the peak flood levels. This number has since been reduced to around 1,300 wells. Concerns have been raised about the safety of such wells in a flood situation. The produced water from these operations sit in open pits and easily mix with flood waters and deposit toxic substances like lead or other sediments across the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Ecological impacts\nScientific reports that show the ecological impacts of the flooding are not readily available because this is such a recent event. Past studies on the ecological impacts of flash flooding can give insight on what may happen. Temporal succession has been studied in areas that experience flash flooding regularly. In these instances, typical biological processes characteristic to the area pre-flood resume within 2\u20133 weeks. The 2013 Colorado flooding is a more complex case because of the close contact with human society.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Ecological impacts\nContamination from sewage, oil, and waste water containing toxic substances can delay natural succession processes if not alter them entirely. For example, waste water from flooded fracking wells could introduce levels of lead into a freshwater system, keeping a particular strain of algae from developing in usual successional form. The hierarchy of development is now delayed or shifted into an entirely different direction. Pollution from the floodwaters could also affect species in ways not related to succession. For example, animals relying on natural freshwater systems as a source for water can contract fatal illnesses as a result of the higher levels of E. coli bacteria in the water due to sewage leaks caused by the flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Impact, Media Response\nMedia such as 9News, 7News, FOX 31 and more covered the entire event for nearly the entire time it was present. The National Weather Service issued Flood and Flash Flood Warnings for all the affected areas. These warnings were complained about by residents in the hardest hit counties in the beginning, saying they were very pestering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Federal aid\nPresident Barack Obama first declared a state of emergency for Boulder, El Paso, and Larimer counties, with an additional 12 counties added September 16: Adams, Arapahoe, Broomfield, Clear Creek, Denver, Fremont, Jefferson, Morgan, Logan, Pueblo, Washington and Weld counties. This authorized federal search and rescue teams, as well as supplies such as food, water, cots, generators, and emergency flood control measures. Obama also declared a major disaster specifically for Boulder County, which provides for federal recovery assistance such as temporary housing, home repairs, and low-cost loans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Federal aid\nOn September 25, 2013, Rep. Cory Gardner (R-CO) introduced the bill To authorize the Secretary of Transportation to obligate funds for emergency relief projects arising from damage caused by severe weather events in 2013 (H.R. 3174; 113th Congress). If passed, the bill would \"exempt Colorado from a cap on funding, contained in Division A of Public Law 113-2 (The Disaster Relief Appropriations Act, 2013), from the Federal Aid Highways Emergency Relief program of $100 million per emergency incident.\" When arguing in favor of the bill, Rep. Cory Gardner cited the statistics that the flood affected \"two hundred mile-lanes of highway.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Federal aid\nThe shutdown of the United States federal government from October 1\u201317, 2013 stopped federal relief aid funding going to recovery efforts in Colorado. The state of Colorado began paying the National Guard for continuing relief efforts until the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) could reimburse the State government at the end of the shutdown. The state hopes to be reimbursed for at least 75% of the funds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Federal aid\nThe shutdown compromise signed on October 17, 2013 includes funding for Colorado relief efforts, specifically referencing Rep. Gardner's bill H.R. 3174; 113th Congress. The cap typically set at $100 million has been raised to $450 million in light of Colorado's current conditions. It is not uncommon for this cap to be raised for disaster struck areas such as those states hit by Hurricane Sandy or Hurricane Katrina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232727-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado floods, Federal aid, Other aid\nThe American Red Cross, The Salvation Army, Save the Children, the United Way, the Air Land Emergency Resource Team, Boulder Flood Relief, and Helping Pets are among the organizations accepting donations on behalf of flood victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election\nThe Colorado recall election of 2013 was a successful effort to recall two Democratic members of the Colorado Senate following their support of new gun control legislation. Initially four politicians were targeted, but sufficient signatures could only be obtained for State Senate President John Morse and State Senator Angela Giron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election\nDuring the petition drive, national organizations on both the gun rights and gun control sides became involved by providing mailings and donations. Once the petitions were submitted, Morse and Giron challenged the effort in court, but were denied the injunction that they had requested from the court. A further court hearing resulted in the election being conducted in-person rather than by mail, which also led to Giron complaining of voter suppression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election\nIn the election, held on September 10, 2013, both Morse and Giron were recalled by the voters of their districts and replaced with Republicans George Rivera and Bernie Herpin, respectively. It was the first time a state legislator in Colorado had been recalled. In the 2014 Senate elections 13 months later, both Rivera and Herpin were defeated by their Democratic opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Background\nIn early 2013, the Colorado legislature passed a series of gun control bills following the theater shooting in Aurora, Colorado and the Sandy Hook school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. The new laws provided for a ban on magazines holding more than fifteen rounds of ammunition, a universal background check, and a requirement that buyers pay a fee for the background check.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Background\nThe initial recall petitions targeted Senate President John Morse and State Representative Mike McLachlan. Two additional petitions were also filed against Senators Evie Hudak and Angela Giron. All four are members of the Colorado Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Background\nThe recall drive against Morse was spearheaded by the Basic Freedom Defense Fund (BFDF) and the El Paso County Freedom Defense Committee. The recall drive against Giron was led by Pueblo Freedom and Rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Background\nDuring the petition drive, groups supporting Morse accused the firm collecting the signatures of hiring convicted felons and gathering personal information. Recall backers said that Morse's group was misleading the public. In addition, the recall drives brought in support from national groups on both sides of the issue. The National Rifle Association (NRA) supported the recall effort with mailers and donations. National groups opposing the recall included America Votes, believed to be financially supported by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, as well as California billionaire Eli Broad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Submission and certification of petitions\nOn June 3, 2013, BFDF turned in over 16,000 signatures petitioning to recall Morse to the Colorado Secretary of State, Republican Scott Gessler, of which only 7,178 needed to be certified in order to force a recall election. In addition, over 13,000 signatures were turned in to recall Giron, of which 11,285 needed to be certified. Efforts to recall McLachlan failed, collecting only about 8,500 signatures of the 10,587 needed. Likewise, the efforts to recall Hudak also failed, falling short of the 18,962 signatures needed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Submission and certification of petitions\nA group backing Morse alleged that fifty of the signatures on the petitions were forged, including one individual who had been dead for two years. A spokesman for BFDF immediately issued a statement calling for an investigation and stating that if anyone committed fraud the guilty party should be prosecuted \"to the fullest extent of the law.\" The group calling for the recall also alleged that Morse's volunteers were harassing those that signed the petition, requesting that they remove their name from the petition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Submission and certification of petitions, Challenges\nImmediately after the signatures for recalling Morse were certified, he filed a challenge to the petitions. Mark Grueskin, Morse's attorney, said: \"The petitions circulated are as valid as the back of a matchbook. All of the signatures are invalid.\" The recall petition was also certified for the effort against Giron. Both Senators claimed the petitions were invalid because they did not use the explicit language that Morse and Giron claim was required under the state constitution. The initial hearings were before the Secretary of State's Office, which denied the challenges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Submission and certification of petitions, Challenges\nOn July 9, 2013, Morse filed suit in the Denver District Court seeking an injunction to block the recall election. At the same time Secretary of State Gessler filed suit to force Democratic Governor John Hickenlooper to set a date for the recall election. On July 18, 2013, Denver District Court Judge Robert Hyatt issued a preliminary ruling that the recall process must proceed even while Morse and Giron challenged the process in court. Hickenlooper then set the recall election for September 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Campaign\nOnce the election date was set as September 10, national organizations on both sides of the gun-control debate started to weigh in. On the recall, pro-gun rights side was the National Rifle Association and Americans for Prosperity, while on the gun control side was the Mayors Against Illegal Guns and Mayor Bloomberg. Morse went door-to-door in an effort to gain voter support and both sides of the campaigns accused the other side of mud-slinging. Morse supporters were upset about an ad alleging ethical misconduct by Morse, noting that he had been cleared of those allegations. Giron supporters were accused of misrepresenting the issue as a choice on women's rights and abortion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Campaign\nFinancial donations were also an issue. Bloomberg and Broad donated $350,000 and $250,000, respectively, to support the Senators. The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee also spent $250,000 to oppose recall. The NRA spent over $108,000 to support the recall efforts. In total, the Morse and Giron side spent approximately $3,000,000 opposing the recall, while the recall supporters spent about $500,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Replacement candidates\nEarly in the recall process, Republican George Rivera announced his candidacy for Giron's senate seat. Rivera was planning to run against Giron in the 2014 elections but stated he would put his name on the ballot during the recall process. Rivera had to turn in a petition with 1,000 signatures in order to qualify to be on the ballot and turned in 1,500 signatures on July 26. Sonia Negrete Winn, a Democrat, also sought to be on the ballot to replace Giron, but failed to obtain the required signatures to be a candidate. In Morse's district, Republican Bernie Herpin announced his interest in replacing Morse and submitted sufficient signatures to qualify for the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Ballot challenge\nOn August 7, 2013, the Libertarian Party filed a lawsuit stating that they were denied access to have their candidate on the ballot due to a conflict between state law and the state constitution. State law provided for ten days to obtain ballot petition signatures, while the state constitution provided for fifteen days. On August 12, Colorado District Court Judge Robert McGahey ruled that the state constitution's provisions had to be followed, and that prospective candidates had until August 26 to turn in their petitions. The Colorado Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal. The ruling meant that election officials would be unable to conduct the election by mail, as is usual for Colorado, and would have to open up polls for in-person voting. Morse stated that not voting by mail was \"bad for everybody.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Ballot challenge\nOn August 27, 2013, Hickenlooper asked the Colorado Supreme Court to clarify if a voter had to vote for recall in order to vote for a replacement candidate. At the same time, Libertarian Jan Brooks turned in petitions to be on the ballot against Morse while Democrat Richard Anglund announced his write-in candidacy against Giron. On August 28, the Supreme Court ruled that a voter did not have to vote to recall in order to vote for a replacement, but that the Senators could only be recalled by a majority vote. Secretary of State Gessler announced that Brooks did not have sufficient signatures to qualify for the ballot, leaving only Republican opponents on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Polling\nWhen asked \"Will you vote 'yes' or 'no' on the question of whether Angela Giron should be recalled from the office of State Senator?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Results\nMorse conceded on the evening of September 10. Initial poll returns seemed to indicate that Giron would win her recall election. The final votes were 9,131 to recall Morse and 8,812 to keep him, a 1.78% difference. The final results also ousted Giron, 19,451 to 15,376, an 11.7% difference. Giron's recall was more surprising, as the district is 47% Democratic to 23% Republican, and news reports stated that Giron was stunned at the results. Other sources stated that Giron remained defiant. Giron has claimed that the recall was due to voter suppression. Giron noted that \"We were less than two weeks out and we didn't know what the rules were,\" referring to the change from mail-in ballots to in-person voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Election, Results\nWith the recall of Morse and Giron, Herpin and Rivera were elected to the State Senate to replace them, defeating their respective write-in opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Aftermath, Reactions\nGiron and Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz claimed that the recall defeat was due to voter suppression. The Denver Post disputed this, saying that the result wasn't caused by voter suppression but the fact that more people showed up to vote against Giron than to vote for her. Gessler said that the Democrats fared worse where more people turned out. Wasserman Schultz also stated that the money spent by the NRA and the Koch brothers made it impossible for Democrats to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Aftermath, Reactions\nCharles C. W. Cooke, writing in the National Review Online, stated that it was a grassroots effort, triggered by the perception that the two senators were not listening to the concerns of the public. Ashby Jones of The Wall Street Journal viewed it as a major win for the NRA and a \"stinging defeat\" for Mayor Bloomberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Aftermath, Reactions\nReuters journalist Keith Coffman stated that the defeat was a sign that Democrats who control Colorado government had reached too far, not just on gun-control, but in other areas also, such as not considering religious exemptions for same sex adoptions, or same-day voter registration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Aftermath, Polling\nPolling firm Public Policy Polling conducted a poll of Giron's district between September 7 and 9, asking likely voters if they supported the recall of Giron, whether they supported various components of the gun control bill, whether they approved of the NRA and Governor Hickenlooper, and who they would vote for in a hypothetical 2014 gubernatorial election between Hickenlooper and Republican Tom Tancredo, as well as various methodological questions. The results found voters supported recalling Giron by 54% to 42%, with 4% undecided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Aftermath, Polling\nHowever, the firm did not release the poll results before the election. The day after the election, when Giron had been recalled by 12 points, they released the poll and company director Tom Jensen explained why they had not initially done so, citing numerous unusual results. These included the district supporting her recall by such a wide margin, despite having been carried by 20 points by Democratic President Barack Obama in the 2012 election; and voters saying they supported universal background checks by 68% to 27% and being split 47% to 47% on limiting high-capacity ammunition magazines to 15 bullets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Aftermath, Polling\nJensen opined that \"if voters were really making their recall votes based on those two laws, that doesn't point to recalling Giron by a 12 point margin\" and that the NRA had done a \"good job of turning the election more broadly into 'do you support gun rights or are you opposed to them.'\" Their decision not to release the poll before the election caused significant controversy, with some statisticians and journalists criticising them and others supporting them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Aftermath, 2014 elections\nIn the November 2014 Senate elections 13 months later, both Rivera and Herpin were defeated by large margins by their Democratic opponents. Rivera lost to State Representative Leroy Garcia and Herpin lost to State Representative Michael Merrifield, a noted gun control advocate. Rivera lost by 22,814 votes (45.06%) to 27,813 (54.94%) and Herpin lost by 14,978 votes (41.52%) to 18,815 (52.16%). Despite reclaiming the two seats, the Democrats lost their overall majority in the Colorado Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232728-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado recall election, Campaign to recall Evie Hudak; her resignation\nOn October 4, 2013, Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler approved a second petition to recall Colorado State Senator Evie Hudak, also an advocate of gun control; the signature gatherers had 60 days to collect 18,300 or more signatures to force a recall election in Colorado Senate District 19 which encompasses Arvada, Colorado and Westminster, Colorado. Hudak later resigned rather than face recall. Because she resigned, the Democrats were able to appoint a replacement; if she had been recalled, the Republicans could have gained a majority in the state senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires\nIn the summer of 2013, there were several major wildfires in Colorado in the United States. During June and July, record high temperatures and dry conditions fueled the fires all across the state. By July 24, 570 structures had been destroyed and 2 lives were lost. Below is a list of the major fires of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, West Fork Complex fire\nThe West Fork Complex Fire started on June 5, and consisted of three fires, all caused by lightning: the Windy Pass Fire, the West Fork Fire, and the Papoose Fire. The fire grew fast through pine beetle-killed trees, and threatened the town of South Fork only 0.5-mile (0.80\u00a0km) away. The fire burned only one structure, and reached 109,615 acres as of July 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Ox Cart fire\nOn June 8, the Ox Cart fire began from lightning 9 miles north of Villa Grove in Saguache County. No structures were burned in the fire, which scorched 1,152 acres. As of July 3, it was 100% contained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Big Meadows fire\nThe Big Meadows Fire started on June 10, about five miles north of Grand Lake, in Rocky Mountain National Park. The fire was caused by a lightning strike and was contained at 653 acres on June 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Royal Gorge fire\nA fire started one mile west of Ca\u00f1on City near the Royal Gorge Park, on June 11. The same day, the high winds caused the fire to jump the gorge into the park, resulting in the loss of 48 structures. The famous Royal Gorge Bridge suffered minor damage; only 32 of the planks on the deck were burned. During the fire, 905 inmates from the Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility were evacuated. 3,218 acres were burned as of June 17, and the cause remains unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Black Forest fire\nThe same day as the Royal Gorge Fire, a fire was sparked near Shoup Road and Darr Drive in Black Forest. The fire quickly grew to 8,000 acres (3,200\u00a0ha; 13\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) acres by the next day. It destroyed 511 homes, and took the lives of two people. The fire eventually grew to 14,280 acres (5,780\u00a0ha; 22.31\u00a0sq\u00a0mi), and was fully contained by June 20. The fire is currently the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history, surpassing the 2012 Waldo Canyon Fire, which destroyed 346 homes. The exact cause of the blaze is currently under investigation, but it is believed to be started by a human.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, East Peak fire\nThe East Peak Fire began near the East Spanish Peak, 10 miles (16\u00a0km) southwest of Walsenburg, in Huerfano County. The town of Walsenburg was put on pre-evacuation while the fire spread out of control after June 19. Eleven structures were destroyed, and the fire was contained at 13,572 acres (5,492\u00a0ha; 21.206\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) by July 4. The blaze was caused by lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Ward Gulch fire\nThe Ward Gulch Fire was caused by a lightning strike 3 miles north of Rifle Gap Reservoir on June 14. The fire grew to 485 acres (196\u00a0ha; 0.758\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) and was extinguished by June 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Lime Gulch fire\nThe Lime Gulch Fire started on June 18 near Chair Rock, for which it was originally named, in Jefferson County near Buffalo Creek. The fire burned over the 2012 Lower North Fork burn scar. It was contained on June 23, and burned 511 acres (207\u00a0ha; 0.798\u00a0sq\u00a0mi). The Lime Gulch Fire was started by lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Wild Rose fire\nThe Wild Rose fire was caused by lightning, 21 miles south of Rangley on June 19. The fire burned 1,067 acres (432\u00a0ha; 1.667\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) and was fully contained on June 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, East Tschuddi fire\nOn July 20, a lightning strike 20 miles (32\u00a0km) northwest of Meeker sparked the East Tschuddi Fire in Rio Blanco County. It burned 2,009 acres (813\u00a0ha; 3.139\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) acres, and was 90% contained by July 27. No homes were threatened by the fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Citadel fire\nAlso northwest of Meeker, in Moffat County, the Citadel Fire was caused by a lightning strike on July 21. The fire burned 1,851 acres (749\u00a0ha; 2.892\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) acres and was 90% contained as of July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232729-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Colorado wildfires, Red Canyon Fire\nThe Red Canyon fire started August 12 a couple miles south of Glenwood Springs. The cause is yet to be determined and lightning is suspected. It burned 390 acres (160\u00a0ha; 0.61\u00a0sq\u00a0mi) and was 100% contained by August 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232730-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbia Lions baseball team\nThe 2013 Columbia Lions baseball team represents Columbia University in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Lions play their home games at Robertson Field at Satow Stadium at the northern tip of Manhattan in New York, New York. The team is coached by Brett Boretti, leading his eighth season at Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232730-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbia Lions baseball team\nThe Lions won the Lou Gehrig Division, then swept Dartmouth in the 2013 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series to claim the Lions' 11th Ivy League crown, and first since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232731-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbia Lions football team\nThe 2013 Columbia Lions football team represented Columbia University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second year head coach Pete Mangurian and played their home games at Robert K. Kraft Field at Lawrence A. Wien Stadium. They were a member of the Ivy League. They finished with a record of 0\u201310 overall, 0\u20137 in Ivy League play for a last place finish. This was the sixth time in school history that the Columbia Lions went winless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232732-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Crew season\nThe 2013 Columbus Crew season was the club's eighteenth season of existence, and their eighteenth season in Major League Soccer, the top tier of the American and Canadian soccer pyramids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232732-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Crew season, Roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Squad correct as of January 22, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232732-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Crew season, Competitions, MLS, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232732-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Crew season, Competitions, MLS, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232732-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Crew season, Competitions, MLS, Results summary\nLast updated: 4 November 2013Source: 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232732-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Crew season, Competitions, MLS, Match results\nAgust\u00edn Viana \u00a021'Josh Williams \u00a026'Danny O'Rourke \u00a045'Federico Higua\u00edn \u00a045+1'\u00a0(pen.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232732-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Crew season, Competitions, MLS Cup Playoffs\nThe Columbus Crew failed to qualify for the playoffs in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232733-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Lions season\nThe 2013 Columbus Lions season was the seventh season for the professional indoor football franchise and their second in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). The Lions were one of seven teams that competed in the PIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232733-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Lions season\nThe team played their home games under head coach Jason Gibson at the Columbus Civic Center in Columbus, Georgia. The Lions earned a 4\u20138 record, placing sixth in the league, failing to qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232733-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Columbus Lions season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated July 1, 201319 Active, 1 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232734-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Comerica Bank Challenger\nThe 2013 Comerica Bank Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Aptos, United States between 5 and 11 August July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232734-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Comerica Bank Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232734-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Comerica Bank Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players got into the singles main draw via Special Exempt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232734-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Comerica Bank Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players got into the singles main draw via Lucky Loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232735-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Comerica Bank Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nRik De Voest and John Peers were the defending champions, but chose not to compete. Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram defeated Chris Guccione and Matt Reid 6\u20133, 6\u20137(6\u20138), [10\u20132].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232736-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Comerica Bank Challenger \u2013 Singles\nSteve Johnson was the defending champion, but lost to Donald Young in the first round. Bradley Klahn won the title over Dan Evans 3\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting\nThe 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM; /\u02c8t\u0283\u0252\u0261\u0259m/) was the 23rd Meeting of the Heads of Government of the Commonwealth of Nations. It was held in Colombo, Sri Lanka, from 15 to 17 November 2013. Commonwealth leaders agreed on Sri Lanka as the 2013 host for the meeting when they met in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, in 2009. Sri Lanka, which was originally slated to host the summit in 2011, was accused of committing atrocities during the Sri Lankan civil war and the summit was instead held in Perth, Australia; Colombo was given the 2013 summit instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting\nThe leaders of Canada, Mauritius, and India boycotted the summit, citing alleged human rights violations by Sri Lanka against its Tamil minority. Protests were also banned during the summit. President Mahinda Rajapaksa summarised the summit's events as: \"Issues covered in the communique include development, political values, global threats, challenges and Commonwealth cooperation.\" However, the meeting was overshadowed by controversy over Sri Lanka's human rights record and the alleged war crimes during the final stages of the civil war. This was the first time in 40 years that the Head of the Commonwealth, Queen Elizabeth II, was not present at the CHOGM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Background\nAt the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2007 in Kampala, Uganda, Commonwealth leaders agreed on Sri Lanka as the host for the 2011 meeting. However, during the final stages of the Sri Lankan civil war the government was accused of committing war crimes, and hence at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2009 in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago it was decided that the 2011 meeting would be held in Perth, Australia whilst Sri Lanka would host the 2013 meeting. At the 2011 meeting Commonwealth leaders reaffirmed that the 2013 meeting would be held in Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Background\nIn May 2013, Buckingham Palace announced that Queen Elizabeth II would not be attending the meeting. Charles, Prince of Wales, would be attending in the 87-year-old monarch's place, as she has curtailed her overseas visits due to age.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Organisation, Venues\nAmongst the venues, an unnamed branch of the Sri Lankan government, said that the main summit venue, in the capital, Colombo - Bandaranaike Memorial International Conference Hall - is an \"outright gift from the Government and People of the People's Republic of China.\" The opening ceremony was held at Colombo's Nelum Pokuna Mahinda Rajapaksa Theatre. The leaders' retreat was at Waters Edge in the Sri Jayawardenapura Kotte suburb of the capital. Other venues included the International Convention Centre, Hambantota; Chaya Tranz, Hikkaduwa; and the Cinnamon Lakeside Hotel, Colombo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Official programme and agenda\nThe official programme outline a week of activities including three days of meetings for heads of government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions\nBritish Prime Minister David Cameron reiterated calls for an independent investigation into the alleged war crimes. \"There needs to be proper inquiries into what happened at the end of the war, there needs to be proper human rights, democracy for the Tamil minority in that country\" Cameron stated. He stated that if this investigation wasn't completed by March 2014 he would press for an independent international inquiry. This followed a visit to Jaffna Peninsula, the first visit to northern Sri Lanka by a foreign leader. Cameron was mobbed by demonstrators, mostly women, seeking his assistance in tracing missing relatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions\nCameron also said that he would have \"tough conversations\" with Rajapaksa. In response to Cameron's pledge to push for a UN-led investigation into the alleged war crimes unless Sri Lanka credibly addressed human rights concerns by March 2014, Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapakse said: \"Why should we have an international inquiry? We will object to it ... Definitely, we are not going to allow it.\" The Defence Secretary and another sibling of the President, Gotabhaya Rajapakse in a response, stated that \"there were other countries such as Russia, China and Cuba at the UNHRC who would not support it.\" The defence minister also went on record to proclaim that the British Premier was 'siding' with the 'LTTE rump', and was mistakenly thinking that Sri Lanka was still a British colony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions\nIn response to questions about the Government's use of torture, Prime Minister Tony Abbott told reporters that while his government \"deplores the use of torture we accept that sometimes in difficult circumstances difficult things happen\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions\nThe chair of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group briefed heads of government on the electoral crisis in the Maldives. The CMAG had, earlier in November, expressed its \"deep disappointment\" that the presidential election process had not concluded prior to the expiration of the president's term in office on 11 November 2013. The CHOGM was expected to discuss how to deal with the situation on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions\nCanada and Australia blocked a proposal to establish a climate change fund, the Commonwealth Climate Change Risk Fund, named the Capital Green Fund, which would have assisted poorer countries dealing with the impact of global warming. The hereditary issue of leading the Commonwealth, however, did not appear to have been discussed formally and was not mentioned in the meeting's final communique.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions\nIn a speech given at a dinner held in honour of the government leaders, Prince Charles spoke in what The Daily Telegraph described as \"a pitch for himself as the Queen's eventual successor as head of the organisation.\" He spoke of his personal attachment to the Commonwealth: \"I feel very much part of the family. It's in my blood, I'm afraid. I have been brought up in the family and I think that what we are renewing here are those family ties, those family associations and family values. I feel proud and enormously privileged to be part of it all.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions, Outcomes\nMalta was chosen as the host of CHOGM 2015. CHOGM 2018 will be held in Vanuatu and CHOGM 2020 will be held in Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions, Outcomes\nThe final communique was issued as the Colombo Declaration on Sustainable, Inclusive and Equitable Development and agreed that eradicating poverty and climate change are major challenges for all countries. Other agreements were made on the necessity for steps to tackle high debt and poverty. Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa said the meetings were characterised by \"fruitful discussions...I am happy with the outcome we have reached at this CHOGM.\" However, he also warned against an ultimatum to address war crimes allegation by March 2014 saying he would not be pushed \"into a corner.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Summit, Discussions, Outcomes\nOther discussions included the \"core values\" of democracy, rule of law, human rights, freedom of expression and religion, women's rights, ridding corruption, transparency, natural resource management and taxation. It also mentioned the issues of small states, including Small Island Developing States; other global issues such as non-state terrorism, the Arms Trade Treaty and arms control, sexual violence in conflict, education, health and general social development. Specifically, the issues of Fiji, Cyprus, Belize, Guyana and The Gambia were discussed. Wider issues of building partnership and networks within the Commonwealth were also discussed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nThere were significant calls from many bodies not to host the summit in Sri Lanka and to boycott the event, because of the country's alleged poor human rights record and reported atrocities against the Tamil population in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nPrime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper stated that he would not attend the meeting as a protest at Sri Lanka's alleged failure to improve its human rights record, as he said he would at the previous CHOGM; the Canadian Prime Minister had previously walked out of the 2011 summit during its last day when Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa was invited to speak. It was announced that Parliamentary Secretary for the Minister of Foreign Affairs Deepak Obhrai would represent Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nHarper further elaborated that Canada might cease its contributions to the funding of the Commonwealth should no action be taken by the organisation against Sri Lanka; he cited the impeachment of the country's chief justice and the execution and imprisonment of journalists and political opponents of President Mahinda Rajapaksa. At the time, Senator Hugh Segal, Canada's envoy to the Commonwealth, claimed that the Commonwealth Secretariat was acting \"as a 'shill'\" for Sri Lanka's government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nIn October 2013, the Legislative Assembly of Tamil Nadu passed a unanimous resolution demanding that the Indian government boycott the meeting and also sought the temporary suspension of Sri Lanka from the Commonwealth until Sri Lanka takes steps to grant what they call similar rights to Tamils as those enjoyed by Sinhalese. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced his decision not to participate in the event due to pressure from the regional Tamil party regarding Sri Lanka's alleged human rights record. External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid, who represented India at the summit in the prime minister's place, said: \"The position we have taken is, it is not a boycott.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nThe Prime Minister of Mauritius, Navin Ramgoolam, stated that he would not attend the meeting as a protest at Sri Lanka's alleged failure to improve its human rights record and was thus withdrawing as the host of CHOGM 2015 as protocol would have required him to attend the summit in order to personally invite other member states. \"I have made it perfectly clear that human rights are more important than hosting a Commonwealth summit, regardless of its importance.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nIn the United Kingdom, the Foreign Affairs Select Committee called on that country's prime minister, David Cameron, not to attend the meeting in light of Sri Lanka's human rights record. Cameron also expressed concern about human rights issues in the country. However, Cameron later affirmed that he would attend. The Channel 4 documentary No Fire Zone, which presented evidence of alleged war crimes by the Sri Lanka Armed Forces, had resulted in increased calls for a boycott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nIn Malaysia, Lim Guan Eng, Chief Minister of the state of Penang, and the Secretary General of the Democratic Action Party called on the Malaysian government to boycott the summit as a protest against alleged human violations committed by the island republic against ethnic Tamils there. However, the Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak rejected that and came to Colombo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nThe New Zealand Green Party also placed similar calls for a boycott and for the replacement of Mahinda Rajapaksa as the Commonwealth Chairperson-in-office for the next two years. However New Zealand Prime minister attended the meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Boycott\nSimilar views were floated by South African anti-Apartheid campaigner and Nobel laureate archbishop Desmond Tutu who suggested that the boycott of the CHOGM could be \"one of the screws that the world has to apply to help the Tamil population.\" but South African President Jacob Zuma attended the meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Restrictions on media\nPrior to the start of the meeting the Sri Lankan government had given assurances that foreign media would be given free and full access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Restrictions on media\nA team from Channel 4 News, which had broadcast several video clips of Sri Lankan troops allegedly committing atrocities during the civil war, arrived at Bandaranaike International Airport on 11 November 2013 and were met by a group of pro-government demonstrators, despite a ban on demonstrations during CHOGM. The Channel 4 News claimed that they were followed by state intelligence operatives throughout their visit to Sri Lanka. On 13 November 2013 the Channel 4 News team tried to get to Kilinochchi in northern Sri Lanka by train but a group of pro-government demonstrators blocked the railway line near Anuradhapura.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Restrictions on media\nChannel 4 News claimed that they had been followed on to the train by state intelligence operatives. The team were forced into a van by police and driven back to Colombo. At 6.30am on 17 November 2013 six immigration officials visited the Channel 4 News crew at their hotel and warned them against violating the conditions laid down in their visas. Channel 4 News left Sri Lanka later on 17 November 2013, earlier than planned, blaming intimidation and surveillance by Sri Lankan security forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Restrictions on media\nA BBC News crew trying to film President Rajapaksa at a CHOGM event on 14 November 2013 were physically restrained by security officials. An Agence France-Presse trying to work in Mullaitivu District on 18 November 2013 were prevented from doing so by the military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Restrictions on protests\nIn October 2013 it was reported that the government was planning to ban all protests, marches and other demonstrations for three weeks in November, coinciding with CHOGM. The government denied the reports. However, on 14 November 2013 the police obtained a court order preventing any protests during CHOGM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Restrictions on protests\nA group of Tamils trying to travel to Colombo on 13 November 2013 to protest about disappeared relatives were prevented from doing so by the Sri Lankan military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Controversy, Restrictions on travel\nThe Civil Air Services Authority suspended all FitsAir flights to Jaffna Airport between 10 and 18 November 2013, allegedly to restrict foreign access to the north of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232737-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Participants\nOf the 53 Commonwealth members, only 27 heads of government/state (nine presidents, 16 prime ministers, one sultan and one governor general) attended the meeting, the lowest in decades. 22 other members sent other delegates such as foreign ministers, vice-presidents, deputy prime ministers and high commissioners. Three members - Grenada, Kiribati and Maldives - did not attend and Fiji was suspended from the Commonwealth. The participants were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232738-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup\n2013 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup was the 21st annual Commonwealth of Independent States Cup since its establishment in 1993. It was hosted in Saint Petersburg, Russia between 18 and 27 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232738-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup\nSaint Petersburg hosted the event for the fourth time, with all matches being held in a single venue (Saint Petersburg Sports and Concert Complex). All participating nations were represented by their youth (U20/U21) national teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232738-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup, Format\nTwelve teams were divided into three groups of four. The top two of each group qualified automatically for a play-off along with the two best third placed teams. The other third placed team along with the three bottom participants out of each group proceed to the play-off which would place its participants 9th through 12th places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232738-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup, Format\nThe winners of the quarter finals advanced further into semi-finals, while the other four less fortunate entered play-off for the fifth place. Next the winners of the semi-finals advanced to the final, while the other two participants played for the third place. Simultaneously the winners of the play-off for the fifth place continued to the fifth place match, while the other two played for the seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232738-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup, Participants\nThe following 12 teams, shown with age of youth national team, took part in the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232739-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Compagnie Africaine d'Aviation Fokker 50 crash\nOn 4 March 2013, a Fokker 50 operated by Compagnie Africaine d'Aviation on a domestic cargo flight from Lodja to Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, crashed in poor weather on approach to Goma Airport. There were nine people on board, of which six were killed. No fatalities were reported on the ground, despite the aircraft crashing into a populated area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232739-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Compagnie Africaine d'Aviation Fokker 50 crash, Accident\nThe aircraft was two minutes from touching down at Goma airport on a cargo service from Lodja Airport, 640 kilometres (400\u00a0mi) west of Goma. At 17:55 local time, the aircraft crashed in an empty lot in the middle of the city. No distress calls were made prior to the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232739-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Compagnie Africaine d'Aviation Fokker 50 crash, Accident\nThere were nine people on board the aircraft, including six airline employees\u2014a crew of five and a security guard\u2014and three passengers. All six employees were killed in the accident. Except for the pilot, a 46-year-old Russian national named Alexander Bazhenov, the dead were all from the Congo. The Russian consul to the Democratic Republic of the Congo confirmed that a Russian national was on board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232739-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Compagnie Africaine d'Aviation Fokker 50 crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft involved in the accident was a twin-turboprop Fokker 50, powered by two Pratt & Whitney Canada PW125B engines; it first flew in 1992 with registration PH-LXJ. Having serial number 20270, it was delivered to AirUK in 1994 and re-registered G-UKTE. This registration was kept following the rebranding of Air UK to KLM uk in 1998. KLM Cityhopper re-registered the aircraft as PH-LXJ in 2003, and returned it to the lessor in 2010. In March of the same year, it was re-registered 9Q-CBD and delivered to Compagnie Africaine d'Aviation. The aircraft was 20 years old at the time of the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232739-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Compagnie Africaine d'Aviation Fokker 50 crash, Aftermath\nFollowing the crash, the Ministry of Transport of the Democratic Republic of the Congo announced a re-certification of all airlines having an operator's certificate issued in the country that were subject to a ban in the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232740-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference League South\nThe 2013 Conference League South was the first season under the new name. Founded in 2013 as a result of the restructuring of the game below the professional level. The Rugby League Conference which was broken up in 2011 was replaced for one season in 2012 by the National Conference League Division 3 which was placed under the banner of the National Conference League which had moved from winter to summer. Bristol Sonics, St Albans Centurions and Nottingham Outlaws moved across from National Conference League Division 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232740-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Conference League South\nThe top two from Midlands Rugby League Premier Division, Northampton Demons as champions and Leicester Storm as runners-up moved up and a new club Sheffield Hallam Eagles, a joint venture set up by Sheffield Eagles and Sheffield Hallam University made up the 6 team competition. The teams would play each other three times during the regular season with the top four contesting the play-offs. The season ran from April to August", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final\nThe 2013 Conference Premier play-off Final, known as the 2013 Blue Square Bet Premier play-off Final for sponsorship purposes, was a football match between Wrexham and Newport County on 5 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium in London. It was the eleventh Conference Premier play-off Final and the first ever Wembley Final to feature two teams from Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final\nAfter not having played in Wembley for 149 years the match represented the second time in the 2012\u201313 season for Wrexham who reached the final with a 5\u20132 aggregate win over Kidderminster Harriers following their appearance in the 2013 FA Trophy Final. The final also represented Newport County's second trip to Wembley in less than a year having played in the 2012 FA Trophy Final. Newport had beaten Grimsby Town 2\u20130 over two legs to reach the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final\nNewport County won the match 2\u20130 to secure promotion to League Two, re-entering the Football League after a 25-year absence. It was the first time in Conference history that a team had not conceded a single goal in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final\nWhereas the players in the Wrexham team were new to the play-off final, the County team had seven players with previous play-off final experience: Alan Julian had featured for Stevenage Borough in the 2005 final. It was the second successive final for Aaron O'Connor who had featured for Luton Town in the 2012 final. Danny Crow had featured in both the 2009 final for Cambridge United and the 2011 final for Luton Town. It was the fourth final for Robbie Willmott who had featured for Cambridge United in 2009 and Luton Town in the 2011 and 2012 finals. Winning the final for a second time were Ismail Yakubu, Lee Minshull and Christian Jolley who were all part of the victorious Wimbledon team in the 2011 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final, Match, Summary\nBoth teams started the game nervously with Wrexham having the better of the opening exchanges. On 15 minutes Brett Ormerod saw an effort at goal dragged wide of the near post. A cross from Johnny Hunt in the 21st minute was met by Ormerod but his shot went over the bar. Towards the end of the first half Newport gained momentum with Christian Jolley's curled shot just wide of goal. The score remained 0\u20130 at half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final, Match, Summary\nIn the second half Wrexham stepped up their game and nearly took the lead in the 59th minute when an initial shot from Andy Morrell was palmed by Lenny Pidgeley into the path of Ormerod who blasted over from six yards. Shortly afterwards Newport's Danny Crow was replaced with their leading goalscorer Aaron O'Connor. Wrexham's player-manager Morrell then replaced himself with Adrian Cieslewicz. As the game wore on both teams made further substitutions with Newport's Michael Flynn making way for Scott Donnelly in the 74th minute and Wrexham's Glen Little coming on for captain Dean Keates in the 80th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final, Match, Summary\nAs the game looked certain to go into extra time Jolley headed a warning shot just wide of goal in the 83rd minute. Wrexham failed to heed the warning and in the 86th minute a long up-field pass from Andy Sandell was headed backwards by Wrexham's David Artell into the path of Jolley who made no mistake in lifting it over the on-rushing Chris Maxwell and into the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232741-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference Premier play-off Final, Match, Summary\nWrexham replaced Jay Harris with Dele Adebola in the 89th minute and pushed every player up front, including goalkeeper Maxwell. They managed to force a number of corners in injury time but were caught on the break by Jolley who fed O'Connor. His initial left-footed shot was saved but he made no mistake with his right-footed follow-up to make the score 2\u20130 to County in the 4th minute of injury time. Two minutes later and the game was over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232742-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 26 at Reckling Park in Houston, Texas. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Conference USA for college baseball. Rice won their fifth tournament championship and claimed the league's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This is the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2012\u201313 academic year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232742-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nThe tournament was established in 1996, Conference USA's first season of play. Entering the event, Tulane has won the most championships, with five. Among current teams, only Marshall and Memphis have never won a title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232742-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nThis was to be the third year of a three-year contract placing the event at Trustmark Park, home of an Atlanta Braves Class-AA affiliate in Pearl, Mississippi, a suburb of Jackson, Mississippi. However, the venue opted out of the contract, leaving Conference USA seeking a new home for the 2013 tournament. The conference announced that the tournament would instead be held at Reckling Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232742-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe tournament continued the round-robin tournament format introduced in 2010. The top eight finishers from the regular season were seeded one through eight and divided into two pools. The winners of each pool then met in a single championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232742-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nChristian Stringer was named Tournament MVP. Stringer was an infielder for Rice who was 7\u201314 in the tournament for a .500 average with one RBI, one Stolen Base, and five runs scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game\nThe 2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, which determined the 2013 football champion of Conference USA (C-USA), was played at noon Eastern Standard Time (11 am local time and 1700 UTC) on December 7 at Rice Stadium in Houston. The game featured the winners of the conference's East division, the Marshall Thundering Herd, and the winners of the West division, the Rice Owls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game\nUnder C-USA rules, the championship game would be played at the home stadium of the team with the best record in conference play. Since Marshall and Rice both finished with 7\u20131 records in conference play, and did not play one another in the regular season, the site was chosen based on the BCS rankings on December 1. Although only 25 teams are explicitly ranked, the ranking formula can be used to determine the relative rankings of any two teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision. Accordingly, Rice received home-field advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game\nRice represented C-USA in the 2013 Liberty Bowl on December 31 in Memphis, Tennessee after defeating Marshall by 17 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, History\nIn the 2012 Championship Game Tulsa defeated former conference member UCF (University of Central Florida) in overtime, 33\u201327 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, History\nAfter the 2013 Conference USA realignment, C-USA added six new members for the 2013 season after losing four members, including UCF, to the American Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, History\nAfter the 2013 season, the ninth C-USA championship game was played in Houston, Texas for the third time since 2011, when the Houston Cougars hosted the Southern Miss Golden Eagles at Robertson Stadium. It was the first time that Rice Stadium hosted the Championship game series after Rice became the winner of the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Teams, West Division Champions\nRice came into the championship with a non\u2013conference record of 2\u20132 after losing to Texas A&M and former C-USA member Houston and beating Kansas and New Mexico State. Rice was second in the West Division behind Tulane until Rice lost to North Texas, falling into third place. Tulane lost their two conference games in November, which moved Rice back up to second behind North Texas, until North Texas lost to UTSA. Rice then became ranked first in the division. At the end of the regular 2013 season, Rice had to defeat Tulane in order to be crowned the winners of the West Division, or Tulane or UTSA would have been crowned winners of the division. Rice defeated Tulane 17\u201313 to win the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Teams, West Division Champions\nThis was Rice's first appearance in Conference USA Championship series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Teams, East Division Champions\nMarshall came into the championship with a non\u2013conference record of 2\u20132 after losing to Ohio and Virginia Tech and beating Miami(OH) and Gardner\u2013Webb. Marshall was behind East Carolina in second in the East Division standings until East Carolina lost to Tulane, moving Marshall up to first in the standings. Marshall then lost a close game to Middle Tennessee 49\u201351, which dropped Marshall behind East Carolina for the rest of the season until the East Carolina\u2013Marshall game in late November. In order for Marshall to be crowned the winners of the East Division, Marshall. Marshall beat East Carolina 59\u201328 to win the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232743-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Teams, East Division Champions\nThis was Marshall's first appearance in the Conference USA Championship series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232744-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament was held at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma from March 13-16, 2013. Memphis was slated to host the 2013 edition but the conference moved it to Tulsa in order to keep Memphis from having home-court advantage during their final appearance in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232744-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 tournament was the last to feature participation from Memphis, Houston, and SMU, as the three schools joined the American Athletic Conference on July 1, 2013. The winner of the tournament will receive the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. UCF would also have been participating in the tournament for the last time, but was banned due to sanctions handed down by the NCAA in August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232745-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament was the nineteenth edition of the Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the Conference USA champion and guaranteed representative into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The tournament was hosted by the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and the games were played at Transamerica Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by BHGbot (talk | contribs) at 08:27, 15 June 2020 (WP:BHGbot 6 (List 4): fixed sort key; WP:GENFIXES). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season\nThe 2013 Conference USA football season is an NCAA football season that was played from August 2013 through January 2014. The 2013 football season marked the 19th season of the conference's existence and 18th of football competition; although C-USA was established in 1995, it did not begin football competition until 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, Previous season\nTulsa won the conference championship for the second time, defeating former members Central Florida Knights 33\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, 2013 season\nConference USA added several new members this season after losing four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, 2013 season\nIn preseason polls, Tulsa was projected to be top of the 2013 season followed by East Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, 2013 season, East Division\nProjected as the winner of the East Division, East Carolina lost its first conference game of the season to Tulane in triple overtime, 36-33. Marshall then topped the standings until they lost 51-49 to new member Middle Tennessee, which returned East Carolina to the top spot. Until the East Carolina\u2013Marshall game at the end of the season, East Carolina was number one followed by Marshall. Whoever ended up winning the game would then be crowned winners of the East Division. Marshall defeated East Carolina 59\u201328 to earn the division title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, 2013 season, West Division\nAs Tulsa was projected to be number one in conference, the team lost their first conference play against Rice in overtime bringing Tulane on top of the western division standings. Tulane became up-top with a conference record of 4\u20130 after close wins against North Texas, East Carolina, and Tulsa. Tulane then lost their first conference game of the season to Florida Atlantic in early November bringing new member North Texas to the top of the division after North Texas defeated Rice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, 2013 season, West Division\nProjected in being last in the division, UTSA defeated Tulane and North Texas in November, which brought UTSA second in the standings after Rice being brought up to first. At the end of the season, Rice had to defeat Tulane in order to be crown the winners of the west division or Tulane or UTSA would have then been crowned winners of the division. Rice defeated Tulane 17\u201313 and crowned winners of the West Division for the first time and their first appearance in the championship game as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, 2013 season, Championship Game\nAfter the 2013 season, the ninth C-USA championship game was played in Houston, Texas, for the third time since 2011, when former member Houston Cougars hosted the Southern Miss Golden Eagles at Robertson Stadium. It was the first time that Rice Stadium would host the Championship game series after Rice won the West Division. Both Rice and Marshall enter the game with 7-1 conference records. Rice was crowned Conference USA Champion for the first time ever after defeating Marshall by 17\u2013points. Rice represented the conference in the 2013 Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tennessee against the Mississippi State Bulldogs, a 44-7 loss for Rice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, 2013 season, Bowl season\nEight teams earned bowl eligibility during the season, but UTSA is still transiting into the FBS level and will not be eligible for bowl games until after the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, Membership\nHouston, Memphis, SMU and UCF left Conference USA, and joined the American Athletic Conference, the football-sponsoring offshoot of the original Big East, on July 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, Membership\nLouisiana Tech and UTSA joined C-USA from the WAC. Florida Atlantic, FIU, Middle Tennessee, and North Texas joined C-USA from the Sun Belt. Old Dominion, which had moved five of its sports from its former home of the Colonial Athletic Association to C-USA for the 2012\u201313 school year, moved the rest of its athletic program to C-USA. ODU had an established FCS program that played as an FCS independent in 2013, joined C-USA football as a provisional FBS member in 2014, and became fully bowl-eligible in 2015. Charlotte, which was starting a football team this season, was initially an FCS independent before becoming a provisional FBS member in 2014 and a C-USA football member in 2015. The 49ers joined from the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232746-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA football season, Membership\nAfter the 2013 football season East Carolina, Tulane, and Tulsa moved to The American on July 1, 2014, at the start of the 2014 football season. On the same day, Western Kentucky joined C-USA from the Sun Belt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232747-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Conference USA men's soccer season was the 19th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The season marked the arrival of the Charlotte 49ers from the Atlantic 10 Conference, the Florida Atlantic Owls from the Mid-American Conference, the New Mexico Lobos from the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation, and the Old Dominion Monarchs from the Colonial Athletic Association. It was also be the last C-USA season for the Tulsa Golden Hurricane, which joined join the American Athletic Conference in July 2014. The 2013 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament was held November 13\u201317 at Transamerica Field in Charlotte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232747-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season champions were the SMU Mustangs, who left the conference to join The American. The defending tournament champions were the Tulsa Golden Hurricane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232747-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Conference USA men's soccer season, C-USA Tournament\nThe format for the 2013 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament was announced in the Fall of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232748-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Congo Premier League\nCongo Premier League is the top division of the Congolese Football Federation. The competition was created in 1961. A total of 18 teams will contest the league in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232749-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Connacht Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Connacht Senior Football Championship was that year's installment of the annual Connacht Senior Football Championship held under the auspices of the Connacht GAA. It was won by Mayo who defeated London in a final, which, historically, was the Exiles' first time to reach a provincial decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232749-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Connacht Senior Football Championship\nLondon's appearance in the Connacht final followed a remarkable turn of events. Having not won a Connacht championship match since 1977, they first overcame Sligo in their quarter-final meeting. They then secured a draw against Leitrim in the semi-final in Carrick-on-Shannon before winning the replay in Roscommon. Following that victory and with a first ever Connacht final ahead of them, the city's mayor Boris Johnson sent \u201cHuge congratulations to the London team as they continue on with their historic march towards this year's Connacht Senior Football Championship Final. Regardless of the result against Mayo, London can be proud of their mightily impressive achievements this year. They travel to Castlebar on their momentous quest for victory with best wishes from me and all London fans. Go London!\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232749-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Connacht Senior Football Championship\nMayo, on the other hand, had contested the previous year's All-Ireland Final and were extremely convincing on their march to the final. They humiliated their traditional rivals Galway in the quarter-finals, beating them comfortably in their own grounds. Galway had two players sent off and the game ended 4-16 to 0-11. Their next match saw Mayo face Roscommon in the semi-finals, a team who had run them close in the 2011 Connacht final two years earlier. This year, however, Mayo were winners by a much greater margin, beating them 0-21 to 0-09 in McHale Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232749-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Connacht Senior Football Championship\nIn the end Mayo proved too much for London, winning the J. J. Nestor Cup, and automatically advanced to the quarter-final stage of the All-Ireland. This was Mayo's 45th Connacht title, and saw them overtake Galway on 44. They progressed to the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final. London entered the final round of the All-Ireland Qualifiers and headed to Croke Park for the first time, where they lost to Cavan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232750-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Connecticut Sun season\nThe 2013 WNBA season was the 15th season for the Connecticut Sun franchise in the Women's National Basketball Association, and their 11th since moving to Connecticut from Orlando.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232750-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Connecticut Sun season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Dream's selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji\nFiji's fourth constitution was signed into law by President Ratu Epeli Nailatikau on September 6, 2013, coming into effect immediately. It is the first to eliminate race-based electoral rolls, race-based seat quotas, district-based representation, the unelected upper chamber, and the role of the hereditary Council of Chiefs. It vests sole legislative authority in a single-chamber, 50-seat, at-large Parliament, to be first convened following general elections in 2014. It is also the first ever to grant the right to multiple citizenship (in effect since 2009 by decree, on abrogation of the 1997 constitution), and lowers the voting age to 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Background\nFiji's first constitution, implemented in 1970 at the time of independence from the UK, contained negotiated provisions to enshrine the political supremacy of the minority indigenous population. When an Indo-Fijian dominated government was elected despite these safeguards, the 1987 Fijian coups d'\u00e9tat took place, resulting in even tighter measures in the 1990 constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Background\nWidespread Indo-Fijian dissent, coupled with a population shift back to an indigenous majority, prompted a more inclusive approach in the 1997 constitution. This was followed by the election of the first Indo-Fijian Prime Minister, and the violent, failed civilian coup of 2000. The 2013 constitution gave Indo-Fijians equal status in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Rationale\nThe 2000 coup was ended by military intervention. Fifteen people died. Power was handed over to a civilian administration, which subsequently won the 2001 elections \u2014 depending for its majority on elements that had been supportive of the coup \u2014 and granted early release to several conspirators who had been imprisoned. It also proposed legislation that would have extended amnesty to those involved (the Reconciliation, Tolerance, and Unity Bill).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Rationale\nThis angered the head of the Republic of Fiji Military Forces, Frank Bainimarama, who spoke out against the government, formally demanded a reversal, withstood an attempt to replace him, and eventually launched his own bloodless coup in December 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Rationale\nAs Prime Minister, Bainimarama declared that the race-based electoral system \u2014 which he characterized as insulating the well-connected not only from political consequences but from justice and the law \u2014 had to be reformed before new elections were held. After months of international pressure, he announced elections for 2009, but then reversed himself, saying that a whole new system (a new census, a new voter's list, and a new constitution) would need to be established to prevent a return to the \"coup culture.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Rationale\nIn 2008, the government-appointed National Council for Building a Better Fiji released the People's Charter for Change, Peace and Progress, which established guidelines for drafting a new constitution, and in 2012 public hearings began across the country to solicit input from the community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Criticism\nOriginal draft author Yash Ghai has publicly disagreed with changes in the final document, including the removal of regional representation, maintaining that it favors larger political parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232751-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Constitution of Fiji, Criticism\nAccording to an article published in The Economist by an uncredited writer in Wellington, New Zealand, despite its electoral success, the FijiFirst government is also \"despised\" by \"many\" native Fijians for implementing the 2013 Constitution of Fiji which describes all of Fiji's citizens as \"Fijians\", regardless of their ethnicity, causing \"some\" indigenes to have fears of \"cultural annihilation\" and an \"Islamic conspiracy to control the country\", due to the Attorney General of Fiji being of Muslim background.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling\nThe 2013 World Financial Group Continental Cup of Curling was held from January 10 to 13 at the South Okanagan Events Centre in Penticton, British Columbia. The Continental Cup, based on the Ryder Cup of golf, pitted teams from North America against teams from the rest of the World. The tournament featured team events, mixed doubles events, singles competitions, and skins competitions, and the brunt of available points was awarded in the skins competitions. TSN broadcast the event, as it had in previous years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling\nTeam North America was represented by Canada Cup champions Jennifer Jones and Kevin Martin, Tournament of Hearts champion Heather Nedohin, Brier champion Glenn Howard, and the United States men's and women's champions Heath McCormick and Allison Pottinger, respectively. Team World was represented by reigning world champion Mirjam Ott, world silver medalist Margaretha Sigfridsson, four-time world junior champion Eve Muirhead, two-time world bronze medalist Niklas Edin, two-time world silver medalist Tom Brewster, and two-time European champion Thomas Ulsrud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling\nTeam World entered the event as the defending champions, but were unseated by Team North America. Team World took an early lead in the first day of the event, but Team North America roared back in the next few days, dominating in the team, mixed doubles, and singles competitions to hold a large lead. Team North America clinched the cup in the second round of skins play after holding back a late Team World comeback, giving Team North America a 5\u20134 edge in the overall cup record. Team North America's win ensured that no defending champion to date would successfully defend its title from the previous Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Competition format\nSix teams from North America and six teams representing the rest of the World play a series of games against each other in order to win points. The first side to win a majority of the points available wins the cup. Teams compete in four formats: team games, mixed doubles games, singles competitions, and skins games. Team games are regular curling games, with two teams of four playing against each other. Mixed doubles games involve two teams, each consisting of one male and one female, playing against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Competition format\nMixed doubles teams use only six stones per end, one of which is positioned prior to the start of the end. This is in contrast to the eight stones per end used by teams of four in regular curling games. The singles competition involves two teams playing against each other. There are six types of shots contested in the singles competitions. Each curler from each team is assigned to throw at least one type of shot. Points are given based on how well the shot is made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Competition format\nAfter all of the shots have been thrown, the team with the most points wins the competition. Skins games involve two teams playing against each other, where the objective is to win skins by scoring two or more points with the hammer or stealing points without the hammer. The points for the skins games, which go toward the total points for the cup, are distributed throughout the game, and the teams earn these points by winning skins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Competition format\nA new points system was implemented in the 2013 Continental Cup of Curling. The total of points available was 60 points, compared to the total of 400 points used in previous years. The mixed doubles, singles, and team games were worth one point each, and ties were worth one half point each to both teams. The skins games were worth a total of five points. All games were eight ends long, and there were no extra ends. Also, six mixed doubles games and six singles competition games were played, as before. However, there were eighteen team games instead of the previous twelve, and there were six skins games instead of the previous eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Teams\nThe teams were selected from the top teams in each region. Six teams from each region will compete against each other in the competition. Four teams from Canada earn the right to represent Team North America by virtue of winning certain events, namely the Canada Cup of Curling and the Canadian National Championships (the Brier and the Tournament of Hearts). Two teams from the United States are chosen by the United States Curling Association to represent North America, and the teams representing Team World are selected by the World Curling Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Teams\nThe teams in the table below have been announced as representatives of their respective regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 1\nTeam World and Team North America began the event with women's team play. Mirjam Ott and Allison Pottinger played a high-scoring game which resulted in a win for Ott, and Eve Muirhead scored an early lead over Heather Nedohin and held it to win another point for Team World. Jennifer Jones made a precise draw to tie her game with Margaretha Sigfridsson and secured a half-point for Team North America, averting a sweep by Team World.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 1\nTeam World held a two-point lead coming into the first mixed doubles round, where they split the three points available with Team North America. The North American pair of John Morris and Kaitlyn Lawes dominated Team World's Niklas Edin and Christina Bertrup. Heather Nedohin made a game-saving shot with Dean Gemmell to tie their game with Michael Goodfellow and Eve Muirhead, and Christoffer Svae and Carmen Sch\u00e4fer stole a win over Marc Kennedy and Allison Pottinger after Pottinger was light on a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 1\nTeam North America closed the two-point gap by one point in men's team play, where they won two of the three games. Both Niklas Edin of Team World and Kevin Martin of Team North America won close games against Heath McCormick and Tom Brewster, respectively, while Glenn Howard made a double-takeout in the last end to hold his lead and win the game over Thomas Ulsrud. At the end of the day, Team World led Team North America 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 2\nIn the morning draw, women's team play saw Team North America turning the tables on Team World by winning two games and splitting the points for the third. Heather Nedohin held a slight lead over Margaretha Sigfridsson, who tried to win the game in the final end but fell short and tied the game. Jennifer Jones and Mirjam Ott played a back-and-forth game which saw Ott miss a double-takeout attempt for the win, allowing Jones to steal the point. Allison Pottinger stole three in the fifth end against Eve Muirhead and held the lead through the rest of the game, capping off the game with a four-point end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 2\nThe singles competition, similar to a skills competition in ice hockey, involved team members from each of the twelve teams attempting six types of shots. Team North America fared well in the singles competition, winning four of the six matchups and earning four points. On the women's side, the teams skipped by Allison Pottinger and Mirjam Ott scored the highest total of points at 18 points, while on the men's side, Glenn Howard's team scored the highest total of points at 22 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 2\nThe evening draw, which consisted of men's team play, saw Team North America extending their lead to five points. Heath McCormick dominated against Thomas Ulsrud, who lost second Christoffer Svae in the middle of the game due to illness. Kevin Martin established an early lead in the first half of the game versus Niklas Edin and held his lead to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 2\nGlenn Howard had a chance to make the draw a North America sweep, starting off with a small lead against Tom Brewster, but a mistake in the eighth end from Brent Laing led to a chance for Brewster to come back and tie the game, which he did. At the end of the day, Team North America led Team World 13\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 3\nThe morning draw consisted of mixed doubles play, where Team North America dominated Team World and earned the first sweep of three points in the event. Heath McCormick and Jessica Mair dominated Sebastian Kraupp and Maria Prytz, stealing three ends en route to a six-point victory. Glenn Howard and Natalie Nicholson held an early lead over Greg Drummond and Anna Sloan after a four-point second end, but Drummond and Sloan came back to make it a close game. In the end, Howard and Nicholson scored two to win the game. Brent Laing and Jennifer Jones played a back-and-forth game with Torger Nerg\u00e5rd and Carmen K\u00fcng, but retained control through most of the game and came out with the victory after K\u00fcng's last shot left Team North America having shot stone, effectively giving Laing and Jones the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 3\nIn the afternoon draw, women's team play saw a split of the three available points. Mirjam Ott pushed out to an early lead against Heather Nedohin, and held her lead against a struggling Nedohin to win. Jennifer Jones played a back-and-forth game with Eve Muirhead, and won on a dramatic finish, tapping a buried stone to score a deuce in the final end. Allison Pottinger held an early lead over Margaretha Sigfridsson, but Sigfridsson rallied with the help of three stolen points and tied the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 3\nThe evening draw saw Team North America extending their lead by one point. Heath McCormick and Tom Brewster played a relatively quick game, with McCormick winning on a draw in the final end. Kevin Martin scored a huge four-point end against Thomas Ulsrud and commanded the rest of the match to secure Team North America's second win. Glenn Howard came short in winning his match versus Niklas Edin, however, when a failed in-off shot in the sixth end led to a steal by Edin. Edin secured Team World's only full point in the draw with a double takeout. At the end of the day, Team North America led Team World 19\u00bd\u201310\u00bd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 4\nThe afternoon draw consisted of skins play. Allison Pottinger and Margaretha Sigfridsson played in the women's skins game. Pottinger held an early lead after four straight skins, but Sigfridsson capitalized on missed shots from Pottinger to win the last four skins and the game. Heath McCormick and Niklas Edin played in the men's skins game, where a series of carryovers saw Edin winning the last skin, worth three and a half points, and the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 4\nA mixed team of John Morris, Beth Iskiw, Ben Hebert, and Jessica Mair played Tom Brewster, Anna Sloan, Scott Andrews, and Claire Hamilton in the mixed skins game. Morris, who skipped against Brewster, held control over the game and limited Brewster in scoring. Brewster won the last point on a draw to the button, giving Team World an 8\u20137 edge in the first round of skins play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 4\nThe evening draw also consisted of skins play. Jennifer Jones and Mirjam Ott played in the women's skins game, in which Jones dominated, scoring four skins and winning four points for Team North America. Glenn Howard and Thomas Ulsrud played in the men's skins game. Ulsrud played a fairly open game, forcing carryovers for five ends until a misfire from Ulsrud led to Howard making the cup-winning shot, scoring three points with a tap for two points. Ulsrud won the remaining points in the game on a draw to the button.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 4\nA mixed team of Kevin Martin, Heather Nedohin, Marc Kennedy, and Laine Peters played Eve Muirhead, Greg Drummond, Vicki Adams, and Michael Goodfellow in the mixed skins game. Martin skipped against Muirhead and controlled most of the game, securing four points on four skins before Muirhead took the last skin. Team North America took a 10\u00bd\u20134\u00bd point edge in the second round of skins play, giving them a CAD$13,000 bonus for winning the skins rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Event summary, Day 4\nThe final score of the event was 37\u201323, and the winning team, Team North America, received a purse of CAD$52,000, CAD$2,000 per player, in addition to the skins bonus, while the losing team received a purse of CAD$26,000, CAD$1,000 per player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Events\nAll times listed are Pacific Standard Time. The draws for Thursday, Friday, and Saturday were released on Wednesday night, and the draws for Sunday were released on Saturday afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232752-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Cup of Curling, Statistics\nThe statistics for team play, including team skins play, are listed below. The percentages are calculated for each player by rating their shots in each game. Each shot the player attempts is scored out of four based on how well the shot is made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232753-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Indoor Football League season\nThe 2013 Continental Indoor Football League season will be the Continental Indoor Football League's eighth overall season. The regular season will start on Friday February 8, with the Marion Blue Racers visiting the Saginaw Sting at the Dow Event Center, and will end with the 2013 CIFL Championship Game, the league's championship game being held on, or around, May 18. The league approved the expansion of the playoff format from four teams to six teams (with the top two teams receiving byes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232753-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Indoor Football League season, Schedule\nFor the 2013 season there will be a 10-game, 12-week regular season running from February to April. Each team will host 5 games, and have five away games. For the first time in league history, there will be Monday night games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232753-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Indoor Football League season, Regular season standings\n\u2020Kane County played the second game on their schedule, but forfeited the other nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232753-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Indoor Football League season, Coaching changes, Pre-season\nOn September 18, 2012, the Blue Racers name, CEO and general manager, LaMonte Coleman, as the team's 5th head coach in franchise history. But, three weeks prior to the season's start, offensive coordinator Martino Theus was promoted to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232753-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Indoor Football League season, Coaching changes, In-season\nCarter named Demar Cranford as the team's new head coach the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232754-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge\nThe 2013 Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge was the thirteenth season of the Grand American Road Racing Association's support series and the final under the Grand Am sanctioning body. For 2014 the series will change to being sanctioned by the International Motor Sports Association upon Grand Am's merger with IMSA's American Le Mans Series to form the United SportsCar Championship. The series, to be known as the IMSA Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge, will remain entirely unaffected aside from the new sanctioning body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232755-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cook Islands Round Cup\nThe 2013 season of the Cook Islands Round Cup is the fortieth 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232756-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cooper Challenger\nThe 2013 Cooper Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 6th edition of the tournament and part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Waterloo, Canada between July 1 and July 7, 2013. It was the final edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232756-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cooper Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232757-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cooper Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSharon Fichman and Marie-\u00c8ve Pelletier were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Pelletier had retired this year after the 2013 Australian Open. Fichman partnered up with Gabriela Dabrowski as the first seeds and they went on to win the title, defeating Misa Eguchi and Eri Hozumi in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232758-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cooper Challenger \u2013 Singles\nSharon Fichman was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she lost in the quarterfinals to Gabriela Dabrowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232758-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cooper Challenger \u2013 Singles\nJulia Glushko won the title, defeating Dabrowski in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232759-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa ASOBAL\nThe 2013 Copa ASOBAL was the 24th edition of the Copa ASOBAL. It took place in the Palau Blaugrana, in Barcelona, Catalonia, on 21 & 22 December 2013. The tournament was hosted by FC Barcelona and Barcelona city council, being the second time Barcelona hosts Copa ASOBAL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232759-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa ASOBAL\nFC Barcelona won its overall ninth title, third in a row and qualified for 2014\u201315 EHF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232759-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa ASOBAL, Qualified teams\nQualified teams are the top four teams on standings at midseason (matchday 15).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232759-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa ASOBAL, TV coverage\nThe tournament was broadcast in Catalonia in Esport3 and nationwide at Spain in Sportman\u00eda. Also worldwide via", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232760-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Argentina Final\nThe 2013 Copa Argentina Final was the 223rd and final match of the 2012\u201313 Copa Argentina. It was played on October 16, 2013 at the Estadio del Bicentenario de Catamarca between San Lorenzo and Arsenal. Arsenal won the match 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232760-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Argentina Final\nAs champion, Arsenal qualified for the 2013 Supercopa Argentina and the 2014 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232761-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Bionaire\nThe 2013 Copa Bionaire was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 WTA 125s. It took place in Cali, Colombia on 11\u201317 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232761-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Bionaire, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232761-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Bionaire, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a Lucky Loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232762-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Bionaire \u2013 Doubles\nKarin Knapp and Mandy Minella were the defending champions but Knapp chose not to participate. Minella played with Elina Svitolina, but they lost in the first round to Estrella Cabeza Candela and Laura Pous Ti\u00f3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232762-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Bionaire \u2013 Doubles\nCatalina Casta\u00f1o and Mariana Duque Mari\u00f1o won the title, defeating Florencia Molinero and Teliana Pereira in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232763-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Bionaire \u2013 Singles\nAlexandra Dulgheru was the defending champion, but lost to Lara Arruabarrena Vecino in the second round. Arruabarrena Vecino went on to win the title, defeating Catalina Casta\u00f1o in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232764-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Catalunya (women's football)\nThe 2013 Copa Catalunya Femenina was the ninth edition of the competition, running from May 25 to September 1, 2013. RCD Espanyol defeated FC Barcelona on penalties in the final, held in Sant Boi de Llobregat, ending Barcelona's 4-year winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232764-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Catalunya (women's football), Preliminary stages, Second stage\n2 Cerdanyola won 4-5 on penalties. 3 Igualada won 3-5 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232764-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Catalunya (women's football), Final stages\n4 Levante Las Planas won 1-4 on penalties. 5 Escola Les Garrigues won on penalties. 6 Espanyol won 3-4 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232765-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana\nThe 2013 Copa Centroamericana was the 12th Copa Centroamericana, the regional championship for men's national association football teams in Central America. It was organized by the Uni\u00f3n Centroamericana de F\u00fatbol or UNCAF, and took place in Costa Rica from 18 January to 27 January 2013. The top five teams go on to participate in the 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232765-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana\nThe tournament consisted of two stages. In the group stage of the tournament finals, the seven teams competed for points in two round-robin groups, one of four teams and the other of three, with the top two teams in each group proceeding. These four teams advanced to the semi-final stage, with the winners advancing to the final, while the losers contested a third-place match. The fifth-place match was played between the third-ranked teams from the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232765-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana\nIn the final, Costa Rica defeated defending champions Honduras 1\u20130, with Giancarlo Gonz\u00e1lez's goal in the 38th minute giving Costa Rica their seventh Central American title; they also became the first host nation to win the tournament since Costa Rica did it in 1999. The final between Costa Rica and Honduras, being the fifth time the two teams have contested final together, became the most frequent match-up at that stage. Belize made history in this tournament by managing to advance to the semifinals and qualifying to compete in the CONCACAF Gold Cup for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232765-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana, Venue\nAll matches were played at Estadio Nacional in San Jos\u00e9, built as a replacement for the original National Stadium and opened in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232765-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was held in San Jos\u00e9 on October 9, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232765-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana, Group stage, Group B\nEl Salvador and Panama finished with identical records and so their positions were determined by drawing of lots. El Salvador won and was placed second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232765-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana, Final stage\nIn case of tie, no extra time is played, and the match is decided by a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232766-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Centroamericana squads\nThe 2013 Copa Centroamericana will be the 2nd edition of the Copa Centroamericana competition and 12th UNCAF-. Costa Rica will be the host nation. The competition is scheduled to begin on January 18, 2013 and the final took place on January 27, 2013. Every national team's roster consists of 21 players with three goalkeepers included", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232767-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Claro\nThe 2013 Copa Claro was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 16th edition of the Copa Claro, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from February 16 through February 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232767-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Claro, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232767-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Claro, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232768-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Claro \u2013 Doubles\nDavid Marrero and Fernando Verdasco were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini won the title, defeating Nicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232769-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Claro \u2013 Singles\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Wolbo (talk | contribs) at 22:48, 30 June 2020 (Updated infobox). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232769-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Claro \u2013 Singles\nDavid Ferrer was the defending champion, and he successfully defended his title by defeating Stanislas Wawrinka in the final 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232770-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colombia\nThe 2013 Copa Colombia, officially the 2013 Copa Postob\u00f3n for sponsorship reasons, was the 11th edition of the Copa Colombia, the national cup competition for clubs of DIMAYOR. It began on February 15 and ended on November 8. The tournament comprised a total of 36 teams. The winner earned a berth to the 2014 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232770-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colombia, Group stage\nThe 36 teams were divided into six groups based on each separate region of Colombia. Each group was played in home-and-away round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up, along with the four best third-placed teams, advanced to the Round of 16. The matches were played from February 13 to June 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232770-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colombia, Knockout phase\nEach tie in the knockout phase was played in home-and-away two-legged format. In each tie, the team which had the better overall record up to that stage host the second leg, except in the round of 16 where the group winners automatically hosted the second leg. In case of a tie in aggregate score, neither the away goals rule nor extra time was applied, and the tie was decided by a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232770-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colombia, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nFirst legs: August 7, 8, 13, 14; Second legs: August 14, 15, September 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232771-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colsanitas\nThe 2013 Copa Colsanitas was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 16th edition of the Copa Colsanitas, and part of the International category of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Centro de Alto Rendimiento in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia, from February 18 through February 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232771-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colsanitas, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232771-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colsanitas, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232772-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colsanitas \u2013 Doubles\nEva Birnerov\u00e1 and Alexandra Panova were the defending champions, but they lost in the final to T\u00edmea Babos and Mandy Minella, 4\u20136, 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232773-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Colsanitas \u2013 Singles\nLara Arruabarrena Vecino was the defending champion, but lost to Karin Knapp in the quarterfinals. Jelena Jankovi\u0107 won the title, defeating Paula Ormaechea in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232774-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Constituci\u00f3\nThe 2013 Copa Constituci\u00f3 was the 21st season of Andorra's football knockout tournament. The competition began on 13 January 2013 with the matches of the first elimination round and ended on 26 May 2013 with the final. FC Santa Coloma are the defending champions. The winners will earn a place in the first qualifying round of the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232774-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Constituci\u00f3, Results, Preliminary round\nThis round was entered by the bottom eight from the twelve 2012\u201313 Segona Divisi\u00f3 teams at the time of the mid-season break: UE Extremenya, Atl\u00e8tic Club d'Escaldes, FC Santa Coloma B, Principat B, FC R\u00e0nger's, FC Encamp B, FS La Massana and Penya Encarnada d'Andorra. The matches were played on 13 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232774-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Constituci\u00f3, Results, First elimination round\nThis round was entered by the top four from the twelve 2012\u201313 Segona Divisi\u00f3 teams at the time of the mid-season break: FC Ordino, UE Santa Coloma B, Casa Estrella del Benfica and Lusitanos B and will join the winners of the preliminary elimination round. The matches were played on 27 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232774-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Constituci\u00f3, Results, Second elimination round\nThe teams from 2011\u201312 Primera Divisi\u00f3 placed fifth to eighth after 10 rounds played \u2013 CE Principat, UE Engordany, FC Encamp and Inter Club d'Escaldes \u2013 entered in this round and joined the winners of the first elimination round. For each match, one Segona Divisi\u00f3 and one Primera Divisi\u00f3 team have been drawn together. The matches were played on 24 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232774-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Constituci\u00f3, Results, Third elimination round\nThe winners from the previous round will compete in this round together with the teams from Primera Divisi\u00f3 placed first to fourth after 10 rounds played \u2013 FC Lusitanos, UE Sant Juli\u00e0, FC Santa Coloma and UE Santa Coloma. The first legs will be played on 28 April 2013, while the second legs took place on 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232774-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Constituci\u00f3, Results, Semi-finals\nThe first legs will be played on 12 May 2013 while the second legs will be played on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232775-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa EuroAmericana\nThe 2013 Copa EuroAmericana was the first edition of the Copa EuroAmericana, an exhibition men's football friendly tournament created by DirecTV. This edition took place in various locations across South America from 20 July to 4 August 2013. Eleven teams from both CONMEBOL and UEFA participated in the tournament. Europe, represented by Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, Porto and Sevilla, won the cup by a 6\u20132 score, beating South America, represented by Atl\u00e9tico Nacional, Barcelona, Deportivo Anzo\u00e1tegui, Estudiantes, Millonarios, Nacional, Sporting Cristal and Universidad Cat\u00f3lica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232775-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa EuroAmericana, Format\nEach match was played for 90 minutes. In the case of a draw after regulation, the winners were determined via a penalty shoot-out. The confederation of the winning team of each match was awarded with a point, and the confederation with the most points at the end of the tournament was crowned champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232776-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest\nThe 2013 Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Mexico City, Mexico between 15 and 21 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232776-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232776-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232776-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232777-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest \u2013 Doubles\nCarsten Ball and Chris Guccione won the first edition of the tournament 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [11\u20139] in the final against Jordan Kerr and John-Patrick Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232778-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Internacional de Tenis Total Digest \u2013 Singles\nAndrej Martin won the first edition of the event by defeating Adrian Mannarino 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores\nThe 2013 Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica (officially the 2013 Copa Bridgestone Libertadores for sponsorship reasons) was the 54th edition of the Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica, South America's premier international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL. Corinthians were the defending champions but were knocked out of the tournament by Boca Juniors in the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores\nFor the fourth year in a row, the title was won by a Brazilian club, with Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro beating Paraguayan club Olimpia on penalties in the finals to win their first title. By winning the competition, Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro won the right to play in the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup and the 2014 Recopa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on 21 December 2012 in Luque, Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nFor the first stage, the 12 teams were drawn into six ties containing a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, with the former hosting the second leg in three ties, and the latter hosting the second leg in the other three ties. The seeding of each team was determined by which associations reached the furthest stage in the previous Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nBol\u00edvar LDU Quito Le\u00f3n Universidad C\u00e9sar Vallejo Defensor Sporting Deportivo Anzo\u00e1tegui", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nFor the second stage, the 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four containing one team from each of the four seeding pots. The seeding of each team was determined by their association and qualifying berth (as per the rotational agreement established by CONMEBOL, the teams which qualified through berths 1 from Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela were seeded into Pot 1 for odd-numbered years, while the teams which qualified through berths 1 from Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay were seeded into Pot 1 for even-numbered years). Teams from the same association in Pots 1 and 3 could not be drawn into the same group. However, a first stage winner, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, could be drawn into the same group with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nArsenal V\u00e9lez Sarsfield Corinthians Fluminense Santa Fe Barcelona Sporting Cristal Deportivo Lara", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nThe Strongest San Jos\u00e9 Universidad de Chile Huachipato Libertad Cerro Porte\u00f1o Nacional Pe\u00f1arol", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nNewell's Old Boys Boca Juniors Palmeiras Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro Millonarios Emelec Real Garcilaso Caracas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Draw\nToluca TijuanaFirst stage winner G1First stage winner G2First stage winner G3First stage winner G4First stage winner G5First stage winner G6", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all dates listed were Wednesdays, but matches may be played on Tuesdays and Thursdays as well).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, First stage\nIn the first stage, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was used. If still tied, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (no extra time was played). The winners of each tie advanced to the second stage to join the 26 automatic qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Second stage\nIn the second stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. Each team earned 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss. If tied on points, the following criteria were used to determine the ranking: 1. Goal difference; 2. Goals scored; 3. Away goals scored; 4. Drawing of lots. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Knockout stages\nIn the knockout stages, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament, with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Knockout stages, Seeding\nThe qualified teams were seeded in the knockout stages according to their results in the second stage, with the group winners seeded 1\u20138, and the group runners-up seeded 9\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232779-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores, Knockout stages, Finals\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232780-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina\nThe 2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina was the fifth edition of the Copa Libertadores Femenina, CONMEBOL's premier annual international women's football club tournament. It was held in Foz do Igua\u00e7u in Brazil. The competition was supposed to start on 12 October, just one week prior to that however, the whole competition was rescheduled from 27 October to 7 November due to logistical problems stated by the Local Organizing Committee. Clubs were given the possibility to change up to five players in their previous submitted squads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232780-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina\nColo Colo were the defending champions. The title was won by S\u00e3o Jos\u00e9, their second title after 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232780-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina\nMaitt\u00e9 Zamorano won the top-scorer award playing for Mundo Futuro by scoring seven goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232780-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Qualification\nThe competition was contested by twelve teams, the champion club from each of the ten nations plus the title holders, Colo Colo, and one additional team from Brazil, the hosts. As Colo Colo had also won the Chilean championship, Everton de Vi\u00f1a del Mar participated additionally as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232780-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina, First stage\nThe group winner and the best runners-up advanced to the semifinals. The draw was held on 26 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232780-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina, First stage, Group A\nMundo Futuro moved on to the semi-finals as best second placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232780-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Femenina, Knockout stage\nPer draw Group A and B winners met with the best second-place finisher meeting Group C winner in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals\nThe 2013 Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica Finals were the final two-legged tie that decided the winner of the 2013 Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica, the 54th edition of the Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica, South America's premier international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals\nThe finals were contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Paraguayan team Olimpia and Brazilian team Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro. The first leg was hosted by Olimpia at Estadio Defensores del Chaco in Asunci\u00f3n on 17 July 2013, while the second leg was hosted by Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro at Est\u00e1dio Governador Magalh\u00e3es Pinto (Mineir\u00e3o) in Belo Horizonte on 24 July. The winner earned the right to represent CONMEBOL at the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup, entering at the semifinal stage, and the right to play against the 2013 Copa Sudamericana winners in the 2014 Recopa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals\nOlimpia won the first leg 2\u20130, and Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro won the second leg by the same score after extra time, which meant the title was decided by a penalty shoot-out, which Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro won 4\u20133 to claim their first Copa Libertadores title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals, Qualified teams\nAtl\u00e9tico Mineiro came into the finals as a first-time finalist, while Olimpia were three-time champion and three-time runner-up, and the first and only club to be a finalist in each decade of the tournament's existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals, Qualified teams, Road to the finals\nNote: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals, Format\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. However, CONMEBOL required that the second leg of the finals must be played in South America, i.e., a finalist from Mexico must host the first leg regardless of seeding. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals, Match details, First leg\nAlejandro Silva opened the scoring in the 23rd minute when he picked up a pass near the right wing and set off on a run towards goal before hitting a low left-footed strike from just outside the box giving the goalkeeper no chance. Wilson Pittoni got the second goal in the fourth minute of stoppage time when he curled a right footed free-kick past the goalkeeper who was hampered by his own defender in his way on the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals, Match details, First leg\nAssistant referees:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)Fourth official:Germ\u00e1n Delfino (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232781-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores Finals, Match details, Second leg\nJ\u00f4 opened the scoring in the 46th minute when he took struck the ball on the turn past goalkeeper Mart\u00edn Silva. In the 85th minute Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro got their second when Leonardo Silva headed Bernard's cross into the top corner of the net. There were no goals in extra time, and in the penalty shoot-out Olimpia's Herminio Miranda missed the first kick, and Mat\u00edas Gim\u00e9nez shot against the bar in the fifth kick, to hand Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro the title to for the first time and a berth in the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232782-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores first stage\nThe first stage of the 2013 Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica was played from January 22 to January 31, 2013. A total of 12 teams competed in the first stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232782-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores first stage, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on December 21, 2012, 11:00 UTC\u22123, at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232782-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores first stage, Draw\nFor the first stage, the 12 teams were drawn into six ties containing a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, with the former hosting the second leg in three ties, and the latter hosting the second leg in the other three ties. The seeding of each team was determined by which associations reached the furthest stage in the previous Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232782-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores first stage, Seeding\nThe following were the seeding of the 12 teams entered into the first stage draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232782-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores first stage, Seeding\nBol\u00edvar LDU Quito Le\u00f3n Universidad C\u00e9sar Vallejo Defensor Sporting Deportivo Anzo\u00e1tegui", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232782-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores first stage, Format\nIn the first stage, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was used. If still tied, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (no extra time was played). The winners of each tie advanced to the second stage to join the 26 automatic qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232782-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores first stage, Matches\nThe first legs were played on January 22\u201324, and the second legs were played on January 29\u201331, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages\nThe knockout stages of the 2013 Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica were played from April 24 to July 24, 2013. A total of 16 teams competed in the knockout stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Qualified teams\nThe winners and runners-up of each of the eight groups in the second stage qualified for the knockout stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Seeding\nThe qualified teams were seeded in the knockout stages according to their results in the second stage, with the group winners seeded 1\u20138, and the group runners-up seeded 9\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Format\nIn the knockout stages, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament, with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Bracket\nThe bracket of the knockout stages was determined by the seeding as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on April 24\u201325 and April 30\u2013May 2, and the second legs were played on May 8\u20139 and 14\u201316, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Round of 16, Match B\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Santa Fe won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Round of 16, Match E\nTied 2\u20132 on aggregate, Newell's Old Boys won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on May 22\u201323, and the second legs were played on May 28\u201330, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Quarterfinals, Match S1\nTied 3\u20133 on aggregate, Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Quarterfinals, Match S4\nTied 0\u20130 on aggregate, Newell's Old Boys won on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on July 2\u20133, and the second legs were played on July 9\u201310, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Finals\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. The teams tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time were played. A penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232783-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores knockout stages, Finals\nThe first leg was played on July 17, and the second leg was played on July 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage\nThe second stage of the 2013 Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica was played from February 12 to April 18, 2013. A total of 32 teams competed in the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on December 21, 2012, 11:00 UTC\u22123, at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Draw\nFor the second stage, the 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four containing one team from each of the four seeding pots. The seeding of each team was determined by their association and qualifying berth (as per the rotational agreement established by CONMEBOL, the teams which qualified through berths 1 from Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela were seeded into Pot 1 for odd-numbered years, while the teams which qualified through berths 1 from Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay were seeded into Pot 1 for even-numbered years). Teams from the same association in Pots 1 and 3 could not be drawn into the same group. However, a first stage winner, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, could be drawn into the same group with another team from the same association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Seeding\nThe following were the seeding of the 32 teams entered into the second stage draw, which included the 26 automatic qualifiers and the 6 first stage winners:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Seeding\nArsenal V\u00e9lez Sarsfield Corinthians Fluminense Santa Fe Barcelona Sporting Cristal Deportivo Lara", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Seeding\nThe Strongest San Jos\u00e9 Universidad de Chile Huachipato Libertad Cerro Porte\u00f1o Nacional Pe\u00f1arol", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Seeding\nNewell's Old Boys Boca Juniors Palmeiras Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro Millonarios Emelec Real Garcilaso Caracas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Seeding\nToluca TijuanaFirst stage winner G1First stage winner G2First stage winner G3First stage winner G4First stage winner G5First stage winner G6", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Format\nIn the second stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. Each team earned 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss. If tied on points, the following criteria were used to determine the ranking: 1. Goal difference; 2. Goals scored; 3. Away goals scored; 4. Drawing of lots. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Groups\nThe matches were played on February 12\u201314, 19\u201321, 26\u201328, March 5\u20137, 12\u201314, April 2\u20134, 9\u201311, and 16\u201318, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232784-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Libertadores second stage, Groups, Group 5\nNote: A 14-year-old San Jos\u00e9 fan was killed by a flare allegedly launched by Corinthians fans during the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2013 Peru Cup season (Spanish: Copa Per\u00fa 2013), the promotion tournament of Peruvian football, started on February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232785-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2013 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 Stage follow in September. The National Stage (Spanish: Etapa Nacional) starts in November. The winner of the National Stage will be promoted to the First Division and the runner-up will be promoted to the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, Departmental Stage\nDepartmental Stage: 2013 Ligas Departamentales del Peru and 2013 Ligas Superiores del Peru", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232785-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage\nEach region had two teams qualify for the next stage. The playoffs only determined the respective regional winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232785-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232785-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region III\nRegion III includes qualified teams from Loreto and Ucayali region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region IV\nRegion IV includes qualified teams from Lima and Callao region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region V\nRegion V includes qualified teams from Jun\u00edn, Pasco and Hu\u00e1nuco region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region VI\nRegion VI includes qualified teams from Ayacucho, Huancavelica and Ica region. Two teams qualified from this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232785-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region VIII\nRegion VIII includes qualified teams from Apurimac, Cusco, Madre de Dios and Puno region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232785-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Per\u00fa, National Stage\nThe National Stage starts on November. This stage has two knockout rounds and four-team group stage. The winner will be promoted to the 2014 Torneo Descentralizado and the runner-up of the National Stage will be promoted to the 2014 Peruvian Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232786-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Rommel Fern\u00e1ndez\nThe Copa Rommel Fern\u00e1ndez 2013 season (officially \"XVII Copa Rommel Fern\u00e1ndez\") starts on November 17, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232787-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa San Juan Gobierno\nThe 2013 Copa San Juan Gobierno was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in San Juan, Argentina between 7 and 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232787-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa San Juan Gobierno, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232787-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa San Juan Gobierno, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players used protected ranking to get into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232788-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa San Juan Gobierno \u2013 Doubles\nMart\u00edn Alund and Horacio Zeballos were the defending champions but Zeballos chose not to compete. Alund partnered with Facundo Bagnis and lost in the final to compatriots Guillermo Dur\u00e1n and M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez 6\u20133, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232789-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa San Juan Gobierno \u2013 Singles\nThiemo de Bakker was the defending champion but chose not to compete. Guido Andreozzi defeated top seed Diego Sebasti\u00e1n Schwartzman 6\u20137(5\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232790-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sevilla\nThe 2013 Copa Sevilla was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 16th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Seville, Spain between 9 and 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232790-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sevilla, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232790-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sevilla, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following player received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232790-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sevilla, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players used a protected ranking to receive entry into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232791-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sevilla \u2013 Doubles\nAlessandro Motti and St\u00e9phane Robert won the title, defeating Stephan Fransen and Wesley Koolhof 7\u20135, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232792-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sevilla \u2013 Singles\nDaniel Gimeno-Traver won the title for the third year in a row, defeating St\u00e9phane Robert 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana\nThe 2013 Copa Sudamericana (officially the 2013 Copa Total Sudamericana for sponsorship reasons) was the 12th edition of the Copa Sudamericana, South America's secondary international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL. The winner qualified for the 2014 Copa Libertadores, the 2014 Recopa Sudamericana, and the 2014 Suruga Bank Championship. S\u00e3o Paulo were the defending champions, but lost to Ponte Preta in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana\nLan\u00fas became the fifth Argentine club to win the Copa Sudamericana, beating Brazilian club Ponte Preta in the finals to win their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on July 3, 2013 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Draw\nExcluding the defending champion (entering in the round of 16), the other 46 teams were divided into four zones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Draw\nTo determine the bracket starting from the round of 16, the defending champion and the 15 winners of the second stage were assigned a \"seed\" by draw. The defending champion and the winners from Argentina Zone and Brazil Zone were assigned even-numbered \"seeds\", and the winners from ties between South Zone and North Zone were assigned odd-numbered \"seeds\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Schedule\nThe schedule of the competition was as follows (all dates listed were Wednesdays, but matches may be played on Tuesdays and Thursdays as well).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Elimination phase\nIn the elimination phase, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was used. If still tied, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (no extra time is played). The 15 winners of the second stage (three from Argentina Zone, four from Brazil Zone, eight from ties between South Zone and North Zone) advanced to the round of 16 to join the defending champion (S\u00e3o Paulo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Final stages\nIn the final stages, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament, with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Final stages, Bracket\nNote: The bracket was changed according to the rules of the tournament so that the two semifinalists from Brazil would play each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232793-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana, Final stages, Finals\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232794-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana Finals\nThe 2013 Copa Sudamericana Finals were the final two-legged tie that decided the winner of the 2013 Copa Sudamericana, the 12th edition of the Copa Sudamericana, South America's secondary international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232794-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana Finals\nThe finals were contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Brazilian team Ponte Preta and Argentine team Lan\u00fas. The first leg was hosted by Ponte Preta at Est\u00e1dio do Pacaembu in S\u00e3o Paulo on 4 December 2013, while the second leg was hosted by Lan\u00fas at Estadio Ciudad de Lan\u00fas in Lan\u00fas on 11 December. The winner qualified for the 2014 Copa Libertadores, and earned the right to play against the 2013 Copa Libertadores winners in the 2014 Recopa Sudamericana, and against the 2013 J. League Cup winners in the 2014 Suruga Bank Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232794-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana Finals\nAfter the first leg ended in a 1\u20131 draw, Lan\u00fas won the second leg 2\u20130, to claim their first Copa Sudamericana title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232794-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana Finals, Qualified teams, Road to the finals\nNote: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232794-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana Finals, Format\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase\nThe elimination phase of the 2013 Copa Sudamericana was played from July 30 to September 5, 2013. A total of 46 teams competed in the elimination phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on July 3, 2013, 12:00 UTC\u22123, at the Sheraton Hotel in Buenos Aires, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, Draw\nExcluding the defending champion (entering in the round of 16), the other 46 teams were divided into four zones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, Seeding\nThe following was the seeding of the 46 teams entered into the first stage and second stage draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, Format\nIn the elimination phase, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was used. If still tied, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (no extra time is played). The 15 winners of the second stage (three from Argentina Zone, four from Brazil Zone, eight from ties between South Zone and North Zone) advanced to the round of 16 to join the defending champion (S\u00e3o Paulo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, First stage\nThe first legs were played on July 30\u2013August 1, and the second legs were played on August 6\u20138, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, First stage\nA minute of silence was held in honor to the passing of Ecuadorian player Christian Ben\u00edtez at all first leg games of the first stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, Second stage\nThe first legs were played on August 13\u201314 and 20\u201322, and the second legs were played on August 27\u201329 and September 5, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, Second stage\nA minute of silence was held in honor to the passing of two-time World Cup-winning Brazilian player Gilmar at all second leg games of the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232795-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana elimination phase, Second stage, Match O11\nTied 1\u20131 on aggregate, La Equidad won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages\nThe final stages of the 2013 Copa Sudamericana were played from September 18 to December 11, 2013. A total of 16 teams competed in the final stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Draw\nThe draw of the tournament was held on July 3, 2013, 12:00 UTC\u22123, at the Sheraton Hotel in Buenos Aires, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Draw\nTo determine the bracket starting from the round of 16, the defending champion and the 15 winners of the second stage were assigned a \"seed\" by draw. The defending champion and the winners from Argentina Zone and Brazil Zone were assigned even-numbered \"seeds\", and the winners from ties between South Zone and North Zone were assigned odd-numbered \"seeds\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Seeding\nThe following were the seeding of the 16 teams which qualified for the final stages, which included the defending champion (S\u00e3o Paulo) and the 15 winners of the second stage (three from Argentina Zone, four from Brazil Zone, eight from ties between South Zone and North Zone):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Format\nIn the final stages, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament, with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Bracket\nThe bracket of the knockout stages was determined by the seeding as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Bracket\nNote: The bracket was changed according to the rules of the tournament so that the two semifinalists from Brazil would play each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on September 18\u201319 and 24\u201326, and the second legs were played on September 25\u201326, October 2 and 22\u201324, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on October 29\u201331, and the second legs were played on November 6\u20137, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on November 20\u201321, and the second legs were played on November 27\u201328, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Semifinals\nA minute of silence was held in honor to the passing of two-time World Cup-winning Brazilian player N\u00edlton Santos at both second leg games of the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Finals\nThe finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232796-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Sudamericana final stages, Finals\nThe first leg was played on December 4, and the second leg was played on December 11, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232797-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Topper\nThe 2013 Copa Topper was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina between 21 and 27 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232797-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Topper, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232798-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Topper \u2013 Doubles\nMart\u00edn Alund and Horacio Zeballos were the defending champions but Zeballos decided not to participate. Alund teamed up with Facundo Bagnis but lost to eventual champions M\u00e1ximo Gonz\u00e1lez and Diego Sebasti\u00e1n Schwartzman in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232798-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Topper \u2013 Doubles\nGonz\u00e1lez and Schwartzman went on to win the title, defeating Rog\u00e9rio Dutra da Silva and Andr\u00e9 Ghem in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232799-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Topper \u2013 Singles\nDiego Sebasti\u00e1n Schwartzman was the defending champion, but lost to Mart\u00edn Alund on the Second Round. Uruguayan Wild Card Pablo Cuevas won the title over Argentinian Facundo Arg\u00fcello, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 2\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232800-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa Venezuela\nThe 2013 Copa Venezuela was the 44th staging of the Copa Venezuela. The winner qualified for the 2014 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232801-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de Espa\u00f1a de Futsal\nThe 2013 Copa de Espa\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol Sala was the 24th staging of the Copa de Espa\u00f1a de F\u00fatbol Sala. It took place in the Pabell\u00f3n Caja Madrid for up to 4,500 seats, in Alcal\u00e1 de Henares, Spain, between 21 and 24 February 2013. The tournament was hosted by LNFS and the Alcal\u00e1 de Henares city council. Inter Movistar was the host team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232801-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de Espa\u00f1a de Futsal\nFC Barcelona Intersport won its third title in a row after defeating ElPozo Murcia 4\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232801-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de Espa\u00f1a de Futsal, Qualified teams\nThe qualified teams were the eight first teams on standings at midseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232802-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de M\u00e9xico de Naciones\nThe 2012 Copa de M\u00e9xico de Naciones is the 2nd edition of the Copa M\u00e9xico de Naciones Sub-15 and it took place in Mexico from August 10 to August 18. The tournament is supposed to be the precursor the proposed U-15 FIFA World Cup. Twelve teams participated in this edition, four more than the 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232802-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de M\u00e9xico de Naciones, Group stage\nThe winners and runners-up from each group, as well as the best two third-placed teams, qualified for the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232802-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de M\u00e9xico de Naciones, Group stage\nThe ranking of each team in each group was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232802-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de M\u00e9xico de Naciones, Group stage\nHad two or more teams been equal on the basis of the above three criteria, their rankings would have been determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232802-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de M\u00e9xico de Naciones, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe two best teams among those ranked third were determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232802-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de M\u00e9xico de Naciones, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stages, if a match is level at the end of normal playing time a kicks from the penalty mark to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232803-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto\nThe Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto 2012\u201313 was the 51st edition of the Spanish Queen's Basketball Cup. It is managed by the Spanish Basketball Federation \u2013 FEB and was held in Zamora, in the Pabell\u00f3n \u00c1ngel Nieto on March 9\u201310, 2013. Tintos de Toro Caja Rural was the host team. Rivas Ec\u00f3polis won its second Copa de la Reina title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232803-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto, Qualified teams\nThe top four qualified after the first half of the LFB Regular Season will qualify to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232803-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de Baloncesto, Draw\nThe draw was held in Zamora on March 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232804-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de Balonmano\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinkerBot (talk | contribs) at 21:55, 20 June 2020 (remove un-needed options from tables). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232804-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de Balonmano\nThe 2013 Copa de la Reina de Balonmano was the 34th edition of the Copa de la Reina de Balonmano. It took place mainly in O Porri\u00f1o with two quarter-final matches taking place in A Guarda. The matches were held at Pavill\u00f3n Municipal do Porri\u00f1o, in O Porri\u00f1o and Pavill\u00f3n da Sangri\u00f1a, in A Guarda, both in Province of Pontevedra Galicia, between 21 & 24 February 2013. It was hosted by Federaci\u00f3n Galega de Balonm\u00e1n, Xunta de Galicia, Deputaci\u00f3n de Pontevedra & RFEBM. O Porri\u00f1o and A Guarda hosted for first time the Copa de la Reina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232804-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de Balonmano\nBM Bera Bera won its fourth title after defeating Ro'Casa ACE 25\u201324 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232804-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de Balonmano, Qualified teams\nThe qualified teams were the top eight teams on standings at midseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232805-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol\nThe 2013 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol was the 31st edition of the Spanish women's football national cup. It ran from 12 May to 16 June 2013 and was contested by the best eight teams in the 2012\u201313 Spanish Championship, four more teams than in the previous edition. Both the quarterfinals and the semifinals were two-legged ties, instead of the final four held in the headquarters of the RFEF in the three previous editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232806-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Final\nThe 2013 Copa del Rey Final was the 111th final since the tournament's establishment (including two seasons where two rival editions were played). The match was a Madrid derby between Real Madrid and Atl\u00e9tico Madrid on 17 May 2013 at the Santiago Bernab\u00e9u Stadium in Madrid. It was the clubs' first meeting in the final since 1992 when Atl\u00e9tico won 2\u20130 over Real Madrid. Before this match, the two teams had met in the final on three other occasions: 1960, 1961 and 1975 Copa del Rey; all were Atl\u00e9tico wins, except 1975 when Real Madrid won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232806-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Final\nAtl\u00e9tico lifted the trophy for the tenth time in their history. It was the first time since 1992 that Atl\u00e9tico had won trophies in two consecutive seasons, following their win in the 2012 UEFA Europa League Final the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232806-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Final, Venue and date\nReal Madrid, Atl\u00e9tico Madrid and the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) all agreed on Madrid as the location for the event. Due to its greater capacity of 80,000, the Santiago Bernab\u00e9u Stadium (Real Madrid's home ground) was chosen as the venue over Atl\u00e9tico's Vicente Calder\u00f3n stadium. Each team was allocated 30,000 tickets to sell, and the remainder were allocated to the RFEF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232806-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Final, Venue and date\nThe match was originally scheduled for Saturday, 18 May, but was moved to Friday, 17 May for TV broadcast reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232806-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Final, Match ball\nAdidas provided the official ball for the match, the Adidas Cafusa, the same ball used for the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232807-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Juvenil\nThe 2013 Copa del Rey Juvenil is the 63rd staging of the Copa del Rey Juvenil de F\u00fatbol. The competition began on May 19, 2013 and will end on June 30, 2013 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232807-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Juvenil, First round\nThe top two teams from each group and the two best third-placed teams are drawn into a two-game best aggregate score series. The first leg began the week of May 18 and the return leg the week of May 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232807-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Juvenil, Quarter-final\nThe eight winners from the first round advance to quarter-final for a two-game series best aggregate score with the first leg beginning the week of June 1 and returning the week of June 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232807-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Juvenil, Semi-finals\nThe four winners play a two-game series best aggregate score beginning the week of June 15 and returning the week of June 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232807-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey Juvenil, Final\nThe semi-final winners play a one game final at Campo de Las Vi\u00f1as in Vera, Almer\u00eda the week of June 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232808-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto\nThe Copa del Rey de Baloncesto 2012\u201313 was the 77th edition of the Spanish King's Basketball Cup. It is managed by the ACB League and was held in Vitoria-Gasteiz, in the Fernando Buesa Arena on February 7\u201310, 2013. FC Barcelona Regal was the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232808-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Qualified teams\nThe seven first qualified after the first half of the ACB Regular Season will qualify to the tournament. As Caja Laboral, host team, finished between the seven first teams, the eight qualified will join the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232808-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Draw\nThe draw will be held in Vitoria-Gasteiz on January 14, 2013. The first four qualified teams are in the Pot 1 and will face each one with the other four qualified teams. There are no restrictions for the draw of the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232808-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto, Draw\nAs new, the first qualified team played its game on Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232809-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Sol\nThe 2013 Copa del Sol took place in La Manga Club and Pinatar (Region of Murcia, Spain) between 23 January and 2 February 2013. The final was between Shakhtar Donetsk and Widzew \u0141\u00f3d\u017a with Ukrainian club winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232809-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa del Sol\nThe tournament gives an opening to the newly constructed Pinatar Arena Football Center. Like in the previous edition, 12 teams are divided into two groups, the Red Group and the Blue Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232810-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil\nThe 2013 Copa do Brasil (officially the 2013 Copa Perdig\u00e3o do Brasil for sponsorship reasons) was the 25th edition of the Copa do Brasil. It began on February 27 and ended on November 27. The competition was contested by 87 teams, either qualified through participating in their respective state championships (71), by the CBF Rankings (10) or those qualified for 2013 Copa Libertadores (6). Clubs that qualify for the 2013 Copa Libertadores entered the competition in the Round of 16. The best 8 teams of 2012 Campeonato Brasileiro eliminated up to the third round qualifies for 2013 Copa Sudamericana which was contested in the second half of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232810-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil, Format\nThe competition is a single elimination knockout tournament featuring two-legged ties. In the first two rounds, if the away team wins the first match by 2 or more goals, it progresses straight to the next round avoiding the second leg. The away goals rule is also used in the Copa do Brasil. The winner qualifies for the 2014 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232810-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil, Qualified teams\nTeams in bold qualified for 2013 Copa Libertadores and entered directly in the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232810-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil, Final rounds\nA draw by CBF scheduled for August 6 set the matches for this round. The 16 qualified teams were divided in two pots. Teams from pot 1 are the ones who competed at the 2013 Copa Libertadores (except S\u00e3o Paulo, replaced by Vasco da Gama) plus the two highest CBF ranked teams qualified via the Third Round. Pot 2 is composed of the other teams that qualified through the Third Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232810-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil, Final rounds, Bracket\nTeams that play in their home stadium in the first leg are marked with \u2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232810-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil, Copa Sudamericana qualification\nThe best eight teams eliminated before the Round of 16 with the best 2012 S\u00e9rie A or 2012 S\u00e9rie B record qualifies for 2013 Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232811-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino\nThe 2013 Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino was the seventh staging of the competition. The competition started on February 2, 2013, and concluded on May 4, 2013. 32 clubs of all regions of Brazil participated of the cup, which is organized by the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232811-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino, Competition format\nThe competition was contested by 32 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 three rounds, if the away team won the first leg with an advantage of at least three goals, the second leg would not be played and the club automatically qualified to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232812-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Nordeste\nThe 2013 Copa do Nordeste was a football competition held in the Brazilian Northeast, counting as the 10th edition in the history of the Copa do Nordeste. It was played from January 19, with its final on 10 and 17 March, featuring 16 clubs, with Bahia and Pernambuco having three berths each and Cear\u00e1, Rio Grande do Norte and Sergipe, Alagoas and Para\u00edba having two each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232812-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Copa do Nordeste, Teams\nThe clubs were separated into pots according to their ranking in the ranking of CBF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232813-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coppa Italia Final\nThe 2013 Coppa Italia Final was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Coppa Italia, the 66th season of the top cup competition in Italian football. The match was played at the Stadio Olimpico in Rome between Lazio and Roma on Sunday, 26 May 2013 at 18:00 CET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232813-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coppa Italia Final\nLazio had played 7 Coppa Italia finals and Roma 16, but the two sides had never met each other in the final prior to this match. Since the final was always played at the Stadio Olimpico independent of which teams were going to play, it was the first Derby della Capitale in a Coppa Italia final, when both Rome teams played at their home stadium in their home city, and the third local derby after the Turin derby in 1938 and the Milan derby in 1977. Roma was officially declared the home team for this match. \"Gangnam Style\" singer Psy had a pregame performance, in which he was mercilessly booed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232813-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Coppa Italia Final\nLazio won the match 1\u20130 with a goal by Senad Luli\u0107 in the 71st minute, a low right footed shot from a low cross from the right by Antonio Candreva after the goalkeeper Bogdan Lobon\u021b failed to cut out the crossed ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232814-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 104th 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 9 December 2012. The championship began on 1 June 2013 and ended on 3 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232814-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 3 November 2013, Kanturk won the championship following a 2-22 to 1-12 defeat of \u00c9ire \u00d3g in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Chaoimh. This was their first ever championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232814-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nMichel Walsh and Kevin Hallissey were the championship's joint top scorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232815-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Cork Junior Hurling Championship was the 116th staging of the Cork Junior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1895. The championship began on 7 September 2013 and ended on 10 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232815-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nOn 10 November 2013, Grenagh won the championship following a 1-10 to 2-05 defeat of Kilbrin in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. This was their first championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232815-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nGrenagh's Tom Kenny was the championship's top scorer with 1-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232816-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship\nThe 2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship was the eighth staging of the Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 2006. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place on 9 December 2012. The championship began on 5 May 2013 and ended on 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232816-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship\nSt. Vincent's and Mayfield left the championship after their respective promotion and relegation to different grades. Castletownbere and Na Piarsaigh joined the championship. Kinsale were relegated from the championship after being beaten in a playoff by Carrigaline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232816-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship\nThe final was played on 13 October 2013 at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Chaoimh in Cork, between Clyda Rovers, who were appearing in their fourth final in five seasons, and Macroom. Clyda Rovers won the match by 0-13 to 0-08 to claim their first championship title in the grade and a first title in any grade since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232816-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Football Championship\nConor Horgan and Gear\u00f3id Finn were the championship's top scorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232817-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship was the tenth staging of the Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 2004. The championship began on 1 June 2013 and ended on 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232817-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 5 October 2013, Ballincollig were relegated from the championship following a 1-14 to 0-16 defeat by Carrigaline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232817-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 13 October 2013, Youghal won the championship following a 0-11 to 0-10 defeat of Castlelyons in the final. This remains their only championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232817-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nTracton's Ronan Walsh was the championship's top scorer with Ronan Walsh 2-46.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232818-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Cork Senior Football Championship was the 115th staging of the Cork Senior Football Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The championship began on 19 March 2013 and ended on 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232818-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Senior Football Championship\nOn 13 October 2013, Castlehaven won the championship following a 0-16 to 1-11 defeat of nemo Rangers in the final. This was their 5th championship title overall and their second title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232818-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Senior Football Championship\nCastlehaven's Brian Hurley was the championship's top scorer with 3-47.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232819-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Cork Senior Hurling Championship was the 125th staging of the Cork Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1887. The championship began on 26 March 2013 and ended on 3 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232819-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nSarsfield's were the defending champions and made it all the way to the final, however, they were defeated by Midleton on a 2\u201315 to 2\u201313 score line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232819-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cork Senior Hurling Championship, Pre-championship\nSarsfield's were installed as the early favourites to retain the title for a fourth time in six years and put back-to-back titles together for the first time in their history. Midleton and Cork Institute of Technology were regarded as the two teams that could provide the strongest challenge to Sarsfield's supremacy once again. St. Finbarr's were ranked at 25/1 as they hoped to end a twenty-year wait for the Se\u00e1n \u00d3g Murphy Cup. Roll of honour leaders Blackrock were ranked at 50/1. Divisional side and Gaelic football stronghold Duhallow were bottom of the pile and are tipped at 100/1 to take the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232820-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornell Big Red football team\nThe 2013 Cornell Big Red football team represented Cornell University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season as a member of the Ivy League. They were led by first-year head coach David Archer and played their home games at Schoellkopf Field. Cornell finished the season with a record of 3\u20137 overall and 2\u20135 in Ivy League play to place seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election\nThe Cornwall Council election, 2013, was an election for all 123 seats on the council. Cornwall Council is a unitary authority that covers the majority of the ceremonial county of Cornwall, with the exception of the Isles of Scilly which have an independent local authority. The elections took place concurrently with other local elections across England and Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Background\nThe elections for Cornwall Council were the second since its creation in 2009. Cornwall had previously been administered as a non-metropolitan county, with local government powers split between Cornwall County Council and the six non-metropolitan districts of Caradon, Carrick, Kerrier, North Cornwall, Penwith and Restormel. These were abolished as part of the 2009 structural changes to local government in England, which created a singular unitary authority. The elections in 2009 resulted in no group gaining a majority. The Conservative and Independent councillors formed a coalition to control the Council, choosing the Conservative Alec Robertson as the leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Background\nThe Boundary Commission had undertaken a review of the Council's electoral divisions, which resulted in a number of changes to their boundaries and a reduction from 123 to 122 wards. One ward, Bude, would elect two councillors while the rest were represented by a single-member, leaving the number of councillors unchanged. All wards were contested in the election, with a total of 480 candidates standing across the county. The Conservatives had the most candidates with 103, followed by the Liberal Democrats with 91 and the United Kingdom Independence Party with 77 candidates. Labour fielded 68, Cornish party Mebyon Kernow had 27, the Green Party 23 and the Liberal Party stood one person. Ninety independents were also standing, with some wards having multiple independent candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Background\nElections to town and parish councils across Cornwall were also scheduled to take place on 2 May. However, not all council elections were contested, as the number of candidates was not greater than the seats available. Four parish councils with insufficient candidates would not have enough councillors to function after the elections. Councils that have vacancies after the elections would attempt to co-opt additional councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Campaign\nThe campaign was set against the backdrop of the Great Recession of the late 2000s, under a Labour government, and the subsequent public sector budget cuts of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government. There were also many issues that were pertinent to local voters in Cornwall, including the building of new houses, wind turbines, transportation infrastructure, jobs losses at the authority and the recent Council Tax freeze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Campaign\nThe Conservative Party, speculated to be facing losses, hoped to attract voters through their previous record as the major party in the outgoing Conservative-Independent council administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Campaign\nThe Liberal Democrats, trying to become the largest party within the council, focused its campaign on cutting economic waste and increasing investment in transport infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Campaign\nMebyon Kernow highlighted the fact that they were an alternative to the parties and groupings that had made up previous UK government or Cornwall Council administrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Campaign\nUKIP, wanting to be seen as increasingly relevant to domestic politics, not just within Europe campaigned on issues of opposing the wind farm project and youth unemployment, but still highlighting its anti-EU stance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Campaign\nThe Labour Party focused its campaign on the fact that, at the time, there was worry as to whether the UK government's Help to Buy scheme could be used to fund the buying of second homes in the county, but was later announced to be untrue. The party also pledged to keep Council Tax rates low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Campaign\nThe Green Party campaigned on raising concerns over a proposed incinerator and overdeveloping land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Eligibility\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Eligibility\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Election result, Outcome\nFollowing the election the council remained in no overall control with the Independent politicians becoming the largest grouping on the council through a modest gain of councillors from the previous election. The Liberal Democrats remained the second largest party after losing 2 councillors and the Conservatives slipped to third after losing over a third of their councillors. The Labour Party, UKIP, Mebyon Kernow and the Green Party all gained seats, with UKIP and the Greens entering Cornwall Council for the first time. Mebyon Kernow had had 6 seats prior to the election, having added 3 to their 2009 total, through defection and by-election. Following the election they held 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Election result, Outcome\nWithin two weeks of the election the Conservative councillor for Ladock, St Clement and St Erme, Mike Eathorne-Gibbons, defected to the Independent grouping. Eathorne-Gibbons had been tipped to be the next leader of the Conservative group in the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Election result, Outcome\nThe Liberal Democrats reached out to all the other parties elected to Council, wanting to form a cross-party administration. The Conservatives decided not to join the alliance, after a lack of communication, therefore the Independents and Liberal Democrats formed a coalition administration with John Pollard of the Independents being elected leader of the council and the Liberal Democrats Jeremy Rowe as deputy leader. The Green councillor and the Independent councillor for Probus, Tregony and Grampound, Bob Egerton, formed a non-aligned independent group. The independent councillor for Wadebridge East, Collin Brewer, was not permitted to join the Independent grouping for his previous negative comments regarding disabled children. Brewer later resigned from Cornwall Council and the Liberal Democrat, Steve Knightley, won the subsequent by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 914]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232821-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cornwall Council election, Electoral division results\nThe electoral division results listed below are based on the changes from the 2009 elections, not taking into account any mid-term by-elections or party defections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232822-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Corpus Christi Fury season\nThe 2013 Corpus Christi Fury season was the 11th season for the franchise, and their first as a member of the Ultimate Indoor Football League (UIFL). The team moving to the UIFL also changed their names from the Hammerhead to the Fury, and named LaDaniel Marshall the team's head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232822-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Corpus Christi Fury season, Roster\nRookies in italicsRoster updated May 24, 20133 Active, 0 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232823-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Costa Book Awards\nThe Costa Book Awards (before 2006 known as the Whitbread Awards) are among the United Kingdom's most prestigious literary awards. They were launched in 1971, are given both for high literary merit but also for works that are enjoyable reading and whose aim is to convey the enjoyment of reading to the widest possible audience. This page gives details of the awards given in the year 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232823-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Costa Book Awards\nThe shortlist was announced on 26 November 2013. The category winners were announced 6 January 2014. The Book of the Year was announced 28 January 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232823-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Costa Book Awards, Children's Book\nWinner: Chris Riddell, Goth Girl and the Ghost of a Mouse", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232823-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Costa Book Awards, Biography\nWinner: Lucy Hughes-Hallett, The Pike: Gabriele D'Annunzio, Poet, Seducer and Preacher of War", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232824-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Costa Rican Cup\nThe 2013 Costa Rican Cup (known as the Torneo de Copa Banco Nacional or Copa BN for sponsorship reasons) is the 1st staging of the Costa Rican Cup. The competition began on July 7 and finished on August 4 with Saprissa crowned as the first champions after defeating Carmelita in the penalty shoot-outs in the final at the national stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232824-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Costa Rican Cup\nThe 2013 Copa BN featured 16 teams, 12 from the Primera Divisi\u00f3n (including the newly promoted team, Universidad de Costa Rica) and 4 from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n (not including the recently relegated team, A.D. San Carlos).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232824-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Costa Rican Cup, Qualified teams\nThe following teams competed in the 2013 Costa Rican Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232825-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotabato City bombing\nThe 2013 Cotabato City car bombing occurred on August 5, 2013. At least 8 people were killed and 40 others injured after a car bomb exploded in Cotabato City, Maguindanao province in the Philippines. It is the worst such attack ever in Cotabato City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232825-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotabato City bombing\nThe police released photos of suspects the day after the bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232825-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotabato City bombing\nIt was initially suspected that the attack may have targeted Cynthia Guiani-Sayadi, city administrator, who had been receiving death threats, however, she was not harmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232825-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotabato City bombing\nAdditional bombs were found later that week, which were believed to be connected to the incident. They were deactivated before they could cause damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic\nThe 2013 AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic was a post-season American college football bowl game held on January 4, 2013 at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas in the United States. The 77th edition of the Cotton Bowl Classic began at 7:00\u00a0p.m. CST and aired on Fox Sports. It featured the Texas A&M Aggies from the Southeastern Conference (SEC) against the Big 12 Conference co-champion Oklahoma Sooners and was the final game of the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season for both teams. Both the Aggies and the Sooners accepted their invitations after finishing the regular season 10\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic\nThe pre-game buildup was primarily focused on the two high-powered offenses, both of whom were led by strong passing attacks led by quarterbacks Johnny Manziel and Landry Jones respectively. Both teams also had several quality wide receivers, but both were average to below average defensively. Experts were split in their prognostications, but most predicted a high-scoring game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic\nTexas A&M defeated Oklahoma 41\u201313 to win the Cotton Bowl Classic and to finish the season with an 11\u20132 record. Manziel rushed for 229 yards during the game, a bowl record, rushing for two touchdowns and throwing for two more. Though the halftime score was 14\u201313 Texas A&M, the Aggies went on to score 27 unanswered second half points to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Oklahoma\nWith an 8\u20131 conference record, the Sooners once again won a share of the Big 12 Championship; however, their loss to the Kansas State Wildcats prevented them from reaching the 2013 Fiesta Bowl spot. In addition, the non-AQ Northern Illinois Huskies completed the qualifications to go to the 2013 Orange Bowl, leaving the Sooners out of the Bowl Championship Series (BCS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Oklahoma\nThis was the Sooners' second Cotton Bowl; they had won the 2002 game, defeating the Arkansas Razorbacks by a score of 10\u20133. The Sooners were the first team since Florida in 1993 to play against the teams with the top 3 Heisman vote-getters for that season (having played against 3rd-place finisher Collin Klein from Kansas State, runner-up Manti Te'o from Notre Dame, and Heisman winner Manziel from Texas A&M); they lost to all three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Texas A&M\nThe Aggies' first season as members of the SEC was led by freshman quarterback and 2012 Heisman Trophy winner Manziel, the Aggies posted a 6\u20132 conference record (10\u20132 overall), good for a second-place tie in the SEC West Division (tied with the LSU Tigers). In perhaps their biggest game of the season, the Aggies defeated defending national champions and 2013 BCS National Championship Game participants the Alabama Crimson Tide in Tuscaloosa, 29\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Teams, Texas A&M\nThis was the Aggies' thirteenth Cotton Bowl appearance; with the win they hold a 5\u20138 record in the game. With the appearance the Aggies became the first program to participate in the Cotton Bowl as members of three different conferences with automatic Cotton Bowl tie-ins (the Southwest Conference, the Big 12, and the SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup\nComing into the game, much of the buildup surrounded the matchup of two top-flight quarterbacks, senior Landry Jones for Oklahoma and Heisman Trophy winner freshman Johnny Manziel for Texas A&M, both of whom ranked in the top-15 nationally in passing yards. In the all-time series between the two schools, Oklahoma had won 19 games to Texas A&M's 11. This was the teams' first meeting since Texas A&M left the Big 12 for the SEC. Aggies coach Kevin Sumlin had been an assistant under Bob Stoops; coming into the game Stoops was 13\u20134 against his former assistants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup, Oklahoma\nOklahoma compiled a 10 win, 2 loss record during the regular season and was left out of the BCS for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup, Oklahoma, Offense\nOklahoma's offense was led by their senior quarterback Jones who was primarily responsible for the Sooners' 224 passing first downs, which was best in the country, and their 52.2 third down conversion success rate, which was fourth-best in the country. Jones, a senior who was ranked by ESPN as the number five quarterback prospect for the 2013 NFL Draft, completed 66% of his 555 passes totaling 4267 yards, which was second-best in the country, and 30 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup, Oklahoma, Offense\nJones threw primarily to a trio of upperclassmen wide receivers each of whom ended the season with more than 800 receiving yards, junior Kenny Stills, junior Jalen Saunders, who transferred in the offseason from Fresno State, and senior Justin Brown, who transferred to the Sooners in the offseason amid sanctions from the NCAA in wake of the Penn State child sex abuse scandal. Oklahoma's rushing attack, which was second-worst in the Big 12 in terms of total yards, was led by juniors Damien Williams and Brennan Clay, who amassed 946 yards and 11 touchdowns and 555 yards and 6 touchdowns respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup, Oklahoma, Defense\nOklahoma's defense improved after head coach Bob Stoops' brother, former Sooners co-defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach Mike Stoops, returned to Oklahoma as the defensive coordinator after having served the previous seven and a half seasons as head coach of the Arizona Wildcats where he totaled 41 wins and 50 losses and was fired mid way through the 2011 season. Oklahoma's defense was led in tackles by safety Tony Jefferson, who recorded 113 becoming just the sixth Sooner defensive back ever to amass more than 100. In addition to Jefferson, Oklahoma was represented by defensive back Aaron Colvin on the All-Big 12 first team and defensive lineman David King and defensive back Demontre Hurst on the second team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup, Texas A&M\nIt was announced on December 12, 2012 that Texas A&M's offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury had left the university for the head coaching position at his alma mater, Texas Tech. Consequently, coach Kevin Sumlin announced that running backs coach and recruiting coordinator Clarence McKinney would call plays during the bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup, Texas A&M, Offense\nThe Aggies' offense averaged 44.8 points per game, third in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). A&M's offense was led in both passing and rushing by Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Johnny Manziel. Manziel threw primarily to two receivers, fellow redshirt freshman Mike Evans, who totaled 82 receptions for 1105 yards and 5 touchdowns, and senior Ryan Swope, who totaled 72 receptions for 913 yards and 8 touchdowns. Together, the duo combined for 45 percent of the Aggies' targets, catching 139 of 199 passes for 1,845 yards and 12 touchdowns. Aside from Manziel, junior Ben Malena amassed 808 rushing yards and 8 touchdowns, while senior Christine Michael scored 8 rushing touchdowns to go along with 417 rushing yards. The Aggies also had two projected first-round draft picks on their offensive line, junior tackles Luke Joeckel and Jake Matthews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 917]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Pre-game buildup, Texas A&M, Defense\nThe Aggies' defense was led by first-year defensive coordinator Mark Snyder, who had been a head coach at Marshall and defensive coordinator for Ohio State. Their leading tackler was junior defensive lineman Damontre Moore, who achieved first-team All-SEC accolades during the regular season and declared early to enter the 2013 NFL Draft, where he is considered one of the top prospects, and was the second overall pick in Todd McShay's initial mock draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Game summary, First quarter\nTexas A&M got the ball to start the game and marched down the field on an 8-play, 75-yard drive that culminated in the first of Manziel's two rushing touchdowns, the first of which went for 23 yards. Oklahoma took over at their own 25 yard line after a touchback on the kickoff. Jones was 6/8 for 43 yards passing on the drive. The Sooners got as far as second and goal at the one yard line prior to two failed plays and a false start penalty that set up a 23-yard field goal to make the score 7\u20133 Texas A&M. The drive totaled 16 plays and 69 yards in 5:43. On the ensuing drive, Texas A&M was forced to punt after achieving only one first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Game summary, Second quarter\nOklahoma's next drive ran 18 plays and 87 yards taking up 7:26. Once again, the Sooners stalled in the red zone and were again forced to settle for a field goal, this time a 24-yarder by Michael Hunnicutt. The next two drives by Texas A&M and Oklahoma both ended in interceptions thrown by Manziel and Jones respectively. Texas A&M took over at the Oklahoma 48 yard line following Jones' interception. A trick play to start the drive resulted in senior wide receiver Kenric McNeal throwing a 20-yard pass to Mike Evans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Game summary, Second quarter\nOn the next play, running back Ben Malena running the ball 23 yards to the five yard line. Manziel ran for a 5-yard touchdown on the next play to make the score 14\u20136. Oklahoma's next drive lasted 13 plays and 83 yards that culminated in a 6-yard touchdown pass from Jones to Justin Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Game summary, Third quarter\nOklahoma's first second-half drive resulted in a quick three-and-out. After a 58-yard punt by Tress Way which was downed at the Texas A&M 9-yard line. Despite the poor field position, the Aggies put together a 7-play, 91-yard drive highlighted by a 35-yard pass from Manziel to Uzoma Nwachukwu and finished with a 7-yard touchdown run by Malena. Oklahoma had another three-and-out on their next drive. Texas A&M subsequently established a 7-play, 89-yard drive that featured three consecutive completed passes from Manziel to Malcome Kennedy and concluded with a 30-yard rushing touchdown by Trey Williams. Oklahoma's next drive was their third consecutive three-and-out. Texas A&M then scored their third consecutive touchdown, this time on a 33-yard pass from Manziel to Ryan Swope making the score 34\u201313. Oklahoma then ran a 7-play, 31-yard drive before punting to end the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 938]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nTexas A&M had their first three-and-out of the game to begin the fourth quarter. Oklahoma achieved one first down on their subsequent drive before turning the ball over on downs. Texas A&M scored for the final time of the game on their ensuing drive via a 34-yard touchdown pass from Manziel to Nwachukwu to make the score 41\u201313. Oklahoma and Texas A&M then exchanged punts before the final drive of the game by Oklahoma which lasted four plays prior to time running out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232826-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Cotton Bowl Classic, Scoring summary, Statistics, Individual statistics\nManziel's 229-yard performance set an FBS record for most rushing yards in a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232827-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Council of the Isles of Scilly election\nThe 2013 Council of the Isles of Scilly election took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 local elections in the United Kingdom The council is a sui generis unitary authority within the ceremonial county of Cornwall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232827-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Council of the Isles of Scilly election\nThe whole council of 21 members was up for election, with thirteen members elected in the St Mary's electoral division and another eight from the 'Off Islands': being two each from Bryher, St Martin's, St Agnes and Tresco. Since only one candidate stood for each of six 'Off Island' seats they were elected unopposed. The Green Party of England and Wales put up candidates - the first time any party had done so, but both were unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232827-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Council of the Isles of Scilly election\nAs with other unitary and county elections in England, these local elections in the Isles of Scilly took place for the first time since 1993 without a European or Westminster election on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232828-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Country Liberal Party leadership spill\nA leadership spill of the Country Liberal Party (CLP) in the Northern Territory occurred on 13 March 2013, less than a year after the Terry Mills-led CLP opposition defeated the Paul Henderson-led Labor government at the 2012 election, winning 16 of 25 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232828-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Country Liberal Party leadership spill\nTransport Minister Adam Giles officially replaced Mills as Chief Minister of the Northern Territory and leader of the CLP on 14 March 2013 with 11 votes to 5. The events occurred while Mills was on a trade mission in Japan. Giles became the first indigenous head of government of an Australian state or territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232828-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Country Liberal Party leadership spill\nDespite Mills being informed of his ousting whilst in Japan, Giles denied that it was a coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232828-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Country Liberal Party leadership spill\nResulting from the 2015 CLP leadership ballot on 2 February, the possibility of a confidence motion being put to the assembly was raised by Willem Westra van Holthe to take over the leadership from Giles, however Giles managed to retain the leadership and continued to govern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232828-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Country Liberal Party leadership spill\nMultiple defections saw the CLP reduced to minority government a few months later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232829-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Country Music Association Awards\nThe 2013 Country Music Association Awards, 47th Annual Ceremony, is a music award ceremony that was held on November 6, 2013, at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee. The show was hosted for the sixth time by Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood. At the ceremony, Taylor Swift became the second artist ever, and the first woman to receive the Pinnacle Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship\nThe 2013 County Championship season, known as the LV= County Championship for sponsorship reasons, was the 114th cricket County Championship season. It was contested through two divisions: Division One and Division Two. Each team played all the others in their division both home and away. Durham were County Champions for the third time in six seasons. The top two teams from Division Two, Lancashire and Northamptonshire, gained promotion to the first division for the 2014 season, while the bottom two sides from Division One\u2014Derbyshire and Surrey\u2014were relegated to Division Two for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nDefending champions Warwickshire had a disappointing start to the season, only managing a draw against newly promoted Derbyshire in a game that was dominated by bad weather. Somerset, runners-up the previous season, collapsed from 96/2 at the end of the third day against Durham to 186 all out, in the process losing by 48 runs to the champions of 2008 and 2009. Middlesex defeated Nottinghamshire by ten wickets at Trent Bridge. This was the latter county's first loss in an opening fixture for eleven years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nYorkshire, the other team promoted from Division Two in 2012, also lost at home\u2014they fell to an innings defeat against Sussex, having been bowled out for just 96 in their first innings. Middlesex and Sussex jointly led the table on 23 points after the first round of games, with only Surrey yet to play their first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nDespite having a slight first-innings lead, Derbyshire lost within three days against Middlesex at Lord's, having been bowled out for just 60 in their second innings, their lowest total against Middlesex. Surrey's first game of the season ended as a draw against Somerset, in part as a result of play being lost due to rain. Durham suffered a change in fortunes, falling to a heavy defeat against Warwickshire, who bowled them out for 94 after setting a target of 413 to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nNottinghamshire picked up their first win of the season against Derbyshire, who had yet to win themselves on their return to Division One. Surrey drew their second consecutive game at The Oval, this time against Sussex, on a pitch that appeared to favour batting. Durham fell to a second consecutive defeat when Yorkshire set a record for the highest successful chase at Chester-le-Street. Warwickshire's tenth-wicket partnership denied Somerset their first victory of the season, holding out for 78 minutes in a match that was somewhat overshadowed by a series of questionable umpiring decisions. Middlesex, with two wins out of two, remained at the top of the table at the end of April, eight points clear of Warwickshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nDurham subjected Nottinghamshire to a second consecutive home defeat, chasing a target of 183 in just over twenty overs. Derbyshire's miserable season continued with an innings loss against Yorkshire in a match that appeared to be heading for a draw. The matches between Middlesex and Surrey, and Sussex and Warwickshire were both drawn, allowing Durham to take the lead in the standings, with four other teams\u2014Middlesex, Yorkshire, Warwickshire and Sussex\u2014within ten points of the lead. In a match heavily affected by bad weather, Somerset hung on for a draw against Yorkshire, finishing on 61/6 after being made to follow-on. The weather also intervened in the match between Warwickshire and Middlesex at Edgbaston, which ended in a high-scoring draw. Durham's third win in five games, this time against Surrey, extended their Championship lead to 13.5 points over nearest rivals Middlesex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nYorkshire's impressive start to the season continued when they inflicted an innings defeat on defending champions Warwickshire, dismissing them for under 200 in both innings. Somerset fell to their first home Championship defeat since the end of 2011, losing to Middlesex by nine wickets in three days. Sussex condemned the struggling Derbyshire to their fourth straight loss, with more than two sessions to spare at Derby. Surrey's difficult season continued when they lost to Nottinghamshire by over a hundred runs in a fairly low-scoring match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nSussex completed an innings victory against Somerset within two days, bowling their opponents out for just 76 and 108 in the two innings. Championship contenders Durham and Middlesex drew at Chester-le-Street after rain curtailed play on the third day. Durham ended up four wickets short of securing another victory. The game between Somerset and Yorkshire at Taunton also resulted in a rain-affected draw. Nevertheless, Yorkshire led the table at the end of May, a single point ahead of Sussex, and a further point clear of Middlesex. Somerset, Surrey and Derbyshire, all yet to win a game, were early contenders for relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nThe match between fellow strugglers Derbyshire and Surrey ended in a high-scoring draw, while Nottinghamshire fell four wickets short of defeating early title contenders Sussex. The 2010 champions drew a second game in a week in a high-scoring encounter against Yorkshire. Draws also resulted in the contests between Middlesex and Sussex, Surrey and Warwickshire, and Somerset and Durham. Yorkshire defeated Middlesex by ten wickets, their first win at Lord's for 26 years. On the same day, Durham completed a narrow victory over Warwickshire, placing them back in title contention. Sussex, while remaining unbeaten, could only manage a draw with Surrey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nThe contest between Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire also ended in a high-scoring draw. Somerset achieved their first win of the season away at fellow relegation candidates Derbyshire, while Surrey managed a fourth successive draw, this time against title contenders Yorkshire. A draw for Sussex against Nottinghamshire was enough to give them second place in the table, eight points behind Yorkshire, and 8.5 ahead of Durham, at the halfway stage of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nAfter a two-week break, Championship cricket returned on 8 July. Sussex beat Somerset for the second time in 2013, this time in just three days. Derbyshire's relegation worries were not abated when they lost by 279 runs to title contenders Durham, who bowled them out for under 200 in both innings. Middlesex's title ambitions were dented by a loss to Warwickshire on a turning pitch at Uxbridge, while an unbeaten century from Ricky Ponting in his final first-class innings was enough to save Surrey from a defeat against Nottinghamshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nA victory for Warwickshire against Nottinghamshire gave the defending champions a faint hope of being able to retain their title, while more realistic title hopefuls Yorkshire completed an innings defeat against Derbyshire, their seventh loss in ten games. Sussex's chances of claiming their first Championship for six years were damaged with their first loss of the season, at Hove against Middlesex. Yorkshire topped the table at the end of July, seven points clear of, and with a game in hand over, second-placed Sussex. Durham were third, 19.5 points behind Yorkshire, but with an extra game left to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nMiddlesex defeated fellow title challengers Durham within three days in a low-scoring match in which neither side posted a score above 200. Sussex lost their second consecutive Championship game, this time against relegation-battling Derbyshire, who took their first win of the season, and their first victory at Hove for seventeen years. The prevalence of heavy rain thwarted any hopes of a result in the matches between Somerset and Nottinghamshire, and Yorkshire and Warwickshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nDerbyshire's hopes of survival were boosted by a win against Middlesex, whose title ambitions were dented, while a draw for Warwickshire at home to Somerset left their hopes of retaining the Championship increasingly slim. Meanwhile, Yorkshire defeated Nottinghamshire to take their sixth victory of the season, strengthening their lead at the top of the table, while at Chester-le-Street, an emphatic victory for Durham over Surrey ensured that Yorkshire's position was not left unchallenged. Yorkshire, with four games remaining had 181 points, while Durham, with an additional game yet to play, were 25.5 points behind the leaders. In the relegation battle, two points separated seventh-placed Derbyshire and eighth-placed Somerset, while Surrey, albeit with a game in hand, were a further thirteen points back in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nSomerset's hopes of retaining their place in Division One were assisted by an innings victory over Middlesex at Lord's, with the erstwhile title contenders being bowled out for just 106 and 164 in their two innings. The match between Warwickshire and Sussex petered out into a draw when neither side could agree to set up a fourth-innings chase. The gap between the two leading sides was closed considerably when Durham defeated Yorkshire by seven wickets, in what was the first-placed county's first loss since their opening fixture of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nSurrey's first win of the season, against relegation rivals Derbyshire, allowed them to move above their opponents in the table, while remaining adrift of both Somerset and Nottinghamshire. However, four days later, Surrey fell to their fourth defeat of the season, against Middlesex, in a match in which off-spinner Ollie Rayner took fifteen wickets. A comprehensive victory against Sussex within three days put Durham into the lead of the Championship, 14.5 points ahead of Yorkshire, with three games apiece to be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nAt the other end of the table, Derbyshire won in a close-fought contest at Taunton, where having been nearly 200 behind after their first innings, Somerset recovered to post Derbyshire a target of 244, which was achieved with two wickets to spare. A washout on the final day of their game denied Nottinghamshire a chance to win against Warwickshire, leaving the 2010 champions on the cusp of the relegation battle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0008-0003", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nA rain-affected draw for Yorkshire against Sussex, while Durham completed a nine-wicket victory against Derbyshire (bowling them out for just 63 in the second innings), left Yorkshire trailing Durham by 27.5 points with two games each remaining. Meanwhile, in the relegation battle, a win for Somerset over Surrey, and a draw for Nottinghamshire against Middlesex, ensured that both Somerset and Nottinghamshire were clear of the relegation zone. Derbyshire and Surrey occupied the bottom two spots, with one and two games left, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nDurham clinched the County Championship on 19 September by winning their match against Nottinghamshire by eight wickets, giving them an unassailable 48.5 point lead over Yorkshire, who, the following day, completed an 80 run victory against Middlesex to secure second place in the table. When Warwickshire defeated Surrey by six wickets at Edgbaston, the latter county's relegation to Division Two for 2014 was confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division One\nThe following week, the remaining relegation spot was taken by Derbyshire, who were also condemned to Division Two by losing a match to Warwickshire\u2014on this occasion by an innings, after being bowled out for 103 and 120. With the prospect for relegation for both counties removed, Nottinghamshire and Somerset drew their match at Trent Bridge, while the game between Surrey and Yorkshire, whose fates had already been decided the previous week, ended as a high-scoring draw. Sussex won their final match, against champions-elect Durham, to clinch third in the standings, leaving Warwickshire and Middlesex in fourth and fifth, respectively, while Somerset and Nottinghamshire ended level on points, with the former taking sixth place, with three wins to the latter's two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nThe opening round of games, which included a contest between the two counties relegated from Division One (Lancashire and Worcestershire), ended with all four matches drawn. The following week, Northamptonshire subjected Essex to an innings defeat, bowling the visitors out for just 183 and 207, in a match that was completed within three days. Glamorgan defeated Worcestershire at Cardiff for the first time in 42 years, while the match between Leicestershire and Kent ended in a high-scoring draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nWorcestershire fell to a second successive defeat, this time against Hampshire, who completed an innings victory, their first win of the season, after rain thwarted their chances against Leicestershire in the first round of games. Northamptonshire took a maximum 24 points in their game against Gloucestershire after claiming a seven-wicket win, while the match between Lancashire and Kent at Old Trafford culminated in a rain-affected draw. At the end of April, Northamptonshire were the early leaders, having played three matches (in contrast to two for most other counties), with Hampshire twenty points behind in second (with a game in hand), while third-placed Glamorgan were eight points away from the promotion spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nEssex took their first win of the season against the previously unbeaten Hampshire, chasing their target of 143 with four wickets to spare, after previously collapsing to 31/6. Gloucestershire also picked up their first win in the first week of May, in a low-scoring contest with Leicestershire, in which neither side reached 300 in a single innings. Northamptonshire took their third consecutive victory of the season when they defeated Kent, with their overseas signing Trent Copeland taking ten wickets in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nGlamorgan, who were sixty runs away from victory against Lancashire, for the loss of just two wickets, suffered a dramatic collapse at Colwyn Bay, losing their last eight wickets for just 45 runs. This was Glamorgan's first loss of the season, and Lancashire's first win. A week later, Lancashire took a second win when they chased down the target of 253, set by Essex, within just 47 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nThere were draws in the matches between Gloucestershire and Hampshire, which saw the hosts resort to using four substitute fielders at one point, and Worcestershire and Leicestershire, in which a day's worth of play was lost due to rain. Worcestershire took their first win of the season against the struggling Kent, who were bowled out for just 63 in their second innings, with the result coming within two days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nIn a closely fought contest, Essex defeated Glamorgan at Cardiff by five wickets, while Northamptonshire's run of three consecutive victories came to an end when their match against Leicestershire ended in a draw. Glamorgan's hopes of victory at Grace Road, after making Leicestershire follow on, were eliminated when less than an hour's play was possible on day four of the match. Worcestershire took a second consecutive victory when they defeated Gloucestershire by ten wickets, while the match between Essex and Kent, in which the third day's play was lost to rain, was drawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0011-0004", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nThe best part of a day's worth of play was also lost in the contest between Hampshire and Lancashire, which consequently ended as another draw. Rain eliminated more than 200 overs in the match between Worcestershire and Essex; as a result, only two innings were possible, and the match was drawn. At the end of May, Northamptonshire, who were unbeaten after five matches, still led the table, while Worcestershire and Essex, who had played two more games each than their closest rivals, were second and third, respectively. Lancashire, also unbeaten, were the next highest-placed team to have played just five matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nThe remaining games begun before the end of May\u2014the contests between Kent and Leicestershire, Northamptonshire and Hampshire, and Lancashire and Gloucestershire\u2014were all curtailed at some point by poor weather, and all finished as draws. The following week, Northamptonshire strengthened their lead at the top of Division Two by winning against Worcestershire by ten wickets. There were relatively high-scoring draws in the matches between Gloucestershire and Glamorgan, and Hampshire and Kent. Rain severely curtailed the game between Leicestershire and Northamptonshire, which resulted in a draw despite the latter county's apparent advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nAfter both captains agreed to forfeit an innings each, Gloucestershire defeated Hampshire by 198 runs in a match that would otherwise have likely ended as a draw. Lancashire continued their unbeaten run with an innings victory against Essex, who were bowled out for just 20 in their second innings, their own record lowest total, and the lowest total against Lancashire. Kent were able to salvage a draw against Glamorgan, despite a first innings deficit of 243 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nIn the final round of games in June, Lancashire won against their main rivals Northamptonshire inside two days, while Worcestershire defeated Glamorgan by eight wickets, Leicestershire, yet to win a Championship match in 2013, were beaten by Essex in a closely fought contest. At the end of June, Northamptonshire still led Division Two. Lancashire were 17 points adrift, although they had a game in hand over the leaders. Worcestershire and Essex, 16 and 17 points behind Lancashire, respectively, were also very much in contention for promotion. Kent and Leicestershire, neither of which had yet won a game, were at the bottom of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nAfter a short break, the County Championship returned to action in the second week of July. Hampshire's 41 run first innings lead against Glamorgan proved to be crucial, as they won the game by just 43 runs. Lancashire's victory against title rivals Northamptonshire at Northampton promoted the visitors to the top spot in the Division Two standings, ahead of their hosts for that game. Kent chased 411 in the fourth innings of their game against Gloucestershire to claim their first Championship victory of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nHowever, a flat pitch in their match against Hampshire prevented any chance of a second consecutive win\u2014the contest ended as a high-scoring draw. Despite a twelve-wicket match haul for Simon Kerrigan, division leaders Lancashire could also only manage a draw against Glamorgan. Leicestershire continued to struggle for Championship form, falling to an innings defeat against Essex. Worcestershire's chances of promotion were dented when Gloucestershire completed a six wicket victory over them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nAt the end of July all nine counties had completed ten games apiece, and Lancashire, the only unbeaten team in the division, led Northamptonshire by eight points, while Essex were a further eighteen points adrift in third. Leicestershire, the only winless team at this stage, were eighteen points behind their nearest rivals, Glamorgan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nIn the first week of August, Leicestershire fell to another innings defeat, this time against top-of-the-division Lancashire. The remaining three fixtures of the week\u2014the matches between Worcestershire and Kent, Hampshire and Glamorgan, and Northamptonshire and Gloucestershire\u2014all culminated in rain-affected draws. Northamptonshire took a second consecutive draw two weeks later, in a game against Essex in which the third day's play was lost. Four months after their first Championship win of the season, Glamorgan claimed a second victory, an innings win against the struggling Leicestershire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nThe loss of the entire final day's play prevented a result in the match between Kent and Gloucestershire\u2014had play been possible, the latter county would have required a further 92 runs with only one wicket in hand. A fifth win in six games, this time against Worcestershire, gave Lancashire a 34-point lead in the points standings. An innings victory inside three days against Glamorgan strengthened Northamptonshire's chances of achieving promotion to Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nLancashire maintained their healthy lead at the top of the table by defeating Hampshire by 122 runs at Southport, while Leicestershire fell to a fifth consecutive defeat, this time against Worcestershire, whose hopes of promotion were boosted by the result. Meanwhile, the match between Gloucestershire and Essex ended in a high-scoring draw. At the end of August, Lancashire held a 33-point lead over Northamptonshire. Essex and Worcestershire, who were 44 and 45 points, respectively, behind Northamptonshire, were still technically promotion contenders. Leicestershire's continuing poor form left them 27 points behind next-to-bottom Kent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nLeicestershire fell to yet another innings defeat in their game against mid-table Gloucestershire, the match being completed within three days. Victory for Essex against their rivals Worcestershire kept the former side in contention for promotion, while the latter county's chances were essentially eliminated by the result. Kent joined Glamorgan on two Championship wins by defeating the Welsh county inside three days at Cardiff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nThe match between Hampshire and Northamptonshire ended in a draw, although it could technically have been called off and restarted at another time, as a result of the absence of Hampshire's scorer on the final day, due to illness. Lancashire, who drew their match against Leicestershire, were assured of promotion when Essex failed to beat Kent. Worcestershire, resigned to remaining in Division Two in 2014, also drew in their game against Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nLeicestershire lost their final match of the season against Hampshire without picking up a single bonus point; they failed to win a single Championship match all season for the first time in their history. Draws in the matches between Essex and Glamorgan, and Northamptonshire and Kent, left Northamptonshire as firm favourites for the second promotion spot, while Lancashire clinched the Division Two title after drawing their game against Gloucestershire. Although Northamptonshire were defeated by Worcestershire, they still secured promotion by virtue of the fact that Essex also lost in their match against Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0015-0003", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Report, Division Two\nGlamorgan ended their season with an eight-wicket win against Gloucestershire, while Division Two champions Lancashire fell to their first, and only, defeat of the season in their game against Kent, who were set 418 to win. Lancashire finished 36 points clear of Northamptonshire, whose advantage over third-placed Essex was 20 points. Hampshire, Worcestershire and Gloucestershire were split by just four points, while there were only two points between Kent and Glamorgan. Leicestershire ended 70 points behind eighth-placed Glamorgan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232830-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship, Standings\nTeams receive 16 points for a win and 3 for a draw. Bonus points (a maximum of 5 batting points and 3 bowling points) may be scored during the first 110 overs of each team's first innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232831-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship Plate\nThe 2013 County Championship Plate, also known as Bill Beaumont Cup Division 2, was the 12th version of the annual English rugby union, County Championship organized by the RFU for the tier 2 English counties. Each county drew its players from rugby union clubs from the third tier and below of the English rugby union league system (typically National League 1, National League 2 South or National League 2 North).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232831-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 County Championship Plate\nThe counties were divided into two regional pools (north/south) with three teams in the north division and three in the south, with the winners of each pool meeting in the final held at Twickenham Stadium. New teams to the division included Northumberland (north)) and North Midlands (south) who were relegated from the 2012 Bill Beaumont Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232831-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship Plate\nBoth Northumberland and North Midlands would make an instant return to the 2014 Bill Beaumont Cup as they won their respective pools, with North Midlands having a more difficult time of it as they were run close by Somerset. In the final at Twickenham, Northumberland proved to be a class apart, scoring six tries as they beat North Midlands 45\u201310 to claim their 4th title in the plate competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232831-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship Plate, Competition format\nThe competition format involved six teams divided into two regional group stages of three teams each, divided into north and south, with each team playing each other once. The top side in each group went through to the final held at Twickenham Stadium on 26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232832-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship Shield\nThe 2013 County Championship Shield was the 9th version of the annual English rugby union County Championship, organized by the RFU for the tier 3 English counties. Each county drew its players from rugby union clubs from the fifth tier and below of the English rugby union league system. The counties were divided into three pools of four teams each, based roughly on regional lines, with the winner of each group plus the best runner-up going through to the semi-finals, with the winners of those games meeting in the final held at Twickenham Stadium. Typically there is no promotion or relegation out of or into the County Championship Shield. Surrey were the reigning champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232832-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship Shield\nAfter winning their pools and semi-final matches, reigning champions Surrey met Cumbria in the final. Having thrashed Leicestershire the last time round, Surrey found Cumbria a much tougher prospect, eventually prevailing 23 \u2013 16 to claim their second successive title (and third overall).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232832-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 County Championship Shield, Competition format\nThe competition format consisted of four pools (one of four teams, the others with three), based roughly on regional lines where possible, with each team playing each other once. The top side of each group qualified for the semi-finals, with the winners of the semi-finals playing in the final held at Twickenham Stadium on 26 May 2013. As the lowest tier in the county championship there is no relegation while promotion is not given every season, although outstanding county performances can lead to counties moving up to tier 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232833-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coupe de France Final\nThe 2013 Coupe de France Final was the 95th final of France's most prestigious football cup competition. The final took place on 31 May 2013 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis and was contested between Bordeaux and Evian. The winner of the Coupe de France was guaranteed a place in the group stage of the UEFA Europa League with the club's appearance being dependent on whether it qualifies for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Champions League. The final was broadcast live on France 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232833-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coupe de France Final\nEvian TG reached the final for the first time in their history. Bordeaux won their fourth Coupe de France, and first since 1987, after a 3\u20132 victory against \u00c9vian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232833-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Coupe de France Final, Match, Summary\nBordeaux opened the scoring in the 39th minute when Diabat\u00e9 went around Evian goalkeeper Bertrand Laquait to slot home. Bordeaux were awarded a penalty a minute into the second half when Diabate was brought down, but Laquait saved the spot kick with a one-handed stop down to his left from Diabate. Evian equalised in the 51st minute when Yannick Sagbo controlled the ball on his chest before finishing from close range. Bordeaux went ahead again two minutes later when Henri Saivet scored from five yards out. In the 70th minute the scores were level again when Brice Dja Djedje finished at the back post after a cross from the left. With one minute remaining Diabate got the winning goal when he scored from seven yards out when played in Nicolas Maurice-Belay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232834-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Coupe de la Ligue Final\nThe 2013 Coupe de la Ligue Final was the 19th final of France's football league cup competition, the Coupe de la Ligue, a football competition for the 42 teams that the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP) manages. The final took place on 20 April 2013 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis and was contested between Saint-\u00c9tienne and Rennes. Marseille were the defending champions, capturing their third title in a row in the 2012 Coupe de la Ligue Final, but were eliminated by Paris Saint-Germain in the round of 16. The winner qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League in the third qualifying round, depending on their league finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232834-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Coupe de la Ligue Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Cyril Saint Cricq Lompre (Aquitaine)Guillaume Debart (Picardie)Fourth official:Olivier Thual (Aquitaine)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake\nThe 2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake (also known as the Queen Charlotte Fault earthquake) struck on January 5th, at 12:58 am (UTC\u20137) near the city of Craig and Hydaburg, on Prince of Wales Island. The Mw\u202f7.5 earthquake came nearly three months after an Mw\u202f 7.8 quake struck Haida Gwaii on October 28, in 2012. The quake prompted a regional tsunami warning to British Columbia and Alaska, but it was later cancelled. Due to the remote location of the quake, there were no reports of casualties or damages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake, Tectonic setting\nThe Queen Charlotte Fault is a major right-lateral (dextral) strike-slip and transform fault running off the coast of British Columbia and into Southern Alaska, through the Saint Elias Range for more than 700 miles. Its southernmost section joins a spreading ridge of the Gorda Plate and the Cascadia subduction zone while the northern termination section joins the a thrust fault where the Yakutat terrane plows into the North American Plate. It has been the source of several large earthquakes in the 20th century, and appears that much of its length has ruptured in these events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake, Tectonic setting\nIn 1949, it produced a magnitude 8.1 earthquake off the west coast of Haida Gwaii, then in 1958 a magnitude 7.8 earthquake generated a megatsunami more than 500 meters tall, killing five people. Other earthquakes in the region include a 7.6 near Sitka, and the 2012 event. The Queen Charlotte Fault bears a similar resemblance with California's San Andreas Fault, another transform fault to the south.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake, Earthquake\nThe rupture zone is situated on a seismic gap between fault segments which ruptured in 1972 to its north, and the other to the south in 1949. The largest earthquake prior to the 7.5 quake along this gap was a magnitude 6.8 to the south of the 2013 epicenter. The 2013 earthquake ruptured for a length of 150 km (93 mi), 322 km (200 mi) north of the 2012 event. A note to take into account, the 2012 temblor had a focal mechanism of thrust rather than strike-slip, like those observed along the fault. That earthquake was on the interface of the subducting Pacific Plate as it is underthrusted beneath the North American Plate. The Craig earthquake on the other hand, was a near pure strike-slip event which was probably in response to stress transfer from the quake four months ago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake, Earthquake, Special characteristic\nResearch found that the earthquake was a rare supershear event, and was the first of its kind to occur on an oceanic plate boundary. Supershear rupture initiated along the northern rupture zone for about 100 km with a velocity of 5.5 to 6.0 km/s, much faster that the propagation velocity of the S-waves. The rupture propagated northwards, away from the epicenter, with an initial rupture velocity of 3.0 km. This subshear rupture continued for the first 30 to 50 km. Afterward, rupture velocity exceeded the S-wave propagation speed of 3.8 km/s, reaching 7.0 km/s at its highest through the upper crust.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nMore than 290 aftershocks greater than magnitude 2.5 were recorded in the aftermath of the earthquake from 2013 to 2020. Most of them were along other fault structures away from the main fault. This is also commonly seen in other supershear earthquakes. The largest aftershocks were of magnitude 5.9, 5.5 and 5.2 which occurred on a different fault from the mainshock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake, Impact\nMaximum intensity of V (Moderate) to VI (Strong) was felt in Craig, Hydaburg, Klawock and Hyder without damage, but there were reports of items falling off shelves. The earthquake was mildly felt as far away in Seattle, Washington. A tsunami warning was broadcast from Cape Fairweather, Alaska to northern Vancouver Island, while a tsunami advisory was issued to the coast of Washington. It was later canceled after no large waves were observed. The shock frightened many who fled to higher grounds to avoid the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232835-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Craig, Alaska earthquake, Impact, Tsunami\nBecause the earthquake was of almost pure strike-slip mechanism, only small waves were produced without damage. These waves were up to 14 cm high. Seiches up to 1.5 meters high were also recorded at Deer Lake, Alaska, north of Port Alexander. The small waves however, were not detected by Ocean Networks Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232836-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Credit Agricole Friuladria Tennis Cup\nThe 2013 Credit Agricole Friuladria Tennis Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cordenons, Italy between 12 and 18 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232836-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Credit Agricole Friuladria Tennis Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 86], "content_span": [87, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232837-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Credit Agricole Friuladria Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd and Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k were the defending champions, but decided not to participate. Marin Draganja andFranko \u0160kugor won the title over Norbert Gombos and Roman Jebav\u00fd 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232838-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Credit Agricole Friuladria Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nPaolo Lorenzi was the defending champion, but was defeated in the semifinals by Pablo Carre\u00f1o Busta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232838-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Credit Agricole Friuladria Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nCarre\u00f1o Busta went on to win the title over Gr\u00e9goire Burquier 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232839-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium International\nThe 2013 Crit\u00e9rium International, was the 82nd running of the Crit\u00e9rium International cycling stage race. It took place on the island of Corsica and was won by Chris Froome of Team Sky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9\nThe 2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 was the sixty-fifth running of the Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 cycling stage race; a race, organised by the Amaury Sport Organisation, rated as a World Tour event on the UCI calendar, the highest classification such an event can have. The race consisted of eight stages, beginning in Champ\u00e9ry on 2 June\u00a0\u2013 the first such start for the race in Switzerland\u00a0\u2013 and concluding in Risoul on 9 June, and was the sixteenth race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season. The Dauphin\u00e9 was viewed as a great preparation for July's Tour de France and a number of the contenders for the general classification of the Tour participated in the Dauphin\u00e9. It featured mountainous stages as well as an individual time trial similar in length to the Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9\nThe race was won by Great Britain's Chris Froome of Team Sky\u00a0\u2013 the third successive year that the squad had won the race, after Bradley Wiggins' victories in 2011 and 2012. Froome took the overall lead of the race after winning the fifth stage, and maintained his advantage to the end of the race to win his fourth stage race of the 2013 season. Ultimately, Froome won the general classification by 58 seconds over runner-up and team-mate Richie Porte, a domestique for Froome in the mountainous stages on the route. The podium was completed by Daniel Moreno of Team Katusha, who finished 74 seconds in arrears of Porte, and two minutes 12 seconds behind Froome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9\nIn the race's other classifications, Garmin\u2013Sharp's Rohan Dennis was the winner of the white jersey for the young rider classification as he was the highest placed rider born in 1988 or later, finishing in eighth place overall. Despite not winning any stages during the race, Gianni Meersman of Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step won the green jersey, for the winner of the points classification\u00a0\u2013 gained at intermediate sprints and stage finishes\u00a0\u2013 while the red and white polka-dotted jersey for the King of the Mountains classification went to Argos\u2013Shimano rider Thomas Damuseau. The teams classification was comfortably won by Team Sky for the second year in a row; they were over twelve minutes clear of the next best team, Saxo\u2013Tinkoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Teams\nAs the Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 was a UCI World Tour event, all UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. Originally, eighteen ProTeams were invited to the race, with four other squads given wildcard places. Team Katusha were not originally invited to the race, but when they later regained their ProTour status after an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, the race organisers announced their inclusion, bringing the total number of teams competing to twenty-three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Teams\nDuring May's Giro d'Italia, Sylvain Georges tested positive for the vasodilator heptaminol, after the seventh stage; his positive test was the second by a rider from the Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale squad in the space of a year, after Steve Houanard tested positive for the glycoprotein hormone erythropoietin (EPO) in an out-of-competition test in September 2012. Since the team was a member of the Mouvement pour un cyclisme cr\u00e9dible union, a second positive test meant that, according to the union's regulations, they had to stop racing for eight days. The team voluntarily withdrew from the Dauphin\u00e9, avoiding a financial penalty which could have been incurred by the team for failing to compete in a World Tour event, against UCI regulations. As a result, the peloton was reduced to the following twenty-two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Teams\nAmong the 176-rider starting peloton was only one previous winner of the race: Alejandro Valverde, the winner of the race in 2008 and 2009, led the Movistar Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Schedule\nThe route for the race was announced on 15 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 1\nDespite starting and finishing in the village of Champ\u00e9ry\u00a0\u2013 the first occasion that the race had started in Switzerland in its history\u00a0\u2013 most of the opening stage of the 2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 was just over the Franco-Swiss border in the Haute-Savoie department, where the previous year's race had finished. After a slight descent from the start, the race's first climb commenced after just 3.3\u00a0km (2.1\u00a0mi) of racing, with the first-category C\u00f4te de Morgins, a 9.2\u00a0km (5.7\u00a0mi)-long, 6% climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 1\nAfter a long and steady descent, another first-category climb of the Col du Corbier\u00a0\u2013 which featured in the 2012 Dauphin\u00e9-ending stage\u00a0\u2013 was ascented, a 7.6\u00a0km (4.7\u00a0mi) test at an average of 7.5%. On the return loop to Champ\u00e9ry, after passing through the intermediate sprint at La Chapelle-d'Abondance, the C\u00f4te de Morgins was climbed from the other side (this time as a second-category climb), before a third-category climb\u00a0\u2013 the C\u00f4te de Champ\u00e9ry\u00a0\u2013 just a kilometre from the finish. This 121\u00a0km (75.2\u00a0mi) parcours, especially the closing kilometres, was expected to see sprinters being dropped from the peloton, resulting in a select group of riders at the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 1\nThe day's breakaway was initiated at the front of the day's opening climb, the C\u00f4te de Morgins, with the initial move being made by Team Europcar rider David Veilleux. Veilleux was later joined by Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi's Ricardo Garc\u00eda, Argos\u2013Shimano rider Thomas Damuseau and Jean-Marc Bideau of Bretagne\u2013S\u00e9ch\u00e9 Environnement, and the quartet built up a maximum lead on the road of around ten minutes. Behind them, Tony Martin (Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step) set off in pursuit of the four leaders, but was not able to reach the lead group at any point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 1\nVeilleux attacked on the Col du Corbier, and managed to break away by 40 seconds from Garc\u00eda and Damuseau\u00a0\u2013 Bideau had been dropped earlier on the climb\u00a0\u2013 in 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) to the top of the climb. Veilleux remained well clear into the closing stages, and eventually came across the line to take the biggest win of his career\u00a0\u2013 his first win at World Tour level\u00a0\u2013 by almost two minutes. In doing so, Veilleux claimed the race lead in the general, points and mountains classifications. The remaining members of the breakaway were caught, and this allowed Martin's team-mate Gianni Meersman to take second, ahead of Blanco Pro Cycling's Tom-Jelte Slagter, who was the best-placed young rider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 2\nAlthough categorised as a flat stage by the race organisers, the second half of the 191\u00a0km (118.7\u00a0mi) parcours was set to test whether the sprinters could with remain with the peloton all the way to the finish in Oyonnax. Five of the day's six categorised climbs came in a 60\u00a0km (37.3\u00a0mi) portion of the route, with the last of these\u00a0\u2013 the second-category Col du Sentier\u00a0\u2013 coming with just 11.5\u00a0km (7.1\u00a0mi) remaining of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 2\nThe Col du Sentier was the day's steepest climb, with an average gradient of 7.6%, and was one of two second-category ascents, along with the 5.6\u00a0km (3.5\u00a0mi)-long C\u00f4te de Communal (6.3%) around 30\u00a0km (18.6\u00a0mi) prior. The descent into Oyonnax was fast, before a gradual rise to the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 2\nFour separate riders attempted to make solo breakaways early in the stage, but it was not until the 22\u00a0km (13.7\u00a0mi) point that a group was able to separate from the peloton. For the second day running, Argos\u2013Shimano rider Thomas Damuseau was in the breakaway, with the main aim of taking the mountains classification lead away from overall leader David Veilleux of Team Europcar. Joining Damuseau in the group initially were Bretagne\u2013S\u00e9ch\u00e9 Environnement's Arnaud G\u00e9rard and Cofidis rider Rudy Molard, while a fourth rider, Jos\u00e9 Mendes (NetApp\u2013Endura), was able to bridge up to the group from the peloton. With three-quarters of the group being within two minutes of Veilleux after the opening stage, the peloton were unwilling to give the group too much distance on the road, and the gap peaked at no more than five minutes, just after halfway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 2\nVeilleux's team maintained the pace in the peloton, pulling the group back as Damuseau led the leaders over the top of the first four climbs, but the quartet held a lead of less than a minute at the foot of the C\u00f4te du Bugnon. Molard attacked his companions, and pulled the advantage out to just over a minute, while the others were brought back by the peloton, now being led by Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step. Molard's resistance lasted until the bottom of the final climb, the Col du Sentier, when the peloton sped by.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 2\nHis team-mate Rein Taaram\u00e4e attacked on the climb itself, remaining clear to around 2.5\u00a0km (1.6\u00a0mi) from the finish of the stage. Cannondale had led the chase, and also led the field into the final kilometre for their sprinter Elia Viviani, and after navigating the hairpin bend with 600 metres (2,000\u00a0ft) left, Viviani was the strongest in the sprint and took his first win of 2013 ahead of Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Gianni Meersman, who finished second for the second day running. Veilleux finished within the peloton to maintain his race lead by 1' 56\" over Meersman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 3\nThe third stage of the race was split into two distinctive sections; the first portion of the 167\u00a0km (103.8\u00a0mi)-long stage from the start town of Amb\u00e9rieu-en-Bugey was predominantly flat as the race headed towards the feeding zone in the commune of Lanci\u00e9. From there, the route moved uphill towards the first of the day's two categorised climbs. The Col des Echarmeaux was a long, but rolling climb of 3% over 10.5\u00a0km (6.5\u00a0mi), with a steady descent towards the intermediate sprint point, coming 25\u00a0km (15.5\u00a0mi) before the finish, in the commune of Cublize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 3\nThe route descended a little further, before the Col des Sauvages, a third-category climb at an average gradient over 4\u00a0km (2.5\u00a0mi) of 5.5%. The summit of the climb came 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi) before the finish into Tarare; the finish was technical, with two tight left-hand turns in the final kilometre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 3\nFour riders broke clear of the main field almost immediately after the race rolled out of Amb\u00e9rieu-en-Bugey, with Fumiyuki Beppu (Orica\u2013GreenEDGE) being joined in the breakaway by Garmin\u2013Sharp rider Jacob Rathe, Sander Cordeel of Lotto\u2013Belisol and Vacansoleil\u2013DCM's Juan Antonio Flecha. The quartet pulled clear to a maximum advantage of around seven minutes early in the stage. This was steadily brought down by the team-mates of the race leader David Veilleux (Team Europcar) and the Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step team for their sprinter Gianni Meersman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 3\nFDJ also aided with the chase for Nacer Bouhanni, and the peloton was within a minute of the leaders at the intermediate sprint in Cublize. Cordeel was the last member of the group to be caught, just as he commenced the Col des Sauvages. After several solo attacks were pulled back by Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step, it set up the final sprint in Tarare. With a lead-out from team-mate Geraint Thomas, Edvald Boasson Hagen finished strongest to take the stage win\u00a0\u2013 the third Dauphin\u00e9 win of his career\u00a0\u2013 ahead of Orica\u2013GreenEDGE's Michael Matthews and Meersman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nThe race's only individual time trial of an extensive length was held as an out-and-back loop around Villars-les-Dombes in the Ain department. The parcours of the 32.5\u00a0km (20.2\u00a0mi)-long stage was almost entirely flat. The stage finished at the Parc des Oiseaux, one of the largest ornithological parks in Europe. Race organisers had expected the quickest times for the course to be around forty minutes. Several of the general classification leaders regarded the time trial as a test for an individual time trial of similar length due to be held in July, at the Tour de France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nAs is customary in time trial stages, cyclists set off in reverse order from where they were ranked in the general classification at the end of the previous stage. Thus, Larry Warbasse of the BMC Racing Team, who was in 172nd place of the 176 starters, trailing overall leader David Veilleux by thirty-five minutes and fourteen seconds, was the first rider to set off on the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nWarbasse recorded a time of 42' 43\" for the course, but his stay at the top was almost immediately beaten by Orica\u2013GreenEDGE's Mitchell Docker. Docker had started two minutes behind Warbasse\u00a0\u2013 riders had started the stage at one-minute intervals\u00a0\u2013 and nearly caught him towards the end, having already passed his team-mate Yannick Eijssen on the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nNetApp\u2013Endura rider Alexander Wetterhall was the next rider to record the fastest time, setting a benchmark of 40' 19\"; Jack Bauer was the first rider to break the expected fastest time, recording a sub-40 minute time for the parcours, as the Garmin\u2013Sharp rider went top with 39' 33\". Eloy Teruel went five seconds quicker than Bauer for the Movistar Team to assume top spot for a short time, before Czech national champion Jan B\u00e1rta, a team-mate of Wetterhall at NetApp\u2013Endura, completed the course over a minute quicker in a time of 38' 30\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nTeruel's team-mate Jonathan Castroviejo almost recorded the first time below 38 minutes, falling a couple of seconds shy with a time of 38' 02 \", but was still almost half a minute clear of the best time to that point, set by B\u00e1rta. His time was to be beaten by only three riders, the first of which was the eventual stage-winning time recorded by the world champion Tony Martin, riding for the Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nMartin was comfortably quickest at each of the two intermediate time-checks along the route, and crossed the line over a minute clear of Castroviejo; he had recorded a time of 36' 54\". Martin's winning time allowed him to claim his sixth individual time trial victory of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 4\nGarmin\u2013Sharp rider Rohan Dennis recorded the second-fastest time for the course at 37' 41\", and by doing so, became the new leader of the Dauphin\u00e9 by five seconds, from Team Sky's Chris Froome\u00a0\u2013 the best of the general classification contenders, and one of four Team Sky riders in the top six\u00a0\u2013 as Veilleux lost more than three minutes on the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 5\nThe fifth stage was the first to be categorised as a mountain stage, with a summit finish at the ski resort of Valmorel, just outside Les Avanchers. After an opening loop around the start town of Gr\u00e9sy-sur-Aix, the C\u00f4te de Tr\u00e9vignin was the first of four categorised climbs on the day's route. The climb of 4.4\u00a0km (2.7\u00a0mi) averaged 6.6% over the ascent, and from there the race progressed to the Massif des Bauges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 5\nAfter a period of undulating terrain, the short, sharp fourth-category Col du Fr\u00eane was next on the route, at 6% over just under 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) of climbing. After the descent down to Saint-Pierre-d'Albigny, the 139\u00a0km (86.4\u00a0mi) parcours headed towards Valmorel via Albertville, the intermediate sprint point at La B\u00e2thie and the fourth-category C\u00f4te de la Croix. The final climb, an hors cat\u00e9gorie ascent, averaged 7% over 12.7\u00a0km (7.9\u00a0mi), which was somewhat ameliorated by several hairpin bends towards the finish, which provided any attacking rider with a perfect kick towards the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 5\nAn attack-laden opening to the stage allowed a breakaway of fifteen riders to be formed after around 20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) of racing, with mountains classification leader Thomas Damuseau being among the group, to maintain his lead in those standings; the best-placed general classification rider among the group was Francesco Gavazzi (Astana), who trailed overnight leader Rohan Dennis of Garmin\u2013Sharp by just under three-and-a-half minutes. The lead gap went over five minutes at one point during the stage, but was around half that as the leaders approached the final climb of the day. Tim Wellens (Lotto\u2013Belisol) and Orica\u2013GreenEDGE's Daniel Teklehaymanot set the pace at the foot of the climb, before Wellens attacked on his own. RadioShack\u2013Leopard's Matthew Busche was able to bridge back up to Wellens, before dropping him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 5\nBehind, Team Sky were leading the main group up the Mont\u00e9e de Valmorel, with the pace dislodging numerous riders. Alejandro Valverde (Movistar Team) attempted to chase down Busche, but was brought back with less than 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi) remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 5\nAfter losing time in the previous day's time trial, Alberto Contador of Saxo\u2013Tinkoff attacked the group, but was chased down by Team Sky's Chris Froome; Froome and Contador were able to catch Busche in the closing stages, with Froome kicking on to take the stage victory and the race leader's yellow and blue jersey, as Dennis had been dropped in the final 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) of the stage. Dennis ultimately fell to third in the general classification, as Froome's team-mate Richie Porte was also able to move ahead by two seconds, but he maintained his lead in the young rider classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 6\nThe sixth stage was relatively short at 143\u00a0km (88.9\u00a0mi) long. After a near-flat opening 50\u00a0km (31.1\u00a0mi), which included the day's intermediate sprint at Albertville, the race moved towards the hills, with four categorised climbs within a 40\u00a0km (24.9\u00a0mi) period. The first was the shallowest of the quartet, with the fourth-category C\u00f4te d'Arvillard averaging 5.3% over 2.2\u00a0km (1.4\u00a0mi), before the first-category Col du Barioz \u2212 a narrow climb averaging 7.3% over 7.1\u00a0km (4.4\u00a0mi). After a speedy descent, the riders climbed once again, with the second-category Col des Ayes averaging over 8%. Another short, sharp climb of the Col des Mouilles finished the categorised climbing for the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 6\nAfter points classification leader Gianni Meersman extended his lead at the intermediate sprint for Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step, the stage's breakaway took over an hour to form on the road. A three-rider move built up an advantage of over two minutes, after which Team Europcar took up station on the front of the peloton to get a rider clear. The rider in question was Thomas Voeckler, who managed to catch the original breakaway, and passed them on the road. Voeckler was later joined by seven other riders as they were ascending the Col du Barioz. The best placed rider of the octet was FDJ rider Alexandre Geniez, who trailed the overnight leader of the general classification, Chris Froome (Team Sky), by 3' 41\"; despite this, Froome's squad kept the gap in check, with the difference not going over three minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 6\nBMC Racing Team also helped with the chase of the leaders, and managed to halve the gap by the time the race reached the 30\u00a0km (18.6\u00a0mi) to go point. The lead group then splintered, as the Movistar Team's Jos\u00e9 Herrada attacked on his own. The Astana pairing of Egor Silin and Kevin Seeldraeyers were next to follow Herrada, with Voeckler and Geniez eventually rejoining, and Tim Wellens (Lotto\u2013Belisol), Mikel Nieve of Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi and Vacansoleil\u2013DCM's Thomas De Gendt losing contact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 6\nGeniez later dropped back, which allowed for a slight lull in the chase, allowing the leaders to increase the gap from just over a minute to a minute-and-a-half. The gap remained at around a minute as the race entered Grenoble, which enabled the breakaway to battle it out for the honours. After several half-hearted moves, Voeckler was the only rider to launch a sizable move; he ultimately won the stage, ahead of Herrada, Seeldraeyers and Silin. Team Sky sprinter Edvald Boasson Hagen won the bunch sprint, 46 seconds later, as team-mate Froome kept the race lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\nThe queen stage of the 2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, the penultimate stage steadily rose out of the start town in Le Pont-de-Claix towards the first of the day's five categorised climbs. The first test, a climb to Alpe d'Huez, was seen as a dress rehearsal for the Tour de France, to be held in July, with the 12\u00a0km (7.5\u00a0mi), 8.6% average hors cat\u00e9gorie climb featuring twice on that race's eighteenth stage. From there, it was a short descent to the second climb, the second-category Col de Sarenne, which averaged almost 7% over 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi) of climbing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\nAn immediate long descent followed, before the first-category Col d'Ornon, which averaged 6.1% over its 10.5\u00a0km (6.5\u00a0mi) duration. The riders enjoyed a respite from the climbs for around an hour across the Valbonnais, passing through the intermediate sprint at Corps. The final portion of the 187.5\u00a0km (116.5\u00a0mi) parcours saw the riders climb the Col du Noyer, with portions at 11%, before a descent and a 4\u00a0km (2.5\u00a0mi), 5.7% kick up to the finish at SuperD\u00e9voluy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\nA group of twenty-two riders (from seventeen teams) formed the day's breakaway, and were around three minutes clear by the time they reached the foot of the climb to Alpe d'Huez. The gap rose to around four minutes by the summit of the climb\u00a0\u2013 led over the top by Vacansoleil\u2013DCM's Thomas De Gendt\u00a0\u2013 which allowed Kevin Seeldraeyers (Astana) to become the virtual leader of the general classification. The breakaway began to splinter on the Col d'Ornon, as the advantage over the main field continued to rise, to over five minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\nAlexey Lutsenko led over the climb for Astana, ahead of the mountains classification leader Thomas Damuseau of Argos\u2013Shimano and Seeldraeyers. Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Sylvain Chavanel and Cannondale rider Alessandro De Marchi moved clear ahead of the Col du Noyer, and managed to pull around a minute-and-a-half clear of the rest of the breakaway by the foot of the climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\nDe Marchi dropped Chavanel on the climb, but by this time, the lead group had moved within a minute of catching him; they eventually did so with around 14\u00a0km (8.7\u00a0mi) left to cover on the stage. Saxo\u2013Tinkoff and Team Sky were prominent at the front of the leading group, setting the pace high enough to reduce the group to around a dozen riders. Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi rider Samuel S\u00e1nchez attacked near the top of the climb, with another Astana rider, Jakob Fuglsang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 7\nThe two riders worked well together and managed to build a gap of about twenty seconds prior to the final climb, remaining clear until the finish. S\u00e1nchez out-sprinted Fuglsang at the end for his first win of the year; a win he later dedicated to his former team-mate V\u00edctor Cabedo, who had died in a training accident in September 2012. Richie Porte finished third for Team Sky, having been aided by his team-mate and overall leader, Chris Froome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nThe final stage of the 2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 was a categorised medium-mountain stage 155.5\u00a0km (96.6\u00a0mi) in length. Having rolled out of the start town of Sisteron, the parcours headed towards Gigors via some rolling terrain, and after a descent, set up for the first of three categorised climbs: the C\u00f4te de la Br\u00e9ole, averaging around 5% for its 5.4\u00a0km (3.4\u00a0mi) length. Having passed through the feed zone at Le Lauzet-Ubaye, the road steadily rose towards the foot of the second climb, the first-category Col de Vars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nA climb of irregular gradient, it averaged 6.9% for 10.4\u00a0km (6.5\u00a0mi) of climbing, albeit with a short downhill section in the middle. From the summit, the route descended towards Guillestre and ultimately, the start of the final climb to Risoul, a steady almost-14\u00a0km (8.7\u00a0mi) climb, maxing at around 9%, but averaging 6.7% for its duration. The climb had previously featured in the 2010 edition of the race, where Nicolas Vogondy soloed to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nFor the second day running, a large breakaway group formed for the primary break of the day. A total of 24 riders, including members of 17 of the race's 22 teams, were part of the group at its largest. The group included mountains classification leader Thomas Damuseau (Argos\u2013Shimano), who set about securing an unassailable advantage in the standings. He led over the top of the C\u00f4te de la Br\u00e9ole, as the peloton allowed them an advantage of around three-and-a-half minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nPoints classification leader Gianni Meersman of Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step was also among the group, and he took maximum points at the intermediate sprint at Jausiers to extend his advantage, but not enough to mathematically secure the jersey. On the Col de Vars, Lotto\u2013Belisol rider Tim Wellens and Cannondale's Alessandro De Marchi attacked, and were later joined by Travis Meyer of Orica\u2013GreenEDGE; Meyer was able to distance his companions for a period, before De Marchi, Wellens, BMC Racing Team rider Manuel Quinziato and Team Katusha's Alberto Losada were able to rejoin him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nThis quintet held an advantage of approaching three minutes, as they headed towards the final climb in the treacherous conditions that had been prominent throughout the stage. Wellens attacked at the foot of the climb, and managed to acquire a gap over around 30 seconds halfway up, but had been tiring quickly. This fatigue allowed De Marchi to rejoin him, and ultimately pass him on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nTeam Sky, leading the peloton in protection of the overall leader Chris Froome, were setting a fast pace in the group, and the pace forced Michael Rogers (Saxo\u2013Tinkoff) to be distanced, putting his third place overall under threat. Froome and team-mate Richie Porte soon gained ground off the front of the peloton, further securing the duo's one-two finish in the overall standings. They set off in chase of De Marchi, but he ultimately prevailed for his first professional victory, finishing 24 seconds clear of the nearest rider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0028-0002", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Stages, Stage 8\nFroome finished second, ahead of Garmin\u2013Sharp's Andrew Talansky, who caught Froome and passed Porte in the closing metres; Froome thus secured the overall lead, missed out on the points title by two points to Meersman Rogers faded to sixth overall, which handed Daniel Moreno (Team Katusha) the final place on the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership\nIn the 2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, four different jerseys were awarded. For the general classification, calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage, the leader received a yellow jersey with a blue bar. This classification was considered the most important of the 2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, and the winner of the classification was considered the winner of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership\nAdditionally, there was a points classification, which awarded a green jersey. In the points classification, cyclists got points for finishing in the top 10 in a stage. For all stages, the win earned 15\u00a0points, second place earned 12\u00a0points, third 10, fourth 8, fifth 6, and one point fewer per place down to a single point for 10th. Points towards the classification could also be achieved at each of the intermediate sprints; these points were given to the top three riders through the line with 5\u00a0points for first, 3 for second, and 1 point for third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership\nThere was also a mountains classification, the leadership of which was marked by a red and white polka-dot jersey. In the mountains classification, points were won by reaching the top of a climb before other cyclists. Each climb was categorised as either hors, first, second, third, or fourth-category, with more points available for the higher-categorised climbs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership\nHors cat\u00e9gorie climbs awarded the most points, with 20\u00a0points on offer for the first rider across the summit; the first ten riders were able to accrue points towards the mountains classification, compared with the first eight on first-category passes and the first six riders on second-category climbs. Fewer points were on offer for the smaller hills, marked as third-category or fourth-category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232840-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9, Classification leadership\nThe fourth jersey represented the young rider classification, marked by a white jersey. This was decided the same way as the general classification, but only riders born after 1 January 1988 were eligible to be ranked in the classification. There was also a classification for teams, in which the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage were added together; the leading team at the end of the race was the team with the lowest total time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232841-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatia Rally\nThe 2013 Croatia Rally, formally the 40. Croatia Rally, was the tenth round of the 2013 European Rally Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232842-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian Football Cup Final\nThe 2013 Croatian Cup Final was a two-legged affair played between Hajduk Split and Lokomotiva. The first leg was played in Split on 8 May 2013, while the second leg on 22 May 2013 in Zagreb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232842-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian Football Cup Final\nHajduk Split won the trophy with an aggregate result of 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232842-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian Football Cup Final, First leg\nAssistant referees:Dalibor Conjar (Osijek)Hrvoje Bari\u0161i\u0107 (Osijek)Fourth official:Tihomir Pejin (Donji Miholjac)Additional assistant referees:Domagoj Ljubi\u010di\u0107 (Osijek)Danijel Trampus (Osijek)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232842-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian Football Cup Final, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Tomislav Petrovi\u0107 (Valpovo)Miro Grgi\u0107 (Osijek)Fourth official:Mario Zebec (Cestica)Additional assistant referees:Damir Batini\u0107 (Osijek)Zlatko \u0160im\u010di\u0107 (Koprivnica)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232843-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian Football Super Cup\nThe 2013 Croatian Football Super Cup was the tenth 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 6 July 2013 at Stadion Maksimir between 2012\u201313 Croatian First League winners Dinamo Zagreb and 2012\u201313 Croatian Football Cup winners Hajduk Split.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232843-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian Football Super Cup, Match details\nAssistant referees:Borut Kri\u017eari\u0107 (\u010cakovec)Sini\u0161a Premu\u017eaj (Vara\u017edin)Fourth official:Tihomir Pejin (Donji Miholjac)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in Croatia on 1 December 2013. The proposed amendment to the constitution would define marriage as being a union between a man and a woman, which would create a constitutional prohibition against same-sex marriage. 37.9% of eligible voters voted. After processing all of the ballots, the State Election Commission announced that 65.87% voted yes, 33.51% no and 0.57% of ballots were disregarded as invalid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum\nThe referendum was called after a conservative organization U ime obitelji (\u201cOn Behalf of the Family\u201d) gathered more than 700,000 signatures in May 2013 demanding a referendum on the subject. The initiative was supported by conservative political parties, the Catholic Church as well as by several other faith groups. The ruling left-wing coalition opposed the amendment along with numerous human rights organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background\nA petition in favor of the change was organized by a Catholic citizens' group 'On Behalf of the Family' (U ime obitelji) and collected over 700,000 signatures by May 2013. The initiative was a reaction to the government's proposal to legalize same-sex partnership. The referendum was approved following a vote in the Sabor on 8 November in which 104 of the 151 MPs voted in favor of holding a referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background\nThe group Citizens Voting Against was formed from 88 civil society organizations (led GONG, Center for Peace Studies and Zagreb Pride), supported by numerous public persons, film actors and actresses, academics, activists and politicians, including media such as Novi list and Jutarnji list and musicians, such as Severina, Dubioza kolektiv, Let 3, Hladno pivo, TBF and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background\nThe Vote Against campaign claimed that the public faces of the initiative \u017deljka Marki\u0107, Kre\u0161imir Planini\u0107, Kre\u0161imir Mileti\u0107, Ladislav Il\u010di\u0107, as well as members of their families, were simultaneously leaders of the referendum effort and candidates of the right wing political party HRAST. The Vote Against and the broader coalition of civil society organizations, Platform 112, claimed that the bank account listed on 'On behalf of the Family' web site does not belong to the initiative but an ad hoc registered association Gra\u0111ani odlu\u010duju (\"The citizens decide\") which was founded by the Vice-president of HRAST Kre\u0161imir Mileti\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background\n\u017deljka Marki\u0107 was furthermore criticized by opponents for allegedly being a member of the controversial Catholic organization Opus Dei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background, Constitutionality of the referendum question\n\"Are you in favor of the constitution of the Republic of Croatia being amended with a provision stating that marriage is matrimony between a woman and a man?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 107], "content_span": [108, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background, Constitutionality of the referendum question\nAfter the initiative gathered enough signatures to hold a referendum, it was widely speculated that the referendum would still not be held. The political willingness in the Sabor to call a referendum was uncertain given that a left-wing coalition which opposed the proposed amendment held a majority of the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 107], "content_span": [108, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background, Constitutionality of the referendum question\nHowever, in a session held on 8 November, the Sabor voted to call a national referendum, with 104 votes in favour, 13 against and five abstentions. A former Prime Minister and an independent MP Jadranka Kosor proposed that the request for the review of constitutionality of the referendum be submitted to the Constitutional Court. However, the two largest parties, the HDZ and SDP, did not embrace the proposal and it was rejected by 75 votes against and 39 in favour. The only political party of the ruling coalition that supported the constitutional review was the HNS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 107], "content_span": [108, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background, Constitutionality of the referendum question\nAfter a two-day session, on 14 November the Constitutional Court of Croatia announced that there is no reason to over-rule the parliamentary vote on the referendum. The judges emphasized that the constitutionality of the referendum itself was not considered, because they believed that the Sabor had expressed its legal willingness to deem the referendum question compliant with the Constitution. However, they further emphasized that any possible amendment to the Constitution that defined marriage as a union of man and woman could not affect further development of the legal framework of the institution of extramarital and same-sex unions. The Constitutional Court did not rule on the constitutionality of the referendum because it was not officially requested to do so by the Croatian Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 107], "content_span": [108, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Political background, Constitutionality of the referendum question\nThe judges were divided in opinion on whether the Constitutional Court should review the constitutionality of the referendum. Several of them pointed out that the Constitutional Court must give a statement on what the constitutional definition of marriage means for the position of LGBT minorities in Croatia. Others explained that the Constitutional Court did not need to respond to citizen proposals, because only the Sabor had the right to request a review of the constitutionality of the referendum question, but which it has refused to do when making the decision to call a referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 107], "content_span": [108, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe Prime Minister Zoran Milanovi\u0107 told HRT that he would vote against the proposal. President Ivo Josipovi\u0107 called the referendum unnecessary, without practical political consequences regardless of the outcome, and a waste of taxpayer money. The president furthermore commented that marriage has already been defined in Croatian law as a union of man and woman, but that the referendum question has a strong psychological effect with an underlying discriminatory message.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nIf successful, this will only strengthen the message that we are not willing to accept diversity, that we want to stop throughout the democratic world a clear process of equalization of rights of all people, regardless of their different personal characteristics, in particular their sexual orientation", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nTomislav Karamarko, leader of the conservative Croatian Democratic Union said he would vote in favor. Four other parties in the Parliament also supported the referendum; in total 104 of 151 members of the Croatian Parliament supported it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nJutarnji list, one of the country's two largest newspapers, announced it would openly endorse the campaign against the amendment. A similar statement was later made by Novi list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe Croatian Bishops' Conference called for Croatian Catholics to vote in favour of the constitutional amendment. Representatives from the Croatian Bishops' Conference, the Serbian Orthodox Church, the Macedonian Orthodox Church, the Reformed Christian (Calvinist) Church, the Baptist Union of Croatia, the Evangelical Pentecostal Church, the Bet Israel Jewish Community and the Mesihat of Croatia issued a joint statement in support of the referendum on 12 November. However, the Croatian Evangelical Lutheran Church and the Jewish Community of Zagreb opposed the proposed amendment. The Rabbinical Center of Europe has written a statement in support of the referendum and the civil initiative 'On behalf of the family', saying they were \"very disturbed at reports that some have compared this pro-marriage initiative with the Nazi regime and the ideology of fascism\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nCardinal Josip Bozani\u0107 encouraged support for the amendment in a letter that was read in churches where he singled out heterosexual marriage as being the only kind of union that is capable of biologically producing children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nIf marriage is a union between a woman and a man, then it is not the same as other types of unions. The Church does not promote any kind of discrimination when it backs that definition of marriage. On the contrary, we can say that the danger exists today of marriage itself being discriminated against, by presenting it as something that it cannot be. The Church wants to preserve marriage and wants the definition of it be clearly spelled out, so that the institution of marriage and the institution of family are preserved for future generations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe Church is therefore not against anyone, it is open for dialogue with everyone, but wants to make it clear that some things can not be made equal. We respect everyone's opinions, but we want the institution of marriage and family, which is imperiled by societal developments today, to be guarded for the future of the Croatian people and a good in all of us.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nBozani\u0107 repeatedly called the issue of marriage naming a serious issue for country's future and reiterated the viewpoint that it is not Church's intent to discriminate against anybody, but only to \"preserve what we already have\". He remarked that the referendum was an opportunity for Christians to practically manifest their fate by voting yes, by respecting God's intent and serving the Truth. He echoed his previous statements that marriage and family are not a private affair of the individual which they can shape as they see fit, but are of wider social significance and must not be experimented upon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign, Media portrayal\nThe initiative and their goals were generally unfavorably reported by the mainstream Croatian media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign, Media portrayal\nOn the day of the referendum the initiative decided to forbid access to their headquarters to the journalists belonging to a group of selected media whom the initiative accused of bias, unprofessionalism and plagiarism. Among these were the Croatian Radiotelevision, the public broadcasting company, the most visited Croatian Internet portals Index.hr, Net.hr and T-portal, as well as all of the publications by Europapress Holding and Novi list. The initiative required of all of the journalists to submit their cell phone numbers, their home addresses, e-mail addresses as well as the name and e-mail address of their editors. This was strongly denounced by the Croatian Journalists' Association who invited all of the media to boycott the coverage of initiative on the referendum day, and emphasized the potential for the abuse of private information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 921]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign, Media portrayal\nIn the last few weeks we have seen a number of anonymous vulgar letters sent to respected journalists in which they are being insulted and threatened by unknown persons, and obvious semi-fascists, simply because of their position on the issue. We believe that this kind of discrimination of journalists announced by the initiative \"On behalf of the family\" is hitherto unprecedented in Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Campaign, Media portrayal\nAll of the major Croatia media have responded to the call and in solidarity with the banned journalists have completely boycotted the coverage of the initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Opinion polls\nA poll conducted in June 2013 revealed that 55.3% of Croats support the changes, while 31.1% said they were opposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Opinion polls\nAnother poll from November revealed that 54.3% of respondents will vote for the proposal and 33.6% against. 12.1% of respondents said they were not sure. The same poll revealed that 85.7% of HDZ voters and 39.5% of SDP voters support the proposed amendment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Opinion polls\nA poll published by HRT two days before the vote showed that 59% of respondents would vote for the proposal, 31% against and 10% did not answer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Results\nAfter processing all of the ballots, the State Election Commission announced that 65.87% voted yes, 33.51% no and 0.57% of ballots were disregarded as invalid. 37.9% of eligible voters have voted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Results\nPula, Rijeka, Vara\u017edin and \u010cakovec were the only large cities, and Istria county and Primorje-Gorski Kotar County were the only counties where the majority of the voters voted no. The counties most supportive of changes were in the Croatian South: \u0160ibenik-Knin, Split-Dalmatia, Dubrovnik-Neretva, and Brod-Posavina. This relative polarization of results between Croatian North and South has been interpreted by sociologists as closely connected to economic indicators as well as the extent to which the regions were affected by the war in the 1990s. In the capital Zagreb, 43.5% of voters voted no, which was interpreted as the capital being an amalgam of \"largely incompatible tendencies\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Results\nStatistical analysis by electoral units has also indicated a strong correlation to political choices, with regions whose citizens voted for right-wing parties generally voting in favor of the referendum, while regions who voted for the left-wing coalition were largely against the referendum - albeit with many exceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Reactions, Negative reactions\nThe Prime Minister Zoran Milanovi\u0107 rejected accusations by civic initiatives that the government was complicit in calling the referendum. Milanovi\u0107 pointed out that the referendum was allowed by the constitution, that it is in no way related to the government, and no way does it change the existing definition of marriage according to Croatian laws. He further announced the upcoming enactment of the Law on Partnership, which will enable same-sex persons to form a lifetime partnership union. Such a union will share the same rights as that of marriage proper, apart from the fact that gay couples will not be able to adopt children, though they will be allowed to have custody of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Reactions, Negative reactions\nVesna Pusi\u0107, the First Deputy Prime Minister, also rejected accusations on government's responsibility, commenting that the referendum is result of an omission, when the threshold of 50 percent voter turnout was abolished to pass the 2012 EU membership referendum. Pusi\u0107 contended that the threshold had protected certain groups from discrimination by a minority, but care was not taken to specifically exempt human, civil and minority rights from being the subject of referendum questions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Reactions, Negative reactions\nHannes Swoboda, the President of the European Socialists, said that he \"was deeply disappointed because he saw Croatia as an open and advanced society, and not as a country which prohibits happiness and equal rights\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Reactions, Positive reactions\nHungary's ruling Christian Democratic People's Party (KDNP) welcomed the results, which cheered the approval of partnership based on \"the order of nature\" and the affirmation of marriage \"in the Christian sense\". According to the KDNP, it is the victory of the \"European Christian values\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Reactions, Positive reactions\nThe Rabbinical Centre of Europe issued a statement that it was disturbed by comparisons between the initiative and the Nazi regime and totalitarian fascism, and that such statements were inappropriate and insulting to the memory of millions of their victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232844-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian constitutional referendum, Reactions, Positive reactions\nCroatian bishop Vlado Ko\u0161i\u0107 described the government official's opposition to the referendum as shocking, unacceptable and undemocratic, emphasizing that Croats are Catholic people, cherishing traditions by which they have lived for centuries. He accused the government of atheizing the population, being eager to erase their traditional values, and has called for their resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232845-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian local elections\nThe 2013 Croatian local elections were held on 19 May, with the second round held on 2 June where necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232845-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian local elections\nThe elections were held to elect members of city councils, mayors, members of county councils and county prefects. The turnout was 47%, and 43% in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232845-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian local elections, Summary of mayoral results\nIn Zagreb, populist right-wing and former Social Democrat Milan Bandi\u0107 won 47.9% of the vote against Social Democrat Health Minister Rajko Ostoji\u0107's 22.7%. Bandic received a two-thirds majority in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232845-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian local elections, Summary of mayoral results\nThe incumbent mayor of Split, \u017deljko Kerum, placed third with 18.54% of the vote and was eliminated from the second round which was narrowly won by the Socialist candidate Ivo Baldasar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232845-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian local elections, Summary of mayoral results\nIn Slavonia's largest city, Osijek, the HDSSB candidate, mayor Kre\u0161imir Bubalo, won 36.3% of the vote in the first round, but lost to Independent candidate Ivan Vrki\u0107, who gained 27.8% in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232845-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Croatian local elections, Election results, City of Split\nThe percentages of votes from each candidate are calculated from number of valid votersThe percentages of valid and invalid votes are calculated from the turnout numberThe turnout percentage is calculated from the number of expected voters", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232846-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season\nThe 2013 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season is the 47th in the club's history. Coached by Shane Flanagan and captained by Paul Gallen, they competed in the NRL's 2013 Telstra Premiership. The Sharks finished the regular season 5th (out of 16), thus reaching the finals for a second consecutive season. They were then knocked out of contention in the second week of the finals by eventual grand finalists the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232846-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season\nThis year Damian Keogh became chairman of the club's board of directors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games\nThe 2013 CrossFit Games, the seventh CrossFit Games, were held on July 24\u201328, 2013, at the StubHub Center in Carson, California. The men's competition was won by Rich Froning Jr., the women's by Samantha Briggs, and the Affiliate Cup by Hacks Pack UTE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games\nThis year 138,000 athletes took part in the Open. The cash prize for the individual winners at the Games increased to $275,000. This is the first year prize money was also awarded to the top three finishers of each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nIn this season, 138,000 registered for the Open to compete for a place in the Games. The Open was held over five weeks from March 6 to April 7, with 5 workouts released for the athletes to complete, one per week. The number of qualifiers from the Open who can compete in the Regionals were reduced to 48 men and 48 women per region this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nQualifiers from the Open proceeded to take part in 7 events in three days in the Regionals; the 17 Regionals were spread over 4 weekends from May 17 through June 9, 2013. Six of these Regionals streamed their events live online. Unlike the preceding season, no athletes were cut during the competition. Three athletes from each Regionals qualified for the Games, apart from the Canadian Regionals (two each), and Asia, Africa and Latin America (one each). The scoring system for the Open and Regionals is the same as previous years (one point for first, two for second, etc.).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Qualification\nAs with the 2012 season, extra places were given to Regionals where previous champions competed and qualified for the Games. CrossFit Games also exercised its right to offer a place in the Games to athletes who failed to qualify, which this year included past champion Kristan Clever. 47 men, 44 women, 43 teams were invited to the 2013 Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events\n46 men and 44 women turned up at the 2013 Games to compete. The scoring system used was the same as the 2012 Games', and all events were scored a maximum of 100 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 24, The Pool\n10 rounds of: swim 25-yard swim, 3 bar muscle-ups, swim 25-yard swim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 24, The Pool\nAs with the Pendleton events in 2012, The Pool was a surprise addition to the Games, starting on Wednesday two days before the official start date. It was held at the Woollett Aquatic Center, and was the first swimming event to be held at the Games. Jordan Troyan won the men's event, and Michelle Letendre the women's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 24, Row 1 and Row 2\nComplete 2000 meters on an indoor rower as fast as possible, and then continue rowing for an additional 19,097 m (half marathon distance) as fast as possible. Jason Khalipa won both the rowing events for the men, Samantha Briggs was first for both the women (Kaleena Ladeairous was joint first for the first row).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 26, Burden Run\n1) Run 2.1 miles; 2) Flip a frame (\"pig\") end-over-end for 100 yards (pig weight: 490\u00a0lb for men and 310\u00a0lb for women); 3) Carry a 3-foot-long log 600 yards (log weight: 100\u00a0lb for men and 70\u00a0lb for women); 4) Drag a sled 66 yards (sled weight: 310\u00a0lb for men and 220\u00a0lb for women)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 59], "content_span": [60, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 26, Legless\nAlternating sets of thrusters (front squat + push press) and no-legs rope climbs with decreasing repetitions each set. Thruster weight: 95\u00a0lb for men and 65\u00a0lb for women; rope climb height: 15\u00a0ft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 27, Naughty Nancy\n4 rounds 1) run 600m, 2) 25 overhead squats (140 lb for men, 95 lb for women)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 27, Clean & Jerk Ladder\nOne clean and jerk every 90 seconds with progressively increasing weight", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 27, 2007\n1000m row, then 5 rounds of 1) 25 pull-ups, 2) 7 push jerks (135 lb for men, 85 lb for women)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 28, Sprint Chipper\n1) 21 GHD situps with a MedBall, 2) 15 snatches (165 lb for men, 100 lb for women), 3) 9 burpees over a 6-foot wall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 28, The Cinco 1\n3 rounds of 1) 5 deadlifts (405 lb for men, 265 lb for women), 2) 5 weighted pistol squats per leg (53 lb for men, 35 lb for women)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 28, The Cinco 2\n3 rounds of 1) 5 muscle-ups, 2) 5 deficit handstand pushups", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Individual events, July 28, The Cinco 2\nThen, a 90-foot overhead walking lunge (160 lb barbell for men, 100 lb barbell for women)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232847-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 CrossFit Games, Team events\nUnlike 2011 and 2012 when scores were wiped clean before the final day, scores for all events counted going into the Sunday events. Most events were scored a maximum of 100, except for a few which were scored 50 points (Iditarod 1/2/3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232848-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cruzeiro Esporte Clube season\nThe 2013 season is Cruzeiro's ninety-second season in existence and the club's forty-third consecutive season in the top flight of Brazilian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232849-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad\nThe 2013 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 46th edition of the Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Roy Emerson Arena in Gstaad, Switzerland, from 20 July through 28 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232849-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232849-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232850-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Doubles\nMarcel Granollers and Marc L\u00f3pez were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Jamie Murray and John Peers won the title, defeating Pablo And\u00fajar and Guillermo Garc\u00eda-L\u00f3pez in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232851-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Singles\nThomaz Bellucci was the defending champion but lost to Federico Delbonis in the first round. Mikhail Youzhny won the title, defeating Robin Haase in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232851-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cr\u00e9dit Agricole Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232852-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cuban parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Cuba on 3 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232852-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cuban parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 612 members of the National Assembly of People's Power were elected in single-member constituencies. Candidates had to obtain at least 50% of the valid votes in a constituency to be elected. If no candidate passed the 50% threshold, the seat was left vacant unless the Council of State chose to hold a by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232852-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cuban parliamentary election, Electoral system\nOnly one candidate stood in each constituency, having been approved by the National Candidature Commission. The electoral law in force at the time stated that half of the candidates had to be municipal councillors, whilst the remaining half were put forward by assemblies composed of members of the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution and groups representing farmers, students, women, workers and young people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232853-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cumbria County Council election\nAn election to Cumbria County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. All 84 councillors were elected from electoral divisions which returned one county councillor each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. Following an electoral review carried out by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England, newly drawn electoral divisions were used without change in the number of county councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232853-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cumbria County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232853-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Cumbria County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election. Prior to the election the Conservatives were in a joint administration with Labour, the Liberal Democrats being in opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232853-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cumbria County Council election, Summary\nThe election saw the council remain in no overall control. However Labour councillors overtook Conservatives to become the largest party on the county council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232853-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cumbria County Council election, Summary\nThe Liberal Democrat and Conservative parties had enough seats to form a coalition, with the support of some of the Independents, but following the election of a new Leader of the Liberal Democrat Group, a coalition was formed between them and Labour, with the Conservatives going into opposition .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232854-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cup of China\nThe 2013 Cup of China was the third event of six in the 2013\u201314 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Capital Indoor Stadium in Beijing on November 1\u20133. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2013\u201314 Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232854-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cup of China, Entries, Changes to preliminary assignments\nPolina Korobeynikova withdrew and was replaced by Nikol Gosviani. Geng Bingwa withdrew and was replaced by Guo Xiaowen. Kevin Reynolds also withdrew; he was not replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232855-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nThe Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, played between Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti and CFR Cluj. The match was played on 1 June 2013 at the Arena Na\u021bional\u0103 in Bucharest. Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti won the match 1-0, triumphing for the 3rd time in this competition while CFR Cluj lost its first final. It was the second final played on the Arena Na\u021bional\u0103 and the second in Bucharest since 2006. Jeremy Bokila scored the only goal of the match in the 8th minute and was named Man of the Match. Winners Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti will face Romanian Champions, on the same stadium on 10 July in the Romanian Supercup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232856-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic\nThe 2013 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic was held from October 11 to 14 at the Calgary Curling Club in Calgary, Alberta. The event was the first women's Grand Slam of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple knockout format, and the purse for the event was CAD$50,000. The winning team received $14,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232856-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic\nEve Muirhead's Scottish rink won the tournament with seven straight victories, a first in the bonspiel's history. She defeated China's Wang Bingyu in the final, which saw the first time the tournament featured two non-Canadian teams in the final. It is also the second straight women's slam to feature two non-Canadian teams in the final, which has only happened one time before in Grand Slam history. Muirhead, who won the 2013 Players' Championship in April, won her second straight slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232857-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup First Division\nThe 2013 Currie Cup First Division was contested from 29 June to 11 October 2013. The tournament (also known as the Absa Currie Cup First Division for sponsorship reasons) is the second tier of South Africa's premier domestic rugby union competition, featuring teams representing either entire provinces or substantial regions within provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232857-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup First Division, Competition, Regular season and title play offs\nThere were 8 participating teams in the 2013 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, 79], "content_span": [80, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232857-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup First Division, Competition, Regular season and title play offs\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 losing a match by 7 points or less. Teams were ranked by points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 79], "content_span": [80, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232857-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup First Division, Competition, Regular season and title play offs\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, 30], "section_span": [32, 79], "content_span": [80, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232857-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup First Division, Competition, Promotion play offs\nThe top team on the log also qualified for the promotion/relegation play-offs. That team played off against the team placed sixth in the 2013 Currie Cup Premier Division over two legs. The winner over these two ties (determined via team tables, with all Currie Cup ranking regulations in effect) qualified for the 2014 Currie Cup Premier Division, while the losing team qualified for the 2014 Currie Cup First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232857-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup First Division, Players, Player Statistics\nThe following table contain points which have been scored in competitive games in the 2013 Currie Cup First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232857-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup First Division, Players, Squad Lists\nThe following players took part in the 2013 Currie Cup First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232858-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup Premier Division\nThe 2013 Currie Cup Premier Division was the 75th season in the competition since it started in 1889 and was contested from 10 August to 26 October 2013. The tournament (known as the Absa Currie Cup Premier Division for sponsorship reasons) was the top tier of South Africa's premier domestic rugby union competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232858-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition, Regular season and title play offs\nThere were 6 participating teams in the 2013 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, 81], "content_span": [82, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232858-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition, Regular season and title play offs\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, 81], "content_span": [82, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232858-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition, Regular season and title play offs\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, 81], "content_span": [82, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232858-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition, Relegation play offs\nThe bottom team on the log qualified for the promotion/relegation play-offs. That team played off against the team placed first in the 2013 Currie Cup First Division over two legs. The winner over these two ties (determined via team tables, with all Currie Cup ranking regulations in effect) qualified for the 2014 Currie Cup Premier Division, while the losing team qualified for the 2014 Currie Cup First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232858-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup Premier Division, Players, Player Statistics\nThe following table contain only points which have been scored in competitive games in the 2013 Currie Cup Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232858-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Currie Cup Premier Division, Players, Squad Lists\nThe following players have been named in the squads for the 2013 Currie Cup Premier Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Cyprus on 17 February 2013. A runoff was held on 24 February 2013. Nicos Anastasiades of Democratic Rally won the election. The other candidates were Stavros Malas of the Progressive Party of Working People (AKEL); Praxoula Antoniadou of the United Democrats; Lakis Ioannou with the support of LASOK; Loukas Stavrou; ELAM's Giorgos Charalambous, Giorgos Lillikas of Movement for Social Democracy (EDEK); and independents Andreas Efstratiou, Makaria-Andri Stylianou, Kostas Kyriacou(Outopos) and Solon Gregoriou. Although the president Demetris Christofias was not term-limited, he did not seek re-election in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of candidates and supports for the first round\nThe first candidate who confirmed the intention to be the candidate of his party was DISY's Nicos Anastasiades on 11 February 2012 at the Pancypriot Convention of the party. The Supreme Council of DISY (on 17 February) had to choose between Nicos Anastasiades and MEP, Eleni Theocharous. The Council voted in favour of Nicos Anastasiades with 673 votes (86.73%) and Eleni Theocharous with 103 votes (13.27%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 96], "content_span": [97, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of candidates and supports for the first round\nWhen president Christofias decided not to be seeking re-election for February 2013, in late July AKEL's Central Committee decided to suggest Minister of Health Stavros Malas to be the candidate of the party. On 21 July 2012 the Pancypriot Convention of AKEL voted in favour of Stavros Malas with 1183 votes (92.3%), against 81 (6.3%) and 17 abstentions (1.3%). Stavros Malas confirmed his candidacy with the support of AKEL on 7 September. On 15 October he resigned as Minister of Health .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 96], "content_span": [97, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of candidates and supports for the first round\nAfter a failed attempt by DIKO, Evroko, Ecological and Environmental Movement and EDEK to form a coalition, known as Intermediate political space (gr:\u0395\u03bd\u03b4\u03b9\u03ac\u03bc\u03b5\u03c3\u03bf\u03c2 \u03c0\u03bf\u03bb\u03b9\u03c4\u03b9\u03ba\u03cc\u03c2 \u03c7\u03ce\u03c1\u03bf\u03c2- Endiamesos politikos horos), EDEK decided to back independent candidate Giorgos Lillikas ( who had already confirmed his candidacy on 6 April) on 27 July at the Central Committee of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 96], "content_span": [97, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of candidates and supports for the first round\nDIKO had two plans on the table. The first was to back Nicos Anastasiades and the second to back a candidate from DIKO. After the talks on 30 August between Nicos Anastasiades and the president of DIKO Marios Garoyian, the two leaders agreed for cooperation. On 25 September the Executive Bureau of DIKO officially suggested the Central Committee to back Anastasiades. At the Central Committee on 27 September 117 members voted in-favour of Anastasiades (81.9%), 27 against and 2 abstained. The two parties had also talks with other parties such as Evroko and the Ecological and Environmental Movement to create and broaden a coalition of \"National Unity\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 96], "content_span": [97, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of candidates and supports for the first round\nEvroko was between to choose either Anastasiades or Lillikas. On 27 September (DIKO's decision day) president of Evroko Demetris Sillouris, had talks with Nicos Anastasiades and most possible scenario was to back DISY. Although, on 17 October Evroko's Executive Bureau decided not to back any of the candidates. At the Central Council, on 3 November, it had to be decided either the acceptance of EB's decision or denial. 75% of the members of the party voted in-favour of EB's decision and 25% against. The members can vote any of the two candidates (Lillikas-Anastasiades) they want.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 96], "content_span": [97, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of candidates and supports for the first round\nThe Movement's Convention was held on 7 October. The members had the opportunity to decide which candidate would be backed by the Movement. The results were split between Lillikas and Anastasiades. Lillikas got 45% and Anastasiades 40%. An electoral conference was scheduled to be held on 4 November where the decision was going to be determined. The Movement would back the candidate who obtained 60% of the vote. Although no candidate obtained 60% of the vote and so the voters of the Movement can vote any of the candidates they want. (like Evroko did)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 96], "content_span": [97, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Candidates and supporting parties\nEleven candidates were approved to participate in the elections. Each candidate had to be recommended by one Cypriot citizen and supported by eight more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Candidates and supporting parties, 1st round\nAll the names of the candidates were announced on 18 January. The names are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of supports for the second round\nAfter the elimination of Giorgos Lillikas in the first round, Evroko decided to back Nicos Anastasiades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of supports for the second round\nWhen Lillikas didn't pass to the second round, the Executive Bureau decided not to endorse any of the remaining candidates. In contrast with EDEK, the Party of European Socialists (mother European political party of EDEK) endorsed Malas. This endorsement brought anger to some EDEK's MP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Announcements of supports for the second round\nThe Archbishop of the Church of Cyprus, Chrysostomos II, endorsed Nicos Anastasiades at the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Main topics, Debates\nCyprus Broadcasting Corporation had talks with all the spokespersons of the candidates. Lillikas and Malas wanted four debates, three before the first round and one before the second. Anastasiades wanted three (two for the first round and one for the second) because he believed that four debates would \"harm the image\" of the candidates. In a meeting with spokespersons of four large Cypriot media networks (Mega, ANT1, Sigma, RIK), it was proposed to hold five debates. In two debates all candidates would participate. The other three debates would be double, which means that they would be between two participants (Anastasiades-Malas, Malas-Lillikas, Anastasiades-Lillikas). However, on 7 November it was decided that three debates were going to be held before the first round and one before a possible second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Main topics, Debates\nThe debates were held on 14 and 28 January and 11 February. The fourth and last presidential debate was held on 22 February. The structure of the debates was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Main topics, Guinness World Records logo dispute\nOn 29 January, the independent candidate Andreas Efstratiou was accused (by an anonymous citizen) of using the logo of Guinness World Records without the permission of the Corporation. The logo was printed on the ballot slip of the election. Efstratiou has been a holder of a Guinness World Record since 2007, when he created the longest wedding-gown train in the world. All the 545,180 ballot slips were destroyed and new ballot slips, without the logo, were printed. It was announced that \u20ac40,000 were wasted. The Central Electoral Service asked Efstratiou to pay at least \u20ac15,000. He refused, stating that he had 8 children and cannot afford the cost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Opinion polls\nA collection of opinion polls taken before the elections is listed below. After 9 February 2013, no opinion poll was allowed to be published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Results and reaction\nOn 24 February, Nicos Anastasiades won the presidential election with 57.48% of the vote; his opponent Stavros Malas received the remaining 42.52%. Of 545,000 eligible voters, 412,000 cast a ballot for one of the two candidates. In addition, the 81% turnout was lower than expected. It is believed that many people cast blank ballots or refused to vote out of protest. A week earlier, Anastasiades had won 45% of the first round vote with Malas receiving 27%, necessitating a second round of voting since no candidate received a strong majority of the votes. In that round, Giorgos Lillikas won 24% of the vote and eight minor candidates received under 1% each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Reactions\nAnastasiades' victory led to celebrations in the nation's capital of Nicosia and boosted hopes of reaching a financial bailout deal with international banks. Economist Stelios Platis remarked \"I would expect the markets, and business, to welcome Anastasiades's victory because he knows the rules of the game very well.\" However, political analyst Alexander White said immediate resolution to Cyprus' debt problems was unlikely. Agence France-Presse remarked that Anastasiades represented a stark contrast to the outgoing government and speculated that \"his perceived bias towards big business may put him on a collision course with influential and powerful trade unions\". In his concession speech, Malas pledged to support Anastasiades \"in actions and politics that we believe are followed for the good of the country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232859-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Cypriot presidential election, Aftermath\nAnastasiades was sworn in on 28 February 2013 and assumed power on 1 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232860-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Cyprus Women's Cup\nThe 2013 Cyprus Women's Cup was the sixth edition of the Cyprus Women's Cup, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Cyprus. It took place between 3\u201314 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232860-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Cyprus Women's Cup\nDefending champions France cancelled their participation just after the UEFA Women's Euro 2013 draw, because of too many European opponents in the tournament. The tournament was won by England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232860-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Cyprus Women's Cup, Format\nThe twelve invited teams are split into three groups that played a round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232860-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Cyprus Women's Cup, Format\nGroups A and B, containing the strongest ranked teams, are the only ones in contention to win the title. The group winners from A and B contested the final, with the runners-up playing for third place. The Group C winner faced the better third place team from Groups A and B for fifth, with the Group C runner-up facing the other third place team for seventh. Group C's third place team faced the better fourth place team of Groups A and B, while the other two fourth place teams play in the 11th place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232860-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Cyprus Women's 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232860-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Cyprus Women's Cup, Venues\nThe games were played in 3 host stadiums in 3 cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232861-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech Lion Awards\n2013 Czech Lion Awards ceremony was held on 22 February 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232862-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix was the eleventh round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Masaryk Circuit in Brno on 25 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232862-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232863-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech Social Democratic Party leadership election\nThe Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD) leadership election of 2015 was held in March 2013. The incumbent leader Bohuslav Sobotka was elected for another term. Sobotka received 84% of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election\nEarly legislative elections were held in the Czech Republic on 25 and 26 October 2013, seven months before the constitutional expiry of the elected parliament's four-year legislative term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election\nThe government elected in May 2010 led by Prime Minister Petr Ne\u010das was forced to resign on 17 June 2013, after a corruption and bribery scandal. A caretaker government led by Prime Minister Ji\u0159\u00ed Rusnok was then appointed by the President, but narrowly lost a vote of confidence on 7 August, leading to its resignation six days later. The Chamber of Deputies then passed a motion of dissolution on 20 August, requiring new elections to be called within 60 days of presidential assent. The President gave his assent on 28 August, scheduling the elections for 25 and 26 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election\nThe two parties gaining the most seats were the Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD) (50 seats) and the new party ANO 2011 (47 seats). The Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia came third, with an increase in vote share of 3.6%. The two parties from the previous coalition government who were contesting the election, TOP 09 and the Civic Democratic Party (ODS), lost substantial numbers of seats, to finish fourth and fifth, respectively. Two other parties (re)entered the parliament, the new party Dawn of Direct Democracy, and the Christian and Democratic Union \u2013 Czechoslovak People's Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nThe previous election in May 2010 resulted in the formation of a three-party centre-right coalition government consisting of the Civic Democratic Party (ODS), TOP 09 and Public Affairs (VV), with 118 seats, led by Prime Minister Petr Ne\u010das.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nOn 22 April 2012, after a split in VV related to corruption accusations against the party leadership (especially V\u00edt B\u00e1rta), ODS and TOP 09 dissolved their coalition with VV, raising the possibility that early elections would be held in June 2012. However, shortly afterwards a breakaway faction of VV, led by Karol\u00edna Peake, formed a new party, LIDEM, who replaced VV in the coalition with ODS and TOP 09. The revised coalition controlled 100 seats (ODS=51, TOP09=41, LIDEM=8), and won a subsequent vote of confidence on 27 April 2012 by 105 to 93 votes, with additional support from some independent MPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nOn 17 June 2013, Prime Minister Petr Ne\u010das resigned after a spying and corruption scandal. The Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD), the largest opposition party, called for the dissolution of the Chamber of Deputies and a snap election, while the ODS\u2011TOP09\u2011LIDEM coalition argued they could still command a majority under Miroslava N\u011bmcov\u00e1 (ODS) as the new prime minister, as they proposed to the Czech President. From 25 June 2013, the previous government coalition only held 98 seats (ODS=50, TOP09=42, LIDEM=6), and was therefore dependent upon support from independent MPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nTo demonstrate its majority, the ODS-led coalition submitted 101 MP signatures of support to the president, including two extra independents as part of the LIDEM parliamentary group and the independent Michal Doktor, a former ODS member. In an unprecedented move, President Milo\u0161 Zeman decided not to accept the coalition's requests, but instead appointed a caretaker government with Ji\u0159\u00ed Rusnok as new prime minister. Zeman described the new government as a \"government of experts\", while his critics described it as a \"government of Zeman's friends\". Former Prime Minister Jan Fischer was named as finance minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nZeman stated that if the caretaker government could not win majority support in the vote of confidence required by the constitution to take place after 30 days in office, then he would give the ODS-led coalition a second attempt to form a government, provided it could still submit at least 101 signatures of support from MPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nOn 7 August 2013, Ji\u0159\u00ed Rusnok's caretaker government lost the confidence vote in parliament by 93 to 100 votes, with 7 abstentions. A simple majority was required to unseat the government, which was supported by all MPs from ODS, TOP09 and LIDEM (except two ODS MPs and Karol\u00edna Peake of LIDEM, who broke the party line by abstaining). The two dissenting ODS MPs, who were both expelled from the party a few hours after the vote, explained their decision by stating that ODS needed a period of self-reflection in opposition in order to win the municipal elections in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nKarol\u00edna Peake resigned as leader of LIDEM after the vote, and TOP 09 stated that due to a lack of support for a reformed ODS\u2011TOP09\u2011LIDEM government, as indicated by the results of the confidence vote, they would withdraw their support for this coalition, in favour of early elections. \u010cSSD and the Communist Party (KS\u010cM) also supported early elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nThough the constitution of the Czech Republic allows the president two attempts to appoint someone to form a new government, there is no time limit. As such, in theory the caretaker government could be allowed by the president to continue in its interim capacity until new elections took place, despite having lost the confidence vote. The end of the legislative term was scheduled to be May 2014, unless the parliament was dissolved before that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nNevertheless, the caretaker government decided voluntarily to resign on 13 August 2013, with immediate effect, and the parliament convened on 20 August to decide whether to dissolve the parliament and call for new elections within 60 days, or to request that the president again appoint someone to form a new government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Background\nA vote on dissolution of the parliament was scheduled to take place at 14:00 on 20 August. The four parties who had stated their support for the motion (TOP 09, \u010cSSD, KS\u010cM and VV) together held more than the 60% majority (120 seats) required to pass the motion of dissolution, according to article 35(2) of the constitution. On 20 August, the parliament approved the motion of dissolution by 140 to 7. The president gave his assent for the dissolution of the parliament on 28 August, and scheduled the elections for 25\u201126 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Incumbent parliament\nThe distribution of seats in the Chamber of Deputies on 20 August 2013, immediately before the parliament was dissolved, was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Incumbent parliament\n* Three of these eight members (Martin Vacek, Radim Vyslou\u017eil, Jana Such\u00e1) were not members of the LIDEM party itself, but independents who worked with the LIDEM parliamentary group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Overseas voters\nFollowing a random draw carried out by the State Election Committee, Czechs voting abroad who did not have permanent residency in the country would be included as voters in the Central Bohemian Region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Aftermath, \u010cSSD internal conflict\nFollowing the election, \u010cSSD said they were open to talks with all parties about the formation of a government. ANO leader Babis said he could imagine supporting a \u010cSSD-led government, whether in a coalition or supporting a \u010cSSD minority government from opposition, but that it was not his preferred option, as he opposed \u010cSSD proposals for tax increases. He also indicated that he would seek to become Minister of Finance in any coalition cabinet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Aftermath, \u010cSSD internal conflict\nImmediately after the elections, two factions emerged in the \u010cSSD, one supporting chairman Bohuslav Sobotka and the other led by Michal Ha\u0161ek, \u010cSSD's leader in Moravia. Ha\u0161ek, with support from President Milo\u0161 Zeman, issued a statement calling for Bohuslav Sobotka to resign as party chairman. \u010cSSD leaders had already appointed Ha\u0161ek as the lead negotiator in coalition talks due to take place with other parties. A few days previously, Michal Ha\u0161ek had declared his loyalty to Sobotka, and endorsed him as leader of \u010cSSD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Aftermath, \u010cSSD internal conflict\n\u010cSSD members organized meetings and rallies against Ha\u0161ek, and Sobotka compared Ha\u0161ek to Zden\u011bk Fierlinger, \u010cSSD's pro-Communist leader from 1948 who forced the party to merge with the Communist regime. Sobotka was supported by Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier Jr., the party's most recent presidential candidate, while Ha\u0161ek was supported by party figures including Jeron\u00fdm Tejc and Lubom\u00edr Zaor\u00e1lek. According to opinion polls, the situation was perceived by the public as an attempted leadership coup. Subsequently, Ha\u0161ek and his allies, in the face of popular and party support for Bohuslav Sobotka, resigned their positions within the party and lost influence. A new negotiation team was formed, led by Bohuslav Sobotka, to negotiate with ANO and KDU-\u010cSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Aftermath, Government formation\nOn 11 November, \u010cSSD began coalition talks with ANO and KDU-\u010cSL. All parties agreed on progressive taxation, abolition of the previous government's social reforms and a law about property origin. However, disagreement remained between \u010cSSD and KDU-\u010cSL regarding church restitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232864-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech legislative election, Aftermath, Government formation\nIn late December 2013, leaders of \u010cSSD, ANO and KDU-\u010cSL announced that they had reached an agreement on a coalition government. The coalition agreement was signed on 6 January 2014. The parties also agreed on a cabinet, in which \u010cSSD took eight ministries, ANO seven ministries and KDU-\u010cSL three ministries. Sobotka became prime minister, with Babi\u0161 deputy prime minister and minister of finance, and KDU-\u010cSL leader Pavel B\u011blobr\u00e1dek second deputy Prime Minister. Bohuslav Sobotka's Cabinet was sworn in on 29 January 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal\nThe 2013 Czech political corruption scandal started with a raid against organized crime which was conducted in the Czech Republic in June 2013 by the Police Unit for Combating Organized Crime (Czech: \u00datvar pro odhalov\u00e1n\u00ed organizovan\u00e9ho zlo\u010dinu, \u00daOOZ) and the Chief Public Prosecutor's Office (Vrchn\u00ed st\u00e1tn\u00ed zastupitelstv\u00ed) in Olomouc. It involved several highly positioned state officers and politicians, as well as controversial entrepreneurs and lobbyists. The scandal affected the top levels of Czech politics, including Prime Minister Petr Ne\u010das and his coalition government. On 17 June 2013, it resulted in the resignation of the Prime Minister and the cabinet. Ne\u010das also quit as leader of the Civic Democratic Party (ODS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nThe investigation of the case started in early 2012, according to Robert \u0160lachta, the head of the Unit for Combating Organized Crime. Ivo I\u0161tvan, the Chief Public Prosecutor in Olomouc, confirmed that a total of 400 policemen were deployed in the raid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nOn 13 June 2013, some of the closest advisors and collaborators of the Czech Prime Minister, including Jana Nagyov\u00e1, Managing Director of the Section of the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic's Cabinet, and Lubom\u00edr Poul, Director of the Office of the Government, were arrested in association with unspecified misconduct. Ondrej P\u00e1len\u00edk, former head of the Military Intelligence Service; Milan Kovanda, current head of the Military Intelligence Service; Ivan Fuksa, former Minister, and Petr Tlucho\u0159, former Deputy, were among the arrested as well. The seat of the Government of the Czech Republic and offices of several influential Prague lobbyists were raided by police. The whereabouts of Petr Ne\u010das after the arrests were not known, however, later he announced that his confidence in Nagyov\u00e1 \"had not decreased\". He also denied speculation about his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 917]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nOn 14 June 2013, the Unit for Combating Organized Crime and the Chief Public Prosecutor's Office in Olomouc announced that Nagyov\u00e1 and members of the Military Intelligence Service had been accused of abuse of power and corruption. Nagyov\u00e1, one of the closest collaborators of the Prime Minister, allegedly misused the Intelligence Service to monitor Ne\u010das' wife (among others) without the official approval of the Defence Minister in late 2012. Her motives were, according to the police, purely private. Petr Ne\u010das was in divorce proceedings when the scandal erupted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nAdditionally, the investigation targeted an organized group of lobbyists and state officers attempting to influence state institutions for their own enrichment. The Unit for Combating Organized Crime confiscated around CZK 120\u2013150m ($7.8m) in cash and tens of kilograms of gold during the raid. Eight people were charged with various offences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nNe\u010das, under pressure from opposition parties and politicians, repeated his refusal to resign. He issued an apology for the actions of Jana Nagyov\u00e1 and denied that he was aware of it. He also announced her retirement from the office. \u010cSSD, the major opposition party, announced its intention to invoke a vote of no confidence on 18 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nOn 15 June, the District Court in Ostrava decided to take into custody Nagyov\u00e1, P\u00e1len\u00edk, Tlucho\u0159, Fuksa, Jan Poh\u016fnek, former employee of the Military Intelligence Service, Marek \u0160najdr, former Deputy, and Roman Bo\u010dek, former employee of the Ministry of Agriculture. Lubom\u00edr Poul was not charged and Milan Kovanda was released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nOn 16 June 2013, Petr Ne\u010das announced that he would resign on Monday, 17 June 2013. \"I am fully aware of how the ups and downs of my personal life currently burden the political scene and ODS ... I want to emphasize that I'm aware of my political responsibility and I draw the consequences from that\", he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nOn 16 July 2013, the Supreme Court of the Czech Republic in Brno decided in favour of three former members of the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic, Ivan Fuksa, Marek \u0160najdr and Petr Tlucho\u0159, on the grounds of their parliamentary immunity at the time of their involvement in the case. The three named persons were released from prison. Jana Nagyov\u00e1 and the other suspects were released from custody on 19 July 2013. According to the court, the danger of influencing witnesses has passed, as key witnesses have already been interrogated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Overview\nAccording to the Czech news websites, Ne\u010das married Nagyov\u00e1 on 21 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Progress in further years\nThe case of the misuse of the Military Intelligence Service was tried by the District Court of Prague 1 starting in November 2014. During the trial Petr Necas himself admitted he requested monitoring of his wife Radka Necasova in 2012 due to security risks connected with his role as PM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Progress in further years\nOn 29 May 2015 the court acquitted all persons charged (including Jana Nagyov\u00e1 and military intelligence officers) of those particular charges while saying the monitoring of later PM's spouse was not considered to be illegal wrongdoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Progress in further years\nThe public prosecutor refused the outcome and appealed immediately after the court's statement. The appellate court (the Regional Court of Prague) reviewed the trial in April 2016 and annulled it because the District Court had overlooked some evidence. Another trial was held but on 17 June 2016, all charged persons were acquitted of their charges once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Analysis and conclusions\nAccording to the Czech media and political commentators, the case consists of several more or less related parts. A leaked police document based on wiretapping records indicates that spying on the Prime Minister's wife by his managing director was prompted by personal motives and that the relationship between Nagyov\u00e1 and Ne\u010das was more than collegial. \"We see a story that meets the quality parameters of a good Mexican telenovela\", commented the newspaper Mlad\u00e1 fronta DNES.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Analysis and conclusions\nThe arrests and charging of several deputies were substantiated by the fact that they were rewarded by lucrative posts in exchange for their resignation and loyalty to the party (ODS) during an important parliamentary vote. While the police considers it to be a case of corruption, Ne\u010das claims it was a standard political deal. Ne\u010das found himself among the suspects, as he had promised and provided the bribe to the deputies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Analysis and conclusions\nThe large police operation also focused on activities of influential Prague entrepreneurs and lobbyists, namely Roman Janou\u0161ek and Ivo Rittig. The investigative authorities raided their offices in association with suspicious activities related to investments made by the Magistrate of the Capital City of Prague and other state-controlled subjects. Both Janou\u0161ek and Rittig were outside the country at the time of the raid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232865-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech political corruption scandal, Analysis and conclusions\nThe police investigation was prompted by suspicion that Libor Gryg\u00e1rek, a former Deputy at the Chief Public Prosecutor's Office in Prague, was in connection with an organized group of entrepreneurs abusing state contracts (Janou\u0161ek and Rittig were among those suspected). Gryg\u00e1rek was neither arrested nor charged with any crime at that time. In December 2013, he was charged with misuse of power in 2009. In February 2014, Ivo Rittig was arrested and charged with money laundering in a separate case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in the Czech Republic in January 2013, the country's first direct election for the presidency. No candidate received a majority of the votes in the first round on 11\u201312 January, so a second round runoff election was held on 25\u201326 January. Nine individuals secured enough signatures or support of parliamentarians to become official candidates for the office. Milo\u0161 Zeman of the Party of Civic Rights (SPOZ) and Karel Schwarzenberg of TOP 09 qualified for the second round, which was won by Zeman with 54.8% of the vote, compared to Schwarzenberg's 45.2%. Zeman assumed office in March 2013 after being sworn in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Background\nAfter the dissolution of Czechoslovakia and the adoption of a new constitution in 1992, the president was indirectly elected by a joint session of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate of the Czech Republic. The possibility of a directly elected President was controversial because of concerns that it could weaken a government under the Prime Minister. The 2008 presidential election, which narrowly reelected V\u00e1clav Klaus after several attempts, however was criticized for the appearance of political deal-making and allegations of corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Background\nPrime Minister Petr Ne\u010das subsequently put the issue of a directly elected President in his three-party coalition agreement when he formed his government in 2010, in part because of demands by the TOP 09 party, and the Public Affairs and Mayors and Independents parties. Several outspoken opponents of the change however came from the Prime Minister's own Civic Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Background\nIn September 2011, an amendment was submitted to the Chamber of Deputies for a second official reading, during which the Communist Party (KS\u010cM) tried to reject the bill by sending it back into the review process, but the Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD), also part of the opposition, did not support the Communists' motion, and allowed the bill to go ahead with certain changes, including limits on presidential power and penal immunity. On 14 December 2011, the Chamber of Deputies passed the constitutional amendment for direct elections by a vote of 159 out of 192.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Background\nThis was then sent to the Senate, which passed the amendment on 8 February 2012 after five hours of debate by a majority of 49 of 75. The Chief Justice of the Constitutional Court, Pavel Rychetsk\u00fd, criticized the bill's method in which a constitutional amendment was in effect added, though without changing the original text of the constitution, and while leaving the election open to legal and constitutional challenges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Background\nIn June 2012 an implementation bill for holding the election passed in the Chamber of Deputies, and in July in the Senate. Though constitutional amendments do not require presidential approval, and cannot be vetoed, President V\u00e1clav Klaus did need to sign or veto the implementation bill; a refusal could have halted the constitutional changes. Klaus opposed the measure, though saying it was a \"fatal mistake\" as the country was not ready for such a move. He however signed the law on 1 August 2012. The law was scheduled to take effect on 1 October 2012, after which Senate President Milan \u0160t\u011bch was due to set a date for the election, following discussions with the Ministry of the Interior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Background\nThe two-day first round was on 11\u201312 January 2013. However, because no one secured an absolute majority, a run-off round was held on 25\u201326 January 2013. Candidates were allowed to spend up to K\u010d40\u00a0million in the first round and K\u010d10\u00a0million in the second round. Each candidate had an election committee that manages campaign funding, which should be run through a special account. All anonymous campaigns contributions were banned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates\nIn order to be a candidate, an individual needs to gather 50,000 signatures from citizens or the support of twenty Deputies or ten Senators. The candidates were bound to file their applications with the signatures sixty-six days before the election; following which the Interior Ministry verified a sampling of the signatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates\nThe Civic Democratic Party (ODS) held primary elections in July 2012 to choose their candidate, selecting former President of the Senate P\u0159emysl Sobotka over MEP Ev\u017een To\u0161enovsk\u00fd. SPOZ, TOP 09, and Suverenita have their party leaders running for the post. Jan \u0160vejnar, who ran for the presidency in 2008 against V\u00e1clav Klaus, declined to run in order to support Jan Fischer's candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Confirmed candidates\nVladim\u00edr Franz appears insignificant in agency surveys but in November he was the obvious favorite of opinion polls of several different popular news servers and media (Aktu\u00e1ln\u011b.cz, Reflex, iDnes.cz) as well as of so-called \"students' elections\" in all regions and all types of secondary schools. The current president Klaus expressed fear that his successor would be Franz or Okamura.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Disqualified candidates\nThe following list includes the candidates who were disqualified after the Ministry of Interior reviewed their petitions assessing that they failed to meet the quorum of minimum of 50,000 popular signatures or twenty MPs in the Chamber of Deputies, or ten MPs in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Disqualified candidates\nCandidates Jana Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1, Vladim\u00edr Dlouh\u00fd, and Tomio Okamura collected more than 50,000 signatures; however, after checking two samples of each petition and reducing the number of signatures according to the error rate, the number fell below the requirement; accordingly, they were not registered as candidates. Along with the action, the ministry stated that many of Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1's alleged signatories were long dead; while in case of Okamura, the ministry found a large number of fictitious signatories. Both candidates appealed the ministry's decision before the Supreme Administrative Court, believing that the ministry had used an incorrect method of recount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Disqualified candidates\nOn 13 December 2012, the Supreme Administrative Court ruled on the complaints. It ordered that Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1 must be registered as a candidate, and rejected the complaints of Dlouh\u00fd and Okamura, as even after correcting the error in computation their number of valid signatures still fails to meet the quorum. Okamura unsuccessfully challenged the verdict at the Constitutional Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Withdrawn candidate\nJan Toman from Bechyn\u011b filed his own candidature on 6 November but he attached no petition. He was also the attorney of the candidate Karel Sv\u011btni\u010dka, and Karel Sv\u011btni\u010dka was the attorney of Jan Toman. However, a candidate must not be an attorney of any proposer. Jan Sv\u011btni\u010dka surrendered his own candidature on 22 November and remained the attorney of Karel Sv\u011btni\u010dka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Other announced candidates\nThe following list includes some of the people who announced their candidacy but the proposal was not filed finally. Some of them started to collect petition signatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Other possible candidates\nJan \u0160vejnar a candidate in 2008 presidential election was speculated to be one of possible candidates and he himself admitted that he considers running. He quickly one of the frontrunners according to polls that showed him being the 2nd strongest candidate. His support decreased by the time and he fell to 3rd or 4th place. \u0160vejnar eventually said in September 2012 that he won't run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Candidates, Other possible candidates\nVladim\u00edr Remek was offered presidential nomination by Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia. He rejected his own party's offer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Primaries, Civic Democratic Party (ODS)\nCivic Democratic Party held primary elections to decide who will become party's candidate. Primaries were held from end of April 2012 to 28 June 2012. Vice-Chairman of Senate P\u0159emysl Sobotka faced MEP Ev\u017een To\u0161enovsk\u00fd. Sobotka received 61% of votes and won party's nomination. Primaries suffered of low voter turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Primaries, Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD)\nCzech Social Democratic Party held primaries in May 2012. The primaries were indirect, with only members of the party's Central Executive Committee able to vote. Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier Jr. was expected to face Jan \u0160vejnar. \u0160vejnar withdrawn from primaries before voting took place and Dienstbier received the nomination on 19 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Primaries, Party of Free Citizens (Svobodn\u00ed)\nThe Party of Free Citizens held presidential primaries in June 2012. Ladislav Jakl, the secretary of President V\u00e1clav Klaus, was the only candidate. Jakl received 88% of votes and won the nomination but the party failed to gather enough signatures and Jakl could not participate in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Primaries, Public Affairs (VV)\nPublic Affairs also intended to choose its candidate in presidential primaries. Jan \u0160vejnar was mentioned by V\u00edt B\u00e1rta as a possible candidate. \u0160vejnar himself didn't say that he would agree with nomination by the party. Leader of Public Affairs Radek John said that he would support Jan Fischer. Primaries never happened and Tomio Okamura was later speculated to be possible candidate of Public Affairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign\nZeman and Fischer were leading in the polls, but Schwarzenberg's campaign ended on a higher note with a crowd of about 10,000 people at a rally in Prague. Zeman said of the runoff: \"It will be a presidential race between a candidate for the left and a candidate for the right. We'll start from scratch for the second round;\" Schwarzenberg said of his campaign that he would make the Czech Republic \"a successful country.\" Vladim\u00edr Franz called his campaign \"a success.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nMilo\u0161 Zeman and Jan Fischer stated they would run if the election is direct. 2008 presidential candidate Jan \u0160vejnar was also speculated as a candidate. Zeman's Party of Civic Rights started petition campaign for direct election on 29 June 2011. Petition was signed by more than 100,000 people as of October 2011. Direct election was accepted by parliament on 8 February 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nFormer Prime Minister of the Czech Republic Jan Fischer announced his candidature on 7 January 2012. Jana Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1 announced her candidature on 9 February 2012. Milo\u0161 Zeman stated that he will officially announce his candidature when he gathers enough signatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nMilo\u0161 Zeman announced his candidature on 14 February 2012. Party of Civic Rights started to gather signatures for him. His presidential bid received support from LEV 21 and some politicians of Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD). \u010cSSD later decided to stand its own candidate Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nJan Fischer became front-runner in early 2012. Jan \u0160vejnar was considered his main rival. Milo\u0161 Zeman was third strongest candidate according to polls. \u0160vejnar himself was at the time waiting if he receives support of Czech Social Democratic Party", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nMilo\u0161 Zeman started gathering signatures on 21 March 2012 when he launched his presidential campaign. Jan Fischer started his campaign on 2 April 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nJan \u0160vejnar withdrew from \u010cSSD primaries on 2 May 2012 and decided to run as independent. Czech Social Democratic Party then nominated Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nZeman grew in polls and in May 2012 he caught up with Jan \u0160vejnar in polls. He also received signatures of 10 senators which meant he doesn't need 50,000 signatures. Zeman gathered required number of signatures by the end of June 2012. Polls in June 2012 indicated that Milo\u0161 Zeman became Fischer's main rival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nCivic Democratic Party nominated P\u0159emysl Sobotka on 28 June 2012 when Sobotka won the party's presidential primaries. Sobotka stated that his campaign will cost 8 million Korunas. Candidate of Czech Social Democratic Party Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier Jr. stated on the other hand that his campaign will cost tens of million Korunas. Dienstbier came third according to one of polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nJan Fischer started to fully pursue his campaign on 9 July. He was supported by businessman Jarom\u00edr Soukup. Fischer was still front-runner at the time while Milo\u0161 Zeman was his main competition. Jan \u0160vejnar who was originally considered the main rival of Fischer was losing in polls due to his indecisiveness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nP\u0159emysl Sobotka started his campaign on 17 August 2012. Jan Fischer gathered 50,000 signatures by the end of August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\n\u0160vejnar announced on 11 September 2012 that he won't run and endorsed Jan Fischer. Tomio Okamura started to gather signatures at the time On 14 September 2012, Jan Fischer officially launched his campaign. He defined himself against Zeman and stated that \"Czech Republic isn't a burnt land\" reminding Zeman's statements from 1990s. He promised that Czechs won't be ashamed of him as a president. \u0160vejnar's withdrawal led to Fischer's growth in polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nGreen Party supported T\u00e1\u0148a Fischerov\u00e1 for the election. Greens started gathering signatures for her on 27 September 2012. Jana Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1 gathered enough signatures on 29 September 2012. Vladim\u00edr Dlouh\u00fd and Zuzana Roithov\u00e1 announced on 1 October 2012 that they are getting closer to required number of signatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nTomio Okamura announced candidature on 3 October 2012. He also started to gather signatures. Zuzana Roithov\u00e1 gathered enough signatures on the same day. Vladim\u00edr Dlouh\u00fd announced that he gathered 50,000 signatures on 5 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nAs of 5 November 2012, Milo\u0161 Zeman, Vladim\u00edr Dlouh\u00fd, Jan Fischer, Jana Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1, Zuzana Roithov\u00e1, Vladim\u00edr Franz and Tomio Okamura reportedly had enough signatures to run. T\u00e1\u0148a Fischerov\u00e1 and Pavel Ko\u0159\u00e1n were close to the number while Kl\u00e1ra Samkov\u00e1 and Ladislav Jakl was unlikely get enough signatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nNominations were closed on 6 November 2012. There were 11 candidates who met required conditions. Milo\u0161 Zeman, Jan Fischer, Vladim\u00edr Franz, Zuzana Roithov\u00e1, Tomio Okamura, T\u00e1\u0148a Fischerov\u00e1, Vladim\u00edr Dlouh\u00fd and Jana Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1 gathered over 50,000 signatures while Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier, P\u0159emysl Sobotka and Karel Schwarzenberg received parliamentary nomination. On 23 November, Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1, Dlouh\u00fd and Okamura were disqualified from the election due to invalid signatures. Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1 was returned to the election after recount on 13 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nAccording to polls in November 2012, a gap between Fischer and Zeman started to shrink. Zeman took lead in January 2013 after debates held prior to voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, First round\nVoting took place on 11 and 12 January 2013. Zeman and Karel Schwarzenberg qualified for the second round. Jan Fischer was surprisingly eliminated when he received only 16% of votes and came third. Zeman received only 40,000 votes more than Schwarzenberg. Chances of both candidates in second round were considered balanced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nThe campaign for the second round started with the agreement of both candidates, Milo\u0161 Zeman and Karel Schwarzenberg, not to attack each other and to conduct their campaign in a civil manner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nHowever, when, in the second debate in the Czech Television held on 17 January 2013, Karel Schwarzenberg stated that the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia after World War II would be today (in the 21st century) considered a war crime and the creators of the Bene\u0161 decrees (a series of laws dealing inter alia with the status of ethnic Germans and Hungarians in postwar Czechoslovakia in connection with Article 12 of the Potsdam Agreement) would be probably judged by the Hague Tribunal as war criminals, Zeman responded as following: \"... he who marks (...) one of the presidents of Czechoslovakia as a war criminal, speaks as a \"sude\u0165\u00e1k\" [Sudeten German] and not as the president\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0037-0002", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nSchwarzenberg has been criticized for the fact that his wife cannot speak Czech and that he spent a part of his life abroad, despite the fact that his family fled from communists when he was a child. It was suggested that members of his family collaborated with Nazis, most notably by the son of the Czech President, V\u00e1clav Klaus Jr. These charges have been dismissed by historians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0037-0003", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nPresident V\u00e1clav Klaus, his Slovak spouse Livia and son V\u00e1clav expressed their concerns towards Schwarzenberg, pointing to the complete lack of knowledge of the Czech language of his spouse or to his emigration during the communist era. Schwarzenberg responded that \"...the last hundred years have demonstrated that an appeal to the lowest instincts has tragic consequences.\" Additionally, he countered by claiming that the President Klaus and Zeman created a power group and manipulated his claims. He also called their alleged pact a \"fraud on the voters\". In a leaked text message to a friend, President Klaus wrote that if Karel Schwarzenberg won the election, he would consider emigration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nThe critics of Karel Schwarzenberg mentioned his post in the unpopular cabinet of Petr Ne\u010das. Schwarzenberg, leader of a government coalition party TOP 09, a Vice-Premier and a Foreign Minister, was frequently associated with the Finance Minister and his TOP 09 colleague Miroslav Kalousek, one of the key proponents of the austerity measures and spending cuts in the Czech Republic. In the first round, he received the majority of support by voters in Bohemian regions and in some of the biggest Czech cities, such as Prague, Brno, and Plze\u0148.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nMilo\u0161 Zeman, a former successful politician and Social Democratic Prime Minister, announced his comeback and the intention to run in the election in February 2012. He narrowly won the first round, supported mainly by voters from industrial regions such as North Bohemia and Silesia, and smaller towns and villages. He has been criticized for the opaque funding of his campaign; the media pointed to his special relationships with controversial business subjects and lobbyists, such as Miroslav \u0160louf and the Russian oil company LUKoil. Some of the issues associated with his previous political activities also reappeared in public. During the pre-election debates, Zeman had to face questions about connections between his former chief advisor \u0160louf and the alleged mafia kingpin Franti\u0161ek Mr\u00e1zek or about a discrediting campaign against his former colleague, Minister Petra Buzkov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nOn 22 January, the newspaper Mlad\u00e1 fronta DNES reported that the \"massive negative campaign\" of Milo\u0161 Zeman and his team won him popularity in the online media, while Schwarzenberg's supporters have a majority on social sites, such as Facebook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nDuring the election, the tensions and rivalries in the Czech society and media culminated to an unusual degree. Some of the commentators and politologists pointed to growing polarization of the society, which was also noted by some of the foreign media, such as The New York Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nOn 26 January, Milo\u0161 Zeman won the second round of the election. In his first post-election speech, he thanked his supporters and promised to be the president of all people. He also criticized the media that openly supported only one of the candidates. \"Truth and love have finally prevailed over lies and hatred\", stated the outgoing President Klaus, ironically paraphrasing the renowned Czech statesman (and political opponent) V\u00e1clav Havel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nThe Austrian press ascribed Zeman's victory to a \"dirty anti-German campaign.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Campaign, Second round\nMedian a Czech agency made a survey to find out what was the reason of the result. According to the survey Zeman was able to gain votes of left-wing supporters of other candidates namely Jan Fischer and Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier Jr. Schwarzenberg on the other hand a little exhausted his electoral base in the first round and lost some supporters during a debate about Bene\u0161 decrees and his membership in Petr Ne\u010das' Cabinet. According to the survey Zeman was an acceptable candidate for 46% of voters and Schwarzenberg for 35%. 71% of asked expected that the next president will influence the government and will support patriotism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Results\nThere were 14,904 polling stations in the Czech Republic, and 102 abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232866-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election, Results\nDuring the second round, in the presence of journalists, Karel Schwarzenberg registered an invalid vote by forgetting to insert his paper into the required stamped envelope.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates\nThe 2013 Czech presidential election debates were a series of debates held for the 2013 Czech presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Prague Pride Debate\nPrage Pride organised a debate about human rights and LGBT rights. Milo\u0161 Zeman, Jan Fischer and Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier Jr. participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Duel: Zeman vs Fischer\nTelevision Prima held debate between Milo\u0161 Zeman and Jan Fischer on 4 January 2013 as they led the polls. Zeman accused Fischer of being a \"Puppet Prime Minister\" while Fischer attacked Zeman for Opposition Agreement. Candidates also showed their knowledge of English and Russian languages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Duel: Zeman vs Fischer\nReflex magazine called the debate a tie. Marketing expert Tom\u00e1\u0161 Jind\u0159\u00ed\u0161ek praised performances of both candidates as outstanding but concluded that Zeman narrowly won the debate. Sanep agency held a poll according to which Zeman decisively won the debate. 54.5% of viewers voted for him while only 12.4% voted that Fischer won. 90.7% of people who plan to vote for either of candidates admitted that the debate influenced them in favor of Milo\u0161 Zeman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Zlat\u00e1 koruna debate\nMilo\u0161 Zeman, Jana Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1 and Ji\u0159\u00ed Dienstbier met at TOP Hotel as part of Project Zlat\u00e1 Koruna. They debated about economical crysis in the Czech republic. This debate showed growing tension between Zeman and Dienstbier. Jan Fischer, P\u0159emysl Sobotka and Karel Schwarzenber were originally supposed to participate too.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Second Duel: Zeman vs Fischer\nSecond duel between Zeman and Fischer was held on 9 January by Television Nova. Candidates attacked each other for their sponsors and co-workers. Zeman also tried to show Fischer as a right wing candidate but Fischer tried to represent himself more as a centrist politician. He", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 92], "content_span": [93, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Second Duel: Zeman vs Fischer\nZeman won the debate according to internet survey. 65% people voted for him while 35% voted that Fischer won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 92], "content_span": [93, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Superdebate\nLast debate before the first round was held on 11 January. All nine candidates participated. Zeman and Dienstbier were squibbingeach other as they rivalled for left wing voters. Dienstbier attacked Zeman for his connections with lobbyinst Miroslav \u0160louf and for financing of his campaign. Schwarzenberg had to defenc his participation in Petr Ne\u010das's Cabinet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, First round debates, Superdebate\nViewers considered Zeman's and Franz's performances as the most impressive while Sobotka and Dienstbier were the least impressive. Roithov\u00e1, Fischerov\u00e1 and Schwarzenberg left the most positive impressions. 70% of impressions of these candidates were positive. Franz and Dienstbier's performances left 60% positive impressions. The least positive impression were left by Fischer who was positively rated by 10% of people. According to index of impression and positive score - Zuzana Roithov\u00e1 and Karel Schwarzenberg had the best result while worst had Jan Fischer, P\u0159emysl Sobotka and Jana Bobo\u0161\u00edkov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, Second round debates, Czech radio duel: Zeman vs Schwarzenberg\nThe first debate between Zeman and Schwarzenberg was held on 16 January by Czech Radio. The debate was calm and both candidates targeted undecided voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, Second round debates, First television duel: Zeman vs Schwarzenberg\nThe second debate between Zeman and Schwarzenberg was held on 17 January by Czech Television. Zeman started as more aggressive participant and Schwarzenberg was in defense. Zeman was reminding Schwarzenberg's participation in unpopular Cabinet of Petr Ne\u010das while Schwarzenberg attacked Zeman for Opposition Agreement. The debate itself was considered as calm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 109], "content_span": [110, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, Second television duel: Zeman vs Schwarzenberg\nAnother debate was held by TV Prima on 18 January. Zeman attacked Schwarzenberg for his words about former Czechoslovak president Edvard Bene\u0161 who would according to Schwarzenberg be judged in Hague if expulsion of Germans happened today.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 88], "content_span": [89, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, Second television duel: Zeman vs Schwarzenberg, Second Czech radio duel: Zeman vs Schwarzenberg\nCzech radio held a debate on 23 January. Candidates seemed tired of campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 137], "content_span": [138, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232867-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Czech presidential election debates, Second television duel: Zeman vs Schwarzenberg, Last duel: Zeman vs Schwarzenberg\nThe last debate was held on 24 January. The debate was considered a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 123], "content_span": [124, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season\nThe 2013 D.C. United season was the club's eighteenth, and their eighteenth season in Major League Soccer, the top division of American soccer. The regular season began on March 2 and concluded on October 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season\nOutside of MLS play, the club competed in the U.S. Open Cup. Also, for the first time in their history, they played in the Walt Disney World Pro Soccer Classic, a preseason tournament to be held in February, after participating in the Carolina Challenge Cup for the past five seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season\nAfter a promising 2012 campaign, United's form took a sharp turn downward as injuries, underachievement from offseason acquisitions, and a loss of form caused the team to record the worst season in MLS history. The extremely poor season came as universal shock to fans and media, who thought United would be one of the top contenders in the Eastern Conference, and a potential candidate for the MLS Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season\nDespite their poor league play, United qualified for the 2014\u201315 CONCACAF Champions League by winning the 2013 U.S. Open Cup Final on October 1. That marked their 13th major honor, the most in North American soccer history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Background: 2012 Season\nAfter four consecutive seasons of failing to qualify for the playoffs, D.C. United returned to the playoffs by finishing second in the Eastern Conference, and third in the overall tables, amassing a total of 58 points from a record of 17\u20137\u201310 (wins, losses, draws). In their return to the playoffs, D.C. United defeated their Atlantic Cup rivals, New York Red Bulls, 2\u20131 on aggregate. In the Eastern Conference Finals, D.C. United fell to Houston Dynamo 4\u20132 on aggregate, making it the furthest D.C. United went in the MLS Cup Playoffs since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Background: 2012 Season\nSince neither the San Jose Earthquakes nor Sporting Kansas City reached MLS Cup 2012, D.C. United narrowly missed out on qualifying for the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League, which would have been United's third appearance in the newly revamped Champions League, their thirteenth overall CONCACAF club tournament, and their first since the 2009\u201310 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Background: 2012 Season\nElsewhere, United competed in the U.S. Open Cup, where they fell in the fourth round proper to Philadelphia Union in a penalty shoot-out. During the preseason, United won their third-straight Carolina Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Offseason\nOne of the largest offseason news was the departure of longtime CEO of the club, Kevin Payne, who had been the chief executive officer and president of the D.C. United franchise since its inception in 1994. Payne left on November 27, 2012, reportedly on good terms with the club, to take over as the president of fellow Major League Soccer outfit, Toronto FC. He was announced as Toronto's president the next day, on November 28, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Offseason\nPrior to the 2012 MLS Re-Entry Draft, United declined options on four players; Mike Chabala, Emiliano Dudar, Maicon Santos and Stephen King. Santos, was selected by Chicago Fire in the first round of the Re-Entry Draft. Held on December 3, 2012, Santos was the only selection in the first stage of the re-entry draft. The second stage was held on December 14, 2012. There, United selected former-Vancouver Whitecaps FC midfielder, John Thorrington. In Thorrington's two seasons in Vancouver, he made 30 appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Preseason/February\nAs of December 14, D.C. United will participate in four preseason exhibitions prior to the start of the regular season. Participating in the Walt Disney World Pro Soccer Classic for the first time in franchise history, United open the exhibition tournament on February 9, 2013 against the Tampa Bay Rowdies, the 2012 North American Soccer League (second division) champions. United will subsequently play against Sporting Kansas City and Montreal Impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Preseason/February\nTwo weeks into the new year, the 2013 MLS SuperDraft was held, with D.C. United having the 17th overall pick. The club traded away their second round pick in this draft back in 2011 with New England Revolution. Needing defensive depth, it was anticipated that United was going to select a defender from the draft to help bolster the defense, in which they ended up doing. The club selected Taylor Kemp from the Maryland Terrapins men's soccer program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Preseason/February\nAt the tail end of the winter transfer window, D.C. United announced they had sold midfielder Andy Najar to Belgian outfit Anderlecht. Najar was previously on a month-long loan to Anderlecht, with RSCA eventually exercising an option to purchase out his contract at the end of the loan. Najar became the first home grown player in Major League Soccer to be sold to an overseas club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, March\u2013June\nAhead of the start of the regular season, Ben Olsen pressed that the club's goals were more than just qualifying for the playoffs, but qualifying for the CONCACAF Champions League, for the first time since the 2009\u201310 tournament. Several media outlets had the club returning to playoffs in preseason predictions, but in various spots due to offseason transactions and questions as to whether or not the 2013 squad was stronger than the 2012 squad. Many sought that the new ownership group was unwilling to spend on a higher-profile player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, March\u2013June\nThe season began on the road, where the club suffered a late 2\u20130 loss at Houston. It was the second consecutive season in which D.C. United lost their opening match. The club form improved at home, where they picked up a win at home to Salt Lake and a draw on the road to New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, March\u2013June\nAfter that though the club form dipped, as United went on a thirteen-match winless streak including 10 losses, seeing the team plummet to the bottom of the MLS table. The streak broke on June 22 when D.C. defeated San Jose Earthquakes 1\u20130 thanks to a penalty kick taken by Chris Pontius at the RFK Memorial, giving DC their second win after three months since their last. Surprisingky, though, United was enjoying much more success in U.S. Open Cup play. Despite struggling to a win over Richmond Kickers in a penalty kick shootout, the team won its next two Open Cup matches, with a pair of convincing 3\u20131 victories over MLS opposition that included the Philadelphia Union and the New England Revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, July\u2013September\nDespite breaking the long losing streak with the win over San Jose, the team quickly resumed their losing ways in league play. The team earned only one point over its next five games before finally winning again, with a 3\u20131 victory over the Montreal Impact, in early August. This win was only the team's third in league play, but it would be the last win in league play during 2013, as the team went winless over the final 12 games. However, just 4 days after the win over Montreal, United traveled to Chicago and gained a surprising 1\u20130 win in the semifinals of the 2013 U.S. Open Cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Finish\nOn October 1, D.C. United won the 2013 U.S. Open Cup by defeating Real Salt Lake in the final, on a goal by midfielder Lewis Neal. The win was a massive surprise to most observers, given that DC was in the midst of a and had won only three regular-season games all year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Finish\nThe team finished the year on Oct 27 tied for the fewest regular-season wins, 3, of any team in MLS history. They won more games against MLS opponents, 4, in the U.S. Open Cup than in the regular season, despite playing against MLS opponents in 34 regular-season games and only 4 Open Cup games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Review, Finish\nNotwithstanding that the team won its first title since last winning the Open cup in 2008, the 2013 D.C. United team set new standards of futility for MLS, as the team ended up with the fewest points per game by any MLS team in history, as well as scoring the fewest goals per game in league history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232868-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 D.C. United season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232869-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 DBL Playoffs\nThe 2013 DBL Playoffs were the final phase of the 2012\u201313 Dutch Basketball League. It started on 17 April and ended on 23 May 2013. EiffelTowers Den Bosch were the defending champions. ZZ Leiden won the playoffs and its third championship. Aris Leeuwarden, who featured in their first finals ever, finished as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232870-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 DFB-Pokal Final\nThe 2013 DFB-Pokal Final was an association football match that took place on 1 June 2013 between Bayern Munich and VfB Stuttgart at the Olympiastadion in Berlin to decide the winners of the 2012\u201313 DFB-Pokal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232870-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 DFB-Pokal Final\nBayern Munich won the game 3\u20132, claiming the cup for the 16th time. The win, combined with earlier titles in the Champions League and Bundesliga, allowed Bayern Munich to complete a continental treble. The feat had never been achieved by a German team before, and had only been achieved by six other European teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232870-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232870-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232870-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 DFB-Pokal Final, Match, Summary\nFor the final, Bayern Munich was without the services of Dante and Luiz Gustavo, who were playing for the Brazil national team. Additionally, Mario G\u00f3mez, normally a reserve, was given the start over Mario Mand\u017euki\u0107. Even so, VfB Stuttgart was considered a massive underdog before the match began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232870-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 DFB-Pokal Final, Match, Summary\nMunich came out pressing, just missing a goal five minutes in. Stuttgart pressed back, narrowly missing on two scoring chances. Another scoring chance by Munich failed and the score remained 0\u20130 after 35 minutes. At the 37-minute mark, Thomas M\u00fcller got the scoring underway for Munich with a penalty, kicking the ball low to the right and sending the goalkeeper the wrong way. Just after half-time, G\u00f3mez made it 2\u20130 when he turned in a Philipp Lahm cross from the right. At the 61-minute mark, G\u00f3mez scored again making the match 3\u20130 with a low, right-footed shot after the ball was crossed low from the right by Thomas M\u00fcller and seemingly putting the game out of reach for Stuttgart, prompting Munich fans to start celebrating in the stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232870-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 DFB-Pokal Final, Match, Summary\nA headed goal by Martin Harnik from a cross from the left got Stuttgart on the board with 19 minutes to play. With ten minutes remaining, substitute Shinji Okazaki's shot hit the goal post. Harnik was there for the rebound, kicking the ball straight into goalkeeper Manuel Neuer, and then converting on the second attempt low right footed, making it a 3\u20132 game. Substitute Anatoliy Tymoshchuk came on for Munich as manager Jupp Heynckes tried to stop Stuttgart's momentum. Stuttgart did not seriously threaten for the rest of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232870-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 DFB-Pokal Final, Match, Summary\nThe win gave Munich their 16th DFB-Pokal title. The match was Heynckes' final game as manager of Munich. Seven days prior to the match, Munich had won the Champions League title. Earlier, they dominated the Bundesliga, securing the title earlier in the season than any previous team. Winning the DFB-Pokal thus completed a continental treble by Munich. They are just the seventh European team ever, and first German team, to complete the treble. Celtic was the first team to accomplish the feat in 1967. Since then, Ajax (1972), PSV Eindhoven (1988), Manchester United (1999), Barcelona (2009 and 2015) and Internazionale (2010) have accomplished the feat. Bayern repeated their treble-winning performance in 2020, joining Bar\u00e7a as the only sides to do that twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232871-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 DFL-Supercup\nThe 2013 DFL-Supercup was the fourth DFL-Supercup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal competitions. It featured Bayern Munich, winners of the 2012\u201313 Bundesliga and the 2012\u201313 DFB-Pokal, and, as a result of the former winning both competitions, the Bundesliga runners-up Borussia Dortmund. The match was hosted by Dortmund at the Signal Iduna Park on 27 July 2013. The match took place two months after the same teams played each other in the 2013 UEFA Champions League Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232871-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 DFL-Supercup\nBorussia Dortmund won the match 4\u20132. It was their fourth triumph in the Supercup, which equalled the then-record held by Bayern Munich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232871-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 DFL-Supercup, Teams\nIn the following table, matches until 1996 were in the DFB-Supercup era, since 2010 were in the DFL-Supercup era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232871-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 DFL-Supercup, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Tobias Christ (M\u00fcnchweiler an der Rodalb)Christian Gittelmann (Albisheim)Fourth official:Guido Kleve (Nordhorn)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232872-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 DPR Korea Football League\nStatistics of DPR Korea Football League in the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232872-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 DPR Korea Football League, Overview\nThe Highest Class Football League was played as a single round robin in October, with ten teams taking part. April 25 won the championship, finishing with 18 points (5 wins, 3 draws, 1 loss) in the nine matches played; Man'gy\u014fnbong were runners-up, and Hwaebul \u2013 a new addition to the competition established in May 2013 \u2013 finished in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232872-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 DPR Korea Football League, Cup competitions, Hwaebul Cup\nThe Hwaebul Cup competition was held for the first time in 2013, with all matches played at Kim Il-sung Stadium in P'y\u014fngyang. The first stage was made up of two groups, with the first and second place finishers qualifying for the semi-finals. The semi-finals were held on (probably) 26 August, with S\u014fnbong defeating Hwaebul, and April 25 defeating Amrokkang 3\u20131 on penalties, after regular time ended 2\u20132. The final was played on 28 August, between S\u014fnbong and April 25. Regular play ended with the sides level at 2\u20132, and S\u014fnbong won 6\u20135 on penalties. However, after the match, S\u014fnbong was deemed to have fielded an ineligible player, and April 25 was awarded the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232872-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 DPR Korea Football League, Cup competitions, Man'gy\u014fngdae Prize\nThe 2013 edition of the Man'gy\u014fngdae Prize was held in P'y\u014fngyang, with matches played at the Kim Il-sung Stadium and the Sosan Football Stadium from early March. Fourteen teams entered, including Kigwanch'a, Ky\u014fnggong'\u014fp, Maebong, Rimy\u014fngsu, Sobaeksu, Myohyangsan, Man'gy\u014fnbong, P'y\u014fngyang City, and Amrokkang. The final, held on 29 April, saw Rimy\u014fngsu defeat Amrokkang by a score of 2\u20131. Having won the Man'gy\u014fngdae Prize, Rimy\u014fngsu were invited to take part in the 2014 AFC President's Cup \u2013 the first time a North Korean side would take part in an Asian club competition since April 25's last appearance in the 1991 Asian Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232872-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 DPR Korea Football League, Cup competitions, Poch'\u014fnbo Torch Prize\nThe fourth edition of the Poch'\u014fnbo Torch Prize was played in two stages between 20 May and 10 July, the first being a double round-robin league phase, followed by a North American-style knock-out play-off phase. The top four finishers in the league phase qualified for the semi-finals. The final was played on 10 July, in which Hwaebul defeated Ky\u014fnggong'\u014fp 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232872-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 DPR Korea Football League, Cup competitions, 60th Anniversary of the Victory in the Fatherland Liberation War\nA one-off competition was held for the 60th anniversary of the end of the Korean War, which is referred to as the \"Fatherland Liberation War\" in North Korea. April 25, Hwaebul, Rimy\u014fngsu, and Amrokkang took part in the competition, which was won by Amrokkang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 114], "content_span": [115, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232873-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 DRIVE4COPD 300\nThe 2013 DRIVE4COPD 300 was a NASCAR Nationwide Series race held on February 23, 2013 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. It was the first race of the 2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series season. The race was the 32nd running of the event, and the pole position given to Roush Fenway Racing's Trevor Bayne with a lap speed of 177.162\u00a0mph (285.115\u00a0km/h), while Tony Stewart of Richard Childress Racing won the race. Sam Hornish, Jr. finished second and Alex Bowman finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232873-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 DRIVE4COPD 300, Race\nThe race was marred by two crashes. On lap 116, 11 cars were involved in the first one, which led to Michael Annett suffering a bruised sternum, which kept him out of the next eight races of the season. Jamie Dick, Johanna Long, and Hal Martin were also treated and were released. This crash brought out a 20-minute red flag. The second crash occurred on the final lap. This one started when Regan Smith got turned while trying to block Brad Keselowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232873-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 DRIVE4COPD 300, Race\nKyle Larson, who was collected in the crash, got the worst of it, as his car went airborne into the catchfence, ripping out everything from its firewall forward, except for the hood, most of which flew into the grandstand (including its engine and both wheels), as did some debris into the second level. Ultimately, 28 fans were injured, with two of them in critical condition. In the midst of the chaos, Tony Stewart escaped the wreck, and won the race, tying Dale Earnhardt for the most Nationwide Series wins at the track with seven. Alex Bowman; Dale Earnhardt, Jr.; and Parker Kligerman closed out the Top 5 while Brian Scott, Justin Allgaier, Eric McClure; Robert Richardson, Jr.; and Travis Pastrana rounded out the Top 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232873-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 DRIVE4COPD 300, Race\nMuch of the tragedy was due to the car hitting a crossover gate in the catch fence, where the fence is not as strong. In the aftermath of the incident, Daytona and Talladega Superspeedway added cables and tethers to the crossover gates, with Daytona's being installed in time for the Sprint Cup Series' Coke Zero 400 in July. The crash also resulted in the banning of the two-car tandem that had been prevalent since the 2011 introduction of the new cars. This rule change came into effect for the 2014 seasons of all three national touring series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232873-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 DRIVE4COPD 300, Race\nThe picture of Larson's car getting shredded by the catch fence remains as one of the most well-known and reproduced images in the sport's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232874-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 DSA Senior Division\nThe 2013 DSA Senior Division is the 2013 season of the DSA Senior Division which is the third tier of the Indian football system and the top tier of the Delhi football system. The league began on 22 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232874-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 DSA Senior Division, Format\nThe league will consist of two groups in the beginning stage, in which each group contains seven teams. After the first round is complete the top four clubs from each group are promoted to the next round of the league which will be played at the Ambedkar Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232875-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dahsyatnya Awards\nThe 2013 Dahsyatnya Awards was an awards show for Indonesian musicians. It was the fifth annual show. The show was held on January 21, 2013, at the Jakarta International Expo in Kemayoran, Central Jakarta. The awards show was hosted by Raffi Ahmad, Olga Syahputra, Ayu Dewi, Denny Cagur, Marcel Chandrawinata, Gisella Anastasia, Melaney Ricardo, Ajun Perwira, Kevin Julio, and Olla Ramlan. The awards ceremonies will held theme for \"Wujudkan Kedahsyatan Cinta\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232875-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dahsyatnya Awards\nNoah led the nominations with four categories, followed by Ungu with three nominations. Andien was the biggest winner of the night, taking home two awards for Outstanding Video Clip and Outstanding Video Clip Director, both for \"Gemilang\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally\nThe 2013 Dakar Rally was the 35th running of the event and the fifth successive year that the event was held in South America. The event started in Lima, Peru on 5 January and finished in Santiago, Chile on 19 January after fourteen stages of competition. 448 vehicles in four classes of competition started the event, which comprised a total distance of over 8,500 kilometres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally\nThe motorcycle category was won by French rider Cyril Despres for a fifth time, riding a KTM; Marcos Patronelli took his second win in the quad competition riding a Yamaha; St\u00e9phane Peterhansel captured his eleventh Dakar victory in the car category alongside co-driver Jean-Paul Cottret at the wheel of a Mini; and Eduard Nikolaev's maiden victory re-captured the truck category title for Kamaz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries\nThe official entry list for the rally was published in November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Bikes\nThe entry list for the bike category would be headed by reigning champion Cyril Despres, who would spearhead the challenge of Austrian manufacturer KTM on board one of the Red Bull backed factory bikes. Absent however would be the Frenchman's long-time rival Marc Coma, who was forced to withdraw from the event due to a shoulder injury sustained whilst participating in Rally Morocco. The Spaniard was replaced by US rider Kurt Caselli, who would represent KTM's AMV team alongside Joan Pedrero. KTM would also be represented by Red Bull rider Ruben Faria, Francisco L\u00f3pez and P\u00e5l Anders Ullev\u00e5lseter among numerous others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Bikes\nYamaha would field factory bikes for 2007 runner-up David Casteu, Olivier Pain, David Fr\u00e9tign\u00e9 and Frans Verhoeven. Honda would make their return to the event after a lengthy absence, with Portuguese rider H\u00e9lder Rodrigues leading the team's assault. Husqvarna meanwhile could count Spaniards Joan Barreda and Jordi Viladoms as well as Portugal's Paulo Gon\u00e7alves among their works riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Quads\nWith defending champion Alejandro Patronelli opting not to return to defend his crown, his brother and 2010 winner Marcos Patronelli would be tasked with leading the Yamaha assault on the quad category. Fellow South American riders Tomas Maffei, Ignacio Casale and Sergio Lafuente would also be making use of Yamaha machinery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Quads\nPolish duo \u0141ukasz \u0141askawiec and Rafa\u0142 Sonik, also riding for Yamaha, would also be expected to be in contention having both finished in the top three in previous years, with Dakar rookie Sebastian Husseini leading Honda's challenge for honours in the category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Cars\nTen-time Dakar winner St\u00e9phane Peterhansel would return to defend his 2012 crown at the wheel of a Monster Energy-sponsored Mini All4 machine prepared by X-Raid. The German team would also enter similar machines for former motorcycle category winner Nani Roma, Leonid Novitskiy and Krzysztof Ho\u0142owczyc with Orlando Terranova driving an X-Raid prepared BMW X3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Cars\nTwo former winners in the shape of Carlos Sainz (2010) and Nasser Al-Attiyah (2011) would drive a pair of Damen Jefferies-built buggies in an all-new team backed by Red Bull and the Qatari government. SMG would also return with their brace of buggies, with driving duties entrusted to Guerlain Chicherit, Ronan Chabot and Bernard Errandonea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Cars\nSouth African Toyota dealership Imperial Toyota would field a pair of Hilux machines for 2009 winner Giniel de Villiers and Duncan Vos, with the Japanese marque also represented by Overdrive's Lucio Alvarez and Peter van Merksteijn. The challenge of Chinese manufacturer Great Wall would be led by Carlos Sousa, whilst Robby Gordon as ever would be present in his self-run Hummer H3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Trucks\nAfter ending several years of Kamaz domination in the 2012 event, the Petronas-backed Iveco works team would return with reigning champion G\u00e9rard de Rooy, 2007 winner Hans Stacey and two-time World Rally champion Miki Biasion making up the driving strength.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Entries, Trucks\nKamaz's trio of Red Bull sponsored trucks would be piloted by an all-Russian line-up of Eduard Nikolaev, Ayrat Mardeev and Andrey Karginov. Tatra's challenge would be headed by Czech driver Ale\u0161 Loprais, nephew of six-time champion Karel, while Dutchman Marcel van Vliet would lead the attack of German manufacturer MAN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Bikes\nKTM rider Francisco L\u00f3pez got his rally off to the best possible start by winning the opening stage, but Husqvarna's Joan Barreda took control of the overall standings by winning the second stage. The Spaniard however lost considerable time in the third stage with navigation problems, handing the lead to defending champion and works KTM rider Cyril Despres, who led by just under three minutes from stage winner L\u00f3pez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Bikes\nDespres however lost 17 minutes to stage winner Barreda during the fourth stage, handing the lead to Yamaha's Olivier Pain. The young French rider held the lead until the end of the seventh stage with some consistent stage times, but hit trouble during the eighth stage with a navigational error. This would mean Pain's teammate David Casteu, who won the fifth stage, headed into the rest day as leader of the overall standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Bikes\nMore misfortune struck Yamaha however as Casteu struck a cow during the ninth stage, causing the Frenchman to dislocate his shoulder and retire from the rally. Despres was set to re-take the lead of the standings after winning the stage but dropped to second behind teammate Ruben Faria after taking a 15-minute penalty for an engine change. Despres nonetheless took the lead after finishing second during the tenth stage, with Faria losing 12 minutes to the leader during the eleventh stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Bikes\nDespite dropping eight minutes to Faria during the twelfth stage, Despres remained in control of the standings until the end of the rally, ending up with a winning margin of just under 11 minutes over Faria. L\u00f3pez seemed set to threaten Despres after winning the penultimate stage and closing to within just over eight minutes of the Frenchman, an engine change penalty prior to the final stage cost him any chance of doing so. The Chilean would have to be content with third, nearly 19 minutes behind Despres despite taking the fastest time on the final stage, with Ivan Jake\u0161 and Joan Pedrero completing an all-KTM top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Bikes\nOlivier Pain recovered to sixth position after his earlier troubles, whilst Barreda could do no better than 17th after losing considerable time with fuel pump issues on the fifth stage. Kurt Caselli had an impressive debut ride as a substitute for Marc Coma, winning two stages but finishing just outside the top 30 as a result of a navigational error during the eighth stage and engine woes in the penultimate stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Quads\nYamaha's Marcos Patronelli took control of the overall standings by winning the stage ahead of Honda newcomer Sebastian Husseini. The two riders finished 1st and 2nd for the next two stages, Patronelli extending his advantage to 15 minutes after the fourth stage, before mechanical problems for Husseini during the fifth stage cost him several hours. This gave Patronelli a lead of almost an hour and 20 minutes over Ignacio Casale, also aboard a Yamaha, who closed the gap slightly with a win on the sixth stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Quads\nPatronelli however began to extend his advantage once more over the following stages, with Casale dropping 23 minutes during the eleventh stage. With a cushion of one hour 50 minutes, Patronelli maintained his advantage over Casale until the end of the rally. Rafa\u0142 Sonik completed a Yamaha 1\u20132\u20133, albeit over three hours adrift of Patronelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Quads\n\u0141ukasz \u0141askawiec briefly held third position after finishing second during the fifth stage, but delays in the sixth and twelfth stages dropped him to a final finishing position of 13th. Sarel van Biljon also held third in the overall standings after winning the eighth stage, but major delays during the following stage left the South African finishing outside the top 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Cars\nQatar Red Bull driver Carlos Sainz was the winner of the first stage, and despite losing twenty minutes to X-Raid's St\u00e9phane Peterhansel during the second stage, the two-time World Rally champion was declared the leader of the overall classification having lost time trying to pass a waypoint due to a fault with his GPS. However, this decision was later reversed, handing the stage win and the lead of the standings back to Peterhansel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Cars\nThe Frenchman's closest challenger initially would prove Sainz's teammate Nasser Al-Attiyah, who closed to within five minutes of Peterhansel following wins in the third and fourth stages. Victory in the sixth stage brought the Qatari within one minute 20 seconds of the rally lead, but an engine problem during the ninth stage put an end to his challenge. With Sainz having retired after the sixth stage, also because of engine problems, it was an event to forget for the newly formed Qatar Red Bull team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Cars\nThis meant that Peterhansel now had a lead of 49 minutes over Imperial Toyota's Giniel de Villiers, the South African able only to erase seven minutes of that advantage during the remaining stages. In this period, a battle for third emerged between X-Raid drivers Nani Roma and Leonid Novitskiy, with the latter holding the advantage until the former won the twelfth stage. Novitskiy however re-gained the advantage after Roma stopped during the penultimate stage to allow Peterhansel to run in convoy with him, so as to ensure overall victory for his teammate. Roma eventually finished fourth, eight minutes behind Novitskiy. Roma's hopes of challenging Peterhansel for victory were negated when the Spaniard lost over an hour during the sixth stage as a result of becoming stuck in a dune. Orlando Terranova made it four X-Raid drivers in the top five having won the tenth stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 913]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Cars\nIt was a difficult rally for Robby Gordon, who finished only fourteenth overall despite a late pair of stage victories. The American had a transmission problem in the opening stage and rolled his Hummer in the fourth stage, leaving him trying to make up for lost time for the remainder of the rally. X-Raid driver Krzysztof Ho\u0142owczyc was eliminated from the running after the third stage having sustained back and rib injuries in a crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Trucks\nDefending champion G\u00e9rard de Rooy took control of the event initially with victories in the first three stages for Iveco, building a seven-minute cushion over Tatra's Ale\u0161 Loprais. The Czech driver then took the lead of the overall standings after the fourth stage as de Rooy hit delays, but lost his advantage after becoming stuck in the sand during the following stage. This handed the lead of the rally back to de Rooy, who led by just over five minutes from Kamaz driver Eduard Nikolaev after the fifth stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Trucks\nThe Dutchman extended this advantage to 22 minutes with back-to-back victories in the sixth and seventh stages, but disaster struck during the ninth stage\u00a0\u2013 turbo failure, steering problems and a puncture conspired to drop de Rooy by nearly an hour. This gave Nikolaev the lead of the rally with 18 minutes in hand from Tatra's Martin Kolomy, though the Kamaz of Ayrat Mardeev would take second position after the eleventh stage and Andrey Karginov would move ahead of Kolomy into third position after victory in the twelfth stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Trucks\nAnother victory in the penultimate stage allowed Karginov to move ahead of Mardeev, albeit some 36 minutes behind eventual victor Nikolaev. Karginov however lost out on the runner-up position during the final stage, with Mardeev doing just enough to clinch second by a margin of under a minute. Behind the all-Kamaz podium, de Rooy recovered to fourth position overall after winning the eleventh stage, 41 minutes behind Nikolaev, with Kolomy fifth and Loprais in sixth after his earlier troubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Summary, Trucks\nMiki Biasion ran third early on for Iveco, but was ruled out of contention after hitting severe delays during the fourth stage, going on to finish 13th overall. Former winner Hans Stacey meanwhile was forced to retire from the event after rolling his Iveco during the sixth stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Fatalities\nIt was reported that, on the evening of 9 January, two people died as a result of a collision between a taxi and the support vehicle for the 'Race2Recovery' team, which is made up of ex-military servicemen from the UK. The team members travelling in the support vehicle were taken to hospital along with the four surviving passengers of the taxi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232876-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Dakar Rally, Fatalities\nOn 11 January, a competitor in the motorcycle category, Frenchman Thomas Bourgin, was killed in a road accident with a Chilean police car whilst travelling to the start of the day's stage. He was running 68th overall at the time of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232877-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dalian Aerbin F.C. season\nThe 2013 Dalian Aerbin F.C. season is the fourth season in club history, and the second season in the Chinese Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232877-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dalian Aerbin F.C. season, Overview\nBefore the season started, Aerbin tried to take over Dalian Shide F.C. after its downfall, after the local rival faced difficulties concerning political issue (see Xu Ming, owner of Dalian Shide for the time), but was eventually called off by the CFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232877-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dalian Aerbin F.C. season, Overview\nAerbin signed former football player Xu Hong as their manager in December 2012, but he resigned after only 62 days, because he was suspended by the CFA for manipulation match results years ago. Li Ming stepped up as the caretaker, before the team signed contract with Serbian manager Simo Kruni\u0107 in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232877-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dalian Aerbin 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-00232878-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season\nThe 2013 season was the Dallas Cowboys' 54th in the National Football League, their fifth playing home games at AT&T Stadium (formerly known as \"Cowboys Stadium\") and the third full season under head coach Jason Garrett. The Cowboys finished 8\u20138 for a third consecutive season, but missed the playoffs for a fourth consecutive season after losing their final game for the third straight season, this time to the Philadelphia Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Denver Broncos\nComing off their loss to the Chargers, the Cowboys hosted the Denver Broncos at home for an interconference duel. The Cowboys grabbed a 14\u20130 lead in the first quarter, with a 2-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Tony Romo to wide receiver Dez Bryant, followed by running back DeMarco Murray rushing for a 4-yard touchdown. The latter score occurred after a fumble by Broncos' wide receiver Eric Decker. The Broncos later got on the scoreboard, with quarterback Peyton Manning connecting on a 4-yard shovel pass to tight end Julius Thomas for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Denver Broncos\nEarly in the second quarter, a 43-yard field goal by placekicker Dan Bailey gave the Cowboys a 17\u20137 lead. The Broncos then reeled off 21 unanswered points, with Manning adding two more touchdown passes \u2014 a 2-yarder to Decker and a 9-yarder to Thomas, followed by Manning rushing for a 1-yard touchdown on a bootleg play. A 48-yard field goal by Bailey at the end of the first half narrowed the Broncos' lead to 28\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Denver Broncos\nIn the second half, the Broncos added to their lead midway through the third quarter, with Manning connecting on a 2-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Wes Welker. However, the Cowboys subsequently began chipping away at the Broncos\u2019 lead, with Romo connecting on an 82-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Terrance Williams. A 48-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater gave the Broncos a 38\u201327 lead, but the Cowboys further narrowed the Broncos' lead, with a 2-yard touchdown pass from Romo to Bryant (with an unsuccessful two-point conversion attempt).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Denver Broncos\nFollowing an intercepted Broncos' pass, the Cowboys subsequently re-claimed the lead early in the fourth quarter, with Romo throwing a 10-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jason Witten, coupled with a two-point pass from Romo to Williams. The Broncos tied the game at 41\u201341 on their next possession, with a 50-yard field goal by Prater. As the shootout continued, on the Cowboys' next possession, Romo connected on a 4-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Cole Beasley to give the Cowboys a 48\u201341 lead with 7:19 remaining in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Denver Broncos\nManning subsequently led the Broncos on a 9-play, 73-yard drive, which culminated with running back Knowshon Moreno rushing for a 1-yard touchdown to tie the game at 48\u201348 with 2:24 remaining in the fourth quarter. Two plays into the Cowboys' next possession, as the Cowboys were attempting a game-winning drive, Romo was intercepted by Broncos\u2019 linebacker Danny Trevathan at the Cowboys' 24-yard line just before the two-minute warning. On the fourth play of the Broncos' final possession, the Broncos were facing a 3rd-and-1 at the Cowboys' 2-yard line, after the Cowboys had exhausted two of their three team timeouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Denver Broncos\nMoreno earned a crucial first down after Manning implored him to go down before reaching the goal line instead of scoring a touchdown, which forced the Cowboys to burn their final timeout with 1:35 remaining in the fourth quarter. After three kneel-downs by Manning, Prater nailed the game-winning 28-yard field goal as time expired. With the loss, the Cowboys moved to 2\u20133, and dropped to second place in the division. Romo passed for 506 yards in this shootout, and his 36 attempted passes is the fewest by any quarterback who managed to pass for 500 yards in one game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nDez Bryant was the topic of the close loss as he was engaged in several sideline rants throughout the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at New York Giants\nDan Bailey's 34 yard field goal with 4 seconds left in the game gave the Cowboys their sixth win of the season. With the win, the Giants' four game winning streak was snapped and the Cowboys regained the top spot of the NFC East, remaining undefeated in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Green Bay Packers\nWith the Packers coming off of their first win since the injury of Aaron Rodgers, the Cowboys lead 26\u20133 at halftime. In the second half of the game, the Packers managed a dramatic comeback that was helped by the mistake-prone Cowboys. The Packers scored the game-winning touchdown with almost a minute left in the game. Tony Romo tried to rally back and give the Cowboys a win, but threw an interception near the 50-yard line that sealed their fate. Controversy followed the game for the Cowboys giving up a 23-point halftime lead and the play-calling of the coaching staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Washington Redskins\nAfter the loss to the Packers the week before, the Cowboys managed to hold the Redskins to only two field goals to lead 14\u20136 at halftime. In the third quarter, Kirk Cousins threw two touchdown passes to give the Redskins a 20\u201314 lead at the end of the 3rd. The Redskins extended their lead to 23\u201314 after another field goal. The Cowboys, in an attempt to not repeat the mistakes of the previous week, sent Dan Bailey out to kick a field goal to trail 23\u201317 in the 4th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Washington Redskins\nAt the 3:29 mark, the Cowboys went back to work to start at their own 13 yard line. Romo led the Cowboys downfield thanks in large part to a Terrance Williams 51 yard catch and then a Dez Bryant catch and run for 17 yards to set up first and goal at the Redskins' 4 yard line. DeMarco Murray carried the ball for all three plays (+3, no gain, \u22129). Facing 4th and goal at the Washington 10 yard line, Romo climbed the pocket and fired a pass to DeMarco Murray in the end zone to tie the game 23\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Washington Redskins\nWith the extra point good, the Cowboys led 24\u201323 with 1:01 remaining in the game. Washington started their drive on their own 13 yard line after a 10-yard illegal block penalty negated what would have been a 21-yard return (to the Washington 23). Kirk Cousins and co. could not sustain their drive, totaling 4 yards on four passing attempts. The Redskins turned the ball over on downs with 40 seconds remaining in the game. Lining up in the victory formation, Tony Romo was able to kneel the ball down and run the clock out. With the win, the Cowboys advanced to 5-0 in the NFC East and kept their playoff hopes alive to set up a do-or-die at home versus the Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Washington Redskins\nRomo was seen limping through most of the fourth quarter after rolling out of what would have been a sack by Redskins linebacker Rob Jackson. The Cowboys later confirmed injury reports of Romo suffering a herniated disc in his lower back. Despite statements that he would be ready to face Nick Foles and the Philadelphia Eagles for the NFC East Championship, Romo was placed on injured reserve. The Cowboys tried to delay surgery by administering an epidural injection two days prior to the anticipated game, but it was decided Romo needed the surgery and ended his season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232878-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cowboys season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nThe loss caused the Cowboys once again to miss out on the playoffs and gave them a 2\u201312 record in Week 17 games since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232879-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Cup\nThe 2013 Dallas Cup was the 34th since its establishment. The Dallas Cup is an international soccer tournament for invited youth teams, held annually in Dallas, Texas, United States. Twelve teams participated in the 2013 tournament. The competition was sponsored by Dr Pepper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232880-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Tennis Classic\nThe 2013 Dallas Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Irving, United States between 11 and 17 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232880-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Tennis Classic, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232880-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Tennis Classic, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232881-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nSantiago Gonz\u00e1lez and Scott Lipsky were the defending champions but decided to compete in the 2013 BNP Paribas Open instead. J\u00fcrgen Melzer and Philipp Petzschner defeated Eric Butorac and Dominic Inglot 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232882-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dallas Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nDefending champion Frank Dancevic lost in qualifying for this year's tournament. J\u00fcrgen Melzer defeated qualifier Denis Kudla 6\u20134, 2\u20136, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232883-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dally M Awards\nThe 2013 Dally M Awards were presented on Tuesday 1 October 2013 at Sydney's Star Casino and broadcast on Fox Sports. They were the official annual awards of the 2013 NRL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232883-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dally M Awards, Judges\nThe Daily Telegraph: Paul Crawley, Paul Kent, Josh Massoud, Dean Ritchie, Barry Toohey, Nick Walshaw and Justin Newlan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232883-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00232884-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Damallsvenskan\nThe 2013 Damallsvenskan, part of the 2013 Swedish football season, is the 26th season of Damallsvenskan since its establishment in 1988. The season began on 13 April 2013 and ends on 20 October 2013. Tyres\u00f6 FF are the defending champions, having won their first title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232884-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Damallsvenskan\nA total of 12 teams played in the league; 10 returned from the 2012 season and 2 were promoted from Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232884-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Damallsvenskan, Teams\nDjurg\u00e5rdens IF and AIK were relegated at the end of the 2012 season after finishing in the bottom two places of the table. They were replaced by Division 1 division champions Sunnan\u00e5 SK and Mallbackens IF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232884-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Damallsvenskan, League table\nTyres\u00f6 FF, second placed team in 2013 Damallsvenskan, would have qualified for the Champions League, but renounced its place after economic problems. As a result, the berth was given to Link\u00f6pings FC, the third placed team of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232885-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish Cup Final\nThe 2013 Danish Cup Final was a football match that decided the winner of the 2012\u201313 Danish Cup. It was played on 9 May 2013 at 15:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232886-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Danish Figure Skating Championships (Danish: Danske Mesterskaber 2013) was held in Aalborg from December 7 through 9, 2012. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing on the levels of senior, junior, novice, and the pre-novice levels of debs, springs, and cubs. The results were used to choose the teams to the 2013 World Championships, the 2013 European Championships, the 2013 Nordic Championships, and the 2013 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232887-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish Individual Speedway Championship\nThe 2013 Danish Individual Speedway Championship was the 2013 edition of the Danish Individual Speedway Championship. The final was staged over two rounds, at Slangerup and Holsted, and was won by Niels Kristian Iversen. It was the second time Iversen had won the national title, having also been victorious the year before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232887-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish Individual Speedway Championship, Event format\nThe competition started with two semi finals, with five progressing to the final series from each. The final series was held over two rounds, with the top four scorers from the two rounds then competing in a Grand Final. The points from the Grand Final were then added to the total score and the overall winner was the rider with the most total points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232888-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish local elections\nThe Danish local elections of 2013 were held on 19 November 2013 in Denmark's 98 municipal councils, contesting 2,444 seats (previous election: 2,468 seats) for the 2014\u201317 term of office, and in five regional councils, contesting 205 seats for the 2014\u201317 term. Advance voting began on 20 August 2013 in national registration offices in Denmark, hospitals, prisons etc. Twelve (12) women hold the highest political office of mayor in the municipalities in the 2014\u201317 term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232888-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish local elections, Results, Results of regional elections\nThe ministry of economy and interior informed that voter turnout was 71.7%. 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232888-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish local elections, Results, Results of regional elections, Old and new Chairmen of the Regional Councils\nOn 22 June 2015, Stephanie Lose became chairman of the Region of Southern Denmark. She is from Venstre. Carl Holst became a minister in the government of Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 114], "content_span": [115, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232888-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Danish local elections, Results, Results of municipal elections\nThe Ministry of economy and interior informed that voter turnout was 71.9%. 2,444 councillors were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232888-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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). Mette Touborg is the mayor of Lejre Municipality since 1 January 2010. She is the only one at present from the Socialist People's Party to hold the highest political post in a municipality. Rebild Municipality has a new mayor since 1 January 2014. His name is Leon Sebbelin from the Danish Social Liberal Party. Tobias Birch Johansen, the mayor of L\u00e6s\u00f8 Municipality, is a member of the agrarian liberal Venstre, but he is elected on the local list L\u00e6s\u00f8 Listen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 98], "content_span": [99, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232888-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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, namely 1 January 2014 until 31 December 2017. The correct name for the municipality on the somewhat remote island of Bornholm is Regional Municipality, because the municipality also handles 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, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232888-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Danish local elections, Results, Old and new mayors in the municipalities\nAs just one example, as the only one of the 46 municipalities in eastern Denmark it is a 100% owner of its own public mass transit agency called BAT, formerly Bornholms Amts Trafikselskab. The public traffic agency of the other 45 municipalities in eastern Denmark is Movia, owned by the Capital Region of Denmark, Region Zealand and the 45 municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232889-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Danmark Rundt\nThe 2013 Danmark Rundt was a men's road bicycle race held from 31 July to 4 August 2013. It was the 23rd edition of the men's stage race, which was established in 1985. The race was rated as a 2.HC event and formed part of the 2013 UCI Europe Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232889-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Danmark Rundt\nThe race was won by Dutch rider Wilco Kelderman of the Belkin Pro Cycling Team with Danish riders Lars Bak of Lotto-Belisol and Matti Breschel of Team Saxo-Tinkoff finishing second and third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232889-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Danmark Rundt\nThe race was made up of six stages over five days and covered a total of 837 kilometres (520\u00a0mi), including an individual time trial. It featured sixteen teams, including seven UCI Pro teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232889-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Danmark Rundt, Teams\n16 teams raced in the 2013 Danmark Rundt: 7 UCI ProTeams, 5 UCI Professional Continental Teams, 4 UCI Continental Teams along with a Danish national team under the Team Post Danmark name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232889-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Danmark Rundt, Final standings\nThe general classification was won by Wilco Kelderman of Belkin Pro Cycling Team by six seconds from Lars Bak of Lotto-Belisol with Matti Breschel of Team Saxo-Tinkoff another nine seconds behind in third place. Kelderman also won the points jersey by two points from Breschel and the young riders award. The race was Kelderman's first professional tour victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232889-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Danmark Rundt, Final standings\nDanish rider Martin Mortensen of Riwal Cycling Team won the mountain classification and the fighters award. The team race was won by Bardiani Valvole-CSF Inox by 16 seconds from Vacansoleil-DCM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse\nThe Dar es Salaam building collapse occurred during the early hours of Good Friday on 29 March 2013 when a 16-floor residential apartment building collapsed on a nearby mosque compound, killing 36 people and trapping over 60 under the rubble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Background\nThe building was owned by Raza Huseein Damji with the National Housing Corporation (NHC) having a 25 percent share in the project. Poor building design was the suspected cause for the collapse, Kheri Kessy, the Deputy Mayor of Ilala said in 2007, as the approved plan was for a 10 floor apartment building project. The project inspector ensured protocol was followed but when the ten floors were completed the oversight responsibility changed to a different governmental body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Background\nThe Contractors Registration Board (CRB) Engineers Registration Board (ERB) claimed a stop order was issued when the building exceeded the 10 floor plan approval. The plan limitation was ignored when at the time of collapse there were 16 completed floors and another projected 3 floors to be constructed. Substandard concrete and steel bar reinforcement were cited as reasons that led to the collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Background\nThe Tanzanian Red Cross expressed relief that the casualty figures could have been far higher but the streets were relatively empty of vendors and shoppers due to the holiday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Second building\nConstruction of a nearby building of the same owner and under the same construction company was immediately ordered to stop pending an investigation after reports that it had developed cracks as well. A week after the collapse, on 5 April,The Minister for Lands, Housing and Human Settlements Development, Prof Anna Tibaijuka issued an order for the owner to demolish the second 16-storey building, based on information gathered by government officials that it was ill-constructed as well. Similar to the first, the owner erected a 16-storey structure instead of 10 floors as the building permit stipulated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Second building\nShe said, \"We are tired of mourning and now it\u2019s time to take action. That building was given a permit for ten floors only but the developer ignored the limitation... \"The owner was given 30 days to comply with this order. The order was delayed while the government agencies discussed options. On May 29, 2013, two months after the collapse of the first building, the Ilala municipality issued a one-week demolition notice to the owners of the building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Reactions\nPresident Jakaya Kikwete who visited the site expressed his sorrow and tweeted his prayers for those afflicted by the tragedy. On a second visit the next day, he ordered for strict supervision of construction projects. \u201cThe municipal Chief Engineer, Ilala District Chief Inspector of buildings, owner of the building and whoever is connected to the scam must face justice,\u201d Kikwete ordered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Reactions\nProfessor Ibrahim Lipumba, leader of the Civic United Front visited the site as well where he said, \u201cInnocent lives have been shuttered down. Authorities should have questioned from the beginning the legality for continued construction of the additional floors of the building against the agreed ten floors. Serious inspection of buildings must be a routine duty.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Reactions\nDar regional police chief, Suleiman Kova, said, \"the owner of the building would be held responsible and taken to task\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Reactions\nWeeks after the incident, in the parliament budget speech, Prof Kulikoyela Kahigi said that the government should bear the blame, considering the fact that former Prime Minister Edward Lowassa formed a task force in 2006 to investigate the state of buildings under construction but its recommendations were ignored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Victims\nOut of the 36 people killed in the collapse, 25 were identified of which were 4 children and 21 adults. The children were all students of the Al Muntazir School who were playing soccer near a mosque after morning prayers. They were identified as Salman Damji, Yusuf Khaki, Zahid Kanji and Suheil Karim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Victims\nOther victims include Kulwa khalfan, Hamada Mussa, Kessy Ally Manjapa, Hamis Zuberi Mkomwa, Boniface Bernard, Seleman Haji, Seleman Mtego, Sikudhani Mohamed, Ahmed Salum Mirambo, Salum Issa Mapunda, Selemani Rashid Mnyani, John Mtyani Majewa, Mussa Ally Munyamani, David Severin Helman, William Joackim, Abdulhaman Othman Mwiha, Emmanuel Christian, Mmanyi Jumanne Ngadula, Advai Mpinge Desiki, Emmanuel Grayson Wahai and Augustino Kanisius Chuma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Arrests\nAt the behest of Kikwete, three municipal officials and the engineer were held for questioning over the incident. This was increased to include the owner Raza Damji and his son, Aly Raza Damji. Vedasto Ferdinand, a quantity surveyor was also arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Arrests, Trial\nOn 4 April 2013, 11 suspects were arrested and charged with 24 counts of manslaughter. These included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Arrests, Trial\nThe owners' son who was also arrested was let go for unknown reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232890-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Dar es Salaam building collapse, Arrests, Trial\nThe suspects were remanded until 16 April pending a bail ruling. On 16 April, the magistrate court justice Devotha Kisoka issued bail to the eleven suspects. The conditions of the bail required each of the accused to secure two reliable guarantors, who would have to sign a bond of 20 million Tanzanian shillings (~12,300 USD) each and bring along formal letters of introduction from their local governments. The suspects were also ordered to surrender all travel documents and not leave the city without informing the court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive\nThe 2013 Daraa offensive was a campaign during the Syrian Civil War launched by the FSA in the Daraa Governorate to capture the strategic border area. The offensive began in early March 2013. During the campaign, rebel forces captured several bases and towns. The offensive was eventually halted following an Army counter-offensive in mid-April, which resulted in the recapture of a few towns and villages. After that, the rebels continued their advance by launching a counter-offensive of their own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Background\nIn early 2013, rebels in southern Syria started receiving an influx of foreign-funded weapons over the border from Jordan. This gave them a new momentum, with the rebels preparing an offensive to capture the strategically important region along the border with Jordan that would give them a critical gateway to attempt an attack on the capital, Damascus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Offensive, Rebel attack\nOn 3 March, rebels seized an artillery battalion in Jalma village near the Israeli Armistice line. Eight rebels were killed in the fighting, and SOHR stated that the rebels summarily executed the battalion commander.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Offensive, Rebel attack\nOn 23 March, several rebel groups captured the 38th division air defense base of the Syrian Army in near a strategic highway linking Damascus to Jordan, and killed the base commander, General Mahmoud Darwish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Offensive, Rebel attack\nOn the next day, rebels captured a 25\u00a0km strip of land near the Jordanian border, which included the towns of Muzrib, Abdin, and the Al-Rai military checkpoint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Offensive, Rebel attack\nOn 29 March, rebels seized control of the strategic town of Da'el, located 10 miles from the Jordanian border, after days of fierce fighting which left 38 people dead, including 16 rebels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Offensive, Rebel attack\nOn 3 April, rebels captured the air defense base of the 49th battalion of the Syrian Army in the town of Alma in the northern outskirts of Daraa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Offensive, Rebel attack\nOn 5 April, rebels captured an Army garrison defending the main border crossing into Jordan, after a week-long siege in which dozens were reportedly killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Offensive, Government counter-attack\nOn 10 April, the Syrian Army launched a counter-attack on the town of Sanamein and Ghabagheb, seizing control of Sanamein. Syrian state TV reported that the Army launched operations against Tafas, Dael and Jassim as well. 54 people were killed during the fighting in Sanamein: 29 civilians, 16 rebels, 9 soldiers and three defectors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 58], "content_span": [59, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Reopening of Army supply line and stalemate\nOn 8 May, government forces captured the strategic town of Khirbet Ghazaleh, situated along the highway to the Jordanian border. Over 1,000 rebel fighters withdrew from the town due to the lack of reinforcements and ammunition. The loss of the town also resulted in the reopening of the government supply-route to the contested city of Daraa. The rebels continued to withdraw from other towns and decided not to face the Army's advance along the highway because they no longer had ammunition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Reopening of Army supply line and stalemate\nHowever, later in the day, an opposition commander claimed that the retreat was part of a rebel plan to set up a trap for government forces and that the opposition fighters managed to recapture the town. Still, this was denied by the opposition group SOHR which stated that the rebels had managed only to recapture one neighbourhood and fighting was still ongoing in the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Reopening of Army supply line and stalemate\nOn 12 May, government forces took complete control of Khirbet Ghazaleh and secured the highway near the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Reopening of Army supply line and stalemate\nBy early June, according to Jordanian border guards and militias, the rebels were conducting primitive attacks against Syrian Army positions on the other side of the border. \u201cThey attack the checkpoints in a primitive way,\u201d according to a Jordanian commander. \u201cSometimes you see them holding their weapons awkwardly and wasting their ammunition. They almost never take advantage of the vehicles and equipment the Syrians leave behind. It is clear from watching them that they are not well-trained.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Reopening of Army supply line and stalemate\nThe Syrian military was edging closer towards the border and their success against the rebels was credited to the recent arrival of more improved gear and vehicles, not seen before, for the Syrian Army. These include drones, anti-mortar systems and communications jamming devices. The anti-mortar systems deployed in some areas allow the Syrian military to trace the source of mortar fire and even strike before the rebels launch an attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Reopening of Army supply line and stalemate\nIn late June, rebel forces were in fear of being routed by the Army in southern Syria and losing control of their safe zones on the Jordanian border. By 26 June, government forces had captured the villages of Itlaa and Basr As Sham and fighting was raging outside the village of al-Sheikh Maskin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Slow rebel advances\nOn 28 June, rebels, including units of Al-Nusra Front, took control of the strategically important Binayat checkpoint in Daraa city. They also occupied the area around the Omari mosque in the southern part of the city, which was a focal point of the initial protests in March 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Slow rebel advances\nOn 8 August, Ahmad Jarba, president of the Western-backed Syrian National Coalition, crossed from Jordan into rebel-held territory in Daraa Province to meet with refugees and observe Id al-Fitr. He was accompanied by Ahmad Nima, leader of the FSA Daraa Military Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Slow rebel advances\nOn 28 September, rebels including groups linked to Al Qaeda seized the Ramtha border crossing on the Syria-Jordan border after days of fighting which left 26 soldiers dead along with 7 foreign rebel fighters. On 9 October, rebels also seized the Hajanar border crossing on the Jordanian border near Daraa after a month of fierce fighting. Its fall meant rebels were now in control of a swath of territory along the border from outside of Daraa to the edge of Golan Heights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Slow rebel advances\nOn 21 October, FSA chief Yasser Abbud (aka Abu Ammar), leader of the Fallujah-Houran brigade was killed during fighting with the army in Tafas. He was once the commander of the military council of the FSA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232891-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Daraa offensive, Aftermath, Slow rebel advances\nOn 2 December, Islamist rebels managed to capture an armament battalion base near the town of Busir al Harir, several soldiers were captured during the attack. One month later, rebels claimed to have taken control of the hospital in the town of Jasem, where government forces had previously been based.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232892-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nThe 2013 Dartmouth Big Green football team represented Dartmouth College in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Big Green were led by head coach Buddy Teevens in his ninth straight year and 14th overall and played their home games at Memorial Field. They were a member of the Ivy League. They finished with a record of 6\u20134 overall and 5\u20132 in Ivy League play to place third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections\nLocal elections will be held in the city of Dasmari\u00f1as on 13 May 2013 together with the National and the provincial level elections. Since Dasmari\u00f1as is a first class city in terms of income and the 2nd largest city in southern Luzon in terms of population, however it still an ordinary component city, it means it still elect a provincial official, despite its own representation in the congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, Background\nSince 1998 Barzagas have dominated in the elections. Their allies have also won several positions in the city/municipal council. In 2010, the Barzagas were members of Lakas Kampi supporting Gilbert Teodoro, who lost to Benigno S. Aquino III of the Liberal Party. When the 15 Congress started, Pidi became a member of the majority group of Feliciano Belmonte. The following year his faction from Lakas-Kampi established the new party, National Unity Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, Background\nThis 2013, Pidi Barzaga and his wife Jenny is running for their last term for congressman and mayor, respectively, together with Vice Mayor Valeriano \"Vale\" Encabo. Although they are running under the National Unity Party, they are also nominated by the Liberal Party due to electoral alliance with Rep. Ayong Maliksi, the alliance called as Team Dasma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, Background\nMeanwhile, last term Councilor Gavino \"Gabby\" Mercado, former Barzaga's allied, are still with the Lakas party, and in alliance with Gov. Jonvic Remulla and Jolo Revilla, is running for mayor along with Miguelito \"Mike\" Ilano who was lost for board member of 4th district in 2010, is running for congressman. The Mercado group known as the Amazing 16 which included Remulla and Revilla in the coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, Congress\nElpidio \"Pidi\" Barzaga is the incumbent. Although he is running under the National Unity Party, he also nominated by the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, Provincial Board\nAlthough Dasmari\u00f1as is a large city not only in Calabarzon region but also in the entire Southern Luzon in terms of income and population, however, it is still not an independent city, and is still in the jurisdiction of the Province of Cavite (4th district) thus it can allow its people to run in and elect to the provincial positions. Incumbent Board Members Teofilo Rudy Lara and Raul Rex Mangubat, both from NUP and Liberal Party are the two candidates to the post of provincial board members. No other opponents are running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, Mayoral, Mayor\nJenny Barzaga is the incumbent, running against incumbent City Councilor Gavino \"Gabby\" Mercado, who is in his last term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, Mayoral, Vice Mayor\nValeriano \"Vale\" Encabo is the incumbent. He will oppose Liga ng mga Barangay President and Brgy. Fatima III Chairman Antonio \"Damo\" Ferrer (namesake of Cavite Rep. Antonio Ferrer, who is running for Mayor of neighboring Gen. Trias, Cavite).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232893-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dasmari\u00f1as local elections, City Council\nElection in the city council is at large at 12 seats on the line. Some candidates from Lakas\u2013CMD are considered as independent because they did not submit their certificate of nomination from their party. 28 people are running, 8 of them are incumbent, all from Team Dasma (NUP/LP) coalition. All 12 candidates of Team Dasma are won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232894-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davao Occidental creation plebiscite\nOn October 28, 2013, residents of Davao del Sur voted in a plebiscite to approve or disapprove the creation of the then proposed province of Davao Occidental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232894-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davao Occidental creation plebiscite, Background\nThe creation of Davao Occidental was first proposed by then Davao del Sur congressman, Marc Douglas Cagas IV in 2013, while his father, Douglas Cagas, was still the governor of Davao del Sur. The proposed province was to compose all municipalities of Davao del Sur under the 2nd legislative district at that time. Cagas withdrew his proposal as the 2013 Philippine elections drew near.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232894-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Davao Occidental creation plebiscite, Background\nThe proposal was revived by Franklin Bautista 2nd district congressman of Davao del Sur. Bautista passed a law proposing the creation of the province, was passed in Congress, and approved by President Benigno Aquino III. Bautista's version of the law has a more limited scope with the municipalities of Santa Maria, Malita, Don Marcelino, Jose Abad Santos and Sarangani proposed to form Davao Occidental. Cagas' version included the municipalities of Kiblawan, Malalag and Sulop. The three municipalities opted out from being a part of the province proposed by Bautista.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232894-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Davao Occidental creation plebiscite, Background\nBy virtue of Republic Act 10360 enacted on July 23, 2013, the province is the newest in the country, carved out from the southern part of Davao del Sur. RA 10360 was passed by the House of Representatives and Senate on November 28, 2012, and December 5, 2012, respectively, and signed by President Benigno Aquino III on January 14, 2013. A plebiscite was to be held to ratify the law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232894-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Davao Occidental creation plebiscite, Background\nA majority vote of those who participated in the plebiscite was required to approve or disapprove the creation of Davao Occidental. Registered voters of Davao del Sur except Davao City at the time of the plebiscite were eligible to vote. The results of the plebiscite was announced by the COMELEC in October 30, 2013. Seventy-six percent of those who voted favored the creation of the new province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232894-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Davao Occidental creation plebiscite, Aftermath\nMalita, was designated as capital of the new province and government officials of Davao del Sur with assistance from the Department of Interior and Local Government retains jurisdiction over the new province until residents of the province vote for the province's own set of government officials in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232895-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davidson Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 Davidson Wildcats football team represented Davidson College in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Paul Nichols and played their home games at Richardson Stadium. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 0\u201311, 0\u20138 in PFL play to finish in eleventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232896-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup\nThe 2013 Davis Cup (also known as the 2013 Davis Cup by BNP Paribas for sponsorship purposes) was the 102nd edition of the tournament between national teams in men's tennis. Czech Republic successfully held their place as Davis Cup champions, by defeating Serbia in the final, in Belgrade, by a 3\u20132 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232896-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup\nThe draw took place on 19 September 2012 in London, United Kingdom. Although, the draws for Asia/Oceania Zone Group I and Europe/Africa Zone Group II were held following the remaining play-off ties on 19\u201321 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232896-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup, World Group Play-offs\nThe eight losing teams in the World Group first round ties and eight winners of the Zonal Group I final round ties will compete in the World Group Play-offs for spots in the 2014 World Group. The draw took place April 11 in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232896-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup, World Group Play-offs\nBold indicates team qualified for the 2014 Davis Cup World Group", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232897-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone\nThe Americas Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232897-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone\nIn the Americas Zone there are three different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232898-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group I\nThe Americas Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232898-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group I\nIn the Americas Zone there are three different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232899-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group II\nThe Americas Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232899-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group II\nIn the Americas Zone there are three different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232900-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III\nThe Americas Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232900-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III\nIn the Americas Zone in 2013 there are three different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232900-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Format\nThe teams will be split into two groups, playing a round-robin, with the winner of each group playing the runner-up of the other group for promotion to Division II in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232900-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Format\nIt will played on the week commencing 17 June 2012 at La Paz, Bolivia and it will be played on outdoor clay court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232901-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232901-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I\nIn the Asia/Oceania 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, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232902-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232902-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II\nIn the Asia/Oceania Zone there are four different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232903-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group III\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232903-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group III\nIn the Asia/Oceania Zone there are four different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232903-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group III, Format\nThe eight teams will be split into two pools of four, the top two nations will advance to the promotion pool. The two best teams from there will be promoted to Group II for 2014. The bottom two teams will play in a relegation pool, where the two last teams will be relegated to Group IV for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232903-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group III, Format\nIt was played on the week commencing 9 September 2013 and it was played at the Aviation Tennis Club in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232904-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232904-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV\nIn the Asia/Oceania Zone there are four different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232904-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV, Teams\nThe 2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV consisted of the following teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232904-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV, Format\nThe ten teams are split into two pools of five, the top nation from each pool play against the runner-up from the other pool. The two winners will be promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232904-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group IV, Format\nThe tournament was played on the week commencing 9 September 2013 at Aviation Tennis Club, Dubai, United Arab Emirates and it was played on outdoor hard court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232905-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nThe Europe and Africa Zone is one of the three zones of the regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232905-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nIn the Europe and Africa Zone there are four different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group. Winners in Group I advance to the World Group Play-offs, along with losing teams from the World Group first round. Teams who lose their respective ties will compete in the relegation play-offs, with winning teams remaining in Group I, whereas teams who lose their play-offs will be relegated to the Europe/Africa Group II in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232905-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nGreat Britain, Netherlands, Poland and Ukraine won their second-round ties, and competed in the World Group Play-offs in mid-September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232905-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nSouth Africa and Denmark were defeated in the play-offs and were relegated to play the Europe/Africa Zone Group II in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232905-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I, Participating teams, Draw\nAll seeded teams get a bye into the second round, as well as Great Britain who were second round losers in the 2012 Davis Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232906-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II\nThe Europe and Africa Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232906-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II\nIn the Europe and Africa Zone there are four different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232907-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup World Group\nThe World Group was the highest level of Davis Cup competition in 2013. The first-round losers go into the Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, and the winners progress to the quarterfinals. The quarterfinalists were guaranteed a World Group spot for 2014. Czech Republic defended their Davis Cup title, by defeating the Serbian team in Belgrade in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232907-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup World Group, First round, Switzerland vs. Czech Republic\nThe doubles match was the second longest match of all time (7 hours and 1 minute).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232908-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs\nThe 2013 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs were held from September 13 to 15. They were the main play-offs of the 2013 Davis Cup. Winners of the playoffs advanced to the 2014 World Group, and the losers were relegated to their respective Zonal Regions I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232908-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, Teams\nBold indicates team has qualified for the 2014 Davis Cup World Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232908-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, Results\nThe eight losing teams in the World Group first round ties and eight winners of the Zonal Group I final round ties competed in the World Group Play-offs for spots in the 2014 World Group. The draw took place April 11 in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232909-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dayton Dutch Lions season\nThe 2013 Dayton Dutch Lions season is the club's fourth season of existence, and third consecutive season of playing in the third division of American soccer. The club will be playing in the USL Pro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232910-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dayton Flyers football team\nThe 2013 Dayton Flyers football team represented the University of Dayton in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by sixth-year head coach Rick Chamberlin and played their home games at Welcome Stadium. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 7\u20134, 5\u20133 in PFL play to finish in a tie for fourth place. The team was awarded White-Allen Most Valuable Player Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232911-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dayton Sharks season\nThe 2013 Dayton Sharks season was the first season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232911-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dayton Sharks season\nIn July 2012, the team announced CA Sports Entertainment LLC. was awarded an expansion franchise in Dayton, Ohio and that the team would be named the Dayton Sharks. The Sharks filled the void left after the Dayton Silverbacks folded at the conclusion of the 2012 season. The team is led by Corwyn Thomas, who is the team's Managing General Partner, CEO and Chairman. The team signed many local players, who have a track record for success, such at Tommy Jones and Robert Redd. The franchise played its first game on February 15, defeating the Port Huron Patriots, 16-64. Over 2,500 turned out to the Sharks' opening game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232911-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dayton Sharks season, Players, Roster\nRookies in italics updated February 15, 201328 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232911-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dayton Sharks season, Schedule, Standings\n\u2020Kane County played the second game on their schedule, but forfeited the other nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500\nThe 2013 Daytona 500, the 55th running of the event, was held on February 24, 2013 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida over 200\u00a0laps and 500 miles (800\u00a0km) on the 2.5-mile (4\u00a0km) asphalt tri-oval. It was the first race of the 2013 Sprint Cup season. Danica Patrick won the pole for the race, becoming the first woman to earn a pole position in NASCAR's highest division. She also achieved the best-ever finish by a woman at the Daytona 500, finishing 8th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500\nJimmie Johnson, driving for Hendrick Motorsports, won the race, making this his first win of the season and his second win in the \"Great American Race\" and his first since the 2006 race. His teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished 2nd while Mark Martin, Brad Keselowski, and Ryan Newman rounded out the Top 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500\nThe race was the final Daytona 500 start for Mark Martin and Jeff Burton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Background\nDaytona International Speedway is one of six superspeedways to hold NASCAR races, the others being Michigan International Speedway, Auto Club Speedway, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Pocono Raceway and Talladega Superspeedway. The standard track at Daytona International Speedway is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 31\u00a0degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at 18\u00a0degrees. Matt Kenseth was the defending race winner. In addition to NASCAR, the track also hosts races of ARCA, AMA Superbike, USCC, SCCA, and Motocross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Background\nThe track features multiple layouts including the primary 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) high speed tri-oval, a 3.56 miles (5.73\u00a0km) sports car course, a 2.95 miles (4.75\u00a0km) motorcycle course, and a .25 miles (0.40\u00a0km) karting and motorcycle flat-track. The track's 180-acre (73\u00a0ha) infield includes the 29-acre (12\u00a0ha) Lake Lloyd, which has hosted powerboat racing. The speedway is owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Background\nThe track was built to host racing that was being held at the former Daytona Beach Road Course and opened with the first Daytona 500 in 1959. The speedway has been renovated three times, with the infield renovated in 2004, and the track repaved in 1978 and 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Background\nIn preparation for the race, NASCAR held several test sessions on January 10\u201312, 2013, for teams to test the sixth generation of race cars. Every test session began at 9\u00a0a.m. EST, paused between 12\u00a0p.m. and 1\u00a0p.m. EST, and concluded at 5\u00a0p.m. EST. During the first session on the morning of January 10, 2013, thirty-four drivers participated; Kenseth, driving for Joe Gibbs Racing, was quickest with a speed of 192.757\u00a0mph while Denny Hamlin had the highest speed of 195.712\u00a0mph during the second session in the afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Background\nThe third test session, held during the morning of January 11, was led by Jeff Burton after having the highest speed of 194.805\u00a0mph. The fourth session was the first session in which multiple drivers were on track to draft, which resulted in a large accident following contact between Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Marcos Ambrose. Following the crash, ten teams left the track because of a shortage of parts for the new car. During that fourth session, held during the afternoon, thirty-two drivers participated with 2011 race winner Trevor Bayne being quickest with a speed of 199.650\u00a0mph. During the fifth session, held on the morning of January 12,\u00a0twenty-one drivers participated; Kenseth was quickest with a speed of 194.062\u00a0mph. Greg Biffle was quickest with a speed of 194.936\u00a0mph in the final session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nSeven practice sessions were held before the race. The first two on February 16 ran 120\u00a0minutes and 105\u00a0minutes each. The next two on February 20 were 90\u00a0minutes each. Two days later, two more 60\u00a0minute practice sessions were scheduled. The final practice session was held on February 23. Joey Logano was quickest with a time of 46.057\u00a0seconds in the first session, less than one-hundredth of a second faster than Austin Dillon. Danica Patrick was just off Dillon's pace, followed by Paul Menard, Burton and Kasey Kahne. Bayne was seventh, still within two-tenths of Logano's time. In the second practice session, Patrick remained fastest with a time of 45.867\u00a0seconds, less than one second quicker than second-placed Tony Stewart. Kyle Busch took third place, ahead of Earnhardt Jr., Jamie McMurray and Bayne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nForty-five cars were entered for qualifying, but only forty-three raced because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Unlike most races during the season, the qualifying session only determined the first two positions, while the rest of the drivers qualified by the 2013 Budweiser Duels. Patrick clinched her first pole during her Sprint Cup career, with a time of 45.817\u00a0seconds, and became the first woman to win the pole position in the Sprint Cup Series. She was joined on the front row of the grid by Jeff Gordon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nOnce the qualifying session were completed, Patrick commented, \"I was brought up to be the fastest driver, not the fastest girl. That was instilled in me from very young, from the beginning. Then I feel like thriving in those moments, where the pressure's on, has also been a help for me. I also feel like I've been lucky in my career to be with good teams and have good people around me. I don't think any of it would have been possible without that. For those reasons, I've been lucky enough to make history, be the first woman to do many things. I really just hope that I don't stop doing that. We have a lot more history to make. We are excited to do it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nMichael Waltrip was quickest in the third practice with 45.375\u00a0seconds, followed by David Ragan, Stewart, Menard and Kyle Busch. Kahne led fourth practice with 45.515\u00a0seconds, only one-tenth of a second faster than Greg Biffle. Gordon was third ahead of Patrick and Carl Edwards. Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch were the winners of the Budweiser Duels. The qualifying grid was finalized with Harvick in third and Kyle Busch fourth. Biffle qualified fifth ahead of Kahne, Juan Pablo Montoya, Dillon, Jimmie Johnson and Clint Bowyer. Drivers who failed to qualify were Mike Bliss and Brian Keselowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nAric Almirola was fastest in fifth practice with a 45.699\u00a0seconds lap, ahead of Burton, Earnhardt Jr., Bobby Labonte and Michael McDowell. Stewart led the sixth session ahead of Gordon and Patrick. Kahne was next with a 45.711\u00a0second lap ahead of Kenseth with 45.827\u00a0seconds. Earnhardt's 45.319\u00a0seconds topped the final practice session, followed by David Gilliland and Bowyer. Ambrose and Almirola rounded out the first five drivers in the fourth and fifth positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Crash at the DRIVE4COPD 300\nOn February 23, a 14-car crash in the DRIVE4COPD 300 left 33 spectators injured. On the final lap of the Nationwide Series race, Regan Smith got turned into the wall while trying to block Brad Keselowski, causing a chain reaction, in which Kyle Larson's car flew into the catch fencing. The impact ripped out its engine on the pathway in between the fence and first row of the grandstands. A tire and some other debris flew over the fence and landed half way up the stands. \"I didn't know what to think.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Crash at the DRIVE4COPD 300\nI'm an emotional person and I immediately started to cry. It was very scary. Absolutely scary\", a spectator remarked. Local officials reported that 19 people were taken to the hospital, including two in critical condition, while others were treated on-site at the infield care center. The incident raised questions about safety at Daytona International Speedway. NASCAR chose to repair the catch fencing overnight and have the Daytona 500 go on as scheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Race\nThere were 28 lead changes among 14 different drivers. Danica Patrick stayed in the limelight, running in the Top 10 all afternoon. On lap 90, she passed Michael Waltrip on a restart following a caution, which was brought out for debris, and she became the first woman to lead the Daytona 500. In total, she led on three separate occasions for a total of 5 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Race\nSeveral pre-race favorites struggled. There were two major wrecks that occurred during the race: The first one was on lap 33. This began when Kyle Busch, heading into turn 1, turned Kasey Kahne into the infield. As the field checked up, a total of 6 more cars were collected: Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick, Jamie McMurray, Casey Mears, Juan Pablo Montoya, and Brad Keselowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Race\nLater, on lap 136, as cars checked up in front of them in turn 2, Keselowski got turned sideways by Trevor Bayne, who then got sideways himself, came up the track, and collected 7 more cars (totaling nine in all): Austin Dillon, Carl Edwards; Ricky Stenhouse Jr.; David Ragan, David Gilliland, Josh Wise, and Terry Labonte. Jeff Gordon led the first 31 laps, but soon his car kept overheating and he never threatened the leaders after dropping back on lap 32, finishing 20th. Matt Kenseth led the most laps, at 86, but his day ended on lap 150 with an engine failure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Race\nJimmie Johnson, racing in his 400th career Sprint Cup start, was back in the field for most of the race. He emerged from the pack with 16 laps to go and seized control with 10 to go, racing past Keselowski on the final restart. A caution with six laps to go for debris bunched up the field, but Johnson held on staving off a last lap charge by Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Mark Martin. \"I had a lot of confidence those final few laps, leading the train,\" Johnson said. \"I knew just how fast this car was.\" Keselowski finished fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Race\nGreg Biffle and Danica Patrick had entered the final lap in second and third place respectively before both were shuffled back by Earnhardt and Martin. Patrick finished eighth, becoming the first woman to finish in the top ten at the Daytona 500. She blamed inexperience for the late fall, saying \"I didn't know what to do, exactly\" in the final scramble. Johnson, however, said that Patrick looked \"really comfortable\" all race. \"She held a great wheel, was smooth, took advantage of runs when she had them.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232912-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Daytona 500, Report, Race\nJohnson became the sixth driver to win a race in his 400th Sprint Cup start, following Lee Petty, Richard Petty, David Pearson, Dave Marcis, and Dale Earnhardt. It also marked the first NASCAR win for Schuberth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232913-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Deauville American Film Festival\nThe 39th Deauville American Film Festival took place at Deauville, France from August 30 to September 8, 2013. Steven Soderbergh's drama film Behind the Candelabra served as the opening night film. Snowpiercer by Bong Joon-ho was the closing night film of the festival. The Grand Prix was awarded to Night Moves by Kelly Reichardt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232913-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Deauville American Film Festival\nComplete lineup for the festival was announced on July 19, 2013, including episodes from Television shows for the Television section at the festival. Electronic music duo Justice was given Carte blanche section to show nine of their favourite American films to the festival audience. The festival paid tribute to Cate Blanchett, Nicolas Cage, Larry Clark, Gale Anne Hurd and John Travolta and hosted retrospective of their films. The festival honoured American actor, singer, dancer, and comedian Danny Kaye with Deauville Legend award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232914-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dehradun Municipal Corporation election\nThe 2013 Dehradun Municipal Corporation election was a municipal election to the Dehradun Municipal Corporation, which governs Dehradun, the largest city in Uttarakhand. It took place on 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team\nThe 2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team represented the University of Delaware in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Dave Brock and played their home games at Delaware Stadium in Newark, Delaware. They were a member of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 7\u20135, 4\u20134 in CAA play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Previous season\nDelaware started 2012 strong with a four-game winning streak over West Chester, Delaware State, Bucknell, and William & Mary. After their peak at #9 in the polls, the Hens finished the season by losing six out of their final seven games, with the only victory against Rhode Island. Former coach K. C. Keeler was fired in January 2013, and most of the staff was released with his departure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Preseason, Recruiting class\nThe Blue Hens received 12 letters of intent on National Signing Day, February 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Preseason, Transfers\nOn February 6, 2013, it was announced that Delaware added two transfers for the 2013 season: junior linebacker Kennedy Ogbonna from ASA The College For Excellence and junior running back Jordan Thomas from Rutgers University. Greyshirted linebacker Eric Patton was added to the roster for the 2013 season as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Preseason, Conference predictions\nDelaware was predicted to finish sixth in the CAA Preseason Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Preseason, Preseason rankings, FCS Coaches Poll\nDelaware received 47 points in the Preseason Coaches Poll, resulting in the 30th highest total. Four of Delaware's CAA opponents received a Top 25 ranking (#9 Villanova, #12 Towson, #14 Richmond, and #15 James Madison). Three additional opponents, two from the CAA, for the season received votes (Wagner, Maine, and Albany).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 95], "content_span": [96, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Preseason, Preseason rankings, The Sports Network FCS Poll\nDelaware received 130 points in the Preseason Sports Network FCS Poll, placing them in 32nd. Of the CAA opponents that the Hens will face in 2013, four received a Top 25 position: #5 Villanova, #11 Towson, #15 Richmond, and #19 James Madison. In addition, three opponents for 2013 received votes: Wagner, Albany, and William & Mary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 106], "content_span": [107, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232915-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team, Postseason\nFollowing the losing streak to close the season, the Blue Hens failed to qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232916-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware State Hornets baseball team\nThe 2013 Delaware State Hornets baseball team represented Delaware State University in the sport of baseball during the 2013 college baseball season. The Hornets competed in NCAA Division I and the Eastern Division of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). The team was coached by J. P. Blandin, who finished his thirteenth season at Delaware State The Hornets looked to build upon their appearance in the 2012 MEAC Baseball Tournament Championship, where they were eliminated after losing in the final game against Bethune\u2013Cookman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232916-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware State Hornets baseball team, Departures\nDelaware State lost 3 players due to graduation, and some players who decided to leave the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232917-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware State Hornets football team\nThe 2013 Delaware State Hornets football team represented Delaware State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Kermit Blount and played their home games at Alumni Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232917-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Delaware State Hornets football team\nThe Hornets entered the 2013 season having been picked to finish eighth in the MEAC. They finished the season 5\u20136, 5\u20133 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election\nThe Delhi Legislative Assembly election was held on 4 December 2013, with the result announced on 8 December resulting in formation of the Fifth Legislative Assembly of Delhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election\nThe Bharatiya Janata Party won a plurality, closely followed by Aam Aadmi Party, in its first election; this resulted in a hung assembly. After the BJP refused to form a government in the hung assembly, the Aam Aadmi Party's (AAP) Arvind Kejriwal became chief minister with \"unconditional\" support from the Indian National Congress (INC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Electoral law change\nThis was one of the first five elections in which the Election Commission of India implemented a \"None of the above\" (NOTA) voting option, allowing the electorate to register a neutral to people any think", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Contesting parties\nThere were 810 candidates running for office, including 224 independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Contesting parties\nBJP and SAD formed a pre-poll alliance; SAD contested four seats (Hari Nagar, Rajouri Garden, Kalkaji and Shahdara), while BJP contested the rest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Campaign\nThe AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal called the BJP's Harsh Vardhan the \"Manmohan Singh of the BJP\" as incapable of stemming the \"rot\" in Delhi's governance. He added: \"We will help the people of Delhi get rid of Congress misgovernance first, and then ensure change at the national level in the Lok Sabha polls.\" However, Vardhan was supported by the BJP's prime ministerial candidate in the 2014 Indian general election, Narendra Modi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Campaign\nThe Hindustan Times suggested that the Rajnath Singh-appointed BJP Delhi leader, Vijay Goel, though organisationally competent, lost favour due to his exclusion of established regional leaders in reorganising local units. Singh was still viewed as reluctant to \"change horses in mid-stream\" but agreed. Modi led the charge, with other party leaders, to have Vardhan as the chief ministerial candidate and Goel himself agreed to the nomination of Vardhan. The AAP released its first electoral manifesto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Election\nThere were 11,753 polling stations, including the presence of EVMs, while 630 identified as critical and hypercritical. There were 11.9\u00a0 million eligible voters, of which 6.6\u00a0 million were men and 5.3\u00a0 million were women while there were 405,000 first-time voters. 32,801 Delhi Police personnel and 107 companies of central paramilitary forces were deployed to ensure a peaceful election. Polling stations opened at 8:00\u00a0am and turnout was 66%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Election\nVoter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) along with EVMs was used in 1 assembly seat in Delhi elections-New Delhi. Polling stations in Tuglaqabad, Karol Bagh, Trilokpuri and Badarpur reportedly had long waits because EVMs dysfunctioned. In Jungpura, Badli, Krishna Nagar, and Kondli constituencies, some voters complained that their names were on the electoral rolls and that they could not vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Election\nAfter voting, party leaders expressed their opinion. Kejriwal said he is confident of a positive result for his party. Vardhan claimed the BJP was \"far ahead\" of the INC and Aam Aadmi Party. \"I can tell you very categorically that we are far ahead of Congress and the new entrant in Delhi politics. I am 100 percent confident about our victory. I think nobody can make any dent in our vote bank. If there is any contest or fight, it is between the Congress and the new entrant (for the second place).\" Dikshit said she had her \"fingers crossed\" on the outcome, while national party leader Sonia Gandhi said from her Nirman Bhavan polling station: \"We will win.\" At many places people with disabilities could not vote due to inaccessible polling booths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Election\nIn all over 43,000 postal ballots were received, an increase from the last election's 1,600 postal ballots. The Delhi Election Commission announced that 2,000 Central Paramilitary Force and Delhi Police personnel were at the vote-counting centers in the city on the day of the result announcement and CCTV cameras and live streaming of proceedings through webcasting, two layers of security cover have been set at all the 14 counting centers. Delhi Chief Electoral Officer Vijay Dev said: \"Paramilitary force forms the inner circle of security of centers while adequate numbers of Delhi Police personnel will ensure safety from outside. Counting of votes will start from 8 AM tomorrow and during the first-hour postal ballots will be counted.\" The postal ballots were counted before the EVM votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Election\nExit polls showed the BJP in the lead to possibly form a government on its own, followed by the AAP and the incumbent INC in third place; others, in general, were fourth with the BSP following.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Election, Result\nNotably, the INC's Chaudhary Prem Singh lost in the Ambedkar Nagar constituency, he held the seat since 1993 and had not lost a single election in 50 years; however, Ashok Kumar of the AAP won the seat. Incumbent Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit lost her New Delhi constituency seat to AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal by a margin that was much more than her total votes and winning hardly 500 votes more than the BJP's Vijender Kumar who finished third; she then submitted her resignation to Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Election, Reactions\nFormer Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit said: \"We accept our defeat and we will analyze what went wrong. We respect what the people of Delhi have decided and thank them for supporting us for last 15 years.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nAs no party won a majority of the 70 seats in the assembly, if the necessary coalition government is not possible, Delhi would be put under president's rule until a new election is held within six months. However, the INC, BJP, and AAP have all said they would not seek alliances with each other. The other option was to try to bring in independents; though since there are not enough, the media speculated that the other option would be lured away MLAs from another party (the AAP being the most likely in their analysis).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nAs the BJP won 31 seats, while its alliance partner Shiromani Akali Dal won one seat, they gained a plurality and would have the first right to form a new government. However, they declined the offer from Lieutenant-Governor Najeeb Jung to form a new government citing an inability to obtain a majority. Jung then invited the Aam Aadmi Party to form the government. Kejriwal wrote to BJP national leader Rajnath Singh and INC national leader Sonia Gandhi for clarification on 18 issues before seeking their support in forming a coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nOn 9 December, Leader of opposition in Rajya Sabha, Arun Jaitley wrote a blog suggesting that Congress should support AAP to form government in Delhi. The BJP did not reply and the INC agreed to 16 of the 18 issues and offered its outside support. On 14 December, BJP Chief Ministerial candidate Dr. Harsh Vardhan asked AAP to take congress support and form the government. The AAP then sought public opinion through a variety of mediums such as via community meetings, text messages and pamphlets about whether or not it should take the support of the INC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nAAP then formed a minority government with outside support from the INC. In a letter to the Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung, the AAP did not however mention that it has the support of the INC. Jung then sent his recommendations to President Pranab Mukherjee. Kejriwal was then sworn in as 7th Chief Minister of Delhi on 28 December, leading the youngest cabinet in Delhi ever. M. S. Dhir was elected as the speaker of the legislative assembly on 3 January 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nAmongst its first tasks, the AAP initiated a corruption response mechanism in a \"durbar\"; it also retracted the FDI in multi-brand retail that the previous government had sanctioned. Kejriwal said that though this would give consumers more options it has been shown that it \"leads to loss of jobs to a very large extent. There is huge unemployment in Delhi and the AAP government does not wish to increase this unemployment. Delhi is not prepared for FDI.\" Yet he added that he was not against FDI by itself but that it needed to occur on a case-by-case basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232918-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, Government formation, Government resignation\nAfter 49 days, Kejriwal resigned as a chief minister following the failure of the introduction of Delhi's Jan Lokpal Bill in the assembly on 14 February 2014. President's rule was then imposed and the assembly was kept in suspended animation. Fresh elections were scheduled for early 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 86], "content_span": [87, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232919-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 21st edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place in Delray Beach, United States between 22 February and 3 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232919-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 96], "content_span": [97, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232919-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 96], "content_span": [97, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232920-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nColin Fleming and Ross Hutchins were the defending champions, but Hutchins did not participate this year because of illness. Fleming played alongside John Peers, but the team lost to James Blake and Jack Sock in the first round. Blake and Sock went on to win the title, defeating Max Mirnyi and Horia Tec\u0103u in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232921-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nKevin Anderson was the defending champion, but lost to John Isner in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232921-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nErnests Gulbis won the title, defeating \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232922-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Action Party leadership election\nA leadership election was held by the Democratic Action Party (DAP) of Malaysia on 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election\nThe 2013 Democratic Party leadership election was an open primary election held in November\u2013December 2013. After having come first in the vote by party members, Matteo Renzi was elected by a landslide 68% in a three-way primary on 8 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nCandidates were required to file their candidacies by 11 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nBetween 14 October and 6 November local and provincial conventions took place all around the country. Between 7 and 17 November party members voted on the candidates for secretary. Under party rules the candidates who receive the support of at least the 15% of voting party members in local conventions or the three most voted candidates with at least 5% of the vote, qualify for the second round of the race and have the chance to present their platform at the national convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Electoral process\nThe national convention, which took place on 24\u201325 November, declared the candidates who will run in an open primary on 8 December. Voters will elect also the national assembly of the party and the regional secretaries and assemblies. If no candidate got more than 50% of the vote, a run-off between the two most voted candidates would take place in the national assembly, scheduled within two weeks from the primary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Candidates\nFour individuals filed their candidacy for becoming secretary of the party:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Results, Vote by party members\nRenzi, Cuperlo and Civati were admitted to the primary election, while Pittella was excluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 81], "content_span": [82, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Results, Results by Regions\nRenzi won an absolute majority in all regions. Only among voters living abroad he won merely a plurality (47.1%). His strongest performances were in his homeregion Tuscany (78.4%) and neighbouring Marche (76.3%) and Umbria (74.5%), the weakest in Sardinia (56.0%). Cuperlo performed strongest in the southern regions of Calabria (34.2%) and Basilicata (33.7%), and weakest in Marche (10.7%). Civati had his strongest results among expatriates (22.3%), in Aosta Valley (20.7%), Trentino (20.5%) and Sardinia (19.6%), the weakest in the southern region of Basilicata (8.0%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232923-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election, Results, Results by Regions\nGenerally speaking, Renzi and Civati did better in central\u2013northern Italy, Cuperlo in the South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232924-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Denham Hospitality Summer Classic\nThe 2013 Denham Hospitality Summer Classic was held from September 6 to 8 at the Leduc Curling Club in Leduc, Alberta as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. Both the men's and women's events were held in a round robin format. The purse for both the men's and the women's events were CAD$9,100 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232925-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Denmark Open darts\n2013 Denmark Open is a darts tournament, which took place in Denmark in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232926-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Denmark Super Series Premier\nThe 2013 Denmark Super Series Premier will be the ninth super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament will be held in Odense, Denmark from October 15\u201320, 2013 and will have a total purse of $400,000. A qualification will be held to fill four places in three of the five disciplines of the main draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season\nThe 2013 season was the Denver Broncos' 44th in the National Football League and 54th overall. It also marked their 30th season under the ownership of Pat Bowlen, the second with Peyton Manning as the team's starting quarterback and the third under head coach John Fox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season\nFollowing a loss to the eventual Super Bowl champion Baltimore Ravens in the divisional round of the 2013 playoffs, the Broncos entered the 2013 season as favorites to win Super Bowl XLVIII. However, the team underwent a tumultuous offseason that was dominated by the suspension of All-Pro linebacker Von Miller as well as several injuries to the offensive line. Notable offseason additions include the free agent acquisitions of wide receiver Wes Welker, linebacker Shaun Phillips, safety Quentin Jammer and cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie. Roster departures include wide receiver Brandon Stokley, linebackers Elvis Dumervil and D. J. Williams, and running back Willis McGahee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season\nThe Broncos' 606 points (37.9 points per game) scored in the regular season is the highest total for any team playing a 16-game season. Throughout the regular season, numerous individual, league and franchise records were set, including Peyton Manning setting new NFL records for passing touchdowns and passing yardage, as well as the team setting new NFL records for touchdowns and points scored in a single season. During the team's mid-season bye week, head coach John Fox received a health scare that resulted in Fox missing four games due to recuperation from heart surgery. Defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio served as the team's interim head coach during Fox's absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season\nThe Broncos won their third consecutive AFC West division title, as well as earning a first-round bye and homefield advantage throughout the playoffs for a second consecutive season. The Broncos defeated the San Diego Chargers 24\u201317 in the Divisional round, the New England Patriots 26\u201316 in the AFC championship game, and faced the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XLVIII \u2013 the Broncos' first Super Bowl berth since winning back-to-back Super Bowls in 1997 and 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season\nHowever, the Broncos were unable to recover from a 22\u20130 halftime deficit, and the Seahawks' No. 1 ranked defense held the Broncos' No. 1 ranked offense to their lowest scoring output of the season, routing the Broncos by a score of 43\u20138. They also scored fewer than 30 points in all three of their playoff games despite only doing so three times during the regular season. They scored at least 37 points in eight of their games. Despite leading the league in points scored, the Broncos were 22nd in points allowed, with 399.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Coaching and front-office changes, Absence of John Fox\nOn November 2, 2013, during the Broncos' bye week, head coach John Fox was hospitalized after experiencing light-headedness while playing golf in Charlotte, North Carolina. Fox was held in a Charlotte-area hospital for further testing, and doctors indicated that he needed aortic valve replacement surgery and would be out for up to two months. Fox knew about his heart condition, and had initially hoped to postpone his surgery until after the season, however, two days later (November 4), Fox underwent the successful surgery. Defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio was named the interim head coach during Fox's absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Coaching and front-office changes, Absence of John Fox\nDel Rio had previously served as head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars from 2003 to 2011, as well as a defensive coordinator on Fox's staff with the Carolina Panthers in 2002. On December 2, Fox returned to the Broncos' training camp facility at Dove Valley, in preparation for the team's Week 14 game against the Tennessee Titans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Roster changes, Trades\nOn August 20, defensive tackle Sealver Siliga was traded to the Seattle Seahawks in exchange for guard John Moffitt. On November 5, Moffitt was placed on the reserve/left squad list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Roster changes, Undrafted free agents\nAll undrafted free agents were signed just after the 2013 NFL draft concluded on April 27, unless noted otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Roster changes, Von Miller suspension\nOn July 22, 2013, All-Pro linebacker Von Miller was initially suspended for a duration of four games due to his violation of NFL's drug policy, though initial reports indicated that his suspension did not involve the NFL's Steroids and Related Substances Policy. The Denver Post reported that Miller tested positive for marijuana and amphetamine during his rookie season in 2011 on multiple occasions. Miller appealed the suspension. However, on August 20 Miller's suspension period was increased from four to six games due to findings of other drug testing issues within the previous two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Roster changes, Von Miller suspension\nOn September 9, reports circulated that the Broncos were attempting to re-claim a $1.25\u00a0million signing bonus from Miller as a result of the suspension. On September 22, ESPN reported that the reason for Miller's suspension being increased from four to six games was due to Miller attempting to cheat a drug test with the aid of a urine collector, which nearly led to Miller being suspended for the entire 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Broncos kicked off their 2013 season at home against the Baltimore Ravens in the NFL kickoff game, in a highly publicized rematch of their 2012 Divisional playoff game. The Ravens grabbed the early lead in the first quarter, with quarterback Joe Flacco tossing a 2-yard touchdown pass to fullback Vonta Leach. Following a Flacco interception, the Broncos responded early in the second quarter, with quarterback Peyton Manning throwing a 24-yard touchdown pass to tight end Julius Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAfter Broncos' wide receiver Wes Welker muffed a punt return near the goal line, the Ravens grabbed the lead, with running back Ray Rice rushing for a 1-yard touchdown, but the Broncos responded, with Manning connecting with Julius Thomas on another touchdown pass \u2013 from 23 yards out. The Ravens grabbed a 17\u201314 lead just before halftime, with placekicker Justin Tucker nailing a 25-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nHowever, the Broncos reeled off 28 unanswered points, with Manning throwing four more touchdown passes \u2013 a 28-yarder to wide receiver Andre Caldwell, two to Welker from 5 and 2 yards out, followed in the fourth quarter by a 26-yarder to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas. The second score came after Broncos' safety David Bruton blocked a Sam Koch punt. The Ravens later scored 10 unanswered points, with Flacco throwing a 13-yard touchdown to wide receiver Marlon Brown, followed by a 30-yard field goal from Tucker to pull to within 42\u201327 with 5:29 remaining in the fourth quarter. However, the Broncos subsequently put the game out of reach, after Manning threw his seventh touchdown pass of the game \u2013 a 78-yarder to Demaryius Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe start of the game was delayed 33 minutes due to lightning in the Denver area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 88], "content_span": [89, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Giants\nComing off their season-opening win over the defending Super Bowl champion Ravens, the Broncos traveled to East Rutherford, New Jersey, for an interconference duel against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium. This was the third match-up between brothers Peyton Manning (Broncos) and Eli Manning (Giants), with Peyton Manning winning the previous two match-ups as a member of the Indianapolis Colts \u2013 2006 and 2010. The Giants grabbed the lead midway through the first quarter, with a 36-yard field goal by placekicker Josh Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Giants\nIn the second quarter, a 20-yard touchdown run by running back Knowshon Moreno gave the Broncos the lead. Two field goals by Brown \u2013 from 24 and 41 yards \u2013 gave the Giants a 9\u20137 lead. The Broncos re-claimed the lead just before halftime, with placekicker Matt Prater nailing a 42-yard field goal. The Broncos increased their lead in the third quarter, with quarterback Peyton Manning connecting on a 2-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Wes Welker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Giants\nThe Giants responded, with running back Brandon Jacobs rushing for a 1-yard touchdown to pull the Giants to within 17\u201316 with three minutes remaining in the third quarter. However, the Broncos seized control of the game with 21 unanswered points, beginning with a 25-yard touchdown run by Moreno, followed in the fourth quarter by an 11-yard touchdown pass from Peyton Manning to tight end Julius Thomas, and return specialist Trindon Holliday returning a punt 81 yards for a touchdown. The Giants tried to rally, with quarterback Eli Manning throwing a 23-yard touchdown pass to running back Da'Rel Scott with four minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, but a 47-yard field goal by Prater put the game out of reach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Giants\nPeyton Manning improved his head-to-head record against Eli Manning to 3\u20130. This would be the last time the Manning brothers played against each other in the NFL, with Peyton retiring following the 2015 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New York Giants\nOffensive tackle Ryan Clady suffered a Lisfranc fracture in his foot late in the fourth quarter, and was placed on injured reserve three days later (September 18).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Oakland Raiders\nComing off their win over the Giants, the Broncos returned home for an AFC West duel with the Oakland Raiders on Monday Night Football. The Broncos jumped out to a 17\u20130 lead, with a two-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Peyton Manning to wide receiver Eric Decker, a 53-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater and 12-yard touchdown pass from Manning to wide receiver Wes Welker, the latter of which occurred in the second quarter. The Raiders got on the scoreboard when quarterback Terrelle Pryor completed a 73-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Denarius Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Oakland Raiders\nThe Broncos subsequently added to their lead, with Manning throwing a 13-yard touchdown pass to tight end Julius Thomas, followed by two field goals by Prater \u2013 a 41-yarder just before halftime and a 40-yarder midway through the third quarter. Following a Manning fumble, the Raiders narrowed the Broncos' lead, with Pryor tossing the football on a running play to running back Darren McFadden, and McFadden throwing a 16-yard touchdown pass to fullback Marcel Reece, however, the Broncos responded early in the fourth quarter, with running back Ronnie Hillman rushing for a 1-yard touchdown. The Raiders scored a late touchdown, with McFadden rushing for a 1-yard touchdown, however, the Broncos recovered the ensuing onside kick, sealing the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Oakland Raiders\nThis was the 17th meeting on Monday Night Football between the Broncos and Raiders \u2013 tied for the most frequent pairing in Monday Night Football history with the Dallas Cowboys & Washington Redskins, who will meet for a 17th time in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nComing off their Monday Night win over the Raiders, the Broncos remained on home ground for an interconference duel with the Philadelphia Eagles. A 6-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Peyton Manning to wide receiver Wes Welker gave the Broncos the early lead. The Eagles countered, with a 35-yard field goal by placekicker Alex Henery, however, the Broncos subsequently increased their lead, with return specialist Trindon Holliday returning the ensuing kickoff 105 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles cut into the Broncos' lead in the second quarter, with a 25-yard field goal by Henery, followed by running back Chris Polk rushing for a 4-yard touchdown to pull to within 14\u201313. However, the Broncos proceeded to score 38 unanswered points and take control of the game. First, running back Knowshon Moreno rushed for a 4-yard touchdown. Then in the third quarter, Manning added three more touchdown passes \u2013 a 1-yarder and a 15-yarder to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas, followed by a 4-yarder to Welker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nIn the fourth quarter, Broncos' linebacker Steven Johnson blocked Donnie Jones' punt and immediately returned the football 17 yards for a touchdown, which was followed by a 53-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater. The Eagles scored a late touchdown, with quarterback Nick Foles, playing in place of Michael Vick, completing a 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Jeff Maehl, but the outcome of the game had already been decided in the Broncos' favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nFormer offensive lineman Tom Nalen, who played with the Broncos from 1994 to 2007, was inducted to the Broncos Ring of Fame during halftime. Nalen made it to five Pro Bowls, earning the NFL's Offensive Lineman of the Year award in 2003, and was an integral part of 11 seasons in which the Broncos had at least one running back rush for 1,000 yards within a season. Steven Johnson's return of a blocked punt for a touchdown marked the first such play for the Broncos' special teams since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nComing off their blowout win over the Eagles, the Broncos traveled to Arlington, Texas, for an interconference duel with the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium. The Cowboys grabbed a 14\u20130 lead in the first quarter, with a 2-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Tony Romo to wide receiver Dez Bryant, followed by running back DeMarco Murray rushing for a 4-yard touchdown. The latter score occurred after a fumble by Broncos' wide receiver Eric Decker. The Broncos later got on the scoreboard, with quarterback Peyton Manning connecting on a 4-yard shovel pass to tight end Julius Thomas for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nEarly in the second quarter, a 43-yard field goal by placekicker Dan Bailey gave the Cowboys a 17\u20137 lead. The Broncos then reeled off 21 unanswered points, with Manning adding two more touchdown passes \u2013 a 2-yarder to Decker and a 9-yarder to Thomas, followed by Manning rushing for a 1-yard touchdown on a bootleg play. A 48-yard field goal by Bailey at the end of the first half narrowed the Broncos' lead to 28\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nThe Broncos added to their lead midway through the third quarter, with Manning connecting on a 2-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Wes Welker. However, the Cowboys subsequently began chipping away at the Broncos' lead, with Romo connecting on an 82-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Terrance Williams. A 48-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater gave the Broncos a 38\u201327 lead, but the Cowboys further narrowed the Broncos' lead, with a 2-yard touchdown pass from Romo to Bryant (with an unsuccessful two-point conversion attempt).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nOn the Broncos' next possession, Manning threw his first interception of the season, and the Cowboys subsequently re-claimed the lead early in the fourth quarter, with Romo throwing a 10-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jason Witten, coupled with a two-point pass from Romo to Williams. The Broncos tied the game at 41\u201341 on their next possession, with a 50-yard field goal by Prater, however, on the Cowboys' next possession, Romo connected on a 4-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Cole Beasley to give the Cowboys a 48\u201341 lead with 7:19 remaining in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nManning subsequently led the Broncos on a 9-play, 73-yard drive, which culminated with running back Knowshon Moreno rushing for a 1-yard touchdown to tie the game at 48\u201348 with 2:24 remaining in the fourth quarter. Two plays into the Cowboys' next possession, as the Cowboys were attempting a game-winning drive, Romo was intercepted by Broncos' linebacker Danny Trevathan at the Cowboys' 24-yard line just before the two-minute warning. On the fourth play of the Broncos' final possession, the Broncos were facing a 3rd-and-1 at the Cowboys' 2-yard line, after the Cowboys had exhausted two of their three team timeouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0018-0003", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nMoreno earned a crucial first down after Manning implored him to go down before reaching the goal line instead of scoring a touchdown, which forced the Cowboys to burn their final timeout with 1:35 remaining in the fourth quarter. After three kneel-downs by Manning, Prater nailed the game-winning 28-yard field goal as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys\nThis was the only game during the 2013 season in which the Broncos wore their alternate navy blue jerseys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nComing off their comeback win over the Cowboys, the Broncos returned home for an AFC match against the Jacksonville Jaguars. The Broncos jumped out to a 14\u20130 lead in the first quarter, with quarterback Peyton Manning throwing a pair of touchdown passes \u2013 a 3-yarder to tight end Julius Thomas and a 20-yarder to wide receiver Wes Welker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Jaguars outscored the Broncos 12\u20130 in the second quarter, with a pair of field goals from placekicker Josh Scobee \u2013 from 50 and 30 yards out, followed by linebacker Paul Posluszny returning a Manning interception 59 yards for a touchdown (with an unsuccessful two-point attempt). On the opening drive of the third quarter, Broncos' running back Knowshon Moreno rushed for a 1-yard touchdown, however, the Jaguars had a response, with running back Maurice Jones-Drew rushing for a 5-yard touchdown to pull to within 21\u201319 midway through the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Broncos subsequently added to their lead, with Moreno rushing for a pair of touchdowns \u2013 an 8-yarder followed by a 3-yarder at the 9:09 mark of the fourth quarter, the latter of which was the final scoring play of the game. The Jaguars attempted a rally, but the Broncos' defense stood their ground on the Jaguars' final two offensive possessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Indianapolis Colts\nComing off their win over the Jaguars, the Broncos traveled to Lucas Oil Stadium for an AFC duel with the Indianapolis Colts. The Broncos grabbed the early lead in the first quarter, with quarterback Peyton Manning connecting with wide receiver Eric Decker on a 17-yard touchdown pass. The Colts responded, with a 27-yard field goal by placekicker Adam Vinatieri. Following a fumble by Broncos' return specialist Trindon Holliday on a punt return, the Colts grabbed the lead, with quarterback Andrew Luck completing an 11-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Darrius Heyward-Bey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Indianapolis Colts\nThe Broncos re-claimed the lead in the second quarter, with Manning throwing a 12-yard touchdown pass to tight end Julius Thomas. On the Broncos next possession, Colts' linebacker Robert Mathis forced a fumble off Manning out of the end zone, resulting in a safety. The Colts subsequently re-claimed the lead, with Luck connecting on a 20-yard touchdown pass to fullback Stanley Havili, then added to their lead, with an 8-yard touchdown pass from Luck to tight end Coby Fleener just before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Indianapolis Colts\nThe Broncos' offense went three-and-out on their first three possessions of the third quarter, and the Colts took a 33\u201314 lead, with Luck rushing for a 10-yard touchdown. Late in the third quarter, the Broncos tried to cut into the Colts lead, with a 31-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater, but the Colts responded early in the fourth quarter, with a 52-yard field goal by Vinatieri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Indianapolis Colts\nTrailing 36\u201317, the Broncos attempted a rally, with Manning connecting on a 31-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas (with a failed two-point conversion attempt), followed by a 1-yard touchdown run by running back Knowshon Moreno. The latter score occurred after Broncos' safety Duke Ihenacho forced a fumble off Colts' running back Trent Richardson deep in Colts' territory. The Broncos' defense forced a punt on the Colts next possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Indianapolis Colts\nHowever, with 7:07 remaining in the fourth quarter, Manning's arm was hit by Colts' linebacker Erik Walden, and his pass was subsequently intercepted by linebacker Pat Angerer deep in Broncos' territory. Four plays later, a Vinatieri 42-yard field goal gave the Colts a 39\u201330 lead with 6:06 remaining. Eight plays into the Broncos' next possession, running back Ronnie Hillman lost a fumble at the Colts' 3-yard line at the 3:15 mark of the fourth quarter, just as the Broncos were attempting to narrow the Colts' lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0022-0003", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Indianapolis Colts\nThe Colts' offense subsequently ran time off the clock, forcing the Broncos to burn all three of their team timeouts. The Broncos tried a desperation rally with 1:28 remaining, with Prater nailing a 47-yard field goal with only 17 seconds remaining. However, the ensuing onside kick was unsuccessful, sealing the win for the Colts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Indianapolis Colts\nWith the loss, the Broncos' 17-game regular season winning streak was snapped. This marked Peyton Manning's first visit to Indianapolis since he was released by the Colts in March 2012. Manning was the Colts' starting quarterback from 1998 to 2010, before missing the entire 2011 season due to multiple neck surgeries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Washington Redskins\nHoping to recover from their first loss of the season at Indianapolis, the Broncos returned home for an interconference match against the Washington Redskins. A 6-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Peyton Manning to wide receiver Wes Welker gave the Broncos the early lead. The Redskins tied the game just before halftime, with quarterback Robert Griffin III connecting on a 7-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Leonard Hankerson. Early in the third quarter, the Redskins grabbed a 21\u20137 lead, with two touchdowns in only 19 seconds \u2013 both off Manning turnovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Washington Redskins\nFollowing a Manning fumble, Redskins' running back Alfred Morris rushed for a 1-yard touchdown. On the first play of the Broncos' next possession, Manning was intercepted by cornerback DeAngelo Hall, who returned the football 26 yards for a touchdown. However, the Broncos scored the final 38 points of the game. Midway through the third quarter, running back Montee Ball rushed for a 4-yard touchdown. At the beginning of the fourth quarter, Manning connected on a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Joel Dreessen to tie the game at 21\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0024-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Washington Redskins\nThe Redskins' offense went three-and-out on their next possession, and after punter Sav Rocca shanked a punt to the Redskins' 35-yard line, the Broncos immediately grabbed the lead on the first play of their next possession, with Manning throwing a 35-yard touchdown pass to running back Knowshon Moreno on a screen play. On the Redskins' next possession, Broncos' linebacker Von Miller forced a fumble off RGIII deep in Redskins' territory, though the Broncos had to settle on a 19-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater. Midway through the fourth quarter, Manning threw his fourth touchdown pass of the game \u2013 a 35-yarder to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas. The final scoring play of the game came courtesy of cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie returning an interception off Redskins' quarterback Kirk Cousins 75 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Washington Redskins\nThis was Redskins' head coach Mike Shanahan's first visit to Denver since being fired by the Broncos after the 2008 season. Shanahan, who coached the Broncos from 1995 to 2008, is the winningest head coach in Broncos' franchise history, with 146 wins. This was the Broncos' final home game against Washington under the \"Redskins\" moniker, as Washington adopted a temporary moniker in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at San Diego Chargers\nComing off their win over the Redskins and subsequent bye week, the Broncos traveled to Qualcomm Stadium for an AFC West duel with the San Diego Chargers. A 74-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Peyton Manning to tight end Julius Thomas in the first quarter gave the Broncos the early lead. Two second-quarter field goals by Chargers' placekicker Nick Novak \u2013 from 26 and 40 yards out \u2013 narrowed the Broncos lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at San Diego Chargers\nHowever, the Broncos struck back, with Manning connecting on three touchdown passes to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas \u2013 an 11-yarder, a 7-yarder just before halftime and a 34-yarder on the opening possession of the second half, which increased the Broncos' lead to 28\u20136. On the Broncos' next possession, Chargers' linebacker Tourek Williams forced a fumble off Manning deep in Broncos' territory, and the Chargers immediately capitalized two plays later, with quarterback Philip Rivers throwing a 7-yard touchdown pass to running back Danny Woodhead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0026-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at San Diego Chargers\nThe Chargers further narrowed the Broncos' lead early in the fourth quarter, with running back Ryan Mathews rushing for a 1-yard touchdown to pull to within 28\u201320 with 10:44 remaining in the fourth quarter. The Chargers' defense forced a punt on the Broncos' next possession, and with 6:43 left in the game, the Chargers tried to rally, however, the Broncos' defense forced a Chargers' punt with 3:37 remaining, and the Broncos' offense subsequently ran out the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nComing off their win over the Chargers, the Broncos returned home for an AFC West duel with the 9\u20130 Kansas City Chiefs. The Broncos jumped out to a 10\u20130 lead in the first quarter, with a 54-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater, followed by a 9-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Peyton Manning to tight end Julius Thomas. The Chiefs got on the scoreboard early in the second quarter, with a 6-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Alex Smith to wide receiver Dwayne Bowe. The Broncos immediately responded, with running back Montee Ball rushing for a 1-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Chiefs pulled to within 17\u201310, with a 20-yard field goal by placekicker Ryan Succop. The Broncos added to their lead late in the third quarter, with an 8-yard touchdown run by Ball, followed by a 36-yard field goal by Prater midway through the fourth quarter. The Chiefs tried to rally, with Smith connecting on a 10-yard touchdown pass to tight end Anthony Fasano, and forced a Broncos' punt with one minute remaining in the game, but the Broncos' defense stood their ground to hand the Chiefs their first loss of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at New England Patriots\nComing off their win over the Chiefs, the Broncos traveled to Foxborough, Massachusetts to face the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium. This was the 14th meeting between quarterbacks Peyton Manning and Tom Brady since 2001. The Broncos jumped out to a 17\u20130 lead in the first quarter off three Patriots' turnovers. First, linebacker Von Miller returned a fumble 60 yards for a touchdown. Then, after another Patriots' fumble, running back Knowshon Moreno rushed for a 2-yard touchdown. Placekicker Matt Prater added a 27-yard field goal after yet another Patriots' fumble. The Broncos increased their lead to 24\u20130 midway through the second quarter, with Manning connecting on a 10-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jacob Tamme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at New England Patriots\nThe Patriots then reeled off 31 unanswered points, 14 of which came off two Broncos' turnovers. The Patriots took the opening possession of the second half and got on the scoreboard, with Brady connecting on a 5-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Julian Edelman. Following a fumble by Broncos' running back Montee Ball, the Patriots scored again, with running back Brandon Bolden rushing for a 1-yard touchdown. After forcing a Broncos' punt, the Patriots pulled to within 24\u201321 near the end of the third quarter, with Brady throwing a 6-yard touchdown pass to tight end Rob Gronkowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at New England Patriots\nOn the second play of the Broncos' next possession, Manning was intercepted by Patriots' cornerback Logan Ryan early in the fourth quarter, and three plays later, Brady connected on another touchdown pass to Edelman \u2013 from 14 yards out \u2013 to give the Patriots a 28\u201324 lead. The Broncos went three-and-out on their next offensive possession, and the Patriots subsequently added to their lead, with a 31-yard field goal by placekicker Stephen Gostkowski midway through the fourth quarter. The Broncos snapped the Patriots' streak of 31 unanswered points and tied the game on their next possession, with a 10-play, 80-yard drive, culminating with an 11-yard touchdown pass from Manning to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas, sending the game to overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at New England Patriots\nEach team traded punts on their first two overtime possessions, and after the Patriots' second punt, Broncos' cornerback Tony Carter inadvertently made contact with the football as he was trying to get out of the way of a bouncing punt, with Patriots' safety Nate Ebner recovering the fumble at the Broncos' 13-yard line. Three plays later, Gostkowski nailed the game-winning 30-yard field goal with 1:56 remaining in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at New England Patriots\nThis marked wide receiver Wes Welker's first visit to New England, where he was a standout Pro Bowler with the team from 2007 to 2012. Tom Brady improved his head-to-head record against Peyton Manning to 10\u20134, while Manning suffered his 14th career loss in 21 starts against the Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Kansas City Chiefs\nHoping to rebound from their overtime loss to the Patriots, the Broncos traveled to Arrowhead Stadium for an AFC West rematch with the Kansas City Chiefs. The Broncos and Chiefs entered the game tied for the AFC West division lead, both with 9\u20132 records. The Chiefs grabbed the lead late in the first quarter, with quarterback Alex Smith throwing a 17-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Junior Hemingway. The Broncos responded at the beginning of the second quarter, with quarterback Peyton Manning throwing a 41-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Eric Decker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Kansas City Chiefs\nHowever, Chiefs' running back Knile Davis returned the ensuing kickoff 108 yards for a touchdown, and following a Manning interception on the Broncos' next possession, Smith connected with tight end Anthony Fasano on a 12-yard touchdown pass to give the Chiefs a 21\u20137 lead. The Broncos then reeled off 28 unanswered points, beginning with a 3-yard touchdown pass from Manning to running back Knowshon Moreno. Manning then connected with Decker on three more touchdown passes \u2013 a 37-yarder and a 15-yarder in the third quarter, followed by a 1-yarder early in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0032-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Kansas City Chiefs\nA 1-yard touchdown run by Chiefs' running back Jamaal Charles narrowed the Broncos' lead to 35\u201328 with 6:32 remaining in the fourth quarter, and the Chiefs' defense forced a punt on the Broncos' next possession. The Chiefs' offense had one last possession with 3:32 remaining in the fourth quarter, and Smith drove the Chiefs to as far as the Broncos' 13-yard line with 1:51 remaining. However, Broncos' safety Mike Adams deflected a fourth-down pass from Smith that was intended for wide receiver Dwayne Bowe near the goal line, and the Broncos subsequently ran out the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Kansas City Chiefs\nWith the win, the Broncos swept the Chiefs for a second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 90], "content_span": [91, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Tennessee Titans\nComing off their win over the Chiefs, the Broncos returned home for an AFC duel with the Tennessee Titans. The Titans struck first on their opening possession, with running back Shonn Greene rushing for a 1-yard touchdown. The Broncos responded, with quarterback Peyton Manning throwing a 1-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Wes Welker. Titans' running back Leon Washington then returned the ensuing kickoff 95 yards to the Broncos' 3-yard line, and the Titans subsequently re-claimed the lead, with a 3-yard touchdown run by running back Chris Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Tennessee Titans\nThe Broncos narrowed the Titans' lead toward the end of the first quarter, with a 25-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater. Midway through the second quarter, Greene rushed for a 28-yard touchdown, which gave the Titans a 21\u201310 lead. Just after the two-minute warning, Manning connected with tight end Julius Thomas on an 8-yard touchdown pass, and just before halftime, Prater nailed an NFL-record 64-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0034-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Tennessee Titans\nThe Broncos claimed the lead on the opening possession of the second half, with Manning throwing a 4-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas, then increased their lead, with running back Knowshon Moreno rushing for a 1-yard touchdown. The Titans tried to cut into the Broncos' lead, with quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick connecting on a 41-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Justin Hunter. However, the Broncos pulled away in the fourth quarter, with a 19-yard field goal by Prater, a 20-yard touchdown pass from Manning to wide receiver Eric Decker and a 5-yard touchdown run by running back Montee Ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 89], "content_span": [90, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. San Diego Chargers\nComing off their win over the Titans, the Broncos remained on home ground for an AFC West rematch with the San Diego Chargers on Thursday Night Football. A 15-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Peyton Manning to wide receiver Andre Caldwell gave the Broncos the early lead. The Chargers subsequently got on the board, with a 38-yard field goal by placekicker Nick Novak. The Broncos answered, with a 32-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. San Diego Chargers\nHowever, the Chargers scored 21 unanswered points and dominated the time of possession, as the Broncos' offense went three-and-out on all three of their second quarter possessions. A 19-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Philip Rivers to wide receiver Keenan Allen tied the game, and the Chargers grabbed the lead late in the first half, with a 10-yard touchdown pass from Rivers to Allen. The Chargers took the opening possession of the second half and increased their lead, culminating with running back Ryan Mathews rushing for a 23-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0035-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. San Diego Chargers\nThe Broncos were forced to punt after only four plays on their initial possession of the second half, and the Chargers' ball control offense subsequently ate up over eight minutes of the third quarter, though the Broncos' defense forced a Chargers' punt. The Broncos cut into the Chargers' lead in the fourth quarter, with a 5-yard touchdown pass from Manning to Caldwell with 10:30 remaining in the game. After forcing a Chargers' punt, the Broncos offense got the football with 5:50 remaining, however, three plays later, Manning was intercepted by Chargers' linebacker Thomas Keiser at the Broncos' 39-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0035-0003", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. San Diego Chargers\nSix plays later, a 35-yard field goal by Novak increased the Chargers' lead to 27\u201317 with 2:41 remaining. With no timeouts remaining (save the two-minute warning), the Broncos tried to rally, with Prater kicking a 42-yard field goal with only 34 seconds remaining. However, the Broncos' onside kick attempt was unsuccessful, sealing the win for the Chargers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. San Diego Chargers\nWith the loss, the Broncos had their 13-game regular-season home winning streak snapped, as well as their 10-game winning streak against division opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 91], "content_span": [92, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Houston Texans\nHoping to rebound from their loss to the Chargers, the Broncos traveled to Reliant Stadium for an AFC match with the Houston Texans. The two teams traded field goals in the first quarter, with a 32-yarder by Broncos' placekicker Matt Prater and a 45-yarder by Texans' placekicker Randy Bullock. The Broncos grabbed the lead early in the second quarter, with a 36-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Peyton Manning to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Houston Texans\nA 35-yard field goal by Bullock narrowed the Broncos' lead, but the Broncos increased it with two field goals from Prater in the final minute of the first half \u2013 a 25-yarder and a 44-yarder. A 15-yard touchdown pass from Texans' quarterback Matt Schaub to wide receiver Keshawn Martin was the only scoring play of the third quarter, which narrowed the Broncos' lead to 16\u201313. After Broncos' safety Mike Adams intercepted Schaub early in the fourth quarter, the Broncos subsequently pulled away, with Manning throwing two touchdown passes to wide receiver Eric Decker \u2013 a 10-yarder and a 20-yarder. Later in the fourth quarter, Manning threw his 51st touchdown pass of the season \u2013 a 25-yarder to tight end Julius Thomas, in which Manning set a new NFL record for touchdown passes in a single season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Houston Texans\nWith the win, coupled with the Kansas City Chiefs' loss to the Indianapolis Colts, the Broncos clinched the AFC West division title. This was the 13th division title in the Broncos' franchise history, surpassing the Oakland Raiders for the all-time lead in AFC West championships since the 1970 AFL\u2013NFL merger. It also marked the first time in franchise history that the Broncos clinched three consecutive AFC West division titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Oakland Raiders\nHoping to gain momentum into the playoffs, the Broncos traveled to the O.co Coliseum for an AFC West divisional rematch with the Oakland Raiders, in the 2013 regular season finale. The Broncos dominated this game from the start. In the first quarter, quarterback Peyton Manning threw a pair of touchdown passes \u2013 a 3-yarder to wide receiver Eric Decker and a 7-yarder to running back Knowshon Moreno. In the second quarter, placekicker Matt Prater added a 34-yard field goal, and later in the second quarter, Manning connected with wide receiver Demaryius Thomas on a 63-yard touchdown pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Oakland Raiders\nThis gave the Broncos a 24\u20130 lead, in which the Broncos set a new NFL record for points scored in a single season. Just before halftime, Manning once again connected with Thomas on another touchdown pass \u2013 from 5 yards out, in which Manning set a new NFL record for single-season passing yardage. Manning sat out the entire second half, and backup quarterback Brock Osweiler took over. After a scoreless third quarter, Prater added a 54-yard field goal in the fourth quarter. The Raiders finally got on the scoreboard, with quarterback Terrelle Pryor throwing a pair of touchdown passes \u2013 a 14-yarder to wide receiver Rod Streater and a 9-yarder to tight end Nick Kasa, but the outcome of the game had already been decided in the Broncos' favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Oakland Raiders\nWith the win, the Broncos clinched a first-round bye and homefield advantage throughout the AFC playoffs, as well as sweeping their division rivals on the road for the fourth time in five seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoffs: vs. (#6) San Diego Chargers\nFollowing a first-round bye, the Broncos began their run in the 2013\u201314 NFL playoffs at home by welcoming their AFC West division rivals, the San Diego Chargers, in the teams' first-ever playoff meeting. The Broncos grabbed the lead late in the first quarter, with quarterback Peyton Manning connecting on a 2-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas. After Chargers' placekicker Nick Novak missed a 53-yard field goal early in the second quarter, the Broncos added to their lead, with Manning throwing a 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Wes Welker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoffs: vs. (#6) San Diego Chargers\nJust before halftime, the Broncos tried to add to their lead, after wide receiver Eric Decker stumbled on a long punt return, when it appeared that he was headed to the end zone for a touchdown. However, eight plays later, Manning was intercepted in the end zone by Chargers' linebacker Donald Butler. A 45-yard field goal by Broncos' placekicker Matt Prater on the opening possession of the second half was the only scoring play of the third quarter, as Prater later missed a 47-yard field goal toward the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0041-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoffs: vs. (#6) San Diego Chargers\nThe Chargers finally got on the scoreboard at the 13:03 mark of the fourth quarter, with quarterback Philip Rivers connecting on a 16-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Keenan Allen. The Broncos subsequently responded, with running back Knowshon Moreno rushing for a 3-yard touchdown. Trailing 24\u20137 with 8:12 remaining in the game, the Chargers attempted a rally on their next possession. The Chargers were facing a 4th-and-5 on their own 36-yard line, and Rivers connected on a 49-yard pass to Allen to keep the Chargers alive. Three plays later, Rivers connected with Allen on another 16-yard touchdown pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0041-0003", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoffs: vs. (#6) San Diego Chargers\nAfter the Chargers recovered the ensuing onside kick, a 30-yard field goal by Novak pulled the Chargers to within 24\u201317 with 3:56 remaining in the game. The Broncos' offense then ran out the clock, which included Manning completing two critical third-down passing plays to tight end Julius Thomas and Moreno converting a 3rd-and-1 into a game-clinching first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoffs: vs. (#6) San Diego Chargers\nWith the win, the Broncos advanced to the AFC Championship game for the first time since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 92], "content_span": [93, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Championship: vs. (#2) New England Patriots\nComing off their win over the Chargers in the Divisional round, the Broncos welcomed the No. 2 seed New England Patriots to Sports Authority Field at Mile High, for the AFC Championship. The Broncos' defense forced the Patriots' offense to go three-and-out on their first two offensive possessions. The Broncos were forced to punt on their first offensive possession, but did not punt for the remainder of the game. A 27-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Prater gave the Broncos the lead late in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Championship: vs. (#2) New England Patriots\nAfter the Broncos' defense forced another Patriots' punt, the Broncos put together a 15-play, 93-yard drive that chewed up seven minutes of the second quarter, and added to their lead, with quarterback Peyton Manning connecting on a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jacob Tamme. The two teams then subsequently traded field goals, with a 47-yarder by Patriots' placekicker Stephen Gostkowski and a 35-yarder by Prater just before halftime, to give the Broncos a 13\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Championship: vs. (#2) New England Patriots\nThe Broncos took the opening possession of the second half and added to their lead, with a 13-play, 80-yard drive that chewed up the first seven minutes of the third quarter, culminating with Manning throwing a 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas. On the Patriots' first offensive possession of the second half, the Patriots drove to the Broncos' 29-yard line and faced a 4th-and-2, however, Broncos' defensive tackle Terrance Knighton sacked Patriots' quarterback Tom Brady, forcing a turnover on downs. The Broncos subsequently added to lead early in the fourth quarter, with a 19-yard field goal by Prater.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Championship: vs. (#2) New England Patriots\nThe Patriots finally got into the end zone on their next possession, with Brady connecting on a 7-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Julian Edelman, but the Broncos subsequently added to their lead, with Prater nailing a 54-yard field goal with seven minutes remaining. Trailing 26\u201310, the Patriots tried to rally, with Brady scrambling up the middle for a 5-yard touchdown run. However, the Broncos' defense subsequently thwarted a two-point conversion attempt by Patriots' running back Shane Vereen to get the Patriots to within a one-score deficit, keeping the score at 26\u201316 with 3:13 remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0044-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Championship: vs. (#2) New England Patriots\nThe Patriots tried an onside kick, but Broncos' wide receiver Eric Decker recovered the football near midfield. The Broncos' offense then forced the Patriots to use all of their timeouts and ran out the clock, aided by a critical 5-yard run on 4th-and-2 by running back Montee Ball just after the two-minute warning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Championship: vs. (#2) New England Patriots\nWith the win, the Broncos advanced to Super Bowl XLVIII, the team's first Super Bowl appearance since winning back-to-back Super Bowls in 1997 and 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, AFC Championship: vs. (#2) New England Patriots\nThis was head coach John Fox's first win over Bill Belichick and the Patriots in the postseason, previously losing to the Patriots in the 2011 Divisional playoffs, and Super Bowl XXXVIII as Carolina Panthers' head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. (N1) Seattle Seahawks\nOn the first offensive play of the game, an errant snap by Broncos' center Manny Ramirez over the head of quarterback Peyton Manning resulted in a safety that gave the Seahawks the early lead only 12 seconds into the game. Placekicker Steven Hauschka added field goals of 31 and 33 yards to give the Seahawks an 8\u20130 lead after the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. (N1) Seattle Seahawks\nThe Broncos' offense went three-and-out on their second offensive possession, and three plays into the Broncos' third offensive possession, Manning was intercepted by Seahawks' safety Kam Chancellor at the Broncos' 39-yard line toward the end of the first quarter. Early in the second quarter, the Seahawks added to their lead, with running back Marshawn Lynch rushing for a 1-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0047-0002", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. (N1) Seattle Seahawks\nThe Broncos earned their first 1st-down on their next offensive possession at the 10:13 mark of the second quarter, however, the Seahawks' defense forced another turnover off Manning \u2013 defensive end Cliff Avril altered a pass by Manning, and linebacker Malcolm Smith intercepted the football and returned it 69 yards for a touchdown. The Broncos' offense drove to the Seahawks' 19-yard line one minute before halftime, and decided to go for a first down instead of kick a field goal. However, a short pass from Manning intended for wide receiver Demaryius Thomas was deflected by Avril and fell incomplete, giving the Seahawks a 22\u20130 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. (N1) Seattle Seahawks\nThings got much worse for the Broncos, as Seahawks' wide receiver/return specialist Percy Harvin returned the opening kickoff of the second half 87 yards for a touchdown. The two teams then traded punts on their next possessions, and later in the third quarter, Seahawks' cornerback Byron Maxwell forced a fumble off Demaryius Thomas, and the Seahawks capitalized six plays later, with quarterback Russell Wilson connecting with wide receiver Jermaine Kearse on a 23-yard touchdown pass to give the Seahawks a commanding 36\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0048-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. (N1) Seattle Seahawks\nThe Broncos finally got on the scoreboard at the end of the third quarter, with a 14-yard touchdown pass from Manning to Demaryius Thomas (coupled with a two-point pass from Manning to wide receiver Wes Welker). This was the Broncos' only scoring play of the game, and the Seahawks added one more scoring play early in the fourth quarter, with a 10-yard touchdown pass from Wilson to wide receiver Doug Baldwin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. (N1) Seattle Seahawks\nWith the loss, the Broncos' record in Super Bowls dropped to 2\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. (N1) Seattle Seahawks\nThis marked cornerback Champ Bailey's final game in a Broncos' uniform, as he was released on March 6, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Records and milestones\nNumerous individual, franchise and league records and milestones were either tied, reached or broken during the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Records and milestones, Passing yardage controversy\nOn December 31, 2013, two days after the end of the regular season, media reports indicated that Peyton Manning's passing yardage record was being reviewed by the NFL. Manning sat out the second half of the Broncos' Week 17 win over the Oakland Raiders, after he had eclipsed Drew Brees' record for single-season passing yardage by one yard just before halftime. However, Manning's record was called into question, due to a play that could have been ruled as a running play instead of a forward pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0052-0001", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Records and milestones, Passing yardage controversy\nNear the end of the first quarter of the Broncos' Week 17 win over the Raiders, Manning completed what was, at the time, ruled as a 7-yard pass to wide receiver Eric Decker. However, the pass appeared to be a lateral from CBS camera angles, as Manning appeared to throw the football from the Broncos' 49-yard line, and Decker appeared to catch the pass from the Broncos' 48-yard line, indicating that the play should have been recorded as a running play, not a passing play. Manning later set the single-season passing yardage record with a 5-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas just before halftime. After further review by the NFL and the Elias Sports Bureau, the league upheld the initial ruling, resulting in Manning's new NFL record for single-season passing yardage remaining intact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 887]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232927-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Broncos season, Awards and honors, Pro Bowl and All-Pro selections\nFive Broncos were selected to the 2014 Pro Bowl: quarterback Peyton Manning, placekicker Matt Prater, wide receiver Demaryius Thomas, tight end Julius Thomas and guard Louis Vasquez. However, due to participation in Super Bowl XLVIII, none of them participated in the Pro Bowl. Manning and Vasquez were also voted to the 2013 All-Pro First Team, while Prater and Demaryius Thomas were named to the Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232928-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Denver Outlaws season\nThe 2013 Denver Outlaws season was the eighth season for the Outlaws in Major League Lacrosse. The Outlaws completed the league's first perfect regular season, compiling a 14\u20130 record and returned to the playoffs for the eighth consecutive time but lost to the Charlotte Hounds in the semifinal by a 17\u201314 score. In the process, goaltender Jesse Schwartzman has set an MLL record for fewest goals allowed per game at 9.67 beating his previous 2011 record of 9.87.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff\nThe 2013 Depsang standoff, also called 2013 Depsang incursion, or 2013 Daulat Beg Oldi incident,was an incursion and sit-in by a platoon-sized contingent of the Chinese PLA at the mouth of Depsang Bulge, 30\u00a0km south of Daulat Beg Oldi near the Line of Actual Control in the disputed Aksai Chin region. Indian forces responded to the Chinese presence by quickly establishing their own encampment 300 metres (980\u00a0ft) away. Negotiations between China and India lasted nearly three weeks, during which the Chinese position was supplied by trucks and supported by helicopters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff\nThe dispute was resolved on 5 May, after which both sides withdrew. As part of the resolution, the Indian military agreed to dismantle some military structures 250\u00a0km away in the Chumar sector, which the Chinese perceived as threatening. The Chinese military in July 2014 acknowledged the incursion at the Depsang Valley in Ladakh region and said that such incidents occurred due to differing perceptions of the Line of Actual Control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Background\nThe territorial incident occurred within a 38,000 square kilometre area of disputed territory between India and China, Aksai Chin. The Chinese claim that this area is part of Xinjiang, while the Indians believe that this area is part of Jammu and Kashmir. China and India signed two agreements, in 1993 and 1996, in order to establish protocols to resolve potential disputes in the region. These protocols included the mutual recognition of a \"Line of Actual Control\" (LAC), but disagreements continue between the two governments about where the LAC lies over a roughly 20\u00a0km-wide swath in this sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Background\nIndia first claimed that the Chinese encampment was 10\u00a0km on their side of where they view the LAC, later revising that to 19\u00a0km. Despite the disputed area being an \"unpopulated and desolate wasteland\", it is strategically important to China because of the presence of a highway that connects Pakistan to Tibet and Xinjiang. Since the late 1980s, border disputes between India and China have successfully been resolved through diplomacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Background\nAfter large-scale Chinese infrastructure improvements adjacent to the region, the Indian army began to develop the infrastructure on their side in the 2000s, which was perceived by the Chinese military as a potential threat. The Indian government claims that Chinese troops continue to illegally enter the area hundreds of times every year. Most of these occur without incident, but in 2011 Chinese military forces entered 18\u00a0km into the disputed area in order to dismantle \"17 structures made up of loose stones in the shape of bunkers\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Incident, Military deployments\nDuring the night of 15 April 2013, a platoon of 50 Chinese troops established an encampment in four tents near the mouth of the Depsang Bulge, 38\u00a0km south of Daulat Beg Oldi. The encampment was discovered the next day by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police, who then set up an encampment of their own consisting of eight tents 300 meters away from the Chinese. The Chinese force was supplied by trucks and supported by helicopters. The Indian government considered this the most serious border incident in years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Incident, Military deployments\nThe Indian military followed a policy of restraint, attempting to keep the issue \"localized\" and \"tactical\", in order to give the Indian government the opportunity to resolve the issue through diplomacy. Throughout the incident no shots were fired and the Indian military did not attempt to outflank the Chinese. Minimal efforts were made by the Indian army to reinforce the position after its initial deployment, though the two sides did raise banners encouraging each other to withdraw. Much of the negotiations were conducted between officers present in the two camps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Incident, Military deployments\nWestern media largely interpreted China's actions as a show of force by the Chinese military, but some journalists speculated that the incident was possibly conducted by the Chinese military as a way to protest the perceived existence of a \"permanent facility\" that the Indian army had built in a disputed area. China's military think tank later tried to suggest that the incident was \"accidental\" and \"not deliberately staged\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Incident, Resolution\nThe Indian government protested diplomatically, asking the Chinese to withdraw their military and to recognise the status quo that existed before the incident. The Chinese responded by publicly denying that there was any border issue, stating that their forces did not cross what they perceived the LAC to be. India opted not to take military action and pressed on with a long-planned visit to China by its foreign minister, Salman Khurshid. Within the Indian Parliament, the government was heavily criticised by the opposition for its handling of the incident who compared it to India's defeat in the 1962 Sino-Indian War. On 3 May, shortly before the dispute was resolved, the Indian parliament was adjourned after opposition members became disruptive, shouting \"get China out, save the country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232929-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Depsang standoff, Incident, Resolution\nThe negotiations lasted nearly twenty days, during which the Chinese military increased their presence in the region. To resolve the issue, India agreed to a Chinese demand to demolish several \"live-in bunkers\" in the Chumar sector, 250\u00a0km to the south. Other Chinese demands included the demolition of Indian listening and observation posts built along the border, and an end to the undocumented passage of nomadic shepherds into the Chinese side, but it was not clear to what degree India agreed to these demands. Following the resolution of the dispute, the Chinese military withdrew. The standoff ended on 5 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232930-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dera Ismail Khan prison attack\nOn 29 July 2013, terrorists attacked on Dera Ismail Khan's central prison and freed more than 240 criminals including 35 high-profile terrorists. Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility of attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232930-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dera Ismail Khan prison attack, Attack\nThe attackers first destroyed an armoured police vehicle outside prison and threw many Hand grenades on prison's security guards. According to a police official, militants were disguised in police uniform and were firing Rocket launchers from outside of prison, he said \"Militants were firing rockets at the jail and I also heard gunfire from inside the building\". Residents in Dera Ismail Khan reported hearing loud blasts and gunfires. About hundred militants (who were armed with Guns, mortars, Rocket-propelled grenades and bombs) attacked the prison. Militants launched their attack with series of explosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232930-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Dera Ismail Khan prison attack, Attack\nMilitants have also launched an attack on buildings surrounding the prison, including a radio station and a hospital. A nearby house was also reportedly attacked where the militants took the residents hostage and laid an ambush for security forces\u2019 reinforcements. While attacking, the militants were shouting \" God is great\" and \"Long live Taliban\". The attackers then entered the prison and opened fires on police officers. The police officers fired and used Tear gas in retaliation. During attack, four police officers and five attackers were killed while several injured. The militants managed to free 300 prisoners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232931-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Derbyshire County Council election\nAn election to Derbyshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. Following the final draft of the 2012 electoral review, 64 councillors were elected from 61 electoral divisions which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. No elections were held in the City of Derby, which is a unitary authority outside the area covered by the County Council. The Labour Party won back control of the council by a landslide victory, taking forty-two of the authority's sixty-four seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232931-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Derbyshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232931-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Derbyshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232931-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Derbyshire County Council election, Background\nThe previous election ended 28 years of Labour control, giving the Conservatives an overall majority of two seats and control of the council. However, their majority was eroded by the suspension and defection of two Conservative councillors, leaving the council hung.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232931-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Derbyshire County Council election, By-Elections between May 2013 \u2013 May 2017\nBy-elections are called when a representative Councillor resigns or dies, so are unpredictable. A by-election is held to fill a political office that has become vacant between the scheduled elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 81], "content_span": [82, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232932-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Desafio Internacional das Estrelas\n2013 Desafio Internacional das Estrelas was the eighth edition of Desafio Internacional das Estrelas (International Challenge of the Stars), the races scheduled for 12\u201313 January 2013 at Kart\u00f3dromo do Beto Carrero World at Penha, Santa Catarina, Brazil. The event was won by Jules Bianchi after he won the race 1 and finished in fourth position in race 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232932-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Desafio Internacional das Estrelas, Participants\nThree champions took part in the 2013 edition (Massa, di Grassi and Alguersuari). 13 former and current Formula One drivers participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232933-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Desert Diamond Cup\nThe 2013 Desert Diamond Cup was a soccer exhibition featuring four soccer teams from Major League Soccer, held between February 13\u201323, 2013. The preseason tournament was played at the Kino Sports Complex 11,000 seat main stadium in Tucson, Arizona. This was the 3rd annual Desert Diamond Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232933-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Desert Diamond Cup, Matches\nThe tournament featured a round-robin group stage followed by third-place and championship matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season\nThe 2013 Detroit Lions season was the franchise's 84th season in the National Football League, their 80th as the Detroit Lions, as well as the fifth and final under head coach Jim Schwartz, who was fired on December 30. It was also the final season under the ownership of William Clay Ford, Sr., who died in March 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season\nThe Lions improved upon their 4\u201312 record from 2012 when they defeated the Dallas Cowboys in Week 8 to go to 5\u20133 on the season. Also, their divisional record improved significantly from 2012 (when they were swept by all their divisional rivals).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season\nAt the end of Week 10, the Lions were in first place in their division following their first win at Soldier Field since 2007. With their Thanksgiving Day win over the Green Bay Packers, the Lions not only won their first Thanksgiving Day game since 2003, but they also went undefeated in division home games for the first time since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season\nThe Lions dropped to 3rd place after their loss to the Ravens in Week 15, and they were eliminated from postseason contention after their loss to the New York Giants six days later. They lost their last game as well, ending the season at 7\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Vikings scored first, and quickly. After the Lions failed on a field goal attempt when new punter/holder Sam Martin fumbled the snap, the Vikings took over on their own 22. On the first play from scrimmage, Adrian Peterson scampered 78 yards for a touchdown. David Akers made it 7\u20133 on a 33-yard field goal, though the Lions missed out on seven points that series when a touchdown reception by Calvin Johnson was reversed. In the second quarter, Akers connected on a 42-yard field goal to make the score 7\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Vikings responded with a 65-yard touchdown drive, capped by a 4-yard TD run from Peterson, to go up 14\u20136. The Lions closed the gap late in the half when Joique Bell finished off a 70-yard drive with a 1-yard run to make it 14\u201313. Bell plunged over from the 1-yard line again in the third quarter to put the Lions up for the first time in the game, 20\u201314. The Vikings' Blair Walsh narrowed the lead to 20\u201317 with a 52-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Lions then went up 27\u201317 when Matthew Stafford and new acquisition Reggie Bush connected on a 77-yard pass play. Adrian Peterson scored his third touchdown of the day, on a 4-yard pass from Christian Ponder, to put the Vikings within 3 points again, 27\u201324. The Lions would get the only score of the fourth quarter, a 1-yard touchdown pass from Stafford to rookie tight end Joseph Fauria, making the final score Detroit 34, Minnesota 24. Reggie Bush had 191 yards from scrimmage on the afternoon (90 rushing, 101 receiving), while Matthew Stafford was 28-of-43 passing for 357 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. After Adrian Peterson's opening 78-yard run, the Lions defense held him to just 15 yards on 17 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals\nAfter a scoreless first quarter, the Cardinals struck first on a Jay Feely 47-yard field goal. The Lions responded with a 72-yard touchdown pass from Matthew Stafford to Calvin Johnson, to take a 7\u20133 lead. The Cardinals went up 10\u20137 on a 36-yard TD pass from Carson Palmer to Andre Ellington. The Lions retook the lead, 14\u201310, when Stafford and Johnson connected again, this time on a 3-yard TD pass. Arizona scored first in the third quarter, capitalizing on a Lions turnover with a 23-yard Jay Feely field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals\nThe Lions got a turnover of their own, as DeAndre Levy returned an interception 66 yards for a touchdown, making the score 21\u201313. The Cardinals finished the third quarter scoring with a 43-yard Feely field goal to close the score to 21\u201316. Feely hit again from 33 yards early in the fourth quarter to make the score 21\u201319. A pass interference penalty by Bill Bentley put the ball on the Lions 1-yard line late in the final quarter, and Arizona's Rashard Mendenhall plunged over two plays later for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals\nArizona failed on a 2-point conversion, making the final score Cardinals 25, Lions 21. Matthew Stafford was 24-of-36 passing for 278 yards and two touchdowns. Calvin Johnson led all receivers with 6 receptions for 116 yards and two touchdowns. David Akers missed a 47-yard field goal, and had another field goal attempt blocked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nWashington took a 7\u20130 lead in the first quarter when DeAngelo Hall intercepted a Matthew Stafford pass and returned it 17 yards for a touchdown. Detroit tied it on the next possession, when Joique Bell capped an 85-yard drive with a 12-yard TD run. Early in the second quarter, Stafford hit tight end Joseph Fauria with a 5-yard TD pass, putting the Lions up 14\u20137. A 72-yard Redskins scoring drive was punctuated by an Alfred Morris 30-yard TD run, knotting the score at 14\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nNear the end of the first half, David Akers connected on a 32-yard field goal, sending the Lions to the locker room with a 17\u201314 lead. The only score of the third quarter came on a John Potter 43-yard field goal, tying the score again at 17\u201317. The Lions went up 20\u201317 early in the fourth quarter on a 28-yard field goal from Akers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nThe Redskins appeared to take the lead on a 57-yard TD pass from Robert Griffin III to Aldrick Robinson, but the play was reversed when replays revealed that Robinson did not maintain possession of the ball when he tumbled to the ground. The Lions took advantage on their next drive, when Stafford hit Calvin Johnson with an 11-yard TD pass, increasing the lead to 27\u201317. The Redskins got a late 21-yard field goal from John Potter to close the gap to 27\u201320, but could not gain possession on the ensuing onside kickoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0006-0003", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: at Washington Redskins\nMatthew Stafford passed for 385 yards and two touchdowns on the day. Nate Burleson led all receivers with 116 yards, while Calvin Johnson tallied 115 receiving yards. Prior to this victory, the Lions had never won a game in Washington, D.C., covering 21 road meetings against the Redskins. They last beat the Redskins on the road in 1935, when the team resided in Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe 2\u20131 Lions returned home in Week 4 to face the 3\u20130 Chicago Bears. Robbie Gould started the scoring for the Bears with a 34-yard field goal, but field goals of 23 and 31 yards by David Akers put the Lions up 6\u20133. Early in the second quarter, Matt Fort\u00e9 exploded for a 53-yard touchdown run to put Chicago back up, 10\u20136. The lead was narrowed to 10\u20139 when Akers connected on a 41-yard field goal. The Lions then reeled off three straight touchdowns in the span of three and a half minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Chicago Bears\nSet up by a 57-yard punt return from Micheal Spurlock, Matthew Stafford scored first when he recovered his own fumble in the end zone following a 1-yard quarterback sneak. On Chicago's next possession, Jay Cutler's second interception of the day was returned by Glover Quin 42 yards, to the Bears 2. One play later, Stafford hit Calvin Johnson in the corner of the end zone for a 2-yard TD. On the Lions next possession, Reggie Bush scored on a 37-yard TD run, hurdling Bears safety Major Wright on his way to the end zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Chicago Bears\nRobbie Gould closed the half with a 28-yard field goal that made the score 30\u201313. Gould would connect again on a 25-yarder in the third quarter to get the Bears within two touchdowns. On Chicago's next possession, Ndamukong Suh forced a Jay Cutler fumble, then Nick Fairley scooped up the ball and took it the remaining 4 yards for the score to give Detroit a 37\u201316 lead. David Akers extended it to 40\u201316 on a 43-yard field goal in the fourth quarter. The Bears attempted a furious rally in the final minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0007-0003", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Chicago Bears\nCutler hit Alshon Jeffery on a 14-yard TD pass with four minutes left, then connected with Jeffery again for a 2-point conversion to make the score 40\u201324. On a potential clock-killing drive, Lions running back Joique Bell lost a fumble, and the Bears took advantage with another Cutler TD pass \u2013 this one going 10 yards to Earl Bennett. After another successful 2-point conversion, Chicago was within one score, 40\u201332. But Detroit's Kris Durham recovered the ensuing onside kick to preserve the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Chicago Bears\nAfter throwing just one interception in eight previous games against the Lions, Jay Cutler threw three picks in this game, two of them being grabbed by Lions safety Louis Delmas. Reggie Bush rushed 18 times for 139 yards, and had another 34 yards on four receptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Lions were attempting to end a 21-game regular season losing streak at Green Bay's Lambeau Field, but were hampered by injuries to starting wide receivers Nate Burleson and Calvin Johnson, neither of whom could suit up for the game. Neither offense could get much going in the first half. Mason Crosby converted field goals of 26 and 52 yards for the Packers, while David Akers hit a 53-yarder for the Lions, making the halftime score 6\u20133 in favor of Green Bay. Crosby connected again in the third quarter on a 31-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: at Green Bay Packers\nThe big blow of the game came just 1:26 later, when Aaron Rodgers found James Jones deep, resulting in an 83-yard touchdown and a 16\u20133 Green Bay lead. Two more Crosby field goals of 42 and 45 yards put the game out of reach. Matthew Stafford hit Kris Durham with a 13-yard TD pass late in the final quarter to make the score 22\u20139 (following a failed 2-point conversion), but it was too little, too late.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Lions struck first on a 1-yard TD pass from Matthew Stafford to tight end Joseph Fauria for the only score of the first quarter. Cleveland did all the scoring in the second quarter. First, Brandon Weeden hit running back Chris Ogbonnaya with a screen pass for a 4-yard touchdown, knotting the score at 7\u20137. Weeden then cashed in again with 1:16 left in the half, connecting with Greg Little for a 2-yard TD pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at Cleveland Browns\nAfter a Lions three-and-out, the Browns got the ball with enough time to get Billy Cundiff into field goal range, and he converted a 40-yard attempt to make the halftime score 17\u20137. The second half belonged entirely to the Lions. In the third quarter, Stafford hit Reggie Bush on a short pass, and the running back took it 18 yards for a touchdown, bringing Detroit closer at 17\u201314. The Lions retook the lead, 21\u201317, early in the fourth quarter when Stafford again connected with Joseph Fauria, this time on a 23-yard play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at Cleveland Browns\nDavid Akers extended the lead to 24\u201317 when he made good on a 51-yard field goal. After a key interception of Weeden by DeAndre Levy, the Lions put the game away when Stafford and Fauria connected a third time with a 10-yard TD pass play, providing a final score of 31\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at Cleveland Browns\nMatthew Stafford was 25-of-43 and had his first four-TD performance of the season. Joseph Fauria now has only seven catches on the season, but five have gone for touchdowns. Cleveland's Josh Gordon tallied 126 yards receiving in defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nCincinnati scored on its first possession, when Andy Dalton threw to A. J. Green for an 82-yard touchdown. The Lions tied it later in the first quarter on a 3-yard TD pass from Matthew Stafford to Brandon Pettigrew. A 36-yard field goal by David Akers gave the Lions a 10\u20137-second quarter lead. But late in the quarter, Akers had a 34-yard field goal attempt blocked by Carlos Dunlap, which the Bengals returned all the way to the Lions 40-yard line despite fumbling during the return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThat set up a 12-yard TD strike from Andy Dalton to Marvin Jones just before the first half closed, giving Cincinnati a 14\u201310 lead. The teams exchanged TD passes in the third quarter. First, Dalton hit Tyler Eifert for a 32-yard TD, and Stafford followed shortly after with a 27-yard TD toss to Calvin Johnson. Mike Nugent connected on a 48-yard field goal late in the third to put the Bengals up 24\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Lions tied the game at 24 in the fourth quarter, when Calvin Johnson leaped up and beat three Bengals defenders in the end zone on a 50-yard pass from Matthew Stafford. After the game, Stafford called Johnson's play \"one of the best catches I have ever seen.\" Late in the fourth quarter, a punt by the Bengals Kevin Huber pinned the Lions at their own 6-yard line. Detroit attempted to kill enough clock to get the game to overtime, but could only gain one first down and 17 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0012-0003", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nDetroit punter Sam Martin then shanked a punt that netted only 28 yards before going out of bounds at the Cincinnati 49 with 26 seconds left in the game. Three plays and 15 yards later, Mike Nugent boomed a 54-yard field goal as time expired to give the Bengals a 27\u201324 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe aerial attack for both teams produced big numbers. Andy Dalton was 24-of-34 for 372 yards and 3 touchdowns, while Matthew Stafford was 28-of-51 for 357 yards and 3 scores. A. J. Green of the Bengals and Calvin Johnson of the Lions both tallied 155 yards receiving on the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Lions needed all 60 minutes to overcome four turnovers and a minus-6 differential in penalties to overtake the Dallas Cowboys. The game started slowly, with just three scores in the first half. Detroit struck first with a 90-yard drive, highlighted by an 87-yard pass from Matthew Stafford to Calvin Johnson and capped when the two connected again on a fourth-down 2-yard TD pass. Dallas got a second quarter field goal of 53 yards by Dan Bailey to make the score 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nOn the Lions next possession, Sean Lee intercepted Stafford for the second time in the game and returned the ball 74 yards to the Lions 4-yard line. Two plays later, Tony Romo hit Dez Bryant with a 5-yard TD pass, giving Dallas a 10\u20137 halftime lead. Bailey converted on another 53-yard field goal in the third quarter, putting the Cowboys up 13\u20137. David Akers narrowed the lead to 13\u201310 with a 20-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nBut Dallas struck on their next possession when Tony Romo connected with Terrance Williams on a 60-yard TD pass play, putting them up by 10. Detroit's Joique Bell capped an 80-yard drive with a 1-yard TD run to cut the lead to 3 again, at 20\u201317. Dallas again went up 10, as Romo and Bryant hooked up for their second TD pass play of the day, this one going 50 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0014-0003", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Lions came back with a 1-yard TD run by Reggie Bush, on a drive that featured a key 54-yard pass from Stafford to Calvin Johnson, cutting the lead to 27\u201324. The Lions lost the ball on downs with 1:24 left in the game, but Dallas could only take 22 seconds off the clock before Dan Bailey put them up 30\u201324 with a 44-yard field goal. The Lions began an improbable 80-yard TD drive with just 1:02 remaining on the clock and no time-outs left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0014-0004", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nStafford hit Kris Durham with a key 40-yard pass that put the ball at the Cowboys' 23. Stafford then hit Calvin Johnson with a 22-yard pass on the next play that got the ball to the Dallas 1, but the clock was still running. Instead of spiking the ball to stop the clock after the Lions quickly lined up, Matthew Stafford lunged over a pile of linemen and stretched the ball over the goal line for the tying touchdown, with David Akers' extra point giving the Lions a 31\u201330 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Lions tallied 623 yards of total offense on the afternoon. Stafford was 33-of-48 for 488 yards and one touchdown. Most of his passing yards were to Calvin Johnson, as the Lions wideout caught 14 balls for 329 yards and one touchdown. Johnson set an NFL record for receiving yards in a regulation game, and was just 7 yards short of the full game record of 336 yards set by Flipper Anderson in a 1989 overtime game. Calvin also tied Lance Alworth's all-time NFL mark with his fifth career game of 200 or more receiving yards. The Lions also became just the second team in the last 56 such games to win despite a minus-4 turnover differential. The only other team to accomplish this was the New England Patriots in a 2007 game against the Miami Dolphins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: at Chicago Bears\nThe Lions entered the game looking to sweep a season series from the Bears for the first time since 2007, and did so. Chicago scored on the game's opening possession when Jay Cutler capped a 65-yard drive with a 32-yard TD pass to Brandon Marshall. The Lions tied the game at 7 later in the first quarter when Matthew Stafford found Kris Durham in the back of the end zone with a 5-yard TD pass. On the opening drive of the third quarter, Stafford hit Calvin Johnson with a 4-yard TD pass to put the Lions up 14\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: at Chicago Bears\nThe Bears narrowed the lead to one point with Robbie Gould field goals of 25 and 32 yards. With 2:22 left in the game, Stafford and Johnson connected again, this time on a 14-yard TD pass play, putting the Lions up 21\u201313. Josh McCown, who relieved an injured Cutler, led the Bears on a 74-yard TD drive, capped by an 11-yard pass to Brandon Marshall for the score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: at Chicago Bears\nNeeding a two-point conversion to tie the game, McCown's pass to Dante Rosario sailed out of the end zone, but Detroit's Willie Young was called for roughing the passer, giving the Bears another chance from the 1-yard line. The Bears attempted a rushing play for the conversion, but Nick Fairley tackled Matt Fort\u00e9 behind the line of scrimmage, ending the Bears hopes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: at Chicago Bears\nCalvin Johnson's second touchdown reception of the game gave him 63 touchdown catches in his Lions career, surpassing Herman Moore's previous team record of 62. The win secured the Lions the #1 spot in the NFC North division, the first time they have held that spot alone since Week 5 of the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nWeek 11 saw the Lions trying to win their first game in Pittsburgh since 1955. The Steelers jumped out to an early 14\u20130 lead, when Ben Roethlisberger hit Antonio Brown with TD passes of 34 and 47 yards on consecutive drives. Detroit got on the board in the second quarter with a 35-yard David Akers field goal, but Pittsburgh went up by 14 again when Shaun Suisham connected on a 25-yard field goal. The Lions made the score 17\u201310 on the first play of their next possession, when Matthew Stafford found Calvin Johnson for a 79-yard TD pass play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nAfter a 34-yard Suisham field goal, the Lions drew within 3 points when Stafford and Johnson connected again, this time for a 19-yard TD. The Lions took their first lead, 24\u201320, on a Joique Bell 2-yard run late in the quarter. Detroit had a chance to go up by 11 in the closing seconds of the first half, but after three incomplete passes from the Steelers' 1-yard line, they settled for a 19-yard Akers field goal to make the score 27\u201320. As the weather turned bad and the field got sloppy in the second half, so did the Lions offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nA 21-yard Suisham field goal was the only score of the third quarter, drawing the Steelers within 4 points at 27\u201323. The Lions got inside the Pittsburgh 10-yard line on their next possession, but failed to score on three straight plays before calling in the field goal unit. The Lions attempted a fake that failed, and following a Sam Martin fumble, the Steelers took over on their own 3-yard line. Roethlisberger engineered a game-winning 97-yard drive, culminating in a 1-yard TD pass to Will Johnson. The Steelers iced it on their next possession, going up 37\u201327 after Roethlisberger hit Jerricho Cotchery with a 20-yard TD pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nMatthew Stafford was 19-of-46 passing in the game for 362 yards, including just 3-for-16 in the second half, with many of his passes being dropped by Lions receivers. Ben Roethlisberger, meanwhile, went 29-of-45 for 367 yards and four touchdowns. Calvin Johnson led all players with 179 receiving yards and two touchdowns, but he was shut out in the second half. Despite the loss, Stafford (16,005 yards) passed Bobby Layne's Lion record of 15,710 career passing yards, while Johnson tied Herman Moore's team mark of four consecutive 1,000-yard receiving seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Lions returned home to face the 2\u20138 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bucs got on the board first with a 38-yard Rian Lindell field goal for the only scoring of the first quarter. Detroit responded early in the second with a 5-yard TD pass from Matthew Stafford to Nate Burleson, who was playing in his first game since Week 3. Tiquan Underwood put Tampa Bay back on top, 10\u20137 when he hauled in a 7-yard TD pass from Mike Glennon. The Lions came back with a 10-yard Matthew Stafford-to-Joseph Fauria TD connection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nLate in the half, Leonard Johnson picked off a Stafford pass intended for Brandon Pettigrew and returned it 48 yards for a touchdown, sending the Bucs to the locker room with a 17\u201314 lead. The Lions jumped ahead for the third time in the game, 21\u201317, when Stafford hit Pettigrew for an 18-yard TD pass. Tampa Bay completed the scoring when Mike Glennon again connected with Tiquan Underwood, this time on an 85-yard bomb, making the final score 24\u201321. The Lions had two potential game-tying or game-winning drives end on turnovers. Kris Durham fumbled after making a reception in Bucs territory, and with 47 seconds left in the game, Calvin Johnson had a potential catch at the Bucs 5-yard line stripped from his hands, resulting in a game-clinching interception by Johnthan Banks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Lions had a season-high five turnovers in the game, while the Buccaneers won their third straight game after an 0\u20138 start to the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nDespite three turnovers and a missed field goal in the first half, the Lions rebounded to dominate the Packers, earning their first win on Thanksgiving Day since 2003. After David Akers and Mason Crosby exchanged field goals, Green Bay took their first and only lead of the day in the second quarter when Nick Perry forced a Matthew Stafford fumble that Morgan Burnett returned for a 1-yard touchdown. Detroit tied the score at 10 after Stafford found Jeremy Ross in the end zone with a 5-yard TD pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nA 1-yard Reggie Bush TD run gave the Lions a 17\u201310 halftime lead. The second half was all Lions. Calvin Johnson hauled in a 20-yard pass from Stafford for a 24\u201310 Lions lead. Late in the third quarter, Ndamukong Suh sacked Matt Flynn in the end zone for a safety. After the ensuing free kick, Joique Bell finished off a 56-yard drive with a 1-yard TD run to put Detroit up 33\u201310. Kevin Ogletree completed the scoring by catching a 20-yard TD pass from Stafford to account for a 40\u201310 final score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nMatthew Stafford was 22-of-35 passing, hitting nine different receivers for 330 yards and three touchdowns, while Reggie Bush had 182 yards from scrimmage (117 rushing, 65 receiving). With 101 yards receiving in the game, Calvin Johnson now has 4,944 receiving yards over the 2011 to 2013 seasons, surpassing Jerry Rice's previous NFL record for receiving yards over a three-season stretch (4,850 yards from 1993 to 1995). The Lions offense outgained the Packers in the game 561 yards to 126 yards, while Detroit's defense sacked Matt Flynn seven times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThis game was well known for being played in a blinding blizzard, with at least 4 inches falling throughout the game. The Lions were leading after the first 3 quarters, but the Eagles scored 4 touchdowns in the 4th quarter and outscored Detroit 28-6 in the 4th, ultimately winning 34-20. The loss dropped Detroit to 7-6, and now have only won 1 out of their last 4 games", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Lions hoped to keep their slim lead for the NFC North division title. Playing against the Ravens, Detroit would rally in the first quarter before Baltimore's Justin Tucker kicked three field goals to give his team a halftime lead, 9\u20137. After trailing 12\u201310 in the third quarter, the Lions would take a 16\u201312 lead with another touchdown and a failed 2-point conversion. Turnovers again doomed the Lions. Matthew Stafford threw an interception, the third Lions turnover, late in the game, with Detroit clinging to a 16\u201315 lead. That would give Justin Tucker a chance at a 61-yard field goal, which he converted to give Baltimore an 18\u201316 victory. With the shocking loss, the Lions fell to 7\u20137 and third place within their division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. New York Giants\nIn their home finale, the Lions met the Giants in a game that the Lions needed to win to stay in the division race. The Lions were having trouble scoring and could only muster a field goal before halftime while the Giants built 13 points to maintain their lead. The Lions would manage to return by scoring 17 unanswered points in the third and fourth quarters. However, an interception thrown by Stafford led to the Giants tying the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. New York Giants\nAs the clock ran out with the score tied, Head Coach Jim Schwartz decided to let the game go into overtime despite Detroit possessing two timeouts. This led to many fans booing at the decision, and Schwartz appeared to yell angrily at the booing crowd. After both teams went 3 and out with the Giants having the starting possession, the Giants managed to record a 45-yard field goal to win the game and seal the Lions' fate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232934-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Lions season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nTo end the season, the Lions had a re-match against division rival Minnesota Vikings in the last-ever game at the Metrodome in Minneapolis. With both teams resting injured superstars (Adrian Peterson for Minnesota and Calvin Johnson for Detroit), the Vikings won the low-scoring contest, 14\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232935-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Thunder season\nThe 2013 Detroit Thunder season was the first season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232935-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Thunder season\nOn November 1, 2012, the Thunder was officially announced as the CIFL's eleventh team for the 2013 season. The team is owned by David and Cynthia Kinsman, who also own the Port Huron Patriots in the same league. In addition, the Michigan Cup was announces as the trophy the Thunder, Patriots, and Saginaw Sting would compete for during the 2013 season. On November 9, 2012, David Kinsman announced the Thunder would be playing their home games at the Taylor Sportsplex in Taylor, Michigan for the 2013 season, with the hopes to move to a larger venue in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232935-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Thunder season, Schedule, Standings\n\u2020Kane County played the second game on their schedule, but forfeited the other nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season\nThe 2013 Detroit Tigers season was the team's 113th season. They finished 93\u201369, first place in the American League (AL) Central Division. During the season, the Tigers finished one game ahead of the second place Cleveland Indians. They became the first Tigers team to win three consecutive titles since the 1907, 1908 and 1909 won three consecutive American League pennants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season\nThe Tigers defeated the Oakland Athletics in five games in the American League Division Series and advanced to the ALCS for the third straight season, the first time a Major League team has done so since the New York Yankees advanced to four straight from 1998 to 2001. They lost the American League Championship Series to the Boston Red Sox, four games to two. Manager Jim Leyland announced his retirement following the American League Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season\nThird baseman Miguel Cabrera was named the AL Most Valuable Player for the second consecutive year and starting pitcher Max Scherzer was named the AL Cy Young Award winner. Shortstop Jose Iglesias was runner-up to Wil Myers of the Tampa Bay Rays for the AL Rookie of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Preseason\nAt the conclusion of the 2012 season, the Tigers extended manager Jim Leyland's contract for one season. and announced that Gene Lamont was moved from third base coach to bench coach. Lamont says the move was primarily for health and mobility reasons. Tom Brookens moved from first base coach to third base coach and Rafael Belliard took over as first base coach. The Tigers also hired veteran third base coach Jeff Cox as a baserunning consultant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Preseason\nOn November 14, 2012, The Tigers signed free agent outfielder Torii Hunter to a two-year, $26 million contract. Hunter was the new starting right fielder for the season. The Tigers also signed free agent catcher Brayan Pe\u00f1a to a one-year contract. They re-signed free agent pitcher An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez to a five-year, $80 million contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Preseason\nThe Tigers exercised the team options on infielder Jhonny Peralta and pitcher Octavio Dotel. They also avoided arbitration when they reached one-year deals with catcher Alex Avila, outfielders Brennan Boesch and Austin Jackson, and pitchers Phil Coke, Doug Fister, Rick Porcello and Max Scherzer. Previously-released Don Kelly was signed to a minor league contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Preseason\nOn March 28, the Tigers extended ace starting pitcher Justin Verlander's contract for another five seasons (in addition to his old contract, which had two seasons remaining on it) with a $180 million deal, meaning he will is under contract until at least 2019, with an option for 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Preseason\nThe Tigers did not re-sign outfielder Delmon Young, backup catcher Gerald Laird, or closer Jos\u00e9 Valverde, releasing them to free agency. However, the Tigers brought back Valverde on April 4 when they signed him to a minor league contract, and called him back up to the major league club on April 24. He was again designated for assignment to the Toledo Mud Hens on June 21. The Tigers unconditionally released Valverde on August 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Preseason\nThe Tigers released utility player Ryan Raburn, and non-tendered pitcher Daniel Schlereth's contract, making him a free agent. Matt Hoffman was outrighted to Triple-A Toledo, and the contract of left-handed relief pitcher Adam Wilk was sold to the NC Dinos of the Korea Baseball Organization. They also released outfielder Brennan Boesch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Preseason\nDuring the offseason, the Tigers traded starting pitcher Andrew Oliver to the Pittsburgh Pirates for catching prospect Ram\u00f3n Cabrera. Cabrera was assigned to Class AAA Toledo. The Tigers also acquired two Rule 5 draft picks through separate trades. The club picked up second-baseman Jeff Kobernus from the Boston Red Sox in exchange for utility player Justin Henry, who had been assigned to Toledo. The Tigers also received left-handed pitcher Kyle Lobstein from the New York Mets in exchange for cash considerations. Kobernus was returned to the Nationals on March 23. The Tigers traded catcher Curt Casali to Tampa Bay in exchange for the rights to Rule 5 pitcher Kyle Lobstein, who was out-righted to Class AA Erie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn April 26, An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez struck out 17 Atlanta Braves' batters, breaking a franchise record previously set by Tigers' left-hander Mickey Lolich in 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn May 5, Justin Verlander took a no-hitter into the 7th inning against the Houston Astros before it was broken up by Carlos Pe\u00f1a. It would have been the third of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn May 19, Miguel Cabrera hit three home runs in a game for the second time in his career. He finished the game with four hits and five RBIs, but the Tigers still lost the game, 11\u20138, to the Texas Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn May 21, Max Scherzer retired 21 consecutive batters in a 5\u20131 victory over the Cleveland Indians. Scherzer allowed three baserunners in the first inning before retiring every hitter he faced over the next seven innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn May 24, in a game against the Minnesota Twins, An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez was within two outs of his second career no-hitter, when it was broken up by Joe Mauer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn June 1, the Tigers hit four home runs in the fourth inning of a game against the Baltimore Orioles. This was the first time the Tigers hit four homers in one inning since they last accomplished the feat on September 10, 1986. V\u00edctor Mart\u00ednez started the barrage with a solo shot down the right-field line; Jhonny Peralta followed with a long fly into the fourth row of the left-field bleachers before Alex Avila blasted one into the Orioles' bullpen. Miguel Cabrera would later join the fun with a grand slam, giving him 17 home runs and a Major league-leading 65 RBIs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn June 20, Jhonny Peralta hit a walk-off two-run home run off closer Andrew Bailey to defeat the Boston Red Sox, 4\u20133. It was the team's first walk-off win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn June 28, after a 6\u20133 win against the Tampa Bay Rays, Max Scherzer became the first Tigers pitcher to ever start a season 12\u20130, surpassing the 11\u20130 start from George Mullin in 1909.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn July 3, after a 6\u20132 win over the Toronto Blue Jays, Max Scherzer became the first major league pitcher to start a season 13-0 since Roger Clemens in 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nThe Tigers sent six players to the 2013 All-Star Game, giving them more representatives than any other major league team, and matching their most representatives since 1985. Miguel Cabrera was voted in as the starter at third base in the fan voting; Prince Fielder, Jhonny Peralta, Torii Hunter and Max Scherzer were selected as reserves in the player voting; Justin Verlander was added by manager Jim Leyland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nThe Tigers had a chance to send seven players to the All-Star Game this season, as Joaqu\u00edn Benoit was one of the five finalists for the AL in the All-Star Final Vote, but Benoit was beaten out by pitcher Steve Delabar of the Toronto Blue Jays. On July 15, Scherzer was selected to start the game by his manager, Jim Leyland, who managed the AL squad this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn July 6, Torii Hunter fell a single shy of the cycle, hitting a triple, double and two-run home run to help the Tigers defeat the Cleveland Indians, 9\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn July 29, the Tigers traded outfield prospect Danry Vasquez and a player to be named later to the Houston Astros, in exchange for relief pitcher Jos\u00e9 Veras. To make room on the roster, pitcher Luke Putkonen was optioned to Triple-A Toledo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn July 30, the Tigers traded outfielder Avisa\u00edl Garc\u00eda to the Chicago White Sox and pitcher Brayan Villarreal to the Boston Red Sox in a three-team deal to acquire infielder Jos\u00e9 Iglesias from the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn July 30, Alex Avila hit his first career grand slam against the Washington Nationals' ace Stephen Strasburg, leading the Tigers to a 5\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn July 31, Torii Hunter fell a triple shy of the cycle, hitting a solo home run, single and double to help the Tigers defeat the Washington Nationals, 11\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn August 5, 2013, shortstop Jhonny Peralta was among 13 players suspended by Major League Baseball for his role in the Biogenesis performance-enhancing drug scandal. As a first-time offender of the league's drug policy, Peralta received a 50-game suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn August 8, after a 10\u20133 win over the Cleveland Indians, Scherzer became the third pitcher in major league history to start a season 17\u20131, following Roger Clemens in 2001 and Don Newcombe in 1955.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn August 9, the Tigers' 12-game winning streak came to an end after an extra innings loss to the New York Yankees. The winning streak was tied for the second longest streak in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn August 17, Miguel Cabrera hit a walk-off home run off Aaron Crow to defeat the Kansas City Royals, 6\u20135. This was Cabrera's major league leading thirteenth game-tying or go-ahead home run in the ninth inning or later in the last five seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn August 18, Miguel Cabrera hit his 361st career home run, taking the number 77 spot on the career home runs list, tying Hall of Fame outfielder Joe DiMaggio. Cabrera became the third player since 1921 to have at least 40 home runs and 120 RBIs while batting .350 or better through 116 games, joining Hall of Fame members Babe Ruth and Jimmie Foxx.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn August 24, after a 3\u20130 win over the New York Mets, Scherzer became the third pitcher in major league history to start a season 19\u20131, following Roger Clemens in 2001 and Rube Marquard in 1912.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn August 25, with a win over the New York Mets, the Tigers became the first Major League team this year to have five pitchers with double-digit wins. The last time the Tigers had five pitchers (including starters and relievers) with double-digit wins was the 1984 World Series winning team, the last time the Tigers had five starting pitchers with double-digit wins was in 1949.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn September 6, the Tigers had a season high 26 hits in a 16\u20132 victory over the Kansas City Royals. The last time the Tigers had at least 26 hits in a game was on May 27, 2004, in a 17\u20137 victory over the Kansas City Royals. Oddly, the Tigers had lost their previous game to the Boston Red Sox by a 20-4 score. Thus, the Tigers became the first MLB team to lose a game by at least 14 runs and then win the next game by at least 14 runs since the 1922 St. Louis Browns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn September 6, Omar Infante and Andy Dirks were both 5-for-5, the first time the Tigers had two players with five hits in the same game since 1917, when Hall of Famer Ty Cobb, Bobby Veach and Ossie Vitt all had five hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn September 20, after a 12\u20135 win over the Chicago White Sox, Scherzer became the first major league pitcher this year to reach 20 wins. Scherzer became the second Tiger's pitcher to reach 20 wins since Bill Gullickson in 1991, following Justin Verlander in 2011, and 45th in Tiger's history. Scherzer finished the regular season with 21 wins, the most in the major leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn September 21, the Tigers defeated the Chicago White Sox, 7-6, after trailing 6-0 in the ninth inning. This marked the first time that a Tigers team won a game after trailing by at least six runs in the ninth since 1947, when they rallied from a 6\u20130 deficit for a 7\u20136 win over the Washington Senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nThe Detroit Tigers set the major league single-season strikeouts record with 1,428 strikeouts. The Tigers became just the third team in major league history to have three pitchers strike out 200-plus batters in a single season, following the 1969 Houston Astros and 1967 Minnesota Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nMiguel Cabrera finished the regular season with a .348 batting average, winning his third straight AL batting title. Cabrera became the first Tiger to win three consecutive batting titles since Ty Cobb from 1917 to 1919. With his 44 home runs, Cabrera became the third player in Tigers history to hit 40+ home runs in consecutive seasons, joining Hank Greenberg (1937\u201338) and Cecil Fielder (1990\u201391).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn November 12, Max Scherzer was named the American League Cy Young Award winner, receiving 28 of 30 first-place votes. Scherzer went 21\u20133 during the season, and was the major leagues' only 20-game winner. He also posted a 2.90 ERA, league-leading 0.97 WHIP, and 240 strikeouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Regular season\nOn November 14, Miguel Cabrera won his second straight AL Most Valuable Player award, on the strength of a league-leading .348 batting average, 44 home runs and 139 RBIs. Cabrera also led the major leagues in on-base percentage (.442), slugging percentage (.636) and OPS (1.078). He received 23 of 30 first-place votes. Miguel is only the third Tiger player to win the MVP award more than once, joining Hank Greenberg (1935, 1940) and Hal Newhouser (1944\u201345).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Postseason\nOn October 10, during Game 5 of the ALDS against the Oakland Athletics, Justin Verlander took a no-hitter into the seventh inning, before it was broken up by Yoenis C\u00e9spedes. Verlander finished with 10 strikeouts and one walk in a shutout to seal the series victory. In his career, Verlander has thrown 30 consecutive scoreless innings in the postseason against the Athletics, a major league record for a pitcher versus one team, surpassing Christy Mathewson's 28 scoreless innings against the Philadelphia Athletics from 1905\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Postseason\nOn October 12, during Game 1 of the ALCS against the Boston Red Sox, the Tigers were within two outs of a combined no-hitter, before it was broken up by Daniel Nava. The only other time a no-hitter was broken up in the ninth inning in postseason history was during the 1947 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Postseason\nOn October 12, during Game 1 of the ALCS against the Boston Red Sox, An\u00edbal S\u00e1nchez became the first pitcher in Detroit Tigers history to strike out four batters in one inning. This was possible because Shane Victorino initially struck out after Jacoby Ellsbury did the same, but the ball got away from catcher Alex Avila, and Victorino advanced to first on a wild pitch. S\u00e1nchez later struck out David Ortiz and Mike Napoli. S\u00e1nchez became the second player in Major League history to strike out four batters in one inning during the postseason, following Orval Overall in the 1908 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Postseason\nOn October 15, during Game 3 of the ALCS against the Boston Red Sox, Justin Verlander tied a postseason record by striking out six consecutive batters. Verlander finished the game with 10 strikeouts, marking the sixth time he has had at least 10 strikeouts in a postseason game, and setting a postseason record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Postseason\nThe Detroit Tigers set a franchise record by going 23 consecutive innings without allowing a run. The streak began in Game 5 of the ALDS against the Oakland Athletics, and continued until the sixth inning of Game 2 of the ALCS against the Boston Red Sox. The previous franchise record, set in 2006 and matched in 2011, was 20 consecutive scoreless innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Postseason\nThe Detroit Tigers starting rotation set a Major League record for the most strikeouts in a postseason series with 55 strikeouts in the American League Championship Series. The previous record was 51, set by the Arizona Diamondbacks during the 2001 World Series. The Tigers pitching staff finished with a total of 73 strikeouts in the ALCS, a postseason record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Detailed records, 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232936-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit Tigers season, Detailed records, 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election\nThe 2013 Detroit mayoral election was held on November 5, 2013, to elect the Mayor of Detroit, Michigan. Incumbent Mayor Dave Bing chose to retire rather than seek re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election\nThe Mayor of Detroit is elected on a non-partisan basis, where the candidates are not listed by political party. A non-partisan primary election was held on August 6, 2013. The top two finishers, businessman Mike Duggan, who ran a write-in campaign and received 46% of the vote, and Wayne County Sheriff Benny N. Napoleon, who won 30% of the vote, advanced to the November general election. In the general election, Duggan was elected mayor with 55% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election\nDuggan became the city's first white mayor since 1973, when Coleman Young was first elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Background\nThe Mayor of Detroit was Dave Bing, who was first elected in May 2009 in a special election following the resignation of Kwame Kilpatrick, then re-elected to full term in November 2009. Bing announced on May 14, 2013, that he would not seek a second full term as Mayor, but would instead form an exploratory committee to run for position of Wayne County Executive in the 2014 mid-term elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Background\nThe filing deadline for the race was May 14, 2013, at 4 p.m. Candidates were required to submit petitions with signatures from 500 registered voters in the city of Detroit to qualify for the August primary ballot. On May 23, 2013, the Detroit Election Commission officially certified the names of 15 candidates that had qualified for the Primary Ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Primary election, Candidates\nThere were officially 15 candidates on the ballot. The top two candidates faced off in the November general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Primary election, Controversy\nIn May, 2013 Barrow filed formal complains with the Detroit City Clerk's Office against several of his competitors. Barrow first filed a complaint against Duggan, Napoleon, and Olumba, alleging that all three had failed to file campaign finance reports regarding previous campaigns that the three men had used to seek previous political office. On May 21, 2013, Barrow filed a formal complaint challenging the residency qualifications of Duggan. Barrow's complaint alleges that Duggan wasn\u2019t a city resident for a year when, on April 2, he was the first candidate to turn in signatures to make the August ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Primary election, Controversy\nDuggan legally became a Detroit resident on April 16, 2012, after moving to the city\u2019s Palmer Woods neighborhood. The Detroit City Charter, which was adopted on January 1, 2012, states \"\"All candidates for elective office and elected officials shall be bona fide residents of the City of Detroit and must maintain their principal residence in the City of Detroit for one (1) year at the time of filing for office or appointment to office. \" Labor activist and Barrow supporter Robert Davis sent a formal letter requesting Michigan Secretary of State Ruth Johnson intervene in the matter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Primary election, Controversy\nAfter Benson refused to intervene, the Detroit Election Commission voted 2-1 on May 23, 2013, to keep Duggan on the ballot. On May 31, 2013, Barrow filed a complaint against the Detroit Election Commission in Wayne County Circuit Court asking the Court to order the Election Commission to remove Duggan from the Mayoral Ballot. On June 12, 2013 Wayne County Circuit Judge Lita Popke ordered that Duggan's name be removed from the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0006-0003", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Primary election, Controversy\nOn June 18, 2013 The Michigan Court of Appeals upheld the ruling in a 2-1 decision and on June 19 Mike Duggan officially bowed out of the race. Political analysts predicted that Benny Napoleon would take over as the front runner for the election, and Barrow would still likely be eliminated in the August elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232937-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Detroit mayoral election, Primary election, Controversy\nOn June 28, 2013, Mike Duggan officially declared he was re-entering the mayoral race as a write-in candidate. As a write-in, Duggan won a plurality of the votes. He was on the ballot for the November election against second place Benny Napoleon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232938-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nThe 2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters was the twenty-seventh season of premier German touring car championship and also fourteenth season under the moniker of Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters since the series' resumption in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232938-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nBruno Spengler started the season as the defending drivers' champion. BMW was the defending manufacturers' champion, and BMW Team Schnitzer the defending teams' champion. Mike Rockenfeller clinched his first DTM title at the penultimate round of the season at Zandvoort, driving for Audi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232938-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nThis was the first season since the 2005 season without any female DTM drivers due to Susie Wolff and Rahel Frey left the series after 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232938-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Teams and drivers\nThe following manufacturers, teams and drivers competed in the 2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters. All teams competed with tyres supplied by Hankook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232938-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Race calendar and results\nA provisional eleven-round calendar was announced on 23 October 2012, and the final schedule was published on 21 November 2012. A revised calendar was released by series organisers on 19 December 2012, with the Norisring round moved back by a week to avoid a clash with the German Grand Prix. To accommodate the change of date, the Zandvoort meeting was moved from July to September, and would become the penultimate event of the season, with the Oschersleben and second Hockenheim meetings also being held later than originally scheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232938-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top ten classified finishers as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232939-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Devon County Council election\nAn election to Devon County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 62 councillors were elected from electoral divisions which returned one county councillor each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. The electoral divisions were the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. 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, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232939-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Devon County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232939-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Devon County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232939-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Devon County Council election, Summary\nThe election saw the Conservative Party maintain overall control with a reduced majority of fourteen seats. The Liberal Democrats remained the council's largest single opposition party, while the Labour Party made a net gain of one seat. UKIP took its first seats on the council, winning four. The Green Party regained its seat (Totnes Rural) following an interim defection to the Labour Party. The election also saw three independent councillors elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232939-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Devon County Council election, Results\nNote: seat changes reflect the council composition immediately before the election, taking into account the defection of the Liberal Democrat councillor for Exwick & St Thomas to the Labour Party, and the June 2012 defection of the Green Party councillor for Totnes Rural to the Labour Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse\nThe 2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse (also referred to as the 2013 Savar building collapse or the Collapse of Rana Plaza) was a structural failure that occurred on 24 April 2013 in the Savar Upazila of Dhaka District, Bangladesh, where an eight-story commercial building called Rana Plaza collapsed. The search for the dead ended on 13 May 2013 with a death toll of 1,134. Approximately 2,500 injured people were rescued from the building alive. It is considered the deadliest non-deliberate structural failure accident in modern human history and the deadliest garment-factory disaster in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse\nThe building contained clothing factories, a bank, apartments and several shops. The shops and the bank on the lower floors were immediately closed after cracks were discovered in the building. The building's owners ignored warnings to avoid using the building after cracks had appeared the day before. Garment workers were ordered to return the following day and the building collapsed during the morning rush-hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Background\nThe building, Rana Plaza, was owned by Sohel Rana, allegedly a member of the local unit of Jubo League, the youth wing of Bangladesh Awami League, the political party in power. It housed a number of separate garment factories employing around 5,000 people, several shops and a bank. The factories manufactured apparel for brands including Benetton, Bonmarch\u00e9, Prada, Gucci, Versace, Moncler, the Children's Place, El Corte Ingl\u00e9s, Joe Fresh, Mango, Matalan, Primark, and Walmart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Background\nThe head of the Bangladesh Fire Service & Civil Defence, Ali Ahmed Khan, said that the upper four floors had been built without a permit. Rana Plaza's architect, Massood Reza, said the building was planned for shops and offices\u00a0\u2013 but not factories. Other architects stressed the risks involved in placing factories inside a building designed only for shops and offices, noting the structure was potentially not strong enough to bear the weight and vibration of heavy machinery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Background\nOn 23 April 2013 (one day before the collapse), a TV channel recorded footage that showed cracks in the Rana Plaza building. Immediately afterward, the building was evacuated, and the shops and the bank on the lower floors were closed. Later in the day, Sohel Rana said to the media that the building was safe and workers should return tomorrow. Managers at Ether Tex threatened to withhold a month's pay from workers who refused to come to work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Collapse and rescue\nOn the morning of 24 April, there was a power outage and diesel generators on the top floor were started. The building collapsed at about 08:57\u00a0am BST, leaving only the ground floor intact. The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association president confirmed that 3,122 workers were in the building at the time of the collapse. One local resident described the scene as if \"an earthquake had struck.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Collapse and rescue\nThe United Nations' urban search and rescue coordination group \u2013 known as the International Search and Rescue Advisory Group, or INSARAG \u2013 offered assistance from its members, but the government of Bangladesh rejected this offer. The government made a statement suggesting that the area's local rescue emergency services were well equipped. Before offering assistance to Bangladesh, the UN held consultations to assess the country's ability to mount an effective rescue operation and they reached the conclusion that they lacked that capability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Collapse and rescue\nBangladeshi officials, desiring to take \"face-saving\" actions and protect national sensibilities, refused to accept the assistance offered to them by the UN. A large portion of the rescue operation consisted of inadequately equipped volunteers, many of whom had no protective clothing and wore sandals. Some buried workers drank their urine to survive the high temperatures, waiting to be saved. Not only was the Bangladeshi government accused of favoring national pride over those buried alive, but many relatives of those trapped in the debris criticized the government for trying to end the rescue mission prematurely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Collapse and rescue\nOne of the garment manufacturers' websites indicates that more than half of the victims were women, along with a number of their children who were in nursery facilities within the building. Bangladeshi Home Minister Muhiuddin Khan Alamgir confirmed that fire service personnel, police and military personnel were assisting with the rescue effort. Volunteer rescue workers used bolts of fabric to assist survivors to escape from the building. A national day of mourning was held on 25 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Collapse and rescue\nOn 8 May, army spokesman Mir Rabbi said the army's attempt to recover more bodies from the rubble would continue for at least another week. On 10 May, 17 days after the collapse, a woman named Reshma was found and rescued alive and almost unhurt under the rubble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Causes\nThe collapse of the building was preceded by a number of administrative failures, leading to early warning signs being ignored. It was reported that the industrial police first requested the evacuation of the building until an inspection had been conducted. It was also reported that Abdur Razak Khan, an engineer, declared the building unsafe and requested public authorities to conduct a more thorough inspection; he was arrested for helping the owner illegally add three floors. It is also reported that Kabir Hossain Sardar, the Upazila Nirbahi Officer who visited the site, met with Sohel Rana and declared the building safe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Causes\nSohel Rana said to the media that the building was safe and workers should return to work the next day. One manager of the factories in the Rana Plaza reported that Sohel Rana told them that the building was safe. Managers then requested the workers to go back to work. As a result, workers also returned to the factories the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Causes, Management and safety compliance\nThe decision by managers to send workers back into the factories was partially due to the pressure to complete orders on time, putting partial responsibility for the disaster on the short production deadlines preferred by buyers due to the fast fashion industry. Media including The Guardian have argued the demand for fast fashion and low-cost clothing motivated minimal oversight by clothing brands and that collectively organised trade unions could have responded to the pressure of management. Others have argued that trade unions would increase workforce costs and thus endanger the Bangladesh garment industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Causes, Management and safety compliance\nSince the Spectrum factory collapse in 2005, prominent manufacturers organized projects like the Ethical Trading Initiative and Business Social Compliance Initiative to prevent such disasters in the Bangladesh textile industry and elsewhere. These programs ultimately failed to prevent the Savar building collapse. Despite social compliance audits conducted according to BSCI procedure at two of the factories at Rana Plaza, auditors failed to detect the structural concerns. In a press release following the collapse, BSCI explained that their system did not cover building safety. This has been contested, as the BSCI audit questionnaire required auditors to check building permits, and discrepancies between the permit and the number of floors in practice were evident. Some have argued that the BSCI has weak incentives to report such violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Causes, Management and safety compliance\nMore conclusions about causes will be available when the investigation is over and the courts give their decisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nThe day after the Rana Plaza building collapsed, the Rajdhani Unnayan Kartripakkha (Capital Development Authority) filed a case against the owners of the building and the five garment factories operating inside it. On the same day, dozens of survivors were discovered in the remains of the building. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had said in Parliament that the name \"Sohel Rana\" was not in the Jubo League office bearers list; she then ordered the arrest of Sohel Rana and four of the owners of the garment factories operating in the building. Sohel Rana was reported to have gone into hiding; however, authorities reported that four other individuals had already been arrested in connection with the collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nTwo days after the building collapsed, garment workers across the industrial areas of Dhaka, Chittagong and Gazipur rioted, targeting vehicles, commercial buildings and garment factories. The next day, leftist political parties and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party-led 18 Party Alliance demanded the arrest and trial of suspects and an independent commission to identify vulnerable factories. Four days after the building collapsed, the owner of the Rana Plaza, Sohel Rana, was arrested at Benapole, Jessore District, on the Indo-Bangladeshi border, by security forces. On the same day a fire broke out at the disaster site and authorities were forced to temporarily suspend the search for survivors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nOn 1 May, during International Workers' Day, thousands of protesting workers paraded through central Dhaka to demand safer working conditions and the death penalty for the owner of Rana Plaza. A week later hundreds of survivors of Bangladesh's worst industrial disaster blocked a main highway to demand wages as the death toll from the collapse passed 700. Local government officials said they had been in talks with the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association to pay the workers their outstanding April salaries plus a further three months\u00a0\u2013 \u00a397.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nAfter officials promised the surviving workers that they would be soon paid, they ended their protest. The government and garment association were compiling a list of surviving employees to establish who must be paid and compensated. The next day, 18 garment plants, including 16 in Dhaka and two in Chittagong, were closed down. Textile minister, Abdul Latif Siddique, told reporters that more plants would be shut as part of strict new measures to ensure safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nOn 5 June, police in Bangladesh fired into the air in an attempt to disperse hundreds of former workers and relatives of the victims of the collapse who were protesting to demand back pay and compensation promised by the government and the Bangladesh Garments Manufacturers and Exporters Association. On 10 June, seven inspectors were suspended and accused of negligence for renewing the licenses of garment factories in the building that collapsed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nOn 30 August 100 days after the collapse of Rana Plaza, injured workers and family members of those who died there along with workers rights activists inaugurated a memorial for the tragedy, a crude statue of two fists thrusting towards the sky grasping a hammer and sickle. The police attempted to stop the erection of the memorial several times. It remains the only memorial monument for the tragedy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nOn 22 September, at least 50 people were injured when police fired rubber bullets and tear gas into a crowd of protesters who were blocking streets in Dhaka demanding a minimum wage of $100 (8,114 takas) a month. In November, a 10-story garment factory in Gazipur, which supplied Western brands, was allegedly burned down by workers angered over rumours of a colleague's death in police firing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Bangladesh\nIn March 2014 Rana Plaza owner Sohel Rana was granted six months' bail in the High Court. This prompted angry reactions from labour leaders. However, Rana would not be released from jail as another case filed by police is pending. A December 2015 report, written by the NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, found that only eight of 3,425 factories inspected had \"remedied violations enough to pass a final inspection\" despite the international community's $280 million commitment to clean up Bangladesh's RMG industry. In 14 June 2016 Sohel Rana and 17 others were indicted for violating building code in the construction of Rana Plaza. On August 2016 the trial was postponed after defendants filed appeals with the High Court of Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Politicians\nNick Clegg, UK Deputy PM and leader of the Liberal Democrats said: \"... consumers have more power than they think when it comes to making choices about where they shop.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Politicians\nMichael Connarty, UK's Falkirk East MP, is calling on the UK Government to push through new legislation to end modern day slavery by forcing major High Street companies in the UK to audit their supply chain. The framework requests that those companies make vigorous checks to ensure slave labour is not used in third world countries and the UK to produce their goods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Politicians\nKarel De Gucht, the European Commissioner for Trade, warned that retailers and the Bangladesh government could face action from the EU if nothing is done to improve the conditions of workers\u00a0\u2013 adding that shoppers should also consider where they are spending their money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Politicians\nOn 1 May, Pope Francis spoke out against the working conditions in the factory:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Politicians\nA headline that really struck me on the day of the tragedy in Bangladesh was 'Living on 38 euros a month'. That is what the people who died were being paid. This is called slave labour. Today in the world this slavery is being committed against something beautiful that God has given us\u00a0\u2013 the capacity to create, to work, to have dignity. How many brothers and sisters find themselves in this situation! Not paying fairly, not giving a job because you are only looking at balance sheets, only looking at how to make a profit. That goes against God!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Advocacy groups\nHuman Rights Watch stated their concern over the number of factory-building tragedies in Bangladesh; there have been numerous major accidents in the country in the past decade, including the 2012 Dhaka fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Advocacy groups\nIndustriALL Global Union, a global union federation representing textile and garment workers' trade unions around the world, launched an online campaign in support of the Bangladeshi unions' demand for labour law reform in the wake of the disaster. The campaign, hosted on LabourStart, calls for changes in the law to make it easier for unions to organise workers, as well as demanding improved health and safety conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Advocacy groups\nOn 27 April, protesters surrounded Primark store on Oxford Street in the City of Westminster in the West End of London. Speaking outside the store, Murray Worthy, from campaign group War on Want, said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Advocacy groups\nWe're here to send a clear message to Primark that the 300 deaths in the Bangladesh building collapse were not an accident\u00a0\u2013 they were entirely preventable deaths. If Primark had taken its responsibility to those workers seriously, no one need have died this week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Advocacy groups\nThere have been monthly protests at Benetton's flagship store at Oxford Circus in London since the one year anniversary of the collapse. Benetton initially denied reports linking production of their clothing at the factory, but clothes and documents linked to Benetton were discovered at the disaster site. The protesters are demanding that Benetton contribute to the compensation fund, which they have not yet done.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Worldwide criticism, Advocacy groups\nThe Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights established a workers' relief fund, which raised $26,000 for injured workers and surviving family members by September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 84], "content_span": [85, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Academia\nA team of researchers from NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights began their investigation which resulted in an April 2014 report entitled \"Business as Usual Is Not an Option: Supply Chains and Sourcing after Rana Plaza.\" A December 2015 report, written by the NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, found that only eight of 3,425 factories inspected had \"remedied violations enough to pass a final inspection\" despite the international community's $280 million commitment to clean up Bangladesh's RMG industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Consumers\nDozens of consumers in the United States and Australia spoke out against unsafe working conditions found in the factory building. People also expressed their anger at retailers that did not have any connections to that specific building, but are known to source from factories located in Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Fashion industry response\nAt a meeting of retailers and NGOs a week after the collapse, a new Accord on Factory and Building Safety in Bangladesh was created and a deadline of 16 May was set to sign it. The agreement expands on a previous accord signed only by the US-based PVH, which owns Calvin Klein and German retailer Tchibo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Fashion industry response\nWalmart, along with 14 other North American companies, refused to sign the Accord as the deadline passed. As of 23 May 2013, thirty-eight companies had signed the accord. Walmart, J.C. Penney and labour activists have been considering an agreement to improve factory safety in Bangladesh for at least two years. In 2011, Walmart rejected reforms that would have had retailers pay more for apparel to help Bangladesh factories improve safety standards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Fashion industry response\nOn 10 July 2013, a group of 17 major North American retailers, including Walmart, Gap, Target and Macy's, announced a plan to improve factory safety in Bangladesh, drawing immediate criticism from labour groups who complained that it was less stringent than an accord reached among European companies. Unlike the accord joined mainly by European retailers, the plan lacks legally binding commitments to pay for those improvements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Fashion industry response\nDov Charney, the founder and CEO of American Apparel, was interviewed on Vice.tv and spoke out against the poor treatment of workers in developing countries and refers to it as \"slave labor\". Charney proposes a \"Global Garment Workers Minimum Wage\" as well discusses in detail many of the inner workings of the modern fast fashion industry commerce practices that leads to dangerous factory conditions like at Savar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Aftermath, Fashion industry response\nIn October 2013, Canadian Brad Loewen was given the responsibility of implementing the Accord requirement to upgrade the safety features of 1600 Bangladeshi garment factories. He and his wife, filmmaker Shelagh Carter, moved to Dhaka in December 2013 for an expected five-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Compensation to victims\nAs of mid-September 2013, compensations to families of disaster victims were still under discussion, with many families struggling to survive after having lost a major wage earner. Families who had received the $200 compensation from Primark were only those able to provide DNA evidence of their relative's death in the collapse, which proved extremely difficult. The US government provided DNA kits to the families of victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Compensation to victims\nOf the 29 brands identified as having sourced products from the Rana Plaza factories, only 9 attended meetings held in November 2013 to agree on a proposal on compensation to the victims. Several companies refused to sign including Walmart, Carrefour, Mango, Auchan and KiK. The agreement was signed by Primark, Loblaw, Bonmarche and El Corte Ingles. By March 2014, seven of the 28 international brands sourcing products from Rana Plaza had contributed to the Rana Plaza Donor\u2019s Trust Fund compensation fund, which is backed by the International Labour Organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Compensation to victims\nMore than 2 dozen victims' families have not been compensated as they could not back up their claims with documentation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Charges\nOn 15 June 2014, the Bangladesh Anti Corruption Commission filed a case against 14 people for building Rana Plaza with faulty design. On 1 June 2015, murder charges were filed by the Bangladesh Police against 42 people, including the owners of the building, over the collapse. The accused were indicted on 28 July 2016. The case was delayed after the Bangladesh High Court stopped trial proceeding against 5 accused including Savar Mayor Refayat Ullah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Charges\nOn 29 August 2017, the factory owner, Sohel Rana, was sentenced to a maximum three year imprisonment by a court for failing to declare his personal wealth to the country's anti-graft commission. Rana and 37 others, including government officials, have also been charged with murder and could receive the death penalty if they are found responsible for the complex's collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Charges\nAs of 2021, both the murder trial and the violation of the building code trial are still pending. Only Sohel Rana is in custody, the other accused are on bail, on the run or already dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, International reaction\nThe Savar building collapse has led to widespread discussions about corporate social responsibility across global supply chains. Based on an analysis of the Savar building collapse, Wieland and Handfield (2013) suggest that companies need to audit products and suppliers; and that supplier auditing needs to go beyond direct relationships with first-tier suppliers. They also demonstrate that visibility must be improved if supply cannot be directly controlled, and that smart and electronic technologies play a key role to improve visibility. Finally, they highlight that collaboration with local partners, across the industry and with universities is crucial to successfully managing social responsibility in supply chains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, International reaction\nBangladesh Garment Sramik Sanghati, an organization working for the welfare of the workers, has called on the government, international buyers, and factory owners to compensate survivors and victims' families. The group has also asked that April 24 be declared Labor Safety Day in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, International reaction\nGlobal labour and rights groups have criticized Western retailers and say they are not doing enough to ensure the safety at factories where their clothes are made. The companies linked to the Rana Plaza disaster include the Spanish brand Mango, Italian brand Benetton and French retailer Auchan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, International reaction\nOn 24 April 2014, thousands of people gathered at an event held to commemorate the first anniversary of the disaster near the building site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232940-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhaka garment factory collapse, Documentary\nShelagh Carter produced a short documentary, Rana Plaza: Let Not the Hope Die (2014), commemorating the one-year anniversary of the tragedy, while living in Dhaka in support of her husband Brad Loewen's work in implementing the Accord.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232941-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhi Qar governorate election\nThe Dhi Qar governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates of Iraq outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232942-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhivehi League\nThe 2013 Dhivehi League(a Maldivian football association) started on 26 February 2013 and ended on 28 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232942-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dhivehi League, League table\nFormat: In Round 1 and Round 2, all eight teams play against each other. The top six teams after Round 2 play against each other in Round 3. The teams with the most total points after Round 3 are crowned the Dhivehi League champions and qualify for the AFC Cup. The top four teams qualify for the President's Cup. The bottom two teams after Round 2 play against the top two teams of the Second Division in Dhivehi League Qualification for places in the next year's Dhivehi League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232943-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Diamond Head Classic\nThe 2013 Diamond Head Classic was a mid-season eight-team college basketball tournament played on December 22, 23, and 25 at the Stan Sheriff Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. It was the fifth annual Diamond Head Classic tournament and was part of the 2013\u201314 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. No. 14-ranked Iowa State defeated Boise State 70\u201366 to win the tournament championship. DeAndre Kane was named the tournament's MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232944-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Diamond League\nThe 2013 IAAF Diamond League is the fourth edition of the Diamond League, an annual series of fourteen one-day track and field meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232944-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Diamond League\nThe series began on 10 May in Doha, Qatar and ended on 6 September in Brussels, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232944-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Diamond League, Results\nEvents not included in the Diamond League are marked in grey background in the below tables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232945-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dingxi earthquakes\nOn 22 July 2013, a series of earthquakes occurred in Dingxi, Gansu. The first quake struck at 07:45 China Standard Time with the epicenter located at the border of Min County and Zhang County. The magnitude of the initial earthquake was placed at Ms 6.6 by the China Earthquake Data Center with a focal depth of 20.0 kilometres (12\u00a0mi). It was measured at Mw 5.9 by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and Mw 6.0 by the European Alert System. Another strong quake occurred about one hour later, measured at 5.6 magnitude by the USGS. As of 18:00 CST (10:00 UTC), 22 July 2013, 422 aftershocks had been recorded. The earthquakes were also felt in the nearby cities of Tianshui and Lanzhou in Gansu, as well as Xi'an, Baoji, and Xianyang in neighbouring Shaanxi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232945-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dingxi earthquakes\nAs of 23:00 CST, 23 July 2013, the earthquakes had caused at least 95 deaths, and more than 2,300 people had been injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232945-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dingxi earthquakes, Background\nThe tremor occurred less than 14 kilometres (9\u00a0mi) from the Lintan-Dangchang fault line (Chinese: \u4e34\u6f6d-\u5b95\u660c\u65ad\u88c2\u5e26). Since recorded history 25 earthquakes of more than 5.0 magnitude have occurred within a 200 kilometres (124\u00a0mi) radius from the current epicenter, the earliest being the 193 BC Lintao earthquake which measured at 6.5 magnitude, while the strongest was the 8.0-magnitude 1654 Tianshui earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232945-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dingxi earthquakes, Effects\nMost of the casualties occurred in Min County, located 15 kilometres (9\u00a0mi) from the epicenter, which reported 87 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232945-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dingxi earthquakes, Effects\nAccording to the Gansu provincial officials, more than 1,200 buildings have collapsed and over 21,000 severely damaged. Many local buildings, often crudely constructed, were buried in the landslides caused by the earthquakes. Within the disaster zone, 20% of the buildings have collapsed and 60% are damaged. 27,360 people are estimated to have been displaced in Zhang County alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232945-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dingxi earthquakes, Effects\nCommunication was cut off to 13 townships in Zhang County and many villages in Meichuan, Min County. Five towns in eastern Min County have lost power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232945-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dingxi earthquakes, Relief efforts\nOn the day of the earthquakes, General-secretary of CCP and Chinese President Xi Jinping ordered \"all-out rescue efforts\". By afternoon the two top leaders of Gansu Province, Communist Party secretary Wang Sanyun and Governor Liu Weiping, along with 1,800 police officers and local officials, had arrived in the earthquake-stricken area. The People's Liberation Army's Lanzhou Military Region, which is headquartered 230 kilometres (143\u00a0mi) from the disaster zone, had sent 1,078 troops to join the relief efforts by mid-afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232946-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Direct Horizontal Drilling Fall Classic\nThe 2013 Direct Horizontal Drilling Fall Classic was held from October 11 to 14 at the Crestwood Curling Club in Edmonton, Alberta as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple-knockout format, and the purse for the event was CAD$50,000, of which the winner, Kevin Martin, received CAD$13,000. Martin defeated Brock Virtue of Saskatchewan with a score of 6\u20135 in an extra end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232947-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Discovery Women's Basketball Invitational\nThe 2013 Discovery Women\u2019s Basketball Invitational, also known as Jesse Robredo Memorial Cup to commemorate the first death anniversary of former Department of the Interior and Local Government secretary Jesse Robredo, was an invitational basketball tournament which was contested by the women's national teams of the Philippines and Singapore, along with a Gold Coast All Stars team assembled by Gold Coast Basketball of Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232947-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Discovery Women's Basketball Invitational\nIndia was also invited to take part in the tournament but did not send its team due to a ban imposed on its National Olympic Committee by the International Olympic Committee at that time which took effect in December 2012. The tournament was held in Naga City from August 22\u201325, 2013 at the Jesse Robredo Coliseum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232947-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Discovery Women's Basketball Invitational, Results\nThe tournament was initially planned to be a single round robin with the top two team playing for the championships at the finals. The tournament's format was switched into a double round robin format with each team at the tournament facing the other teams twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232947-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Discovery Women's Basketball Invitational, Results\nIt is unknown what the scoreline is between the one other match between Singapore and Gold Coast. The Philippines emerged champions with Gold Coast placing second and Singapore placing last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232948-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Distalnet Tennis Cup\nThe 2013 Distalnet Tennis Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Todi, Italy between 1 and 7 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232948-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Distalnet Tennis Cup, 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-00232949-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Distalnet Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMartin Fischer and Philipp Oswald were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Santiago Giraldo and Cristian Rodr\u00edguez won the title, by defeating Andrea Arnaboldi and Gianluca Naso 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20132), [10\u20133]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232950-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Distalnet Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nAndrey Kuznetsov was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Pere Riba beat Santiago Giraldo 7\u20136(7\u20135), 2\u20136, 7\u20136(8\u20136), to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232951-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Division 1 (Swedish football)\nThe 2013 Division 1, part of the 2013 Swedish football season, was the 8th season of Sweden's third-tier football league in its current format. The 2013 fixtures were released in December 2012. The season started on 14 April 2013 and ended on 27 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232951-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Division 1 (Swedish football), Teams\nA total of 28 teams contested the league, divided into two division, Norra and S\u00f6dra. 20 returning from the 2012 season, two relegated from Superettan and six promoted from Division 2. The champion of each division qualified directly for promotion to Superettan, the two runners-up had to play a play-off against the thirteenth and fourteenth team from Superettan to decide who would play in Superettan 2014. The bottom three teams in each division qualified directly for relegation to Division 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232952-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de B\u00e9isbol\nDivisi\u00f3n de Honor de B\u00e9isbol 2013 is the 28th season since its establishment. 2013 season started on March 16 and finished on 4 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232952-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de B\u00e9isbol\nOnly nine teams played the Spanish baseball top league after Halcones de Vigo was relegated to 1\u00aa Divisi\u00f3n A, and no team was promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232952-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de B\u00e9isbol\nOn July 22, Tenerife Marlins won its sixth title in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232953-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Diyala governorate election\nThe Diyala Governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232954-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Djiboutian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Djibouti on 22 February 2013. After their boycott of the 2008 elections, opposition groups contested the elections as the Union for National Safety alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232954-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Djiboutian parliamentary election\nAccording to government figures, the ruling Union for the Presidential Majority won 55 of 65 seats in Parliament, while the USN won the remaining 10 seats. It was the first time since independence in 1977 that opposition parties had been represented in the legislature. However, the USN claimed the figures for Djibouti city were falsified and released alternative results which would have reduced the UMP to 34 seats and increased their total from 10 to 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232954-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Djiboutian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nIn 2013 the previous winner-takes-all party block vote was abandoned. Instead the elections were held using closed list systems in which 80% of seats (rounded to the nearest integer) in each constituency were awarded to the party receiving the most votes. The remaining seats were allocated proportionally to other parties receiving over 10% of the vote using the D'Hondt method. In cases where no other party received more than 10% of the vote, all seats in a constituency were awarded to the party receiving the most votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232954-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Djiboutian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nOn 26 February 2013, UNS spokesman Daher Ahmed Farah said police fired tear gas on demonstrators that were protesting the election results. 300 people were arrested. \"The situation is tense,\" Farah said. \"The opposition won the elections and the victory was denied... the numbers were manipulated.\" The National Assembly began meeting for its new parliamentary term on 18 March 2013. Idriss Arnaoud Ali was re-elected without opposition as President of the National Assembly. 10 opposition deputies were not present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232955-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Djurg\u00e5rdens IF season\nIn the 2013 season, Djurg\u00e5rdens IF competes in the Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen. Magnus Pehrsson is managing the team for the third year. In July, the team will move to the newly built Tele2 Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nThe Dominican Republic (DR) and Haiti experienced a diplomatic crisis in 2013. The principal point of conflict was an issue of trade restrictions, but it unfolded against the background of the DR's attempt to return thousands of DR residents of Haitian descent to Haiti. More than 3,000 Haitians had been expelled from the DR in the first half of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nOn June 6, 2013, Haiti imposed a ban on the importation of chickens and eggs from the DR, citing indications that there was an outbreak of bird flu there. DR officials said other types of flu but not bird flu had been identified. On June 10, the Pan American Health Organization stated that no cases of bird flu had been found in the DR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nOn June 12, the President of the Dominican Republic, Danilo Medina, sent a committee led by the Secretary of Industry and Commerce, Jos\u00e9 Del Castillo Savi\u00f1\u00f3n, to Port-au-Prince to resolve the dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nA meeting between Haitian Foreign Minister Pierre-Richard Casimir and Dominican Foreign Minister Carlos Morales on June 17 produced no resolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nThe DR ships 30 million eggs and 1.5 million chickens to Haiti monthly. By June 19, activity at the four border crossings between the two countries had come to a standstill. Medina announced that the DR would work to identify new markets and grow those already established in Puerto Rico and Venezuela. The head of the Dominican Association of Egg Producers said that thousands of poultry farm workers, who he identified as Haitians, would have to be fired. Casimir said Haiti wanted to find a way to reopen trade, while Medina said he could not wait and would have to take \"drastic measures\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nPresidents Michel Martelly of Haiti and Medina of the DR discussed their differences on 30 June during a meeting of the Petrocaribe oil alliance nations in Nicaragua. Medina said that Martelly admitted there were no problems with the quality of eggs and chickens from the Dominican Republic and that the ban had been imposed as a matter of economic policy based on Haiti's difficulty in collecting tax revenues associated with the imports. The import ban remained in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nOn July 19, the Haitian government prohibited the importation of plastics from the Dominican Republic, arguing that they were not of good quality and that Haiti needed to reduce pollution caused by plastic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nOn September 23, 2013, the Dominican Republic Constitutional Court ruled that children born to non-citizens in the Dominican Republic after 1929 are not and have never been citizens of the Dominican Republic. Since 2010 the DR constitution has denied citizenship to any non-citizen born \"in transit\", but the court extended that language to cover any undocumented person resident in the DR and their descendants. The ruling affects 458,233 Haitian workers living in the Dominican Republic and it can leave more than 200,000 people stateless. One analysis reported that the court decision created the fifth largest groups of stateless people in the world. A group of writers who protested the ruling compared its impact to apartheid and said it represented \"the reinstating of the old racism that many have fought against\". They described its impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nDominicans born after 1929 to parents who are not of Dominican ancestry are to have their citizenship revoked. The ruling affects an estimated 250,000 Dominican people of Haitian descent, including many who have had no personal connection with Haiti for several generations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nThe government of the DR said the decision would allow for the proper documentation of non-citizens and allow the government to establish clearly their means of becoming legal residents of the DR. Advocates for the stateless criticized the DR's procedures as inadequate and ill-suited to an impoverished rural population that lacked the required birth registration records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nOn October 1, Haiti recalled its ambassador from the Dominican Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232956-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Dominican Republic\u2013Haiti diplomatic crisis\nThe Dominican government's acceptance of implementation of the court ruling was harshly criticized by NGO human rights offices, by 15 countries in the Caribbean Community (Caricom) and by the United Nations. Amnesty International said the DR had \"effectively wiped four generations of Dominicans off the map\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship was contested by senior Gaelic football clubs under the auspices of Donegal GAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship\nBrian McEniff managed R\u00e9alt na Mara in the competition, taking over from Joe Keeney after his resignation and filling the position in his 71st year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Format\nThe old format, which involved a two-legged first round, was scrapped in favour of an opening round containing four groups of four teams played out as a league and one team relegated. Two of the four teams in each group advanced to the quarter-finals after each have played the others once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Format\nTeams finishing bottom of their group played two relegation semi-finals. The losing relegation semi-final teams met in the relegation final. The losing team was relegated to the Donegal Intermediate Football Championship to be replaced either by the Intermediate Championship winning team or the team finishing seventh in the All-County League Division Two. The match schedule was released in March 2013 and matches began over the June Bank Holiday weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Format\nDonegal captain Michael Murphy begged the Donegal County Board to reconsider the scheduling of the Donegal Senior Football Championship as his team set out to defend the Sam Maguire Cup. Murphy described it as \"probably not ideal from our situation\" and despaired over \"the hand we're dealt with\" but said he would \"like them to look after us in that way\". They didn't.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Draw\nThe draw for the first round, made at the RT\u00c9 Raidi\u00f3 na Gaeltachta studios in Derrybeg in February 2013, produced a \"group of death\" with only two from Glenwilly, St Michael's and Cill Chartha progressing to the quarter-finals. The 2012 finalists St Eunan's and Naomh Conaill were also placed in the same group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Results, Group stage\nFour Masters, St Michael's and Naomh Conaill, considered \"big guns\", failed to progress from their respective groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Results, Knock-out stage, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals took place on RT\u00c9 Raidi\u00f3 na Gaeltachta on 9 July upon the completion of the group stage. All four group winners from the first round were defeated at the quarter-final stage, including defending champions St Eunan's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 83], "content_span": [84, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Results, Knock-out stage, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was made in Letterkenny on 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232957-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, Results, Knock-out stage, Final\nAhead of the final Glenswilly player and Donegal captain Michael Murphy was named Ireland captain for the 2013 International Rules Series, creating a dilemma for the young pup and giving the Donegal County Board a headache due a fixture clash. The Donegal County Board ultimately decided not to move the final. Murphy did not captain Glenswilly - this honour fell to James Pat McDaid. S\u00e9amus Coleman attended the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 74], "content_span": [75, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232958-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal county football team season\nThe 2013 Donegal county football team season was the franchise's 109th season since the County Board's foundation in 1905. The team entered the season as defending All-Ireland champions after winning Sam Maguire MMXII.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232958-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal county football team season\nJim McGuinness returned for his third season as the team's manager. Pioneer of the game's revolutionary tactic The System, he entered the season with two Ulster titles (2011, 2012). Attempting to secure an unprecedented three-in-a-row this season, his men came undone in the final game of the series against Monaghan. Two games later they lost their All-Ireland crown against Mayo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232958-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Donegal county football team season, Panel\nThe following were called into the senior panel for the 2013 Dr McKenna Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election\nAn election to Dorset County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the United Kingdom local elections. 45 councillors were elected from 42 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 the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in Bournemouth or Poole, which are unitary authorities outside the area covered by the County Council. The election saw the Conservative Party maintain overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors could not vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election, Summary\nThe election saw the Conservatives maintain overall control of the council with a majority of 4 seats, a reduction of 1 seat. The Liberal Democrat group retained their status as the council's official opposition despite being reduced to 12 seats, down 4 seats. The Labour Party were the biggest winners, making their debut appearance in county hall with 5 seats. It was also the first time a UKIP candidate had been elected to the council. The council's only independent councillor lost his seat. No other parties achieved electoral representation on the council, though the Green Party did contest the election in a number of divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election, By-elections between 2013 and 2017, Rodwell\nA by-election was held for the Rodwell ward of Dorset County Council on 12 November 2015 following the resignation of Labour councillor Dan Brember due to work commitments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election, By-elections between 2013 and 2017, Sherborne Rural\nA by-election was held for the Sherborne Rural division of Dorset County Council on 2 June 2016 following the resignation of Conservative councillor Michael Bevan for health and family reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election, By-elections between 2013 and 2017, Ferndown\nA by-election was held for the Ferndown division of Dorset County Council on 1 September 2016 following the death of Conservative councillor John Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232959-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dorset County Council election, By-elections between 2013 and 2017, Ferndown\nAnother by-election was held for the Ferndown division of Dorset County Council on 1 December 2016 following the resignation of UKIP councillor Ian Michael Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232960-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dothan Pro Tennis Classic\nThe 2013 Dothan Pro Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the thirteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Dothan, Alabama, United States, on April 15\u201321, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232960-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dothan Pro Tennis Classic, 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-00232961-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dothan Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nEugenie Bouchard and Jessica Pegula were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Bouchard chose not to participate in 2013. Pegula partnered up with Emily Harman, but lost in the quarterfinals to Irina Falconi and Maria Sanchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232961-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dothan Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nJulia Cohen and Tatjana Maria won the title, defeating Falconi and Sanchez in the final, 6\u20134, 4\u20136, [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232962-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dothan Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nCamila Giorgi was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232962-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dothan Pro Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nAjla Tomljanovi\u0107 won the title, defeating Zhang Shuai in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232963-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic\nThe 2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the nineteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $100,000 in prize money. It took place in Midland, Michigan, United States, on February 4\u201310, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232963-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic, Women's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232963-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic, Women's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232964-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nAndrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 were the defending champions but chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232964-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nMelinda Czink and Mirjana Lu\u010di\u0107-Baroni won the title, defeating Maria Fernanda Alves and Samantha Murray in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20134, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232965-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nOlga Govortsova was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232965-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dow Corning Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nLauren Davis won the title, defeating Ajla Tomljanovi\u0107 in the final, 6\u20133, 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season\nThe following is a summary of Down county football team's 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season, Dr McKenna Cup\nDown made a strong start to their 2013 campaign with McKenna Cup group victories over Cavan and neighbouring county Armagh. Queens University withdrew from the competition over a row regarding player availability and the fixture was simply written off. Down progressed into the latter stages of the McKenna Cup but fell sort of a place in the final at the hands of Monaghan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season, National Football League Division 1\nDown looked deserving relegation favourites in the National Football League Division 1, as they lost their first 3 games, two of which were at home. Down looked close to beating Cork at home but fell to a very late goal. A comeback looked on the cards as Down went out and beat Mayo at P\u00e1irc Esler, however defeats to Kerry and Dublin sealed Down's fate and relegation was a certainty despite an impressive 3\u201313 to 1-12 hammering of Kildare in Newry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season, National Football League Division 1, Table\nCompete in Division 1 semi-finals\u00a0\u00a0Automatic relegation to Division 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season, Ulster Senior Football Championship, Fixtures\nThe draw for the 2013 Ulster Senior Football Championship took place on 4 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season, Ulster Senior Football Championship, Fixtures\nHaving got to the 2012 Ulster final, Down started their Cup run away to Derry at Celtic Park. In what was regarded as one of the games of the summer, Down came out victors having been 5 points down at half time. The semi final paired last year's finalists again in what would be a closely fought affair. Donegal maintained a 2-point lead throughout the match and eventually won 12 points to 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season, All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nDown entered the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in the round 2 qualifier stage. The draw for the second round took place on Monday 1 July 2013 and once again had Down travelling to Celtic Park, Derry. Down produced a poor display in this repeat fixture as they failed to score from open play in the entire second half and lost the game by 5 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232966-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Down county football team season, O'Fiaich Cup\nOn 27 November 2013, it was announced that the O'Fiaich Cup would return for the first time since the late 1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232967-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dr McKenna Cup\nThe 2013 Dr McKenna Cup was a Gaelic football competition played under the auspices of Ulster GAA. The tournament features the 2012 All-Ireland Champions, Donegal, whose first game (away against Fermanagh) was put back for several days due to Donegal's team holiday in Dubai. Ahead of the tournament Queen's announced they were quitting in a controversy over their players being poached by other teams, though Ulster Council President Aogan Farrell had appealed for this practice to stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232967-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dr McKenna Cup, Format, Later rounds\nThe semi-finals were contested by Monaghan, Fermanagh, Down and Tyrone. Monaghan defeated Down, while Tyrone defeated Fermanagh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232967-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dr McKenna Cup, Format, Later rounds\nTyrone beat Monaghan in the final, held at Armagh's Athletic Grounds on 26 January 2013. Ronan McNally was shown a straight red card on the stroke of half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232968-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Drake Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Drake Bulldogs football team represented Drake University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by sixth-year head coach Chris Creighton and played their home games at Drake Stadium. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 6\u20135, 5\u20133 in PFL play to finish in a tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232968-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Drake Bulldogs football team\nAt the end of the season, head coach Chris Creighton resigned to become the head coach at Eastern Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232969-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Drentse 8 van Dwingeloo\nThe 2013 Drentse 8 van Dwingeloo was the 7th running of the women's Drentse 8 van Dwingeloo, a women's bicycle race in the Netherlands. It was held on 7 March 2013 over a distance of 141.2 kilometres (87.7 miles), starting and finishing in Dwingeloo. It was rated by the UCI as a 1.2 category race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232970-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Duty Free Darts Masters\nThe 2013 Dubai Duty Free Darts Masters was the inaugural staging of the tournament by the Professional Darts Corporation, as a first entry in the new World Series of Darts. The tournament featured the top 8 players according to the Order of Merit, competing in a knockout system. The tournament was held at the Dubai Tennis Centre in Dubai over 23\u201324 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232970-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Duty Free Darts Masters\nMichael van Gerwen won the title, defeating fellow Dutchman Raymond van Barneveld 11\u20137 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232970-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Duty Free Darts Masters, Qualifiers\nThe top eight on the PDC Order of Merit after the 2013 World Championship qualified for the event, with the top 4 seeded. These were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232970-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Duty Free Darts Masters, Broadcasting\nThis event was shown live in the United Kingdom and Europe by Eurosport", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232971-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Sevens\nThe 2013 Dubai Sevens was the second tournament within the 2013-2014 Sevens World Series. It was held over the weekend of 29\u201330 November 2013 at The Sevens Stadium in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232971-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Sevens, Format\nThe teams were drawn into four pools of four teams each. Each team played everyone in their pool one time. 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, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232971-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Sevens, Teams\nThe participating teams and schedule were announced on 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232972-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Dubai Tennis Championships (also known as the 2013 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships for sponsorship reasons) was a 500 event on the 2013 ATP World Tour and a Premier event on the 2013 WTA Tour. Both of the events took place at the Aviation Club Tennis Centre in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The women's tournament took place February 18 to 23, while the men's tournament took place from February 25 to March 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232972-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232972-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232972-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232972-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232973-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Rohan Bopanna were the defending champions but decided not to participate together. Bopanna played alongside Rajeev Ram, while Bhupathi partnered up with Micha\u00ebl Llodra. The two teams met in the semifinals, with Bhupathi and Llodra winning. Bhupathi and Llodra went on to win the title, defeating Robert Lindstedt and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232974-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but was eliminated by Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych in the semifinals. Novak Djokovic won the title, defeating Berdych in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232975-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions but chose not to participate together. Huber played with Hsieh Su-wei, but lost in the first round to Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Sania Mirza. Raymond played alongside Samantha Stosur but lost in the quarterfinals to Cara Black and Anastasia Rodionova. Mattek-Sands and Mirza won the title, defeating Nadia Petrova and Katarina Srebotnik in the final, 6\u20134, 2\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232976-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nAgnieszka Radwa\u0144ska was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Petra Kvitov\u00e1. Kvitov\u00e1 went on to win the title, defeating Sara Errani in the final, 6\u20132, 1\u20136, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232976-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232977-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Women's Sevens\nThe 2013 Dubai Sevens was the first tournament within the 2013-14 Sevens World Series. It was held over the weekend of 28\u201329 November 2013 at The Sevens Stadium in Dubai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232977-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Women's Sevens, Format\nThe teams were drawn into three pools of four teams each. Each team played everyone in their pool one time. The top two teams from each pool advanced to the Cup/Plate brackets while the top 2 third place teams will also compete in the Cup/Plate. The rest of the teams from each group went to the Bowl brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232977-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai Women's Sevens, Teams\nThe participating teams and schedule were announced on 23 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232978-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai World Cup\nThe 2013 Dubai World Cup was a horse race held at Meydan Racecourse on Saturday 30 March 2013. It was the 18th running of the Dubai World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232978-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai World Cup\nThe winner was Team Valor, Arrowfield Stud & Darley Stud's Animal Kingdom, a five-year-old chestnut entire horse trained in the United States by Graham Motion and ridden by Joel Rosario. Animal Kingdom's victory was the first in the race for his jockey, trainer and owners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232978-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dubai World Cup\nAnimal Kingdom had been the American Champion Three-Year-Old Male Horse in 2011 when his wins included the Kentucky Derby but injury problems restricted him to only five races in almost twenty-three months before he competed in Dubai. In the World Cup he started the 11/2 third favourite and won by two lengths and four and three quarter lengths from the British-trained challengers Red Cadeaux and Planteur. The 5/2 favourite Hunter's Light finished seventh of the twelve runners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232979-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Dublin Senior Football Championship was the top club championship competition on the Dublin GAA calendar for 2013. The championship was changed since 2012, with a backdoor system no longer in place, meaning that the championship was played on a knockout basis. All teams knocked out in the first round of the Dublin championship were entered into a new Dublin Senior B Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232979-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Football Championship, Round one\nThe first round tie between Raheny and Naomh Maur finished on a draw after extra time and therefore the 16th team in the second round was to be decided with a replay. The shock of the round was a victory for Dublin minnows Ballinteer St. John's against a strong Oliver Plunketts Eoghan Ruadh side. Raheny defeated Naomh Maur in the first round replay at Parnell Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232979-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Football Championship, Round two\nThe following teams qualified for the last 16 of the Dublin Senior Football Championship: St. Jude's, Parnell's, Ballyboden St. Enda's, Fingal Ravens, Templeogue Synge Street, Thomas Davis, UCD, St. Vincent's, Ballinteer St. John's, St. Sylvester's, Na Fianna, Kilmacud Crokes, Ballymun Kickhams, St. Brigid's, Raheny and Erin's Isle. * All winning teams from the second round progressed to the quarter finals of the Dublin championship and the losing sides will return in the 2014 Dublin Senior Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232979-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Football Championship, Quarter-finals\nSt. Vincent's, St. Jude's, St. Brigid's, Raheny, St. Sylvester's, Ballyboden St. Enda's and Ballymun Kickhams all qualified for the quarter finals of the Dublin championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232979-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Football Championship, Senior B Championship, First round\nThe eight winning teams in the first round progress to the second round of the senior B championship. The eight losers must enter a relegation championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232979-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Football Championship, Relegation Championship\nThe relegation championship is the opposite of the usual format of a championship. The winner of each game leaves the competition when they lose their game, the losers go on to the next stage. The team that loses all their games will get relegated if the Dublin Intermediate champions are a non senior championship club. The relegation championship was cancelled as St. Mark's opted to be relegated and rebuild their team in the Dublin Intermediate Football Championship in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232980-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship is the 124th staging of the Dublin Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1887. The championship is scheduled to end on 10 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232980-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship\nKilmacud Crokes were the defending champions, however, they were defeated in the quarter-final stage. Lucan Sarsfields and Ballyboden St. Enda's will contest the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232981-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Duke Blue Devils football team\nThe 2013 Duke Blue Devils football team represented Duke University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) in the Coastal Division.. The team was led by head coach David Cutcliffe, in his sixth year, and played its home games at Wallace Wade Stadium in Durham, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232981-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Duke Blue Devils football team\nThe 2013 season was one of the best for Duke in its 125-year history. The Blue Devils finished the regular season with a 10\u20132 record and the most wins in team history. They also won their first ACC Coastal Division title and a berth in the 2013 ACC Championship Game against Florida State. Duke lost to Florida State, 45\u20137, and earned a bid to the 2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl against Texas A&M, where they were defeated 52\u201348.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232982-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dundalk F.C. season\nDundalk entered the 2013 season having spent the 2012 season rooted in the relegation play-off spot. The club had been put up for sale, and, with the assistance of a Supporters Trust, it was taken over by local businessmen Andy Connolly and Paul Brown (owners of the team's official sponsors, Fastfix). They subsequently managed to remain in the top-flight by winning a promotion/relegation play-off. With the takeover complete and the club saved, the new owners turned to Stephen Kenny - out of work since being sacked by Shamrock Rovers - to become the new manager ahead of the season. 2013 was Dundalk's fifth consecutive season in the top tier of Irish football, their 78th in all, and their 87th in the League of Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232982-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dundalk F.C. season, Season summary\nWhen the 33 round League programme commenced on 8 March 2013, neither supporters nor pundits were sure what to expect, and Dundalk failed to win any of the first five home matches. But with Kenny's team clicking into gear as his ideas took hold, they rose up the table to mount an unexpected title challenge, eventually finishing second - a defeat to eventual champions St. Patrick's Athletic ultimately costing them the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232982-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dundalk F.C. season, Season summary\nIn the cup competitions, they exited in both the second round of the League Cup, and the quarter-final of the Leinster Senior Cup, to Shamrock Rovers. They reached the semi-final of the FAI Cup and were defeated 1\u20130 away to 'Louth Derby' rivals, Drogheda United, in a tempestuous game - referee Anthony Buttimer sent off two Dundalk players inside half an hour, and Drogheda took the lead from the penalty spot after the second red card. But the nine men of Dundalk prevented Drogheda scoring again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232983-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunedin mayoral election\nThe 2013 Dunedin mayoral election was held on Saturday, 12 October 2013 and was conducted under the single transferable voting system. Dave Cull, Dunedin's 57th mayor, was re-elected after seeing off eight challengers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232983-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunedin mayoral election, Candidates\nFirst-term incumbent Dave Cull was the first to enter the contest, announcing his candidature in January 2013. He faced eight challengers, including one sitting councillor and one former Member of Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232983-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunedin mayoral election, Candidates\nCouncillor Lee Vandervis, who placed third in the previous local body elections, announced on 21 May that he would contest his fourth mayoralty; he had stood in every mayoral election since 2004. Aside from Cull, Vandervis was the only current councillor seeking the mayoralty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232983-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunedin mayoral election, Candidates\nFor the first time, the Green Party stood a candidate for the Dunedin mayoralty. Although former mayor Sukhi Turner was a member of the Green Party, she did not run for mayor on the party ticket. Broadcaster Aaron Hawkins was confirmed by the Green Party on 24 May as their candidate. Hawkins contested the 2010 mayoralty as an independent, when he came fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232983-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunedin mayoral election, Candidates\nFormer ACT Member of Parliament Hilary Calvert declared her candidacy, as an independent. She also contested a seat on the City Council. Former United Future candidate and blogger Pete George also declared an independent bid for the mayoralty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232983-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunedin mayoral election, Candidates\nThe other mayoral candidates were two 2010 mayoral hopefuls Olivier Lequeux and Kevin Dwyer, as well as Steve McGregor and Andrew Whiley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232983-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunedin mayoral election, Results\nCull was re-elected, beating Calvert and Vandervis to second and third place. Both Calvert and Vandervis were elected to Council, as were fourth-placed Aaron Hawkins and fifth-placed Andrew Whiley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election\nThe Dunfermline by-election, 2013 is a by-election that was held for the Scottish Parliament constituency of Dunfermline on 24 October 2013. It followed the resignation of its MSP, Bill Walker after he was convicted of 23 charges of assault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election\nIt was won by Cara Hilton of the Labour Party, gaining the seat from the SNP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Background\nBill Walker was elected as a SNP candidate in the 2011 election. In March 2012 a Scottish newspaper, the Sunday Herald, claimed that his first three marriages had ended with allegations of violent behaviour towards his wives. The SNP suspended Walker in March, and then expelled him in April, for allegedly not declaring similar claims cited in uncontested divorce proceedings during their MSP vetting process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Background\nOn 22 August 2013, Walker was convicted of 23 offences of assault and one of breach of the peace in relation to three ex-wives and a stepdaughter, and sentencing was set for 20 September. The maximum sentence he could receive was 12 months, but only a longer sentence would see him automatically expelled from Parliament. This led to considerable political and media discussion about the situation; a majority of MSPs backed a motion calling on him to resign. As a result, Walker resigned on 7 September 2013. He was subsequently jailed for 12 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nOn 9 September, 22-year-old local resident James Reekie announced that he would stand as the Scottish Conservative candidate. He centred his campaign around job creation and regeneration of Dunfermline city centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nThe SNP announced Shirley-Anne Somerville as their candidate on 16 September 2013, having chosen her from a shortlist of two, defeating Fife councillor Karen Marjoram. At the time she was director of communities at Yes Scotland, the campaign group supporting Scottish independence in the 2014 Scottish independence referendum . Somerville failed to win a seat in the 2007 Scottish Parliament election, but was appointed as a Regional List MSP for the Lothians later in 2007 (following the resignation of another SNP MSP) and served until the 2011 election. Somerville and SNP party leader Alex Salmond apologised for Walker's tenure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nOn 15 September 2013 Labour selected Cara Hilton, a councillor for Dunfermline South ward on Fife Council since May 2012. She defeated Fiona Yates and Fife councillor Lesley Laird, Labour having chosen an all-woman shortlist to improve the gender balance in the Scottish Parliament. Hilton is the daughter of former Labour MSP Cathy Peattie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nOn 17 September, it was announced that UKIP would field Peter Adams, who lives in Fife and was treasurer of Kirkcaldy West Community Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nThe Liberal Democrats chose Susan Leslie as their candidate on 18 September, a university lecturer and a councillor on Fife Council for the Burntisland, Kinghorn, Auchtertool and Western Kirkcaldy ward, a seat she retained in the 2012 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nThe Scottish Greens chose Zara Kitson, a 27-year-old pro-independence campaigner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nJohn Black, the leader of the Scottish Jacobite Party, was nominated as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates\nNominations closed on 23 September, with no further candidates nominated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates, UKIP controversy\nAdams was an elected member of the NHS Fife Board when he submitted his nomination, despite some interpretations of guidance being taken to mean board members cannot stand as candidates from the Scottish Parliament unless they resign. However, UKIP noted other guidance reading: \"An elected member vacates office on becoming \u2026 (d) a member of the Scottish Parliament ...", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Candidates, UKIP controversy\nAs a result, it will not be necessary for such members who wish to stand for election to resign prior to doing so, but if they are elected, they will automatically and immediately cease to be a member of the NHS board.\" However, Adams resigned his board position after the issue came to light, and NHS Fife intended to reconvene meetings attended by Adams after his nomination. No complaint was registered with Police Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Election campaign\nA live debate between the SNP, Labour, Conservative, and Liberal Democrat candidates was aired by STV's Scotland Tonight programme on 14 October 2013. The debate drew \"online criticism\" for the absence of the Scottish Green Party's candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Election campaign\nThe SNP, Labour, Conservative, Liberal Democrat, UKIP, and Scottish Green candidates took part in a televised debate on Newsnight Scotland on 21 October 2013, hosted by Gary Robertson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Result\nLabour's Cara Hilton was elected, defeating the SNP's Shirley-Anne Somerville with a majority 2,800 votes (11.9%), overturning a previous SNP majority of 590 on a 6.9% swing. This was the first time ever that Labour had won a parliamentary seat from the SNP at a by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, Result\nIn her victory speech, Hilton praised the courage of preceding MSP Bill Walker's ex-wives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232984-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunfermline by-election, 2016 election\nLabour's Cara Hilton stood for re-election in the 2016 election, however was ousted by Shirley-Anne Somerville, the SNP candidate whom she had previously defeated in the by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232985-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop V8 Supercar Series\nThe 2013 Dunlop Series was an Australian motor racing competition for V8 Supercars. It was the fourteenth running of a V8 Supercar Development Series, with all rounds held in support of 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232985-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop V8 Supercar Series\nThe introduction of the \"New Generation V8 Supercar\" regulations to the V8 Supercar Championship resulted in a number of rule changes which affected the Dunlop Series. Teams were only allowed to compete with one model of the cars raced in V8 Supercars. All teams competing with Fords upgraded to the FG Falcon, whilst the Holden teams continued to use the VE Commodore. With all V8 Supercar teams building brand-new chassis for the 2013 season to comply with the New Generation V8 Supercar regulations, many of the cars they used in the 2012 Supercars Championship were sold to Dunlop Series teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232985-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop V8 Supercar Series\nDale Wood won the 2013 series driving a Ford FG Falcon for MW Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232985-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop V8 Supercar Series, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers competed in the 2013 Dunlop Series:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232985-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop V8 Supercar Series, Calendar\nThe 2013 Dunlop Series comprised nineteen races within seven rounds at seven circuits, all in support of the International V8 Supercars Championship. The calendar remains unchanged from the 2012 season, with only the Winton event being brought forward, reflecting the change in the V8 Supercar Championship calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232985-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop V8 Supercar Series, Points system\nPoints were awarded to the driver of a car that had completed 75% of the race distance and was running at the completion of the final lap. Two different points scales were applied to rounds having two or three races to ensure that a driver would be awarded 300 points for winning all races at any event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232986-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge\nThe 2013 Dunlop World Challenge was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit and the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Toyota, Aichi, Japan, on 18\u201324 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232986-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge, Men's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232986-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge, Men's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232986-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge, Women's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232987-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Men's Doubles\nPhilipp Oswald and Mate Pavi\u0107 were the defending champions, but Oswald chose not to compete. Mate Pavi\u0107 partnered with Marin Draganja, but they lost in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232987-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Men's Doubles\nChase Buchanan and Bla\u017e Rola won the title, defeating Marcus Daniell and Artem Sitak in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232988-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Men's Singles\nMicha\u0142 Przysi\u0119\u017cny was the defending champion but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232988-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Men's Singles\nMatthew Ebden won the title, defeating Y\u016bichi Sugita in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232989-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAshleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players decided not to compete in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232989-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Women's Doubles\nShuko Aoyama and Misaki Doi won the tournament, defeating Eri Hozumi and Makoto Ninomiya in the all-Japanese final, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 2\u20136, [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232990-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Women's Singles\nStefanie V\u00f6gele was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232990-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dunlop World Challenge \u2013 Women's Singles\nLuksika Kumkhum won the tournament, defeating Hiroko Kuwata in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232991-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Duquesne Dukes football team\nThe 2013 Duquesne Dukes Devils football team represented Duquesne University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by ninth year head coach Jerry Schmitt and played their home games at Arthur J. Rooney Athletic Field. They were a member of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 7\u20134, 4\u20132 in NEC play to share the conference title with Sacred Heart. Due to their loss to Sacred Heart, they did not receive the conference's automatic playoff bid and did not receive an at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232992-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup\nThe 2013 Durand Cup was the 126th season of the Durand Cup, the third oldest football tournament in the world, which is a knock-out competition held in India. Air India were the current holders, having beaten Mumbai Tigers 3-2 on penalties after the match ended 0-0 after 120 minutes in the 2012 Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232992-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup\nThe tournament is held from 2 September to 19 September with all matches at the Ambedkar Stadium in New Delhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232992-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup, Quarter-Finals\nThe Quarter-Finals of the Durand Cup shall be played between 12 teams. Four of the teams currently played in 2012\u201313 I-League and four played in the 2013 I-League 2nd Division. The other four spots would have been taken up by the top two teams from the preliminary round plus two services team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232992-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup, Scorers\nAll goals from tournament proper. Goals from qualifiers are not counted in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 24], "content_span": [25, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232993-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup Final\nThe 2013 Durand Cup Final was a football match between Mohammedan and ONGC on 19 September 2013 at Ambedkar Stadium, Delhi. It was the final match of the 2013 Durand Cup, the 126th season of the Durand Cup, a football competition for Indian football system. Mohammedan were appearing in their third final and whereas ONGC were appearing in their first final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232993-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup Final, Route to the final, Mohammedan\nMohammedan entered the Durand Cup at the 2013 Durand Cup Quarter-Finals and was paired in Group A with Army Green FC and Kalighat MS. They played their first match on 12 September 2013 against Army Green FC in which Mohammedan won 4\u20132 with 2 goals from Tolgay \u00d6zbey, one goal each from Collin Abranches and Penn Orji. Then on 14 September 2013 the club played their second match of the tournament against Kalighat MS in which they won 3\u20131 with 2 goals from Ajay Singh and one goal from Penn Orji. That victory managed to push Mohammedan through to the semi-finals in which they faced Mumbai Tigers on 16 September 2013. Mohammedan won the match 3\u20131 with goals from Collin Abranches, Penn Orji and Anthony Soren to move on to the final of the Durand Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232993-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup Final, Route to the final, ONGC\nONGC also entered the Durand Cup via Group Stage. They won their first match on 11 September 2013 against Army Red FC 4\u20131 with 2 goals from Asim Hassan, and one goal each from Henry Ezeh and Parwinder Singh. Then they played their second match on 13 September 2013 against Pune and won 2-1 with 2 goals from Henry Ezeh to qualify for semi finals. In the semi-final ONGC played against Indian Navy on 17 September 2013, beating them 1\u20130 with goal from Henry Ezeh to qualify for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232994-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup Quarter-Finals\nThe group stage features 12 teams: the 10 automatic qualifiers and the 2 winners of the preliminary stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232994-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup Quarter-Finals\nThe teams are drawn into four groups of three, and play each once. The matchdays are between 9 September to 15 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232994-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Durand Cup Quarter-Finals\nThe top teams in each group advanced to the Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232995-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria\nThe 2013 Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria was the twelfth running of the Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria, a women's bicycle race in Spain. It was held on 4 June over a distance of 113.1 kilometres (70.3 miles). It was rated by the UCI as a 1.2 category race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232996-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Durham County Council election\nAn election to Durham County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. Following a boundary review, 126 councillors were elected from 63 electoral divisions which returned either one, two or three councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. The previous election took place in 2008 in advance of the council becoming a unitary authority after the 2009 changes to local government. The election saw the Labour Party increase their majority on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232996-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Durham County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232996-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Durham County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232996-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Durham County Council election, Summary\nThe Statement of Persons Nominated was published on 8 April 2013. In total 362 candidates stood in the election. The Labour Party had the most candidates, with 125 standing out of a possible 126 and only one candidate standing in the two member Weardale electoral division. The Conservative Party stood 59 candidates, the Liberal Democrats 40, the United Kingdom Independence Party 31 and the Green Party 15 candidates. A number of local independent groups stood, including 16 Derwentside Independents and 11 Wear Valley Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232996-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Durham County Council election, Summary\nNine candidates stood for the Free Association for Independent Representation (FAIR) around Peterlee and Ferryhill, and four for the Spennymoor Independents in Spennymoor and Tudhoe. There were 50 other independent candidates, including two candidates with no description. The British National Party stood two candidates, having fielded 30 in the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232996-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Durham County Council election, Summary\nThe Labour Party gained 27 seats, increasing their majority on the council to 62. The Liberal Democrats lost 18 seats compared to the 2008 results, with their representation on the new council limited to the city of Durham and the division of Consett North. The Conservative Party lost six seats, winning only in the two Barnard Castle divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232996-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Durham County Council election, Summary\nTurnout across the county was 27.8%, having fallen from 36.4% in the 2008 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232997-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Durham mayoral election\nThe 2013 Durham mayoral election was held on November 5, 2013 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-00232998-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 Dutch Championships were held in Rotterdam. It was a smaller competition than usual, as it was held after the 2012 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232998-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nMost memorably, Eythora Thorsdottir, who is now a European medallist, won every event but the floor exercise in the Junior competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232998-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThis article about sports in the Netherlands is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00232999-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Basketball Supercup\nThe 2013 Dutch Basketball Supercup was the 3rd edition of the Dutch Basketball Supercup. The game was played between ZZ Leiden, the winner of the 2012\u201313 Dutch Basketball League, and SPM Shoeters Den Bosch, the winner of the 2012\u201313 NBB Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233000-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Darts Masters\nThe 2013 Dutch Darts Masters was the eighth of eight PDC European Tour events on the 2013 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Koningshof Hotel in Veldhoven, Netherlands, between 25\u201327 October 2013. It featured a field of 64 players and \u00a3100,000 in prize money, with \u00a320,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233000-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Darts Masters\nKim Huybrechts won his first European Tour title by defeating Brendan Dolan 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233000-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Darts Masters, Qualification\nThe top 32 players from the on 30 September 2013 automatically qualified for the event. The remaining 32 places went to players from three qualifying events - 20 from the UK Qualifier (held in Dublin on 4 October), eight from the European Qualifier and four from the Host Nation Qualifier (both held at the venue in Veldhoven on 24 October).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233000-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Darts Masters, Qualification\nRobert Thornton withdrew from the event the day before it started due to personal reasons and was replaced by an additional European Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233001-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch National Road Race Championships \u2013 Women's road race\nThe Women's road race of the 2013 Dutch National Road Race Championships cycling event took place on 22 June 2013 in and around Kerkrade in the province Limburg, the Netherlands. The race consisted of 13 laps of 8.8\u00a0km making a total distance of 114.4\u00a0km. 28 of the 133 women's finished the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233001-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch National Road Race Championships \u2013 Women's road race\nLucinda Brand (Rabobank\u2013Liv Giant) rode away from the bunch in the second lap. After losing many riders in the chasing group due to many attacks of the other Rabobank\u2013Liv Giant riders, only the Specialized\u2013lululemon rider Ellen van Dijk, Argos-Shimano rider Amy Pieters and two Rabobank\u2013Liv Giant riders Marianne Vos and Annemiek van Vleuten were together in the front. With a few laps to go also Pieters could not keep up the pace. Despite the fact that Van Dijk rode really strong in the chasing group, she had to abandon the race due to a broken derailleur in the second last lap. From then on Vos and Van Vleuten stopped chasing and so Brand won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233002-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch National Time Trial Championships \u2013 Women's time trial\nThe Women's time trial of the 2013 Dutch National Time Trial Championships (NK tijdrijden) cycling took place in and around Winsum, nearby the city Groningen, in the Netherlands on 19 June 2013. Winsum got the event due to the success of the 2012 Energiewacht Tour. The individual time trial at the 2013 Energiewacht Tour took place on the same course. Ellen van Dijk was the defending champion, who won the national title at the 2012 Dutch National Time Trial Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233002-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch National Time Trial Championships \u2013 Women's time trial\nEllen van Dijk won the time trial in a time of 33\u2019 56\", 39 seconds ahead of Loes Gunnewijk and 61 seconds of Annemiek van Vleuten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233002-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch National Time Trial Championships \u2013 Women's time trial, Preview\nEllen van Dijk, the 2012 Dutch national champion, was the main favourite for the title. She was the best Duch rider in all the 2013 time trials (stage 3a 2013 Energiewacht Tour, 2013 EPZ Omloop van Borsele, prologue and stage 2 2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, GP Leende, 2013 Emakumeen Euskal Bira) and won them almost all. The best Dutch riders in the time trial at the 2013 Energiewacht Tour on the same course behind Van Dijk were Loes Gunnewijk and Kirsten Wild. One of the other favourites was Annemiek van Vleuten, the runner up of the 2012 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 74], "content_span": [75, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233002-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch National Time Trial Championships \u2013 Women's time trial, Schedule\nWednesday 19 June10:30 First block of 20 cyclists11:30 Second block of 20 cyclists12:45 Victory Ceremony", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 75], "content_span": [76, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233003-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch Open Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Dutch Open Grand Prix was the thirtieth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Topsportcentrum, Almere, Netherlands October 8 until October 13, 2013 and had a total purse of $50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT\nThe 2013 Dutch TT was the seventh round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the TT Circuit Assen in Assen on 29 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nThis race was most notable for Valentino Rossi's comeback ride to win the race and Jorge Lorenzo's excellent ride to fifth place after a heavy crash in one of the free practice sessions where he badly injured his left collarbone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn Thursday, reigning world champion Jorge Lorenzo crashed heavily during free practice in wet conditions and fractured his left collarbone as a result. After surgery he was able to take part in the race on Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nAfter six rounds, Dani Pedrosa narrowly leads the title hunt with 123 points. Close second is Jorge Lorenzo with 116 and further back is rookie Marc M\u00e1rquez with 93 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn Friday, Cal Crutchlow scored his first ever pole position with a time of 1:34.398. +0.357 seconds behind is Marc M\u00e1rquez in second and +0.480 seconds behind is Stefan Bradl. The second row of the grid consists out of Valentino Rossi in fourth, Dani Pedrosa in fifth and Bradley Smith in sixth place. Iv\u00e1n Silva replaces Hiroshi Aoyama who is still recovering from a crash in free practice on the Saturday of the Catalan round, losing a part of his finger as a result. Michele Pirro also replaces Ben Spies who is still recovering from chest pains which caused him to miss multiple races since the Americas race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, 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, Pedrosa has the best start and manages to get up into first place entering the Haarbocht (Turn 1). Close behind him is Bradl who managed to jump M\u00e1rquez and go up into second. Third is the Spaniard as he has to fight off Rossi in fourth. Crutchlow gets a bogged down start and has to settle for fifth position. Behind him is teammate Smith in sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nAt Strubben (Turn 5), M\u00e1rquez goes up the inside of Bradl and takes second. Further back, Nicky Hayden gets passed by Aleix Espargar\u00f3 who takes a tighter line at Ossebroeken (Turn 4) for seventh spot. Lorenzo then uses the opportunity to quickly move past the American on the outside of Strubben as well for eighth place on the opening lap. Rossi has a look up the inside of Bradl at De Bult (Turn 9) but isn't able to get past. Before De Bult, Lorenzo has already overtaken Espargar\u00f3 and is now up into seventh position. At the entrance of the Geert Timmer Bocht (Turn 16), Rossi dives down the inside of Bradl and manages to take third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap two, Lorenzo makes a lunge up the inside of Smith at the end of start/finish straight to pass the Briton for sixth position entering the Haarbocht. Entering Strubben, Crutchlow takes a tight line and goes side-by-side upon exit but managing to take fourth from Bradl. Espargar\u00f3 also takes a shorter line at the hairpin and overtakes Smith for seventh spot. At the Veenslang (Turn 6), Smith retakes seventh from the Spaniard however. The fighting between Bradl and Crutchlow has allowed Lorenzo to close up to them significantly. At the straight before Stekkenwal (Turn Turn 8), Espargar\u00f3 has retaken seventh place from Smith again. Lorenzo goes up the inside of Bradl at De Bult, promoting him up to fifth place. Pedrosa's gap back to M\u00e1rquez is +0.649 in sector three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap three and Rossi sets the fastest lap of the race. Pedrosa's gap back to M\u00e1rquez is +0.565 seconds at the start/finish straight, increasing to +0.733 seconds in sector one. In sector two, the gap decreases to +0.630 before decreasing again to +0.708 seconds in sector three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap four, the gap Pedrosa has to M\u00e1rquez has decreased to +0.491 seconds at the start/finish straight. Rossi closes up to second place M\u00e1rquez as Crutchlow sets the fastest lap. In sector one, the gap increases to +0.698 seconds as Lorenzo also closes up on Crutchlow in fourth. The gap decreases slightly to +0.659 seconds in sector two. At the run up to Duikersloot (Turn 11), Crutchlow goes a bit wide and Lorenzo makes good use of this by taking a shorter line an passing the Briton for fourth position. In sector three, the gap increases again to +0.876 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap five and Rossi dives down the inside of M\u00e1rquez entering Haarbocht, taking second from him as the fans in the main grandstands cheer him on. Rossi is now opening a gap in pursuit of Pedrosa, Lorenzo doing likewise on Crutchlow to chase down M\u00e1rquez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap six, Rossi sets the fastest lap of the race. Pedrosa's gap at the start/finish straight was +0.405 seconds, decreasing to +0.339 seconds in sector one, dropping again to +0.288 seconds in sector two. In sector three, the gap diminishes again slightly to +0.227 seconds. At the Geert Timmer Bocht, Rossi goes up the inside of Pedrosa and takes over the lead of the race at the exit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap seven and Rossi now leads the race for the first time. The top six is as follows: Rossi, Pedrosa, M\u00e1rquez, Lorenzo, Crutchlow and Bradl. M\u00e1rquez's gap back to Lorenzo is +0.824 seconds at the start/finish straight, decreasing to +0.717 seconds in sector one. It decreases again to +0.688 seconds in sector two and in sector three it drops once more to +0.546 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap eight, M\u00e1rquez's gap back to Lorenzo increases to +0.754 seconds at the start/finish straight. At the entrance to De Bult, M\u00e1rquez has a moment trying to stop his bike but doesn't lose any significant time over it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap nine and Pedrosa is still relatively close to Rossi in second as third M\u00e1rquez now starts to come under pressure from Lorenzo in fourth. Exiting Strubben, Lorenzo has now fully closed up to M\u00e1rquez and at the short straight before De Bult, he closes up so much that he almost makes a move on his inside at the corner but thinks better of it at the last moment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap ten, Crutchlow's gap back to Bradl is +3.601 seconds and Bradl's gap back to \u00c1lvaro Bautista is +3.867 seconds. No overtakes happen at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap eleven and Rossi starts to open up a gap to Pedrosa. The front is stable for now.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twelve, Lorenzo is now losing ground to M\u00e1rquez as Crutchlow is right behind him also.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap thirteen - the halfway point of the race - and M\u00e1rquez is closing the gap to teammate Pedrosa. Rossi is still out in front as Crutchlow is still right behind Lorenzo. At the Geert Timmer Bocht, he tries a move up the inside but isn't able to pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap fourteen, Rossi's gap back to Pedrosa is +0.372 seconds at the start/finish straight. Crutchlow is still right behind Lorenzo and attempts a move at Strubben but misses the speed to get past as the Spaniard also closes the door on him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap fifteen and Rossi's gap back to Pedrosa is +0.522 seconds at the start/finish straight. In sector one, the gap increased to +0.655 seconds, then decreased to +0.478 seconds in sector two. In sector three, the gap widened again to +0.563 seconds in sector three. At the Geert Timmer Bocht, Crutchlow finally manages to get past by diving down the inside of Lorenzo at the entrance of the chicane, taking fourth as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap sixteen, Rossi's gap back to Pedrosa has decreased slightly to +0.534 seconds at the start/finish line. M\u00e1rquez's gap back to Crutchlow was +1.796 seconds at the start/finish line, decreasing to +1.491 seconds in sector one and increasing to +1.578 in sector two. In sector three, the gap drops again slightly in sector three to +1.451 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap seventeen and M\u00e1rquez's gap back to Crutchlow has increased to +1.655 seconds at the start/finish straight. No overtakes happened at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap eighteen, M\u00e1rquez closes up to Pedrosa. At the end of the Veenslang, M\u00e1rquez carries a lot more speed at the new, quick right-hand kink but runs wide entering the Ruskenhoek, allowing Pedrosa to get back at him exiting the turn. At the Geert Timmer Bocht, M\u00e1rquez makes his move by going up the inside of his teammate and taking second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap nineteen and Rossi's gap back to M\u00e1rquez is +1.044 seconds, showing that he has increased it since the pair were fighting. Crutchlow has also been able to close up as a result. In sector one, the gap has widened to +1.246 but has decreased in sector two, now only being +1.073 seconds. The gap increases again to +1.107 seconds in sector three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty, Rossi increases his gap back to M\u00e1rquez again to +1.149 seconds. Meanwhile, Crutchlow in fourth is also slowly gaining on Pedrosa In sector one, the gap widens to +1.231 seconds. Entering Strubben, Crutchlow dives too deep and goes wide, giving some breathing room to Pedrosa. The gap increases again to +1.326 seconds in sector two, then decreases to +1.252 seconds in sector three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-one and Rossi's gap back to M\u00e1rquez has increased to +1.550 seconds. The gap widens again to +1.707 seconds in sector one, decreasing to +1.660 seconds in sector two. In sector three, the gap increases once more to +1.864 seconds as Crutchlow is right behind Pedrosa. At the Hoge Heide (Turn 13), the Briton is right behind Pedrosa and shadows him throughout the Ramshoek (Turn 15), going side-by-side with him and passing for third spot at the entrance of the Geert Timmer Bocht.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty-two, Rossi's gap back to M\u00e1rquez has decreased slightly to +1.825 seconds at the start/finish straight. Crutchlow is slowly opening up a gap to Pedrosa and is hunting down M\u00e1rquez in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-three and M\u00e1rquez's gap back to Crutchlow was +0.633 seconds at the start/finish straight, decreasing slightly to +0.585 seconds in sector one. In sector two, the gap increased to +0.664 seconds, only to decrease to +0.381 seconds in sector three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty-four, M\u00e1rquez's gap back to Crutchlow increased to +0.462 seconds at the start/finish straight. Crutchlow closes up even further but is not yet able to pass M\u00e1rquez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-five, the penultimate lap, and Crutchlow is still all over the rear of M\u00e1rquez. At Strubben, the Spaniard blocks the inside line, preventing Crutchlow from attempting a move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nRossi crosses the line to start the final lap - lap twenty-six - and Crutchlow has still not been able to pass M\u00e1rquez. Entering the Haarbocht, Crutchlow makes a mistake and almost runs into M\u00e1rquez but just manages to avoid him, ending his hopes for a second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nRossi has no problems throughout the lap, exits the last corner, looks back to see how far back M\u00e1rquez is and as the near entire grandstand stand on their feet to cheer and congratulate him, he raises his arm and crosses the line to win the race - his first and only of the season and the first since the 2010 Malaysian Grand Prix. Behind him is M\u00e1rquez is second and Crutchlow in third place. Fourth is Pedrosa and Lorenzo comes home a superb fifth after struggling with a broken left collarbone only 36 hours earlier. Further back is Bradl who finishes in sixth spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nOn the parade lap back to parc-ferm\u00e9, Rossi waves gleefully at the fans after winning a race in nearly three years. Lorenzo is seen suffering visibly with his left hand as a delighted Rossi shakes hands with M\u00e1rquez while still on the bike. Rossi then raises his arm in the air multiple times as Lorenzo does so once as well. He then rides off the track to some of his fans that invaded the track as many of the fans in the grandstands wave the fluorescent yellow flags with the number 46 on it in pride.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nSome of the fans congratulate him as the photographers also surround him to make photo's. He steps off his bike and one of the fans offers him to sit on his shoulders, which he duly accepts. He lifts him up and walks him over to the grandstand here his fanclub sits. M\u00e1rquez meanwhile calmly waves at the fans, as does Crutchlow. He claps his hands, then instructs the fans to stand up for him, the fans doing so in return. On his to the pit lane, Rossi then gets briefly stopped again by two of his fans before going again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nCrutchlow is the first to arrive at parc-ferm\u00e9, the Briton removing his gloves as he has already stepped off the bike. Rossi is still riding back, throwing his arm in the air as M\u00e1rquez also arrives at parc-ferm\u00e9. As Lorenzo arrives at the pits, he is seen visibly in pain and even cries as he needs help from his team to push the bike back inside. Rossi - still riding back - briefly waves at the crowd, then puts his arm up in the air multiple times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nBy now, M\u00e1rquez takes off his helmet as Rossi finally enters the pits, still with his arm up in the air as a salute to his fans. A happy M\u00e1rquez talks and shakes hands with an equally delighted Crutchlow as Rossi finally arrives at parc-ferm\u00e9, steps off his bike and immediately goes to celebrate with his team. When he's done, he looks at the camera happily, then kisses his number 46 and hugs one of the Factory Yamaha crewmembers. Lorenzo in his garage is still seen struggling as Rossi celebrates with Uccio and other members of his team. Both Rossi and M\u00e1rquez then get interviewed by the media, after that M\u00e1rquez goes and talks with his brother \u00c1lex M\u00e1rquez and the Repsol Honda crewmembers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nAll the riders make their way onto the podium, first one being Crutchlow followed by M\u00e1rquez and a very happy Rossi, the crowd erupting in delight as he steps onto the podium. He symbolically kisses the top step of the podium before stepping onto it. The trophies get handed out: First Arjan Bos, President of the Board of the TT Circuit Assen, hands the constructors trophy out to Jeremy Burgess and Crutchlow. Next up is the second place trophy handed out by Lorenzo Sistino, Iveco brand President, which is handed out to M\u00e1rquez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nHe raises the trophy happily up in the air as the crowd applauds him. Then it is Jacques Tichelaar, the King's commissioner of Drenthe, to present to Rossi the winner's trophy. He accepts the trophy, kisses it and then displays it for everyone to see. The crowd cheers and applauds as he does so, then the Italian national anthem plays for him. After it stops, the champagne gets handed out by the podium girls as Crutchlow immediately sprays Rossi, with Rossi cheekily spraying one of the podium girls instead. M\u00e1rquez sprays Rossi, with 'The Doctor' returning the favour before also spraying it on Crutchlow, then into the crowd before drinking some of it. He toasts with the bottle afterwards with the other two before taking a group photo together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Dutch TT, MotoGP race report\nRossi's victory, M\u00e1rquez's second and Crutchlow's third place has shaken up the championship. Pedrosa still leads the title with 136 points but the gap has now been reduced to 9 points as Lorenzo has been able to close up thanks to his ride to fifth and Pedrosa's fourth position. Lorenzo now sits second with 127 points while M\u00e1rquez closes up to Lorenzo with 113 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233004-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233005-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Dwars door Vlaanderen\nThe 2013 Dwars door Vlaanderen was the 68th edition of the Dwars door Vlaanderen cycle race and was held on 20 March 2013. The race started in Roeselare and finished in Waregem. The race was won by Oscar Gatto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233006-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 E3 Harelbeke\nThe 2013 E3 Harelbeke was the 56th running of the E3 Harelbeke single-day cycling race. It was held on 22 March 2013, over a distance of 211 kilometres (131.1 miles) and was the sixth race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233006-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 E3 Harelbeke\nThe race was won for the third time by RadioShack\u2013Leopard rider Fabian Cancellara, after he made a solo attack with around 35\u00a0km (21.7\u00a0mi) remaining of the race. Second place went to Peter Sagan of the Cannondale team, while third place went to the BMC Racing Team's Daniel Oss; both of those riders finished 64 seconds behind Cancellara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233006-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 E3 Harelbeke, Teams\nAs E3 Harelbeke was a UCI World Tour event, all UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. Originally, eighteen ProTeams were invited to the race, with six other squads given wildcard places, and as such, would have formed the event's 24-team peloton. Team Katusha subsequently regained their ProTour status after an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. With Team Katusha not originally invited to the race, race organisers announced their inclusion to the race, bringing the total number of teams competing to twenty-five. Each of the 25 teams entered eight riders to the race, making up a starting peloton of 200 riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup\nThe 2013 EAFF East Asian Cup was the 5th edition of this regional competition, the football championship of East Asia. Two preliminary competitions were held during 2012. Mongolia were suspended from the EAFF and could not compete in any EAFF competition until March 2014, whilst Australia accepted an invitation to take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Preliminary round 1\nThe first round of the Preliminary Competition was hosted by Guam between 18\u201322 July 2012. The winner of the group advanced to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Preliminary round 2\nThe second round of the preliminary competition was held in Hong Kong between 1 December and 9 December 2012. The winner of the group advanced to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Final tournament, Matches\nThe final stage of the tournament was played in South Korea between 20 and 28 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\nAt the final match between South Korea and Japan on 28 July, South Korean fans booed the start of the Japanese anthem and later upped the political sloganeering with a banner that covered most of the width of one end of the ground that read, in Korean, \"The nation that forgets history has no future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\n\"(Korean: \uc5ed\uc0ac\ub97c \uc78a\uc740 \ubbfc\uc871\uc5d0\uac8c \ubbf8\ub798\ub294 \uc5c6\ub2e4), apparently aiming at the Japanese leaders' reluctance to admit to wrongdoings during its militaristic and colonial past, after they displayed huge pictures of Ahn Jung-geun, who assassinated the first Prime Minister of Japan and then-Japanese Resident-General of Korea It\u014d Hirobumi back in 1909, and Yi Sun-sin, a Korean naval commander who is famed for his victories against the Japanese navy during the Imjin war in the Joseon Dynasty back in the 16th century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\nThe banner was not removed until Korea Football Association (KFA) directed supporters to do so after the first half of the match. After the banner was taken down, \"Red Devils,\" a group of South Korean football supporters, refused to cheer on the national team in the second half. On its Facebook page, the Seoul sector of the Red Devils wrote that its members would not bang drums or chant songs for South Korea in protest of the decision by the KFA to remove the banner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\nKuniya Daini, President of Japan Football Association, said \"We ask the East Asian Football Federation to thoroughly investigate the matter and act in the appropriate fashion,\" and Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the incident was \"extremely regrettable\" and the Japanese government \"will respond appropriately based on FIFA rules when the facts are revealed. \", while KFA said \"We are still investigating the matter. We have no official statement now\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\nJapanese Sports Minister Hakubun Shimomura went further on Tuesday, saying the style of the banners called into question \"the nature of the people\" in South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\nThe South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs then responded with a statement deploring Shimomura's \"rude comments\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\nOn 31 July, KFA issued a statement insisting that Japanese fans waving a large \"rising sun\" Japanese military flag had incited South Korean supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233007-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup, Controversies\nAustralia commitment to the ASEAN Football Federation is questioned due to its participation in this tournament while having not participated in a single edition of the AFF Championship, the top level competition in the sub-confederation Australia which later became a member of in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233008-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup Final squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2013 EAFF East Asian Cup tournament, held in Korea Republic. There were 23 players in each squad, including 3 goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233009-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF East Asian Cup Preliminary Competition Round 2 squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2013 EAFF East Asian Cup Preliminary Competition Round 2 in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233010-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF Women's East Asian Cup\nThe 2013 EAFF Women's East Asian Cup was the fourth edition of EAFF Women's East Asian Cup. There were three competition rounds. The final round was won by North Korea. In August 2012, Australia accepted an invitation to take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233011-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EAFF Women's East Asian Cup Preliminary squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2013 EAFF Women's East Asian Cup tournament, held in South Korea on from 20 to 27 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233012-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EBSA European Under-21 Snooker Championship\nThe 2013 EBSA European Under-21 Snooker Championships was an amateur snooker tournament that took place from 18 March to 22 March 2013 in Bor Serbia It was the 17th edition of the EBSA European Under-21 Snooker Championships and also doubles as a qualification event for the World Snooker Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233012-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 EBSA European Under-21 Snooker Championship\nThe tournament was won by 14th seed James Cahill who defeated fellow Englishman Ashley Carty 6\u20130 in the final, becoming the only player to win the final by a whitewash in the tournaments history. As a result, Cahill was given a two-year card on the professional World Snooker Tour for the 2013/2014 and 2014/2015 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233013-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EC\n2013 EC is a near-Earth asteroid that passed Earth just inside the orbit of the Moon, with its closest approach on March 4, 2013 at 07:35 UTC. 2013 EC was discovered by the Mount Lemmon Observatory in Arizona, United States, on March 2, 2013. Asteroid 2013 EC is estimated to be equal in size to the Chelyabinsk meteor that impacted on February 15, 2013. Its measurement is about 10 to 17 meters (33 to 56\u00a0ft) wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233013-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 EC\n2013 EC was one of four asteroids that passed in the vicinity of Earth during one week in early March 2013. The other asteroids in this group besides 2013 EC, included 2013 ET (2.5 lunar distances), 2013 EC20, and 2013 EN20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233014-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2013 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 8 and March 23, 2013 at campus locations and at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States. Union College was the winner of the tournament for the second year in a row and received the ECAC Hockey's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233014-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament features four rounds of play. In the first round, the fifth and twelfth, sixth and eleventh, seventh and tenth, and eighth and ninth seeds as determined by the final regular season standings play a best-of-three series, with the winner advancing to the quarterfinals. There, the first seed and lowest-ranked first-round winner, the second seed and second-lowest-ranked first-round winner, the third seed and second-highest-ranked first-round winner, and the fourth seed and highest-ranked first-round winner play a best-of-three series, 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 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 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 967]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233014-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Regular season 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, 78], "content_span": [79, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233015-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EMF miniEURO\nThe 2013 EMF miniEuro was the fourth edition of the EMF miniEURO for national Small-sided football teams. It was hosted in Rethymno, Greece, from 10 to 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233015-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 EMF miniEURO\nThe final tournament was contested by 24 teams. The matches were played in one venue in the city of Rethymno, at an especially built stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233015-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 EMF miniEURO\nThe defending champions, Romania, kept their title by overcoming Croatia 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233015-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 EMF miniEURO, Group stage\nIn the group stage, the 24 teams were divided into 6 groups of 4 teams, with each team playing 3 matches. the teams finishing in the top two positions in each of the six groups progressed to the knockout stage, along with the best four third-placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233015-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 EMF miniEURO, Knockout stage\nThe knockout stage matches were played on 12\u201313 October 2013. If a match is drawn after 40 minutes of regular play, a penalty shoot-out is used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233016-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EPZ Omloop van Borsele\nThe 2013 EPZ Omloop van Borsele is the 11th running of the Omloop van Borsele, a women's cycling event in 's-Heerenhoek, the Netherlands. For women's there was an individual time trial over 19.5 kilometres (12.1 miles) on 19 April and a road race over 120 kilometres (74.6 miles) on 20 April 2013. The race was rated by the UCI as 1.2 category race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233016-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 EPZ Omloop van Borsele\nEllen van Dijk won for the second consecutive year the individual time trial. Due to illness Van Dijk did not start in the road race which she also won in the 2012 edition. Vera Koedooder was this year the fastest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233016-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 EPZ Omloop van Borsele, Time trial\nThe individual time trial was held on 19 April over a distance of 19.5 kilometres (12.1 miles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233016-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 EPZ Omloop van Borsele, Road race\nThe road race was held on 20 April over a distance of 120 kilometres (74.6 miles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233017-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ESF Women's Championship\nThe 2013 ESF Women's Championship was an international European softball competition that was held in Prague, Czech Republic from July 7 to July 13, 2013. Prague hosted Championships for the 4th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233018-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ESPY Awards\nThe 2013 ESPY Awards were announced from the Nokia Theatre on July 17, 2013 and were live on ESPN. ESPY Award is short for Excellence in Sports Performance Yearly Award. The awards show was hosted by Jon Hamm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233019-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ET\n2013 ET is a near-Earth asteroid that was first observed on March 3, 2013, six days before its closest approach to Earth. It is estimated to be around 100 meters (330 feet) wide. The orbit of 2001 SY169 has been connected to 2013 ET extending the observation arc to 11 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233019-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ET\nIts closest approach to Earth was 0.0065207\u00a0AU (975,480\u00a0km; 606,140\u00a0mi) on March 9, 2013 at 12:09 UT. The asteroid also makes close approaches to Mars and Venus. The asteroid was imaged by Goldstone radar on March 10, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233019-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ET\n2013 ET was one of four asteroids that passed in the vicinity of Earth during one week in early March 2013. The other asteroids in this group besides 2013 ET, included 2013 EC, 2013 EC20, and 2013 EN20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233020-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EU Cup Australian rules football\nThe 2013 Euro Cup of Australian rules football was a 9-a-side Footy tournament held in Bordeaux, France on September 21, 2013, with 12 national men's teams and two women's teams. The men's tournament was won by England who defeated France in the Grand Final by 77 points. The women's match was won by the European Crusaders who defeated France 45-26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233021-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Cup\nThe 2013 East Africa Cup was the third edition of Cricket Kenya's East Africa Premier League competitions. The competition took place at the Nairobi Club Ground and Simba Union Club Ground 7\u201311 September 2013. It featured several significant changes from the first two editions,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233021-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Cup, Squads\nCollins Obuya (c), Harrison Angila, Boniface Anjere, Irfan Karim (wk), Rajesh Khetiya, Alfred Luseno, David Maina, Martin Mworia, Martin Okoth, Joseph Owino, Kirtan Patel, Henry Rudd, Vishal Shikotra, Subham Patel, Tarandeep Singh, Hiren Varaiya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233021-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Cup, Squads\nRakep Patel (c), Gautam Bhudia, Kavi Dosaja, Gurdeep Singh, Ikreeth Kenth, Peter Kituku, Peter Koech, Maninder Singh, Nikul Patel, Lucas Oluoch, Paresh Gami, Abdul Rehman, Mitesh Sanghani, Paramveer Singh, Abraham Vadada, Dominic Wesonga", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233021-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Cup, Squads\nTanmay Mishra (c), Josephat Ababu, Abdulqadir Najmi, Ibrahim Akello, Nick Oluoch, Hamza Malik (wk), Jimmy Kamande, Karan Kaul, Krutarth Rao, James Ngoche, Alex Obanda, Elijah Otieno, Emmanuel Bund, Willam Rudd, Raj Savala, Waqas Aslam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233021-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Cup, Squads\nMorris Ouma (c), Stephen Biko, Dhiren Gondaria,\tBhargab Goswami, Nadeem Ahmed, Shem Ngoche, Eugene Ochieng, Nelson Odhiambo, Kennedy Owino, Harsh Patel, Narendra Patel, Gagandeep Singh, Gurmanjot Singh, Taaha Sulemanjee, Siddhant Taneja, Bhavya Thaker", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233021-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Cup, Squads\nDavis Arinaitwe (c), Hamza Saleh, Asadu Seiga, Nicholas Kebba, Arthur Kyobe, Deusdedit Muhumuza, Benjamin Musoke, Frank Nsubuga, Faruk Ochimi,\tJackson Ogwang, Richard Okia, Raymond Otim, Danniel Ruyange, Ivan Thawithemwira, Arthur Ziraba", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233021-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Cup, Squads\nLawrence Sematimba (c), Abdulah Lubega, Hamu Bagenda, Fred Isabirye, Jeremy Kibukamusoke, Brian Masaba, Mohammed Akmal, Roger Mukasa, Naeem Bardai, Martin Ondeko, Arnold Otwan, Jonathan Ssebanja, Shamu Mukaaya, Abu Sseguya, Henry Ssenyondo, Charles Waiswa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233022-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Premier League\nThe 2013 East Africa Premier League was the third edition of Cricket Kenya's East Africa Premier League competitions. The competition took place at the Nairobi Club Ground and Simba Union Club Ground from the 7th to 11 August 2013. It featured several significant changes from the first two editions, including the massive overhaul of the identities of the Kenyan franchises participating as well as the participation of several high-profile Pakistani cricketers such as Kamran Akmal and Imran Nazir. The tournament was won by Rising Stars Chuis who defeated Ruwenzori Warriors by 9 wickets in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233022-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Premier League, Squads\nCollins Obuya (c), Harrison Angila, Boniface Anjere, Imran Nazir, Kamran Akmal (wk), Irfan Karim, Rajesh Khetiya, Alfred Luseno, David Maina, Martin Mworia, Martin Okoth, Joseph Owino, Kirtan Patel, Henry Rudd, Vishal Shikotra, Subham Patel, Tarandeep Singh, Hiren Varaiya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233022-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Premier League, Squads\nRakep Patel (c), Gautam Bhudia, Kavi Dosaja, Gurdeep Singh, Imran Nazir, Ikreeth Kenth, Peter Kituku, Peter Koech, Maninder Singh, Mohammad Sami, Nikul Patel, Lucas Oluoch, Paresh Gami, Abdul Rehman, Mitesh Sanghani, Paramveer Singh, Abraham Vadada, Dominic Wesonga", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233022-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Premier League, Squads\nTanmay Mishra (c), Josephat Ababu, Abdulqadir Najmi, Ibrahim Akello, Nick Oluoch, Hamza Malik (wk), Jimmy Kamande, Karan Kaul, Krutarth Rao, James Ngoche, Alex Obanda, Elijah Otieno, Emmanuel Bund, Willam Rudd, Raj Savala, Waqas Aslam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233022-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Premier League, Squads\nMorris Ouma (c), Stephen Biko, Dhiren Gondaria,\tBhargab Goswami, Nadeem Ahmed, Shem Ngoche, Eugene Ochieng, Nelson Odhiambo, Kennedy Owino, Harsh Patel, Narendra Patel, Gagandeep Singh, Gurmanjot Singh, Taaha Sulemanjee, Siddhant Taneja, Bhavya Thaker", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233022-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Premier League, Squads\nDavis Arinaitwe (c), Hamza Saleh, Asadu Seiga, Nicholas Kebba, Arthur Kyobe, Deusdedit Muhumuza, Benjamin Musoke, Frank Nsubuga, Faruk Ochimi,\tJackson Ogwang, Richard Okia, Raymond Otim, Danniel Ruyange, Ivan Thawithemwira, Arthur Ziraba", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233022-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 East Africa Premier League, Squads\nLawrence Sematimba (c), Abdulah Lubega, Hamu Bagenda, Fred Isabirye, Jeremy Kibukamusoke, Brian Masaba, Mohammed Akmal, Roger Mukasa, Naeem Bardai, Martin Ondeko, Arnold Otwan, Jonathan Ssebanja, Shamu Mukaaya, Abu Sseguya, Henry Ssenyondo,\tCharles Waiswa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233023-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 East Asian Games\nThe 2013 East Asian Games, officially known as the VI East Asian Games, was an international multi-sport event that took place in Tianjin, China, between 6 October and 15 October 2013. 2,422 Athletes from nine East Asian nations competed in 254 events in 24 sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233023-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 East Asian Games\nTianjin 2013 is the last edition of East Asian Games before replaced by East Asian Youth Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233023-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 East Asian Games, Organisation, Bid\nIn 2007, China and Mongolia entered the bidding process as potential host cities for the 6th East Asian games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233023-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 East Asian Games, Participation, Sports\n2013 East Asian Games featured 258 events in 24 sports (including 16 Olympics sports), a new record of East Asian Games history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233024-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 East Carolina Pirates football team\nThe 2013 East Carolina Pirates football team represented East Carolina University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Ruffin McNeill and played their home games at Dowdy\u2013Ficklen Stadium. They were a member of the East Division of Conference USA. This was their final season in C-USA before joining the American Athletic Conference in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233024-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 East Carolina Pirates football team, Game summaries, at Marshall\nThis was the fifteenth time these two teams have faced each other. East Carolina leads the overall win-loss record 10\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233025-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 East Coast Music Awards\nThe 2013 East Coast Music Awards were held on March 10, 2013 to honour achievements in Atlantic Canada's music industry in 2012. The ceremony, the event's 25th anniversary, was held at the Cunard Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and was hosted by singer-songwriters Rose Cousins and David Myles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233025-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 East Coast Music Awards\nCousins herself was one of the event's big winners, winning three awards for her album We Have Made a Spark and its single \"Go First\". The rock band The Stanfields won two awards, Group Album of the Year and the Fan's Choice Entertainer of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233025-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 East Coast Music Awards\nThe event also featured a video tribute to country music legend Stompin' Tom Connors, who died just a few days before the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233026-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 East Sussex County Council election\nThe East Sussex County Council election, 2013 took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. All 49 councillors of East Sussex County Council were elected from 44 electoral divisions, which return either one or two councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. The electoral divisions were the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in Brighton and Hove, which is a unitary authority outside the area covered by the County Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233026-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 East Sussex County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233026-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 East Sussex County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233026-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 East Sussex County Council election, Summary\nAt this election, the Conservative Party was seeking to retain overall control of the council, previously having a majority of four seats, and the Liberal Democrats to maintain or better their position of 13 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233026-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 East Sussex County Council election, Summary\nThe Conservatives were reduced to 20 seats on the 49-member council, producing no overall control. UKIP made strong gains, winning 7 seats (their first ever seats on the council), and Labour also gained seats (its gain of three seats being wholly at the expense of Conservatives). The number of Independent members increased to 5. Overall, the Liberal Democrats lost three councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233026-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 East Sussex County Council election, Summary\nSince the election the Conservatives have decided to form a minority administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233026-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 East Sussex County Council election, Results by electoral division\nEast Sussex includes five districts: Eastbourne borough, Hastings borough, Lewes district, Rother district and Wealden district, and the results are grouped by those districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog\nThe 2013 Eastern China smog was a severe air pollution episode that affected East China, including all or parts of the municipalities of Shanghai and Tianjin, and the provinces of Hebei, Shandong, Jiangsu, Anhui, Henan, and Zhejiang, during December 2013. A lack of cold air flow, combined with slow-moving air masses carrying industrial emissions, collected airborne pollutants to form a thick layer of smog over the region. Levels of PM2.5 particulate matter averaged over 150 micrograms per cubic metre; in some areas, they were 300 to 500 micrograms per cubic metre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog\nIt was one of the worst bouts of air pollution in the area, cutting visibility and causing major disruption in transportation and daily activities. Airports, highways, and schools were closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Background\nIn January 2013, China experienced massive fog and haze outbreak affecting about 600 million people and covering seventeen provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions, a fourth of China's territory. On 12 September 2013, the State Council announced the \"Air Pollution Prevention Plan\". China limited the fine particulate matter level, and the Chinese government officials' assessment index included improving the environment for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Background\nOn 4 November 2013, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and the China Meteorological Administration jointly released the \"Green Paper on Climate Change: Addressing Climate Change (2013)\". It stated that the fog and smog in China had increased in the past 50 years with the number of fog-free days significantly reduced, while that of the smog days were significantly increasing with the phenomenon of persisting smog days. The fastest growing fog and smog days occurred in the Pearl and Yangtze River Delta regions, which are the most industrialized areas. The report also indicated that the main reason of increased fog and smog days is the yearly increase in fossil fuel consumption in China. The report calls for urgent implementation of regional joint prevention and control measures to effectively solve the air pollution crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Background, Weather\nThe mixture of natural fog and unnatural smog started accumulating over the first weekend of December 2013. In Shanghai, the Air Quality Index (AQI) crossed the threshold of 300 on 2 December. The lingering smog also left the air qualities in neighboring cities, such as Nanjing, Jiaxing, at seriously polluted levels. The National Meteorological Center (NMC) issued yellow alert for smog and fog, the third most serious alert in China's four-tiered system. PM2.5 particulate levels reached their highest point on 6 December 2013, with Shanghai reaching a high of 507. The U.S. Embassy categorizes air quality readings over 300 as hazardous to all humans, not just those with heart or lung ailments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Background, Weather\nAccording to a NASA Terra Satellite image, the thick haze stretches over Eastern China, across a distance of around 1,200 kilometres (750\u00a0mi). The polluted air appears gray on the image and most of the pollution is trapped in the lower boundary layer of a few hundred meters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Background, Causes\nCoal burning is a primary source of fine particle air pollution. It increased as the weather worsened during winter months and residents burned more coal to keep warm. This increased the amount of sulphate and nitrate (results of coal combusting), which led to higher PM2.5. Research suggests that 41% of the carbon that made up these high PM2.5 levels in Shanghai were also from coal burning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Background, Causes\nAdditionally, there were pollution from industrial sources. Jiangsu, Anhui, Shandong, Henan and many eastern provinces are heavy coal-burning regions. Research shows that prevailing winds blew low-hanging air masses of factory emissions (mostly SO2) towards the east coast of China. Regional transportation also had a significant impact on air quality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Background, Causes\nThe State Environmental Protection Administration investigates tens of thousands of polluters every year, shutting down thousands of the worse offenders, but has failed to reach its target of reducing emissions by 2 percent. In 2011, a factory manufacturing solar panels in Zhejiang province had been shut down because of toxic emissions of fluorine polluting air and water, sickening nearby residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Effects on major cities and provinces, Shanghai\nAir in Shanghai was reported to have strange taste \u2013 astringent and smoky, with an aftertaste of earthy bitterness. It was possible to feel the dust-like particulate matter on tongues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Effects on major cities and provinces, Shanghai\nWith such a high concentration of air pollutants, government authorities warned residents of health symptoms, such as coughing and headaches. Citizens were advised to wear protective masks and use air purifiers. Many sanitation workers were required to wear dust masks during work early in the morning. Schools were closed as the government ordered children to stay indoors, and reduce outdoor activities as much as possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Effects on major cities and provinces, Shanghai\nConstruction work was halted and authorities pulled nearly one-third of government vehicles from the roads. A majority of inbound flights were cancelled and more than 50 flights were diverted at Shanghai Pudong International Airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Effects on major cities and provinces, Nanjing\nThe heavy smog greatly polluted central and southern Jiangsu Province, especially around Nanjing, capital of East China's Jiangsu province. AQI remained at \"severely polluted\" for five straight days, \"heavily polluted\" for nine, and hit a record-breaking value of 331. PM10 also went over 500 at times. On 3 December 2013, levels of PM2.5 particulate matter averaged over 943 micrograms per cubic metre, decreasing to over 338 micrograms per cubic metre on 4 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Effects on major cities and provinces, Nanjing\nBetween 3:00 pm, 3 December and 2:00pm, 4 December local time, several expressways from Nanjing to other Jiangsu cities were closed, stranding dozens of passenger buses in Zhongyangmen bus station. From 5 to 6 December, Nanjing's air pollution stayed at red alert, suspending classes in all middle and primary schools and kindergartens. Experts say these figures indicate high levels of dust on construction sites. Children's Hospital outpatient services increased by 33\u00a0percent; the general incidence of bronchitis, pneumonia, upper respiratory tract infection increased significantly. The smog dissipated 12 December. Officials blamed the dense pollution on lack of wind, automobile exhaust emissions under low air pressure and coal-powered district heating system in North China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Effects on major cities and provinces, Jiangxi\nVisibility was reduced to less than 50 meters. Many highways in East China's Jiangxi province were closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Environmental impacts\nThe severe smog is raising awareness in re-assessing China's air pollution. On 12 February 2014, China's cabinet announced that government will implement a series of measures aimed at shifting the primary energy source from coal to natural gas and renewables. Pricing mechanisms will be used to favor cleaner alternatives to coal. Financial incentives will be offered to encourage green energy companies. The government will place tougher controls over emissions and better support for developing clean technologies. It will also set up a 10 billion renminbi (US$1.7 billion) fund to help companies to meet new environmental standards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants\nPM2.5, a particulate matter with a diameter of 2.5 micrometers or less, is one of the major components of the air pollution in Eastern China, contributing to the growing smog problem in large areas across cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants\nThe composition of PM2.5 particles varies, and they are often made of heavy metals and various toxic compounds, such as lead and sulfate. Small particles can be suspended in the air for long periods of time due to their low masses. While some particles such as large-size carbon may be seen as soot and smoke, most of them can only be detected with a microscope. The Chinese Academy of Sciences indicated that smog in Beijing is a combination of both artificial factors and natural factors. While various causes such as coal burning and car emissions come from human activity, natural causes such as the humid weather and a lack of wind also contributed to the smog.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants\nA study in 2005 in Beijing showed that PM2.5 is mostly composed of carbon, SO2\u22124 salts, NO\u22123 salts, and NH+4 salts. PM2.5 is a byproduct of the process of coal burning from power stations and produces significant amounts of sulfate, black carbon, ammonium, and nitrate. In 1989, 32.7% of PM2.5 particulates in Beijing came from burning of coal, which decreased to 16.4% in 2000, as people started to use cleaner energy such as natural gas. Automobile exhaust also significantly contributed to the smog problem. More importantly, such chemicals, along with organic carbon released from coal burning, may react with each other in the air, creating more toxic, harmful particles made of SO2\u22124 and NO\u22123.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants\nPM2.5 particles are small enough to pass through the human respiratory system and reach the lung, causing problems like heart attacks and asthma attacks. In northern China, people live, on average, 5.5 years fewer than those in southern China, because of the over-reliance on burning coal for heating systems, which produces huge amounts of PM2.5 pollutants in winter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants\nPollution from China has already affected other countries, and some ozone-forming particles have travelled across the Pacific Ocean to the United States, contributing to a relatively high level of ozone on the American West Coast. While these particles, along with other ozone-related chemicals, can be carried up to 30,000 feet above the ground, researchers in the United States predict that these pollutants may play a bigger role in the near future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants, Bacteria in PM2.5\nScientists are still trying to understand the microorganisms within PM2.5 particles and how they are spread through pollutants. Research indicated that many kinds of pathogens and bacteria can be spread through PM2.5 smog and cause diseases. For example, Chinese researchers have found that smog in Beijing contains significant amounts of inhalable microbial allergens and pathogenic species, which increase the risk of respiratory diseases. The same study also reported that among all the microorganisms within PM2.5 particles, 86.1% are bacteria, 13% eukaryota, 0.8% archaea, and 0.1% viruses. The smog contains a variety of microorganisms such as Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Chloroflexi, Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and Euryarchaeota. Many of these are not harmful to humans, but some pathogenic microorganisms are carried through smog, and their numbers increase as the pollutant level increases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 958]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants, Bacteria in PM2.5\nMore than 1,300 kinds of microorganisms have been detected on PM2.5 particles. Because PM2.5 particles have relatively large surface area, many microorganisms from the soil easily attach to them, spreading them quickly through wind. For example, scientists detected that Aspergillus fumigatus var. fumigatus, a fungus which triggers allergic reactions in the respiratory system, are 1% to 8% of microorganisms found on PM2.5 particles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233027-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern China smog, Pollutants, Index\nThe United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has developed an Air Quality Index that is used to report air quality. This AQI is divided into six categories indicating increasing levels of health concern. A PM2.5 concentration lower than 12\u00a0\u00b5g/m3 indicates good air quality and between 12 and 35\u00a0\u00b5g/m3 the airquality is moderate. An AQI value over 300 represents hazardous air quality and below 50 the air quality is good. In December 2013, huge areas of Eastern China reached \"hazardous\" level for multiple days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233028-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team\nThe 2013 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team represented Eastern Illinois University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Dino Babers and played their home games at O'Brien Stadium. They were a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC). Eastern Illinois finished the season 12\u20132 overall and 8\u20130 in OVC play to win the conference championship. They received an automatic bid to the FCS playoffs where they defeated Tennessee State in the second round before losing to Towson in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233028-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team\nOn December 18, Babers resigned to become the head coach at Bowling Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233029-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team\nThe 2013 Eastern Kentucky Colonels football team represented Eastern Kentucky University during the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by sixth year head coach Dean Hood and played their home games at Roy Kidd Stadium. They were a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC). Eastern Kentucky had an overall record of 6\u20136 with a mark 4\u20134 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233030-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team\nThe 2013 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team represented Eastern Michigan University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Eagles played their home games at Rynearson Stadium and were a member of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. The team was led by fifth year head coach Ron English through the first nine games of the season (posting a 1\u20138 record). English was fired mid-season and replaced on an interim basis by Stan Parrish, previously the team's offensive coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season\nIn 2013, the Eastern Province Kings in the Currie Cup and the Vodacom Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Players, Movement matrix\n1 Ross Geldenhuys joined Western Province during the 2013 Currie Cup. 2 Daniel Adongo joined the Indianapolis Colts during the 2013 Currie Cup. 3 Wesley Dunlop joined the US Montauban during the 2013 Currie Cup. (did not play) indicates a player was included in a squad, but made no appearances in the competition. (not in squad) indicates a player was not included in the squad, remained at the EP Kings and was in previous and future squads, usually due to a long-term injury. (SR) indicates a player was not included in the squad for the 2013 Vodacom Cup, but did represent the Southern Kings in the 2013 Super Rugby season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Vodacom Cup, Player Statistics\nThe following table shows players statistics for the 2013 Vodacom Cup season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Currie Cup, Player Statistics\nThe following table shows players statistics for the 2013 Currie Cup season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Under-21 Provincial Championship, Players\nThe following players played during the 2013 Under-21 Provincial Championship Division B season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Under-21 Provincial Championship, Player Statistics\nThe following table shows players statistics for the 2013 Under-21 Provincial Championship season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Under-19 Provincial Championship, Players\nThe following players played during the 2013 Under-19 Provincial Championship Division B season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Under-19 Provincial Championship, Player Statistics\nThe following table shows players statistics for the 2013 Under-19 Provincial Championship season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Awards, SARU Awards\nThe Kings received the following nomination for the SARU awards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233031-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Province Kings season, Awards, EP Kings Awards\nThe following awards were given to players for the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233032-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Washington Eagles football team\nThe 2013 Eastern Washington Eagles football team represented Eastern Washington University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The team was coached by Beau Baldwin, who was in his sixth season with Eastern Washington. The Eagles played their home games at Roos Field in Cheney, Washington and were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished with a record of 11\u20133, 8\u20130 in Big Sky play to win the capture the Big Sky Regular season title. They qualify for the FCS playoffs which they defeated South Dakota State in the second round, Jacksonville State in the quarterfinals before losing to Towson in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233032-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastern Washington Eagles football team, Game summaries, @ Oregon State\nThe Eagles upset of AP #25 Oregon State is only the fourth time ever that a ranked FBS team has been beaten by an FCS program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election\nThe Eastleigh by-election, 2013 was a parliamentary by-election held on 28 February 2013 for the United Kingdom House of Commons constituency of Eastleigh in Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election\nThe election was triggered by the resignation of the sitting MP, Liberal Democrat Chris Huhne, which took effect on 5 February 2013. The resignation coincided with his guilty plea on the eve of a court case in which he and his ex-wife were to be prosecuted for lying to police about a historical speeding offence (committed in 2003 but which only came to light in May 2011). Huhne had already stood down from his position as the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change in February 2012 when first charged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election\nMike Thornton retained the seat for the Liberal Democrats, though with a reduced majority compared with the 2010 general election. UKIP came second with a greatly increased share of the vote, the Conservatives came third, and Labour fourth. Following the election result, UKIP leader Nigel Farage and Conservative candidate Maria Hutchings each blamed the other party for splitting the vote and allowing the Liberal Democrats to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nThe Statement of Persons Nominated was published on 13 February and confirmed 14 candidates for the by-election. The defending party, the Liberal Democrats, nominated Eastleigh Borough Council councillor Mike Thornton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nMaria Hutchings, the Conservatives' candidate at the General Election, was chosen as the candidate for the by-election on 7 February. Hutchings came to prominence in 2005 when she interrupted a live television phone-in with the then Prime Minister Tony Blair. She said that she would vote for Britain to leave the EU and would have voted against gay marriage. She also identified as pro-life and says that she is not a \"Tory toff\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nThe Labour Party chose author and broadcaster John O'Farrell as its candidate on 12 February. Having received during the campaign negative coverage of selected quotations from a book he wrote in 1998, in which he recalled the Brighton bomb attacks against the Conservative Party and then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, O'Farrell reflected after polling day that the experience was enough to put him off electoral politics for good.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nUKIP Eastleigh selected candidate Diane James, a Councillor from Ewhurst in Waverley, Surrey, who was elected there as an independent and subsequently joined UKIP. The party's leader, Nigel Farage, previously contested the seat at a by-election in 1994. While he initially said he would consider standing again, he decided not to after much media speculation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nThe English Democrats fielded Michael Walters, the South East Area Secretary of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nThe Christian Party candidate was Kevin Milburn. He said \"I am standing in this election to allow voters the opportunity to show their disapproval of this Government over many issues, including their attack on marriage. The Government has upset vast swathes of the population with this ill-conceived Bill.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nThe Monster Raving Loony Party, which stood in the 1994 by-election, selected its leader Howling Laud Hope as its candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nOn 8 February, the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition announced that it had chosen Darren Procter, secretary of the Southampton Shipping branch of the RMT union, as their candidate. Procter also serves on the National Executive Committee of RMT. He stood on an anti-austerity platform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nThe National Health Action Party, a new party founded in 2012 in response to the Coalition Government's healthcare reforms, selected Dr Iain Maclennan, a local doctor and former Royal Navy medical officer, as their candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nIndependent candidate Danny Stupple stood in protest at gay marriage and what he describes as the party \"machine\" pushing it through Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Selection of candidates\nThe Wessex Regionalist Party fielded the party's president, Colin Bex, as its candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Result\nThe Liberal Democrats' win was their first in a by-election since Dunfermline and West Fife seven years earlier. It was also their first by-election win under the leadership of Nick Clegg. The UKIP vote was their highest yet in any parliamentary election (in both share and number of votes), and was the fourth time the party had come second in a by-election. At the time, it was also the closest UKIP had come to winning a Westminster seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233033-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Eastleigh by-election, Result\nWith less than 7% of the vote separating the top three candidates, it was the closest three-way result in an English by-election for over 90 years (in Penistone in 1921 there was 6% between the top three). It was also the first time since the 1989 Richmond by-election that Labour had come fourth while in opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233034-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe 2013 East\u2013West Shrine Game was the 88th staging of the all-star college football exhibition game featuring NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision players and a few select invitees from Canadian university football. The game featured over 100 players from the 2012 college football season, and prospects for the 2013 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. Jerry Glanville and Leeman Bennett were named coaches on December 5, 2012. The game was played on January 19, 2013, at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida; the West defeated the East, 28\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233034-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 East\u2013West Shrine Game, 2013 NFL Draft\nOf the players that participated in the 2013 East\u2013West Shrine Game, 35 were drafted during the 2013 NFL Draft. The highest player drafted that played in the game was Christine Michael who was selected by the Seattle Seahawks in the second round (62nd overall).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash\nThe 2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash was an incident involving a Zlin Z 526 light aircraft which occurred on 29 June 2013 during an unauthorized aerobatics display near Eberswalde Finow Airfield in Germany. The pilot was fatally injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Accident\nThe Roadrunner's Paradise Race 61 festival was taking place at the Luftfahrtmuseum Finowfurt (Finowfurt Aviation Museum), next to Eberswalde Finow Airfield. The pilot involved made an unauthorized demonstration flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Accident\nThe aircraft took off from runway 10 at Eberswalde Finow Airfield shortly after 12:04. After takeoff, the pilot flew to the festival site and then made several low passes. On the final pass, the aircraft made a low inverted pass from an easterly direction. During this manoeuvre, the engine lost power. The pilot attempted to roll the aircraft upright, but the right wing tip tank collided with the ground. This reversed the roll and the aircraft crashed upside down. There was no fire except for a brief flash as the right wing tip fuel tank was ruptured on initial impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Accident\nThe crash destroyed the aircraft and fatally injured the pilot. The aircraft crashed into the Solarpark Finow Tower, destroying a number of solar panels. No one on the ground was injured in the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Aircraft\nThe Zlin 526 is a low wing single-seat aerobatic aeroplane powered by a 180\u00a0hp Avia M 137 6-cylinder in-line engine. The involved aeroplane, serial number 1119, was made in 1967. It was bought by the German pilot in the Czech Republic on 29 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Aircraft\nThe fuel system of the Zlin is optimised for aerobatics. It consists of a fuel tank in each wing feeding by gravity a 5\u00a0l (1.3\u00a0US\u00a0gal) collector tank in the fuselage. A fuel pump draws fuel from the collector tank and supplies fuel - via filters - to the fuel injection pump, which in turn delivers fuel via separate lines to each of the engine's six cylinders. During inverted flight, the collector tank receives no fuel from the wing tanks, and a one-way check valve ensures the collector tank's fuel does not flow to the wing tanks. The aircraft involved in this accident was fitted with optional wing tip tanks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Aircraft\nAs of 24 November 2012 the aircraft had accumulated 3,284:19 operating hours and 18,243 flight cycles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Investigation\nThe German Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accident Investigation (BFU) investigated the accident. The investigation revealed that on the day of the crash, the aircraft did not have a valid registration: the purchase contract required the aircraft to be promptly deleted from the Czech register. Furthermore, the liability insurance policy had ended on 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Investigation\nAccording to BFU, the 47-year-old crash pilot held a valid Private Pilot's License (PPL) and was rated as Pilot in Command (PIC) for Single Engine Piston land (SEP land). His license also had entries for aerobatics and night flight qualifications. The pilot had a valid class 2 medical certificate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Investigation\nThe pilot had accumulated 3,127:55 hours and 10,445 flight cycles as per last logbook entry 13 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Causes\nBFU concluded that engine performance was impaired due to lack of fuel during inverted flight. Subsequent errors in control inputs by the pilot during the roll back to normal flight attitude resulted in the collision with solar panels and, subsequently, the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233035-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Eberswalde-Finow Zlin crash, Causes\nThey further stated that the pilot's decision to conduct aerobatics in close proximity to the ground contributed to the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233036-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecatepec de Morelos gas tanker explosion\nOn 7 May 2013, a tanker truck carrying liquefied petroleum gas lost control and ran into several cars and houses before it exploded on Federal Highway 85 in San Pedro Xalostoc community in Ecatepec de Morelos, Mexico. 27 people were killed and more than 30 injured as a result of the accident. The resulting fires damaged 45 homes and 16 vehicles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233036-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecatepec de Morelos gas tanker explosion, Background\nPrior to 2012, Mexican transport trucks were allowed to carry up to 80 metric tons of cargo, roughly double the limit in the United States or Europe. A series of deadly accidents, including one in April 2012 that killed 43 people, led to protests and calls for reform. In response, the federal government lowered the maximum amount of weight allowed to be carried on freight vehicles by about 4.5 tons. However, such accidents remain common. Compounding the danger, homes are often built on cheap land within a few feet of major highways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233036-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecatepec de Morelos gas tanker explosion, Accident\nOn 7 May 2013, at about 05:15 local time (12:15 GMT), a gas tanker exploded on Federal Highway 85 \"M\u00e9xico\u2013Pachuca\" in Ecatepec de Morelos, a municipality in the State of Mexico about 14\u00a0km (8.7\u00a0mi) north-east of Mexico City. As a result of the accident, 27 people were killed, including 10 children, and another 31 people were injured. Among the dead was a family of four, including two children aged 11 and 6. Twenty-three people were hospitalized, eight of them in serious condition. Many of the casualties were asleep in their homes along the edge of the road at the time of the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233036-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecatepec de Morelos gas tanker explosion, Accident\nThe blast led to extensive fires which damaged 45 homes and 16 vehicles. Local media reports described the area as resembling a \"war zone\". \"It was a ball of fire which exploded as though they'd put a spotlight in the whole window,\" said an eyewitness. \"We opened the door and it was like fire had blown through the whole of the garden.\" Roughly 100 people were left homeless by the accident. Several animals were killed by the explosion, but some others were rescued. Although Pemex was not involved in the crash, the company said it would help with rescue efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233036-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecatepec de Morelos gas tanker explosion, Accident\nAccording to early reports, the driver of the tanker, Omar D\u00edaz Olivares, allegedly was speeding and lost control of his vehicle. He then crashed into several cars and homes before the tanker exploded. D\u00edaz was taken to the local hospital, where he was arrested. The highway remained closed for five hours, but later a few highway lanes were opened. According to D\u00edaz' declaration, he lost control of the tanker after he tried to evade a minivan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233036-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecatepec de Morelos gas tanker explosion, Aftermath\nPresident of Mexico Enrique Pe\u00f1a Nieto requested the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation, as well as Mexico Civil Protection System, to investigate the causes of the accident. Eruviel \u00c1vila, governor of the State of Mexico, returned to Mexico. \u00c1vila was on an official visit to Vatican City, but after the explosions he decided to cancel his trip. He announced state government-paid funeral expenses of the families of the victims, and affected people will receive MXN$50,000 (about US$5,000) to \"rebuild their homes\", and MXN$25,000 (about US$2,000) to buy home appliances. The company Termogas, owner of the truck, announced they will be responsible for damages, if their truck was the cause of the accident. Alfredo Mart\u00ednez Torres, Secretariat of Urban Development of the State of Mexico, announced at least 110 families that live near the highway will be relocated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233037-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Echo Awards\nThe 22nd Annual Echo Awards were held on March 21, 2013, at the Palais am Berliner Funkturm in Berlin. The show was broadcast on Das Erste and was hosted for the first time by Schlager entertainer Helene Fischer. Nominations for all 27 award categories were announced on January 31, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233037-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Echo Awards\nDie Toten Hosen won the most number of awards during the ceremony, with four, including the Echo for Song of the Year for \"Tage wie diese\" and Album of the Year for Ballast der Republik. In addition, the band was awarded Best National Rock/Pop Group and Producers of the Year along with Vincent Sorg. Other multiple winners include: Cro, Unheilig, Lana Del Rey and host Helene Fischer with two awards each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233037-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Echo Awards, Winners and nominees, Awards\nThe winners and nominees per category were (Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233037-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Echo Awards, Televised ratings\nIn its original live television broadcast, the ceremony received an 11.4 share/rating among viewers aged 18\u201349 and was watched by 3.73 million people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Ecuador on 17 February 2013 to elect the President, the National Assembly, Provincial Assemblies and members of the Andean Parliament. The incumbent President Rafael Correa was re-elected by a wide margin. Correa's closest electoral rival, Guillermo Lasso, conceded the election shortly after it concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election\nThe vote had been set for January 2013, but was put back a month to allow a full year to elapse after the reform of election rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election\nThis was the first election since 1996 held after the natural expiration of a four-year presidential term. This due to a decade of political and economical instability that Ecuador experienced after Abdal\u00e1 Bucaram was impeached by the former Congress, in late 1997, and that lasted until Correa's inauguration in early 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Background\nThe call for general elections happened on October 18, 2012. The election campaigns were officially launched on January 4 and ended on February 14, as announced by CNE member Juan Pablo Pozo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Background\nVoters chose the president and vice president of the Republic, as well as national and provincial assembly members, members of the Andean Parliament, mayors, prefects, and other sectional officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Background\nThe seated President Correa, a two-term incumbent, is credited with bringing stability and prosperity to Ecuador's nearly 15 million people. A staunch friend of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, he is usually described as \"leftist\" and \"socialist.\" He is committed to poverty reduction through not just economic growth, but redistribution of wealth as well. As he told the CELAC Summit in 2015:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Background\n\"For the first time in the history of humanity this poverty is no longer due to a lack of resources, but rather is the fruit of inequality, and this, in turn, the product of perverse relations of power, where few have it all and many have nothing at all. \u201dThis approach has generated fervent support as well as hostility from wealthy sectors in Ecuador; for example, his land reform policies for giving unproductive land to poor peasants has worried agribusiness, particularly the large flower and banana producers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Background\nHe has vastly expanded the number of workers on the public sector and made health and education free for all Ecuadorians. Some have argued that Correa has clamped down on dissent in the country's news media, although journalists in Ecuador are not risking their lives as they are in other countries of the region. His government has run record-high deficits. In 2009, Correa became the first president of Ecuador to win re-election in nearly a half-century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Background, Democracy Code\nIn late 2012, Ecuador's Constitutional Court (CC) ruled on the adoption of the Democracy Code by a 6 to 3 vote in favor. The new resolution made the D'Hondt method of voting constitutional; therefore it was applied in the 2013 elections. The resolution also states that legal restrictions on the work of journalists during elections are unconstitutional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Presidential elections, Candidates\nEight presidential candidates were registered in the National Electoral Council. The candidates were: Rafael Correa of the PAIS Alliance movement, Guillermo Lasso of the Creating Opportunities movement, Lucio Guti\u00e9rrez of the PSP party, Alberto Acosta Espinoza, candidate of the Coordinating Committee of the Left, Norman Wray, of the Ruptura 25 movement, Nelson Zavala, of the Roldosist Party, Mauricio Rodas, of the SUMA movement, and \u00c1lvaro Noboa, of PRIAN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Presidential elections, Restrictions of the candidate's qualifications\nThe National Electoral Council (Spanish-language initials, CNE) approved the regulations for the registration and qualification of candidates running for President, Vice President, Assembly and the Andean Parliament for the election. The regulations established that candidates who have contracts with the State or have received final judgments for offenses penalized with imprisonment such as bribery, illicit enrichment and embezzlement, would not be allowed to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 104], "content_span": [105, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Parliamentary elections\nEcuadorians not only voted on February 17 for their president and vice-president, but as well as for 137 members of the national assembly; drawn from provinces, a national list, and six migrant spots, and for their five Andean Parliament representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Opinion polls\nSurveys generally attributed between 50% and 60% of the votes to President Correa. The seven other candidates lagged far behind; Correa's nearest rival, Guillermo Lasso, was credited with 10\u201420% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233038-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Ecuadorian general election, Reactions\nBanker Guillermo Lasso, the runner-up in the vote, conceded his defeat in broad terms, by stating: \u201cI recognise the triumph of President Correa.\u201d Thousands of Correa's backers celebrated in Quito's main square just after the polls closed. Speaking from the balcony of the Presidential Palace, Correa thanked them for their \"immense trust.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233039-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Eskimos season\nThe 2013 Edmonton Eskimos season was the 56th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 65th overall. The Eskimos finished the season in 4th place in the West Division with a 4\u201314 record and failed to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233039-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Eskimos season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2013 CFL Draft took place on May 6, 2013. The Eskimos had seven selections in the seven-round draft after trading their first round pick to Montreal for Brody McKnight and acquiring additional third and fourth round picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233039-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Eskimos season, Offseason, Notable transactions\n*Later traded to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats**Later traded to the Saskatchewan Roughriders***Later traded back to the Saskatchewan Roughriders", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233040-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Rush season\nThe Edmonton Rush are a lacrosse team based in Edmonton playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2013 season was the 8th in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233040-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Rush season\nAfter making the Championship game in 2012, the Rush started the 2013 season with only a single win in their first five games. They won 7 of their next 8 games to improve to 8-5, tied for first in the division. Losses to division rivals Colorado and Calgary dropped the Rush to 3rd place and they faced the second place Washington Stealth in the first round of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233040-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Rush season\nBut the Stealth ended any thoughts the Rush had of returning to the Championship game, winning 12-11 in the division semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233040-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Rush 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-00233040-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Rush season, Transactions, Trades\n*Later traded to the Minnesota Swarm**Later traded to the New England Black Wolves", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233040-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Rush season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nThe 2012 NLL Entry Draft took place on October 1, 2012. The Rush made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233040-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton Rush season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nx\u00a0 Denotes player who won at least one NLL Award\u00a0#\u00a0 Denotes player who never played in the NLL regular season or playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233041-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton municipal election\nThe 2013 Edmonton municipal election was held Monday, October 21, 2013 to elect a mayor and 12 councillors to the city council, seven of the nine trustees to Edmonton Public Schools, and the seven trustees to the Edmonton Catholic Schools. Two incumbent public school trustees had no challengers. From 1968 to 2013, provincial legislation has required every municipality to hold elections every three years. The Legislative Assembly of Alberta passed a bill on December 5, 2012, amending the Local Authorities Election Act. Starting with the 2013 elections, officials are elected for a four-year term, and municipal elections are moved to a four-year cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233041-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton municipal election\nThe 12 electoral wards are the same as that of the 2010 election; each represented by a single councillor. Of the estimated 619,138 eligible voters, only 213,585 turned in a ballot, a voter turnout of 34.5%. A municipal census conducted in 2012 showed a population of 817,498, meaning approximately 75.7% of the population was eligible to vote. Three incumbent councillors retired from politics, Jane Batty, Kim Krushell, and Linda Sloan, while incumbent councillors Kerry Diotte, Don Iveson and Karen Leibovici ran for the position left by incumbent Mayor Stephen Mandel, guaranteeing at least six new councillors. The six vacancies were the only new councillors, as the remaining seven incumbents were re-elected. While the mayoral election was billed as a three-way race between the incumbent councillors, on election night Iveson won by a large margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233041-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton municipal election, 2015 by-election\nOn May 5, 2015, Sarah Hoffman left her position as Ward G trustee for Edmonton Public Schools, and was elected as an MLA in the Alberta general election for Edmonton-Glenora. The 2015 Edmonton municipal by-election was held on Monday September 28, 2015 to elect one trustee to replace Hoffman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233041-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Edmonton municipal election, 2016 by-election\nIn October 2015 Amarjeet Sohi left his position as Ward 12 city councillor, after being elected as an MP in the Canadian federal election for Edmonton Mill Woods. The 2016 Edmonton municipal by-election was held on Monday February 22, 2016 to elect one councillor to replace Sohi. With 32 candidates running, the by-election had a record number of candidates for a by-election in Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233042-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Egypt Cup Final\nThe 2013 Egypt Cup tournament came to a close on 9 November 2013 when Zamalek played Wadi Degla at El Gouna Stadium in El Gouna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233042-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Egypt Cup Final\nit was Zamalek's 35th final, It was Wadi Degla's first final, Zamalek won the game 3\u20130, claiming the cup for the 22nd time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat\nThe 2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat took place on 3 July 2013. Egyptian army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi led a coalition to remove the President of Egypt, Mohamed Morsi, from power and suspended the Egyptian constitution of 2012. The move came after the military's ultimatum for the government to \"resolve its differences\" with protesters during widespread national protests. The military arrested Morsi and Muslim Brotherhood leaders, and declared Chief Justice of the Supreme Constitutional Court Adly Mansour as the interim president of Egypt. The announcement was followed by demonstrations and clashes between supporters and opponents of the move throughout Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat\nThere were mixed international reactions to the events. Most Arab leaders were generally supportive or neutral, with the exception of Qatar and Tunisia who strongly condemned the military's actions. The US avoided describing the action as a coup. Other states either condemned or expressed concern over the removal of Morsi. Due to the regulations of the African Union regarding the interruption of constitutional rule by a member state, Egypt was suspended from that union. There has also been debate in the media regarding the labeling of these events. It has been described by Western mainstream media as a coup or as a revolution by proponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat\nEnsuing protests in favour of Morsi were violently suppressed culminating with the dispersal and massacre of pro-Morsi sit-ins on 14 August 2013, amid ongoing unrest; journalists and several hundred protestors were killed by police and military force. Muslim Brotherhood members claim 2,600 people were killed. Human Rights Watch documented 904 deaths, describing it as crimes against humanity and \"one of the world's largest killings of demonstrators in a single day in recent history,\" while the government puts the figure at 624.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nIn February 2011, Hosni Mubarak resigned after 18 days of mass demonstrations that ended his 29-year rule of Egypt. In July 2011 the caretaker government approved an election law, leading to election of a Parliament in December 2011 \u2013 January 2012, and an advisory council in January\u2013February 2012. An alliance led by the Freedom and Justice Party won the most seats in each election. An additional 25% of the members of the advisory council were to be appointed by the President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nIn June 2012, Mohamed Morsi won the presidential election with 51.73% of total votes to become the first democratically elected president of Egypt. In June 2012, prior to Morsi being sworn in as President, the Supreme Constitutional Court ruled that the election law was unconstitutional and ordered the elected bodies dissolved. After assuming office, President Morsi appointed additional members to the advisory council from 35 political parties and invited the elected bodies to meet to discuss the ruling of the court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nThe elected parliament determined that the constitutional court did not have authority to dissolve an elected parliament, then referred the matter to the Court of Cassation. The elected parliament could not pass any laws, but the advisory council continued to give advice on proposed Presidential Decrees. Parliament also proceeded with creation of a new constitutional committee to draft amendments to the Egyptian Constitution, replacing the committee created in March 2012 but dissolved by the constitutional court. Proposed constitutional amendments were approved in December 2012 by a national referendum. New elections were scheduled for April 2013 under a law approved in draft by the constitutional court, but were postponed to October 2013 to comply with a technical order of an administrative court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nIn November 2012, following the protests against the Constitutional Declaration by Morsi, opposition politicians \u2013 including Mohamed ElBaradei, Amr Moussa and Hamdeen Sabahi, according to The Wall Street Journal \u2013 started holding confidential meetings with army leaders, in order to discuss ways of removing President Morsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nOn 28 April 2013, Tamarod was started as a grassroots movement to collect signatures to remove Morsi by 30 June. They called for peaceful demonstrations across Egypt especially in front of the Presidential Palace in Cairo. The movement was supported by the National Salvation Front, April 6 Youth Movement and Strong Egypt Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nIn a poll published by PEW research center in May 2013, 54% of Egyptians approved of Morsi against a 43% who saw him negatively, while about 30% were happy with the direction of the country, 73% thought positively of the army and only 35% were content about local policy authorities. In the lead up to the protests, a Gallup poll indicated that about a third of Egyptians said they were \"suffering\" and viewed their lives poorly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nAt a conference on 15 June, Morsi called for foreign intervention in Syria. According to Yasser El-Shimy, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, this statement crossed \"a national security red line.\" The army rebuked this statement the next day by stating that its only role was to guard Egypt's borders. Although the Egyptian constitution ostensibly declares the president as the supreme commander of the armed forces, the Egyptian military is independent of civilian control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Background\nAs the first anniversary of Morsi's presidential inauguration approached in 2013, his supporters such as the National Coalition for Supporting Legitimacy started demonstrations at multiple places including El-Hossari Mosque, El-Nahda Square, outside Cairo University, outside Al-Rayan Mosque in the posh suburb of Maadi, and in Ain Shams district. They had started open-ended rallies. The largest protest was planned for 30 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Causes\nThe removal of Morsi from office by the coalition was a result of a coup d'\u00e9tat following protests, that were instigated by frustration with Morsi's year-long rule in which Egypt faced economic issues, energy shortages, lack of security, and diplomatic crises. Some of the issues that might have caused the protests and lead to the later removal of Morsi include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Planning\nLeaked tapes from the summer of 2013 that were later verified by J. P. French Associates recorded figures of the Egyptian military, including former General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, suggesting that the Egyptian military was involved in the mass-protests preceding Morsi's ouster. In one of the leaked tapes, the generals are heard discussing rigging the legal case against Morsi, and in another, authorizing the withdrawal of a large sum of money for the army's use from the bank account of Tamarod, the ostensibly independent grassroots group that was organizing protests against President Morsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Planning\nThe tapes also suggest high-level collusion between the coup plotters and the Government of the United Arab Emirates as the money that was to be transferred from Tamarod's account into the army's account was provided by the UAE. The tapes were first released on the Turkish Islamist channel Mekameleen, a fact that the Egyptian government says discredits the tapes as fakes. American officials later confirmed that the United Arab Emirates was indeed providing financial support for the protests against Morsi that preceded the military coup. There is also evidence on the support of the military coup plotters by the Egyptian economic elites. Egypt\u2019s Interior Ministry was seen as most influential in the lead-up to the coup d\u2019\u00e9tat as a revenge for powers lost during the Egyptian revolution of 2011 according to a Reuters analysis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events\nOn 28 June, protests against Morsi started to build throughout Egypt including in such cities as Cairo, Alexandria, Dakahlia, Gharbiya and Aswan as a \"warm up\" for the massive protests expected on 30 June that were planned by Tamarod. Pro -Morsi and Muslim Brotherhood supporters started counter demonstrations at the Rabia Al-Adawiya Mosque in Nasr City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events\nPrior to the protests, Christians, particularly in Upper Egypt, received threats from pro-Morsi protestors, pressuring them not to take part in the protests. Sheikh Essam Abdulamek, a member of parliament's Shura Council, said in an interview on television that Christians should not participate in the protests and warned them \"do not sacrifice your children [since the] general Muslim opinion will not be silent about the ousting of the president.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events\nAccording to information that came out after President Morsi was removed from office, officials claimed that Morsi stopped working at the Egyptian Presidential Palace on 26 June in anticipation of the coup and moved with his family to El-Quba Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events\nOn 29 June, Tamarod claimed that it collected more than 22 million signatures from a petition calling for Morsi to step down as president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events\nOn the other hand, the coup was preceded by the reconciliation of military and economic elites who organized shortages of fuel to provoke discontent of general population toward the Morsi administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 30 June: Anti-Morsi demonstrations\nOn 30 June, according to unverified military sources, 14 million protesters demonstrated across Egypt against Morsi. The protestors expressed their anger at the Brotherhood, which they accuse of hijacking Egypt's revolution and using electoral victories to monopolize power and impose Islamic law. However, independent observers have raised concerns about wild exaggeration of the number of actual anti-Morsi protestors with one crowd statistical expert study indicating that a total of a little more than 1 million people protested against Morsi across the whole country. Hundreds of thousands in support of Morsi gathered in Rabaa Square in Cairo and other cities. In Damietta, 250 fishing boat sailors demonstrated against Morsi by sailing through the Nile and chanting against him. The president moved that day from Quba Palace to the Republican Guard headquarters, while protesters thought he was at Ittihadeya Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 993]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 1 July: Deadlines and options\nOn 1 July, again more than 1 million demonstrators against Morsi gathered in Tahrir Square and outside the presidential palace, while other demonstrations were held in the cities of Alexandria, Port Said and Suez. Some police officers wearing their uniforms joined the anti-Morsi protests and chanted: \"The police and the people are one.\" In clashes around the Muslim Brotherhood headquarters in Mokattam, eight people died. Their headquarters was ransacked and burned while protesters threw objects at windows and looted the building, making off with office equipment and documents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 1 July: Deadlines and options\nTamarod gave President Mohamed Morsi until 2 July at 17:00 to resign or face a civil disobedience campaign. That was followed by the Egyptian Armed Forces issuing a 48-hour ultimatum that gave the country's political parties until 3 July to meet the demands of the Egyptian people. The Egyptian military also threatened to intervene if the dispute was not resolved by then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 1 July: Deadlines and options\nFour ministers also resigned on the same day: Tourism Minister Hisham Zazou (who previously offered to resign a few months earlier after Morsi appointed an Islamist member of al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, the group allegedly responsible of the Luxor massacre, though the group has denied this charge, as governor of Luxor), Communication and IT Minister Atef Helmi, State Minister for Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Hatem Bagato, and State Minister for Environmental Affairs Khaled Abdel Aal, leaving the government with only members of the Freedom and Justice Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 1 July: Deadlines and options\nOn the same day, it was reported that Barack Obama called Morsi. The call went along the United States' vision and that the only option out of the stressed situation would be to call for an early general presidential election in which Morsi is not a candidate. Morsi replied, \"the Egyptian people decide,\" before he closed the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 2 July: Morsi speech\nOn 2 July, opponents and supporters of Morsi gathered in the capital, Cairo. The deadline set by the military for Morsi to solve the escalating political problem approached. The military said that they would intervene without eliminating either side, but they betrayed their speech and the president by engineering a coup the next day. Helicopters were also present around Cairo with armored vehicles taking up positions. On 3 July, clashes between protestors and local residents erupted around a pro-Morsi rally near Cairo University, leaving 18 people dead. Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr also resigned, in support of the anti-government protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 2 July: Morsi speech\nThe presidency rejected the Egyptian Army's 48-hour ultimatum, vowing that the president would pursue his own plans for national reconciliation to resolve the political crisis. Defense Minister General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi was also said to have told Morsi that he would impose a military solution if a political one could not be found by the next day. Incidentally, the Court of Cassation ordered the reinstatement of former general prosecutor Abdel Maguid Mahmoud who was replaced with Talaat Abdallah following the constitutional declaration on 22 November 2012. The presidential spokesman and the spokesman for the cabinet resigned as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 2 July: Morsi speech\nThe newspaper Al-Ahram reported that if there were no political resolution, the military would suspend the constitution of Egypt and appoint a new council of experts to draft a new one, institute a three-person executive council, and appoint a prime minister from the military. Morsi's military advisor, Sami Hafez Anan, also resigned and said that the army would not \"abandon the will of the people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 2 July: Morsi speech\nIn a late-night television address Morsi declared that he would \"defend the legitimacy of his elected office with his life.\" He added that \"there is no substitute for legitimacy\" as he vowed not to resign. Morsi accused supporters of Hosni Mubarak of exploiting the wave of protests to topple the government and fight democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 2 July: Morsi speech\nAfter Morsi's statement, an official Facebook page of the Egyptian Armed Forces wrote a post under the title \"The Last Hours\" saying in response to Morsi: \"The Supreme Commander in Chief of the Egyptian Armed Forces had mentioned before that it's better for us to die rather than seeing the Egyptian People being threatened or horrified, and we swear that we would sacrifice our lives and our blood for Egypt against every terrorist or extremist or ignorant. Long live Egypt.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action\nAs the deadline of the Armed Forces's ultimatum approached on 3 July, there was renewed expectation of an increase in violence, according to the media. As in other days, there were both anti-Morsi and pro-Morsi protests, the latter particularly in Nasr City and near Cairo University. Army tanks were reported to surround two smaller pro-Morsi rallies as the demonstrators vowed to defend the government with their lives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action\nAs the 16:35 deadline set by the army approached, the coalition met with the military leaders for emergency talks, with the expectation that the army would issue a statement when the deadline passed. Mohamed El-Baradei, who was chosen to represent the National Salvation Front, was also said to have met army chief General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action\nThat same day, shortly before the deadline, Morsi offered to form a consensus government. An army statement read: \"The General Command of the Armed Forces is currently meeting with a number of religious, national, political and youth icons... There will be a statement issued from the General Command as soon as they are done.\" At the same time the Freedom and Justice Party's senior leader, Waleed al-Haddad, said: \"We do not go to invitations (meetings) with anyone. We have a president and that is it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action\nAt about 17:30, the head of the Republican Guard Mohamed Ahmed Zaki, joined Morsi with some of the Republican Guard officers and conducted the arrest. It was reported from Morsi's assistant Yahya Hamed the flow of conversation took place as Morsi saying \"Mohammed (the head of the of Republican Guard) you know well you are going to be tried for that.\" And Mohammed Zaki replying: \"I know, however I had already told them I don't want in, because of my special good relations with the president.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action, 3 July military coup\nOn 3 July, General Abdel Fattah Saeed Hussein Khalil el-Sisi, Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian Armed Forces, announced that there would be new presidential and Shura Council elections. The coalition appointed Chief Justice Adly Mansour as the interim president and charged him with forming a transitional technocratic government. Military vehicles drove throughout Cairo. Morsi was put under house arrest, and was believed to be at the Republican Guard barracks. According to other sources he was taken to a military base and his travel was restricted. Army troops and tanks were reported to have surrounded key facilities and installations. At noon, the Republican Guard, who had Morsi in their care, left his side to allow Army commandos to take him to an undisclosed Ministry of Defence building. He offered no resistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action, 3 July military coup\nGeneral al-Sisi said: \"The president's speech last night failed to meet and conform with the demands [of the people, prompting the armed forces to consult] with some of the symbols of the national forces and the youths without excluding anyone. [ They agreed on a road map] that includes initial steps that realize the building of a strong and coherent Egyptian society that does not exclude any of its sons and currents and that ends the state of conflict and division.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action, 3 July military coup\nHe added the army was standing apart from the political process but was using its vision as the Egyptian people were calling for help and discharged its responsibility. Al-Sisi named former Chief Justice Adli Mansour as the interim president and added that he would be sworn in on 4 July. The Shura Council was also dissolved. Morsi condemned his removal as a \"full coup\" by the general. He also urged everyone to \"adhere to peacefulness and avoid shedding blood of fellow countrymen.\" The Office of Assistant to President of Egypt on Foreign Relations called Morsi's removal a \"military coup\", and said \"there is no democracy without the ballot box\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action, 3 July military coup\nThe announcement of the removal of Morsi was met with cheers in Tahrir Square. Anti - Morsi protesters shouted \"Allahu akbar\" and \"Long live Egypt\" and launched fireworks as green laser lights held by those in the crowd lit the sky. Mohamed el-Baradei says the coup was to rectify the issues of the revolution. The Coptic Pope Tawadros II, Grand Imam of al-Azhar Ahmed el-Tayeb, Mohamed ElBaradei and some of the youth leaders of Tamarod, Mahmoud Badr and Mohamed Abdelaziz, spoke in support of the military intervention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action, 3 July military coup\nThe al-Nour party also commented in saying that the events occurred as they were not heard in their call for dialogue. Party Secretary-General Galal Murra commented that: \"we took this position (on agreeing to the army political road map) and we took these decisions only so we stop the bloodshed of our people.\" Pro-Morsi protesters heard a statement from Morsi, which was published on his Facebook page. He called the move a \"coup\" and rejected the Armed Forces' statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action, 3 July military coup\nThe Freedom and Justice Party's Gamal Heshmat said: \"There is absolutely no direction towards violence. The Brotherhood are not raised on violence. Their cause is a peaceful one, defending their rights, which is stronger than a \"military coup\". The army has perpetrated a \"shameful coup\". We are still in the street, we still don't know if all of the armed forces will accept what Sisi has done.\" A party spokesman said that what started as a military coup was \"turning into something much more.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, 3 July: Day of Action, 3 July military coup\nThe National Salvation Front, an alliance of multiple political parties, stated on 4 July that \"what Egypt is witnessing now is not a military coup by any standards. It was a necessary decision that the Armed Forces' leadership took to protect democracy, maintain the country's unity and integrity, restore stability and get back on track towards achieving the goals of the 25 January Revolution.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Arrests\nAccording to Morsi, he was abducted by the Armed Forces and held at the Republican Guard headquarters one day before the army announced his removal, and held there until 5 July 2013, after which he and his aide were forcibly moved to a naval base for the next four months. His family had stated earlier Morsi was kidnapped on 3 July 2013. The spokesperson of the Egyptian Armed Forces, Colonel Ahmed Ali later denied allegations that Morsi was badly treated, saying they had nothing to hide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Arrests\nThe Egyptian Army later gave Catherine Ashton the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy for the European Union permission to meet Morsi. Ashton later stated that Morsi was doing well: \"Morsi was keeping up with the latest developments in the country through television and newspapers. So we were able to talk about the situation, and we were able to talk about the need to move forward. The people around him do care for him. I looked at the facilities.\" Morsi later met an African Union delegation also.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Arrests\nThe army arrested the former speaker of parliament and the head of Freedom and Justice Party Saad El-Katatni, along with Rashad al-Bayoumi, a Muslim Brotherhood deputy, as well as other top leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood. Al-Jazeera quoted unnamed security officials saying that \"more than a dozen\" members of the Muslim Brotherhood had been arrested, while Al-Ahram reported that the Egyptian police had been ordered to arrest more than 300 members of the Muslim Brotherhood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Arrests\nA travel ban was also put on Morsi, the head of his Muslim Brotherhood Mohammed Badie, Badie's deputy Khairat El-Shater, the Muslim Brotherhood's former leader Mahdi Akef, another Muslim Brotherhood figure Mohamed Beltagy, Salafi preacher close to the Muslim Brotherhood Safwat Hegazi and the leader of the al-Wasat Party Abou Elela Mady and his deputy Essam Sultan. Badie and Akef were arrested for \"incitement to murder.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Arrests\nIn December 2013, Morsi as well as high-echelon Muslim Brotherhood leaders were charged with \"terrorism and plotting with foreign militants against Egypt\" while the Muslim Brotherhood was officially classified as a terrorist group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Arrests\nBy May 2014, approximately 16,000 people, mostly Brotherhood members or supporters, have been imprisoned since the coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Media restrictions and violence against journalists\nPolice and military forces made statements against four television channels and took them off the air. Misr 25, a channel owned by the Muslim Brotherhood, was shut down and officials said that journalists working for the channel were arrested. The Al Hafez and Al Nas channels were shut down as well. A few hours later, Al Jazeera's Mubasher Misr, which had been criticised for its alleged pro-Morsi slant, was also taken off the air, its offices raided and its employees detained. Five staff were arrested, including managing director Ayman Gaballah, who was still in custody after the others were released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Media restrictions and violence against journalists\nIt was also prevented from broadcasting a pro-Morsi rally in northern Cairo. Associated Press Television News was ordered not to provide Al Jazeera with footage of protests in the country or with any filming equipment, while the Cairo News Company was warned against providing broadcasting equipment. Al Jazeera Media Network's acting Director General Mostafa Souag condemned the move, saying \"regardless of political views, the Egyptian people expect media freedoms to be respected and upheld. Media offices should not be subject to raids and intimidation. Journalists should not be detained for doing their jobs.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Media restrictions and violence against journalists\nThe Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reported that two journalists and one student were killed while covering Egyptian unrest in the two weeks leading up to 8 July 2013. According to CPJ research, before those deaths only four journalists had been killed in Egypt since 1992. One of the journalists killed while documenting the 2013 clashes was 26-year-old photographer Ahmed Assem el-Senousy, also known as Ahmed Samir Assem. The photographer was shot by a sniper after he recorded security forces firing on protestors. According to media reports, el-Senousy may have captured his own death on film. A video clip posted on his Facebook page shows a sniper firing on crowds before turning toward the camera, at which point the clip abruptly ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events, Media restrictions and violence against journalists\nWhile reporting for the BBC, journalist Jeremy Bowen was hit in the head with birdshot fired by Egyptian security forces on 5 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nOn 4 July, violence continued with over 100 people wounded and at least two deaths, believed to be that of children. The Muslim Brotherhood's spokesman called for \"strictly peaceful\" protests to defy the \"military coup\". Other Islamist groups threatened armed retaliation, while the police arrested four armed men on 5 July over claims that they had planned a reprisal attack, according to state-run Al-Ahram. The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces added that it would protect all groups from revenge attacks and that Egyptian values \"do not allow for gloating.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nProtests after Friday prayers were called by Morsi supporters, now in opposition, and termed \"Rejection Friday.\" That morning, troops opened fire killing at least 51 pro-Morsi protesters at the Republican Guard headquarters in which Morsi was believed to be held. According to some witnesses, the military opened fire without provocation towards the end of morning prayers, immediately using live ammunition and shooting to kill. At least 51 Morsi supporters were killed and 435 were injured. Though the Egyptian Army denied firing at the protesters, BBC News reporter Jeremy Bowen said he saw soldiers firing on protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nIn Qena, security forces opened fire on protesters trying to storm a security building, injuring two of them. Shots were also fired in Alexandria. This occurred as tens of thousands of Egyptians took to the street to condemn the coup and support Morsi. Despite claiming to respect all sides, the military also issued a statement warning Islamists who planned on protesting. Tamarod, which had organised anti-Morsi protests, called for protests to \"protect the revolution.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0039-0002", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nDuring the night pro and anti-Morsi demonstrators clashed over the 6th October Bridge; at least two people were killed and more than 70 people were injured, according to state television, who quoted medical personnel at a makeshift hospital in the square. At least three deaths were that of Morsi supporters during the march towards the military barracks after the Friday prayer in Cairo. In all, through the night of rioting, throughout the country 30 people were killed. Pro -Morsi demonstrators continued to call for protests. Protesters continued to demand the reinstatement of Morsi throughout the weekend, some of which were violent protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nPalestinian officials in Gaza also said that the Egyptian Armed Forces had shut the Rafah border crossing and that only certain people, such as patients and students, would be allowed through. Egyptian Intelligence Service official Nader al-Asar telephoned Palestinian Prime Minister in Gaza Ismail Haniyeh on the afternoon of 5 July and Haniyeh briefed him about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza as a result of the restrictions on tunnels and the Rafah crossing. Al-Asar promised to seek remedies on the situation", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nAfter dawn prayers on 8 July clashes erupted between pro-Morsi protesters and the army at the Republican Guard compound. According to the army, \"terrorists\" tried to storm the compound and one officer and 42 other people were injured. On the other hand, the Muslim Brotherhood said that 42 of its supporters were killed and over 300 were injured after shootings that followed the police storming their peaceful sit-in demanding the reinstatement of Morsi. MP Mohamed Beltagy described the incident as a \"massacre\" during dawn prayers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nAfter the incident, the Freedom and Justice Party, called for \"the international community and international groups and all the free people of the world [to] intervene to stop further massacres [...] and prevent a new Syria in the Arab world.\" The Nour party said it would suspend taking part in the political process as a response to the deadly clashes. And Ahmed el-Hawary, a founding member of the al-Dustour party and a member of 30 June front, said: \"We cannot blame the Muslim Brotherhood without blaming the army. They are both held accountable for this catastrophe...", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0041-0002", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nThe Brotherhood is playing victims to gain international sympathy yet losing whatever is left of the sympathy at home. A speedy formation of the new cabinet is essential at this point, and although consensus is critical. Egypt must not be the hostage of a concurrence based on non-pertinent arguments.\" At the same time, Morsi supporters were said by the military of having forced two soldiers, Samir Abdallah Ali and Azzam Hazem Ali, to make pro-Morsi statements on a loudspeaker and that one of them was \"severely beaten up\" and filmed while making the statements. However, an army official later said that they had \"managed to escape their captors.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nOn 8 July, following reports that many fighters in Syria were returning in support of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt slapped restrictions on Syrians entering the country and required them to obtain visas before entering the country. An arrest warrant was issued against Mohamed Badie also as the party refused to join a transitional government. The Investigative Reporting Program at the University of California at Berkeley showed that a State Department programme ostensible to support democracy provided funds to activists and politicians for fomenting unrest in Egypt after the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak in February 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nThe Muslim Brotherhood vowed to continue its resistance to the military's ouster of Morsi. In a statement it disavowed itself from an assassination attempt against a senior army commander in the Sinai Peninsula on 10 July and said it adheres to peaceful measures. The statement also read: \"We will continue our peaceful resistance to the bloody military coup against constitutional legitimacy. We trust that the peaceful and popular will of the people shall triumph over force and oppression.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0042-0002", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nThe public prosecutor issued a freeze on the assets of the Muslim Brotherhood's leaders, as well as other supporters pending investigations in ongoing cases related to events in al-Mokatam, al-Nahda square and the Republican Guards Club. This would affect Mohamed Badie, Khairat al-Shater, Mahmoud Ezzat, Mohammed Mahdi Akef, Saad El-Katatni, Essam el-Erian, Mohamed Beltagy and the Muslim Brotherhood's allies, including Essam Sultan, Assem Abdul Majed, Safwat Hegazi and Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, will also be affected by the freeze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nIn addition to continuing daily protests, the Muslim Brotherhood called for more protests after Friday prayers on 19 July. The protests were held in Cairo and Alexandria with two formations of fighter jets flying over both cities after noon prayers ended and some military helicopters flew low over roof tops in Cairo. Amongst the tens of thousands of protesters present, they chanted \"Islamic, Islamic\" calling for an Islamic state. The protests again turned violent and fatal in Cairo and Qalyub on 22 July. Morsi's family also held a press conference in Cairo in which his children accused the military of kidnapping him, as well as announcing local and international legal measures they had initiated against General Abdul Fatah al-Sisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nIn mid-August, the violence against Islamists by the army escalated further, with at least hundreds killed, and the government declaring a month-long nighttime curfew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nFollowing the mid-August incidents and the imposition of a state of emergency, security forces targeted the Brotherhood and its allies with a wave of arrests of leaders and senior members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 14 August crackdown\nOn 14 August 2013, Egyptian security forces raided two camps of protesters in Cairo: one at al-Nahda Square and a larger one at Rabaa al-Adawiya Mosque. The two sites had been occupied by supporters of ousted President Mohamed Morsi, who was removed from office by the military after mass street protests for and against his rule. The camps were raided after initiatives to end the six-week sit-ins failed and as a result of the raids the camps were cleared out within hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 14 August crackdown\nThe Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim announced that police used water hoses to disperse the campers. Yet, all videos and photos from the scenes of the raids never showed water or hoses. Tents and bodies were on fire, and the main mosque of Rabaa Al-Adawiya was burned with hundreds of unidentified bodies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 14 August crackdown\nAccording to Human Rights Watch at least 904 people were killed in what was described as crimes against humanity. However, the Egyptian Health Ministry claimed 638 people were killed and at least 3,994 injured. According to the National Coalition for Supporting Legitimacy (NCSL), the number of deaths from the Rabaa al-Adawiya Mosque sit-in alone were some 2,600. Violent retaliation followed in several cities across the country. The military appointed interim government declared a month-long state of emergency in response and curfews were instituted in many areas. The total casualty count made 14 August the deadliest day since the 2011 Egyptian revolution which toppled former President Hosni Mubarak. The violent dispersals carried out by the security forces were widely denounced by world leaders, with the exception of Gulf Arab states: the U.A.E., Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 943]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 14 August crackdown\nA study conducted by the Egyptian Centre for Media Studies and Public Opinion revealed that 79% of Egyptians believe the massacres on 14 August were crimes against humanity. 73% hold General Al Sisi, the Defence Minister, responsible for the massacres. Another poll by Egyptian Centre for Public Opinion Research later showed that 67 percent of Egyptians were satisfied about the method in which the Rabaa al-Adaweya and Nahda sit-ins were dispersed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 14 August crackdown\nOn 10 December, thirteen Egyptian and international human rights organizations urged Cairo's interim authorities to probe the mass killing of protesters in the capital on 14 August. The joint call issued by organizations that included Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, said an investigation must be launched into the killing of \"up to 1,000 people by security forces\" almost four months ago when they dispersed sit-ins by supporters of deposed president Mohamed Morsi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 14 August crackdown\n\"There can be no hope for the rule of law and political stability in Egypt, much less some modicum of justice for victims, without accountability for what may be the single biggest incident of mass killing in Egypt's recent history,\" said Gasser Abdel-Razak, associate director at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. \"As a first step toward accountability, the government should establish an effective independent fact-finding committee to investigate responsibility throughout the chain of command for the unlawful killings,\" the rights groups said. They said that on 14 August a \"small minority of protesters used firearms...", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0050-0002", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 14 August crackdown\nbut the police responded excessively by shooting recklessly, going far beyond what is permitted under international law.\" \"After the unprecedented levels of violence and casualties seen since the ousting of Mohamed Morsi, investigations must provide real answers and cannot be another whitewash of the security forces' record,\" Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui of Amnesty International said in the statement. \"Egypt's authorities cannot deal with the carnage through PR in world's capitals, rewriting events and locking up Morsi's supporters.\" The groups also said the probe should determine whether there is any evidence of a policy to kill protesters or commit other serious crimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Violence against Coptic Christians\nSince Morsi's overthrow, Egypt's Christian minority, a reported 6 to 12% of the population, have been the target of sectarian divide tactics by unidentified groups. On 5 July 2013 \u2013 two days after Morsi was ousted\u2014 mobs rampaged through the Christian village of Nagaa Hassan, burning over seventy churches, as well as burning dozens of homes, ransacking stores and stabbing to death at least four people. This included pro-military Christian activist Emile Naseem, who was hacked and beaten to death. Dozens of Christian families sought protection in a local church.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Violence against Coptic Christians\nIn Port Said's al-Manakh, masked gunmen opened fire at the Mar Mina Church. Since 30 June, mobs carried out attacks on Christians in six out of Egypt's twenty-seven provinces. Churches across Egypt cancelled their evening Mass and social activities. Other incidents include Coptic Christian priest Mina Abboud Sharobeen being killed in an outdoor market.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Violence against Coptic Christians\nRamy Jan, a Christian journalist and activist, claims that Islamic violence against Copts is rather fabricated and that Muslims would not commit any type of sectarian violence. He considered all previously-mentioned incidents as \"accusations\" to Islamists, to which he reacted by starting the Christians Against the Coup movement in demand of \"reestablishing democracy\", joining with his movement the Anti-Coup Alliance. However, Jan's credibility and that of the group he supposedly represented was severely challenged when it was revealed that he was also in fact a member of the Egyptian Nazi Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Violence against Coptic Christians\nIn 2011, Egypt opened a probe on former Interior Minister Habib el-Adly's reported role in the New Year's Eve bombing of al-Qiddissin Church in Alexandria in which twenty-four people were killed. According to the UK diplomatic sources quoted in the reports, the former interior ministry had masterminded the deadly church attack with the intent to blame it on Islamists, escalate government crackdown on them, and gain increased western support for the regime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0054-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Violence against Coptic Christians\nThe former interior minister had built up in over six years a special security system that was managed by twenty-two officers and that employed a number of former radical Islamists, drug dealers and some security firms to carry out acts of sabotage around the country in case the regime was under threat to collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0054-0002", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Violence against Coptic Christians\nThe proclamation also pointed, sourcing reports on UK intelligence services, that interior ministry officer Maj. Fathi Abdelwahid began on 11 December 2011, preparing Ahmed Mohamed Khaled, who had spent eleven years in Egyptian prisons, to contact an extremist group named Jundullah and coordinate with it the attack on the Alexandria church. Khaled reportedly told the group he could assist with providing weapons he had allegedly obtained from Gaza and that the act was meant to \"discipline the Copts.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Other incidents\nThe day after the coup, militant gunmen staged multiple attacks on security forces in the Sinai and Suez. One soldier was killed and two others were wounded at a police station near the local headquarters of military intelligence in Rafah as it was attacked by rocket fire. Attackers also fired rocket-propelled grenades at army checkpoints guarding El Arish airport. A protest by hundreds of people occurred in Al-Arish the day after the ouster with calls to form a war council to combat the army. Ten areas in north Sinai were witness to clashes, including the Central Security Force camp and a number of checkpoints along the ring road. The airport was also closed after being targeted by unidentified armed men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Other incidents\nIn late July 2013 the Egyptian military reportedly launched \"Operation Sinai\" in an effort to quash the militants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Other incidents\nOn 5 December, a court in Egypt sentenced Mohammed Badie, the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, to life imprisonment for his part in the violence in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, 2014 referendum\nAccording to the official results 38.6% of eligible voters participated in a referendum held on 14\u201315 January 2014 on a new constitution; 98.1% of those who voted supported the new constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Propaganda\nIn April 2021, an Egyptian series called \u2018The Choice\u2019 received condemnation on social media platforms for depicting the controversial Rab\u2019a massacre by apparently adopting the state\u2019s narrative. The depiction has also been disputed by human rights organizations for the glorification of the Egyptian army and security forces. On the contrary, rights organizations like Human Rights Watch claim that the security forces crushed demonstrators at the peaceful sit-ins in Rab\u2019a and Al-Nahda squares, killing approximately 800 people in the 2013 massacre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0059-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath, Propaganda\nAccording to media reports, \u2018The Choice\u2019 has been produced by an Egyptian production house called Synergy, which allegedly has links to the Egyptian regime and thus, is in line with the regime\u2019s propaganda. The team behind the series claims to have used archival footage of the event issued by news media like Al-Jazeera and the Egyptian Center for Human Rights, along with witness testimonies. However, a careful selection of short clips and pictures was done, not masking, but manipulating the reality concerning the Egyptian security personnel and their role in the massacre, portrayed as a terror event in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, Domestic\nAmid months of protests, and after his trial had started, Morsi said on 13 November that he was kidnapped by the military the day before his removal and that the move was treason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, Domestic\nA poll by the Egyptian Centre for Public Opinion Research (Baseera) showed 17% of Egyptians believed that the sit-ins were peaceful, while 67% believed they were not. Another poll by Baseera showed 69% of Egyptians do not approve of the Muslim Brotherhood's continuation (in politics) and 57% of Egyptians feel the Muslim Brotherhood is responsible for all instances of violence since the sit-in dispersals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, States\nThe decision by the Egyptian military to take state authority out of the hands of the ruling Muslim Brotherhood government marks another sharp turning point in Egypt's incomplete revolution. What the Brotherhood neglected to understand is that democracy means more than simply holding elections. Real democracy requires inclusiveness, compromise, respect for human and minority rights, and a commitment to the rule of law. Morsi and his inner circle did not embrace any of these principles and instead chose to consolidate power and rule by fiat. As a result the Egyptian people and their economy suffered greatly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0062-0001", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, States\nIt is now up to the Egyptian military to demonstrate that the new transitional government can and will govern in a transparent manner and work to return the country to democratic rule. We are encouraged that a broad cross-section of Egyptians will gather to rewrite the constitution. All parties in Egypt must show restraint, prevent violence, and prepare to be productive players in the future democratic Egypt. We encourage the military to exercise extreme caution moving forward and support sound democratic institutions through which the people and future governments can flourish", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, States\nThe military was asked to intervene by millions and millions of people, all of whom were afraid of a descendance into chaos, into violence And the military did not take over, to the best of our judgement \u2013 so far. To run the country, there's a civilian government. In effect, they were restoring democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, Media\nSyrian state-television carried live coverage of the anti-Morsi protests. It also said of the statement that \"Syria's people and leadership and army express their deep appreciation for the national, populist movement in Egypt which has yielded a great achievement.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, Media\nThe United States media pointed out that Obama did not call the removal of Morsi a coup. If Obama accepts that a coup had taken place, then U.S. law requires him to cut off military and economic aid to Egypt such as previous incidents in Mauritania, Mali, Madagascar and Pakistan. The U.S. funds 20% of Egypt's military costs (US$1.3 billion) and gives another US$250 million in economic aid. Al Jazeera noted that the refusal to term the events as a coup were tied with the U.S. stance in stopping military aid to countries that have perpetrated a coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, Media\nThe media noted that the U.K. did not condemn the removal of Morsi, nor call for him to be restored to power. Some media reports refer to the events as another \"revolution\" and there has been debate as to whether events are best named as being a coup or not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, Others\nEgyptian Americans, particularly in the Arab-dominated areas of Michigan, had mixed views of the event with some wary of the Muslim Brotherhood, but also wary of usurping democratic rights following a 30-year dictatorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233043-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Egyptian coup d'\u00e9tat, Reactions, International, Others\nAmnesty International called on foreign governments to stop supplying further arms to the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233044-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ekayana Monastery bombing\nThe 2013 Ekayana Monastery bombing was a terrorist attack that occurred in Jakarta, Indonesia on August 4, 2013 at 6:53\u00a0p.m. It targeted a Buddhist monastery named Ekayana in Jakarta. This bombing caused injuries to three people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233045-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 El Paso mayoral election\nThe 2013 El Paso mayoral election was held on May 11 and June 8, 2013, to elect the Mayor of El Paso, Texas. Incumbent Mayor John Cook could not seek another term due to term limits. In the nonpartisan preliminary round was held on May 11, 2013, businessman Oscar Leeser and City Councilman Steve Ortega placed first and second with 47% and 21% of the vote, respectively, and because no candidate received a majority, a runoff election was held on June 15. Leeser won the runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado\nDuring the early evening of Friday, May 31, 2013, a very large and powerful tornado occurred over rural areas of Central Oklahoma. This rain-wrapped, multiple-vortex tornado was the widest tornado ever recorded and was part of a larger weather system that produced dozens of tornadoes over the preceding days. The tornado initially touched down at 6:03\u00a0p.m.\u00a0Central Daylight Time (2303\u00a0UTC) about 8.3 miles (13.4\u00a0km) west-southwest of El Reno, rapidly growing in size and becoming more violent as it tracked through central portions of Canadian County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado\nRemaining over mostly open terrain, the tornado did not impact many structures; however, measurements from mobile weather radars revealed extreme winds up to 302\u00a0mph (486\u00a0km/h) within the vortex; these are the highest observed wind speeds on Earth, ahead of the 1999 Bridge Creek\u2013Moore tornado with slightly higher wind speeds. As it crossed U.S. Highway 81, it had grown to a record-breaking width of 2.6 miles (4.2\u00a0km). Turning northeastward, the tornado soon weakened. Upon crossing Interstate 40, the tornado dissipated around 6:43\u00a0p.m.\u00a0CDT (2343\u00a0UTC), after tracking for 16.2 miles (26.1\u00a0km), it avoided affecting the more densely populated areas near and within the Oklahoma City metropolitan area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado\nThe tornado killed four storm chasers, the first known deaths in the history of storm chasing. Although the tornado remained over mostly open terrain, dozens of storm chasers unaware of its immense size and erratic movement were caught off-guard. Near Highway 81, TWISTEX scientist and engineer Tim Samaras, along with his son Paul and research partner Carl Young, died in the tornado. Paul Samaras and Young were ejected from their Chevrolet Cobalt by the storm's sub-vortex, while Tim was still buckled in the passenger's seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado\nLocal resident Richard Henderson, who decided to follow the storm, lost his life in that same area. He snapped a picture of the tornado from his cellular phone before it struck him. Other chasers, including Mike Bettes of The Weather Channel and Reed Timmer, were either injured or had their vehicles damaged. A Doppler on Wheels-based analysis of how the tornado impacted these teams revealed that they were hit by an intense internal sub-vortex. Overall, the tornado was responsible for eight fatalities and 151 injuries. Due to the ferocity and sheer size, as well as its irregular movement and the deaths linked with this tornado, it has become one of the most studied and infamous tornadoes ever. The National Weather Service referred to the tornado as \"the most dangerous tornado in storm observing history.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado\nAlongside rush hour traffic, thousands of residents in Oklahoma City attempted to outrun the storm by taking to the roads in an attempt to drive out of the tornado's projected path. By attempting to escape the storm by vehicle, in direct contrast to the recommended plan of action, residents put themselves at great risk from the storm; had the tornado maintained itself and passed over the congested freeways, more than 500 lives could have been lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nOn May 31, 2013, a prominent mid-to-upper level trough and closed mid-level low pressure area moved east-northeastward, with a lead upper low pivoting over the Dakotas and Upper Midwest region. A moderately strong polar jet moved east-northeastward over the southern Rocky Mountains to the southern Great Plains. With a broad influence of moderately strong cyclonic flow aloft, the air mass was expected to become unstable across much of the southern Great Plains, through the Upper Midwest and Mississippi Valley, by the afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nDewpoint values had ranged from the upper 60s\u00a0\u00b0F (20\u00a0\u00b0C) to the lower 70s\u00a0\u00b0F (20\u201322\u00a0\u00b0C), with temperatures in the low to mid-80s\u00a0\u00b0F (27\u201330\u00a0\u00b0C), and CAPE (a meteorological concept used to predict the force and power of potential storms and tornadoes) predicting referring to values ranging from 3500 to 5000 J/kg. Deep layer wind shear speeds of 45\u201355\u00a0kn (52\u201363\u00a0mph) would enhance storm organization and intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nThese factors, along with CAPE values in excess of 4000\u00a0J/kg and an embedded speed maxima rotating around the southern periphery of the low, made the threat of significant severe thunderstorms increasingly likely. These ingredients were present ahead of a cold front extending from the low from the eastern Dakotas southwestward to western Oklahoma, and ahead of a dry line extending from western Oklahoma southward into western north and west-central Texas. The most intense severe weather activity was expected across the southern Great Plains, specifically central and eastern Oklahoma, during the afternoon hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nAs such, the Storm Prediction Center (SPC) issued a moderate risk of severe thunderstorms during the early morning hours of May 31 from southeastern Missouri to southwestern Oklahoma. The degree of wind shear, moisture and instability within the warm sector favored the development of discrete supercells. Very large hail and tornadoes were expected with the supercells, with the possibility of a few strong to violent tornadoes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nAt 3:30\u00a0p.m. Central Daylight Time (CDT) early that afternoon, the SPC issued a Particularly Dangerous Situation Tornado Watch from southwestern through northeastern Oklahoma, surrounding the Interstate 44 corridor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Storm development and track\nA quasi-linear complex of thunderstorms began developing near the Highway 81 corridor west of Oklahoma City between 4:00 and 4:45\u00a0p.m.\u00a0CDT, and rapidly reached severe intensity. At 5:33\u00a0p.m.\u00a0CDT (2233\u00a0UTC), the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Norman, Oklahoma issued a tornado warning for Canadian County, prompted by increasingly strong tornadic circulation exhibited in the southernmost supercell of this complex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Storm development and track\nAt 6:03\u00a0p.m.\u00a0CDT (2303\u00a0UTC), a large tornadic wall cloud formed and touched down, initially in the form of several smaller sub-vortices, 8.3 miles (13.4\u00a0km) west-southwest of El Reno. The tornado ultimately attained EF3 intensity during its existence, according to ground surveys. As the tornado passed south of El Reno across Highway 81, it grew to an unprecedented width of 2.6 miles (4.2\u00a0km), becoming the widest known tornado ever recorded in the United States. At 6:28\u00a0p.m.\u00a0CDT (2328\u00a0UTC), the storm began moving into more densely populated areas of Canadian County while maintaining its intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Storm development and track\nThis prompted the National Weather Service office in Norman to issue a tornado emergency for Yukon, Richland, Wiley Post Airport, Bethany, The Village, and eastern El Reno, as the tornado was projected to track toward western portions of the Oklahoma City metropolitan area. Within minutes, the tornado turned northeast and soon passed directly over Interstate 40 at around 6:42\u00a0p.m.\u00a0CDT (2342\u00a0UTC). Shortly thereafter, the tornado lifted off the ground as it neared Banner Road. Overall, the tornado was on the ground for 40 minutes along a 16.2-mile (26.1\u00a0km) path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Storm development and track\nA strong anticyclonic multivortex satellite tornado also formed southeast of the primary tornado at approximately 6:28\u00a0pm\u00a0CDT (2328\u00a0UTC), and remained on the ground for 15 minutes before lifting at 6:43 (2343\u00a0UTC). Such companion tornadoes tend to be observed with especially large and intense tornadoes, although this was the first documented multiple-vortex anticyclonic tornado of this kind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Intensity\nThe intensity of the tornado has been a subject of internal debate within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The agency utilizes the Enhanced Fujita Scale to rate and assess tornado intensity based on the damage left behind. This excludes the use of supplementary measurements, such as those from mobile radar, in concluding a tornado's intensity. Initially receiving an official EF3 rating based on damage, the El Reno tornado was subsequently upgraded to a radar-estimated EF5 rating, the highest on the scale, based on data from a mobile radar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Intensity\nThe University of Oklahoma's RaXPol mobile Doppler weather radar, positioned at a nearby overpass, measured winds preliminarily analyzed as in excess of 296\u00a0mph (476\u00a0km/h). These winds are considered the second-highest ever measured worldwide, just shy of the 302\u00a0\u00b1\u00a022\u00a0mph (486\u00a0\u00b1\u00a035\u00a0km/h) recorded during the 1999 Bridge Creek\u2013Moore tornado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Intensity\nRevised RaXPol analysis found winds of 302\u00a0\u00b1\u00a034\u00a0mph (486\u00a0\u00b1\u00a055\u00a0km/h) well above ground level and \u2265291\u00a0mph (468\u00a0km/h) below 10\u00a0m (33\u00a0ft), with some subvortices moving at 175\u00a0mph (282\u00a0km/h). The strongest winds occurred in small subvortices along the south side of the main vortex. The two most intense vortices occurred north and east of the intersection of 10th Street and Radio Road, about 3 miles (4.8\u00a0km) southeast of El Reno. The main funnel is believed to have had radar-estimated EF4 winds, with wind speeds around 185\u00a0mph (298\u00a0km/h). Radar-estimated EF5 winds were only found aloft and in the smaller vortices that revolved around this funnel at 110\u00a0mph (180\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Intensity\nRick Smith, the warning coordination meteorologist at the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Norman, stated that this tornado was among a \"super-rare\" category within the EF5 rating. Smith also stated that it was fortunate the tornado did not track into more densely populated areas, particularly those within the Oklahoma City metropolitan area, \"this would have been \u2026 I don't even want to imagine what it would have been.\" William Hooke, a senior policy fellow at the American Meteorological Society stated that, \"[Oklahoma City] dodged a bullet... You lay that path over Oklahoma City, and you have devastation of biblical proportions.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Meteorological synopsis, Intensity\nOn August 30, the National Weather Service office in Norman once again revised the intensity of the El Reno tornado. Keli Pirtle, a Public Affairs worker at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, stated that, \"despite the radar-measured wind speeds, the survey team did not find damage that would support a rating higher than EF3. While the wind measurements from the mobile radars are considered reliable, NWS policy for determining EF-ratings is based on surveys of ground damage.\" The lack of EF5 damage was likely a result of the rural nature of the area, as the sub-vortices that contained the EF5 wind speeds did not impact any structures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents\nThe tornado's unusual behavior consisted of these simultaneous occurrences: abrupt changes in direction, rapid enlargement to a width of 2.6\u00a0mi (4.2\u00a0km) in diameter in about 30 seconds, swift increase in forward motion from about 20 to 55\u00a0mph (32 to 89\u00a0km/h) within a few minutes, multiple vortices within and around, and an expansive translucent outer circulation without a full condensation funnel while being surrounded and obscured by precipitation made it a worst-case scenario for storm chasers. Several professional and amateur chasers were caught off guard and impacted by the tornado. Many were located in a region northeast of the tornado, known as the \"bear's cage\". Chasers can generally get a clear view of the tornado from that area; however, it places them at great risk and with little time to react should the storm take a left turn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents\nIn the case of El Reno, the wrapping rain bands did not lead to a narrow corridor of clear air close to the tornado. Rather, these rotating curtains of rain were the outer circulation of the tornado itself. Former Discovery Channel storm chaser Tim Samaras (an engineer), his son Paul Samaras (a photographer), and Tim's longtime chase partner Carl Young (a meteorologist), all professional storm chasers with the TWISTEX project, were caught directly by the tornado; all three died in their vehicle, two of them were ejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents\nNormally, Tim drove a reinforced three-quarter ton truck optimized for hail protection and stability in high winds; however, on May 31, Carl was driving an unmodified Chevrolet Cobalt, a subcompact vehicle with three 45-lb barometric probes in the trunk likened by one TWISTEX chaser to a \"pizza delivery car\", making it much less suited to high winds and rain-slicked backcountry dirt roads. It was also underpowered, which hampered their escape in the strong inflow winds. Tim's body was found still buckled in the passenger's seat. They were the first known tornado-related deaths of either recreational storm chasers or scientific researchers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents\nMike Bettes, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel, was also caught in the storm. His sport utility vehicle was severely damaged, having been thrown about 200 yards (180\u00a0m); the driver was left with a broken neck, fractured vertebrae, and several broken ribs while Bettes and the other passenger sustained minor injuries. Meteorologist Emily Sutton and storm chaser Kevin Josefy of Oklahoma City NBC affiliate KFOR-TV (channel 4) were also caught in the path of the storm; their vehicle was damaged by debris hurled by the tornado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents\nUniversity of Oklahoma student Billy Prater, along with his father and a friend, sought refuge under an overpass (an action strongly discouraged in these situations) when the tornado changed direction. Near Union City, debris from a barn destroyed by the tornado struck the vehicle of Brandon Sullivan and Brett Wright, breaking their windshield; they escaped without injury. The hood of Reed Timmer's Dominator 2, a vehicle designed for intercepting tornadoes, was torn off. Storm chaser Dan Robinson received injuries after being enveloped within the outskirts of the tornadic circulation. He escaped a few hundred meters ahead of the TWISTEX crew and is believed to be the last person to see Samaras, his son Paul and Young.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents\nA Doppler on Wheels-based analysis of how the tornado impacted these teams revealed that they were hit by an intense internal sub-vortex. This analysis showed that both the Weather Channel and TWISTEX vehicles entered the tornado through the less intense north/northwestern side, then were impacted by the internal sub-vortex, which contained radar-indicated winds approaching 200 miles per hour (320\u00a0km/h) and was moving in a complex quasi-trochoidal pattern, sometimes nearly stationary, sometimes with forward speeds over 100 miles per hour (160\u00a0km/h). Entering the larger tornadic circulation without the ability to maintain situational awareness of the internal sub-vortex was likely a key contributing factor to the deaths and injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents, Response\nIn the wake of the storm chaser deaths, Kansas Emergency Management Association president Brian Stone called for there to be regulations put on future storm chasing; however, he stated that there are questions as to how it would actually be implemented. AccuWeather Senior Vice President Mike Smith urged against overreacting to their deaths, citing that they were the first chasers to be killed in 40\u00a0years of the practice and that chasing as a whole is a significant source of real-time and research information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents, Response\nOn June 2, dozens of members of the storm chasing and spotting communities coordinated a tribute to Tim Samaras, Paul Samaras, and Carl Young. Using GPS transponders over Spotter Network, they aligned themselves to spell out the initials of the three men in North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska for many hours. The Discovery Channel scheduled a special tribute episode of Storm Chasers titled Mile Wide Tornado: Oklahoma Disaster on June 5, both honoring the three chasers and covering the events of the EF5-rated tornado that struck Moore and portions of southern Oklahoma City eleven days earlier on May 20. The November 2013 issue of National Geographic, for its featured cover story, paid tribute to Tim Samaras, a National Geographic Explorer funded in part by the Society, and featured a detailed scientific analysis of the tornado itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents, Response\nA team of scientists and veteran chasers embarked on a crowd-sourcing survey project to gather storm chaser information, including video and photographic recordings and GPS logs, to piece together precisely what happened. It is, as of February 2014, the largest such visual data set ever collected on a tornado. The chaser information is compiled with radar and lightning data and the project is intended to eventually expand to a standardized open access database covering future events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Storm chaser incidents, Response\nIn association with the project, software was unveiled in 2015 allowing for the synchronization of maps, radar data, and storm chasers' footage of the storm. The tool was named \"Tornado Environment Display\" (TED) after Dr. Ted Fujita. Anton Seimon, one of the tool's architects, said that while the tool had only been used in relation to the El Reno tornado, it could potentially be applied to future tornadoes with sufficient footage as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Casualties and impact\nSince the tornado remained over mostly open terrain, damage was relatively light \u2013 although still significant in isolated locations \u2013 in comparison to its extreme intensity. Surveys from the National Weather Service revealed that structures in its path sustained EF3-level damage at most. The Oklahoma City West Livestock Market was described as a \"war zone,\" sustaining extensive damage. Several large steel-frame warehouse type buildings were destroyed at that location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Casualties and impact\nMultiple large brick buildings at the nearby Canadian Valley Technology Center were heavily damaged or destroyed, and a large metal wind turbine prop blade was thrown 100 yards (91\u00a0m) into the side of a daycare building on the property. Damage totals at that location alone were estimated at up to $40\u00a0million. One farmstead, consisting of a large barn, a cattle barn, three machine sheds, granaries and the owner's home, was also completely destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Casualties and impact\nSeveral other rural homes were destroyed, and large amounts of gravel was blown off of gravel roads in the area, with only the dirt underneath left at some locations. Several large metal electrical transmission poles were downed, trees were snapped and defoliated, and multiple vehicles were tossed from roadways in the area. At least 29 buildings and 40 vehicles were damaged or destroyed by the tornado, with repairs in the El Reno area expected to take at least a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Casualties and impact\nOn June 1, the American Red Cross set up a shelter at the Redlands Community College in El Reno for victims of the storm. The following day, Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin toured damaged areas of El Reno. Due to the tornadoes that occurred previously on May 20, a state of emergency was already in place for the affected areas, allowing residents to quickly obtain emergency assistance. Residents left homeless were provided with temporary housing constructed from shipping containers. Each container was fitted with a kitchen, bedroom, living room, and bathroom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Casualties and impact\nOverall, eight people lost their lives as a result of the tornado, all of whom were killed in vehicles. Local hospitals in Oklahoma City, including OU Medical Center and INTEGRIS Southwest Medical Center, and Mercy Hospital in El Reno, reported receiving at least 115 injured, including five critical patients. Overall, 151 injuries were attributed to the tornado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Casualties and impact, Evacuations\nAs the tornadoes approached the Oklahoma City metro, thousands of residents decided to leave the area for safety, possibly due to the still fresh memories of the devastation caused by the EF5 tornado that struck Moore on May 20. Already congested with rush hour traffic, Interstates 35, 40, 44 and 240, became \"parking lots\" as the storms neared. Residents reported the highways to be a scene of chaos, \"people were going southbound in the northbound lanes. Everybody was running for their lives.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233046-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 El Reno tornado, Casualties and impact, Evacuations\nIt has been suggested that the evacuation was partially caused by a controversial call to action on-air by KFOR-TV chief meteorologist Mike Morgan, who suggested on-air during coverage of the storm \u2013 as the tornado was projected to track into Oklahoma City \u2013 that residents without underground storm shelters or safe rooms get into their cars and evacuate south of the track. This advice was contrary to the recommended plan to go to an interior room, bathtub or closet with no windows if no basement or other underground shelter is available. These locations are typically much safer than an automobile in tornadic winds. Dr. Jeff Masters of Weather Underground stated that had the tornado tracked directly over one of the congested highways, the death toll could have easily exceeded 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233047-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Elgeyo-Marakwet local elections\nLocal elections were held in Elgeyo-Marakwet County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233047-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Elgeyo-Marakwet local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233048-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Elite League speedway season\nThe 2013 Elite League speedway season (also known as the Sky Sports Elite League for sponsorship reasons) was the 79th season of the top division of UK speedway and the took place between March and October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233048-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Elite League speedway season, Summary\nThe Swindon Robins were the defending champions after winning in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233048-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Elite League speedway season, Summary\nBirmingham Brummies finished top of the regular season table but lost in the play off to Poole Pirates, who continued to enjoy British League success. It was their fifth success in ten years and was instrumented by their Australian duo Chris Holder and Darcy Ward and Poles Maciej Janowski and Przemys\u0142aw Pawlicki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233048-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Elite League speedway season, League table\nHome: 3W = Home win by 7 points or more; 2W = Home win by between 1 and 6 points Away: 4W = Away win by 7 points or more; 3W = Away win by between 1 and 6 points; 1L = Away loss by 6 points or lessM = Meetings; D = Draws; L = Losses; F = Race points for; A = Race points against; Pts = Total Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233048-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Elite League speedway season, Championship play-offs, Grand final, Second leg\nThe Poole Pirates were declared Elite League Champions, winning on aggregate 104-79.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233049-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Elite One\nThe 2013 Elite One was the 53rd season of the Cameroon Top League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233049-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Elite One, League table\nOwing to an expansion of the 2014 Elite One into 19 teams, no teams were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nThe 2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs was the 40th time a spot in the Norwegian top flight was decided by play-off matches between top tier and second level clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs\nAt the end of the 2013 season, Troms\u00f8 and H\u00f8nefoss were relegated directly to the 2014 1. divisjon, and was replaced by Bod\u00f8/Glimt and Stab\u00e6k who were directly promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Background\nThe play-offs between Eliteserien and 1. divisjon have been held every year since 1972 with exceptions in 1994 and 2011. They take place for the two divisions following the conclusion of the regular season and are contested by the fourteenth-placed club in Eliteserien and the four clubs finishing below the automatic promotion places in 1. divisjon. The fixtures are determined by final league position \u2013 the first to knockout-rounds begins with the four teams in the 1. divisjon: 3rd v 6th and 4th v 5th, and the winner then play each other to determine who meet the Eliteserien club in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Qualified teams\nFive teams entered a play-off for the last Eliteserien spot for the 2014 season. These were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Qualified teams\nThe four 1. divisjon teams first played a single game knockout tournament, with the winner (Ranheim) advancing to a two-legged tie against the Eliteserien team (Sarpsborg 08) for the 16th and final spot in the 2014 Eliteserien season. Sarpsborg 08 maintained their position in the top flight with a 3\u20130 win on aggregate against Ranheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Matches\nThe third to sixth-placed teams in 2013 1. divisjon took part in the promotion play-offs; these were single leg knockout matches, two semi-finals and a final. The winners of the second round, Ranheim, advanced to play the 14th placed team in Tippeligaen over two legs in the Eliteserien play-offs for a spot in the top flight the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Matches, Final\nThe 14th-placed team, Sarpsborg 08, took part in a two-legged play-off against Ranheim, the winners of the 2013 1. divisjon promotion play-offs, to decide who would play in the 2014 Tippeligaen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233050-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Eliteserien Promotion/Relegation play-offs, Matches, Final\nSarpsborg 08 won 3\u20130 on aggregate and maintained their position in the 2014 Tippeligaen; Ranheim stayed in the 1. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233051-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Elon Phoenix football team\nThe 2013 Elon Phoenix football team represented Elon University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Jason Swepson and played their home games at Rhodes Stadium. They were a member of the Southern Conference. This was their final season as a member of the SoCon as they joined the Colonial Athletic Association in 2014. They finished the season 2\u201310, 1\u20137 in SoCon play to finish in a tie for eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233051-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Elon Phoenix football team\nOn November 25, 2013 Jason Swepson was fired after 3 consecutive losing records with a compiling record a 10\u201324 in those three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233051-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Elon Phoenix football team, Preseason outlook\nThe Elon Phoenix began the season with four players named to the preseason All-Southern Conference teams: Linebacker Jonathan Spain was joined by second-team selections Clay Johnson for offensive line, Kierre Brown as a wide receiver, and defensive back Chandler Wrightenberry. The team began the season picked next to last in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233051-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Elon Phoenix football team, Preseason outlook\nIn May 2013, the school announced that the program will be leaving the Southern Conference to join the Colonial Athletic Association in 2014 as an all-sports member. The 2013 football season was their last season in the Southern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233051-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Elon Phoenix football team, Media\nEvery Elon game will be broadcast on WPCM AM 920. Select games will be streamed online by ESPN3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233052-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Emakumeen Euskal Bira\nThe 2013 Emakumeen Euskal Bira will be the 26th edition of the Emakumeen Bira, a women's cycling stage race in Spain. It was rated by the UCI as category 2.1, and was held between 6 and 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233053-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Embu local elections\nLocal elections were held in Embu to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233053-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Embu local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233054-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Emir of Qatar Cup\nThe 2013 Emir of Qatar Cup will be the 41st edition of the cup tournament in men's football. It is played by the 1st and 2nd level divisions of the Qatari football league structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233054-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Emir of Qatar Cup\nThe draw for the competition is on 1 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 71]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233054-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Emir of Qatar Cup\nThe cup winner is guaranteed a place in the 2014 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233054-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Emir of Qatar Cup, Round 1\nFour teams from the 2nd Division enter this round, the winners qualify for round two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233054-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Emir of Qatar Cup, Round 3\n1 Al Kharitiyath were deemed to have played an ineligible player and Al-Gharafa were later awarded a 3:0 victory to proceed to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup\nThe 2013 Emirates Cup was a pre-season football friendly tournament hosted by Arsenal at its home ground, the Emirates Stadium in London. It was the sixth Emirates Cup, an invitational competition inaugurated in 2007. Held on the weekend of 3\u20134 August 2013, the participants were Arsenal, Porto, Napoli, and Galatasaray. The 2013 edition marked the resumption of the Emirates Cup as the tournament took a hiatus in 2012 due to the Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup\nThe competition followed a point scoring system much like the Amsterdam Tournament, whereby each team played two matches, with three points awarded for a win, one point for a draw and none for a loss. It also reverted to system whereby each goal was awarded with a point. Arsenal did not face Porto, and Napoli did not play against Galatasaray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup\nThe first day saw Galatasaray defeat Porto by a single goal, while Arsenal came from two goals down to draw against Napoli. Didier Drogba scored twice for Galatasaray against Arsenal to ensure the Turkish club won the tournament. Porto beat Napoli 3\u20131 to finish second, on six points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Background\nIn March 2007 Arsenal announced their intention to stage a pre-season competition at their home ground, the Emirates Stadium. Managing director Keith Edelman revealed plans were at an exploratory stage, and added: \"It would be in pre-season, around late July, and tickets would be reasonably priced. We feel it could be a really exciting event.\" The tournament went ahead four months later and is named after Arsenal's main sponsor Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Background\nAfter a break in 2012 due to the Summer Olympics, Arsenal confirmed the return of the Emirates Cup in May 2013. S\u00fcper Lig champions Galatasaray, Italian side Napoli and Portuguese club Porto were revealed as participants for the 2013 edition, alongside hosts Arsenal. Arsenal chief executive Ivan Gazidis said in a statement, \"We are welcoming three high-quality sides to this year\u2019s competition again and I\u2019m sure we\u2019ll see some great football played over the two days.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Summary\nPorto faced Galatasaray on the first day of the tournament. The only goal of the game was scored by Galatasaray's Felipe Melo, who converted a penalty in the second half. Porto began sprightly, but struggled to make their possession count. They were awarded a penalty in the 19th minute but Jackson Mart\u00ednez saw his effort saved by goalkeeper Fernando Muslera. As the match went on Galatasaray started to dominate; Didier Drogba and Wesley Sneijder linked up well and provided the team\u2019s biggest threat up front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Summary\nAfter taking the lead via a penalty won by former Arsenal defender Emmanuel Ebou\u00e9, Galatasaray once more conceded a penalty. Up stepped Porto\u2019s captain Lucho Gonz\u00e1lez, but he hit his penalty wide. The score ended 1\u20130 in Galatasaray's favour; the club's manager Fatih Terim said afterwards: \u201cOur play wasn't very satisfactory but in the second half we pressed more and we performed better.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Summary\nArsenal played Napoli in the day's late game. In the match, the hosts came back from two goals down in the space of 14 minutes to draw 2\u20132. Napoli were sharp in the first half, leading through Lorenzo Insigne's goal and doubled their advantage after Pandev went around goalkeeper \u0141ukasz Fabia\u0144ski to score. Arsenal's poor performance resulted in the home support booing the team off at half time. Arsenal played with purpose thereafter, and got back into the game when Olivier Giroud's overhead kick found its way into the Napoli goal. Laurent Koscielny equalised for Arsenal with four minutes of normal time remaining. In an assessment of Arsenal's performance, The Observer's match reporter Simon Burton noted the hosts \"worked the ball nicely through midfield but ran out of ideas at the edge of the penalty area.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Summary\nNapoli took on Porto on the second day of the Emirates Cup. The Italian club led towards the end of the first half as Goran Pandev scored from the penalty spot. Porto responded after the break with three goals; the first came in the 50th minute when Nabil Ghilas' strike beat Pepe Reina in goal. Napoli's Federico Fern\u00e1ndez scored an own goal and substitute Lic\u00e1 sealed a 3\u20131 win for the Portuguese side after Andrea Dossena made an error in his penalty box. The final game of the tournament was Arsenal versus Galatasaray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Summary\nIt was the first meeting between the two clubs since the 2000 UEFA Cup Final which Galatasaray won on penalties. Yaya Sanogo played up front for Arsenal, while Drogba started on the bench for Galatasaray. Theo Walcott, who missed a chance in the 18th minute, gave Arsenal the lead five minutes before the break. A tangle between Drogba and Ignasi Miquel in the Arsenal penalty box resulted in the referee awarding Galatasaray a penalty in the 78th minute. Arsenal manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger described the penalty as a \"classic Drogba,\" and the player duly converted his spot kick. Drogba scored his second of the match late on to win the Emirates Cup for Galatasaray; he controlled a long ball from Sneijder, before cutting inside and shooting past Wojciech Szcz\u0119sny. It was Drogba's 15th goal against Arsenal in 15 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233055-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Emirates Cup, Standings\nEach team played two matches, with three points awarded for a win, one point for a draw, and a point for every goal scored. In addition, shots on target were taken into account and were used to decide the tournament winners if teams were level on points and goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup\nThe 93rd Emperor's Cup (\u7b2c93\u56de\u5929\u7687\u676f\u5168\u65e5\u672c\u30b5\u30c3\u30ab\u30fc\u9078\u624b\u6a29\u5927\u4f1a) is the regular edition of the annual Japanese national cup tournament. It started on 31 August 2013 and ended on 1 January 2014 with the final at National Stadium in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup\nYokohama F. Marinos defeated 2013 J.League Division 1 champions Sanfrecce Hiroshima 2\u20130 for their seventh Emperor's Cup, their first in twenty-one years and their second in the J.League era after winning 1992 Emperor's Cup as Nissan F.C. Yokohama Marinos. The cup winners would normally receive a berth in the upcoming AFC Champions League; as F. Marinos finished as J.League runners-up that year, the nod went to Cerezo Osaka, the fourth-placed team in the 2013 J.League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup, Participating clubs\n88 clubs compete in the tournament. The 18 J.League Division 1 clubs and 22 J.League Division 2 clubs receive a bye to the second round of the tournament. The other 47 teams earned berths by winning their respective prefectural cup tournaments, and will enter from the first round along with the JFL seeded team, the team with the best record after the 17th matchday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup, First round\nThe 47 prefectural tournament winners join JFL seeded team Kamatamare Sanuki in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup, Second round\nThe 24 winners from the first round are joined by all 40 J.League teams. Ties that were played on September 11 had been moved from their originally-scheduled dates of September 7 and 8; the Kashiwa Reysol\u2013University of Tsukuba match originally scheduled for the 7th was moved to the 10th, then the 4th due to a league scheduling conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup, Third round\nA.C. Nagano Parceiro and Zweigen Kanazawa, both playing in the Japan Football League, were the lowest-ranked teams remaining at this stage in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup, Fourth round\nThe draw for the remaining rounds of the tournament was held on October 20. Only three teams outside the top flight remain: Consadole Sapporo and Montedio Yamagata of J.League Division 2 and A.C. Nagano Parceiro of the Japan Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup, Fourth round\nMatches between J1 sides were played on November 16; matches involving J2 or JFL clubs were played on November 20 to avoid scheduling conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233056-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe four quarter-final matches, all featuring J.League Division 1 clubs, will be played on December 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233057-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233057-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Emperor's Cup Final\n2013 Emperor's Cup Final was the 93th final of the Emperor's Cup competition. The final was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on January 1, 2014. Yokohama F. Marinos won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233058-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Empire Slovak Open\nThe 2013 Empire Slovak Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $75,000 in prize money. It took place in Trnava, Slovakia, on 6\u201312 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233058-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Empire Slovak Open, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233058-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Empire Slovak Open, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233059-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Doubles\nElena Bogdan and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012. In 2013, both players decided to defend their titles, but with different partners. Bogdan paired up with Jill Craybas but they lost in the quarterfinals while Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 paired up with Mervana Jugi\u0107-Salki\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233059-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Doubles\nJugi\u0107-Salki\u0107 and Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Jana \u010cepelov\u00e1 and Anna Karol\u00edna Schmiedlov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233060-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Singles\nAnastasija Sevastova was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233060-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Empire Slovak Open \u2013 Singles\nBarbora Z\u00e1hlavov\u00e1-Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Karin Knapp in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233061-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Empress's Cup, Overview\nIt was contested by 36 teams, and INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233062-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Empress's Cup Final\n2013 Empress's Cup Final was the 35th final of the Empress's Cup competition. The final was played at Omiya Football Stadium in Saitama on December 23, 2013. INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233062-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Empress's Cup Final, Overview\nDefending champion INAC Kobe Leonessa won their 4th title, by defeating Albirex Niigata on a penalty shoot-out. INAC Kobe Leonessa won the title for 4 years in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233063-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eneco Tour\nThe 2013 Eneco Tour was the ninth running of the Eneco Tour cycling stage race. It started on 12 August in Koksijde and ended on 18 August in Geraardsbergen, Belgium, after seven stages. It was the 20th race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season and was won by Zden\u011bk \u0160tybar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233063-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eneco Tour, Teams\nAll 19 teams in the UCI's Proteam category were entitled, and obliged, to enter the race. Two UCI Professional Continental teams were also invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233063-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eneco Tour, Schedule\nThe race consists of seven stages, including one individual time trial stage. Just as the previous season, the race will finish with a stage including the Muur van Geraardsbergen, which was famous for its presence in the Tour of Flanders single-day race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233064-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Energiewacht Tour\nThe 2013 Energiewacht Tour is the third edition of the Energiewacht Tour women's cycling stage race. It is rated by the UCI as category 2.2, and is held between 3 and 7 April 2013 in the Netherlands. Twenty-four teams of 6 riders take part. There is also an Energiewacht Tour for junior riders from 5 to 7 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233064-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Energiewacht Tour, Stages, Stage 1\nThe race consisted of three laps around Bad Nieuweschans and 3 laps around Winschoten. The mayor of Oldambt, Pieter Smit, started the race. The race included two bonification sprints. Lisa Brennauer won the first one, ahead of Ellen van Dijk and Adrie Visser. Visser won the second one ahead of Trixi Worrack and Annemiek van Vleuten. In Bad Nieuweschans the bunch split into three groups. The first group had a 1' 25\" seconds gap on the second group before they were sent into the wrong direction. The race was neutralized and the first group got the 1' 25\" seconds lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233064-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Energiewacht Tour, Stages, Stage 1\nAfter that some roads were not properly closed anymore and cars rode over the course. Due to the dangerous situation the women's stopped riding. After a while they continuead riding but later on they had to wait for an open bridge. A protest of the women's followed and with one lap to go the ladies stopped at the start/finish in Winschoten. Some of them wanted to abandon the race but after intense discussions with the organisation the ladies started again with the original time differences between the groups. In the final lap the front group split with a small group of 4 leaders in the front. Kirsten Wild won the side by side sprint of Ellen van Dijk. Iris Slappendel finished in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233064-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Energiewacht Tour, Stages, Stage 2\nPekela was the start and Veendam the finish place of the team time trial in the 2012 Energiewacht Tour. Now the riders rode the same course in a regular race. After three laps in Pekela the riders rode to Veendam for four local laps there. During the local laps in Pekela the peloton split in different groups, with a front group of 13 riders. Annemiek van Vleuten got punctured and could not reach the front group during the race. From the stage 1 top-10 of also Christine Majerus was not in the first group. In the final kilometers there were a lot of attacks, but were pulled back. Kirsten Wild pulled back the last one of Lisa Brennauer and won the sprint ahead of Chloe Hosking and Adrie Visser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233064-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Energiewacht Tour, Stages, Stage 3a\nWinsum will be also the host city for 2013 Dutch National Time Trial Championships and the course of both time trials is probably the same. Ellen van Dijk won the time trial with nearly a minute ahead of Lisa Brennauer and Shara Gillow who finished second and third. Van Dijk took over the lead in the general classification from Kirsten Wild who finished 9th at 1' 54\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina\nIn June 2013, England played a two-test series against Argentina as part of the 2013 mid-year rugby test series. This series was part of the second year of the global rugby calendar established by the International Rugby Board, which runs through to 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina\nEngland played the Pumas over a two-week period, playing in Estadio Padre Ernesto Martearena in Salta (8 June) and playing at Estadio Jos\u00e9 Amalfitani in the capital city of Buenos Aires (15 June). The first test was their first encounter since England's 13\u20139 victory over Argentina during the 2011 Rugby World Cup, and was the first time they have met in Argentina since 2009, the last time Argentina beat England. England won both matches of the series, completing their first series victory in Argentina since the 1981 England rugby union tour of Argentina, and winning both matches of a series in Argentina for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina\nAhead of the test series, England played their annual uncapped fixture against the Barbarians at Twickenham, and a fixture against the South American XV side, which was made up of representatives from Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Squads, England\nEngland's 32-man squad for fixtures against the Barbarians and the two-test tour to Argentina plus a mid-week match against South American XV. Full -back Alex Goode and uncapped centre Joel Tomkins withdrew from the squad due to injury. They were replaced by uncapped players Stephen Myler and Luther Burrell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Squads, England\nEd Slater and Calum Clark was ruled out of the tour due to injury and Kearnan Myall was added to the squad for the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Squads, England\nHaydn Thomas featured in the squad to face the Barbarians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Squads, England\nAlex Corbisiero left the squad ahead of the first test as he was called up for the British and Irish Lions. Corbisiero was not replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Squads, England\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Squads, Argentina\nArgentina 28-man squad for the 2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina and single test against Georgia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Squads, Argentina\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Matches, Warm-up match\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Paul Dix (England)Television match official:David Grashoff (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Matches, First test\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Christie du Preez (South Africa)Television match official:Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233065-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 England rugby union tour of Argentina, Matches, Second test\nTouch judges:Marius Jonker (South Africa)Christie du Preez (South Africa)Television match official:Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233066-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 English Greyhound Derby\nThe 2013 William Hill Greyhound Derby took place during May and June with the final being held on 29 June 2013 at Wimbledon Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233066-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 English Greyhound Derby\nSidaz Jack rewarded trainer Charlie Lister OBE with an incredible seventh Derby title. The ante-post favorite Ballymac Eske had finished last in the semi-finals and was eliminated. The competition was sponsored by William Hill and the winner Sidaz Jack received \u00a3150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233066-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 English Greyhound Derby, Final result, Distances\n1\u00bc, short head, 1\u00bd, 1\u00be, 2\u00bd (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, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233066-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 English Greyhound Derby, Final result, Race Report\nBallymac Vic led to the second bend before being overtaken by Sidaz Jack and the two battled it out until Sidaz Jack gained an advantage. Airlie Impact ran on well for third place. Screen Critic and Droopys jet lost their chance after encountering trouble at the first bend and Bittles Bar made no impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233067-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 English National Badminton Championships\nThe 2013 English National Badminton Championships were held at the National Cycling Centre, in Manchester, from 1-3 February, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233068-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 English cricket season\nThe 2013 English cricket season was the 114th in which the County Championship had been an official competition. It began on 5 April with a round of university matches, and continued until the conclusion of a round of County Championship matches on 27 September. Three major domestic competitions were contested: the 2013 County Championship, the 2013 Clydesdale Bank 40 and the 2013 Friends Life t20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233068-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 English cricket season\nAustralia toured England to compete for the Ashes. It was the 76th test series between the two sides with England winning 3-0. The New Zealand cricket team toured earlier in the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233068-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 English cricket season, Friends Life t20, Group stage\n\u2020Durham were deducted 0.25 points for a breach of team salary payments in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal\nIn November and December 2013 several individuals were arrested by the National Crime Agency (NCA) on suspicion of fixing English association football matches. The arrests occurred as a result of two separate newspaper investigations, by The Daily Telegraph and the Sun on Sunday. On 17 June 2014, a jury at Birmingham Crown Court found Michael Boateng, Krishna Sanjey Ganeshan and Chann Sankaran guilty of conspiracy to commit bribery, while Hakeem Adelakun was cleared of the offence. Sankaran and Ganeshan were sentenced to five years in prison, with Boeteng given an 18-month sentence. At a later trial, Moses Swaibu and Delroy Facey were also found guilty of conspiracy to commit bribery and sentenced to 16 months and 30 months in prison respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Sun on Sunday investigation\nSix people were arrested by the NCA in December 2013 as the result of an investigation into match fixing by the Sun on Sunday. Sam Sodje, a former player for Reading F. C. and Portsmouth F. C., allegedly claimed that he could arrange for footballers in the Football League Championship to get themselves booked in exchange for cash payments. One of the six people arrested was footballer DJ Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Sun on Sunday investigation\nSodje told reporters that in an attempt to receive a red card and \u00a370,000 he had twice punched the Oldham Athletic player Jose Baxter, while playing for Portsmouth in a League One match. Sodje also claimed that he was preparing to fix games at the 2014 FIFA World Cup and that he had organised \u00a330,000 to be paid to a Championship player for receiving a yellow card. Sodje additionally claimed that he could fix Premier League games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Sun on Sunday investigation\nThe investigation also surrounded claims by Sodje involving his brother, the Tranmere Rovers player Akpo Sodje, and the Oldham player Cristian Monta\u00f1o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Daily Telegraph investigation\nThe NCA said their operation was focused on a \"suspected international illegal betting syndicate\", and said they were closely cooperating with the Gambling Commission and the Football Association. A seventh person was later arrested, and two of the initial six people arrested, Chann Sankaran, and Krishna Sanjey Ganeshan, were charged with conspiracy to defraud. Sankaran is a Singaporean national, and Ganeshan a dual UK-Singaporean national.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Daily Telegraph investigation\nThe six men who were arrested included three football players and football agent Delroy Facey, a former Premier League player. The identities of the football teams concerned has not been disclosed as the police operation is still active, but no Premier League football teams are involved. Two of the footballers were charged with conspiracy to defraud. The players charged, Michael Boateng and Hakeem Adelakun, both play for Whitehawk F.C., in the Conference South division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Daily Telegraph investigation\nIn a series of undercover meetings in Manchester, a Singaporean fixer claimed that he could rig the result of football games and that potential gamblers using betting websites based in Asia would make hundreds of thousands of pounds as a result of the information. The fixer claimed to \"control\" teams in other European countries and claimed to \"buy\" foreign referees to influence results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Daily Telegraph investigation\nThe cost of fixing matches in England was \"very high\" according to the fixer, who said the cost for players was usually \u00a370,000. The fixer planned to target two football matches in Britain in November, and tell the players how many total goals needed to be scored. The fixer gave an example of a game where four goals needed to be scored, with two goals would be scored in each half. The result was irrelevant as long as the correct number of total goals was scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Daily Telegraph investigation\nThe fixer claimed that a player would be paid \u00a35,000 to receive a yellow card at the start of the game as a signal to him that the match result could be manipulated. The fixer accurately predicted how many goals would be scored in a football match during the following day. The fixer asked The Daily Telegraph for \u20ac60,000 so that players could be paid. The fixer claimed to be connected to the convicted match fixer Wilson Raj Perumal, a fellow Singaporean, describing Perumal as \"the king\". Perumal is assisting police in Hungary in their own investigations of corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, NCA investigation & jail terms\nFollowing newspaper reports an investigation was launched by the National Crime Agency, and subsequently jailed two businessmen, Krishna Ganeshan, and Chann Sankaran, and player Michael Boateng, who were all convicted of conspiracy to commit bribery for a failed plot to fix a game between AFC Wimbledon and Dagenham & Redbridge on 26 November. It is believed that the case may be part of wider Singaporean match-fixing syndicate which Europol and other investigations have uncovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Reaction\nThe Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, Maria Miller, said that criminal activity had \"no place\" in British sport, and said that the actions of the NCA showed that \"robust\" measures existed to tackle unlawful activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233069-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 English football match-fixing scandal, Reaction\nThe shadow minister for sport, Clive Efford, said that the government had failed to do enough to help the governing bodies of sports address the issue of match fixing. Efford said that the government had voted against his amendments to the Gambling Bill that would have \"fixed the anomaly that exempts sports spread-betting operators from the requirement to pass on details of suspicious betting activity to sports governing bodies.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233070-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Enterprise Cup\nThe 2013 Enterprise Cup was the 75th time that the Enterprise Cup has been contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby\nThe 2013 Epsom Derby (known as the Investec Derby for sponsorship reasons) was the 234th annual running of the Derby horse race. It took place at Epsom Downs Racecourse on 1 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby\nThe race was won by Ruler of the World, at odds of 7/1 ridden by jockey Ryan Moore. The winner gave Aidan O'Brien his fourth success and was the first horse since Shergar to win both the Chester Vase and the Derby. The favourite Dawn Approach finished last of the twelve runners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby, Race synopsis\nDawn Approach, who had been sired by 2008 Derby winner New Approach, was a 5-4 favorite leading into the race, having won the 2013 2000 Guineas Stakes, the first leg of Britain's Triple Crown, by 5 lengths. The only other horse from the 2000 Guineas was Mars, going off at 12\u20131. Appearing in his third race was Ruler of the World, who did not race as a two-year-old, but he won his first race, a maiden race at Curragh by 3 1/2 lengths and also took the Chester Vase by six lengths. Ruler of the World went off at 7-1 odds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby, Race synopsis\nPresent for the race, as in years past, was Queen Elizabeth II, along with a crowd of 18,237. Favourite Dawn Approach would be ridden by Kevin Manning, who had also ridden his father New Approach to the 2008 Derby win. Ruler of the World, who would go on to win this year's Derby, was ridden by Ryan Moore, after fellow jockey Joseph O'Brien elected to ride Battle of Marengo. Both Battle of Marengo and Ruler of the World were trained by Aidan O'Brien from Ballydoyle, who is Joseph's father. O'Brien would train five of the twelve horses in the race, also including Mars, Flying the Flag, and Festive Cheer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby, Race synopsis\nAt the start of the race, favourite Dawn Approach showed little discipline, and was out of the running by the first furlong. Though he led briefly at the one-mile mark, he would fall to the back of the pack and finished last, half a length behind Ocean Applause. Early in the straight Ruler of the World overtook his stable companion Battle of Marengo and established a clear advantage which he maintained throughout the final quarter mile and won by a length and a half. Libertarian finished strongly, overtaking several horses in the closing strides to finish second ahead of Galileo Rock and Battle of Marengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby, Race synopsis\nFollowing the race, winning jockey Ryan Moore stated \"I planned to be a bit closer but I just didn\u2019t get away very well \u2014- it was a very messy race.\" Trainer Aiden O'Brien, on winning his fifth Derby stated that Ruler of the World \"quickened up well that day and won like a very good horse.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, Two-year-old races\nNotable runs by the future Derby participants as two-year-olds in 2012:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, The road to Epsom\nEarly-season appearances in 2013 and trial races prior to running in the Derby:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233071-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233071-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Epsom Derby, Subsequent breeding careers, Other Stallions\nDawn Approach (12th) \u2013 Musis Amica (2nd Prix De Diane 2018), Mary Tudor (3rd Irish Oaks 2018), Madhmoon (2nd Epsom Derby (2019)Ocovango (5th) \u2013 Langer Dan \u2013 1st Wensleydale Juvenile Hurdle (2019)Battle Of Marengo (4th) \u2013 Sired flat and jumps winnersLibertarian (2nd) \u2013 Offspring yet to race, several sold as storesFlying The Flag (8th) \u2013 Exported to South Africa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 62], "content_span": [63, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233072-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Equatorial Guinean legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Equatorial Guinea on 26 May 2013, alongside local elections. Following constitutional reforms approved in a 2011 referendum, they were the first elections in which the newly established Senate is elected. The ruling Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea won all but one seat in both houses of Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233072-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Equatorial Guinean legislative election, Electoral system\nThe Senate has 70 members, of which 55 were elected and 15 were to be appointed by President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233072-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Equatorial Guinean legislative election, Electoral system\nThe 100 members of the Chamber of People's Representatives were elected by closed list proportional representation in multi-member constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233073-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Erbil bombings\nThe 2013 Erbil bombings were five coordinated suicide car bombings attacks in the Iraqi Kurdistan capital, Erbil on 29 September 2013 . At least 6 people were killed in the attack and over 40 injured. The suicide attacks happened at entrance an Asayesh headquarter and also near Iraqi Kurdistan ministry of Interior building", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233074-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Erie Explosion season\nThe 2013 Erie Explosion season was the 7th season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233074-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Erie Explosion season\nThe Explosion left the United Indoor Football League after the 2012 season. The team remained idle for about a month, while fielding offers to join four different leagues. Owner Bill Stafford ultimately decided to join the Continental Indoor Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233074-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Erie Explosion season\nThe Explosion accrued a perfect season in their first year in the CIFL, winning all ten regular season games (one of which was played against the semi-pro Flint Fury after the Owensboro Rage failed toward the end of the season) and defeated the Saginaw Sting in the CIFL Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233074-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Erie Explosion season, Schedule, Standings\n\u2020Kane County played the second game on their schedule, but forfeited the other nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny\nThe 2013 Eritrean Army mutiny was mounted on 21 January 2013, when around 100-200 soldiers of the Eritrean Army in the capital city, Asmara seized the headquarters of the state broadcaster, EriTV, and allegedly broadcast a message demanding reforms and the release of political prisoners. The mutiny was the first major incident of resistance to the rule of Isaias Afewerki since the purging of a group of fifteen ministers who demanded political reform in 2001. Details about the mutiny remain murky, with several (but not all) government officials denying it even took place, while opposition sources claimed it had been an abortive coup attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny, Background\nEritrea has been ruled by Isaias Afewerki since its independence in 1993 from Ethiopia, following a 30-year independence war. Initially allied with Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and his Tigrayan People's Liberation Front, whom Isaias' Eritrean People's Liberation Front had helped overthrow the communist regime of Mengistu Haile Mariam, border disputes caused relations between the two nations to rapidly turn sour, and in May 1998, Ethiopia invaded Eritrea. The resultant conflict killed between 70,000-100,000 on both sides, and left Eritrea with over a third of its territory occupied and over 650,000 people displaced. Although Eritrea was awarded most of the disputed territory by the Permanent Court of Arbitration, Ethiopia, as of 2017, still occupies most of the disputed land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny, Background\nThe war caused a severe curtailment of political freedoms and rights in Eritrea, with the constitution's implementation being delayed indefinitely and most young people being forced into indefinite national service. Presidential and parliamentary elections were postponed and have never been held since independence. The People's Front for Democracy and Justice, nominally a transitional authority, is the sole legal political organisation, making Eritrea Africa's last remaining official one-party state and the only non-communist one-party state in the world (most African nations were at one point single party states, while all its neighbours, Sudan, Ethiopia, and Djibouti have dominant-party systems).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny, Background\nReligious activity has been strictly monitored and suppressed, with evangelicals in particular facing imprisonment and torture. Even the patriarch of the majority Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church, Abune Antonios, was in 2007 forcibly removed and placed under house arrest. The level of repression has prompted many to call it \"the North Korea of Africa\"\u2013 but Eritrea, which has no private media, has been ranked last in Reporters Without Borders' Press Freedom Index since 2007, below North Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny, The mutiny\nEarly on January 21, the soldiers surrounded the headquarters of the state broadcaster, EriTV, known as \"Forto\", which sits atop a small hill overlooking Asmara. The soldiers stormed the building and gathered all the employees into a room, and forced the director of EriTV, Asmelash Abraha, to read a prepared statement demanding the restoration of the constitution, the release of political prisoners, and the freeing of captured refugees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny, The mutiny\nOnly after Asemlash had read two sentences, the feed was cut off and the building surrounded by loyal soldiers, who also took up defensive positions around the presidential palace and airport, with the city remaining mainly calm. The soldiers were purportedly led by Col. Saleh Osman, a hero of the war with Ethiopia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny, The mutiny\nAt 10pm, the broadcast resumed, and the station's employees were released. The soldiers were said to have withdrawn from the headquarters complex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233075-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Eritrean Army mutiny, Reaction\nIranian media outlet, Press TV, interviewed Tesfa-Michael Gerahtu, Eritrean Ambassador to the United Kingdom, who claimed that the attempt had been fabricated, and that there had been no unrest whatsoever. There is also controversy in the name of the kind of action led by these rebel militaries. The Permanent Representative to the African Union and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), Ambassador Girma Asmerom claimed that \"As is the case all over the world an armed crazy, stupid and terrorist individual or group can take stupid actions... Such isolated incidents which frequently occur in the West are considered terrorist acts. I don't understand why in Africa they are considered coups d'\u00e9tat. It is the highest form of double standard and hypocrisy,\" thus implying that there had been unrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233076-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Erondegemse Pijl\nThe 2013 Erondegemse Pijl (Erpe-Mere) was a one-day women's cycle race held in Belgium, from Erpe to Erondegem. on August 3 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race resulted in a clean sweep of the podium by Sengers Ladies Cycling Team, with Polspoel, de Vuyst and Majerus finishing first, second and third respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233077-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Erste Bank Open\nThe 2013 Erste Bank Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 39th edition of the event known that year as the Erste Bank Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It was held at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, Austria, from 14 October through 20 October 2013. Tommy Haas won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233077-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Erste Bank Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233077-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Erste Bank Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233078-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Doubles\nAndre Begemann and Martin Emmrich were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski. Florin Mergea and Luk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol won the title, defeating Julian Knowle and Daniel Nestor in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233079-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro was the defending champion but decided not to compete. Tommy Haas won the title, defeating Robin Haase in the final, 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233079-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Singles, 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-00233079-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Erste Bank Open \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nThe first three seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233080-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga\nThe 2013 season of the Esiliiga, the second level in the Estonian football system, is the twenty-third season in the league's history. The season officially began on 3 March 2013 and ended on 10 November 2013. However, on 3 March the Estonian Football Association announced that all matches scheduled for 3 March 2013 would be postponed due to heavy snowfall. The previous league champions Infonet were promoted to Meistriliiga while P\u00e4rnu Linnameeskond and Kohtla-J\u00e4rve Lootus were relegated to Esiliiga B division. For this season those three teams are replaced by J\u00f5hvi Lokomotiv from II Liiga East/North division and Viljandi Tulevik and V\u00e4ndra Vaprus from II Liiga West/South division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233080-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 13], "section_span": [15, 40], "content_span": [41, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233080-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga, League table, Promotion play-off\nAt season's end, the runners-up of the 2013 Esiliiga will participate in a two-legged play-off with the 9th place club of the 2013 Meistriliiga for the spot in next year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 47], "content_span": [48, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233080-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga, League table, Relegation play-off\nAt season's end, the 8th place club of the 2013 Esiliiga will participate in a two-legged play-off with the 3rd place club of the 2013 Esiliiga B for the spot in next year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 48], "content_span": [49, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233081-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga B\nThe 2013 season of the Esiliiga B, the third level in the Estonian football system, is the first season in the league's history. The season officially began on 3 March 2013 and ended on 10 November 2013. However, on 3 March the Estonian Football Association announced that all matches scheduled for 3 March 2013 would be postponed due to heavy snowfall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233081-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga B, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233081-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga B, Results, Promotion play-off\nAt season's end, the 3rd place club of the 2013 Esiliiga B will participate in a two-legged play-off with the 8th club of the 2013 Esiliiga for the spot in next year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233081-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Esiliiga B, Results, Relegation play-off\nAt season's end, the 8th place club of the 2013 Esiliiga B will participate in a two-legged play-off with the runners-up of the II Liiga for the spot in next year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233082-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eski\u015fehir Cup\nThe 2013 Eski\u015fehir Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 1st edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Eski\u015fehir, Turkey between 15 and 21 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233082-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eski\u015fehir Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233082-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eski\u015fehir Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as alternates into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233082-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eski\u015fehir Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as lucky losers into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233083-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eski\u015fehir Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMarin Draganja and Mate Pavi\u0107 won the title, defeating Sanchai and Sonchat Ratiwatana in the final, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233084-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eski\u015fehir Cup \u2013 Singles\nDavid Goffin won the title, defeating Marsel \u0130lhan in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233085-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Essendon Football Club season\nThe 2013 Essendon Football Club season is the club's 115th season in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233085-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Essendon Football Club season\nThis season also represents the first time since 2002 that the club will independently compete with a reserves team in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233085-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Essendon Football Club season, Supplements controversy\nOn 5 February the Essendon Football Club asked Australian Sports Anti- Doping Authority (ASADA) to investigate the concerns over the clubs possible use of un-approved supplements during the 2012 season. An Independent review conducted by Ziggy Switkowski regarding the Essendon Football Club governance processes was released to the public on 6 May. CEO Ian Robson hands in his resignation on 23 May. He is replaced by former Tatts Group CEO and Essendon board member Ray Gunston as the interim CEO. Chairman David Evans resigns citing health issues on 27 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233085-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Essendon Football Club season, Supplements controversy\nFormer Toll Holdings Managing Director and Essendon board member Paul Little is elected to replace him as the new Essendon Chairman. On 27 August, the AFL charged the Essendon Football Club with breaking \"Rule 1.6 - engaging in conduct that is unbecoming or likely to prejudice the interests or reputation of the Australian Football League or to bring the game of football into disrepute\". There have been no player sanctions from ASADA, whose investigation is still ongoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233085-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Essendon Football Club season, Supplements controversy\nThe following charges were handed down against club and personnel:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election\nAn election to Essex County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 75 councillors were elected from 70 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 the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in Thurrock or Southend-on-Sea, which are unitary authorities outside the area covered by the County Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election, Previous composition, Changes between elections\nIn between the 2009 election and the 2013 election, the following council seats changed hands:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 83], "content_span": [84, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election, Summary\nThe election saw the Conservative Party retain overall control of the council, but their majority fell from twenty-two to four councillors. UKIP, Labour and the Liberal Democrats all won nine seats. Of the three second-placed parties who won nine seats, UKIP gained the largest share of the county-wide vote, more than 10% ahead of the Labour party. The Liberal Democrats remain as the official Opposition (entitling them to certain expenses and rights to additional speeches) due to incumbency, despite winning fewer votes. The Green Party gained two seats on the Council, despite its overall share of the vote falling. The Independent Loughton Residents Association and the Canvey Island Independent Party both returned one member and an Independent candidate was also elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election, Results Summary, Election of Group Leaders\nDavid Finch (Hedingham) was elected leader of the Conservative Group, Michael Mackrory (Springfield) was re elected leader of the Liberal Democratic Group, Julie Young (Wivenhoe St. Andrew) was re elected leader of the Labour Group, and Jamie Huntman was elected leader of the UKIP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election, Results Summary, Election of Group Leaders\nIn mid 2016 deputy Labour leader Ivan Henderson (Harwich) replaced Young as leader, and Nigel Le Gresley replaced Huntman as UKIP leader group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233086-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Essex County Council election, Results Summary, Election of Leader of the Council\nDavid Finch the leader of the conservative group was duly elected leader of the council and formed a conservative administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233087-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Esso Cup\nThe 2013 Esso Cup was Canada's fifth annual national women's midget hockey championship, played April 21\u201327, 2013 at the Bill Copeland Sports Centre in Burnaby, British Columbia. The LHFDQ North squad captured Quebec's first national title with a victory over Ontario's North Bay Ice Boltz in the gold medal game. The Edmonton Thunder captured a medal for the fourth consecutive year by winning the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233087-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Esso Cup, Road to the Esso Cup, Atlantic Region\nTournament held April 4 \u2013 7 at the Pictou Wellness Center in Pictou, Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233087-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Esso Cup, Road to the Esso Cup, Quebec\nDodge Cup played April 4 \u2013 5, 2013 at Boucherville, Qu\u00e9bec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 43], "content_span": [44, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233087-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Esso Cup, Road to the Esso Cup, Ontario\nOntario Women's Hockey Association Championship played April 4 \u2013 7, 2013 at Ottawa, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 44], "content_span": [45, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233087-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Esso Cup, Road to the Esso Cup, Western Region\nBest-of-3 series played April 5 \u2013 7, 2013 in Morden, Manitoba", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 51], "content_span": [52, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233087-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Esso Cup, Road to the Esso Cup, Pacific Region\nEdmonton automatically qualifies for Esso Cup as Fraser Valley is host team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 51], "content_span": [52, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233087-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Esso Cup, Road to the Esso Cup, Pacific Region\nPacific champion determined by 2013 Esso Cup round robin match on April 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 51], "content_span": [52, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233088-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Estonian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Estonian Figure Skating Championships (Estonian: Eesti Meistriv\u00f5istlused 2013) took place between 15 and 16 December 2012 in Tallinn. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing on the senior, junior, and novice levels. The results were used to choose the teams to the 2013 World Championships and the 2013 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233088-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Estonian Figure Skating Championships, Junior results\nThe 2013 Estonian Junior Figure Skating Championships took place between 1 and 3 February 2013 at the Tartu L\u00f5unakeskuse J\u00e4\u00e4hall in Tartu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233089-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Estonian municipal elections\nMunicipal elections were held in Estonia on 20 October 2013, with advance voting between 10 and 16 October 2013. A total of 2,951 municipal council seats were up for election in 215 municipalities. The number of councillors had decreased by over 125 compared to the previous elections due to the merging of some municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233089-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Estonian municipal elections\nThe result was a victory for the Estonian Centre Party, which retained its majority in Tallinn by taking 46 of the 79 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233089-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Estonian municipal elections, Campaign\nAlongside the six major parties, 102 independent candidates and 292 citizens' elections coalitions participated in the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233090-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy\nThe 2013 Ethias Trophy was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Mons, Belgium between 30 September and 6 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233090-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233090-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233090-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233090-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players used protected ranking to gain entry into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233091-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy \u2013 Doubles\nTomasz Bednarek and Jerzy Janowicz were the defending champions but decided Janowicz not to participate. Bednarek partnered with Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek, but lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233091-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy \u2013 Doubles\nJesse Huta Galung and Igor Sijsling won the title, defeating Eric Butorac and Raven Klaasen in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20132), [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233092-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy \u2013 Singles\nKenny de Schepper was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Dustin Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233092-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethias Trophy \u2013 Singles\nRadek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won the title, defeating Igor Sijsling in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233093-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian Air Force An-12 crash\nOn 9 August 2013, an Antonov An-12 operated by the Ethiopian Air Force crashed while attempting to land at Aden Abdulle International Airport in Mogadishu, Somalia. There were six crew on board, of which four perished and two survived with injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233093-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian Air Force An-12 crash, Accident\nThe flight departed from Dire Dawa International Airport in Ethiopia at 06:00 local time that morning, commanded by Colonel Berhanu Geremew, a highly experienced pilot. It was carrying a cargo of weapons and ammunition. The aircraft was cleared for a visual approach to runway 05 in Mogadishu but crashed to the left of the runway at 07:58 local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233093-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian Air Force An-12 crash, Accident\nDue to the location of the crash on the airport property, the Rescue Fire Fighting Service led by AMISOM firefighters and SKA airport employees were able to respond to the impact site within 90 seconds. Two crew members were rescued from the aircraft wreckage and transferred to the AMISOM Level 2 hospital with injuries. The other four crew, were killed upon impact. The aircraft was consumed and destroyed by a fire. There was no damage to the airport runway or other facilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233093-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian Air Force An-12 crash, Accident\nThe airport remained closed for nearly 7 hours due to the accident and re-opened to commercial traffic at 14:55 local time. The first departure after resumption of operations was a Turkish Airlines Airbus 321 to Djibouti and Istanbul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233093-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian Air Force An-12 crash, Investigation\nThe Government of Somalia appointed a 7-person committee to investigate the accident. It contained representatives from the Ministry of Transport, Somali Civil Aviation and Meteorology Authority, Somali Police Force, National Intelligence Security Agency, Somali Air Force, SKA International Group and AMISOM. The committee presented a preliminary report that ruled out foul play as a cause of the accident. The final report is due after analysis of the black boxes recovered from the wreckage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233094-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian presidential election\nThe presidential election held on 7 October 2013, was the fourth presidential election of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia to elect the country's third president. Mulatu Teshome was elected by the parliament to a six-year term. Incumbent president Girma Wolde-Giorgis is barred from seeking re-election due to term limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233094-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian presidential election, Background and electoral process\nAs a parliamentary republic, most administrative power and the effective ability is vested in the prime minister and his government, rather than the president, leaving the president as primarily a figurehead executive. However, the president retains significant Reserve powers granted by the constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233094-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian presidential election, Background and electoral process\nA presidential candidate is required to be elected by a joint session of the upper house and lower house of the Ethiopian parliament, the Federal Parliamentary Assembly, the House of Federation and the House of People's Representatives, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233094-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ethiopian presidential election, Potential candidates\nSeveral persons have been the subject of speculation by various media sources as potential candidates in the election. The past two presidents, Negasso Gidada, and Girma Wolde-Giorgis, have hailed from the Oromo ethnic group, the country's largest, and thus it has been speculated that the ruling party, the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front, will again nominate an Oromo candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThe 2013 Euro Beach Soccer League (EBSL) is an annual European competition in beach soccer. The competitions allows national teams to compete in beach soccer in a league format over the summer months. Each season ends with a Superfinal, deciding the competition winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThis season, there are twelve teams each participating in two divisions in each Stage (there are a record number of five Stages this year) that will face each other in a round-robin system. Division A consists of the 12 top teams in Europe based on the BSWW European Ranking. Division B consists of 12 of the lower ranked teams and new entries to the competition. Each division has its own regulations and competition format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League\nEach team competes in two preliminary events to see their points obtained accumulated into an overall ranking that will determine the teams that qualify for the Superfinal. Due to the newly expanded format this season, the top eight teams of Division A (including the individual Stage winners and the host team Spain) will play in the Superfinal in Torredembarra, Spain from 8\u201311 August. The top seven teams of Division B (including the individual Stage winners) plus the worst team in Division A will play in the Promotional Final to try to earn promotion to Division A for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League\nOnce again this season, the Power Horse energy drink company is the main sponsor of the EBSL. The logo has been slightly modified to show this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Eligible EBSL Teams\nThe teams from Division A will compete for the Euro Beach Soccer League title while the teams from Division B will compete for promotion into next year's Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 Kyiv, Ukraine \u2013 May, 24 \u2013 26, Schedule & Results\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Kyiv (UTC+03:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 Kyiv, Ukraine \u2013 May, 24 \u2013 26, Individual Awards\nMVP: Boguslaw SaganowskiTop Scorer: Oleg Zborovskyi (6 goals)Best Goalkeeper: Vitali Sydorenko", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 86], "content_span": [87, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 1 Kyiv, Ukraine \u2013 May, 24 \u2013 26, Total Goals\n53 goals were scored, for an average of 8.83 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 Terracina, Italy \u2013 June, 14 \u2013 16, Final standings Division B\nNote: Although the Netherlands won their group, they were not automatically qualified for the Superfinal, as Portugal had the better group-winner record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 99], "content_span": [100, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 Terracina, Italy \u2013 June, 14 \u2013 16, Schedule & Results\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Terracina (UTC+02:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 Terracina, Italy \u2013 June, 14 \u2013 16, Individual Awards\nMVP: Nuno Belchior Top Scorer: Alan Cavalcanti, Nuno Belchior, Oleg Zborovskyi, Patrick Ax (4 goals) Best Goalkeeper: Stefano Spada", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 2 Terracina, Italy \u2013 June, 14 \u2013 16, Total Goals\n126 goals were scored, for an average of 7 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 3 Valence, France \u2013 June, 21 \u2013 23, Schedule & Results\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Valence (UTC+02:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 3 Valence, France \u2013 June, 21 \u2013 23, Individual Awards\nMVP: Dejan Stankovic Top Scorer: Dejan Stankovic (8 goals) Best Goalkeeper: Valentin Jaeggy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 3 Valence, France \u2013 June, 21 \u2013 23, Total Goals\n105 goals were scored, for an average of 8.75 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 4 The Hague, Netherlands \u2013 July, 19 \u2013 21, Schedule & Results\nAll kickoff times are of local time in The Hague (UTC+02:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 97], "content_span": [98, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 4 The Hague, Netherlands \u2013 July, 19 \u2013 21, Individual Awards\nMVP: Patrick AxTop Scorer: Boguslaw Saganowski, Henrik Salveson (6 goals)Best Goalkeeper: Frank van der Geest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 96], "content_span": [97, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 4 The Hague, Netherlands \u2013 July, 19 \u2013 21, Total Goals\n87 goals were scored, for an average of 7.25 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 5 Moscow, Russia \u2013 August, 2 \u2013 4, Schedule & Results\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Moscow (UTC+04:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 5 Moscow, Russia \u2013 August, 2 \u2013 4, Individual Awards\nMVP: Ilya LeonovTop Scorer: Llorenc Gomez (6 goals)Best Goalkeeper: Sascha Penke", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Stage 5 Moscow, Russia \u2013 August, 2 \u2013 4, Total Goals\n31 goals were scored, for an average of 5.17 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, Cumulative standings\nRanking & tie-breaking criteria: Division A \u2013 1. Points earned 2. Goal difference 3. Goals scored | Division B \u2013 1. Points earned 2. Highest stage placement 3. Goal difference 4. Goals scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, EBSL Superfinal and Promotional Final \u2013 Torredembarra, Spain \u2013 August, 8 \u2013 11, Superfinal and Promotional Final Divisions\nThe Divisions for the Euro Beach Soccer League Superfinal have now been determined. The teams from Division A will compete for the Euro Beach Soccer League title while the teams from Division B will compete for promotion into next year's Division A. The division of the Superfinal and Promotional Final Groups are based on how the cumulative standings for Divisions A and B finish. In Division A, Group A will have teams that finish in places 1, 4, 6 and 7, while Group B will have teams that finish in places 2, 3, 5 and 8. In Division B, Group A will have teams that finish in places 4, 5, 6 and the last-place team in Division A, while Group B will have teams that finish in places 1, 2, 3 and 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 152], "content_span": [153, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, EBSL Superfinal and Promotional Final \u2013 Torredembarra, Spain \u2013 August, 8 \u2013 11, Schedule & Results\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Torredembarra (UTC+02:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 128], "content_span": [129, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, EBSL Superfinal and Promotional Final \u2013 Torredembarra, Spain \u2013 August, 8 \u2013 11, Schedule & Results\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Torredembarra (UTC+02:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 128], "content_span": [129, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233095-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Beach Soccer League, EBSL Superfinal and Promotional Final \u2013 Torredembarra, Spain \u2013 August, 8 \u2013 11, Total Goals\n235 goals were scored, for an average of 7.34 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 121], "content_span": [122, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup\nThe inaugural 2013 Euro Winners Cup was a beach soccer tournament that took place on two pitches at the UMPI Smart Beach Arena stadium, located at the Riviera delle Palme resort in San Benedetto del Tronto, Italy, from 15 \u2013 19 May 2013. The tournament brought together club champions of many domestic beach soccer leagues across Europe, almost in the same vein as the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Format and draw\nThe first Beach Soccer Winner Cup was held in the sands of San Benedetto del Tronto, Rive delle Palme which located in Ascoli, Italy from 15\u201319 May 2013. This Cup is involving all the champions in the different official National Leagues all across the Old Continent, 18 different countries will be represented in this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Format and draw\nIn the first stage, the eighteen champions of the officially sanctioned Beach Soccer National Championships, plus the host and the Italian runner-up got distributed into five groups, yet offering interesting battles with powerful teams having to compete for the head of the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Format and draw\nOnly the sides topping the group will be granted a ticket to the quarterfinals stage, accompanied by the three best second-ranked teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Stadium\nThe stadium that was used is called the UMPI Smart Beach Arena. The new state-of-the-art facility is intended to maximize the technology and the environmental consciousness directives to create a stadium that offers 360-degree amusement possibilities both for citizens and tourists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Online\nDue to the facility not having satellite capabilities, the tournament was not streamed online by BSWW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Rosters\nThe complete rosters for all participating teams can be found on the BSWW web site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Group stage\nThe draw to divide the teams into five groups of four was conducted on 19 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Group stage\nAll kickoff times are of local time in San Benedetto del Tronto, (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233096-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Euro Winners Cup, Knockout stage\nA draw will be held after the group stage matches were completed to determine the quarterfinal pairings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233097-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup\nThe 2013 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup was the 41st edition of the premier European competition for women's field hockey clubs. The preliminary round of the competition was held in Hamburg, Germany from 29 March\u20131 April, while the final of the competition was held in Bloemendaal, Netherlands on 19 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233097-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup\nDen Bosch defeated defending champion Laren in the final 4\u20132 to win their thirteenth title. Hamburg and Rot-Weiss K\u00f6ln also reached the final four, losing in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233097-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 59 goals scored in 15 matches, for an average of 3.93 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233099-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurockey Cup U-15\nThe 2013 Eurockey Cup U-15 was the 2nd edition of the Eurockey Cup U-15. It was held in November 2013 in Vilanova i la Geltr\u00fa, in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233099-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurockey Cup U-15, Group stage, Group A\n* \u2013 UVP Mirandola e Modena wins the Free-kick tie-up", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233100-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup Clio\nThe 2013 Eurocup Clio season was the third season of the Renault\u2013supported touring car category, a one-make racing series that is part of the World Series by Renault, the series uses Renault Clio RS 197's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233100-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup Clio, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar for the 2013 season was announced on 20 October 2012, the day before the end of the 2012 season. Four rounds formed meetings of the 2013 World Series by Renault season, with additional rounds in support of the Imola round of the Italian Clio Cup, and the Alca\u00f1iz round of the International Clio Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 44], "content_span": [45, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233101-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0\nThe 2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across Europe. The championship features drivers competing in 2 litre Formula Renault single seat race cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. The 2013 season is the 23rd Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season organized by the Renault Sport and the first season with the new generation car. The season began at Ciudad del Motor de Arag\u00f3n on 27 April and finished on 20 October at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. The series formed part of the World Series by Renault meetings at seven double header events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233101-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0\nTech 1 Racing's Pierre Gasly won the championship title after wins at Moscow, Budapest and Le Castellet. His rival Oliver Rowland had the same number of wins and fought for the title until he received a drive-through penalty, as a result of a collision with Gasly in the final race of the season. ART Junior's Esteban Ocon took wins at Le Castellet and Barcelona to finish in third position in the drivers' standings. Nyck de Vries, Ignazio D'Agosto, Luca Ghiotto and Matthieu Vaxivi\u00e8re were also race-winners during the season. Gasly, with the help of Egor Orudzhev and Vaxivi\u00e8re, accrued enough points to confirm the teams' championship title for Tech 1 Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233101-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0, Teams and drivers\nOn 7 November 2012, twelve teams were preselected for entry into the 2013 season, with BVM Racing and Atech Reid GP on the reserve list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233101-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar for the 2013 season was announced on 20 October 2012, the day before the end of the 2012 season. All seven rounds formed meetings of the 2013 World Series by Renault season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233101-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0, Championship standings, Drivers' Championship\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest LapDriver who retired but was classified denoted by \u2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233102-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup M\u00e9gane Trophy\nThe 2013 Eurocup M\u00e9gane Trophy season was the ninth and final season of the Renault\u2013supported touring car category, a one-make racing series that is part of the World Series by Renault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233102-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Eurocup M\u00e9gane Trophy, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar for the 2013 season was announced on 20 October 2012, the day before the end of the 2012 season. All seven rounds will form meetings of the 2013 World Series by Renault season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233103-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Euroleague Final Four\nThe 2013 Euroleague Final Four was the concluding Final Four tournament of the 2012\u201313 Euroleague season. It was held from 10 May till 12 May 2013, at The O2 Arena in London. The Greek League club Olympiacos, successfully defended their EuroLeague title from the previous season, after defeating Real Madrid in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233103-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Euroleague Final Four\nVassilis Spanoulis won his second consecutive Final Four MVP, and the third of his career. Spanoulis joined Toni Kuko\u010d, as the only player to have ever won the award three times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233103-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Euroleague Final Four, Venue\nOn May 12, 2012, it was announced that the Final Four would be hosted at The O2 Arena in London, England. The O2 Arena is a multi-purpose indoor arena that is located in the centre of The O2 entertainment complex, on the Greenwich Peninsula, in south-east London. It is named after its primary sponsor, the telecommunications company O2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233103-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Euroleague Final Four, Venue\nThe O2 Arena is the world's largest building as measured by floor space, and has the second-highest seating capacity of any indoor venue in the United Kingdom, behind the Manchester Arena, but it took the crown of the world's busiest music arena from New York City's Madison Square Garden in 2008. The closest underground station to the venue is the North Greenwich station, on the Jubilee line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233103-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Euroleague Final Four, Final\nAfter the end of the opening quarter, Madrid led Olympiacos by 17 points. However, the Reds managed to get back in the game, and the game was tied by the end of the third quarter. Behind Spanoulis, Olympiacos pulled away in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233104-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European 10 m Events Championships\nThe 2013 European 10 m Events Championships were held in Odense, Denmark from February 25 to March 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233105-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European 10,000m Cup\nThe 2013 European 10,000m Cup, was the 17th edition of the European 10,000m Cup took place on 8 June in Pravets, Bulgaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233105-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European 10,000m Cup, Team\nIn italic the participants whose result did not go into the team's total time, but awarded with medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233106-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe Men's 2013 European Amateur Boxing Championships were held in Minsk, Belarus from June 1 to June 8, 2013. It is the 40th edition of this biennial competition organised by the European governing body for amateur boxing, the EUBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233106-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe organization of this championships cost 11 billion Br (Belarusian currency, 1 mln. Eu) for the Belarusian government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233106-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Boxing Championships, Schedule\nFrom 1 June\u20133 June the preliminaries were held, on June 4\u201305 the quarterfinals in all categories were held. The semifinals took place on June 7 with the finals at June 08.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe 2013 European Amateur Team Championship took place 9 \u2013 13 July at Silkeborg Ry Golf Club in Silkeborg, located in the middle of the Jutlandic peninsula, Denmark. It was the 30th men's golf European Amateur Team Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe club was founded as Silkeborg Golf Club in 1965 and its first 18-hole course was fully developed in 1968. In early 2013 the club merged with Ry Golf Club and under the new name Silkeborg Ry Golf Club expanded to 54 holes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe number of entering nation teams was, for the first time limited to 16. A second division, named European Men's Challenge Trophy, introduced in 2002, took place 10 \u2013 13 July 2013 in the Czech Republic, giving the participating teams the opportunity to qualify for next year's championship. Belgium and Iceland finished first and second and qualified for the 2014 European Amateur Team Championship. The year after, the Challenge Trophy was renamed The European Amateur Team Championship Division 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233107-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nLeader of the opening 36-hole competition was team France, with a 15-over-par score of 735. Two-times champions Spain did not make it to the quarter finals, finishing 10th, despite future professional world number one, 18-year-old Jon Rahm, in the team, who finished tied fourth individually. Two-times-champions Sweden, finishing 13th in the qualifying round, did not make it to the quarter finals either.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nThere was no official award for the lowest individual score, but individual leaders were Rory McNamara, Ireland and James Ross, Scotland, each with a 1-under-par score of 143, one stroke ahead of Mads S\u00f8gaard, Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233107-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233107-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nTeam England won the gold medal, earning their 11th title, beating neighbor nation Scotland in the final 4\u00bd\u20132\u00bd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nTeam France, earned the bronze on third place, after beating the Netherlands 5\u20132 in the bronze match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship\nNorway and Wales, placed 14th and 16th, was moved to Division 2 for 2014. Finland, placed 15th, was qualified for the 2014 event as host nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship, Teams\n16 nation teams contested the event, four less than 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, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233107-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233107-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233107-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 European Amateur Team Championship, Results\n* Note: Game declared halved, since team match already decided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233108-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 5th Individual European Artistic Gymnastics Championships for both men and women were held at the Olympic Stadium in Moscow, Russia, from 17 to 21 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233109-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships\nThe 32nd European Athletics Indoor Championships were held at Scandinavium and Svenska M\u00e4ssan in Gothenburg, Sweden, on 1\u20133 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233109-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Bidding process\nThe decision to grant the event for Gothenburg was made by the European Athletics Council at their long meeting in Malta on October 15, 2007. Initially, Gothenburg applied for the 2011 Championships against Paris. The European Athletic Association thought the two cities presented very good concepts, and it ended up with the two candidates get one championship each; Paris in 2011 and Gothenburg in 2013. Gothenburg will use the concept All under one roof.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233109-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Venue\nThe main venue for the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships will be Scandinavium with a maximum capacity of 12,000 spectators, but at the event the arena will have about 6,500 spectators because of the reconstruction. Prior to the championships, the arena floor will be raised 3 metres and be equipped with running tracks. In Svenska M\u00e4ssan, next to Scandinavium, there will be a Market Square, where various activities will be organized during the competitions. All the victory ceremonies will take place in the Market Square during the evenings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233109-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Venue\nThe shot put qualifications will also be held at a special shot put venue in Svenska M\u00e4ssan. The host city Gothenburg has organized several championships in athletics before. In 1974 and 1984, Scandinavium hosted the European Indoor Championships. Moreover, nearby Ullevi Stadium has staged the 1995 World Championships in Athletics and the 2006 European Athletics Championships. Last time Sweden hosted the European Indoor Championships was in 1996 when Ericsson Globe in Stockholm held the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233109-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Men's results, Track\n* Pavel Trenikhin was originally disqualified, but was reinstated upon appeal. * * Great Britain were originally disqualified, but were reinstated upon appeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233109-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Participating nations\nA total of 577 athletes from 47 countries has participated in the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233109-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Broadcasting\nTV4 in Sweden is the host broadcaster of the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233110-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 2, 2013 at 13:10 (round 1), and March 3, 18:00 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233110-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 2 (Q) or and the 3 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 82], "content_span": [83, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233111-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres\nThe men's 3000 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 12:35 (round 1), and March 2, 18:20 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233111-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 4 (Q) or and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 82], "content_span": [83, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233112-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Men's 4 x 400 metres relay race at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 3, 2013 at 18:45 local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233112-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Controversy\nOriginally, the British men's 4 \u00d7 400 m quartet of Michael Bingham, Richard Buck, Levine and Richard Strachan finished the race first, followed by Russian and Polish Team, but their victory was questioned by the judges because during his change, Richard Buck had crossed the line streets and stepped off the track. The British team was disqualified, but the members of British Athletic Federation appealed this decision by accusing Rafal Omelko (Polish athlete) of pushing Buck out of his line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 86], "content_span": [87, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233112-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Controversy\nThe British team was eventually reinstated as victors; the Polish squad of Micha\u0142 Pietrzak, Rafal Omelko, \u0141ukasz Domaga\u0142a and Grzegorz Sobinskilost lost their third-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 86], "content_span": [87, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233113-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 12:02 (round 1), March 2, 17:45 (semi-final) and March 3, 12:00 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233113-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 2 (Q) or and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 81], "content_span": [82, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233114-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres\nThe men's 60 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 1, 2013 at 17:00 (round 1), March 2, 17:15 (semi-final) and 18:40 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233114-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 4 (Q) and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 80], "content_span": [81, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233115-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles\nThe Men's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 1, 2013 at 10:30 (round 1), 18:05 (semi-final) and 19:45 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233115-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 3 (Q) or and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 88], "content_span": [89, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233116-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 1, 2013 at 18:35 (round 1), March 2, 16:55 (semi-final) and March 3, 11:30 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233116-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 2 (Q) or and the 2 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 81], "content_span": [82, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233117-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's heptathlon\nThe Men's heptathlon event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233118-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe Men's high jump event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 1, 2013 at 16:30 & 18:30 (qualification) and March 2, 16:15 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233118-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 2.31 (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-00233119-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe Men's long jump event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 2, 2013 at 11:00 & 12:30 (qualification) and March 3, 17:00 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233119-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 8.05 (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-00233120-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe Men's pole vault event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 2, 2013 at 11:00 & 13:30 (qualification) and March 3, 16:33 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233120-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233121-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 28 February 2013 at 19:00 (qualification) and 1 March, 18:45 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233121-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 20.15 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 85], "content_span": [86, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233122-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe Men's triple jump event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 11:40 (qualification) and March 2, 17:25 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233122-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 16.90 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233123-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 19:05 (round 1), and March 2, 18:05 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233123-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 2 (Q) or and the 3 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 84], "content_span": [85, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233124-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres\nThe women's 3000 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 2, 2013 at 12:25 (round 1), and March 3, 12:10 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233124-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 4 (Q) or and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 84], "content_span": [85, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233125-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Women's 4 x 400 metres relay race at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 3, 2013, in Gothenburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233126-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 11:00 (round 1), March 2, 16:35 (semi-final) and March 3, 11:15 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233126-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 2 (Q) and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 83], "content_span": [84, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233127-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres\nThe women's 60 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 2, 2013 at 13:35 (round 1), March 3, 16:30 (semi-final) and March 3, 18:15 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233127-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 4 (Q) and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 82], "content_span": [83, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233127-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Final\nThe final was held at 18:15. The initial winner of the final, Tezdzhan Naimova, tested positive for the banned steroid drostanolone during the competition. In September 2013, she was officially stripped of her 2013 European Indoor Championships 60m title and banned for life from athletics. Ukraine's Mariya Ryemyen, who came second in the Gothenburg final, was declared the gold medalist of the 60m event, with France's Myriam Soumar\u00e9 taking the silver medal and Bulgaria's Ivet Lalova the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233128-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles\nThe women's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 1 March 2013 at 11:30 (round 1), 18:20 (semi-final) and 19:55 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233128-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 4 (Q) or and the 4 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 90], "content_span": [91, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233129-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 17:40 (round 1), March 2, 17:30 (semi-final) and March 3, 11:45 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233129-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Round 1\nQualification: First 3 (Q) and the 3 fastest athletes (q) advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 83], "content_span": [84, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233130-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe Women's high jump event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 2, 2013 at 11:55 (qualification) and March 3, 2013 at 16:40 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233130-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 1.94 (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-00233131-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe Women's long jump event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 10:05 (qualification) and March 2, 16:00 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233131-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 6.65 (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-00233132-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pentathlon\nThe women's pentathlon event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held at March 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233133-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe Women's pole vault event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 17:15 (qualification) and March 2, 16:10 (final) local time. The gold medal was won by British athlete Holly Bleasdale, who beat defending champion Anna Rogowska in a jump-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233133-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 4.56 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 89], "content_span": [90, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233134-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 2 March 2013 at 13:00 (qualification) and 3 March, 11:10 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233134-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 18.00 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233135-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe Women's triple jump event at the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 1, 2013 at 18:40 (qualification) and March 3, 11:05 (final) local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233135-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 14.10 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 90], "content_span": [91, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233136-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships\nThe 2013 European Athletics Junior Championships was the 22nd edition of the biennial athletics competition between European athletes in under twenty. It was held in Rieti, Italy from 18 to 21 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233136-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships\nThe medal table was topped by Great Britain with 9 golds, ahead of Russia and Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233137-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres at the 2013 European Athletics Junior Championships was held in Rieti on 18 and 19 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233137-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Records\nPrior to the competition, the existing world junior and championship records were as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233137-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 6 best performers (q) advance to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233137-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +0.4\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: \u22120.5\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +0.6\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: +1.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 5: +0.5\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +1.6\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233137-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233138-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres at the 2013 European Athletics Junior Championships was held in Rieti on 18 and 19 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233138-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Records\nPrior to the competition, the existing world junior and championship records were as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233138-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233138-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233139-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres at the 2013 European Athletics Junior Championships was held in Rieti on 18 and 19 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233139-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Records\nPrior to the competition, the existing world junior and championship records were as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 74], "content_span": [75, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233139-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233139-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +1.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +1.3\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +0.5\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: +1.1\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233139-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Junior Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the final. Wind: Heat 1: -1.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.9\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233140-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Team Championships\nThe 2013 European Athletics Team Championships was the 4th edition of European Athletics Team Championships, first named European Athletics Team Championships and not only European Team Championships as from the 1st edition (Leiria 2009) to the 3rd edition (Stockholm 2011), took place on 22 and 23 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233140-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Team Championships, Final standings\nNote: The competition was originally won by Russia but after the doping disqualification of Yekaterina Sharmina and points being reallocated, it was overtaken by Germany and Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233140-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Team Championships, Third League, Participating countries\nAthletic Association of Small States of Europe(\u00a0Gibraltar, \u00a0Liechtenstein, \u00a0Monaco, \u00a0San Marino)\u00a0Albania\u00a0Andorra\u00a0Armenia\u00a0Azerbaijan\u00a0Bosnia and Herzegovina\u00a0Georgia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233141-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Team Championships Super League\nThe 2013 European Athletics Team Championships Super League was the Super League of the 4th edition of the European Athletics Team Championships (European Team Championships until 2011 edition), the 2013 European Athletics Team Championships, which took place on 22 and 23 June 2013 in Gateshead, Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233141-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Team Championships Super League\nAs with the previous championships there were a couple of rules applying specifically to this competition, such as the limit of three attempts in the throwing events, long jump and triple jump (only the top four were allowed the fourth attempt) and the limit of four misses total in the high jump and pole vault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233141-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics Team Championships Super League, Final standings\nNote: The competition was originally won by Russia but after doping disqualification of Yekaterina Sharmina and points being reallocated it was overtaken by Germany and Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 72], "content_span": [73, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233142-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships\nThe 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was the 9th edition of the biennial athletics competition between European athletes under the age of twenty-three. It was held in Tampere, Finland from 10 to 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233142-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships\nRussia topped the medal table with 20 medals in total, including 8 golds, before Great Britain and Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233142-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 934 athletes from 45 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233143-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe Men's 10,000 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233143-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:1000m: 2:55.65 Marius \u00d8yre Vedvik \u00a0Norway2000m: 5:57.21 Marius \u00d8yre Vedvik \u00a0Norway3000m: 9:04.74 Marius \u00d8yre Vedvik \u00a0Norway4000m: 12:06.21 Mats Lunders \u00a0Belgium5000m: 15:02.01 Gabriel Navarro \u00a0Spain6000m: 18:08.61 Dmytro Siruk \u00a0Ukraine7000m: 21:11.84 Thijs Nijhuis \u00a0Denmark8000m: 24:09.82 Igor Maksimov \u00a0Russia9000m: 27:04.37 Gabriel Navarro \u00a0Spain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233143-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres, 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-00233144-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe Men's 100 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233144-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 81], "content_span": [82, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233144-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the Semifinals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233144-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 32 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233145-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe Men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233145-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233145-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233146-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe Men's 1500 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233146-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:02.45 Pieter-Jan Hannes \u00a0Belgium800m: 2:05.83 Pieter-Jan Hannes \u00a0Belgium1200m: 3:03.30 Damian Roszko \u00a0Poland", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233146-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 4 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233146-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 59.85 Alberto Imedio \u00a0Spain800m: 2:01.82 Alberto Imedio \u00a0Spain1200m: 3:01.13 Pieter-Jan Hannes \u00a0Belgium", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233146-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:00.44 Bryan Cantero \u00a0France800m: 2:02.89 Bryan Cantero \u00a0France1200m: 3:01.71 Bryan Cantero \u00a0France", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233146-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 16 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233147-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk\nThe Men's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, on 10 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233147-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk, Results, Final\n\u2020: Pyotr Bogatyrev ranked initially 1st (1:21:31), but was disqualified later for infringement of IAAF doping rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233147-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:2\u00a0km: 8:26 Hagen Pohle \u00a0Germany4\u00a0km: 16:44 Hagen Pohle \u00a0Germany6\u00a0km: 25:02 Pyotr Bogatyrev \u00a0Russia8\u00a0km: 33:17 Pyotr Bogatyrev \u00a0Russia10\u00a0km: 41:34 Pyotr Bogatyrev \u00a0Russia12\u00a0km: 49:52 Pyotr Bogatyrev \u00a0Russia14\u00a0km: 58:00 Pyotr Bogatyrev \u00a0Russia16\u00a0km: 1:05:58 Pyotr Bogatyrev \u00a0Russia18\u00a0km: 1:13:52 Pyotr Bogatyrev \u00a0Russia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233147-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 12 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233148-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe Men's 200 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233148-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233148-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233149-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe Men's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233149-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:1000m: 2:46.35 Fernando Carro \u00a0Spain2000m: 5:44.99 Fernando Carro \u00a0Spain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 90], "content_span": [91, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233149-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 4 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 90], "content_span": [91, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233149-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:1000m: 2:59.32 Adriano Engelhardt \u00a0\u00a0Switzerland2000m: 5:58.12 Adriano Engelhardt \u00a0\u00a0Switzerland", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 99], "content_span": [100, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233149-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:1000m: 3:00.74 Maksim Yakushev \u00a0Russia2000m: 6:01.08 Martin Grau \u00a0Germany", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 99], "content_span": [100, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233149-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 21 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 89], "content_span": [90, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233150-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe Men's 4 x 100 metres relay event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233150-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233150-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 59 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233151-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Men's 4x400 metres relay event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233151-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233151-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 59 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233152-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe Men's 400 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233152-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233152-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233153-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11, 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233153-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 89], "content_span": [90, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233153-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the Semifinals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233153-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 32 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233154-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe Men's 5000 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233154-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:1000m: 2:52.22 Gabriel Navarro \u00a0Spain2000m: 6:01.92 Aitor Fern\u00e1ndez \u00a0Spain3000m: 9:00.80 Gabriel Navarro \u00a0Spain4000m: 11:49.11 Thomas Farrell \u00a0United Kingdom", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233154-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 15 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233155-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe Men's 800 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233155-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:400m: 51.75 Pierre-Ambroise Bosse \u00a0France600m: 1:18.19 Pierre-Ambroise Bosse \u00a0France", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233155-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233155-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 53.02 Soufiane El Kabbouri \u00a0Italy600m: 1:20.30 Andreas Lange \u00a0Germany", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 85], "content_span": [86, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233155-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 52.40 Pierre-Ambroise Bosse \u00a0France600m: 1:20.13 Pierre-Ambroise Bosse \u00a0France", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 85], "content_span": [86, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233155-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 54.75 Alejandro Est\u00e9vez \u00a0Spain600m: 1:22.22 Alejandro Est\u00e9vez \u00a0Spain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 85], "content_span": [86, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233155-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 27 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233156-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe Men's decathlon event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233156-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 28 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233157-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe Men's discus throw event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233157-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 59.50 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233157-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 27 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233158-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe Men's hammer throw event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233158-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 71.00 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233158-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 26 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233159-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe Men's high jump event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233159-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 2.20 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 84], "content_span": [85, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233159-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 28 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233160-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe Men's javelin throw event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233160-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 78.00 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 88], "content_span": [89, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233160-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 21 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233161-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe Men's long jump event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233161-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 7.85 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 84], "content_span": [85, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233161-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 28 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233162-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe Men's pole vault event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233162-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 5.40 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 85], "content_span": [86, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233162-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 27 athletes from 16 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233163-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe Men's shot put event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233163-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 18.70 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 83], "content_span": [84, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233163-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 28 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 73], "content_span": [74, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233164-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe Men's triple jump event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233164-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 16.20 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233164-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233165-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres\nThe Women's 10,000 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233165-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:1000m: 3:19.16 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia2000m: 6:39.09 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia3000m: 9:59.94 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia4000m: 13:19.30 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia5000m: 16:34.86 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia6000m: 19:50.34 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia7000m: 23:08.36 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia8000m: 26:28.97 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia9000m: 29:46.47 Gulshat Fazlitdinova \u00a0Russia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233165-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233166-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe Women's 100 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233166-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Semifinals\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 83], "content_span": [84, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233166-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the Semifinals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233166-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 25 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233167-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe Women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233167-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233167-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233168-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe Women's 1500 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233168-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:05.62 Elif Karabulut \u00a0Turkey800m: 2:14.63 Corinna Harrer \u00a0Germany1200m: 3:19.50 Corinna Harrer \u00a0Germany", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233168-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 4 in each heat (Q) and 4 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233168-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:06.79 Kajsa Barr \u00a0Sweden800m: 2:17.58 Corinna Harrer \u00a0Germany1200m: 3:23.10 Corinna Harrer \u00a0Germany", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 88], "content_span": [89, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233168-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:09.42 Maureen Koster \u00a0Netherlands800m: 2:20.79 Elif Karabulut \u00a0Turkey1200m: 3:26.84 Maureen Koster \u00a0Netherlands", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 88], "content_span": [89, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233168-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 23 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233169-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk\nThe Women's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, on 10 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233169-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:2\u00a0km: 9:37 Nina Ochotnikova \u00a0Russia4\u00a0km: 18:54 Natalya Serezhkina \u00a0Russia6\u00a0km: 28:02 Natalya Serezhkina \u00a0Russia8\u00a0km: 37:08 Natalya Serezhkina \u00a0Russia10\u00a0km: 46:05 Lyudmyla Olyanovska \u00a0Ukraine12\u00a0km: 55:01 Natalya Serezhkina \u00a0Russia14\u00a0km: 1:03:36 Svetlana Vasilyeva \u00a0Russia16\u00a0km: 1:12:21 Svetlana Vasilyeva \u00a0Russia18\u00a0km: 1:21:09 Svetlana Vasilyeva \u00a0Russia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233169-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 23 athletes from 12 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233170-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe Women's 200 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233170-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233170-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233171-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe Women's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [76, 76], "content_span": [77, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233171-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:1000m: 3:12.56 Gesa-Felicitas Krause \u00a0Germany2000m: 6:27.88 Gesa-Felicitas Krause \u00a0Germany", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 92], "content_span": [93, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233171-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 12 athletes from 9 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 91], "content_span": [92, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233172-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe Women's 4x100 metres relay event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233172-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 32 athletes from 8 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 87], "content_span": [88, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233173-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Women's 4x400 metres relay event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233173-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233174-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe Women's 400 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233174-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233174-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233175-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe Women's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233175-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233175-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 18 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233176-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe Women's 5000 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233176-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:1000m: 3:11.49 Layes Abdullayeva \u00a0Azerbaijan2000m: 6:17.35 Gamze Bulut \u00a0Turkey3000m: 9:17.79 Gamze Bulut \u00a0Turkey4000m: 12:33.29 Gamze Bulut \u00a0Turkey", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233176-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 23 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233177-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe Women's 800 metres event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233177-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Final\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:02.65 Olha Lyakhova \u00a0Ukraine600m: 1:32.17 Mirela Lavric \u00a0Romania", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233177-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nQualified: First 2 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233177-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:03.27 Anastasiya Tkachuk \u00a0Ukraine600m: 1:33.79 Anastasiya Tkachuk \u00a0Ukraine", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233177-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:02.40 Olha Lyakhova \u00a0Ukraine600m: 1:33.21 Olha Lyakhova \u00a0Ukraine", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233177-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats, Details\nIntermediate times:400m: 1:01.27 Ayvika Malanova \u00a0Russia600m: 1:32.37 Ayvika Malanova \u00a0Russia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233177-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 23 athletes from 16 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233178-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe Women's discus throw event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233178-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 54.00 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 89], "content_span": [90, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233178-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw, 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-00233179-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe Women's hammer throw event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233179-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 64.50 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 89], "content_span": [90, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233179-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233180-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe Women's heptathlon event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233180-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 19 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233181-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe Women's high jump event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233181-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 1.86 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233181-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 23 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233182-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe Women's javelin throw event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233182-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 55.50 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 90], "content_span": [91, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233182-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 27 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233183-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe Women's long jump event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233183-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 6.45 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233183-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 17 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233184-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe Women's pole vault event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 and 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233184-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 4.20 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 87], "content_span": [88, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233184-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 27 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233185-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe Women's shot put event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233185-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 16.00 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 85], "content_span": [86, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233185-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 18 athletes from 12 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233186-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe Women's triple jump event at the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Tampere, Finland, at Ratina Stadium on 11 and 12 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233186-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Results, Qualifications\nQualified: qualifying perf. 13.45 (Q) or 12 best performers (q) advance to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 88], "content_span": [89, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233186-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233187-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Beach Handball Championship\nThe 2013 European Beach Handball Championship was held in Randers, Denmark from 9\u201314 July. The men's competition was won by Croatia, while the women's tournament was won by Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233188-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Beach Volleyball Championships\nThe 2013 European Beach Volleyball Championships were held from July 30 to August 4, 2013, in Klagenfurt, Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233189-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2013 European Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Krak\u00f3w, Poland between June 6 and 9, 2013 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA) at the Krak\u00f3w-Kolna Canoe Slalom Course. It was the 14th edition and it was the second time that Krak\u00f3w hosted the event after hosting it in 2008. The competitions were held over two days instead of three due to floods which forced the organizers to shorten the program. The qualification for individual events consisted of a single run instead of two and the semifinal runs were skipped. Therefore, the competitions were decided in two runs instead of four. The women's C1 team event was canceled completely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233190-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Championship (darts)\nThe 2013 PartyPoker.net European Championship was the sixth edition of the Professional Darts Corporation tournament, the European Championship, which allows the top European players to compete against the highest ranked players from the PDC Order of Merit. The tournament took place from 4\u20137 July at the RWE-Sporthalle in M\u00fclheim, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233190-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Championship (darts)\nThe defending champion, Simon Whitlock, pulled off an incredible comeback in his quarter-final match against Jamie Caven to win 10\u20139 having been 3\u20139 down. He advanced to the final once more where he faced Adrian Lewis. Lewis won his third major title by defeating the Australian 11\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233190-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Championship (darts), Prize money\nThe 2013 European Championship has a total prize fund of \u00a3200,000. The following is the breakdown of the fund:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233190-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Championship (darts), Qualification\nThe top 16 players from the PDC Order of Merit on 23 June automatically qualified for the event. The top eight from them were also the seeded players. The remaining 16 places went to the top eight non-qualified players from the PDC Pro Tour Order of Merit, with further places awarded to the top seven non-qualified players from the Continental Europe Order of Merit and the leader of the Scandinavian Order of Merit after four of eight events. Gary Anderson withdrew before the event began due to illness so Mark Webster took his place due to being the next non-qualified player from the PDC Order of Merit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233190-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Championship (darts), Broadcasting\nOn 14 June 2013, the PDC announced that the European Championship would be broadcast in the United Kingdom on ITV4 for the next three years. It was also shown on RTL 7 in the Netherlands, Sport1 in Germany, Fox Sports in Australia and on Sky New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233191-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cross Country Championships\nThe 2013 European Cross Country Championships was the 20th edition of the cross country running competition for European athletes which was held in Belgrade, Serbia, on 8 December 2013. The senior individual winners were Alemayehu Bezabeh of Spain and Sophie Duarte of France. A record 571 runners from 37 nations entered the competition, making it Serbia's largest international athletics event in over forty years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233191-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cross Country Championships\nIn the women's senior race Ireland's Fionnuala Britton was the defending champion, but she failed to win a third straight title and ended the race in fourth. Sophie Duarte took the lead in the penultimate lap and ran on her own over the last lap to take her first European gold medal at the age of 32. The 2011 minor medallists Ana Dulce F\u00e9lix of Portugal and Great Britain's Gemma Steel closely raced each other in the final lap, with the British runner gaining the edge over the Portuguese on this occasion. Steel headed the British women to the team title, while Duarte led France to second and Spain took the bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233191-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cross Country Championships\nAndrea Lalli entered the men's senior race as champion and fellow 2012 medallists Hassan Chahdi and Daniele Meucci were also present. None of the three reached the podium on this occasion. The leading pack was soon whittled to two runners: 2009 champion Alemayehu Bezabeh and (despite an early fall) Polat Kemboi Ar\u0131kan of Turkey. Bezabeh extended his lead to over twenty seconds by the time he crossed the finish line. Ar\u0131kan was a clear second and British athlete Andy Vernon produced a fast finish to edge Belgium's Jeroen D'Hoedt to the bronze medal. Bezabeh headed up the Spanish team victory, followed by D'Hoedt's Belgium and Vernon's British side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233191-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cross Country Championships\nIn the under-23 races Pieter-Jan Hannes of Belgium won the men's race and Great Britain topped the team rankings. Sifan Hassan of the Netherlands was dominant in the women's under-23 race, where the British under-23 team easily won the team gold with five women in the top eight. The junior men's race saw Turkey's Ali Kaya come out on top in a two-man race against Belgium's Isaac Kimeli. Women's junior champion Emelia Gorecka won a fourth straight junior team title for Great Britain and also her fourth straight podium finish (she previously won the title in 2011). She was unrivalled and won by a margin of ten seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233191-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cross Country Championships\nThree of the six event winners (Alemayehu Bezabeh, Sifan Hassan and Ali Kaya) were born in East Africa and gained European citizenship. Three of the individual silver medallists were also born outside of Europe: Ar\u0131kan in the men's senior race, Kimeli in the men's junior race, and Sofia Ennaoui in the women's junior race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233191-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 European Cross Country Championships\nThis prompted concern of growing African participation in the European event \u2013 the falling interest in the IAAF World Cross Country Championships, partly due to a prolonged period of African dominance of the competition, had recently led to the world event being reduced to a biennial event. Excitement over Bezabeh's large margin of victory was also tempered by discussion of his doping ban stemming from Operaci\u00f3n Galgo, which had expired at the beginning of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233192-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Combined Events\nThe 2013 European Cup Combined Events were held in Tallinn, Estonia, at the Kadriorg Stadium (Super league), in Nottwil, Lucerne, Switzerland, at the Sport Arena Nottwil (First league), and in Ribeira Brava, Madeira, Portugal, at the Estadio de Camara de Lobos (Second league), on 29\u201330 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233192-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Combined Events, Super league\nDetailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results were given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233192-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Combined Events, Super league, Participation\nAn unofficial count yields the participation of 64 athletes from 8 countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233192-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Combined Events, First league\nDetailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results were given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233192-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Combined Events, First league, Results, Participation\nAn unofficial count yields the participation of 56 athletes from 7 countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233192-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Combined Events, Second league\nDetailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results were given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233192-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Combined Events, Second league, Participation\nAn unofficial count yields the participation of 35 athletes from 9 countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233193-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Winter Throwing\nThe 2013 European Cup Winter Throwing was held on 16 and 17 March at the Pista de Atletismo Universitat Jaume I and Complejo Deportivo Gaet\u00e0 Huguet in Castell\u00f3n, Spain. It was the thirteenth edition of the athletics competition in throwing events and was jointly organised by the European Athletic Association and the Real Federaci\u00f3n Espa\u00f1ola de Atletismo. The competition featured men's and women's contests in shot put, discus throw, javelin throw and hammer throw. In addition to the senior competitions, there were also under-23 events for younger athletes. A total of 249 athletes from 38 nations entered the competition. It was the second time that Spain hosted the event, following on from the 2009 edition held in Tenerife.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233193-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Winter Throwing\nMariya Abakumova provided the highlight of the first day of competition, winning the women's javelin in a cup record and world-leading mark of 69.34\u00a0metres. Daniel Jasinski narrowly won the men's discus, beating 41-year-old Virgilijus Alekna by three centimetres. Kriszti\u00e1n Pars and Yevgeniya Kolodko were comfortable winners in the hammer throw and shot put, respectively. In the under-23 section Valeriy Iordan won with a javelin championship record of 82.89 m \u2013 the best by any athlete in the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233193-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Cup Winter Throwing\nThe best performance on the second day came from Nadine M\u00fcller, who won the discus with a world-leading 66.69\u00a0m. Borja Vivas won the only gold medal for the host country Spain in the men's shot puts, reaching twenty metres. The women's hammer contest was close with Zalina Marghieva beating the reigning Olympic champion Tatyana Lysenko with a throw of 71.98\u00a0m. The world junior record holder in the javelin, Zigismunds Sirmais, marked his transition from the junior ranks by winning the senior title. In the under-23 section Turkey's Emel Dereli won the women's shot put at the age of seventeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233194-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships\nThe 2013 European Curling Championships were held from November 22 to 30 at the S\u00f8rmarka Arena in Stavanger, Norway. Norway last hosted the European Curling Championships in 1990. The Group C competitions were held in October at the T\u00e5rnby Curling Club in T\u00e5rnby, Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233194-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships\nAt the conclusion of the championships, the top eight women's teams advanced to the 2014 Ford World Women's Curling Championship, and the top eight men's teams advanced to the 2014 World Men's Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233194-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships, Men, Group B, Round Robin Standings\nBelgium relegated to Group C after losing tiebreaker to Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233194-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships, Men, Group C\nThe Group C competitions were contested in T\u00e5rnby. Eight men's teams competed for two berths to the Group B competitions in Stavanger. The teams played a single round robin, and at its conclusion, the top four teams advanced to the playoffs, which were held in a format similar to that of the World Wheelchair Curling Championship qualification events. Wales and Romania advanced to the Group B competitions in Stavanger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233194-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships, Women, Group A, Round Robin Standings\nSweden won the draw-to-the-button challenge and were given the third seed. Russia and Denmark played a tiebreaker game for the fourth seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233194-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships, Women, Group C\nThe Group C competitions were contested in T\u00e5rnby. Four women's teams competed for two berths to the Group B competitions in Stavanger. The teams played a double round robin, and at its conclusion, the top three teams advanced to the playoffs. Belarus and Slovenia advanced to the Group B competitions in Stavanger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe men's tournament of the 2013 European Curling Championships will be held from November 22 to 30 at the S\u00f8rmarka Arena in Stavanger, Norway. The winners of the Group C tournament in T\u00e5rnby, Denmark will move on to the Group B tournament. The top eight men's teams at the 2013 European Curling Championships will represent their respective nations at the 2014 World Men's Curling Championship in Beijing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Ji\u0159\u00ed Sn\u00edtilThird: Martin Sn\u00edtilSecond: Jind\u0159ich KitzbergerLead: Marek VydraAlternate: Jakub Bare\u0161", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Rasmus StjerneThird: Johnny FrederiksenSecond: Mikkel PoulsenLead: Troels HarryAlternate: Lars Vilandt", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nFourth: Toni AnttilaSkip: Tomi Rantam\u00e4kiSecond: Pekka PeuraLead: Jermu P\u00f6ll\u00e4nenAlternate: Kimmo Ilvonen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Joffrey VincentThird: Guillaume VincentSecond: Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric ButtoudinLead: Rodolphe VincentAlternate: Tom Berrin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Ritvars GulbisThird: Normunds \u0160ar\u0161\u016bnsSecond: Aivars Avoti\u0146\u0161Lead: Art\u016brs GerhardsAlternate: Raivis Bu\u0161manis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Thomas UlsrudThird: Torger Nerg\u00e5rdSecond: Christoffer SvaeLead: H\u00e5vard Vad PeterssonAlternate: Markus H\u00f8iberg", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Andrey DrozdovThird: Evgeniy ArkhipovSecond: Alexey StukalskiyLead: Petr DronAlternate: Alexander Kozyrev", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : David MurdochThird: Greg DrummondSecond: Scott AndrewsLead: Michael GoodfellowAlternate: Tom Brewster", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Niklas Edin Third: Sebastian KrauppSecond: Fredrik LindbergLead: Viktor Kj\u00e4llAlternate: Oskar Eriksson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Sven MichelThird: Claudio P\u00e4tzSecond: Sandro TrollietLead: Simon GempelerAlternate: Beno\u00eet Schwarz", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group A, World Challenge Games\nThe winner of the best-of-three series between the eighth placed team in Group A and the winner of Group B goes to the 2014 World Men's Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 86], "content_span": [87, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Alan MacDougallThird: Andrew ReedSecond: Andrew WoolstonLead: Thomas JaeggiAlternate: John Sharp", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Martin LillThird: Harri LillSecond: Siim SildnikLead: Ingar M\u00e4esaluAlternate: Fred Randver", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Yellow Group\nFourth: Felix SchulzeSkip: John JahrSecond: Christopher BartschLead: Sven GoldemannAlternate: Peter Rickmers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Amos MosanerThird: Andrea PilzerSecond: Daniele FerrazzaLead: Roberto ArmanAlternate: Sebastiano Arman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Allen ColibanThird: Bogdan ColceriuSecond: Bogdan T\u0103utLead: \u015etefan BodeaAlternate: Valentin Anghelinei", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Mikel UnanueThird: Sergio VezSecond: I\u00f1aki LasuenLead: Victor MireteAlternate: Avelino Garcia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Alican Karata\u015fThird: Ilhan OsmanagaogluSecond: Bilal Omer CakirLead: Murat Sa\u011f\u0131rAlternate: Muhammet O\u01e7uz Zengin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : Markus ForejtekThird: Martin EgretzbergerSecond: Marcus SchmittLead: Felix PurznerAlternate: Sebastian Wunderer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : Timothy VerryckenThird: Walter VerbuekenSecond: Nils BeosierLead: Dirk HeylenAlternate: Gregory Janbroers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : Alen \u010cade\u017eThird: Dra\u017een \u0106uti\u0107Second: Ognjen Golubi\u0107Lead: Robert Mikulandri\u0107Alternate: Ivica Ivaci", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : G\u00e1bor \u00c9zs\u00f6lThird: Lajos BelleliSecond: Kriszti\u00e1n HallLead: Bal\u00e1zs VargaAlternate: Tam\u00e1s Vasp\u00f6ri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : Tadas VyskupaitisThird: Vytis KulakauskasSecond: Laurynas TelksnysLead: Vidas SadauskasAlternate: Vygantas Zalieckas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : Jaap van DorpThird: Carlo GlasbergenSecond: Wouter G\u00f6sgensLead: Joey BruinsmaAlternate: Floyd Koelewijn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nFourth: Jakub G\u0142owaniaSkip: Tomasz Zio\u0142oSecond: Konrad StychLead: Micha\u0142 Kozio\u0142Alternate: Adam Sterczewski", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : Adrian MeikleThird: James PougherSecond: Andrew TannerLead: Garry CoombsAlternate: Rhys Phillips", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group B, Round Robin Standings\n* Belgium relegated to Group C after losing tiebreaker to Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 86], "content_span": [87, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group C\nThe eight men's teams will play a single round robin, and at its conclusion, the top four teams will advance to the playoffs, which will be held in a format similar to that of the World Wheelchair Curling Championship qualification events. In the playoffs, the first and second seeds will play a semifinal game to determine the first team to advance to the Group B competitions. The loser of this game, along with the winner of the semifinal game played by the third and fourth seeds will advance to the second place game, which determines the second team to advance to the Group B competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 63], "content_span": [64, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : Pavel PetrovThird: Dimitri KirillovSecond: Andrew AvlasenkoLead: Yury PavlyuchikAlternate: Igor Platonov", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : Alan MitchellThird: James RussellSecond: John FureyLead: Arran CameronAlternate: Craig Whyte", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : J\u00f6rg MoeserThird: Yves SieradzkiSecond: Claude SchweitzerLead: Alex BenoyAlternate: Marc Hansen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : Lan \u017dagarThird: Toma\u017e ToplakSecond: Marko HarbLead: \u017diga Babi\u010dAlternate: Marko \u0160inkovec", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : Adrian MeikleThird: James PougherSecond: Andrew TannerLead: Garry CoombsAlternate: Rhys Phillips", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233195-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Men's tournament, Group C, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Central European Time (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe women's tournament of the 2013 European Curling Championships will be held from November 22 to 30 at the S\u00f8rmarka Arena in Stavanger, Norway. The winners of the Group C tournament in T\u00e5rnby, Denmark will move on to the Group B tournament. The top eight women's teams at the 2013 European Curling Championships will represent their respective nations at the 2014 Ford World Women's Curling Championship in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Anna Kube\u0161kov\u00e1Third: Tereza Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1Second: Martina Strnadov\u00e1Lead: Kl\u00e1ra Svato\u0148ov\u00e1Alternate: Veronika Herdov\u00e1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nThird: Helle SimonsenSecond: Jeanne EllegaardLead: Maria PoulsenAlternate: Mette de Neergaard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Andrea Sch\u00f6ppThird: Imogen Oona LehmannSecond: Corinna ScholzLead: Stella Hei\u00dfAlternate: Nicole Muskatewitz", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Veronica ZapponeThird: Sara LevettiSecond: Elisa PatonoLead: Arianna LosanoAlternate: Martina Bronsino", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Evita Reg\u017eaThird: Dace Reg\u017eaSecond: Ieva B\u0113rzi\u0146aLead: \u017dakl\u012bna LitaunieceAlternate: Iluta Linde", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Marianne R\u00f8rvikThird: Anneline Sk\u00e5rsmoenSecond: Camilla HolthLead: Julie Kj\u00e6r MolnarAlternate: Pia Trulsen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Anna SidorovaThird: Margarita FominaSecond: Alexandra SaitovaLead: Ekaterina GalkinaAlternate: Nkeiruka Ezekh", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Eve MuirheadThird: Anna SloanSecond: Vicki AdamsLead: Claire HamiltonAlternate: Lauren Gray", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nFourth: Maria PrytzThird: Christina BertrupSecond: Maria Wennerstr\u00f6mSkip: Margaretha SigfridssonAlternate: Agnes Knochenhauer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Teams\nSkip : Mirjam OttThird: Carmen Sch\u00e4ferSecond: Carmen K\u00fcngLead: Janine GreinerAlternate: Alina P\u00e4tz", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, Round Robin Standings\nSweden won the draw-to-the-button challenge and were given the third seed. Russia and Denmark will play a tiebreaker game for the fourth seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 88], "content_span": [89, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, World Challenge Games\nThe winner of the best-of-three series between the eighth placed team in Group A and the winner of Group B goes to the 2014 Ford World Women's Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 88], "content_span": [89, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group A, World Challenge Games, Challenge 3\nGermany advances to the 2014 Ford World Women's Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 101], "content_span": [102, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Constanze HummeltThird: Andrea H\u00f6flerSecond: Anna WeghuberLead: Marijke ReitsmaAlternate: Tina Sauerstein", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Alina PavlyuchikThird: Natalia SverzhinskayaSecond: Evgeniya OrlisLead: Ekaterina KirillovaAlternate: Arina Sverzhinskaya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Anna FowlerThird: Hetty GarnierSecond: Naomi RobinsonLead: Lauren PearceAlternate: Lucinda Sparks", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Maile M\u00f6lderThird: Kristiine LillSecond: K\u00fcllike UstavLead: Kaja Liik-TammAlternate: Helen Nummert", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Sanna PuustinenThird: Oona KausteSecond: Heidi HossiLead: Marjo HippiAlternate: Maija Salmiovirta", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Ildik\u00f3 SzekeresThird: \u00c1gnes PatonaiSecond: Blanka P\u00e1thy-Densc\u0151Lead: \u00c1gnes SzentannaiAlternate: Alexandra B\u00e9res", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : El\u017cbieta RanThird: Magda Str\u0105czekSecond: Magdalena DumanowskaLead: Agata MusikAlternate: Joanna Waryszak", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Irantzu Garc\u00edaThird: Oihane OtaegiSecond: Estrella LabradorLead: Mar\u00eda Fern\u00e1ndezAlternate: Itziar Ortiz de Urbina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group B, Teams\nSkip : Elif K\u0131z\u0131lkayaThird: Dil\u015fat Y\u0131ld\u0131zSecond: Ay\u015fe G\u00f6z\u00fctokLead: Ozlem PolatAlternate: \u00d6znur Polat", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group C\nThe four women's teams played a double round robin, and at its conclusion, the top three teams advanced to the playoffs. In the playoffs, the first and second seeds, Slovenia and Belarus played a game to determine the first team to advance to the Group B competitions. The loser of this game, Slovenia, then played a game with the third seed, Slovakia, to determine the second team to advance to the Group B competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : Alina PavlyuchikThird: Natalia SverzhinskayaSecond: Eugene OrlisLead: Ekaterina KirillovaAlternate: Arina Sverzhinskaya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : Iva PenavaThird: Iva RosoSecond: Antonia MaricevicLead: Lucija FabijanicAlternate: Anita Sajfa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group C, Teams\nSkip : Monika KristofcakovaThird: Nina MayerovaSecond: Dominika NitkovaLead: Sona MayerovaAlternate: Tereza Hubackova", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 72], "content_span": [73, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233196-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 European Curling Championships \u2013 Women's tournament, Group C, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Central European Time (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 86], "content_span": [87, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233197-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Darts Open\nThe 2013 European Darts Open was the third of eight PDC European Tour events on the 2013 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Maritim Hotel in D\u00fcsseldorf, Germany, from 17\u201319 May 2013. It featured a field of 64 players and \u00a3100,000 in prize money, with \u00a320,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233197-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Darts Open\nMichael van Gerwen won his first European Tour title with a 6\u20132 defeat of Simon Whitlock in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233197-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Darts Open, Qualification\nThe top 32 players from the on the 17 April 2013 automatically qualified for the event. The remaining 32 places went to players from three qualifying events - 20 from the UK Qualifier (held in Wigan on 26 April), eight from the European Qualifier and four from the Host Nation Qualifier (both held at the venue in D\u00fcsseldorf on 16 May).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233198-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Darts Trophy\nThe 2013 European Darts Trophy was the second of eight PDC European Tour events on the 2013 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Glaspalast in Sindelfingen, Germany, from 30 March\u20131 April 2013. It featured a field of 64 players and \u00a3100,000 in prize money, with \u00a320,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233198-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Darts Trophy\nWes Newton won his first European Tour title by defeating Paul Nicholson 6\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233198-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Darts Trophy, Qualification\nThe top 32 players from the on the 5 March 2013 automatically qualified for the event. The remaining 32 places went to players from three qualifying events - 20 from the UK Qualifier (held in Wigan on 15 March), eight from the European Qualifier and four from the Host Nation Qualifier (both held at the venue in Sindelfingen on 29 March).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233198-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Darts Trophy, Qualification\nPhil Taylor, Adrian Lewis, Gary Anderson and Raymond van Barneveld opted to not play in the event. James Wade withdrew the day before the tournament started due to illness, as did Simon Whitlock in order to focus on the Premier League. An additional place in the draw was therefore available in the European Qualifier and the Host Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233199-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships\nThe 2013 European Diving Championships was the third edition of the European Diving Championships and took place from 18\u201323 June 2013 in Rostock, Germany. A total of eleven disciplines were contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233200-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 1 metre springboard\nThe men's 1 m springboard competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 19 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233200-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 1 metre springboard, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 09:00 and the final was held at 15:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233201-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 10 metre platform\nThe men's 10 metre platform competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships will be held on June 23 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233201-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 10 metre platform, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 12:00 and the final was held at 16:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 69], "content_span": [70, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233202-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 3 metre springboard\nThe men's 3 m springboard competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 20 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233202-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 3 metre springboard, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 09:00 and the final was held at 15:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233203-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 3 metre synchro springboard\nThe men's 3 metre synchro springboard competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 21 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233203-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's 3 metre synchro springboard, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 12:00 and the final was held at 17:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 79], "content_span": [80, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233204-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's synchronized 10 metre platform\nThe Men's synchronized 10 metre platform competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 22 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233204-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Men's synchronized 10 metre platform, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 12:00 and the final was held at 17:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 82], "content_span": [83, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233205-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Team event\nThe team event competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on 18 June with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233206-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 1 metre springboard\nThe women's 1 m springboard competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 21 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233206-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 1 metre springboard, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 09:00 and the final was held at 15:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 73], "content_span": [74, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233207-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 10 metre platform\nThe women's 10 metre platform competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 19 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233207-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 10 metre platform, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 12:00 and the final was held at 17:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233208-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 3 metre springboard\nThe women's 3 m springboard competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 22 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233208-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 3 metre springboard, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 09:00 and the final was held at 14:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 73], "content_span": [74, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233209-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 3 metre synchro springboard\nThe women's 3 metre synchro springboard competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 23 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233209-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's 3 metre synchro springboard, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 09:00 and the final was held at 14:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 81], "content_span": [82, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233210-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's synchronized 10 metre platform\nThe women's synchronized 10 metre platform competition at the 2013 European Diving Championships was held on June 20 with a preliminary round and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233210-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Diving Championships \u2013 Women's synchronized 10 metre platform, Results\nThe preliminary round was held at 12:00 and the final was held at 17:30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [77, 84], "content_span": [85, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233211-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Dressage Championships\nThe 2013 European Dressage Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the Blue Hors European Dressage Championship was held between August 21 and August 25, 2013 in Herning, Denmark. It formed part of the 2013 FEI ECCO European Championships; other disciplines included were Showjumping and Para-Dressage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233211-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Dressage Championships\nGermany, the historically dominant nation in European and World dressage, regained its European team title, which it had lost to Great Britain in 2011. The Netherlands edged out the British team, for whom Olympic team champion Laura Tomlinson was a late withdrawal, for the silver team medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233211-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Dressage Championships\nThe individual competitions were dominated by the British double Olympic champion Charlotte Dujardin, riding Valegro, winning her first European titles and edging out 2011 double individual champion Adelinde Cornelissen. Dujardin set a new Championship record in the Individual Freestyle or Kr with the second highest score ever recorded in the discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233211-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Dressage Championships\nThe 2013 event was the 26th edition of the European Dressage Championships. Parallel to the senior European Championships, a Youth Horse Show for riders up to 25 years of age was also held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233211-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Dressage Championships, Medal summary, Minor Competitions\nAs part of the event, two individual under 25 'junior' competitions were also held. They were both won by Nanna Skodborg Merrald, as hosts Denmark dominated the medals in both disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233211-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Dressage Championships, Competitions, General\nCompetition was held in the MCH Arena of Herning, in three events; the team event involved three or four horses per nation (the three best scores are counted), while individuals competed in two individual competitions, Individual Grand Prix Sp\u00e9cial and two days later in the individual Grand Prix Freestyle or K\u00far. Unlike in the Olympic Games, scores in the two individual disciplines were not combined, and medals were awarded in each discipline separately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233211-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Dressage Championships, Competitions, General\nAt this European Championship a record number of participants started the Championship competitions. In the Team Grand Prix de Dressage 64 riders and 16 teams start. Each nation can start with a team of three or four riders, each rider with one horse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233212-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Eventing Championships\nThe 2013 European Eventing Championship was held from August 29 to September 1, 2013, in Malm\u00f6, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233213-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European F3 Open Championship\nThe 2013 European F3 Open Championship was the fifth European F3 Open Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233213-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European F3 Open Championship\nDespite missing the opening round of the season, Ed Jones of Team West-Tec was crowned champion by nine points on dropped scores over RP Motorsport driver Sandy Stuvik. The final championship standings were determined after two appeals had been lodged, and upheld, with the Real Autom\u00f3vil Club de Espa\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233213-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European F3 Open Championship, Championship standings, Class A\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap1\u00a0\u2013 Ineligible for points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233214-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Fencing Championships\nThe 2013 European Fencing Championships was held in Zagreb, Croatia from 16\u201321 June 2013. Venue for the competition was Arena Zagreb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 European Figure Skating Championships was a senior international figure skating competition in the 2012\u201313 season. The competition was held from 23 to 27 January 2013 at the Dom Sportova in Zagreb, Croatia. Medals were awarded 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, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Qualification\nSkaters were eligible for the event if they were representing a European member nation of the International Skating Union and had reached the age of 15 before July 1, 2012 in their place of birth. The corresponding competition for non-European skaters was the 2013 Four Continents Championships. National associations selected their entries according to their own criteria but the ISU mandated that their selections achieve a minimum technical elements score (TES) at an international event prior to the European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Qualification, Number of entries per discipline\nBased on the results of the 2012 European Championships, the ISU allowed each country one to three entries per discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 91], "content_span": [92, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Overview\n2012 European ladies' silver medalist Kiira Korpi of Finland withdrew due to inflammation of her left Achilles tendon and was replaced by Alisa Mikonsaari. The defending ice dancing champions, France's Nathalie P\u00e9chalat / Fabian Bourzat, withdrew due to a partial tear of Bourzat's adductor muscle. France did not have a substitute. The 2012 pair skating silver medalists, Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov of Russia, withdrew due to Larionov's wrist injury and Ksenia Stolbova / Fedor Klimov were named as their replacements. Poor weather delayed some arrivals. Germany's Aliona Savchenko / Robin Szolkowy's flight was cancelled twice. A group of Russian skaters flying to Zagreb were stuck in Budapest, Hungary for ten hours due to weather and organizational problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nFrance's Florent Amodio was first in the men's short program, one point ahead of Spain's Javier Fern\u00e1ndez, while France's Brian Joubert finished third. Seven-time European champion Evgeni Plushenko withdrew after the short program due to aggravation of his back problem. Fern\u00e1ndez placed first in the free skate, with Michal B\u0159ezina of the Czech Republic in second and Amodio in third. Fern\u00e1ndez finished first overall and won Spain's first ever European title in figure skating, silver went to Amodio, while B\u0159ezina claimed the bronze medal and the first European podium of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nRussia's Adelina Sotnikova placed first in the ladies' short program, with Italy's Carolina Kostner and Valentina Marchei in second and third respectively. Elizaveta Tuktamysheva of Russia won the free skate ahead of Kostner and Sotnikova. Kostner finished first in the overall standings and won her fifth European title while Sotnikova and Tuktamysheva took their first continental medals, silver and bronze respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nTatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov of Russia won the pairs' short program ahead of Germany's Aliona Savchenko / Robin Szolkowy and Italy's Stefania Berton / Ondrej Hotarek. The top three maintained their respective positions in the free skate. Volosozhar / Trankov repeated as European champions, while Savchenko / Szolkowy took silver and Berton / Hotarek took the bronze, Italy's first European medal in pair skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nRussia's Ekaterina Bobrova / Dmitri Soloviev placed first in the short dance, with teammates Elena Ilinykh / Nikita Katsalapov and Italy's Anna Cappellini / Luca Lanotte rounding out the top three. Bobrova / Soloviev won their first European title, silver medalists Ilinykh / Katsalapov were first in the free dance by 0.33 and second overall by 0.11, and bronze medalists Cappellini / Lanotte finished on the European podium for the first time in their career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medals by country\nTable of small medals for placement in the short segment:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233215-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 European Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medals by country\nTable of small medals for placement in the free segment:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233216-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Individual Chess Championship\nThe European Individual Chess Championship 2013 was a chess 11-round Swiss-system tournament, played between 4 and 17 May 2013, in Legnica, Poland. Ukrainian grandmaster Alexander Moiseenko won the gold medal after tie break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233216-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Individual Chess Championship, Format\nPlayers had 90 minutes for their first 40 moves followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game with an additional increment of 30 seconds per move from move one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233216-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Individual Chess Championship, Format\nThe best 23 players qualified for the Chess World Cup 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233216-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Individual Chess Championship, Participants\nThe players were nominated by their respective national chess federations. The 10 highest ranked participants with their May 2013 rating (Continent Rank Europe position) were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233216-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Individual Chess Championship, Winners\nTen players finished on 8/11 points to tie for first place. After applying tie-breaks, the following players were awarded the gold, silver and bronze medal positions;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233217-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Judo Championships\nThe 2013 European Judo Championships were held in Budapest, Hungary from 25 to 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233218-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Badminton Championships\nThe 2013 European Junior Badminton Championships were held at the ASKI Sport Hall in Ankara, Turkey, between 22-31 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233218-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Badminton Championships, Venue\nThis Tournament was held at the ASKI Sport Hall in \u0130vedik, Ankara, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233219-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Cup\nThe 2013 European Junior Cup was the third season of the European Junior Cup, and the first to use Honda CBR500R bikes after using KTM 690 Duke bikes in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233219-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Cup\nThe series featured two female riders this year, Am\u00e9lie D\u00e9moulin of France and Sabrina Paiuta of Brazil. The title was won by Jake Lewis from New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233220-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Curling Challenge\nThe 2013 European Junior Curling Challenge was held from January 3 to 8 at the Curling Hall Roztyly in Prague, Czech Republic. Nations in the Europe zone that have not already qualified for the World Junior Curling Championships participated in the curling challenge. The top finishers of each tournament will advance to the 2013 World Junior Curling Championships in Sochi, Russia. In the men's tournament, Italy regained a spot in the World Junior Championships after a last place finish at last year's worlds with a win over Denmark. In the women's tournament, Denmark won a spot in the World Junior Championships with a win over Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233220-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Curling Challenge, Men, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Central European Time (UTC+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233221-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Swimming Championships\nThe 2013 European Junior Swimming Championships were held from 10\u201314 July 2013 in Pozna\u0144, Poland. The Championships were organized by LEN, the European Swimming League, and were held in a 50 meter pool. Per LEN rules, competitors must be age 15 or 16 for girls and 17 or 18 for boys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233221-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior Swimming Championships, Participating countries\n42 countries will take part in 2013 European Junior Swimming Championships with total of 511 swimmers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233222-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2013 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Bourg-Saint-Maurice, France from 31 July to 4 August 2013 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA). It was the 15th edition of the competition for Juniors (U18) and the 11th edition for the Under 23 category. A total of 19 medal events took place. No medals were awarded for the junior women's C1 team event due to low number of participating countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233223-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Juniors Wrestling Championships\nThe 2013 European Juniors Wrestling Championships was held in Skopje, North Macedonia between July 2\u20137, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233224-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Karate Championships\nThe 2013 European Karate Championships, the 48th edition, were held in Budapest, Hungary from 9 to 12 May 2013. A total of 497 competitors from 45 countries participated at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233225-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Kendo Championships\nThe 25th European Kendo Championships was held in Berlin, Germany 12\u201314 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233226-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Le Mans Series\nThe 2013 European Le Mans Series season was the tenth season of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest's European Le Mans Series endurance auto racing series. It is the first season of the European Le Mans Series under the control of the ACO's Le Mans Endurance Management, replacing former organisers Peter Auto. Championships are open to four categories, two of which are for Le Mans Prototypes while the other two are grand tourers. The season contested over five races starting at the Silverstone Circuit, United Kingdom on 13 April and ended at Circuit Paul Ricard, France on 28 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233226-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Le Mans Series, Schedule\nDuring the 2012 season several planned races were cancelled due to low interest from teams, leading the series to adopt several changes for the 2013 calendar. All race weekends have been shortened to two days, with practice and qualifying on Friday and the race on Saturday. Races have also been shortened from six hours to three. The European Le Mans Series will also share its weekends with several other international racing series, including the FIA World Endurance Championship, World Series by Renault, and FFSA GT Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233226-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Le Mans Series, Schedule\nThe Silverstone Circuit, United Kingdom returns to the European Le Mans Series for the first time since 2011, serving as part of a Super Endurance weekend as the ELMS race will be a precursor to the 6 Hours of Silverstone for the World Endurance Championship the following day. The Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari in Imola, Italy also returns to the European Le Mans Series calendar, joined by the GT Tour series. The Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Austria is new to the European Le Mans Series, while the Hungaroring, Hungary is another circuit with ELMS history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233226-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 European Le Mans Series, Schedule\nThe season finale is at Circuit Paul Ricard, France is the only event carried over from 2012. The Circuit layout used at this event was to have the full length of the Mistral straight without the chicanes. The final three races of the season are all shared with the World Series by Renault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233226-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Le Mans Series, Entries\nThe entry list for the 2013 season was released on 8 February, and included eleven LMP2 and three LMPC cars, ten LMGTE entries, and five GTC cars, bringing the full grid up to twenty-nine entrants. However, only 23 cars turned up for the opening race of the season, the 3 Hours of Silverstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233227-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Masters (curling)\nThe 2013 European Masters were held from April 17 to 20 at the Sports Center Lerchenfeld in St. Gallen, Switzerland as part of the 2012\u201313 World Curling Tour. It was the final event on the Curling Champions Tour (CCT) of Europe, and featured the top teams from the CCT rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233227-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Masters (curling), Teams\nThe teams for the European Masters were invited based on their top-ten finishes in the Curling Champions Tour ranking list for the 2012\u201313 season, with the exception of Mark Dacey's Canadian team, who were a special invite. The top-ranked teams skipped by Niklas Edin and Thomas Ulsrud declined their invitations due to their participation in the 2013 Players' Championship, which ran at the same time as the European Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233227-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Masters (curling), Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Central European Summer Time (UTC+2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233228-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2013 European Mixed Curling Championship was held from September 14 to 21 at the Murrayfield Curling Rink in Edinburgh, Scotland. Due to an issue with the ice chilling plant, play was postponed from Saturday night until Sunday night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233228-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Curling Championship\nGermany's Andy Kapp defeated defending champion Scotland's Ewan MacDonald with a score of 5\u20134. The game was tied after four ends, but Scotland gave up a steal of two in the sixth end after a draw by MacDonald came up light. Scotland scored two in the seventh end, but Germany were able to get one point in the final end to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233228-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Curling Championship, Teams, Red Group\nSkip : Gy\u00f6rgy NagyThird: Ildik\u00f3 SzekeresSecond: Zsolt KissLead: \u00c1gnes SzentannaiAlternate: Jakab Zolt\u00e1n", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233228-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Curling Championship, Teams, Blue Group\nSkip : Hans Roger T\u00f8mmervoldThird: Marte BakkSecond: Olav Helge StorliLead: Pia Trulsen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233228-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Curling Championship, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Robin GrayThird: Louise KerrSecond: John Jo KennyLead: Hazel Gormley-Leahy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233228-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Curling Championship, Teams, Yellow Group\nSkip : Alican Karata\u015fThird: \u00d6znur PolatSecond: Muhammet O\u01e7uz ZenginLead: Elif K\u0131z\u0131lkaya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233228-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Curling Championship, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Greenwich Mean Time (UTC+0).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233229-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships\nThe 2013 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships were held at the Borisoglebsky Arena in Ramenskoye, Moscow Oblast, Russia, from 12\u201317 February 2013, and were organised by the Badminton Europe and the National Badminton Federation of Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233230-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Modern Pentathlon Championships\nThe 2013 European Modern Pentathlon Championships were held in Drzonk\u00f3w, Poland from July 11 to 17, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233231-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mountain Running Championships\nThe 2013 European Mountain Running Championships were held on 6 July at Borovets in Sofia, Bulgaria. The competition featured four individual races: The men's race was 11.8\u00a0km long and with an ascent of 1152\u00a0m, the women's and junior men's races were 8.8\u00a0km long with an ascent of 1072\u00a0m. and the junior women's race was 3.5\u00a0km long with an ascent of 530\u00a0m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233231-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Mountain Running Championships\nIn the men's race, Bernard Dematteis ended Ahmet Arslan's six year winning streak by finishing first, over a minute ahead of Alex Baldaccini who finished second and Arslan who finished third. In the women's race, Andrea Mayr won her second title, beating Valentina Belotti and Mateja Kosovelj by 1 minute 5 seconds and 1 minute 18 seconds respectively. In total 217 athletes from 27 countries participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233232-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Pairs Speedway Championship\nThe 2013 European Pairs Speedway Championship was the tenth edition of the European Pairs Speedway Championship. The final was held in Herxheim, Germany on 29 June. Germany won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233232-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Pairs Speedway Championship, Semi-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, 53], "content_span": [54, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233232-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233233-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Para-Dressage Championship\nThe 2013 European Para-Dressage Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the JYSK FEI European Para-Dressage Championship, was held between August 19 and August 25, 2013 in Herning, Denmark. It formed part of the 2013 FEI European Championships; other disciplines included were Showjumping and Dressage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233233-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Para-Dressage Championship, Competitions, General\nCompetition was held in eleven events; the team event involved four horse per nation, while individuals competed across ten graded individual freestyle competitions; the five individual classes, where marks also counted towards team medals, and the freestyle classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233233-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Para-Dressage Championship, Competitions, General\nCompetition was dominated by riders from Great Britain, historically the leading nation in the sport. Sophie Christiansen, Sophie Wells and Natasha Baker each won three gold medals on their way to taking team gold for Great Britain. Austria's Pepo Puch won two gold medals in the Grade III classifications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233234-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Parliament election in Croatia\nEuropean Parliament elections were held in Croatia for the first time on 14 April 2013 to elect twelve Members of the European Parliament. The members served the remainder of the Parliament's 2009\u20132014 after Croatia entered the European Union on 1 July 2013. The country formed a single constituency, with members elected by proportional representation using open lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233234-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Parliament election in Croatia\nDespite opinion polling predicting a decisive victory of the governing centre left SDP-led coalition, the centre right HDZ-led coalition won a razor-thin plurality of the vote. The turnout of just 20.8% was the lowest turnout in a national election in modern Croatian history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233235-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Race Walking Cup\nThe 2013 European Race Walking Cup was held in Dudince, Slovakia, on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233235-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Race Walking Cup\nComplete results were published. Detailed report were given. Medal winners were published on the Athletics Weekly website,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233235-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Race Walking Cup, Participation\nThe participation of 282 athletes ( men/ women) from 29 countries is reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233236-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Racquetball Championships\nThe XVII Racquetball European Championships were held in Brembate, (Italy) from July 15 -20 2013, with men's national and women's national teams in competition. In addition to the European Championships, the European Racquetball Masters and Junior Racquetball Championships were held at the same time. The venue was the Centro Communale Spotivo di Brembate, with 2 regulation racquetball court. The opening ceremony was held on July 19th .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233237-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Rally Championship\nThe 2013 European Rally Championship season was the 61st season of the FIA European Rally Championship, the European continental championship series in rallying. The season was also the first following the merger between the European Rally Championship and the Intercontinental Rally Challenge. French broadcaster Eurosport, which previously organised the IRC, assumed the duties of organising the ERC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233237-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Rally Championship\nThe season started in Austria on 3 January, with the running of the Internationale J\u00e4nner Rallye, and finished on 9 November at the International Rallye du Valais. Jan Kopeck\u00fd won the Championship after scoring a total of six victories and two more podium finishes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233237-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Rally Championship, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2013 season featured twelve rallies, which were drawn from the 2012 European Rally Championship and Intercontinental Rally Challenge calendars. A final calendar of thirteen events was confirmed on 15 December 2012, however in April 2013 Rally San Marino lost its place on the calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233237-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Rally Championship, Selected entries\nThe following teams and drivers represent the major entries participating in the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233238-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Rallycross Championship\nThe 2013 European Rallycross Championship was the thirty seventh season of the FIA European Championships for Rallycross Drivers. The season consisted of nine rounds and started on 31 March with the British round at Lydden Hill Race Circuit. The season ended on 21 September, at Germany at Estering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233239-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Road Championships\nThe 2013 European Road Championships were held in Olomouc, Czech Republic, between 18 and 21 July 2013. The event consisted of a road race and a time trial for men and women under 23 and juniors. The championships were regulated by the European Cycling Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233240-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Road Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race\nThe Women's junior road race at the 2013 European Road Championships took place on 21 July. The Championships were hosted by the Czech Republic city of Olomouc. The course was 77\u00a0km long. 82 junior cyclists competed in this discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233241-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Road Championships \u2013 Women's junior time trial\nThe Women's junior time trial at the 2013 European Road Championships took place on 19 July. The Championships were hosted by the Czech Republic city of Olomouc. The course was 13.2\u00a0km long. 39 junior cyclists competed in this discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233242-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Road Championships \u2013 Women's under-23 time trial\nThe Women's under-23 time trial at the 2013 European Road Championships took place on 18 July. The Championships were hosted by the Czech Republic city of Olomouc. The course was 22.4\u00a0km long. 34 cyclists competed in the time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233243-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Rowing Championships\nThe 2013 European Rowing Championships was held in Seville, Spain, between 31 May and 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233244-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Senior Tour\nThe 2013 European Senior Tour was the 22nd season of the European Senior Tour, the professional golf tour for men aged 50 and above operated by the PGA European Tour. Paul Wesselingh won four events and the Order of Merit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233244-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Senior Tour, Tournament results\nThe numbers in brackets after the winners' names show the number of career wins they had on the European Senior Tour up to and including that event. This is only shown for players who are members of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233244-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Senior Tour, Tournament results\nFor the tour schedule on the European Senior Tour's website, including links to full results, click .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233244-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Senior Tour, Leading money winners\nThere is a complete list on the official site .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233245-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Shooting Championships\nThe 2013 European Shooting Championships (25, 50, 300 m) were held in Osijek, Croatia from 21 July \u2013 4 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233246-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Short Course Swimming Championships\nThe 2013 European Short Course Swimming Championships took place in Herning, Denmark, from 12 to 15 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233246-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Results, Men's events\nLegend: WR \u2013 World record; WBT \u2013 World best time; ER \u2013 European record; CR \u2013 Championship record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233246-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Results, Women's events\nLegend: WR \u2013 World record; WBT \u2013 World best time; ER \u2013 European record; CR \u2013 Championship record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233246-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Medal table\nOn 13 May 2014 Russian swimmer Yuliya Yefimova was officially suspended for doping use and lost 4 gold and 1 silver medals. Another Russian swimmer Vitaly Melnikov was banned in May 2015, which resulted in a loss of an individual silver and two relay gold medals for Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233246-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Participating nations\n577 swimmers from 39 countries swam at the 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233247-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2013 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships took place between 18 and 20 January 2013 in Malm\u00f6, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233248-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Shotgun Championships\nThe 2013 European Shotgun Championships (Running Target & Shotgun) were held in Suhl, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233249-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2013 European Speed Skating Championships was the 38th continental allround speed skating event for women and the 107th for men. The championships were held at the Thialf in Heerenveen, Netherlands, from 11 through 13 January 2013. Both the men's and women's championship consisted of four separate distance events and the winners are the skaters with the lowest points total after four distances. The competition was also a qualifying event for the 2013 World Allround Speed Skating Championships as the entry quotas were allocated according to the results of the European Championships. Sven Kramer and Ireen W\u00fcst won the European titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233249-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Speed Skating Championships, Venue\nThe competition took place at the Thialf, Heerenveen, Netherlands, an indoor artificial skating rink, on a standard 400 meters track with inner and outer curves with radii of 26 and 30 meters respectively. The venue has a capacity of 12,500 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233249-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Speed Skating Championships, Participating nations\nA provisional list of competitors and staff had to be presented until 24 December 2012, while the final deadline of applications for the European Championships was closed on 8 January 2013. Every European member federation of the International Skating Union (ISU), whose racer met the qualification criteria were eligible to delegate one participant to the event, and, according to the rules of the ISU, the following nations had the right to enter additional competitors in virtue of their results in the previous continental event:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233249-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Speed Skating Championships, Participating nations\nEventually 52 competitors from 17 nations registered officially for the championships, not including the substitutes, in the following distribution:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233249-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Speed Skating Championships, Events, Women's competition\nThe women's European Championship were held over two days, Saturday and Sunday, with the 500 and 3000 metre events on the first day, followed by the 1500 and 5000 metre events on the second day. Skaters were awarded points according to their times, and the eight best placed competitors after the second day were eligible to participate in the 5000 metres closing event on the last day of the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233249-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Speed Skating Championships, Events, Women's competition\nMartina S\u00e1bl\u00edkov\u00e1 was the defending 2012 European Champion and also won the title previously in 2007, 2010 and 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233249-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Speed Skating Championships, Events, Men's competition\nThe men's event took place over three days, with the 500 metres and the 5000 metres race on the first day, the 1500 on the second day and 10,000 meters race on the final day. After the first day, the best 24 out of the 26 skaters got the change to participate in the 5000 meters event, while the best eight competitors after three events took part in the 10,000 meters race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233250-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Superstock 600 Championship\nThe 2013 European Superstock 600 Championship was the ninth season of the European Superstock 600 Championship. Italian Franco Morbidelli was proclaimed champion after winning two races, he beat out fellow Italians Alessandro Nocco and Christian Gamarino to the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233251-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Table Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 European Table Tennis Championships were held in Schwechat, Austria from 4\u201313 October 2013. Venue for the competition is Multiversum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233252-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour\nThe 2013 European Tour was the fifth edition of the Race to Dubai and the 42nd season of golf tournaments since the European Tour officially began in 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233252-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour\nSweden's Henrik Stenson won the Race to Dubai and was named Golfer of the Year. Peter Uihlein of the United States was the Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233252-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour, Rule changes\nIn a change to the European Tour's membership criteria, from 2013 the Ryder Cup, Presidents Cup and Seve Trophy were included in the 13-event minimum requirement. The move was seen as an attempt to retain leading European players based in the United States on the PGA Tour, and attract top Americans to join the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233252-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the 2013 European Tour schedule. New for 2013 was the \"Final Series\", consisting of the final four tournaments of the season \u2013 BMW Masters, WGC-HSBC Champions, Turkish Airlines Open, and DP World Tour Championship, Dubai \u2013 with a requirement to play in two of the first three in order to compete in the DP World Tour Championship. In addition, participation in the first three events accrued a 20% bonus in the Race to Dubai standings for those events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233252-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour, Schedule\nThere were several changes from the 2012 season. Additions for 2013 were the season opening The Nelson Mandela Championship, the Tshwane Open, the returning Russian Open and the Turkish Airlines Open. Dropped from the schedule were the Sicilian Open and the Barclays Singapore Open; the UBS Hong Kong Open and the South African Open were also missing from the 2013 schedule as they were played in late in the year as part of the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233252-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour, Race to Dubai\nSince 2009, the European Tour's money list has been known as the \"Race to Dubai\". It is based on money earned during the season and is calculated in euro, with earnings from tournaments that award prize money in other currencies being converted at the exchange rate available the week of the event. The following table shows the final top-10 in the 2013 standings and includes the bonus pool and bonus points from the \"Final Series\" (earnings converted to points before DP World Tour Championship, Dubai).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233252-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour, Awards, Golfer of the Month\nThe winners of the European Tour Golfer of the Month award:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233253-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour Qualifying School graduates\nThis is a list of the 27 players who earned their 2014 European Tour card through Q School in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233253-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour Qualifying School graduates, 2014 Results\n* European Tour rookie in 2014T = Tied \u00a0 The player retained his European Tour card for 2016 (finished inside the top 110, or won). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2016, but retained conditional status (finished between 111\u2013147). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2015 (finished outside the top 147).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233253-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Tour Qualifying School graduates, Winners on the European Tour in 2014\n1 Event shortened to 36 holes due to poor weather", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233254-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Touring Car Cup\nThe 2013 FIA European Touring Car Cup was the ninth running of the FIA European Touring Car Cup. It consisted of five events in Italy, Slovakia, Austria and the Czech Republic. The championship was split into three categories: Super 2000, Super 1600, and the Single-Make Trophy for cars such as the SEAT Le\u00f3n Supercopa. The Super Production category was abolished for this season. The 2013 season saw the introduction of the Lady Trophy Cup, with the best-placed female driver in either of the categories at each event receiving \u20ac10,000 in prize money. Diesel engines were banned from the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233254-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Touring Car Cup, Championship standings, Single-makes Trophy\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, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233255-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Track Championships (under-23 & junior)\nThe 2013 European Track Championships are the European Championships for track cycling. The junior and under 23 riders events took place at the Vel\u00f3dromo Nacional de Sangalhos in Anadia, Portugal from 9 to 14 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233255-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Track Championships (under-23 & junior)\nThis year, the women's team pursuit event differed in that the number of riders in each team had increased from 3 to 4, and correspondingly, the distance covered changed from 3\u00a0km to 4\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy\nThe 2013 European Trophy was the fourth and final season of the European Trophy, an annually held European ice hockey tournament. It was also the eighth tournament since its predecessor, the Nordic Trophy, was launched in 2006. The regulation round began on 6 August 2013 with the South Division game between Pir\u00e1ti Chomutov\u2013Sparta Praha, and ended on 8 September 2013. The playoffs were played between 19\u201322 December 2013 in Berlin. The preliminary schedule for the regulation round was released on 15 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy\nJYP won the tournament, defeating F\u00e4rjestad BK in the final 2\u20131. Like last year's tournament, the same 32 teams participated in the tournament, marking the first time since 2007 that the teams remained the same from last year. For the first time in tournament history, Eisb\u00e4ren Berlin hosted the playoffs, the Red Bulls Salute. It marked the first time that the playoffs were hosted in a single city, as well as the first time that the playoffs weren't hosted in Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Tournament format\nThe 32 teams in the tournament were, partly based on geographical location, divided into four divisions: the West Division, the North Division, the South Division, and the East Division. Each division consisted of 8 teams who played a round-robin in their division, with an extra game against a local rival in their division, giving a total of 8 games per team. Each team was assigned four home games as well as four road games. The match-ups were nearly identical to last year, the only difference being that the home\u2013away team assignings were switched for each game. Six teams qualified for the playoffs: Eisb\u00e4ren Berlin (as host), the winner of each division, and the best 2nd-placed team of all four divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Tournament format\nIf at least two teams in the same division or at least two 2nd-placed teams ended up tied in points, the following tie-breaker format was used:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Tournament format, Playing format\nIf a game was tied after regulation time (60 minutes), a 5-minute overtime period was played. During overtime, both teams substitute only 4 players on the ice at once (except for 3 when either of the teams has a penalized player). If no team scores during the overtime period, a shootout was played, starting with three penalty shots for both teams. If the shootout remains tied after the first three rounds, sudden death rounds were played until a winning team has been determined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Tournament format, Playing format\nIn the regulation round games, the teams get three points for a regulation-time victory, two points for an overtime/shootout win, one point for losing in overtime/shootout, and zero points for a regulation loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Tournament format, Prize money\nAfter the regulation round, the four division winners receive \u20ac25 000 each, the four second-placed teams \u20ac20 000, and the third, fourth and fifth team of each division receive \u20ac15 000, \u20ac10 000, and \u20ac5 000, respectively. Additionally, in the Red Bulls Salute, the winning team receives \u20ac50 000, while the team finishing second gets \u20ac10 000. In total, \u20ac360 000 was given out during the entire tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Regulation round, North Division\nFinal standings. Eisb\u00e4ren Berlin qualified for the playoffs as the host team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Regulation round, Ranking of runner-up teams\nTo determine the last playoff spot (along with playoff host Eisb\u00e4ren Berlin and the four group winners), a ranking between the group runners-up was made, and the best runner-up got a place in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 66], "content_span": [67, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Playoffs\nThe playoffs, known as the Red Bulls Salute, took place in the Wellblechpalast and the O2 World, Berlin between 19\u201322 December 2013. It was played with two groups of three teams each. The teams played a round-robin in their group, for a total of three games, and the best-seeded team from each group qualified for the Final; all other teams were eliminated from the tournament. The groups were determined by a draw taking place in Berlin on 9 September 2013. The first game in each group took place in the Wellblechpalast; all other games, including the Final, were played in the O2 World.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Ranking and statistics, Final standings\nThe following is the final standings of the playoffs. Note that due to the playoff groups, the standings for the teams that failed to qualify for the Final were determined by their records in the playoff groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 61], "content_span": [62, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Ranking and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top 10 skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 61], "content_span": [62, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Ranking and statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties In Minutes; POS = Position positions: F = Forward; D = DefencemanSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 61], "content_span": [62, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nList shows the top 10 goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes. If two goaltenders has the same save percentage the order is based on number shots against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 65], "content_span": [66, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSources: and", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 65], "content_span": [66, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Ranking and statistics, European Star Award leaders\nThe European Star Award was a three stars award given to the three best players in each game. The first star got three points, the second got two points, and the third got one point. List shows the top ten players based on the number of European Star Award points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 73], "content_span": [74, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233256-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 European Trophy, Ranking and statistics, European Star Award leaders\nGP = Games played; Pts = Points; POS = Position positions: G = Goaltender; F = Forward; D = DefencemanSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 73], "content_span": [74, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233257-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Truck Racing Championship\nThe 2013 FIA European Truck Racing Championship was a motor-racing championship using highly tuned tractor units producing over 1000\u00a0bhp. It was the 29th year of the championship and Jochen Hahn won the title for the third year in a row with MAN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233257-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Truck Racing Championship\nSince Heinz-Werner Lenz, who between 1997 and 1999 won the Race-Trucks Class title at three consecutive years on his Mercedes-Benz 1938-S, and for the first time since the Super-Race-Truck Class was abolished prior to the opening of the 2006 season, Jochen Hahn is the first truck racer to win the title hat-trick on his Castrol Team Hahn Racing MAN race truck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233257-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Truck Racing Championship\nIn 1988, 1989 and 1990, Curt G\u00f6ransson was the first one to achieve such a success by winning three Class B titles in a row on his Volvo N12 race truck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233257-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Truck Racing Championship, Teams and drivers\nRace drivers without fixed number, whose number is defined race by race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233257-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Truck Racing Championship, Championship Overall Standings, Drivers' Championship\nEach round or racing event consisted of four races. At the races 1 and 3, the points awarded according to the ranking was on a 20, 15, 12, 10, 8, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1 basis to the top 10 finishers \u2013 at the races 2 and 4 with reversed grid, the points awarded were 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 (rank 1 - 10) respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 94], "content_span": [95, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233258-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2013 European Weightlifting Championships were held in Tirana, Albania from 8 April to 14 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233258-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Weightlifting Championships, Schedule\nThe competition days were split in A and B groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233258-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Weightlifting Championships, Medals tables\nRanking by all medals: \"Big\" (Total result) and \"Small\" (Snatch and Clean&Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233258-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Weightlifting Championships, Participating countries\nList of participating countries. In total 35 countries participated in this championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233259-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships\nThe 2013 European Wrestling Championships were held in Tbilisi, Georgia, from 19 March to 24 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233259-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships, Medal summary, Women's freestyle\n(*) Romanian original silver medallist Estera Dobre was disqualified after her doping sample had been tested positive in August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233260-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 120 kg\nThe men's freestyle 120\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 21 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233261-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 55 kg\nThe men's freestyle 55\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 20 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233262-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 60 kg\nThe men's freestyle 60\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 20 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233263-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 66 kg\nThe men's freestyle 66\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 19 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233264-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 74 kg\nThe men's freestyle 74\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 21 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233265-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 84 kg\nThe men's freestyle 84\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 22 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233266-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Freestyle 96 kg\nThe men's freestyle 96\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 19 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233267-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 120 kg\nThe men's Greco-Roman 120\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 23 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233268-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 55 kg\nThe men's Greco-Roman 55\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 23 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233269-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg\nThe men's Greco-Roman 60\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 23 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233270-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 66 kg\nThe men's Greco-Roman 66\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 24 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233271-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 74 kg\nThe men's Greco-Roman 74\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 24 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233272-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 84 kg\nThe men's Greco-Roman 84\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 24 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233273-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Men's Greco-Roman 96 kg\nThe men's Greco-Roman 96\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 23 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233274-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 48 kg\nThe women's freestyle 48\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 19 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233275-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 51 kg\nThe women's freestyle 51\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 20 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233275-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 51 kg, Medalists\n(*) Romanian original silver medallist Estera Dobre was disqualified after her doping sample had been tested positive in August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 74], "content_span": [75, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233276-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 55 kg\nThe women's freestyle 55\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 21 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233277-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 59 kg\nThe women's freestyle 59\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 20 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233278-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 63 kg\nThe women's freestyle 63\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 22 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233279-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 67 kg\nThe women's freestyle 67\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 21 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233280-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Wrestling Championships \u2013 Women's Freestyle 72 kg\nThe women's freestyle 72\u00a0kg is a competition featured at the 2013 European Wrestling Championships, and was held at the Tbilisi Sports Palace in Tbilisi, Georgia on 22 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival\nThe 2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival was an international multi-sport event held between 17 and 22 February 2013, in Bra\u015fov, Romania, with some of the events also held in R\u00e2\u0219nov, Predeal and Fundata. It was the 11th edition of the European Youth Olympic Winter Festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival\nIt was organized by the Romanian Olympic and Sports Committee (COSR), headed by Octavian Morariu. 1,465 athletes, aged between 14 and 18, from 45 nations participated in 36 events of eight disciplines. It was the first multi-sport competition hosted by Romania since the 1981 Summer Universiade that took place in Bucharest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Venues\nThe budget spent for the organization was \u20ac1.15 million, while for the construction of the venues came to a total cost of \u20ac60 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Venues\nThe Bra\u0219ov Olympic Ice Rink raised to a cost of \u20ac11 million and was built entirely from public resources, being opened in May 2008. It hosted ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Venues\nThe Ministry of Regional Development and Tourism of Romania spent \u20ac28 million on upgrading facilities at Poiana Bra\u0219ov, which hosted the figure skating, alpine skiing and speed skating events, and \u20ac4 million at Predeal. The R\u00e2\u0219nov Sports Complex, primarily financed through sponsorships, has also received ministry contribution. The three smaller hills were raised from non-government sources, but the K90 with money from the MDRT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Venues\nThe Cheile Gr\u0103di\u015ftei Arena from Fundata belonged to a private investor, Ovidiu G\u00e2rbacea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Volunteers\nThe organizing committee was supported by 480 volunteers, divided into several departments, after a selection which consisted in psycho-pedagogical interviews, foreign language knowledge and sportive abilities. Experience accumulated in organizing other events and volunteering activities was also taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Volunteers\nThey participated in all scheduled activities at the competition that were held from 17 to 22 February. Most volunteers worked a maximum of 10 hours per day. For this reason, volunteers took shifts in some of the activities. All volunteers were dressed in the same uniform, marked with the logos of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Marketing, Logo\nThe logo was designed in the shape of a snowflake in the five Olympic colors. The main idea behind it was that each snowflake is different from another, and while they are so fragile independently, they become together, similarly to how each athlete has their own strengths and qualities, and how team spirit makes them even greater.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Marketing, Mascot\nThe Carpathian Brown Bear Martin was the official mascot of the festival. Often present in Romanian culture, it inspired songs and tales, this type of bear being considered to be Romanian, due to its large presence in the Romanian Carpathian Mountains. Martin was dressed in red, yellow and blue, representing the colors of the Romanian national flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Medals\nThe medals were produced by a company in Bucharest that has an experience of over 20 years in the field. They were cast in gold, silver and bronze and attached to a multicolor cord having the colors of the Olympic circles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Applications for IPhone and IPad\nFree applications for IPhone, IPad, tablets and smartphones were launched on February 15, also available on iTunes and Google Play. The application contained the schedule of the competition, information about the organizers and sponsors. During the competition, the sport results were updated in 30 minutes after the end of the races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Official stores\nIn each location where the festival competitions took place, there was a store with promotional items and souvenirs, such as miniature mascots, magnets, pins, inscriptioned mugs, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Organization, Media coverage\nThe host broadcaster was the Romanian Television (TVR). It used its own cameras and crews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233282-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival, Festival, Opening ceremony\nThe event was officially opened by Prime Minister Victor Ponta, who was accompanied by the Mayor of Bra\u015fov George Scripcaru and the International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge. Approximately 3,000 spectators attended the opening ceremony, which was held outdoors on the Ion \u021airiac Arena of the Sports High School, at the foothill of the T\u00e2mpa Mountain. The Olympic torch was carried into the arena by Rare\u0219 Dumitrescu and Mihai Covaliu. The latter had the mission to carry the Olympic flame in the last part of the route and to light the torch. The olympic oath followed, uttered by athletes, referees and trainers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233283-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival\nThe 2013 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival was held in Utrecht, Netherlands, between 14 and 19 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233283-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival, Schedule\nThe competition schedule for the 2017 European Youth Olympic Summer Festival is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233284-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European aflatoxin contamination\nIn February\u2013March 2013 several European countries, including Romania, Serbia, Croatia reported nationwide contamination of milk for human consumption (and possibly of derivative products) with aflatoxins. The details are still scarce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233284-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European aflatoxin contamination\nIt was reported in March that feed originating from Serbia and imported in the Netherlands and Germany was contaminated. It was also reported in March that tests revealed contamination in milk produced by two Dutch farms. Milk in Germany was also tested but so far is reported as not tainted. Nevertheless, Russia announced it would ban imports from the German farms that received contaminated feed. On March 20, Romanian farmers dumped milk in protest after the government banned milk from five farms, which remain unnamed. Danone Romania also withdrew some 75 tons of milk products from the shelves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233284-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European aflatoxin contamination\nThe European Commissions' Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) has reported 10 notifications of aflatoxin B1 in maize of European origin since the last maize harvest in autumn 2012. In the 10 years prior to the last harvest\u2014between 2001 and 2011\u2014a total of nine cases of aflatoxins were reported in maize. Aflatoxins have been mainly an \"import problem\" up to now. However, global warming is increasingly affecting the mycotoxin map in Europe, producing \"tropical toxins\" within Europe's borders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233284-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European aflatoxin contamination\nIn Serbia the contamination turned into a political scandal after the government raised the internal milk contamination standards to tenfold of those from the EU. This higher limit however is the one practiced in the United States and two-thirds of the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233284-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European aflatoxin contamination\nOn February 22, The Iowa Department of Agriculture found elevated Aflatoxin concentrations in dog food manufactured at a Pro-Pet facility in Kansas City, KS. The corn component of the dog food was reportedly contaminated with aflatoxins, though the contributing corn load passed screening at the facility. There are no reports of milk infestation in Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods\nExtreme flooding in Central Europe began after several days of heavy rain in late May and early June 2013. Flooding and damages primarily affected south and east German states (Thuringia, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Lower Saxony, Bavaria and Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg), western regions of the Czech Republic (Bohemia), and Austria. In addition, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary were affected to a lesser extent. The flood crest progressed down the Elbe and Danube drainage basins and tributaries, leading to high water and flooding along their banks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nThe spring weather preceding the flooding had been wet in the region, and May 2013 had been one of the three wettest in the last 156 years in Austria, together with the years 1962 and 1965. Austria saw twice as much rainfall as average during the month, resulting in the ground in the region becoming saturated. Soils in Germany were showing record levels of moisture prior to the rains. The already saturated soils led to greater runoff when the rains began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nIn last ten days of May a low pressure system named \"Christoffer\" swung up from the Mediterranean across the Black Sea then across Ukraine and Poland to Northern Germany, eventually bringing a very moist, and warm airmass to Central Europe from north-east. Late May saw a blocking high \"Sabine\" located over the Sole sea area to the west of the UK and France. This split the jet stream over Europe which maintained the weather pattern in Central Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nSpring and summer flooding in Central Europe is commonly associated with the so-called \"Zugstrasse Vb\" track of low pressure areas, which bring low pressure and moist air from the Mediterranean Sea over Central Europe, and have led to severe flooding in the affected region before. Though later analysis found this flooding did not fit into this type.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nLow pressure areas \"Frederik\" and \"G\u00fcnther\" formed over the northern Adriatic and tracked north towards central Europe. The high pressure \"Sabine\" and low pressure areas brought an airflow from the north across Germany, which brought the water-laden air from the north east. The air mass was pushed to the south west by the northerly flow, where it was lifted as it moved south from the North European Plain over the Thuringian Forest, Ore Mountains, and Bohemian Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nThe air was then lifted along the north side of the Alps in Austria as the air masses were pushed into the Alps by the northerly flow, which led to intense orographic precipitation. Heavy rain was reported in the Austrian states of Vorarlberg and Tyrol and the area of Salzburg, and to the mountains of Upper Austria and Lower Austria and Upper Styria in a short time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nOn 30 May to 1 June, 150 to 200\u00a0mm of rain (5.9 to 7.9\u00a0in of rain) fell, in places reaching around 250\u00a0mm (9.8\u00a0in), which in just a few days was the equivalent normally seen over two and a half months on average. The rainfall experienced in Austria has an expected return period of between 30 and 70 years. The bulk of the rain fell in only two days in Salzburg, Tyrol, and Vorarlberg, which is thought to have a return period of more than 100 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nFollowing the intense rain, sporadic showers and rainfall continued to raise the risk of further flooding but no rainfall of the intensity as that seen on 31 May-2 June occurred. Some Flash flooding occurred in the Polish capital Warsaw on 9 June, as a result of thunderstorms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history\nThe flood waters were expected to exceed the levels seen during the disastrous \"once in a century\" Central European floods of 2002 in some areas. In Bavaria and eastern Germany water levels significantly exceeded those of 2002 in many places on the Danube and Elbe. In Passau, at the confluence of the rivers Danube, Inn and Ilz, the highest water level since 1501 was recorded. In Dresden, by contrast, the old city center was largely spared, unlike in 2002. Thanks to better flood control, fewer dykes on the upper reaches of the Elbe broke than in 2002, but this meant that the flood wave further downstream was all the higher. In Magdeburg, the floods reached a record level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history, Climatological context\nStefan Rahmstorf, a professor of ocean physics at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, stated that a low-pressure system that dumped the rain was locked into place by a disturbance with the global wind pattern. Linking the weather to the concurrent drought conditions in Russia, he said pressure systems stay locked in place, causing a persistent pattern of weather in an area. He also stated that this planetary wave resonance is not a local effect but spread around the whole (northern) hemisphere. When a \u201cresonance\u201d episode occurs, half a dozen peaks and troughs of high or low pressure form around the hemisphere. This explains why some parts of the world become unseasonably hot or cold and others unusually dry or rainy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 68], "content_span": [69, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history, Climatological context\nAccording to The Inquirer/Agence France-Presse, the resonance hypothesis has been widely discussed among climate scientists, but has met resistance among experts who are wary of associating single extreme-weather events with climate change; the European Environment Agency cautioned that more data were needed to confirm it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 68], "content_span": [69, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Meteorological history, Climatological context\nClimate scientists have estimated that the flooding regime, which has prior inflicted severe flooding once every 50 years, to become more frequent, and cause severe flooding once every 30 years. The cost of flooding in the European continent, which currently causes an estimated 4.9 billion Euros of damage per year, is expected to increase to 23.5 billion Euros per year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 68], "content_span": [69, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Hydrological development\nThe Austrian meteorological center (ZAMG) said Austria had experienced at the beginning of June as much rain in two days as it normally would in two months. Train lines in many parts of northwest Austria were suspended on 1 June due to landslides according to Austrian Federal Railways. The town of Ettenau was evacuated, while one person in Sankt Johann im Pongau near Salzburg was caught in a mudslide and died. Rail services between Munich and the Austrian city of Salzburg also were suspended. One section of a Swiss motorway was shut down due to flooding, along with many smaller roads throughout the country. Swiss officials said water levels were still rising and landslides remained a risk, although the general situation was under control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Elbe basin\nThe upper areas of the Elbe basin saw heavy rainfall, with the Vltava (Czech Republic) and the Saale (Germany) tributaries flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Elbe basin, Vltava river\nIn the Czech capital Prague, floodwaters covered the esplanades along the Vltava, which on 3 June flowed at a rate of 3,200\u00a0m3/s (110,000\u00a0cu\u00a0ft/s), compared to the almost 5,000\u00a0m3/s (180,000\u00a0cu\u00a0ft/s) in the devastating floods of 2002. Parts of all three city metro lines were closed. The transit authority provided alternative transport in the form of buses and special trams. Heavy machinery was brought in to protect the historic Charles Bridge in the city, as a digger with an extended 17-metre (56\u00a0ft) long arm was used to clear debris from accumulating at the bridge. One thousand troops from the Czech Army were called in to help build flood defenses. Fire fighters helped evacuate more than 7,000 people on 2 \u2013 3 June from areas hit by the floods, in the region of central, northern and western Bohemia, including parts of the Czech capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Elbe basin, Vltava river\nIn Prague, the Hostiva\u0159 and Z\u00e1b\u011bhlice neighborhoods in the southeast of the city were flooded. Hundreds of homes in Mod\u0159any and Zbraslav in the south of the city were also evacuated while some people in Lahovice and Velk\u00e1 Chuchle were rescued by helicopter. The tigers at Prague Zoo were tranquilised and moved out of their enclosure, which was at risk from flooding. The Czech government declared a state of emergency in seven regions of the country including Prague, in response to the floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 European floods, Elbe basin, Vltava river\nPetr Ne\u010das, the Czech prime minister, announced on 4 June that the government will release 4 billion CZK (\u20ac 155m, \u00a3 133m, $ 203m) from the state reserves to repair the damage. More than 19,000 people were evacuated in the Czech Republic (as of 5 June 2013). In Prague the Staropramen Brewery on the river bank was closed as a protective measure, along with several major chemical factories, including Spolana, which had released dangerous toxic chemicals into the Elbe during the devastating floods of 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Elbe basin, Saale river\nIn the state of Saxony-Anhalt, the Saale river also caused concern, with officials fearing that it might rise even higher than in 2002. In the area around Halle alone, authorities told some 30,000 people to evacuate their homes, the Saale river, a tributary of the Elbe, had risen 26 feet (7.9\u00a0m) above its normal level. In Halle one of the city's main sources of tourist income is the Handel music festival, which was called off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Elbe basin, Elbe river\nIn the state of Saxony, the old town of Grimma, on the Mulde tributary was under meters of water. Authorities were concerned about the Elbe river; in Dresden one of the bridges across the river was closed to traffic. In the city of Magdeburg, authorities declared a state of emergency and said they expected the Elbe river to rise higher than in 2002. In Magdeburg with water levels of five metres (16\u00a0ft) above normal about 23,000 residents had to leave their homes on 9 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Elbe basin, Elbe river\nIn the area surrounding the city of Leipzig, some 6,000 people had to be evacuated on 4 June. In Zwickau, Saxony the Volkswagen factory had to stop its car production, a spokesman said 3 June early shift had been asked to stay at home, with damage done to transport infrastructure raising fears that suppliers would not be able to deliver their products in time. The factory was able to resume production by 4 June. German armed forces were able to protect chemical production facilities in the Middle German Chemical Triangle from the floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Danube basin\nThe historic center of Passau, where the Danube, Inn and Ilz converge, was underwater on 1 June 2013, with the water levels reaching 12.85\u00a0m (42.2\u00a0ft), overflowing the highest recorded historic flood level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Danube basin\nAfter a dike failed near the town of Deggendorf, water levels rose to a record-breaking eight metres (26\u00a0ft). The town flooded and in places buildings were two metres (6\u00a0ft 7\u00a0in) underwater. In the Fischerdorf area of the town, water lapped at second-storey windows. Some residents refused to evacuate, fearful of looting and not wanting to leave their lives behind. The town's fire station was underwater, with car dealerships holding millions of euros worth of vehicles destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Danube basin\nFlooding affected German businesses with Krones, a bottling and packaging manufacturing company, shutting down production in two plants in upper Bavaria, as workers were unable to get to work on the inundated roads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Danube basin\nThe entire Austrian stretch of the Danube saw all shipping halted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Danube basin\nBudapest, Bratislava, and other river cities along the Danube enacted emergency preparations. In Bratislava, the Danube peaked with a volumetric flow rate of 10,530\u00a0m3/s (372,000\u00a0cu\u00a0ft/s), which is the highest flow rate ever recorded in Bratislava. In Hungary, the Prime Minister Viktor Orb\u00e1n declared a state of emergency in some areas along the Danube, which was expected to peak 5 June in western areas and hit Budapest the following weekend. He announced the government had mobilized 8,000 soldiers, 8,000 emergency personnel, 1,400 water management experts, and 3,600 police officers to deal with the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Rhine river\nFlooding along the Rhine watershed was less severe in terms of flood damage. Shipping was halted on extensive stretches of the Rhine, Main, and Neckar rivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Reaction\nThe European Commission stated that help would be available to the victims of the current flooding through the European Union Solidarity Fund, which it set up after the last major floods to hit the region in 2002. The floods led to the International Charter on Space and Major Disasters being activated, which provides a unified system of data acquisition and delivery to those affected by disasters. On June 3, the German Federal civil protection authorities triggered the Copernicus Emergency Mapping Service via the European Commission's Emergency Response Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Reaction\nInsurance industry specialists said they expected insurance losses to fall short of the last big floods to hit the region in 2002, some areas experienced higher waters, but investment over the previous ten years has meant that flood defenses in a number of locations worked better than in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233285-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 European floods, Fatalities\nTwenty-five deaths were recorded as a result of the floods; eleven in the Czech Republic, six in Austria, and eight in Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233286-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi season\nThe 2013 season for Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship\nThe 2013 Evian Championship was played 12\u201315 September at the Evian Resort Golf Club in \u00c9vian-les-Bains, France. It was the 20th Evian Championship (the first 19 played as the Evian Masters), and the first as a major championship on the LPGA Tour. The inaugural event was televised by Golf Channel and NBC Sports in the United States and Sky Sports in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship\nHeavy rain before and during the first day of the tournament forced Thursday's played to be suspended and the scores abandoned. The initial plan was to play the first and second rounds on Friday and Saturday and play the final 36 holes on Sunday. The prediction of more heavy rain on Sunday and several following days forced tournament officials to shorten the event to 54 holes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship\nSuzann Pettersen won by two strokes over amateur Lydia Ko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship, Field\nThe field for the tournament was set at 120, and most earned exemptions based on past performance on the Ladies European Tour, the LPGA Tour, or with a high ranking in the Women's World Golf Rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship, Field\nThere were seven exemption categories for the 2013 Evian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship, Round summaries, First round\nThursday's play began after a two-hour rain delay. Play was suspended after less than an hour due to continuing rain. The scores were annulled and play resumed on Friday. The course had received almost 4 inches (10\u00a0cm) of rain since the previous Saturday. The first round was played on Friday with Mika Miyazato of Japan shooting a 6-under-par 65 to take a one stroke lead over Sandra Gal, Se Ri Pak, and Suzann Pettersen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nMika Miyazato shot a 2-under-par 69 to maintain a one-shot lead over Suzann Pettersen and amateur Lydia Ko. The cut was at 146 (+4) and 77 players made the cut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233287-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Evian Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nThe event was reduced to 54 holes due to heavy rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series\nThe 2013 Extreme Sailing Series was the seventh year of the series and the third year of it being a fully global event. The series started in Muscat, Oman on 5 March 2013 and ended in Florian\u00f3polis, Brazil on 17 November 2013 and took place in 8 cities and across 3 continents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 1: Muscat, Oman\nThe starting act of the 2013 series was held in Muscat, Oman on the weekend of 5\u20138 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 2: Singapore\nThe second act of the series was back in Singapore this year, and took place between 11\u201314 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 3: Qingdao, China\nThe third act of 2013 was held in Qingdao, China on the weekend of 2\u20135 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 4: Istanbul, Turkey\nThe fourth act took place in Istanbul, Turkey. Originally it was planned to be held between 20\u201323 June 2013, but had been postponed indefinitely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 5: Porto, Portugal\nAct 5 was held in Porto, Portugal on the weekend of 25\u201328 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 6: Cardiff, UK\nThe fifth act of 2013 was in Cardiff, Wales, the second of a three-year deal to host the event there. The event was scheduled to be held over the August bank holiday, 23\u201326 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 7: Nice, France\nThe seventh act took place in Nice, France between 3\u20136 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Acts, Act 8: Florian\u00f3polis, Brazil\nAct 8, took place in Florian\u00f3polis, Brazil between 14\u201317 November 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, Alinghi\nAlinghi is a professional sports team that was created in 2000 by Ernesto Bertarelli in order to compete in the 31st America's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, Alinghi\nTheir team consisted of Ernesto Bertarelli (Skipper), Morgan Larson (Skipper/Helm), Stuart Pollard/Anna Tunnicliffe/Ben Lezin (Tactician), Pierre-Yves Jorand (Mainsail Trim), Nils Frei (Headsail Trim) and Yves Detry (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, ChinaSpirit\nChinaSpirit entered the series late, and competed in the Cardiff, Nice and Florian\u00f3polis acts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, ChinaSpirit\nTheir team consisted of Phil Robertson (Skipper/Helm), Garth Ellingham (Tactician), Llang Wu (Mainsail Trim), James Williamson/Louis Viat (Headsail Trim) and Nick Catley (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, GAC Pindar\nGAC Pindar, in its third year sailing Extreme 40's, is a long-time sailing team competing in the World Match Racing Tour and supporting numerous sailors across all levels of the sport. The team this year will be skippered by William Tiller, an experienced match racer from New Zealand with the rest of the team consisting of Matt Steven (Tactician), Harry Thurston/Stewart Dodson (Mainsail Trim), Brad Farrand (Headsail Trim) and Shaun Mason/Ash Hammond (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, Red Bull Sailing Team\nSkippered by Roman Hagara, Red Bull is another regular who has been competing in the Extreme Sailing Series for a number of years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, SAP Extreme Sailing Team\nWith skippers Rasmus Kostner and Jes Gram-Hansen sharing the duties this year, SAP is in its second year of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, Team Korea\nTeam Korea was a new team for 2013, skippered by Peter Burling", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, The Wave, Muscat\nThe Wave, Muscat were the 2012 champions of the Extreme Sailing Series and are back again, with their skipper Leigh McMillan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Core Teams, Realteam\nA new team for 2013, Realteam will be skippered by J\u00e9r\u00f4me Clerc who led his D35 catamarans team to victory in 2012 and who has now turned his sights to Extreme 40's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams\nAs in previous years, host cities have the opportunity to enter their own entry into their home act. This year, all 'wildcard' entries will be amalgamated to give an overall score at the end of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams, Act 1 team: Team Duqm Oman\nTeam Duqm Oman is the first invitational team of 2013 skippered by Robert Greenhalgh, the winner of the first-ever Extreme Sailing Series in 2007 (helming Basilica). The rest of the crew are Bleddyn Mon (Tactician), Will Howden (Mainsail trim), Andrew Walsh (Headsail trim) and Nasser Al Mashari (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams, Act 2 team: Team Aberdeen Singapore\nTeam Aberdeen Singapore's crew consisted of Scott Glen Sydney (skipper/Tactician), Robert Greenhalgh (Helm), Andrew Walsh (Mainsail Trim), Justin Wong (Headsail Trim) and Rick Peacock (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 91], "content_span": [92, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams, Act 3 team: China Team\nChina Team's crew consisted of Mitch Booth (Co-skipper/Helm), Wen Zijin (Co-skipper/Tactician), Yingkit Cheng (Mainsail Trim), Liu Xue (Headsail Trim) and Zhang Yiran (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams, Act 5 team: ROFF Cascais\nThis Portuguese team consisted of Ant\u00f3nio Mello (skipper/Tactician), Bernardo Freitas (Helm), Jo\u00e3o Mello (Mainsail Trim), Ricardo Schedel (Headsail Trim) and Jo\u00e3o Matos Rosa (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams, Act 6 team: Team Wales Land Rover\nCompeting for the second year, Team Wales consisted of Dave Evans (Skipper/Helm), Chris Grube/Bleddyn Mon (Tactician), Will Howden (Mainsail Trim), Tudur Owen (Headsail Trim) and Trystan Seal (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 89], "content_span": [90, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams, Act 7 team: ALL4ONE\nThis French team consisted of Jean-Christophe Mourniac (skipper/Helm), Romain Petit (Tactician), St\u00e9phane Christidis (Mainsail Trim), Arnaud Jarlegant (Headsail Trim) and Julien Cressant (Bowman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233288-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Extreme Sailing Series, Teams, Invitational Teams, Act 8 team: Team Brazil Mapfre\nTeam Brazil's crew consisted of Cl\u00ednio de Freitas (skipper/Helm) with Cl\u00e1udia Swan, Andr\u00e9 Mirsky, Andr\u00e9 Chang, Daniel Santiago and Bruno di Bernardi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship\nThe 2013 UIM F1 H2O World Championship was the 30th season of Formula 1 Powerboat racing. For the first time in the championship's history, there was an event held in South America, with the first race of the year taking place in Brasilia on 1 and 2 June. In addition, the series' 250th race since it began in 1981 took place on 2 October at the Grand Prix of China in Liuzhou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship\nAlex Carella, driving for the Qatar Team, successfully defended his world championship for the second year in a row, ensuring he became only the second driver in the history of the championship to win three consecutive world titles, after Guido Cappellini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Team changes\nAll nine full-time teams from 2012 continued into the 2013 season, although Team Sweden revisited a title sponsorship agreement with the country of Azerbaijan which saw the outfit rebranded to Team Azerbaijan, a partnership last formed back in 2010. None of the part-time teams that participated in 2012 were present for the opening round in Brazil, however there was speculation that Dragon Racing would at some point rejoin the series, as would Jay Price, the 2008 champion who drove for the other part-time team in 2012, Skydive Dubai. Neither of these teams ultimately entered the championship however.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Team changes\nCaudwell Racing were forced to miss the first race of the year in Brazil due to their new boats not being ready in time. After it was initially believed that they would join the rest of the field at the second race of the season in Ukraine, as in Brazil Caudwell were not present. Shortly before the third race at Liuzhou, the South African team made the announcement that they would be returning to the fold in Qatar for the fourth race, citing \"unprecedented shipping challenges\" for their delay. The delay however allowed the team to design an all-new hull and make major refinements to their revolutionary four-stroke engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nFollowing his two race ban at the end of the 2012 season, Shaun Torrente returned to the Qatar Team to partner reigning double world champion Alex Carella. Neither Terry Rinker who filled in for Torrente, nor Khalid Al Shamlan, the Qatari who raced for the team for one race in 2012, were announced as drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nAhmed Al Hameli was initially expected to miss out on racing in 2013 following surgery on a brain tumour mid-way through the 2012 season which forced his withdrawal, with Rashed Al Tayer, rather than Majed Al Mansoori who had replaced Al Hameli in 2012, taking his place at Team Abu Dhabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nHowever just a week prior to the first race of the year in Brazil, Al Hameli announced that he had been cleared by doctors to participate in the championship, completing a remarkable recovery that would allow him to challenge for a championship which he had been favourite to win prior to his operation in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nAfter a promising debut in the final two races of 2012, Chinese driver Xiong Ziwei was handed a full-time drive alongside regular Team CTIC China driver Philippe Chiappe, following the retirement of veteran Russian driver Stanislav Kurtsenovskiy. At the F1 Atlantic Team, Phillipe Toure didn't return for 2013, ensuring that the outfit would run with just two full-time boats for the year, with Duarte Benavente and Youssef Al Rubayan continuing on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nJonas Andersson continued at the renamed Team Azerbaijan for 2013, and after having a number of different drivers in the team's second boat in 2012, announced that Norwegian veteran Pal Virik Nilsen would make his debut in F1 at Brazil alongside the Swede. Brazilian Paul Gaiser also entered for Team Azerbaijan in a third boat at his home event having last raced in F1 back in 2001, 12 years previously. Prior to the Brazilian race, Gaiser announced that it would be his last and would retire from racing afterwards, describing F1 as \"a sport for the young\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nGaiser was forced to withdraw from the Brazilian event however after injuring his wrist, and subsequently reversed his decision to retire, indicating that he would return to the boat for the next race in Ukraine. This failed to materialise though, and alongside Andersson in Kiev was fellow Swede Tommy Wahlsten, replacing Nilsen. But by China, Andersson had a third driver in as many races in his second boat, with recently crowned 2013 USF1 champion Terry Rinker taking the drive as the American returned to the series after a brief cameo in 2012. Rinker drove the second Azerbaijan boat until the final race of the year where Wahlsten found himself back in as number two to see out the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nBoth Francesco Cantando and Valerio Lagiannella stayed on at the Singha F1 Racing Team, and would be joined in a third boat by Polish driver Bartek Marszalek at the second round in Ukraine. Joining Cantando and Marszalek in China was Rhys Coles, the Australian driving Lagiannella's #23 DAC boat having last made an appearance in the series in 2012 in a one-off drive for Team Sweden at the Grand Prix of Qatar. Prior to his involvement with Singha, Marszalek had last raced in the series in 2011, competing in five races in a third boat for Team Nautica. Nautica were one of two teams who had unchanged line-ups for 2013, along with Mad Croc Baba Racing. Caudwell Racing retained Ivan Brigada when they eventually joined the series at the fourth race in Qatar, with South African Paul Shepard making his debut alongside the Italian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 905]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Season calendar\nAn initial calendar of eight races was released by the UIM at the beginning of 2013, including Brazil, and thus South America for the first time in the history of the F1 Powerboat World Championship. However the Grand Prix of Tartarstan, due to be the third race of the year and held at the end of August, was cancelled on 29 April, with the Russian authorities in Kazan, where the race was to be held, hoping to reintroduce the event for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Season calendar\nThis meant the calendar dropped to seven races for the 2013 season, and was the first season that an event wasn't held in Russia since 2007. As part of the seven race calendar, there were to be two back-to-back races in China, and whilst Liuzhou was announced as the second of the two races upon the calendar's release, it took some time for a first race to be confirmed. Eventually Shanghai was announced as the venue at the beginning of May, and would have been the 250th race in the championship's history. However less than three months later towards the end of July, the event was pulled from the calendar, leaving six races to make up the schedule, and Liuzhou to take the title of the historic 250th GP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233289-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233289-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233290-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 F1600 Championship Series\nThe 2013 F1600 Championship Series season was the third season of the F1600 Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233290-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 F1600 Championship Series\nEighteen-year-old Jake Eidson from Littleton, Colorado won the championship driving for Cape Motorsports w/ Wayne Taylor Racing. Eidson won seven of the twelve races and captured a race win in all but one of the series' weekend double-headers. Bryan Herta Autosport's Adrian Starrantino captured three wins on his way to runner-up honors in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233290-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 F1600 Championship Series\nNotably, IndyCar Series rookie Tristan Vautier joined the series for its race weekend at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course to gain experience at the track that he had not raced at before and where he would race in IndyCar a few weeks later. Vautier won the pole for race two, but finished just sixth and 13th in the pair of races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233291-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 F2000 Championship Series\nThe 2013 F2000 Championship Series season was the eighth season of competition in the series. It consisted of 14 rounds (seven double-race weekends), beginning April 11 at Virginia International Raceway and concluding August 25 at Summit Point Raceway. The race schedule was largely un-changed from the previous year, as only the round at New Jersey Motorsports Park was eliminated and a second weekend at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course was added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233291-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 F2000 Championship Series\nTim Minor clinched the championship after the fourth race at Mid-Ohio, becoming the first Masters Class driver to win the overall championship as well as being becoming the first series champion not to drive a Van Diemen chassis. Minor drove a Citation chassis to victory nine times on his way to the championship and finished either first or second in all but one race. 22-year-old Floridian Kyle Connery won four times and finished second in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233291-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 F2000 Championship Series, Championship standings\nThis list only contains drivers who registered for the championship. (M) indicates driver is participating in Masters Class for drivers over 40 years of age.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233292-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Community Shield\nThe 2013 FA Community Shield (also known as The FA Community Shield sponsored by McDonald's for sponsorship reasons) was the 91st FA Community Shield, played on 11 August 2013 at Wembley Stadium, between the winners of the previous season's Premier League and FA Cup competitions. The match was contested by the champions of the 2012\u201313 Premier League, Manchester United, and the 2012\u201313 FA Cup winners, Wigan Athletic. Following Wigan's relegation to the Football League Championship just days after their cup triumph, it was the first time a team from outside the top division featured in the Community Shield since West Ham United in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233292-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Community Shield\nManchester United won the Shield for a record 16th time outright and 20th time overall after a 2\u20130 win over Wigan Athletic, with Robin van Persie scoring both goals. This season's Shield was especially notable for being David Moyes' only honour as Manchester United manager, in what was his first competitive match in charge of the club following the retirement of Sir Alex Ferguson at the end of the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final\nThe 2013 FA Cup Final was an association football match between Manchester City and Wigan Athletic on 11 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium in London, England, organised by the Football Association (FA). It marked the 132nd final of the Football Association Challenge Cup (FA Cup), the world's oldest football cup competition. It was Wigan's first FA Cup final and Manchester City's tenth. En route to the final, Manchester City defeated Watford, Stoke City, Leeds United, Barnsley and Chelsea, while Wigan Athletic beat Bournemouth (after a replay), Macclesfield Town, Huddersfield Town, Everton and Millwall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final\nThe match kicked off in the early evening in front of 86,254 spectators and was refereed by Andre Marriner. After a goalless first half, Manchester City's Pablo Zabaleta was sent off for a second yellow card, becoming the third player to be sent off in an FA Cup final. One minute into injury time, Wigan Athletic won a corner kick which was taken by Shaun Maloney: Watson outjumped Jack Rodwell and headed the ball over Joe Hart, the Manchester City goalkeeper, and into the goal to secure a 1\u20130 win. The cup was jointly lifted by playing captain Emmerson Boyce and club captain Gary Caldwell. Wigan Athletic's Callum McManaman was named as man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final\nManchester City and their semi-final opponent Chelsea had already qualified for the following season's Champions League by virtue of the clubs' league positions. Wigan Athletic secured a place in the group stage of the 2013\u201314 Europa League competition after they had won their semi-final against Millwall. Nine days after the final, Wigan Athletic made an open-top bus tour of the town to celebrate the FA Cup victory. Manchester City sacked manager Roberto Mancini two days later, confirming rumours of the manager's fate before the match. Wigan Athletic failed to avoid relegation from the Premier League, becoming the first club ever to have won the FA Cup and be relegated from the highest tier of English football in the same season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Background\nThe world's oldest football cup competition, the FA Cup is an annual knockout tournament involving professional and amateur men's football clubs in the English football league system. The final of the 2012\u201313 FA Cup was the 132nd to be played since the tournament was first held in 1872. Manchester City were making their tenth appearance in an FA Cup final since the club was founded in 1880. They had won the cup five times (in 1904, 1934, 1956, 1969 and 2011) and were runners-up four times (1926, 1933, 1955 and 1981). Conversely, Wigan Athletic were making their first appearance in an FA Cup Final since the club was founded in 1932.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Background\nManchester City had won both Premier League games between the sides during the regular season. They secured a 2\u20130 victory at the DW Stadium in November 2012 with second-half goals from Mario Balotelli and James Milner and a 1\u20130 win the following April at the City of Manchester Stadium after a late goal from Carlos Tevez. The final was being played before the last two games of the Premier League season, with Wigan Athletic in eighteenth place in the league and Manchester City in second position. Wigan Athletic's leading scorer during the regular season was Arouna Kon\u00e9 who had 13 goals, 11 in the league and 2 in the FA Cup. Sergio Ag\u00fcero led the scoring for Manchester City with 15 goals during the season, including 3 in the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nAs a Premier League team, Manchester City entered the 2012\u201313 FA Cup in the third round, in which they were drawn at home against Championship team Watford. Midway through the first half, Tevez gave Manchester City the lead with a free kick from around 25 yards (23\u00a0m). Costel Pantilimon then saved a Fernando Forestieri shot for Watford. One minute before half-time, Gareth Barry doubled Manchester City's lead with a header. In second-half stoppage time, Manchester City academy player Rony Lopes scored from close range to secure a 3\u20130 victory for his side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nIn doing so, he became the club's youngest ever goalscorer at the age of seventeen years and eight days. Manchester City progressed to a fourth round match against fellow Premier League side Stoke City away at the Britannia Stadium. Despite long spells of possession for the visiting team, the first half ended goalless. David Silva struck the Stoke goalpost and Tevez saw shots saved by the Stoke goalkeeper Thomas S\u00f8rensen, before Pablo Zabaleta converted a cross from Ag\u00fcero with four minutes remaining. Manchester City won the match 1\u20130 and progressed to the fifth round where they faced Championship side Leeds United at the City of Manchester Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nYaya Tour\u00e9 gave Manchester City the lead in the fifth minute, taking the ball past Leeds United goalkeeper Jamie Ashdown and socring after a pass from Tevez. Ag\u00fcero then doubled his side's lead when he scored from the penalty spot after he had been fouled by Tom Lees. Tevez scored Manchester City's third from close range soon after half-time before Ag\u00fcero scored 15 minutes from the end of the match to secure a 4\u20130 victory. In the sixth round, Manchester City's opponents were Championship club Barnsley at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nTevez scored the first goal for Manchester City in the eleventh minute after Silva's volley rebounded off the goalpost. Aleksandar Kolarov and Tevez then scored in quick succession to make it 3\u20130 at half-time. Five minutes after the interval, Tevez completed his hat-trick, scoring from Samir Nasri's pass. Midway through the second half, Silva scored after his initial shot was kept out by Barnsley goalkeeper Luke Steele to make it 5\u20130, which was the final score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester City\nIn the semi-final, Manchester City faced defending FA Cup champions Chelsea for the first time in the competition since 1971, with the match being held at Wembley, a neutral venue. Ten minutes before half-time, Manchester City took the lead. Ag\u00fcero's shot bounced off Chelsea's defender C\u00e9sar Azpilicueta and the ball fell to Nasri who scored. Vincent Kompany then shot off-target shortly before half-time, and two minutes after the interval Barry's cross found Ag\u00fcero, who headed the ball into the Chelsea goal off the post while goalkeeper Petr \u010cech remained motionless. Demba Ba then scored past Pantilimon to reduce the deficit for Chelsea but the match ended 2\u20131 and Manchester City progressed to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Athletic\nPremier League side Wigan Athletic's FA Cup campaign also began in the third round, in which they faced League One side AFC Bournemouth at the DW Stadium. Roberto Mart\u00ednez made nine changes to the team that had played in the league four days earlier. Eunan O'Kane scored for the visiting side towards the end of the first half with a strike from distance. Wigan Athletic hit the Bournemouth crossbar twice in the second half before they won a penalty after Simon Francis fouled Maynor Figueroa in the area in the 70th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Athletic\nShwan Jalal saved Jordi G\u00f3mez's penalty kick but G\u00f3mez scored from the rebound to make it 1\u20131, and ensured the tie would need to be settled in a replay. At Dean Court ten days later, the match was settled by a single goal: in the first half, Bournemouth's Harry Arter conceded possession of the ball to Mauro Boselli whose shot from around 20 yards (18\u00a0m) flew into the top corner of the goal, securing a 1\u20130 win for Wigan Athletic. Wigan Athletic were drawn against non-league team Macclesfield Town in the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Athletic\nTo avoid postponement, snow had to be cleared from the pitch at Moss Rose on the morning of the game. Six minutes into the match, Thierry Audel fouled Callum McManaman in the Macclesfield penalty area and G\u00f3mez scored the resulting penalty to give Wigan Athletic the lead. The home side had several opportunities to score, including a header from Audel from 6 yards (5.5\u00a0m) which went straight to Wigan Athletic's debutant goalkeeper Joel Robles. Macclesfield's appeals for a penalty late in the match were turned down by the referee and Wigan Athletic won 1\u20130. Victory gave them their second appearance in the fifth round of the FA Cup since the founding of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Athletic\nIn the fifth round, Wigan Athletic were drawn away against Championship team Huddersfield Town. McManaman gave the visiting side the lead in the 31st minute, shooting into the top corner of the goal after a pass from James McArthur. Five minutes before half-time, Kon\u00e9 doubled his side's lead after G\u00f3mez had passed from a McManaman cross before McArthur made it 3\u20130 when he scored in the 56th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Athletic\nLee Novak scored with a header from a Calum Woods cross to reduce Huddersfield Town's deficit but with a minute of the match remaining, Kon\u00e9 scored his second to secure a 4\u20131 win for Wigan Athletic. Wigan Athletic's quarter-final opponents were Premier League side Everton whom they faced at Goodison Park. Wigan Athletic scored three goals within four minutes in the first half: just after half an hour, Wigan Athletic's Figueroa opened the scoring when he headed in a corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Athletic\nMcManaman then doubled the lead when a mistake by Phil Neville allowed him to take the ball past Everton's goalkeeper J\u00e1n Mucha and shoot. G\u00f3mez then struck a long-range shot into the Everton goal to make it 3\u20130, the final score. The win ensured Wigan Athletic would play in the first FA Cup semi-final appearance in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Wigan Athletic\nWigan Athletic's fifth appearance at Wembley Stadium saw them face Championship side Millwall in the semi-final. In the first half, Kon\u00e9's cross found Shaun Maloney who volleyed the ball past David Forde in the Millwall goal to give Wigan Athletic the lead. With twelve minutes of the match remaining, Wigan Athletic broke out of defence and G\u00f3mez's pass found McManaman who took the ball round Forde to double his side's lead. Wigan Athletic won the match 2\u20130 and progressed to the first FA Cup final in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nBefore the match, it was reported in The Daily Telegraph that Roberto Mancini's job was under threat after he failed to lead Manchester City to a defence of their league title. It was suggested that the M\u00e1laga manager Manuel Pellegrini was to be Mancini's successor. The referee for the match was Andre Marriner who had officiated at Wembley Stadium twice previously, at the 2010 FA Community Shield and the 2010 Football League Championship play-off Final. He was assisted by Stephen Child and Simon Long, Anthony Taylor was the fourth official and Gary Beswick acted as the reserve assistant referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nManchester City were considered strong favourites to win the match by the British media. Wigan Athletic wore the club's black away kit for the final, used the away team dressing room and were allocated the East End of the stadium. Manchester City fans occupied the West End and the team played in their home kit after winning the coin toss to decide who would wear which kit. Ticket prices for the final started at \u00a345 and were available at \u00a365, \u00a385 and \u00a3115, with a \u00a310 discount for concessions. Manchester City received an initial allocation of 25,000 tickets, later increased to 31,779, while Wigan Athletic requested 21,000 tickets, later increased to a 25,000 allocation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nDespite expectations in the media that Pantilimon would retain his position as the Manchester City goalkeeper for the final, he was dropped to the substitute's bench in place of Joe Hart. Before the match, Mancini said \"I decided this because I wanted this for this game but it doesn't change anything\u00a0... We know Costel is a good keeper.\" Manchester City had no injury problems, with Tour\u00e9 included in the team after suffering from a muscle problem. Antol\u00edn Alcaraz returned to the Wigan Athletic starting lineup after recovering from a torn hamstring, while Figueroa was ruled out with a groin injury. Wigan Athletic adopted a 3\u20134\u20133 formation while Manchester City played as a 4\u20132\u20133\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nThe kick-off time for the final was 5:15\u00a0p.m. as opposed to the traditional 3\u00a0p.m. This was controversial, particularly with regard to both sets of supporters facing difficulties in guaranteeing train transport back to the North West of England after the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nThe secretary of the Manchester City Supporters Club stated that \"Not only does it show that [the FA] don't care but it shows that they don't know\" while a spokesperson for the Wigan Athletic Supporters Club noted that \"The FA don't think about stuff like young children of four or six years old potentially not getting home till 2{{nbsp}a.m. if they are travelling by coach.\" It was also the subject of a cross-party early day motion in the House of Commons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nWigan Athletic owner Dave Whelan led out his team before kick-off along with manager Mart\u00ednez. The traditional pre-match anthem, \"Abide with Me\", was performed by musical quartet Amore alongside the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra. The national anthem was also performed by Amore with the Band of the Grenadier Guards. Paralympic footballer Dave Clarke and David Bernstein, chairman of the FA, were introduced to the teams prior to kick-off. In the United Kingdom, the match was televised by ITV and ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, First half\nWigan Athletic kicked off the match around 5:15\u00a0p.m. in front of a crowd of 86,254. Two minutes into the game, Zabaleta made a run down the right wing and crossed the ball, which took a deflection before falling to Silva whose volley was blocked by McArthur. Ag\u00fcero was then fouled by Alcaraz on the edge of the Wigan Athletic penalty area but Tevez's subsequent free kick was blocked with the ball finding Tour\u00e9 whose shot was pushed away by Joel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, First half\nIn the ninth minute, Wigan Athletic's McManaman made a run down the right-hand side of the pitch after a pass from Kon\u00e9. He cut inside and struck the ball from around 8 yards (7\u00a0m), but his shot went wide of the Manchester City post. Wigan Athletic then enjoyed a spell of pressure before Silva's 18th-minute shot for Manchester City was blocked. Midway through the half, Maloney's shot from around 30 yards (27\u00a0m) was off-target before Matija Nastasi\u0107 failed to score with a long-range strike for Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, First half\nIn the 29th minute, Silva passed the ball into the Wigan Athletic penalty area and found Tevez who stretched to shoot, with Joel making a save with his boot. Tevez's shot from the corner of the Wigan penalty area was too high before Gomez's strike from 25 yards (23\u00a0m) was blocked by Kompany. With nine minutes of the half remaining, Alcaraz ran through the middle of the pitch and passed to McManaman who went round Nastasi\u0107, before his shot was blocked by Zabaleta. Nasri's cross was then headed off-target by Silva. In the 41st minute, Zabaleta's shot was blocked but the ball fell to Barry whose curling strike was saved by Joel. Just before half-time, Joel saved Nasri's 20-yard (18\u00a0m) shot and the half ended 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nNeither side made any changes to their playing personnel during the interval and Manchester City kicked off the second half. Two minutes in, McCarthy's shot was wide before Ag\u00fcero's attempt to score was defended by Emmerson Boyce. A corner from Barry was then headed onto the roof of the Wigan Athletic net by Kompany. In the 55th minute, Manchester City made the first substitution of the game with Milner coming on to replace Nasri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nOn the hour mark, Zabaleta became the first player of the match to be shown the yellow card after he committed a professional foul on McManaman who had made a break for Wigan Athletic. In the 64th minute, Gomez's shot from 25 yards (23\u00a0m) went over the Manchester City crossbar before Kompany tackled McManaman after the Wigan Athletic player had dribbled past both Silva and Clichy. Five minutes later, Jack Rodwell was brought on in place of Tevez in Manchester City's second change of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nIn the 72nd minute, Roger Espinoza fouled Milner who took the resulting free kick himself, from which Rodwell's header was straight at Joel. Nastasi\u0107 was then booked for a foul on McManaman before Maloney's cross struck the Manchester City crossbar. In the 81st minute, Wigan Athletic made their first substitution, with Ben Watson coming on to replace Gomez. Three minutes later, Kompany received a poor pass from Clichy in the centre circle which Kon\u00e9 intercepted. He passed to McManaman who was fouled by Zabaleta around 30 yards (27\u00a0m) from the Manchester City goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0017-0003", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nAs a result, Zabaleta was sent off after receiving a second booking, and became the third player to be dismissed in an FA Cup final. Barry was then shown the yellow card for bringing down Maloney. In the final minute of the match, Wigan Athletic won a corner which was played in by Maloney. Watson beat Rodwell to the ball at the near post and headed it inside the far post of the goal to give Wigan Athletic the lead. Three minutes into stoppage time, Joel was booked for time-wasting and Manchester City brought on Edin D\u017eeko for Barry. A minute later, the final whistle was blown and Wigan Athletic had won the match 1\u20130, securing the FA Cup for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nThe cup was jointly lifted by playing captain Boyce and club captain Gary Caldwell. Wigan Athletic's McManaman was named man of the match. On 20 May, Wigan had an open-top bus tour of the town to celebrate the FA Cup victory. Zabaleta became the third player to be sent off in an FA Cup final, after Kevin Moran (in the 1985 final) and Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes (in 2005). As FA Cup winners, Wigan Athletic received \u00a31.8\u00a0million from the FA Cup Prize Fund, while Manchester City earned \u00a3900,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nWigan Athletic were also awarded a place in the group stage of the 2013\u201314 Europa League competition. Because Manchester City and their semi-final opponent Chelsea had already qualified for the following season's Champions League by virtue of their league positions, Wigan had gained a Europa League place by winning their semi-final match. They failed to progress to the knockout stage, finishing bottom of Group D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nWigan Athletic lost their next Premier League match, a 4\u20131 defeat against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium, and were consequently relegated to the Championship. In doing so, they became the first club ever to have won the FA Cup and be relegated from the highest tier of English football in the same season. Mancini was dismissed days after the final with the club owners citing that he had \"failed to achieve any of the club's targets, with the exception of qualification for next season's Champions League\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nHis assistant, Brian Kidd, took temporary charge of the club and they ended the season with a 2\u20130 victory at Reading followed by a 3\u20132 home defeat by Norwich City to finish second in the Premier League. Pellegrini was appointed as the full-time replacement for Mancini in June 2013. Defender Joleon Lescott later reflected that \"it was a little bit weird on the morning of the final. We were eating breakfast together and the TVs were on with Sky Sports News reporting that Mancini was going to get sacked\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nIn early June, Wigan's manager Mart\u00ednez left the club and joined Everton, being replaced at his former club by Owen Coyle. The final drew a peak television audience of 9.4\u00a0million. Despite the criticism of the early evening kick-off time, the BBC confirmed that subsequent finals would be started at a similar time as part of their new deal to broadcast the final from 2014, but did concede to play the fixture as the last game of the domestic season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nSporting Life described the win as the \"biggest FA Cup final shock\" since Wimbledon's defeat of Liverpool in the 1988 final. Other commentators went further with Fox Sports, BBC Sport and FourFourTwo all saying it was one of the biggest shocks in competition's history, and bookmaker William Hill agreeing. In a statistical analysis performed by Forbes, the 2013 final was the tenth biggest \"surprise\" result in the history of the FA Cup. European newspapers also commented on the shock result, with La Gazzetta dello Sport, Die Welt and Le Figaro all noting the historical significance of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233293-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nWigan Athletic defeated Manchester City again in the sixth round of the following season's FA Cup, winning 2\u20131 at the City of Manchester Stadium, but failed to retain the trophy after they lost in a penalty shoot-out against Arsenal in the semi-final. The 2013 finalists met for a third FA Cup tie in the 2017\u201318 tournament where Wigan Athletic won the fifth round tie 1\u20130 at the DW Stadium, which was described by BBC Sport as \"one of the biggest FA Cup giant-killings\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233294-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Trophy Final\nThe 2013 FA Trophy Final was the 44th final of the Football Association's cup competition for levels 5\u20138 of the English football league system. The match was contested between Grimsby Town and Wrexham. It was Wrexham's first visit to Wembley Stadium in their 149-year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233294-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Trophy Final\nGrimsby Town defeated Buxton, Havant & Waterlooville, Welling United, Luton Town and Dartford en route to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233294-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Trophy Final\nWrexham defeated Rushall Olympic, Solihull Moors, Sutton United, Southport and Gainsborough Trinity en route to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233294-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Trophy Final, Overview\nThe final of the 2013 FA Trophy played between Wrexham and Grimsby Town ended with Wrexham winning 4\u20131 in a penalty shoot-out after the teams had drawn in the normal time of 90 minutes. Grimsby Town led over Wrexham with a solitary goal scored by Andy Cook in the 71st minute, but Wrexham equalised as captain Keates was fouled inside the box and Kevin Thornton scored the resulting penalty spot-kick. In the ensuing extra time both the teams failed to score leading to a penalty shoot-out. The spot kicks from Adrian Cieslewicz, Danny Wright, Chris Westwood and finally Johnny Hunt, led to Wrexham's victory. Wrexham became the first Welsh club to win the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233295-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Vase Final\nThe 2013 FA Vase Final was the 39th final of the Football Association's cup competition for teams below level 8 of the English football league system. It was the 30th FA Vase Final. It was contested by Northern Football League team Spennymoor Town and Kent League team Tunbridge Wells. The match was played at Wembley Stadium in London on 4 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233295-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Vase Final, Route to the Final\nSpennymoor Town started in the first round against Bridlington Town, winning 5\u20131. In the second round, they were drawn at home to Newcastle Benfield and winning 5\u20131. In the third round Spennymoor played fellow Northern Football League team, Billingham Synthonia winning 2\u20130. They were then drawn against Lordswood in the fourth round, winning 3\u20131. In the fifth round, they played Bemerton Heath Harlequins winning 4\u20132. In the quarter finals, Spennymoor drew Gornal Athletic where they won 3\u20131. In the semi-finals, Spennymoor were drawn against Guernsey. They won 3\u20131 in the first leg at Footes Lane in Guernsey and won 1\u20130 in the second leg for a 4\u20131 win on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233295-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Vase Final, Route to the Final\nTunbridge Wells started in the second round after receiving a bye in the first round, due to having reached the fifth round the previous year, by defeating Hellenic League Premier Division team Wantage Town 2-0 at their Culverden Stadium. In the third round, they were drawn away to Binfield, where they won 2\u20131 after extra time (aet). In the fourth round, Tunbridge Wells were drawn against the FA Vase holders, Dunston UTS. After the match was postponed four times, Tunbridge Wells won 1\u20130 at the Culverden Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233295-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 FA Vase Final, Route to the Final\nIn the fifth round, they were drawn away to Larkhall Athletic, where they won 4\u20133 aet In the quarter finals, they played Hadleigh United. In front of a record home crowd, Tunbridge Wells won 2\u20130. In the semi-finals, Tunbridge Wells defeated Shildon 4\u20133 on aggregate after a 2\u20130 win at the Culverden Stadium in the first leg and a 3\u20132 aet loss in the second leg. This made Tunbridge Wells the second Kent League team to reach the FA Vase final in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233295-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Vase Final, Build up\nAfter a meeting at Wembley Stadium the week after the semi-finals, where both teams met with The Football Association to decide the choice of dressing rooms and the kit selections, tickets for the final were released on sale on 2 April 2013, with Tunbridge Wells selling over 2,600 tickets within the first 24 hours comparing with an average home crowd of 138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233295-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Vase Final, Build up\nBoth teams set up shops in their respective towns. On 12 April 2013, Spennymoor Town opened a shop under Spennymoor Town Hall after the space was loaned to them by the Mayor of Spennymoor. On 16 April, Tunbridge Wells opened a temporary shop in the offices of the Kent and Sussex Courier newspaper in Royal Tunbridge Wells. On 27 April 2013, Tunbridge Wells opened a second temporary shop in the Royal Victoria Place shopping centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FA WSL\nThe 2013 FA WSL was the third season of the FA WSL, the top-level women's football league of England. The season began on 14 April and ended on 29 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FA WSL\nArsenal were the defending champions, having won their ninth consecutive English title last season. The top two teams qualified for the 2014\u201315 UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FA WSL\nThe season was the last before the creation of a second division of the WSL. All teams had to reapply for a place in WSL 1 in the next season. Doncaster Belles were the only current WSL team not granted a WSL 1 place, thus they played in the WSL 2 the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 FA WSL\nThis decision had already been taken before Doncaster finished the season bottom of the WSL with the lowest points tally, as no relegation to the WSL 2 based on points was scheduled until the WSL 2 had completed its inaugural season to produce a corresponding promotion team. The reason for Doncaster's relegation from WSL 1 was a failed reapplication based on financial criteria, which is an aspect of the WSL the FA monitors very closely since it funds the participating teams and the teams must regularly prove they can match the FA funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 FA WSL\nThe Belles' place in the top flight the following season was taken by the Manchester City Ladies team from the FA Women's Premier League National Division, but now re-branded as Manchester City Women. Likewise, Lincoln Ladies retained their place in WSL 1 but relocated and re-branded as Notts County Ladies for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FA WSL, Teams\nThe same teams as last season returned, as there was no relegation system in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 18], "content_span": [19, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FA WSL, Teams\nLiverpool, who finished bottom in 2011 and 2012, relocated from Skelmersdale to the Halton Stadium in Widnes prior to the 2013 season as part of an ambitious programme of investment. Lincoln Ladies left Ashby Avenue to return full-time to Sincil Bank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 18], "content_span": [19, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233296-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FA WSL, League Cup\nThe WSL Continental Cup was played in the same format as last year. Arsenal won their third title in as many editions with a 2\u20130 win over Lincoln.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 23], "content_span": [24, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233297-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FA Women's Cup Final\nThe 2013 FA Women's Cup Final was the 43rd final of the FA Women's Cup, England's primary cup competition for women's football teams. The showpiece event was the 20th to be played directly under the auspices of the Football Association (FA). The final was contested between Arsenal Ladies and Bristol Academy on 26 May 2013 at Keepmoat Stadium in Doncaster. Holders Arsenal made its 12th final win. The win marked the first team trophy for new head coach Shelley Kerr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233298-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup\nThe 2013 FAI Senior Challenge Cup, also known as the 2013 FAI Ford Senior Cup, was the 93rd season of the national football competition of the Republic of Ireland. The winners of the competition earned a spot in the first qualifying round of the 2014-15 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233298-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup\nA total of 40 teams are competing in the 2013 competition, which commenced on the weekend ending on 31 March 2013. The teams entered from the 2013 League of Ireland Premier Division and First Division received byes into the second round stage. Four non-league clubs also received byes to the second round. The remaining 12 teams entered at the first round stage. These non-league teams are composed of the sixteen clubs, which reached the fourth round of the 2012\u201313 FAI Intermediate Cup and the seni-finalists of the FAI Junior Cup 2012-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233298-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup, First round\nThe draw for this round was conducted by FAI President Paddy McCaul at the FAI headquarters in Abbotstown on 5 March 2013. 16 of the 20 non-League of Ireland clubs are participating in this round, with the remaining 4 clubs earning a bye to the Second round. The matches were played on the weekend ending 31 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233298-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was made live on Monday Night Soccer on 29 April. The draw was made by FAI President Paddy McCaul and Nicky Byrne, a former international goalkeeper for Republic of Ireland youth sides and former member of the boy band Westlife.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233298-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup, Third round\nThe draw for the third round was made live on Monday Night Soccer on 15 July. The draw was made by FAI President Paddy McCaul and Republic of Ireland U19 team manager Paul Doolin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233298-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup, Quarter finals\nThe draw for the quarter finals was made on 26 August on Monday Night Soccer. The draw was made by FAI President Paddy McCaul and former goalkeeper Alan O'Neill who won the FAI Cup with Shamrock Rovers, Dundalk and UCD. Fixtures took place on the weekend of 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233298-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup, Semi finals\nThe draw for the semi finals was made on 16 September on Monday Night Soccer. The draw was made by the Director of the Airtricity League Fran Gavin and former Irish national player Turlough O'Connor. Fixtures took place on the weekend of 6 October 2013. Both matches were shown live on RT\u00c9 Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233299-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup Final\nThe 2013 FAI Cup Final was the final match of the 2013 FAI Cup, the national association football cup of the Republic of Ireland. The match took place on 3 November 2013 at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin. Drogheda United and Sligo Rovers contested the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233299-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup Final\nThe match was shown live on RT\u00c9 Two and RT\u00c9 Two HD in Ireland and was refereed by Paul Tuite, assisted by Damien MacGraith and Michelle O\u2019Neill with Derek Tomney as Fourth Official. The Referee Observer was John Duffy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233299-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup Final\nSligo Rovers won the cup for the third time in four years. Rovers substitute Danny North proved the difference between the sides with two goals in the last 15 minutes and assisted in a third for Anthony Elding to win it deep in injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233299-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Cup Final\nThe match was preceded by the 2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, in which Raheny United defeated Castlebar Celtic after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final\nThe 2013 FAI Women's Cup Final was the final match of the 2013 FAI Women's Cup, the national association football Cup of the Republic of Ireland. The match took place on 3 November 2013 at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin. Raheny United and Castlebar Celtic contested the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final\nThe match was shown live on RT\u00c92 and RT\u00c92 HD in Ireland and was refereed by Marie Ward, assisted by Deirdre Nolan and Olivia Syned with Natasha Valenti as Fourth Official. The Referee Observer was Victor Loughman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final\nRaheny United won the Cup to retain the trophy they won for the first time the previous year. Underdogs Castlebar Celtic equalised twice to force extra time but were unable to come back a third time after conceding an own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Background\nThe two managers were already acquainted, as Raheny's Terry Eviston had previously been in charge of Athlone Town when Castlebar's Adrian Carberry had been a player at the League of Ireland club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Background\nCarberry was barred from the technical area at the Aviva Stadium because he was an employee of the Football Association of Ireland. His request for a one-off dispensation was refused, so he took his place in the stand and his assistant Maz Sweeney directed operations from pitch-side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Background\nAll the Castlebar Celtic players wore the name Jeremy on the back of their shirts, as a mark of respect to their former manager Jeremy Dee whose untimely death occurred in November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Background\nAs Cup holders, reigning Women's National League champions and undefeated League-leaders, Raheny United entered the match as strong favourites. Two weeks previously they had beaten Castlebar Celtic's comparatively youthful team 9\u20132 in a League fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Background\nCastlebar Celtic were without Shauna Jackson due to an injured ankle. Deirdre Doherty had missed recent fixtures while attending college in England, but Castlebar retained her registration and she agreed to come back to play in the match. Seana Cooke had agreed a transfer from Raheny United to Durham in the week leading up to the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Match, Summary\nAs the match was played as a curtain raiser to the 2013 FAI Cup Final between Drogheda United and Sligo Rovers, it began with a \"small crowd\" of around 200 which expanded to a reported attendance of 17,573 in time for the men's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Match, Summary\nRaheny took control of possession in the early exchanges and forced Castlebar's 16-year-old goalkeeper Caoimhe O'Reilly into action. Raheny took the lead after 37 minutes when Ciara Grant hit a half volley over O'Reilly and into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Match, Summary\nCastlebar continued to yield the territorial advantage but tried to hit Raheny on the break, usually through their skilful playmaker Emma Hansberry. On 67 minutes Sarah Rowe made a foray up the right wing and found Hansberry, who played the ball inside for substitute Emma Mullin to score the equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Match, Summary\nOn 84 minutes Raheny went back ahead when Caroline Thorpe was controversially adjudged to have been fouled by Castlebar's young goalkeeper, and scored the resultant penalty kick herself. Castlebar equalised again in the last minute of normal time, when another substitute Deirdre Doherty fired a powerful long-range shot past Niamh Reid Burke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe standard 15-minutes each-way of extra-time was unexpectedly abridged to ten minutes each-way. Five minutes into the additional period Castlebar's centre-back Kim Flood inadvertently headed Siobh\u00e1n Killeen's cross past O'Reilly and into her own goal. The luckless Flood was later carried off with an injury, replaced by Rachel Kearns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Match, Summary\nDuring the presentation of the trophy to victorious Raheny captain Becky Creagh, Sligo Rovers players intruded on the pitch to begin their warm up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233300-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FAI Women's Cup Final, Match, Summary\nExperienced midfielder Caroline Thorpe was named Player of the Match by RT\u00c9 summariser Susan Ronan. Thorpe later revealed that she had been bereaved by the death of her brother and was in the grip of anorexia nervosa at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233301-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FAM Youth Championship\nThe 2013 FAM Youth Championship, includes the youth teams of all the Dhivehi League teams and 4 other teams from any part of the Maldives who want to participate (Mahibadhoo Sports Club, Kelaa Naalhi Sports, Eydhafushi Zuvaanunge Club and Club Green Street). The age group of this tournament is Under-21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233301-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FAM Youth Championship, Participated Teams\nIt was announced that only 10 teams can participate in the competition but later, the Football Association of Maldives decided to give permission for all the teams who wants to participate, in order to give more young stars to show their capability in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233302-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FAMAS Awards\nThe 61st Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences Awards Night was held at the AFP Theater in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City on April 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233302-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FAMAS Awards\nEl Presidente (English: The President; Filipino: Ang Pangulo), a 2012 biopic film based on the life of Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, the first president of the Philippine Republic is this edition's recipient of the Best Picture Award while its lead star, Jeorge Estregan, got the award for Best Actor. Angel Locsin, the female lead for the film One More Try, won as this year's Best Actress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233303-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FBD Insurance League\nThe 2013 FBD Insurance League was an inter-county and colleges Gaelic football competition in the province of Connacht. As well as the five county teams, three colleges' teams competed: Institute of Technology, Sligo, NUI Galway and Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT). Leitrim won for the first time in the competition's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233303-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FBD Insurance League, Format\nThe teams are drawn into two groups of four teams. Each team plays the other teams in its group once, earning 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw. The two group winners play in the final. The winners were supposed to play a further game against New York, but this game was never played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233304-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Aktobe season\nThe 2013 FC Aktobe season was the 13th successive season that the club played in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. Aktobe won the League title for the first time since 2009, qualifying for the UEFA Champions League. Aktobe also reached the Semifinal of the Kazakhstan Cup and the Play-off Round of the Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233304-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Aktobe 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233304-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Aktobe 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233304-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Aktobe 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233304-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Aktobe 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233304-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Aktobe 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233305-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Astana season\nThe 2013 FC Astana season was the fifth successive season that Astana played in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan. They also participate in the Kazakhstan Cup, reaching the Quarter-Finals, and the Europa League, where they were knocked out in the First Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233305-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Astana 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233305-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Astana 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233305-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Astana 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233305-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Astana 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season\nThe 2013 season was Bunyodkors 7th season in the Uzbek League in Uzbekistan. Bunyodkor completed first treble in the season. They completed a Domestic double winning both the League and Cup. Also Bunyodkor youth team won 2013 Uzbek Youth League. Bunyodkor also competed in the AFC Champions League, reaching the Round of 16 stage before being knocked out by Buriram United of Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor 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-00233306-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season, Transfers, Winter 2012-13\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season, Transfers, Winter 2012-13\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season, Transfers, Players on Trial\nThe following players have been on trial during training camps in January\u2013February, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season, Transfers, Players on Trial\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, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season, Transfers, Summer 2013\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season, Transfers, Summer 2013\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233306-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Bunyodkor season, Competitions\nBunyodkor was present in all major competitions: Uzbek League, the AFC Champions League and the Uzbek Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233307-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Dallas season\nThe 2013 FC Dallas season is the eighteenth of the team's existence. The team began their preseason by signing three new players to the squad: Stephen Keel, Peter Luccin, and Pipico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233307-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Dallas season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Overall standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233308-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Gifu season\nThe 2013 FC Gifu season sees FC Gifu compete in J. League Division 2 for the sixth consecutive season as well as competing in the 2013 Emperor's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233308-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Gifu season, Players\nAs of August 8, 2013Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233308-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Gifu season, Players, 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233309-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Kairat season\nThe 2013 FC Kairat season was the 3rd successive season that the club playing in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan, since their promotion back to the top flight in 2009. Kairat finished the season in 3rd place and reached the Second Round of the Kazakhstan Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233309-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Kairat 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233309-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Kairat 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233309-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Kairat 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233309-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Kairat 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233310-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Kansas City season\nThe 2013 season was FC Kansas City's first season of existence, in which they competed in the National Women's Soccer League, the top division of women's soccer in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233310-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Kansas City season, Club, Team management\nFC Kansas City's ownership group is composed of Chris, Brad and Greg Likens, and Brian Budzinski. The group also owns the Missouri Comets of the Major Indoor Soccer League. Budzinski is also owner of the Kansas City Soccerdome. Vlatko Andonovski, a former professional player and head coach of the Kansas City Kings of the PASL and Missouri Olympic Development Program (ODP), was head coach for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233311-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Pakhtakor season\nThe 2013 season was Pakhtakor's 22nd season in the top Uzbek League in Uzbekistan. Pakhtakor competed in the Uzbek League, Uzbek Cup and AFC Champions League tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233311-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Pakhtakor 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-00233311-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Pakhtakor season, Transfers, Winter 2012-13\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233311-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Pakhtakor season, Transfers, Winter 2012-13\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233311-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Pakhtakor season, Transfers, Summer 2013\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233311-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Pakhtakor season, Transfers, Summer 2013\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233311-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Pakhtakor season, Competitions\nPakhtakor is present in all major competitions: Uzbek League, the AFC Champions League and the Uzbek Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233312-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Seoul season\nThe 2013 season is FC Seoul's 30th season in the K League Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233312-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233312-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233312-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Seoul season, Tactics, Starting eleven and formation\nThis section shows the most used players for each position considering a 4\u20133\u20133 or 4-2-3-1 formation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233312-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233312-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233313-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Shakhter Karagandy season\nThe 2013 FC Shakhter Karagandy season was the 22nd successive season that Shakhter played in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233313-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Shakhter Karagandy 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-00233313-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Shakhter Karagandy 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233313-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Shakhter Karagandy 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233313-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Shakhter Karagandy 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233313-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Shakhter Karagandy 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233314-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Tokyo season\nThe 2013 FC Tokyo season is FC Tokyo's 2nd season back in the J. League Division 1 since the unexpected relegation in the 2010 season. They also competed in the 2013 J. League Cup and 2013 Emperor's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233314-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Tokyo season, Current squad\nAs of February 14, 2013Note: 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, 35], "content_span": [36, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233314-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FC Tokyo season, Match results, J. League\nJ. League Winner (also qualified for 2014 AFC Champions League Group Stage)\u00a0 2014 AFC Champions League Group Stage\u00a0 Relegation to J. League 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233315-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FCBL season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by ThatOhioGuy (talk | contribs) at 07:11, 3 April 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233315-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FCBL season\nThe 2013 FCBL season was the third season of the Futures Collegiate Baseball League, a wood bat collegiate summer baseball league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233315-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FCBL season, All-star game\nThe FCBL's second annual All-Star game was hosted by the Pittsfield Suns at Wahconah Park in Pittsfield, Massachusetts on July 25, 2013. The format for this year's game had members from the league's 5 Massachusetts teams pitted against players from the league's 4 remaining New England teams. The Massachusetts All-Stars defeated the New England All-Stars 2-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233315-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FCBL season, Postseason\nThe postseason expanded again for the 2013 season to include a one-game Play-In round. The playoff field expanded to six teams as well, where the two teams with the best records would get a bye for the first round. The Play-In game would be played at the home field of the higher seeded team that had the bye, and the 2 series would be a doubleheader. For example: seed #4 played seed #5 at seed #1's home field, where the winner of the game would then face seed #1. This game would begin the 3-game series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233316-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FDJ.fr season\nThe 2013 season for FDJ.fr began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233316-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FDJ.fr season\nHaving raced as FDJ-BigMat in 2012, the team lost their sponsorship, and competed as FDJ for the first half of the season. Prior to the Tour de France, it was announced that the team would change name slightly, becoming FDJ.fr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233317-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team\nThe 2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team represented Far Eastern University during the 76th season of the UAAP men's basketball tournament that began on June 29, 2013. The Tamaraws finished the eliminations with a 10-4 record and placed third in the tournament after losing to DLSU in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233317-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team, Notable Games, UE Red Warriors\nThe Tamaraws played the season opener facing the Battle of the East rival and the much favored preseason Filoil champions UE Red Warriors. The Tams found themselves trailing 21-11 at the end of the first quarter. The Warriors were mostly leading by double digits the entire first half until the Tams were able to claw their way back to cut the lead down to a single digit in the final 2 minute frame of the second quarter, 32-37.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233317-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team, Notable Games, UE Red Warriors\nFEU started the second half on a 10-3 run to take advantage of the Warriors 42-40 in the first three minutes of the third quarter, only to end the momentum with Garcia committing an unsportsmanlike foul that gave the Warriors their own 7-0 surge to regain the lead 42-47. FEU scored the last six points to lead the Warriors 61-54 to end the third. FEU led as much as 15 in the fourth and went on to win the game, 89-78, their seventh straight win against the Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233317-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team, Notable Games, ADMU Blue Eagles\nLeading by as much as 11 points in the fourth quarter, the Eagles came back with a 14-2 run to gain the lead, 58-57. FEU then scored three straight baskets for a 59-64 lead with over two minutes in the fourth but Elorde made a quick three to pull within two, 62-64. The game were tied at 66 with 10 seconds left in the game and eventually went to overtime after a Garcia miss. The Tams outscored the Eagles, 13-9 in overtime to get the win, 79-75, ending their six-game losing streak to the Eagles. Romeo scored six of the Tams' last eight points in the extra period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233317-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team, Notable Games, ADMU Blue Eagles\nTerrence Romeo was named the first Press Corps Player of the Week of the season averaging 21 points, 5.3 assists and two steals per game in wins over UE, Ateneo and UP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233317-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team, Notable Games, Battle of the East, Round 2\nThough FEU led almost the entire game with as much as 17, Sumang-led Red Warriors came back late in the fourth quarter taking advantage of FEU's lackluster defense and poor free throw shooting to tie the game at 70.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233317-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 FEU Tamaraws men's basketball team, Notable Games, Battle of the East, Round 2\nThe game went to overtime and the Warriors were in control in the extra period with a seven-point lead with 28 seconds in left, but was not able to cap off the win as they let the Tams score five straight points with Romeo completing a coast to coast finish and Mendoza stealing an inbound pass off of UE's Santos for a three-point marker putting the Tams within striking distance, 84-82. Sumang was fouled and missed one of his free throws with 13 seconds left, giving FEU the chance to tie the game only being down by three, 85-82. Tolomia hit the three pointer after faking a hand-off pass to Romeo and sends the game to its second overtime. The Tams showed dominance into the second overtime with a 98-94 win, snapping their two-game losing skid. The Warriors lost eight straight games to the Tamaraws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233318-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FFAS Senior League\nThe 2013 season of the FFAS Senior League was the thirty-three season of association football competition in American Samoa. SKBC won the championship, their first recorded title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233318-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FFAS Senior League, Format\nEight teams competed in the league. The top team became the champion. Seventh place played in a relegation playoff against the second place finisher from division 2. Last place was automatically relegated, replaced by division 2 winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233319-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FFSA season\nThe Football Federation South Australia 2013 season was the first season under the new competition format in South Australia. The competition consists of two divisions across the State of South Australia, created from the teams in the previous three tier structure: the National Premier Leagues South Australia and the FFSA State League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233319-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FFSA season\nThe overall champion for the new structure (Campbelltown City) qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233319-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FFSA season, League Tables, 2013 National Premier Leagues SA\nThe National Premier League South Australia 2013 season was played by 14 teams over 26 rounds, from February to August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233319-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FFSA season, League Tables, 2013 NPL State League\nThe 2013 NPL State League was the first edition of the new NPL State League as the second level domestic association football competition in South Australia. 16 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 30 rounds, with the top two at the end of the year being promoted to the 2014 National Premier Leagues South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233319-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FFSA season, League Tables, 2013 Women's Premier League\nThe highest tier domestic football competition in South Australia for women was known for sponsorship reasons as the Adelaide Airport Women's Premier League. The 8 teams played a triple round-robin for a total of 21 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup\nThe 2013 FFV State Knockout Cup was the third edition of a football (soccer) knockout-cup competition held between men's clubs in Victoria, Australia in 2013, the annual edition of the Dockerty Cup. The first round was played during the weekend of 3 March 2013, with the Final scheduled for 7 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup\nUnlike previous years, this tournament does not stagger the entrance of teams based on their position on the football pyramid; teams from as high as the Victorian Premier League participated in the opening round, though 16 selected clubs were given byes to the Fourth Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Format\nDuring Rounds 1\u20134, the matches will be played within 4 geographical \"zones\" (North, South, East and West), with the zones merging into a single competition in Round 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Round 1\n50 Clubs were randomly granted byes into Round 2; the remaining 28 of the introductory teams played in Round 1 on the weekend of 2 March. The Draw for this round was held on 15 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Round 2\nThese matches were played during the weekend of 9 March. The Draw for this round was held on 15 February, the same day as the Draw for Round 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Round 2, West Zone\nJohn Strycharski 31Kacper Hubiak 53, 60Phillip Mucha 58, 72Wojciech Galon 76", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Round 3\nThese matches were played on the weekend of 23 March; the Draw was held on 12 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Round 4\nRound 4 saw the introduction of 16 Seeded Clubs, selected based on their performance in the 2012 FFV State Knockout Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Round 4, Clubs Entering\nThe Round 4 matches were played on the weekend of 4 May; the Draw was held on 25 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Round 5\nThis round saw the 4 winners from each Zone in the previous round enter a single 16-Club draw. These matches were played on the weekend of 8 June; the Draw took place on 6 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Quarter-Finals\nThe Draw for the Quarter-Finals took place on 12 June; the matches took place on 23 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Semi-Finals\nThe Draw for the Semi-Finals took place on 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233320-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FFV State Knockout Cup, Final\nThe Final was played at the neutral venue of Knights Stadium on 8 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233321-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Alternative Energies Cup\nThe 2013 FIA Alternative Energies Cup is a season of the FIA Alternative Energies Cup, a world championship for vehicles with alternative energy propulsion organized by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233321-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Alternative Energies Cup\nFor the final classifications, 50% rounded up of the best results plus one is taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233322-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Formula 3 European Championship\nThe FIA Formula 3 European Championship was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across Europe. The championship featured drivers competing in 2-litre Formula Three Dallara single seat race cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. The 2013 season was the second edition of the FIA Formula 3 European Championship organized by the FIA. The season began at Autodromo Nazionale Monza on 23 March and finished on 20 October at Hockenheimring. The series formed part of the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters meetings at seven triple header events, with other triple header events as part of the World Touring Car Championship, the FIA World Endurance Championship and the Superstars Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233322-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Formula 3 European Championship\nThe championship was won by 2012 runner-up Raffaele Marciello, driving for Prema Powerteam. M\u00fccke's Felix Rosenqvist finished behind Marciello for the second year in a row, finishing 32.5 points behind. Marciello's teammates Alex Lynn and Lucas Auer finished third and fourth respectively, allowing Prema to clinch the teams' championship. Carlin's driver Harry Tincknell completed the top five with a win at his home round at Silverstone. Non -regular drivers Pascal Wehrlein\u00a0\u2013 prior to moving into the DTM\u00a0\u2013 and Daniil Kvyat were the only drivers outside the top five, who took a race win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233322-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Formula 3 European Championship, Calendar\nA provisional ten-round calendar was announced on 18 November 2012. This was modified on 19 December 2012, after DTM organisers moved the Norisring event back by a week to avoid a clash with the German Grand Prix. To accommodate the change of date, the Zandvoort meeting was moved from July to September. On 1 June 2013, the Le Castellet round was removed from the calendar, and was ultimately replaced by a round at Vallelunga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233322-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Formula 3 European Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' championship\nThe third race at Monza was red-flagged after half the race had been completed due to torrential rain. As a result, series organisers awarded half points to each of the classified finishers eligible to score points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233322-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Formula 3 European Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' championship\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, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233322-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA Formula 3 European Championship, Championship standings, Ravenol Team Trophy\nPrior to each round of the championship, two drivers from each team\u00a0\u2013 if applicable\u00a0\u2013 are nominated to score teams' championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233323-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Nogaro round\nThe 2013 FIA GT Nogaro, also known as 2013 Easter Cup (French: Coupes de P\u00e2ques 2013) was the first of six rounds in the 2013 FIA GT Series season. It took place at the Circuit Paul Armagnac in France between 30 March\u00a0\u2013 1 April 2013. The race was the first race under the newly renamed FIA GT Series after the FIA GT1 World Championship name was discontinued due to no GT1-spec cars competing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233323-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Nogaro round\nThe most notable entrants are nine-times World Rally Championship champion S\u00e9bastien Loeb racing with his own team and former professional football goalkeeper Fabien Barthez competing racing in the Gentleman Trophy with SOFREV Auto Sport Promotion. Also competing in the race is reigning FIA GT3 European Championship Teams champions HTP Gravity Charouz as well as one of the reigning Drivers' champions from 2012 Maximilian B\u00fchk who will enter in the Pro Cup. His team mate last season Dominik Baumann also competes in the series for Grasser Racing in the Pro-Am Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233323-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Nogaro round, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nQualifying took place on Saturday 30 March and determined the grid for the Qualifying Race the next day. Rather than the usual knockout qualifying sessions seen in the past series, there were two qualifying sessions for all twenty-four cars. The fastest ten times from the two combined sessions would go through to the Superpole session where they would compete for pole position. Seeing as the first session was partly wet, everybody set their fastest time in session two. As a result, the fastest ten drivers from session two went through to the Superpole session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233323-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Nogaro round, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nRen\u00e9 Rast set the fastest time in the Superpole session for Belgian Audi Club Team WRT and would start in pole position for the Qualifying Race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233324-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Series\nThe 2013 FIA GT Series was the first season following on from the demise of the SRO Group's FIA GT1 World Championship, an auto racing series for grand tourer cars. The series underwent changes in 2013, retaining GT3 cars as the mainstay, but creating sub-classes for Pro, Pro-Am and Gentleman driver line-ups. All-Inkl.com M\u00fcnnich Motorsport did not return to defend their Teams' World Champions, instead moving to the World Touring Car Championship with one of the Drivers' World Champions Marc Basseng beside Ren\u00e9 M\u00fcnnich, team director of All-Inkl.com M\u00fcnnich Motorsport, and defending 2012 WTCC champion Rob Huff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233324-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Series, Calendar\nThe series commenced at the Circuit Paul Armagnac in France on 1 April and ended at Baku World Challenge in Azerbaijan on 24 November. The six-event calendar contained largely the same events as FIA GT1, with the addition of a race at Circuit Park Zandvoort in the Netherlands. The final round was originally scheduled to be held at a venue in the Middle East before organisers came to an agreement to hold the race on the streets of Baku in Azerbaijan instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233324-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Series, Entry list\nThe SRO released the entry list for Nogaro on 22 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233324-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA GT Series, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first six positions in each Qualifying Race and for the first ten positions in each Championship Race. The pole-sitter in the qualifying race also received one point, entries were required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers were required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina was the eighth round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the maiden running of the FIA WTCC Race of Argentina. It was held on 4 August 2013 at the Aut\u00f3dromo Termas de R\u00edo Hondo in Termas de R\u00edo Hondo, Santiago del Estero Province, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina\nRace one was won by Yvan Muller for RML while race two was won by local driver Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez on his debut weekend in the World Touring Car Championship while driving for Wiechers-Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Background\nMuller was leading the drivers' championship by 122 points over Michel Nykj\u00e6r who was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Background\nThe Honda Civic WTCCs, SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs and BMW 320 TCs lost all additional ballast when the compensation weights were re-calculated. The Chevrolet Cruzes retained their 40\u00a0kg of ballast while the Lada Grantas remained 20\u00a0kg below the baseweight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Background\nJos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez joined Wiechers-Sport for the round, substituting for regular driver Fredy Barth. Following heavy damage sustained in the previous round, Tom Boardman and the Special Tuning Racing team elected to skip the Race of Argentina to repair the car before shipping to the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Background\nCampos Racing's Hugo Valente came to the event with a 10\u2013place grid penalty for race one after ignoring yellow flags in race one in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller led an RML 1\u20132 in Friday's test session, L\u00f3pez was eleventh quickest in his first WTCC session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller and teammate Tom Chilton were first and second once again in free practice one, Tiago Monteiro was third for Honda and fourth placed L\u00f3pez was the quickest independent driver. The session had been red flagged early on when a technical failure cut off the timing and video systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Testing and free practice\nChilton led a Chevrolet 1\u20132\u20133 in free practice two ahead of Muller and bamboo-engineering's Alex MacDowall. The session was red flagged when Ren\u00e9 M\u00fcnnich got his M\u00fcnnich Motorsport SEAT stuck in a gravel trap. His teammate Robert Huff stopped on the track three minutes from the end as a result of a suspected turbocharger failure. M\u00fcnnich Motorsport were forced to change the engine in Huff's car after free practice two, earning the reigning champion a penalty which would see him start at the back of the grid for race one. Monteiro would also be sent to the back of the grid for race one following an engine change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Qualifying\nNykj\u00e6r led the cars out at the start of Q1, Muller then went to the top of the times straight away while MacDowall was the first driver to go off the track. L\u00f3pez was running as high as third during the session while for a brief time both Lukoil Lada Sport cars were inside the top twelve before Mikhail Kozlovskiy was bumped down the order by improvements for other drivers, notably James Nash and Marc Basseng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Qualifying\nAfter lengthy repairs, Huff left the pits in time to do one flying lap which was only good enough for 14th, putting him out of qualifying. Valente was the only SEAT driver to get through to Q2 when Basseng was displaced by Nash while L\u00f3pez was the only BMW driver to do so. A misunderstanding between the ROAL Motorsport pair of Tom Coronel and Darryl O'Young saw the pair eliminated from qualifying in the first session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Qualifying\nAfter a short break, Q2 began and Muller went to the top of the times once again. A group of cars formed up for a final flying lap at the end of the session with both Muller and Chilton improving their times; Muller stayed on top while Chilton was second despite an off at the final corner. Pepe Oriola was the other driver to go off on the final tour. L\u00f3pez had caught up with the back of the train of cars which was driving slowly around the circuit before going off on a final fast lap but he still finished tenth to secure pole position for race two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Qualifying\nAfter qualifying, Muller, Chilton, Nash, MacDowall, Tarquini, Monteiro and Oriola were called to the stewards to explain the slow train of cars at the end of Q2 but no further action was taken. Kozlovskiy was lost all his lap times for a breach of parc ferm\u00e9 regulations when a laptop was connected to his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Warm-Up\nL\u00f3pez was quickest in the warm\u2013up session on Sunday morning, edging out the Chevrolet of MacDowall. Huff was third while Kozlovskiy was fourth for Lada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Race One\nMuller was on pole position for the first race, the first attempt at the rolling start was aborted when second placed Chilton failed to drive through the grid boxes. The race was started when the cars came around again, Chilton ran wide at the first corner and lost places to Nykj\u00e6r and Oriola. On lap five Chilton reclaimed second place ahead of Oriola. Michelisz lost his front splitter following collisions with Nykj\u00e6r and Nash which caused the three of them to slow down allowing Tarquini to move past the group into fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Race One\nL\u00f3pez was also able to catch up with them having run in a distant 8th place and he picked them off one\u2013by\u2013one to finish 5th. Oriola passed Chilton at the end of the race to split with RML cars, Muller won by a comfortable margin of 4.9 seconds ahead of Oriola. L\u00f3pez in fifth was the Yokohama Trophy winner in his first WTCC race while Huff and Monteiro came through from the back of the grid to score points in 8th and 10th respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Race Two\nL\u00f3pez started on pole position for the second race and maintained his first place at the start, at the end of the first lap he had built up a lead of 1.8 seconds ahead of Monteiro. Nykj\u00e6r separated the Hondas as Tarquini was running fourth, by the end of the second lap Muller had closed in on the trio fighting for second place. Tarquini tried a move on Nykj\u00e6r at turn thirteen, he ran wide and Nykj\u00e6r did likewise trying to defend which allowed Muller and Nash through while Tarquini was now battling with Oriola and Michelisz for 6th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Race Two\nOn lap three Nykj\u00e6r tried to dive up the inside of Nash at turn seven but the pair collided and allowed Tarquini through while MacDowall and Chilton collided further back. Monteiro was running second ahead of Muller on lap five and the pair were closing in on L\u00f3pez when Muller ran into the back of him in the braking area for turn five, putting Monteiro off the road and dropping the Honda driver down to ninth once he had recovered to the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233325-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Argentina, Report, Race Two\nOn the same lap Huff was disputing sixth place with Michelisz; there was light contact between the pair before Huff dropped back slightly into Thompson who then bumped the SEAT and broke its front left suspension causing Huff to go off into the gravel. On lap seven Muller was issued with a drive\u2013through penalty for his collision with Monteiro which was served immediately. O'Young and Valente came together on lap nine, they had been contesting eighth place until Valente tapped the back of the ROAL BMW and O'Young spun off the circuit. Thompson had been running behind them but one lap later he slowed down with technical problems. At the end of lap eleven L\u00f3pez passed the checkered flag to take his first overall WTCC victory and the first WTCC victory for an Argentine driver, Tarquini and Oriola completed the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria was the fifth round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the second running of the FIA WTCC Race of Austria. It was held on 19 May 2013 at the Salzburgring in Salzburg, Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria\nBoth races were won from pole position with Michel Nykj\u00e6r taking victory in the first race for NIKA Racing and James Nash won race two, the first victory in the World Touring Car Championship for both himself and the bamboo-engineering team. This was the first time in WTCC history that both races in a weekend were won by drivers eligible for the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria\nThe round is best remembered for a qualifying incident where all twelve cars in the second part of qualifying drove slowly around the lap before what was supposed to be their final flying lap. The cars drove slowly around the lap in order to ensure themselves a slipstream for the next lap but all of them missed the checkered flag. A total of fourteen drivers were penalised after the session which drastically reshuffled the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Background\nComing into the Austrian round Yvan Muller was leading the world drivers' championship and Nash was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Background\nThe Honda Civic WTCCs gained 10\u00a0kg of ballast when the compensation weights were revised, pulling them on the maximum ballast of 1,190\u00a0kg equal to the Chevrolet Cruze 1.6Ts. The SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs gained 10\u00a0kg to take their weight up to 1,160\u00a0kg and the BMW 320 TCs returned to their base weight of 1,150\u00a0kg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Background\nSpecial Tuning Racing elected to miss the Austrian and Russian rounds in order to fix their car which had been plagued with issues since the Race of Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Background\nFollowing his crash in Hungary, Gabriele Tarquini was allowed by the FIA to run a new engine in his Honda Civic without a penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Free practice\nMuller topped the opening practice session leading a Chevrolet 1\u20132\u20133 ahead of Tom Chilton and Alex MacDowall. Robert Huff was the fastest SEAT in fourth and Norbert Michelisz was fifth in his Zeng\u0151 Motorsport Honda while the works drivers were both outside the top ten. Darryl O'Young did not set a time during the session due to a turbo problem on his ROAL Motorsport BMW 320 TC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Free practice\nMuller led Huff in the second free practice session, Nash in third was the fastest independent driver. James Thompson didn't set any times and spent the entire session in the pit lane while Hugo Valente stopped on track with five minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Qualifying\nChilton led the first session which had seen a number of incidents. Tom Coronel locked up and avoided hitting Pepe Oriola. Oriola then had a collision with the rear of Charles Ng with both sustaining minor bodywork damage. Many of the drivers were trying to get into the slipstream of other cars and towards the end of the session, a group of cars led by Tarquini were slowed as they came round to start a flying lap with Coronel being caught out by the slow moving cars ahead and being launched over the Campos Racing SEAT of Valente. Thompson had parked his car on the exit of the first corner due to steering problems. At the end of the session, Marc Basseng went wide at the final corner and clipped the barriers on the outside before spinning to a halt in front of the pit entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Qualifying\nAll twelve cars formed up for a final flying lap in Q2 with Chilton at the front. Chilton had been going around the lap slowly and with the cars behind looking for a slipstream, nobody overtook. None of the cars made it around to the start line before the checkered flag came out, some of cars dived straight into the pits while others carried on. Coronel had continued and lost the rear of his BMW on one of the fast corners and went backwards into the tyre wall. At the end of the session with an RML 1\u20132 with Muller ahead of Chilton. Huff was third and MacDowall in fourth was the leading independent. Nash was tenth and claimed the pole position for race two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Qualifying\nAfter the session, fourteen drivers were called the stewards. All the drivers who took part in Q2 bar Nykj\u00e6r plus O'Young, Valente and Mikhail Kozlovskiy were summoned. Twelve drivers were deemed to be guilty of unsporting behaviour. Tarquini lost twelve places, Oriola lost eight places and Coronel dropped fifteen places. Muller, Chilton, Michelisz and Tiago Monteiro lost twelve places, Huff received a ten place penalty, MacDowall moved down eight places while Stefano D'Aste, O'Young and Valente all lost five places on the grid. WTCC General Manager Marcello Lotti commented on the incident during the warm\u2013up session the following morning and confirmed the penalties would be applied to race one only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Qualifying\nAfter qualifying the Honda cars were found to be running illegal rear wings, Tarquini, Monteiro and Michelisz were sent to the back of the grid for race one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Warm-Up\nThompson was quickest in the warm\u2013up session on Sunday morning. D'Aste ended his session in the gravel early on. Nash suffered a puncture and Kozlovskiy spun but neither sustained damage to their cars and continued in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Race One\nNykj\u00e6r led away from pole position at the rolling start with Nash challenging him for the lead. Nykj\u00e6r, Nash and Bennani broke away from the rest of the field while Kozlovskiy who had started fourth was dropping back and was soon behind teammate Thompson. Fredy Barth held fifth place after a number of attempts by MacDowall to get past. Barth was passed and then regained the position twice, first on the back straight and then at the first chicane. Another attempted pass by MacDowall on the back straight allowed Muller to take the pair of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Race One\nMuller set off after the leaders and eventually caught Bennani who was demoted to fourth place. Muller's teammate Chilton was battling over the final four points positions with Huff, Thompson and Coronel and he came out ahead in seventh place. There was a coming together between the Liqui Moly Team Engstler cars in the final laps when Ng tried to go up the inside of Engstler in the final sector, they made contact which spun Engstler around who then collided with O'Young.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Race One\nThe third sector was covered by yellow flags for the final few laps, reducing passing opportunities for the leaders who were running close together. By the final lap Muller had caught the leading pair and they were bumper to bumper but he couldn't make a move, Nykj\u00e6r won ahead of Nash and Muller. Thompson finished ninth behind Chilton and Huff to secure his second points finish of the year with Coronel coming from nineteenth to tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Race Two\nNash was on pole position but he was overtaken my Michelisz before the first corner but retook the lead before the end of the lap. Chilton retired in the pit lane after a collision at the first chicane. MacDowall and Thompson were also caught out and ran through the escape road to return to the circuit. Nash was leading Michelisz and Monteiro but Muller who had started tenth was closing in on the Hondas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233326-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Austria, Report, Race Two\nHis first attempt at passing Monteiro was unsuccessful but with the Chevrolet's superior speed on the back straight the RML driver was able to make the pass stick the following lap. Tarquini had dropped back down the field and was defending eighth place from Huff who was unable to pass the Honda driver. Monteiro in fourth was defending his position from Nykj\u00e6r in the final laps while on the penultimate lap Muller passed Michelisz; he couldn't catch Nash who claimed his first overall WTCC victory and the first for bamboo\u2013engineering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of China was the eleventh round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the third running of the FIA WTCC Race of China. It was held on 3 November 2013 at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China\nRace one was won by Tom Chilton of RML and race two was won by Tiago Monteiro for the Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Background\nYvan Muller secured the drivers' title at the previous round in Japan. James Nash was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Background\nWhen the weights were re-calculated, the Honda Civic WTCCs gained 20\u00a0kg of ballast to equal them with the Chevrolet Cruze 1.6Ts on 1,190\u00a0kg. The SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs, BMW 320 TCs and Lada Granta WTCCs remained on 1,130\u00a0kg. The Volvo C30 received 20\u00a0kg of ballast to set it at 1,170\u00a0kg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Background\nRickard Rydell returned to the championship with NIKA Racing, replacing Hiroki Yoshimoto who had other commitments. Fredy Barth returned to Wiechers-Sport with the displaced Yukinori Taniguchi moving to Campos Racing alongside Fernando Monje and Hugo Valente. Volvo Polestar Racing entered a Volvo C30 for 2013 Scandinavian Touring Car Championship champion Thed Bj\u00f6rk for a one\u2013off appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Testing and free practice\nYvan Muller set the pace in Friday's test session by almost two tenths of a second ahead of Tom Coronel, with Chilton completing the top three placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Testing and free practice\nThed Bj\u00f6rk set the pace in free practice one, his first two laps of the session were both quickest. Gabriele Tarquini in second and Rickard Rydell in third were the only other drivers to break through the 1 minutes 55 seconds barrier. Pepe Oriola failed to set a timed lap due to power steering issues while Mehdi Bennani had a broken driveshaft on his Proteam Racing BMW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller was ahead in free practice two with Bj\u00f6rk a close second, Chilton was third ahead of James Thompson. Bennani suffered once again with technical problems which limited his running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Qualifying\nMuller led a Chevrolet 1\u20132\u20133\u20134\u20135\u20136 in qualifying, RML teammate Chilton was second with the Tuenti Racing car of Oriola third. The bamboo-engineering pair of James Nash and Alex MacDowall were next up followed by series returnee Rydell in sixth. Norbert Michelisz was the leading Honda in seventh ahead of outgoing champion Robert Huff. The Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team pairing of Gabriele Tarquini and Tiago Monteiro were ninth and tenth ensuring they would lock out the front row for race two. Franz Engstler made it through to Q2 and finished 11th fastest. Franz Engstler was one place ahead of Bj\u00f6rk who was ineligible to score points in the nationally homologated Volvo and was therefore required to sit out Q2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Qualifying\nAfter qualifying, Bj\u00f6rk's Volvo was found to be underweight and he was given a five\u2013place grid penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Warm-Up\nBj\u00f6rk was quickest in Sunday morning's warm\u2013up session, pole sitter Muller was seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Race One\nThe track was damp after earlier rainfall and the decision was taken to start the race behind the safety car, some cars elected to run on wet tyres. The safety car went in and the race started on lap three, Oriola was the leading car on wet tyres and he passed Chilton and Muller to take the lead on the first lap. Hugo Valente went off into the gravel after being tagged and spun across in front of Engstler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Race One\nRydell moved up to fifth at the expense of MacDowall and was then able to pass Nash to move up to fourth. At the back of the field Mak Ka Lok spun on the back straight but continued without incident while up ahead the cars on wet tyres were not getting a consistent advantage. Huff had a moment on the entry of turn 1 but he was soon closing in on the Bamboo Engineering pair, he passed MacDowall on lap 5. MacDowall got 6th place back from Huff, Tarquini was now within range of Huff on lap 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Race One\nOn lap 7 the advantage went back to the cars running on slick tyres, Muller and Chilton were closing the gap to Oriola, the three had built up a healthy gap to Rydell in fourth. Muller used the extra grip from his tyres to retake the lead before the end of lap 7, Chilton did so a few corners later at the start of lap 8. Nash briefly took fourth back from Rydell but the NIKA Racing driver soon retook the position, the two were at the head of a long train of cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Race One\nAt the end of the back straight Nash, MacDowall and Tarquini passed Rydell at the hairpin while Huff and Michelisz were running close, they came together at the first corner on lap 9. By lap 10 Rydell had dropped out of the points while Oriola was in an increasingly distant third place. Thompson used the straightline advantage of his Lada to take 9th on Monteiro who was now under attack from the SEAT of Tom Boardman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0011-0004", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Race One\nOriola's third place was also under threat from Nash on the final lap while Boardman tapped the back of Monteiro and went through into the final points position. Muller and Chilton were close as they headed down the back straight for the last time, the two ran side by side at the final corner with Chilton claiming victory at the line by one hundredth of a second. Nash and MacDowall moved into third and fourth on the last lap, Nash taking the Yokohama Trophy victory. In the Eurosport Asia Trophy, Taniguchi claimed victory with 21st place ahead of Felipe De Souza in one of the naturally aspirated Chevrolets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Race Two\nMonteiro retained his lead while there was a collision with Coronel and Rydell at turn one. Michelisz in third was defending from Huff with Nash and Muller close behind. On lap four yellow flags were out in the final sector for the car of Jer\u00f3nimo Badaraco which had stopped near the finish line. Muller had been chasing down Nash for a couple of laps when he passed around the outside of the Bamboo Chevrolet at the first corner of lap 7, elevating Muller to 5th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233327-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of China, Report, Race Two\nBarth and Darryl O'Young came together at the final hairpin at the end of lap 7, the incident also delayed MacDowall who had dropped downt he field after a slow start. Nash lost another position to Coronel at the end of lap 8 while just up the road Muller was attacking Huff who was in turn trying to pass Michelisz for third place. Muller had a close battle with Huff on the final lap but Huff held on to take fourth while Monteiro led a Honda 1\u20132\u20133 across the line. Nash took his second independents' victory of the day and Taniguchi claimed his second Asia Trophy victory of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary was the fourth round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the third running of the FIA WTCC Race of Hungary. It was held on 5 May 2013 at the Hungaroring in Mogyor\u00f3d near Budapest, Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary\nRace one was won by Yvan Muller of RML from pole position. Race two was won by Robert Huff for ALL-INKL.COM M\u00fcnnich Motorsport, the first win in the World Touring Car Championship for the team and Huff's first victory as the reigning champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Background\nAfter three rounds, Muller was leading the world drivers' championship and James Nash was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Background\nThe compensation weights were revised for the Hungarian rounds with the SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs gaining 10\u00a0kg (22\u00a0lb) of ballast and the Honda Civic WTCCs gaining 30\u00a0kg (66\u00a0lb) of ballast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Background\nCampos Racing expanded to two cars with Hugo Valente returning to the championship to drive alongside Fernando Monje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Free practice\nGabriele Tarquini was the quickest driver in the first free practice session on Saturday morning with Tiago Monteiro in second making it a Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team 1\u20132. Muller was third ahead of the third Honda of Norbert Michelisz. Valente was the quickest SEAT driver in fifth and Slovakia race two winner Tom Coronel was seventh. Charles Ng was black flagged for exceeding the track limits repeatedly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Free practice\nChevrolets filled the top three positions at the end of the free practice two with Muller leading teammate Tom Chilton and bamboo-engineering's James Nash. Huff was the top SEAT driver in fourth ahead of Michelisz and Coronel. Tarquini and Monteiro and seventh and eighth both set fastest lap times of 1:55.547. James Thompson was ninth in the best placed Lukoil Lada Sport car. A number of drivers were warned for exceeding the track limits but Stefano D'Aste was black flagged for doing so repeatedly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Qualifying\nTarquini was quickest in the first part of qualifying. Fredy Barth set his best lap late in the session which knocked Pepe Oriola out of the top twelve. Nash and Mehdi Bennani were the final two drivers who would go through to Q2 and both were in the pits but Oriola was unable to beat their times for earlier on. Thompson had earlier in the session been running in the top ten but ended the session sixteenth having been called in for weighing near the end of the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Qualifying\nMichelisz held the fastest time briefly until Muller demoted him moments later, a time the rest of the Q2 participants couldn't beat it. The RML driver took pole position ahead of local driver Michelisz and the two works Honda drivers. Tarquini aborted his first lap and at the end of the session and returned to the track near the end of the session to set a time to put him third on the grid ahead of Monteiro. Nash was the quickest independent driver in seventh while his teammate Alex MacDowall in tenth would take the pole position when the grid was reversed for race two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Qualifying\nTom Boardman had all his times removed when his car failed the ride height check after Q1, he would start at the back of the grid for both races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Warm-Up\nMichelisz was fastest in warm\u2013up ahead of Huff and Muller. Franz Engstler was black flagged for repeatedly exceeding the track limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Race One\nMuller retained his lead at the rolling start with Michelisz and Tarquini remaining second and third respectively. Further down the field at turn two a number of drivers were caught out by a pileup. Darryl O'Young ran into the back of Monje who then collided with Barth while O'Young hit Thompson who retired on the spot with a broken right rear suspension. Oriola also retired at the second corner while Barth returned to the pits for repairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Race One\nA number of other drivers were also delayed by the incident including Monteiro who suffered a puncture on the pit straight at the start of lap two and collided with the tyre wall on the outside of the first corner when he was unable to stop. Muller and Michelisz distanced themselves from the rest of the field where Tarquini was running third ahead of Huff. Chilton had been running behind them early on before Bennani ran wide at the penultimate corner allowing Coronel through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Race One\nCoronel battled with Chilton for a number of laps until the RML driver made a mistake that let both Coronel and Bennani through. Coronel quickly caught up to fourth placed Huff but was unable to take the place, the pair had made light contact on several occasions before Coronel made a mistake and Bennani re\u2013passed the ROAL Motorsport driver. Michelisz had been closing in on Muller in the final laps but couldn't pass and Muller took the win. The battle between Huff and Coronel had allowed Tarquini to break away into a safe third place and Bennani finished fifth to take the independents' victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Race Two\nBefore the start of the race the Honda Civic of Monteiro was being repaired following the crash in race one but problems with starting the car meant he was not able to get going before the end of the repair time, he therefore started the race from the end of the pit lane. MacDowall was on pole position for the standing start but he was passed straight away by Bennani who took the lead while Huff put himself up into second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Race Two\nOn the exit of the second corner, Tarquini was turned around across the front of Muller's car and was launched into the barriers before coming back across the track in front of Michelisz and then collecting Engstler. The safety car came out while the cars were cleared from the track and Tarquini received medical assistance. The race distance was extended by two laps and Bennani led away at the restart on lap five but Huff took the lead around the outside at the first corner. Having been given a drive\u2013through penalty, Barth then stopped in the pit entry three laps from the end. Huff won the race with Bennani close behind while the Bamboo cars of MacDowall and Nash finished third and fourth ahead of Muller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233328-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Hungary, Report, Race Two\nTarquini and Engstler were taken to Budapest's military hospital following their collision, Engstler was discharged later in the day while Tarquini was kept in overnight while still suffering neck pains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy (formally the 2013 FIA WTCC Bet\u2013At\u2013Home Race of Italy) was the opening round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the ninth running of the FIA WTCC Race of Italy. It was held on 24 March 2013 at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza in Monza, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy\nBoth races were won by Yvan Muller of RML. Tom Chilton and Alex MacDowall both finished on the podium for the first time in their World Touring Car Championship careers in race one, the NIKA Racing team finished on the podium for the first time in race two with their driver Michel Nykj\u00e6r.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Background\nAll the cars started on an equal base weight of 1,150\u00a0kg, with the exception of the championship winning Chevrolet Cruze 1.6Ts which ran with the additional maximum compensation ballast of 40\u00a0kg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Free Practice\nRML Chevrolet driver Muller set the pace in the first free practice session. Tiago Monteiro second was the fastest Honda, Pepe Oriola in third was the fastest SEAT driver, James Thompson in seventh was the fastest Lada and Tom Coronel was the best placed BMW driver in ninth. Liqui Moly Team Engstler driver Charles Ng spun off at and hit the barriers at the Della Roggia chicane, damaging the front of his BMW 320 TC but he was able to return to the pits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Free Practice\nChevrolets filled the top five places at the end of the final practice session. Muller led bamboo-engineering's MacDowall in second and James Nash fourth. Chilton was third and the NIKA Racing car of Nykj\u00e6r was fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Qualifying\nMuller took pole position for race one, leading an RML 1\u20132. The first part of qualifying saw multiple incidents with reigning champion Robert Huff colliding Fredy Barth less than three minutes into the session. The incident broke Huff's suspension and the session was stopped while the SEAT was removed from the circuit. When the session resumed, the two Ladas collided with Aleksei Dudukalo missed the braking point for the first chicane and went straight into the side of Thompson's car. Thompson was already through to Q2 and he returned to the pits for repairs. Honda driver Gabriele Tarquini tapped Ren\u00e9 M\u00fcnnich into a spin just before the end of the session and the getting a black and white flag. His team\u2013mate Monteiro failed to get through to the second session while the Zeng\u0151 Motorsport car of Norbert Michelisz 21st having suffered from brake problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Qualifying\nAfter repairs, Thompson was able to get out in the second session to finish ninth and a front row start on the reversed grid for race two behind the ROAL Motorsport car of Darryl O'Young. At the end of the ten-minute shoot\u2013out Muller led an RML 1\u20132 with Chilton second and MacDowall third the leading independent driver in the Bamboo Chevrolet. Oriola was the best placed SEAT in fourth with Tarquini fifth after another eventful session. The best placed ALL-INKL.COM M\u00fcnnich Motorsport driver Marc Basseng was eighth on his debut in the World Touring Car Championship. Nykj\u00e6r had stopped on the circuit near the end of the session with a puncture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Qualifying\nAfter the session two drivers were given grid penalties for the first race, Tarquini was issued with a five\u2013place grid penalty for spinning M\u00fcnnich while Dudukalo was given a five\u2013place grid drop for his collision with Thompson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Warm-Up\nStefano D'Aste topped the wet warm\u2013up session on Sunday morning with pole sitter Muller fourth. Jean-Philippe Dayraut did not take part in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Warm-Up\nLukoil Lada Sport withdrew both of their cars prior to the races as neither could be repaired in time after their qualifying crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Race One\nThe race was started behind the safety car with Muller on pole position. The race got off to a slow start with very few places changing hands. Nykj\u00e6r returned to the pits on lap three with a driveshaft failure but he returned to the track after repairs. D'Aste spun on exit of Ascari on lap four and hit the barriers, skating over the track and then hitting the barriers on the other side before coming to a halt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Race One\nFurther up the field Basseng and Tarquini engaged in battle for 6th place before the safety car came out at the end of the lap 5 while the stricken BMW of D'Aste was removed. The race resumed on lap seven and Tarquini got past Nash to take fifth while Monteiro was also moving up the order. By lap eight Huff had made his way up the field to tenth place, displacing Tom Boardman from the final points position. Oriola ran wide at the second Lesmo with Tarquini moving up to fourth, Basseng then went through the gravel moments later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Race One\nBoardman and Huff came across the line side\u2013by\u2013side at the start of lap nine but Huff failed to stop for the first corner and used the cut through for the second time during the race. Basseng was then issued with a drive\u2013through penalty for not having all his wheels down on the grid at the three-minute warning. Barth touched O'Young on lap nine and the ROAL Motorsport car went off the track and through the gravel but returned to the track. Huff moved further up the order on lap ten, taking sixth place from Nash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Race One\nNash and Boardman then came together on lap eleven, breaking the steering arm on the SEAT and forcing Boardman to stop on the track. The race was completed with yellow flags in the second sector, Muller took the first win of the season with Chilton second to take his first podium result in the WTCC. MacDowall also finished on the outright podium for the first time and took the independents' victory. The factory Hondas of Tarquini and Monteiro finished fourth and fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Race Two\nHuff and Boardman started from the pit lane after their cars were repaired. Tarquini jumped up to second at the start behind pole sitter O'Young, he then took the lead at Curva Grande while Basseng was in third. Basseng then passed O'Young to go up to second. Nykj\u00e6r and Muller then passed O'Young before the end of the first lap. M\u00fcnnich went into the pits at the end of the first lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Race Two\nDayraut, Mehdi Bennani, Fernando Monje and MacDowall all took the escape round at the first chicane on lap three due to the slippery conditions at the end of the pit straight. On the same lap Muller moved up to third attempted a move on Basseng at the Parabolica. Basseng ran deep at the first chicane the following lap and this allowed Muller to take second place, the RML driver then taking the lead from Tarquini the same lap. Bennani was issued with a drive\u2013through penalty on lap five for exceeding track limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233329-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Italy, Report, Race Two\nFurther back Nash was defending his fifth place from Oriola and Chilton behind and soon after Oriola missed the chicane and allowed Chilton to move up to sixth behind Nash. Nearer the front, Basseng missed the first chicane and dropped down to fourth behind Nykj\u00e6r. The NIKA Racing driver was now closely following Tarquini on lap seven and succeeded in moving up to second by the end of the lap. Tarquini then retook the place on lap eight before Nykj\u00e6r moved back in front once again. Basseng was closing in on third placed Tarquini in the final laps and the two were running nose\u2013to\u2013tail. Tarquini narrowly ended up third at the finish line where Muller had finished first ahead of Nykj\u00e6r who was the independent victor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan (formally the 2013 FIA WTCC JVC Kenwood Race of Japan) was the tenth round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the sixth running of the FIA WTCC Race of Japan. It was held on 22 September 2013 at the Suzuka Circuit in Suzuka City, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan\nRace one was won by Norbert Michelisz of Zeng\u0151 Motorsport and race two was won by Tom Coronel of ROAL Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan\nYvan Muller secured his fourth World Touring Car Championship Drivers' Championship title by finishing third in race one, he became the first driver to win the title without the support of a manufacturer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan\nRace two was the 200th World Touring Car Championship race to be run since the series began in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Background\nMuller was leading the drivers' championship, he had his second opportunity to secure a fourth world title during the weekend. Michel Nykj\u00e6r and James Nash were jointly leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Background\nBefore the start of the season the new Eurosport Asia Trophy was launched for drivers entered on a race\u2013by\u2013race basis for the three Asian rounds at the end of the season, starting in Japan. Points would be awarded to the top eight finishers in class with additional points for any World Championship points scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Background\nThe Chevrolet Cruze 1.6Ts continue to be the benchmark cars, retaining their 40\u00a0kg maximum ballast to set them at 1,190\u00a0kg. The Honda Civic WTCCs gained 10\u00a0kg after their strong showing in the United States to take them up to 1,170\u00a0kg. The Honda of Takuya Izawa was set at the base weight of 1,150\u00a0kg on its first appearance of the season, this was the test car previous used by Tiago Monteiro in 2012 which was homologated under 2012 Scandinavian Touring Car Championship regulations. Both the SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs and BMW 320 TCs dropped to the minimum weight of 1,130\u00a0kg, the same as the Lada Granta WTCCs. The Chevrolet Cruze LTs and the BMW 320sis making their first appearances of the season started on the base weight of 1,150\u00a0kg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Background\nThe Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team added a third car for local driver Takuya Izawa. Franz Engstler was unable to take part in the event due to illness, his replacement was local racer Masaki Kano. This ended Engstler's run of 138 consecutive race entries. Liqui Moly Team Engstler entered a naturally aspirated BMW 320si for Macanese driver Henry Ho. In the week leading up to the race, Yokohama Trophy joint leader Michel Nykj\u00e6r lost his drive at NIKA Racing due to financial issues, his replacement was Hiroki Yoshimoto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Background\nCampos Racing reduced their entry to a single car for Fernando Monje with Hugo Valente not participating. China Dragon Racing joined the grid with a pair of Chevrolet Cruze LTs for Felipe De Souza and Kin Veng Ng, the Son Veng Racing Team ran another naturally aspirated Cruze for series debutant Jer\u00f3nimo Badaraco. Wiechers-Sport ran Yukinori Taniguchi as the replacement for Fredy Barth who was unable to participate due to other commitments. RPM Racing entered a BMW 320si for Mak Ka Lok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller led Pepe Oriola at the end of the first test session on Friday which saw a number of red flags. Souza spun his China Dragon Racing Chevrolet at turn eight, Mikhail Kozlovskiy was the next to get stuck in the gravel while Norbert Michelisz put his Zeng\u0151 Motorsport Honda also ended his session in the gravel traps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Testing and free practice\nMonteiro headed a Honda 1\u20132 in free practice one with Izawa second fastest, championship leader Muller was third. Marc Basseng was black flagged having been towed out of the gravel trap at Turn 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller was on top in free practice two, Alex MacDowall was second having led the session earlier on. Tom Chilton had a near\u2013miss with his RML team\u2013mate and had to go off the track onto the grass to avoid collecting Muller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Qualifying\nThe four Honda cars led by Gabriele Tarquini were the first out on track at the start of Q1. Chilton was fastest earlier on in the session with MacDowall third. Monteiro went to the top of the times 8 minutes in before he was deposed by the fellow Honda of Michelisz. Muller moved to the top of the times with 3 minutes remaining, James Thompson moved into the top 12 at the expense of Charles Ng. Izawa was outside the top 12 and made a last attempt to get through to the second part of qualifying but a trip out onto the grass meant he failed to improve his time, ensuring Robert Huff in 12th was safely through to the next session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Qualifying\nEarly on in Q2, Michelisz led the RML drivers in the times while Thompson opted not to go out straight away. At the halfway point of the session all the drivers were it the pit lane, Oriola and MacDowall went out before Thompson went out for the first time with just under four minutes left of the session. Oriola looked to be setting a quick lap but failed to improve in the last sector, MacDowall went up to second with Thompson on his first timed lap did not improve from 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Qualifying\nMuller had a slide at turn one while Tarquini went off a Turn 3 and narrowly avoided the tyre wall. At the end of the session Michelisz stayed on top to secure his first pole position of the season, MacDowall in second was the best placed independent driver while Mehdi Bennani finished tenth to take pole for race two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Warm-Up\nMichelisz was fastest in the warm\u2013up session on Sunday morning with Monteiro second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Race One\nMichelisz got away from pole position well to keep MacDowall behind him while Monteiro leapt up to third. At the end of the first lap Monteiro attempted to pass MacDowall but ran wide and dropped back behind the RML cars. On lap 4 Pepe Oriola tapped the back of Tarquini, as the Honda driver tried to regain control Nash went up the inside and moved up ahead of Oriola. Lap 8 saw Yoshimoto run wide at Turn 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Race One\nAt half distance, Michelisz had built up a healthy lead over MacDowall who had the close company of Muller and Chilton; there was a gap to the rest of the field behind them led by Tarquini. Monteiro was right behind Oriola on lap 19 and trying to take seventh place, he tapped the back of Oriola who recovered but then Monteiro tried to go up the inside of Oriola at Turn 7, crashing into the tyre stack on the apex. At the same time Tarquini went off the track with a left\u2013front puncture which released Nash into fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Race One\nMonteiro went into the pits for repairs as Oriola was issued with a drive\u2013through penalty for squeezing Monteiro off the track. Oriola failed to serve his penalty; he returned to the pits where he retired his car. Michelisz claimed the victory while MacDowall held on to second after defending from Muller and Chilton on the last lap. Muller secured his fourth World Drivers' Championship title with third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Race Two\nBennani lined up on pole position for the 200th race in the history of the WTCC. Bennani held the lead while contact further back between Michelisz and Muller flung Muller off into the wall and out of the race, Michelisz suffered a broken front left suspension. The incident left polystyrene on the pit straight. With the yellow flags out in the first sector, overtaking opportunities were limited as the leading pair of Bennani and Coronel pulled away from the Hondas of Tarquini and Monteiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Race Two\nTom Boardman tried an overtake up the inside of Kozlovskiy at Turn 1, Kozlovskiy was tapped and ran wide and Boardman went through. Coronel also tried a move on Bennani at the first corner shortly after and then again on lap 10 with no success. Mak went off into the gravel in the second sector while Monteiro got past his team\u2013mate. On lap 13 Kozlovskiy and Oriola were issued with drive\u2013through penalties for jump starts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Race Two\nCharles Ng was defending from Robert Huff who made a move on the pit straight and went onto the grass to complete the move into the first corner. On lap 17 Coronel went into the lead, passing Bennani at the first corner when the Proteam Racing driver ran out wider than usual. Two laps from the end, MacDowall went off at Turn 1 and dropped from 9th to 13th when he returned to the track. Coronel claimed his third victory in Japan, Bennani was second and the independent winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233330-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Japan, Report, Race Two\nAfter the race, Basseng was given a 30\u2013second penalty for a move on Thompson, which dropped him out of the points to 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco was the second round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the fourth running of the FIA WTCC Race of Morocco. It was held on 7 April 2013 at the Marrakech Street Circuit in Marrakech, Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco\nBoth races were won by first time victors in the World Touring Car Championship, race one was won by Michel Nykj\u00e6r of NIKA Racing and race two was won by Pepe Oriola of Tuenti Racing Team who also became the youngest winner of a WTCC race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Background\nAfter the first round at Monza, RML driver Yvan Muller was leading the drivers' championship. James Nash was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Background\nAfter the qualifying incident at Monza, Lukoil Lada Sport replaced Aleksei Dudukalo with series rookie Mikhail Kozlovskiy. Jean-Philippe Dayraut and the ANOME team were not on the entry list for Marrakech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Testing and free practice\nA test session had been scheduled for Friday afternoon but was cancelled along with activities for the support races when heavy rain flooded the circuit, the lost half\u2013hour session would not be replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller led the dry first free practice session on Saturday morning with teammate Tom Chilton third, the pair separated by the Honda of Gabriele Tarquini who had set the pace earlier on. Norbert Michelisz was fourth in the independent Honda ahead of James Thompson in the leading Lada. Tom Coronel was sixth as the fastest BMW while Fernando Monje in tenth was the quickest SEAT. There were no improved times in the final minutes of the session due to yellow flags at the final hairpin brought out by Tom Boardman who had stopped on the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller led an RML 1\u20132 in the second practice session with Alex MacDowall making it three Chevrolets at the top of the times. There was a small fire on Michelisz's car in the pit lane while SEAT drivers Boardman and Robert Huff completed a limited number of laps due to car problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Qualifying\nQualifying was delayed by an hour as a result of the cancellation of all Friday running for the support races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Qualifying\nTarquini took the first pole position for the Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team ahead of the bamboo-engineering Chevrolet of Nash. The first part of qualifying was led by Tarquini, whose teammate Tiago Monteiro brought out the red flags halfway through the session when he hit one of the walls at the second chicane. The ROAL Motorsport drivers collided towards the end of the session, Darryl O'Young had given Tom Coronel a tow to get the Dutch driver through to Q2, Coronel then got his braking wrong at turn ten and ran into the back of O'Young. Thompson collided with one of the walls on the street circuit and damaged his front left corner, although he was through to the second session he would not be able to set a time due to the damage sustained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Qualifying\nTarquini spent most of Q2 at the top of timing pages, Chilton looked set to take pole position when he came across the slow moving Campos Racing car of Fernando Monje who had just left the pits. Chilton and the train of cars behind him were forced to abandon their flying laps. The grid order was therefore decided by times set earlier in the session, Tarquini was ahead of five Chevrolets with Nash second, Muller and Michel Nykj\u00e6r on row two with Chilton and MacDowall on row three. The ALL-INKL.COM M\u00fcnnich Motorsport cars of Huff and Marc Basseng were on row four, Pepe Oriola was ninth and Monje in tenth would start on pole position for race two. Coronel and Thompson didn't set times in Q2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Warm-Up\nChilton led the warm\u2013up session on Sunday morning. The red flags came out twice, firstly when Nykj\u00e6r clipped the kerbs at the second chicane and stopped in the middle of the track. The second stoppage brought warm\u2013up to an early end when Boardman appeared to suffer a brake failure, clipping the front of MacDowall's Chevrolet and colliding head\u2013on with the barriers at the final chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Warm-Up\nBoardman was later ruled out of the races as a result of the damage sustained in the warm\u2013up crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Race One\nTarquini led away from pole position while Nykj\u00e6r moved into second place ahead of Nash. Huff had moved up to fifth place behind Muller and eventually managed to pass the RML driver, the pair then spent the next couple of places fighting over the position. Muller eventually got ahead at the final hairpin and Huff lost more places. Chilton pulled into the pit lane on lap six due to overheating resulting for damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Race One\nNykj\u00e6r and Nash were disputing second place behind Tarquini, Nykj\u00e6r was then able to pass Tarquini moments before the yellow flags came out after Monteiro crashed into one of the barriers and the safety car was deployed. Nash ignored the yellow flags and passed Tarquini for second place, he then tried to hand the position back on the main straight behind the safety car but it wasn't until the following lap when the pair swapped positions. The race resumed with two laps to go, the main battle was for the final podium spot with Muller chasing Nash. Muller made a number of attempts to take the place but Nash successfully defended the place to take his first podium finish. Up ahead Nykj\u00e6r claimed his first overall victory in the WTCC ahead of Tarquini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Race Two\nMonje was on pole but was passed on the opening lap by Oriola. Monje was involved a collision with the Lada of Thompson although both cars were removed under yellow flags. Towards the end of the first lap, Huff made contact with Monje and broke his right front suspension. Monje was then out on lap two when he collided with the Lada of Thompson. The safety car came out on lap nine when Tarquini lost control of his car over the kerbs at one of the chicanes and collided with MacDowall, putting both out of the race. The race resumed on the final lap with Oriola holding off Muller and Chilton to claim his first WTCC victory and become the youngest winner and the championship's history, Nash in fourth was the independents' winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233331-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Morocco, Report, Race Two\nAfter the race, Monje was given a five\u2013place grid penalty at the next race in Slovakia for his collision with Thompson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal was the seventh round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season, the seventh running of the FIA WTCC Race of Portugal and the final European round of the season. It was held on 30 June 2013 at the Circuito da Boavista street circuit in Porto, Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal\nRace one was won from pole position by Yvan Muller for RML. The second race was won by James Nash driving for bamboo-engineering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Background\nAt the halfway point of the season, Yvan Muller was leading the drivers' championship and Michel Nykj\u00e6r was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Background\nThe Honda Civic WTCCs dropped 30\u00a0kg when the compensation weights were revised after the previous round. The BMW 320 TCs received an extra 20\u00a0kg of ballast, making them the second heaviest cars on the grid behind the Chevrolets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Background\nPepe Oriola switched from his SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCC to a Chevrolet Cruze 1.6T leased from RML and run by Tuenti Racing Team. Hugo Valente was originally scheduled to miss the Portuguese round but rejoined Campos Racing when a third car was made spare by Oriola's switch to Chevrolet. Tom Boardman also rejoined the field having missed the Austrian and Russian rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Free practice\nROAL Motorsport's Tom Coronel was fastest in free practice one, leading the Chevrolet pair of Muller and Oriola. The Honda trio led by Gabriele Tarquini were fourth, fifth and sixth while Robert Huff was the leading SEAT driver in seventh. Mikhail Kozlovskiy and Tom Chilton had brushes with the walls during the session while Hugo Valente crashed head\u2013on into the barriers at turn four after missing his braking point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Free practice\nMuller was the quickest driver in free practice two, over five\u2013tenths quicker than Tarquini in the Honda. The session interrupted early on when Tiago Monteiro suffered an engine problem on his Honda Civic and came to a stop at turn thirteen. Several drivers held the fastest time before Muller put in his best time a few minutes from the end of the session. Kozlovskiy spent much of the session in the pits when he damaged his rear\u2013left wheel while Nikolay Karamyshev crashed at turn twenty at the end of the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Qualifying\nWith the Circuito da Boavista being a street circuit, Q1 was extended from 20 minutes to 30 minutes and Q2 was extended from 10 minutes to 15 minutes. Alex MacDowall lost control of his Bamboo Engineering Chevrolet during Q1 and spun into one of barriers, he damaged both ends of his car but was able to drive back to the pits. Monteiro was still suffering from turbo problems which had brought his running in free practice two to an early end, he got out in Q1 but ended the session 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Qualifying\nFernando Monje had a small collision with a tyre wall which cause some minor damage to the side of his Campos Racing SEAT, Mehdi Bennani had a slow-speed head-on collision in the same place at the end of the session. Kozlovskiy didn't set a time with his car being stuck in the garage for the duration of qualifying due to a damaged subframe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Qualifying\nQ2 was interrupted by a red flag early on when Oriola crashed at turn three. James Thompson had got through to Q2 and on his only run during the session put himself fifth on the grid. Norbert Michelisz was the last driver to set a quick lap but cut a chicane meaning the lap wouldn't count, he ended up fourth on the grid as the quickest Honda. At the end of the session, Muller led a Chevrolet 1\u20132\u20133 with Chilton second and Nykj\u00e6r third. Coronel was tenth in Q2 which would secure him pole position for race two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Qualifying\nThe results of qualifying were later amended after a transponder error recorded the wrong times for Tarquini and Oriola in Q2. Tarquini moved up one place to 5th while Oriola moved up from 12th to 6th. Thompson dropped two places to seventh while Huff, Marc Basseng, James Nash and Coronel each dropped one place. This put Nash on pole position for race two. An engine change for Monje sent the Campos Racing driver to the back of the grid for race one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Warm-Up\nFollowing the alterations to the qualifying results on Saturday evening, Coronel elected to miss Sunday morning's warm\u2013up session in protest. The ROAL Motorsport team were informed of the change outside of the one-hour window in which they would have been allowed to protest the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Warm-Up\nZeng\u0151 Motorsport driver Michelisz led a Honda 1\u20132 in the fifteen-minute session, factory driver Monteiro was second. Fredy Barth was seventh, he had to pull over early on when the bonnet of his BMW blew open when he left the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race One\nMuller led away from pole position ahead of teammate Chilton, Tarquini and Oriola were soon past Michelisz while Huff got ahead of Thompson. Further around the lap, Boardman tried to pass Bennani at the turn 6 chicane but lost control under braking, cutting across the chicane and collecting Bennani who later retired. Huff was now after Michelisz's sixth place although, on lap two Michelisz ran wide and crashed into the barriers with Huff close behind avoiding the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race One\nMichelisz attempted to return to the pits to get the car repaired but he struggled with broken suspension on the right side of his car and pulled off further around the lap. Tarquini who had been running fourth dropped out of the race late on with turbo problems, after trying to return to the pits he stopped at turn 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race One\nA recovery truck was out on circuit to recover the stranded car of Tarquini, Barth spun when trying to avoid it while Franz Engstler didn't see the vehicle around the corner at turn 12 and ran into the back of it. The safety car was deployed on lap The race resumed on the last lap, Monteiro passed Nash to take the final points position while Boardman and O'Young collided with Boardman going into the barriers. Up ahead of them, Basseng lost out to Coronel and D'Aste. At the end of the race Muller led a Chevrolet 1\u20132\u20133\u20134 ahead of Chilton, Nykj\u00e6r and Oriola; Nykj\u00e6r in third took the independents' victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race One\nAfter the race, Valente was given a 30\u2013second time penalty and 10\u2013place grid penalty for the first race in Argentina for ignoring yellow flags and causing a collision. Kozlovskiy and Ren\u00e9 M\u00fcnnich were penalised for breaking the speed limit at the rolling start and given a 30\u2013second penalty and a suspended 10\u2013place grid penalty respectively. Boardman was issued with a 30\u2013second penalty and a suspended 10\u2013place grid penalty for his first lap collision with Bennani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race Two\nNash was under attack from Huff and Basseng from the start but maintained the lead while Chilton jumped ahead of Oriola. Oriola re\u2013passed Chilton at the hairpin allowing Muller, Coronel and Bennani also to get through. Nash and Huff broke away from a train of cars led by Basseng, on lap three Nykj\u00e6r passed Thompson to take fourth place at the final chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race Two\nOn lap four Oriola was attempting a pass on Thompson but made a mistake and cut the second chicane, he was required to give the place back on the exit of turn 7, Muller tried to follow Thompson but Oriola shut the door on the RML driver when the pair arrived side\u2013by\u2013side at turn 9. At the end of lap 4 Nykj\u00e6r took third place from Basseng while lap 5 saw Monje retire with broken suspension along the Avenida Da Boavista.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race Two\nBy lap 6 Nykj\u00e6r was trailing Huff who was staying ahead despite cutting chicanes on a number of occasions, something for which he was later investigated for. On lap eight Oriola passed Thompson just before the final chicane to take fifth place, Thompson then cut the chicane when he was tapped from behind by Muller. Oriola then moved up to fourth on lap 10 when Basseng ran wide across the grass at turn two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233332-0014-0003", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal, Report, Race Two\nAlso on that lap, Barth collided head on with one of the barriers at turn eight; his car was left there covered by yellow flags for the remainder of the race. At the end of the race one lap later, Nash took the overall and independents' wins with Huff second and Nykj\u00e6r third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia (formally the 2013 FIA WTCC Lukoil Race of Russia) was the sixth round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the maiden running of the FIA WTCC Race of Russia. It was held on 9 June 2013 at the Moscow Raceway in Volokolamsk, Russia, 97 kilometres (60 miles) from Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia\nRace one was won by Yvan Muller of RML who started from pole position. Race two was won by Michel Nykj\u00e6r for NIKA Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Background\nAfter the last round in Austria, Yvan Muller was leading the world drivers' championship and James Nash was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Background\nThe SEAT cars were allowed a 10\u00a0kg weight reduction under the compensation weights system after the Austrian round, taking their weight down to 1,160\u00a0kg. The Chevrolet and Honda cars remained at their maximum weights of 1,190\u00a0kg while the BMW 320 TCs maintained their base weight of 1,150\u00a0kg. The Lada cars continued to be the lightest cars on the grid at 1,130\u00a0kg for their home race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Background\nEuropean Touring Car Cup regular Nikolay Karamyshev joined Campos Racing for his home race, replacing Hugo Valente on a two race deal for Russia and the following round in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller was the quickest driver in Friday's test session which took place on a drying track. Gabriele Tarquini was third having topped the times in the first half of the session, Tom Coronel was second fastest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Testing and free practice\nCoronel was fastest in the first free practice session on Saturday morning ahead of Robert Huff and Muller. Karamyshev was tenth quickest. Muller then led an RML 1\u20132 in the second practice session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Qualifying\nCoronel had been fastest in the first part of qualifying which remained dry despite a threat of rain. A number of drivers were close to dropping out of qualifying in the first session with Huff and Norbert Michelisz getting through after late improvements. The first driver to drop out in Q1 was Fredy Barth who was just over one\u2013hundredth of a second off Michelisz's time. Tiago Monteiro was 22nd after a water pump problem on his Honda Civic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Qualifying\nThe weather changed in Q2 with rain starting to fall meaning there were very few flying laps. Muller set the benchmark time of 1:45.335 with the fastest times being slower in the session as the rain got heavier. Coronel was second ahead of Huff, Michelisz and Tarquini. James Thompson was sixth at Lada's home race. Mehdi Bennani was tenth to secure pole position on the reversed grid for race two, he would then start alongside Liqui Moly Team Engstler's Charles Ng. Yokohama Trophy points leader missed out on the reversed grid in eleventh ahead of his former teammate Tom Chilton in twelfth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Qualifying\nAfter qualifying, both of the Campos Racing cars had their lap times removed. Karamyshev failed to stop and get his car weighed after the session while his teammate Fernando Monje's car failed the scrutineering check. Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team driver Monteiro received a grid penalty for race one when the team decided to change the engine as a precaution after experiencing overheating issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Warm-Up\nThompson led the warm\u2013up session on Sunday morning. Ng ended his session stuck in one of the gravel traps while Tarquini had a minor collision with a tyre wall which ended his running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Race One\nMuller led away from pole, there was some light contact with Coronel at the first corner while Barth and Ng behind collided, putting both out of the race on the spot. Karamyshev was clipped by Ng's car as he tried to avoid the incident and returned to the pits for repairs. Darryl O'Young was also caught out by the collision and returned to the pits for repairs to his suspension. The safety car came out as the debris was cleared up, the race was then red flagged on lap four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Race One\nThe rescue vehicle that was recovering the stricken BMW of Ng broke down and the marshals were required to remove the car manually. When the recovery vehicle had been removed, the race was restarted with the recovery vehicle still in place when it could not be removed, the race continued with a permanent yellow flag at the first corner. Further back there was a close battle between Monteiro, Marc Basseng, Alex MacDowall and Mikhail Kozlovskiy. Up at the front, Coronel had closed in on Muller while Huff was still trying to take the final podium place off Michelisz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Race One\nThroughout the field there was generally very little overtaking with the best overtaking spot at turn one unavailable. Coronel was close but was unable to pass Muller who won, Michelisz was third after holding off Huff's advances. Thompson in fifth secured Lada's best ever result in the World Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Race One\nAfter the race, Oriola, Basseng and Karamyshev were issued with 30\u2013second penalties when the three drivers were deemed to have made false starts. With Oriola losing his eighth place, Stefano D'Aste was promoted into the final points paying position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Race Two\nBefore the race, Ng was dropped to the back of the grid when Engstler Motorsport broke parc ferme regulations to repair his car. This promoted Nykj\u00e6r to the front row alongside Bennani. Bennani had a fast start from pole position and quickly distanced himself from the rest of the field. Oriola passed Tarquini on the opening lap, the Honda then went to retake the position but tapped Oriola and spun him. On the second lap Nykj\u00e6r began to close in on Bennani, setting the fastest lap of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Race Two\nOn lap three Tarquini and Coronel were disputing third place, the two made contact while allowed Thompson to make it a three-way battle. Going up the pit straight at the start of lap four, Huff made it a four-way battle and the quartet ran side by side until Coronel spun around the front of Tarquini's car and collided with Thompson at the first corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233333-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Russia, Report, Race Two\nNykj\u00e6r had caught up with Benanni at the end of lap four and looked likely to take the lead, Bennani stayed up the inside of the Chevrolet at the final corner, Nykj\u00e6r ran out wide and Bennani retained the lead. Nykj\u00e6r took the lead on lap seven. At the end of lap nine Huff attempted a pass on Bennani at the final corner, the move did not stick and it allowed Bennani and Muller who had been close behind to get in front of the SEAT. At the end of lap eleven Huff made another attempt to pass Bennani and pulled it off when Bennani spun on the exit of the corner, dropping the Proteam Racing driver to fourteenth. Nykj\u00e6r held on to win ahead of Muller and Huff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia was the third round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the second running of the FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia. It was held on 28 April 2013 at the Automotodr\u00f3m Slovakia Ring in Orechov\u00e1 Pot\u00f4\u0148, Slovakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia\nThe first race was won by Gabriele Tarquini who took the first win for the Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team and the Honda Civic WTCC. Tom Coronel won race two for ROAL Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Background\nYvan Muller was leading the world drivers' championship while James Nash was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Background\nThe compensation weight system came into force after the first two rounds, the Chevrolet Cruze 1.6Ts continued with the 40\u00a0kg maximum ballast to maintain their weight of 1,190\u00a0kg. The BMW 320 TCs and Lada Grantas lost 20\u00a0kg to drop to 1,130\u00a0kg while the Honda Civic WTCCs and SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs remained at their base weights of 1,150\u00a0kg. The BMWs were allowed to run with three carbon fibre doors to reduce their weight with the original drivers' door remaining the same.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Background\nFernando Monje came into the round with a five\u2013place grid penalty for the first race after his collision with James Thompson at the Race of Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Free practice\nTarquini led a Honda 1\u20132 in the first free practice session with Tiago Monteiro second. Coronel was the fastest BMW driver in third ahead of the RML pair of Muller and Tom Chilton. Fredy Barth ended his session early when he got his Wiechers-Sport BMW stuck in the gravel at turn three while an exhaust fire hindered Zeng\u0151 Motorsport's Norbert Michelisz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Free practice\nTarquini was quickest once again the second practice session, leading Muller and Chilton. Robert Huff was the quickest SEAT driver in fourth and Michelisz was seventh after his problems in the morning session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Qualifying\nHaving led both practice sessions, Tarquini took his second consecutive pole position of the season, leading a Honda 1\u20132\u20133 with Monteiro and Michelisz behind. Tom Boardman stopped just after leaving the pit lane for the first time when his engine misfired, he had already had a new engine fitted after his crash in Marrakech and then required another new engine after free practice two. Five minutes into the first part of qualifying, Darryl O'Young ran wide, crashed his ROAL Motorsport BMW into the barriers at turn nine and brought out the red flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Qualifying\nThe session resumed half an hour later once the barriers had been repaired and after Huff topped the times before the stoppage, Tarquini went to the top of the times by the end of Q1. Thompson, Fernando Monje and Marc Basseng failed to get through to the second session for the first time in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Qualifying\nTarquini was quickest in Q2 with team\u2013mate Monteiro ensuring a Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team front row lockout. Michelisz in third shared the second row with championship leader Muller. Coronel ended up tenth to secure the race two pole position on the reversed grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Qualifying\nHuff failed the ride height check after qualifying and received a ten\u2013place grid penalty for race one as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Warm-Up\nMichelisz was fastest in Sunday morning's warm\u2013up session, the yellow flags were out briefly when Chilton crashed his RML Chevrolet at turn two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Race One\nTarquini started on pole position and built up an early lead with Monteiro and Michelisz behind being pursued by Muller. Chilton made contact with Fredy Barth and then went off at turn six on the second lap and got stuck in the gravel trap. Nash held off Coronel for the first eight laps until the bamboo-engineering ran wide at turn eight and allowed Coronel through. Towards the end of the race Michelisz attempted to take second place off Monteiro but did not succeed and the two factory Hondas finished first and second. Four cars were fighting for the final points position with Mehdi Bennani securing tenth spot and Barth beating Stefano D'Aste to eleventh by five thousandths of a second at the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Race Two\nCoronel started at the front of the grid and got away from the rest of the field at the start, Pepe Oriola retained his second place and Huff was third. Michel Nykj\u00e6r didn't get away at the start but the rest of the field avoided him, Nash went out of the race on the opening lap when he ran into one of the gravel traps. On lap two Muller tapped Monteiro out of fourth place and went through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233334-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of Slovakia, Report, Race Two\nAt half distance Huff was able to pass Oriola and Muller also went through into the podium position with Tarquini going down the other side of the SEAT. Muller, Oriola and Tarquini ran three abreast into the next corner where Oriola and Tarquini touched with Oriola dropping down to sixth. Huff and Muller resumed their battle for position until Huff ran wide at turn one allowing both Muller and Tarquini through, Huff was now fourth ahead of Monteiro. Oriola was sixth and battling with Chilton, Michelisz was also involved until he dropped to the back of the field in the final laps. Coronel claimed the win, his first since the 2011 Race of Japan, Muller was second with race one winner Tarquini third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States\nThe 2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States was the ninth round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the second running of the FIA WTCC Race of the United States. It was held on 8 September 2013 at the Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States\nRace one was won by Tom Chilton of RML, his first victory in the World Touring Car Championship. Race two was won by Gabriele Tarquini of the Castrol Honda World Touring Car Team. Honda secured the 2013 Manufacturers' Championship in race two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Background\nMuller was leading the drivers' championship by 132 points over Michel Nykj\u00e6r. Muller had his first mathematical opportunity to secure a fourth world title in race two. Nykj\u00e6r was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Background\nThe Honda Civic WTCCs gained 10\u00a0kg under the compensation weight re-calculation to take them up to 1,160\u00a0kg. The SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs lost 10\u00a0kg of weight to take them to 1,140\u00a0kg, below the base weight of 1,150\u00a0kg. The Chevrolets, BMWs and Ladas were not changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Background\nFredy Barth returned to Wiechers-Sport, replacing Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez while Tom Boardman returned with Special Tuning Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Testing and free practice\nTiago Monteiro was quickest in Friday's warm\u2013up session, Robert Huff was second. James Thompson damaged his suspension early on and went on to finish 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Testing and free practice\nPepe Oriola led a Chevrolet 1\u20132\u20133 in free practice one ahead of Chilton and Yvan Muller. The session was stopped early on when the ROAL Motorsport car of Tom Coronel crashed into the barriers at turn 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller was on top in practice two ahead of Norbert Michelisz and Hugo Valente. The session was briefly stopped with Valente's Campos Racing teammate Fernando Monje crashed into the barriers at turn 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Qualifying\nMonteiro was the first driver out of the pits at the start of qualifying. Alex MacDowall lost the rear of his Chevrolet Cruze on the exit of turn one and went off the track but he quickly recovered to the circuit, Fernando Monje and Chilton also had similar excursions off the track at the first corner during Q1. Muller was now quickest with the three Honda drivers his nearest challengers until Oriola moved up to third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Qualifying\nMarc Basseng put in a quick lap at the end of the session to move into the top twelve and Mehdi Bennani was another late improver at the expense of Coronel. Muller was still quickest at the end of the session with the Hondas of Monteiro and Michelisz second and third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Qualifying\nMonteiro was the first to post a lap time in Q2 which was quickly beaten by Muller, Chilton then slotted into second. After their first runs most of the cars headed back to the pits while Nykj\u00e6r headed out onto the track to set his time. Tarquini set only one quick lap and went tenth to secure pole position for race two, Chilton then went quickest ahead of Muller to take his first pole position in the WTCC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Qualifying\nAfter qualifying, the seat positions of NIKA Racing's Nykj\u00e6r and the Campos Racing pair of Monje and Valente were found not to comply with the regulations. All three drivers lost their qualifying times and were sent to the back of the grid for both races. Michelisz would start race one from the back of the grid following an engine change before qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Warm-Up\nMichelisz was fastest in the morning warm\u2013up session ahead of Thompson, Chilton was sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Race One\nChilton led away from the rolling start while Monteiro passed Muller to move into second place. By the end of the lap Muller was under pressure from the MacDowall. Bennani spun on lap two with Barth having to avoid the spinning BMW, both dropped to near the back of the field as a result. Darryl O'Young came in to the pits after two laps for repairs. On lap three Monteiro began to challenge Chilton for the lead while further back Coronel was challenging Huff for seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Race One\nBy lap eight there was a train of cars building up behind Huff with his team-mate Basseng attacking Coronel. On lap ten Coronel was able to pass Huff with a small tap on the back bumper of the SEAT. Chilton successfully converted his first WTCC pole position into his first WTCC victory, leading home Monteiro and Muller complete the podium. Monje and Barth were side\u2013by\u2013side at the finish line with Monje narrowly ahead, ahead of them Nykj\u00e6r finished 13th having started at the back of the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Race One\nAfter the race, Boardman and Monje were given 30\u2013second penalties for speeding during the rolling start, dropping them from 12th and 16th to 21st and 23rd respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Race Two\nTarquini took the lead from Bennani at the second corner while Rene Munnich went off the track. Further behind Muller was beginning his move up the field and took sixth off Monteiro. On lap two Huff slowed down with a right front puncture and returned to the pits. Muller had now caught up with Nash who was keeping the Frenchman at bay and allowing Monteiro to keep up with the Chevrolets. Muller made a pass on lap four at the first hairpin, Monteiro then pulled off a similar move on Nash at the final corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Race Two\nOn lap five Coronel also passed Nash who was now in seventh place having run fourth the previous lap. Charles Ng had a spin at turn 6 and after kicking up plenty of dust he was able to continue. Bennani in second was being challenged by Michelisz while Barth passed Nash on lap nine after two laps of trying to overtake. Basseng was tenth with race one retiree O'Young was trying to make a move on the SEAT with race one winner Chilton behind O'Young.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233335-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 FIA WTCC Race of the United States, Report, Race Two\nOn lap 11 Michelisz was beginning to struggle with the pressure of having Muller behind him, the loose rear end of his car producing puffs of smoke from his tyres at several corners around the lap. Chilton had a slide at turn two at the start of lap 12, narrowly avoiding O'Young as he came across the track. Tarquini claimed the victory with Bennani taking second and the independents' victory having suffered from steering problems throughout the race, Michelisz held onto third place ahead of Muller. Honda secured the world manufacturers championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship\nThe 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship season was the second season of the FIA World Endurance Championship auto racing series, co-organized by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) and the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO). The series was open to Le Mans Prototypes and grand tourer-style racing cars meeting four ACO categories. World Championships were awarded to drivers and to LMP1 category manufacturers, and several World Cups and Endurance Trophies were awarded for the series' other categories. The eight race championship began in April at the Silverstone Circuit and ended in November at the Bahrain International Circuit. The season was marred by the death of Allan Simonsen in the 24 Hours of Le Mans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Calendar\nAn initial calendar was published by the FIA World Motor Sport Council on 28 September 2012. Seven of the eight races on the schedule are carried over from 2012, although several events have had their dates changed. The 6 Hours of Silverstone now begins the season in April before Spa in May and the 24 Hours of Le Mans in June. In order to save costs and utilize shipping by sea instead of air, the non-European events have all been grouped at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Calendar\nS\u00e3o Paulo remains as the first post-European event, while the new 6 Hours of Circuit of the Americas replaces the 12 Hours of Sebring as the American round of the series. Fuji and Shanghai are moved forward on the calendar, leaving Bahrain to now close the season in November, allowing cooler temperatures than its September date in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Calendar\nThe Silverstone race weekend was shared with the European Le Mans Series, while the Austin weekend was held in conjunction with the American Le Mans Series, although unlike the 2012 12 Hours of Sebring, both series ran separate races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Regulation changes\nAn additional World Cup was awarded for the 2013 season, with drivers in both LMGTE categories having a unified championship. Further, the LMP2 and LMGTE Am categories had FIA Endurance Trophies awarded for their drivers. The qualifying format of the race weekend was also changed, with teams requiring two drivers each to set two timed laps. The qualifying results were determined based on an average of the four total laps. The new qualifying format has been met with much criticism from drivers. The pre-race warm-up session has also been eliminated from the series, except in instances where extra practice may be necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Regulation changes\nThe LMP2 category saw several rule changes in order to lower costs, including the issuing of balance of performance updates during the course of the season. A limit was also be set on the price of upgrade kits for 2012 cars for teams not purchasing 2013 chassis, while the number of engines and tyres they can utilize over the course of the season have been restricted. Diesel engines were allowed in the LMP2 category for the first time. Limits on tyres was also be set in the LMGTE Am category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Entries\nThe World Endurance Championship received entries in four classes, including Le Mans Prototype 1 (LMP1), Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance\u00a0\u2014 Professional (LMGTE Pro) and Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance\u00a0\u2014 Amateur (LMGTE Am). The entry list for the 2013 season was released by the Automobile Club de l'Ouest on 1 February, and included six LMP1 and twelve LMP2 cars, six LMGTE Pro entries, and eight LMGTE Am cars, bringing the full grid up to thirty-two entrants. Two LMP2 teams, Starworks Motorsport and HVM Status GP later withdrew their full-season entries citing a lack of funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Race results\nThe highest finishing competitor entered in the World Endurance Championship is listed below. Invitational entries may have finished ahead of WEC competitors in individual races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Race results\nEntries are required to complete the timed race as well as to complete 70% of the overall winning car's race distance in order to earn championship points. A single bonus point is awarded to the team and all drivers of the pole position car for each category in qualifying. For the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the race result points allocation was doubled. Due to the 6 Hours of Fuji not completing 75% of the race time, half points were awarded in all championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Drivers Championships\nFour titles are awarded to drivers in the 2013 season. A World Championship is reserved for LMP1 and LMP2 drivers. A World Cup is available for drivers in the LMGTE categories. Further, two FIA Endurance Trophies are also awarded to drivers in the LMP2 and LMGTE Am categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 83], "content_span": [84, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Drivers Championships, FIA World Endurance Championship\u00a0\u2014 Drivers\nAllan McNish, Tom Kristensen and Lo\u00efc Duval won the Championship at the 6 Hours of Shanghai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 127], "content_span": [128, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Drivers Championships, FIA World Endurance Cup for GT Drivers\nGianmaria Bruni won the FIA World Endurance Cup for GT Drivers at the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 123], "content_span": [124, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Drivers Championships, FIA Endurance Trophy for LMP2 Drivers\nBertrand Baguette, Martin Plowman and Ricardo Gonz\u00e1lez earned the Trophy for LMP2 Drivers at the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 122], "content_span": [123, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Drivers Championships, FIA Endurance Trophy for LMGTE Am Drivers\nJamie Campbell-Walter and Stuart Hall secured the Trophy for LMGTE Am Drivers at the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 126], "content_span": [127, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Manufacturers' Championships\nTwo manufacturers' championships are held in the FIA WEC, one for sports prototypes and one for grand tourers. The World Manufacturers' Championship is only open to manufacturer entries in the LMP1 category, and points are only awarded to the highest scoring entry from each manufacturer for each event. The World Cup for GT Manufacturers allows entries from both LMGTE Pro and LMGTE Am to participate, and allows the top two finishing cars from each manufacturer to earn points toward their total. Audi secured their second consecutive World Manufacturers' Championship at the 6 Hours of Fuji. Ferrari won their second consecutive World Cup at the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Teams Championships\nTeams in each of the four FIA WEC categories are eligible for their own FIA Endurance Trophies. Each car is scored separately, unlike 2012 in which team results were combined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Teams Championships, FIA Endurance Trophy for Private LMP1 Teams\nThe FIA Endurance Trophy for Private LMP1 Teams was open only to private teams competing in LMP1 without manufacturer support. Following Strakka Racing's withdrawal mid-season, Rebellion Racing were the only team to complete the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 126], "content_span": [127, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Teams Championships, FIA Endurance Trophy for LMP2 Teams\nThe Trophy for LMP2 Teams was won by the No. 35 car of OAK Racing at the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 118], "content_span": [119, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Teams Championships, FIA Endurance Trophy for LMGTE Pro Teams\nThe Trophy for LMGTE Pro Teams was won by the No. 51 car of AF Corse at the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 123], "content_span": [124, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233336-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, Results and standings, Teams Championships, FIA Endurance Trophy for LMGTE Am Teams\nThe No. 81 car of 8 Star Motorsports won the Trophy for LMGTE Am Teams at the 6 Hours of Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 122], "content_span": [123, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233337-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA 3x3 World Tour\nThe 2013 FIBA 3x3 World Tour was an international 3x3 basketball between 3x3 basketball teams. The tournament is organized by FIBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233337-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA 3x3 World Tour, Finals Qualification\nFive Masters Tournaments were held in five cities in five countries. 12 teams participated in the finals which was held in Istanbul, Turkey on October 4\u20135. Two best teams from each masters tournament qualified for the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233338-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Africa Championship for Women was the 21st FIBA Africa 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 Mozambique from September 20 to 29, with games played at the Pavilh\u00e3o do Maxaquene in Maputo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233338-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Championship for Women, Final standings\nAngola rosterAstrida Vicente, Catarina Camufal, Clarisse Mpaka, Felizarda Jorge, Fineza Eus\u00e9bio, Lu\u00edsa Tom\u00e1s, Madalena Felix, Nacissela Maur\u00edcio, Nadir Manuel, Ngiendula Filipe, S\u00f3nia Guadalupe, Whitney Miguel, Coach: An\u00edbal Moreira", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233339-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Championship for Women squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2013 FIBA Africa Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233340-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup\nThe 2013 FIBA Africa Basketball Club Championship (28th edition), is an international basketball tournament held in Sousse, Tunisia from December 12 to 21, 2013. The tournament, organized by FIBA Africa and hosted by \u00c9toile Sportive du Sahel was contested by 12 clubs split into 2 groups of six, the top four of which qualifying for the knock-out stage, quarter, semifinals and final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233340-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup, Draw\nClub Sportif Constantinois ES Sahel Ferrovi\u00e1rio da Beira LPRC Oilers Sporting Club Alexandria Tali Basket-ball", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233340-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup, Draw\nAl-Ahly Benghazi Kano Pillars Malabo Kings Primeiro de Agosto Recreativo do Libolo Urunani", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233340-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup, Final standings\nPrimeiro de Agosto rosterAgostinho Coelho, Armando Costa, Cedric Isom, Edmir Lucas, Edson Ndoniema, Felizardo Ambr\u00f3sio, Francisco Machado, Hermenegildo Santos, Islando Manuel, Joaquim Gomes, M\u00e1rio Correia, Mutu Fonseca, Coach: Paulo Macedo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233341-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2013 FIBA Africa Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233342-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Men (alternatively the Afrobasket U16) was the 3rd U-16 FIBA Africa championship, organized by FIBA Africa and played under the auspices of the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Basketball, the basketball sport governing body and qualified for the 2014 FIBA Under-17 World Championship. The tournament was held from June 28 to July 7 in Antananarivo, Madagascar, contested by 9 national teams and won by Angola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233342-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship, Final standings\nAngola rosterAires Goubel, Alexandre Jungo, Avelino D\u00f3, Bruno Santos, Cley Cabanga, Cristiano Xavier, Daniel Manuel, Edmilson Miranda, Eric Am\u00e2ndio, M\u00edlton Valente, S\u00edlvio Sousa, Teodoro Hil\u00e1rio, Coach: Manuel Silva (Gi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233343-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women was the 3rd FIBA Africa U16 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 Mozambique from October 5 to 12, with the games played at the Pavilh\u00e3o do Maxaquene in Maputo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233343-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women\nMali defeated Egypt 62\u201361 in the final to win their third title in a row. and securing a spot at the 2014 U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233343-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women, Final standings\nMali rosterAdama Coulibaly, Aminata Diakite, Assetou Diakite, Djeneba N'Diaye, Djenema Dembele, Kadiatou Samake, Kadidia Maiga, Kani Keita, Mariam Coulibaly, Ramata Gadiaka, Saran Traor\u00e9, Coach: Sidiya Oumarou", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233344-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233345-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2013 FIBA Africa U16 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233346-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Women's Clubs Champions Cup\nThe 2013 FIBA Africa Women's Clubs Champions Cup (19th edition), was an international basketball tournament held in Meknes, Morocco, from November 22 to 29, 2013. The tournament, organized by FIBA Africa and hosted by Club Omnisport De Mekn\u00e8s, was contested by 8 clubs split into 2 groups, all of which qualifying for the knock-out stage (quarter, semis and final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233346-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Women's Clubs Champions Cup, Draw\nClub Omnisport De Mekn\u00e8s Dolphins B.C. Primeiro de Agosto USIU Flames", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233346-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Women's Clubs Champions Cup, Final standings\nInterclube rosterAngelina Golome, Astrida Vicente, Catarina Camufal, Elizabeth Mateus, Felizarda Jorge, Indira Jos\u00e9, Italee Lucas, Judite Queta, Meiya Tireira, Merciana Fernandes, Nadir Manuel, Ngiendula Filipe Coach: Apolin\u00e1rio Paquete", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233347-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Africa Women's Clubs Champions Cup squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2013 FIBA Africa Club Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Men, later known as the FIBA AmeriCup, was the qualifying tournament for FIBA Americas, for the 2014 FIBA World Cup, in Spain. This FIBA AmeriCup tournament was held in Caracas, Venezuela, from August 30, to September 11, 2013. The top four teams qualified for the 2014 FIBA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship\nMexico defeated Puerto Rico, in the final, to win their first AmeriCup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held at the Catia Theatre in Caracas on February 28. This was how the teams were seeded:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Draw\nAs hosts, Venezuela picked first the group that they played at, and their final opponent in the preliminary round. Included are the last published FIBA World Rankings prior to the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Format\nThe ten teams were split into two groups. The best four teams of each group advanced to the second round, where the teams played against the four teams from the other group; each team carried over all points earned during the first round, except for those earned in the match against the team that was eliminated. The best four teams of this group advanced to the semifinals and were qualified for the 2014 FIBA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Format\nThe United States, which won the Olympic Gold Medal in 2012, automatically qualified for the 2014 FIBA World Cup and chose not to participate in the 2013 Americas Championship. Originally, Panama were supposed to compete but was replaced by Mexico after FIBA implemented a suspension on the Panamanian Basketball Federation. Mexico was chosen as the next highest placed finisher in Panama's subcategory (COCABA) at the 2012 Centrobasket tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Preliminary round, Group A\nIn Group A, team Puerto Rico secured their first round undefeated, as well as narrowly clinching their win against surprising newcomer Jamaica 88\u201382, while Canada and Uruguay also secured their place for the second round. Brazil lost all four games for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Preliminary round, Group B\nHosts Venezuela lost their first two games against surprising Mexico and Argentina, but managed to win two other games to advance the second round, despite having two losses in the game. The Mexican team lost their three-win streak to the Argentine basketball team, while Paraguay's poor efforts prevented them from winning a single game since their recent game in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Second round\nPuerto Rico narrowly clinched their place for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup against surprising hosts Venezuela in an 85\u201386 thriller of an overtime match. Meanwhile, upstart Mexico also clinched their position for the World Cup from their performance, while Dominican Republic and Argentina also secured their place for the World Cup. Despite the efforts, the Canadian team were unable to put up a defensive and offensive play, thus eliminating the team for the second time since 2011. Newcomers Jamaica was also eliminated, despite winning against the Argentine team, whereas Uruguay were unable to make their debut for the Championship round, losing half of the matches throughout the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233348-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship, Final round, Semifinals\nMexico avenged their first-round loss to world third-ranked Argentina, becoming the first team to advance to the final round. Meanwhile, Puerto Rico avenged their second-round loss against the Dominican team to secure their place in the final match against Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233349-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Women was the qualifying tournament for FIBA Americas at the 2014 FIBA World Championship for Women in Turkey. The tournament was held at the Gimnasio USBI in Xalapa, Mexico from 21\u201328 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233349-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Women\nCuba won their fourth title after defeating Canada 77\u201371 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233349-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Women, Qualification\nQualification was done via FIBA Americas' sub-zones. USA Basketball chose not to enter its national team, because it had already qualified for the 2014 World Championships by winning the 2012 Olympics. The qualified teams were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233349-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Women, Draw\nThe draw was held in San Juan, Puerto Rico on July 12, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233349-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Women, Format, Tie-breaking criteria\nTies are broken via the following the criteria, with the first option used first, all the way down to the last option:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification\nThe qualification for the 2013 FIBA Americas Championship in Venezuela was held as early as 2011 until 2012. There are several stages of qualification for some teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, Qualification format\nEach FIBA Americas subzone has a specific number of berths, generally based on the relative strengths of its member national teams. For the 2013 FIBA Americas Championship, the berths distribution is:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, Qualification format, North America\nFor the North American zone, since there are only 2 member teams (Canada and the United States), and there are 2 berths, this means there no more qualification games to be held. Furthermore, the United States won the 2012 Olympic gold medal and was thus automatically qualified for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup, thus allowing Canada to earn an automatic qualification. This means they do not have to participate, resulting in their non-participation. This opens up an extra berth, which was awarded to the fourth placed team in the South American Basketball Championship 2012. With hosts Venezuela losing in the final, the fifth placed team was invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, Qualification format, Central America and Caribbean\nSome teams from the Central America and Caribbean Commission Zone had to qualify for the 2012 Centrobasket. The qualifying tournament was the 2011 FIBA CBC Championship for Caribbean teams. A FIBA COCABA Championship was supposedly held for teams from Mexico and Central America, but was no longer held; the supposed participants in that tournament automatically qualified to the 2012 Centrobasket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 98], "content_span": [99, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, Qualification format, South America\nThe 2012 South American Basketball Championship determined the teams that will qualify for 2013 FIBA Americas Championship. Since the USA is skipping this tournament, this opened up an additional berth for South American teams, increasing the number of berths from three to four, excluding Venezuela's berth as a host. This brings the number of South America's teams to five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, 2011 FIBA CBC Championship\nThe 2011 FIBC CBC Championship in the Bahamas serves as the qualifier for the 2012 Centrobasket for Caribbean national teams. The top three advance to the Centrobasket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, 2011 FIBA CBC Championship, Final ranking\nThis were the final rankings. The top 3 teams qualify for the 2012 Centrobasket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, 2012 Centrobasket, Suspension of Panama\nFIBA suspended the Panamanian Basketball Federation \"for many problems that Panama has been going through for several years due to conflicts of interest between two Directives that manifest hold the same authority,\" as announced by FIBA Secretary-General Patrick Baumann. This means Panama's \"national teams and clubs and referees, cannot participate in any international competition.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 86], "content_span": [87, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233350-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship qualification, South American Basketball Championship 2012, Final ranking\nThis is the final ranking for the participating teams The top three teams excluding Venezuela qualify, but with the non-participation of the United States, the fourth-best team excluding Venezuela was also included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 105], "content_span": [106, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233351-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Americas Championship squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2013 FIBA Americas Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233352-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia 3x3 Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia 3x3 Championship is the first edition of the FIBA Asia 3X3 championship. The games were held at Doha, Qatar between 15 May and 16 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233353-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia 3x3 Under-18 Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia Under-18 3x3 Championship for Boys and Girls is the first edition of the FIBA Asia's 3x3 championship for boys and girls under the age of 18. The games were held at Bangkok, Thailand from 22 May to 24 May 2013. The Philippines and Taiwan clinched the inaugural FIBA Asia 3x3 Under-18 Championship for Boys and Girls, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233354-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Champions Cup\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia Champions Cup was the 24th staging of the FIBA Asia Champions Cup, the international basketball club tournament of FIBA Asia. The tournament was held in Amman, Jordan in September 13\u201321, 2013. The main venue was the Prince Hamzah Court. This marked the first occasion when Jordan have hosted any FIBA Asia event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233354-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Champions Cup\nFoolad Mahan from Iran, after going undefeated in the entire tournament, won its first ever FIBA Asia Champions Cup title after defeating Al-Rayyan from Qatar in the final game, 84\u201374. It was the fifth time a club from Iran has won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233354-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Champions Cup\nASU from the hosts Jordan, on the other hand, finished third in the tournament after defeating Al-Hala from Bahrain in the third-place game, 107-76.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233354-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Champions Cup, Qualification\nAccording to the FIBA Asia rules, the number of participating teams in the FIBA Asia Champions Cup is ten. Each of the six FIBA ASIA Sub-Zones had one place, and the host was automatically qualified. The other three places are allocated to the zones according to performance in the 2012 FIBA Asia Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Men was the intercontinental championship for basketball organized by FIBA Asia that served as the qualifying tournament for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup in Spain. The tournament was held from August 1\u201311 in Metro Manila, Philippines. Beirut, Lebanon was supposed to host the tournament but the hosting rights was given to the Philippines citing the Syrian Civil War and security concerns in the Middle East in general. This was also the last Asian Championships that served as the qualifying round for the FIBA Basketball World Cup, as a qualifying window will be used starting 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Hosting\nDuring the 2012 FIBA Asia Cup in Japan, FIBA Asia accepted the bids of the Philippines, Lebanon and Iran to host the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The Philippines' bid, which was presented by Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP; the national basketball federation) president Manuel V. Pangilinan, SBP secretary-general Sonny Barrios, Philippine Basketball Association commissioner Chito Salud and former FIBA Asia secretary general Moying Materlino, included hosting the games at the newly constructed Mall of Asia Arena. The Lebanese bid was presented by national team player Fadi El Khatib, which was a 10-minute video demonstration of the venues, of which Ghazir Club Court would be the primary arena. The FIBA Asia Executive Committee awarded the tournament to Lebanon, which shall be hosting its first championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Hosting\nBeirut was the host of the 2012 FIBA Asia Champions Cup, the Asian club championship. However, the final between Lebanese club Al-Riyadi and Mahram Tehran was put off due to political tension in the city. In a statement, FIBA Asia secretary general Hagop Khajirian said that \"FIBA Asia will take a decision on holding the Final Game of the event very soon\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Hosting\nHowever, with the escalating Syrian civil war, FIBA Asia announced on January 2013 that they shall move the championship to the Philippines, after the SBP expressed willingly to still host the event. This would be the first time in 40 years that the Philippines hosted the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Qualification\nAccording to the FIBA Asia rules, the host nation Philippines and 2012 FIBA Asia Cup champions Iran automatically qualified. East Asia, West Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Gulf each had two berths while Central Asia and South Asia each had one slot allotted. The other four places are allocated to the zones according to performance in the 2012 FIBA Asia Cup. Therefore, with Japan, Qatar, China, and Chinese Taipei finishing in the top four in that tournament other than Iran and Philippines which were both direct qualifiers, East Asia gained another three berths while the Persian Gulf gained an additional slot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Qualification\nIncluded are the teams' FIBA World Rankings prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Qualification\nAmong teams that participated in 2011, Uzbekistan and Indonesia failed to qualify, and Syria did not participate. Returnees include Kazakhstan, which skipped the 2011 tournament after finishing ninth in 2009, Saudi Arabia, which failed to qualify in 2009 and last participated in 2005, Thailand, which last participated in 2001, and Hong Kong, which returned after failing to qualify in 2009 and 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Qualification, Suspension of the Lebanese federation\nLebanon originally qualified for the tournament after placing second in the 2013 West Asian Basketball Championship. However, after the country's basketball federation was suspended indefinitely by FIBA due to unresolved conflicts within the country's national basketball federation, they were replaced by fourth-placer Iraq, who declined due to lack of preparation time, and FIBA Asia instead invited the United Arab Emirates to replace them. After the United Arab Emirates declined the invitation for the same reason, and FIBA's confirmed the Lebanese federation's suspension, FIBA Asia decided not to invite any other team, reducing the total number of teams to 15. This left Group B with only three teams, and some games were moved from the Ninoy Aquino Stadium to compensate for the lost games involving Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Qualification, Suspension of the Lebanese federation\nThis meant all Group B teams thus automatically qualified for the second round, regardless of the outcome of their first round matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Venues\nThe Mall of Asia Arena (MOA Arena) was chosen as the main venue for the championship, while the Ninoy Aquino Stadium served as the second venue for the tournament. Treston College Gym, the University of Makati Gym, the Makati Coliseum and the Cuneta Astrodome were the designated practice venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Draw\nThe draw was held at the Centennial Ballroom of the Manila Hotel on June 6. Unlike earlier championships where the draw favored stronger teams, FIBA Asia mandated that it will be a \"pure draw\", or the teams were not seeded, with the host country (the Philippines) picking 13th. At the time of the draw, two participants from the SEABA region were yet to be determined and were designated as \"Southeast Asia 1\" and \"Southeast Asia 2\". A separate draw would later be held to determine which teams would be designated as \"Southeast Asia 1\" and \"Southeast Asia 2\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Squads\nEach team has a roster of twelve players. Only one naturalized player per team is allowed by FIBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Marketing, Broadcasting\nFIBA announced that Chinese state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) earned the rights to broadcast FIBA events in China from 2013 to 2016, and that a record number of Asian broadcasters are to telecast the event. At least some matches were broadcast in 40 countries and territories all over the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Marketing, Broadcasting\nIn the Philippines, Solar Entertainment Corporation's Basketball TV is the official home broadcaster airing all matches from the Mall of Asia Arena. Solar has the rights to all FIBA telecasts in the Philippines until 2015. For free TV, ABC Development Corporation's flagship network, TV5, aired games involving the Philippines and the immediately preceding match, while AksyonTV aired the afternoon matches. BTV aired all games of the knockout round, while TV5 aired two quarterfinal games, the semifinals, third-place playoff and final, and AksyonTV aired a quarterfinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Marketing, Broadcasting\nThe TV5 airings of Philippines games were consistently among the top ten telecasts of the night throughout the tournament, and even beat shows from ABS-CBN and GMA in Mega Manila. According to Nielsen Media Research, TV5's Mega Manila audience share on 10 August was 33.1%, as against GMA's 30.1% and ABS-CBN's 24.3%; numbers for 11 August improved, with TV's 38.1% beating GMA's 31.5% and ABS-CBN's 18.3%. National audience share showed TV5 winning with a 35.3% share, or about 5.7 million people, against 28.1% of GMA and 25% of ABS-CBN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233355-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship, Marketing, Soundtrack\nThere were 2 main soundtracks made for the Asian Championship, which was heard over in Philippine TV Broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233356-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Final\nThe final match of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship was the game of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship in the Philippines to determine the champion and runner-up. The game currently holds the most watched FIBA game in a tournament, even beating the FIBA Basketball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233357-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group A\nGroup A of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship took place from 1 to 3 August 2013. This is the preliminary round of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship, with the three teams with the best records (Chinese Taipei, the Philippines and Jordan) advancing to 2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group E. Saudi Arabia, the last placed team, was relegated to the 13th\u201315th classification round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233357-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group A\nAll games were played at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233357-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group A, Summary\nOn the first day, Chinese Taipei defeated Jordan in a close match; meanwhile, the Philippines expectedly won against Saudi Arabia, but on a closer-than-expected winning margin. The next day, the Taiwanese blew out Saudi Arabia on their second match, while the Philippines outlasted Jordan in the final minutes to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233357-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group A, Summary\nIn a game that is colored by the killing of the Philippine Coast Guard to a Taiwanese fisherman at the waters near Batanes, and the subsequent withdrawal of invitation from the 2013 William Jones Cup by Taiwanese to the Philippines, which were defending champions, Chinese Taipei banked on Lu Cheng-ju and Lin Chih-chieh to defeat the Filipinos to win the group. In a virtual elimination game, the Jordanians won by 16 points to eliminate the Saudi Arabians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233358-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group B\nGroup B of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship took place from 1 to 3 August 2013. This is the preliminary round of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship, with the three teams with the best records advance to 2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group E.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233358-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group B\nThe competing teams are Hong Kong, Japan and Qatar. Lebanon originally qualified for the tournament, but was replaced by 2013 Gulf Basketball Championship fourth-placer United Arab Emirates after the former was suspended indefinitely by FIBA Asia due to internal squabbles in its national basketball federation. FIBA Asia eventually decided not to issue a replacement. This caused the remaining teams to qualify automatically to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233358-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group B, Summary\nQatar and Japan fought to a close opening game, which was won by the Qataris after Jarvis Hayes split his free throws with eight seconds remaining to provide the winning margin. The two teams then easily won over Hong Kong. All three teams qualified to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233359-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group C\nGroup C of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship took place from 1 to 3 August 2011. This is the preliminary round of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship, with the three teams with the best record (Iran, Korea, China) advancing to 2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group F. Malaysia, the last placed team, was relegated to the 13th\u201315th classification round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233359-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group C\nAll games were played at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233359-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group C, Summary\nIran opened the 2013 championship with an unprecedented 90-point win against Malaysia. In a close match between China and Korea, the match was tied with 30 seconds left when Cho Sung-min made his free throws to give the Koreans a two-point lead. Zhou Peng missed a shot for China, and Cho made both of his free throws off an intentional foul. The Koreans held on for the win when Chinese missed three more shots. On the next day, the Chinese scored a 91-point win against Malaysia, thereby eliminating them. Iran maintained a healthy lead against Korea in the second half, never relinquishing it to qualify for the next round. On the final day, the Malaysians had a better offensive output, but were still beaten by Korea, and Iran never relinquished the lead against China to win the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233360-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group D\nGroup D of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship took place from 1 to 3 August 2011. This is the preliminary round of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship, with the three teams with the best record (Kazakhstan, Bahrain and India) advancing to 2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group F.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233360-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group D\nThree games will be played at the Ninoy Aquino Stadium in Manila, Philippines, while the other three games will be played at the Mall of Asia Arena at nearby Pasay. Thailand, the last placed team, was relegated to the 13th\u201315th classification round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233360-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group D, Summary\nIn Manila, Bahrain defeated India in their opening round via overtime; Mohamed Kawaid scored on a three-pointer to tie the game in regulation, while Mohamed Ebrahim converted a three-pointer of his own at with 49 seconds left in OT to put the Bahrainis up for good. In Pasay, the Kazakhs won when they built a large enough lead at the end of the third quarter that made a comeback from Thailand impossible. In a game of first day winners, the match in Manila went into overtime anew when Jerri Johnson scored on a three-pointer with 15 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233360-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group D, Summary\nIn the overtime, Konstantin Dvirnyy scored the marginal free-throws with 21 seconds left to win the game for Kazakhstan. Elsewhere, India scored an easy win against Thailand in the game held at Pasay. On the final day, Bahrain and Kazakhstan easily beat Thailand and India respectively, qualifying both to the second round; India's win against Thailand the night earlier qualified them for the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233361-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group E\nGroup E of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship will take place from 5 to 7 August 2013. This is the second round of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The four teams with the best record advance to 2013 FIBA Asia Championship final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233361-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group E\nAll games will be played at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay, Philippines. The competing teams are top three teams in Group A and Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233361-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group E, Standings\nThe results and the points of the matches between the same teams that were already played during the preliminary round shall be taken into account for the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233362-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group F\nGroup F of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship was to take place from 5 to 7 August 2013. This is the Second round of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The four teams with the best record advance to 2013 FIBA Asia Championship final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233362-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group F\nAll games will be played at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay, Philippines. The competing teams are top three teams in Group C and Group D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233362-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship Group F, Standings\nThe results and the points of the matches between the same teams that were already played during the preliminary round shall be taken into account for the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233363-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship classification rounds\nThe classification rounds of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship are games of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship in the Philippines to determine the final rankings of teams ranked 9th and below. Games, which will be held from August 5 to 11, are held in the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay and in the Ninoy Aquino Stadium in nearby Manila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233363-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship classification rounds\nThere are two classification rounds, both single-elimination tournaments: for 13th and 9th places. The classification for 13th place involves teams that finished last in the preliminary round. Since there were only three teams in Group B, the fourth-placed team in Group A received a bye to the 13th place playoff, with the loser between the teams from Groups C and D ranked 15th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233363-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship classification rounds\nFor the classification for 9th place, teams that finished fifth and sixth in the second round participate. The losers in the first round play for 11th place, while the winners place 9th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233363-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship classification rounds\nFor classification for 8th place and better, see 2013 FIBA Asia Championship final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233363-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship classification rounds, Classification 13th\u201315th\nThese are the teams that finished last in their respective preliminary round groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 75], "content_span": [76, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233363-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship classification rounds, Classification 9th\u201312th\nThese are the teams that finished fifth and sixth in their respective second round groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233364-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship final round\nThe final round of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship was a series of games in the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship in the Philippines to determine the final rankings of teams ranked 8th and above. Games were held in the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay from August 9 to 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233364-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship final round\nThe final round was a single-elimination tournament with a consolation round for fifth place and a third-place playoff. The finalists and the winner of the third place playoff qualified for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233365-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women was the qualifying tournament for FIBA Asia at the 2014 FIBA World Championship for Women in Turkey. The tournament was held in Bangkok, Thailand from October 27 to November 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233365-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women\nThe championship was divided into two levels: Level I and Level II. The two lowest finishers of Level I met the top two finishers of Level II to determine which teams qualify for the top Level of the 2015 Championship. The losers were relegated to Level II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233365-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women\nJapan defeatedSouth Korea 65\u201343 in the final to capture their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233365-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women, Participating teams\nAccording to FIBA Asia Rules, the number of participating teams in the FIBA Asia Championship for Women was set at twelve. In order to balance the level of competitions, the Championship shall be played in two levels: Level I and Level II. The number of the teams in Level I is set at six. The six teams of Level I are set with reference to the 2011 FIBA Asia Championship for Women. The six teams of Level II are set with reference to the first six teams registered with respect to the deadlines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233365-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women, Squads\nEach team has twelve players on its roster. FIBA permits one naturalised player for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233365-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women, Qualifying round\nWinners are promoted to Level I of the 2015 FIBA Asia Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233365-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women, Final round\nTop three teams qualify to the 2014 FIBA World Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233366-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship qualification\nThe qualification for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship was held in late 2012 from early 2013 with the Gulf region, West Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Central Asia and South Asia each conducting tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233366-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship qualification, Central Asia\nThe qualification for Central Asia consisted of a single game. On May 7, 2013, in Astana, Kazakhstan beat Uzbekistan 80\u201360 and was qualified for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233366-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship qualification, East Asia\nThe 3rd East Asian Basketball Association Championship for Men is the qualifying tournament for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. It also serves as a regional championship involving East Asian basketball teams. the five best teams qualifies for 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The tournament was held from May 16 to 21, 2013 in Incheon, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233366-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship qualification, Gulf\nThe 13th Gulf Basketball Championship is the qualifying tournament for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. it also serves as a regional championship. the three best teams qualifies for FIBA Asia Championship 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233366-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship qualification, South Asia\nThe 2013 South Asian Basketball Association Qualifying Round for the 27th FIBA Asia Championship is the qualifying tournament for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The winner qualifies for 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The tournament will be held from June 2 to 4, 2013 in New Delhi, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 53], "content_span": [54, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233366-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship qualification, Southeast Asia\nThe 10th Southeast Asia Basketball Association Championship is the qualifying tournament for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship; it also serves as a regional championship involving Southeast Asian basketball teams. It will be held on June 20 to June 23, 2013 at Medan, Indonesia. The two best teams will qualify for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233366-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship qualification, West Asia\nThe 2013 West Asian Basketball Championship is the qualifying tournament for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. It also serves as a regional championship involving West Asian basketball teams. the two best teams excluding Iran qualifies for 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The tournament was held from February 7 to February 9, 2013 in Tehran, Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233367-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Championship squads\nThese are the team rosters of the 15 teams competing in the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233368-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship was the qualifying tournament for FIBA Asia at the 2014 FIBA Under-17 World Championship. The tournament was held in Tehran, Iran from September 25 to October 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233368-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship\nChina successfully defended their title against the first time finalists, the Philippines, 85-78, in the championship match considered as the most competitive finals so far in FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship history. Both teams, as well as Japan, who defeated Chinese Taipei for the bronze medal, 85-72, will represent FIBA Asia in the 2014 FIBA Under-17 World Championship in United Arab Emirates in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233368-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship, Qualification\nAccording to the FIBA Asia rules, the number of participating teams in the 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship was set at sixteen (16). Each zone had two places, and the hosts (Iran) and holders (China) were automatically qualified. The other four places were allocated to the zones according to performance in the 2011 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233369-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship Qualification\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship qualification was held in late 2012 and early 2013 with the Gulf region, West Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Central Asia and South Asia each conducting tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233369-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship Qualification, Central Asia\nThe 2013 CABA Under-16 Championship was held at Shchuchinsk, Kazakhstan from June 26, 2013 . The winner teams qualifies for 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233369-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship Qualification, East Asia\nAll the others withdrew, so \u00a0Chinese Taipei,\u00a0Hong Kong,\u00a0Japan,\u00a0South Korea qualified automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233369-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship Qualification, South Asia\nThe 2013 SABA Under-16 Championship was held at Dakar, Bangladesh from July 3 to 5, 2013. The winner teams qualifies for 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233369-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship Qualification, Southeast Asia\nThe 2nd SEABA Under-16 Championship was held at Yogyakarta, Indonesia from July 14 to 18, 2013.The two best teams qualifies for 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233369-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship Qualification, West Asia\nThe 2012 West Asian Under-15 Championship was held at Amman, Jordan from September 26 to 28, 2013. The three best teams excluding Iran qualifies for 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233370-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women is the qualifying tournament for FIBA Asia at the 2014 FIBA Under-17 World Championship for Women. The tournament was held in Colombo, Sri Lanka from November 23 to November 30. Sugathadasa Indoor Stadium was the main venue for the entire tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233370-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women\nChina defeated Japan in the finals, 62\u201350 to notch their second title, while Korea thrashed Chinese Taipei in the battle for Third Place, 86\u201364. China, Japan and Korea will represent FIBA Asia at the 2014 FIBA Under-17 World Championship for Women which will be held in Slovakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233370-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women\nThe championship was divided into two levels: Level I and Level II. The two lowest finishers of Level I met the top two finishers of Level II to determine which teams qualified for the top Level of the 2015 Championship. The losers were relegated to Level II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233370-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women, Qualifying round\nWinners are promoted to Level I of the 2015 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233370-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women, Final round\nTop three teams qualify to the 2014 FIBA Under-17 World Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233371-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA EuroChallenge Final Four\nThe 2013 FIBA EuroChallenge Final Four was the concluding tournament of the 2012\u201313 FIBA EuroChallenge season. The Final Four was held in the Kar\u015f\u0131yaka Arena at Izmir, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233372-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe SuperCup Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe SuperCup Women was the fourth edition of the FIBA Europe SuperCup Women. It was held on 29 October 2013 at the Palace of Sports \"Uralochka\" in Yekaterinburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233373-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship was the 27th edition of the European Under-16 Basketball Championship. 16 teams participated in the competition, which was held in Kyiv, Ukraine, from 8 to 18 August 2013. Turkey were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233373-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship, First round\nThe first-round groups draw took place on 8 December 2012 in Freising, Germany. In this round, sixteen teams are allocated in four groups of four teams each. The top three teams of each group will advance to the Qualifying Round. The last teams will play in the Classification Group G first, then in the 9th\u201316th place playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233373-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship, Second round\nTwelve advancing teams from the First Round were allocated in two groups of six teams each. The top four teams of each group will advance to the quarterfinals. The last two teams of each group will play for the 9th\u201316th place against the teams from the Group G.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233373-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship, Classification Group G\nThe last team of each group of the First Round will compete in this Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233374-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship Division C\nThe 2013 FIBA U16 European Championship Division C was held in Gibraltar, from 2 to 7 July 2013. Five teams participated in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233375-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women is the 25th edition of the FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women. 16 teams feature in the competition, held in Varna and Albena, Bulgaria from 1 to 11 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233375-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women, First round\nThe first-round groups draw took place on 8 December 2012 in Freising, Germany. In the first round, the sixteen teams were allocated in four groups of four teams each. The top three teams of each group will qualify for the Second Round. The last team of each group will play in the Classification Group G first, then in the 9th\u201316th place playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233375-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women, Second round\nTwelve advancing teams from the First Round will be allocated in two groups of six teams each. The top four teams of each group will advance to the quarterfinals. The last two teams of each group will play for the 9th\u201316th place against the teams from the Group G.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233375-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women, Classification Group G\nThe last team of each group of the First Round will compete in this Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233376-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division B\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division B was the 10th edition of the Division B of the European basketball championship for women's national under-16 teams. It was played in Matosinhos, Portugal, from 1 to 11 August 2013. Serbia women's national under-16 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233376-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division B, First round\nIn the first round, the teams were drawn into four groups. The first two teams from each group will advance to the Quarterfinal Groups E and F and the other teams will advance to the 9th\u201317th place classification (Groups G, H and I).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233377-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division C\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division C was the 9th edition of the Division C of the FIBA U16 Women's European Championship, the third tier of the European women's under-16 basketball championship. It was played in Gibraltar from 2 to 7 July 2013. Cyprus women's national under-16 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233378-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship was the 30th edition of the FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship. 16 teams participated in the competition, held in Latvia, from 18 to 28 July 2013. Croatia were the defending champions. Turkey became the new champions, taking their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233378-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship, First round\nThe first-round groups draw took place on 8 December 2012 in Freising, Germany. In the first round, the sixteen teams were allocated in four groups of four teams each. The top three teams of each group qualified for the Second Round. The last team of each group played in the Classification Group G first, then in the 9th\u201316th place playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233378-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship, Second round\nTwelve advancing teams from the First Round were allocated in two groups of six teams each. The top four teams of each group advanced to the quarterfinals. The last two teams of each group played for the 9th\u201316th place against the teams from the Group G.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233378-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship, Classification Group G\nThe last team of each group of the First Round competed in this Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233379-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship Division B\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship Division B was an international basketball competition held in Macedonia in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233380-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship Division C\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Mai\u014d T. (talk | contribs) at 19:16, 14 April 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233380-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship Division C\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship Division C was the 9th edition of the Division C of the FIBA U18 European Championship, the third tier of the European men's under-18 basketball championship. It was played in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, from 15 to 20 July 2013. San Marino men's national under-18 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233381-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women was the 30th edition of the European Under-18 Women's Basketball Championship. 16 teams featured in the competition, held in Vukovar and Vinkovci, Croatia, from 15 to 25 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233381-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women, First round\nThe first-round groups draw took place on 8 December 2012 in Freising, Germany. In the first round, the sixteen teams were allocated in four groups of four teams each. The top three teams of each group will qualify for the Second Round. The last team of each group will play in the Classification Group G first, then in the 9th\u201316th place playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233381-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women, Second round\nTwelve advancing teams from the First Round will be allocated in two groups of six teams each. The top four teams of each group will advance to the quarterfinals. The last two teams of each group will play for the 9th\u201316th place against the teams from the Group G.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233381-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women, Classification Group G\nThe last team of each group of the First Round will compete in this Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233382-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women Division C\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship for Women Division C was the 8th edition of the Division C of the FIBA U18 Women's European Championship, the third tier of the European women's under-18 basketball championship. It was played in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, from 15 to 20 July 2013. Andorra women's national under-18 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233383-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship was the 16th edition of the FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. The competition was played in Tallinn, Estonia, from 9 to 21 July 2013. For the first time competition was increased to 20 participating teams from tournament scheme of 16 teams which was introduced in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233383-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, First round\nThe first-round groups draw took place on 8 December 2012 in Freising, Germany. In this round, the twenty teams were allocated in four groups of five teams each. The top three advanced to the Second Round. The last two teams of each group played in the Classification Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233384-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship Division B\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship Division B was the ninth edition of the Division B of the FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, the second-tier of European U-20 basketball. As in 2008, the tournament was held in Romania. Pite\u0219ti was the host city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233384-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship Division B, First round\nTwelve teams were allocated in two groups or six teams each. The top four teams advanced to the Quarterfinals, whereas the last two teams played for the 9th\u201312th place in the Classification Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233384-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship Division B, Classification Games for 9th \u2013 12th place\nThe last two teams of each group competed in a round robin for the 9th\u201312th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233385-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women was the 12th edition of the FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women. 16 teams participated in the competition, held in Samsun, Turkey, from 4 to 14 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233385-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women, First round\nThe first-round groups draw took place on 8 December 2012 in Freising, Germany. In the first round, the sixteen teams were allocated in four groups of four teams each. The top three teams of each group will qualify for the Second Round. The last team of each group will play in the Classification Group G first, then in the 9th\u201316th place playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233385-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women, Second round\nTwelve advancing teams from the First Round were allocated in two groups of six teams each. The top four teams of each group advanced to the quarterfinals. The last two teams of each group played for the 9th\u201316th place against the teams from the Group G.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233385-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women, Classification Group G\nThe last team of each group of the First Round competed in this Classification Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 72], "content_span": [73, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233386-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women Division B\nThe 2013 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women Division B was the ninth edition of the Division B of the Women's European basketball championship for national under-20 teams. It was held in Albena, Bulgaria, from 4 to 14 July 2013. Belgium women's national under-20 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233387-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2013 FIBA Intercontinental Cup was the 23rd edition of the FIBA Intercontinental Cup for men's professional basketball clubs and the 22nd edition of the tournament being in the form of a true intercontinental tournament for clubs. The 2 game aggregate score tournament took place at the Gin\u00e1sio Jos\u00e9 Corr\u00eaa arena in Barueri, S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil, on October 4 and October 6, 2013, in order to determine the world club champion. The tournament was contested between the 2012\u201313 season EuroLeague champions, Olympiacos, and the 2013 FIBA Americas League champions, Pinheiros Sky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233388-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Oceania Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Oceania Championship for Men was the 21st edition of the tournament. The tournament featured a two-game series between Australia and New Zealand between 14 and 18 August. It also served as the qualifying tournament of FIBA Oceania for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup in Spain. The first game was held in Auckland, New Zealand followed by the second game in Canberra, Australia. Australia won their 18th title in the tournament, but the two teams still advanced to the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233389-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Oceania Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Oceania Championship for Women was the 15th edition of the tournament. The tournament featured a two-game series between Australia and New Zealand between 14 and 18 August. Game one was held in Auckland, New Zealand followed by the second game in Canberra, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233390-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Stankovi\u0107 Continental Champions' Cup\nThe 2013 FIBA Stankovi\u0107 Continental Champions' Cup, or 2013 FIBA Mini World Cup, officially called Dongfeng Yueda KIA FIBA Stankovi\u0107 Continental Champions' Cup 2013, were the 10th and 11th annual FIBA Stankovi\u0107 Continental Champions' Cup tournaments. They were held as two separate round-robin tournaments, in Lanzhou and Guangzhou, from June 27 to July 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233391-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship\nThe 2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship(Czech: Mistrovstv\u00ed sv\u011bta FIBA do 19 let 2013) was hosted by the Czech Republic from June 27 to July 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233391-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship\nThe United States won their fifth title by defeating Serbia 82\u201368 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233391-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship, Format\nTeams played a round robin in the preliminary round, with the top three teams advancing to the main round. The teams played against the teams from the other groups. The top four teams advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233391-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the tournament was held on 15 January 2013 in Prague, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233392-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women\nThe 2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women (Lithuanian:2013 m. FIBA iki 19 met\u0173 pasaulio moter\u0173 \u010dempionatas)was hosted by Lithuania from July 18 until July 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233392-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women\nThe United States won their fifth straight and sixth overall title by defeating France 69\u201363 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233392-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women, Format\nTeams played a round robin in the preliminary round, with the top three teams advancing to the main round. The teams played against the teams from the other groups. The top four teams advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233392-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women, Group stage\nThe draw for the tournament was held on 17 January 2013 in Vilnius, Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or\nThe 2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or Gala was the fourth year for FIFA's awards for the top football players and coaches of the year. The awards were given out in Z\u00fcrich on 13 January 2014. The deadline for voting was 15 November 2013 but was extended to 29 November 2013 for the first time in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or\nPortugal winger Cristiano Ronaldo won the Ballon d'Or award as the World Player of the Year. It was his second Ballon d'Or, after winning the award in 2008, as well as his first FIFA Ballon d'Or. He became the first and only player in the 21st century to win the award after going trophyless during the year. With the win, he ended Lionel Messi's domination of the award. Nadine Angerer was announced as the Women's World Player of the Year recipient, while Jupp Heynckes claimed the World Coach of the Year for Men's Football, and Silvia Neid the World Coach of the Year for Women's Football. The ninety-minute ceremony was hosted by Fernanda Lima along with Ruud Gullit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Voting\nThe deadline for voting was 15 November 2013. However, for the first time ever, on 20 November 2013, FIFA announced that voting was extended to 29 November 2013 \"after not receiving a response of enough eligible voters before the original deadline\", when Lionel Messi was leading the vote. The winners were announced on 13 January 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Voting\nDuring the voting and prior to it, bookmakers and betting sites had Lionel Messi as the favorite to win the award for the fifth consecutive time, with Frank Ribery coming second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Winners and nominees, FIFA Ballon d'Or\nA shortlist of 23 male players was compiled by members of FIFA's Football Committee as well as a group of experts from France Football. It was announced on 29 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Winners and nominees, FIFA Ballon d'Or\nThere were three voters per FIFA member federation: one journalist and the coaches and captain of the national men's team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Winners and nominees, FIFA Ballon d'Or\nThe following 20 men were originally in contention for the 2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Winners and nominees, FIFA Ballon d'or Prix d'Honneur\nPel\u00e9 was given an honorary Ballon d'Or, having won three FIFA World Cups with Brazil but never an individual award from FIFA, as during his playing career only European-based players were eligible to win the original Ballon d'Or.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Contenders, FIFA Women's World Player of the Year\nOn 29 October 2012, a 10-player shortlist was unveiled for the FIFA's Women's Player of the Year, which was chosen by experts from FIFA's Committee for Women's Football and the FIFA Women's World Cup and a group of experts from France Football. It was announced on 29 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Contenders, FIFA Women's World Player of the Year\nThe three finalists for the award, announced on 9 December 2013, are indicated in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Contenders, FIFA World Coach of the Year for Men's Football\nThis award will be decided by the same voters and system as that of the men's player award. The shortlist of candidates was announced on 29 October 2013, with the three finalists (indicated in bold type) announced on 9 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 82], "content_span": [83, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233393-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or, Contenders, FIFA World Coach of the Year for Women's Football\nThis award will be decided by the same voters and system as that of the women's player award. The shortlist was announced on 29 October 2013, and the three finalists (indicated in bold type) were announced on 9 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 84], "content_span": [85, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup was the seventh edition of the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. Overall, this was the 17th edition of a world cup in beach soccer since the establishment of the Beach Soccer World Championships which ran from 1995\u20132004 but was not governed by FIFA. It took place from 18\u201328 September 2013 at Tahua To'ata Stadium (Stade Tahua To'ata) in Papeete, Tahiti, French Polynesia and was the fourth tournament to have taken place outside Brazil. This was the second tournament to take place since the establishment of a longer two-year cycle of tournaments. This was also the first FIFA tournament held in a Pacific country other than New Zealand, and the first senior FIFA tournament took place in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup\nThe tournament was confirmed in March 2010. Russia successfully defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualifying rounds, African Zone\nThe CAF qualifiers took place from 22\u201326 May 2013 in El Jadida, Morocco to determine the two teams for the finals. The qualifiers were originally scheduled for 10\u201314 April, and then 29 May-2 June 2013 in Casablanca. Senegal and Ivory Coast qualified for the two available spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualifying rounds, Asian Zone\nThe AFC qualifiers took place from 22\u201326 January 2013 at a temporary stadium and adjacent pitch on Katara Beach in Doha, Qatar, to determine the three teams to qualify for the finals. Iran, Japan and the United Arab Emirates took the three spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualifying rounds, European Zone\nThe UEFA qualifiers took place in Moscow, Russia on 1\u20138 July 2012. Spain, Russia, Ukraine and the Netherlands grabbed the four available spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualifying rounds, North, Central American and Caribbean Zone\nThe CONCACAF qualifiers took place from 8\u201312 May 2013 in Nassau, Bahamas to determine the two spots available. The United States, and El Salvador claimed the two spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualifying rounds, Oceanian Zone\nThe OFC qualifiers took place from 30 August to 2 September 2013 on the grounds of the University of New Caledonia in Noum\u00e9a, New Caledonia to determine the second OFC team to qualify for the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup (Tahiti having already qualified as hosts). They were originally to have taken place from 4\u20139 August 2013 in the 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup's host city of Papeete, Tahiti. Due to difficulties with the dimensions of the pitch that was to be used for the qualifiers, and Tahiti's declined not to participate in the tournament, it was decided that the tournament should be moved to reduce costs. It was originally scheduled for 12\u201314 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Qualifying rounds, South American Zone\nThe CONMEBOL qualifiers took place from 10\u201317 February 2013 at a temporary stadium in Merlo, a town in the San Luis Province of Argentina, to determine the three spots available. Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay claimed the three spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Teams\nThe allocation of slots for this competition was approved by the FIFA Executive Committee in May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Teams\nThese are the teams that qualified for the World Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Venue\nAll matches were played at the Tahua To'ata Stadium in Papeete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Match ball\nAll matches were played using the new Adidas Cafusa match ball; this version was slightly-modified from the match ball used at the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Official song\nTu'e Popo' by Sabrina was the official song of the tournament, and the video features the island rhythms of the host country and the city of Papeete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Referees\nFIFA chose 24 officials to referee the matches at the World Cup. From the 24 referees, at least one referee representing each confederation; four from the AFC, three from CAF, five from CONMEBOL, three from CONCACAF, one from the OFC and eight from UEFA, with all 24 officials being from different countries. The referees were revealed in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Draw\nThe final draw was held on 5 June 2013 at 19:30 (local time) at the Maison de la Culture (Te Fare Tauhiti Nui) in Papeete, Tahiti. The hosts, Tahiti, and the defending champions, Russia, were assigned to positions A1 and D1 prior to the draw. Teams from the same confederation could not be drawn against each other at the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Draw\nNote: At the time the draw was conducted, the OFC qualifier was not yet known.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Squads\nTeams must name a 12-man squad (two of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline. The squads were announced by FIFA on 11 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Group stage\nEach team earns three points for a win, two points for a win in extra time or a penalty shoot-out, and no points for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233394-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, Group stage\nWhere two or more teams end the group stage with the same number of points, their ranking is determined by the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233395-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final\nThe 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final was the last match of the 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup which took place on September 28, 2013 at the Tahua To'ata Stadium, in the Tahitian capital, Papeete. The final was contested between Spain, who had never competed in the FIFA final before, and defending champions Russia. Team Russia won the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233395-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final, Match details\nAssistant referees:Christian Zimmermann (Switzerlannd)Hugo Pado (Solomon Islands)Timekeeper:Bakhtiyor Namazov (Uzbekistan)Fifth official:Mariano Romo (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233396-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA)\nThe 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualifiers for UEFA is a beach soccer tournament that was played in Moscow, Russia from 1 \u2013 8 July 2012. It determined the four teams that would qualify for the 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in Papeete, Tahiti. All matches were played on two temporary stadium courts at Victory Park at Poklonnaya Hill in Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233396-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Participating teams and draw\nThe draw to divide the 24 teams into six groups of four was conducted on 9 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 83], "content_span": [84, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233396-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Group stage\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Moscow (UTC+04:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233396-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Playoff stage\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Moscow (UTC+04:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 68], "content_span": [69, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233396-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Playoff stage, Round of 16\nFor the first time in the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup UEFA Qualifying tournament, a straight knockout stage was not used. Instead, the eight winners of the Round of 16 were divided into two groups of four. The compositions of the groups were formed on the basis of the composite ranking based on the results of the first group stage and the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233396-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA), Playoff stage, Round of 16\nGroup G consisted of the Round of 16 winners with the 1st, 4th, 5th and 8th best records, while Group H consisted of the Round of 16 winners with the 2nd, 3rd, 6th and 7th best records. The group winners would play in the final, while the second-place teams would play for third place. In any event, the top two teams in each group would qualify for the 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup\nThe 2013 FIFA Club World Cup (officially known as the FIFA Club World Cup Morocco 2013 presented by Toyota for sponsorship reasons) was the 10th edition of the FIFA Club World Cup, a FIFA-organised international club football tournament between the winners of the six continental confederations as well as the host nation's league champions. It was hosted by Morocco, and played from 11 to 21 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup\nCorinthians were the defending champions, but could not defend their title after being eliminated in the 2013 Copa Libertadores round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup\nBayern Munich won the title for the first time after defeating Raja Casablanca 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Host bids\nThere were four countries bidding to host the 2013 and 2014 tournaments (same host for both tournaments):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Host bids\nIn October 2011, FIFA said that Iran, South Africa and the United Arab Emirates all withdrew their bids, leaving Morocco as the only bidder. FIFA officially announced Morocco as host on 17 December 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Venues\nThe venues for the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup were in Marrakesh and Agadir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Organisation, Emblem\nThe official emblem of the tournament was unveiled in Casablanca on 2 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Organisation, Ticketing\nPre -sale tickets were available from 14 to 27 October 2013, while the open sales phase began on 28 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Organisation, Trophy tour\nA tour of the FIFA Club World Cup Trophy took place from October to December 2013, starting from Yokohama, the site of the 2012 FIFA Club World Cup Final, before visiting the cities of each participating team, and ending at Casablanca before the start of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Refereeing, Goal-line technology\nFor the second year in a row, goal-line technology was used for the tournament. GoalControl GmbH was chosen as the official goal-line technology provider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Refereeing, Vanishing spray\nFollowing successful trials at the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup and 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, FIFA approved the vanishing spray to be used by the tournament referees to mark the ten-yard line for the defending team during a free kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Squads\nEach team named a 23-man squad (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline of 29 November 2013. Injury replacements were allowed until 24 hours before the team's first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Squads\nA total of 31 nationalities were represented in the squads of the seven teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Matches\nThe draw was held on 9 October 2013 at 19:00 WEST (UTC+1), at the La Mamounia Hotel in Marrakesh, to decide the \"positions\" in the bracket for the three teams which entered the quarter-finals (champions of AFC, CAF, and CONCACAF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Final standings\nNote: As 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233397-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup, Awards\nFIFA also named a man of the match for the best player in each game at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233398-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup Final\nThe 2013 FIFA Club World Cup Final was the final match of the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup, an association football tournament hosted by Morocco. It was the 10th final of the FIFA Club World Cup, a FIFA-organised tournament between the winners of the six continental confederations as well as the host nation's league champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233398-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup Final\nThe final was contested between German club Bayern Munich, representing UEFA as the reigning champions of the UEFA Champions League, and Moroccan club Raja Casablanca, representing the host country as the reigning champions of the Botola. It was played at the Stade de Marrakech in Marrakesh on 21 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233398-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Background, Bayern Munich\nBayern Munich qualified for the tournament as winners of the 2012\u201313 UEFA Champions League, following a 2\u20131 win against Borussia Dortmund in the final. This was Bayern Munich's first time competing in the tournament. They twice won the Intercontinental Cup, the predecessor of the FIFA Club World Cup, in 1976 and 2001. They reached the final after defeating Chinese club Guangzhou Evergrande in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233398-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Background, Raja Casablanca\nRaja Casablanca won the 2012\u201313 Botola to earn the host country berth of the tournament. This was Raja Casablanca's second time competing in the tournament, having participated in the competition in the inaugural edition in 2000. They were the second team to reach the final of the competition (after Corinthians in 2000) under the condition of being the host nation's national champions, as well as the second African finalist (after TP Mazembe in 2010). They reached the final after defeating New Zealand club Auckland City in the play-off round, Mexican club Monterrey in the quarter-finals, and Brazilian club Atletico Mineiro in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233398-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Summary\nBayern Munich defender Dante opened the scoring in the seventh minute; after J\u00e9r\u00f4me Boateng headed Xherdan Shaqiri's corner into his path, he turned and shot past goalkeeper Khalid Askri. Thiago got the second for Bayern in the 22nd minute, when he shot right-footed into the far corner from the edge of the penalty area after a pull-back pass from the left from David Alaba. Bayern had the chance to add a third midway through the second half, but Shaqiri hit the crossbar from six yards before Thiago shot the rebound high and wide. Raja Casablanca almost got themselves back into the game late on, when Vianney Mabid\u00e9 found himself onside only to shoot straight at Manuel Neuer in the Bayern goal, and captain Mouhcine Moutouali hit the rebound over the bar from just outside the goal area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233398-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Emerson de Carvalho (Brazil)Marcelo Van Gasse (Brazil)Fourth official:Mark Geiger (United States)Fifth official:Sean Hurd (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233399-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads\nEach team in the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup had to name a 23-man squad (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline of 29 November 2013. Injury replacements were allowed until 24 hours before the team's first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233399-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Al-Ahly\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, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233399-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro\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-00233399-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Auckland City\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-00233399-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Bayern Munich\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-00233399-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Guangzhou Evergrande\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-00233399-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Monterrey\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, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233399-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Club World Cup squads, Raja Casablanca\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, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup\nThe 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup was the ninth FIFA Confederations Cup, which was held in Brazil from 15 to 30 June 2013 as a prelude to the 2014 FIFA World Cup. The most recent winners of the six continental championships appeared in the tournament, along with hosts Brazil and UEFA Euro 2012 runners-up Italy, who qualified because the Euro 2012 winners, Spain, had also won the most recent FIFA World Cup in 2010 thus securing a spot in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup\nHost nation, Brazil successfully defended their title with a 3\u20130 win over Spain in the final. It was their fourth Confederations Cup title and third in a row, after previous wins in 1997, 2005 and 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup\nAccording to then FIFA president Sepp Blatter, the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup was the best version of the tournament ever played. The competition was the first national team tournament to employ goal-line technology, which was also used at the 2014 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Draw\nThe draw for the competition was held at the Pal\u00e1cio das Conven\u00e7\u00f5es in the Anhembi Convention Center in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil on 1 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Draw\nTeams from the same confederation were not drawn into the same group, therefore, one team each from UEFA and from CONMEBOL was drawn in each group. Brazil and Spain had automatically been assigned as A1 and B1 respectively, therefore, Italy and Uruguay were assigned respectively to Group A and Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Match officials\nTen trios of officials were announced by FIFA on 13 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Squads\nTeams had to name a 23-man squad (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline of 3 June 2013. The squads were announced by FIFA on 7 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Group stage\nThe competition's dates were confirmed by FIFA on 27 July 2011 in the build-up to the draw for the 2014 World Cup's preliminary qualification rounds. As the competition partially overlapped with the fourth round of the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification in Asian zone, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) asked FIFA to consider a change of date. However, the AFC decided that the match day would only be adjusted for the AFC representative at the Confederations Cup, Japan. The official final schedule was presented in Rio de Janeiro on 30 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Group stage\nAll eight teams entered the group stage. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the semi-finals, while the bottom two teams in each group were eliminated from the tournament. The ranking of the teams in each group was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Group stage\nIf two or more teams were equal on the basis of the above three criteria, their rankings were determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of normal playing time, extra time would be played (two periods of 15 minutes each) and followed, if necessary, by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nFernando Torres was awarded the Golden Boot award on tie-breakers. Both he and Fred scored five goals and made one assist, but Torres was given the award due to having played fewer minutes over the tournament. In total, 68 goals were scored by 38 different players, with three of them credited as own goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Statistics, Tournament ranking\nPer 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Match ball\nThe official match ball for the Cup was produced by Adidas, a development of the Adidas Tango 12. It was unveiled during the draw for the competition. The ball is named \"Cafusa\" (pronounced\u00a0[k\u0250\u02c8fuz\u0250]) \u2013 a syllabic abbreviation of the words \"carnaval\" (Carnival), \"futebol\" (football) and \"samba\", aside of being homophonous with cafuza, the Portuguese name for a zamba i.e. a woman of mixed Amerindian and black African descent. Former Brazil captain Cafu was invited to officially unveil the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Prize money\nThe competing national football associations received prize money from FIFA based on their representative team's final finishing position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Goal-line technology\nThe 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup was the first international tournament for national teams to use goal-line technology. The IFAB officially approved the use of goal-line technology in July 2012, and it was first used in a FIFA competition for the 2012 FIFA Club World Cup in December 2012. Having trialled systems from both Hawk-Eye and GoalRef during the Club World Cup, FIFA announced on 2 April 2013 that the German technology GoalControl had been chosen as the official goal-line technology for the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup. Its system, GoalControl-4D, uses 14 high-speed cameras located around the pitch and directed at both goals. It was used in the match for third place between Uruguay and Italy to determine the scorer of Italy's first goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Protests\nPrior to the opening ceremony at the Brasilia National Stadium on 15 June, demonstrations took place outside the stadium, organised by people unhappy with the amount of public money spent to enable the hosting of the FIFA World Cup. Police used tear gas and pepper spray to quell the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Protests\nThe demonstrations were part of wider unrest and rioting in Brazilian cities initially sparked by increased ticket prices on public transport, but growing to express deeper public disenchantment with the financial management of the country by its government, specially due to the high inflation. The Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff as well as FIFA president Sepp Blatter were heavily booed as they were announced to conduct their speeches at the tournament's opening. Further protests took place the following day prior to the game between Mexico and Italy in Rio de Janeiro. Blatter said that the protesters \"should not use football to make their demands heard\", and that the public expenditure on staging the tournaments was on \"items that are for the future, not just for the World Cup\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Protests\nAs the protests continued to intensify during the week, with a reported participation of over a million people taking to the streets in a hundred different towns and cities, reports in the Brazilian media suggested that FIFA was having to negotiate with the teams to keep them in Brazil and that the tournament could be abandoned. However, a FIFA statement on 21 June insisted that \"to date, neither FIFA nor the local organising committee have ever discussed any such possibility of cancelling the FIFA Confederations Cup\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Protests\nFIFA General Secretary J\u00e9r\u00f4me Valcke subsequently admitted that FIFA had held a \"crisis meeting\" involving the Brazilian government regarding the completion of the tournament, but sought to distance FIFA from the wider social unrest, stating that \"the most important thing for us is to detach the World Cup or the Confederations Cup from these problems. We are not the answer to all problems and we are definitely not the reason for such a crisis. We are just part of what Brazil is doing for the next 20 years....the light FIFA is being shown in here, is the wrong one\". He also reaffirmed that the protests had not caused FIFA to consider moving the 2014 World Cup away from Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233400-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, Protests\nJust before the final in Rio de Janeiro, a large crowd marched towards the stadium both in support of the team and in continuation over the original protests. Though largely peaceful, there were some disturbances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final\nThe 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final was a football match to determine the winners of the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup. The match was held at the Est\u00e1dio do Maracan\u00e3, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on 30 June 2013 and was contested by the winners of the semi-finals, Brazil and Spain. Brazil defeated Spain 3\u20130 with goals from Fred and Neymar, thus breaking Spain's record of 29 games without a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final\nThe match was Brazil's fifth appearance in the final (after 1997, 1999, 2005 and 2009). Spain reached their first ever Confederations Cup final. The win gave Brazil their third consecutive Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Background\nBefore the final, Brazil and Spain had previously faced each other eight times, of which Brazil have recorded a total of four wins compared to Spain's two, with the remaining two matches ending in draws. The two sides' debut match was played on 27 May 1934, in the first round of the 1934 FIFA World Cup in Italy, held at the Stadio Luigi Ferraris in Genoa. It ended in a 3\u20131 win in favor of Spain. Sixteen years later, at the 1950 World Cup, the two sides met again in the final round stage, which contained Sweden and Uruguay. Brazil responded by winning 6\u20131 in front of their 153,000 home spectators. The last meeting took place 13 November 1999, in a 0\u20130 friendly draw at the Bala\u00eddos, Vigo, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Background\nBrazil had won the FIFA Confederations Cup three times, in 1997 against Australia, in 2005 against Argentina and 2009 against the United States. They had competed in every Confederations Cup competition since FIFA's takeover in 1997, with Brazil losing the 1999 final against Mexico 4\u20133. Spain qualified for the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup, their first ever appearance after winning the UEFA European Championship in 2008 against Germany. They reached the semi-finals, but lost 2\u20130 to the United States, resulting in Spain competing for the third-place play-off against South Africa, who had lost 1\u20130 against Brazil in the second semi-final match. The match ended in a 3\u20132 scoreline for Spain. Brazil were ranked 22nd in the FIFA World Rankings, considered to be their worst rank ever achieved, while Spain were ranked first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Route to the final\nGroup A of the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup took place from 15 to 22 June 2013 in Belo Horizonte's Mineir\u00e3o, Bras\u00edlia's Man\u00e9 Garrincha, Fortaleza's Castel\u00e3o, Recife's Arena Pernambuco, Rio de Janeiro's, Maracan\u00e3 and Salvador's Arena Fonte Nova. The group consisted of defending champions Brazil, Italy, Japan, and Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Brazil vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Bertino Miranda (Portugal)Tiago Trigo (Portugal)Fourth official:Felix Brych (Germany)Fifth official:Mark Borsch (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Mexico vs Italy\nAssistant referees:Sergio Rom\u00e1n (Chile)Carlos Astroza (Chile)Fourth official:Djamel Haimoudi (Algeria)Fifth official:Redouane Achik (Morocco)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Brazil vs Mexico\nAssistant referees:Mike Mullarkey (England)Darren Cann (England)Fourth official:Enrique Osses (Chile)Fifth official:Carlos Astroza (Chile)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Italy vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)Fourth official:Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)Fifth official:William Torres (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Italy vs Brazil\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Bahadyr Kochkarov (Kyrgyzstan)Fourth official:Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)Fifth official:Toru Sagara (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Japan vs Mexico\nAssistant referees:Stefan Lupp (Germany)Mark Borsch (Germany)Fourth official:Howard Webb (England)Fifth official:Mike Mullarkey (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Spain vs Uruguay\nAssistant referees:Toru Sagara (Japan)Toshiyuki Nagi (Japan)Fourth official:Bj\u00f6rn Kuipers (Netherlands)Fifth official:Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Tahiti vs Nigeria\nAssistant referees:William Torres (El Salvador)Juan Zumba (El Salvador)Fourth official:Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan)Fifth official:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Spain vs Tahiti\nThis game holds the record for the biggest margin of victory in a FIFA senior men's tournament. The previous record was nine goals which occurred three times: the first occurred in 1954 when Hungary defeated South Korea 9\u20130, the second was during the 1974 FIFA World Cup as Yugoslavia defeated Zaire by the same score of 9\u20130, and the third and final happened in 1982 when Hungary dispatched El Salvador 10\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Spain vs Tahiti\nAssistant referees:Redouane Achik (Morocco)Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)Fourth official:Felix Brych (Germany)Fifth official:Stefan Lupp (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Nigeria vs Uruguay\nAssistant referees:Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)Erwin Zeinstra (Netherlands)Fourth official:Pedro Proen\u00e7a (Portugal)Fifth official:Bertino Miranda (Portugal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Nigeria vs Spain\nAssistant referees:William Torres (El Salvador)Juan Zumba (El Salvador)Fourth official:Diego Abal (Argentina)Fifth official:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Matches, Uruguay vs Tahiti\nAssistant referees:Bertino Miranda (Portugal)Tiago Trigo (Portugal)Fourth official:Djamel Haimoudi (Algeria)Fifth official:Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, External links\nWarning: Default sort key \"Confederations\" overrides earlier default sort key \"Group A\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Pre-match, Venue\nThe Est\u00e1dio do Maracan\u00e3 in Rio de Janeiro was announced as the venue of the final. It is the largest of the six 2013 Confederations Cup venues. The stadium was used at the 2014 FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Pre-match, Match ball\nThe Adidas Cafusa, provided by Adidas, was the official match ball of the tournament. The ball had been previously used at the 2012 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Pre-match, Officials\nBj\u00f6rn Kuipers of the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB) and UEFA was selected to referee the final. Having been an international referee since 2006, he made his debut in the 2006 UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship youth competition, where he officiated in the final between Czech Republic under-17s and Russia under-17s. One year later, he appeared in his first Champions League match in July between Zeta and Kaunas in the first qualifying round. On 14 January 2009, Kuipers was promoted to elite level in European football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Pre-match, Officials\nThis led to him taking charge of his first proper Champions League match on 29 September 2009 in the group stage between Barcelona and Dynamo Kyiv. Ahead of the final, Kuipers had refereed 23 Champions League matches and 15 UEFA Cup/Europa League matches, including his first senior final, the 2013 UEFA Europa League Final between Benfica and Chelsea. He has also refereed at the 2010 FIFA Club World Cup and UEFA Euro 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Pre-match, Officials\nKuipers was assisted by his compatriots Sander van Roekel and Erwin Zeinstra; the trio had previously taken charge of the Group B match between Nigeria and Uruguay earlier in the tournament. They were joined by fourth and fifth officials Felix Brych and Mark Borsch, representing the German Football Association (DFB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Match, Summary\nIn the second minute of the game, a cross from the right by Hulk was not dealt with by defenders \u00c1lvaro Arbeloa, Gerard Piqu\u00e9 or goalkeeper Iker Casillas. The ball fell to Brazil forward Fred, who had slipped and while lying on the ground managed to improvise and poke the ball past Casillas to give Brazil the lead. In 39th minute, Spain almost equalised when Pedro beat the goalkeeper from the right but saw his shot hooked off the line and over the bar by David Luiz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Match, Summary\nBrazil increased their lead just before half time when Oscar passed to Neymar on the left side of the penalty area and he hit the ball left footed hard and high at the near post past Casillas. The third goal for Brazil arrived two minutes into the second half when Fred curled the ball low right footed inside the far post from the left, with Casillas getting his fingers to the shot but unable to keep it out. Five minutes later, Marcelo tripped Jes\u00fas Navas to give away a penalty. Sergio Ramos took the penalty but he shot low, right-footed, and past the goalkeeper's right post. In the 68th minute, Gerard Piqu\u00e9 was shown a red card for bringing down Neymar just outside the penalty area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233401-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)Erwin Zeinstra (Netherlands)Fourth official:Felix Brych (Germany)Fifth official:Mark Borsch (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233402-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group A\nGroup A of the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup took place from 15 to 22 June 2013 in Belo Horizonte's Mineir\u00e3o, Bras\u00edlia's Man\u00e9 Garrincha, Fortaleza's Castel\u00e3o, Recife's Arena Pernambuco, Rio de Janeiro's, Maracan\u00e3 and Salvador's Arena Fonte Nova. The group consisted of host nation and defending champions Brazil, Italy, Japan, and Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233402-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group A, Matches, Brazil vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Bertino Miranda (Portugal)Tiago Trigo (Portugal)Fourth official:Felix Brych (Germany)Fifth official:Mark Borsch (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233402-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group A, Matches, Mexico vs Italy\nAssistant referees:Sergio Rom\u00e1n (Chile)Carlos Astroza (Chile)Fourth official:Djamel Haimoudi (Algeria)Fifth official:Redouane Achik (Morocco)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233402-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group A, Matches, Brazil vs Mexico\nAssistant referees:Mike Mullarkey (England)Darren Cann (England)Fourth official:Enrique Osses (Chile)Fifth official:Carlos Astroza (Chile)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233402-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group A, Matches, Italy vs Japan\nAssistant referees:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)Fourth official:Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)Fifth official:William Torres (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233402-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group A, Matches, Italy vs Brazil\nAssistant referees:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)Bahadyr Kochkarov (Kyrgyzstan)Fourth official:Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)Fifth official:Toru Sagara (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233402-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group A, Matches, Japan vs Mexico\nAssistant referees:Stefan Lupp (Germany)Mark Borsch (Germany)Fourth official:Howard Webb (England)Fifth official:Mike Mullarkey (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B\nGroup A of the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup took place from 16 to 23 June 2013 in Belo Horizonte's Mineir\u00e3o, Fortaleza's Castel\u00e3o, Recife's Arena Pernambuco, Rio de Janeiro's, Maracan\u00e3 and Salvador's Arena Fonte Nova. The group consisted of Nigeria, Spain, Tahiti, and Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B, Matches, Spain vs Uruguay\nAssistant referees:Toru Sagara (Japan)Toshiyuki Nagi (Japan)Fourth official:Bj\u00f6rn Kuipers (Netherlands)Fifth official:Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B, Matches, Tahiti vs Nigeria\nAssistant referees:William Torres (El Salvador)Juan Zumba (El Salvador)Fourth official:Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan)Fifth official:Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B, Matches, Spain vs Tahiti\nThis game holds the record for the biggest margin of victory in a FIFA senior men's tournament. The previous record was nine goals which occurred three times: the first occurred in 1954 when Hungary defeated South Korea 9\u20130, the second was during the 1974 FIFA World Cup as Yugoslavia defeated Zaire by the same score of 9\u20130, and the third and final happened in 1982 when Hungary dispatched El Salvador 10\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B, Matches, Spain vs Tahiti\nAssistant referees:Redouane Achik (Morocco)Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)Fourth official:Felix Brych (Germany)Fifth official:Stefan Lupp (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B, Matches, Nigeria vs Uruguay\nAssistant referees:Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)Erwin Zeinstra (Netherlands)Fourth official:Pedro Proen\u00e7a (Portugal)Fifth official:Bertino Miranda (Portugal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B, Matches, Nigeria vs Spain\nAssistant referees:William Torres (El Salvador)Juan Zumba (El Salvador)Fourth official:Diego Abal (Argentina)Fifth official:Hern\u00e1n Maidana (Argentina)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233403-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup Group B, Matches, Uruguay vs Tahiti\nAssistant referees:Bertino Miranda (Portugal)Tiago Trigo (Portugal)Fourth official:Djamel Haimoudi (Algeria)Fifth official:Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233404-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup began on 26 June with the semi-final round, and concluded on 30 June 2013 with the final at the Est\u00e1dio do Maracan\u00e3, Rio de Janeiro. The top two teams from each group advanced to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination style tournament. A third place match was included and played between the two losing teams of the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233404-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage (including the final), if a match was level at the end of 90 minutes, extra time of two periods (15 minutes each) would be played. If the score was still level after extra time, the match would be decided by a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233404-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Brazil vs Uruguay\nAssistant referees:Carlos Astroza (Chile)Sergio Rom\u00e1n (Chile)Fourth official:Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)Fifth official:William Torres (El Salvador)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233404-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup knockout stage, Semi-finals, Spain vs Italy\nAssistant referees:Mike Mullarkey (England)Darren Cann (England)Fourth official:Pedro Proen\u00e7a (Portugal)Fifth official:Bertino Miranda (Portugal)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 72], "content_span": [73, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233404-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup knockout stage, Third place play-off\nAssistant referees:Redouane Achik (Morocco)Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)Fourth official:Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)Fifth official:Toru Sagara (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233404-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees:Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)Erwin Zeinstra (Netherlands)Fourth official:Felix Brych (Germany)Fifth official:Mark Borsch (Germany)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233405-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup squads\nThe following is a list of squads for each nation who competed at the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup in Brazil from 15 to 30 June 2013, as a prelude to the 2014 FIFA World Cup. Each squad consisted of 23 players, three of which had to be goalkeepers. Replacement of injured players was permitted until 24 hours before the team's game. Players marked (c) were named as captain for their national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233405-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup squads, Group A, Brazil\nOn 7 June, Leandro Dami\u00e3o withdrew from the squad with a thigh injury and was replaced by J\u00f4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233405-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup squads, Group A, Mexico\nDe la Torre named his 23-man squad on 20 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233405-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup squads, Group B, Spain\nDel Bosque named his 23-man squad on 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233405-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup squads, Player representation, By club nationality\nNations in italics are not represented by their national teams in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233406-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup statistics\nThese are the statistics for the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, an eight-team tournament running from 15 June 2013 through 30 June 2013. The tournament took place in Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233406-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA Confederations Cup statistics, Overall statistics\nUpdated to games played on 2 July 2013. Team(s) rendered in italics represent(s) the host nation(s). The competition's winning team is rendered in bold. (1) \u2013 Total games lost not counted in total games played (total games lost = total games won)(2) \u2013 Total number of games drawn (tied) for all teams = Total number of games drawn (tied) \u00f7 2 (both teams involved)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup\nThe 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup was the fifteenth tournament of the FIFA U-17 World Cup. The tournament was held in the United Arab Emirates between 17 October and 8 November. Nigeria won the tournament after defeating Mexico 3\u20130 in the final, claiming the country's fourth title. Sweden won the bronze with a 4\u20131 victory over Argentina in the third-place play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Venues\nIn June 2012, FIFA selected the Sheikh Khalifa International Stadium in Al Ain, the Al Nahyan Stadium in Abu Dhabi, the Al-Rashid Stadium in Dubai, the Emirates Club Stadium in Ras al-Khaimah and the Fujairah Club Stadium in the state of Fujairah as venues. The use of Sharjah Stadium in Sharjah was initially proposed, and finally selected as a venue, in September 2012. Mohammed Bin Zayed Stadium replaced Al Nahyan Stadium of Abu Dhabi and will host the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Teams\nIn addition to host nation United Arab Emirates, 23 nations qualified from six separate continental competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Squads\nTeams had to name a 21-man squad (three of whom must be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw\nThe final draw for group stage was held on 26 August 2013 in Abu Dhabi at the Bab Al Bahr Hotel at 19:00 (local time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw\nPrior to the draw, FIFA announced that as host, the United Arab Emirates would be placed as 'A1', to assist with ticket sales. The continental champions of the confederations AFC, CAF, CONCACAF, CONMEBOL, and UEFA are assigned to the other five groups. Teams from the same confederation cannot be drawn against each other at the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw\nUnited Arab Emirates (assigned to Group A)\u00a0Iran\u00a0Iraq\u00a0Japan\u00a0Uzbekistan (assigned to Group C)\u00a0New Zealand", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw\nArgentina (assigned to Group E)\u00a0Brazil\u00a0Uruguay\u00a0Venezuela\u00a0Mexico (assigned to Group F)\u00a0Panama", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw\nCanada\u00a0Honduras\u00a0C\u00f4te d'Ivoire (assigned to Group B)\u00a0Morocco\u00a0Nigeria\u00a0Tunisia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Draw\nAustria\u00a0Croatia\u00a0Italy\u00a0Russia (assigned to Group D)\u00a0Slovakia\u00a0Sweden", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Logo and tickets\nThe logo of the competition was unveiled on 5 March 2013, including the local organising committee asking Omar Abdulrahman to be a 'brand ambassador' for this event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Logo and tickets\n'Stadium package' tickets for the Tournament went on sale on 26 June, with the ability to buy tickets per match once the draw has been made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Logo and tickets\nA falcon known as 'Shaqran' will be the mascot for the World Cup, after being introduced to local journalists on 13 May .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage\nThe winners and runners-up from each group, as well as the best four third-placed teams, qualified for the first round of the knockout stage (round of 16).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage\nThe ranking of each team in each group is determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage\nIf two or more teams are equal on the basis of the above three criteria, their rankings are determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe four best teams among those ranked third are determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stages, if a match is level at the end of normal playing time, no extra time will be played, with the match to be determined by a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233407-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, Goalscorers\nTop scorers after the end of the tournament this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nThe 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup was the nineteenth edition of the FIFA U-20 World Cup, since its inception in 1977 as the FIFA World Youth Championship. It ran from 21 June to 13 July 2013. At the FIFA Executive Meeting in Z\u00fcrich on 3 March 2011, Turkey beat other bids to host the series games, from host competition by the United Arab Emirates and Uzbekistan. In its bid, Turkey suggested the use of thirteen stadiums in ten of its cities, before deciding in February 2012, that seven cities would play host to games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nThis tournament marked the first time in its history that neither Argentina nor Brazil (the most successful teams in the competition) qualified. It was also only the second time that Brazil had not taken part (the first time was the 1979 edition).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup\nFrance won the tournament and their first U-20 World Cup, and thus became the first nation to win all five FIFA 11-a-side men's titles (FIFA World Cup, FIFA Confederations Cup, FIFA U-20 World Cup, FIFA U-17 World Cup, and Olympic gold medal).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Bids\nAt the deadline date of 17 January 2011, three member associations confirmed they would be bidding for the event. Neither Turkey nor Uzbekistan had ever been hosts to a FIFA competition, while the United Arab Emirates were hosts of the U-20s in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Qualification\nIn addition to host nation Turkey, 23 nations qualified from six separate continental competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Organization and emblem\nTo mark the one year countdown date to the competition, FIFA, as well as members of the Turkish FA, announced that the emblem would be presented to the media on 25 June 2012 at Ciragan Palace Mabeyn Hall in Istanbul. Details of the ticketing access were made publicly available on 30 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Organization and emblem\nHost city logos for each participating stadium were shown to the general public on 20 March 2013, with each taking inspiration from their surroundings. The official logo included an Evil Eye protector, worn or hung inside Turkish homes to bring luck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Mascot\nThe mascot for the tournament was called Kanki, a blue-eyed Kangal puppy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Theme song\nThe official theme song for the tournament was Y\u0131ld\u0131zlar Buradan Y\u00fckseliyor, which is translated as Building Bridges for Rising Stars, performed by Turkish rock band Gece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Draw\nThe final draw was held at the Grand Tarabya Hotel in Istanbul on 25 March 2013, at 19:00 local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Draw\nOn 12 February 2013, FIFA announced the procedure of the draw. The 24 teams were divided into four differing pots:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Draw\nPrior to the draw, Turkey was assigned to position C1, and Spain was assigned to Group A. As a basic principle, teams from the same confederation could not be drawn against each other at the group stage, except in Group A where there were two teams from UEFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Draw\nAs the CAF U-20 Championship was not completed at the time of the draw, a separate draw took place at the tournament's conclusion on 30 March in Oran, Algeria to determine the groups where the second, third and fourth-placed CAF teams would play in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Draw\nTurkey (assigned to A1)\u00a0Colombia \u00a0South Korea \u00a0Mexico \u00a0Egypt \u00a0Spain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Match officials\nThe 23 referee trios were announced by FIFA on 13 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Squads\nTeams had to name a 21-man squad (three of whom had to be goalkeepers) by the FIFA deadline. The squads were announced by FIFA on 14 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage\nThe winners and runners-up from each group, as well as the best four third-placed teams, qualified for the first round of the knockout stage (round of 16).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage\nThe ranking of each team in each group was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage\nIf two or more teams were equal on the basis of the above three criteria, their rankings were determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage, Group D\nNote: drawing of lots was used to determine the final positions of Greece and Paraguay, as the two teams finished level on points, goal difference, goals scored, and head-to-head record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nThe four best teams among those ranked third were determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stages, if a match was level at the end of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of fifteen minutes each) and followed, if necessary, by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner, except for the play-off for third place, where no extra time would be played as the match was played directly before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Awards\nThe following awards were given out after the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Miscellanea, Trophy\nThe winners were the first team to receive an updated version of the trophy, with Rebecca Cusack and Thomas R. Fattorini of Thomas Fattorini Ltd, Birmingham taking over from Sawaya & Moroni as suppliers of FIFA competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233408-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Miscellanea, Vanishing spray\nA \u201cvanishing spray\u201d made its FIFA debut (versions were already in use in CONCACAF and CONMEBOL competitions) during this tournament, with referees using it to denote the ten-yard mark for an opposing defence at time of free kicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233409-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads\nThe following is a list of all the squads of the national teams that competed at the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup. Each squad consisted of 21 players in total, three of whom had to be goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233409-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads\nPlayers whose names are marked in bold have been capped at full international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233409-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Player statistics\nNewcastle Jets Deportivo Cali Al Ahly, ENPPI Manchester United Everton Guadalajara Cerro Porte\u00f1o, Libertad Benfica Defensor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233409-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Player statistics\nVilla Clara Rubio \u00d1u Atlas, Santos Laguna, Monterrey Universidad de Chile Ismaily Tema Youth Olympiacos Chung-Ang University Pe\u00f1arol Dolphins Atl\u00e9tico Madrid, Barcelona, Real Madrid, Sevilla", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233409-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads, Player statistics\nThe Iraq, Uzbekistan and Cuba squads were made up entirely of players from the respective countries' domestic leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233410-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series\nThe 2013 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series consists of 10 events in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233411-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series\nThe 2013 FIG World Cup circuit in Rhythmic Gymnastics includes one category A event (Sofia) and seven category B events. Apart from Tartu, Bucharest and Corbeil-Essonnes (individuals only), all events include both individual and group competitions, with all-around competitions serving as qualifications for the finals by apparatus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233411-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series\nWith stopovers in Europe only, the competitions took place on 8 \u2013 10 February in Tartu (EST), 3 \u2013 6 April in Lisbon (POR), 19 \u2013 21 April April in Bucharest (ROU), 26 \u2013 28 April in Pesaro (ITA), 4 \u2013 5 May in Sofia (BUL), 10 \u2013 12 May in Corbeil-Essonnes (FRA), 17 \u2013 19 May in Minsk (BLR) and 17 \u2013 18 August in St Petersburg (RUS). The world ranking points collected by the competitors at their best four World Cup events added up to a total, and the top scorers in each event were crowned winners of the overall series at the final event in Saint Petersburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233412-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIM Motocross World Championship\nThe 2013 FIM Motocross World Championship was the 57th F.I.M. Motocross World Championship season. It included 36 races at 18 events including Qatar, Thailand, The Netherlands, Italy, Bulgaria, Portugal, Brazil, Mexico, France, Sweden, Latvia, Finland, Germany, Czech Republic, Belgium and Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233412-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIM Motocross World Championship, 2013 calendar\nThe 2013 calendars of the FIM Motocross World Championships promoted by Youthstream were finalised on 2 March 2013. The MXGP of Mexico, which was scheduled for the 26 May weekend, was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233413-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIM Superstock 1000 Cup\nThe 2013 FIM Superstock 1000 Cup was the fifteenth season of the FIM Superstock 1000 Cup, the ninth held under this name. It began on 7 April at Arag\u00f3n and finished on 20 October in Jerez after 9 rounds. Sylvain Barrier returned on the BMW he won the title with in 2012. The first few rounds were hotly contested between Barrier, Eddi La Marra and his team mate and former Superstock 1000 champion Niccol\u00f2 Canepa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233413-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 FIM Superstock 1000 Cup\nUnfortunately for La Marra, he would have a massive accident during testing which left him with in a coma and unable to complete the final three rounds of the championship on his Ducati Panigale. Barrier won 5 of the 9 races to retain his championship title, doing so at his home event at Magny-Cours. Despite skipping the final round at Jerez\u00a0\u2013 to compete in the Superbike World Championship event\u00a0\u2013 Barrier beat Canepa to the title by 24 points, with J\u00e9r\u00e9my Guarnoni a further point behind in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233413-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIM Superstock 1000 Cup, Race calendar\nThe provisional race schedule was publicly announced by the FIM on 6 October 2012 with nine confirmed rounds and one other round pending confirmation. On 8 March 2013, the FIM issued a definitive calendar, confirming rounds at Portim\u00e3o and Imola that were previously subject to contract, as well as reducing the number of venues from ten to nine, but a second race was later added to the schedule of the Silverstone round. The series supported the Superbike World Championship at every meeting except Phillip Island, Donington Park, Moscow Raceway, Istanbul Park and Laguna Seca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233414-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIM eRoad Racing World Cup\nThe 2013 FIM eRoad Racing World Cup season was the only season of the eRoad Racing championship for electric motorcycle road racing, organised by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) following the unification of the former TTXGP series with the FIM \"e-Power\" electric motorcycle racing series. Two separate series were held in Europe and in North America. Since the planned World Final was cancelled, two separate winners were determined, one for each series: Ho Chi Fung (Zongshen, China) for the European series and Eric Bostrom (Icon Brammo, USA) for the North American series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233414-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIM eRoad Racing World Cup, Calendar\nThe 2013 eRoadRacing World Cup was planned to consist of 4 races in Europe and 4 in North America, with a world final in Asia. However, only 6 races took place in the end, as two of the American races as well as the World Final had to be cancelled because of time constraints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233415-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Diving World Series\nThe 2013 FINA Diving World Series is the 2013 edition of FINA Diving World Series. The divers who participate are the current world and olympic champions and runners-up, the top 8 divers in the world rankings and along with some wild cards from either the host nation or from certain countries which had previously qualified athletes for the World Series. This World Series was made up by six legs hosted in different cities: 1st leg Beijing, China, 2nd leg Sheffield, United Kingdom, 3rd leg Dubai, United Arab Emirates , 4th leg Moscow, Russia, and 5th and 6th legs Guadalajara, Mexico", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233416-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Men's Water Polo World League\nThe 2013 FINA Men's Water Polo World League was played between November 2012 and June 2013, and was open to all men's water polo national teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233416-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Men's Water Polo World League, Super Final\nThe Super Final was playing from 11\u201316 June 2013 in Chelyabinsk, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233417-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Swimming World Cup\nThe 2013 FINA Swimming World Cup was a series of eight, two-day, short course meets in eight different cities between August and November 2013. Arena was again the title sponsor for the series, with Omega serving as official timer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233417-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Swimming World Cup, Meets\nAs of June 2013, the 2013 World Cup consists of the following eight meets:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233417-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Swimming World Cup, World Cup standings, Event winners, 100 m individual medley\n* Katinka Hossz\u00fa set a new World record of 57.45 seconds in the heats of this event in Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233417-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Swimming World Cup, World Cup standings, Event winners, 400 m individual medley\nLegend: WR \u2013 World record; (WR) \u2013 World record when swum (earning bonus World Cup points); WC \u2013 World Cup record; (WC) \u2013 World Cup record when swum", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233417-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Swimming World Cup, World Cup standings, Event winners, Mixed 4x50m medley relay\nNOTE: The mixed relay is not included in the overall scoring of the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233418-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Women's Water Polo World League\nThe 2011 FINA Women's Water Polo World League was the tenth edition of the event, organised by the world's governing body in aquatics, the FINA. After playing in groups within the same continent, eight teams qualify to play in a final tournament, called the Super Final in Beijing, China from June 1 to June 6, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233418-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA Women's Water Polo World League, Super Final, Final ranking\nYang Jun, Teng Fei, Liu Ping, Sun Yujun, He Jin, Sun Yating, Song Donglun, Zhu Yajing, Mei Xiaohan, Ma Huanhuan, Zhang Cong, Zhang Lei, Wang Yi. Head Coach: Alexander Kleymenov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233419-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships\nThe 4th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships, were held on August 26\u201331, 2013, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233420-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRA-AER Sevens Grand Prix Series\nThe 2013 Sevens Grand Prix Series was the 12th year of the annual rugby Sevens Grand Prix Series (formerly known as the European Sevens Championship) for rugby sevens organised by the FIRA \u2013 Association of European Rugby. The 2013 Series consisted of two tournaments, held in Lyon, France and Bucharest, Romania. England won both legs, winning the overall 2013 Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233422-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRA-AER Women's Sevens \u2013 Division A\nThe 2013 FIRA-AER Women's Sevens \u2013 Division A was the second level of international women's rugby sevens competitions organised by FIRA-AER for 2013. The competition featured just one tournament, played in Prague. Sweden won the tournament and, along with runner-ups Belgium, were promoted to the 2014 Grand Prix series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233423-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRA-AER Women's Sevens \u2013 Division B\nThe 2013 FIRA-AER Women's Sevens \u2013 Division B was the third level of international women's rugby sevens competitions organised by FIRA-AER during 2013. It featured one tournament hosted in Bratislava. The winners and runners up, Finland and Norway respectively, were promoted to the 2014 Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233424-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRS Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2013 FIRS Intercontinental Cup was the 14th edition of the roller hockey tournament known as the Intercontinental Cup, played on 16 November 2013 at the Pal\u00e1cio dos Desportos de Torres Novas, in Torres Novas, Portugal. SL Benfica (winner of the 2012\u201313 CERH European League) won the cup for the first time, defeating Sport Recife (winner of the 2012 CSP South American Club Championship).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233425-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRS Men's Roller Hockey World Cup\nThe 2013 FIRS Men's Roller Hockey World Cup was the 41st edition of the FIRS Roller Hockey World Cup. It was held in Luanda and Namibe (today Mo\u00e7\u00e2medes), Angola from 20 to 28 September 2013. This is the first Roller Hockey World Cup organized in Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233425-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRS Men's Roller Hockey World Cup, Venues\nLuanda and Namibe were the host cities of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233425-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRS Men's Roller Hockey World Cup, Qualification\nThe teams to play the World Cup are the first thirteen countries at the last World Cup, and the first three countries qualified at last B World Cup. The group arrangement is already defined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233426-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIRS Roller Hockey World Cup U-20\nThe 2013 FIRS Roller Hockey World Cup U-20 was the 6th edition of the FIRS Roller Hockey World Cup U-20. It was held in October 2013 in Cartagena, Colombia. Portugal won its second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233427-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nThe 2013 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 20th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping on plastic for men and the 2nd for ladies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233427-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nSeason began on 26 July 2013 in Hinterzarten, Germany and ends on 3 October 2013 in Klingenthal, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233427-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nFor men Andreas Wellinger was the overall and team of Germany was the Nations Cup winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233427-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nFor ladies Sara Takanashi was the overall and team of Japan was the Nations Cup winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233427-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nOther competitive circuits this season included the World Cup, Continental Cup and Alpen Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233428-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIU Panthers football team\nThe 2013 FIU Panthers football team represented Florida International University (FIU) during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by first year head coach Ron Turner and played their home games at FIU Stadium. This was their first year as a member of Conference USA in the East Division and they finished the season with a 1\u201311 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233429-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour\nThe 2013 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour is an international beach volleyball circuit organized by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233429-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour\nFrom this season, the FIVB World Tour calendar comprises the 10 FIVB World Tour Grand Slams and the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233429-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour\nFor the first time since 2002 the competition does not take the name of Swatch, the main sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233429-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour, Open tournaments\nIn this season, the FIVB Open tournaments no longer form part of the World Tour and are considered separate events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233430-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship was held in Tijuana and Mexicali, Mexico, from 27 June to 7 July 2013. This was the first edition of the tournament that features 20 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233430-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship, Competition formula\nThe 20 teams will be divided into four pools of five teams each and will play a round-robin tournament. The bottom-ranked team of each pool will play classification matches for 17th\u201320th place in a round-robin system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233430-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship, Competition formula\nThe other 16 teams progress to the Eight Finals which consists of a playoff (1st of Pool A against 4th of Pool B etc.). The winners of the playoff matches will advance to the quarterfinals, semifinals and finals to be classified from 1st to 8th while the losers of playoff match will play classification matches, with a similar quarterfinals, semifinals and finals system, to be classified from 9th to 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233430-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World 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-00233431-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship\nThe 2013 Girls Youth Volleyball World Championship was held in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand, from 26 July to 4 August 2013. This was the first edition of the tournament that features 20 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233432-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship was the 9th edition of the event. It was held in Betim, Brazil from 15 to 20 October 2013. Sada Cruzeiro won the title for the first time in front their home crowd. Wallace de Souza was named Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233432-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World 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, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233433-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship squads\nThis article shows all participating team squads at the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship, held from 15 to 20 October 2013 in Betim, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233434-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship was held in Turkey for ten days, from 22 August to 1 September 2013. This was the first edition of the tournament that features 20 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233434-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship, Competition formula\nThe 20 teams will be divided into four pools of five teams each and will play a round-robin tournament. The bottom-ranked team of each pool will play classification matches for 17th-20th place in a round-robin system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233434-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship, Competition formula\nThe other 16 teams progress to the Eight Finals which consists of a playoff (1st of Pool A against 4th of Pool B etc.). The winners of the playoff matches will advance to the quarterfinals, semifinals and finals to be classified from 1st to 8th while the losers of playoff match will play classification matches, with a similar quarterfinals, semifinals and finals system, to be classified from 9th to 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233434-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World 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-00233435-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship European qualification\nThe qualification for the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship was held from 7\u201312 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233435-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship European qualification, Pool C\nMatches of Pool C will be played in Sofia, Bulgaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 80], "content_span": [81, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233435-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship European qualification, Pool D\nMatches of Pool D will be played in Arilje, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 80], "content_span": [81, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233436-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship was held in Uberl\u00e2ndia, Brazil from 6 to 13 October 2013. This was the first edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233436-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship, Twenty-one point rule\nFor this tournament, the first four sets were played over 21 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233436-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship, Qualification\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship will feature two countries per confederation plus the host Brazil and the highest country in the world rankings not already selected by their confederation, in this case Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233436-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship, Pools composition\nTeams were seeded following the Serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of 22 July 2013. FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as head of pool A regardless of the World Ranking. Rankings are shown in brackets except the hosts who ranked 1st.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233436-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World 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-00233437-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup was held in Kyoto and Tokyo, Japan from 19 to 24 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233437-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup, Competition formula\nThe competition formula of the 2013 Men's World Grand Champions Cup was a single Round-Robin system. Each team played once against each of the five remaining teams. Points were accumulated during the whole tournament, and the final standing was determined by the total points gained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233437-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup, 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, 52], "section_span": [54, 77], "content_span": [78, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233438-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup squads\nThis article shows all participating team squads at the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233438-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazil roster in the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 67], "content_span": [68, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233438-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Iran\nThe following is the Iran roster in the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233438-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italy roster in the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233438-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japan roster in the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233438-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russia roster in the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 67], "content_span": [68, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233438-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup squads, United States\nThe following is the United States roster in the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 74], "content_span": [75, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233439-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship\nThe 2013 FIVB Women's Club World Championship was the 7th edition of the event. It was held in Zurich, Switzerland, from 9 to 13 October 2013. Vak\u0131fbank Istanbul won the title and Jovana Brako\u010devi\u0107 was named Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233439-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship, Pool standing procedure\nMatch won 3\u20130 or 3\u20131: 3 points for the winner, 0 points for the loserMatch won 3\u20132: 2 points for the winner, 1 point for the loserIn case of tie, the teams will be classified according to the following criteria:number of matches won, sets ratio and points ratio", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 77], "content_span": [78, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233440-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship\nThe 2013 Women's Junior Volleyball World Championship was held in Czech Republic, for ten days between from 21 to 30 June 2013. This was the first edition of the tournament that features 20 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233440-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, Competition Formula\nThe 20 teams will be divided into four pools of five teams each and will play a round-robin tournament. The bottom-ranked team of each pool will play classification matches for 17th-20th place in a round-robin system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233440-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, Competition Formula\nThe other 16 teams progress to the Eight Finals which consists of a playoff (1st of Pool A against 4th of Pool B etc.). The winners of the playoff matches will advance to the quarterfinals, semifinals and finals to be classified from 1st to 8th while the losers of playoff match will play classification matches, with a similar quarterfinals, semifinals and finals system, to be classified from 9th to 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233440-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, Venues\nKajot Arena and Mestska Hala Micovych Sportu, Brno, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233441-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U23 World Championship\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U23 World Championship was held in Tijuana and Mexicali, Mexico, for seven days from 5 to 12 October 2013. This was the first edition of the tournament. China won the tournament and Yao Di was selected Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233441-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U23 World Championship, Competition Formula\nThe competition format saw the 12 teams split into two pools of six teams playing in round robin format. The semifinals featured the top two teams from each pool. The FIVB Volleyball Women\u2019s U23 World Championship featured two countries per confederation plus the host Mexico and the highest country in the world rankings not already selected by their confederation, in this case USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233441-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U23 World Championship, Competition Formula, Qualified teams\nEach Confederation was allowed to enter two teams into the competition. The qualification criteria was left to the discretion of each continental confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 89], "content_span": [90, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233441-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's U23 World Championship, Competition Formula, Pool Composition\nFirst six teams were seeded according to their Senior World Ranking number as of October 2013, the other 6 were seeded by draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 90], "content_span": [91, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233442-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Grand Champions Cup\nThe 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup was held in Nagoya and Tokyo, Japan from November 12 to 17, 2013. Brazil won their second title and Brazilian Fabiana Claudino was selected the Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233442-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Grand Champions Cup, Competition formula\nThe competition formula of the 2013 Women's World Grand Champions Cup was a single Round-Robin system. Each team played once against each of the five remaining teams. Points were accumulated during the whole tournament, and the final standing was determined by the total points gained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233443-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World Grand Prix\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball World Grand Prix was the 21st edition of the annual women's international volleyball tournament played by 20 countries from 2 August to 1 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233443-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World Grand Prix, Calendar\nThe original list was released December 1, 2012; one day later on December 2 a new list was released to the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233443-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World Grand Prix, Preliminary round, Ranking\nJapan (finals host) and the top five teams in the preliminary round will advance to the Final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233444-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World League\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball World League was the 24th edition of the annual men's international volleyball tournament, played by 18 countries from 31 May to 21 July 2013. The Final Round was held in Mar del Plata, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233444-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World League, Pools composition\nPools A and B are determined using the Serpentine system based on the FIVB World Ranking as of 13 August 2012. Pool C features teams ranked as the next best four in the World Ranking after the 12 teams in Pool A and B plus two additional teams, which were confirmed by the FIVB Executive Committee during its end of year meeting on 15 December 2012. The pools were announced on 1 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233444-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World League, 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233445-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World League qualification\nThe 2013 FIVB Volleyball World League qualification was a qualification tournament to determine the final two spots for the 2013 World League. It was held from 24 August to 9 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233445-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World League qualification, 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 72], "content_span": [73, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233446-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World League squads\nBelow there are the squads from the participating teams of the 2013 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233446-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Volleyball World League squads\nPlayers' age as of 31 May 2013: the tournament's opening day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233447-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's Club World Championship squads\nThis article shows all participating team squads at the 2013 FIVB Women's Club World Championship squads, held from October 9 to 13, 2013 in Zurich, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233448-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup squads\nThis article shows all participating team squads at the 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup, held from November 12 to November 17, 2013 in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233448-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazil roster in the 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233448-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Dominican Republic\nThe following is the Dominican Republic roster in the 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233448-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japan roster in the 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233448-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russia roster in the 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233448-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup squads, Thailand\nThe following is the Thailand roster in the 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233448-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup squads, United States\nThe following is the United States roster in the 2013 FIVB Women's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads\nThis article show all participating team squads at the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix, played by twelve countries with the final round held in Sapporo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Algeria\nThe following is the Algeria roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Argentina\nThe following is the Argentina roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Brazil\nThe following is the Brazil roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Bulgaria\nThe following is the Bulgaria roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, China\nThe following is the China roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Cuba\nThe following is the Cuba roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Czech Republic\nThe following is the Czech Republic roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Dominican Republic\nThe following is the Dominican Republic roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Germany\nThe following is the Germany roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italy roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Japan\nThe following is the Japan roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Kazakhstan\nThe following is the Kazakhstan roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Netherlands\nThe following is the Netherlands roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Poland\nThe following is the Poland roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Puerto Rico\nThe following is the Puerto Rico roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russia roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Serbia\nThe following is the Serbia roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Thailand\nThe following is the Thailand roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, Turkey\nThe following is the Turkey roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233449-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 FIVB World Grand Prix squads, United States\nThe following is the United States roster in the 2013 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233450-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FK Haugesund season\nThe 2013 season was FK Haugesund's 4th season back in the Tippeligaen since their promotion in 2009 and their fifth season with Jostein Grindhaug as manager. They participated in the Tippeligaen finishing third, qualifying for the First Qualifying Round of the 2014\u201315 UEFA Europa League. They also reached the Semi Finals of the Cup, where they lost to Rosenborg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233450-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FK Haugesund 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-00233450-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FK Haugesund 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233450-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FK Haugesund 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233450-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FK Haugesund 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233450-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FK Haugesund 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233450-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FK Haugesund 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One\nThe 2013 FKF Division One was the second season of FKF Division One and the Golden Jubilee second division season since it began in 1963. It began on 23 March and concluded on 21 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One\nOn 12 April, Murang'a United were suspended from participating in the league any further for the rest of the 2013 season and relegated to the Provincial League for missing three consecutive league games, against Brighter Stars, Maweni City and Kenya Revenue Authority. They were only allowed to participate in the Provincial League from the beginning of the 2014 season, and would not be replaced by any other team during the course of the season. As a result, all their results were nullified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One\nOn 25 April, the Football Kenya Federation initially decided to slash the league to 20 teams for the 2014 season. For that to happen, it was decided that the league will consist of top 5 teams in each zone (except the two teams that win the promotion play-offs) in addition to the two relegated Premier League teams. The remaining 28 teams will be relegated to FKF Division Two, which will begin next season, along with the 8 teams promoted from the Provincial League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One\nHowever, due to the creation of the Kenyan National Super League on 10 July, it was decided that top 5 teams in each zone (except the two teams that win the promotion play-offs) would be promoted to the new league along with the two relegated Premier League teams, while the remaining 28 teams along with 12 teams promoted from the Provincial League would form the new FKF Division One, which is to be the third-tier league from the beginning of the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One, Changes from last season\nFor this season, all Division One teams endorsed a decision to split both Zone A and Zone B into two groups of 12 teams each, increasing the total number of teams in the league to 48. It was decided that the first group from Zone A comprise teams from the Nairobi, Aberdares and Mount Kenya regions while the second group comprise teams from the Eastern, North and South Coast regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One, Changes from last season\nThe first group from Zone B is to comprise teams from the South Nyanza, Central and South Rift regions while the second group comprise teams from the North Nyanza, North Rift and Western regions. In the league phase, teams are to play each other only one and winners from each of the four groups will play the winners from the other group in their zone in a two-legged play-off tie to determine who gains promotion to the Kenyan Premier League for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One, Changes from last season\nOutgrowers, who were to be relegated after finishing in 18th place in Zone B the previous season, were readmitted for reasons unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One, Teams, Stadia and locations, Zone A locations\nZone A clubs are from the Nairobi, Central, Eastern and Coast provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One, Teams, Stadia and locations, Zone B locations\nZone B teams are from the Western, Nyanza and Rift Valley provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233451-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF Division One, Promotion play-offs\nThe promotion play-offs were contested between the winners of each of the 2 groups in both zones, to determine the winners of the zones, who would be consequently promoted to the Premier League. The losers would still gain promotion to the National Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup\nThe 2013 FKF President's Cup (known as the GOtv Shield for sponsorship reasons) is the 42nd season of Kenya's top domestic cup competition. It began on 20 July and ended on 17 November, with domestic broadcasting rights for the competition held by SuperSport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup\nAfter beating rivals and 2013 Kenyan Premier League champions Gor Mahia in the final, A.F.C. Leopards will represent Kenya in the preliminary round of the 2014 CAF Confederation Cup and will play Gor Mahia again at the 2014 Kenyan Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, First round\nFirst round ties were played from 20 July to 28 July. 32 teams from FKF Division One, the Kenyan Provincial League, the Kenyan County League and the Kenyan District League combined began their campaigns at this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round of the tournament was held on 7 August 2013 in central Nairobi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Third round\nThe third round of the tournament will be played on the weekend of 21\u201322 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Third round\nOf the 16 teams that advanced from the second round, only Finlays Horticulture and Kariobangi Sharks are from Division One, while the rest are from the Premier League. No Provincial League side made it through the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals of the tournament were played on the weekend of 12\u201313 October 2013. All matches were played at the Nyayo National Stadium in Nairobi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Quarter-finals\nOf the 8 teams that advanced from the third round, Finlays Horticulture was the only remaining FKF Division One side in the tournament. The other 7 clubs were from the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on the weekend of 19\u201320 October at the Moi International Sports Centre in Kasarani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Semi-finals\nControversy followed the match between Gor Mahia and Sony Sugar when fans of the former invaded the match to attack the latter while celebrating the win. Goalkeeper Wycliffe Kasaya and other players were injured in the fray and admitted to hospital later on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Third place playoff\nThe third place playoff was played on 16 November 2013 at the Nairobi City Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233452-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup, Final\nThe final was played on Sunday 17 November at the Nyayo National Stadium. It was the final Nairobi derby match of the season. Noah Wafula was named Man of the Match and Player of the Tournament after the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final\nThe 2013 FKF President's Cup Final was the 42nd final of the FKF President's Cup. The football match took place on Sunday, 17 November 2013 at 3:00 PM local time, and was contested by Gor Mahia and A.F.C. Leopards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final\nBy winning the match, Leopards denied their opponents a league and cup double, and will represent Kenya at the 2014 CAF Confederation Cup. The two teams will face off again in the first Nairobi derby match of the 2014 season at the Kenyan Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Background\nThe Nairobi derby between Gor Mahia and A.F.C. Leopards is the biggest rivalry in the history of Kenyan football, having already met 75 times in all competitions since their first match on 5 May 1968, with Leopards winning 25 against Gor Mahia's 22. The final will be the final derby match of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nBeginning their President's Cup campaign in the second round as a Premier League team, Gor Mahia played their first match against FKF Division One side Shabana Kisii on 11 September. The match ended in a 6\u20130 rout in favour of the Nairobi side, with braces from Kevin Omondi and Ugandan international Dan Sserunkuma and goals from Angelo Okumu and Edwin Lavatsa at the Nyayo National Stadium cementing their place in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nGor Mahia's next opponents were fellow Premier League side Thika United. It took K'Ogalo 50 minutes to break the deadlock in the match played at the Nairobi City Stadium, when Kenyan international Patrick Oboya, who went on to win the man of the match award, neatly chipped the ball over goalkeeper Lucas Indeche to give his side the lead. After only 8 minutes, Sserunkuma got himself on the scoresheet again to seal the victory and book them a quarter-final clash with Kakamega side Western Stima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nIn the quarter-final played on 12 October at the Nyayo National Stadium, Sserunkuma emerged the hero for Gor Mahia once again, netting a brace to send his side to the semi-finals. The diminutive Ugandan forward scored twice in the last 7 minutes of the first half and helped his side hold on to their lead in the second half, in which Edwin Lavatsa almost made it 3\u20130, having his shot punched away for a corner in the 72nd minute by David Juma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nThe semi-final match against Sony Sugar proved to be a very tough affair for Gor Mahia, who had to win the game on a penalty shoot-out. Their star striker and the competition's top scorer Dan Sserunkuma was ruled out just minutes before the game, picking up a slight injury while warming up for the 2013 Kenyan Premier League champions and having to be replaced by Paul Kiongera. Just 6 minutes after kick-off, Gor Mahia had a golden opportunity to snatch the lead after Kiongera was brought down in the box by Charles Odette, who was booked for the offence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nHowever, Kevin Omondi had his penalty kick saved by Wycliffe Kasaya, and the score remained 0\u20130. Former Thika United and Tusker striker Moses Arita could have also taken the lead for Sony Sugar at the other end, but had his shot easily picked up by Tanzanian international Ivo Mapunda in the 33rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nThe second half proved to be just as eventful as the first, with Gor Mahia's first chance of the half coming just 1 minute after the break through a free kick, which Omondi struck wide. Arita had another good chance to grab his side's first goal of the game, but after heading well from a cross from the right wing by Marwa Chamberi, the ball was cleared off the line by Israel Emuge. Sony Sugar then went on the defensive for the rest of the match, placing their hopes on a penalty shoot-out win after 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nHowever, goals from Chamberi and Wycliffe Nyangech were not enough to save the Awendo side from defeat, as David Owino scored the winning penalty for Gor Mahia after Odette and Ben Barasa missed their penalties. Patrick Oboya, who replaced Kiongera during the course of the match, Omondi and Joseph Wanyonyi had also put their penalties at the back of the net prior to Owino. The match was suddenly shrouded in controversy after the shoot-out, when Gor Mahia fans invaded the pitch in celebration and attacked Sony Sugar players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, Gor Mahia\nThe incident left Kasaya and several other Sony Sugar players injured and admitted in hospital. However, the Football Kenya Federation (FKF) took no action against Gor Mahia, but the Kenya Footballers Welfare Association called for heightened security for the final, and the FKF announced plans to ensure a safe match a week before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, A.F.C. Leopards\nGaining automatic entry to the second round as a Premier League team, Ingwe began their President's Cup campaign with a 5\u20130 rout of Provincial League side Wazee wa Kazi, thanks to goals from Mike Baraza, Allan Wanga, Noah Wafula, Oscar Kadenge and Peter Opiyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, A.F.C. Leopards\nLeopards then had to face Chemelil Sugar, a team they hadn't beaten in 12 years, in the third round away from home. However, Leopards looked the better side in the first half, creating a good chance just 8 minutes into the game, but captain Martin Imbalambala had his shot blocked. Wanga scored the first goal in the 20th minute after having the ball cut back from the left wing for him by Paul Were, but the referee disallowed the goal, with the linesman saying the ball had gone out of play at the time Were made the pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, A.F.C. Leopards\nIn the second half, Chemelil Sugar looked more dangerous on the attack and emerged as the better side. 6 minutes after the break, Jared Obwoge almost took the lead for his side, but headed wide off a corner. Obwoge had another chances 6 minutes later but put his shot wide of the far post to give Leopards a goal kick. However, their efforts would prove to be in vain, when in the 74th minute Charles Okwemba rose above his opponents to head home a corner from Abdallah Juma. Wanga almost made it 2\u20130 just 4 minutes later, but goalkeeper Jairus Adira came off his line to deal with Mike Baraza's cross. The narrow win took them to the quarter-finals, where they would face Karuturi Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, A.F.C. Leopards\nThe quarter-final seemed to be a much easier task for Ingwe. Their first chance of the game came early in the 3rd minute, but Noah Wafula put his shot wide after combining well with Wanga. The first goal came just 3 minutes later, when skipper Imbalambala caused a mix-up in the box after connecting a header from a free kick by Kadenge, during which Okwemba put the ball in the back of the net. Just 2 minutes later, Wanga put his side 2\u20130 up after dribbling past Geoffrey Msiebe and slotting his shot low past Michael Wanyika.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, A.F.C. Leopards\nWanga then added to his tally in the second half after finishing off a cross from Were from the left flank. However, Leopards could have conceded in the second half, with John Kiplagat heading on target the first of Karuturi's chances from an Amon Muchiri free kick, only to be calmly handled by goalkeeper Martin Musalia. Player-coach Jacob Omondi could have also grabbed one for his side, but could not find himself on the end of a good pass from Kiplagat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Road to the final, A.F.C. Leopards\nIn the semi-final against Sofapaka, Leopards drew first blood in the 39th minute after a flurry of chances from both teams, when Mike Baraza sent Wanga off to the goalmouth with a well-played through pass. Goalkeeper Duncan Ochieng rushed out to clear the pass, but missed the ball, leaving himself embarrassed and Wanga with an open goal. It was during the second half where Leopards sealed their victory, after Were won the ball in the midfield to find Wafula, who blasted the ball into the top of the net and cemented their place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nBefore the match took place, a \"legends\" match between former members of both teams was played. After a goalless 30 minutes of play, Gor Mahia won the match 2\u20131 on penalties, with the winning penalties coming from Sony Sugar coach Sammy Omollo and Oti Maua. Francis Xavier scored his penalty for A.F.C. Leopards but Mike Amwayi and Nicholas Muyoti both shot wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, First half\nThe first half began on a strong note, with Leopards creating the first chance of the game in the 3rd minute. Paul Were's attack forced goalkeeper Jerim Onyango to lose the ball, but the skipper saved the second shot and conceded the first corner. Gor Mahia then responded a few minutes later through a surging run by Dan Sserunkuma, but did not find enough time to take a shot on goal. Going into the 20th minute, both sides had good chances to go ahead, with Leopards' Charles Okwemba and Gor Mahia's Sserunkuma and Innocent Mutiso all putting their shots wide. Abdallah Juma could have gotten the lead for Leopards in the 28th minute, but had his free kick well saved by Onyango.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, First half\nArguably the best chance for A.F.C. Leopards came in the 38th minute after Augustine Etemesi's cross from the right wing found Wanga, whose shot rolled just inches wide under considerable pressure. On the other end, Anthony Akumu almost headed Gor Mahia into the lead from a corner taken by Mutiso, but the cross was quickly punched away by Martin Musalia in the last minute of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, Second half\nAt the beginning of the second half, Sserunkuma had a good chance to score for Gor Mahia, but had his low shot easily collected by Musalia. Leopards then capitalised on Gor Mahia's exposed defence, when Noah Wafula made a run down the right wing and received the ball to set up Peter Opiyo, who put his shot away in the 52nd minute. Just 5 minutes later, Gor Mahia would have gone down by 2 goals, but captain Onyango was equal to the task when Juma got a shot on goal after being released on a surging run by Allan Wanga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, Second half\nMusalia could have cost his side the equaliser in the 65th minute after fumbling the ball. However, Musa Mohammed's attack was well dealt with by Etemesi. 10 minutes later on the other end, Wafula had run down the right wing once again but instead of setting up Wanga, who was waiting inside the box, he sent his shot well wide and gave Gor Mahia a goal kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, Second half\nIn the dying minutes of the game, both sides had good chances to score. Paul Kiongera, who replaced Akumu in the 68th minute, had a shot hit the side netting, while Oscar Kadenge, who replaced Were much earlier in the 55th minute, had a weak shot easily picked up by Onyango in the 88th minute. Sserunkuma, who was heavily marked by Leopards defenders throughout the course of the second half, nearly took Gor Mahia's last chance of the game, but had his low shot picked up by Musalia in the second minute of added time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, Post-match\nImmediately after the final whistle was blown, Leopards fans invaded the pitch in celebration and engaged their Gor Mahia counterparts in provocative banter, which resulted in stone-throwing between the two sets of fans. Several people were injured in the fray, and police were forced to use tear-gas to clear them from the pitch and the VIP section of the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233453-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 FKF President's Cup Final, Match, Post-match\nAfter the clash between the fans, Noah Wafula was named Man of the Match and Player of the Tournament in addition to receiving a winner's medal, and won a GOtv decoder as part of the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233454-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FORU Oceania Cup\nThe 2013 FORU Oceania Cup for national rugby union teams in the Oceania region was held in Papua New Guinea at the Lloyd Robson Oval in Port Moresby from 6 to 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233454-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FORU Oceania Cup\nThe Cook Islands won the cup, by winning the round-robin tournament over Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and Tahiti, to progress to the second stage of the Oceania qualifiers for the 2015 Rugby World Cup and a play-off against Fiji. Fiji and the other Band 1 teams from Oceania teams (Australia, New Zealand, Samoa, and Tonga) do not participate in the Oceania Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233454-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FORU Oceania Cup, Standings\n\u2022 The top team (Green background) advances to the 2015 RWC Oceania Qualifying Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233454-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FORU Oceania Cup, Standings\nPoints breakdown:4 points for a win2 points for a draw1 bonus point for a loss by seven points or less1 bonus point for scoring four or more tries in a match", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233455-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FQ28\n2013 FQ28 is a trans-Neptunian object, both considered a scattered and detached object, located in the outermost region of the Solar System. It was first observed on 17 March 2013, by a team of astronomers at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile. It orbits the Sun in a moderate inclined, moderate-eccentricity orbit. The weak dwarf planet candidate measures approximately 260 kilometers (160 miles) in diameter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233455-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FQ28, Orbit and classification\n2013 FQ28 orbits the Sun at a distance of 45.8\u201380.1\u00a0AU once every 499 years and 5 months (182,422 days; semi-major axis of 62.95\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.27 and an inclination of 26\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233455-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FQ28, Orbit and classification\nWith an orbital period of 499 years, and similar to 2015 FJ345, it seems to be a resonant trans-Neptunian objects in a 1:3 resonance with Neptune, as several other objects, but with a lower eccentricity (0.27 instead of more than 0.60) and a higher perihelia (at 45.8\u00a0AU rather than 31\u201341\u00a0AU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233455-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FQ28, Orbit and classification\nConsidered both a scattered and detached object, 2013 FQ28 is particularly unusual as it has a relatively circular orbit for a scattered-disc object (SDO). Although it is thought that typical SDOs 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, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233455-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FQ28, Physical characteristics\nA survey for objects beyond the Kuiper Cliff by Scott Sheppard, Chadwick Trujillo and David Tholen gives a diameter of 250 kilometers assuming a moderate albedo of 0.10. Johnston's archive estimates a diameter of 280 kilometers based on an assumed albedo of 0.09, while American astronomer Michael Brown, calculates a diameter of 266 kilometers, using an estimated albedo of 0.08 and an absolute magnitude of 6.3. This is approximately half the size of 2005 TB190, which is estimated at around 500 kilometres (310\u00a0mi), roughly a quarter the size of Pluto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233455-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FQ28, Physical characteristics\nOn his website, Brown lists this object as a \"possible\" dwarf planet (200\u2013400\u00a0km), which is the category with the lowest certainty in his 5-class taxonomic system. As of 2018, no spectral type and color indices, nor a rotational lightcurve have been obtained from spectroscopic and photometric observations. The body's color, rotation period, pole and shape remain unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233456-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FS28\n2013 FS28 is an extreme trans-Neptunian object from the extended scattered disc on a highly eccentric orbit in the outermost region of the Solar System. It measures approximately 466 kilometers (290 miles) in diameter and is \"probably\" a dwarf planet. The detached, extended scattered disc object belongs to the group of extreme trans-Neptunian objects. It was first observed on 16 March 2013, by American astronomers Scott Sheppard and Chad Trujillo at the Cerro Tololo Observatory in Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233456-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FS28, Orbit and classification\n2013 FS28 is 83\u00a0AU (12.4\u00a0billion\u00a0km) from the Sun with a 7 year observation arc. It orbits the Sun at a distance of roughly 36\u2013240\u00a0AU once every 1600 years. Its orbit has a high eccentricity of 0.7 and an inclination of 13\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic. It has a minimum orbital intersection distance with Neptune of 9 AU. The body's observation arc begins with its first official observation in March 2013, using the 4-meter Blanco Telescope at Cerro Tololo Observatory (807).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233456-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FS28, Orbit and classification\nIt belongs to a small group of detached objects with perihelion distances of 30\u00a0AU or more, and semi-major axes of 150\u00a0AU or more. Such extreme trans-Neptunian objects (ETNOs) can not reach such orbits without some perturbing object, which lead to the speculation of Planet Nine. It comes to perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) around December 2119.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233456-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FS28, Numbering and naming\nAs of 2018, this minor planet has neither been numbered nor named by the Minor Planet Center. The official discoverer(s) will be defined when the object is numbered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 31], "content_span": [32, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233456-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FS28, Physical characteristics\nAccording to the Johnston's archive and to American astronomer Michael Brown, 2013 FS28 measures 464 and 468 kilometers in diameter based on an assumed albedo of 0.09 and 0.07, respectively. On his website, Michael Brown lists this object as \"probably\" a dwarf planet (400\u2013500\u00a0km) based on his 5-class taxonomic system that ranges from \"nearly certainly\" to \"possibly\". As of 2018, no rotational lightcurve of has been obtained from photometric observations. The body's rotation period, pole and shape remain unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233457-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FSCC Early Cash\nThe 2013 FSCC Early Cash was a bonspiel that was held from September 20 to 22 at the Four Seasons Curling Club in Blaine, Minnesota as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. Both the men's and women's events were being held in a round robin format. The purse for the men's event was $10,000, while the purse for the women's event was $7,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233458-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FSP Gold River Women's Challenger\nThe 2013 FSP Gold River Women's Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Sacramento, United States, on July 1\u20137, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233458-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FSP Gold River Women's Challenger, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233459-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FSP Gold River Women's Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAsia Muhammad and Yasmin Schnack were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both decided not to defend the title together as a team. Muhammad partnered up with Maria Sanchez as the first seeds whilst Schnack received a wildcard with Kelly Wilson. Schnack and Wilson lost in the first round; Muhammad and Schnack lost in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233459-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FSP Gold River Women's Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nNaomi Broady and Storm Sanders won the title, defeating Robin Anderson and Lauren Embree in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233460-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FSP Gold River Women's Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sanchez was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she lost to Ivana Lisjak in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233460-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FSP Gold River Women's Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMayo Hibi won the title, defeating Madison Brengle in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233461-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FT28\n2013 FT28 is a trans-Neptunian object. The existence of the TNO was discovered on 16 March 2013 at Cerro Tololo Observatory, La Serena and revealed on 30 August 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233461-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FT28\n2013 FT28 is the first high semi-major axis, high perihelion extreme trans-Neptunian object that is anti-aligned with the other known extreme trans-Neptunian objects such as Sedna and 2012 VP113, i.e. its longitude of perihelion differs by 180\u00b0 from other objects. The orbit of 2013 FT28 appears stable though simulations showed that it may have some resonant interaction with the known giant planets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233461-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FT28\nIts argument of perihelion is similar to that of another TNO, 2015 KG163.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233462-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FW13\n2013 FW13 is an Apollo asteroid and a potentially hazardous object, that was discovered on March 23, 2013 by the Catalina Sky Survey. Further observation of its orbital calculation was made by amateur astronomer Mohammed Alsunni of Sudan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233462-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FW13\n2013 FW13 is a potentially hazardous asteroid (PHA) since its minimum orbit intersection distance (MOID) is less than 0.05 AU and its diameter is estimated to be greater than ~150 meters. The Earth MOID is 0.013\u00a0AU (1,900,000\u00a0km; 1,200,000\u00a0mi). On 18 September 2024 it will safely pass about 0.02\u00a0AU (3,000,000\u00a0km; 1,900,000\u00a0mi) from Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233462-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FW13\nThe Absolute magnitude of the asteroid is 21.70 giving the object an approximate diameter of 120\u2013270 meters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233463-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands general election\nThe Falkland Islands general election of 2013 was held on Thursday 7 November 2013 to elect all eight members of the Legislative Assembly (five from the Stanley constituency and three from the Camp constituency) through universal suffrage using block voting, with each Stanley constituent having up to 5 votes and each Camp constituent having up to 3 votes. A total of 1,046 ballots (4,750 votes) were cast in Stanley, representing a turn-out of 75.4%, and 242 ballots (675 votes) in Camp, representing a turn-out of 85.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233463-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands general election\nAs no political parties are active in the Falklands, all the candidates stood as Independents. The Chief Executive of the Falkland Islands, Keith Padgett, acted as returning officer. It was the second election since the new Constitution came into force replacing the Legislative Council (which had existed since 1845) with the Legislative Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233463-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands general election\nFor the first time, elected candidates would be paid a salary, rather than just expenses, and be expected to work full-time, giving up whatever jobs or business interests they may have previously held. This led to criticism from some Islanders that potential candidates had been put off from standing as they didn't want to give up their jobs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233463-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands general election\nAll but two members of the previous Legislative Assembly won re-election (Camp MLA Sharon Halford lost her seat and Stanley MLA Dick Sawle did not stand for re-election). Michael Poole, one of the new intake, became the first member of the islands' legislature to have been born after the Falklands War and received the highest number of votes of a candidate in the history of the islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233463-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands general election, Campaign\nOn 29 July 2013 the Executive Council announced that election day had been scheduled for 7 November. In preparation for the election, the Legislative Assembly was dissolved by the Governor on 26 September 2013. Nominations for candidates opened on the day of the dissolution and closed on 17 October. Eleven candidates stood in Stanley and five in Camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233463-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands general election, Campaign\nEach candidate made a two-minute televised broadcast on the Falkland Islands Television Service to set out their manifestos. Hustings were held in late October and early November, with a north\u2013south air-link and better facilities for tourism being the main issues debated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum\nA referendum on political status was held in the Falkland Islands on 10\u201311 March 2013. The Falkland Islanders were asked whether or not they supported the continuation of their status as an Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom in view of Argentina's call for negotiations on the islands' sovereignty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum\nOn a turnout of 92%, 99.8% voted to remain a British territory, with only three votes against. Had the islanders rejected the continuation of their current status, a second referendum on possible alternatives would have been held. Brad Smith, the leader of the international observer group, announced that the referendum was free and fair and executed in accordance with international standards and international laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Background\nNegotiations over the sovereignty of the islands took place between Argentina and the United Kingdom in the 1960s and 1970s, but no agreement was ever reached. In 1982 the Argentine military junta, which ruled Argentina at the time, invaded and occupied the islands, beginning the Falklands War at the end of which the islands came back under British control. Since the war, Argentina has continued to call for the resumption of negotiations, but the United Kingdom refuses such requests, stating that the Falkland Islanders have the right to self-determination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Background\nOn the fourth anniversary of the start of the war, the Falkland Islands Association and the Marplan Institute conducted the Falkland Island Sovereignty Survey of all registered voters on the islands, the result of which showed that 96.45% of the islanders supported remaining a British territory. Eight years later, in an Argentine-inspired poll, 87% of the islanders rejected any form of discussion of sovereignty in any circumstances, preferring to remain British.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Recent tensions\nTensions over the status of the islands began to increase with approach of the 30th anniversary of the Falklands war and the decision of the Falkland Islands government to start oil exploration in Falklands territorial waters. This led to the government of Argentina banning Falklands flagged ships and vessels linked to the Falklands' oil industry from docking at Argentine ports. The Argentine government also began a diplomatic campaign, calling on several international groups to support the resumption of negotiations, gaining support from organisations such as the Union of South American Nations and the Rio Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Recent tensions\nIn 2011 the Argentine Defence minister, Arturo Puricelli, stated that the Falkland Islanders were kept as \"hostages\" on the islands and later suggested that the British military \"is the only element that upholds the usurpation of that part of our national territory\". This led to the Governor of the Falkland Islands, Nigel Haywood, proposing a referendum to see whether islanders want to remain British or not \"so we can solve the issue once and for all\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Announcement and responses\nOn 12 June 2012, Gavin Short, a Member of the Falkland Islands Legislative Assembly, announced the intention of the Falkland Islands Government to hold a referendum in the first half of 2013, saying that:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Announcement and responses\nWe have thought carefully about how to convey a strong message to the outside world that expresses the views of the Falklands people in a clear, democratic and incontestable way. So we have decided, with the full support of the British Government, to hold a referendum on the Falkland Islands to eliminate any possible doubt about our wishes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Announcement and responses\nHe made the announcement during a visit to the islands by Foreign Office Minister Jeremy Browne to mark the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War. Browne supported the holding of the referendum, calling it a \"truly significant moment\", saying that \"It will give the Falkland Islands people the opportunity to send a clear message... that the Islanders, and they alone are masters of their fate.\" British Prime Minister David Cameron said that his Government supported the holding of the referendum and would \"respect and defend\" the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Announcement and responses\nThe Argentine government said the outcome of the referendum would not affect the country's claim to the islands. Daniel Filmus, chairman of the Argentine Senate Foreign Affairs committee, said it \"does not change at all the Argentine position\", while Guillermo Carmona, chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of Argentina's Chamber of Deputies, said \"This has no value at all since Argentina rejects the possibility of self-determination for an implanted population, such as the implanted British population in the Malvinas\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Announcement and responses\nAt the 2012 G-20 Mexico summit Cameron confronted Argentine President Christina Fernandez de Kirchner and called on her to respect the referendum, while she said that the issue should be resolved in line with United Nations General Assembly resolution 40/21 November 1985. President Kirchner had earlier refused an invitation from the Falkland Islands Government to speak with a delegation of islanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, History, Announcement and responses\nOn 28 November 2012, it was reported that Argentina had launched a campaign to \"undermine the legitimacy\" of the referendum. This consisted of dissuading British politicians from acting as observers in the referendum, and sending two diplomats on a tour of the Caribbean and Africa to argue for Argentina's claim to the islands and convince governments of the \"inconvenience\" of sending observers to monitor the referendum. During a visit to London on 6 February 2013 the Argentine Foreign minister, Hector Timerman, claimed that the Falkland Islanders \"do not exist\" as such, they are British citizens in disputed islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Referendum details\nThe current political status of the Falkland Islands is that of an Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom. The Islands are internally self-governing, with the United Kingdom being responsible for defence and foreign affairs. Under Chapter 1 of the Falkland Islands Constitution, the people of the Falkland Islands have the right to self-determination. The referendum was called following Argentina's calls for negotiations over the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands and was undertaken to consult the people regarding their views on the political status of the Falkland Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Referendum details\nThe final wording of the question was proposed by the Legislative Assembly in October 2012 and adopted by the Executive Council on 21 November 2012. The question posed by the referendum was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Referendum details\nDo you wish the Falkland Islands to retain their current political status as an Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom? YES or NO", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Referendum details\nIn order to vote in the referendum, electors had to be resident in the islands, aged 18 or over and have Falkland Islands status. According to the 2012 census, 11% of the electorate were not born in either the Falkland Islands or the UK; this included 13 Argentine-born electors. Polls were open from 10:00 to 18:00 FKST (UTC\u22123) on Sunday 10 and Monday 11 March 2013 in the two constituencies of the islands (Stanley and Camp).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Observers\nFollowing the announcement of the referendum, British Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Jeremy Browne, said that the Falkland Islands Government would invite independent international observers to verify the outcome of the referendum. The Referendum International Observation Mission during the referendum was led by Brad Smith from the United States and included representatives from Canada, Mexico, Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile and New Zealand. Following the declaration of the results, Smith announced \"the international observation mission has concluded that the voting process was executed in accordance with international standards and local laws. The process was technically sound, with a systematic adherence to established voting procedures... It is our finding that the Falkland Islands referendum process was free and fair, reflecting the democratic will of the voters of the Falkland Islands.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 979]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Results\nThe results were announced by Keith Padgett, the Chief Executive of the Falkland Islands, at 22:40 FKST (UTC\u22123), in Stanley Town Hall. The high vote to remain a British territory was widely expected, with even the small Argentine population on the islands saying they would vote 'Yes'. Several commentators, including the BBC's correspondent Caroline Wyatt, had anticipated a fairly large 'No' vote from islanders who wanted a second referendum on independence. However, out of the 1,518 ballots cast, only three voters were against keeping the islands' current status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Results\nTurnout was over 90% with 1,650 islanders eligible to vote in a population of 2,841. It is possible that at least one of the three people that voted 'No' did so out of a desire for full independence. There was one blank and one invalid votes each, the latter coming from a voter who both ticked the Yes box and crossed the No one. Despite recognizing the intent for a yes vote, the officials considered it invalid, as the rules written directly above on the ballot clearly forbade making signs in both boxes. Around twenty to thirty \"doubtful\" votes with signs others than ticks or crosses in the yes box were examined during the count, and deemed valid yes votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Results\nShortly after the vote was announced several islanders gathered in Victory Green, in the centre of Stanley, to celebrate the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Reactions\nFollowing the declaration, British Prime Minister David Cameron said \"the Falkland Islanders have spoken so clearly about their future, and now other countries right across the world, I hope, will respect and revere this very, very clear result.\" Argentine President Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner rejected the result and described the referendum as a \"parody\", saying \"It is as if a consortium of squatters had voted on whether to continue illegally occupying a building.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233464-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Falkland Islands sovereignty referendum, Reactions\nOn 18 April 2013, U.S. Congressman Mario D\u00edaz-Balart introduced a resolution to the United States House of Representatives calling on the United States Government to officially recognise the referendum result. The resolution was cosponsored by 18 Republican and 7 Democratic members of the House and was referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs without a vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233465-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Family Circle Cup\nThe 2013 Family Circle Cup was a women's tennis event in the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place from March 30 to April 7, 2013. It was the 41st edition of the tournament and a Premier level tournament. The event was hosted at the Family Circle Tennis Center, on Daniel Island, Charleston, United States. It was the only event of the Clay courts season played on green clay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233465-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Family Circle Cup, Points and prize money, Prize money\nThe total commitment prize money for this year's event was $795,707", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233465-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Family Circle Cup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233466-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Doubles\nAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Lucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but Pavlyuchenkova chose not to participate this year. \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 played alongside Kristina Mladenovic and successfully defended the title, defeating Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Liezel Huber in the final 6\u20133, 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233467-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Singles\nSerena Williams was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, defeating Jelena Jankovi\u0107 in the final 3\u20136, 6\u20130, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233467-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233468-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl\nThe 2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 21, 2013 at Bronco Stadium on the campus of Boise State University in Boise, Idaho. The seventeenth annual Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, it featured the Buffalo Bulls of the Mid-American Conference against the San Diego State Aztecs of the Mountain West Conference. It began at 3:30\u00a0p.m. MST and aired on ESPN. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. San Diego State defeated Buffalo, 49\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233468-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Teams\nThe Bulls accepted their invitation after earning an 8\u20134 record in their season, while the Aztecs accepted their invitation after earning a 7\u20135 record in theirs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233468-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Teams, Buffalo Bulls\nThe Bulls returned to their winning ways this season, finishing at 8\u20134 overall and 6\u20132 in conference play, good for second place in the MAC's East Division. At season's end, bowl director Kevin McDonald extended an invitation to the Bulls to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233468-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Teams, Buffalo Bulls\nThis was Buffalo's first Famous Idaho Potato Bowl appearance. The University at Buffalo was led by Khalil Mack, who was the MAC Defensive Player of the Year, with team-high 94 tackles, 19 TFLs, 10.5 sacks, three interceptions and five forced fumbles. Buffalo has seven players named to All-MAC Teams, with five on the first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233468-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Teams, San Diego State Aztecs\nThe Aztecs continued their recent winning ways this season, finishing at 7\u20135 overall and 6\u20132 in conference play, good for second place in the Mountain West's West Division. At season's end, bowl director Kevin McDonald extended an invitation to the Aztecs to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233468-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Teams, San Diego State Aztecs\nThis will be San Diego State's first Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, setting a school-record fourth consecutive bowl game. Quarterback Quinn Kaehler has thrown for 2,796 yards and 17 touchdowns for coach Rocky Long this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233469-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Farah attack\nOn 3 April 2013, the Taliban attacked Farah, Afghanistan, using bombs and guns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233469-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Farah attack, Attack\nOn 3 April 2013, a group of militants began an assault on Farah, a city in western Afghanistan. The attack began at about 9am and centred on the city's courthouse. Wearing army uniforms, they blew up an army vehicle, damaging buildings - including the local governor's office and two banks. They entered buildings, then a machine-gun and grenade battle ensued between the attackers and Afghan security forces. Six attackers wore explosive belts. The death toll was 34 civilians, 10 members of the security forces and nine attackers. Another 90 people, most of whom were civilians, were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233469-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Farah attack, Reaction\nThe Taliban said they carried out the attack and that they succeeded in freeing their prisoners. However, the province's police chief said that the insurgents failed in their attempt to enable the escape of 15 Taliban prisoners who were being transferred to the courthouse to be tried, as they are all accounted for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233470-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Cup\nThe 2013 Faroe Islands Cup was the 59th edition of the Faroe Islands domestic football cup. It started on 30 March 2013 and ended with the final on 24 August 2013. V\u00edkingur G\u00f8ta were the defending champions, having won their second cup title the previous year. The winner of the competition qualified for the first qualifying round of the 2014\u201315 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233470-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Cup\nOnly the first teams of Faroese football clubs were allowed to participate. The Preliminary Round involved only teams from 1. deild, 2. deild and 3. deild competitions. Teams from the highest division entered the competition in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233470-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Cup, Preliminary round\nThree clubs from the 2. deild and one club from the 3. deild entered this round. These matches took place on 30 March 2013. The draw for this round was made on a live TV broadcast on KVF's show 3-2 on 11 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233470-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Cup, First round\nThe two winners from the Preliminary Round, all ten clubs from the Faroe Islands Premier League and four clubs from the 1. deild entered this round. The matches took place on 14 April 2013. The draw for this round was made on a live TV broadcast on KVF's show 3-2 on 11 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233470-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Cup, Semifinals\nThe ties were played over two legs on 29 May and 7 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233471-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Premier League\n2013 Faroe Islands Premier League was the seventy-first season of top-tier football on the Faroe Islands. For sponsorship reasons, it is known as Effodeildin. EB/Streymur were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233471-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Premier League, Teams\nB68 Toftir and FC Su\u00f0uroy had finished 9th and 10th respectively at the end of the previous season and were relegated to the 1. deild as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233471-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Premier League, Teams\nReplacing them were the 1. deild champions 07 Vestur and runners-up AB Argir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233471-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Faroe Islands Premier League, Results\nThe schedule consisted of a total of 27 rounds. Each team played three games against every opponent in no particular order. At least one of the games had to be at home and at least one had to be away. The additional home game for every match-up was randomly assigned prior to the season, with the top five teams of the previous season having 5 home games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233472-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fast5 Netball World Series\nThe 2013 Fast5 Netball World Series was the fifth staging of the annual Netball World Series, and the second to be played under the new Fast5 rules, which replaced the older fastnet rules introduced in 2009. The tournament was held at Vector Arena in Auckland for the second year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233472-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fast5 Netball World Series\nThe 2013 tournament was contested by the top six national netball teams in 2013. Hosts New Zealand defeated Australia in the Grand Final by 56 to 27, to record their fourth overall series victory in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233472-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fast5 Netball World Series, Tournament overview, Date and Venue\nThe 2013 Fast5 Netball World Series was played in Auckland, New Zealand over three days, from 8-10 November. All matches were held at Vector Arena, which has a capacity of 12,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233472-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fast5 Netball World Series, Tournament overview, Format\n20 matches were played over three days, under the Fast5 rules of netball. Each team played each other once during the first two days in a round-robin format. The four highest-scoring teams from this stage progressed to the finals, played on the final day of competition, in which the 1st-ranked team played the 4th-ranked team, while 2nd played 3rd. The winners of these two matches contested the Grand Final; the remaining teams contested the third-fourth place playoff match and fifth-sixth place playoff match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233472-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fast5 Netball World Series, Teams\nThe tournament was contested by the six top national netball teams in the world, according to the INF World Rankings: New Zealand, Australia, England, Jamaica, Malawi and South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233472-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fast5 Netball World Series, Draw and results, Round robin table\n1. New Zealand (5 wins, 0 losses, 0 draws) 2. Jamaica (3 wins, 1 loss, 1 draw) 3. Australia (2 wins, 2 losses, 1 draw) 4. South Africa (2 wins, 3 losses, 0 draws) --- 5. Malawi (1 win, 4 losses, 0 draws) 6. England (1 wins, 4 losses, 0 draws)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233473-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fayetteville, North Carolina mayoral election\nThe 2013 Fayetteville mayoral election took place on November 5, 2013 to elect the mayor of Fayetteville, North Carolina. It saw the election of Nat Robertson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233473-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fayetteville, North Carolina mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor Tony Chavonne did not seek reelection to a fifth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233474-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup\nThe 2013 Fed Cup (also known as the 2013 Fed Cup by BNP Paribas for sponsorship purposes) was the 51st edition of the most important tournament between national teams in women's tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233474-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup\nThe draw took place on 6 June 2012 in Paris, France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 65]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233474-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup\nThe final took place at the Tennis Club Cagliari in Cagliari, Italy on 1\u20132 November. The home and three time champions Italy defeated the fourth-seeded Russia, to win their fourth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233474-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup, World Group II\nThe World Group II was the second highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2013. Winners advanced to the World Group Play-offs, and the losers played in the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233474-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup, World Group Play-offs\nThe four losing teams in the World Group first round ties, and four winners of the World Group II ties entered the draw for the World Group Play-offs. Four seeded teams, based on the latest Fed Cup ranking, were drawn against four unseeded teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 35], "content_span": [36, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233474-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup, World Group II Play-offs\nThe four losing teams from World Group II played off against qualifiers from Zonal Group I. Two teams qualified from Europe/Africa Zone, one team from the Asia/Oceania Zone, and one team from the Americas Zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 38], "content_span": [39, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233474-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233475-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone\nThe Americas Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2013 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233475-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone, Group I\nThe eight teams were divided into two pools of four teams. The two pool winners took part in play-offs to determine the nation advancing to the World Group II Play-offs. The nations in second place in each pool played off against each other to determine the final positions within the group. For the relegation Play-off, the nations in third place in each pool played off against the nations in fourth position in the other pool to determine which two nations were relegated to Americas Zone Group II in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233475-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone, Group II\nThe eleven teams were divided into two pools of five and six teams. The winner of each pool was promoted to Americas Zone Group I in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233476-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2011 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 2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I, the top countries of each pool played for first to second, while the bottom two of each pool competed for sixth and ninth. The top team advanced to World Group II Play-offs, and the bottom two teams were relegated down to the Americas Zone Group II for the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233476-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first placed teams of each pool were drawn in a head-to-head round. The winner of the round advanced to the World Group II Play-offs, where they would get a chance to advanced to World Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233476-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 3rd to 4th Play-Offs\nThe second placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the third and fourth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233476-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe last placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds. The loser of each round was relegated down to Americas Zone Group II in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233477-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Americas zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom teams faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233478-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Americas zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom teams faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233479-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Americas zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Five teams competed in a round robin competition, with the teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the 2014 Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233480-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2013 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Americas zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Five teams competed in a round robin competition, with the teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the 2014 Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233481-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2013 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233481-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group I\nThe seven teams were divided into one pool of three and one pool of four teams. The two pool winners took part in play-offs to determine the nation advanced to the World Group II Play-offs. The nations finishing last in their pools took part in relegation play-offs, with the losing nation was relegated to Group II for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233481-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group II\nThe eleven teams were divided into one pool of five and one pool of six teams. The winners of each pool played off against each other to determine which one team advanced to Asia/Oceania Zone Group I in 2014. All the other nations competed in the same manner for the positional Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233482-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2013 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 seven teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I. The top team advanced to the World Group II, and the bottom team was relegated down to the Group II for the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233482-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first placed teams of each pool were drawn in a head-to-head round. The winner of the round advanced to the World Group II Play-offs, where they'd get a chance to advanced to World Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233482-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 3rd to 4th Play-Offs\nThe second placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the third and fourth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233482-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe last placed teams of each pool were drawn in a head-to-head round. The loser of each round was relegated down to Asia/Oceania Zone Group II in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233483-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233484-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233485-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II were the final stages of the Group II Zonal Competition involving teams from Asia and Oceania. Using the positions determined in their pools, the eleven teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II. The top team advanced to 2014 Asia/Oceania Zone Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233485-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Round\nThe first placed teams of each pool played in a head-to-head round. The winner advanced to the Group I for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233485-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, 3rd to 4th Play-Off\nThe second placed teams of each pool played in a head-to-head round to find the third and fourth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233485-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, 5th to 6th Play-Off\nThe third placed teams of each pool played in a head-to-head round to find the fifth and sixth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233485-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, 7th to 8th Play-Off\nThe fourth placed teams of each pool played in a head-to-head round to find the seventh and eighth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233485-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, 9th to 10th Play-Off\nThe fifth placed teams of each pool played in a head-to-head round to find the ninth and tenth placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233486-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Five teams competed in a round robin competition, with the teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the 2014 Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233487-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2013 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Five teams competed in a round robin competition, with the teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the 2014 Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233488-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone\nThe Europe/Africa Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2013 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233488-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group I\nThe sixteen teams were divided into four pools of four teams. The four pool winners will take part in play-offs to determine the two nations advancing to the World Group II Play-offs. The nations finishing last in their pools will take part in relegation play-offs, with the two losing nations being relegated to Group II for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233488-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group II\nThe eight teams were divided into two pools of four teams. The two nations placing first and second will take part in play-offs to determine the two nations advancing to Group I. The nations finishing last in their pools will take part in relegation play-offs, with the two losing nations being relegated to Group III for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233488-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group III\nThe thirteen teams were divided into three pools of three teams and one pool of four. The four pool winners will take part in play-offs to determine the two nations advancing to Group II for 2014. The fourth nation in Pool D will not compete in the positional play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233489-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I were the final stages of the Group I Zonal Competition involving teams from Europe and Africa. Using the positions determined in their pools, the fifteen teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I. The top two teams advanced to World Group II Play-offs, and the bottom two teams were relegated down to the Europe/Africa Zone Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233489-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional play-offs\nThe first placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds. The winner of each round advanced to the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233489-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 5th to 8th play-offs\nThe second placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the equal fifth and seventh placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233489-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 9th to 12th play-offs\nThe third placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the equal ninth and the eleventh placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233489-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, 9th to 12th play-offs, Portugal vs. Slovenia\nThe play-off tie between Portugal and Slovenia did not take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233489-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation play-offs\nThe last placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds. The loser of each round was relegated down to Europe/Africa Zone Group II in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233490-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233491-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233492-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool C\nGroup C of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233493-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool D\nGroup D of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to the World Group II Play-offs, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233494-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs\nThe play-offs of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II were the final stages of the Group II zonal competition involving teams from Europe and Africa. Using the positions determined in their pools, the seven teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II. The top two teams advanced to Group I, and the bottom two teams were relegated down to the Group III for the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233494-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional play-offs\nThe first-placed teams of each pool played against the second-placed teams of the other pool in head-to-head rounds. The winner of each round advanced to the 2014 Europe/Africa Zone Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233494-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation play-offs\nThe third-placed teams of each pool played against the fourth-placed teams of the other pool in head-to-head rounds. The loser of each round was relegated to the 2014 Europe/Africa Zone Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233495-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round-robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group I, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233496-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa zone of the 2013 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round-robin competition, with the top team and the bottom team proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group I, while the bottom team faced potential relegation to Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233497-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III were the final stages of the Group III Zonal Competition involving teams from Europe and Africa. Using the positions determined in their pools, the twelve teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III. The top two teams advanced to Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233497-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds. The winner of each round advanced to Group II in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233497-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs, 5th to 8th Play-Offs\nThe second placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the equal fifth and seventh placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 75], "content_span": [76, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233497-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs, 9th to 12th Play-Offs\nThe third placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the equal ninth and eleventh placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233498-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group III of the 2013 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233499-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group III of the 2013 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233500-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool C\nGroup C of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group III of the 2013 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233501-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool D\nGroup D of the 2013 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group III of the 2013 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top team and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top team played for advancement to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233502-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup World Group\nThe World Group was the highest level of Fed Cup (women's tennis) competition in 2013. First seeds Czech Republic were the defending champions, but they were defeated in the semi-finals by Italy. Italy won the final against Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233503-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup World Group II\nThe World Group II was the second highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2013. Four of the winners advanced to the World Group Play-offs, and the losing nations resorted to the World Group II Play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233504-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup World Group II Play-offs\nThe World Group II Play-offs were four ties which involved the losing nations of the World Group II and four nations from the three Zonal Group I competitions. Nations that won their play-off ties entered the 2014 World Group, while losing nations joined their respective zonal groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233505-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fed Cup World Group Play-offs\nThe World Group Play-offs were four ties which involved the losing nations of the World Group first round and the winning nations of the World Group II. Nations that won their play-off ties entered the 2014 World Group, while losing nations joined the 2014 World Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400\nThe 2013\u00a0FedEx\u00a0400\u00a0benefiting\u00a0Autism\u00a0Speaks was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on June 2, 2013, at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware, United States. Contested over 400 laps on the 1\u2013mile (1.6\u00a0km) oval, it was the thirteenth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Tony Stewart won the race, his first win of the season, snapping a 30\u2013race winless streak, while Juan Pablo Montoya finished second. Jeff Gordon, Kyle Busch, and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Background\nDover International Speedway is a four-turn short track oval that is 1 mile (1.6\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at twenty-four degrees. The front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at nine degrees with the backstretch. The racetrack has seats for 113,000 spectators. Jimmie Johnson was the defending race winner after winning the event in the 2012 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 445 points, while Carl Edwards stood in second with 413 points. Matt Kenseth followed in the third with 394, nine ahead of Clint Bowyer in fourth, and 24 ahead of Kasey Kahne in fifth. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., with 364, was in sixth; two ahead of Kevin Harvick, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Paul Menard was eleven points ahead of Martin Truex, Jr. and twelve ahead of Brad Keselowski in ninth and tenth. Kyle Busch was eleventh with 332, while Aric Almirola completed the first twelve positions with 328 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 83 points, five points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third after recording only 60 points before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, held on May 31, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held a day later on June 1, 2013, were 55 and 60 minutes long. During the first practice session, Johnson was quickest with a time of 22.556, ahead of his team-mate Kahne and Kyle Busch in second and third. Kurt Busch followed in the fourth position, ahead of Jamie McMurray in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-three cars were entered. Denny Hamlin clinched his third pole position of the season, with a lap time of 22.788 seconds. After his qualifying run, Hamlin commented, \"When I ran the lap, I wasn't in love with it. Fundamentally, I knew I didn't do that great of a job. I'm still knocking off some rust. This is only my third race back.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Truex, Jr. Kyle Busch qualified third, Kenseth took fourth, and Ryan Newman started fifth. Mark Martin, Harvick, Keselowski, Joey Logano, and McMurray completed the first ten positions on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Kenseth was quickest, ahead of Kahne and Keselowski in second and third. Kyle and Kurt Busch followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Hamlin, Edwards, Bowyer, Johnson, and Juan Pablo Montoya rounded out ten quickest drivers in the session. In the final practice session for the race, Kurt Busch was quickest with a time of 23.495 seconds. Kenseth followed in second, ahead of Montoya and Johnson in third and fourth. Jeff Gordon, who was 27th quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Race\nThe green flag was waved at 1:15 pm ET, with Denny Hamlin leading the field. Hamlin got the lead at the green flag over 2nd-place Martin Truex, Jr. By lap 12, Matt Kenseth was up to 2nd place and right behind Hamlin. As they battled for the lead, Kyle Busch caught up and took the lead on lap 24. Shortly after lap 30, Danica Patrick was forced to make a green-flag pit stop after contact with David Stremme. Busch continued to lead the race, lapping several cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Race\nHe nearly lapped 22nd-place Jimmie Johnson until a round of green-flag pit stops allowed Johnson to stay on the lead lap by pitting early. On lap 81, the first caution of the race occurred for debris in turn 2. Tony Stewart got the free pass on this caution. Following the restart, Busch maintained the lead. On lap 128, there was another caution due to debris in turn 3. On the restart following this caution, Kenseth gained the lead from Busch. On lap 159, race leader Kenseth blew an engine. As a result, Busch regained the lead and the third caution of the day would be brought out on lap 161. Busch maintained the lead after a round of pit stops under the caution. On the restart, he led the race ahead of Truex, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Race\nAt the halfway point of the race, cloud cover began to increase. Busch's lead narrowed and Johnson caught up to him. Johnson eventually passed Busch for the lead on lap 206. He maintained the lead after a round of green-flag pit stops. On lap 279, Truex, Jr. blew an engine, bringing out another caution on lap 280. The leaders pitted during the caution, and Johnson won the battle off pit road. He would lead the race after the restart. On lap 299, there was a wreck involving Ryan Newman and David Gilliland on the backstretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Race\nThis wreck brought out the fifth caution of the race on lap 301, in which Hamlin would lead at the restart following different pit strategies. Hamlin continued to maintain the lead until another caution was brought out on lap 318 from a spin by Kasey Kahne in turn 2. All the leaders came to pit road during this caution except Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon. Ku. Busch led the race following the restart, but Johnson caught up and regained it on lap 326.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Race\nThe seventh caution of the race was brought out on lap 378, when Hamlin got into the turn 1 wall. The leaders pitted under this caution, with Juan Pablo Montoya getting the lead ahead of Johnson on pit road. On the restart following this caution, Johnson took the lead. However, Johnson was black-flagged for jumping the restart on lap 381. This driver was forced to come to pit road on lap 385 and Montoya led the race. On lap 398, Stewart took the lead from Montoya. Stewart went on to win the race, giving him his first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Report, Post-race\nFollowing the race, Keselowski's car failed post-race inspection because the car's front end was too low to the ground, resulting in a six-point penalty for Keselowski and a $25,000 fine for his crew chief Paul Wolfe, who had returned for the first time after a three-week suspension for infractions in the 2013 NRA 500. Car owner, Roger Penske was also penalized six owner's points. An official from Penske Racing said that the infraction was caused by a part failure, but the team is not expected to appeal the penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233506-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx 400, Results, Race results\nPoints include 3 Chase for the Sprint Cup points for winning, 1 point for leading a lap, and 1 point for most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs\nThe 2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, the series of four golf tournaments that determined the season champion on the U.S.-based PGA Tour, were played from August 22 to September 22. It included the following four events:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs\nThese were the seventh FedEx Cup playoffs since their inception in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, The Barclays\nThe Barclays was played August 22\u201325. Of the 125 players eligible to play in the event, two did not enter: Zach Johnson (ranked 18) and Steve Stricker (20). Of the 123 entrants, 74 made the second-round cut at 142 (E).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, The Barclays\nAdam Scott won by one stroke over Graham DeLaet, Justin Rose, Gary Woodland, and Tiger Woods and moved from 11th place to second place in the standings. The top 100 players in the points standings advanced to the Deutsche Bank Championship. This included five players who were outside the top 100 prior to The Barclays: Martin Kaymer (ranked 103rd to 90th), Camilo Villegas (110 to 100), Erik Compton (117 to 94), Greg Chalmers (122 to 93), and Stuart Appleby (123 to 96). Five players started the tournament within the top 100 but ended the tournament outside the top 100, ending their playoff chances: James Driscoll (ranked 93rd to 103rd), Ted Potter Jr. (96 to 105), J. J. Henry (97 to 106), Geoff Ogilvy (99 to 104), and Jeff Overton (100 to 108).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, Deutsche Bank Championship\nThe Deutsche Bank Championship was played August 30 \u2013 September 2. All 100 players eligible to play in the event did so. 76 made the second-round cut at one-under-par, 141.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, Deutsche Bank Championship\nHenrik Stenson won by two strokes over Steve Stricker and moved into first place in the standings. The top 70 players in the points standings advanced to the BMW Championship. This included seven players who were outside the top 70 prior to the Deutsche Bank Championship: Kevin Stadler (75 to 32), Brian Davis (80 to 49), Ian Poulter (77 to 52), Marc Leishman (76 to 58), Nicholas Thompson (73 to 59), Brendan Steele (89 to 69), and Ernie Els (91 to 70).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, Deutsche Bank Championship\nSeven players started the tournament within the top 70 but ended the tournament outside the top 70, ending their playoff chances: Ryan Palmer (60 to 71), Freddie Jacobson (61 to 72), Martin Laird (63 to 74), David Lingmerth (64 to 75), Kyle Stanley (66 to 77), Cameron Tringale (69 to 79), and Tim Clark (70 to 80).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, BMW Championship\nThe BMW Championship was played September 12\u201316, after a one-week break. All 70 players eligible to play in the event did so. There was no cut. The tournament was scheduled to end on September 15 but the final round could not be completed on Sunday due to rain and finished on Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, BMW Championship\nZach Johnson won by two strokes over Nick Watney. Two players played their way into the Tour Championship: Watney (ranked 34 to ranked 12) and Luke Donald (54 to 29). Two players played their way out of the Tour Championship: Harris English (28 to 31) and Lee Westwood (30 to 41).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, BMW Championship\nThe top 30 players in FedEx Cup points after this event advanced to the Tour Championship and also earned spots in the 2014 Masters Tournament, U.S. Open, and (British) Open Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, BMW Championship\nWith the FedEx Cup points reset after the BMW Championship, all 30 remaining players had at least a mathematical chance to secure the season crown, and any of the top five players could claim the FedEx Cup with a win in the Tour Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233507-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 FedEx Cup Playoffs, Tour Championship\nThe Tour Championship was played September 19\u201322. All 30 golfers who qualified for the tournament played, and there was no cut. Henrik Stenson won the tournament by three shots over Jordan Spieth and Steve Stricker, and the FedEx Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400\nThe 2013 Federated Auto Parts 400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on September 7, 2013, at Richmond International Raceway in Richmond, Virginia, United States. Contested over 400 laps, it was the twenty-sixth and final race leading into the Chase for the Sprint Cup in the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season. Carl Edwards of Roush Fenway Racing won the race, his second win of the season, while Kurt Busch finished second. Ryan Newman, Jamie McMurray, and Paul Menard rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400\nThe race was the first for Harry Scott, Jr. as a Sprint Cup Series team owner; Ryan Truex drove the #51 car in the team's debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400\nThe race was marred by a controversial finish, after evidence surfaced that two teams were found to have manipulated the outcome of the race and Chase positions in the final ten laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400\nNASCAR ultimately determined that Michael Waltrip Racing, Penske Racing, and Front Row Motorsports were involved in two separate, but intertwined, incidents, first by Clint Bowyer intentionally causing a caution with less than ten laps remaining in the race, and on the ensuing restart, having Brian Vickers pit after a restart from caution so that Martin Truex, Jr. would clinch a Wildcard berth over Ryan Newman, and the second was collusion where Penske's Joey Logano earned the final guaranteed berth over Jeff Gordon after passing Front Row's David Gilliland. Both situations were intertwined together because of the tenth place and wild card situation. This scandal became widely known as Spingate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Results, Qualifying\n1 Regan Smith drove the No. 48 car for practice and qualifying; Jimmie Johnson was on paternity leave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nTeam orders became an issue during the last ten laps of the race, and it was ultimately determined that three teams had tried to manipulate the finish of the race and Chase positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nUnder the Chase system at the time, 12 drivers were eligible to make the Chase: the top 10 in points, with two additional Wild Card spots for drivers positioned 11th-20th in the points with race wins. Entering the race, Kasey Kahne had already locked up the first Wild Card spot as he was the only repeat winner in the field outside of the top 10 in points, with his two race wins from earlier in the year (Bristol in March, and Pocono in August). Ryan Newman entered the race trailing Martin Truex, Jr. for the final wild card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nIn order to guarantee a Chase position, Newman needed to either win the race, or be five points ahead of Truex and not have Joey Logano or Greg Biffle fall out of the top ten (as if either Logano or Biffle dropped out of the top ten at the end of the race, the other Wild Card spot would go to one of them). Jeff Gordon trailed Logano by 16 points for 10th place, the final Chase spot based on points position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nOn Lap 393, Gordon was ahead of Logano by a large enough margin that Gordon led Logano by two points for the final guaranteed Chase position. Newman was the leader, and would have bumped out both Logano and Truex (one win each) had the race ended at that point. It was on that lap that Truex's teammate Clint Bowyer spun out in Turn 4. From the various angles captured of the spin, it initially appeared that Bowyer had either been tapped from behind by Dale Earnhardt, Jr. or he had cut a right front tire. The field pitted under the resulting caution flag, including Bowyer, Truex's other teammate Brian Vickers, Newman and the rest of the field. A slow pit stop for Newman dropped him to third, behind Carl Edwards, Paul Menard, with Kurt Busch starting next to him in 4th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nAs a result of pit stops, Truex gained multiple positions. Logano, who was two laps behind the leader (while Gordon was on the lead lap), used a wavearound to move up to one lap behind the leaders, where he could race other cars one lap behind in an attempt to gain more positions and score enough points to retake Gordon. Edwards went on to win, albeit with controversy as it appeared he jumped Paul Menard on the restart, with Kurt Busch and Newman finishing behind Edwards. However, Edwards was not penalized (as had happened to Jimmie Johnson at Dover in June) as NASCAR ruled that Menard had spun his tires and was slow getting up to speed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nNewman and Truex finished tied for the final wildcard spot on both wins, and the first tie-breaker, points. However, since Truex had an extra second-place finish at Texas, he entered the Chase. Logano, who overtook Gordon on the final restart, clinched the final non-wild card spot by one point over Gordon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nImmediately after the race, many in the garage suspected that Bowyer had spun out deliberately in an attempt to manipulate the finish of the race so that Truex would gain a Chase spot. The incident drew comparisons to the 2008 SingTel Singapore Grand Prix Formula One race, where Nelson Piquet, Jr. intentionally caused a caution to give an advantage to teammate Fernando Alonso, who would win the race. Coincidentally, Piquet was entered in the second-tier Nationwide Series race that weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nDale Earnhardt, Jr. was directly behind Bowyer at the moment of the spin, and said afterwards that the way Bowyer's car spun was \"one of the craziest things he's ever seen\", and noticed the car being \"jerked around\" to make it lose control out of turn 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nWhile Bowyer claimed it was a flat tire that caused him to spin out, and indeed the right front was down after the spin, it was noted that the behavior of Bowyer's car was inconsistent with the normal behavior of a car that had cut a tire: the normal behavior for a car cutting a tire in the corners being for the car to wash up the track with no steering and slam the outside wall with its right side, then come back down onto the track, rather than spinning onto the apron. In addition, the popping noise normally associated with a flat tire only happened after the spin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nFurther suspicion arose during the video replays, as the radio communications between Bowyer and crew chief Brian Pattie showed they were openly worried about the possibility of Newman winning and eliminating Truex from the Chase on lap 391, two laps before Bowyer spun. Another suspicious conversation was revealed between Vickers and his spotter, team general manager and vice president Ty Norris, where Norris ordered a completely oblivious Vickers to make a green-flag pit stop after the restart on lap 398 in order to give Truex another position to tie Newman in points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nThese conversations seemed to provide evidence of some kind of manipulation going on via team orders. In order for the scheme to work, Gordon, who was in 10th place, had to be overtaken by Logano in order to guarantee Truex a wild card. This scandal became known as Spingate from Bowyer's late-race spin, but also the Singapore Sling because the incident was similar to the 2008 Singapore Formula One incident to manipulate the outcome of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nOn Monday, September 9, NASCAR penalized Michael Waltrip Racing by fining the team $300,000\u2014the highest fine imposed on a team in NASCAR's 67-year history. It also indefinitely suspended Norris, placed all three of MWR crew chiefs on probation until December 31, and docked Bowyer and Truex 50 driver points (While Vickers, a Nationwide Series regular, was not eligible for Sprint Cup driver points under the series declaration rule, he was also docked 50 points, which was reflected in a negative points total at year's end).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nEach car was also docked 50 owner's points (Waltrip for the #55 and #56, Rob Kauffman for the #15; even if a driver is not a Cup-declared driver, the owner earns points). As this penalty was applied before the reset for the Chase, it effectively knocked Truex out of the Wildcard spot in favor of Newman. The 50-point penalty dropped Truex to 17th in points, removing him from eligibility for a wild-card position, and giving his spot to Newman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nWhile NASCAR could not find any conclusive evidence that Bowyer had deliberately spun out, it did determine that Vickers' pit on Norris' orders was illegal. The point deduction did not affect Bowyer's post-seeding, as all penalties affected his pre-Chase points total and he had clinched a Chase berth two races earlier. Gordon, meanwhile, remained eliminated from the Chase because he did not have the necessary points to leapfrog Logano for a spot, which drew even more controversy, since Logano was able to overtake Gordon in the ensuing restart after the caution. Logano had to stay in the top ten in order to give Truex a wild card if Newman did not win. Had the caution not occurred, Gordon would likely have clinched a Chase position, since Logano would have remained two laps down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nShortly after the penalties against Michael Waltrip Racing for trying to manipulate the race, rumors surfaced that Logano had received assistance from Front Row Motorsports driver David Gilliland. Penske and Front Row were considered technical partners, as they both used Ford cars and Roush Fenway Racing powertrains. Radio communications seemed to suggest to NASCAR that Front Row officials asked Gilliland to slow down and give up a position to Logano in order to help Logano race his way into the Chase, in exchange for an undisclosed form of compensation. Logano passed Gilliland on the final restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nAfter a second inquiry, NASCAR placed both Penske and Front Row on probation until December 31, and forced all teams to attend a Saturday afternoon meeting at the 2013 GEICO 400 in Chicagoland, regarding ethics in light of the two related match fixing incidents. Additionally, NASCAR CEO Brian France announced that Gordon would be added to the Chase field, expanding the field to 13 drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Race manipulation controversy\nFrance explained in a press conference that his decision to add Gordon to the Chase was \"based on the totality of events that were outside\" Gordon's control, and how MWR's and Penske's manipulation attempts gave Gordon an \"unfair disadvantage\", and the fact that if Bowyer had not spun and the caution had not come out at any point between lap 393 and the white flag, Gordon would have qualified for the Chase on points based on his running position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Aftermath\nNAPA Auto Parts, Truex's primary sponsor on the #56 car, announced on September 19, 2013, that they would withdraw sponsorship of the #56 team at the end of the season as a direct result of the incident, choosing instead to align with Hendrick Motorsports and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. for the 2014 season. In 2014, NAPA would partner with Earnhardt's Nationwide Series team JR Motorsports and became the primary sponsor for up-and-coming driver Chase Elliott's 2014 championship and rookie of the year run in the Nationwide Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Aftermath\nThey also sponsored Elliott for his part-time Sprint Cup debut in 2015, with a partial run set for his championship debut in 2016 after Elliott was moved to the No. 24 full-time following Jeff Gordon's retirement from racing, with Axalta covering the remaining races; Elliott would eventually win his first Cup Series title (with NAPA sponsorship) in 2020. With the loss of NAPA sponsorship, MWR had to scale the #56 team down to a part-time team for 2014, while Truex and everyone on his pit crew ended up being signed by Furniture Row Racing to replace a departing Kurt Busch. Truex would win the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Championship for Furniture Row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Aftermath\nMichael Waltrip Racing continued to run as a two-car operation for 2014 and 2015 but never again saw victory lane. Team principal Rob Kauffman announced he was purchasing a stake in Chip Ganassi Racing in 2015 and MWR folded at the end of the season; the team's charters (as a founding member of Race Team Alliance) were given to Stewart Haas Racing and fellow Toyota team Joe Gibbs Racing, allowing both to receive one extra car under the then-new charter system. Bowyer would take 5-Hour Energy to HScott Motorsports for 2016. In 2017, Bowyer moved to drive the 14 for Stewart Haas Racing in 2017, replacing retired team owner, Tony Stewart. 5-Hour Energy would move to Furniture Row to sponsor Erik Jones and Truex, before also withdrawing from the sport in 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233508-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Federated Auto Parts 400, Aftermath\nNASCAR would be rocked by another race manipulation scandal six years later, involving backmarker teams during that year's season finale, the 2019 Ford EcoBoost 400, involving bonuses for the best team without a Race Team Alliance charter (a system introduced in 2016) in that year's owner point standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233509-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger\nThe 2013 Fergana Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 14th edition of the tournament for men which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour, offering $50,000 in prize money, and the third edition of the event for women on the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering $25,000 in prize money. It took place in Fergana, Uzbekistan, on 23\u201329 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233509-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger, Men's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233509-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger, Men's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players entered as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 73], "content_span": [74, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233509-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger, Women's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233510-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nIzak van der Merwe and Raven Klaasen were the defending champions, but not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233510-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Doubles\nFarrukh Dustov and Malek Jaziri won the title, defeating Ilija Bozoljac and Roman Jebav\u00fd in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233511-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Singles\nYuki Bhambri was the defending champion but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233511-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Men's Singles\nRadu Albot won the title, defeating Ilija Bozoljac in the final, 7\u20136(11\u20139), 6\u20137(3\u20137), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233512-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLyudmyla and Nadiya Kichenok were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Nadiya chose not to participate. Her sister Lyudmyla partnered up with Polina Pekhova as the first seeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233512-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLyudmyla Kichenok and Pekhova won the title, defeating Michaela Hon\u010dov\u00e1 and Veronika Kapshay in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233513-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Women's Singles\nDonna Veki\u0107 was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233513-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fergana Challenger \u2013 Women's Singles\nNigina Abduraimova won the title, defeating Anastasiya Vasylyeva in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups\nThe 2013 Festival of World Cups was a series of rugby league World Cups held in the United Kingdom during 2013. The centrepiece of the Festival was the men's 2013 Rugby League World Cup. In addition to this tournament, there were also world cups held for students, police, women, armed forces and wheelchair teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, University\nThe eighth Student Rugby League World Cup were held in July. The eight countries that took part were England, Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, Russia, South Africa, Scotland and Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, University\nGroup stage games took place at South Leeds Stadium, The Big Fellas Stadium in Featherstone, The LoveRugbyLeague.Com Stadium in Batley and The Tetley\u2019s Stadium in Dewsbury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, Men\nThe fourteenth Rugby League World Cup took place with the final on 30 November. Fourteen teams took part. Defending Champions New Zealand, hosts England, Australia, France, Wales, Ireland, Scotland, Fiji, Samoa, the Cook Islands and Papua New Guinea all qualified automatically, while Italy and the United States qualified through tournaments in 2010 and 2011. The final was held at Old Trafford on 30 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 32], "content_span": [33, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, Police\nThe second Police Rugby League World Cup took place in July. Defending champions Fiji joined hosts Great Britain and Australia in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, Police\nGroup stage games took place at South Leeds Stadium, The Big Fellas Stadium in Featherstone, The LoveRugbyLeague.Com Stadium in Batley and The Tetley\u2019s Stadium in Dewsbury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, Women\nThe fourth Women's Rugby League World Cup were held in Leeds alongside the student and police World Cups, with the final taking place at Headingley Rugby Stadium, Leeds. Seven teams took part including three time defending champions New Zealand as well as hosts England and Australia, France, Russia, Samoa and Tonga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, Women\nGroup stage games took place at South Leeds Stadium, The Big Fellas Stadium in Featherstone, The LoveRugbyLeague.Com Stadium in Batley and The Tetley\u2019s Stadium in Dewsbury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, Armed Forces\nThe second Armed Forces World Cup took place at the Colchester Garrison Sports Stadium. Five nations competed; Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Russia and Serbia. The middle weekend of the tournament coincides with the annual military festival held in Colchester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233514-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Festival of World Cups, Wheelchair\nFive teams took part in the second Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup to be held at Medway Park. The six teams are France, Australia, England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233515-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiesta Bowl\nThe 2013 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl was a postseason college football bowl game played on Thursday, January 3, 2013, at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The Kansas State Wildcats, champions of the Big 12 Conference, played the Oregon Ducks, an at-large selection from the Pac-12 Conference. This was the only bowl game of the season to feature two top-10 ranked teams, other than the 2013 BCS National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233515-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiesta Bowl\nThe game started at 6:30\u00a0p.m. (MST) and aired on ESPN. Oregon won the game by a score of 35 points to 17 over Kansas State, making its second Fiesta Bowl title for the Ducks (first since 2001 in the 2002 Fiesta Bowl).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233515-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiesta Bowl, Preview\nThis was the first time Kansas State and Oregon played each other on the gridiron. The two teams were scheduled to meet during the 2012 regular season but the game was cancelled due to scheduling conflicts. On November 11, 2012, both schools were undefeated (10\u20130) and were ranked #1 or #2 in the polls and the BCS rankings. However, both schools lost their eleventh game of the season on November 17 to fall from the national championship race. Each finished the regular season with an 11\u20131 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233515-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiesta Bowl, Preview\nThis was the fourth Fiesta Bowl to match a Big 12 (formerly Big Eight) team and a Pac-12 (formerly Pacific-10) team. The previous such Fiesta Bowls occurred in 1983 (Oklahoma vs. Arizona State), 2002 (Colorado, then representing the Big 12, against Oregon) and 2012 (Oklahoma State vs. Stanford).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233515-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiesta Bowl, Preview, Kansas State\nK-State attributed its success this season to a balanced offense led by quarterback Collin Klein and an opportunistic defense that included linebacker Arthur Brown. The Wildcats are leading the nation in turnover margin at +21. Klein rushed for 22 touchdowns this season, threw for 10 or more touchdowns in consecutive seasons, passed for more than 4,000 yards and rushed 2,000 yards for a career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233515-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiesta Bowl, Preview, Oregon\nThe Oregon Ducks were led by redshirt freshman quarterback Marcus Mariota, who was the Conference\u2019s Offensive Freshman of the Year. Mariota, was sixth in the country in passing efficiency, completed 218 of 312 passes for 2,511 yards and 30 touchdowns with six interceptions. All-America running back Kenjon Barner ran for 1,624 yards and scored 22 touchdowns this season, fifth best in rushing (135.3 avg.) and sixth in scoring (11.0 ppg).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233515-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiesta Bowl, Game summary, Conversion safety scored\nA rare type of football scoring occurred during the third quarter on an attempted Oregon extra point, a one-point conversion safety. The one point safety was awarded to Oregon after Kansas State ended the play while in possession of the ball in the end zone after blocking Oregon's extra point attempt. This was only the second one-point safety scored in the history of NCAA FBS competition; the other was converted by Texas A&M against Texas on November 26, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 56], "content_span": [57, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233516-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 18th edition for men and the 16th edition for women of the tournament and was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit and the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour, offering prize money of $50,000 each for the men's and women's events. It took place in Lexington, Kentucky, United States, on July 22\u201328, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233516-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 90], "content_span": [91, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233516-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 90], "content_span": [91, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233516-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry by a lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 90], "content_span": [91, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233517-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAustin Krajicek and John Peers were the defending champions, but Peers chose not to compete. Krajicek paired with Mitchell Krueger but lost in the semifinals to eventual finalists Bradley Klahn and Michael Venus. Frank Dancevic and Peter Polansky won the title 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233518-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nDenis Kudla was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. James Ward defeated James Duckworth in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233519-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nShuko Aoyama and Xu Yifan were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Xu chose not to defend her title. Aoyama partnered up with Misaki Doi as the third seeds, but were knocked out of the tournament in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233519-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nThai duo Nicha Lertpitaksinchai and Peangtarn Plipuech won the tournament defeating the first seeds, Julia Glushko and Chanel Simmonds in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233520-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nJulia Glushko was the defending champion of the Fifth Third Bank Tennis Championships, having won the event in 2012, but losing in the semifinals to Shelby Rogers in 2013. Rogers went on to win the title, defeating Julie Coin in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl\nThe 2013 Fight Hunger Bowl is an American college football bowl game that was played on December 27, 2013 at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The 12th edition of the Fight Hunger Bowl, it featured the Washington Huskies, from the Pac-12 Conference, against the BYU Cougars, an independent team. The game began at 6:30\u00a0p.m. PST and aired on ESPN. It was the last Fight Hunger Bowl game played at AT&T Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl\nWashington and BYU both finished the regular season with records of 8\u20134, and each team faced its own set of circumstances entering the game. Washington entered the game with quarterbacks coach Marques Tuiasosopo serving as its interim coach following the departure of Steve Sarkisian and several staff members to University of Southern California, where Sarkisian was named head coach days before the game. Though the Huskies moved quickly to hire Chris Petersen away from Boise State, Tuiasosopo coached the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl\nWashington featured a pair of key star players on offense, in Bishop Sankey at running back and Austin Seferian-Jenkins at tight end. Key performers on the defense included linebacker Shaq Thompson and team captain Sean Parker, a safety. BYU featured a high-powered offense that centered on dual-threat quarterback Taysom Hill and wide receiver Cody Hoffman. The offensive line, however, had been in shambles all season long, and was a potential area of concern. Defensively, Kyle Van Noy, an All-American who was one of the \"best defenders\" in program history, headlined a unit that also featured Uani 'Unga, who led the group in tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl\nThe game featured two female officials, which made Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) history. After Washington scored first, and was the only team to score in the first quarter, BYU came back in the second quarter with a trio of field goals from Justin Sorensen, but ultimately trailed at halftime following a kickoff returned for a touchdown and a touchdown pass to Seferian-Jenkins by Washington. The halftime score was 21\u201316, with Washington holding the 5-point advantage. They were the only team to score in the second half, posting 10 points despite losing both their quarterback and running back due to injury in the fourth quarter. Ultimately, they won the game 31\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars\nIn December 2010, organizers announced that they had reached a deal with BYU to play in the 2013 edition of the Fight Hunger Bowl. The Cougars, who became conference independent during the 2011 season, were scheduled to fill a slot originally allotted to a team from the Western Athletic Conference, which discontinued football prior to the 2013 season. After defeating the Boise State Broncos for their sixth win of the season on October 25, bowl director Gary Cavalli extended an invitation to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars\nCavalli stated in 2010 that he had been hoping to secure the Cougars' participation in the game since 2002. If the Cougars did not earn enough wins to become bowl eligible, an alternate team from the Atlantic Coast Conference would have replaced them; though they finished bowl eligible, one ESPN writer opined they were even better than their record indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Offense\nLed by coordinator Robert Anae, the Cougars' offense led all seven Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) independent teams in total offense, gaining 495.3 yards per game, they were second in scoring, averaging 31.3 points per game. Averaging 220.8 passing yards per game, BYU's passing game was led by 23-year-old sophomore quarterback Taysom Hill, who totaled 2,645 passing yards with 19 touchdowns (TDs) and 13 interceptions (INTs) on a total of 390 passing attempts, which was in the top-25 most passing attempts among NCAA quarterbacks. Hill also led the team in rushing attempts, yards, and touchdowns, with 215, 1211, and 9 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Offense\nFellow sophomore Jamaal Williams, a running back, was a close second in each of the aforementioned categories, with 205, 1202, and 7 respectively. Other key contributors in the rushing attack included running backs Paul Lasike, a bruising 6\u00a0feet 0\u00a0inches (1.83\u00a0m) 227 pounds (103\u00a0kg) junior former rugby star, from New Zealand, who rushed for 341 yards and a touchdown on the season, Algernon Brown, a freshman who rushed for 234 yards and 2 touchdowns, and Adam Hine, a sophomore who rushed for 219 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Offense\nNFL Draft prospect Cody Hoffman, rated the 22nd-best wide receiver prospect for 2014, led the receiving game from his 6\u00a0feet 4\u00a0inches (1.93\u00a0m) frame, catching 45 passes for 727 yards and 5 TDs. Supplementing Hoffman's leadership of the receiving game were fellow senior wide receiver Skyler Ridley (35 receptions, 412 yards, 2 TDs) and sophomore Mitch Mathews, who from his massive 6\u00a0feet 6\u00a0inches (1.98\u00a0m) stature reeled in 23 passes for 397 yards and 4 TDs. Other contributors included wide receivers JD Falslev and Ross Apo, and tight ends Brett Thompson and Kaneaku Friel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Offense\nA \"work in progress\" all season long, the BYU offensive line shuffled players in and out in various positions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Offense\nHead coach Bronco Mendenhall and offensive coordinator Robert Anae both say they\u2019ve witnessed progress in recent weeks, but there have still been a lot of whiffs, missed assignments, questionable efforts, injuries, rotating lineups, challenges to compete, and advocacy to be more physical. When in pass pro \u2014 a formation with a loaded backfield to help pass block \u2014 backs are missing shuffle blocks and pickups. Offensive line coach Garett Tujague has navigated all this like Horatio Hornblower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Offense\nAs evidenced by their depth chart, numerous players started all season long. In the final game against Notre Dame, junior Michael Yeck started at left tackle, fellow junior Solomone Kafu started at left guard, sophomore Terrance Alletto started at center, freshman Kyle Johnson started at right guard, and junior De'Ondre Wesley started at right tackle. Senior Justin Sorensen handled the kicking duties, and was accurate, making 81.8% of his field goal attempts and 100% of his extra point attempts, though did not have much range, with a long of 41 yards on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Defense\nThe 3-4 defense was led by coordinator Nick Howell. Senior linebacker Uani 'Unga led the defense in tackles, recording 136 on the season, adding 7 tackles-for-loss (TFL), and 2 forced fumbles (FF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Defense\nJoining him in the linebacking corps were All-American Kyle Van Noy, \"perhaps the best defender to ever run out of the home-team tunnel at LaVell Edwards Stadium\" and led the defense with 16 TFL, junior Alani Fua, who was third on the team with 63 tackles, senior Austin Jorgensen, whose career ended with surgery to repair torn knee cartilage in October, and Spencer Hadley, who returned late in the year after a suspension imposed due to an honor code violation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Defense\nThe defensive line was composed of sophomore defensive end Bronson Kaufusi, tied for second on the defense with seven TFL and tied for first with four sacks, senior nose tackle Eathyn Manumaleuna, an Alaskan who made 46 tackles and was a candidate to win the Outland Trophy, and sophomore defensive end Remington Peck, who recorded 4 TFL and 3 sacks to complement his 36 tackles and 2 fumble recoveries. Junior safety Craig Bills led the defensive backfield with 69 tackles, and tied with three others for the team lead in interceptions with two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0008-0003", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, BYU Cougars, Defense\nJoining him in the secondary were fellow safety Daniel Sorensen, a senior who recorded 59 tackles and 4 TFL (as well as 2 interceptions), junior cornerback Daniel Robertson, who recorded 59 tackles as well as one each TFL, sack, and interception, and freshman cornerback Michael Davis, who in only eight games made 17 tackles. Junior Skye Povey, seniors Mike Hague and Blake Morgan, and sophomore Manoa Pikula also contributed to the defensive backfield, though did not start in the last game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies\nFormer Washington quarterback Marques Tuiasosopo, who during the season served as the team's quarterbacks coach, was named the Huskies' interim head coach after Steve Sarkisian left the team to return to the USC Trojans, where he previously served as offensive coordinator. The announcement came after Washington closed its regular season on a two-game winning streak including defeating arch-rival Washington State in the Apple Cup. Prior to that, they had lost four of their previous six games, including three losses to top-15 teams (#13 UCLA, #5 Stanford, #2 Oregon). They won their first four games of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies\nIn total, their record entering the bowl game was 8\u20134. Prior to the bowl game, it was announced that former Boise State head coach Chris Petersen, whom an associate athletic director characterized as a \"dream hire\", agreed to be Washington's next head coach, however he would not coach in the bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Offense\nCoordinated during the season by Eric Kiesau, the Huskies offensive staff was shaken up after the departure of Sarkisian \u2013 Tuiasosopo, who during the season was quarterbacks coach, was promoted to interim head coach, and Johnny Nansen, who during the season was running backs coach and special teams coordinator, departed to USC with Sarkisian; all other coaches remained in the same capacity for the bowl game. On the field, senior quarterback Keith Price recorded 20 touchdown passes to just 5 interceptions, while passing for 2843 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Offense\nThough the passing game was successful, the offense was anchored by a strong rushing game, whose 243.1 rushing yards per game was 14th in the country entering the game. That rushing game was led by Doak Walker Award finalist Bishop Sankey, who \"exceeded the hype this year and has been a workhorse back\"; he recorded 1775 rushing yards and 18 rushing touchdowns, as well as 25 receptions for 298 yards and another touchdown. Freshman Dwayne Washington, junior Deontae Cooper, and junior Jesse Callier, all running backs, also contributed to the rushing attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Offense\nA trio of wideouts were the top three receivers \u2013 senior Kevin Smith, who emerged at the beginning of the season as a spark for the team's offense and totaled 45 receptions for 722 yards and 4 touchdowns, sophomore Jaydon Mickens, who recorded 62 receptions for 681 yards and 5 touchdowns, and junior Kasen Williams, who caught 29 receptions for 421 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Offense\nJunior Austin Seferian-Jenkins, a 6\u00a0feet 6\u00a0inches (1.98\u00a0m) 276 pounds (125\u00a0kg) \"tight end that plays like a wide receiver\", regressed from his 2012 campaign in which he caught 69 passes, but still managed to reel in 33 passes for 413 yards and 7 touchdowns. Senior Travis Coons handled the kicking game, and made 58 of 59 extra point attempts, and 14 of 15 field goal attempts, with a long of 48 yards. The Huskies' offensive line was more stable than in 2012, as it returned all five starters, however they were not effective in 2012, but did improve in 2013. Sophomore left guard Dexter Charles, junior center Mike Criste, and left tackle Micah Hatchie each earned honorable mention all-Pac-12 honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Defense\nThrown into shambles by Sarkisian's departure, the Huskies' defensive staff still featured Justin Wilcox as defensive coordinator, despite his candidacy for various other coaching positions as well as to move with Sarkisian to USC, and Tosh Lupoi as defensive line coach, though like Wilcox, he was rumored to be heading with Sarkisian to USC, but had a large buyout in his contract, while secondary coach Keith Heyward and linebackers coach and recruiting coordinator Peter Sirmon both left for USC. the latter of whom \"without a doubt\" fostered strong play from linebackers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Defense\nSenior linebacker Princeton Fuimaono led the defense with 76 tackles and 3 tackles for loss (TFL), while sophomore linebacker Shaq Thompson was a close second with 70 tackles, adding 4 TFL (he earned honorable mention All-Pac-12 honors), and junior linebacker John Timu rounded out the corps and finished third on the defense with 63 tackles and 2.5 TFL. Sophomore Travis Feeney also contributed. On the defensive line, Hawaiian end Hau'oli Kikaha was fourth on the defense with 61 tackles, and led the defense with 12.5 TFL and 10 sacks; he received second-team All-Pac-12 honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Defense\nCory Littleton, a sophomore who was listed as a linebacker, started at defensive end and was sixth on the defense with 58 tackles, adding 9.5 TFL and 5 sacks. Danny Shelton, a 6\u00a0feet 1\u00a0inch (1.85\u00a0m) 327 pounds (148\u00a0kg) junior, started every game in the interior at nose tackle, and totaled 52 tackles, 3.5 TFL, and 2 sacks. The Huskies' defensive backfield featured two preeminent starters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0012-0003", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Teams, Washington Huskies, Defense\nAt safety, two-time team captain senior Sean Parker, an honorable mention all-conference honoree, recorded 60 tackles, fifth on the team, 3.5 TFL, a sack, and was second on the defense with 4 interceptions. He was joined by fellow senior Will Shamburger, who totaled 47 tackles. At cornerback, sophomore Marcus Peters achieved second-team all-conference honors; he led the defense with 5 interceptions, also recording 53 tackles and deflecting 14 passes. Joining him at cornerback was senior Gregory Ducre, who started every game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe game, which was the first FBS game to feature two female officials, commenced with BYU receiving the opening kickoff and, after running six plays that netted 21 yards, punting. After the punt, Washington (WASH) embarked on a 12-play, 71-yard drive that encapsulated 3:57, was highlighted by a 17-yard pass from Keith Price to Austin Seferian-Jenkins that converted a 3rd down and 16, and culminated with an 11-yard touchdown run by Bishop Sankey to open up a 7\u20130 advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nAfter the teams' exchanged punts, BYU tried to convert a fourth down despite the fact that they were deep in their own territory, and ultimately turned the ball over on downs, only to have Washington subsequently do the same (turn the ball over on downs once again) while trying to convert a fourth down inside the 5-yard line. At the end of the first quarter, Washington retained their 7-point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nAt the end of the first quarter, BYU started a drive that occurred predominantly in the second quarter, and came to fruition when Taysom Hill rushed for a 1-yard touchdown, which, after the extra point was made, tied the game at seven. The tie did not last long, however, as on the ensuing kickoff, WASH's John Ross returned BYU's Justin Sorensen's kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown, putting the Huskies back on top, 14\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nOn BYU's ensuing drive, this time one that lasted 10 plays, netting 48 yards, Sorensen kicked a 45-yard field goal to pull the Cougars within four points. They had the ball again after a quick three-and-out by Washington, and once again ran more than 10 plays, this time running 11 for a total of 51 yards and another Sorensen field goal, this time a 31-yard kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nHoping to avoid another long kickoff return, Sorensen's kickoff was a short one, but the plan backfired when Washington's Jesse Callier, typically a backup running back, returned the kickoff 47 yards, allowing the Huskies to start their drive at the BYU 35-yard line. Four plays later, Sankey rushed for his second 11-yard touchdown of the game, making the score 21\u201313. Subsequently, BYU executed 12 plays, en route to Sorensen kicking his third field goal of the quarter as the first half's time expired, thus making the halftime score 21\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nWASH received the second half's opening kickoff, and Ross returned the kick to the 38-yard line, from which they began a 10-play, 62-yard drive that ended with a 16-yard touchdown pass from Price to Seferian-Jenkins that made the score 28\u201316. That was the only score of the quarter. After the drive, the teams exchanged punts twice before Price threw an interception to BYU's Robertson Daniel; BYU thus had the ball to start their drive at the Washington 26-yard line. They failed to gain any yardage, and settled for a Sorensen field goal attempt, but he missed the 44-yard try, giving the ball back to the Huskies, who failed to score, and punted back to BYU, who was amidst a drive at the conclusion of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nBYU opened the final quarter of play by punting. After exchanging three-and-outs with BYU, Washington, who had backup quarterback Cyler Miles and Callier at running back in the game rather than Price and Sankey, who exited due to a rib injury and hand injury respectively, moved down the field in 9 plays totaling 39 yards, entering field goal range, and scoring when Travis Coons made a 45-yard field goal to put the Huskies on top by 15 with 7:53 to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nBYU turned the ball over on their next two possessions, the first time on downs, the second due to an interception (between the two, WASH punted), allowing WASH to nearly run out the clock at the end of the game, relinquishing the ball on downs back to BYU with 44 seconds left. The Cougars failed to score at the end of the game, and ultimately, Washington won 31\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Game summary, Broadcast\nESPN broadcast the game to a national live viewing audience. Dave Pasch disseminated play-by-play, former quarterback Brian Griese handled analysis, and recruiting guru Tom Luginbill was the sideline reporter. ESPN Radio was the primary radio outlet through which the game was broadcast; the announcers on that platform were San Francisco Giants baseball announcer Dave Flemming, who did play-by-play commentary, former Oregon Ducks football coach Mike Bellotti, who was the game analyst, and long-time ESPN anchor and reporter Shelley Smith, who was the sideline reporter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233521-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Fight Hunger Bowl, Postgame effects\nWashington advanced to a record of 9\u20134. Soon after the game, both running back Bishop Sankey, who was a finalist for the Doak Walker Award, and tight end Austin Seferian-Jenkins, who won the John Mackey Award declared their intentions to forgo their final seasons and enter the 2014 NFL Draft. Conversely, however, prior to the draft, defensive tackle Danny Shelton, whom draft analysts speculated would be an \"under-the-radar prospect to watch in 2014\", announced his intentions to return to school for the 2014 season. BYU fell to a record of 8\u20135 with the loss. After the game, some BYU fans lobbied for the dismissal of BYU coach Bronco Mendenhall via a trending topic on Twitter. The end of the season was \"disappointing\" for the Cougars, however there was still some reason for excitement among fans, due to a strong recruiting class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233522-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fiji National Football League\nThe 2013 Fiji National Football League was the 37th season of the Fiji National Football League organized by the Fiji Football Association since its establishment in 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233523-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Finlandia Trophy\nThe 2013 Finlandia Trophy is a senior international figure skating competition in the 2013\u201314 season. The 18th edition of the annual event was held on October 4\u20136, 2013 at the Barona Arena in Espoo. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, ice dancing, and synchronized skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233524-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Finn Gold Cup\nThe 2013 Finn Gold Cup, and the official Finn World Championships, was held on Tallinn Bay, Estonia, between 23 and 31 August 2013. The hosting yacht club was Kalev Yacht Club located in Pirita.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup\nThe 2013 Finnish Cup (Finnish: Suomen Cup) is the 59th season of the main annual association football cup competition in Finland. It is organised as a single-elimination knock\u2013out tournament. Participation in the competition is voluntary. A total of 152 teams registered for the competition, with 12 teams from the Veikkausliiga, 8 from the Ykk\u00f6nen, 31 from the Kakkonen, 54 from the Kolmonen and 101 teams from other divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup\nThe tournament started on 5 January 2012 with the first match of Round 1. Many matches in the early rounds are played on artificial pitches in indoor halls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup, Round 1\nIn this round 70 clubs entered from the Finnish fourth level and below, while the other 31 clubs from the lower divisions received byes to the next round. These matches took place between 5 January 2013 and 5 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup, Round 2\nIn this round 66 clubs participated from the Finnish fourth level and below. These matches commenced on 27 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup, Round 3\nIn this round 72 clubs participated, including 8 teams from the Ykk\u00f6nen and 31 teams from the Kakkonen . These matches commenced on 20 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup, Round 4\nIn this round 40 clubs will participate, including 4 teams from the Veikkausliiga (Teams which have been eliminated from the League Cup). These matches commenced on 16 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup, Round 5\nIn this round 24 clubs will participate, including 4 teams from the Veikkausliiga. These matches commenced on 5 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup, Round 6\nIn this round 16 clubs will participate. These matches commenced on 25 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233525-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Cup, Quarterfinals\nIn this round 8 clubs will participate. These matches commenced on 20 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233526-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Finnish Figure Skating Championships (Finnish: SM2013, yksinluistelu ja j\u00e4\u00e4tanssi) took place between December 14 and 16, 2012 in Joensuu. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing on the senior and junior levels. The results were one of the criteria used to choose the Finnish teams to the 2013 World Championships, 2013 European Championships, and 2013 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233527-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish League Cup\nThe 2013 Finnish League Cup will be the 17th season of the Finnish League Cup, Finland's second-most prestigious cup football tournament. TPS are the defending champions, having won their first league cup last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233527-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish League Cup\nThe cup consists of two stages. First there will be a group stage that involves the 12 Veikkausliiga teams divided into three groups. The top two teams and two best 3rd placed teams from each group will enter the one-legged elimination rounds \u2013 quarter-finals, semi-finals and the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233527-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Finnish League Cup, Group stage\nEvery team will play every other team of its group twice, both home and away. The group stage matches will be played from 15 January to 6 March 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233528-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Finswimming World Championships\nThe 17th Finswimming World Championships were held between 05\u201312 August 2013 in Kazan, Russia, at the Burevestnik swimming pool as part of the CMAS Games 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233528-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Finswimming World Championships, Pool events\nThe pool part of the championships was held from 5 to 9 August 2013 at the Burevestnik swimming pool in Kazan, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233528-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Finswimming World Championships, Pool events, Schedule\nThe finswimming competition featured races in a long course (50\u00a0m) pool in 30 events (15 for males, 15 for females; 13 individual events and 2 relays for each gender).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233528-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Finswimming World Championships, Pool events, Schedule\nNote: every distances have preliminary heats and finals, but only 800m immersion is on direct final on morning sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233529-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Firestone 550\nThe 2013 Firestone 550 was twenty-third running of the Firestone 550 and the eighth round of the 2013 IndyCar Series season. It took place on Saturday, June 8. The race was contested over 228 laps at the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, and was televised by ABC in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233529-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Firestone 550, Report, Background\nBefore coming to Texas Motor Speedway, IndyCar completed the first doubleheader of the season at Belle Isle in the Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit, where Mike Conway earned his first victory of the season in the first race, while Simon Pagenaud won his first IndyCar series race in the second part of the doubleheader. Entering the Firestone 550, both Marco Andretti and H\u00e9lio Castroneves were tied atop the IndyCar drivers point championship, each with 206 point, though both did not have any victories on the season. Justin Wilson entered the race as the defending champion having won the previous year's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233529-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Firestone 550, Classification, Race results\nPoints include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233530-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nThe 2013 First Division season was the 34th 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 12 January and finished on 16 June. Balantas won their fourth and recent title and finished with 40 points and later competed in the 2004 CAF Champions League the following season. Estrela de Cantanhez (Third Division participant) won the 2013 Guinea-Bissau Cup and later competed in the 2014 CAF Confederation Cup the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233530-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nThere was no competition last season due to financial concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233530-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nIt was an 18 match season and had a total of 90 matches. A total of 170 goals were scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233530-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nAC Bissor\u00e3 was the defending team of the title. Benfica Bissau scored the most goals and numbered 23, Balantas and Sporting Bafat\u00e1 were second with 23 goals and Bissor\u00e3 scored the least with 10. On the opposites, Os Balantas conceded the least with 8 and Acad\u00e9mica Ingor\u00e9 conceded the most with 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233530-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 First Division (Guinea-Bissau), Overview\nThe league was contested by 10 teams with Os Balantas winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233531-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida A&M Rattlers football team\nThe 2013 Florida A&M Rattlers football team represented Florida A&M University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Rattlers were led by new head coach Earl Holmes and played their home games at Bragg Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233531-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida A&M Rattlers football team\nIn addition to a new head coach, Florida A&M entered the season with a new offensive and defensive coordinator. Levon Kirkland came aboard as the new defensive coordinator, while Quinn Gray returned for his second season as quarterback coach and his first season as offensive coordinator. George Small also returned to the team as the Assistant Head Coach after failing to get the head coaching job at Southern University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233531-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida A&M Rattlers football team\nThe Rattlers entered the 2013 season having been picked to finish fifth in the MEAC and having placed 11-players on the All-MEAC Pre-Season team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233531-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida A&M Rattlers football team\nThey finished the season 3\u20139, 2\u20136 in MEAC play to finish in tenth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233532-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Atlantic Owls baseball team\nThe 2013 Florida Atlantic Owls baseball team represents Florida Atlantic University in the sport of baseball for the 2013 college baseball season. The Owls compete in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Sun Belt Conference. They play their home games at FAU Baseball Stadium, on the university's Boca Raton, Florida campus. The team is coached by John McCormack, who is in his fifth season at Florida Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233532-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Atlantic Owls baseball team, 2013 MLB First-Year Player Draft\nFAU players selected in the 2013 MLB First-Year Player Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233533-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Atlantic Owls football team\nThe 2013 Florida Atlantic Owls football team represented Florida Atlantic University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Owls were led by at the start of the season by second-year head coach Carl Pelini. However Pelini and defensive coordinator Rekstis resigned on October 30 after admitting they were at a local party where pot was served. Brian Wright was promoted and made interim head coach for the remainder of the season. The Owls played their home games at FAU Stadium. This season was the Owls' first as a member of Conference USA in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233534-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators baseball team\nThe 2013 Florida Gators baseball team represented the University of Florida in the sport of baseball during the 2013 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 Kevin O'Sullivan, who was in his sixth season at Florida. The Gators entered the season looking to build upon their appearance in the 2012 College World Series, where they were eliminated after two consecutive losses to South Carolina and Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233534-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators baseball team\nThe Gators suffered from inexperience for much of the season and experienced key injuries to their pitching staff. As a result, the team struggled to a record of 11\u201316 by mid-season. From that point forward however, the Gators climbed their way back into postseason contention by winning 14 out of 18 games including a series win over No. 11 Ole Miss, a series sweep over No. 8 South Carolina, and a road win over No. 7 Florida State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233534-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators baseball team\nDespite struggling once again toward the end of the season, the Gators earned a berth in the 2013 NCAA Tournament as a No. 3 seed in the Bloomington, Indiana regional where they were eliminated after consecutive losses to Austin Peay and Valparaiso. The team finished with their first losing record since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233534-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators baseball team, Schedule\nRankings from USA Today/ESPN Top 25 coaches' baseball poll. All times Eastern. Parenthesis indicate tournament seedings. Retrieved from", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233534-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators baseball team, Rankings\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, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team\nThe 2013 Florida Gators football team represented the University of Florida in the sport of American football during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Gators competed in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They played their home games at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus, and the 2013 season was the Gators' third under head coach Will Muschamp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team\nThe Gators finished the season with a 4\u20138 overall win-loss record, and finished 3\u20135 in the SEC and in fifth place in the SEC Eastern Division. The Gators suffered their first losing season since 1979 and did not play in a bowl game for the first time since 1990, when the program was on NCAA probation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team, Previous season\nThe 2012 Florida Gators compiled an 11\u20132 overall win-loss record, and a 7\u20131 record in the Southeastern Conference. The Gators were ranked as high as No. 3 in the Associated Press and Coaches polls. They concluded the 2012 season with a loss to the Louisville Cardinals in the Sugar Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team, 2013 recap\nFollowing their success in 2012, the Gators were ranked No. 10 in both major polls coming into the 2013 season. They opened with a 24\u20136 home win over Toledo, then fell 21\u201316 to in-state rival Miami in a game in which the Gators gained almost twice as many yards as the Hurricanes but committed 5 turnovers, including a crucial late interception in the red zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team, 2013 recap\nThe Gators next beat the SEC rival Tennessee Volunteers at home, but lost starting quarterback Jeff Driskel for the rest of the season with a broken leg. Tyler Murphy finished the Tennessee game at quarterback and garnered praise for his play in consecutive wins over Kentucky and Arkansas, at which point the team's record was 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team, 2013 recap\nThe offense was held to just two field goals in the next game, a 17\u20136 loss at No. 10 LSU. This contest would start several negative trends, as the Gators ended the season on a seven-game losing streak in which the offense struggled mightily while major injuries ended the season for a dozen starting players, including Tyler Murphy and defensive leader Dominique Easley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team, 2013 recap\nFor the first time since the winless 1979 team, the Gators finished the 2013 season with a losing record. Several other streaks were broken, including 22 consecutive seasons going to a bowl game and a 22-game win streak against Vanderbilt. With a November loss to Georgia Southern, Florida suffered its first ever defeat to a lower division team and its first loss to a current FCS team since the winless 1946 Gators lost to Villanova. The Gator offense was ranked 112th nationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team, 2013 recap\nDespite calls from the fanbase to fire Will Muschamp for the teams' performance, UF athletic director Jeremy Foley repeated several times that he would remain the Gators head coach through 2014. However, offensive coordinator Brent Pease and offensive line coach Tim Davis were fired on the day after the season finale. Muschamp hired Kurt Roper as the new offensive coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233535-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators football team, Rankings\nThe Gators fell out of the AP Top 25 on October 20 for the first time since the final rankings of the 2011 season, when they won the Gator Bowl, following their third loss of the season to Missouri on October 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233536-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators softball team\nThe 2013 Florida Gators softball team represented the University of Florida softball program for the 2013 NCAA softball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233536-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Gators softball team, Roster\nThe 2013 Florida Gators softball team has 2 seniors, 2 juniors, 6 sophomores, and 6 freshmen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team\nThe 2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, variously Florida State or FSU, represented Florida State University in the sport of American football during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS college football season. Florida State competed in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The Seminoles were led by fourth-year head coach Jimbo Fisher and played their home games at Bobby Bowden Field at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida. They were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference, and played in the Atlantic Division. It was the Seminoles' 22nd season as a member of the ACC and its ninth in the ACC Atlantic Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team\nLed by eventual Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston, Florida State finished the season with a school-record fourteen wins and completed the school's third undefeated season. The Seminoles captured their seventeenth conference title and third national championship, earning the Grantland Rice Award, the MacArthur Trophy, the Associated Press Trophy and the AFCA National Championship Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team\nIn addition to the Heisman, Jameis Winston won the Walter Camp Award, the Davey O'Brien Award, and the Manning Award as well as being a finalist for the Maxwell Award and honored as the AP Player of the Year. Roberto Aguayo won the Lou Groza Award as the nation's best placekicker, Bryan Stork won the Rimington Trophy awarded to the nation's top center. Ten players were named All-Americans, with three earning consensus honors. For their accomplishments, Lamarcus Joyner was a finalist for both the Jim Thorpe Award and the Nagurski Trophy, and Coach Fisher was named the AFCA Coach of the Year and was a semifinalist for Maxwell Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team\nTwenty-six Seminoles from the national title team have gone on to play professional football with twenty-five players going on to play in the NFL, including four first round picks, and one player in the CFL. Nine players have been named consensus All-Americans. Since the National Championship, numerous players have gone on to win a Super Bowl including Bryan Stork, Tre' Jackson, Ronald Darby, Timmy Jernigan and Cameron Erving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season\nFlorida State ended the 2012 season, ranked #8 with a 12\u20132 record (7\u20131 in ACC play); they finished the season as champions of the ACC and BCS Orange Bowl champions. They were led by head coach Jimbo Fisher in his third year of head coaching. Eleven players from the 2012 team were taken in the 2013 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season, Preseason\nAfter the season, FSU lost six coaches from their coaching staff. Defensive coordinator Mark Stoops left his position at Florida State to take the job as head coach at Kentucky. D.J. Eliot left his position as defensive ends coach to assist Stoops at Kentucky as defensive coordinator. Eddie Gran, who served as runningback coach and special teams coordinator as well as associate head coach, also left the staff to serve as offensive coordinator at Cincinnati. Offensive coordinator James Coley left Florida State to take the same position at Miami. Greg Hudson, an assistant head coach left his position to become the defensive coordinator at Purdue. Quarterbacks coach Dameyune Craig left Florida State to return to Auburn, his alma mater.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season, Preseason\nFormer Alabama assistant coach, Jeremy Pruitt, joined the Florida State staff as the new defensive coordinator, replacing Mark Stoops. Former Tennessee assistant coach Sal Sunseri was hired as defensive ends coach. Former Minnesota head coach Tim Brewster was hired as tight ends coach. Former South Carolina assistant coach Jimmy Graham was hired as runningbacks coach. Former Georgia Tech Defensive coordinator Charles Kelly was hired as linebackers coach and special teams. Randy Sanders was hired as quarterbacks coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season, Preseason\nPrior to the start of the season, wide receiver Greg Dent was suspended indefinitely following an arrest and subsequent charge of sexual battery. Just days later, Tight end transfer Kevin Haplea suffered a torn ACL during workouts, ruled to be out for the season. During the offseason, tight end Nick O'Leary (grandson of Jack Nicklaus) was involved in a motorcycle accident but recovered before the start of the season. Just before fall practice, tight end Christo Kourtzidis chose to transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season, Preseason\nAt the start of fall practice, freshman tight end Jeremy Kerr suffered a knee cartilage tear leaving him sidelined for an undetermined amount of time. In August, wide receiver Willie Haulstead was released from the team after being named academically ineligible. Runningback Mario Pender was also declared ineligible due to academics. Jarred Haggins, a wide receiver, suffered a knee stress fracture in practice causing him to miss the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season, Preseason\nIn the ACC Media Poll, Florida State was voted to finish second in the Atlantic Division. FSU led the league with six preseason All-ACC selections in Tre' Jackson, Bryan Stork, and James Wilder, Jr. on offense along with Timmy Jernigan, Christian Jones, and Lamarcus Joyner on defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Previous season, Preseason\nThe annual 'Garnet and Gold Game' was held on April 13 at Doak S. Campbell Stadium and the gold team was victorious, winning by a score of 40\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Personnel\nThis was head coach Jimbo Fisher's fourth year as the Seminole's head coach. During his previous three years with Florida State, he led the Seminoles to an overall record of 31 wins and 10 losses (31\u201310).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Personnel\nJeremy Pruitt, a former assistant coach at Alabama, assumed the duties of defensive coordinator. Head coach Jimbo Fisher took over as offensive coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Returning starters\nFor the 2013 season, Florida State had eight returning starters on offense, three on defense, and one on special teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Media\nFlorida State football is broadcast on the Florida State University Seminoles Radio Network and the games are called by Gene Deckerhoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Statistics\nThe Seminoles ended the season as the highest-scoring team in college football history, surpassing the 2008 Oklahoma Sooners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Pittsburgh\nOn February 23, 2013, officials from both Florida State and Pittsburgh, as well as the commissioner of the Atlantic Coast Conference announced that the Seminoles and the Panthers would open the season at Heinz Field on Labor Day in what would be Pittsburgh's first game as a member of the ACC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Pittsburgh\nIn the game that would serve as the debut of Jameis Winston as quarterback, the Seminoles had to overcome an early deficit to defeat the Panthers, 41\u201313. After Pitt scored on their first possession to take a touchdown lead, Florida State quickly responded on their first drive with a touchdown pass from Winston to Nick O'Leary to tie the game. Winston and O'Leary would connect twice more for touchdowns in a game where the offense rolled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Pittsburgh\nThe first quarter would end with a tie game. Driving down the field, Florida State took their first lead of the game with another touchdown pass to Nick O'Leary. Pittsburgh was able to close the gap to four points after a twenty-eight yard field goal. The Seminoles would extend their lead with a rushing touchdown from Jameis Winston and a pass to Rashad Greene following an interception to give Florida State an eighteen-point lead at halftime. The third quarter was mostly uneventful with a pair of field goals from Florida State and a single field goal from Pittsburgh. The Seminoles held a three score lead going into the fourth quarter. Winston would add another touchdown in the final quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Pittsburgh\nFollowing Pitt's touchdown on the first drive, Florida State kept them out of the end zone for the remainder of the game and held the Panthers to just two field goals. After a slow start for the defense, Pitt was held to only 297 yards of offense and one touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Pittsburgh\nFor his four touchdown and 356 all-purpose yardage rookie performance, Winston was recognized as the Davey O'Brien Quarterback of the Week while tight end Nick O'Leary was named the John Mackey Tight End of the Week. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Panthers to 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Pittsburgh\nThe game drew 4.5 million viewers and a 2.9 rating for ESPN, a three-year high for the network's Labor Day game. It was the third-most viewed game of college football's opening week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Nevada\nIn their home opener, Florida State faced the Nevada Wolf Pack of the Mountain West Conference. After a slow start and another early deficit, the Seminoles would go on to defeat the Wolf Pack in dominating fashion, 62\u20137, after scoring 59 unanswered points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Nevada\nThe Seminoles would strike first courtesy of a field goal from Roberto Aguayo, which would serve as the only score of the first quarter. Going into the second quarter, the Seminoles held a three-point lead but they would eventually trail after Nevada scored the first touchdown of the game to take a four-point lead. However, this would be the only points allowed by the Seminole defense. Florida State scored touchdowns on two consecutive drives with two passes from quarterback Jameis Winston to Kenny Shaw and Rashad Greene to take a ten-point lead into the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Nevada\nFlorida State rolled during the second half of the game, scoring thirty-one points in the third quarter and fourteen more points in the fourth quarter while holding Nevada scoreless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Nevada\nDespite allowing a touchdown early in the game, the Florida State defense allowed only 214 yards while the Florida State offense tallied up 617 yards of total offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Nevada\nWinston continued to impress completing fifteen of his eighteen pass attempts with 214 yards, two passing touchdowns and one rushing touchdown. For his performance, he was named the ACC Rookie of the Week for the second consecutive week. Kicker Roberto Aguayo was also honored as the ACC Specialist of the Week after a game that saw him kick a career long field goal of 33 yards as well as make all eight extra-point attempts. The eight touchdowns were all scored by different players: Devonta Freeman, Ryan Green, Freddie Stevenson, James Wilder Jr., Karlos Williams (in his first start as running back), and Jameis Winston scored rushing touchdowns while Rashad Greene and Kenny Shaw scored the game's two receiving touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Bethune\u2013Cookman\nPregame Line: Lines are not released when an FCS team plays an FBS team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Bethune\u2013Cookman\nIn their third game of the season, Florida State defeated the Bethune\u2013Cookman Wildcats on a rainy night in their first meeting by a final score of 54\u20136. Coming into this game, Florida State held a 19\u20130 record against teams from the Football Championship Subdivision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Bethune\u2013Cookman\nFlorida State jumped out to a quick lead by scoring the first 40 points of the game. Telvin Smith opened up the scoring for The Seminoles with an interception returned for a touchdown followed up by a 45-yard field goal from Roberto Auayo. A safety, caused by a penalty in the endzone by the Wildcats, gave the Seminoles an early twelve point lead. Florida State then scored three straight touchdowns courtesy of Kelvin Benjamin, James Wilder Jr., and Devonta Freeman to carry a thirty-three point lead into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Bethune\u2013Cookman\nBethune\u2013Cookman scored their first points at the start of the third quarter with a seven-yard touchdown run; they subsequently missed the extra point kick. Florida State would then score the final fourteen points of the game with two touchdown runs from newly converted RB Karlos Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Bethune\u2013Cookman\nThe defense allowed only 242 yards while the offense gained 492 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 10 of 19 passes for 148 yards and two touchdowns. Running back Devonta Freeman led the team in rushing while wide receiver Kenny Shaw led the team in receiving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Boston College\nFor their second road game of the season, the first since the season opener, Florida State hit the road to face the Boston College Eagles. In 2012, Florida State was victorious with a 51\u20137 win over the Eagles in Tallahassee. Florida State last traveled to Chestnut Hill in 2011 for a Thursday night match-up, a game the Seminoles won 38\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Boston College\nFlorida State mounted a comeback to defeat Boston College, 48\u201334, in their second conference game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Boston College\nAfter stopping Florida State on their first offensive possession, Boston College took the early lead with a touchdown pass from BC quarterback Chase Rettig. Florida State responded with a seven play drive that ended in a field goal to cut the lead to four. The Eagles would then go on to score the next ten points of the game to take a fourteen-point lead and seemingly seize control of the game. However, the Seminoles rattled off twenty-one unanswered points including a \"Hail Mary\" pass, with no time remaining, at the end of the second quarter to take a seven-point lead at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Boston College\nOn the first drive of the second half, Boston College mustered up a drive that resulted in a field goal to close the gap and make it a four-point game. Florida State then completed two drives ending in touchdowns to take an eighteen-point lead. Boston College added another touchdown at the end of the third quarter. Entering the fourth quarter, Florida State held an eleven-point lead. In the final quarter, Florida State would extend their lead with a field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Boston College\nBoston College then began a promising drive, but P. J. Williams intercepted the ball and returned it for a touchdown to put the Noles up 48\u201327 late in the game. Boston College closed the gap with a touchdown to pull within two scores midway through the quarter. Florida State sealed the win with a late interception to take possession of the ball with less than two minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Boston College\nAlthough Boston College controlled the game early, Florida State outgained them with 489 yards of offense while limiting to Eagles to 397 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 17 of 27 passes for 330 yards and four touchdowns. Winston also led the team in rushing with 14 rushes for 96 yards while wide receiver Kenny Shaw led the team in receiving with 4 receptions for 93 yards and one touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Boston College\nThis was the 12th meeting between Florida State and Boston College, the 8th meeting as conference opponents. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Eagles to 8\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Maryland\nAfter a tough road game, the Seminoles returned home to face the Maryland Terrapins, who were ranked twenty-fifth in the nation coming into the game. In 2012, Florida State was victorious with a 41\u201314 win over the Terrapins in College Park, clinching the division in the process. In Maryland's last visit to Tallahassee in 2011, the Terps lost to the Seminoles by a score of 41\u201316. This game marked the final meeting between the teams as conference opponents as Maryland is leaving for the Big Ten Conference following the end of this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Maryland\nFlorida State earned their first shutout of the season with a rout of Maryland, 63\u20130, setting a record for the most lop-sided victory against a ranked opponent in school history as well as the first shut-out of a ranked opponent in sixteen years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Maryland\nFlorida State struck first on offense and defense, forcing a three-and-out on the opening possession of the game and scoring a touchdown on their first possession. Maryland's defense held Florida State scoreless for the rest of the first quarter. However, Florida State would score another fourteen points in the second quarter courtesy of two five-yard touchdown runs from Devonta Freeman and Kelvin Benjamin. At halftime, Florida State held a 21\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Maryland\nThe Seminoles opened up the second half with another scoring drive capping off with an eight-yard pass from Jameis Winston to tight end Nick O'Leary to extend the lead to twenty eight. The second half was an offensive explosion for Florida State as the Seminoles went on a forty-two point scoring spree. With a twenty-one yard pass to Kenny Shaw and a twelve-yard pass to Nick O'Leary, Florida State carried a forty-two point lead into the final quarter. Florida State continued to score in the fourth with another twenty-one point quarter that consisted of touchdowns from Kelvin Benjamin and Karlos Williams along with backup QB Jacob Coker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Maryland\nFlorida State dominated the game with 614 yards of offense while the defense limited the Terrapins to only 234 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 23 of 32 passes for 393 yards and five touchdowns and led the team in passing. Devonta Freeman led the team in rushing with 17 rushes for 63 yards while Rashad Greene led the team in receiving with 4 receptions for 108 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Maryland\nThis was the 24th and final meeting between Florida State and Maryland, the 22nd and last meeting as conference opponents. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Terps to 22\u20132. The victory also improved Florida State's record against the Terps to 12\u20130 at Doak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Clemson\nFollowing a bye week, Florida State traveled to Clemson to face the Clemson Tigers in a top five matchup. In 2012, Florida State was victorious with a 49\u201337 comeback win over the Tigers in Tallahassee en route to an Atlantic Division title and an ACC Championship. Florida State last traveled to Death Valley in 2011, a game the Seminoles lost 35\u201330, furthering their win drought in Clemson, a place they have not won at since 2001. The winner of this game has represented the Atlantic Division in the ACC Championship Game for the past four years with Clemson winning the division title in 2009 and 2011 while Florida State won it in 2010 and 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Clemson\nUnder the lights (and with the attendance of College GameDay), Florida State stunned the third-ranked Clemson Tigers, 51\u201314, becoming the first team in history to score 50 points at Memorial Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Clemson\nFlorida State struck early, capitalizing on a Clemson turnover on the first play from scrimmage. The Seminoles scored a touchdown on their third play as Winston threw a touchdown on his first pass of the game. Florida State added a field goal on their second series of the game. With a ten-point lead, Mario Edwards Jr. returned a fumble for a touchdown that put the Seminoles up 17\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0045-0001", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Clemson\nClemson scored their first points of the game near the end of the first quarter with a touchdown pass from Tajh Boyd to Sammy Watkins to cut the lead back down to ten. Florida State doubled their lead with a touchdown and a field goal in the second quarter while Clemson failed to score. The Seminoles went into the half holding a twenty-point advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Clemson\nFlorida State continued to control the game in the second half, scoring twenty-four straight points, courtesy of a passing touchdown to Rashad Greene, rushing touchdowns from Devonta Freeman and Jameis Winston, and a field goal from Roberto Agauyo. Clemson would not make it into the endzone again until the end of the fourth quarter, securing a thirty-seven point win for the Noles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Clemson\nFlorida State amassed 565 yards of offense while the defense held the Tigers to 326 total yards and a season low 14 points. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 22 of 34 passes for 444 yards and four touchdowns, three passing and one rushing, while leading the team in passing. Devonta Freeman led the team in rushing with 21 rushes for 84 yards while Nick O'Leary led the team in receiving with 5 receptions for 161 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Clemson\nThis was the 29th meeting between Florida State and Clemson, the 22nd meeting as conference opponents. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Tigers to 19\u20138. With the win, Florida State became bowl eligible for the thirty-second consecutive year, the longest active streak in college football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, NC State\nIn a game that honored former head coach Bobby Bowden, Florida State faced the NC State Wolfpack. In 2012, Florida State was upset by the Wolfpack, 17\u201316, in Raleigh, giving the Seminoles their first loss of the season. When North Carolina State last traveled to Tallahassee in 2011, the Wolfpack were defeated by the Seminoles 34\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, NC State\nFlorida State avenged last season's upset loss to NC State, riding on a huge first quarter to defeat the Wolfpack, 49\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, NC State\nThe Seminoles took control of the game early, scoring the first thirty-five points. The first score of the game came from an 18-yard run from Karlos Williams following an interception by Brandon Mitchell. The next score came courtesy of a 39-yard touchdown pass from Jameis Winston to Kelvin Benjamin to give the Noles an early fourteen-point advantage. Devonta Freeman scored on an 11-yard rush for a touchdown. After a forced fumble by Terrence Brooks, Florida State converted the turnover into points with a 14-yard pass to Nick O'Leary. The Seminoles ended the first quarter with another receiving touchdown from Rashad Greene. The scoring continued in the second quarter when Devonta Freeman ran four yards for a touchdown. Florida State scored a total of 42 points in the first half while holding NC State scoreless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, NC State\nNC State put their first points on the board in the third quarter by scoring ten unanswered points with a field goal and a 72-yard touchdown. The Wolfpack added seven more points in the fourth with another rushing touchdown. Florida State scored their final points of the game with a 31-yard rushing touchdown from Levonte Whitfield to secure the blowout win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, NC State\nFlorida State amassed 566 yards of offense, giving the Seminoles over 500 yards of offense for the fifth consecutive conference game, while the defense held the Wolfpack to 316 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 16 of 26 passes for 292 yards and three touchdowns. Devonta Freeman led the team in rushing with 12 rushes for 92 yards and two touchdowns while Rashad Greene led the team in receiving with 8 receptions for 137 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, NC State\nThis was the 24th meeting between Florida State and NC State, the 22nd meeting as conference opponents. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Wolfpack to 23\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Miami (FL)\nFollowing an emotional game, Florida State took on their rival, the Miami Hurricanes. In 2012, Florida State was victorious with a 33\u201320 win in Miami Gardens. Miami last traveled to Tallahassee in 2011, where the Hurricanes lost to the Seminoles 23\u201319 in a game dominated by questionable calls from the referees. College Gameday was on campus to witness the top ten clash, marking the tenth time that the program has visited campus and the twenty-sixth appearance for the school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Miami (FL)\nIn front of a record crowd, Florida State defeated their rival for the fourth straight time, 41\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Miami (FL)\nThe Seminoles scored the first points on the opening drive of the game when Devonta Freeman ran the ball into the endzone to give Florida State an early seven-point lead. Miami then drove the ball down the field only to be stopped in the red zone; the Hurricanes then attempted a field goal that sailed wide left. As the Seminoles were once again going down the field, Jameis Winston threw his first interception of the season that led to a Miami touchdown five plays later to tie the game at 7. The first quarter ended in a tie game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Miami (FL)\nFlorida State responded by scoring the fourteen unanswered points courtesy of a rushing touchdown from James Wilder, Jr. and a receiving touchdown from Devonta Freeman. Looking to go up by more before the half, Jameis Winston made his second mistake of the game with an interception that led to another Miami score, to make the score 21\u201314 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Miami (FL)\nThe Seminoles went on to dominate the second half, scoring twenty points while holding Miami scoreless. James Wilder, Jr. and Devonta Freeman each scored a touchdown in the third quarter to give Florida State a fourteen-point lead heading into the final quarter. In the fourth quarter, the Seminoles were held to two field goals from Roberto Aguayo, one with only a minute remaining, to secure the win over their rival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Miami (FL)\nFlorida State amassed 517 yards of offense while the defense held the Hurricanes to 275 total yards and a season-low 14 points. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 21 of 29 passes for 325 yards and one touchdown. Devonta Freeman led the team in both rushing and receiving with 23 carries for 78 yards and two touchdowns along with six receptions for 98 yards and one touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Miami (FL)\nThis was the 58th meeting between Florida State and Miami, the 8th meeting as conference opponents. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Hurricanes to 27\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Wake Forest\nFlorida State traveled to face the Wake Forest Demon Deacons. In 2012, Florida State shutout the Demon Deacons, 52\u20130, in Tallahassee. When the Seminoles last traveled to Winston-Salem in 2011, they were upset by the Demon Deacons 35\u201330, part of a three-game skid for the Noles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Wake Forest\nThe defense totaled a school record seven turnovers in a rout of Wake Forest, 59-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Wake Forest\nAfter holding Wake Forest on the first drive of the game, Florida State scored on their first possession to take the lead. Following their opening drive, Terrence Smith intercepted Tanner Price's pass and set up Devonta Freeman to score on a one-yard touchdown run. Price was then picked off again by Mario Edwards Jr. to set up another rushing touchdown from Karlos Williams. In the second quarter, the Florida State defense continued their impressive performance when Nate Andrews returned an interception for a touchdown. On the next play, Jalen Ramsey returned a fumble for a touchdown. The offense put together another drive to go up by 42 points before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Wake Forest\nAnother interception would lead to a touchdown at the start of the second half. A field goal extended the lead to 52 going into the final quarter. Wake Forest's only points of the game came courtesy of a field goal in the fourth. Florida State would add a score on special teams with a sixty-two yard punt return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Wake Forest\nFlorida State amassed 296 yards of offense, the lowest output of the season, while the defense held the Deacons to 166 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 17 of 28 passes for 159 yards and two touchdowns, leading the team in passing. Karlos Williams led the team in rushing with 12 carries for 49 yards and a touchdown. Rashad Greene led the team in receiving with 5 receptions for 47 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Wake Forest\nThis was the 32nd meeting between Florida State and Wake Forest, the 22nd meeting as conference opponents. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Demon Deacons to 25\u20136\u20131. With the win, Florida State claimed the division title and clinched a berth in the conference championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Syracuse\nIn the final conference game of the year, Florida State faced the Syracuse Orange. The teams last met during the 2005 season in Tallahassee, a 38-14 win for the Seminoles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Syracuse\nOn a day when the 1993 national title team was recognized to honor the twentieth anniversary of Florida State's first national championship, the Seminoles continued their own run by defeating Syracuse 59-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Syracuse\nThe Seminoles seized control of the game, scoring on the first drive of the game with a six-play drive culminating in a three-yard touchdown run from James Wilder, Jr. to put the Seminoles up early. Florida State went on to score on three straight possessions, with touchdown runs from Levonte Whitfield and Devonta Freeman and a touchdown throw from Jameis Winston to Rashad Greene, to put the Seminoles up by twenty-eight going into the second quarter. Florida State scored on their first possession in the second as well courtesy of a Jameis Winston pass to Kelvin Benjamin. The Seminoles extended their lead with a 53-yard field goal from Roberto Aguayo to go into halftime with a 38-0 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Syracuse\nTo open the third quarter, Florida State forced Syracuse to punt. James Wilder, Jr. then ran for a touchdown to put the Seminoles up by forty-five. The Seminoles scored on their next possession with a seventeen-yard pass from Sean Maguire to Nick O'Leary. After forcing a fumble, Chris Casher returned the ball thirty-one yards for a touchdown. Going into the final quarter, the Seminoles held a fifty-nine point lead while the Orange had yet to score. Syracuse would get their first points of the game as a result of a ten-minute drive that ended in a field goal. With the clock ticking down, Florida State held Syracuse in the end zone to preserve a fifty-six point homecoming win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Syracuse\nFlorida State amassed 523 yards of offense while the defense held the Orange to 247 total yards. Amid speculation of an alleged sexual assault, quarterback Jameis Winston completed 19 of 21 passes for 277 yards and two touchdowns, leading the team in passing; backup quarterback Sean Maguire, who played for much of the second half, also threw for a touchdown. Karlos Williams led the team in rushing with 4 carries for 78 yards. Kenny Shaw led the team in receiving with 7 receptions for 99 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Syracuse\nThis was the 7th meeting between Florida State and Syracuse, the 1st meeting as conference opponents. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Orange to 6\u20131. Florida State finished the season with an unbeaten conference record for the eighth time in school history, the first time since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Idaho\nFor their final home game of the season, Florida State faced the independent Idaho Vandals. In the first meeting between the two, Florida State set a school record for points scored with an 80-14 victory over the Vandals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Idaho\nThe Seminoles dominated the game from the start, scoring the game's first thirty-five points. Florida State's first score came courtesy of a rushing touchdown from Devonta Freeman. This was followed up by a touchdown run from Kelvin Benjamin. Telvin Smith returned an interception seventy-one yards for another touchdown to put the Noles up by three scores at the end of the first quarter. Florida State built on their lead in the second quarter with a passing touchdown from Jameis Winston to Kenny Shaw and a rushing touchdown from James Wilder, Jr. to give the Seminoles a commanding lead. Idaho got on the board with a ten-play drive that ended with a passing touchdown. In the final seconds of the first half, Florida State scored with a passing touchdown to Kenny Shaw. The Seminoles went into halftime, leading 42-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Idaho\nFlorida State scored on the opening drive of the second half with a pass to Kelvin Benjamin. Karlos Williams rushed for a touchdown on the Seminole's next possession. A 42-yard field goal from Roberto Aguayo extended the lead going into the fourth. In the final quarter, Florida State scored two more touchdowns, a rush from Karlos Williams and a pass from backup Sean Maguire to Ryan Green. Idaho completed a nine-play drive that resulted in a touchdown as the game wound down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Idaho\nFlorida State amassed 645 yards of offense while the defense held the Vandals to 345 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 14 of 25 passes for 225 yards and four touchdowns, leading the team in passing. Devonta Freeman led the team in rushing with 11 carries for 129 yards and one touchdown. Kenny Shaw led the team in receiving with 5 receptions for 107 yards and two touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Florida\nFlorida State traveled to Gainesville for their annual rivalry game with the Florida Gators, who were in the midst of their worst season since 1979, in the regular season finale. In 2012, Florida was victorious with a 37\u201326 win over the Seminoles in Tallahassee after Florida State blew a late lead. The Seminoles last traveled to Gainesville in 2011, where Florida State beat the Gators 21\u20137 in a turnover filled game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Florida\nIn the final regular season game, Florida State defeated their archrival, 37-7, marking the Seminoles' third win in the last four games against the Gators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0079-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Florida\nThe Seminoles started off sluggish against the Gators, scoring only three points in the first quarter. The offense was more productive in the second quarter, scoring their first touchdown of the game when Jameis Winston completed a 45-yd pass to Kelvin Benjamin to put them up by ten. Just before the half, Winston completed a 29-yd pass to Kelvin Benjamin for a touchdown to give the Noles a seventeen-point lead at halftime. Despite the offensive struggles, the defense held the Gators scoreless in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0080-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Florida\nEarly in the third quarter, Florida State capitalized on a Florida fumble, scoring three more points on a 40-yd field goal. Florida State extended their lead when Devonta Freeman rushed 11 yards for a touchdown to give the Seminoles a twenty-seven point advantage. Florida scored their first points of the game in the fourth quarter courtesy of a 5-yd pass from third-string quarterback Skyler Mornhinweg to Hunter Joyer. Florida State responded with a 4-yd pass from Winston to Benjamin. The final score of the game would come from Roberto Aguayo who kicked 28-yd field goal to give the Seminoles a thirty-point win over the rival Gators. Because of their victory over Florida, along with their earlier victory over Miami, the Seminoles were awarded the Florida Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0081-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Florida\nFlorida State amassed 456 yards of offense while the defense held the Gators to 193 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 19 of 31 passes for 327 yards and three touchdowns, leading the team in passing. James Wilder, Jr. led the team in rushing with 10 carries for 63 yards. Kelvin Benjamin led the team in receiving with 9 receptions for 212 yards and three touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0082-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Florida\nThis was the 58th meeting between Florida State and Florida, making it one of the most-played rivalries in college football. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Gators to 22\u201334\u20132. Florida State also completed their first undefeated regular season since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0083-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, ACC Championship: Duke\nBy virtue of winning the Atlantic Division, Florida State played in the ACC Championship Game in Charlotte. This marked the Seminoles' fourth appearance in the conference championship game and their fifth division title. Florida State's most recent appearance in the game came in 2012 when they won the conference title. The Seminoles faced the Coastal Division champion, the Duke Blue Devils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0084-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, ACC Championship: Duke\nThe Seminoles won the ACC title, defeating the Blue Devils, 45-7, earning a spot to play in the BCS National Championship Game as the only undefeated team left in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0085-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, ACC Championship: Duke\nFlorida State was held scoreless in the first quarter for the first time all season. The Seminoles scored the first points of the game with a fourteen-yard pass to Kelvin Benjamin to put the Noles up by a touchdown. After being forced to punt on their next possession, Florida State scored with a rushing touchdown from Karlos Williams. A field goal before the half put Florida State up by seventeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0086-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, ACC Championship: Duke\nFlorida State began to seize control of the game in the second half. An interception turned into points with a pass to Kenny Shaw. The Seminoles scored on their next drive courtesy of a pass to Kelvin Benjamin. Nate Andrews forced a fumble which the Seminoles converted into points when Winston rushed seventeen yards for a touchdown. In the fourth quarter, Devonta Freeman rushed for a touchdown while Duke scored their only points of the game in the final minute with a five-yard rushing touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0087-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, ACC Championship: Duke\nFlorida State amassed 569 yards of offense while the defense held the Blue Devils to 239 total yards. Quarterback Jameis Winston completed 19 of 32 passes for 330 yards and three touchdowns, leading the team in passing. Devonta Freeman led the team in rushing with 18 carries for 91 yards and a touchdown. Kelvin Benjamin led the team in receiving with 5 receptions for 119 yards and two touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0088-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, ACC Championship: Duke\nThis was the 19th meeting between Florida State and Duke. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Blue Devils to 19\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0089-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, BCS Championship: Auburn\nIn the national championship game, Florida State faced the Auburn Tigers, champions of the SEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0090-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, BCS Championship: Auburn\nThe Seminoles captured their third national title by defeating Auburn, 34-31, at the Rose Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0091-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, BCS Championship: Auburn\nAfter Florida State scored a field goal on their first drive, Auburn responded with a touchdown in the first quarter and two in the second to storm out to a 21-3 lead. After a successful punt fake, the Seminoles managed a late touchdown before the half to go into the locker room down 21-10, marking the first halftime deficit of the season for the Seminoles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0092-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, BCS Championship: Auburn\nBoth teams dominated on defense in the third quarter with the Seminoles hitting a field goal to cut the lead to eight. In the fourth quarter, Florida State scored a touchdown early to make it a one-point game. After Auburn made a field goal, Kermit Whitfield returned the following kickoff 100 yards to give the Seminoles a three-point lead. Auburn answered with a touchdown to go up by four with just over a minute remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0092-0001", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, BCS Championship: Auburn\nOn their final drive of seven plays, Florida State scored a touchdown with thirteen seconds remaining, benefiting from a 49-yard completion to Rashad Greene to bring them into scoring position with less than a minute to play. The Seminoles emerged victorious to complete a perfect season and end the SEC's streak of seven consecutive BCS titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0093-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, BCS Championship: Auburn\nFlorida State amassed 385 yards of offense but was outgained by Auburn. The defense allowed 449 total yards with running back Tre Mason accounting for 195 yards. Despite an unproductive first half, quarterback Jameis Winston completed 20 of 35 passes for 237 yards and two touchdowns, leading the team in passing. Devonta Freeman led the team in rushing with 11 carries for 73 yards and a touchdown and also passed the 1,000 yard mark for the season. Rashad Greene led the team in receiving with 9 receptions for 147 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0094-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Schedule, Game summaries, BCS Championship: Auburn\nThis was the 19th meeting between Florida State and Auburn. The victory improved Florida State's all-time record against the Tigers to 5\u201313\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0095-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Awards, Honors, All-ACC\nSeventeen players from Florida State were honored as All-ACC selections by the Atlantic Coast Sports Media Association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0096-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Awards, Honors, All-ACC\nEighteen players from Florida State were also honored as All-ACC selections by the coaches:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0097-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Awards, NFL Draft selections\nTwenty-three former players have been selected in the NFL Draft so far:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0098-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Awards, NFL Draft selections\nFour former players have been chosen to go to the Pro Bowl:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233537-0099-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida State Seminoles football team, Awards, ESPY Awards\nIn recognition of their season, Florida State was nominated for two ESPY Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233538-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Tarpons season\nThe 2013 Florida Tarpons season was the 2nd for the Ultimate Indoor Football League franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233538-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Tarpons season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated June 8, 20132 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233539-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Tech Panthers football team\nThe 2013 Florida Tech Panthers football team represented the Florida Institute of Technology (FIT) during the NCAA Division II football season. They were led by head coach Steve Englehart, who was in his first year at Florida Tech. The Panthers played their home games at Pirate Stadium, approximately one mile from the Florida Tech campus and were a member of the Gulf South Conference. The 2013 season was the Panthers' first, after having football approved at FIT in April, 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233539-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Tech Panthers football team\nIn a season full of firsts, the Panthers memorably won their first ever game by defeating Stetson, 20-13, on a touchdown with 1:09 to play. Later on, they would earn their first GSC win in dramatic fashion by scoring 21 unanswered fourth quarter points to defeat Shorter, 28-24. They would cap their inaugural campaign by winning on the road for the first time in their first ever bowl game in a 32-20 win over Alderson-Broaddus in the ECAC Futures Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233539-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Florida Tech Panthers football team, Awards and milestones, Gulf South Conference honors\nEight players from Florida Tech were honored as All-GSC selections by the league's coaches. Linebacker Chris Stapleton was named the GSC Defensive Freshman of the Year, becoming the first Panther to receive any such honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 93], "content_span": [94, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall\nIn 2017 a wide-scale recall of products sold by dairy producer Fonterra was announced after suspected botulism-causing bacteria were found during safety tests. The contaminated whey products had been sold to third parties who use it to produce infant formula and sports drinks. Approximately 1,000 tonnes of consumer product was affected by the recall across seven countries, but no cases of sickened consumers were reported. China, which imports most of its powdered milk from New Zealand, instituted a temporary ban on the import of the ingredient from New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall\nThe scandal resulted in the resignation of Fonterra's head of its milk business division, Gary Romano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall\nThe bacteria were ultimately found not to be a botulism-causing strain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Background\nBased in New Zealand, Fonterra Cooperative Group is the world's fourth largest producer of dairy products, with a turnover of nearly NZ$ 20\u00a0billion (US$15.7\u00a0billion). The company was formed in 2001 following the merger of the country's two largest dairy cooperatives, and controls 95% of New Zealand's dairy market.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Background\nNew Zealand produces 15 million tonnes of dairy products annually, of which 5% is consumed domestically and 95% is exported to other countries. Dairy exports contribute NZ$11\u00a0billion directly to the New Zealand economy, or around 7% of the country's gross domestic profit. Because of New Zealand's excellent safety history, consumers are willing to pay a premium for its dairy products. Chinese manufacturers in particular are major buyers of Fonterra products as many citizens have concerns about the safety of domestic dairy products in the wake of the 2008 Chinese milk scandal, in which melamine sickened thousands of people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Background\nBotulism is a rare disease caused by Clostridium botulinum bacteria. A small number of the bacteria can cause severe poisoning leading to respiratory and muscular problems in adults. In infants, the toxin also affects the intestinal system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Recall\nOn 3 August 2013, the Ministry for Primary Industries announced a recall of products sold by Fonterra. The contaminated products originated with three batches of whey protein concentrate weighing 38 metric tons (42 tons) produced in May 2012. A problem was first noticed by Fonterra in March 2013 when testing suggested the possible presence of Clostridium, a sometimes-dangerous class of bacteria which is often harmless. On 31 July 2013, tests revealed signs of Clostridium botulinum, leading to the recall. The contamination was blamed on unsterilised pipes used to move the whey during production.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Recall\nThe whey had been sold to third party manufacturers who used it to produce infant formula, protein drinks, sports drinks, and other beverages; it had been mixed with other ingredients to produce an estimated 1,000 tons of consumer products by the time of the recall. No fresh dairy products were affected by the contaminated pipes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Recall\nManufacturers in Australia, China, Malaysia, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, and Vietnam were affected by the recall, but the specific companies affected were not identified by the Ministry of Primary Industries. A Chinese consumer watchdog group said four domestic manufacturers \u2013 Dumex Baby Food Company, two subsidiaries of beverage manufacturer Wahaha Group, and Shanghai Sugar, Tobacco and Alcohol \u2013 had potentially imported contaminated products. Fonterra said that Coca-Cola's Chinese subsidiary was also affected. Coca-Cola said 4,775 out of 4,800 kilograms (10,600\u00a0lb) of contaminated whey had been quarantined before being used. The remainder was used in a single batch of Minute Maid Pulpy Milk, which was recalled to reassure consumers even though it posed no health risk since the drink was heat treated to kill bacteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Recall\nInternationally, eight companies were affected \u2013 three food companies, two beverage companies, and three animal-feed producers. Danone Dumex Malaysia said tests on its products did not indicate any contamination, but announced a precautionary recall of four batches of infant formula. One affected product, Karicare formula made by Nutricia, was sold directly to consumers by Fonterra in New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Recall\nOn 9 August, it was revealed that Fonterra had donated a 12\u00a0kg (26\u00a0lb) bag of the affected whey concentrate to Palmerston North Girls' High School, in the eponymous New Zealand city, for use in a science project back in February 2013. Around 25 students drank drinks made with the concentrate in April, but no ill effects were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Recall\nFonterra CEO Theo Spierings promised swift action to ensure that potentially dangerous products were not used by consumers. Since most of the consumer products affected are not manufactured by Fonterra, individual manufacturers are responsible for co-ordinating the recall efforts in their areas. Spierings travelled to China to deal with the fallout from the botulism scare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Recall\nThe Government reaction involved five ministers, with the Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce, known as the \"Minister of Everything\" or \"Mr Fixit\", in charge (he is also responsible for investigating the Novopay debacle). A Government inquiry is expected to be announced on Monday 12 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Reaction, China\nChina's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine ordered importers to recall any potentially infected products and demanded \"that New Zealand take immediate measures to prevent problem products harming the health of Chinese consumers.\" On 4 August, China temporarily blocked the import of all milk powder products from New Zealand. New Zealand's trade minister, Tim Groser, agreed with the decision calling it \"absolutely appropriate\". China imports US$1.9\u00a0billion of milk powder a year, 90 percent of which originates in New Zealand. Economists said an extended ban could cause a shortage of infant formula and other dairy products in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Reaction, Thailand\nThailand ordered a recall of all Fonterra products imported since May. Reports by the RIA Novosti news agency indicated that Russia, which was not part of the official recall, also halted the import and sale of Fonterra products. Fonterra called the reports \"unconfirmed\". The company said that all affected batches of Nutricia are believed to have been secured before reaching consumers' hands. Groser said the government had serious questions about how the contamination occurred and why it went undetected for so long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Reaction, Sri Lanka\nHealth ministry of Sri Lanka issued an island-wide recall of all suspected milk stocks which were imported from New Zealand including Anchor. The Health Services Director General of Sri Lanka announced contaminated milk products ban under Food Act Number 26 of 1980 using his powers in consultation with the Food Advisory Committee. Also, on 8 August, the Court of Appeal of Sri Lanka issued an Interim Order compelling the Consumer Affairs Authority (CAA) to prevent Fonterra Brands Lanka (Pvt) Ltd., from publishing any advertisements. No cases of consumers being sickened have been reported. A statement by New Zealand prime minister John Key expressed doubt about Sri Lanka's testing methods (for DCD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Reaction, France\nFrench food company Danone, which owns the Nutricia brand, was said to be seeking upwards of \u20ac300\u00a0million in damages following the scare, despite Fonterra only setting aside $NZ14\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Aftermath\nFurther testing showed that the bacteria found were Clostridium sporogenes, which do not produce botulism toxins. There was no actual health risk, and the crisis was a false alarm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233540-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Fonterra recall, Aftermath\nThe Ministry for Primary Industries brought four charges against Fonterra under the Animal Products Act concerning its risk-management programme and delayed notification of problems. Fonterra pleaded guilty to all charges and was fined NZ$300,000 in April 2014. A government investigation into the crisis and three other inquiries are continuing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233541-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Food City 500\nThe 2013\u00a0Food\u00a0City\u00a0500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on March 17, 2013, at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee. Contested over 500\u00a0laps on the 0.533 mile (0.858\u00a0km) concrete oval, it was the fourth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Kasey Kahne of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, while Kyle Busch finished second. Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch, and Clint Bowyer rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233541-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Food City 500, Report, Background\nBristol Motor Speedway, is a four-turn short track oval that is 0.533 miles (0.858\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked from twenty-four to thirty degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked from six to ten degrees. The back stretch also has banking from six to ten degrees. The track has a seating capacity of 160,000 people. The race consists of 500 laps, which is equivalent to a race distance of 266.5 miles (428.9\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233541-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Food City 500, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 129 points, while Brad Keselowski stood in second with 124 points. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. followed in the third position, seventeen points ahead of Denny Hamlin and Carl Edwards in fourth and fifth. Mark Martin, with 95, was two points ahead of Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle, as Clint Bowyer was one point ahead of Aric Almirola in tenth, and two points ahead of Ricky Stenhouse, Jr.. Paul Menard completed the first twelve positions with 82 points. The defending winner of the race was Keselowski, who won the race in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233541-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Food City 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, held on March 15, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third were held on March 16, and were both 60 minutes long. During the first practice session, Keselowski was quickest with a time of 14.869, ahead of Kenseth and Kyle Busch in second and third. Bowyer followed in the fourth position, ahead of Hamlin in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233541-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Food City 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Busch was quickest, ahead of Kenseth and Hamlin in second and third. Jeff Burton and Kahne followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Kevin Harvick, Jeff Gordon, Jamie McMurray, Kurt Busch, and Johnson rounded out the first ten positions. Busch and Keselowski were quickest during ten consecutive laps with an average speed of 124.874 miles per hour (200.965\u00a0km/h) and 124.702 miles per hour (200.688\u00a0km/h), respectively. In the final practice session for the race, Busch remained quickest with a time of 15.372 seconds. Kahne followed in second, ahead of David Gilliland and Kenseth in third and fourth. Hamlin, who was third quickest in second practice, only managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233541-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Food City 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-four cars were entered, but only forty-three were able to start because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Busch clinched his eleventh career pole position, with a record-setting time of 14.813 seconds. After his qualifying run, Busch commented, \u201cThe car felt great during that lap. We\u2019ve never really worried too much about qualifying runs. We unloaded with a really good race car and we just kept fine-tuning to make it a little bit better\u00a0\u2013 and we were able to get it where it was pretty quick in practice.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233541-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Food City 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nHe was joined on the front row of the grid by Kahne. Hamlin qualified third, Brian Vickers took fourth, and Paul Menard started fifth, after being scored fifteenth in the final practice session. McMurray, Keselowski, Tony Stewart, Martin Truex Jr., and Joey Logano completed the first ten positions on the grid. The driver that failed to qualify was Scott Riggs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season\nThe Football Federation Tasmania 2013 season was the first season under the new competition format in Tasmania. The competition consists of three major divisions across the State of Tasmania, created from the teams in the previous structure. The overall premier for the new structure qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 NPL Tasmania\nThe 2013 T-League season was played over 22 rounds, from March to August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian Premier Leagues, 2013 Northern Premier League\nThe 2013 Northern Premier League was the first edition of the new Northern Premier League as the second level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (third level overall in Australia). 9 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 16 matches. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 122], "content_span": [123, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian Premier Leagues, 2013 Southern Premier League\nThe 2013 Southern Premier League was the first edition of the new Southern Premier League as the second level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (third level overall in Australia). 12 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 22 rounds. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 122], "content_span": [123, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian Premier Leagues, 2013 Southern Premier League\nAt the completion of the finals series, Hobart Zebras B, South Hobart B, NTC, Kingborough Lions and Glenorchy Knights B withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 122], "content_span": [123, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian League One, 2013 Northern League One\nThe 2013 Northern League One was the first edition of the new Tasmanian League One as the third level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (fourth level overall in Australia). 9 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 16 matches. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 113], "content_span": [114, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian League One, 2013 Southern League One\nThe 2013 Southern League One was the first edition of the new Tasmanian League One as the third level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (fourth level overall in Australia). 10 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 18 matches. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 113], "content_span": [114, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian League Two, 2013 Northern League Two\nThe 2013 Northern League Two was the first edition of the new Tasmanian League Two as the fourth level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (fifth level overall in Australia). 6 teams competed, all playing each other four times for a total of 20 matches. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 113], "content_span": [114, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian League Two, 2013 Southern League Two\nThe 2013 Southern League Two was the first edition of the new Tasmanian League Two as the fourth level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (fifth level overall in Australia). 6 teams competed, all playing each other four times for a total of 20 matches. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 113], "content_span": [114, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian League Three, 2013 Southern League Three\nThe 2013 Southern League Three was the first edition of the new Tasmanian League Three as the fifth level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (sixth level overall in Australia). 10 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 18 matches. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 117], "content_span": [118, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233542-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Football Federation Tasmania season, Men's Competitions, 2013 Tasmanian League Four, 2013 Southern League Four\nThe 2013 Southern League Four was the first edition of the new Tasmanian League Four as the sixth level domestic association football competition in Tasmania (seventh level overall in Australia). 10 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 18 matches. No teams were promoted or relegated this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 115], "content_span": [116, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final\nThe 2013 Football League Championship play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 27 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium, London, between Crystal Palace and Watford. The match was to determine the third and final team to gain promotion from the Football League Championship, the second tier of English football, to the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final\nThe top two teams of the 2012\u201313 Football League Championship season gained automatic promotion to the Premier League, while the teams placed from third to sixth place in the table partook in play-off semi-finals; Watford ended the season in third position while Crystal Palace finished fifth. The winners of these semi-finals competed for the final place for the 2013\u201314 season in the Premier League. Winning the game was estimated to be worth up to \u00a3120\u00a0million to the successful team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final\nThe 2013 final, refereed by Martin Atkinson, was watched by a crowd of more than 82,000 people. The game ended goalless in regular time, and proceeded into extra time. Crystal Palace won 1\u20130, with the only goal of the game coming from Kevin Phillips in the last minute of the first half of extra time from the penalty spot. It was Palace's fourth win in five play-off finals. Wilfried Zaha was named man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final\nBoth teams finished mid-table in their respective leagues the following season. Crystal Palace ended the next season in 11th place in the Premier League, while Watford finished their following campaign in the Championship 13th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nWatford finished the regular 2012\u201313 season in third place in the Football League Championship, the second tier of the English football league system, two places 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 to determine the third promoted team. Watford finished two points behind Hull City (who were promoted in second place) and ten behind league winners Cardiff City. Crystal Palace ended the season five points behind Watford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nCrystal Palace faced Brighton & Hove Albion in their play-off semi-final, the first leg being played at Selhurst Park. The game ended goalless but Palace's top scorer Glenn Murray was injured and had to be carried off on a stretcher midway through the second half after suffering what was suspected to be a cruciate ligament injury. The second leg was held three days later at Falmer Stadium, a venue at which Brighton had not lost since January. Palace went into the match having won once in their past eleven games and, as expected, without Murray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nHe was replaced by Aaron Wilbraham who had scored once in his 25 appearances that season. Wilfried Zaha put Palace ahead midway through the second half with a header from Yannick Bolasie and double their advantage late in the game, striking the ball into the roof of the net. The 2\u20130 aggregate win ensured the London club's qualification for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nIn the other play-off semi-final, Watford's opponents were Leicester City, and the first leg was played at the King Power Stadium. The hosts won the match 1\u20130 with a David Nugent header from an Anthony Knockaert free kick late on. In the second leg, Mat\u011bj Vydra, recently named the Championship Player of the Year at the Football League Awards, put Watford into the lead with a left-foot volley from a Marco Cassetti pass into the far corner of Kasper Schmeichel's goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Route to the final\nNugent restored parity in the leg with another header from a Knockaert corner, before Vydra played a one-two with Troy Deeney to score his second and equalise the semi-final 2\u20132 on aggregate. Leicester were awarded an injury time penalty: Knockaert stepped up to take it only to see it saved, and in the immediate counter-attack, Jonathan Hogg's knock-down was finished by Deeney to give Watford a 3\u20132 aggregate victory and passage to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nThis was Crystal Palace's fifth appearance in the second tier play-off final, with their most recent being in the 2004 final at the Millennium Stadium which they won 1\u20130 against West Ham United. Palace had also won the 1989 final (over two legs) and the 1997 final, and had lost the 1996 final. Watford also had play-off final experience, winning both their previous appearances, in the 1999 and 2006 finals. During the regular season, Crystal Palace lost their home game against 3\u20132 in August 2012 in what was Gianfranco Zola's first league match as manager of Watford. The return game played at Vicarage Road the following February ended in a 2\u20132 draw. Murray was Palace's top scorer with 30 while Vydra had scored the most for Watford with 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nBoth clubs sold out their allocation of tickets at Wembley Stadium, with Palace selling 33,000 tickets and Watford more than 34,000. The final was refereed by Martin Atkinson of the West Riding County Football Association, with assistant referees Stuart Burt and Peter Kirkup, while Neil Swarbrick acted as the fourth official. It was reported in the press and media that the match was worth more than \u00a3120\u00a0million over four years to the winning club through sponsorship and television appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Background\nSeven of Watford's starting line-up were on loan at the club, four from Italian club Udinese, two from Spanish team Granada and one from Chelsea. Palace's soul loanee was Zaha who had been sold to Manchester United in the January transfer window and loaned back to the south London club. He was declared fit to play despite picking up an ankle injury in the semi-final, so Palace's team was unchanged. Daniel Pudil and Hogg were recalled to the Watford side, having been absent from the team that defeated Leicester City in the semi-final. Wilbraham retained his place in the Palace team as Murray's first semi-final injury kept him sidelined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, First half\nWatford kicked the match off shortly after 3\u00a0p.m. in front of a Wembley crowd of 82,025. After a brief interlude to remove some balloons which had descended from the spectators into the Crystal Palace penalty area, Watford won a free kick for a foul on Deeney. The resulting set piece was cleared, and on 8 minutes, Palace's Jonny Williams was brought down by Hogg for another free kick, which came to nothing. Three minutes later, Joel Ekstrand received the first yellow card of the game after a late tackle on Wilbraham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, First half\nPalace's South African international defender Kagisho Dikgacoi went down with a calf injury in the 15th minute and was replaced two minutes later by Stuart O'Keefe in the first substitution of the afternoon. A counter attack from Palace midway through the first half saw Zaha holding off two Watford defenders, enabling him to pass to Owen Garvan who delayed his shot too long and allowed Lloyd Doyley to block. The second yellow card of the afternoon was shown to Jedinak in the 28th minute after a poor challenge on Almen Abdi. Five minutes later, Vydra's first shot on goal was blocked by Palace defender Damien Delaney, but by the end of the half the Watford striker was visibly struggling after picking up an injury. Despite the clubs being the two top-scoring teams in the division, the half ended goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Second half\nOver the half-time break, Watford's Vydra was replaced by the Spanish striker Alexandre Geijo. Palace kicked off the second half and after two minutes the first chance fell to Watford's loanee Nathaniel Chalobah whose long-range strike went wide. Abdi's shot was then blocked by Delaney; meanwhile Jedinak began to struggle. In the 58th minute, a Geijo shot was easily saved by Juli\u00e1n Speroni in the Palace goal. Two minutes later a Wilbraham shot was blocked by Watford's goalkeeper Manuel Almunia. Abdi then brought down O'Keefe, who reacted to the challenge: both players were booked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Second half\nGeijo then forced a save from Speroni in the 63rd minute before O'Keefe's effort from a Zaha square pass was saved by Almunia. In the 66th minute, Kevin Phillips came on to replace Williams for Palace. Twice in quick succession the Watford defence failed to deal with Palace attacks, but still the deadlock remained. With 18 minutes remaining, a cross from Zaha was headed back across goal by Phillips but Garvan failed to find the target, curling his shot past the outside of the post. Chalobah was then substituted off, with another loanee, Cristian Battocchio, coming on to replace him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Second half\nWith seven minutes remaining, Almunia saved a Wilbraham shot before Garvan was replaced by Andr\u00e9 Moritz in Palace's final substitution of the match. Fernando Forestieri was then brought on for Ikechi Anya. Both teams had chances to break the deadlock but after three minutes of added-on time, the referee Martin Atkinson brought the second half to a close, still goalless, for extra time to be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Extra time\nWatford kicked off the first period of extra time, and three minutes in, Deeney brought another save from Speroni. Forestieri then shot wide from a tight angle. Nine minutes in, Danny Gabbidon conceded a corner which, taken by Abdi, was struck by Battocchio through a group of defenders and saved by Speroni. Dean Moxey was then booked for a foul on Forestieri, becoming the sixth player of the afternoon to receive a yellow card. On the brink of half time, Cassetti fouled Zaha in the Watford box and Palace were awarded a penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Match, Extra time\nThe spot kick was struck into the top-left corner by Phillips, putting Palace 1\u20130 ahead. Four minutes into the second half, a corner from Abdi was gathered by Speroni before Deeney could capitalise on the loose ball. In the 23rd minute, a free kick from Abdi from 25 yards (23\u00a0m) was easily caught by Speroni. With two minutes remaining, Joel Ward blocked an Ekstrand shot with his stomach; appeals for a penalty were dismissed by Atkinson. Forestieri then went close as Ward was forced to clear his shot off the Palace goal line. Two corners for Watford came to nothing and the referee blew his whistle to signify the end of extra time and the match, with Palace winning 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Post-match\nCrystal Palace manager Ian Holloway said: \"I've been very fortunate to have worked with some great players and I'm very grateful to this bunch. We're in the Premier League now and\u00a0... god help us. We battled hard.\" He went on to say \"It all starts now for me because the minute we kick off next season we're on a hiding to nothing\u00a0... We've got to make sure we can compete and I want to stay there.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Post-match\nZola was gracious in defeat and conceded that Palace \"played well and probably deserved it more than us, so congratulations to them\u00a0... I had no complaints about their penalty\u00a0... Wilfried Zaha made a huge difference.\" Phillips spoke of his winning penalty strike and his future: \"I had in my mind where I wanted to take it, I was happy to take it. I picked my spot and stuck to it. I don't know if that's going to be my last match, but if it is, what a way to sign off.\" Zaha was named man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233543-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Championship play-off Final, Post-match\nCrystal Palace ended the next season in 11th place in the Premier League, 12 points above the relegation zone. Watford finished the following season in 13th place, 16 points above the relegation zone but 12 points outside the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final\nThe 2013 Football League Cup Final was a football match between Bradford City and Swansea City, which took place on 24 February 2013 at Wembley Stadium in London. It was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Football League Cup, the 53rd season of the Football League Cup, a football 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, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final\nBradford City, of League Two, were appearing in their first major cup final since they won the 1911 FA Cup Final, and were the first fourth-tier side to reach the League Cup final since Rochdale in 1962. Swansea City, of the Premier League, were appearing in their first major English cup final in their 101-year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final\nSwansea won the match 5\u20130, and qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League, entering in the third qualifying round. Although based in Wales, their participation in the English football league system means they took one of the English berths in the competition. It was the first time the League Cup had been won by a non-English club and the first time a major English cup had been won by a non-English club since Swansea's rivals Cardiff City won the FA Cup in 1927.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Bradford City\nBradford City defeated League One team Notts County in the first round, winning in extra time through a James Hanson goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Bradford City\nBradford's second round tie was against Championship side Watford, who went ahead after a 71st-minute goal from Ikechi Anya. Bradford scored, first through Kyel Reid's 84th-minute equaliser and Garry Thompson in injury-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Bradford City\nBurton Albion, also of League Two, played Bradford in the third round. Bradford were behind by two goals for the majority of the match, but Nahki Wells scored twice in the last 10 minutes, resulting in extra time. Stephen Darby scored the winning goal in the 115th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Bradford City\nBradford were drawn against Wigan Athletic of the Premier League (who went on to win that year's FA Cup) in the fourth round. The match was goalless after 90 minutes and also after extra time, resulting in a penalty shoot-out. Bradford won the shoot-out 4\u20132 with successful penalties from Nathan Doyle, Gary Jones, Stephen Darby and Alan Connell. It was the first time Bradford had knocked a Premiership club out of the competition since they defeated Nottingham Forest in September 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Bradford City\nBradford's quarter-final victory over Arsenal of the Premier League at Valley Parade was also decided on penalties, after the match finished 1\u20131 during regulation time. Nathan Doyle, Gary Jones and Alan Connell all successfully converted their penalties for Bradford, who won 3\u20132 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Bradford City\nIn the semi-final first leg against Premier League Aston Villa, Nahki Wells gave Bradford the lead after 20 minutes and Rory McArdle scored in the 77th minute. Andreas Weimann scored for Aston Villa in the 82nd minute, but Carl McHugh restored Bradford's two-goal lead in the 87th after heading home Gary Jones' corner. Aston Villa won the second leg 2\u20131, but Bradford won 4\u20133 on aggregate. Christian Benteke put Aston Villa ahead in the 24th minute, before Bradford's James Hanson levelled in the 55th minute. Andreas Weimann scored an 89th-minute goal for Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Swansea City\nSwansea City received a bye into the second round as one of the thirteen Premier League clubs not involved in European competition. They were drawn against Championship side Barnsley at the Liberty Stadium. Swansea won 3\u20131 after a 24th-minute opener from Danny Graham and two second-half goals from Luke Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Swansea City\nSwansea's third round opponents were Crawley Town. Played at the Broadfield Stadium, Michu put Swansea one goal ahead in the 27th minute. Josh Simpson and Hope Akpan put Crawley 2\u20131 ahead after 62 minutes. Graham levelled the tie in the 74th minute with header from a Dwight Tiendalli cross. Garry Monk scored an injury-time winner from a corner kick for Swansea. The match finished 3\u20132 and Swansea progressed to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Swansea City\nSwansea were paired with Liverpool at Anfield in the fourth round draw. Chico Flores put Swansea in the lead and Nathan Dyer scored a second goal for Swansea from a cross across the six-yard line from Pablo Hern\u00e1ndez. Luis Su\u00e1rez scored one goal for Liverpool, but a counterattack from Swansea led to a third goal for Swansea from Jonathan de Guzm\u00e1n in the 90th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Swansea City\nSwansea were drawn against Championship side Middlesbrough in the quarter-final. The only goal of the game came in the 82nd minute, after Middlesbrough defender Seb Hines headed the ball into his own net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Swansea City\nSwansea played Chelsea in the semi-final, with the first leg at Stamford Bridge. Michu scored in the 39th minute to give Swansea the lead, following a defensive error from Branislav Ivanovi\u0107. A second mistake from Ivanovi\u0107 allowed Danny Graham to double Swansea's lead in the 90th minute; the match ended 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233544-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Cup Final, Road to Wembley, Swansea City\nThe second leg was played at Swansea's Liberty Stadium. While Michu had the best opportunity to score in the 9th minute, the game finished 0\u20130 (2\u20130 on aggregate) and Swansea advanced to the final. In the 80th minute, there was an incident between a ball boy and Chelsea player Eden Hazard. Replays showed that the ball boy was shielding the ball from Hazard in an attempt to waste time. Hazard then kicked the ball out from under the boy, prompting referee Chris Foy to show him a red card for violent conduct.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final\nThe 2013 Football League One play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 19 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium, London, between Brentford and Yeovil Town to determine the third and final team to gain promotion from Football League One to the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final\nThe top two teams of the 2012\u201313 Football League One season, Doncaster Rovers and Bournemouth, 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 2013\u201314 season in the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final\nThe match kicked off around 1:30\u00a0p.m. in front of 41,955 spectators and was refereed by Andy D'Urso. On six minutes, Yeovil's Paddy Madden made it 1\u20130 with a shot from the edge of the Brentford penalty area with the outside of his right boot into the top-right corner of Simon Moore's goal. In the 42nd minute, Dan Burn doubled the lead with a header. Six minutes into the second half, Brentford's Harlee Dean scored with a header from Forrester's corner. Despite pressure from Brentford with Moore saving attempts from Clayton Donaldson, Adam Forshaw and Bradley Wright-Phillips, the score remained 2\u20131 and Yeovil were promoted to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final\nYeovil Town ended the following season bottom of the Football League Championship, and were relegated back to League One. Brentford finished second in League One in their next season, and gained automatic promotion to the Championship for the 2014\u201315 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nBrentford finished the regular 2012\u201313 season in third place in Football League One, the third tier of the English football league system, one place ahead of Yeovil Town. Both therefore missed out on the two automatic places for promotion to the Football League Championship, the second tier of English football, and instead took part in the play-offs to determine the third promoted team. Brentford finished four points behind Bournemouth (who were promoted in second place) and five behind league winners Doncaster Rovers. Yeovil Town ended the season two points behind Brentford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nYeovil Town's opponents for their play-off semi-final were Sheffield United and the first match of the two-legged tie was played on 3 May 2013 at Bramall Lane in Sheffield. The first half ended goalless with the best chance falling to Barry Robson; his free kick went just wide of the Yeovil goalpost. Callum McFadzean came on after half-time to replace Robson and within a minute of the second half, his shot deflected past Marek \u0160t\u011bch in the Yeovil goal to give Sheffield United the advantage. Both sides had further chances to score but the match ended 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nThe second leg of the semi-final took place three days later at Huish Park in Yeovil. Kevin Dawson levelled the tie on aggregate when he put the home side ahead on five minutes after a pass from Ed Upson. Sheffield United's Jamie Murphy struck the Yeovil bar with a shot before Upson scored from a Paddy Madden cross with five minutes remaining to make the final score 2\u20130 and to send his side to Wembley with a 2\u20131 aggregate victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nBrentford faced Swindon Town in the other semi-final and the first leg was played on 4 May 2013 at the County Ground in Swindon. After a goalless first half, Swindon's Massimo Luongo opened the scoring in the 70th minute with a curling shot from the edge of the penalty area. In injury time, Luongo fouled Harry Forrester in the Swindon box to concede a penalty. The spot kick was scored by Kevin O'Connor and the match ended 1\u20131. The second leg of the semi-final was held at Griffin Park in Brentford two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nThe home side dominated the early play and went ahead midway through the half after Adam Rooney steered the ball into his own net from a corner. Brentford doubled their lead in the 40th minute when Clayton Donaldson struck from the edge of the Swindon penalty area. Rooney scored four minutes later to make it 2\u20131 to the home side before Donaldson scored with a chip early in the second half. Joe Devera's 57th-minute volley made it 3\u20132 and in injury time Aden Flint's headed goal levelled the match at 3\u20133, and the aggregate score at 4\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Route to the final\nDespite Swindon's Nathan Byrne being sent off after receiving a second yellow card for handball, the extra-time period ended goalless and the game went to a penalty shootout. The first six spot kicks were converted before Miles Storey's strike was saved by the Brentford goalkeeper Simon Moore. No other penalties were missed and Brentford won 5\u20134 in the shootout to progress to Wembley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nThis was Brentford's third appearance in the third-tier play-off finals, having lost both the 1997 Football League Second Division play-off Final 1\u20130 against Crewe Alexandra and the 2002 Football League Second Division play-off Final 2\u20130 against Stoke City. They had also lost in the semi-finals of the 1991, 1995, 2005 and 2006 play-offs. Yeovil Town had made one appearance in the play-off finals where they were beaten 2\u20130 by Blackpool in the 2007 Football League One play-off Final. Brentford had played in League One since their promotion from League Two in the 2008\u201309 season as champions, while Yeovil had been promoted to League One after finishing top of 2004\u201305 Football League Two. Yeovil had been promoted from non-League football as champions of the 2002\u201303 Football Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nBrentford's top scorer during the regular season was Donaldson with 22 goals (18 in the league and 4 in the FA Cup) followed by Forrester who had scored 11 (8 in the league and 3 in the FA Cup). The leading scorers for Yeovil were Madden on 22 (all in the league) and James Hayter with 14 (also all in the league). Yeovil had won both matches between the clubs during the regular season: a 3\u20131 victory at Griffin Park in August 2012 was followed by a 3\u20130 win at Huish Park the following February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Match, Background\nThe referee for the match was Andy D'Urso, who was assisted by Derek Eaton and Alan Young. The fourth official was Graham Scott and the reserve assistant referee was John Hopkins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe match kicked off around 1:30\u00a0p.m. at Wembley Stadium in front of a crowd of 41,955. In the fifth minute, Madden's shot from inside the Brentford penalty area was blocked. A minute later, he took control of the ball on the edge of the box and struck it with the outside of his right boot into the top-right corner of Moore's goal. It was his 23rd goal of the season, but the first for six games, and was described by Jacob Steinberg in The Guardian as a goal which \"would have graced any previous Wembley final\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe remainder of the first half saw few chances, but in the 42nd minute, a corner from Sam Foley to the far post found Dan Burn who headed the ball into the six-yard box. Hayter and Moore both missed it and the ball crossed the goal-line to make it 2\u20130 to Yeovil. In injury time, Jake Bidwell's cross was headed goalwards by Marcello Trotta but it was caught by \u0160t\u011bch in the Yeovil goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Match, Summary\nNeither side made any changes to their personnel during half-time and in the opening moments of the second half, Brentford went on the attack with an off-target shot from Donaldson. Six minutes into the half, Brentford's Harlee Dean scored with a header from Forrester's corner, narrowing the margin to 2\u20131. In the 62nd minute, Bradley Wright-Phillips came on for Trotta in the first substitution of the game. Two minutes later, Donaldson's header was cleared off the line and Wright-Phillips failed to convert the rebound. In the 68th minute, Brentford made their second substitution when Sam Saunders replaced Forrester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Match, Summary\nA shot from Adam Forshaw was then saved by \u0160t\u011bch. On 75 minutes, Dawson appeared to be fouled in the Brentford penalty area but was booked for diving. Two minutes later Vit\u0101lijs Maksimenko came on to replace Jamie McAllister for Yeovil, and then Toumani Diagouraga for Hayes. In the 82nd minute, Wright-Phillips spun and struck a volley, but \u0160t\u011bch made the save. With two minutes of regular time remaining Matt Dolan replaced Hayter. Shay Logan then struck a shot just wide of the Yeovil goalpost. Despite late pressure from Brentford, the score remained 2\u20131 and Yeovil were promoted to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Post-match\nThe Yeovil manager Gary Johnson described Madden's opening goal as \"a sublime piece of ingenuity\". Speaking of the play-offs, he described his team as having \"three great games\" which had \"brought the club together, even more so than if we had gone up automatically.\" His counterpart Uwe R\u00f6sler was reflective: \"This club has not been at this level for decades\u00a0... this squad has lifted the club to a higher level.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233545-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League One play-off Final, Post-match\nTen years after being promoted from non-League football, Yeovil were promoted to the second tier of English football. Yeovil Town ended their following season bottom of the Football League Championship, and were relegated back to League One. Brentford finished second in League One in their next season, and gained automatic promotion to the Championship for the 2014\u201315 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233546-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Trophy Final\nThe 2013 Football League Trophy Final was the 30th final of the English domestic football cup competition for teams from Football Leagues One and Two, the Football League Trophy. The final was played at Wembley Stadium in London on 7 April 2013. The match was contested between Crewe Alexandra from League One and Southend United from League Two. Crewe Alexandra won the game 2\u20130, following goals from Luke Murphy and Max Clayton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final\nThe 2013 Football League Two play-off Final was an association football match played on 18 May 2013 at Wembley Stadium, London, between Bradford City and Northampton Town. The match determined the fourth and final team to gain promotion from Football League Two, English football's fourth tier, to Football League One. The top three teams of the 2012\u201313 Football League Two season gained automatic promotion to League One, while the teams placed from fourth to seventh in the table took part in play-off semi-finals; the winners then competed for the final place for the 2013\u201314 season in League One. Northampton Town finished in sixth place while Bradford City ended the season in seventh position. Burton Albion and Cheltenham Town were the losing semi-finalists, being defeated by Bradford and Northampton respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final\nThe match was refereed by Keith Stroud in front of a crowd of 47,127. In the 15th minute of play, Bradford took the lead after James Hanson headed in a pass from Garry Thompson after James Meredith's cross. Four minutes later, the lead was doubled when Rory McArdle's strong header from a Nathan Doyle cross went low into Northampton's goal. Nahki Wells then volleyed past Lee Nicholls from close range just under the half-hour mark in the first half to make it 3\u20130 to Bradford. Northampton failed to make a shot on target and the match ended 3\u20130 to see Bradford promoted to League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final\nBradford ended their following season in 11th place in League One, while Northampton finished in 21st place in League Two in their next season, two places and three points above the relegation zone. Their manager, Aidy Boothroyd, was sacked in December 2013 with the club at the bottom of the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nNorthampton Town finished the regular 2012\u201313 season in sixth place in Football League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system, one place and four points ahead of Bradford City. Both therefore missed out on the three automatic places for promotion to Football League One and instead took part in the play-offs to determine the fourth promoted team. Northampton Town finished five points behind Port Vale (who were promoted in third place), six behind Rotherham United (who were promoted in second place), and ten behind league winners Gillingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nBradford City's opponents in their play-off semi-final were Burton Albion with the first match of the two-legged tie taking place at Valley Parade in Bradford on 2 May 2013. Calvin Zola put the visitors ahead midway through the first half with a header, then scored his second in the 29th minute with a curling shot. Damien McCrory was then adjudged to have deflected Garry Thompson's shot with his hand and the referee awarded a penalty to Bradford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nNahki Wells converted the spot kick to make it 2\u20131 in 38th minute, before Robbie Weir scored from Alex McDonald's pass to make it 3\u20131 a minute before half-time. With 16 minutes of the game remaining, Thompson scored for Burton making the final score 3\u20132. The second leg of the semi-final was played three days later at the Pirelli Stadium in Burton upon Trent. Wells opened the scoring for the visitors in the 27th minute when he intercepted Marcus Holness' header and beat Burton goalkeeper Stuart Tomlinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nJames Hanson made it 2\u20130 in the 50th minute with a shot from the edge of the Bradford penalty area, and Jacques Maghoma added a third seven minutes later from the penalty spot after Thompson fouled Stephen Darby in the Burton box. Wells made it 3\u20131 to Bradford less than two minutes later after Hanson knocked down a long free kick from his goalkeeper Jon McLaughlin. With no further goals, Bradford won the semi-final 5\u20134 on aggregate and secured their place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nNorthampton Town faced Cheltenham Town in the other play-off semi-final with the first leg being played at Sixfields Stadium in Northampton on 2 May 2013. Roy O'Donovan scored in the 27th minute to put Northampton into the lead from a Chris Hackett cross; almost immediately, Paul Benson missed a chance to equalise after shooting wide of the post. Both sides had chances to add to the scoreline but the match finished 1\u20130. The second leg took place three days later at Whaddon Road in Cheltenham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Route to the final\nIn the 15th minute, Ben Tozer was deemed to have fouled Russell Penn and the referee awarded a penalty: Marlon Pack took the spot kick but it was saved by Lee Nicholls. Before half-time, Luke Guttridge's volley put Northampton into the lead which they did not relinquish. An aggregate score of 2\u20130 meant that Northampton progressed to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nBradford had featured in the play-offs on two occasions, losing in the second tier-semi-finals in 1988 and winning the third-tier 1996 Football League Second Division play-off Final 2\u20130 against Notts County. They had played in the fourth tier since relegation from League One in the 2006\u201307 season. Northampton had lost in the 1998 Football League Second Division play-off Final having secured promotion the season before from the fourth tier of English football with victory in the 1997 Football League Third Division play-off Final. They had played in the fourth tier since relegation from League One in the 2008\u201309 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nThe teams had faced each other four times during the season. Bradford had won both league matches 1\u20130, at Sixfields in October 2012 and at Valley Parade in April 2013. They had played one another twice in the first round of the 2012\u201313 FA Cup. The first encounter, at Sixfields, ended 1\u20131, forcing a replay which was played ten days later at Valley Parade. That match ended 2\u20132 in regular time, and 3\u20133 after extra time; Bradford won 4\u20132 in the subsequent penalty shootout. The play-off final was Northampton's 64th match of the season. Bradford had already played at Wembley during the season when they faced Swansea City in the League Cup final, losing 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Match, Background\nThe referee for the match was Keith Stroud from Hampshire and Geoff Eltringham was the fourth official. According to bookmakers, a draw in regular time was the most likely outcome, although Jason Mellor writing in The Times suggested Bradford were marginal favourites having gone unbeaten in the four matches between the sides earlier in the season. Both teams played a 4\u20134\u20132 formation. The Northampton supporters were situated in the East End of Wembley while Bradford's fans occupied the West End. The Bradford squad had cost a total of \u00a37,500 with the only transfer fee having been paid for Hanson. The game was broadcast live in the UK on Sky Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe match kicked off around 1:30\u00a0p.m. on 18 May 2013 in front of a crowd of 47,127. Wells twice went close for Bradford in the early stages of the game, with a free-kick struck over the bar, and later a header. On 15 minutes, Bradford took the lead. A cross from James Meredith found Thompson at the far post who sent the ball back high for Hanson to score with a header. Four minutes later, Rory McArdle doubled the score with a strong header low into the Northampton goal from a Nathan Doyle cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Match, Summary\nClive Platt was then shown the first yellow card of the game in the 21st minute. On 28 minutes, Wells volleyed past Nicholls from close range to make it 3\u20130 to Bradford. Two minutes later, Roy O'Donovan was booked for a foul on Kyel Reid. Nicholls made a one-handed stop from a Wells shot on 31 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Match, Summary\nNeither side made any changes to their personnel during half-time. Immediately after the restart, Nicholls saved an attempt from Hanson. In the 53rd minute, Northampton made their first substitution of the match with Joe Widdowson coming on for Collins. Two minutes later, Northampton's Akinfenwa replaced Platt. In the 67th minute, Clarke Carlisle was booked for a foul on Reid. Northampton made their final substitution of the game in the 70th minute with Lewis Hornby replacing Ishmel Demontagnac. In the 78th minute, Bradford's Will Atkinson replaced Reid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Match, Summary\nWith six minutes of the match remaining, Nathan Doyle was booked for a foul on Widdowson. Connell then came on for Wells in the 85th minute before Ricky Ravenhill replaced Doyle two minutes later. Hanson was then shown a yellow card for a foul on Nathan Cameron. O'Donovan's header for Northampton went wide of the Bradford goal. Northampton failed to register a single shot on target and the match ended 3\u20130 with Bradford securing promotion to League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Post-match\nWinning manager Phil Parkinson noted: \"This determines the future of the club. In the League Cup it was great to reach the final, given the revenue that it brought in, but this is what it's all about. This is our bread and butter \u2013 to get this club back to where it belongs.\" He described the season's achievements as \"his best yet as a manager.\" His counterpart Aidy Boothroyd said: \"It's great to have got here but when you get to a final like this, you want to be a winner, nothing else.\" He added: \"[Bradford] dealt with the whole occasion and the game, more importantly, better than we did. This is a rubbish day.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233547-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League Two play-off Final, Post-match\nBradford ended their following season in 11th place in League One, 15 points outside the play-offs and 12 points above the relegation zone. Northampton finished in 21st place in League Two in their next season, two places and three points above the relegation zone. Boothroyd was sacked in December 2013 with the club at the bottom of the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233548-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League play-offs\nThe Football League play-offs for the 2012\u201313 season were held in May 2013 with all finals being staged at Wembley Stadium in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233548-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League play-offs\nThe play-off semi-finals were played over two legs, contested by the teams who finished in 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th place in the Football League Championship and League One and the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th-placed teams in the League Two table. The winners of the semi-finals advanced to the finals, with the winner of the final gaining promotion for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233548-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233548-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Football League play-offs, League One, Semi-finals\nBrentford 4\u20134 Swindon Town on aggregate. Brentford won 5\u20134 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233549-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Football NSW season\nThe Football NSW 2013 season was the first season under the new competition format in New South Wales. The competition consisted of four divisions across the State of New South Wales, created from the teams in the previous structure. The overall premier for the new structure qualified for the National Premier Leagues finals series, competing with the other state federation champions in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233549-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Football NSW season, League Tables, 2013 National Premier League NSW Men's 1\nThe National Premier League New South Wales 2013 season was played over 22 rounds, from March to August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 81], "content_span": [82, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233549-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Football NSW season, League Tables, 2013 National Premier League NSW Men's 2\nThe 2013 National Premier League NSW Men's 2 was the first edition of the new NPL NSW 2 as the second level domestic association football competition in New South Wales. 12 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 22 rounds, with the top team at the end of the year being promoted to the NPL NSW Men's 1 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 81], "content_span": [82, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233549-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Football NSW season, League Tables, 2013 NSW State League Division 1\nThe 2013 NSW State League Division 1 was the first edition of the State League to be incorporated under the National Premier Leagues banner. 12 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 22 rounds. At the end of the season, one team was promoted from the State League Division 2, with one team relegated to the State League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 73], "content_span": [74, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233549-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Football NSW season, League Tables, 2013 NSW State League Division 2\nThe 2013 NSW State League Division 2 was the first edition of the State League to be incorporated under the National Premier Leagues banner. 11 teams competed, all playing each other twice for a total of 20 matches. At the end of the season, one team was promoted from the State League Division 2, with one team relegated from the State League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 73], "content_span": [74, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233550-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ford EcoBoost 400\nThe 2013 Ford EcoBoost 400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on November 17, 2013, at Homestead Miami Speedway in Homestead, Florida. Contested over 267 laps, it was the thirty-sixth and final race in the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, as well as the final race in the ten-race Chase for the Sprint Cup, which ends the season. Denny Hamlin won the race. Matt Kenseth finished second while Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Martin Truex Jr. and Clint Bowyer rounded out the top five. Jimmie Johnson finished ninth to take his sixth Sprint Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233550-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ford EcoBoost 400\nThis race marked Mark Martin's, Ken Schrader's and Tony Raines' final career start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233550-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ford EcoBoost 400, Statistics after the race\nNote: Only the first five positions are included for the driver standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233551-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fordham Rams football team\nThe 2013 Fordham Rams football team represented Fordham University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second year head coach Joe Moorhead and played their home games at Coffey Field. They were a member of the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233551-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fordham Rams football team\nFordham was not eligible for the Patriot League championship because they use scholarship players while the rest of the league's members do not. Fordham's official conference record was 0\u20130 and did not occupy a spot in the conference standings. Though ineligible for the conference title, Fordham finished 11\u20131 to earn an at-large bid in the FCS playoffs where they defeated Sacred Heart in the first round before losing in the second round to Towson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233551-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fordham Rams football team\nFordham finished the season ranked 9th in the country. Its highest FCS ranking ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233552-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula 3 Brazil Open\nThe 2013 Formula 3 Brazil Open was the fourth Formula 3 Brazil Open race held at Aut\u00f3dromo Jos\u00e9 Carlos Pace from January 17\u201320, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233552-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula 3 Brazil Open\nAfter start in the last position on final race, Felipe Guimar\u00e3es won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233553-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula 3 Sudamericana season\nThe 2013 Formula 3 Sudamericana season was the twenty-seventh and final season of the Formula 3 Sudamericana. It begin on 7 April at Interlagos and ended on 1 December at Curitiba, after eighteen races. In 2014 the championship becomes a Brazilian Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233553-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula 3 Sudamericana season, Race calendar and results\nA calendar for the 2013 season was released on 21 December 2012, with all Brazilian rounds supporting Brasileiro de Marcas events. A round in Argentina was also scheduled, with the venue later confirmed as the Aut\u00f3dromo Ciudad de Concordia, supporting the TC 2000 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233554-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Abarth season\nThe 2013 Formula Abarth season was the ninth and the final season of the former Formula Azzurra, and the fourth under its guise of \"Formula Abarth\". The series returned to a one-championship format, dropping the European Series moniker. The season started at Vallelunga on 28 April and concluded at 20 October at Monza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233555-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula BMW Talent Cup\nThe 2013 Formula BMW Talent Cup was the third and final Formula BMW Talent Cup season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233556-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula D season\nThe 2013 Formula D season (officially titled Formula Drift Pro Championship) was the tenth season of the Formula D series. The season began on April 12 at Long Beach and ended on October 12 at Irwindale Speedway. Michael Essa was crowned series champion, Lexus won the inaugural manufacturer\u2019s championship and Hankook Tire won the tire championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233557-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Masters China\nThe 2013 Formula Masters China season is the third season of the Formula Pilota China series, and the first under the Formula Masters China branding. It was also the first season with one-make Volkswagen 2.0 engines. The championship began on 10 May at Zhuhai and will finish on 10 November at Guia Circuit in Macau after nineteen races held at seven meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship\nThe 2013 FIA Formula One World Championship was the 64th Formula One World Championship, recognised by the sport's governing body, the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), as the highest class of competition for open-wheel racing cars. Eleven teams and twenty-three drivers contested the nineteen Grands Prix that made up the calendar for the 2013 season, with the winning driver being crowned the World Drivers' Champion and the winning team the World Constructors' Champions. The season started in Australia on 17 March 2013 and ended in Brazil on 24 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship\nThe 2013 season was the final year the series used the 2.4-litre V8 engine configuration which was introduced in 2006; a 1.6-litre turbocharged V6 engine formula came into force for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship\nSebastian Vettel successfully defended his World Championship, winning his fourth consecutive title in the fourth to last race of 2013. In doing so he became the third driver in Formula One's sixty-four years to win four consecutive World Drivers' Championships. It was one of the most dominant championship victories in the sport, with Vettel winning by a record 155 points. Vettel's 2013 season performance additionally saw him recognised by the Laureus World Sports Awards as the Sportsman of the Year, the second racing driver to be so recognised. He became the fourth driver to win at least four titles along with Alain Prost, Juan Manuel Fangio and Michael Schumacher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship\nVettel's team Red Bull Racing, with the assistance of his teammate Mark Webber, successfully defended their World Constructors' Championship at the same race as their lead driver secured his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers were contracted to drive in the 2013 season, following ratification of a new Concorde Agreement. At the 2012 Malaysian Grand Prix, Bernie Ecclestone announced that the \"majority\" of teams competing in the 2012 season had agreed to compete in 2013, though he gave no indication of which teams\u2014if any\u2014were offering resistance to the new Concorde Agreement. At the 2012 British Grand Prix, Ecclestone announced that every team had agreed \"in principle\" to the terms of the new Concorde Agreement, and the final draft of the Concorde Agreement was presented to the teams ahead of the 2012 Indian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers\nOn 30 November 2012, the FIA published a provisional entry list for the 2013 season. The final entry list was published on 3 March 2013. Teams competed with tyres supplied by Pirelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Team changes\nIn November 2012, Thesan Capital, the owners of HRT Formula 1 Team, announced that they were putting the team up for sale. The team needed to find a buyer by 30 November\u2014the date by which entry fees for the 2013 were due to be paid\u2014or else face closure and a departure from the sport. Thesan Capital failed to find a buyer in time, and HRT was omitted from the 2013 entry list. The team was later reported to be in liquidation, and despite bids to purchase and revive the team under a new name, their assets were ultimately sold to Teo Mart\u00edn, the owner of a firm specialising in recycling automotive parts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nUpon starting his second career in 2010, Michael Schumacher signed a three-year agreement to race for Mercedes AMG. With that deal expiring at the end of the 2012 season, Schumacher was given the option of renewing his contract with the team for 2013. However, in the face of disappointing results over the past three seasons, Schumacher became indecisive about his future, prompting Mercedes to start searching for a new driver. Following a protracted period of negotiation, 2008 World Champion Lewis Hamilton announced that he would join Mercedes for the next three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nThe move ended his fourteen-year association with McLaren, and Hamilton later described his decision to change teams as being motivated by the desire to find a new challenge for himself, and that the idea of taking a struggling team and building them up to become a successful one held more appeal to him than \"cruising around with a great team\". Schumacher ultimately announced that he would be retiring from the sport for the second time at the end of the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nWith Hamilton leaving McLaren, the team sought out Sauber driver Sergio P\u00e9rez to replace him. P\u00e9rez was previously a member of the Ferrari Driver Academy, and was considered to be the leading candidate to join Ferrari should a vacant seat become available, but said that although he had talked with the team, he had never considered racing for them to be a realistic proposition, adding that McLaren was the best place for him to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nNico H\u00fclkenberg left Force India after just one season, despite having originally signed a multi-year deal to race for the team starting in 2012, to fill the vacant seat at Sauber. H\u00fclkenberg was joined by Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez, who had previously served as Sauber's testing and reserve driver in 2011 and 2012 whilst campaigning in the GP2 Series. H\u00fclkenberg's place at Force India was taken by Adrian Sutil, who returned to the team after a season out of the sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nWith H\u00fclkenberg and Guti\u00e9rrez joining Sauber, Kamui Kobayashi was left without a seat after three seasons with the Swiss team. In a bid to secure a seat, Kobayashi accepted donations from fans to raise as much money as possible. However, shortly after Lotus F1 announced that they would retain Romain Grosjean, Kobayashi announced that he had given up hope of securing a racing seat for the 2013 season. He later joined AF Corse for the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship. However, he returned to the Formula 1 grid in 2014 with Caterham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nWilliams promoted test and reserve driver Valtteri Bottas to a full-time racing seat alongside Pastor Maldonado, replacing Bruno Senna. Bottas, the 2011 GP3 Series champion, made regular appearances for Williams during the 2012 season, in official practice sessions at fifteen Grands Prix. Faced with the loss of his seat, Bruno Senna initially sought a drive with Force India, but instead moved to the World Endurance Championship, joining Aston Martin Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nCharles Pic moved from Marussia to Caterham, joining former GP2 Series teammate Giedo van der Garde. Pic and van der Garde had previously raced alongside one another as teammates in 2011, racing for Barwa Addax. Where Pic joined Marussia for the 2012 season, van der Garde became Caterham's test driver and contested the 2012 GP2 Series with their GP2 team before being promoted to Formula One. As a result of this, Caterham's 2012 drivers, Heikki Kovalainen and Vitaly Petrov lost their seats for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nCaterham team principal Cyril Abiteboul later said that the relationship between the team and Kovalainen had fallen apart towards the end of the 2012 season, leading to his dismissal from the team, whilst Petrov lost his seat due to a lack of sponsorship. Kovalainen later returned to the team to take part in free practice sessions on a temporary basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nTimo Glock was initially signed to compete for Marussia until the end of the 2014 season, but later announced that he would be leaving the team. Marussia team principal John Booth cited \"tough economic conditions\" as the reason for the team being forced to let Glock go, whilst Glock referenced the loss of tenth place in the 2012 World Constructors' Championship to Caterham at the 2012 Brazilian Grand Prix as the first sign that his position with the team was in danger. Glock moved to the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, driving for BMW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nWith Glock gone, the team elected to take two rookie drivers: Max Chilton, who spent the 2012 season competing in the GP2 Series with the Marussia-backed Carlin team; and GP2 Series runner-up Luiz Razia. However, Razia was removed from Marussia's testing line-up for the second pre-season test in Barcelona, leading to speculation that his future with the team was in jeopardy. It was later reported that his sponsors had missed payments to the team, prompting the decision to suspend his testing programme. His contract to race was terminated twenty-three days after it had been announced, and Razia was replaced by 2009 Formula 3 Euro Series champion and 2012 Formula Renault 3.5 Series runner-up Jules Bianchi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nWith HRT withdrawing from the championship, Pedro de la Rosa and Narain Karthikeyan were left without full-time racing seats. De la Rosa later joined Ferrari to aid the team in developing their simulator and was confirmed as one of their test and reserve drivers before the first pre-season test in Jerez, while Karthikeyan began contesting Auto GP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 70], "content_span": [71, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers, Driver changes, Mid-season changes\nKimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was forced to miss the final two races of the season in order to undergo surgery to relieve pain from a back injury he had been suffering from for a long time and which flared up during the Singapore Grand Prix. His place in the team was taken by fellow Finnish racer Heikki Kovalainen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 90], "content_span": [91, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season calendar\nThe following nineteen races appeared on the 2013 race schedule. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One's commercial rights holder through his Formula One Management and Formula One Administration companies, has previously said that he believes twenty races is the maximum that is viable. The number of races on the Formula One calendar is dictated by the Concorde Agreement, the arrangement between teams, the FIA and Formula One Management. At the time of Ecclestone's comments regarding the length of the series schedule, the then-current Concorde Agreement was set to expire at the end of the 2012 season. Twenty to twenty-five races would be possible if the teams agreed to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season calendar\nAt the 2012 Hungarian Grand Prix, Ecclestone announced that the 2013 calendar would consist of twenty races, and would be largely similar to the 2012 calendar. The provisional calendar was announced at the 2012 Singapore Grand Prix, which was approved by the FIA World Motor Sport Council on 28 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season calendar\nThe calendar was originally intended to host twenty races, with the inclusion of the Grand Prix of America, a new event to be hosted on the streets of New Jersey on 16 June, as part of a 1-week North American \"double-header\". Following its removal from the calendar, the schedule was reduced to nineteen races until the FIA World Motor Sport Council announced that a twentieth round would be included at a circuit in Europe, pending the outcome of negotiations between Bernie Ecclestone and event organisers. In February 2013, Ecclestone announced that a replacement venue had not been found, leaving the calendar at nineteen Grands Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nWith the nineteen races of the season completed, the defending World Champion, Red Bull Racing's Sebastian Vettel, retained the Drivers' Championship. He did so by winning in India and opening an unassailable 115-point gap with only three races remaining. He broke the record for most consecutive wins in a single season with nine. He also tied the record for consecutive wins, which was set by Alberto Ascari in 1952\u20131953, and for total wins in a single season with 13, set by Michael Schumacher in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nHis record tally of 13 wins included a controversial victory at the Malaysian Grand Prix that came when he defied team orders, overtaking teammate Mark Webber late in the race to secure victory. Vettel apologised afterwards to the team, although he later refused to apologise for winning. Vettel's other wins came in Bahrain, Canada, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Singapore, Korea, Japan, India, Abu Dhabi, the United States and Brazil. The four times world champion scored 397 points, also a record until 2018, when Lewis Hamilton scored 408 points. Webber finished his last Formula One season in third place with 199 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nIt was the first time since 2008 that the Australian failed to win a race. Their combined results allowed Red Bull to clinch the 2013 Constructors' Championship in India by opening a gap of 157 points, with only 129 still up to grab. The team scored a total of 596 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nFerrari's Fernando Alonso finished as the runner-up with 242 points. The Spaniard won two races, in China and Spain, and scored five second-places, in Australia, Canada, Belgium, Italy and Singapore, to keep him in a strong championship position throughout the season. However, a retirement in Malaysia and relatively poor results in Bahrain, Monaco, Korea and India saw him fall behind Vettel in the points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nThe gap closed briefly after the German's gearbox failure at the British Grand Prix, but the defending world champion scored eleven consecutive podium finishes after his sole retirement of the season, including ten wins, to clinch the title. Alonso's teammate Felipe Massa finished eighth in the standings, scoring 112 points with a single podium finish in Spain. Ferrari lost second place in the Constructors' Championship to Mercedes, finishing a mere 6 points behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nLewis Hamilton, who scored a win in Hungary, four third places and five pole positions in 2013 with Mercedes AMG, finished fourth in the drivers' standings with 189 points. His Malaysian Grand Prix podium came with a share of controversy as team orders were employed to help him retain third place. After the race, Hamilton said that his teammate Nico Rosberg was the one who actually deserved the podium. Italy was the first time that Hamilton failed to make a Q3 appearance since the 2010 Malaysian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nAs a result, the Briton's streak of consecutive Q3 appearances ended at 66. Hamilton also suffered his first retirement of the season in Japan due to damage caused by a puncture, which he got from a clash with Vettel. Rosberg, despite winning the Monaco and British Grands Prix, finished sixth, with retirements in Australia, China and Hungary, as well as a string of bad luck preventing him from having clean races, hurting his point tally. Mercedes finished as the runner-up to Red Bull in the Constructors' Championship with 360 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nLotus driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen finished fifth in the Drivers' Championship with 183 points. He missed the last two races of the season due to a back surgery. The Finn won the season-opening Australian Grand Prix and placed second at the Chinese, Bahrain, Spanish, German, Hungarian and Korean Grands Prix, but a retirement in Belgium combined with a non-points finish in Italy opened the gap to the championship leader. Belgium was the first time R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen failed to finish a race since returning to the sport at the 2012 Australian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nIt also ended R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's record run of consecutive points finishes at 27, which started at the 2012 Bahrain Grand Prix. Teammate Romain Grosjean finished third in Bahrain, Germany, Korea, Japan and India, finishing seventh in the points standings. He also saw a return of 2012 controversies during the first half of the season after being handed a 10-place grid penalty for the Canadian Grand Prix, which he received for crashing into Daniel Ricciardo at Monaco. He was also handed a 20-second time penalty in Hungary for a collision with Jenson Button.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nHowever, the Frenchman found great form and confidence afterwards to score three consecutive podium finishes and equalled his best ever result in the United States with second place. Poor showings in Monaco, Canada, Great Britain, Belgium, Italy and Brazil saw Lotus fall to fourth in the Constructors' Championship with 315 points, 39 adrift of Ferrari for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nDespite finishing the 2012 season with two wins in the final two races, McLaren openly admitted to a difficult 2013 campaign. Button finished ninth overall, 39 points behind Massa, whilst teammate Sergio P\u00e9rez ended up eleventh. The team ended the season in fifth place in the Constructors' Championship, with a best result of fourth achieved by Button in Brazil. It was the first time since 2006 that McLaren failed to win a race and the first time since 1980 that the team did not score a podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nForce India had a strong start to the season, with Paul di Resta finishing fourth in Bahrain and Adrian Sutil recording a fifth place in Monaco, though the team's performance fell significantly during the second half of the season, with only 3 points scored in seven races from Germany to Japan. However, the team put both cars in the points at its home race as well as in Abu Dhabi. Di Resta has been very consistent during the first half of the season, claiming points in six consecutive races from China to Great Britain. The team finished in sixth place in the Constructors' Championship, 45 points behind McLaren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nSauber endured a very difficult first half of the season, scoring just seven points in the first 11 Grands Prix. However, Nico H\u00fclkenberg showed impressive form in Italy, qualifying third and finishing fifth in the race, in Korea, where he started seventh and fought off Hamilton and Alonso for fourth, as well as in the United States, where he qualified fourth and finished sixth. The team also enjoyed a great team result in Japan, where the German finished sixth and his rookie teammate Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez seventh, the Mexican's first and only points of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nSauber scored 57 points and finished in seventh place in the Constructors' Championship. Guti\u00e9rrez endured a difficult introduction to Formula One, with a retirement due to driver error in China, a lowly eighteenth place in Bahrain and a string of grid penalties for causing avoidable collisions and blocking other drivers during qualifying. Despite this, he recorded the fastest lap of the race in Spain, secured his first career top ten qualifying appearance in Singapore, repeated the feat in Korea and drove a strong race for seventh in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0024-0002", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nScuderia Toro Rosso finished in eight place overall with career-best results for both Daniel Ricciardo, who finished seventh in China and Italy, and Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne, who finished sixth in Canada. Qualifying improved as well with the team making the top ten in qualifying on a regular basis, with a peak of fifth for Ricciardo at Silverstone. Williams endured one of their worst seasons, not scoring points until Pastor Maldonado finished tenth in Hungary. Teammate Valtteri Bottas qualified third in changeable conditions in Canada, but was unable to carry the speed into the race. However, the Finn scored his first career points in the United States after a strong weekend, finishing eight in the race. Williams finished ninth in the Constructors' Championship, 28 points adrift of Toro Rosso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Championship summary\nMarussia F1 and Caterham F1 did not score points in 2013. The teams' best results were achieved by Jules Bianchi, who scored a thirteenth for Marussia, and by Charles Pic and Giedo van der Garde, who have both scored a fourteenth-place finish for Caterham. By virtue of Bianchi's thirteenth place in Malaysia, Marussia ended the season in tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Tyre issues\nTyre supplier Pirelli faced criticism early in the season due to the wear of some tyres, with some claiming tyre management had become too important to race strategy. This prompted Pirelli to announce plans to introduce new designs after the Canadian Grand Prix. The testing Pirelli undertook on these proposed new designs led to an official complaint on the eve of the Monaco Grand Prix from Ferrari and Red Bull who claimed the way it was done, using the 2013 Mercedes car and drivers, would give them a competitive advantage in both Monaco and Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Tyre issues\nThere were also disputes over the change in the failure mode that were the result of new manufacturing methods, as to whether these increased or decreased safety. As the teams arrived in Montreal for the Canadian Grand Prix it was announced that, after further enquiries were made to all teams, the FIA were referring the Mercedes tyre test to its International Tribunal as it may have breached the rules. The FIA cleared an earlier test by Ferrari as it used a 2011 car, which was not a breach of the rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0026-0002", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Tyre issues\nTo reduce the number of delaminations, Pirelli introduced two new specifications of rear tyre in time for the Canadian race, which also reverted to the belt pack used in 2011 and 2012 tyres. In announcing the tyre, Pirelli said there would be no further tyre changes for the 2013 season due to the fact that to doing so would need the agreement of all teams, some of whom did not want their performance to be affected by such a mid-season change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Tyre issues\nTyre issues continued to dominate headlines at the British Grand Prix when several drivers suffered explosive punctures during the race. Amid concerns that the issue would continue at the German Grand Prix one week later, Pirelli received permission to introduce an entirely new specification of tyre in time for the Hungarian Grand Prix, whilst introducing modifications to the existing tyres for the race in Germany as a stop-gap solution. The FIA also imposed restrictions of their own, banning the teams from swapping the left- and right-side tyres around, a practice that had been employed to extend the lifespan of the tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233558-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula One World Championship, Results and standings, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top ten classified finishers using the following structure:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233559-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic season\nThe 2013 Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic season was the inaugural season of the Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic, a series running 1600cc Formula Renault machinery in similar fashion to the French F4 Championship. The series began on 3 May at Ring Knutstorp and ended on 21 September at Mantorp Park, after fifteen races held in seven venues. Most of these rounds were held in support of the 2013 Scandinavian Touring Car Championship season, joint organiser of the series along with the FIA Northern European Zone Organisation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233559-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic season\nThe series uses all-carbon Signatech chassis, 1.6-litre 140bhp Renault K4MRS engines, and Dunlop tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233559-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic season, Race calendar and results\nExcept for the second round in Estonia, all rounds took place in Sweden. All Swedish rounds, except for the one in the Kinnekulle Ring, were held in support of the STCC championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233559-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic season, Race calendar and results\nRounds denoted with a blue background were a part of the Formula Renault 1.6 NEZ Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233559-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic season, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers. No points were awarded for pole or fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233559-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic season, Championship standings\nParallel to the main championship, two other championships were held: the Formula Renault 1.6 Junior Svenskt M\u00e4sterskap (JSM) for drivers under 26 years old holding a Swedish driver license, and the Formula Renault 1.6 Northern European Zone (NEZ) championship at selected rounds. Points to these championships were awarded using the same system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233560-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Alps Series\nThe 2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Alps Series was the third year of the Formula Renault 2.0 Alps series, and the twelfth season of the former Swiss Formula Renault Championship. The championship began on 6 April at Vallelunga and finished on 6 October at Imola after fourteen races held at seven meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233560-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Alps Series\nDebutant Antonio Fuoco dominated the championship from the first round, clinching both the junior and overall championship titles with a race to spare. Prema Powerteam drivers Luca Ghiotto and Bruno Bonifacio completed the top three in the drivers' standings, with the trio winning all fourteen races between them; Fuoco won six races, Ghiotto five and Bonifacio three. Ghiotto and Bonifacio also accrued enough points to win the teams title for Prema, with Fuoco's sister Prema Junior outfit finishing second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233560-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Alps Series, Race calendar and results\nThe seven-event calendar for the 2013 season was announced on 25 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233560-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Alps Series, Championship standings, Teams' championship\nPrior to each round of the championship, two drivers from each team\u00a0\u2013 if applicable\u00a0\u2013 are nominated to score teams' championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 81], "content_span": [82, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233561-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup\nThe 2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup was the eighth Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup season, an open-wheel motor racing series for emerging young racing drivers based in Europe. The season began at Hockenheimring on 7 April and ended on 14 October at Zandvoort, after sixteen races at seven events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233561-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup\nThe title was clinched by Fortec Motorsports driver Matt Parry, who won five races. His teammate Jack Aitken finished as runner-up after five podium finishes. Dennis Olsen with three podiums completed the top three in the drivers' standings. Wins in other races were shared between non-regular drivers Oliver Rowland, Steijn Schothorst, Andrea Pizzitola, Esteban Ocon, \u00d3scar Tunjo and Jake Dennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233561-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup, Race calendar and results\nThe seven-event calendar for the 2013 season was revealed on 2 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233562-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 3.5 Series\nThe 2013 Formula Renault 3.5 Series season was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across Europe. The championship features drivers competing in 3.5 litre Formula Renault single seat race cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. The 2013 season was the ninth Formula Renault 3.5 Series season organized by the Renault Sport. The season began at Autodromo Nazionale Monza on 6 April and finished on 20 October at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. The series formed part of the World Series by Renault meetings at seven double header events with double header event at Monza and single event at Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233562-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 3.5 Series\nThe championship battle was between McLaren junior programme drivers Kevin Magnussen and Stoffel Vandoorne. Magnussen clinched the championship title with a race to spare, and ultimately finished sixty points ahead of Vandoorne. Despite having less wins than in 2012, Ant\u00f3nio F\u00e9lix da Costa improved to the third place in the drivers' standings. Nico M\u00fcller, Marco S\u00f8rensen and Carlos Huertas were the only other winners outside the top three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233562-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 3.5 Series, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar for the 2013 season was announced on 20 October 2012, the day before the end of the 2012 season. Seven of the nine rounds formed meetings of the 2013 World Series by Renault season, with additional rounds in support of the Superstars Series at Monza, and the 2013 Monaco Grand Prix. The championship visited the Red Bull Ring for the first time and returned to Monza. The N\u00fcrburgring and Silverstone have been removed from the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233562-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault 3.5 Series, Championship standings, Drivers' Championship\nBold\u00a0\u2013 PoleItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest Lap\u2020\u00a0\u2013 Retired, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233563-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault seasons\nThis article describes all the 2013 seasons of Formula Renault series across the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233563-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault seasons, Formula Renault 2.0L, 2013 Pau Trophy\nOn 20 May 2013, first non-championship Pau Trophy for Formula Renault 2.0 was held. The main race was won by Prema Powerteam driver Luca Ghiotto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233563-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault seasons, Other Formulas powered by Renault championships, 2013 Remus Formula Renault 2.0 Cup season\nThe season was held between 7 April and 11 September and raced across Austria, Germany and Czech Republic. The races occur with other categories as part of the Austria Formula 3 Cup, this section presents only the Austrian Formula Renault 2.0 classifications. Division II cars were built between 2000 - 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 120], "content_span": [121, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233563-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault seasons, Other Formulas powered by Renault championships, 2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Argentina season\nAll cars use Tito 02 chassis, all races were held in Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 120], "content_span": [121, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233563-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Formula Renault seasons, Other Formulas powered by Renault championships, 2013 Formula Renault 2.0 Argentina season\n1 extra point in each race for regularly qualified drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 120], "content_span": [121, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season\nThe 2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season is the third season of the team in the North American Soccer League, and the entire club's thirty-ninth season in professional soccer. The NASL inaugurated a new format this year in which the season would be split into two, having a spring and fall tournament. The team finished in seventh place during the spring season, and is currently in third place during the fall season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season, Squad, Current 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season, Competitions, NASL Spring Championship\nThe New York Cosmos and the Puerto Rico Islanders will not be participating in the spring season. The season will begin April 6 and end July 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season, Squad statistics, Top Assists\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total assists are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season, Squad statistics, Starting XI\nThis shows the most used players in each position, based on the Striker's typical starting formation for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season, Squad statistics, Starting XI\nLast updated: June 11, 2013Source: 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233564-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Lauderdale Strikers season, Recognition\nTeam of the WeekWeek 1: David Foley, Pecka, Toni St\u00e5hl Week 4: Walter Restrepo Week 5: Jeff Attinella, Shavar Thomas, Manny Gonzalez, Jemal Johnson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233565-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fort Wayne Summer Cash Spiel\nThe 2013 Fort Wayne Summer Cash Spiel was held from August 16 to 18 at the Lutheran Health Sportscenter in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The women's event was held as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour, while both the men's and women's events were held as part of the 2013\u201314 Ontario Curling Tour. The men's event was being held in a triple-knockout format, while the women's event was being held in a round robin format. The purse for the men's event was US$3,000, while the purse for the women's event was US$6,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships was a senior international figure skating competition in the 2012\u201313 season. It was held at the Osaka Municipal Central Gymnasium in Osaka, Japan on February 6\u201311. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Qualification\nThe competition was open to skaters from a non-European member nation of the International Skating Union who reached the age of 15 before July 1, 2012. The corresponding competition for European skaters was the 2013 European Figure Skating Championships. Unlike the European event, national associations at Four Continents are all allowed up to three entries in each discipline, regardless of how their skaters placed at the previous year's event. Member nations select their entries based on their own national criteria. Entries were required to achieve a minimum technical elements score (TES) at an international event prior to the Four Continents Championships. The minimum TES for each discipline and segment were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Entries\nA total of 85 skaters from 13 nations participated at the event, including 23 in men's singles, 20 in ladies' singles, 8 pairs teams, and 13 ice dancing teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Entries, Withdrawals\nTwo-time World champions and Olympic silver medalists Pang Qing / Tong Jian and ice dancers Huang Xintong / Zheng Xun withdrew from the pairs and ice dancing events respectively. China did not replace either team. On January 31, South Korea's Kim Hae-jin withdrew from the ladies' event and was not replaced. On February 1, Brazil's Isadora Williams withdrew from the ladies' event and Brazil did not replace her, leaving the country without any entries at the competition. On February 4, American Adam Rippon withdrew from the men's event and the U.S. called up Richard Dornbush to take his place. Ronald Lam from Hong Kong also withdrew from the men's event and was not replaced, leaving Hong Kong without an entry. Alexa Scimeca / Chris Knierim of the United States withdrew from the pairs' event a day before the start of the competition and were not replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 71], "content_span": [72, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Schedule\nOfficial training sessions occurred at the Osaka Pool and the main venue from February 6 throughout the competition period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Overview\nOlympic and two time world ice dancing champions Tessa Virtue / Scott Moir were the only defending Four Continents champions entered in the 2013 event. 2012 men's champion Patrick Chan elected not to compete in order to prepare for the 2013 World Figure Skating Championships in London, Ontario, Canada as well as allowing his fellow Canadian skaters to compete. 2012 ladies' champion Ashley Wagner did not defend her title for the same reason. China's Sui Wenjing / Han Cong did not defend their pairs title due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ice dancing\nThe competition began with the short dance with Canada's Tessa Virtue / Scott Moir winning the segment with a score of 75.12 with a 0.44 point advantage over training partners from the United States Meryl Davis / Charlie White. Despite scoring higher in the presentation score and most of the elements, a small stutter in their non-touching step sequence from White allowed the Canadians, who earned a level four for the non-touching step sequence to edge ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 111], "content_span": [112, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ice dancing\nIn an interview following the short dance, Moir commented that they were pleased with their performance to Anthony Hopkin's \"The Waltz goes on\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 111], "content_span": [112, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ice dancing\n\"The biggest thing for us today was \u2013 it felt like the seasons best skate. So no matter what the score was, that's always the best feeling. Ever since we've been young that's really the feeling we chase. If we feel we are together, it feels like a strong performance, if the coaches are happy with it - that's the big thing\", Moir remarked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 111], "content_span": [112, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ice dancing\nDavis / White too said that they were pleased but a little disappointed with their Giselle short dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 111], "content_span": [112, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ice dancing\n\"I think it was a really good performance today. It was a step up in a lot of aspects. Technically it wasn't what we were aiming for. We had a couple of little mistakes here and there which certainly you can't get away at this point. We're looking to execute everything perfectly at this point of the season, but I think we've made some improvement in a lot of other areas. Despite the little mistakes we are headed into the right direction and we're feeling good\", Davis said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 111], "content_span": [112, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ice dancing\nAmerican national silver medalists Madison Chock / Evan Bates scored 65.44, leaving them in third place, 2.18 points ahead of American bronze medalists, Maia Shibutani / Alex Shibutani. Japan's Cathy Reed / Chris Reed were the highest ranked home team, finishing in sixth place with 53.97, 0.27 points ahead of Canada's Nicole Orford / Thomas Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 111], "content_span": [112, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Pairs\nThe short dance was followed by the pairs short program. Canadian champions Meagan Duhamel / Eric Radford successfully executed a side-by-side triple lutz and throw triple lutz in their La Boh\u00e8me routine to take first place with 70.44, 4.11 points ahead of fellow skaters and Canadian silver medalists Kirsten Moore-Towers / Dylan Moscovitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 105], "content_span": [106, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Pairs\n\"To break that 70 points barrier, not too many teams have done that, it feels incredible\", Radford shared. \"We kind of discovered especially after last Nationals the more pressure that's on, the better we seem to skate. Coming in here we knew that we have a great chance to finally have a gold medal after all these silver medals. We came in with a fighting attitude as opposed to trying to ride the wave from Nationals\", he added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 105], "content_span": [106, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Pairs\nMoore-Towers was also very pleased with their program but said the pair wished to clean up some small errors before the 2013 World Championships in London, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 105], "content_span": [106, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Pairs\nAmerican champions Marissa Castelli / Simon Shnapir had an error ridden program faulting on their triple twist, side by side spins and throw triple salchow to finish in third with 53.06, trailing second by 13.27 points. There were no Japanese teams in this event. China's highest ranking team was Peng Cheng / Zhang Hao in fifth place with 52.46 points, after doubling a side-by-side triple toe and making an error on the throw triple loop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 105], "content_span": [106, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Men\nThe men's short program followed the pairs' short. Hometown favourite Yuzuru Hanyu won the short program, successfully executing a quadruple toe loop and a triple axel but singling his triple lutz in combination to earn 87.65 for his Parisian Walkways routine, 2.57 points in front of China's Yan Han who skated a technically flawless program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 103], "content_span": [104, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Men\nIn the interview after the short program, Hanyu expressed his disappointment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 103], "content_span": [104, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Men\n\"I do not feel good about my performance. I think I missed the Lutz because my timing was a bit fast. I did not feel the pressure from being the national champion. I did not focus on winning or losing to Daisuke (Takahashi) or Takahito (Mura), and I was focusing on my own performance.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 103], "content_span": [104, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Men\nChina's Yan was greatly surprised by what he accomplished in the short program, considering that he did not assume that he would be a medal contender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 103], "content_span": [104, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Men\n\"I am very pleased with what I did. I did all my elements. I don't have a special goal for this event, this being my first (international) senior competition. I don't expect a medal or anything, I am here to learn. Today's result won't put pressure on me. I just want to show what I can do in practice in the free skating and want to do all my elements\", Yan explained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 103], "content_span": [104, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Men\nDespite American skater Richard Dornbush placing his hand down on the triple axel, his quadruple toe loop and triple lutz-triple toe loop combination earned him 83.01 points and a third-place finish for his \"With or without you\" program. Japan's Daisuke Takahashi had an error ridden program to be left in fourth place with 82.62. China's Song Nan finished fifth with 81.18. Kevin Reynolds was the highest ranked Canadian in the short program, under rotating his quadruple salchow and quadruple toe loop to lie in sixth with 78.34 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 103], "content_span": [104, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ladies\nThe ladies' short program saw Japan's Mao Asada perfectly execute her triple axel, which has been absent since the previous Olympic season. The technical and artistic strength she displayed in her routine to the \"I've got rhythm\" variations by Gershwin propelled her into the lead with 74.49, 8.84 points clear of Akiko Suzuki, who scored 65.65.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 106], "content_span": [107, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ladies\n\"This is the first time I landed my triple Axel in my short program this season. I was in good condition since I came here. The moment I jumped I was 99 percent sure I was going to land it (triple Axel). My condition has been going up since Nationals. It is exactly one year till the Sochi Olympic Games, and I would like to skate my best there. I would like to bring this confidence into my free skating tomorrow\", Asada said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 106], "content_span": [107, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ladies\nIn the press conference, Suzuki expressed a sigh of relief that her \"Kill Bill\" routine was clean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 106], "content_span": [107, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ladies\n\"I was able to feel like \"I finally made it\". I have been struggling with jumps this season, and I had tough time making my best towards the competitions. I didn't have 100% confidence in the triple-triple but my coach and I went through practices to make me strong mentally\", the Grand Prix Final bronze medalist commented. \"(In the Free Skating) I would like to skate like a \"flying bird\" and I hope my skate will make the audience smile\", she added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 106], "content_span": [107, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Short programs / Short dance, Ladies\nThe Japanese ladies clean swept the short program with Kanako Murakami earning 64.04 and a third-place finish. Christina Gao was the highest of the American skaters, landing in fourth place with 62.34. China's Zhang Kexin was the highest ranked skater from her nation, earning 57.56 and a sixth-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 106], "content_span": [107, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\nThe first free skating of the competition was the men's free skating. The highly competitive segment of the competition saw as many as twelve of the skaters attempting or executing quadruple jumps. Taking advantage of his technical strength, Canadian skater Kevin Reynolds laid out three quadruple jumps and numerous triples jumps to cause a massive upset. His program, music from \"Concerto No. 4 in E Minor for piano and orchestra\" by Mathieu earned him an enormous 172.21 points to take the championship overall with 250.55. In his interview, Reynolds said that he was shocked that he actually won, even when he knew his skate was medal worthy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\n\"This was completely beyond anything that I would've expected. I knew I was in the range of medals if I do everything in my free skating. I had a couple of under-rotated quad jumps in my short program. I came back to the practice this morning and worked on them. Recently, I was able to do two strong performances at our national championships, so that gave me a lot of confidence, but being able to win this competition surpassed everything I could have expected.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\nReynolds hopes he will skate a top six finish at the 2013 World Figure Skating Championships in London, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\nJapan's Yuzuru Hanyu was unable to hold onto the lead, doubling a planned quadruple salchow, receiving an incorrect edge call on a triple flip and singling a triple lutz in his \"Notre Dame de Paris\" program to place third in the free skating with 158.73 points and finish second overall with 246.38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\nAt the press conference, Hanyu talked about his disappointment for not winning as expected and his optimism to peak at the World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\nHe says, \"I am full of disappointment, but after I was done, I felt refreshed and relieved. Regarding my performance, there is a lot of what I need to improve. But I have not lost my confidence and there are a lot of things I can do better.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\nDespite a fall and under rotation call on his quadruple toe loop, China's Yan Han was able to hold onto the podium with bronze medal finish, earning 150.14 points with a total of 235.22 points. Despite his errors, the sixteen-year-old said he was greatly satisfied of how he performed, especially when he did not expect to medal at all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Men\nDespite finishing second in the free skating, America's Max Aaron was unable to make the podium with a fourth-place finish and a total of 234.65. Fellow skater Richard Dornbush slipped from third to fifth finishing 0.61 points behind Aaron. Japan's Daisuke Takahashi had another disappointing skate finishing overall in seventh place with 222.77 points. Kazakhstan's Denis Ten slipped from seventh to twelfth with a total of 197.26 after finishing seventeenth in the free skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 88], "content_span": [89, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Pairs\nThe final day of competition began with the pair's free skating. Canada's Meagan Duhamel / Eric Radford earned a seasons' best score of 128.74 to take their first international title with 199.18, however, errors on both side by side elements meant that fellow skaters Kirsten Moore-Towers / Dylan Moscovitch finished higher in the free skating. Despite a fall on the throw triple loop, the couple earned 130.45 with a total score of 196.78.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Pairs\nFollowing the event, Duhamel told reporters that they were disappointed with their performance, describing that their program to \"Angel\" was a struggle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Pairs\n\"We know we are capable of skating much better. We want to show an improved free skating at the world championships. We felt confident going in but once the music started it just became a struggle.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Pairs\nMoore-Towers / Moscovitch were pleased about their free skating to a Queen medley and say that they now have the confidence to achieve a podium finish at the 2013 World figure skating championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Pairs\n\"We feel great about our performance. It is a bit unfortunate that we lost the championship on an element we do easily all the time, but we don't intend on that happening next time\", Moore-Towers said. \"(At the ISU World Championships next month) we want to skate two clean programs. We want to better ourselves from here and from Nationals and we're really hoping that lands us on the podium. There are a lot of teams vying for the spot and we are trying to get it. If we keep working hard and skate the way we know we can it's attainable\", she added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Pairs\nAmerican national champions Marissa Castelli / Simon Shnapir took the bronze medal. Despite making errors on both side by side elements and the side by side spins, they earned 117.04 with a safe total of 170.10, 2.80 points ahead of fellow skaters Felicia Zhang / Nathan Bartholomay. Despite China's Peng Cheng / Zhang Hao executing a quadruple twist, errors in their side by side elements meant that they only earned 112.36 to finish fifth with 164.82. Canada's Paige Lawrence / Rudi Swiegers bounced back from a poor short program to finish fifth in the free skating with 113.54 with a total score of 162.30 and a sixth-place finish. China's Wang Wenting / Zhang Yan rounded out the field finishing with 145.56.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Pairs\nDuhamel / Radford became the first Canadians to claim the pairs title since Jamie Sale and David Pelletier in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 90], "content_span": [91, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\nFollowing that event was the ladies' free skating with Japan continuing to display their dominance in ladies' singles by clean sweeping the podium for the second time in the history of the Four Continents Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\nDespite under rotating a triple axel and the ends of two combinations and receiving an incorrect edge call on a triple lutz, Mao Asada earned 130.96 for her \"Swan Lake\" performance with a winning total of 205.45.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\n\"For the first time since the Olympic Games I went over 200 points, so I feel that I am coming back to my performance level. Today's performance was about in-line with my practice, so I need to practice more to exceed today's level\", the two-time World Champion said. \"Throughout this Four Continent Championship, I was able to have great performances on both short and free. My short program was beyond my practice level and free skating was within the range of my practice level. Lessons I learned from this competition are that I can push my level higher as long as I practice hard\", she went on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\nFellow skater Akiko Suzuki consolidated her second placement in the short with a mostly error free skating. She landed six triples in her routine to \"O\" from Cirque du Soleil, earning 124.43 points with a total of 190.08.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\n\"Overall it was okay, it was good, because in the competition just before that (a national event) I did very badly. My aim was to redeem myself in this competition. I talked to my coach a lot about how to become stronger mentally before the competition\", the 27-year-old commented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\nKanako Murakami held onto third place with 116.99 for her tango themed program with a total of 181.03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\n\"The jumps were okay however my skating was not powerful enough. My coach told me that as well. I only focused on my jumps so that is the reason I could not care about the skating. I definitely got my confidence after my short program in this competition. But my task is to skate more powerfully in both short program and free skating. That is what I want to do at Worlds\", the National silver medalist noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ladies\nAmerican skater Christina Gao was the highest ranked skater from her nation earning a fifth place rank in the free skating of 113.94 to finish fourth overall with 176.28. China's Li Zijun jumped from tenth to fifth earning 115.91 to finish fourth in the free skating and fifth overall all. Gracie Gold finished sixth with 166.66 points after making numerous errors. Canada's Kaetlyn Osmond was the highest of the Canadian ladies earning 103.16 points for a total of 159.38 and a seventh-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\nThe final event of the competition was the free dance and the battle for Gold and Bronze was fierce. Meryl Davis / Charlie White from the United States executed a solid program earning level fours in all but one of the elements and tens for performance, choreography and interpretation to earn a new personal best score for the Free Dance of 112.68 and earning a total competition score of 187.36. Skating to \"Notre Dame de Paris\", the new champions told of the work required to reclaim the Four Continents Championships Ice dancing title which they lost to Virtue and Moir in Colorado Springs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\n\"It was a really emotional skate. We gave it everything we had, literally, and that's all we can ask of ourselves. It's difficult coming off nationals so to be able to go out and perform the way we did is a monument to our preparation and I'm really proud\", White said. \"We would like to show our best skating yet. Charlie and I have been talking a lot this week about growth and improvement. That's always what we look back to \u2026 how we can improve, how we can continue to grow throughout the season. We're in a great place but the sky's the limit\", Davis added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\nIn the lead after the short dance, Olympic champions Tessa Virtue / Scott Moir began their Carmen routine with confidence until leg cramps from Tessa forced them to temporarily stop three minutes into their routine, just before their combination lift. They were allowed to continue and they finished the program with Tessa feeling unwell. Despite the incident, it was the downgrades in both the step sequences and not the interruption that cost Virtue / Moir points, dropping from the gold position with a second place score of 109.20 with a total of 184.32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\nDespite feeling deflated, the Canadians talked to reporters about the positive achievements they accomplished this week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\n\"Tessa and I feel like as a team we have a lot of positive things this week, especially in our short dance. In the free dance, we were able to execute a lot of the elements that we've been struggling with in practice and a little bit at the National Championships. Obviously there are a couple of things we want to work on going into the World Championships. We know what we have to do, luckily\", Moir told the press. \"I just had some cramp in my legs to deal with. I'm glad we collected ourselves and kept pushing through the program\", Virtue explained when asked about the interruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\nAmerican skaters Madison Chock / Evan Bates held of a strong field to finish in third with 160.42 total, despite finishing fifth in the free dance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\n\"As the season has progressed, we have gotten stronger and stronger. Worlds is the culmination of the full season and all of our hard work. Our goal is to have the best two performances we have had all season and carry that momentum into the Olympic year\", Bates noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Competition recap, Free skatings, Ice dancing\nSiblings Maia Shibutani / Alex Shibutani earned 96.71 in the free dance to finish fourth overall with 159.97 points, 0.45 behind Chock and Bates. Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier finished third in the free dance with 97.93 to finish fifth overall with 157.83. Japan's Cathy Reed / Chris Reed were the highest ranked Japanese team. A fall on the diagonal step sequence dropped them from sixth to seventh place, earning 77.07 with a total of 131.04. Australia's Danielle O'Brien / Gregory Merriman cleanly skated an engaging circus themed free dance to earn a personal best score of 75.07 to finish in eighth place on 123.88, a personal best ranking and score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 96], "content_span": [97, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medalists\nMedals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest overall placements in each discipline:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medalists\nSmall medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest short program or short dance placements in each discipline:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medalists\nMedals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest free skating or free dance placements in each discipline:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 76], "content_span": [77, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medals by country\nTable of small medals for placement in the short segment:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Medals summary, Medals by country\nTable of small medals for placement in the free segment:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233566-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships, Prize money\nPrize money is awarded to skaters who achieve a top 12 placement in each discipline. An increased prize pool of US$250,000 will be awarded at the 2013 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships. The prize money is awarded to skaters as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233567-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Four Nations Tournament (women's football)\nThe 2013 Four Nations Tournament was the twelve edition of the Four Nations Tournament, an invitational women's football tournament held in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233568-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Foxtel Cup\nThe 2013 Foxtel Cup was the third season of the Australian rules football knock-out cup competition involving clubs from the various state league competitions from around Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233568-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Foxtel Cup\nThe Cup's purpose is to support and promote the second-tier Australian rules football competitions and to provide another way of developing lower-tier Australian Football League (AFL) players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233568-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Foxtel Cup\nAll matches, as in previous years, were broadcast by Fox Footy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233568-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Foxtel Cup\nThe format of the competition saw four significant changes from the first two years of the competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233568-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Foxtel Cup\nFor the first time, the highest-ranked qualifiers from each state all elected to compete in the competition; in the previous two years, the top South Australian clubs had declined to participate. However, both the VFL premiers and the NEAFL premiers in 2012 were reserves teams for AFL clubs (Geelong and Brisbane Lions respectively), so neither was invited to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233568-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Foxtel Cup\nThe competition began in April 2013 and concluded with the Grand Final in August 2013, in which West Adelaide defeated East Fremantle by four points at AAMI Stadium in a low scoring thriller. It was the Bloods' first trophy of any sort since their last SANFL premiership in 1983.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233568-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Foxtel Cup\nWest Adelaide onballer (and former AFL player for the Crows and Lions) Chris Schmidt was awarded the Coles Medal as best-on-ground in the Grand Final for his unrelenting performance that included 26 disposals and nine clearances. He also operated at 81 per cent disposal efficiency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand\nIn June 2013, France played a three-test series against New Zealand as part of the 2013 mid-year rugby test series. This was the sides' first encounter since they met in the 2011 Rugby World Cup Final, which New Zealand won 8\u20137. It was France's first test series against the All Blacks since their 2009 two-test tour of New Zealand, which ended in a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand\nThe tour began at the stadium where they last played each other, Eden Park in Auckland on 8 June. Following this, they played a mid-week match against the Auckland Super Rugby franchise, the Blues, at North Harbour Stadium in Auckland on 11 June. The second test was played in Christchurch at Rugby League Park on 15 June, and the third test at Yarrow Stadium in New Plymouth on 22 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Squads, France\nOn 14 May, head coach Philippe Saint-Andr\u00e9 named a 35-man squad for the fixtures against New Zealand and the Blues. The selection created controversy when South African-born prop Daniel K\u00f6tze and flank Bernard Le Roux and Fijian-born wing Noa Nakaitaci (qualifying on residency grounds) were chosen ahead of in-form French-born players. The most notable absentees were wing Vincent Clerc (injured with his club), captain and lock Pascal Pap\u00e9 (injured during the Six Nations Championship) and fly-half Fran\u00e7ois Trinh-Duc (deemed out of form, with Camille Lopez and R\u00e9mi Tal\u00e8s chosen ahead of him).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Squads, France\nWing Alexis Palisson withdrew from the squad due to injury and was replaced with Marc Andreu prior to the first test. Injured during the first test, flank Fulgence Ouedraogo also withdrew from the tour and was replaced in the squad by Damien Chouly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Squads, France\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Squads, France\nNote*: Chouly joined the squad between the first two tests after Ouedraogo came off injured in the first test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Squads, New Zealand\nNew Zealand 32-man squad for the 2013 mid-year series to be played against France. The squad includes Matt Todd, who is included as injury cover for Sam Whitelock\u2014who is not expected to be available until the third Test. All players play Super Rugby and provincial rugby within New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Squads, New Zealand\nProp Joe Moody was added to the squad as prop cover should all the original props not be available for the first test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Squads, New Zealand\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Background\nFollowing their later encounter in the 2011 Rugby World Cup Final France and New Zealand had different fortunes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Background\nFrance, under the leadership of newly appointed head coach Philippe Saint-Andr\u00e9, endured a mixed 2012 Six Nations Championship (ending 4th with 2 wins, 1 draw and 2 losses) which was the last outing of several key figures of the squad with the likes of Julien Bonnaire, Imanol Harinordoquy, Lionel Nallet, Jean-Baptiste Poux, Aur\u00e9lien Rougerie, William Servat and Dimitri Yachvili playing their last games in the France jersey while only a couple of players (Wesley Fofana and Yoann Maestri) received their first caps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Background\nThe Summer tour of Argentina then marked the rise of new players like Brice Dulin, Maxime Machenaud, Fofana and Maestri and saw the return in the mix of Thomas Domingo (who had missed on the World Cup due to injury), Yoann Huget (who had missed on the World Cup due to suspension) and Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Michalak (back from his stint in Super Rugby after having fallen out of favour of French rugby) while experienced players like Vincent Clerc and Thierry Dusautoir were rested, the captaincy being handed to Pascal Pap\u00e9. The Series was drawn 1-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Background\nFrance then ended 2012 on a high with three straight wins in the Autumn Internationals over Australia, Argentina and Samoa, claiming the fourth spot in the IRB World Rankings which gave them First Seed status for the 2015 Rugby World Cup draw thus avoiding New Zealand, Australia and South Africa at pool stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Background\nHowever the 2013 Six Nations Championship was a real disappointment as France ended up bottom of the table, claiming only one win and a draw with a squad that had not much evolved since the previous Summer - Antonie Claassen, Ga\u00ebl Fickou, Jocelino Suta and S\u00e9bastien Vahaamahina being the only new caps while long-time absentees Mathieu Bastareaud and Yannick Nyanga were recalled. Philippe Saint-Andr\u00e9 stated that the Top 14 final being played just one week prior to the first test, players taking part in this final and thus joining the squad late would not feature in the first test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Background\nNew Zealand also started 2012 with a new head coach with former assistant coach Steve Hansen taking over Graham Henry's role. The All Blacks whitewashed Ireland during their Summer tour, winning the series 3-0 with a remarkable 60-0 victory in the third Test, their largest ever winning margin over Ireland. New Zealand followed with a perfect 2012 Rugby Championship - which featured Argentina for the first time - winning all six of their games. However their traditional Bledisloe Cup match in October put an end to their 16-game winning streak when they drew (18-18) with Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Background\nThe All Blacks went on to hammer Scotland, Italy and Wales (scoring 30+ points each time) in the end-of-year tests before suffering their first defeat in two years at the hands of England on December 1. New Zealand however remained on top of the IRB World Rankings and were given Top Seed status for the 2015 Rugby World Cup. Starting in January 2013, stalwart All Blacks captain Richie McCaw was granted a six-month sabbatical from rugby to try and extend his career up to the 2015 World Cup. He has thus not taken any part in the 2013 Super Rugby campaign nor will he take part in the mid-year tests series against France. He is due to resume his international career in the 2013 Rugby Championship after a few stints with his Christchurch club side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Matches\nTouch judges:Alain Rolland (Ireland)James Leckie (Australia)Television match official:Matt Goddard (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Matches\nTouch judges:Richard Kelly (New Zealand)Sheldon Eden-Whaitiri (New Zealand)Television match official:Glenn Newman (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Matches\nTouch judges:Wayne Barnes (England)James Leckie (Australia)Television match official:George Ayoub (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Matches\nTouch judges:Alain Rolland (Ireland)Wayne Barnes (England)Television match official:George Ayoub (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Aftermath\nFollowing the tour the All Blacks went on to record a perfect 2013 Rugby Championship against Argentina, Australia and South Africa with six wins out of six matches for the second time in a row in as many instances of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Aftermath\nDuring the end-of-year internationals they went on to beat successively Australia, Japan, France, England and Ireland thus finishing 2013 undefeated with 14 wins out of 14 matches, the first national team to ever achieve this feat in the professional era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Aftermath\nAfter suffering their fourth defeat at the hands of New Zealand in the same year in their first match of the end-of-year internationals, France overcame Tonga before losing to South Africa thus finishing the year with only two wins out of eleven matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Aftermath\nFrance then experienced a mixed 2014 Six Nations Championship with three wins (against England and Italy at home and Scotland away) and two losses (to Wales away and Ireland at home), ending up fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233569-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 France rugby union tour of New Zealand, Aftermath\nDuring the 2014 mid-year internationals New Zealand hosted England while France toured Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233570-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Franken Challenge\nThe 2013 Franken Challenge was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in F\u00fcrth, Germany between 3 and 9 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233570-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Franken Challenge, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233570-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Franken Challenge, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233570-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Franken Challenge, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received as alternates into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233571-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Franken Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nArnau Brugu\u00e9s-Davi and Jo\u00e3o Sousa were the defending champions but Arnau decided not to participate. Sousa played alongside Frank Moser but lost in the first round. Colin Ebelthite and Rameez Junaid won the title after defeating Christian Harrison and Michael Venus 6\u20134, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233572-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Franken Challenge \u2013 Singles\nBla\u017e Kav\u010di\u010d was the defending champion but lost in the second round. Jo\u00e3o Sousa defeated Wayne Odesnik 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233573-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fremantle Football Club season\nThe 2013 Fremantle Football Club season was the club's 19th season of senior competition in the Australian Football League (AFL). It was the club's most successful season to date, recording the most wins in a season, highest percentage and equal highest final ladder position of 3rd. The club won its first ever Qualifying Final, and defeated Sydney in the Preliminary Final at Patersons Stadium and played in its first AFL Grand Final against Hawthorn, losing by 15 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233573-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fremantle Football Club season, Squad, Squad changes\nThe 2012 AFL Draft contained a free agency trade provision for the first time. Fremantle was the first club to lodge a bid for a free agent when the put in a four-year offer to recruit Danyle Pearce from Port Adelaide. As a restricted free agent, Port could have matched Fremantle's offer, but chose not to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233573-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fremantle Football Club season, Squad, Squad changes\nDuring the trading and drafting period, the futures of Adam McPhee and Jack Anthony at the club were in doubt, however McPhee signed a one-year contract extension in October. On 20 November, two days before the National Draft, McPhee announced that he was retiring to return to Victoria and Anthony was delisted, despite having a year to go on his contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233573-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fremantle Football Club season, Awards, Records & Milestones, Club awards\nThe Doig Medal was awarded at a function at the Perth Convention Exhibition Centre on 16 November. Between 1 and 5 votes are awarded to each player by five coaches after each game. Nathan Fyfe won his first Doig Medal, after previously finishing second in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233574-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 French Athletics Championships was the 125th edition of the national championship in outdoor track and field for France. It was held on 12\u201314 July at the Stade S\u00e9bastien Charl\u00e9ty in Paris. A total of 38 events (divided evenly between the sexes) were contested over the three-day competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233575-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French F4 Championship\nThe 2013 French F4 Championship season was the 21st season of the series for 1600cc Formula Renault machinery, and the third season to run under the guise of the French F4 Championship. The series began on 27 April at Le Mans and ended on 27 October at Le Castellet, after seven rounds and twenty-one races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233575-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French F4 Championship, Championship standings\n\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 75% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233576-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 French Figure Skating Championships took place between December 13 and 16, 2012 at the Patinoire Iceberg in Strasbourg. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, ice dancing, and synchronized skating on the senior level. The results were among the criteria \u2013 along with FFSG minimum scores and jump requirements \u2013 used to choose the French entries for the 2013 World Championships and the 2013 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233576-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Men\nBrian Joubert withdrew due to the flu. Florent Amodio won his second senior national title. Amodio decided to replace his short program with a shortened version of the previous season's free skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233576-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Pairs\nVanessa James / Morgan Cipr\u00e8s won their first senior national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233576-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 French Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Ice dancing\nNathalie P\u00e9chalat / Fabian Bourzat won their fourth senior national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233577-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 French Indoor Athletics Championships was the 42nd edition of the national championship in indoor track and field for France, organised by the French Athletics Federation. It was held on 16\u201317 February at the Jean-Pellez Stadium in Aubi\u00e8re. A total of 26 events (divided evenly between the sexes) were contested over the two-day competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open\nThe 2013 French Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 117th edition of the French Open and the second Grand Slam event of the year. It took place at the Stade Roland Garros from 26 May to 9 June. It consisted of events for professional players in singles, doubles and mixed doubles play. Junior and wheelchair players also took part in singles and doubles events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open\nRafael Nadal was the three-time defending champion in the men's singles, and won the title to become the first man to win the same Grand Slam title eight times. Maria Sharapova was the defending champion in women's singles, but lost in the final to Serena Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open\nThis championship was the third time in grand slam history that two multiple slam sets were accomplished in two different disciplines, and that was Serena Williams in Women's Singles, and her fellow countrymen Bob and Mike Bryan in Men's Doubles. At the 1969 US Open, Rod Laver won his multiple slam set in Men's Singles, and his fellow countryman Ken Rosewall did in Men's Doubles. At the 2012 French Open, Mahesh Bhupathi won a multiple slam set in Mixed Doubles, and Esther Vergeer won her multiple slam set in Women's Wheelchair Doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open\nIn the women's singles final, it marked the first French Open since 1995 that the top two seeded players had played each other in the final, and the first time at any grand slam event since the 2004 Australian Open that the top two seeded players had played each other in a grand slam final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Tournament\nThe 2013 French Open was the 112th edition of the French Open and was held at Stade Roland Garros in Paris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Tournament\nThe tournament was an event run by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and was part of the 2013 ATP World Tour and the 2013 WTA Tour calendars under the Grand Slam category. The tournament consisted of both men's and women's singles and doubles draws as well as a mixed doubles event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Tournament\nThere were singles and doubles events for both boys and girls (players under 18), which were part of the Grade A category of tournaments, and singles and doubles events for men's and women's wheelchair tennis players as part of the NEC tour under the Grand Slam category. The tournament was played on clay courts and took place over a series of twenty courts, including the three main showcourts, Court Philippe Chatrier, Court Suzanne Lenglen and Court 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Point and prize money distribution, Point distribution\nBelow is a series of tables for each of the competitions showing the ranking points on offer for each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 72], "content_span": [73, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Point and prize money distribution, Prize money\nThe French Open's total prize money for 2013 has been increased by more than three million euros to 22 million euros ($28.77 million). The winners of the men's and women's singles titles will each earn 1.5 million euros, up 250,000 euros from last year. The move was part of plans to boost the total prize money by a further 10 million euros to 32 million euros by 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 French Open, Point and prize money distribution, Prize money\nIn comparison, US Open prize money will reach $33.6 million this year and rise to $50 million by 2017, while Wimbledon prize money was more than 16 million pounds ($24.61 million) in 2012. In the 2013 season, the French Open's prize money is the lowest out of four grand slam tournaments, compared to $30m at the Australian Open, $34m at Wimbledon, and $32m at the US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Singles seeds\nThe following are the seeded players and notable players who withdrew from the event. Rankings are as of 20 May 2013 and the Points are as of 27 May 2013. It had been reported that the French Open was considering giving Nadal a seeding higher than his current world ranking (No. 4), on the basis of his history at the tournament, but French Open tournament organisers decided against it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Singles seeds, Men's Singles\n1Robredo has 100 points coming off after the French Open because of a challenger tournament (Citt\u00e0 di Caltanissetta) he won when not attending the 2012 French Open. Therefore, 100 points must be subtracted from his old points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Protected ranking\nThe following players were accepted directly into the main draw using a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Seniors, Men's doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Micha\u00ebl Llodra / Nicolas Mahut, 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Seniors, Women's doubles\nEkaterina Makarova / Elena Vesnina defeated Sara Errani / Roberta Vinci, 7\u20135, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Seniors, Mixed doubles\nLucie Hradeck\u00e1 / Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k defeated Kristina Mladenovic / Daniel Nestor, 1\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20136]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Juniors, Boys' Doubles\nKyle Edmund / Frederico Ferreira Silva defeated Christian Gar\u00edn / Nicol\u00e1s Jarry, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Juniors, Girls' Doubles\nBarbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 / Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 defeated Dom\u00e9nica Gonz\u00e1lez / Beatriz Haddad Maia, 7\u20135, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Wheelchair events, Wheelchair Men's Doubles\nSt\u00e9phane Houdet / Shingo Kunieda defeated Gordon Reid / Ronald Vink, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20136]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 72], "content_span": [73, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Wheelchair events, Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nJiske Griffioen / Aniek van Koot defeated Sabine Ellerbrock / Sharon Walraven, 6\u20132, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Other events, Legends Under 45 Doubles\nC\u00e9dric Pioline / Fabrice Santoro defeated Albert Costa / Carlos Moy\u00e1, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, [4\u20131] ret.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 67], "content_span": [68, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Other events, Legends Over 45 Doubles\nAndr\u00e9s G\u00f3mez / Mark Woodforde defeated Mansour Bahrami / Pat Cash, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20132)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Champions, Other events, Women's Legends Doubles\nLindsay Davenport / Martina Hingis defeated Elena Dementieva / Martina Navratilova, 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233578-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open, Withdrawals\nThe following players were accepted directly into the main tournament, but withdrew with injuries or personal reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233579-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nAndrew Harris and Nick Kyrgios were the defending champions. Kyrgios partnered up with Wayne Montgomery, but lost in the first round, while Harris decided not to participate. Kyle Edmund and Frederico Ferreira Silva won the title, defeating Christian Gar\u00edn and Nicol\u00e1s Jarry in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233580-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nKimmer Coppejans was the 2012 champion, but is no longer eligible to compete in junior tennis, and thus cannot defend his title. Christian Gar\u00edn defeated Alexander Zverev, 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233581-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nDaria Gavrilova and Irina Khromacheva were the 2012 champions, but Gavrilova was no longer eligible to compete in junior tennis, so was unable to defend her title. Khromacheva entered qualifying for the women's draw, but lost in the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233581-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nCzech pair Barbora Krej\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 and Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 won their first junior grand slam, defeating the South American duo of Dom\u00e9nica Gonz\u00e1lez and Beatriz Haddad Maia in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233582-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nAnnika Beck was the 2012 champion, but was no longer eligible to compete in junior tennis, and thus couldn't defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233582-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nBelinda Bencic won her first junior grand slam, defeating doubles partner Antonia Lottner in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233583-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Legends Over 45 Doubles\nJohn McEnroe and Patrick McEnroe were the defending champions, but Patrick McEnroe did not participate. John McEnroe played alongside Adriano Panatta, but lost in the group stage. Andr\u00e9s G\u00f3mez and Mark Woodforde won the title, defeating Mansour Bahrami and Pat Cash in the final, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233583-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Legends Over 45 Doubles, Draw, Group C\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233583-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Legends Over 45 Doubles, Draw, Group D\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233584-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Legends Under 45 Doubles\nAlbert Costa and Carlos Moy\u00e1 were the defending champions, but retired in the deciding tiebreak in the final against C\u00e9dric Pioline and Fabrice Santoro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233584-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Legends Under 45 Doubles, Draw, Group A\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233584-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Legends Under 45 Doubles, Draw, Group B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233585-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMax Mirnyi and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions, but chose not to compete together. Mirnyi competed with Horia Tec\u0103u, but lost in the second round to Micha\u00ebl Llodra and Nicolas Mahut, while Nestor competed with Robert Lindstedt, losing in the second round to Jonathan Dasni\u00e8res de Veigy and Florent Serra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233585-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan won the title, defeating Llodra and Mahut in the final, 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134). With this victory they earned their first multiple career Grand Slam set as a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThree-time defending champion Rafael Nadal defeated David Ferrer in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20132, 6\u20133 to win the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2013 French Open. It was his record-extending eighth French Open title and his twelfth major title overall. With his win in the final, Nadal recorded his 59th French Open match win, surpassing the previous record held by Guillermo Vilas and Roger Federer (who equaled Vilas' record with his fourth round win but lost in the quarterfinals). Nadal also became the first man in history to win any major eight times and tied with Roy Emerson for the third-most major titles of all time. He also tied with Max Decugis, who won eight titles at this event when it was only open to French club members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nIn the semifinal encounter between Nadal and Novak Djokovic, they played a notably long match which lasted 4 hours and 37 minutes. It was dubbed the best clay court match ever, and one of the greatest matches ever played. Nadal outlasted Djokovic to win 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20137(5-7), 9\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nFederer attempted to become the first man in the Open Era to achieve a double career Grand Slam, but he lost to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the quarterfinals. With his loss, a new French Open finalist was guaranteed from the bottom half of the draw; Ferrer emerged to become that player. This created the first all-Spanish Grand Slam final since 2002 and the first occasion since 2004 that two compatriots contested a major final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nDespite the victory, Nadal dropped one place down the rankings to world No. 5 following Ferrer's run to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Road to the final\nFor the first time in his career, Rafael Nadal lost a set in both of the first two rounds. In the semi-finals, he faced off against world number one Novak Djokovic. In an epic five setter, Nadal triumphed 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-7 (3-7), 9-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Road to the final\nDavid Ferrer advanced to the final of a Grand Slam for the first time in his career. He did not lose a single set in the tournament before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Final\nThird-seeded Nadal from Spain faced off against fourth-seeded David Ferrer in the finals of the French Open. Both players employed the same strategy, trying to win points from the baseline. Nadal won a break early in the first set, but lost it back quickly and had to fend off two other break points during the set. Nadal ending up winning the first set 6\u20133. Down 3\u20131 in the second set, Ferrer had four break points to get back into the set. However, Nadal fought them all off, winning the last point on a 31-shot rally, the longest of the match. From there he cruised to a 6\u20132 set victory. Aided by a Ferrer double fault on break point, Nadal took the third set 6\u20133 for a three set to none victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Final\nNadal had been dominant on clay during his career, but took seven months off from mid-2012 to February 2013 to recover from a knee injury. He showed few signs of the injury during the final as he tracked down balls from corner to corner and hit numerous topspin-laden winners. \"This one is very special one,\" said Nadal after the match. \"When you have period of time like I had, you realize that you don't know if you will have the chance to be back here with this trophy another time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Final\nThe two-hour sixteen-minute match was briefly interrupted by noisy protesters, one of whom ran onto the court with a lit flare. Tournament director Gilbert Ysern said security \"acted efficiently and quickly and handled [the situation] very well.\" Both players appeared to be rattled by the event, dropping serve immediately after it. \"I felt a little bit scared at the first moment because I didn't see what's going on. I just turned there and I watch a guy with some fire,\" remarked Nadal. Ferrer said the event did not affect his play. Ten people were arrested in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233586-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Final\nWith his win, Nadal became the first man to win the same Grand Slam event eight times. It was his 12th major overall, putting him tied for third on the all-time list behind Roger Federer (17) and Pete Sampras (14). He is 59\u20131 all time in Paris. Nadal broke the men's record for most victories at the French Open and improved to 20\u20134 against Ferrer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233587-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for men's singles at the 2013 French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233588-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nSania Mirza and Mahesh Bhupathi were the defending champions, but decided not to participate together. Mirza played alongside Robert Lindstedt, but lost in the first round to Cara Black and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, while Bhupathi competed with Casey Dellacqua, but lost to Anastasia Rodionova and Santiago Gonz\u00e1lez in the first round. Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k won the title, defeating Kristina Mladenovic and Daniel Nestor in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233589-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Doubles\nFr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Cattaneo and Shingo Kunieda were the defending champions. Cattaneo was not competing, while Kunieda played alongside St\u00e9phane Houdet and won the title 3\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20136] against Gordon Reid and Ronald Vink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233590-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Men's Singles\nSt\u00e9phane Houdet successfully defended the title by defeating Shingo Kunieda 7\u20135, 5\u20137, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233591-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Doubles\nMarjolein Buis and Esther Vergeer were the defending champions. Vergeer did not compete due to retirement, while Buis played alongside Lucy Shuker, but lost to Ellebrock and Walraven in the semifinals. Ellebrock and Walraven lost to Jiske Griffioen and Aniek van Koot 2\u20136, 3\u20136 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233592-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Wheelchair Women's Singles\nEsther Vergeer was the defending champion, but she retired. Sabine Ellerbrock defeated Jiske Griffioen 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233593-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSara Errani and Roberta Vinci were the defending champions, but lost in the final to Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina 5\u20137, 2\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233594-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Legends Doubles\nLindsay Davenport and Martina Hingis successfully defended their title by defeating Elena Dementieva and Martina Navratilova 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233594-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Legends Doubles, Draw, Group A\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233594-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Legends Doubles, Draw, Group B\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233595-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams defeated defending champion Maria Sharapova, 6\u20134, 6\u20134, to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2013 French Open. Williams' victory earned her a Double Career Grand Slam in women's singles, her 16th Grand Slam singles title, and her second French Open title. She also became the oldest woman to win the French Open (a record she surpassed herself in 2015) and set a record for the longest gap between French Open titles. With her victory, Williams expanded her season winning streak to 31 matches dating back to the Miami Open. Williams only dropped one set the entire tournament, to Svetlana Kuznetsova in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233595-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThe 2013 French Open final was the first time at any Grand Slam event since the 2004 Australian Open that the top two seeded players had played each other in the final. It was the first French Open since 1995 that the top two seeded players played each other in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233595-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Road to the final\nSince winning the French Open in 2002, Serena Williams had not advanced to the final of the event, last semifinal was in 2003 (lost to Henin). In 2008, she was the only former champion left in the draw, she lost to Katarina Srebotnik in the third round. In 2012, she lost in the first round to Virginie Razzano, a player ranked in the 100s. In 2013, however, she made quick work of her opponents advancing to the finals with an average match length of less than one hour and fifteen minutes. She had problems in just one match, in quarterfinals against Svetlana Kuznetsova, when she was down 2\u20130 and break points in third set. However, she won six of last seven games to close out the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233595-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Road to the final\nAfter reaching quarterfinals without dropping set, Sharapova needed two three-setters to reach final. First, she met 18th seed Jelena Jankovi\u0107 and dropped the first set 6\u20130. In that set Sharapova committed 20 errors to just two from Jankovic. However, Jankovic lost her opening service game in the second set, which looked to be key for Sharapova as she could cool down after a horrible first set. In the semifinal she faced third seed Victoria Azarenka. Sharapova won the first set convincingly, but lost the second in the same fashion. But she eventually eased to a 5\u20132 lead in the final set and finished the match two games later to reach her second French Open final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233595-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Final\nFirst seeded Williams faced off against second seeded Maria Sharapova in the women's singles final. Williams came out aggressive, charging the net on the first point. Her aggression set up a triple break-point, but Sharapova fought back and held serve. She then broke Williams for a 2\u20130 lead. Williams broke back in the next game, then broke Sharapova twice more for a 6\u20134 first set. In the second set, Sharapova fought off five break points to hold in her opening serve. After Williams held serve, Sharapova dropped a break with two consecutive errors in the fourth game. From there, Williams went on to take a 5\u20134 lead with her serve coming up. She finished off the match with her tenth ace of the day. \"She's always had a big serve,\" said Sharapova. \"I think her second serve is better than it was in the past.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233595-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Final\nFor Williams, it was her 31st consecutive victory, a career best. She has beaten Sharapova 13 times in a row. When asked by a reporter if she still wanted to retire at her peak, Williams replied \"That's my goal, but have I peaked yet?\" Commentary by Simon Briggs published by The Daily Telegraph described Williams' performance as \"almost flawless\". \"Sharapova actually played a fine match,\" said Briggs. \"But it is so difficult to attack an in-form Williams because she can shut you down with the quality of her serve.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233595-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Final\nBy winning the 1 hour 46 minute match, Williams completed her second career Grand Slam. It was her 16th major title overall, moving her within six of Steffi Graf's modern era record of 22 such wins, and within eight of Margaret Court's all-time record. She also became the oldest women ever to win the French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233596-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Polynesian legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in French Polynesia on 21 April and 5 May 2013. The result was a victory for the Tahoera'a Huiraatira party, which won 38 of the 57 seats in the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233596-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Polynesian legislative election, Electoral system\nThe election was held using a two round system. In the first round, parties were required to cross a threshold of 12.5% in order to participate in the second round, although parties receiving between 5% and 12.5% were allowed to form an alliance for the second round with a party that did qualify. In the second round, 38 seats are allocated by proportional representation, with the party receiving the most votes gaining an additional 19 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233596-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Polynesian legislative election, Campaign\nThe Union for Democracy alliance was continued for the elections, consisting of Aia Api, Here Ai'a, Tavini Huiraatira, Tapura Amui No Raromatai and Tapura Amui No Te Faatereraa Manahune \u2013 Tuhaa Pae. A new alliance, A Tia Porinetia, was formed for the election, which included To Tatou Aia and several smaller parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233596-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 French Polynesian legislative election, Campaign\nAfter being knocked out in the first round, Emile Vernier, leader of the Rally for the Respect of the Polynesian Population, gave his backing to A Tia Porinetia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233597-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Road Cycling Cup\nThe 2013 French Road Cycling Cup was the 22nd edition of the French Road Cycling Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233597-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French Road Cycling Cup\nCompared to the previous edition, the Fl\u00e8che d'Emeraude was replaced by the Tour de la Somme. The defending champion from 2012 was Samuel Dumoulin, who won for a second consecutive time after a third place in the final event allowed him to overtake Bryan Coquard and Anthony Geslin in the overall standings. Bryan Coquard still won the youth classification, while FDJ.fr won the teams competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233597-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French Road Cycling Cup, Points standings, Individual\nIn order to be eligible for the classification, riders either had to be French or competed for a French-licensed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233597-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 French Road Cycling Cup, Points standings, Young rider classification\nIn order to be eligible for the classification, riders had to be younger than 25 and either had to be French or competed for a French-licensed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233597-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 French Road Cycling Cup, Points standings, Teams\nOnly French teams are eligible to be classified in the teams classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233598-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French Super Series\nThe 2013 French Super Series was a top level badminton competition which took place from October 22, 2013 to October 27, 2013 in Paris, France. It was the tenth BWF Super Series competition on the 2013 BWF Super Series schedule. The total purse for the event was $200,000. A qualification round was held for all five disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233599-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French White Paper on Defence and National Security\nThe 2013 French White Paper on Defense and National Security is the most recent defence reform of the French Armed Forces and the fourth ever defence white paper in French history. It was released on the 29 April 2013. The white paper reaffirmed France's commitment to NATO, the security of the European Union as well as its enhanced defence-relationship with the United Kingdom after the 2010 Lancaster House treaties on defence and security co-operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233600-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 French motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 French motorcycle Grand Prix was the fourth round of the 2013 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. It took place on the weekend of 17\u201319 May 2013 at the Bugatti Circuit in Le Mans, France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233600-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 French motorcycle Grand Prix, Classification, Moto2\nThe race was red-flagged on lap 24 of 26 due to rain; the final results were taken from the end of lap 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233600-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 French 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233601-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team represented California State University, Fresno in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bulldogs were by second-year head coach Tim DeRuyter and played their home games at Bulldog Stadium. They were members of the Mountain West Conference in the West Division. They finished the season 11\u20132, 7\u20131 in Mountain West play to win the West Division. They defeated Utah State in the inaugural Mountain West Championship Game to be crowned Mountain West champions. They were invited to the Las Vegas Bowl where they were defeated by USC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233601-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, at Colorado\nThis game was canceled due to effects from the Boulder Creek flash floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233601-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, USC\u2013Las Vegas Bowl\nUSC technically vacated the win in 2005. This is the second time the two teams have met in a bowl game with the other coming in the 1992 Freedom Bowl. Tracy Jones of the American Athletic Conference is the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233601-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, USC\u2013Las Vegas Bowl\n1st quarter scoring: USC - Marqise Lee 10-yard pass from Cody Kessler (Andre Heidari kick); FS - Isaiah Burse 8-yard pass from Derek Carr (Colin McGuire kick blocked); USC - Nelson Agholor 40-yard pass from Kessler (Heidari kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233601-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, USC\u2013Las Vegas Bowl\n2nd quarter scoring: USC - Agholor 17-yard pass from Kessler (Heidari kick); USC - Javorius Allen 24-yard run (Heidari kick); USC - Lee 40-yard pass from Kessler (Heidari kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233601-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, USC\u2013Las Vegas Bowl\n3rd quarter scoring: FS - Davante Adams 23-yard pass from Carr (McGuire kick); USC - Heidari 39-yard field goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233601-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Fresno State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, USC\u2013Las Vegas Bowl\n4th quarter scoring: FS - Derron Smith 41-yard interception return (McGuire kick)\u00a0; USC - Allen 1-yard run (Heidari kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233602-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Friuli-Venezia Giulia regional election\nThe Friuli-Venezia Giulia regional election of 2013 took place on 21\u201322 April 2013 in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region of Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233602-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Friuli-Venezia Giulia regional election\nDebora Serracchiani, Socialist MEP and regional leader of the Democratic Party (PD), narrowly defeated incumbent Renzo Tondo of The People of Freedom (PdL) 39.4% to 39.0%; Saverio Galluccio of the Five Star Movement (M5S) came third with 19.2% of the vote. Serracchiani was the second woman to hold the office of President of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, after Alessandra Guerra of Lega Nord Friuli (LNF) in 1994\u20131995. The turnout was a record low as a mere 50.5% of eligible voters turned out to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233602-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Friuli-Venezia Giulia regional election\nIn the election, the PD was the most voted list with 26.8% (resulting in 20 seats, including Serracchiani's), but the combined result of the PdL and its sister-list Responsible Autonomy (comprising PdL members, centre-right independents and the Friulian Autonomist Movement) was 30.7% (resulting in a total of 13 seats including Tondo's). Other than LNF (8.3%, 3 seats), two other regional parties, Citizens for the President (5.3%, 3 seats) and Slovene Union (1.4%, 1 seat, Slovene minority), gained seats in the Regional Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233602-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Friuli-Venezia Giulia regional election\nOn the same day of the regional election, also provincial and municipal elections were held. LNF's Pietro Fontanini was re-elected President of the Province of Udine by beating PD's Andrea Lerussi 50.0% to 41.1%. In the occasion, the separatist Friulian Front made its debut in electoral politics with 5.7% of the vote. In Udine no candidate for mayor passed the required 50%; a run-off will be held on 5\u20136 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km\nThe 2013 Fuji GT 300km was the sixth round of the 2013 Super GT season. It took place on September 8, 2013 at the Fuji Speedway in Oyama, Shizuoka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Background\nNISMO drivers Ronnie Quintarelli and Masataka Yanagida led the GT500 championship standings by one point over Impul's Jo\u00e3o Paulo de Oliveira and Tsugio Matsuda, while Team Mugen led the GT300 championship over R&D Sport's Subaru BRZ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Background\nA total of 40 cars were entered for the race, all 38 cars that raced at Suzuka were in the Fuji race with their normal 2-driver lineups, while the Tomei Sports Nissan GT-R GT3 returned to the series after missing Suzuka, as did the Dijon Racing Callaway Corvette Z06.R GT3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Practice\nThe #1 MOLA Nissan GT-R was the fastest car in the GT500 class, while the #6 Team LeMans Lexus SC430 was 2nd fastest. In GT300 the #30 apr Nissan GT-R GT3 was fastest from two other Nissan GT-R's, the #3 NDDP Racing in 2nd and the #5 Team Mach in 3rd. The #50 Arnage Aston Martin V12 Vantage GT3 had suspension trouble during the session and only managed 23rd fastest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Qualifying\nQualifying was held on September 7, 2013. Daiki Sasaki was the fastest driver in the first session for the GT300 cars from Yuhki Nakayama and Katsumasa Chiyo. The team ranked 4th in points, the #52 with Takeshi Tsuchiya driving only managed 16th fastest in the session. In the first session for GT500 cars Kohei Hirate was fastest from Yuhi Sekiguchi and Yuji Kunimoto. Neither the NISMO team or the Impul teams, ranked 1st and 2nd in the championship made the second session for the top 8 cars, Yanagida put in a laptime good enough for only 9th place, Oliveira was 14th fastest for Impul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Qualifying\nIn the second GT300 qualifying session Shinichi Takagi was fastest with a 1:38.773, giving the #55 ARTA Honda CR-Z its second pole position of the season and the third for the Honda CR-Z. Kazuki Hoshino was 2nd fastest in the #3 NDDP Racing Nissan GT-R GT3, 0.425 seconds slower than Takagi's laptime. Hideki Mutoh qualified the championship leading car in 3rd place despite carrying 114\u00a0kg of weight ballast from the team's results during the season. The team that won the 500km race earlier in the season, the #31 apr Toyota Prius was 9th fastest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Qualifying\nIn the second session for GT500 cars the #38 Team ZENT Cerumo Lexus SC430 with Yuji Tachikawa driving was again fastest in Q2 and gave Tachikawa his 18th pole position in Super GT, and his 8th at Fuji Speedway. Tachikawa's lap of a 1:32.548 was 0.272 seconds faster than Andrea Caldarelli in 2nd. Kazuki Nakajima was 6th fastest in the team that won the 500\u00a0km race earlier in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Race\nThe race was held on September 8, 2013, starting at 2:00pm local time. Kohei Hirate led the field from pole position in GT500 while in GT300 Daiki Sasaki passed Shinichi Takagi for the race lead, the polesitting car having to change its engine before the race. Takagi would drop to fourth place but contact with Bj\u00f6rn Wirdheim caused bodywork on the CR-Z to rub on the rear wheels, forcing the team to make a pitstop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Race\nOn lap 19 Ryo Michigami driving the #32 Nakajima Racing Honda HSV-010 GT had a left-rear tyre puncture while travelling down the main straight, spun and crashed into the guardrail. With debris scattered over the circuit the safety car was brought out on lap 21. During the safety car all the GT500 teams with the exception of the #24 Kondo Racing Nissan GT-R decided to make their pitstops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Race\nThe #1 MOLA GT-R managed to get Yuhi Sekiguchi into the lead in the pitstops, from the #17 HSV-010 with Koudai Tsukakoshi driving and Daisuke Ito in the #37 SC430 in 4th, however Sekiguchi was deemed to have been in violation of the restart procedure and were later given a drive-through penalty. The #4 GSR Hatsune Miku BMW started 5th in GT300 but were able to take the lead of the cars that had made their pitstop under the safety car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Race\nThe #100 Team Kunimitsu HSV-010 retired following the restart due to radiator damage, while the #19 Bandoh SC430 retired from steering rod damage due to contact with a GT300 car. Juichi Wakisaka in the #39 SARD SC430 was given a drive-through penalty for a collision with Kazuki Nakajima in the #36 TOM'S SC430. On lap 43 Yuji Tachikawa managed to get the #38 back into the race lead after passing Tsukakoshi and the lead #24 GT-R with Hironobu Yasuda, who was slowing to make his pitstop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233603-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 300km, Report, Race\nTachikawa would hold off Tsukakoshi in the slippery conditions for the remaining 22 laps and win his 15th GT500 race. Nobuteru Taniguchi in the #4 BMW was unchallenged following the safety car, once the cars ahead pitted he was in the lead, and won by a margin of over 47 seconds over the #31 apr Toyota Prius.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233604-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fuji GT 500km\nThe 2013 Fuji GT 500km was the second round of the 2013 Super GT season. It took place on April 29, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233605-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup\nThe 2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the thirteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Fukuoka, Japan, on 6\u201312 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233605-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233605-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry by a lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233606-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMonique Adamczak and Stephanie Bengson were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their titles the year after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233606-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Doubles\nJunri Namigata and Erika Sema won the all-Japanese final, defeating Rika Fujiwara and Akiko Omae 7\u20135, 3\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233607-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Singles\nCasey Dellacqua was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to defend her title the year after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233607-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Fukuoka International Women's Cup \u2013 Singles\nOns Jabeur won the title, defeating An-Sophie Mestach in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233608-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Furman Paladins football team\nThe 2013 Furman Paladins football team represented Furman University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by third year head coach Bruce Fowler and played their home games at Paladin Stadium. They were a member of the Southern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233609-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Futsal Confederations Cup\nThe 2013 Futsal Confederations Cup, which was called the Intercontinental Cup for this tournament, was held in Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233609-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Futsal Confederations Cup\nHaving participated in 2013 Grand Prix de Futsal, many continental championships are tired of playing another tournament, so Colombia gave up their right of hosting this tournament. Only some invitees come to Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233610-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 F\u00f3rmula Truck season\nThe 2013 F\u00f3rmula Truck season was the 18th F\u00f3rmula Truck season. It begin on March 10 at Tarum\u00e3 and ended on December 8 at Bras\u00edlia. All ten rounds will count towards the Brazilian title, with four rounds counting towards the South American title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233610-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 F\u00f3rmula Truck season, Teams and drivers\nAll drivers were Brazilian-registered, excepting Alex Caffi, who raced under Italian racing license.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233610-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 F\u00f3rmula Truck season, Calendar and results\nA ten-round calendar was announced on 10 December 2012. All races were held in Brazil, excepting round at Aut\u00f3dromo Oscar Cabal\u00e9n, that was held in Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233610-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 F\u00f3rmula Truck season, Championship standings, Drivers' standings, Brazilian\n1 2 3 4 5 refers to the classification of the drivers on the yellow flag scheduled, where bonus points are awarded 5\u20134\u20133\u20132\u20131 and the top five drivers in race ensures a place on the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233611-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 G20 Saint Petersburg summit\nThe 2013 G20 Saint Petersburg summit was the eighth meeting of the G20 heads of government/heads of state. The hosting venue was the Constantine Palace in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on 5\u20136 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233611-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 G20 Saint Petersburg summit, Syria\nThe summit was dominated by questions regarding the Syrian civil war and any potential international reaction to the Ghouta chemical attacks. The summit came after U.S.-led efforts to obtain a UN Security Council resolution authorising military strikes against the Assad government had failed due to Russian and Chinese opposition. The House of Commons of the United Kingdom had defeated a motion regarding UK involvement in any strike on 30 August and U.S. politicians were debating potential action as the summit was ongoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233611-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 G20 Saint Petersburg summit, Syria\nMedia billed the summit as a contest between U.S. President Barack Obama, trying to garner support for military action, and Russian President Vladimir Putin in opposition to any such action. 11 countries signed a U.S.-authored statement blaming and condemning the Assad government for the attacks and calling for a \"strong international response\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233611-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 G20 Saint Petersburg summit, Finance policy meetings\nRussia, as this year's chair, hosted the G20 finance ministers and central bank governors' meeting in Moscow on 15 and 16 February 2013. While preparing for the September summit, the most pressing subject addressed \u2013 \"desperately\" according to Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty \u2013 was protectionist actions such as competitive devaluations. Japan, represented by finance minister Taro Aso, \"escape[d] criticism\" for the 20% drop in the yen that had stemmed from its recent reflationary policies. The \"nations declared ... there would be no currency war and deferred plans to set new debt-cutting targets, underlining broad concern about the fragile state of the world economy\", per Reuters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233611-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 G20 Saint Petersburg summit, Finance policy meetings\nAnother meeting of the same participants was held in Moscow on 18 and 19 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233611-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 G20 Saint Petersburg summit, Attendance\nThis meeting was the second time an Australian Prime Minister could not be in attendance, Kevin Rudd being represented by Foreign Minister Bob Carr, owing to the timing of a federal election on 7 September. In 2010, Rudd had been unable to attend when he was displaced as prime minister two days before the 2010 G20 Toronto summit, at which Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan then represented Australia. During the summit, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh focused on the ongoing economic crisis and urged the G20 nations to pay more attention to their monetary policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233612-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GCC U-17 Championship\nThe 2013 GCC U-17 Championship took place in Qatar from September 3 - September 12. It was the 10th edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233613-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GCC U-23 Championship\nThe 2013 GCC U-23 Championship was the fifth edition of GCC U-23 Championship, taking place in Bahrain between 15 August and 24 August 2013. It was the first time that Bahrain had been hosts. Six nations entered. The 2013 edition was officially known as the Huawei GCC National Teams Under-23 Championship owing to sponsorship by Huawei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400\nThe 2013 GEICO 400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on September 15, 2013, at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Illinois, United States. Contested over 267 laps on the 1.500-mile (2.414\u00a0km) tri-oval, it was the twenty-seventh in the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, as well as the first race in the ten-race Chase for the Sprint Cup, which ends the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400\nMatt Kenseth of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his career best sixth of the season, teammate Kyle Busch finished second, Kevin Harvick, Kurt Busch, and Jimmie Johnson rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400, Report, Background\nChicagoland Speedway is a four-turn tri-oval track that is 1.500 miles (2.414\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are each banked at 18 degrees and have a turn width of 55 feet (17\u00a0m). The racetrack has a grandstand capacity of 75,000 spectators, and has a 11,050-square-foot (1,027\u00a0m2) garage area. Brad Keselowski was the race's defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Matt Kenseth led the Drivers' Championship with 2,015 points, with Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch tied for second place with 2,012. Kevin Harvick and Carl Edwards had a total of 2,006 points, while Joey Logano and Greg Biffle were sixth and seventh with 2,003. Clint Bowyer, and Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Kurt Busch, Kasey Kahne, Ryan Newman, and Jeff Gordon rounded out the Chase field with 2,000 points each. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 178 points, ten points ahead of Toyota. Ford, with 141 points, was in the third position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, scheduled on September 13, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held a day later on September 14, 2013, were 55 and 50 minutes long. In the first practice session, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. was the quickest with a best lap time of 28.774 seconds. Kurt Busch followed in second, ahead of Edwards and Johnson in third and fourth. Juan Pablo Montoya was scored fifth quickest with a best lap time of 28.853, seven-tenths slower than Stenhouse. Logano, Biffle, Aric Almirola, Brad Keselowski, and Bowyer completed the top-ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nAfter the first practice session, NASCAR discussed the second half of what became known as Spingate, the race fixing scandal that took place during the last ten laps of the previous week's race in Richmond, which was still under investigation. NASCAR had uncovered radio chatter between two Roush Fenway Racing affiliated teams (Penske and Front Row). At 2:55 PM CT, NASCAR held a press conference to discuss the results and placed both Ford teams in question on probation for the rest of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nFurthermore, after discussions that took place because of the first part of the rule where which Michael Waltrip Racing ordered Brian Vickers to pit in order to help Martin Truex, Jr. get into the Chase, and later disqualifying the #56 of Truex from the Chase while reinstating the #39 of Ryan Newman, NASCAR had no choice but to add Jeff Gordon, who was the victim of both manipulations, to the Chase as the 13th team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nChairman Brian France has always had the power to expand the Chase field in exceptional circumstances, and decided to invoke this power in order to add Gordon to the Chase. According to France, \"There were too many things that went on Saturday night that provided a clear disadvantage (to the #24 team)\" for him not to take this action. Ironically, Joey Logano, one of the drivers involved in the controversy, set a new track qualifying record, qualifying on pole with a time of 28.509 seconds, and speed of 189.414\u00a0mph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233614-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 GEICO 400, Results, Race results\nPoints include 3 Chase for the Sprint Cup points for winning, 1 point for leading a lap, and 1 point for most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3\n2013 GM3 is a micro-asteroid, classified as near-Earth object of the Aten group, approximately 20 meters in diameter. It was first observed on 3 April 2013, by astronomers of the Mount Lemmon Survey conducted at the Mount Lemmon Observatory near Tucson, Arizona, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3\nThe asteroid has only been observed for 12 days. Based on a crude orbit determination, it has an exceptionally low MOID and may approach Earth at one lunar distance on 14 April 2026. Alternative calculations gave a much shorter distance with a possible minimum transit at approximately 8,600 kilometers above Earth's surface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3, Orbit and classification\n2013 GM3 is a member of the dynamical Aten group, which are Earth-crossing asteroids and one of the smaller subgroups of near-Earth objects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3, Orbit and classification\nIt orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.60\u20131.08\u00a0AU once every 9 months (279 days; semi-major axis of 0.84\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.29 and an inclination of nearly 0\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic. The body's observation arc begins with a precovery taken by DECam at the Chilean V\u00edctor M. Blanco Telescope on 1 April 2013, just two nights prior to its first official observation at Mount Lemmon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3, Orbit and classification, Close approaches\n2013 GM3 has a poorly determined orbit with an uncertainty parameter of 7, due to its short 12-day observation arc. Based on the preliminary orbital elements, the object has an Earth minimum orbital intersection distance of 0.0000948\u00a0AU (14,200\u00a0km), which translates into 0.037 lunar distances (LD). Due to its small size, that is, an absolute magnitude fainter than 22, it is not classified as a potentially hazardous asteroid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 52], "content_span": [53, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3, Orbit and classification, Close approaches\nOn 14 April 2026, the object is currently predicted to approach Earth within a nominal distance of 0.00262382\u00a0AU (393,000\u00a0km; 244,000\u00a0mi) or 1.02\u00a0LD. It will also pass the Moon at a nominal distance of 0.00036017\u00a0AU (53,900\u00a0km; 33,500\u00a0mi). Conversely, Italian astronomers Piero Sicoli and Francesco Manca at the Sormano Astronomical Observatory estimated a close approach with Earth at a nominal distance of 68,420 kilometers and a possible minimum transit at approximately 8,600 kilometers above Earth's surface for that very same date. The two astronomers acknowledge that their orbital computations still contain large uncertainties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 52], "content_span": [53, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3, Physical characteristics\n2013 GM3 has not been observed by any of the space-based surveys such as the Infrared Astronomical Satellite IRAS, the Japanese Akari satellite, and NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer with its subsequent NEOWISE mission. Based on a generic magnitude-to-diameter conversion, 2013 GM3 measures approximately 17 meter in diameter using an absolute magnitude of 26.3 and assuming an albedo of 0.20, which is a typical figure for the common, stony S-type asteroids. Astronomers at the Sormano Astronomical Observatory estimate a similar diameter of 25 meters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233615-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 GM3, Physical characteristics\nAs of 2018, no rotational lightcurve of 2013 GM3 has been obtained from photometric observations. The asteroid's rotation period, shape and spin axis remain unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233616-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in\nThe 2013 GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in was the 60th edition of the GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in cycle race and was held on 30 March 2013. The race started and finished in Estella. The race was won by Simon \u0160pilak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233617-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GP Ouest\u2013France\nThe 2013 GP Ouest-France was the 77th edition of the GP Ouest-France, a single-day cycling race. It was held on 1 September 2013, over a distance of 243\u00a0km (151.0\u00a0mi), starting and finishing in Plouay, France. It was the twenty-fourth race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233617-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GP Ouest\u2013France\nThe race was won by Lampre\u2013Merida's Filippo Pozzato, Pozzato finished ahead RadioShack\u2013Leopard's Giacomo Nizzolo and Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Samuel Dumoulin, who completed the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233617-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 GP Ouest\u2013France, Teams\nAs the GP Ouest-France was a UCI World Tour event, all 19 UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. Five other squads were given wildcard places into the race, and as such, formed the event's 24-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233618-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GP de Plouay\nThe 2013 GP de Plouay will be the 13th running on the GP de Plouay, a women's road race in Plouay, France. It will be held on 31 August 2013 over a distance of 135 kilometres (83.9 miles) and is the eight and final race of the 2013 UCI Women's Road World Cup season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233618-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GP de Plouay\nThe number 3 of the 2013 UCI Road World Cup standings, Ellen van Dijk, did not participate in this race. After the race the top 3 of the UCI World Cup Standings remained the same. Marianne Vos won the World Cup, ahead of Emma Johansson and Ellen van Dijk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233619-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GP2 Series\nThe 2013 GP2 Series season was the forty-seventh season of the second-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also ninth season under the GP2 Series moniker, a support series to the 2013 Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233619-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GP2 Series\nThe 2013 season saw three new teams\u00a0\u2014 Russian Time, Hilmer Motorsport and MP Motorsport\u00a0\u2014 join the championship, replacing iSport International, Ocean Racing Technology and Scuderia Coloni. 2013 was scheduled to be the last season in which teams compete with the third-generation GP2 car\u00a0\u2014 the Dallara GP2/11\u00a0\u2014 which was introduced in 2011, but series organisers decided to keep the GP2/11 for another three-year cycle in a bid to keep costs down. The season saw 10 different winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233619-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 GP2 Series\nChampion Fabio Leimer took 3 race wins, as runner-up Sam Bird took 5 victories, Jolyon Palmer took 2 race wins, as did Jon Lancaster. Stefano Coletti took 3 sprint race wins. Adrian Quaife-Hobbs, Nathanael Berthon, Marcus Ericsson and Alexander Rossi each took 1 race win, and ART Grand Prix driver James Calado took 2 race wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233619-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 GP2 Series, Teams and drivers\nTwenty-six drivers representing thirteen teams was scheduled to take part in the championship. The driver who is declared champion received a Formula One test with tyre supplier Pirelli as their prize, as well as qualifying for an FIA Superlicence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233619-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 GP2 Series, 2013 schedule\nThe calendar for the 2013 series was unveiled on 19 December 2012. The season consisted of twenty-two races in support of eleven Formula One Grands Prix throughout the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233619-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 GP2 Series, Results and standings, Drivers' championship\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in the Feature race, and to the top 8 classified finishers in the Sprint race. The pole-sitter in the feature race also received four points, and two points were given to the driver who set the fastest lap inside the top ten in both the feature and sprint races. No extra points were awarded to the pole-sitter in the sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233620-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GP3 Series\nThe 2013 GP3 Series was the fourth season of the third-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also fourth season under the moniker of GP3 Series, a motor racing feeder series for Formula One and sister series GP2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233620-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GP3 Series\nFollowing a three-year cycle, the previous GP3 chassis was replaced by a brand new car, the GP3/13, built by Italian racing car manufacturer Dallara. The 280\u00a0bhp turbo-charged engine used from 2010 to 2012 was upgraded to a 400\u00a0bhp naturally-aspirated V6 unit, which will be used until end of 2015. Series organisers have anticipated that the new cars became up to three seconds per lap faster than the GP3/10 chassis; these estimations proved to be accurate during pre-season testing at the Aut\u00f3dromo do Estoril. The re-structuring of the category coincides with the series' organisers' desire to ease the transition between the GP3 Series and parent series GP2, thereby allowing rookie drivers more opportunities to succeed in GP2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233620-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 GP3 Series\nAER was selected as official engine supplier of GP3 Series began in 2013 until 2015 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233620-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 GP3 Series\nThe championship title was secured by Daniil Kvyat with a race to spare after three consecutive feature race wins in Spa, Monza and Abu Dhabi. He had a thirty-point advantage on ART Grand Prix's Facu Regalia, who finished as runner-up. His teammate Conor Daly, who was the feature race winner at Valencia. Tio Ellinas, who led the drivers' standings until the first race at Spa, bookended the season with victories in both the first race and the final race of the season. Jack Harvey completed the top five, helping ART Grand Prix to claim the teams' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233620-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 GP3 Series, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers competed in the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233620-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 GP3 Series, Calendar\nThe official calendar for the 2013 series was unveiled on 19 December 2012. The format remains largely unchanged from 2012, with seven rounds of the championship in support of the 2013 Formula One season and sister series GP2, plus the addition of a stand-alone round at Circuit Ricardo Tormo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233620-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 GP3 Series, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers in the race 1, and to the top 8 classified finishers in the race 2. The pole-sitter in the race 1 also received four points, and two points were given to the driver who set the fastest lap inside the top ten in both the race 1 and race 2. No extra points were awarded to the pole-sitter in the race 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233621-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GT Asia Series\nThe 2013 GT Asia Series season was the fourth season of the GT Asia Series championship. It began on 11 May at Twin Ring Motegi and finished on November 17 at the Guia Circuit after eleven races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233621-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GT Asia Series, Championships, Drivers Championship\nOnly the best 9 results counted for the drivers championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233622-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GT4 European Trophy\nThe 2013 Avon GT4 European Trophy season was the 6th season of the GT4 European Cup. The trophy name was carried out only this season. The season began on 26 May at Silverstone, and finished on 13 October at Zandvoort after five race weekends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233623-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gagarin Cup playoffs\nThe 2013 Gagarin Cup playoffs of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) has begun on February 20, 2013, after the conclusion of the 2012\u201313 KHL regular season. The 2013 Gagarin Cup Finals started in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233623-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the regular season, the standard 16 teams qualified for the playoffs. The SKA Saint Petersburg became the Western Conference regular season champions and Continental Cup winners with 115 points. The Ak Bars Kazan were the Eastern Conference regular season champions, finishing the season with 104 points. Lev Prague and Slovan Bratislava both made the playoffs for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233623-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Draw\nIn each round, the highest remaining seed in each conference is matched against the lowest remaining seed. The higher-seeded team is awarded home ice advantage. In the Gagarin Cup Final series, home ice is determined based on regular season points. Each best-of-seven series follows a 2\u20132\u20131\u20131\u20131 format: the higher-seeded team plays at home for games one and two (plus five and seven if necessary), and the lower-seeded team is at home for games three and four (and if necessary, game six).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233623-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Draw\nDuring the first three rounds home ice is determined by seeding number within the Conference, not position on the bracket. In the Finals the team with better seeding number has home ice advantage. If the seeding numbers are equal, the regular season record is taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233623-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Draw, Player statistics, 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, 75], "content_span": [76, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233623-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gagarin Cup playoffs, Draw, Player statistics, Playoff leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SOL = Shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233624-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Galway Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Galway Senior Hurling Championship was the 116th staging of the Galway Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1887. The championship began on 28 April 2013 and ended on 28 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233624-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Galway Senior Hurling Championship\nSt. Thomas's were the defending champions, however, they were defeated in the semi-final stage. Portumna won the title, following a 3-12 to 0-14 defeat of Loughrea in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233625-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gamba Osaka season\nThe 2013 Gamba Osaka season saw Gamba Osaka compete in J. League Division 2 following their shock relegation the previous year. As such they did not compete in the 2013 J. League Cup, but did participate in the 2013 Emperor's Cup in addition to their 2013 J. League Division 2 fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233625-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gamba Osaka season\nMaintaining the bulk of the previous season's squad including Japanese internationals, captain End\u014d and defenders Akira Kaji and Yasuyuki Konno, Gamba were able to make their stay in J. League 2 a short one and were crowned champions in November 2013 following a season long title race with neighbours Vissel Kobe who had also been relegated along with Gamba the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233625-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gamba Osaka season\nTakashi Usami returned to the club in mid-season following a loan-spell in Germany and his goals as well as those from Brazilians Leandro and Adi Rocha saw Gamba finish the season with 87 points and 99 goals to their credit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233625-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gamba Osaka season, J.League 2 Results, Match Day Line-Ups\nThe following players appeared for Gamba Osaka during 2013 J. League 2:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233625-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gamba Osaka season, J.League 2 Results, Match Day Line-Ups\n= Substitute on, = Substitute Off, = Number of goals scored, = Yellow Card and = Red Card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233625-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gamba Osaka season, Emperor's Cup Results, Match Day Line-Ups\n= Substitute on, = Substitute Off, = Number of goals scored, = Yellow Card and = Red Card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233626-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Games of the Small States of Europe\nThe 2013 Games of the Small States of Europe, also known as the XV Games of the Small States of Europe, were held in Luxembourg City and surrounding areas. The slogan, as well as the logo, was \"Are you ready for the Games?\" The opening ceremony was held at the Stade Josy Barthel on 27 May; the closing ceremony was held at the Neum\u00fcnster Abbey on 1 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233626-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Games of the Small States of Europe, Games, Sports\nNote: Basketball and artistic gymnastics were not contested in the 2011 Games of the Small States of Europe. However, squash was dropped for this year's Games, also from 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233627-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gangwon FC season\nThe 2013 season is Gangwon FC's fifth season in the K League Classic in South Korea. Gangwon FC is competing in K League Classic and Korean FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233627-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gangwon FC season, 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233627-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gangwon FC season, Current 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233627-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gangwon FC season, Match results, K League Classic, Relegation/Promotion Playoff\nGangwon FC lost 2\u20134 on aggregate and relegated 2014 K League Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 85], "content_span": [86, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions\nThe 2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions was a singles-only tennis tournament that was played on indoor hard courts. The tournament was sponsored by Turkish construction firm Garanti Koza (the first year of a two-year deal). It was the fifth edition of the tournament and was part of the 2013 WTA Tour. The 2013 edition was the second to be held in Sofia at the Arena Armeec. The tournament was played between October 29 and November 3. Nadia Petrova was the defending champion, but she did not qualify this year, nor did she receive a wildcard into the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Tournament\nThe 2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions was the fifth edition of the event and the second to take place in Sofia. The tournament is run by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) and is part of the 2013 WTA Tour. It is the season ending championships for players who have won one of the WTA International tournaments but have not qualified for the WTA Championships. The Tournament consisted of a singles draw of eight players (including two Wild Cards, if applicable) in a round robin format determined by the WTA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Tournament, Format\nThe singles event featured eight players in a round robin event, split into two groups of four. Over the first four days of competition, each player met the other three players in their group, with the top two in each group advancing to the semifinals. The first-placed player in one group met the second-placed player in the other group, and vice versa. The winners of each semifinal met in the championship match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Tournament, Format, Round robin tie-breaking methods\nThe final standings of each group shall be determined by the first of the following methods that apply:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 99], "content_span": [100, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Prize money and points\nThe total prize money for the 2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions was 750,000 United States dollars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying\nThe six highest-ranked players who have captured at least one International tournament during the year and who are not participating in singles at the year-end WTA Championships in Istanbul or the finals of the Fed Cup will automatically qualify for the event, plus two wildcards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nWozniacki qualified with victory in the final international series event of the season in Luxembourg. The Dane decided, although she would be the number one seed, not to compete and instead only focus her attentions on being an alternate at the WTA Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nVinci qualified by winning two international series tournaments, in Katowice and Palermo, respectively, but decided to compete in the Fed Cup final instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nHalep is having a breakthrough year, entering the top 15 and winning her first title after previously losing three finals between 2010 and 2012. The Romanian won an impressive number of five titles in the year. The first was on the N\u00fcrnberger Versicherungscup defeating German Andrea Petkovic 6\u20133, 6\u20133, which gave her entry to the event. The following week she claimed the title on the grass courts of the Topshelf Open defeating Kirsten Flipkens 6\u20134, 6\u20132. Halep claimed her third title at the Budapest Grand Prix defeating Austrian Yvonne Meusburger in three sets 6\u20133, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nShe won her biggest title so far at the New Haven Open at Yale her first Premier title defeating Petra Kvitov\u00e1 6\u20132, 6\u20132. Halep also reached the semifinals Internazionali BNL d'Italia as a qualifier, but lost to world no. 1 Serena Williams. She also lost to Serena Williams at the quarterfinals of the Western & Southern Open, again in straight sets. On 20 October 2013, just before the Garanti Koza in Sofia, she won her fifth title of the year and the second Premier, beating Samantha Stosur 7\u20136 6\u20132 at the Kremlin Cup in Moscow. Simona Halep is making her debut at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nIvanovic was one of the wildcard recipients. Ivanovic reached the semifinals of the Mutua Madrid Open a Premier Mandatory event, losing to Maria Sharapova 4\u20136, 3\u20136. She also reached the semifinals of the Southern California Open losing to Victoria Azarenka 0\u20136, 6\u20134, 3\u20136. She reached her first final of the year at the Generali Ladies Linz losing to German Angelique Kerber 4\u20136, 6\u20137(6\u20138). At the slams, Ivanovic reached the fourth round of the Australian Open and French Open, losing to Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska 2\u20136, 4\u20136 on both occasions. Ivanovic lost to Eugenie Bouchard in the second round of Wimbledon 3\u20136, 3\u20136. At the final slam of the year, at the US Open, she lost in the fourth round to Victoria Azarenka 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 4\u20136. She is making her third appearance to the event, having won the event twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nKirilenko's first half of 2013 saw her with good results and broke through the top 10, while her second saw her struggle with a knee injury. Kirilenko last year's wildcard received entry into the event after winning the PTT Pattaya Open defeating Sabine Lisicki 5\u20137, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20131). Kirilenko was able to reach the semifinals of the BNP Paribas Open losing to compatriot Maria Sharapova 4\u20136, 3\u20136. At the slams, Kirilenko reached her first French Open quarterfinal and her third slam quarterfinals losing to Victoria Azarenka 6\u20137(7\u20139), 2\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nShe also reached the fourth round of the Australian Open losing to Serena Williams 2\u20136, 0\u20136, third round of the US Open losing to Simona Halep 1\u20136, 0\u20136, and was upset in the first round of Wimbledon losing to Laura Robson 3\u20136, 4\u20136. She is making her second appearance at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nStosur had a dip in 2013, falling out of the top 10 for the first time since 2010 and finishing outside the top 10 for the first time since 2009. At the slams, Stosur failed to get past the fourth round of a slam in a year since 2008. She lost in the third rounds of French Open, to Jelena Jankovi\u0107 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 4\u20136, and Wimbledon, to eventual runner-up Sabine Lisicki 6\u20134, 2\u20136, 1\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nShe also lost in the second round to Zheng Jie 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 5\u20137 at the Australian Open and first round of US Open to American qualifier Victoria Duval 7\u20135, 4\u20136, 4\u20136. After poor results in the beginning of the year, Stosur showed good form by reaching back-to-back quarterfinals in Qatar and Dubai. However, after withdrawing from her quarterfinal match against Angelique Kerber at the BNP Paribas due to a calf-injury, Stosur showed poor form throughout the year until shocking Victoria Azarenka in the final of the Southern California Open. She won her second title of the year at HP Open defeating Eugenie Bouchard 3\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20132 to receive entry into the Tournament of Champions. She is making her 2nd appearance in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nVesnina made her breakthrough year in 2013. She won her first title after six former runners-up at the Moorilla Hobart International, defeating German Mona Barthel in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134. This also gave Vesnina entry into the tournament of champions. She then won her second title at the Aegon International a Premier event defeating Jamie Hampton 6\u20132, 6\u20131. At the slam, the Russian reached the fourth round of the Australian Open and the first round of the French Open losing to Victoria Azarenka in both occasions 1\u20136, 1\u20136, and 1\u20136, 4\u20136, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nThe Russian then fell in the second rounds of Wimbledon and US Open to Sabine Lisicki 3\u20136, 1\u20136 and Karin Knapp 1\u20136, 4\u20136, respectively. She also won French Open with Ekaterina Makarova. She opted to play at the Tournament of Champions rather than the Fed Cup final. She is making her debut to the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nPavlyuchenkova is the third Russian to play at the event. Pavlyuchenkova won two international events in clay to gain entry into the event, the first coming at the Monterrey Open defeating Angelique Kerber 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20134 and the second at the Portugal Open defeating Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro 7\u20135, 6\u20132. The Russian also reached two other finals but lost, the first being at the Premier event of the Brisbane International losing to Serena Williams 2\u20136, 1\u20136 and the second at the KDB Korea Open losing to Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 3\u20136, 4\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nThe Russian didn't fare well at the slams, her best performance reaching the third round of the US Open losing to Radwa\u0144ska 4\u20136, 6\u20137(7\u20139). She then fell in the second round of the French Open to Petra Cetkovsk\u00e1 5\u20137, 6\u20132, 4\u20136, and the first rounds of the Australian Open and Wimbledon to Lesia Tsurenko 5\u20137, 6\u20133, 5\u20137 and Tsvetana Pironkova 0\u20136, 1\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nCornet had a resurgence this season - re-entering the top 30, and winning her third WTA career title. Cornet qualified for Sofia by winning her maiden tournament of the year at the Internationaux de Strasbourg, defeating Czech Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20130. At the slams, the Frenchwoman lost in the second round of the Australian Open to Venus Williams 3\u20136, 3\u20136. She then reached the third round of Wimbledon losing to Flavia Pennetta 6\u20130, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 2\u20136. She also fell to Victoria Azarenka in the third rounds of the French Open 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 1\u20136, and US Open 7\u20136(2\u20137), 3\u20136, 2\u20136. She is making her debut to the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Qualifying, Qualifiers\nPironkova is one of the wild card recipients, being a native of Bulgaria. She reached two quarterfinals in the year at the Topshelf Open and at 2013 Moorilla Hobart International. However, she was able to reach the fourth round of Wimbledon before losing to world no. 4 Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 3\u20136. In the other slams, Pironkova didn't fare well falling in the first rounds of the Australian Open to Romina Oprandi 6\u20134, 5\u20137, 2\u20136, French Open to Eugenie Bouchard 1\u20136, 6\u20137(7\u20139), and US Open to Alison Riske 3\u20136, 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Groupings\nIn the 2013 edition of the Tournament of Champions, the competitors were divided into two groups: the Serdika and the Sredets, representing the names of two districts in Sofia. The Serdika Group consists of no. 1 seed Simona Halep, no. 3 seed Maria Kirilenko, no. 6 seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, and no. 7 seed Aliz\u00e9 Cornet. The Sredets Groups is composed by no. 2 seed Ana Ivanovic, no. 4 seed Samantha Stosur, no. 5 seed Elena Vesnina, and no. 8 seed Tsvetana Pironkova. The two alternates are Elina Svitolina and Yvonne Meusburger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Groupings\nIn Serdika Group, and their respective match\u2013ups against their group, Halep was 4\u20131, Kirilenko was 1\u20136, Pavlyuchenkova was 5\u20134, and Cornet was 4\u20133. In their individual match\u2013ups, Halep is unbeaten against the Russians 1\u20130 against Kirilenko and 3\u20130 against Pavlyuchenkova, with Halep beating Kirilenko in their only match at the 3rd round of the 2013 US Open 6\u20131, 6\u20130, and beating Pavlyuchenkova in the semifinals of the 2013 Kremlin Cup 6\u20132, 6\u20131. However, against Cornet she lost their only match at the 2011 Monterrey Open 5\u20137, 1\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Groupings\nKirilenko has a negative record in her group, including being 1\u20132 against Pavlyuchenkova with Pavlyuchenkova winning their last match at the 2013 Kremlin Cup 6\u20133, 6\u20133 and 0\u20133 against Cornet, the last being at the 2013 Rogers Cup 5\u20137, 5\u20137. In the final match up Pavlyuchenkova has a perfect 3\u20130 record against Cornet, however their last match was at the 2011 Fed Cup with a 3 set win 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Groupings\nIn Sredets Groups, and their head\u2013to\u2013heads in their group, Ivanovic was 5\u20135, Stosur was 7\u20134, Vesnina was 3\u20133, and Pironkova was 1\u20132. Ivanovic has a mixed head\u2013to\u2013head against her group, she trails Stosur 2\u20134, with Stosur winning their last three meetings the last being a 7\u20135, 6\u20134 win at the 2013 Kremlin Cup. She leads Vesnina 2\u20131, however Vesnina won their last meeting at the 2013 Aegon International 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133. She also led Pironkova 2\u20131, including winning their last encounter 6\u20130, 6\u20134 at the 2012 US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Groupings\nStosur also has mixed results in her other head\u2013to\u2013heads, she trails Vesnina 1\u20132, with Vesnina winning their last match at the 2013 Family Circle Cup. On the other hand, she is 2\u20130 against Pironkova winning their last match at 2011 China Open 6\u20134, 6\u20130. On the final head\u2013to\u2013head between Vesnina and Pironkova, this will be their first meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233628-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions, Player head-to-head\nBelow are the head-to-head records as they approached the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233629-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions \u2013 Singles\nNadia Petrova was the defending champion, but did not qualify this year. Simona Halep won the title, defeating Samantha Stosur in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233629-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions \u2013 Singles, Draw, Serdika 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, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233629-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Garanti Koza WTA Tournament of Champions \u2013 Singles, Draw, Sredets 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, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233630-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Gardner\u2013Webb Runnin' Bulldogs football team represented Gardner\u2013Webb University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Carroll McCray and played their home games at Ernest W. Spangler Stadium. They were a member of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 7\u20135, 2\u20133 in Big South play to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233631-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Garissa local elections\nLocal elections were held in Garissa County were held on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general election was the first to elect County Governors and their Deputies for the 47 newly created counties. They were also first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC), which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233631-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Garissa local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233632-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Garmin\u2013Sharp season\nThe 2013 season for the Garmin\u2013Sharp cycling team began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233633-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gastein Ladies\n2013 Gastein Ladies is the 2013 edition of the outdoor clay courts women's tennis tournament Gastein Ladies. It was the seventh edition of the tournament, which was part of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Bad Gastein, Austria between 13 and 21 July 2013. Yvonne Meusburger won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233633-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gastein Ladies, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233633-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gastein Ladies, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233634-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gastein Ladies \u2013 Doubles\nJill Craybas and Julia G\u00f6rges were the defending champions but chose not to participate. Sandra Klemenschits and Andreja Klepa\u010d won the title, defeating Kristina Barrois and Eleni Daniilidou in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233635-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gastein Ladies \u2013 Singles\nAliz\u00e9 Cornet was the defending champion, but withdrew before the tournament began. Yvonne Meusburger defeated Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 7\u20135, 6\u20132 in the final for her first WTA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233636-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gatineau municipal election\nA municipal election was held in Gatineau, Quebec, Canada on November 3, 2013 in conjunction with 2013 Quebec municipal elections across the province on that date. Elections were held for Mayor of Gatineau as well as for each of the 18 districts on Gatineau City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233637-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gator Bowl\nThe 2013 TaxSlayer.com Gator Bowl was a post-season American college football bowl game held on January 1, 2013, at EverBank Field in Jacksonville, Florida in the United States. The 68th edition of the Gator Bowl began at noon EST and aired on ESPN2. It featured the Mississippi State Bulldogs from the Southeastern Conference (SEC) against the Northwestern Wildcats from the Big Ten Conference and was the final game of the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season for both teams. The Bulldogs accepted their bowl bid after an 8\u20134 regular season, while the Wildcats accepted theirs after a 9\u20133 finish. It was the first time that the two teams had met. Northwestern won the game by a score of 34 \u2013 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233637-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gator Bowl, Teams, Mississippi State\nWith a 3\u20130 start in conference play (and a 7\u20130 start overall), the season had a bright outlook for the Bulldogs. However, the schedule's increasing difficulty put the Bulldogs in decline, only finishing at 4\u20134 and fourth place in the SEC Western Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233637-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gator Bowl, Teams, Mississippi State\nThis was the Bulldogs' second Gator Bowl; they had previously played in the 2011 game, soundly defeating the Michigan Wolverines by a score of 52\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233637-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gator Bowl, Teams, Northwestern\nThe Wildcats were undefeated out of conference and posted a 5\u20133 Big Ten record, good for third place in the Legends Division. Only a one-point loss to the Nebraska Cornhuskers and an overtime loss to the Michigan Wolverines kept the Wildcats from the division title and a trip to the conference championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233637-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gator Bowl, Teams, Northwestern\nThis game was the Wildcats' first Gator Bowl; it was also their unprecedented fifth consecutive bowl game. The Wildcats got their first bowl victory since the 1948 team won the 1949 Rose Bowl over the California Golden Bears by a score of 20\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233637-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Game notes\nMississippi State opened as a 2-point favorite, but by kickoff Northwestern was the favorite -2.5", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233638-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Geelong Football Club season\nThe 2013 Geelong Football Club season was the club's 114th season of senior competition in the Australian Football League (AFL). The club also fielded its reserves team in the Victorian Football League (VFL) for the 14th season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233639-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Geelong mayoral election\nA by-election for the City of Greater Geelong mayor occurred on 24 November 2013. This by-election was triggered by the resignation of Geelong's first directly elected mayor Keith Fagg and saw Darryn Lyons of the Liberal Party become Geelong's second directly elected mayor with a first-preference vote of 29.79%. Lyons' nearest rival, Stephanie Asher, achieved a primary vote of 14.43%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233639-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Geelong mayoral election, Background\nGeelong's first directly elected mayor, Keith Fagg, resigned from his position in August 2013, just over a year following his election, citing health reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233639-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Geelong mayoral election, Campaign\nOver the course of the mayoral campaign, the local media focused heavily on Darryn Lyons and former mayor Ken Jarvis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233639-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Geelong mayoral election, Campaign\nOn 6 November, the Geelong Advertiser hosted a Mayoral candidate forum with a crowd of over 600 people, and Ken Jarvis won the exit poll which was taken by 200 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233639-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Geelong mayoral election, Campaign\nControversy arose when Geelong businessman Frank Costa publicly backed Jarvis; stating that the \"state government wouldn't muck around\" and that it \"may intervene and sack the council if Ken Jarvis isn't elected\". The next day, however, Victorian Premier Denis Napthine, along with Costa, denied claims that the council would be sacked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233639-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Geelong mayoral election, Candidates\nA total of 16 candidates ran in this election. :", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233640-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 General Cup\nThe 2013 General Cup was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 9\u201313 September 2013 at the General Snooker Club in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233640-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 General Cup\nMark Davis won his fourth professional title by defeating defending champion Neil Robertson 7\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233640-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 General Cup, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233641-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz\nThe 2013 Generali Ladies Linz was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 27th edition of the Generali Ladies Linz, and part of the WTA International tournaments-category of the 2013 WTA Tour. It was held at the TipsArena Linz in Linz, Austria, on 7\u201313 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233641-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233641-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233641-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz, Doubles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233642-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Doubles\nAnna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld and Kv\u011bta Peschke were the defending champions, but chose not to participate. Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 and Krist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Gabriela Dabrowski and Alicja Rosolska in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233643-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Singles\nVictoria Azarenka was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233643-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Singles\nAngelique Kerber won the title, defeating Ana Ivanovic in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233643-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nAngelique Kerber received a wildcard after the original draw was made. The wildcard had originally been given to Lisa-Maria Moser, who was forced to withdraw from the tournament. Kerber was given the top seed but placed in the bottom half of the draw, and several seeds were moved around in the draw to accommodate Kerber's late entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233644-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Geneva Grand Council election\nThe 2013 election to the Grand Council was held in the canton of Geneva, Switzerland, on 6 October 2013. All 100 members of the Grand Council were elected for four-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233645-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Geneva Open Challenger\nThe 2013 Geneva Open Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Geneva, Switzerland between 28 October and 3 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233645-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Geneva Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233646-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Geneva Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nJohan Brunstr\u00f6m and Raven Klaasen were the defending champions but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233646-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Geneva Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nOliver Marach and Florin Mergea won the title, defeating Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Philipp Oswald 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233647-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Geneva Open Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMarc Gicquel was the defending champion but chose to compete at the 2013 BNP Paribas Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233647-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Geneva Open Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMalek Jaziri won the title, defeating Jan-Lennard Struff 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233648-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Genting Highlands bus crash\nThe 2013 Genting Highlands bus crash was the deadliest road accident to occur in Malaysia. 37 passengers were killed and 16 others were injured in the accident which took place near Chin Swee Temple, Genting Highlands, Pahang. It occurred on 21 August 2013 at 2:15 pm, when the bus carrying 53 passengers lost control as it was going down an incline and it plunged into a deep ravine at about 60 metres at the kilometre 3.5 of the Genting Sempah-Genting Highlands Highway. The bus driver, Lim Kok Ho died on the spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233648-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Genting Highlands bus crash\nThe point of crash was about 10m after an escape ramp directly in the path of the bus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233648-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Genting Highlands bus crash\nThe independent review of the crash cited six contributing factors, including excessive speed and poor bus maintenance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233649-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gent\u2013Wevelgem\nThe 2013 Gent\u2013Wevelgem was the 75th running of the Gent\u2013Wevelgem single-day cycling race. It was held on 24 March 2013 over a distance of 183.4 kilometres (114.0 miles) and was the seventh race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season. The race was originally scheduled to be over a distance of 238 kilometres (147.9 miles), but due to snow, the race start was moved from Deinze to Gistel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233649-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gent\u2013Wevelgem\nThe race was won by Slovakia's Peter Sagan of the Cannondale team, after making a solo attack with 4\u00a0km (2.5\u00a0mi) remaining, and ultimately held on to win the race by 23 seconds ahead of a group of nine riders. Second place went to Slovenian Borut Bo\u017ei\u010d, riding for the Astana team, while Greg Van Avermaet was the highest-finishing Belgian rider, completing the podium for the BMC Racing Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233649-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gent\u2013Wevelgem, Teams\nAs Gent\u2013Wevelgem was a UCI World Tour event, all UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. Originally, eighteen ProTeams were invited to the race, with six other squads given wildcard places, and as such, would have formed the event's 24-team peloton. Team Katusha subsequently regained their ProTour status after an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. With Team Katusha not originally invited to the race, race organisers announced their inclusion to the race, bringing the total number of teams competing to twenty-five. Each of the 25 teams were allowed to enter eight riders to the race, making up a maximum starting peloton of 200 riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233650-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgetown Hoyas football team\nThe 2013 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Kevin Kelly and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 2\u20139, 1\u20134 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. At the end of the season, Kelly resigned to become the defensive coordinator at Ball State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233651-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Georgia Bulldogs football team represented the University of Georgia in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by head coach Mark Richt, who was in his thirteenth year as head coach. The Bulldogs played their home games at Sanford Stadium. They were a member of the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233651-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Bulldogs football team\nESPN's College GameDay aired live from the university campus on September 28, 2013 before the Bulldogs played LSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233652-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Rampage season\nThe 2013 Georgia Rampage season was the second season for the professional indoor football franchise and second in the Ultimate Indoor Football League (UIFL). One of six teams that competed in the UIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233652-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Rampage season\nLed by head coach Mark Bramblett, the Rampage played their home games at the Northwest Georgia Trade and Convention Center in Dalton, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233652-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Rampage season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated June 5, 201314 Active, 0 Inactive]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233653-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Southern Eagles football team\nThe 2013 Georgia Southern Eagles football team represented Georgia Southern University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Jeff Monken and played their home games at Paulson Stadium. They were a member of the Southern Conference. This was Georgia Southern's final year in the Southern Conference and the FCS. They joined the FBS and the Sun Belt Conference for the 2014 season. They finished the season 7\u20134, 4\u20134 in SoCon play to finish in a four-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233653-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Southern Eagles football team\nIn the final game of the season, against the Florida Gators, the Eagles upset the FBS Gators, 26\u201320, without completing a pass. The win marked the first time a FCS team defeated the Gators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233653-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Southern Eagles football team\nAt the end of the season, head coach Jeff Monken resigned to become the head coach at Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233653-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Southern Eagles football team\nOn July 22, 2016, the university announced that it was ordered by the NCAA to vacate two wins from the 2013 season and one win from the 2014 season, due to academically ineligible student-athletes participating in those games. The wins affected in the 2013 season were against the Savannah State Tigers and St. Francis Red Flash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233654-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia State Panthers baseball team\nThe 2013 Georgia State Panthers baseball team represented Georgia State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Panthers played their home games at the GSU Baseball Complex. The 2013 season represented Georgia States final season in the Colonial Athletic Association before leaving to join the Sun Belt Conference. Because of their planned move, the CAA would not allow Georgia State to compete in the end of season tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233655-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia State Panthers football team\nThe 2013 Georgia State Panthers football team represented Georgia State University (GSU) in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Panthers were led by first year head coach Trent Miles and played their home games at the Georgia Dome. The 2013 season was the Panthers' first in the Sun Belt Conference and at the FBS level. As a result of this transition, the Panthers were ineligible to play in a bowl game regardless of their final record (0\u201312).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233655-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia State Panthers football team, Season notes\nAfter the loss to Chattanooga in the second week of the season, running back coach Tony Tiller was reassigned to a different position within the athletic department, being replaced by former Indiana State player and graduate assistant Brock Lough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233656-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia State Panthers softball season\nThe 2013 Georgia State Panthers softball team represented Georgia State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I softball season. The Panthers competed in the Colonial Athletic Association and were led by then third-year head coach Roger Kincaid. Georgia State played its home games at the Robert E. Heck Softball Complex in Panthersville, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team\nThe 2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Yellow Jackets were led by sixth year head coach Paul Johnson and played their home games at Bobby Dodd Stadium. They were members of the Coastal Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference. They finished the season 7\u20136, 5\u20133 in ACC play to finish in a three way tie for second place in the Coastal Division. They were invited to the Music City Bowl where they lost to Ole Miss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Previous season\nThey were members of the Coastal Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference, finishing the season 7\u20137, 5\u20133 in ACC play to share the Coastal Division Championship with Miami and North Carolina. With Miami and North Carolina on post seasons bans, Georgia Tech represented the division in the ACC Championship Game where they were defeated by Florida State. They were invited to the Sun Bowl where they defeated USC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Elon\nGeorgia Tech opened their 2013 season with a rout of Elon University, one of the two FCS teams the Yellow Jackets will play this season. In Ted Roof's first game as Defensive Coordinator, Georgia Tech would force four turnovers including two interceptions returned for touchdowns. Vad Lee showed off his passing abilities by throwing for two touchdowns to David Sims and Robert Godhigh for 59 and 24 yards respectively. Six different Yellow Jackets accounted for six rushing touchdowns including a 44-yard run by backup red-shirt freshman quarterback Justin Thomas in the fourth quarter. Elon's only major scoring opportunity was a missed field goal as time expired at the end of the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Duke\nGeorgia Tech opened up their 2013 ACC schedule at the Duke Blue Devils on September 14. Georgia Tech scored first on a 49-yard field goal from true freshman kicker Harrison Butker, his first field goal of the year after kicking a plethora PATs against Elon. Duke answered back with a touchdown of their own off a Jela Duncan 1 yard run to go up 7\u20133 seven minutes into the contest. Georgia Tech would then rattle off 28 unanswered points to go up 31\u20137 by the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Duke\nIn the fourth quarter each team would trade touchdowns for a final score of 38\u201314. Vad Lee threw four touchdowns and one interception seen as a stellar passing performance from a Georgia Tech quarterback due to the emphasis on the triple option on offense. To go along with the passing game Georgia Tech averaged 5.7 yards per run weakening the Duke defense instrumentally. With the win Georgia Tech went to 2\u20130 for the season and 1\u20130 in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. North Carolina\nGeorgia Tech's first ACC home game was against the North Carolina Tar Heels. The game was played in a steady rain allowing the experience of North Carolina senior quarterback Bryn Renner to control the game while Georgia Tech's relative inexperience led to several fumbles and drops ending drives without a score. The Tar Heels scored two touchdowns in the first quarter but failed to convert a two-point conversion on the first while settling for a PAT on the second to lead 13\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 95], "content_span": [96, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. North Carolina\nDavid Sims ran for a 1-yard touchdown to get the Yellow Jackets on the board, but Bryn Renner connected with Sean Tapley for a 24-yard TD less than two minutes later to put the Tar Heels back up thirteen. The turning point of the game was a 21-yard touchdown pass from Vad Lee to Darren Waller with 30 seconds remaining in the half to dent the deficit back to six and allowing Georgia Tech to head to the locker room with the momentum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 95], "content_span": [96, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. North Carolina\nA squall line came over Bobby Dodd Stadium at the start of the third quarter causing sloppy play from UNC which along with Tech's improved defense prevented the Tar Heels from scoring in the second half. Paul Johnson from there on out decided to dominate the time of possession wearing down UNC's defense allowing for the Yellow Jackets to add two more rushing touchdowns for a come from behind 28\u201320 victory, bringing Georgia Tech to 3\u20130 for the season and 2\u20130 in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 95], "content_span": [96, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Virginia Tech\nGeorgia Tech's first night game of the year occurred on a Thursday night ESPN telecast against Virginia Tech. After an overtime victory in this matchup last year by Virginia Tech this game was expected to be a close contest. Once again Georgia Tech allowed the opposition to score early going behind 14\u20130 after spectacular play by Virginia Tech's quarterback Logan Thomas who threw and ran for a touchdown in the first half. Harrison Butker was able to lower the deficit to 11 after converting a 49-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 94], "content_span": [95, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Virginia Tech\nVad Lee struggled throughout the first half throwing an interception and fumbling on another drive. Both defenses came out of halftime strong with a defensive contest dominating the third quarter until Georgia Tech miraculously recovering their own fumble on the Virginia Tech five yard line and then drawing a pass interference penalty to get a new set of downs on the two yard line. David Sims then ran in a one-yard touchdown a play later to bring the Yellow Jackets within 4. Hokie kicker Cody Journell then added a field goal to put Virginia Tech back up by a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 94], "content_span": [95, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Virginia Tech\nVirginia Tech then forced a turnover on downs but could not get a first down forcing Journell to come back out on short rest. Journell would miss the field goal left. Both teams then traded three and outs. After driving for about 25 yards Kendall Fuller intercepted a Vad Lee pass deep down field on 4th and 13 giving the Hokies the ball with 1:06 remaining. Two kneels ended the game handing the Yellow Jackets their first loss of the season dropping them to 2\u20131 in ACC play and 3\u20131 for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 94], "content_span": [95, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Miami\nLooking to bounce back from their first loss of the season Georgia Tech took on undefeated Miami at Sun Life Stadium. Both offenses started strong with matching touchdowns in the first 7 minutes of the game. Georgia Tech then took over and scored 10 straight points due to a powerful run game and a turnover courtesy of a Duke Johnson fumble. However a Vad Lee fumble inside the red zone early in the second quarter would be the Yellow Jackets undoing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Miami\nInjured Miami quarterback Stephen Morris along with a strong running core would rally to score 17 in a row to go up 24\u201317 by end of the third quarter. Georgia Tech regained composure to add a touchdown courtesy of a David Simms 6 yard run but Harrison Butker would miss the PAT after a poor snap caused him to kick into the laces keeping the Yellow Jackets behind albeit one point. A 41-yard pass from Stephen Morris to Stacy Coley set up 3-yard rushing touchdown by Dallas Crawford put Miami up by eight after a converted PAT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233657-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team, Game summaries, Georgia Tech vs. Miami\nRayshawn Jenkins would intercept a Vad Lee pass leading to another quick touchdown by Dallas Crawford. Vad Lee would be benched for Justin Thomas who would come in and throw an interception returned for a touchdown on the second play of the drive putting Miami up 45\u201323. Third string Tech quarterback Tim Byerly would lead the Jackets on their last drive of the day capped off by a Byerly 15 yard run. Miami moved to 5\u20130 after running out the clock while the Jackets would be handed their second straight loss in ACC play moving them to 2\u20132 in conference play and 3\u20132 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Georgia on 27 October 2013, the sixth presidential elections since the country's restoration of independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. The last elections in January 2008 resulted in the re-election of Mikheil Saakashvili for his second and final presidential term. Saakashvili was constitutionally barred from running for a third consecutive term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election\nThe elections were held under a two-round system. Giorgi Margvelashvili was elected with a majority of votes in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Background\nThe previous presidential elections were held on 5 January 2008 in a polarised political environment following the November 2007 crisis, in response to which President Mikheil Saakashvili, then serving his first term in office, brought forward the elections from the original date in autumn 2008. Saakashvili won the election with 53.47% of the votes in an election described in the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) election observation mission report as \"the first genuinely competitive post-independence presidential election\", which \"was in essence consistent with most OSCE and Council of Europe commitments and standards for democratic elections\". At the same time, the mission \"revealed significant challenges which need to be addressed urgently.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Background\nIn the October 2012 parliamentary elections, the former ruling party United National Movement (ENM) lost power to the Georgian Dream coalition led by Bidzina Ivanishvili, who became the new Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Background\nUpon the inauguration of a new president in 2013, a series of constitutional amendments passed in the Parliament of Georgia from 2010 to 2013 entered into force. The amendments envisaged significant reduction of the president's powers in favour of the Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Candidates\nThe Georgian Dream coalition named Giorgi Margvelashvili, minister of education and science and deputy prime minister, as their presidential candidate on 11 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Candidates\nThe candidates for the ENM presidential primaries, announced in June 2013, were former parliamentary speaker David Bakradze, veteran lawmaker and former cabinet minister Giorgi Baramidze, Shota Malashkhia and Zurab Japaridze. All the primaries were won by Bakradze who was announced the presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Candidates\nOn 12 June, Nino Burjanadze announced that she would run for president as the nominee of Democratic Movement \u2013 United Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Opinion polls\nOpinion polls in the run-up to the election showed Margvelashvili to be the frontrunner. Polls varied between showing over 50% support for Margvelashvili and figures indicating the election would go to a second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Results\nThe result of the election was a clear first-round majority for Margvelashvili with 62% of the vote. Bakradze, his nearest rival, polled 22%. Burjanadze came third, with 10% of the vote. No other candidate received more than 3% of the vote. The inauguration of Margvelashvili was on 17 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Results\nThe election saw 47% of eligible voters cast a ballot; this is lower than the 2012 parliamentary election, which saw 61% vote, and the 2008 presidential election, where 54% of voters participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Reactions\nMargvelashvili is an ally of Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili, and the result was considered to be a consolidation of Ivanishvili's power. With his appointee elected to the presidency, Ivanishvili has declared his intention to leave his role as Prime Minister, stating that his goals have been achieved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233658-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Georgian presidential election, Reactions\nThe election was declared as \"clean\" and \"transparent\" by international observers. The OSCE observer mission preliminary stated that the election was \"efficiently administered, transparent and took place in an amicable and constructive environment.\" However, there were some issues noted by observers. International Society for Fair Elections and Democracy, a Georgian election observer group, found \"significant shortcomings\" regarding invalid ID and voter lists in Batumi, filing 45 complaints. Another group, Transparency International, filed 34 complaints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233659-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 German Athletics Championships were held at the Donaustadion in Ulm on 6\u20137 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233660-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Championship\nThe 2013 German Darts Championship was the sixth of eight PDC European Tour events on the 2013 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at Halle 39 in Hildesheim, Germany, between 6\u20138 September 2013. It featured a field of 64 players and \u00a3100,000 in prize money, with \u00a320,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233660-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Championship\nDave Chisnall won his first European Tour title by defeating Peter Wright 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233660-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Championship, Qualification\nThe top 32 players from the on the 11 June 2013 automatically qualified for the event. The remaining 32 places went to players from three qualifying events - 20 from the UK Qualifier (held in Crawley on 21 June), eight from the European Qualifier and four from the Host Nation Qualifier (both held at the venue in Hildesheim on 5 September).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233660-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Championship, Qualification\nJames Wade was replaced by an additional European qualifier, due to a PDC-banning after the draw. Phil Taylor withdrew and was replaced by an additional Host Nation qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233661-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Masters\nThe 2013 German Darts Masters was the seventh of eight PDC European Tour events on the 2013 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Glaspalast in Sindelfingen, Germany, between 20\u201322 September 2013. It featured a field of 64 players and \u00a3100,000 in prize money, with \u00a320,000 going to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233661-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Masters\nSteve Beaton won his first European Tour title by defeating Mervyn King 6\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233661-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Masters, Qualification\nThe top 32 players from the on the 2 July 2013 automatically qualified for the event. The remaining 32 places went to players from three qualifying events - 20 from the UK Qualifier (held in Barnsley on 12 July), eight from the European Qualifier and four from the Host Nations Qualifier (both held at the venue in Sindelfingen on 19 September).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233661-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 German Darts Masters, Qualification\nPhil Taylor withdrew from the event before it started and was replaced by an additional European Qualifier. Ted Hankey suffered whiplash injuries a week earlier in a minor car crash and had not recovered in time to participate in the event. He was replaced by an additional Host Nation Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233662-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 German Figure Skating Championships (German: Deutsche Meisterschaften im Eiskunstlaufen 2013) was held on December 21\u201322, 2012 at the Volksbank Arena in Hamburg. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior, junior, and novice levels. The results are among the criteria used to choose the German teams to the 2013 World Championships and 2013 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233662-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Figure Skating Championships, Junior results\nThe 2012\u201313 junior competition was held on January 9\u201313, 2013 at the Eislaufzentrum Oberstdorf in Oberstdorf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233662-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Figure Skating Championships, Qualification results\nAfter the national championships, the final European Championship qualification standings were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League\nThe 2013 German Football League season was the thirty fifth edition of the top-level American football competition in Germany and fourteenth since the renaming of the American football Bundesliga to German Football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League\nThe regular season started on 5 May and finished on 15 September 2013, followed by the play-offs. The season culminated in the German Bowl XXXV, staged on 12 October 2013 in Berlin, as in 2012, and the fourth time for the championship decider to be held in the German capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League\nThe German Bowl was won by the New Yorker Lions, a club from the city of Braunschweig, who defeated the Dresden Monarchs by a score of 35\u201334. It was the club's eight title overall and the first since 2008 while Dresden made their first-ever German Bowl appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Modus\nDuring the regular season each club played all other clubs in its division twice, home and away, resulting in each team playing 14 regular season games. There was no games between clubs from opposite divisions, inter conference games having been abolished after the 2011 season when the GFL was expanded from 14 to 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Modus\nThe four best teams in each division qualified for the play-offs where, in the quarter finals, teams from opposite divisions played each other, whereby the better placed teams had home advantage. The first placed team played the fourth placed from the other division and the second placed the third placed team. From the semi-finals onwards teams from the same division could meet again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Modus\nThe eighth placed team in each division entered a two-leg play-off with the winners of the respective division of the German Football League 2, the second tier of the league system in Germany. The winners of this contest qualified for the GFL for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Season overview\nThe 2013 season saw one newly promoted team, the Cologne Falcons, who replaced the L\u00fcbeck Cougars in the northern division of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Season overview\nThe Wiesbaden Phantoms were relegated from the GFL South at the end of the 2013 season after losing to the Allg\u00e4u Comets while, in the northern division, the Cologne Falcons defended their league place against the Bielefeld Bulldogs. For Wiesbaden it meant the end to a three-year stint in the league. In January 2014 the Hamburg Blue Devils withdrew from the northern division, leaving it to play with seven clubs in the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Season overview\nSix of the eight teams qualified for the play-offs in 2012 did so again in 2013. Only the D\u00fcsseldorf Panther and the Stuttgart Scorpions missed out on post season play compare to the previous season. For Stuttgart it ended a run of fifteen consecutive post season appearances since 1998. In their stead the Munich Cowboys returned to the play-offs to make their twentieth appearance while, in the north, the New Yorker Lions returned after a two-year absence to make their sixteenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Season overview\nIn the quarter-finals of the play-offs the four northern clubs defeated their southern opponents, resulting in an all northern division semi-final for the first time since 1999. The 2011 and 2012 champions Schw\u00e4bisch Hall Unicorns were knocked-out by the Berlin Adler, losing at home in the GFL for the first time since 2010. In the semi-finals the first and second placed teams won their home games against the third and fourth placed clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Season overview\nIn the German Bowl XXXV the New Yorker Lions then defeated the Dresden Monarchs in front of over 12,000 spectators 35\u201334, the fifth time the German Bowl had been decided by just one point. It was the first appearance from a club from the former East Germany in a German Bowl. For the Lions the 2013 title signalled a return to former dominance after four difficult seasons that had followed their twelve consecutive German Bowl appearances from 1997 to 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Season overview\nIn the relegation play-offs between the last-placed southern team, the Wiesbaden Phantoms, and the winner of the GFL 2 South, the Allg\u00e4u Comets, the Comets won the first leg away 37\u201321 before losing 34\u201344 at home, thereby winning promotion to the GFL on overall points. The northern division saw the Cologne Falcons defeat the Bielefeld Bulldogs 42\u201330 at home and then lose 17\u20136 away, retaining their league place by just one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233663-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 German Football League, Play-offs\nThe quarter-finals of the 2013 play-offs were played on 21 and 22 September, the semi-finals on 28 September and 3 October and the German Bowl on 12 October 2013. The German Bowl was held at the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark in Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233664-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Formula Three Championship\nThe 2013 ATS Formel 3 Cup was the 11th edition of the ATS F3 Cup. The season began on 27 April at Oschersleben and finished on 29 September at Hockenheim after nine race weekends, with 26 races\u00a0\u2013 one race at the N\u00fcrburgring was cancelled\u00a0\u2013 completed in total. The championship was dominated by Marvin Kirchh\u00f6fer in his debut year finishing with 25 podiums including 13 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233664-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Formula Three Championship, Race calendar and results\nOn 28 January 2013, the final version of the 2013 calendar was released with nine triple-header meetings. With the exception of a round at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, all rounds took place on German soil. The series was part of the ADAC Masters Weekend package six times, with additional rounds in support of the 24 Hours N\u00fcrburgring, and Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters events at the Lausitzring and Oschersleben.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233664-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Formula Three Championship, Championship standings, SONAX Rookie-Pokal\nRookie drivers are only eligible for the SONAX Rookie-Pokal title if they have not previously competed in more than two events of national or international Formula 3 championship and not aged 26 in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233664-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 German Formula Three Championship, Championship standings, Teams\nOnly the highest car from each team is eligible to teams' standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix\nThe 2013 German Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Gro\u00dfer Preis Santander von Deutschland 2013) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 7 July 2013 at the N\u00fcrburgring in N\u00fcrburg, Germany, as the ninth round of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix\nIt marked the 74th running of the German Grand Prix overall, and the 60th running of the German Grand Prix since 1950, when the racing series now known as the Formula One World Championship was created. This is the earliest a German Grand Prix has been held in a calendar year, followed by the 1926 and the 2009 editions of the race, though the 1996 European Grand Prix was held at the N\u00fcrburgring in late April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix\nThe 60-lap race was won by Sebastian Vettel, driving a Red Bull after starting from second position on the grid. This was the first home victory for the German driver. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen finished second for Lotus. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's teammate Romain Grosjean finished third. A charging Fernando Alonso finished fourth and also set the fastest lap driving a Ferrari. Lewis Hamilton, who started from pole position driving a Mercedes, ended up finishing 5th, only a second ahead of his former teammate Jenson Button.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix\nAs a result of the race, Sebastian Vettel increased his championship lead to 34 points from Ferrari's Fernando Alonso. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's second place moved him just 7 points behind Alonso in the standings. Lewis Hamilton remained fourth, while Mark Webber also remained in 5th spot. This was also Sergio P\u00e9rez's first points finish since Spain, and also for his teammate Jenson Button, since Monaco. This was the last Formula One Grand Prix to be held at the N\u00fcrburgring until the 2020 Eifel Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Background, Tyre changes\nIn the aftermath of the British Grand Prix, in which four drivers experienced explosive punctures at some of the fastest points of the Silverstone Circuit, tyre supplier Pirelli announced plans to alter the structure of the tyres for the German Grand Prix, ahead of a more-permanent solution to be introduced at the next race in Hungary. The new tyres replaced the steel belts used in the rear wheels with Kevlar in order to lower the operating temperature by up to 10\u00a0\u00b0C (18\u00a0\u00b0F) and reduce the likelihood of explosive punctures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Background, Tyre changes\nIn addition to this, the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) banned the practice of swapping the left- and right-side tyres around on the cars, which teams had discovered increased the life expectancy of each tyre. Pirelli further lobbied to the FIA to make their recommendations for tyre pressure and camber settings to be made mandatory, after it was discovered that teams were deliberately using pressure and camber settings outside Pirelli's recommendations in order to maximise performance. This followed a similar incident at the 2011 Belgian Grand Prix, where teams used camber settings outside Pirelli's recommendations, which created blistering on the inside edge of the tyres as they experienced higher-than-normal operating temperatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nFelipe Massa was the fastest driver in Q1, ahead of Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's Lotus. The drivers eliminated in Q1, were Valtteri Bottas, Pastor Maldonado, Charles Pic, Jules Bianchi, Giedo van der Garde and Max Chilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nThis session saw a rapid improvement in times in the closing stages which caught some teams out, such as Nico Rosberg being eliminated due to a mistake on the part of the Mercedes team and Mark Webber only barely making it into Q3 by five one-hundredths of a second Felipe Massa was fastest again ahead of Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen again as well. Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne was eliminated, as well as Adrian Sutil, Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez, Sergio P\u00e9rez and Paul di Resta,.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nLewis Hamilton took pole position with Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber in second and third, respectively. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Romain Grosjean qualified 4th and 5th. Alonso qualified 8th behind his teammate Felipe Massa and both opted to start the race on the medium tyre. Daniel Ricciardo managed to qualify on the 3rd row for the second race in succession. Jenson Button and Nico H\u00fclkenberg elected not to set a time, saving their tyres for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nBoth Webber and Vettel had strong starts applying immediate pressure to Hamilton. Hamilton responded by trying to push Vettel off the racing line on the inside of the track which then opened the door for Webber to try to make a move on the outside, but by the end of turn one Vettel had managed to shake off Hamilton and take the race lead, with Webber moving into second and Hamilton dropping down to third. Felipe Massa also had a good start, gaining a few places. Alonso fell back slightly as did Hamilton and Daniel Ricciardo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel kept the lead for the next few laps. Meanwhile, Massa, running in sixth place, went off the track at turn one on lap 3 after locking his rear brakes. The engine stalled and he retired from the race, caused by a gearbox failure. Nico Rosberg meanwhile, who had a disastrous qualifying, barely improved on his position in the first 5 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFrom laps 5 to 9, drivers were pitting due to using worn softs from qualifying to switch to the medium compound tyres, with Grosjean and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen going longer than most drivers and also setting a very quick pace. Grosjean led the race before stopping on lap 13 and continued to show strong pace afterwards. Webber, on the other hand, pitted a lap later and had a serious incident with his rear-right wheel. The mechanics did not attach the wheel properly and as Webber left his pitbox, the wheel fell off and rolled down the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nIt hit and knocked over a cameraman, who was transported to a hospital in Koblenz where he was reported to have suffered broken bones and a concussion. Webber's Red Bull was pushed back to his pitbox where a new wheel was fitted and he rejoined the race, a lap behind Vettel. The two Lotuses had never lost touch with Vettel during the first half of the race and were keeping pace with him, with both Grosjean and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen setting fastest laps of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 23, Jules Bianchi's Marussia suffered an engine failure which resulted in a fire. He pulled to the left-hand side of the track but, unusually, his car rolled back across the track to the other side where it was stopped by an advertising board. This caused an instant safety car, which allowed Webber to get back on to the lead lap. Most of the drivers pitted for fresh tyres. Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne's Toro Rosso suffered a hydraulics failure less than two laps after Bianchi's engine failure, during the safety car period. He was able to return to the pits. His team-mate Daniel Ricciardo was struggling. He had qualified sixth but was slowly falling back into the field. Paul di Resta and Adrian Sutil of Force India also struggled during the first half of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAfter the safety car period, Webber began to make his way through the field before becoming stuck behind the Sauber of Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez. He was unable to pass the Mexican for more than ten laps and pitted to try to get an advantage with fresh tyres and clean air. Meanwhile, the McLaren drivers were once again having a tussle, with Jenson Button getting past Sergio P\u00e9rez at turn one. Pastor Maldonado, driving in the 600th grand prix race for the Williams F1 Team, was in the points in eighth, along with his team-mate and rookie Valtteri Bottas in tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was leading on lap 41 after Vettel and Grosjean had pitted for the third time. Lotus waited until lap 49 to pit R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, switching him to the soft tyre, which left Vettel and Grosjean in first and second, with Alonso a threat from behind in fourth place. Grosjean was then told on the radio to not hold R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen up, for championship title points reasons. It took a few laps for R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen to pass Grosjean and afterwards he attempted to chase down Vettel. Alonso set the fastest lap of the race, almost a second faster than the first three drivers, and was rapidly catching Grosjean. Meanwhile, Hamilton made a move on his former team-mate Button at turn two, moving into fifth. Webber then made a move on P\u00e9rez to go into seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was unable to catch Vettel, who took the victory. It was his first victory at his home race and the first victory he gained in his birthday month, July. It was also his 30th career victory, becoming the 6th driver to achieve such a feat and in just his 110th start. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen finished just one second behind, with Grosjean only just holding off Alonso for third place, the latter having used too much of his soft tyres while closing down the gap to Grosjean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe podium placings were the same as at the 2012 and the 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix. Hamilton, Button, Webber and P\u00e9rez remained fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth respectively. Rosberg, struggling to keep his Mercedes on the pace, finished ninth at his home race while Nico H\u00fclkenberg took the final point for Sauber. di Resta finished eleventh, the first time he had finished outside the points during the season, with Ricciardo in twelfth, Adrian Sutil in thirteenth and Guti\u00e9rrez in fourteenth. Williams had a poor ending to their milestone race, with Maldonado and Bottas finishing fifteenth and sixteenth respectively after wheel gun problems in their pitstops. Charles Pic, his team-mate Giedo van der Garde and Max Chilton were the final finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Post Race\nAfter the race Red Bull and Force India were given fines for incidents in the pits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Post Race\nRed Bull were fined \u20ac30,000 after the right-rear tyre from Mark Webber's car became detached as the Australian left his pit box. The errant tyre subsequently bounced down the pit lane before striking FOM cameraman Paul Allen. Allen, who remained conscious after the incident, was treated at the circuit's medical centre before being helicoptered to Koblenz Hospital for observation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233665-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 German Grand Prix, Report, Post Race\nForce India, meanwhile, were given a \u20ac5,000 fine after releasing Paul di Resta into the path of Toro Rosso's Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233666-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 German Indoor Athletics Championships (German: Deutsche Leichtathletik-Hallenmeisterschaften 2013) was the 60th edition of the national championship in indoor track and field for Germany. It was held on 23\u201324 February at the Helmut-K\u00f6rnig-Halle in Dortmund. A total of 26 events, 13 for men and 13 for women, were contested plus five further events were held separately. It was to serve as preparation for the 2013 European Athletics Indoor Championships. The event was sold out on both days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233666-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe combined events and racewalking national championships were held on 26\u201327 January at the Leichtathletikhalle Frankfurt-Kalbach in Kalbach-Riedberg. The 3 \u00d7 800 m and 3 \u00d7 1000 m relays were held on 17 February alongside the German Indoor Youth Athletics Championships in Halle (Saale).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233666-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Indoor Athletics Championships\nChristina Schwanitz won the women's shot put with the best performance by any athlete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233667-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Masters\nThe 2013 Betfair German Masters was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 30 January \u2013 3 February 2013 at the Tempodrom in Berlin, Germany. It was the sixth ranking event of the 2012/2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233667-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German Masters\nRonnie O'Sullivan was the defending champion, but he decided not to compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233667-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German Masters\nAli Carter won his third ranking title by defeating Marco Fu 9\u20136 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233667-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 German Masters, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233667-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 German Masters, Qualifying\nThese matches were held between 28 and 30 November 2012 at the World Snooker Academy in Sheffield, England, and on 30 January 2013 at the Tempodrom in Berlin, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233668-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Masters (curling)\nThe 2013 German Masters were held from January 25 to 27 at the Curling Club Hamburg in Hamburg, Germany as part of the 2012\u201313 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a round-robin format. In the final, David Murdoch of Scotland, skipping for Tom Brewster, defeated Rasmus Stjerne of Denmark with a score of 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233669-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German Open Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 German Open Grand Prix Gold was the first grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in RWE-Sporthalle, Mulheim an der Ruhr, Germany from February 26 until March 3, 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election\nFederal elections were held on 22 September to elect the members of the 18th Bundestag of Germany. At stake were all 598 seats to the Bundestag, plus 33 overhang seats determined thereafter. The Christian Democratic Union of Germany/Christian Social Union of Bavaria (CDU/CSU) of incumbent chancellor Angela Merkel won their best result since 1990 with nearly 42% of the vote and nearly 50% of the seats, just five short for an overall majority. The Free Democratic Party (FDP) failed to meet the 5% vote electoral threshold in what was their worst showing ever in a federal election, denying them seats in the Bundestag for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election\nAs the FDP, the CDU/CSU's junior coalition partner, failed to get any seats and a red\u2013green alliance, which governed Germany from 1998 to 2005, did not have enough seats for a majority, the only possible coalition without the CDU/CSU was a left-wing red\u2013red\u2013green coalition government. Merkel scared it off, and both the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and Alliance 90/The Greens ruled out governing with The Left. Ultimately, Merkel's party reached a coalition agreement with the then-main opposition party, the SPD, to form a grand coalition, the third in the country's history since World War II. The SPD leadership conducted a ratification vote by their broader membership before the agreement was made final. The grand coalition was renewed after the 2017 German federal election due to failure during the negotiations of a Jamaica coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Background\nIn the 2009 German federal election, the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) and its sister party, the Christian Social Union of Bavaria (CSU), and the Free Democratic Party (FDP) won the election with Angela Merkel as Chancellor of Germany and Guido Westerwelle as Vice-Chancellor of Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Date\nThe date of the federal election is governed by the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany (Germany's constitution) and the Federal Election Law (Bundeswahlgesetz). Article 39 of the Basic Law states that the Bundestag shall be elected between 46 and 48 months after the beginning of the legislative period. As the 17th Bundestag convened on 27 October 2009, the election was scheduled between 27 August and 27 October 2013. To avoid school holidays, a date in late September is usually chosen; this made 15 or 22 September 2013 the most likely dates. The President of Germany ordered 22 September 2013 to be the election day upon the recommendation of the federal government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Electoral system\nAccording to Article 38 of the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany, members of the Bundestag shall be elected in general, direct, free, equal, and secret elections; everyone over the age of eighteen is entitled to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Electoral system\nIn 2008, some modifications to the electoral system were required under an order of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany. The court had found a provision in the Federal Election Law by which it was possible for a party to experience a negative vote weight, namely losing seats due to more votes, violated the constitutional guarantee of the electoral system being equal and direct. The court allowed three years for these changes, so the 2009 German federal election was not affected. The changes were due by 30 June 2011 but appropriate legislation was not completed by that deadline. A new electoral law was enacted in late 2011 but was declared unconstitutional once again by the Federal Constitutional Court upon lawsuits from the opposition parties and a group of some 4,000 private citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Electoral system\nFour of the five factions in the Bundestag agreed on an electoral reform whereby the number of seats in the Bundestag will be increased as much as necessary to ensure that any overhang seats are compensated through apportioned leveling seats, to ensure full proportionality according to the political party's share of party votes at the national level. The Bundestag approved and enacted the new electoral reform in February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Electoral system\nThe Bundestag is elected using mixed-member proportional representation, meaning that each voter has two votes, a first vote for the election of a constituency candidate by first-past-the-post and a second vote for the election of a state list. The Sainte-Lagu\u00eb/Schepers method is used to convert the votes into seats, in a two-stage process with each stage involving two calculations. First, the number of seats to be allocated to each state is calculated, based on the proportion of the German population living there. Then the seats in each state are allocated to the party lists in that state, based on the proportion of second votes each party received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Electoral system\nIn the distribution of seats among state lists, only parties that have obtained at least five percent of the valid second votes cast in the electoral area or have won a seat in at least three constituencies are taken into consideration. The minimum number of seats for each party at federal level is then determined. This is done by calculating, for each party state list, the number of constituency seats it won on the basis of the first votes, as well as the number of seats to which it is entitled on the basis of the second votes. The higher of these two figures is the party\u2019s minimum number of seats in that state. Adding together the minimum number of seats to which the party is entitled in all of the states produces a total representing its guaranteed minimum number of seats in the country as a whole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Electoral system\nIn order to ensure that each party receives its guaranteed minimum number of seats when the seats are allocated using the Sainte-Lagu\u00eb/Schepers method, it may become necessary to increase the number of seats in the Bundestag. Then it must be ensured that the seats are distributed to the parties in line with their national share of the second votes. Additional overhang seats, or balance seats, are created to ensure that the distribution of the seats reflects the parties' share of the second votes and that no party receives fewer than its guaranteed minimum number of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Electoral system\nBalance seats are also necessary to ensure that each party requires roughly the same number of second votes per seat. Once the number of seats which each party is entitled to receive across the country has been determined, the seats are allocated to the parties' individual state lists. Each state list must receive at least as many seats as the number of constituencies which the party won in the state in question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Chancellor-candidates\nAlthough the chancellor-candidates (Kanzlerkandidaten) play a very important role in election campaigns, their office is not regulated in any law, and it is up to each party to determine how, and if at all, to name a chancellor-candidate. The SPD names a chancellor-candidate, while the CDU and the CSU name a common one. The smaller Bundestag parties (the FDP, the Left, and the Greens) usually do not name a chancellor-candidate as it is very improbable for such a candidate to actually be elected chancellor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Chancellor-candidates\nThey instead name one or two persons (Spitzenkandidaten) who are to become the faces of that party's campaign. Although there is nearly no chance for them to win seats in the Bundestag, especially due to the required minimum quota of votes required to be granted any seats, and much less have their candidate become chancellor, fringe parties sometimes name a chancellor-candidate, such as the B\u00fcrgerrechtsbewegung Solidarit\u00e4t with its chancellor-candidate Helga Zepp-LaRouche in the 2009 federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Chancellor-candidates\nWhile a sitting chancellor is usually named chancellor-candidate for his or her own party, the main opposition party's process to determine their chancellor-candidate differs. Most times, such a person is determined in an inner party circle and then anointed in a party convention. As the CDU/CSU is the main government party, CDU chairwoman and incumbent chancellor Angela Merkel was not challenged as chancellor-candidate. In the SPD, the situation was a bit less clear, as there were four candidates in the discussion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Chancellor-candidates\nWhile the party chairman Sigmar Gabriel, the parliamentary caucus leader Frank-Walter Steinmeier, and Peer Steinbr\u00fcck, former minister-president of Nordrhein-Westfalen and former federal minister of Finance, were quasi-official contenders for the candidacy, incumbent Nordrhein-Westfalen minister-president Hannelore Kraft denied interest in the candidacy. Gabriel, Steinmeier, and Steinbr\u00fcck all had a bad electoral record, as they all had led their party into painful defeats in state or general elections. Gabriel and Steinbr\u00fcck lost their inherited minister-president offices in 2003 and 2005, and Steinmeier failed as a chancellor-candidate in 2009. On 28 September 2012, the party announced that Steinbr\u00fcck would be the SPD's chancellor-candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Campaign\nAfter taking heat domestically for bailing out other European countries, Finance-Minister Wolfgang Sch\u00e4uble took the step of mentioning that Greece would need a third bailout. This was in stark contrast to his colleagues who had refrained from making such measures in light of the election, in particularly following Merkel's dismissal of a potential future bailout. In reaction to the statement and the dithering, Peer Steinbrueck of the SPD said that it was \"time that Mrs. Merkel tells people the truth\", while the Greens' J\u00fcrgen Trittin of the Greens also criticized Merkel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Campaign\nMerkel also became the first chancellor to visit Dachau concentration camp after an invitation by former inmate Max Mannheimer, who leads a survivor group, saying: \"What happened at the concentration camps was and continues to be incomprehensible.\" Merkel also warning of a rising tide of antisemitism and racism as a threat to democracy in Europe. Her visit was welcomed by residents of the town due to its historic nature but was also suggested as a vote ploy ahead of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Campaign\nShe also campaigned on Germany's unemployment record that fell to a two-decade low during her premiership, progress towards a balanced budget, and the Eurozone's advantages for Germany's exports. There were questions asked about her legacy and a potential heir to the party leadership. Campaigning in the \"hot phase\" ended on 21 September, as Merkel appealed to voters to support her against Eurosceptics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Campaign, Televised debates\nA 90-minute televised debate between the lead candidates of the CDU/CSU and the SPD, the two leading contenders, was held on 1 September. The smaller-party top-ranking candidates Rainer Br\u00fcderle (FDP), J\u00fcrgen Trittin (Alliance 90/The Greens), and Gregor Gysi (The Left) held a separate debate on 2 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Opinion polling\nIn Germany, there are regular opinion polls during the whole of the legislative period. Germany's major polling agencies are Allensbach, Emnid, Forsa, Forschungsgruppe Wahlen, GMS, Infratest dimap, and INSA/YouGov. August 2013 opinion polls suggested that the CDU/CSU and the FDP (black\u2013yellow coalition) would be just short of or just above an absolute majority, rather than the SPD and Greens (red\u2013green coalition), partners in Gerhard Schr\u00f6der-led government (1998\u20132005).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Results\nOnly four parties were present in the Bundestag for the first time since the 1987 West German federal election, as the CDU/CSU operates as one Bundestag group. The Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) and the Christian Social Union of Bavaria (CSU) scored 42 percent of the vote, their best result since tallying 44% in 1990. Since some 15 percent of the vote went to parties that fell short of the 5% threshold, the CDU/CSU came up just five seats short of a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Results\nThe Free Democratic Party (FDP), junior partner in the outgoing coalition government, failed to pass the 5% threshold. It also failed to win any directly elected seats, as it has not won any directly elected seats since 1990), shutting it out of the Bundestag altogether for the first time in the party's history. A new Eurosceptic party, Alternative for Germany, nearly won seats but was shut out by narrowly missing the 5% electoral threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Results, Results by state\nBelow are second votes (Zweitstimme), or votes for party list, by state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Results, Reactions\nIncumbent chancellor Angela Merkel said: \"It was a strong vote to take responsibility in Germany, but also in Europe and the world.\" Peer Steinbr\u00fcck announced his withdrawal from top politics and his intention to focus on his ordinary tasks as a member of parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Government formation\nAs in the red-baiting and Red Scare campaign (\"red socks\") during the 1994 German federal election, Merkel scared off that the alternative was a left-wing red\u2013red\u2013green coalition government, since the FDP lost all its seats. Many SPD insiders did not want to work with The Left. One day after the election, Merkel announced that she had already spoken with the SPD but would not rule out other possibilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Government formation\nAn opinion poll conducted shortly after the election showed that 65% of SPD members were opposed to entering a Merkel-led grand coalition; however, the SPD executive voted to enter coalition talks with the proviso that they would seek a vote from their membership before making a final agreement on entering a coalition. The Greens were open to coalition talks with the CDU/CSU, but CSU leaders said they opposed a coalition with the Greens. The Greens announced they would not consider going into coalition with the Left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Government formation\nFormal talks began in the first week of October when Merkel met SPD leaders on 4 October. She said: \"Europe is watching us, the world is watching us. We have the common responsibility to build a stable government.\" She also planned to hold talks with the Greens the following week. After five weeks of negotiations that culminated in an all-night session 27\u201328 November, the CDU/CSU reached agreement with the SPD to form a new coalition government. Issues resolved in the talks included the planned introduction of a minimum hourly wage of \u20ac8.50 in 2015 and no new taxes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233670-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 German federal election, Government formation\nThe deal depended on approval by the SPD rank and file, with a poll set for 6 December. On 14 December, 76% of the SPD's members voted for the coalition to go ahead. The Third Merkel cabinet was sworn in on 17 December. This grand coalition continued after the 2017 German federal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233671-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 German motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 German motorcycle Grand Prix was the eighth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was scheduled to be held at the Sachsenring in Hohenstein-Ernstthal on 14 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233671-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 German motorcycle Grand Prix\nIn Moto2, Kalex rider Xavier Sim\u00e9on secured his first pole position, the first for a Belgian rider since Didier de Radigu\u00e8s took pole position in the 250cc class at the 1989 Belgian motorcycle Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233671-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 German motorcycle Grand Prix\nIn MotoGP, Jorge Lorenzo and Dani Pedrosa were forced out of the event due to injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233671-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233672-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gerry Weber Open\nThe 2013 Gerry Weber Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 21st edition of the event known that year as the Gerry Weber Open and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Gerry Weber Stadion in Halle, Germany, between 8 and 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233672-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gerry Weber Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233672-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gerry Weber Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233673-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Doubles\nAisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Kei Nishikori and Milos Raonic. Santiago Gonz\u00e1lez and Scott Lipsky won the title, defeating Daniele Bracciali and Jonathan Erlich in the final, 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233674-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Singles\nTommy Haas was the defending champion but was knocked out by top seed Roger Federer in the semifinals. Federer won 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20133, 6\u20134 against Mikhail Youzhny to claim a record sixth title and his first since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233674-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233674-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nThe top three seeds received byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233675-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Geylang International FC season\nThe 2013 S.League season is Geylang International's 18th season in the top flight of Singapore football and 38th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233676-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ghana Movie Awards\nThe 2013 Ghana Movie Awards was held at the Accra International Conference Center on 30 December, 2013. A Northern Affair and Contract were the top winners for the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233677-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar Darts Trophy\nThe 2013 Gibraltar Darts Trophy was the fifth of eight PDC European Tour events on the 2013 PDC Pro Tour. The tournament took place at the Victoria Stadium, Gibraltar, from 28\u201330 June 2013. It featured a field of 64 players and \u00a3100,000 in prize money, with \u00a320,000 going to the winner. It was won by Phil Taylor, with Jamie Lewis as the runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233677-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar Darts Trophy\nAlso notable was the nine-dart finish hit by Ross Smith in his second round defeat by Adrian Lewis, which was the last nine darter to be hit in the PDC European Tour until June 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233677-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar Darts Trophy, Course of the event\nPhil Taylor won his second European Tour title with a 6\u20131 victory over Jamie Lewis in the final. He had previously beaten Steve Beaton 6-0 in the last eight and Dave Chisnall 6-2 in the semi-finals, recording an average score of 112.73 in the former. The \u00a320,000 first prize was Taylor's second win in June 2013, having earlier won the 2013 UK Open title. Taylor's victory was his first European Tour win since Berlin in June 2012, adding to a career that has led to him being called the greatest ever darts player. He told the Staffordshire newspaper The Sentinel, \"It's fantastic to win this and I am over the moon. It's been a great weekend for me and I've really enjoyed it in Gibraltar.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233677-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar Darts Trophy, Course of the event\nThe tournament's biggest surprise was Jamie Lewis' appearance in the final. He reached his first senior final after having to qualify to take part in the event, and was aiming to win one match and the \u00a31,000 prize money, so that he would earn a place in the world top 64 and would avoid having to need to qualify for the 2014 PDC European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233677-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar Darts Trophy, Course of the event\nThe event was the first-ever Gibraltar Darts Trophy, sponsored by the Government of Gibraltar at a reported cost of \u00a3100,000. Although it was not broadcast live, it was covered by Sky Sports. The trophy was presented by the territory's Sports Minister, Stephen Linares. Four Gibraltarian players participated as home nation qualifiers, but were all eliminated in the opening round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233677-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar Darts Trophy, Qualification\nThe top 32 players from the on the 22 May 2013 automatically qualified for the event. The remaining 32 places went to players from three qualifying events - 20 from the UK Qualifier (held in Wigan on 24 May), eight from the European Qualifier (held at the venue in Gibraltar on 27 June) and four from the Host Nation Qualifier (held in Gibraltar on 24 April).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election\nThe Gibraltar by-election, 2013 was a parliamentary by-election held on 4 July 2013 for the Gibraltar Parliament. The by-election was to contest the seat left vacant by the death of Government of Gibraltar Housing Minister Charles Bruzon in April 2013. The Gibraltar Socialist Labour Party (GSLP), Gibraltar Social Democrats (GSD), Progressive Democratic Party (PDP) and an independent contested the by-election. The Liberal Party of Gibraltar who is in alliance and in Government with the GSLP backed the GSLP's candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election\nThe Gibraltar Broadcasting Corporation's pre-election poll gave the GSLP's candidate Albert Isola an advantage of almost 5% over the GSD's Marlene Hassan Nahon. It was also the last elections that the Progressive Democratic Party had took part before their disbandment over a month later that same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election, Background\nCharles Bruzon was a member of the Gibraltar Socialist Labour Party (GSLP) and the Government's Housing Minister since 9 December 2011. His seat in the Gibraltar Parliament became vacant following his death on 16 April 2013 aged 74, following a long battle with illness. On 20 May 2013, Chief Minister Fabian Picardo met with Governor Sir Adrian Johns at The Convent and asked him to issue a writ for the by-election. The Chief Minister then made the announcement in Parliament later that day calling for candidates to sign up by noon on 14 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election, Background\nPicardo confirmed that the GSLP would, in alliance with the Liberal Party field a candidate for election. He announced it would be a GSLP candidate but that the alliance would fight the election jointly. The Gibraltar Social Democrats as Opposition had initially decided not to contest the by-election considering instead a \"gentleman's agreement\" as the seat had been one of the GSLP which had become vacant under tragic circumstances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election, Background\nThe Progressive Democratic Party (PDP) which was not represented in Parliament immediately decided it would contest the by-election seeing it as an opportunity to be represented despite its poor performance at the previous two general elections. On 30 May 2013 the PDP announced its candidature of party leader Nick Cruz. At this point the GSD was reconsidering its decision not to contest the by-election as its leader, Daniel Feetham, said it would be \"illogical\" for the elected Opposition not to do so if the PDP signed up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election, Background\nThe party announced, via its Twitter account on 5 June 2013, that it had chosen former Chief Minister Sir Joshua Hassan's daughter Marlene Hassan Nahon, as its candidate. The GSLP chose former Member of the then House of Assembly Albert Isola, son of former Leader of the Opposition Peter Isola, as the party's candidate on 9 June 2013. The final candidate to sign up on 12 June 2013 was independent Bryan Zammit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election, Poll\nA public opinion poll commissioned by the Gibraltar Broadcasting Corporation (GBC) predicted a close running between Isola and Nahon. The survey was carried out over six days on 500 eligible voters through face-to-face interviews, representing 2.5% of the Gibraltarian electorate. The poll's results were published on 24 June 2013 and showed Isola with 41.4%, Nahon with 36.5%, Zammit with 11.9% and Cruz with 8.2% support amongst the interviewees with 2% of them yet undecided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233678-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar by-election, Poll\nGBC's poll also predicted that the 5.4% of voters who previously voted for the GSLP/Liberals at the 2011 general election would vote for the GSD's candidate, while only 2.4% of those who previously voted for the GSD would vote for the GSLP's candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match\nThe international friendly between the Gibraltar and Slovakia national football teams on 19 November 2013 was the first official match played by Gibraltar after joining the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). It took place at the Est\u00e1dio Algarve in Faro/Loul\u00e9, Portugal with 350 fans in attendance. The Gibraltar Football Association chose to play at the Est\u00e1dio Algarve as this would be the stadium the team would use for competitive matches as their only venue the Victoria Stadium was not eligible to. The game ended in a 0\u20130 draw which was seen as an upset with Slovakia being heavy favourites to defeat UEFA's newest members. Gibraltar defender Danny Higginbotham received the man of the match award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match, Background\nGibraltar first applied for UEFA membership in 1997 but was rejected because of intense opposition from Spain due to the disputed status of Gibraltar and that the territory's acceptance would inspire separatist Basque and Catalan national football teams to apply for membership as well. They reapplied unsuccessfully in 2007 with only three member nations supporting their bid after Spain threatened to withdraw Spanish teams from all UEFA competitions. They tried again in October 2012 and were granted full membership in March 2013. The team's first announced match was against Estonia in Tallinn on 5 March 2014, but in October 2013 Slovakia, who had been UEFA members since 1993, were named as Gibraltar's first opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match, Background\nSlovakia began 2013 with a narrow 2\u20131 away defeat to Belgium. This was followed by two consecutive home draws, 1\u20131 in a 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Lithuania and 0\u20130 in a friendly against Sweden. On 7 June 2013 they faced Liechtenstein away in a World Cup qualifier, Martin B\u00fcchel gave the host a surprise lead but J\u00e1n \u010eurica equalised 60 minutes later for Slovakia, despite the late goal the match was considered an upset, co-coaches Stanislav Griga and Michal Hipp were sacked after the match as they failed to win their last six matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match, Background\nThe Slovak Football Association appointed former Slovakia midfielder J\u00e1n Koz\u00e1k as the new head coach of the national team in July 2013. Koz\u00e1k's first match was a friendly away to Romania which ended in a 1\u20131 draw. After Koz\u00e1k's appointment Slovakia had four remaining World Cup qualifiers: a win, a draw and two losses saw Slovakia finish UEFA Group G in third place and failed to qualify for the 2014 FIFA World Cup. The final match before facing Gibraltar was a friendly against Poland away in Wroc\u0142aw, first half goals from Juraj Kucka and R\u00f3bert Mak gave Slovakia a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match, Background\nThe Victoria Stadium is the only football stadium in Gibraltar but does not meet UEFA's standards for competitive internationals, so it was agreed they would use the Est\u00e1dio Algarve in Faro/Loul\u00e9, Portugal for competitive matches until Gibraltar had an eligible stadium of their own. Even though the Victoria Stadium is eligible for friendly matches the Gibraltar Football Association decided to play the match against Slovakia at the Est\u00e1dio Algarve to give them a chance to test the stadium for its future use.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match, Post-match\nAs Slovakia were heavy favourites for a comfortable win over Gibraltar the draw resulted in opposite feelings for both managers: Gibraltar's Allen Bula said the result was \"a dream come true\" while Slovakia's J\u00e1n Koz\u00e1k described the result as \"a huge disappointment\" for him. Defender Danny Higginbotham, who qualifies for Gibraltar via his grandmother, was the recipient of the man of the match award and declared the result as \"one of the best\" in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match, Post-match\nThe match was the last in 2013 for both teams; Gibraltar's next match was a friendly against the Faroe Islands at the Victoria Stadium in March 2014, the first official match played in Gibraltar since their acceptance into UEFA. They took the lead with a goal from captain Roy Chipolina before going on to lose 4\u20131. The result was the largest away win for the Faroes and it was also their joint largest win overall, equalling their 3\u20130 win over San Marino in 1995. Slovakia's next match was also a friendly, but they were away to Israel; goals from Martin Jakubko, J\u00e1n \u010eurica and R\u00f3bert Mak ensured a 3\u20131 win for Slovakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233679-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Gibraltar v Slovakia football match, Post-match\nIn 2014 Gibraltar gained their second draw and first win, 1\u20131 against Estonia and 1\u20130 against Malta \u2014 they lost the other six matches. That same year they took part in their first major international competition entering the qualifying rounds for UEFA Euro 2016. Slovakia would go through 2014 winning eight of the nine fixtures they played, losing the other 0\u20131 to Russia; they began their sixth qualifying campaign for the UEFA European Championship the same year. Slovakia were able to qualify for the main tournament as runners-up of Group C while Gibraltar finished bottom of Group D without a point and failed to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233680-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta GT Supercup\nThe 2013 Ginetta GT Supercup is a multi-event, one make GT motor racing championship held across England and Scotland. The championship features a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers, competing in a Ginetta G55 or Ginetta G50 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, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233680-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta GT Supercup\nThis season will be the third Ginetta GT Supercup, having rebranded from the Ginetta G50 Cup, which ran between 2008 and 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233680-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta GT Supercup, Race calendar and results\nThe series will last for 27 races over 10 rounds, and will support the British Touring Car Championship at all rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233680-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta GT Supercup, Championship standings\nA driver's best 25 scores counted towards the championship, with any other points being discarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233681-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta Junior Championship\nThe 2013 Ginetta Junior Championship was a multi-event, one-make motor racing championship held across England and Scotland. The championship featured a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers, aged between 14 and 17, competing in Ginetta G40s that conformed to the technical regulations for the championship. It forms part of the extensive program of support categories built up around the British Touring Car Championship centrepiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233681-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta Junior Championship\nThis season was the seventh Ginetta Junior Championship. The season commenced on 31 March 2013 at Brands Hatch\u00a0\u2013 on the circuit's Indy configuration\u00a0\u2013 and concluded on 13 October 2013 at the same venue, utilising the Grand Prix circuit, after twenty races held at ten meetings, all in support of the 2013 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233681-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta Junior Championship, Regulation changes\nAfter introducing slick racing tyres in 2012, the championship reverted to treaded road tyres from this season onwards. The switch back was made in effort to cut costs, by saving 75% on the tyre budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233681-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ginetta Junior Championship, Race calendar and results\nThe provisional calendar was announced by the British Touring Car Championship organisers on 29 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233682-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Girabola\nThe 2013 Girabola was the 35th season of top-tier football in Angola. The season ran from 26 February to 3 November 2013. Recreativo do Libolo are the defending champions. Kabuscorp were crowned champions having won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233682-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Girabola\nThe league comprises 16 teams, the bottom three of which will be relegated to the 2014 Segundona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233682-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Girabola\nThe winner and the runner-up qualified to the CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233682-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Girabola, Changes from 2012 season\nRelegated: Acad\u00e9mica do Soyo, Sporting de Cabinda, Nacional de Benguela Promoted: Desportivo da Hu\u00edla, Porcelana FC, Primeiro de Maio", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 39], "content_span": [40, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233683-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' EuroHockey Youth Championships\nThe 2013 Girls' EuroHockey Youth Championships was the 7th edition of the Girls' EuroHockey Youth Championship. The tournament was held from 29 July\u20134 August 2013 in Dublin, Ireland at the University College Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233683-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' EuroHockey Youth Championships\nNetherlands won the tournament for the fifth time after defeating Germany 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233683-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' EuroHockey Youth Championships, Qualified teams\nThe following teams participated in the 2015 EuroHockey Youth Championship:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233683-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' EuroHockey Youth Championships, Format\nThe eight teams were split into two groups of four teams. The top two teams advanced to the semifinals to determine the winner in a knockout system. The bottom two teams played in a new group with the teams they did not play against in the group stage. The bottom two teams were relegated to the EuroHockey Youth Championship II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233683-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' EuroHockey Youth Championships, Results, Classification round, Fifth to eighth place classification\nPoints from the preliminary round were carried over to Pool C to determine group standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 111], "content_span": [112, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233684-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' U16 South American Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Girls' U16 South American Volleyball Championship was the 2nd edition of the tournament, organised by South America's governing volleyball body, the Confederaci\u00f3n Sudamericana de Voleibol (CSV). Held in Popay\u00e1n, Cauca, Colombia from November 9 to 16, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233684-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' U16 South American Volleyball Championship, Competition System\nAll matches in the preliminary round and the semifinals were played best out of three sets, the third place match and the Gold Medal match were played best out of 5 as normal senior tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 74], "content_span": [75, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233684-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' U16 South American Volleyball Championship, Competition System\nThe competition system for the second Girls' U16 South American Championship consisted of two rounds, the first round was a Round-Robin system. Each team played once against each of the 7 remaining teams with each team playing two matches in a day against different teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 74], "content_span": [75, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233684-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' U16 South American Volleyball Championship, Competition System\nAccording to the final ranking in the first round, the best four teams played in the semifinals (1\u00ba VS 4\u00ba and 2\u00ba VS 3\u00ba), the winners played for the Gold Medal while the losers played for the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 74], "content_span": [75, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233684-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' U16 South American Volleyball Championship, Matches, First Round\nThe first round matches were divided in two parts, the first part saw the top three teams plus the host (Colombia, Brazil, Peru and Argentina) play the other four teams (Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia), this part was played for two days, the second part had the remaining matches between the groups, this round was played for a day and a half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233685-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth African Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Girl's Africa Volleyball Championship happens in Egypt, from 25 to 27 March. The top three finishers qualify for the 2013 FIVB Girls Youth World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233686-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship was played in Serbia and Montenegro from March 30 to April 7, 2013. The top six teams qualified for the 2013 Youth World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233686-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship, Preliminary round\nThe draw was held on 18 January 2013 at Belgrade, Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233687-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship Qualification\nThe qualification for the 2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship was held from January 3\u20137, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233687-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship Qualification, Pool A\nMatches of Pool A were to be played in Moscow, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 72], "content_span": [73, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233687-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship Qualification, Pool A, Pool B\nMatches of Pool B were played in Brno, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233687-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship Qualification, Pool A, Pool D\nMatches of Pool D were played in Nova Gorica, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233687-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth European Volleyball Championship Qualification, Pool A, Pool E\nMatches of Pool E were played in Nea Ionia, Magnesia, Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233688-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup\nThe 2013 Girls' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup takes place April 29 to May 4, in Guatemala City. The top ranked team of Pool B at the end of the round-robin preliminary phase will be granted a ticket to the 2013 Youth World Championship in the city of Nakhon Ratchasima, in Thailand, from July 26 to August 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233688-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Girls' Youth Pan-American Volleyball Cup\nAccording to the competition format, the top two ranked teams in Pool A, will advance directly to the semifinals, while the third and fourth placed squads will meet in the quarterfinals with the top teams of Pool B in cross-over matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia\nThe 2013 Giro d'Italia was the 96th\u00a0edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. It started in Naples and finished in Brescia. Vincenzo Nibali of team Astana won the general classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Teams\nAs a UCI World Tour race, the Giro was obliged to invite all teams in the UCI's top division\u2014the ProTour teams\u2014and these teams were obliged to take part. At the beginning of the season, there were, as in recent years, 18 ProTour teams, and the race organisers issued four wildcard invitations to fill the usual quota of 22 teams for the event. However, Team Katusha successfully appealed against its loss of ProTour status to the Court of Arbitration for Sport and the UCI decided against demoting any of the other teams; meaning that 23 teams took part in the Giro, as happened under a special dispensation in 2011. The participating teams were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Teams\n* : Pro Continental teams given wild card entry to this event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Pre-race favourites\n2012 Giro winner Ryder Hesjedal, Bradley Wiggins, winner of the 2012 Tour de France, and Vincenzo Nibali were among the favourites for overall victory. Other possible contenders included Michele Scarponi, Cadel Evans, Robert Gesink and Samuel S\u00e1nchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nOn 30 September 2012 the complete route was announced in Milan. For the first time since 2008, the first stages of the race (eight in total) took place in the south of Italy. The island of Ischia also hosted a stage for the first time in 54 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nIn 2013, the race paid tribute to the victims of the Vajont Dam disaster of 1963, but also to composer Giuseppe Verdi in stage 13 and to famous cyclist and triple Giro winner Gino Bartali in stage 9. There was speculation before the race that some sections of the route may also be relevant for contenders of the world championships in Florence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nIn a revocation of a rule change in the 2012 race, all mass-start stages again awarded time bonuses to the first three riders, 20, 12, and 8 seconds respectively. In 2012, stages classified high-mountain did not award time bonuses. This Giro was also the first to feature two intermediate sprints per road stage, rather than only one. These sprints awarded points to the points classification and bonus seconds in the general classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe 2013 Giro d'Italia featured cold and wet weather, leading Bicycling magazine to call it \"one of the more grueling Grand Tours in recent memory.\" During the first week of the race it looked like it may be a close contest that came down to the final stages. On the eighth stage, a time trial, Vincenzo Nibali took over the pink jersey (given to the overall leader). Early departures by contenders Ryder Hesjedal and Bradley Wiggins took much of the drama out of the race. By the final stages, all Nibali had to do was remain upright to claim victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nESPN's Andrew Hood described his performance as \"three nearly perfect weeks of racing.\" \"Nibali revealed he is a complete rider, handling the stresses and demands of racing both on and off the bike,\" wrote Hood. Nibali called winning the Giro \"a dream\" and said it was unlikely he would compete in the Tour de France. It was the first time an Italian won the race outright since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nOthers with strong performance in the Giro d'Italia included Carlos Betancur, Mark Cavendish, Cadel Evans, and Rigoberto Ur\u00e1n. Riding in his first grand-tour event, 23-year-old Betancur finished fifth overall and won the best young rider's jersey. He had two second places on stages during the race. \"I won my Giro\", he said. Cavendish won five stages\u00a0\u2013 all bunch sprints\u00a0\u2013 and the points jersey. He became the fifth rider to win the points jersey at all three grand-tour races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nEvans was written off by many commentators following a poor 2012 season, but bounced back with a third-place finish at the Giro. In so doing, he became the oldest rider to reach the podium since 1928. \"I wasn't even planning on racing this Giro until a few weeks before it started, so to be [third] isn't so bad,\" he said. Ur\u00e1n won the tenth stage, and took second overall. His second-place finish came despite his loss of 1:30 on stage seven when he waited for teammate Bradley Wiggins to catch up to him. It was the best finish by Colombian rider since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nIn the 2013 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-00233689-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nAdditionally, there was a points classification, awarding a red jersey. In the points classification, cyclists received points for finishing in the top 15 in a stage. Unlike in the better known points classification in the Tour de France, the type of stage has no effect on what points were on offer\u00a0\u2013 each stage had the same points available on the same scale. The winner earned 25\u00a0points, second place earned 20\u00a0points, third 16, fourth 14, fifth 12, sixth 10, and one point fewer per place down 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, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThere was also a mountains classification, the leadership of which was marked by a blue jersey. In the mountains classifications, points were won by reaching the top of a climb before other cyclists. Each climb was categorized as either first, second, third, or fourth-category, with more points available for the higher-categorized climbs. The Cima Coppi, the race's highest point of elevation, was worth still more points than the other first-category climbs. Initially, the Cima Coppi was scheduled to be awarded at the top of the Passo dello Stelvio but, after the cancellation of the stage containing the climb, the Cima Coppi for the 2013 Giro d'Italia was the Tre Cime di Lavaredo, at 2,304 metres (7,559\u00a0ft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThe fourth jersey represents the young rider classification, marked by a white jersey. This was decided the same way as the general classification, but only riders born after 1 January 1988 were eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThere were also two classifications for teams. In the Trofeo Fast Team 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, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThe rows in the following table correspond to the jerseys awarded after that stage was run. In a break with the practice of recent years, defending Giro champion Ryder Hesjedal wore the pink jersey during the first stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 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. These awards were based on points earned throughout the three weeks of the tour. Each mass-start stage had two intermediate sprints, the Traguardi Volante, or T.V. The T.V. sprints gave bonus seconds towards the general classification, points towards the regular points classification, and also points towards the T.V. classification. This award was known by various names in previous years, and was previously time-based. It was won by Brazilian Rafael Andriato of the Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia team. Andriato also won the Premio della Fuga, which rewarded riders who took part in a breakaway at the head of the field. Each rider in an escape of ten or fewer riders received one point for each kilometre that the group stayed clear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233689-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Final standings, Minor classifications\nOther awards included the Combativity classification, which was a compilation of points gained for position on crossing intermediate sprints, mountain passes and stage finishes. Points classification winner Mark Cavendish won this award. The Azzurri d'Italia classification was based on finishing order, but points were awarded only to the top three finishers in each stage. It was likewise won, like the closely associated points classification, by Cavendish. Teams were given penalty points for minor technical infringements. Cannondale were the only team to avoid being penalised altogether over the course of the race, and so won the Fair Play classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233690-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia Femminile\nThe 2013 Giro d'Italia Femminile, also known as the 2013 Giro Rosa, was the 24th consecutive Giro d'Italia Femminile, the most prestigious Italian stage race in the women's road cycling calendar for 2013. It was held over eight stages between 30 June and 7 July 2013, starting in Giovinazzo, Apulia, and finishing with an individual time trial in Cremona, Lombardy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233690-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia Femminile, Classification standings, Team classification\nObsolete - data not currently available for Stages 3 onwards", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nThe 2013 Giro d'Italia began on 4 May, and stage 11 occurred on 15 May. The 2013 edition began with a road stage, for the first time since 2003, around Naples before a team time trial took place the following day on the island of Ischia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nThe rest of the opening half of the race\u00a0\u2013 remaining within Italy for the duration\u00a0\u2013 consisted of medium-mountain stages, save for two categorised flat stages and the first of two individual time trials during the event; the 54.8\u00a0km (34.1\u00a0mi)-long eighth stage between Gabicce Mare and Saltara, where each remaining member of the starting peloton of 207 riders competed against the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nMark Cavendish became the first race leader, as he won the opening stage in Naples; the first of two stage wins that Cavendish achieved during the opening half of the race, along with the sixth stage. As a result, Cavendish was the only rider to win multiple stages in the opening half of the race. Cavendish lost the race lead the following day, as his Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step team failed to a sufficient time for him to remain in the jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nTeam Sky won the stage, which put Salvatore Puccio into the maglia rosa after he had placed highest during the opening stage, out of the five remaining members of the Team Sky train at the finish. Luca Paolini soloed into the leader's jersey after the third stage, attacking with 7\u00a0km (4.3\u00a0mi) remaining and held clear of the field to win by sixteen seconds. He held the leader's jersey for four days, before losing it on the seventh stage, held in heavy rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nOn that stage, Adam Hansen\u00a0\u2013 a rider who had completed all three Grand Tours in 2012\u00a0\u2013 took the honours by over a minute from a stage-long breakaway, while Be\u00f1at Intxausti was able to take the leader's jersey after finishing in the group of the overall favourites for the race. Intxausti's weakness in the time trial discipline saw him surrender the lead the following day, losing three-and-a-half minutes to the stage winner, team-mate Alex Dowsett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nVincenzo Nibali\u00a0\u2013 a previous Grand Tour winner at the 2010 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a\u00a0\u2013 assumed the race lead, and held the lead to the end of the eleventh stage, which marked the halfway point of the race. Nibali had ended the time trial 29 seconds clear of closest challenger Cadel Evans, but he gained twelve bonus seconds on the tenth stage, the race's first summit finish, to extend his advantage to 41 seconds with the more mountainous second half of the Giro still to come.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\nFor the first time since the 2003 edition of the race, the Giro d'Italia began with a mass-start stage rather than a time trial test against the clock. Naples was announced as the starting location for the race in June 2012, with the 2013 race marking the 50th anniversary of the race's only other start in Naples; on that occasion, Vittorio Adorni soloed to victory in Potenza. The opening stage of the 2013 Giro was a circuit race in and around Naples, with two different circuits being utilised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\nFour laps of a 16.3\u00a0km (10.1\u00a0mi)-long circuit were completed first, with two ascents of a fourth-category climb providing any potential breakaways with the opportunity of claiming the mountains jersey on the opening day. From there, a shorter circuit of 8.1\u00a0km (5.0\u00a0mi) in length was completed eight times, with the finish of the stage at the Lungomare Caracciolo. With no major tests on the stage, it was widely expected to end in a sprint finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\nAlmost immediately after the race began, the breakaway was formed, with seven riders attempting to work together in order to create a sizable advantage over the field, but could not muster an advantage of much over two minutes. The Movistar Team's Giovanni Visconti and Cameron Wurf of Cannondale each led the breakaway over the summit of the climb, with Guillaume Bonnafond (Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale) also achieving three points through minor placings on both ascents. This meant that the first maglia azzurra would be settled in the final sprint. Around halfway into the stage, Wurf moved off the front on his own, and remained clear of the field until around 19\u00a0km (11.8\u00a0mi), where the Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step-led peloton moved past him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\nSeveral late crashes split the field into many groups, the last of which came inside the final 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi), ensuring that the majority of the field would receive the same time as the stage winner. For the final sprint, it came down to a select group of sprinters; Orica\u2013GreenEDGE sat on the front with the lead-out for Matthew Goss, but Elia Viviani (Cannondale) and Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Mark Cavendish moved ahead, with Cavendish ultimately taking the victory on the line by almost a bike length.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\nWith his 37th Grand Tour stage win, moving him into a tie for eighth place on the all-time list with Rik Van Looy, Cavendish picked up the pink and red jerseys on the podium as leader of the general and points classifications. Although disappointed with losing the sprint, Viviani became the first white jersey wearer as young rider leader, and Visconti placed highest in the sprint to take the mountains lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\nFor the second stage of the race, the peloton was ferried over to the volcanic island of Ischia, which was hosting the Giro d'Italia for the first time in 54 years. On that occasion, an individual time trial over a course of 31\u00a0km (19.3\u00a0mi) was contested; which was won by Antonino Catalano, taking his only Giro stage victory, beating every other member of the peloton\u00a0\u2013 with the exception of Jacques Anquetil\u00a0\u2013 by over a minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\nFor Ischia's appearance in the 2013 race, a technical, undulating parcours of 17.4\u00a0km (10.8\u00a0mi) was set aside for the team time trial, including gradients of approaching 7% for a period within the final 5\u00a0km (3.1\u00a0mi) of the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\nThe start order for the stage was primarily set by the reverse order of how each of the 23 teams were ranked in the Trofeo Fast Team standings after the previous day's opening stage; the only exception was that Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step would set off last, as Mark Cavendish was in possession of the maglia rosa, as the general classification leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\nColombia were the first team to start\u00a0\u2013 each team setting off thereafter, at three-minute intervals\u00a0\u2013 and only shed one rider from their train by the time they reached the finish in a time of 23' 01\", but that time was beaten by the next squad on the course, as Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale went below 23 minutes, recording a time of 22' 55\". Blanco Pro Cycling were next onto the stage, and were comfortably quicker, as they were 22 seconds faster for the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\nTheir time was not beaten until Team Sky hit the course, and despite early problems for several of their team, they came across the line in a time of 22' 05\". As it turned out, the time was not to be beaten, giving the squad their second team time trial victory of the season after a victory in the discipline at the Giro del Trentino. By the end of the stage, only one team\u00a0\u2013 the Movistar Team\u00a0\u2013 remained within ten seconds, having recorded a quicker time, by two seconds, to the intermediate point in Casamicciola Terme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\nCavendish surrendered the leader's jersey, as Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step could only record the seventeenth best time, 48 seconds down on Team Sky. As a result, Salvatore Puccio became the race leader, as of the five remaining members of the Team Sky train at the finish, he had placed highest on the opening stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\nBack on the mainland after its foray to Ischia, the third stage of the 2013 Giro was split into three distinct sections. From the start in Sorrento, the peloton completed two circuits of a 7.2\u00a0km (4.5\u00a0mi) loop before making an undulating way along the Amalfi coast to Salerno. Upon reaching Salerno\u00a0\u2013 where the first of two intermediate sprint points was held, along with one at Agropoli\u00a0\u2013 the route remained relatively flat for the next 80\u00a0km (49.7\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\nThe day's two categorised climbs came within the final third of the stage; the second-category San Mauro Cilento, averaging 6.7% over 7.8\u00a0km (4.8\u00a0mi), with gradients reaching 16% in the opening metres of the climb, and the third-category Sella di Catona, averaging 6.6% over 8\u00a0km (5.0\u00a0mi). From the top of the Sella di Catona, there was a near-20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) descent into the finish town of Ascea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\nThe day's breakaway was formed immediately after the start in Sorrento, with seven riders going clear to establish an advantage; the best of which was Fabio Taborre of the Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia team, who trailed the overall leader Salvatore Puccio (Team Sky) by 22 seconds overnight. Despite this, the septet was allowed to establish an advantage of over seven minutes at its maximum. On the San Mauro Cilento, the breakaway was down to six riders as Bert De Backer (Argos\u2013Shimano) lost contact with his companions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\nVacansoleil\u2013DCM rider Willem Wauters led over the climb, while the peloton came across the top around 3' 45\" down on the lead sextet, with De Backer in between. A group of sprinters fell off the back of the peloton, including Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Mark Cavendish and Nacer Bouhanni of FDJ, but both were able to rejoin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\nTaborre attacked on the descent from the climb, gaining an advantage of over a minute at one point, reaching the foot of the Sella di Catona with such a lead. Garmin\u2013Sharp upped the pace in the peloton, which enabled the group to overcome the remnants of the breakaway group, and at one point, caused a fracture in the main field which saw a group of overall contenders including Ryder Hesjedal, Vincenzo Nibali, Bradley Wiggins and Michele Scarponi to get clear. Hesjedal then attacked solo from this group, passing Taborre, before slowing up and returned to the main group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\nOn the descent, Nibali's Astana team-mate Valerio Agnoli pushed on and had Hesjedal and Team Katusha's Luca Paolini join him. This group was brought back, with Team Sky keeping the pace high. Paolini attacked again with around 7\u00a0km (4.3\u00a0mi) remaining, and was not to be caught, taking his first stage win in his d\u00e9but Giro, and the maglia rosa from Puccio, who lost seven minutes. BMC Racing Team rider Cadel Evans led home a sixteen-rider select group sixteen seconds behind, ahead of Hesjedal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\nThe race continued to make its way along the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea, heading southwards to the southernmost point of the 2013 Giro d'Italia with the finish in Serra San Bruno. With a parcours of 246\u00a0km (152.9\u00a0mi), the fourth stage was also the second longest of the entire race, with only the thirteenth stage involving a longer day in the saddle. The stage was predominantly flat, with only the final quarter of the stage involving sizable shifts in altitude, with two categorised climbs as part of the parcours, for the second day in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\nThe third-category Vibo Valentia climb was slow and progressional, as it averaged only 3% over 15\u00a0km (9.3\u00a0mi), before the second-category Croce Ferrata. Incorporating the second intermediate sprint at Soriano Calabro, the climb itself was 16.8\u00a0km (10.4\u00a0mi) long, and reached a maximum gradient of 10%. A descent of almost 7\u00a0km (4.3\u00a0mi) followed towards the finish in Serra San Bruno, with most of the final kilometre being run on cobblestones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\nJust like the previous day, the day's main breakaway was made up of seven riders, with the best-placed among the septet being Emanuele Sella (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela), who trailed race leader Luca Paolini of Team Katusha by 2' 39\" overnight. The group managed to build up an advantage of around eight minutes at one point during the stage. Paolini's team maintained their presence at the front of the peloton, cutting the advantage by half by the time the race reached the 100\u00a0km (62.1\u00a0mi) mark. The lead group split at this point, with Sella, Ioannis Tamouridis (Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi) and FDJ's Anthony Roux gradually falling back to the main group. The lead then went back up to 5' 10\", before falling substantially prior to the first climb of the day, the Vibo Valentia, to about one minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\nTamouridis' team-mate Miguel M\u00ednguez attacked on the climb, and was the last member of the breakaway to be brought back by the main field, eventually doing so with 42\u00a0km (26.1\u00a0mi) remaining. There were several mini-attacks from there, lasting all the way to the foot of the other climb, the Croce Ferrata, where Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Sylvain Georges attacked out of a six-rider move at the bottom; he managed to establish a maximum lead of over a minute, before Team Sky moved to the front of the peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\nVini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia's Danilo Di Luca and Robinson Chalapud (Colombia) attacked out of the peloton and soon passed Georges on the road, maintaining a small gap over the main field. Di Luca launched a long sprint for the line, doing so from around 800 metres (2,600\u00a0ft) out, and was not caught until 250 metres (820\u00a0ft) to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\nFrom there, Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox's Enrico Battaglin finished strongest to take the biggest win of his short professional career, by two lengths ahead of Sella's team-mate Fabio Felline and the Movistar Team's Giovanni Visconti, who had earlier done enough to regain the mountains classification lead. Paolini retained the maglia rosa after finishing tenth on the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\nAnother predominantly flat stage, the fifth stage started with a gradual downhill stretch from the start town of Cosenza, before a fourth-category ascent at Cipolletto, after around 37\u00a0km (23.0\u00a0mi) of racing. From there, the race meandered its way back to coastal roads, taking in intermediate sprint points at Villapiana Lido and Rocca Imperiale. With around 45\u00a0km (28.0\u00a0mi) remaining, the route turned away from the coast, and headed towards the finish town of Matera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\nOn the run-in was another fourth-category climb at Montescaglioso, before a gradual uphill finish in Matera; the roads rose by 2.6% within the final kilometre before the finish on the Via Dante Alighieri. It was expected to disadvantage out-and-out sprinters, but favour sprinters with climbing capabilities, such as Argos\u2013Shimano's John Degenkolb, and Orica\u2013GreenEDGE rider Matthew Goss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\nSix riders formed the primary breakaway for the day, establishing their advantage from the 6\u00a0km (3.7\u00a0mi) points onwards. The best placed of the sextet was Stefano Pirazzi of the Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox team, who trailed overall leader Luca Paolini (Team Katusha) by just over three minutes overnight; after he claimed maximum points at the first climb at Cipolletto, Pirazzi sat up from the lead group and returned the peloton. After Pirazzi dropped back, the peloton slowed their pace substantially, and the five-man lead group were allowed to build up a lead of almost ten minutes on the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\nThe weather changed on the route; having started in bright sunshine, heavy rain hit the peloton with around 60\u00a0km (37.3\u00a0mi) making conditions treacherous on the roads. The lead group's advantage was continually brought back on the route, holding a lead of just over 30 seconds by the time they reached the final climb at Montescaglioso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\nThe lead five riders were brought back one-by-one, with the last rider to be caught being Ricardo Mestre of the Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi team, with about 22\u00a0km (13.7\u00a0mi) to go. Pirazzi attacked on the climb in the hope of gaining more points to the mountains classification\u00a0\u2013 ultimately crossing the summit in first position\u00a0\u2013 but was joined on the descent by Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Ben Gastauer. Gastauer soon left Pirazzi behind and was joined by Mestre's team-mate Robert Vre\u010der.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\nLotto\u2013Belisol rider Lars Bak also provided assistance to the group within the final 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi), but the trio were ultimately caught. Marco Canola led the field into the final kilometre for Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox, with Degenkolb's lead-out man Luka Mezgec falling to the tarmac on the still-wet roads, meaning Degenkolb had to chase Canola on his own; he caught up with him, and soon sprinted away to his first stage win at the Giro, and his sixth Grand Tour stage win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 6\nThe sixth stage of the Giro d'Italia was seen as one of the most sprinter-friendly stages of the race, with the parcours being run largely at sea level, on the coast of the Adriatic Sea. The course meandered inland after the second of the day's intermediate sprint points at Barletta\u00a0\u2013 the first coming 11\u00a0km (6.8\u00a0mi) prior in the town of Trani\u00a0\u2013 with a slight ascent of a small hill, but nothing categorised towards the mountains classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 6\nThe route headed back to the coast for the finish in Margherita di Savoia, where around two-and-a-half laps of a 16.3\u00a0km (10.1\u00a0mi)-long circuit were completed before the expected sprint finish. The day's breakaway was all-Australian, as Blanco Pro Cycling's Jack Bobridge was joined by Cameron Wurf of Cannondale\u00a0\u2013 who featured in the breakaway on the opening day\u00a0\u2013 as they got clear after numerous smaller attacks had been brought back within the opening 15\u00a0km (9.3\u00a0mi), gaining an advantage of six-and-a-half minutes at one point during the stage, before the sprinters' teams started the chase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 6\nWurf's team-mates were twice able to launch Elia Viviani to gain points on Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Mark Cavendish, in relation to the points classification, at each of the intermediate sprint points. Prior to the first passage through the finish line, the two leaders were brought back and almost immediately after, there was a large crash in the main field, which blocked the road momentarily. The group split, but ultimately came back together within 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi) and set up the sprint finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 6\nArgos\u2013Shimano led into the final kilometre, but Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step soon came to the fore with Gert Steegmans launching Cavendish for his second stage win of the race, and his 38th Grand Tour stage win. After praising the lead-out of his team-mates, Cavendish dedicated his victory on the podium to Wouter Weylandt, by holding a dossard with the number 108 on it, the number Weylandt had been competing with during the 2011 Giro d'Italia, when he was killed during the third stage, held on 9 May. He also regained the lead of the points classification from overall leader Luca Paolini, who maintained the maglia rosa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\nAn undulating parcours of 177\u00a0km (110.0\u00a0mi) awaited the riders for the seventh stage of the 2013 Giro d'Italia, starting and finishing on the coast of the Adriatic Sea. However, most of the day's action was scheduled for inland, and in the second half of the stage; within the final 60\u00a0km (37.3\u00a0mi), there were four categorised climbs\u00a0\u2013 two third-category and two fourth-category ascents respectively\u00a0\u2013 as well as the day's two intermediate sprints, coming in Chieti (most notably, a frequent stage finishing town for the early-season Tirreno\u2013Adriatico stage race) and in Chieti Scalo. The final climb of the San Silvestro came with just 7.4\u00a0km (4.6\u00a0mi) remaining before the pan-flat finish to in Pescara, just 3 metres (10\u00a0ft) above sea level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\nFabio Taborre (Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia) launched the first attack of the day, but it was not until a group of six riders had formed that the breakaway was allowed to break free and establish an advantage; the best-placed rider amongst them was Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela rider Emanuele Sella, who trailed overall leader Luca Paolini of Team Katusha by just under seven minutes. The sextet built up a lead of almost seven-and-a-half minutes around halfway through the stage, before Taborre and his team-mates\u00a0\u2013 as well as Paolini's team\u00a0\u2013 set about trying to reduce the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\nThe lead group split on the second climb in Chieti, when Sella and Adam Hansen of Lotto\u2013Belisol, were able to drop the four other members of the breakaway. Rain was also making riding conditions difficult, with Sella being caught out while cornering; Hansen waited for his fellow escapee before regaining the momentum to gap the main field. Hansen was able to drop Sella on the third of the four climbs, the third-category, 5.9% average gradient ascent of the Santa Maria de Criptis, reaching the top of the climb with an advantage of some 30 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\nIn the main field, Astana's Tanel Kangert and Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia rider Danilo Di Luca both launched combative moves off the front, while at the bottom of the final climb, Kangert's team-mate Vincenzo Nibali fell to the ground due to the slippery conditions. The main field had split at this point, with Team Sky missing the junction, leaving Bradley Wiggins in a chasing group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\nSella\u00a0\u2013 who was in between the lead and the peloton\u00a0\u2013 crashed with around 5\u00a0km (3.1\u00a0mi) remaining, with the same corner later catching out Wiggins, who later elected to gingerly descend the rest of the hill, losing more time to the main group. At the front, Hansen\u00a0\u2013 who completed all three Grand Tours in 2012\u00a0\u2013 was still out front and soloed away to his first win since 2010. A 27-rider group came across the line just over a minute later, with Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox's Enrico Battaglin leading the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\nThe majority of the race favourites were within this group, with the exception of Wiggins, who lost nearly 90 seconds more than that, dropping outside the top 20 overall. Paolini was also in that group, and thus surrendered the lead of the race to the Movistar Team's Be\u00f1at Intxausti, with Nibali and Garmin\u2013Sharp's Ryder Hesjedal within ten seconds ahead of the following day's time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\nThe first of two individual time trials to be held in the 2013 Giro d'Italia, the eighth stage was the longest such test against the clock to feature in the race since 2009. On that occasion, then-Rabobank rider Denis Menchov won the stage after completing the 60.6\u00a0km (37.7\u00a0mi) course, in the Cinque Terre, in a time just over 94 minutes. The Marche region played host to the 54.8\u00a0km (34.1\u00a0mi) parcours, with a twisty, technical course, but not overly mountainous unlike 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\nThe final 3.5\u00a0km (2.2\u00a0mi) of the course was also set to test the riders; from the second intermediate time-check in Calcinelli, the riders steadily climbed towards the finish at the Villa del Bal\u00ec in Saltara, with an 11.2% average gradient climb coming within the final kilometre. As was customary of time trial stages, the riders set off in reverse order from where they were ranked in the general classification at the end of the previous stage. Thus, Jack Bobridge of Blanco Pro Cycling, who, in 201st place\u00a0\u2013 of the 207 riders who started the race\u00a0\u2013 trailed overall leader Be\u00f1at Intxausti (Movistar Team) by one hour, twenty-four minutes and twelve seconds, was the first rider to set off on the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\nAlthough Bobridge was first into the stage, he was not the first to finish, as Team Katusha's Maxim Belkov\u00a0\u2013 who started the stage three minutes behind Bobridge, at one-minute intervals\u00a0\u2013 recorded a time of one hour, twenty-one minutes and thirty-two seconds for the course; Bobridge finished three minutes further later, losing six minutes in total to Belkov. Belkov's time remained at the top of the time-sheets for around fifteen minutes before RadioShack\u2013Leopard rider Jesse Sergent took over at the top, beating Belkov's time by 3' 05\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\nAgain, Sergent held the top spot for around the same length of time as what Belkov did, before the eventual stage-winning time was recorded. British national champion Alex Dowsett (Movistar Team) set the fastest time at each of the intermediate splits, and ultimately recorded a time exactly two minutes quicker than Sergent, in a time of one hour, sixteen minutes and twenty-seven seconds. In his d\u00e9but Grand Tour, Dowsett achieved his first stage victory since the 2011 Tour of Britain, also in an individual time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\nAmong the overall contenders, Team Sky's Bradley Wiggins was considered as the pre-stage favourite, but was not expected to take the maglia rosa after losing time the previous day into Pescara. Wiggins caught his minute-man Danilo Di Luca (Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia) in the early part of the stage, but he had stop several minutes later with a puncture; he threw his bike to the ground, before receiving a new bike from his mechanics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\nAlthough he was 52 seconds down on Dowsett at the first split, Wiggins had reduced the gap to just 10 at the finish, which was the closest anyone got to Dowsett. Lampre\u2013Merida's Michele Scarponi put in a solid performance to lose just 43 seconds to Wiggins, while the BMC Racing Team's Cadel Evans lost 29 to remain 47 seconds ahead of him, in the overall classification. Evans also moved up to second overall, as Astana's Vincenzo Nibali became the new leader. Nibali went quicker than Dowsett to the first intermediate, but faded in the second portion of the course, finishing fourth on the stage\u00a0\u2013 just behind team-mate Tanel Kangert\u00a0\u2013 losing eleven seconds to Wiggins, but maintained a 1' 16\" lead over him overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\nThe ninth stage of the 2013 Giro d'Italia was the last to be contested before the first of two rest days to be held during the race, the following day. With an itinerary of 170\u00a0km (105.6\u00a0mi) through the mountains of Tuscany, it was to be expected that the breakaway would have a chance to achieve another stage victory, on roads expected to feature in September's UCI Road World Championships due to be held in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\nThe parcours had a mix of categorised climbs throughout; for the four categorised climbs during the stage, each of the four categorisations available to the race organisers for ascents was implemented. The highest of these was the first-category Vallombrosa climb, but was not overly difficult at 6% over 9\u00a0km (5.6\u00a0mi). Two punchy climbs followed; the third-category Vetta le Croci averaged over 9% during the 4\u00a0km (2.5\u00a0mi) climb, while the Fiesole averaged 5.7%, before a 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi) run to the finish in Florence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\nAfter an earlier seven-rider move had been brought back early in the stage, the day's breakaway came about at the 21\u00a0km (13.0\u00a0mi) point, with a group swelling to twelve riders going clear; the best placed among the group was Blanco Pro Cycling's Juan Manuel G\u00e1rate, who trailed overall leader Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) by 5' 42\" overnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\nThe lead group split on the day's first climb, the Consuma Pass, when Colombia's Robinson Chalapud attacked along with Stefano Pirazzi of the Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox team, with the duo being joined by Team Katusha rider Maxim Belkov on the descent from the climb. The trio were continuing to extend their lead over the main field, holding an advantage of over five minutes at that point. Belkov lost time on the second climb\u00a0\u2013 where Pirazzi led Chalapud over the top again, in order to boost his position in the mountains classification\u00a0\u2013 but was able to rejoin on the descent, once more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\nOnce Belkov had rejoined, he did not stay around long, accelerating down the road from Pirazzi and Chalapud. He had established an advantage of almost two minutes by the time that another three riders had joined up with Pirazzi and Chalapud, with around 40\u00a0km (24.9\u00a0mi) remaining of the stage; the chase group soon expanded to nine riders chasing after Belkov, who was over three-and-a-half minutes clear with 25\u00a0km (15.5\u00a0mi) remaining. Belkov tired in the closing stages, but still did enough to win the stage by 44 seconds for his first professional victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\nBehind, Jarlinson Pantano (Colombia) and Argos\u2013Shimano's Tobias Ludvigsson had attacked out of the chase group, and had vainly set off in pursuit of Belkov. Both riders were ultimately beaten to the line by Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Carlos Betancur, who attacked out of the peloton on the final climb; he mistakenly believed that he had won the stage, celebrating as he came across the line. Pantano beat Ludvigsson for third, while Cadel Evans (BMC Racing Team) led home the group of overall contenders not long after, taking the points classification lead in the process. One overall contender missing from the group however, was Ryder Hesjedal of Garmin\u2013Sharp, who lost over a minute on the course, and dropped out of the top ten overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\nThe race's first summit finish was key to its resumption after the first rest day the previous day; the 167\u00a0km (103.8\u00a0mi) parcours from Cordenons started with a gradual climb out of the starting town, with several small hills in the opening half of the stage. The roads started to climb towards more sharply after the day's first intermediate sprint point, coming with around 64\u00a0km (39.8\u00a0mi) to go in Paularo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\nFrom there, the riders began the climb of the Passo Cason di Lanza\u00a0\u2013 a 14.5\u00a0km (9.0\u00a0mi) ascent from the bottom to the top, but with a downhill portion of just over 2.1\u00a0km (1.3\u00a0mi)\u00a0\u2013 averaging a gradient of around 8.5%. A long gradual descent followed, towards the town of Chiusaforte before the ascent of the Altopiano del Montasio. After a sustained approach, the climb of 10.9\u00a0km (6.8\u00a0mi) ramped up immediately with 14% sections\u00a0\u2013 sections reached 20% near the top of the climb\u00a0\u2013 with the average being around 8%. The final kilometre was a false flat, averaging 3.2%, before the finish at 1,519 metres (4,984\u00a0ft) up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\nA group of thirteen riders formed the day's breakaway, with the group being initiated at the 20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) mark of the stage, with their advantage over the main field reaching a maximum of around nine minutes at the mid-stage point. Team Sky moved to the front of the peloton as the first climb began, while at the front of the race, Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela rider Jackson Rodr\u00edguez attacked on his own. He was followed up the climb by RadioShack\u2013Leopard's Tiago Machado, who had also attacked out of the group with Serge Pauwels of Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\nThe numbers in the peloton had reduced significantly thanks to the pace being set, before Rodr\u00edguez's team-mate Franco Pellizotti attacked from the group, beginning a chase of the leaders. Following his difficulties to remain with the overall contenders on the previous stage, defending Giro winner Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin\u2013Sharp) again struggled to remain in contention, cracking on the climb. He lost almost 21 minutes by the stage's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\nRodr\u00edguez began to suffer with mechanical problems on the descent from the climb, and after a change of machinery, he was joined by Pauwels at the front, after he had moved away from Machado; the duo reached the lower slopes of the final climb with a lead of around 2' 20\" over the main field, still being led by Team Sky. This gap was wiped out before the steeper segments of the climb had commenced, with around 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi) remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\nRigoberto Ur\u00e1n attacked several kilometres later, with Astana forced to try and chase down the move for race leader Vincenzo Nibali, through domestique Valerio Agnoli. Ur\u00e1n held a lead of around 50 seconds at one point during his attack, and ultimately soloed away to the stage victory. Fellow Colombian rider Carlos Betancur (Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale) managed to get clear with around 1.5\u00a0km (0.9\u00a0mi) to go, and finished 19 seconds behind Ur\u00e1n, with the rest of the overall contenders coming across the line 12 seconds later, led home by Nibali. With eight bonus seconds gained at the line, Nibali extended his overall lead to 41 seconds over BMC Racing Team's Cadel Evans, while Ur\u00e1n moved ahead of team-mate Bradley Wiggins into third place, by one second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\nThe midway point of the race was marked by a transitional stage across the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region, starting at the Cave del Predil around 15\u00a0km (9.3\u00a0mi) to the south of Tarvisio. After descending towards Tarvisio itself, the riders crested a small hill on the route at Camporosso, before descending gradually for around 50\u00a0km (31.1\u00a0mi). Having made their way through the feed zone at Ovaro\u00a0\u2013 at the foot of the Monte Zoncolan, which featured in 2011\u00a0\u2013 the riders ascented the second-category Sella Ciampigotto, a rolling climb of around 4.5% in gradient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\nFrom there, the riders descended through the two intermediate sprint points\u00a0\u2013 at Lozzo di Cadore and Pieve di Cadore\u00a0\u2013 before the final kick up to the finish at Erto e Casso. The final climb was another rolling climb, with an average of around 5%, but the climb itself maxed out at 9% in places. The Vajont stage was held to commemorate victims of the Vajont Dam disaster in 1963, when a landslide caused major flooding in the Piave Valley, and the deaths of around 2,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\nPrior to the start, it was announced that Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale rider Sylvain Georges\u00a0\u2013 who had been lying 81st overall\u00a0\u2013 had tested positive for heptaminol after the seventh stage, and he failed to start the stage. With descending key to the first hour of racing, the peloton remained together for the duration, before a twenty-rider breakaway group was allowed to form at the 75\u00a0km (46.6\u00a0mi) mark; 20 of the 23 teams that started the race were represented, with only Astana, Lampre\u2013Merida and Lotto\u2013Belisol not represented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\nThe highest placed rider within the group was Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia's Danilo Di Luca, who trailed overnight leader Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) by almost fourteen minutes overnight. The group built up a lead of around five minutes at the halfway point, prior to the day's first climb. After Stefano Pirazzi (Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox) extended his mountains classification lead by placing second to Jackson Rodr\u00edguez of Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela at the summit, the group continued as one down the descent. The group held a lead of around five-and-a-half minutes over the peloton, being led by Astana, who were setting the pace for Nibali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\nArgos\u2013Shimano rider Patrick Gretsch attacked the group, and set off to an advantage which eventually reached almost two minutes prior to the final climb. Di Luca tried to get away twice, but was unable to gain enough ground to breach the group; however, his move was the catalyst for another three riders to counter-attack, with Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Guillaume Bonnafond being joined by Ram\u016bnas Navardauskas of Garmin\u2013Sharp\u00a0\u2013 who wore the maglia rosa during the 2012 Giro d'Italia\u00a0\u2013 and Daniel Oss of the BMC Racing Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\nBonnafond could not remain with his rivals, and soon dropped back to the group while Navardauskas and Oss set off in chase of Gretsch, catching him with around 17.5\u00a0km (10.9\u00a0mi) to go. Gretsch struggled to contribute to the pace, and ultimately cracked prior to the final climb. Navardauskas dropped Oss with several sharp accelerations at the 5\u00a0km (3.1\u00a0mi) to go mark, and soloed away to his first Grand Tour stage win by over a minute from Oss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233691-0033-0002", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\nPirazzi broke away from the chasing group to take third\u00a0\u2013 further extending his mountains lead\u00a0\u2013 while the remainder of the group came home in small packs. The peloton came home almost six minutes down, although the Movistar Team's Be\u00f1at Intxausti was able to gain some time on the other overall contenders; a gap of 18 seconds was enough for Intxausti to move back into the top ten overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21\nStage 12 of the 2013 Giro d'Italia was contested on 16 May, and the race concluded on 26 May. The second half of the race was almost entirely situated within Italy; it started with a categorised flat stage from Longarone to Treviso, before four mountain stages\u00a0\u2013 as well as a mountainous individual time trial between Mori and Polsa\u00a0\u2013 en route to the finish in Brescia, where the race concluded with a road stage for the first time since 2007. The race also crossed over into France during the fifteenth stage, ending with a summit finish on the Col du Galibier. After the second rest day of the race, the peloton returned to Italy in the following stage, from Valloire in France to Ivrea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21\nHaving picked up the overall race lead after the eighth stage, Astana rider Vincenzo Nibali was able to hold onto the race leadership for the entire second half of the Giro, and as a result, achieved the second Grand Tour general classification victory of his career; he had previously won the 2010 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a for the Liquigas\u2013Doimo team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21\nNibali held a 41-second lead margin over BMC Racing Team's Cadel Evans until the fourteenth stage, when Nibali attacked on the final climb to the Monte Jafferau outside Bardonecchia, and was able to gain 45 seconds on Evans by finishing second to Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia's Mauro Santambrogio. Nibali later won two stages during the final week of the race, further extending his overall advantage, and eventually completed the race with a winning margin of close to five minutes. Evans was unable to hold onto second place overall, as he faded on the final climb of the race to Tre Cime di Lavaredo; he ultimately finished third overall behind Team Sky rider Rigoberto Ur\u00e1n, who had become his squad's leader after Bradley Wiggins was forced to withdraw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21\nAside from the overall race battle, Mark Cavendish was able to avenge his close defeat in the points classification at the 2012 race\u00a0\u2013 where he lost the red jersey by a single point to Team Katusha rider Joaquim Rodr\u00edguez\u00a0\u2013 by taking the classification on the final day in Brescia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21\nThe Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step rider's victory in Brescia, his fifth of the race\u00a0\u2013 he achieved three in the second half of the race, with other victories on stages 12 and 13\u00a0\u2013 allowed him to become only the fifth rider to complete a clean sweep of points classification victories at Grand Tours. Giovanni Visconti was another rider to take multiple victories during the second half of the race, taking solo victories at the Col du Galibier and into Vicenza. The second half of the race was also adversely affected by snow, with three stages being re-routed and a fourth having to be cancelled due to heavy snow and treacherous conditions; the cancelled stage was the first due to weather since the 1989 Giro d'Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\nThe second half of the race started with a stage ideally favoured towards the sprinters; with a parcours of 134\u00a0km (83.3\u00a0mi)\u00a0\u2013 one of the shortest of the race\u00a0\u2013 the stage was predominantly downhill from the start in Longarone, all the way to the finish in Treviso. Along the course, there were two fourth-category climbs alternating with the two intermediate sprint points\u00a0\u2013 coming in the comunes of Pieve d'Alpago and Vidor respectively\u00a0\u2013 within the opening two-thirds of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\nThe two categorised climbs were short and punchy; the Muro di C\u00e0 del Poggio averaged 12.2% over 1,200 metres (3,900\u00a0ft), while the Montello-Santa Maria della Vittoria ascented at an average of 6.3% over 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi). Once the riders reached Treviso, they completed a 7.5\u00a0km (4.7\u00a0mi) loop around the city; the final metres involved the crossing of a bridge, before the line on the Viale Bartolomeo Burchiellati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\nWet conditions awaited the riders in Longarone, where the breakaway was initiated almost immediately after the start, with a four-rider move going clear. The breakaway was made up of ninth stage winner Maxim Belkov (Team Katusha), Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela rider Fabio Felline, Bert De Backer of Argos\u2013Shimano and Vacansoleil\u2013DCM's Maurits Lammertink. Lammertink's team-mate Marco Marcato bridged the gap not long after, to make it a quintet. With a lead of nearly three-and-a-half minutes, all bar De Backer fell in the treacherous conditions, but were able to get back on their bikes not long after. The sprinters' teams slowly brought the lead group back, holding a 25-second lead going into the final loop around Treviso; the quintet managed to hold off until inside the final kilometre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\nFrom there, the Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step lead-out train swooped to the front, with Gert Steegmans providing the perfect launch for Mark Cavendish to take his third stage win of the race, and what was to be the 100th win of his professional career. Astana's Vincenzo Nibali maintained his 41-second overall lead ahead of the BMC Racing Team's Cadel Evans. Further behind, Team Sky rider Bradley Wiggins suffered the most notable time loss during the stage. With no fewer than four team-mates around him, Wiggins lost 3' 17\" on the day to the main group, falling out of the top ten overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\nWiggins attributed his lack of performance to an ever-worsening medical ailment; he had been taking antibiotics due to him suffering from a cold and chest infection. Due to this, Team Sky general manager Dave Brailsford stated that the team would now be backing Rigoberto Ur\u00e1n, lying third overall, as their best hope of winning the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\nAt 254\u00a0km (157.8\u00a0mi), the thirteenth stage was also the longest stage of the 2013 Giro d'Italia. The parcours, which ran through six different regions, was flat from the start to around the 175\u00a0km (108.7\u00a0mi) point. From there, there were several uncategorised hills on the route, passing through the two intermediate sprint points\u00a0\u2013 which were competed at the comunes of Castagnole delle Lanze and Alba respectively\u00a0\u2013 before reaching the day's only categorised climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\nThe third-category Tre Cuni was seen as a potential danger for the sprinters\u00a0\u2013 ahead of the finish in Cherasco\u00a0\u2013 with a gradual rolling climb of around 5% over 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi). From there, the riders descended towards the finish with several rolling hills in between; the expectations were still there for a sprint finish, but not a certainty. Prior to the start of the stage, former contenders for the overall classification, Bradley Wiggins (Team Sky) and Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin\u2013Sharp) both withdrew from the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\nA seven-rider group broke away from the peloton after around 20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) of racing, and with no potential contenders for the overall classification, the main field allowed the breakaway members to build up a lead of almost fourteen minutes at one point during the stage. With the main contenders unwilling to pull the gap back, it was left to the teams of the sprinters to set the pace; they did so gradually, with the leaders holding an advantage of just over a minute before the climb to Tre Cuni, around 40\u00a0km (24.9\u00a0mi) from the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\nOn the climb, Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox's Nicola Boem initiated the first attack, and was joined by Pablo Lastras of the Movistar Team and Lars Bak (Lotto\u2013Belisol), with the trio pulling clear of the remaining four members of the lead group. A small group attacked the peloton behind, but after several kilometres off the front of the bunch, this group was pulled back, leaving the three leaders around thirty seconds clear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\nOmega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step\u00a0\u2013 looking to set up Mark Cavendish for a fourth stage win at the race\u00a0\u2013 were stationed at the front of the peloton, and slowed the pace of the chase, and allowed the lead trio to gain several seconds of an advantage, pushing the lead out to almost a minute. Boem was dropped shortly after, while Lastras and Bak were joined by another group of riders, with seven going clear from the peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\nFrom the group, Giampaolo Caruso (Team Katusha) attacked with 6.5\u00a0km (4.0\u00a0mi) remaining, but his solo bid for victory was stopped with 1.5\u00a0km (0.9\u00a0mi) left. Cannondale led the field into the final kilometre for Elia Viviani, but Cavendish was first to launch his sprint, and was able to hold off the rest, just edging out Giacomo Nizzolo of RadioShack\u2013Leopard on the line. With his fourth victory of the race, Cavendish became the sixth rider to win 40 Grand Tour stages, and the first rider to take successive Giro stages since Alessandro Petacchi in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 14\nOriginally due to be held over a parcours of 168\u00a0km (104.4\u00a0mi), the fourteenth stage was altered on the morning of the stage, due to bad weather, which also precluded televised live pictures of the race for all but the final few hundred metres. The originally-scheduled climb to Sestriere, a second-category gradual ascent, was removed from the itinerary, with the peloton being re-routed along roads in the Susa Valley to Oulx. The race rejoined the original itinerary at Oulx; in total, 12\u00a0km (7.5\u00a0mi) was added to the stage distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 14\nFrom there, the parcours rose to steadily to an intermediate sprint at Bardonecchia, before the climb to the finish on the Jafferau. A first-category climb for its third appearance in the Giro, the Jafferau averaged a 9% gradient over 7.3\u00a0km (4.5\u00a0mi), with places reaching 14% and portions of the climb being run on unsurfaced roads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 14\nA group of seven riders went clear after around 14\u00a0km (8.7\u00a0mi) of racing, but this was quickly reduced to four, as three riders fell on wet roads. When they had recovered to the main field, the lead group started to increase their advantage. The all-Italian group\u00a0\u2013 former race leader Luca Paolini (Team Katusha), Daniele Pietropolli of Lampre\u2013Merida, Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox rider Sonny Colbrelli and Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Matteo Trentin\u00a0\u2013 were able to extend their advantage to almost ten minutes at one point before the peloton started to bring them back. As the race moved towards the Jafferau, Team Sky took up station on the front of the peloton, slimming the numbers in the main group. Before the final climb, Trentin was dropped by his three companions, and was soon caught by the main field on the climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 14\nThe leaders held a lead of around four minutes at the foot, at which point, Colbrelli attacked. Only Paolini could stay with him, as they set about trying to hold off the front. Sergio Henao (Team Sky) attacked halfway up the climb, where he was joined by Diego Rosa of Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela; Rosa's move was the precursor of an attack by his team captain Franco Pellizotti. Pellizotti caught the duo, and soon set off alone after the leaders, pulling within two minutes before being caught.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 14\nPaolini dropped Colbrelli with around 1.5\u00a0km (0.9\u00a0mi) remaining, and held a 43-second lead over the fast-closing chasers. After Paolini was caught, maglia rosa wearer Vincenzo Nibali attacked for Astana, pulling Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia's Mauro Santambrogio with him. The two remained clear until the end, with Santambrogio taking the stage win, his first in a Grand Tour. Nibali finished close behind, to extend his overall lead to 1' 26\" over BMC Racing Team's Cadel Evans, with Santambrogio moving into fourth overall, one second behind Rigoberto Ur\u00e1n of Team Sky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 15\nOriginally due to be held over a parcours of 149\u00a0km (92.6\u00a0mi), the stage was slightly shortened due to snow on the Col du Galibier. The snow forced organisers to move the stage finish further down the climb, to the memorial in honour of Marco Pantani. Pantani soloed to a stage victory after attacking on the Col du Galibier during the 1998 Tour de France, before winning at Les Deux Alpes; the catalyst to his overall victory in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 15\nAt one point, both the Col du Galibier and the day's opening climb, the Col du Mont Cenis, were reportedly off the itinerary due to the atmospherical conditions, but both were eventually ascended during the stage. The first-category Col du Mont Cenis climb started in Italy, and crossed over into France with a gradual 25.7\u00a0km (16.0\u00a0mi)-long climb, averaging around 6.2%, before the race descended down towards Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne, and the start of the second-category Col du T\u00e9l\u00e9graphe. The Col du T\u00e9l\u00e9graphe averaged 7.2% over nearly 12\u00a0km (7.5\u00a0mi), although reaching 11% in places. After a slight descent to Valloire, the Col du Galibier ascent commenced, with almost 14\u00a0km (8.7\u00a0mi) covered before the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 15\nWith continued uncertainty about the safety of the Col du Mont Cenis, racing was neutralised until near the top of the ascent, where mountains classification leader Stefano Pirazzi (Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox) attacked with Colombia's Robinson Chalapud. The duo were joined on the descent by five more riders as the peloton allowed them to gain a lead of over two minutes. Orica\u2013GreenEDGE rider Pieter Weening soon went off the front on his own, but could not force the pace by himself and soon fell back to rejoin the rest of the breakaway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 15\nThe group held a maximum lead of over six minutes, but it was around a third of that by the time they reached the Col du T\u00e9l\u00e9graphe. Pirazzi and Weening were strongest in the early kilometres, before Giovanni Visconti (Movistar Team) and Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia's Matteo Rabottini were able to join back up with them. Visconti dropped his breakaway companions with around 23\u00a0km (14.3\u00a0mi) remaining, setting off on a solo effort. Rabottini tried to chase him on the descent from the T\u00e9l\u00e9graphe, but ultimately, Visconti soloed to his first Grand Tour stage win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 15\nRabottini's resolve lasted until inside the final kilometre when he cracked, and allowed a group of four riders to do battle for second. Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Carlos Betancur won the sprint for second place ahead of Lampre\u2013Merida's Przemys\u0142aw Niemiec, and Rafa\u0142 Majka of Saxo\u2013Tinkoff; with the 12 seconds on offer for second, Betancur moved into the white jersey as young rider leader, ahead of Majka. The overall contenders group came across the line 54 seconds down on Visconti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\nThe final week of racing commenced after the race's second rest day the previous day; the sixteenth stage was a transitional stage, returning to Italy following the Col du Galibier finish of the previous stage. Starting in Valloire, the parcours of 238\u00a0km (147.9\u00a0mi) began with a descent from the Col du T\u00e9l\u00e9graphe, going in the opposite direction from the way that the peloton had climbed previously. Having reached Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne, the parcours sloped up again towards Modane and onwards to the Mont Cenis, this time in reverse, crossing back into Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\nFrom the foot of the climb, there was around 100\u00a0km (62.1\u00a0mi) of relatively flat terrain before reaching the finish town of Ivrea for the first time. From there, a 40\u00a0km (24.9\u00a0mi) loop was tackled, which contained a third-category climb. The climb, the Andrate, averaged around 8% in gradient\u00a0\u2013 reaching 13% in places\u00a0\u2013 and was expected to deny the sprinters of any chance of winning the stage. The day's breakaway was formed prior to the Mont Cenis, when an attack by Blanco Pro Cycling's Wilco Kelderman instigated a move of sixteen riders in total, while six more riders were able to bridge up towards the leaders before they had reached the summit of the climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\nThe 22-man lead group held an advantage of around three minutes over the top, with the lead continuing to increase on the descent into Italy. Astana were stationed on the front of the peloton, and were later joined by Team Katusha and RadioShack\u2013Leopard to take up some of the pace-making, when the lead advantage had reached five minutes; this margin was putting the highest-placed riders from those teams\u00a0\u2013 Yuri Trofimov and Robert Ki\u0161erlovski\u00a0\u2013 in danger from Cannondale's Damiano Caruso, who was in the breakaway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\nThe lead gap had been more than halved by the time the field reached the first intermediate sprint with around 54\u00a0km (33.6\u00a0mi) remaining, in the comune of Agli\u00e8. Counter-attacks were key on the run-in towards Ivrea for the first time; after several mini-attacks, Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela rider Emanuele Sella was the first to gain a manageable advantage over the rest of the breakaway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\nHe was later joined by Kelderman and Team Sky's Danny Pate, and they were around twenty seconds clear as they hit Ivrea. A five-rider group made contact on the final climb, among whom was mountains classification leader Stefano Pirazzi (Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox), who continued to extend his points lead. The remnants of the peloton had also caught up with the leaders, with young rider leader Carlos Betancur of Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale leading Pirazzi over the summit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\nAll the main contenders for the race were up front, with the exception of Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia's Mauro Santambrogio, who would ultimately lose over two minutes on the day. A group of three riders managed to get clear in the closing stages, where Be\u00f1at Intxausti (Movistar Team) won the sprint ahead of Astana's Tanel Kangert and Przemys\u0142aw Niemiec of Lampre\u2013Merida. Intxausti saluted his former team-mate Xavier Tondo while coming across the line; crossing his fingers to form an X, in honour of Tondo, who was killed prior to a training ride with Intxausti in May 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\nWith the exception of the final stage of the race heading into Brescia, the seventeenth stage marked one of the last opportunities for a sprinter to prevail in the 2013 Giro d'Italia. Starting in the Lombardy comune of Caravaggio, the parcours of 214\u00a0km (133.0\u00a0mi) in length, was predominantly a flat, transitional stage, except for a fourth-category climb towards the end of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\nFollowing the two intermediate sprint points in San Bonifacio and Orgiano, the climb of the Crosara was narrow and technical; averaging 6.8% over the course of 5.3\u00a0km (3.3\u00a0mi)\u00a0\u2013 with portions of the climb reaching 12% in gradient\u00a0\u2013 meaning that teams would have to take extra care in consideration of the climb, hoping to keep their sprinters in check prior to the descent and finish into Vicenza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\nIn the early kilometres, the day's breakaway was formed as Luke Durbridge (Orica\u2013GreenEDGE), Maxim Belkov of Team Katusha, Lotto\u2013Belisol rider Gert Dockx and Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela's Miguel \u00c1ngel Rubiano went clear. The quartet's lead reached a maximum of around five minutes at the midpoint of the stage, but was gradually reduced from then on. Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step took station on the front of the peloton, in the hope of keeping points classification leader Mark Cavendish in contention for the stage victory; other sprinters' teams also helped to bring the time gap down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\nBelkov was first to be dropped, after falling into difficulty with around 30\u00a0km (18.6\u00a0mi) remaining. The other three riders from the lead group held an advantage of around one minute as they hit the foot of the Crosara. Cavendish ran into trouble on the climb, but remained as leader of the points classification overnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\nRubiano lifted the pace, which saw Dockx being dislodged from the front, while a second burst of acceleration saw his only other lead companion, Durbridge, being dropped as well. Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia launched a two-pronged attack through Alessandro Proni and Danilo Di Luca, with Di Luca forcing himself clear in chase of Rubiano; he caught him with just under 20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) remaining, when Giovanni Visconti (Movistar Team) attacked from the peloton, joining quickly after bridging the 30-second gap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\nVisconti attacked over the top of the climb solo, gaining a maximum advantage of 35 seconds, but did enough to hold on, despite nearly crashing, for his second stage win in four days\u00a0\u2013 his team's third in succession, after Be\u00f1at Intxausti's win on stage 16\u00a0\u2013 by 19 seconds. Garmin\u2013Sharp's Ram\u016bnas Navardauskas led the main group across the line in second, mistakenly believing he had won the stage, while the main contenders were also positioned within the group, leaving the general classification unchanged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\nThe second of two individual time trials to be held in the 2013 Giro d'Italia, the eighteenth stage was deemed as a mountainous time trial\u00a0\u2013 the form of the discipline returning to the race after a one-year hiatus\u00a0\u2013 in the Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol region, in northern Italy. The parcours of 20.6\u00a0km (12.8\u00a0mi) was split into several distinct sections; starting at the velodrome in Mori, the opening kilometre of the stage was on a false flat, before an 8\u00a0km (5.0\u00a0mi), 6.6% climb towards the intermediate time-check at Brentonico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\nAn undulating false flat section in the middle portion was then covered, before a steeper climb to the finish in Polsa; the slopes hit 10% at one point during the climb, but again averaged 6.6% over around 6.5\u00a0km (4.0\u00a0mi). As was customary of time trial stages, the riders set off in reverse order from where they were ranked in the general classification at the end of the previous stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\nThus, Rafael Andriato of Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia, who, in 172nd place, trailed overall leader Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) by three hours, fifty-six minutes and fifty seconds, was the first rider to set off on the stage. Andriato was not the first rider to reach the line, as Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi rider Miguel M\u00ednguez\u00a0\u2013 who started directly behind him on the road, at a one-minute interval\u00a0\u2013 passed him and went on to record a time of 48' 55\" for the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\nM\u00ednguez's time held for around quarter of an hour until Steve Cummings took the lead for the BMC Racing Team, when he recorded a time for the course of 47' 08\". Eros Capecchi was first to break 47 minutes for the Movistar Team, before Team Sky's Dario Cataldo\u00a0\u2013 the Italian national time trial champion\u00a0\u2013 assumed the top position with a time of 46' 10\". Blanco Pro Cycling rider Stef Clement was the next rider to record the quickest time, achieving a time five seconds clear of Cataldo, setting a time of 46' 05\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\nDamiano Caruso (Cannondale) broke into the 45-minute region with the next quickest time for the course, with the weather conditions changing around the time that he was reaching the finish in Polsa. From the sun that had greeted the earlier runners on the course, the weather worsened and soon heavy rain was falling. Caruso's time was ultimately good enough for third on the stage; the first rider to beat the time was Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi's Samuel S\u00e1nchez, who recorded a time of 45' 27\", a time which enabled him to move into the top ten in the general classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\nHowever, the best performance was left to the overall leader, Nibali. Setting the best time at the intermediate time-check, Nibali completed the course in 44' 29\", to take his third Giro stage victory. He also managed to get within 24 seconds of catching his main rival for the general classification, BMC Racing Team's Cadel Evans, who had started three minutes before him. As a result, Nibali's overall lead grew to 4' 02\" over Evans, with Team Sky rider Rigoberto Ur\u00e1n ten seconds further back in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\nThe nineteenth stage was scheduled to be the queen stage of the 2013 Giro d'Italia, covering a distance of 139\u00a0km (86.4\u00a0mi) between Ponte di Legno and Val Martello. However, much like the previous weekend's stages to Bardonecchia and the Col du Galibier, the scheduled route was affected by poor weather conditions; race organisers had been expecting snow to fall on the potentially key mountain stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\nThis materialised, and as such, the two main climbs for the day\u00a0\u2013 the 16.5\u00a0km (10.3\u00a0mi)-long Passo di Gavia and the 21.7\u00a0km (13.5\u00a0mi) Passo di Stelvio (the scheduled Cima Coppi for the Giro), the highest two climbs of the race\u00a0\u2013 were removed from the route. A revised route was released the night before the scheduled start of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\nAlong with the extension of the stage by 21\u00a0km (13.0\u00a0mi), two new climbs were added to the route. The second-category Passo del Tonale was set to test the riders\u00a0\u2013 the 7.5% average climb of 8.3\u00a0km (5.2\u00a0mi), coming inside the opening 20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) of the stage\u00a0\u2013 while the first-category Hofmahdjoch, 9.5% over 8.4\u00a0km (5.2\u00a0mi), was due to be ascented halfway through the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\nFurther adverse conditions overnight dropped even more snow on the scheduled itinerary, and ultimately, race organisers cancelled the stage on safety grounds; the first weather-related cancellation of a stage in the Giro since 1989\u00a0\u2013 when the sixteenth stage was cancelled\u00a0\u2013 and the first cancellation of any form since 2001, when the peloton refused to race in the eighteenth stage, after drug raids. Competing riders and teams supported the decision that the race organisers made in relation to the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\nLater in the day, it was announced that Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia rider Danilo Di Luca had tested positive for the banned glycoprotein hormone erythropoietin (EPO)\u00a0\u2013 which controls red blood cell production\u00a0\u2013 during an out-of-competition drugs test held a week in advance of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\nAfter receiving notification of his rider's positive test, team manager Angelo Citracca stated that Di Luca had been sacked\u00a0\u2013 after less than a month with the squad\u00a0\u2013 and that they were launching legal proceedings against Di Luca. Di Luca\u00a0\u2013 who had previously served a fifteen-month suspension after testing positive for continuous erythropoietin receptor activator (CERA) at the 2009 Giro d'Italia\u00a0\u2013 himself expressed his \"surprise\" at the positive test, while race director Michele Acquarone angrily chastised Di Luca at a press conference, describing him as \"stupid\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\nLike several other stages to be held during the second half of the 2013 Giro d'Italia, the penultimate stage of the race had to be re-routed due to unfavourable weather conditions which resulted in potentially dangerous riding conditions. The original parcours of 203\u00a0km (126.1\u00a0mi) was slightly lengthened to 210\u00a0km (130.5\u00a0mi), but it also meant that three of the five originally-scheduled climbs of the route being removed; the first-category Passo Giau was bypassed, along with the second-category ascents of the Karerpass and the Passo di San Pellegrino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\nWith the previous day's cancellation of the Passo di Stelvio, the climb to Tre Cime di Lavaredo became the Cima Coppi. The Passo Tre Croci was the first part of the climb, averaging 7.2% over 8\u00a0km (5.0\u00a0mi), before a false flat to the short, steep Col Sant'Angelo. The final climb averaged over 11% for the final 4\u00a0km (2.5\u00a0mi), but reached 18% in places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\nThe day's breakaway was formed after around 25\u00a0km (15.5\u00a0mi) of racing, with a four-rider group consisting of earlier stage winner Adam Hansen (Lotto\u2013Belisol), Pavel Brutt of Team Katusha, RadioShack\u2013Leopard rider Yaroslav Popovych and Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela's Giairo Ermeti. The quartet built up a lead of more than eight minutes at one point during the stage, before the peloton\u00a0\u2013 being led by Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi, Colombia and Cannondale\u00a0\u2013 set about reducing that advantage. As the leaders reached Cortina d'Ampezzo, their advantage was around three minutes; upon leaving the comune, Popovych attacked his companions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\nBrutt and Hansen were able to bridge back up, before Brutt attacked of his own accord. He quickly gained an advantage of around a minute over the others, when Orica\u2013GreenEDGE rider Pieter Weening attacked from the peloton, closely followed by mountains classification leader Stefano Pirazzi (Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox) and Darwin Atapuma of Colombia. Weening caught up with Hansen, and the duo set off in chase of Brutt, with the peloton around one minute behind the leader, and closing on the climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\nBy the top of the Passo Tre Croci, Brutt was around 30 seconds clear of Weening\u00a0\u2013 who had dropped Hansen\u00a0\u2013 with the leaders group a further 20 seconds behind. In the driving snow, Brutt was caught with around 9\u00a0km (5.6\u00a0mi) remaining by Weening, Pirazzi, Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Gianluca Brambilla and the Movistar Team's Eros Capecchi. Capecchi launched a move at the bottom of the final climb, gaining ground from the others, but behind, Vincenzo Nibali, in the maglia rosa for Astana, was pulled clear from the peloton by team-mate Tanel Kangert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\nNibali was joined by Colombian duo Rigoberto Ur\u00e1n (Team Sky) and Carlos Betancur (Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale) for a period, and after catching Capecchi, Nibali launched another attack, soloing away to his second consecutive stage victory, and all but securing the race overall. Colombia's Fabio Duarte bridged up to his compatriots, and ultimately won the sprint for second place, seventeen seconds behind, ahead of Ur\u00e1n and Betancur. In the general classification, Nibali extended his overall lead to 4' 43\" over Ur\u00e1n, who had moved ahead of BMC Racing Team's Cadel Evans\u00a0\u2013 who cracked on the climb\u00a0\u2013 for second place overall. Betancur was another mover; he moved from seventh to fifth overall, and reclaimed the lead of the young rider classification from Saxo\u2013Tinkoff rider Rafa\u0142 Majka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 21\nAfter the previous five editions of the Giro d'Italia had finished with individual time trial stages, the 2013 edition ended with a mass-start road stage. With no categorised climbs on the route, and very little in the way of undulation during the 197\u00a0km (122.4\u00a0mi) parcours, it was widely expected to finish in a mass sprint finish in Brescia. Once the riders had reached Brescia, the peloton had to complete eight laps of a 4.15\u00a0km (2.6\u00a0mi)-long city centre circuit, with the race's final intermediate sprint coming on the third passage through the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 21\nGoing into the stage, the points classification was also set to be settled, as overall leader Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) held an eleven-point advantage over Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Mark Cavendish, with 41 points on offer during the stage. With little competition in the stage, the field remained together all the way to Brescia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 21\nCavendish had reduced the gap in the classification to three points, after taking the honours in the opening intermediate sprint at Sirmione. Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia's Stefano Garzelli was allowed to head into Brescia on his own, in his final Giro d'Italia, before Astana took up the head of the pace again. Giairo Ermeti (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela) attacked for the second day running, and once Cavendish had chased him down and taken the second batch of eight points at the other intermediate sprint, the group came back together for the eventual final sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233692-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 21\nOmega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step led into the final kilometre for Cavendish, with Cannondale in tow for Elia Viviani; after Matteo Trentin pulled off, Cavendish launched his sprint and despite competition from Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox's Sacha Modolo, achieved his fifth stage win of the race, to become the fifth rider to win the points classification at all three Grand Tours. Nibali finished within the peloton to take the general classification, and his second Grand Tour overall win, after the 2010 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a. Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Carlos Betancur and Stefano Pirazzi (Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox) also confirmed their respective wins in the young rider classification and the mountains classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233693-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro del Trentino\nThe 2013 Giro del Trentino was the 37th edition of the Giro del Trentino cycling stage race. It started on 16 April in Lienz (Austria) and ended on 19 April in Sega di Ala. The race, that was officially presented on 8 April in Trento, consisted of four stages, with the first one divided into two half-stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233693-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro del Trentino\nThe race was won by Astana rider Vincenzo Nibali, who claimed the leader's jersey in the final stage and won the King of the Mountains classification as well. Mauro Santambrogio (Vini Fantini-Selle Italia) was second and Maxime Bouet of Ag2r-La Mondiale completed the podium. In the race's other classifications, Jarlinson Pantano of Colombia won the Sprints classification and Astana's Fabio Aru won the Young Rider classification, with Astana finishing at the head of the Teams classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233693-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro del Trentino, Teams\nSix World Tour teams took part in the race: Ag2r-La Mondiale, Astana, BMC, Cannondale, Lampre-Merida and Team Sky. Among the riders, there were six Grand Tour-winners: Vincenzo Nibali, Bradley Wiggins, Cadel Evans, Ivan Basso, Michele Scarponi and Stefano Garzelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233693-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro del Trentino, Teams\nA total of 18 teams were invited to the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233694-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro del Trentino Alto Adige-S\u00fcdtirol\nThe 2013 Giro del Trentino Alto Adige-S\u00fcdtirol is a women's cycling stage race in Italy. It was rated by the UCI as category 2.1, and was held between 15 and 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233695-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro della Toscana Int. Femminile \u2013 Memorial Michela Fanini\nThe 2013 Giro della Toscana Int. Femminile\u00a0\u2013 Memorial Michela Fanini will be the 19th edition of the Giro della Toscana Int. Femminile\u00a0\u2013 Memorial Michela Fanini, a women's cycling stage race in Italy. It was rated by the UCI as a category 2.HC race and will be held between 11 and 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233695-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro della Toscana Int. Femminile \u2013 Memorial Michela Fanini, Safety concerns\nDuring the 4th and final stage 63 riders abandoned the race or did not take the start, in protest of the lack of security measures during the stage race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 81], "content_span": [82, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233696-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Giro di Lombardia\nThe 2013 Giro di Lombardia or 2013 Il Lombardia was the 107th edition of the Giro di Lombardia single-day cycling race, often known as the Race of the Falling Leaves. It was held on 6 October 2013. Joaquim Rodr\u00edguez (Team Katusha) won the race for a consecutive time after a solo breakaway initiated on the final climb of the day. Alejandro Valverde finished second before Rafa\u0142 Majka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash\nOn 29 November 2013, a police helicopter operated by Bond Air Services for Police Scotland crashed into the Clutha, a pub in central Glasgow, killing all three crew on board and seven patrons of the pub. Thirty-one more people in the pub were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash\nThe subsequent investigation concluded that the cause of the crash was fuel starvation due to incorrect operation of the fuel system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Accident\nThe helicopter took off from its base at Glasgow City Heliport (which at the time operated from Stobcross Quay adjacent to the SECC) at 20:45 on 29 November 2013. The pilot was 51-year-old David Traill; Traill had flown Chinook helicopters in the RAF for 20 years, latterly as an instructor. He had worked for the police for four years, and had 646 hours of flight experience on the EC135. The helicopter carried two police observers, PCs Kirsty Nelis and Tony Collins. On takeoff it carried 400 kilograms (880\u00a0lb) of fuel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Accident\nThe flight, callsign SP99, was initially involved in the search for a suspected trespasser on railway lines around Eglinton Toll. It was then tasked to Dalkeith in Midlothian, around 44 miles (71 kilometres) east of its base, before returning to the Glasgow area. A few minutes before the crash, the pilot had received air traffic control clearance to return to Glasgow City Heliport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Accident\nAt 22:22, approximately two miles (three kilometres) east of its home base, the helicopter came down on the flat roof of the Clutha bar in Stockwell Street (Clutha is Latin for the River Clyde, which is adjacent to the pub). No distress call was made. A ska band, Esperanza, was playing in the pub at the time of the crash and there were reported to be around 120 people in the building, some of whom were trapped by the collapsing roof. The three helicopter occupants and six people on the ground were killed. Thirty-two others were injured, twelve seriously, one of whom died some days later. One witness, Gordon Smart, editor of the Scottish Sun, stated that he did not see a fireball or hear an explosion, and that the engine seemed to be misfiring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Aircraft\nThe accident aircraft was a twin-engined Eurocopter EC135 T2+, serial 0546, registered G-SPAO and manufactured in 2007. At the time of the accident it had flown for 6,351 hours and made 9,385 landings. The helicopter's Certificate of Airworthiness was valid until 4 September 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Emergency response\nThe building is a former tenement which used to have multiple storeys, but after a fire in the 1960s the upper storeys were removed. The walls were therefore much thicker than would be expected for a building of this height, and the complex construction of the roof complicated the search and rescue operation. The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service deployed 125 firefighters to the scene rescuing people trapped in the building for hours after the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Emergency response\nThe Scottish Ambulance Service sent upwards of 25 ambulances to the scene along with 2 Special Operations Response Teams that specialise in major and inaccessible incidents. They worked throughout the next two days searching and retrieving people from within the Clutha. Urban search and rescue firefighters were also in attendance to shore up unstable parts of the building and to excavate collapsed areas. People rescued from the scene were initially taken by the emergency services to a nearby Holiday Inn hotel. Labour Party MP Jim Murphy was interviewed as he was passing soon after the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Emergency response\n32 people were taken for treatment to local hospitals including Glasgow Royal Infirmary and Glasgow Victoria Infirmary, a dozen with injuries classed as serious. An emergency phone number was set up for anyone concerned about family and relatives who may have been in and around the pub, and Glasgow City Council established a family reception centre to \"provide advice and counselling to relatives of people who have been injured or people whose relatives are unaccounted for\". One of the seriously injured victims died from his injuries on 12 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Reactions\nScottish First Minister Alex Salmond tweeted confirmation that the helicopter was a police aircraft. He subsequently described the crash as \"a black day for Glasgow and for Scotland\". Glasgow MSP and Scottish Labour leader Johann Lamont, Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson, British Prime Minister David Cameron, opposition leader Ed Miliband, the Queen, and Pope Francis all publicly expressed their condolences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Reactions\nOn the day following the crash, planned St. Andrew's Day celebrations in Glasgow's George Square were cancelled, and flags were flown at half-mast on Scottish Government buildings. Scottish football clubs held a pre-match minute's silence. Special services were held at Glasgow's St Andrew's Cathedral and Glasgow Cathedral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Reactions\nThe Prince of Wales visited the crash site on 6 December and met emergency service personnel. Police investigated offensive, racist or sectarian comments made about the crash on social media. A weekend of fundraising events for the families of the victims and the emergency services was held on 3\u20135 January 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation\nThe Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB), which is responsible for investigating aircraft crashes in the United Kingdom, launched an investigation into the cause of the accident. Assistance in the investigation was provided by the German Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accident Investigation and the French Bureau d'Enqu\u00eates et d'Analyses pour la S\u00e9curit\u00e9 de l'Aviation Civile aviation incident investigation bodies (the manufacturers of the helicopter and its engine are based in Germany and France). The American National Transportation Safety Board (representing the state of the manufacturer of the engines' FADEC controls), also provided assistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation\nThe wreckage of the helicopter arrived at the AAIB's headquarters at Farnborough, Hampshire on 3 December. The aircraft was not fitted with flight data recorders but the electronics fitted to the aircraft could contain data helpful in determining the cause of the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation, Preliminary findings\nThe AAIB issued a preliminary report of its findings on 9 December. It confirmed that the rotor blades were attached, but neither they nor the fenestron tail rotor were rotating at the time of impact. No evidence of engine or gearbox failure was found and there were around 95 litres (21\u00a0imp\u00a0gal) of fuel still on board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation, Preliminary findings\nThe aircraft struck the building with \"a high rate of descent and low/negligible forward speed\" and no part of it detached in flight. It came to rest approximately upright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation, Preliminary findings\nOn 14 February 2014, the AAIB issued a Special Bulletin on the accident. It stated that the cause of the accident was that both engines had flamed out, but the reasons that they had done so had not yet been determined. The report stated that one of the two tanks supplying the engines was empty and the other contained 0.4\u00a0kg (14\u00a0oz) of fuel. A third tank, known as the main tank, was reported to contain 75\u00a0kg (165\u00a0lb) of fuel but the transfer pumps supplying this fuel to the two engine fuel tanks were found with their switches in the \"off\" position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation, Final report\nThe final accident report was published in October 2015. It found the main cause of the accident to be fuel starvation due to the fuel transfer pumps being switched off \"for unknown reasons.\" This resulted in the engines flaming out despite there being 73\u00a0kg (161\u00a0lb) of usable fuel remaining in the main tank. A failure to land within ten minutes of the first low-fuel warning, as prescribed by emergency checklists, and a failure to achieve a successful autorotation after both engines failed were cited as additional causal factors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation, Final report\nThe AAIB also identified as contributory factor that the radar altimeter and the steerable landing light were both unpowered following the engine flame-out, leading to a loss of height information and reduced visual cues during the autorotation manoeuvre. Seven safety recommendations were made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Investigation, Fatal accident inquiry\nIn 2017 the Crown Office announced that a fatal accident inquiry would be held into the crash. The Crown Office also confirmed that no criminal charges would be laid following an investigation by Police Scotland. Preliminary hearings were held on 3 October and 4 December 2018, then on 11 January 5 February and 3 April 2019. The inquiry began on 8 April 2019 in a temporary court at Hampden Park football ground, and concluded on 5 August. The inquiry was mandatory in respect of the crew of the helicopter, and discretionary in respect of the customers of the Clutha Vaults. The inquiry sat for 31 days between 8 April and 18 July. Sheriff Principal Craig Turnbull provided a written determination which was published on 30 October 2019. No recommendations were made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Aftermath, The Clutha\nThe Clutha pub partially reopened in July 2015, with Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon attending the opening ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233697-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Glasgow helicopter crash, Aftermath, Civil aviation\nAs a direct result of the accident and recommendations made by the AAIB, the Civil Aviation Authority mandated that all police helicopters would be fitted with Cockpit Voice Recorders and Flight Data Recorders. Implementation of this was to be completed by 31 March 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233698-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Global Cebu F.C. season\nThe 2013 season is Global's 3rd season in the Philippines premier league, the UFL Division 1. They reached the quarterfinals of the 2013 PFF National Men's Club Championship after they lost to Ceres. They played in the 2013 AFC President's Cup after they top the previously concluded 2012 season, however they were eliminated after finishing third in Group B. Global also competed in the 2013 Singapore Cup, winning the last three matches, which booked them to the semifinals. Likewise, they will also compete in the 2013 UFL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233698-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Global Cebu F.C. season\nThey signed the service of Brian Reid for the preparation in the President's Cup and after the end of caretakers role of Dan Palami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233698-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Global Cebu F.C. season\nThe club finished the 2013 season of the UFL Division 1 second behind the champions, Stallion Sta. Lucia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233698-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Global Cebu F.C. season, Squad, League 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, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233698-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Global Cebu F.C. season, Squad, AFC President's Cup 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, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233698-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Global Cebu F.C. season, Squad, Singapore Cup 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, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship\nThe 2013 Global RallyCross Championship was the third season of this championship. The season consisted of nine weekends, three in X Games events (including a doubleheader after an event cancellation). Toomas Heikkinen earned his first series championship after a record-setting streak of five consecutive victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Rules changes\nA penalty box will be added for this season. In case of a false start, the driver must endure a stop-go penalty in this zone avoiding the need to restart the race. Stop-go penalty can be also given for too aggressive car-to-car contact, such causing a competing driver to spin out by pushing their car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Schedule\n(DH): An event in Barcelona at Llu\u00eds Companys Olympic Stadium May 19 was called off because of weather conditions. The Munich round, originally scheduled for June 30, was converted into a doubleheader round with races on June 29 and 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nThe first event of the season in Foz do Igua\u00e7u was performed on a purpose built gravel track, with the start/finish straight having the only tarmac section. Fifteen drivers took part in the event. Liam Doran set the fastest laptime in the seeding round. Heat 1 was won by Finnish driver Toomas Heikkinen, who took advantage of a crash at the start of the heat. Ken Block took second place, with Liam Doran placed third, after retiring on Lap 1. Heat 2 was won by Brian Deegan followed by Travis Pastrana is second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nNelson Piquet, Jr. finished third despite being penalized for a jump start. Bryce Menzies finished the heat in last place. In Heat 3 the reigning champion Tanner Foust took victory over Steve Arpin. Patrik Sandell and Mauricio Neves finished in third and fourth place, respectively. Scott Speed was the winner of Heat 4 by passing Anton Marklund on the last corner, despite spinning on the first lap. Buddy Rice ended up third, with Eduardo Marques, Jr rounding off the heat. Buddy Rice won the Last Chance Qualifier, meaning he qualified for the final along with second-place finisher Patrik Sandell. Doran's car failure at the start of the race, retires both himself and Bryce Menzies, denying them both of qualifying for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nThe Final saw mayhem at the first turn on Lap 1, which shook up the field, placing Heikkinen into the lead from Speed and Marklund after Lap 1. After Lap 2, Speed slowed down, which allowed Marklund to jump into second place. By the end of Lap 3, the race is red flagged, and is scheduled to restart, after retirements from Foust, Pastrana, Block and Rice. On the restart, Scott Speed sat on pole from a six car grid. Travis Pastrana, Buddy Rice, Ken Block and reigning champion Tanner Foust were all unable to make the restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nOn Lap 1 Toomas Heikkinen aggressively made his way into the lead, ahead of Speed and Arpin by the end of the lap. On the second lap, Arpin took the joker lap, but failed to pass Speed, leaving the top three the same after the end of the lap. On Lap 4, Sandell takes the joker lap to pass Arpin into 3rd place, as Speed starts closing down Heikkinen for the lead. On the final lap, Speed finally used his joker lap to pass Heikkinen on the last corner of the race, to take the gold medal. Heikkinen won the silver, and Sandell the bronze. For all three of them it was their first X Games medals, most notably Speed, who had not ever drove a rally car prior to the event. Steve Arpin finished 4th, ahead of Brian Deegan in 5th, and Anton Marklund in 6th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nThe second round of the season was set to take place in Llu\u00eds Companys Olympic Stadium, as part of the Barcelona X Games. Spanish drivers Nani Roma and Carlos Sainz, both Dakar Rally champions, arrived to debut in this event. However, after heavy rain all day, the whole event was eventually moved to Munich after several delays on May 19, and the Munich event turned into a doubleheader. Day 1 featured Liam Doran win in his new Mini, while Toomas Heikkinen won gold in race 2. The Subaru PUMA Rallycross Team USA made their 2013 debut, and Townsend Bell made his GRC debut in the #7 Royal Purple Ford Fiesta, for OMSE2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nRound 4 took place in Loudon, New Hampshire, at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway. GRC Lites made their debut there, and Joni Wiman won the first-ever Lites race. In the Supercar class, Travis Pastrana returned, and Tanner Foust led 9 of 10 laps in the final, but crashed in the final corner, handing the win to Heikkinen. The fifth round of the season took place in Bristol. Joni Wiman won the Lites final, which had to be restarted because Kevin Eriksson flipped over on the first lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nPatrik Sandell won his heat, but Heikkinen cruised to an easy third victory in a row. Round 6 took place at Irwindale Speedway, as part of X Games Los Angeles. David Sterckx, Rhys Millen, and Stephan Verdier made their 2013 debut, and Reinis Niti\u0161s made his Lites debut. In Supercars, Sverre Isachsen won heat 1, which had to be restarted because Steve Arpin crashed. Heat 2 saw Liam Doran win. Toomas Heikkinen won Heat 3, while Heat 4 went to Ken Block.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nAnton Marklund crashed on the 1st turn of the LCQ, and that caused the 2nd red flag of the day. Marklund was out. On the restart, Rhys Millen and Scott Speed advanced. In the final, Ken Block, Liam Doran, and others crashed on the first turn. Toomas Heikkinen won the final X Games LA gold medal in history. Tanner Foust took silver, and Sverre Isachsen took bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nRound 7 took place at Atlanta Motor Speedway, as a standalone event. Bryce Menzies was replaced by Henning Solberg in the #99 Dodge, and Travis Pastrana was once again replaced by Timur Timerzyanov. Patrik Sandell crashed into a dirt embankment in the LCQ, sending him airborne. Toomas Heikkinen almost secured the championship with another win, while Joni Wiman won in Lites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nRound 8 took place at the dirt track at Charlotte Motor Speedway, where Pat Moro debuted his new Chevrolet Sonic and Dave Mirra helped Prodrive make its official debut, after having rented its Mini to Doran for much of the season. Block, Speed and Deegan took heat victories, while Foust missed the final after rolling his car during the final heat. Speed won the final, while third place for Heikkinen (having qualified via the LCQ) gave him the championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nThe season finale took place in Las Vegas during the week of the SEMA Show as a two-day event, with practice, seeding, and the first set of heats run on Wednesday and the second set of heats, LCQ, and final run on Thursday. Heikkinen aimed to continue his streak of eight consecutive podiums with a pair of heat wins, while Foust, Block, and Speed also swept each of their heats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Season summary\nThe LCQ saw Nelson Piquet Jr. spin Sverre Isachsen to earn a transfer spot and land his Mitsubishi in the final, but a protest from Isachsen saw stewards disqualify Piquet for aggressive driving and restore the transfer spot to the Norwegian. In the final, a jump start from Foust forced him into the penalty box, giving Block a lead that he would never relinquish. Block would earn his first GRC victory in his 17th GRC start, while Foust ended the season with a runner-up finish and Travis Pastrana completed the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233699-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Global RallyCross Championship, Results, Drivers standings\nPoints are awarded to the top sixteen finishers using the following structure:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election\nElections to Gloucestershire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 53 electoral divisions elected one county councillor each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. No elections were held in South Gloucestershire, which is a unitary authority outside the area covered by the County Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election\nControl of the council went from the Conservative Party to no party having overall control. Turnout across the county was 32% with 151,250 votes cast. The Conservatives gained most votes in four of the six parliamentary seats, the Liberal Democrats coming first in Cheltenham and UKIP in the Forest of Dean. The Conservatives were the only party to win a county council seat in every district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election, County Council single-member electoral review 2012-13\nGoing into the elections, the Conservatives held a majority of 21 seats. Due to boundary changes and a reduction in the number of councillors from 63 to 53 following a public consultation by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England the notional results to be used for the purposes of election planning and comparison before the election were: Conservatives - 36, Liberal Democrats - 10, Labour - 4, People Against Bureaucracy - 1, Greens - 1, Independents - 1. This gave a notional Conservative majority of 17 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 99], "content_span": [100, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election, Summary\nThe Conservative Party lost 13 notional seats, although the numerical loss was larger due to the reduction in the total number of councillors. The Liberal Democrats remained the second largest party by total seats and percentage vote, while the Labour Party had the largest net gain of five seats. UKIP won representation on the county council for the first time, winning three seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election, Summary\nThe number of Independent councillors rose to two, while both the Green Party and People Against Bureaucracy saw their only councillors re-elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election, By-elections between 2013 and 2017, Mitcheldean\nA by-election was held for the Mitcheldean Division on 23 October 2014 following the death of Independent councillor Norman Stephens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 93], "content_span": [94, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233700-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Gloucestershire County Council election, By-elections between 2013 and 2017, Churchdown\nA by-election was held on Thursday 5 May 2016 for the Churchdown Division due to the death of County Councillor Bill Whelan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 92], "content_span": [93, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233701-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Glynhill Ladies International\nThe 2013 Glynhill Ladies International was held from January 18 to 20 at the Braehead Curling Rink in Glasgow, Scotland as part of the 2012\u201313 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a round robin format, and the purse for the event was GBP\u00a38,000, of which the winner, Binia Feltscher, received GBP\u00a32,500. Feltscher defeated Heather Nedohin of Canada in the final with a score of 8\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233702-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GoDaddy.com Bowl\nThe 2013 GoDaddy.com Bowl was a postseason college football bowl game held on January 6, 2013, at Ladd\u2013Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Alabama. The 14th edition of the bowl began at 8:00 PM CST and aired on ESPN. The Kent State Golden Flashes of the Mid-American Conference competed against the Sun Belt Conference champion Arkansas State Red Wolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233702-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GoDaddy.com Bowl, Teams, Arkansas State\nArkansas State won the Sun Belt championship, finishing the season with a 9\u20133 record and a 7\u20131 record in conference play. The team made its second consecutive appearance in the bowl and for the second consecutive year was playing without its head coach. Arkansas State had lost the prior appearance to Northern Illinois in the 2012 game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233702-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 GoDaddy.com Bowl, Teams, Kent State\nThe GoDaddy.com Bowl was Kent State's first bowl game appearance in forty years; the team last played in the 1972 Tangerine Bowl. Kent State went 11\u20131 in regular season games and 8\u20130 in MAC play before losing the MAC Championship Game to Northern Illinois; their eleven victories set a team record. The team finished the season ranked #25 in the AP Poll. Kent State coach Darrell Hazell was MAC Coach of the Year and accepted the head coach position with the Purdue Boilermakers prior to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma\nThe 2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma was an IndyCar Series race held on August 25, 2013 at Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma, California. The race was the fifteenth of the 2013 IndyCar Series season, and was won by Will Power of Team Penske.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Report, Background\nThe previous race of the season, the Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, was won by Charlie Kimball. The 2012 edition of Sonoma race was won by Ryan Briscoe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Report, Background\nEntering the race, James Hinchcliffe and Scott Dixon were tied for the most wins with three. In the points race, H\u00e9lio Castroneves held the lead with 453 points, followed by Dixon (422), Ryan Hunter-Reay (388), Marco Andretti (377) and Simon Pagenaud (350) rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Report, Qualifying\nDario Franchitti won his 33rd career and final pole position, his fourth of 2013 and third at the track, with a lap time of 1:17.5271. Teammate Scott Dixon started second with a time of 1:17.7196, Team Penske teammates Will Power and H\u00e9lio Castroneves were in third and fourth, respectively. Ryan Hunter-Reay closed out the top five starting spots. Charlie Kimball, Justin Wilson, Graham Rahal, James Hinchcliffe and Simon Pagenaud rounded out the starting top ten. JR Hildebrand, making his return to IndyCar since the Indianapolis 500, started 18th, while Ryan Briscoe, running his final race of the season, started 22nd. Lucas Luhr started his IndyCar debut in 25th. The race was also Tony Kanaan's 311th, tying him with Jimmy Vasser for most consecutive IndyCar starts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Race\nThe race featured a track record seven cautions, four of which came in turn 7. Meanwhile, Scott Dixon and Will Power battled throughout the day, but during the final pit stops under caution, Dixon sped out of his pit box and struck Power's right rear tire carrier, sending the carrier into another pit member, while another was injured by an air gun. None of the three were seriously injured, and were treated with ice. As hitting pit crew members and pit equipment results in a penalty, Dixon fell back to 21st and finished 15th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Race\nThe penalty became controversial after Dixon believed Power's crew member walked in front of Dixon's car intentionally. Dixon eventually called the ruling \"pretty annoying\"; IndyCar race director Beaux Barfield stated that replays Dixon hadn't seen of the incident showed him driving too close to Power's car, which was getting serviced at the time. As for Power, he led for the remainder of the race, and beat Justin Wilson by 1.2 seconds for his nineteenth career IndyCar victory and first in 25 races, while Dario Franchitti, Marco Andretti and Simon Pagenaud closed out the top five. The win was Power's third at Sonoma in four years, as he continues to be the only IndyCar driver with multiple wins at the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Race\nSometime during the later portion of the race, Andretti made contact with Power, which led to a confrontation between Andretti and Power's car owner Roger Penske after the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233703-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, Race\nThe points standings featured Castroneves increasing his then 31-point lead over Dixon to a 39-point lead (479 points to 440), while Ryan Hunter-Reay (417), Marco Andretti (409), Simon Pagenaud (380) and Dario Franchitti (379) remained as the top six, Justin Wilson and Will Power leapt past James Hinchcliffe and Charlie Kimball for seventh and eight, respectively, dropping Hinchcliffe and Kimball to ninth and tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 42], "content_span": [43, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400\nThe 2013 Gobowling.com 400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on August 4, 2013, at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania. Contested over 160 laps on the 2.5-mile (4.023\u00a0km) triangular superspeedway, it was the twenty-first race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Kasey Kahne of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his second win of the season, while Jeff Gordon finished second. Kurt Busch, Ryan Newman, and Dale Earnhardt Jr rounded out the top five. The race was one of the most competitive races held at Pocono Raceway, as there were nine cautions, 14 different leaders, and 27 lead changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Background\nPocono Raceway is a three-turn superspeedway that is 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked differently; the first is banked at 14\u00b0, the second turn at 8\u00b0 and the final turn with 6\u00b0. However, each of the three straightaways are banked at 2\u00b0. The front stretch at Pocono Raceway is 3,740 feet long, the longest at the track. The back stretch, is 3,055 feet long, while the short stretch, which connects turn two with turn three, is only 1,780 feet long. Jeff Gordon was the defending race winner after winning the race in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 740 points, while Clint Bowyer stood in second with 665 points. Carl Edwards followed in the third with 655, seven points ahead of Kevin Harvick and 39 ahead of Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in fourth and fifth. Matt Kenseth, with 615 points, was in sixth; five ahead of Kyle Busch, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Greg Biffle was one point ahead of Kasey Kahne and six ahead of Gordon in ninth and tenth. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 143 points, twelve points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third after recording only 99 points before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions are scheduled to be held before the race. The first session, scheduled on August 2, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held a day later on August 3, 2013, will last 50 minutes each. In the first practice session, Kurt Busch was the quickest with a best lap time of 50.600 seconds. Kyle Busch followed in second, ahead of Greg Biffle and Jeff Burton in third and fourth. Joey Logano was scored fifth quickest with a best lap time of 50.929, 329 thousandths of a second slower than Kurt Busch. Kahne, Marcos Ambrose, Ryan Newman, Denny Hamlin, and Edwards completed the top-ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring the qualifying session, Johnson, whose car was late to the qualifying grid, recorded his thirty-first career pole position, and set a new track record with a lap time of 49.819 seconds and a speed of 180.654\u00a0mph (290.734\u00a0km/h). Kyle Busch, who completed his lap in 49.823 seconds, will start alongside Johnson on the grid, in front of Edwards, Newman, and Kurt Busch. Logano, with a lap time of 50.111 seconds, was scored sixth ahead of Biffle and Ambrose in seventh and eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nHamlin and Aric Almirola completed the first ten grid positions with lap times of 28.162 and 28.191. After the session concluded, Johnson explained why his car was late to the qualifying grid, \"We had a left rear toe (tire angle) was off by a thousandth of an inch. The system is pass-fail... a thousandth of an inch. I'm glad we got it sorted out.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nBefore the race, NASCAR decided that there would be a competition caution on lap 20 because of Saturday practice being washed out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nJimmie Johnson led the field to the green flag, but the field had only gotten through the first turn when the first caution came out for a crash, as Juan Pablo Montoya washed up the track into Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., causing Stenhouse to spin out. Matt Kenseth was also collected. Montoya would finish three laps down in 28th, Kenseth would finish in 22nd on the lead lap, and Stenhouse would end up in 34th place, 46 laps down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nThe race restarted on lap 5, with Johnson still leading. On lap 16, the second caution of the race came out when Denny Hamlin spun and hit the wall in turn 3. Hamlin would ultimately be credited with a last place finish. Due to its proximity to lap 20, NASCAR declared this to be the competition caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nOn the restart, Johnson continued to lead, and led until lap 33 when he pitted for a green flag pit stop, handing the lead to Brad Keselowski. A cycle of green flag pit stops was carried out over the next fifteen laps. Due to some cars staying out on the previous caution, the lead changed several times between lap 33 and lap 48. Keselowski led one lap before pitting. Kurt Busch then led seven laps before pitting. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Matt Kenseth and Jamie McMurray then each stayed out to lead a lap before pitting, which cycled the lead back to Johnson on lap 48.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nOn lap 53, the third caution came out when David Gilliland cut a right-front tire in the Tunnel Turn and hit the outside wall. Johnson and most of the leaders pitted under the caution. Ultimately, Johnson had a slow pit stop and ended up restarting in the middle of the pack. At the restart on lap 58, Keselowski led the field to the green flag. He led for four laps before a fast-charging Kasey Kahne managed to overtake him. Kahne led for ten laps before taking a green flag pit stop (he and Keselowski were on an off-sequence strategy). Ryan Newman held the lead for two laps before pitting, which handed the lead to Johnson. Johnson led until lap 75, when he pitted, giving the lead to Tony Stewart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nOn lap 78, the fourth caution flag came out when Johnson cut a right front tire coming off the first turn and slapped the outside wall. This damaged his car significantly, and he stayed at the back of the lead lap for most of the remainder of the race, until his crew discovered that a spark plug had been knocked loose. Once this problem had been fixed, he rallied back to a 13th-place finish. Kahne reassumed the lead under caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nAt the restart on lap 82, Kahne and Keselowski were again at the front of the field. Over the next 13 laps, the two drivers exchanged the lead several times, until the fifth caution came out on lap 96 when David Stremme cut a right front tire in turn 1. Most of the leaders pitted under this caution, but Martin Truex, Jr. stayed out and assumed the lead for the restart on lap 100. He then led the next three laps. On lap 104, the sixth caution came out when Aric Almirola cut a left rear tire and spun in turn 3 after contact with Timmy Hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nKahne reassumed the lead under caution and continued to lead at the restart on lap 107. On lap 110, the seventh caution flag came out for a four car accident at the Tunnel Turn exit. Danica Patrick was racing Travis Kvapil for 17th place when the two made contact and both cars got loose and spun. Kvapail was able to save his car, but Danica ended up being hit by Paul Menard and Jeff Burton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nThe race restarted on lap 116 with Kahne still leading. Kahne continued to lead until a set of green flag pit stops on lap 130. As Kahne pitted, Kurt Busch assumed the lead for two laps before pitting, handing the lead to Almirola for lap 132. Almirola led that lap, then Dave Blaney assumed the lead for three laps before pitting on lap 135. David Ragan then held the lead for one lap before the lead cycled back to Kahne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nWith 15 laps to go, three of the four Hendrick Motorsports cars were leading the field, with Kahne leading Gordon and Earnhardt, Jr. The top five (the three Hendrick cars, plus Newman and Kurt Busch) were Chevrolets. Kahne was able to use lapped traffic to build up a 7.5 second lead on Gordon. This continued until lap 150, when the eighth caution came out for debris, erasing Kahne's lead on Gordon. Kahne restarted on the outside lane on lap 153. Kahne held the lead until Gordon overtook him in the Tunnel Turn. Gordon appeared to be on his way to his first victory of the season, but on lap 156, his lead was erased when Matt Kenseth spun in the Tunnel Turn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nOn the last restart on lap 158, Gordon restarted on the inside and Kahne restarted on the outside. Gordon got a jump on the restart ahead of Kahne and Newman. Kahne caught up to Gordon and the two cars raced side by side down the Long Pond straightaway. Kahne cleared Gordon in the Tunnel Turn and assumed the lead at the white flag. He then held off Gordon and Kurt Busch over the last lap to win his second race of the season and his second Pocono race win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233704-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Gobowling.com 400, Report, Race\nNewman finished fourth, and Earnhardt, Jr. finished fifth. Keselowski finished sixth, the highest non-Chevrolet finisher in the field. Joey Logano finished seventh, Kyle Busch finished eighth, while Stewart and Greg Biffle rounded out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233705-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Sevens\nThe 2013 Gold Coast Sevens was the first tournament of the 2013-2014 Sevens World Series. It was held over the weekend of 12\u201313 October 2013 at Robina Stadium (known for sponsorship reasons as Skilled Park) in Queensland, Australia. It was the eleventh edition of the Australian Sevens tournament and the first stop of the 2013\u201314 IRB Sevens World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233705-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Sevens, Format\nThe teams were drawn into four pools of four teams each. Each team played everyone in their pool one time. 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233705-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Sevens, Teams\nThe participating teams and schedule were announced on 11 September 2013. They are the same teams as the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233705-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Sevens, Dream Team\nThe 2013 Gold Coast Sevens 'Dream Team' as voted for by the fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233706-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Suns season\nThe 2013 AFL season is the Gold Coast Suns' third season in the Australian Football League (AFL). The Gold Coast Suns reserves team also competed in the NEAFL. The club was again captained by Gary Ablett, Jr. and coached by Guy McKenna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233706-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Suns season, Draft picks\nThe mini-draft allowed teams to pre-list players for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233707-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Titans season\nThe 2013 Gold Coast Titans season was the 7th in the club's history. Coached by John Cartwright and co-captained by Greg Bird and Nate Myles, they competed in the NRL's 2013 Telstra Premiership. Gold Coast finished the regular season in 9th (out of 16) and failed to qualify the finals for the third consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233707-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gold Coast Titans season, Representative honours\nThe following players have played a representative match in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233708-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Golden Icons Academy Movie Awards\nThe 2013 Golden Icons Academy Movie Awards was the second edition of the ceremony to reward excellence in African cinema. It was hosted by Ramsey Nouah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233709-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Golden Spin of Zagreb\nThe 2013 Golden Spin of Zagreb (Croatian: Zlatna pirueta Zagreba) was the 46th edition of the annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Zagreb, Croatia. It was held at the Dom Sportova on December 5\u20138, 2013. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233710-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Good Times Bonspiel\nThe 2013 Good Times Bonspiel was held from September 6 to 8 at the Calgary Curling Club in Calgary, Alberta as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. It was the first ever edition of the event. Both the men's and women's events were held in a double knockout format. The purse for both the men's and the women's events was CAD$8,000 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233710-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Good Times Bonspiel\nThe Terry Meek rink from Calgary won the men's event, defeating Bert Martin's rink from Airdrie. Lloyd Hill, also from Calgary, won the consolation event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233710-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Good Times Bonspiel\nOn the women's side, 2010 Olympic silver medalist Cheryl Bernard and her rink from Calgary defeated Jocelyn Peterman's team from Red Deer. Crystal Webster's rink, also from Calgary won the consolation event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233711-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500\nThe 2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on October 27, 2013, at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia. Contested over 500 laps on the 0.526-mile (0.847\u00a0km) oval, it was the thirty-third race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season, as well as the seventh race in the ten-race Chase for the Sprint Cup, which ends the season. Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his first and only win of the season, breaking a 33-race winless streak, while Matt Kenseth finished second and Clint Bowyer finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233711-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500, Report, Background\nComing into the race, Jimmie Johnson was the chosen by the pundits to be the favorite along with Kyle Busch, Kasey Kahne and Matt Kenseth. Ten drivers were depicted as the underdogs for this race including Danica Patrick, Juan Pablo Montoya, Marcos Ambrose and Paul Menard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233711-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500, Report, Background\nJohnson had the advantage in the Sprint Cup Series championship points while Kyle Busch and Jeff Gordon were within easy striking distance of taking the championship lead away from him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233711-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500, Qualifying results, Race\nDavid Ragan blew his engine on lap 109, with Kyle Larson having a similar incident on lap 160. Tony Raines developed problems with his brakes on lap 220 while Dave Blaney was involved in a terminal crash on lap 357. The final DNF of the race came from David Reutimann, who had troubles with his rear gear on lap 451 and had to leave the race prematurely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233711-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500, Qualifying results, Race\nApproximately 22% of the race was held under a caution flag while the average green flag run was nearly 22 laps. Most of the yellow flags in this race were caused by accidents, debris and cars spinning dangerously out of control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233711-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500, Qualifying results, Race\nJeff Burton, Greg Biffle, Jeff Gordon, Matt Kenseth and Jimmie Johnson had the fastest pit crews in the race, with the average time on pit road being 41 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233711-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500, Qualifying results, Race\nThere were seven total penalties during the course of the race. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. was penalized twice for too many men over the wall. Ken Schrader, and Kasey Kahne were also penalized for too many men over the wall. Ryan Newman was penalized for Lug nut(s) not installed, and Ken Schrader and David Reutimann were both penalized for too fast entering pits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233712-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gooik\u2013Geraardsbergen\u2013Gooik\nThe 2013 Gooik\u2013Geraardsbergen\u2013Gooik was a one-day women's cycle race held in Belgium on May 26 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race was won by the Emma Johansson of Orica-AIS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233713-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Governor General's Awards\nThe shortlisted nominees for the 2013 Governor General's Awards for Literary Merit were announced on October 2, and the winners were announced on November 13. Each winner will be awarded $25,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1\nThe 2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1 is the 27th edition of the Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, a women's cycling stage race. It is an UCI 2.2 category race and is held between 24 and 28 April 2012 in the Czech Republic. It consists of a prologue and 5 stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Prologue\nThe prologue started in Hav\u00ed\u0159ov located in the east of the Republic, only 12km from the Polish border and less than 40km from Slovakia at 17:00 local time. The prologue was 2.2\u00a0km (1.4\u00a0mi) and consisted of a straight kilometer followed by a few technical turns and again back the straight kilometer to the finish line. Ellen van Dijk won the prologue, just as in the 2012 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1. Behind Van Dijk her Specialized\u2013lululemon teammate Lisa Brennauer finished second Aleksandra Burchenkova finished third. With Evelyn Stevens in fourth place made that 3 Specialized\u2013lululemon finished in the top 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Stage 1\nThe first stage started in D\u011btmarovice with a 18.1\u00a0km (11.2\u00a0mi) travel south to Hav\u00ed\u0159ov. The riders swung east and encircled the lake to the south-east of the city. The course had during this section different small climbs, some steep but rising no more than 50m. At 45\u00a0km (28.0\u00a0mi) and 70\u00a0km (43.5\u00a0mi) started bigger climbs, but not that big as the mountains of stages 3 and 4. The last section after the last descent, about 20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) from the finish line, was a flatter section with hills no higher than 50m. The race ended on top of a steep climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Stage 1\nDue to the fall of the main bunch in the last three kilometer zone riders on place 1\u2013101 were credited with the same time. The fall happened before beginning of the final climb. Evelyn Stevens (Specialized\u2013lululemon) won at the top of the climb the side-by-side sprint ahead of teammate Ellen van Dijk. Behind them Alena Amialiusik (BePink) finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Stage 2\nThe second stage was a 13\u00a0km (8.1\u00a0mi) individual time trial which took place in the morning starting from 9:30. The riders rode from Hav\u00ed\u0159ov to Ostrava and back. The time trial would have been two rounds but was shortened to one. The course has some humps witch sections reaching a gradients near 6% and had a sweeping bend at the turning point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Stage 3\nThe race sets out once again from Orlov\u00e1 in the afternoon on the same day as stage 2. This time the race began in the north of the town and heading north briefly before turning south-east towards the same lakes as in stage 1, then turns south at Stonava and south-west at Albrechtice. It passes the lakes Terlicko and Zermanice before progressing south via Dobra and Nosovice. The first 30\u00a0km (18.6\u00a0mi) had only a couple of small hills but from here the terrain begins to climb more steeply. At Raskovice, with 12.4\u00a0km (7.7\u00a0mi) to go, the race entered the mountains with the finish line located 800m above sea level, at the Visalaje ski resort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Stage 4\nThe fourth stage featured over the course of its 118.1\u00a0km (73.4\u00a0mi) four main mountains. One reaching 1000m with a 6% gradient climb of 600m over 10km to get there, one reaching 800m with a 5.3% climb of 425m in 8km, one to 900m with another 6% climb over 4km before it flattens out slightly over the last kilometre to the summit and a final climb to 550m with a 12.5% section over the last kilometer to the top. Then there was another very steep, short climb to the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Stage 4\nThe race started without team RusVelo. Team manager Zabirova navigated the team to the wrong village also called Lichnov, about 70\u00a0km (43.5\u00a0mi) from Lichnov where the start took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233714-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Gracia-Orlov\u00e1, Stages, Stage 5\nThe stage 5 route, winding through Orlov\u00e1, was a 16.7\u00a0km (10.4\u00a0mi) long circuit with some very steep climbs but no higher than 270m above sea level. The circuit was completed six times, giving a total distance of 100.2\u00a0km (62.3\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233715-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grambling State Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Grambling State Tigers football team represented Grambling State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Tigers were led by head coach Doug Williams in the third season of his second tenure as head coach and ninth overall after coaching the Tigers from 1998 to 2003. They competed as a member of the West Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) and played their home games at Eddie Robinson Stadium in Grambling, Louisiana. The Tigers finished the season with a 1\u201311 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233715-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grambling State Tigers football team\nHead coach Doug Williams' contract was bought out after the first two games of the season. He was replaced by interim head coach George Ragsdale, the team's running backs coach. Ragsdale was subsequently fired on October 17 after losing five games in a row and replaced with Dennis Winston as interim head coach. In response to a number of players being dissatisfied with the conditions of the facility and practices of the athletic department, Grambling State refused to play the October 19 game against Jackson State University. As such, their game against the Tigers was forfeited. On October 22, the players officially ended their boycott, and the team returned to the field for their next game against Texas Southern University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233715-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grambling State Tigers football team\nOn December 4, 2013, Broderick Fobbs was introduced as Winston's replacement as full-time head coach of the Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National\nThe 2013 Grand National (officially known as the John Smith's Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 166th annual running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase, which concluded a three-day meeting (one of only four held at Aintree throughout the year), took place on 6 April 2013. The maximum permitted field of 40 runners competed for a share of the \u00a3975,000 prize fund, which made the National the most valuable jump race in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National\nThe race was won by 66/1 shot Auroras Encore, who was ridden by jockey Ryan Mania for trainer Sue Smith. The 11/2 favourite Seabass, ridden by Katie Walsh, finished in 13th place. During the race only two horses fell and six unseated their riders; 17 completed the course and all 40 that ran returned safely to the stables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National\nThe race was broadcast on Channel 4 for the first time as it took over the broadcasting rights for a four-year period to 2016. The BBC had broadcast the race every year since it was first televised in 1960 and first aired on radio in 1927. The BBC retain the UK radio coverage rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Safety changes\nIn addition to modifications made for the previous year's race, Aintree announced that a number of further changes had been made for the 2013 National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Safety changes\nTwelve of the 16 fences on the course were rebuilt with the timber frames within them replaced by a softer material known as \"plastic birch\". The fences are still covered with at least 14 inches of spruce and will remain the same height. The starting line was also moved 90 yards closer to the first fence, further away from the spectators' stands and thereby reducing slightly the overall distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Safety changes\nAintree and the Professional Jockeys' Association jointly issued a note urging participating jockeys to avoid a false start by paying more attention to the starter's orders, and to better control their speed during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Safety changes\nIn response to the further changes, David Muir of the RSPCA said: \"They have done more than I thought they would. Fundamentally the changes that have been made are major already. They've taken the cores of the fences out, there is a cooling down area now, there's a water system and there's a reduction in the number of drop fences; [however] we'd still like to see changes to Becher's Brook, the drop is still a concern.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race card\nEntries for the race had to be submitted by 30 January 2013. Aintree announced that 84 horses had been entered for consideration in the 2013 Grand National, including last year's runner-up Sunnyhillboy, as well as Seabass and Cappa Bleu, third and fourth in the 2012 race respectively. Others hoping to return to the National for 2013 included Oscar Time, Big Fella Thanks, What A Friend, Cloudy Lane, Calgary Bay, and 2011 winner Ballabriggs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race card\nEight of the entrants were trained in Wales, including Cappa Bleu; the only Welsh-trained horse to have won the Grand National was Kirkland in 1905. Thirty-two of the 84 were trained in Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race card\nHandicap weights were announced by the British Horseracing Authority in London on 12 February. The top weight of 11 st 10 lb was allotted to Tidal Bay, trained by last year's winning trainer Paul Nicholls, however the horse was withdrawn two days later with a stress fracture of the lower cannon bone on his right hind leg. 2010 Cheltenham Gold Cup winner Imperial Commander now carries top weight. The National's official betting partner, Betfred, put Seabass (11 st 2\u00a0lb), On His Own (10 st 10\u00a0lb), and Prince De Beauchene (11 st 3\u00a0lb) as joint-favourites upon announcement of the handicaps. Prince De Beauchene was later withdrawn with a stress fracture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race card\nThere were scratchings' deadlines on 26 February and 19 March, after which 57 entries remained. 1 April marked the five-day confirmation stage at which 49 horses remained and were ranked according to their ratings. On 4 April the final field of 40 runners was declared:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race overview\nThe starter Hugh Barclay got the field of 40 horses off and running at the first attempt, the start line having been moved 90 yards closer to the first fence and further away from the spectators' stands. Seabass was sent off as 11/2 favourite, with jockey Katie Walsh becoming the first female rider to start a Grand National as favourite. Her brother Ruby Walsh was second-favourite on board On His Own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race overview\nFor the first time in history, all 40 runners made it to the Canal Turn \u2013 the eighth of the 30 fences \u2013 without mishap. Across the Bay led over the Turn from Balthazar King, while three riders were unseated. Andrew Thornton became the first of only two jockeys in the 2013 National to fall from his mount as the field streamed over the 12th fence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race overview\nThe Chair is the penultimate fence on the first circuit and marked the end of the race for champion jockey Tony McCoy who was unseated from Colbert Station. Thirty-two of the 40 participants were still in contention going onto the second circuit, led by Across the Bay from Balthazar King, Oscar Time, and Teaforthree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race overview\nAll the remaining runners safely jumped the second Becher's Brook, the first time since 1996 that the famous fence had not claimed any fallers. Ruby Walsh fell at Valentine's (the 25th fence) after which several runners had been pulled up, leaving 21 still racing. Irish-trained Oscar Time and Welsh-trained Teaforthree led the field, with Auroras Encore emerging in third position. At the final fence, Paul Carberry pulled up Chicago Grey while Mumbles Head refused and two other horses unseated their riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Race overview\nAt the elbow on the 494-yard run-in, Auroras Encore had extended his lead over Teaforthree and Oscar Time, the latter fading and quickly overtaken by Cappa Bleu. At the line, the pairing of Auroras Encore and Ryan Mania \u2013 taking his first ride in the Grand National \u2013 won by a distance of nine lengths, Cappa Bleu pipped Teaforthree for second place, Oscar Time finished in fourth and Rare Bob was fifth. Seventeen runners completed the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Reaction\nSue Smith became only the third woman to train a Grand National winner, after Jenny Pitman (1983 and 1995) and Venetia Williams (2009). Smith said afterward: \"I knew the ground was right for him and hoped everything else was. He stayed down the middle and had a bit of luck in running. He didn't have a lot of weight and that helped, too.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Reaction\nAuroras Encore was jockey Ryan Mania's first ride in the National. He said after his victory: \"There are no words to describe it. I got a dream ride round. I couldn't believe my luck.\" Mania added that he could not \"go too mad\" with his celebrations as he was due to race at Hexham the next day. He did race the following afternoon, but was injured in a fall during the St. John Lee Handicap Hurdle and had to be airlifted to Newcastle Royal Infirmary where he was described as being in a \"stable\" condition. He was released from hospital two days later with minor neck and back injuries, saying he was \"feeling a bit tired and a bit sore but apart from that I'm OK, it's nothing serious.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Reaction\nWith two equine fatalities in each of the two previous Nationals, much of the media commentary after the 2013 race hailed the fact that all 40 runners had returned safely to the stables and that only two had fallen at the modified fences. The RSPCA's chief executive Gavin Grant said that his organisation was \"delighted that the changes seem to have contributed to a safe yet competitive race.\" Roly Owers of World Horse Welfare added: \"Aintree can take considerable credit for the improvements they have made to the course. It is too early to say with certainty whether the softer fences are making a difference, but ... the initial signs are encouraging.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Reaction\nChannel 4 enjoyed a 61% share of the UK terrestrial television audience at its peak during the race. Though its peak viewing figures were down by 2 million from the 2012 race which was broadcast on the BBC and watched by nearly 11 million in the UK, they were slightly above those registered by the BBC in 2011 and 2009 and more than 1\u00a0million above those achieved in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Broadcasting\nChannel 4 lead commentator Simon Holt describes the climax of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Broadcasting\nAs the Grand National is accorded the status of an event of national interest in the United Kingdom and is listed on the Ofcom Code on Sports and Other Listed and Designated Events, it must be shown on free-to-air terrestrial television in the UK. Channel 4 took over the broadcasting rights from the BBC for a four-year period from 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Broadcasting\nClare Balding and Nick Luck presented Channel 4's coverage, supported by Jim McGrath, Mick Fitzgerald and Graham Cunningham. Reports were provided by Rishi Persad and Alice Plunkett and betting updates by Tanya Stevenson and Brian Gleeson. Balding, Fitzgerald and Persad were previously regulars of BBC's coverage team for the race in recent years. The commentary team was composed of Richard Hoiles, Ian Bartlett (also previously part of the BBC's team) and Simon Holt. As lead commentator for Channel 4, Holt called the winner home for the first time. After the race, Nick Luck, Mick Fitzgerald and Richard Hoiles provided the viewers with a detailed re-run of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233716-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand National, Broadcasting\nWhereas the BBC lost the television rights for the race, its radio station 5 Live broadcast the race as before, the 81st consecutive running of the National to be covered live on BBC radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233717-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al\nThe 2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al is the fourth edition of the Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al, a single-day professional bicycle road race. It was held on 15 September 2013, over a distance of 205.7\u00a0km (127.8\u00a0mi), starting and finishing in Montr\u00e9al, Quebec, Canada. It was the 26th event of the 2013 UCI World Tour season. The race is one of only two events which are part of the World Tour calendar in North America, the other one being the 2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec contested two days prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233717-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al, Teams\nThe race is held under the auspices of the UCI World Tour, and all nineteen UCI ProTeams are invited automatically. There is also one wildcard invitation, taken byTeam Europcar. A Canadian national squad also competed in the race, and as such, formed the event's 21-team peloton. The 21 teams that competed in the race were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233717-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al, Course\nThe race consisted of 17 laps of a circuit 12.1\u00a0km (7.5\u00a0mi) in length, and followed the same path as the 2011 edition. The circuit, around the main campus of the Universit\u00e9 de Montr\u00e9al, was well-suited for climbers and punchers with three climbs per lap. The finish was on an uphill climb with a small gradient of 4%, that was located on Avenue du Parc. There was a sharp, 180 degrees bend to the right situated 500 meters away from the line. The total vertical climb of the race was 3,893 metres. The major difficulties were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233718-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec\nThe 2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec was the fourth edition of the Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec, a single-day professional bicycle road race. It was held on 13 September 2013, over a distance of 201.6\u00a0km (125.3\u00a0mi), starting and finishing in Quebec City. It was the 25th event of the 2013 UCI World Tour season. The race is one of the only two events which are part of the World Tour calendar in North America, the other one being the 2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montr\u00e9al contested two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233718-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec, Teams\nAs the Grand Prix Cycliste de Qu\u00e9bec was a UCI World Tour event, all 19 UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. There was also one wildcard invitations, which was Team Europcar. A Canadian national squad also competed in the race, and as such, formed the event's 21-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233719-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix GSB\nThe 2013 Grand Prix GSB was a one-day women's cycle race in the Grand Prix GSB series held in El Salvador on March 7, 2013. It ran from Plaza El Salvador del Mundo (The Savior of the World Plaza) in San Salvador City to Juay\u00faa over 97\u00a0km (60\u00a0mi) and has an UCI rating of 1.1. The race was won by the Brazilian Clemilda Fernandes Silva, beating the Be Pink pairing of Alena Amialiusik and Noemi Cantele.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233720-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Hassan II\nThe 2013 Grand Prix Hassan II was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 29th edition of the tournament, which was part of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place in Casablanca, Morocco between 7 and 14 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233720-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Hassan II, 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-00233720-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Hassan II, 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-00233721-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Doubles\nDustin Brown and Paul Hanley were the defending champions, but they decided not to compete together this year. Brown played alongside Christopher Kas and defeated Hanley and Luk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd in the first round. Julian Knowle and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek won the title, defeating Brown and Kas in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233722-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Singles\nPablo And\u00fajar was the two-time defending champion but lost in the first round to fellow countryman Pablo Carre\u00f1o-Busta. Tommy Robredo won the title, defeating Kevin Anderson in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 4\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233722-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233723-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem\nThe 2013 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem was a professional women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 13th edition of the tournament which was part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Royal Tennis Club de Marrakech in Marrakesh, Morocco between 22 and 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233723-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233723-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233724-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Doubles\nPetra Cetkovsk\u00e1 and Alexandra Panova were the defending champions but decided not to participate. T\u00edmea Babos and Mandy Minella won the title, defeating Petra Marti\u0107 and Kristina Mladenovic in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233725-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Singles\nKiki Bertens was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino. Francesca Schiavone won the title, defeating Dom\u00ednguez Lino in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233726-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix cycliste de Gatineau\nThe 2013 Grand Prix cycliste de Gatineau was a one-day women's cycle race held in Canada on 18 May 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.1. The race was won by the Shelley Olds of Team TIBCO - To The Top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233727-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix de Denain\nThe 2013 Grand Prix de Denain was the 55th edition of the Grand Prix de Denain cycle race and was held on 11 April 2013. The race started and finished in Denain. The race was won by Arnaud D\u00e9mare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233728-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix de Dottignies\nThe 2013 Grand Prix de Dottignies was the 12th edition of a one-day women's cycle race held in Dottignies, Belgium on April 1 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race was won by Vera Koedooder of Sengers Ladies Cycling Team, fending off the Rabobank\u2013Liv Giant duo of Iris Slappendel and Sanne van Paassen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233729-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix de Futsal\nThe 2013 Grand Prix de Futsal was the eighth edition of the international futsal competition of the same kind as the FIFA Futsal World Cup but with invited nations and held annually in Brazil. It was first held in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233730-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix de Oriente\nThe 2013 Grand Prix de Oriente was a one-day women's cycle race held in El Salvador on February 27, 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race was won by the Italian Noemi Cantele of Be Pink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233731-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix el Salvador\nThe 2013 Grand Prix el Salvador was a one-day women's cycle race held in El Salvador on February 27, 2013 over 93.2\u00a0km from San Marcos to Zaragoza, La Libertad. The race has an UCI rating of 1.1 and was won by the Italian Silvia Valsecchi of Be Pink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233732-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore\nThe 2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore, the third running of the event, was an IndyCar Series race held on September 1, 2013 on the streets of Baltimore, Maryland. The race was the sixteenth of the 2013 IndyCar Series season, and was the final running of the Grand Prix of Baltimore. Scott Dixon started on the pole position, while Simon Pagenaud of Sam Schmidt Motorsports won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233732-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore, Background\nThe previous race in the season, the GoPro Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma, was won by Will Power. The winner of the previous race was Ryan Hunter-Reay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233732-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore, Background\nIn the season, James Hinchcliffe and Scott Dixon were tied for the most wins with three. In the points race, H\u00e9lio Castroneves held the points lead with 479 points, followed by Dixon (440), Ryan Hunter-Reay (417), Marco Andretti (409), and Simon Pagenaud (380) rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233732-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore, Background, Qualifying\nScott Dixon won the pole position with a lap time of 1:18.0838 and lap speed of 94.053 miles per hour (151.364\u00a0km/h) for his second pole of the year, becoming 14th all-time among IndyCar Series drivers for career poles, passing Danny Sullivan and drawing with Gordon Johncock. Will Power (94.013 miles per hour (151.299\u00a0km/h)), Simon Pagenaud (93.637 miles per hour (150.694\u00a0km/h)), Justin Wilson (93.115 miles per hour (149.854\u00a0km/h)) and Josef Newgarden (93.077 miles per hour (149.793\u00a0km/h)) filled out the top five starting spots. Tristan Vautier (92.917 miles per hour (149.535\u00a0km/h)), H\u00e9lio Castroneves (92.928 miles per hour (149.553\u00a0km/h)), Ryan Hunter-Reay (92.919 miles per hour (149.539\u00a0km/h)), Charlie Kimball (92.901 miles per hour (149.510\u00a0km/h)), and Takuma Sato (92.702 miles per hour (149.189\u00a0km/h)) filled out the bottom half of the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233732-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore, Race\nThe race was marred by six cautions, five of which took place between laps 41 and 65, the lone exception occurring on lap 13 with Ed Carpenter's car stopping in turn 5 and Luca Filippi leaving the track in turn 3 due to a fire in the engine compartment. On lap 41, Stefan Wilson hit the turn 7 wall, while seven laps later, Scott Dixon was spun by Graham Rahal in turn 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233732-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore, Race\nFive laps later, Will Power collided with Dixon and was sent spinning into the wall, and four laps later, Oriol Servia and Sebastian Bourdais also touched, and the latter was turned. On lap 63, six cars were involved in an accident. Also during the race, H\u00e9lio Castroneves was black-flagged for a safety violation. Meanwhile, Simon Pagenaud was able to take the lead and hold off Josef Newgarden to win with a four-second advantage, his second victory of the year. Bourdais finished third, Justin Wilson and Simona de Silvestro closed out the top five; Charlie Kimball, James Hinchcliffe, Sebasti\u00e1n Saavedra, Castroneves and Marco Andretti rounded out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233732-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Baltimore, Race\nAfter the race, Castroneves continued to lead the points standings with 501 points. Dixon was 49 points behind with 452, while Pagenaud took third with 431. Andretti and Ryan Hunter-Reay were in fourth and fifth with 430 and 427 points, respectively. Wilson (393), Dario Franchitti (388), Hinchcliffe (376), Will Power (371), and Kimball (363) finished the top ten in points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233733-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Prix of Maykop\nThe 2013 Grand Prix of Maykop was a one-day women's cycle race held in Russia on June 4 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race was won by the Russian, Natalia Boyarskaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood\nThe 2013 Grand Rapids flood lasted from April 12 to 25, 2013, affecting multiple areas in the Grand Rapids metropolitan area. Sudden heavy rainfall, saturation of the ground from rainwater and the flow of tributaries caused the Grand River to rise dramatically, with the river cresting at 21.85 feet (6.66\u00a0m) in Grand Rapids on April 21, 2013. The flooding caused thousands of residents in the area to evacuate their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Meteorology\nIn April 2013, heavy rain throughout the Midwest caused severe flooding in the region. In a period between April 8 and 15, Grand Rapids received 3.50 inches (89\u00a0mm) of rain, while the upriver community of Comstock Park received about 5.04 inches (128\u00a0mm) of rainfall. Within that period on April 13, the National Weather Service stated that floodwaters in Comstock Park rose from minor to moderate, with the flood stage beginning at 12 feet (3.7\u00a0m) and that day's level at 13.3 feet (4.1\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Meteorology\nOn April 17, Grand Rapids received about 0.83 inches (21\u00a0mm) of rain. Rainfall broke a 104-year-old record on April 18 with 9.1 inches (230\u00a0mm) of rain falling by 9:30 a.m. EDT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Meteorology\nOn April 21, in Comstock Park, the Grand River crested at 17.8 feet (5.4\u00a0m), 5.8 feet (1.8\u00a0m) above the 12-foot (3.7\u00a0m) flood level while in Grand Rapids, the river rose to 21.85 feet (6.66\u00a0m), or 3.85 feet (1.17\u00a0m) above the 18-foot (5.5\u00a0m) flood level. A storm deemed \"catastrophic\" that had the potential to drop 3 to 4 inches (76 to 102\u00a0mm) of rain had also barely missed the Grand Rapids area on the day that the water crested in the Grand River. Rain totals for the month of April were about 11.10 inches (282\u00a0mm).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Impact\nOn April 21, Mayor of Grand Rapids, George Heartwell, declared a state of emergency. Evacuations of homes were reported along with some reports about boat rescues from houses in the area. In Kent County, about 700\u00a0people were evacuated while 1,000\u00a0people alone were evacuated from the Plaza Towers in downtown Grand Rapids. Some buildings in Grand Rapids near the riverfront had the Grand River's waterline go over their windows with some individuals able to see fish and ducks swim by through the windows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Impact\nFlood walls and bridges in Grand Rapids caused some increased flooding in cities up and downstream from the Grand River since they impeded the flow of the river, causing water to stand and rise. Wastewater treatment plants in Grand Rapids, Grandville and Wyoming had partially treated wastewater overflow from their facilities. The Grand Rapids wastewater plant had about 429\u00a0million US gallons (1.62\u00d710^9\u00a0l) of the partially treated water spill into the Grand River.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Impact, Response\nThe American Red Cross of West Michigan deployed to heavily affected neighborhoods in the area. During the floods, thousands of residents in the Grand Rapids area volunteered to fill over 100,000\u00a0sand bags that were to be used throughout the territory. Near the Grand Rapids wastewater facility, a 1.25-mile (2.01\u00a0km) wall of sandbags were placed. CSX Transportation also placed train cars full of salt on a 110-year-old trestle bridge that crossed the river near Wealthy Street in order to weigh down the bridge from the rising floodwaters below it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Aftermath\nThe state of emergency declared by Mayor Heartwell lasted until May 24 in order to give more time for officials to gather information about the impact of the flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Aftermath\nFollowing the flooding, thousands of sandbags had to be removed with some possibly being stored for future use for other floods. Discussions were also held on whether to turn the wall of sandbags near the Grand Rapids wastewater facility into a permanent berm for future protection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233734-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Rapids flood, Aftermath\nIn the spring of 2014, Grand Rapids and Walker started a $703,000 contract to install flap gates and to perform repairs to existing flood walls. In August 2014, Grand Rapids also released plans to remove obstructions in the Grand River and to raise the berm near their wastewater plant. After initial claims by Grand Rapids officials that the flood walls in the city were adequate, in November 2014, city officials decided to look at ways to heighten flood walls due to factors involving Federal Emergency Management Agency, climate change and a proposed river restoration project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts\nThe 2013 William Hill Grand Slam of Darts, was the seventh staging of the tournament, organised by the Professional Darts Corporation. The event took place from 9\u201317 November 2013 at the Wolverhampton Civic Hall, Wolverhampton, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts\nRaymond van Barneveld was the defending champion, but he was eliminated in the group stage. The semi-final match between Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis proved to be the highest quality in darts history as the players averaged 109.76 and 110.99 respectively, the highest combined average ever recorded. The PDC record of 31 maximums set in the 2007 World Championship final was broken as 32 were made in this match in 32 fewer legs. Taylor won the match 16\u20139 and went on to seal his fifth Grand Slam title by beating Robert Thornton 16\u20136 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nPhil Taylor (1) Raymond van Barneveld (2) Scott Waites (3) Michael van Gerwen (4) Adrian Lewis (5) Simon Whitlock (6) Andy Hamilton (7) James Wade (8)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nGary Anderson Dave Chisnall Kim Huybrechts Mervyn King Christian Kist Wes Newton Kevin Painter Robert Thornton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nWesley Harms Ronny Huybrechts Paul Nicholson Tony O'Shea Michael Smith Mark Walsh Mark Webster Dean Winstanley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts, Pools\nRicky Evans Richie George Ted Hankey Stuart Kellett Justin Pipe Ross Smith Vincent van der Voort Peter Wright", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts, Draw, Group stage\nAll matches first-to-5/best of 9NB in Brackets: Number = Seeds; BDO = BDO Darts player; RQ = Ranking Qualifier; Q = QualifierNB: P = Played; W = Won; L = Lost; LF = Legs For; LA = Legs Against; +/- = Plus/Minus Record, in relation to legs; Average \u2013 3-dart average; Pts = Points; Q = Qualified for K.O. phase", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233735-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand Slam of Darts, Draw, Group stage, Group H\nWith Wes Newton and Mark Webster finishing level on points and leg difference, a nine-dart shootout between the two took place to see who would play Scott Waites in the second round. The match took place after the conclusion of Monday's group matches, and was the first time since the 2009 Grand Slam of Darts that a nine-dart shootout was required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233736-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand-Am of The Americas\nThe 2013 Grand-Am of The Americas presented by Gainsco and Total was held on March 2, 2013 as the second race of 2013 Rolex Sports Car Series season, and the first Grand-Am race at the Circuit of the Americas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233736-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grand-Am of The Americas, Qualifying\nThe qualifying session will take place on March 1. The DP session will commence at 17:15 EST and will last for 15 minutes. GT and GX will qualify between 17:40 and 17:55 EST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233737-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grande Pr\u00eamio do Cinema Brasileiro\nThe 2013 Grande Pr\u00eamio do Cinema Brasileiro is the 12th edition of Grande Pr\u00eamio do Cinema Brasileiro, presented by Academia Brasileira de Cinema (Brazilian Academy of Cinema), honored the best Brazilians films of 2012. The ceremony took place on November 13, 2013, at Cidade das Artes, Rio de Janeiro and was televised by Canal Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233738-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Alaska Shootout\nThe 2013 Carrs/Safeway Great Alaska Shootout was the 35th Great Alaska Shootout, the annual college basketball tournament in Anchorage, Alaska that features colleges from all over the United States. The event is scheduled from November 27 through November 30, 2013, with eight colleges and universities participating in the men's tournament and four universities participating in the women's tournament. Most of the games in the men's tournament were televised on the CBS Sports Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave\nThe 2013 heat wave in the United Kingdom and Ireland was a period of unusually hot weather primarily in July 2013, with isolated warm days in June and August. A prolonged high pressure system over Britain and Ireland caused higher than average temperatures for 19 consecutive days in July, reaching 33.5\u00a0\u00b0C (92.3\u00a0\u00b0F) at Heathrow and Northolt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave\nFollowing a brief period of cooler weather at the end of July, temperatures temporarily rose again, peaking at 34.1\u00a0\u00b0C (93.4\u00a0\u00b0F) on 1 August in the United Kingdom, the warmest the country had seen since July 2006, and 31\u00a0\u00b0C (88\u00a0\u00b0F) in Ireland. At 19 days, the July heatwave was the longest continuous period of hot weather in the UK since August 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Timeline\nOn 4 July the Met Office predicted a long spell of warm weather over England and Wales to last until the middle of the month, with the south-east set to experience close to 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F), and Scotland and Northern Ireland expected to avoid the warmest weather. In the following week temperatures reached 29.7\u00a0\u00b0C (85.5\u00a0\u00b0F) on the south coast and climbed to 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F) in Northern Ireland, the highest temperature seen there since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Timeline\nHeat waves in the United Kingdom are declared when the threshold maximum day temperature and a minimum night temperature are exceeded for at least two consecutive days. The threshold temperatures differ region by region, but the average is 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F) for the day and 15\u00a0\u00b0C (59\u00a0\u00b0F) for the night. On 12 July, the Met Office released heat wave alerts across much of England, with Yorkshire and the Humber placed in the level three category out of four alert levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Timeline\nOn 17 July, the Met Office upgraded London and South East England to level three following the fifth consecutive day of temperatures over 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Timeline\nThe heatwave ended on 23 July with heavy thunderstorms, bringing flooding and lightning strikes that caused delays on motorways and railways, power cuts and fires. Despite this, temperatures still remained above average for the time of year. On 29 July, another spell of thunderstorms hit the UK. Manchester for example was hit by three thunderstorms in eight hours. Three days later on 1 August, the temperatures rose again, recording the warmest August temperature since 2003. In some places, 1 August was actually warmer than all of the days in July. London Heathrow recorded 34.1\u00a0\u00b0C (93.4\u00a0\u00b0F), which exceeded the previous record of 33.5\u00a0\u00b0C (92.3\u00a0\u00b0F) which was recorded on 22 July. By 2 August however, temperatures began to return to normal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Impact\nOn 18 July, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine reported that the first 9 days of the heat wave had caused up to an additional 760 deaths in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Impact, Emergency services\nThe heat wave led to rises in both the number of calls to the emergency services and admissions to A&E departments. The large numbers of people using rivers, lakes and the sea to cool off led to a large increase in the number of calls to lifeguards. The London Fire Brigade reported having to deal with double the number of grass fires in the capital compared to the previous year. Wildfires were also reported in Epping Forest in Essex, the Dorset coast, the valleys of southern Wales and Tentsmuir Forest in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Impact, Ecology\nFollowing declines in the summer of 2012 due to wet and windy conditions, butterfly numbers saw a surge due to the prolonged warm weather. The warmer waters around the British coasts also led to an increase in the number of jellyfish sightings, particularly the moon jellyfish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233739-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Britain and Ireland heat wave, Impact, Ecology\nThe death of thousands of fish in rivers and lakes was attributed to the elevated temperatures lowering the amount of oxygen in the water to toxic levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233740-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Southern 4 Hour\nThe 2013 Great Southern 4 Hour was an endurance motor race held on 26 May 2013 at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit in Victoria, Australia. It was Round 1 of the 2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship and as such it was open to \"modified production touring cars\" complying with the technical regulations for that championship. The race was won by Bob Pearson and Glenn Seton, driving a Mitsubishi Lancer Evo 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233740-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Southern 4 Hour, Class structure\nAs the race was a round of the 2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship, the following class structure applied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233740-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Southern 4 Hour, Class structure\nThere were no starters in Classes E, F or I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233740-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Great Southern 4 Hour, Results\nNote: Drivers listed in italics in the above table did not drive the car in the actual race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233741-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Great West Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Great West Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21\u201325. All eight of the league's teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at new Jersey Institute of Technology's Bears & Eagles Riverfront Stadium in Newark, New Jersey. As the Great West is a new conference, the league does not have an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. Third seeded Houston Baptist won their first championship, ending Utah Valley's run of three consecutive titles dating to the event's inception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233741-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Great West Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nAll eight teams were seeded based on conference winning percentage only and then met in a double-elimination bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233741-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Great West Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nLuke Clements was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Clements was an outfielder for Houston Baptist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 89], "content_span": [90, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233742-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 14\u201316, 2013, in Chicago, Illinois at the Emil and Patricia Jones Convocation Center. Per NCAA regulations as a new Division I conference, the Great West champion would not have received an automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament until 2020. The winner, however, did receive an automatic bid to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament. This was the final GMC men's basketball tournament as the conference dissolved after the season due to its member schools joining other conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233742-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nWith North Dakota joining the Big Sky Conference for the 2012-13 season, the conference used the same 5-team format they used for 2012 as the outline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233742-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nFive teams participated in the 2013 Great West Tournament. This was the last Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament as Houston Baptist left the conference after this season to join the Southland Conference and Utah Valley, UTPA and Chicago State left the conference after this season to join the Western Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233743-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Blizzard season\nThe 2013 Green Bay Blizzard season was the team's eleventh season as a football franchise and fourth in the Indoor Football League (IFL). One of just nine teams competing in the IFL for the 2013 season, the Green Bay Blizzard were members of the United Conference. The team played their home games at the Resch Center in the Green Bay suburb of Ashwaubenon, Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233743-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Blizzard season\nThe Blizzard began the season under the direction of head coach Robert Fuller but he was replaced after six games by Chad Baldwin. The team ended the regular season with a 4\u201310 record and did not qualify for the playoffs. They drew an average attendance of 3,812 for their seven regular season games. After failing to turn reach certain unspecified \"financial benchmarks\", three of the four principal owners of the team agreed to place the franchise for sale in June 2013. If a new owner had not been found by September 1, 2013, the franchise would have suspended operations for the 2014 IFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233743-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Blizzard season, Off-field moves\nShortly before the 2013 season began, the owner of the Cheyenne Warriors died which forced that team to suspend operations and the IFL to revise its schedule to accommodate the now 9-team league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233743-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Blizzard season, Off-field moves\nThe March 23, 2013, game against the Chicago Slaughter was \"Military Appreciation Night\" with free tickets for veterans and all fans in attendance received a personal American flag. Children also received replicas of the special \"camouflage\" Blizzard jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233743-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Blizzard season, Off-field moves\nAfter the April 7th loss dropped the team's record to 1\u20135, head coach Robert Fuller was fired and defensive coordinator Chad Badwin was promoted to replace him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233743-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Blizzard season, Roster moves\nJunior Aumavae, a nose tackle who spent the 2012 season playing for the Blizzard, was signed by the New York Jets in late March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233743-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Blizzard season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated March 26, 201325 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season\nThe 2013 season was the Green Bay Packers' 95th season overall, 93rd in the National Football League and eighth under head coach Mike McCarthy. The Packers came into the 2013 season looking to win the NFC North for the 3rd year in a row. They came off a 45\u201331 loss to the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Divisional Playoffs the previous season. The Packers started the 2013 season in a rematch with the 49ers, to whom they lost 28\u201334.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season\nAfter winning their home opener against the Redskins, Green Bay lost 34\u201330 in Cincinnati to the Bengals after holding a 30\u201314 lead in the 3rd quarter. Following the loss in Cincinnati, the Packers won 4 games in a row to sit at 5\u20132 before losing a Monday Night game at home to the Bears, 20\u201327. In that game, the Packers lost star quarterback Aaron Rodgers to a broken collarbone in the 1st quarter. He would be replaced by backups Scott Tolzien and Matt Flynn during recovery. In Week 12, the Packers tied the Vikings 26\u201326; it was Green Bay's first tie since 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season\nThe Packers would lose the next game 40\u201310 to the Lions on Thanksgiving to sit at 5\u20136\u20131, threatening to miss the postseason for the first time since 2008. The Packers then rallied to beat the Falcons 22\u201321 to even their record at 6\u20136\u20131. The following week, the Packers defeated the Dallas Cowboys 37\u201336 in Dallas after they had trailed 26\u20133 at halftime. The comeback was the largest in franchise history. The Packers would then lose a shootout with the Pittsburgh Steelers 31\u201338 at home to sit at 7\u20137\u20131, the first meeting between the teams since Super Bowl XLV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season\nThe following week, the Packers defeated the Chicago Bears 33\u201328 at Soldier Field to clinch the NFC North in a game in which the winner would clinch the division. The game is well known for a touchdown catch made by Randall Cobb from Aaron Rodgers with less than a minute remaining to seal the win. The play came on a 4th and 8 situation in which Cobb was wide open near the endzone. After the win the team finished the regular season with an 8-7-1 record. The Packers entered the playoffs as the 4th seed in the NFC. In the wild card game, they lost 23\u201320 in a rematch with the 49ers on a Phil Dawson field goal as time expired. The game was one of the coldest in NFL playoff history, with a temperature of 5\u00a0\u00b0F (\u221215\u00a0\u00b0C).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Offseason, Free agents\nRFA: Restricted free agent, UFA: Unrestricted free agent, ERFA: Exclusive rights free agent, FT: Franchise Tag", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Washington Redskins\nFollowing their loss to the 49ers 28\u201334 at Candlestick Park in Week 1, the Packers went back home to Lambeau to take on the 0\u20131 Washington Redskins. On the opening drive, Eddie Lacy suffered a concussion after a helmet-to helmet hit with Brandon Meriweather. He exited the game and James Starks replaced him. The Packers drew first blood with a 28-yard field goal. They then followed it up with a 35-yard touchdown pass to Randall Cobb on 4th and 3 to take a 10\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Washington Redskins\nThe Packers took advantage of Robert Griffin III's limited mobility and shut out the Redskins' offense in the 1st half. The Packers continued to pile up yards and points, first with a 14-yard touchdown pass to Jordy Nelson and then with a 3-yard touchdown pass to Jermichael Finley. By halftime, the Packers had a commanding 24\u20130 lead. Early in the 3rd quarter, Aaron Rodgers once again connected with Jordy Nelson for a 15-yard touchdown to take a 31\u20130 lead. The Redskins finally manage to sustain a drive and capped it off with a 6-yard touchdown pass to Pierre Gar\u00e7on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Washington Redskins\nHowever, the Packers responded with a 32-yard touchdown run by James Starks to make it 38\u20137. The Redskins managed to score two more touchdowns in the 4th quarter, first a 3-yard touchdown pass to Jordan Reed, then a 9-yard touchdown pass to Santana Moss (failed 2-point conversion). Up 38\u201320 with 7:36 remaining in the 4th, the Packers managed to sustain a drive to run out the clock and win their first game of the 2013 season. Aaron Rodgers was 34\u201342 for 480 yards and 4 touchdown passes, while James Starks rushed 20 times for 132 yards and a touchdown. Rodgers managed to tie Matt Flynn against Detroit in 2011 for the franchise record of passing yards in a single game (480). With the win, the Packers were 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 94], "content_span": [95, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: at Cincinnati Bengals\nBoth teams each committed four turnovers with Aaron Rodgers throwing two interceptions and Andy Dalton throwing one pick to Sam Shields. Two other Packer turnovers were fumbles with the last fumble came from Johnathan Franklin with Terence Newman returning a fumble return for a touchdown to give the Bengals the lead. With the loss, the Packers fell to 1\u20132 entering their bye week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: vs. Detroit Lions\nAfter the heart-breaking 30\u201334 loss to the Cincinnati Bengals in Paul Brown Stadium, the Packers return to action after their Week 4 bye to take on the 3\u20131 Detroit Lions at Lambeau. Eddie Lacy returned to action after recovering from a concussion in the past two weeks. He had a very productive game, rushing 23 times for 99 yards. After forcing the Lions to punt on their first possession, the Packers struck first with a 26-yard field goal. They followed it up with a 52-yard field goal to take a 6\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: vs. Detroit Lions\nThe Lions managed to answer with a 53-yard field goal to go into halftime down 3\u20136. Early in the 3rd quarter, Randall Cobb rushed to the Lions 22-yard line for a 67-yard gain. From there, the Packers kicked a 31-yard field goal to take a 9\u20133 lead. Following a Lions 3-and-out, the Packers struck again with an 83-yard touchdown pass to James Jones to take a 16\u20133 lead. In the 4th quarter, the Packers added two more field goals, one 42 yards and the other 45 yards, to take a 22\u20133 lead. The Lions finally find the endzone with a 13-yard touchdown pass to Kris Durham (failed 2-point conversion) to make it 22\u20139 with 2:04 remaining. However, the Packers ran out the remaining clock and won. The Packers reach .500 again with a 2\u20132 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens\nAfter defeating the Detroit Lions 22\u20139 at Lambeau Field, the Packers travelled to M&T Bank Stadium to take on the defending Super Bowl champions Baltimore Ravens. Eddie Lacy had a breakout game, rushing for 120 yards on 23 carries. On the first drive, Lacy rushed for 10- and 37-yard gains before settling for a 45-yard field goal to take a 3\u20130 lead. Both defenses played exceptionally well in the 1st half, highlighted by Green Bay's 4th down goal-line stand against Bernard Pierce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Packers suffered severe injuries to the offense, however, as both James Jones and Randall Cobb would exit the game in the 1st half with leg injuries. 4th-string receiver Jarrett Boykin saw extended playing time in the wake of their absences. With less than 20 seconds remaining in the half, Nick Perry forced a Joe Flacco fumble that was returned by Datone Jones to the 13-yard line. From there, the Packers settled for a 31-yard field goal and a 6\u20130 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens\nAfter trading punts to begin the 2nd half, Aaron Rodgers' pass intended for Jordy Nelson was intercepted by Jimmy Smith in the endzone. After Baltimore punted, Jarrett Boykin, who struggled in the 1st half, took a screen pass 43 yards to the Baltimore 25. From there, the Packers extended their lead to 9\u20130 after a 50-yard field goal. Following a 53-yard pass to Marlon Brown, the Ravens settled for a 23-yard field goal. Late in the 3rd quarter, Aaron Rodgers lofted a 64-yard pass to Jordy Nelson to extend their lead 16\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0006-0003", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens\nHowever, the Ravens stayed in the ballgame with an 11-yard pass to Jacoby Jones. The Packers tried to ice the game with a 31-yard field goal to make it 19\u201310 with 4:17 remaining in the 4th quarter. However, on 4th and 21, Joe Flacco found a wide open Tandon Doss for 63 yards. It appeared that Jerron McMillian slipped while covering Doss. On the very next play, Flacco found Desmond Clark for an 18-yard touchdown to make it 19\u201317 with 2:04 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0006-0004", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Packers preserved the 2-point lead with a 52-yard pass to Jermichael Finley on 3rd and 3 and with a 4-yard run by Eddie Lacy on 3rd and 2. With the 19\u201317 win, the Packers went above .500 for the first time in the 2013 season with a 3\u20132 record. After the game, Randall Cobb would be put on IR with designation to return, and James Jones would be out for the next 2 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: vs. Cleveland Browns\nAfter their win against the Baltimore Ravens 19\u201317, the Packers, wearing their throwback jerseys of blue and yellow, returned home to Lambeau Field to take on the Cleveland Browns. Both James Jones and Randall Cobb would be inactive for the game, and Jarrett Boykin got his first career start. He had a breakout game, catching 8 passes for 103 yards and a touchdown. After forcing the Browns to punt on their opening possession, the Packers quickly struck with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Jermichael Finley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: vs. Cleveland Browns\nAfter Brandon Weeden's pass was intercepted by Davon House on the next drive, the Packers took advantage with a 1-yard run by Eddie Lacy to take a 14\u20130 lead in the 1st quarter. After Cleveland scored on a 46-yard field goal, the Packers responded with a 26-yard field goal to take a 17\u20133 lead at halftime. In the 3rd quarter, the Browns scored on a 44-yard field goal to make it 17\u20136. Early in the 4th quarter, the Browns decided to go for it on 4th down and 15 on the Packers 31-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe pass to Jordan Cameron in the endzone was incomplete and the Packers took over. On the drive, Jermichael Finley was carried off the field on a stretcher after suffering a neck injury. The Packers capped off that drive with a 1-yard touchdown pass to Jordy Nelson. They followed it up with a 20-yard touchdown pass to Jarrett Boykin, taking a 31\u201313 win. About two weeks after the game, Jermichael Finley was put on IR. With the win, the Packers extended their winning streak to three games and improved to 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at Minnesota Vikings\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at Minnesota Vikings\nAfter defeating the Cleveland Browns 31\u201313 at Lambeau Field, the Packers travelled to the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome to take on the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday Night Football. This was the Packers' last game at the Metrodome, for the Minnesota Vikings would play at TCF Bank Stadium for the following two seasons. On the opening kickoff, Cordarrelle Patterson returned the kick 109 yards for a touchdown. Green Bay responded with a 14 play, 7:24-minute drive that ended with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Jordy Nelson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at Minnesota Vikings\nAfter the Vikings punt, the Packers led a 17-play, 8:24-minute drive that ended with a 30-yard field goal. After the Vikings responded with a 36-yard field goal, Aaron Rodgers zipped a 76-yard touchdown pass to Jordy Nelson. A 93-yard punt return by Micah Hyde made it 24\u201310 with less than two minutes remaining. The Vikings, aided by a 26-yard pass interference penalty, scored on an 8-yard touchdown run by Adrian Peterson to make it 24\u201317 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at Minnesota Vikings\nOn the first possession of the 2nd half, the Packers led another time-consuming drive that ended with a 1-yard touchdown run by Eddie Lacy. After Christian Ponder was sacked by Mike Daniels on 3rd down, the Packers scored easily against a tired Minnesota defense on a 25-yard run by James Starks to pull a commanding 38\u201317 lead at the beginning of the 4th quarter. The effective tandem between Eddie Lacy and James Starks salted the game away, and the Vikings' brief comeback fell short. The Packers had an overwhelming advantage in time of possession with 40:54 compared to the Vikings' 19:06. The Packers did not punt all night and they were 2 of 2 on fourth-down conversions. With the 44\u201331 win, the Packers were 5\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Chicago Bears\nAfter defeating the Minnesota Vikings 44\u201331 for the last time in the Metrodome, the Packers returned to Lambeau to take on the Chicago Bears on Monday Night Football. The Bears were without Jay Cutler (groin), so Josh McCown made his first start in the 2013 season. The Packers moved down the field with ease on their first possession, with Rodgers completing a 27-yard pass to Jordy Nelson followed by Eddie Lacy's 16-yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Chicago Bears\nHowever, the drive stalled when Aaron Rodgers was sacked by Shea McClellin on 3rd and 8, so the Packers settled for a 30-yard field goal for the 3\u20130 lead. Josh McCown then led a drive that ended with a 23-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Marshall, taking a 7\u20133 lead. It soon became apparent that Aaron Rodgers couldn't return to the game because of an injury suffered on the McClellin sack. Instead, Seneca Wallace trotted onto the field on the Packers' second possession. It ended with a tipped pass that was intercepted by Julius Peppers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Bears' punt after their 3-and-out was blocked by Jamari Lattimore and recovered by Chris Banjo, taking possession at the Chicago 32. On the very next play, James Starks bursted through the middle for a 32-yard touchdown run, taking a 10\u20137 lead. In the 2nd quarter, the Bears took a 14\u201310 lead following a 1-yard run by Matt Forte. They added a 24-yard field goal at the end of the half to lead 17\u201310 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Chicago Bears\nEarly in the 3rd quarter, Eddie Lacy sprinted to the Chicago 1-yard line on a 56-yard gain, before punching it in himself to tie the game at 17\u201317. The Packers successfully recover the ensuing onside kick, but had to settle for a 23-yard field goal to take a 20\u201317 lead. The Bears responded with a 6-yard touchdown pass to Alshon Jeffery, taking a 24\u201320 lead. With 9:48 left in the 4th quarter, the Bears sustained an 18 play, 8:58-minute drive that ended with a 27-yard field goal to make it 27\u201320 with 53 seconds remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0010-0004", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Packers tried to make a comeback, but after a 15-yard pass to Jordy Nelson, Seneca Wallace was sacked twice, first by Corey Wootton then by Shea McClellin, and time expired. With the 20\u201327 loss, the Packers' six-game winning streak against the Chicago Bears was snapped and the Packers fell to 5\u20133. It was confirmed later in the week that Aaron Rodgers suffered a fractured left collarbone, with his playing status to be determined \"week to week.\" He ended up missing 7 weeks, only to make his return against the same Bears in Week 17 for the NFC North title decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 10: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nAfter the Packers' first possession, QB Seneca Wallace exited the game with a groin injury and was replaced by Scott Tolzien, who threw for 280 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions. With the loss, the Packers fell to 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nPackers QB Scott Tolzien was benched midway through the 3rd quarter in favor of Matt Flynn. Down 23\u20137 at the beginning of the 4th quarter, Flynn and the offense tied the game at 23\u201323 to go into overtime. After the Packers offense scored a field goal in the opening possession, Minnesota was able to answer with a field goal of their own, and after a series of back-and-forth possessions, overtime came to an end at 26\u201326. It was the first tie between the two teams since 1978. With the tie, the Packers went to 5\u20135\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 93], "content_span": [94, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nFollowing a rare tie with the Minnesota Vikings 26\u201326 at Lambeau Field, the Packers travelled to Ford Field to take on the Detroit Lions on Thanksgiving football. Due to Matt Flynn's performance the previous week, he replaces Scott Tolzien and makes his first start for the Packers in the 2013 season. The Lions' opening possession ended at the Green Bay 12 when Clay Matthews forced a Reggie Bush fumble that was recovered by Morgan Burnett. However, the Packers could not capitalize and the Lions drew first blood with a 27-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nFollowing a kickoff that went out-of-bounds, the Packers answered with a 54-yard field goal to tie it at 3\u20133. The Packers quickly struck again when Nick Perry forced a Matthew Stafford fumble that was returned by Morgan Burnett for a touchdown for a 10\u20133 lead. The Lions answered by scoring two touchdowns, first a 5-yard touchdown pass to Jeremy Ross, then a 1-yard run by Reggie Bush. Detroit had opportunities for more points before the half, but David Akers missed a 31-yard field goal as the 1st half expired, keeping a 17\u201310 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nFollowing a 3-and-out on Green Bay's opening possession in the 3rd quarter, the Lions scored on a 20-yard touchdown pass to Calvin Johnson, extending their lead 24\u201310. Late in the 3rd quarter, Ndamukong Suh sacked Matt Flynn in the endzone, forcing a safety that made it 26\u201310. The Lions capitalized on their next possession with a 1-yard run by Joique Bell. They followed that up with a 20-yard touchdown pass to Kevin Ogletree, which extended their lead 40\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0013-0003", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Detroit Lions\nThe Packers tried to rally with a 56-yard pass to James Jones, but Matt Flynn fumbled the snap on the next play; Detroit recovered and ran out the clock. This loss marked Matthew Stafford's first career win against the Packers. It also snapped the Lions' 10-year losing streak on Thanksgiving Day. With the loss, the Packers fell to 5\u20136\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nAfter the heart-numbing loss to the Detroit Lions on Thanksgiving Day, the Packers returned to snowy Lambeau Field to take on the 3\u20139 Atlanta Falcons. Matt Flynn made his 2nd start as quarterback. The Packers struck first with a 1-yard touchdown run by Eddie Lacy just before the 1st quarter ended. However, the Falcons would answer with a 36-yard touchdown pass to Drew Davis, followed by a 2-yard reception by Tony Gonzalez following a Matt Flynn fumble. The Packers responded with a 40-yard field goal to make the score 14\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nLate in the 2nd quarter, Green Bay sustained a drive into Atlanta territory. However, on Atlanta's 35-yard line, Matt Flynn threw a pass that was deflected, intercepted and returned 71 yards for a touchdown by Sean Weatherspoon. There were audible boos as the Packers were down 21\u201310 at halftime. In the 3rd quarter, Matt Flynn led two drives that both resulted in field goals, making the score 21\u201316. As the 4th quarter began, Mike Neal forced a Matt Ryan fumble at Atlanta's 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nThe Packers capitalized on the turnover with a 2-yard touchdown reception to Andrew Quarless, gaining the lead 22\u201321. The Packers' defense held for the rest of the 4th quarter as Atlanta missed a 52-yard field goal and also turned the ball over on downs at Green Bay's 33. A Jarrett Bush interception at Green Bay's 37 with 11 seconds remaining sealed the win for the Packers. With the win, the Packers recorded their first win since Aaron Rodgers' injury in Week 9. With the win, the Packers are 6-6-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Dallas Cowboys\nFollowing a 22\u201321 comeback win against the Atlanta Falcons, the Packers travelled to AT&T Stadium, the site of Super Bowl XLV, to take on the 7\u20136 Dallas Cowboys. Matt Flynn made his 3rd start as Aaron Rodgers was deemed not ready to return from a broken collarbone. The two teams traded field goals with their first possessions, but Dallas went on to score 23 unanswered points to take a 26\u20133 lead at halftime. The 2nd half began with a bang as Eddie Lacy rushed to Dallas' 20-yard line for a 60-yard gain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Dallas Cowboys\nThree plays later, Matt Flynn connected with Jordy Nelson for a 13-yard touchdown. Tony Romo and the Cowboys offense responded with a field goal to make it 10\u201329 with over 6 minutes left in the 3rd quarter. On the Packers next drive, Matt Flynn converted two 3rd downs with 22- and 21-yard passes to Andrew Quarless and Jordy Nelson, respectively. Flynn capped the drive with a 3-yard touchdown pass to Quarless to pull within 12 points. After two incompletions, Tony Romo was sacked by Clay Matthews and Dallas was forced to punt before the end of the 3rd quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Dallas Cowboys\nA good punt return by Micah Hyde gave the Packers offense good field position at the Dallas 22. Early in the 4th quarter, James Starks scored on an 11-yard screen pass and made it 24\u201329. Dallas countered with a 5-yard touchdown pass to Dez Bryant to increase their lead back to 12, but Green Bay responded with a 3-yard touchdown pass to James Jones to make it 31\u201336. Dallas' next drive ended with an interception by Sam Shields at midfield with 2:50 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0015-0003", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Dallas Cowboys\nThe Packers offense led a drive that was capped off by Eddie Lacy's 1-yard touchdown that took the lead 37\u201336 with 1:34 remaining. After the failed 2-point attempt, Dallas attempted a field goal drive, but Tony Romo's pass was intercepted by Tramon Williams to seal the 23-point comeback win for the Packers. With the win, not only did the Packers improve to 7\u20136\u20131, but following the Detroit Lions' loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Monday night, Green Bay rose to 2nd place in the NFC North, only a half game behind the Chicago Bears. This was also the first time since 1989 that the Packers beat the Cowboys in Dallas, ending a 9-game losing streak at Dallas against the Cowboys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nFollowing the Packers miraculous 37\u201336 comeback win against the Dallas Cowboys, the Packers returned to snowy Lambeau Field to take on the Pittsburgh Steelers for the first time since Super Bowl XLV. Once again, Aaron Rodgers was inactive and Matt Flynn got the start. The two teams traded touchdowns in the first quarter, and Eddie Lacy ran 14 yards for a touchdown at the 2-minute warning. Pittsburgh responded with a 31-yard field goal to make it 10\u201314 at halftime. In the 3rd quarter, both teams once again traded touchdowns to make it 17\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nPittsburgh then took the lead with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Matt Spaeth. On the Packers' next drive, Matt Flynn collided with Andrew Quarless, disrupting a pass that was intercepted and returned 40 yards for a touchdown by Cortez Allen to extend their lead 31\u201321. In the 4th quarter, The Packers managed to tie the game with a 22-yard field goal and a 1-yard run by John Kuhn. With a little less than 3 minutes remaining, Troy Polamalu forced a Matt Flynn fumble at the Packers 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Steelers took a 38\u201331 lead with a 1-yard touchdown run from Le'Veon Bell. After a 70-yard kick return by Micah Hyde, the Packers were at the Steelers 31-yard line with 1:25 remaining. 3 plays later they reached the Steelers 1-yard line. However, a false start penalty both pushed them back 5 yards and ran 10 seconds off the clock, leaving the Packers with one play to get into the endzone. On the final play, Matt Flynn's pass for Jarrett Boykin was incomplete and time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0016-0003", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith the 38\u201331 loss, The Packers fell to 7-7-1 and their playoff hopes rested on the outcomes of the games played by the Detroit Lions (7-7) and the Chicago Bears (8-6). Detroit lost to the New York Giants 23\u201320 in OT and was eliminated from playoff contention. Meanwhile, Chicago had an opportunity to clinch the NFC North division with a win over the Eagles on Sunday Night Football, but the Eagles beat the Bears 54\u201311. This set up a win-and-in matchup between Green Bay (7-7-1) and Chicago (8-7) the following week. The winner would obtain the 4th seed in the NFC playoffs and the loser would be eliminated from playoff contention. This would also be Green Bay's last home loss until week 10 in 2015 against Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nFollowing the Packers' 38\u201331 loss to the Steelers and Chicago's 54\u201311 loss to the Eagles, both Green Bay (7-7-1) and Chicago (8-7) met at Soldier Field in week 17 to compete for the NFC North Championship. The NFC North Champion would enter the NFC playoffs as the 4th seed, while the other team will be eliminated from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nThree days prior to the game on Dec. 26, Packers Head Coach Mike McCarthy announced that Packers QB Aaron Rodgers (collarbone) was cleared to play against the Bears, as well as RB Eddie Lacy (ankle) and WR Randall Cobb (leg), who was activated after staying on IR with designation to return for the past 9 weeks. After forcing a Bears 3-and-out, Aaron Rodgers and the Packers established a 14-play, 75-yard drive that took 7:30 minutes. On 3rd and goal at the Chicago 5, Aaron Rodgers threw an interception to Chris Conte in the endzone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nJay Cutler and the Bears took advantage with a drive that featured a 37-yard pass to Brandon Marshall and was capped off by a 4-yard touchdown pass to Matt Forte. Early in the 2nd quarter, Aaron Rodgers threw another interception, this time to Tim Jennings at the Chicago 21-yard line. After forcing a 3-and-out, the Packers drove to the Chicago 15 and scored on a 33-yard field goal to make it 3\u20137. The Packers defense held Chicago to another three-and-out, and Green Bay had great field position at the Chicago 41.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0017-0003", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\n6 plays later, Julius Peppers forced an Aaron Rodgers fumble that was recovered by Jarrett Boykin and run in 15 yards for a touchdown. Many players initially believed that it was an incomplete pass, but instant replay upheld the call since Rodgers' hand was empty as he propelled it forward. After the two-minute warning, A. J. Hawk forced an Alshon Jeffery fumble that was recovered and returned to the Chicago 28. The Packers offense could not find the endzone in the final seconds of the 1st half, so they settled for a 27-yard field goal and a 13\u20137 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nEarly in the 3rd quarter, Devin Hester returned a punt 49 yards to the Packers 30 and Matt Forte scored on a 5-yard run to take a 14\u201313 lead. Four plays into Green Bay's next drive, James Starks scampered for a 41-yard gain and three plays after that Aaron Rodgers threw a 7-yard touchdown pass to Randall Cobb to retake the lead at 20\u201314. Chicago quickly answered with a 1-yard touchdown run by Matt Forte following a 67-yard pass to Alshon Jeffery. On the Packers' next possession, an 18-yard pass to Andrew Quarless was overruled to be an incomplete pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nInstant replay suggested there was insubstantial evidence to overturn the call, as the tip of the football disappeared between Quarless' forearms and the ground. Therefore, it remained an incomplete pass and the Packers had to punt. On the Bears' drive, Cutler completed a 33-yard pass to Matt Forte. On 3rd and goal, Cutler threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Marshall to take a 28\u201320 lead at the start of the 4th quarter. However, Green Bay quickly struck back with a 6-yard touchdown run by Eddie Lacy to make it 27\u201328 with 11:38 remaining in the 4th quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nAfter fair-catching a punt at the Green Bay 13 with 6:24 remaining, Green Bay steadily drove to the Chicago 48 in 14 plays, converting two 4th downs in the process. The Packers found themselves on 4th down & 8 with 43 seconds remaining. On the play, Aaron Rodgers side-stepped a 7-man blitz led by Bears defensive end Julius Peppers and threw a 48-yard touchdown to a wide open Randall Cobb to take a 33\u201328 lead with 38 seconds remaining. John Kuhn's cut-block on Peppers gave Rodgers enough room to move to his left and find Cobb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0018-0003", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nGreen Bay failed on the two-point conversion, so Chicago attempted to make one more comeback. After Devin Hester's kickoff return and Martellus Bennett's 15-yard catch, the Bears were at the Green Bay 45-yard line with 24 seconds remaining. On 1st down, Morgan Burnett deflected a Hail Mary pass intended for Alshon Jeffery. On 2nd down, Brandon Marshall dropped Cutler's pass at the 27-yard line. On 3rd down with 10 seconds remaining, Cutler attempted another Hail Mary pass intended for Brandon Marshall, but it was intercepted by Sam Shields as time expired. With the 33\u201328 win, the Green Bay Packers (8-7-1) won their 3rd consecutive NFC North Championship and enter the 2013\u201314 NFC playoffs as the 4th seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233744-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Bay Packers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at Chicago Bears\nThe Packers became the only NFC team that clinched their division in the previous season to do so again this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233745-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Party of Quebec leadership election\nThe 2013 Green Party of Quebec leadership election took place September 21, 2013 in Quebec City, Quebec", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233745-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Green Party of Quebec leadership election\nFollowing the party's sagging fortunes in the 2012 campaign, including a public incident in which a journalist with the newspaper La Presse was able to secure candidacy with the party without vetting, incumbent Green Party leader Claude Sabourin resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233746-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Greenlandic Men's Football Championship\nThe 2013 Coca-Cola GM was the 43rd edition of the Greenlandic Men's Football Championship. The final round was held in Qaqortoq from August 15 to 21. It was won by B-67 Nuuk for the second consecutive time and for the ninth time in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233746-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00233747-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Greenlandic general election\nGeneral elections were held in Greenland on 12 March 2013. The opposition Siumut party emerged as the largest in Parliament, winning 14 of the 31 seats. On 26 March Siumut leader Aleqa Hammond became Greenland's first female Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233747-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Greenlandic general election, Electoral system\nThe 31 members of Parliament were elected by proportional representation in multi-member constituencies. In Nuuk there was just one polling station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233747-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Greenlandic general election, Campaign\nThe main campaign issue was exploitation of the island's mineral wealth. The ruling Inuit Ataqatigiit party supported allowing foreign workers, most of whom would be Chinese, into the country to work in the mining industry, whilst the Siumut party was opposed to the proposal. Rare-earth elements were of particular concern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233747-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Greenlandic general election, Government formation\nFollowing the election results, Siumut leader Aleqa Hammond claimed that she was \"in no hurry to form a coalition\" and would wait to hear the demands of the other parties. Hammond ultimately formed a government with Atassut and the Inuit Party. Siumut took six of the eight cabinet posts, with Solidarity taking the Health and Infrastructure portfolio and the Inuit Party taking the Environment portfolio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233748-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Greenlandic local elections\nThe 2013 Greenlandic local elections were held on 2 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233749-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Greensboro mayoral election\nThe 2013 Greensboro mayoral election was held on November 5, 2013 to elect the mayor of Greensboro, North Carolina. It saw the election of Nancy Vaughan, who unseated incumbent mayor Robbie Perkins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233750-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grenadian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Grenada on 19 February 2013. The result was a landslide victory for the opposition New National Party, which won all 15 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233750-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Grenadian general election, Date\nThe election date was announced by Prime Minister Tillman Thomas at the National Democratic Congress Party Convention at Sauteurs Bus Station on 13 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233750-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Grenadian general election, Electoral system\nThe fifteen members of the House of Representatives were elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233750-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Grenadian general election, Conduct\nThe preliminary report from invited Organisation of American States election observers was positive regarding the \"civil and peaceful\" election and its high turnout. The observers noted minor bureaucratic problems, and recommended greater enactment of campaign finance regulations. The observers also noted that women were under-represented in the list of candidates (9 of 48) and elected representatives (4 of 15).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233751-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens\nThe 2013 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens was the 47th edition of the Grote Prijs Jef Scherens cycle race and was held on 15 September 2013. The race started and finished in Leuven. The race was won by Bert De Backer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233752-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guadiana Trophy\nThe 2013 Guadiana Trophy was the 13th edition of the competition and took place between 5 and 7 August 2013. It featured Sporting CP, West Ham United and Braga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233752-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guadiana Trophy\nBraga won its first Guadiana Trophy by winning both of its matches in the competition by a score of 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233753-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nThe 35th Guangdong-Hong Kong Cup will be held on 29 December 2012 and 1 January 2013. The first leg will be played at Huizhou Olympic Stadium with the second leg to take place at Hong Kong Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233753-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nBoth Hong Kong and Guangdong were not able to win the Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup after 90 minutes of first leg game and 120 minutes of second leg, which include 30 minutes of extra time. The game ended in 2\u20132 in aggregate. Hong Kong won 9\u20138 on penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233754-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou Evergrande F.C. season\nThe 2013 Guangzhou Evergrande season is the 60th year in Guangzhou Evergrande's existence and is its 46th season in the Chinese football league, also its 24th season in the top flight. The club won its third consecutive top-tier league title and became the first club in China to win the AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233754-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou Evergrande 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-00233754-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou Evergrande 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-00233754-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou Evergrande F.C. season, Players, 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233755-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou International Women's Open\nThe 2013 Guangzhou International Women's Open (named as GRC Bank Guangzhou International Women's Open for sponsorship reasons) was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 10th edition of the Guangzhou International Women's Open, and part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Guangzhou, China, from September 16 through September 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233755-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou International Women's Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233755-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou International Women's Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233756-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nTamarine Tanasugarn and Zhang Shuai were the defending champions, but Tanasugarn chose not to participate. Zhang played alongside Yaroslava Shvedova, but lost in the first round to T\u00edmea Babos and Olga Govortsova. First seeded Hsieh Su-wei and Peng Shuai won the title, defeating in the final 3rd seeded Vania King and Galina Voskoboeva with the score 6\u20133, 4\u20136, [12\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233757-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nHsieh Su-wei was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Zhang Shuai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233757-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nZhang went on to win her first WTA title, defeating Vania King in the final 7\u20136(7\u20131), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233758-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guangzhou R&F F.C. season\nThe 2013 Guangzhou R&F season is the 3rd year in Guangzhou R&F's existence and its 3rd season in the Chinese football league, also its 2nd season in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau\nThe 2013 Guia Race of Macau was the twelfth and final round of the 2013 World Touring Car Championship season and the ninth running of the Guia Race of Macau. The race was part of the Macau Grand Prix weekend, headlined by the Formula Three event. It was held on 17 November 2013 at the Guia Circuit in the Chinese special administrative region of Macau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau\nRace one was won by Yvan Muller from pole position, race two was won by Robert Huff for ALL\u2013INKL.COM M\u00fcnnich Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau\nJames Nash won the Yokohama Independents' Trophy in race one, his first WTCC title and the first for his team bamboo-engineering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Background\nWith the drivers' title already secured by Yvan Muller, Gabriele Tarquini, Tom Chilton and James Nash were all in contention to finish second in the championship going to Macau. Nash was leading the Yokohama Independents' Trophy and needed just two points to secure it ahead of bamboo-engineering teammate Alex MacDowall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Background\nWhen the weights were re-calculated, the Chevrolet Cruze 1.6Ts and the Honda Civic WTCCs gremained on 1,190\u00a0kg. The BMW 320 TCs gained 30\u00a0kg of weight to take them up to 1,160\u00a0kg while the SEAT Le\u00f3n WTCCs remained below the base weight with a 10\u00a0kg increase to bring them up to 1,140\u00a0kg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Background\nJo Merszei joined Liqui Moly Team Engstler who along with the returning Masaki Kano brought the team's entry up to 5 cars. Yukinori Taniguchi moved teams again, this time to NIKA Racing as he looked to secure the inaugural Eurosport Asia Trophy. Fernando Monje did not race in Macau for personal reasons, Hugo Valente was joined at Campos Racing by series debutants Michael Soong and Konstant\u012bns Calko. China Dragon Racing expanded to four cars, running a pair of Chevrolet Lacettis for Lam Kan San and Celio Alves Dias. PAS Macau Racing Team joined the championship with a Honda Accord Euro R driven by Eurico de Jesus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Testing and free practice\nRobert Huff set the pace in a disrupted test session on Thursday. Stefano D'Aste finished sixth despite clashing with Calko's SEAT at Moorish Hill before Taniguchi spun at the first corner and crashed into the barriers, bringing out the red flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Testing and free practice\nMuller set the pace in free practice one, seven tenths clear of Pepe Oriola. Kin Veng Ng crashed into the barriers at Police, he was then hit by the Campos Racing car of Calko who was able to continue to the pits for repairs having been shown a black and orange flag. There was also a minor collision for Fredy Barth at Fisherman's bend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Testing and free practice\nThe top two from FP1 switched places in FP2, Oriola ended the session fastest ahead of Muller. James Thompson missed the session due to steering issues on his Lada Granta while Chilton had a big crash at the Solitude Esses. Charles Ng, Franz Engstler and Michael Soong all had less serious collisions with the barriers during the remainder of the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Qualifying\nDuring the first part of the session, Valente crashed into the barriers and brought the red flags out for the first time. The red flags came out again when the second Campos car of Soong crashed into the barriers and briefly caught fire. After a lengthy delay, the session resumed, and several cars tried to get quick laps in. Chilton was outside the top twelve and got up to thirteenth place before a crash for Barth brought out the red flags for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Qualifying\nThe session resumed with less than five minutes left on the clock; Chilton went up to seventh on his single timed lap. This bumped out Norbert Michelisz who then responded to go second to put Oriola out in Q1. Despite having not gone out for a final run, Muller was quickest in the first session, with Huff second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Qualifying\nIn the second session, Muller initially set the pace, although the Hondas of Tiago Monteiro and Michelisz were second and third. Tarquini in the third Honda had been close to dropping out in Q1 and now had to return to the pits when his front bumper was damaged. Muller was the only driver to set a time below 2:29; Monteiro would start second and Tarquini third. MacDowall was the leading independent driver while Tom Coronel finished tenth to take pole for race two, where he would share the front row with Thompson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Warm-Up\nHuff led the final warm-up session in the WTCC on Sunday morning, Pepe Oriola was second fastest ahead of pole sitter Muller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Race One\nBefore the race started, Tarquini required an engine change in his Honda Civic and would not make the start but would start race two from the back of the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Race One\nMuller led away from the final rolling start of the World Touring Car Championship and distanced himself from Monteiro in second. There was contact on lap two between Muller's teammate Chilton and Oriola with Chilton spinning into one of the barriers and ending his race. Oriola went on to have a spin at the Solitude Esses which dropped him down the order having already been under investigation for the incident with Chilton. Muller claimed his second Macau win ahead of Monteiro who had spent the race defending from multiple Macau winner Huff's SEAT. Nash finished sixth to claim his first Yokohama Independent Drivers' Trophy title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Race One\nAfter the race, Oriola was given a 30-second time penalty for his collision with Chilton which dropped him from 8th to 15th in the final classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Race Two\nCoronel led Thompson away from pole while behind Michelisz tagged the back of Chilton, sending the Honda spinning across the track where it was struck by a number of other cars with Mehdi Bennani, Darryl O'Young, Tom Boardman, Mikhail Kozlovskiy, Calko and Valente out on the spot. The race was red flagged while the cars were removed from the circuit, when the race resumed a battle developed behind them between Chilton and Nash for third place both in the race and in the drivers' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Race Two\nA clash between Monteiro and Muller on lap 3 pushed Muller into a tyre barrier at San Francisco and Monteiro would eventually return to the pits for repairs. On lap 4 Thompson, Chilton and Nash were all running close together in their pursuit of Coronel, Nash tapped into the back of Chilton and Huff took the opportunity to go around. Chilton dropped out of the race on lap 5 with exhaust problems, only to be hit by de Jesus as he crawled around the Maternity corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233759-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Guia Race of Macau, Report, Race Two\nWith the Honda stopped across the track, the safety car out only for Charles Ng, Felipe De Souza and Henry Ho to crash into the back of Franz Engstler and Yvan Muller who had slowed to pass the scene of the accident. Soong and Merszei then also crashed into the stranded cars and the race was stopped for a second time. On the restart Huff quickly got past Thompson and Coronel to take the lead, Thompson then crashed out of the race following contact with Oriola. Huff went on to claim the win ahead of Oriola and Coronel, Nash in fourth was the winning independent driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233760-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guimar\u00e3es Open\nThe 2013 Guimar\u00e3es Open was a professional tennis tournament played on Hard Courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Guimar\u00e3es, Portugal between 22 and 28 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233760-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guimar\u00e3es Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233761-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guimar\u00e3es Open \u2013 Doubles\nJames Cluskey and Maximilian Neuchrist won the title, defeating Roberto Ortega-Olmedo and Ricardo Villacorta-Alonso 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20132, [10\u20138] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233762-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guimar\u00e3es Open \u2013 Singles\nThis was the first edition of the event. Jo\u00e3o Sousa won the title, defeating Marius Copil 6\u20133, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes\nThere were two waves of violence in Guinea in 2013, first in February and March, then in July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes\nNine civilians died in political violence in Guinea in February 2013, after protesters took to the streets to voice their concerns over the transparency of the 2013 election. The demonstrations were fuelled by the opposition coalition's decision to withdraw from the electoral process in protest at the lack of transparency in the preparations for the election. Nine people were killed during the protests in early 2013, while around 220 were injured, and many of the deaths and injuries were caused by security forces using live fire on protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes\nIn July 2013 there was ethno-religious fighting between the Fula (also Kpelles or Guerze) and Malinke (also Konianke) people, the latter forming the base of support for President Alpha Cond\u00e9, with the former consisting mainly of the opposition. The July violence left 98 dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Background\nThe run up to the September 2013 election was full of controversy, with the process having been delayed four times until 12 May was agreed as the voting date. The parliamentary poll had originally been scheduled for 2011 but was delayed four times until 12 May was agreed. The election set for May 12 is intended to be the last step in the country's transition to civilian rule after two years under a violent army junta following the death of leader Lansana Conte in 2008, however it has now been postponed till September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Background\nIn September 2012, there were many complaints over the government's arbitrary arrest of protesting opposition supporters, 100 of whom were detained that month. This prompted the resignation of two Guinean opposition ministers. The president of Guinea's national election commission, Louceny Camara, was also forced to step down after numerous demands for his sacking; Camara was seen to be a keen ally of President Cond\u00e9 and was accused of helping to pre-rig the legislative polls in Cond\u00e9's favour. Additionally, Guinean opposition parties announced that they would no longer participate in the National Transitional Council, which serves as an interim parliament, and would also boycott the national electoral commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Background\nThe main cause of the political protests was the decision by the Guinean opposition coalition to withdraw from the electoral process on 24 February, which was followed by an appeal to citizens to stage nationwide protests. This decision was provoked in part by the National Electoral Commission's approval of South African software firm Waymark Infotech in compiling a new list of registered voters for the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Background\nThe opposition argued that the firm is \u201copen to voting fraud\u201d as it was chosen by the ruling party and has a history of discrepancies in not just Guinea elections, but also other African elections. In September 2012, thousands of Guineans marched in Conakry in protest of Waymark only to be dispersed by police with tear gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Background\nThe indigenous Guerze are mostly Christian or animist, while the Konianke are newer immigrants to the region who are Muslims and considered to be close to Liberia's Mandingo ethnic community. The former are considered to supportive of Liberian President Charles Taylor, while the former fought with rebels against the government in the Liberian civil war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence\nProtests began on 27 February 2013 after the opposition coalition began to encourage and stage protests in the capital, Conakry. Thousands of pro-opposition supporters took to the streets and lashes broke out between rock-throwing youths and security forces armed with truncheons, guns and tear gas grenades. Around 130 people were injured on the first day, including 68 police. Police in anti-riot gear were posted in opposition strongholds in the capital the following day, with the first death reported that day. On Friday, the ethnic clashes commenced, with the pro-opposition Fula and the pro-government Malinke people fighting with knives and truncheons on the streets of the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence\nThe violence worsened at the weekend after a teenager was shot by soldiers who opened fire indiscriminately on a street of protesters in Conakry, injuring several others. The fifteen-year-old was reportedly on his way to buy bread when he was shot at point blank range, along with 13 others who were allegedly not protesting at all, according to one witness. Two further reported deaths that weekend were also caused by gunfire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence\nOn 4 March, the violence showed no signs of abating, with further clashes between protesters and government security forces leading to more dead and injured at the hands of gunfire, bringing the death toll to five people. The violence also spread to another city, Lab\u00e9, a region known for its allegiance to opposition leader Cellou Dalein Diallo, 450\u00a0km from the capital. On Tuesday, two private radio stations, Planet FM and Renaissance FM, were attacked during the violence, in an incident that was condemned by The International Federation of Journalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence\nShots were fired at parts of Planet FM's recording studio as an opposition leader was being interviewed, while other acts of violence targeted the premises of Renaissance FM at night. No one claimed any responsibility for the attacks. By Wednesday 6 March, the death toll had reached eight people after two more deaths the previous day, with violence reportedly reaching more towns in the country's interior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence\nSeveral weeks after the initial violence, reports also materialised of violence against another radio station, Lynx FM, with journalists revealing that supporters of the ruling party had threatened a reporter from the station on 27 February. The militants reportedly called her a spy and threatened to attack her on the grounds that she belonged to the Fula ethnic group, and shortly afterwards, she was forced to flee with a colleague from a violent, stone-throwing mob. A third reporter with Lynx FM, Asmaou Diallo, was assaulted by unknown assailants outside the RPG office despite wearing a press vest. She said the attackers slapped her after someone said she was an \"opposition journalist.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence\nFurther tension was seen in the week after the riots, when thousands of opposition supporters marched in Conakry to mark the funerals of the nine people who died during the protests. Former Prime Minister Celou Dalein Diallo, now an opposition leader, gave a speech at the event, urging solidarity and unity after a week of violence. Despite the peaceful proceedings, security forces fired warning shots and tear gas to disperse the crowds, with one resident claiming shots were still heard, even after the crowds had left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence, Renewed clashes (July 2013)\nIn the southern forest region petrol pump security guards of the Guerze tribe in Koule beat to death a Konianke youth who they accused of stealing on 15 July. Fighting then spread to the provincial capital N'Zerekore resulting in 80 people wounded and several homes destroyed. Though security forces were deployed to quell the fighting, and despite N'Zerekore Prefect Aboubacar Mbop Camara announcing a curfew, fighting initially continued. People were attacked with machetes, axes, sticks, stones and firearms as houses and cars were burnt. Guerze chief Molou Holamou Azaly Zogbelemou was also among those wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 70], "content_span": [71, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence, Renewed clashes (July 2013)\nThe initial death toll was put at 16 but rose through 17 July as bodies were collected from the streets and were put in the mortuary, even without identification due to the absence of limbs and identity papers. A medic from the hospital where the mortuary was located said that after all the victims were identified deaths from both communities as either burned alive or hacked to death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 70], "content_span": [71, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Protest and violence, Renewed clashes (July 2013)\nAfter the deployments of troops to quell three days of violence, government spokesman Damantang Albert Camara said: \"We're now doing a triage to find out who did what. Some were arrested with machetes or clubs but others had (hunting rifles) and military weapons.\" He also said that \"we are today at around 100 dead - 76 victims in N'Zerekore and 22 others in Koule,\" while at least 160 more people were injured. The violence also followed an agreement to by opposing political parties to hold the election on 24 September 24 after street protests that sometimes resulted in ethnic clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 70], "content_span": [71, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Government reaction\nPresident Alpha Cond\u00e9 and the government appealed for calm throughout the violence, however they gave no official death toll to the media. The government said on 2 March that it would investigate whether the security forces had used live rounds on civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Government reaction\nCond\u00e9 was in Ivory Coast at the time of the protests and flew back for talks with the opposition. This meeting that would discuss the preparations for May's vote was boycotted by the majority of the opposition, prompting further clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Government reaction\nEventually, on 7 March, the Guinean government bowed to popular demand and postponed the 12 May election date \"until further notice\", upon the recommendations of the National Independent Electoral Commission (CENI). In a press statement, the Prime Minister Mohamed Said Fofana asserted the commitment of the government not to spare any effort to ease the political tension, with pledges of free and fair elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Government reaction\nOn 10 March, a Guinean court ordered opposition leaders to appear at a hearing scheduled for the 14 March, in which they would be questioned for their role in organising the protests. A government spokesman told Reuters that they would be facing a \"civil procedure\", following President Conde's call for those responsible for the violence and the pillaging of businesses to be brought to justice. Former Prime Minister Sidya Toure branded the summons as an \"illegal procedure for what was an authorised march\" and a \"manipulation of justice for political ends\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, Government reaction\nThe Guinean government also agreed to suspend poll preparations, prompting the opposition's agreement on 15 March to take part in preliminary talks to end the deadlock over the elections. Days later however, the opposition were to be found appealing for an international effort to help organise the legislative polls, after a \"painful\" dialogue with the government. Opposition leader Cellou Dalein Diallo blamed Interior Minister Alhassane Cond\u00e9 for the \"mistrust between us and the government\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, International reaction\nOn 2 March, the African Union announced it was deeply concerned about recent political developments in the country \u201cthat have degenerated into street clashes and violence and saw the loss of lives and destruction of property\u201d. Its chairperson strongly urged all stakeholders to remain calm and engage in genuine dialogue on the way forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, International reaction\nOn 5 March, the European Union voiced concerns over the political unrest, and urged all concerned parties to \u201cshow restraint and resolve differences through a national dialogue\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233763-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinea clashes, International reaction\nThe United Nations human rights office and Ban Ki-Moon both denounced the violence in Guinea and called on authorities \u201cto protect civilians and ensure all parties refrain from using violence to resolve disputes.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Guinea on 28 September 2013 after numerous delays and postponements. President Alpha Cond\u00e9's party, the Rally of the Guinean People (RPG) emerged as the largest party in the National Assembly with 53 of the 114 seats. Parties allied with the RDG won seven seats and opposition parties won the remaining 53 seats. Opposition leaders denounced the official results as fraudulent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nThe election was originally planned to be held in June 2007, but was postponed to December 2007 due to a general strike in January and February, which resulted in the appointment of a new government and Prime Minister. It was, however, subsequently considered likely that the election would be postponed another time to around March 2008 due to delays in setting up the Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) and the need for revision of electoral lists. A date for the election in November or December 2008 has been proposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nOn 11 October 2007, Prime Minister Lansana Kouyat\u00e9 expressed regret regarding slowness in the organization of the election and said that it would be difficult to hold the election by December. Political parties had difficulty reaching an agreement on how many members should be on CENI. CENI was established in November 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nOn 12 February 2008, an ad hoc commission responsible for determining a timetable for the election proposed that it be held between 23 November and 14 December 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nFollowing the replacement of Kouyat\u00e9 by Ahmed Tidiane Souar\u00e9 in May 2008, the International Crisis Group released a report on 23 June 2008 expressing doubt about the likelihood of the election being held before the end of 2008. This report expressed concern that a delay might \"compromise economic revival and bury the independent commission of inquiry tasked with identifying and prosecuting authors of the 2007 crackdown\". CENI President Chiekh Fantamady Cond\u00e9 said that he was \"convinced\" that the election would be held in 2008, however.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nBen S\u00e9kou Sylla, the President of CENI, announced on 20 October 2008, that the election was being delayed and would be held in the second half of March 2009 at the earliest. He cited difficulties with biometric voter registration, as well as a \"delay in setting up structures to register voters and supervise the elections\" and a \"delay in funding\". Sidya Tour\u00e9 of the Union of Republican Forces, an opposition party, denounced the decision as \"a political delay, not a technical one\"; he also claimed that the government was unwilling to finance CENI and was inhibiting CENI's work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nTour\u00e9 warned against any further delay, saying that it would \"lead to further despair and fresh protests\". Sekou Konate, the Secretary-General of the governing Party of Unity and Progress (PUP), reacted positively to the delay: \"People prefer a delay much more than having war straight away. If we do not have a clean electoral roll, we risk having things go wrong.\" According to Konate, holding the parliamentary election together with the 2009 local elections or the 2010 presidential election was out of the question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nOn 19 December 2008, it was announced that the election would be held on 31 May 2009. After the military coup d'\u00e9tat in December 2008, civilian and political groups proposed to hold them in November 2009, before presidential elections that were planned for December 2009 (although later delayed to 2010). The government set them for 11 October 2009 in late March 2009. The election was then again delayed until 16 March 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nFollowing a political agreement and the 2010 presidential election, the parliamentary election was delayed again. In September 2011, the election date was announced as 29 December 2011. but in early December it was postponed again for security reasons and lack of organization until July 2012. In April 2012, the election was postponed indefinitely by Guinea President Alpha Cond\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Date\nAfter a reshuffle in the Electoral Commission, the election was announced to be planned for 12 May 2013. They were later delayed to 30 June and then to 28 July. The date was moved again in early July, to 24 September, following a UN-mandated agreement between the parties. On 19 September, opposition leader Diallo called protests for Monday, 23 September, complaining of irregularities in voter lists and polling stations that would be impossible to fix before the 24 September elections. On 21 September, the UN mediator for Guinea announced a further delay to 28 September following talks between the parties, and the opposition cancelled their scheduled protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Registration\nIn preparation for voter registration that is needed for the revision of the voter rolls, an awareness campaign regarding registration was launched on 20 May 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Registration\nCENI President Cond\u00e9 said in June 2008 that the voter registration process, which was being undertaken by CENI and the Ministry of the Interior, would be complete by August. This election will be the first in Guinea to use biometric registration, involving the fingerprints and photographs of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Registration\nAlthough registration was scheduled to begin on 15 July 2008, it was subsequently delayed to 1 August in mid-July. This delay was attributed to political instability in May and June 2008 and associated financial difficulties. The process is planned to take place over the course of two months and will be conducted by 2,100 agents. In early August, the start of registration was again delayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Funding and international involvement\nIn October 2007, the budget for the election was placed at about 79 billion Guinean francs, with about 18 billion coming from the government and foreign aid required for the remainder. As of June 2008, the government had contributed 26% of the total; the European Union had contributed $6.2 million, while the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) had contributed $500,000 and France had contributed $155,600 (sums in United States dollars). Germany has also said that it would contribute. Many feel that the Guinean government is relying excessively on donors and should pay for a larger portion of the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Funding and international involvement\nIn July 2008, the electoral budget was placed at 146 billion Guinean francs, having been increased from an earlier figure of 132 billion Guinean francs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Funding and international involvement\nSaid Djinnit, the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General in West Africa, met with CENI on 18 August as part of a visit to review Guinea's progress in electoral preparations, political dialogue, and security. Djinnit gave a public assurance that the UN would do everything it could to assist in preparations for the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Funding and international involvement\nIt was reported in late August that about three billion Guinean francs would be provided to parties by the government for campaign purposes, although 90% of this money would go to parties already represented in the National Assembly, such as the governing PUP, the opposition Union for Progress and Renewal (UPR), and the opposition Union for the Progress of Guinea (UPG).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Credibility and participation\nAccording to CENI President Cond\u00e9, past electoral fraud caused many people to lose faith in voting, and he emphasized the importance of ensuring transparency and encouraging participation so that the election would be credible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Credibility and participation\nAll political parties were represented on CENI. According to CENI's Ben S\u00e9kou Sylla, speaking in October 2008, the election would the first to be held without an opposition boycott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Protests\nIn early 2013, protests against the government by those in the opposition who feared a rigged election left over 50 people dead. The opposition demanded that Waymark, a South African firm contracted to revise voter lists, be replaced because of allegedly inflated voter lists. It also said expatriate Guineans should be allowed to vote. On 29 May, President Alpha Conde announced a judicial investigation into protests the prior week that killed at least 12 people. He also replaced Interior Minister Mouramany Cisse with Guinean Ambassador to Senegal Madifing Diane. Ethnic clashes continued in July leading to over 50 deaths. In September, a police officer was killed and 49 people injured in clashes in the capital Conakry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Results\nThe election was finally held on 28 September 2013. Official results were announced three weeks later on 18 October. The RPG won 53 of the 114, failing to achieve an outright majority, although its allies won an additional seven seats. The main opposition party, Cellou Dalein Diallo's Union of Democratic Forces of Guinea (UFDG), won 37 seats, while another opposition party, Sidya Toure's Union of Republican Forces (UFR), won 10 seats. In total opposition parties won 53 seats and opposition leaders denounced the results as fraudulent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233764-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Guinean legislative election, Aftermath\nClaude Kory Kondiano, an RPG deputy, was elected President of the National Assembly on 13 January 2014. He received 64 out of 113 votes; one deputy cast a spoilt vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233765-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guzzini Challenger\nThe 2013 Guzzini Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Recanati, Italy between 15 and 21 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233765-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Guzzini Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233765-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Guzzini Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players got into the singles main draw via protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233766-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guzzini Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nBrydan Klein and Dane Propoggia were the defending champions but Klein decided not to participate, Propoggia chose to play with Stefano Ianni and lost in the semifinals to Gianluigi Quinzi and Adelchi Virgili. Quinzi and Virgili lost in the final to Ken Skupski and Neal Skupski 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233767-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Guzzini Challenger \u2013 Singles\nSimone Bolelli was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Italian Thomas Fabbiano won the title over David Guez 6\u20130, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233768-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Gyama Mine landslide\nThe 2013 Gyama Mine Landslide occurred on 29 March 2013 at about 06:00 local time (March 28, 2013 at 22:00 GMT). 83 people were trapped in the Gyama Mine (\u7532\u739b\u77ff\u533a) in Maizhokunggar County, Tibet Autonomous Region, China. The mining area is situated about 70\u00a0km east of Lhasa and has an altitude of about 4600 m. The landslide was about 3\u00a0km long and between 20 m and 50 m thick, with a volume of about 2 million cubic meters. Among the 83 people, 2 are ethnic Tibetans and the rest are ethnic Han, most of them from the Provinces of Yunnan, Guizhou, and Sichuan. As of April 5, 66 bodies have been found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233768-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Gyama Mine landslide\nThe Gyama Mine is operated by Huatailong Mining Development (\u534e\u6cf0\u9f99\u77ff\u4e1a\u5f00\u53d1\u516c\u53f8), a subsidiary of the China National Gold Group Corporation (\u4e2d\u56fd\u9ec4\u91d1\u96c6\u56e2), a state-owned enterprise and the country's largest gold producer. The operation of the Gyama Mine by China National Gold Group Corporation had been reported as eco-friendly and praised as a model for development by Chinese media. Criticisms over possibly excessive mining in Tibet flashed in China on the internet before they were deleted or blocked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233768-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Gyama Mine landslide\nAccording to the experts of the Department of Land and Resources of China, four factors caused this mine disaster. First, the site of the landslides is located in a very steep V-shaped valley. Second, Tibet has a very complex geological condition, and there are a lot of neotectonic activities. Third, the area experienced several snowfalls in March 2013 after an extreme dry period between November 2012 to February 2013, and the infiltration of water from the melted snow decreased the stability of the slope. Fourth, the process of the landslides is that the accumulation body in the back lost its stability, started the slip, and pushed the accumulation body in the front, and thus was formed the overall slip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233769-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 H1 Unlimited season\nThe 2013 H1 Unlimited season is the fifty-eighth running of the H1 Unlimited series for unlimited hydroplanes, sanctioned by the APBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233770-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 HJK season\nThe 2013 season was Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi's 105th competitive season. HJK is the most successful Finnish football club with 25 Finnish Championships, 11 Finnish Cup titles, 4 Finnish League Cup titles and one appearance in the UEFA Champions League Group Stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233770-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 HJK 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, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233771-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 HP Open\nThe 2013 HP Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts sponsored by Hewlett-Packard. It was the fifth edition of the HP Open, and part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It was held at the Utsubo Tennis Center in Osaka, Japan, from October 7 through October 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233771-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 HP Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233771-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 HP Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233772-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 HP Open \u2013 Doubles\nRaquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Samantha Stosur and Zhang Shuai. Kristina Mladenovic and Flavia Pennetta won the title, defeating Samantha Stosur and Zhang Shuai in the final, 6-4, 6-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233773-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 HP Open \u2013 Singles\nHeather Watson was the defending champion, but she lost in the first round to Monica Puig. Samantha Stosur won the title for the second time, defeating Eugenie Bouchard in the final, 3\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233774-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 38th edition of the Hall of Fame Tennis Championships, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, United States, from July 8 through July 14, 2013. Unseeded Nicolas Mahut, who received a wildcard for the maind draw, won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233774-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233774-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233775-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nSantiago Gonz\u00e1lez and Scott Lipsky were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to Denis Kudla and Michael Russell. Nicolas Mahut and \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin won the title, defeating Tim Smyczek and Rhyne Williams, 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20132, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233776-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nJohn Isner was the two-time defending champion, but was defeated by 2012 finalist Lleyton Hewitt in the semifinals. Nicolas Mahut defeated Hewitt in the final 5\u20137, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233777-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Halmstads BK season\nIn 2013 Halmstads BK will compete in Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive\nThe 2013 Hama offensive was a military operation launched by Syrian rebels during the Syrian Civil War in the eastern part of the province of Hama, in an attempt to open up a new front, after rebel attacks in the governorate had stalled. The rebels managed to capture 10 villages during their offensive. However, the Army soon retaliated and reversed all of the rebels gains, as well as capturing the town of Halfaya, which the rebels captured during their previous offensive, five months earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Opening rebel attacks\nOn 25 April, rebel forces launched an attack in Hama city, where heavy clashes erupted for the first time in months as rebels tried to relieve pressure on their forces under attack from government troops elsewhere in the country. The next day, clashes occurred in the neighborhood of Tariq Halab between the Army and the rebels. Video footage emerged of several soldiers being burned alive in an armored vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army captures Halfaya and rebels advance\nOn 10 May, a cease-fire agreement between government and rebel forces in Halfaya broke down. Heavy shelling of the town started in which 25 people were reportedly killed. Government forces tightened the siege on Halfaya and the town of Aqrab, shutting down communications in the area. The shelling of Halfaya and Aqrab was seen as preparation to storm the towns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army captures Halfaya and rebels advance\nOn 17 May, rebels captured four Alawite villages in the eastern part of Hama province. The villages were abandoned by its residents days before the rebels arrived. The villages in question were Tulaysiyah, Zoghbe, Shaata and Balil. Their takeover followed several weeks of fighting after which the Army withdrew from the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army captures Halfaya and rebels advance\nOn 19 May, the Syrian Army took control of Halfaya after rebel forces retreated from the town. The takeover was reportedly followed with the burning of homes by government troops and the execution of 15 people by pro-government militias, according to the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army captures Halfaya and rebels advance\nOn 23 May, rebels reportedly took control of three more villages in the eastern part of the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army captures Halfaya and rebels advance\nOn 24 May, government forces raided the town of Ma'arzaf, and two days later captured the village of Rihya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nOn 1 June, after heavy fighting, the Syrian Army recaptured the two Alawite villages of Tulaysiyah and Janineh and on 2 June they recaptured the Alawite village of Zoghbe, after the withdrawal of rebel forces, according to SOHR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nBy 3 June, the Army had captured 13 villages in Hama province during their offensive, including the ones captured by the rebels earlier in the operation, according to state TV and SOHR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nAccording to the Syrian news agency SANA, by 10 June, the Syrian military captured six more villages in eastern Hama. Three days later, the capture of three of those six villages, as well as one other, was confirmed by SOHR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nAt dawn on 13 June, rebels seized an Army position on the northern edge of the town of Morek, in fighting that killed six soldiers and two rebels. Later in the day, the Army shelled the base and sent reinforcements in an attempt to recapture the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nOn 14 June, fighting took place in the village of Um Meil, to the east of Salamiyah, with the Army capturing the village. The next day, after fierce fighting, the Syrian Army took control of the towns of Rasm al-Abd and Rasm al-Awabed, southeast of Salamiyah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233778-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Hama offensive, Aftermath\nOn 7 July, the Syrian Army captured the town of Hayalin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233779-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton Nationals season\nThe 2013 Hamilton Nationals season is the fifth and final season for the Hamilton Nationals of Major League Lacrosse, and third since relocating from Toronto. They improved upon their 2012 season in which they finished with a record of 4-10. But lost to the Bayhawks in the semifinals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233780-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season\nThe 2013 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season was the 56th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 64th overall. The Tiger-Cats finished in 2nd place in the East Division with a 10\u20138 record, which was their first winning season since 2004. The Ti-Cats played in their first Grey Cup championship game since 1999, but lost to the hometown Saskatchewan Roughriders 45-23 in the 101st Grey Cup. The Tiger-Cats primarily played their home games at Alumni Stadium in Guelph, Ontario while also playing one game at Moncton Stadium in Moncton, New Brunswick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233780-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season, Stadium\nDue to the demolition of Ivor Wynne Stadium and the construction of Tim Hortons Field on the same site, the Tiger-Cats were forced to play the majority of their home games outside of Hamilton for the first time in franchise history. On November 20, 2012, the Tiger-Cats announced the signing of a memorandum of understanding to play most of their 2013 schedule at a renovated Alumni Stadium in Guelph. The decision came after scouting and considering several other venues within and outside the region. Ron Joyce Stadium, the nearest available stadium, ruled itself out in June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233780-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season, Stadium\nOn March 5, 2013, the 2013 schedule was released, revealing that eight of the regular season games would be played in Guelph and one would be played in Moncton, New Brunswick as part of Touchdown Atlantic. When the Tiger-Cats clinched a home game in the 2013 playoffs, the team announced that that game would also be played in Guelph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233780-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2013 CFL Draft took place on May 6, 2013. The Tiger-Cats had eight selections in the seven-round draft, including the first overall pick. The club had an additional selection in the fifth round coming from Calgary after a trade for Milton Collins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums\nIn the city of Hamilton, New Zealand, elections were held for the offices of Mayor of Hamilton and twelve members of the Hamilton City Council (HCC) on 12 October 2013. They were held as part of the 2013 New Zealand local elections. Referendums on city water fluoridation and to determine voting method for electing city councillors in the future were held simultaneously. Postal ballots were issued to 97,259 registered voters, and were returned from 23 September to 12 October 2013. Across the city, 37,276 people cast votes, a voter turnout of 38.33%. Some voters chose not to vote in particular elections or referendums, so voter turnout in individual elections varies from this figure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums\nJulie Hardaker was re-elected for her second term as mayor with 43.6% of the vote. First past the post (FPP) was used to elect the twelve members of the HCC\u2014six from each of the East and West Wards. FPP was retained over single transferable vote (STV) as the method used to elect city councillors in future elections. A majority voted for the return of city water fluoridation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums, Mayor\nIncumbent mayor Julie Hardaker was re-elected with a 2,911-vote majority over Ewan Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums, City council, East Ward\nThe six candidates with the most votes were elected, shown in the table below by a green tick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums, Referendums, Water fluoridation, Background\nFluoride has been added to drinking water in Hamilton since 1966 to improve dental health. Hamilton sources its water from the Waikato River, which has a fluoride concentration of 0.1\u20130.3 parts per million (ppm); in 2012 fluoride concentration in Hamilton drinking water was 0.7 parts per million. Parts of southern and western Waikato District are also served by the Hamilton city water supply.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 90], "content_span": [91, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums, Referendums, Water fluoridation, Background\nIn 2006, a binding referendum was held in which 69.46% of voters supported continuation of public water fluoridation, while 30.54% opposed it. The referendum had a voter turnout of 38%. During the draft of the city council's 2011/12 annual plan in February 2011, the termination of water fluoridation was discussed by councillors, but no decision was made. 120 submissions related to water fluoridation were filed for the annual plan in March and April 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 90], "content_span": [91, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums, Referendums, Water fluoridation, Background\nA referendum was planned to coincide with the 2013 local elections, but this was cancelled by the council on 8 June 2012 after taking legal advice that the referendum may not be deemed adequate public consultation. From 28 to 31 May 2013, public hearings were held and attended by councillors, and on 5 June 2013, the city council voted 7\u20131 (with five abstentions) to cease water fluoridation. The council wrote to Minister of Health Tony Ryall requesting that, as a health issue, water fluoridation be decided by the national government. The cost of water fluoridation was estimated by the city council as $48,000 per year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 90], "content_span": [91, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums, Referendums, Water fluoridation, Aftermath\nOn election day, the referendum result was welcomed by both the chief executive and Medical Officer of Health of the Waikato District Health Board. As the referendum was not binding, a council vote was required to restart fluoridation. On 28 November 2013 the HCC delayed its decision pending a legal challenge to the decision by the South Taranaki District to fluoridate water there. The HCC voted 9\u20131 in favour (3 abstentions) of refluoridating water on 27 March 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233781-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Hamilton local elections and referendums, Referendums, Water fluoridation, Aftermath\nThe lobby group Safe Water Alternative New Zealand (SWANZ) sought an interim order from the High Court to prevent fluoridation until their application for judicial review could be heard. The application for an interim order was dismissed on 27 June 2014. SWANZ removed its application for judicial review on 4 September 2014, ahead of the 9 September hearing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233782-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton mayoral election\nThe 2013 Hamilton mayoral election was part of the Hamilton and wider New Zealand local elections. On 12 October 2013, elections were held for the Mayor of Hamilton and other local government roles. The incumbent, Julie Hardaker, ran against seven other candidates and was re-elected with 43.6% of the vote, a 2,911-vote majority over Ewan Wilson who won 35.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233782-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton mayoral election, Campaign\nAll of the mayoral candidates except Wikiriwhi took part in a debate held at the Waikato Institute of Technology and chaired by Waikato Times editor Jonathan MacKenzie on 10 September 2013. According to Waikato Times editor Daniel Adams, about 200 people attended the debate, and the main issues were water metering and water fluoridation. The Waikato Chamber of Commerce and the Hamilton branch of the Property Council of New Zealand hosted a debate between Hardaker, Wilson and Macpherson on 17 September. The debate was chaired by the Property Council's vice-president Graham Dwyer and was attended by over 100 businesspeople, according to Kashka Tunstall of the Waikato Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233782-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton mayoral election, Opinion polls\nA Waikato Times opinion poll completed on 26 August 2013 had Hardaker at 20% support, Wilson 10% and Macpherson 6%, with 49% of voters undecided. A second poll by the Waikato Times, completed on 24 September 2013 showed Hardaker steady at 20% and Wilson and Macpherson moving up to 18% and 8%, respectively. On 28 September, the day that the Waikato Times' second poll was published, Macpherson withdrew from the race and asked his supporters to back Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233782-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hamilton mayoral election, Results\nNote that blank votes are not included. Swing is compared to 2010 results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233783-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampden\u2013Sydney Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Hampden\u2013Sydney Tigers football team represented Hampden\u2013Sydney College in the 2013 NCAA Division III football season. It was the Tiger's 119th overall, the 38th as a member of the Old Dominion Athletic Conference. The team was led by Marty Favret, in his fourteenth year as head coach, and played its home games at Lewis C. Everett Stadium in Death Valley, Hampden\u2013Sydney, Virginia. They finished the season 9\u20133, 6\u20131 in ODAC play to finish in first place in the conference. They received an automatic bid to the Division III Playoffs where they defeated Maryville in the first round and lost to #2 Linfield in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233784-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampshire County Council election\nAn election to Hampshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 78 councillors were elected from 75 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 the same as those of the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in Portsmouth and Southampton, which are unitary authorities outside the area covered by the County Council. The election saw the Conservative Party retain overall control of the council, with a reduced majority of five councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233784-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233784-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Hampshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233784-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampshire County Council election, Summary\nThe elections saw the Conservative Party retain overall control of the council, though with their majority reduced from 24 seats to five. The largest opposition party continued to be the Liberal Democrats, despite a net loss of seven seats. Having been reduced to just one seat in the previous election, the Labour Party gained three more seats including two which had been lost in 2009. The election saw an electoral breakthrough by the UK Independence Party, who won their first seats on the Council and became the third-largest party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233784-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampshire County Council election, Summary\nThe local Community Campaign in Hart successfully defended its councillor's seat in Church Crookham and Ewshot, which was the only seat it fought. An independent candidate gained a seat in Lymington from the Conservatives. Alan Weeks, the sole Green Party incumbent who had defected from the Liberal Democrats, lost his Totton North seat to UKIP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233784-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampshire County Council election, Candidates\nThe Conservatives and Labour both obtained local nominations for all divisions, while UKIP had no candidates in six divisions and the Liberal Democrats had no candidate in one. The Green Party fielded 30 candidates, six short of half of the council divisions. The next highest total share of votes was won by the six independent candidates. None of the other parties, local or national achieved more than 0.71% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233784-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampshire County Council election, Results by electoral division\nHampshire County Council is divided into 11 districts, which are split further into electoral divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary\nThe Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative Party parliamentary primary of 2013 was the 1st open primary election used to select the Conservative Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for the North London constituency of Hampstead and Kilburn. The election was held on Wednesday 30 January 2013 under the first-past-the-post system. It was the third primary organised by a Conservative Association to select a PPC, after Totnes and Gosport. However, unlike previous primaries, voting took place at a public meeting rather than by postal ballot. At the time, the seat was held by Glenda Jackson, a long serving Labour MP and as due to the close race in 2010, was the Conservatives' number one target seat at the 2015 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary, Background\nAt the 2010 general election, the incumbent MP Glenda Jackson retained her seat by just 42 votes, the closest margin in England out of all the election results in that election. However, in June 2011, she announced that she would retire from politics, presuming that the Coalition Government survived to 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary, Background\nOn 13 December 2012, the Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative Association announced that the selection of the party's Prospective Parliamentary Candidate would be opened up to the public, including those not affiliated with the Conservative Party. The three shortlisted candidates were announced on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary, Background\nDuring the campaign, the three candidates met with constituents at stalls to answer questions and raise awareness of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary, Result\nAt a public meeting held at Hampstead Synagogue, Simon Marcus was selected as the PCC for Hampstead and Kilburn. The local Association estimated that over 200 people attended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary, Result\nSeema Kennedy went on to be selected to be the candidate in South Ribble in Lancashire. She was elected the MP there holding the seat for the Conservatives. Kennedy served until standing down at the 2019 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary, Result\nAlex Burghart was elected as MP for Brentwood and Ongar at the 2017 general election and since 2019 has served as Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Prime Minister", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233785-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampstead and Kilburn Conservative primary, Aftermath\nAgainst the national swing, Labour candidate Tulip Siddiq held the seat at the 2015 general election with a slightly increased majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233786-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampton Pirates football team\nThe 2013 Hampton Pirates football team represented Hampton University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fifth year head coach Donovan Rose and played their home games at Armstrong Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233786-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampton Pirates football team\nThe Pirates entered the season with a new offensive and defensive coordinator. Earlier in the off-season Glen Ferebee was brought on board to be the Quarterbacks coach at Hampton. However, on July 2, he was named as the new offensive coordinator. Meanwhile, Bernard Clark Jr. was brought back to be the Pirates defensive coordinator. Previously Clark served as defensive coordinator for Hampton under Rose in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233786-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampton Pirates football team\nAt the MEAC Media Days on July 26, Hampton was picked to finish 6th in the 2013 MEAC season. Hampton also entered the season with one defensive player and two special teams players having been selected for 2nd team All-Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233786-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampton Pirates football team\nThey finished the season 4\u20138, 4\u20134 in MEAC play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233786-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hampton Pirates football team\nAt the end of the season, head coach Donovan Rose was fired after 5 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233787-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Haridwar Municipal Corporation election\nThe 2013 Haridwar Municipal Corporation election was a municipal election to the Haridwar Municipal Corporation, which governs Haridwar in Uttarakhand. It took place on 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233788-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Harrisburg City Islanders season\nThe 2013 season is the Harrisburg City Islanders's 10th season of competitive soccer - its tenth season in the third division of American soccer and its third season in USL Pro since the league was first created with the City Islanders as one of the original 10 founder-members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233788-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Harrisburg City Islanders season, Season overview\nIn the end of season all-league teams, three players from the Islanders made the selections. Sainey Touray was the sole member from Harrisburg to make the first team, while goalkeeper Nick Noble and Lucky Mkosana - HCI's top scorer - were picked for the second team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233788-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Harrisburg City Islanders season, Competitions, USL Pro, Results summary\nLast updated: January 18, 2017Source: 2013 USL Pro seasonPld = 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, 37], "section_span": [39, 77], "content_span": [78, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233788-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Harrisburg City Islanders season, Competitions, USL Pro, Playoffs\nThe City Islanders were beaten in the quarterfinals of the 2013 USL Pro season playoffs by the Charlotte Eagles. The North Carolina club ran out 3\u20131 winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233788-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Harrisburg City Islanders season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nThe Harrisburg City Islanders were knocked out of the U.S. Open Cup at the second round stage by Reading United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233789-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Harvard Crimson football team\nThe 2013 Harvard Crimson football team represented Harvard University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 20th-year head coach Tim Murphy and played their home games at Harvard Stadium. They were a member of the Ivy League. They finish with a record of 9\u20131 overall and 6\u20131 in Ivy League play to share the Ivy League title with Princeton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign\nHassan Rouhani, a moderate Iranian politician and former Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, also known as the Diplomat Sheikh, launched his presidential campaign in March 2013. He was earlier expected to withdraw and endorse Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani after he registered, but he returned to the race after Hashemi's disqualification. The symbol of Rouhani's campaign was a key and his slogan was \"Government of Prudence and Hope.\" On 15 June, he was elected as the president with 18,613,329 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies\nRouhani questioned the formal policy of the government about different issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Economy\nRouhani considers the existing problems in the field of economy and other sectors due to incorrect management by the incumbent administration. He admitted with proper planning, production units can be activated and jobs can be created, but this needs stability because sometimes economic regulations of the country have changed 50 times in a single month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Nuclear program\nRohani defended his track record as Iran's chief nuclear negotiator from October 2003 to August 2005. He said he moved war, sanctions, and the UN Security Council (resolutions) away from Iran. About his view on nuclear program and its relationship with economical problems due to sanctions he said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Nuclear program\n\"when a centrifuge is supposed to keep spinning while the entire country remains stagnant, meaning that we launch the single Natanz nuclear facility, but hundreds of our factories face problems, stop operating or work at a 20-percent capacity due to a lack of parts, raw materials and sanctions\u2026 that we do not approve of.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Nuclear program\nRouhani has pledged more transparency about what he says is Iran's peaceful nuclear enrichment program, aimed at producing fuel for nuclear reactors to generate electricity. He told Alsharq Alawsat:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Nuclear program\n\u201dIran has an exclusively peaceful nuclear program, which under international law is lawful and indisputable. A politically motivated campaign of misinformation has persistently attempted to cast doubts on the exclusively peaceful nature of this program. This campaign is being fueled and directed first and foremost by Israel, in order to divert international attention not only from its own clandestine and dangerous nuclear weapons program, but also from its destabilizing and inhuman policies and practices in Palestine and the Middle East. Regrettably, the Security Council has discredited itself by allowing the United States to impose this counter-productive Israeli agenda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Nuclear program\nIf elected, I will reverse this trend by restoring international confidence . . . Nuclear weapons have no role in Iran\u2019s national security doctrine, and therefore Iran has nothing to conceal. But in order to move towards the resolution of Iran\u2019s nuclear dossier, we need to build both domestic consensus and global convergence and understanding through dialogue.\"\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Diplomacy with the United States\nHassan Rouhani promised more effective diplomacy with the West.. Rouhani said, in Alsharq Alawsat:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Diplomacy with the United States\n\u201cThe Iran\u2013US relationship is a complex and difficult issue. A bitter history, filled with mistrust and animosity, marks this relationship. It has become a chronic wound whose healing is difficult but possible, provided that good faith and mutual respect prevail. . . . As a moderate, I have a phased plan to deescalate hostility to a manageable state of tension and then engage in promotion of interactions and dialogue between the two peoples to achieve d\u00e9tente, and finally reach to the point of mutual respect that both peoples deserve.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Treatment of Political Prisoners\nRouhani has promised to attempt to heal the severe rift between Green Movement liberals and Khomeinist hard liners by getting Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, leaders of the 2009 protest movement, released from house arrest. He said\"I was Iran\u2019s national Security Advisor for sixteen years during the administrations of Rafsanjani and Khatami. Therefore, I know how to deal with sensitive issues. If elected, I will do my best to secure the release of those who have been incarcerated following the regrettable events of 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Policies, Treatment of Political Prisoners\nI know that the constitutional powers of the president in Iran do not extend to the areas outside the realm of the executive branch of the system. However, I am quite optimistic that I can muster the necessary domestic consensus to improve the present situation of Mr. Mousavi and Mr. Karrubi.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Disqualification rumors\nAs Mehr news agency reported Rouhani might get disqualified prior to the upcoming presidential elections. The news agency announced that an anonymous source had told it that the reasoning of a possible disqualification was the disclosure of confidential information related to Iran's nuclear program during the televised debates. Another reason for a possible disqualification of Rouhani was the slogans that his supporters chanted, according to the source. The disqualification was thereafter denied by the Guardian Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Consensus of Reformists for Rouhani\n\"It was never about me or Dr. Aref, It has always been about our shared goals.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Consensus of Reformists for Rouhani\nThree days before the presidential election, Iranian moderates and reformists coalesced behind Hassan Rouhani; Including Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Mohammad Khatami and Molavi Abdul Hamid. This Consensus happened after the withdrawal of the only reformist candidate Mohammad Reza Aref. Aref withdrew on the advice of Mohammad Khatami so the electorate would all stand behind Rouhani, so there wouldn't be a split in the vote between the twoand to greatly limit the chance of a conservative victory. This showed that the moderates and reformists had united together and had thrown all their support behind Rouhani, which the conservatives failed to do with a single conservative candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Observers views on candidacy\n\"The more I hear about Rouhani, the more I'm encouraged that he might be able to be a spoiler in this election.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233790-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Hassan Rouhani presidential campaign, Observers views on candidacy\n\"He doesn't yet know how the other side will respond, mainly the United States and whether the United States will also show flexibility. Rouhani would want that kind of flexibility in order to be able to strike a deal.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado\nOn Sunday, February\u00a010, 2013, a large, violent EF4 multiple-vortex wedge tornado devastated the cities of West Hattiesburg, Hattiesburg, and Petal. The tornado was one of eight that touched down in southern Mississippi and southwestern Alabama that day. It reached a maximum path width of 0.75\u00a0mi (1.21\u00a0km) in its path through the Hattiesburg area and reached estimated maximum sustained winds of 170\u00a0mph (270\u00a0km/h) in Oak Grove neighborhood of West Hattiesburg. It destroyed many structures and impacted University of Southern Mississippi and two high schools (Oak Grove High School and Hattiesburg High School). Mississippi was declared a federal disaster area by President Barack Obama, and a state of emergency was issued by Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nThe Storm Prediction Center (SPC) had stated as early as February 8 that a few supercells would possibly develop on the 10th and could produce large hail, damaging winds, and a few tornadoes. When the thunderstorm outlook was issued for the 10th, the SPC stated that only a marginal chance for severe thunderstorms existed and that only a few storms would develop. Most of the severe weather activity was expected to develop along the cold front in the form of a squall line. A 10% chance of isolated tornadoes was introduced as the instability remained marginal for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nDuring the morning hours of February 10, a squall line developed along a cold front that stretched from western Arkansas, down through northwest Louisiana, and into east Texas. Simultaneously, a warm front was ascending northward through Mississippi and Louisiana. The area between the fronts became increasingly unstable as the day went on, and four tornado watches were issued across Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama throughout the day as the storms tracked eastward. The watches were issued as very strong wind shear and instability engrossed the area, causing the development of supercell thunderstorms. These watches were issued through the day, with the first being posted at 7 a.m. CST (1300 UTC) and the last one coming out at 5:35\u00a0p.m. CST (2335 UTC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nThroughout the afternoon hours, the cold front and the squall line began to stall over portions of Louisiana and Arkansas. The supercells that developed that afternoon ahead of the squall line originated across Louisiana and southern Mississippi. Around 4 p.m. (2200 UTC), a newly-developed supercell produced an EF2 tornado in Marion County, Mississippi. That tornado tracked northeast and entered Lamar County, where it dissipated. Later, that same supercell quickly produced another tornado \u2013 this was a large wedge tornado that hit the Hattiesburg area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nThe tornado touched down west-southwest of West Hattiesburg at around 5:03\u00a0p.m. CST (23:03 UTC), causing EF0 damage to tree limbs at the western edge of the community. It rapidly widened and intensified as it moved through residential subdivisions of the city, snapping numerous trees and power lines, severely damaging homes, and expanding to one half-mile wide. Further northeast, it narrowed as it struck Oak Grove High School, causing major damage to the school's athletic complex. Several well-constructed buildings around the school's athletic stadiums were destroyed, with twisting and buckling steel girders noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nSeveral steel light poles with concrete reinforcement were snapped as well. Vehicles were thrown in considerable distances, one of which was taken from a parking lot of the high school, rolled up a hill and across the baseball field, and then deposited onto the pitcher's mound. Much of the damage in this area ranged from EF2 to EF3 intensity, though an isolated pocket of EF4 damage occurred just to the southwest of the high school, as a well-built brick home was completely flattened with debris scattered downwind. Nearby trees were denuded and debarked. As it then approached I-59, the tornado heavily damaged numerous homes and apartment buildings at EF2 to EF3 strength, and snapped more trees and power lines. It crossed the interstate and entered Forrest County, tearing through densely populated areas of Hattiesburg, resulting in major damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nIn Forrest County, roughly 300 homes and other structures were damaged/destroyed as the tornado moved through various neighborhoods and business districts. The University of Southern Mississippi sustained significant damage to the southern portion of its campus; at least six buildings were damaged and two others were destroyed there. Near the university, a gas station, a strip mall, a church, an apartment building, and multiple homes were damaged/destroyed, and some metal traffic light poles were mangled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nThe tornado continued through residential areas to the east of Route 49, where many trees were uprooted, homes were heavily damaged, and a church's steeple was blown off. Large metal light poles at the athletic fields of Hattiesburg High School were snapped, and the third base wall at the baseball field was destroyed. The gymnasium sustained considerable damage to its roof as well. Near the high school, the American Red Cross Building lost its roof and some of its exterior walls, and the Girl Scouts of Greater Mississippi building had its roof torn off as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nThe tornado then impacted the northern fringes of downtown Hattiesburg, damaging or destroying several more homes, snapping numerous power lines, and causing heavy damage to several large brick buildings, three of which were leveled. Damage intensity throughout the city of Hattiesburg ranged from EF2 to EF3. The tornado maintained its strength as it continued into Petal, where an ACE Hardware store was completely leveled and more homes were damaged or destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nNow traveling to the northeast of Petal, the tornado began to weaken, causing EF1 to EF2\u00a0strength damage to numerous roofs and downing many trees. It weakened to EF1-strength in Perry County before weakening rapidly and lifting in a wooded area just west of Runnelstown at 5:36\u00a0p.m. CST (2336 UTC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nThis tornado was on the ground for 33\u00a0minutes, traveled 22.5 miles (36.2\u00a0km), had a maximum path width of 0.75 miles (1.21\u00a0km), and was rated low-end EF4, with winds up to 170\u00a0mph (270\u00a0km/h). It damaged many buildings and athletic fields at University of Southern Mississippi, Oak Grove High School, and Hattiesburg High School. In Lamar County (where the tornado first touched down and was rated EF4), 51 homes were destroyed and another 170 suffered major damage. The tornado was slightly weaker in Forrest County (EF3); however, 192 homes were destroyed and 338 suffered major damage. The tornado injured 82 people (19 in Lamar County and 63 in Forrest County) and caused damage amounting to $38.525 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary\nThis was the first violent tornado to occur in Lamar and Forrest Counties since April 24, 1908, in which 143\u00a0people were killed. 64\u00a0deaths occurred in Lamar and Forrest Counties alone with that tornado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary, Other tornadoes\nA total of eight tornadoes touched down on February 10, including one in northeast Texas, five in southeast Mississippi, and two in southwest Alabama. The tornadoes caused a total of 86 injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary, Other tornadoes\nIn Texas, an EF0 tornado touched down east of Livingston in Polk County. A trailer was destroyed and trees and power lines were downed, injuring one person. In Mississippi, an EF1 tornado touched down southeast of Arm in Lawrence County, causing damage to several barns and mobile homes and downing many trees. In nearby Marion County, an EF2 touched down south of the Columbia area and traveled into Lamar County, causing significant damage to many trees and numerous structures and injuring three people. This tornado lifted and the parent supercell quickly produced another tornado, which impacted the Hattiesburg area (See above), injuring 82 people. The same supercell would later produce two EF1 tornadoes across Wayne County, causing damage to many trees and structures, before moving into Alabama and dissipating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Tornado summary, Other tornadoes\nTwo EF1 tornadoes touched down across Washington and Clarke Counties in Alabama. These tornadoes removed roofs from homes, severely damaged a few mobile homes, and downed many trees, including numerous pine trees that were snapped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Aftermath\nPresident Barack Obama declared Mississippi a federal disaster area following the tornado. Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant issued a State of emergency for Forrest, Lamar, Lawrence, and Marion Counties due to the impact of the severe storms and tornadoes in those counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Aftermath\nRain hampered cleanup efforts in the city during the days following the tornado. Schools remained closed in the Hattiesburg area until February 14, 2013, including the University of Southern Mississippi (USM). When schools reopened, school buses had to be borrowed from neighboring school districts as most of Hattiesburg's had been damaged by the tornado. USM had to move classes that were previously held in the eight damaged buildings. USM officials estimated that it would take over 10 million dollars to repair the school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Aftermath\nOak Grove High School in West Hattiesburg lost its athletic facilities as well as a few other buildings. The Lamar County School Superintendent said that it would take months and millions of dollars to repair. Hattiesburg High School also suffered destruction of some of its athletic facilities, including the basketball gym that had undergone renovations just a few weeks before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Aftermath\nPower outages in the area were as many as 13,000 just after the storm, but they were quickly reduced. The American Red Cross and the Salvation Army worked together to provide food and shelter for victims of the tornado and the Mississippi State Department of Health offered free tetanus shots at county health departments for residents of storm-affected counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Aftermath\nSempra U.S. Gas & Power donated $100,000 to Hattiesburg area schools and the American Red Cross branch based in Hattiesburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233791-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Hattiesburg, Mississippi tornado, Aftermath\nIn the early morning hours of January 21, 2017, a destructive EF3 tornado destroyed many homes and businesses in Hattiesburg and Petal. This tornado was not as powerful as the 2013 event, though it resulted in four fatalities and many injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233792-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawaii Bowl\nThe 2013 Sheraton Hawaii Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 24, 2013, at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu. The twelfth edition of the Hawaii Bowl, sponsored by Sheraton Hotels and Resorts, featured the Boise State Broncos from the Mountain West Conference against the Oregon State Beavers from the Pac-12 Conference. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. It began at 3:00\u00a0p.m. HST (8:00\u00a0p.m. EST) and aired on ESPN. Oregon State defeated Boise State, 38\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233792-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawaii Bowl, Teams\nOregon State leads the series with Boise State 4\u20133. Last meeting, Boise State defeated OSU 37-24 in 2010. The teams have never met in a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233792-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawaii Bowl, Teams, Boise State\nInterim Head Coach is Bob Gregory after Chris Petersen decided to take over the job at Washington. Since 2000, the Broncos are the winningest football program in college 155\u201325 (.861), producing 38.8 points per game this year. The team, with 47 penalties this season, is ninth-nationally in fewest penalties per game (3.92) and is 18th-fewest in penalty yards per game (36.42).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233792-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawaii Bowl, Teams, Oregon State\nJunior wide receiver Brandin Cooks has won the 2013 Biletnikoff Award, as the nation's top college receiver. He set OSU records for career receiving touchdowns (23), single season touchdown receptions (15), single season receptions (120) and single season yards (1,670).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233793-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team\nThe 2013 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team represented the University of Hawaii at M\u0101noa in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by second-year head coach Norm Chow and played their home games at Aloha Stadium. They were members of the Mountain West Conference in the West Division. They finished the season 1\u201311, 0\u20138 in Mountain West play to finish in last place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes\nThe 2013 Hawija clashes relate to a series of violent attacks within Iraq, as part of the 2012\u20132013 Iraqi protests and Iraqi insurgency post-U.S. withdrawal. On 23 April, an army raid against a protest encampment in the city of Hawija, west of Kirkuk, led to dozens of civilian deaths and the involvement of several insurgent groups in organized action against the government, leading to fears of a return to a wide-scale Sunni\u2013Shia conflict within the country. By 27 April, more than 300 people were reported killed and scores more injured in one of the worst outbreaks of violence since the U.S. withdrawal in December 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Background\nViolence in Iraq has decreased since its peak in 2006\u201307, but attacks remain common. Deaths rose in 2012 for the first time in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Background\nIn the months leading up to the 20 April provincial elections, the first since the withdrawal of US forces in 2011, tensions were high in Iraq as Sunni groups claimed they were being marginalized by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's Shiite dominated government. A number of large scale attacks linked to the Salafist umbrella group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant were carried out in early 2013 in an attempt to destabilize the country ahead of the elections. At least fourteen election candidates were murdered, while Anbar and Nineveh Governorates postponed elections because of security concerns. Four other governorates did not hold elections on 20 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Hawija protests\nOn Friday 19 April a group of protesters marched toward an Iraqi Army checkpoint in Hawija, a town west of Kirkuk, sparking a violent confrontation in which one civilian and one Iraqi officer were killed. Following the refusal of residents to hand the suspects over to security forces, Hawija was put under siege. Government sources reported the protesters had stolen some weapons from the checkpoint after the attack took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Hawija protests\nOn 23 April, Iraqi Army units moved against the encampment set up by protesters in Hawija, sparking deadly clashes and reprisal attacks across the country. According to army officers, the operation began shortly before dawn and was aimed at Sunni militants from the Naqshbandi Army, who were reportedly involved in the protest movement. Army officials said their forces only opened fire after being fired upon, and they confiscated at least 34 Kalashnikov assault rifles and 4 PKM machineguns after the clashes had ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Hawija protests\nA total of 42 people were killed and at least 153 others injured, with most of them being protesters; only 3 soldiers were confirmed dead and 7 others wounded. United Nations spokeswoman in Iraq, Eliana Nabaa, confirmed there were many casualties. The organizers behind the protests disputed the Army's account of events and accused them of killing and injuring innocent people. According to Abdulmalik al-Juburi, one of the leaders of the Hawija movement, Army units \"burned the tents and opened fire indiscriminately and killed and wounded dozens of protesters\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Hawija protests\nHe also denied harboring any wanted criminals and said there was only four rifles used to protect the whole gathering, placing the official military report under question. After news of the assault broke, several checkpoints around Kirkuk were attacked by groups of armed gunmen, and at least 13 of them were killed by security forces. Unidentified assailants attacked a checkpoint near Ramadi, killing 6 soldiers and kidnapping another, while setting fire to the building and two armored vehicles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0004-0003", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Hawija protests\nAn additional attack took place near Sulaiman Bek in Saladin Governorate, where six soldiers and a gunman were killed, while 11 soldiers and six attackers were left injured. Attacks against three checkpoints on the road to Tikrit left 9 police officers dead and 5 others injured. Four bodies were found dumped in Fallujah and one in Iskandariya, while an IED attack in Baaj killed a soldiers and injured another. Four soldiers were wounded in a shooting near Al-Karmah, while in Haswa gunmen stormed a Sahwa militia member's home, killing five members of his family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0004-0004", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Hawija protests\nArmy units cut off-road access to Kirkuk in the evening, as a curfew came into effect for the region. On the same day, at least 13 others were killed and 25 injured as they left Sunni mosques in Baghdad and Diyala Governorate. A bomb in Mosul killed a policeman and injured another, while mortars killed 9 and wounded 25 in Muqdadiyah. In addition, the Minister of Education Mohammed Tamim resigned from his post in response to the Army's operation, and was followed later by Science and Technology Minister Abd al-Karim al-Samarrai. Samarrai is part of the Renewal List, while Tamim is a member of the Iraqi National Dialogue Front and was born in Hawija.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nViolent attacks grew in number and scope on 24 April, as protesters and insurgents forces attacked government installations and personnel across the country. In Suleiman Bek, north of the capital Baghdad, clashes left 7 gunmen and 5 policemen dead and 63 others injured, including at least 20 soldiers. Helicopters belonging to the Iraqi Air Force were used to bomb several locations in and around the town, injuring 'dozens' of civilians, according to local officials. In addition, a bomb attack against a police patrol left an officer and 3 of his bodyguards dead and wounded another.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nFollowing the clashes in Suleiman Bek the Iraqi Army withdrew from the town, with an Iraqi Army officer claiming the move was to allow for civilians to leave the town before the army began a counter-offensive. A shooting in nearby Tuz Khormato killed one policeman and seven insurgents, while another three officers were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nA roadside bomb killed two soldiers and injured five others in Baiji, where clashes later claimed 19 casualties, though government officials did not specify how many were killed and how many wounded in the fighting. Sunni tribesmen reportedly blocked the roads going into Qara Tappah, 120\u00a0km northeast of Baghdad. After Iraqi Army units came in to clear the barricades, fighting broke out in which 7 soldiers and 15 gunmen were reported killed. In Mosul three gunmen were killed while attacking a checkpoint, while various shootings left a policeman and a soldier dead, and another officer and a doctor wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nContinued clashes in and around Hawija killed a total of 12 security personnel and attackers. Unidentified gunmen attacked a Sahwa militia checkpoint in Khales, killing four militiamen and injuring a civilian. In the eastern Baghdad district of Al-Husseiniyah, a car bomb was detonated near a mobile phone market, killing at least 8 civilians and injuring 21 others. Another car bombing killed three and wounded seven in Tarmiyah, north of the capital. Three police officers were wounded in an ambush near Fallujah, while mortar fire injured three civilians inside the city. A rocket attack in Tikrit killed one soldier and wounded two others. Meanwhile, anti-government protesters near Ramadi released two soldiers that had been captured the previous day. The Iraqi government announced a commission to investigate the previous day's incidents, that is to be led by Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 955]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nOn 25 April violence appeared to escalate, as Prime Minister al-Maliki appeared on national TV and read a statement, warning of sectarian war and blaming \"remnants of Baath Party\" for the recent events. Heavy fighting broke out in the western parts of Mosul, where insurgents used mosque loudspeakers to urge fellow Sunnis to join the fight, before overrunning a police compound and taking 17 hostages. At least 31 unidentified gunmen and 15 policemen were reported killed in the fighting, which lasted throughout the day and forced residents to hide in their homes until the late evening, when the government forces retook control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nLocal morgues reported another 6 police officers were injured in clashes across the city, although the numbers were likely to be higher. In a separate attack, gunmen stormed into a policeman's home and killed four members of his family. Heavy fighting between local tribesmen and the Iraqi Army in Saidiyah left 7 soldiers and 12 gunmen dead, while a total of 25 others were injured. Local sources reported a helicopters crashing and at least two vehicles being burnt by attackers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nAttacks were reported from the south as well, including a car bomb next to a bus stop in Najaf that killed four civilians and injured 22 others. A bomb in Jurf-al-Shakhar killed four soldiers and injured four others. Clashes were again reported from Fallujah, though the full extent of casualties was not immediately known. At least two Sahwa militiamen were killed, along with two police officers, while two civilians were injured. Fighting continued in Qara Tappah, where four gunmen were killed and nine civilians injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nAt least 8 gunmen and 2 policemen were killed in attacks against checkpoints in Hawija, Samarrah and Kafak. Five attackers and four officers were also injured in those incidents. Heavy fighting was reported from Suleiman Bek, where the Naqshbandi Army appeared to be in control, although no casualty figures were released. A similar situation was present in Baqubah, where residents were placed under a strict curfew by local authorities. A soldiers was shot dead in Tikrit, while two police officers were injured by mortar fire in Yathrib. Gunmen briefly took over two checkpoint in Ad-Dawr and Qayara, while an oil pipeline was damaged in an explosion near Shirqat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nViolent incidents continued at a high pace across the country on 26 April, although many reports did not include detailed casualty counts, as in the day before. Insurgents withdrew from Suleiman Bek after negotiations with local tribesmen, allowing the Iraqi Army to re-enter the town. The capital Baghdad was the scene of a number of bombings, most of them targeting Sunni civilians. Four blasts near mosques in Doura, Rashidiya and Shabb killed 12 and injured 61 others. A motorcycle bomb exploded next to a falafel shop in Sadr City, killing 5 and wounding 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Attacks spread out\nLater in the day, a car bomb killed 7 and wounded 13 at a shopping center in the city's south. A roadside bombing killed 4 soldiers and injured another near Mahmoudiya, while five bodies were brought to the morgue in Tuz Khormato. Gunmen shot dead five people in and around Tikrit. A bombing outside a tailor shop in Wadi Hajar wounded 12 civilians, while an IED blast injured another in Saidiyah. Clashes were once more reported from Fallujah, where a policeman and a civilian were injured by gunfire. Fighting was also reported in Haditha and Kubaisa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nThe number of attacks appeared to be lower on 27 April; as Prime Minister al-Maliki blamed the unrest on regional issues and authorities imposed a 9\u00a0pm to 4 am curfew in Al Anbar Governorate in an effort to quell the violence. Five intelligence officers were killed and two gunmen wounded in a firefight near a protesters' camp in Ramadi. Two policemen were also injured in the attack, which allegedly took place after the officers were seen filming the camp. Two bodyguards were injured in a failed assassination attempt against a police official just outside the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nFour soldiers were killed and seven others injured in a firefight in Abu Ghraib, while three civilians were shot dead in separate attacks in the southern port of Basra. Fresh fighting was reported from Fallujah, where insurgents attacked a football team, killing one player and injuring another. Mortar fire wounded four civilians inside the city. Clashes were also reported from Baiji and Baqubah, where 2 gunmen were killed and 10 others arrested. Kurdish government officials deployed Peshmerga troops in and around Kirkuk to prevent further bloodshed in a move criticized by the cabinet in Baghdad. Staff General Ali Ghaidan Majeed, the commander of Iraqi ground forces, called it a \"dangerous development\" and an apparent attempt to reach the area's large oilfields.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nThe nightly curfew and response operations of the government's security forces appeared to ease tensions a bit, as casualties continued to fall in the days following the original clash, while attacks began to shift back to their usual pattern of large bombings and isolated shootings. On 28 April, a car bomb killed 3 policemen and injured 3 others in Taji, while gunmen killed a soldier and injured 3 others in Hammam-al-Ali. Unidentified assailants also killed 2 civilians and injured another in separate attacks in Mosul and Fallujah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nMeanwhile, the Iraqi government revoked the broadcasting licenses of ten satellite television stations for \"inciting sectarian unrest\". Among the channels affected was the Qatari-based Al Jazeera, as well as al-Sharqiya and al-Shariqya News, two frequent critics of the Maliki cabinet. Iraq's media commission accused the stations of misleading reports and \"clear calls for disorder and for launching retaliatory criminal attacks against security forces\". A statement from Al Jazeera expressed dismay at the move and called on the government to \"uphold freedom for the media to report the important stories taking place in Iraq\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nCasualties rose on 29 April, as most of the attacks turned to cities in Iraq's south, killing a total of 47 people and injuring at least 100 others. Twin car bombs killed 18 and injured 42 others in Amarah, while two others killed 12 and injured 37 in Karbala and Diwaniyah. Another blast in a Shi'ite district of the mostly-Sunni city of Mahmoudiyah killed 6 and left 14 wounded. Armed clashes also continued in the north, where gunmen killed 3 soldiers and injured 3 others in Mosul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nA civilian was killed and his brother injured in a separate attack within the city. Similar attacks in Yathrib, Salman Pak and Riyadh left 5 soldiers and a policeman dead, and 3 other soldiers injured. A prominent lawyer was assassinated in Baqubah, while mortar strikes were reported near Baghdad International Airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nAt least 16 people were killed and 46 wounded in scattered attacks across the country on 30 April, though most of them appeared to be small bombings, rather than the heavy clashes with security forces that rocked Iraq in the previous week. Three bombings took place in Baghdad, including one at a Sunni mosque, killing a total of 7 civilians and injuring 27 others. A suicide bomber killed 2 and injured 5 others in Suleiman Bek, while a protest organizer was assassinated in Haditha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nRoadside blasts occurred in Mosul, Baqubah, Baiji, Zaidan and Kirkuk, killing a total of 5 people - two policemen, two Peshmerga troops, and a civilian. At least eleven others were injured in these incidents. Gunmen killed a civilian in Taji and injured three soldiers in Qayara. Meanwhile, the Iraqi government announced the temporary closure of the Karameh Border Crossing with Jordan near Trebil due to ongoing security concerns in the western Anbar Governorate. The border point is seen as a vital economic interest of the province, and the move was expected to have a significant impact on businesses and markets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nAttacks were focused on the central parts of Iraq on 1 May, including a pair of bombings in Al-Karmah that killed a Sahwa member and injured at least 16 other militiamen. A suicide bomber killed six east of Fallujah, while another blast and a shooting inside the city left three soldiers and a policeman dead and another officer injured. Four policemen died in a roadside bombing in Baiji, while two others were killed in twin bombings in Ramadi. At least thirteen others were injured in those incidents, including 3 officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nBombings and shootings in Baqubah killed three, including a local cleric, and injured 11 others. Roadside bombings killed a soldier and injured four civilians in Kanaan and Tal Afar. Similar attacks injured five others in Kirkuk and Jalawla. In the capital Baghdad a bomb blast ripped through the Husseiniya neighborhood, killing 4 and injuring 12 others. At nearby Abu Ghraib mortar fire injured at least 11 civilians. Despite the overall reduction in violence, at least 25 were killed and 73 injured during the day\u2014figures much higher than the average daily death toll before the Hawija clashes on 23 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nThese dropped on 2 May, when only 12 killed and 23 injured were reported from across the country, most of them members of the security forces. Clashes in Mosul killed three, while a political candidate was assassinated in the city as well. A suicide bomber killed a captain and injured 4 soldiers in Abu Faraj, and a bombing killed 2 soldiers and injured another in Yusufiya. The chief of police for Kirkuk Governorate escaped an assassination attempt, which injured four policemen guarding him. Roadside blasts killed 2 civilians and injured 6 others in Baqubah and Ramadi. Gunmen injured 4 policemen in Numaniya, while 2 others were injured and one killed in a bombing in Karbala. A Katuysha rocket attack near Abu Ghraib killed one soldiers and injured 2 others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nOn 3 May, a bomb was detonated at the Rashidiyah mosque in Baghdad, killing 7 people, including one of the clerics. An additional 31 were injured in the blast, which took place as worshippers left the building after Friday prayers. A car bomb killed 4 policemen and injured 3 civilians near Ramadi, while a police captain was killed in Baiji. Seven others were injured after bombings in Taji and Muqdadiyah, including 3 officers. Despite the overall drop in violence across most of Iraq since the 23 April incidents, heavy clashes continued in the northern city of Mosul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233794-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Hawija clashes, Timeline, Aftermath\nAt least 10 policemen were killed and 10 others injured in several shootings, mortar strikes and a roadside bombing. Meanwhile, the United Nations mission to Iraq released figures, showing that more people died in violent attacks in April than in any other month since June 2008. According to the numbers, at least 712 were killed during April, including 117 members of the security forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233795-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawthorn Football Club season\nThe 2013 season was the Hawthorn Football Club's 89th season in the Australian Football League and 112th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233795-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawthorn Football Club season, Overview\nAfter losing the 2012 AFL Grand Final against the Sydney Swans, Hawthorn participated in the 2012 AFL Draft and traded Tom Murphy and Clinton Young to the Gold Coast and Collingwood respectively via the free agency system. The club also picked up Jonathan Simpkin from Geelong. During the main trade period, the Hawks picked up former Western Bulldogs backman Brian Lake and Sydney Swans forward Matthew Spangher and offloaded Stephen Gilham to Greater Western Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233795-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawthorn Football Club season, Playing list changes\nThe following lists all player changes between the conclusion of the 2012 season and the beginning of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233795-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hawthorn Football Club season, Awards, Records & Milestones, Records\nHawthorn win 12 games in a row from round 2 to 14. Equal 1961 as club's longest winning run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final\nThe 2013 Hazfi Cup Final was the 26th final since 1975. The match was the Iran's El-classico between Persepolis and Sepahan. This was the clubs' second meeting in the final where Sepahan won 4\u20132 over Persepolis in the penalties in 2006. The match was also the last match of Persepolis captain Mehdi Mahdavikia, a former Iran national football team and Hamburg SV midfielder. Sepahan won Persepolis for another time in penalties and crowned their 4th domestic cup title. Sepahan was qualified for the group stage of the 2014 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Format\nThe tie was contested over one legs, simply to last edition. If the teams could still not be separated, then extra time would have been played with a penalty shootout (taking place if the teams were still level after that).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Road to the finals, Persepolis\nPersepolis's head coach Manuel Jos\u00e9 de Jesus was sacked ten days before Persepolis' first match in domestic cup campaign and his assistant and former captain Yahya Golmohammadi was appointed as the caretaker head coach. Golmohammadi's first match in charge occurred on the Round of 32, which they faced Malavan, match ends 6\u20130, same with Persepolis' best win over Esteghlal in Tehran derby in 1973. Persepolis also defeated another Iran Pro League side, Naft Tehran with their technicians coach Mansour Ebrahimzadeh 4\u20131. Persepolis faced Zob Ahan in quarter-finals and won the match 1\u20130 with a late goal from Mohammad Nouri in extra time. Their match with Damash Gilan was also ends 1\u20131 after extra time and Persepolis won that match in the penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Road to the finals, Sepahan\nSepahan began their campaign with hosting Foolad in Isfahan. Foolad was eliminated Sepahan on the last edition at the same stadium but Sepahan won the match 2\u20131 with goals comes from Mohammad Gholami and Mohammad Reza Khalatbari and Luciano Pereira was foolad's scorer. On the Round of 16, Sepahan faced with second tier side, Mes Rafsanjan, match ends 1\u20130 for Sepahan after extra time. Sepahan also defeated Sanat Naft 2\u20130 and was qualified to semi-final to face with powerhouse Esteghlal. Esteghlal was defending champion and match was ends 1\u20131 after extra time and goes to penalties. Sepahan won 5\u20134 on penalties and qualified to their 4th final in last 10 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Pre-match, Match history\nPersepolis appeared in six Hazfi Cup Finals before this match. They won the cup in 1988, 1992, 1999, 2010 and 2011 and were runners-up in 2006. This was Sepahan's fourth appearance in a Hazfi Cup Final, having won in 2004, 2006 and 2007. The teams had met 50 times in the Iranian Football League. Persepolis won 17 times, Sepahan 12 times and the other 21 games were drawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Pre-match, Ticketing\nTicket prices for the final started at 2,000 toman and were also available at 5,000 and 10,000 with all of the incomes was awarded to a charitable foundation to spend for the people involved in Bushehr and Sistan earthquakes. The Cup winners received 50,000,000 from the IRIFF while the runners-up was earned 25,000,000 tomans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Pre-match, Venue\nTeam officials met with each other on 1 April 2013 to decide on the final venue. After they failed to agree on a venue between Ghadir Stadium in Ahvaz, Samen Stadium in Mashhad and Sahand Stadium in Tabriz, the final venue was decided with a draw which 100,000 capacity Azadi Stadium (the Persepolis F.C. home Stadium) was announced as the venue for the 2013 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Pre-match, Officials\nFIFA listed referee, Alireza Faghani who also refereed the 2012 edition final was announced as the final match referee by IRIFF's referees committee. Hassan Kamranifar, the assistant referee of 2010 FIFA World Cup and Reza Sokhandan helped Faghani. Yadollah Soleimani was the fourth official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233796-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hazfi Cup Final, Pre-match, Kit colors\nSepahan wore their yellow home kit for the Final. They also used the away dressing room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233797-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Heart of Dallas Bowl\nThe 2013 Heart of Dallas Bowl was played on January 1, 2013, at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas, as one of the 2012\u201313 NCAA football bowl games. The game featured a matchup between the Purdue Boilermakers football team and the Oklahoma State Cowboys football team. ESPNU televised the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233798-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Heartland Championship\nThe 2013 Heartland Championship, the eighth edition of the Heartland Championship since the 2006 reconstruction, was a rugby union competition involving the twelve amateur rugby unions in New Zealand. The tournament involved a round-robin stage in which the twelve teams played eight games each and then the top four advanced to the Meads Cup semifinals, while fifth to eighth advanced to the Lochore Cup semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233798-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Heartland Championship\nIn both of these knockout stages the top seeds (first and fifth) played at home against the lowest seeds (fourth and eighth), the second highest seeds (second and sixth) played at home against the third highest seeds (third and seventh) and the final had the higher seed play at home against the lower seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233798-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Heartland Championship, Teams\nThe 2013 Heartland Championship was contested by the following teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233798-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Heartland Championship, Pre-season\nTwo Heartland Championship teams, Horowhenua-Kapiti and East Coast, challenged Waikato for the Ranfurly Shield in two matches that took place in at Whakarua Park, Ruatoria and Campbell Park, Morrinsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233798-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Heartland Championship, Standings\nIn the case of a two-team tie on points the ranking of teams is decided by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233798-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Heartland Championship, Standings\nIn the case of a three-team or more tie on points the ranking of teams is decided by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final\nThe 2013 Heineken Cup Final was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Heineken Cup, the 18th season of Europe's top club rugby union competition. The match was played on 18 May 2013 in the Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Ireland, kicking off at 5\u00a0pm (16:00 UTC). The all-French game was won by Toulon, defeating Clermont 16\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Background\nUnder rules of the competition organiser, European Rugby Cup, the winner of the Heineken Cup receives an automatic entry into the following season's Heineken Cup, as does the winner of the Amlin Challenge Cup. If the Heineken Cup winner has already qualified through its domestic or regional league, the berth will normally pass to another team from its country; both Clermont and Toulon have qualified as the top two teams in the Top 14 home-and-away season. However, France is capped at seven Heineken Cup places (as is England).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Background\nThe final 2013\u201314 Heineken Cup participant was determined by the result of the Challenge Cup Final held the previous day at the RDS Arena in Dublin. Leinster's victory over Stade Fran\u00e7ais meant that the Heineken Cup winner's berth would now pass to the seventh-place team in Top 14, Perpignan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Route to final\nOn 6 April, Clermont defeated Montpellier 36\u201314 at the Stade Marcel Michelin in the quarterfinals while Toulon defeated Leicester Tigers the following evening 21\u201315. On 27 April, in the semifinals, Clermont won 16\u201310 against Munster at Stade de la Mosson while Toulon beat Saracens 26\u201314 at Twickenham the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Match\nThe European Champions Village was staged in Merrion Square and was a point for all travelling supporters to congregate before the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe final was an all-French clash between Clermont and Toulon. At half-time the score was 3\u20133, with Toulon's Jonny Wilkinson and Clermont's Morgan Parra scoring a penalty each. Early in the second half, Clermont scored two tries (Napolioni Nalaga and Brock James) taking the score to 15\u20136, but despite this, Delon Armitage's converted try resulted in a 16\u201315 win for Toulon. Delon later apologized for mocking Brock James on the way to scoring the winning try, after being criticized for being unprofessional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Match, Details\nTouch judges: Wayne Barnes George ClancyTelevision match official: Marshall Kilgore", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Reaction\nWilkinson, who had turned down a place on the British and Irish Lions side to focus on his club rugby, said that winning the Heineken Cup was \"right up there with winning the World Cup\". The following day, Wilkinson was named European Player of the Year following his performance in the Heineken Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233799-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Cup Final, Reaction\nToulon's victory also doubled, to six, the number of players to have won titles in the premier club competitions of both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, respectively the Heineken Cup and Super Rugby. Bakkies Botha and Danie Rossouw had won the then-Super 14 title with the Bulls in 2007, 2009, and 2010, while Matt Giteau had won the title with the Brumbies in 2004 when the competition was known as Super 12. The previous three players to have claimed both titles were Rod Kafer, Doug Howlett, and Brad Thorn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233800-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Open\nThe 2013 Heineken Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 38th edition of the Heineken Open, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland, New Zealand, from January 7 to 12, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233800-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233800-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw through qualifying:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233800-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233801-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Open \u2013 Doubles\nOliver Marach and Alexander Peya were the defending champions but Peya decided not to participate. Marach played alongside Daniele Bracciali but they lost in the first round to Jerzy Janowicz and Albert Ramos. Colin Fleming and Bruno Soares won the title, defeating Johan Brunstr\u00f6m and Frederik Nielsen in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233802-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Heineken Open \u2013 Singles\nDavid Ferrer successfully defended his title by defeating Philipp Kohlschreiber in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233803-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Helic\u00f3pteros del Pac\u00edfico Mil Mi-8 crash\nOn 7 April 2013, a Mil Mi-8 helicopter operated by Helic\u00f3pteros del Pac\u00edfico (Helipac) broke up in flight and crashed en route from Iquitos to a Perenco site near the Curaray River, in the Loreto Region of Peru. All 13 people on board were killed. The occupants, all Peruvian nationals, were nine passengers and four crew. Among the passengers were Perenco workers and other contractors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233803-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Helic\u00f3pteros del Pac\u00edfico Mil Mi-8 crash, Investigation\nThe accident investigation by the Peruvian Comisi\u00f3n De Investigaci\u00f3n De Accidentes De Aviaci\u00f3n (Aviation Accidents Investigation Commission) established that while the aircraft was cruising at an altitude of 700 metres (2,300\u00a0ft), a luggage net that was improperly placed in a rear fuselage compartment became entangled with the tail rotor's transmission shaft and control cables, causing the cables to snap and resulting in a total loss of directional control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233803-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Helic\u00f3pteros del Pac\u00edfico Mil Mi-8 crash, Investigation\nThe crew then attempted an emergency landing by performing an autorotation, but likely over-control by the pilot while flaring over densely forested terrain resulted in the main rotor's blades striking the tail boom, severing it from the fuselage. The aircraft then crashed to the ground out of control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233804-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hertfordshire County Council election\nAn election to Hertfordshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013, as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 77 electoral divisions elected one county councilor each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. The electoral divisions were the same as those used at the previous election in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233804-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hertfordshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013, were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233804-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Hertfordshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233804-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hertfordshire County Council election, Summary\nThe Conservative Party retained overall control of the council with a reduced majority of 15 seats, having lost a net total of 9 seats. The Liberal Democrats remained the council's official opposition with 16 seats, while the Labour Party won a larger proportion of votes to win 15 seats, a net gain of 12. UKIP were unsuccessful in their challenge for seats, despite making breakthroughs in surrounding counties. The Green Party and British National Party both lost their solitary councilors, finishing second and fourth in those two divisions respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233804-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hertfordshire County Council election, Summary\nAll seats in the east of the county returned Conservative councilors, whereas in Stevenage and Watford no Conservative candidates succeeded in winning a seat. Labour's main area of success was Stevenage where its candidates (some ex-councilors) regained a dominant position at the expense of the Conservatives, but their lack of success in Hemel Hempstead will have been a disappointment in a former stronghold. Labour picked up two gains in mid-density divisions in Watford and Letchworth. Liberal Democrat support held up well in Tring, but saw a greater collapse in those broad areas without any local incumbency such as East Hertfordshire (10 divisions). However, their net loss of one councilor was smaller than in most other parts of England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233804-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hertfordshire County Council election, Candidates\nLabour and Conservative parties contested every electoral division and finished bottom of individual polls in a small minority of divisions, 11 and one respectively. UKIP had no candidate in six divisions and the Liberal Democrats fielded no candidate in three. After the four main parties, the Green Party fielded the next highest number of candidates at 37, just over half of the Council divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233804-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hertfordshire County Council election, Results by district\nThe above results can be broken down by district, although these are not current compositions of the district councils whose elections are held in other years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233805-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hessian state election\nThe 2013 Hessian state election was held on 22 September 2013 to elect the members of the Landtag of Hesse. The election was held on the same day as the 2013 federal election. The incumbent coalition government of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Free Democratic Party (FDP) led by Minister-President Volker Bouffier was defeated. The FDP suffered major losses, exceeding the 5% electoral threshold by under 1,000 votes. After the election, the CDU formed a coalition with The Greens, and Bouffier continued in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233805-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hessian state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag of Hesse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting\nOn July 26, 2013, a mass shooting occurred at the Todel Apartments, an American apartment complex in Hialeah, a city in Miami-Dade County, Florida. Seven people, including the shooter, were killed in the incident. The shooter was identified by police as 42-year-old Pedro Alberto Vargas, a resident of Hialeah, who, after setting his apartment ablaze, opened fire from his balcony and inside the apartment, then held two people hostage before being fatally shot by a SWAT team in the early hours of July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Events, Prior to the shooting\nAt 1:37\u00a0p.m., hours before the shooting started, Vargas called 9-1-1 and reported he was being followed, asking the dispatcher to run the license plate of a vehicle parked outside his apartment. He also claimed he was being threatened by people using witchcraft on him. His mother, 83-year-old Esperanza Patterson, then took the phone and told the dispatcher about her son's strange behavior. The dispatcher informed Patterson that police units have been sent to her residence, but Patterson advised against it, and later informed the dispatcher that Vargas had left, having gone to the office of a lawyer he hired for a recent legal matter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Events, Shooting\nAccording to officials, Vargas poured combustible liquid on $10,000 in cash and set it on fire in his apartment unit at around 6:30\u00a0p.m. The Todel Apartments' manager, 79-year-old Italo Pisciotii, and his 69-year-old wife Samira noticed the smoke and ran to the apartment. Vargas stepped into the hallway and opened fire with a Glock 17 9mm semiautomatic pistol, killing both. He proceeded to go to his balcony on the fourth floor of the building and fired 10 to 20 bullets into the street, fatally hitting 33-year-old Carlos Gavilanes as he got out of his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Events, Shooting\nVargas then kicked open the door of apartment 304, where he shot and killed the residents, 64-year-old Patricio Simono, his 51-year-old wife Merly Niebels, and their 17-year-old daughter Priscilla Perez; Police officers responded to the scene and exchanged gunfire with Vargas throughout the complex's stairwells for about five hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Events, Shooting\nVargas then entered apartment 525, where he took the residents, Zoeb and Farida Nek, hostage for about three hours. During the standoff, he continued firing shots at officers outside. After negotiations reportedly broke down, authorities decided to send in a six-officer SWAT team to rescue the hostages. The team entered the building and found the two hostages praying in the living room, while Vargas was pacing around out of their view. Officers outside distracted Vargas with a stun grenade, allowing the SWAT team to rescue the hostages and open fire on Vargas, who they gunned down after a brief shootout. Both hostages escaped unharmed. Two fully loaded magazines were found at the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Events, Shooting\nThe event was the deadliest mass shooting in Hialeah's history, as well as the deadliest in the entire Miami area in three decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Perpetrator\nPedro Alberto Vargas (October 3, 1970 \u2013 July 27, 2013), a Cuban native, was identified as the shooter. He was born in Havana to teachers, and his father died in 1991 or 1992. Vargas studied at the University of Pedagogical Sciences between 1990 and 1994, graduating with a bachelor's degree in technical education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Perpetrator\nHe and his mother Esperanza Patterson immigrated to the U.S. in the mid-1990s after winning U.S. visa lotteries, and Vargas was naturalized in 2004. According to records, he resided in apartment 408 with Patterson since 1999 and had committed no serious criminal offenses. He took classes at Miami Dade College, graduating in 2004 with an associate degree in graphic design.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Perpetrator\nNeighbors described Vargas as a quiet man who commonly got into arguments with his mother in their apartment. According to several LA Fitness customers, Vargas frequented the local gym and often lifted weights as a way to channel out pent-up anger. He also used steroids and expressed frustration at bad experiences with women. The Glock 9mm pistol used in the shooting was legally purchased by Vargas in October 2010 from Florida Gun Center, a local gun shop, and he had a concealed carry permit for it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Perpetrator, Professional problems\nHe worked at the media services department at Miami Dade College's North Campus starting in 2004, and although his initial performance evaluations judged him positively, they began noting a lack of social skills. Vargas was eventually forced to resign in 2008 after the school found he downloaded inappropriate files, including a computer hacking tutorial from The Anarchist Cookbook. Several months afterward, Miami Dade College received anonymous online threats that were traced to a public library in Hialeah, though Vargas was suspected of being the sender. Vargas later found employment at a Miami company as a graphic designer, but was fired after three months. Like Miami Dade College, the company later received anonymous threats and Vargas was suspected, but not confirmed as the sender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Perpetrator, Professional problems\nPrior to the shooting, Vargas had been working as a graphic design artist for Bullet Line, a promotional company, from May to October 2012. Recently, he had been seeing an attorney, Angel Castillo, Jr., regarding \"abusive emails and text messages\" that were being sent to Bullet Line, starting a week after Vargas's dismissal. He initially denied sending the messages but later admitted to being the sender after being informed by the lawyer that he was possibly committing perjury. On the day of the shooting, after making the 9-1-1 call, Vargas had gone to Castillo's office and demanded to see him, only to learn he was not there at the time. According to a relative of his mother, Vargas feared losing his money due to the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233806-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Hialeah shooting, Reaction\nFollowing the incident, Mayor Carlos Hern\u00e1ndez responded, \"I'm torn apart. We've never had something so complex as we had last night.... It's an extremely sad day in Hialeah.\" In the wake of the shooting, some citizens of Hialeah took to Twitter to express their concerns about safety in the city. On July 28, 2013, Sandy Hook Promise, a nonprofit organization that was formed in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, issued a statement about the shooting, saying, \"Our hearts are broken. Our spirit is not. Sending prayers and condolences to the victims and families of the Hialeah, Florida mass shooting.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233807-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 14 and March 13, 2013 at campus locations and at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The Massachusetts\u2013Lowell River Hawks won their first Hockey East Tournament and earned the Hockey East's automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233807-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured three rounds of play. The teams that finish below eighth in the conference are 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 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233807-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Regular season 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, 70], "content_span": [71, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233808-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League\n2013 Hockey India League, known as Hero Hockey India League and abbreviated as HIL 2013 was the first season of the field hockey tournament Hockey India League. Tournament was scheduled to start from January 5 to February 3 but was postponed to January 14 to February 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233808-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League, Rules and regulations\nFive teams took part in the tournament and each team played three matches against each team, one at their home venue and one at the venue of the opposition team. The third match was played against the other four teams two at home and two away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233808-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League, Rules and regulations\nThe points in the league phase of the tournament were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233808-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League, Rules and regulations\nIf at the end of the League two or more teams had the same number of points for any place, these teams would be ranked according to the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233808-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League, Venues\nFive venues have been selected for Hockey India League which will serve as home grounds for each franchise:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233808-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League, Venues\nThe semi-final, third and fourth place playoff and the final of 2013 HIL were played on 9 and 10 February at Astroturf Hockey Stadium in Ranchi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233808-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League, Players\nThe players' auction for first season of HIL took place on December 16 in New Delhi. A total of 246 players were available for the auction out of which 120 players were bought by the franchises which included 50 foreign and 70 local players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction\n2013 Hockey India League Players' Auction was the auction of players for the first season of the franchise-based field hockey tournament, Hockey India League. Auction was conducted by International Auctioneer Bob Hayton and took place on December 16 at The Lalit Hotel in New Delhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction\nA total of 246 players were available for the auction out of which 93 were foreign player and 153 local. Each franchise had a purse of US$ 650,000 to spend in the auction on 24 players (14 Indian and 10 overseas) for a term of 3 years. Minimum base price for an Indian player was US$ 2,800 and for overseas player was US$ 5,000 under which franchise owners could not bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction, Marquee Players\nThe franchise owners made silent bids for each of the five marquee players before the actual auction begun. Hockey India then revealed which marquee player will lead which franchise based on the maximum bids by all the owners. Each team's marquee player got a contract worth at least 115 per cent of the highest successful bid for a player of that team in the auction if the silent bid is not worth more than this amount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction, Marquee Players\nSandeep Singh was bought by Mumbai Magicians at his base price ($27,800) but Mumbai bought Australian Joel Carroll for $56,000 which raises Sandeep's annual purse to $64,400 due to the 115% rule. Similarly, Jamie Dwyer will fetch $78,200 (115% of Jaap Stockmann with $68,000) and Moritz F\u00fcrste will earn $83,950 (115% of Ashley Jackson's $73,000). Dutchman Teun de Nooijer's annual purse is the highest of the league i.e. $87,400 (115% of V.R. Raghunath's winning bid of $76,000) whereas Sardar Singh's annual purse is the highest among Indian players ($78,000).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction, Auction\nEach round of main auction involved bidding for 10 defenders, 10 forwards and 10 midfielders. 25 goalkeepers were auctioned all together in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction, Auction, 2nd Round\nAfter the main auction, the teams who had not completed their quota of 24 players (14 Indians and 10 overseas) could bid for the unsold players in the main auction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction, Replacement signings\nFranchises can sign players after the HIL auction, as replacement of contracted players who are not available to play due to injuries and national commitments. Under HIL rules, the replacements have to be chosen from the pool of players who went unsold in the auction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233809-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hockey India League players' auction, Unsold players\nFollowing unsold players were added to the reserve pool (according to their base price):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233810-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Holiday Bowl\nThe 2013 Holiday Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 30, 2013, at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California. The 36th edition of the Holiday Bowl, it featured the Texas Tech Red Raiders of the Big 12 Conference and the Arizona State Sun Devils of the Pac-12 Conference. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The game started at 7:15\u00a0p.m. PST and was telecast on ESPN. It was sponsored by National University and was officially known as the National University Holiday Bowl. Texas Tech defeated Arizona State by a score of 37\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233810-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Holiday Bowl\nThis was only the second meeting of the teams. Although both the Red Raiders and Sun Devils were members of the Border Conference from 1932\u20131956, neither team faced the other until the 1999 season when both universities were members of their current athletic conferences. The Red Raiders lost to the Sun Devils 13\u201331, in both teams' season opener at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233810-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Holiday Bowl, Teams, Arizona State\nThe Arizona State Sun Devils won the South Division Championship of the Pac-12 Conference after they defeated the UCLA Bruins on November 23, 2013. However, they lost the Pac-12 Championship Game to the Stanford Cardinal 38\u201314. Earlier in the season, the Sun Devils lost to the Cardinal 28\u201342, and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish 34\u201337.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233810-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Holiday Bowl, Teams, Texas Tech\nThe Texas Tech Red Raiders won their first seven games this season, but lost their last five games, including the last game to Texas Longhorns, 16\u201341. Texas Tech, along with Arkansas, Auburn, Baylor, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, and Stanford, are the only teams to face four ranked opponents in AP Poll in the teams' final six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233811-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Holland Hills Classic\nThe 2013 Boels Rental Hills Classic is the 10th running of the Holland Hills Classic, a women's cycling event in Limburg the Netherlands. The race is a 1.2 UCI category race and will be held over a distance of 120 kilometres (74.6 miles) with the start and finish in Sittard on 24 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233812-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Holland Ladies Tour\nThe 2013 Boels Ladies Tour also known as the 2013 Holland Ladies Tour is the 16th edition of the Holland Ladies Tour, a women's cycle stage race in the Netherlands. The tour will be held from 3 September to 8 September, 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 2.1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233812-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Holland Ladies Tour\nThe second stage of the tour is a team time trial and is the last team time trial of the 2013 season before the World Championships team time trial in Italy on 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233813-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hollywood Casino 400\nThe 2013 Hollywood Casino 400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race that was held on October 6, 2013, at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas. Contested over 267 laps on the 1.5\u2013mile (2.4\u00a0km) oval, it was the 30th race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship, and the 4th race in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. Kevin Harvick of Richard Childress Racing won the race, his third win of the season, while Kurt Busch finished second and Jeff Gordon finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233813-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hollywood Casino 400\nThe 15 cautions flown during the race were a track record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233814-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Holy Cross Crusaders football team\nThe 2013 Holy Cross Crusaders football team represented the College of the Holy Cross in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by tenth-year head coach Tom Gilmore and played their home games at Fitton Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 3\u20139, 1\u20134 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233815-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Homa Bay local elections\nLocal elections were held in Homa Bay County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233815-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Homa Bay local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233816-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Home United FC season\nThe 2013 Home United FC season involves Home United competing in the 2013 S.League. They are also competing in the 2013 Singapore Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg\nThe 2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg was the first race of the 2013 IndyCar Series season, with the race taking place on March 24 in St. Petersburg, Florida, on the city's temporary street course. The race was won by James Hinchcliffe, his first ever victory in the IndyCar Series, coming at his 33rd attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Report, Background\nRyan Hunter-Reay entered this race as the defending series champion, having clinched the title in dramatic fashion in the last race of the previous year, after title rival Will Power spun out early in the race while battling for track position with each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Report, Background\nThe relative lack of rookies for the 2013 season meant that Tristan Vautier and A. J. Allmendinger were the only newcomers onto the grid from last season for this race, with Allmendinger not officially being considered a true rookie by the IndyCar officials due to his previous drives in Champ Car, leaving Vautier the only full-time driver eligible for the Sunoco Rookie of the Year Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Qualifying\nWill Power once again proved his one-lap dominance on this circuit, taking his 4th consecutive St. Petersburg pole, going nearly 2 tenths of a second faster than his record pole attempt last year, and going fastest in each of the three Qualifying Rounds. Second to him was Japanese driver Takuma Sato, while Simona de Silvestro and James Hinchcliffe took the Second Row, and last year's race winner H\u00e9lio Castroneves and impressive rookie Tristan Vautier just behind them. Five different teams had drivers in the Firestone Fast Six, Team Penske being the only team with more than one representative, with both Power and Castroneves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Qualifying\nFurther back, defending champ Ryan Hunter-Reay qualified 8th, missing out on qualifying for the Fast Six by less than a tenth of a second, while Chip Ganassi's Scott Dixon failed to progress from the first part of qualifying after his fast lap was disrupted by a piece of track signage left on the circuit from a previous incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nWill Power stormed away from the field at the green flag, pulling out a lead over Takuma Sato of a few car lengths before he even reached the first corner, a clean getaway was enjoyed by all drivers on the grid on what is often a tricky and incident filled first corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nPower went on to control the first part of the race, pulling out over a 12-second advantage when the yellows came out on Lap 20 after Dario Franchitti slid into the wall just out of the pits on cold tyres, putting him out the race and capping a thoroughly frustrating weekend for the 4-time IndyCar champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nThis incident proved to be costly for Power, as upon the restart, H\u00e9lio Castroneves overtook him for the lead at the first corner. Meanwhile, a bunch-up in the midfield caused Ana Beatriz to turn Charlie Kimball's machine around near the back of the field, blocking the track for E. J. Viso, James Jakes and Sebastian Bourdais, Beatriz coming to a stop at the next corner as she'd stalled her car. J. R. Hildebrand also made contact with the wall at Turn 10, having been punted by Sebasti\u00e1n Saavedra, while Simon Pagenaud pulled into the pits to retire with a mechanical issue. Power lost another place to James Hinchcliffe upon the restart after this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nRyan Hunter-Reay's race came to stuttering end in the pit lane with throttle issues, while Beatriz and Josef Newgarden also suffered similar mechanical woes which forced them out the race, before Saavedra crashed out at Turn 10, bringing out the yellow's once again. It was behind the safety car that a bizarre crash happened, as Power, who was slowing down and speeding up his car to warm his tyres, was clattered into the back of by Hildebrand, who seemingly wasn't looking at the track when Power suddenly slowed until it was too late.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nHildebrand's car rode over the top of Power's, coming to a halt in the wall, the suspension broken beyond repair and putting him out of the grand prix. Power's car was less severely damaged, but it also ruined his race, he was running 3rd at the time, and ended up finishing 16th after having to come into the pits to sort out a puncture caused by Hildebrand's car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nHinchcliffe overtook Castroneves at the restart on Lap 85, after Castroneves made a mistake out of the first corner, which allowed the Canadian to settle into a lead that he never relinquished afterward. Following behind the two leaders was Simona de Silvestro, who had been putting in a very strong performance all weekend, and Scott Dixon, who had driven all way up from 20th to 4th at the restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nCastroneves pressured Hinchcliffe for the entirety of the 25 laps after the restart, but Hinch held on to take the top spot of the podium, Castroneves followed him home 2nd, while de Silvestro had 3rd cruelly snatched from her when she ran wide at the last corner of the penultimate lap, allowing Marco Andretti through to come home 3rd, leading home a tight pack, with just over 6 seconds separating him and Bourdais in 11th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Race\nHinchcliffe dedicated his victory to the memory of Dan Wheldon, who had signed a deal to drive the Go Daddy car he was in on the morning of his death in the crash at Las Vegas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 45], "content_span": [46, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233817-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Classification, Race results\nPoints include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233818-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio\nThe 2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, the 35th running of the event, was an IndyCar Series race held at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on August 4, 2013. It was the 14th race in the 2013 IndyCar Series season. The pole position was held by Ryan Hunter-Reay of Andretti Autosport, while Chip Ganassi Racing's Charlie Kimball won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233818-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Report, Background\nThe race was the seventh running since it became a part of the IndyCar schedule, and was dominated by Chip Ganassi Racing, with Scott Dixon winning four times and teammate Dario Franchitti winning once in 2010. The lone non-Ganassi win was by Team Penske's Ryan Briscoe in 2008. IndyCar extended the race by five laps to 90 laps to prevent the race from not having much competition and being determined by the driver who can manage their fuel mileage the best.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233818-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Report, Background\nThe past three races at Pocono and Toronto had been dominated by Dixon, with the Toronto sweep making him the winningest active driver in IndyCar with 32 wins, tied with Franchitti, Paul Tracy and S\u00e9bastien Bourdais. The three consecutive wins placed Dixon in contention for the championship, 29 points behind leader H\u00e9lio Castroneves. Chip Ganassi Racing's three wins in 2013 are second to Andretti Autosport's five victories, with James Hinchcliffe winning three and Ryan Hunter-Reay winning two. Takuma Sato (A. J. Foyt Enterprises), Tony Kanaan (KV Racing Technology), Mike Conway (Dale Coyne Racing), Simon Pagenaud (Sam Schmidt Motorsports) and Helio Castroneves (Team Penske) won the other five races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233818-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Report, Qualifying\nRyan Hunter-Reay of Andretti Autosport won the pole with a lap speed of 1:05.3519, barely missing the record set by Dario Franchitti and Gil de Ferran in 1999 and 2000, respectively, falling .0049 seconds short. Hunter-Reay stated that the reason he fell short of the record was because he was not driving through turn 13 cleanly. Will Power was .1840 behind Hunter-Reay, and Scott Dixon started third. Marco Andretti (1:05.8566), Charlie Kimball (1:06.4638), Dario Franchitti (1:07.1793), Justin Wilson (1:05.9405), Simon Pagenaud (1:05.9412), Simona de Silvestro (1:05.9621) and James Jakes (1:06.1778) rounded out the top ten starting grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233818-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Race\nDuring the race, much of the race leaders conserved fuel, attempting to finish the race with only two pit stops. Charlie Kimball, who was running a backup car due to wrecking his primary car in practice, had three stops, and led a race-high 46 laps; Kimball had led only 15 laps in his IndyCar career prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233818-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Race\nKimball competed with Simon Pagenaud for much of the race, and while attempting to pass Pagenaud, who was exiting pit road, Kimball's right tires slid into the grass, but eventually made the pass after three corners with 18 laps to go while heading into turn 5. Kimball held off Pagenaud for his first career IndyCar Series win by a margin of 5.5 seconds; it was his first win in any racing series since 2006, when he won a Formula 3 Euro Series race. Kimball became the first driver with diabetes to win an IndyCar race. Dario Franchitti, Will Power and Ryan Hunter-Reay closed out the top five, while H\u00e9lio Castroneves, Scott Dixon, Justin Wilson, Marco Andretti and James Hinchcliffe rounded out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233818-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Race\nFor the second year in a row, the race ran in its entirety without a caution period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233819-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama\nThe 2013 Indy Grand Prix of Alabama was the second race of the 2013 IndyCar Series season. The race was run on April 7, 2013 in Birmingham, Alabama, United States at Barber Motorsports Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233819-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, Report, Background\nThe first race of the 2013 IndyCar Series season in St. Petersburg, saw James Hinchcliffe earn his first career victory, holding off H\u00e9lio Castroneves in the closing laps. Expected championship contenders Dario Franchitti, Ryan Hunter-Reay and Will Power all experienced trouble during the race, finishing outside the top 15. A. J. Allmendinger made his return to IndyCar for this race, driving for Penske Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233819-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, Report, Qualifying\nScott Dixon set a new track record in the first round of qualifying, but it was Ryan Hunter-Reay that would capture the pole in the Firestone Fast 6. While Takuma Sato had originally made the Fast Six, he was penalized for impeding Justin Wilson's qualifying lap, and Tristan Vautier was bumped into the Fast Six after initially missing the cut. Sato would lose his two fastest laps and fall to 12th starting position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233819-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, Classification, Race results\nPoints include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233820-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Toronto\nThe 2013 Honda Indy Toronto was a Canadian open wheel motor race held as the twelfth and thirteenth rounds of the 2013 IndyCar Series season. It was the 27th Indy Toronto For the first time in its 28-year history it was held over two races instead of one. The races were contested over 85 laps each at the 1.755-mile (2.824\u00a0km) street course at Exhibition Place in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233820-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Toronto\nBoth races were won by New Zealander Scott Dixon driving for the Chip Ganassi Racing team. By the end of the weekend Dixon had won three races consecutively, adding to his victory in the previous race, the Pocono IndyCar 400. Dixon had risen from fourth in the points to second, just 29 points behind H\u00e9lio Castroneves putting his charge towards his third Indycar championship back on track. Dragon Racing's S\u00e9bastien Bourdais had his best weekend of the season, finishing second on Saturday and third on Sunday behind Castroneves. Dixon's teammate Dario Franchitti followed immediate behind Bourdais in both races for a third and a fourth, scoring more points than Castroneves for the weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233820-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Toronto\nThe first race saw Dixon overhaul Bourdais late in the race to take the victory. The much hyped standing start was shifted from Race 1 to Race 2 after Josef Newgarden stalled on the grid for the Saturday race. Franchitti's third place was originally taken away when he was assigned a 25-second penalty for blocking Will Power's attempted overtake for third place on the final lap. Power hit the barriers and would be classified in 15th. The penalty was later rescinded. Early in the race Ryan Briscoe broke his wrist in an accident. Indly Lights driver Carlos Mu\u00f1oz was drafted in to replace him on Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233820-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Toronto\nDixon dominated the Sunday race, leading home Castroneves ahead of a battle between Bourdais, Franchitti, Power and Ryan Hunter-Reay that ended with a collision that eliminated Power, Hunter-Reay and Takuma Sato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233820-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Toronto\nThey were Dixon's first wins in Toronto and the fifth and sixth IndyCar victories in Toronto for Chip Ganassi Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233820-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Honda Indy Toronto, Classification, Round 13\nPoints include 1 point for pole position and 2 points for most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election\nGeneral elections were held in Honduras on November 24, 2013. Voters went to the polls to elect a new President, the 128 members of the National Congress, 298 Mayors and vice-mayors and their respective councilors and 20 representatives to the Central American Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election\nThe closely watched presidential election saw a field of eight candidates vying to succeed outgoing President Porfirio Lobo Sosa, who is not eligible to run for re-election. Salvador Nasralla, a sports journalist and television personality, and Xiomara Castro, the wife of the deposed president Mel Zelaya, both candidates from newly formed political parties (the Anti- Corruption Party and Libre, respectively) were leading in most of the early polls. However, as the election neared, the candidates of the two traditional parties \u2013 Juan Orlando Hern\u00e1ndez of the National Party and Mauricio Villeda of the Liberal Party \u2013 both surged in the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Background\nThis is the first election to be contested by the opposition since the controversial and polarising 2009 Honduran coup d'\u00e9tat. The social mobilization since then led to the founding of the main opposition party, Libre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Background, Two-party system\nHonduras has historically been dominated by a two-party system \u2013 the National Party and the Liberal Party. This election represents the first time in Honduran history in which other parties have a chance at winning the presidency or at least gaining a significant representation in the Congress, four of which find their genesis post-coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Background, Human rights concerns\nThe elections are set to take place amidst a deteriorating human rights situations. Amnesty International called attention to the killings of human rights defenders in the lead-up to the election, noting that Honduras has the highest homicide rate in the world yet only twenty percent of homicides are investigated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Background, Human rights concerns\nHonduran human rights organizations formed the Board of Analysis on the Human Rights Situation to monitor human rights violations surrounding the election, pointing to the level of political violence in the country: human rights group Rights Action examined the period between May 2012 and October 2013 and documented 36 killings and 24 armed attacks against pre-candidates, candidates, their families and campaign leaders across all parties, with Libre experiencing the majority of both armed attacks and killings. In light of this situation, 24 U.S. Senators signed a letter to the U.S. State Department expressing their concerns about the upcoming elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Campaign\nKey electoral issues have been citizen security, organized crime, unemployment, and corruption. One of the main components of Hern\u00e1ndez's campaign is his promise to put \"a soldier on every corner.\" For her part, Castro has emphasized the need for community policing and secure borders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Presidential candidates, Primaries\nPrimaries were held for the National Party, Liberal Party and Libre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Presidential candidates, Primaries, National\nJuan Orlando Hern\u00e1ndez, president of the National Congress of Honduras, won the presidential nomination of the National Party. The other candidates were Ricardo \u00c1lvarez (the Mayor of Tegucigalpa), Fernando Anduray (National Congress deputy), Victor Hugo Barnica (Third Vice President of Honduras), Eva Fernandez, Loreley Fernandez, and Miguel Pastor (Secretary of State for Public Works, Transport, and Housing). The Supreme Electoral Tribunal certified Hern\u00e1ndez's victory, but \u00c1lvarez immediately presented an appeal, accusing Hern\u00e1ndez of fraud and asking for a recount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Presidential candidates, Primaries, National\nThe appeal was rejected by the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court, four of whose five members were replaced by Hern\u00e1ndez a month earlier in a move widely criticized as an illegal \"technical coup\". \u00c1lvarez and Pastor refused to attend the party convention in protest, claiming that they were being persecuted by their own party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Presidential candidates, Primaries, Liberal\nMauricio Villeda, won the presidential nomination of the Liberal Party. Other candidates in the fray for the presidential nomination were Esteban Handal Perez and Yani Rosenthal (National Congress deputy and former Minister of Presidency).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Presidential candidates, Primaries, Libre\nXiomara Castro de Zelaya, former First Lady of Honduras, was the sole presidential candidate in the Libre primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Conduct\nHonduran elections have historically been marred by fraud, and polls leading up to the elections found that 59% of Hondurans believe the elections would be fraudulent. However, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) has stated that these would be the most clean and fair elections in Honduras's history, and both the traditionally dominant parties \u2013 the National and Liberal parties \u2013 agree. The newly formed Libre Party and Anti- Corruption Party fear that there would be fraud, a position backed by the Carter Center. Anti -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Conduct\nCorruption Party candidate Salvador Nasralla publicly denounced attempts at vote-buying by the National Party across the country. Nasralla highlighted National Party control of key government institutions like the Public Ministry and the Supreme Court. Dana Frank, writing in The Nation, echoed these concerns, noting National Party candidate Hern\u00e1ndez's participation in both the illegal naming of a new attorney general in August 2013 and the illegal destitution of four Supreme Court judges in December 2012, the latter of which ultimately resulted in Hern\u00e1ndez securing his party's nomination for the presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Conduct\nThe TSE has stated that over 700 international election observers, representing various governments and organizations, including the United Nations, the Organization of American States, the European Union, and the Carter Center, will be present to monitor the elections. In the days before the election, international observers in the department of Yoro and in the capital Tegucigalpa reported targeted harassment and intimidation on the part of immigration officials and unidentified armed men. The TSE confirmed these reports and ordered the Honduran immigration authorities to stop all of these types of operations concerning election observers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Aftermath\nJuan Orlando Hern\u00e1ndez was announced as the winner in a result the Supreme Electoral Tribunal's head, David Matamoros, called \"irreversible\", this followed initial claims by both leading candidates of having won. While opposition protests continued, Hern\u00e1ndez said the result was \"not negotiable with anybody\" and named a transition team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Aftermath\nHowever Castro and Nasralla disputed the results, and Venezuelan president Nicol\u00e1s Maduro accused the United States of \"meddling in the internal affairs of Hondurans.\" Castro called on her supporters to hold a protest on Saturday 30 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233821-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Honduran general election, Aftermath\nAccording to the North American Congress on Latin America, the elections were \"fraught with irregularities and violent intimidation, threatening to throw the embattled nation into further political disarray.\" However, observers from the Organization of American States and the United Nations declared that the elections met international standards and were both free and fair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233822-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Sevens\nThe 2013 Hong Kong Sevens was the 38th edition of the Hong Kong Sevens and the sixth tournament of the 2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series. It was hosted by its long-time home, Hong Kong Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233822-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Sevens\nFiji won the title by defeating Wales 26\u201319 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233822-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Sevens, Format\nThe teams were divided into pools of four teams, who played a round-robin within the pool. Points were awarded in each pool on the standard schedule for rugby sevens tournaments (though different from the standard in the 15-man game)\u20143 for a win, 2 for a draw, 1 for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233822-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Sevens, Format\nBuilding on the changes made for the 2012 Hong Kong Sevens, in which two separate 12-team competitions were contested, the International Rugby Board (IRB) expanded the event to a total of 28 teams, again divided into two competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233822-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Sevens, Format\nThe main draw consisted of 16 teams\u2014the same number that were involved in all regular series events. The contestants were the 15 core teams guaranteed of places in each series event, plus Hong Kong, which qualified as winner of the 2012 HSBC Asian Sevens Series. These teams competed in Pools A, B, C, and D. The winners and runners-up from each pool in the main draw qualified for the Cup quarterfinals. The losers of these quarterfinals competed in the Plate semifinals. The remaining 8 teams competed in the Bowl quarterfinals, with the losers of these matches competing in the Shield semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233822-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Sevens, Format\nThe second competition was the newly instituted World Series Pre-Qualifier. It featured 12 teams, specifically two qualifiers from each of IRB's six regional sevens competitions. These teams played in Pools E, F, and G. The top two teams from each pool, plus the top two third-place teams, advanced to the knockout stage. The four quarterfinal winners advanced, along with Hong Kong, to the World Series Core Team Qualifier at the 2013 London Sevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233822-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Sevens, World Series pre-qualifier, Ranking matches\nBy making it to the semifinals, Russia, Zimbabwe, Tonga, and Georgia have qualified for the Promotion tournament, along with Hong Kong and the bottom three core teams following the 2013 Scotland Sevens. The promotion tournament took place at the 2013 London Sevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 66], "content_span": [67, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233823-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong Super Series\nThe 2013 Hong Kong Open Superseries is a top level badminton competition which took place from November 19, 2013 to November 24, 2013 in Kowloon, Hong Kong. It was the twelfth BWF Superseries competition on the 2013 BWF Superseries schedule. The total purse for the event is $350,000. A qualification round was held for all five disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike\nThe 2013 Hong Kong dock strike was a 40-day labour strike at the Kwai Tsing Container Terminal. It was called by the Union of Hong Kong Dockers (UHKD), an affiliate of the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions (HKCTU) on 28 March 2013, against contracting companies to whom workforce management had been out-sourced by the Hongkong International Terminals Ltd. (HIT), subsidiary of Hutchison Port Holdings Trust (HPHT), which is in turn owned by Hutchison Whampoa Ltd (HWL), flagship company of Li Ka-shing, Hong Kong's richest man. The strike workers demanded better pay and working conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike\nThe strike ended on 6 May 2013 when the strikers accepted the offer of 9.8% pay rise. It was the longest running industrial action in Hong Kong in years. Public support and media attention on the strike were unprecedented in the city's history. Some observers marked this as the rejuvenation of political engagement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Demands\nEarlier before the strike, the dockers demanded a 12 percent pay hike, plus overtime pay at 1.5 times the basic wage in January 2013. The demand was not fulfilled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Demands\nOn 28 March, some 450 crane operators and stevedores went on strike inside the Kwai Tsing Container Terminal, for better pay and conditions. They demanded a $1.60 per hour raise. More workers joined the action, but they were forced outside the port after the local court granted HIT a temporary injunction on 1 April banning unionists and their supporters from entering any of the four Kwai Tsing container terminals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Demands\nDockers complained that they have had a minimal rise in income in the last 10 years. Mr Lee, a dock worker for more than 20 years, said there had been two very low adjustments. \"Basically, there's no fringe benefits, we only had paid leave in recent years. My monthly income isn't steady. I earn HK$15,000\u2013$16,000 (US$2,000) during the high season, and less than HK$10,000 (US$1,300) for the low season.\" The workers demanded a 20% pay rise to a daily wage of HK$1,600, equivalent to a monthly salary of HK$24,000 based on 15 working days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Demands\nChan Chiu-wai, an organiser of the Confederation of Trade Unions, said that dock workers earned $167 a day for 24 consecutive hours' work, less than they received in 1997. Chan said staff often work shifts of up to 72 consecutive hours during high-season. \"For this work, the salary is very low, the working conditions are very poor and the hours are very long, so we are often in the position of being understaffed and the workers have to work many hours overtime,\" Chan added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Demands\nAccording to the strike leader, Lee Cheuk-yan general secretary of the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions and also the Labour Party legislator and said the checker and lashing man was receiving only HK$1,310 per 24 hours. They had to station in the terminal for 24 hours and work; crane operators would often continuously work 12 hours in the crane; they would eat and answer calls of nature inside the booth. Workers said whilst HIT had granted increases to the contractors over the years, the latter had not passed on increases to the workers. \"We are overworked, not given enough rest time, and we don't have proper toilet breaks. We have to shit in newspapers in our cranes.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Demands\nHIT dismissed claims that workers were being paid less now than they were in 1997. \"It's also wrong that their pay is now lower than in 1997 or during SARS,\" HIT general manager Gerry Yim Lui-fai told the South China Morning Post. Several long-serving stevedores working for Lem Wing Transportation and Everbest dismissed the strikers' claims as exaggeration. A 7-year veteran crane driver said \"It's not that we can't go to the toilet or don't have time for a meal... In fact, we have short breaks of two to three minutes between vessels berthing at the terminals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Demands\nVery rarely can I get 15 to 30 minutes. We also take turns to have meals so that we have around 15 to 20 minutes for mealtimes.\" He said that he enjoyed a pay increase in 2011. Two Everbest employees said that, by working as a pair and managing their time during a 24-hour shift, they can alternate and work six or twelve hours. They said they took home HK$1,315 and HK$1,441, (between US$170 and $185) per shift, averaging HK$20,000 ($2,560) per month. They also said that some of their colleagues wanted to return to work, but were worried they would be chastised as spineless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nHong Kong International Terminals, subsidiary of Hutchison International, operates the port with a number of directly employed staff supplemented by employees hired via four subcontractors. Subcontractors \u2013 who are not genuinely independent companies \u2013 are intermediaries used to put distance between HIT and workforce, to hold down wages and provide operational flexibility. HIT refused to negotiate with the workers, saying that such matters were subcontractors' responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nThe CTU insisted that it would refuse to talk with individual contractors, and would talk only if all the contractors were present. The first meeting between the Union of Hong Kong Dockers and contractors were held under the mediation of the Labour Department on 10 April but broke off without any immediate progress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nThe representative of the Beijing-loyalist Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions (FTU) which did not join the strike and the rival union of the pro-democratic Confederation of Trade Unions said they would only look for a 12-percent rise, compared to the 23 percent increase demanded by the Confederation of Trade Unions as they claimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nA second round of talks between striking dock workers and the contractors, mediated by the Labour Department, ended without agreement on 11 April, but both sides said they would consider each other's proposals. Another negotiation failed to reach agreement on 12 April. The two unions present at the meeting were the Federation of Trade Unions, whose members are not on strike, and the Federation of Hong Kong and Kowloon Labour Unions, representing the Hong Kong Docks and Ports Industry Unions whose 300 workers are employed directly by the port operator, HIT, and who were staging a work-to-rule. The FTU says it will not accept a five percent pay-rise and a two percent increase in welfare benefits. The two unions insisted on 12 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nOn day 18 of the strike, Hongkong International Terminals issued a statement declaring optimism that operations were returning to normal, with \"more workers returning to their posts\". HIT said that the terminal was running at 86 to 90 percent handling capacity over the previous weekend. The union rejected the claim that some strikers had returned to work, saying their 450 striking colleagues had reduced terminal handling capacity to 15 containers each hour instead of 25 before the strike began. However, The Standard noted some signs of a drift back to work over the previous five days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nOn 17 April, another round of talks between striking dock workers and the employers made little progress as the contractors rejected the 23-percent wage increase demanded by the CTU and stood firm of their seven-percent pay rise proposal. After the talks failed on 17 April, CTU members escalated their industrial action by setting up camp outside the Cheung Kong Center, where the Hutchison Whampoa Group is headquartered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nGlobal Stevedores, a contractor who employs fewer than 200 dock workers, announced on 19 April that it would be winding up in June at the expiry of its contract with HIT due to \"an inability ... to continue its operations\" \u2013 three-quarters of the company's workers had gone on strike and the union's 20-percent pay rise demand could not be met. However, the workers regard this closure as a move calculated to put pressure on them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nDuring the third week of the dispute, the union and HIT both engaged in war of words in the press. HIT took out full page advertisements in almost all local newspapers on 20 April, except the anti-government Apple Daily, not merely defending itself but making personal attacks on Lee Cheuk-yan claiming he is using the workers to further his own political ends. HIT's advertisement in the English-language press said union demands for a 20 percent raise would \"create an impact across other industries and cause irreparable damage to Hong Kong.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nCanning Fok, managing director of the Hutchsion Whampoa group, publicly alleged that Lee Cheuk-yan was not genuinely interested in helping the workers and harboured ulterior motives. He criticised Lee for \"resort[ing] to every means ... hoping that as the strike drags on, he can negotiate with Mr Li so as to boost his own publicity.\" Fok likened the style of the dispute to the Cultural Revolution, \"where people are vilified on banners and posters\". The SCMP estimated the series of adverts would have cost around HK$1 million. Workers took out advertising space in Ming Pao Daily with a headline suggesting that KS Li did not really understands their situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nOn 1 May 2013, Hutchison Port Holdings group managing director John Meredith published an article in several Chinese-language newspapers said the strike was jeopardising Hong Kong's entrepot status. \"The union and its leaders said they would protect the livelihood of workers, but it seems to me that they are more concerned about the political bargaining chip they have gained,\" he said. Meredith accused Lee Cheuk-yan for ignoring such facts, saying that Lee's \"Cultural Revolution-style\" banners targeted tycoon Li Ka-shing and even Hutchison businesses, stating making politicised and exaggerated gestures do not help. Lee slammed the company for resorting to delaying tactics and neglecting the problems of pay rises and working conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Negotiations and strike actions\nAfter 40 days of strike action, the union called an end to the dispute, having secured promises of a pay deal of 9.8 percent for all workers including non-strikers and improved working conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Strike consequences\nThe unions say the striking workers account for some 30%\u201340% of dock employees serving Hutchison's terminals in the city. HIT said the strike is costing it HK$5 million (US$644,000) in daily losses. According to the chairman of Hong Kong Association of Freight Forwarding and Logistics, vessels now need to queue up outside of Hong Kong port for two to four days before being able to berth; the wait was negligible just before the strike. The association estimated 120,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) have accumulated since the strike action began two weeks earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Strike consequences\nAlthough the docks are said to be operating at approximately 80 percent capacity, an insider at one major Japanese shipping line said that the company's cargo traffic via Hong Kong has been delayed by more than three days due to the strikes, prompting the line to consider rescheduling some of their ships to first call at other cities. Several shipping lines, such as Evergreen Marine, Mitsui OSK Lines, are reported to have diverted vessels to other ports, or skipping Hong Kong altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Strike consequences\nAn industry insider said that Hong Kong ports needed to stay competitive as it was already facing strong competition from other ports in the region such as Shenzhen; the trend, shifting from transshipping to directly importing through a mainland Chinese port, was not in Hong Kong's favour. Hongkong International said that instead of losing HK$5 million, the strike was costing it HK$2.4 million daily from 5 April because an \"increasing number\" of workers returned to work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Strike consequences\nShares in Hutchison Port Holdings Trust listed on the Singapore Exchange dropped to US$0.81 on 17 April, which is the lowest since the Kwai Tsing dock strike began after research showed that the strike could have cost the port operator HK$100 million in revenue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Public response\nThe workers have attracted many supporters among student unions and pro-democracy parties in Hong Kong. The Hong Kong Federation of Students have organised donation and supply collection points outside major train stations. Hong Kong's pro-democracy Labour Party is also supporting the strike, in which the party's chairman Lee Cheuk-yan is also the leader of the Confederation of Trade Unions and organiser of the strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Public response\nThe union was paying the striking workers (HK)$1,000 per day, and was encouraged to have gained the support of the International Trade Union Confederation. Lee Cheuk-yan expressed confidence that \"the strike will not be easily displaced.\". Sympathisers have been making donations to support the workers, and union's fund reached US$645,000 on 16 April 2013, sufficient for union members' lost wages only for about 10 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Public response\nOn 7 April, protesters marched from Victoria Park to Central carrying placards and modified images of Li Ka-shing's with devil's horns and the Chinese character for \"monster\" (\u5996) written across his forehead. Organisers said that 4,000 demonstrators joined the march; police estimated 2,800 at its peak. The Liberal Party's youth committee chairman criticised the CTU for politicising the dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Media coverage\nNext Magazine published on 3 April reported that the managing director of the HIT Gerry Yim Lui-fai, who earlier said that the workers should negotiate with the contractors but not HIT refused to involve in the dispute, was a board member of one of the contractors involved in the pay dispute. HIT denied this; Yim reiterated that no members of top management of Hutchison Whampoa, Hutchison Port Holdings Trust or HIT are board members of any of the contractors. Yim said that the name of Sakoma \u2013 the HIT subsidiary that previously dealt with out-sourcing contracts \u2013 still appears on the entry passcards, and acknowledged it was a mistake for that name to be there. Yim said the Hutchison Logistics, replacing Sakoma, is now responsible for management of out-sourcing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233824-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong dock strike, Media coverage\nThe programme Scoop on TVB, the dominant terrestrial television channel in Hong Kong, on 1 April drew criticism. The strikers objected to the programme, saying it was biased, misleading and did not give enough airtime to the strikers. The Communications Authority had received 1,800 complaints within four days and TVB said it had received 47 complaints from the audience, and the broadcaster had no particular stance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233825-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong\u2013Shanghai Inter Club Championship\nThe 2013 Hong Kong\u2013Shanghai Inter Club Championship was held on 5 November and 8 November 2012. The first leg will be played at Shanghai Stadium, Shanghai, China PR, with the second leg taken place at Mong Kok Stadium, Mong Kok, Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233825-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong\u2013Shanghai Inter Club Championship\nCurrent defending champions of Hong Kong First Division League South China was selected to represent Hong Kong while Chinese Super League club Shanghai Tellace represents Shanghai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233825-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hong Kong\u2013Shanghai Inter Club Championship\nShanghai Dongya won 2\u20131 at home but was defeated by 0\u20131 in Hong Kong. Match ended in 2\u20132 after 90 minutes and extra time. Liu Stephen Garlock's penalty miss in the seventh round crowned Shanghai Dongya the champions of 2013 Hong Kong\u2013Shanghai Inter Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233826-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Honkbal Hoofdklasse season\nThe 2013 Honkbal Hoofdklasse season began on Thursday, April 11. Mampaey The Hawks from Dordrecht competed in the Hoofdklasse for the first time. Sparta/Feyenoord was relegated at the end of the 2012 season but was declared bankrupt by a Rotterdam court on November 22, 2012 and did not compete in the Overgangsklasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup\nThe Hopman Cup XXV (also known as the Hyundai Hopman Cup for sponsorship reasons) corresponds to the 25th edition of the Hopman Cup tournament between nations in men's and women's tennis. The tournament commenced on 29 December 2012 at the Perth Arena in Perth, Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup\nEight teams competed for the title, with two round robin groups of four, from which the top team of each group progress to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup\nCzech Republic were the 2012 champions. In that tournament's final the Czech Republic team of Petra Kvitov\u00e1 and Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych defeated France's Marion Bartoli and Richard Gasquet 2\u20130. This was the Czech Republic's second Hopman Cup title. They decided not to defend their title; Berdych instead competed at the 2013 Aircel Chennai Open and Kvitov\u00e1 decided to participate at the 2013 Brisbane International.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup\nThe 2013 Hopman Cup was won by Spain - Spain's fourth title, defeating Serbia in the final 2\u20131. Serbia won the men's singles, followed by Spain's winning of the women's singles; then the deciding mixed doubles event was won by Spain in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup, Tournament\nThe 2013 Hyundai Hopman Cup is an invitational tennis tournament and is also known as the Official Mixed Teams Championships of the ITF. The 2013 cup has prize money of $1 million and will follow the traditional round robin format, the leading teams after three round robin matches qualify for the final. All matches are best of three sets with the exception of the doubles match where a match tie break, first to ten points, is played if the match is tied at one set all. All ties are played in this format; women's singles, men's singles and finally mixed doubles. In the event of a tie in the final group standings the following will be used to separate the nations;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup, Entrants, Seeds\nThe seeds for the 2013 Hopman Cup were decided by tournament director Steve Ayles, Paul Kilderry, Kim Hames and Terry Waldron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup, Group stage, Group A, Germany vs. Australia\nScores stand as 6\u20130, 6\u20130 win for Barty and 6\u20130, 6\u20130 win for Barty/Tomic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup, Group stage, Group A, Serbia vs. Germany\nScore stands as 6\u20130, 6\u20130 win for Ivanovic/Djokovic due to Haas' withdrawal before the mixed match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233827-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hopman Cup, Group stage, Group B, USA vs. Spain\nScores stand as 3\u20130 win for Spain; 6\u20130, 6\u20130 win for Verdasco; 6\u20130, 6\u20130 win for Medina Garrigues and 6\u20130, 6\u20130 win for Verdasco/Medina Garrigues due to John Isner withdrawal before start of USA vs. Spain match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233828-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Horizon League Baseball Tournament was held from May 22\u201325. All five of the league's teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at Youngstown State University's Eastwood Field. Valparaiso won their second tournament championship and earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233828-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe league's five teams were seeded one through five based on winning percentage, using conference games only. They then played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233828-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nKarch Kowalczyk was named Tournament Most Valuable Players. Kowalczyk was a pitcher for Valparaiso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233829-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament began on March 5, 2013, and ended with the championship game on Tuesday, March 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233829-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament\nFirst round games were played on the home court of the higher-seeded team. The second round and semifinals were hosted by the No. 1 seed Valparaiso, while the highest remaining seed hosted the championship game. All Horizon League schools participated in the tournament. Teams were seeded by their regular season record, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. The top two teams received a bye to the semifinals. With the departure of Butler to the Atlantic 10, there were only three first round games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233829-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nFirst round games at campus sites of lower-numbered seeds Second round and semifinals hosted by #1 Seed ValparaisoChampionship game hosted by highest remaining seed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233830-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Horizon League Women's Basketball Tournament took place at the end of the 2012\u201313 regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233830-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Horizon League Women's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll Horizon League schools played in the tournament. Teams were seeded by 2012\u201313 Horizon League regular season record, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. The top 7 teams received a bye to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233831-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny stampede\nThe 2013 Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny stampede occurred as crowds departed a New Year's Eve fireworks display in the early hours of 1 January 2013 near the F\u00e9lix Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny Stadium in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. It resulted in 61 deaths and over 200 injuries, mostly women and children. This was the second time in four years that a fatal stampede occurred at the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233831-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny stampede\nPresident Alassane Ouattara declared three days of mourning and promised an investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233831-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny stampede, Incident\nAt some time between 1 and 4\u00a0am according to sources, following the New Year's Eve celebration and fireworks display, crowds stampeded as they exited the stadium into the Boulevard de la R\u00e9publique near the Hotel Tirama. This was the second year that fireworks had been held by the government to commemorate the end of the 2010\u20132011 Ivorian crisis and the Second Ivorian Civil War, following the controversial 2010 presidential election. According to official reports, 61 individuals were killed, with upwards of 200 injured. According to Alain Lobognon, the Minister of Youth, 26\u00a0children were among the dead, most of whom were between the ages of 8 and 15, as well as 28 women and six men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233831-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny stampede, Investigation and reaction\nThe cause of the stampede is not yet clear, however a senior police spokesman has confirmed they are investigating. Lieutenant Colonel Issa Sako, the officer in charge of the military responding to the disaster, said that the deaths were caused when \"people were walked over and suffocated by the crowd\". According to an Ivorian government official, approximately \"50,000 people [were] on the streets ... going home\" after the New Year's celebrations. Witnesses have alternatively claimed that two large crowds moving in opposite directions collided, and that security forces attempting to break up the crowd leaving the stadium caused a panic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233831-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny stampede, Investigation and reaction\nVisiting the injured in hospital, President Alassane Ouattara said that the national tragedy would be investigated. Minister of the Interior Hamed Bakayoko stated in a national television broadcast on Radiodiffusion Television Ivoirienne that \"the government extends its condolences to the families of those deceased and assures them of its solidarity\" and that the Ivorian government would help by \"all means possible.\" Bakayoko went on to say that \"the precise circumstances of this tragic occurrence are being looked into by the security services\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233832-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Astros season\nThe 2013 Houston Astros season was the team's first year as a member of the American League, with them switching from the National League Central division to the American League West. This was also their 52nd season as an MLB franchise, their 49th as the Astros, and their 14th at Minute Maid Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233832-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Astros season\nThe Astros continued their exceptionally poor records from 2011 and 2012, winning only 51 games, the fewest by any Major League Baseball team since the 2004 Arizona Diamondbacks who finished with an identical record. Perhaps the lowest point of the season came when the Astros finished with a 15-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233832-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Houston Astros season\nOther lowlights included winning only 12 series (2 of which were sweeps, none outside of the AL West), getting swept 18 times, winning just 2 games against the rival Texas Rangers, getting shut out 18 times (twice in a row against the Rangers and the Rays), and yielding 10 runs or more in 17 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233832-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Astros season, Player stats, Pitching\nNote: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV=Saves; SVO = Saves Opportunity; IP = Innings pitched; H =Hits; R= Runs; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR= Home Run allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233832-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Astros season, Television coverage\nAstros games were televised on the Comcast SportsNet Houston network in 2013. The network broadcasts to about 40% of the households in the Houston area. Writer J. J. Cooper said that a game in September received a 0.0 rating, as \"the Nielsen company could not statistically prove that anyone in the Houston market actually watched the game.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233833-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Baptist Huskies football team\nThe 2013 Houston Baptist Huskies football team represented Houston Baptist University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Huskies, playing their first season of collegiate football, were led by first year head coach Vic Shealy. However, they were not considered a FCS team for scheduling purposes until 2014. They played three home games at Crusader Stadium and one home game at BBVA Compass Stadium. This was an exhibition season for the Huskies. The season did not count against the players academic eligibility, but they also were not eligible for the FCS playoffs. As a result, they played a mixed schedule of schools from the FCS, NAIA, and D-II. They finished the season 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233833-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Baptist Huskies football team\nThe Huskies joined the Southland Conference for the 2014 season and then became immediately eligible for the Southland Championship and for the FCS Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233833-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Baptist Huskies football team, Audio Streaming\nAll Houston Baptist games were streamed online by the Legacy Sports Network,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233834-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Cougars football team\nThe 2013 Houston Cougars football team represented the University of Houston in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the 68th year of season play for Houston. The season marked the first for the Cougars as a member of the American Athletic Conference. Due to construction of the new TDECU Stadium during the 2013 season, the team played its home games at other locations in Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233834-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Cougars football team\nThe season featured the Cougars\u2019 continued Bayou Bucket Classic rivalry with the Rice Owls. The game again became a non-conference battle due to the departure from Conference\u00a0USA for the Cougars following the 2012 season. The previous time the two teams met as non-conference foes was during the 2004 season when the Rice\u00a0Owls was a member of the Western\u00a0Athletic Conference. The 2013 Bayou Bucket Classic was played at Reliant Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233834-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Cougars football team\nThey finished the season 8\u20135, 5\u20133 in American Athletic play to finish in fourth place. They were invited to the BBVA Compass Bowl where they were defeated by Vanderbilt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233834-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Cougars football team, Previous season\nWith a 5\u20137 overall record, the 2012 season was a step backward for the program, as it compiled only its second losing season since 2005. The team suffered an early season humiliating loss against Texas\u00a0State in Houston's season opener, and offensive coordinator Mike\u00a0Nesbitt was forced to resign after only one game. First year head coach Tony\u00a0Levine promoted Travis\u00a0Bush to fill the position. It was the final season that the team would play its home games at the on-campus Robertson\u00a0Stadium, as it was closed and demolished soon after the season finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233834-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Cougars football team, Preseason, Recruits\nFor the 2013 recruiting class, Houston attained its highest overall class ranking since 2010, and its second-highest ranking ever by Rivals.com. However, Scout.com only gave Houston its seventh-best overall ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233835-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Dynamo season\nThe 2013 season is the Houston Dynamo's 8th competitive season in Major League Soccer, 8th year of existence as a football club, and their second consecutive season playing at BBVA Compass Stadium. They also competed in the CONCACAF Champions League, participating in the knockout phase of the 2012\u201313 campaign being eliminated by Santos Laguna in the quarterfinal 3-1 on Aggregate. They will be opening the 2013\u201314 group stage in late July or early August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233835-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Dynamo season\nDuring the 2013 season Houston suffered their first ever loss at BBVA Compass Stadium against Sporting Kansas City on May 12, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233835-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Dynamo season\nThe Dynamo are entering the season as the two-time defending MLS Eastern Conference post-season champions and runners-up to the MLS Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233835-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Dynamo season, Squads, First team squad\nSource (Stats are for Major League Soccer Regular Season Only):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233835-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Dynamo season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Eastern Conference\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233835-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Dynamo season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Supporters' Shield\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233835-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Dynamo season, Competitions, MLS Cup Playoffs\nKickoff time for Knockout round is in CDT while rest of games are in CST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season\nThe 2013 Houston Texans season was the franchise's 12th season in the National Football League. The Texans failed to improve upon their 12\u20134 record from 2012, suffering through a season-ending 14-game losing streak following a 2\u20130 start and missing the playoffs for the first time since 2010. Head coach Gary Kubiak was fired after eight seasons following their eleventh loss (Week 14 vs. the Jacksonville Jaguars). Defensive coordinator Wade Phillips was named the interim head coach for the final three games of the season. Their 14-game losing streak is the worst in team history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season\nComing off a franchise-best 12\u20134 record just the year before, the Texans tie a league record with the Houston Oilers (who, coincidentally, also went 12\u20134 in 1993 and 2\u201314 in 1994) for the biggest season-to-season decline in win total. On January 3, 2014, claiming that \"I'm ready to kick 2013 the hell out the door\", Texans owner Robert McNair announced that former Penn State head coach Bill O'Brien would be the Texans' third head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: at San Diego Chargers\nThe Texans won their fourth straight regular season opener and picked up their first franchise victory against the San Diego Chargers, improving to 1\u20134 against them on the late game of ESPN's Week 1 Monday Night Football doubleheader. San Diego scored 4 times compared to Houston's 1 to take a 28-7 3rd quarter lead before Houston scored 24 straight points to win 31-28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Tennessee Titans\nWith the OT win, the Texans improved to 2-0 for the 4th straight year. In a hard fought defensive battle, Tennessee built up a lead as big as 24-16 before Houston sent it to overtime behind Arian Foster's TD run and 2-point conversion with 1:53 to go in regulation. DeAndre Hopkins caught his first career touchdown, which was the game-winning touchdown to give the Texans the 30-24 win. If not for this overtime victory, the 2013 Texans would've became the first team since the 2001 Carolina Panthers to win their opener and lose the remainder of their games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Texans' 14-game losing streak started in Baltimore, where the Ravens pummeled Houston, 30-9. The Texans fell to 2-1. After Houston grabbed a 6-3 lead, the Ravens got a pick-six and a punt return for a touchdown to make it 17-6. Baltimore outscored Houston in the second half 13-3 en route to a 30-9 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nAfter falling behind 3-0 at the end of the first quarter, the Texans scored 20 unanswered to build up a 20-3 halftime lead. But with a 20-6 fourth quarter lead, Houston gave up two touchdowns, including a pick-six by Richard Sherman to tie the game at 20. The Seahawks won in overtime 23-20 on Steven Hauschka's 45-yard field goal with 3:23 to go in OT. With the surprising loss, the Texans fell to 2-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: at San Francisco 49ers\nMatt Schaub threw another pick-six in a blowout loss to the 49ers. The final was 34-3 and the Texans fell to 2-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. St. Louis Rams\nSt. Louis had 2 straight defensive touchdowns and they dominated Houston 38-13. Houston dropped to 2-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: at Kansas City Chiefs\nCase Keenum got the start in a game that ended with Houston losing 17-16 to Kansas City. They would drop to 2-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Indianapolis Colts\nHouston got off to a 21-3 lead, but Indy outscored them 24-3 to win 27-24. Houston dropped to 2-6. At halftime, head coach Gary Kubiak collapsed on the field on his way to the locker room with a Transient Ischemic Attack. Defensive coordinator Wade Phillips took over head coaching duties for the remainder of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: at Arizona Cardinals\nArizona dominated the second half in a 27-24 win. Houston dropped to 2-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. New England Patriots\nThe Texans had a lead as much as 17-7 at the half, but fell 34-31 to the Patriots to match their combined number of losses from the previous two seasons (10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: at Jacksonville Jaguars\nWith the Texans dropping to 2-11, Houston was swept by the Jaguars for the first time since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: at Tennessee Titans\nWith the loss to Tennessee, Houston lost 14 straight games to close out a disappointing season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233836-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston Texans season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: at Tennessee Titans\nThe Texans 14 game losing streak has matched the 1980 Saints and the 1976 Buccaneers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233837-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Houston mayoral election\nThe Houston mayoral election of 2013 took place on November 5, 2013. The incumbent Mayor Annise Parker was re-elected to a third, and final, two-year term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233838-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Howard Bison football team\nThe 2013 Howard Bison football team represented Howard University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by interim head coach Rayford Petty, who was conducting the season after Gary Harrell took a leave of absence for the 2013 season. Petty was previously head coach at Howard from 2002\u20132006, compiling a 25\u201330 record in those 5 seasons. Harrell plans to return for the 2014 season. The Bison played their home games at William H. Greene Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233838-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Howard Bison football team\nHoward entered the season having been picked to finish eighth in the MEAC. Howard entered the season with 3 players having been selected to the MEAC-first team and six players having been selected to the 2nd team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233838-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Howard Bison football team\nThey finished the season 6\u20136, 4\u20134 in MEAC play to finish in a three way tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar\nMatthew and Grace Huang are an American couple who were wrongfully convicted by the judicial system of Qatar in March 2014 of neglecting their daughter (whom they had adopted), thus leading to her death. However, on November 30, 2014, the Appellate Court of Qatar declared the Huangs innocent, and three days later lifted the travel ban allowing them to return home and be reunited with their sons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Background\nThe Huangs moved to Qatar with their three young children in 2012. Matthew Huang, a Stanford-trained engineer, was relocated there by his employer, MWH Global, to work for two years on a major infrastructure project related to the 2022 World Cup improvements. Matthew and Grace had adopted all three of their children from Africa. In all of the adoptions, the Huangs used a respected adoption agency and obtained all the proper visas from the State Department. The Huangs\u2019 middle child was Gloria, whom they adopted from an orphanage in Ghana when she was 4 years old in 2009 and who had chronic eating disorders according to the parents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Gloria Huang\nIn Ghana, Gloria was born into extreme poverty and grew up in impoverished conditions up through her time in an orphanage. \"The Huangs describe her eating issues as a sporadic behavioral problem that resulted in Gloria sometimes going days where she refused to eat. She would then follow such fasting with unhealthy binge eating and attempts to find food from bizarre sources, such as in the trash or from neighbors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Gloria Huang\nThe Huangs were aware of their daughter\u2019s eating issues, had educated themselves about the best way to handle those issues, and were attempting to manage the situation and help her grow out of it.\" Matthew and Grace Huang say that Gloria had eating disorders. The California Innocence Project has said that Gloria died of her eating disorder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Gloria Huang\nOn January 15, 2013, Gloria died unexpectedly and suddenly. The death certificate, issued by Qatar\u2019s supreme council of health, listed the causes of death as \"cachexia and dehydration\". Her parents were subsequently arrested on suspicion of murder and human trafficking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Matthew and Grace Huang\nPrior to moving Doha, Qatar, Matthew and Grace Huang lived in San Gabriel, California. The Huangs have three adopted African children. While the Huangs are detained, their other two children are being cared for by their grandmother.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Matthew and Grace Huang\nMatthew Huang graduated from the University of California, Irvine in 1998. He graduated from Stanford University with a master's degree in 1999. Matthew has worked for MWH Global since July 1999. Matthew is a licensed civil engineer in California. Matthew moved to Doha with his wife, Grace, and their three children (all of whom were adopted), in 2012 because MWH Global relocated him there to work for two years on a major infrastructure project related to the 2022 FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Matthew and Grace Huang\nIn October 2013, the Huangs two other children left Qatar to live with family back in the United States. Prior to this, their grandmother had flown to Qatar to care for them while Matthew and Grace were in custody. This came as a result of a private negotiations between the Huang's representatives and the Qatar Attorney General Ali bin Fetais al-Marri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Matthew and Grace Huang\nMatthew and Grace Huang were released from custody on November 6, 2013, but still faced charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Detainment\nMatthew and Grace Huang were detained by Qatar police on January 15, 2013. They were released from custody on November 6, 2013. If convicted, they could face the death sentence, although Qatar has maintained a moratorium on actual executions for more than a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Police investigation\nAccording to the \"California Innocence Project\" the report filed by the police in the investigation noted that the children were not \u201cgood-looking\u201d and did not share the \u201chereditary traits\u201d of their parents. The CIP reported that investigations also theorize that Matthew and Grace \u201cbought\u201d their children in order to harvest their organs, or perhaps to perform medical experiments on them, allegations arising from the testimony of unnamed sources who claimed that family kept to themselves and did not socialize", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Police investigation\nHowever, friends of the family in Qatar came forward to praise Matthew and Grace\u2019s parenting skills and the way they care for and love their children. One family was even at the Huang's home the night before Gloria's death, where they say that they witnessed Gloria walking around and sitting with the family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Forensic evidence\nWhile the death certificate indicated that the causes of death as \"cachexia and dehydration,\" an independent review performed by a US pediatric forensic pathologist questioned the determination. The formal definition of cachexia is the loss of body mass that cannot be reversed nutritionally. Cachexia can produce symptoms such as weight loss and muscle atrophy, which often looks similar to starvation, and can be caused by a range of conditions, including congestive heart failure and autoimmune diseases. These causes were not screened in the report by the medical examiner in Doha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Forensic evidence\nOne theory of Gloria's death was that she was starved. Eyewitness accounts claim that the last time Gloria was seen eating was four days prior to her death. However, Gloria was witnessed walking around her home the day before she died by a visiting family. Her brothers recounted to the police how they had played with her and that she had appeared normal in the days before she died. While a child can go a few days without eating without risk of starvation, a child would not have the physical strength to walk one day before death due to starvation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Forensic evidence\nAs noted in the report by the Qatari medical examiner, Dr. Anis Mahmoud Khalifa, Gloria also lacked other physical hallmarks of a child who was starved to death or abused.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Forensic evidence\nThere were also several other considerations regarding Gloria's medical history that were not addressed by the medical examiner. Gloria suffered from giardia when she was adopted, an infection which is difficult to completely eliminate. She also had recent blood tests showing severely low levels of a certain type of leukocytes that may have been a sign of an underlying bone marrow condition. In addition, Gloria had a vitamin D deficiency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Forensic evidence\nThe medical examiner's report also made no mention of testing the vitreous humour, the clear gel inside the eyes, which is a standard way to diagnose dehydration. Gloria's bodily fluids were tested only for drugs, poison and semen, and all tests were negative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Forensic evidence\nDue to the non-conclusive results of the autopsy, the cause of death for Gloria was never established by the prosecution. Despite lacking this essential evidence for pursuing murder charges, the prosecutor insisted that the parents intentionally harmed their daughter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nIn the court hearing of June 18, 2013, several witnesses testified for the prosecution. A police detective from the criminal investigation department said that according to information gathered from \u201cintelligence sources we knew that the defendant once has taken away a candy off the girl\u2019s hand, and grounded her for eating it.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nPertaining to the issue of adoption, detective Ahmad Issac Hamoudah Abu Zoro told the court, \u201cAs you are aware, the deceased child has black complexion, very skinny while her parents are white. Parents who wish to adopt children should be selective so that their kids are supposed to be beautiful.\u201d Adoption outside of biological families does not occur in Qatar or in other Gulf Arab societies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nThe California Innocence Project claims that Qatari police records stated that it was odd that the Asian Huangs had adopted black children who were not \u201cgood looking\u201d and who didn\u2019t share their \u201chereditary traits.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nIn addition, Dr. Anis Mahmoud Khalifa, the medical examiner who conducted Gloria's autopsy, openly told the court, \u201cI never mentioned in my report or statements the word \u201cstarvation\u201d but rather emaciation,\u201d contradicting the prosecution's basis for charging her parents with starving Gloria to death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nThe request to drop the charges against the American couple were rejected and bail was declined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nOn Tuesday, October 1, 2013, Judge Abdullah Al-Emady ordered the Huangs to remain imprisoned until at least their next hearing, which is scheduled for November 6, 2013. Officials raised questions about the Huangs paying adoption fees to an adoption agency. After Tuesday's hearing, Matthew proclaimed his innocence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nOn March 27, 2014, Matthew and Grace were each sentenced to three years in prison and fined 15,000 Qatari Riyals. No verdict was read by the judge. The couple was not detained, pending the appeals process, but remained restricted from leaving the country. The travel ban went against the precedent set in the Villagio Mall fire, where 5 Qataris were sentenced to 6 years in prison after being convicted of murder by negligence, but were allowed to travel without restriction during appeals. The U.S. State Department issued a statement following the judicial announcement, noting that they were \"surprised and disappointed\" by the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Trial\nSeveral weeks later, the defendants were notified that they had been found guilty of child endangerment, a different crime from that which they had been originally charged and tried.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nFollowing two procedural hearings in which the appeals of the defense and prosecution were both heard and accepted, the charges were merged into a single appeals trial on June 16, 2014. In that hearing, the defense argued for the closure of the appeals for judgment and presenting closing arguments and written arguments. The prosecution requested for the forensic pathologist that did the original autopsy to testify again before the appellate court. The judges deliberated and accepted the prosecutor's motion, and set the next trial date for October 20, 2014, spanning over 4 months of waiting for Matthew and Grace, while unable to travel home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nDuring this time, the U.S. State Department issued its first public statement of support for the Huangs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\n\"On July 30, 2014, Under Secretary for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman and Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs Anne Patterson met with family and representatives of U.S. citizens Matthew and Grace Huang concerning their ongoing legal proceedings in Qatar following the tragic death of their daughter, Gloria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nUnder Secretary Sherman conveyed concern for the Huang family\u2019s well-being, adding that assisting U.S. citizens in need overseas was among the Department\u2019s highest priorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nSenior U.S. Government officials have raised the Huangs\u2019 case with the Government of Qatar on multiple occasions, and the State Department will continue to engage Qatari officials at the highest levels. We seek the Qatari Government\u2019s assistance in providing a fair and expeditious conclusion to the proceedings. We also urge the Qatari Government to lift the current travel ban and allow Mr. and Mrs. Huang to return home to the United States to be reunited with their two sons and the rest of their family.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nThe State Department then issued a follow-up statement on October 6, 2014:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\n\"The U.S. Government continues to closely follow the legal proceedings in Qatar of American citizens Matthew and Grace Huang, whose appeals hearing is set for October 20. Mr. and Mrs. Huang have been detained in Qatar since the tragic death of their daughter in January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nThe U.S. Government strongly urges that the Qatari Government immediately lift the travel ban and allow Mr. and Mrs. Huang to return to the United States on a humanitarian basis to be reunited with their children and family, pending the completion of legal proceedings. We continue to call on the Qatari Government to bring the case to an expeditious and just conclusion.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nOn October 20, 2014, the first appeals hearings for the Huang case began. In court, the prosecutor reexamined the forensic pathologist, who read his testimony from a document on his podium. The witness contradicted his previous testimony by stating that there was no food or water in Gloria's intestines, and that it was not his job to determine whether she had died of starvation. As the Huang's attorney began his cross-examination of the witness, he was stopped by the judge, and not allowed to complete his duty to his clients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Court of Appeals\nDuring the prosecutor's final arguments in which he argued that the children had been purchased and that they had murdered their daughter, Matthew shouted out \"You lie! You lie!\" at the prosecutor, which shocked the courtroom. The judges then closed the argument portion of the appeals trial and set the verdict hearing for November 30, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Employer pressure to return to work\nThe new element is an increasingly bitter legal dispute with Matthew Huang\u2019s American employer, MWH Global, which requested \u2014 now that he was out of prison \u2014 that Matthew return to work or forfeit further pay and benefits. In what the employer is calling a personnel issue and Matthew Huang is calling an unrealistic demand that amounts to forced dismissal, he resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Representation\nDue to the overwhelming medical evidence of Matthew and Grace Huang's innocence, they have been pro bono clients of the (part of the Innocence Project based at the California Western School of Law in San Diego) since June 2013. The Huangs are also represented by Lewis and Roca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Representation\nThe Huang case is being managed by the Los Angeles-based David House Agency, an international crisis resource agency that has handled other notable cases such as the case of American Hikers in Iran, Amanda Knox, and Jason Puracal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233839-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Huang Case in Qatar, Case, Petition to Qatar\nAn official petition written by Grace's sister has been posted to Change.org. The petition is addressed to the U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, the U.S. Ambassador to Qatar Susan L. Ziadeh, and Ambassador of the State of QatarMohammed Jaham Al Kuwari. The request is for these individuals to compel the Qatar government to end the imprisonment they consider wrongful of Matthew and Grace, and allow them to be reunited with their sons in the U.S.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident\nIn early March 2013 over 16,000 dead pigs were found in the Shanghai Songjiang section of the Huangpu River, which supplies the city of Shanghai, China with some of its drinking water. The pigs were dumped by farmers in neighbouring Jiaxing, Zhejiang province, a major pig farming area that is upstream of Shanghai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident\nThe BBC reported that some pig corpses were infected by porcine circovirus, in line with comments from Lu Hongzhou, Secretary of the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center's Party committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, Overview, Before March 11\nIn early March news stories began to appear online in China regarding the incident. On March 9 it was reported that the pig carcasses had not influenced the water supply for human use. Official sources held that the quality of Shanghai's drinking water remained unchanged. On March 11 reports emerged that the pigs were infected with disease, but none communicable to humans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, Overview, Before March 11\nSome environmentalists claimed that the corpses of pigs were a common sight in the Huangpu River. They said that this had been going on for ten years and that the peak periods were when spring changed to summer and when summer changed to fall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, Overview, March 12 to 14\nAs the story developed it became known that the carcasses came from upriver in Jiaxing, Zhejiang Province. Officials claimed that the pigs had frozen to death. Because of the enormous number of dead pigs, the carcasses were dumped into the river rather than being disposed of properly. Some livestock farmers were put under investigation. In other accounts, the farmers had thrown the bodies into the Huangpu River because burying the bodies was too expensive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, Overview, March 12 to 14\nAs this story became known to the public the head of the Ministry of Civil Affairs stated that the incident was due to high costs of cremation. A few days after this he said that there was no need to burn the bodies as long as they were disposed of in a responsible manner, such as burial. After several days of media reporting, only a few stray corpses remained in the river in Shanghai and the stench faded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, Overview, Bird flu\nDuring this time, there was an outbreak of H7N9 avian flu in the Yangtze river delta. Regarding a possible link between the two events, Jiang Qingwu, department chair of Fudan University's School of Public Health, said that H7N9 chiefly occurred in birds and had not historically been found in swine. On the same day, Lu Hongzhou, Secretary of the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center's Party committee, stated that there were indications that the pigs carried porcine circovirus. Porcine circovirus, he said, was spread among pigs but could not spread to humans. \"No matter the strain, avian flu has never had any connection to porcine circovirus.\" However, the pigs themselves could serve as hosts in which viruses could hybridize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, Official response, Ministry of Agriculture\nThe Ministry of Agriculture immediately sent investigative teams to Zhejiang and Shanghai on a mission to understand the facts of the matter, oversee its handling, and coordinate response work. Yu Kangzhen, National Chief Veterinarian, led the Ministry of Agriculture's supervisory team in Zhejiang to coordinate local science efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, Official response, Jiaxing, Zhejiang\nThe City of Jiaxing held a press release from 10:30 AM to 11:10 AM on March 15. At the conference Deputy Mayor Zhao Shumei described the situation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 75], "content_span": [76, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233840-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Huangpu River dead pigs incident, In film\nThe Chinese-American film director Cathy Yan was inspired to make her first film, Dead Pigs, by a story about the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233841-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Huddersfield Giants season\nThis article details the Huddersfield Giants rugby league football club's 2013 season. This was the 18th season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233841-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Huddersfield Giants season, Table\n* - Salford deducted 2 points on 14 June 2013 for fielding 14 players during home game against Castleford", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233841-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Huddersfield Giants season, Table\nSource: and . 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233842-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hull FC season\nThis article details the Hull F.C. rugby league football club's 2013 season. This was the 18th season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233843-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hull Kingston Rovers season\nThis article details the Hull Kingston Rovers rugby league football club's 2013 season. This is the 18th season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233843-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hull Kingston Rovers season, Table\n* - Salford deducted 2 points on 14 June 2013 for fielding 14 players during home game against Castleford", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233843-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hull Kingston Rovers season, Table\nSource: and . 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233844-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team\nThe 2013 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team represented Humboldt State University during the 2013 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-00233844-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team\nThe 2013 Lumberjacks were led by sixth-year head coach Rob Smith. They played home games at the Redwood Bowl in Arcata, California. Humboldt State finished the season winless, with a record of zero wins and eleven losses (0\u201311, 0\u201310 GNAC). The Lumberjacks were outscored by their opponents 170\u2013354 for the 2013 season, with none of the losses coming by less than 7 points. This was the first time Humboldt State had been winless since the 1984 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233844-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team, Team players in the NFL\nNo Humboldt State players were selected in the 2014 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233845-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hun Sen Cup\nHun Sen Cup, the main football knockout tournament in Cambodia. The 2013 Hun Sen Cup is the 7th season of the Hun Sen Cup, the premier knockout tournament for association football clubs in Cambodia involving Cambodian League and provincial teams organized by the Football Federation of Cambodia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233845-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hun Sen Cup\nPreah Khan Reach were the defending champions, having beaten Nagacorp FC 2\u20131 in the previous season's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233845-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hun Sen Cup, Group stage\nThe teams finishing in the top two positions in each of the four groups (highlighted in tables) in group stage progressed to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233846-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Hungarian Figure Skating Championships took place on 21\u201322 December 2012 in Budapest. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing on the senior, junior, and novice levels. The results were used to choose the Hungarian teams to the 2013 World Championships and the 2013 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Hungarian Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Magyar Nagyd\u00edj 2013) was a Formula One motor race which was held on 28 July 2013 at the Hungaroring in Mogyor\u00f3d, Hungary. The race was the tenth round of the 2013 season, and marked the 29th running of the Hungarian Grand Prix, and the 28th time it had been held as a round of the World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix\nThe race, contested over 70 laps, was won by Lewis Hamilton after starting from pole position. It was his first win since joining Mercedes for 2013. Lotus driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen finished second, and Sebastian Vettel finished third for Red Bull Racing. Despite being held in July, the race was the last of the season that was not won by Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nLike the 2012 Hungarian Grand Prix, tyre supplier Pirelli brought its white-banded medium compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the yellow-banded soft compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nEliminated in Q1 were Sauber's Gutierrez, Force India's di Resta, Caterham's Pic and Van der Garde and the Marussias of Bianchi and Chilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nEliminated in Q2 were Force India's Sutil, Sauber's H\u00fclkenberg, McLaren's Button, Toro Rosso's Vergne, and the Williams cars of Maldonado and Bottas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nMercedes' Lewis Hamilton took pole position with a time of 1:19.388 narrowly followed by Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel, and the Lotus of Romain Grosjean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMercedes' Lewis Hamilton led from pole position ahead of Vettel and Grosjean. Rosberg and Massa touched on lap 1 and caused damage to Massa's car. Rosberg twice ran off the road during the first lap and lost several places, but suffered no damage. Hamilton made his first pit stop on lap 10 and that handed the race lead to Vettel. Hamilton came out just behind McLaren's Jenson Button, but was able to get past him quickly and this changed the dynamic of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel would pit and get stuck behind Button for several laps. Webber was the only leading driver to start on the harder compound tyres, giving him the lead after the first round of pit stops. However the harder tyres were to prove less durable than expected under the hot conditions, and he was eventually forced to make three stops. By lap 15 the running order was Webber, Hamilton, Button, Vettel, and Grosjean. Vettel tried to get past Button and damaged his front wing during one attempt. Vettel and Grosjean would eventually get past Button.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nGrosjean touched Button going into the chicane at Turn 6 and 7. Grosjean eventually passed Massa into Turn 4 but received a drive-through penalty for leaving the track during the overtake. Sutil suffered an hydraulic leak earlier on and his 100th Grand Prix was over. Shortly after Grosjean's penalty, Estaban Gutierrez who suffered an engine failure in FP3 and was eliminated from Q1 continued to have reliability issues and was wheeled back in the garage with transmission problems. Despite being a potential contender for points, his teammate H\u00fclkenberg picked up a drive-through penalty for speeding in the pit lane. Valtteri Bottas retired after a smoky engine failure when the race leaders were on lap 45, which was his first retirement in Formula One, it was later confirmed of a hydraulic failure the cause of the smoke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nHamilton retook the lead after the last round of stops ahead of R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Vettel, and Webber. Rosberg retired late in the race with a fiery engine failure which lifted Maldonado and Williams into the points for the first time this season. Di Resta, Sutil's teammate also suffered hydraulic failure shortly before the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMercedes' Lewis Hamilton went on to win the 2013 Hungarian Grand Prix followed by Lotus' Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel. Hamilton had thus won the Hungarian Grand Prix four times, in 2013, 2012, 2009, and 2007, and became tied with Michael Schumacher for the most wins in the Hungarian Grand Prix. He also became the first British driver to win in a Mercedes since Stirling Moss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Post race\nRomain Grosjean received a 20-second post-race penalty for hitting Jenson Button's McLaren while attempting to overtake him at the chicane during the race, but the penalty had no effect on the final standings as Button was more than 20 seconds behind him at the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233847-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Post race\nFerrari was fined \u20ac15,000 when FIA's technical officials notified the race stewards after the race that Fernando Alonso had activated his DRS on three occasions during the race when not within one second of another car, as mandated by the regulations. The team was reported to not have switched the DRS enabling system from the pre-race setting to the race setting. As soon as the team became aware of the problem, they informed the driver to only use DRS when told to do so by the team. Stewards concluded that although Alonso gained a small advantage (less than a second), he also suffered a disadvantage by being unable to use DRS on every legitimate occasion. The team was still ultimately responsible for ensuring that the system conformed to the regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233848-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hwaebul Cup\nThe 2013 Hwaebul Cup was the inaugural edition of the Hwaebul Cup (\ud670\ubd88, Torch) celebrating North Korea's Youth Day. The competition was held between 15 and 28 August 2013, with all matches played at the Kim Il-sung Stadium in P'y\u014fngyang. The competition was arranged in two phases, a group stage followed by a single-elimination play-off semi-finals, and a single-game final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233848-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hwaebul Cup, Group stage\nEleven teams took part in the group stage, drawn into two groups, with five teams in Group A and six in Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233848-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hwaebul Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final matches were both held on the same day, probably 26 August 2013. The result of the S\u014fnbong\u2013Hwaebul match is unknown; in the other match, April 25 defeated Amrokkang 3-1 on penalties after finishing level at 2-2 after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233848-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hwaebul Cup, Final\nThe final was held on 28 August 2013 at Kim Il-sung Stadium. The score was even at 2-2 after extra time, and S\u014fnbong won 6-5 on penalties. However, a few days after the match, S\u014fnbong was deemed to have fielded an ineligible player, and April 25 were awarded the victory. In addition to being stripped of the title, S\u014fnbong were suspended from all competitions for six months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts\nOn 21 February 2013, at around 19:00 IST, two blasts occurred in the city of Hyderabad, India. The bombs exploded in Dilsukhnagar, a crowded shopping area, within 100 metres (330\u00a0ft) of each other. The first explosion occurred outside a roadside eatery named A1 Mirchi, next to the Anand Tiffin Centre and opposite the Konark movie hall, followed by the second one two minutes later near the Route 107 bus stand close to the Venkatadri theatre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Bombings\nThe first bomb went off at Anand Tiffins, located opposite Konark Theatre at around 19:02 IST (UTC+05:30). The second bomb went off at 19:06 IST between Venkatadri Theatre and Dilsukhnagar Bus Stand. According to the Hyderabad Police, the bombs were placed on bicycles. Andhra Pradesh's Director General of Police noted that Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) had been used in the two blasts to cause maximum damage. The blasts killed 18 people, which included at least three college students and at least 119 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Investigation\nA team of forensic experts from the National Investigation Agency (NIA) and the National Security Guard (NSG) arrived in Hyderabad on a plane provided by the Border Security Force (BSF) for further investigation. Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde claimed that the Indian government had intelligence about possible blasts, but the information wasn't specific enough to pinpoint the location of the blast site. Shinde also said that authorities had received intelligence about possible attacks in the country but no specific information as to where or when they might occur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Investigation\nCNN-IBN reported that an Indian Mujahideen operative named Maqbool confessed to carrying out reconnaissance of Dilsukhnagar in 2012 during interrogation by Delhi Police. Initial reports also suggested the involvement of Indian Mujahideen in the blasts. On 22 February, two First Information Reports (FIR) were lodged probing the attack. One FIR was lodged at Cyberabads Saroor police station, while the second was lodged in Hyderabad. As the Hyderabad Police continued investigating in the serial blasts case, they detained six people for questioning. The NIA conducted raids at various places in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Maharashtra, looking for alleged terror modules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Investigation\nForensic investigation revealed that the two bombs used were packed with huge amounts of iron nails and bolts and ammonium nitrate, which were held together with a copper string. Closed-circuit television footage collected from the traffic signal near the blast site revealed movements of five men who allegedly had planted explosives at the blast sites. However, the faces of the suspects were not clearly seen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Investigation\nPolice sources later said that a Sai Baba temple in the area was the initial target of the criminal activity. However, a visit by Hyderabad police commissioner Anurag Sharma eluded them and forced them to change their target. The Andhra Pradesh government claimed that it had obtained vital clues regarding the crime and would crack the case soon. Chief Minister Kiran Kumar Reddy sent out 15 special teams of Andhra Pradesh police, consisting of 10\u201315 personnel each. People lodged in the Chanchalguda Central Jail were also questioned regarding the blasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Response\nMajor cities in India like Mumbai, New Delhi and Bangalore, along with states like Gujarat, Maharashtra and West Bengal were put on high alert after the blasts. The police of Andhra Pradesh were confronted with massive traffic jams when they tried to implement relief and rescue operations. Home secretary R. K. Singh stated that officials from the National Investigation Agency were shifted from Delhi to Hyderabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Reactions, Domestic\nPresident Pranab Mukherjee offered condolences to the bereaved families and condemned the blasts as \"acts of cowardice\". Prime Minister Manmohan Singh consoled the next of kin of those killed and seriously injured. The Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, Kiran Kumar Reddy, announced a compensation of \u20b9600,000 (US$8,400) to the next of kin of those killed in the blasts and promised to bear the medical expenses of the injured. Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde visited the blast site on the morning of 22 February and said that an investigation had been launched by a probe team appointed by the Andhra Pradesh government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Reactions, Domestic\nOn the next day, speaking in the Lok Sabha, Leader of the opposition and senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Sushma Swaraj said political parties must fight non-state terror unitedly while calling out the central and Andhra Pradesh governments for their failure to prevent the twin explosions. \"The nation needs to be united, the political parties need to get united.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233849-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Hyderabad blasts, Reactions, Domestic\nThe moment that happens, we will be capable of fighting terror,\" She controversially linked the twin blasts with a provocative speech made earlier by Akbaruddin Owaisi stating \"Do these blasts have a connection with the provocative speeches made by an honourable member of this house?\" which Asaduddin Owaisi his brother described \"unfortunate\" and \"irresponsible\". The spokesperson for Bharatiya Janta Party Ravi Shankar Prasad said, \"Several innocent lives have been lost in the Hyderabad blasts. The government should stop playing politics on the issue of terrorism. We want the government to take appropriate action. There should be better coordination between the Centre and the state governments. [ ..] This government should rise above vote-bank politics.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233850-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK season\nThe 2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK season was H\u00f8nefoss' second consecutive season in the Tippeligaen and their third season in the top flight of Norwegian football. H\u00f8nefoss finished bottom of the league, and therefore were relegated to the Adeccoligaen, whilst they reached the Third Round of the Cup losing to Alta of the 2. Divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233850-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK 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-00233850-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233850-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233850-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233850-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233850-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 H\u00f8nefoss BK 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233851-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 I-League 2nd Division\nThe 2013 I-League 2nd Division is the sixth season of the league under its current title. The season will begin on March 9, 2013. The original 21 clubs who would participate in the 2nd Division were officially announced on 25 January 2013, however since then 5 more clubs were accepted into the league. As a result of the tournament, the winner and the runner-up, Rangdajied United and Mohammedan respectively, were promoted to 2013\u201314 I-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233852-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 I-League 2nd Division Final Round\nThe 2013 I-League 2nd Division Final Round is the sixth Final Round of the I-League 2nd Division. The tournament began after the group stage was completed on 26 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233852-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 I-League 2nd Division Final Round, Format\nThe Final Round of the 2013 I-League 2nd Division is taking place between six teams from the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233853-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 I-League U20\nThe 2013 I-League U20 was the fifth season of the Indian I-League U20 competition. The season took place during the I-League break between February and March. The tournament began on 6 March in Jamshedpur at the facilities which are currently used by Tata Football Academy. The stadiums were officially announced on 29 January 2013 as the JRD Tata Sports Complex and the Gopal Maidan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233853-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 I-League U20\nThen on 6 February 2013 it was announced by I-League club Pune F.C. that the I-League U20 would be played between 15 clubs separated into 3 groups of five each with former I-League 2nd Division clubs SESA Football Academy and Tata Football Academy joining the U20 league while Pailan Arrows would not send an under-20 side to the tournament as they are already a developmental side in the I-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233853-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 I-League U20\nEach team played each other once in the group stage and then after 4 games the top 2 teams qualified for the Final Round in which the top team was crowned champion. The final round began on 16 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233853-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 I-League U20, Top scorers, Group stage\nPlayer's team did not have a game in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 43], "content_span": [44, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233854-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge\nThe 2013 IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge was the fourth edition of the annual, global series of hammer throw competitions organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations. The winners were Pawe\u0142 Fajdek (244.23 metres) and Anita W\u0142odarczyk (233.83 metres), both of Poland. Both the final scores were records for the challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233854-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge\nA total of fifteen meetings featured on the circuit, with nine women's and nine men's contests spread across those events. The point scoring format was cumulative \u2013 the final standings were decided by the sum of athletes' three best throws on the circuit. Only the best throw by an athlete from each meet was taken into consideration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233854-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge, Calendar\nThe 2013 edition marked a move away from the series' alignment with the IAAF World Challenge circuit. Instead, the series was expanded and featured nine World Challenge meetings, one IAAF Diamond League meeting (Prefontaine Classic), and four non-IAAF meetings in Europe. Performances at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics were also included in series for the first time. The Rieti Meeting leg spanned two days, with a qualification round and a final the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233854-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge, Calendar\nNew additions to the tour included the Ponce Grand Prix de Atletismo, IAAF World Challenge Beijing, Moscow Challenge, Janusz Kusoci\u0144ski Memorial, Istv\u00e1n Gyulai Memorial, Karlstad Grand Prix and the Athletics Bridge. The Colorful Daegu Pre-Championships meet, Han\u017eekovi\u0107 Memorial and Meeting de Atletismo Madrid were dropped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233854-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge, Final standings, Men\nA total of twelve men recorded valid marks at three meetings and made the final standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233854-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge, Final standings, Women\nA total of eleven women recorded valid marks at three meetings and made the final standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233855-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Race Walking Challenge\nThe 2013 IAAF Race Walking Challenge was the tenth edition of the annual international racewalking series organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233855-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Race Walking Challenge, Calendar\nThe following meetings, as well as the competition final, formed the schedule of the 2013 Race Walking Challenge. The \"A\" category meetings are worth the most points, with progressively fewer points being available through the \"B\" and \"C\" categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233856-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF Road Race Label Events\nThe 2013 IAAF Road Race Label Events were the sixth edition of the global series of road running competitions given Label status by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). All six World Marathon Majors had Gold Label status. The series included a total of 74 road races: 36 Gold, 21 Silver and 17 Bronze. In terms of distance, 46 races were marathons, 12 were half marathons, 11 were 10K runs, and 5 were held over other distances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233857-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Challenge\nThe 2013 IAAF World Challenge was the fourth edition of the annual, global circuit of one-day track and field competitions organized by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). The series featured a total of fifteen meetings \u2013 one more than the previous year as the IAAF World Challenge Dakar and IAAF World Challenge Beijing meetings were added to the schedule while the Colorful Daegu Championships Meeting was dropped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233858-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships\nThe 2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships took place on March 24, 2013. The races were held at the My\u015bl\u0119cinek Park in Bydgoszcz, Poland. Kenya topped the medal standings in the competition with 5 gold, and Ethiopia had the most overall medals with 10. Reports of the event were given in the Herald and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233858-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Results, Senior men's race (12 km)\nComplete results for senior men and for senior men's teams were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 79], "content_span": [80, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233858-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Results, Senior women's race (8 km)\nComplete results for senior women and for senior women's teams were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 80], "content_span": [81, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233858-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Results, Junior men's race (8 km)\nComplete results for junior men and for junior men's teams were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233858-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Results, Junior women's race (6 km)\nComplete results for junior women and for junior women's teams were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 80], "content_span": [81, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233858-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 398 athletes from 41 countries participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233859-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior men's race\nThe Junior men's race at the 2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the My\u015bl\u0119cinek Park in Bydgoszcz, Poland, on March 24, 2013. Reports of the event were given in the Herald and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233859-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior men's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 113 athletes from 27 countries participated in the Junior men's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233860-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior women's race\nThe Junior women's race at the 2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the My\u015bl\u0119cinek Park in Bydgoszcz, Poland, on March 24, 2013. Reports of the event were given in the Herald and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233860-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior women's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 86 athletes from 21 countries participated in the Junior women's race. The announced athlete from \u00a0Palestine did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233861-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior men's race\nThe Senior men's race at the 2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the My\u015bl\u0119cinek Park in Bydgoszcz, Poland, on March 24, 2013. Reports of the event were given in the Herald and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233861-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior men's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 102 athletes from 30 countries participated in the Senior men's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233862-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior women's race\nThe Senior women's race at the 2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the My\u015bl\u0119cinek Park in Bydgoszcz, Poland, on March 24, 2013. Reports of the event were given in the Herald and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233862-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior women's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 97 athletes from 29 countries participated in the Senior women's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season\nThe 2013 IAM Cycling season was the first season of the IAM Cycling team, which was founded in 2012. The team competed on the UCI Professional Continental level. They began the season on 27 January at the Grand Prix d'Ouverture La Marseillaise, and finished in October at the 2013 Giro di Lombardia. The team participated in UCI Continental Circuits and UCI World Tour events when given a wildcard invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, New team\nThe paperwork for the foundation of the IAM Cycling SA company was filed in Geneva on 19 April 2012. The team was founded by Swiss businessman Michel Thi\u00e9taz and sponsored by his company IAM Independent Asset Management for three seasons. The team budget for their premiere season was 7 million euros. In August 2012 the team announced a high-profile signing, with 2010 Giro d'Italia stage winner and 2012 Tour of Utah winner Johann Tschopp of BMC Racing Team joining the team. Cofidis rider Micka\u00ebl Buffaz was rumoured to sign with the team, but did not receive a contract. IAM Cycling joined the Mouvement pour un cyclisme cr\u00e9dible in October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, New team\nThe team was officially launched 14 January 2013 in Geneva, with the goal for the season being invitations to Paris\u2013Nice, Paris\u2013Roubaix, the Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 and the Ardennes classics. The following week IAM Cycling was selected as a wild-card entry by race organisers Amaury Sport Organisation for the 2013 Paris\u2013Nice race, but not for the 2013 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, Staff\nFormer French champion and Cr\u00e9dit Agricole directeur sportif Serge Beucherie was hired as team manager. Former Swiss rider Marcello Albasini, former French rider Eddy Seigneur and former Finnish rider Kjell Carlstr\u00f6m were hired as directeur sportifs along with former Swiss rider Rubens Bertogliati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, One-day races\nThe team's first ever race was the Grand Prix d'Ouverture La Marseillaise on 27 January, where Wyss and Br\u00e4ndle both finished with the bunch. At the 1.2 race Tour de Berne IAM had five people in the top ten, with Marcel Wyss winning the race 13 seconds ahead of S\u00e9bastien Reichenbach and 15 seconds ahead of R\u00e9mi Cusin and Matthias Br\u00e4ndle. Reto Hollenstein finished sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, Stage races\nThe 2013 Tour of Qatar was the teams' first ever stage race. Martin Elmiger finished second on the first stage, but lost his place in the general classification the next day. Heinrich Haussler finished fifth on stage three and ninth on stage five. The team did well at the Tour M\u00e9diterran\u00e9en in February, with Matteo Pelucchi finishing second on the first stage, letting him ride in the white jersey on stage two as the leader of the young rider classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, Stage races\nThomas L\u00f6fkvist finished fourth on the second stage, and sixth on stage four which placed him in the green points jersey and only two seconds behind leader Maxime Monfort of RadioShack\u2013Leopard. On the final stage L\u00f6fkvist lost the points jersey to J\u00fcrgen Roelandts of Lotto\u2013Belisol but took over the lead and won the overall classification. Gustav Larsson finished eight and Stefan Denifl eleventh overall, and IAM won the teams classification ahead of Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, Stage races\nAt the 2013 Tour of Oman Kristof Goddaert finished eight on the stage one bunch sprint, but was only 11th overall due to intermediate sprints. On stage two Goddaert finished in 63rd place and lost his position in the general classification. Martin Elmiger took part in a late breakaway which led to him finishing third, helping him into third place overall and seventh in the points classification. Marco Bandiera finished seventh, which placed him in ninth place overall. After stage two Jonathan Fumeaux was eighth in the young rider classification, and IAM was second in the team classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, Stage races\nElmiger finished 16th on stage three, dropping to fourth overall while IAM fell to third place in the teams classification and Fumeaux climbed to sixth in the young rider classification. On stage four Johann Tschopp crossed the finish line in Jebel Akhdar in seventh place, which led to an eighth place in the overall standings and four points in the points classification. Fumeaux dropped one position in the young rider classification and IAM dropped to fourth place in the teams competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, Stage races\nOn stage five Tschopp again finished seventh, elevating him into sixth position overall six seconds in front of Vincenzo Nibali (Astana). Fumeaux finished 76th on the stage and dropped to ninth place in the youth classification. On the sixth and final stage Tschopp finished with the bunch, thus retaining his sixth place in the general classification. Elmiger was 15th overall. Fumeaux finished ninth overall in the young riders classification, over a minute behind eighth placed Jens Keukeleire of Orica\u2013GreenEDGE, and IAM finished fourth in the teams classification only twelve second behind third placed FDJ. Elmiger and\u00b4Tschopp finished 17th and 20th respectively in the overall points classification, with Marco Bandiera and Goddaert also scoring some points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233863-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IAM Cycling season, Grand Tours\nAs an UCI Professional Continental team IAM Cycling was not automatically granted the right to participate in any of the three Grand Tours. The team was considered by race organiser Amaury Sport Organisation for a Tour de France invitation, but ultimately was not invited. They did not receive an invitation to the Giro d'Italia or the Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a either, but were invited to Milan\u2013San Remo and Il Lombardia by Giro race organizer RCS Sport instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233864-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IAUM World Championships\nThe 2013 IAUM World Championships were the 24th edition of the International Association for Ultra-Multievents World Championships. They were held at the Yeovil Olympiads Athletics Club track in Yeovil, Somerset, from 24-25 August 2013. It was the fourth time that Great Britain had hosted the World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233864-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IAUM World Championships, Event Schedule\nThe event was made up of two different combined events competitions, an icosathlon for men and a tetradecathlon for women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233865-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Twenty20 Division One\nThe 2013 ICC World Cricket League Africa Region Twenty20 Division One was an international Twenty20 cricket tournament that took place between 23 February\u20131 March 2013. It was the second edition of the ICC Africa Twenty20 Championship's Division One. Uganda hosted the event for the second time in a row, with all matches again played in the capital, Kampala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233865-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Twenty20 Division One, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233865-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Twenty20 Division One, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe top five wicket takers (total wickets) are listed in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233866-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship Division One\nThe 2013 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship Division One was a cricket tournament held in Uganda from 25\u201331 May 2013. Matches were played at grounds in Entebbe and Kampala, with Kampala's Lugogo Stadium hosting the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233866-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship Division One\nNamibia won the tournament by defeating Kenya in the final, qualifying for the 2014 Under-19 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates. Two African under-19 sides, South Africa and Zimbabwe, are ICC full members, and thus qualified directly for the World Cup. Ugandan all-rounder Lawrence Sempijja was Player of the Tournament, while Namibian Xander Pitchers and Kenyan Paramveer Singh led the competition in runs and wickets, respectively. Namibia's JJ Smit was named Player of the Final, having taken 4/17 (including a hat-trick).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233866-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship Division One\nThe tournament was the fifth edition of the ICC Africa Under-19 Championships, and the second to be held in Uganda (after the inaugural championship in 2001). Eight teams participated, divided into two pools for the group stages. The five best teams after the tournament's playoffs qualified directly for the 2015 Division One tournament, while the three lowest-placed teams were relegated to the 2014 Division Two tournament, with the winner of that tournament gaining promotion to Division One in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233866-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship Division One, Teams and qualification\nThe top seven teams at the eight-team 2010 Division One tournament qualified directly for the 2013 Division One Tournament. The last-placed team, Tanzania, was relegated to the 2013 Division Two tournament, played in Benoni, South Africa, in March 2013. The Division Two tournament was won by Ghana, but that side was unable to attend the Division One tournament, with runner-up Tanzania taking their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233866-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship Division One, 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, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233866-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship Division One, 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, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233867-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Americas Twenty20 Division One\nThe 2013 ICC Americas Twenty20 Division One is a cricket tournament that took place between 18\u201324 March 2013. The United States hosted the event, with all matches played at the Central Broward Regional Park in Lauderhill, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233867-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Americas Twenty20 Division One, Statistics, Most Runs\nThe top five run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233867-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Americas Twenty20 Division One, Statistics, Most Wickets\nThe top five wicket takers (total wickets) are listed in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233868-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Americas Twenty20 Division Two\nThe 2013 ICC World Cricket League Americas Region Twenty20 Division Two is a cricket tournament that took place between 5\u20139 February 2013. The Bahamas hosted the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233868-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Americas Twenty20 Division Two, Statistics, Most Runs\nThe top five run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233868-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Americas Twenty20 Division Two, Statistics, Most Wickets\nThe top five wicket takers (total wickets) are listed in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233869-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Awards\nThe 2013 ICC Awards were broadcast in a special TV show which was aired on 14 December 2013. The ICC had been hosting ICC Awards since 2004, which were now into their tenth year. Previous events were held in London (2004, 2011), Sydney (2005), Mumbai (2006), Johannesburg (2007, 2009), Dubai (2008), Bangalore (2010) and Colombo (2012). The ICC awards the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy to the Cricketer of the Year, which is considered to be the most prestigious award in world cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233869-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Awards, Selection Committee\nChaired by ICC Cricket Hall of Famer Anil Kumble, the ICC Selection Committee was charged with two main tasks. Using their experience, knowledge and appreciation of the game, they selected the ICC World XI Teams and provided a long list of nominations to the 32 members of the voting academy to cast their votes in the individual player award categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233869-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC Test Team of the Year\nAlastair Cook was selected as the captain of the Test Team of the Year, with MS Dhoni selected as the wicket-keeper. Other players are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233869-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC ODI Team of the Year\nFor the third time consecutively, MS Dhoni was selected as both captain and wicket-keeper of the ODI Team of the Year. Other players are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy\nThe 2013 ICC Champions Trophy was the seventh ICC Champions Trophy, a One Day International cricket tournament held in England and Wales between 6 and 23 June 2013. Three cities hosted the tournament's matches: London (at The Oval), Birmingham (at Edgbaston) and Cardiff (at Sophia Gardens, known as Cardiff Wales Stadium for the tournament).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy\nIndia won the competition, beating England by five runs in the final after overcoming South Africa, the West Indies and Pakistan in the group stage, followed by a semi-final victory over Sri Lanka. As winners, India earned $2\u00a0million in prize money, the largest amount since the tournament's inception. It was due to be the final ICC Champions Trophy, to be replaced by the ICC World Test Championship in 2017, but in January 2014, it was instead confirmed by the ICC that a Champions Trophy tournament would take place in 2017, with the proposed Test Championship being cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Rules and regulations\nThe 2013 ICC Champions Trophy was contested by eight teams, which were seeded and divided into two groups. Each team played every other team in its group once. Following the group stage, the top two teams from each group progressed to the semi-finals, where the winner of Group A played the runner-up of Group B and the winner of Group B played the runner-up of Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Warm-up matches\nThe warm-up matches had rules that were slightly different from normal ODI matches, so they are not recognised as ODIs. A team could use up to 15 players in a match, but only 11 could bat or field in each innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Controversy\nAustralian David Warner was suspended by Cricket Australia until the first Ashes Test after an altercation with English batsman Joe Root following Australia's loss to England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Controversy\nFormer England captain Bob Willis accused one English cricketer of tampering with the ball in order to aid reverse swing during their match against Sri Lanka. Umpire Aleem Dar changed the ball midway through Sri Lanka's innings, but England coach Ashley Giles denied the accusations, saying that Dar changed the ball because it had gone out of shape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Controversy, Pitch invasion incident\nThe semi-final between India and Sri Lanka at Sophia Gardens in Cardiff saw individuals, possibly Tamil Youth activists, running onto the pitch with flags of Tamil Eelam and banners protesting against the Sri Lankan team playing in the United Kingdom. The first invasion occurred in the 50th over of the Sri Lanka innings, but the two interlopers were soon overpowered by the security staff. However, the second invasion saw at least six protesters run onto the field from various angles from the River Taff End of the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Controversy, Pitch invasion incident\nThe protests continued after the match had finished, and a fight broke out outside the ground between protesters and supporters in a manner similar to the earlier protests at a group stage game at The Oval. Later, hundreds of members of Britain's Tamil community held up the Sri Lankan team bus after the encounter and raised anti-Sri Lankan government slogans. No protests were shown to the Indian team and their bus left as scheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Controversy, Pitch invasion incident\nThe earlier protest at The Oval allegedly saw several Tamils being harassed by Sinhala cricket fans who were leaving the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233870-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy, Team of the Tournament\nThe team of the tournament was announced by ICC on 28 June 2013. It was selected by a five-person selection panel that comprised Geoff Allardice (ICC General Manager \u2013 Cricket, and Chairman Event Technical Committee), Javagal Srinath (former India fast bowler and ICC Emirates Elite Panel match referee), Aleem Dar (ICC Emirates Elite Panel umpire), Scyld Berry (Wisden Editor from 2008-2011 and Sunday Telegraph correspondent) and Stephen Brenkley (correspondent of The Independent and Independent On Sunday).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final\nThe final of the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy was played on 23 June 2013 between the England and India at the Edgbaston Cricket Ground, Birmingham. This was the 7th ICC Champions Trophy. India won the match by 5 runs England qualified into the final by defeating South Africa in the first semi-final at The Oval, London on 19 June 2013. India made their way into the final after defeating Sri Lanka in the second semi-final played at SWALEC Stadium, Cardiff on 20 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final\nThe match was delayed almost six hours for rain and started at 16:20 local time, and the match was reduced to 20 overs per innings. So all the rules of this match were the same as a Twenty20 game. It was India's 2nd ICC Champions Trophy championship after the 2002 ICC Champions Trophy. But they had to share the honour with Sri Lanka since this was a joint championship winning. So this was the first time when India won that title individually.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0000-0002", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final\nIn addition India became the second team after Australia to win the ICC Champions Trophy more than one time. Ravindra Jadeja earned the man of the match award for his performance in the match. Shikhar Dhawan was named the man of the series for scoring 363 runs in the tournament. In the stadium, the match was watched by 24,867 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Background\nPrior to this match England and India played 86 times against each other in ODIs, where India had the upper hand with 46 wins and England won in 35 matches. 2 matches were tied and 3 match were ended as No Result. Their latest meeting resulted a six wickets win for England in a bilateral series in India at 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Background\nThese teams met thrice in the ICC Champions Trophy history where India won all the three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Road to the final, India\nIndia had dominated the tournament from the first match to semi final match. They beat South Africa, West Indies and Pakistan in assertive wins to be the group champions of Group B. They brought their strong performance to the semi final match too where they beat Sri Lanka by 8 wickets to reach the final for the third time after 2000 and 2002. 2 century & 1 half century from Shikhar Dhawan powered the Indian batting line up. Ravindra Jadeja was the leader from the front of the Indian bowling line up. India didn't lose a single match since the start of the tournament with winning both of their practice matches too.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Road to the final, England\nEngland's qualified for the semi finals as the group champions of Group A In the very first match of their tournament they won against Australia by 48 runs but lost to Sri Lanka in the next match. But they beat New Zealand in the last match to qualify for the semi final. In the semi final they beat South Africa with Jonathan Trott scoring an unbeaten 82 run innings, England won the match by 7 wickets. It was the second time after 2004 that England made the final but lost the final of ICC Champions Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Match Details, Match Officials\nThe on-field umpires were Kumar Dharmasena of Sri Lanka and Rod Tucker of Australia, with Bruce Oxenford being the third (TV) umpire. Aleem Dar was the fourth umpire. Ranjan Madugalle was the match referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233871-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Match Details, Toss\nEngland's captain Alastair Cook won the toss in the rain delayed game and chose to field first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233872-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Champions Trophy squads\nThis is a list of squads selected for the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233873-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC East Asia-Pacific Men's Championship\nThe 2013 ICC East Asia-Pacific Men's Championship was played between 3\u20137 February 2013 in Auckland, New Zealand. The tournament was a Twenty20 competition with the winner promoted to the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier in the United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233873-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC East Asia-Pacific Men's Championship, Teams\nTeams of Philippines and South Korea did not participate due to their implementation of the wrong selection policy, whereas the team from Tonga pulled out due to political squabbles in the board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233873-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC East Asia-Pacific Men's Championship, Statistics, Most Runs\nThe top five run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233873-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC East Asia-Pacific Men's Championship, Statistics, Most Wickets\nThe top five wicket takers (total wickets) are listed in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233874-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC European T20 Championship Division One\nThe 2013 ICC European Twenty20 Championship Division One was a cricket tournament that took place from 8\u201314 July 2013. It formed part of the European Cricket Championship. England hosted the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233874-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC European T20 Championship Division One, Play-offs\nPlay-offs are scheduled for 13 July; 14 July is a \"Reserve Day\", if needed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233875-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier\nThe 2013 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier was an international cricket tournament held in Dublin, Ireland, from 23 July to 1 August 2013. The tournament was the inaugural edition of the Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, with the top three teams advancing to the 2014 World Twenty20 in Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233875-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier\nEight teams played in the tournament. The host, Ireland, was joined by the two lowest-placed teams from the 2012 World Twenty20, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, as well as five teams from regional qualifying tournaments. Pakistan and Sri Lanka both went on to be undefeated at the tournament, sharing the title after the final was interrupted by rain. Ireland defeated the Netherlands in the third-place playoff to also qualify for the World Twenty20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233875-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Qualification and format\nOriginally, the ICC had determined that only the winner of the tournament would qualify for the World Twenty20, with that tournament then having only eight teams. This decision was altered at the 2013 International Cricket Council (ICC) annual conference in June 2013, as part of a concerted effort to support women's cricket. The eight teams at the qualifier were divided into two groups based on their ranking, with the four teams that failed to make the semi-finals going on to participate in a rep\u00eachage tournament (the Shield).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233875-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233875-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier, 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233876-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven\nThe 2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven was a cricket tournament that took place from 6 to 13 April 2013. It formed part of the ICC World Cricket League and qualifying for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. Botswana hosted the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233876-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven, Teams\nThe teams that took part in the tournament were decided according to the results of the 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven, the 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Six and the 2012 ICC World Cricket League Division Eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233876-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five highest run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233876-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven, Final Placings\nAfter the conclusion of the tournament the teams were distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233877-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Six\nThe 2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Six was a cricket tournament that took place from 21-28 July 2013. It formed part of the ICC World Cricket League and qualifying for the 2019 Cricket World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233877-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Six, Teams\nThe teams that took part in the tournament were decided according to the results of the 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Six, the 2012 ICC World Cricket League Division Five and the 2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233877-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Six, Final and Playoffs\nThe playoff matches were cancelled after the abandonment of fifth-round group matches led to replays on the day the playoff matches were scheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233877-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Six, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five highest run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233877-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Six, Final Placings\nAfter the conclusion of the tournament the teams were distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233878-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three\nThe 2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three was a cricket tournament which took place from 28 April to 5 May 2013 in Bermuda. It formed part of the ICC World Cricket League and qualifying for the 2015 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233878-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three\nNepal were the pre-tournament favourites, but they lost against USA and Uganda in their first two matches. On the other hand USA and Uganda made solid starts. Uganda remained unbeaten in their first four matches to comfortably secure one of the two available places in the 2014 World Cup Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233878-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three\nIn the fifth round of the league, three teams remained in contention for the second qualifying spot, USA having won 3 out of 4 and Bermuda & Nepal both having won 2 out of 4. USA could guarantee progress by defeating the hosts Bermuda, but for Nepal to proceed, they had to defeat Italy by a heavy margin and also rely on a Bermuda victory over the USA. In the end, exactly that happened and Nepal went through to the 2014 World Cup Qualifier over USA and hosts Bermuda on net run rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233878-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three, Teams\nThe teams that took part in the tournament were decided according to the results of the 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Two, the 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Three and the 2012 ICC World Cricket League Division Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233878-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five highest run scorers (total runs) in the season are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233878-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe following table contains the five leading wicket-takers of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233878-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three, Final Placings\nAfter the conclusion of the tournament the teams were distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233879-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier\nThe 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier was played in November 2013 in the United Arab Emirates and is a part of the ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier series. This edition of the qualifier for the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 was an expanded version comprising ten qualifiers from regional Twenty20 tournaments in addition to the top six finishers of the previous edition. The groups were announced by the ICC on 7 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233879-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier\nIreland met Afghanistan in the final for the third time with Ireland winning their 2nd title against Afghanistan and 3rd title overall. The top 6 nations (previously 2) qualified for the 2014 ICC World Twenty20: Ireland, Afghanistan, Netherlands and making their World Twenty20 debut the UAE, Nepal and Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233879-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier, Format\nThe tournament runs for 16 days with 72 fixtures amongst 16 teams, divided into two groups of eight. Each group plays a round-robin tournament. The bottom three teams of each group are immediately eliminated from contention for the top six positions but will play matches to determine which teams finish in positions 11 to 16. The top three teams from each group compete in the first place playoffs to determine the teams finishing in the top four positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233879-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier, Format\nThe other two teams are relegated to the fifth place playoffs where they compete with the fourth- and fifth-ranked teams from each group for the positions of five to ten. Both the first and fifth place playoffs are played in a six-team, single-elimination format. The bottom four teams play in the quarter-finals. The winners of the quarter-finals compete with the top two teams in the semi-finals. Playoffs follow to determine the finishing positions of the teams. The top six teams qualify for the 2014 ICC World Twenty20. They will join the hosts Bangladesh and Zimbabwe in the preliminary group stage, from which only two teams will advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233879-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier, Match officials\nOfficiating the tournament was three regional match referees and 17 umpires, one of which was of the Elite Panel and three was on the ICC Assiciate and Affiliate Panel of Umpires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233879-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier, Fixtures and results, 1st place playoffs, Bracket\n\u2020 Teams qualified for the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 upon reaching this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233879-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier, Final standings\nQualified for the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 and 2015 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233880-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships\nThe 2013 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships took place from September 11 to 15, 2013 in Prague, Czech Republic under the auspices of International Canoe Federation (ICF) at the Prague-Troja Canoeing Centre. It was the 35th edition. Prague was the host city for the second time after hosting the event previously in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233880-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships\nThe city was awarded the event at an ICF Board of Directors meeting in Budapest on 10 April 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233881-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships\nThe 2013 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships was held 29 August\u20131 September 2013 in Duisburg, Germany. The championships were awarded originally to Szeged, Hungary, but Szeged was moved to 2011 in the wake of Vichy, France's withdrawal in 2010 and awarded to Rio de Janeiro, who withdrew in September 2012. Consequently, the World Championships were awarded to Duisburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233881-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, Explanation of events\nCanoe sprint competitions are broken up into Canadian canoe (C), an open canoe with a single-blade paddle, or in kayaks (K), a closed canoe with a double-bladed paddle. Each canoe or kayak can hold one person (1), two people (2), or four people (4). For each of the specific canoes or kayaks, such as a K-1 (kayak single), the competition distances can be 200 metres (660\u00a0ft), 500 metres (1,600\u00a0ft), or 1,000 metres (3,300\u00a0ft) long. When a competition is listed as a C-2 500 m event as an example, it means two people are in a canoe competing at a 500 metres (1,600\u00a0ft) distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233882-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ICO Crossminton World Championships\nThe 2013 ICO Crossminton World Championships was a crossminton tournament, taking place in Berlin, Germany, between 13 and 15 June 2013. With the 1st Crossminton World Championships being played in 2011 and the competition taking place every two years, the 2013 World Championships was the 2nd ICO Crossminton World Championships ever being played. 479 players from 29 countries participated at the event that took place at a time when crossminton was still named speed badminton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233882-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ICO Crossminton World Championships, Venue\nThe tournament, organised by Speedminton GmbH and , was played on outdoor tennis clay courts of the Steffi-Graf-Stadion in Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233883-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IFA Shield\nThe 2013 IFA Shield was the 117th edition of the IFA Shield. The tournament this season was held from 4 March 2013 in West Bengal. This year also, the Indian Football Association announced that two foreign clubs would participate in the tournament, Costa Rican Primera Divisi\u00f3n club Deportivo Saprissa and Bangladesh Premier League club Muktijoddha Sangsad. However on 4 March 2013 it was announced that Muktijoddha Sangsad would not participate in this tournament and instead current I-League club ONGC would take their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233883-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IFA Shield\nPrayag United won their maiden title by defeating East Bengal in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233884-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IFAF Women's World Championship\nThe 2013 IFAF Women's World Championship was the second IFAF Women's World Championship, an American football competition for women. It took place between 30 June and 6 July 2013. The tournament was hosted at the ISS Stadion in Vantaa, Finland. The defending champion, the United States, won its second title after defeating Canada 64\u20130 in the final. Host team Finland won the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season\nThe 2013 season was IFK G\u00f6teborg's 108th in existence, their 81st season in Allsvenskan and their 37th consecutive season in the league. They competed in Allsvenskan where they finished third, Svenska Cupen where they won the competition, Svenska Supercupen where they finished as runners-up and the UEFA Europa League where they were knocked out in the second qualifying round. IFK G\u00f6teborg also participated in one competition in which the club continued playing in for the 2014 season, 2013\u201314 Svenska Cupen. The season began with the group stage of Svenska Cupen in March, league play started in April and lasted until November, Svenska Supercupen was the last competitive match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season\nThe club won their 6th Svenska Cupen title on 26 May 2013 when they defeated Djurg\u00e5rdens IF after a penalty shoot-out in the final at Friends Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season, Summary, Svenska Supercupen\nIFK G\u00f6teborg qualified for the 2013 Svenska Supercupen by winning the 2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen on 26 May 2013. The match was played at Swedbank Stadion on 10 November 2013 and the club's opponents were 2013 Allsvenskan winners Malm\u00f6 FF. This was the fourth time that the club competed in Svenska Supercupen. The previous times had ended in a win against Kalmar FF in 2008 and two losses against Kalmar FF in 2009 and AIK in 2010. The match ended in a 3\u20132 win for Malm\u00f6 FF after Emil Forsberg scored two goals and Guillermo Molins scored the third and winning goal in injury time. Philip Haglund and Lasse Vibe scored the goals for IFK G\u00f6teborg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season, Summary, UEFA Europa League\nIFK G\u00f6teborg qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League by merit of winning the 2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen. The club entered the competition in the second round of qualification. The draw for the second qualifying round was held on 23 June, IFK G\u00f6teborg was seeded in the draw. The club was drawn against the 2012\u201313 Slovakian third-placed team Tren\u010d\u00edn. This was the first time ever that IFK G\u00f6teborg faced Slovakian opposition in European competition. The first leg of the fixture was played at home on 18 July and ended in a 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season, Summary, UEFA Europa League\nThe match was played at Olympia in Helsingborg since both Gamla Ullevi and Ullevi was busy with other events. The away fixture at Mestsk\u00fd \u0161tadi\u00f3n in Dubnica nad V\u00e1hom was played on 25 July and ended with a 2\u20131 loss for IFK G\u00f6teborg after two goals from Fanendo Adi, which confirmed the aggregate score to 2\u20131 in favour of Tren\u010d\u00edn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season, Players, Squad, Youth players with first-team appearances\nYouth players who played a competitive match for the club in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 83], "content_span": [84, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season, Players, Squad, Youth players with first-team appearances\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, 83], "content_span": [84, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233885-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IFK G\u00f6teborg season, Squad statistics, Disciplinary record\nSource: Only competitive matches = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233886-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IFMAR 1:10 Electric Off-Road World Championships\nThe 2013 IFMAR 1:10 Electric Off-Road World Championships was the fifteenth edition of the IFMAR 1:10 Electric Off-Road World Championship was held in America. The track is located at Silver Dollar Fairgrounds and is on a large purpose built 150\u2019\u00d7110\u2019 dirt track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233886-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IFMAR 1:10 Electric Off-Road World Championships, Schedule\n2WD - ClassSunday 22nd Sept: Registration, Opening CeremonyMonday 23rd Sept: PracticeTuesday 24th Sept: Practice, 4 Qualifying RoundsWednesday 25th Sept: Q5, Finals4WD - ClassThursday 26th Sept: RegistrationFriday 27th Sept: PracticeSaturday 28th Sept: Practice, 4 Qualifying RoundsSunday 29th Sept: Q5, Finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233887-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IFSC Climbing World Cup\nThe 2013 IFSC Climbing World Cup was held in 19 locations. Bouldering competitions were held in 8 locations, lead in 8 locations, and speed in 7 locations. The season began on 22 March in Chongqing, China and concluded on 17 November in Kranj, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233887-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IFSC Climbing World Cup\nThe top 3 in each competition received medals, and the overall winners were awarded trophies. At the end of the season an overall ranking was determined based upon points, which athletes were awarded for finishing in the top 30 of each individual event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233887-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IFSC Climbing World Cup\nThe winners for bouldering were Dmitrii Sharafutdinov and Anna St\u00f6hr, for lead Sachi Amma and Jain Kim, for speed Stanislav Kokorin and Alina Gaidamakina, and for combined Jakob Schubert and Mina Markovic, men and women respectively. The National Team for bouldering was Austria, for lead Japan, and for speed Russian Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233887-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Highlights of the season\nIn bouldering, at the World Cup in Kitzb\u00fchel, Anna St\u00f6hr of Austria flashed all boulders in the final round to take the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233887-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IFSC Climbing World Cup, Highlights of the season\nIn speed climbing, at the World Cup in Wujiang, Iuliia Kaplina of Russia set a new world record of 7.85s in the final round against her teammate Mariia Krasavina. Then at the end of the season, Russian athletes, Stanislav Kokorin and Alina Gaidamakina clinched the overall titles of the season for men and women respectively, making it double speed titles for Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233888-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IHF Super Globe\nThe 2013 IHF Super Globe was the seventh edition. It was held in Doha, Qatar at the Al-Gharafa Sports Club Hall from 25\u201330 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233888-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IHF Super Globe\nFC Barcelona won the title for the first time after defeating HSV Hamburg 27\u201325 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233888-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IHF Super Globe, Teams\nThe teams that took part are the respectives continental champions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233888-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IHF Super Globe, Draw, Seedings\nThe seedings were announced on 24 June with the draw being held at 27 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233889-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia\nThe 2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia was the 6th IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, an annual international ice hockey tournament held by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). It took place between 16 March and 24 March 2013 in Bangkok, Thailand. The Chinese Taipei won the tournament after defeating Hong Kong in the final and Mongolia finished in third after defeating Kuwait in the bronze medal match. The defending champions, the United Emirates were knocked out of the playoff round in the quarterfinals by Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233889-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, Overview\nThe 2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia began on 16 March 2013 in Bangkok, Thailand. The tournament was split into two groups of five for the preliminary round, with both groups competing in a round robin format. Group A consists of Chinese Taipei, Kuwait, Malaysia, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates. While Group B is made up of Hong Kong, India, Macau, Mongolia and Singapore. After the preliminary round all five teams from Group A enter the quarterfinals along with the top three teams from Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233889-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, Overview\nChinese Taipei won the tournament after they defeated Hong Kong 4\u20132 in the final, claiming their third IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia title. Mongolia finished third after winning the bronze medal game against Kuwait. Khaled Al Suwaidi of the United Arab Emirates was named the tournament's top goaltender by the IIHF directorate. Thai Likit Neimwann was named the top defenceman and Ban Kin Loke of Malaysia was selected as the top forward. Jasper Tang of Hong Kong finished the tournament as the top scorer with 19 points including nine goals and ten assists. Chinese Taipei's Ting Pang-Keng was the leading goaltender based on save percentage with a percentage of 0.937.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233889-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals, assists, and the lower penalties in minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233889-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Challenge Cup of Asia, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233890-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship\nThe 2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship was the 18th IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, an international inline hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The World Championship ran alongside the 2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I tournament and took place between 2 and 8 June 2013 in Dresden, Germany. The tournament was won by the United States, earning their sixth World Championship title. Sweden finished in second place and Canada in third after defeating Slovakia in the bronze medal match. Slovenia after losing their placement round game and finishing last in the standings was relegated to Division I for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233890-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, Qualification\nSeven of the eight teams automatically qualified for the 2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship while the eighth spot was awarded to the winner of the 2012 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I tournament. The 2012 Division I tournament was won by Slovakia who defeated Hungary in the final to earn promotion back to the World Championship after they were relegated in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233890-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, Seeding and groups\nThe seeding in the preliminary round was based on the final standings at the 2012 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship and 2012 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I. The World Championships groups are named Group A and Group B while the 2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I tournament use Group C and Group D, as both tournaments were held in Dresden, Germany. The teams were grouped accordingly by seeding at the previous year's tournament (in parenthesis is the corresponding seeding):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233890-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, Preliminary round\nEight participating teams were placed in the following two groups. After playing a round-robin, every team advanced to the Playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233890-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, Playoff round\nAll eight teams advanced into the playoff round and were seeded into the quarterfinals according to their result in the preliminary round. The winning quarterfinalists advanced through to the semifinals, while the losing teams moved through to the placement round. Slovenia was relegated after losing the final placement round game against Finland, while the Czech Republic finished fifth after defeating Slovenia and Germany finished sixth following their win over Finland. In the semifinals Sweden defeated Canada and the United States beat Slovakia, both advancing to the gold medal game. After losing the semifinals Canada and Slovakia played off for the bronze medal with Canada winning 5\u20131. The United States defeated Sweden 6\u20133 in the gold medal game, earning their sixth World Championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233890-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey 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 shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 83], "content_span": [84, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233890-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 87], "content_span": [88, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I\nThe 2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I was an international inline hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division I tournament ran alongside the 2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship and took place between 2 and 8 June 2013 in Dresden, Germany. The tournament was won by Great Britain who upon winning gained promotion to the 2014 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship. While Bulgaria and Argentina were relegated after finishing last and second last respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Qualification\nSix teams attempted to qualify for the two remaining spots in the 2013 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I tournament. The other six nations automatically qualified after their results from the 2012 World Championship and the 2012 Division I tournaments. Two qualification tournaments were held with a place awarded to the winner of each tournament. The European Qualification tournament was contested between Bulgaria, Latvia, Macedonia and Turkey, with Bulgaria winning promotion and returning to Division I after being relegated last year. The Rest of the World Qualification tournament was contested between Argentina and Brazil, with Argentina winning promotion. In addition to the Rest of the World tournament Argentina B, Colombia, Uruguay and Venezuela joined Argentina and Brazil in a South American invitational tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 68], "content_span": [69, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Qualification, European Qualification\nThe European Qualification tournament was held at the Winter Palace in Sofia, Bulgaria from 3 August 2012 to 5 August 2012. Bulgaria gained promotion to Division I after winning all of their games and finishing first in the standings. Latvia finished in second place after winning two of their games and losing the third against Bulgaria in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 92], "content_span": [93, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Qualification, Rest of the World Qualification\nThe Rest of the World Qualification tournament was held in Buenos Aires, Argentina on 13 and 14 December 2012. Argentina gained promotion to Division I after winning both of their games against Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Qualification, Rest of the World Qualification, South American invitational tournament\nFollowing the Rest of the World tournament Argentina hosted a South American invitational tournament in Buenos Aires. Argentina B, Colombia, Uruguay and Venezuela joined Argentina and Brazil for the tournament. Brazil won the competition after defeating Colombia 5\u20133 in the final and Argentina beat Argentina B to finish third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 141], "content_span": [142, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Seeding and groups\nThe seeding in the preliminary round was based on the final standings at the 2012 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship and 2012 IIHF InLine Hockey World Championship Division I. Division I's groups are named Group C and Group D while the 2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship use Group A and Group B, as both tournaments are held in Dresden, Germany. The teams were grouped accordingly by seeding at the previous year's tournament (in parenthesis is the corresponding seeding):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Preliminary round\nEight participating teams were placed in the following two groups. After playing a round-robin, every team advanced to the Playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Playoff round\nAll eight teams advanced into the playoff round and were seeded into the quarterfinals according to their result in the preliminary round. The winning quarterfinalists advanced through to the semifinals, while the losing teams moved through to the placement round. Bulgaria and Argentina were relegated after losing their placement round games, while Croatia finished fifth after defeating Bulgaria and Japan finished sixth following their win over Argentina. In the semifinals Great Britain defeated Australia and Austria beat Hungary, both advancing to the gold medal game. After losing the semifinals Australia and Hungary played off for the bronze medal with Hungary winning 7\u20135. Great Britain defeated Austria 5\u20131 in the gold medal game and earned promotion to the 2014 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 68], "content_span": [69, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, 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 shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 94], "content_span": [95, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233891-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 98], "content_span": [99, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233892-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF U20 Challenge Cup of Asia\nThe 2013 IIHF U20 Challenge Cup of Asia was the second IIHF U20 Challenge Cup of Asia, an annual international ice hockey tournament held by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). It took place between 7 and 9 June 2013 in Khabarovsk, Russia. Japan won the tournament after winning both of their round robin games and finishing first in the standings. Russia, represented by the MHL Red Stars, finished second and South Korea finished in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship\nThe 2013 IIHF World Women's Championships was the 15th world championship sanctioned by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) and was the last world championship before the 2014 Winter Olympics. The United States won their fifth world title with a 3\u20132 win over Canada, while Russia defeated Finland, 2\u20130, to win its second bronze medal in tournament history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship\nThe tournament was held at Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, the site of the first Women's World Championship in 1990. Organizers set a tournament record of over 150,000 tickets sold, and a preliminary round contest between Canada and Finland set an all-time attendance mark for a women's hockey game of 18,013. Canada's Marie-Philip Poulin was named top forward and most valuable player after leading the tournament with 12 points. Finland's Jenni Hiirikoski was named top defenceman and Russia's Nadezhda Alexandrova was named top goaltender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division\nThe Top Division of the world championship was contested between eight teams from April 2 to April 9, 2013 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was the second time the tournament was held in Canada's capital city as Ottawa hosted the inaugural Women's World Championship in 1990. The women's game had undergone a considerable period of growth in the intervening 23 years; the 1990 tournament was primarily played in small community arenas, but the majority of the 2013 event was held in the 20,000 seat Scotiabank Place arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division\nThe host city set a tournament record by selling over 150,000 tickets for the tournament, but gate attendance fell short of the record of 119,231 set in 2007. Such discrepancies are not unusual at IIHF events, where games are often sold in packages in order to boost attendance figures of less attractive fixtures. However, both actual attendance and ticket sales were below the ambitious pre-tournament objective of 200,000 spectators relayed to the media by the organizers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division\nAccording to Hockey Canada, the announced crowd of 18,013 for the preliminary round game between Canada and Finland set an all-time record for a women's hockey game. A large component of the crowd was made up of female players competing in the Ontario Women's Hockey Association provincial championships, which was scheduled to coincide with the Women's World Championship. The game surpassed the previous record of 16,347, also set in Ottawa, for a pre-Olympic exhibition game in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division\nOvernight data indicates that an average 795,000 viewers watched the Gold Medal game in Canada, making it the highest rated Women's World Championship final in TSN's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Teams\nThe preliminary round was divided into two pools and introduced a new format that placed the top four seeds into Group A, and the bottom four in Group B. The top two finishers in Group A advanced directly to the semifinals, while the two remaining teams and the top two in Group B played a quarterfinal round. The change in format helped reduce the number of severely one-sided contests in a tournament praised by IIHF president Ren\u00e9 Fasel for its increasing competitiveness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Teams\nEach team's roster for the 2013 IIHF Women's World Championship consisted of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 20 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All eight participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Officials\nThe IIHF selected six referees and nine linesmen to work the 2013 IIHF Women's World Championship. They were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Tournament highlights\nThe opening night featured a match-up of the game's top powers, Canada and the United States. The contest ended with a 3\u20132 Canadian win, decided by a shootout, in what was viewed as a preview of the probable gold medal final. The Canadian team made headlines by wearing yellow and black uniforms in lieu of the team's usual red and white colors. This was part of a promotion for the Nike-backed Livestrong cancer awareness initiative, whose founder Lance Armstrong had confessed to doping a few months earlier. Nike hoped to attach the Livestrong brand to other athletes, and the jerseys were subsequently auctioned in support of the charity. Both teams easily won their remaining pool games, to earn byes to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Tournament highlights\nAfter failing to win a game in the 2012 tournament, Russia rebounded in 2013 by winning all of its pool games to lead Group B. It clinched first place with a 4\u20130 victory over Sweden, a nation that entered the tournament with high medal hopes but was instead forced to play a best-of-three series against the Czech Republic to avoid relegation. The Swedes, who hosted the next tournament in 2015, retained their position in the top division by winning the series against the Czechs by 2\u20131 (SO) and 4\u20130 scores. The Czech Republic, who were promoted from Division 1A for this tournament, were relegated back to the lower division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Tournament highlights\nIn the medal round, Germany joined Russia in reaching the quarterfinal round from Group B, while Finland and Switzerland qualified out of Group A. The Russians won their fourth consecutive game in the tournament by defeating the 2012 bronze medal-winning Switzerland team 2\u20131 to earn a semifinal game against Canada. Forty-year-old Yekaterina Pashkevich, the eldest player in the tournament, said that her nation's turnaround following a winless 2012 tournament could be attributed to increased \"drive and motivation\" in the country as a result of Russia hosting the 2014 Winter Olympics. In the second semifinal, Finland beat Germany 1\u20130 to earn a match-up with the United States. Goaltender Meeri Raisanen recorded the shutout after unexpectedly being named her team's starter in favour of Finland's number-one goaltender, Noora Raty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Tournament highlights\nRussia's unbeaten run came to an end in the semifinals as they were routed by Canada, 8\u20131. In a closer contest, the United States defeated Finland, 3\u20130. The results set up the 15th consecutive gold medal match-up between the two North American rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Tournament highlights\nIn the bronze medal game, the Russians captured only their second medal in tournament history with a 2\u20130 victory over Finland. They earned the win on the goaltending of Nadezhda Alexandrova, who stopped all 32 shots she faced for the shutout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Tournament highlights\nThe United States defeated Canada, 3\u20132 to win its fifth world championship in seven years. The winning goal was scored by Amanda Kessel for the American team that outshot their opponents 30\u201316. The goaltending of Shannon Szabados was credited with keeping Canada close as Americans used their speed advantage to overcome Canada's size and physical presence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Preliminary round, Ranking and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top 10 skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 96], "content_span": [97, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Preliminary round, Ranking 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, 96], "content_span": [97, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Preliminary round, 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Preliminary round, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division I, Division I A\nThe Division I A tournament was played in Stavanger, Norway, from 7 to 13 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division I, Division I B\nThe Division I B tournament was played in Strasbourg, France, from 7 to 13 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division II, Division II A\nThe Division II A tournament was played in Auckland, New Zealand, from 8 to 14 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division II, Division II B\nThe Division II B tournament was played in Puigcerd\u00e0, Spain, from 1 to 7 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233893-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division II, Division II B Qualification\nThe Division II B Qualification tournament was played in \u0130zmir, Turkey, from 7 to 9 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233894-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I\nGroup A of the Division I tournament was held at DNB Arena in Stavanger, Norway, from April 7 to 13. Group B was contested from April 8 to 14 at France. The winner of Group A, was initially presumed to be promoted to the 2015 top division. However, with the Division I and II playing in an olympic year, and the eight olympic entries being in none of those tournaments, it was determined that the last placed olympic team will play a challenge series with the 2014 Division IA champion for promotion to the 2015 top division. The last-placed team was relegated to Group B for 2014. The Group B winner moved up to Group A, while the last placed team was relegated to Division II Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233894-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group A, Statistics and awards, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 96], "content_span": [97, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233894-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group A, Statistics and awards, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 100], "content_span": [101, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233894-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group B, Statistics and awards, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 96], "content_span": [97, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233894-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I, Group B, Statistics and awards, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 100], "content_span": [101, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233895-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II\nGroup A of the Division II tournament was held in Auckland, New Zealand, from April 7 to 13. Group B was contested in Puigcerd\u00e0, Spain, from April 1 to 7. The winner of Group A was promoted to Division I Group B for the 2014 championships, while the last-placed team were relegated to Group B. The Group B winner moved up to Group A. The qualification tournament was held from December 7 to 9, 2012 in Izmir Turkey. Beginning this year, the winner of the qualification tournament has to wait until the following year to play in Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233895-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group A, Statistics and awards, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 97], "content_span": [98, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233895-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group A, Statistics and awards, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 101], "content_span": [102, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233895-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B, Statistics and awards, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 97], "content_span": [98, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233895-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II, Group B, Statistics and awards, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 101], "content_span": [102, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233896-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF Women's World Championship rosters\nEach team's roster for the 2013 IIHF Women's World Championship consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 20 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All eight participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship\nThe 2013 IIHF World Championship was the 77th event hosted by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), held in Stockholm, Sweden and Helsinki, Finland, between 3\u201319 May 2013. TV4 and MTV3 served as host broadcasters of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship\nThe host team Sweden won the team's ninth title in history by defeating Switzerland in the final 5\u20131, and became the first host team to win the tournament since the Soviet Union team won the 1986 World Championship in Moscow, Soviet Union. The Swedish team started the tournament with an unconvincing performance but managed to get a collective boost when the Sedin brothers joined the team after the Vancouver Canucks had been eliminated in the Stanley Cup playoffs. Switzerland sent a clear message about their recently improved hockey program by going undefeated through the tournament before the final; finishing first in their group (ahead of Canada and Sweden); and earning their second silver medal in history, as well as the team's first medal since 1953.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Bidding\nAt the semi-annual congress in Vancouver on 21 September 2007, Sweden was voted the host of the 2013 tournament, defeating the runner-up Belarus by 55 votes. Other countries in the running were Hungary, Czech Republic and Latvia (which withdrew from the race and endorsed the Swedish bid). At the congress in Bern in 2009, it was announced that Finland (the host for the 2012 World Championship) and Sweden would co-host both the 2012 and 2013 tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Locations\nThe host arenas were the Ericsson Globe in Stockholm (12,500 permitted seats) and Hartwall Areena in Helsinki (13,506 permitted seats). Capacity has been limited to these numbers because of modern health and safety rules. Malm\u00f6 Arena was originally planned to co-host according to the Swedish bid, but the Swedish Hockey Federation decided to drop Malm\u00f6 as a host city when they decided to collaborate with Finland before the Eurovision Song Contest 2013, which took place in that arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Locations\nTampere was also a candidate to be the Finnish venue, but due to a delay in construction of the new Tampereen Keskusareena, Helsinki was named as co-host. Tele2 Arena, a new retractable-roof multi-purpose stadium seating 30,000 spectators, was planned to host at least one game, but due to construction delays it would not be finished until July 2013, two months after the World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Format\nThe format of the tournament was the same as in 2012, which was also co-hosted by Helsinki and Stockholm. Sixteen teams were divided into two groups of eight, who played a seven-game round-robin within their groups. The top four teams in each group advanced to a three-round single-knockout playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Format\nThe only difference from 2012 was that the final games were played in Stockholm instead of Helsinki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Rosters\nEach team's roster consisted of at least 15 skaters (forwards and defencemen) and two goaltenders, and at most 22 skaters and three goaltenders. All sixteen participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Officials\nThe IIHF selected 16 referees and 16 linesmen to work the 2013 IIHF World Championship. They were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Seeding and groups\nThe seeding in the preliminary round is based on the 2012 IIHF World Ranking, which ended at the conclusion of the 2012 IIHF World Championship. The teams were grouped according to seeding (in parenthesis is the corresponding world ranking). However, Russia and the Czech Republic swapped their slots between their groups to optimize the seeding for the Finnish-Swedish organizers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Playoff round, Quarterfinals\nThe games in Stockholm are UTC+2, while the games in Helsinki are UTC+3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Ranking and statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Ranking and statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalties in Minutes; POS = PositionSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top ten goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes, are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233897-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nTOI = Time on Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233898-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division I\nThe 2013 IIHF World Championship Division I was a pair of international Ice hockey tournaments run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. Group A contested in Budapest, Hungary and Group B contested in Donetsk, Ukraine, both running from 14 April to 20 April 2013. Divisions I A and I B represent the second and the third tier of the Ice Hockey World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233898-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division I\nFor the third consecutive year the two nations that had been demoted from the top level, were sent right back. In Group A Kazakhstan and Italy narrowly held off Hungary to achieve promotion, who lost for the first time in their history to South Korea. The Koreans also defeated Great Britain on the final day, relegating the British, and achieving a placement of 21st overall, their best ever finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233898-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division I\nIn Group B, Ukraine returned to Group A, Estonia returned to Division II, and the other four nations repeated their placements from 2012. The final day was dramatic though, as it featured head-to-head match-ups to determine promotion and relegation. Both Poland and Ukraine were undefeated until they met in the final game of the tournament, Ukraine came out ahead four to three. The game between the two winless Baltic nations was not as dramatic, as Lithuania scored twelve to stay in Division I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233899-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division II\nThe 2013 IIHF World Championship Division II was a pair of international Ice hockey tournaments run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. Group A was contested in Zagreb, Croatia, running from 14 to 20 April 2013 and Group B was contested in \u0130zmit, Turkey, running from 21 to 27 April 2013. Divisions II A and II B represent the fourth and the fifth tier of the Ice Hockey World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233900-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division III\nThe 2013 IIHF World Championship Division III was an international Ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. Group A was contested in Cape Town, South Africa, from 15 to 21 April 2013 and the qualification tournament was contested in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, from 14 to 17 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233900-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division III, Venues\nGroup A was played in Grandwest Ice Arena, Cape Town. The qualification tournament was played in Abu Dhabi Arena, Abu Dhabi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233900-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division III, Officials\nThe IIHF selected 7 referees and 12 linesmen to work the 2013 IIHF World Championship DIV III. Division III has 4 referees and 7 linesman. Division III Qualification had 3 referees and 5 linesman. They were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233900-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division III, Officials\n2013 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Division III in South Africa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233900-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Division III, Officials\n2013 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Division III Qualification in the United Arab Emirates", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final\nThe 2013 IIHF World Championship Final was played at the Ericsson Globe in Stockholm, Sweden, on 19 May 2013 between Sweden and Switzerland. The game determined the winners of the 2013 IIHF World Championship, with Sweden winning 5\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Background\nThis was Sweden's fifth final of the 21st century (their most recent final occurred in 2011), as well as the team's tenth final in history (discounting years when champions were determined through round-robins). Sweden had previously won eight gold medals. This was the first time a host nation qualified for the final since 2008, when Canada qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Background\nThis was Switzerland's first final in history. Switzerland had previously won one silver medal (1935) and eight bronze medals, the most recent one in 1953. Switzerland was the only team in the tournament to go undefeated before the final, winning all nine games with one victory coming through a shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Background\nSweden and Switzerland faced each other in the semifinals in 1992 and 1998, with Sweden winning both times, but this was the first final between the two teams. The Swiss team won the preliminary round game against Sweden 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Match, Summary\nSwitzerland took early control of the game, and five minutes in, rushing defenceman Roman Josi opened the scoring with a backhand shot that went five-hole on Swedish goaltender Jhonas Enroth. After eight minutes of play, the Swiss had outshot the Swedes 8\u20130. Sweden regrouped and turned the game around in a three-minute span. At 8:42, Erik Gustafsson scored his first goal of the tournament to tie the game on a rebound in front of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Match, Summary\nTwo minutes later, Sweden got a power play following a checking to the head penalty to Andres Amb\u00fchl, and at 11:38 Henrik Sedin scored to put Sweden ahead 2\u20131. Switzerland received a bench minor two minutes later for too many players on the ice, but the Swedes did not convert on the ensuing power play. The first period ended 2\u20131 in Sweden's favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Match, Summary\nThe second period was scoreless and very even, featuring excellent play from Jhonas Enroth and Switzerland's goaltender Martin Gerber. The period featured one tripping penalty to Sweden at 32:01, and one hooking penalty to Switzerland at 39:10, but neither team managed to score any goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Match, Summary\nTwo minutes into the third period, Switzerland received another power play from an interference penalty to Sweden, but would pay for their lost chance to tie the game. At 47:13, Sweden's Simon Hjalmarsson scored on a breakaway to make the score 3\u20131, and eight minutes later, Loui Eriksson put the Swedes ahead by three goals. Following a tripping penalty to Sweden at 56:27, Switzerland pulled Martin Gerber for an extra attacker, but it only took nine seconds before Henrik Sedin sealed the game with an empty netter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233901-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship Final, Match, Summary\nThe game ended 5\u20131 for Sweden, who captured the team's ninth gold medal in history. The victory marked the first time since 1986 that a host nation won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233902-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship rosters\nEach team's roster for the 2013 IIHF World Championship consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 22 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All sixteen participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, had to submit a roster by the first IIHF directorate meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233902-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Championship rosters, Sweden, Goaltenders\n\u2021 Elias F\u00e4lth started the tournament with number 33, but changed to 81 following the inclusion of Henrik Sedin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233903-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I\nThe 2013 IIHF U18 World Championship Division I was a pair of international under-18 ice hockey tournaments organised by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division I A and Division I B tournaments represent the second and the third tier of the IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233903-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A\nThe Division I A tournament was played in Asiago, Italy, from 7 to 13 April 2013. Danish goalie George S\u00f8rensen scored a goal against France, joining Anton Khudobin as the only goaltenders ever to accomplish this feat in an IIHF event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233903-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I A, Results\nAll times are local. (Central European Summer Time \u2013 UTC+2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233903-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B\nThe Division I B tournament was played in Tychy, Poland, from 14 to 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233903-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Division I B, Results\nAll times are local. (Central European Summer Time \u2013 UTC+2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233904-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II\nThe 2013 IIHF U18 World Championship Division II was a pair of international under-18 ice hockey tournaments organised by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division II A and Division II B tournaments represent the fourth and the fifth tier of the IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233904-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Division II A\nThe Division II A tournament was played in Tallinn, Estonia, from 31 March to 6 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233904-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Division II A, Results\nAll times are local. (Eastern European Summer Time \u2013 UTC+3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233904-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Division II B\nThe Division II B tournament was played in Belgrade, Serbia, from 9 to 15 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233905-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III\nThe 2013 IIHF U18 World Championship Division III was a pair of international under-18 ice hockey tournaments organised by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division III A and Division III B tournaments represent the sixth and the seventh tier of the IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233905-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III, Division III A\nThe Division III A tournament was played in Taipei City, Taiwan, from 11 to 16 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233905-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III, Division III B\nThe Division III B tournament was played in \u0130zmit, Turkey, from 7 to 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships\nThe 2013 IIHF U18 World Championship was the 15th IIHF World U18 Championship and was hosted in Sochi, Russia. This was also a test event for the facilities to be used in the 2014 Winter Olympics. It began on 18 April 2013 with the gold medal game played on 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships\nCanada won its third under-18 championship by defeating the four time defending champion Americans 3\u20132. The host Russians lost to Finland 2\u20131 in the bronze medal game. MVP Connor McDavid set Canadian records for goals and points in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, Format\nA new format was implemented. The four best ranked teams from the preliminary round advanced to the quarterfinals, while the last placed teams played a relegation round in a best of three format to determine the relegated team. Additionally the practice of playing ranking games (fifth place through eighth place) was abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, Officials\nThe IIHF selected 12 referees and 10 linesmen to work the 2013 IIHF U18 World Championship. They were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, 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, 64], "content_span": [65, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Top Division, Leading goaltenders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division I, Division I A\nThe Division I A tournament was played in Asiago, Italy, from 7 to 13 April 2013. Danish goalie Georg S\u00f8rensen scored a goal against France, joining Anton Khudobin as the only goaltenders ever to accomplish this feat in an IIHF event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division I, Division I B\nThe Division I B tournament was played in Tychy, Poland, from 14 to 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division II, Division II A\nThe Division II A tournament was played in Tallinn, Estonia, from 31 March to 6 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division II, Division II B\nThe Division II B tournament was played in Belgrade, Serbia, from 9 to 15 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division III, Division III A\nThe Division III A tournament was played in Taipei City, Taiwan, from 11 to 16 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233906-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division III, Division III B\nThe Division III B tournament was played in \u0130zmit, Turkey, from 7 to 10 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship\nThe 2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championships was the sixth IIHF World Women's U18 Championships and was hosted in Finland. It began on December 29, 2012 with the gold medal game played on January 5, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, Relegation round\nThe teams played a best-of-three series. With Russia winning the first two meetings, a third one wasn't necessary and Germany was relegated to Division I in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, 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 shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, Ranking and statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In Minutes; POS = Position", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 99], "content_span": [100, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Top Division, Ranking and statistics, Leading goaltenders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = Shutouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 99], "content_span": [100, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Division I, Qualification tournament\nThe qualification tournament was played in Dumfries, Great Britain, from 27 October to 1 November 2012. The top two teams were promoted to Division I of this year, and the third team was promoted to Division I of next year, because starting in 2014 one team will be promoted from the qualification tournament and will wait until the following year to play in Division I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233907-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship, Division I, Final tournament\nThe 2013 Division I final tournament was played in Romanshorn, Switzerland, from 2 to 8 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233908-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship \u2013 Division I\nThe 2013 Division I final tournament was played in Romanshorn, Switzerland, from 2 to 8 January 2013. Japan won the tournament and after two years in the Division I they returned to the Top Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233908-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship \u2013 Division I, Qualification tournament\nThe qualification tournament was played in Dumfries, Great Britain, from 27 October to 1 November 2012. The top two teams, France and Slovakia, were promoted to Division I of this year, but starting in 2014 one team will be promoted from the qualification tournament and will wait until the following year (2015) to play in Division I. Though not indicated at the time of the tournament, the 2014 schedule indicates that Austria was relegated to the qualification level, and Great Britain was promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233909-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IK Start season\nThe Norwegian football club IK Start returned to the top league Tippeligaen for the 2013 season. It was their second full season with Mons Ivar Mjelde as manager, and they finished the season in 9th place. They also took part in the Norwegian Cup, reaching the quarter-finals stage before being beaten by Lillestr\u00f8m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233909-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IK Start season, Squad\nAs of 1 February 2013. Note: 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, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233909-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IK Start 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233909-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IK Start 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233909-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IK Start 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233909-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IK Start 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233910-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IMT-GT Cup\nThe 2013 IMT-GT Cup or IMT-GT Friendship Football 2013 was invited association football tournament that featured six teams and was staged on 23 September 2013 to 29 September 2013 in Satun, Thailand. T", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233910-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IMT-GT Cup\nhe competition was organised and promoted by Indonesia\u2013Malaysia\u2013Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT) under Thailand, ministry of sports and tourism with ASEAN Football Federation (ASEAN) collaboration. The champion, Kedah FA defeated Songkhla United FC in the final 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233911-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Alpine Skiing World Championships\nThe 2013 IPC Alpine Skiing World Championships was an international disability sport alpine skiing event held in La Molina ski resort in Spain from 18 to 27 February 2013. The Championship is held biannually by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) and is the largest event of its type outside the Winter Paralympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233911-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Alpine Skiing World Championships\nSkiers competed in sitting, standing or visually impaired classification categories in Downhill, Giant Slalom, Slalom, Super-G, Super Combined and Team events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233911-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Alpine Skiing World Championships\nOver 118 skiers competed, with France finishing the Championship on top of the medal table with the most gold medals and Canada finishing with the highest total medals won (14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233911-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Alpine Skiing World Championships, Classifications\nSkiers compete in sitting, standing or visually impaired events, depending on their classification of disability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships\nThe 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was the biggest track and field competition for athletes with a disability since the 2012 Summer Paralympics. It was held in Lyon, France and lasted from 20 to 28 July. Around 1,100 athletes competed, from 94 different countries. The event was held in the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne located at the Parc de Parilly in V\u00e9nissieux, in Lyon Metropolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Venue\nThe Championship was staged at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne in the Parc de Parilly. The stadium, previously known as the Stade Parilly, was refurbished in 2012 and officially reopened and renamed on 3 September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Format\nThe 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was an invitational tournament taking in track and field events. No combined sports were included in the 2013 Championships, with the pentathlon dropped. A total of 1,300 places were made available to all IPC affiliated countries, with 94 countries accepting the invitation and 1,073 athletes reaching the sporting criteria requested. Of the 1,300 available places, 900 were made available for male athletes and 400 for female athlete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Format\nNo country could send more than 55 male athletes and 25 female athletes, and only three athletes per event, apart from the marathons where six were allowed, or multi-classification events (such as F54/55/56 javelin) where five athletes could be entered. All events, apart from the marathons, took place within the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne. Not all events were open to all classifications, with several throwing and jumping events being contested between classifications, which were then decided on a points system. The men's 100m relay was the only event to use mixed classifications as a team, with each leg of the relay contested by a different classification athlete. There were no women's relay events. In total there were 207 events held over 17 disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Format\nAthletes finishing in first place are awarded the gold medal, second place the silver medal and third place the bronze. If only three competitors are available to challenge for an event then no bronze medal is awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Coverage\nThe International Paralympic Committee provided live video coverage on its website, as well as live coverage, videos of events and interviews on its ParalympicSportTV channel on YouTube.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Coverage\nIn the host country, France, the television channel France 4 broadcast two hours daily in the evening. This followed criticism that French television had given insufficient coverage to the 2012 Summer Paralympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Coverage\nIn the United Kingdom, Channel 4's sister channel More4 aired over five hours of live coverage daily throughout the Championship. This continued Channel 4's commitment to broadcasting disability sport until at least 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Events, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony was held at Stade du Rhone on Friday 19 July. The spectators were entertained by a celebration of Lyon's cultural heritage with an historic re-enactment, followed by a parade of athletes representing the 90 participating nations filed into the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Events, Opening ceremony\nSpeeches were made by G\u00e9rard Masson, President of the Organisation Committee and Sir Philip Craven, IPC President. Before the host nation national anthem played, master corporal Thomas Brun, a wounded veteran of the Afghanistan war, passed on the Tricolour to French athletes of the 2014 Winter Paralympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Events, Classification\nTo ensure competition is as fair and balanced as possible, athletes are classified dependent on how their disability impacts on their chosen event/s. Thus athletes may compete in an event against competitors with a different disability to themselves. Where there are more than one classification in one event, (for example discus throw F54/55/56), a points system is used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Medal table\nThe medal table at the end of Day 9 (28 July).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Multiple medallists\n161 competitors won multiple medals at the 2013 Championships. The following six athletes won four gold medals or more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (20 July)\nAfter failing to show up at the final of the T11 5,000m at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, Brazil's Odair Santos took the world title, beating fellow South American and Paralympic champion Cristian Valenzuela by over 11 seconds. In the T12 class of the 5,000m, Morocco's El Amin Chentouf set a competition record of 14:32.27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (20 July)\nThe Ukraine team started the games strongly with three gold medals, Andrii Holivets in the F12 shot put, Andriy Onufriyenko in the T37/38 long jump and Roman Pavlyk who broke the T36 long jump world record with a distance of 5.44m. Maciej Lepiato won the first gold of the Championships for Poland when he broke his own world record in the T44 high jump with a height of 2.13m. Other world records fell in the throwing events when Mohsen Kaedi (Iran) took the F34/35 Javelin while Aled Davies (Great Britain) won the F42 shot put.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (20 July)\nMarcel Hug of Switzerland started a strong personal Championship with his first medal of the tournament, the 10,000m gold in the T54 classification, his third consecutive World medal at this distance. Although the team failed to take a gold medal on day one, the USA showed strength in the qualifiers with Tatyana McFadden winning both her T54 heats, setting a personal best in the 200m and a championship record in 5000m. Fellow countryman Jarryd Wallace set a world record of 22.32 in the T44 200m sprint qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (20 July)\nLiu Fuliang of China, who took gold in the T46 triple jump and silver in the T42-46 4 \u00d7 100 m relay in the London Paralympics, showed his versatility by winning the T46 long jump. Another Paralympic winner to take gold in Lyon was Britain's Hannah Cockroft who won the T34 200m sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 2 (21 July)\nOn day two the USA converted their strong qualifying results into medals, taking five golds. Two from Tatyana McFadden, in the T54 200m and 5000m, Jeremy Campbell in the F44 discus, Raymond Martin with a Championship record in the T52 800m and Jarryd Wallace who beat his world record, set the day before, by running 22.08 in the T44 200m. Luis Felipe Guti\u00e9rrez won the first gold of the Championship for Cuba taking the T13 long jump, while his compatriot Leonardo Diaz doubled their tally with a world record in F54/55/56 discus throw. Japan's Atsushi Yamamoto gave his country their first top podium finish, in the T42 long jump.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 2 (21 July)\nThe Ukraine continued their first day success by collecting three more golds, including two wins in the throwing disciplines, Mykola Zhabnyak in the F37/38 discus and Mariia Pomazan in the F35/36, who set a new World record with a distance of 12.35m. The Ukraine's trio of gold medals was completed by Oxana Boturchuk in the T12 200m sprint. Poland saw double success, with golds from Bartosz Tyszkowski in the F41 shot put and Mateusz Michalski on the track, where he set a Championship record in the T12 200ms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 2 (21 July)\nWorld records were set in the F51/52/53 women's discus throw, set by Britain's Josie Pearson, and in the T37 800m race Michael McKillop of the Republic of Ireland who added the world title to his Paralympic gold. Ireland added to this success when Jason Smyth equaled his own world record in the T13 200m final. World records also fell in the qualifying rounds, with the host nation's own Mandy Francois-Elie recording a time of 28.35s in the T37 200m semi-final. Tunisia's Walid Ktila qualified for the final of the T34 200m with a record time of 27.61s. One of the most significant wins of the day came late in the schedule when Brazil's parasport poster-boy Alan Oliveira secured the T43 200m title by running a world record time of 20.66s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 3 (22 July)\nHost nation France secured their first gold medal of the Championships when Mandy Francois-Elie won the T37 200m final. Further success from Russia pushes the country into second place on the medal table, with gold medals for five athletes. Of the five gold medal winning athletes, four broke the world record in their discipline: Andrey Vdovin, (100m T37), Evgenii Shvetcov (100m T36), Maria Bogacheva (shot put F54) and Egor Sharov (800m T12). Their fifth winning athlete was Alexey Ashapatov who set a Championship record of 58.39m in the F57/58 discus. Germany also saw one of its athletes break a world record as Sebastian Dietz took the F35/36 in the men's discus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 3 (22 July)\nAlgeria continued to build on the achievements set by Samir Nouioua on the first day, with two gold medals in the men's events, Abdellatif Baka in the T13 800m and a world record for Mohamed Berrahal in the F51/52/53 discus. In the two long jump finals of the day Karolina Kucharczyk of Poland recorded a World record of 6.09m in the T20 while Martina Caironi of Italy took the title in the women's T42. Italy added a third gold on day 3 when Oxana Corso won the 100m T35 with a world record time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 3 (22 July)\nMuhammad Ziyad Zolkefli gave Malaysia their first medal of the competition with a gold in the F20 shot put. Finland also added to their tally with a gold in the T51 100m sprint from Toni Piispanen and a silver from Henry Manni in the T34 200m, high returns from a small but competitive team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 3 (22 July)\n2016 Summer Paralympics host nation Brazil continued to impress with two more track golds, one from Ver\u00f4nica Hip\u00f3lito in a hotly contested T38 200m final, and the second by Yohansson Nascimento in the T46 200m. The previous Paralympic host's Great Britain also kept up their challenge for the top of the medal table with Hannah Cockroft taking her second gold with victory in the T34 100m, Hollie Arnold winning the F46 javelin and Paul Blake achieving gold success in the T36 800m final. In the T44 100m qualifiers, world record holder Jonnie Peacock of Britain qualified for the finals with a season's best only to see American rival Richard Browne beat his world record by 0.02 seconds to set up an exciting day 4 showdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 4 (23 July)\nIn the shot put, Aigars Apinis of Latvia equaled the world record in the F43/43 classification, while Nikita Prokhorov took a centimeter off his own world record in the F46 class. Germany had further success in the throwing events with gold for Marianne Buggenhagen in the F54/55/56 discus and Birgit Kober in the F33/34 javelin. Other notable wins went to Aled Davies (Britain) in the F42 discus, Anibal Bello who won Venezuela's first gold of the Championship in the F11 javelin and Estela Salas in the F52/53 javelin, a second win for Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 4 (23 July)\nIn the jumping events, Iris Pruysen of the Netherlands won the T44 long jump, her country's first in Lyon, Nikol Rodomakina (Russia) recorded a personal best to win the T46 long jump and another gold went to the Ukraine as Dmytro Prudinkov took the T20 long jump title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 4 (23 July)\nOn the track, Russia took the first team event when they won the Men's 4 \u00d7 100 m Relay in the T11-13 class, pushing the USA and France into second and third place. The USA were not without success on day four, with Tatyana McFadden securing her third out of a possible six gold medals with a world record time of 1.44:44 in T54 800m final. This was followed by a win by Raymond Martin in the T52 100m sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 4 (23 July)\nThe highly anticipated contest between Peacock and Browne in the T44 final went to Peacock who took the gold with just 0.02seconds between the rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 4 (23 July)\nThe contest was not so close between Oliveira and his American rival Blake Leeper, with the Brazilian winning his second gold of the Championship in style in the T43 100m. There were more gold medals for Brazil on the track, for Odair Santos in the T11 800m and Terezinha Guilhermina in the T11 100m. Other wins went to Min Jae Jeon of South Korea in the T36 200m and China's Zhou Hongzhuan added to her Beijing and London success with the T53 800m title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 5 (24 July)\nRussia continued their steady accumulation of podium wins with success on the track. Evgenii Shvetcov won the T36 200m and Andrey Vdovin broke the world record in the T37 200m. Not to be outdone, teammate Atrem Arefyev also broke a world record, in the 1500m in the T36 classification. Other track success was claimed by Australia's Evan O'Hanlon, whose gold in the T38 200m sprint was his second of the competition. O'Hanlon's two wins, Australia's only top podium success of the Championships so far, hide a team heavy in medal success but unable to convert silver and bronze to gold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 5 (24 July)\nFrance broke into the top twenty of the medal table with three podium finishes, two of them gold. Mandy Francois-Elie who secured her second win of the Championship with the T37 100m title was joined by Tony Falelavaki who threw 54.39m in the F44 Javelin. Other multiple medal winners included Marcel Hug (Switzerland), whose domination of the T54 distance racing continued as he added the 5000m title to his 400 and 10,000m golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 5 (24 July)\nIreland's Michael McKillop collected his second gold by setting a championship record in the T38 1500m, while Walid Ktila of Tunisia won the T34 100m, the second of a possible four medals in his sights. Another athlete aiming at four medals was T53 wheelchair racer Brent Lakatos of Canada, who, with a silver already in the 800m and a gold in the 400m, took the 200m title with a championship record time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 5 (24 July)\nWorld records continued to be broken, with Markus Rehm of Germany setting a distance of 7.95m in the T44 men's long jump. In the T38 100m, 16-year-old British sprinter Sophie Hahn gained revenge over her rival Ver\u00f4nica Hip\u00f3lito, who had beaten her in the 200m, by posting a record time of 13.10s. Two world records were also set in the women's throwing events, in the club throw Maroua Ibrahmi recorded a distance of 24.15 on her way to a points victory, while Assunta Legnente out threw her nearest rival by a massive five metres to win the T11 shot put for Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 6 (25 July)\nDay 6 started with Michelle Stilwell of Canada collecting her country's third gold of the games with a world record time of 2:14.79 in the T52 800\u00a0metres. Iran brought their medal tally up to six when Peyman Nasiri Bazanjani won his country's first track medal of the championships with victory in the T20 1500\u00a0m race. Algeria collected two gold medals on the track, both at 1500\u00a0m distance, Samir Nouioua in the T46 classification and Abdellatif Baka in the T13. These wins gave Nouioua and Baka their second gold medals of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 6 (25 July)\nThis was bettered by Odair Santos who won his third gold of the games when he secured the T12 1500\u00a0m, though the Brazilian could not compete with Tatyana McFadden who successfully claimed her fourth and fifth golds of the games when she won the T54 100\u00a0m and 1500\u00a0m. In the T54 1500m race, despite the distance of the race, Japan's Wakako Tsuchida and Switzerland's Edith Wolf crossed the finish line in a rare dead-heat and were both awarded the silver medal. Other multiple gold medal winners on the track included a third for Tunisia's Walid Ktila (T34 800\u00a0m), a second for China's Huang Lisha (T53 100\u00a0m) and a second for Ireland's Jason Smyth (T13 100\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 6 (25 July)\nIn the throwing events, four new world records were set. Hania Aidi of Tunisia recorded a distance of 18.32\u00a0m in the F54/55/56 javelin. Lahouari Bahlaz of Algeria secured gold with a record in the men's F31/32/51 club throw, while Ukrainian Mariia Pomazan threw 31.42\u00a0m in the F35/36 discus throw. Fifteen-year-old British athlete Scott Jones beat his closest rival by 59\u00a0cm in the F34 shot put to set the last world record of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 6 (25 July)\nBoth jumping events held on day six were in the women's long jump. Isle Hayes from South Africa set a championship record of 5.76\u00a0m to win the T13. Another championship record fell in the T12 classification of the long jump when Oksana Zubkovska of the Ukraine recorded a distance of 6.51\u00a0m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 7 (26 June)\nTwo world records were broken and one equaled on day 7, two in throwing events and one on the track. Vladimir Sviridov of Russia equaled the world record in the F36 shot put in his very first throw with a distance of 14.70m. Fellow Russian Chermen Kobesov added a gold medal to his silver from the long jump with a world record in the T37 400m. The final record of the day was achieved in the F53/53 javelin where Alphanso Cunningham gave Jamaica their first gold of the Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 7 (26 June)\nJamaica were one of five countries to collect their first gold medal of the games on Day 7. Syria won a gold in the F56/57 shot put, awarded to Mohamed Mohamed, the sole representative of his country. Ihar Fartunau of Belarus reached a height of 1.93 to win the T13 high jump, while Chiang Chih-Chung of Chinese Taipei threw 59.29m in the F12/13 javelin. The fifth country to gain their first gold in Lyon was Austria, won in the T46 400m by Gunther Matzinger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 7 (26 June)\nMarcel Hug continued to stamp his mark on the competition with his third gold of the Championships, winning the T54 1,500m. Birgit Kober of Germany became a double gold medal winner adding the F32/33/34 shot put to her javelin title won three days earlier. Xia Dong of China put behind the disappointment of failing to clinch the gold in the F37/38 discus by setting a Championship record in the F37 shot put.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 7 (26 June)\nWhile Australia began to hit the top spot with gold winning achievements for Evan O'Hanlon (T38 400m), and after an appeal by the Australian team Scott Reardon shared the T42 100m title with German rival Heinrich Popow. Initially Popow had been declared the winner by a few thousandths of a second, but later the two men shared the podium together after one of the most contested races of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 8 (27 June)\nAmerican wheelchair racer Tatyana McFadden sealed her position as the most successful athlete of the Championships when she won her sixth gold medal by taking the 400m T54.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 8 (27 June)\nThe United States also celebrated a fifth gold medal from Raymond Martin who like McFadden also won every event he entered, finishing with the T52 400m. Other gold medals for the United States came from Elexis Gillette in the T11 long jump, Cassie Mitchell, who added the F53/53 shot put to her silver and two bronzes won on the track, and a team medal in the men's 4 x 100 metres relay T42-46 setting a new world record. The other relay finals were won by Canada in the men's 4 x 400 metres T53/54 and Russia in the men's 4 x 100 metres T35-38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 8 (27 June)\nAs well as the relay, Russia finished the Championship with more gold medal success. Nikita Prokhorov won the F46 discus and Evgeniya Trushnikova won the T37 400m, both setting tournament records. Russia finished Day 8 with golds for Egor Sharov in the T12 400m, Elena Pautova in the T12 1,500m and two new world records for Marta Prokofyeva in the F12 shot put and Dmitrii Safronov in the T35 200m. Two further world records were broken on the penultimate day, both by Algerian athletes. Nassima Saifi threw a distance of 42.05m in the F57/58 women's discus while her countryman Lahouari Bahlaz, also a discus thrower, recorded 22.75 in the joint F32/33/34 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 8 (27 June)\nAzerbaijan secured their first gold medal of the Championships when Vladimir Zayets won the T12 triple jump, a feat equaled by Namibia who took their sixth medal of the games with a top podium finish for Nambala Johannes in the T13 400m. Walid Ktila struck again for a fourth gold medal, this time in the T34 400m, while there were second gold medals for China's Zhou Hongzhuan (T53 400m), the Netherlands Marlou van Rhijn (T44 200m) and Italian duo Martina Caironi (T42 100m) and Oxana Corso (T35 200m). The final track medal of the day went to Michelle Stilwell of Canada who added the T52 200m event to her 100m and 800m titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 9 (28 July)\nThe final day of the Championships took in five events all in the marathon. There was only one women's race, the T54 classification, with ten competitors from six different nations. The three medal winners all crossed the finish line within a second of each other, with eventual winner Switzerland's Manuela Sch\u00e4r recording a final time of 1:49.45. Switzerland made it a double in the T54 marathon when Marcel Hug dominated the men's race to win by over three minutes to collect his fifth gold medal of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Highlights, Day 9 (28 July)\nChile gained its first gold medal of the Championship when Cristian Valenzuela won the T11 marathon. With two silver medals already to his name; in the 1,500 and 5,000m, Valenzuela made Chile the most successful nation in proportion to the size of their team, being his country's only competitor. The T46 marathon was a limited field with only four challengers for the title. Italy's Alessandro Di Lello took gold, beating his nearest rival by almost 15 minutes. The T12 marathon saw Paralympic champion El Amin Chentouf of Morocco finishing close to the Championship record to cement his dominance in his classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233912-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, Participating nations\nBelow is the list of countries who agreed to participate in the Championships and the requested number of athlete places for each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233913-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233914-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233915-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1,500 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233916-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233917-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4x100 metres relay at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233918-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4x400 metres relay at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20 to 29 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233919-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July. There were 12 categories contested over the 400m at the championship. Two World records were set in the 400m, Chermen Kobesov of Russia posted a time of 51.88s in the T37 class, while Ahmad Almutairi of Kuwait recorded a time of 57.95s in the T33 category. Almutairi's category was not part of the schedule of this championship, but he qualified to compete in the T34 category. Despite coming last in his qualifying round and not advancing to the final he still broke the T33 world record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233920-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5,000 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233921-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233922-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's club throw\nThe men's club throw at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233923-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233924-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233925-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233926-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233927-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's marathon\nThe men's marathon at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held in the streets of Lyon, France on 29 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233928-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233929-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233930-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233931-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1,500 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233932-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233933-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233934-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5,000 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233935-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233936-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's club throw\nThe women's club throw at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233937-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233938-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe women's javelin throw at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233939-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233940-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's marathon\nThe women's marathon at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held in the streets of Lyon, France on 29 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233941-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Athletics World Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships was held at the Stade du Rh\u00f4ne from 20\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233942-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Ice Sledge Hockey World Championships\nThe 7th IPC Ice Sledge Hockey World Championships took place in the SPART Complex in Goyang, South Korea from 12 to 20 April 2013. It was the first time that South Korea hosted the IPC Ice Sledge Hockey World Championships. In the final match, Canada defeated the United States 1-0, to win their third title. Russia defeated the Czech Republic 3-0 for the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships\nThe 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was an international swimming competition, the biggest meet for athletes with a disability since the 2012 Summer Paralympics. It was held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and lasted from 12 to 18 August. Around 530 athletes competed from 57 different countries. The event was held in the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex located at the Parc Jean-Drapeau in Montreal. 172 events were contested with 43 new world records set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Venue\nThe Championship was staged at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in the Parc Jean-Drapeau located in the east of Montreal. The complex contains three outdoor swimming pools, all renovated shortly before the staging of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Coverage\nAs with the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, the IPC will continue to show live streaming of the evening finals on ParalympicSport.TV. In the United Kingdom Channel 4 continued their commitment to parasport with their own live streaming Paralympics website with pool-side commentary and a daily one-hour highlights television show the following morning on Channel 4. In Brazil coverage was provided by Globo-Sport TV while some European Broadcasting Union countries would also air the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Events, Classification\nAthletes are allocated a classification for each event based upon their disability to allow fairer competition between athletes of similar ability. The classifications for swimming are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Events, Classification\nClassifications run from S1 (severely disabled) to S10 (minimally disabled) for athletes with physical disabilities, and S11 (totally blind) to S13 (legally blind) for visually impaired athletes. Blind athletes must use blackened goggles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Medal table, Multiple medallists\nMany competitors won multiple medals at the 2013 Championships. The following athletes won five gold medals or more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (12 August)\nThe first medal of the 2013 World Championships was won by Ireland's Darragh McDonald who took gold in the 400m freestyle S6 class. The first world record of the games came much earlier in the day when at 9:18AM on only the fourth heat of the championships, Konstantin Lisenkov of Russia recorded a time of 1:04.12 to beat his own record set three years earlier in Eindhoven in the 100m backstroke S8. This was one of three world records to fall in the morning heats, the others going to Nely Miranda Herrera (Mexico) in the 50m Women's freestyle S4 and Olga Sviderska (Ukraine) in the Women's 200m freestyle S3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (12 August)\nThe afternoon session witnessed five new world records. Ihar Boki of Belarus, one of the stand-out athletes of the championships, broke the world record in the final of the SM13 200m individual medley. Then within the hour two more records fell as Lisenkov's record in the 100m backstroke S8, set in the morning, failed to last a day as he took 0.70 seconds of his own time to secure gold; while Britain's Josef Craig added the World title of the 400m freestyle S7 to his Paralympic title with a winning time of 4:39.13. The final two new world records were set in the last three races of the day. New Zealand's Sophie Pascoe swam 1:00.15 in the 100m freestyle S10 while British athlete Jessica-Jane Applegate recorded a time of 2:09.88 in the 200m freestyle to just freeze out Ireland's Bethany Firth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (12 August)\nOf the other medals, several of the big stars of the games took their first gold medals on the first day. Ukraine's Dmytro Vynohradets took the first of his seven gold medals with success in the Men's 200m freestyle S3, while his teammate Olga Sviderska took the equivalent title in the women's race but well outside her morning's record finish. Australia's Matthew Cowdrey picked up the first of five championship golds in the 100m freestyle S9 while the women's race Stephanie Millward of Britain secured the first of her four golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Highlights, Day 1 (12 August)\nNew Zealand saw further success on Day one when Mary Fisher started her rung of gold medals with a win in the 100m backstroke S11. Brazil's Andre Brasil became a double Paralympic and World Champion taking the 100m Freestyle S10, a title he has held in those two world championships since 2008 in Beijing. The USA also achieved success on day one, collecting three medals from Roy Perkins (50m butterfly S5), Rebecca Anne Meyers (200m medley SM13) and Cortney Jordan (400m freestyle S7), though it was the Ukraine who topped the medal table at the day with six golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233943-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships, Participating nations\nBelow is the list of countries who agreed to participate in the Championships and the requested number of athlete places for each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233944-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metre backstroke\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by AnomieBOT (talk | contribs) at 16:28, 16 December 2019 (Dating maintenance tags: {{Nosources}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233944-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metre backstroke\nThe men's 100 metre backstroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233945-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metre breaststroke\nThe men's 100 metre breaststroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12 to 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233946-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metre butterfly\nThe men's 100 metre butterfly at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233947-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metre freestyle\nThe men's 100 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233948-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 150 metre medley\nThe men's 150 metre medley at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233949-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metre freestyle\nThe men's 200 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233950-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metre medley\nThe men's 200 metre medley at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12 to 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233951-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metre freestyle relay\nThe men's 4 x 100 metre freestyle relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233952-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metre medley relay\nThe men's 4 x 100 metre medley relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233953-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 50 metre freestyle relay\nThe men's 4 x 50 metre freestyle relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233954-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 50 metre medley relay\nThe men's 4 x 50 metre medley relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12 to 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233955-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metre freestyle\nThe men's 400 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233956-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 50 metre backstroke\nThe men's 50 metre backstroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233957-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 50 metre breaststroke\nThe men's 50 metre breaststroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233958-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 50 metre butterfly\nThe men's 50 metre butterfly at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233959-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Men's 50 metre freestyle\nThe men's 50 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233960-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metre backstroke\nThe women's 100 metre backstroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233961-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metre breaststroke\nThe women's 100 metre breaststroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233962-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metre butterfly\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by AnomieBOT (talk | contribs) at 16:29, 16 December 2019 (Dating maintenance tags: {{Nosources}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233962-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metre butterfly\nThe women's 100 metre butterfly at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233963-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metre freestyle\nThe women's 100 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233964-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 150 metre medley\nThe women's 150 metre medley at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233965-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metre freestyle\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by AnomieBOT (talk | contribs) at 16:31, 16 December 2019 (Dating maintenance tags: {{Nosources}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233965-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metre freestyle\nThe women's 200 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233966-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metre medley\nThe women's 200 metre medley at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12 to 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233967-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metre freestyle relay\nThe women's 4 x 100 metre freestyle relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [77, 77], "content_span": [78, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233968-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metre medley relay\nThe women's 4 x 100 metre medley relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233969-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 50 metre freestyle relay\nThe women's 4 x 50 metre freestyle relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [76, 76], "content_span": [77, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233970-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 50 metre medley relay\nThe women's 4 x 50 metre medley relay at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233971-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metre freestyle\nThe women's 400 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233972-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 50 metre backstroke\nThe women's 50 metre backstroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12 to 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233973-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 50 metre breaststroke\nThe women's 50 metre breaststroke at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233974-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 50 metre butterfly\nThe women's 50 metre butterfly at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233975-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPC Swimming World Championships \u2013 Women's 50 metre freestyle\nThe women's 50 metre freestyle at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships was held at the Parc Jean Drapeau Aquatic Complex in Montreal from 12\u201318 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233976-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPP Open and the Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open\nThe 2013 IPP Open and the Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open were professional tennis tournaments played on indoor hard courts. It was the 13th edition of the men's tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour, offering a total of \u20ac42,500 in prize money, and sixth edition of the women's tournament, which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $10,000 in prize money. The two events took place together at the Tali Tennis Center in Helsinki, Finland, on 11\u201317 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233976-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IPP Open and the Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open, Men's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233976-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IPP Open and the Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open, Women's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233976-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IPP Open and the Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open, Women's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233977-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPP Open \u2013 Doubles\nMikhail Elgin and Igor Zelenay were the defending champions, but Zelenay did not participate that year. Elgin played alongside Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k and they lost in the quarterfinals to Henri Kontinen and Jarkko Nieminen, who won the title, defeating Dustin Brown and Philipp Marx in the final, 7\u20135, 5\u20137, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233978-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IPP Open \u2013 Singles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Lacko was the defending champion, but lost to Jan-Lennard Struff in quarterfinals. Jarkko Nieminen won the title, beating Ri\u010dardas Berankis in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233979-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Championship\nThe 2013 IRB Junior World Championship was the sixth annual international rugby union competition for Under 20 national teams. The event was organised in France by rugby's governing body, the IRB. A total of twelve nations played in the tournament. South Africa went into the tournament as defending champions, after winning the tournament for the first time in 2012. England were crowned the 2013 champions for the first time after defeating Wales 23\u201315 in the final on the 23 June at Stade de la Rabine in Vannes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233979-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Championship\nAfter finishing last at the 2012 IRB Junior World Championship, Italy were relegated to the IRB Junior World Trophy and therefore didn't participate in this year's event. After finishing first at the 2012 IRB Junior World Rugby Trophy, the United States were promoted to this competition for 2013. Their stay in the IRB Junior World Championship was short lived however as they lost in the 11th place final to Fiji 46\u201312 and were relegated to the IRB Junior World Trophy being replaced for the 2014 competition by its winners Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233979-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Championship, Venues\nThe championship was held in La Roche-sur-Yon, Vannes and Nantes in France. In an effort to improve TV broadcasting for all matches, only three venues were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233979-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Championship, Venues\nFor the first time since the competitions inception, the final was contested by two northern hemisphere teams. Also for the first time New Zealand did not participate in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233979-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Championship, Teams\nThe following teams participated in the 2013 IRB Junior World Championship:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233979-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Championship, Teams\n1 \u00a0United States were promoted from the 2012 IRB Junior World Rugby Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233980-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Rugby Trophy\nThe 2013 IRB Junior World Rugby Trophy was the sixth annual international rugby union competition for under-20 national teams, second-tier world championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233980-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Junior World Rugby Trophy\nThe event was held in Temuco, Chile and was organized by rugby's governing body, the International Rugby Board. The tournament was originally to be held in Antofagasta, but that city pulled out of hosting only a few months before the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233981-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Nations Cup\nThe 2013 IRB Nations Cup was the eighth edition of the international rugby union tournament, a competition created by the International Rugby Board. For the seventh time in a row, it was held in Bucharest, Romania. It was played between 8 June and 16 June and ran alongside the 2013 IRB Tbilisi Cup in Georgia. All fixtures were played at the 5,000 capacity Stadionul Na\u0163ional de Rugby, the Home stadium for Hosts Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233981-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Nations Cup\nHosts Romania were joined by ENC side Russia and regular A sides Italy A and 2012 IRB Nations cup runners-up, Argentina Jaguars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233981-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Nations Cup\nRomania retained the title they won in 2012 by winning all three of their matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup\nThe 2013 Pacific Nations Cup rugby union tournament was held between five national sides in the Pacific Region: Canada, Fiji, Japan, Tonga, and USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup\nSamoa were the reigning champion after they defeated Fiji in the 2012 competition but took the year off to compete in a tournament with South Africa, Scotland and Italy in the South African Quadrangular Tournament. Meanwhile, with the demise of the Churchill Cup, Canada and United States joined this competition for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup\nThe tournament ran from 25 May to 23 June 2013. Five of the matches were held in Japan, three in Canada, one in the U.S., and one in Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup\nAs with previous years, the tournament was a round-robin where each team played each of the other teams once. Four points were awarded for a win, two for a draw and none for a defeat. There were also bonus points offered with one bonus point for scoring four or more tries in a match and one bonus point for losing by 7 points or less.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, Canada\nCanada's 44-man squad for their Summer 2013 games, including the 2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, the June international against Ireland, and the two Rugby World Cup Qualifiers vs the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, Canada\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, Fiji\n35-man extended Fiji squad for the 2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, Japan\nJapanese 35-man squad for 2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup and 2013 Welsh rugby union tour of Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, Japan\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, Tonga\n28-man Tonga squad for the 2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, 10 non-travelling reserves were also named.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, United States\nEagles squad 30-man training squad for the 2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233982-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup, Squads, United States\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233983-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Tbilisi Cup\nThe 2013 IRB Tbilisi Cup was the inaugural edition of this international rugby union tournament, created by the International Rugby Board and was played from 7 to 16 June 2013 at the Avchala Stadium in Tbilisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233983-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Tbilisi Cup\nThe hosts Georgia were joined by Uruguay, who regularly take part in the IRB Nations Cup, and two newly founded teams: Emerging Ireland, who were made up of young Irish players that didn't get selected for the Lions tour to Australia or the national side's tour to North America, and a South Africa President's XV, composed of Currie Cup players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233983-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Tbilisi Cup\nSouth Africa President's XV won the inaugural tournament after winning all three of their games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233983-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IRB Tbilisi Cup\nFollowing this tournament, Georgia played Argentina for the first time outside the Rugby World Cup on 22 June as part of the 2013 mid-year tests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233984-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open\nThe 2013 IS Open was a professional tennis tournament being played on hard courts. It was the first edition and only edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It is taking place in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil between 30 September and 6 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233984-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233985-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open de T\u00eanis\nThe 2013 IS Open de T\u00eanis was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil, on 22\u201328 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233985-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open de T\u00eanis, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233985-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open de T\u00eanis, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233985-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open de T\u00eanis, Doubles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233986-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open de T\u00eanis \u2013 Doubles\nPaul Capdeville and Marcel Felder were the defending champions but Felder decided not to participate. Capdeville played alongside Hans Podlipnik-Castillo, but they withdrawn after the first round. Marcelo Demoliner and Jo\u00e3o Souza defeated James Cerretani and Pierre-Hugues Herbert 6\u20132, 4\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233987-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open de T\u00eanis \u2013 Singles\nBla\u017e Kav\u010di\u010d was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Paul Capdeville won the final 6\u20132, 6\u20132 against Renzo Olivo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233988-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open \u2013 Doubles\nRoman Borvanov and Artem Sitak won the title defeating Sergio Gald\u00f3s and Guido Pella in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233989-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IS Open \u2013 Singles\nGuido Pella won the title defeating Facundo Arg\u00fcello in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233990-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ISAF Women's Match Racing World Championship\nThe 2013 ISAF Women's Match World Championship was held in Busan, South Korea between June 4 and June 9, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233991-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating\nThe 2013 ISU World Team Trophy was an international team figure skating competition in the 2012\u201313 season. Participating countries selected two men's single skaters, two ladies' single skaters, one pair and one ice dancing entry to compete in a team format with points based on the skaters' placement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233991-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, Overview\nSix countries qualified for the event: Canada (7824 points), the United States (7156), Japan (6823), Russia (6648), France (4826), and China (4702). Japan had no pair entry due to the split of Narumi Takahashi / Mervin Tran. There were several changes to the initial roster. Ekaterina Bobrova / Dmitri Soloviev withdrew due to an injury to Soloviev and Ksenia Monko / Kirill Khaliavin were named in their place. Nathalie P\u00e9chalat / Fabian Bourzat were replaced by Pernelle Carron / Lloyd Jones, Florent Amodio by Romain Ponsart, and Song Nan by Wang Yi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233991-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, Overview\nJapan and the United States were tied with 47 points each after the first day of competition, with Russia in third. Madison Chock / Evan Bates, Patrick Chan, and Adelina Sotnikova were the leaders in the short dance, men's, and ladies' short programs, respectively. The second day featured the pair's short program, free dance, and men's free skating. Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov took the lead in pairs, while Daisuke Takahashi and Chock / Bates won the men's and dance free programs respectively. Konstantin Menshov, third after the short program, withdrew after dislocating his right shoulder attempting a triple Axel in the free skating. The United States moved into the lead with 55 points, Canada rose to second place (50), and Japan slipped to third (48).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233991-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, Overview\nThe third and final day of competition features the pairs' and ladies' free skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233992-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit\nThe 2013 ITF Men's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the entry level tour for men's professional tennis, and is the third tier tennis tour below the Association of Tennis Professionals, World Tour and Challenger Tour. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) who additionally organizes the ITF Women's Circuit which is an entry level tour for women's professional tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233992-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit\nFuture tournaments are organized to offer either $10,000 or $15,000 in prize money and tournaments which offering hospitality to players competing in the main draw give additional ranking points which are valid under the ATP ranking system, and are to be organized by a national association or approved by the ITF Men's Circuit Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233992-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit\nThe tournaments are played on a rectangular flat surface, commonly referred to as a tennis court. The dimenstion of a tennis court are defined and regulated by the ITF and the court is 23.78 meters (78.0 feet) long, 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) wide. Its width is 8.23 meters (27.0 feet) for singles matches and 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) for doubles matches. Tennis is played on a variety of surfaces and each surface has its own characteristics which affect the playing style of the game. There are four main types of courts depending on the materials used for the court surface, clay, hard, grass and carpet courts with the ITF classifying five different pace settings ranging from slow to fast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233992-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit, Participating host nations\nCountries that are hosting a tournament in 2013, but did not in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233993-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (April\u2013June)\nThe 2013 ITF Men's Circuit was the 2013 edition of the entry level tour for men's professional tennis, and the third tier tennis tour below the Association of Tennis Professionals, World Tour and Challenger Tour. It was organised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) which also organizes the ITF Women's Circuit, an entry level tour for women's professional tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233993-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (April\u2013June)\nLater tournaments were organized to offer either $10,000 or $15,000 in prize money and tournaments which offered hospitality to players competing in the main draw to give additional ranking points which are valid under the ATP ranking system, and were organized by a national association or approved by the ITF Men's Circuit Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233993-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (April\u2013June)\nThe tournaments were played on a rectangular flat surface, commonly called a tennis court. The dimensions of a tennis court are defined and regulated by the ITF and the court is 23.78 meters (78.0 feet) long, 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) wide. Its width is 8.23 meters (27.0 feet) for singles matches and 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) for doubles matches. Tennis is played on a variety of surfaces and each surface has its own characteristics which affect playing style. The four main types of courts, depending on the materials used for the surface, are clay, hard, grass and carpet courts, with the ITF classifying five different pace settings ranging from slow to fast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233994-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (January\u2013March)\nThe 2013 ITF Men's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the entry level tour for men's professional tennis, and is the third tier tennis tour below the Association of Tennis Professionals, World Tour and Challenger Tour. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) who additionally organizes the ITF Women's Circuit which is an entry level tour for women's professional tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233994-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (January\u2013March)\nFuture tournaments are organized to offer either $10,000 or $15,000 in prize money and tournaments which offering hospitality to players competing in the main draw give additional ranking points which are valid under the ATP ranking system, and are to be organized by a national association or approved by the ITF Men's Circuit Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233994-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (January\u2013March)\nThe tournaments are played on a rectangular flat surface, commonly referred to as a tennis court. The dimenstion of a tennis court are defined and regulated by the ITF and the court is 23.78 meters (78.0 feet) long, 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) wide. Its width is 8.23 meters (27.0 feet) for singles matches and 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) for doubles matches. Tennis is played on a variety of surfaces and each surface has its own characteristics which affect the playing style of the game. There are four main types of courts depending on the materials used for the court surface, clay, hard, grass and carpet courts with the ITF classifying five different pace settings ranging from slow to fast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233995-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (July\u2013September)\nThe 2013 ITF Men's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the entry level tour for men's professional tennis, and is the third tier tennis tour below the Association of Tennis Professionals, World Tour and Challenger Tour. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) who additionally organizes the ITF Women's Circuit which is an entry level tour for women's professional tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233995-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (July\u2013September)\nFuture tournaments are organized to offer either $10,000 or $15,000 in prize money and tournaments which offering hospitality to players competing in the main draw give additional ranking points which are valid under the ATP ranking system, and are to be organized by a national association or approved by the ITF Men's Circuit Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233996-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (October\u2013December)\nThe 2013 ITF Men's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the entry level tour for men's professional tennis, and is the third tier tennis tour below the Association of Tennis Professionals, World Tour and Challenger Tour. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) who additionally organizes the ITF Women's Circuit which is an entry level tour for women's professional tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233996-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (October\u2013December)\nFuture tournaments are organized to offer either $10,000 or $15,000 in prize money and tournaments which offering hospitality to players competing in the main draw give additional ranking points which are valid under the ATP ranking system, and are to be organized by a national association or approved by the ITF Men's Circuit Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233996-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Men's Circuit (October\u2013December)\nThe tournaments are played on a rectangular flat surface, commonly referred to as a tennis court. The dimenstion of a tennis court are defined and regulated by the ITF and the court is 23.78 meters (78.0 feet) long, 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) wide. Its width is 8.23 meters (27.0 feet) for singles matches and 10.97 meters (36.0 feet) for doubles matches. Tennis is played on a variety of surfaces and each surface has its own characteristics which affect the playing style of the game. There are four main types of courts depending on the materials used for the court surface, clay, hard, grass and carpet courts with the ITF classifying five different pace settings ranging from slow to fast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233997-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit\nThe 2013 ITF Women's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the second-tier tour for women's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the WTA Tour. The ITF Women's Circuit includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $10,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233997-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit, Statistical information\nTo avoid confusion and double counting, these tables should only be updated after the end of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233998-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit (April\u2013June)\nThe 2013 ITF Women's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the second tier tour for women's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the WTA Tour. The ITF Women's Circuit includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $10,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00233999-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit (January\u2013March)\nThe 2013 ITF Women's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the second tier tour for women's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the WTA Tour. The ITF Women's Circuit includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $10,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234000-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit (July\u2013September)\nThe 2013 ITF Women's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the second tier tour for women's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the WTA Tour. The ITF Women's Circuit includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $10,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234001-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit (October\u2013December)\nThe 2013 ITF Women's Circuit is the 2013 edition of the second tier tour for women's professional tennis. It is organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the WTA Tour. The ITF Women's Circuit includes tournaments with prize money ranging from $10,000 up to $100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234002-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya\nThe 2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Sanya, China, on 9\u201315 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234002-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234002-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234003-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya \u2013 Doubles\nErika Sema and Zheng Saisai were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234003-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya \u2013 Doubles\nSun Ziyue and Xu Shilin won the title, defeating Yang Zhaoxuan and Zhao Yijing in the final, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20133, [10\u20133].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234004-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya \u2013 Singles\nWang Qiang was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but lost in the first round to Wang Yafan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234004-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Sanya \u2013 Singles\nKarol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Zheng Saisai in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234005-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Wenshan\nThe 2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Wenshan was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Wenshan City, China, on 22\u201328 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234005-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Wenshan, 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-00234006-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Wenshan \u2013 Doubles\nHsieh Shu-ying and Hsieh Su-wei were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Hsieh Su-wei chose not to participate. Hsieh Shu-ying paired up with Zhu Aiwen but lost in the first round to Li Ting and Zhang Kailin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234006-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Wenshan \u2013 Doubles\nMiki Miyamura and Varatchaya Wongteanchai won the title, defeating Rika Fujiwara and Junri Namigata in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234007-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Wenshan \u2013 Singles\nHsieh Su-wei was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234007-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITF Women's Circuit \u2013 Wenshan \u2013 Singles\nZhang Yuxuan won the tournament, defeating Wang Qiang in the final, 1\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234008-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITM 400 Auckland\nThe 2013 ITM 400 Auckland was a motor race meeting for the Australasian sedan-based V8 Supercars. It was the third event of the 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship. Four races were held during the race meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234008-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITM 400 Auckland\nIt was the first running of the event since 2007. The event replaced the Hamilton 400 on the championship calendar and is the sole New Zealand race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234009-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITM Cup\nThe 2013 ITM Cup season was the eighth season of New Zealand's provincial rugby union competition since it turned professional in 2006. The regular season began on August 15, when Counties Manukau hosted Wellington. It involved the top fourteen rugby unions of New Zealand. For sponsorship reasons, the competition was known as the ITM Cup and it was the fourth season under the lead sponsor. The winner of the Championship, Tasman was promoted to the Premiership, the seventh placed Premiership team, Bay of Plenty was relegated to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234009-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITM Cup, Format\nThe ITM Cup standings were sorted by a competition points system. Four points were awarded to the winning team, a draw equaled two points, whilst a loss amounted to zero points. Unions could also win their side a respectable bonus point. To receive a bonus point, they must have scored four tries or more or lose by seven or fewer points or less. Each team was placed on their total points received. If necessary of a tiebreaker, when two or more teams finish on equal points, the union who defeated the other in a head-to-head got placed higher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 20], "content_span": [21, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234009-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 ITM Cup, Format\nIn case of a draw between them, the side with the biggest points deferential margin got rights to be ranked above. If they were tied on points difference, it was then decided by a highest scored try count or a coin toss. This seeding format was implemented since the beginning of the 2006 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 20], "content_span": [21, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234009-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ITM Cup, Format\nThe competition included a promotion-relegation process with the winner of the Championship receiving automatic promotion to the Premiership, replacing the seventh-placed team in the Premiership which was relegated to the Championship for the following year. The regular season consisted of two types of matches. The internal division matches were when each team played the other six unions in their division once, home or away. The cross-division matches were when each team played four teams from the other division, thus missing out on three teams, each from the opposite division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 20], "content_span": [21, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234009-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 ITM Cup, Format\nEach union played home or away games against teams from the other division, making a total of ten competition games for each union. The finals format allowed the top four teams from each division move on to the semi-finals. The top two division winners, based on table points, received a home semi-final. In the first round of the finals, the semi-finals, the second division winner hosted the third division winner, and the first division winner hosted the fourth division winner. The final was hosted by the top remaining seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 20], "content_span": [21, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234009-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ITM Cup, Regular season\nThe 2013 ITM Cup was played across nine weeks with every team playing one Wednesday night fixture in a double-up round where they played twice that week. The competition started on Thursday, August 15, with Counties Manukau taking on Wellington at ECOLight Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234010-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITS Cup\nThe 2013 ITS Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $100,000 in prize money. It took place in Olomouc, Czech Republic, on 15\u201321 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234010-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITS Cup, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234011-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITS Cup \u2013 Doubles\nIn\u00e9s Ferrer Su\u00e1rez and Rich\u00e8l Hogenkamp were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234011-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITS Cup \u2013 Doubles\nRenata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 and Barbora Z\u00e1hlavov\u00e1-Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 won the tournament, defeating Martina Boreck\u00e1 and Tereza Mal\u00edkov\u00e1 in the all-Czech final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234012-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITS Cup \u2013 Singles\nMar\u00eda Teresa Torr\u00f3 Flor won the event in 2012 but chose to compete at the 2013 Gastein Ladies instead of defending her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234012-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITS Cup \u2013 Singles\nPolona Hercog won the title, defeating Katarzyna Piter in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234013-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITU Triathlon World Cup\nThe 2013 ITU Triathlon World Cup was a series of triathlon races organised by the International Triathlon Union (ITU) for elite-level triathletes held during the 2013 season. For 2013, Ten races were announced as part of the World Cup series. Each race was held over a distance of 1500\u00a0m swim, 40\u00a0km cycle, 10\u00a0km run (an Olympic-distance triathlon). Alongside a prize purse, points were awarded at each race contributing towards the overall point totals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234014-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ITU World Triathlon Series\nThe 2013 ITU World Triathlon Series was a series of eight World Championship Triathlon events that led up to a Grand Final held in London in September 2013. The Series was organised under the auspices of the world governing body of triathlon, the International Triathlon Union (ITU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234014-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ITU World Triathlon Series\nThe World Triathlon Series (WTS) visited Auckland, San Diego, Madrid, Yokohama, Kitzb\u00fchel, Hamburg, Stockholm, and London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234014-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ITU World Triathlon Series\nThe series included two sprint distance races and six Olympic distance races. The series stop in Hamburg also served as the location for the 2013 ITU Team Triathlon World Championships. The Grand Final in London included the World Championships for Under 23, Junior and Paratriathlon division, which were decided over a single race. Elite level competitors were crowned champions based on the final WTS point standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234015-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IWBF Men's European Championship\nThe 2013 IWBF Men's European Championship was the 21st edition of the European Wheelchair Basketball Championship held in Frankfurt, Germany from 27 June to 8 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234015-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IWBF Men's European Championship\nNations ranked 1 to 7 are qualified for participation at the 2014 World Championship in Incheon, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234015-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IWBF Men's European Championship, Squads\nEach of the 12 teams selected a squad of 12 players for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234015-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IWBF Men's European Championship, Squads\nAthletes are given an eight-level-score specific to wheelchair basketball, ranging from 0.5 to 4.5. Lower scores represent a higher degree of disability The sum score of all players on the court cannot exceed 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234016-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IWBF Men's U23 Wheelchair Basketball World Championship\nThe 2013 IWBF Men's U23 World Championship was the fifth edition of the IWBF U23 World Wheelchair Basketball Championship held in Adana, Turkey from 7 to 14 September 2013. The tournament was played in two venues, the Y\u00fcre\u011fir Serinevler Arena and the Menderes Sports Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234016-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IWBF Men's U23 Wheelchair Basketball World Championship, Squads\nEach of the 12 teams selected a squad of up to 12 players for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 68], "content_span": [69, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234016-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IWBF Men's U23 Wheelchair Basketball World Championship, Squads\nAthletes are given an eight-level-score specific to wheelchair basketball, ranging from 0.5 to 4.5. Lower scores represent a higher degree of disability The sum score of all players on the court cannot exceed 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 68], "content_span": [69, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234017-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IWRF European Championship\n2013 IWRF European Championship was the 9th international European wheelchair rugby competition, taken place between 10 August - 17 August. The championships was contested between Europe's twelve top national teams and was held at the Pajulahti Sports Institute in Antwerp, Belgium. The tournament was won by Sweden, their fourth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234017-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IWRF European Championship\nThe finalists of the competition, Denmark and Sweden, won the two European qualification slots for the wheelchair rugby tournament at the 2014 IWRF World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234017-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IWRF European Championship, Tournament\nTwelve teams contested the 2013 IWRF European Championship. The preliminary rounds consisted of a group stage where the teams were split into two leagues which were contested as a round-robin. The winner of group A then faced the second placed team from Group B and the winner of group B faced the second placed team from group A in elimination matches to determine the two finalists. The eventual winners, Great Britain, finished the competition unbeaten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234018-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iba local elections\nLocal elections were held in Iba, Zambales on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and eight councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234018-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iba local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234019-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Cup\nThe 2013 Icelandic Cup, also known as the Borgunarbikar for sponsorship reasons, was the 54th edition of the Icelandic national football cup. It began with the first round on 30 April 2013 and ended on 17 August 2013. The final was played at Laugardalsv\u00f6llur, the Icelandic national stadium, and was won by Fram, who beat Stjarnan in a penalty shoot-out after the match had finished 3\u20133. It was Fram's eighth Icelandic Cup triumph, and their first since 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234019-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Cup, First round\nThe First Round consisted of 38 teams from the lower Icelandic levels and 6 clubs from the 2. deild karla. The 20 matches were played between 30 April and 4 May 2013. Two teams, St\u00e1l-\u00falfur and Fjar\u00f0abygg\u00f0, were given walkovers after their opponents withdrew from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234019-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Cup, Second round\nThe Second Round consisted of the 20 winning teams of the First Round, St\u00e1l-\u00falfur and Fjar\u00f0abygg\u00f0 who had walkovers in the First Round, the remaining 6 teams from the 2. deild karla and the 12 teams from the 1. deild karla. The 20 matches were played between 10 May and 14 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234019-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Cup, Third round\nThe Third Round consisted of the 20 winning teams of the Second Round and the 12 teams from the \u00darvalsdeild. The 16 matches were played on 29 May and 30 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234019-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Cup, Round of 16\nThe draw for the last 16 was made on 3 June 2013 at the headquarters of the KS\u00cd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234020-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup\nThe 2013 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup was the 18th season of the Icelandic Men's League Cup, a pre-season professional football competition in Iceland. The competition started on 15 February 2013 and concluded on 27 April 2013. KR were the reigning champions, having won their fifth League Cup last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234020-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup\nThe 24 teams from the \u00darvalsdeild karla and 1. deild karla were divided into 3 groups of 8 teams. Every team played every other team of its group once, home, away or on a neutral ground for a total of 7 games. Each group winner, each runner-up and the two best third-place finishes entered the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234020-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup, Group stage\nThe games were played from 15 February to 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234020-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup, Knockout stage\nThe final round saw the 8 progressed teams meet in a knockout stage to determine the winner of the 2013 League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234020-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup, Knockout stage, Quarterfinals\nThe games were played on 18 and 19 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Iceland on 27 April 2013. Fifteen parties contested the elections, compared to just seven in the previous elections. The result was a victory for the two centre-right opposition parties, the Independence Party and Progressive Party, which subsequently formed a coalition government. The parties were eurosceptic and their win brought to a halt partially completed negotiations with the European Union regarding Icelandic membership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Background\nThe previous elections in 2009 were won by the Social Democratic Alliance \u2014 the first time that the Independence Party was not the largest party in the Althing. The Social Democratic Alliance was able to form a coalition with the Left-Green Movement. As a result of this, J\u00f3hanna Sigur\u00f0ard\u00f3ttir became the first female prime minister of Iceland, as well as the first openly lesbian head of government in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Incumbent parliament\nFive parties were elected at the previous election, held in April 2009. Since then, the parliamentary representation for one of these, Citizens' Movement, first mostly moved to The Movement and then, in March 2012, to the new party Dawn. One of the MPs elected for the Citizens' movement, \u00der\u00e1inn Bertelsson, left the parliamentary party almost immediately and then a 16 months after the 2009 election he joined the Left-green movement. In January 2012, the new party Solidarity was founded by an incumbent MP, Lilja M\u00f3sesd\u00f3ttir, who was elected as a member of the Left-Green Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Incumbent parliament\nAnother new party, Bright Future, was formed in February 2012 with the involvement of two MPs from, respectively, the Progressive Party and Social Democratic Alliance. One MP originally elected for Citizens' Movement, Birgitta J\u00f3nsd\u00f3ttir, also participated in the establishment of a new party in 2012, namely the Pirate Party. Two eurosceptic Left-Green Movement MPs, J\u00f3n Bjarnason and Atli G\u00edslason, also decided to defect and form the new Rainbow Movement in March 2013. The box below shows the distribution of seats in the incumbent parliament on 28 March 2013, the last working day of the parliament's term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies\nThere are 6 constituencies in Iceland. According to the Law on Parliamentary Elections (nr.24/2000), each constituency is allocated 9 seats decided by proportional voting, with 9 special leveling seats (either 1 or 2 per constituency, depending on population size) adjusting the result so that proportionality is maintained according to the overall number of votes received by a party at the national level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies\nThe number of constituency seats will, however, be adjusted ahead of the next election, if the number of residents with suffrage per available seat in the constituency increases to more than twice as many as in the last election, when comparing the constituency with the highest number against the one with the lowest. In that case a constituency seat will be reassigned from the constituency with the lowest number to the one with the highest, until the rule is met. However, the total number of seats (including leveling seats) may never fall to less than six in any constituency. The box below shows the number of seats available in each constituency at the 2013 parliamentary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of constituency seats\nThe available constituency seats are first distributed to each party according to the D'Hondt method, so that proportional representation is ensured within each of the constituencies. The next step is to apportion these party distributed seats to the candidates within the party having the highest \"vote score\", after counting both direct candidate votes and their share of party votes in the constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of constituency seats\nIn Iceland the \"candidate vote system\" is that, for each constituency, each party provides a pre-ranked list of candidates beneath each party name (listed according to the preferred order decided by the party), but where the voters voting for the party can alter this pre-ranked order by renumbering the individual candidates and/or crossing out those candidates they do not like, so that such candidates will not get a share of the voter's \"personal vote\" for the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of constituency seats\nAs a restriction on the possibility of re-ranking candidates, it is however only possible to alter the first several candidates on the list. The borderline for alterations is drawn for the first three candidates if the party only win one of the total seats in the constituency, or if more than one seat is won the borderline shall be drawn at the pre-ranked number equal to two times the total number of seats being won by the party in the constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of constituency seats\nSo if a party has won two seats in a constituency, then the voter is only allowed to re-rank the top four ranked candidates on the list, with any rank altering by voters below this line simply being ignored when subsequently calculating the candidate vote shares within each party. Final calculation of the candidate vote shares is always done according to the Borda method, where all candidates above the previously described borderline in the ranking are granted voting fraction values according to the voters noted rank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of constituency seats\nIf the number of considered candidates consist of four (as in the given example), then the first ranked candidate is assigned a value of 1 (a so-called full personal vote), the next one get the value 0.75 (1/4 less), followed likewise by 0.50 and 0.25 respectively for the two last candidates. If the number of considered candidates instead had been six (due to winning 3 seats), then the first ranked candidate in a similar way would be assigned a value of 1 (a so-called full personal vote), with the following five candidates receiving respectively 5/6, 4/6, 3/6, 2/6 and 1/6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0005-0003", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of constituency seats\nAs mentioned above, crossed out names will always be allocated a 0.00 value. The accumulated total score of the candidates voting fractions, will be used in determining which candidates receive the seats won by their party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0005-0004", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of constituency seats\nNote that candidate vote scores are not directly comparable to candidates from other parties, as how many seats are being won in a constituency by a particular party will effect how their candidates receive voting fractions (like in the above examples, where a candidate ranked number four for a party winning two seats would receive a voting fraction of 0.25, compared to 0.50 for an equally ranked candidate belonging to a party winning 3 seats)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 101], "content_span": [102, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of leveling seats\nAfter the initial apportionment of constituency seats, all the parties that exceed the election threshold of 5% nationally will also qualify to potentially be granted the extra leveling seats, which seek to adjust the result towards seat proportionality at the national level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of leveling seats\nThe calculation procedure for the distribution of leveling seats is, first, for each party having exceeded the national threshold of 5%, to calculate the ratio of its total number of votes at the national level divided by the sum of one extra seat added to the number of seats the party have so far won. The first leveling seat will go to the party with the highest ratio of votes per seat. The same calculation process is then repeated, until all 9 leveling seats have been allocated to specific parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of leveling seats\nA party's \"votes per seat\" ratio will change during this calculation process, after each additional leveling seat being won. The second and final step is for each party being granted a leveling seat to pin point, across all constituencies, which of its runner-up candidates (candidates that came short of winning direct election through a constituency seat) should then win this additional seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of leveling seats\nThis selection is made by first identifying the constituency having the strongest \"relative constituency vote shares for this additional seat of the party\", which is decided by another proportional calculation, where the \"relative vote share for the party list in each constituency\", is divided with the sum of \"one extra seat added to the number of already won constituency seats by the party list in the constituency\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0007-0003", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of leveling seats\nWhen this strongest constituency has been identified, the leveling seat will be automatically granted to the highest placed unelected runner-up candidate on the party list in this constituency, who among the remaining candidates have the highest personal vote score (the same figure as the one used when ranking candidates for constituency seats).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Constituencies, Method for apportionment of leveling seats\nThe above described method is used for apportionment of all the party allocated leveling seats. Note that when selecting which of a party's constituencies shall receive its apportioned leveling seat, this identification may only happen in exactly the same numerical order as the leveling seats were calculated at the party level. This is important because the number of available leveling seats are limited per constituency, meaning that the last calculated leveling seats in all circumstances can never be granted to candidates who belong to constituencies where the available leveling seats already were granted to other parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 97], "content_span": [98, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Participating parties\nThe final deadline for parties to apply for participation in the parliamentary election was 9 April 2013. To be approved for a list letter to participate in the election, new parties were required to submit a minimum of 300 signatures from supporters in each constituency where they intended to list. The participating parties also needed to submit a valid candidate list to the election committee in each of the constituencies where they intended to run, comprising twice as many candidate names as the number of available seats in the constituency, before 12 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Participating parties\nOn 16 April the National Election Committee (Icelandic: Landskj\u00f6rstj\u00f3rn) published its list of 15 approved parties with 72 candidate lists, as 11 parties had opted to run in all six constituencies, while 2 parties opted only to run in two constituencies, and the final 2 parties were only present in one constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Participating parties\nDespite of having a current member presence in the incumbent parliament, the party Solidarity (C list) decided not to run for election. Likewise these recently established parties also decided not to participate: Optimism Party (E list), Christian Political Movement, and Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Participating parties\nWhile all applying party lists by the end of the day were getting approved, it was clear that all those who had applied for running the election as single independent candidates were disapproved. According to the Icelandic constitution and election law, independent candidates are not allowed to run in parliamentary elections, unless they manage to join forces with other independent candidates to establish a full complete candidate list for a new group named \"independent candidates\" in the constituency they intend to run. Last time Iceland had a list of \"independent candidates\" approved to participate was back in the 2003 elections, where \"Independents from the South constituency (\u00d3h\u00e1\u00f0ir \u00ed Su\u00f0urkj\u00f6rd\u00e6mi)\" was approved as a local list in the South constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, European Union accession negotiations\nOn 14 January 2013, the two governing parties of Iceland, the Social Democratic Alliance and Left-Green Movement, announced that because it was no longer possible to complete EU accession negotiations before the parliamentary elections, they had decided to slow down the process and that the 6 remaining unopened chapters would not be opened until after the election. However, negotiations would continue for the 16 chapters already opened. The new party Bright Future supports the completion of negotiations, while two opposition parties, Independence Party and Progressive Party, argue that negotiations should be completely stopped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, European Union accession negotiations\nIn February 2013, the national congress of both the Independence Party and Progressive Party reconfirmed their policy that further membership negotiations with the EU should be stopped and not resumed unless they are first approved by a national referendum, while the national congresses of the Social Democratic Alliance, Bright Future and Left-Green Movement reiterated their support for the completion of EU accession negotiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, European Union accession negotiations\nOn 19 March 2013, \u00deorger\u00f0ur Katr\u00edn Gunnarsd\u00f3ttir, an Independence Party MP, put forward a motion in the Althing calling for a referendum asking the Icelandic public whether EU accession negotiations should continue. She proposed that the referendum be held during the upcoming parliamentary election in April if possible, or else during local elections in the spring of 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, European Union accession negotiations\nIn response to \u00deorger\u00f0ur and other proponents of EU integration within the Independence Party, Bjarni Benediktsson, the leader of the party, reiterated the party's policy of stopping negotiations with the EU, but promised to hold a referendum on continuing the negotiations in the first half of their term if they form government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe list below gives a short summary of significant events in the electoral campaign of each participating party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results\nThe centre-right Independence party was one of the election's winners with 26.7% of the votes, regaining their position as Iceland's largest party. Two new parties entered the Althing for the first time. The green liberal Bright Future got 8.3% of the votes and The Pirate Party got 5.1% of the votes, just above the 5% threshold for leveling mandates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results\nFollowing the election, a coalition government was formed between the Progressive Party and Independence Party with Progressive Party's Sigmundur Dav\u00ed\u00f0 Gunnlaugsson as prime minister. The Progressive Party received four ministries, and the Independence Party received five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Turnout\nThe 81.4% turn-out was the lowest in any general election since Iceland's independence from Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Turnout\nBy 20, 9 April 582 people had voted using early voting. This represented an increase of approximately 1,400 votes over the number of early votes cast in the 2009 election. By 26 April, 24,850 people had voted. Prior to the election, it was not clear whether this meant that turnout would be increased or just that early voting had become more popular.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\n1. Illugi Gunnarsson (D)2. Frosti Sigurj\u00f3nsson (B)3. Katr\u00edn Jakobsd\u00f3ttir (V)4. \u00d6ssur Skarph\u00e9\u00f0insson (S)5. Brynjar \u00de\u00f3r N\u00edelsson (D)6. Bj\u00f6rt \u00d3lafsd\u00f3ttir (A)7. Sigr\u00fan Magn\u00fasd\u00f3ttir (B)8. \u00c1rni \u00de\u00f3r Sigur\u00f0sson (V)9. Birgir \u00c1rmannsson (D)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\n1. Hanna B. Kristj\u00e1nsd\u00f3ttir (D)2. Vigd\u00eds Hauksd\u00f3ttir (B)3. Sigr\u00ed\u00f0ur I. Ingad\u00f3ttir (S)4. P\u00e9tur H. Bl\u00f6ndal (D)5. Svand\u00eds Svavarsd\u00f3ttir (V)6. R\u00f3bert Marshall (A)7. Gu\u00f0laugur \u00de\u00f3r \u00de\u00f3r\u00f0arson (D)8. Karl Gar\u00f0arsson (B)9. Helgi Hj\u00f6rvar (S)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\n1. Bjarni Benediktsson (D)2. Eygl\u00f3 Har\u00f0ard\u00f3ttir (B)3. Ragnhei\u00f0ur R\u00edkhar\u00f0sd\u00f3ttir (D)4. \u00c1rni P\u00e1ll \u00c1rnason (S)5. Willum \u00de\u00f3r \u00de\u00f3rsson (B)6. J\u00f3n Gunnarsson (D)7. Gu\u00f0mundur Steingr\u00edmsson (A)8. \u00d6gmundur J\u00f3nasson (V)9. Vilhj\u00e1lmur Bjarnason (D)10.\u00deorsteinn S\u00e6mundsson (B)11.Katr\u00edn J\u00fal\u00edusd\u00f3ttir (S)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\n1. Gunnar Bragi Sveinsson (B)2. Einar K. Gu\u00f0finnsson (D)3. \u00c1smundur Einar Da\u00f0ason (B)4. Haraldur Benediktsson (D)5. Gu\u00f0bjartur Hannesson (S)6. Elsa L\u00e1ra Arnard\u00f3ttir (B)7. J\u00f3hanna M. Sigmundsd\u00f3ttir (B)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\n1. Sigmundur D. Gunnlaugsson (B)2. Kristj\u00e1n \u00de\u00f3r J\u00fal\u00edusson (D)3. H\u00f6skuldur \u00de\u00f3r \u00de\u00f3rhallsson (B)4. Steingr\u00edmur J. Sigf\u00fasson (V)5. L\u00edneik Anna S\u00e6varsd\u00f3ttir (B)6. Valger\u00f0ur Gunnarsd\u00f3ttir (D)7. Kristj\u00e1n L. M\u00f6ller (S)8. \u00de\u00f3runn Egilsd\u00f3ttir (B)9. Bjarkey Gunnarsd\u00f3ttir (V)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\n1. Sigur\u00f0ur I. J\u00f3hannsson (B)2. Ragnhei\u00f0ur E. \u00c1rnad\u00f3ttir (D)3. Silja D\u00f6gg Gunnarsd\u00f3ttir (B)4. Unnur Br\u00e1 Konr\u00e1\u00f0sd\u00f3ttir (D)5. P\u00e1ll J\u00f3hann P\u00e1lsson (B)6. Oddn\u00fd G. Har\u00f0ard\u00f3ttir (S)7. \u00c1smundur Fri\u00f0riksson (D)8. Haraldur Einarsson (B)9. Vilhj\u00e1lmur \u00c1rnason (D)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\nFor the parties having qualified with a national result above the 5% election threshold, the 9 leveling seats (L1-L9) were first distributed party-wise according to the calculation method in this particular order (where the party's total number of national votes was divided by the sum of \"won seats plus 1\" - with an extra leveling seat granted to the party with the highest fraction - while repeating this process until all 9 leveling seats had been determined).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\nAt the next step, these leveling seats were then by the same order distributed one by one to the relative strongest constituency of the seat winning party (while disregarding the constituencies that already ran out of vacant leveling seats). At the third step, the specific leveling seat is finally granted to the party's highest ranked runner-up candidate within the constituency, according to the same accumulated candidate vote score as being used when apportioning the constituency seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\nThe table below display how the leveling seats were apportioned, and the \"relative constituency strength\" figures for each party, which is measured for each constituency as the \"party vote share\" divided by \"won constituency seats of the party +1\". To illustrate how the selection method works, each party in a constituency being apportioned a leveling seat, have got their figure for relative strength (vote share per seat) bolded in the table, with a parenthesis noting the number of the leveling seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\nBecause constituencies run out of available leveling seats one by one as the calculation progress, it can sometimes happen that the constituency with the highest relative strength needs to be disregarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234021-0026-0002", "contents": "2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, Results, Elected MPs\nIn example, if there had been no restrictions to the available number of leveling seats in a constituency, then the table below would have distributed the Independence Party's L8-seat to its relative strongest Northwest Constituency with an 8.22% vote share per seat; But as the one and only leveling seat of this constituency had already been granted to the Left-Green party (who won the L6-seat), then the L8-seat instead had to be granted to a relatively weaker constituency, which to be more exact ended only being the fourth strongest constituency for the Independence Party - namely the Southwest constituency with a 6.14% vote share per seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234022-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Idaho State Bengals football team\nThe 2013 Idaho State Bengals football team represented Idaho State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bengals were led by third year head coach Mike Kramer and played their home games at Holt Arena. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 3\u20139, 1\u20137 in Big Sky play to finish in a tie for 11th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234023-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Idaho Vandals football team\nThe 2013 Idaho Vandals football team represented the University of Idaho in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Vandals were led by first year head coach Paul Petrino and played their home games at the Kibbie Dome. This was Idaho's first and only season as an independent. They became a football only member of the Sun Belt Conference in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234024-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Idol Star Athletics \u2013 Archery Championships\nThe 2013 Idol Star Athletics \u2013 Archery Championship (Hangul: \uc544\uc774\ub3cc \uc2a4\ud0c0 \uc721\uc0c1 \uc591\uad81 \uc120\uc218\uad8c \ub300\ud68c) was held at Goyang Gymnasium in Goyang, South Korea on January 28, 2013 and was broadcast on MBC on February 11, 2013 (a small part was broadcast on February 20, 2013). At the championships a total number of 8 events in athletics and 2 events in archery were contested: 5 by men, 4 by women and 1 mixed. There were a total number of 150 participating K-pop singers and celebrities, divided into 10 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234025-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Idol Star Olympics Championships\nThe 2013 Idol Star Athletics Championships (Hangul: \uc544\uc774\ub3cc \uc2a4\ud0c0 \uc62c\ub9bc\ud53d), also known as the 2013 Idol Athletics - Chuseok Special, was held at Goyang Gymnasium in Goyang, South Korea on September 3, 2013 and was broadcast on MBC from September 19 to 20, 2013. At the championships a total number of 10 events (7 in athletics, 2 in archery and 1 in futsal) were contested: 5 by men and 5 by women. There were a total number of 160 participating K-pop singers and celebrities, divided into 5 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234026-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 If Stockholm Open\nThe 2013 If Stockholm Open was a professional men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 45th edition of the tournament, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Kungliga tennishallenin Stockholm, Sweden between 14 and 20 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234026-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 If Stockholm Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234026-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 If Stockholm Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234027-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 If Stockholm Open \u2013 Doubles\nMarcelo Melo and Bruno Soares were the defending champions, but Soares chose to compete in Vienna instead. Melo was scheduled to play alongside Ivan Dodig, but withdrew due to an abdominal injury. Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer won the title, defeating Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Robert Lindstedt in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234028-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 If Stockholm Open \u2013 Singles\nTom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Grigor Dimitrov won the title, defeating David Ferrer in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234028-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 If Stockholm Open \u2013 Singles, 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-00234029-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election\nA by-election was held in the New Zealand electorate of Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti on 29 June 2013. The seat was vacated by the death of incumbent member of parliament Parekura Horomia two months earlier, who had represented the electorate for the Labour Party since its inception for the 1999 election. The election was won by Labour's Meka Whaitiri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, Date\nHoromia died on 29 April 2013. Once the Registrar of Birth and Deaths receives the registration of death for a sitting MP, they must inform the Speaker of the House within 12 hours, and then the Speaker must publish, without delay, the notice of vacancy of the seat in the New Zealand Gazette. The notice was published in the Gazette on 8 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, Date\nThe Governor-General must issue the writ for a by-election to fill a vacant electorate seat within 21 days of the Gazette notice (i.e. 29 May 2013). The writ must be returned with the successful candidate within 50 days of its issue, which means the writ must be returned, and therefore the election must have taken place, by 18 July 2013. As polling day must be a Saturday, and two weeks are generally required for the counting of special votes, the last possible polling day is therefore Saturday 29 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, Date\nAfter the notice of vacancy was published, Prime Minister John Key announced the by-election date has been set as Saturday 29 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, Candidates\nSeven candidates were contesting the by-election. It was won by Meka Whaitiri of the Labour Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, Impact\nPolitical editor Patrick Gower reported two days before the election that, according to sources within the Labour caucus, Labour leader David Shearer has been put on notice and given two months to achieve better poll results, or else face a leadership challenge. This followed recent polls for the next general election that showed Labour in the low 30 percent, (e.g. the Herald-DigiPoll from mid-June that showed Labour at 30.9%, with a margin of error of 3.6%. ), although the party was well up on its 2011 general election result of 27.48 percent. Earlier in the week, Shearer had downplayed Labour's hopes for winning the by-election, despite the party having held the electorate since its inception for the 1999 election and expected by mainstream media to again win the by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, Impact\nMatt McCarten of the Mana Party claimed that sources within the M\u0101ori Party had told him that if Mana came ahead of their party, they would make amends, and commentators agreed that a strong result for Mana away from their Northland base would spell the end to the M\u0101ori Party's claim to be independent political voice for tangata whenua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti by-election, Impact\nRight-wing political blogger David Farrar called the poll result \"a good victory for Labour\", and commented that Whaitiri \"could be one of the better Labour MPs\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234029-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti 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-00234029-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ikaroa-R\u0101whiti 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-00234030-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iligan local elections\nLocal elections held in Iligan City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The resident voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the one congressman, and twelve councilors. Each official is elected publicly to a 3-year term and can be re-elected up to 3 terms in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234030-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iligan local elections\nAt the last of voter's registration last October 2012, the city has accumulated a total of 138,744 registered voters. Registered voters of the city no longer vote for provincial candidates such as the Governor and Vice Governor unlike its nearby towns. In 2010, through Republic Act 9724, Iligan City separated from the First District of Lanao del Norte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234030-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iligan local elections\nLawrence Lluch Cruz is the incumbent on his third consecutive term. Thus, he is prohibited to run due to term limits. Instead, Cruz's tandem and incumbent vice-mayor Henry Dy was challenged by the two other popular candidates, retired Colonel Celso Regencia and former mayor Franklin Quijano .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234030-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Iligan local elections\nOn May 14, 2013, Celso Regencia and Ruderic Marzo were proclaimed newly elected city mayor and vice-mayor of the city by the Board of Canvassers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234031-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois Fighting Illini football team\nThe 2013 Illinois Fighting Illini football team represented the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2013Champaign in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Tim Beckman, and played their home games at Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the Leaders Division of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138, 1\u20137 in Big Ten play to finish in fifth place in the Leaders Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234031-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Previous season\nIllinois finished the 2012 season with 2\u201310, 0\u20138 in Big 10 Leaders play, where they placed last and failed to become bowl eligible for first time since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234031-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois Fighting Illini football team, Schedule, Chicago homecoming\nFor only the second time in Soldier Field's 89 year history, the stadium hosted the Illinois Fighting Illini football team. The Fighting Illini's last appearance at Soldier Field was during the 1994 season in which the team lost 10\u20139 to #22 ranked Washington State Cougars. Additionally, the University of Illinois Alumni Association, Illinois Foundation, and Division and Intercollegiate Athletics are hosting an \"Illini Fest\" family tailgate prior the start of the football game. The event is modeled after Chicago Street Festivals that are popular throughout Neighborhoods in Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234032-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois State Redbirds football team\nThe 2013 Illinois State Redbirds football team represented Illinois State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fifth-year head coach Brock Spack and played their home games at Hancock Stadium. Illinois State was a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC). The Redbirds finished the season 5\u20136 overall 4\u20134 in MVFC play to place sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234032-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois State Redbirds football team, Home attendance average\nThe Illinois State Redbird football program averaged 10,138 fans for the 2013 home football games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234033-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois's 2nd congressional district special election\nA special election for Illinois' 2nd congressional district was held on April 9, 2013, to fill a seat in the United States House of Representatives for Illinois's 2nd congressional district, after Representative Jesse Jackson, Jr. resigned on November 21, 2012. The special election was required to be held within 115 days of Jackson's resignation. It was won by Democratic candidate Robin Kelly, formerly the Chief Administrative Officer of Cook County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234033-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois's 2nd congressional district special election\nPat Quinn, the Governor of Illinois, set the primary elections for February 26, coinciding with municipal primary elections, and initially set the general election for March 19. However, legislation was enacted at Quinn's request to allow the general election to coincide with municipal general elections held on April 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234033-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois's 2nd congressional district special election\nThe winner of the Democratic primary was Robin Kelly and Paul McKinley won the Republican Primary. The Green Party nominated 2010 U.S. Senate candidate LeAlan Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234033-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Illinois's 2nd congressional district special election, Green Party\nThe Green Party nominated 2010 U.S. Senate candidate and journalist LeAlan Jones to run on the Green Party ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 72], "content_span": [73, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections\nLocal elections were held in the newly created city of Imus in Cavite on May 13, 2013 in conjunction with the 2013 Philippine midterm elections. Registered voters of the city elected candidates for the following elective local posts: district representative, provincial board members representing the city, mayor, vice mayor, and twelve councilors at-large.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections\nMayor Emmanuel Maliksi of the Liberal Party narrowly won over ousted Mayor Homer Saquilayan while his running mate, Vice Mayor Mandy Ilano was reelected overwhelmingly. Maliksi's ticket took all but two seats in the Sangguniang Panlungsod.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Overview\nThe most recent elections conducted in the then-municipality of Imus in 2010 is considered as one of the most controversial, if not the most controversial, elections with questionable results. In the country's first-ever automated election, where precinct optical count scanning (PCOS) machines were utilized, then comebacking Homer T. Saquilayan defeated the then incumbent Mayor Manny Maliksi, once his vice mayor and the son of then governor Ayong Maliksi, by 8,499 votes. On May 21, 2010, Maliksi filed an election protest alleging irregularities caused by the PCOS machine count, among others \"double-shading\" of ballots, ambiguous votes, and over-voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Overview\nAfter the first recount, Imus Regional Trial Court Judge Cesar Mangrobang released a decision in November 2011 declaring the younger Maliksi as the duly elected mayor of the town, with 41,088 votes as against that of Saquilayan's 40,423, for a difference of 665 votes. This decision angered the incumbent mayor's supporters and municipal employees and on December 2, 2011, they successfully prevented Maliksi in formally assuming office, thereby causing further tension between the rival camps. Such tension only averted three days before the turn of the year on December 28, 2011, when Saquilayan ceded the post to his rival with the promise of avenging his latest setback before the courts and the COMELEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Overview\nBarely five months later, in May 2012, the COMELEC overturned the decision of Mangrobang, citing that he gravely abused its discretion when it issued the order since it did not have the necessary grounds and ordered Saquilayan to be reinstated. This prompted Maliksi to file a motion for reconsideration but it was dismissed by the poll body in September 2012 \"for lack of merit.\" On October 10, 2012, Maliksi elevated his appeal to the Supreme Court and filed a petition for an issuance of a temporary restraining order (TRO). Five days later, Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno issued him a TRO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Overview\nThe TRO was lifted by the Supreme Court on March 12, 2013 and declared Saquilayan as the duly elected mayor. He took his oath six days later, on March 18. Maliksi, however, refused to recognize the ruling and filed for a motion for reconsideration, which the court granted on April 11, 2013, thereby reinstating him as mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Results, District Representative\nThe candidates for district representative, mayor, and vice mayor with the highest number of votes win their respective seats. They are elected separately; therefore, they may be of different parties when elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Results, District Representative\nAyong Maliksi is running for Governor, his party nominates former Board Member, Alex Advincula. Albert Villaseca is also nominate by Nacionalista party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Results, Board Members\nVoters of Imus elect two members to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Cavite as part of the third district, which is contiguous with the legislative district. The two candidates with the highest number of votes for the positions win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Results, Board Members\nLarry Boy Nato is the only incumbent who sought reelection, which Rodrigo Arguelles did not run in favor of Councilor Arnel Cantimbuhan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Results, City Councilors\nUpon the adoption of a city charter, seats in the new Sangguniang Panglungsod of Imus (Imus City Council) have increased from eight to twelve and were elected at-large, similar to that of neighboring city of Dasmari\u00f1as and 98% of component cities in the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Results, City Councilors, Candidates\nOf the incumbent councilors elected in 2010, only one did not seek re-election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234034-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Imus local elections, Results, City Councilors, Candidates\nAside from re-electionist candidates, names in italics denote appointed councilors and ex officio officials, in the case of SK Federation President Darlon Jay Sayarot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234035-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team\nThe 2013 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team represented the University of the Incarnate Word in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Cardinals played their first season of a transition to the FCS level. However, they were not considered a FCS team for scheduling purposes until 2014. They were led by second-year head coach Larry Kennan. Home games were played at Gayle and Tom Benson Stadium. This was a transition season for the Cardinals. As a transitioning school from D2 to D1, the Cardinals were ineligible for the FCS Playoffs and the D2 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234035-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team\nThey played a mixed schedule of schools from the FCS, NAIA, and D-II. The Cardinals joined the Southland Conference for football in the 2014 season, and it counted as the 2nd year in a 4-year transition into the D1 level that will make them eligible for the FCS Playoffs in 2017\u201318. They finished the season 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234035-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Incarnate Word Cardinals football team, Audio streaming\nAll Incarnate Word games were broadcast on KKYX with the voices of Gabe Farias and Shawn Morris. KKYX's broadcasts were available at their . produced a student media broadcast every week, that is available online, and they provided streaming of all non-televised home games were shown via .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234036-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Incheon United FC season\nThe 2013 season was Incheon United's ninth season in the K-League in South Korea. Incheon United competed in K League Classic and Korean FA Cup. It also marked the tenth anniversary of the club's founding and Kim Bong-Gil's first full season as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234036-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Incheon United FC season, 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234036-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Incheon United FC season, Current 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234038-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 India Super Series\nThe 2013 India Super Series will be the fourth super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament was held in New Delhi, India from 23\u201328 April 2013 and had a total purse of $200,000. A qualification will be held to fill four places in both singles events and Men's doubles of the main draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234039-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Badminton League\n2013 Indian Badminton League was the first season of Indian Badminton League started from 14 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234039-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Badminton League, Teams\nSix teams participate in the first edition of Indian Badminton League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234039-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Badminton League, Venues\nSix venues have been selected for the first edition of Indian Badminton League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234039-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Badminton League, Schedule\nThe following is the schedule for 2013 Indian Badminton League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Indian Grand Prix (formally the 2013 Formula 1 Airtel Indian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 27 October 2013 at the Buddh International Circuit, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. It was the sixteenth round of the 2013 Formula One season, and the third Indian Grand Prix. The race, contested over 60 laps, was won by Sebastian Vettel, driving a Red Bull, from a pole position start. Nico Rosberg finished second in a Mercedes, with Romain Grosjean third for the Lotus team. Vettel's win confirmed him as 2013 Drivers' Champion, as Fernando Alonso could not pass Vettel's points total with only three races remaining. Red Bull also clinched their fourth consecutive Constructors' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nThe Grand Prix was contested by eleven teams, each of two drivers. The teams, also known as \"constructors\", were Red Bull-Renault, Ferrari, McLaren-Mercedes, Lotus-Renault, Mercedes, Sauber-Ferrari, Force India-Mercedes, Williams-Renault, Toro Rosso-Ferrari, Caterham-Renault and Marussia-Cosworth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel led the Drivers' Championship with 297 points; Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso was second on 207 points. A maximum of 100 points were available in the remaining four races, which meant Alonso could still win the title. Vettel only needed a fifth place or higher to become Drivers' Champion, even if Alonso won. Behind Vettel and Alonso in the Drivers' Championship, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was third with 177 points in a Lotus, with Lewis Hamilton and Mark Webber on 161 and 148 points respectively. In the Constructors' Championship, Red Bull were leading on 445 points and Ferrari were second on 297 points, with Mercedes third on 287 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nIn the week leading up to the race, the organisers of the race, Jaypee Sports International attended a court hearing on a dispute over unpaid entertainment taxes from the previous running of the Grand Prix. A court official confirmed, the case would be heard the week after the race, thereby ending speculation that the Grand Prix would be cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nOn 21 October, four days before the event's first free practice sessions took place, Toro Rosso confirmed the team was signing GP3 Series driver Daniil Kvyat for the 2014 season, partnering Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nThe drag reduction system (DRS) had two activation zones for the race; one was on the straight between turns 3 and 4, and the second was on the start/finish straight from the final to first corners. The sport's sole tyre supplier Pirelli, provided two specifications of slick compound tyres for the race, designated Medium (also referred to as the \"prime\" tyre) and Soft (also referred to as the \"option\" tyre). The Medium compound was distinguished by a white-band with the Soft compound being distinguished by a yellow-band. As was the case for all the 2013 Grands Prix, the rules stipulated that all cars should use both types of tyre during the course of the race, and each driver was limited to eleven sets of dry tyres for the weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the Sunday race\u2014two on Friday from 11:00 to 12:00 and 14:00 to 15:30 local time, and a third on Saturday morning between 11:00 to 12:00. The first practice session took place in dry conditions with an ambient temperature of 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F). and a track temperature of 32\u00a0\u00b0C (90\u00a0\u00b0F). Vettel set the session's fastest time with a lap of 1 minute and 26.683, almost two-tenths of a second faster than teammate Webber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe Mercedes of Nico Rosberg set the third fastest time ahead of Renault driver Romain Grosjean who was fourth fastest. Hamilton set the fifth fastest time in his Mercedes. The two McLaren drivers were sixth and seventh, Jenson Button ahead of Sergio P\u00e9rez. Felipe Massa and Nico H\u00fclkenberg set the eighth and ninth fastest lap times respectively for Ferrari and Sauber. Valtteri Bottas in the Williams completed the top ten. Alonso's Ferrari car was afflicted by a gearbox problem; this restricted him to completing only six timed laps, and he was 12th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe second practice session was held in similar weather to the first; the only difference was a slightly higher peak track temperature of 40\u00a0\u00b0C (104\u00a0\u00b0F). During this session, Vettel set the fastest lap of the day, a 1:25.722; Webber finished with the second-fastest time. Grosjean ended up with the third fastest time. The Mercedes drivers were again quick\u2014Hamilton in fourth and Rosberg sixth. They were split by Alonso; with teammate Massa in seventh. R\u00e4ikkonen set the eighth fastest time. The McLaren drivers ran slower\u2014 Button in ninth and P\u00e9rez tenth. Williams driver Pastor Maldonado suffered from a loose wheel nut which deflated his right-front tyre, as a result of an earlier pitstop. Williams were fined \u20ac60,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nSaturday's weather was again dry for third and final practice session, with an ambient temperature of 28\u00a0\u00b0C (82\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature of 35\u00a0\u00b0C (95\u00a0\u00b0F). The start of session was delayed by 20 minutes as the medical helicopter was unable to take off, due to poor visibility caused by smog. The Red Bull drivers were again quickest\u2014Vettel setting the fastest time, a 1:25.332, over half a second faster than Webber. Alonso was able to improve his pace and set the third-fastest time. Hamilton and Rosberg set the eighth and tenth fastest times respectively; they were separated by Button.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\n\"The car felt good all weekend and it just got better as the track improved. The car was amazing; it's a great circuit, I really like the flow of it, especially around the middle sector with the high speed corners. If the car behaves the way you want it to through that section then you're always then going to enjoy it, as we did today. It's a great result for the team; Mark is on a different strategy, so we'll see what the race brings tomorrow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nWe have been getting a lot of questions about the championship this weekend, but we'll keep doing what we've done in the past, just focusing on every single step \u2013 we won't change that for tomorrow, or the next couple of races. We've worked hard to get here and tomorrow will be a long race. With the strategy, I think it's always tricky do the right thing, but we have a good package so we should be in good shape.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nSaturday afternoon's qualifying session was divided into three parts. The first part ran for 20 minutes and eliminated the cars from qualifying that finished the session 17th or lower. During this session, the 107% rule was in effect, which necessitated each driver set a time within 107% of the quickest lap to qualify for the race. The second part of qualifying lasted 15 minutes and eliminated cars that finished in positions 11 to 16. The final part of qualifying determined the positions from first to tenth, and decided pole position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe session was held in dry weather; the ambient temperature was 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F) with a track temperature of 39\u00a0\u00b0C (102\u00a0\u00b0F). Vettel set the fastest time in the second and final parts of the session, which clinched him pole position with a lap of 1:24.119. Vettel was joined on the front row by Rosberg, who was nearly eight-tenths of a second slower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nRicciardo was the fastest driver not to advance into the final session, qualifying 11th; his best time of 1:25.519 was nearly a second slower than Vettel's pace in the second session. Grosjean (Renault), Jules Bianchi (Marussia), Caterham drivers Giedo van der Garde and Charles Pic and Max Chilton (Marussia) failed to advance beyond the first part of qualifying, and thus completed the final rows of the grid. In the first part of qualifying (the only section in which all drivers took part), the entire field was covered by just over two seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe race took place in the afternoon from 15:00 local time, in dry and sunny weather, with an ambient temperature of 30\u00a0\u00b0C (86\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature of 35\u00a0\u00b0C (95\u00a0\u00b0F). Vettel, from pole position on the grid, held onto the lead into the first corner. Massa, from fifth, made a good start, moving from 5th to 2nd place by the end of the first lap. Maldonado made the best start in the field, moving from 17th to 13th. Going into the second corner, Alonso touched Webber, resulting in damage to his Ferrari's front wing. At the end of the first lap, Vettel led from Massa, Rosberg, Hamilton, H\u00fclkenberg and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel began to immediately pull clear of Massa. di Resta and Vergne became the first two drivers to pit by coming in on lap 2. Vettel pitted for a new set of medium compound tyres at the end of lap 2, allowing Massa to take the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 40, Webber suffered an alternator failure and became the third retirement of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nVettel won his tenth race of the season in a time of 1:31:12.187, at an average speed of 125.598 miles per hour (202.130\u00a0km/h). Vettel was crowned the 2013 Drivers' Championship as Alonso could not catch his points total with three races remaining. He became the fourth driver after Michael Schumacher, Juan Manuel Fangio and Alain Prost to have won four or more Drivers' Championships. Rosberg finished second in his Mercedes car, 29 seconds behind Vettel, with Grosjean third. Massa was fourth in his Ferrari with P\u00e9rez fifth for McLaren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nHamilton took sixth place in the other Mercedes and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen took seventh in the other Lotus car. The Force India cars of di Resta and Sutil were eighth and ninth respectively, with Ricciardo taking the final point in tenth place for Toro Rosso. Alonso finished eleventh with Maldonado trailing behind in twelfth. Vergne, Button, Guti\u00e9rrez and Bottas filled the next places, one lap behind the leader, while Chilton and Bianchi were two laps down in seventeenth and eighteenth. H\u00fclkenberg was the final classified driver in nineteenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Report, Post-race\nThe top three finishers appeared on the podium to collect their trophies, and in the subsequent press conference. Sebastian Vettel was given a reprimand for failing to drive straight to parc ferm\u00e9 after the race, while Red Bull Racing were given a \u20ac25,000 fine for failing to adequately instruct him to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234040-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Grand Prix, Classification, Race\n2: This was the last ever Indian GP. The circuit had tax disputes with the Uttar Pradesh government, and was closed after this race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234041-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Open\nThe 2013 Indian Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament held between 14 and 18 October 2013 at the Le Meridien Hotel in New Delhi, India. It was the first ranking event held in India, and the fourth ranking event of the 2013/2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234041-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Open\nDing Junhui won his eighth ranking title by defeating Aditya Mehta 5\u20130 in the final. Ding became the first player to win two consecutive ranking titles in the same season since Ronnie O'Sullivan in 2002/2003, who won the 2003 European Open and the 2003 Irish Masters. At the tournament Mehta became the first Indian player to reach the final of a ranking event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234041-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Open, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234041-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Open, Wildcard round\nThese matches were played in New Delhi on 14 October 2013. The Indian wildcard players were selected through a qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234041-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Open, Qualifying\nThese matches were held on 11 and 12 August 2013 at the Doncaster Dome in Doncaster, England. All matches were best of 7 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League\nThe 2013 season of the Indian Premier League, abbreviated as IPL 6 or Pepsi IPL 2013, was the sixth season of the IPL, established by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) in 2007. The tournament featured nine teams and was held from 3 April to 26 May 2013. The opening ceremony was held at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata on 2 April 2013. This was the first season with PepsiCo as the title sponsor. The Kolkata Knight Riders were the defending champions, having won the 2012 season. A spot fixing case was revealed by Delhi Police, leading to arrest of three cricketers from Rajasthan Royals and other persons. Mumbai Indians won the tournament for the first time, defeating Chennai Super Kings in the final by 23 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Background, Sponsorship\nPepsiCo replaced DLF Ltd as the title sponsor starting with the 2013 season. DLF did not renew their contract after their initial five-year contract, for \u20b9 2.50\u00a0billion, ended with the previous season. PepsiCo's contract is \u20b9 3968\u00a0million for five years, ending with the 2017 season. In response to questions about the higher sponsorship costs compared to DLF's, a representative of PepsiCo said, \"Our estimate is that we will get five to six times the value of the money we paid.\" However, Brand Finance had assessed the IPL's brand value to have fallen from $4.1 billion in 2010 to $2.9 billion in 2012, attributed to the decline in television ratings over the two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Background, Termination of Deccan Chargers\nDeccan Chargers, champions of the 2009 Indian Premier League, became the second team to be terminated from the IPL after Kochi Tuskers Kerala. The owners failed to save the team after several attempts were made with the Bombay High Court and Supreme Court of India. Immediately after the Chargers' termination, the BCCI invited bidders for a replacement team also based in Hyderabad. It was announced on 25 October 2012 that Sun TV Network won the bid at \u20b9 850.5\u00a0million per year. The new team was named the Sunrisers Hyderabad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Background, Personnel changes\nIn October 2012, the teams were allowed to release any number of their players from their contracts to reduce their player costs. The released players would have the option of entering the auction. The players' auction was held on 3 February 2013, where 37 players were sold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Background, Overseas participation\nAvailability of Bangladeshi players was put in doubt when the Bangladesh Cricket Board considered not issuing the players with the No Objection Certificates they needed to participate in the tournament. Their deliberation was due to the tournament's dates clashing with the Bangladesh tour of Zimbabwe. Regardless, both affected players, Shakib Al Hasan and Tamim Iqbal, missed the start of the tournament due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Background, Overseas participation\nDespite the progress on the restoration of cricketing relations between India and Pakistan after the Pakistan national cricket team toured India in December 2012 and January 2013, no Pakistani players were included in the auction. Several South Africans missed the start of the tournament to play in the knockout stage of the Ram Slam T20 Challenge. Two New Zealand players were released early by their teams to join the New Zealand tour of England. Both players were not performing for their teams. Sri Lanka Cricket made a similar request to allow some of their players to join their preparations for the ICC Champions Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Background, Overseas participation\nShortly before the start of the season, the IPL governing council ruled that Sri Lankan cricketers and match officials will not participate in any matches held in Chennai. This was a result of the growing political tensions in Tamil Nadu concerning the ethnic conflict between the Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils. The anti-Sinhalaese sentiments from the people of Tamil Nadu raised security concerns for Sri Lankan involvement. The decision was made after Jayalalithaa, the chief minister of Tamil Nadu, wrote to the Prime Minister of India requesting the ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Background, Overseas participation\nOther than the Chennai Super Kings, the franchises were not in support of the decision as they believed it offered Chennai an added advantage in their home matches. Chennai's Sri Lankan players hold secondary positions in their team while some Sri Lankans in other teams play key roles and their absence in those matches would affect their team strategies. Another concern was with how the decision did not follow the precedence of moving the matches to a different venue. However, the playoff matches originally scheduled to be held in Chennai were later relocated to Delhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony was held at the largest stadium in India, and the second largest stadium in the world by capacity, the Salt Lake Stadium or Yuva Bharati Krirangan in Kolkata, on 2 April 2013. All nine teams, led by their captains, took the \"MCC Spirit of Cricket\" pledge. Mamata Banerjee, the Chief Minister of West Bengal, was present at the ceremony. It featured live performances of American rapper Pitbull and Indian film stars Shahrukh Khan, Katrina Kaif and Deepika Padukone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, April\nThe season began on 3 April with the defending champions the Kolkata Knight Riders defeating the Delhi Daredevils. Kolkata would then struggle and lose five of their next six matches due to good batting performances only coming from captain Gautam Gambhir and Eoin Morgan. Delhi, who topped the group stage in 2012, had a six-match losing streak due to batting failures apart from three half-centuries from captain Mahela Jayawardene and David Warner. Both Delhi and Kolkata were positioned at the bottom of the points table for the first half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, April\nTwo-time runners-up the Royal Challengers Bangalore won six of their first eight matches with a six-of-six home record. This was credited to good death-over bowling from Vinay Kumar and prolific and quick run-scoring from captain Virat Kohli, Chris Gayle and AB de Villiers. This included Gayle's score of 175 not out, the highest in Twenty20 cricket. However, their performances were fluctuant. Included was a 130-run victory, two Super Overs and two other matches involving a tight finish. Two-time champions the Chennai Super Kings were similarly dominant, with good batting from captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Michael Hussey and Suresh Raina and an all-round bowling attack. They came up with an IPL record-equalling seven-match winning streak, which took them to the top of the points table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, April\nThe Mumbai Indians, who made playoff-stage appearances in each of the past three years, were inconsistent with both batting and bowling. Good batting performances from Dinesh Karthik, Rohit Sharma and Kieron Pollard put Mumbai at the middle of the points table halfway through the season. The Sunrisers Hyderabad produced results contrary to the poor performance last season by their predecessors the Deccan Chargers. With no stand-out individual batting performances, Hyderabad managed to win five of their first seven matches. Their strength was in their strong and economical bowling from an attack centred around Dale Steyn and Amit Mishra. Mishra got the second hat-trick of the season, becoming the first to achieve three IPL hat-tricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, April\nAlso at the middle of the points table was the Rajasthan Royals. They won matches with cohesive batting and bowling where different players delivered match-winning contributions. Shane Watson produced scores of 101 and 98 not out while James Faulkner was briefly the season's top wicket-taker after taking 5 for 20. The Pune Warriors India and the Kings XI Punjab continue their form from 2012. Pune won two matches from eight with significant contributions coming only from Aaron Finch, Steve Smith and Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Punjab had average performances with poor contributions from their international players and a dependency on their less-accomplished local players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, May\nIn the second half of the season, Chennai continued to be dominant and held their number-one position on the points table while Mumbai, Rajasthan, Bangalore and Hyderabad were evenly matched as they switched between the positions of second to fifth. Mumbai excelled to win seven out of eight matches with improved bowling performances around Mitchell Johnson and Pollard producing an unbeaten innings of 66 runs from 27 balls. Rajasthan were also strong and had four consecutive victories and a perfect record at home. Ajinkya Rahane scored three consecutive half-centuries, Sanju Samson made a strong IPL debut and Watson continued his good form.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, May\nBangalore's schedule had them play six consecutive away matches, of which they could only win two due to their bowling attack struggling on away surfaces and repeatedly failures to defend high scores set by Gayle, Kohli and de Villiers. Hyderabad's bowlers continued to perform while their batting was strengthened with the inclusion of Shikhar Dhawan, who returned from injury after scoring the fastest Test-debut hundred two months ago, and Darren Sammy. Bangalore and Hyderabad slowly fell behind Mumbai and Rajasthan in the points table, allowing a chance for other teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, May\nDelhi and Pune failed to recover from their poor starts to the season and were the first to be eliminated from the tournament, similar to their performances in 2011. Punjab's form deteriorated as they faced teams at the top-half of the points table, with only Shaun Marsh and David Miller making significant batting contributions. Kolkata showed signs of improvement as their bowlers limited the opposition to low scores but this only lifted their position to sixth. Both Punjab and Kolkata needed to win every one of their remaining matches for any chance of qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, May\nWith ten matches remaining in the group stage, Chennai, Mumbai and Rajasthan were first to earn playoff stage berths while a few losses by Bangalore and Hyderabad gave Kolkata and Punjab a slim chance of competing for the final spot. Kolkata was eliminated after suffering an upset at home by Pune. Punjab, despite finishing their season with three straight wins, failed to catch up. The tie between Bangalore and Hyderabad came down to the final match of the group stage, between Hyderabad and Kolkata. Hyderabad won to place themselves narrowly ahead of Bangalore by one win and qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, May, Playoff stage\nAmidst the spot-fixing controversy and despite Faulkner's second five-wicket haul, Rajasthan finished the group stage with two consecutive losses and gave Mumbai and Chennai the advantageous top two positions. In Qualifier 1 between Chennai and Mumbai, a 140-run partnership between Raina and Hussey against Mumbai's formidable bowling helped Chennai win by 48 runs and qualify for their fifth IPL Final. Dwayne Smith's innings of 68 runs was the only highlight of Mumbai's innings. Rajasthan faced Hyderabad in the Eliminator. On a slow pitch that troubled batsmen, Brad Hodge top-scored with an unbeaten innings of 54 runs to help Rajasthan win in a low-scoring match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Season summary, May, Playoff stage\nIn Qualifier 2, Mumbai defeated Rajasthan by 4 wickets. Mumbai bowled better, as Harbhajan Singh's 3 wickets earned him the man of the match. Smith was again the top-scorer for Mumbai, scoring 68 but better support from other batsmen allowed Mumbai to win with one ball remaining. Mumbai faced Chennai in the Final, in which the Mumbai Indians had a shaky start but due to some great batting by Kieron Pollard (he scored 60*), they managed to reach a score of 148\u20139. They started well with the ball, reducing Chennai to 39\u20136, but captain MS Dhoni led from the front. However, he lacked support from the other end. Finally they finished at 125\u20139, giving the Mumbai Indians an unexpected victory and won their first IPL Title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Other incidents, Spot-fixing\nOn 16 May 2013, Rajasthan Royals players Sreesanth, Ankeet Chavan and Ajit Chandila were arrested from Mumbai's Trident Hotel by Delhi Police along with seven bookies on charges of spot-fixing in the tournament. Police sources said the players have been accused of spot-fixing in their matches on 9 and 15 May 2013 against Kings XI Punjab and Mumbai Indians respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Other incidents, Withdrawal by Pune Warriors India\nOn 21 May 2013, Pune Warriors India terminated their participation in the league due to disagreements with their franchisee fees for the BCCI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Venues\n12 venues were selected to host the matches, with Raipur and Ranchi hosting for the first time in the tournament's history. In the playoff stage, Delhi will host the Qualifier 1 and Eliminator while Kolkata will host the Qualifier 2 and Final. Chennai was originally scheduled to host the playoff stage matches instead of Delhi on account of Chennai and Kolkata being the home venues of the runners-up and champions of the 2012 season. The change was made due to the political tension in Tamil Nadu preventing Sri Lankan players and management staff from entering the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Teams and standings, Points table\n(\"C\" refers to the \"Champions\" of the Tournament. ' R'(2nd Position), '3' and '4' are the positions of the respective teams in the tournament.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Statistics, Most runs\nThe leading run-scorer of the tournament wears an orange cap while fielding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Statistics, Most runs\nMichael Hussey's 733 runs makes him the joint second highest run scorer in a single IPL season tied with Chris Gayle who also scored 733 runs in 2012 and behind Virat Kohli who scored 973 runs in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe leading wicket-taker of the tournament wears a purple cap while fielding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234042-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League, Statistics, Most wickets\nDwayne Bravo's 32 wickets made him the highest wicket taker in a single IPL season. He broke Lasith Malinga's record of 28 wickets in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final\nThe 2013 Indian Premier League Final was a day/night Twenty20 cricket match played between the Chennai Super Kings and the Mumbai Indians on 26 May 2013 at Eden Gardens, Kolkata to determine the winners of the 2013 Indian Premier League, the sixth annual season of the professional Twenty20 cricket tournament in India. Mumbai defeated Chennai by 23 runs, attributed to Kieron Pollard's unbeaten innings of 60 runs from 32 balls which earned him the man of the match award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final\nMumbai won their first IPL title playing in their second IPL Final, after losing to Chennai in 2010. Chennai were playing their fifth IPL Final, attempting to win their third title. It was also the final match where Mumbai's Sachin Tendulkar was an IPL cricketer, although he did not participate in the match due to injury. He announced his retirement from the IPL at the conclusion of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final\nHeading into the tournament, as with the previous seasons, both the Chennai Super Kings and Mumbai Indians were considered to be amongst the favourites due to their past performances and squads. Chennai were the runners-up of 2012 and twice IPL champions before. Mumbai had made playoff-stage appearances in each of the past three years and were runners-up in 2010 when they lost to Chennai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group stage\nChennai and Mumbai were dominant throughout the group stage. At the end of the group stage, they were ranked first and second respectively and each had 11 wins from 16 matches. Apart from losing their first match, which was against Mumbai, and an upset against Pune Warriors India, Chennai started their season strong with consistent batting from Michael Hussey and Suresh Raina. Captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Ravindra Jadeja formed a strong middle order as they scored quickly late in their innings to help Chennai while chasing. Chennai's bowling attack continued to be considered their one weakness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group stage\nWhile the inclusion of Dirk Nannes and Chris Morris, both purchased at this year's auction, produced a few successes, the best bowling performances came from Dwayne Bravo and Mohit Sharma. Sharma, an uncapped Indian player playing in his debut IPL season, took the most wickets in powerplays in the first half of the season. For most of the season's second half, Chennai held the top position on the points table with an IPL record-equalling seven-match winning streak. Hussey and Raina continued their prolific run-scoring. Hussey was frequently the season's highest run-scorer while Raina made his maiden IPL century and another score of 99. They, however, finished the group stage with three losses from five matches, including another against Mumbai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group stage\nMumbai began the season with the new opening batting partnership of Sachin Tendulkar and Ricky Ponting, who was acquired in the auction and took on the captaincy. This partnership failed to produce runs and Ponting was benched after five matches. Instead, Mumbai's batting solely depended on Dinesh Karthik, Rohit Sharma and Kieron Pollard and they could only win three of their first six matches. Mumbai were at the middle of the points table halfway through the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group stage\nAs the tournament progressed, they had a more consistent top order with Dwayne Smith replacing Ponting and an improved bowling attack that included Mitchell Johnson, in his first IPL season, Harbhajan Singh, Lasith Malinga and Pragyan Ojha. Sharma, who took over the captaincy from Ponting, continued his form while Karthik began to struggle. Pollard only made one more significant contribution when he scored 66 runs from 27 balls. Towards the end of the group stage, Tendulkar suffered a wrist injury. This did not hamper the team as his replacement, Aditya Tare, showed promise with a score of 59 runs in his first innings. Mumbai only lost two of their last ten matches, both due to batting collapses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group stage, Group stage series\nIn the two group stage matches between Mumbai and Chennai, Mumbai won both. In the first, Mumbai initially struggled and were 83 for 6 after 12 overs before Pollard's unbeaten innings of 57 runs from 38 balls lifted them to a total of 148 for 6. Chennai suffered a similar collapse to lose the match by 9 runs despite a valiant innings of 51 runs from Dhoni. In their second encounter, Mumbai struggled to a below-par total of 139 for 5 with Sharma having the top score of 39.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Group stage, Group stage series\nChennai was then bowled out for 79, the lowest total of the season, and lost by 60 runs. Only three of their batsmen made scores of double figures, including Hussey who was dropped by Pollard in three successive deliveries off Johnson's bowling. Dhoni described the match as \"a comedy of errors\" and explained the cause of the defeat to be complacency and a lack of focus as they had won their past seven matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoff stage\nThe playoff stage is played according to the Page playoff system and provided Mumbai and Chennai, being the top- and second-ranked teams, with two ways of qualifying for the Final. They first faced either other in Qualifier 1 where the winners would qualify for the Final. The losers of Qualifier 1 would play against the winners of the Eliminator in Qualifier 2, the winners of which would also qualify for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoff stage\nIn Qualifier 1, Chennai chose to bat first. Both captains wished to bat first and believed the flat pitch and quick outfield would favour batsmen and produce a high-scoring match. Chennai's innings began steady before a 140-run partnership between Raina and Hussey boosted their total to 192 for 1. They scored 123 runs from the last 10 overs against Mumbai's formidable bowling attack. Malinga and Johnson, two of Mumbai's key bowlers, conceded 45 and 40 runs each without taking a wicket. Harbhajan, with figures of 0 for 26, was the only bowler to concede less than 9 runs an over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoff stage\nThe chase started promisingly as Smith propelled them to 86 for 1 after 8 overs. Jadeja was then introduced into the attack and took the wickets of Smith, Karthik and Pollard. Mumbai did not recover as Bravo helped remove the remaining batsmen, finishing with figures of 3 for 9. Mumbai was bowled out in 18.4 overs and lost the match by 48 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoff stage\nQualifier 2 was between Mumbai and the Rajasthan Royals. Rain delayed the game by an hour but it remained a full-length match. Rajasthan captain Rahul Dravid won the toss and elected to bat. Both captains wanted to bat, stating it appeared to be a good pitch to bat on. Dravid and Ajinkya Rahane provided a solid but slow start to reach 42 without loss after 6 overs. Harbhajan then entered the attack and took the wickets of Rahane and Shane Watson, Royals' top scorer of the season, in his first two overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Road to the final, Playoff stage\nApart from Dravid, who also fell to Harbhajan for 43 runs, only Stuart Binny and Dishant Yagnik made good scores. Yagnik's quick scoring helped Rajasthan get 46 runs from the last 3 overs and finish with 165 for 5. Mumbai were confident in their chase as Smith helped them reach 125 for 1 after 14 overs. Wickets were then lost at regular intervals but the required rate remained manageable and Mumbai won by 4 wickets with one ball remaining. Smith was again the top scorer for Mumbai with 62 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Team history\nBoth the Chennai Super Kings and the Mumbai Indians were a part of the original eight teams of the Indian Premier League when its first season was held in 2008. From the first season, Chennai had been a formidable, well-balanced team with a strong lineup of Indian players, including the captain of India Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Dhoni was bought for US$1.5 million, the highest of the 2008 auction, and appointed their captain. They immediately became runners-up in 2008 and had continued to appear in every knockout/playoff stage since.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Team history\nThey were the most successful IPL team, being twice champions and twice runners-up in the IPL and also the winners of the 2010 Champions League Twenty20. Apart from Dhoni, their most recognised player is Suresh Raina, who has played in every one of Chennai's matches and holds the record for most career runs in the IPL. Chennai's squad is batting oriented, largely consisting of specialist batsmen and all-rounders in favour of specialist bowlers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Team history\nIn contrast, Mumbai struggled in their first two seasons and failed to make the knockout stage in both. The team began with the notoriety of being the most expensive team in the league and the team with cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar. The team was bought for $111.9 million by Reliance Industries, one of India's largest private sector enterprises. In 2010, the team began to shed its problems of inconsistency and unsettled squad composition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Team history\nThe team perpetuated their reputation of being big spenders as they signed Kieron Pollard at the 2010 auction for an undisclosed amount after reaching the maximum open-auction bid of $750,000. Mumbai reached the Final that year, where they lost to Chennai. They then made the playoff stage every year since with the staple of their squad comprising Tendulkar, Pollard, Lasith Malinga and Rohit Sharma, who was acquired in 2011. Pollard and Malinga are amongst the most sought out players of the format for their big-hitting and death-over bowling respectively. Despite their lineup, they had yet to become IPL champions but did win the 2011 Champions League Twenty20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Background\nThe Final was at the neutral venue of Eden Gardens, Kolkata and saw Chennai and Mumbai face each other for the fourth time this season in a rematch of the 2010 Final, won by Chennai. In 14 previous encounters between the two teams, Mumbai had won 8 and Chennai had won 6. In knockout/playoff stage matches, the record was 3\u20130 in favour of Chennai. In all three matches, Chennai batted first and restricted Mumbai to totals in the 140s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Background\nWhile both had the same win-loss record in the group stage this season, Mumbai's record was attributed to their undefeated record at their home ground. Chennai had the best record playing away from home in this season's group stage, winning 5 of 8 matches. Chennai had the tournament's highest run-scorer in Michael Hussey and joint-top wicket-taker in Dwayne Bravo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Background\nThe final weeks of the tournament were shrouded by controversies involving corruption. It began with the arrest of three players from the Rajasthan Royals by the Delhi Police on allegations of spot fixing. Two days before the Final, Gurunath Meiyappan, a top official of the Chennai Super Kings, was arrested by Mumbai Police on charges of cheating, forgery and fraud. His arrest also implicated N. Srinivasan, the president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India and Meiyappan's father-in-law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Report\nThe toss was won by Mumbai. Their captain Rohit Sharma described the pitch as being drier than the previous match and predicted it would slow down as the match progressed. Chennai captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni also wanted to bat first as it would have put pressure on the team chasing. Both squads were unchanged from their respective previous matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Report\nMumbai's innings began poorly as Mohit Sharma and Albie Morkel troubled their batsmen with straight deliveries. Both opening batsmen, Dwayne Smith and Aditya Tare, and Rohit Sharma lost their wickets within the first four overs for 16 runs. Dinesh Karthik and Ambati Rayudu attempted to build a partnership but also struggled and Karthik was dismissed after they added 36 runs. In came Kieron Pollard in the tenth over and immediately played aggressively. Pollard and Rayudu were able to score more freely against Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja to lift Mumbai to 100 for 4 after 15 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Report\nThe following delivery, Rayudu fell to Dwayne Bravo for 37 runs and Mumbai was left with only Pollard and their bowlers. Harbhajan Singh briefly provided support for Pollard with boundaries coming from the edges of his bat before he fell to Bravo off a mishit. The remaining batsmen only made minimal contributions and most were dismissed by Bravo, who finished with figures of 4 for 42. Despite Pollard getting his third half-century of the season, Mumbai could only achieve a total of 148 for 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Report\nMichael Hussey and Murali Vijay opened in the chase. In the first over, Lasith Malinga took the wickets of Hussey and Suresh Raina in two successive deliveries. Subramaniam Badrinath was dismissed in the following over and Chennai's score was 3 for 3. Vijay and Bravo attempted to target Pragyan Ojha and Rishi Dhawan but wickets continued to fall due to poor shot selection and Chennai was reduced to 39 for 6 in the eighth over. This forced Dhoni to bat earlier than his preference of late in the innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Report\nDhoni attempted to rescue the innings but wickets continued to fall around him. Chennai's innings finally improved in the ninth-wicket partnership between Dhoni and Ashwin, during which Dhoni hit three boundary sixes off the bowling of Ojha and Pollard. The asking rate slowly became unmanagable and Ashwin was dismissed in the 18th over. Dhoni finished with an unbeaten 63 runs and Chennai lost by 23 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Summary\nIn a match that resembled their first group stage encounter, Mumbai defeated Chennai by 23 runs. The top run-scorers of the season for both teams failed to make high scores while Rayudu and Malinga produced one of their best performances of the season. These performances, along with Pollard's 60 runs, helped Mumbai better Chennai's lone resistance from Dhoni. Pollard's good innings had only come sporadically before and his contribution earned him the man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Match, Summary\nIt was Mumbai's first IPL title and Chennai's second consecutive time as runners-up. It was the second IPL title for Rohit Sharma and Ojha, who were with the Deccan Chargers when they won the 2009 Final. Bravo's four wickets made him the top wicket-taker of the season with 32 wickets, unprecedented for an IPL season. Hussey remained the top run-scorer of the season with 733 runs. They were awarded the Purple Cap and Orange Cap awards respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Scorecard\nToss : Mumbai Indians won the toss and elected to bat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Scorecard\nFall of wickets: 1\u20134 (Smith, 0.4 ov), 2\u20138 (Tare, 1.1 ov), 3\u201316 (R Sharma, 3.2 ov), 4\u201352 (Karthik, 9.3 ov), 5\u2013100 (Rayudu, 15.1 ov), 6\u2013125 (Harbhajan Singh, 17.5 ov), 7\u2013133 (Dhawan, 18.4 ov), 8\u2013135 (Johnson, 19.1 ov), 9\u2013135 (Malinga, 19.3 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234043-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League Final, Scorecard\nFall of wickets: 1\u20132 (Hussey, 0.4 ov), 2\u20132 (Raina, 0.5 ov), 3\u20133 (Badrinath, 1.4 ov), 4\u201335 (Bravo, 5.6 ov), 5\u201336 (Jadeja, 6.4 ov), 6\u201339 (Vijay, 7.3 ov), 7\u201357 (Morkel, 10.6 ov), 8\u201358 (Morris, 11.3 ov), 9\u201399 (Ashwin, 17.4 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case\nThe 2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case arose when the Delhi Police arrested three cricketers, Sreesanth, Ajit Chandila and Ankeet Chavan, on the charges of alleged spot-fixing. The three represented the Rajasthan Royals in the 2013 Indian Premier League. In a separate case, Mumbai Police arrested Vindu Dara Singh, Priyank Sepany (diamond dealer)and Chennai Super Kings Team Principal Gurunath Meiyappan for alleged betting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case\nIn July 2015, the RM Lodha Committee suspended India Cements and Jaipur IPL, owners of Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals respectively, for two years. Additionally, Sreesanth, Chandila and Chavan were cleared of all the charges after they were found not guilty by the Patiala House Courts. However, in January 2016, Chandila was given a life ban from all forms of cricket by the BCCI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case\nIn March 2019, the Supreme Court lifted the life ban imposed by BCCI on Sreesanth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details\nSreesanth was arrested at his friend's house, whereas Chandila and Chavan were arrested from their team hotel in Mumbai. Rajasthan Royals suspended the contracts of the three players until the investigation was complete. Delhi police have claimed that Chavan has confessed being involved in the spot fixing. The police also claimed that Chandila had tried to get other players, including Chavan, involved in the spot fixing under the direction of the bookies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details\nThe Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) suspended the players till further investigation. BCCI secretary Sanjay Jagdale, said, \"The BCCI is shocked and saddened at the recent developments. The BCCI has zero tolerance to corruption. We will offer all cooperation to the Delhi police and all other authorities in their investigations in this matter. The IPL Governing Council has met and decided that the cricketers found involved will be dealt with severely.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details\nOn 4 June 2013, Delhi Police said that Sreeshant, Chandila, Chavan and 23 other people arrested by them in the spot-fixing scandal were going to be charged with the provisions of Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) since they were acting under the command of underworld dons Dawood Ibrahim and Chhota Shakeel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details\nSreesanth, Ankeet Chavan and 17 other people (including 14 alleged bookies) who were arrested by the Delhi Police were released on bail on 10 June 2013 by a Delhi court due to lack of evidence to be charged under MCOCA. Ajit Chandila had not applied for bail. Bombay High Court has sought investigation progress report from Mumbai Crime Branch during the hearing of a public interest litigation filed by social-activist Ketan Tirodkar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details\nDelhi Police chief Neeraj Kumar said they had been taping phone calls since April 2013. He added, \"Further arrests will be of bookies and no more players will be arrested.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details\nThe International Cricket Council withdrew umpire Asad Rauf from the Champions Trophy in the wake of reports that the Mumbai Police were conducting an investigation into Asad Rauf's activities in the IPL spot fixing scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Arrest of bookies\nSunil Bhatia, a bookie arrested by Delhi Police, said that he was involved in fixing in Indian Cricket League and Bangladesh Premier League besides the IPL leading to speculations that the entire fixing scandal runs even deeper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 97], "content_span": [98, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Arrest of bookies\nA team of Delhi Police Special Cell officers arrested Yahya Mohammad in the early hours of 24 May 2013 from the Rajiv Gandhi International Airport in Hyderabad in connection with the cricket betting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 97], "content_span": [98, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Arrest of bookies\nAhmedabad Crime Branch arrested bookie Vinod Mulchandani from the Satellite Area of Ahmedabad city on 25 May 2013. 12.8 million INR in cash, laptops and mobile phones were seized from his possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 97], "content_span": [98, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Arrest of bookies\nVindu Dara Singh was arrested for alleged links to bookies in this spot fixing. He was later released on bail on 3 June 2013 by a Mumbai court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 97], "content_span": [98, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Gurunath Meiyappan case\nCall records of Vindu Dara Singh in connection with the betting scandal showed that he was in frequent contact with Chennai Super Kings (CSK) team principal and BCCI president N. Sreenivasan's son-in-law, Gurunath Meiyappan. To investigate whether frequent calls to Meiyappan were for betting, Mumbai Police issued summons to him. On 24 May 2013, Gurunath Meiyappan was arrested on charges of betting, conspiracy and cheating after he was questioned by the Mumbai Crime Branch. After his arrest, the CSK franchise immediately disowned him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 103], "content_span": [104, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Gurunath Meiyappan case\nIn a press statement on 24 May 2013, India Cements, which owns the CSK franchisee said: \"Mr. Meiyappan is neither the owner, nor the CEO/Team Principal of the Chennai Super Kings. [ He] is only one of the members (Honorary) of the management team of the Chennai Super Kings.\" The main reason for the immediate disowning of him was that, his arrest could lead to termination of the CSK franchise. This was because of the Clause 11.3 (c) of the Franchise Agreement, which stated", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 103], "content_span": [104, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Gurunath Meiyappan case\na franchise may be terminated immediately if the Franchisee, any Franchisee Group Company and /or any Owner acts in any way which has a material adverse effect upon the reputation or standing of the League, BCCI-IPL, BCCI, the Franchisee, the Team (or any other team in the League) and/or the game of cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 103], "content_span": [104, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Gurunath Meiyappan case\nOn 26 May, BCCI announced that a three-member commission would investigate the role of Meiyappan in the spot-fixing and betting scandal. On 31 May 2013, a senior Mumbai Police official said that Meiyappanan had been warned by an official from the International Cricket Council's ACSU. Meiyappan was later released on bail by a Mumbai court, on 3 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 103], "content_span": [104, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Raj Kundra case\nOn 5 June 2013, Rajasthan Royals team co-owner Raj Kundra was questioned by the Delhi Police for alleged involvement in illegal betting. On 6 June 2013, Delhi Police claimed that he had confessed to them of placing bets on his IPL team through a bookie who was his friend. On 7 June 2013, Rajasthan Royals team management said that Raj Kundra would be suspended and all his shares in the team taken back if the charges against him of betting were proved. Because of this, he was suspended from the IPL by the BCCI on 10 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 95], "content_span": [96, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Supreme court observation\nOn 25 March 2014, the Supreme Court of India told N. Srinivasan to step down from his position on his own as BCCI president in order to ensure a fair investigation into the betting and spot-fixing charges levied against his son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan who was team principal of Chennai Super Kings, else it would pass verdict asking him to step down. The Supreme court said it was \"nauseating\" that N. Srinivasan continued as BCCI chief.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 105], "content_span": [106, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Investigation details, Mukul Mudgal Committee\nIn October 2013, Supreme Court of India appointed a three-member committee headed by Justice (Retd.) Mukul Mudgal to probe allegations of betting and spot fixing in the Indian Premier League (IPL). The committee submitted its report to the Supreme Court in February 2014. The details of the report have not been made public. The other members of the committee are Additional Solicitor General of India L Nageswara Rao and senior advocate and former cricket umpire Nilay Dutta. The former Indian Cricket Captain Sourav Ganguly has also been appointed as a part of the committee and a part of the investigating process of the committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 102], "content_span": [103, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Reactions\nInitially, Sreesanth's father Shantakumaran Nair termed his son's arrest to be a \"larger conspiracy\", and blamed cricketers M. S. Dhoni and Harbhajan Singh for connecting his son with the scandal, but later retracted the statement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234044-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Premier League spot-fixing and betting case, Reactions\nThere were reports that the Delhi and the Mumbai police were in an unfriendly competition between each other and there was a lack of coordination between them. These reports were later dismissed by Maharashtra Home minister R.R. Patil saying that the two teams were co-operating with each other to uncover the truth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234045-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Rajya Sabha elections\nMinor Rajya Sabha elections were held in 2013, to elect members of the Rajya Sabha, Indian Parliament's upper chamber also known as the Council of States. Routine elections were held in May and June among proportionately qualifying legislators to elect (nominate) two members from Assam and six from Tamil Nadu, to the 245-member body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234045-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian Rajya Sabha elections\nBy-elections were also held among legislators of the States of Bihar, Meghalaya, Karnataka, (one seat for each) and two in Uttar Pradesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal\nAlso referred to as the AugustaWestland VVIP chopper deal, the Indian helicopter bribery scandal by Congress led UPA Government refers to a multimillion-dollar corruption case in India, wherein money was paid to middlemen and Indian officials in 2006 and 2007 to purchase helicopters for high level politicians. As per the CBI, this amounted to \u20b92.5 billion (US$35\u00a0million), transferred through bank accounts in the UK and UAE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal\nIt came to light in early 2013, when an Indian national parliamentary investigation began into allegations of bribery and corruption involving several senior officials and a helicopter manufacturer AgustaWestland surrounding the purchase of a new fleet of helicopters. The scandal has been referred to as the Chopper scam or Choppergate by the media and popular press.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal\nSeveral Indian Congress politicians and military officials were accused of accepting bribes from AgustaWestland in order to win the \u20b93.6 billion (US$50\u00a0million) Indian contract for the supply of 12 AgustaWestland AW101 helicopters; these helicopters are intended to perform VVIP duties for the President of India and other important state officials. Ahmed Patel, political secretary to Congress President Sonia Gandhi, is alleged by Italian prosecutors to have received kickbacks from the deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal\nA note presented in the Italian court, sent by middleman Christian Michel (who was extradited to India on 4 December 2018), asks Peter Hulett, an Agusta Westland employee, to target key advisors to Sonia Gandhi and lists their names as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Ahmed Patel, Pranab Mukherjee, M. Veerappa Moily, Oscar Fernandes, M. K. Narayanan and Vinay Singh. The note also contains the bribes to be paid out, divided as \"AF\" \u20ac6 million, \"BUR\" \u20ac8.4 million, \"Pol\" \u20ac6 million and \"AP\" \u20ac3 million. On 8 January 2018, the third Court of Appeals of Milan acquitted the defendants on all charges Abhay Tyagi was also accused to have received kickbacks worth \u20b969,00,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal\nThe case continues to be investigated in India by the Indian government and the CBI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Overview\nThe Indian Ministry of Defence (MoD) signed a contract to purchase 12 AgustaWestland AW101 helicopters in February 2010 for the Communication Squadron of Indian Air Force to carry the president, PM and other VVIPs. Controversy over the contract came to light on 12 February 2013 with the arrest of Giuseppe Orsi, the CEO of Finmeccanica, AgustaWestland's parent company by Italian authorities over corruption and bribery charges; the following day Indian Defence Minister A.K. Antony ordered a probe into the contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Investigation\nAfter a huge controversy and allegations of corruption, Defence Minister A.K. Antony, on 12 February, ordered an investigation by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Investigation\nOn 25 February 2013, CBI registered a Preliminary Enquiry (PE) against 11 persons including the former Indian Air Force Chief, Air Chief Marshal S.P. Tyagi, and his cousins, besides four companies. After carrying out the preliminary enquiry, the CBI found sufficient evidence and registered an FIR on 13 March. The FIR named 13 persons including: former Indian Air Force Chief, Air Chief Marshal S.P. Tyagi, his three brothers: Juli, Docsa and Sandeep, the brother of former Union minister Santosh Bagrodia, Satish Bagrodia, and Pratap Aggarwal (Chairman and Managing Director of IDS Infotech). The FIR also named four companies - Italy-based Finmeccanica, UK-based AgustaWestland and Chandigarh-based IDS Infotech and Aeromatrix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Investigation\nIn 2013, billionaire Indian arms dealer Abhishek Verma and his Romanian born wife Anca Neacsu were named suspects in this scandal. Abhishek had played the role of a middleman in the deal and had interfaced with the politicians in securing CCS clearance from the Cabinet Committee. This nexus was exposed by TimesNow TV with their global investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Investigation\nAccording to the investigators, part of the bribes from AgustaWestland was sent to Abhishek's companies Atlas Defence Systems accounts in Mauritius, to Bermuda accounts of Atlas Group Ltd and the other part was diverted to his wife's front company in New York, Ganton Limited. These funds are suspected to have been sent to Indian politicians who were beneficiaries in this scandal. BJP leader Subramanian Swamy had first identified the role of Abhishek Verma and his wife Anca Neacsu in 2013 in several of his blogs and press-releases. Later in April 2017, the Verma couple were exonerated from these allegations of corruption by CBI Special Court of Judge Anju Bajaj Chandana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Investigation\nIn September 2015, a special CBI court issued an open non-bailable warrant (NBW) against Christian Michel based on a CBI report that he was needed to be questioned in the case to know how much amount he had received as \"commission\" in the deal. The CBI said that \"Based on this arrest warrant, Interpol India would be requested to issue a Red Corner Notice against Christian Michel James and execute said warrant.\" In an interview to a newspaper, he denied any wrongdoing by stating that he had never met any \"Gandhi\" in his life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Investigation\nEnforcement Directorate (ED) is investigating money laundering allegations. In March 2015, the ED traced and identified the properties worth around \u20b9 1.12 crore owned by Christian Michel and issued a provisional attachment order. The ED claimed that Michel bought a flat in south Delhi's Safdarjung Enclave in the name of media firm Media Exim using the bribe money. He was also reportedly in possession of a luxury car and a Fixed Deposit of \u20b9 54 lakh. In September 2015, the adjudicating authority confirmed the attachment of properties and allowed the agency to retain the properties. In September 2015, the ED attached assets worth about \u20b9 7 crore alleged to be in the name of family members of ex-IAF Chief S. P. Tyagi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Investigation\nThe CBI and the ED have sent letters rogatory to as many as eight countries including Italy, Tunisia, Mauritius, the UAE, the UK, Switzerland, Singapore and the British Virgin Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) investigation\nOn 27 February 2013, UPA-II Government introduced a motion in Rajya Sabha (the upper house of the Parliament of India) for an investigation led by a 30-member Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC). The motion was passed after a walkout by most of the opposition parties like BJP, JD(U), Trinamool Congress, CPI, TDP and AGP. During the debate, Leader of the Opposition Arun Jaitley said the JPC was an \"exercise in futility\" and a \"diversionary tactic.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 89], "content_span": [90, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) investigation\nHe argued that the case involved various legal aspects such as extradition of accused foreigners and custodial interrogation and the JPC can have \"none of these powers,\" leaving it ineffective. Many opposition members demanded Supreme Court-monitored investigation (on the similar lines of 2G spectrum case). Demands were also made to establish money trail and issue Letter Rogatory (LR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 89], "content_span": [90, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) investigation\nThe UPA government initially denied all allegations and claimed it has \"nothing to hide\" and that \"our track record is not cover up.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 89], "content_span": [90, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Cancellation of the contract by the Indian Government\nIndia cancelled the \u20b9 3,600 crore deal with AgustaWestland in January 2014. The government cancelled the contract \"on grounds of breach of the Pre-contract Integrity Pact and the agreement by AWIL (AgustaWestland International Ltd)\". The contract was frozen in February 2013 after allegations surfaced that \u20b93.6 billion (equivalent to \u20b94.9\u00a0billion or US$69\u00a0million in 2019) was paid as a bribe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 93], "content_span": [94, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Decision-makers\nSenior officials involved in the decision-making process that led to the selection of the AgustaWestland helicopters for VVIP use were M. K. Narayanan (Indian Police Service (IPS), former Director Intelligence Bureau (India) and NSA); B V Wanchoo (IPS, and Chief of Special Protection Group); and Shashi Kant Sharma, IAS, and former defence secretary. After their tenures at the centre, the UPA Government made M.K. Narayanan governor of West Bengal, B.V. Wanchoo governor of Goa and Shashikant Sharma Comptroller and Auditor General of India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, CBI probe\nThe CBI approached Union Law Ministry to record statements of M. K. Narayanan and B. V. Wanchoo in January 2014. M.K Narayanan and B. V. Wanchoo were West Bengal and Goa Governors respectively at the time of CBI's request. Their statements were considered vital as they were National Security Adviser and Special Protection Group (SPG) chief at the time of the signing of the contract with AgustaWestland. Their views were also considered before the Indian Government signed the contract with AgustaWestland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, CBI probe\nHowever, Kapil Sibal's Union Law ministry stonewalled the CBI probe by rejecting CBI's request to examine them under the usual excuse of \"immunity.\" The CBI, therefore, approached President Pranab Mukherjee to seek permission to examine ex-NSA and ex-chief of SPG. M. K. Narayanan and B. V. Wanchoo were questioned by CBI later in June and July 2014 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Recovery of bank guarantee\nAfter the cancellation of the contract, India encashed over \u20b92.5 billion (US$35\u00a0million) made by AgustaWestland as a bank guarantee in the Indian banks in January 2014. Separately, India requested the Italian government to retrieve the bank guarantee amount made by the firm in Italian banks which was more than \u20ac275 million (\u20b9 23.64 billion). On 17 March 2014, a request made by India was rejected by an Italian court. However, the appellate court in Milan reversed the lower court's judgement and upheld the claims of the Indian government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Recovery of bank guarantee\nAccordingly, in June 2014, the Indian government encashed \u20b918.18 billion (US$250\u00a0million), taking the total amount recovered so far to \u20b920.68 billion (US$290\u00a0million). With this, India was reported to have recovered the entire amount of around \u20b916.2 billion (US$230\u00a0million) (45% of the total contract value \u20b936 billion (US$500\u00a0million)) it had paid to AgustaWestland. However, it was later reported that AgustaWestland had not returned the entire amount, and kept \u20ac106 million for three helicopters it had delivered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Italian Court judgments\nItalian prosecutors started investigating the case in late 2011. After completing the investigations, they referred the case for trial to the Court of Busto Arsizio. The Italian court, passing its judgment in October 2014, acquitted ex-IAF Chief S.P. Tyagi of all corruption charges. It also acquitted the former Finmeccanica CEO Giuseppe Orsi and former AgustaWestland head Bruno Spagnolini of \"charges of international corruption\". The court, however, convicted and sentenced them to two years in prison on the lesser charge of \"false invoicing\" in the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Italian Court judgments\nOn 8 April 2016, the Milan Court of Appeal, in a 225-page judgement, overturned the lower court verdict and sentenced Giuseppe Orsi to four years' imprisonment. Then, on 16 December 2016, the Corte di Cassazione (Supreme Court) cancelled the Appeals Court guilty verdict, and ordered a retrial, referring the matter to a different Court of Appeal, always in Milan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234046-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Indian helicopter bribery scandal, Italian Court judgments\nAfter nine months of proceedings, on 8 January 2018, the Milan Third Court of Appeals finally cleared the defendants and dismissed all charges, on grounds of insufficient evidence provided by the prosecution to support the allegations The verdict was upheld by the Supreme Court of Cassazione on 22 May 2019 after the Milan General Prosecutor's office failed to have a recourse supported by the Attorney General.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234047-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Fever season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 14th season for the Indiana Fever of the Women's National Basketball Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234047-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Fever season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Fever's selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft. Layshia Clarendon 9th overall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234048-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team\nThe 2013 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team represented the Indiana University Bloomington in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Hoosiers were coached by Tracy Smith, in his eighth season, and played their home games at Bart Kaufman Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234048-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team\nThe Hoosiers finished with 49 wins, the most in school history, against 16 losses overall, and 17\u20137 in the Big Ten Conference, earning the conference championship. They claimed the 2013 Big Ten Conference Baseball Tournament Championship, their third title in that event, and reached the College World Series for the first time in their history, where they finished 1\u20132, eliminated by Oregon State 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234048-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, Ranking movements\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, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234049-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Hoosiers football team\nThe 2013 Indiana Hoosiers football team represented the Indiana University during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Hoosiers played in the Leaders Division of the Big Ten Conference and played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington, Indiana. The team was led by head coach Kevin Wilson, who was in his third season. They finished the season 5\u20137, 3\u20135 in Big Ten play to finish in fourth place in the Leaders Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234050-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team\nThe 2013 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team was the college's 41st season playing organized men's college soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234050-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Hoosiers men's soccer team, Background\nIn the 2012 regular season Indiana finished 4th in the conference, losing in the Big Ten Tournament to eventual champions Michigan State. Indiana also entered the NCAA Tournament, defeating the Georgetown Hoyas in the 2012 College Cup Final 1\u20130 and winning the national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234050-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana Hoosiers 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234051-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indiana State Sycamores football team\nThe 2013 Indiana State Sycamores football team represented Indiana State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first year head coach Mike Sanford and played their home games at Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 1\u201311, 0\u20138 in MVFC play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500\nThe 97th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday May 26, 2013. It was the premier event of the 2013 IZOD IndyCar Series season. Tony Kanaan, a native of Brazil, was victorious on a record-setting day. Kanaan became the fourth Brazilian driver to win the Indianapolis 500 joined by Emerson Fittipaldi, Helio Castroneves, and Gil de Ferran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500\nThe track opened for practice on Saturday, May 11. Time trials were held May 18\u201319, and the final practice, traditionally dubbed \"Carb Day,\" was Friday, May 24. A support race, the Freedom 100 for the Indy Lights series was also held on Carb Day. In time trials, owner/driver Ed Carpenter of Indianapolis won the pole position, the first American-born pole-sitter since 2006, and the first owner/driver to sit on the pole since 1975.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500\nFor the first time since 1987, two drivers in the field entered the race attempting to win a fourth Indianapolis 500. Three-time winners H\u00e9lio Castroneves (2001, 2002, 2009) and Dario Franchitti (2007, 2010, 2012) attempted to tie A. J. Foyt, Al Unser Sr. and Rick Mears for the most Indy 500 victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500\nAfter eleven previous attempts, Tony Kanaan, racing for KV Racing Technology, won the race. On a restart with three laps remaining, Kanaan overtook leader Ryan Hunter-Reay in the first turn. Three-time champion Dario Franchitti got loose and crashed into the outside wall bringing out the final caution of the race. Kanaan led Rookie of the Year Carlos Mu\u00f1oz and Hunter-Reay across the line. The average speed of the race \u2013 187.433\u00a0mph (301.644\u00a0km/h) \u2013 was the fastest Indianapolis 500, breaking the record set in 1990 by Arie Luyendyk. The record would stand until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500\nThe 68 lead changes, and 14 different leaders, set during the race are also new records. Other records set (each of which have since been broken) included most cars running at the finish in a race that completed 200 laps (26), fewest caution laps (21), most laps completed by the field (5,863), as well as a 133-lap caution-free segment from lap 61 through 193.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500\nChevrolet swept the top four finishing positions, and took its first Indianapolis 500 win since 2002, breaking Honda's streak of nine consecutive Indy 500 wins. Chassis manufacturer Dallara won its 8th straight Indy 500, and 13th overall since joining the series in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Schedule\n* Includes days where track activitywas significantly limited due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Entry list\nThe official entry list was released May 7, featuring 34 entries. The initial entry list included four rookies (A. J. Allmendinger, Conor Daly, Tristan Vautier, Carlos Mu\u00f1oz) and four former winners in H\u00e9lio Castroneves, Dario Franchitti, Scott Dixon and Buddy Lazier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Entry list\nRyan Briscoe\u2014who took pole position for the 2012 race\u2014was unable to secure a full-time drive for the 2013 season, but participated in the race in a fourth car entered by Chip Ganassi Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Practice and rookie orientation\nRookie orientation was scheduled for Thursday, April 11. However, due to a poor weather forecast, was postponed. Instead, rookies will participate in special two-hour sessions during the first two days of Indianapolis 500 practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Practice and rookie orientation, Testing\u00a0\u2013 Thursday, May 9\nA private test focused on NASCAR driver Kurt Busch, who tested a car for Andretti Autosport. Busch conducted the evaluation test with the possibility of attempting \"Double Duty\" in 2014. Busch reached a top lap of 218\u00a0mph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 81], "content_span": [82, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Starting grid\n(R) = Indianapolis 500 rookie; (W) = Former Indianapolis 500 winner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Start\nFor the first time since 1987, multiple three-time winners of the race were in contention (Franchitti and Castroneves); however, neither driver ended up being a serious threat to win the race. The race started at 12:15\u00a0p.m. EDT (4:15\u00a0p.m. UTC). Ed Carpenter started in pole position, but Marco Andretti, who started in third position, soon took the lead. The initial start and first laps commenced without any crashes or yellow flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, First half\nThe first caution flag flew when J. R. Hildebrand hit the wall in Turn 2 on the fourth lap of the race, just after posting the fastest time for a lap in the race. Hildebrand had almost won the 2011 Indianapolis 500 but lost due to a crash during the final lap, and in the 2013 was then was out of contention after the early crash. On lap 27, driver Sebasti\u00e1n Saavedra was bumped between turns three and four and subsequently crashed into the wall outside of turn four. Driver Pippa Mann later apologized for the accident on her website. The first half of the race featured many lead changes, with Tony Kanaan, Carpenter, and Andretti exchanging the leading spot; however, just before the halfway point in the race, A. J. Allmendinger passed Kanaan to take the lead, with Ryan Hunter-Reay and Andretti following behind in third and fourth, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Second half\nAllmendinger, leading with 70 laps to go, had a clasp from his seatbelt come loose and was forced to make a pitstop so his pit crew could refasten it, losing the lead. Driver Graham Rahal then crashed with 7 laps left to go, bringing the race under a yellow caution flag. Ryan Hunter-Reay had been in the lead during this caution flag, but when the caution ended, Kanaan, who ran in the top ten most of the race, slipped by Hunter-Reay to take the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Race summary, Second half\nJust when Kanaan led in the first turn, Dario Franchitti crashed with three laps left, causing another yellow caution flag that would last for the remainder of the race. Under the yellow flag, Kanaan finished the final 2,5 laps to win his first Indy 500, with Carlos Mu\u00f1oz in second place and Hunter-Reay in third. The race featured more lead changes than any previous Indianapolis 500 with 68, twice the number of the previous record (34), set in 2012. Kanaan said after the race, \"I was looking at the stands, and it was unbelievable ... This is it, man. I made it. Finally they're going to put my ugly face on this trophy\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Race results\nPoints include qualification points from Time Trials, 1 point for leading a lap, and 2 points for most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Race results, Record and milestones\nNumerous race records and statistical milestones were set during the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nThe race was broadcast live in high definition in the United States on ABC. A newcomer to the telecast was Lindsay Czarniak, served as host. Brent Musburger, who served as host from 2005\u20132012, departed the broadcast crew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nTime trials, Carb Day, and the 500 Festival Parade were covered live in the United States on NBC Sports Network. Two separate crews will be used for the qualifying weekend and final practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nFor qualifying, the on-air crew was Leigh Diffey, Gil de Ferran and Jon Beekhuis in the booth, with Kevin Lee, Marty Snider, Robin Miller and Will Buxton in the pits and garage area. de Ferran substituted for regular Townsend Bell, who was participating in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nFor final practice, the on-air crew was Bob Jenkins, Jon Beekhuis and Wally Dallenbach, Jr. in the booth, with pit reporters Snider, Lee and Miller. Jenkins was filling in for Diffey, who was leading NBC's Monaco Grand Prix broadcast. The Freedom 100 was covered by Mike King, Davey Hamilton and Josef Newgarden, with Jake Query covering the pits, and the parade coverage on Saturday was anchored by Jenkins, Diane Willis and Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nThe IMS Radio Network broadcast the race live on approximately 400 affiliates, as well as AFN, the LeSEA broadcasting network, and World Harvest Radio. The broadcast was carried on XM channel 94 and Sirius channel 212. Mike King served as anchor for the 15th and unknown to all final year. King resigned his position in late October 2013. Historian Donald Davidson celebrated his 50th year as an official member of the network broadcast. Several drivers, including A. J. Foyt and Bobby Unser recorded celebratory greetings. The commercial out-cues used in 2013 were the drivers (like 2010) during the pre-race coverage, and the historical chief announcers during the race (like 2011-2012).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nKatie Hargitt, who had worked other races during the year as a pit reporter, joined the crew for the first time. Her duties were limited to interviews during the pre-race coverage. During the first half of the race, Mike King interviewed future Vice President of the United States and current Indiana Governor Mike Pence in the broadcast booth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\n1070 The Fan broadcast nightly with Trackside with Curt Cavin and Kevin Lee, followed by Donald Davidson's The Talk of Gasoline Alley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nChief Announcer: Mike KingDriver expert: Davey HamiltonColor: Paul PageHistorian: Donald DavidsonAnalyst: Jerry Baker", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234052-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nTurn 1: not usedTurn 2: Jake QueryTurn 3: Mark JaynesTurn 4: Chris Denari", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nThe 2013 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 61st season in the National Football League, the 30th in Indianapolis and the second season under head coach Chuck Pagano, who missed most of the 2012 season due to treatment for leukemia. The Colts matched their 2012 record of 11\u20135, and went undefeated within the division during the season. The Colts hoped to advance further than the Wild Card round in the playoffs than in 2012, where they lost to the eventual Super Bowl champion Ravens. They did so after falling behind by 28 points against the Chiefs, but came back and won 45\u201344. However, the Colts were defeated by the New England Patriots in the Divisional round, by a score of 43\u201322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nOn March 7, 2013, Jeff Saturday signed a one-day contract in order to retire as a member of the Indianapolis Colts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nFor the second consecutive season, the Colts held the final pick in the NFL Draft, number 254, which is famously known as Mr. Irrelevant. In 2012, the final player selected was Chandler Harnish. The 2013 season's Mr. Irrelevant was Justice Cunningham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nThroughout the season, the Colts wore a patch to recognize the 30th season since their move to Indianapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nOn October 20, 2013, Peyton Manning made his first return to Indianapolis since being released by the Indianapolis Colts in March 2012 and signed by the Denver Broncos, a game in which commentator Al Michaels dubbed \"the War of 1812\" (referring to Peyton Manning's number of 18 and Colts quarterback Andrew Luck's number of 12). The Colts won the game 39\u201333.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nWhile losing their Week 14 match-up against the Cincinnati Bengals, the Colts overall record as well as a 4\u20130 record within the division was enough to earn them their 15th division title after the Denver Broncos defeated the Tennessee Titans. The Colts became the first team of the 2013 season to win their division, securing a home playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nWith the Titans' loss to the Cardinals in Week 15, the Colts were the only AFC South team to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season\nIn the AFC Wild Card Game against the Kansas City Chiefs, the Colts rallied to turn a 38\u201310 Chiefs' lead into a 45\u201344 victory for the second largest comeback in NFL playoff history. It is behind only the Bills who rallied from a 32-point deficit in the 1993 AFC Wild Card Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Schedule, Regular season\nFor the first time since the 2002 season, the Colts did not play the New England Patriots during the regular season. The Colts\u2013Patriots rivalry had become one of the most known in modern era sports. However, they did play each other in playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Schedule, Regular season\nOne highlight of the 2013 Colts season was a trip to San Francisco to play the 49ers. This game marked the return of starting quarterback Andrew Luck to the San Francisco Bay Area, where he played three seasons of college football at Stanford University, which for his first two years there was coached by Jim Harbaugh, then-coach of the 49ers. Luck got the better of his old coach with a 27\u20137 statement victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: vs. Oakland Raiders\nThe Colts began their 2013 season at home, for the first time since 2009, against the Oakland Raiders. The Raiders, who received the opening kickoff, would turn the ball over on a Terrelle Pryor interception by Colts cornerback Greg Toler. The interception would allow Andrew Luck and the Colts offense to drive down the field and score the first touchdown of the season on a pass from Luck to Reggie Wayne. Heading into the second quarter, the Colts defense would continue to prevent the Raiders from scoring, forcing Oakland to punt on second drive of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: vs. Oakland Raiders\nLuck would again lead the Colts down the field in an eight play, 69-yard drive that would result in a touchdown pass from Luck to tight end Dwayne Allen, giving the Colts an early 14\u20130 lead. Pryor and the Raiders would respond for the first time on their next offensive drive, which ended in a touchdown run from Darren McFadden. Defensive stops by both the Colts and the Raiders would ensure no further scoring in the half and would allow Indianapolis to head into halftime with the 14\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: vs. Oakland Raiders\nIndianapolis was forced to punt on their first offensive possession of the second half, while the Raiders would drive down to the Colts 20-yard line and would score on a Sebastian Janikowski field goal, cutting the Colts lead to 14\u201310 lead. The Raiders would again begin to drive down the field and would score the go ahead touchdown early in the fourth quarter on a pass from Denarius Moore from Terrelle Pryor, giving the Raiders a 17\u201314 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: vs. Oakland Raiders\nAndrew Luck, on the next Colts offensive drive, would lead the team down the field, 71 yards in 11 plays, with Luck himself scoring the game-winning touchdown on a 19-yard run. Pryor and the Raiders would drive down to the Colts 24-yard line, though the drive would end with an interception by Antoine Bethea, sealing the Colts victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: vs. Oakland Raiders\nWith the win, the Colts went to 1\u20130 on the season and extended their home winning streak to seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Colts faced the Miami Dolphins in week two, a rematch of the 23\u201320 Colts victory during the 2012 season. This game also marked the second meeting between Andrew Luck of the Colts and Ryan Tannehill of the Dolphins, both sophomore quarterbacks. Indianapolis, who received the opening kickoff, were unable to score on their first drive, unlike the Dolphins who drove down 58 yards in six plays, while scoring on a Tannehill pass to wide receiver Mike Wallace, giving the Dolphins an early 7\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Colts would respond with a long drive of their own, however they would be able to put it into the endzone, settling instead for an Adam Vinatieri field goal. The Dolphins would strike again, this time scoring in just two plays following a Tannehill 67-yard pass and a Lamar Miller touchdown run. The Colts, who entered the second quarter trailing 14\u20133, quickly scored their first touchdown on the day with an Andrew Luck pass to tight end Coby Fleener.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAfter trading possessions, the Indianapolis offense would strike again, scoring their second touchdown of the quarter and taking the first lead of the day, though it would be taken away by a Caleb Sturgis field goal to end the half, with the teams going into halftime tied at 17. Indianapolis would drive down on their first possession of the second half, though a touchdown would be nullified by an illegal shift penalty and forcing the Colts to settle for a field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0012-0003", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Miami Dolphins\nMidway through the third quarter, the Dolphins would score the go ahead touchdown on a Charles Clay run, putting them ahead 24\u201320. On their last offensive possession of the day, Luck and the Colts would drive down to the Miami 23-yard line, though the comeback would fall short following a sack of Luck on fourth down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Miami Dolphins\nWith the loss, the Colts went to 1\u20131 on the season and lost their first home game since September 23, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: vs. Denver Broncos\nThe game was preceded by a 90-second tribute to Manning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: at Houston Texans\nThe Colts fell behind 21\u20133 before rallying to defeat the Houston Texans on Sunday Night Football 27\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 89], "content_span": [90, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: at Cincinnati Bengals\nWith the loss, the Colts dropped to 8\u20135, however, they clinched the AFC South division title after the Broncos defeated the Titans later in the evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: vs. Houston Texans\nWith the win, the Colts improved to 9\u20135 and 12\u20130 at home against the Texans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234053-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis Colts season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nWith the win, the Colts were the only team during the 2013 season to sweep all of their division rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234054-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Indianapolis motorcycle Grand Prix was the tenth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis on 18 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234054-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis motorcycle Grand Prix\nBen Spies crashed heavily in practice, and the resulting injuries caused the end of his racing career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234054-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indianapolis 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, 39], "section_span": [41, 87], "content_span": [88, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nThe 2013 India\u2013Pakistan border incidents was a series of armed skirmishes along the Line of Control (LoC) in the disputed Kashmir area. Starting from the mid-January 2013, they have been described as the \"worst bout of fighting in the region in nearly 10 years\". It began on 6 January 2013, when according to Pakistani reports Indian forces attacked a Pakistani border post, killing one soldier. Indian authorities claimed the incident as a retaliation against preceding Pakistani ceasefire violations, but denied having crossed the demarcation line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nIn a second skirmish on 8 January, Indian authorities said that Pakistani forces crossed the LoC, killing two Indian soldiers. The incident sparked outrage in India and harsh reactions by the Indian army and government over the news that the body of one of the soldiers had been beheaded. Pakistan denied these reports. On 15 January, a third skirmish reportedly led to the death of another Pakistani soldier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nAfter talks between Lieutenant General Vinod Bhatia and Major General Ashfaq Nadeem, an understanding was reached to de-escalate the situation. But the skirmishes continued despite peace efforts by the countries resulting in 8 Indian casualties in total and 9 Pakistani casualties till August. Civilians were also affected adversely by the border skirmishes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes\nOn 9 October 2014 Indian media claimed that a total of 9 military personnel and 6 civilians were killed on Pakistani side. 12 Indian soldiers and 1 civilian were killed on Indian side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Incidents, In January\nAccording to the Indian Army, the skirmish lasted for approximately 30 minutes, after which the intruders retreated from the Indian territory. Two soldiers, Lance Naik Hemraj and Lance Naik Sudhakar Singh, were killed and their bodies were apparently found mutilated, with one decapitated. The bodies were then recovered and the injured soldiers were airlifted and admitted to the Indian Army's Command Hospital. The Military Intelligence of India claimed that the operation was carried out by Anwar Khan, from Azad Kashmir, who was hired by the Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence for \u20a80.5 million (US$3,100).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, India\nIf Pakistan does not return the severed head of the martyred soldier Hemraj, India should get at least 10 heads from the other side", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, India\nThe reaction in India was overwhelmingly one of anger. Then Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said that this incident had seriously damaged the ongoing peace process and \"after this dastardly act, there can\u2019t be business as usual with Pakistan.\" Bikram Singh, the Chief of Army Staff of India said that \"We reserve the right to retaliate at a time of our choosing.\" Bikram Singh also said,\"The attack on January 8 was premeditated, a pre-planned activity. Such an operation requires planning, detailed reconnaissance.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, India\nThen Indian Leader of Opposition, Sushma Swaraj said that \"If Pakistan does not return the severed head of the martyred soldier Hemraj, India should get at least 10 heads from the other side\". She also said that the Indian government had to avenge the death of the two soldiers. Protests took place outside the Pakistani High Commission in New Delhi, and the protesters painted Pakistan Murdabad (Death to Pakistan) on its walls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, India\nThe Indian Army also released the photos of landmines planted by Pakistan in Indian-controlled land, though Pakistan refused to acknowledge any such act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, India\nThe then Indian Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde alleged on 9 January that the 2008 Mumbai attacks mastermind and Lashkar-e-Toiba founder Hafiz Saeed has visited the Indo-Pakistani border a few days before the Indian soldiers were killed. He cited intelligence obtained by Indian intelligence agencies, and said that they were trying to obtain more details on the visit. However, Saeed rejected the claim, calling it a \"blatant lie\" and challenged the Indian government to prove the allegation. He said that India was trying to shift focus from its internal problems and was exploiting the sentiments against Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, Pakistan\nThe Pakistan military information sources, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), rejected the allegation that the incident was unprovoked, calling the Indian presentation of events as \"propaganda\" to divert international attention from an earlier incident on 6 January, when a Pakistani soldier was killed by Indian troops in what was claimed by Pakistan as an Indian violation of the Line of Control. Pakistani officials also welcomed an investigation from the UN. The Washington Post quoted an Indian security official admitting that the 8 January incident may have \"come in retaliation\" for the 6 January incident in which Indian troops had killed the Pakistani soldier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, Pakistan\nAfter every Indian violation of the LoC, Indians fabricate something and rather put an allegation of violation on Pakistan to ease pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, Pakistan\nThe Foreign Office of Pakistan stated that it had summoned the Deputy Indian High Commissioner in Islamabad during which a protest note was handed on the \"unprovoked Indian attack\" and the Government of India \"was strongly urged to take appropriate measures to avoid recurrence of such incidents in the future.\" Earlier in January 2013, Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar said to the media that she was \"unpleasantly surprised\" by India's accusations. She further said that \"Pakistan's government and its people have demonstrated a deep and abiding commitment to normalize and improve relations with India and to really start a journey of trust-building.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, Pakistan\nIn an interview with Times Now, former President and chief of army staff General Pervez Musharraf similarly refuted allegations of any Indian soldier being mutilated by the Pakistani military, pointing out that this was not part of army discipline and culture. He also criticised India's tendency of painting \"us as rogues when you yourself are not prepared to admit all the cruelty that you inflict on us\" and India's decision of sending back Pakistani artists and hockey players, adding: \"The politicians, media, everyone in India have a tendency to be hysterical about everything.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, Pakistan\nResponding to the incident to media, senior fleet commander, Vice-Admiral Muhammad Zakaullah quoted that, Pakistan has ability to answer the disturbance of border. Addressing the media representatives at the ISPR directorate, Admiral Zakaullah noted to media that \"Pakistan forces are prepared for any critical situation.\" Answering the question of Indian Army's further capabilities, Admiral Zakaullah said that Pakistan was not concerned due to New Delhi's ground capability as it had the ability to defend itself from against any aggression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, Pakistan\nIn August, protestors in Muzaffarabad of Azad Kashmir protested against India's attacks during which they chanted anti-India and pro-Kashmir slogans. In the aftermath of the August incidents, Pakistan considered withdrawing diplomatic staff from its High Commission in New Delhi and redeploying troops positioned on the Afghan border towards the Line of Control. The Provincial Assembly of Punjab passed a unanimous resolution against India's violations of the LoC and expressed concern over the killing of Pakistani soldiers and civilians, in addition to calling on the federal government to raise the issue at international forums. The Parliament of Pakistan adopted a unanimous resolution similarly condemning the incidents and demanded the Pakistan government to take up the issue with India in a \"forceful but prudent manner\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Reactions, Pakistan\nPakistan has also temporarily abandoned talks on the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan\u2013Pakistan\u2013India pipeline with India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, International reactions, Effect on India-Pakistan relations\nDue to the tensions building between the two nations and as a sign of protest, the Indian Government on 15 January decided to send back the Pakistani hockey players who were in India to participate in the Hockey India League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 98], "content_span": [99, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, International reactions, Effect on India-Pakistan relations\nThe Indian government has put on hold a plan to issue visas to Pakistani senior citizens on arrival in India. Though the government sources initially mentioned that the agreement was delayed, a senior home ministry official said that the deal was put on hold for some time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 98], "content_span": [99, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, International reactions, Effect on India-Pakistan relations\nAfter a brief phone conversation between Indian Director General of Military Operations (DGMO) Lieutenant General Vinod Bhatia and his Pakistani counterpart Major General Ashfaq Nadeem, an Indian spokesman told that the Indian Army has reached an understanding with Pakistan to de-escalate the situation. Pakistan's DGMO conveyed that his troops had been ordered to observe the ceasefire at the LoC strictly and exercise restraint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 98], "content_span": [99, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Media coverage, India\nIn the backdrop of the border incident, Indian television news anchors questioned the peace process and cultural and sporting ties between India and Pakistan. The Indian government spoke of the \"barbaric and inhuman mutilation\" of the corpses and denounced the \"ghastly\" and \"dastardly\" act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Media coverage, India\nSaikat Datta for the Daily News and Analysis suggested that Indian army units in the Uri sector could have provoked the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234055-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 India\u2013Pakistan border skirmishes, Media coverage, Pakistan\nAli Ahmed, a freelance journalist who writes for the Express Tribune, wrote that media coverage in Pakistan was not very extensive was partially due to focus being diverted to Pakistan's upcoming general elections \u2013 which was only weeks away \u2013 and the fallout of the War in North-West Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234056-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Ice Racing World Championship\nThe 2013 FIM Ice Speedway World Championship was the 2013 version of FIM Individual Ice Racing World Championship season. The world champion was determined by ten races hosted in five cities, Krasnogorsk, Tolyatti, Assen, Inzell and Uppsala between 2 February and 24 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234057-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Long Track World Championship\nThe 2013 Individual Long Track/Grasstrack World Championship was the 43rd 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-00234057-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Long Track World Championship\nThe world title was won by Joonas Kylm\u00e4korpi of Finland for the fourth consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234058-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Speedway Junior European Championship\nThe 2013 European Individual Speedway Junior Championship (also known as the 2013 Speedway European Under 21 Championship) was the 16th edition of the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234058-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Speedway Junior European Championship\nThe final was staged at G\u00fcstrow in Germany and was won by Denmark's Mikkel Michelsen. He scored 13 points, level with Latvian And\u017eejs \u013bebedevs, but won the run-off to claim the title.2013 Final Results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234059-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship\nThe 2013 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship was the 37th edition of the FIM World motorcycle speedway Under-21 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234059-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship\nThe competition retained the 'Grand Prix' style format, but was reduced from seven to three rounds, which took place in June, August and September. It was won by Poland's Patryk Dudek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234059-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship, Classification\nThe meeting classification was according to the points scored during the meeting (heats 1\u201320). The total points scored by each rider during each final meeting (heat 1\u201320) were credited also as World Championship points. The FIM Speedway Under 21 World Champion was the rider having collected most World Championship points at the end of the series. In case of a tie between one or more riders in the final overall classification, a run-off will decide the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place. For all other placings, the better-placed rider in the last final meeting will be the better placed rider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League\nThe 2013 Indonesia Super League season is the fifth season of the Indonesia Super League (ISL), a fully professional football competition as the top tier of the football league pyramid in Indonesia. The season scheduled begins in November 2012. Sriwijaya are the defending champions, having won their second league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League\nThis season is also the first season of ISL organized with authorization from the Joint Committee of PSSI until the establishment of a new league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League\nAfter the signing of the MoU between Djohar Arifin Husin (PSSI) and La Nyalla Matalitti (KPSI-PSSI) that initiated by FIFA and the AFC through the Asian Football Confederation's Task Force, now Indonesia Super League will be under the control of the Joint Committee to remain manageable by PT Liga Indonesia until the establishment of a new professional competition by the committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League\nIn the original plan the league season will begin in November. But to honor the results of the joint committee meeting, the league schedule was postponed. At a meeting with club participants decided that the league will be held in 2013 precisely starts at 5 January 2013 and ended on 18 September 2013 in the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Teams\nPSMS Medan, Deltras and PSAP Sigli were relegated during the end of the Previous season . They were replaced by the best three teams from the 2011\u201312 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI), PS Barito Putera, Persita Tangerang and Persepam Pamekasan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Teams\nFourth-placed Premier Division sides PSIM Yogyakarta failed to be promoted to the Indonesia Super League after defeated by the 15th-placed finishers of 2011\u201312 Indonesia Super League, Gresik United by score 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Teams\nIndonesian Premier League Champion (IPL) season 2011/2012, Semen Padang finally officially returned to the Indonesia Super League (ISL). The Return of Semen Padang to ISL was known as PT Liga Indonesia issued numbered 01010/Liga/X/2012, regarding the delivery status of Semen Padang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Teams\nFinalize participant Indonesia Super League (ISL) season 2013 will be completed on 30 October 2012. After that PT Liga Indonesia will build on the planning competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Teams, Personnel and kits\n1Gustavo Chena is Gresik United captain, before he leaves the club after his contract terminated. 2Aldo Barreto was Gresik captain until 14 June, when he suffered an injury due to a broken hand when playing against Arema and adjudged not to play again until the Super League finish. Ambrizal was handed the captaincy in Aldo's absence. 3Eka Ramdani was Pelita captain until April, when he was injured. Mijo Dadi\u0107 was handed the captaincy in Eka's absence. 4Ambrizal is PSPS captain, before he resigned from the club and joined Gresik United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Teams, Foreign players\nNote:1Those players who were born and started their professional career abroad but have since gained Indonesia Residency;2Foreign residents or foreign residents of Indonesian descent who have chosen to represent Indonesian national team;3Injury Replacement Players;4Pass away Players (R.I.P)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, League table\nPersijap Jepara and Semen Padang FC return to Indonesia Super League this season, but in last November Persijap and Semen Padang withdrew and joined Premier League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Results\nThe fixtures for the Super League were released on 14 December 2012. The season kicked off on 5 January 2013 and is scheduled to conclude on 7 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Achievement, Monthly awards\nThe selection is done by a team of Technical Study Group (TSG) which was formed by PT Liga Indonesia. TSG is a part of the High Performance Group (HPG), whose task is to analyze the technical, the whole game Indonesia Super League and also determine individual worthy of the award. The team consists of Joppie Lepel, Yeyen Tumena, Demis Djamaoeddin, and Tommy Welly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Achievement, Season award\nThe selection is done by a team of Technical Study Group (TSG).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234060-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 18 September 2013Source: Notes:\u2020 Team played previous season in Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234061-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League All-Star Game\n2013 Indonesia Super League All-Star Game (in Indonesian: ISL Perang Bintang 2013) is the annual football All-star game in Indonesia, which was held shortly after the end of 2013 Indonesia Super League. This is the closing event for the Indonesia Super League's 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234061-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League All-Star Game\nFor this year football fans can't vote for the players to be included in the ISL All-Star team, now the player choice by a team of Technical Study Group (TSG). The other spot will be automatically taken by the 2013 Indonesia Super League champions, Persipura Jayapura. Obviously, the ISL All-star team will not be composed of any player from Persipura.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234061-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League All-Star Game\nThe 2013 season's MVP award and top-scorer award (both given to Boaz Solossa), best goalkeeper award (to Yoo Jae-Hun), coach of the year award (to Jacksen F. Tiago), rookie of the year award (to Syakir Sulaiman) and the ISL Champions' trophy (to Persipura Jayapura) were awarded by PSSI (Indonesia's FA) during a ceremony after the All-Star game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234061-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League All-Star Game, ISL All-Star Squad\nThe 2013 ISL All-Star squad was announced on September 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234061-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super League All-Star Game, ISL All-Star Squad, Players\nNote: 1. All-star players composition changed by the coach after several players required by their respective clubs to go down in the International Tournament Menpora Cup. 2 . List of players who were replaced: Beto, Greg Nwokolo, Thierry Gathuessi and Hasyim Kipuw from Arema, Supardi Nasir and Muhammad Ridwan from Persib, Diogo Santos Rangel from Gresik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234062-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesia Super Series Premier\nThe 2013 Indonesia Super Series Premier will be the fifth super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament will be held in Jakarta, Indonesia from June 10\u201316, 2013 and had a total purse of $700,000. A qualification was held to fill four places in all five disciplines of the main draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234064-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Community Shield\nThe 2013 Indonesian Community Shield was the third Indonesian Community Shield. The match was contested by the 2011\u201312 Indonesian Premier League winners Semen Padang FC and 2012 Piala Indonesia winners Persibo Bojonegoro. It took place on 10 February 2013 at the Haji Agus Salim Stadium in Padang, Indonesia. Semen Padang won the match 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234065-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Masters Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 Indonesian Masters Grand Prix Gold was the tenth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in GOR Among Rogo, Yogyakarta, Indonesia September 24 until September 29, 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234066-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Movie Awards\nThe 7th Annual Indonesian Movie Awards was held on May 27, 2013, at the Studio 8 RCTI, West Jakarta. The award show was hosted by Choky Sitohang and Tamara Geraldine. And the nominations have been announced for the category of Favorite, which will be chosen by the public via SMS. As for the category of Best, will be selected by a jury that has been appointed. As a guest star who will fill the event, among them Ahmad Dhani, Bebi Romeo, Rossa, Bunga Citra Lestari, 3Composer, and the participants of X Factor Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234066-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Movie Awards\nBelenggu leads the nominations with nine nominations, with Rectoverso and Habibie & Ainun followed behind with eight and seven nominations each. In the night ceremonies, Rectoverso and Habibie & Ainun were biggest winner with receiving three awards trophies each. Followed behind by film Belenggu success taking home two awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234066-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Movie Awards\nAminah Cendrakasih received a Lifetime Achievement Award, the first to be awarded by the Indonesian Movie Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234067-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier Division (LPIS)\n2013 Indonesian Premier Division was the second and the final edition of Indonesian Premier Division organized by LPIS before reverted to be organized by PT.LI. PSS Sleman was the champions but not awarded promotion to 2014 Indonesian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234067-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier Division (LPIS), Semi Final\nPSS Sleman became the host for Semi Final, Third place play-off and Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League\nThe 2013 Indonesian Premier League season is the 2nd and a final season of the Indonesian Premier League (IPL), a fully professional football competition as the shared top tier of the football league pyramid in Indonesia with the Indonesia Super League before the two leagues merged for the 2014 season. The season scheduled begins on 16 February 2013. Semen Padang are the defending champions, having won their 1st league title .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Teams\nPSMS Medan were relegated during the end of the previous season . They were replaced by the best three teams (three group champions) from the 2011\u201312 Liga Indonesia Premier Division, Persepar Palangkaraya, Perseman Manokwari and Pro Duta FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Teams\nEleventh place Indonesian Premier League side Bontang FC managed to retain his place in the highest competition after finishing as champions of the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Teams\nTwo Premier Division group runner-up last season side PSLS Lhokseumawe and PSIR Rembang managed promotion after finished runner-up and third-place in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round\nAfter the meeting on Wednesday, 2 October 2013 between PSSI and PT. Liga Prima Indonesia Sportindo and club participants Indonesian Premier League (IPL), they decided that the IPL competition was stopped and the entire first and second round scores are not recognised. Due to this on Thursday 3 October 2013 PSSI executive committee decided to hold a play-off to determine which club to be eligible for the verification of 2014 Indonesia Super League club participants and also determine the champions of IPL 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round\nTen clubs participated in the play-off. These were Persiraja Banda Aceh, PSLS Lhokseumawe, Pro Duta FC, Persijap Jepara, PSIR Rembang, Persiba Bantul, Bontang FC, PSM Makassar, Persepar Palangkaraya and Perseman Manokwari. Meanwhile, Persebaya 1927 and Arema Indonesia disqualified for not official members of the PSSI . While Semen Padang FC wildcard to qualify directly for the finals and 2014 leagues verification as the defending champion of last season and in the standings this season they are top of the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round\nAs for the format of the play-off with the home tournament system, Jepara (Gelora Bumi Kartini) and Bantul (Sultan Agung Stadium) was appointed as the host. Play-offs were divided into two groups with five teams each, the top three teams of each group qualify for the following leagues verification. While the winner of each group qualify for the semi-finals of the play-offs, the winner advanced to the finals to face with Semen Padang to determine the champion of the 2013 Indonesian Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round\nThe play-off was originally scheduled to start on 16 October and finish on 2 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round, Group stage\nGroup stage draw made on Friday on 4 October 2013 at the headquarters of the Football Association of Indonesia. Among the group stage starts on 16 October 2013 and will finish on 25 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round, Knockout stage\nKnockout stage starts on 28 October and finish on 2 November 2013 in grandfinal match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round, Cancellation of Final\nOn 25 October 2013, PSSI secretary-general Joko Driyono announced the cancellation of the 2013 IPL play-off final match. Joko said that the game was not a priority, because competition in the IPL was already finished, since it had been cancelled by PSSI. He elaborated that the main objective of the play-off was to determine 7 teams that would be join the new unified league in 2014, pursuant to a verification process. According to Joko, other agendas were not considered not a priority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round, Cancellation of Final\nThe cancellation of the final solved a scheduling problem. Semen Padang was committed to play in a tournament in Vietnam from 25 October to 3 November, making it impossible for them to play in the final match that scheduled for 2 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234068-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Indonesian Premier League, Play-off round, Cancellation of Final\nThe cancellation meant that there is no league champion for the IPL's final season. Rather, the winner of the semifinal match earned the title of 2013 IPL play-off champion. Three days after the announcement by PSSI, Pro Duta FC defeated Persepar Palangkaraya in the final IPL match that will ever be played to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234070-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indoor Football League season\nThe 2013 Indoor Football League season was the fifth season of the Indoor Football League (IFL). Playing with nine teams in two conferences spread across the United States, the league's regular season kicked off on February 15, 2013, when the Sioux Falls Storm beat the Green Bay Blizzard 64\u201341. The season ended on June 15, 2013, with the visiting Sioux Falls Storm defeating the Texas Revolution 52-38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234070-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indoor Football League season, Teams\nFor 2013, the IFL maintained its two-conference no-divisions format with each team scheduled to play 14 games during the 16-week regular season. The league contracted from 16 teams to just nine with the Bloomington Edge, Lehigh Valley Steelhawks, Omaha Beef, Reading Express, Everett Raptors, New Mexico Stars, and Wichita Wild either folding, hibernating, or moving to a different league. A new team, the Cheyenne Warriors, were expected to join the league for 2013 until the death of the team's owner in late December 2012; the team subsequently became inactive. The Texas-based Allen Wranglers changed ownership and became the Texas Revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234070-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indoor Football League season, Personnel\nRobert Loving served as interim commissioner of the IFL in 2012 after Tommy Benizio left mid-season to pursue other opportunities. Benizio became president of the Texas Revolution, an IFL franchise based in Allen, Texas. Loving was officially named as the IFL's commissioner by the league's board of directors during the 2012 annual league meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234070-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indoor Football League season, Personnel\nFor 2013, Michael Allshouse was Director of Football Operations, Sean Whitmire was Director of Communications/Team Services, and Tom Falcinelli was the Director of Officiating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234071-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Indy Lights\nThe 2013 Indy Lights season was a season of open wheel motor racing. It was the 28th season of the series and the twelfth sanctioned by IndyCar, acting as the primary support series for the IZOD IndyCar Series. It began March 24, 2013 in St. Petersburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234071-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Indy Lights\nRookie Sage Karam won the championship, the eighth rookie to win the series title. Karam clinched the championship in the final race over rookie teammate Gabby Chaves. Second-year driver Carlos Mu\u00f1oz won a series-high four races but was forced to settle for third in the championship. Peter Dempsey captured the Freedom 100 in a spectacular four-wide finish in what was the closest finish in Indianapolis Motor Speedway history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234071-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Indy Lights\nIn June, it was announced that the series would be promoted by Andersen Promotions beginning in 2014. INDYCAR sanctioning will remain. In August it was announced that Cooper Tire would replace Firestone as the official tire of the series in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234071-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Indy Lights, Schedule\nIndyCar announced the 2013 Indy Lights schedule on October 18, 2012. It joined all IndyCar Series weekends in North America except Detroit, Texas and Sonoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series\nThe 2013 IZOD IndyCar Series was the 18th season of the IndyCar Series and the 102nd season of American open wheel racing. Its premier event was the 97th Indianapolis 500 held on Sunday, May 26. The 2013 season was the second to feature the Dallara DW12 chassis. Ryan Hunter-Reay entered the season as the defending drivers' champion. Chevrolet entered as the defending Manufacturers' Cup champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series\nThe 2013 season has featured four first-time winners, the most since 1965. Also highlighting the season is the introduction of doubleheader races, and the experimentation with standing starts at selected events. Heading into the final race of the season, two-time champion Scott Dixon led H\u00e9lio Castroneves by 25 points in a two driver fight for the championship. In a race where only nine drivers finished, Dixon finished fifth while Castroneves finished sixth, and as a result, Dixon won his third series title by 27 points. In the manufacturers' championship, Chevrolet defended their title ahead of Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series\nAfter Lotus decided to withdraw from the IndyCar Series due to a poor 2012 season, the 2013 season marks the first season since 2002 that the series would feature only two engine manufacturers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series\n2013 was the final season that Izod\u2014which became the main sponsor in the 2010 IndyCar Series\u2014was the main sponsor of the championship; as Verizon Communications was announced as the new series sponsor for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Schedule\nThe 2013 IndyCar Series schedule was formally announced on Speed's WindTunnel with Dave Despain, on the evening of September 30, 2012. The schedule consists of nineteen races, hosted across sixteen venues. Included are three doubleheader events\u00a0\u2013 with one race of the Toronto and Houston doubleheader featuring a standing start (Belle Isle will not use a standing start because of the narrowness of the start-finish area). The IndyCar Triple Crown will return for the first time since 1989, featuring the races at Indianapolis, Pocono and Fontana. IndyCar is offering a $1,000,000 bonus to a driver who can win all three events, with a $250,000 consolation prize if a driver can win two of the three events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Schedule\nO\u00a0 Oval/Speedway\u00a0R\u00a0 Road courseBOLD indicates a Fuzzy's Ultra Premium Vodka IndyCar Triple Crown event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 1: St. Petersburg\nJames Hinchcliffe won the first IndyCar race of his career, taking the lead from H\u00e9lio Castroneves on a restart on lap 85 of 110. Hinchcliffe held off Castroneves by 1.09 seconds, with Marco Andretti finishing third, passing Simona de Silvestro for the position on the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 1: St. Petersburg\nWill Power dominated the early parts of the race, but dropped to 16th at the finish after contact with J. R. Hildebrand. Dario Franchitti finished last after an early crash, and defending series champion Ryan Hunter-Reay dropped out with mechanical problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 2: Barber\nRyan Hunter-Reay won the pole position and led 53 laps en route to victory. After a sequence of pit stops around lap 50, H\u00e9lio Castroneves led. Hunter-Reay caught up and passed Castroneves for the lead on lap 76, with Scott Dixon moving up to second. Hunter-Reay held off the charge of Dixon over the last 5\u201310 laps, to seal the win. Castroneves held on to finish third. Will Power started second, but slid off the track in turn one at the start, losing several positions. After working his way back to the front for two laps, he came home 5th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 3: Long Beach\nTakuma Sato led 50 of 80 laps, and won his first career IndyCar race at the 39th annual Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach. Sato effectively took control of the race on lap 23, when he passed Ryan Hunter-Reay for second place in turn 1. After the leaders cycled through pit stops, Sato assumed the lead on lap 31, and did not relinquish the top spot for the remainder of the race. Sato's win was the first for A. J. Foyt Enterprises since 2002 and their first ever (in the team's 34th season) not on an Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 3: Long Beach\nTop teams Penske, Ganassi, and Andretti were all shut out of the podium. In addition, contenders and Andretti teammates James Hinchcliffe and Hunter-Reay both dropped out early due to contact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 4: S\u00e3o Paulo\nIn the dramatic closing laps, Takuma Sato was leading, looking for his second consecutive victory. Josef Newgarden was running second, and in third was a hard-charging James Hinchcliffe. Newgarden challenged Sato for the lead with a few laps to go, but Sato held the lead. Hinchcliffe then managed to take over second, and set his sights on Sato. On the backstretch, Hinchcliffe went side-by-side, but again Sato held the lead, with what some thought may have been intentional 'blocking.' On the final lap, Hinchcliffe again tried for the lead on the backstretch, and again Sato aggressively defended his position. At the end of the backstretch, going into the final turn, Sato slid high, and Hinchcliffe slipped by on the inside to take the win by 0.3463 seconds. At the same time, Marco Andretti made a similar pass for third place, to round out the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 5: Indianapolis 500\nA race record 68 lead changes amongst 14 different drivers highlighted the most competitive and fastest Indy 500 in history. On a restart with three laps to go, Ryan Hunter-Reay led rookie Carlos Mu\u00f1oz, Tony Kanaan, and Marco Andretti. At the green flag, the top three cars went three-wide into turn one, with Kanaan taking the lead. Seconds later, Dario Franchitti hit the outside wall in turn one, bringing out the final caution. Tony Kanaan completed the final two laps in the lead under yellow, and won his first Indy 500, a popular victory after eleven previous unsuccessful attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 6: Detroit (Sat.)\nThe first race of the Detroit Grand Prix (IndyCar) saw part-time driver Mike Conway dominate. The series began utilizing a revised and upgraded version of the Belle Isle circuit, a layout used by CART from 1998\u20132001. Conway took the lead on lap 44 and led a total of 47 laps en route to victory. In the second half, Conway pulled out to an insurmountable 20-second lead at one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 7: Detroit (Sun.)\nMike Conway started from the pole position and looked to sweep the weekend of races in the second race of the Chevrolet Dual at Detroit. Conway led 31 of the first 45 laps, but after a sequence of pit stops, and a failed tire strategy, was shuffled back to third in the closing stages. After a ten-car accident that took out several front-runners, the final stint shaped up as a three-car battle between Simon Pagenaud, James Jakes, and Conway. Pagenaud came to the lead when Jakes pitted on lap 58. Jakes came back out on the track close behind, with Conway charging in third. Pagenaud held off the challenge, and won his first-career IndyCar race, and the first victory for Schmidt Hamilton Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 8: Texas\nH\u00e9lio Castroneves dominated en route to his first win of the season, and Team Penske's first victory of 2013. Castroneves led the final 132 laps, and won over second place Ryan Hunter-Reay by 4.6919 seconds. However, Castroneves' car failed post-race inspection due to an illegal underwing. The team was fined $35,000 but Castroneves maintained the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 9: Milwaukee\nRyan Hunter-Reay won for the second year in a row at Milwaukee, taking the lead from Takuma Sato with 53 laps to go, after executing a daring pass on H\u00e9lio Castroneves only a few laps before. Marco Andretti started on the pole and led 61 laps, but an electrical problem dropped him from contention. The combination of these events meant Hunter-Reay passed his Andretti Autosport teammate for 2nd in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 10: Iowa\nJames Hinchcliffe led 226 of 250 laps, dominating his way to victory. Second place Ryan Hunter-Reay mounted a charge in the waning laps as Hinchcliffe developed some handling problems, but fell short at the finish. H\u00e9lio Castroneves finished 8th, but held on to the championship points lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 11: Pocono\nIndyCars returned to Pocono for the first time since 1989. Marco Andretti started on the pole, and dominated most of the first half. His fuel stop strategy, however, forced him to conserve late in the race, and dropped him to a 10th-place finish. Early contenders Ryan Hunter-Reay and Takuma Sato dropped out when Sato overshot the entrance to pit road, slamming into Hunter-Reay's car from behind. In the late stages, Ganassi teammates Scott Dixon, Charlie Kimball, and Dario Franchitti came to the front after a well-executed final pit stop strategy. Dixon led the Ganassi sweep of the podium, owner Chip Ganassi's first 1\u20132\u20133 sweep, the team's 100th Indycar win, and the 200th victory for Honda in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 12: Toronto (Sat.)\nThe second doubleheader of the season was held at Toronto. The Saturday race was scheduled to utilize a standing start, but it was waved off when Josef Newgarden stalled on the track. Scott Dixon won, while S\u00e9bastien Bourdais finished second, his first open-wheel podium since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 13: Toronto (Sun.)\nScott Dixon swept the second race of the doubleheader, as well as winning his third consecutive race overall. After waving off the previous day, the Sunday race utilized a standing start, the first American Indycar race to utilize a standing start in modern times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 14: Mid-Ohio\nCharlie Kimball became the fourth first-time winner of the season, and the 9th different winner in 14 races. Kimball took the lead for good on lap 73 of 90, and won even after crashing his primary car earlier in the weekend. Some drivers in the field were attempting to execute a two-stop strategy, but in doing so, fuel-saving measures were needed. In a race that went without a caution, Kimball's race strategist made the call to switch to a three-stop run, which allowed a much faster pace, and Kimball pulled away to a commanding victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 14: Mid-Ohio\nOn the final lap, 6th place H\u00e9lio Castroneves held off Scott Dixon at the line, allowing him to leave the weekend with a 31-point lead in the championship standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 15: Sonoma\nLucas Luhr made his IndyCar Series debut, driving the #97 Honda for Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing. J. R. Hildebrand drove the #98 car for Barracuda Racing. Dario Franchitti won the pole. Will Power and Scott Dixon battled most of the race, but when Dixon hit one of Power's crew members, Dixon received a drive-through penalty. Power led the final sixteen laps to take his first win of the season, and as a result, Power became the tenth different winner of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 16: Baltimore\nSimon Pagenaud won his second race of the season. H\u00e9lio Castroneves finished 9th, and maintained the points lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 17: Houston (Sat.)\nThe first race of the Houston doubleheader saw Scott Dixon win, and points leader H\u00e9lio Castroneves struggle. Castroneves suffered mechanical problems and came home 18th. Dixon closed the championship deficit to 8 points with two events remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 18: Houston (Sun.)\nThe second race of the Houston doubleheader was marred by a major crash involving Dario Franchitti, Takuma Sato and E. J. Viso. On the final lap, Franchitti touched wheels with Sato and his car was launched up into the catch fence. Debris injured thirteen spectators, while Franchitti was hospitalized with a concussion, fractured ankle, and two spinal fractures; these injuries forced him to retire from racing. Sato and Viso were uninjured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 18: Houston (Sun.)\nWill Power took the race victory, and Scott Dixon came home second. For the second day in a row, H\u00e9lio Castroneves suffered gearbox troubles, which relegated him to a 23rd-place finish. Dixon took the points lead for the first time, holding a 25-point advantage with one race left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 19: Fontana\nA. J. Allmendinger returned to Team Penske, driving the #2 car. J. R. Hildebrand drove the #98 Honda for Barracuda Racing. Will Power, from the pole, quickly lost the lead to a faster S\u00e9bastien Bourdais who dominated the first quarter of the race. Meanwhile, Castroneves rises from 10th to 5th place and watched the battle for the lead between Kanaan, Hunter-Reay, Bourdais and a fast Carlos Mu\u00f1oz while Dixon keep the pace in 15th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 54], "content_span": [55, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 19: Fontana\nAt lap 111, Justin Wilson lost the rear of his car and was avoided by Josef Newgarden who collected Oriol Servi\u00e0 in the process. Then Wilson was hit by Tristan Vautier involving also James Jakes and Simona de Silvestro on the accident. Wilson was sent to the local hospital with minor fractures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 54], "content_span": [55, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234072-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 IndyCar Series, Race summaries, Round 19: Fontana\nAt the checkered flag Will Power finally grabbed the win at Fontana, followed by Ed Carpenter and Tony Kanaan. Dixon finished at 5th place, which was enough to give him the season title, while Castroneves had a tough night and finished 6th. Dixon become the new three time Indycar Series Champion, winning previously in 2003 and 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 54], "content_span": [55, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234073-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ingush Head election\nIndirect elections for the Head of the Republic of Ingushetia were held on 9 September 2013. Incumbent Head Yunus-Bek Yevkurov was re-elected for another 5 year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234073-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ingush Head election, Background\nSince 1992, Ingushetia has been a Republic of the Russian Federation. It held direct presidential elections until 2004 when Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin abolished direct elections. He replaced them with indirect elections in which the People's Assembly elected a Head. However, amid growing anti-Putin protests in 2011-2012, President Dimitry Medvedev reintroduced them. However, when Putin returned to power, he signed a decree that abolished direct elections in Dagestan and Ingushetia, and some saw it as an attempt to keep unpopular leaders in power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234073-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ingush Head election, Candidates\nIt was rumored that former, but highly controversial Head Murat Zyazikov may be a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234073-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ingush Head election, Results\nOn 9 September Yanus-Bek Yevkurov was declared the winner. He will serve as Head unless he loses the next election or is dismissed by the President of Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234074-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Championship\nThe 2013 Interprovincial Championship was the first season of the Inter-Provincial Championship, the domestic multi-day cricket competition of Ireland. The competition was between Leinster Lightning, Northern Knights and North West Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234074-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Championship\nThe inaugural Inter-Provincial Championship was won by the Leinster Lightning, who clinched the title with one match to spare. Despite falling just four runs short of victory in their opening match, they then won their next two games before closing with a hard-fought, high-scoring draw against Northern Knights (cricket team) in the last game of the year at Waringstown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234074-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Championship\nThe Inter-Provincial Series has been funded at least partly by the ICC via their TAPP programme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234075-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Cup\nThe 2013 Inter-Provincial Cup was the first season of the Inter-Provincial Cup, the domestic 50-over one-day competition of Ireland. The competition was played between Leinster Lightning, Northern Knights and North West Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234075-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Cup\nThe Northern Knights were the inaugural winners of the competition, following a surprise last day defeat of Leinster Lightning by North West Warriors by 71 runs in Strabane. That result meant the Northern Knights finished top of the table with 10 points from four matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234075-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Cup\nThe Inter-Provincial Series has been funded at least partly by the ICC via their TAPP programme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234076-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Inter-Provincial Hurling Championship, known as the 2013 M Donnelly Hurling Inter-Provincial Championship due to the tournament's sponsorship by businessman Martin Donnelly, will be the 84th series of the Inter-provincial Championship. The annual hurling championship between the four historic provinces of Ireland is contested by Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234076-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Hurling Championship\nLeinster were the reigning champions but Munster won the title after defeating Connacht in the final by 1-22 to 0-15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234077-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Trophy\nThe 2013 Interprovincial Twenty20 Cup was the first season of the Interprovincial Twenty20 Cup, the domestic Twenty20 cricket competition of Ireland. The competition was played between Leinster Lightning, Northern Knights and North West Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234077-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Trophy\nThe competition was won by Leinster Lightning, who won the last game of the competition, against North West Warriors at Bready CC, to draw level with Northern Knights on 6 points, but finish top of the table on Net Run Rate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234077-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Inter-Provincial Trophy\nThe Interprovincial Series has been funded at least partly by the ICC via their TAPP programme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234078-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Intercity Football League\nThe 2013 Intercity Football League (known as the MediaTek Intercity Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the seventh season of the Intercity Football League since its establishment in 2007. The season began on 11 May 2013 and will end on 16 November 2013. Taiwan Power Company were the defending champions, having won the league for the 4th time last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234078-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Intercity Football League, Clubs\nA total of 8 clubs will contest the league, including five sides from the 2012 season and three new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234079-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Intermediate League World Series\nThe 2013 Intermediate League World Series took place from July 30\u2013August 5 in Livermore, California, United States. Osaka, Japan defeated Collier Township, Pennsylvania in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234080-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Bernese Ladies Cup\nThe 2013 International Bernese Ladies Cup was held from January 11 to 13 at the Curlingbahn Allmend in Bern, Switzerland as part of the 2012\u201313 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple-knockout format, and the purse for the event was CHF20,000, of which the winner, Silvana Tirinzoni, received CHF6,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234081-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Challenge Cup\nThe 2013 International Challenge Cup was held from February 21 to 24, 2013 at the Uithof in The Hague. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles on the senior, novice, and pre-novice \"Debs\" levels, and pair skating at the senior level only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234082-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Champions Cup\nThe 2013 International Champions Cup (or ICC) was an exhibition association football tournament played in the United States and Spain. It began on Saturday, July 27 and culminated on Wednesday, August 7, 2013. This tournament replaced the World Football Challenge and was staged mainly throughout the United States, and with one match in Valencia, Spain. The participating teams were LA Galaxy of the United States, Real Madrid and Valencia of Spain, Milan, Juventus and Inter Milan of Italy, and Chelsea and Everton of England. In the United States, Fox Soccer televised 11 of 12 matches live, and Fox Sports broadcast one match live on August 3. ESPN Deportes televised all matches live on TV and on WatchESPN in Spanish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234082-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Champions Cup\nReal Madrid won the tournament, defeating Chelsea 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234082-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International Champions Cup, Format\nThe tournament had two groups of four: an \"Eastern\" and a \"Western\" group. The groups were not played as a round-robin; rather, the winners of the first round matches played each other in the second round, and the first round losers also played each other in the second round. The two teams with two wins from the first two matches advanced to the final. For the other teams, positions in the final round were determined by their position in their group, with the following rules:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234082-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International Champions Cup, Format\nIn other words, though the team placing first (two wins) in each group would be apparent, the determination of second, third (both teams: one win, one loss) and fourth place (two losses) was based on the above tiebreakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234082-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International Champions Cup, Official song\nThe official song of the 2013 International Champions Cup \"Exotic\" was performed by the Indian Bollywood actress turned singer Priyanka Chopra, and was sung in both English and Hindi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234083-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Championship\nThe 2013 International Championship was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 27 October and 3 November 2013 at the Chengdu Eastern Music Park in Chengdu, China. It was the fifth ranking event of the 2013/2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234083-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Championship\nJudd Trump was the defending champion, but he lost 5\u20136 against Alan McManus in the last 64.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234083-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International Championship\nDing Junhui won his ninth ranking title by defeating Marco Fu 10\u20139 in the final. Ding became the first player to win three consecutive ranking titles since Stephen Hendry in 1993. This was also the third consecutive all-Asian ranking final, after Ding defeating Xiao Guodong at the Shanghai Masters and Aditya Mehta at the Indian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234083-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International Championship, Prize fund\nThe total prize money of the event was raised to \u00a3625,000 from the previous year's \u00a3600,000. The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234083-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International Championship, Wildcard round\nThese matches were played in Chengdu on 27 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234083-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 International Championship, Qualifying\nThese matches took place on 1 and 2 October 2013 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England. All matches were best of 11 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election\nA special election for one judge of the International Criminal Court was held during the 12th session of the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court which took place in The Hague from 20 to 28 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election\nThe election became necessary after one judge elected in the 2011 election was unavailable: Anthony Carmona had been elected President of Trinidad and Tobago and had resigned from the bench on 18 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election\nGeoffrey A. Henderson, also from Trinidad and Tobago, was elected in the first ballot after his only opponent had withdrawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Background\nThe judge elected at this election was chosen to complete the term, until 10 March 2021, of the judge he replaces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Background\nThe election is governed by the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. Its article 36(8)(a) states that \"[t]he States Parties shall, in the selection of judges, take into account the need, within the membership of the Court, for:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Background\nFurther rules of election were adopted by a resolution of the Assembly of States Parties in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Nomination process\nFollowing these rules, the nomination period of judges for the 2013 special election was scheduled to last from 28 August to 8 October 2013 and could have been extended up to three times if there had been a lack of candidates from a group for which a minimum voting requirement is in place. As of 13 October, the following persons were nominated:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Minimum voting requirements\nMinimum voting requirements governed part of the election. This was to ensure that article 36(8)(a) cited above is fulfilled. For this election, the following minimum voting requirements existed; they could have been adjusted once the election was underway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Minimum voting requirements\nRegarding the List A or B requirement, there was no minimum voting requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Minimum voting requirements\nRegarding the regional criteria, there was a voting requirement for one judge from the Latin American and Caribbean States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Minimum voting requirements\nRegarding the gender criteria, there was no minimum voting requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Minimum voting requirements\nThe regional criterion could have been adjusted even before the election depending on the number of candidates. Paragraph 20(b) of the ASP resolution that governed the elections states that if there are less than double the number of candidates required for each region, the minimum voting requirement shall be a (rounded-up) half of the number of candidates; except when there is only one candidate which results in no voting requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Minimum voting requirements\nThe regional criterion could have been dropped if after four ballots the seat had not been filled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234084-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 International Criminal Court judges election, Ballots\nThe ballot took place on 23 November 2013. The voting totals were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234085-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Cup of Nice\nThe 2013 International Cup of Nice (French: 2013 Coupe Internationale de Nice) was the 18th edition of an annual international figure skating competition held in Nice, France. It was held on October 23\u201327, 2013. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior level, and in singles on the junior level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234086-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International GT Open\nThe 2013 International GT Open season was the eighth season of the International GT Open, the grand tourer-style sports car racing founded in 2006 by the Spanish GT Sport Organizaci\u00f3n. It began on 27 April at Le Castellet and finished on 10 November, at Barcelona after eight double-header meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234086-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International GT Open\nThe season was won by Scuderia Villorba Corse driver Andrea Montermini, who raced on the Ferrari F458 GT Italia. He also won the Super GT standings. Giorgio Pantano, who raced behind the wheel of Bhai Tech Racing's McLaren MP4-12C GT3 won the GTS class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234086-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International GT Open, Entry list\nOn 23 April 2013, was released the provisional entry list for the first round at Paul Ricard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234087-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International GTSprint Series\nThe 2013 International GTSprint Series season was the fourth year of the International GTSprint Series. The season began at Monza on 6 April and finished at Vallelunga on 13 October. Thomas Sch\u00f6ffler won the championship, driving an Audi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234087-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International GTSprint Series, Championship Standings, Drivers' championship\n\u2020 - Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 50% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234088-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International German Open\nThe 2013 International German Open (also known as the bet\u2013at\u2013home Open \u2013 German Tennis Championships 2013 for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor red clay courts. It was the 107th edition of the event known that year as the International German Open and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Am Rothenbaum in Hamburg, Germany, from 14 July through 22 July 2013. Twelfth-seeded Fabio Fognini won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234088-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International German Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234088-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International German Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234089-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International German Open \u2013 Doubles\nDavid Marrero and Fernando Verdasco were the defending champions, but withdrew from the semifinals against Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares. Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski won the title, defeating Peya and Soares in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20131, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234090-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International German Open \u2013 Singles\nJuan M\u00f3naco was the defending champion but lost to Nicol\u00e1s Almagro in the quarterfinals. Fabio Fognini defeated qualifier Federico Delbonis 4\u20136, 7\u20136(10\u20138), 6\u20132 to win his first ATP World Tour 500 event and second career title in as many weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Origin series\nThe 2013 International Origin series is the third time the rugby league International Origin has been played. This series was just a one off match between England and Exiles RL to give England a good opposition mid-season in preparation for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup in November. It was announce on 11 January that the match will be played on 14 June 2013 at the home of the Warrington Wolves, the Halliwell Jones Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, International Origin Match\nThe first 15 minutes were very even as both teams probed each other's try line and each team made a couple of breaks but good cover defence soon rubbed out any threat of a try. However, in the 19th minute a break from James Roby (from a Chris Hill offload) set England up in a good position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, International Origin Match\nFirst they tried a sweeping move to the right only for Gareth Ellis to be shut down, then a sweeping move to the left saw Sam Tomkins place a delicate grubber kick through the defence for Zak Hardaker to pounce on to score the game's first try. Captain Kevin Sinfield converted to make it 6\u20130. Another try for England soon followed as the Exiles tried to attack the England line only for Leroy Cudjoe to shoot up and shut Brett Hodgson down who lost the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, International Origin Match\nSinfield picked the loose ball up and offloaded to James Roby who then sprinted 80m to score under the posts. Sinfield converted to make it 12\u20130. The first half was dominated by England and they showed their dominance as Rangi Chase made a break down the left before being tackled. Then a few passes to the right saw Richie Myler put Gareth Ellis through a gap, he then offloaded to Cudjoe who produced an outrageous dummy to Exiles fullback Hodgson which left Cudjoe to stroll over for a try. Sinfield converted to make it 18\u20130. Sinfield made a break from dummy half in the 34th minute and found Sam Tomkins in support who sprinted 50m to score under the sticks. Sinfield converted to give his team a 24-0 advantage at half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, International Origin Match\nEngland came out after half time and continued to dominate through excellent kicking and field possession. This dominance nearly paid off as Sam Tomkins jinked his way over the line only for the video referee to disallow it due to an obstruction. This resulted in a penalty and the Exiles got themselves into a good position through great runs from Steve Menzies and Michael Dobson before hooker Lance Hohaia ran across the England line and gave a drop off to Mickey Paea who powered over the line to score. Winger Pat Richards converted to make it 24\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, International Origin Match\nA few minutes later Hohaia made a break up the middle and the Exiles took advantage of the lack of defence as Travis Burns found Menzies on the right hand side who simply drew in the defender and gave Joel Monaghan a walk in try. Richards missed the conversion to make it 24\u201310. The game was wrapped up in the 77th minute as the Exiles tried some off the cuff rugby on the last tackle and Harrison Hansen's pass was intercepted by Leroy Cudjoe who sprinted 50m to score. Josh Charnley converted to ensure that England won 30\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, Teams, England RL\nEngland RL announced their team on the day of the match. Wigan Warriors key man Sam Tomkins was selected at fullback with his teammate Josh Charnley on one wing. The centre partnership was between Huddersfield Giants player Leroy Cudjoe and Leeds Rhinos fullback Zak Hardaker who beat out the likes of Ryan Atkins and Kallum Watkins for the position. Richie Myler was selected at Scrum Half to partner captain Kevin Sinfield in the halves instead of regular England choice Rangi Chase who was demoted to the bench. Youngster Liam Farrell also received a call up to the starting line-up after an impressive season and veteran Gareth Ellis started his first Origin game after returning from Australia. McNamara also handed a debut to Brett Ferres who started on the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, Teams, Exiles RL\nThe Exiles 2013 squad included a lot of players who had previously played in the International Origin. Australian Brian McLennan (who previously coached Leeds Rhinos) was once again selected as the Exiles coach after leading them to victory in the inaugural 2011 International Origin. Brett Hodgson was also named the captain for the 2nd series in a row. The initial squad featured several players who had played International Origin before however the coach has added some new players into the camp such as Blake Green, Manase Manuokafoa and Jarrod Sammut to name a few. Ever presents Francis Meli, Iosia Soliola and Willie Manu are also included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234091-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 International Origin series, Teams, Exiles RL\nOn 13 June Brian McLennan announce his match day 17 for the game. He handed debuts to Hull Kingston Rovers trio Travis Burns, Michael Dobson and Mickey Paea. He also handed a debut to Catalans Dragons second-row Zeb Taia and London Broncos forward Chris Bailey. The coach also promoted Bradford Bulls hooker Heath L'Estrange to the starting line-up after Michael Monaghan was ruled out through injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234092-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rugby Union matches\n2013 consisted of 340 Rugby union matches that included an international nation, with 295 of the matches being classed a test match. 126 international teams played at least one test either at home, away or at a neutral venue. On 154 occasions, the home side won, 118 away sides won, 5 draws and 63 neutral venue matches. 2013 marked two years to the 2015 Rugby World Cup, meaning for most tournaments; Africa Cup, Asian Five Nations, European Nations Cup, Oceania Cup and South American Rugby Championship acted as Rugby World Cup qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234092-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 International Rugby Union matches\nThe Americas playoffs saw the first team to qualify for the World Cup, with Canada winning 40\u201320 on aggregate against the United States, to join Pool D as Americas 1. The fourteenth edition of the Six Nations Championship took place in February and March with Wales retaining the championship with a 30\u20133 record winning margin against England, while in August, September and October, the second edition of the Rugby Championship took place with New Zealand completing the sweep winning 6 from 6 to retain the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234092-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rugby Union matches\nJune 2013, the busiest month of the year at 87 matches or 73 test matches, marked 125 years of the British & Irish Lions, as the Lions embarked on a 3-test tour against Australia, finishing with a historic 41\u201316 victory to seal a 2\u20131 test series win for the first time in 16 years. To end the year, November 2013 saw the number one test side the All Blacks win their fourteenth from fourteenth test match of the year, the first team to win every match in a calendar year in the professional era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234092-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rugby Union matches\nThe IRB World Rankings changed very little from the end of 2012 to the end of 2013. New Zealand remained ranked number one a position they have held since 2010, South Africa stayed in second and Australia in third. England moved up to fourth from fifth where they were in 2012, while Samoa remained the highest tier 2 side despite falling one place to eighth in 2013. Japan slowly climbs the rankings ahead of their home Rugby World Cup in 2019 following a successful year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234092-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 International Rugby Union matches\nThey earned their first win over Wales in Tokyo in June, before hosting the All Blacks for the first time in Japan. They scored the most tries than any other team at 75, 18 of which came in their 121\u20130 win over Philippines. Spain drew more matches than any other team this year, while Benin, Brunei and Burundi failed to score a single point in all their international matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234092-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rugby Union matches\nThe 340 matches below all contain an international team, some of which are not members of the International Rugby Board:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series\nThe 2013 International Rules Series (officially the 2013 Irish Daily Mail International Rules Series) was the 17th International Rules Series contested between Gaelic footballers from Ireland and Australian footballers from Australia. Ireland entered the 2013 series as defending champions, whilst Australia were, for the first time in the series, represented by an exclusively Indigenous team, known as the Indigenous All-Stars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series\nThe series was played over two Test matches, with Ireland winning both Test matches to take the series 2\u20130 and achieve a record aggregate win of 173\u201372 points. The Gaelic Athletic Association announced the schedule for the series in February 2013, with Breffni Park in Cavan chosen for the first Test match and Croke Park in Dublin chosen to host the second Test match. It marked just the second time that an international rules match was played in Cavan, or for that matter at a venue situated in the jurisdiction of the Ulster GAA. Breffni Park had previously hosted the first Test in the 2006 Ladies' International Rules Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Broadcast and sponsorship\nThe GAA announced as part of their management team selection in March 2013 that the Irish Daily Mail newspaper would return as Irish team and series sponsor whilst Irish language TV network TG4 would again be the official broadcaster of the series in Ireland. In making the announcement, GAA President Liam O'Neill stated that \u201cTG4 [and the Irish Daily Mail] are...valued long term partners of the GAA and we are looking forward to working with them to bring the games to the widest audience possible.\u201d As part of their live coverage of the two Test matches, TG4 announced they would also provide replays of previous international rules matches in September and October for Irish audiences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Broadcast and sponsorship\nThe AFL announced as part of their extended squad selection in August 2013 that Australian supermarket chain Coles and Indigenous health and wellbeing group National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) would be the official partners of the Indigenous All-Stars. Both groups are featured on the newly designed team guernsey. Australian free-to-air TV network 7mate was the exclusive broadcaster of the series in Australia, showing both matches on a slight delay and replaying them as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Background, Irish management and captain\nIn February 2013, the GAA confirmed that former Roscommon footballer Paul Earley would succeed Anthony Tohill as manager of the Irish team. GAA President Liam O'Neill said the Association was \"delighted that someone of the standing and calibre of Paul Earley will lead the Irish challenge\" and praised his extensive experience in both international rules and Australian football, Earley having represented Ireland in the 1987 series and played briefly for the Melbourne Football Club in 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Background, Irish management and captain\nEarley announced his management team in March, appointing S\u00e9amus McCarthy (Tipperary), Jarlath Fallon (Galway) and Tony Scullion (Derry) as selectors and former Cavan footballer and current GWS Giants high-performance manager Nicholas Walsh as conditioning coach. On October 3, Earley announced that former All-Ireland Donegal captain Michael Murphy would be captain of the Irish side for the series. This created a headache for young Murphy, as the Series was scheduled to clash with the final of the 2013 Donegal Senior Football Championship, which his club Glenswilly contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Background, Irish management and captain\nOn October 8, Earley announced an Irish squad of 29, with 15 of the national counties being represented in the side. This number of counties represented was reduced to 11 when Earley named his final 23-man match-day squad for the first Test in Cavan. Despite having a club county final scheduled the following day, captain Michael Murphy was named as a starting player. Ahead of the second test, former Irish vice-captain Ciaran McKeever and veteran Kildare footballer John Doyle were included in the squad, replacing the injured Finian Hanley and Mayo footballer Aidan O'Shea, who had club commitments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Background, Australian Indigenous team\nIn May 2013, AFL CEO Andrew Demetriou confirmed to Channel 9's The Footy Show that the AFL was considering the possibility of sending an all-Indigenous team made up of exclusively Aboriginal footballers to Ireland for the 2013 series. Previously, an all-Indigenous team made up of some of the best such players in the AFL has competed in pre-season exhibition matches in the Northern Territory to relatively little public exposure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Background, Australian Indigenous team\nIn late May, respected sports journalist Caroline Wilson penned an article in The Age claiming that the plan now \"seemed certain\" as a result of support from star Indigenous players Adam Goodes and Lance Franklin. The decision was made official in July, when the AFL announced that the Indigenous All-Stars would indeed represent Australia, with Deputy CEO Gillon McLachlan justifying the move by contending that the series needed reinvigoration and that the commitment of senior indigenous players had been significant in forming the new concept.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Background, Australian Indigenous team\nThe AFL announced a 33-man extended squad on 29 August, which included high-profile names such as Daniel Wells and Shaun Burgoyne alongside multiple All-Australian winners Franklin and Goodes; however, on October 8, the squad was trimmed to a touring party of 21 and featured a rather makeshift lineup of both high-profile Indigenous players and several lesser-known players who were not included in the original squad Lance Franklin, who would otherwise have been captain, was ruled out of the second Test due to commitments in Australia. Paddy Ryder may be a late inclusion in the team. \u2013 including two players who had never previously played a senior level AFL game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Background, Australian Indigenous team\nDaniel Wells was the Australian captain; Aaron Davey was vice-captain. Former Sydney Swans and Indigenous player Michael O'Loughlin coached and managed the team, with former Australian coach Rodney Eade, former senior AFL and GAA player Tadhg Kennelly, and ex-Adelaide Crows and Indigenous player Andrew McLeod joining him on the panel. Prior to the opening Test, the Australian side defeated a combined Dublin universities team by a score of 62\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234093-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 International Rules Series, Squads\n\u2020These players have never played a senior AFL game prior to this series **These players participated in only one of the two test matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship\nThe 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship (often simplified to the 2013 V8 Supercars Championship) was a F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile-sanctioned international motor racing series for V8 Supercars that was based in Australia. It was the fifteenth running of the V8 Supercar Championship Series and the seventeenth series in which V8 Supercars contested the premier Australian touring car title. The championship was contested over thirty-six races, starting with the Clipsal 500 Adelaide on 2 March 2013, and finishing with the Sydney 500 on 8 December. The series' calendar also expanded, travelling to the United States for the first time for a race at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship\nThe 2013 season saw the introduction of the \"New Generation V8 Supercar\", a revision to the regulations which were designed to cut costs and to make the series more attractive to new manufacturers. Nissan and Mercedes-Benz entered the series, with four Nissan Altimas being prepared by Kelly Racing and three Mercedes-Benz E63 W212s being run by Erebus Motorsport \u2014 who purchased Stone Brothers Racing during the off-season \u2013 respectively. Holden teams competed with the new VF Commodore, which replaces the VE model, whilst Ford continued to use the FG Falcon, which had been raced since 2009, but built to New Generation V8 Supercar specifications for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship\nJamie Whincup started the season as the defending drivers' champion. The team for which he drives, Triple Eight Race Engineering, are the defending teams' champions. Whincup successfully defended his title, winning eleven of the season's thirty-six races and scoring a record-breaking thirteen pole positions. His team-mate Craig Lowndes finished second in the championship for the third consecutive season, giving Triple Eight Race Engineering its fourth consecutive Teams Championship win. Lowndes, with Warren Luff, won the inaugural Enduro Cup for the best performing drivers across the three endurance races. Ford Performance Racing driver Will Davison finished the season in third place. Rick Kelly finished the highest of the Nissan drivers, in fourteenth place, while Lee Holdsworth ended the season in twentieth to be the highest placed Erebus Motorsport driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers competed during the 2013 championship:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Season calendar\nThe 2013 calendar was released on 15 October 2012. The season consisted of thirty-six races to be held at fourteen venues in Australia, New Zealand and the United States, plus an additional non-championship event that was held at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit in support of the 2013 Australian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Rule changes, New Generation V8 Supercar\nThe New Generation V8 Supercar (originally Car of the Future) project was first announced in 2008, when a working group was established to explore options for the long-term future of the category. The study found that in the fifteen years since the category had been restricted to a two manufacturers, the costs of building and racing with a competitive car had doubled, with some estimates putting the cost as high as A$600,000 per car, per season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Rule changes, New Generation V8 Supercar\nThe Car of the Future program was created to address this, aiming to reduce running costs to $250,000. This was achieved through the use of \"control\" parts; where teams had previously been charged with designing and developing their own parts, the Car of the Future regulations called for these parts to be built independently and to a set specification. The basic chassis and roll cage, differential, brakes, cooling and fuel systems and rear suspension were all changed to control parts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Rule changes, New Generation V8 Supercar\nThe category also introduced a larger fuel tank to combat the phenomenon of \"economy racing\" whereby drivers would be forced to drive conservatively late in the race so as to preserve enough fuel to reach the finish. The larger tanks and a restructuring of event formats to include more compulsory pit stops instead allowed drivers to push as hard as they pleased until the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Rule changes, New Generation V8 Supercar\nManufacturers were free to develop their own aerodynamic aids to suit their cars, which were then put through a rigorous system of parity testing so as to refine the aerodynamics of each model of car so as to prevent one model from having a distinct advantage over the others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Rule changes, New Generation V8 Supercar\nFinally, manufacturers were also given the option of using \"generic\" engines developed by the category and re-badged to reflect the manufacturer using them\u2014though as the season started, no manufacturers had elected to do so\u2014or developing their own engines, which would be built to specifications and then be subject to a process of homologation to ensure that all engines developed by the manufacturer would be identical. In order to ensure the cars can remain competitive, the process of homologation only applies to the basic engine platform, which teams will be free to develop over the course of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Rule changes, New Generation V8 Supercar\nWith the requirement that all teams build brand-new cars for the 2013 season, most of the cars that were raced in 2011 and 2012 were sold to teams competing in the V8 Development Series, the second-tier category for V8 Supercars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Rule changes, New Generation V8 Supercar\nIn November 2013 the Car of the Future was officially renamed the New Generation V8 Supercar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Clipsal 500 Adelaide\nThe first race of the season took place on the streets of Adelaide and saw Triple Eight Race Engineering emerge with a firm hold on the championship lead. Craig Lowndes won the first of the two races after pole-sitter Shane van Gisbergen made a poor start and ultimately retired from the race. Will Davison finished second, with reigning drivers' champion Jamie Whincup completing the podium. Van Gisbergen claimed pole in the second race and went on to win by two seconds ahead of Whincup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Clipsal 500 Adelaide\nLowndes recovered from a poor qualifying session to finish third, giving him a twelve-point championship lead over Whincup, and a thirty-one point lead over Davison in third place. Rick Kelly achieved a best finish of eleventh place for Nissan in the first race, whilst the Mercedes-Benz E63 AMGs prepared by Erebus Motorsport struggled throughout the weekend, with Tim Slade recording a best result of fifteenth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Tasmania Microsoft Office 365\nBrad Jones Racing won all three of the races at the next event of the championship in Tasmania. Fabian Coulthard secured his maiden V8 Supercars race win in the first race, while Jason Bright took his first race win since the 2011 Winton 300 when he won the second race. Coulthard took a second win in the third and final race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 92], "content_span": [93, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Tasmania Microsoft Office 365\nCraig Lowndes lost the championship lead after an altercation with Shane van Gisbergen in the first race that saw Lowndes spin and puncture a tyre, leaving him to finish the race in twenty-sixth position, and Whincup gained the championship lead by finishing on the podium in the first race. David Reynolds and Scott Pye were involved in separate accidents over the course of the meeting, the latter of which ruled Pye out of the next event in New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 92], "content_span": [93, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, ITM 400 Auckland\nThe next event in New Zealand saw four different winners in four races. Scott McLaughlin became the youngest person to win a V8 Supercar race when he took his maiden victory in the first race as pole-sitter Jamie Whincup struggled with tyre problems at the start. Whincup survived a chaotic second race\u2014in which Fabian Coulthard jumped the start; Shane van Gisbergen, Jason Bright and James Courtney all left the circuit at high speed; and Mark Winterbottom collided with Whincup whilst trying to pass for the lead on the last lap\u2014to take his first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, ITM 400 Auckland\nA rare mistake from Whincup saw him run wide in the third race, which was won by Will Davison, also in his\u2014and Ford's\u2014first win of the season. Jason Bright won the fourth race, and with it the Jason Richards Memorial Trophy, as he scored the most points over the four races. Whincup's tyre problems in the first race and off-track excursion in the third meant that he lost the lead of the championship to Will Davison, whose lead was further established when Whincup was penalised fifteen points for an unsportsmanlike pass in the third race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Chill Perth 360\nTriple Eight Race Engineering performed a clean sweep of the fourth event of the series at Barbagallo Raceway, with Craig Lowndes winning the 60/60 sprint race on Saturday. This was Lowndes' ninety-first career race win, breaking Mark Skaife's record of ninety wins. Jamie Whincup went on to win the following two races, and also took pole position for the first and third races; Jason Bright qualified on pole for the second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Chill Perth 360\nWhincup's wins, coupled with a second place in the first race, allowed him to take the championship lead back from Will Davison, who suffered a puncture in the first race. James Moffat provided Nissan Motorsport with three top ten results, continuing the team's strong form from New Zealand. Engine upgrades for Erebus Motorsport saw the Mercedes-Benz E63 AMGs find pace, with Maro Engel giving the team its first top ten qualifying result. Chaz Mostert, replacing Jonny Reid at Dick Johnson Racing, made a strong championship debut, finishing in the top fifteen in all three races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Chill Perth 360\nThe Saturday race saw a major incident involving Scott Pye, who was launched into the air sideways and landed heavily in the infield after he made contact with Rick Kelly and Garth Tander coming onto the back straight during the first race. Pye was uninjured and the car undamaged and the team was able to continue racing throughout the weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Austin 400\nTriple Eight Race Engineering dominated V8 Supercars' first foray into the United States, with Jamie Whincup winning three of the four races at the Circuit of the Americas near Austin, Texas. Fabian Coulthard denied Whincup a clean sweep of the event when he won the third race. Whincup later caused controversy when he claimed that \"external factors\" had inspired an unorthodox penalty that he, Coulthard and Craig Lowndes were given for breaching safety car regulations in the third race, implying that the penalty had been applied to allow a different driver to win the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Austin 400\nElsewhere, Rick Kelly demonstrated the Nissan Altima L33's development by securing four top-ten finishes, whilst James Moffat claimed an extra top-ten finish for the marque in the second race. Erebus Motorsport, on the other hand, continued their difficult introduction to V8 Supercars, spending most of the weekend outside the top twenty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Skycity Triple Crown\nDavid Reynolds took the second pole position of his career at Hidden Valley Raceway and despite leading the 60/60 Sprint race at the halfway mark, contact with Mark Winterbottom robbed him of the chance to take his maiden victory. Jamie Whincup went on to win the race ahead of Shane van Gisbergen, who had spent most of practice struggling with mechanical problems, and James Courtney. Courtney claimed his first pole position since the Winton event in the 2010 season for the second race, whilst Reynolds bounced back from his difficulties in the sprint race to take pole again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Skycity Triple Crown\nWinterbottom recovered from the Saturday incident to win the second race from Courtney and Craig Lowndes, while Lowndes would win the third race ahead of Winterbottom and Reynolds. Whincup was given a drive-through penalty in the third race for spinning his wheels while the car was in the air, allowing Lowndes to close the points gap in the championship. James Rosenberg Racing's Tim Slade demonstrated a reversal of fortunes for the Mercedes AMG E63 teams, finishing in the top ten in the first race and qualifying inside the top ten for the second and third races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Skycity Triple Crown\nHowever, his luck ran out on the first lap in the third race when he was involved in a multi-car accident which caused a red flag and eliminated himself, Lee Holdsworth, Alex Davison, Dean Fiore, David Wall, Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat and James Moffat. Scott McLaughlin, Jason Bright, Fabian Coulthard and Russell Ingall were also involved in the crash but were able to take part in the restarted race. German driver Maro Engel scored a career-best ninth place in the third race, capitalising on the first lap crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Sucrogen Townsville 400\nThe seventh event in Townsville saw mixed results. Series veteran Russell Ingall made his 226th championship event start, breaking John Bowe's record of 225, and used the number 226 in celebration of the achievement. Shane van Gisbergen continued his strong street circuit form from Adelaide, taking pole position for the Saturday race. However, a penalty from a pit lane infringement dropped him down the order. The Ford Performance Racing duo of Will Davison and Mark Winterbottom were able to capitalise on this and take a one-two finish ahead of Brad Jones Racing's Fabian Coulthard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Sucrogen Townsville 400\nWinterbottom took pole for the second race on Sunday but lost out on strategy, after many drivers pitted during an early safety car to do a double stint on soft tyres. The Holden Racing Team utilised this strategy to finish first and second, their first win since the 2011 Bathurst 1000, with Garth Tander leading James Courtney. Van Gisbergen rounded out the podium while Winterbottom finished fourth. Championship leaders Triple Eight Race Engineering endured a difficult weekend, with both Jamie Whincup and Craig Lowndes qualifying outside of the top ten for the first race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Sucrogen Townsville 400\nLowndes was able to recover to fourth using an alternative strategy while Whincup finished seventh. The team was not able to recover over night, with Lowndes and Whincup finishing seventh and eleventh respectively on Sunday. Lowndes was able to take 48 points out of Whincup's championship lead, bringing it down from 159 to 111 points. Erebus Motorsport again finished in the top ten, with Tim Slade finishing eighth on Sunday. The Sunday race also saw Tony D'Alberto equal his career-best result with a sixth place while Ingall returned to the top ten with a fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Coates Hire Ipswich 360\nTriple Eight Race Engineering returned to form at Queensland Raceway, with Jamie Whincup winning the 60/60 Sprint race from pole position ahead of Scott McLaughlin and Mark Winterbottom. The race featured several incidents, firstly with Whincup's teammate Craig Lowndes touching the rear of Winterbottom's car on the first lap and causing both Winterbottom and Fabian Coulthard to lose positions. Todd Kelly had separate altercations with David Wall and Chaz Mostert, with Wall and Mostert coming off worse in each incident. Lee Holdsworth was forced out of the race after contact with Dean Fiore and Michael Caruso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Coates Hire Ipswich 360\nWhincup again took pole for the second race but was beaten by McLaughlin for the race win, with James Courtney finishing third. The final race featured tyre problems which affected many drivers: Whincup, McLaughlin, Courtney, Garth Tander, Alex Davison and David Wall all had punctures which dropped them down the order. In just his fifteenth race, Chaz Mostert of Dick Johnson Racing won the race from second on the grid, ahead of pole-sitter Will Davison and Winterbottom. It was the first victory for Dick Johnson Racing since November 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Winton 360\nJames Moffat took his first win and the maiden victory for Nissan Motorsport in the 60/60 Sprint race at Winton, Nissan's first win in an Australian Touring Car Championship or V8 Supercar race since 1992. His teammate Michael Caruso, who led the first half of the race, finished in second with Jason Bright completing the podium for Brad Jones Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Winton 360\nControversy surrounded Moffat's victory, however, as the two Nissans used an E70 fuel blend (compared to the usual E85) in an effort to evaluate its potential in balancing fuel economy between the engines used by Nissan and Erebus Motorsport and those used by Ford and Holden. Championship leader and pole-sitter Jamie Whincup encountered a gearbox problem while leading, forcing his retirement. Whincup's troubles continued in the second race, involved in a first lap crash after qualifying poorly. The crash also affected Caruso, Alex Davison, Russell Ingall, Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat and Garth Tander.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Winton 360\nMark Winterbottom won the race for Ford Performance Racing, ahead of pole-sitter Bright and James Courtney. Courtney started on pole for the final race and went on to win ahead of Fabian Coulthard and Chaz Mostert. The race saw differing strategies with many drivers pitting for fresh tyres during a late safety car period and then making their way through the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Wilson Security Sandown 500\nJamie Whincup and Triple Eight Race Engineering recovered from their troubles at Winton to win the Sandown 500, with Paul Dumbrell co-driving the winning car. The win came despite a drive-through penalty for spinning the rear wheels while the car was jacked up during a pit stop. The pair finished ahead of their teammates Craig Lowndes and Warren Luff and the pole-sitting Ford Performance Racing car of Will Davison and Steve Owen. Erebus Motorsport achieved its best result of the season, with Lee Holdsworth and Craig Baird taking their E63 AMG to fourth place. Ashley Walsh, driving with Tim Blanchard for Dick Johnson Racing, had a major accident at the end of the back straight on lap 35, significantly damaging the car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000\nAn intense finish to the race saw Mark Winterbottom and Steven Richards win the Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000 for Ford Performance Racing. It was Winterbottom's and the team's first victory in the race, while Richards won his third and Ford won their first since 2008. The winners of the Sandown 500, Jamie Whincup and Paul Dumbrell, finished second after Winterbottom and Whincup fought for the lead in the final stint, with their Triple Eight Race Engineering teammates Craig Lowndes and Warren Luff in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 92], "content_span": [93, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000\nScott Pye achieved his best result of the season, finishing sixth with Paul Morris, while the wildcard entry of Andy Priaulx and Mattias Ekstr\u00f6m performed strongly to finish in tenth. The race was the quickest in history at six hours, eleven minutes and twenty-seven seconds with only two safety car periods. The first was to allow the clean-up of debris after David Russell struck a kangaroo at Griffins Bend while a heavy crash for Greg Murphy at Reid Park brought about the second safety car period. Despite finishing second, Whincup extended his championship over Lowndes by eighteen points, while Winterbottom overtook teammate Will Davison for third in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 92], "content_span": [93, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Armor All Gold Coast 600\nThe twelfth event on the Gold Coast saw Craig Lowndes take the championship lead from Triple Eight Race Engineering teammate Jamie Whincup after Whincup and co-driver Paul Dumbrell failed to finish the Saturday race, with Dumbrell causing a heavy crash for Greg Murphy before suffering a drive-train failure. Lowndes and co-driver Warren Luff won the race from pole ahead of Shane van Gisbergen and Jeroen Bleekemolen, the first Dutchman to stand on a V8 Supercar podium, and Mark Winterbottom and Steven Richards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 87], "content_span": [88, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Armor All Gold Coast 600\nDavid Reynolds won the first race of his career in the Sunday race, with he and co-driver Dean Canto winning from pole. Fabian Coulthard and Luke Youlden finished second ahead of Russell Ingall and Ryan Briscoe, Briscoe's first podium finish and Ingall's first since 2009. James Courtney and Murphy looked set to take victory until a steering problem put them out of the race. Whincup and Dumbrell finished fourth while Lowndes and Luff were eighth, leaving Lowndes with a six-point championship lead. Lowndes and Luff won the Endurance Cup ahead of Whincup and Dumbrell and Winterbottom and Richards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 87], "content_span": [88, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Sargent Security Phillip Island 360\nThe Holden Racing Team's Garth Tander took his second win of the season in the 60/60 Sprint race at Phillip Island, ahead of Fabian Coulthard and Alex Davison, who scored his first podium of the season. The race included on a controversial incident between Craig Lowndes and Mark Winterbottom, who came together while battling for the lead on the last lap of the first half of the race, resulting in the pair dropping to fifteenth and fifth places respectively. Other incidents during the first half allowed Jamie Whincup, who had qualified poorly, to move up to sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Event summaries, Sargent Security Phillip Island 360\nWhincup would go on to finish fourth in the race to retake the championship lead while Winterbottom finished fifth and Lowndes recovered to eighth. The race was marred by a major accident involving Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat and James Courtney. Pr\u00e9mat had a tyre failure going into turn three before sliding across the damp grass and hitting the driver's door of Courtney's car, causing significant damage to both cars while Courtney also suffered slight tissue damage on his right leg. Triple Eight Race Engineering dominated Sunday's races, with Lowndes winning the first race ahead of teammate Whincup and Shane van Gisbergen. Whincup went on to win the final race ahead of Winterbottom and Lowndes. This left Whincup with a 20-point lead over Lowndes in the championship heading into the final round, with Winterbottom 124 points off the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234094-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, Championship standings, Points system\nPoints were awarded for each race at an event, to the driver/s of a car that completed at least 75% of the race distance and was running at the completion of the race, up to a maximum of 300 points per event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234095-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Club Championship\nThe 2013 International Women's Club Championship was the second worldwide international women's football club tournament, and was held in Japan from 30 November\u20138 December 2013. Five teams, comprising representatives from Europe, Australia, South America, and Asia took part in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234095-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Club Championship, Participating teams\nThe invited teams were the champions of Europe, Australia, South America, Japan, and the Nadeshiko League Cup. As INAC Kobe Leonessa won both the Japanese Cup and league, the runner-up of the league was also invited. An unidentified team from the United States was also invited but ultimately declined. Wolfsburg, the champions of Europe, also apparently declined, and they were replaced by Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234096-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Football Tournament of Bras\u00edlia\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 2804:7f7: e192:26e2:207d:7d7b:5918:84cd (talk) at 16:59, 1 February 2020 (\u2192\u200eFinal). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234096-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Football Tournament of Bras\u00edlia\nThe 2013 Torneio Internacional de Bras\u00edlia de Futebol Feminino (also known as the 2013 International Tournament of Brasilia) was the fifth edition of the Torneio Internacional de Futebol Feminino, an invitational women's football tournament held every December in Brazil. It began on 12 December and ended on 22 December 2013. The tournament had previously been held in S\u00e3o Paulo but was moved to Bras\u00edlia in 2013 at the instigation of the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234096-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Football Tournament of Bras\u00edlia, Format\nIn the first phase, the four teams play each other within the group in a single round. The two teams with the most points earned in the respective group, qualify for the next phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234096-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Football Tournament of Bras\u00edlia, Format\nIn the final stage, the first and second teams placed in the Group contest the final. Should the match ends in a tie, the team with the best record in the first phase is declared the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234096-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Football Tournament of Bras\u00edlia, Format\nThe third and fourth teams placed in the group contest the third place play-off. Should the match ends in a tie, the team with the best record in the first phase is declared the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234096-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 International Women's Football Tournament of Bras\u00edlia, Venues\nAll matches took place at Est\u00e1dio Nacional Man\u00e9 Garrincha in Bras\u00edlia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 66], "content_span": [67, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation\nProject Spade, an international police investigation into child pornography, began in October 2010 in Toronto, Canada. The investigation started when Toronto Police Service officers made on-line contact with a man who was alleged to have been sharing pornographic videos via the Internet and by mail. The investigation eventually covered over 50 countries. Almost 350 people were arrested internationally, and 386 children were said to have been rescued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation\nFollowing numerous complaints received by the website cybertip.ca about Azov Films, the investigation began in October 2010 when undercover police made online contact with Brian Way, a 42-year-old man from Toronto and the owner of Toronto-based Azov Films, a firm that distributed DVDs and streaming videos of naked children which it marketed as \"naturist.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation\nIn May 2011 Way's home and office were raided, and he was arrested. Toronto law enforcement authorities and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service recreated Way's customer records and shared them with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Interpol. Investigations involved more than 50 countries. Way is alleged to have earned more than $4 million from his website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation\nApart from Canada, Australia and the United States, authorities in Hong Kong, South Africa, Spain and Sweden were involved. Investigations also spread to Greece, Ireland, New Zealand, and Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation\nThe Canadian arm of the operation was \"Project Spade\", in Australia it was \"Operation Thunderer\". Up to 45 terabytes of images and videos were seized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation\nInspector Joanna Beaven-Desjardins, of the TPS' Sex Crimes Unit, said, \"It's a first for the magnitude of the victims saved\" and \"the amount of arrests internationally, also a first.\" Beaven-Desjardins also spoke about materials seized from Way's home: \"Officers located hundreds of thousands of images and videos detailing horrific sexual acts against very young children, some of the worst that they have ever viewed.\" The materials distributed commercially by Azov featured nude athletic and recreational scenes, but not explicit sexual acts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation\nThe nudity-only nature of the Azov material caused it to be classified in the UK as level 1 on the COPINE scale for rating images of children, i.e., generally beneath the threshold of legal interest. This standardized rating caused controversy, as politicians and members of the UK press later accused the National Crime Agency of negligence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation\nThe investigation was officially made public in November 2013. Alternative news sources had disclosed its existence as early as December. 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation, Germany\nThe German Federal Criminal Police Office was informed in October 2011, but investigations only started in October 2012, with the list of customers being distributed to the German states' authorities in November 2012. During 13 months of holding back any investigations it should have been obvious for Federal Criminal Police Office that within the list there were IP-numbers of Deutscher Bundestag with at least several downloads of nude material of boys of the age between 9 and 14 towards the German Bundestag IP-numbers range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation, Germany\nFive hundred of the 800 listed persons had purchased unambiguous child pornography according to German legal standards; the rest had bought material not considered to be illegal. A German MP appeared on the list; since the material he purchased wasn't categorized as clearly illegal, the case was held back pending further investigations, until 10 February 2014, when his house was raided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation, Germany\nAccording to J\u00f6rg Fr\u00f6hlich, public prosecutor in Hannover, Lower Saxony, the raid took place for reason of a higher count of other public prosecutor agencies handling similar cases this way against the account of agencies favoring not to do so when found material would need to be categorized as so-called \"II\" instead of \"I\". The passing of secret information regarding the investigation to the MP's party leader resulted in the resignation of the former German Interior Minister, Hans-Peter Friedrich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation, Germany\nThe home raid on Edathy when he had only purchased materials classified as legal was criticized in a national newspaper, Die Zeit, in a guest editorial by Thomas Fischer, Chief Judge of the German Federal Court. He stated, \"Law exists in clear boundaries between permitted and forbidden behavior. Justice dares not follow he who does nothing illegal. In the Edathy case, this rule has been violated.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation, Germany\nIn contrast, however, Mick Moran, head of Interpol's Human Trafficking and Child Exploitation unit, issued a public warning on Twitter to \"MAPs\" (\"minor-attracted persons\") that any sign they were acting upon their sexual orientations, whether the actions were legal or illegal, \"demonstrates an escalation of activity by 'MAPs' that must be interpreted as an increased risk to children regardless of the illegality\" and that \"must result in action by public safety officials.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation, Germany\nPublic discussion about nude pictures of children being legal in Germany, when not categorized as sexual in nature, led within hours to a published consent from all parliamentary parties, as well as from Germany's Minister of Justice Heiko Maas, for a prompt change of the relevant law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Investigation, Germany\nOn a 19 February 2014, a non-public meeting of the federal home affairs committee where BKA president J\u00f6rg Ziercke was reporting on this affair\u2014Ziercke admitted, according to MP Bosbach\u2014who leads that committee\u2014towards reporters, that he had not seen any reason to publish the involved MP's name any earlier, since at that time Sebastian Edathy was head of the NSU-murderseries committee doing inquiries against the BKA and therefore himself, Ziercke, so to prevent the obviously wrong public image of a nonexisting act of revenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 74], "content_span": [75, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Children\nApart from the children involved in the production of the Azov films, 386 children were said to have been rescued from exploitation by purchasers of the films. In Canada alone, 24 were rescued while six were rescued in Australia. \"More than 330 children\" were stated to have been rescued in the US.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Children\nThis high number has been questioned, since full details of the charges for 54 of the total of 76 arrests in the US had been publicly released as of 14 November 2013, and these details account for fewer than 15 persons exposed as children to current or historical sexual contact. An additional 75 to 100 children were surreptitiously indecently photographed, mostly by two arrested men who were school employees. The definition of \"rescued child\" used was that \"the children were either being sexually abused or they were being sexually exploited by having videos taken of them in exploitative positions.\" The 'exploitative positions' always included nudity or genital exposure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Arrests\nAs of 14\u00a0November\u00a02013, 348 people were arrested internationally. Those arrested included priests or pastors, teachers, foster parents, doctors and nurses. A police officer and a youth baseball coach were also arrested. A Richmond, Virginia, man was sentenced to 70 months in prison on 11 April 2013, for receipt of child pornography.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Arrests\nIn Canada alone 108 people were arrested. In the US 76 were arrested. In Australia arrests began in August 2013 and 65 persons aged from 25 to 72 were arrested. In Spain 28 were arrested in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Charges\nWay has been charged with 24 offenses. The charges include \"instruction of a criminal organisation\" and \"making, possessing, distributing and exporting child exploitation ... \", which had \"explicit images of boys ranging in age from toddlers to teens.\" Way's mother, Sandra Waslov, is still sought by authorities. Waslov changed her name on 21 May 2010 in Orchard Park, Erie County, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Charges\nThe 65 Australian suspects face 399 charges involving child exploitation. The charges include \" ... accessing, possessing, producing and distributing online child exploitation material\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Suicide of a US government official\nOne of the high-impact arrests resulting from Project Spade was that of Ryan Loskarn. The 35-year-old was chief of staff to U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander at the time of his arrest. An investigation of Loskarn's electronic equipment was prompted in part by the appearance of his name on the Azov Films customer list. It uncovered graphic child pornography that had been obtained over the Gnutella peer-to-peer network Loskarn was charged with possessing and intending to distribute child pornography and released on his own recognizance five days after his arrest on 11 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 87], "content_span": [88, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Suicide of a US government official\nOn 23 January 2014, he committed suicide by hanging himself at his parents' home. In his suicide note, published on the internet by his family, he stated that \"I found myself drawn to videos that matched my own childhood abuse.\" The incident provoked wide discussion in Washington, with The Washington Post opinion writer Ruth Marcus suggesting that \"we should use this sad episode to call attention to the need for mental health services\u2014although Loskarn's problem was not lack of access but lack of willingness to accept the help available . . . But we should also use the moment to remind ourselves that reality is more complex than our cursory assumptions acknowledge, and that before we rush to condemn we might pause to consider the possibility of compassion.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 87], "content_span": [88, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Suicide of Martin Goldberg\nMartin Goldberg, a deputy headteacher in Essex, hung himself after being investigated following information uncovered in Canada. Approximately 75 indecent images of children were found in his possession from his schools' changing rooms; 465 were taken at the swimming pools of his local leisure centre and 38 from other locations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234097-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 International child pornography investigation, Suicide of Martin Goldberg\nThe headteacher of the school that he worked at said that he felt \"utter shock and betrayal\" about Goldberg's behavior, which had been brought to the attention of Essex Police in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234098-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationale J\u00e4nner Rallye\nThe 30. Internationale J\u00e4nner Rallye 2013 was the first round of the 2013 European Rally Championship. The eighteen stage asphalt, snow and ice rally took place over 3\u20135 January 2013. Jan Kopeck\u00fd won the rally with an amazing recovery, after being in third place at almost 30 seconds from the lead, with just three stages until the end of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234099-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne\nThe 2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the seventeenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $100,000 in prize money. It took place in Poitiers, France, on 21\u201327 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234099-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234099-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as lucky losers into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234100-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Doubles\nCatalina Casta\u00f1o and Mervana Jugi\u0107-Salki\u0107 were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234100-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Doubles\nLucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Micha\u00eblla Krajicek won the tournament, defeating Christina McHale and Monica Niculescu in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234101-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Singles\nMonica Puig was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234101-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux F\u00e9minins de la Vienne \u2013 Singles\nAliaksandra Sasnovich won the tournament, defeating Sofia Arvidsson in the final, 6\u20131, 5\u20137, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234102-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie\nThe 2013 Internationaux de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Noum\u00e9a, New Caledonia between 31 December 2012 and 6 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234102-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234102-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234103-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie \u2013 Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Samuel Groth and Toshihide Matsui won the final 7\u20136(8\u20136), 1\u20136, [10\u20134] against Artem Sitak and Jose Statham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234104-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Nouvelle-Cal\u00e9donie \u2013 Singles\nJ\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Adrian Mannarino defeated Andrej Martin 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234105-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Strasbourg\nThe 2013 Internationaux de Strasbourg was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 27th edition of the tournament and was part of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Strasbourg, France between 18 and 25 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234105-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Strasbourg, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234105-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Strasbourg, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234106-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Doubles\nOlga Govortsova and Klaudia Jans-Ignacik were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Kimiko Date-Krumm and Chanelle Scheepers won the title, defeating Cara Black and Marina Erakovic, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [14\u201312].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234107-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Singles\nFrancesca Schiavone was the defending champion but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234107-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Singles\nAliz\u00e9 Cornet won the title, defeating Lucie Hradeck\u00e1 in the final 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234108-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de BLOIS\nThe 2013 Internationaux de Tennis de BLOIS is a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It is the first edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It takes place in Blois, France between 10 and 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234108-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de BLOIS, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234109-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de BLOIS \u2013 Doubles\nThis is the first edition of the event. Jonathan Eysseric and Nicolas Renavand defeated Ruben Gonzales and Chris Letcher in the final and take the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234110-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de BLOIS \u2013 Singles\nJulian Reister won the first edition of the event against Du\u0161an Lajovi\u0107 6\u20131, 6\u20137(3\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234111-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e\nThe 2013 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e is a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It is the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It is taking place in Mouilleron-le-Captif, France between 14 and 20 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234111-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234112-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e \u2013 Doubles\nFabrice Martin and Hugo Nys won the title over Henri Kontinen and Adri\u00e1n Men\u00e9ndez-Maceiras 3\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234113-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internationaux de Tennis de Vend\u00e9e \u2013 Singles\n8th seed Michael Berrer won the first edition of the event against Nicolas Mahut in three sets 1\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234114-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo\nThe 2013 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo was a professional women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Palermo, Italy between 8 and 14 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234114-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234114-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234115-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Doubles\nRenata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 and Barbora Z\u00e1hlavov\u00e1-Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but they lost in the semifinals to Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 and Krist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1. Kristina Mladenovic and Katarzyna Piter won the title, defeating the Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 sisters in the final, 6\u20131, 5\u20137, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234116-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Singles\nSara Errani was the defending champion, but lost in the final to her long-term doubles partner Roberta Vinci, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234117-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali di Tennis Castel del Monte\nThe 2013 Internazionali di Tennis Castel del Monte was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Andria, Italy between 18 and 24 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234117-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali di Tennis Castel del Monte, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234117-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali di Tennis Castel del Monte, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players entered as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234118-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali di Tennis Castel del Monte \u2013 Doubles\nPhilipp Oswald and Andreas Siljestr\u00f6m won the title, defeating Alessandro Motti and Goran To\u0161i\u0107 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234119-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Internazionali di Tennis Castel del Monte \u2013 Singles\nM\u00e1rton Fucsovics won the title, defeating Dustin Brown in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234120-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Intersport Heilbronn Open\nThe 2013 Intersport Heilbronn Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 25th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Heilbronn, Germany between 23 and 29 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234120-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Intersport Heilbronn Open, Singles main draw Entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234120-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Intersport Heilbronn Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234121-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Intersport Heilbronn Open \u2013 Doubles\nJohan Brunstr\u00f6m and Frederik Nielsen were the defending champions but Nielsen decided not to participate. Brunstr\u00f6m played alongside Raven Klaasen and successfully defended the title by defeating Jordan Kerr and Andreas Siljestr\u00f6m 6\u20133, 0\u20136, [12\u201310] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234122-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Intersport Heilbronn Open \u2013 Singles\nBj\u00f6rn Phau was the defending champion but he retired in the first round. Michael Berrer defeated Jan-Lennard Struff 7\u20135, 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234123-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Invercargill mayoral election\nThe 2013 Invercargill mayoral election finished on Saturday, 12 October 2013 and was conducted under the first-past-the-post voting system using the postal voting system. It was held as part of the 2013 New Zealand local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234123-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Invercargill mayoral election, Background\nThe candidates for mayor included the incumbent Tim Shadbolt who contested a seventh consecutive term. Other candidates included Shadbolt defeated challengers Lindsay Dow and Kevin Middleton. Shadbolt was re-elected with a decreased majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234124-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Barnstormers season\nThe 2013 Iowa Barnstormers season was the 13th season for the franchise, and the ninth in the Arena Football League. The team was coached by Mike Hohensee and played their home games at Wells Fargo Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234124-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Barnstormers season, Regular season schedule\nThe Barnstormers began the season on the road against the Chicago Rush on March 23. Their first home game was April 5 against the Spokane Shock. They closed the regular season against the Arizona Rattlers at home on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234125-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250\nThe 2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250 Presented by DEKALB, the seventh annual running of the event, was an IndyCar Series race held on June 23, 2013 at Iowa Speedway in Newton, Iowa. The race was the tenth round of the 2013 IndyCar Series season, and was won by James Hinchcliffe of Andretti Autosport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234125-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250, Report, Background\nIowa Speedway is the shortest track on the IndyCar schedule, being .875 miles long. Four of the first nine races in the season were dominated by Andretti Autosport drivers James Hinchcliffe and Ryan Hunter-Reay, each winning two races. The defending race winner was Hunter-Reay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234125-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250, Report, Qualifying\nH\u00e9lio Castroneves of Team Penske set the one-lap track record in qualifying with a time of 17.3324 seconds and a speed of 185.65\u00a0mph (298.77\u00a0km/h), breaking the record set in 2008 by Ryan Briscoe. Castroneves also won the pole position after winning the qualifying heat race, but IndyCar officials ruled that Castroneves and his team had an improper engine change, changing engines before it ran the minimum 2,000 miles (3,218\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234125-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250, Report, Qualifying\nBecause of this, Penske teammate Will Power was given the pole, with James Hinchcliffe in second, Marco Andretti in third and Ed Carpenter in fourth, taking Scott Dixon's spot, who was also penalized for improperly changing engines. Defending race winner Ryan Hunter-Reay failed to advance out of the preliminary heat. The starting grid for the race was decided by three 50-lap heat races. Dixon won the first race, Graham Rahal won heat 2, and Castroneves won the final heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234125-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250, Race\nOn lap one, James Hinchcliffe passed pole-sitter Will Power for the lead, and proceeded to dominate the race, leading all but 24 laps, a track-record 226 laps; he had led only 33 laps on ovals prior to the race. Hinchcliffe's teammate Ryan Hunter-Reay fell behind with early right front car damage early in the race, and was in 21st, but was able to reach second, but was slowed by lapped cars. Hinchcliffe beat Hunter-Reay to the finish by 1.5009 seconds, giving Andretti Autosport its second consecutive 1-2 finish at the track, and the team's fifth win at the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234125-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250, Race\nThe win was Hinchcliffe's third of the season, making him the first three-race winner of the season, and was also his first on an oval. Tony Kanaan finished third, Ed Carpenter and Graham Rahal finished fourth and fifth, respectively. Simon Pagenaud, Oriol Servia, H\u00e9lio Castroneves, Marco Andretti, and E. J. Viso closed out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234125-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250, Race, Race results\nPoints include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234126-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nThe 2013 Iowa Hawkeyes football team represented the University of Iowa in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by 15th year head coach Kirk Ferentz and played their home games at Kinnick Stadium. They were a member of the Legends Division of the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 8\u20135, 5\u20133 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for second place in the Legends Division. They were invited to the Outback Bowl where they lost to LSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234126-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Regular season, at Nebraska\nIowa won for the first time in the series since 1981 and for the first time in Lincoln since 1943.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234127-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa State Cyclones football team\nThe 2013 Iowa State Cyclones football team represented Iowa State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Playing as a member of the Big 12 Conference (Big 12), the team was led by head coach Paul Rhoads, in his fifth year and played its home games at Jack Trice Stadium in Ames, Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234127-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa State Cyclones football team\nThe Cyclones played in record setting temperatures: the hottest Jack Trice Stadium game at 92\u00a0\u00b0F vs. Northern Iowa on August 31, 2013, and the coldest Jack Trice Stadium game at 8\u00a0\u00b0F for kickoff and 3\u00a0\u00b0F by the start of the second half vs. Kansas on November 23, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234127-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iowa State Cyclones football team\nOn December 1, 2013, offensive coordinator Courtney Messingham and running backs coach Kenith Pope were fired from their positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234128-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iran Futsal's 2nd Division\nThe 2013 Iranian Futsal 2nd Division will be divided into two phases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234128-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iran Futsal's 2nd Division\nThe league will also be composed of 20 teams divided into two divisions of 10 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 18 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup\nThe 2013 Irani Cup, also called 2013 Irani Trophy, was the 51st season of the Irani Cup, a first-class cricket competition in India. It was a one-off match which was played from 6 February 2013 to 10 February 2013 between the 2012\u201313 Ranji champions Mumbai and the Rest of India team. Wankhede Stadium, the home ground of Mumbai, hosted the match. The match was drawn and Rest of India retained the Irani Cup by virtue of their first innings lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup, Lead-up\nMumbai captain Ajit Agarkar was ruled out of the Irani Cup due to a groin injury. Allrounder Abhishek Nayar was named the captain of the side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 23], "content_span": [24, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup, Lead-up\nA stomach bug forced the RoI captain Virender Sehwag to sit out for the match, and Harbhajan Singh lead the team instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 23], "content_span": [24, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup, Scorecard\nFall of wickets: 1\u2013144 (Dhawan, 38.1 ov), 2\u2013222 (Tiwary, 58.6 ov), 3\u2013231 (Vijay, 62.6 ov), 4\u2013309 (Rayudu, 83.2 ov), 5\u2013330 (Saha, 88.5 ov), 6\u2013352 (Harbhajan, 94.4 ov), 7\u2013505 (Mithun, 122.4 ov), 8\u2013506 (Ojha, 123.6 ov), 9\u2013512 (Raina, 124.4 ov), 10\u2013526 (Pandey, 130.1 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 25], "content_span": [26, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup, Scorecard\nFall of wickets: 1\u201314 (Tare, 3.3 ov), 2\u2013146 (Jaffer, 39.2 ov), 3\u2013161 (Thakur, 44.1 ov), 4\u2013234 (Rahane, 64.5 ov), 5\u2013254 (Sharma, 70.4 ov), 6\u2013257 (Nayar, 73.4 ov), 7\u2013360 (Chavan, 99.4 ov), 8\u2013399 (Kulkarni, 110.4 ov), 9\u2013409 (Khan, 113.5 ov), 10\u2013409 (Dabholkar, 114.1 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 25], "content_span": [26, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup, Scorecard\nFall of wickets: 1\u20130 (Dhawan, 0.6 ov), 2\u201355 (Sreesanth, 17.6 ov), 3\u201367 (Vijay, 23.1 ov), 4\u2013207 (Tiwary, 72.2 ov), 5\u2013352 (Raina, 106.5 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 25], "content_span": [26, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup, Scorecard\nFall of Wickets:1-36 (Tare, 13.3 ov), 2-89 (Rahane, 27.3 ov), 3-104 (Sharma, 30.3 ov), 4-123 (Nayar 41.5 ov)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 25], "content_span": [26, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234129-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Irani Cup, Scorecard\nResult: Match Drawn; Rest of India won on 1st innings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 25], "content_span": [26, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping\nNour Ahmad Nikbakht, an administrative staff member of the Iranian Embassy in Sana'a, Yemen, was kidnapped by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in the Yemeni capital on 21 July 2013. He was held hostage for two years and released in March 2015 in exchange for five al-Qaeda leaders. Nikbakht was abducted while leaving his home in Sana'a by a gunman who was a member of al-Qaeda. He returned home safely on March 5, 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Abduction\nOn 21 July 2013, Nikbakht left his house in Sana'a and went to work. On his way to the embassy, unidentified gunmen blocked the road, forced him out of his car and abducted him, taking him to an unknown location. After he was liberated, Nour-Ahamd stated: \"I was kidnapped by unknown gunmen and terrorists as I left my home to go to work.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Abduction\nAccording to the Yemeni tribunal, Nour-Ahmad Nikbakht was held by al-Qaeda militants in an area between the southern provinces of Shabwa and Baida. Nour-Ahmad described his ordeal: \"I was in an extremely difficult situation and I did not know what was happening in the outside world.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Officials statements, Before release\nOn 14 August 2013, foreign ministry of Yemen claimed that it had no clues as to the whereabouts of the abducted Iranian diplomat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Officials statements, Before release\nHossein Amirabdollahian, deputy of foreign minister, mentioned that a special group was formed at the Iran and Yemen foreign ministry to solve this issue. Also, he said: \"the Yemeni government is responsible for the Iranian diplomat's safety and his safe return to the country.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Officials statements, Before release\nThe Iranian foreign ministry summoned the Yemeni charg\u00e9 d'affaires at the Tehran twice and announced that Yemen was responsible for Nikbakht's safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Officials statements, After release\nOne day before the release Iranian officials announced that Nikbakht is healthy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Officials statements, After release\nHossein Amirabdollahian, deputy of foreign minister, explained that intelligence officers did a difficult and complicated rescue operation in a very special area in Yemen. He did not give more details about the operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Officials statements, After release\nMahmoud Alavi, intelligence minister of Iran, declared that the rescue operation occurred with the fewest casualties. Also, Alavi said: \"Tehran had refused the conditions set by the terrorists\" for the diplomat's release.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234130-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping, Return\nOn March 5, 2015, he moved to Mehrabad international airport and returned to his family, where he was greeted by his family and some Iranian officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections\nThe Iranian local elections took place on 14 June 2013 to elected members of the fourth council of the City and Village Councils of Iran. This election was held by a general election with the presidential election. The original date of the election was in June 2010 but Parliament of Iran voted to increase age of the councils from 4 to 7 years. The councils began their work one month after the election to elect the new mayors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Background\nThe city and village councils are local establishments that are elected by public vote in all cities and villages across the country. Council members in each city or village are elected for a four-year term. The councils are tasked with helping the Islamic Republic\u2019s social, economic, cultural and educational advancement by encouraging public participation in social affairs. The city councils also elects city mayors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Registrations\nThe registration of candidates was toke place from 15 to 20 April 2013. The Guardian Council was announced the final candidates on 16 May 2013. The candidates that failed to enter to the election had a four days timeout for protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Members\nThe councils have 124,700 original members; with the allowance members, it reaches to 207,587 members. This is different from the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Election summary\nMinistry of Interior have announced that election will be held by electoral vote in fourteen provinces. The candidates can began their publicity from 6 June and it will be end 24 hours before the election. According to Interior Minister, Mostafa Mohammad Najjar a number of 352,165 persons have enrollment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Results, Provincial capitals\nKhabar Online published the results of the election in 9 major cities, according to electoral lists. Those who did not count as Principlist or Reformist, were Independents:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Results, Provincial capitals\nFars News Agency also published a detailed report for province capitals, with the results as following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Results, Provincial capitals\nProvince capital seats won by political factions according to Fars News Agency report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Highlights\nFor the first time in Iran, Sepanta Niknam, a Zoroastrian citizen was elected to the city council of Yazd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234131-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian local elections, Highlights\nIn another unprecedented event, Samiyeh Balochzehi, a Baloch Sunni woman was elected as a mayor in Iran, by the council of Kalat in Sistan and Baluchestan Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Iran on 14 June 2013. Hassan Rouhani won with a landslide victory, elected in the first round of voting with 50.71% of the vote. Tehran Mayor Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf finished second with 16.56% of the vote. Over 36.7 million Iranians voted, 72.71% of eligible voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election\nThe Guardian Council screened 680 registered candidates, approving eight to run in the election; Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel, Ali Akbar Velayati, Saeed Jalili, Mohsen Rezaee, Mohammad Gharazi, Hassan Rouhani and Mohammad Reza Aref. Haddad-Adel and Aref later withdrew from the race in the days leading up to the election. Incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was not able to run for re-election as he was limited to two terms or 8 years in office under the Iranian constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Electoral system\nThe President of Iran is the country's highest directly elected official, the chief of the executive branch, and the second most important position after the Supreme Leader. Duties are similar to heads of governments in other countries, except that the armed forces, Chief judiciary system, state television, and other key governmental organizations are under the control of the Supreme Leader of Iran. It is also an informal custom that cabinet ministers for sensitive departments like foreign relations and intelligence are coordinated with the Supreme Leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Electoral system\nAny Iranian citizen born in Iran, believing in God and the official religion of Iran (Islam), who has always been loyal to the Constitution and is above 21 years of age may register as a presidential candidate. An institution called the Election Monitoring Agency (EMA) and managed by the Guardian Council vets registered candidates (in the 2009 election 36,000 people signed up as candidates) and selects a handful to run in the election. The Guardian Council does not announce publicly the reason for rejections of particular candidates although those reasons are explained to each candidate. Females who register as candidates have invariably been excluded from standing for election by the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Electoral system, Electoral law\nOne of the issues that has been raised in the pre-election debate over electoral reforms, especially regarding enforcement, situations of candidates. Executive of elections under previous law was ministry of interior (Government) and there were statements about changing of maintaining law. In addition, the law provided that the candidates must be political men and the meaning of men was not known. The changes began after the protests to the previous election. According to Iranian law, candidates more than 75 years old are eligible to run but their health issues must be checked by the Guardian Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Electoral system, Electoral law\nThe new act of the elections was approved by the parliament on 17 December 2012 and was signified by speaker of the parliament, Ali Larijani, to the president for official implementation. Some of the changes are explained:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Electoral system, Electoral Commission\nFor the first time in the history of Iranian presidential elections, a commission of eleven persons (three legal, seven experts, and one from parliament) supervised the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Candidates\nRegistration for candidates took place from 7 to 11 May 2013. Registered candidates' qualifications were then reviewed by the Guardian Council. On 21 May 2013 eight candidates were approved for placement on the ballot. BBC News commented that all eight approved candidates were \"considered hardline conservatives,\" with reformist candidates, notably former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, having been barred from standing. In contrast, Lebanon's Daily Star newspaper described attempts by former presidents Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami to unite behind one or the other of two \"reformist candidates,\" Hassan Rouhani and Mohammad Reza Aref. Two of the eight, Aref and Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel, withdrew from the race on 10 and 11 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Candidates, Withdrawn, During the electoral campaign\nThe following two candidates registered for the election and their nominations were approved by the Guardian Council, but withdrew their candidacies during the electoral campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Candidates, Withdrawn, Before the electoral campaign\nThe following candidates registered for the election campaign but withdrew their candidacies before the electoral campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Candidates, Rejected\nThe following candidates registered for the election but their nominations were rejected by the Guardian Council. All thirty registered female candidates were promptly disqualified on constitutional grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Candidates, Declined\nThe following people did not register for the election and declined to enter the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Endorsements\nWhile Rouhani is a high-ranking member of the Combatant Clergy Association, his candidacy in the election was not supported by CCA which has conservative tendency. He was supported by some moderate and reformist parties such as Moderation and Development Party and Islamic Iran Participation Front as well as Iranian reform movement's umbrella organization, Council for coordinating the Reforms Front. Rouhani's motto in the election is \"E'tedal\" which is translated to \"Moderation\" and he is described as a moderate politician by some western sources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, Debates\nFrom 25 May to 12 June 2013, each of the eight final candidates has the right to use National TV and Radio (IRIB) for their presidential election campaigns. In total, each candidate will use 405 minutes on Public TV and 285 minutes on Public Radio. This time comprises the candidates' own campaign programs as well as participation in the specific discussion shows. In addition, there will be three main live group debates on TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, Debates\nThe debates are held in three chapters: the first was held on 31 May, and second on 5 May and third on 7 May between all eight candidates. They differed from the previous election debates, which were held person-by-person. The 2013 debates and TV shows are moderated by Morteza Heidari and Hassan Abedini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, Debates\nThe following table shows the programme details and the time schedule for each candidate in Iranian Public TV. The times given are the local time (UTC +4:30 IRDT).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, Debates\n1 The first one-hour TV program of Mohammad-Reza Aref was cut after 15 minutes and did not continue. Later, the program was completely shown again on Friday, 31 May 2013.2 Haddad and Aref's programs were not shown because they withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, State limits on the campaign\nOn 9 June Brigadier General Seyyed Masoud Jazayeri, Deputy Chief of Joint Armed Forces Headquarters and head of the Defense Propaganda Headquarters, \"warned\" a \"few of the candidates\" that \"we have warned before that it's better that candidates express their opinions within the framework of presidency's authority, and avoid entering in those issues related to security or the armed forces.\" Jazayeri added that the Pasdaran will confront those candidates \"who have spread untrue information and painted a black picture [of the regime], after the election.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, State limits on the campaign\nAccording to the Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, Jazayeri was \"alluding to the two reformist candidates in the race, Mohammad Reza Aref and Hassan Rouhani\". (Aref withdrew from the race 11 June)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, State limits on the campaign\nAlso according to the Campaign, \"several political activists and campaign workers have been arrested at political rallies, at their work places, and at their homes\" since the beginning of June. In addition, \"journalists and activists who had been imprisoned after the 2009 elections\" and were later released on furlough \"have been recalled to prison in the month leading to the election\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Campaign, State limits on the campaign\nIn the run-up to the election, the internet was drastically slowed down with poor connectivity and since March virtual private networks have been blocked, resulting in the inability of Iranians to access thousands of foreign websites, as well as Twitter and Facebook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Opinion polls\nThe main online polls began after announcement of candidates' final list. The polls are divided into three main groups: field polls, telephone polls and internet polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Opinion polls, IPOS polls\nAs one of the few telephone polling systems in Iran, IPOS (Iranian Elections Tracking Polls) institute ran a daily poll system for the election, by claiming that they have the only official poll system in Iranian presidential election. The poll is based on the daily phone interviews with a sample size of around 1,000 people per day. The poll also reported that between 60 and 75% of the people confirmed they will participate in the presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Opinion polls, IPOS polls\nOn 6 June 2013 Ghalibaf held a strong lead in the poll with the support of 39% of decided voters. However, the poll notified that 57% of voters are undecided, meaning that the poll result can be changed easily. Rezaee and Jalili had the second and third place with 16.8 and 13.9% of decided voters respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Opinion polls, IPOS polls\nOn 10 June 2013 Ghalibaf still held a lead in the presidential race, but this time with the support of 27% of decided voters. Ghalibaf votes has started to decrease after the third national TV debate held on 7 June 2013. The percentage of undecided voters decreased to 47%. Jalili and Rezaee had the second and third place with 16.5 and 16% of decided voters respectively. Rouhani's votes started to increase after the third national TV debate reaching from 8 to 14%. After Aref's withdrawal on 11 June 2013 and decreasing the undecided voters percentage, some significant changes in the percentages are expected in the following days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Opinion polls, IPOS polls\nOn 12 June 2013 Rouhani made a notable lead in the presidential race, reaching 32% of decided votes. Ghalibaf votes has continued to decrease to 24.4% of decided voters. The percentage of undecided voters decreased to 42%. Jalili, Rezaee and Velayati had the third to fifth place with a rally small margin of difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Opinion polls, IPOS polls\nOn 13 June 2013 in the final results, Rouhani reached 38% of decided votes. Ghalibaf votes remained on 25% of decided voters. The percentage of undecided voters decreased to 38.7%. Rezaee, Jalili and Velayati were in third to fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results\nAccording to the Ministry of Interior, 50,483,192 were eligible to vote in the first round. Over 66,000 polling stations were set up across the country. Expatriates were able to vote in 285 polling stations set-up in their respective countries. Due to its massive population, Tehran Province had the highest number of polling stations with over 17,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results\nAt 20:30 local time, the ministry announced Rouhani as the new president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results\nSplit percentages are from the Ministry of Interior of Iran, based on all votes cast. This is because 50%+ of all votes is needed to win the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results, Votes by provinces\nThe table below displays the official vote tallies by province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results, Turnout\nOfficials said over 72 percent of over 50 million eligible Iranians turned out to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results, Reactions\nPrior to the election, the Foreign Ministry's spokesperson, Abbas Araghchi accused France and the United States of interfering in the electoral process after the two countries' officials criticised the nomination process and the disqualifications. Hours after the announcement of preliminary results, Ali Akbar Velayati and Mohammad Gharazi both conceded their loss in the election and congratulated the president-elect. Mohammad Reza Aref, the withdrawing candidate also published via his Twitter account, congratulating the new president and thanked people for voting for the reform movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results, Reactions\nHassan Rouhani, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Mohsen Rezaee's campaigns also thanked the nation on their high participation in the election. Tehran Stock Exchange's index also reached more than 46,000 units that was highest since February 2013. Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei also congratulated Rouhani on his election as new president of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234132-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election, Results, Inauguration\nThe inauguration of Hassan Rouhani as the 7th President of Iran took place on two rounds, first on Saturday 3 August 2013 whereby he received his presidential precept from Supreme Leader and entered to the Sa'dabad Palace, official residence of the president in a private ceremony. The second was on the next day with sworn in for the office in the Parliament of Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates\nThe Iranian presidential election debates of 2013 was held from 31 May to 7 June. For the 2013 election, the IRIB has approved three televised debates with all candidates, different from last election's format which was person-by-person. For each question, one candidate was chosen randomly to give his response. Then, other candidates shared their ideas. The eight candidates was explained their cultural and political plans during debates. The debates was focused on such issues as economy, foreign policy, and Iran\u2019s comprehensive talks with the P5+1 group (United Kingdom, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany) over the country\u2019s nuclear energy program. More than 45,000,000 people world-wide watched the debates according to IRIB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Debates, The first debate\nThe first televised debate was held on May 31 at 4 PM UTC+4:30 in the Channel 1. All eight candidates were invited. The host of the first debates was Morteza Heidari. The first lottery was selected by a lottery based on a question which was answered within 3 minutes. Within 90 seconds of talk, then 7 others criticize him or his views were expressed. The selected person within 2 minutes to answer incoming criticism and the view was perfect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Debates, The first debate, Questions\nAt the end of the round, each candidate paid within 90 seconds to sum up his views.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Debates, The second debate\nThe second televised debate took place on June 5 on Channel 1. Morteza Heidari also hosted the second debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Debates, The second debate, Format change\nThe second and third sections (test questions and pictures slide) was removed for the second and third debates and time of answering was changed up to seven minutes. Designing of the program was also changed. Save the time he also was added to the system, regardless of where each candidate could have the opportunity to criticize others and save time for other questions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Debates, The second debate, Reactions\nAfter Rouhani named Mohammad-Reza Shajarian as the cultural ambassador of the Iranian people, it was given the vast in the social medias. Gharazi was also more focused by the medias. Jalili's instrumental pieces Zarfiyat was also joked and his cultural views was heavily criticized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Debates, The third debate\nThe third and last televised debate toke place on June 5 in the Channel 1. The host of debate remains unchanged. This debate passionately than the other two debates had. The conflict between Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Hassan Rouhani about July 1999 student protest was one of the main subjects of the debate. They also discuss about Syrian civil war and Arab spring. Independent Mohammad Gharazi also criticized conservatives and reformists mutuality with each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Debates, The third debate, Reactions\nAli Akbar Salehi, Iran's Foreign minister said that Iran's policies about Nuclear program will not changed despite anyone will be elected as the president, According to the candidates' ideologies about it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234133-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Iranian presidential election debates, Polls for Debates Winner\nThe following polls are held right after each debate in order to define the debate winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections\nGovernorate or provincial elections were held in Iraq on 20 April 2013, to replace the local councils in the governorates of Iraq that were elected in the Iraqi governorate elections of 2009. Elections took place in 12 of Iraq's 18 governorates. Elections didn't take place in the 3 governorates forming the Kurdistan Region or Kirkuk, Anbar, or Nineveh, meaning that a total of 378 provincial council seats were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections\nThe Iraqi government later decided on 19 March to delay the elections in the governorates of Anbar and Nineveh due to ongoing instability caused by the insurgency and the ongoing protests, prompting criticism from Muqtada al-Sadr and John Kerry. Elections for Anbar and Nineveh were held on 20 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Electoral Law\nThere have been several disputes about the electoral law that is to be used for the election. The current electoral law, which was also used in the 2009 election, states that if certain parties don't get enough votes, their votes and seats are given to the larger parties. In the 2009 election this led to many smaller parties failing to take any seats. Because of the disproportionate affect this law had on smaller parties, the Supreme Court of Iraq declared the law unconstitutional, as it restricted democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Electoral Law\nIn spite of this ruling, and mostly due to the fact that because the law benefits the largest parties they have little incentive to change it, the law has yet to be changed. If not changed, the unconstitutional nature of the law however would make the 2013 election results vulnerable to a legal challenge. As a result, although this does not currently effect the work of the Independent High Electoral Commission, IHEC has been calling on the Iraqi government to pass changes to the law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Electoral Law\nIn response to this, on 13 December 2012 the Iraqi parliament voted to adopt the Sainte-Lagu\u00eb method as the new electoral method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Participants\nParties and candidates wishing to stand for election had to register by the deadline of 25 November 2012. By the time of the deadline 243 entities, including 16 independent candidates, had registered, with some of the entities registering to participate for the first time. As a result of the large number of applications submitted for the registration of political coalitions for the election, IHEC decided to extend the deadline for submissions from the 13th to the 18th of December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Participants\nOne of the biggest changes to the political coalitions taking part is the fact that the State of Law Coalition has expanded from its traditional supporters, with former opponents such as the Badr Organization, the National Reform Trend, the Islamic Virtue Party, and the secular Shiite White Iraqiya Bloc all joining the coalition for the election. Despite the massive size of the coalition, it is exclusively Shiite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Participants\nAccording to IHEC, a total of 8,224 candidates registered to run in the elections, including 131 candidates who have since been barred by IHEC from running due to their ties to the Iraqi Ba'ath Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Preliminary results\nAccording to preliminary results from the 12 governorates were elections were held, Nouri al-Maliki's expanded State of Law Coalition would come in first place with 115 seats, second would come ISCI with 80 seats and Sadr Movement would win 50.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234134-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Iraqi governorate elections, Preliminary results\nWith 87-90% of the vote counted, the results were as following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234135-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ireland rugby union tour of Canada and United States\nIn June 2013, Ireland toured North America, playing test matches against Canada and the United States. The tour was part of the second year of the global rugby calendar established by World Rugby (known as the International Rugby Board prior to November 2014), which will run until 2019, with Ireland helping to expand Test opportunities for Tier 2 nations in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234135-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ireland rugby union tour of Canada and United States, Touring squad\nCaps and ages are to first test date, 8 June", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234135-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ireland rugby union tour of Canada and United States, Touring squad\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234135-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ireland rugby union tour of Canada and United States, Touring squad, Notes\nPre tour and post 2013 Six Nations Championship, the then head coach Declan Kidney, was sacked from his role as head coach of Ireland. Leinster's head coach Joe Schmidt was named as Kidney's replacement, but will be unable to fill the role for Ireland's Summer Tour. Therefore, assistant head coach Les Kiss, was named as interim head coach for the Summer Tour to Canada and United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 79], "content_span": [80, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234135-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ireland rugby union tour of Canada and United States, Touring squad, Notes\nThe initial squad was named on 19 May 2014, with Rory Best as captain. It was a significantly weaker squad due to a number of regular Irish players in the British & Irish Lions squad for their 2013 tour to Australia. The squad then lost their original captain, Rory Best, on 26 May, due to a call to the Lions squad. Peter O'Mahony was named as his replacement in terms of captaincy, and Se\u00e1n Cronin filled the void left in the hookers. Ahead of the test against Canada, Ireland then lost Simon Zebo to the Lions. Zebo who has started in the test against the United States, was not replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 79], "content_span": [80, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234136-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish Greyhound Derby\nThe 2013 Irish Greyhound Derby took place during August and September with the final being held at Shelbourne Park in Dublin on 14 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234136-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish Greyhound Derby\nThe winner Slippery Robert won \u20ac120,000 and was trained by Robert Gleeson, owned and bred by Larry Dunne. The race was sponsored by the UK-based independent finance company Enterprise Target Solutions (ETS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234136-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nDefending champion Skywalker Puma, Ballymac Vic, Droopys Jet and recent Champions Stakes winner Paradise Madison were the leading contenders for the 2013 Irish Derby. The English threat came in the form of Holdem Spy. A mandatory first round acted as a trial because only 16 from 120 would be eliminated which was lucky for Ballymac Vic who could only finish fifth but still qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234136-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nIn round two only Paradise Madison, Kereight King and Tyrur Sugar Ray remained unbeaten. Skywalker Puma who had impressed in the first round finished badly lame and was withdrawn. Kereight King posted the best third round time and became the new favourite but all the major names also progressed. The event was set for very competitive quarter finals but suffered a double blow before they started. The English hope Holdem Spy had suffered a hock injury when winning previously and Ballymac Vic gashed his foot at his home kennels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234136-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nThe first three quarter finals were won by Cabra Buck, Hawaii Kinsale and Isabels Boy win the first three heats, Droopys Jet was eliminated but Ballymac Vic qualified but ran under par with his patched up foot. The fourth heat contained Kereight King, Paradise Madison, Ringtown Snowy and Tyrur Sugar Ray and it was Kereight King confirming his favourite tag who won the race. Tyrur Sugar Ray ran well again to finish second but Paradise Madison and Ringtown Snowy failed to progress. Pat Curtin's Kereight King was now clear favourite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234136-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nThe semi-final were as expected, Tyrur Sugar Ray won the weaker heat from Slippery Robert and Carrowgarriff and Cabra Buck continued his good run defeating Kereight King and Ballymac Vic. After the draw for the final it was revealed that Kereight King had broken a toe and Ballymac Vic had split his foot again. It meant a five dog final and Ballymac Vic would not be at his best.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234136-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nIf the unnecessary first round had been cancelled it would have been likely that both Kereight King and Ballymac Vic could have competed in the final at their best. The five runner race saw Slippery Robert gain victory after taking the lead at the third bend from Cabra Buck. The under par Ballymac Vic held up the gambled Tyrur Sugar Ray at the first bend ending his chances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234137-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish budget\nThe 2013 Irish budget was the Irish Government budget for the 2013 fiscal year, presented to D\u00e1il \u00c9ireann on 5 December 2012. It was the second budget of the 31st D\u00e1il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234137-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish budget\nThe budget saw the introduction of the Local Property Tax at rates of 0.18% per annum and 0.25% per annum. Child benefit will be cut by \u20ac10 a month with \u20ac61m cuts in other household benefits. College fees will also rise in the next year by \u20ac250 a student while motor tax will also increase. A packet of 20 cigarettes increases by 10-cent while excise duty on a pint or beer or cider will increase by 10-cent, on a standard measure of spirits by 10-cent, and on a bottle of wine by \u20ac1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234137-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish budget\nOn 13 December 2012, Labour Party TD Colm Keaveney voted against the government on cuts to the respite care grant leading to his loss of the Parliamentary Labour Party whip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums\nTwo constitutional referendums were held simultaneously in Ireland on 4 October 2013. The Thirty-second Amendment of the Constitution Bill 2013 proposed abolishing the Seanad, the upper house of the Oireachtas, and was rejected despite opinion polls to the contrary, while the Thirty-third Amendment of the Constitution Bill 2013 proposed the establishment of a Court of Appeal to sit between the High Court and the Supreme Court, taking over the existing appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, and was approved by voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\nGoverning coalition members Fine Gael and Labour Party supported abolishing the Seanad citing a 20 million euros reduction in spending and fewer politicians, meanwhile Fianna F\u00e1il opposed the proposal on the grounds that voters should \"demand real reform\". Democracy Matters opposed the measure citing it as a power grab; more specifically, they referenced the biggest majority for a government coalition ever. It also pointed to five reasons to vote no: real reform, accountability, revive the economy, defend the constitution of Ireland and protecting rights. Sinn F\u00e9in also supported the motion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\nTaoiseach Enda Kenny said the abolition would result in a leaner, more effective and more accountable system of government. Due to representation for large number of religious minorities (Protestants) in the first few Senate sessions, it has been a voice of Northern Ireland in introducing their perspective to national government. At the time, there were a large number of Protestant representative for the Roman Catholic majority. As such former senators Seamus Mallon (former Social Democratic and Labour Party MLA), Maurice Hayes (former Northern Ireland Ombudsman) and John Robb opposed the measure of abolition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\nRobb said that the abolition could \"exclude the possibility of northern input into southern politics. I think it is very important to sustain that link, and it will not be sustained at political level, except by party politics blowing across the so-called border;\" Mallon added that representation of six-county Northern Ireland was \"very valuable\" but that it should be from a \"broader base. If you're simply going to have input from people in the mainstream party politics then it defeats its own purpose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\nThere has been a huge reluctance on unionists to take nominations to the senate, that's a fact of life.\" Hayes added: It (the Seanad) might not have stopped a bill but it has certainly improved a lot of bills. [ While it is] hard to defend the senate in its present form, [something is needed to] keep a curb [on government ministers]. The D\u00e1il is dominated by whichever government is in power, and there's no check on them really at all.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0002-0003", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\nHe cited the dismissal of TD Lucinda Creighton from her ministerial post the same year for voting against party policy on the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act 2013 as evidence of suppressing independent opinions by the whip system. As such, he also noted that as a senator he had voted against Bertie Ahern, even though Ahern nominated him. Mallon said similarly that he \"didn't go to the senate to take up a party whip. John Robb and myself are very clear about this, we went there as independents, we spoke as independents and we voted as independents. [ The Seanad offered] a new layer of both academic and technical and political expertise. [ It needs more people] from different walks of life.\" Yet, he conceded that \"I'm afraid it will be passed and I'm afraid the Seanad will become a historical memory.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\nGreen Party MEP Patricia McKenna supported Democracy Matters' campaign saying that there was a lack of balance in the campaign with a disproportionate amount of funding for the advocates on the government side but that the Referendum Commission was doing its best to inform voters but was limited as it could not advocate for either side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\n\"A Yes vote will block any possibility for the Seanad to be reformed into an effective checks and balance mechanism that might protect the rights of interest groups and citizens across the board. With Ireland currently under massive financial obligations to the IMF and the EU/ECB, this is not the time to dismantle our current constitutional structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Campaign\nThere was never a time in our history when we needed scrutiny and accountability more than now and it beggars belief that most political parties are willing to support a decision which will allow for the easier passage of controversial legislation most of which emanates from the EU. Compared to Scandinavian courtiers, Germany and many of the new member states, Ireland\u2019s has one of the least effective scrutiny systems of EU legislation within the EU. A reformed Seanad could provide real potential to correct this weakness in Ireland\u2019s oversight of EU policy making.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234138-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Irish constitutional referendums, Results, Abolition of the Seanad, Reactions\nKenny's reaction included that he was \"personally disappointed\" but that \"sometimes in politics you get a wallop in the electoral process. I accept the verdict of the people... It is not about parties, it is not about leaders, it is not about government because there wasn't a government campaign here. It was the people's day and the people's decision and that's the people's absolute right and I think from that point of view this is the ultimate exercise in democracy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 82], "content_span": [83, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234139-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman 70.3 World Championship\nThe 2013 Ironman 70.3 World Championship was a triathlon competition that was held at Lake Las Vegas in Henderson, Nevada on September 8, 2013. The event was won by German Sebastian Kienle and Australian Melissa Hauschildt. The championship was organized by the World Triathlon Corporation (WTC) and was the culmination of the Ironman 70.3 series of events that occurred from August 19, 2012 through August 11, 2013. Athletes, both professional and amateur, earned a spot in the championship race by qualifying in races throughout the 70.3 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234139-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman 70.3 World Championship\nThis was the final year of the championship event being held in the Las Vegas area. In 2014, the championship race will begin changing locations each year. This is in contrast to having an annual recurring championship in one location as in the past with Las Vegas and Clearwater, Florida. The annual Las Vegas race will remain in place for 2014 but will be renamed the Ironman 70.3 Silverman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234139-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman 70.3 World Championship, Qualification\nThe 2013 Ironman 70.3 Series featured 61 events that enabled qualification to the 2013 World Championship event. Professional triathletes qualified for the championship race by competing in races during the qualifying period, earning points towards their pro rankings. An athlete\u2019s five highest scoring races were counted toward their pro rankings. The top 50 males and top 35 females in the pro rankings qualified for the championship race. Professional athletes were also eligible for prize purses at each qualifying event, which ranged in total size from $15,000 to $200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234139-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman 70.3 World Championship, Qualification\nAmateur triathletes could qualify for the championship race by earning a qualifying slot at one of the qualifying events. At qualifying events, slots were allocated to each age group category, male and female, with the number of slots given out based on that category's proportional representation of the overall field. Each age group category would be tentatively allocated one qualifying spot in each qualifying event. Some 70.3 events also served as qualifiers for the full Ironman World Championships in Hawaii.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234139-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman 70.3 World Championship, Qualification, Qualifying Ironman 70.3 events\n\u2020Also serves as a 2013 Ironman World Championship qualifier. \u2021Also serves as a 2013 Ironman World Championship handcycle qualifier", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 83], "content_span": [84, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234139-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman 70.3 World Championship, Qualification, Qualifying Ironman 70.3 events\nThe Ironman 70.3 Switzerland race was canceled due to weather. The race was initially changed to a duathlon due to cold temperatures preventing the swim portion from taking place. However, rain in the region caused both a landslide and a falling tree to obstruct the bike course forcing race organizers to cancel the race entirely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 83], "content_span": [84, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234140-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman World Championship\nThe 2013 Ironman World Championship was a long distance triathlon competition that was held on October 12, 2013 in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii. The event was won by Belgium's Frederik Van Lierde and Australia's Mirinda Carfrae. It was the 37th edition of the Ironman World Championship, which has been held annually in Hawaii since 1978. The championship is organized by the World Triathlon Corporation (WTC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234140-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman World Championship, Championship results, Women\nCarfrae broke Chrissie Wellington's course record of 8:54:02 set in 2009. She also lowered her own marathon course record of 2:52:09 set in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234140-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman World Championship, Qualification\nFor entry into the 2013 World Championship race, amateur athletes were required to qualify through a performance at an Ironman or selected Ironman 70.3 race. Entry into the championship race could also be obtained through a random allocation lottery or through the Ironman\u2019s charitable eBay auction. The division of athletes was divided into professional, age group, physically challenged, and hand cycle divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234140-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman World Championship, Qualification\nFor professional triathletes, the 2013 championship season marked the third year of a point system that determined which professional triathletes would qualify for the championship race. To qualify, points were earned by competing in WTC sanctioned Ironman and Ironman 70.3 events throughout the qualifying year. For the 2013 championship race that period is September 1, 2012 to August 31, 2013. The top 50 male and top 35 female pros in points at the end of the qualifying year qualified to race in Kona. An athlete's five highest scoring races were counted in the point totals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234140-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Ironman World Championship, Qualification\nAt least one Ironman race must have been completed and only three Ironman 70.3 races count towards an athlete's overall point total. Prior champions received an automatic entry for the Championship race for a period of five years after their last championship performance provided that they competed in at least one full-distance Ironman race during the qualifying year. Their entry did not count toward the number of available qualifying spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234140-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman World Championship, Qualification\nThe Ironman 2013 series consisted of 27 Ironman races plus the 2012 Ironman World Championship which was itself a qualifier for the 2013 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234140-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ironman World Championship, YWC Sports purchase\nIn June 2013, World Triathlon Corporation purchased YWC Sports, a private company that organizes triathlons and endurance sport events in Denmark. YWC Sports was contracted by the Challenge Family, a competing brand of WTC's Ironman races, to produce the long distance triathlon races Challenge Copenhagen and Challenge Aarhus. However, Challenge Family CEO Felix Walchsh\u00f6fer did not wish to have WTC produce a Challenge licensed event and therefore terminated YWC's agreement stating that the sale to WTC constituted a breach of contract. As a result, the Challenge Copenhagen race, which was scheduled to race in August 2013, was rebranded as Ironman Copenhagen and 50 qualifying spots were offered up for the 2013 Ironman World Championships. Challenge Aarhus was replaced by Ironman 70.3 Aarhus and took place in June 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234141-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Irwin Tools Night Race\nThe 2013 Irwin Tools Night Race was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on August 24, 2013, at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee. Contested over 500 laps, it was the twenty-fourth race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Matt Kenseth of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his fifth victory of the season, while Kasey Kahne finished second. Juan Pablo Montoya, Brian Vickers, and Joey Logano rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234141-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Irwin Tools Night Race, Report\nDenny Hamlin took the pole and led the first 22 laps. After being passed by Kurt Busch, Hamlin would fall back to mid-field. Busch would lead most of the laps until lap 81, when he came down pit road for a loose wheel and was given a pass-through for speeding. Carl Edwards and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. shared the lead during the next two stints, before Clint Bowyer passed Earnhardt for the lead on lap 126. Bowyer led until getting spun on lap 176, causing the fourth caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234141-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Irwin Tools Night Race, Report\nEdwards retook the lead, showing the way until being passed by Matt Kenseth on lap 236. After a lap 259 debris caution, Kenseth was caught speeding on pit road and relegated to the back, while Paul Menard stayed out to take the lead. Edwards once again claimed the lead on lap 322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234141-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Irwin Tools Night Race, Report\nKevin Harvick took the lead after the seventh caution on lap 335, but he was quickly passed by Edwards on lap 344. Edwards held the lead through two more cautions, but dropped a cylinder on lap 380 and blew his engine on lap 389. Kenseth held the lead through most of the final 120 laps and held off a final 10-lap charge by Kasey Kahne to score his fifth victory of the season. Juan Pablo Montoya finished third, and Brian Vickers and Joey Logano rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234141-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Irwin Tools Night Race, Report\nEleven caution flags waved during the race, three of which were for debris. Drivers involved in seven, mostly minor, crashes included Ryan Truex, Josh Wise, Clint Bowyer, Tony Raines, Jimmie Johnson, David Reutimann, Aric Almirola, and Jeff Burton. The eleventh caution on lap 448, as Hamlin blew a tire and ran into Ryan Newman, causing a large crash also involving Brad Keselowski, Martin Truex, Jr., Terry Labonte, David Stremme, Casey Mears, David Ragan and Kevin Harvick. After the crash, Harvick stopped for a few moments in Hamlin's pitbox preventing the #11 to access his box. Truex, Jr. suffered a broken wrist after the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234142-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Isiolo local elections\nLocal elections were held in Isiolo County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234142-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Isiolo local elections, Gubernatorial election, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234143-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamabad hostage crisis\nOn August 15, 2013, a hostage crisis occurred in Islamabad, Pakistan, in the Blue Area of the city. Malik Muhammed Sikander took one woman and two children hostage, purported to be his wife and children. The event ended after six hours due to the intervention of Zamarud Khan and the shooting of Sikander.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234143-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamabad hostage crisis, Background\nIslamabad had been on high alert for the ten days preceding the event, as intelligence suggested a high likelihood of terrorist activity. The week prior to the crisis, the Quetta mosque attack had taken place, however the police quickly eliminated this as an organized terrorist operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234143-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamabad hostage crisis, Event\nOn August 15, 2013, Malik Muhammad Sikandar stole a car and eluded several police officers. He eventually drove into the middle of Constitution Avenue. Police on the scene were initially unable to arrest the man. According to Inspector General of Police Sikandar Hayat, the gunman made seven demands during early negotiations, including the imposition of Shariah in the country and safe passage for his family. Some demands were illegal and others beyond the ability of police to provide. The police conducted several rounds of negotiations without result. The incident was televised live over a six-hour period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234143-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamabad hostage crisis, Event\nSeveral politicians attempted to negotiate with the hostage-taker, without success. Zamarud Khan was also watching the situation and travelled to the scene where he obtained permission to approach the gunman. Khan approached the family and exchanged a few words with the gunman. While shaking hands with the children, Khan made a sudden attempt to capture the man, but lost his footing. The gunman fired several shots, but Khan escaped injury. Khan rushed towards the children and moved them away from danger. Available police then fired at the gunman's legs, injuring him, and he fell to the ground. He was arrested and taken to hospital for treatment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234144-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamic Solidarity Games\nThe 3rd Islamic Solidarity Games was an international sporting event held in Palembang, Indonesia from 22 September to 1 October 2013. The 2009 event, originally scheduled to take place in Iran, and later re-scheduled for April 2010, was cancelled after a dispute arose between Iran and the Arab countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234144-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamic Solidarity Games, Participating Nations\nThere are 57 nations participating in 2013 Islamic Solidarity Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234144-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamic Solidarity Games, Sports bikini controversy\nThe Games faced a controversy over female athletes competing in sports bikinis. Some participating nations demanded that all sportswomen competing in the athletics, beach volleyball and swimming events wear body-covering sporting outfits instead of the usual, functional and official sports bikinis regulated by international rules. In some countries of the Muslim world, sporting suits for women called burqini, which cover the whole body except the face, the hands and the feet, are in use in accordance with Islamic culture. Furthermore, some countries asked the organizers to run the male and female events on separate days. Both regulations were applied in the first edition of the Games held in Saudi Arabia in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234144-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Islamic Solidarity Games, Sports bikini controversy\nThe organizing committee refused to fully comply with the demands stating that only the countries ruled by Islamic governments among the 44 participants with Muslim population opposed the two-piece sporting outfits standardized in international sports dress code. The organizers ruled that the use of sports bikinis is set optional so that sportswomen may wear religious-based outfits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234145-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Island Games\nThe XV Island Games (also known as the 2013 NatWest Island Games for sponsorship reasons) were held in Bermuda from 13 to 19 July 2013. Bermuda was selected to host the Games by default after Prince Edward Island withdrew from the International Island Games Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234145-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Island Games\nIt was the first time that the games were held outside Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234145-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Island Games, Participating islands\n22 island entities of the IIGA from Europe, South Atlantic and the Caribbean area competed in these games. Rhodes and Sark declined their invitations to the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234145-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Island Games, Sports\nNumbers in parentheses indicate the number of medal events contested in each sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234146-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Anglesey County Council election\nAn election to the Isle of Anglesey County Council was held as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections and took place on 2 May 2013. Anglesey was the only Welsh authority voting in 2013, the election having been postponed from 2012 by the Welsh Government, in order to allow an electoral review to take place. The next full council election took place on 4 May 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234146-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Anglesey County Council election, Boundary review\nUnder The Isle of Anglesey (Electoral Arrangements) Order 2012, thirty seats (a reduction from the previous 40) were created, from eleven (previously 40) electoral divisions, by the Local Government Boundary Commission for Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234146-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Anglesey County Council election, Overall results\nTurnout for the election was 50.5% of eligible voters. Independent councillors won more seats than any other group, but Plaid Cymru made strong gains, saying they would find it difficult to work with the independent group and hoped to form an alliance with Labour. The island's Returning Officer described democracy on the island as being \"invigorated\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT\nThe 2013 Isle of Man TT Races were held between the Saturday 25 May and Friday 7 June 2013 on the 37.73-mile Isle of Man TT Mountain Course in the Isle of Man. The event celebrated the 90th anniversary of the first Sidecar TT with a special parade lap for racing sidecar outfits. The 2013 Isle of Man TT Festival also included the Pre-TT Classic Races on 24, 25 & 27 May 2013 and the Post-TT Races on 8 June 2013 and both events held on the Billown Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT\nThe Blue Riband event of race meeting the Senior TT race was won by John McGuinness and raising his tally of victories to 20 Isle of Man TT wins and also breaking the outright course record in the Superbike TT with a lap at an average speed of 131.671. The event was dominated by Michael Dunlop winning the Superbike TT race, Supersport TT Races 1 & 2, the Superstock TT and the Joey Dunlop TT Championship with 120 points from John McGuinness and Bruce Anstey in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT\nThe Sidecar TT race produced a maiden Isle of Man TT wins for the two former Sidecar World Champions with Tim Reeves / Dan Sayle winning Sidecar TT Race 1 and Ben Birchall / Tim Birchall winning Sidecar TT Race 2. The Lightweight TT for 650cc twin-cylinder motor-cycles produced another maiden win for James Hillier and Michael Rutter scored a hattrick or wins in the TT Zero class for electric powered motor-cycles after winning for the third consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT\nThe Senior TT race was red-flagged on the first lap after Isle of Man TT newcomer Jonathan Howarth crashed at the bottom of Bray Hill and 10 spectators were injured in the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT\nNews was also made when James May completed a lap on a sidecar outfit built entirely from meccano. This was televised as part of his Toy Stories series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Practice Week\nThe first part of practice week was dominated by inclement weather with Monday and the Wednesday evening practice run as untimed sessions. The Tuesday session cancelled due to heavy rain showers and the Friday evening was session red-flagged for 50 minutes for the Isle of Man Fire Service to attend a house fire in Kirk Michael village. To provide sufficient practice for competitors the first part of Saturday race day was run as an extended practice session. The first race of the 2013 Isle of Man TT races was the rescheduled Sidecar TT Race 1 and the Superbike TT held over to next day and run on Sunday afternoon for the first time since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Practice Week\nThe Japanese competitor Yoshinari Matsushita crashed fatally at Ballacrye Corner near Ballaugh during the Monday evening practice causing the session to be abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Sidecar TT Race 1 TT final standings\n1 June 2013 3 Laps (113.00\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Sidecar TT Race 1 TT final standings\nFastest Lap: Tim Reeves/Daniel Sayle\u00a0\u2013 114.608\u00a0mph (19' 45.158 ) on lap 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Superbike TT final standings.\n2 June 2013 6 Laps (236.38\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 69], "content_span": [70, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Superbike TT final standings.\nFastest Lap and New Overall Course Record: John McGuinness\u00a0\u2013 131.671\u00a0mph (17' 11.572) on lap 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 69], "content_span": [70, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Supersport Junior TT Race 1\n3 June 2013 4 Laps (150.73\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Supersport Junior TT Race 1\nFastest Lap: Michael Dunlop\u00a0\u2013 127.525\u00a0mph (17' 45.111) on lap 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Superstock TT Race final standings.\n3 June 2013 4 Laps (150.73\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 75], "content_span": [76, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Superstock TT Race final standings.\nFastest Lap: Michael Dunlop\u00a0\u2013 131.220\u00a0mph (17' 15.114) on lap 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 75], "content_span": [76, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 TT Zero Race\n5 June 2013 1 Lap (37.73\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 TT Zero Race\nFastest Lap and New Race Record: Michael Rutter\u00a0\u2013 109.675\u00a0mph (20' 38.461) on lap 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Supersport Junior TT Race 2\n5 June 2013 4 Laps (150.73\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Supersport Junior TT Race 2\nFastest Lap: Michael Dunlop\u00a0\u2013 128.667\u00a0mph (17' 35.659) on lap 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Sidecar TT Race 2 TT final standings\n5 June 2013 3 Laps (113.00\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Sidecar TT Race 2 TT final standings\nFastest Lap: Ben Birchall / Tom Birchall\u00a0\u2013 114.662\u00a0mph (19' 44.598 ) on lap 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Lightweight TT 650cc Super-Twin\n7 June 2013 3 Laps (113.00\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 71], "content_span": [72, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Lightweight TT 650cc Super-Twin\nFastest Lap: James Hillier\u00a0\u2013 115.554\u00a0mph (19' 00.168) on lap 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 71], "content_span": [72, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Senior TT final standings.\n7 June 2013 6 Laps (236.38\u00a0Miles) TT Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 66], "content_span": [67, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Race Results, 2013 Senior TT final standings.\nFastest Lap: Bruce Anstey\u00a0\u2013 131.531\u00a0mph (17' 12.671) on lap 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 66], "content_span": [67, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\nIsle of Man TT winner Michael Dunlop (6) 650cc Kawasaki leads away the first Lightweight TT Practice Session 25 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0\u2014 Start of the Newcomers Speed Control with Isle of Man TT winners John McGuinness (left) and Bruce Anstey (right) 25 May 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0\u2014 Rob Barber (29) & Josh Brookes (24) Wednesday evening practice session TT Grandstand 29 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0\u2014 Guy Martin (4) 1000cc Suzuki Thursday evening practice session Parliament Square, Ramsey 30 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0Sidecar Race 1\u00a0\u2014 Lap 3 Tim Reeves/Dan Sayle (3) & Dave Molyneux/Patrick Farrance (1) Parliament Square, Ramsey 1 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0Saturday afternoon practice\u00a0\u2014 Bruce Anstey (5), James Hillier (1) & Gary Johnson (7); Parliament Square, Ramsey 1 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0Superbike Race Lap 6\u00a0\u2013 Michael Dunlop (6) 1000cc Honda Parliament Square, Ramsey 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0Superbike Race Lap 4\u00a0\u2013 John McGuinness (3), Michael Dunlop (6) & Cameron Donald (2) Parliament Square, Ramsey 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\nSupersport TT Race 1 Lap 4\u00a0\u2013 Michael Dunlop (6), Bruce Anstey (5), John McGuinness (3) & James Hillier (1) Parliament Square, Ramsey 3 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0 TT Zero\u00a0\u2013 Mark Miller(2) MotoCzysz E1pc Practice Session\u00a0\u2013 Parliament Square, Ramsey 3 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\nSuperstock TT\u00a0\u2013 Michael Dunlop (6) Honda Parliament Square, Ramsey 3 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\nSidecar TT Race 2\u00a0\u2014 Competitors line-up to start the race. TT Grandstand 5 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0Supersport TT Race 2 Michael Dunlop (6), 600cc Honda TT Grandstand 5 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234147-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Man TT, Gallery\n2013 Isle of Man TT\u00a0John McGuinness on the start-line of the Senior TT Race 7 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election\nThe 2013 Isle of Wight Council election was held on 2 May 2013 to elect all 40 members for a four-year term to the Isle of Wight Council, a unitary authority which governs the Isle of Wight. Going into the election, the Conservative Party was looking to gain a third term in power after first being elected to overall control in 2005, but in one of the shock results of the wider local elections being held in the country, the Conservatives lost overall control of the council, having been reduced to 15 seats, 6 short of a majority of 21. The 'Island Independents', a mutually supporting group of candidates and councillors running as independents, gained the same number of seats, whilst other independents, UKIP, Labour, and a Liberal Democrat made up the remainder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election\nEmblematic of the election, the Conservative leader of the council, David Pugh, lost his own seat to an Island Independent. The popular perception of the reasons for the Conservative losses was, in the words of OnTheWight, 'It's widely thought that the way they implemented the financial cuts turned the Island against them. Particularly unpopular was the wholesale closing of the Tourist Information centres and public toilets.' With neither the Conservatives or the Island Independents gaining a majority outright, control of the authority was initially in doubt, but on 8 May the Island Independents announced the five non-aligned independents would be joining their group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Background\nLeading into the 2005 council election, the Liberal Democrats and its predecessors had been in power on the island since 1981, albeit since 2001 in coalition with a group of independents. However, public opposition to a school closure program by the council led to the rout of the Liberal Democrats, and the election of the Conservatives to take over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Background\nEducation remained a major issue as the Conservatives under Council Leader David Pugh sought re-election in 2009, with plans to redress problems caused by the island's unusual three-tier education structure having elicited further controversy \u2013 and the resignation of several Conservative councillors in protest \u2013 and a sluggish economy with unemployment higher than the average of South East England playing against the party as well. In the end, the Conservatives won re-election, but held only 24 seats, a drop of 9 since the last election, although a boundary review had led to the abolition of 8 seats. Behind them, independents made up the next largest contingent on the council, winning 10 seats, whilst the Liberal Democrats failed to make headway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Campaign\nAs the 2013 campaign started, education remained a top issue. Though the three-tier system had been abolished in favour of two tiers, three of the island's six secondary schools were judged 'inadequate' by Ofsted. Simon Perry, editor of OnTheWight, remarked to the BBC that education was the single biggest priority for voters. In addition, the council agreed to transfer some of its education powers to Hampshire County Council, despite not being under its jurisdiction; and problems over education were further amplified for the Conservatives when the chief executive of the council, Steve Benyon, departed controversially after the Ofsted inspections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Campaign\nBeyond this local issue was the impact of national politics: the Conservatives were into their third year of governing the United Kingdom in coalition with the Liberal Democrats, implementing unpopular austerity measures and fending off challenges from Labour on the left and UKIP on the right. Cuts to local government forced the council to implement their own cost-saving measures, which included closing public toilets and tourist information centres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Campaign\nThe Conservatives campaigned on working with the private sector to improve the local economy, and minimising future council tax rises. The Island Independents \u2013 a group of mutually-supporting candidates and councillors standing as independents \u2013 pledged to create a more transparent administration that worked more with islanders on decision-making. Their campaign was launched by former independent MP Martin Bell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Campaign\nLabour focused its campaign on improving facilities for disabled people, including trying to repair the council's relationship with the disabled-orientated Riverside Centre, and working to prevent schools on the island from becoming academies; the Liberal Democrats, meanwhile, promised to invest more into children's services and to start an affordable housing program. UKIP, trying to enter the council for the first time, pledged to re-open public toilets and tourist information centres, campaign for a grammar school, protect the Frank James Hospital, and allow their councillors to vote without a party whip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Campaign\nThe election in the Shanklin South ward, held by Pugh, soon became the most high-profile battle of the campaign. Facing Pugh was Richard Priest, manager of the Riverside Centre and a town councillor, standing as an Island Independent. Fearful of splitting the anti-Pugh vote and sensing Priest had the best chance of defeating Pugh, Labour and UKIP decided not to field candidates in the ward. Meanwhile, the continuing decline of the Liberal Democrats on the island became more evident during the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Campaign\nAside from their local problems since their last stint in power, the national party had been battered by its involvement in government with the Conservatives. Bob Blezzard, a high-profile Liberal Democrat on the island, resigned from the party in 2012 and publicly denounced his national party leader, Nick Clegg, before announcing he would stand as an independent candidate to the council for Sandown North. Former council leader, Shirley Smart, likewise decided to resign from the party and stand as an independent in Newport South. Neither aligned themselves with the Island Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Campaign\nIn the end, the Liberal Democrats were only able to field seven candidates, with group leader Reg Barry saying it was a 'shame' that Blezzard and Smart, among others, 'have turned their back'. The UKIP campaign ran into some difficulty when they were accused by the Conservatives of falsifying signatures on the electoral nomination forms of their candidate for Newport North \u2013 the police were unable to give judgement on the complaint before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Results\nWith all ward results declared on the day after the election, the Conservatives had lost their majority on the council. After winning 24 seats in 2009, with a majority of 4, the party ended up with 15 seats, 6 short of overall control \u2013 a net loss of 9 seats. The Island Independents, on the other hand, won 15 seats as well. UKIP gained representation on the council for the first time, winning 2 seats, whilst Labour reclaimed Lake North, lost in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Results\nThe Liberal Democrats achieved their worst result on the island since the party's formation, holding onto only Reg Barry's seat. Blezzard and Smart, however, were elected as independents, as were another three candidates who were also not aligned with the Island Independents. The most notable result though, was Pugh's defeat to Priest by only 10 votes. Without a seat on the council, Pugh lost its leadership, and that of the Conservative group \u2013 on 7 May, Cllr Dave Stewart was chosen to replace Pugh as leader of the group. After his election defeat, Pugh remarked 'Clearly I'm disappointed. It's been a privilege to serve the island.'", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234148-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Isle of Wight Council election, Results\nWith neither the Conservatives or the Island Independents winning a majority outright, both sides vied to win the support of other councillors to form their own administration. On 8 May, the Island Independents announced that the five other independents had joined their group. The next election to the council was held in May 2017 and led to the Conservatives regaining control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234149-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli Basketball League Cup\nThe 2013 Israeli Basketball League Cup is the 8th edition of the Israeli Basketball League Cup pre-season tournament. It plays between October 6 and October 10 at Bet Maccabi in Rishon LeZion and NOKIA Arena in Tel Aviv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234149-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli Basketball League Cup, Participants\nAs the format states, the top eight teams on the 2012\u201313 Israeli Super League qualified for the tournament. However, league champions Maccabi Haifa were at the time in the United States competing against clubs of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and were therefore replaced by ninth placed team Hapoel Holon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234150-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli Beach Soccer League\nThe 2013 Israeli Beach Soccer League was a national beach soccer league that took place between 31 May and 26 July 2013, in Netanya, Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234150-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli Beach Soccer League, Group stage\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Netanya, Israel (UTC+02:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234151-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli Labor Party leadership election\nAs a result of the party failing to enter the government after a poor performance in the legislative election in the previous January, a leadership election for the Israeli Labor Party was held on 22 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234151-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Results\nThe only round of voting was held on November 22:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234151-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli Labor Party leadership election, Results\nAccording to Ynetnews, turnout of voting Labor Party members was a relatively low 52.7%. Herzog won a majority of the votes cast and was thus elected leader of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections\nElections for the positions of Chief Rabbis of Israel were held at the Leonardo Hotel in Jerusalem on 24 July 2013. The elections were to elect the chief rabbis for the Ashkenazi and Sephardi communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections, Background\nThe position of chief rabbi is a position that places the winning candidate at the head of the state religious infrastructure. This includes kosher certification, all Jewish marriages and deaths in Israel. They also have significant influence over the question of who is a Jew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections, Background\nThe position is for a 10-year term, with incumbents unable to run for reelection. As such the incumbents Yona Metzger and Shlomo Amar were unable to be candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections, Background\nThe elections were conducted at the Leonardo Hotel, with 150 eligible voters. These were made up by 80 rabbis representing the religious councils, and 70 other people representing the government, Knesset and local authorities. There was a push to include 40 women in this group, but at the election there was only 10 women voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections, Candidates\nThere were a number of candidates for each position. This represented a divide between the ultra Orthodox and Zionist communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections, Candidates\nThere were 4 sons of former chief rabbis standing for elections, David Lau son of Yisrael Meir, Yaakov Shapira son of Avraham, Yitzhak Yosef son of Ovadia and Shmuel Eliyahu son of Mordechai. There was a legal effort to have Eliyahu eliminated from the elections due to racist and extremist views. Yehuda Deri, who is the brother of minister Aryeh and related to former Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar was also a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections, Candidates\nThe other major candidates were David Stav who is the head of the Tzohar organization and a voice to fundamentally restructure the Rabbinate, and Zion Boaron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234152-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli chief rabbi elections, Results\nOnly 147 of the 150 eligible voters turned up to vote. David Lau and Yitzchak Yosef were the successful candidates, both getting 68 votes after the non Haredi vote was split.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election\nEarly elections for the nineteenth Knesset were held in Israel on 22 January 2013. Public debate over the Tal Law had nearly led to early elections in 2012, but they were aborted at the last moment after Kadima briefly joined the government. The elections were later called in early October 2012 after failure to agree on the budget for the 2013 fiscal year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election\nThe elections saw the Likud Yisrael Beiteinu alliance emerge as the largest faction in the Knesset, winning 31 of the 120 seats. Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu formed the country's thirty-third government after establishing a coalition with Yesh Atid, the Jewish Home, and Hatnua, which between them held 68 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background\nFollowing the 2009 elections, in which right-wing and religious parties won the majority (65 out of 120, or 54%) of the seats, opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu established a government including right-wing parties Likud, Yisrael Beiteinu, the ultra-orthodox Shas and United Torah Judaism, the religious Zionist Jewish Home, and the centre-left Labor Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background\nAlthough there were disagreements between the coalition parties on issues of national security and the peace process, and separation of church and state, the government was relatively stable and was able to overcome several political and national security related crises with no real threat from the opposition. The stability of the coalition government increased after a split in the Labor Party when five of its members led by Ehud Barak left to establish the Independence Party. Whilst the Labor Party subsequently left the coalition, Independence remained within it, allowing the government to maintain a majority of 66 of the 120 seats in the Knesset.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background\nPrime Minister Netanyahu's initial popularity remained stable, as he managed to overcome various events that could have endangered the stability of his government\u2014such as the political speech at the Bar-Ilan University at the beginning of his term in which he endorsed the idea of a Palestinian state alongside Israel for the first time, the government's agreement to freeze construction in the West Bank, in light of the common belief of the Israeli public that the diplomatic relations between the United States and Israel had worsened during Netanyahu's term, the 2010 Gaza flotilla incident and its implications, the outbreak of the Mount Carmel forest fire in December 2010 and the various government oversights which were attributed to this blunder, as well as the growing debate within the Israeli public about a pre-emptive attack on Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background\nHowever, a decline in the popularity of Netanyahu and his government occurred in summer 2011 following the protests about social justice. Nevertheless, the decline passed quickly after Netanyahu's speech at the General debate of the sixty-sixth session of the United Nations General Assembly in September 2011 following the Palestinian diplomatic campaign to gain full membership of the United Nations, and following cross-border attacks in the south of the country in August 2011. In addition, Netanyahu's popularity was increased after the Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange was approved and Shalit was released. These events led to the highest level of public support Netanyahu had received since the start of his term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background\nAs a result of the high levels of support for the government, Netanyahu announced that early primaries would be held in the Likud party, a move which slightly surprised the Israeli political establishment and led to speculations about the possibility that Netanyahu would announce early general elections, due to his high approval ratings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background\nNetanyahu, together with Mahmoud Abbas, Hillary Clinton and George J. Mitchell at the start of the direct talks on 2 September 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background, Tal Law controversy and implications\nPrior to the decision to dissolve the Knesset, attempts to amend the Tal Law, which allows Haredi to indefinitely defer national service, by Yisrael Beiteinu and Kadima were struck down by the High Court of Justice. It was also supported by the Independence party, but failed after Shas appealed an expedited process pass through the Ministerial Committee on Legislative Affairs, which meant it would have to be rediscussed and could not pass. The dissolution of parliament would force an automatic extension of the law, due to expire on 1 August, for another six to eight months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background, Tal Law controversy and implications\nNetanyahu said a new law should \"make the burden [of serving in the IDF or civilian service] more equal and fair\". Yisrael Beiteinu said the dissolution should have been postponed so that its proposed Equal National Service for All bill could be voted upon. Similarly, Kadima chairman Shaul Mofaz told the \"Suckers Camp\" (\u05de\u05d0\u05d4\u05dc \u05d4\u05e4\u05e8\u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd) protesters outside Likud's political convention that this was an \"historic opportunity to clean the moral stain that is the Tal Law\". He also said that the motion to dissolve the legislature at this state was a \"stinky political trick\" by Netanyahu, Yacimovich, and the Haredi parties. Dalia Itzik of Kadima also reiterated calls to have a new law before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background, Tal Law controversy and implications\nOn 7 May the Knesset voted on a series of bills relating to its dissolution and holding the election on 4 September, which passed; however, in the early morning of 8 May, a few hours before the Knesset was expected to approve the bill which would bring the 18th Knesset's term to its end, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reached an agreement with the Kadima leader Shaul Mofaz to join the current government, thus canceling the early election supposed to be held in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Background, Tal Law controversy and implications\nOn 17 July, after the failure of parties to reach a compromise on the issue, Kadima voted to pull out of the coalition. The coalition did, however, still have a majority of seats even without Kadima. Nevertheless, the reduced coalition which was now divided between nationalist groups such as Yisrael Beiteinu and Haredi groups such as Shas, cast doubts regarding the coalition's ability to pass a budget for 2013 on the date prescribed by law. This situation, of the inability to pass the budget, revived the possibility that early elections might be held \u2013 a possibility which Prime Minister Netanyahu expressed his support of during a special speech he delivered from his public office on 9 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Parliament factions\nThe table below lists the parliamentary factions represented in the 18th Knesset.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Date\nSince the term of the 17th Knesset ended prematurely, the term of the 18th Knesset is four full years plus eight more months, starting from the month of its election (February 2009). The expected date for a regular election was to be on 22 October 2013, but an early election was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Date\nLikud's coalition chairman MK Ze'ev Elkin wanted the election to be scheduled for 4 September 2012. He got support for the motion from Yisrael Beiteinu, Shas and Labor; however, Kadima wanted the election 16 September. Meretz, Labor and Elkin submitted different motions for dissolution. Netanyahu told the Likud party on 7 May that he would like an early election saying that he does not \"want there to be a year-and-a-half of political instability accompanied by blackmail and populism. I'd prefer a short electoral campaign of four months that will ensure political stability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Date\nI would have been very happy if we could have completed the term, which was also my goal, but it is no secret that with the start of the government's fourth year, the coalition is fraying somewhat. The achievements of this government are a result of a joint vision and a partnership that was possible due to political stability. We have not had such a stable government in decades. We are proposing 4 September, after which, God and voters willing, we will receive a mandate.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Date\nThe Knesset House Committee's approval on 7 May for the expedition of the bill to dissolve the 18th Knesset allowing for plenum vote. The committee bill was approved by a vote of 13 to four. Though Shas voted against the measure, a party member said that \"Shas' unambiguous stance is to support the early elections and the legislation. [ Shas MKs] abstained due to confusion. We support the bill.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Date\nOn 9 October, Netanyahu made a televised address in which he reacted to the inability to pass a budget for the next fiscal year by the deadline of 31 December. He said: \"I have decided that it is in Israel's better interest to go to elections now and as quickly as possible. For Israel, it is preferable to have as short a campaign as possible, one of three months over one that would last in practice an entire year and damage Israel's economy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Date\nReactions to the announcement included the Labor Party's Shelley Yachimovich who said that despite lagging in opinion polls to Likud there was a \"reasonable probability\" of winning and that \"the public today understands that security is not just on the borders, but is also job and income security and health and education security\". Kadima's Shaul Mofaz told Channel 10: \"I think the decision for early elections is a day of hope for the citizens of Israel. It is an opportunity to replace the bad Netanyahu government that has isolated Israel politically over the past four years, damaged Israel's deterrence, and deteriorated the middle class.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Surplus-vote agreements\nTwo parties can make an agreement so that the sum of both parties' surplus votes are combined, and if the combined surplus votes amounts to an extra seat, then the extra seat goes to the party with the larger number of surplus votes. Several agreements were signed by parties prior to the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign\nThe decision to have an early election was read as influential over the issue of an attack on Iran. A victory for Likud could bolster the case for an armed strike; however, it was also risky during an election. It would, however, be an election issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign\nLikud's Netanyahu said that in a new government he would seek to have as large and stable a governing coalition as possible in order to \"deal with the great challenges that we will face\". He also said that his other priority would be to tackle the still high levels of crime. \"We know that there has been a reduction of 30% in the incidence of murder, but these cases are brutal and underline our acknowledged need to battle these occurrences full force.\" He said that Internal Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch and Police Commissioner Yohanan Danino were tasked with compiling a report into the 37 murders in 2012, in comparison to 52 in 2011, and said he was confident in curbing the trend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign\nCampaign issues, particularly in regards to attacking the Netanyahu government, are expected to be Netanyahu's relationship with U.S. President Barack Obama over Israel-Iran relations in light of the controversy over the Iranian nuclear programme, the stalling of the Israel-Palestinian peace process, the 2011 Israeli social justice protests and the aforementioned Tal law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Likud and Yisrael Beiteinu present common list\nOn 25 October 2012, Prime Minister and Likud chairman Benjamin Netanyahu and Yisrael Beiteinu chairman Avigdor Lieberman announced that Yisrael Beiteinu and Likud would present a common list (without merging) in the 2013 general elections. \"A joining of forces will give us the strength to defend Israel from military threats, and the strength to spearhead social and economic changes in the country\", Netanyahu said. \"In view of the challenges we're facing, we need responsibility on a national level ... We're providing a true alternative, and an opportunity for the citizens to stabilize leadership and government\", Lieberman said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 91], "content_span": [92, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Operation Pillar of Defense\nIn November 2012, following Gaza militants rocket and mortar fire at Israeli towns and villages and attacks committed against Israeli soldiers stationed near the border with the Gaza Strip, the Israeli political leadership ordered the IDF to launch Operation Pillar of Defense, during which the IAF conducted a series of air strikes against militant targets of the Hamas and against the organization's leaders, including the head of the organization's military wing Ahmed Jabari, who was assassinated while he was driving his car in Gaza City. As a result, Hamas responded by firing rockets and mortars at various localities in Israel, especially in the southern Israel region, but also in addition, for the first time in the Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict, managed to shoot rockets at Israel's biggest metropolitan area in the central region of Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 924]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Operation Pillar of Defense\nThe operation in the Gaza Strip gained the support of most parties, including various opposition parties. However, some parties, including Meretz, Hadash, and all Israeli Arab parties, expressed their strong opposition to the operation. Some left-wing figures stated that the operation was actually an \"Election War\" aimed at putting aside socio-economic issues and replacing them with a defense agenda, and claimed that the operation would not help Israel in the long term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Operation Pillar of Defense\nAfter the Israeli government signed the ceasefire agreement with Hamas, a number of figures in the Israeli right-wing political spectrum, including Naftali Bennett and Aryeh Eldad, criticized the government's decision. During the operation and the shelling of southern Israel, various parties declared that they would suspend their political campaign until the operation would end\u2014among them the Likud Party and the opposition parties Kadima and the Labor party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Independence withdrawal\nOn 26 November, Independence leader Ehud Barak announced that he would retire from politics after the next Minister of Defense was appointed, and that the party's political campaign was suspended. Subsequently, Shalom Simhon became the chairman of the party, but on 6 December, he announced that he was retiring from politics and that Independence was pulling out of the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Palestinian statehood recognition\nIn the General Assembly of the United Nations held on 29 November 2012, the 67th session adopted a resolution that upgraded Palestine to non-member observer state status at the United Nations. The new status equates Palestine's with that of the Holy See. In response, the inner cabinet approved the building of housing units in area E1, connecting Jerusalem and Ma'aleh Adumim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Disqualification petitions\nThe ultra-orthodox parties Shas and United Torah Judaism had men-only party lists, based on their belief that women in the Knesset would violate modesty laws. Because of this, the Central Elections Committee received petitions in December 2012 to disqualify both parties for being discriminatory. Likewise, the Otzma LeYisrael party, headed by Aryeh Eldad and Michael Ben-Ari, has come under scrutiny due to its alleged denial of Israel as both a Jewish and democratic state. On 20 December, the Committee declared it would not ban any of those parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Campaign, Disqualification petitions\nOn 19 December, the Committee voted to disqualify the Israeli Arab MK Haneen Zoabi from being re-elected on grounds of \"supporting terrorism and rejecting Israel as a Jewish and democratic state\". However, the ban was later overturned by the Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties\nThe National Election Commission announced that 34 parties had filed to run, and the election is expected to cost 250 million shekels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties\nThe parties listed below are ordered by the number of seats each of these parties eventually received in the 2013 Israeli legislative elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Likud Yisrael Beiteinu\nIn early December 2011, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu initially announced that early primaries would be held for the leadership of the Likud Party \u2013 this announcement was later supported and approved by the Likud's Central Committee later that month. The date of the Likud primaries was set for 31 January 2012. Netanyahu's main political opponent in the Likud party, Silvan Shalom, was surprised by the move and even declared it to be illegal, but eventually announced that he would not be running against Netanyahu for the leadership of the party, thus leaving Moshe Feiglin as Netanyahu's sole competitor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Likud Yisrael Beiteinu\nDuring the election day Netanyahu repeatedly attempted to spur the Likud members to come to the polls and vote, nevertheless the turnout remained low. As a result, and due to various many failures at the opening of polling stations across Israel, the voting time was extended by two hours in some places. Nevertheless, at the end of the day the voter turnout was 50% of the total eligible voters. Despite Netanyahu's fears of a low voter turnout, the vast majority of voters supported him, while Moshe Feiglin gained relatively low support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Likud Yisrael Beiteinu\nIn early May, Netanyahu's attempts to head the Likud central committee were dealt blow as party members called for a secret ballot, which was seen as an hindrance to him in beating out Danny Danon. Popular Communications and Welfare & Social Services Minister and Likud MK Moshe Kahlon declared he will not contest the upcoming election. The decision was considered surprising, with Likud officials speculating that Kahlon was passed over by Netanyahu for the post of Minister of Finance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Likud Yisrael Beiteinu\nOn 25 October 2012, Prime Minister and Likud chairman Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister and Yisrael Beiteinu chairman Avigdor Lieberman announced the unification of their two parties which would run as a single bloc for the upcoming election. The new party will be called Likud Beiteinu (\"The Likud Is Our Home\"), with Netanyahu number one on the list followed by Lieberman as number two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Likud Yisrael Beiteinu\nThe results of the Likud primaries indicated the absence of prominent Likud members currently serving as ministers from the top positions in the new Likud list (namely, Benny Begin, Michael Eitan, Dan Meridor and Avi Dichter), and on the other hand the entry of two other politicians who were positioned in top positions in the new Likud list - Tzachi Hanegbi (who left the Kadima party and joined the Likud party), and Moshe Feiglin, who is considered a political hardliner with a unique political perspective that emphasizes policies that reflect Israel's Jewish identity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Likud Yisrael Beiteinu\nOn 14 December Avigdor Lieberman resigned as the Israeli Foreign Affairs Minister and as Deputy Prime Minister following an indictment for fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Yesh Atid\nDuring the term of the Israeli 32nd government speculation arose concerning the possibility that Israeli journalist and television personality Lapid would end his career in journalism and begin a career in Israeli politics. Initially, Lapid dismissed these reports and speculations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Yesh Atid\nDue to the ethical conflict between Lapid's functioning as a journalist and his political aspirations, Lapid informed Channel 2's CEO that he would resign six months before entering politics. Lapid's commitment did not stop the Knesset legislation proceedings aimed at preventing the influx of Israeli journalists running for a position in the Knesset during their first year after they ended their journalist careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Yesh Atid\nDespite Lapid's denials about going into politics and in light of his obligations to end his journalism career long before that, Lapid officially announced in early January 2012 that he was leaving his journalism career in order to enter politics and that he would lead a new party. Lapid continued to write his weekly column in Yediot Aharonot until the elections were officially announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Yesh Atid\nLapid ultimately decided to name his party Yesh Atid. His father's (Tommy Lapid) secular movement party Shinui used the election symbol 'yesh'. The party will have to submit a list of 100 founders and will be capped at raising 13.5 million shekels during this election cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Labor Party\nAt the start of 2011, Labor leader Ehud Barak began to face dissent from his party over its presence in the coalition. On 17 January 2011, disillusionment with Barak, over his support for coalition policies, especially regarding the peace process, led to his resignation from the Labor Party with four other Knesset members to establish a new \"centrist, Zionist and democratic\" party named Independence. Following this move, all Labor Party government ministers resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Labor Party\nSplitting the Labour Party enabled Barak to keep a faction of Labour MKs loyal to him within Netanyahu's coalition, preventing the departure of all 13 Labour MKs from the coalition. Due to the split, the party remained without a chairman for a while and was even regarded in the public and the media as a party in demise. However, Barak's departure led to increased interest in the party, particularly since the remaining members began campaigning to win the position of party chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Labor Party\nIn the first round of voting, which was held on 12 September 2011, MK Shelly Yacimovich managed to get first position, and was followed, in a low margin, by Amir Peretz. In the third and fourth places were Isaac Herzog and Amram Mitzna. Since no candidate topped the 40% threshold required, a second round was held a week later on 21 September 2011, in which Yachimovich was able to beat Peretz in a gap of about 10%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Labor Party\nYachimovich's victory, which placed the emphasis of the party on social values rather than issues of national security, brought a renewed interest in the party following the 2011 social protest and as a result, many polls predicted that the party might win nearly 20 seats, which would make the party become the second largest party after Likud on the account of Kadima. Down the road, and especially after Yair Lapid declared that he would enter politics, Yachimovich's popularity and the popularity of the party were slightly moderated. In January 2012 the party got a lot of media attention after Noam Shalit (father of Gilad Shalit) and former head of the Unit of International Crime Investigations Moshe Mizrahi both announced that they are joining the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, The Jewish Home\nThe Jewish Home and the National Union (an alliance of four parties \u2013 Tkuma, Hatikva, Eretz Yisrael Shelanu, and Moledet) began preparing for the possibility of running in a joint list for the 2013 elections during the term of the 18th Knesset. While negotiations were successful in principle and the two parties reached consensus, disagreements arose regarding the selection of candidates for the Knesset, as The Jewish Home supported the idea of running open primaries while The National Union opposed it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, The Jewish Home\nIn September 2012, Ya'akov Katz (Moledet) signed an agreement with Jewish Home leadership candidate Naftali Bennett to form a joint list for the elections. On 12 October 2012, Michael Ben-Ari (Eretz Yisrael Shelanu) announced that due to not being placed in realistic spots, he and Aryeh Eldad (Hatikva) would be running in a separate pro-Land-of-Israel alliance, called Otzma LeYisrael. Meanwhile, Tkuma decided to run together with the Jewish Home. As part of the agreement, it was established that Naftali Bennett would serve as the alliance's chairman while Uri Ariel would be in the second position of the list and that after the elections both parties would merge into a single party. Uri Bank and his Moledet party also joined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, The Jewish Home\nThe primaries were held on 6 November 2012 for the position of the party's chairman. Naftali Bennett was elected as the chairman with 67.1% of the votes. Zevulun Orlev, who was second with 32.7% of the votes, declared that he would end his political career following his defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Shas\nAfter Aryeh Deri announced his return to politics, and following a series of highly publicised events that led to an increase in the tensions between the Haredi public and the non-Haredi public, Shas's popularity began to falter according to most polls. As a result, Shas chairman Eli Yishai requested that Aryeh Deri join the party instead of establishing an independent party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0045-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Shas\nShas spiritual leader Ovadia Yosef offered Aryeh Deri the 3rd position on the party list, but Deri rejected it at first and was believed to want to lead the party, start his own party (which according to polls might win as many as 7 seats), or not participate in the election at all. On 16 October a compromise was reached: Shas would not have a formal chairman, but would instead be jointly led by Deri, Yishai, and Housing and Construction Minister Ariel Atias. The direction of the election campaign is in debate, with reports suggesting that Yishai wishes to focus on fighting illegal immigration, and Deri favoring focusing on social justice issues while avoiding mentions of Shas's treatment of Sudanese refugees in Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, United Torah Judaism\nUnited Torah Judaism is an alliance of two Haredi parties, the Hasidic Agudat Israel party and the Lithuanian Degel HaTorah party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, United Torah Judaism\nIn 2012, a split occurred among the Lithuanian Haredi public, as a group within the Degel HaTorah party which regards itself as the successor of Rabbi Elazar Shach and affiliated with Rabbi Shmuel Auerbach, felt that it is not represented by the party. After it was announced that early elections would be held, a group of people associated with Rabbi Auerbach registered a new party under the name Netzah. After Menachem Carmel, who is affiliated with this group, did not win the third position in the United Torah Judaism list, it was officially announced that the \"Netzah\" would be running in the 2013 Israeli legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Hatnua\nSince she lost the primaries for the leadership of the Kadima party and resigned from the Knesset, many reports spread in the Israeli media of Tzipi Livni's possible return to politics as the head of a new party of her own. Those reports eventually turned out to be true on 27 November, when the logo for her new party titled \"Hatnua - headed by Tzipi Livni\" was initially published. At a press conference held during the same day, Livni officially announced the establishment of the Hatnua party which would be headed by her and which would participate in the upcoming elections. \"Hatnua\" (\u05d4\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d4) means \"The Movement\" in Hebrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Hatnua\nImmediately after the establishment of Hatnua party, seven Knesset members from the Kadima (Meir Shitrit, Yoel Hasson, Shlomo Molla, Robert Tiviaev, Majalli Wahabi, Rachel Adato and Orit Zuaretz) announced that they have left the Kadima party and joined Livni's party. On 1 December, it was announced that the Former Labor chairman Amram Mitzna joined Livni's party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Meretz\nFollowing the party's failure in the 2009 legislative elections, some of the party members called for the resignation of the party chairman Chaim Oron and to give way for Zehava Gal-On. Haim Oron indeed left the Knesset and later left the chairmanship of the party. As a result, MKs Zehava Gal-On, Ilan Gilon, and youth activist Ori Ophir began campaigning to win the position of the party chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Meretz\nThe primaries were held on 7 February 2012 for the position of the party's chairman. Zehava Gal-On was elected as the chairman with 60.6% of the votes. Ilan Gilon was second with 36.6% of the votes, and Uri Ofir was third with 2.8% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Meretz\nPrimaries were held on 11 November 2012 for the party list for the upcoming elections. The party list is as follows (in order): Zehava Gal-On, Ilan Gilon, Nitzan Horowitz, Michal Rozin, Issawi Frej, Tamar Zandberg, Avshalom Vilan, Mossi Raz, Yifat Solel and Uri Zaki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Meretz\nHaaretz endorsed Meretz for the 2013 election, and gave honorable mention to Tzipi Livni's Hatnua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, United Arab List\u2013Ta'al\nUnited Arab List\u2013Ta'al is an alliance of the two Arab parties United Arab List (Ra'am) and Ta'al which was first formed prior to the 2006 Israeli legislative elections. The party list is as follows (in order): Ibrahim Sarsur (party chairman), Ahmed Tibi, Masud Ghnaim, Taleb Abu Arar, Taleb el-Sana, Muhammad Cnaan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Hadash\nPrimaries were held on 10 November 2012 for the party list for the upcoming elections. The party list is as follows (in order): Mohammad Barakeh (party chairman), Hana Sweid, Dov Khenin, Afu Agbaria, Nabila Espanioly, and Ayman Odeh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Hadash\nThe party delegates also voted to decline the proposal to reserve a certain number of seats in the list for female representatives (79% were against this proposal).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Balad\nThe party list is as follows (in order): Jamal Zahalka (party chairman), Haneen Zoabi, Basel Ghattas, Juma Azbargh, and Abed Fukra. In December 2012, it was announced that the Central Elections Committee and a panel of Supreme Court judges would hold discussions on whether to disqualify Haneen Zoabi, as well as the Balad party, from the 2013 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Balad\nThe request for her disqualification, submitted by MK Ofir Akunis (Likud) and which obtained the necessary number of signatures, stated that, \"throughout her years in the Knesset, Zoabi has constantly undermined the State of Israel and has openly incited against the government, its institutions, and IDF soldiers\". The request further alleged that Zoabi rejects Israel's existence as a Jewish and democratic state, which makes Knesset candidates eligible for disqualification. Zoabi called the sponsors of the request fascists and said that \"for whoever does not want citizens to have free elections, I am one of many targets ...\" After hearing the case, the Central Elections Committee disqualified Zoabi in a 19-9 vote. The Israeli Supreme Court unanimously overturned the disqualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Kadima\nPrime Minister Netanyahu's announcement about having early primaries in the Likud started a debate among the Kadima party members over when to hold leadership elections for their party. Following increasing pressure to hold the election, party leader Tzipi Livni announced that the election for the leadership of Kadima would be held on 27 March 2012. In addition to Livni, party members Shaul Mofaz and Avi Dichter announced their intention to run for chairman position of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Kadima\nMofaz won the election 62.3% to 37.7% with a turnout of approximately 40%. Livni later resigned from her seat in Knesset complaining that Israel was sitting \"on a volcano. The international clock is ticking and the existence of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state is in danger. For years, Israeli leaders have been burying their heads in the sand, occupying themselves with political exercises and spin and in that time the threat to Israel has only grown.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Otzma LeYisrael\nFollowing the negotiations between the National Union alliance and The Jewish Home party, MK Michael Ben-Ari, along with Baruch Marzel and Itamar Ben-Gvir (all Eretz Yisrael Shelanu members), announced that they do not plan to stay in such an alliance, and they would form an independent party. MK Aryeh Eldad from the Hatikva party decided also not to take part in the alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Otzma LeYisrael\nOn 13 November 2012, they announced that they formed a new joint list called Otzma LeYisrael.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Am Shalem\nRabbi Haim Amsalem was elected to the Knesset as a Shas member during the 17th and 18th legislative elections, as the representative of Rabbi Meir Mazoz, the head of the Kisseh Rachamim yeshiva. During the 18th Knesset, Amsalem began to publicly hold controversial positions on key issues such as conversions to Judaism (he would not require a pledge to follow Torah laws), the enforcement of Haredi public integration in the work force, the status of women in Israel, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0062-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Am Shalem\nHis positions caused a rift between him and the Shas party, which eventually led the Council of Torah Sages (\u05de\u05d5\u05e2\u05e6\u05ea \u05d7\u05db\u05de\u05d9 \u05d4\u05ea\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4) to call for his resignation, and lead to complaints against him from public Haredi bodies. On the other hand, in 2011, he received the Knight of Quality Government Award on behalf of the Movement for Quality Government in Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Participating parties, Am Shalem\nAfter Amsalem quit the Shas party, he established a new political movement called \"Am Shalem\" (a play of words on his last name), and announced that it would take part in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Conduct\nElection day was a public holiday. With few exceptions, voting centres were scheduled to be open from 7:00 until 22:00, whilst in communities with a population of less than 350, as well as in hospitals, prisons and detention centres, voting hours might start later and end earlier. Voters who reside more than 20 kilometres from voting centres were eligible for free transport vouchers from the day before the election with the return ticket valid until the next day. As of 11:00, 11.4% of voters had voted, an increase on the previous two elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Conduct\nA total of 5,656,705 people were eligible to vote in the 10,132 polling stations in Israel and 96 overseas. The cost of the election was estimated to be around 1.5\u20132 billion NIS, with around 180 million NIS spent on campaigning, of which 59.4 million was spent by the Likud Yisrael Beiteinu alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Government formation\nAfter the election, Netanyahu, the previous prime minister and leader of the largest bloc, announced that he wished to form \"as broad a coalition as possible\" and that he was willing to work with Yesh Atid. Labour chairwoman Shelly Yachimovich said she had made contacts with the aim of forming a centre-left coalition excluding Likud Yisrael Beitenu. Lapid, leader of Yesh Atid, announced that he would not join a coalition aimed at preventing Netanyahu from forming a new government. He also said that he would only join a government committed to reviving the peace process and to reforming the Tal Law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Government formation\nSeveral days after the election, domestic media reported that Netanyahu's former chief of staff Natan Eshel would be involved in the negotiations. This move was criticised since Eshel had been involved in a sexual harassment scandal the year before, which resulted in him being banned from public service. Yesh Atid announced that it would not meet with Eshel under any circumstances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Government formation\nIn consultation meetings with President Shimon Peres, six parties representing 82 MKs (Likud Yisrael Beiteinu, Yesh Atid, The Jewish Home, Shas, United Torah Judaism, and Kadima) recommended that Netanyahu be asked to form a government, whilst the Labor Party, Hatnua, Meretz, Hadash, and the two Arab parties (38 MKs) did not recommend anyone. On 2 February, Peres formally tasked Netanyahu with forming a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Government formation\nOn 19 February Netanyahu reached a coalition deal with Tzipi Livni, in which Hatnua agreed to join the coalition and Livni would be named as Justice Minister, placing her in charge of negotiations with the Palestinians. This was Netanyahu's first coalition deal. Likud Yisrael Beiteinu and Hatnua together controlled 37 seats, 24 short of the 61 needed to form a government. The Jewish Home issued a statement criticizing the coalition and saying that Livni's inclusion made the Bennett-led party less likely to join.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Government formation\nYesh Atid and The Jewish Home announced a pact that neither would join the government without the other. This prevented Netanyahu from forming a coalition with only one of those parties along with the Haredi parties (Shas and United Torah Judaism), though Yesh Atid's Lapid was quoted as saying he would not join a government with the Haredim and such a scenario was considered unlikely given Yesh Atid's platform of ending Haredi exemptions from military service and personal animosities between the parties' leaders. On 25 February Likud announced that it had invited Yesh Atid and The Jewish Home to join the government. Netanyahu needed the support of both parties to have enough support to form a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Government formation\nBy 5 March, Shas and UTJ had reportedly been informed they would not be joining the government. Yesh Atid began demanding more policy changes for the next government: public transportation on the Sabbath, an easier process for conversion to Judaism, and changes to the Chief Rabbinate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234153-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli legislative election, Government formation\nA coalition of Likud Yisrael Beiteinu, Yesh Atid, The Jewish Home, and Hatnua was announced on 14 March 2013. This coalition won a vote of confidence in the Knesset on 18 March, and was sworn in later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234154-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli municipal elections\nMunicipal elections were held in Israel on 22 October 2013. Turnout was low, with only 43% of those eligible voting, compared to 51% in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234154-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli municipal elections\nIn Jerusalem, the incumbent Nir Barkat won re-election with 52% against challenger Moshe Lion, who gained 45%, as did the Tel Aviv incumbent Mayor Ron Huldai against the Knesset member Nitzan Horowitz from the Meretz Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234155-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli protests\nIn 2013, several independent protests occurred in Israel. In May, the Tal Law ruling in 2012 led to protests by Haredi against conscription. Again in November, Bedouins in the Negev called for a Day of Rage against their displacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234155-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli protests, Haredi protests\nFollowing announcements that the new government plans to gradually incorporate the Haredi Jewish population of Israel into the country's armed forces, there were widespread protests against the government and the draft. On 16 May of that year, between 15,000 and 30,000 Haredim demonstrated outside an IDF recruiting office in Jerusalem. Some allegedly threw stones and bottles at police and called them Nazis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234155-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli protests, Bedouin protests\nThe Prawer-Begin plan to move Bedouins out of unrecognised villages, which the government has termed \"illegal\" and a \"land grab,\" is intended to move them to state-planned towns. Former General Doron Almog, who is tasked with implementing the plan, said: \"The idea is to ... better integrate Jews and Bedouins; to bring many more Bedouins to our work force; to employ and educate many more women for employment; and to build new communities; and to expand some of the current communities and make them modern.\" Its stated aim is also to \"modernise\" the Bedouin and improve their quality of life. US$340m has been allocated over five years for the project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234155-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli protests, Bedouin protests\nA Day of Protest was called against the plan that organisers said would evict 40,000 Bedouin citizens from their homes and into impoverished townships. The main protest was scheduled to be held near the Bedouin township of Hura on 30 November, with other protests planned in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and in several other cities across Europe, North America and the Middle East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234155-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Israeli protests, Bedouin protests\nBedouin activist Huda Abu-Obeid said: \"The government is trying to present the plan as 'in the best interest of the Bedouin', while with one hand it is acting to destroy Bedouin villages\u2026 and with the other it is building new Jewish localities in the Negev, some of these in the very same places where the [Bedouin] villages stand today.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234155-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Israeli protests, Bedouin protests\nFollowing expectation the plan would fail a Knesset vote it was canceled. Benny Begin, who jointly formulated the plan, said: \"Right and left, Arabs and Jews joined forces - while exploiting the plight of many Bedouin - to heat things up for political gain. There is no majority in the coalition for the bill. [ But Netanyahu agreed to] carry out the development plan for Bedouin settlements in the coming years.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234156-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Italian Athletics Championships was the 103rd edition of the Italian Athletics Championships and were held in Milan on 26\u201328 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234157-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Athletics Indoor Championships\n2013 Italian Athletics Indoor Championships was the 44th edition of the Italian Athletics Indoor Championships and were held in Ancona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234157-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Athletics Indoor Championships, Records\nIn this edition of the championships have fallen three national records: Michael Tumi (6.51 in male 60 metres), Silvano Chesani (2.33 m in male high jump) and the junior Roberta Bruni (4.60 m in female pole vault).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234158-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Italian Figure Skating Championships (Italian: Campionati Italiani Assoluti 2013 Pattinaggio Di Figura Su Ghiaccio) was held in Milan from December 19 through 22, 2012. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, ice dancing, and synchronized skating on the senior and junior levels. The results are among the criteria used to choose Italy's teams for ISU Championships. On 5 December 2012, the Italian federation released the final selection criteria for the 2013 World Championships, 2013 European Championships, and 2013 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234158-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Men\nThe Italian Federation selected Zandron for the European Championships and Bacchini for the World Championships but the president decided Bacchini should be sent to both.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Italian Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 Gran Premio d'Italia) was a Formula One motor race held on 8 September 2013 at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza in Monza, Italy. The race was the 12th round of the 2013 season, and the 83rd running of the Italian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix\nPrior to the weekend, Red Bull revealed that Daniel Ricciardo will be driving alongside Sebastian Vettel in 2014, taking over from Mark Webber, who is moving to the Porsche Sportscar programme. Furthermore, Felipe Massa announced two days after the race that he will leave Ferrari at the end of 2013 after eight years with the team. On the next day, the Scuderia announced that former Ferrari driver and 2007 champion Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen will take Massa's place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nTyre supplier Pirelli brought its hardest two compounds, with the orange-banded hard compound tyre being the harder \"prime\" tyre, and the white-banded medium compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre. This is the same tyre allocation as for the 2012 Italian Grand Prix. Sebastian Vettel and Red Bull looked strong in all three practice sessions prior to qualifying. The two biggest threats to a Vettel pole position, apart for Vettel's teammate Mark Webber, were Lewis Hamilton and, quite surprisingly, Ferrari's Fernando Alonso, who had strong pace on a single lap Saturday morning, an area where Ferrari struggled throughout the season. Three-time 2013 pole-sitter Nico Rosberg had really poor mileage in the final practice session due to overheating and was unlikely to fight for pole because of this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q1\nDrivers eliminated in the first qualifying session were both drivers from Caterham and Marussia as well as Valtteri Bottas of Williams and Sauber's Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez. Several drivers were out on track early on option tyres, including 2007 champion Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q2\nThe second qualifying session was the stage of a few surprises. First, both Lotus drivers were eliminated at the end of the 15 minutes session. Qualifying has never been the strength of the E21 this season, especially on the lowest downforce track of the season. The biggest disappointment of the session was the elimination of Hamilton's Mercedes. The five-time 2013 pole-sitter had an off at the exit of Curva Parabolica on his first flying lap and was impeded by Adrian Sutil on his second attempt at the entrance of the same turn. The German was later handed a three-place grid penalty for the race. It was the first time that Hamilton failed to make a Q3 appearance since the 2010 Malaysian Grand Prix. As a result, Hamilton's streak of consecutive Q3 appearances ended at 66.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q3\nBoth Ferraris and Red Bulls were out early as well as Rosberg's Mercedes. The red cars were using their towing tactic, which they practiced a lot during free practice. Vettel was the fastest man of that group with a time of 1:23.859. All ten cars then went out on track, either for a second run or for a first. Rosberg and Ricciardo were out first in the second wave as they opted for a two-flying lap run. Webber improved his time on his second run, but stayed second behind Vettel while the German also improved his fastest time to 1:23.755.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q3\nNico H\u00fclkenberg set up for a massively impressive third place, especially with his teammate early exit in Q1. Ferrari's towing tactic did not do any good as the red cars could only manage fourth and fifth, with Felipe Massa in front of Alonso. Rosberg took a respectable sixth, considering his misfortune of Saturday morning. Ricciardo again showed great qualifying pace with seventh despite running wide at turn six. The McLaren duo could only manage eight and ninth, with Sergio P\u00e9rez in front, while Vergne had to settle for tenth with an off that was a near carbon copy of Hamilton's in Q2 at Curva Parabolica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Race\nAt the start, Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel led the race from pole position with Felipe Massa jumping up into second position, ahead of Mark Webber and teammate Fernando Alonso. Further down the order, Lotus' Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was forced to put his left wheels on the grass to avoid Sergio P\u00e9rez on the approach of Variante del Rettifilo, preventing the Finn to brake in time and to avoid running in the back of the Mexican's McLaren. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen had to pit for a new front wing at the end of the first lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Race\nMore drama unfolded during the first lap as Paul di Resta ran into the back of Romain Grosjean's Lotus. The Scot lost his front left wheel and retired his car on the spot, while Grosjean's car was left unscathed by the incident. On lap three, Alonso made his move on Webber at Variante della Roggia for third place and the Spaniard later passed his teammate at Variante del Rettifilo on lap eight for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Race\nLewis Hamilton picked up a slow puncture early on in the race as well as radio problems. This meant that his team could not tell him about the tire problem and had to communicate with him with the help of pit boards throughout the rest of the race. Hamilton's one stop strategy became a two-stopper because of the slow puncture and rejoined the track almost at the back of the grid. Further ahead, Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne was on his way to a points finish until his transmission failed on lap fifteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Race\nLater on, Webber managed to leapfrog Massa during the pit stops. The impressive Nico H\u00fclkenberg managed to stay in front of Nico Rosberg for a net fifth place, but the recovering Hamilton passed both Germans at Curva Biassono and at Variante del Rettifilo respectively, though the Briton had to stop again because of his earlier tire problem. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was also recovering from his first-lap clash with P\u00e9rez, taking advantage of a battle between Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez and Adrian Sutil, although Hamilton passed the three of them after his second pit stop. The Briton then quickly caught the McLaren duo and overtook them almost as quickly. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen also overtook P\u00e9rez and went after Jenson Button for tenth and the last championship point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234159-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Grand Prix, Race\nAt the end of his 52nd lap, Sutil pulled into the Force India garage and retired with a brake problem. He was classified 16th, as he had completed 90% of the winner's race distance. A lap later, Sebastian Vettel crossed the start/finish line to win the 2013 Italian Grand Prix, his sixth win of the season, ahead of Alonso and teammate Webber. Massa drove to a respectable fourth, while H\u00fclkenberg successfully beat Rosberg to the flag for a strong fifth place. Daniel Ricciardo took advantage of the great top speed of his Toro Rosso to successfully fight off Grosjean for a solid seventh. Hamilton recovered from his slow puncture to pick up ninth, while Button managed to hold R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen behind him for tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234160-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open (tennis)\nThe 2013 Italian Open (also known as the 2013 Rome Masters and sponsored title 2013 Internazionali BNL d'Italia) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Foro Italico in Rome, Italy. It was the 70th edition of the Italian Open and was classified as an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2013 ATP World Tour and a Premier 5 event on the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place from 13 to 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234160-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open (tennis), ATP main draw entrants, Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234160-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open (tennis), WTA main draw entrants, Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234161-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMarcel Granollers and Marc L\u00f3pez were the defending champions, but lost to Santiago Gonz\u00e1lez and Scott Lipsky in the quarterfinals. Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan won the title, defeating Mahesh Bhupathi and Rohan Bopanna in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234162-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nDefending champion Rafael Nadal successfully defended his title, defeating Roger Federer in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133, to win the Men's Singles title at the 2013 Italian Open. It was his record-extending seventh Italian Open title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234162-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234163-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSara Errani and Roberta Vinci were the defending champions. They reached the final this year, but lost to unseeded pair Peng Shuai and Hsieh Su-wei 4\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234163-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234164-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nMaria Sharapova was the two-time defending champion, but withdrew in the quarterfinals due to illness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234164-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams won her second Internazionali BNL d'Italia title, defeating Victoria Azarenka in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20133. Williams won without dropping a set, without dropping more than three games per set, and without dropping more than four games per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234164-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234165-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Senate election in Lombardy\nLombardy renewed its delegation to the Italian Senate on February 24, 2013. This election was a part of national Italian general election of 2013 even if, according to the Italian Constitution, every senatorial challenge in each Region is a single and independent race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234165-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Senate election in Lombardy\nLombardy obtained two more seats to the Senate, following the redistricting subsequent to the 2011 Census. For the first time in history, a senatorial election was paired with a regional election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234165-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Senate election in Lombardy\nThe election was won by the centre-right coalition between The People of Freedom and the Northern League, differently as it happened at national level and hugely contributing to create that hung parliament which was the general result of the 2013 vote. All the two coalitions lost votes to the newly created Five Star Movement of comedian Beppe Grillo and, in a minor scale, to the Civic Choice of incumbent PM Mario Monti. Ten provinces gave a plurality to the centre-right coalition, while the provinces of Milan and Mantua preferred Bersani's alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234165-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian Senate election in Lombardy, Electoral law\nThe electoral law for the Senate was established in 2005 by the Calderoli Law, and it is a form of semi-proportional representation. A party presents its own closed list and it can join other parties in alliances. The coalition which receives a plurality automatically wins at least 27 seats. Respecting this condition, seats are divided between coalitions, and subsequently to party lists, using the largest remainder method with a Hare quota. To receive seats, a party must overcome the barrage of 8% of the vote if it contests a single race, or of 3% of the vote if it runs in alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election\nA general election took place on 24\u201325 February 2013 to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 17th Parliament of the Italian Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election\nThe centre-left alliance Italy Common Good led by the Democratic Party obtained a clear majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies, thanks to a majority bonus that has effectively trebled the number of seats assigned to the winning force, while in the popular vote it narrowly defeated the center-right alliance of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. Close behind, the new anti-establishment Five Star Movement of comedian Beppe Grillo became the third force, clearly ahead of the centrist coalition of outgoing Prime Minister Mario Monti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian general election\nIn the Senate, no political group or party won an outright majority, resulting in a hung parliament. Eventually a grand coalition between Italy Common Good, the Berlusconi coalition, and the center was formed. Berlusconi and his allies withdrew support of the coalition and formed a new Forza Italia six months later, which meant that the PD dominated the government coalition until the 2018 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Background\nFollowing the European sovereign debt crisis, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi resigned from his position in November 2011. He was replaced as Prime Minister by technocratic Senator for Life Mario Monti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Background\nIn December 2012, Berlusconi announced his intention to run for Prime Minister for a sixth time. Shortly after, his party, People of Freedom (PdL), withdrew endorsement for Monti's Cabinet and Monti announced he would resign after sending the annual budget to parliament, which was expected by Christmas. The Constitution of Italy then requires an election to be held within 70 days of the dissolution of parliament by President Giorgio Napolitano. Monti's resignation came after he said that, following the PdL's withdrawal, he \"matured [to] the conviction that we could not continue like this any longer,\" and that he could not govern with a loss of support for his platform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Background\nDuring Monti's tenure, Italy had faced tax increases and state spending cuts, as well as reforms intended to improve the competitiveness of the Italian economy. On the other hand, PdL parliamentary party leader Angelino Alfano told parliament on 7 December that Italy's debt, unemployment, and tax rates had risen in contrast to the economy since Monti became prime minister. In the approximately one year since Monti took office, unemployment rose by almost two percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Background\nPreviously Monti had controversially told the rising tide of youth unemployment to forget about a steady job for life, saying such is \"monotonous [anyway and] it's nice to change and take on challenges.\" He also called for changes to Article 18 of the 1970 Workers Statute that forbids companies with over 15 employees from sacking an employee without \"just cause\", saying that it \"can be pernicious for Italy's growth.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Background\nThe same reforms and austerity-focused policies which upset many Italians are perceived to have improved international confidence in Italy. Monti was supported by other Eurozone leaders, such as Germany's Angela Merkel and former French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Merkel's spokesman, Georg Streiter, said that she had \"always worked well\" with Monti and \"had a relationship of esteem\"; however, when asked about Berlusconi, he said it was not up to him to decide domestic politics of other countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Background\nGerman Finance Minister Wolfgang Sch\u00e4uble added that he did not foresee \"any destabilization in the euro-zone [but] expect[ed] Italy to keep going forward by respecting its European commitments.\" In reaction, financial markets fell on speculation of further instability; while, specifically, Italian 10-year bond yields rose by 0.4% to reach 4.87% and the Italian stock exchange's flagship index dropped by over 3.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nFrom the summer of 2012, a number of parties and movements from the so-called \"Third Pole\" of the political spectrum, including Pier Ferdinando Casini's Union of the Centre (UdC), Gianfranco Fini's Future and Freedom (FLI), Luca Cordero di Montezemolo's Toward the Third Republic (VTR), as well as a number of other politicians from both PD and PdL, pushed for direct involvement of Mario Monti in an election. Monti's statement that he would resign after the budget was passed, was suggested by Reuters to be indicative of him seeking to run for office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nMonti also told a press conference in France that \"populism\" was dangerous, and he further said that a failure to pass the budget \"would render more serious the government crisis, also at a European level\" and that his resignation would then be \"irrevocable.\" The two largest parties in parliament, the PdL and the Democratic Party (PD) said they would be willing to work together to expedite passage of the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nPD Secretary Pier Luigi Bersani said: \"Faced with the irresponsibility of the right that betrayed a commitment it made a year ago before the whole country [...] Monti responded with an act of dignity that we profoundly respect.\" PD Deputy Secretary Enrico Letta said of the PdL's withdrawal from the government that \"the financial markets will judge this latest outburst by Berlusconi and they certainly will not judge it positively.\" Bersani had won the centre-left primary election shortly before the PdL withdrew from the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nFollowing a defeat in the primary, Mayor of Florence Matteo Renzi ruled out an approach, in writing, from Berlusconi's PdL to join the party during the election. In the following weeks, both PD and Left Ecology Freedom (SEL) announced their intention to hold primary elections for MP candidates on 29 and 30 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nThe possibility of Monti directly involving himself in the election was seen as increasingly likely after the government crisis in December later that year, as Monti was invited to a European People's Party meeting at which Berlusconi was present too. A few days later, Monti published a political agenda for Italy, dubbed the \"Monti agenda\", and offered it to all political parties. After the Third Pole promptly agreed to use it as their own platform for the upcoming elections, talks started regarding a direct involvement of Monti as premiership candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nOn 28 December 2012, following a 4-hour meeting and after being publicly backed by the Vatican regarding a potential bid, Monti publicly announced his candidacy as head of the Third Pole, which ran in the Senate as a unique component provisionally named \"Monti's Agenda for Italy\", and in the Lower House as a coalition of several components.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nBerlusconi said the platform his party would run on includes opposition to Monti's economic performance, which he said put Italy into a \"recessive spiral without end.\" He also told the media, on the sidelines of AC Milan's practice session (the football club he owns along with Mediaset, the largest media outlet in the country): \"I race to win. To win, everyone said there had to be a tested leader. It's not that we did not look for one. We did, and how! But there isn't one [...] I'm doing it out of a sense of responsibility.\" Berlusconi and Five Star Movement (M5S) leader Beppe Grillo criticised the euro-zone and Germany's influence on European policy. Grillo wrote that the average Italian \"is literally terrified about the prospects of five more years of Monti-like rule.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nOn 8 December 2012, a new political party formed around a think tank named \"Fermare il Declino\" (Stop the Decline), on an initiative by the economic journalist Oscar Giannino and supported by various economists. On 19 December 2012, the name \"FARE per Fermare il Declino\" (\"ACT to Stop The Decline\") was chosen, and a list was presented with Oscar Giannino as PM candidate. The party's programme was also introduced, roughly inspiring to reduce the role of the State in the economy, reduce the national debt through disposing redundant assets, and to propose market liberalizations and privatizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nOn 29 December 2012, a new coalition, Civil Revolution (RC), was formed with the support of Italy of Values (IdV), Orange Movement (MA), Communist Refoundation Party (PRC), Party of Italian Communists (PdCI) and Federation of the Greens (FdV). It is led by celebrity magistrate Antonio Ingroia and Mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris. FdS co-leader Paolo Ferrero said it would be a \"Fourth Pole\" that would bring new hope for the left. Civil Revolution attempted to solicit M5S to join them, saying \"the door is open.\" Grillo, however, turned them down, writing on his blog \"is the door for M5S open? Well, thank you, but close the door again, please.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Campaign\nOn 7 January 2013, Berlusconi announced he had penned a coalition agreement with the Northern League (LN); as part of it, PdL will support Roberto Maroni's bid for the presidency of Lombardy, and he will run as \"leader of the coalition\", but suggested he could accept a role as Minister of Economy under a cabinet headed by another PdL member, such as Angelino Alfano. Later that day, LN leader Maroni confirmed his party will not support a new candidacy of Berlusconi as Prime Minister in the case of an electoral win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system\nThe electoral system had been last reformed by Law no. 270, 21 December 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system, Chamber of Deputies\nFor the election of the lower house, all seats in the Chamber of Deputies (excluding one deputy for the region of Aosta Valley and twelve deputies for Italians residing abroad) are allocated based on the national vote in a form of party-list proportional representation with a series of thresholds encouraging parties to form coalitions. Voters cast one vote for a closed list, meaning they cannot express a preference for individual candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system, Chamber of Deputies\nParties can choose to run in coalitions. Seats are first allocated based on coalition votes, then divided among parties belonging to the same coalition by the largest remainder method. To guarantee a working majority, the coalition or party that obtains a plurality of the vote, but fewer than 340 seats, is assigned additional seats to reach that number, which is roughly 54% of all seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system, Chamber of Deputies\nThe autonomous region of Aosta Valley elects one deputy through a first-past-the-post system. Italians abroad are divided into four constituencies, which elect a total of twelve seats based on proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system, Senate\nFor the election of the upper house, a similar system is used. However, the results are based on regional, rather than national, vote. This means the coalition or party that wins a plurality of votes in each region is guaranteed a majority of the seats assigned to that region. As this mechanism is region-based, opposing parties or coalitions may benefit from the majority bonus in different regions. It therefore does not guarantee any party or coalition a majority in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system, Senate\nThree regions have exceptions to the system detailed above. In the region of Molise, that is granted two seats in the Senate, seats are allocated proportionally, with no majority bonus. The region of Aosta Valley, which elects one senator, uses a first-past-the-post system. Finally, the region of Trentino-South Tyrol elects seven senators with a mixed-member proportional system: six senators are elected in six single-member constituencies, while the seventh is allocated to the most underrepresented list based on the regional votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system, Senate\nSix seats in the Senate are assigned to Italians living abroad and are allocated using the same system used for the Chamber of Deputies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Electoral system, Constitutionality\nAt the end of 2013, Italy's Constitutional Court declared that this electoral law failed to meet a number of constitutional requirements. The electoral system for the Chamber of Deputies was later reformed by Law no. 52, 6 May 2015 (commonly called Italicum).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Results for the Chamber of Deputies, Aosta Valley\nThe autonomous region of Aosta Valley, in northwestern Italy, elects one member to the Chamber of Deputies through a direct first-past-the-post election. Some parties that formed electoral coalitions in Italy, might have opted to run against one another (or form different coalitions) in this particular region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Results for the Chamber of Deputies, Italians abroad\nTwelve members of the Chamber of Deputies are elected by Italians abroad. Two members are elected for North America and Central America (including most of the Caribbean), four members for South America (including Trinidad and Tobago), five members for Europe, and one member for the rest of the world (Africa, Asia, Oceania, and Antarctica). Voters in these regions select candidate lists and may also cast a preference vote for individual candidates. The seats are allocated by proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Results for the Chamber of Deputies, Italians abroad\nThe electoral law allows for parties to form different coalitions on the lists abroad, compared to the lists in Italy. In the 2013 election, this freedom was used by Left Ecology Freedom to provide a list as an independent party, instead of making themselves available as part of the mainlands coalition with Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Results for the Senate of the Republic, Aosta Valley\nThe semi-autonomous region of Aosta Valley, in northwestern Italy, elects one member to the Senate through a direct first-past-the-post election. Some parties that formed electoral coalitions in Italy, might have opted to run against one another (or form different coalitions) in this particular region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 83], "content_span": [84, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Results for the Senate of the Republic, Trentino-Alto Adige/South Tyrol\nThe semi-autonomous region of Trentino-Alto Adige in north Italy, including South Tyrol, elects seven members to the Italian Senate through its six constituencies. Each constituency elects one senator by first-past-the post, while the seventh seat attributed to the region is filled by the most underrepresented party based on the overall regional result (mixed-member proportional system). Some parties that formed electoral coalitions in Italy, might have opted to run against one another (or form different coalitions) in this particular region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 102], "content_span": [103, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Results for the Senate of the Republic, Italians abroad\nSix members of the Senate are elected by Italians abroad. One member is elected for North America and Central America (including most of the Caribbean), two members for South America (including Trinidad and Tobago), two members for Europe, and one member for the rest of the world (Africa, Asia, Oceania, and Antarctica). Voters in these regions select candidate lists and may also cast a preference vote for individual candidates. The seats are allocated by proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 86], "content_span": [87, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Results for the Senate of the Republic, Italians abroad\nThe election law allow for parties to form other electoral coalitions on the lists abroad, compared to the lists in Italy. In the 2013 electional list for the Senate all parties were listed independently without any coalitions formed. None of the parties were neither in internal coalitions at the mainland; so in 2013 the electoral situation abroad actually was not different compared to the electoral situation at the mainland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 86], "content_span": [87, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Reactions\nIn most of the rest of Europe, Bersani would have had more than enough support to form a government in his own right, as Italy Common Good won a decisive majority in the Chamber of Deputies. However, in Italy, unlike in most other parliamentary democracies, the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate have equal power. Governments must thus maintain the confidence of both houses, and require a majority in both houses to pass legislation. As Italy Common Good was 35 seats short of a majority in the Senate, it could not form government on its own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Reactions\nBersani said that Italy was in a \"dramatic situation\". Italian and global shares fell as the result became clear, with the value of the euro also dropping. Strong results for anti-austerity parties were interpreted as showing popular opposition to the austerity measures of the Monti government, with the populist Five Star Movement considered to have had a strong election. Analysts were uncertain as to how this new party would behave in the legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Reactions\nOn 26 February La Repubblica ran the headline \"Boost for Grillo: Italy ungovernable\", whilst Il Giornale described Berlusconi's result as a miracle. Il Messaggero declared that \"The winner is ungovernability\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Government formation\nFormal talks to form a new government were expected to start on 10 March with the official confirmation of the results and the convening of parliament. The formation task immediately turned out to be tough due to the absence of a clear majority in the Senate, with Giorgio Napolitano being unable to dissolve the Parliament due to constitutional constraints forbidding a president from doing so during the last six months of his term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Government formation\nOn 22 March, after the election of house speakers Laura Boldrini and Piero Grasso, and after two days of consultations with all the parliamentary groups, Napolitano designated Pier Luigi Bersani with the task of forming a new government. Bersani immediately ruled out the possibility of a grand coalition with Berlusconi's right-wing coalition, and instead tried to form a minority government supported by the Five Star Movement. On 28 March, after formal talks with Napolitano, Bersani admitted there was no chance to form such a government. Given the troubles in forming a majority coalition, Napolitano then decided to directly form two informal bipartisan commissions with the task of agreeing on a number of shared reforms", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Government formation\nAt the same time, a new presidential election was called for 18 April. However, the lack of a clear majority turned out to be problematic also in this scenario, as the first five ballots failed to elect a candidate. The Democratic Party split into several factions due to internal conflicts involving the support of party candidates Franco Marini and Romano Prodi, leading to Bersani's resignation as party leader. On the sixth ballot, in an unprecedented move, Napolitano was elected for a second term as Italian president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234166-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election, Government formation\nSuccessively, Napolitano started talks again and on 24 April appointed the Democratic Party's deputy secretary Enrico Letta as designated prime minister on 28 April, he announced that he had managed to form a grand coalition of his Democratic Party, the People of Freedom, Civic Choice, the Union of the Centre and the Radicals that would take office and seek a vote of confidence the next day. The same day as the swearing-in a gunman opened fire at the prime minister's office, Palazzo Chigi, injuring two police officers. Letta told parliament in his inaugural speech \"Italy is dying from austerity alone. Growth policies cannot wait.\" He added that there would not be a property tax imposed and that a \"fairer\" system for the less affluent was being worked. He also won the vote of confidence by 453 votes to 153.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234167-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election in Aosta Valley\nThe Italian general election of 2013 took place on 24\u201325 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234167-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election in Aosta Valley\nIn its two single-seat constituencies, Aosta Valley elected Rudi Marguerettaz (Edelweiss, Aosta Valley) to the Chamber of Deputies and Albert Lani\u00e8ce (Valdostan Union, Aosta Valley coalition) to the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234168-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election in Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol\nThe Italian general election of 2013 took place on 24\u201325 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234168-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election in Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol\nIn Trentino the centre-left came first, but Civic Choice, which included Lorenzo Dellai's Union for Trentino, had a strong showing. In South Tyrol the South Tyrolean People's Party was confirmed as the largest party, but Die Freiheitlichen had their best result ever in a general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234169-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election in Veneto\nThe Italian general election of 2013 took place on 24\u201325 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234169-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian general election in Veneto\nThe election was won in Veneto by the centre-right coalition between The People of Freedom and Lega Nord (31.8%), which by the way lost almost a half of its electorate from 2008. The Five Star Movement was the largest party with 26.3%, followed by the Democratic Party (21.3%) and The People of Freedom (18.7%). Lega Nord, the party of President Luca Zaia, fell from 27.1% to 10.5%. Despite coming third in Veneto, the centre-left coalition led by the Democratic Party obtained the most Chamber seats due to the national majority premium, while the centre-right won the regional majority premium in the Senate race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234170-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian local elections\nThe 2013 Italian local elections were held on different dates; most on 26\u201327 May, with a second round on 9\u201310 June. In Italy, direct elections were held in 720 municipalities: in each municipality (comune) were chosen mayor and members of the City Council. Of the 720 municipalities, 20 were provincial capitals and only 171 had a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants (10,000 for Sicily).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234170-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian local elections\nIn Friuli-Venezia Giulia the elections were held on 21\u201322 April with a second ballot on 5\u20136 May; all of 13 municipalities of the region voted for a new mayor and a new City Council concurrently with the Regional elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234170-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian local elections\nIn Sicily the elections were held on 9\u201310 June with a second ballot on 23\u201324 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234170-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian local elections\nThere weren't provincial elections around Italy because of their abolition (also in Sicily, since 2012), except for Friuli-Venezia Giulia: in this region citizens elected a new president and a new Provincial Council in Province of Udine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234170-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian local elections, Voting System\nAll mayoral elections in Italy in cities with a population higher than 15,000 use the same voting system. Under this system voters express a direct choice for the mayor or an indirect choice voting for the party of the candidate's coalition. If no candidate receives at least 50% of votes, the top two candidates go to a second round after two weeks. This gives a result whereby the winning candidate may be able to claim majority support, although it is not guaranteed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234170-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian local elections, Voting System\nThe election of the City Council is based on a direct choice for the candidate with a preference vote: the candidate with the majority of the preferences is elected. The number of the seats for each party is determined proportionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234170-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian local elections, Results\nMajority of each coalition in 92 municipalities (comuni) with a population higher than 15,000:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234171-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix was the fifth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Mugello Circuit in Scarperia on 2 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234171-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix\nJorge Lorenzo took the victory, ahead of pole sitter Dani Pedrosa, and Cal Crutchlow. Valentino Rossi and \u00c1lvaro Bautista collided on lap 1, the barriers being torn apart on impact, and Marc M\u00e1rquez slid wide into the gravel trap with 3 laps to go, suffering his first MotoGP retirement, whilst riding in a comfortable second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234171-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian 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-00234172-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election\nThe Italian presidential election of 2013 was held in Italy on 18\u201320 April. The result was the re-election of Giorgio Napolitano, the first time a President had been elected for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election\nOnly members of Parliament and regional delegates were entitled to vote, most of these electors having been elected in the 2013 general election. As head of state of the Italian Republic, the President has a role of representation of national unity and guarantees that Italian politics comply with the Italian Constitution, in the framework of a parliamentary system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Procedure\nIn accordance to the Italian Constitution, the election was held in the form of a secret ballot, with the Senators, the Deputies and 58 regional representatives entitled to vote. The election was held in the Palazzo Montecitorio, home of the Chamber of Deputies, with the capacity of the building expanded for the purpose. The first three ballots required a two-thirds majority of the 1,007 voters in order to elect a president, or 672 votes. Starting from the fourth ballot, an absolute majority was required for candidates to be elected, or 504 votes. The presidential mandate lasts seven years. The term of the incumbent president, Giorgio Napolitano, was due to end on 15 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Procedure\nThe election was presided over by the President of the Chamber of Deputies Laura Boldrini, who proceeded to the public counting of the votes, and by the President of the Senate Pietro Grasso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Chronology\nOn 16 April 2013 the Five Star Movement (M5S) announced its support for investigative journalist Milena Gabanelli, and the party's leader Beppe Grillo indicated that the party might be willing to form a coalition government with the centre-left coalition if she were elected president with the coalition's support. On 17 April, after Gabanelli and Gino Strada withdrew from consideration, the M5S announced its support for Stefano Rodot\u00e0, a former President of the Data Protection Authority, member of the Chamber of Deputies, Member of the European Parliament, and president of the Democratic Party of the Left (PDS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Chronology\nOn 17 April Pier Luigi Bersani, leader of the Democratic Party (PD), put forward Franco Marini, a former leader of the Italian Confederation of Workers' Trade Unions (CISL), leader of the Italian People's Party (PPI) and President of the Italian Senate, as his party's candidate for president. Marini was selected having received the support of centre-right parties, notably The People of Freedom (PdL), Civic Choice (SC), Lega Nord (LN) and the Union of the Centre (UdC). However, Matteo Renzi, mayor of Florence and leader of a party minority, several Democratic Party lawmakers and Left Ecology Freedom (SEL) stated that they would not support Marini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Chronology\nOn 18 April Marini received just 521 votes in the first ballot, short of the 672 needed, as more than 200 centre-left delegates rebelled. In the run-up of the second ballot Marini's candidacy was retired. The first two rounds' inconclusive results were interpreted as showing turmoil within the centre-left. As results of apparent jokes by electors, a number of implausible candidates, such as football manager Roberto Mancini and porn star Rocco Siffredi, received individual votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Chronology\nOn 19 April the PD and SEL selected Romano Prodi, a former Prime Minister and President of the European Commission, to be their candidate in the fourth ballot. Despite the fact that his candidacy had received unanimous support among the two parties' delegates, Prodi obtained only 395 votes in the fourth ballot as more than 100 centre-left electors did not vote for him. After the vote, Bersani announced his resignation from party secretary and Prodi pulled out of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Chronology\nOn 20 April incumbent President Giorgio Napolitano, holder of the post since 2006, agreed to run for another term in an attempt to break the parliamentary deadlock with the aim of safeguarding the continuity of the country's institutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Results\nIn the first three ballots the required majority was 672 votes. Further ballots require a simple majority of electors, in this case 504 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Results\nBerlusconi and his coalition refused to support the PD's Fourth Round choice of Romano Prodi, claiming he was unacceptable as a compromise candidate. As a result, leaders from all political parties except for Beppe Grillo turned to Napolitano and held discussions with him in order to convince him to run again. Even though he had openly stated his refusal to consider running again in an interview a week before, Napolitano reluctantly agreed, and the party leaders subsequently urged electors to back him as a show of unity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Results\nNapolitano was comfortably re-elected, having garnered the support of centre-left leader Pier Luigi Bersani, former Prime Minister and centre-right leader Silvio Berlusconi, and interim PM and centrist Mario Monti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Reactions\nAfter the election results were announced, demonstrations took place outside Palazzo Montecitorio against the re-election of Napolitano. A sizable number of protesters were supporters of the Five Star Movement led by Beppe Grillo. Grillo himself condemned Napolitano's re-election, claiming this was a \"coup d'\u00e9tat.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234172-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian presidential election, Reactions\nPier Luigi Bersani promised to resign as leader of the PD in response to the lack of support within his coalition for Romano Prodi, the party's preference for president on the fourth ballot. Following his resignation, former trade union leader Guglielmo Epifani was elected in his place on 11 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234173-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian regional elections\nA round of regional elections in Italy took place during 2013 in seven regions out of twenty including Lazio, Lombardy and Molise (24 and 25 February), and 3 autonomous regions: Friuli-Venezia Giulia (21 and 22 April), Aosta Valley (26 May), Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol (27 October) and Basilicata (17 and 18 November).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nIn 2013, protests occurred in many parts of Italy, starting on 15 November and ending on 18 December although several protests continued until February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nUsual targets have been the government, high taxation, red tape, established parties, the European Union, the Euro, the Common Agricultural Policy, and Globalization. The protesters' goals include the overthrow of Enrico Letta's government, the resignation of President Giorgio Napolitano and the dissolution of Parliament. Some went so far as to propose the formation of a military junta to lead the country out of Eurozone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nThe whole protests, including rallies, demonstrations and blockades of highways and rail service, were dubbed by journalists Pitchfork protests from the name of one of the leading participants: the Sicilian-based \"Pitchforks Movement\", which has been active in Sicily since 2011 and was characterised by an autonomist streak. In the 2012 Sicilian regional election the Pitchforks supported either Mariano Ferro (candidate for \"People of Pitchworks\") or Cateno De Luca (candidate for \"Sicilian Revolution\"), who both hailed from the Movement for the Autonomies and received a combined 2.5% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nSeveral groups, sometimes in conflict one with another, have animated protests, benefiting from a loose or non-existent coordination. They included a diverse bunch of groups: the original Pitchfork Movement, associations of truck drivers, environmental activists, farmers, entrepreneurs, unemployed people, football fans, minor political parties (including New Force and CasaPound, two far-right movements), and a plethora of local groups. The European Federalist Free Entrepreneurs (LIFE), a libertarian and mainly Venetian nationalist organization led by Lucio Chiavegato (a former president of Veneto State), has been playing a big role in Veneto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nThe committee which organized the first protests, the \"National Coordination 9 December 2013\", was led by Mariano Ferro, Lucio Chiavegato and Danilo Calvani (a farmer from Lazio).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nIn December 2013, Pitchfork spokesman Andrea Zunino claimed that Italy was a \"slave\" to Jewish bankers; this anti-Semitic remark was widely condemned. As a result of this and of neo-fascist infiltrations, Ferro and Chiavegato, who distanced himself from neo-fascists and Italian nationalists, decided not to take part to the 18 December demonstration in Rome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nIn March 2014 Chiavegato announced that the 9 December Movement had been dissolved and that he would concentrate again on Veneto only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests\nIn April, Chiavegato and other leading members of the LIFE were arrested, along with other Venetian separatists (including Franco Rocchetta and two members of the Venetian Most Serene Government), for suspected crimes including criminal association for terrorism and subversion of the democratic order. Chiavegato, who endured a 17-day hunger strike in jail, was released on 18 April, along with Rocchetta and most of the others, as the tribunal of Brescia did not uphold the accusations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nThousands of students protested in major university centers in the country against proposed spending cuts in the 2014 budget. Scuffles broke out with riot police at some marches as protesters rallied in Rome, Turin and Palermo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nOn 26 November 2013 Trasportounito, a truckers' union, announced a strike which would take place from 9 December through 13 December. On 4 December 2013 thousands of people gathered in Brenner, the Austrian-Italian border, to protest the counterfeited goods imported abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nThousands of farmers, lorry drivers, pensioners and unemployed people have taken to the streets in Italy as part of a series of protests against the government and the European Union. Demonstrators stopped train services by walking on the tracks while striking lorry drivers disrupted traffic by driving slowly and blocking roads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nIn Turin, police officers used tear gas to disperse demonstrators who had been throwing rocks and bottles at the headquarters of Italy's tax collection agency. Two demonstrators were arrested for violence. An additional number of 32 people were given police warnings for blocking roads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nIn Savona, near Genova, protesters broke into a bookshop urging the owner to \"shut down the store and set fire to the books\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nOn 11 December, violence erupted in Milan when 20 Ajax fans, who had arrived in the city for the Champions League game against AC Milan, got off their bus and hurled beer cans and insults at the demonstrators in the central Loreto Square. Police intervened quickly to break up the fighting, but five Ajax supporters and an Italian peddler were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nIn Rome, hundreds of students clashed with police and threw firecrackers outside a university where government ministers were attending a conference. \"Our university isn\u2019t a catwalk for those who peddle austerity\" read a banner. Clashes have been also reported in Ventimiglia, a locality on the Italian-French border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nA group of protesters of the neo-fascist movement CasaPound attacked the headquarters of the European Union in Rome. The leader of the movement, Simone Di Stefano, ripped the EU flag from the balcony of the building and replaced it with the Italian one. The protesters have been charged by the police and, after tough fighting, ten of them, including Di Stefano, have been arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234174-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Italian social protests, Timeline\nAfter the renouncement of Mariano Ferro and Lucio Chiavegato to take part to the demonstration in Rome, Danilo Calvani, the leader of Lazio's factions of the movement, remained the only one to participate to it. Simone Di Stefano, the Vice-President of the neo-fascist CasaPound said that his movement will take part to the protest. The Ministry of the Interior deployed 2,000 police officers to maintain security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234175-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament\nThe 2013 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament is an under-18 ice hockey tournament held in B\u0159eclav, Czech Republic and Pie\u0161\u0165any, Slovakia from August 5\u201310, 2013. As in the previous three years, the venues are Alcaplast Arena in B\u0159eclav and Easton Arena in Pie\u0161\u0165any.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234176-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series\nThe 2013 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series was held at Robertson Field at Satow Stadium on the campus of Columbia University in New York, New York on May 4, 2013. The series matched the regular season champions of each of the league's two divisions, Columbia and Dartmouth. Columbia won their second series championship in two games and claimed the Ivy League's automatic berth in the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234176-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series\nThrough the 2013 championship, Dartmouth had appeared in the Ivy League Championship Series every year since 2008, winning in 2009 and 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234177-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ivy League Men's Lacrosse Tournament\nThe 2013 Ivy League Men's Lacrosse Tournament took place May 3 to May 5 at Schoellkopf Field in Ithaca, New York. The winner of the tournament received the Ivy League 's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship. Four teams from the Ivy League conference competed in the single elimination tournament. The seeds were based upon the teams' regular season conference record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234177-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ivy League Men's Lacrosse Tournament, Standings\nOnly the top four teams in the Ivy League conference advanced to the Ivy League Conference Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234178-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ivy League men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Ivy League men's soccer season will be the 59th season of men's college soccer in the conference. The league will be part of the 2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The Cornell Big Red are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234179-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Cup\nThe 2013 J.League Cup, also known as the 2013 Yamazaki Nabisco Cup for sponsoring purposes, was the 38th edition of the most prestigious Japanese soccer league cup tournament and the 21st edition under the current J.League Cup format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234179-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Cup, Format\nTeams from the J.League Division 1 will take part in the tournament. Kashiwa Reysol, Sanfrecce Hiroshima, Urawa Red Diamonds and Vegalta Sendai were given a bye to the quarter-finals due to qualification in the 2013 AFC Champions League. The remaining 14 teams started from the group stage, where they were divided into two groups of seven. The group winners and the runners-up of each group qualified for the quarter-final along with the four teams which qualified for the AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234180-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Cup Final\n2013 J.League Cup Final was the 21st final of the J.League Cup competition. The final was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on November 2, 2013. Kashiwa Reysol won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234181-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 1\nThe 2013 J.League Division 1 season was the 48th season of Japanese top-flight football and 21st since the establishment of the J.League. The season began on 2 March and finished on 7 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234181-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 1, Clubs\nVissel Kobe, Gamba Osaka and Consadole Sapporo were relegated at the end of the 2012 season after finishing in the bottom three places of the table. Consadole Sapporo returned to J2 after only one season in the top flight, while Vissel Kobe was relegated after six seasons in the top flight. Gamba Osaka, instead, was relegated for the first time since the creation of J. League in 1993 and first time since their forerunners, Matsushita Electric Soccer Club, were relegated to the second Division of Japan Soccer League after the 1986\u201387 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234181-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 1, Clubs\nThe three relegated teams were replaced by 2012 J.League Division 2 champions Ventforet Kofu, runners-up Shonan Bellmare and sixth-placed and play-off winner team Oita Trinita. Kofu made an immediate return to the top division, while Shonan after a two-year absence. In the end, Oita beat JEF United Chiba in the playoff final and returned in J1 after three seasons in the second division. Due to Oita's promotion, it will be the first time to have 2 clubs in the top-flight league competitions from Kyushu since 2006, and Kansai region will have only one club competing in the top flight first time since 1994 season due to Kobe and Gamba's relegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234181-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 1, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 7 December 2013Source: Notes:\u2020 Team played previous season in J2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234182-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 2\nThe 2013 J.League Division 2 season is the 42nd season of the second-tier club football in Japan and the 15th season since the establishment of J2 League. The regular season began on 3 March and ended on 24 November, followed by the promotion play-offs among four clubs ranked between 3rd and 6th at the end of regular season. Gamba Osaka became champions, and Vissel Kobe became runners-up, both returned to J1 immediately after one season at J2. The other promoted team is third runners-up (fourth placers) Tokushima Vortis, who won the promotion playoff final, defeating Kyoto Sanga FC. With the win, Vortis are making their J1 debut, becoming the first professional Shikoku football club to compete in the top division of their national league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234182-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 2, Clubs\nVentforet Kofu and Shonan Bellmare, champions and runners-up in the previous season, and Oita Trinita, winners of the promotion play-offs for 2012, were promoted to J1, then Consadole Sapporo, Vissel Kobe, and Gamba Osaka were relegated to J2 instead. Sapporo returned to J2 only after one season in the top-flight, and Kobe returned to J2 second time after 2006 season, while Gamba suffers their very first relegation to the second-tier after J.League Division 2 was established in 1999, and the first relegation since their former organization, Matsushita Electric Soccer Club, were relegated after the 1986\u201387 season of JSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234182-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 2, Clubs\nV-Varen Nagasaki, champions of the 2012 Japan Football League, are promoted to J2 while F.C. Machida Zelvia, promoted to J2 from the previous season and ranked 22nd, were relegated back to 2013 Japan Football League only after spending one season in J2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234182-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 2, Clubs\nIn February, Thespa Kusatsu changed their name to Thespakusatsu Gunma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234182-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 2, Play-offs, Promotion Playoffs to Division 1\nTeams that finished 3rd to 6th participate in play-off series for the last J1 promotion berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234182-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 2, Play-offs, Promotion Playoffs to Division 1, Semifinals\nIf the score is tied after 90 minutes, no extra time is played and the winner is the team with the best league ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 81], "content_span": [82, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234182-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 J.League Division 2, Play-offs, JFL Relegation Playoffs\nThe last-placed Gainare Tottori faced 2013 Japan Football League runners-up Kamatamare Sanuki in a two-legged playoff series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix\nThe 2013 JAF Grand Prix Fuji Sprint Cup was the final racing event for both the 2013 Super GT season and the 2013 Super Formula season. It took place over November 23 and November 24, 2013 at the Fuji Speedway in Oyama, Shizuoka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, Background\nThe JAF Grand Prix would be the last time the current model GT500 and the current model Super Formula cars would race, as Super GT would move to unified regulations with the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, while the Swift SF13 would be replaced by the Dallara SF14 for the 2014 Super Formula season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, Background\nThe Balance of Performance in GT300 was once again adjusted, the GTA decided to adopt the balance of performance for GT3 cars from the Blancpain Endurance Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, Background\nUnlike the eight points-scoring races in Super GT, the Fuji Sprint Cup was run under slightly different rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, Background\n38 cars were entered in the two Super GT classes, 15 in GT500 and 23 in GT300. The #96 Dijon Racing Callaway Corvette Z06.R GT3 returning to the series after having last raced in the 2013 Fuji GT 300km, while the #35 Nismo Global Athlete Team made its only appearance of the season, with Alex Buncombe and Lucas Ord\u00f3\u00f1ez driving. Neither the #52 OKINAWA-IMP RACING with SHIFT Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 or the #87 JLOC Lamborghini Gallardo GT3 were entered for the JAF Grand Prix, however JLOC put Hideki Yamauchi and Hiroki Yoshimoto, the drivers of the #87 car into their #88 car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, Background\nIn Super Formula with the exception of Andr\u00e9 Lotterer and Lo\u00efc Duval returning to the cars they had driven for part of the season, there were no other driver changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, GT300 Race 1 results\nThe first GT300 race was held on November 23, 2013. Race result is as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, GT500 Race 1 results\nThe first GT500 race was held on November 23, 2013. Race result is as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, Super Formula results\nThe Super Formula race was held on November 24, 2013. Race result is as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, GT300 Race 2 results\nThe second GT300 race was held on November 23, 2013. Race result is as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234183-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 JAF Grand Prix, GT500 Race 2 results\nThe second GT500 race was held on November 23, 2013. Race result is as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234184-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana\nThe 2013 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Champaign, United States between 11 and 17 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234184-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234184-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players got into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234185-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana \u2013 Doubles\nDevin Britton and Austin Krajicek were the defending champions but Britton decided not to participate. Krajicek partnered with Tennys Sandgren, but lost in the final to the British pairing of Edward Corrie and Daniel Smethurst 7\u20136(7\u20135), 0\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234186-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 JSM Challenger of Champaign\u2013Urbana \u2013 Singles\nTim Smyczek was the defending champion but lost to Erik Crepaldi in the first round. Unseeded American Tennys Sandgren won the title defeating Australian 7th seed Samuel Groth 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234187-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 JX28\n2013 JX28 (also known as 2006 KZ39) is an Atira asteroid, a type of Aten asteroid, that orbits entirely within Earth's orbit. It orbits very close to the Sun, having the fourth smallest semi-major axis of any minor planet in the Solar System. At its closest, it is only 0.26\u00a0AU (39,000,000\u00a0km; 24,000,000\u00a0mi) from the Sun, but more than 100 minor planets have a smaller perihelion distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234187-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 JX28\nDespite being officially classified as a near-Earth object, 2013 JX28 has a MOID (minimum orbit intersection distance) with Earth of ~0.067 AU, making it highly unlikely to ever hit Earth. For comparison, the Moon orbits Earth at about 1/26th this distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234187-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 JX28, Physical characteristics\n2013 JX28 has an absolute magnitude (H) of 20.1, which means it is rather small, with the size being approximately 300 meters based on an assumed albedo of 0.15. Its albedo is not known, so a size estimate is not certain. Assuming the albedo is between 0.05 and 0.25, it is somewhere between 260\u2013580 meters in diameter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234187-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 JX28, Physical characteristics\n163693 Atira, an asteroid with an orbit similar to 2013 JX28, for comparison, has an absolute magnitude of 16.28 and is notably larger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234187-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 JX28, Close approaches\nAs a near-Earth object, 2013 JX28 often comes within 0.1\u00a0AU (15,000,000\u00a0km; 9,300,000\u00a0mi)] of Earth. On 29 April 2014, it traveled to 0.0843 AU from Earth, about 33 times further than the Moon. Below is a list of close approaches until 2100 where 2013 JX28 travels closer than 0.1 AU to Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 27], "content_span": [28, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234188-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jackson State Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Jackson State Tigers football team represented Jackson State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Tigers were led by eighth year head coach Rick Comegy and played their home games at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the SWAC East Division. Jackson State returned as the defending East Division Champs. The Tigers finished the season with an 8\u20134 record, as East Division Champions and with a loss against Southern in the SWAC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234188-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jackson State Tigers football team\nOn Media Day, Jackson State was picked to finish second in the Eastern Division of the SWAC. They had two players, Defensive Lineman Tedderick Terrell and Defensive Back Qua Cox selected the Pre-Season All-SWAC 1st Team Defense. Running backs Tommy Gooden and Rakeem Sims, offensive lineman Jordan Arthur, linebacker Todd Wilcher, and defensive back Cameron Loeffler were selected as All-SWAC 2nd Team members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234188-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jackson State Tigers football team, Media\nJackson State games were broadcast on 95.5 Hallelujah FM. All Jackson State games were also streamed online at no cost via Yahoo!.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234189-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jackson mayoral election\nThe 2013 mayoral election in Jackson, Mississippi took place on June 4, 2013, alongside other Jackson municipal races. City councilman Chokwe Lumumba was elected mayor in a landslide in the general election after defeating Jonathan Lee and incumbent mayor Harvey Johnson, Jr. in the primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234190-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Dolphins football team\nThe 2013 Jacksonville Dolphins football team represented Jacksonville University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by seventh-year head coach Kerwin Bell and played their home games at D. B. Milne Field. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 5\u20136, 4\u20134 in PFL play to finish in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234191-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Jaguars season\nThe 2013 Jacksonville Jaguars season was the franchise's 19th season in the National Football League, the first under general manager David Caldwell, and the first under head coach Gus Bradley. Although they missed the playoffs and started 0-8, the Jaguars improved upon their then-franchise-worst 2\u201314 record from 2012; but failed to improve their 1-7 home record from last year. Much like 2012, the root of their victories were intra-division. The Jaguars also gained a close non-divisional victory over the Browns to finish 4\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234191-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Jaguars season, Roster changes, Undrafted rookie free agents\nThe following is a list of notable rookie free agents signed after the 2013 NFL Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234191-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Jaguars season, Schedule, Regular season\nNote: Intra-division opponents are in bold text. #\u00a0 Blue/Red indicates the International Series game in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234192-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Sharks season\nThe 2013 Jacksonville Sharks season was the fourth season for the franchise in the Arena Football League. The team was coached by Les Moss and played their home games at Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena. After winning the South Division for the fourth consecutive year, the Sharks were eliminated in the conference championship game by the Philadelphia Soul for the second straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234192-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Sharks season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated August 7, 201324 Active, 12 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234192-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Sharks season, Standings\nz - Clinched division and conference's best recordx - Clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234192-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville Sharks season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe Sharks began the season on the road against the Tampa Bay Storm on March 24. Their first home game was on April 12 against the New Orleans VooDoo. They closed the regular season against the Storm at home on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234193-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team\nThe 2013 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team represented Jacksonville State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Bill Clark and played their home games at Burgess-Snow Field at JSU Stadium. They were a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC). Jacksonville Stat had a record of 11\u20134 on the season with a 5\u20133 mark in OVC play to finish in a tie for third place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS playoffs where they defeated Samford and McNeese State to advance to the quarterfinals where they lost to Eastern Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234193-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jacksonville State Gamecocks football team\nOn January 21, 2014, Clark resigned to become the head coach at UAB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood\nThe 2013 Jakarta flood was a flood in Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia, which, in addition to areas in downtown Jakarta, also affected several other areas surrounding the city, such as West Java and Banten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood, History\nSevere floods have been reported to have hit Jakarta in the past, including in 1621, 1654, 1918, 1942, 1976, 1996, 2002 and 2007. An important part of the flooding problem is caused by the fact that a substantial part of Jakarta is low-lying. Around 24,000 ha (about 240 square km) of the main part of Jakarta is estimated to be below sea level. Flooding can become severe if heavy rain happens to coincide with high tides. When this happens, high tides tend to push water into low-lying areas just as the run off from rains in upland areas such as nearby Bogor is flowing down into the Jakarta area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood, Duration\nThe flood in 2013 began on Tuesday, 15 January 2013, in some parts of the city as a result of heavy rain and waterways clogged with garbage and other kinds of debris. Serious flooding began along several main thoroughfares of Jakarta. A 30-meter-long section of Jakarta's West Flood Canal dike on Jalan Johannes Latuharhary in Menteng collapsed. This breach quickly caused flooding in nearby areas. Military personnel, the Jakarta public works agency, and public order officers joined forces to quickly replace the collapsed dike section with a temporary retaining wall made of rocks and sandbags. Workers finished rebuilding a section of a canal dike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood, Duration\nThe clearing of the land above Jakarta has been identified as a major contributor to Jakarta's water table and flooding issues. Jakarta has a very bad sewage system due to the disposing of trash in roads and sidewalks. There were 47 deaths reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood, Transport\nThe city's main airport was open but many roads leading to it were reportedly blocked. The flooding disrupted train services from Manggarai Station in South Jakarta to Tanah Abang Station in Central Jakarta. Most commuter trains and buses were suspended, and roads were difficult to access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood, Transport\nFlooding was reported at the presidential palace, forcing the postponement of a meeting between President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his visiting Argentine counterpart, Cristina Fernandez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood, Evacuations\nEvacuations were carried out in parts of Jakarta. An estimated 20,000 people were evacuated 17 January 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234194-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Jakarta flood, Nationwide flooding\nOther parts of Indonesia, from Sumatra to Sulawesi, have also seen seasonal flooding, though it is most acute in the capital city, Jakarta. Five died in Sulawesi, while another 4 died in Semarang by flood electrocution. Yogyakarta is on high alert for lahars, as some 70 million cubic meters of volcanic material still cling to the slopes of Mount Merapi, and heavy rains could trigger an avalanche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234195-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jalisco Open\nThe 2013 Jalisco Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Guadalajara, Mexico between 8 and 14 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234195-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jalisco Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234195-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jalisco Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234196-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jalisco Open \u2013 Doubles\nJames Cerretani and Adil Shamasdin were the defending champions but lost in the semifinals. Marin Draganja and Mate Pavi\u0107 won the title by defeating Samuel Groth and John-Patrick Smith 5\u20137, 6\u20132, [13\u201311] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234197-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jalisco Open \u2013 Singles\nThiago Alves was the defending champion but chose to compete in the 2013 Taroii Open de T\u00eanis instead. Alex Bogomolov Jr. won the title after defeating Rajeev Ram 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234198-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jalpaiguri bombing\nOn 26 December 2013, a bomb blast took place in Jalpaiguri district of West Bengal that killed five persons and injured five others. Militants of Kamtapur Liberation Organization are suspected to be behind the bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234199-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 James Madison Dukes football team\nThe 2013 James Madison Dukes football team represented James Madison University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 15th year head coach Mickey Matthews and play their home games at Bridgeforth Stadium and Zane Showker Field. They were a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 6\u20136, 3\u20135 in CAA play to finish in a tie for eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234199-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 James Madison Dukes football team\nOn November 25, head coach Mickey Matthews was fired. He had a record of 109\u201371 in 15 seasons and won the FCS National Championship in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234200-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Championships in Athletics\nThe 97th Japan Championships in Athletics (\u7b2c97\u56de\u65e5\u672c\u9678\u4e0a\u7af6\u6280\u9078\u624b\u6a29\u5927\u4f1a, Dai 97 kai Nihon Rikuj\u014d Ky\u014dgi Sensyuken Taikai) were held at Ajinomoto Stadium in Ch\u014dfu. Organised by JAAF, the three-day competition took place from June 7\u20139 and served as the national championships in track and field for the Japan. The competition was for the qualifying trial for the Japan team at the 2013 World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234200-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Championships in Athletics\nDuring the competition, 3 new championship records were set in the events. Koji Murofushi won the hummer throw's national champions for nineteen consecutive years. For the Most Valuable Player of the Championships, Ryota Yamagata and Hitomi Niiya were selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League\nThe 2013 Japan Football League (Japanese: \u7b2c15\u56de\u65e5\u672c\u30d5\u30c3\u30c8\u30dc\u30fc\u30eb\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0, Hepburn: Dai J\u016bgo-kai Nihon Futtob\u014dru R\u012bgu) is the 17th season of the third tier of the Japanese football, and the 15th season since the establishment of Japan Football League. It started on 10 March and finished on 24 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Clubs\nDue to unfortunate withdrawal of Arte Takasaki, the previous season has featured only 17 teams, but for 2013 the league has brought the number of teams back to 18. After having another team (Sagawa Shiga) ceasing its operations and withdrawing after the season, the league has welcomed into its ranks two newcomers, SC Sagamihara and Fukushima United. Both clubs are looking forward to eventual J. League promotion, with Sagamihara holding the associate membership status, and Fukushima having applied for it in 2007, though unsuccessfully.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Clubs\nLast season has for the first time ever featured direct exchange of teams between JFL and J. League. JFL champions and J. League associate members V-Varen Nagasaki were promoted at the expense of Machida Zelvia, who returned to JFL after only a single season in J2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Clubs\nTochigi Uva were on the brink of relegation, as their play-off series against Norbritz Hokkaido was tied after two rounds. It was decided in penalty shootout, which Tochigi club has won 4\u20131 and retained their place in the JFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Clubs\nOn 26 February Blaublitz Akita and Zweigen Kanazawa were granted J. League associate membership status, bringing the number of such clubs to six, an all-time high mark for the league. On 20 August YSCC Yokohama's application was also granted by J. League, further increasing associate members count to seven. It raised again to 10 members after another J. League board session on 16 September, when applications of Fukushima United, FC Ryukyu and Fujieda MYFC were approved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 24 November 2013Source: Japan Football League: , Notes:\u2020 Team played previous season in J2\u2021 Team played previous season in Regional Leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Post-season promotion and relegation, J2 Promotion playoffs\nAfter conclusion of the JFL and J2 seasons, playoffs for participation in 2014 J2 season were contested by lowest-placed J2 club Gainare Tottori and Kamatamare Sanuki, who possess J2 license and have finished second in JFL. The playoffs took place on 1 and 8 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Post-season promotion and relegation, J2 Promotion playoffs\nKamatamare Sanuki won the playoffs on aggregate and were promoted to 2014 J. League Division 2. Gainare Tottori were relegated to the newly created 2014 J3 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Post-season promotion and relegation, Promotion from Regional Leagues\nAfter 10 of 18 teams were set to leave JFL for the newly created J3, the league announced that it would suffer a contraction and only 14 teams would participate in 2014. The league accommodated all winners of the Regional League promotion series and accepted applications from other Regional clubs that were willing to participate in the nationwide league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 97], "content_span": [98, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234201-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Football League, Post-season promotion and relegation, Promotion from Regional Leagues\nThe top three spots of the Regional League promotion series were occupied by Grulla Morioka, Fagiano Okayama Next and FC Kagoshima respectively, and Volca Kagoshima took the last spot. However, the Morioka club has been chosen by J. League for participation in the 2014 J3 season, and both Kagoshima clubs have announced their post-season merger to Kagoshima United. On 4 December the league announced the final list of promoted teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 97], "content_span": [98, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234202-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Golf Tour\nThe 2013 Japan Golf Tour season was played from 14 March to 8 December 2013. The season consisted of 25 official money events, mostly in Japan, as well as the four majors and the four World Golf Championships. The first two events of the year, played in Thailand and Indonesia, were co-sanctioned with the OneAsia Tour, the first time this has happened with the Japan Golf Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234202-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Golf Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the 2013 schedule. The number in brackets 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 (does not include the four major golf championships and the World Golf Championships). Most tournaments are played in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Series\nThe 2013 Konami Japan Series was the 64th edition of Nippon Professional Baseball's (NPB) championship series known colloquially as the Japan Series. The best-of-seven playoff was won by the Pacific League champion Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles in seven games over the Central League champion Yomiuri Giants. It was the Eagles' first Japan Series appearance and their first win since the team's creation in 2005. The series began on Saturday, October 26, 2013 and ended on Sunday, November 3, 2013 at the Miyagi Baseball Stadium in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture. Eagles' starting pitcher Manabu Mima, who was the winning pitcher in Games 3 and 7, was named the Japan Series Most Valuable Player (MVP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nYomiuri Giants' starter Tetsuya Utsumi and relievers Scott Mathieson, Tetsuya Yamaguchi and Kentaro Nishimura combined on a nine-hit shutout to beat the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles and take one-game lead in the Series. Even though they failed to score in the game, the Eagles had several scoring opportunities. Their leadoff man reached base in six innings and they also ended six innings with at least one runner in scoring position. Eagles' rookie-starter Takahiro Norimoto performed well, holding the Giants to only four hits through eight and a third innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nThe Giants' two runs came from a Hisayoshi Chono RBI-single in the fifth inning and Shuichi Murata's solo homerun in the top of the eighth. In the bottom half of the inning, Giants' outfielder Yoshiyuki Kamei stopped a potential game-tying play by making an impressive catch at the wall to retire Kazuo Matsui with runners on first and second with two outs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nTying the Series at a game a piece, Eagle's ace Masahiro Tanaka earned a victory in Game 2 by striking out 12 in his complete game performance. The game's first run came with Ginji Akaminai's RBI single for the Eagles in the sixth inning. In the bottom of the next inning, with runners on first and third, Kazuya Fujita hit a ground ball to second base. Giants' second baseman Takayuki Terauchi fielded the ball and threw it to first base in an attempt to throw out a head-first-sliding Fujita.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nFirst base umpire Kenjiro Mori called Fujita safe, however replays showed that he should have been out as the ball reached the base first. Giants' manager Tatsunori Hara came onto the field to argue the call with Mori but the call stood. Mori's blown call was exaggerated when Terauchi hit what should have been a game-tying solo home run the next inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nAfter collecting only two runs on nine hits in each of the Series' first two games, the Eagles capitalized on 13 hits in Game 3 getting five runs and the victory. Giants' starter Toshiya Sugiuchi was removed from the game in only the second inning after giving up four runs. Eagles' starter Manabu Mima held the Giants to just four singles and no runs through 52\u20443 innings before leaving the game after being hit in the left foot with a ball hit by Shinnosuke Abe. Mima was relieved by Ken Ray, who pitched though the eighth inning and gave up the Giants' only run, a Kenji Yano leadoff, solo home run in the eighth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nAfter blowing a save in the ninth inning, the Eagles came back to win Game 5 in 10 innings. They led the majority of the game after scoring two runs off of Tetsuya Utsumi in the second. Rakuten starter Wataru Karashima and Takahiro Norimoto pitched five innings a piece. Karashima got through the first four innings without giving up a hit and allowed his first and only hit in the fifth inning. Relieving Karashima, Norimoto blew the game's save opportunity in the ninth only to earn a win in the tenth inning. Yomiuri's Shuichi Murata scored both of the Giants' runs off of Norimoto. His first RBI came from a solo home run in the seventh inning and his game-tying RBI hit came in the ninth sending the game into extra innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nIn the top of the tenth inning, Norimoto drew a lead off walk from Yomiuri reliever Kentaro Nishimura. He went on to reach second base on a sacrifice bunt by Takero Okajima. Next, Kazuya Fujita was hit in the calf with a pitch and took first base. Rakuten then took the lead with a single from Ginji Akaminai. On Akaminai's single, Fujita went from first to third but was then taken out and replaced by pinch runner Toshihito Abe. Abe then scored on Andruw Jones' infield single giving the Eagles an insurance run. Norimoto pitched a hitless bottom half of the inning to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234203-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nRakuten brought home their first Japan Series win after their Game 7 home win over the Giants. Eagles' starter Mima pitched for six innings and gave up only one hit, struck out five and walked three. Norimoto then relieved Mima to pitch two scoreless innings, and Tanaka came in to close out the ninth earning him a save. Tanaka's one-inning save came the day after he pitched a 160-pitch complete game loss. The Giants' offensive problems throughout the series hurt them again in Game 7 where they hit only 5 singles and were shutout. The Eagles immediately took the lead in the first inning on a run-scoring error by Giants' shortstop Hayato Sakamoto. The following inning, they added to their lead with Takero Okajima\u2019s RBI-double. The final insurance run came with Akihisa Makida's solo home run in the fourth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234204-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Sevens\nThe 2013 Japan Sevens was the second edition of the tournament and the seventh tournament of the 2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series. The host stadium was the Chichibunomiya Rugby Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234204-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Sevens\nSouth Africa won the title by defeating New Zealand 24\u201319 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234204-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Sevens, Format\nThe teams were divided into pools of four teams, who played a round-robin within the pool. Points were 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 top two teams in each pool advanced to the Cup competition. The four quarterfinal losers dropped into the bracket for the Plate. The Bowl was contested by the third- and fourth-place finishers in each pool, with the losers in the Bowl quarterfinals dropping into the bracket for the Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234205-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan Super Series\nThe 2013 Japan Super Series was the eighth super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament was held in Tokyo, Japan from 17\u201322 September 2013 and had a total purse of $200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234206-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan national football team\nThe Japan national football team in 2013, managed by head coach Alberto Zaccheroni, competed in the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, the 2013 EAFF East Asian Cup and the fourth round of the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification, in amongst international friendly matches both at home and abroad, as they progress towards the 2014 FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234207-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japan women's national football team\nThis page records the details of the Japan women's national football team in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234208-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Formula 3 Championship\nThe 2013 Japanese Formula 3 Championship was the 35th edition of the Japanese Formula 3 Championship. It was the first Formula Three championship that accepted new FIA Formula 3 engine rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Japanese Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 13 October 2013 at the Suzuka Circuit in Suzuka, Japan. The race was the fifteenth round of the 2013 season, and marked the 39th running of the Japanese Grand Prix. The race, contested over 53 laps, was won by Sebastian Vettel, driving a Red Bull after starting from second on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix\nMark Webber, who started on pole position, settled for second after being forced to switch to a three stop strategy, which in the end was not successful. Romain Grosjean took his second podium in succession in third position for Lotus F1. This was Red Bull's 14th one-two finish in Formula One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix\nThe result meant that the title was not sealed at Suzuka but Vettel could seal it with 5th place at the next race in India. Meanwhile, Fernando Alonso stretched his lead to 30 points over Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen but was still 90 behind Vettel's total. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in turn also increased his lead over Lewis Hamilton to 16 points after the Briton retired from puncture damage after colliding with Vettel on lap one. The result also meant that only Alonso could deprive Vettel of becoming world champion as Hamilton and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen fell out of contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix, Report, Background\nTyre supplier Pirelli brought its Orange-banded hard compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the White-banded Medium compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre, as opposed to the previous year where hard and soft selection were provided. Jules Bianchi and Charles Pic were each given ten-place grid penalties after stewards found they had been speeding behind the safety car at the previous round in Korea. Both drivers were reprimanded for their actions, and automatically received a ten-place grid penalty as it was their third reprimand of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix, Report, Free Practice\nFree Practice 1 saw Heikki Kovalainen drive for Caterham, in place of Charles Pic. The session was not without incident, as both Jules Bianchi (Marussia), Giedo van der Garde (Caterham) both went off at the exit of the second Degner corner. As a result of his accident, Bianchi was forced to sit out of Free Practice 2, while his car was repaired. Pastor Maldonado suffered a loose wheel up at Spoon Curve. Williams were later fined \u20ac60,000 for failing to attach the wheel properly. Lewis Hamilton set the fastest lap of the session, with teammate Nico Rosberg behind him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix, Report, Free Practice\nFree Practice 2 saw Pastor Maldonado also going off at the second Degner corner, where he became stuck in the gravel. Sergio P\u00e9rez lost control of his McLaren going into Spoon, and slid backwards and made heavy contact with the tyre barrier. Fernando Alonso spun at the second Degner corner, but he was able to continue. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen spun into the gravel trap at the Dunlop corner and was forced to end his session. This time championship leader Sebastian Vettel finished the session fastest, with teammate Mark Webber behind him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nIn a first, Charles Pic was given a drive-through penalty for leaving the pits when the red light was displayed at the pit exit during qualifying. The penalty was to be served during the first five laps of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAt the start, Romain Grosjean made a superb start to lead into the first corner, behind him there was drama with Mark Webber making contact with Lewis Hamilton causing the latter to have a puncture, also there was a collision between the Marussia of Jules Bianchi and the Caterham of Giedo van der Garde sending both cars into the barriers at the first corner, fortunately both cars were removed quickly so no safety car was needed. Hamilton pitted to change his punctured tyre but retired on lap 7 with floor damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix, Report, Race\nGrosjean led until the pit stops but careful tyre management from Sebastian Vettel during the second phase of the race meant he was able to pass Grosjean and go on to win the race. On the penultimate lap Webber then caught and passed Grosjean to make it a Red Bull 1-2, with Grosjean having to settle for 3rd. Fernando Alonso claimed 4th with Nico H\u00fclkenberg in fifth. Kimi Raikkionen managed 6th although he was some 40 seconds behind his teammate Grosjean. Esteban Gutierrez had the strongest race of his career with 7th beating Nico Rosberg who had to serve a drive through penalty for an unsafe release in the pits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234209-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Grand Prix, Classification, Qualifying\nNotes: \u00a0\u2014 Adrian Sutil received a five-place grid penalty for a gearbox change. However, he chose he demoted two-five places for causing a deliberate accident at the previous race. \u2014 Charles Pic and Jules Bianchi received ten-place grid penalties for receiving three reprimands over the season. However, due to Sutil's grid penalty Pic and Bianchi were promoted to 20th and 21st respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election\nHouse of Councillors elections were held in Japan on July 21, 2013 to elect the members of the upper house of the National Diet. In the previous elections in 2010, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) remained the largest party, but the DPJ-led ruling coalition lost its majority. The House of Councillors is elected by halves to six year terms. In 2013, the class of Councillors elected in 2007 was up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election, Background\nJapan had been in a \"twisted parliament\" situation since 2007, in which neither major party controlled both houses of the Diet of Japan, leading to political paralysis on a number of issues. Shinzo Abe led the Liberal Democratic Party to victory in the December 2012 general election after several years in the opposition. In campaigning to win control of the House of Councillors, Abe sought to resolve the \"twisted parliament\" problem for the next three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election, Background\nJust prior to the election, the U.S. dollar fell against the yen on expectations of more momentum for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's aggressive monetary easing to fight deflation and boost growth for the export-dominant economy of Japan. Abe's LDP and its coalition partner, the New Komeito party, were tipped to win a majority and end years of parliamentary stalemate so as to enable economic reforms. However, his critics suggested that a strong mandate could even make Abe complacent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election, Opinion polling\nIn the run-up to the election, various organizations conducted opinion polls to gauge voting intentions for the 48 proportional seats. Polls are listed in chronological order, showing the oldest first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election, Results\nThe ruling coalition won 76 seats and now holds a total of 135 seats in the House of Councillors ending the divided Diet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election, Results\nOf the 31 single-member districts the LDP won 29; only in Iwate and Okinawa, opposition incumbents could hold their seats. The ten two-member districts elected ten LDP and ten opposition members; in several prefectures the second seat went to parties other than the DPJ: In Hy\u014dgo to the JRP, in Miyagi to YP and in Ky\u014dto to the JCP. Twelve of the 22 seats in three-, four and five-member districts went to LDP and K\u014dmeit\u014d candidates. In the nationwide proportional race, the coalition parties won 25 seats, the opposition parties 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election, Results, Summary\nDifferences between party and parliamentary group membership in the post-election opening session: Two independents caucus with the NRP, President Masaaki Yamazaki (LDP \u2013 Fukui), Vice-President Azuma Koshiishi (DPJ \u2013 Yamanashi) and Keiko Itokazu (OSMP \u2013 Okinawa) are independents in terms of parliamentary group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234210-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese House of Councillors election, Results, Results by electoral district\nAbbreviations and translations used in this table for (nominating \u2013 endorsing) parties:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234211-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Regional Leagues\nThe 2013 Japanese Regional Leagues were a competition between parallel association football leagues ranking at the bottom of the Japan Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234212-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese Super Cup\nThe 2013 Japanese Super Cup was held on 23 February 2013 between the 2012 J. League champions Sanfrecce Hiroshima and the 2012 Emperor's Cup winner Kashiwa Reysol. Sanfrecce Hiroshima won the match 1\u20130 after a Hisato Sat\u014d goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234213-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix was the seventeen round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Twin Ring Motegi in Motegi on 27 October 2013. Jorge Lorenzo won the MotoGP race to gain Yamaha its 200th victory in the 500cc/MotoGP class. Pol Espargar\u00f3 clinched the Moto2 world title after title contenders Scott Redding and Esteve Rabat crashed out in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234213-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix\nThis was Valentino Rossi's 200th race in the 500cc/MotoGP class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234213-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, Classification, Moto2\nThe first attempt to run the race was interrupted on the opening lap, following an incident involving Scott Redding, \u00c1lex Mari\u00f1elarena and Esteve Rabat. For the restart, the race distance was reduced from 23 to 15 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234213-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (MotoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round seventeen has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234214-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Japanese television dramas\nThis is a list of Japanese television dramas shown within Japan during the year of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234215-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jelajah Malaysia\nThe 2013 Jelajah Malaysia, a cycling stage race that took place in Malaysia. It was held from 26 to 30 June 2013. There were five stages with a total of 856.1 kilometres. In fact, the race was sanctioned by the Union Cycliste Internationale as a 2.2 category race and was part of the 2012\u201313 UCI Asia Tour calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234215-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jelajah Malaysia\nLoh Sea Keong of Malaysia won the race, followed by Sergey Kuzmin of Kazakhstan second and Kiril Pozdnyakov of Russia third overall. Mohamed Harrif Salleh of Malaysia won the points classification and Mohamed Zamri Salleh of Malaysia won the mountains classification. Synergy Baku Cycling Project won the team classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234215-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jelajah Malaysia, List of teams and riders\nA total of 20 teams were invited to participate in the 2013 Jelajah Malaysia. Out of 116 riders, a total of 107 riders made it to the finish in Putra Square, Putrajaya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum\nA referendum on electoral reform was held on Jersey on 24 April 2013. Voters were offered three choices for a future electoral system, and will be asked to rank them in order of preference. Option B was the most preferred option, receiving 41% of votes in the first round, and 55% after second preferences were counted. Voter turnout was just 26%, and the proposed reforms were later rejected by the States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum, Background\nIn 2012 an Electoral Commission was set up to examine potential reforms to the electoral system after a campaign by former States deputy Daniel Wimberly. The current system provides for a 51-seat States, with constituency size ranging from 1,200 to 98,000 residents. The States has three types of elected members; 29 deputies elected in constituencies of between 1,200 and 3,000 residents; constables who head the 12 parishes of Jersey; and 10 senators elected on an island-wide basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum, Background\nHowever, Wimberly was unhappy with the proposals, claiming that the options presented did not make the changes people wanted, as they would still not be able to choose their government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum, Electoral system\nVoters were asked to rank their preferences. If no option received over 50% of the vote, the second preferences of ballots for the third-placed option would be tallied and added to the totals of those in first and second place. Voters had to be registered by 3 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum, Campaign\nOption A was supported by the \"A Team\", who claimed it was simple, fair and equal and its implementation would mean that \"for the first time, all islanders will have an equal say in how the States is made up\". Supporters of Option B claimed that removing the Constables from the States would lead to parishes being unrepresented, whilst supporters of Option C claimed that keeping the Senators was important, describing them as \"the most representative elected office and therefore the most democratic.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum, Campaign\nStates deputy Jeremy Ma\u00e7on called for a minimum turnout threshold of 40% for the referendum to encourage more people to vote, but the proposal was rejected by a vote of 31\u201313 in the States. A proposal by Constable Phil Rondel for a 51% threshold was rejected by 36\u20137. Adrian Lee, an expert on Jersey politics, claimed that turnout would probably be low enough for the States to ignore the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum, Campaign\nIn March, Senator Lyndon Farnham asked the treasury minister for \u00a35,000 to be given to each of the campaign groups, and for each campaign's spending to be capped at \u00a310,000. Farnham is supporting the Option C campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234216-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Jersey electoral reform referendum, Aftermath\nThe States voted on adopting the reforms in July 2013, but rejected them by a vote of 28\u201321, with one abstention. Following the vote, Simon Crowcroft resigned as chairman of the Privileges and Procedures Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234217-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jerusalem mayoral election\nThe 2013 Jerusalem mayoral election was held on 2 October, 2013, and saw the reelection of Nir Barkat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234217-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jerusalem mayoral election\nThe election was part of the 2013 Israeli municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234217-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jerusalem mayoral election, Campaigning\nLion was regarded as the candidate of the far-right, as was strongly linked to Avigdor Lieberman. The candidate of Likud-Yisrael Beiteinu (an alliance between the Likud party led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Yisrael Beiteinu party led by Lieberman), he was regarded as Lieberman's candidate. It was believed that Lieberman had hoped that a Lion victory would bolster his chances of potentially challenging Netanyahu's leadership. Pundits observed that Haredi opponents of Netanyahu's government were supporting Lieberman in hopes of trying to gain momentum to topple Netanyahu's coalition in the Knesset. Also supporting Lion was Aryeh Deri, the chairman of the Shas party. Lion did not receive the support of Netanyahu, who formally remained neutral in the race, but was speculated to favor Barkat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234217-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Jerusalem mayoral election, Campaigning\nBarkat was endorsed by the Israel Hayom newspaper. Lion was endorsed by Yedioth Ahronoth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234217-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Jerusalem mayoral election, Campaigning\nIt was speculated that a last-minute agreement between Barkat and major sects of the city's Hasidic populace were key in delivering Barkat his reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234217-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Jerusalem mayoral election, Campaigning\nWhile the coinciding municipal elections in most other cities relatively attracted little attention, Jerusalem's mayoral race attracted significant attention. The election was tense and hard-fought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234218-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jeux de la Francophonie\nThe 2013 Jeux de la Francophonie, also known as VII\u00e8mes Jeux de la Francophonie (French for 7th Francophone Games), were held in Nice, France, from September 6-15. This was the second edition of the games to be hosted in France and the first time that a country hosted the games twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234218-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jeux de la Francophonie, Participants\nThe list below is not complete. You can help by expanding it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234219-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Johan Cruyff Shield\nThe 2013 Johan Cruyff Shield was the eighteenth edition of the Johan Cruyff Shield (Dutch: Johan Cruijff Schaal), an annual Dutch football match played between the winners of the previous season's Eredivisie and KNVB Cup. The match was contested by AZ, the 2012\u201313 KNVB Cup winners, and Ajax, champions of the 2012\u201313 Eredivisie. It was held at the Amsterdam Arena on 27 July 2013. Ajax won the match 3\u20132 after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234220-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 John Newcombe Women's Pro Challenge\nThe 2013 John Newcombe Women's Pro Challenge is a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It is the second edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It takes place in New Braunfels, Texas, United States, on October 28\u2013November 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234220-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 John Newcombe Women's Pro Challenge, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234221-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 John Newcombe Women's Pro Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nElena Bovina and Mirjana Lu\u010di\u0107-Baroni were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both chose not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234221-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 John Newcombe Women's Pro Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nAnna Tatishvili and Coco Vandeweghe won the title, defeating Asia Muhammad and Taylor Townsend in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, [13\u201311].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234222-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 John Newcombe Women's Pro Challenge \u2013 Singles\nMelanie Oudin was the defending champion, but chose to compete at the 2013 Tevlin Women's Challenger instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234222-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 John Newcombe Women's Pro Challenge \u2013 Singles\nAnna Tatishvili won the title, defeating Elitsa Kostova in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234223-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Johor Darul Takzim F.C. season\nThe 2013 season is Johor Darul Takzim F.C. 's 1st season in the Malaysia Super League after rebranding their name from Johor FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234223-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Johor Darul Takzim F.C. season\nThis is Fandi Ahmad's 1st season with The Southern Tigers. Tunku Ismail Idris has made many changes to the team's structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234223-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Johor Darul Takzim F.C. season, Malaysia Cup, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election\nEarly general elections were held in Jordan on 23 January 2013. Voter turnout was reported to be 56.6%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election, Electoral system\nPrior to the elections a new electoral law was passed, allowing voters to cast two ballots; one for a candidate in their constituency and one for party lists elected by proportional representation at the national level. In addition, the number of seats reserved for candidates of political parties was raised from 17 to 27 out of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives. Fifteen seats were reserved for women, whilst the remaining 108 seats were elected by first-past-the-post system in constituencies. A new Independent Election Commission was also created.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election, Electoral system\nAround 70% of eligible voters were reported to have registered to vote. Although over two-thirds of the population lived in urban areas at the time of the election, cities were allocated less than one-third of seats in the House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election, Campaign\nIn July 2012, the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated Islamic Action Front announced that the party would boycott the elections, stating that the changes to the electoral law increasing the number of seats for political parties did not go far enough and that the constituency system favoured tribal candidates. Opposition parties had demanded that 50% of seats be reserved for parties rather than the 18% provided for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election, Campaign\nA total of 1,400 candidates registered to contest the elections, of which 22 were described as Islamists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election, Conduct\nThe Islamist opposition complained that the elections had been marred by fraud, claiming that turnout had been artificially inflated during the last two hours of voting. The voting period had been extended by an hour to 20:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election, Conduct\nThe National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI) reported that there had been a \"marked improvement in procedures and administration\", but also noted shortcomings and irregularities. The NDI also criticised unequal constituency sizes, claiming that they increased tribal cleavages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234224-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian general election, Aftermath\nFollowing the elections Interim Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour was appointed to the post on a permanent basis, with King Abdullah consulting Parliament on membership of the cabinet for the first time. With 19 members, the new cabinet was the smallest in four decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234225-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Jordanian local elections\nLocal elections were held in Jordan on 27 August 2003 to elect held municipal and local councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234226-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Judgments of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom\nThis is a list of the 81 judgments given by the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in the year 2013. They are ordered by neutral citation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234226-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Judgments of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom\nThe table lists judgments made by the court and the opinions of the judges in each case. Judges are treated as having concurred in another's judgment when they either formally attach themselves to the judgment of another or speak only to acknowledge their concurrence with one or more judges. Any judgment which reaches a conclusion that differs from the majority on one or more major points of the appeal has been treated as dissent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234227-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Judo World Masters\nThe 2013 Judo World Masters was held in Tyumen, Russia, from 25-26 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests\nThe 2013 mid-year rugby union tests (also known as the summer internationals in the Northern Hemisphere) were international rugby union matches that were played in June 2013, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests\nThese matches were played in the second year of the global rugby calendar established by the International Rugby Board (IRB), which will run until 2019. They included tests between Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere nations, whilst some of the touring teams played mid-week matches against provincial or regional sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests\nThe international window coincided with the 2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, consisting of a three-test series between the Lions and Australia, plus seven non-test matches. South Africa hosted a quadrangular tournament, with Italy, Samoa and Scotland. France toured New Zealand, playing a three-test series and a mid-week match against the Blues. England played a two-test series against Argentina, after a warm-up match against South American XV, made up of players from Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests\nLike in 2012, the new global calendar provided expanded Test opportunities for Tier 2 nations. Japan hosted a two-test tour by Wales, their first home matches against a Tier 1 side since their defeat against Italy in 2006. Ireland visited North America, playing one test each against United States and Canada. Argentina played Georgia for the first time on home soil, and for the first time outside the Rugby World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 26 May\u20132 June\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Paul Dix (England)Television match official:David Grashoff (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 26 May\u20132 June\nTouch judges:Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa)Angus Gardner (Australia)Television match official:Matt Goddard (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 8 June\nTouch judges:Alain Rolland (Ireland)James Leckie (Australia)Television match official:Matt Goddard (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 8 June\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Christie du Preez (South Africa)Television match official:Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 11\u201315 June\nTouch judges:Richard Kelly (New Zealand)Sheldon Eden-Whaitiri (New Zealand)Television match official:Glenn Newman (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 11\u201315 June\nTouch judges:Wayne Barnes (England)James Leckie (Australia)Television match official:George Ayoub (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 11\u201315 June\nTouch judges:Marius Jonker (South Africa)Christie du Preez (South Africa)Television match official:Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 22 June\nTouch judges:Alain Rolland (Ireland)Wayne Barnes (England)Television match official:George Ayoub (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 22 June\nTouch judges:Craig Joubert (South Africa)Romain Poite (France)Television match official:Vinny Munro (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 22 June\nTouch judges:Marius Jonker (South Africa)Christie du Preez (South Africa)Television match official:Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 29 June\nTouch judges:Chris Pollock (New Zealand)Romain Poite (France)Television match official:Ben Skeen (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, Matches, 6 July\nTouch judges:Chris Pollock (New Zealand)Craig Joubert (South Africa)Television match official:Vinny Munro (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, South African quadrangular tournament\nOn 6 December 2012, the SARU announced that South Africa would host Samoa, Italy and Scotland in a four-team tournament. The hosts and Samoa each played Italy and Scotland in a league format. On June 22, the top two teams, South Africa and Samoa, played to determine first and second place, and the bottom two, Scotland and Italy, played for third and fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, South African quadrangular tournament, Matches\nTouch judges:Marius Jonker (South Africa)Sindile Mayende (South Africa)Television match official:Johann Meuwesen (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, South African quadrangular tournament, Matches\nTouch judges:Blake Beattie (South Africa)Neil Hennessy (Wales)Television match official:Paul Ackermann (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, South African quadrangular tournament, Matches\nTouch judges:John Lacey (Ireland)Tiaan Jonker (South Africa)Television match official:Gerrie Coetzee (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, South African quadrangular tournament, Matches\nTouch judges:Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (France)Neil Hennessy (Wales)Television match official:Gerrie Coetzee (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, South African quadrangular tournament, Matches\nTouch judges:Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa)Cobus Wessels (South Africa)Television match official:Deon van Blommestein (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234228-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 June rugby union tests, South African quadrangular tournament, Matches\nTouch judges:Nigel Hennessy (Wales)JP Doyle (England)Television match official:Deon van Blommestein (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234229-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior Club World Cup\nThe 2013 Junior Club World Cup was the 3rd Junior Club World Cup, an annual international ice hockey tournament. It took place between 25\u201331 August 2013 in Omsk, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234229-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior Club World Cup\nThe 2013 edition was hosted by Omsk, the host of the 2011 and 2012 editions of the World Cup. 8 teams participated in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234230-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior League World Series\nThe 2013 Junior League World Series took place from August 11\u201317 in Taylor, Michigan, United States. Taoyuan, Taiwan defeated Rio Rico, Arizona in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234231-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior Oceania Cup\nThe 2013 Junior Oceania Cup was an international field hockey tournament hosted by Australia. The quadrennial tournament serves as the Junior Championship of Oceania organized by the Oceania Hockey Federation. It was held in Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia between 27 February and 3 March 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234231-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior Oceania Cup\nHost nation Australia was joined by teams from, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234231-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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 2013 men's and women's Junior World Cups, with both Australia and New Zealand qualifying to both.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234232-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior World Rally Championship\nThe 2013 FIA Junior World Rally Championship was the twelfth season of the Junior World Rally Championship, an auto racing championship recognised by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile, running in support of the World Rally Championship. It was previously known as the WRC Academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234232-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior World Rally Championship\nThe Junior World Rally Championship was open to drivers under the age of twenty-six. All teams contested the same six events \u2013 with their best five results counting towards their final championship position \u2013 in identical Ford Fiesta R2 cars, prepared by M-Sport. Hankook supplied tyres for all competitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234232-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior World Rally Championship\nPontus Tidemand secured the drivers' championship after winning at the Rallye de France-Alsace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234232-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior World Rally Championship, Calendar\nThe calendar for the 2013 Junior World Rally Championship consisted of six rounds, run alongside the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234232-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior World Rally Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers took part in the 2013 Junior World Rally Championship season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234232-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Junior World Rally Championship, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers, and one point for winning a stage. Five best results of the season are counted towards the final score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234233-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Challenge\nThe 2013 K League Challenge was the first season of the K League Challenge, the second top South Korean professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2013. The 2013 fixtures were announced on 30 January 2013. The season began on 16 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234233-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Challenge, Teams\nA total of eight teams contested the league, including two sides from the 2012 K-League and six promoted from the Korea National League, Challengers League and R-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234233-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Challenge, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234233-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Challenge, Teams, Foreign players\nRestricting the number of foreign players strictly to four per team, including a slot for a player from AFC countries. A team could use four foreign players on the field each game including a least one player from the AFC country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234233-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Challenge, Promotion-Relegation Playoffs, 2nd Leg\nSangju Sangmu secure promotion to the 2014 K League Classic season, 4\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234233-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Challenge, Attendance\nUpdated to games played on 30 November 2013Source: Notes:Attendants who entered with free ticket are not counted.\u2020 Team played previous season in 2012 K League.\u2021 Police FC withdraw the right to play at home ground. Police FC play all matches as away matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234233-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Challenge, Awards\nThe 2013 K League Awards was held on 3 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234234-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Classic\nThe 2013 K League Classic was the 31st season of the top division of South Korean professional football. The South Korean professional football league, K League, was split into two divisions since this year, and the top division was named the \"K League Classic\". Its fixtures were announced on 30 January, and began on 2 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234234-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Classic, Teams, Foreign players\nRestricting the number of foreign players strictly to four per team, including a slot for a player from AFC countries. A team could use four foreign players on the field each game including a least one player from the AFC country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234234-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Classic, Positions by matchday\nLeaders\u00a0\u00a0Qualification for the 2014 AFC Champions League\u00a0\u00a0Qualification for the relegation playoffs\u00a0\u00a0Relegation to the K League Challenge", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234234-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Classic, Relegation playoffs\nSangju Sangmu won 4\u20132 on aggregate and were promoted to the K League Classic, while Gangwon FC were relegated to the K League Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234234-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 K League Classic, Awards\nThe 2013 K League Awards was held on 3 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234235-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KBS Drama Awards\nThe 2013 KBS Drama Awards (Korean:\u00a0KBS \uc5f0\uae30\ub300\uc0c1) is a ceremony honoring the outstanding achievement in television on the Korean Broadcasting System (KBS) network for the year of 2013. It was held on December 31, 2013 and hosted by actors Lee Mi-sook, Shin Hyun-joon, Joo Sang-wook, and Im Yoona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234236-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Expansion Draft\nThe 2013 KHL Expansion Draft was held on 17 June 2013 in order to fill the roster of the league's expansion team Admiral Vladivostok for the 2013-14 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234236-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Expansion Draft, Rules\nAdmiral Vladivostok was able to select players from any of the Russian-based teams in the KHL, except from Lokomotiv Yaroslavl. This exception was because Lokomotiv had been still recovering from the plane crash in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234236-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Expansion Draft, Rules\nFive days before the draft, each team submitted 5 players to be available for selection in the expansion draft and the Vladivostok team was allowed to choose one player from each club. The players submitted for selection might have been either Russian or foreign. However, the Vladivostok roster had to contain no more than seven foreign players and no more than one foreign goaltender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234236-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Expansion Draft, Rules\nThe players submitted to the draft had to meet the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234236-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Expansion Draft, Rules\nThe players names available for Admiral to choose from were not revealed to public due to ethical issues and league agreements with the various teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234236-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Expansion Draft, Draft picks\nBelow are all players drafted to Admiral in the extension draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234237-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Junior Draft\nThe 2013 KHL Junior Draft was the fifth entry draft held by the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL), taking place on 25\u201326 May 2013 in Druzhba Arena. Ice hockey players from around the world aged between 17 and 21 years of age were selected. Players eligible to take part in the draft were required to not have an active contract with a KHL, MHL or VHL team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234237-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KHL Junior Draft, Selections per nation\nThe table shows the number of players selected by which country they played in prior to the draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234238-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Allround Championships\nThe 2013 KNSB Dutch Allround Championships in speed skating were held at the Thialf ice stadium in Heerenveen, Netherlands from 29 to 30 December 2012. The tournament was part of the 2012\u20132013 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234239-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships\nThe 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships were held at the Thialf ice stadium in Heerenveen from 9 November until 11 November 2012. Although the tournament was held in 2012 it was the 2013 edition as it is part of the 2012/2013 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234240-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 m\nThe men's 10,000 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 11 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012 it was part of the speed skating season 2012\u20132013. There were 11 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234241-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 1000 m\nThe men's 1000 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 11 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012 it was part of the speed skating season 2012\u20132013. There were 24 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234242-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 m\nThe men's 1500 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Saturday 10 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012 it was part of the speed skating season 2012\u20132013. There were 24 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234243-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 500 m\nThe men's 500 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Friday 9 November 2012. It consisted of twice 500 meter where the speed skaters started once in the inner and once in the outer lane. Although this tournament was held in 2012 it was part of the speed skating season 2012\u20132013. There were 24 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234244-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 m\nThe men's 5000 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Friday 9 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012 it was part of the speed skating season 2012\u20132013.There were 20 participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234245-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 1000 m\nThe women's 1000 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 11 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012, it was part of the speed skating season 2012\u20132013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234246-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 m\nThe women's 1500 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Friday 9 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012, it was part of the 2012\u20132013 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234246-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 m\nThere was a qualification selection incentive for the next following 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234247-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 m\nThe women's 3000 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Saturday 10 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012, it was part of the 2012\u20132013 speed skating season .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234247-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 m\nThe first 5 skaters qualified for the next following 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234248-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 500 m\nThe women's 500 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Saturday 10 November 2012. Although this edition was held in 2012, it was part of the 2012\u20132013 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234248-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 500 m\nThere were 22 participants who raced twice over 500m so that all skaters had to start once in the inner lane and once in the outer lane. There was a qualification selection incentive for the next following 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234249-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 m\nThe women's 5000 meter at the 2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships took place in Heerenveen at the Thialf ice skating rink on Sunday 11 November 2012. Although this tournament was held in 2012, it was part of the 2012\u20132013 speed skating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234249-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 m\nThere were 14 participants. There was a qualification selection incentive for the next following 2012\u201313 ISU Speed Skating World Cup tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234250-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Sprint Championships\nThe 2013 KNSB Dutch Sprint Championships in speed skating were held at the Kardinge ice stadium in Groningen, Netherlands. Stefan Groothuis and Margot Boer were the defending champions. Stefan Groothuis succeeded his title but Margot Boer lost hers to Marrit Leenstra. Stefan Groothuis got his 6th Dutch Sprint Championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234251-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Super Sprint Championships\nThe 2013 KNSB Dutch Super Sprint Championships in speed skating were held at De Uithof The Hague at 2 February 2013. It was the 23rd edition of this championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234251-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KNSB Dutch Super Sprint Championships\nThe seniors and the juniors in category A skate a combination, called \"pure sprint\", over the distances 100m, 300m and 500m. The juniors in category B and C skate a combination, called \"supersprint\", over the distances 2x100m and 2x300m. The resulting times have been measured in seconds and then converted to points, using the average times on 100 meter units; thus the number of points for a 300 meters race is the time in seconds divided by three; for the 500 meters, the time in seconds is divided by five. Points are calculated to three decimal places and truncation is applied; the numbers are not rounded. All points are added up; the lower the score the better.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234252-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KNVB Cup Final\nThe 2013 KNVB Cup Final was a football match between AZ and PSV Eindhoven that took place on 9 May 2013 at De Kuip, Rotterdam. It was the final match of the 2012\u201313 KNVB Cup competition and the 95th Dutch Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234252-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KNVB Cup Final\nAZ won the match 2\u20131 to defeat the defending champions from the previous season to earn their 5th and most recent KNVB Cup trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup\nThe 2013 KPL Top 8 Cup was the third edition of the tournament, which was originally scheduled to run from 3 April to 2 June 2013, but had the date of its final changed to 24 July. It was contested by the top 8 teams of the 2012 Kenyan Premier League season: A.F.C. Leopards, Chemelil Sugar, Gor Mahia, Mathare United, Sofapaka, Thika United, Tusker and Ulinzi Stars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup\nGor Mahia were the defending champions, having won their first title the previous season, but were eliminated by eventual champions Tusker in the semi-finals, who beat Thika United to clinch their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was held on 27 March, and the ties were played on 3, 10, 17 and 24 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup, Quarter-finals\nDuring the fixture between Chemelil Sugar and A.F.C. Leopards on 17 April, fans of the latter stormed onto the pitch claiming that their players were being unfairly treated by match officials during the 90th minute. Police were forced to intervene and take players and match officials off the pitch, and the match was abandoned with Chemelil Sugar winning 3\u20132. The KPL ruled Chemelil Sugar winners of the match and therefore qualified to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals are being played over two legs on a home-and-away basis on 1, 8, 15 and 23 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup, Semi-finals, First leg\nThe first leg ties of the semi-finals were played on 1 and 8 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup, Semi-finals, Second leg\nThe second leg ties of the semi-finals were played on 15 and 23 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup, Semi-finals, Second leg, Fixtures\n1\u20131 on aggregate. Thika United won through a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234253-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 KPL Top 8 Cup, Team statistics\nUpdated to games played on 24 July 2013. Team(s) rendered in italics represent(s) the host nation(s). The competition's winning team is rendered in bold. (1) \u2013 Total games lost not counted in total games played (total games lost = total games won)(2) \u2013 Total number of games drawn (tied) for all teams = Total number of games drawn (tied) \u00f7 2 (both teams involved)(3) \u2013 As 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, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234254-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 KW Fall Classic\nThe 2013 KW Fall Classic was held from September 26 to 29 at the Kitchener-Waterloo Granite Club in Waterloo, Ontario in 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The men's event was held in a triple knockout format, while the women's event will be held in a round robin format. The purse for the men's event was CAD$8,500, while the purse for the women's event was CAD$15,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style)\nThe 2013 World Kabaddi Cup was the fourth edition of the circle style World Kabaddi Cup, held from December 1 to December 14, 2013 with the Opening Ceremony on November 30, 2013 at Bathinda. The tournament took place in Punjab, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Organization\nThe tournament was organized by the Government of Punjab, India. The dates of the tournament were first announced publicly on July 12, 2013. Approving of the 20 crore budget for the 4th World Cup Kabaddi, the opening and closing ceremonies were telecast live throughout the country, with international broadcasting in Canada, the United States, India and the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Participating nations\nThe 14-day-long event had 11 participating nations in the men's tournament, with 8 participating nations in the women's tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Opening Ceremony\nOpening Ceremony was held at Bathinda. Many Celebrities Of Cinema of Punjab and Bollywood Performed at this mega event. Those who performed were actress Priyanka Chopra, Gippy Grewal, Sharry Mann and Miss Pooja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Closing Ceremony\nClosing Ceremony was held at Ludhiana. Chief Minister of Punjab, Pakistan Mian Shahbaz Sharif was the chief guest for the ceremony. Many Indian and Pakistani Celebrities Of Cinema of Punjab and Bollywood performed at this mega event like actor Ranveer Singh, Fariha Pervez, Bir Khalsa Gatka Group, Master Saleem, Prince Dance Group, Lakhwinder Wadali, Roshan Prince, Jaspinder Narula. There was interruption in Jaspinder Narula's Performance by young supporter of Bhai Gurbaksh Singh Khalsa who is on Hunger strike for release of Sikh Prisoners who have completed their full terms in jail and not even released yet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Schedule\nNote: All matches' timings are according to Indian Standard Time (UTC +5:30).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Women's Tournament, Schedule\nNote: All matches' timings are according to Indian Standard Time (UTC +5:30).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Doping\nIssuing strict instructions for ensuring dope free tournament, he said that every participant player would have to undergo dope test as prescribed by NADA and sanctioned Rs 100 crore budget for it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234255-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kabaddi World Cup (Circle style), Song\nOn November 14, 2013, prominent actor/director Harpreet Sandhu (Actor) release a song based on Kabaddi world cup called 2013 World Cup sung by Dilbag Brar and produced by ArtGauge Films Inc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234256-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kagame Interclub Cup\nThe 2013 Kagame Interclub Cup was the 38th edition of the Kagame Interclub Cup, which is organised by CECAFA. It began on 18 June and ended on 1 July 2013. Sudan hosted the tournament for the fifth time since it officially began in 1974. Vital'O, who have won the Burundi Premier League a record 18 times, beat Primus National Football League side Arm\u00e9e Patriotique Rwandaise to win the tournament for the first time in their history. Prior to the beginning of the competition, clubs from Kenya, South Sudan and Tanzania withdrew from the tournament due to security concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234256-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kagame Interclub Cup, Participants\nOn 22 May 2013, the draw for clubs to participate in the tournament was released. Due to dropouts the fixtures and group draws were amended only on 15 July, three days before the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234256-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kagame Interclub Cup, Group stage\nThe group stage featured eleven teams, with 4 teams in Group A and B and only three in Group C. Three teams advanced from Group A and B and two from Group C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234256-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kagame Interclub Cup, Group stage\nIf two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria are applied to determine the rankings (in descending order):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234256-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kagame Interclub Cup, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, teams play against each other once. The losers of the semi-finals played against each other in a third place playoff where the winner was placed third overall in the entire competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234257-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kajiado local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kajiado County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234257-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kajiado local elections, Gubernatorial election, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 76], "content_span": [77, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234258-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakamega local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kakamega County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234258-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakamega local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen\nThe season started on 20 April 2013 and is scheduled to end on 5 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, Teams\nA total of 40 teams will contest the league divided into four groups, Etel\u00e4inen (Southern), Pohjoinen (Northern), L\u00e4ntinen (Western) and It\u00e4inen (Eastern). 30 returning from the 2012 season, two relegated from Ykk\u00f6nen and eight promoted from Kolmonen. The champion of each group will qualify to promotion matches to decide which two teams get promoted to the Ykk\u00f6nen. The bottom two teams in each group and the worst eight-placed will qualify directly for relegation to Kolmonen. Each team will play a total of 27 matches, playing three times against each team of its group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, Teams\nFC H\u00e4meenlinna and HIFK were relegated from the 2012 Ykk\u00f6nen, while AC Kajaani and Ilves were promoted to the 2013 Ykk\u00f6nen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, Teams\nFC Espoo, FC Kiffen, FC Kiisto, HauPa, JIlves, LoPa and PK-35/VJS were relegated from 2012 Kakkonen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, Teams\nFC POHU, Kerho 07, K\u00e4Pa, Masku, MuSa, ORPa, PK Keski-Uusimaa, Sudet and Tervarit were promoted from the 2012 Kolmonen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, Teams\nSiPS didn't take its place in 2013 Kakkonen. Its place was given for Sporting Kristina, the worst eight-placed of the last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, Teams\nORPa took the place of FC Santa Claus for the 2013 season when the club went bankrupt after the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, Teams\nWarkaus JK was excluded from the Kakkonen due to breaking the rules of the association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, League tables, Promotion play-offs\nGroup winners will play two-legged ties. Team pairs will be drawn and the two winning teams will be promoted to the Ykk\u00f6nen for season 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 49], "content_span": [50, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234259-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kakkonen, League tables, Eight-placed teams\nAt the end of the season, a comparison is made between the eight-placed teams. The worst eight-placed team will be directly relegated to the Kolmonen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 48], "content_span": [49, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case\nOn 7 June 2013, a 20-year-old college student was abducted, gang-raped and murdered in Kamduni village, 16km from Barasat, North 24 Parganas district about 20km from main Kolkata. In January 2016 the accused were sentenced to death and life imprisonment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Incident\nThe victim, a second year BA student of Derozio College named Shipra Ghosh, was walking home along the Kamduni BDO Office Road in the afternoon, when she was abducted and taken inside a factory where she was gang-raped by eight men. After raping her, the perpetrators tore apart her legs up to the navel, slit her throat and dumped her body into a nearby field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Incident\nAt around 8:30pm local time, the brothers of the victim discovered the body of their sister alongside a bheri in the At Bigha region of Kharibari in Rajarhat. At around 9:45pm, an altercation and subsequent skirmish occurred between the villagers and the police when the latter tried to recover the body of the victim. The crowd damaged three police vehicles. At around 2am, a large police contingent recovered the victim's body from the villagers and sent it to Barasat for post mortem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Incident\nOn the evening of June 15, a contingent of the Indian Reserve Battalion started flag march in Kamduni. In spite of the paramilitary vigil a team of Citizen's Forum visited Kamduni. Several women's organizations, including Matangini Mahila Samiti, Maitri, Manabi, Ahalya and Chetana, visited Kamduni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Incident\nOn 17 June, Mamata Banerjee, the Chief Minister of West Bengal visited Kamduni. She promised that charge sheet would be produced against the arrested within 15 days of the incident and that her government would plead for the capital punishment of the culprits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Arrest and prosecuation\nThe residents of Kamduni caught hold of Ansar Ali, the prime accused, and handed him over to the police. After interrogation, he confessed to have committed the crime along with four others. Five persons were named in the FIR. Based on that, the district police arrested three persons in the early hours of 8 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Arrest and prosecuation\nThe case is being investigated by the CID, West Bengal. On 16 June, the CID officers took the eight accused to Kamduni to reconstruct the incident amid tight security by the police and Indian Reserve Battalion. For 45 minutes, the accused recounted how they had gang raped and then murdered the victim, throwing her body over the set wall afterwards. Even fifteen days after the incident, no charge sheet was filed. On 22 June, Ansar Ali was remanded in judicial custody for 14 days. The accused and State Govt. want the legal proceedings shifted from Barasat court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Arrest and prosecuation\nFinally in January 2016, the accused were sentenced - some were sentenced to death and others to life imprisonment. Additional Sessions Judge Sanchita Sarkar handed out a death sentence to Ansar Ali, Saiful Ali and Aminul Ali, while Emanul Islam, Aminur Islam and Bhola Naskar were sentenced to life imprisonment for the gang-rape and murder of Shipra Ghosh on June 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Protests\nFrom the early morning of 8 June, the Kamduni residents protested afor exemplary punishment for the culprits. Jyotipriya Mallick, the Minister for Food and Supplies met the villagers and promised job for the victim's elder brother, which was promptly rejected by the villagers. The protesters were also visited by Haji Nurul Islam, the M.P. from Bashirhat and Nirmal Ghosh, the President of North 24 Parganas District Trinamool Congress. When the former blamed the CPI(M) for this crime, his car was damaged by the protesters. Protests continued until July 4, demanding capital punishment for the perpetrators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234260-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamduni gang rape and murder case, Protests\nSeveral human rights groups participated in the protests as well, submitting memoranda to the police and demanding access to political decisionmakers. The lawyers of Barasat Bar took out a procession in protest against the crime. The body declared that no lawyer in Barasat would stand for the accused. In the evening a hundreds of residents brought out a candle light procession in Baguiati, Kolkata. On 18 June, around 400 government employees of the Writers' Building marched around the Writers' Building in protest against the Kamduni gang rape and murder. Eminent intellectuals including, filmmaker Aparna Sen, Shankha Ghosh Nabaneeta Dev Sen, Mrinal Sen, Mahashweta Devi and Tarun Majumder also showed their support for the victim and demanded justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234261-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kamloops Crown of Curling\nThe 2013 Kamloops Crown of Curling was held from October 18 to 21 at the Kamloops Curling Club in Kamloops, British Columbia as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The men's event was held in a round robin format, while the women's event was held in a triple-knockout format. The purse for the men's event was CAD$32,000, of which the winner, Grant Dezura, received CAD$8,000, and the purse for the women's event was CAD$34,000, of which the winner, Allison Pottinger, received CAD$8,000. Dezura defeated Dean Joanisse in the men's final with a score of 5\u20134, while Pottinger defeated Ayumi Ogasawara of Japan in the final with a score of 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234262-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kane County Dawgs season\nThe 2013 Kane County Dawgs season was a short-lived season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234262-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kane County Dawgs season\nThe franchise was originally to be called the DeKalb Dawgs, and were to play in the American Professional Football League in 2013, before announcing that they would be joining the Continental Indoor Football League as its tenth member in October 2012. On October 10, 2012, the franchise announced that former National Football League and Arena Football League player Matt Griebel was named the team's first head coach. The team also announced that they would be playing their home games at the Seven Bridges Ice Arena in Woodridge, Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234262-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kane County Dawgs season\nAfter having the first two weeks of the season off with a bye weeks, the Dawgs forfeit their first game, when the turf they purchased did not adequately fit the Seven Bridges Ice Arena. The following week, the Dawgs would lose their first ever played game in franchise history, with a 13-69 loss to the Erie Explosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234262-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kane County Dawgs season\nThe loss to the Explosion, would end up being the team's only game, as the following week the league announced on their website that the Dawgs franchise was \"indefinitely suspending operations\" to protect the integrity of the league. Players and coaches were all released and free to sign with other teams in the CIFL or elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234263-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kangaroo Cup\nThe 2013 Kangaroo Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the seventeenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Gifu, Japan, on 29 April \u2013 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234263-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kangaroo Cup, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234264-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kangaroo Cup \u2013 Doubles\nJessica Pegula and Zheng Saisai were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Pegula chose not to participate. Zheng paired up with Xu Yifan, but they lost in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234264-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kangaroo Cup \u2013 Doubles\nLuksika Kumkhum and Erika Sema won the event, defeating Nao Hibino and Riko Sawayanagi in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234265-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kangaroo Cup \u2013 Singles\nKimiko Date-Krumm was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but retired in the second round against qualifier An-Sophie Mestach, who went on to win the tournament. She defeated Wang Qiang in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234266-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kano bus bombing\nOn March 18, 2013, a suicide attack was committed against Christian civilians at the Kano Bus station, all of whom were boarding the buses to go to the mostly Christian south.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234266-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kano bus bombing, The attack\nOn March 18, a Volkswagen Golf packed with explosives and driven by three suicide bombers sped to five buses, which were being boarded by civilians, mostly Christians, to east and south Nigeria. The car hit one of the buses and exploded. After the explosion, people started evacuating from the remaining buses. A fire spread to the four remaining buses, many of which still had passengers in them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234266-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kano bus bombing, Casualties\nIt is speculated how many people died in the attack. Sources like the Vanguard claim the attack killed up to 60 people. BBC claims it was 22, though according to Reuters, the number is 25. Though the target of the attacks is not disputed, the buses were carrying mostly Christians, the main target of Boko Haram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season\nThe 2013 Kansas City Chiefs season was the franchise's 54th season and the first under the head coach/general manager tandem of Andy Reid and John Dorsey. After their 26\u201316 win over the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 3, which was also coach Andy Reid's first visit to Philadelphia since the Eagles fired him the season prior, the Chiefs vastly improved on their 2\u201314 record from 2012 just three weeks into the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season\nAfter defeating the New York Giants 31\u20137 in Week 4, the Chiefs became the first team in NFL history to win two or fewer games in the previous season, and win the first four games the next. On October 13, 2013 against the Oakland Raiders, Chiefs fans broke the Guinness World Record for loudest crowd roar at an outdoor stadium with 137.5 decibels. Seattle Seahawks fans later reclaimed the record on December 2, 2013, with a roar of 137.6 decibels. After the Indianapolis Colts defeated the Denver Broncos in Week 7, the Chiefs were the final undefeated team in the NFL. They were the first team in NFL history to earn the number one draft pick and be the last undefeated team in consecutive years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season\nThe Chiefs clinched a playoff berth, but lost to the Indianapolis Colts in the Wild Card round of the playoffs 44\u201345, after blowing a 38\u201310 second half lead, extending an 8-game playoff losing streak dating back to the 1993 season, the longest in NFL history, until it was broken by the Detroit Lions in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Preseason cuts\n*Tony Moeaki was originally released but was subsequently placed on injured reserve", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Roster changes, Inseason Transactions, Players with multiple transactions\nThis is a list of players who played for the Chiefs at some point during the season who were involved in more than one transaction during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 105], "content_span": [106, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Chiefs started their 2013 season on the road against the Jaguars. The Jags scored a safety when J.T. Thomas blocked a punt in the end zone giving them a 2-0 lead. The Chiefs took the lead as Alex Smith found Donnie Avery on a 5-yard touchdown pass for a 7-2 lead. This was followed up by Smith finding Junior Hemingway on a 3-yard pass sending the game to a 14-2 game. In the 2nd quarter, the Chiefs continued to dominate as Jamaal Charles ran for a 2-yard touchdown giving the team a 21-2 halftime lead. After a scoreless 3rd quarter, the Chiefs scored the only points of the 2nd half in the 4th quarter when Tamba Hail returned an interception 10 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Chiefs beat the Jacksonville Jaguars 28\u20132, the first time in NFL history a game ended with that score. It was also the first time in 20 years a team scored 2 points during a regular season game. The Jaguars crossed the 50 yard line once but failed to score. The Jaguars only score came when a blocked punt that went out of the end zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Chiefs made their regular season debut at home against the Cowboys. They would score first as Jamaal Charles caught a 2-yard touchdown pass from Alex Smith for a 7-0 lead. The Boys got on the board as Dan Bailey kicked a 51-yard field goal for a 7-3 game followed up by Tony Romo and Dez Bryant hooking up on a 2-yard pass for a 10-7 lead. With the 2nd quarter being scoreless, the Boys gradually held on to the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nIn the 3rd quarter, Bailey nailed a 30-yard field goal to increase their lead 13-7. However, the Chiefs retook the lead as Smith found Dwayne Bowe on a 12-yard pass making the score 14-13. In the 4th quarter, the Chiefs increased their lead as Ryan Succop nailed a 40-yard field goal for a 17-13 lead. The Boys then tried to rally late, but came up a point short when Bailey kicked a 53-yard field goal as the Chiefs won the game 17-16 sending them to their first 2-0 start since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: at Philadelphia Eagles\nAfter a close call win at home, the Chiefs traveled to Philadelphia to take on the Eagles in a TNF duel. The Chiefs started their scoring when Ryan Succop kicked a 33-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead. This was followed by Eric Berry returning an interception 38 yards for a touchdown for a 10-0 lead. The Eagles managed to get on the board later on in the quarter when Michael Vick found Jason Avant on a 22-yard touchdown pass (with a failed PAT) making the score 10-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Chiefs continued to dominate as Succop kicked 2 field goals increasing his teams lead from 7 to eventually 10 points with field goals from 31 and 34 yards out 13-6 and 16-6 at halftime. In the 3rd quarter, the Eagles managed to rally coming within 7 points as Alex Henery kicked a 29-yard field goal for the only score of the quarter. The Chiefs pulled away as Jamaal Charles ran for a 3-yard touchdown for a 23-9 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles then would fire back as LeSean McCoy ran for a touchdown from 41-yards out once again coming within 7 23-16. With Succop's 38-yard field goal, the Chiefs were able to seal the game with a final score of 26-16 sending them to a 3-0 start, their first such start since 2010. This was also head coach Andy Reid\u2019s first visit to Philadelphia since he was fired by the organization a season earlier. Reid served as the Eagles head coach from 1999-2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: vs. New York Giants\nAfter a win over the Eagles, the Chiefs returned home for a game against the Giants. After a scoreless 1st quarter, they got on the board as Alex Smith found Sean McGrath on a 5-yard pass for a 7-0 lead. The Giants managed to tie the game up as Eli Manning found Victor Cruz on a 69-yard pass making the score 7-7. Ryan Succop then kicked a 51-yard field goal to send the Chiefs to a 10-7 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: vs. New York Giants\nIn the 2nd half, the Chiefs dominated as Dexter McCluster would run a punt back 89 yards for a touchdown increasing their lead to 17-7 for the only score of the 3rd quarter. In the 4th quarter, Alex Smith threw 2 more touchdown passes to Jamaal Charles and Dwayne Bowe from 2 and 34 yards out that would eventually seal the game for them moving them up 24-7 before the final score sat at 31-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: vs. New York Giants\nThe win sent the Chiefs to their first 4-0 start since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Tennessee Titans\nKansas City jumped to 13\u20130 lead but by end of the third quarter, the Chiefs were trailing 17\u201313. But the Chiefs answered by scoring 13 unanswered points in the 4th quarter and won the game 26\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Tennessee Titans\nWith the win, the team improved to 5-0, their first such start since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. Oakland Raiders\nThe Chiefs improved to 6\u20130 after defeating the Oakland Raiders 24\u20137, and snapped a 6-game home losing streak to the Oakland Raiders dating back to the 2007 season. It was at this game that Arrowhead Stadium fans set a new Guinness World Record for loudest outdoor stadium in any sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: vs. Houston Texans\nWith the win, the Chiefs improved to 7-0 for the first time they would start a season with such a record since 2003. With the Broncos' loss to the Colts, they became the league's only undefeated team while they also became leader of the AFC West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: vs. Cleveland Browns\nWith the win, the Chiefs improved to 8-0 for the first time since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: at Buffalo Bills\nWith the win, the Chiefs went 9-0 heading into their bye week. It also gave them their first winning season since 2010 and first 9-0 start since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Denver Broncos\nAgainst the Broncos in a battle of the 9-0 Chiefs and 8-1 Broncos, Denver wound up beating the Chiefs 27-17, handing the Chiefs their first loss. With the loss, the Chiefs fell to 9-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. San Diego Chargers\nSan Diego triumphed in the highest-scoring matchup with Kansas City since a 42-41 loss in 1986. The game lead changed eight times as Alex Smith threw for 294 yards and three touchdowns, but Rivers (392 yards) won it in the final seconds on a 26-yard score to Seyi Ajirotutu. The loss was Kansas City's second straight after the Chiefs' nine-game winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: vs. Denver Broncos\nKansas City would lead 21-7 at one point, but the Broncos would come back to win 35-28 and sweep the Chiefs for the second straight season. With their third straight loss, the Chiefs fell to 9-3. They were the first 9-0 team in NFL history to lose 3 straight games following a 9-0 start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: at Washington Redskins\nThe Chiefs would finally find their winning ways again, as they throttled the Redskins 45-10 and lead 38-10 at halftime. With the win, the Chiefs improved to 10-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Oakland Raiders\nJamal Charles would score 5 touchdowns for the Chiefs as they won 56-31 at Oakland. With the win, the Chiefs improved to 11-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 91], "content_span": [92, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Indianapolis Colts\nIn a preview of the Wild Card game between these 2 teams, the Chiefs lost to Indianapolis 23-7 despite leading 7-0 at one point. With the loss, the Chiefs fell to 11-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234267-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Chiefs season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: at San Diego Chargers\nWith no Alex Smith playing due to Kansas City resting their starters for the playoffs, it was up to Chase Daniel to guide the Chiefs. Kansas City missed a field goal at the end of regulation. The Chargers would win in overtime on a field goal. With the loss, the Chiefs finished the regular season 11-5 and finished 2-4 against their division and 9-1 against the rest of the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 94], "content_span": [95, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season\nThe Kansas City Royals' season of 2013 was the 45th for the Royals franchise which began on April 1, 2013 against the Chicago White Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season\nAfter a winning record in spring training (setting a team and MLB record), the Royals remained over .500 nearly most of April during regular season play. The team also didn't commit an error in their first seven games (for 64 2/3 innings) for the first time in team history. On September 22, the Royals won their 82nd game of the season, to clinch their 2nd winning season since 1994 and first since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nDuring the offseason, the Kansas City Royals donated over $4 million in funds raised during the 2012 All-Star game for various projects in the Kansas City area communities, including building two baseball facilities for disabled children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nAlex Gordon signed a $37.5 million four-year deal last season with the Royals. The team lost Eric Hosmer to the United States team for the World Baseball Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nRight-handed pitcher Zack Greinke, who won the 2009 AL Cy Young Award while with Kansas City, signed a $147 million six-year contract to join the Los Angeles Dodgers in the offseason but was slow during spring training with a sore elbow and the flu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nJeremy Guthrie signed a $25 million three-year deal in November 2012 to stay with the Royals after being their best starter during the year. Guthrie will be the Royals' No. 3 starter. Former AL MVP, Miguel Tejada, made the team as a utility player with a $1.1 million one-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nDuring spring training in Surprise, Arizona, the Royals had the best record of any team and maintained first place throughout every game. They not only tied and then exceeded a franchise record (previously set 22 wins and 9 losses in 1999), but also had more spring training wins than any other team in MLB history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nThe Royals were the only team losing less than 10 games other than the Baltimore Orioles (9 losses), ending spring training with a 25\u20137\u20132 record. Kansas City lost their first spring training game after 11 wins in a row, the only unbeaten team in spring training at that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nKansas City manager Ned Yost said \"The key to our success this year is going to be our pitching staff, because we can catch the ball. If they're throwing strikes, we're going to be able to make plays and I think we're going to be able to score runs.\" Yost added, \"It just gives you confidence going into the season knowing that everybody's ready, everybody's playing well.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nThe Royals left Arizona (Surprise Stadium) without any players having any serious injuries. This was in contrast to March 2012 when closer Joakim Soria needed season-ending Tommy John surgery and starting catcher Salvador P\u00e9rez required knee surgery which sidelined him until late June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nKansas City led the majors in team batting average, hits, doubles, runs scored and on-base percentage, clinching first place in the Cactus League standings. The Royals finished with a Cactus League-leading .335 batting average and 230 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nAfter improving their starting rotation, the Royals were considered a \"sleeper team\" entering the 2013 season. The Royals appeared poised to challenge the AL champion Detroit Tigers in the AL Central. Overall, the Royals increased their chances that they would contend in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\nAccording to Foxs Sports, for the first time in more than two decades the Kansas City Royals may become relevant again. Other projections predicted the Royals to finish in second, third or even fourth place in the American League Central.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Offseason and spring training\n\"There's a lot to like about this team\", Royals manager Ned Yost said. \"I think we've got a great defense. I think our starting pitching is going to be a focal point and a strong asset to our club. Our relief pitching has always been dynamite in my mind.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Signings\n\u2022Minor League: Blaine Boyer, Chad Tracy, Endy Ch\u00e1vez, Miguel Tejada, Xavier Nady, Willy Taveras, George Sherrill, Dan Wheeler, Brandon Wood and Anthony Ortega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Trades and Claims\n\u2022Acquired SP James Shields, P Wade Davis and IF Elliot Johnson from the Tampa Bay Rays for OF Wil Myers, P Mike Montgomery, 3B Patrick Leonard and P Jake Odorizzi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Trades and Claims\n\u2022Acquired P Luis Rico and P Luis Santos from the Pittsburgh Pirates for P Vin Mazzaro and 1B Clint Robinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Trades and Claims\n\u2022Acquired SP Ervin Santana from the Los Angeles Angels for P Brandon Sisk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Trades and Claims\n\u2022Claimed C George Kottaras off waivers from the Oakland Athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Trades and Claims\n\u2022Claimed P Guillermo Moscoso off waivers from the Colorado Rockies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Trades and Claims\n\u2022Claimed C Brett Hayes off waivers from the Miami Marlins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Trades and Claims\n\u2022Claimed P Chris Volstad off waivers from the Chicago Cubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Transactions, Notable Losses\n\u2022Wil Myers, Vin Mazzaro, Joakim Soria, Mike Montgomery, Brandon Sisk and Patrick Leonard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April\nIn April, Jeremy Guthrie had the longest undefeated streak by a Royals pitcher over 13 starts since Kevin Appier in 1994-95.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April\nOn April 5, Alex Gordon and Chris Getz each hit a bases-loaded triple, allowing the Royals to rally and beat the Philadelphia Phillies 13\u20134, spoiling the Phillies' home opener with a sellout crowd of 45,307 at Citizens Bank Park. The interleague matchup was a rare one between teams who first met in the 1980 World Series. The only other visit to Philadelphia by the Royals came in 2004. After getting a total of 17 hits in their first three games against the Chicago White Sox, the Royals had 19 against the Phillies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April\nHall of Famers Mike Schmidt and George Brett, rivals when the Phillies beat the Royals to win their first championship 33 years earlier, threw out the first pitches (along with SNL's Joe Piscopo). Wade Davis, acquired from Tampa Bay Rays along with James Shields, made his first start since 2011. He made 54 relief appearances for the Rays in 2012 after 58 starts from 2010-11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April\nThe Royals didn't commit an error in their first seven games (64 2/3 innings) for the first time in team history. As of April 10, the Royals had won four straight games and six of seven games to move three games above .500 for the first time since May 12, 2011, when they were 20\u201317. The Royals went on to sweep the Minnesota Twins at home at Kauffman Stadium. However, on April 12 (after a day off), the Royals lost against the Toronto Blue Jays after committing three errors within the game, matching their season total at that time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April\nRoyals 1B Eric Hosmer had tightness in his right quadriceps and did not start for the second straight night on April 13. Nonetheless, as a result of Alex Gordon driving in a run, the Royals avoided a three-game sweep by the Blue Jays, who had won six straight and eight of 10 against the Royals at Kauffman Stadium, including a four-game sweep in their only series in Kansas City from the previous season. Therefore, the Royals maintained first place in the ALC, but were tied with the Detroit Tigers after they defeated the Oakland Athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nAlthough performing well, the Royals helped the Atlanta Braves win their 10th straight game with a 6\u20133 victory over KC on April 16. After both teams had a day off, players, managers and coaches for both teams wore No. 42 on their jerseys to honor Jackie Robinson. Like many teams, the Braves also held a moment of silence before the game for the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing (April 15). Chris Getz, KC's No. 8 hitter, homered for the first time in nearly four years (on July 19, 2009 when he played for the Chicago White Sox). Jeff Francoeur, a former Braves RF, played his first game at Turner Field with Kansas City. With Wade Davis pitching 7 scoreless innings, the Royals beat the Braves 1\u20130 on April 17 to end Atlanta's 10-game winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nThe Royals had a scheduled weekend series against the Boston Red Sox between April 19\u201321. It was to be Boston's first home game since the bombings, the explosions occurring 45 minutes after they finished playing the Rays on April 15 while en route to play the Cleveland Indians. However, the Greater Boston area went on a citywide lockdown in search of a suspect on the morning of April 19. Therefore, their first \"homecoming game\" of the weekend was postponed. The Red Sox reported the decision was made \"to support efforts of law enforcement officers.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nThe Royals stayed at the Westin Copley Place Hotel near Copley Square, about a block from the marathon finish line. \"We've been told not to go outside. We've been told the hotel has been locked down, although I've seen a handful of people moving around\", Royals vice president Mike Swanson said. \"The streets are just, wow. It's numbingly quiet for a noon hour in Boston.\" No make-up game was immediately scheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nHowever, with the second suspect captured that same evening and Fenway Park under tight security, play resumed Saturday, April 20, with a win of 4\u20133 by Boston over the Royals. Following an emotional pregame ceremony, both teams honored the victims of the bombing tragedy by wearing special uniforms/logos. (The Red Sox wore white home jerseys with \"Boston\" on the front instead of the customary \"Red Sox\" while Kansas City players and staff wore a \"B Strong\" patch on the front of their jerseys, with the shirts being auctioned off for funds to support victims of the bombing.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nThe Red Sox later announced Friday's (April, 19) game would be made up as part of a day-night doubleheader on Sunday (April, 21). The regularly scheduled game took place at 1:35\u00a0p.m., and a nightcap at 7 p.m. Even with the loss, the Royals moved to first place since the Detroit Tigers also lost in the American League Central.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nOn April 21, Kansas City ended Boston's seven-game winning streak with a 4\u20132 win over the Red Sox in the opener of a day-night doubleheader. With tributes to the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings still visibly clear, the Royals ended a season-opening streak of 16 games by Red Sox starters allowing three runs or less, tying an AL record achieved by the Oakland Athletics in 1978 and 1981. With the Detroit Tigers losing, the win kept the Royals secure in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nIn the second game of the doubleheader, Kansas City narrowly beat Boston 5\u20134 in 10 innings to win the weekend series (and sweep the doubleheader), as a result of Lorenzo Cain walking with two outs and the bases loaded in the 10th inning. With both wins against the Red Sox on April 21, Kansas City remained in first place in the AL Central as did Boston in the AL East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0030-0002", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Impact of the Boston Marathon bombing\nA disappointing ending to an emotional weekend for the Red Sox, Ervin Santana (2-1) pitched seven strong innings, Kelvin Herrera (2\u20132) got the win and Greg Holland pitched a perfect ninth for his fourth save in five opportunities. Billy Butler homered in the eighth inning of the night game (clearing the Green Monster). The Royals also recalled LHP Will Smith from Triple-A Omaha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Remaining in first place\nOn April 25, Alex Gordon's grand slam (clearing the 420-foot marker on the wall in center field) highlighted a five-run 10th inning for Kansas City, who rallied against the Detroit Tigers bullpen for an 8\u20133 win, keeping the Royals in first place (ALC). Billy Butler had three hits on the day and improved to 23 for 55 (.418) off Justin Verlander, the best mark of anyone with at least 30 at-bats against the Detroit pitcher. Tim Collins (1\u20130) pitched a scoreless ninth for the Royals and got the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Remaining in first place\nThis followed a game the previous day, which the Royals narrowly lost against Detroit (having only played two out of six days due to postponed games and having no batting practice prior to the game on April 24 as a result of bad weather). Overall, the Royals went 4\u20133 at Atlanta, Boston and Detroit. Kansas City did not play a home game since April 14. They played seven road games in 11 days. \"This was a phenomenal road trip for us\", said right-hander James Shields, who pitched eight solid innings on April 25. \"We're going to look back at this road trip, and I think it's going to be a pretty crucial road trip.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, April, Remaining in first place\nOn April 28, in the opener of a doubleheader caused by a rainout two days earlier, Jeremy Guthrie (3\u20130) allowed six hits over 6 2/3 innings for his 16th consecutive start without a loss. That matched the Kansas City record set by Paul Splittorff from August 13, 1977 \u2013 April 22, 1978. The Royals went on to beat the Indians 9\u20130, with a memorable 500th career hit from Alcides Escobar being a home run (370 feet) and a right center home run by Alex Gordon (438 feet),", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234268-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City Royals season, Season highlights, May\nAfter spending most of April in first place (AL Central), the Royals ended the month with a 14\u201310 record (7\u20134 at home), a half game behind the Detroit Tigers as of April 30 (an improvement from their 6\u201315 mark going into May a year ago). However, on May 1, the Royals moved back into first place (15\u201310), due to the Tigers losing to the Minnesota Twins and then the Royals later beating the Tampa Bay Rays (giving them a .600 percentage). Unfortunately, it was not to last, as the Royals would go 8-20 for the month, their worst May record since 2006 (8-21).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234269-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City, Kansas mayoral election\nThe 2013 Kansas City, Kansas mayoral election took place on April 2, 2013, to elect the Mayor/CEO of the United Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas. The election is officially nonpartisan. Incumbent Joe Reardon did not run for a third term. Mark Holland and Ann Murguia were on the ballot in the general election. Holland defeated Murguia by over 1,500 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234269-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City, Kansas mayoral election, Primary Election, Candidates\nIncumbent Joe Reardon chose not to run for a third term. The following people filed for candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234269-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas City, Kansas mayoral election, Primary Election, Election Results\nHolland and Murguia received enough votes to qualify for the general election on April 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234270-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season\nThe 2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season is made up of 10 United States college athletic programs that compete in the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference (KCAC) under the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) for the 2013 college football season. The season began play on August 31, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234270-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season, Conference teams and information\nConference rules require each team to play all other teams within the conference and two other regular season non-conference game for a total of 11 games. Up until 2011, the conference only allowed a 10-game season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 92], "content_span": [93, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234270-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season, Conference teams and information\nTwo teams begin the season with new head coaches. Bethel's current coach is Martin Mathis. Mathis replaces James Dotson, who took over the role for one season after the sudden resignation of Travis Graber on July 27, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 92], "content_span": [93, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234270-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season, Conference teams and information\nBethany's Manny Matsakis is also new to his team and a first-year head coach. Matsakis was announced as the new head coach for the Swedes in March 2013 to replace Jamie Cruce after his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 92], "content_span": [93, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234270-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season, Preseason outlook\nThe 2013 NAIA football rankings released their annual spring poll on April 15, 2013. Two teams from the conference were ranked in the top 25: #16 Ottawa and #19 Tabor. A third team, Kansas Wesleyan, received votes in the poll. The poll rankings changed slightly with the Preseason Poll on August 12, 2013: Tabor was ranked ahead of Ottawa at 17th and 18th. Kansas Weleyan did not receive any votes, but Friends managed to receive nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 77], "content_span": [78, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234270-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season, Schedule\nThe season is scheduled to begin play on August 31, 2013. The schedule is subject to change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234270-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season, Schedule, Week 2\nThe week of September 14 marks the first Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference \u2013 Heart of America Athletic Conference Football Series. During this week, head-to-head matchups are played from teams in the KCAC versus the Heart of America Athletic Conference. Matchups are based on the final standings of the 2012 season (see 2012 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football season and 2012 Heart of America Athletic Conference football season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 76], "content_span": [77, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234271-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Jayhawks football team\nThe 2013 Kansas Jayhawks football team represented the University of Kansas in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Jayhawks were led by second year head coach Charlie Weis and played their home games at Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234271-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas Jayhawks football team\nOn September 21, with a 13\u201310 win over Louisiana Tech, the Jayhawks ended a 22-game losing streak to FBS opponents. On November 16, the Jayhawks ended their 27 conference game losing streak with a 31\u201319 defeat of West Virginia. The conference win was the Jayhawks first conference win since their 52\u201345 defeat of Colorado during the 2010 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team represented Kansas State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wildcats play their home games at Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium, in Manhattan, Kansas as they have since 1968. 2013 is the 118th season in school history. The Wildcats are led by head coach Bill Snyder in his 22nd overall and fifth straight season since taking over in his second tenure in 2009. K-State is a member of the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team\nConference play began with a loss to the Texas Longhorns, which ended the Wildcats 5-game winning streak against the Longhorns. Their last lost against Texas was in 2003. The regular season ended with a win over in-state rival Kansas in the Sunflower Showdown. After completing the regular season with a 7\u20135 record, the Kansas State Wildcats returned for a bowl game for the fourth straight year, were selected to play in the 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl and played the Michigan Wolverines. The season ended with the Wildcats defeating the Wolverines, 31\u201314, to break a five-game bowl losing streak winning their first bowl game since the 2002 Holiday Bowl and finishing the season 8\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Off-season\nThe off-season saw the completion of the West Stadium Center of Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, North Dakota State\nThe Wildcats were favored by 11 going into the game. The game was debut of K-State's brand new West Stadium Center, a brand new press box and luxury suite building, and featuring a statue of head coach Bill Snyder, replacing the old structure built in 1993. The Bison spoiled the opening game of the Wildcats' season, which featured a pre-game ceremony of raising the 2012 Big 12 Conference Champions flag. North Dakota State, trailing 21\u201317 in the middle of the fourth quarter, made an eight-minute touchdown drive to go up by 2 points with just 28 seconds remaining. New K-State quarterback Jake Waters threw an interception on the Wildcats' first play of the possession, sealing the victory for the two-time defending FCS champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, North Dakota State\nNorth Dakota State went on to finish the season undefeated with a record of 15\u20130 and won their third consecutive FCS Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette\nThe Wildcats were favored by 10 going into the game. Kansas State scored 10 points in each of the first two quarters while giving up just 3 points in the half. Tramaine Thompason returned the opening kickoff of the second half 94 yards for a touchdown. Moments later, Thompson returned a Louisiana\u2013Lafayette punt 79 yards to the Rajin' Cajun 2-yard line. Following a Jake Waters 1-yard touchdown run, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette returned the ensuing kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette\nIn the fourth quarter K-State's Ty Zimmerman returned an interception 32 yards for a touchdown after the ball deflected off of a Rajin' Cajun player's helmet. K-State was able to score on offense, defense, and special teams in the second half alone. K -State leads the nation for most non-offense touchdowns since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, UMass\nThe Wildcats were favored by 38 1/2 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Texas\nThe Longhorns were favored by 5 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma State\nThe Cowboys were favored by 11 1/2 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Baylor\nThe Bears were favored by 17 1/2 going to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, West Virginia\nThe Wildcats were favored by 11 1/2 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Iowa State\nThe Wildcats were favored by 17 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nThe Red Raiders were favored by 11 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, TCU\nThe Wildcats were favored by 11 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Michigan (2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl)\nK-State was favored by 7 going into the game. Kansas State played the Michigan Wolverines on December 28, 2013 at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona for the 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Michigan (2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl)\nKansas State scored first with a touchdown pass from Jake Waters to Tyler Lockett in the first quarter and K-State's kicker Ian Patterson made good on the extra point to take the lead 7\u20130. Kansas State maintained the lead for the remainder of the game. At halftime, Kansas State led 21\u20136 with Tyler Lockett receiving three touchdown passes from Jake Waters and Michigan succeeding with two field goals. After no score in the third quarter, Michigan's Fitzgerald Toussaint ran the ball three yards for a touchdown while Kansas State's Patterson made a field goal and John Hubert ran in a touchdown for 1 yard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Michigan (2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl)\nKansas State won the game by a score of 31\u201314. Many sportswriters determined that Kansas State controlled the Michigan team through the entire game and one wrote \"Kansas State dominates Michigan in Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl\" to summarize the results. Another wrote that \"K-State could be a 2014 Big 12 title contender\" after the results of the game. Supporters of Michigan used the results to highlight high hopes for the upcoming seasons with comments such as \"The young guys are the bright spot for this team.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Michigan (2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl)\nKansas State's Tyler Lockett was named the offensive MVP. Lockett finished the game with ten catches for 116 yards and three touchdowns to tie the Bowl record. Kansas State safety Dante Barnett was awarded the Defensive MVP. Barnett recorded a team-high eight tackles and an interception with a 51-yard return to the Michigan seven-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Michigan (2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl)\nKansas State Quarterback Jake Waters was named the overall Most Valuable Player of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234272-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Kansas State Wildcats football team, Coaching staff\nThe following is a list of coaches at Kansas State for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234273-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karbala governorate election\nThe Karbala governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234274-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karjala Tournament\nThe 2013 Karjala Tournament was played between 7\u201310 November 2013. The Czech Republic, Finland, Sweden and Russia played a round-robin for a total of three games per team and six games in total. Five of the matches were played in the Hartwall Areena in Helsinki, Finland, and one match in the L\u00e4ker\u00f6l Arena in G\u00e4vle, Sweden. The tournament was won by Finland. The tournament was part of 2013\u201314 Euro Hockey Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234274-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Karjala Tournament, Games\nAll times are local. Helsinki \u2013 (Eastern European Time \u2013 UTC+2) G\u00e4vle \u2013 (Central European Time \u2013 UTC+1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election\nThe 2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election was held on 5 May 2013 to elect members from 223 constituencies in the Indian state of Karnataka. Five major political parties contested the election: Indian National Congress (INC), Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Janata Dal (Secular) (JD(S)), B. S. Yeddyurappa's Karnataka Janata Paksha (KJP) and B. Sriramulu's Badavara Shramikara Raitara Congress (BSRCP). Though Karnataka has 224 assembly constituencies, elections were held only for 223 seats. The election for the Piriyapatna constituency was postponed to 28 May 2013 due to the death of the BJP candidate for the seat. The voter turnout in the state was 70.23%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election\nThe INC under the leadership of the erstwhile Janata Parivar leader Siddaramaiah won the election with an absolute majority of 122 seats (including the Piriyapatna seat), 9 more than the majority mark of 113. As a result, the INC returned to power on its own after nine years with Siddaramaiah becoming the Chief Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Background\nIn 2008, the BJP under the leadership of B. S. Yeddyurappa, a powerful Lingayat leader, won 110 seats, emerging as the single largest party. As the party did not have a majority of its own, having not won 113+ seats, it had to form a government with the support of a few independent MLA's. The BJP thus came to power for the first time in South India with Yeddyurappa becoming the Chief Minister of Karnataka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Background\nHowever, the five years in which BJP was in power in Karnataka was not smooth and was mired in many controversies. A few months after coming to power, the BJP encouraged Congress and JD(S) MLA's to defect to the BJP to boost its strength in the assembly. Yeddyurappa had to face many revolts over his style of functioning from the Reddy brothers (Karunakara, Somashekara and Janardhana) and B. Sriramulu, a faction led by Balachandra Jarkiholi and the old BJP loyalists led by Ananth Kumar. Janardhana Reddy was arrested in the Bellary illegal mining scam in 2011. Some BJP leaders like Katta Subramanya Naidu, Ess Enn Krishnaiah Setty and Yeddyurappa were imprisoned for some time for their role in individual land scams. Yeddyurappa and Kumaraswamy of JD(S) were accused of encouraging illegal mining, though were cleared later by the High Court of Karnataka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Background\nIn its five years of rule, the BJP had three Chief Ministers. Yeddyurappa was forced to resign as Chief Minister in July 2011 due to his alleged involvement in a land scam. He was replaced by his handpicked successor and loyalist D. V. Sadananda Gowda, who faced a challenge from Jagadish Shettar, the Chief Minister choice for Yeddyurappa's opponents in the BJP. However, Gowda soon fell out with Yeddyurappa and the latter began to revolt against him, threatening to quit the BJP if Gowda was not removed. The BJP High Command replaced Gowda with Shettar, only 11 months after he became Chief Minister. Shettar was another Lingayat BJP leader whom Yeddyurappa opposed becoming his successor just less than a year ago as they were from the same caste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Background\nIn local body elections, the Congress and the JD(S) won more seats while the BJP was pushed to third. In the by-election to the Udupi Chimagalur Lok Sabha seat held in March 2012, the Congress won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Background\nYeddyurappa quit the BJP in November 2012 and formed his own party, the Karnataka Janata Paksha (KJP). Previously, Sriramulu had quit the BJP in 2011 to form the Badavara Shramikara Raitara Congress (BSR Congress) after Janardhana Reddy was imprisoned. These splits weakened the BJP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Election\nThe election was held in a single phase on 5 May 2013 for 223 out of total 224 seats. A voter turnout of 70.23% was recorded. 50,446 polling stations were set up for the 41.8 million voters in Karnataka. The election in the constituency of Periyapatna was adjourned due to the death of the BJP candidate, Sannamogegowda, a day before polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Results by Constituency\n^\u00a0Held later:\u00a0Poll adjourned due to death of BJP candidate, Sannamogegowda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Results by Constituency\nThree candidates who failed to secure the Congress tickets were elected as independents: Santeesh Sail Krishna in Karwar, S N Subbareddy in Bagepalli, and G Manjunatha in Mulbagal. ^\u00a0Note2:\u00a0Includes the result of Periyapatna assembly seat election held later", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234275-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Aftermath\nFollowing the defeat, Chief Minister Jagadish Shettar submitted his resignation on 8 May. Governor H. R. Bharadwaj later appointed INC legislative leader Siddaramaiah as the next chief minister. The next election was held in May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234276-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka State Film Awards\nThe Karnataka State Film Awards 2013, presented by Government of Karnataka, to felicitate the best of Kannada Cinema released in the year 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234276-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Karnataka State Film Awards, Jury\nA committee headed by G. K. Govinda Rao was appointed to evaluate the awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234277-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karshi Challenger\nThe 2013 Karshi Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Qarshi, Uzbekistan between 6 and 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234277-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Karshi Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234277-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Karshi Challenger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234278-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karshi Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nThe defending champions were Lee Hsin-han and Peng Hsien-yin, but they chose not to compete. Chen Ti and Guillermo Olaso defeated Jordan Kerr and Konstantin Kravchuk 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20135 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234279-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karshi Challenger \u2013 Singles\nIgor Kunitsyn was the defending champion, but chose not to participate. Teymuraz Gabashvili defeated Radu Albot 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234280-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Karuizawa International Curling Championship\nThe 2013 Karuizawa International Curling Championship was held from April 18 to 21 at the Karuizawa Ice Park in Karuizawa, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234281-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashima Antlers season\nThe 2013 season was Kashima Antlers 10th season in the J1 League. They got to the 4th round of the Emperors Cup and the 1st round of the J.League Cup, and ended up finishing 5th in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234281-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashima Antlers 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-00234282-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season\nThe 2013 Kashiwa Reysol season was Kashiwa Reysol's 3rd season back in the J.League Division 1 since promotion in 2010, making it their 41st season in the top flight overall. They finished 10th in the league, won the J.League Cup and were knocked out of the Emperor's Cup and AFC Champions League at the fourth round Semifinals respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season, Squad\nAs of January 31, 2013Note: 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, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season, Transfers, Winter\nInNote: 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, 45], "content_span": [46, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season, Transfers, Winter\nOutNote: 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, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season, Competitions, J.League, League table\nThe 2013 J.League Division 1 season was the 48th season of Japanese top-flight football and 21st since the establishment of the J.League. The season began on 2 March and finished on 7 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season, Clubs\nVissel Kobe, Gamba Osaka and Consadole Sapporo were relegated at the end of the 2012 season after finishing in the bottom three places of the table. Consadole Sapporo returned to J2 after only one season in the top flight, while Vissel Kobe was relegated after six seasons in the top flight. Gamba Osaka, instead, was relegated for the first time since the creation of J. League in 1993 and first time since their forerunners, Matsushita Electric Soccer Club, were relegated to the second Division of Japan Soccer League after the 1986\u201387 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season, Clubs\nThe three relegated teams were replaced by 2012 J.League Division 2 champions Ventforet Kofu, runners-up Shonan Bellmare and sixth-placed and play-off winner team Oita Trinita. Kofu made an immediate return to the top division, while Shonan after a two-year absence. In the end, Oita beat JEF United Chiba in the playoff final and returned in J1 after three seasons in the second division. Due to Oita's promotion, it will be the first time to have 2 clubs in the top-flight league competitions from Kyushu since 2006, and Kansai region will have only one club competing in the top flight first time since 1994 season due to Kobe and Gamba's relegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234282-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kashiwa Reysol season, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 7 December 2013Source: Notes:\u2020 Team played previous season in J2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234283-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Cup\nThe 2013 Kazakhstan Cup is the 22nd season of the Kazakhstan Cup, the annual nationwide football cup competition of Kazakhstan since the independence of the country. The competition begins on 10 April 2013 and will end with the final on November 2013. Astana are the defending champions, having won their second cup in the 2012 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234283-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Cup\nThe winner of the competition will qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2014\u201315 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234283-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Cup, First round\nThe draw was conducted on 2013 at the offices of the Football Federation of Kazakhstan. Entering this round are 30 clubs from both the 2013 Premier League and First Division seasons. The matches took place on 10 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234283-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Cup, Second round\nEntering this round are the 14 winners from the First Round and the finalists of last year FC Astana and FC Irtysh Pavlodar. The matches took place on 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234283-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Cup, Quarter-final\nEntering this round are the 8 winners from the Second Round. The matches took place on 19 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234283-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Cup, Semi-final\nEntering this round of the competition were the four winners from the quarter-final. The first legs are on 25 September 2013, the return games - on 30 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234284-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan First Division\nThe 2013 Kazakhstan First Division was the 19th edition of Kazakhstan First Division, the second level football competition in Kazakhstan. 18 teams to play against each other on home-away system. The top team gains promotion to the Premier League next season, while the second-placed team enters playoff series with the eleventh team of the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234285-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Hockey Cup\nThe 2013 Kazakhstan Hockey Cup was the 11th edition of the Kazakhstan Hockey Cup, the national ice hockey cup competition in Kazakhstan. Tent teams participated and Arlan Kokshetau won its 2nd cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234286-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Premier League\nThe 2013 Kazakhstan Premier League was the 22nd season of the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest football league competition in Kazakhstan. The season began on 9 March 2013 and ended on 2 November. Shakhter Karagandy were the defending champions, having won their second league championship the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234286-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Premier League, Changes from 2012 season\nThe league was reduced from fourteen to twelve teams for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234286-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams\nFor the 2013 season, the league changed from 14 teams to 12, meaning the bottom two teams from the previous season, Sunkar and Okzhetpes, along with Kaisar were relegated to the Kazakhstan First Division with only Vostok, the second place team, gaining promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234286-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234286-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nThe number of foreign players is restricted to eight per KPL team. A team can use only five foreign players on the field in each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234286-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams, Foreign players\nIn bold: Players that have been capped for their national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234287-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan President Cup (football)\nThe 6th Kazakhstan President Cup was played from May 9 to May 13, 2013 in Astana. 8 youth teams participated in the tournament (players were born no earlier than 1997.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234287-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan President Cup (football), Format\nThe tournament was held in two stages. In the first stage, eight teams were divided into two groups (A and B). The first stage was held on a round robin basis. The winners of the groups advanced to the final, while the group runners-up met to determine third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234287-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan President Cup (football), Statistics, Prize money\nAccording to the FFK, the prize fund was US$20,000. The teams which finished 1st, 2nd and 3rd received, respectively, 10,000, 6,000 and 4,000 dollars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234288-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazakhstan Super Cup\nThe 2013 Kazakhstan Super Cup was the 5th Kazakhstan Super Cup, an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Premier League, Shakhter Karagandy, and the previous season's Kazakhstan Cup, Astana, with the Shakhter Karagandy winning 3\u20132. This was both teams second appearance in the Kazakhstan Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234289-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Kremlin Cup\nThe 2013 Kazan Kremlin Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Kazan, Russia between 21 and 27 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234289-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Kremlin Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234290-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Kremlin Cup \u2013 Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana were the defending champions, but both players chose not to participate. Radu Albot and Farrukh Dustov won the title defeating Egor Gerasimov and Dzmitry Zhyrmont 6\u20132, 6\u20137(3\u20137), [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234291-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Kremlin Cup \u2013 Singles\nJ\u00fcrgen Zopp was the defending champion but chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234291-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Kremlin Cup \u2013 Singles\nIn the final, Oleksandr Nedovyesov defeated Andrey Golubev 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234292-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup\nThe 2013 Kazan Summer Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $100,000 in prize money. It took place in Kazan, Russia, on 10\u201318 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234292-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup, Men's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234292-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup, Women's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234292-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup, Women's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234293-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Doubles\n2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Doubles may refer to either of the following events at the 2013 Kazan Summer Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234294-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana were the defending champions, but they decided not to compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234296-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Singles\n2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Singles may refer to either of the following events at the 2013 Kazan Summer Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234297-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nThis was a new event on the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234297-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nThe wildcard pair Veronika Kudermetova and Evgeniya Rodina won the title, defeating Alexandra Artamonova and Martina Boreck\u00e1 in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20130, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234298-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was a new event on the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234298-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kazan Summer Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nLyudmyla Kichenok won the tournament, defeating Valentyna Ivakhnenko in the final, 6\u20132, 2\u20136, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234299-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kehoe Cup\nThe 2013 Kehoe Cup, known for sponsorship reasons as the Bord na M\u00f3na Kehoe Cup, was an inter-county and colleges hurling competition in Ireland. The competition was ranked below the Walsh Cup and featured second- and third-tier counties and colleges from Leinster, Ulster and Connacht.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234299-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kehoe Cup, Format\n14 teams compete in a straight knockout tournament. Drawn games go to extra time; if drawn after extra time, a replay is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234299-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kehoe Cup, Format\nThe 6 teams that lose in the first round go into the Kehoe Shield, which is also a straight knockout tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234300-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Keio Challenger\nThe 2013 Keio Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Yokohama, Japan between 11 and 17 November 2013. Mathew Ebden was the tournament champion over Go Soeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234300-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Keio Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234300-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Keio Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players used protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234301-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Keio Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nPrakash Amritraj and Philipp Oswald were the defending champions but chose not to compete. Bradley Klahn and Michael Venus defeated second seeds Sanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana 7\u20135, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234302-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Keio Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMatteo Viola was the defending champion but chose not to compete. Matthew Ebden won his third Challenger of the year over Japan's Go Soeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season\nThe 2013 season was Kelantan's 5th season in the Malaysia Super League. They were defending Malaysia Super League champions and aimed for 3rd league title this season. Furthermore, they were competing in the AFC Cup for the second consecutive seasons. In addition, they were competing in the domestic tournaments, the FA Cup and the Malaysia Cup as the last season's runners-up and defending champion respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season\nAfter a very successful 2012 season, winning a treble for the first time in their history, Kelantan started the season with busy pre-season player transfer activities. They already announce their sponsors for the 2013 season as well as presenting the new kits on 3 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, Community Shield\nThe Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah Cup, more popularly known as Piala Sumbangsih (Charity Shield), is an annual soccer match currently contested by the current Malaysia Cup winner and the current Super League Malaysia winner. Since both trophies were won by Kelantan, FAM has decided that ATM as last season's Malaysia Cup runner-up to face Kelantan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, Community Shield\nThe match was played at Shah Alam Stadium on 5 January 2013, with kick-off at 8.45pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, Community Shield\nA deflected shot from Indra Putra gave Kelantan the lead in the 58th minute while a curled free kick taken by Irwan Fadzli Idrus five minutes from time cancelled the advantage. The match went straight to the penalty shoot-out and Kelantan failed by 2 shots; one from Rizal Fahmi which was saved by ATM keeper Farizal Harun and shot from Daudsu Jamaluddin hit the bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, Super League\nThe fixtures for the 2012\u201313 season were announced on 10 December 2012. The league is set to start on 8 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, Super League\nKelantan started a bit nervy when the out-muscled PKNS in the very last minute on their first league match. Kelantan win 2\u20131 from goals from captain Badhri Radzi in 18th minute and Zairul Fitri's injury time header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, FA Cup\nHaving finished as the champion of the FA Cup last season, Kelantan will begin their FA Cup campaign in the second round, having given a bye in the first round. The draw for the FA Cup's first and subsequent rounds was held on 10 December 2012 at Grand BlueWave Hotel, Shah Alam, Selangor. Kelantan will play against the winner of the first round match between PKNS and Lions XI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, FA Cup\nKelantan won the two-legged semi-finals to advance into the third consecutive FA Cup finals after beating Terengganu 6\u20135 on aggregate. They beat Johor Darul Takzim 1\u20130 during final on 29 June 2013 at National Stadium, Bukit Jalil, Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, AFC Cup, Group stage\nHaving finished in the top of Super League last season, Kelantan will begin their AFC Cup campaign in the group stage. The draw for the qualifying play-off was held on 6 December 2012 in Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, AFC Cup, Knockout stage\nKelantan advanced to the round of 16 after leading group G with 13 points, 1 point ahead of SHB \u0110\u00e0 N\u1eb5ng. The matches for the round of 16 are decided prior to the group stage, with the winners of one group, which host the match, playing the runners-up of another group in the same zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, Squad statistics\nKelantan FA has announced 2013 AFC Cup squad on 15 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234303-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelantan FA season, Squad statistics\n(Compiled from match statistics in Stadium Astro website. , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , )", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234304-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelly Cup playoffs\nThe 2013 Kelly Cup Playoffs of the ECHL started on April 5, 2013, following the end of the 2012\u201313 ECHL regular season. The playoff format changed from that of the 2012 postseason; 16 teams qualified for the playoffs, the top eight teams from both the Western Conference and the Eastern Conference. First-round series were scheduled as best-of-seven, where in prior years they were best-of-five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234304-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kelly Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the regular season, 16 teams qualified for the playoffs. The Alaska Aces were the Western Conference regular season champions and the Brabham Cup winners with the best record and 106 points, making them the first team in league history to win the Brabham Cup in three consecutive seasons. The Reading Royals earned the top seed in the Eastern Conference and finished the season with 99 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234305-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kemer Cup\nThe 2013 Kemer Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Istanbul, Turkey, on 4\u201310 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234305-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kemer Cup, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 48], "content_span": [49, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234305-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kemer Cup, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 48], "content_span": [49, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234306-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kemer Cup \u2013 Doubles\nNigina Abduraimova and Maria Elena Camerin won the tournament, defeating Tadeja Majeri\u010d and Andreea Mitu in the final, 6\u20133, 2\u20136, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234307-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kemer Cup \u2013 Singles\nKsenia Pervak won the tournament, defeating Eva Birnerov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election\nThe Kent County Council election, 2013 was an election to all 84 seats on Kent County Council held on Thursday 2 May as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 84 councillors were elected from 72 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 the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in Medway, which is a unitary authority outside the area covered by the County Council. The election saw the Conservative Party narrowly retain overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Summary\nThe Conservative Party retained overall control of the council, winning 44 of the 84 seats on the council. This was a reduction of 30 seats from the party's 2009 performance, where the local party held all but 10 of the 84 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Summary\nUKIP came second in terms of councillors with 17 seats (including one defection from the Conservatives prior to the election), the party is now the council's official opposition with Roger Latchford as their leader. UKIP capitalised on their strong national opinion poll performances and Parliamentary by-election results, winning their first representation on the council. Labour Party candidates made substantial gains, rising from 3 to 13 seats and finishing in third place in the election. Despite local Liberal Democrats winning the same number of seats as in 2009 they are no longer the official opposition, having slipped to become the fourth largest party in the Maidstone County Hall chamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Summary\nThe Green Party won their first seat on the Council, for the Hythe division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Summary\nThe Swanscombe and Greenhithe division was held by the incumbent independent councillor, who gained the seat in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Council Composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Council Composition\nLD - Liberal DemocratsG - Green PartyR - Residents Association", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district\nKent is divided into 12 regions: Ashford, Canterbury, Dartford, Dover, Gravesham, Maidstone, Sevenoaks, Folkestone and Hythe, Swale, Thanet, Tonbridge and Malling, and Tunbridge Wells.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Ashford\nThere are seven single-member constituencies within the borough of Ashford. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Canterbury\nThere are five single-member and two multi-member constituencies within the City of Canterbury, which elect a total of nine councilors to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Dartford\nThere are six single-member constituencies within the borough of Dartford. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Dover\nThere are three single-member and two multi-member constituencies within the District of Dover, which elect a total of seven councillors to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Gravesham\nThere is a single-member and two multi-member constituencies within the Borough of Gravesham, which elect a total of five councillors to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Maidstone\nThere are seven single-member and one multi-member constituencies within the Borough of Maidstone, which elect a total of nine councillors to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Sevenoaks\nThere are seven single-member constituencies within the District of Sevenoaks which elect to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Shepway\nThere are six single-member constituencies within the District of Shepway, that elect councillors to Kent County Council. The results are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Swale\nThere are six single-member constituencies and one multi-member constituencies within the Borough of Swale, which elect a total of eight councillors to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Thanet\nThere are two single-member and three multi-member constituencies within the District of Thanet, which elect a total of eight councillors to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Tonbridge and Malling\nThere are five single-member constituencies and one multi-member constituency within the District of Tonbridge and Malling, which elect a total of seven councillors to Kent County Council. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234308-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent County Council election, Results by district, Tunbridge Wells\nThere are six single-member constituencies within the Borough of Tunbridge Wells. Below are the results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234309-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kent State Golden Flashes football team\nThe 2013 Kent State Golden Flashes football team represented Kent State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Paul Haynes and played their home games at Dix Stadium as a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138, 3\u20135 in MAC play to finish in fifth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby\nThe 139th running of the Kentucky Derby commenced at 6:33 pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) on May 4, 2013 at Churchill Downs. The race was televised in the United States on the NBC television network. The favorite, Orb, won a purse of $1.4 million with a final time of 2:02.89, with Golden Soul finishing second and Revolutionary placing third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby\nThe attendance for the race was 151,616. Security was increased in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombings; coolers and large purses were banned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Qualification\nFor the first time, the colts making the field in the Kentucky Derby qualified under a new points system. In years past, colts qualified based on graded stakes earnings. A total of thirty-six races, with the first coming last year, gave Derby starters an opportunity to accumulate points towards an entry into the race. Twenty horses qualified for the Kentucky Derby with two other horses (Fear the Kitten and Carving) listed as \"also eligible\" in case one of the starters would be scratched prior to the opening of betting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Field\nAfter the draw of the field, Orb, the Florida Derby winner, was the 7-2 favorite. Trainer Todd Pletcher had five different horses in the race, including the winners of the Arkansas Derby (Overanalyze), Louisiana Derby (Revolutionary) and Wood Memorial (Verrazano). Among jockeys, noteworthy entrants were Kevin Krigger, who rode Goldencents, trying to become the first black jockey to win since Jimmy Winkfield in 1902, and Rosie Napravnik, riding Mylute, attempting to become the first female jockey to win the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Field, Scratches\nBlack Onyx was scratched late after early betting began. As a result, it was too late for Fear the Kitten, who would have been eligible in the case of scratch, to enter the race. Connections for Carving, who was listed as \"also eligible\" after Fear the Kitten, elected not to make the trip to the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Race\nOn race day, rain fell steadily throughout the morning and early afternoon. The rain stopped before the start of the Derby, but the track conditions remained cold and \"sloppy\". All the pre-race favorites drew favorable posts. Black Onyx drew lane one, which was left open when he scratched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Race\nThe Derby got off to a very fast start as Palace Malice took the early lead. As Normandy Invasion seized the lead, Orb was just about in last place. \"I was so far behind. I just let him be calm and relaxed, and he was able to do it,\" said Orb jockey Joel Rosario. \"He was very relaxed and did exactly what I wanted. It was a perfect trip.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Race\nOrb rallied down the stretch, winning by 2 1/2 lengths in a time of 2:02.89. The win gave Hall of Fame trainer and native Kentuckian Shug McGaughey his first career Kentucky Derby victory. His horses were 0-6 in six previous Derby starts. \"I've always dreamed of this day and it finally came,\" McGaughey remarked. \"I'm thrilled for the people who put in so much time on this horse, and of course I'm thrilled for me.\" The win supplemented a record setting season for Rosario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Race\nHe racked up 38 victories in the spring session, the most ever, and in March won the world's richest horse race - the $10 million Dubai World Cup. The Derby marked Orb's fifth consecutive win, earning $1,414,800 and bringing the horse's lifetime winnings to $2,335,850. He is owned by Ogden Mills Phipps and Stuart Janney III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Race\nGolden Soul took second place while Revolutionary finished third. Revolutionary trainer, Todd Pletcher, who had a record tying five horses in the field, remarked \"I thought he ran super. He got shuffled back farther than we thought and he had to keep waiting to try to make up ground\u00a0... He closed strongly and just ran out of ground.\" Normandy Invasion and Mylute rounded out the top five. Riding Mylute, Rosie Napravnik's fifth-place finish was the highest ever by a female jockey, besting her own record of ninth place set in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Race, Wagering\nAccording to live odds on the Kentucky Derby website, more than $4.7 million was wagered on Orb of the $36.6 million gambled on the race, making the horse a 5-1 favorite as betting closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Race, Wagering\nJust minutes before, Orb pulled even with Revolutionary as a 6-1 favorite even though more than $4 million was bet on Revolutionary and approximately $3.5 million on Orb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234310-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Derby, Subsequent Grade I wins\nAlthough Orb never won another race, several members of the Derby field went on to subsequent Grade I victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234311-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Drillers season\nThe 2013 Kentucky Drillers season was the third season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234311-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Drillers season\nOn July 19, 2012, it was announced that the Drillers would leave the UIFL and join the Continental Indoor Football League, as well as change their name to the Kentucky Drillers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234312-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats baseball team\nThe 2013 Kentucky Wildcats baseball team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Wildcats played their home games in Cliff Hagan Stadium. The team was coached by Gary Henderson, who was in his fifth season at Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wildcats competed as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) as part of its Eastern Division. The team was led by head coach Mark Stoops, in his first year and played its home games at Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington, Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Preseason, Spring game\nThe 2013 Blue/White Spring Game at Commonwealth Stadium saw the Blue squad squeak out a one-point victory over the White team in the annual scrimmage, 24\u201323. The program witnessed its largest attendance for a spring game in program history with 50,831 fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Preseason, Spring game\nThe Kentucky faithful finally got to see a glimpse of what the new coaching staff had been working on since joining the Big Blue Nation with Stoops coming on board in late November. Stoops promised to bring a new approach to the defensive side of the ball with his offense revisiting a familiar style of play from air-raid era with an up-tempo offense. As the Wildcats put five passing touchdowns on the board, it marked the return of the old air raid sirens that once carried through the Lexington skies on game day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Preseason, Spring game\nWith very little decided in the way of starters and roles, all five of Kentucky's quarterbacks received reps during Saturday evening's scrimmage, with the majority of the opportunities going to Maxwell Smith, Patrick Towles and Jalen Whitlow. Coach Stoops and offensive coordinator Neal Brown have yet to determine who their starting quarterback will be going into the fall, and with very little chance to see them up-close and personal, there's no hurry to name one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Preseason, Spring game\nHowever, with fairly equal playing time divvied up amongst the signal callers, it was Whitlow who threw and rushed for the most yardage in Brown's new-look schemes. Whitlow did a little bit of everything in the game, displaying a strong, accurate arm, finding multiple receivers, and showing off his speed which gives him a unique, additional element to his game. He finished the night 17-of-28 with 193 yards and two touchdowns through the air, while scampering for 49 net yards on seven attempts on the ground while toggling back and forth between the Blue and White squads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Western Kentucky\nKeshawn Simpson ran for a pair of 3-yard touchdowns and Antonio Andrews added his own 3-yard score as Western Kentucky beat Kentucky 35\u201326 Saturday night making coach Bobby Petrino a winner in his debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Western Kentucky\nThe Hilltoppers also beat their in-state rival for a second straight year, though they didn't need overtime like they did last year in this win over the Southeastern Conference program. They outgained Kentucky 487\u2013419 in total offense and held the ball for 35 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Western Kentucky\nBrandon Doughty was 27 of 34 for 271 yards and a TD, numbers that would have been better except for at least four drops including a would-be touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Western Kentucky\nThe loss ruined Kentucky coach Mark Stoops' debut. Coordinator Neal Brown's Air Raid offense struggled against a Western Kentucky defense returning seven starters from a bowl team that went 7\u20136 last season in the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Miami (OH)\nMaxwell Smith threw three long touchdown passes and Jalen Whitlow and Raymond Sanders each added scoring runs as Kentucky beat Miami (Ohio) 41\u20137 on Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Miami (OH)\nThe Wildcats made a winner of first-year coach Mark Stoops and Smith, who started for the first time since a season-ending ankle injury last September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Miami (OH)\nMost importantly for the Wildcats (1\u20131) was how Smith helped offensive coordinator Neal Brown's pass-oriented \"Air Raid\" philosophy take flight with TD passes of 48 yards to Jonathan George, 88 to Javess Blue and 56 to Jeff Badet. He completed 15 of 23 passes for 310 yards, 210 by halftime, as Kentucky outgained Miami 675\u2013122 and allowed the RedHawks' only score on a fumbled punt return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Louisville\nHeisman hopeful Teddy Bridgewater got off to a slow start as Kentucky's defense kept him and his receivers in check for much of the first half. He began 1 of 4 for 10 yards and had just 58 yards through one quarter, looking especially out of sync in throwing behind Robert Clark after the Cardinals recovered a Whitlow fumble at the Wildcats 27. Wallace salvaged the drive with a 36-yard field goal for a 3\u20130 lead. Even when Bridgewater seemed to get going in hitting Parker for 10 yards, the receiver fumbled and Kentucky's Ashley Lowery recovered, setting up Mansour's 37-yard field to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Louisville\nThe Wildcats' defense closed running lanes for Michael Dyer and other Cardinals backs and even sacking Bridgewater for just the second time this season. But Kentucky's offense couldn't take advantage as receivers dropped passes from Maxwell Smith\u2013who took all but two snaps in the first half\u2013while Raymond Sanders fumbled a handoff at the Louisville 13 late in the second quarter. Smith and Whitlow combined to complete just 17 of 37 passes for 214 yards for the Wildcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Louisville\nSenorise Perry ran for 100 yards and two touchdowns and Bridgewater overcame a shaky start to pass for 250 yards and No. 7 Louisville scored on four consecutive drives to pull away from rival Kentucky for a 27\u201313 victory on Saturday. Perry finished with 100 yards on 11 carries while Bridgewater completed 16 of 28 attempts to help the Cardinals earn their third straight Governor's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Florida\nJoe Mansour's 25-yard run on a fake field goal was the only TD for Kentucky (1\u20133, 0\u20131), which was outgained 402\u2013173. That trick play was Kentucky's only highlight on a night that largely belonged to Murphy and the Gators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Florida\nMatt Jones rushed for 176 yards and a touchdown and Tyler Murphy threw for 156 yards and a score as No. 20 Florida beat Kentucky 24\u20137 on Saturday night, its 27th straight win over the Wildcats. Jones, who had 28 carries, outgained Kentucky by himself while he and Murphy provided all of the Gators' touchdowns in the first half to extend the longest active winning streak over a major opponent. Murphy also rushed for a 3-yard TD in his first career start for the Gators (3\u20131, 2\u20130 Southeastern Conference), who closed a difficult week on a high note after losing starting quarterback Jeff Driskel and defensive tackle Dominique Easley to season-ending injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Florida\nFlorida gave Gators wide receivers coach Joker Phillips a happy return after his firing last fall as Wildcats coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, South Carolina\nKentucky (1\u20134, 0\u20132) rallied from a 21\u20130 deficit to pull within 6 at 27\u201321 with 11:50 left in the game but could not complete the comeback to upset #13 South Carolina. They were still only down 7 with 4 minutes remaining after a 1-yard touchdown run by Jalen Witlow but South Carolina was able to run out the clock behind SEC leading rusher Mike Davis and beat Kentucky for the 13th time in the last 14 meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, South Carolina\nSouth Carolina senior quarterback Connor Shaw completed 17 of 20 passes for 262 yards and rushed for 50 yards. Kentucky quarterback Jalen Witlow complete 17 of 24 passes for 178 yards and 2 touchdowns and rushed for 69 yards and a touchdown. Mike Davis rushed for 106 yards and scored 2 touchdowns for the Gamecocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, South Carolina\nSouth Carolina played without star defensive end Jadeveon Clowney who was out with an injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Alabama\nT.J. Yeldon and Kenyan Drake each ran for two touchdowns and No. 1 Alabama brushed off a few early mistakes to blow out Kentucky 48\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Alabama\nAfter a scoreless first quarter thanks to fumbles by the running backs and dropped passes in Kentucky territory, the Crimson Tide (6\u20130, 3\u20130) scored on their last eight possessions and outgained the Wildcats (1\u20135, 0\u20133) 668\u2013170. Alabama gained 369 yards through the air including a career-high 359 yards by A. J. McCarron. Kentucky's only score came in the 3rd quarter on a 30-yard touchdown pass from Maxwell Smith to Javess Blue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Alabama\nKentucky quarterback Jalen Witlow was injured on a sack early in the game and did not return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nDak Prescott threw for 268 yards and two touchdowns and also caught a 17-yard touchdown pass to lead Mississippi State past Kentucky. Prescott completed a career-high 23 of 34 passes and also rushed for 33 yards. Jameon Lewis had a 19-yard touchdown run, caught a 17-yard scoring pass and also threw the 17-yard touchdown to Prescott on a trick play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nKentucky's Joe Mansour made a 44-yard field goal with 8:15 remaining to pull the Wildcats to 28\u201322, but the Wildcats could get no closer. They had pulled to 21\u201319 in the third quarter on Jojo Kemp's 14-yard touchdown run. Then in what proved to be a key moment, the Wildcats recovered an onside kick, only to have it disallowed because of an offside penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234313-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Kentucky Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nMaxwell Smith completed 18 of 33 passes for 160 yards and a touchdown. Raymond Sanders rushed for 86 and Jojo Kemp rushed for 63 and a touchdown to lead the Wildcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234314-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Premier League\nThe 2013 Kenyan Premier League (known as the Tusker Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the tenth season of the Kenyan Premier League since it began in 2003, marking a decade of its existence. It was also the Golden Jubilee season of top division football in Kenya since 1963. It began on 24 February 2013 and ended on 9 November 2013. League champions Gor Mahia earned a place in the preliminary round of the 2014 CAF Champions League while 2013 FKF President's Cup champions A.F.C. Leopards earned a place in the preliminary round of the 2014 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234314-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Premier League\nA total of 16 teams competed for the league, with fourteen returning from the 2012 season and one team from each of the two zones of FKF Division One. This was the first ever season for Kakamega Homeboyz in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234314-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Premier League\nAfter beating Kakamega Homeboyz on 27 October, Gor Mahia won the Kenyan Premier League title for a joint record 13th time, matching the record set by their rivals A.F.C. Leopards in 1998. It was also Gor Mahia's first title since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234314-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Premier League, Teams\nOut of the 16 participating teams, 7 are based in the capital, Nairobi, while Bandari is the only team based at the Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234314-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Premier League, 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. For example, if a match is scheduled for matchday 13, but then postponed and played between days 16 and 17, it will be added to the standings for day 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234315-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Super Cup (post-season)\nThe second 2013 Kenyan Super Cup was a Kenyan football match contested by the 2013 Kenyan Premier League champions Gor Mahia and the 2013 KPL Top 8 Cup champions Tusker. After the two teams drew 1\u20131 in regulation time, Tusker won the match 5\u20133 in the penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234316-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Super Cup (pre-season)\nThe first 2013 Kenyan Super Cup was a Kenyan football match which was contested by 2012 Kenyan Premier League champions Tusker and 2012 FKF President's Cup champions Gor Mahia at the Nyayo National Stadium in Nairobi on 23 February. The latter won the match 5\u20134 on penalties to win the match and the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234316-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan Super Cup (pre-season), Road to Cup, 2012 FKF President's Cup bracket\nThe FKF decided to change the quarter-final fixtures, meaning that A.F.C. Leopards and Kenya Revenue Authority were now to face Karuturi Sports and Sofapaka respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 81], "content_span": [82, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election\nGeneral elections were held in Kenya on 4 March 2013. Voters elected the President, members of the National Assembly and newly formed Senate. They were the first elections held under the new constitution, which was approved in a 2010 referendum, and were also the first run by the new Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC). They coincided with the 2013 Kenyan local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election\nThe presidential election saw Uhuru Kenyatta of the National Alliance (TNA) defeat Raila Odinga of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM). Incumbent President Mwai Kibaki was ineligible to pursue a third term due to the two-term limit established in Clause 142 of the Constitution of Kenya. This was the first Kenyan presidential election to include a joint-ticket system for deputy president, which was introduced in the 2010 Constitution. Kenyatta was joined on his ticket by William Ruto, while Odinga's running mate was Kalonzo Musyoka. Kenyatta was backed by the Jubilee Alliance, while Odinga was supported by the Coalition for Reforms and Democracy (CORD). Kenyatta was declared the winner with 50.5% of the vote, meaning a second round of voting was not needed. Odinga unsuccessfully contested the results in the Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Background, Election date\nThe elections were originally scheduled for 14 August 2012 or December 2012 were planned for the election, depending on a court ruling to be issued. The court ruled that presidential and parliamentary elections should be held in March 2013. This resulted in the resignation of several civil servants who wished to enter politics, as required by the Elections Act. On 28 December 2012, the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission announced the Notice of General Elections which confirmed polling day as 4 March. The nomination deadlines were set over a period between 29 January and 1 February, with presidential candidates submitting their nomination papers on 29 and 30 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Background, Supreme Court\nOn 13 January, the Judiciary indicated it would hear and determine within two weeks disputes on Presidential Election results. The Judiciary Working Committee on Election Preparations (JWCEP) announced that election petitions would be certified urgent. These rules were developed in pursuance of Article 163(8) of the constitution which mandates the Supreme Court to make rules for the exercise of its exclusive jurisdiction of hearing presidential election petition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Background, Voter registration\nVoter registration ran from 19 November 2012 for 30 days. Problems were reported during the first few days of the registration exercise included availability of electricity, military operations in some areas and logistical challenges caused by rains. Another subsequent challenge was the inability to register prospective voters who were still awaiting issuance of their formal identity documents by the government. On 27 November, the government announced that, due to time and logistics constraints, there would be no attempts to register Kenyan voters in the diaspora. The IEBC later announced a decision to register Kenyan diaspora voters living within the East African Community Countries. The ten-day exercise concluded on 25 December 2012 with low turnout attributed to \"logistical challenges\". The IEBC estimate was that about 1,700 people registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Background, Voter registration\nVoter registration was carried out using Biometric Voter Registration (BVR) Kits which would reduce certain incidents of fraud. The purchase of the BVR Kits was financed through a loan from Standard Chartered Kenya in a government-to-government deal involving Kenya and Canada made cheaper by a guarantee from the Canadian government. The Canadian government arranged to have its fully owned parastatal, Canadian Commercial Corporation (CCC), sign a contract with the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Background, Voter registration\nA case was filed in court seeking to extend the voter registration period arguing that Section 5(1) of the Elections Act was in conflict with the Constitution to the extent that it limited continuous registration of voters. The courts however declined request to extend the deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Background, Voter registration\nAfter the 18 December deadline, the IEBC released the provisional voter numbers showing a registered base of 14.3 million voters. The IEBC indicated that they had missed their target of 18 million voters, citing voter apathy as one of reasons for this. The IEBC begun an exercise to clean up the voters\u2019 roll with a target of opening it for verification early January 2013. On 13 January 2013 the IEBC opened its voter register for inspection; voters were to verify their details before 26 January to enable the commission clean the register ahead of the poll. The options include visiting respective registration centers, the IEBC website or the use of mobile phone numbers via an SMS service (using National Identity Card or Passport numbers used during registration).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Background, Voter registration\nThe IEBC announced on 23 February 2013 that it had removed 20,000 voters who had registered more than once from the voter roll. The names were identified during continuing activities to clean up the register.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Electoral system\nThe 2010 constitution provided for a two-round system for presidential elections, the president having previously been elected on a first-past-the-post basis. In order to win in the first round, a candidate was required to receive over 50% of the vote, as well as 25% of the vote in at least 24 counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Coalitions and alliances\nThe law required all Kenyan political parties to register any coalition agreements with the Registrar of Political Parties by 4 December 2012. This resulted in several publicised discussions among key political players and their respective parties who aimed to form pre-election coalitions prior to the deadline. Another effect considered likely was a reduction in the number of prospective candidates. Four coalitions formed by the deadline include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Coalitions and alliances\nThe release of the calendar resulted in several parties opting to hold their nominations on 17 January 2013. The IEBC proposed public school shut down on 17 January 2013, as the schools would be the venue for a significant number of nomination activities across the country. The Government confirmed that public schools would not open on 17 January 2013. The government later announced that Public primary schools would for the second day (18 January 2013) remain closed to allow party primaries to continue. On 19 January the IEBC indicated that political aspirants who lost during respective party primaries are not allowed to defect and seek tickets on other parties after Midnight on 18 January 2013. By law, political parties were expected to nominate their candidates for an election at least 45 days before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 879]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Coalitions and alliances\nWhile other parties and coalitions held their nominations early, the Jubilee, Amani and CORD coalitions chose to hold country wide their nominations two days before the deadline. These were marked with disorganization and chaos with protests arising in Nairobi, Nyanza and Central provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Coalitions and alliances\nFurther acrimony arose over issuance of certificates by political parties, with over 200 complaints filed with the IEBC disputes and Resolution panel The committee consisted of 4 IEBC Commissioners and one official from the Director of Public Prosecutions office. The committee held its sittings at the Milimani Law Courts in Nairobi. Complaints raised included issuing of certificates not losers, nepotism and discrimination. The committee had seven days to complete the arbitration process with those dissatisfied with the tribunal's decision asked to lodge their cases with the High Court. The panel eventually announced 3 days of hearings. The Panel completed its work on 28 January 2013 dismissing 64 out of 207 petitions following failure by complainants to attend. 29 applications did not need determination as Political parties conceded to the complaints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Presidential candidates\nMinister of Internal Security George Saitoti, second hand man to both Daniel Arap Moi and incumbent President Mwai Kibaki, was expected to be a candidate but died in June 2012 in a helicopter crash. His mixed Masai and Kikuyu heritage was seen as important in light of the violence that followed the 2007 presidential election and the tendency in Kenyan politics for ethnic-based alliances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Presidential candidates\nSeveral politicians made public their intentions to run or were speculated to run by media analysts and polling organizations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Presidential candidates\nUltimately Joseph Hellon, George Luchiri Wajackoyah, Dishon Kirima and Kingwa Kamencu did not submit papers to the IEBC. William Ruto, Mutava Musyimi and Joseph Nyagah opted to support Uhuru Kenyatta with Ruto being selected as his running mate. Those who stepped down in favour of Raila Odinga included Cyrus Jirongo, Moses Wetangula, Sylvester Wakoli Bifwoli and Kalonzo Musyoka, who became his running mate. Eugene Wamalwa opted to support Mudavadi while Raphael Tuju supported Peter Kenneth who both chose other running mates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Presidential candidates\nOn 24 January 2013 the IEBC begun collecting the initial batch of documents to be used for processing the names of presidential candidates who would contest the elections. Candidate were required to present a letter expressing intention to contest the presidency and lists of 2,000 signatures from supporters in more than half of the 47 counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Presidential candidates, ICC and Integrity court cases\nA court case was filed seeking to restrain the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission from accepting the nomination of any candidate who has been committed to trial for serious criminal charges under the Kenyan and International law. At the time of the elections, Kenyatta and Ruto were facing charges of crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court (ICC) following the International Criminal Court investigation in Kenya as a result of the 2007\u20132008 post-election violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Presidential candidates, ICC and Integrity court cases\nAlthough the petitioners withdrew the case on 29 November 2012, a new petition was filed the following day by an NGO that was an interested party in the initial case. On 22 January 2013 High Court Judge David Majanja ruled that three integrity cases filed against presidential candidates and their deputies would be heard jointly. The cases sought to bar Prime Minister Raila Odinga, Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka, Deputy Prime Ministers Uhuru Kenyatta and Musalia Mudavadi and William Ruto from contesting in the presidential elections. On 25 January 2013 Chief Justice Willy Mutunga appointed five judges to hear the three cases jointly; Mbogholi Msagha, Luka Kimaru, Hellen Omondi, George Kimondo and Pauline Nyamweya. Hearings began on 7 February 2013. On 15 February the High Court unanimously rejected the petition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 917]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Debates\nThe Kenyan media announced their sponsorship of presidential debates set to be broadcast between the 26 November 2012 and 11 February 2013 with coverage from eight television stations and 32 radio stations. The debates were postponed to January 2013 to allow completion of the nomination process. On 25 January, the media confirmed the debates would be held on the 11 February 2013 and 25 February 2013. Other organisation later sponsored similar though less publicised Presidential and Vice Presidential debates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Debates\nThe first debate was held on 11 February 2013 at the Brookhouse International School and moderated by Julie Gichuru and Linus Kaikai. Initially, only the six leading candidates were slated to participate. However, a legal challenge by Paul Muite, ensured that himself and Mohammed Dida were added to the participant list. Their addition was so last-minute, that they had to use make-shift podiums that were noticeably different from those of the other candidates. The debate was split into two with a break in-between.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Debates\nThe second media sponsored debate was held on 25 February 2013 at the Brookhouse International School and was moderated by Joe Ageyo and Uduak Amimo. Initially, Kenyatta had threatened to boycott the second debate alleging bias on the part of moderator Linus Kaikai. According to a Jubilee campaign press release, the first debate was 'skewed, shambolic and farcical', while the CORD campaign retorted by accusing Kenyatta of dodging tough questions. Eventually, Kenyatta agreed to participate, and once again, all presidential candidates were involved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Debates\nSeveral churches and Christian organisations supported by Daystar University held presidential and vice-presidential debates, which were both broadcast on the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation TV station and intermittently on several other TV stations. The debates were held at the Anglican Church of Kenya's All Saints Cathedral. The focus of these debates were issues and question that the Christians bodies identified as important to them. Aside from the lower publicity, the debates were also characterized by poor turnout by the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Debates\nThe Central Organization of Trade Unions (COTU) also held a debate which received low publicity and participation of some of the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Issues\nDuring the campaign Odinga caused as stir when he implied that Kenyatta was among those in possession of huge tracts of land across the country and could therefore not reform the sector. Kenyatta responded by claiming he was clean and that Odinga should respond over his involvement with the Kisumu Molasses Plant. The National Cohesion and Integration Commission (NCIC) however through its chairman Mzalendo Kibunja stated that such statements were a form of incitement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Campaign, Issues\nKibunja was contradicted by Constitution Implementation Commission (CIC) chairman Charles Nyachae who said candidates should not be prevented from discussing land issues during their campaigns. The recently appointed police Inspector General David Kimaiyo whose name appears in the Ndungu Land Commission's report on illegal/irregular allocation of public land also added his voice asking for politicians not to debate land matters. Rejection of debate on land matters also came from the Anglican Church of Kenya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Conduct\nIn mid-August 2012, tribal conflict led to the highest death toll through deliberate killings since the last election. Though the specific instance had no clear motive, past clashes have occurred due to the alleged misuse of land and water resources, however this instance was reportedly larger in scale and intensity. Speculation was made of links to the election amid an increase in political tensions. During and in the aftermath of the political party nominations held between 17 and 18 January 2013 unrest was seen in several parts of the country most notably in Nairobi, Nyanza and Central Provinces", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Conduct\nThe 2013 elections were largely peaceful, other than an incident in the early hours of 4 March just before polls opened, when a gang killed at least six police officers in the region of Changamwe, Mombasa. and in Kwale county. The authorities immediately blamed the Mombasa Republican Council (a fringe separatist group that had opposed the elections and believes that Kenya\u2019s coastal zone should be a separate country) and arrested some of its members over the incident. Nevertheless, turnout in the affected counties was still high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234317-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan general election, Results, Local elections\nThe 2013 general election will be the first where there would be election of County governors and their deputies for the 47 newly created counties. A total of 237 candidates ran for office. Each county was divided into wards in order to elect County Assembly representatives, with 9,885 candidates running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234318-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kenya on 4 March 2013 as part of the general elections. Voters elected governors and members of County Assemblies of the 47 counties created by the 2010 constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234318-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan local elections, Electoral system\nKenyan law requires governors to have a recognised university degree. This clause resulted in challenges for aspirants including Soita Shitanda in Kakamenga and Margaret Wanjiru in Nairobi", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234318-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan local elections, Electoral system\nCounty Representative were elected in single member wards, of which there were a total of 1,450. Several County Representatives were also nominated to represent youths and disabled people in the various county assemblies from party lists, and after the elections 680 women were also nominated to the various county assemblies to ensure gender balance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234318-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan local elections, Results, Governors\nCornel Rasanga's election as Siaya governor was nullified in August 2013 following a petition at the High Court in Kisumu. He won the subsequent by-election and was sworn in again as governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition\nThe was an election petition aiming to declare the Kenya presidential election 2013 invalid. The Petition was filed at the Supreme Court of Kenya on 16 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition\nThe Report of the Kriegler Commission on the crisis that followed the 2007 general election placed a special requirement of fiduciary duty on the Supreme Court of Kenya in relation to any matter alleging election fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Background\nThe main petitioner Raila Odinga in a press conference shortly after the election results were announced on 9 March, noted that the election had been marred by massive and significant alleged failures of the biometric voter registration (BVR) kits, the electronic voter identification system generated by these kits, the results transmission or 'tallying' system and the results presentation system. In all, the petitioner's claim was that the manual tallying could not be relied on, and therefore the technical evidence of the IEBC needed to undergo scrutiny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Background\nAfter the 2007 general election and the chaos that followed, the report by the Kriegler Commission urged Kenya came up with a new constitution that was promulgated on 27 August 2010 that detailed on how any future dispute concerning election will be solved. The major avenue of this was to set up Supreme court that would hear all issues regarding presidential election and make a ruling. Its decision is final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Judges\nThe justices of the Supreme Court of Kenya would hear and determine the petition following the election, and any decision required a simple majority to pass. consisted of six justices at the time:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Petitioners\nThere were three petitions filed at the Supreme Court for determination:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Petitioners\nAll above cases were consolidated and heard at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Petitioners\nOther organisations and entities that appealed for inclusion in the case as amicus curiae:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Pre-Trial Hearing\nDuring the status conference judges decided on major issues brought up by the lawyers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Pre-Trial Hearing\nThe court rejected 900 pages which formed the Second Affidavit of Raila Odinga's position on the basis that it amounted to new evidence, which is not admissible under The Kenyan Constitution. Senior Counsel, George Oraro for Raila Odinga, argued it was not new evidence, but instead was 'further and better particulars', giving precise details of each allegation as was presented. The court ultimately declined, wrongly claiming that the affidavit was filed after the deadline for submission of evidence had passed. The reality and Court records show that the Affidavit was correctly filed and on time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Pre-Trial Hearing\nThe petitioners' appeal to for an audit of the ICT system of the IEBC was also declined, with the court citing that the process would be time consuming. The 900 pages included the evidence of Raj Pal Senna marked \"RO6\" which outlined the results of the forensic investigation of the IT used in the Kenyan Elections 2013 and which findings were later published as the OpCo Report", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Pre-Trial Hearing\nThe court also rejected AfriCOG request that IEBC produce all register that were used to identify voter at polling stations, citing that the time limit of 7 days to hear and rule the case would not be enough for this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Pre-Trial Hearing\nThe court had also rejected the Law Society of Kenya and the Katiba Institute's appeal for inclusion as amicus curiae, as they were deemed to be partisan to Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto. Attorney-General Githu Muigai's appeal was approved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Case Hearing\nAfriCOG's petition sought to demonstrate that constitutional and legal safeguards on the election process were so breached that the accuracy and legitimacy of the electoral outcomes was laid open to question. They sought to demonstrate that the electoral process was neither accountable nor transparent and its results therefore could not be verified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Case Hearing\nRaila Odinga's petition sought to bring attention to the series of technological failures that cast doubt on the provisional results as tallied by the IEBC, as well as the breakdown of BVR kits on polling day. He also alleged that massive electoral fraud and malpractices occurred that helped his opponent to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Case Hearing\nDuring the case closing Lawyer for IEBC chairman Ahmednasir Abdullahi coined the term Raila Doctrine that state that an election can never be free and/ or fair unless Raila Odinga wins the election;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Case ruling\nThe case was decided unanimously by the six sitting judges. ;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Case ruling\nThe court ruled that all members were to pay for their own costs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Aftermath\nAfter the Supreme Court gave its ruling on 30 March, both Uhuru and Raila accepted the ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Aftermath\nIn a televised speech, Uhuru said that \"judgment upholding his election as the fourth President of Kenya is a victory to all Kenyans\". He also said that his administration will be an all-inclusive one and nobody should feel isolated. He further extended an olive branch to his major competitor, Raila Odinga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Aftermath\nIn his concession speech, Raila said 'Kenya is more important and urged Uhuru to reunite all Kenyans and uphold constitutionalism'. He disagreed with the court but he also noted that their decision is final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Aftermath\nFollowing the determination of the case, the swearing in ceremony of Uhuru Kenyatta as President and William Ruto as Deputy President was held on 9 April 2013 in accordance with Article 141(2)(b) of the constitution of Kenya:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Aftermath\nIn case the Supreme Court upholds the victory of the president-elect, the swearing in will take place on \"the first Tuesday following the seventh day following the date on which the court renders a decision declaring the election to be valid. \",", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Further developments\nThe full report of forensic investigation carried out by Raj Pal Senna was published after the petition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Further developments\nThe report detailed how a forensic investigation of the technical evidence of the IEBC was carried out in relation to the technology deployed during the Kenyan Elections. In particular a forensic investigation was carried out on claims made by the IEBC that the electronic voter identification kits failed, the server used to handle transmission of election results overloaded and subsequently crashed, and that the database of results crashed. The affidavits of the IEBC and of Uhuru Kenyatta during the petition were similarly subjected to forensic scrutiny. The findings of this investigation were documented in a witness statement known as \"Witness Statement R06\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Further developments\nThis inspired a documentary called \"50%+1 - The Inside Story\" by Kenya Television Network journalists John-Allan Namu and Mohammed Ali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234319-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Kenyan presidential election petition, Further developments\nFollowing the investigation by Raj Pal Senna and the legal notices filed by a voter George Nyongesa, the IEBC CEO James Oswago was arrested and prosecuted over the acquisition of the kits used for biometric voter registration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234320-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala Sahitya Akademi Awards\nThe 2013 Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award was announced on 19 December 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam\nThe 2013 Kerala solar panel scam occurred in 2013, when a solar energy company, Team Solar, in Kerala, India, used two women to create political contacts with links including to the Chief Minister's office. The company duped several influential people to the tune of 70 lakhs, by offering to make them business partners, or by offering to install solar power units for them, and receiving advance payments for the same. Team Solar was unsuccessful in lobbying Kerala Govt to get their firm included in ANERT programmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Incident\nThe Team Solar Energy Company (Team Solar), floated by the main accused Biju Radhakrishnan and Saritha. S. Nair, directors of the company, allegedly collected advance amounts from large number of people and investors by offering to make them business partners, or in the guise of installing alternate sources of energy and failed to deliver the goods. The company awarded a \"Virgin Earth Golden Feather Environment Award\" to several prominent people of Kerala to gain media coverage and credibility. The scam came to light when one of the customers who had paid for the installation filed a case against the company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Incident\nThe arrangement has defrauded several agencies and people to the tune of crores of rupees and at least one lady actor was used as \"brand ambassador\" to lure gullible people. There were widespread protests across the state, mainly by Leftist youth groups, after an interview with an industrialist was aired on television, which alleged fraud by the company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Incident\nThe incident drew much attention because most of those who lost big money were all influential people, the women allegedly involved fueled the imagination/ jealousy of the depraved Malayalam Media and the alleged involvement of three officials from the office of the Chief Minister of Kerala, Oommen Chandy, who made several phone calls to Saritha. It caused great embarrassment to Chandy, who faced demands for his resignation; two of the officials involved in phone conversation, lost their positions. The total amount involved in the scam, calculated on the basis of complaints, is less than \u20b9100 million (US$1.4\u00a0million) but the aggressive protests by Leftist political parties and the modus operandi used by the company has made the scam notorious.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Arrests\nFive persons have been arrested in connection with this scam. The chief accused, Saritha Nair and one of the Chief Minister's personal aides Tenny Joppan has been fired and arrested. The director of the Public Relations Department, who allegedly received Rs 500,000 from the Team Solar man, has been suspended and has gone underground fearing arrest. Other people accused in the case, who have been arrested include Biju Radhakrishnan, and Malayalam movie/TV actress and danseuse, Shalu Menon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Arrests, Biju Radhakrishnan\nBiju Radhakrishnan was already caught in a case pertaining to the murder of his wife Rashmi. However, despite having evidence of his involvement in the murder, he was not arrested After his arrest, at Coimbatore, by the Kollam Crime Branch CID, he admitted to Rashmi's murder by giving her poisoned liquor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Arrests, Saritha S Nair\nSaritha Nair was a director of the Team Solar Renewable Energy Co. and an accomplice of the Biju Radhakrishnan in the Solar Scam. She was arrested on the complaint of one of the persons who she had defrauded, in AmbalapuzhaShe later requested the Economic Offences court where her case is being heard, that she wanted to give a secret statement, which would help to broaden the scope of the investigation. Her attorney, Fenny Balakrishnan termed the revelations as very crucial and capable of changing the direction of the investigation. She was released on bail in February 2014. Her name reappeared in the news after her scandal video was released and went viral on social media including WhatsApp on 12 October 2014. On 2015 June 2 her short film Anthyakoodasha was released on YouTube, which has crossed 500k views as on 18 May 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Arrests, Shalu Menon\nTelevision and film actress Shalu Menon, a close associate of Biju Radhakrishnan, initially denied any knowledge or relationship with Biju Radhakrishnan. Photographs showing the two of them posing together or Biju handing over keys to a new vehicle she had purchased recently were explained away, on TV, as pictures taken at his request. Later, she came under the scanner of the Police and was arrested upon concluding that she was also an accomplice to the scam and had used her popularity to entice customers into parting with their money. She was released on bail in August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Arrests, Tenny Joppan\nTenny, an aide and personal staff member of Kerala Chief Minister Oommen Chandy was arrested on charges of cheating, for aiding Biju Radhakrishnan and Saritha for defrauding a businessman, Sreedharan Nair, to the tune of 40 Lakh Indian Rupees. He was released on bail in August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Arrests, A. Firoze\nA. Firoz, a government servant, surrendered himself on 18 July, after the court rejected his plea for anticipatory bail. He was accused of helping to dupe a builder of 4\u00a0million Rupees along with Biju and Saritha, by claiming one of them was an ADB official and they could arrange a contract with the ADB. He was suspended from service after his name surfaced as one of the accomplices of Biju.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Phone call controversy\nAt least four Kerala Cabinet ministers, three MLAs and hordes of government officials besides a junior Central Minister had been roped in by the women and their phone calls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Allegations against the Chief Minister\nAllegations against the Chief Minister Oommen Chandy have been raised, due to phone calls made by his personal staff and forged letters which were used by the fraudsters to defraud customers. The issue snowballed when Sridharan Nair, a quarry owner, claimed that he had met the Chief Minister, at his office, along with Saritha, during which the Chief Minister encouraged investments in renewable energy. The Chief Minister refuted these claims on the floor of the Assembly, stating that the only time he met Sridharan Nair was as a representative of Quarry owners. The allegations are being used by the opposition LDF as a reason to stall the proceedings of the Kerala Legislative Assembly and demand the resignation of the Kerala Chief Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Kerala secretariat siege\nMounting pressure on Kerala Chief Minister Oommen Chandy to tender for a judicial investigation and thereby his resignation over the solar scam, the CPI (M)-led Left Democratic Front (LDF) on 12 August 2013, had conducted an indefinite, allegedly illegal siege on the state secretariat which lasted for 30 hours. The siege was addressed by Former Prime Minister and Janata Dal (Secular) chief H.D Deve Gowda and CPI(M) General Secretary Prakash Karat. The activists of the LDF, who blocked three entry and exit gates of the Kerala Secretariat and claimed that the fourth will be blocked later in that day. The Left Democratic Front in Kerala had demanded a judicial investigation in the scam, which was later allowed by the government which led to the conclusion of the siege.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234321-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerala solar panel scam, Crime branch findings\nThe Crime Branch appointed by First Vijayan ministry in the year 2018 found that there was no evidence against Oommen Chandy in the scam. As part of the procedures, the state home secretary T. K. Jose had forwarded a report to the central government. According to the report, no evidence could be collected against Chandy and the Crime Branch failed to confirm that the incident mentioned in the complaint actually happened. The case was handed over to the central agency after several teams of the Kerala Police, repeatedly failed to prove the allegations against Chandy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234322-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kericho local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kericho County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234322-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kericho local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234323-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerrick Sports Sedan Series\nThe 2013 Kerrick Sports Sedan Series was an Australian motor racing series open to Group 3D Sports Sedans and to Class TA Trans Am type cars. It was the tenth annual National Series to be held in Australia for Sports Sedans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship was the 113th edition of Kerry GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for senior teams in County Kerry, Ireland. The tournament consists of 20 teams (11 club teams and 9 divisional teams), with the winners representing Kerry in the Munster Senior Club Football Championship if they are a club team. If the winners are a divisional team the winners of the Kerry Club Football Championship represent the county.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nThe championship has a back-door format with the losers of the first round going into a knockout Round Two. The winners of Round One proceed to Round Three. After that the competition proceeds on a Knockout basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nDr. Crokes were the 2012 champions after they defeated Dingle in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship\nThe winner of the 2013 I.F.C. will be promoted to the 2014 Senior County and Club Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Round 1\nThe sixteen remaining teams play in eight matches in Round 1. The winners proceed to Round 2A while the losers play in Round 2B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Round 2\nThe losers from Round 1 play each other in this round. The losing team in this round are eliminated from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Round 3\nThe 10 winners from Round 1 are joined by the 5 winners from Round 2 with Rathmore receiving a BYE into the Quarter Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234324-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Football Championship, Knock-Out Stage, Quarter-Finals\nThe seven Round 3 winners and Rathmore who received a Bye play each other in an open draw in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234325-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Kerry Senior Hurling Championship was the 112th completed staging of the Kerry Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1889. The championship began on 19 July 2013 and ended on 27 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234325-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kerry Senior Hurling Championship\nBallyduff were the defending champions, however, they were defeated in the quarter-final stage. St. Brendan's won the title, following a 0-13 to 0-8 defeat of Lixnaw in a replay of the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election\nProvincial elections were held in the Pakistani province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on 11 May 2013, alongside nationwide general elections and three other provincial elections in Sindh, Balochistan and Punjab. The remaining two territories of Pakistan, Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, were ineligible to vote due to their disputed status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Background\nIn the 2008 elections, the ANP, a secular, leftist and Pashtun nationalist party, won the elections, prompting them to form a coalition government with the centre-left Pakistan Peoples Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Background\nThis coalition government was said to be riddled with corruption and poor governance, leading to common mistrust with the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Campaign\nOverall throughout the campaign, there were three main contenders: Awami National Party, the party in government for the past five years; the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F), a religious party or the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, a welfarist, centrist party led by former cricketer Imran Khan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Campaign\nOpinion polls were consistently showing that Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf were making deep inroads into the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, being close to even forming a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Campaign\nThe parties campaigned on multiple different policy platforms: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf campaigned on a Third Way, Welfarist and anti-establishment platform, attempting to attract disillusioned voters of mainstream parties; the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F) campaigned on religious issues such as the enforcement of Islamic Law and the Pakistan Muslim League (N) mainly campaigned against the leftist policies of the federal PPP government and vowed to tackle the energy conservation crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Results\nPakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, led by former cricketer Imran Khan emerged as the largest party in the province with 48 seats. While this was a considerably higher number than the second largest party, (Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F), with 16 seats), it was still 15 seats short of a majority government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Aftermath\nFollowing the elections, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf formed a coalition government with Jamaat-e-Islami and the Qaumi Watan Party, giving them 15 extra seats. As well as this, 9 out of the 14 independents elected joined PTI, giving them a comfortable majority in the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234326-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election, Aftermath\nFollowing this, Pervez Khattak was elected as Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, securing 84 out of 124 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234327-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kiambu local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kiambu County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234327-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kiambu local elections, Gubernatorial election, Prospective candidatures\nGeorge Nyanja (Former MP, Limuru Constituency) also made public his intentions to run but later changed his mind and vie for the senatorial position:. Dr James Nyoro is a former Managing Director, Rockefeller Foundation Africa while William Kabogo is the MP for Juja Constituency", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 77], "content_span": [78, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack\nOn 12 April 2013, four Chadian soldiers were killed, and five civilians were injured, in an attack by two suicide bombers in Kidal, Mali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack, Background\nSince early February, Chadian and French troops have occupied Kidal, using it as a key military base to house their troops and to renew counter-attacks on jihadists rebels in the Adrar des Ifoghas, situated just north of the city. The city has been targeted on several occasions since then. On 5 April, after the French-led Operation Panther had ended, the Chadian army left the Adrar des Ifoghas mountains after weeks of battling Islamists to return their main base located on the outskirts of Kidal, bringing the number of troops there to 1,800.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack, Attack\nOn Friday morning 12 April 2013, a group of Chadian soldiers stationed in Kidal went to the local market to buy supplies. At around 9:50 am, according to eyewitnesses, once the group made its debut a suicide bomber detonated his explosive belts in a nearby market stall, while Chadian soldiers were passing by, killing three soldiers instantly and severely wounding four more in the explosion. According to residents, the incident occurred on a street commonly frequented by Chadian soldiers, located about 100 meters from the town market itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack, Attack\nAccording to witness accounts, the first bomber was said to have been neutralized before he could explode his belt, but the second one succeeded, letting of a deadly blast that destroyed part of the market and also injured five bystanders. However, Chadian and MNLA authorities claim only one suicide bomber took part in the attack itself. Immediately following the explosion, Chadian soldiers fired automatic weapons in the air, in an attempt to disperse the crowd from reaching the scene of the blast. According to Kidal's deputy mayor Abda Ag Kazina, the four soldiers were in a state of critical condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack, Attack\nThe expected death toll was likely to rise. Following the explosion, army checkpoints were placed at the four main entrances to Kidal, in fear that more suicide bombers can infiltrate the city, as easily as they did that morning. The same day, a Chadian security source issued a statement indicating that MOJWA (The Movement of Oneness and Jihadism in West Africa) was responsible for the suicide attack. According to inhabitants of the city, after the suicide bombing occurred, Chadian soldiers succumbed to fear and turned their weapons against civilians, firing live rounds of ammunition that injured five bystanders. A fourth Chadian soldier who was injured in the attack died overnight at a hospital in Gao. The three other wounded soldiers were evacuated to a military hospital Bamako, where from their military officials claim that they were in no life-threatening condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack, Attack\nThe same day, a suspect in the name of Sidi Amar Ould Algor, ranked a colonel in the MNLA, was arrested by Chadian soldiers in connection to the earlier bombings, where he admitted he was the owner of the car that drove the future-suicide bomber to the Kidal market, where moments later he blew himself up. Tensions were raised following his arrest, as the MNLA never granted the Chadian army permission to take custody of one of its fighters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack, Aftermath\nEarlier on the same day as the suicide attack, a Chadian Air Force helicopter (probably a Mil Mi-17 Hip-H) crashed around 50\u00a0km northeast of the Malian town of Sevare, killing all 5 occupants, including a senior military officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234328-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kidal suicide attack, Aftermath\nTwo days after the attack, Chadian president Idriss Deby announced Chad would withdraw its troops, citing the jihadist's guerrilla tactics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234329-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kids' Choice Awards\nThe 26th Annual Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards was held on March 23, 2013, at the Galen Center in Los Angeles, California. Actor Josh Duhamel hosted the ceremony. The \"Orange Carpet\" was set up in front of Galen Center on the sidewalks of Jefferson Boulevard. Voting on the 22 categories began on Thursday, February 14, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234329-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kids' Choice Awards, Winners and nominees\nWinners are listed first, in bold. Other nominees are in alphabetical order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234329-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kids' Choice Awards, Events within the show, Slimed Celebrities\nIn a pre-show promo, Josh Duhamel was slimed while revealing that he was the 2013 Kids' Choice Awards' host. Duhamel was also seen bathing in a bathtub full of slime during the promo. During the show, Josh Hutcherson, Amanda Seyfried, and a group of kids appeared in a special green room to advertise the upcoming movie \"Epic\". They were slimed by Mub and Grub from the movie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234330-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kilifi local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kilifi County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234330-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kilifi local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234331-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 48th staging of the Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Kilkenny County Board in 1929. The Championship began on 14 September 2013 and ended on 20 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234331-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship\nRower-Inistioge won their first intermediate title, beating Emeralds 2-13 to 2-11 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234331-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kilkenny Intermediate Hurling Championship\nMooncoin were relegated from the championship following 1-11 to 0-08 defeat to Young Irelands in a replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234332-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship is the 119th staging of the Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1887. The championship began on 14 September 2013 and is scheduled to end on 27 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234332-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nBallyhale Shamrocks were the defending champions, however, they were defeated in the semi-final stage. Clara won the title, following a 1-15 to 2-10 defeat of Carrickshock in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234333-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 King Cup of Champions\nThe 2013 King Cup of Champions, or The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup, was the 38th season of King Cup of Champions since its establishment in 1957, and the 6th under the current edition. The top eight in the Professional League competed in the King cup which kicked off on 4 May. Al-Ahli were the defending champion but they were eliminated by Al-Shabab in semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234333-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 King Cup of Champions\nAl-Ittihad won their eighth title after beating Al-Shabab 4\u20132 in the final, and qualified to the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234333-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 King Cup of Champions, Participating teams\n* Number of appearance in King Cup of Champions since the 2008 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234333-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 King Cup of Champions, Fixtures and results, Quarter-finals\nQuarter-finals were played on 4, 5, 8, & 9 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234333-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 King Cup of Champions, Fixtures and results, Semi-finals\nSemi-finals were played on 17, 18, 24, & 25 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234334-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nThe 2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes was a horse race held at Ascot Racecourse on Saturday 27 July 2013. It was the 63rd King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234334-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nThe winner was Christoph Berglar's Novellist, a four-year-old bay colt trained in Germany by Andrea Wohler and ridden by Johnny Murtagh. Novellist's victory was the fourth in the race for Murtagh and the first for his trainer and owner. It was the second consecutive success for a German-trained horse following the victory of Danedream in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234334-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nNovellist was an established international performer, having won the Gran Premio di Milano in Italy in October 2012 and the Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud in France in June 2013. In the 2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, Novellist, starting at odds of 13/2, took the lead a quarter of a mile from a finish and drew clear in the closing stages and won by five lengths from the Irish colt Trading Leather. The British colt Hillstar finished third ahead of the French-trained favourite Cirrus des Aigles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234334-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nThis was the first running of the race to be shown on Channel 4; the BBC had shown the race every year from 1951 to 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234334-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, Subsequent breeding careers\nLeading progeny of participants in the 2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234334-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, Subsequent breeding careers\nNovellist (1st) - Last Draft (1st Keisei Hai 2019)Universal (5th) - Minor flat and jumps winnersVery Nice Name (7th) - Minor flat runnersHillstar (3rd) - Progeny yet to race", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234335-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 King's Cup\nThe 2013 King's Cup was an international football competition, the 42nd edition of the tournament. It was a two-round knockout tournament, with all matches held at the 700th Anniversary Stadium in Chiang Mai, Thailand between 23 January and 26 January. This edition features the hosts Thailand and three invited teams (Sweden, Finland and North Korea). In the final Sweden defeated Finland 3\u20130 to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234335-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 King's Cup\nGoing into the tournament, North Korea were unofficial football world champions. In winning their semi-final, Sweden took the title and successfully defended it in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234336-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 King's Cup (Bhutan)\nThe 2013 King's Cup is a football tournament that took place from 20 July to 10 August 2013. The tournament was held in Thimphu, Bhutan at the Changlimithang Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234336-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 King's Cup (Bhutan), Group stage\nThe nine participants were divided into two groups. The top two teams for each group qualified for the semifinals. Brothers Union from Bangladesh was set to participate at the tournament and was included in Group A but was replaced by Arambagh Krira Sangha, also from Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234336-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 King's Cup (Bhutan), Team statistics\nThis table will show the ranking of teams throughout the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234337-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 King's Cup squads\nThe 2013 King's Cup is an international football tournament that will be held in Thailand from 23 to 26 January 2013. The 4 national teams involved in the tournament are required to register a squad of 22 players. Only players in these squads are eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234337-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 King's Cup squads, Stage\nPlayers' age and caps as of the opening day of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234338-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kirinyaga local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kirinyaga to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234338-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kirinyaga local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes\nThe 2013 Kishtwar Riots, which claimed three lives and injured eighty more, was a conflict between Muslim and Hindu communities, that occurred in the aftermath of the Eid festival on 9 August 2013 at Kishtwar, Jammu and Kashmir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Initial clashes\nThe conflict started as a bike rider was trying to make his way through a procession of Muslims, who were going for Eid prayers. The bike rider (who was Hindu), reportedly began a heated argument with members of the procession. This soon degenerated into a violent conflict between both religious communities. The riots led to the killing of one Hindu and two Muslims. Later, Muslim mobs went through the market area, setting fire to shops and homes of Hindus. People involved in the clashes initially started with stone-pelting and later shops and houses were gutted. The situation was handled by the state government, who called in the army and prevented the entry of politicians into affected areas, due to fears of the politicians' presence further inflaming tensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Initial clashes\nOn 11 March 2016, the Justice R C Gandhi Commission indicted former Minister of State for Home, then National Conference MLC, Sajjad Ahmed Kichloo for masterminding the 2013 Kishtwar communal riots that claimed three lives, left 80 injured and over 100 houses and business establishments (mainly belonging to Hindus) gutted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Arrests\nAs at 13 August 2013, a total of 141 people had been taken into custody, in connection with the incidents. Nearly 40 weapons looted from a Kishtwar arms shop remained missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Arrests, Administrative Failure\nAdministrative failure was cited as the reason for Kishtwar clashes. Central Security establishment mentioned issues such as:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Arrests, Administrative Failure\nThe home ministry had issued an advisory asking J&K government to prevent violence from spreading further by deploying adequate forces in all parts of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Reactions\nOh that's right they can't because their star PM hopeful waited days to call out the army & has yet to apologise. Hypocrites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Reactions\nDuring such processions, some hot-headed people always make demands of 'azadi'. It happens virtually every Friday... Since information moves very fast these days, tension spread to other parts of the town. It became difficult for the police to control it. Then, the Army was called. The Army conducted a flag march at 5.30 pm and imposed strict curfews thereby bringing the situation under control,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234339-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kishtwar clashes, Reactions\nWhen the riots occurred in Gujarat in 2002, the Army was not allowed inside. No one from outside was allowed to enter Ahmedabad. And Gujarat is not a property of Modi", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234340-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kisii local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kisii to elect a Governor and County Assembly on March 4, 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234340-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kisii local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run for office of governor in Kisii county:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234341-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kisumu local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kisumu to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234341-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kisumu local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234342-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kitui local elections\nKitui Gubernatorial Elections were held in Kitui to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234342-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kitui local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234343-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kivu Offensive\nThe 2013 Kivu offensive refers to actions in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo by the Congolese army, which captured two towns from M23 rebels: Kiwanja and Buhumba, both of which are in the Rutshuru area of North Kivu province, near the Rwandan border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234343-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kivu Offensive\nIn October 2013, Congo told the UN that the M23 movement was virtually finished after being pushed back from its key position at Mount Hehu and Rumanagabo, north of Goma, to an enclave near Rwanda. Congo also re-captured Kiwanja and Rutshuru, where its forces discovered mass graves. On 30 October, Bunagana, the first town seized by the rebels in 2012, was stormed by UN-backed Congolese troops as the rebels abandoned it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234343-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kivu Offensive\nFollowing Uganda's calls for a ceasefire on 1 November and government shelling the next day, as well as a new offensive on 3 November in the hills around the border with Uganda and Rwanda, M23 leader Bertrand Bisimwa called to \"immediately end hostilities\". He asked for the facilitator of the Kampala peace talks \"to immediately put in place a mechanism to monitor the ceasefire.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234343-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kivu Offensive\nThe army accused the rebels of bombing Bunagana. Army spokesman Olivier Hamuli said: \"This is not fighting, it is bombs launched by M23 targeting the population of Bunagana. They are targeting civilians.\" Conversely, the rebels said that they were attacked with heavy weapons. Radio Okapi reported that four civilians were killed and 10 others were wounded in Bunagana on 4 November. UN, EU and AU envoys urged both sides not to undo the progress made in peace talks, saying that M23 should renounce its rebellion and the army should hold off from further military action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234343-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kivu Offensive\nThe next day, following the two-week UN-backed offensive, the government claimed to have defeated the rebels. M23 representatives said that it was ending its rebellion and would disarm and demobilise its forces in order to pursue a political solution. The announcement came hours after its fighters were driven out of its last two strongholds of Tshanzu and Runyoni at about 3:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234343-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kivu Offensive\nBisimiwa issued a statement that read: \"The chief of general staff and the commanders of all major units are requested to prepare troops for disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration on terms to be agreed with the government of Congo.\" Government spokesman Laurent Mende said that many rebel fighters were surrendering and that Congo was ready to pursue peace talks. The U.S. special envoy for the African Great Lakes region said from Pretoria: \"In a region that has suffered so much, this is obviously a significant positive step in the right direction.\" On 6 November 2013, the March 23 rebels fled the country. The next day, the rebels surrendered at Mgahinga Gorilla National Park in Uganda Another 1,500 fighters, believed to be most of the force, were held after surrendering in Kisoro by the borders; they included Sultani Makenga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234343-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kivu Offensive\nAt a meeting in Entebbe, Uganda, the Congolese government delegation left the talks after a failure to agree to a wording of a document intended to officially end the insurgency. Government spokesman Lambert Mende said: \"Uganda seems now to be acting as part of the conflict. It has interests in M23.\" At the same time, no dates for talks to resume were set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234344-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Knokke-Heist \u2013 Bredene\nThe 2013 Knokke-Heist\u00a0\u2014 Bredene was a one-day women's cycle race held from the Knokke-Heist municipality to municipality of Bredene both of which are located in the provincial region of West Flanders, Belgium on May 4 2013. The race has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race was won by the Italian Giorgia Bronzini of Wiggle High5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234345-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville Challenger\nThe 2013 Knoxville Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Knoxville, United States between 4 and 10 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234345-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville Challenger, 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-00234345-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players used protected ranking into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234345-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234345-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234346-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAlex Kuznetsov and Mischa Zverev were the defending champions, but Zverev chose not to compete. Kuznetsov partnered with Denys Molchanov but lost to eventual champion Samuel Groth and John-Patrick Smith in the semifinals, who also defeated Carsten Ball and Peter Polansky in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234347-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMichael Russell was the defending champion, but retired against Tennys Sandgren in the quarterfinals. Top seed Tim Smyczek won the title defeating unseeded Canadian Peter Polansky in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234348-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville NightHawks season\nThe 2013 Knoxville NightHawks season was the second and final season for the professional indoor football franchise and their second in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). The NightHawks were one of seven teams that competed in the PIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234348-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville NightHawks season\nThe team played their home games under head coach Cosmo DeMatteo at the James White Civic Coliseum in Knoxville, Tennessee. The NightHawks earned a 2\u201310 record, placing seventh in the league, failing to qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234348-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Knoxville NightHawks season, Roster\nRookies in italicsupdated June 15, 201420 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234349-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kobalt Tools 400\nThe 2013\u00a0Kobalt\u00a0Tools\u00a0400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on March 10, 2013, at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Clark County, Nevada. Contested over 267\u00a0laps on the 1.5\u00a0mile (2.4\u00a0km) asphalt tri-oval, it was the third race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Matt Kenseth of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his first of the season. Kasey Kahne finished second while Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch and Carl Edwards rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234349-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kobalt Tools 400\nThe win was Kenseth's first win driving for Joe Gibbs Racing. He also became the third driver to win a Sprint Cup race on his birthday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234349-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kobalt Tools 400, Report, Background\nLas Vegas Motor Speedway is a four-turn, 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) D-shaped oval track that has sanctioned NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events since 1996. After being reconfigured in 2007, the track has a 20\u00b0 banking in each of the turns, while the rounded front stretch and the back straightaway has a 9\u00b0 banking. The front stretch, the location of the finish line, is 2,275 feet (693\u00a0m) long, 703 feet (214\u00a0m) longer than the back straightaway. Las Vegas Motor Speedway also has a grandstand seating capacity of 138,000 people. The defending winner of the 267\u00a0lap, 400.5\u00a0mile (644.5\u00a0km) race was Tony Stewart, who won the race in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234349-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kobalt Tools 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 90 points, while Dale Earnhardt, Jr. and Brad Keselowski stood in second and third with 82 points each. Denny Hamlin and Clint Bowyer followed in fourth and fifth with 72 points each, and was six ahead of Greg Biffle in sixth. Mark Martin with 65 was five points ahead of Jeff Gordon, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., and Aric Almirola, as Carl Edwards with 59 points was seven ahead of Marcos Ambrose. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet and Ford were leading with fourteen points, four points ahead of their rival Toyota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234349-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kobalt Tools 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nAs a result of Friday afternoon rain, qualifying was canceled for the first time in track history. With the field being set by the previous year's points standings, Brad Keselowski was awarded the pole position. Mike Bliss was the only driver not to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234350-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kolkata market fire\nThe 2013 Kolkata market fire was a fire accident that occurred in a five-storeyed marketplace in Kolkata, the capital city of West Bengal, India, on 27 February 2013. An estimated 19 people, who were mostly labourers working in the market were killed in the accident. Initial reports indicate the fire might have been initiated by a short circuit in the first floor of the market. The other major fire accidents in Kolkata are the 2011 AMRI hospital fire accident that killed 90 people and 2018 Bagri Market fire in which no people were killed but lasted for 4 days which destroyed nearly 1000 shops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234350-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kolkata market fire, The accident\nThe Surya Sen street market was an illegal market operating in the area of Surya Sen street. An estimated 19 people, who were mostly labourers working in the market were killed in the accident, and 17 people were admitted to the hospital in critical condition. Most of the people who were killed in the accident were shopkeepers and labourers who stayed overnight in the market. The accident occurred at around 3:50 in the morning. The rescue operations took nearly 3 hours for the 20 fire tenders who fought the fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234350-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Kolkata market fire, The accident\nThe rescue operations were hampered by smoke in the narrow lanes leading to the fire and in the only exit available in the building. Eyewitness have alleged that the fire brigade were late and the rescue operations were delayed as gas masks and gas cutters were not brought along. Initial reports suggest that fire might have been initiated by a fire in the eatery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234350-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kolkata market fire, The accident\nThe market fire is the second major one in Kolkata after the 2011 AMRI hospital fire accident that killed 90 people. The Hon'ble Chief Minister, Mamata Banerjee, admitted lapses on implementing the fire safety steps from the 2011 incident. The Chief Minister of the state, Mamata Banerjee visited the site afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234350-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kolkata market fire, Post accident\nIn the aftermath of the fire, the market was closed for entry for days. The shop owners were allowed to set up temporary shops on the pavements adjoining the market. While the exact value of losses of the shop owners are not known, it is inferred that many of the small shop owners have lost their lifetime savings in the fire. Many of them were reported to be on the lookout for alternate employment and seeking relief from the state government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234351-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kontinental Hockey League All-Star Game\nThe 2013 Kontinental Hockey League All-Star Game was the All-Star game for the 2012\u201313 season of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). It took place on 13 January 2013 at the Traktor Sport Palace in Chelyabinsk, Russia, and resulted in Team East, captained by Aleksey Morozov, winning 18\u201311 over Team West, captained by Ilya Kovalchuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234352-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kor Royal Cup\nThe 2013 Kor Royal Cup was the 78th Kor Royal Cup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Thai Premier League and Thai FA Cup competitions. The match was played at Suphachalasai Stadium, Bangkok, on 23 February 2013, and contested by the 2012 Thai Premier League champions Muangthong United, and Buriram United, the winner of the 2012 Thai FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234352-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kor Royal Cup, Details\nAssistant referees: Lee Jung-Min (South Korea) Seong Mu-Hee (South Korea)Fourth official: Chaiya Mahapab", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234353-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 Korea Grand Prix Gold was the fifteenth badminton tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Jeonju Indoor Badminton Court, Jeonju, South Korea November 5\u201310, 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234354-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea National League\nThe 2013 Korea National League season was the eleventh season of the Korea National League. The 2013 season operated with ten clubs because four clubs were dropped out from the league. Goyang KB Kookmin Bank FC had merged with Ansan H FC. Ansan H FC moved to Goyang and changed club name to Goyang Hi FC at a time. Ansan H FC, Suwon City FC and Chungju Hummel FC participated in the newly-formed 2013 K League Challenge. The postseason playoff consisted of four teams. The league began on 9 March 2013 and ended on 23 November 2013 with the final playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234355-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea National League Championship\nThe 2013 Korea National League Championship, known as Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power 2013 Korea National League Championship for sponsorship reasons, is cup competition of Korea National League in South Korea. The 10th edition of Korea National League Championship was held from June 1 to 14 in Yanggu, Gangwon. All of Korea National League clubs participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234356-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Open\nThe 2013 Korea Open was a women's professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 10th edition of the tournament, which was part of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Seoul, South Korea between 16 and 22 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234356-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234356-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234357-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Open Super Series Premier\nThe 2013 Korea Open Superseries Premier was the first super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament was held in Seoul, South Korea from January 8\u201313, 2013 and had a total purse of $1,000,000. A qualification was held to fill four places in all five disciplines of the main draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234358-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Open \u2013 Doubles\nRaquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears were the defending champions, but lost in the final to Chan Chin-wei and Xu Yifan, 5\u20137, 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234359-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Open \u2013 Singles\nCaroline Wozniacki was the defending champion, but she chose not to participate this year. Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska won the title, defeating Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the final, 6-7(6-8), 6-3, 6-4", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234360-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Professional Baseball season\nThe 2013 Korea Professional Baseball season was the 32nd season in the history of the Korea Professional Baseball. The Samsung Lions won the regular season and Korean series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234360-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Professional Baseball season, Season structure, Regular season\nFor the 2013 season, due to the admission of the NC Dinos as the KBO's ninth team, each team's schedule was reduced from 133 games to 128 games during the regular season with the new schedule arranging for each team to play every other team 16 times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234360-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Professional Baseball season, Season structure, All-Star Game\nOn 19 July, the best players in the KBO participated in the Korean All-Star game at Pohang Baseball Stadium. The franchises participating were divided into two regions: Eastern League (Samsung Lions, Doosan Bears, Lotte Giants, SK Wyverns) and Western League (Kia Tigers, Hanwha Eagles, LG Twins, Nexen Heroes, NC Dinos). The titles 'Eastern' and 'Western' do not directly correspond to the geographical regions of the franchises involved, as both SK and Doosan, being from Incheon and Seoul respectively, are based in the Western region of Korea, despite representing the Eastern League. Unlike in Major League Baseball, the Korean All-Star Game does not determine home-field advantage in the Korean Series. The 2013 Korean All-Star Game was won by the Eastern League, 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234360-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Professional Baseball season, Season structure, Postseason\nThe 2013 Korea Professional Baseball season culminated in its championship series, known as the Korean Series. The top four teams qualified for the postseason based on their records. The team with the best record gained a direct berth into the Korean Series, while the other three teams competed for the remaining spot in the Korea Series in a step-ladder playoff system:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234360-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Professional Baseball season, Season structure, Postseason\nUnlike the regular season, no playoff game can result in a draw so each series can be completed as it was intended to be, whether it be a best-of-five-game or best-of-seven-games series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234360-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Korea Professional Baseball season, Foreign players\nFor the second straight year, there are no foreign hitters in the KBO, as all nine teams use their foreign player allotments on pitchers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup\nThe 2013 Korean FA Cup, known as the Hana Bank FA Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 18th edition of Korean FA Cup. It began on 10 March 2013. The cup winner were guaranteed a place in the 2014 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Participants, K League Classic\nAll of K League Classic teams are entered in round of 32. Total 14 teams took part in 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Participants, K League Challenge\nTwo teams related from 2012 K-League are entered in round of 32, Six newly joined 2013 K League Challenge clubs are entered in second round, respectively. Total 8 teams took part in 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Participants, Korea National League\nAll of Korea National League are entered in second round. Total 10 teams took part in 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Participants, Challengers League\nTop twelve clubs of 2012 season are entered in first round. Other Challengers League teams don't take part in 2013 KFA Cup. Total twelve teams of Challengers League took part in 2013 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Participants, University\nAll of university teams took part in 2013 edition are entered in first round. Total 20 teams of U-League took part in 2013 KFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Results, Preliminary Round\nPreliminary round is consist of two round. First round will be hold on 9 & 10 March 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Results, Preliminary Round, First round\nThe draw for the first round was held on 22 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Results, Preliminary Round, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was held on 13 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 60], "content_span": [61, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Results, Final Round, Round of 32\nThe draw for the round of 32 was held on 18 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Results, Final Round, Round of 16\nThe draw for the round of 16 was held on 29 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Results, Final Round, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the Quarter Finals was held on 18 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234361-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean FA Cup, Results, Final Round, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals was held on 21 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234362-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Korean Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 Korean Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race that was held on 6 October 2013 at the Korea International Circuit in Yeongam, South Korea. The race was the fourteenth round of the 2013 season, and marked the fourth and final running of the Korean Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234362-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Grand Prix\nThe race which was contested over 55 laps was won by Sebastian Vettel, driving for Red Bull Racing. He dominantly won the race to claim his fourth consecutive victory of the year. He achieved a Grand Slam for the second race in a row, becoming the first driver since Jim Clark in 1963 to achieve the feat in consecutive race weekends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234362-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Grand Prix\nThe result meant that Vettel extended his lead to 77 points over Alonso and could seal his fourth consecutive championship in the next race in Japan if results went his way. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen leapfrogged Hamilton to go third, 28 points behind Alonso while Hamilton's result meant he was six points behind R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's score. Behind them, Mark Webber, who retired after a fire due to a collision with Adrian Sutil, kept fifth while Rosberg also stayed in sixth. On lap 38 a fire truck appeared on track on its driver's own accord during a safety car period after Webber's car caught fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234362-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Grand Prix\nDespite major circuit renovations including a complete modification to the exit of the pit lane, this was the last Korean Grand Prix in Formula One to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234362-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Grand Prix, Classification, Qualifying\nNotes: \u2014 Mark Webber received a ten-place grid penalty after receiving his 3rd reprimand of the season, for hitching a ride back to the pits on Fernando Alonso's Ferrari at the previous race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234362-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Grand Prix, Classification, Qualifying\n\u2014 Jules Bianchi received a three-place grid penalty and a reprimand after impeding Paul di Resta while on an out-lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234362-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Grand Prix, Classification, Race\nThis was the last Korean GP. The race was on the 2014 provisional calendar, scheduled for 25\u201327 April, but the Jeolla government cut funding to the circuit. Another reason was the very low number of spectators because the circuit was about 400\u00a0km from Seoul, the capital of South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234363-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Series\nThe Best-of-7 2013 Korean Series began on Tuesday, October 24, at the Daegu Baseball Stadium in Daegu, South Korea. It featured the Samsung Lions, who had claimed homefield advantage by finishing in first place at the end of the regular season, and the Doosan Bears, who finished second during the regular season and defeated the LG Twins in a best-of-5 playoff series (3 games to 2) to advance to the Finals. The Samsung Lions won the series in seven games to collect their fifth Korean Series championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234364-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Tour\nThe 2013 Korean Tour was the third season of the Korean Tour to carry Official World Golf Ranking points. The season consisted of 14 events, five of which were co-sanctioned by other tours. All the tournament had prize funds of at least 300 million won (approximately US$270,000). Four had prize funds of 1 billion won (US$900,000) while the Ballantine's Championship has a prize fund of 2.2 million euros (approximately US$2.9 million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234364-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Tour, Tournament schedule\nThe number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of Korean Tour events he had won up to and including that tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234364-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Tour, Order of Merit\nThe Order of Merit used a points system. Points were awarded based on the player's position in each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234364-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Korean Tour, Prize money leaders\n'Events' refers to the number of tournaments in which the player won prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234365-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Korfball European Bowl\nThe 2013 Korfball European Bowl was the qualifying competition for the 2014 European Korfball Championship, split into two divisions: Central, in Prievidza (Slovakia), and Eastern, in Papendrecht (Netherlands). 3 best teams of each division will join the 10 qualified-teams-by-ranking for competing in the European Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234365-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Korfball European Bowl, Central division\nThe Central Division took place in Prievidza (Slovakia) from 8 to 9 June and the winners were Slovakia. Serbia and Scotland were qualified for European Championships too.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234365-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Korfball European Bowl, Eastern division\nThe Eastern Division took place in Papendrecht (Netherlands) from 18 to 19 October, and the winners were Turkey. Wales and Ireland were the other teams qualified for the European Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kosovo on 3 November 2013, with a second round on 1 December. These were the first elections which the Serbs of Northern Kosovo participated in since the Republic of Kosovo declared independence in 2008; polls were monitored by the OSCE. There were violent reactions in Serb-majority areas of northern Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Incidents in Northern Kosovo\nIn August 2013, members of the \"Interim Assembly of the Autonomous Province of Kosovo-Metohija\" voted on a statement that said the election would violate Serbian law. This statement was rejected by the governments of Kosovo and of Serbia. Since Kosovo declared independence in 2008, government in these Serb-majority municipalities in the north of Kosovo has been funded by Serbia, and they have been dominated by organised crime and paramilitaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Incidents in Northern Kosovo\nIn the predominantly Serb area of Northern Kosovo, local Serb hardliners campaigned for a boycott of the elections. Voter intimidation was reported. Right before the election day, on Saturday night, a group of people attacked and severely injured the G.I.Srpska candidate for northern Mitrovica Krstimir Panti\u0107 in front of his house in Koloshin street; he was taken to hospital. The entire political spectrum condemned the attack. Though the perpetrators were not found, Panti\u0107 pointed to the pro-boycott groups, who were not interested in official representation of Serbs within Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Incidents in Northern Kosovo\nOn election day, there were incidents and clashes with police, after extremists raided several polling stations and spoiled votes. Staff were assaulted, ballot boxes smashed, and tear gas canisters set off. This disruption caused the elections to be annulled in three polls in northern Mitrovica, repeated on November 17. The government of Serbia had encouraged Serbs in North Kosovo to participate in the elections, but this violence undermined attempts to normalise relations between the two governments. According to the OSCE the voter turnout was 22% in Leposavi\u0107, 22% in Zubin Potok and 11.21% in Zve\u010dan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Incidents in Northern Kosovo\nOliver Ivanovi\u0107 called for the results in the northern four municipalities to be annulled. Following Foreign Minister Enver Hoxhaj declarations that \"the mayors in the north should be of Serbian ethnicity\", the Albanian opposition accused the government and DPK for having intentionally facilitated the defeat of Albanian candidates for the sake of stimulating the Serbian citizens in the north, despite their low voter turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Partial repetition in Northern Mitrovica\nThe partial revoting in three polls of Northern Mitrovica on 17 November was quiet without any notable incident. The result reconfirmed G.I.Srpska had the plurality, pushing the municipality elections into the second round on 1 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Results 2nd round\nThe media reported a turnout of 41.5%, while the official statement after the closing of polls from the Central Election Commission chairwoman Valdete Daka gave a turnout of 39.87%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Incidents during the Second Round\nIncidents similar to Northern Mitrovica during the first round we reported in Partesh during the second round, where groups of persons entered the voting polls and destroyed the materials. The Central Election Commission reordered re-voting in three polls to be held in December 15, 2013, before finalizing the results for this municipality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Incidents during the Second Round\nOther controversies sprang in Prishtina, where a video of Isa Mustafa's son trying to buy votes were registered and distributed to the media from a VV! activist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Partial repetition in Partesh\nThe repetition took place in Pasjan village on December 15. 1304 voters (68.78%) participated. G.I.Srpska won over SLS with 52.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Incidents in overall\nThe official statement from the Prosecution Office during the fourth press conference within December 1, stated that the office received material regarding 44 cases involving 81 persons. Out of these, 16 charges were pressed towards 21 persons. In addition, 8 persons were arrested during the same day for various offenses related to the election process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234366-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Kosovan local elections, Oaths controversy, Panti\u0107 resignation and 3rd election\nAll candidates who won elections had to sign a swearing in and oath paper that contained symbols of the Republic of Kosovo. In Serbian areas, a piece of paper was taped over the symbols so that Serbs would sign them without incident. Krstimir Panti\u0107, mayor-elect of North Mitrovica, took the paper off the symbols, declared he would never sign them and resigned. A new election for North Mitrovica was scheduled for February 23, 2014. Goran Raki\u0107 won the election on February 23. He campaigned that he would sign the oath and pledge loyalty to Pristina unlike Panti\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234367-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ko\u0161ice Open\nThe 2013 Ko\u0161ice Open is a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It is the eleventh edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It takes place in Ko\u0161ice, Slovakia between 10 and 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234367-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ko\u0161ice Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234368-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ko\u0161ice Open \u2013 Doubles\nTomasz Bednarek and Mateusz Kowalczyk was the defending champions, but Bednarek chose not to compete. Kowalczyk decided to participate in Strabag Prague Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234368-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ko\u0161ice Open \u2013 Doubles\nKamil \u010capkovi\u010d and Igor Zelenay defeated Gero Kretschmer and Alexander Satschko in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234369-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ko\u0161ice Open \u2013 Singles\nAlja\u017e Bedene was the defending champion but chose to compete in the 2013 Aegon Championships instead. Mikhail Kukushkin won the title defeating Damir D\u017eumhur in the final, 6\u20134, 1\u20136, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship\nThe 2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship was the 42nd Kraft Nabisco Championship, held April 4\u20137 at the Dinah Shore Tournament Course of Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California. In its 31st year as a major championship, Inbee Park won her second major title, four strokes ahead of runner-up So Yeon Ryu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship\nIt was the first of Park's three consecutive major victories in 2013; the first to win the opening three majors of a season since Babe Zaharias in 1950.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship\nFor the first time as a major, a defending champion missed the cut: Sun-Young Yoo was at 153 (+9).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Round summaries, First round\nNa Yeon Choi, Jodi Ewart Shadoff, and Suzann Pettersen shot 68 (\u22124) to hold a three-way tie for the lead, with Anna Nordqvist and Amy Yang a stroke back. Defending champion Sun-Young Yoo was tied for 90th place after a 77 (+5). World number one Stacy Lewis, the 2011 champion, had a triple bogey on the 14th hole leading to a 73, five strokes behind the leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nThe cut came at 149 (+5) with 73 players continuing to the weekend, including five of the nine amateurs. Reigning Vare Trophy winner Inbee Park shot 67 (\u22125) to move into first place with a one-stroke lead over Lizette Salas. Round one co-leaders Shadoff, Choi, and Pettersen fell to three, six, and six strokes back, respectively. Defending champion Yoo missed the cut\u2014the first time in Kraft Nabisco Championship history. Two players, Jeong Jang and Yi Eun-jung, withdrew before completing round two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nAmateurs: Hedberg (E), Ko (+2), Meadow (+2), Ramsey (+2), Yin (+4), Duncan (+6), Chen (+7), Hall (+10), Lendl (+29).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nPark and Salas retained their first and second place positions, with Park opening up the lead to three strokes after shooting a bogey-free 67 (\u22125) and 204 (\u221212). Six players were tied for third, three shots behind Salas at 210, including Angela Stanford, with a round-low 66 (\u22126) on Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nAgain in the final pairing, Park birdied the first hole while Salas double-bogeyed to double the lead to six strokes. Playing nearly an hour ahead, So Yeon Ryu shot a bogey-free 65 (\u22127) to climb the leaderboard into solo second place. Park finished with a 69 (\u22123) to finish with a four-stroke margin over Ryu. Salas shot a 79 (+7) and fell to a tie for 25th place at 286 (\u22122).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234370-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nAmateurs:Ko (\u22122), Meadow (+1), Ramsey (+2), Yin (+5), Hedberg (+13).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234371-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup\nThe 2013 Kremlin Cup was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 24th edition of the Kremlin Cup for the men (18th edition for the women) and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour, and of the Premier Series of the 2013 WTA Tour. It was held at the Olympic Stadium in Moscow, Russia, from 12 October through 20 October 2013. Richard Gasquet and Simona Halep won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234371-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234371-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234371-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234371-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 64], "content_span": [65, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234372-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k were the defending champion, but they decided not to participate together. \u010cerm\u00e1k played alongside Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek, but lost in the first round to Rameez Junaid and Philipp Marx. Merti\u0148\u00e1k teamed up with Andr\u00e9 S\u00e1, but lost in the quarterfinals to Victor Baluda and Konstantin Kravchuk. Mikhail Elgin and Denis Istomin won the title, defeating Ken Skupski and Neal Skupski in the final, 6\u20132, 1\u20136, [14\u201312].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234373-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndreas Seppi was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Mikhail Kukushkin. Richard Gasquet won the title, defeating Kukushkin in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234373-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Singles, 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-00234374-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEkaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina were the defending champions, but Makarova withdrew due to injury. Vesnina partnered up with Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1, but they retired in the quarterfinals due to Hantuchov\u00e1's injury. Svetlana Kuznetsova and Samantha Stosur won the title, defeating Alla Kudryavtseva and Anastasia Rodionova in the final, 6\u20131, 1\u20136, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234375-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nCaroline Wozniacki was the defending champion, but she chose to participate in Luxembourg instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234375-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nSimona Halep won the title, defeating Samantha Stosur in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234375-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234376-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kroger 200\nThe 2013 Kroger 200 was a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race held on October 26, 2013 at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia. Contested over 200 laps, the race was the nineteenth of the 2013 season. Bubba Wallace of Kyle Busch Motorsports won the race. Brendan Gaughan finished second and Jeb Burton finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234376-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kroger 200, Race\nBubba Wallace led 96 laps in winning the race, becoming the first African American driver to win in the Camping World Truck Series, and the first African American driver to win in a NASCAR national touring series since Wendell Scott won a Grand National Series race, the 1964 Jacksonville 200, at Speedway Park in Jacksonville on December 1, 1963.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234377-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuala Besut by-election\nA by-election was held for the Terengganu State Assembly seat of Kuala Besut on 24 July 2013 with nomination day on 12 July 2013. The seat of Kuala Besut fell vacant after the death of incumbent assemblyman, A. Rahman Mokhtar on 26 June 2013 from lung cancer. Dr. Mokhtar was an assemblyman from the United Malays National Organisation, a component party of the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition, which holds a 1-seat majority into the by-election. The by-election was contested by Tengku Zaihan Che Ku Abdul Rahman from UMNO and Azlan Yusof, who hails from the Pakatan Rakyat component Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234377-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuala Besut by-election\nThis by-election is viewed as critical by both the government and opposition. A win by Pakatan Rakyat would have resulted in a hung parliament with both coalition holding 16 seats, and potentially a fresh state election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234377-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuala Besut by-election\nThe by-election was won by BN's Tengku Zaihan with a slightly increased majority, thus keeping the government's wafer-thin 2-seat majority. Turnout in this by-election dropped by 7% compared to the turnout during the general election two months before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234378-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series\nThe 2013 Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series was an Australian motor racing series for V8 Touring Cars, which are de-registered and superseded former V8 Supercars. Although the series utilised cars built for V8 Supercar racing, it was not an official V8 Supercar series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234378-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series\nIt was the sixth running of the V8 Touring Car National Series. The series took place on the program of Shannons Nationals Motor Racing Championships events. It began at Sydney Motorsport Park on 22 March and finished at Sandown Raceway on 17 November after six meetings held in New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234378-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series\nShae Davies was the eventual series winner, holding off at late charge from Ryan Simpson. Simpson now holds the record for the most race wins in one V8 Touring Car Season, as well as the most round wins in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234378-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers competed in the 2013 Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234379-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kunming Challenger\nThe 2013 Kunming Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Kunming, China between 6 and 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234379-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kunming Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234379-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kunming Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234379-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kunming Challenger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234380-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kunming Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSamuel Groth and John-Patrick Smith won the first edition of the tournament by defeating Go Soeda and Yasutaka Uchiyama 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234381-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kunming Challenger \u2013 Singles\nAlex Bogomolov, Jr. won the first edition of the event by defeating Rik de Voest 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20132) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234382-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuomintang chairmanship election\nThe 2013 Kuomintang chairmanship election (Chinese: 2013\u5e74\u4e2d\u570b\u570b\u6c11\u9ee8\u4e3b\u5e2d\u9078\u8209) was held on 20 July 2013 in Taiwan with Ma Ying-jeou as the sole candidate. This was the fifth direct election of the chairman in the Kuomintang history. All registered, due-paying KMT party members were eligible to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234382-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuomintang chairmanship election, Aftermath\nIn his victory speech, Ma promised to enhance cooperation between Kuomintang and the government, cultivate talent and boost the party's momentum for future elections. He would be inaugurated as the Chairman of Kuomintang in the upcoming party congress scheduled to be held on 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234382-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuomintang chairmanship election, Reactions\nMainland China - CPC General Secretary Xi Jinping congratulated Ma immediately after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234383-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election\nThe Kurdistan Region parliamentary elections of 2013 took place on 21 September 2013. It was the fourth legislative election in Kurdistan Region since 1992. The candidates were competing for a total of 111 seats out of which 11 seats were reserved for minorities. According to the Iraqi High Electoral Commission, there were 366 female and 736 male candidates for the elections. A total of 2,653,743 people were eligible to vote throughout the three provinces of Erbil, Sulaymaniyah and Dohuk of which 74% cast their ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234383-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, Run-up\nThe legislative elections together with presidential and provincial were originally planned for September 21. However, in the months leading to the elections the parliament extended Massoud Barzani\u2019s term for another two years. Meanwhile, IHEC delayed the provincial elections until November 21. Under Kurdish Election law political parties were allowed to campaign from August 28 until September 17th, four days before voting. The Peshmerga and police voted on September 19, in order for them to be able to guard the voting polls on September 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234383-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, Run-up\nThe election marked the first time the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan were running as individual parties since 1992. The Kurdistan Democratic Party was expected to win the most votes. The party has had a strong backing in the provinces of Duhok and Erbil and no challengers. The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan meanwhile was facing competition from the Movement for Change. The Movement for Change had in the previous elections secured a surprising 25 seats in Sulaymaniyah, which had until then been a stronghold for the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan also faced uncertainty due to internal conflicts and the absence of its leader Jalal Talabani who was recovering from a stroke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234383-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, Run-up, Clashes\nOn 5 September, a gunman opened fire on a campaign rally by the Movement for Change in the city of Sulaymaniyah, wounding one person. In the same week, clashes broke out between the opposition Movement for Change and PUK and KDP supporters that led to 12 people, mostly policemen, being wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234383-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, Results\nNo party won enough votes to form a government outright. The Kurdistan Democratic Party won the most votes in Erbil and Duhok. The province of Sulaymaniyah was heavily divided. The Movement for Change won the second most votes which made it the prime partner for the Kurdistan Democratic Party to form a coalition with. The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, unexpectedly, lost more than a third of its seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234383-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, Results\nThe Patriotic Union of Kurdistan announced that it respected the results. Soon after the announcement high-ranking member of the party resigned accepting responsibility for the bad results. Both Islamists and socialists made gains. A total of 77 men and 34 women were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234384-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurume Best Amenity Cup\nThe 2013 Kurume Best Amenity Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Kurume, Japan, on 13\u201319 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234384-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurume Best Amenity Cup, WTA 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-00234385-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurume Best Amenity Cup \u2013 Doubles\nHan Xinyun and Sun Shengnan were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Han chose not to defend her title. Sun partnered up with Hsu Chieh-yu, but withdrew in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234385-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurume Best Amenity Cup \u2013 Doubles\nKanae Hisami and Mari Tanaka won the title, defeating Rika Fujiwara and Akiko Omae in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234386-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurume Best Amenity Cup \u2013 Singles\nZheng Saisai was the defending champion, but she lost to An-Sophie Mestach in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234386-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kurume Best Amenity Cup \u2013 Singles\nOns Jabeur won the title, defeating Mestach in the final, 6\u20130, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234387-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwait Emir Cup\nThe Kuwait Emir Cup is the premier cup competition involving teams from the Kuwaiti Premier League and the Kuwaiti Division One league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234387-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwait Emir Cup\nThe 2013 edition is the 50th to be held and has been moved back to its original place in the footballing calendar and played at the back end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234387-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwait Emir Cup\nDefending Emir Cup champions Al Qadsia and Kuwaiti Premier League runners up Al Kuwait received byes to the Quarter-Final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234388-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwait Super Cup\nThe 2013 Kuwaiti-Supercup was the sixth Kuwait Super Cup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Kuwaiti Premier League and Kuwait Emir Cup competitions. It featured AL Kuwait, winners of the 2012\u201313 Kuwaiti Premier League and the Kuwait Emir Cup runner-up Al Qadsia at Ali Al-Salem Al-Sabah Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234389-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwaiti general election\nEarly general elections were held in Kuwait on 27 July 2013. The elections were required after the Constitutional Court dissolved Parliament and annulled the results of the December 2012 elections. Voter turnout was an estimated 52.5%, which was higher than expected despite an opposition boycott, and only 7% lower than the non-boycotted February 2012 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234389-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwaiti general election, Background\nEarly elections had been held in December 2012 after the National Assembly elected in February 2012 was dissolved by the Constitutional Court, as the dissolution of the previous Assembly elected in 2009 by Emir Sabah Al-Sabah was deemed to be unconstitutional. Six weeks before the December 2012 elections, the electoral law was changed to reduce the number of votes voters could cast from four to one. The changes were rejected by opposition groups, claiming that it would allow the government to manipulate the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234389-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwaiti general election, Background\nAccording to the constitution, elections had to be held within 60 days of the dissolution on 16 June. They were originally scheduled for 25 July, but were later postponed due to delays in the candidate registration process; the electoral law required registration had to start a month before the election, but the cabinet put process on hold whilst it waited for the Constitutional Court to publish the reasons for ruling that dissolved the previous National Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234389-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwaiti general election, Campaign\nThe secular National Democratic Alliance announced that it would contest the elections after boycotting the December 2012 elections. However, other liberal parties, together with nationalist groups said they would boycott the July elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234389-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwaiti general election, Results\nAccording to the Associated Press, liberal lawmakers gained at least six seats. The Congressional Research Service reported that liberals won 9 seats, making them the largest political bloc in the parliament after pro-government Independents. Fox News reported that the tribal bloc won at least 10 seats in the 50-member parliament. Two women were elected. Sunni Islamists won 3 seats. The Shia group was initially reduced to eight seats after winning 17 seats in December 2012. Following a parliamentary by-election in 2014, the Shia group increased their share to 10 seats in the parliament. Overall, there were 36 Independent MPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234389-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kuwaiti general election, Aftermath\nFollowing the elections, Marzouq Al-Ghanim was elected Speaker with 36 of the 65 votes, defeating Ali Al-Rashid (18 votes) and Roudhan Al-Roudhan (8).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234390-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kvalserien\nThe 2013 Kvalserien was the 39th Kvalserien, consisting of two Elitserien (SHL) teams and four HockeyAllsvenskan teams. It began on 14 March 2013 and ended on 5 April 2013. The 2013 Kvalserien determined which two teams of the participating ones would play in the 2013\u201314 SHL season and which four teams would play in the 2013\u201314 HockeyAllsvenskan season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234390-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kvalserien\nFor the first time since 2006, neither of the two Elitserien teams \u2013 Timr\u00e5 IK and R\u00f6gle BK \u2013 managed to defend their spot in the top-tier league. Instead, HockeyAllsvenskan teams \u00d6rebro HK and Leksands IF took the two available spots for the 2013\u201314 SHL season. \u00d6rebro went undefeated in regulation time throughout the ten games and secured promotion in the seventh round (of ten), while Leksand secured their SHL spot in the following round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234390-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Kvalserien\n\u00d6rebro promoted to the SHL for the first time in club history (another \u00d6rebro team, \u00d6rebro IK, last played in the Elitserien in 1978\u201379), while Leksand returned to the SHL for the first time since the 2005\u201306 season. Timr\u00e5 were relegated to HockeyAllsvenskan for the first time since 2000, while R\u00f6gle's return to Elitserien lasted for only one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234390-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kvalserien, Standings\nLegend: \u00a0\u00a0Qualified for the 2013\u201314 SHL season; \u00a0\u00a0Play in the 2013\u201314 HockeyAllsvenskan season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234390-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kvalserien, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nUpdated as of the end of the season. GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234390-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kvalserien, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThese are the leaders in GAA among goaltenders who have played at least 40% of the team's minutes. Updated as of the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234390-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Kvalserien, Statistics, 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, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234391-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kwale local elections\nLocal elections were held in Kwale to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234391-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kwale local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234392-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstan Cup\nThe 2013 edition of the Kyrgyzstan Cup was the annual Kyrgyzstan football competition between domestic clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234392-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstan Cup, Play-off round, 1/16 Round\nThe 1/16 round matches were played on 7, 8, 9 and 11 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 47], "content_span": [48, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234392-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstan Cup, Play-off round, 1/8 round\nThe 1/8 round matches were played on 2, 3 and 4 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234392-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstan Cup, Play-off round, 1/4 Round\nThe 1/4 round matches were played on 23 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234392-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstan Cup, Play-off round, 1/2 Round\nThe 1/2 round matches were played 1st leg on 17-18 August and 2nd leg on 21-24 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234393-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstan League\nThe 2013 Kyrgyzstan League was the 22nd season of Kyrgyzstan League, the Football Federation of Kyrgyz Republic's top division of association football. Dordoi Bishkek are the defending champions, having won the previous season. Due to sponsorship reasons the league was known as the Shoro Top League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234394-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstani protests\nThe 2013 Kyrgyzstani protests started on May 30, 2013 when as many as 3,000 people stormed the Kumtor Gold Mine demanding it be nationalized or provide more social benefits. The mine - owned by Canada's Centerra Gold - contributes to almost 12% of Kyrgyzstan's national GDP. The protests blocked a road to the mine and cut off electricity. Riot police responded when protesters tried to storm the mine's office; 50-55 people were injured in resulting clashes and 80-92 were arrested. Supporters of the protest also besieged the local governor's office in Jalal-Abad later in the evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234394-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstani protests\nIn response the President of Kyrgyzstan, Almazbek Atambayev, declared a state of emergency until June 10. The Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan, Zhantoro Satybaldiyev, stated that the government would get more money from the mine, either through taxes or otherwise. Centerra Gold responded by calling the protests and occupation of the mine illegal. The road to the mine was unblocked on June 1, though the protests in Jalal-Abad continued demanding the release of protesters in previous in unrest. Protests have continued through the month of June, resulting in the death of at least one person.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234394-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Kyrgyzstani protests\nOther factors that exacerbated the protests included a nitric acid spill into a nearby river in 1998, which the locals had been fighting for compensation in court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234395-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LA2\n2013 LA2 is a centaur and damocloid on a cometary-like and retrograde orbit from the outer Solar System, suggesting that it is an extinct comet. It was first observed on 1 June 2013 by astronomers with the Pan-STARRS survey at Haleakala Observatory, Hawaii, in the United States. The object measures approximately 1.8 kilometers (1.1 miles) in diameter. It holds the record for having the highest orbital inclination of any known minor planet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234395-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LA2, Orbit and classification\n2013 LA2 orbits the Sun at a distance of 3.0\u201312.0\u00a0AU once every 20 years and 7 months (7,519 days; semi-major axis of 7.51\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.59 and an inclination of 175\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234395-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LA2, Orbit and classification\nIt has the highest orbital inclination of any known minor planet which gives it a retrograde orbit. The objects's orbit takes it from the outer region of the asteroid belt to between the orbit of Saturn (9.5\u00a0AU) and Uranus (19.2\u00a0AU). The body's short observation arc of less than a month begins with its first observation on 1 June 2013. It has not since been observed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234395-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 LA2, Physical characteristics\nJohnston's archive assumes an albedo 0.09 and calculates a diameter of 1.8 kilometers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234396-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LEB Oro Playoffs\nThe 2013 LEB Oro promotion Playoffs is the final stage of the 2012\u201313 LEB Oro season. They will start on 26 April 2013, and they will finish on May 31 or June 2 or 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234396-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LEB Oro Playoffs\nAll the series will be played in a best-of-5 games format. The best seeded team plays at home the games 1, 2 and 5 if necessary. The winner of the playoffs will promote to 2013\u201314 ACB season with Ford Burgos, the champion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234397-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LET Access Series\nThe 2013 LET Access Series was a series of professional women's golf tournaments held from March through November 2013 across Europe. The LET Access Series is the second-tier women's professional golf tour in Europe and is the official developmental tour of the Ladies European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234397-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LET Access Series, Tournament results\nThe table below shows the 2013 schedule. The numbers in brackets after the winners' names show the number of career wins they had on the LET Access Series up to and including that event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234397-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LET Access Series, Order of Merit rankings\nThe top five players on the LETAS Order of Merit earn LET membership for the Ladies European Tour. Players finishing in positions 6\u201320 get to skip the first stage of the qualifying event and automatically progress to the final stage of the Lalla Aicha Tour School.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234398-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LFF I Lyga\nThe 2013 I Lyga (also known as LFF I Lyga) is the 24th season of the I Lyga, the second-tier association football league of Lithuania. The season started on 8 April 2013 and end is planned for 24 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234398-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LFF I Lyga, Changes from 2013\nThe league changed its number of teams, increasing it from 10 teams in 2012 I Lyga to 12 teams in 2013. Two teams of 2012 resigned \u2013 FK Granitas Vilnius and NFA Kaunas (replaced by FM Spyris Kaunas), and another two were relegated \u2013 FK Venta Kur\u0161\u0117nai and FK K\u0117dainiai. From LFF II lyga were admitted 5 teams \u2013 3 from zone South (FK \u017dalgiris-3 Vilnius, FK \u0160ilas Kazl\u0173 R\u016bda and FM Spyris Kaunas) and 2 from zone West (FK Lokomotyvas Radvili\u0161kis and FK Klaip\u0117dos Granitas). A newly created team of FK Baltija Panev\u0117\u017eys was also allowed to start at I lyga in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234399-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL Canada season\nThe 2013 LFL Canada Season would have been the second season of LFL Canada and the sixth season of the combined history of the Legends Football League and its predecessor, the Lingerie Football League. LFL Canada intended to feature four teams in four cities across Western Canada, with the Calgary Fillies to replace the suspended Toronto Triumph; Calgary was to join the BC Angels, Regina Rage and the Saskatoon Sirens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234399-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL Canada season\nThe 2013 season never transpired, and LFL announced, in July 2014, that LFL Canada had been terminated and the teams would fold into a (never formed) LFL North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234399-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL Canada season, Aborted developments\nOn June 27, 2013, the 2013 LFL Canada schedule was released. The 2013 regular season was scheduled to begin on September 13, 2013 and conclude on November 9, 2013, with the Legends Cup championship scheduled to be played on November 16, 2013 at Stampede Corral in Calgary, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234399-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL Canada season, Aborted developments\nIt was announced that a Calgary, Alberta team would join the LFL and be known as the Calgary Fillies, playing home games at the Stampede Corral. As well, the LFL announced that the Toronto Triumph would suspend operations for the 2013 season, ostensibly due to arena concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234399-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL Canada season, Aborted developments\nOn September 11, 2013, Ticketmaster began notifying ticket holders in Saskatoon that the team's first home game against Calgary has been cancelled. No reasons were given for the cancellation, nor a rescheduled date provided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234399-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL Canada season, Aborted developments\nLegends Football League then moved the season opener to October 5th, then cancelled the 2013 Season before that revised start date. The LFL first blamed a lack of preparation time for the teams due to three new coaching staffs (all except Saskatoon), then confirmed that the league office was not prepared, the stated the inability of USA players to be available to practice with Canadian teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234399-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL Canada season, Aborted developments\nThe LFL stated that it would be properly prepared for the 2014 season, but in July 2014 announced that LFL Canada had been terminated, with plans to fold the teams into a (never formed) LFL North America, joining teams from the US and Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season\nThe 2013 LFL US Season was the fourth season of LFL United States, the first in the rebranded Legends Football League, and the fifth in the combined history of that league and its predecessor, the Lingerie Football League. The season featured 12 teams in various cities across the United States. In 2012, the league decided to move to a spring and summer schedule, beginning in March, 2013. For the 2013 season the league granted two new franchises: Omaha Heart and Atlanta Steam. The Toronto Triumph was, as scheduled, realigned into the league's Canadian division, LFL Canada, for the 2012 season. The Orlando Fantasy officially suspended operations, while the Tampa Breeze relocated to Jacksonville, Florida to become the Jacksonville Breeze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season\nFor the 2013 season, the LFL released a new division structure, splitting the twelve teams into four divisions. Opening night of the 2013 was on March 30, 2013, between Atlanta Steam and Jacksonville Breeze, while Chicago Bliss and Green Bay Chill ended the regular season on August 10, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 LFL US season\nFor the first time, Conference division playoffs were held on August 17, 2013 at Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Illinois between the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds of both the Eastern and Western Conferences, with the winners playing the No.1 seeds in the Conference Championship games on August 24, 2013 at Citizens Business Bank Arena in Ontario, California. The 2013 LFL US Legends Cup (formerly the Lingerie Bowl) was played at Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on September 1, 2013 between the Philadelphia Passion and Chicago Bliss. The Chicago Bliss won the Legends bowl 38\u201314, its first championship in the LFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nIn 2012, the league decided to officially move the next LFL United States season to April 2013. The league stated the reasoning behind the postponement of the schedule was to move the league to a spring and summer schedule, mirroring every other indoor American football league of the past decade, as the commissioner felt that there was greater opportunity for success in the spring; the league also stated the hiatus would allow the league offices to focus on the introductory world tours scheduled for late 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nLFL Canada was not affected by the change and continues to play its fall 2012 schedule as originally announced. The commissioner denied the suggestion that the move was a suspension of operations. On January 10, 2013, the league announced it was abandoning its original premise as the Lingerie Football League and would rebrand as the Legends Football League, with more conventional sportswear replacing the lingerie for uniforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nThe LFL announced its first expansion team for the 2013 season would be the Omaha Heart, located in Omaha, Nebraska, playing at the Ralston Arena. This was followed by a new expansion team in Saint Charles, Missouri (serving the St. Louis metropolitan area), playing in the St. Charles Convention Center, to be known as the St. Louis Saints. However, negotiations to play at the arena fell through, with the league suspending operations of the franchise indefinitely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nSt. Charles officials cited the league's refusal to guarantee fixed dates and money, while the league argued that the arena did not meet requirements of a top-tier facility. On October 2, 2012, the LFL announced that Atlanta had been granted an expansion franchise to play in the 2013 LFL US season. The Atlanta Steam played its home matches at the Arena at Gwinnett Center in Duluth, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nOn May 24, 2012, the LFL officially temporarily suspended operations of the Orlando Fantasy franchise for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nFor the 2013 season, the Tampa Breeze moved to Jacksonville, Florida to become known as the Jacksonville Breeze. The move was primarily driven by the owners of the Tampa Bay Times Forum, who also own the Arena Football League team the Tampa Bay Storm, deciding not to compete with the Tampa Breeze for tickets sales now that the LFL shifted its regular season schedule to coincide with the Arena Football League schedule. The team played its home matches at Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena, which previously hosted the 2011 LFL US Conference Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nThe Philadelphia Passion announced that it will play its home games at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania for the 2013 season. PPL Park is an outdoor soccer stadium, a venue that would have not been viable in the fall given eastern Pennsylvania's weather during that season. Chicago Bliss returned to playing at the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nDue to a new divisional structure, the league expanded its playoff series to include the top three teams in each conference. The best team in each conference was awarded a first round bye, while the other divisional champions played off against the third best teams in the conference in the Divisional Playoff round. The Conference Division Playoffs were played at Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Illinois on Saturday, August 17. The matches were originally scheduled to be played at 1stBank Center in Denver, Colorado. The Conference Championship games were played on August 24, 2013 at Citizens Business Bank Arena in Ontario, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nThe 2013 Legends Cup (formerly the Lingerie Bowl) was played at Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on September 1, 2013. The game was originally awarded to the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania with the match to be played at Highmark Stadium. Pittsburgh has been named as an LFL expansion city for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Developments\nHowever, due to higher ticket sales than the 3,000 seat Highmark could accommodate, an announcement was made June 1, 2013 that the championship game would move to PPL Park in the Philadelphia suburb of Chester, Pennsylvania On July 5, 2013 the game was once again moved to Las Vegas after the LFL and Las Vegas partners negotiated a multi-year agreement to keep the LFL US Legends Cup in Las Vegas for at least the next 3 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234400-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 LFL US season, Standings, Western Conference\n* conference champion, \" division winner, ^ clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234401-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LKL All-Star Game\nThe annual 2013 LKL All-star game, was held in \u0160iauliai Arena, in \u0160iauliai, on March 17th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234401-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LKL All-Star Game, Coaches\n\"Lietuviai\" was coached by Lithuanian Virginijus \u0160e\u0161kus, of Prienai, who acquired 4,866 votes. \"Time Team\" was coached by Spaniard Joan Plaza, of \u017dalgiris, who acquired 8,672 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234401-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LKL All-Star Game, Game\nIn the third quarter, singer Donatas Montvydas stepped on the court, wearing a \"Lietuviai\" jersey. In 5 minutes of action, he scored 6 points, and dished out 2 assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship\nThe 2013 LPGA Championship was the 59th LPGA Championship, held June 6\u20139 at Locust Hill Country Club in Pittsford, New York, a suburb southeast of Rochester. Known for sponsorship reasons as the Wegmans LPGA Championship, it was the second of five major championships on the LPGA Tour during the 2013 season. This was the fourth consecutive year the LPGA Championship was played at Locust Hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship\nInbee Park, number one in the world rankings, won her third major title in a sudden-death playoff, defeating runner-up Catriona Matthew on the third extra hole, their 39th of the day. The third and fourth rounds were played on Sunday after play was washed out by heavy rain on Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship\nThe win was the second consecutive major for Park; she won the Kraft Nabisco Championship in April and became only the third to win both in the same year, joining Pat Bradley (1986) and Annika S\u00f6renstam (2005).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship\nIt was the eighth playoff at the LPGA Championship and the first since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship, Field\nThe field included 150 players from 24 countries, with the 36-hole cut to the top 70 players and ties after the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship, Round summaries, First round\nPlay was washed out on Thursday due to heavy rain, course flooding, and occasional lightning. Chella Choi shot a 67 (\u22125) on Friday on a soggy course to take the first round lead; major winners Morgan Pressel and Jiyai Shin were one stroke back at 68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nPressel grabbed the lead with a 70 (\u22122) for 138 (\u22126), and world number one Inbee Park shot 68 to move into tie for second place with first round leader Choi, two strokes back at 140 (\u22124). The cut was at 150 (+6) or better, with 77 players advancing to play the final two rounds on Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nOne-over for the round after the first eight holes, Park then made five birdies and five pars for another 68 (\u22124) to total 208 (\u22128), one stroke ahead of Pressel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nFollowing the third round in the morning, the groupings were kept the same for the afternoon's final round. The top three players after 54 holes, Park, Pressel, and Shin, all shot 75 (+3) and came back to the field. Matthew recorded a 68 (\u22124) without a bogey for a 283 (\u22125), which tied Park and forced a sudden-death playoff. Suzann Pettersen, the champion in 2007, started the round eleven strokes back, in a tie for 31st. She carded a tournament best 65 (\u22127), but finished one stroke back at 284 (\u22124), tied with Pressel for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234402-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round, Playoff\nThe sudden-death playoff began on the 18th hole and alternated with the 10th hole, both par fours. Both players parred the first two holes, with Matthew scrambling for par on the second after finding the rough and pitching out to the fairway. She drove into the rough again on the third hole while Park hit the fairway. Matthew failed to chip in for par from 50 feet (15\u00a0m) and Park sank her 18-foot (5.5\u00a0m) birdie putt for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234403-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Tour\nThe 2013 LPGA Tour was a series of weekly golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world. The Tour began in Australia on February 14 and ended on November 24 in Florida. The tournaments were sanctioned by the United States-based Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234403-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Tour\nInbee Park of South Korea won the most tournaments, six, including three majors. She also led the money list for the second straight year and won the Rolex Player of the Year award. Stacy Lewis won the Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average, the first American to win since 1994. Three players, Lewis, Park, and Suzann Pettersen had scoring averages below 70, for the first time in LPGA Tour history. Moriya Jutanugarn of Thailand won the Rookie of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234403-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA Tour, Schedule and results\nThe number in parentheses after winners' names is the player's total number wins in official money individual events on the LPGA Tour, including that event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 36], "content_span": [37, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234404-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA of Japan Tour\nThe 2013 LPGA of Japan Tour was the 46th season of the LPGA of Japan Tour, the professional golf tour for women operated by the Ladies Professional Golfers' Association of Japan. It consisted of 36 golf tournaments, all played in Japan. Rikako Morita and Sakura Yokomine each won four tournaments and Morita was the leading money winner with earnings of \u00a5126,675,049.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234404-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA of Japan Tour, Schedule\nThe number in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number wins in official money individual events on the LPGA of Japan Tour, including that event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234405-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA of Korea Tour\nThe 2013 LPGA of Korea Tour was the 36th season of the LPGA of Korea Tour, the professional golf tour for women operated by the Korea Ladies Professional Golf' Association. It consisted of 23 golf tournaments, 20 played in South Korea, two played in China, and one played in Taiwan. Jang Ha-na won three tournaments and was the leading money winner with earnings of \u20a9689,542,549.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234405-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA of Korea Tour, Schedule\nThe number in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number wins in official money individual events on the LPGA of Korea Tour, including that event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234405-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LPGA of Korea Tour, Schedule\nLPGA KEB- HanaBank Championship is co-sanctioned with LPGA Tour. Kumho Tire Women's Open and Hyundai China Ladies Open are co-sanctioned with China LPGA Tour. Swinging Skirts World Ladies Masters is co-sanctioned with Taiwan LPGA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234406-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers baseball team\nThe 2013 LSU Tigers baseball team represents Louisiana State University in the NCAA Division I baseball season of 2013. The Tigers played their home games in the new Alex Box Stadium, which opened in 2009. On May 17, 2013, the playing field at Alex Box Stadium was designated Skip Bertman Field, in honor of the LSU coach with the most wins in the program's history. At the end of the game against Ole Miss, the program celebrated the best regular season record in its history with 48 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234406-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers baseball team\nThe team is coached by Paul Mainieri who is in his seventh season at LSU. In the 2012 season, the Tigers failed to reach the College World Series; however, the Tigers did win the regular season and post season SEC championship. Overall, the Tigers finished 47\u201318, 19\u201311 in the SEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234406-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers baseball team, Schedule/Results\n*Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the Baseball America poll the week LSU faced each opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234406-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers baseball team, Ranking movements\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, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234406-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers baseball team, LSU Tigers in the 2013 Major League Baseball Draft\nThe following members and future members (denoted by *) of the LSU Tigers baseball program were drafted in the 2013 MLB Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 81], "content_span": [82, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234407-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers football team\nThe 2013 LSU Tigers football team represented Louisiana State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by ninth-year head coach Les Miles and played their home games at Tiger Stadium. They were a member of the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234407-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers football team, Previous season and offseason\nLSU entered the 2012 season as the defending SEC champion. The Tigers accumulated a conference record of 6\u20132, with losses on the road against the Florida Gators and at home to the eventual national champions, the Alabama Crimson Tide. After finishing the regular season with an overall record of 10\u20132, LSU was selected to play in the 2012 Chick-fil-A Bowl against the Clemson Tigers. LSU was defeated by Clemson on a last second field goal by a score of 25\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234407-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers football team, Previous season and offseason\nFollowing the end of the season, LSU lost numerous players to the NFL Draft, including ten underclassmen, the most of any other team. Key losses included second-team All Americans Kevin Minter and Eric Reid, third-team All American Sam Montgomery, and second-team All-SEC players Barkevious Mingo and Drew Alleman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234407-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers football team, Previous season and offseason\nIn February 2013, LSU announced that it had hired former Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator, Cam Cameron, for the same position. Cameron served as the Ravens' offensive coordinator for five seasons. Cameron served for a single season as the head coach of the Miami Dolphins prior to joining the Ravens' staff. Prior to that, Cameron was the offensive coordinator for five seasons for the San Diego Chargers. Cameron had also previously spent time as part of the staff for the Michigan Wolverines alongside LSU head coach Les Miles for seven seasons from 1987 to 1993. Cameron will be replacing Greg Studrawa as LSU's offensive coordinator. Studrawa had spent the prior two seasons as offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. Studrawa was retained as the offensive line coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234407-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers football team, Depth chart\nThe official opening day depth chart was released on August 22, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234407-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 LSU Tigers football team, Schedule\nLSU's 2013 schedule was released by the Southeastern Conference and LSU on October 18, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234408-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LX28\n2013 LX28, is an asteroid, classified as near-Earth object of the Apollo group that is a temporary quasi-satellite of the Earth, the third known Earth quasi-satellite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234408-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LX28, Discovery, orbit and physical properties\n2013 LX28 was discovered on 12 June 2013. As of September 2014, it has been observed 26 times with a data-arc span of 349 days. It is an Apollo asteroid and its semi-major axis (1.0016\u00a0AU) is very similar to that of the Earth but it has relatively high eccentricity (0.4521) and high orbital inclination (49.9761\u00b0). With an absolute magnitude of 21.7, it has a diameter in the range 130\u2013300\u00a0m (for an assumed albedo range of 0.04\u20130.20).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234408-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LX28, Quasi-satellite dynamical state and orbital evolution\n2013 LX28 has been identified as an Earth quasi-satellite following a kidney-shaped retrograde orbit around the Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack\nOn the afternoon of 25 May 2013, French soldier C\u00e9dric Cordier was attacked and stabbed in the Paris suburb of La D\u00e9fense by a man who was later ruled by a court not to be criminally responsible for psychiatric reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Background\nIn March 2012, French-Algerian Mohammed Merah went on a series of shooting sprees targeting soldiers and Jewish schoolchildren in Toulouse and Montauban, southern France. France was also on a state of high alert due to a threat from al-Qaeda in North Africa. The threat was sent in response to the French campaign to liberate northern Mali from Islamist occupation. Due to the alert, some 450 soldiers were placed on patrol in train stations and other locations in Paris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Background\nThe attack occurred three days after of the murder of a British soldier in Woolwich, London, though President Hollande said there was no evidence to link the two attacks, despite this there was speculation as to whether it was a copycat attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Attack\nIn late afternoon, Saturday 25 May 2013, private first class C\u00e9dric Cordier was patrolling a busy underground hall in La D\u00e9fense in uniform with two other servicemen. Around 6 p.m., a man approached Cordier from behind and attacked him with a knife. The attacker stabbed Cordier in the neck and fled into a crowded shopping area before the other servicemen could react. The attacker stabbed the soldier several times, narrowly missing Cordier's jugular vein and carotid artery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Attack, Victim\nThe soldier attacked was 23-year-old private first class C\u00e9dric Cordier. He was stabbed in the neck and had lost a considerable amount of blood; however, his injuries were not life-threatening. He was in a stable condition and was treated at a nearby military hospital. He was released by 29 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Attack, Victim\nSome sources described Cordier as 25 years old; others identified him as C\u00e9dric Cordiez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Attack, Suspect\nThe suspected attacker was then-21-year-old Alexandre Dhaussy, a recent Christian convert to Islam. He turned 22 on 30 May. Dhaussy, unemployed and homeless, was already known to police since 2009 for petty crimes. He was known as becoming more radicalized in February, but had not been considered dangerous. Prosecutor Fran\u00e7ois Molins said that Dhaussy's attack was believed to be motivated by his Islamic belief. In 2012, the police stopped him when he acted suspiciously as he did not want to wait for a bus with women; in 2011, he refused a job that involved working with women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Investigation\nFrench Minister of Defence Jean-Yves Le Drian said Cordier was targeted \"because he was a soldier\". The case was assigned to a counter-terrorism prosecutor. The attacker, a \"tall, athletic, bearded man\", was recorded on security cameras wearing a light-colored robe called djellaba. He was seen saying a Muslim prayer before the attack. The attacker took off his robe and fled in European clothing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Investigation\nOn Wednesday 29 May, Minister of the Interior Manuel Valls stated that a man\u2014later identified as Alexandre Dhaussy\u2014was arrested in the morning in Yvelines. The suspect was traced from DNA found on a plastic bag left at the scene and was identified by fingerprint. He admitted the attack to the police who arrested him. Prosecutor Fran\u00e7ois Molins said that Dhaussy \"wanted to attack a representative of the state\" and \"acted in the name of his religious ideology\", considering the character and timing of the attack. Molins also stated that Dhaussy stabbed Cordier with a \"fairly clear intent to kill\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Legal proceedings\nOn Friday 31 May 2013, Dhaussy appeared before anti-terrorism judges Thierry Fragnoli and Gilbert Thiel, who determined there was enough evidence to proceed with an investigation. He was placed under formal investigation for \"attempted murder linked to a terrorist enterprise\". In November 2015, the court declared him not criminally responsible for psychiatric reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234409-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 La D\u00e9fense attack, Reactions\nMinister of Defence Jean-Yves Le Drian said he was determined to lead \"an implacable fight against terrorism\". Minister of the Interior Manuel Valls warned of growing radicalization of young French Muslims online and by extremist imams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234410-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne\nThe 2013 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne was the 77th running of La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne, a single-day cycling race. It was held on 17 April 2013 over a distance of 205 kilometres (127.4 miles) and it was the twelfth race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234410-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne, Teams\nAs La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne is a UCI World Tour event, all 19 UCI ProTeams were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad. Six other squads were given wildcard places into the race, and as such, formed the event's 25-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234411-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine\nThe 2013 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine is the 16th running of the La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine, a women's single-day cycling race held in Belgium and is the fourth race of the 2013 UCI Women's Road World Cup season. The race was held on 17 April 2013 over a distance of 131.5 kilometres (81.7 miles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234411-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine, Course\nThe 131.5\u00a0km event started in Huy, where the riders rode two laps of a tough circuit including the steep Mur de Huy (The wall of Huy) climb, with several sections steeper than 15% and up to 26% on one section. The finish was at the top of the Mur after the second ascent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234411-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne F\u00e9minine, World Cup standings\nStandings after 4 of 8 2013 UCI Women's Road World Cup races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234412-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 La Manga Cup\nThe 2013 La Manga Cup was an exhibition international club football (soccer) competition featuring football club teams from Europe, which was held in February 2013. All matches were played in La Manga Stadium in La Manga Club, Spain. This was the sixteenth La Manga Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234412-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 La Manga Cup, Standings\nWith only six teams entered, the 2012 version of the Cup was contested in a Round Robin style format, wherein each participating team played against three of the other seven teams entered in the competition, with the winner determined by points earned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234413-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 La Route de France\nThe 2013 La Route de France was an Elite Women's road race, rated at 2.1 by the UCI, which ran from 3 August to 10 August covering approximately 831.8\u00a0km. The race was won overall by Linda Villumsen of Wiggle-Honda, marking her first overall win for the new British based team. The race is also noted due to the record breaking efforts of Villumsen's team mate, Giorgia Bronzini who won six consecutive stages (1 \u2013 6) breaking the all-time record for consecutive stage wins in a women's stage racing. The Wiggle-Honda team won all seven of the road stages, with Emma Johansson of Orica-AIS winning the prologue earlier in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection\nIn 2013, Eric Joyce, Member of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom for Falkirk, resigned from the Labour Party and announced he would not seek re-election. The process of nominating a replacement candidate for the 2015 General Election led to a dispute between the party and its major financial backer Unite the Union, causing the suspension of two local party members, the resignation of Tom Watson MP as Labour's 2015 election strategist, and the forwarding of an internal report into the situation to Police Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Background\nEric Stuart Joyce was selected as the Labour Party candidate and subsequently voted in as Member of Parliament for Falkirk at the 2010 general election. After a series of alcohol-related incidents, including a drink-driving conviction and two fights in a House of Commons bar, Joyce resigned from the Labour Party, saying that he intended to complete his term as an MP but not seek re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nThe selection process for a new Labour prospective parliamentary candidate (PPC) for Falkirk began in late 2012. Until Joyce had resigned his membership of the Labour Party in February 2012, the membership of Falkirk West Constituency Labour Party (CLP), which makes-up 70% of the total electoral constituency, stood at fewer than 100 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nSoon after Joyce's resignation, Stephen Deans - a local shop steward who had risen to become chairman for Unite in Scotland - became chair of the Falkirk West CLP. In line with the then Unite policy, and also within the Labour Party rules in force at the time, Deans began recruiting Unite members, mainly from the local Ineos Grangemouth Refinery, where Unite had been involved in a pensions dispute in 2008, as new members of the Falkirk West CLP, and paying their membership fees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nBy January 2013, membership of the Falkirk West CLP stood at over 200 members, all of whom were entitled to vote in the process to select a new parliamentary candidate. Although he was now no longer a member of the Labour Party, Joyce, whose own actions had been at the root of the need to select a new candidate, blogged about allegations arising from unnamed persons, supposedly, he claimed, to \"flood\" the CLP with Unite members. Joyce was threatened with legal action via a solicitor's letter from Unite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nIt became clear that the recruitment efforts of Unite were in support of a particular potential candidate, Karie Murphy. A leaked Unite document from December 2012 detailed its activity in Falkirk as \"exemplary\" for the way in which \"we have recruited well over 100 Unite members to the party in a constituency with less than 200 members. 57 came from responses to a text message alone, (followed up face to face). A collective effort locally, but led and inspired by the potential candidate\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nThe constituency decided to adopt the process provided by the national Labour Party for an all-women's shortlist, with the CLP Executive Committee agreeing, by consensus, to consult on this question, but two of the other prospective candidates, Linda Gow, a former leader of Falkirk Council, and Gregor Poynton, UK political director at communications firm Blue State, publicly wrote to all constituency members asking for an open contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nIn February 2013, the selection process for the new PPC was deferred to the Labour Party's National Executive Committee (NEC). In March, the NEC proposed that the process be scrutinised by the Labour Party organisation sub-committee, and that an internal NEC report on allegations be completed, covering the perceived promoting of Karie Murphy (a former Chair of the Scottish Labour Party, and Unite's preferred candidate), as PPC, and the mass recruitment of Unite members to the constituency, with their membership fees being paid en bloc by the union. Joyce commented after the National Executive Committee (NEC) report was handed to the police that -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nThe amateur, hubristic and irresponsible actions of a small number of Unite officials at the top of the organisation will require some rules to be changed to prevent another Falkirk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Selection process\nAs a result of the NEC investigation, Murphy withdrew her name from the selection process. Stephen Deans, who was still the chair of both Unite Scotland and the Falkirk West CLP, said the suspension of the PPC selection process by the NEC was an attack on the union by a \"Blairite rump\", and that \"the decision taken is purely an attack on the work Unite has been doing in the constituency to recruit its members into the Labour Party\". Both Murphy and Deans were later briefly suspended by the Labour Party in light of the contents of an NEC internal report in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nIn May 2013 whilst speaking at the annual Progress conference, former MP and business secretary Lord Mandelson claimed that a cabal at the top of the NEC were trying to exert influence, and warned Labour Party leader Ed Miliband that he \"was storing up danger for himself and for a future Labour government over parliamentary selections\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nOn 25 June 2013, in the light of allegations claimed to be contained within the completed NEC internal report, Labour Party Central Office in London implemented \"special measures\" under the Labour Party constitution, and took direct control of candidate selection in Falkirk. A spokesperson commented:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nAfter an internal inquiry into the Falkirk constituency we have found there is sufficient evidence to raise concern about the legitimacy of members qualifying to participate in the selection of a Westminster candidate. As a result, NEC officers today decided a series of measures are needed to uphold the integrity of the Labour party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nThe NEC later concluded that anyone who had joined the Labour Party in Falkirk after 12 March 2012, when Eric Joyce announced he was stepping down, would not be allowed to take part in the selection process. The NEC then suspended provisional candidate Karie Murphy and Falkirk party chairman Stephen Deans, a decision which Unite the Union criticised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nOn 27 June, Unite General Secretary Len McCluskey wrote to his members with regards to the NEC special measures process:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nThese decisions have been taken on the basis of an 'investigation' into the CLP (Constituency Labour Party), the report of which your union has not been allowed to see. As a result, not only are the rights of Falkirk CLP members being ignored, Unite is being subjected to a behind-the-scenes smear campaign. We will be challenging this procedure and this campaign through all proper channels within the party, publicly and by legal action if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nOn 2 July former Labour Home Secretary David Blunkett MP speaking on BBC Two's Daily Politics said the party had \"taken the right step by having an investigation\" and said he hoped the NEC would \"deal with it decisively\". Blunkett went on to say he thought the party should publish the internal report, adding that Labour \"should be as transparent as possible\". However, a Labour Party spokesperson later said that it was standard practice not to publish the NEC's internal reports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nOn 4 July, Tom Watson MP resigned as Labour's 2015 general election campaign co-ordinator, though he remained in place as Deputy Chair of the Labour Party. Watson confirmed that provisional Falkirk candidate Karie Murphy had been his office manager prior to her selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nAfter the NEC had been briefed by the party solicitor on 4 July, on 5 July Ed Miliband announced that the party was to refer the NEC internal report into allegations of irregularities in the selection of a PPC in Falkirk to Police Scotland, after confirming that the NEC internal inquiry had shown irregularities in the Falkirk Labour Party's candidate selection process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Investigation\nThe Conservative member of parliament Henry Smith then wrote to the Chief Constable of Scotland, Sir Stephen House, asking for an investigation, suggesting that Unite might have committed fraud. On 25 July Police Scotland concluded that there were insufficient grounds to support an investigation. A spokesman for Police Scotland told the BBC: \"Following a comprehensive review of all material submitted, Police Scotland has concluded there are insufficient grounds to support a criminal investigation at this time. However, should further information come to light this will be looked into.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Consequences\nMurphy and Deans were suspended by the Labour Party in the light of submission of the NEC internal report in June 2013. Murphy had withdrawn her candidature for the PPC position and was later reinstated as a party member after having her name cleared of any wrongdoing. The Labour Party immediately changed its rules, to prevent affiliated unions from paying the Labour Party membership fees for their members to be individual members of constituency Labour parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Consequences\nThe Guardian reported in July 2013 that the row had also led to a former cabinet minister and other \"senior party figures\" calling for the Labour Party to break its formal links with the trade union movement. The incident fuelled calls for reforms to Labour's selection system and lead to the 2014 Collin's Report which was adopted by the party and changed the system for both leadership elections and candidate selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Consequences\nA re-selection was held on 8 December 2013. Karen Whitefield, who had not been involved in the controversy, was chosen as the prospective candidate for Falkirk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234414-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Labour Party Falkirk candidate selection, Consequences\nAt the general election of May 2015, Labour's share of the vote in the Falkirk constituency fell by 20.6%, with the Scottish National Party gaining the seat on a 24.1% swing, which was typical of the swing from Labour to the SNP in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234415-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies European Tour\nThe 2013 Ladies European Tour is a series of golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world, which takes place from February through December, 2013. The tournaments are sanctioned by the Ladies European Tour (LET).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234415-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies European Tour\nAt present, the tour is scheduled to feature a total of 24 events, including the return of the Ladies Italian Open, which hasn't been on the tour since 2009. It also features the bi-annual Europe vs. USA Solheim Cup, which will rotate its turn to the United States for 2013. Also added to the tour is the Helsingborg Open in Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234415-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies European Tour\nLeaving the tour for 2013 are the Deutsche Bank Ladies Swiss Open (Switzerland), the Ladies Irish Open (Ireland), and the UNIQA Ladies Golf Open (Austria).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234415-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies European Tour\nThe tour has chronologically moved some of the events. Moving upwards on the calendar are the South African Women's Open by three months, and the Open de Espa\u00f1a Femenino by three months. Moving back on the calendar are the Honma Pilsen Golf Masters by two months, The Evian Championship by two months, and the Aberdeen Asset Management Ladies Scottish Open by three months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234415-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies European Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the 2013 schedule. The numbers in brackets after the winners' names indicate the career wins on the Ladies European Tour, including that event, and is only shown for members of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar\nThe 2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar is the 5th edition of the Ladies Tour of Qatar. It is organised by the Qatar Cycling Federation with technical and sports-related assistance from Amaury Sport Organisation (A.S.O.) under the regulations of the Union Cycliste Internationale (category 2.1). It took place from Tuesday 29 January until Friday 1 February 2013 and consisted of 4 stages, one more stage than the former editions. 15 teams of 6 riders took part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar\nAll stages of the 2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar were live broadcast on TV station Al Jazeera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Teams\nFifteen teams competed in the 2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar. These included eleven UCI teams and four national teams. The teams participating in the race were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 1\nThe 88 riders of the 5th edition of the Ladies Tour of Qatar took off this in front of the Museum of Islamic Arts in Doha. Facing the wind, the pack remained bunched during the first half of the stage. The packed bunch covered 36.8 kilometres in the first hour. As the wind started blowing sideways on the pack, several riders failed to keep up with the pace. At km 55, twenty young ladies powered away while former World champion Giorgia Bronzini was left stranded behind. At km 65 the front group could enjoy a 27\u201d lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 1\nThe gap started growing as the kilometres went by: 55\" on the Bronzini group and 1\u201945\" on the main pack at km 70, and then 2\u2019 with 15 kilometres to go. At km 85, three riders managed to break away: Chloe Hosking, Gracie Elvin and Lisa Brennauer. They were soon to be caught by Liesbet De Vocht. The four escapees managed to stay put all the way to the finish line in Masaieed. Used to battling it out in bunched sprints, Hosking powered to her first stage success in Qatar, outsprinting Elvin and Brennauer to the line. The Aussie captures the overall lead and the first Golden jersey of this edition. With three stages to go, Hosking has a 6\" lead over Elvin and also leads the points and best young rider standings that she had won last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 2\nThe 88 riders took off in windy conditions from the Camel Race Track just outside Doha. After just 6.5 kilometres, China's Jiang broke away and was rapidly caught by two other eager riders: Jasinska and Cordon. While the pack had to deal with a strong head wind, the gap increased from 2 minutes at km 20 to a maximum 8\u2019 50\" at the first intermediate sprint (km 38.5) won by Jiang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 2\nAs the wind started blowing sideways on the race, nine riders powered away from the pack at km 39 including event leader Chloe Hosking, as well as former winners of the race Ellen van Dijk and Kirsten Wild. At km 46, the leading three could still enjoy a 4\u2019 40\" advantage on the golden jersey group and 5\u2019 15\" over a bunch including Giorgia Bronzini, Rochelle Gilmore and Lisa Brennauer. The second bonus sprint (km 60) was again claimed by Jiang while the favourites\u2019 group moved closer, 1\u2019 30\" adrift. The escapees were eventually caught at km 63.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 2\nTwelve competitors continued powering to the finish, enjoying a 1\u2019 lead with 20 kilometres to go. After Cordon and Jiang dropped out of the front group, nine ladies could start considering the stage win. One after the other, the five Orica-AIS girls tried to break away but were caught on each attack. It came down to a sprint, captured by Wild, ahead of Trixi Worrack and Ellen van Dijk. Chloe Hosking captured a fine fourth spot on the line, keeping command of the overall standings. The Australian however remains under the pressure of Elvin, 6\" adrift and Wild, only 9\" behind. Hosking also leads the points and best young rider standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 3\nThe 86 riders remaining in the race took off from the Al Thakhira harbour. It would be another day across the peninsula under the influence of strong winds. Despite several attempts, the pack remained bunched all the way to Al Zubara, north-west of Qatar. The first hour had an average speed of 48 kilometres per hour. The first bonus sprint was won by Kirsten Wild As the pack headed up north and the wind started blowing sideways, several riders failed to keep up with the pace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 3\nWhile a crash occurred in the peloton, a group of 18 ladies pulled away including race leader Chloe Hosking, Ellen van Dijk, Wild, Gracie Elvin, and Trixi Worrack. The front group enjoyed a 40\u201d lead at km 83 on a group of 22 including Cromwell, Gilmour and Bronzini. With 25 kilometres to go, as the riders entered the final circuit, the first two groups bunched up together again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 3\n8 riders gave it a go but where rapidly caught before reaching Madinat Al Shamal for the second bonus sprint won by Lisa Brennauer ahead of Chantal Blaak, who had both broken away just before crossing the line. Wild powered to third spot ahead of the pack, 5\u201d adrift. With 10 kilometres to go, Brennauer and Blaak could still enjoy a 10\u201d lead. Both were first caught by Fahlin and Cantele and then by the whole golden jersey group with 5 kilometres to go. Just under 40 riders moved closer to the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0005-0003", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 3\nWith under 3 kilometres to go, race leader Hosking suffered a puncture. Despite being eventually given the winner's time, she could no longer hope for stage victory and extra bonus seconds. Well helped out by her Team Argos-Shimano teammates, Wild powered to a second consecutive stage win, beating Ellen van Dijk and Giorgia Bronzini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 3\nThe Dutch lady claimed her fifth victory in Qatar and took command of the overall standings, with a 3\u201d lead over Gilmour and 16\u201d over Elvin, while she also leads the points\u2019 standings. Hosking remains best young rider of the event and will carry the White Pearl jersey during the 4th stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 4\nThe 80 riders remaining in the race took off at 1:07 PM to the Doha Corniche where they would have to cover five laps of the traditional final circuit. Facing the wind, the pack remained bunched until the first intermediate sprint in Al Wakra (km 38.5) won by Kirsten Wild ahead of Chloe Hosking and Ellen van Dijk. Just after the sprint, nine ladies managed to break away: MacLean, Rowney, Small, Guderzo, Brand, Longo Borghini, Valsecchi, Cordon, Olds and Glaesser. Their lead grew to 1\u201910\" at km 55 before dropping down once on the final circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 4\nThe second bonus sprint at the 2nd crossing of the line (km 62.5) was claimed by Glaesser ahead of Cordon and Olds, while the pack remained 48\u201d adrift. The front riders were eventually all caught with just over two laps to go. The pack remained bunched all the way to the finish where a sprint was to take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 4\nLike on the two previous stages, Wild powered to victory, outsprinting Lucinda Brand and Marta Tagliaferro. The Dutch rider captured her sixth success on Qatar soil and comforted her overall lead. Wild indeed wins the Ladies Tour of Qatar for the third time after 2009 and 2010 and shows that she really is the Queen of the event. In the final overall standings, she can enjoy a lead of 14\u201d on Chloe Hosking and 29\u201d on Ellen van Dijk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234416-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ladies Tour of Qatar, Stages, Stage 4\nAdded to her Golden Jersey, Wild also wins the points classification's Silver Jersey while, like last year, Hosking finishes best young rider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234417-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lafayette Leopards football team\nThe 2013 Lafayette Leopards football team represented Lafayette College in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Leopards were led by 14th year head coach Frank Tavani and played their home games at Fisher Stadium. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 5\u20137, 4\u20131 in Patriot League play to finish win the Patriot League championship. They received the league's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the first round to New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234418-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Laghman earthquake\nThe 2013 Laghman earthquake occurred with magnitude of 5.6, with an epicenter 11\u00a0km (seven miles) from Mehtar Lam, the capital of Afghanistan's eastern province of Laghman Province near Jalalabad, Afghanistan at 09:25 UTC on April 24. The quake took place 6.6\u00a0km down the surface. The tremors were also felt in the neighboring Pakistan and India. There were no immediate reports of any casualty or injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234418-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Laghman earthquake\nEarthquake tremors were felt across Pakistan including in Parachinar, Mohmad Agency, Shabqadar, Swat, Peshawar, Islamabad, Chiniot and Lahore. On April 16, a 7.7 earthquake with its epicenter in Iran was also felt across Pakistan. At least 40 people were killed in Mashakhel a town located on in Balochistan near the Pak-Iran border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections\nLocal elections was held in the Province of Laguna on May 13, 2013 as part of the 2013 general election. Voters elected candidates for all local positions: a municipal/city mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the four districts of Laguna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, Provincial elections, Gubernatorial election\nE.R. Ejercito is the incumbent, incumbent 4th district Rep. Edgar San Luis is his primary opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, Provincial elections, Vice-gubernatorial election\nCaesar Perez is the incumbent and is running for Mayor of Los Ba\u00f1os, Laguna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, Congressional elections, 2nd District\nIncumbent Timmy Chipeco is term limited; his father, Calamba City mayor Jun Chipeco, Jr., is his party's nominee. His opponent is former governor Teresita Lazaro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, Congressional elections, 3rd District\nMaria Evita Arago is the incumbent. She will oppose former ABS-CBN News anchor/reporter Sol Aragones and campaign coordinator Celia Lopez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, Congressional elections, 4th District\nIncumbent Edgar San Luis is running for governor. His party, the Liberal Party, nominates former Rep. Benjamin Agarao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, Provincial Board elections\nAll 4 Districts of Laguna will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections\nAll municipalities of Laguna, Bi\u00f1an City, Cabuyao City, Calamba City, San Pablo City, and Santa Rosa City will elect mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 2nd District, Los Ba\u00f1os\nIn a bid for the mayoralty,Incumbent Vice Governor Caesar Perez faces off against Incumbent Mayor Anthony Genuino, Former Mayor Francisco Lapis, Marcelino de Guzman and Juan Leron", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, City and municipal elections, 4th District, Santa Cruz\nIncumbent Mayor Domingo Panganiban seeks for reelection against Councilor Ramon Tan and Former Mayor Ariel Magcalas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234419-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Laguna local elections, Aftermath\nIn September 2013, the Commission on Elections ruled that Ejercito was disqualified for overspending during the election, later in May 2014, the En Banc of COMELEC ordered Ejercito to step down from office, but the latter appealed on the Supreme Court to null the COMELEC decision. On May 27, 2014, Ramil Hernandez assumed as Governor of Laguna, while Board Member Atty. Katherine \"Karen\" Agapay of the 3rd District assumed as Vice Governor. Three days later, Ejercito's uncle, Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada convinced his nephew to step down at the capitol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff\nThe 2013 Lahad Datu standoff, also known as the Lahad Datu incursion or Operation Daulat (Malay: Operasi Daulat), was a military conflict that started on 11 February 2013 and fully ended on 24 March 2013. The conflict began when 235 militants, some of whom were armed, arrived by boats in Lahad Datu District, Sabah, Malaysia from Simunul island, Tawi-Tawi, in southern Philippines. The group, calling themselves the \"Royal Security Forces of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo\", was sent by Jamalul Kiram III, one of the claimants to the throne of the Sultanate of Sulu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff\nKiram III stated that their objective was to assert the unresolved territorial claim of the Philippines to eastern Sabah (the former North Borneo). Malaysian security forces surrounded the village of Tanduo in Lahad Datu, where the group had gathered and, after several weeks of negotiations and deadlines for the intruders to withdraw, especially after the killing of Malaysian police members, launched a major operation to flush out the militants. At the end of the standoff, around fifty-six militants were killed, together with six civilians and ten Malaysian security force personnel. The rest of the militants were either captured, or escaped back to the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Background, National territorial dispute\nThe Philippines retains a dormant territorial claim to eastern Sabah, formerly known as North Borneo, through the heritage of the Sultanate of Sulu. The basis of this claim is that the dominion of the sultanate has historically spanned from the Sulu Archipelago into parts of northern Borneo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Background, National territorial dispute\nIn line with International Court of Justice court decision in the case concerning sovereignty of Pulau Ligitan and Pulau Sipadan in 2002, Malaysia views that Sultan of Sulu indisputably relinquished the sovereign rights of all its possession in favour of Spain on 22 July 1878, hence losing any title to its claim of Sabah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Background, National territorial dispute\nIt is acknowledged that a request for payment to the defunct-Sultanate of Sulu was revived by the Philippine government during a meeting of Maphilindo in 1963. The Philippine government at the time said they have no problem with the formation of Malaysia but said the Sultan of Sulu wanted the payment of 5,000 from the Malaysian government. The first Malaysian Prime Minister at the time, Tunku Abdul Rahman said he would go back to Kuala Lumpur and get on the request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Background, National territorial dispute\nSince then, the Malaysian embassy in the Philippines issues a cheque in the amount of 5,300 ringgit (US$1,710 or about 77,000 Philippine pesos) to the legal counsel of the heirs of the Sultan of Sulu every year in keeping with the terms. Malaysia considers the amount an annual cession payment for the disputed state, while the sultan's descendants consider it as a \"rent\" payment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Background, Sulu succession dispute\nAnother factor behind the standoff is the unresolved status of the Sultanate of Sulu. The Filipino group in Lahad Datu claims to represent Jamalul Kiram III as the Sultan of Sulu. However, his status as sultan is disputed by several other claimants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Initiation of the standoff\nHeirs to the Sultanate of Sulu felt excluded by the terms of the framework of a peace deal between the Philippine government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, as announced on 7 October 2012 by Philippine president Benigno Aquino III. In response, Jamalul Kiram III, claiming to be the legitimate heir to the throne of Sulu, decreed on 11 November 2012 that a civilian and military contingent should assert his territorial rights in North Borneo. He appointed his brother and Raja Muda (\"heir apparent\" or \"crown prince\"), Agbimuddin Kiram, to lead the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Initiation of the standoff\nMonths later on 11 February 2013, Agbimuddin Kiram and at least 101 followers arrived in the village of Tanduo, located near Tungku in Lahad Datu District, Sabah from neighbouring Simunul island, Tawi-Tawi, of southern Philippines. Around eighty people fled from 15 homes in Tanduo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nMalaysian police blockaded roads leading from Lahad Datu to the remote village of Tanduo, where the armed group was encircled. Malaysian police patrol boats also patrolled nearby waters. At the same time, Filipino security agencies blocked off entry from southern Philippines. The Philippines also deployed six naval ships to the seas of Sulu and Tawi Tawi to help stabilise the situation. An additional Philippine naval ship was sent to Malaysian waters off Lahad Datu to provide humanitarian assistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nOn 26 February 2013, President Aquino appealed to Kiram III to recall his followers and to hold discussions with the government to address his family's concerns. In a press conference held at Malaca\u00f1ang Palace, Aquino said that the longer Kiram's III followers stay in Sabah, the more they endanger not just their own lives, but also those of the thousands of Filipinos living and working there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nAddressing Kiram III, he said, \"It must be clear to you that this small group of people will not succeed in addressing your grievances, and that there is no way that force can achieve your aims\". Aquino also reminded him that as a Filipino citizen, he is bound by the Constitution of the Philippines and its laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nThe president said that he had ordered an investigation into possible violations of laws by Kiram III, his followers and collaborators, citing the Constitution's provision on renouncing war as an instrument of national policy and Article 118 of the Revised Penal Code, which punishes those who \"provoke or give occasion for a war...or expose Filipino citizens to reprisals on their persons or property\". He said a dialogue to address the country's territorial dispute to eastern Sabah could be arranged after those involved in the standoff came home immediately. Aquino also declined to confirm reports of other parties being allegedly behind the standoff to sabotage the Bangsamoro peace process. The statement by President Aquino was also supported by Senator Francis Pangilinan who urged Kiram III to put an end to the standoff in Sabah. In a statement, he said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nThis standoff has reached a critical point where the Philippine government must now act decisively and do what is necessary to protect the general interest of the Filipino people. Kiram is essentially declaring war on Malaysia. He must understand that it has never been a policy of the Philippines to take on other countries by force. Regardless of Sulu's rightful claim to Sabah, an armed invasion will unlikely lead to an amicable resolution. This has come at a time when we are so close to achieving lasting peace with our brothers from the South. Malaysia has played a crucial role in brokering talks between the Philippine government and our Muslim brothers in Mindanao. We cannot afford to have a wedge between our country and Malaysia because of one person's whim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nKiram III remained defiant, despite a warning of arrest, and said his men would not go back home \"until an arrangement has been done by our officials and the president, and if that will be arranged accordingly with a written agreement signed by the parties concerned\". He shared that in his last conversation with Agbimuddin over the phone, his brother told him that their followers were firm in their decision to stay in Sabah even though they have little access to food as a result of the food blockade ordered by the Malaysian government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nThe 74-year-old sultan said he was ready to be jailed if the Philippine government filed a case against him and the members of his clan. He said he cannot understand what his violation against the Constitution is, saying he has always respected it and that \"coming home to their homeland\" is not a crime. Kiram III also asked Malaysia to \"sit down in a square table and to diplomatically settle the issue on the claim\" stressing the need to \"come up with a win-win solution\". He reiterated that he and his men \"will not initiate the violence...", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nBut are prepared to defend our lives and aspirations\" and that the Sabah issue \"can be peacefully settled without threat, but in a diplomatic way\". Sitti Jacel, the daughter of Kiram III, said her father's followers were not in Lahad Datu to wage war but to reside peacefully on what they call their ancestral territory. She added that they would not leave unless they are given a \"concrete solution\". She also expressed disappointment at the apparent lack of support from the Philippine government, adding that Manila needs to balance diplomatic relations and the interests of its constituents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nMalaysian Deputy Inspector-General of Police Khalid Abu Bakar advised the public not to be worried, and assured that the standoff would be resolved as soon as possible. He added that the incident was being handled as a national security issue. He also declined to comment on whether there are ongoing negotiations with the group of Kiram III. On 7 March 2013, the Malaysian Foreign Ministry issued a statement that said it now considered Kiram's III forces as a group of terrorists \"following their atrocities and brutalities committed in the killing of Malaysia's security personnel\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Development of standoff\nIt added that the label had the concurrence of Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario. However, this was denied by the Philippine Ambassador to Malaysia, Jose Eduardo Malaya, who said Del Rosario was \"taken out of context\". It was clarified that Del Rosario agreed that those responsible for the killing of Malaysian police forces committed \"terroristic acts\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, 1 March skirmish\nAt around 10:15\u00a0am on 1 March 2013, three days after Malaysia's extended deadline for the group to leave Lahad Datu, a confrontation occurred between the sultanate's forces and the Malaysian police, with shots exchanged. According to Abraham Idjirani, Kiram's spokesperson, 10 members of their army were killed with four more injured as a result of the skirmish. There were also two casualties among the Malaysian police officers. The owner of the house where Agbimuddin Kiram and his men had stayed was also killed in the exchange of gunfire. Malaysian Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein claimed that Kiram's men opened fire and denied that their security forces retaliated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, 1 March skirmish\nInitial reports from the Malaysian embassy in the Philippines had stated that there were no fatalities in the shooting. Ambassador Mohammad Zamri bin Mohammad Kassim told Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario that the \"standoff was over\" and that 10 \"royal army\" members had surrendered to Malaysian authorities after the assault. He added that members of Kiram's group had escaped and ran towards the sea. He said a pursuit for them ensued. Idjirani responded that none of their members were in Malaysian custody after the shooting incident. He also denied that their forces fled to the sea after their clash with the police. He said \"the standoff is not over, unless there's a concrete understanding or agreement that can be reached\" between the sultanate and the governments of Malaysia and the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 892]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, 1 March skirmish\nIdjirani claimed that Malaysian officials wanted \"to cover up the truth\" when they claimed that no one was hurt in the incident. He also appealed to the Malaysian government to stop the attack, saying Kiram's men were primarily armed only with bolos and knives and only a few had guns. He also claimed that snipers from the Malaysian police were targeting their group. He added that the sultanate is now looking at the possibility of elevating the matter to the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and the United Nations Human Rights Commission. He also said that their men had moved to another location to continue their fight and urged Malaysia to hold talks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, 1 March skirmish\nSabah Police Commissioner Hamza Taib meanwhile said no one from Kiram's followers surrendered to Malaysian authorities. He added that 12 men from Kiram's group were killed when they tried to break out of the security cordon imposed by Malaysian security forces. Hamza claimed that the Filipinos opened fire at the Malaysian police before they were forced to retaliate in self-defence, resulting in a gun battle. He said they found various weapons, including M16 rifles, pistols and SLR rifles and ammunition from the group. Hamza also denied reports from a foreign news agency that the gunmen had given themselves up and escaped to the sea. He said Agbimuddin's group were still in Tanduo and that the security cordon was being maintained because Malaysia wants the occupation to be resolved peacefully.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, 1 March skirmish\nMalaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak later confirmed that two police officers, identified as Inspector Zulkifli Bin Mamat and Corporal Sabaruddin Bin Daud from 69 Commandos, were killed in the shootout. The Sabah police commissioner, in a separate statement, said that 12 of Kiram's followers died. Najib said he had now given Malaysian security forces a mandate to take \"any action\" against the group. Najib added that \"there will be no compromise\" for the sultanate's forces and that \"either they surrender or face the consequences\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Presence of armed men in Kunak\nOn 2 March 2013, a group of 10 armed men were spotted near Kunak, a district between Lahad Datu and Semporna, according to Royal Malaysia Police Inspector-General Ismail Omar. He said that three of these men were in military fatigues similar to those being worn by the sultanate's forces. The Malaysian government began doubling the number of police and army officers, including deploying members of the Royal Malay Regiment, in areas where the sultanate's armed supporters were believed to be present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 77], "content_span": [78, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Semporna attack\nAt around 6:30\u00a0am on 3 March 2013, armed gunmen believed to be less than 10 in number claiming to be from the Sulu Sultanate ambushed the police during a surveillance operation on a village off the coast of Semporna, Sabah. The Bukit Aman special branch superintendent and four operatives were killed in the action. At 9 a.m., it emerged that the police party remained trapped in the village surrounded by the attackers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Semporna attack\nThe superintendent had led three dozen policemen, from the Semporna District Police Headquarters, after having been ordered to carry out an investigation at the village following a tip-off that there was a group of armed men at Kampung Sri Jaya Siminul in Semporna District. The operation in Semporna was launched at 4\u00a0pm on Saturday following intelligence reports of the existence of a cache of firearms in the village, and that an uprising by certain groups of villagers believed to be of Southern Philippines origin and residing there was in the making.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Semporna attack\nAbout three hours into the operation, the police officers were fired upon while heading towards a house in the village and returned fire. The superintendent was reportedly the first to be hit and killed during the ambush. Sabah police commissioner DCP Datuk Hamza Taib had said on Saturday the attack may not be related to the Kampung Tanduo standoff. During the ambush, two armed gunmen were also killed. Idjirani, the secretary-general of Sultan Kiram III, said the violence started when Malaysian policemen pretending to round up undocumented Filipinos shot Imam Maas and his four sons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Semporna attack\nAnother imam was allegedly shot when Malaysian authorities learned that they were taking care of the sultan's relatives in the area, Alianapia and Amir Bahar. Subsequent police investigations and interviews with the village head, Ramlee Saraman, found that Kampung Simunul, Semporna, had been infiltrated by the Sulu intruders who mingled with the unsuspecting inhabitants, one of whom was regarded as an 'imam' despite a lack of accreditation. It was earlier reported that the intruders had planned to attack Lahad Datu police station and that both Lahad Datu and Tawau Police Special Investigation Divisions had been deployed to the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Semporna attack\nDuring the shootout, a total of 23 police officers were pronounced missing. While captive, four policemen were tortured and had their bodies mutilated, with one beheaded, according to Malaysian authorities, who later found the bodies. The mutilated condition of these bodies led the major Malay-language newspaper Utusan Malaysia to allege the influence of drugs or black magic. Reports came out that a total of six Malaysian police officers and seven assailants were killed in Semporna. Six of the attackers were fatally shot while ambushing Malaysian police while another was beaten to death by villagers after he tried to take a hostage, says Sabah's head of police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Operation Daulat\nOn 5 March 2013, Royal Malaysian Air Force fighter jets, reported as F/A-18 and Hawk fighters, bombed the Kiram followers' hide-out. Continuous explosions were being heard in Lahad Datu as the police and army as well as commando forces moved in against the gunmen who were reportedly returning fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Operation Daulat\nIn a Kuala Lumpur rally, Prime Minister Najib said, \"We started with air strike by jet fighters of Royal Malaysian Air Forces, followed by mortar strike; and as I'm speaking, the army and police forces, along with other members (of the security forces) following behind, are taking action to arrest and destroy the group which has breached the nation's sovereignty\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Operation Daulat\nAccording to IGP Ismail Omar and other police sources, the army and police began mopping-up operations codenamed \"Ops Sulu\" now \"Ops Daulat\" (Operation Sovereignty). It was believed that rebel leader Agbimuddin Kiram and several of his followers managed to escape the security cordon around Kampung Tanduo. The search for these men was carried out by the joint Malaysian police and army taskforce in the surrounding farmland and FELDA plantations. The Malaysian troops recovered 13 bodies of suspected Kiram followers in Felda Sahabat. Malaysian Defence Minister Zahid Hamidi was unsure on whether the deaths were due to the assault on Semporna or from Lahad Datu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Operation Daulat\nOn 9 March 2013, Malaysian Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said that \"Ops Daulat\", which aimed to flush out the Sulu gunmen, would end only when no intruders were left in Sabah, because the gunmen had not laid down their arms unconditionally. The Malaysian security forces maintained tight security cordons around the operation area and those with no documents such as MyKad were detained for further investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Operation Daulat\nTanduo village was declared secured by Malaysian security forces on 11 March after a week of bombardments and firefights, with the bodies of 22 Sulu gunmen recovered by security forces from the village as the fighting ended. Meanwhile, the security forces engaged in the final stages of sweeping a neighbouring village in which a firefight left a Malaysian army soldier dead. Private Ahmad Hurairah Ismail was killed along with three Sulu gunmen. Another soldier, Private Ahmad Farhan Ruslan was also killed in a road accident near Bandar Cendera-Wasih in the Felda Sahabat area en route from the town of Lahad Datu. The soldier was believed to be part of an army logistics convoy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Military operations, Operation Daulat\nThe clash ended on 24 March while Operation Daulat was replaced by the Eastern Sabah Security Command (ESSCOM) on 29 June. Sabah Chief Minister, Datuk Seri Musa Aman said ESSCOM was now responsible to enforce security arrangements and undertake operations in the Ops Daulat area. The zone would cover all operations from northern Kudat to south-eastern Tawau to ensure Sabah's eastern sea borders were safe from any threats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Defacement of Malaysian and Philippine websites\nOn 3 March 2013, the website of Globe Telecom was defaced by hackers claiming to be from the \"MALAYSIA Cyb3r 4rmy\". The group left the message, \"Do not invade our country or you will suffer the consequences\". Global Telecom confirmed its own website had been hacked but assured the public that no sensitive information was stolen. The website was restored at around noon the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 92], "content_span": [93, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Defacement of Malaysian and Philippine websites\nIn apparent retaliation, hackers identifying themselves as from Anonymous Philippines, attacked several Malaysian websites. They warned Malaysia to \"Stop attacking our cyber space! Or else we will attack your cyber world!\" The website of Stamford College in Malaysia was also hacked with its front page replaced by a note that said: \"The time has come to reclaim what is truly ours. Sabah is owned by the Philippines, you illegally [sic] claiming it\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 92], "content_span": [93, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Google search results alteration\nOn 4 March 2013, a Google search for the word \"Sabah\" reflected a cached version of the territory's Wikipedia article. It said the Malaysian control of the state is \"illegitimate\" and that \"in fact, [Sabah] is part of the Sultanate of Sulu\". A spokesman for Google Malaysia said they have already been informed of the issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 77], "content_span": [78, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Protests at a Malaysian embassy\nSome 20 Filipinos organised a protest in front of the Malaysian embassy in Makati on 5 March 2013. They called for an end to the violence in Sabah, while some expressed support for the cause of Kiram. At least 50 policemen and a fire truck were deployed in the area. The Malaysian embassy later suspended its operations as a result of the protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Allegations of political motives behind the conflict\nMalaysian Prime Minister, Najib Razak, sought to investigate the opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, if he was involved in the incident to destabilise the state, which is known to be the ruling party's stronghold for the upcoming 13th general election. This began after Filipino media reported that Mr. Anwar may be involved with the incursion and the evidence of an image showing the opposition leader with Nur Misuari of MNLF began circulating on the internet. Concurrently, Anwar has embarked legal proceedings against government-owned newspaper Utusan Malaysia and television station TV3 for trying to link him to the incursions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 97], "content_span": [98, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Allegations of political motives behind the conflict\nMeanwhile, Malaysian People's Justice Party (PKR) vice-president Tian Chua claimed that the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) had deliberately orchestrated the crisis as a conspiracy to divert and frighten the people of Sabah in favour of the ruling coalition. The allegations made by Tian Chua was met with an outcry by the Malaysian public; there are various calls from the public and many key political personalities such as Ambiga Sreenevasan and Saifuddin Abdullah for both political parties to forge an unprecedented bi-partisan ties to settle the issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 97], "content_span": [98, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Allegations of political motives behind the conflict\nOn the eve of its 2013 general election, Filipino senatorial candidates from the opposition blamed president Benigno Aquino III for sending unclear messages to the Kiram family. They also said that President Aquino III is in danger of facing an impeachment for \"betrayal of public trust\". Meanwhile, President Aquino himself blamed unnamed members of the previous Gloria Macapagal Arroyo government as conspirators to the current conflict; while Aquino did not name names due to lack of evidence on the alleged conspiracy, Kiram's daughter Princess Jacel challenged Aquino to prove such allegations. Former National Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales denied that he is the one being alluded by Aquino. Jamalul Kiram III unsuccessfully ran for senator under Arroyo's TEAM Unity during the 2007 Senate Elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 97], "content_span": [98, 908]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Utilisation of commercial aircraft by the Malaysian Army\nOn 5 March 2013, flights of AirAsia were rearranged in transporting Malaysian troops to Sabah. An online debate ensued on whether the move highlighted such patriotism of a Malaysian-based airline or the lack of resources of the military. Some Malaysians wondered why the government requested help from a commercial airline, instead of mobilising its own fleet of C-130 Hercules transport planes. Others lauded AirAsia for its efforts in assisting the armed forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 101], "content_span": [102, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Utilisation of commercial aircraft by the Malaysian Army\nThis came despite the explanations provided by the Defence Ministry that the use of AirAsia jetliners is one that of expediency instead of incompetency on the part of the Armed Forces. The Malaysian defence minister, Zahid Hamidi, pointed out that each of the RMAF C-130 Hercules transport aircraft are only capable of carrying up to 90 soldiers each, while airliners of AirAsia are capable of transporting up to 200 soldiers each. The Malaysian Defence Ministry, reiterated by various netizens, also pointed out the fact that chartering civilian jetliners are also a common practice in other countries, including those of NATO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 101], "content_span": [102, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Assembly at the Philippine embassy\nOn 8 March 2013, Malaysians held an assembly outside the Philippine embassy in Kuala Lumpur. The event, called Ops Bunga (Operation Flower), encouraged participants to place flowers at the embassy's doorstep as a show of the Malaysian public's solidarity towards Filipinos in Malaysia. Organisers also urged people to offer prayers to the Malaysian security officers who died in the conflict. Participants used the Twitter hashtag #OpsBunga during the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Allegations of police brutality\nOn 10 March 2013, reports arose of police brutality committed by Malaysian police officials as part of a crackdown on suspected Kiram III supporters, causing a mass migration of Filipinos from Sabah to Sulu. One refugee stated that Malaysian police had shot and killed a large number of Filipino civilians irrespective of their MyKad status and detained many others. Also, it was stated that those detained were not given proper treatment The DFA has yet to receive a formal statement from the Malaysian government. A Royal Malaysian Police official has denied the allegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Related incidents, Allegations of police brutality, MNLF reactions to police brutality\nAn exclusive report by News5 showed that some Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) members were undergoing training in Jolo, Sulu for a rescue mission for abused Filipinos in Sabah. Former MNLF leader Nur Misuari has admitted that these MNLF members were not members or allied with the Royal Security Force of the Sulu sultanate. However, the Sulu Province governor, Abdusakur Tan has denied any reports that says MNLF fighters under Nur Misuari were heading to Sabah, he also denied that 1,000 MNLF fighters were able to sneak into the state. Also, according to MNLF chairman, Muslimin Sema, they respect the decision of Sabah joined Malaysia in 1963. He also said he had visited Sabah in 1973 and witnessed the joy that was enjoyed by the people of the state, adding that he also has many relatives in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 112], "content_span": [113, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Arrests and prosecutions\nSince Operation Daulat was launched, 443 individuals were held for various offences while 121 were held under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012 (SOSMA), one of the successors to the Internal Security Act. The total number arrested under SOSMA later decreased to 104, with most of them being Filipinos who were suspected of having links to Jamalul Kiram III. These included several family members of Kiram III who had entered the state of Sabah using assumed identities. 149 Sulu gunmen were also arrested with eight being charged under Section 121 of the Penal Code for waging war against the King, a charge which carries the death penalty in Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Arrests and prosecutions\nOn 6 August 2013, the Kota Kinabalu High Court convicted Corporal Hassan Ali Basari, a Malaysian Special Branch officer for intentionally withholding information about the intrusion of Sulu gunmen at Lahad Datu between January and March 2013. The Malaysian Special Branch is the country's main internal security and domestic intelligence agency. The prosecution successfully argued that Hassan's intention not to inform his superiors resulted in casualties and fatalities on the Malaysian side. Hassan was sentenced to seven years of imprisonment, the maximum jail term under Section 130M of the Penal Code, read with the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Burials of Sulu militants in Sabah\nIn 2013 during the ensuing conflict, the Malaysian authorities has announced that those killed militants will be buried in the state if their bodies are not claimed by their relatives in the Philippines based on humanitarian grounds of Geneva Conventions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 71], "content_span": [72, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Death of the self-proclaimed Sulu Sultanate leader\nOn 20 October 2013, the group main leader, Jamalul Kiram III died of multiple organ failure in Simunul, Tawi-Tawi, Philippines. His family stated that they will continue their main objective to take over Sabah. The Royal Malaysia Police in Sabah responded by stating that they \"would continue to be alert for any intrusion\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 87], "content_span": [88, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Death of the self-proclaimed Sulu Sultanate leader\nOn 13 January 2015, Agbimuddin Kiram - who led the group to invade Sabah under the instruction of the late Jamalul Kiram III - died of cardiac arrest in Tawi-Tawi where he had been in hiding since fleeing from Malaysian security forces. Agbimuddin's whereabouts had been unknown until his death was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 87], "content_span": [88, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nOn 6 January 2014, 30 individuals (27 Filipinos and three Malaysians) were brought to trial where they were charged with waging war against the King, harbouring terrorists, being members of a terrorist group, and the recruiting of terrorists. All proceedings began at the Kota Kinabalu Central Prison in Kepayan where the charges were read out in English, Malay and Suluk language. Among those being prosecuted were Jamalul Kiram III's nephew, Datu Amir Bahar Hushin Kiram, who abandoned his men in Tanduo but was caught by Malaysian security forces hiding in the swamps around Semporna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nOn 5 February 2016, 19 of the 30 peoples were ordered to enter their defence in the High Court of Kota Kinabalu. Justice Stephen Chung made the ruling after finding that the prosecution had succeeded in establishing a prima facie case against 19 of the accused: 16 Filipinos (including a woman) and three local men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nNine of the 16 Filipinos: Atik Hussin Abu Bakar, Basad H. Manuel, Ismail Yasin, Virgilio Nemar Patulada @ Mohammad Alam Patulada, Salib Akhmad Emali, Al Wazir Osman @ Abdul, Tani Lahaddahi, Julham Rashid and Datu Amir Bahar Hushin Kiram were alleged to have waged war against the King, an offence which carries the death penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nSix Filipinos, Lin Mad Salleh, Holland Kalbi, Habil Suhaili, Timhar Hadir, Aiman Radie and a Malaysian man, Abdul Hadi Mawan were accused of being members of a terrorist group, which is punishable with 20 years to life imprisonment and a fine, or both, if found guilty. The sole Filipina Norhaida Ibnahi was also ordered to enter her defence for allegedly willfully harbouring individuals she knew to be members of a terrorist group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nA local man, Mohamad Ali Ahmad, and a Filipino Basil Samiul were acquitted of waging war and being members of a terrorists group, but were later charged with soliciting or giving support to a terrorist group, to which they pleaded not guilt. The new charge was made after Justice Chung found the prosecution had shown evidence that they had solicited or given support to a terrorist group, an offence punishable with life imprisonment or a fine. Another Malaysian named Pabblo Alie was charged with soliciting support for a terrorist group, an offence punishable with up to 30 years imprisonment and a fine if found guilty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nOn 23 February 2016, six of the Filipinos pleaded guilty to being members of the terrorist group involved in the intrusion. They were Atik Hussin Abu Bakar, Lin Mad Salleh, Holland Kalbi, Basad H. Manuel, Ismail Yasin and Virgilio Nemar Patulada @ Mohammad Alam Patulada. Another three, Aiman Radie and Malaysians Pablo Alie and Mohamad Ali Ahmad, all Filipinos, also pleaded guilt On 23 April, one of the Filipino accused, Habil Suhaili died from an asthma attack in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. It was reported that the accused had been ill throughout the trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nOn 25 July 2016, the court convicted that nine Filipino militants who leading the intrusion may facing death penalty. All nine Filipinos identified as Atik Hussin Abu Bakar, Basad H. Manuel, Ismail Yasin, Virgilio Nemar Patulada @ Mohammad Alam Patulada, Salib Akhmad Emali, Al Wazir Osman, Tani Lahaddahi, Julham Rashid and Datu Amir Bahar Hushin Kiram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0045-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nAll of them were however spared by the court and were given life sentence instead as the court found no evidence that all of the accused were directly involved in the skirmishes that occurred during the intrusion, nor was there proof that they had killed any member of the security force in cold blood or injured anybody. Other found guilty were local Abdul Hadi Mawan, Filipino Timhar Habil, Habil Suhaili (deceased during trial) and a sole Filipina, Norhaida Ibnahi bringing the total to 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nOn 8 June 2017, following the appeal by prosecutors to replace nine of the convicted life imprisonment sentence for waging war against the King, the Malaysian Court of Appeal made a decision to sentenced the nine to death for their involvement in the incursion. The court's judge said the men had meticulously executed the planning of the incursion, stating that:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nThe respondents were part of a conspiracy hatched across the border to wage war against the government of Malaysia and/or the King, to dictate its foreign relations with other countries, with intent to weaken the country from within so that they could reclaim Sabah. Such a ruthless attack by foreign enemies was unprecedented in Malaysia. For the reasons, we allow the appeal and set aside the sentence imposed by the High Court against the respondents and substitute it with the death penalty against each of the respondents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Trial\nThe following year, the Federal Court of Malaysia upheld the conviction and sentencing of the nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Repercussions\nThousands of Filipinos who had illegally resided in Malaysia, some for decades, were deported following the conflict and ensuing security-related crackdown. Some of these were forced to leave behind family members. From January to November 2013, a total of nine thousand Filipinos were repatriated from Sabah, a number that had increased to over twenty-six thousand in 2014. Many overseas Filipinos who remained subsequently faced discrimination. They also became a possible target for retaliation, especially from the local Bornean tribes, because the Malaysian police officers were mainly indigenous Borneans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Further arrests and the killing of more Sulu militants\nOn 22 April 2014, a 57-year-old man in Lahad Datu who claimed to have been given the power to manage the Suluk people in Sabah was arrested for raising the Sulu Sultanate flag on his home. Later on 25 June, six suspected Sulu terrorists including a policeman was arrested in Kunak with membership cards, appointment letters by the Sulu sultanate, several documents linked to the sultanate and weapons was seized from them. It was later revealed that one of the suspects who is a police corporal, has family ties in the southern Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 91], "content_span": [92, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Further arrests and the killing of more Sulu militants\nThese suspects had allegedly drawn up plans to reform an \"army\" of terrorists, with plans to mount another incursion and may have linked to the recent kidnappings in eastern Sabah. While on 22 July, three people \u2014 a Bajau, a Suluk, and one Filipino illegal immigrant \u2014 were held for joining a bid to claim Sabah for the self-proclaimed Sulu sultanate, the three are believed to have been recruiting new members to join their cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 91], "content_span": [92, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Further arrests and the killing of more Sulu militants\nOn 30 October 2014, two men identified as the members of the Sulu militants were shot dead by police in Penampang. Both suspects, have committed robberies to raise funds for their activities and tried to recruit new members to join their fight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 91], "content_span": [92, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Naturalised locals involvement\nOn 6 May 2015, Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Shahidan Kassim said some locals together with the Filipino illegal immigrants have provide information to intruders during the invasion of Lahad Datu and other abduction incidents. In his quotation, he said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Naturalised locals involvement\nMany locals in the east coast of Sabah originated from the Philippines and, therefore, had family or economic ties with their counterparts there. This [locals] have played a part in the intrusion in the east coast of Sabah, abductions and cross border crimes prior to the establishment of ESSCOM and ESSZONE. As a counter-measure, we will try to instill in their mindset that this is our country where we make our living together, where our children are studying and where their future lies, adding that the effort to defend the country was a collective effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Economical impacts\nThe attack by Kiram's III in 2013 have since affected trade relations especially to the Philippines side of Tawi-Tawi where most of their goods source came from Sabah. Therefore in 2015, there was a proposed ban by the Malaysian police over the activities. This was heavily opposed by the Philippine counterparts as it would affect their regions. The ban came into effect in 2016 with a majority support from Sabahan residents, although it was then removed a year later in 2017 following the increase of security enforcements from the Philippines side. Despite the return of barter trade activity, the state of Sabah has maintained they will always be cautious on their trade with the Philippines due to security issues since the incursion in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Malaysian politician meeting with the daughter of the late Kiram III\nOn 9 November 2015, the allegation of political motives towards one of the Malaysian opposition parties behind the incursion was strengthened when the daughter of de facto leader of the Malaysian People's Justice Party (PKR) Nurul Izzah Anwar was seen taking selfie with Jacel Kiram by holding a poster \"#Release Anwar immediately\" as seen from Jacel Facebook account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0055-0001", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Malaysian politician meeting with the daughter of the late Kiram III\nCountering the allegation from the public that she was collaborating with Jacel Kiram to give Sabah to the Kiram families if managed to release her father and overtake the Malaysian government, Izzah stressed that she together with Tian Chua was invited by Philippine counterparts as part of the PKR delegation to meet with various stakeholders from the Philippines, adding that they also meet other Filipino politicians such as former Governor and Congressman of Batangas Hermilando Mandanas and Congress lady Regina Reyes among others aside Jacel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0055-0002", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Malaysian politician meeting with the daughter of the late Kiram III\nShe also stressed her support for Malaysian government initiatives in peace negotiations in southern Philippines, as well defending the sovereignty of Sabah as part of the Malaysian federation and said that any suggestions otherwise are mere wild, unfounded and malicious allegations. Her intention was however still been questioned from various Sabahan politician and residents with one Sabahan politician said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Malaysian politician meeting with the daughter of the late Kiram III\nAs an MP [Member of parliament] in Malaysia, if she was caring for Malaysians and Sabah residents, we would welcome it. But if there is \"something deeper\" in the meeting, we want her to explain and it should be brought to Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Malaysian politician meeting with the daughter of the late Kiram III\nThe Malaysian government has since been referring Izzah to the Parliament to investigate if there is any \"hidden agenda\" to undermine national sovereignty in the form of deal between them. She was then banned from entering the states of Sabah and the neighbouring Sarawak for failing to show her sensitiveness on the issues that has claimed the lives of both residents in the states involved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Malaysian politician meeting with the daughter of the late Kiram III\nOn 22 November 2015, Izzah filed a lawsuit against Malaysian Inspector Police Chief Khalid Abu Bakar and Rural and Regional Development Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob for defaming her by accusing her collaborating with Jacel. On 18 April 2018, Izzah won the case and both are being ordered to pay Izzah a total of RM1 million for all the damages made towards her reputation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Sulu militants arms discovery\nOn 4 January 2016, a team of 15-General Operations Force (GOF) members led by two officers discover a cache of weapons comprising two M14 rifles, one Uzi machine pistol, three Colt .45 pistols, one revolver, a pair of handcuffs and 173 bullets of different calibres in Lahad Datu following a tip-off from local villagers when the team was conducting an operation in the area. The weapons are believed to have been buried by surviving militants before they fled across the sea back to the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234420-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahad Datu standoff, Aftermath, Honours\nOn 11 August 2017, the Malaysian Armed Forces (MAF) held the 'Daulat Feb 2013' Battle Honour parade and award presentation ceremony at the Merdeka Square, Kota Kinabalu to honour the soldiers who died in the line of duty during the operation against the intrusion. The award was bestowed on 24 teams involved in the operation for their sincerity, efficiency and perseverance when facing tough challenges. Defence Minister Hishammuddin Hussein presented the 'Pingat Kedaulatan Negara' (PKN) to 61 MAF officers and personnel who were directly involved in the operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234421-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahore bombing\nOn 6 July 2013, a time-device bomb blast occurred in the food street of the Old Anarkali district, in the eastern city of Lahore, Pakistan. The blast killed five people and injured dozens of others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234421-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahore bombing, Background\nLahore, the second largest city of Pakistan, an important political, economic and cultural center of the country, and capital of the Punjab province, has been relatively free of violence and terrorism compared to other parts of the country. The food street attack was the first major incident of terrorism in the city in three years. The Anarkali food street area comes under the NA-120 constituency of the National Assembly, from where Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, a native of Lahore, contested and emerged victorious in the 2013 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234421-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahore bombing, Incident\nThe blast was triggered by a time-device bomb. The blast occurred on the night of Saturday on 6 July 2013. Two people died on the spot while three succumbed to their injuries at Mayo Hospital on Sunday, bringing the death toll to five. The deaths were confirmed by police and Rescue 1122 officials. Mirza Taimoor, a student of GC university Lahore was also injured severely in this incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234421-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lahore bombing, Investigations\nPolice rounded up over 200 suspects, most of them Afghan nationals, during an operation a day after the incident. Two injured brothers, said to hail from the Bajaur Agency in the northwestern tribal areas, were also interrogated. Late on Sunday, police reported that a group called the Baloch Liberation Tigers (BLT) claimed responsibility for the attack. The BLT is said to be a splinter Baloch militant group involved in the insurgency in Balochistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234422-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Laikipia local elections\nLocal elections were held in Laikipia County on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general election was to be the first where there would be election of county governors and their deputies for the 47 newly created counties. They were also the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234422-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Laikipia local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234423-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake\nThe 2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake was a magnitude 6.6 earthquake that occurred at 2:31:05\u00a0 pm (NZST) on Friday 16 August 2013. The epicentre was located about 10\u00a0km south-east of Seddon, under Lake Grassmere, with a focal depth of 8\u00a0km. The earthquake caused significant land damage in the local area, with landslips blocking roads, including the main highway between Blenheim and Christchurch. Buildings in Seddon were damaged, with some being declared uninhabitable. The earthquake was widely felt in both the North and South Islands of New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234423-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake, Earthquake\nThis earthquake is considered to be a doublet of a magnitude 6.5 earthquake that occurred in Cook Strait on 21 July 2013 and is thought to have occurred on part of the same complex of faults. It started its own aftershock sequence, with several magnitude 5 and one magnitude 6 earthquakes occurring in the first few hours after the main shock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234423-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nThe earthquake generated a significant series of aftershocks, the largest of which had a magnitude of 6.0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234423-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nBelow is a list of all aftershocks magnitudes 5.0 and above that occurred in the region between 16 August 2013 and 5 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234423-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake, Damage\nIn Wellington, the earthquake caused minor damage to buildings, breaking some display windows and cracking plaster. Many central city office workers left work early, and with all suburban train services cancelled for urgent track inspections, bus services overloaded and traffic gridlock occurred on major roads out of the city for a couple of hours. The City Council ordered the deconstruction of a 30-year-old lift shaft that had been damaged in a previous earthquake in July, after recently installed emergency seismic restraints failed. Several surrounding buildings in the fall zone were ordered to be evacuated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234423-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake, Damage, Seddon\nThe quake caused substantial damage to a number of residential homes in the Seddon area. Eight houses were evacuated by The Marlborough District Council and another 11 allowed only restricted access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234423-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Lake Grassmere earthquake, Damage, Rest of NZ\nThe quake was felt as far north as Auckland and far south as Dunedin. Damage was reported in the Kapiti Coast, Hutt Valley, Wellington, Blenheim, Ward and the rest of West Upper South Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234424-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakeland Raiders season\nThe 2013 Lakeland Raiders season was the second season for the United Indoor Football League (UIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234424-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakeland Raiders season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated October 29, 20123 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234425-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakoseljac Cup\nThe 2013 Milan Lakoseljac Cup was an domestic soccer cup competition held in Tasmania which was held from March to June 2013. The tournament which was the 43rd edition of the Lakoseljac Cup featured twenty teams from three regional competitions in a knockout format with the Victory League teams plus four third division teams getting a first round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234425-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakoseljac Cup\nIn the final, it was won by Olympia who defeated Tilford Zebras 4\u20132 in the final to claim their fifth state title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234425-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakoseljac Cup, First round\nA total of 16 teams took part in this stage of the competition. All matches were completed by 11 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234425-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakoseljac Cup, Quarter finals\nA total of 8 teams took part in this stage of the competition. All matches in this round were completed by 1 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234425-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakoseljac Cup, Semi finals\nA total of 4 teams took part in this stage of the competition. All matches in this round were completed by May 5, 2013. The draw was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234425-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lakoseljac Cup, Final\nThe 2013 Lakoseljac Cup was held at the neutral venue of KGV Park on 10 June. Earlier in the day Clarence United FC won the Women's Cup, and South Hobart FC won the Under 20s Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234426-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lale Cup\nThe 2013 Lale Cup is a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It is the first edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It takes place in Istanbul, Turkey, on 22\u201328 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234426-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lale Cup, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 43], "content_span": [44, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234427-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lale Cup \u2013 Doubles\nThis was a new event on the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234427-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lale Cup \u2013 Doubles\nEkaterina Bychkova and Nadiya Kichenok won the title, defeating Ba\u015fak Erayd\u0131n and Aleksandrina Naydenova in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234428-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lale Cup \u2013 Singles\nThis was a new event on the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234428-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lale Cup \u2013 Singles\nDonna Veki\u0107 won the title, defeating Elizaveta Kulichkova in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234429-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lamar Cardinals football team\nThe 2013 Lamar Cardinals football team represented Lamar University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Cardinals were led by fourth-year head coach Ray Woodard and played their home games at Provost Umphrey Stadium. They were a member of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 5\u20136, 2\u20134 in Southland play to finish in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234429-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lamar Cardinals football team, Media\nAll Cardinals football games were broadcast on KLVI AM 560 as part of the Lamar Cardinals Radio Network. At least 3 games, including 2 road games, were broadcast on Fox 4 KBTV as the Cardinals completed the fourth year of a five-year deal granting exclusive broadcast rights to select Cardinals games to KBTV. will cover 1 game (with a possible option for a 2nd game to end the season), CSN Houston will cover 1 game, and ESPN3 will cover 1 game in addition to the KBTV games. Cardinals SLC TV games will air locally on KUIL-LD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234429-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lamar Cardinals football team, Before the season, 2013 recruits\nLamar signed 20 players on national letter of intent day. Recruits are listed here. Player profiles for each recruit are available at the signing day link below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234429-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lamar Cardinals football team, Before the season, 3rd Crawfish Bowl\nThe 3rd Annual Red-White Crayfish Bowl was held Saturday, April 16 at 7 PM. The team was divided into a red and white team, and 4 12-minute quarters were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234429-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lamar Cardinals football team, Before the season, 3rd Crawfish Bowl\nThe Crawfish Bowl would need overtime to decide the winner. Just as in 2012, it was a Ryan Mossakowski pass that would determine the winner. In overtime, on 2nd and 10, a Mossakowski pass was picked off by Keith Wilson at the 20-yard line. He returned it 80-yards for the game-winning touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck\nOn 3 October 2013, a boat carrying migrants from Libya to Italy sank off the Italian island of Lampedusa. It was reported that the boat had sailed from Misrata, Libya, but that many of the migrants were originally from Eritrea, Somalia and Ghana. An emergency response involving the Italian Coast Guard resulted in the rescue of 155 survivors. On 12 October it was reported that the confirmed death toll after searching the boat was 359, but that further bodies were still missing; a figure of \"more than 360\" deaths was later reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck\nA second shipwreck occurred 120 kilometres (75\u00a0mi) from Lampedusa on 11 October, within the Maltese search and rescue zone, but closer to Lampedusa. The boat was reportedly carrying migrants from Syria, and at least 34 individuals were later confirmed dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, 3 October incident\nIt was initially reported that over five hundred people were on board the 20-metre-long (66\u00a0ft) fishing boat when it began to have engine trouble less than a quarter-mile from Lampedusa, causing the ship to begin sinking. In an attempt to contact nearby boats, a blanket on the ship was set on fire. This fire ignited some gasoline and began to engulf the boat before it sank. To avoid the flames, many people threw themselves into the water or moved away from the fire to the same part of the ship, which then capsized. At least 350 people were initially declared missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, 3 October incident\nOn 7 October, it was reported that 194 bodies had been recovered, and that the final death toll could rise to between 325 and 363 individuals. A total of 155 people had been rescued. A further 108 bodies were reported retrieved by 9 October, after access was gained to the inside of the boat's hull, resting some 47 metres (154\u00a0ft) beneath the surface of the water. On 11 October, it was reported that all bodies had been recovered from the boat, and the confirmed death toll had reached 339. About 50 were believed to be still missing, and searches for further bodies in the area would continue using aircraft and robotic devices. A further 20 bodies had been found by 12 October, bringing the total to 359. The total number of dead was later reported as \"more than 360\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, 3 October incident\nOn 8 November, it was reported that the migrants had each paid at least $3,000 (\u00a31,866) to the Libyan, Somali and Sudanese trafficking group before making the sea crossing from Libya. Women who were unable to pay were said to have been raped, and men who rebelled were tied up and tortured. The alleged captain of the boat, a 35-year-old Tunisian named as Khaled Bensalam, who was reported to have been deported from Italy in April 2013, was arrested under suspicion of being responsible for the sinking. It was reported that he could be charged with manslaughter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, 3 October incident\nOn 8 November, a 34-year-old Somali national, Mouhamud Elmi Muhidin, and a Palestinian man, Attour Abdalmenem, were also arrested under suspicion of having been among the traffickers that organized the voyage. Police indicated that Muhidin was facing a series of charges, including people trafficking, kidnapping, sexual assault, and criminal association with the aim of abetting illicit immigration. The two men were detained by the Italian police after a number of the shipwreck survivors spotted and began attacking them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Reaction\nPope Francis of the Roman Catholic Church tweeted \"pray [to] God for the victims of the shipwreck off Lampedusa,\" while Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta tweeted that it was \"an immense tragedy\". Ant\u00f3nio Guterres, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, commended the Italian Coast Guard for their quick reaction to the disaster. The Italian Government launched Operation Mare Nostrum in order to avoid new tragedies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Reaction\nItalian Deputy Prime Minister Angelino Alfano stated that the incident highlighted the need for European assistance to handle the continuing influx of refugees, declaring the shipwreck \"a European tragedy, not just an Italian one[...] The toll is unfortunately a tragic one\". A national day of mourning was also announced in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Reaction\nIn response to the deaths, Cecilia Malmstr\u00f6m, European Commissioner for Home Affairs, called for the European Union to increase their Mediterranean-wide search and rescue patrols to intercept migrant boats, through the Frontex border agency. She said: \"Let's make sure that what happened in Lampedusa will be a wakeup call to increase solidarity and mutual support and to prevent similar tragedies in the future.\" Jos\u00e9 Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, and Italian Prime Minister Letta visited Lampedusa on 9 October. Letta announced that a state funeral would be held for the migrants who died, and Barroso said that 30 million euros would be used to help refugees in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Shipwreck of 11 October\nA second shipwreck occurred on 11 October, 120 kilometres (75\u00a0mi) from Lampedusa within the territorial waters of Malta. Reports the following day stated that 34 were confirmed dead; initial unconfirmed reports of at least 50 bodies appeared to be exaggerated. The boat was carrying over 200 migrants, reportedly from Syria and Palestine, and capsized when people on board moved to one side of the vessel as they tried to get the attention of a passing aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Shipwreck of 11 October\nThe rescue operation was coordinated by the Maltese authorities, with the assistance of some of the Italian vessels involved after 3 October shipwreck at Lampedusa. Some 147 survivors were taken to Malta, and a further 56 were taken to Italy. According to some of the Syrian migrants, the boat was fired upon by Libyan militiamen during a trafficking gang dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Shipwreck of 11 October\nAfter the second shipwreck, the Prime Minister of Malta, Joseph Muscat, complained of a lack of action from other European countries on the problem of migration across the sea, and said: \"As things stand we are building a cemetery within our Mediterranean Sea.\" United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on the international community as a whole \"to take action to prevent such tragedies in the future, including measures that address their root causes and that places the vulnerability and human rights of migrants at the centre of the response.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Shipwreck of 11 October\nOn 8 November, Italian police arrested a 47-year-old Palestinian man, Attour Abdalmenem, for having allegedly been among the traffickers that organized the voyage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234430-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck, Shipwreck of 11 October\nTwo Italian officers are accused of multiple manslaughter by delaying the rescue of the boat. Their trial is scheduled for 3 December 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234431-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampre\u2013Merida season\nThe 2013 season for Lampre\u2013Merida began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234431-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lampre\u2013Merida season\nFor the 2013 season the team changed from using Wilier bikes to Merida bikes. Although Wilier had been contracted through to the end of the 2013 season, they cited that Lampre broke the terms and conditions of the contract, and terminated their technical sponsorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234432-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lamu local elections\nLocal elections were held in Lamu County in Kenya, to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234432-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lamu local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234433-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lancashire County Council election\nAn election to Lancashire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the United Kingdom local elections, 2013. 84 councillors were elected from single-member electoral divisions by first-past-the-post for a four-year term of office. Electoral divisions were the same as those at the previous election in 2009. Elections were held in all electoral divisions across the present ceremonial county, excepting Blackpool and Blackburn with Darwen which are unitary authorities in a similar way to Greater Manchester and most of Merseyside. The election saw the Conservative Party lose overall control of the council, instead overtaken in number of seats by the Labour Party, without any absolute majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234433-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lancashire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234433-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Lancashire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season\nThe 2013 season was Landskrona BoIS's 98th in existence, their 51st season in the second highest division, their 10th season in Superettan and their 8th consecutive season in the league. They competed in Superettan and Svenska Cupen. The season began with the group stage of Svenska Cupen in March, and league play started in April and lasted until November. J\u00f6rgen Pettersson replaced Henrik Larsson as manager in December 2012, and Georg \"Rossi\" Eterovic replaced Hans Eklund as assistant manager. The captain this season was Linus Malmqvist, with Fredrik Svanb\u00e4ck as vice captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, First-team squad\nThis section shows the squad as of the end of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS 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-00234434-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, Youth players\nThis section shows youth players who made appearances in the first-team squad as of the end of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, Youth 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, Transfers, Winter 2012-13\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, 63], "content_span": [64, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, Transfers, Winter 2012-13\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, 63], "content_span": [64, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, Transfers, Summer 2013\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, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, Transfers, Summer 2013\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, 60], "content_span": [61, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Players, Goalscorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal and includes all competitive matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234434-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Landskrona BoIS season, Club officials\nThis list shows the club officials as of the end of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234435-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lao League\nStatistics of Lao League in the 2013 season. League started on 16 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234436-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Las Vegas Bowl\nThe 2013 Las Vegas Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 21, 2013, at Sam Boyd Stadium in Whitney, Nevada, in the Las Vegas Valley. The 22nd annual Las Vegas Bowl, it featured the Mountain West Conference champion Fresno State Bulldogs against the USC Trojans of the Pac-12 Conference. The game started at 12:30\u00a0p.m. PST and aired on ABC and Sports USA Radio. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. Sponsored by motor oil manufacturer Royal Purple, the game was officially known as the Royal Purple Las Vegas Bowl. The Trojans won by a score of 45\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234436-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Las Vegas Bowl, Teams, Fresno State Bulldogs\nContinuing their conference success from the previous season which saw them finish 7\u20131 and sharing their conference title with Boise State, the Bulldogs did even better in the 2013 season. Already having won the Mountain West Conference's West Division championship, the Bulldogs went on to win the first Mountain West Conference Championship Game, defeating Utah State by a score of 24\u201317, advancing to the Las Vegas Bowl by virtue of their victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234436-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Las Vegas Bowl, Teams, Fresno State Bulldogs\nThis will be the Bulldogs' second Las Vegas Bowl; they had previously made the bowl in 1999, losing to the Utah Utes by a last-second field goal for a score of 17\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234436-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Las Vegas Bowl, Teams, USC Trojans\nThe season was tumultuous by USC standards, having seen head coach Lane Kiffin fired five games into the season, and then interim head coach Ed Orgeron resigning at season's end (Clay Helton will serve as interim coach for the bowl game while Steve Sarkisian takes over for the 2014 season). Nonetheless, the Trojans still managed a 6\u20133 conference and 9\u20134 overall record (tied with the rival UCLA Bruins for second in the Pac-12 South Division), leading them to the Las Vegas Bowl at season's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234436-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Las Vegas Bowl, Teams, USC Trojans\nThis will be USC's second Las Vegas Bowl; they had previously made the bowl in 2001, losing to future conference foe the Utah Utes by a score of 10\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive\nThe 2013 Latakia offensive, (called The Descendants of Aisha, Mother of the Believers by Salafist jihadists, and the Operation Liberation of the Coast by the Free Syrian Army and its supporters) was a campaign during the Syrian Civil War launched by rebel groups led by Salafi jihadists in the Latakia Governorate. The stated aim of the offensive was to conquer al-Haffah city, but government supporters assumed conquering Mount Nabi Younes was more likely the real aim. A calculated side effect may have been to spark more sectarian violence in Syria by carrying out a sectarian attack on an Alawite-majority area. The offensive began in early August 2013. During the campaign, rebel forces captured a dozen villages. However, in mid-August, the military counter-attacked and recaptured all of the territory previously lost to the rebels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nOn 4 August 2013, an estimated 1,500 to 2,000 rebel fighters, 300 of them foreigners, launched an offensive from the rebel-held town of Salma further into the predominantly pro-government Alawite Latakia province. The offensive started with a rebel attack on 10 Alawite villages in the Jabal al-Akrad mountain area. Rebel tanks were also deployed, firing on the villages. Throughout the day, ambulances rushed wounded government fighters to Latakia city from the frontline. As for rebel casualties, Tunisians, Libyans, Saudis and Jordanians were among those reported killed in the initial attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nIn one instance during the fighting, a foreign rebel suicide-bomber detonated his car killing at least 15 NDF militiamen and Army soldiers. By the end of the first day of fighting, rebels had seized five villages and captured 400 Alawite villagers and pro-government militiamen, including a pro-government Alawite cleric, Badr Ghazal. Hundreds of Alawite civilians fled to Latakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nOn 5 August 2013, rebels further advanced to the outskirts of the Alawite village of Aramo, 20\u00a0km from Qardaha, president Bashar al-Assad's hometown which also contains the mausoleum of Assad's father, Hafez al-Assad. Rebel forces were using freshly supplied anti-tank missiles to a reportedly devastating effect with one opposition activist claiming three Army tanks were destroyed on a hilltop overlooking Salma. Later, it was reported that opposition forces had captured Aramo, along with one other village. Rebels also made attempts to advance in the Jabal Turkman mountain area. However, during the second day of the fighting, government forces launched a counter-attack and managed to recapture one of the five villages they lost the previous day, Beit al-Shakuhi. The counter-attack came as fresh government reinforcements started to arrive in an attempt to push back the rebels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 935]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nWhile the rebel offensive was praised by some of their sympathizers, others were opposed to opening up the front, with one opposition activist noting that the rebels \"have a habit of escalating without preparing as soon as they feel they have enough weapons. But they are not ready... and the regime's response will be crazy.\" The United States, a main backer of the FSA, was against targeting Latakia, because it could spark revenge attacks by Alawites against its majority Sunni population and increase the flow of refugees. Other foreign diplomats said the coastal area and its mountain villages could be the scene of a bloodbath against the Alawites if Islamist radicals end up eventually gaining the upper hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nOn 6 August 2013, the opposition activist group the SOHR claimed that rebels had overrun 11 Alawite villages in the previous three days. A security source played down the report saying that only two villages were still rebel-held after an Army counter-attack. SOHR also reported that a number of executions had been conducted during the course of the offensive. Four hilltop military posts that were shelling rebel-held villages were also reportedly captured by opposition forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nOn 7 August 2013, an Alawite cleric confirmed 13 villages were captured by rebel forces, but stated that six of them had already been recaptured by the Army the previous day. He also claimed that the rebels killed more than 100 people in sectarian massacres against the villagers, most of them women and children. Two days later, SOHR confirmed that dozens of Alawite civilians had been killed in the area. Other activists also reported 60 civilians had been killed in the offensive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nOn 9 August 2013, opposition activists reported that FSA commanders had issued orders to their battalions in the province to halt their advances and retreat from villages they had captured, the reason being that arms supplies to the rebels had been halted in the previous hours. However, senior FSA sources denied that a retreat order was issued. One opposition activist stated that rebel fighters actually rejected the FSA\u2019s request to retreat, due to the arms shortage, and resorted to using the ammunition they seized from government forces during the fighting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nLater during the day, the Syrian Army attacked three villages, with state media claiming the military managed to recapture all three. However, activists stated government forces managed to recapture one village, Qashba, while fighting was still ongoing in the other two. Rebel forces, in turn, claimed in an online video to had managed to capture the village of Kharratah, three kilometers south of Salma. However, the village had already been confirmed as captured by rebel forces at the start of the offensive days earlier. During the night, several air-strikes hit Salma killing 20 people. 10 of them were rebel fighters, including four foreigners, and 10 were civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel advance\nBy 11 August, reports emerged of mass civilian killings by rebel forces in the captured Alawite villages, as well as the abduction of hundreds of others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nOn 16 August 2013, the military launched a counter-attack, reportedly quickly capturing two villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nOn 18 August 2013, the Syrian Army claimed to have recaptured nine villages over the previous two days. An opposition activist confirmed that the rebels lost seven villages, but stated that they managed to once again capture five of them. Later, the SOHR acknowledged that the military made gains and recaptured several Alawite villages during the day. They added that the Army killed scores of foreign fighters, including a Libyan emir of the al-Qaeda-linked group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. The air force bombarded rebel positions in the Jabal al-Akrad mountains, during which a fighter jet was reportedly shot down and its pilot captured by the rebels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Army counter-attack\nOn 19 August 2013, state media reported that the Army recaptured all rebel-held positions in Latakia after capturing the Nabi Ashia mountain range and adjoining areas in the north of the province. According to a security source, the only remaining rebel-held area was in and around the town of Salma, from which the rebels launched their offensive. Opposition activists confirmed the Army recaptured nine Alawite villages, but stated that fighting was still ongoing in two more. Government troops had also retaken all of the military observation posts which rebels seized at the start of their offensive. It was later confirmed that all of the villages had been recaptured by the military.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel massacre of civilians\nOn 26 August 2013, the SOHR reported that the kidnapped Alawite cleric, Badr Ghazal, had been executed by the Al-Nusra Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 62], "content_span": [63, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel massacre of civilians\nMore than a month after the offensive had ended, additional reports emerged of civilian killings by rebel fighters. According to one report, two mass graves were found. Kidnapped women had also been shipped off in trucks to be raped by rebel fighters. 62\u2013140 civilians were estimated to had been massacred, with another 105\u2013199 missing or confirmed as kidnapped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 62], "content_span": [63, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234437-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Latakia offensive, Offensive, Rebel massacre of civilians\nOn 11 October, Human Rights Watch released a report which stated that, after an investigation, they found grave violations of human rights by opposition forces, for example executions, unlawful killings, and hostage-taking. According to the report, 190 civilians were killed by rebel forces, including at least 67 of the victims being executed or unlawfully killed, although the number could be higher. Human Rights Watch stated that most of those killed were either intentionally or indiscriminately killed by opposition forces. More than 200 hostages, primarily women and children, continued to be held by Islamist forces. Human Rights Watch further stated, that two Kuwaiti nationals, Sheikh Hajjej al-Ajami and Shafi al-Ajami, apparently had a prominent role in collecting financial resources for the operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 62], "content_span": [63, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234438-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Latin American Series\nThe 2013 Latin American Series was the first edition of the Latin American Series, a baseball sporting event played by the champions of the professional winter leagues that make up the Latin American Professional Baseball Association (ALBP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234438-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Latin American Series\nThe competition took place at Estadio Universitario Beto \u00c1vila in Veracruz, Mexico from February 1 to 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234439-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Latin Billboard Music Awards\nThe 2013 Billboard Latin Music Awards were held on April 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234440-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Higher League\nThe 2013 Latvian Higher League was the 22nd season of top-tier football in Latvia. FC Daugava were the defending champions. The season started on 29 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234440-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Higher League\nThe league comprised ten teams. The champions of this season were FK Ventspils, followed by Skonto FC", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234440-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Higher League, Teams\nThe league had a ten-team circuit like the 2012 season. 2012 Latvian First League champions Il\u016bkstes NSS from Il\u016bkste were directly promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234440-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Higher League, Teams\nFK Daugava R\u012bga finished the 2012 season in ninth place and were therefore required to compete in a two-legged promotion/relegation play-off against First Division runners-up BFC Daugava. FK Daugava Riga won the play-off 4\u20131 on aggregate and therefore stayed in the Higher League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234440-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Higher League, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234440-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Higher League, Broadcasting\nAs in the previous season most of the matches are being transmitted live via sportacentrs.com online and sportacentrs TV channel. In June 2012 broadcasting rights were also bought by the English company Bet365. Since 2012, the league's homepage futbolavirsliga.lv has been active and since September 2012 this website has been accompanied by the InStat Football system, showing information and analysis of each match individually. Since October 2012, the Virsl\u012bga has also had its own analytical broadcast after each round of matches with football experts discussing the games and future events connected to Latvian football. It is transmitted via sportacentrs TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234440-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Higher League, League table, Relegation play-offs\nThe 9th-placed sides will face the runners-up of the 2013 Latvian First League in a two-legged play-off, with the winner being awarded a spot in the 2014 Higher League competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234441-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Supercup\nThe 2013 Latvian Supercup was the first edition of the Latvian Supercup, an annual football match organised by Latvian Football Federation and contested by the reigning champions of the two main Latvian club competitions, the Latvian Higher League and the Latvian Football Cup. It was played at the Celtnieks Stadium in Daugavpils on 9 March 2013, between the 2012 Latvian Higher League winners Daugava and the 2011\u201312 Latvian Football Cup winners Skonto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234441-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Supercup, Venue\nThe Celtnieks Stadium was opened in 1989, and it is the home stadium of Latvian Higher League team BFC Daugavpils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234441-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Supercup, Venue\nThe net capacity of the Celtnieks Stadium is 2,000. In October 2011, the next generation artificial turf was laid on the stadium with size: 105 x 68 meters. The last renovation of the stadium took place in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234441-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian Supercup, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Vas\u012blijs Boto\u0161s (Jelgava)Igors Tagijevs (Liepaja)Fourth official:Ivars Caune (Daugavpils)Additional assistant referees:Vit\u0101lijs Liholajs (Jurmala)Arturs Gaidels (Riga)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234442-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Latvian municipal elections\nMunicipal elections were held across Latvia on 1 June 2013. All 119 municipalities and republican cities of Latvia elected their city councils. In Riga, by far the largest city in Latvia, Harmony Centre won an absolute majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234443-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Laurence Olivier Awards\nThe 2013 Laurence Olivier Awards were held on Sunday 28 April 2013 at the Royal Opera House, London. The awards were sponsored by MasterCard for the third consecutive year and presented by Hugh Bonneville and Sheridan Smith, with music from the BBC Concert Orchestra. Live coverage of the awards was provided by BBC Radio 2, presented by Ken Bruce and for the first time in over a decade, the awards were televised, with a highlights programme on ITV1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234443-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Laurence Olivier Awards, Winners and nominees\nThe nominations were announced on 26 March 2013 in 24 categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234443-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Laurence Olivier Awards, Productions with multiple nominations and awards\nThe following 18 productions, including three operas, received multiple nominations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234444-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lazio regional election\nThe Lazio regional election of 2013 took place in Lazio, Italy, on 24\u201325 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234444-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lazio regional election\nRenata Polverini of The People of Freedom (PdL), who was elected president in 2010, was toppled by an expense scandal in October 2012 which led to her resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234444-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lazio regional election\nAfter that, the candidate of Democratic Party (PD) seemed a shoo-in for victory. In December 2012, the Commissioner of the Province of Rome, Nicola Zingaretti, decided to run as Governor of Lazio for 2013 regional election. As Lazio had been a traditional stronghold of National Alliance party, the former president Francesco Storace, secretary of the national-conservative party The Right and supported by Silvio Berlusconi's coalition, was chosen for the center-right coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234444-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lazio regional election\nThe other candidates were Davide Barillari (M5S), who received the 20% of the votes, Giulia Bongiorno (Civic Choice) and Alessandro Ruotolo (Civil Revolution).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234444-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lazio regional election, Electoral system\nThe Regional Council is elected with a mixed system: 39 MPs are chosen with a form of proportional representation using a largest remainder method with open lists and a 5% threshold, while 11 MPs are elected with a block voting system with closed lists. One seat is for the elected president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234445-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Le Samyn des Dames\nThe 2013 Le Samyn des Dames was the second running of the women's Le Samyn, a women's bicycle race in Fayt-le-Franc, Belgium. It was held on 27 February 2013 over a distance of 119 kilometres (73.9 miles) starting in Frameries and finishing in Dour. It was rated by the UCI as a 1.2 category race. The race was part of the 2013 Lotto Cycling Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234445-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Le Samyn des Dames, Race\nBy a miscommunication the race started while some teams were on the stage signing the startlist. The race was controlled for the most part by the teams of Tibco, Specialized\u2013lululemon, Orica-AIS and Hitec. It stayed together until the last third of the race. With about 35 kilometres (21.7 miles) to go Ellen van Dijk attacked over a cobbled section. In the scramble to close the gap, a number of riders went down at the front of the peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234445-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Le Samyn des Dames, Race\nEmma Johansson and Elisa Longo Borghini managed to avoid the carnage and chased, but van Dijk was too strong and had created a gap of over a minute. Despite hitting the pavement, Shelley Olds bridged up to the pair but the trio could scarcely close down a minute of the large gap to the leader. With a lead of more than three minutes, van Dijk rode solo over the finish line. Behind her, Olds out-sprinted Johansson for the second place, while Longo Borghini claimed fourth place. Tiffany Cromwell led home the main bunch for the fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234446-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Cup\nThe 2013 League of Ireland Cup, also known as the 2013 EA Sports Cup, is the 40th season of the Irish football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234446-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Cup\nA total of 22 teams have entered the 2013 competition. The 12 League of Ireland Premier Division and 8 League of Ireland First Division clubs were joined by Ulster Senior League runners up Cockhill Celtic and the Mayo League representative side. For the First and Second rounds of the competition, all participating clubs will be split into 4 regional pools while the further rounds of the competitions will have an open draw. The 2013 competition will commence with the First round on 2 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234446-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Cup, First round\nThe draw for the First Round took place on 30 January 2013. The First Round games were played on the 2, 3, 11 and 19 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234446-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the Second Round took place on 3 April 2013. The Second Round games were played on the 20 and 21 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234446-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was made on 10 June 2013. All of the remaining teams play in the League of Ireland Premier Division; this had not happened since 2005. The tie between Shamrock Rovers and St. Patrick's Athletic was postponed from 1 July due to the latter club travelling to Lithuania for a Europa League fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234446-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was made on 8 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234446-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Cup, Final\nThe final, which was broadcast live on Setanta Sports, took place at Tallaght Stadium, the home ground of finalists Shamrock Rovers, on 21 September 2013. The 2012 League of Ireland Cup Final was also contested by Drogheda United and Shamrock Rovers at Tallaght Stadium. Shamrock Rovers won the game 2\u20130 with a penalty from Gary McCabe in the 11th minute and Thomas Stewart scoring the second in the 58th minute when he slotted the ball past the goalkeeper after a pass by Paul O'Connor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234447-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland First Division\nThe 2013 League of Ireland First Division season was the 29th season of the League of Ireland First Division. The First Division was contested by 8 teams and Athlone Town won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234447-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland First Division, Overview\nThe 2013 First Division featured eight teams. Each team played every other team twice, totalling 28 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234447-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland First Division, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nThe second and third placed First Division teams, Longford Town and Mervue United, played off to decide who would play Bray Wanderers, the eleventh placed team from the Premier Division. The winner of this play off would play in the 2014 Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234447-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland First Division, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nThe play-off finished 3\u20133 on aggregate. Longford Town won 3\u20130 on penalties", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234447-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland First Division, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nBray Wanderers win 5\u20134 on aggregate and retained their place in the Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234448-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Premier Division\nThe 2013 League of Ireland Premier Division was the 29th season of the League of Ireland Premier Division. The division featured 12 teams. St. Patrick's Athletic were champions, winning their eighth top level League of Ireland title. Dundalk finished as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234448-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Premier Division, Overview\nThe Premier Division featured 12 teams. Each team played each other three times, totalling 33 games. The regular season began on 8 March and concluded on 25 October. St. Patrick's Athletic clinched the title on 13 October 2013, with two games to go, after a 2\u20130 win against the holders, Sligo Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234448-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Premier Division, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nBray Wanderers, the eleventh placed team from the Premier Division, played off against Longford Town, the winners of the 2013 First Division play off. The winner of this play off would play in the 2014 Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234448-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Premier Division, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nBray Wanderers win 5\u20134 on aggregate and retained their place in the Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234448-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 League of Ireland Premier Division, Television coverage\nLive coverage of matches in Ireland were shown on RT\u00c9 Two and Setanta Sports. MNS on RT\u00c9 Two showed match highlights and analysis on each Monday night during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234449-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese Elite Cup\nThe 2013 Lebanese Elite Cup is the 16th edition of this football tournament in Lebanon. The competition started on 25 August through to the final on 14 September. This tournament includes the six best teams from the 2012\u201313 Lebanese Premier League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal\nThe 2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal was part of a worldwide FIFA investigation with the intent of cracking down on match fixing. Many players were found guilty of being bribed by betting companies to purposefully lose games, with matches not only limited to domestic leagues in Asia, but also international competitions. 24 players were fined in various degrees, with Ramez Dayoub and Mahmoud El Ali being given the most severe punishment: a lifetime ban from the sport and a $15,000 fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nFIFA held an investigation to crack down on match fixing across the world. Their investigation was concentrated mostly on European football, but it also looked at the problem in Africa, South America and in Asia. In 2012, over 50 countries were under investigation for match fixing\u2014about one quarter of the entire 209 members overseen by FIFA's governing body. The suspicion of a scandal within Lebanese football began in late 2012, when many Lebanese players were accused of purposefully losing games in the Lebanese league and other leagues across Asia. The scandal was not limited only to matches in football leagues across Asia, but included international matches. Players were bribed by large betting companies to throw games or to put the opposing team in favorable position to win the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nOnce the scandal broke, the Lebanese Football Association (LFA) began to investigate allegations that had been made against Lebanese football players. The LFA appointed the general secretary of the West Asian Football Federation (WAFF), Fadi Zreiqat, to lead the investigation. During the two-month-long investigation, involving more than 60 witnesses, Zreiqat concluded there was proof that match fixing was actually occurring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Findings and consequences\nThe Lebanese match-fixing scandal was revealed in a report that led to the suspension of 24 Lebanese players in domestic clubs in Lebanon, Asian clubs, and even the Lebanese national team. In addition to the 24 players, two officials were also involved in match-fixing in Lebanon. Soon after Zreiqat's findings were released, the Lebanese Football Association (LFA) handed out fines and also suspended the individuals involved from playing the sport. 20 Lebanese football players were suspended from playing for one year and given a $2,000 fine, while two players were suspended for three years and given a $7,000 fine each. These 22 players belonged either to the domestic league in Lebanon or other leagues across Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Findings and consequences\nThe most severe punishments were given to Ramez Dayoub and Mahmoud El Ali. They were each given a $15,000 fine and banned from playing the sport for life. Dayoub and El Ali both played for Lebanon's national football team and also club teams in Asia. The reason their punishments were more severe than those of the other players was because the match fixing took place on the international level while they were playing for the national team. The pair have been associated with attempting and succeeding at manipulating matches on different occasions. These include 2012 Arab Nations Cup matches in Saudi Arabia, and rumors of a match against Qatar in the 2014 World Cup qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Findings and consequences\nLebanon advanced for the first time in its history to the fourth and final round of the World Cup qualifiers. Because of the match-fixing scandal, which led to a crucial loss, however, their hopes of qualifying for the 2014 tournament decreased significantly. Theo B\u00fccker, the German coach who took control of Lebanon's national team in 2011, and took the team from being unsuccessful and transformed it to qualify for the final round of the World Cup Qualification, was extremely disappointed and frustrated. The team's success included defeating Asian football giants Iran and South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Findings and consequences\nIn 2012, Lebanon lost to Qatar in the World Cup Qualifiers 1\u20130. Dayoub made an extremely bad pass that was intercepted by the Qatar striker Sebastian Soria who gave his team their only goal to defeat Lebanon. After the investigation was complete, B\u00fccker had the following to say: \"We were showing some action and then suddenly a (Qatar) player has the ball in a one-on-one situation and you get the feeling that something is wrong. The guy looked paralyzed or something.\" His frustration with Dayoub continued as he said: \"I never came close to the idea that someone could not just sell the game, but sell their country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Findings and consequences\nSoon after the LFA handed out these penalties to the players involved in the match-fixing scandal, FIFA sent a letter praising the Association's response to the report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Details\nIn February 2013, Ramez Dayoub found himself at the center of a controversy given that, despite the ban suffered by the Lebanese Football Association (LFA), his club, Selangor (India), wanted to field him for the AFC Cup match against Kingfisher East Bengal. At the end of the match, lost by Selangor 1\u20130, Dayoub, whose name was canceled from the fixture list a few minutes before the start of the game, told Fox Sports: \"I am not guilty. They have suspended me and accused me of match fixing without any evidence or proof.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Details\nTwo other domestic players, Nejmeh's Mohammad Jaafar and Ahed's Hadi Sahmarani, were banned for three seasons and handed $7,000 fines for their involvement. Twenty more players were banned for a year and each given $2,000 fines; ten were Ahed players, most notably Akram Moghrabi, who played for Churchill Brothers in the 2012\u201313 I-League, Ahmad Zreik, and Hussein Dakik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Details\nThe Asian Football Confederation (AFC) received the summary report from the Lebanese Football Association (LFA) of their investigations and subsequent action against involvement of Lebanese players in match fixing. The AFC had also asked the LFA to provide the full report of their investigation. The LFA informed the All India Football Federation (AIFF) and the football federations of Malaysia and Indonesia of the sanctions on Lebanese players plying their trade in these countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Player sanctions, Category A\nTwo players received a lifetime suspension from football and a $15,000 fine:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Player sanctions, Category B\nTwo players received a three-season suspension from club football, a lifetime suspension from the national team, and a $7,000 fine:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234450-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Lebanese football match-fixing scandal, Player sanctions, Category C\nTwenty players received a one-season suspension from club football, a lifetime suspension from the national team, and a $2,000 fine:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234451-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeds Rhinos season\nThis article details the Leeds Rhinos rugby league football club's 2013 season. This was the 18th season of the Super League era. The Rhinos enter the 2013 season as champions after defeating Warrington Wolves 26-18 in the 2012 Super League Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234452-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics\nThe 2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics took place on June 1, 2013. The event was held at the A. O. Shirley Recreation Ground in Road Town, Tortola, British Virgin Islands. Detailed reports were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234452-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics\nA total of 28 events were contested, 15 by boys and 13 by girls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234452-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics, Results\nThe Leeward Islands Junior Championships were held jointly with the BVI Twilight Invitational and the event was covered on Facebook. Complete results for both competitions can be found on the British Virgin Islands Athletics Association webpage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 63], "content_span": [64, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234452-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics, Results, BVI Twilight Invitational\nThe results of the BVI Twilight Invitational were discussed in detail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 90], "content_span": [91, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234452-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics, Results, Leeward Islands Junior Championships (Open), Boys\n\u2020: Shernyl Burns from \u00a0Montserrat was already 22 years old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 114], "content_span": [115, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234452-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics, Participation, BVI Twiligth Invitational\nAccording to an unofficial count, 42 athletes from 13 countries participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 96], "content_span": [97, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234452-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Leeward Islands Junior Championships in Athletics, Participation, Leeward Islands Junior Championships (Open)\nAccording to an unofficial count, 89 athletes from 8 countries participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 114], "content_span": [115, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234453-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lega Nord leadership election\nThe 2013 Lega Nord leadership election took place in November\u2013December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234453-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lega Nord leadership election, Background and race\nIn September 2013 Roberto Maroni, who had been secretary of the party for just about a year, announced he would soon step down from the party's leadership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234453-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lega Nord leadership election, Background and race\nA federal congress was scheduled for mid December and five candidates filed their bid to become secretary: Umberto Bossi (the party's founder and former leader), Matteo Salvini, Giacomo Stucchi, Manes Bernardini and Roberto Stefanazzi. Of these, only Bossi and Salvini gathered the 1,000 necessary signatures by party members to take part to a closed \"primary\" (open only to a selected public of party members), and Salvini collected four times the signatures gathered by Bossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234453-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lega Nord leadership election, Background and race\nOn 7 December Salvini trounced Bossi with 82% of the vote in the \"primary\". His election was ratified by the party's federal congress on 15 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234454-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Legends Tour\nThe 2013 Legends Tour was a series of professional golf tour events for women aged 45 and older sanctioned by the Legends Tour. Based in the United States, it is an offshoot of the main U.S.-based women's tour, the LPGA Tour. The tour was founded in 2001, and is intended to allow women to prolong their competitive golf careers on the model of the successful Champions Tour for men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234454-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Legends Tour, Schedule and results\nIn 2013, the Legends Tour had its most prolific season to date with 10 events on the schedule. The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of Legends Tour events she had won up to and including that tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234455-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team\nThe 2013 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team represented Lehigh University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Andy Coen and played their home games at Goodman Stadium. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 8\u20133, 3\u20132 in Patriot League play to finish in a three-way tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234456-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lehigh Valley Steelhawks season\nThe 2013 Lehigh Valley Steelhawks season was the third season as a professional indoor football franchise and their first in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). One of 7 teams competing in the PIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234456-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lehigh Valley Steelhawks season\nThe team played their home games under head coach Chris Thompson at the Stabler Arena in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. The Steelhawks earned a 7-5 record, placing tied for 2nd in the league, qualifying for the playoffs. They were defeated in the Semifinals, 40-44 by the Richmond Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234457-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Leicestershire County Council election\nAn election to Leicestershire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 55 councillors were elected from 52 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 Conservatives held control of the council with a reduced majority of 5 seats. Despite a strong challenge from UKIP, the party only gained 2 seats (including one where the sitting Conservative councillor had previously defected to UKIP) whilst the Liberal Democrats lost one seat and Labour recouped some of their 2009 losses, gaining 6 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234457-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Leicestershire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234457-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Leicestershire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234457-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Leicestershire County Council election, Results by electoral division\nResults for individual divisions are shown below. They have been divided into their respective Districts or Boroughs and listed alphabetically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234457-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Leicestershire County Council election, Results by electoral division, District of North West Leicestershire\n^ The sitting councillor Graham Partner had previously defected from the BNP to the newly formed British Democratic Party and so his vote share changes reflect the result he achieved in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 113], "content_span": [114, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234458-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Leinster Senior Cup Final\nThe 2013 Leinster Senior Cup Final was the last match of the 2013 Leinster Senior Cup. The match was played between 2013 League of Ireland champions St Patrick's Athletic and 2012 Leinster Senior Cup winners, Shamrock Rovers at Richmond Park on the 20 October 2013. The match finished 1\u20130 to Shamrock Rovers, with James Chambers scoring the winner to secure Rovers their 18th Leinster Senior Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234459-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Leinster Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Leinster Senior Football Championship was that year's installment of the annual Leinster Senior Football Championship held under the auspices of the Leinster GAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234459-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Leinster Senior Football Championship\nIt was won by Dublin who defeated Meath in the final. This was Dublin's 52nd Leinster title. Their defeat of Kildare in the semi-final was their biggest Championship win over the team since 1897.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234459-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Leinster Senior Football Championship\nThe winning Dublin team received the Delaney Cup, and automatically advanced to the quarter-final stage of the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship. They progressed to the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final. Meath entered the All-Ireland qualifiers, and were defeated by Tyrone in their next game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234460-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2013 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship Final, the deciding game of the 2013 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship, was a hurling match played on 7 July 2013 at Croke Park, Dublin. Contested by Dublin and Galway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234460-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary\nDublin led by 1-12 to 0-7 at half time with the goal coming from Paul Ryan who shot low to the net. Ryan got a second goal in the second half, again shooting low to the goalkeepers left and into the corner of the net as Dublin ran out comfortable winners to claim their first Leinster title since 1961 with a 2-25 to 2-13 win. John McCaffrey became the first Dublin captain to lift the Bob O'Keeffe trophy in 52 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234460-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nDublin manager Anthony Daly felt that his side\u2019s four-match run-up to the final had stood to them against Galway, saying \"We hoped to get off to a good start and we did, even though it was two points all, three all, four for a long time but we kicked on after about 15. We got the bit of a lead and a bit of momentum and the goal came then, and it was a great break to get.\" Galway manager Anthony Cunningham accepted that his team were second best on the day, saying \"I think Dublin showed fantastic skill, fantastic fitness levels, and fantastic strength there. They were the clear winners.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234461-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lenoir\u2013Rhyne Bears football team\nThe 2013 Lenoir\u2013Rhyne Bears football team represented Lenoir\u2013Rhyne University as a member of the South Atlantic Conference (SAC) during the 2013 NCAA Division II football season. They were led by third-year head coach Mike Houston and played their home games at Moretz Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234462-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lethbridge municipal election\nThe 2013 Lethbridge municipal election was held Monday, October 21, 2013 to elect a mayor and eight councillors (at-large), the seven Lethbridge School District No. 51 trustees, and five of the Holy Spirit Roman Catholic Separate Regional Division No. 4\u2019s nine trustees (as Ward 2). This election marks a change of title for council members, from \"Alderman\", to \"Councillor\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234462-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lethbridge municipal election\nFrom 1968 to 2013, provincial legislation has required every municipality to hold elections every three years. The Legislative Assembly of Alberta passed a bill on December 5, 2012, amending the Local Authorities Election Act. Starting with the 2013 elections, officials are elected for a four-year term, and municipal elections are moved to a four-year cycle. Of the 72,912 eligible voters, only 21,726 turned in a ballot, a voter turnout of 29.8%, and an average of 5.66 councillors per ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234463-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Levene Gouldin & Thompson Tennis Challenger\nThe 2013 Levene Gouldin & Thompson Tennis Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard court. It was the 19th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Binghamton, United States between 15 and 21 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234463-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Levene Gouldin & Thompson Tennis Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 92], "content_span": [93, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234464-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Levene Gouldin & Thompson Tennis Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nDudi Sela and Harel Srugo were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Bradley Klahn and Michael Venus won the final against Adam Feeney and John-Patrick Smith 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234465-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Levene Gouldin & Thompson Tennis Challenger \u2013 Singles\nMichael Yani was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Alex Kuznetsov won the title defeating Bradley Klahn in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season\nThe 2013 Li Na tennis season officially began on 31 December with the start of the 2013 WTA Tour at the first edition of the 2013 Shenzhen Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Shenzhen Open\nLi Na started her season strongly by participating the inaugural Shenzhen Open in her home country. Defeating Mandy Minella, Julia Cohen, Bojana Jovanovski and country woman Peng Shuai en route, Li advanced to her first final of the year against fifth seed Kl\u00e1ra Zakopalov\u00e1. After splitting the first two sets, the deciding set was a tight affair, but Li broke her opponent's last service game to win the match. It was Li's first title of the year and seventh overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 100], "content_span": [101, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Apia International\nLi then competed in Sydney in preparation for the Australian Open. On her road to the semifinals, Li defeated rising star Christina McHale, qualifier Ayumi Morita and another American prodigy Madison Keys, amassing a perfect 8-0 this season. In the semifinal Li faced Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska and went on to lose in straight sets. Radwa\u0144ska later won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nEntering the first Grand Slam of the year, Li defeated young players Sesil Karatantcheva, Olga Govortsova, Sorana C\u00eerstea and Julia G\u00f6rges en route to set up a quarter final match between her tour rivalry and friend Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska. Li took full advantage of her well-rounded performance, ending the Pole's Australian run in straight sets. In the semifinals, world No. 2 Maria Sharapova won only 4 games in a lopsided victory for Li. This would be Li's third Major final in her career .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 102], "content_span": [103, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nLi's opponent in the final was defending champion Victoria Azarenka. The pair entered the final with 1 Major victory each. Li won the first set but fell twice in the second set. She twisted her left ankle and also hit her head on the court. Li, though injured, continued the match and was defeated by Azarenka in three sets. Li received a huge applause from the audience while giving her speech in the ceremony later that night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 102], "content_span": [103, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nBecause of her left ankle injury, Li withdrew from 2013 Qatar Total Open, 2013 Dubai Tennis Championships and 2013 BNP Paribas Open. She continued her season in 2013 Sony Open Tennis in March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 102], "content_span": [103, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Sony Open Tennis\nAfter not participating any tour events for 2 months, Li returned to the American hard court season in Miami. As the fifth seed of the event", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 103], "content_span": [104, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open Series and US Open, Rogers Cup\nIn her first match since Wimbledon, she beat Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in two easy sets. In the third round Li faced Ana Ivanovic. The two traded sets but in the final set in went to a tiebreak, and Li earned a hard-fought victory. Li then defeated Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1 and proceeded to the semifinal where she lost to Sorana C\u00eerstea in two sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 80], "content_span": [81, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open Series and US Open, Western & Southern Open\nLi was the defending champion, and went on to make the semifinals. She lost to Serena Williams, 7-5 7-5, and double faulted to lose both sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 93], "content_span": [94, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Asian hard court season and Year-end Championships, WTA Championships\nLi was drawn in the White group along with Victoria Azarenka, Sara Errani and Jelena Jankovi\u0107. She opened her campaign with a straight set win over Errani, improving to 6-0 in career head-to-head meetings against her. She was behind 3-1 in the second set before winning the next four games. She twice served for the match, wasting a match point at 5-3, and dropped serve on both occasions. Trailing 3-1 in the tiebreaker, Li won the next five points and converted her third match point when Errani dumped a forehand into the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 111], "content_span": [112, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly summary, Asian hard court season and Year-end Championships, WTA Championships\nShe emerged victorious against Jankovi\u0107 in three topsy-turvy sets. In her final round robin match against Azarenka, she stormed out to a 4-2 lead before Azarenka suffered a lower back injury, allowing Li to win in two easy sets. She finished the match with an impressive +20 winner to error differential (28 to 8). The win meant she advanced to the semifinals for the first time with a 3-0 round robin record. She secured a career-high ranking of world No. 3 by besting Petra Kvitov\u00e1 in the semifinals, the highest ranking an Asian player, male or female, has ever achieved. In the final she made a strong start, blasting 10 winners en route to winning the first set against Serena Williams, but ran out of gas at 3-3 in the second set, losing nine games in a row to lose the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 111], "content_span": [112, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234466-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Li Na tennis season, Yearly records, Head-to-head matchups\nBold indicates that the player was in the Top 10, italics denotes that the player was in the Top 20 (at the time of the match being played). This list is ordered by number of wins to number of losses in chronological order played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election\nThe 2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election was triggered by Michael Ignatieff's announcement on May 3, 2011, of his intention to resign as leader following the party's defeat in the 2011 federal election. On May 25, 2011, Bob Rae was appointed by Liberal caucus as interim leader. The party announced Justin Trudeau as its new leader on April 14, 2013, in Ottawa, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election\nJustin Trudeau would go on to become the 23rd prime minister of Canada in the 2015 Canadian federal election in which the Liberal Party won 184 seats, an increase of 148 seats from 36 seats in the 2011 election, the largest-ever numerical increase by a party in a Canadian election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Leadership election timing\nMichael Ignatieff declared on May 3, 2011, that he intended to resign as leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, but his statement was worded so as not to be an actual resignation to avoid immediately triggering a leadership vote under party rules; he tendered a letter of resignation to the party's National Board of Directors on May 11. Under the provisions of the party's constitution, the Board was required to set a date for a leadership vote to be held within five months thereafter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Leadership election timing\nHowever several MPs expressed their reluctance to hold a third leadership election in eight years and instead wanted to take the four years of electoral stability provided by a majority parliament as an opportunity to rebuild under an interim leader for as much as two years before selecting a permanent leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Leadership election timing\nThe Board met as required on May 19 and set the election for October 28 and 29, 2011, but adopted a proposed constitutional amendment allowing this leadership election to be held between March 1 and June 30, 2013, with the exact date to be announced no sooner than five months in advance. The next convention of the party adopted the amendment on June 18, 2011. On June 13, 2012, the Board decided to call the leadership vote for April 2013 with a specific date to be confirmed during the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Leadership election timing\nThe Board subsequently established April 14, 2013, as the date the leadership election winner is to be announced and November 14, 2012, as the official start of the race. It also set a spending limit of $950,000 and a debt limit of $75,000, both considerably lower figures than allowed in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Interim leader\nIn the case of a vacancy in the leadership, the Board is required to meet to appoint an interim leader \"in consultation\" with the parliamentary caucus, i.e., its 34 MPs and 46 senators. Before this meeting, the Board determined it would not consider anyone unless that person has the support of a majority of MPs and of the caucus as a whole, was bilingual, and promised in writing not to seek the permanent leadership and not to discuss or negotiate significant changes to the party, which would include a merger with the New Democratic Party (NDP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Interim leader\nThis was taken as intended to exclude Bob Rae a potential leadership candidate who had significant support among Liberal senators and had talked about a merger shortly after the general election loss, as well as Deputy Leader Ralph Goodale, who is not bilingual, and any other MP who may intend to run in the leadership campaign. Nonetheless, after the caucus discussed the interim leadership on May 11, 2011, it met again on May 25 and voted to recommend Rae as interim leader over Marc Garneau; the Board subsequently confirmed the appointment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Interim leader\nIn June 2012, the Board was expected to release Rae from his promise and allow him to run for the party leadership provided he stepped down as interim leader when Parliament rose for the summer. However, Rae announced on June 13, 2012, that he would not be running for the permanent leadership and remained interim leader until Trudeau was announced as the new leader April 14, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Process\n130,774 Liberal Party members and supporters registered to vote in the election of almost 300,000 who were eligible. General voting took place from April 7 to April 14, 2013, by preferential ballot online and by phone. Each electoral district was allocated 100 points with points in a district allocated in proportion to each candidate by the number of first preference votes received. All points were then aggregated nationally for a \"national count\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Process\nIf no candidate received 15,401 points on the first count, then the candidate with the fewest points would be eliminated and his/her votes are distributed in each electoral district among the remaining leadership contestants according to the next preference indicated. This process would then continue until one candidate has more than 15,401 points. Trudeau was selected on the first ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Martin Cauchon\nMartin Cauchon, 49, was the MP for Outremont from 1993 to 2004 and served in the cabinet of Jean Chr\u00e9tien as Minister of Justice from 2002 to 2003. Cauchon was the Liberal candidate in Outremont in the 2011 federal election but was defeated by New Democrat Tom Mulcair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Deborah Coyne\nDeborah Coyne, 58, was a Toronto lawyer, professor, author and Liberal candidate for Toronto\u2014Danforth in the 2006 federal election. She worked in the Prime Minister's Office in the 1980s and between 1989 and 1991 she was a constitutional adviser to Newfoundland Premier Clyde Wells.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 75], "content_span": [76, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Martha Hall Findlay\nMartha Hall Findlay, 53, was MP for Willowdale from 2008 to 2011. She was opposition critic for transport, infrastructure and communities (2008\u20132009), public works (2009\u20132010) and international trade (2010\u20132011). She ran in the 2006 leadership election, where she placed last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 81], "content_span": [82, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Karen McCrimmon\nMcCrimmon is a retired Canadian Forces Lieutenant colonel who was the first woman to command a Royal Canadian Air Force squadron (429 Transport Squadron). She was the Liberal candidate in Carleton\u2014Mississippi Mills during the 2011 election. McCrimmon served in the Gulf War, with NATO forces during the Yugoslav Wars, and the War in Afghanistan, and in 1995 was admitted to the Order of Military Merit in the rank of Officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 77], "content_span": [78, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Joyce Murray\nMurray, 58, has been the Liberal MP for Vancouver Quadra since 2008 and served as Opposition Critic for Small Business and Tourism, Asia\u00a0\u2014 Pacific Gateway and Western Economic Diversification (2011\u2013present). BC Liberal MLA for New Westminster (2001-2005). BC Minister of Water, Land and Air Protection (2001-2004). BC Minister of Management Services (2004-2005)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 74], "content_span": [75, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Justin Trudeau\nJustin Trudeau, 41, has been MP for Papineau since 2008 and was Liberal Post Secondary Education, Youth and Amateur Sport Critic (2011\u20132015). He is the son of former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. Trudeau had ruled out a leadership bid but reconsidered in the wake of Bob Rae's announcement that he was not running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Justin Trudeau\nYvonne Jones Newfoundland and Labrador MHA for Cartwright-L'Anse au Clair;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Withdrawn candidates\nCandidates who filed nomination papers and paid the required installments of their registration fee, but withdrew from the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Withdrawn candidates, David Bertschi\nDavid Bertschi is an Ottawa lawyer and was the federal Liberal candidate in Ottawa\u2014Orl\u00e9ans during the 2011 election. In 2012, he established an exploratory committee to assess his leadership prospects, and announced his candidacy on November 7, before ending his campaign on March 21, 2013 without endorsing another candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 86], "content_span": [87, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Withdrawn candidates, David Bertschi\nBertschi subsequently ran for the Liberal nomination in Orl\u00e9ans ahead of the 2015 election, though was disqualified, with the party citing Bertschi's failure to repay debts from his leadership campaign. Bertschi subsequently ran for the Conservatives in Orl\u00e9ans in the 2019 general election, but lost in a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 86], "content_span": [87, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Withdrawn candidates, Marc Garneau\nMP for Westmount\u2014Ville-Marie, Quebec (2008\u2013present)Liberal House Leader (2011\u20132012)Retired astronautRetired Captain in the Royal Canadian NavyFormer President of the Canadian Space Agency (2001-2005)Garneau stood for the position of interim leadership but was passed over in favour of Bob Rae. Garneau withdrew on March 13, 2013 and endorsed Justin Trudeau after concluding that the latter's lead was insurmountable. Garneau had previously suggested that Trudeau lacked substance and was \"untested\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Withdrawn candidates, George Takach\nGeorge Takach is a Toronto based technology lawyer at the McCarthy Tetrault law firm. Takach declared his candidacy in November 2012, but withdrew from the race on February 25, 2013 and endorsed Justin Trudeau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 85], "content_span": [86, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Withdrawn candidates, George Takach\nTakach was born in Toronto of Hungarian descent. He went to the University of Toronto for his BA and JD (law degree) and received his MA in International Relations from the Norman Patterson School of International Affairs Carleton University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 85], "content_span": [86, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Withdrawn candidates, George Takach\nDuring the campaign he supported improvements to the country's high-tech infrastructure. He also supported the legalization of marijuana and was opposed to a merger with the NDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 85], "content_span": [86, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Results\nJustin Trudeau won the 2013 Liberal leadership in a landslide first-ballot victory and led the third-place party into a majority government in the 2015 federal election. The voter turnout was 82.16% of all registered voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234467-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, Results\nJustin Trudeau won the most points in all but 5 of the 308 ridings, with the remaining 5 (British Columbia Southern Interior, Vancouver East, Vancouver Island North, Vancouver Kingsway, and Vancouver Quadra) all being won by Joyce Murray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234468-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberal Party of Newfoundland and Labrador leadership election\nThe Liberal Party of Newfoundland and Labrador leadership election of 2013 was triggered by Kevin Aylward's announcement on October 26, 2011, that he would resign as leader following the party's result in the 2011 provincial election. It was announced on December 15, 2011, that Humber Valley MHA Dwight Ball would start serving as interim leader of the party on January 3, 2012. In May 2012, the party announced the leadership convention would take place between November 15\u201317, 2013. It was won by Dwight Ball, who had stepped down as interim leader in July 2013 to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl\nThe 2013 Liberty Bowl was an college football postseason bowl game played on December 31, 2013, at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee. The 55th edition of the Liberty Bowl, it featured the Mississippi State Bulldogs of the Southeastern Conference and the Rice Owls, the champions of Conference USA. It began at 3:00\u00a0p.m. CST and aired on ESPN. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. Sponsored by automobile parts and accessories store AutoZone, it was officially known as the AutoZone Liberty Bowl. Mississippi State defeated Rice by a score of 44\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl\nThe Bulldogs accepted their invitation after finishing the regular season 6\u20136, while the Owls advanced by virtue of winning the C-USA Championship Game over Marshall, 41\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Teams\nThis was the second meeting between Mississippi State and Rice's football teams; the Bulldogs won the first matchup in 1975 by a score of 28\u201314, but were later forced to forfeit that game among others during the 1975 through 1977 seasons for NCAA rules violations. The Bulldogs were invited to the game despite an inferior record to Vanderbilt, who was 8\u20134, likely in part due to their proximity and past attendance; in 2007, the Bulldogs played in the bowl and filled the stands with a record 63,816 fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Teams, Mississippi State\nAfter finishing the previous season 8\u20134 and losing the Gator Bowl to the Northwestern Wildcats by a score of 34\u201320, the Bulldogs declined somewhat in the next season, finishing 6\u20136 overall and 3\u20135 in conference play, tied with rival Ole Miss for fifth place in the SEC's Western Division. Nonetheless, that was sufficient for bowl director Steve Ehrhart to extend an invitation to the Bulldogs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 43], "content_span": [44, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Teams, Mississippi State\nThis will be Mississippi State's record\u2013tying fourth Liberty Bowl; the Bulldogs are currently 2\u20131 in the game, having won the 1963 game over the NC State Wolfpack by a score of 16\u201312, lost the 1991 game to Air Force Falcons 38\u201315, and won the 2007 game over the UCF Knights 10\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 43], "content_span": [44, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Teams, Rice\nContinuing their success from the previous season which saw them finish 6\u20136 and win the 2012 Armed Forces Bowl over the Air Force Falcons by a score of 33\u201314, the Owls did even better in the 2013 season. Already having won the Conference USA's West Division championship, the Owls went on to win the 2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game, defeating the Marshall Thundering Herd by a score of 41\u201324, advancing to the Liberty Bowl by virtue of their victory. In addition to being Rice's first Liberty Bowl, this is set to be the final Liberty Bowl to feature representation from Conference USA, as that tie-in will go to the Big 12 Conference from 2014 until at least 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup\nA plurality of college football analysts predicted that Mississippi State (MSU) would emerge victorious, including Pat Forde of Yahoo Sports, all six panelists from CBS Sports (although four of the six predicted that Rice would cover the 7-point spread), and Randy Chambers, a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. Chambers commented,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup\nThis should end up being one of the better bowl games of this season ... but for the sake of a prediction, you have to go with Mississippi State. It's the team that's a lot more balanced offensively and has seemed to have found a rhythm ... Rice has been on fire, winning nine of its last 10, but the lack of competition is a concern. The Owls are in for their toughest battle yet and may not have enough athletes to compete with a team from the SEC. Mississippi State is too big, too strong and too fast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup\nCBS's Tony Moss concurred, noting, \"Rice was a consistent winner this year and Mississippi State became bowl-eligible by the skin of its teeth. Still, it's hard to imagine a team that snuck by the likes of UAB and FAU beating someone from the SEC.\" Statistically, MSU held a slight edge in total offense and rushing yards allowed per game, and a significant edge in passing yards per game, whereas Rice held edges in points scored and points allowed per game, rushing yards per game, total yards allowed per game, and passing yards allowed per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State\nThe Bulldogs, who, over Christmas, took a five-day hiatus from what was a \"distracted\" series of practices, finished their preparations for the bowl game looking to match a three-game losing streak that they suffered towards the end of the season with a three-game winning streak including the bowl game. They began the season losing two of their first three games, including a loss to then unranked, but eventual 2014 BCS National Championship Game participant Auburn. They went on to win three of their next four before skidding onto the aforementioned three game losing streak. They concluded the regular season with wins against Arkansas and Ole Miss in the Egg Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Offense\nCoordinated by Les Koenning, the Bulldogs' spread offense averaged 240.3 passing yards per game, 185.8 rushing yards per game, and 26.3 points per game, averages that ranked 56th, 45th, and 80th respectively. Though three different quarterbacks \u2013 sophomore Dak Prescott, senior Tyler Russell, and freshman Damian Williams \u2013 started games and split time throughout the season, Prescott was the starter heading into the bowl after a strong performance in the 2013 Egg Bowl. Prescott totaled 1,657 passing yards, 7 touchdowns, and 7 interceptions on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Offense\nPrescott also led the Bulldogs' rushing attack, totaling 751 rushing yards for 11 touchdowns on the season, the latter of which led SEC quarterbacks. Senior LaDarius Perkins started at running back, and totaled 495 rushing yards and 2 touchdowns on the season. Wide receiver Jameon Lewis contributed multilaterally, completing three passes, all for touchdowns, rushing for three touchdowns on a total of 13 carries, and catching five touchdown passes on 55 total catches for 703 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Offense\nJunior Robert Johnson and sophomore Joe Morrow were the other predominant starters at wide receiver, with the former of whom finishing second on the team with 33 receptions for 379 yards, and the former of whom finishing sixth on the team with 18 receptions for 211 yards; Johnson caught no touchdowns, while Morrow caught one. Freshman De'Runnya Wilson made one start at wide receiver, and finished fourth on the team with 23 receptions for 314 yards and 3 touchdowns. Two junior tight ends \u2013 Malcolm Johnson and Brandon Hill \u2013 the former of whom focused predominantly on receiving whereas the latter of whom focused predominantly on blocking, started at various points throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Offense\nContinuity was prevalent on the offensive line, as the group featured only four different starting combinations during the season, and three of the four lasted only one game (in other words, the same group of starters started 9 of their 12 games). The group was anchored by star left guard Gabe Jackson, who did not allow a sack all season, and was named both an All-American and All-SEC performer by various media outlets at the season's conclusion. Rod Gilmore, the game's analyst, described Jackson's prospects for the 2014 NFL Draft as follows: \"Gabe Jackson will be playing on Sundays, guaranteed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Offense\nThe only question is how high he goes in the NFL Draft.\" Chris Low commented, \"The top guard in the SEC going into the season, the 6-foot-4, 335-pound Jackson is a true road-grader. He combines size, power and strength and has been a fixture at left guard for the Bulldogs since his redshirt freshman season.\" Scouts Inc., a subsidiary of ESPN, rated him the second-best guard prospect for the draft. Senior right tackle Charles Siddoway started all 12 games as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Defense\nThe Bulldogs' 4-3 defense was coordinated by Geoff Collins, and surrendered an average of 366.3 yards per game and 24.3 points per game, both of which were well within the top third of Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) schools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Defense\nThe defense was anchored by a strong defensive line that included freshman defensive tackle Chris Jones, whom ESPN writer Chris Low described as \"freakishly big, athletic, and disruptive\", as well as \"one of the most promising freshman defensive linemen in the country\", senior defensive end Denico Autry, a community college transfer who totaled 72 tackles, 15 tackles for loss (TFL), 5 sacks, 2 forced fumbles (FF), and 1 interception (INT) on the season, junior Kaleb Eulls, who though he was a two-year starter at defensive end ultimately transferred to defensive tackle at the onset of the season so that, according to Bulldogs' defensive line coach David Turner, the Bulldogs could \"get the best four guys on the field and he is one of them\", and junior defensive end Preston Smith, who totaled 38 tackles, 6.5 TFL, and 2.5 sacks on the season. Junior P.J. Jones was actually the predominant starter at defensive tackle (ahead of Chris Jones \u2013 no relation between the two), but missed some time due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 1078]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Defense\nAt linebacker, another of the defense's strong points, sophomore Benardick McKinney, who measured 6\u00a0feet 5\u00a0inches (1.96\u00a0m) 235 pounds (107\u00a0kg), led the defense in tackles with 72, adding 6 TFL, and 2.5 sacks. Senior Deontae Skinner, who though he was inexplicably unlisted on the bowl game depth chart, (he missed time at the end of the season due to injury, but was expected to play in the bowl game, at least by external media) was second on the defense with 61 tackles. Junior Matt Wells was the unit's third starter, totaling 49 tackles on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Mississippi State, Defense\nIn the secondary, MSU's starters developed over the season, particularly at cornerback, where junior Jamerson Love, sophomore Taveze Calhoun, and Will Redmond all saw significant time. Despite the improvement at cornerback, there was concern at safety for the Bulldogs, primarily because of season-ending surgery underwent by leader Nickoe Whitley after their final game; in his absence, redshirt freshman Deontay Evans and sophomore Kendrick Market, the latter of whom was third on the defense in tackles with 60, were the starters. Overall, one preview noted MSU's defense had an edge over Rice's because of a strong front seven that, during games against tough opponents, was \"battle tested against the nastiest OLs in the country\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 62], "content_span": [63, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice\nDuring bowl practices, coach David Bailiff commented that, to prepare for the cowbells utilized by Bulldogs' fans, the team simulated the noise: \"I think we have a good plan for the cowbells. We've got the CDs of the cowbells going off (at practice). We're looking forward to it.\" Conversely to MSU, Rice's pre-bowl practices were \"sharp\", according to Bailiff. During the season, the Owls lost two of their first three games, including the Bayou Bucket Classic to Houston, but after that, won five consecutive games, including an overtime win against Tulsa. They lost to North Texas on Halloween, before winning their final four games, including an overtime win against UAB, and a victory in the 2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game against Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Offense\nLarry Edmondson was the Owls' offensive coordinator entering the bowl game as his first game coordinating after the departure of John Reagan, who coordinated the offense during the season, but left after the conference championship game to be the offensive coordinator and offensive line coach for Kansas, and led the offense to posting 185.5 passing yards per game (101st in FBS), 240.2 rushing yards per game (15th in FBS), 31.4 points per game (52nd in FBS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Offense\nThree-year starter Taylor McHargue, a fifth-year senior who was \"a productive and steady signal-caller\", started at quarterback for the owls, posting 2,261 passing yards (fifth in the conference) for 17 touchdowns (third in the conference) and 8 interceptions (tenth-most in conference). Despite missing two games due to a knee injury, senior running back Charles Ross mustered 1,252 rushing yards (second in the conference) and earning first team all-conference accolades; he rushed for 14 touchdowns, which led the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Offense\nMcHargue was second on the team in rushing, totaling 466 yards and 5 touchdowns, and freshman Jawon Davis rushed for 455 yards and 3 touchdowns. Luke Turner, who was listed second on the depth chart, and Turner Petersen, who started when Ross was injured but ultimately sustained an injury himself thus rendering himself out for the season, also contributed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Offense\nJunior wide receiver Jordan Taylor, a second team all-conference performer who measured 6\u00a0feet 5\u00a0inches (1.96\u00a0m) and weighed 210 pounds (95\u00a0kg), led the team with 54 receptions, more than twice the second-leading receiver, adding 846 yards and 8 touchdowns. Secondarily, sophomore Dennis Parks totaled 26 catches, 470 yards, and 3 touchdowns. Petersen was the third-leading receiver. Senior Donte Moore started 11 of the 12 games, and was fourth on the team with 20 catches for 299 yards and 1 touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Offense\nAt tight end, freshman Connor Cella made seven starts (all the games in which a tight end started, Cella started \u2013 they began in alternate formations when Cella did not start), and totaled 12 receptions for 111 yards and 1 touchdown. On the offensive line, bookends Jon Hodde, a senior left tackle, and Caleb Williams, a sophomore right tackle, fostered stability on the line, each starting all of the Owls' regular season games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Offense\nAt guard, juniors Nico Carlson and Drew Carroll started at left and right guard respectively; Carlson started 11 of 12 games, being replaced once by Carroll, and Carroll started a total of 4 games, 3 of them at right guard, replacing Andrew Reue. Senior center Nate Richards attained all-conference accolades, and started all of the games for Rice during the regular season. Second team all-conference performer Chris Boswell started at kicker, making 14 of his 21 attempts with a long of 56 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Defense\nUtilizing predominantly a 4-2-5 defense in which they played single coverage on the outside and strived to pressure the quarterback, Chris Thurmond was the defensive coordinator, and led the defense to averaging 352.2 yards per game, which ranked 24th in the FBS, and 22.9 points per game, which ranked 33rd in the FBS. There was much fluctuation in the starting lineup on the defensive line, however the one consistent starter was Christian Covington, a sophomore first team all-conference honoree at defensive tackle who totaled 51 tackles, 9.5 TFL, and 4 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Defense\nSophomore Ross Winship entered the game first on the depth chart at nose tackle, having started there in the previous five games; he totaled 20 tackles during the season. At end, fifth-year senior Cody Bauer entered the game as the starter; he led the defense with 4.5 sacks on the season to complement 9.5 TFL and 34 tackles. At the other end spot, seniors Tanner Leland and Josh Skinner both saw playing time, but Leland was the predominant starter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Defense\nThe two linebacker spots were filled by undersized (205 pounds (93\u00a0kg)) senior Michael Kutzler, a second team all-conference performer who led the defense in tackles with 86 tackles, and junior James Radcliffe, who totaled 58 tackles. An SB Nation preview called linebacker the \"weak\" point of the Owls' defense. That same preview gave Rice the edge at both cornerback and safety in the secondary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Defense\nAt cornerback, they featured two all-conference performers \u2013 fifth-year senior Phillip Gaines, who achieved first team commendation with a team-leading four interceptions to complement 34 tackles and 4 TFL, and junior Bryce Callahan, who started all 12 regular season games and achieved second team commendation with 32 tackles, 3 TFL, and 3 interceptions. In their 4\u20132\u20135 set, they started three safeties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Pregame buildup, Rice, Defense\nThe same trio started each of the final seven games \u2013 fifth-year senior Paul Porras at the \"KAT\" spot, totaling 76 tackles (second on the team), junior Julius White at free safety, totaling 59 tackles (third on the team) and 2 interceptions, and junior Malcolm Hill at strong safety, totaling 44 tackles (fifth on the team), 3 interceptions, and 2.5 TFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, Broadcast\nESPN broadcast the game on television, with Bob Wischusen, Rod Gilmore, and Quint Kessenich providing play-by-play, analysis, and sideline coverage respectively. On ESPN Radio, Beth Mowins provided play-by-play, Joey Galloway analysis, and Paul Carcaterra sideline coverage. Each team also had its own radio coverage. For Mississippi State, Jim Ellis handled play-by-play, Matt Wyatt provided analysis, and John Correro reported from the sideline on the Mississippi State Radio Network, and for Rice, J. P. Heath provided play-by-play, Nate Griffin provided analysis, and Jorge Vargas reported from the sideline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nRice received the opening kickoff, and embarked on a drive during which they were faced with a key decision on fourth down and six at Mississippi State's (MSU) 41-yard line; ultimately they decided to punt, pinning MSU at their own 11-yard line. On 3rd down and 10 for MSU on their drive, Dak Prescott completed a pass to Robert Johnson, who appeared to have a first down, but while fighting for extra yardage, fumbled, and Rice recovered around the same place where their previous drive ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThey were quickly faced with a fourth down and one, and lined up to go for it, and converted. Several plays later, they were faced with a second down and goal, and scored on a 1-yard touchdown run by Charles Ross. MSU gained significant yardage on their drive, entering the red zone, and ultimately scored on a 10-yard pass from Prescott to Ladarius Perkins to culminate a 10-play, 73-yard drive that encapsulated 4:40, tying the game at 7. On the final full drive of the quarter, Rice punted. At the end of the quarter, MSU had the ball around their own 40-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nTaking advantage of several third down conversions, the Bulldogs executed a 10-play, 64-yard drive that ended when Ashton Shumpert rushed for a 1-yard touchdown, taking the lead for MSU. Rice's ensuing drive was decimated by a chop-block penalty, and ultimately they were forced to punt after going three-and-out. MSU capitalized on the ensuing drive, scoring via a screen pass to Malcolm Johnson; the PAT was blocked. Hoping to avert a blowout, Rice took the field at their own 25-yard line after a touchback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nOn a play during which they converted a first down, they got 15 additional yards thanks to a personal foul penalty, thus advancing them into MSU territory. The advancement was to little avail, as a sack on fourth down gave MSU the ball back near midfield. After the play, however, MSU was assessed with a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, backing up their field position to the 30-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nIt did not stop MSU; after a 65-yard pass to Jameon Lewis, they were inside the Rice 10-yard line, and a few plays later, the rout commenced with another MSU touchdown; the extra point was good, and at the half, MSU led 27\u20137, having scored 27 unanswered points since Rice scored early in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nIn the third quarter Mississippi State extended the lead they held at halftime to 34 points on TD runs of 5 and 11 yards by Prescott, capping off drives of 61 and 57 yards respectively. In the quarter the Bulldogs had 150 yards of offense while holding the Owls to 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234469-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThe Bulldogs capped off the scoring when kicker Taylor Earhart came on and Kicked a 19-yard field goal with 4:45 remaining. It was the only field goal attempt of the Memphis Metro area (Olive Branch, Mississippi) native's Mississippi State career. Taylor walked-on at MSU after playing the first two years of his college career at Northeast Mississippi Community College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234470-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liberty Flames football team\nThe 2013 Liberty Flames football team represented Liberty University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Turner Gill and played their home games at Williams Stadium. They were a member of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 8\u20134, 4\u20131 in Big South play to share the Big South Conference title with Coastal Carolina. Due to their loss to Coastal Carolina, they did not receive the conference's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs and did not receive an at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt\nThe 2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt was a coup d'\u00e9tat attempt by a group of members of the General National Congress to take control of the country from Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan. Zeidan was kidnapped in the early hours of the 10 October by armed gunmen and was then released several hours later after a pro-government militia stormed the site where he was being held. Following his release Zeidan claimed the incident was an attempted coup orchestrated by two militias in line with members of the GNC opposed to Zeidan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Background\nFollowing the Libyan Civil War, the new Libyan government lacks an effective police force and military. Whilst the government attempts to build up their own centralised security forces the Libyan Government has coopted and employed various militias. Although under the pay of the defence and interior ministries, many of these groups are not wholly under the control of or loyal to the Libyan Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Background\nOn 5 October 2013 U.S. Army \"Delta Force\" operators captured Anas al-Liby in Tripoli, Libya. Al-Liby had worked as a computer analyst for al-Qaeda and was wanted in the United States for his part in the 1998 United States embassy bombings. A day after Al-Liby was captured, he was in military custody on the ship USS San Antonio in the Mediterranean Sea. He will be sent to New York City for criminal prosecution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Background\nU.S. officials claimed that the Libyan government had approved of the raid, although the Libyan Government officially denied any involvement and called the incident a kidnapping. In spite of the Libyan government's official denials, many Libyans believed their government to have been involved, or to have at least approved of the raid. As a result of this, the Islamist government was strongly criticized, and an anti-government protest was held in Benghazi on Monday 7 of October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Events, Capture\nIn the early hours of Thursday 10 October 2013 Zeidan was kidnapped from the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli by armed militants and taken to an undisclosed location. The group of up to 150 militants had seemingly arrived at the hotel in pick-up trucks, and then a large group had entered the building with some militants remaining in the reception whilst others headed to the 21st floor, where Zeidan was staying. The militants scuffled with Zeidan's bodyguards, before seizing him. Zeidan offered no resistance as he was being led away, and the militants led him out of the hotel at around 5:15 AM. Nobody was killed in Zeidan's seizure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Events, Capture\nZeidan later claimed that the kidnappers did not appear to have a fully developed plan, and that his kidnappers were unsure of where to take him following his abduction. Zeidan claimed that his kidnappers initially attempted to take him to Zawiya, but then decided to take him to Sha'ab sea front area of Tripoli, before finally settling on taking him to the CCA building in Fornaj. Zeidan also mention that the streets of Tripoli were devoid of security patrols during the episode.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Events, Confusion\nThe kidnapping caused confusion for several hours, and many in Tripoli feared that a coup was underway. The Libyan Prime Ministers Office denied early reports of a kidnapping, and dispelled such claims as rumors on its Facebook page. The Office later acknowledged the kidnapping, and claimed that they had been coerced by the kidnappers to deny any reports. Police units left the Corinthia hotel area and the Prime Ministers Office, and were instead replaced with anti-government militiamen who claimed that Zeidan had been arrested. Abdel-Moneim al-Hour, an official with the interior ministry's anti-crime committee, also claimed that Zeidan was under arrest and would be charged with violating state security. In response to the developing crisis the Libyan Cabinet met for an emergency meeting at the Electricity Ministry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Events, Confusion\nThe Zintan militia, one of the strongest armed groups in Libya, sided with the Government, and mobilised units and threatened to move on Tripoli and \"level\" the bases of the militias responsible for the kidnapping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Events, Confusion\nThe group Libyan Revolutionaries Operations Room said they abducted Zeidan as a reaction to the government of Libya's involvement in the American capture of Anas al-Liby, and his statements in late September calling for an international force to be sent to Libya to disarm and liquidate the revolutionary militias that worked with NATO to overthrow and kill Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. The group also claimed that they had been acting \"on the prosecutor's orders\", although the public prosecutor's office denied having issued a warrant for Zeidan's arrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Events, Confusion\nGNC President Nouri Abusahmain visited Zeidan and his kidnappers for some 20 minutes, attempting to persuade the kidnappers to release him. Deputy Defence Minister Khaled al-Sharrif arrived with Abusahmain, and remained at the building for several hours after Abusahmain had left, also trying to persuade the kidnappers to release Zeidan. Sharrif eventually left to report to the GNC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Events, Release\nThe building where Zeidan was being held was surrounded by local residents of Fornaj and pro-Government units, including the First Support Brigade under the command of Haitham Tajouri, and the 106 Brigade. The First Support Brigade attempted to negotiate with Zeidan's captors, however ultimately Zeidan was freed after the 106 Brigade and local residents stormed the building. By the time of his release, Zeidan had been held for less than six hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath\nThe kidnapping was condemned by the US, UK, France, and the UN, who all also pledged their support for Libya's transition to democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath\nFollowing Zeidan's release the Libyan Government released a statement blaming the kidnapping on two groups of ex-rebels; the Operations Cell of Libyan Revolutionaries and Counter Crime Agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath\nDespite having claimed earlier responsibility for the kidnapping, following Zeidan's release the group denied having played any role in the kidnapping, and claimed that any statements to the contrary in the media were untrue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath\nAt a press conference later the same day GNC President Nouri Abusahmain claimed responsibility for establishing the Libyan Revolutionaries Operations Room in July 2013, claiming he had done so in order to protect Tripoli and various state institutions. Abusahmain denied however that LROR was acting under any orders from him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath\nA source in the Attorney General's Office revealed to Libya Herald on 10 October that Abdelmonem Al-Said, the head of the Counter Crime Agency in Tripoli's Fornaj district, was under investigation by the Attorney General for his role in the kidnapping of Zeidan. The source also claimed that the arrest warrant supposedly signed by the Attorney General was a forgery, and that several other security officials were believed to have been aware of the planned kidnapping in the week leading up to it, but had not acted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Accusations of guilt\nIn a TV address to the nation on 11 October, Zeidan called the incident an attempted coup d'\u00e9tat, and blamed it on an unnamed political party in the GNC. Zeidan claimed that the party had previously failed to rally enough votes in the GNC to dismiss Zeidan from his post of Prime Minister by constitutional means, and so had instead resorted to force. Zeidan also vowed a strong response to his kidnappers, and signaled the possibility of an imminent crackdown by the Libyan Government. Zeidan also stated that a crisis committee, including revolutionaries, had been formed, and that previously delayed funds for police and security forces were now being dispensed by the Central Bank of Libya. Zeidan also denied that Nouri Abusahmain, the President of the GNC, had played any role in the kidnapping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Accusations of guilt\nAt a press conference on the afternoon of 20 October, Zeidan named several of those he accused as responsible for his kidnapping. Zeidan claimed that Mustafa Treiki and Mohamed al-Kilani, both of whom are Independent members of the General National Congress for Zawiya, were the political leadership behind the kidnapping. Kilani in particular is regarded as being a radical Islamist. During the Libyan Civil War both Kilani and Treiki had served in a rebel brigade known as the Zawiya Martyrs Brigade, with Kilani serving as the brigades commander whilst Treiki had been a leading member. The two have been considered close to the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, although neither are members. Kilani had also previously been a key figure in the GNC who had pushed for the storming of Bani Walid in October 2012, and had also served in a military capacity during the siege.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Accusations of guilt\nOthers named by Zeidan included Abdul Hakkim Belazi; the official spokesman for the Counter Crime Agency, and a man named Ramadan Zaamit. Zeidan also claimed that whilst he was being detained at the Counter Crime Agency building on Fornaj he was interrogated by Abdelmonem Al-Said; the local head of the CCA, as well as by Adel Al-Said and Abdulraouf Al-Minae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Accusations of guilt\nZeidan also claimed that his mobile phone had been taken during his detention, but that his service provider had helped recover it. The phone was eventually found on GNC premises, where it had been taken by one of Zeidan's kidnappers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Response by alleged kidnappers\nTreiki and Kilani in turn called a press conference for the evening of the 20 October to respond to Zeidan's claims, which they denied, calling Zeidan a \"liar.\" Instead they claimed Zeidan was attempting to blame them in order to distract from his own failures, and claimed Zeidan was trying to emerge from the incident as a hero. Treiki and Kilani did however admit to having previously unsuccessfully attempted to organise a vote of no confidence in the GNC in order to topple Zeidan's Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Response by alleged kidnappers\nSharing the platform with Treiki and Kilani at the press conference was Abdelmonem al-Said (the commander of the CCA Fornaj unit). In contrast to Treiki and Kilani's denials of responsibility, al-Said claimed he was proud of having arrested Zeidan, and accused Zeidan of involvements in drugs and corruption. Said also claimed that drugs had been found in Zeidan's car some months prior, in June 2013, and that there was no evidence that Zeidan enjoyed any kind of political immunity from arrest and prosecution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Response by alleged kidnappers\nGNC members are entitled to immunity, meaning that no investigation or prosecution of a GNC member can take place until their immunity has been removed. The GNC can however vote to remove immunity from sitting members, such as in early October 2013 when immunity was removed from several GNC member's accused of defaming members of the Justice & Construction party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Reactions, Domestic\nJustice and Construction Party - In a speech responding to the kidnapping, Mohamed Sowan; the head of the Justice and Construction Party, called for Zeidan's resignation. Sawan accused Zeidan of mismanagement, and claimed that this was the real reason for the kidnapping. Sawan also claimed the GNC was looking to replace Zeidan, although criticized the kidnapping as \"irresponsible behavior.\" Sawan also denied that Zeidan had been referring to the Justice and Construction Party when he referenced to an unnamed political party being behind the attempted coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Reactions, Domestic\nSawan had in September demanded Zeidan's removal by means of a no-confidence motion, and blamed Zeidan for all of Libya's problems. Sawan had never spoken openly about withdrawing the Justice and Construction Party's 5 Ministers from the Government. There were reports that the Justice and Construction Party had failed in an attempt to gather the 120 votes needed to dismiss Zeidan from his office, and so had instead offered a truce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234471-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Libyan coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Aftermath, Reactions, Domestic\nZintan Local Council - On 10 October the Council issued a call for all those involved in Prime Minister Zeidan's kidnapping to be arrested and punished. The Council also blamed the GNC and GNC President Nouri Abusahmain for establishing the Libyan Revolutionaries Operations Room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election\nGeneral elections were held in Liechtenstein on 3 February 2013, using a proportional representation system. Four parties contested the elections; the centre-right Patriotic Union (VU) and Progressive Citizens' Party (FBP), centre-left Free List (FL) and newly created populist alliance The Independents (DU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election, Background\nThe previous elections in 2009 were won by the Patriotic Union which managed to secure an absolute majority of the seats (13 out of 25). Despite winning a parliamentary majority, the Patriotic Union chose to form a coalition with the conservative Progressive Citizens' Party, which won 11 seats. The Free List won a single seat and became the opposition party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election, Background\nPrime Minister Klaus Tschuetscher's term in office was marked by an effort to move the country away from being a tax haven. Prior to the election Tschuetscher, who is a member of the Patriotic Union (VU) party, declared he would not be seeking the premiership for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election, Electoral system\nThe 25 members of the Landtag were elected by open list proportional representation from two constituencies, Oberland with 15 seats and Unterland with 10 seats. Only parties and lists with more than 8% of the votes cast in each constituency were eligible to win seats in the Landtag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election, Electoral system\nThe constituency of Unterland consists of the municipalities of Eschen, Gamprin, Mauren, Ruggell and Schellenberg. The other constituency, Oberland, consists of the municipalities of Balzers, Planken, Schaan, Triesen, Triesenberg and Vaduz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election, Opinion polls\nOn 28 January 2013, the newspaper Liechtensteiner Vaterland published a poll in which they asked their readers, \"Which party conducted the best election campaign?\" About 10,000 people responded, and the results of the poll were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election, Results\nThis was the first election in Liechtenstein in which four different political groups have won seats in the Landtag. The success of The Independents was considered by observers to be a result of protest votes against austerity measures in the country. It was also postulated that greater diversity in the Landtag was a result of a decreased partisanship of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234472-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liechtenstein general election, Results\nPatriotic Union members expressed their disappointment at the result. The VU suffered a large defeat, losing more than a third of its seats. The Progressive Citizens' Party lost one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season\nLiga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito's 2013 season was the club's 83rd year of existence, the 60th year in professional football, and the 52nd in the top level of professional football in Ecuador.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Squad information\nLiga's squad for the season is allowed a maximum of four foreign players at any one time, and a maximum of eight throughout the season. At the start of the season, Liga was mandated to start one under-18 player in each match. The jersey numbers in the main table (directly below) refer to the number on their domestic league jersey. The under-18 players will wear a jersey number of at least #50. For each CONMEBOL competition, Liga must register 25 players, whose jerseys will be numbered 1\u201325. Because of this, some players may have different jersey numbers while playing in CONMEBOL matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Squad information\nNote: Caps and goals are of the national league and are current as of the beginning of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Squad information, Winter transfers\nIn a press conference on December 18, 2012, Liga de Quito announced the signings of Carlos Arboleda of Deportivo Quevedo, Hugo V\u00e9lez of El Nacional and Koob Hurtado of LDU Loja. On the same day, Sporting Kansas City signed with Claudio Bieler as Designated Player. On December 19, 2012, Liga de Quito announced the signings of Carlos Feraud and Marco Mosquera of LDU Loja. On December 20, 2012, Liga de Quito announced the signings of Carlos Garc\u00e9s and Francisco Rojas of Manta FC, Marco Posligua of Pilahuin, Yeison Ord\u00f3\u00f1ez of Independiente Jos\u00e9 Ter\u00e1n and Johao Monta\u00f1o of Deportivo Quito. In the same press conference, Ignacio Canuto was announced as the new foreign player of the team. On January 3, 2013, Liga de Quito announced the signings of Jos\u00e9 Madrid of El Nacional and Luis Saritama of Deportivo Quito.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Squad information, Summer transfers\nOn April 16, 2013, veteran midfielder Patricio Urrutia announced his retirement from professional football. He played his last game on May 23. In a press conference on June 24, 2013, Liga de Quito announced the signing of Jaime Ayov\u00ed for one year on a loan from Club Tijuana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Competitions, Serie A\nThe 2013 season is Liga's 52nd season in the Serie A and their twelfth consecutive. The league season will run from late January to early December. The format is identical to the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Competitions, Copa Libertadores, Copa Libertadores squad\nLDU Quito qualified to the 2013 Copa Libertadores\u2014their 16th participation in the continental tournament\u2014as 3rd place of the 2012 Serie A aggregate table and were given the Ecuador 3 berth. They entered the competition in the First Stage and were placed in Match G2 with Gr\u00eamio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 107], "content_span": [108, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Competitions, Patricio Urrutia testimonial match\nIn honor of his retirement, a testimonial match was held for long-time captain Patricio Urrutia. The match was contested between players of the 2008 Copa Libertadores winning squad, and members of the Ecuadorian national football team. Urrutia played with each team. Important players of the 2008 Copa Libertadores squad as Claudio Bieler, Luis Bola\u00f1os, Joffre Guerr\u00f3n and Diego Calder\u00f3n couldn't participate of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 99], "content_span": [100, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Competitions, Patricio Urrutia testimonial match\nNote 1: Current LDU Quito player, but not part of the 2008 squad. Note 2: Former LDU Quito player, but not part of the 2008 squad. Note 3: Never played with LDU Quito.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 99], "content_span": [100, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234473-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season, Player statistics\nLast updated: December 8, 2013Note: Players in italics left the club mid-season. Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division\nThe 2013 Liga Indonesia First Division season is the eighteenth edition of Liga Indonesia First Division since its establishment in 1995. The competition is managed by PT. Liga Indonesia (LI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division\nPerseka Kaimana is the last season champion version BLAI and Persibangga Purbalingga for LPIS version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division\nThe competition starts on 16 June 2013 and scheduled to finish by September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division\nPS Kwarta Deli Serdang to win the title after defeating Persinga Ngawi with the score 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division, Format\nAs with previous seasons, the competition system used in the First Division this season is a home tournament with a round robin format. League is divided into three groups stage and knock-out round. In the first stage of the club is divided into 12 groups, group winner and runner-up advances to second stage. While the second stage is divided into four groups of six, the winner and runner-up of each group advances to third stage and also promotion to 2014 Premier Division season. In the third round the eight teams that qualify from the second round were divided into two groups of four, while the knockout consist of finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division, First round\nIn this stage 77 teams divided into twelve group (seven group of six and five group of seven). All result for this stage is not complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division, Second round\nIn this stage 24 teams divided into four group of six. This stage scheduled start from 14 to 29 September 2013. Results in the table below are not exhaustive, but the team with the green background has qualified for the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234474-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia First Division, Third round\nIn this stage 8 teams divided into two group of four. This stage scheduled start from 9 to 14 November 2013. Winners of each group advance to the finals to compete for the First Division title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI)\nThe 2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division season is the eighteenth edition of Liga Indonesia Premier Division since its establishment in 1994. The competition is managed by PT. Liga Indonesia (LI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI)\nThis season is the second season of Liga Indonesia Premier Division organised by PT.Liga Indonesia without authorisation from PSSI as it has decided to appoint the new PT. Liga Prima Indonesia Sportindo (LPIS) to organise the competition. It is then recognised by PSSI breakaway leadership under La Nyalla Matalitti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI)\nThe participant initially consists of 37 clubs, Included the four clubs that played last season at DU PT LPIS, PSIS Semarang, PSCS Cilacap, Persikabo Bogor and Persbul Buol, later added to 42 clubs, after 5 clubs, (Persipasi Bekasi, Persik Kediri, PS Madiun Putra, Persewangi Banyuwangi, and PPSM Sakti Magelang) come back from competition that held by PT. LPIS, and divided into five groups. The fixtures were released on 23 January 2013. The season kicked off on 27 January 2013 and the group stage is scheduled to conclude on 23 Juny 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI)\nOn 1 February 2013, PT. Liga Indonesia received resignation PSGL Gayo Lues due to lack of sponsors to support their progress in the competition this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI)\nOn 6 February 2013, PT. Liga Indonesia disqualified PSAB Aceh Besar and Persipasi Bekasi due to administrative reason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI), First round\nThe First round is played from 27 January 2013 to 21 Juny 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI), Second round\nThe 12 teams were drawn into three groups of four. Each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners of each group and one best runners-up advanced to the semi-final. The second round is played from 28 Juny 2013 to 30 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234475-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI), Knockout stage\nFor this season in the knock-out stage, the 4 teams play a single-elimination tournament. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 2 September 2013 at the headquarters of the Football Association of Indonesia. All matches will play in Manahan Stadium in Surakarta, Central Java.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234476-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) Final\nThe 2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division Final is a scheduled football match played on 14 September 2013 at the Manahan Stadium in Surakarta, Indonesia, to determine the winner of 2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division. This round will bring together two of the best teams the East Java club Persebaya DU (Bhayangkara) with his opponent from Papua Perseru Serui. Persebaya DU (Bhayangkara) advanced to the finals after conquering Persikabo Bogor with a score of 4-1, while Perseru overcame Persik Kediri in a shootout with the final score ending 5-4 after extra time when normal and half ended with the score 2-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234476-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) Final\nPersebaya DU (Bhayangkara) claim his first title in Premier Division after defeat Perseru Serui 2-0 in this Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234477-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) knock-out stage\nThe knockout stage of 2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division took place between September 8, 2013 and September 14, 2013 with the final at the Manahan Stadium in Surakarta, Central Java. The draw for the semi-finals took place on 2 September 2013 at the headquarters of the Football Association of Indonesia. To determine which teams who were to be promoted to the Indonesia Super League After the completion of the group stage on 30 August 2013, four teams qualified for the semi-finals (winner from each group and one best runner-up), which were played from 8 September 2013. The Champions, Runner-Up, and the 3rd Place finishers directly qualified to the 2014 Indonesia Super League with the 4th-place finisher qualified via Play-off with the 15th-place finisher of the 2013 Indonesia Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234477-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) knock-out stage, Promotion/Relegation play-off\nNote:(O) = Play-off winner; (P) = Promoted to 2014 Indonesia Super League; (R) = Relegated to 2014 Liga Indonesia Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 88], "content_span": [89, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234478-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) second round\nThe second stage of the 2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) was played from 28 June to 27 August 2013. A total of twelve teams competed in the second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234478-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) second round, Draw\nThe draw for the group stage was held in June 2013, at the Liga Indonesia House in Jakarta, Indonesia. The 12 teams were drawn into three groups of four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 60], "content_span": [61, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234478-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) second round, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners of each group and one best runners-up advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234478-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) second round, Format, Tiebreakers\nThe teams are ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234478-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (LI) second round, Groups\nThe matchdays were 28 June, 2 July, 6 July, 19 August, 24/25 August, and 30 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division\nThe 2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division season is the eighteenth edition of Liga Indonesia Second Division since its establishment in 1995. This season is also the last season of this league before dissolved. The competition is managed by Badan Liga Sepakbola Amatir Indonesia (BLAI, Indonesia Amateur League Board).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division\nPersinab Nabire is the last season champion version BLAI and Nusa Ina FC for LPIS version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division\nThe competition starts on 28 September 2013 and finish on 15 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Format\nAs with previous seasons, the competition system used in the Second Division this season is a home tournament with a round robin format. League is divided into three groups stage and knock-out round. In the first stage of the club is divided into 12 groups, group winner and runner-up advances to second stage. While the second stage is divided into four groups of six, the winner and runner-up of each group advances to third stage and also promotion to 2014 First Division season. In the third round the eight teams that qualify from the second round were divided into two groups of four, while the knockout consist of semi-finals and finals as well as the third place playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, First round\nIn this stage 73 teams divided into twelve group (four group of seven, five group of six and three group of five).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Second round\nIn this stage 24 teams divided into six group of four, kick-off for this round began on 19 November 2013 except Group R which will begin on 24 November 2013. Winner and runner-up of each group advanced to third round and also promoted to First Division next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Second round\nAll match played in Teladan Stadium and TD. Pardede Stadium, Medan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Second round\nAll match played in Krakatau Steel Stadium and Sadag Stadium, Cilegon", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Second round\nAll match played in Gelora Samudera Kuta and Yoga Parkhanti Stadium, Jimbaran", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Second round\nAll match played in Bumi Moro Stadium and Persebaya field, Surabaya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Second round\nAll match played in Mulawarman Stadium and Taman Prestasi Stadium, Bontang", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234479-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Indonesia Second Division, Third round\nIn this stage 12 teams divided into two group of six, kick-off for this round began on 5 to 11 December 2013. Winner from each group qualify for the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla\nThe Liguilla (English: Mini League) of the 2013 Liga MX Clausura is the final knockout tournament involving eight teams of Liga MX. The tournament began on 8 May 2013 and will end on 26 May 2013. The winners and runners-up of the competition will qualify for the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Teams\nThe eight best teams in the general table qualified for the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Bracket\nThe eight qualified teams play two games against each other on a home-and-away basis. The winner of each match up is determined by aggregate score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Bracket\nThe teams were seeded one to eight in quarterfinals, and will be re-seeded one to four in semifinals, depending on their position in the general table. The higher seeded teams play on their home field during the second leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs of the quarterfinals were played on May 8 and 9. The second legs were played on May 11 and 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Quarter-finals\nKickoffs are given in local time (UTC-5 unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Semi-finals\nThe first legs of the semifinals will be played on May 15 and May 16. The second legs will be played on May 18 and 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Semi-finals\nKickoffs are given in local time (UTC-5 unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Final\nThe first leg of the final will be played on May 23, the second leg on May 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234480-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga MX Clausura Liguilla, Final\nKickoffs are given in local time (UTC-5 unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234481-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Nacional Juvenil de Voleibol Femenino\nThe 2013 Liga Nacional Juvenil de Voleibol Femenino (Spanish for: 2013 Women's Junior National Volleyball League) or 2013 LNJVF is the 3rd edition of the Peruvian Volleyball League in the junior category (U19). The competition is open for all 12 teams who have the A1 category in the LNSV, for this season 11 out of the 12 teams signed up. Teams were made up of U19 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234481-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Nacional Juvenil de Voleibol Femenino, Competing Teams\nTeams were seeded according to how they finished in the 2013 Youth Edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234481-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Nacional Juvenil de Voleibol Femenino, Competition format\nThe competition is divided in two phases, the group round in which teams are divided into two groups and they will play once against the other teams in the same pool, after the first round is finished, the top three teams will move on to the next round. The final round is a single round-robyn with all six teams playing one against the other 5, including the teams that had already played each other in the group round, the top team ranking wise will be named champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234482-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Nacional Menor de Voleibol Femenino\nThe 2012 Liga Nacional Menores de Voleibol Femenino (Spanish for: 2012 Girls' Youth National Volleyball League) or 2012 LNMVF is the 1st edition of the Peruvian Volleyball League in the youth category (U17). The competition is open for all 12 teams who have the A1 category in the LNSV, for this season 11 out of the 12 teams signed up. Teams were made up of U17 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234482-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Nacional Menor de Voleibol Femenino, Competing Teams\nTeams were seeded according to how they finished in the 2012 Junior Edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234482-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Nacional Menor de Voleibol Femenino, Competition format\nThe competition is divided in two phases, the group round in which teams are divided into two groups and they will play once against the other teams in the same pool, after the first round is finished, the top three teams will move on to the next round. The final round is a single round-robyn with all six teams playing one against the other 5, including the teams that had already played each other in the group round, the top team ranking wise will be named champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234483-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Nacional de F\u00fatbol de Puerto Rico\nThe 2013 Liga Nacional de F\u00fatbol de Puerto Rico is the fifth season of Puerto Rico's top-division football league. The regular season ran from April to September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234484-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liga Super goalscorers\nThis is the list of 2013 Malaysia Super League goalscorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234485-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ligas Superiores del Peru\nThe 2013 Ligas Superiores, the fifth division of Peruvian football (soccer), was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234486-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ligue 1 (Senegal)\nThe 2013 Ligue 1 season was the 50th of the competition of the first-tier football in Senegal and the fifth professional season. The tournament was organized by the Senegalese Football Federation. The season began on 13 January and finished earlier on 19 August and it was a season that competed through a single year. It was the fifth season labelled as a \"League\" (\"Ligue\" in French). Diambars FC won their only title, and a year later would compete in the 2014 CAF Champions League. ASC Diaraf the winner of the 2013 Senegalese Cup participated in the 2014 CAF Confederation Cup the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234486-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ligue 1 (Senegal), Overview\nThe season would have feature 16 clubs, this time the winner would be decided on a club with the highest number of points after all thirty matches had been finished. The clubs would be reduced to 14 in the following season as four clubs were relegated in the season. The season had a total of 240 matches, 385 goals were scored in the season, almost double than the previous season. Diambars scored the highest 42 goals, the lowest scored was ASC Assur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234486-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ligue 1 (Senegal), Overview\nUS Ouakam again was the defending team of the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234486-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ligue 1 (Senegal), Overview\nIt was the only time as two clubs shared the same results and were Niarry Tarry and Tour\u00e9 Kunda Foot-Pro, they finished 8th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK season\nThe 2013 season was Lillestr\u00f8m's 37th consecutive year in Tippeligaen and their second with Magnus Haglund as manager. They finished 10th in the league and were knocked out of the cup at the Semi-Final stage by Molde.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK season, Season summary\nThe club has had mixed results in the early season, disappointingly drawing with Sarpsborg 08 at home before beating defending champions Molde away from home. Following a 0-1 defeat at \u00c5r\u00e5sen Stadion to Viking, LSK however beat Brann at home to clinch just the fourth win for Magnus Haglund in 17 home games since March 2012. A decent early season was however offset by a dramatic drop in form from the second half of April through May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK season, Season summary\nBarring a 3-2 win against Start, the team underperformed and won just one out of seven games before a 3-0 home victory against Haugesund in the final match before the summer break. Notably, LSK's defence leaked an incredible 16 goals in five matches after losing club captain Frode Kippe to injury in the Start match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK season, Season summary\nLillestr\u00f8m's Swedish coach has been under heavy pressure in the first half of the season, following disappointing results and speculation that club legend St\u00e5le Solbakken might be tempted to take over the reins. Lillestr\u00f8m's dwindling attendances under Magnus Haglund reached a low point in the home match against Haugesund. The attendance in that match was just 4,106. Attendance-wise, LSK are at a low ebb with an average attendance of just 5,252. The highest average attendance in recent history was 9,018 in the 2007 season. At the time of the summer break, LSK are 9th in the Tippeligaen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK season, Season summary\nLillestr\u00f8m qualified for the fourth round of the Norwegian Cup after beating 2nd division outfit Kvik Halden 2-0 on 30 May. In earlier rounds, LSK beat Skedsmo of the division III 4-0 in the 1st round of the cup, then ousted Grorud (division II) 4-2 after extra time in the 2nd round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK 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-00234487-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234487-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Lillestr\u00f8m SK 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234488-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lima Challenger\nThe 2013 Lima Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Lima, Peru between 11 and 17 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234488-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lima Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234489-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lima Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nFacundo Arg\u00fcello and Agust\u00edn Velotti were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Andr\u00e9s Molteni and Fernando Romboli defeated Marcelo Demoliner and Sergio Gald\u00f3s 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234490-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lima Challenger \u2013 Singles\nGuido Andreozzi was the defending champion, but lost to compatriot Mart\u00edn Alund in the quarterfinals. Top seed Horacio Zeballos won the title defeating Facundo Bagnis 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234491-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship was the 119th staging of the Limerick Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1887. The championship began on 2013 and is ended on 6 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234491-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship\nKilmallock were the defending champions, however, they were defeated in the semi-final stage. Na Piarsaigh won the title following a 0-14 to 0-12 defeat of Adare in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234492-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Linafoot\nThe 2013 Linafoot season (known as the Vodacom Superligue 2013 for sponsorship reasons) was the 52nd edition since its establishment. It began on 20 March 2013 and ended on 23 June 2013. Only the first round was disputed, as halfway into the tournament, the Congolese Association Football Federation (FECOFA) decided to switch to a new competition format, with 'European' style calendar from October to May. The 2013-14 Linafoot was the first edition to be disputed under the new format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234492-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Linafoot\nAll matches played by TC Elima were awarded as 0-3 victories to its opponents after the completion of the tournament, for fielding an ineligible player, Patou Tingo Disasi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234492-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Linafoot, Clubs\nA total of 14 teams are contesting the league, played under a round-robbin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 20], "content_span": [21, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234493-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lincolnshire County Council election\nAn election to Lincolnshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 77 electoral divisions returned one county councillor each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. The electoral divisions were the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in North Lincolnshire or North East Lincolnshire, which are unitary authorities outside the area covered by the County Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234493-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lincolnshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234493-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Lincolnshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234493-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lincolnshire County Council election, Summary\nThe election saw the Conservative Party lose overall control of the council. The party previously enjoyed a sizable majority, holding around three quarters of the seats. After the election, the Conservatives found themselves 6 seats short of an overall majority; the UK Independence Party was the council's second biggest party, with 16 seats. Since the election the Conservative group have negotiated a coalition deal with the Liberal Democrats, whereby there is one Liberal Democrat cabinet member. UKIP replaced the Liberal Democrats as the council's official opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234493-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lincolnshire County Council election, Summary\nUKIP lost six of its councillors to defections shortly after the election, and as a result Labour now form the official opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234494-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lion City Cup\nThe Lion City Cup is one of the oldest and prestigious youth tournaments in the world with its first edition dating back to 1977, organised by The Red Card and co-organised by the national footballing body Football Association of Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234494-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lion City Cup\nThe 25th Lion City Cup, also known as the 25th Canon Lion City Cup due to sponsorship reasons, was held from 8 to 16 June 2013 at the Jalan Besar Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234494-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lion City Cup\nThis year's edition promised more fun and excitement as big names were set to come down to Singapore to battle against the hosts' youth teams. The teams also got to tour around Singapore to better understand the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234494-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lion City Cup, Teams\nThe participating teams usually include other big clubs especially those based in Europe and Singapore's very own National Football Academy (NFA) boys. It served to provide greater exposure for the Baby Cubs. Six teams will compete for the prestigious trophy in this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234494-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lion City Cup, Teams\nThis year, the Under-15 teams of Arsenal F.C., PSV Eindhoven, Eintracht Frankfurt and Corinthians were invited to the tournament. Singapore was represented by the NFA Under-15 and Under-16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234494-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lion City Cup, Teams\nThe six teams are divided into two groups of three, and the top two teams of each group will advance into the semi-finals. They will then compete for the final, and the losers of the semi-finals will play in the 3rd/4th Placing play-off while the last-placed teams in their respective groups will play in the 5th/6th Placing play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season\nThe 2013 season is LionsXII's 2nd season in the Malaysia Super League. LionsXII won their first MSL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season\nLionsXII were set a target of finishing top five for the 2013 Malaysia Super League. Five senior players, namely Shahril Ishak, Isa Halim, Fazrul Nawaz, Irwan Shah and Baihakki Khaizan were included in the 29-men squad to guide the younger players. Other key players such as Shahdan Sulaiman and Shaiful Esah no longer featured. The main aim was to develop the U\u201323 players and prepare them for the upcoming 2013 Southeast Asian Games that would be held at the end of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season, Malaysia Super League\nLionsXII began their campaign by defeating ATM FA 1\u20130 away. Subsequently, they vanquished the nation's traditional rivals Selangor FA. However, LionsXII stumbled to three losses against lowly T-Team FC and PKNS FC away. One sent them crashing out of the 2013 Malaysia FA Cup. In a turn of events, LionsXII went on a long unbeaten streak, securing important wins over Pahang FA (3\u20130), Kelantan FA (1\u20130), and ATM FA (3\u20131) at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season, Malaysia Super League\nOn 2 July 2013, a 4\u20130 win over relegation-threatened FELDA United FC in the penultimate league game made LionsXII league champions. Singapore's Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong was present for the match played in front of a sold-out crowd at the Jalan Besar Stadium. The MSL trophy was also brought to the stadium as the LionsXII received it on home soil after the final whistle. LionsXII became the first foreign team to win the MSL, adding to the four Malaysian league titles it had won in 1979, 1981, 1985, and 1994. The title run was defined by a combination of good defence (15 goals conceded, the best record in the MSL) and goals from set-pieces (17 out of 32). The club chalked up their best home record (10 wins and 1 draw) in the league, making Jalan Besar Stadium a fortress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season, Malaysia Super League\nThe news of V. Sundramoorthy leaving to helm Negeri Sembilan FA was confirmed on 7 October 2013. On 13 October, the Football Association of Singapore posted an advertisement openly to recruit the succeeding LionsXII coach. Former Johor Darul Takzim coach and ex-Singapore international Fandi Ahmad is speculated to take over the position. Other candidates include former Warriors FC coach Richard Bok and Liverpool F.C. stalwart Steve McMahon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season, Malaysia FA Cup\nFollowing inclement weather and a water-logged pitch, the match against PKNS was abandoned in the 38th minute with PKNS leading 1\u20130. The scoreline was reset for the rescheduled match but the teams had to submit the same starting line-ups. LionsXII were forced to bring on two substitutes in Faris Azienuddin and Izzdin Shafiq in the first minute as initial players Faritz Hameed and Shahril Ishak were unavailable. Raihan Rahman was dismissed for a second yellow card in the 24th minute with his first caution from the abandoned match carrying over. Fauzan Dzulkifli scored the only goal in the match to knock the Lions out of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season, Malaysia Cup\nOn 27 July, LionsXII were drawn into Group D for the 2013 Malaysia Cup with Perak FA, Sarawak FA and Kedah FA. They drew Kedah (2\u20132) in Singapore and succumbed to two collapses against Perak (1\u20130) and Sarawak (2\u20131). With those results, they nearly bowed out of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season, Malaysia Cup\nAt that time, coach V. Sundramoorthy was rumoured to leave LionsXII at the end of the season to take charge of Malaysian Premier League side Negeri Sembilan FA.On the contrary, LionsXII eked out three victories (2\u20131 versus Perak, 1\u20130 versus Sarawak and 3\u20131 versus Kedah which marked the biggest away accomplishment of the season) out of the three remaining games to progress to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234495-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 LionsXII season, Malaysia Cup\nOn 28 September, LionsXII narrowed a 1\u20130 victory over ATM FA in the first leg of the quarter-finals of the 2013 Malaysia Cup but squandered to a 1\u20134 mauling to the Gladiators in the return tie on 4 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234496-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lipa local elections\nLocal elections will be held in Lipa City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters will elect for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234496-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lipa local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nIncumbent Mayor Meynardo Sabili decided to run for reelection under the Liberal Party. He was elected as Mayor in 2010 defeating then incumbent Oscar L. Gozos despite his disqualification due to his residency. Sabili is from San Juan, Batangas, but it is stated in his certificate of candidacy that Sabili was a registered voter in Pinagtongulan. His running mate is councilor Eric Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234496-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lipa local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nOne of Sabili's opponents is the outgoing Vice Mayor Lydio Lopez, Jr.(running under the [United Nationalist Alliance])whose running mate is the Chairman of Barangay Antipolo del Sur and incumbent Liga ng mga Barangay President Marlon Luancing. Another opponent is the top councilor of Lipa (from the 2010 Elections), Merlo Silva running with incumbent three-time Lipa City councilor Avior Rocafort both under the party PMP (Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino) centering their platforms on the general masses or the marginalized populace of the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234496-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lipa local elections, Candidates, City Council election\nVoting is via plurality-at-large voting: Voters vote for ten (10) candidates and the ten candidates with the highest number of votes are elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234496-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lipa local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234496-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lipa local elections, Results, City Council election\nVoting is via plurality-at-large voting: Voters vote for ten (10) candidates and the ten candidates with the highest number of votes are elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour\nThe 2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour was an endurance race for a variety of GT and touring car classes, including: GT3 cars, GT4 cars, Group 3E Series Production Cars and Dubai 24 Hour cars. The event, which was staged at the Mount Panorama Circuit, near Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia, on 10 February 2013, was the eleventh running of the Bathurst 12 Hour. The race also incorporated the opening round of the 2013 Australian GT Championship. The Australian GT Championship was to compete as the first hour only and cars were permitted to enter for only that hour or to cross-enter for both the first hour and continue for the endurance race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour\nThere were 53 starters in the race, the largest field since the Bathurst 12 Hour event moved to GT orientation in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour, Class structure\nClasses D & E were open to Group 3E Series Production Cars and Class I was for cars complying with the regulations for the 2013 Dubai 24 Hour race. There was also a provision for teams competing in the Australian GT Championship to race for the first 55 minutes of the race only, to compete for GT Championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour, Qualifying\nTwo qualifying sessions were run on Saturday 9 February with Danish driver Allan Simonsen setting the fastest time of 2:05.49 in the Maranello Motorsport entered Ferrari 458 GT3. However, as penalties are applied for lap times recorded under 2:06 minutes to provide a form of parity, the car lost the lap time and acquired a 50\u00a0kg penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour, Race\nDriving a Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG for Erebus Motorsport, Germans Thomas J\u00e4ger, Alexander Roloff and former Formula One driver Bernd Schneider were the winners, covering 268 laps. The Ferrari 458 GT3 of Craig Baird, Matt Griffin and Weng Sun Mok finished a lap behind in second, with Griffin setting the fastest lap of the race with a lap of 2:06.8714. Finishing in third place was the VIP Petfoods Porsche 997 GT3-R of Matt Kingsley, Klark Quinn and Shane van Gisbergen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour, Race\nA late afternoon rain storm caused havoc in the field as it started suddenly and most cars took a few laps to pit for wet weather tyres. Shane van Gisbergen, driving the Quinn Porsche, excelled in the wet conditions, passing several drivers across the top of the circuit despite the conditions. There were a number of safety cars in the wet conditions which caused the leaders to close up, with slower, lapped cars mixed in between. At one restart the #63 Erebus Motorsport SLS, which had been in contention for most of the race, clipped a lapped car and damaged the steering. The car was repaired but lost multiple laps, eventually finishing in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour, Race\nEarly in the day the two Aston Martins, Tony Quinn's DBRS9 in GT3 Class A, and the St Gallen Vantage GT4 of Baenziger, Kamelger and Porritt in Class C, had a coming together at the top of Conrod Straight. Quinn's race was ended and the Vantage GT4 recommenced racing, albeit several laps down. The #22 FPV FG GT of Robinson Racing Developments broke a supercharger pulley late in the day. The car was repaired using a part taken off a road car belonging to a crowd member, allowing the team to finish the race. The car recommenced racing in the last five laps and the team returned the borrowed part following the end of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234497-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Liqui Moly Bathurst 12 Hour, Official result\n\u2013 Tony Quinn was unable to drive in the race following a crash during the first hour of the race. He was replaced by Matt Kingsley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl\nThe 2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl is an American college football bowl game that was played on December 26, 2013 at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. The 17th edition of Little Caesars Pizza Bowl featured the Pittsburgh Panthers from the Atlantic Coast Conference against the Bowling Green Falcons from the Mid-American Conference. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl\nPittsburgh defeated Bowling Green by a score of 30\u201327. Pittsburgh running back James Conner, who rushed for 229 yards, was named the game's most valuable player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl\nThe game was the final edition of the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl; it was displaced by the Quick Lane Bowl, organized by the Detroit Lions, beginning in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Teams\nThe 2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl marked the fourth time Pittsburgh and Bowling Green have played each other. Because Pittsburgh was not selected for one of the ACC's seven contractual bowl tie-ins and with the Big Ten having just seven bowl-eligible teams and not able to send a team to the Little Caesar's Pizza Bowl, Pittsburgh was selected. Pittsburgh came into the game holding a 2\u20131 lead in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Teams, Pittsburgh\nIn the Panthers' first season in the ACC, Pittsburgh finished 6th in the Coastal Division with a 6\u20136 (3\u20135 conference) record. The Panthers' offense was led by wide receivers Devin Street (who was unable to play in the game due to injuries) and Tyler Boyd, as well as senior quarterback Tom Savage. Pittsburgh's defense was led by All-American defensive tackle Aaron Donald, who entered the game with 10 sacks on the season. The Panthers were coached by Paul Chryst.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Teams, Bowling Green\nBowling Green entered the game as the Mid-American Conference champions. The Falcons finished 1st in the MAC East Division with a 10\u20133 (7\u20131 conference) record. In the 2013 MAC Championship Game, BGSU defeated Northern Illinois 47\u201327 to spoil the Huskies' BCS hopes. The Falcons' offense was led by quarterback Matt Johnson, who entered the game with 3,195 passing yards and 23 passing touchdowns. BGSU's defense led the MAC in scoring, rushing, passing and total defense. The Falcons were coached by Adam Scheier, who took over head coaching duties after Dave Clawson agreed to become the head coach at Wake Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Game summary\nBGSU scored first on a 28-yard field goal from Tyler Tate. Pittsburgh responded on the next drive with a 15-yard James Conner touchdown run to take a 7\u20133 lead. In the second quarter, Pittsburgh expanded their lead to 10\u20133 after Chris Blewitt kicked a 25-yard field goal. Pittsburgh took a 17\u20133 lead after the Panthers' Tyler Boyd returned a punt 54-yards for a touchdown. On the ensuing drive, Bowling Green looked like it would have to punt inside their own 30-yard line after Matt Johnson was sacked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Game summary\nHowever, an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty was called on Pittsburgh defensive tackle Aaron Donald, giving the Falcons a first down. Bowling Green would later score on the drive on a 29-yard touchdown pass from Matt Johnson to Alex Bayer to make it 17\u201310. The game remained 17\u201310 going into the half. Pittsburgh quarterback Tom Savage suffered a rib injury in the first half of the game and was unable to play in the second half. Savage was replaced by Chad Voytik for the second half of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Game summary\nBowling Green tied the game 17\u201317 on the first play in the second half with a 94-yard kickoff return by BooBoo Gates. On the following Pittsburgh drive, the Panthers drove to Bowling Green's 21-yard line. However, Pittsburgh was unable to take the lead when Chris Blewitt missed a 39-yard field goal. On the subsequent drive, Bowling Green drove to Pittsburgh's 28-yard line and took a 20\u201317 lead on a 46-yard field goal from Tyler Tate. On the subsequent drive, Pittsburgh tied the game 20\u201320 with a 28-yard field goal from Chris Blewitt. The game remained tied 20\u201320 going into the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Game summary\nPittsburgh took 27\u201320 lead on a 5-yard touchdown run from Chad Voytik. On the subsequent Bowling Green drive, the Falcons tied the game 27\u201327 with a 15-yard touchdown pass from Matt Johnson to Ryan Burbrink with 4:42 left in the game. Pittsburgh retook the lead on a 39-yard field goal from Chris Blewitt with 1:17 remaining in the game. Bowling Green had one final chance to tie or win the game. However, after the Falcons committed a holding penalty and Matt Johnson was sacked on back-to-back plays, the Falcons needed to convert a 4th and 40 situation to continue the drive. The Falcons were unable to convert, however, sealing the victory for Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Statistics\nPittsburgh running back James Conner was named the game's most valuable player. Conner rushed for 229 yards on 26 carries and had one rushing touchdown. Conner also broke the Pittsburgh bowl record for yards rushing, a record that was once held by Tony Dorsett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Statistics\nPittsburgh outgained Bowling Green 487\u2013289 in total yards. The Falcons had 279 receiving yards, but were held to only 10 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Statistics\nTyler Boyd was Pittsburgh leading receiver, who had 8 catches for 173 yards. With his performance, Boyd also broke the Pittsburgh record for most receiving yards by a freshman, a record that was once held by Larry Fitzgerald. Tom Savage was Pittsburgh leading passer, completing 8 of his 13 passes for 124 yards. Chad Voytik, who played in the second half after Savage was injured, completed 5 of his 9 passes for 108 yards. Voytik was also Pittsburgh's second leading rusher, rushing twice for 24 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234498-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Statistics\nBowling Green's leading receiver was Shaun Joplin, who had 6 catches for 86 yards. Heath Jackson was the Falcons' second leading receiver, catching 5 passes for 78 yards. Bowling Green quarterback Matt Johnson completed 20 of his 32 passes for 272 yards and 2 touchdowns. The Falcons' leading rusher was Travis Greene, who rushed for 39 yards on 18 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot\nThe 2013 Little India riot took place on 8 December 2013 after a fatal accident occurred at SST 21:23 at the junction of Race Course Road and Hampshire Road in Little India, Singapore, causing angry mobs of passersby to attack the bus involved and emergency vehicles that had by then arrived at the location. About 300 migrant labourers were involved in the riot which lasted for around two hours. This was the second riot in post-independence Singapore, and the first in 44 years since the 1969 race riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Riot\nThe riot continued for approximately two hours, and the situation was brought under control before midnight. Officers from the Special Operations Command (SOC) and Gurkha Contingent were deployed. An estimated 300 police officers were dispatched to deal with the rioting. A witness reported that rioters at the scene were intoxicated with alcohol and threw beer bottles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Riot\nBy 23:45, all rioters had dispersed to the surrounding areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Aftermath\nTwenty-five emergency vehicles were damaged in the riots, alongside five that were set on fire. Video footage uploaded on the Internet shows rioters pushing police cars on their sides and setting an ambulance on fire. 39 police, four civil defence and auxiliary officers were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Aftermath\nEarly estimates put the number of rioters at 400, later reduced to 300 in the aftermath of the riot. The Singapore Police Force dispatched 300 riot police. The police made 27 arrests in relation to the riots. In a police statement released to the media on 9 December, it was specified that of those arrested, 24 were migrant labourers from India, two were migrant labourers from Bangladesh and one was a Singaporean permanent resident. Subsequent investigations revealed that the two Bangladeshis and the Singaporean permanent resident were not involved in the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Aftermath\nFrom 11 to 14 December 2013, nine more labourers from Tamil Nadu were similarly charged in court for their involvement in the riot. Three were charged on 11 December, four on 12 December, and two on 14 December, bringing the total charged to 33. On 10 February 2014, an Indian construction worker was sentenced to 15 weeks imprisonment on charges related to riots. On 2 October 2014, a man was sentenced to 25 months imprisonment with three strokes of the cane for flipping a police car. On 2 December 2014, a construction worker was sentenced to a year's imprisonment for assaulting a police officer during the riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Aftermath\nIn addition, 53 workers were deported for offences ranging from obstructing the police to failing to follow police orders to disperse, while 200 workers received formal advisories to obey the law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Aftermath\nThe riot eventually led to the implementation of a new law, the Liquor Control (Supply and Consumption) Act in 2015 banning consumption of alcohol in all public places from 10:30\u00a0pm to 7\u00a0am. This also included banning the sales of alcohol products such as Rum and Raisin ice cream between the time periods, which was lifted in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Investigation\nAccording to a statement from the Singapore Police Force, the riots broke out shortly after a fatal road traffic accident between a private bus and a pedestrian at 21:23 SST, at the junction of Race Course Road and Hampshire Road. The victim was identified as Sakthivel Kumaravelu, a 33-year-old construction worker from Tamil Nadu, India. Sakthivel succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead at the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Investigation\nThe Singapore authorities commissioned a Committee of Inquiry to study the reasons for the riot and its handling, as well as to review the government's management of areas where foreign workers congregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Investigation\nThe 55-year-old Singaporean bus driver who caused the fatal traffic accident was not found to be at fault, and was acquitted. The subsequent riots that led to the 27 arrests were classified by the Singapore police under rioting with dangerous weapons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Investigation\nPreliminary investigations found that Sakthivel, while intoxicated, attempted to board the private bus, which was believed to be ferrying foreign workers to the Avery Lodge dormitory. The bus driver requested assistance from a female time-keeper, who was from the Singapore School Transport Association and was responsible for handling transport arrangements, to get Sakthivel to alight, as the latter was causing trouble. The accident occurred shortly after Sakthivel alighted from the bus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Reactions, Domestic\nSingapore's Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong, stated that the police will \"spare no effort to identify the culprits and deal with them with the full force of the law\". Later, he told Singaporeans to refrain from negative comments against migrant workers. The country's Deputy Prime Minister, Teo Chee Hean, similarly stated that no effort will be spared in capturing the perpetrators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Reactions, Domestic\nThen Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew, who was also a member of parliament for that district, wrote on Facebook that he would consider limiting the sale of liquor within Little India. A temporary ban on the sale and consumption of alcohol in Little India was in effect during the weekend of 14\u201315 December; followed by an extension of the ban for 6 months until 24 June 2014 and covered mostly parts of the Central Business District. Since May 2014, a total ban of alcohol with closing of night schools and limitation of nightlife areas took effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Reactions, Domestic\nThe incident has also raised debate online by Singaporeans on the issues of overcrowding and increasing numbers of migrant workers in Singapore. It also highlighted ongoing ethnic tensions within Singapore, rising income inequality, the country's heavy reliance on foreign labour, and the working conditions of migrant workers. The Singapore authorities have called for calm and warned against speculations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Reactions, Domestic\nMainstream media outlets praised and made public appeals to trace a man and other bystanders who attempted to stop the riots, which was captured on video and uploaded to YouTube. The man in the video footage was initially identified as Thangaval Govindarasu, 38, from Tamil Nadu, after he came forward following appeals for the identity of the man. However, he later claimed he was not the man in the video, although he did attempt to stop the rioting. A coffee shop owner in Little India later claimed that he recognised the man in the footage as a regular customer from Chennai. However, he declined to divulge the name of the customer, and stated he is unaware of where the man worked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Reactions, International\nBangladesh \u2013 Bangladesh's High Commissioner to Singapore, Mahbubuz Zaman, was reported as saying that \"the news reports that appeared on a section of media and news involving a Bangladeshi worker is not based on facts\", and called for the co-operation of the Bangladeshi community with the Singapore authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234499-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Little India riot, Reactions, International\nIndia \u2013 A news report by India's Sun TV on 9 December 2013 attracted strong reactions and controversy in Singapore for erroneously reporting that the deceased was pushed out of the bus by the driver, as well as attacked by locals. In response to protests from Lim Thuan Kuan, Singapore's High Commissioner to India, Sun TV issued a correction the following day and apologised for the error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234500-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Intermediate World Series, Teams\nEach team that competes in the tournament will come out of one of the 10 regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234501-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series\nThe 2013 Little League Softball World Series was held in Portland, Oregon from August 8 to August 14, 2013. Six teams from the United States and four from throughout the world competed for the Little League Softball World Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234501-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series, Teams\nEach team that competes in the tournament will come out of one of the 10 regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification\nAll the qualified teams qualify for the 2013 Little League Softball World Series in Portland, Oregon", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, United States, Central\nThe tournament took place in Indianapolis, Indiana from July 20\u201325.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, United States, East\nThe tournament took place in Bristol, Connecticut from July 19\u201326.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, United States, Southeast\nThe tournament took place in Warner Robins, Georgia from July 25\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 80], "content_span": [81, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, United States, Southwest\nThe tournament took place in Waco, Texas from July 25\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 80], "content_span": [81, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, United States, West\nThe tournament took place in San Bernardino from July 19\u201326.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, United States, Oregon District #4\nThe tournament took place in Portland, Oregon at Alpenrose Dairy from July 15\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 89], "content_span": [90, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, International, Canada\nThe tournament took place in Victoria, British Columbia from August 1\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 77], "content_span": [78, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, International, Europe and Africa\nThe tournament took place in Caronno Pertusella, Italy from July 10\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234502-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League Softball World Series qualification, International, Latin America\nThe tournament took place in Maunabo, Puerto Rico from July 10\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234503-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series\nThe 2013 Little League World Series was held in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania, from August 15 until August 25. Eight teams from the United States and eight from throughout the world competed in the 67th edition of this tournament. The Musashi-Fuch\u016b Little League of Tokyo, Japan, defeated the Eastlake Little League of Chula Vista, California, 6\u20134 in the championship game. For the country of Japan, this was their ninth LLWS championship overall, second consecutive, and the third in four years. This was the last World Series to feature players born in the 20th century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234503-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series, Tournament changes\nIt was announced on August 29, 2012 that three of the eight international regions had been realigned. The results of the realignment included Australia having its own region, meaning that the national champion of that country would be given a berth into the Little League World Series. Also, teams from Middle Eastern countries (except Israel and Turkey) would compete to qualify with teams in the Asia-Pacific Region to form the Asia-Pacific and Middle East region. Teams from Africa would compete to qualify with teams from Europe to form the Europe and Africa region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234503-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series, Results\nThe drawing to determine the opening round pairings took place on June 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234503-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series, Results, Crossover games\nTeams that lose their first two games get to play a crossover game against a team from the other side of the bracket that also lost its first two games. These games are labeled Game A and Game B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234503-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series, Results, Consolation game\nThe consolation game is played between the loser of the United States championship and the loser of the International championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234503-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series, No-hitter\nGrant Holman of the Eastlake Little League (Chula Vista, CA) tossed a no-hitter in the sixth game of the tournament against Grosse Pointe, Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234503-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series, Champion's path\nThe Musashi Fuch\u016b LL reached the LLWS by winning all eight of their Tokyo and national tournament games. In total, they went undefeated with a 13\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification\nQualification for the 2013 Little League World Series took place in eight United States regions and eight international regions from June through August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Great Lakes\nThe tournament took place in Indianapolis, Indiana from August 3\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Mid-Atlantic\nThe tournament took place in Bristol, Connecticut from August 2\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Midwest\nThe tournament took place in Indianapolis, Indiana from August 2\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Midwest\nNote: North Dakota and South Dakota are organized into a single Little League district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, New England\nThe tournament took place in Bristol, Connecticut from August 2\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Northwest\nThe tournament took place in San Bernardino, California from August 2\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Southeast\nThe tournament took place in Warner Robins, Georgia from August 2\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Southwest\nThe tournament took place in Waco, Texas from August 2\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, United States, West\nThe tournament took place in San Bernardino, California from August 2\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Asia-Pacific and Middle East\nThe tournament took place in the Philippines from July 1\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 90], "content_span": [91, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Asia-Pacific and Middle East\n1 Republic of China, commonly known as Taiwan, due to complicated relations with People's Republic of China, is recognized by the name Chinese Taipei by majority of international organizations including Little League Baseball (LLB). For more information, please see Cross-Strait relations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 90], "content_span": [91, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Australia\nThe tournament took place in Gold Coast, Queensland on June 1\u20135. The top two teams in each pool advance to the elimination round, where they are seeded one through eight based on overall record. The \"runs against ratio\" (RAR) is used as the tiebreaker. It is calculated by the number of runs scored against a team, divided by the number of defensive innings the team played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Canada\nThe tournament took place in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia on August 2\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Caribbean\nThe tournament took place in Bonaire, Netherlands (formerly part of the Netherlands Antilles) from July 13\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Europe and Africa\nThe tournament took place in Kutno, Poland from July 13\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Europe and Africa\nNote: No Ugandan team was able to participate in the tournament, due to the fact that some players from the previous year's Lugazi squad moved and played with the Allen VR school, the team who won this year's Ugandan tournament. Little League rules allow this in the United States, but it is not allowed in Uganda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Japan\nThe first two rounds of the tournament were held on June 30, and the remaining two rounds were played on July 7. All games were played in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Latin America\nThe tournament took place in Guayaquil, Ecuador from July 20\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234504-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series qualification, International, Mexico\nThe tournament took place in Reynosa, Tamaulipas from July 8\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234505-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Little League World Series results\nThe results of the 2013 Little League World Series were determined between August 15 and August 25, 2013 in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania. 16 teams were divided into two groups, one with eight teams from the United States and another with eight international teams, with both groups playing a modified double-elimination tournament. In each group, the last remaining undefeated team faced the last remaining team with one loss, with the winners of those games advancing to play for the Little League World Series championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234506-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge\nThe 2013 Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge was the 99th running of Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge, a single-day cycling race. It was held on 21 April 2013 over a distance of 261.5 kilometres (162.5 miles) and it was the thirteenth race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season. The race was won by Dan Martin of Garmin\u2013Sharp after he placed a late attack out of a group led by his teammate Ryder Hesjedal, to catch and eventually distance Joaquim Rodr\u00edguez who had to settle for second, while Alejandro Valverde won the sprint for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234506-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge, Teams\nAs Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge is a UCI World Tour event, all 19 UCI ProTeams were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad. Six other squads were given wildcard places into the race, and as such, will formed the event's 25-team peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234507-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lombard regional election\nThe Lombard regional election of 2013 took place on 24 and 25 February 2013 and was the first snap election in Lombard political history, and the first one paired with a general election. The 10th term of the Regional Council was chosen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234507-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lombard regional election, Electoral law\nLombardy used for the first time its own legislation to elect its Council, very similar to national Tatarella Law of 1995. The new electoral law was adopted before the resignation of 74 members of the Council on October 26, 2012. While the President of Lombardy and the leader of the opposition are still elected at-large, 78 councillors, instead of 64 as it was before, are elected by party lists under a form of semi-proportional representation. The winning coalition receives a jackpot of at least 45 seats, which are divided between all majority parties using the D'Hondt method, as it happens between the losing lists. Each party then distributes its seats to its provincial lists, where candidates are openly selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234507-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lombard regional election, Campaign\nOn 16 October 2012, Formigoni announced the dissolution of the regional legislature after one of his commissioners, Domenico Zambetti of the PdL was arrested on accusations he bought votes from the 'Ndrangheta in 2010 and extorted favours and public building contracts, including construction tenders for the World Expo 2015 in Milan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234507-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lombard regional election, Campaign, Center-left primary election, 2012\nOn 15 December 2012 the center-left primary election took place to decide the official candidate of the coalition in the election. There were three candidates: Umberto Ambrosoli, son of Giorgio killed in 1979, Alessandra Kustermann and Andrea Di Stefano. Umberto Ambrosoli received the 57% of the votes and became the center-left official candidate for the regional election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234507-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lombard regional election, Results\nAccording to the final results, Roberto Maroni was the new President of Lombardy with more than 40% of the votes, obtaining the greater bonus given by the electoral law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234508-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 London Broncos season\nThe 2013 London Broncos season was the thirty-fourth in the club's history and their eighteenth season in the Super League. Competing in Super League XVIII, the club was coached by Tony Rea, finishing in 13th place and reaching the Semi Finals of the 2013 Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234508-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 London Broncos season\nIt was the 18th season of the Super League era and their second since returning to the London Broncos name. They came within one match of the Challenge Cup final but finished the Super League season in second to last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234509-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 London Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 London Grand Prix Gold was the twelfth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in The Copper Box Arena, London, England October 1 until October 6, 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon\nThe 2013 London Marathon was the 33rd running of the annual marathon race in London, England, which took place on Sunday, 21 April. The men's elite race was won by Ethiopia's Tsegaye Kebede and the women's race was won by Kenyan Priscah Jeptoo. Australian Kurt Fearnley won the men's wheelchair race, while American Tatyana McFadden won the women's wheelchair race with a new course record of 1:46:02.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon\nAround 167,449 people applied to enter the race: 48,323 had their applications accepted and 34,631 started the race. A total of 34202 runners, 22,136 men and 12,066 women, finished the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon\nIn the under-17 Mini Marathon, the 3-mile able-bodied and wheelchair events were won by Alex George (14:34), Bobby Clay (16:24), Will Smith (12:41) and Jade Jones (12:39).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon, Pre-race\nAfter the Boston Marathon bombings six days before the London Marathon, organisers issued a statement announcing that the event's security\u2014which is jointly planned with the Metropolitan Police\u2014would be reviewed. On 16 April, Minister for Sport Hugh Robertson announced that the event would go ahead as planned, stating that he was \"absolutely confident\" that organisers can \"keep the event safe and secure.\" Forty percent more police officers were deployed to manage the race than in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon, Race description\nThe 2013 London Marathon began with a 30-second moment of silence in honour of the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings. Many runners also wore black ribbons on the encouragement of race organisers. Organisers also pledged to donate US$3 to a fund for Boston Marathon victims for every person who finished the race. The weather was ideal for racing, drawing 700,000 fans and raising the prospect of a world record time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon, Race description\nThrough the halfway mark of the men's race, the leaders were on world record pace. At that point, Great Britain's Mo Farah withdrew from the race, as he had planned. The pace dropped off after that and Emmanuel Mutai of Kenya built a large lead. In the final kilometre of the race, Tsegaye Kebede of Ethiopia surged past Mutai to win the men's marathon with a time of two hours, six minutes and four seconds. Ayele Abshero of Ethiopia finished third. 2012 Olympic champion Stephen Kiprotich of Uganda took sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon, Race description\nAt the 15-kilometre (9.3\u00a0mi) mark, the women's elite leaders converged with men's wheelchair racers at a water station. Ethiopia's Tiki Gelana, who won the marathon at the 2012 Olympics in London, and Canadian wheelchair racer Josh Cassidy collided as she attempted to cut in front of him to get water. She returned to the race, but fell off the pace in clear pain. Priscah Jeptoo of Kenya pulled away from the lead group of three when she ran a 5-minute, 11-second 21st mile. She won the women's race with a time of two hours, 20 minutes and 15 seconds. \"Today I'm very, very happy, I couldn't believe I could be the winner,\" Jeptoo remarked. Edna Kiplagat of Kenya and Yukiko Akaba of Japan finished second and third respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon, Race description\nIn the men's wheelchair race, Kurt Fearnley of Australia won an eight-way sprint to the finish to win with a time of 1:31:29. He credited a new training regimen for his win and remarked \"I realised last year that at the last 300\u00a0m (980\u00a0ft) if someone's got that extra bit of power up their sleeve they beat you every time.\" Marcel Hug of Switzerland took second and Ernst van Dyk from South Africa finished third. Pre -race favourite and six-time winner David Weir of Great Britain finished fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 London Marathon, Race description\nCassidy, who dropped out of the race after the crash, had harsh words for the race organisers. \"I don't know who's responsible, but every year we come to overtake the women, there's 10 chairs going at 20\u00a0mph (32\u00a0km/h) and the poor women are scrambling to find their feet,\" he said. \"I have a brand new $2,000 pair of wheels that are damaged, who's going to pay for them? Things have to change.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234510-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 London Marathon, Race description\nAmerican Tatyana McFadden won the women's wheelchair race with a new course record of 1:46:02. Fellow American Amanda McGrory finished second and Sandra Graf of Switzerland took third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234511-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 London Sevens\nThe 2013 London Sevens was the seventh edition of the rugby union tournament and the final stage of the 2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series and was hosted at Twickenham Stadium in London, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234511-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 London Sevens, Format\nThe teams were divided into pools of four teams, who played a round-robin within the pool. Points were awarded in each pool on the standard schedule for rugby sevens tournaments (though different from the standard in the 15-man game)\u20143 for a win, 2 for a draw, 1 for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234511-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 London Sevens, Format\nFrom the end of the 2012/13 Series, promotion and relegation from core team status came into effect, with a pre-qualifying competition in Hong Kong and a final core team qualifier in London at the ninth and final round of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234511-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 London Sevens, Format\nThe 2013 London Sevens, the final round of the Series, featured two distinct tournaments, and a total of 20 teams. In the first, the top 12-ranked sides in the HSBC Sevens World Series standings after round eight in Glasgow competed for the London title, and final World Series points towards their overall tally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234511-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 London Sevens, Format\nIn the second, the 13th, 14th and 15th-ranked core teams after the Glasgow event competed against five pre-qualified regional teams from Hong Kong, for the three available core team places on the 2013\u201314 IRB Sevens World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234511-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 London Sevens, World Series qualifiers, Knockout stage\nThe winners of the Semifinals, Spain and Scotland, earned core status for the 2013\u201314 IRB Sevens World Series. The losing teams, Portugal and Russia, advanced to the Qualifier Third Place playoff. Portugal won the Qualifier Third Place playoff and therefore became the final team to earn core status next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 59], "content_span": [60, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234512-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Longueuil municipal election\nThe 2013 Longueuil municipal election took place on November 3, 2013, to elect a mayor and city councillors in Longueuil, Quebec, Canada. This is in conjunction with 2013 Quebec municipal elections that was held across the province on the same date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234512-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Longueuil municipal election\nLongueuil City Council voted to reduce the number of councillors from 26 to 15 in time for the 2013 municipal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234513-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lory Meagher Cup\nThe 2013 Lory Meagher Cup was a hurling competition contested by Tier 4 county sides. Warwickshire, Longford, Leitrim and Fermanagh contested the 2013 competition. Tyrone were the defending champions, having won the 2012 competition, but were unable to defend their title as they were promoted to the Nicky Rackard Cup as a result of their victory. Warwickshire won the 2013 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234514-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Angels season\nThe Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim's 2013 season was the franchise's 53rd season and 48th in Anaheim (all of them at Angel Stadium of Anaheim).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season\nThe 2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season was the 124th for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 56th season in Los Angeles. The Dodgers dealt with a series of injuries to key players during the first half of the season and on June 21 were 31\u201342, 9+1\u20442 games back in last place in the NL West. Beginning with a 6\u20131 win over the San Diego Padres on June 22, the return of the injured players, and the emergence of rookie Yasiel Puig, they went 46\u201310 through August 23 as the rest of the division collapsed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season\nOn September 19, they clinched the Western Division title. This was the earliest the Dodgers had ever clinched a title and the largest deficit they had ever overcome to win the division. They opened the playoffs by defeating the Atlanta Braves in the Division Series and advanced to the NL Championship Series. In the National League Championship Series, they lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Offseason, Coaching staff\nThe Dodgers fired hitting coach Dave Hansen after the 2012 season but retained the rest of their coaching staff for 2013. On November 7, the Dodgers hired Mark McGwire to be the new hitting coach. On November 13, the Dodgers promoted bullpen coach Ken Howell to assistant pitching coach and named Chuck Crim as the new bullpen coach. They also named John Valentin as assistant hitting coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Offseason, Departing players\nAfter the 2012 season several Dodgers players became free agents: pitchers Joe Blanton, Randy Choate, Brandon League and Jamey Wright, infielder Adam Kennedy and outfielders Shane Victorino and Bobby Abreu. The Dodgers also declined the 2013 contract options for pitcher Todd Coffey, backup catcher Matt Treanor and outfielder/first baseman Juan Rivera, making them free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Offseason, Player signings\nThe Dodgers began their offseason by re-signing closer Brandon League to a three-year, $22.5 million contract. On December 9, the Dodgers signed pitcher Hyun-jin Ryu to a six-year, $36 million contract after winning his rights from the Hanwha Eagles in the Korea Baseball Organization. The Dodgers, on December 10, signed the top free agent pitcher, Zack Greinke, to a six-year, $147 million contract, the largest ever awarded to a right-handed pitcher. They signed left-handed relief pitcher J. P. Howell to a one-year, $2.75 million contract on January 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Offseason, Trades\nOn December 12, the Dodgers acquired utility player Skip Schumaker from the St. Louis Cardinals for minor league shortstop Jake Lemmerman. On December 19, they traded RHP John Ely to the Houston Astros in exchange for minor league LHP Rob Rasmussen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Spring training\nSpring training began for the Dodgers on February 12, when pitchers and catchers reported to the team's spring training facility at Camelback Ranch in Glendale, Arizona. The Dodgers went into spring training with the lineup fairly set but a few issues remained to be worked out. The Dodgers had eight pitchers Clayton Kershaw, Chad Billingsley, Zach Greinke, Josh Beckett, Chris Capuano, Aaron Harang, Ted Lilly and Hyun-jin Ryu vying for five spots in the starting rotation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Spring training\nSeveral Dodgers players participated in the 2013 World Baseball Classic held during spring training. Kenley Jansen played for the Netherlands, Ronald Belisario for Venezuela, Nick Punto for Italy, Luis Cruz and Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez for Mexico, and Hanley Ram\u00edrez for the Dominican Republic, as well as minor leaguers Andres Santiago and Mario Santiago for Puerto Rico and Felipe Burin for Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Spring training\nIn the WBC Championship game, Ram\u00edrez injured his hand while diving for a ball. An MRI the next day revealed a torn thumb ligament that required surgery. The Dodgers announced that he would miss the first two months of the season while recovering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Spring training\nOne of the big stories of spring training was the play of Cuban defector Yasiel Puig. He hit .526 in Cactus League games and there was talk that he might be able to make the opening day roster, despite being a \"very raw\" talent who had only briefly played in Class-A the year before. However, the club sent him to AA Chattanooga to start the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nThe Dodgers began the regular season at home on April 1 against the San Francisco Giants. Clayton Kershaw made the opening day start for the third straight season and pitched a complete game shutout as the Dodgers won 4\u20130. Kershaw also hit his first career home run in the game, for the Dodgers' first run in the bottom of the 8th. Korean pitcher Hyun-jin Ryu made his Major League debut the following day, allowing three runs (one earned) on 10 hits in 6+1\u20443 innings to pick up the 3\u20130 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nThe Dodgers went 1 for 14 with runners in scoring position in the series finale, and Pablo Sandoval and Hunter Pence hit homers off Josh Beckett as the Giants won 5\u20133. Zack Greinke made his Dodgers debut on April 5, pitching a two-hitter for 6+1\u20443 innings in the Dodgers' 3\u20130 win. Andre Ethier hit a solo homer in the game. In his second start of the season, Kershaw pitched seven shutout innings while striking out nine and only allowing two hits in the 1\u20130 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Dodgers finished off their three-game sweep of the Pirates with a 6\u20132 win on April 7. Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez had four RBI and Ryu picked up his first Major League win in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nThe Dodgers began their first road trip of the season on April 9 at Petco Park against the San Diego Padres. The bullpen allowed 5 runs to score in the bottom of the 8th and the team lost 9\u20133. In Game 2 of the Padres series, Chad Billingsley made his first start of the season and allowed only one run in six innings. Carl Crawford and A. J. Ellis both homered in the 4\u20133 win. The Dodgers won the third game of the series, 3\u20132, thanks to a go-ahead pinch hit home run by Juan Uribe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nHowever, pitcher Zack Greinke injured his left collarbone when Carlos Quentin charged the mound and tackled him to the ground after he was hit by a pitch. Kershaw pitched well again in his next start, against the Arizona Diamondbacks, but the offense failed to score and the team lost 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nRyu struck out nine in six innings in his next start and also went 3 for 3 at the plate as the Dodgers beat the Diamondbacks 7\u20135. Josh Beckett struck out nine in the next game and pitched a complete game, but the offense failed to score and he allowed the game-winning hit by Paul Goldschmidt in the bottom of the ninth of the 1\u20130 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nThe Dodgers returned home on April 15 for a Jackie Robinson Day game against the Padres. Eric Stults hit a three-run homer off Chad Billingsley and the Dodgers again were unable to get key hits and lost 6\u20133. Chris Capuano made his first start of the season on April 16, replacing the injured Zack Greinke in the rotation. He struggled early, allowing four runs in the first inning and then left the game in the top of the third after suffering his own injury, a strained left calf. The Dodgers lost 9\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nKershaw picked up his 1,000th career strikeout when he fanned Yonder Alonso of the Padres in the 2nd inning on April 17. He became the youngest Dodger pitcher to reach that mark since Fernando Valenzuela. However, he struggled after that and the offense again failed to do much as the team lost 7\u20132. The Dodgers were swept at home by the Padres for the first time since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nThe Dodgers were rained out on April 19 at Camden Yards and forced to play a doubleheader the following day against the Baltimore Orioles. Their losing streak extended to six games after they lost both games of the doubleheader. In the first game, Andre Ethier hit a three-run homer in the first to stake the Dodgers to a 4\u20130 lead but Ryu allowed two home runs and the bullpen again failed as the team lost 7\u20135. Manny Machado battered Beckett for a homer, double, single and 4 RBIs in the nightcap as the Orioles won 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nThe Dodgers woes continued when Chad Billingsley was scratched from his scheduled April 20 start and placed on the disabled list due to pain in his elbow. Stephen Fife was recalled from AAA Albuquerque to make the start. The Dodgers did manage to end the six-game losing streak with a 7\u20134 victory in the series finale. Mark Ellis hit two home runs in the Dodgers 7\u20132 victory over the New York Mets at Citi Field on April 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nTed Lilly made his first start of the season the following day and held the Mets to 1 run on 6 hits in 5 innings while striking out 7. Matt Kemp also hit his first home run of the season. However, the Mets tied the game in the bottom of the ninth and then won it with a walk-off grand slam by Jordany Valdespin off of Josh Wall in the bottom of the 10th. The Dodgers got a two-run rally in the top of the ninth on the 25th to pick up a 3\u20132 win over the Mets in the final game of the road trip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nThe Dodgers returned home on April 26 to begin a three-game weekend series with the Milwaukee Brewers. Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez doubled twice and drove in 3 runs in the 7\u20135 victory. Mark Ellis left the game after five innings because of a strained right quad. Fife was placed on the disabled list the next day and Matt Magill was called up from the minors to make his Major League debut. Magill allowed only two runs in 6+2\u20443 innings while striking out seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, April\nHowever, Matt Guerrier allowed two home runs and they lost 6\u20134. Clayton Kershaw struck out 12 while pitching 8 shutout innings and Carl Crawford hit two homers as the Dodgers beat the Brewers 2\u20130 to win the series. Ted Lilly allowed five runs in the first three innings in his next start and Josh Wall allowed seven more in 2 innings of relief as the Dodgers were crushed by the Colorado Rockies 12\u20132. The Dodgers finished April with a 13\u201313 record after Ryu struck out 12 in 6 innings and Hanley Ram\u00edrez homered in his first start of the season after coming off the disabled list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nJosh Beckett fell to 0\u20134 on the season as the Dodgers lost to the Rockies 7\u20133 to start the month of May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nThe Dodgers injury epidemic continued as Hanley Ram\u00edrez, after playing in just four games, injured his hamstring in the May 3 game against the San Francisco Giants at AT&T Park. Clayton Kershaw allowed only 3 hits and 1 run in 7 innings but the Giants won 2\u20131 on a walk-off home run by Buster Posey. The following day, Matt Magill got pounded in his second start, allowing 5 runs in only 1.1 innings. The Dodgers fell behind 6\u20131 but came back to tie the game, partially thanks to Dee Gordon who tripled, stole two bases and scored two runs. However, they wound up losing 10\u20139 on a walk-off home run by Guillermo Quir\u00f3z in the 10th inning. The Giants completed the sweep of the injury-riddled Dodgers the next day, 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nThe team returned home to open a series against the Arizona Diamondbacks. Chris Capuano came off the disabled list to allow six runs in 4+ innings, Carl Crawford misplayed two balls in the outfield and the losing streak hit 5 in a 9\u20132 loss. Paul Goldschmidt hit a two-run homer off Brandon League in the ninth on May 7 to send the Dodgers to their sixth straight loss 5\u20133. This was the second six-game losing streak of the season for the team, the first time that had happened since 1912.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nGoldschmidt hit two more runs the next day as the Diamondbacks won 3\u20132. This was the first time the Dodgers had been swept in consecutive series since 2008. The Dodgers combined for 10 hits on May 10 against the Miami Marlins, including a three-run homer by Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez in the first inning. But it wasn't enough as they lost 5\u20134 to run the losing streak to 8. Hyun-jin Ryu pitched well the next day, allowing only 1 run in 6.2 innings, as the Dodgers snapped their 8-game losing streak with a 7\u20131 win over the Marlins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nAndre Ethier had 4 hits in 4 at-bats and Dee Gordon hit his 2nd career home run in the win. Chris Capuano picked up his first win of the season on Mother's Day as Scott Van Slyke went 2 for 4 with a home run in the Dodgers 5\u20133 win. Matt Kemp picked up his 1,000th career hit in the game, the fifth fastest Dodger to reach that mark. Beckett struggled the next night, allowing 4 runs in only 3 innings of a 6\u20132 loss to the Washington Nationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0016-0003", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nKershaw was back on the mound on May 14, striking out 11 in 8+2\u20443 scoreless innings. Andre Ethier provided a two-run single for the 2\u20130 win. Zack Greinke returned from the disabled list to allow only one run in 5+1\u20443 innings to get a 3\u20131 win over the Nationals in the final game of the homestand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nThe Dodgers went back on the road on May 17 against the Atlanta Braves at Turner Field. Van Slyke hit two home runs in the first game but Paco Rodriguez allowed a grand slam home run to Justin Upton and the Braves won 8\u20135. Chris Capuano pitched well the next day, taking a shutout into the 8th inning but reliever Kenley Jansen allowed back-to-back homers to Evan Gattis and Andrelton Simmons and the team lost again, 3\u20131. The bullpen surrendered the lead again the next night as the Braves completed the sweep with a 5\u20132 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nThe Dodgers traveled to Miller Park for a series against the Milwaukee Brewers next. After 3 straight days of bullpen meltdowns, Clayton Kershaw picked the team up by pitching his 10th career complete game and only allowing 3 hits in a 3\u20131 victory. Ethier and Kemp homered in the win. The team reverted to form the next day as they stranded 14 runners in scoring position and Zack Greinke struggled in a 5\u20132 defeat. The offense finally came alive as the Dodgers wrapped up the road trip with a 9\u20132 win over the Brewers on May 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nThe Dodgers returned home on May 24 for a series against the St. Louis Cardinals amid media speculation that Manager Don Mattingly was in danger of losing his job. The team didn't help his cause as they managed only 3 hits against Lance Lynn and lost 7\u20130. Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez had a homer, double and three RBI in a 5\u20133 victory over the Cardinals the following day. Gonzalez homered and drove in 3 more the next day, but Kershaw had a rough outing allowing four runs, his most all season, in a 5\u20133 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nContinuing his hot streak, Gonzalez was 4 for 4 on May 27 against the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim as the Dodgers came back from a 6\u20131 deficit to win 8\u20137. Hyun-Jin Ryu pitched a complete game shutout and Luis Cruz hit his first home run of the year in a 3\u20130 win over the Angels the following day in the final game of the homestand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, May\nThe Freeway series continued the next night at Angel Stadium, as Jered Weaver held the Dodgers offense in check and the Angels won 4\u20133. The Angels took the finale to the series, 3\u20132, thanks to solid pitching by Jason Vargas and an RBI infield single by Chris Nelson. The Dodgers concluded a tough month of May with a game at Coors Field against the Colorado Rockies. Kershaw pitched seven plus solid innings but Todd Helton two-run homer off closer Brandon League tied the game in the bottom of the ninth. The Dodgers rallied to score two in the tenth for their first extra inning win of the season, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nThe Dodgers began June much the way they ended May. Ronald Belisario allowed a two-run homer to Michael Cuddyer in the seventh to blow the lead and then Dexter Fowler hit a walk-off single off Matt Guerrier in the 10th as the Rockies beat the Dodgers 7\u20136. Matt Magill was called up from the minors to make a spot start on June 2 but he struggled. Magill became the first Major Leaguer since at least 1916 to allow at least nine walks and four homers in the same start as the Dodgers were crushed 7\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nThe Dodgers returned home to play the San Diego Padres. Stephen Fife was the second straight spot starter, allowing one run in 5+1\u20443 innings. Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez and Scott Van Slyke each hit solo homers to account for all the Dodgers runs in the 2\u20131 win. The story of the game however, was the debut of top prospect Yasiel Puig, who went 2 for 4 and threw out a runner at first from the warning track on a double play to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nIn the next game, Puig went 3 for 4 with a double and two home runs to lead the team to a 9\u20137 victory. He was the first Dodger player in history with a multi-homer game in one of his first two games and the first with five RBI in one of his first two games since Spider Jorgensen in 1947. However, he went 0 for 4 with 2 strikeouts in the series finale as Jason Marquis no hit the Dodgers into the sixth inning and the Padres won 6\u20132 to keep the Dodgers in last place in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nZack Greinke pitched seven scoreless innings on June 6 against the Atlanta Braves and Puig continued his hot start by blasting a grand slam home run in the eighth inning to blow open the Dodgers 5\u20130 win. Puig homered again the next day, and became only the second player in the modern era with four homers in his first five games and he tied the Major League record with 10 RBI in his first five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0021-0003", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nHyun-Jin Ryu allowed one run on six hits in 7+2\u20443 innings and the Dodgers won, 2\u20131, when pinch runner Skip Schumaker scored on a wild pitch by Anthony Varvaro in the bottom of the 10th. The Braves won the next day, 2\u20131, as Kris Medlen pitched 6+2\u20443 scoreless innings and hit a solo homer. That was one of two homers allowed by Stephen Fife in the fifth inning. Matt Magill made another emergency start on June 9 as Ted Lilly went back on the disabled list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0021-0004", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nHe walked six and allowed seven runs in 3+2\u20443 innings as the Dodgers lost to the Braves 8\u20131. Clayton Kershaw allowed only one run in seven innings on June 10 against the Arizona Diamondbacks but Brandon League was tagged for four runs in the ninth and the Dodgers lost 5\u20134. Puig had three hits on the day to move his batting average to .500 on the season. He became the first Dodger in history with 16 hits in his first eight games and the first with six multi-hit games in his first eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0021-0005", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nThe Dodgers beat the Diamondbacks the next day as Tim Federowicz three-run double provided the difference in the 5\u20133 win. The game was marred by five hit batters, two bench clearing incidents, and six ejections of players and coaches. The Dodgers ended their homestand with an 8\u20136 loss to the Diamondbacks in 12 innings on June 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nMajor League Baseball on June 14 announced the discipline for the fight between the Dodgers and Diamondbacks that took place a few days prior. Diamondbacks pitcher Ian Kennedy was suspended 10 games and utility player Eric Hinske 5 games, while Dodgers utility player Skip Schumaker and relief pitcher J. P. Howell were suspended two games and Ronald Belisario one. In addition manager Don Mattingly and hitting coach Mark McGwire were suspended as well and several players were fined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nThe Dodgers began a roadtrip at PNC Park on June 14 but the woes continued as Jeff Locke tossed seven shutout innings and the Pittsburgh Pirates won 3\u20130. The next day, Kershaw allowed only one run and three hits in seven innings, while striking out eight. However, the bullpen coughed up the lead yet again. This time the Dodgers managed to pull out the win 5\u20133 in 11 innings. A three-run home run by Pedro \u00c1lvarez off Greinke was the key to the Pirates' 6\u20133 win in the series finale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nThe Dodgers were scheduled to begin a two-game series against the New York Yankees on June 18, but a rain out forced the two teams to play a day-night doubleheader on June 19. Hanley Ram\u00edrez had four hits, including a two-run homer in the first game, but the Dodgers committed four errors in the game and lost 6\u20134. Chris Capuano came off the disabled list to pitch six shutout innings and Puig hit a home run to lead the Dodgers to a split of the doubleheader with a 6\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0023-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nPuig had 27 hits in his first 15 games, second most all-time. After the game, they took a cross-country plane ride and opened a series against the Padres in San Diego. They lost 6\u20133 as the Padres defenders made several highlight reel plays and Pedro Ciriaco had an RBI triple and a two-run home run in the game. The Dodgers committed two more errors the next day, tying the Houston Astros for the league lead. They lost 5\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0023-0003", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nZack Greinke had his best start as a Dodger on June 22, holding the Padres to one run and four hits, while striking out eight in eight innings. Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez and Hanley Ram\u00edrez homered in the 6\u20131 victory. Gonz\u00e1lez and Ram\u00edrez hit back-to-back homers the following day to help the Dodgers split the series 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nThe Dodgers returned home on June 24, to open a series against the San Francisco Giants. Yasiel Puig went 3 for 4 with a home run and two RBI in the first game as the Dodgers won 3\u20131, their first three-game winning streak since they swept the Pirates on April 5\u20137. They extended the streak to four games when they beat the Giants 6\u20135 the next day. Ram\u00edrez and Mark Ellis homered and Matt Kemp came off the disabled list to make a game-saving catch to end the game and preserve the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nThe Dodgers finished off the three-game sweep of the Giants with a 4\u20132 win on June 26. Kershaw pitched 8+ innings and allowed only a two-run homer to Buster Posey, while striking out seven. Puig delivered the go-ahead two-out, two-run single in the seventh inning as the Dodgers took the opener of a series from the Philadelphia Phillies to stretch the winning streak to six games. The streak came to an abrupt end on June 28 as the Phillies erupted for 21 hits and 16 runs in a 16\u20131 shellacking of the Dodgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0024-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nIt was the team's worst home loss since 1947 and the most runs allowed in a game since 2003. Hanley Ram\u00edrez was 3 for 4 with a 3-run homer the following day, and also scored the winning run on a walk-off single by A. J. Ellis as the Dodgers won 4\u20133. The Dodgers finished out their first winning month of the season with a 6\u20131 victory over the Phillies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0024-0003", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, June\nStephen Fife pitched seven shutout innings but the real story was Yasiel Puig who was 4 for 5 with a double and a triple to break Steve Sax's team record for most hits in a month by a rookie with 44. His total was also second most all-time among rookies in their first month, behind only Joe DiMaggio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nIn their first July game, the Dodgers moved out of last place for the first time since May 5. Clayton Kershaw struck out eight and pitched a complete game shutout in the 8\u20130 victory over the Rockies at Coors Field. The Dodgers won again the next night as Juan Uribe, Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez, Hanley Ram\u00edrez and Matt Kemp all homered in the 10\u20138 win. Gonz\u00e1lez was 4 for 5 with a homer in the series finale and Kemp also hit another homer, but Chris Capuano allowed 5 runs in 4+1\u20443 innings and the Rockies won the game, 9\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nThe Dodgers began a series with the Giants at AT&T Park on July 5. Uribe had a double, triple, homer and 7 RBI in the 10\u20132 win. Three errors and an inability to mount any offense against Giants starter Madison Bumgarner led to the 4\u20132 loss the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0025-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nA. J. Ellis three-run double in the top of the ninth of Sergio Romo gave the Dodgers a 4\u20131 win on July 7. Zack Greinke allowed only two hits and struck out seven in seven scoreless innings to lead the Dodgers to a 6\u20131 victory over the first place Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. Ricky Nolasco made his first start as a Dodger on July 9, after having been acquired in a trade with the Miami Marlins a few days prior. He allowed only one run on four hits in seven innings of work and the Dodgers again won 6\u20131. Hanley Ram\u00edrez and A. J. Ellis hit back-to-back homers in the top of the 14th inning as the Dodgers swept the Diamondbacks with a 7\u20135 win to climb back to .500 for the first time since April 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nThe Dodgers returned home on July 11 and extended their winning streak with a 6\u20131 victory over the Rockies. Capuano pitched 6.1 scoreless innings, while striking out a season-high eight and Mark Ellis was 3 for 4 with 4 RBI in the game. The Dodgers' five-game winning streak came to an end when Juan Nicasio shut them out 3\u20130. The Dodgers returned the favor the next day as Zack Greinke struck out nine and allowed only two hits in a 1\u20130 complete game shutout. The Dodgers headed into the All-Star break with a 47\u201347 record after losing 3\u20131 to split the series with the Rockies. Kershaw was the Dodgers only representative at the 2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, and retired the three batters he faced in his one inning of work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nAfter the break, the Dodgers traveled to the nation's capital for a three-game series against the Washington Nationals. Hanley Ram\u00edrez hit a two-run homer and Andre Ethier a solo shot to account for all the team's runs in a 3\u20132 win. Ram\u00edrez's RBI double in the 10th inning capped a 3 for 5 night as the Dodgers took game 2 of the series, 3\u20131, on July 20. Matt Kemp rejoined the Dodgers on July 21 after spending two weeks on the disabled list with a sore shoulder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nIn his return, he was 3 for 4 with a homer as the Dodgers drubbed the Nationals 9\u20132 to sweep the series. The Dodgers moved into first place for the first time all season when they clobbered the Toronto Blue Jays 14\u20135 on July 22. A. J. Ellis set career highs with five RBI, four hits (including a homer), and three runs. Skip Schumaker also hit a three-run homer in the game. The following day, the Dodgers fell behind 8\u20133 after 6 innings but came back and won 10\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0027-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nAdri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez three-run homer in the eighth inning was the big blow. They came from behind again the next day, closing out the road trip by scoring 5 runs in the top of the 10th with home runs by Mark Ellis and Yasiel Puig to win 8\u20133. With the win the Dodgers set an L.A. Dodger record with their 10th straight road win, something the Dodgers franchise hadn't done since 1955. This was also the first time they had swept an interleague series (of three or more games) since 2003 and the first time they had scored eight or more runs in four straight games since 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nThe Dodgers returned home on July 25 and dropped the opener of a four-game series against the Cincinnati Reds, 5\u20132. Mat Latos held the Dodgers to one run in 7+2\u20443 innings, and Jay Bruce and Xavier Paul each homered to end the six-game winning streak. Hanley Ram\u00edrez hit a two-run homer to back Clayton Kershaw's eight strikeouts in eight innings as the club won 2\u20131 in the second game of the series. Hyun-jin Ryu dominated on July 27, striking out nine and allowing only one run on two hits in seven innings in the Dodgers' 4\u20131 victory over the Reds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, July\nPuig hit a walk-off homer in the bottom of the 11th as the Dodgers took the series finale 1\u20130. A pitching duel between Chris Capuano and Tony Cingrani kept the game tied heading into extra innings. The 20 strikeouts by Dodgers batters in the game set a franchise record, breaking the mark set during a 15-inning game on May 2, 1995 against the Giants. Greinke stuck out 7 in 7 innings and Mark Ellis hit a walk-off RBI single in the ninth as the Dodgers beat the New York Yankees 3\u20132 on July 30. Kershaw pitched eight shutout innings as the month came to a close, but Hiroki Kuroda also did not allow a run and the Yankees won 3\u20130 after scoring all their runs off the Dodgers bullpen in the top of the ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nThe Dodgers traveled to Wrigley Field and started the month of August with a 6\u20134 victory over the Chicago Cubs, extending the road winning streak to 11. The following day they won again 6\u20132, tying the all-time franchise record of 12 set by the 1924 Brooklyn Robins. Hyun-jin Ryu became the first Dodger rookie to win 10 games in a season since Kazuhisa Ishii in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nA two-run single by Carl Crawford keyed the Dodgers' 3\u20130 win over the Cubs on August 3 to extend the streak to 13, a new franchise record and the longest in the National League since the 1976 Phillies also won 13. The team finished off a sweep of the Cubs with a 1\u20130 victory. Stephen Fife came off the DL to pitch 5+1\u20443 scoreless innings and Kenley Jansen pitched a scoreless ninth for his 17th save, and 25th consecutive batter he had retired in a row. This was the Dodgers' first four-game sweep at Wrigley Field since 1954.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nZack Greinke picked up his 100th career win in the Dodgers' 3\u20132 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium. He pitched 6+1\u20443 innings and drove in the eventual winning run with a single in the seventh. A lack of clutch hitting led to the Dodgers first road loss in a month, a 5\u20131 loss to the Cardinals on August 7. The streak ended at 15, just two behind the all-time record set by the 1984 Tigers and 1916 Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0029-0003", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nCardinals starter Shelby Miller had to leave the next game after only two pitches due to injury and the Dodgers erupted for 6 runs in the second inning on their way to a 13\u20134 win. Crawford had 4 hits from the leadoff spot and both Andre Ethier and Skip Schumaker had 3 hits and 4 RBI in the win. Ryu struck out seven in seven innings while not walking a batter and allowing only one unearned run as the Dodgers completed a 7\u20131 road trip with a 5\u20131 win. A. J. Ellis delivered the big blow with a 3-run homer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nThe Dodgers returned home on August 9 to begin an interleague series against the Tampa Bay Rays. In the opener, the Rays jumped out to a 6\u20130 lead and David Price allowed only one unearned run through his seven innings. However, the Dodgers rallied against the Rays bullpen with two runs in the eighth and four in the ninth to win 7\u20136. Zack Greinke pitched 6+1\u20443 scoreless innings, Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez homered, Skip Schumaker had four hits and the Dodgers won the second game of the series, 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nClayton Kershaw dominated in the series finale, striking out eight and allowing just 3 hits and 1 earned run in 8 strong innings, while driving in 2 runs on a second-inning single. The Dodgers won 8\u20132. The next day, they beat the New York Mets 4\u20132 as Nick Punto homered and Gonz\u00e1lez had three hits and an RBI. The Dodgers record of 38\u20138 over their past 46 games was the franchise's best mark since the 1899 Brooklyn Superbas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0030-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nRyu pitched another good game the following day, beating Mets ace Matt Harvey to pick up his 12th win in the Dodgers 4\u20132 victory. On August 14, the Dodgers fell behind early 4\u20130 after 3 innings but again fought their way back and tied it up on a two-run pinch hit homer by Andre Ethier in the bottom of the ninth. Back-to-back doubles by Yasiel Puig and Gonz\u00e1lez in the 12th gave them a 5\u20134 walk-off win. This was the 12th straight victory for the Dodgers in one-run games, a franchise record, and their 40th win in 48 games, the best mark in the Majors since the 1942 St. Louis Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nThe Dodgers traveled to the east coast to begin a road trip with the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park. Greinke and the bullpen shut out the Phillies and Hanley Ram\u00edrez hit a two-run homer in the 4\u20130 win. Kershaw struck out 8 in 8 scoreless innings as the Dodgers shut out the Phillies again, 5\u20130 for their first 10-game win streak since 2006. The record of 42\u20138 over the past 50 games was the third best 50 game stretch in Major League history, behind only the 1906 Cubs and 1912 Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nThe streak was snapped the next day as Ram\u00edrez made two errors in the bottom of the ninth and the Phillies won 3\u20132. The Dodgers lost consecutive games for the first time since June 20\u201321 when they dropped the opener of a series against the Miami Marlins 6\u20132 on August 19 at Marlins Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0031-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nYasiel Puig came off the bench and hit a solo homer to lead off the eighth inning as the Dodgers won the second game of the series, 6\u20134. Greinke pitched another good game the next day, allowing only one run in eight innings as the Dodgers capitalized on 3 Marlins errors to win 4\u20131. Kershaw followed that up by again pitching eight scoreless innings in the Dodgers 6\u20130 shutout of the Marlins to end the road trip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nThe Dodgers began a three-game series against the American League East leading Boston Red Sox at Dodger Stadium on August 24. Ricky Nolasco and John Lackey both pitched eight strong innings, and only five hits were allowed combined. Hanley Ram\u00edrez two-run homer in the 4th was the only scoring in the 2\u20130 win for the Dodgers, which stretched their lead in the division to 10+1\u20442 games, the largest since 1977. Ryu allowed 4 runs in the first inning the next day, with the big blow on a 3-run homer by Jonny Gomes and the Dodgers never recovered, losing 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nThe Red Sox won the series finale 8\u20131, the Dodgers first series loss since June 14\u201316. They had won or tied 18 straight series, a franchise record. Greinke got the Dodgers back on track after their two-game slide, pitching 8+2\u20443 innings against the Cubs and also hitting an RBI single in the 6\u20130 win. The Dodgers offense was stymied by Cubs pitcher Travis Wood the next night and they lost 3\u20132. The team moved past 3 million in attendance this night, the first team in the Majors to reach that mark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0032-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, August\nNolasco pitched eight shutout innings, while striking out 11, and Ram\u00edrez and Ethier both homered in the 4\u20130 win on August 28. The Dodgers 8 shutout wins in the month of August was the most by any MLB team in one month since the Dodgers did it in September of 1988. Yasiel Puig had four hits and Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez hit two homers as the Dodgers pounded the San Diego Padres 9\u20132 on August 30, setting a new L.A. Dodgers record with 22 wins in a month, one shy of the franchise record set by the 1953 and 1957 Brooklyn Dodgers. Newly signed Edinson V\u00f3lquez made his Dodgers debut, the 26th pitcher the team used this season, setting a franchise record. The Dodgers tied the franchise record for wins in a month the next day, as they finished August with a 2\u20131 win over the Padres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThe Dodgers started September with a 2\u20131 win to finish off a sweep of the San Diego Padres. Zack Greinke allowed one run on two hits and Yasiel Puig homered in the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nClayton Kershaw had a rare poor performance in the opener of a road series against the Colorado Rockies. He allowed 5 runs and a career-high 11 hits, but the Dodger offense picked him up and the team continued winning, 10\u20138. Ricky Nolasco won his sixth straight decision, 7\u20134, on September 3 as Nick Punto had four hits and Carl Crawford had three hits and two RBI. The Dodgers dropped the series finale to the Rockies, 7\u20135, thanks to a poor first Dodger start by Edison Volquez, who allowed four runs in four innings of work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThe Dodgers next traveled to Great American Ball Park to begin a weekend series with the Cincinnati Reds. Chris Capuano left the game in the second inning with a groin strain and the Reds won 3\u20132. A walk-off single by Todd Frazier in the 10th inning gave the Reds a 4\u20133 victory on September 7, sending the Dodgers to their first three-game losing streak since June 8\u201310. The Reds completed the sweep, 3\u20132, thanks to two home runs by Jay Bruce and a walk-off double by Ryan Hanigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThe Dodgers returned home on September 9 and smacked the Arizona Diamondbacks 8\u20131. Juan Uribe went had 4 hits, including 3 home runs, in 4 at-bats. He was the first Dodger to hit three homers in a game since Andre Ethier on June 26, 2009. The Dodgers as a team hit six homers in the game, the most since they hit seven against the Padres on September 16, 2006. The team won again the next night, as Scott Van Slyke hit a pinch hit walk-off home run in the 11th inning to give the Dodgers a 5\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThis was the team's first walk-off homer by a pinch hitter since Olmedo S\u00e1enz in 2007. Patrick Corbin kept the Dodgers offense in check the next day and the Diamondbacks won 4\u20131. A walk-off single by Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez in the 10th inning gave the Dodgers a 3\u20132 win over the San Francisco Giants on September 12. Madison Bumgarner out pitched Kershaw as the Giants won the next game, 4\u20132. The Giants pounded the Dodgers 19\u20133 on September 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0035-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThe 19 runs was the most ever scored by one team at Dodger Stadium, the most allowed by the Dodgers in a game since May 5, 2001, at Chicago, and the worst Dodger home defeat since a July 3, 1947, loss to the Giants in Brooklyn. Hunter Pence hit two homers in the Giants 4\u20133 win in the series finale. He hit five home runs in total in the four game series, the first Giant to accomplish that feat against the Dodgers since Willie Mays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThe Dodgers traveled to Phoenix to begin a four-game series against the Diamondbacks, needing to win just two of them to clinch the Western Division title. In the opener, Hyun-Jin Ryu allowed only two hits in a complete game effort; however, one of those hits was a two-run homer by Paul Goldschmidt and they lost again 2\u20131. Matt Kemp and Hanley Ram\u00edrez returned to the Dodgers' lineup on September 17 after missing time with injuries and both reached base four times as Uribe and Gonz\u00e1lez homered. The Dodgers snapped the four-game losing streak with a 9\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThey failed in their first chance to clinch the division when spot starter Stephen Fife didn't make it out of the third the next night and Ronald Belisario was pounded for five runs in relief. The Diamondbacks won 9\u20134. The Dodgers clinched the National League West championship with a 7\u20136 win over the Diamondbacks on September 19. Ram\u00edrez hit two home runs and A. J. Ellis hit the game-winning homer in the eighth inning for the Dodgers' first West title since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0036-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nThe team's 9+1\u20442-game deficit on June 21 was the largest the Dodgers had ever overcome to win a division, and they were just the fourth team in MLB history to ever accomplish that feat. The next day, the Dodgers rested all the regulars in the opening of a series at the San Diego Padres. The backups could not generate any offense and the Padres won 2\u20130. Clayton Kershaw was brilliant the next day, pitching seven shutout innings while allowing just three hits and striking out ten. Yasiel Puig and A. J. Ellis both hit two-run homers in the 4\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0036-0003", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nZack Greinke pitched five shutout innings as the Dodgers wrapped up their series with the Padres with a 1\u20130 win. Hyun-jin Ryu allowed only one run in seven innings and Puig and Matt Kemp each hit solo homers as the Dodgers won the opener of their final road series of the season, 2\u20130, over the Giants. Ricky Nolasco allowed six runs over 5+2\u20443 innings in his last start of the regular season, a 6\u20134 loss to the Giants. It was his third straight poor start. The Dodgers finished up their final road series of the regular season when \u00c1ngel Pag\u00e1n homered off Paco Rodriguez to give the Giants a 3\u20132 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Regular season, September\nKershaw pitched six shutout innings in his final start of the regular season, an 11\u20130 win, on September 27. He finished the season with a Major League leading 1.83 ERA, making him the first pitcher to lead the league three years in a row since Greg Maddux in 1993\u201395. His ERA was the lowest for a starter since Pedro Mart\u00ednez in 2000. Greinke also pitched well in his final start, allowing only one run while striking out seven in six innings. However, the Dodgers were unable to score and lost the game, 1\u20130. The Dodgers lost their final game of the regular season, 2\u20131, to the Rockies on September 29. They finished the season with a record of 92\u201370.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Division Series\nAs National League West Champions, the Dodgers advanced to the 2013 National League Division Series to play the Eastern Division champion Atlanta Braves. They suffered a blow on the last day of the regular season when MRI results revealed that Matt Kemp had a severe ankle injury and was not able to play in the postseason. Andre Ethier was also dealing with an ankle injury and he was limited to pinch hitting in the division series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Division Series\nIn game 1 of the series, at Atlanta's Turner Field, Clayton Kershaw struck out 12 batters in 7 innings. That was the third most strikeouts by a Dodger pitcher in the playoffs, behind only Sandy Koufax (15 in the 1963 World Series) and Carl Erskine (14 in the 1953 World Series). His six straight strikeouts in the game tied an MLB post-season record set by Tim Belcher in game 2 of the 1988 World Series. The Dodgers won the game 6\u20131. The Braves tied up the series the next day, with a 4\u20133 win, as the Dodgers bullpen faltered. Hanley Ram\u00edrez homered and doubled twice in the game but it wasn't enough. Jason Heyward had a two-RBI single for the deciding runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Division Series\nThe Dodgers offense took over in game 3 as they took the lead in the series with a 13\u20136 win at Dodger Stadium. Ram\u00edrez had two more extra base hits (a double and triple) in the game to tie the NLDS record and franchise record (Steve Garvey, Duke Snider) for most extra-base hits in the postseason. The 13 runs tied a franchise record set in the 1956 World Series. The Dodgers brought Kershaw back on short rest in game 4 and he pitched six innings, while allowing only two unearned runs (thanks to two Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez errors).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Division Series\nCarl Crawford hit two solo homers in his first two at-bats, the first Dodger to do so in the playoffs since Shawn Green in the 2004 National League Division Series. An RBI double by Jos\u00e9 Constanza off Ronald Belisario in the 7th gave the Braves the lead, but the Dodgers went back up thanks to a two-run homer by Juan Uribe in the 8th off David Carpenter. Kenley Jansen closed it down in the ninth to preserve the 4\u20133 series clinching victory for the Dodgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Championship Series\nThe Dodgers advanced to the NLCS for the first time since 2009, where they faced off with the St. Louis Cardinals. In the first game of the series at Busch Stadium, Zack Greinke allowed only two runs in eight innings, while striking out a season high 10 batters, the first pitcher to strike out 10 Cardinals in a postseason game since Denny Galehouse in the 1944 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Championship Series\nAndre Ethier, making his first post-season start of the season after being limited to pinch hitting the previous round, just missed catching Carlos Beltr\u00e1n's double at the fence to allow the two runs to score in the third. The Dodgers also managed two runs, on a single by Juan Uribe in the top of the third. The game remained tied into extra innings until Beltran recorded the walk-off hit off Kenley Jansen in the bottom of the 13th inning to give the Cardinals a 3\u20132 victory. This was the longest game in Dodgers post-season history since the 1916 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0041-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Championship Series\nIn the second game, Clayton Kershaw and two relievers combined to allow only 2 hits and 1 run but that was enough as the Dodgers offense failed to score at all and they lost 1\u20130. Kershaw was the first starting pitcher in post-season history to lose a game while allowing no earned runs and two or fewer hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Championship Series\nHanley Ram\u00edrez sat out game two after getting hit by a pitch in the first game and was diagnosed with a fractured rib. However, he was back in the lineup for Game three at Dodger Stadium and had two hits and an RBI. Yasiel Puig snapped an 0 for 11 streak with an RBI triple and Hyun-jin Ryu pitched seven shutout innings as the Dodgers picked up their first victory of the series with a 3\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Championship Series\nRicky Nolasco got his first post-season start the next day and he allowed three runs in the third, on an RBI double by Matt Carpenter and a booming 2-run home run by Matt Holliday. Ram\u00edrez tried to play through the pain again, but struck out three times and was in noticeable pain when he was taken out in the seventh inning. The Dodgers offense again struggled to score runs and they lost 4\u20132 to fall to the brink of elimination. Greinke responded with seven strong innings in Game Five and the Dodgers offense came alive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0042-0002", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Championship Series\nThe team hit four home runs, including two by Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez and held on to win 6\u20134, sending the series back to St. Louis. The four homers tied a Dodger post-season record that had previously been accomplished in Game 2 of the 1977 World Series and Game 1 of the 1978 NLCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Postseason, National League Championship Series\nIn Game Six, Kershaw struggled from the start and he allowed seven runs on ten hits in four innings, his shortest start of the year. NLCS MVP Michael Wacha shut out the Dodgers for the second time in the series and the Dodgers season came to an end with a 9\u20130 blowout loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Player stats, Batting\nList does not include pitchers. Stats in bold are the team leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Player stats, Batting\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 OBP = On-base percentage; SLG = Slugging; OPS = On-base plus slugging", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Major League Baseball draft\nThe Dodgers selected 40 players in this draft. Of those, six of them have played Major League Baseball as of the 2020 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Major League Baseball draft\nThe first round draft pick was right-handed pitcher Chris Anderson from Jacksonville University. He pitched in the Dodgers system through 2016 before he was released, accumulating a record of 23\u201326 with a 4.75 ERA in 104 games (three of them in the Minnesota Twins farm system in 2017) and 72 starts with a 4.75 ERA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234515-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Major League Baseball draft\nThe Fourth round pick Cody Bellinger from Hamilton High School became the 2017 NL Rookie of the Year and 2019 NL MVP, Gold Glove Award, and Silver Slugger Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234516-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards\nThe 39th Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, given by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association (LAFCA), honored the best in film for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234517-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Galaxy season\nThe 2013 Los Angeles Galaxy season was the club's eighteenth season of existence, and their eighteenth season in Major League Soccer, the top tier of the American and Canadian soccer pyramids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234517-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Galaxy season\nThe Galaxy entered the season as the two-time defending MLS Cup champions. They were eliminated by Real Salt Lake in the Conference Semifinals of the MLS Cup Playoffs. The team reached the semifinals of the 2012\u201313 CONCACAF Champions League, where they were knocked out by Monterrey. The Galaxy also qualified for the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League by virtue of winning the 2012 MLS Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234517-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Galaxy season, Club, Current roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Squad correct as of March 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234517-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Galaxy season, Competitions, MLS, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting\nOn November 1, 2013, a terrorist attack occurred at around 9:20\u00a0a.m. PDT in Terminal 3 of the Los Angeles International Airport. Twenty-three-year old Paul Anthony Ciancia, opened fire with a rifle, killing a U.S. government Transportation Security Administration officer and injuring several other people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Shooting\nOn the morning of Friday, November 1, 2013, Ciancia entered Terminal 3 of Los Angeles International Airport after being dropped off there by a roommate. He was carrying a bag filled with a semiautomatic, .223-caliber Smith & Wesson M&P-15 rifle, five 30-round magazines, and hundreds of additional rounds of ammunition contained in boxes. Walking up to a TSA checkpoint, he pulled the rifle out of the bag and opened fire, shooting TSA Officer Gerardo Hernandez in the chest at point-blank range. He then went up an escalator, but returned to the checkpoint and shot Hernandez again after seeing him move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Shooting\nCiancia then moved up the escalator into the TSA screening area, passed the checkpoint area, and moved farther into the secure airside area of the terminal. At the time, many people fled by going into the concourse area or through doors leading into the airfield. Others ran into the restaurant where staff locked the metal security doors and ordered customers to take cover under the restaurant's tables. Entering the concourse area, Ciancia continued firing, wounding two TSA agents and a passenger. People hiding in the concourse area then fled the terminal through street exits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Shooting\nOne witness, interviewed on CNN, said the gunman was walking, not running, down the terminal's concourse, and actor Tim Daly reported hearing shooting while in the Virgin America's \"The Loft\" lounge. According to several witnesses, Ciancia repeatedly asked passersby if they were TSA agents and then moved on without shooting when they said no. At 9:20\u00a0a.m., the first calls to 9-1-1 were made, followed by the arrival of the first LAX officers two minutes later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Shooting\nCiancia made it as far as the end of the terminal in the food court, where LAX police officers confronted him and shot him in a gunfight. He was wounded four times by gunshots and captured before being transported via ambulance to a nearby trauma hospital. Witnesses saw a rifle with three magazines nearby on the floor of the waiting area near gates 35 and 36. Police were unsure whether the terminal was safe for paramedics to enter, and as a result Hernandez lay wounded about 20 feet from an exit without medical attention for 33 minutes. He bled out from his gunshot wounds before being put in a wheelchair and removed from the terminal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Victims, Fatality\nThe gunman shot TSA Officer Gerardo I. Hernandez, age 39, at the airport. Hernandez was pronounced dead after arriving at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, although coroner officials asserted that he was dead within a few minutes of getting shot. Hernandez is the first TSA officer in the twelve-year history of the agency to have been killed on the job. A behavior detection officer, Hernandez had immigrated to the United States from El Salvador at age 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Victims, Injuries\nSeven victims were treated at the scene. Three victims were wounded by gunfire, including two TSA officers, identified as 54-year-old James Speer and 36-year-old Tony Grigsby; Grigsby was shot in the foot. The third shooting victim was 29-year-old Brian Ludmer, a schoolteacher from Lake Forest, Illinois, who was shot in the leg. Six victims were transported to area hospitals, including three men, two of whom had suffered gunshot wounds, who were treated at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Some of the injuries were confirmed to have been caused by other factors, not gunshot wounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Victims, Injuries\nCiancia was shot four times, including wounds in the head and leg, by law enforcement in the food court area of Terminal 3 and was in critical condition. The officers kicked the rifle away from him. He was then transported to a local trauma hospital via ambulance. Video from KCAL-TV shows Ciancia brought into the hospital from an ambulance, surrounded by multiple police officers, while handcuffed to a gurney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Perpetrator\nPaul Anthony Ciancia, age 23 at the time of the shooting, perpetrated the attack. An unemployed car mechanic, he lived in the Sun Valley neighborhood of Los Angeles and grew up in Pennsville, New Jersey. In 2008, Ciancia graduated from Salesianum School.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Perpetrator\nAfter the shooting ended, Ciancia was found to be carrying a note stating that he \"wanted to kill TSA\" and describing them as \"pigs\". It also mentioned \"fiat currency\" and \"NWO\", the latter likely being a reference to the New World Order conspiracy theory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Perpetrator\nOn the day of the shooting and before Ciancia was identified as the suspect, the LAPD went to his residence when concerned family members wanted to file a missing persons report after not having heard from him after repeated attempts to make contact. Ciancia was not at home at the time and his roommates told them that he had been there earlier in the day. The police left and could not file a report, because they had no confirmation on where he was. Ciancia had talked about taking his own life a few days earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Perpetrator\nAccording to reports, on the day of the shooting, Ciancia burst into the room of an unidentified roommate and demanded him to drive him to the airport immediately, and the roommate, not sensing any intention of committing violence, agreed to do so. Days prior to the shooting, Ciancia had begun asking for a ride to the airport so he could fly back to New Jersey, claiming that his father was ill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Immediate reaction\nLos Angeles Airport Police evacuated several terminals and searched for any other possible suspects. They searched in cars with armed officers and a bomb-sniffing dog at the nearby parking garages that are connected to airport terminals by pedestrian bridges. The Federal Aviation Administration grounded all outbound flights at the airport. Runways 24L and 24R were shut down. Terminals 1, 2, and 3 were shut down and the 300 passengers were evacuated from these terminals to the Tom Bradley International Terminal for questioning, and then were re-screened as they exited the international terminal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Immediate reaction\nAirlines diverted some flights to other airports in the Greater Los Angeles Area. Most were directed to Ontario International Airport, and others to Long Beach Airport. Most of the diverted flights were originally scheduled to taxi to gates at Terminals 1, 2, and 3. Over 1,500 flights and 171,000 passengers were affected by the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Immediate reaction\nLater that afternoon, Ciancia's family released a statement, saying that they were \"shocked and numbed\" by his actions and also expressing their sympathies to the family of Gerardo Hernandez, and also to the wounded victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nIn the wake of the shooting, ongoing debates over the effectiveness of airport security were reignited, with several suggestions being made about arming TSA officers with guns. In response to these suggestions, TSA Administrator John S. Pistole commented, \"[Officer safety] is something we have dealt with really since the standup of TSA, knowing that in many respects TSA employees are the first line of defense when it comes to airport security particularly. And so given this tragedy, we will obviously look at and review our policies with airport police both here at LAX and of course around the country.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nTom Ridge, the former secretary for the United States Department of Homeland Security, criticized the suggestion of arming TSA officers, calling it a \"big mistake\" and saying, \"You have literally hundreds and hundreds of armed police officers roaming every major airport in America. And I don't think arming another 40 or 50 or 60 thousand people ... would have prevented this incident from happening.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nOn January 22, 2014, it was revealed that the two unarmed officers assigned to the area had gone on a break at the time of the shooting, without carrying out the requirement of informing a dispatcher, with one being at the bathroom of an adjacent terminal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nIn response to the new details, airport police union chief Marshall McClain stated that the two officers were still capable of quickly responding to the shooting, adding, \"I want to make sure that in any terminal, there's always somebody there, that a bathroom break doesn't result in somebody, even for a few minutes, being out of the action.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nOn March 18, 2014, a released 83-page report highlighted flaws in various divisions and current systems of the airport, adding that emergency response had been hindered by \"communication problems and poor coordination\". The report also laid out an estimated 50 recommendations, including one for training airport police to be trained in tactical medicine and for training paramedics to enter more dangerous zones earlier with the protection of law enforcement. In addition, it was critical of the current airport emergency management program, saying that it was \"not well-defined or widely understood across the agency, or perhaps even respected\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nIt was also reported that at the time of the shooting, a union representing the airport's lower-level employees was not trained for an evacuation and did not know what to do or how to help passengers. Jeffrey David Cox, Sr., the president of the American Federation of Government Employees, called the lack of coordination \"absolutely unacceptable\" and criticized the report as being incomplete and failing to note the two airport officers who were not on their shifts at the time of the shooting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nOn June 6, 2014, Rep. Richard Hudson (R, NC-8) introduced the Gerardo Hernandez Airport Security Act of 2014 (H.R. 4802; 113th Congress) in response to the findings about events of the shooting. The bill would direct the Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security, acting through the Transportation Security Administration, to undertake a variety of activities aimed at enhancing security at airports where TSA performs oversees security-related activities. The bill would require TSA to verify that all such airports have plans in place for responding to security threats and to provide technical assistance as necessary to improve such plans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Security and emergency response\nH.R. 4802 also would require TSA to disseminate information on best practices for addressing security threats and ensure that all screening personnel have received training in how to handle potential shooting threats. Finally, H.R. 4802 would require the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Cybersecurity and Communications to report to the Congress on the capacity of law enforcement, fire, and medical response teams to communicate and respond to security threats at airports. It passed in the House on July 22, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Charges and prosecution\nOn November 2, 2013, federal prosecutors charged Ciancia with murder of a federal officer and committing violence at an international airport. Ciancia also faced additional federal and/or state charges, including attempted murder in relation to the two men who were wounded by gunfire. On November 19, 2013, Ciancia was released from hospital after recovering from his gunshot wounds, and was taken into custody by agents from the United States Marshals Service (US Marshals).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 83], "content_span": [84, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Charges and prosecution\nOn December 5, 2013, Ciancia appeared for the first time in court, where he was remanded without bail because he posed a threat to the community. On December 17, 2013, a federal grand jury indicted Ciancia on 11 counts, including first-degree murder. This raised the possibility that he could have received the death penalty if he was convicted. The indictment described how the offence involved substantial planning and premeditation to cause the death of a person and to commit an act of terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 83], "content_span": [84, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Charges and prosecution\nOn December 26, 2013, Ciancia pleaded not guilty to the charge of first-degree murder. On March 3, 2014, a judge ordered that Ciancia be moved from a treatment facility at a San Bernardino County jail to a federal detention facility in Los Angeles. After initially being set for trial on February 11, 2014, he appeared in court prior to his trial on August 11, 2014 and December 8, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 83], "content_span": [84, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Charges and prosecution\nIn January 2015, federal prosecutors decided they would seek the death penalty against Ciancia. On January 5, 2015, it was announced that Ciancia's trial was projected to begin on February 23, 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 83], "content_span": [84, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234518-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles International Airport shooting, Aftermath, Charges and prosecution\nOn September 6, 2016, Ciancia pled guilty in exchange for a life sentence. On November 7, 2016, Ciancia was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole plus 60 years and is currently incarcerated in the United States Penitentiary, Allenwood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 83], "content_span": [84, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234519-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Sparks season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 17th season for the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women's National Basketball Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234519-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles Sparks season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Sparks' selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234520-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles election\nThe 2013 Los Angeles election was held on March 5, 2013 in the city of Los Angeles, California. Voters elected candidates in a nonpartisan primary, with runoff elections scheduled for May 21, 2013. The executive offices of Mayor, City Attorney, and City Controller, as well as eight seats of the City Council, were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234520-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles election\nMunicipal elections in California are officially nonpartisan; candidates' party affiliations do not appear on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234521-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles mayoral election\nThe 2013 Los Angeles mayoral election was held on March 5, 2013, to elect the mayor of Los Angeles. No candidate received a majority of the primary votes to be elected outright, and the top two finishers, Eric Garcetti and Wendy Greuel advanced to a runoff vote. On May 21, 2013, Garcetti was elected mayor with a majority of the votes in the runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234521-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles mayoral election\nMunicipal elections in California are officially non-partisan but candidates receive support and endorsements from their respective parties or affiliated organizations. The Los Angeles County Republican Party endorsed Kevin James, the lone Republican in the field, while the Los Angeles County Democratic Party supported the candidacies of Garcetti, Greuel, Perry and Pleitez without making an endorsement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234521-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor Antonio Villaraigosa was ineligible to run because of term limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234521-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Los Angeles mayoral election, General election, Issues\nArticles in the Los Angeles Times and Los Angeles Daily News suggested that the fiscal state of Los Angeles would likely play a major role in the election. Also a question was the role that Villaraigosa's popularity will play; in 2009 his support was seen as more of a liability than an asset.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234522-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lotto\u2013Belisol season\nThe 2013 season for Lotto\u2013Belisol began in January at the La Tropicale Amissa Bongo. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup\nThe 8th Louis Vuitton Cup was held during July and August 2013, in San Francisco, California, United States of America. The three contenders were Artemis Racing (Sweden), Emirates Team New Zealand (New Zealand), and Luna Rossa Challenge (Italy). After a preliminary round robin to determine seeding, Artemis Racing was eliminated in the semi-final round by Luna Rossa Challenge by four races to none. In the final, Emirates Team New Zealand beat Luna Rossa Challenge by seven races to one, and went on to challenge Oracle Team USA for the 2013 America's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, The teams\nTwelve yacht clubs applied to challenge the America's Cup before the deadline, though their names were not originally disclosed. They included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, The teams\nOn August 2, 2012, the America's Cup Event Authority announced that, following withdrawals or failure to meet the eligibility criteria, only four challenging teams would compete: Kungliga Svenska Segels\u00e4llskapet's Artemis Racing, Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron's Team New Zealand, Circolo della Vela Sicilia's Luna Rossa Challenge and Sail Korea Yacht Club's Team Korea", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, The teams\nIn March, 2013, Team Korea withdrew, leaving three challengers. Shown in the order in which they applied, they were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, The teams, Artemis Racing (SWE)\nThe Challenger of Record, Artemis Racing represented the Royal Swedish Yacht Club and was led by skipper Iain Percy, helmsman Loick Peyron and America's Cup veteran Paul Cayard as tactician and CEO. The crew included Rodney Ardern, Magnus Augustson, Stuart Bettany, Curtis Blewett, Chris Brittle, Sean Clarkson, Juliean Cressant, Rodney Daniel, Andy Fethers, Thierry Fouchier, John Gimson, Kevin Hall, Phil Jameson, Iain Jensen, Santiago Lange, Andrew McLean, Craig Monk, Nathan Outteridge, Troy Tindill and coach Andrew Palfrey. Tom Schnackenberg was in charge of performance & design.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, The teams, Emirates Team New Zealand (NZL)\nLed by Grant Dalton and skippered by Dean Barker, Team New Zealand won the America's Cup in 1995 and 2000 and the Louis Vuitton Cup in 1995 and 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, The teams, Luna Rossa Challenge (ITA)\nFunded by Patrizio Bertelli, the Italian team previously won the Louis Vuitton Cup in 2000 and were runners-up in 2007. The crew included skipper Massimiliano Sirena, helmsman Paul Campbell-James, Chris Draper, Giulio Giovanella, Benjamin Durham, Pierluigi De Felice, Dave Carr, Giles Scott, Nick Hutton, Matteo Plazzi, Alister Richardson, Simone de Mari, Emanuele Marino, Manuel Modena, Marco Montis, Wade Morgan, Francesco Bruni and Olympian Xabier Fern\u00e1ndez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, The teams, Luna Rossa Challenge (ITA)\nSteven Erickson was the team's sailing co-ordinator and Umberto Panerai was a trainer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, Round Robins\nThe three yachts were scheduled to race ten times each, match-racing each competitor five times on a seven-leg course, with the winner of the Round Robins advancing to the final and the other two advancing into the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, Round Robins\nOn May 9, 2013, Team Artemis Racing's main boat capsized in strong winds, resulting in the death of crewmember Andrew Simpson. Artemis Racing forfeited its ten Round Robin races, entering the competition in the semi-finals stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, Round Robins\nPer rules 60.5 and 44.1c, the Artemis boat was deemed to have abandoned each race after the event had run for 10 minutes. While the Emirates and Luna Rossa boats earned black flag victories against Artemis, both boats chose to run a five-leg course for some (Luna Rossa) or all (Emirates, including one seven-leg) of these black flag races. Emirates and Luna Rossa only raced nine times, each forfeiting their final race against the missing Artemis as it could not change the final first-second standings of the Round Robins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, Round Robins\nEmirates Team New Zealand won the Round Robins with nine points (4 race wins, 5 forfeit wins) to Luna Rossa Challenge's four points (4 forfeit wins) and Artemis Racing's zero points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were a best-of-seven event held over the seven-leg course and won 4-nil by Luna Rossa Challenge over Artemis Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234523-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Louis Vuitton Cup, Finals\nThe finals were a best-of-thirteen event held over the five-leg course won by Team New Zealand over Luna Rossa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234524-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana Swashbucklers season\nThe 2013 Louisiana Swashbucklers season was the ninth season for the professional indoor football franchise and their second in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). The Swashbucklers were one of seven teams that competed in the PIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234524-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana Swashbucklers season\nThe team played their home games under head coach Darnell Lee at the Sudduth Coliseum in Lake Charles, Louisiana. The Swashbucklers earned a 5\u20136 record, placing fifth in the league, failing to qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234524-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana Swashbucklers season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated July 17, 201318 Active, 0 Inactive, 1 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234525-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team represented Louisiana Tech University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bulldogs were led by first-year head coach Skip Holtz as a member of Conference USA (C-USA) in the West Division. The Dawgs played their home games at Joe Aillet Stadium in Ruston, Louisiana. This was the Bulldogs inaugural season as members of C-USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234525-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team, Before the season, T\u2013Day spring game\nThe T\u2013Day spring game was held at Joe Aillet Stadium on April 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234525-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team, After the season, NFL Draft\nIn May's 2014 NFL Draft, Justin Ellis was selected by the Oakland Raiders in the fourth round, and IK Enemkpali was selected by the New York Jets in the sixth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election\nA special election for Louisiana's 5th congressional district was held on November 16, 2013, to elect a member of the United States House of Representatives. Incumbent Republican Congressman Rodney Alexander resigned on September 26, 2013, to become the Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Veterans Affairs under Governor Bobby Jindal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election\nThe primary election was held on October 19, 2013. Under Louisiana's jungle primary system, all candidates appear on the same ballot, regardless of party. As no candidate received 50 percent plus one vote during the primary election, the general election was held on November 16 between the top two candidates in the primary, Republicans Neil Riser, a state senator from Columbia in Caldwell Parish, and Vance McAllister, a businessman from Swartz. In the general election, McAllister handily defeated Riser to win the seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Background\nOn August 6, 2013, Alexander announced that he would not seek a seventh term in the House in the 2014 congressional elections. He cited his weariness with partisanship in Washington, D.C., as the primary reason for his decision to retire. On August 7, Alexander moved up his timetable for departure from Congress. He resigned his seat effective September 26. Alexander joined the administration of Governor Bobby Jindal as the new secretary of the Louisiana Department of Veterans Affairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 72], "content_span": [73, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Controversy\nThe day after Alexander announced his resignation, Republican state senator Neil Riser publicly declared his candidacy and launched his website. Within days, he had hired a campaign manager and started distributing campaign material. Riser's unusually fast response to the unexpected announcement of the special election led to charges of favoritism by Alexander and Governor Jindal. Specifically, that they colluded to declare Alexander's appointment to the State Cabinet in a surprise announcement and ensure a short filing period so as to benefit Riser, who, it was alleged, knew of Alexander's plans in advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Controversy\nRiser had filed documents with the Federal Election Commission to run in the special election the day before Alexander announced his resignation, although he claimed that this was a \"clerical error\" on the part of the FEC. Additionally, Riser had traveled through the district for several months with Alexander before the announcement and had been endorsed by every Republican congressman from Louisiana within days. An editorial by The Town Talk said: \"If this feels a lot like someone has stolen your vote, well, let\u2019s just say you\u2019re not alone.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Controversy\nRepublican state representative Jay Morris declared his candidacy and accused Alexander and Jindal of trying to \"rig the election\", adding that \"it appears to me some sort of deal was made to grant an advantage to [Riser]. It disturbs me and should disturb everyone that an election could be manipulated like this.\" Democratic state senator Rick Gallot had considered joining the race but declined, citing the short time frame and unexpected nature of the announcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Controversy\nWhen declaring his candidacy, Democrat Jamie Mayo, the mayor of Monroe, said that he assumed the allegations were true, \"but I'm not doing to cry over spilled milk.\" Republican Public Service Commissioner and former Congressman Clyde C. Holloway said that his candidacy for the seat was motivated by suspicions that Alexander and Jindal wanted Riser to win, saying: \"This thing stinks... I feel like we tried to have an appointed congressman by the governor and by Rodney... Without any doubt, I think they've been orchestrating this for months.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Controversy\nThe state's junior U.S. Senator, Republican David Vitter, declined to make an endorsement and said that \"it's a very quick election. And it's obvious that didn't happen by accident.\" Attorney Ed Tarpley, who had considered running, said that \"Everywhere I go without exception people are angry about what happened. [ The short time frame means voters are] deprived of the normal election cycle.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Controversy\nThe Jindal administration has responded that the election was not rigged, with press secretary Sean Lansing saying: \"There is no truth to [the] claims.\" Timmy Teepell, who previously worked as a political consultant for Riser and as Jindal's Chief of Staff said: \"It's a free country, and nobody is prevented from running. Is two weeks not enough time... to get to Baton Rouge to qualify to run next week?\" Alexander said, \"There was no deal\", and Riser added, \"I don\u2019t think it was any secret that I wanted to eventually run for the seat. I've been clear the past two years about my intention to run.\" After Riser announced that he would run for Congress, Teepell and his Virginia-based On Message, Inc., assumed management of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 73], "content_span": [74, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, Jungle primary, Polling\nOther polls that were not made public showed that Riser was a \"lock\" to make the runoff with Holloway \"consistently\" polling in second place. Morris, McAllister and Mayo also had the potential to make the runoff, with McAllister seen as the most likely to benefit from a slip in support for Holloway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 85], "content_span": [86, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, General election, Campaign\nRiser was the heavy favorite to win and McAllister was thought to have little chance of pulling off an upset. Riser raised and spent more money than McAllister, who largely self-financed his campaign. While Riser was backed by both the Republican establishment and the Tea Party, McAllister boasted endorsements from the stars of the television show Duck Dynasty. During the campaign, McAllister ran to Riser's left, particularly on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 88], "content_span": [89, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234526-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, General election, Campaign\nRiser spoke only of repealing the law whereas McAllister argued that with a Democratic majority in the Senate, repeal had no chance of success and that the two parties should work together to improve the law. He also emphasised his support for two of its key components: the Medicaid expansion and preventing insurance companies from denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions. Riser campaigned on his experience and his opposition to President Obama. McAllister campaigned as a pragmatic outsider and won over voters who were frustrated with Congress and politicians in general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 88], "content_span": [89, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234527-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns baseball team\nThe 2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns baseball team represented the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Ragin' Cajuns played their home games at M. L. Tigue Moore Field and were led by the nineteenth year head coach Tony Robichaux.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234527-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns baseball team, Preseason, Sun Belt Conference Coaches Poll\nThe Sun Belt Conference Coaches Poll was released on February 11, 2013. Louisiana-Lafayette was picked to finish eighth in the Sun Belt with 39 votes and 1 first-place vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 97], "content_span": [98, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234528-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns football team\nThe 2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns football program represented the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Mark Hudspeth and played their home games at Cajun Field. They were a member of the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 9\u20134 overall and 5\u20132 in Sun Belt play to claim a share of the conference title with Arkansas State. They were invited to the New Orleans Bowl for the third consecutive year where they defeated Tulane. However, in 2015 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette vacated eight wins including their New Orleans Bowl victory and Sun Belt Conference co-championship due to alleged major NCAA violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234529-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns softball team\nThe 2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns softball team represented the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in the 2013 NCAA Division I softball season. The Ragin' Cajuns played their home games at Lamson Park and were led by thirteenth year head coach Michael Lotief and, for a short time while Lotief underwent family issues, former Cajun player Megan Granger served as interim head coach for the month of February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234529-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns softball team, Preseason, Sun Belt Conference Coaches Poll\nThe Sun Belt Conference Coaches Poll was released on February 4, 2013. Louisiana-Lafayette was picked to finish first in the Sun Belt Conference with 81 votes and 9 first place votes, all first place votes available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 97], "content_span": [98, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234530-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks baseball team\nThe 2013 ULM Warhawks baseball team represents University of Louisiana at Monroe in the NCAA Division I baseball season of 2013. The Tigers played their home games in Warhawk Field. The team is coached by Jeff Schexnaider, who is in his seventh season at ULM. In the 2012 season, the Warhawks reached the NCAA Regionals for the first time in more than 10 years; also, the Warhawks did win the post season Sun Belt championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team\nThe 2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team represented University of Louisiana at Monroe in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by fourth-year head coach Todd Berry. The Warhawks played their home games at Malone Stadium and competed in the Sun Belt Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 4\u20133 in Sun Belt play to finish in a four-way tie for third place. Despite being bowl eligible, they were not selected to play in a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, @ Oklahoma\nIn their first game of the season, the Warhawks lost, 34\u20130 to the Oklahoma Sooners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, Grambling State\nIn their second game of the season, the Warhawks won, 48\u201310 over the Grambling State Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, @ Wake Forest\nIn their third game of the season, the Warhawks won, 21\u201319 over the Wake Forest Demon Deacons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, @ Baylor\nIn their fourth game of the season, the Warhawks lost, 70\u20137 to the Baylor Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, Tulane\nIn their fifth game of the season, the Warhawks lost, 31\u201314 to the Tulane Green Wave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, WKU\nIn their sixth game of the season, the Warhawks lost, 31\u201310 to the WKU Hilltopers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, @ Texas State\nIn their seventh game of the season, the Warhawks won, 21\u201314 over the Texas State Bobcats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, Georgia State\nIn their eighth game of the season, the Warhawks won, 38\u201310 over the Georgia State Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, @ Troy\nIn their ninth game of the season, the Warhawks won, 49\u201337 over the Troy Trojans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, Arkansas State\nIn their tenth game of the season, the Warhawks lost, 42\u201314 to the Arkansas State Red Wolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, @ South Alabama\nIn their eleventh game of the season, the Warhawks lost, 36\u201314 to the South Alabama Jaguars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234531-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks football team, Game summaries, @ Louisiana\u2013Lafayette\nIn their twelfth game of the season, the Warhawks won, 31\u201328 over the Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234532-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisville Cardinals baseball team\nThe 2013 Louisville Cardinals baseball team represented the University of Louisville in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Cardinals were coached by Dan McDonnell, in his seventh season, and played their home games at Jim Patterson Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234532-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisville Cardinals baseball team\nThe Cardinals finished with 51 wins, the most in school history, against 14 losses overall, and 20\u20134 in the Big East Conference, earning the conference championship. They reached the College World Series for the second time in their history, where they finished 0\u20132, eliminated by Oregon State 11\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234532-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisville Cardinals baseball team, Schedule\n*Denotes non\u2013conference game \u2022 \u2022 Rankings based on the teams' current ranking in the Baseball America poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234532-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisville Cardinals baseball team, Ranking movements\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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234533-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisville Cardinals football team\nThe 2013 Louisville Cardinals football team represented the University of Louisville in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Cardinals were led by fourth-year head coach Charlie Strong. The Cardinals played their home games at Papa John's Cardinal Stadium in Louisville, Kentucky. They were in their last year as a member of the American Athletic Conference (formerly known as the Big East) until they moved to the Atlantic Coast Conference starting on July 1, 2014. They finished the season 12\u20131, 7\u20131 in American Athletic play to finish in second place. They were invited to the Russell Athletic Bowl where they defeated Miami (FL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234533-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Louisville Cardinals football team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2012 season 11\u20132, 5\u20132 in Big East play to finish in a four-way tie for the Big East championship. As the highest rated of the four Big East champions in the final BCS poll, the Cardinals received the conference's automatic bid into a BCS game. It marked also the first time the Cardinals won back-to-back BIG EAST titles. Louisville finished a remarkable season by defeating third-ranked Florida 33\u201323 in the Allstate Sugar Bowl, giving the Cardinals their 11th win for just the fourth time in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election\nThe 2013 Lower Austrian state election was held on 3 March 2013 to elect the members of the Landtag of Lower Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election\nThe Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) retained its majority. The main winner of the election was the new Team Stronach, which debuted at 9.8%. It drew votes from the \u00d6VP, Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6) and Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election, Background\nThe Lower Austrian constitution mandates 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 is a perpetual coalition of all parties that qualify for at least one state councillor. After the 2008 election, the \u00d6VP had six councillors, the SP\u00d6 two, and the FP\u00d6 one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election, Electoral system\nThe 56 seats of the Landtag of Lower Austria are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between twenty 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 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election, Contesting parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election, Contesting parties\nIn addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, five parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election, Results, Preference votes\nAlongside votes for a party, voters were able to cast a preferential votes for a candidate on the party list. The ten candidates with the most preferential votes were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234534-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Austrian state election, Aftermath\nThe \u00d6VP retained its Landtag majority and six out of nine state councillors; the SP\u00d6 also retained its two councillors. The FP\u00d6 lost their sole state councillor to Team Stronach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234535-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Saxony state election\nThe 2013 Lower Saxony state election was held on 20 January 2013 to elect the members of the 17th Landtag of Lower Saxony. The incumbent coalition government of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Free Democratic Party (FDP) led by Minister-President David McAllister was defeated. The Social Democratic Party (SPD) formed a government with The Greens which held a slim, one-seat majority. Stephan Weil was subsequently elected Minister-President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234535-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Saxony state election, Background\nThe CDU\u2013FDP coalition had governed since the 2003. In the 2008 state election, the SPD under Wolfgang J\u00fcttner lost more than three percentage points, suffering its worst ever result in Lower Saxony. The FDP retained their status as the third strongest party, leading the Greens by just 0.2%. The Left won 7.1 percent of the vote, crossing the electoral threshold and winning seats for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234535-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Saxony state election, Background\nMost polls taken in early 2012 showed a SPD\u2013Green majority. However, in the lead-up to the election, polls tightened, with the CDU\u2013FDP coalition virtually neck and neck with the SPD\u2013Green coalition. Polling suggested that the FDP's vote could be very close to 5%, which led some officials in the CDU to suggest tactically voting FDP to ensure it met the threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234535-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Saxony state election, Background\nBefore the election, the SPD and Greens announced their plan to govern and campaign together. The CDU acted independently of the FDP during the campaign, but sought to continue the incumbent coalition. If a CDU\u2013FDP coalition could not be formed, the CDU stated that the SPD would be their second choice. However, the SPD itself rejected the idea of a grand coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234535-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Saxony state election, Electoral System\nThe system used was Mixed-member proportional representation. The results in the electoral districts were determined using FPTP and the overall result using the D'Hondt method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234535-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lower Saxony state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 16th Landtag of Lower Saxony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234536-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lunar New Year Cup\nThe 87th 2013 Lunar New Year Cup (Chinese: \u86c7\u5e74\u8cc0\u6b72\u76c3), also known as the China Mobile Satellite Communication Cup (Chinese: \u4e2d\u570b\u79fb\u52d5\u885b\u661f\u901a\u4fe1\u76c3) due to sponsorship reason, is the annual football event held in Hong Kong in Lunar New Year. The name of this event was changed back to Lunar New Year Cup after two editions of Asian Challenge Cup were held in 2011 and 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234536-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lunar New Year Cup, Public Vote of Hong Kong League XI Team\nEach First Division League team had nominated at most 4 defenders, 3 midfielders and 3 forwards for the public vote of Hong Kong League XI Team. 10 players with the highest number of vote from different position were selected to the team, while 2 goalkeepers and 6 other players were chosen by the head coach of the team, Josep Gombau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234536-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lunar New Year Cup, Public Vote of Hong Kong League XI Team\n10 players with the highest voting in each position of the public vote are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake\nThe Lushan earthquake or Ya'an earthquake (Standard Tibetan: \u0f42\u0f61\u0f42\u0f0b\u0f62\u0f94\u0f0b\u0f61\u0f72\u0f0b\u0f66\u0f0b\u0f61\u0f7c\u0f58\u0f0b, Yak-ngai Sayom) occurred at 08:02 Beijing Time (00:02 UTC) on April 20, 2013. The epicenter was located in Lushan County, Ya'an, Sichuan, about 116\u00a0km (72\u00a0mi) from Chengdu along the Longmenshan Fault in the same province heavily impacted by the 2008 Sichuan earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake\nThe magnitude of the earthquake was placed at Ms 7.0 by China Earthquake Data Center, Ms 7.0 by Russian Academy of Sciences, Mw 7.0 by Geoscience Australia, Mw 6.6 by the United States Geological Survey (USGS), Mw 6.6 by the European Alert System (EMSC) and Mj 6.9 by the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA). 1,815 aftershocks have been recorded as of 00:00 (UTC+8h) April 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Effects\nThe earthquake has resulted in 196 people dead, 24 missing, at least 11,826 injured with more than 968 seriously injured as of 5:00 PM (UTC+8h, April 20). Sichuan provincial government has held the 3rd press conference on April 21, reported that the earthquake has resulted in 186 people dead, 21 missing, 11248 injured and 852 of them seriously as of 2:00 PM (UTC+8h, April 21), this is still the latest official report. Several townships suffered major damage, and many old buildings in Lushan collapsed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Effects\nThe electricity service was interrupted, and the electricity grids in the counties of Baoxing, Lushan, and Tianquan disintegrated. Telecommunication was interrupted in part of Ya'an. The Chengdu\u2013Ya'an and Ya'an\u2013Xichang sections of the G5 Beijing\u2013Kunming Expressway were reserved exclusively for vehicles for rescue purpose and closed to other vehicles. The Xiaojin section (\u5c0f\u91d1\u6bb5) of Sichuan Provincial Highway 210 between Baoshan (\u5b9d\u5c71) and Lushan was interrupted. A debris dam appeared in Jinjixia (\u91d1\u9e21\u5ce1) of the Yuxi River (\u7389\u6eaa\u6cb3) in Lushan. 2 volunteers were injured seriously in a traffic accident on the way to Lushan. However, around 60 giant pandas in the BiFengXia National Nature Reserve in Ya'an, were left unharmed by the devastating earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Effects, Lushan\nThe epicenter was located in Lushan. As of April 21, it was reported that 120 people died, 578 people were seriously injured, 5537 slightly injured, 278 saved from the ruins, and 3 still missing in Lushan County. The electricity grid disintegrated, and there were no water and gas services. According to China News Service, \"100%\" of houses in the 9 towns and townships and in the county seat were damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Effects, Baoxing\nAs of April 21, it was reported that 24 people died, 2500 were injured, and 19 missing in Baoxing County. The electricity, water, and gas services were interrupted in the county seat. Most of houses in the county seat of Baoxing were uninhabitable. Water, medicines, and tents were urgently needed. Some rescuers had had to walk to Baoxing because major roads to there were cut off. On April 22, it was reported that the access to the county seat of Baoxing had been restored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Rescue efforts\nAbout 8,000 soldiers from the People's Liberation Army were sent into the stricken area in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake, as well as 1,400 provincial rescue workers and 120\u00a0support\u00a0vehicles. Also, 180 doctors from a Chinese emergency response team and search-and-rescue dogs were dispatched, with volunteers mobilized from other parts of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Rescue efforts\nChinese Premier Li Keqiang toured the area and emphasized the need for quick action. Officials warned that regional rainfall and aftershocks were factors complicating the rescue efforts, with potential secondary effects like additional landslides and further building collapses being concerns. Impassible roads and damaged communications infrastructure posed substantial challenges to rescue efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Rescue efforts, Hong Kong donations controversy\nHong Kong chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, put forward a proposal to the Legislative Council to donate HK$100m ($13m) to the Sichuan provincial government for relief efforts. However, the government motion was vehemently opposed by legislators, in particular pan democrats, who feared that the local government would misuse the funds destined to help with earthquake relief efforts. Apparent signs of misappropriations or misuse by local officials of $HK9 billion donated after the earthquake in 2008 was cited as one major concern. The proposal failed to win support of Hong Kong people. An civic campaign was started online to try to stop earthquake donations falling into the hands of corrupt officials; and the liberal Apple Daily highlighted embezzlement scandals on the mainland. To satisfy the legislature, the Hong Kong government was forced to donate the money to registered Hong Kong non-governmental organisations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 71], "content_span": [72, 998]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234537-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Lushan earthquake, Rescue efforts, Day of mourning\nOn April 25, the provincial government of Sichuan announced that April 27 (seven days after the occurrence of Lushan earthquake) would be the day of mourning for those that passed in earthquake. Public entertainment was forbidden, and the sound of siren wailed for 3 minutes to mourn the loss of earthquake. The domestic media also mourned the passed in different ways. Baidu changed its background of the page to black. The social media also developed a special feature about the Lushan earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election\nEarly general elections were held in Luxembourg on 20 October 2013. The elections were called after Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, at the time the longest-serving head of government in the European Union, announced his resignation over a spy scandal involving the Service de Renseignement de l'\u00c9tat (SREL). The review found Juncker deficient in his control over the service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election\nAlthough the elections saw Juncker's Christian Social People's Party (CSV) lose three seats, but remain the largest party in the Chamber of Deputies with 23 of the 60 seats, Xavier Bettel of the Democratic Party (DP) succeeded him as Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election, Background\nAfter a spy scandal involving the Service de Renseignement de l'\u00c9tat illegally wiretapping politicians, the Grand Duke and his family, as well as allegations of paying for favours in exchange for access to government ministers and officials leaked through the press, Prime Minister Juncker submitted his resignation to the Grand Duke on 11 July 2013, upon knowledge of the withdrawal of the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party from the government and thereby losing its confidence and supply in the Chamber of Deputies. Juncker urged the Grand Duke for the immediate dissolution of parliament and the calling of a snap election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election, Electoral system\nThe 60 members of the Chamber of Deputies were elected by proportional representation in four multi-member constituencies; 9 in North constituency, 7 in East, 23 in South and 21 in Centre. Voters could vote for a party list or cast multiple votes for as many candidates as there were seats. Seat allocation was calculated in accordance with the Hagenbach-Bischoff quota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election, Electoral system\nVoting was compulsory for all citizens between the age of 18 and 75, whilst those over 75 and citizens living abroad were the only ones allowed to vote by post. Failure to vote could have resulted in a fine of between \u20ac100 and \u20ac250.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election, Parties\nNine parties contested the election, of which five won seats in the Chamber of Deputies at the last election: the Christian Social People's Party (CSV), the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (LSAP), the Democratic Party (DP), the Greens, the Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR), and The Left. Two extra-parliamentary parties also ran: the Communist Party (KPL) and Pirate Party Luxembourg (PPLU). In addition, the Party for Full Democracy (PID), which was headed by independent deputy Jean Colombera, also contested the election. All parties that ran in the election submitted lists in all constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election, Results, By locality\nAs in 2004 and 2009, the CSV won pluralities in each of Luxembourg's four circonscriptions. However, the CSV's performance declined in all circonscriptions from 2009. The CSV held up the best in Centre, where it lost only 3.29% compared to its 2009 result. The CSV's sharpest decline was in Nord, where the party lost 5.91%. It nonetheless held a 10% lead over DP in Nord; Nord was the last constituency to not vote for the CSV at the national level, when the DP beat the CSV by 2% in Nord in 1999. Overall, despite a relative decline, the CSV retained a comfortable lead in all circonscriptions, both in votes and in seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election, Government formation\nFollowing the elections, the Democratic Party, the Socialist Workers' Party and The Greens began initial talks about forming a coalition (dubbed the \"Gambia coalition\", after Gambia's flag colours, a local variant of the German traffic light coalition), pushing the Christian Social People's Party into the opposition for the first time since 1979. On 25 October, Xavier Bettel, the leader of the Democratic Party and mayor of Luxembourg City, was named formateur by the Grand Duke of Luxembourg. The negotiations were finished by 29 November, as planned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234538-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxembourg general election, Government formation\nThe new Bettel\u2013Schneider Ministry was sworn in on 4 December. It succeeded the Juncker\u2013Asselborn Ministry II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash\nOn 26 February 2013, a hot air balloon crashed near Luxor, Egypt, killing 19 out of the 21 people on board. A fire developed in the basket due to a leak in the balloon's gas fuel system, causing the balloon to deflate mid-air and crash to the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash\nIt was the deadliest ballooning accident in history and the deadliest aerostat disaster since the Hindenburg disaster in 1937, which killed 36 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Background\nHot air balloons are commonly used in Luxor to provide tourists with aerial views of the Nile River, the temple of Karnak, and the Valley of the Kings, among other historical attractions. Concerns over passenger safety have been raised from time to time, with multiple crashes reported in 2007, 2008 and 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Background\nIn April 2009, 16 people had been hurt when a balloon crashed during a tour of Luxor. After the crash, flights were grounded for six months while safety measures were improved. Pilot training was increased and balloons were given a designated launching site. Following the toppling of Hosni Mubarak in 2011, the rule of law and the improved regulations were largely ignored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Background\nSky Cruise, the operator of the balloon, had suffered a previous accident in October 2011, which even involved the same balloon. The company has stated that it is properly insured and prepared to compensate victims' families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Crash\nOn 26 February at 07:00 Egypt Standard Time (05:00 UTC), an Ultramagic N-425 balloon, registration SU-283, operated by Sky Cruise departed on a sight-seeing flight carrying 20 passengers and a pilot. According to a nearby balloon pilot, Mohamed Youssef, a fire started in the Sky Cruise balloon a few meters off the ground as it was attempting to land, as a result of a leaking fuel line. As the fire engulfed the basket, the pilot and one passenger leaped to safety as the craft rose rapidly aided by a wind gust.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Crash\nAs the balloon rose, approximately seven passengers jumped to their deaths to escape the fire. At an altitude of approximately 300 meters (980\u00a0ft), there was an explosion which could be heard several kilometers away. The balloon and remaining passengers plunged to the ground, killing everyone remaining on board. Youssef said it appeared that a gas leak in one of the balloon's tanks caused the fire and resulting explosion, consistent with information reported in state-run media. Earlier reports had indicated that the balloon may have contacted a power line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Crash\nTwo minutes later, the burning craft crashed into a sugar cane field west of Luxor. A second explosion was reported 15 seconds later. Ambulances arrived on the scene after 15 minutes. Bodies were scattered across the field when rescue workers arrived on the scene. The balloon's final moments were caught on amateur video.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Casualties\nAt the time of its ascent, the balloon carried 20 passengers and Momin Murad, the balloon's Egyptian pilot. Nineteen of the passengers were tourists: nine from Hong Kong, four from Japan, three from Britain, two from France, and one from Hungary; the 20th passenger was an Egyptian tour guide. Of the Hong Kongers, five were women and four were men. They were members of three families on a tour group organized by Kuoni Travel. The Japanese victims were two couples from Tokyo in their 60s. They were on a ten-day tour of Egypt organized by JTB Corporation. The three Britons and the Hungarian-born passenger, a resident of the UK, were on a tour organized by Thomas Cook Group. The French victims were a 48-year-old woman and her 14-year-old daughter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Casualties\nThe accident killed 18 of the passengers on site; the pilot and two passengers survived the initial crash. The two surviving passengers, both British men, were rushed to hospital in critical condition. One of them died after five hours of surgery. Dr. Mohammad Abdullah, the head of the emergency ward of the Luxor hospital, said that the Briton who died in the hospital had probably suffered a 50-meter (160\u00a0ft) fall. The surviving Briton was described as being in critical but stable condition, while the pilot was said to be conscious and talking, but with burns covering 70% of his body. Doctors at the Luxor International Hospital said that many of the dead suffered severe internal injuries and severe burns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Aftermath\nAfter news of the accident broke, Governor of Luxor Ezzat Saad banned hot air balloon flights in his jurisdiction until further notice. Egypt's civil aviation minister, Wael el-Maadawi, followed by suspending balloon flights nationwide. In a statement, President Mohamed Morsi expressed his \"deepest condolences and sympathy for the families of those who lost their lives in this tragic incident.\" National government spokesman Alaa Hadidi said a committee would be formed to investigate the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Aftermath\nThe bodies of the victims were transported to four hospitals in Cairo. Chinese consular officials in the Arab Republic of Egypt and Hong Kong Immigration Department officers were scheduled to travel with the family members of the Hong Kong victims to Cairo. Kuoni Travel, the Hong Kong travel agency that organized the tour attended by the Hong Kong passengers, made plans for the six tour members who did not take the balloon ride to leave Egypt. The tour agency stated that, in addition to the US$7000 per person stipulated by contract, additional compensation would be given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Aftermath\nMohammed Osman, head of the Luxor Tourism Chamber, accused civil aviation authorities of lowering standards prior to the accident. \"I don't want to blame the revolution for everything, but the laxness started with the revolution,\" he said. \"These people are not doing their job, they are not checking the balloons and they just issue the licenses without inspection.\" National authorities were quick to deny the allegations, noting that the balloon had recently been inspected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Aftermath\nThey also said the pilot should have shut off gas valves and attempted to put out the fire instead of bailing, and thus may have contributed to the tragedy. An anonymous civil aviation ministry official acknowledged to the press that standards had been weakened by the current regime. The pilot's license had been renewed one month prior to the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Aftermath\nLocal and foreign media analysts speculated that the crash would hurt Egypt's already weakened tourism industry, which was down 22% from 2010 levels. Wael Ibrahim, who oversees the tourism syndicate in Luxor, did not expect the accident to worsen the situation since tourism was already down so much. \"This (type of) accident could happen anywhere in the world\", he remarked. A local balloon operator, angered by the industry shutdown, remarked: \"Why the mass punishment? Do you stop all flights when you have a plane crash? ...", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Aftermath\nYou will cut the livelihoods for nearly 3,000 human beings who live on this kind of tourism.\" Angered by the industry-wide shutdown, tourism workers threatened to organize protests on 2 March. The same day, Saad admitted that pressure to resume balloon flights was mounting and promised that downtime would be less than a month. Hot air balloon rides at Luxor were set to resume in April, according to a statement on the Egyptian Civil Aviation Regulatory Commission's (CARC) website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Investigation\nPreliminary results of the government investigation ruled out criminal conduct as the cause of the crash. On 2 March, Luxor-area balloon pilots held a press conference to defend Egypt's safety protocol and their colleague's actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234539-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Luxor hot air balloon crash, Investigation\nThe Egyptian Civil Aviation Authority released its final report of the crash on 7 January 2014. The 219-page report blamed a leak in a fuel line connected to the balloon's burner. The aging line had been in use since 2005 and sprung a leak, which ignited as the balloon came in to land. The fire severely injured the pilot, who jumped or fell from the basket. Some of the ground crew released the ground line in order to attend to the pilot, so that the remaining crew could not keep the balloon near the ground. The flaming balloon rose rapidly and uncontrolled, then exploded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234540-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Lyndhurst state by-election\nA by-election for the seat of Lyndhurst in the Victorian Legislative Assembly was held on 27 April 2013. The by-election was triggered by the resignation of Labor Party (ALP) member Tim Holding on 18 February 2013. Martin Pakula retained the seat for Labor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234540-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Lyndhurst state by-election, Dates\nThe writ for the by-election was issued on 5 March 2013. The electoral roll in Lyndhurst closed on 12 March, and the final date for candidates to nominate was 28 March. Registration of how-to-vote cards closed on 18 April. Polling day was 27 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234540-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Lyndhurst state by-election, Candidates\nThe Liberal Party declined to nominate a candidate for the by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234540-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Lyndhurst state by-election, How-to-vote cards\nHow-to-vote cards are distributed to voters at polling stations to provide information with how the candidate suggests preferences be allocated. Candidates and parties suggesting preferences are shown in each column of the table below. The Sex Party released a card with two preferences allocated, one favouring Labor and the other favouring the Greens. The Greens ran an open card at this by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234540-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Lyndhurst state by-election, Results\nResults are final. Pre -poll and postal votes were included on election night upon which media outlets called the by-election for Labor. The full preference distribution occurred on 1 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234541-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 M-League Division 1\nThe 2013 M*League Division 1 was the seventh season of top-flight football in Northern Marianas Islands. The Spring League was won by IFC Wild Bills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234542-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MAAC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 8\u201311 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield, Massachusetts. The tournament was held in Springfield through 2014. The winner of the tournament received the conference's automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Tournament. The regular season champion received an automatic bid into the 2013 NIT Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234543-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MAC Championship Game\nThe 2013 Mid-American Football Championship Game was played on December 6, 2013, between the winners of the East division, the Bowling Green Falcons and the winners of the West division, the Northern Illinois Huskies. The Championship game determined the 2013 football champion of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). The winner was to be the Mid-American Conference representative for the 2014 GoDaddy.com Bowl on January 5, 2014, in Mobile, Alabama. Going into the game, Northern Illinois was hoping for an undefeated season and another chance at a BCS game. Bowling Green ended that dream with a 47\u201327 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234544-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Mid-American Conference men's basketball tournament was the post-season basketball tournament for the Mid-American Conference (MAC) 2012\u201313 college basketball season. The 2013 tournament was held between March 11\u201316, 2013. Akron, as the winner of the tournament received the MAC's automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234544-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe 2013 MAC tournament only had 11 teams due to Toledo being ineligible for post season play due to low APR Scores. First round games were held on campus sites at the higher seed on March 11. The remaining rounds were held at Quicken Loans Arena, between March 13\u201316. As with the 2012 tournament, the top two seeds (Akron and Ohio, respectively) received byes into the semifinals, with the three seed (Western Michigan) and four seed (Kent State) receiving a bye to the quarterfinals. No. 5 Ball State received a first round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234544-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Championship Game\nFirst round games at campus sites of lower-numbered seedsAll times listed are EasternOT denotes overtime game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards\nThe 2013 MAD Video Music Awards were the 10th award ceremony, hosted by Themis Georgantas and Mary Sinatsaki. They took place on 25 June 2013. The awards were broadcast from the Tae Kwon Do Stadium in Athens, honoring the best music videos and artists of the past year. The theme song, \"We Are Young\", was performed by the Australian-Greek singer Vassy. The nominations were announced on 23 May 2013 by the presenter, Themis Georgantas. Vegas received five nominations, while Elena Paparizou, Sakis Rouvas, Michalis Hatzigiannis, Melisses and Demy received four. The song \"All the Time\" received three nominations, the most for any song.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards\nAs every year there were thirty three categories with additionally, the top 50 category which was introduced for first time where the fans could vote their five favorite out of the fifty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards\nDue to the celebration of the 10 years, the logo was selected through The Missing Logo, a contest where the fans could create their own logos. The winning logo was revealed on 1 May 2013. Also there was another contest with the fifty best performances from the past awards and the people could vote for their favorites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards, Shows\nAs every year, a kick-off party was held to mark the start of the Awards. The party was held on 23 May 2013 at the Balux Priv\u00e9 in Athens, the same day the voting opened. Eleni Foureira, Ivi Adamou, Vegas, Kostas Martakis were some of the artists that attended for the party. A 10 hours live concert was held on 14 June to celebrate the 10 years of the awards. Artists including Ivi Adamou, Melisses, Demy, Shaya and Stavento performed in the concert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards, Shows\nA few hours before the ceremony a MAD PreShow was held with Melisses, Melina Zisi, Snik, OGE, The Fade and Stelios Legakis performing cover versions of the best performances through the ten years of the awards. The songs were picked by the fans in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards, Awards, Best Dance Video\nPlaymen feat. Elena Paparizou, Courtney and RiskyKidd \u2013 \"All the Time\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards, Awards, Best Collaboration\nPlaymen feat. Elena Paparizou, Courtney and RiskyKidd \u2013 \"All the Time\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234545-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 MAD Video Music Awards, Performances\n34 artists have been confirmed to perform at the award night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234546-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships\nThe 2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships was the 19th and final race of the 2013 IndyCar Series season. The event took place on October 19, at the 2.000-mile (3.219\u00a0km) Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234546-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships\nIt was the final race for Izod as the series' main sponsor, as Verizon Communications took over as title sponsor from 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234546-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships\nThis was the first race without Dario Franchitti In the field since the 2008 Peak Antifreeze Indy 300", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234546-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships, Report\nWill Power, who won the pole position in qualifying, won the race leading 103 laps. Scott Dixon, who finished 5th, won the championship, defeating H\u00e9lio Castroneves by 27 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234546-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships, Report\nA. J. Allmendinger returned to Team Penske, driving the #2 car. J. R. Hildebrand drove the #98 Honda for Barracuda Racing. Will Power, from the pole, quickly lost the lead to a faster S\u00e9bastien Bourdais who dominated the first quarter of the race. Meanwhile, Castroneves rises from 10th to 5th place and watched the battle for the lead between Kanaan, Hunter-Reay, Bourdais and a fast Carlos Mu\u00f1oz while Dixon keep the pace in 15th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234546-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships, Report\nAt lap 111, Justin Wilson lost the rear of his car and was avoided by Josef Newgarden who collected Oriol Servi\u00e0 on the process. Then Wilson was hit by Tristan Vautier involving also James Jakes and Simona de Silvestro on the accident. Wilson was sent to the local hospital with minor fractures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234546-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships, Report\nAt the checkered flag Will Power finally grabbed the win at Fontana, followed by Ed Carpenter and Tony Kanaan. Dixon finished at 5th place, which was enough to give him the season title, while Castroneves had a tough night and finished 6th. Dixon become the new three time Indycar Series Champion, winning previously in 2003 and 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234547-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MBC Drama Awards\nThe 2013 MBC Drama Awards (Korean:\u00a0MBC \uc5f0\uae30\ub300\uc0c1) is a ceremony honoring the outstanding achievement in television on the Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) network for the year of 2013. It was held on December 30, 2013 and hosted by actor Lee Seung-gi and actress Han Ji-hye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234548-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place March 11\u201316, 2013 at the Norfolk Scope in Norfolk, Virginia. The tournament winner, North Carolina A&T, received an automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Tournament. 2013 was the first year in Norfolk after the last eight years in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. First Round games were played on March 11 and March 12, with the Quarterfinal games played March 13 and March 14. The semifinals were held March 15, with the Championship game being played on March 16. ESPNU televised the Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game\nThe 2013 Major League Soccer All-Star Game, held on July 31, 2013, was the 18th annual Major League Soccer All-Star Game, a soccer match involving all-stars from Major League Soccer. The game was played at Sporting Park, now known as Children's Mercy Park, in Kansas City, Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game\nThe game featured the MLS All-Stars against Roma from Italy's Serie A, marking the first time that an Italian team has played in the MLS All-Star Game. Roma is also the first European club not from Great Britain to play in the All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game\nPeter Vermes, the coach of Sporting Kansas City (the All-Star Game's host), was announced to coach the MLS All-Stars. A unique feature of this year's MLS All-Star Game was that the 11th player in the fan XI was decided through the FIFA 13 video game, with players from around the world scoring goals with their player of choice, and the player with the most goals scored at the end of the allotted time frame would earn their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game\nItalian Montreal Impact striker Marco Di Vaio made the cut, joining the ten other fan XI players and those voted for by other MLS players and those chosen by Peter Vermes and MLS Commissioner Don Garber. Despite initially being selected, Robbie Keane and Tim Cahill, of LA Galaxy and New York Red Bulls, were both removed from the squad due to injury, which led to their being replaced by Landon Donovan and Jack McInerney, playing for LA Galaxy and Philadelphia Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game\nA.S. Roma won the game 3\u20131, with goals from Kevin Strootman, Alessandro Florenzi, and Junior Tallo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game, Roster, MLS All-Stars\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, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game, Roster, MLS All-Stars\n\u2022- Fan XI *- 11th Player of Fan XI, determined through FIFA 13", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game, Roster, MLS All-Stars\n\u2666 - Players selected by MLS Commissioner Don Garber and All-Star Coach Peter Vermes\u2665 - \"Inactive Roster\" players voted for by other players in MLS#- Injured Player that was replaced% - Chosen by Don Garber and Peter Vermes to replace the injured Robbie Keane and Tim Cahill", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game, Roster, Roma 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, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234549-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS All-Star Game, Match, Details\nVolkswagen MLS All-Star MVP: Alessandro Florenzi (Roma)Assistant referees: (Paul Scott) (Bill Dittmar)Fourth official: (Drew Fischer)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs\nThe 2013 MLS Cup Playoffs was the eighteenth post-season tournament culminating the Major League Soccer regular season. The tournament began in late October and culminated on December 7, 2013 with MLS Cup 2013, the eighteenth league championship for MLS. This was the third year that the playoffs included ten teams, and the second playoff series since 2006 in which teams could not cross conference brackets. The top five teams in both the Eastern and Western conferences of the league earned berths, with the top three clubs in each conference earning direct byes to the conference semifinals. The fourth and fifth-place finishers of both conferences competed in a single-elimination play-in match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs\nThe play-in winner played their respective conference regular season champion in the conference semifinals, which was a two-leg aggregate series, without the away goals rule enforced. For the second year in a row, each Conference Championship will also be a two-leg aggregate series, as opposed to the traditional single elimination match. The MLS Cup championship will once again remain a single match, but the team with the stronger regular season record will host the final at their home venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs\nLos Angeles Galaxy were the defending champions, having defeated Houston Dynamo 3\u20131 in the 2012 MLS Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs\nIn a break from previous years, only Sporting Kansas City, the MLS Cup winner, directly entered the 2014\u201315 CONCACAF Champions League, earning a Pot A seed. They were joined by the New York Red Bulls, the Supporters' Shield winner; the Portland Timbers, the conference winner from the conference opposite the Supporters' Shield winner; and D.C. United, the 2013 U.S. Open Cup champion. However, none of these berths were available to the league's three Canadian teams, which instead participated in the Canadian Championship for that country's single berth in the CONCACAF Champions League. The change from the MLS Cup runner-up gaining entry to the CONCACAF Champions League to the opposite conference winner gaining entry was new for 2013. The change was announced after the MLS Cup had been played, with the announcement stating that the teams knew in advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs, Format\nFor 2013, the league kept the format the same as the 2012 edition. In 2012, the league's previous system of \"wild card\" qualification\u2014which had the potential for \"crossover\" series in which one team could play in the other conference's bracket\u2014was scrapped. Instead, the current system has the top five teams in each conference qualify for the playoffs and the two conference brackets are entirely separate. The First Round of each conference is a one-off match between the 4th and 5th place teams, similar to the previous wild card system, with the 4th-place team hosting. The First Round winner advances to play the conference's top seed in the Conference Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs, Format\nConference Semifinals and Conference Championship series are conducted in a home-and-away aggregate-goal format. The lower-seeded team in the Conference Semifinal hosts the first game, and the higher seed hosts the second. If the teams are tied after two games, a 30-minute extra time period (divided into two 15-minute periods) will be played followed by penalty kicks, if necessary. The away goals rule or golden goal is not used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs, Format\nIn the case of ties in the First Round and MLS Cup, extra time and penalty kicks are used in the same manner as above.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs, Qualification\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234550-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Cup Playoffs, Qualification, Tiebreak rules\nWhen two or more teams are tied in standings on points the following tiebreak rules apply:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft\nThe two-stage 2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft took place on December 12, 2013 (Stage 1) and December 18, 2013 (Stage 2). All 19 Major League Soccer clubs were eligible to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft\nThe Stage 1 and Stage 2 Drafts were conducted in the same order as the traditional Waiver Draft, with clubs choosing in reverse order of their 2013 Major League Soccer season finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft\nPlayers who were not selected in the Stage 1 draft were made available for the Stage 2 draft. Clubs that selected players in Stage 2 had to negotiate a new salary with any player not under contract. Players not selected in either stage were free to negotiate with any club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft\nTeams also had the option of passing on their selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Available players\nPlayers were required to meet age and service requirements to participate as stipulated by the terms of the MLS Collective Bargaining Agreement. The league released a list of all players available for the draft on December 9, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Stage One\nThe first stage of the 2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft took place on December 12, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Stage One, Round 2\nOnly teams which selected a player in Round 1 were eligible for a pick in Round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Stage One, Round 3\nOnly teams which selected a player in Rounds 1 and 2 were eligible for a pick in Round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Stage Two\nThe second stage of the 2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft took place on December 18, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Stage Two, Round 2\nOnly teams which selected a player in Round 1 were eligible for a pick in Round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234551-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Re-Entry Draft, Stage Two, Round 3\nOnly teams which selected a player in Rounds 1 and 2 were eligible for a pick in Round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234552-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS SuperDraft\nThe 2013 MLS SuperDraft was the fourteenth SuperDraft presented by Major League Soccer. The draft took place on January 17, 2013 in Indianapolis, Indiana at the Indiana Convention Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234552-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS SuperDraft\nThe Colorado Rapids enjoyed returns from the 2013 draft, with its two first-round draft picks Dillon Powers and Deshorn Brown finishing first and second respectively in 2013 rookie of the year voting. The 2013 season also showed the ability of MLS teams to develop young talent without turning to the draft, as homegrown players DeAndre Yedlin and Gyasi Zardes finished third and fourth respectively in rookie of the year voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234552-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS SuperDraft, Selection order\nThe official selection order was announced by Major League Soccer on December 6, 2012:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234552-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS SuperDraft, Selection order\nThis selection order pertained to all rounds of the MLS SuperDraft. The same order was followed in the 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft held 5 days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234552-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS SuperDraft, Selection order, Round 1\nAny player marked with a * is part of the Generation Adidas program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234552-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS SuperDraft, Selection order, Round 2\nAny player marked with an * is part of the Generation Adidas program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234553-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Supplemental Draft\nThe 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft was a secondary draft that was held by Major League Soccer via conference call on January 22, 2013. The draft was four rounds with all 19 MLS clubs participating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234553-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Supplemental Draft, Selection order\nThe official selection order was announced by Major League Soccer on December 6, 2012:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234553-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MLS Supplemental Draft, Selection order\nThis selection order pertained to all rounds of the MLS Supplemental Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234554-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MNC Cup\nThe 2013 MNC Cup were held from 21 November to 24 November 2013, hosted by Indonesia. This tournament is intended for players under the age of 23 years (maximum birth 1 January 1990), but each team can register three players aged over 23 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234555-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MNL-2\nThe 2013 MNL-2 New Holland League is the inaugural MNL-2 season which began on 15 February and ended on 28 June. On 28 June 2013, Chin United defeated GFA FC to become the first ever MNL-2 Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234555-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MNL-2, Teams\nThe 2013 MNL-2 season will have 9 teams playing for promotion to the Myanmar National League. The teams are:-", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 17], "content_span": [18, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234555-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MNL-2, Stadium\nMatches are planned to play in Bogyoke Aung San Stadium and Padonmar Stadium with a League cup format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 19], "content_span": [20, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234556-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MSBL season\nThe 2013 MSBL season was the 25th season of the Men's State Basketball League (SBL). The regular season began on Friday 15 March and ended on Saturday 27 July. The finals began on Saturday 3 August and ended on Saturday 31 August, when the Lakeside Lightning defeated the Wanneroo Wolves in the MSBL Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234556-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MSBL season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on Friday 15 March and ended on Saturday 27 July after 20 rounds of competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234556-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MSBL season, Finals\nThe finals began on Saturday 3 August and ended on Saturday 31 August with the MSBL Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234557-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MSS Security V8 Supercars Challenge\nThe 2013 V8 Supercars Albert Park Challenge was a motor race for the Australian sedan-based V8 Supercars. It was a stand-alone event not part of the 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship, but it was attended by all of the International Championship's teams. The event was held at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit as the principal support event of the 2013 Australian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234557-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MSS Security V8 Supercars Challenge\nFabian Coulthard won the opening three races with Scott McLaughlin winning the fourth and final race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234558-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MTN 8\nThe 2013 MTN 8 was the 39th tournament of South Africa's annual football (soccer) cup competition. It featured the top eight teams of the Premier Soccer League table at the end of the 2012-13 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234558-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MTN 8, Teams\nThe eight teams that competed in the MTN 8 knockout competition are listed below according to their finishing position in the 2012-13 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 17], "content_span": [18, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234559-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Europe Music Awards\nThe 2013 MTV EMAs (also known as the MTV Europe Music Awards) were held at the Ziggo Dome, Amsterdam, Netherlands, on 10 November 2013. This was the second time the awards had taken place in the Netherlands, the last time being in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234559-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Europe Music Awards\nSeveral performances of the main show were performed at different locations in Amsterdam than the Ziggo Dome. Dutch DJ Afrojack performed at the Melkweg and was joined by Snoop Lion for the performance of 'Gin and Juice'. The American band Imagine Dragons performed their song 'Radioactive' at the Heineken Music Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234560-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Movie Awards\nThe 2013 MTV Movie Awards were held on April 14, 2013 at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, California. The show was hosted by Rebel Wilson. The nominees were announced on March 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards\nThe 2013 MTV Video Music Awards were held on August 25, 2013, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Marking the 30th installment of the award show, they were the first to be held in New York City not to use a venue within the borough of Manhattan. Nominations were announced on July 17, 2013. Leading the nominees were Justin Timberlake and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis with six, followed by Bruno Mars, Miley Cyrus, and Robin Thicke with four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards\nJustin Timberlake was the big winner on the night with four awards, including Video of the Year for \"Mirrors\" and the Michael Jackson Vanguard Award. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Bruno Mars and Taylor Swift were also among the winners of the night. The ceremony drew a total of 10.1\u00a0million viewers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards\nThe show featured Miley Cyrus and Robin Thicke's raunchy and sexually-driven performance for the medley of their songs \"We Can't Stop\" and \"Blurred Lines\", which received negative reactions from critics and mixed reactions from fans and fellow celebrities. The most watched performance of the night was Justin Timberlake's 15-minute medley number, which included a mini-reunion with NSYNC, leading up to his acceptance speech for the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees\nNominees were announced on July 17, 2013. Winners were announced on August 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Hip-Hop Video\nMacklemore and Ryan Lewis (featuring Ray Dalton) \u2013 \"Can't Hold Us\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Collaboration\nPink (featuring Nate Ruess) \u2013 \"Just Give Me a Reason\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Direction\nJustin Timberlake (featuring Jay-Z) \u2013 \"Suit & Tie\" (Director: David Fincher)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Visual Effects\nCapital Cities \u2013 \"Safe and Sound\" (Visual Effects: Grady Hall, Jonathan Wu and Derek Johnson)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Art Direction\nJanelle Mon\u00e1e (featuring Erykah Badu) \u2013 \"Q.U.E.E.N.\" (Art Director: Veronica Logsdon)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Editing\nJustin Timberlake \u2013 \"Mirrors\" (Editors: Jarrett Fijal and Bonch LA)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Cinematography\nMacklemore and Ryan Lewis (featuring Ray Dalton) \u2013 \"Can't Hold Us\" (Directors of Photography: Jason Koenig, Ryan Lewis and Mego Lin)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Winners and nominees, Best Video with a Social Message\nMacklemore and Ryan Lewis (featuring Mary Lambert) \u2013 \"Same Love\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Controversy\nPop singer Miley Cyrus became the subject of widespread media attention following a controversial performance with Robin Thicke. The performance began with Cyrus performing \"We Can't Stop\" in bear-themed attire. Following this, Thicke entered the stage and Cyrus stripped down to a skin-colored two-piece latex outfit while they performed \"Blurred Lines\" in a duet. Cyrus subsequently touched Thicke's crotch area with a giant pedicured foam finger and twerked against him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Controversy\nCritics universally panned the performance, while fans and celebrities were shocked. Parents expressed outrage over the performance. An article published in The Hollywood Reporter described the performance as \"crass\" and \"reminiscent of a bad acid trip\". The performance was described by XXL critic B. J. Steiner as a \"trainwreck in the classic sense of the word as the audience reaction seemed to be a mix of confusion, dismay and horror in a cocktail of embarrassment\", while the BBC said Cyrus stole the show with a \"raunchy performance\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Controversy\nKaty Kroll of Rolling Stone magazine wrote in 2014, \"there were dancing teddy bears, an overused foam finger, an unflattering flesh-colored bikini, some very obvious groping and twerking \u2013 lots and lots of twerking. For lack of a better term, it was a hot mess.\" A Telegraph article described Cyrus' actions as her going into \"overdrive [...] trying to kill off her Disney millstone, Hannah Montana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234561-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards, Controversy\nThe performance prompted Disney to pull Cyrus\u2019 Hannah Montana series from reruns on Disney Channel. Also, Toys R Us pulled all Hannah Montana toys from its stores. It generated 306,100 tweets per minute on Twitter, Cyrus' performance resulted in a gain of over 213,000 Twitter followers, 226,000 likes on Facebook, and 90,000 downloads of her new single, \"Wrecking Ball\", within days of the controversial performance. This amounted to a total 112% increase in Cyrus' social media activity. The performance topped Twitter during the East Coast telecast, with Timberlake behind with 219,800 tweets per minute at its peak. The most-mentioned performers on Twitter were Cyrus (4.5\u00a0million), Timberlake (2.9\u00a0million) and Lady Gaga (1.9\u00a0million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234562-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards Japan\nThe 2013 MTV Video Music Awards Japan was held in Chiba on June 22, 2013 at the Makuhari Messe and was hosted by Atsuko Maeda and Nobuaki Kaneko from Rize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234562-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards Japan, Awards, Best Hip-Hop Video\nASAP Rocky featuring Drake, 2 Chainz and Kendrick Lamar \u2014 \"Fuckin' Problems\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234562-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MTV Video Music Awards Japan, Performers\n* Exile performance was a special movie from their concert on Tokyo Dome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Macau on 15 September 2013 according to the provisions of the Basic Law of Macau. This election was the first of its kind succeeding the reform of the Legislative Assembly that created four new seats; two new geographical constituency seats and two new functional constituency seats. Out of a total of 33 seats, 14 were elected by universal suffrage under the highest averages method, while 12 were voted on from the Functional constituency, and 7 from nomination by the Chief Executive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Background\nFormerly a Portuguese colony, Macau has been a Special Administrative Region within China since 1999. As a Special Administrative Region it is entitled to a high degree of autonomy from the mainland Chinese legal system through the year 2050, although China represents the city on foreign policy matters. Macau's economy is based primarily on its status as a tech and financial sector, as well as its internationally famous casino industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Background\nThe previous legislative election took place in 2009. The pro-democracy camp ANMD+APMD, led by Ant\u00f3nio Ng, received 19.35% of the votes cast, and the next largest party, the pro-establishment camp UPD, received 14.88% in vote with 2 seats while the pro-establishment ACUM received 12.00% with 2 seats. Due to the characteristics of the Macau election system, only 14 members are directly elected. On 1 July 2013 twenty-two parties have submitted their nominations for the direct election including current incumbents (Kwan Tsui Hang, Chan Meng Kam, Ant\u00f3nio Ng, Paul Chan, Angela Leong, Ho Ion Sang, Au Kam San, Jos\u00e9 Pereira Coutinho, Mak Soi Kun, and Melinda Chan) and new candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, New structure of the Legislative Assembly, Previous Structure\nMacau's government is headed by the Chief Executive, who controls government appointments and in many ways serves as the face of the city. Prior to 2012, the Chief Executive was elected by a 300-member Election Committee consisting of representatives from functional constituencies. 100 total came from the industrial, commercial and financial sectors, 18 from the culture sector, 20 from the education sector, 30 from the \"specialty\" sector, 12 from the sports sector, 40 from the labor sector, 34 from the social services sector, and 6 total from various religious groups. 16 were representatives of the Legislative Assembly of Macau and 24 were Macau representatives in the mainland Chinese government. While all members of the Election Committee are technically elected, in practice they are effectively appointed as each functional constituency usually nominates only one candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 985]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, New structure of the Legislative Assembly, Previous Structure\nMost power in the Macau government is concentrated in the Legislative Assembly. Macau's Legislative Assembly is unicameral (consisting of a single house). Prior to 2012 it had 29 members - 12 directly elected (in citywide elections), 10 indirectly elected (appointed through election by functional constituencies representing \"employee\", \"business\", \"professional\" and \"charity/culture/education/sports\" interests) and 7 appointed by the Chief Executive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, New structure of the Legislative Assembly, Previous Structure\nDemocracy advocates in Macau had criticized the large number of indirectly elected members, charging that these tended to be pro-establishment and pro-Beijing businesspeople. As an alternative, they called for a larger number of directly elected legislators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, New structure of the Legislative Assembly, 2012 reform package\nAs a result of the 2012 passage of \"Amendment to Electoral Law for the Legislative Assembly of Macau\" also known as the \"+2+2+100\" Law, the number of Legislative Council members is increased from 29 to 33. Two new geographical constituency seats, and two new indirectly elected Functional Constituency seats are created. Another key proposal was increasing the Election Committee for the chief executive election from 300 members to 400 on the next Chief Executive election in 2014. These changes were designed to create representation for a larger number of groups in the Election Committee and to reduce the power of the Chief Executive over the Legislative Assembly. However, democracy advocates criticized the law for not going far enough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, New structure of the Legislative Assembly, Geographical constituency\nUnder the constitutional reform package passed in 2012, this election saw AL increase its total size from 29 seats to 33 seats, half of which are geographical constituencies (GCs) and half functional constituencies (FCs). The GC seats are returned by universal suffrage in citywide elections, with gaining two extra seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, New structure of the Legislative Assembly, Functional constituencies\nThe Welfare, Culture, Education, and Sports constituency is split into two groups. Culture and Sports retains the two seats of the initial group, with the two incumbents (Victor Cheung Lup Kwan and Chan Chak Mo) running unopposed. Culture and Sports continues to be run by the Excellent Culture and Sports Union Association. A new constituency is created for Welfare and Education, receiving one seat (Cahn Hong, unopposed). Welfare and Education is managed by the Association for Promotion of Social Services and Education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, New structure of the Legislative Assembly, Functional constituencies\nAdditionally, one seat is added to the Professionals constituency, lead by the Macau Professional Interest Union. Chan Lek Lap is elected, unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, The pro-democracy lists\nThis year, there are three lists for the pro-democrats instead of two campaigning on high property prices and freedom of speech. The three lists included the New Macau Association (ANM), New Hope (NE), and the addition of New Macau Liberals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, The pro-democracy lists\nAntonio Ng for ANM campaigns for universal suffrage, promotion of a minimum wage and public housing, and increasing government accountability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, The pro-democracy lists\nJos\u00e9 Maria Pereira Couthino of NE campaigns for improvements in public housing and pension services, equal pay for workers, and increasing government accountability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, The pro-democracy lists\nJason Chao Teng-hei is a radical young candidate for New Macau Liberals and a prominent social activist for LGBT rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, The pro-establishment lists\nPro -establishment Chan Meng-kam, casino owner and lawmaker-elect of the ACUM, said he believed the city should implement universal suffrage \"step by step\", and that functional constituencies should be preserved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, The pro-establishment lists\nOthers with casino links on the pro-establishment lists were Angela Leong On-kei of New Union for Macau's Development and Melinda Chan Mei-yi of the Alliance for Change. Leong is married to gambling mogul Stanley Ho Hung-sun, while Chan is married to casino tycoon David Chow Kam-fai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Macau Election Laws\nMacau's direct electoral system is based around proportional representation, with elections carried out through a closed party-list balloting system. This means that each geographic electoral district has multiple members, with the number of its seats filled by each competing party determined by the proportion of the vote that party receives. Parties nominate a slate of candidates (generally, one per seat in each district where the party is competing). After the election, party leaders decide who from the slate will fill the party's legislative seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Macau Election Laws\nShortly before usual campaign period for the 2013 elections, the Electoral Affairs Commission of Macau banned the use of commercial advertising by election candidates. The new election rules stipulate that candidates should not carry out activities that could influence voters in the two-month period between their registration and the start of the campaign period on August 31. Commercial advertising is barred from most public areas, except those specially designated by the government. Even in areas where campaigning is permitted, it is still limited to a 14-day official campaign period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Macau Election Laws\nThese restrictions are intended to limit the advertising advantage of wealthy business interests. However, they have been criticized for limiting the amount of canvassing candidates with less money can do, thus encouraging clientelistic bloc voting where parties simply strike deals with associations, business interests and community leaders to turn out assured votes in their favor. Working around the rules, candidates resorted to using loudspeakers to promote their campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Macau Election Laws\nAmong the most powerful special interests in Macau are casinos. Macau's casino industry has a long history of Triad and other organized crime connections. Since laws around casinos were liberalized in 2002 to promote more foreign investment, the Triad has lost its stranglehold on Macau's casino industry (although it remains deeply embedded in it). Casinos have long played a major role in clientelistic politics in Macau, and since liberalization their influence has further increased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Controversies\nThe total of the void ballot is very close to the total of the winning vote", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Controversies, Electoral Affairs Commission Bias\nJason Chao chairman of New Macau Association accuse the CAEAL (Electoral Affairs Commission) being biased suggesting the New Macau Liberals should modifying their political platform by deleting two sentences \"Secretary for Administration and Justice Florinda Chan must step down for her ineffectuality,\" and \"an investigation into former Chief Executive Edmund Ho\u2019s alleged abuse of power.\" On 23 August Jason Chao suggests he may sue the CAEAL after the legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Scandals, Community members bribed potential voters with food and transportation and caught by The Commission Against Corruption\nMr. He, who was a member of a social community of Macau, and Mr. Huang were accused of bribing potential voters and caught by the Commission Against Corruption on September 13. Mr. He has called several members of his community and asked them to support a candidate. He offered free meals and transportation in exchange for the support. Mr. Huang has helped Mr. He call more than one hundred voters based on Mr. He's testimony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 164], "content_span": [165, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Scandals, UPD and UGM false start\nKwan Tsui Hang (Union for Development) and Mak Soi Kun (Macau-Guangdong Union) were both accused of illegal campaigning on 8 August 2013. In various locations banner supporting Kwan Tsui Hang were hung outside of the campaigning period. Lee Kin Yun claims UGM vice-president Mak Soi Kun was vote buying during a function gift bags were handed out with the name, photo and address of Mak Soi Kun with the estimated value of 100 Macanese pataca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Scandals, The ongoing campaign has severely interfered with public order\nOn March 22, four members of Macau Conscience delivered campaign material at Haojiang High School without permission and monitored by more than ten police officers. They are even asked to join the protest around the campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Scandals, Nomination list dispute within MS2\nLuiz Pedruco president of 21st Century Macau Association was accused of replacing Jos\u00e9 Estorninho with his own named on the nomination list. Under the pressure, he purposes a rally in 30 June 3013 to properly nomination its list of members. Electoral Affairs Commission of Macau soon disqualified 21st Century Macau Association for the lack of valid signatures required for Nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Scandals, Lack of organization at polling places\nDuring the voting day, 14 people were reported to police because of illegally recording voting process. They came from 8 different polling stations. 13 of them were arrested immediately by police, and one of them were brought back to the police station for further questioning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Scandals, 8000 notifications of voting were sent back to polling stations by postal service because of wrong address\nSince July 2013, voting notifications with important information regarding voting agenda and other relevant information have been sent to citizens. By August 2013, all the notifications have been sent, but 8000 of them were sent back by postal service. This incident has caused repercussions in Macau society.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 152], "content_span": [153, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Ballot and Results, Voter Turnout\nThe 2013 elections were met with a significant improvement in voter quality, with nearly 280,000 Macau residents having registered as voters for the election. Despite being called the \u201clow-profile\u201d election by many in the media, this election in fact reflected a high voter turnout at 55%. This marked an increase of 80% from the 2001 election, and the turnout rate exceeded 59%. This enormous increase in political participation may be attributed to the high levels of competition between the political parties and the introduction of dynamic newcomers in the face of candidates backed by powerful local families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Ballot and Results, Voter Turnout\nHowever, ultimately the top two lists, in terms of number of votes received, featured candidates hailing from, and relying on clanship connections with, the Fujianese and Guangdong communities. Macau's strong \u201cassociation culture\u201d that advantages such candidates was demonstrated clearly in this year's elections with the win of ACUM's pro-Beijing candidate, Chan Meng-kam, who is both a Fujianese community leader and a casino owner. He secured the highest number of votes at 26,385 (18% of the total), breaking a record in Macau by winning three seats from a single candidate list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Ballot and Results, Voter Turnout\nMeanwhile, newer, pro-democrat candidates such as Jason Chao Teng-hei, a radical young candidate for New Macau Liberals faced difficulties winning out at the polls. Initially hoping to secure the youth vote, he was only able to get 3,227 votes in the face of the new restrictions on campaigning, ultimately resulting in a loss of one of the democrats\u2019 three seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234563-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Macanese legislative election, Candidates lists and results, Geographical constituencies (14 seats)\nVoting System: Closed party-list proportional representation with the Highest averages method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Macau Grand Prix (formally the 60th Star River-Windsor Arch Macau Grand Prix) was a motor race for Formula Three cars that was held on the streets of Macau on 17 November 2013. Unlike other races, such as the Masters of Formula 3, the 2013 Macau Grand Prix was not a part of any Formula Three championship, but was open to entries from all Formula Three championships. 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 2013 race was the 60th running of the Macau Grand Prix and the 31st for Formula Three cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix\nThe Grand Prix was won by Theodore Racing by Prema driver Alex Lynn from pole position, having won the event's Qualification Race the previous afternoon. Lynn led every lap of the main race to take victory and became the seventh driver to win the race for Theodore Racing. Second place went to the race's defending champion Ant\u00f3nio F\u00e9lix da Costa, competing for Carlin, while the podium was completed by Fortec Motorsport driver Pipo Derani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Entry list and background\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 2013 Macau Grand Prix was the 60th running of the event and the 31st time the race was held to Formula Three regulations. It took place on the 6.2\u00a0km (3.9\u00a0mi) 22-turn Guia Circuit on 17 November 2013 with three preceding days of practice and qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Entry list and background\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 FIA Formula Three European Championship or one of the domestic championships, with the highest-ranked drivers in those series given priority in receiving an invitation to the meeting. Within the 28-car grid of the event, three of the four major Formula Three series were represented by their respective champion, Raffaele Marciello, the FIA Formula Three European champion, was joined in Macau by British champion Jordan King and Japanese series winner Yuichi Nakayama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Entry list and background\nGerman Formula Three title victor Marvin Kirchh\u00f6fer did not enter the event and so the highest-placed German series participant at Macau was fifth-placed John Bryant-Meisner. Dennis van de Laar was confirmed as a late replacement for European Formula Three driver Mitchell Gilbert at M\u00fccke Motorsport who could not raise the necessary capital to compete in Macau due to poor results. Ed Jones and Nelson Mason, both European F3 Open Championship winners, replaced F\u00e9lix Serrall\u00e9s and Sandro Zeller; Serral\u00e9s was replaced after his run of poor results in the European Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Entry list and background\nSeven drivers who mainly competed in other series outside of Formula Three in 2013 became eligible for the Macau race: GP3 Series title contender Daniil Kvyat could not attend as he was at the United States Grand Prix testing for Toro Rosso and Ant\u00f3nio F\u00e9lix da Costa, the defending winner of the event, replaced him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Entry list and background\nEurocup Formula Renault 2.0 race winner Esteban Ocon and GP3 Series victor Carlos Sainz Jr. were announced among the lineup of drivers \u2013 Ocon to wait until his main series campaign had concluded before sealing his eligibility; F\u00e9lix da Costa, Ocon and Sainz sealed their eligibility by competing in the MotorSport Vision Formula Three Cup, a second-tier Formula Three series in the United Kingdom, in its season-ending round at Snetterton. Three-time 2013 GP2 Series race winner Stefano Coletti and Kevin Korjus of the GP3 Series raced in the season-closing European Formula Three round at the Hockenheimring to prepare for Macau. The two other drivers who qualified for Macau were Formula Renault 3.5 Series racer Jazeman Jaafar who won two races at the Brands Hatch round of the British championship and Super GT competitor Yuhi Sekiguchi whose entry to the Masters of Formula 3 race allowed for his participation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 965]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Entry list and background\nIn April, the FIA single-seater commission president Gerhard Berger hinted to the press that the race would not have vehicles running with the more powerful 2013-specification engines from the All-Japan Formula Three championship due to a lack of car space and reliability concerns. The FIA World Motor Sport Council confirmed at a meeting at Goodwood House on 28 June that all engines installed in the cars had to be of 2012-specification. After the deaths of touring car driver Phillip Yau and motorcycle rider Lu\u00eds Carreira in support races for the 2012 event, organisers installed crash protection fences for safety reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nTwo 45-minute practice sessions were held before the race on Sunday: one on Thursday morning and one on Friday morning. Alex Lynn set the fastest time for Theodore Racing by Prema in the opening practice session\u2014held in variable weather conditions\u2014with a lap of 2 minutes, 14.495 seconds, 0.061 seconds faster than any one else. His closest challenger was F\u00e9lix da Costa in second in front of third-placed Coletti and M\u00fccke Motorsport's Felix Rosenqvist in fourth position. Alexander Sims, Jaafar, Tom Blomqvist, Marciello, Lucas Auer and Korjus rounded out the session's top ten drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nSainz was the first driver to go off the slippery track and ricocheted off the Fisherman's Corner barrier with his car's rear. His teammate King understeered into the same barrier 11 minutes later, while Rosenqvist ran wide on dirty tyres at Lisboa turn and crashed at San Francisco Bend. Three other drivers\u2014Sekiguchi, Lucas Wolf and Sun Zheng\u2014failed to record a lap time by encountering incidents during the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nQualifying was divided into two sessions; the first was held on Thursday afternoon and ran for 40 minutes with the second held on Friday afternoon and lasted 30 minutes. The fastest time set by each driver from either session counted towards their final starting position for the qualification race. The first qualifying session had Rosenqvist come out on top with a late lap of 2 minutes, 12.751 seconds. He achieved this despite not slipstreaming any other car and recovered the lost time through the final sections of the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nRosenqvist was 0.111 seconds faster than F\u00e9lix da Costa with Sims a further three-tenths of a second slower in third. Harry Tincknell was fourth with Pipo Derani following in fifth having led the session in its opening minutes. Sainz ended up sixth in front of Coletti and Marciello. Korjus and Jaafar\u2014who was forced to abort his fastest time because of red flags\u2014rounded out the top ten. Auer was the fastest driver not to reach the top ten although he was fourth early on before other drivers improved on their best efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nFollowing him were Blomqvist, King, Giovnazzi, Sekiguchi, William Buller, Nakayama, Ocon, Katsumasa Chiyo, Nicholas Latifi, Bryant-Meisner, Mason, Jones, Van de Laar, Sean Gelael, Lynn and Sun completing the order. Wolf sat out qualifying because of the damage sustained to his car in the first practice session. Lynn crashed his car at Fisherman's Bend in the first minutes which was temporarily halted to enable marshals to move his car into a safe location. The session ended early with a minute and 37 seconds remaining when Nakayama broke his suspension in an impact with a wall at Solitude Esses corner. Nakayama was unhurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nIn the second 45-minute practice session, Jaafar was quickest multiple times during the session until Korjus set a lap time of 2 minutes, 13.870 seconds which made him the fastest driver and ultimately held it to the conclusion of practice. Blomqvist was 0.063 seconds slower in second place. Carlin teammates Jaafar and Tincknell were third and fourth respectively. Lynn recovered from the first qualifying session to go fifth. Two more Carlin drivers: Sainz and F\u00e9lix da Costa placed sixth and seventh. Sims, Buller and King occupied eighth to tenth places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nFive drivers damaged their cars during the session: King made light contact with the barrier at Police Bend but rejoined after a replacement front wing was installed on his car. Auer struck a wall at the same turn with the left-hand side of the car and the session was stopped. Coletti's impact was harder and his car was extricated by a crane. Marciello did not continue after going deep at the Melco hairpin as he felt unsafe reversing. Chiyo's left-front corner was loosened from contact with a barrier lining the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nIn the second qualifying session, it was red-flagged soon after it started: Chiyo crashed at San Francisco Bend but the stoppage was short-lived as course workers worked swiftly to get running back under way. Lynn bettered Rosenqvist's benchmark first qualifying lap and recorded the fastest time which was suppressed soon by Derani. A second stoppage occurred when Sun and Mason crashed at Moorish corner just as Blomqvist went quickest. No driver managed a timed lap as Giovinazzi crashed against a barrier at Paiol turn, causing a third red flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nWhen the session restarted, Rosenqvist took provisional pole before Marciello took it with a 2 minutes, 11.555 seconds lap. Rosenqvist slipstreamed other cars but was cautious in the final two turns as he was confident of pole position. Lynn was a tenth of a second adrift in third. Auer moved up from his provisional grid slot to start fourth; he stalled in the pit lane.at the third restart. F\u00e9lix da Costa dropped to fifth as Blomqvist improved to sixth. His teammate Derani took seventh. The top ten was completed by Carlin runners with Jaafar leading Tincknell and King.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nBehind them the rest of the field lined up as Sims, Buller, Korjus, Sainz, Ocon, Latifi, Coletti, Sekiguchi, Wolf, Giovinazzi, Nakayama, Van de Laar, Byrant-Meisner, Gelael, Mason, Jones, Chiyo and Sun. Jaafar, Nakayama and Jones each received penalties after second qualifying; Nakayama and Jones were demoted to the back of the grid for changing their engines while Jaafar dropped five places for a yellow flag infringement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nThe qualifying race to set the grid order for the main race started on 16 November at 14:00 Macau Standard Time (UTC+08:00). The weather at the start were dry and sunny with an air temperature of 23\u00a0\u00b0C (73\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature at 39\u00a0\u00b0C (102\u00a0\u00b0F). On the grid, pole sitter Marciello was slow off the line and fell to fifth. Rosenqvist made a fast getaway to take the lead only for Lynn to slipstream up behind him and claim it on the outside of Mandarin Oriental Bend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nIn turn, Rosenqvist then slipstreamed onto the back of Lynn heading towards Lisboa corner and reclaimed first position as Lynn was forced to run deep and go wide, narrowly avoiding a collision with a barrier. Further down the field a safety car caused by a startline crash neutralised competitive racing. Blomqvist stalled and his rear was impacted by the slow-starting Tincknell, littering debris across the track. Van de Laar's race ended prematurely as he stalled on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nAll cars were instructed to drive through the pit lane since marshals were needed to remove the two stricken cars from the circuit. The event restarted at the conclusion of lap three with Rosenqvist defending first place from Lynn after losing traction in his tyres from driving behind the safety car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nLynn steered to the outside of Rosenqvist into Lisboa corner and turned in to take the lead. F\u00e9lix da Costa overtook Auer for third up to Mandarin Oriental Bend, and Auer lost a further place to Marciello at Lisboa turn. Auer then crashed heavily against the barrier at San Francisco Bend while defending from Derani, ending his race early. Soon after Jones hit a bump going off the racing line at Fisherman's Bend and made contact with the wall. Yellow flags were shown in the area but were withdrawn after he was removed from the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nUp front Lynn continued to lead Rosenqvist while F\u00e9lix da Costa was being hounded by Marciello for third. Meanwhile, King battled Sims for fifth with Coletti, Buller and Ocon in close formation in a duel over sixth. Mason was imposed a drive-through penalty after his team started his engine while stationary in the fast lane of the pit lane. Sims got ahead of King for fifth and began closing up to Derani. Buller overtook Coletti while Sainz passed Korjus for 11th. Marciello moved in front of F\u00e9lix da Costa heading towards Lisboa corner on the fifth lap for third. Marciello set what was at that point a new fastest lap of the race as he drew closer to Rosenqvist. Ocon could not resist Sainz's challenge for tenth while the struggling Jaafar was overtaken by Korjus on the next lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nMason was black-flagged as he opted to continue racing and not take his drive-through penalty. Rosenqvist concentrated on not allowing Marciello get close to him while F\u00e9lix da Costa and Derani waited to capitalise on any mistakes. Sainz overtook Coletti for ninth as Giovinazzi won a battle against Gelael for 17th. Giovinazzi then gained a further place with a pass on Wolf for 16th. Coletti lost ninth to Ocon in the closing stages while Korjus pulled to the side of the track at Fisherman's Bend with smoke billowing from his engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nLynn opened up a two-second lead over the rest of the field to win the qualification race and pole position for the Grand Prix itself. He was joined on the front row of the grid by Rosenqvist while Marciello completed the podium despite gaining on Rosenqvist who felt a loss in tyre grip. Behind the two, F\u00e9lix da Costa followed with Derani fifth. Sims, King and Buller were in close formation for positions six to eight. Sainz and Ocon completed the top ten. Coletti, Jaafar, Latifil, Sekiguchi, Giovnazzi, Wolf, Gelael, Nakayama, Chiyo, Bryant-Meisner, Sun, Mason and Korjus rounded out the 23 classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Main race\nThe race began at 15:30 local time on 17 November. The weather at the start were dry and sunny with an air temperature of 24\u00a0\u00b0C (75\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature of 29\u00a0\u00b0C (84\u00a0\u00b0F). Three drivers took penalties: Korjus was demoted places because of an engine change. Tincknell was required to start from 27th as he was adjudged to have caused the collision between himself and Blomqvist. Mason joined Tincknell because he ignored his drive-through penalty due to a malfunctioning radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Main race\nLynn maintained the lead into the first corner while Derani made a brisk start to move into second. Ocon stalled on the grid but later got moving. As the field drove down towards the fast Mandarin Oriental Bend some bumping occurred. This caused Rosenqvist to hit the barrier and broke his suspension after battling with Marciello for the ideal line. Marciello's car sustained damage but continued with an oversteer. Soon after, Auer pushed Bryant-Meisner off the racing line, causing the latter to crash into the wall. Gelael spun trying to avoid hitting Bryant-Meisner, causing Auer to plough into him. The events meant Bryant-Meisner, Gelael and Auer retired from the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Main race\nGiovnazzi spun at the Melco hairpin but recovered. The safety car's deployment was necessitated to allow for a track clearing. At the end of the first lap, Lynn led from Derani, F\u00e9lix da Costa, Marciello, Sims, Coletti, Buller, King, Sainz and Latifi. At the restart, Lynn held the lead and Derani was passed by F\u00e9lix da Costa on the outside at Lisboa corner. Sims lined up an pass on Marciello but realised it could not be completed and eased off. King fell to ninth when Sainz overtook him. Lynn increased his lead to two seconds in the following laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Main race\nMarciello attempted to force his way through Derani but the latter resisted his overtaking attempts. Sainz moved in front of both Coletti and Buller but the two drivers retook their lost positions. Marciello passed Derani at Lisboa corner for third place. On lap seven, Coletti and Buller collided, causing the latter's retirement but the former restarted racing after loing positions by spinning onto the escape road. The main beneficiary of the crash was King who moved to seventh. Both King and his Carlin teammate Jaafar passed Sainz after a battle for sixth. Sun spun off at Fisherman's Bend, prompting the brief waving of localised yellow flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Main race\nMaricello pushed but lost control of his car at the R Bend and collided against a barrier. His retirement relieved pressure off F\u00e9lix da Costa who used the situation to close up to Lynn. Sims slowed at about lap ten due to an engine temperature sensor problem which he corrected by short shifting and pulling out of Derani's slipstream. F\u00e9lix da Costa gained on Lynn to be just over a second behind with four laps to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Main race\nHe reduced the gap to 1.3 seconds under yellow flag conditions for Wolf's stranded car at Lisboa corner, but could not get close to affect an pass on Lynn who maintained the lead for the rest of the race to become the seventh Macau Grand Prix winner for Theodore Racing. The 2012 winner F\u00e9lix da Costa finished second, 1.173 seconds in arrears, while Derani completed the podium in third. Off the podium, Sims finished fourth. The highest-placed rookie King led Carlin teammates Jaafar and Sainz in the next three places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234564-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Macau Grand Prix, Main race\nBlomqvist came from the back of the field to finish eighth with Latifi ninth. Ocon recovered from his stall to place tenth. Outside the top ten, Sekiguchi was 11th and led fellow countryman Nakayama in 12th. The British pair of Buller and Tincknell followed in 13th and 14th with Chiyo, Giovinazzi, Mason, Van der Laar, Jones, Wolf and Korjus the final classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234565-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Macau Open Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 Macau Open Grand Prix Open was the seventieth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Macau Forum, Macau November 26 \u2013 December 1, 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games\nThe 19th Maccabiah (Hebrew: \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d1\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05ea\u05e9\u05e2-\u05e2\u05e9\u05e8\u05d4\u200e) were the 19th incarnation of the Maccabiah Games, which took place July 18 to 30, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games\nThe Games brought together 7,500 competing athletes, making it the third-largest international sporting event in the world after the Olympic Games and the FIFA World Cup. The Maccabiah held competitions in 42 disciplines, in 34 sports. A number of new sports were introduced or brought back, including archery, equestrian, and handball; ice hockey was brought back for the first time since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, History\nThe Maccabiah Games were first held in 1932. In 1961, they were declared a \"Regional Sports Event\" by, and under the auspices and supervision of, the International Olympic Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremonies for the 19th Maccabiah took place for the second time at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem. The games were officially opened by Shimon Peres. US President Barack Obama greeted the Maccabiah through a prerecorded video. Prime Minister David Cameron also greeted the Maccabiah and Team GB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Opening ceremony\nDuring the parade of nations, giant helium balloons with the country the delegation represented accompanied each delegation. Coincidentally, the opening ceremony took place on Nelson Mandela's birthday. The South African delegation carried with them a large banner reading: \"Celebrating our legacy \u2013 Mandela Day\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Opening ceremony\nU.S. Olympic gold medal-winning gymnast Aly Raisman lit the Maccabiah cauldron. The opening ceremonies were celebrated with performances by a number of popular musicians, including Rami Kleinstein and Harel Skaat. Additionally, Grammy-winning Israeli violinist Miri Ben-Ari and The X Factor finalist Carly Rose Sonenclar also performed at the ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Notable medalists\nAmerican Olympic medalist swimmer Garrett Weber-Gale won the gold medal in the men's 100 free with a time of 48.99, and won the gold medal in the men's 50 meter sprint with a new Maccabiah record time of 22.68 seconds. Andrea Murez won five gold medals in swimming for the US, and two silver medals, and received the 2013 Maccabiah Games Most Outstanding Athlete Award for Women. American Major League Soccer player Ross Friedman helped Team USA capture a gold medal in soccer, leading the Games in assists. In karate, American Dov Sternberg won a gold medal in Team Kata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Notable medalists\nMarcel Felder of Uruguay won a gold medal in men's tennis. Canadian National Hockey League player Zach Hyman had three goals and three assists in two games, and won a gold medal, and was joined on the team by Adam Henrich. Canadian Sasha Gollish won the half-marathon. Footballer Scott Kashket played for Team GB Under-18, winning a bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Notable medalists\nIsraeli Laetitia Beck won both an individual gold medal and a team gold medal at the Games, shooting 69 in each of the three rounds, finishing 9-under, 15 strokes ahead of her next competitor. Israeli Olympic sprinter Donald Sanford broke the Israeli record and won the gold medal in the 400 meter race with a time of 45.65, defeating Australian Olympic finalist Steven Solomon. Israeli Maor Tiyouri was a silver medalist in the 3000 m. Israeli Olympic racing cyclist Shani Bloch won a silver medal in the women's triathlon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Notable medalists\nIsraeli two-time European champion Alex Averbuch returned from retirement and won the gold medal in the pole vault. Israeli Olympian Neta Rivkin won the all-around gold medal in rhythmic gymnastics. Israeli Olympic swimmer Amit Ivry won a bronze medal in the Women's 100m freestyle, with a time of 57.19. Israeli Keren Siebner won two gold medals, in the 100m butterfly and the 400m freestyle relay team, which set a new Israeli record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Notable medalists\nIsrael's Olympian Alex Tripolski won the gold medal in the 10 meter air pistol with a score of 571, and the silver medal in the 50 meter free pistol with a score of 530. Israeli Olympic badminton player Misha Zilberman won two gold medals. Israeli Daniel Poleshchuk won a gold medal in Men's Open Squash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Notable medalists\nAmerican baseball pitcher Benjamin Feinman, a recent high school graduate, threw a no-hitter on the opening day of competition for Team USA against Canada. This was the first no-hitter in the history of the Maccabiah Games. Team USA, which also had Israeli-American Dean Kremer pitching for it, went on to take the gold medal in baseball, and Feinman was selected as the MVP of the baseball competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Notable medalists\nAmerican Spencer Weisz was a member of the Under-18 USA National basketball team that won the gold medal, and he earned Most Valuable Player recognition for the tournament, as he was joined by future NFL player Anthony Firkser. Stu Douglass, Ben Carter, and Evan Conti were part of Team USA's men's team, which won a gold medal in basketball. Danny Schayes coached Team USA in basketball. American Jacqui Kalin played basketball for Team USA and led the team to a gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Debuting countries\nAlbania\u00a0Armenia\u00a0Aruba\u00a0Bahamas\u00a0Bosnia-Herzegovina\u00a0Cuba\u00a0Cura\u00e7ao\u00a0Ecuador\u00a0El Salvador\u00a0Guinea-Bissau\u00a0Honduras\u00a0Mauritius\u00a0Mongolia\u00a0Nicaragua\u00a0Suriname", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234566-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games, Sports\nThe 2013 Maccabiah Games programme featured 34 sports encompassing 42 disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234567-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maccabiah Games medal table\nThis is the full table of the medal count of the 2013 Maccabiah Games. These rankings sort by the number of gold medals earned by a country (in this context a country is an entity represented by a National Maccabi Federation). The number of silvers is taken into consideration next, and then the number of bronze. If, after the above, countries are still tied, equal ranking is given and they are listed alphabetically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234568-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Macedonian local elections\nThe Macedonian local election, 2013 are the sixth held-on-schedule local elections for the election of local mayors of the municipalities of the Republic of Macedonia and members of municipality councils. There were two large coalitions on the elections: the Coalition for a Better Macedonia led by VMRO-DPMNE and the Union for the Future led by SDSM. Also present on the elections was the Democratic Union for Integration (DUI), Democratic Party of Albanians (DPA) and the Union of Roma Forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234568-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Macedonian local elections\nThere was also coalition made between the two major rival parties VMRO-DPMNE and SDSM in Ki\u010devo and Struga municipalities against the ethnic Albanian candidates Fatmir Dehari and Ramiz Merko of DUI. There were two rounds in the elections on March 24, 2013 and April 7, 2013. The first round of elections were declared the most peaceful elections in the history of independent Macedonia without any serious incidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234568-0000-0002", "contents": "2013 Macedonian local elections\nThe elections were however not untainted, as the situation in the Centar Municipality was labeled as undemocratic by the Macedonian opposition with several voters being labeled as questionable for having only recently received their national ID cards and not being actual inhabitants of this respective municipality. The elections in this municipality lasted for three turns and were monitored by the foreign embassies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234569-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Machakos local elections\nLocal elections were held in Machakos County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234569-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Machakos local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234570-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Machang Coal Mine outburst\nThe 2013 Machang Coal Mine outburst occurred in Machang Coal Mine (\u9a6c\u573a\u7164\u77ff) in Shuicheng County, Guizhou, China. A total of 25 people lost their lives in the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234570-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Machang Coal Mine outburst, Location\nMachang Coal Mine is located in Shuicheng, Liupanshui, Guizhou. The mine belongs to Gemudi Company (\u683c\u76ee\u5e95\u77ff\u4e1a\u516c\u53f8) of Guizhou Water & Mining Group (\u8d35\u5dde\u6c34\u77ff\u96c6\u56e2). The coal and gas outburst occurred on March 12, 2013 at about 20:00 local time. At the time of the outburst, there were 83 workers working underground, and 58 of them managed to leave safely. Most of the 25 people who died in the accident were locals from Guizhou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234571-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mackay Cutters season\nThe 2013 Mackay Cutters season was the sixth in the club's history. Coached by Kim Williams and captained by Jardine Bobongie and Joel Clinton, they competed in the QRL's Intrust Super Cup. The club enjoyed their most successful season, finishing the regular season in second place and defeating the Easts Tigers 27\u201320 in the Grand Final to win their first premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234571-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mackay Cutters season, Season summary\nAfter the departure of head coach Anthony Seibold at the end of 2012, the Cutters hired former Melbourne Storm SG Ball Cup coach Kim Williams as his replacement. The club's biggest off-season recruit was former Australian international and NRL premiership winning-prop Joel Clinton, who was returning to Australia after three seasons with Hull Kingston Rovers. He was named co-captain of the club, alongside veteran Jardine Bobongie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234571-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mackay Cutters season, Season summary\nOn 28 April 2013, just hours after a 22\u201322 draw with the Tweed Heads Seagulls, North Queensland Cowboys contracted hooker Alex Elisala was found unconscious and not breathing after jumping from a hotel balcony. He died in hospital the following day. In honour of Elisala, the Cutters retired his number 14 jersey for the rest of the season. Despite the tragedy, the Cutters pushed forward and finished the season in second on the ladder, their highest ever finish (as of the 2019 season). In Week 1 of the finals, they suffered a 18\u201331 loss to the Easts Tigers before bouncing back to defeat the Ipswich Jets and Northern Pride to qualify for their first Grand Final and set up a rematch with the Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234571-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mackay Cutters season, Season summary\nOn 28 September 2013, the Cutters defeated Easts 27\u201320 in the Grand Final at North Ipswich Reserve to claim their maiden Queensland Cup premiership. Prop Tyson Andrews was named the club's Player of the Year, while Cowboys contracted players, Sam Hoare and Curtis Rona, were selected for the Queensland Residents side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234571-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mackay Cutters season, Squad List, 2013 squad\nThe following players contracted to the North Queensland Cowboys played for the Cutters in 2013: Alex Elisala, Kalifa Faifai Loa, Clint Greenshields, Chris Grevsmuhl, Sam Hoare, Rory Kostjasyn, Tyson Martin, Anthony Mitchell, Michael Morgan, Curtis Rona, Zac Santo, Tariq Sims and Jason Taumalolo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234571-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mackay Cutters season, Fixtures, Finals\nMackay Cutters' Grand Final winning side: 1 Liam Taylor, 2 Bureta Faraimo, 15 Michael Morgan, 4 Kalifa Faifai Loa, 5 David Milne, 6 Dan Murphy, 7 Matt Minto, 8 Tyson Andrews, 9 Anthony Mitchell, 10 Sam Hoare, 17 Jason Taumalolo, 12 Chris Gesch, 13 Jardine Bobongie (c). Interchange: 11 Dean Webster, 16 Karl Davies, 18 Kelvin Nielsen, 20 Jason Schirnack. Coach: Kim Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234572-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Madagascar locust infestation\nIn 2012, Madagascar had an upsurge in the size of its Malagasy migratory locust (Locusta migratoria capito) populations. In November of that year, the government issued a locust alert, saying that conditions were right for swarming of the pest insects. In February 2013, Cyclone Haruna struck the country, creating optimal conditions for locust breeding. By late March 2013, approximately 50% of the country was infested by swarms of locusts, with each swarm consisting of more than one billion insects. The authorities changed the situation to plague status. According to one eyewitness,\"You don't see anything except locusts. You turn around, there are locusts everywhere\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234572-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Madagascar locust infestation\nNews of the infestation went global the week before Passover, inspiring comparisons with the Biblical Plagues of Egypt, one of which was a swarm of locusts. It is the worst locust outbreak in Madagascar since a 17-year-long outbreak which began during the 1950s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234572-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Madagascar locust infestation, Pest control\nOn March 26, 2013, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations called for US$41\u00a0million of donations to fight the locusts. Under the proposed aid plan, $22\u00a0million would be delivered by June for pest control efforts and $19\u00a0million would be devoted to a three-year plan to keep the insect in check. According to the FAO report, the infestation threatens 60% of the country's rice crop, as well as livestock pastures. Rice is a staple crop in Madagascar, a nation where a large percentage of the population lives in famine conditions. In the southwestern region of Madagascar, where the locusts are the worst, 80% of the population lives in poverty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234572-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Madagascar locust infestation, Pest control\nThe FAO plan calls for large-scale aerial operations to spray extra pesticides over 1.5\u00a0million hectares (3.7 million acres) of land from 2013 to 2014. According to the national Locust Control Centre, 100,000 out of 130,000 hectares (257,000 out of 321,000 acres) of vulnerable crop land had not been treated at the time of the FAO proposal. If no action is taken, the FAO estimates that two-thirds of Madagascar will be infested by September, and says the infestation could last for five to ten years. \"Failure to respond now will lead to massive food aid requirements later on,\" said Dominique Burgeon, Director of the FAO Emergency and Rehabilitation Division. Additionally, the infestation threatens the habitat of numerous endangered species, especially several species of lemur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nA Legislative Assembly election was held on 25 November 2013 in Madhya Pradesh, India, with the result announced on 8 December. Along with four other state assembly elections, these were the first elections in which the Election Commission of India (ECI) implemented a \"None of the above\" (NOTA) voting option, allowing the electorate to register a neutral vote but not to outright reject candidates. In a first, the Election Commission of India also appointed Central Awareness Observers, whose main task was to oversee voter awareness and facilitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, List of declared candidates\nA total of 2,586 candidates filled their nomination for 230 seats spread across 51 districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, List of declared candidates\nProminent BJP candidates included former CM Babulal Gaur (Govindpura constituency in Bhopal), Gopal Bhargava (Rehli in Sagar), Kailash Vijayvargiya (Mhow in Indore) and former PM, Atal Bihari Vajpayee\u2019s nephew Anoop Mishra (Bhitarvar in Gwalior).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, List of declared candidates\nProminent Congress candidates included former Union Minister Suresh Pachouri (Bhojpur), leader of the opposition in the assembly Ajay Singh (Churhat), Digvijaya Singh\u2019s son Jaivardhan Singh (Raghogarh), and Sachin Yadav, son of former Deputy CM, Subhash Yadav (Kasravad).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, List of declared candidates\nNote: Constituency names marked with SC or ST are reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes respectively. * = Puar died of cardiac arrest on 20 June 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 78], "content_span": [79, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Campaign\nOn 10 November, CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan, who won an election from the Budhni seat in 2008, decided to run again from two seats, Budhni and Vidisha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Campaign\nA large number of rallies took place prior to elections addressed by various local and national level party leaders including BJP's prime ministerial candidate for forthcoming General Elections, Narendra Modi and Congress vice president, Rahul Gandhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Campaign\nBJP leader and Chief Ministerial candidate Shivraj Singh Chouhan used 3D Virtual Live Technology to address various rallies simultaneously from one place. This technology was previously used by the then Gujarat Chief Minister, Narendra Modi during 2012 Gujarat legislative assembly election", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Campaign\nBJP extensively campaigned on social media including Twitter and Facebook to attract young and first time voters. BJP's mobile app was also released in a view of upcoming state and General Elections on various platforms including Android, iOS, and Symbian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Campaign\nECI also made people aware of the newly introduced NOTA button on EVMs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Controversies\nOn 5 November, Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly speaker and Jabalpur Cantonment MLA, Ishwar Das Rohani died following a heart attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Controversies\nPolls were conducted peacefully and no major untoward incident was reported, however, the Election Commission said minor incidents of violence were reported from Bhind and Morena districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Controversies\nAn assistant poll official in Katni district\u2019s Vijayraghavgarh seat, KB Shrivastava, died of a heart attack while on duty. A case was registered against state minister Ranjana Baghel in Dhar district for allegedly bribing voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Election\nVoter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) along with EVMs was used in 1 assembly seat in Madhya Pradesh elections. There were over 47 million voters were eligible to exercise their Right to Franchise. Polling for the 230-member assembly began at 0800 hours IST and continued till 1700 hours, baring three Naxal-affected seats of Baihar, Paraswada and Lanjhi in Balaghat district where it ended at 1500 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Election\nPolling started with a brisk voter turnout reaching only 18% till 1100 hours, however, turnout increased significantly after mid-day and reached 71% by the evening, surpassing the earlier 69.08% turnout recorded during 2008 elections, making it the highest recorded voter turnout in Madhya Pradesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Results\nCounting of votes started on December 8, 2013 at 0800 hours IST which continued till later part of the evening. BJP emerged as the winner with 165 seats followed by Congress and BSP with 58 and 4 seats respectively. 3 Independent MLAs also won the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234573-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, Results, Constituency-wise results\n*Dadu died in a car accident on 9 June 2016 Manju Rajrenda Dadu was subsequently elected to fill the vacancy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 85], "content_span": [86, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede\nOn 13 October 2013, during the Hindu festival of Navratri, a stampede broke out on a bridge near the Ratangarh Mata Temple in Datia district, Madhya Pradesh, India, killing 115 people and injuring more than 110.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Background\nThe stampede occurred during the Navratri festival dedicated to the worship of the Hindu goddess Durga. About 500,000 pilgrims were estimated to have flocked to the Ratangarh Mata Temple, located in the village of Ratangarh in Datia district of Madhya Pradesh in central India. The worshippers were mainly from Datia and the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Background\nIn 2006, 56 pilgrims died at the same site after being washed away by water released upstream from the Sindh River. In response to that disaster, the state government built a bridge over the Sindh. The bridge, located 1.5 kilometres (0.93\u00a0mi) from the temple, is 400 metres (1,300\u00a0ft) long and 7 metres (23\u00a0ft) wide. It was less than four years old and reportedly in good condition when the stampede took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, The stampede\nApproximately 25,000 people were on the bridge at about 9 a.m. on Sunday, 13 October 2013, and a section of the railing was broken. Rumour spread that the bridge was about to collapse, and the crowd panicked and began pushing their way off. Many were killed or injured in the ensuing crush, and others drowned after jumping into the swelling river. Most of the victims were women and children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, The stampede\nThere were conflicting reports about the cause of the stampede. One report said that the rumour of the bridge's impending collapse began when a section of the railing broke, but another said that the bridge had been hit by a tractor before the stampede. Others said that a group of pilgrims intentionally spread the rumour, hoping to cut the long line. Some witnesses said that the stampede started when the police charged into the crowd wielding canes, but the allegation was denied by police officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Aftermath\nRescue operations were hampered by a 7-kilometre-long traffic jam on the only road to the temple. Angry at the delay, relatives of the victims pelted stones at police officers, injuring several.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Aftermath\nNews agencies carried reports, including eyewitness reports, that policemen robbed and also threw dead bodies and even living survivors off the bridge into the swollen Sindh River below apparently in an effort to reduce the death count; D. K. Arya, the Deputy Inspector-General of Police (DIG) for the Chambal Range based at Morena categorically denied the possibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Aftermath\nThe Madhya Pradesh government has announced a compensation of Rs. 150,000 for each of the deceased and Rs. 50,000 to those who suffered serious injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Aftermath\nChief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan ordered the establishment of a judicial commission to probe allegations of corruption and police misconduct.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Aftermath\nThe Election Commission of India has, at the request of the State Government, suspended the District Magistrate (District Collector) Mr. Sanket Bhondwe, Superintendent of Police (SP) Mr. P. Chandrashekhar Solanki, Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Revenue (SDM) of Seondha Mr. Mahip Tejaswi, Sub-Divisional Officer of Police (SDOP) of Seondha Mr. B.N. Basave, and the entire staff of the Seondha Police Station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234574-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Madhya Pradesh stampede, Aftermath\nCongress Party representatives allege that the true death toll is higher, possibly touching 400. The representatives criticized the State Administration for allegedly fudging the records and demanded the resignation of Chouhan, but the ruling BJP rebuffed the demand and accused the Congress Party of playing politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234575-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Magnolia Refinery oil spill\nThe 2013 Magnolia Refinery oil spill occurred on March 9, 2013, when the line between a vital pump and an oil storage container broke. The split allowed a reported 15,000 barrels (1,788 m3) or 7,000 tonnes of crude oil into the Little Corney Creek. The creek runs towards the town of Magnolia, Arkansas. The resulting oil slick was approximately 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) long on the surface of the water, about 20 miles (32\u00a0km) north of the Louisiana state border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234575-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Magnolia Refinery oil spill\nThe leak was located at the Lion Oil and Trading & Transportation's Oil tank farm, between the settlements of Magnolia and El Dorado, owned by Delek's Logistic Unit. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) classified this pipeline rupture as a major spill because of the number of barrels estimated to have been spilled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234575-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Magnolia Refinery oil spill, Geography\nThe city of Magnolia is in Columbia County, Arkansas, United States and is the county seat of the county. According to the 2009 U.S. Census Bureau reports, the population of the city is 10,951. The city itself has an approximate area of 9.344 square miles (24.20\u00a0km2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234575-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Magnolia Refinery oil spill, Response\nLocal authorities were called to action and responded quickly to clean up the spill and monitor the damage. Cleanup workers made use of a \"vacuum truck\", a vehicle used to suck up the oil and water from the creek quickly before making efforts to separate the two liquids. This process was employed to minimize environmental damage to the local shorelines. Beginning oil removal as fast as possible is beneficial to the overall results of the cleanup process. The farther into the environment that the oil seeps, the longer it will take to remove and the more integrated it will become into the food chain, becoming inaccessible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234575-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Magnolia Refinery oil spill, Response\nThe United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was vital too in the cleanup process at Magnolia, Arkansas after this oil spill. Low temperatures and inclement weather initially delayed the cleanup procedures, but the EPA was eventually able to send out crews to various locations within the affected area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234575-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Magnolia Refinery oil spill, Result\nDelek was required to pay for all cleanup operations after the spill and if the logistics unit corporation is confirmed to be guilty of negligence, for which they be fined accordingly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234576-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Magyar Kupa (men's water polo)\nThe 2013 Magyar Kupa, known as (Hungarian: Theodora F\u00e9rfi Magyar Kupa for sponsorship reasons), is the 87th edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234576-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Magyar Kupa (men's water polo), Quarter-finals\nQuarter-final matches were played on 14 and 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234576-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Magyar Kupa (men's water polo), Final four\nThe final four will be held on 16 and 17 November 2013 at the Vizilabda Ar\u00e9na (Tiszaligeti uszoda) in Szolnok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234577-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Magyar Kupa Final\nThe Magyar Kupa Final was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Magyar Kupa, played between Debrecen and Gy\u0151r.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234578-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mahabubnagar bus accident\nThe 2013 Mahabubnagar bus accident occurred on 30 October when a private Volvo bus on the way from Bangalore to Hyderabad caught fire after hitting a culvert while overtaking a car, killing 45 people and injuring another seven. The accident took place at Palem village, Mahbubnagar district, then in Indian state of Andhra Pradesh (but after 2 June 2014 in Telangana) at 5.30 AM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234578-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mahabubnagar bus accident, Accident\nThe bus, which belonged to a local tour operator Jabbar Travels left Bangalore at 11 pm on 29 October, with 49 passengers on board. The accident happened when the bus driver tried to overtake a car but hit a culvert and damaged its diesel tank in the process leading to the fire. However the bus driver, cleaner and five other passengers managed to escape the bus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234579-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maine Black Bears football team\nThe 2013 Maine Black Bears football team represented the University of Maine in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 21st-year head coach Jack Cosgrove and played their home games at Alfond Stadium. They were a member of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). They finished the season 10\u20133, 7\u20131 in CAA play to be crowned CAA Champions. They received an automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the second round to fellow CAA member New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234580-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game\nThe 2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game was the 84th edition of the Major League Baseball All-Star Game. It was held on Tuesday, July 16, 2013 at Citi Field in Queens, New York City, the home of the New York Mets. This was the first time that the Mets have hosted an All-Star Game since 1964, the team's inaugural season at Shea Stadium, and the ninth time the All-Star Game was held in New York City. The game was last held in New York City in 2008, when the old Yankee Stadium hosted it in its final season before being demolished. It was televised in the United States on Fox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234580-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game\nThe American League shut out the National League for the third time in All-Star game history; the National League has six shutouts. This game marks the first time that there have been shutouts in consecutive All-Star games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234580-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, Host selection\nThe host site was reportedly to either be at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C., home of the Washington Nationals or at Citi Field, the home of the Mets since 2009. The official announcement was made on May 16, 2012, at New York City Hall. The Mets unveiled the logo for the 2013 All-Star Game on August 7, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234580-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, Fan balloting, Starters\nBalloting for the 2013 All-Star Game starters began online April 24 and ended on July 4. Fan voting also took place in each MLB stadium, beginning May 7 (at the latest) and ended on June 28. The top vote-getters at each position (including the designated hitter for the American League) and the top three among outfielders, were named the starters for their respective leagues. The results were announced on July 6. Chris Davis was the leading vote-getter with 8,272,243 votes, while Yadier Molina led the NL with 6,883,258 ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234580-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, Fan balloting, Final roster spot\nAfter the rosters were revealed, a second ballot of five players per league was created for the All-Star Final Vote to determine the 34th and final player of each roster. The online balloting was conducted from July 6 through July 11. The winners of the All-Star Final Vote were Steve Delabar of the Toronto Blue Jays (AL) and Freddie Freeman of the Atlanta Braves (NL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234580-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00234580-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, Game summary, Box score\nUmpires: Home Plate, crew chief \u2013 John Hirschbeck; First Base \u2013 Wally Bell; Second Base \u2013 Larry Vanover; Third Base \u2013 Paul Emmel; Left Field \u2013 Rob Drake; Right Field \u2013 Chad FairchildWeather: Temperature: 90\u00a0\u00b0F (32\u00a0\u00b0C), clear; Wind: 9 mph, in from left field Time of Game: 3:06 Attendance: 45,186", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234581-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball Home Run Derby\nThe 2013 Major League Baseball Home Run Derby (known through sponsorship as the Chevrolet Home Run Derby) was a home run hitting contest in Major League Baseball (MLB) between four batters each from the National League and American League. The derby was held on July 15, 2013, at the site of the 2013 MLB All-Star Game, Citi Field in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234581-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball Home Run Derby\nIn June, MLB named Robinson Can\u00f3 of the New York Yankees and David Wright of the New York Mets the Home Run Derby team captains. On July 8 and 9, the captains each picked three other players to compete with them. The AL team captain, Can\u00f3, selected Yoenis C\u00e9spedes of the Oakland Athletics, Chris Davis of the Baltimore Orioles, and Prince Fielder of the Detroit Tigers. The NL team captain, Wright, selected Michael Cuddyer and Carlos Gonz\u00e1lez of the Colorado Rockies, and Bryce Harper of the Washington Nationals. Gonz\u00e1lez then withdrew due to a sprained finger and was replaced by Pedro \u00c1lvarez of the Pittsburgh Pirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234581-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball Home Run Derby\nC\u00e9spedes hit 32 total home runs and won the competition by defeating Harper in the final round. C\u00e9spedes was the first winner of the event who had not been selected to that year's All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234582-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball draft\nThe 2013 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft was held from June 6 through June 8, 2013. The first two rounds were broadcast from Studio 42 of the MLB Network in Secaucus, New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234582-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball draft\nEach team received one selection per round, going in reverse order of the 2012 MLB season final standings. In addition, teams could receive compensation draft picks if they had made a qualifying offer to a free agent player from their team, and the player rejected the offer and signed with another team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234582-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball draft, Draft order\nThe Washington Nationals, Atlanta Braves, Milwaukee Brewers, and Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim all surrendered their first round picks by signing players who had received and rejected qualifying offers from their previous teams: Rafael Soriano, B. J. Upton, Kyle Lohse, and Josh Hamilton, respectively. The Cleveland Indians, whose first round pick was protected as it fell in the top ten, lost their second round pick and a pick in the sandwich round between the second and third rounds for signing two players who received qualifying offers: Nick Swisher and Michael Bourn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234582-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball draft, NCAA investigation\nThe Philadelphia Phillies selected college juniors Ben Wetzler of Oregon State University in the fifth round and Jason Monda of Washington State University in the sixth round of the draft. Both entered into negotiations with the Phillies with the help of a financial adviser, which is against National Collegiate Athletic Association rules. Both also chose to return to college for their senior year. The Phillies reported Wetzler and Monda to the NCAA, which cleared Monda and suspended Wetzler for the first 11 games of the college season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234582-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball draft, Player Notes\nKyle Crockett, the Cleveland Indians fourth round pick out of the University of Virginia, was promoted to the Indians on May 16, 2014. This made Crockett the first 2013 draftee to reach the major leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234582-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball draft, Player Notes\nMarco Gonzales, the St. Louis Cardinals' first round pick, made his MLB debut on June 25, 2014. This made Gonzales the first 2013 first round pick to reach the major leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234582-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball draft, Player Notes\nNate Orf, who went undrafted out of Baylor University in 2013, signed with the Milwaukee Brewers for $500 and worked his way up through their farm system, making his MLB debut with them on July 2, 2018. His first hit two days later turned out to be the game-winning home run and he was carried back out by his teammates for a curtain call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season\nThe 2013 Major League Baseball season started on March 31 with a Sunday night game between the Texas Rangers and the Houston Astros. Opening Day for most clubs was a day later on April 1. The regular season ended on September 30, extended one day for a one-game playoff between the Tampa Bay Rays and the Texas Rangers to decide the second American League Wild Card winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season\nThe 2013 season was the first with the Houston Astros as a member of the American League (AL), playing in the West Division. This marked the first growth in the number of American League teams since the 1977 Major League Baseball expansion added the Seattle Mariners and Toronto Blue Jays. When the then-named Tampa Bay Devil Rays were added to the AL in 1998, the Milwaukee Brewers were reassigned to the National League (NL) the same year, keeping the AL at 14 teams. With the Astros' move to the AL, giving both leagues 15 teams, interleague play occurred throughout the entire season for the first time in MLB history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season\nThe Major League Baseball All-Star Game's 84th edition was held on July 16 at Citi Field, home of the New York Mets, with the AL defeating the NL, 3\u20130. With the win, home field advantage at the World Series was awarded to the AL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Rule changes\nSeveral minor rule changes took effect during the 2013 season. These changes were approved by MLB owners; unless otherwise noted, they will also need the approval of the players' union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Managerial changes, Field managers, Off-season\nAt the end of the 2012 season, the following teams made replacements to their managers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Scheduling changes\nThe Houston Astros' move to the American League West created two 15-team leagues each separated into three five-team divisions. With an odd number of teams in each league, interleague games were played nearly every day during the season, the only exception being when not every team had a game. For this season, each team played 20 interleague games (up from 15-18 games in 2012) in eight series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Scheduling changes\nEach team played one three-game series against four teams from one division in the other league, and two two-game series (one home, one away) against the remaining team in that division (for 2013 the match-ups are AL East vs. NL West, AL Central vs. NL East, and AL West vs. NL Central, meaning the changes of the Astros and the small increase in interleague play will not affect the yearly rotation, also the Astros played all of their former NL Central rivals in 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Scheduling changes\nThe remaining four games were played against a team's \"natural rival\" in two back-to-back two-game series from May 27\u201330. Teams played in one city May 27 and 28, then traveled to the other city for games on May 29 and 30. It was the first season that every team has an interleague rivalry, according to the table below, with new rivalries for the season shown in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Scheduling changes\nThe remaining 142 games will be played within the league. Each team will play its four division rivals 19 times (up from 15-18 in 2012) for a total of 76 games. Each team will play either 6 or 7 games against the ten teams in the two other divisions in its league, for a total of 66 games. In 2012, these season series ranged anywhere from five to ten games, creating large disparities between teams' strengths of schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Scheduling changes\nAside from the natural rivalries, teams from the same division will play the same opponents for roughly the same number of games. The only variation occurs in interleague match-ups (either 3 or 4 games) and same-league interdivision match-ups (either 6 or 7 games).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Wholesale changes\nAll 30 teams are wearing new batting practice caps. The new caps provided by the New Era Cap Company are of the 59Fifty style instead of the 39Fifty used in seasons past. In addition to batting practice and spring training games, Major League Baseball has also allowed the use of the new caps during regular season play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Wholesale changes\nThe Houston Astros unveiled a new/old identity at a fan event November 2, 2012, at Minute Maid Park, as the team reverted to the orange and navy colors used from their inception in 1962 through 1993. There are four uniforms and three hats. Houston will wear white uniforms with orange piping at home, and gray ones with blue piping on the road. There's an orange alternate jersey with blue piping that can be worn at home or on the road, as well as a blue jersey to be worn for Sunday games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Wholesale changes\nOn November 14, the New York Mets introduced two new blue alternate jerseys. The home alternate features the \"Mets\" script, player numerals and names in orange outlined in white, while the road alternate features the \"NEW YORK\" script, player numerals and names in gray outlined in orange. The team also introduced a new alternate cap with a blue crown and an orange brim, with an orange \"NY\" logo outlined in white.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Wholesale changes\nOn November 19, the St. Louis Cardinals introduced an alternate uniform to be worn for Saturday home games. The uniform is off-white and the jersey features the \"St. Louis\" script on the front. This is the first time in 80 years the city name appears in the team's uniforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Wholesale changes\nOn December 14, the Pittsburgh Pirates introduced an alternate uniform to be worn for Sunday home games. It is the same uniform that the team wore from mid-1970 through 1976 and was worn during their championship season of 1971. The hat that goes with this uniform is mustard gold with a black bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Wholesale changes\nOn January 24, 2013, the Chicago White Sox announced they will be wearing 1983 throwback uniforms on Sunday home games to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their 1983 division title. The uniforms replaced the 1972 red pinstriped throwbacks from last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Wholesale changes\nOn January 24, the Milwaukee Brewers promoted their special edition 'gold-out' uniforms to alternate status. The uniforms were first used on September 10, 2011, against the Phillies, but did not wear them the previous season. The Brewers have also worn a Latin Nights version of the gold uniform (with 'Cerveceros' wordmark) the last two seasons, and would wear them again on June 8 against the Phillies. They also wore a fan-designed uniform for two spring training games, featuring an updated version of the Beer Barrel Man logo in the current colors, and classic typeface design, designed by Ben Peters of Richfield, Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nAs part of the franchise's 20th anniversary, the Colorado Rockies wore their original grey away uniforms at Coors Field on April 16 against the Mets. The uniforms, complete with the inaugural season patch, team name and purple piping, were the uniforms the Rockies used in their inaugural 1993 season. Though it was a home game, they wore the grey throwbacks to correspond to the franchise's first game at Shea Stadium. The Mets wore corresponding throwback white pinstripe uniforms with an underscore below the word 'Mets'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Detroit Tigers donned Detroit Stars throwbacks for Negro leagues tribute night against the Atlanta Braves on April 27. The Braves wore Atlanta Black Crackers throwbacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Brewers wore the 1913 American Association throwbacks on May 5 against the Cardinals, who wore corresponding throwbacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe San Diego Padres wore their orange, gold and brown home throwbacks from the 1984 season against the Washington Nationals on May 17. On June 14, they wore their 1998 navy alternates against the Arizona Diamondbacks. On July 12, they wore throwbacks of the 1948 Padres of the Pacific Coast League against the Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Minnesota Twins wore the 1948 St. Paul Saints uniforms on May 30 against the Brewers. Even though the game was held at Target Field, the Twins wore the road grey versions of the throwbacks, while the Brewers will wore the home whites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nFour teams \u2013 the Pirates, the Reds, the Nationals and the Braves \u2013 wore Negro leagues throwbacks on June 1. The Pirates wore the Homestead Grays uniforms, while the Reds wore the Cincinnati Tigers uniforms. The Nationals and Braves wore Negro leagues throwbacks that day as well, the Nationals wearing Grays uniforms, and the Braves donning Black Crackers uniforms. (The Grays called Pittsburgh and Washington home.) On July 20, the Brewers wore the Negro league Milwaukee Bears uniforms against the Marlins, who wore the uniforms of the International League Marlins. The Nationals again represented the Grays on August 24 against the Royals, who wore Kansas City Monarchs uniforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Seattle Mariners wore the 1909 Seattle Turks uniforms for their interleague matchup with the Chicago Cubs on June 29. The Cubs wore their 1909 throwbacks, as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Kansas City Royals wore their 1985 powder blue pullover uniforms on June 9 against the Astros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Tampa Bay Rays wore their faux-back 1970s uniforms on July 6 against the White Sox, who wore the previous season's Sunday home throwback jerseys from the 1972 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Cleveland Indians wore the 1902 Cleveland Bronchos uniforms on July 13, in a non-televised game against the Royals. Despite the game taking place at Progressive Field, the Indians wore the road version of the Bronchos uniforms (navy jersey, cap, and pants, with black socks).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe White Sox, in celebration of their 1983 AL West champion team, donned 1983-replica jerseys during each Sunday home game, as well as other select occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Angels and Athletics wore 1969 throwbacks on July 27. The Angels then wore a hybridized version of their 1980s throwbacks (with buttons, belts and California patch on the left sleeve) on August 16, and then their 1961\u201365 throwbacks the following day against the Astros. The 1961\u201365 throwbacks were worn again on September 5 against the Rays to pay tribute to Bobby Knoop's induction to the Angels Hall of Fame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Throwbacks\nThe Philadelphia Phillies wore their 1991 home pinstripe throwbacks on August 23 against the Diamondbacks, who wore their 1999 black alternate throwbacks. The Diamondbacks also wore the said throwback uniforms on August 31 against the Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe San Francisco Giants wore special uniforms to commemorate their 2012 World Series win on April 7. Similar to their commemoration of their 2010 World Series championship, the jerseys, instead of bearing the familiar \"GIANTS\" across the chest, displayed the interlocking \"SF\" logo on the front of the jersey's left side in gold. The Giants also wore caps with the \"SF\" logo also in gold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nOn April 20 and 21, the Boston Red Sox wore home uniforms with \"BOSTON\" on the front of the jerseys instead of the familiar \"RED SOX\" to honor the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nCinco de Mayo saw two teams don Hispanic-flavored uniforms. The Giants wore their cream home uniforms with 'Gigantes' in front against the Dodgers, while the Houston Astros wore their current home uniforms with 'Los Astros' in front against the Detroit Tigers. The Cincinnati Reds wore red jerseys with 'Los Rojos' in front for their May 11 game against Milwaukee. The Giants again wore the 'Gigantes' uniforms against the Diamondbacks on September 7. On the same day, the Seattle Mariners wore a modified version of their white uniforms against the Rays, featuring 'Marineros' in front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe Pittsburgh Pirates wore desert camouflage uniforms for their games against the Astros May 17 and 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nAll teams wore uniforms with camouflaged logos, names and numerals on May 27, Memorial Day in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe Milwaukee Brewers wore special batting practice uniforms against the Braves on June 23 for Polish Heritage Day. The uniform is white with red striping, featuring \"Piwowarzy\" in front. They also wore red fielding caps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe Toronto Blue Jays wore red jerseys against the Detroit Tigers on July 1, Canada Day in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe Arizona Diamondbacks wore special black uniforms during their homestand from July 5\u201314 to commemorate the 19 firefighters who perished in the Yarnell Hill Fire. The style was similar to their alternate black uniforms, except the front read 'Arizona' in brick red, and had black and sand trim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nAll teams wore special caps with an American (or Canadian) flag on July 4. The Reds, whose game was rained out that day, wore the caps on July 5 against Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe New York Mets wore a special orange 'Los Mets' jersey on July 24 against Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe Tigers wore a Hispanic-flavored home uniform against the White Sox on August 3 as part of the 'Fiesta Tigres' promotion. The uniform is similar in style to the 1960 script uniforms, but read 'Tigres' in front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Uniforms, Other uniforms\nThe Washington Nationals wore US Navy caps on September 17 during pre-game before the first game of a doubleheader against Atlanta to commemorate the victims of the Washington Navy Yard shooting. The first game was a makeup game for the one scheduled for September 16 which was postponed due to the shooting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Television, National\nThis was the seventh and final year of the current TV contracts with ESPN, Fox Sports and TBS, before the new eight-year TV contracts begin in 2014. ESPN aired games on Sundays, most Mondays, and Wednesdays, in addition to a four-game Opening Day schedule. ESPN also aired the Home Run Derby during All-Star week. TBS carried Sunday afternoon games, along with two League Wild Card Games, League Division Series, and National League Championship Series. Fox aired games on Saturday afternoons and select Saturday nights, and also aired the All-Star Game, American League Championship Series, and World Series. MLB Network had a Thursday game of the week and several simulcasted games from local channels during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Television, Local\nThe Houston Astros switched from Fox Sports Houston to Comcast SportsNet Houston starting this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Television, Local\nOn March 1, 2013, Fox Sports South and SportSouth announced they have picked up 45 more Atlanta Braves games, ending the team's contract with WPCH-TV. This will be the first season in 40 years without locally produced Braves games on over-the-air TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Television, Local\nThis is the final season of Los Angeles Dodgers games on Prime Ticket and KCAL-TV. They will move to a new channel called SportsNet LA in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234583-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Baseball season, Television, Local\nCleveland Indians owner Larry Dolan sold SportsTime Ohio to Fox Sports Networks on December 28, 2012, and it was rebranded as Fox SportsTime Ohio on April 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234584-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse draft\nThe 2013 Major League Lacrosse draft took place on January 10, 2013 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season\nThe 2013 Major League Lacrosse season was the 13th season of the league. The season began on April 27, 2013 and concluded with the championship game on August 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Milestones and events, Coaching changes\nOn June 10, 2013, the Boston Cannons fired head coach Steve Duffy after a 1-5 start and replaced him with John Tucker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 74], "content_span": [75, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Milestones and events, Coaching changes\nOn June 24, 2013, the Ohio Machine fired head coach Ted Garber after a 1-7 start to the season and replaced him with Bear Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Milestones and events, Name changes\nOn December 14, 2012, the Long Island Lizards changed their name to the New York Lizards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Milestones and events, Neutral-location games\nIn addition, the New York Lizards will play two of its seven home games at Icahn Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Milestones and events, Other\nOn April 22, 2013, MLL and YouTube agreed to an exclusive fifteen-game schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Milestones and events, Other\nOn July 4, 2013, the Denver Outlaws broke the MLL attendance record for the eighth year in a row as 31,019 fans poured into Sports Authority Field at Mile High to watch the Outlaws defeat the New York Lizards, 16-7. Denver also became the first MLL team ever to start a season 10-0 with the win, and they carried this on the finish with the first perfect regular season in the thirteen years of the competition. Previously, in fact, no team had gone through an MLL regular season with only one loss, yet alone without losing. The most recent teams to lose two regular season games were the Outlaws and the Philadelphia Barrage in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Milestones and events, Other\nThe 2013 season marked the last season for the Hamilton Nationals. The dissolved Nationals team will form the basis of the Florida Launch for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, Standings\nChesapeake and Hamilton split their two regular-season games. Chesapeake outscored Hamilton 28-22 in those two games to finish second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234585-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Lacrosse season, All Star Game\nTeam Supernova defeated Team Eclipse 24-15 in the 2013 MLL All-Star Game, presented by Moe's Southwest Grill from American Legion Memorial Stadium in Charlotte, N.C on Saturday July 13, 2013. Hamilton's Kevin Crowley was named the Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season\nThe 2013 Major League Soccer season was the 101st season of FIFA-sanctioned soccer in the United States and Canada, the 35th with a national first-division league, and the 18th season of Major League Soccer. The season featured 19 total clubs (16 from the United States, 3 from Canada).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season\nThe regular season began on March 2, when Sporting Kansas City defeated the Philadelphia Union 3\u20131 at PPL Park. The 2013 Major League Soccer All-Star Game was held on July 31, 2013 in Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kansas (hosted by Sporting Kansas City). The regular season ended on October 27. The New York Red Bulls won the Supporters' Shield and Sporting Kansas City went on to win the MLS Cup in a penalty kick shootout against Real Salt Lake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers\nMajor League Soccer employs 12 methods to acquire players. These include: signing players on transfers/free transfers as is done in most of the world; via trades; drafting players through mechanisms such as the MLS SuperDraft, MLS Supplemental Draft, or MLS Re-Entry Draft; rarely used methods which cover extreme hardship and injury replacement; signing players as Designated Players or Homegrown Players; placing a discovery claim on players; waivers; and methods peculiar to MLS such as through allocation or a weighted lottery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers, Allocation ranking\nThe allocation ranking is the mechanism used to determine which MLS club has first priority to acquire a U.S. National Team player who signs with MLS after playing abroad, or a former MLS player who returns to the League after having gone to a club abroad for a transfer fee. The allocation rankings may also be used in the event two or more clubs file a request for the same player on the same day. The allocations will be ranked in reverse order of finish for the 2012 season, taking playoff performance into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers, Allocation ranking\nOnce the club uses its allocation ranking to acquire a player, it drops to the bottom of the list. A ranking can be traded, provided that part of the compensation received in return is another club's ranking. At all times, each club is assigned one ranking. The rankings reset at the end of each MLS League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers, Allocation ranking\nOn December 12, 2012, Portland Timbers acquired the number 2 ranking from Chivas USA in exchange for the number 3 ranking and an international roster spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers, Allocation ranking\nOn February 19, 2013, Chivas USA traded the No. 3 ranking to Seattle Sounders FC in the Shalrie Joseph trade. It was also reported that Seattle sent the No. 15 allocation ranking to Chivas USA as part of the deal, although Seattle appeared to have owned the No. 16 selection and not the No. 15 selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers, Allocation ranking\n#On July 1, 2013, Chivas USA acquired the number 1 allocation ranking from Toronto FC in exchange for the #16 ranking, a first-round pick in the 2015 MLS SuperDraft, and an international roster spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers, Weighted lottery\nSome players are assigned to MLS teams via a weighted lottery process. A team can only acquire one player per year through a weighted lottery. The players made available through lotteries include: (i) Generation adidas players signed after the MLS SuperDraft; and (ii) Draft eligible players to whom an MLS contract was offered but who failed to sign with the League prior to the SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 99], "content_span": [100, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player transfers, Weighted lottery\nThe team with the worst record over its last 30 regular season games (dating back to previous season if necessary and taking playoff performance into account) will have the greatest probability of winning the lottery. Teams are not required to participate in a lottery. Players are assigned via the lottery system in order to prevent a player from potentially influencing his destination club with a strategic holdout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 99], "content_span": [100, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Standings, Conference tables, Eastern Conference\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Standings, Overall table\nNote: the table below has no impact on playoff qualification and is used solely for determining host of the MLS Cup, certain CCL spots, the Supporters' Shield trophy, seeding in the 2014 Canadian Championship, and 2014 MLS draft. The conference tables are the sole determinant for teams qualifying for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Standings, Overall table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234586-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Soccer season, Standings, Tie-breaking\nThe teams are awarded three points for a win, one point for a tie (draw) and zero points for a loss. If teams have an equal number of points the following tie-breaking procedures apply:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234587-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Ultimate season\nThe 2013 Major League Ultimate season was the inaugural season for the league. The season began on April 20, 2013 and concluded on July 13, 2013 with the Championship between the Boston Whitecaps and the San Francisco Dogfish. Each team played a 10-game schedule. This season had the first and only team, to date, to go completely undefeated as the Boston Whitecaps went 12-0, including playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234587-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Major League Ultimate season, Standings\nQ indicates a team qualified for the playoffs. H indicates home field advantage in the conference finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234588-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Makassar mayoral election\nA mayoral election was held in the city of Makassar on 23 September 2013. The election was the second direct mayoral election in the city's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234588-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Makassar mayoral election\n10 pairs contested the elections, including 4 independent tickets. With the incumbent barred from reelection after 2 terms, nearly 600,000 of the city's residents voted in the elections. Demokrat-backed architect Mohammad Ramdhan Pomanto secured a victory with a plurality of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234588-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Makassar mayoral election, Background\nMakassar's first direct mayoral election was held in 2008, with incumbent Ilham Arief Sirajuddin winning his second term. The city's province, South Sulawesi, has been described by national and international observers alike as being rife with dynastic politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234588-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Makassar mayoral election, Background\nInitially, the election was planned for February 2014, but it was moved to 2013 in order to prevent interference with the national legislative and presidential elections. There were 983,900 eligible voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234588-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Makassar mayoral election, Results\n7,008 votes out of the 592,299 cast were invalid. During the results announcement, witnesses of the Supomo-Kadir pair walked out, claiming that the election had been a fraudulent one. Candidate pairs with ballot numbers 2, 7 and 9 sued Pomanto-Rizal in the Constitutional Court, but their demands to disqualify the winner and repeat voting were rejected in full.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234588-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Makassar mayoral election, Results\nPomanto and Rizal were officially sworn in on 8 May 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234589-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Makati local elections\nLocal elections were held in Makati on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the two congressmen, and the sixteen councilors, eight in each of the city's two legislative districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234589-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Makati local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nIncumbent Mayor Jejomar Erwin \"Junjun\" Binay is running for his second term under United Nationalist Alliance. His running mate is former city administrator Marge De Veyra. His opponent for mayoralty race is a lawyer Renato \"Rene\" Bondal, an independent candidate whose running mate is incumbent Vice Mayor Romulo \"Kid\" Pe\u00f1a Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234589-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Makati local elections, Congressional election\nIncumbent 1st District Representative Monique Lagdameo won on 2010 election with a 0.19% margin over her closest rival, Maria Lourdes Locsin, wife of former Rep. Teodoro Locsin, Jr.. This year, she is running for her reelection under UNA, facing Edilberto Magsaysay, Virgilio Batalla, and Miguel Lopez, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234589-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Makati local elections, Congressional election\nIncumbent 2nd District Representative Abigail Binay is running for reelection. Her opponent is Joel Sarza, who is running as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234589-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Makati local elections, City Council Election\nEach of Makati's two legislative districts elects eight councilors to the City Council. The eight candidates with the highest number of votes wins the seats per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234589-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Makati local elections, City Council Election\nOf the incumbent councilors elected in 2010, two are not seeking re-election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234590-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Makueni local elections\nLocal elections were held in Makueni County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234590-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Makueni local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election\nPresidential and parliamentary elections were held in Madagascar on 20 December 2013, following a first round of presidential elections on 25 October. The presidential elections in December were a runoff between Jean Louis Robinson and Hery Rajaonarimampianina, the top two candidates to emerge from the first round of voting in October. The official results of the second round were announced on 7 January 2014 with Rajaonarimampianina proclaimed the victor with nearly 54% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election\nThe last elected president, Marc Ravalomanana, was unconstitutionally removed from power by mass protests led by Mayor of Antananarivo Andry Rajoelina in early 2009. Rajoelina dissolved the Senate and National Assembly and took power as the president of the High Transitional Authority (HAT) he created to govern the country in the lead up to elections, which he promised to hold within 18 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election\nThe HAT repeatedly delayed the parliamentary and presidential elections, which were scheduled separately for various dates before finally being merged in May 2011 and postponed to September 2011, May 2012, November 2012, May 2013, July 2013 and August 2013. The 2010 constitutional referendum introduced a new constitution that barred candidates who had not lived in Madagascar for the previous six months, effectively excluding opposition leaders living in exile, including Ravalomanana, who had resided in South Africa since his ouster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election\nThe international community was actively involved in negotiating an end to the political impasse in Madagascar and maintained legitimate and transparent elections as a precondition to international recognition of Madagascar's head of state. In 2012 the African Union demanded that both top candidates - Rajoelina and Ravalomanana - withdraw their candidature. Ravalomanana accepted in December 2012, and Rajoelina followed suit in February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election\nShortly afterward, Lalao Ravalomanana, wife of the former president, submitted her candidature, causing Rajoelina to add his name to the list of candidates just after the deadline; former president Didier Ratsiraka also submitted his candidature despite having returned from exile in France too recently to meet the six-month requirement. This prompted the international community to withdraw funding for the election then scheduled for May 2013, leading to further delays. All three candidates were removed from the approved list by an electoral court in August 2013, and the international community recommitted to providing financial support for the 2013 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nAfter becoming transitional President in March 2009, Andry Rajoelina announced that, within 24 months, there would be a new constitution and elections. Rajoelina was effectively handed the presidency on 18 March 2009, when the military handed over the executive power that was given to it by President Marc Ravalomanana upon his resignation. Rajoelina, as president of the High Transitional Authority which he had created weeks before Ravalomanana's resignation, announced he would serve as head of state until the next election. He became the youngest head of state in the country's history at 34 years of age.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nOn 13 May 2009 it was reported that Rajoelina had stated he did not want to run in the presidential election and that he only wanted to lay the groundwork. According to Rajoelina, he was prepared to accept a proposal from United Nations mediators that no former heads of state run in the election, but only if the other former heads of state also accepted the proposal. On 14 May, Ravalomanana ridiculed the proposal and said that \"anyone who is legally eligible to run for president should be allowed to do so\". On 23 May 2009 an agreement was reached that all former presidents would be allowed to stand in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nRajoelina announced on 12 July 2009 that the election would be held by the end of 2009 to accommodate the demands of international investors, including the EU. This did not take place, however. In May 2010, the elections were set for 26 November 2010 and Rajoelina announced that he would not be a candidate, though he latter suggested that he was still considering running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nA constitutional referendum, originally scheduled for September 2009, was held in Madagascar on 17 November 2010, in which voters approved a proposal for the state's fourth Constitution. The new constitution contains a clause that requires presidential candidates to have lived in Madagascar for at least six months prior to the elections, effectively barring Ravalomanana, who has been living in exile and faces life in prison upon returning to Madagascar after being convicted in absentia for the deaths of protestors during the coup, from running in the next election. Ravalomanana and Rajoelina engaged in negotiations to allow for Ravalomanana's return to the country, but have failed to come to an agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nIn April 2012 an amnesty law was passed, but it prevents the return of former president Marc Ravalomanana despite the South African Development Community's attempts at brokering a reconciliation agreement signed by all parties that would allow him to return. In December 2012, Ravalomanana agreed to withdraw his candidacy in compliance with the international community's roadmap to legitimate elections in Madagascar; Rajoelina followed suit two months later. However, when Ravalomanana's wife Lalao submitted her candidacy despite not having met the six-month residency requirement prior to doing so, Rajoelina likewise submitted his candidature after the deadline had officially closed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nFormer president Didier Ratsiraka also submitted his candidacy, despite also failing to meet the six-month residency requirement. Donors consequently pulled funding for the election, leading it to be postponed twice in 2013. In May 2013, the first round of the presidential elections was scheduled for 23 August 2013 alongside Parliamentary elections, with a second round of presidential elections in October if a runoff were needed. In September 2013, the first round of presidential elections was scheduled for 25 October, with a presidential run-off, if necessary, and parliamentary elections to be held on 20 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nIn August 2013, the special electoral court decided to invalidate the candidacy of Rajoelina, Ravalomanana and Ratsiraka, thereby fulfilling a key criteria for legitimacy set forth by the international community. In August 2013, Foreign Minister Pierrot Rajaonarivelo and Finance Minister Hery Rajaonarimampianina resigned in order to run for the presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nThirty-three presidential candidates were approved to appear on the final ballot used in the first round of voting held in October. None of the candidates won more than fifty percent of the vote, requiring a runoff in December to elect a new president. The candidate with the most votes (21.1%), Jean Louis Robinson, was the declared candidate of former president Ravalomanana. The second place candidate (15.93%), Hery Rajaonarimampianina, was named by Rajoelina as his preferred candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential elections\nIn the second round of voting, held on 20 December, Rajaonarimampianina was elected president with 54% of the votes over Robinson won 46% of the vote, mainly in the densely populated central highlands around the capital of Antananarivo. The election was declared peaceful and legitimate by international observers, although both candidates accused the other of fraud. The results were announced by the electoral commission on 7 January 2014; the commission stated that the results would be officially confirmed on 18 February. Robinson conceded defeat in late January, and Rajaonarimampianina was sworn in as president in an inauguration attended by foreign dignitaries, including the French Ambassador and American Attache.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Parliamentary elections\nOn 19 March 2009, Rajoelina dissolved the National Assembly of Madagascar and the Senate of Madagascar. Parliamentary elections were planned for 2011, after being postponed from 20 March 2010 and then 30 September 2010. Parliamentary and presidential elections were previously scheduled separately for various dates before finally being merged in May 2011 and postponed to September 2011, May 2012, November 2012, May 2013, July 2013 and August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Parliamentary elections\nRajoelina announced on 16 December 2009 that parliamentary elections would be held in March 2010. In May, it was announced they would be held on 30 September 2010. On 14 August 2010, they were again postponed to 16 March 2011. Another postponement was announced in January 2011, with no new date specified. Parliamentary elections were held on 20 December 2013. It was the first time parliamentary elections were held concurrently with the presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Presidential candidates\nThirty-three approved contenders ran in the 2013 presidential election. In August 2013, the three top candidates were barred from running by a Madagascar legal body charged with election oversight. These included Rajoelina, barred for not submitting his candidacy by the deadline; Lalao Ravalomanana, barred for not having lived in Madagascar for 6 months before the poll; and Didier Ratsiraka, barred for filing paperwork for the candidacy only 2 days after returning from exile. Ravalomanana publicly endorsed medical doctor and politician Jean Louis Robinson from Antananarivo. On 24 September 2013, the official starting date of the campaign, online news magazine Afrik.com identified the top candidates as Jean-Louis Robinson, Hery Rajaonarimampianina (endorsed by Andry Rajoelina), Hajo Andrianainarivelo, Camille Vital, Pierrot Rajaonarivelo and Saraha Georget Rabeharisoa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234591-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Malagasy general election, Results, President\nJean Louis Robinson and Hery Rajaonarimampianina emerged as the two candidates with the most votes in the first round held in October 2013, receiving 21% and 16% of the vote respectively. Election results for the second round, held in December 2013, were announced on 7 January. Rajaonarimampianina won with 53.5% of the vote while Robinson had 46.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup\nThe 2013 Malaysia Cup (Malay: Piala Malaysia 2013) was the 87th season of Malaysia Cup and began on 20 August with a preliminary round and finished on 3 November 2013 with the final, held at Shah Alam Stadium. A total of 16 teams took part in the competition. The teams were divided into four groups, each containing four teams. The group leaders and runners-up teams in the groups after six matches qualified to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup\nKelantan were the defending champions, having beaten ATM 3\u20132 in last season's final. For the second time, a Singaporean team, LIONSXII, also newly minted 2013 Malaysian Super League champions, participated in this competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup\nThis 87th edition ended with Pahang winning the title after beating Kelantan 1\u20130, with a goal scored by Mat\u00edas Conti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup, Format\nIn this competition, the top 10 teams from 2013 Malaysia Super League is joined by the top 4 teams from 2013 Malaysia Premier League. The remaining 2 teams from 2013 Malaysia Super League and the team who finished 5th and 6th place in the 2013 Malaysia Premier League will battle it out in the playoffs for the remaining 2 spots. The teams will be drawn into four groups of four teams. Voting took place on 27 July at TM Convention Centre, Menara Telekom, Jalan Pantai Baharu, Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup, Round and draw dates\nThe draws are held at TM Convention Centre in Kuala Lumpur on 27 July 2013 .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on 27 & 28 September 2013, and the second legs were played on 4 & 5 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first leg will be played on 18 & 19 October while the second leg will be played on 25 & 26 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234592-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup, Final\nThe Final will be played on 3 Nov 2013 at Shah Alam Stadium, Shah Alam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234593-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup Final\nThe 2013 Malaysia Cup Final was a football match which was played on 3 November 2013, to determine the winners of the 2013 Malaysia Cup. It was the final of the 87th edition of the Malaysia Cup, competition organised by the Football Association of Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234593-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup Final, Venue\nThe final was held at the Shah Alam Stadium in Selangor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234593-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup Final, Road to final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234593-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup Final, Match details\nAssistant referees: Mohd Kamil Yumin (Kuala Lumpur) Muhd Mu'azi Zainal Abidin (Kuala Lumpur)Fourth official: Samsudin Ibrahim (Kuala Lumpur)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234594-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Cup group stage\nThe 2013 Piala Malaysia group stage featured 16 teams. The teams were drawn into fourth groups of four, and played each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The top two teams in each group advanced to the 2013 Piala Malaysia quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup\nThe 2013 Malaysia FA Cup, also known as the Astro Piala FA due to the competition's sponsorship by Astro Arena, was the 24th season of the Malaysia FA Cup, a knockout competition for Malaysia's state football association and clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup\nKelantan defended the title after defeating Johor Darul Ta'zim 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup\nThe cup winner of the 2013 edition has qualified for the 2014 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup, Format\n30 teams will participate in this tournament instead of 32 in the 2012 edition. 2012 winners Kelantan and runners-up Sime Darby have received byes for this edition and will progress straight into the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup, Format\nJust like the previous edition, the first two rounds would be single matches. The quarter finals and semi finals would be played over two legs while the final will be played at National Stadium, Bukit Jalil, Kuala Lumpur, on 26 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup, Matches\nThe draw for the Piala FA 2013 was held at Wisma FAM on 10 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup, Matches\nCambodian club Preah Khan Reach is invited for the 2nd time. to participate in the Piala FA, after exiting in the Round of 16 in the 2012 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup, Matches\nThe Singapore club LionsXII is also participating for the second time in this competition, after being knocked out in the first round by PKNS to a 1-0 aggregate loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup, Matches, Quarter-finals\nThe first leg matches will be played on 6 April 2013, with the second legs to be held on 16 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234595-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup, Matches, Semi-finals\nThe first leg matches will be played on 25 May 2013, with the second legs to be held on 28 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234596-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup Final\nThe 2013 Malaysia FA Cup Final was a football match which was played on 29 June 2013, to determine the champion of the 2013 Malaysia FA Cup. It was the final of the 24th edition of the Malaysia FA Cup, competition organised by the Football Association of Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234596-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup Final\nThe final was played between Kelantan and Johor Darul Takzim. Kelantan won 1\u20130 to win their second Malaysia FA Cup title for the second year in row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234596-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup Final, Venue\nThe final was held at the National Stadium, Bukit Jalil in Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234596-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FA Cup Final, Match details\nAssistant referees: M. Sivanesan (Malaysia) Mohd Sabri Mat Daud (Malaysia)Fourth official: Lismotia Mohem Mohd Tisan (Malaysia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234597-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FAM League\nThe 2013 Malaysia FAM League (referred to as the FAM League) is the 61st season of the FAM League since its establishment in 1952. The league is currently the third level football league in Malaysia. The season began on 17 February 2013. Suruhanjaya Perkhidmatan Awam FC are the defending champions, having won their first league title the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234597-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FAM League\nPenang won the league for the 5th time in the league history after beating Shahzan Muda on 2 June 2013. This is the first FAM League title Penang has won since 1957. PBAPP FC, another team from Penang, also were promoted after capturing second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234597-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FAM League, Teams\nThe following teams participated in the 2013 Malaysia FAM League. In order by the number given by FAM:-", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234597-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia FAM League, Teams, Team summaries, Personnel and kits\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, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234598-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Grand Prix Gold\nThe 2013 Malaysia Grand Prix Gold was the fifth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Juara Indoor Stadium, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia from 30 April to 4 May 2013 and had a total purse of $120,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234599-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Junior Hockey League\nThe 2013 Malaysia Junior Hockey League is slated to begin on 11 January 2013. SSTMI-Thunderbolt is the defending champion for both league and cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234599-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Junior Hockey League\nBefore the seasons gets underway, controversial issue involving SSTMI girls' team that submitted an entry to the Under-19 boys league. However the competitions committee met and were against the idea and decided to create a junior girls' league this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234599-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Junior Hockey League, Teams\nA total of 28 teams enter this season, the highest since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234599-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Junior Hockey League, Teams, Division 1\nThe eight teams playing in Division One are as below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234599-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Junior Hockey League, Teams, Division 2\nDivision Two will have two groups of ten teams each. For Group A the teams comprise mostly from the northern region to cut down the cost of travel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234600-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia National Basketball League\nThe 2013 Malaysia National Basketball League Regular Season was the 33rd season of competition of the Malaysia National Basketball League (MNBL) since its establishment. A total of five teams competed in the league. The regular season began on 6 September 2013 with the 1st Series in Miri, Sarawak and ended on 29 September 2013 in Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234600-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia National Basketball League, Pre-Season\nA new format was announced for the regular season, where the teams will play in three Circuits. The playoff format was also changed: both the semifinals and the finals will be one-off series, instead of best-of-three series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234600-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia National Basketball League, Playoffs for 2013 MNBL Overall Champions Cup\nThe 2013 MNBL Overall Champions Cup started on May 23, 2013 and concluded with Kelantan Warriors defeating Perak Farmcochem in the 2013 MNBL Overall Champions Cup Finals to claim the team's first ever MNBL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 86], "content_span": [87, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234601-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Premier League\nThe 2013 Liga Premier (English: 2013 Premier League), also known as the Astro Liga Premier for sponsorship reasons, is the 10th season of the Liga Premier, the second-tier professional football league in Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234601-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Premier League\nThe season was held from 7 January and concluded in 5 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234601-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Premier League\nThe Liga Premier champions for 2013 season was Sarawak. The champions and runners-up were both promoted to 2014 Liga Super.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234601-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Premier League, Teams\nA total of twelve teams will contest the league. The teams competing includes the sides finishing 3rd to 6th from the 2012 Liga Premier season, Harimau Muda B who will stay in the league regardless of league position, the champion of 2012 Malaysia FAM League, and the bottom team from the 2012 Liga Super season. The remaining 5 places in the league will be contested in the playoff round between teams from Liga Super, Liga Premier and FAM League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234601-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Premier League, Teams\nFAM later decided to withdraw Harimau Muda B from the league and register them in the 2013 S.League, replacing Harimau Muda A who pulled out of the S.League to embark on a tour of friendly matches in Europe, and preparing them for the 2013 Southeast Asian Games. Perlis, who originally were relegated after finishing second bottom in 2012 Liga Premier, were reinstated in the league as a result of the withdrawal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234601-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Premier League, Teams\nKuala Lumpur were relegated from 2012 Liga Super after finishing the season in the last place of the 14-team league table. Sarawak, Kedah and Sabah were also relegated after losing in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234601-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Premier League, Teams\n2012 Malaysia FAM League champions SPA secured direct promotion to this season Liga Premier. Meanwhile UiTM, the 3rd-place team in FAM League, were invited to replace USM FC, who were withdrawing from Liga Premier due to financial difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League\nThe 2013 Liga Super (English: 2013 Super League) also known as the Astro Liga Super for sponsorship reasons is the 10th season of the Liga Super, the top-tier professional football league in Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League\nThe season was held from 8 January and concluded on 6 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League, Teams\nA total of twelve teams will compete in the 2013 season which includes the top 10 teams that participated in the 2012 season, champion of the 2012 Liga Premier, and the winner of the play-off round between teams finishing 11th to 13th in the Liga Super as well as the team finishing 2nd in the Liga Premier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League, Teams\nKuala Lumpur was relegated at the end of the 2012 Liga Super season after finishing in the bottom place of the league table. Sarawak, Sabah and Kedah were also relegated after losing the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League, Teams\n2012 Liga Premier champions Angkatan Tentera Malaysia secured direct promotion to the Liga Super. Meanwhile, 2012 Liga Premier runner-up Pahang clinched the promotion after winning the playoff rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League, Teams\nNote:1Promoted from 2012 Liga Premier2Winners of 2013 Liga Super/Liga Premier Play-off round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League, Team summaries, Stadium\nMatches may not be played at night at stadiums marked with an asterisk (*) because the floodlights do not meet FAM regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234602-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super League, Team summaries, Name changes\nJohor FC was renamed as Johor Darul Takzim Football Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234603-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysia Super Series\nThe 2013 Malaysia Super Series Premier was the first super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia from January 15\u201320, 2013 and had a total purse of $400,000. A qualification was held to fill four places in all five disciplines of the main draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234604-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Chinese Association leadership election\nA leadership election was held by the Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) on 21 December 2013. It was won by then Deputy President of MCA, Liow Tiong Lai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix (officially the 2013 Formula 1 Petronas Malaysia Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Sepang International Circuit in Sepang, Selangor on 24 March 2013 before 90,000 people. It was the second round of the 2013 Formula One World Championship, and the 15th Formula One Malaysian race. Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel won the 56-lap race from pole position. His teammate Mark Webber finished second, and Lewis Hamilton was third for the Mercedes team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix\nThe race began on a damp track after an earlier downpour, with Vettel in pole position alongside Felipe Massa of Ferrari; Massa's teammate Fernando Alonso, and Hamilton began from third and fourth. Webber moved from fifth to second by the second lap, and took the lead after Vettel made his first pit stop for dry slick tyres on lap five. He maintained that position through most of the race until Vettel ignored a team order from Red Bull to lower the performance of his engine, overtaking Webber for the lead on the 46th lap. Vettel maintained the lead for the final nine laps for his first victory of the season, his third in Malaysia, and the 27th of his career. Hamilton finished 12\u00a0seconds behind, and his teammate Nico Rosberg was told by Mercedes team principal Ross Brawn to hold fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix\nVettel apologised to the Red Bull team and Webber for ignoring the order to hold position; Red Bull did not punish or reprimand him because his attorneys threatened legal action, and he recanted the apology three weeks later. Webber was asked to present his version of events to Red Bull founder and co-owner Dietrich Mateschitz. Vettel's victory placed him in the lead of the World Drivers' Championship, after Lotus driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen finished seventh. Red Bull took the lead of the World Constructors' Championship from Ferrari, with 17 races left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Background\nThe 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix was the 2nd of the 19 rounds of the 2013 Formula One World Championship, and the 15th Formula One Malaysian race. It was held at the 15-turn 5.543\u00a0km (3.444\u00a0mi) Sepang International Circuit in Sepang, Selangor on 24 March. A F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA, motorsport's governing body)-sanctioned race has been held in Malaysia since the 1960s, with the first editions run in Singapore\u2014then part of the Malaysian Federation\u2014before moving to the Shah Alam Circuit. With the arrival of Formula One in 1999, the race was moved to the purpose-built Sepang International Circuit, where all editions were held until 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Background\nTyre supplier Pirelli brought white-banded, medium compound tyres; red-banded, hard compound dry tyres; green-banded, intermediate compound tyres; and dark-blue-banded wet-weather tyres to the race. The drag reduction system (DRS), an adjustable flap at the back of each car that helps with overtaking when activated, had two activation zones for the race: one on the straight, linking turns 14 and 15, and another on the straight between the final and first corners. For the race, a debris fence on the pit lane wall was extended to better safeguard track marshals. There were 11 teams (each representing a different constructor) that each entered two race drivers, with no changes from the season entry list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Background\nAfter winning the season-opening Australian Grand Prix one week earlier, Lotus driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen led the World Drivers' Championship with 25 points, ahead of Ferrari's Fernando Alonso and Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel in second and third, with 18 and 15 points. Alonso's teammate Felipe Massa was fourth with 12 points, and Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton was fifth with ten points. Ferrari led the World Constructors' Championship with 30 points; Lotus and Ferrari followed with 26 and 23 points, respectively. Mercedes and Force India held fourth place, with ten points each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Background\nVettel said that the Australian Grand Prix would be meaningless later in the year, and predicted that with the different conditions and tyres in Malaysia, he would outpace Ferrari and Lotus. His teammate, Mark Webber, explained that Red Bull required an improvement in car performance for the race: \"As a team we weren't as strong as we thought we'd be. But that's Formula One \u2013 it can change very quickly. We've got a very, very hot track this week in Sepang. So let's see how we go for the next few races. It's the first marker in the sand.\" Hamilton said that Mercedes would bring what they learnt about team strategy from Melbourne to Sepang, and would have good results if his team then scored ten points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Background\nFor the second consecutive race, reliability issues with the telemetry link between race control and the cars prompted the FIA to disable the system, stopping teams from informing drivers of an incident or being lapped, and the FIA could not disable DRS in inclement weather or a safety car. The stewards advised drivers to comply with DRS usage rules, and required teams to inform them when the system was disabled. If officials deployed the safety car, drivers were ordered to manually press a button on their steering wheel to slow their cars as soon as they noticed a warning board or an illuminated light. Drivers acquainted themselves with the revised procedures in a test held after the third practice session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Background\nSeveral teams made changes to their cars for the race. Sauber introduced a new C32 chassis for driver Nico H\u00fclkenberg after a fuel-system fault prevented him from starting the Australian Grand Prix. Sauber modified the C32's engine cover to remove hot air from its engine and sidepods, and added a small vertical fin to improve airflow to the car's rear and diffuser's side channels. Red Bull installed extra cooling outlets on the centre of the RB9, to counter Malaysia's warm climate. Ferrari opened the exhausts on the F138 to improve the extraction of warm air from its sidepods. Mercedes changed the turning vanes and pillars under the F1 W04. Lotus introduced a new exhaust system on R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's E21 car and its endplate, main plane and revised upper flap, in addition to a revised diffuser with a gurney flap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Practice\nIn accordance with the 2013 regulations, three practice sessions were held: two 90-minute sessions on Friday, and another 60-minute session on Saturday. The first practice session was held in hot, humid weather; no driver set a competitive lap time for 34 minutes. Several drivers remained in the pit lane to wait for better track conditions to record their quickest times in a ten-minute period of successive laps, before running a heavy fuel load. Webber's first timed lap (1 minute, 37.588 seconds) was followed by 1 minute, 37.354 seconds from his teammate Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Practice\nWebber improved to a 1-minute, 36.395-second lap to go fastest. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen missed the first 55 minutes as Lotus replaced a kinetic energy recovery system (KERS) battery which failed due to a sensor problem, but was second-fastest. Vettel, Alonso, Nico Rosberg of Mercedes, Adrian Sutil of Force India, Massa, Paul di Resta, Hamilton and Lotus driver Romain Grosjean were second to tenth. Sutil damaged his front wing on a kerb, and Sauber's Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez spun at turn 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Practice\nThe second session was also hot and humid; many teams used dry tyres early, due to rain clouds above the track. A heavy rain shower fell, preventing an improvement in lap times; some drivers drove on the wet track on the intermediate-compound tyres, to acclimatise themselves with the conditions if inclement weather returned later in the week. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen lapped fastest at 1 minute, 36.569 seconds, followed by Vettel, Massa and Alonso, Webber, Grosjean, Rosberg, Di Resta, Hamilton and Sutil. Some drivers went off the track during the session, due to wetness. Guti\u00e9rrez's in-car fire extinguisher activated after mounting the turn-12 kerb, and a subsequent exhaust-system fracture ended his session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Practice\nIn the final session (also in hot, humid weather), most drivers used hard-compound tyres to see how they would behave during the race, then switched to medium-compound tyres when track grip improved. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen set a benchmark in the first ten minutes, which Rosberg and Sutil bettered. Rosberg and his teammate, Hamilton, fought for the fastest lap time until Vettel used the medium-compound tyres to lead with a 1 minute, 36.435-second lap with three minutes to go. Hamilton, Sutil, Webber, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Di Resta, McLaren's Jenson Button, Massa, Rosberg and Alonso were the ten fastest drivers. Near the end of the session, Hamilton's right-front tyre tore a tread after locking the wheel and flat-spotting it to the canvas. Part of the tyre detached on the backstraight, and damaged Hamilton's front wing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nSaturday afternoon's qualifying session was divided into three parts. The first session lasted 18 minutes, eliminating cars which finished the session 17th or below. The 107% rule was in effect, requiring drivers to reach a time within 107 per cent of the fastest lap to qualify. The second session lasted 15 minutes, eliminating cars that finished 11th to 16th. The final, ten-minute session determined pole position to tenth place. Drivers who progressed to the final session were not allowed to change tyres for the race's start, and used the tyres with which they set their fastest lap times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nA sudden downpour five minutes before the end of the second session wet the track from turns five to six, prompting the drivers to switch to intermediate-compound tyres during the session. Vettel used a single set of medium-compound tyres in the first and second sessions to prevent tyre overuse. He also used intermediate-compound tyres in the final minutes of the third session to take his second pole position of the season and the 38th of his career with a one-minute, 49.674-second lap. Massa started second for the first time since the 2010 Bahrain Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nand was faster than his teammate, Alonso (in third), for the fourth race in a row. Hamilton used an older set of intermediate tyres in Mercedes' strategy to remain on the circuit, and qualified fourth. Webber took fifth on one set of intermediate tyres; a pit-wall miscommunication at the end of the final session allowed Hamilton past and stopped Webber improving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nRosberg was fastest in the first session, but fell to sixth in the final session on a used set of intermediate tyres. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen took seventh on a new set of intermediate tyres. A slow pace put Button eighth, an oversteer in the corners left Sutil ninth, and McLaren's Sergio P\u00e9rez was tenth. Grosjean, 11th, drove onto the track too late. H\u00fclkenberg, 12th, could not switch from a set of worn medium-compound tyres due to a loss of weather data. A car-balance adjustment put Toro Rosso's Daniel Ricciardo 13th. The rain caught out Guti\u00e9rrez in 14th on dry tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Qualifying\nDi Resta aborted a timed lap due to the rain, prompting Force India to call him to the pit lane for a tyre change. He took 15th, rejoining the track when the rain fell and making two errors. Williams driver Pastor Maldonado, in 16th, set no lap time; he aborted when the rain began. Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne's Toro Rosso, 17th, failed to advance beyond the first session after a slower car obstructed him on his lap. Williams' Valtteri Bottas lapped 18th fastest due to poor grip from the medium-compound tyre. Marussia's Jules Bianchi and Max Chilton were 19th and 21st, separated by Charles Pic's Caterham, who had an understeer on his first lap that a pressure adjustment for his second did not remove. Giedo van der Garde, 22nd, was slowed by an oversteer on the medium-compound tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Post-qualifying\nAfter qualifying, the stewards imposed a three-place grid penalty on R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen after concluding he blocked Rosberg between turns 12 and 15 in the third session. This moved Button to seventh, Sutil to eighth and P\u00e9rez to ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying classification\nThe fastest lap in each of the three sessions is in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nThe 56-lap race was held during the afternoon on 24 March. Thunderstorms were forecast, and a 30-minute torrential downpour half an hour before the start made the track wet. The air temperature was 24 to 25\u00a0\u00b0C (75 to 77\u00a0\u00b0F), and the track temperature ranged from 27 to 33\u00a0\u00b0C (81 to 91\u00a0\u00b0F). 90,000 people were in attendance. Standing water caused light spray and impaired visibility, and all cars used intermediate tyres. Turn three was flooded, causing several drivers to aquaplane into a gravel trap before the race. Bottas damaged his front wing; after an assessment, the Williams team repaired it on the grid. Williams also changed Maldonado's engine the morning of the event due to piston damage in qualifying; Maldonado did not incur a penalty because he switched to another of his eight allocated engines for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nWhen the five red lights went out to begin the race, Vettel maintained his lead into the first corner. Massa and Alonso veered towards each other behind him, with Hamilton on the left and Webber on the right. Alonso entered turn two in second position, and was surprised by Vettel's perceived early braking. He hit the rear of Vettel's car, which put him wide and damaged his front wing. Webber overtook both Mercedes to move into third place, and battled Alonso for second on the first lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nThe left front section of Alonso's front wing scraped the tarmac surface; Ferrari kept him on the circuit, anticipating that it would not detach. Further down the field, Massa was blocked by other cars and fell from second to sixth. H\u00fclkenberg made a fast start to advance from 12th to ninth, as P\u00e9rez moved up from tenth to eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nAt the start of lap two, Webber drew alongside Alonso, whose front wing detached and folded under his Ferrari at the end of the main straight, sending him into the turn-one gravel trap. Track stewards refused Alonso's request to extricate his car from the gravel, and he was the race's first retirement. DRS was enabled on the third lap. Rosberg passed Button for fourth on the third lap; R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen tried to pass Ricciardo for tenth at turn one on the next lap, but ran wide and dropped to 12th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nH\u00fclkenberg passed P\u00e9rez on the inside for seventh at turn one, and tried unsuccessfully to regain the position on the outside at turn two on lap five. As lap times fell, Vettel made a pit stop from the lead at the end lap four to switch to medium-compound tyres. He struggled for grip on a damp area, falling behind P\u00e9rez, Sutil and Grosjean on lap six, until he drove onto a dry section and overtook Grosjean; Sutil blocked his attempt to pass at turn 13. On lap seven, Vettel overtook P\u00e9rez for seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nWebber led laps five to seven, because Red Bull advised him that turn three was too wet for dry tyres and he set a series of fast lap times. His race engineer, Simon Rennie, told him to enter the pit lane on the seventh lap. Hamilton made a pit stop on lap eight. He mistakenly drove into the McLaren pit stall, and the team waved him through to prepare for Button and P\u00e9rez's arrival. On that lap, Toro Rosso released Vergne into the path of Pic and they made contact; both drivers had their front wings replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nThe stewards ruled that Vergne was released unsafely into Pic's path and fined the Toro Rosso team $10,000, but Vergne did not incur a post-race time penalty. Rosberg led the eighth lap, until his first stop. After the pit stops, Webber led teammate Vettel and Hamilton. On lap nine, Grosjean passed Ricciardo for ninth position. His teammate, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, unsuccessfully attempted to do the same at turn nine. He tried again, and overtook Ricciardo with DRS on the hairpin turn. Two laps later, Grosjean used DRS to pass P\u00e9rez for eighth position. On the 12th lap, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen unsuccessfully tried to pass P\u00e9rez for ninth into turn one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nMaldonado, in 12th position, ran on a damp white line at turn 11 on lap 13; he drove across the gravel trap, removing half of his car's front wing. Maldonado recovered to the pit lane without external aid for a replacement front wing, and rejoined the race in 21st place. By lap 15 Webber led teammate Vettel by 2.2 seconds, and Vettel was the same distance ahead of Hamilton in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nWebber began the second round of pit stops when he entered the pit lane to switch to medium-compound tyres at the end of that lap; he returned to the track in fifth, behind Button. Vettel took the lead and was instructed by his race engineer, Guillaume Rocquelin, to speed up to retain the position. He and Rosberg made their second pit stops at the end of lap 22. Vettel and Rosberg returned to the track in third and fourth place, and Webber returned to the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nA recurring captive wheel-nut system fault, possibly caused by a high temperature on the left front wheel, caused Sutil to lose 84 seconds in a pit stop, and dropped him to 20th. Soon thereafter the Force India team called Sutil and his teammate, Di Resta, into retirement because they could not fix the problem before the end of the race and did not want to damage their cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nBy the end of lap 25, Vettel was less than a second behind teammate Webber and could use DRS to attempt a pass for the lead. The gap to Vettel and Webber was lowered to four-tenths of a second at the start of the next lap, as Hamilton gained on them. Rocquelin told Vettel by radio on that lap to conserve his tyres in high-speed corners, because he drew too close to Webber and was affected by the aerodynamic turbulence of airflow over his teammate's car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nWebber also slowed to preserve his tyres so he could reach the third series of pit stops, and Vettel told the Red Bull team by radio to have his teammate relinquish the lead to him because he thought he was the faster driver. On the 29th lap, Webber went faster by three-tenths of a second and pulled away from Vettel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nThe third pit-stop phase began on the 30th lap. Hamliton entered the lane to switch to hard-compound tyres, and rejoined the track in fifth place. Webber and Rosberg made their stops on the next lap for hard-compound tyres, and emerged in third and fifth. Vettel led the 32nd lap; he made his stop and returned in fourth position, behind Hamilton and Webber. Button led laps 33 and 34. Webber unsuccessfully challenged Button for first place near the final corner; he then used DRS and out-braked Button to reclaim the lead before turn one of lap 35.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nOn the 36th lap, Button had a problematic pit stop; a fault in the McLaren micro-switch pit-stop lighting system erroneously shone a green light for 120 milliseconds, and Button was released from his pit box before a mechanic could install his right-front wheel. Mechanics pushed Button's car back to the pit stall for the job to be completed. Button lost two minutes in the pit lane, and emerged one lap behind in 14th position. At the front of the field, Hamilton was asked to conserve fuel when Mercedes was unable to adapt to the speed of the faster Red Bull cars; Vettel used DRS into turn one, passing Hamilton for second place on lap 39.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nVettel began to draw clear of Hamilton. On lap 41, H\u00fclkenberg locked his tyres in the final corner and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen overtook him on the inside for eighth place at turns one and two. Hamilton began the final sequence of pit stops at the end of the lap, and was followed by Rosberg and the Red Bull duo of Webber and Vettel. Webber rejoined the race on an old set of hard-compound tyres, holding off his teammate Vettel through turns one to four to retain the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nRed Bull invoked team orders on Vettel and Webber, with the code \"Multi-Map 21\", telling both drivers to lower engine performance and remain in first and second position (without challenging each other) to conserve their tyres. At the end of the lap, Rosberg used DRS to pass teammate Hamilton at the hairpin; Hamilton retook the position before turn one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nOn the 46th lap, Vettel, avenging Webber for forcing him toward the pit wall at the start of the 2012 Brazilian Grand Prix causing him to be hit by Williams driver Bruno Senna, turned right on the first straight and used DRS and KERS. Webber put him towards the pit-lane barrier, with their wheels almost touching at about 180\u00a0mph (290\u00a0km/h). Webber used the outside to keep Vettel behind at turn two, placing himself away from the racing line, and Vettel accelerated faster out of turn three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nVettel turned left cresting a hill into turn four, overtaking Webber with better traction for the lead out of the corner. Red Bull team principal Christian Horner reprimanded Vettel by radio: \"This is silly, Seb. Come on.\" At the start of lap 47, Webber tried to pass Vettel into turn one; Vettel placed Webber on the edge of the track to prevent his teammate from driving onto the outside at turn two. On that lap, Maldonado retired with a KERS failure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nMassa made a pit stop on the 47th lap to switch to medium-compound tyres when he was unable to pass Grosjean, and emerged in eighth position. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen passed P\u00e9rez on the inside on the hairpin for sixth place on lap 49. Massa then passed P\u00e9rez on the first turn for seventh position; P\u00e9rez had used DRS to challenge R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who was then passed by Massa for sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nRosberg begged Mercedes team principal Ross Brawn to let him pass teammate Hamilton on lap 50; Brawn refused, wanting to ensure that both cars finished the race and trying to control Hamilton's pace to improve his position in the World Drivers' Championship. Two laps later, Ricciardo retired with a faulty exhaust system. Massa then retook fifth from Grosjean on the straight linking the hairpin. On the 55th lap, Button retired with vibration caused by a lock in his left front suspension. That lap, P\u00e9rez made a pit stop for hard-compound tyres after H\u00fclkenberg passed him on the inside for eighth place at the fourth corner. He retained ninth place, ahead of Vergne in tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race\nOn the final lap, Brawn radioed Hamilton to conserve fuel to finish the race as Rosberg held position. Vettel had his first victory of the season, his third in Malaysia (after winning in 2010 and 2011) and the 27th of his career, which tied him with three-time world champion Jackie Stewart. Webber finished 4.298 seconds later behind in second, and Hamilton had his first podium finish with Mercedes in third. Rosberg and Massa were fourth and fifth, and Grosjean and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen were sixth and seventh. H\u00fclkenberg took eighth, Sauber's first points of the season. P\u00e9rez took ninth, and set the race's fastest lap on the final lap: 1 minute, 39.199 seconds. Vergne was tenth, and the final finishers were Bottas, Guti\u00e9rrez, Bianchi, Pic, Van Der Garde, Chilton, Button and Ricciardo. After the race, Webber cut across Vettel in anger over how his teammate won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race, Post-race\nRed Bull technical director Adrian Newey told Webber that Vettel was instructed to hold position. Incensed about Vettel's action, Webber considered boycotting the podium ceremony until convinced to do otherwise. In the cool-down room, Vettel wanted to speak to Webber, who did not want to communicate with him; he sat on a chair and told Vettel, \"Multi 21, Seb. Multi 21\". During the podium interviews by commentator Martin Brundle, Vettel said that it was \"very close wheel-to-wheel racing\" with Webber. Webber said that Vettel made an independent choice to pass him, and would receive protection from Red Bull's management.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race, Post-race\nHamilton said that his teammate, Rosberg, should have finished third because the latter was faster. During the post-race press conference, Vettel called himself \"the black sheep\" for prioritising himself over the Red Bull team. Webber said in the final 15 laps, he \"was thinking that many things, yes. Many many things\" about previous races and the current one. Hamilton said that he would ask Mercedes if he could apologise to his teammate, Rosberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race, Post-race\nVettel ignoring team orders was a key moment in his rivalry with Webber, which began when he collided with Webber at the 2010 Turkish Grand Prix and was forced to retire. Horner talked to Vettel and Webber the night after the race, expressing his misgivings about the situation. Vettel flew from Kuala Lumpur to visit the Red Bull team factory in Milton Keynes, England on 26 March to apologise to his colleagues after doing so to Webber at the press conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race, Post-race\nAccording to Horner, Vettel was eager to make up for the wrongdoing and shook hands with Webber: \"He can't turn back the clock, but he's accepted what he did was wrong.\" Red Bull did not reprimand or punish Vettel because his lawyers threatened legal action; he told Webber at the Chinese Grand Prix three weeks later that he was annoyed by his teammate's comments on the podium. Vettel later recanted his apology for winning: \"Obviously I realised at that moment there was quite a conflict. On the one hand I am the kind of guy who respects team decisions and on the other hand, probably Mark is not the one who deserved it (to win) at the time. The bottom line is I was racing, I was faster, I passed him, I won.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race, Post-race\nWebber received a telephone call in Australia from Red Bull owner and co-founder Dietrich Mateschitz, who asked him to provide an oral and written account of events because he was irate about the damage to his company's reputation. Although media reports and comments from the Formula One community speculated about his future at Red Bull and whether reserve driver, S\u00e9bastien Buemi, would replace him, Webber dismissed the suggestions and would continue driving for the team for the foreseeable future and talk to Mateschitz about his future later in the year. Webber said in 2020 he believed Vettel might regret the incident, but added that he was not \"an angel at certain other events here and there.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race, Post-race\nAlonso said that he could have challenged for the victory had he not retired on the second lap due to Ferrari's similar race pace to Red Bull: \"No one was especially quick, so I think we could really have fought for the win.\" According to Button, he could have battled Mercedes for third position on strategy. Although Rosberg begged Ross Brawn to reconsider his decision to maintain position, he respected Mercedes' judgment and finishing third and fourth and duelling Red Bull was \"such a milestone\". Mercedes motorsport boss Toto Wolff said about Rosberg was unhappy about the situation but understood the decision to hold position: \"We are all grown ups and they are grown up. They are professional sportsmen and they understand that sometimes there can be a certain controversy in a certain situation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234605-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race, Post-race\nThe result moved Vettel into the lead of the World Drivers' Championship with 40 points, and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen fell to second place. Webber rose three positions to third place, Hamilton moved to fourth, and Massa dropped from fourth to fifth. Red Bull took the lead of the World Constructors' Championship with 60 points. Lotus maintained second place, and Ferrari fell from first to third. Mercedes and Force India retained fourth and fifth place, with 17 races left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234606-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Open\nThe 2013 BMW Malaysian Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the Malaysian Open and was an International tournament on the 2013 WTA Tour. The tournament took place from February 25 to March 3 at the new venue Royal Selangor Golf Club. This was the last time that Malaysia hosted the event, as in 2014 it will move to Hong Kong, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234606-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234607-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Open \u2013 Doubles\nChang Kai-chen and Chuang Chia-jung were the defending champions, but Chuang decided not to participate. Chang played alongside Shuko Aoyama and successfully defended her title by defeating Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 and Zhang Shuai in the final, 6\u20137(4\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20134), [14\u201312].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234608-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian Open \u2013 Singles\nHsieh Su-wei was the defending champion, but she lost in the quarterfinals to Bethanie Mattek-Sands. Karol\u00edna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 defeated Mattek-Sands in the final, 1\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20133, to claim her first WTA singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Malaysia on Sunday, 5 May 2013 to elect the members of the 13th Parliament. Voting took place in all 222 parliamentary constituencies, each electing one MP to the Dewan Rakyat, the dominant house of Parliament. State elections also took place in 505 state constituencies in 12 of the 13 states (excluding Sarawak) on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election\nThe elections were the first since Najib Razak became Prime Minister in 2009. The incumbent right-wing Barisan Nasional led by Razak won a second term against the opposition centre-left Pakatan Rakyat led by Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim, after Barisan Nasional formed a majority government at a federal level. Barisan Nasional won 133 seats in the 222-seat Dewan Rakyat and 47.38% of the vote whereas the informal coalition, Pakatan Rakyat contesting under a different election symbol, saw a slight increase in both support and seats, winning 50.87% of the popular vote and 89 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election\nThis was the best performance shown by the opposition bloc against the federal ruling Barisan Nasional, and the first time Barisan Nasional won less of the popular vote than the opposition. Because Barisan Nasional nonetheless won more parliamentary seats than the opposition, the elections were followed by protests and accusations of gerrymandering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Background\nThe Malaysian Parliament was dissolved on 3 April 2013 by Tuanku Abdul Halim, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong on the advice of the Prime Minister of Malaysia, Najib Tun Razak. The Prime Minister made a televised statement announcing the dissolution of the 12th Parliament at 11:30\u00a0am local time the same day. Following the dissolution of Parliament, a general election was required to be held within 60 days, between 3 April and 2 June 2013, with the date to be decided by the Election Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Background\nOn 10 April 2013, the Election Commission of Malaysia announced that nominations for election candidates would be held on 20 April, with the general election set for 5 May. The early voting date of 30 April was also announced by the Election Commission. Official campaigning began on 20 April, which allowed for a 15-day campaigning period. Postal voting for eligible overseas Malaysians was announced to happen on 28 April 2013. Malaysian representative offices would open on that day for this purpose from 9\u00a0am to 6\u00a0pm local time. Offices in London and Melbourne would close at 8\u00a0pm instead, for the number of postal voters registered in those cities exceeded 1,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Political system\nMalaysia is one of the most ethnically diverse countries, with a majority Malay population in addition to Chinese and Indian minorities, so the political parties are also diverse. Parties engage ethnic divisions, and conflicts over power play out between political parties that represent specific ethnic groups. According to the author Lim Hong Hai, writing in 2002, \"over 80 per cent of Malaysia\u2019s population of over 23 million is found in Peninsular Malaysia, where the Malays form the largest ethnic group followed by the Chinese and Indians. All these ethnic groups are minorities in Sabah and Sarawak, where native ethnic groups other than the Malays make up about 60 per cent and 50 per cent of the population, respectively\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Political system\nThe Federation of Malaya was composed of 11 states in the Malay Peninsula that gained independence from Britain in 1957, and two states from the Borneo Island, Sabah and Sarawak which became members of the Federation of Malaya in 1963.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Political system, Barisan Nasional\nRuling party, Barisan Nasional (BN) consists of 13 parties and has 137 seats in the parliament. In history, BN has dominated the political framework and easily won each election since the first national vote in 1959.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Political system, Barisan Nasional\nThe incumbent Barisan Nasional coalition returned to power in the 2008 general elections with 140 seats. The opposition parties that would later form the Pakatan Rakyat coalition won a total of 82 seats, thereby denying the BN its two-thirds majority which is required to pass amendments to the Federal Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Political system, Barisan Nasional\nFollowing their losses, then Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced on 8 October 2008 that he was stepping down, resigning his post as United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) party leader. A leadership election was held on 26 March 2009, where then Deputy Prime Minister and Prime Minister-designate Najib Tun Razak was elected unopposed as the UMNO party leader. On 2 April 2009, Prime Minister Abdullah tendered his resignation to the Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin (who was the Yang di-Pertuan Agong) which was consented. On 3 April 2009, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak was sworn-in as the sixth Prime Minister of Malaysia at the Istana Negara, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in front of Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Political system, Pakatan Rakyat\nPakatan Rakyat (PR) has 76 seats in the Malaysian Parliament and is composed of three large parties. Pakatan Rakyat gained control of five out of thirteen state assemblies (has since lost state assembly to BN due to defection in Perak) and 10 of the 11 parliamentary seats in the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Political system, Pakatan Rakyat\nFormer Deputy Prime Minister of Malaysia and the Leader of the Opposition Anwar Ibrahim, also the head of Pakatan Rakyat was returned to parliament after a ten-year absence following his victory in the Permatang Pauh by-election. The by-election was triggered when his wife Wan Azizah Wan Ismail resigned from her Permatang Pauh parliamentary seat, allowing Anwar to contest the seat and subsequently return to parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Dissolution of state legislative assemblies\nIn accordance with Malaysian law, the parliament as well as the legislative assemblies of each state (Dewan Undangan Negeri) would automatically dissolve on the fifth anniversary of the first sitting, and elections must be held within sixty days of the dissolution, unless dissolved prior to that date by their respective Heads of State on the advice of their Heads of Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Dissolution of state legislative assemblies\nOn 28 March 2013, the Negeri Sembilan Legislative Assembly became the first state assembly to dissolve automatically in Malaysian history. The state government would remain in place as a caretaker government and assembly members' constituency offices would remain open to serve the constituencies' needs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Dissolution of state legislative assemblies\nFollowing the dissolution of the Federal Parliament, state assemblies that have yet to be dissolved have announced their dissolution in quick succession. Below are the dates of which the legislative assemblies of each state were dissolved:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Dissolution of state legislative assemblies\nThe Sarawak State Legislative Assembly was not dissolved as the last election was held in 2011 and the term of the state assembly is due to end in 2016. Only parliamentary elections will be held there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Electoral system\nThe 222 members of the Dewan Rakyat, the dominant house of Parliament, were elected in single-member constituencies using first-past-the-post voting. In the 2013 general election, 11.05 million people voted which was approximately 85 percent of registered voters in total, and it was the highest rate that Malaysia had ever gotten in their electoral history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Electoral system\nMalaysia does not practice compulsory voting and automatic voter registration. Although the age of majority in the country is 18, the voting age is 21. The election was conducted by the Election Commission of Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign\nEven before the dissolution of Parliament, both the incumbent BN and Pakatan Rakyat brought up a number of issues and incentives to be given to the Malaysian electorate to gain a decisive advantage during the election. Both coalitions released separate election manifestos dealing with issues such as minimum wage, taxation, assistance to small-medium industries, racial relations and financial assistance to the poor. The 2013 elections also saw a number of new measures introduced that are intended to improve the electoral process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Election firsts\nSince the 2008 general election a Parliament Select Committee was formed to make recommendations to improve the country's electoral process. The general election in 2013 brought about the introduction of Indelible ink to prevent voters from voting more than once. The indelible ink was mooted for use during the elections in 2008 but was scrapped by the Election Commission at the last minute. However, it was a source of controversy as reports of voters claiming that the indelible ink could be easily washed off were circulated in the media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Election firsts\nThere was also advanced voting for civil servants and military personnel in place of postal voting. This was partly in response to protests by election watchdog groups and opposition parties that the previous voting procedures were not transparent and prone to manipulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Election firsts\nThe Election Commission introduced for the first time postal voting for Malaysians who resided overseas. However, these came with conditions, among them being that overseas Malaysians have to have been in Malaysia a number of times in the last five years. Overseas Malaysians residing in Singapore, southern Thailand, Brunei or Kalimantan in Indonesia were also not qualified to register as postal voters but had to return to their constituency if they were to cast their ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Election firsts\nThe EC also permitted the disabled to bring along an assistant into the polling booth to aid them in the voting process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Barisan Nasional\nWhen Najib took over from Abdullah Badawi, he began enlarging the budget of the Prime Minister's Department, where he appointed Koh Tsu Koon to be in charge of the Government Transformation Programme (GTP), which includes monitoring the performance of ministries and six national key result areas (NKRAs) through Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). He also appointed the former CEO of Malaysian Airlines Idris Jala to help monitor the implementation of the KPIs in the form of the government's Performance Management and Delivery Unit (Pemandu).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Barisan Nasional\nNajib's administration also introduced the slogan 1Malaysia in which he called for the embracing all Malaysians of various ethnic groups, national unity and efficient governance. This became public policy, involving various initiatives like the introduction of Kedai Rakyat 1Malaysia's discount grocery stores to help the poor, 1Malaysia clinics providing free basic medical services and free email accounts (1Malaysia Email) for the Malaysian populace. His administration also began the distribution of financial aid to Malaysian households earning less than RM3,000 called 1Malaysia People's Aid or Bantuan Rakyat 1Malaysia (BR1M). A second round of BR1M financial allocations were made out in February 2013 totalling RM2.6 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Barisan Nasional\nAnother issue that arose was UMNO endorsing controversial candidates from the Malay right-wing group Perkasa to contest in the upcoming elections such as Zulkifli Noordin and Ibrahim Ali. Although Ibrahim Ali contested the Pasir Mas parliamentary seat as an independent candidate, the BN candidate who was supposed to challenge Ibrahim Ali did not file his nomination papers. The Pasir Mas parliamentary seat was the only seat without a BN candidate in this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Barisan Nasional\nDuring the election campaign, Muhyiddin Yassin, the incumbent Deputy Prime Minister had called for Malay Muslims to fight the alleged spread of LGBT movements and freedom of religion among the Malays. Furthermore, Najib has said that his government will defend the prohibition of the usage of the word 'Allah' by non-Muslims, which is currently being challenged in court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Barisan Nasional, BN manifesto\nThe national BN manifesto pledges the following commitments to be realised within the next 5 years if and when they secure a mandate to form the next Malaysian government:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat\nThe opposition Pakatan Rakyat (PR) has remain focused on the good governance of the Malaysian states (Kedah, Penang, Kelantan and Selangor) that they currently control despite not getting full assistance from the federal government One of the points they have made is the strong economic performance of the two states of Penang and Selangor which were reported in the media to have attracted higher business investments compared to other state governments with a BN majority. Some aspects of Pakatan's Election Manifesto is borrowed from their administrative masterplan Buku Jingga. In 2011, Penang and Selangor recorded a total of RM 17.8 billion in investments in the manufacturing sector, slightly more than 30% of the national share.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat\nPR announced its intention to replace the criticised New Economic Policy which they claim was discriminatory and only benefited certain groups of people, such as UMNO-connected individuals. Another main election promise they brought up was to cut the amount of spending wastages and the usage of direct aid to pay for social causes and provide free education around the country. One of the other issues is the Pakatan Rakyat's tussle for control of water company Syabas with the federal government, which has allegedly been mismanaging their operations. They have promised to give free water for the poor and unfortunate in the state of Selangor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat\nPR also promised to close down the Lynas Advance Materials Plant situated in Kuantan, Pahang if it is deemed unsafe. This received the support of Himpunan Hijau, the green movement opposed to the operations of the Lynas plant, whose chairman, Wong Tack will be contesting in the elections under the DAP banner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat\nPR also promised to increase the petroleum royalty payments from national oil company Petronas to petroleum-producing states (Pahang, Kelantan, Terengganu, Sabah and Sarawak) in Malaysia, irrespective of the party that forms the next state government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat\nOn 13 April 2013, the Registrar of Societies (ROS) sent a letter to DAP, that due to technical glitches in the party polls, several of DAP's members were requested to attend an inquiry on 18 April 2013. This could have endangered DAP's chance to contest in the general election due to fears that the party might be deregistered. DAP had mulled the intention for their candidates to contest under the banner of PKR and PAS, butreceived assurance from the ROS that their symbol could be used legally during the general elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat\nIn Sarawak, opposition party DAP had put up election billboards highlighting the issue of murdered Mongolian Altantuyaa Sharibuu, but these billboards were torn down by enforcement officers. Following protests made by local DAP members, it was explained that the election billboards were removed as it depicted a person who was not contesting in the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat, PR manifesto\nThe national PR manifesto has outlined the actions they will take if they form the next Malaysian government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Pakatan Rakyat, PR manifesto\nThe following actions have been pledged to be implemented immediately, in accordance with the Kuching Declaration:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Third parties\nThe election also brought in the entry of many third parties that influenced the election outcome in many parliament and state seats. Indian-based party Human Rights Party Malaysia, which was instrumental in organising Indians in protests against the government such as Hindraf rally in 2007, contested in several seats in Peninsular Malaysia. Currently, there are two camps in Hindraf: one aligned to Barisan Nasional and another that is neutral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Third parties\nBorneo-based parties such as Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) (a former BN coalition partner) and the State Reform Party (STAR) contested the election on their own after a breakdown in talks with PR in having one to one contests against BN. The entry of these parties have brought about multi-cornered fights in Sabah and Sarawak. One of the main issues they brought up was the increasing number of illegals in Sabah and of the Royal Commission of Inquiry on illegal immigrants in Sabah. Furthermore, SAPP and STAR are partners in the United Borneo Front which fights for the equal status of Sabah and Sarawak as stipulated in the Malaysia Agreement that was made in 1963.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Bersih factor\nThe election watchdog group Bersih will be a big factor in the elections as they were responsible for organising large rallies calling for the electoral reforms in Malaysia in 2011 and 2012. They have pointed out that the electoral roll was marred by irregularities such as gerrymandering, phantom voters, malapportionment and postal vote fraud. Bersih has also warned against politicians or groups that support intimidation and violence against the electorate. Bersih has added to its blacklist of politicians who perpetuate the cycle of political violence such as Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein, Defence Minister Zahid Hamidi and BN candidate Hamidah Othman. Bersih has criticised both the BN-majority federal and PR-majority Selangor state caretaker governments for using government resources for election campaigning purposes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Nominations\nNominations for candidates were made on 20 April 2013 between 9am and 10am. For the first time in Malaysian electoral history, all seats were contested and no candidate won a seat unopposed, with some candidates facing as many as 6 opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Campaign, Nominations\nThere were 579 parliamentary candidates contesting for 222 parliamentary seats, and 1,322 candidates fighting for 505 state seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Incidents\nDuring the first three days of the official campaigning period, a total of 387 incidents were reported, with no fewer than 15 people arrested by the police for investigation. On 23 April 2013 in Nibong Tebal, an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) exploded at the site of a BN rally, injuring one. The police subsequently discovered a second IED at the site, which was later safely detonated. Both the incumbent Prime Minister Najib Razak and opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim have condemned the violence. The bombings have also been condemned by Bersih who said that all politicians should condemn the violence regardless of party affiliation. Bersih has offered to monitor police reports made on political violence and incidents of electoral misconduct.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Incidents\nOpposition political gatherings were disrupted by bikers. On 24 April 2013, a press photographer was assaulted by bikers spotted wearing 1Malaysia shirts at a gathering by DAP in Bukit Gelugor. The state BN chief has denied any connection with the incident. Additionally, there have been numerous reports of vandalism against vehicles used by opposition politicians and their supporters. In one incident, two cars belonging to a PKR candidate's daughter were damaged following an arson attempt at her residence in Klang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Incidents\nA number of sexually explicit videos allegedly portraying opposition figures have surfaced in cyberspace, notably on blogs hostile towards the Pakatan Rakyat. The secretary-general of PAS, Datuk Mustafa Ali, who was implicated in one of the videos has denied his involvement, with his lawyer calling the videos \"a pure slander campaign by UMNO\". In turn, UMNO has sued Mustafa and his lawyer over those allegedly libelous statements. Anwar Ibrahim has also sued UMNO blogger and election candidate Wan Muhammad Azri Wan Deris for trying to implicate him in one of the explicit videos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Incidents\nA number of anti-Christian billboards have appeared during the election campaign period, bringing up the ire of the Christian Federation of Malaysia, who have called for the removal of such billboards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Incidents\nUsers of several online news and media websites, such as independent news site Malaysiakini have claimed that several Malaysian internet service providers (ISPs) were throttling their access speeds to the sites. Several independent websites critical of the government, such as Radio Free Malaysia and Sarawak Report have experienced DDoS attacks. Malaysiakini have claimed that their Twitter account was hacked and their videos inaccessible through local ISPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Incidents\nThere have been a number of reports by the opposition alleging that the incumbent government is flying in thousands of foreigners to parts of Malaysia to influence the outcome of the vote in favour of BN. BN in turn has denied any wrongdoing, saying these flights were sponsored by \"friends of BN\". Bersih has called the provision of flights for voters an election offence. The opposition said that many of their supporters and agents will be monitoring the situation and making citizen's arrests of foreigners who vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Voting\nPostal voting for overseas Malaysians were conducted in various Malaysian representative offices around the world. According to the Election Commission (EC), 70% of 8,756 people who were eligible to vote overseas turned up to vote despite some teething problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Voting\nEarly voting was conducted for military, police personnel and their spouses in 544 polling centres throughout Malaysia. It was estimated that there were 270,000 of these voters in total. There have been several reports regarding the usage of indelible ink for early voters, with some claiming that the ink could be easily washed off. The Election Commission has promised to conduct investigations on this issue after a number of reports lodged by several opposition parties. On 2 May 2013, the EC held a public demonstration on the application of indelible ink.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0046-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Voting\nDuring this demonstration, the stain left behind by the ink was attempted to be washed off using various means, but without success. Addressing the earlier claims and reports of the stain being easily removed, EC deputy chairman Datuk Wan Ahmad Wan Omar stated that this could be due to improper application procedures. He said that if the ink bottles were not thoroughly shook before use, the applied ink may contain insufficient quantities of silver nitrate, the compound used in the ink that leaves a permanent stain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Conduct, Voting\nGeneral voting began at 8.00\u00a0am on 5 May 2013 with a total of 13,268,002 Malaysians eligible to cast their ballots at 8,789 polling centres nationwide. Voter turnout is expected to be at an all-time high surpassing the 2008 election. As of 12\u00a0pm, 58.99% of voters have cast their ballots, nationwide. Voting closed at 5\u00a0pm however voters inside the polling stations are allowed to continue casting their ballots. Estimated turnout was 80%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Results, Dewan Rakyat\nAccording to the author of the document \"13th General Election in Malaysia: Overview and Summary,\" Khoo Boo Teik, \"At the national level, PR gained a significantly higher proportion of the popular vote than BN. In all Parliamentary contests, PR obtained 50.8 per cent of the popular vote compared to BN\u2019s 47.38 per cent. As in past elections, however, its domination of a gerrymandered first-past-the-post system with pronounced constituency malapportionment gave BN a disproportionately high share of Parliamentary seats.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Reactions, analysis and aftermath\nNajib Razak told the media the day after the election: \"We have to show to the world that we are a mature democracy. Whatever happens, the decision of the people, the will of the people must be respected.\" He added: \"After my inauguration as prime minister, I vow to honestly carry out all my obligations with full dedication. I will be truly faithful to Malaysia and will preserve, protect and defend the institution.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0049-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Reactions, analysis and aftermath\nAnwar Ibrahim reacted in calling for two days of protests in saying the win was the \"worst electoral fraud in our history\" and that he \"call[s] upon as many Malaysians to join hands and express our rejection and disgust at the unprecedented electoral fraud committed by Najib Razak and the EC (Election Commission).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Reactions, analysis and aftermath\nHerizal Hazri of the Malaysia Asia Foundation said: \"There is a sense of rejection within the urban Malaysian voters to accept this rhetoric. They want a more inclusive Malaysia, they want to vote for parties that represents all race groups.\" The opposition parties had promised to revise Malaysia's affirmative action policy which favours Malays and other indigenous groups (\"Bumiputra\") over the Chinese and Indian minorities. Prime Minister Najib Razak claimed that this was the reason why ethnic Chinese voted for the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Reactions, analysis and aftermath\nThe most perceivable swing from the ruling coalition to the opposition, namely from the BN-affiliated MCA and Gerakan parties to the DAP, was among ethnic Chinese voters. This led to Najib claiming that the opposition had manipulated and deceived this population group and making a \"Chinese tsunami\" accountable for his alliance's losses. However, the claim was disputed by political analyst Datuk Dr Shamsul Amri Baharuddin, who claimed it was more accurately, an urban swing. The geographic distribution of votes shows a considerable difference between largely urban regions with a great proportion of ethnic Chinese which mostly voted for the oppositional alliance \u2013 often by a high margin \u2013 and more rural states populated by \"Bumiputra\" where the governing coalition won most of its seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Reactions, analysis and aftermath\nOn 8 May, Anwar led a rally in the Kelana Jaya football stadium near Kuala Lumpur. According to online sources that support PR, 120,000 people participated. Since the stadium usually can hold approximately 25,000 people, skeptics estimated that the number of participants ranged from 64,000 to 69,000. PR supporters claimed that the election was a sham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234609-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian general election, Reactions, analysis and aftermath\nPakatan Rakyat suffered from a leadership crisis after the election, including the withdrawal of PAS from the coalition in 2015. The coalition thus automatically dissolved and was replaced by Pakatan Harapan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234610-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix was the fifteenth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Sepang International Circuit in Sepang on 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234610-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix\nSpain's Ana Carrasco became the first female rider to score a point since Katja Poensgen at the 2001 Italian Grand Prix, and the first in the Moto3 class. The predecessor 125cc class had its last point scored by a female rider, Tomoko Igata at the 1995 Czech Republic Grand Prix. This also marked the final Grand Prix win in the career of Luis Salom before his death 3 years later at the 2016 Catalan Grand Prix after suffering a fatal crash in the second free practice session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234610-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix, Classification, Moto2\nThe first attempt to run the race was interrupted on the opening lap, following an incident involving Axel Pons, Fadli Immammuddin, who collected Pons's crashed bike, and then Ezequiel Iturrioz, Zaqhwan Zaidi and Decha Kraisart. For the restart, the race distance was reduced from 19 to 12 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234610-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian 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, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234611-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian state elections\nState elections were held in all states and territories in Malaysia except Sarawak on 5 May 2013, alongside general elections. Although the Pakatan Rakyat alliance received over 50% of the vote across the 12 states and territories where elections took place, the Barisan Nasional won the most seats, emerging as the largest faction in all states and territories except Kelantan, Penang and Selangor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234611-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malaysian state elections, Results, Terengganu\nSource: Note:1 Kuala Besut BN assemblyman, A. Rahman Mokhtar died on 26 June 2013 from lung cancer, paving way for a by-election", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234612-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldives FA Cup\nThe 2013 Maldives FA Cup was the 26th edition of the Maldives FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234612-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldives FA Cup\nThe cup winner were guaranteed a place in the 2014 AFC Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234613-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldives FA Cup Final\nThe 2013 Maldives FA Cup Final is the 26th Final of the Maldives FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234613-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldives FA Cup Final, Route to the final\n* Victory Sports Club withdraw from 2013 FA Cup and the match awarded New Radiant a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234614-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian Second Division Football Tournament\nStatistics of Second Division Football Tournament in the 2013 season. The FAM rebranded the name of the 'Second Division Football Tournament to Enjoy Championship after the sponsor from Enjoy juice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234614-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian Second Division Football Tournament, Teams\n9 teams are competing in the 2013 Second Division Football Tournament, and these teams were divided into 2 groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234614-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian Second Division Football Tournament, Group stage round\nFrom each group, the top two teams will be advanced for the league round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234614-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian Second Division Football Tournament, Group stage round, Group 1\nClub Green Streets and Mahibadhoo SC advanced to the league round as the top two teams of the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234614-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian Second Division Football Tournament, Group stage round, Group 2\nClub Zefrol and Sports Club Mecano advanced to the league round as the top two teams of the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234614-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian Second Division Football Tournament, League round\nThe top two teams from each group will be qualified to compete in this round. As a total of four teams will be playing in this round of the tournament, the top two teams from this round will be advanced to the Final. The top two teams of this round will also play in the Playoff for 2014 Dhivehi League. Mahibadhoo SC and Sports Club Mecano claimed the first and second position to advance for the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 64], "content_span": [65, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in the Maldives in 2013. The first round of voting was held on 7 September, with no candidate receiving a majority of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election\nA second round was planned for 28 September, to be contested by the top two candidates, former President Mohamed Nasheed (who was contesting the election following his controversial resignation amidst the 2011\u201312 Maldives political crisis with the aim of returning to the presidency after what he claimed was a coup d'\u00e9tat orchestrated by his deputy and successor Mohammed Waheed Hassan) and Abdulla Yameen, paternal half-brother of former president Maumoon Abdul Gayoom; incumbent President Hassan had come fourth and was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election\nHowever, on 27 September the Supreme Court cancelled the run-off and annulled the first round results. A re-run of the first round was held on 9 November, with a similar result to the annulled vote. A run-off was planned for the following day due to the need to have a new President in place by 11 November. However, it was then postponed until 16 November by the Supreme Court after Yameen claimed he needed more time to campaign. Yameen went on to win the run-off with his share of the vote rising from 30% in the first round to 51% in the second round, whilst Nasheed's share increased by only 2%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election, Background, 2011\u201312 political crisis\nPolitical friction in the country escalated in December 2011, when an opposition alliance 'Madhanee Ithihaad' was formed, which included the parties that supported the President Mohamed Nasheed in his 2008 presidential race. On 23 December, the capital city was rocked by protests by the opposition against the President Mohamed Nasheed. Further events transpired leading to the arrest of Chief Justice Abdulla Mohamed from his house by the military. This arrest sparked violent protests near the Republic Square. After the government refused to disclose any information to the public, the protests started gaining momentum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election, Background, 2011\u201312 political crisis\nDemands went up for an independent investigation into the Judge and to arrest him according to the constitution and for the president to stop using executive power over another institution. The protest extended for over 22 days in the Republic Square and on 6 February 2012, the Maldives Police Service declined to use force to control or disperse the protests and joined the protest for the release of Judge Abdulla Mohamed. President Nasheed resigned the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election, Background, 2011\u201312 political crisis\nOn 8 February 2012, the Maldivian Democratic Party announced for all its members across the country to go into streets in protests. President Mohamed Nasheed led the protests to Republic Square, announcing that he was forced to resign at gunpoint, and that the event was a coup d'etat orchestrated by Vice-President Mohammed Waheed Hassan, who was sworn in as the new president of Maldives on the same day in accordance with the law of the Maldives. An independent National Commission of Inquiry later ruled that there was no evidence for Nasheed's version of events, a finding supported by the US and the Commonwealth of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election, Background, 2011\u201312 political crisis\nAfter Nasheed and his supporters continued to protest Waheed's removal from office, he agreed to call a snap election. In April 2012, Waheed set the election for July 2013, stating that no earlier election was constitutionally possible. However Nasheed, strongly opposed this idea instead arguing for a 2012 election to settle the disputed presidency. This date was later then pushed down to September 2013, to when the next presidential election would constitutionally be taking place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election, Candidates\nIncumbent President Mohammed Waheed ran as an independent candidate but backed by the National Unity Party and the Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party. Former President Mohamed Nasheed was the Maldivian Democratic Party's candidate. Gasim Ibrahim is the candidate of the Jumhooree Party (JP) and is supported by the Adhaalath Party (AP) and the Dhivehi Qaumee Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election, Candidates\nLeader of the Progressive Party of Maldives, former president Maumoon Abdul Gayyoom, declared that he would not participate in any further election on 25 February. PPM held its presidential primary election on 30 March. The candidacy was won by the party's parliamentary group leader, and half-brother of Gayyoom, Abdulla Yameen with 63% of the vote, beating rival candidate Umar Naseer. A total of 31,298 PPM members were eligible to vote in the party's presidential primary through one of the 167 ballot boxes placed in 140 islands. In August, new political party Maldives Development Alliance (MDA) signed a coalition agreement with PPM to provide support in the presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234615-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Maldivian presidential election, Results\nFollowing the original first round on 7 September, the Supreme Court annulled the elections and cancelled the planned second round by a vote of four to three. Voting in favour of the annulment, Judge Ahmed Abdulla Didi referenced a confidential police report that claimed that 5,623 ineligible people had voted in the elections including dead people and others under 18. The rechecking of voters' registry was carried out in the presence of the staff of Elections Commission and the Police Service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234616-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Mali on 24 November 2013. President Ibrahim Boubacar Ke\u00efta's party, Rally for Mali, won 66 of the 147 seats in the National Assembly, with its allies winning an additional 49 seats, giving it a substantial majority. The Union for the Republic and Democracy, led by Souma\u00efla Ciss\u00e9, won 17 seats, becoming the Opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234616-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian parliamentary election\nThe elections had originally been planned for 1 and 22 July 2012, but were postponed after the Tuareg Rebellion and the March 2012 coup d'\u00e9tat. A second round of voting was held on 15 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234616-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian parliamentary election, Background\nFollowing French intervention in the country's separatist Azawad region, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said that the elections should continue as scheduled and that the number of French forces in the country would be halved. Interim Prime Minister Django Sissoko visited Gao in northern Mali for the first time since the French intervention and rebel takeover in April 2013. He announced that the elections would take place in July and the preparations were under way. However, unnamed analysts suggested botched elections could lead to further unrest. It was later decided to hold the legislative elections a few months after the presidential polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234616-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian parliamentary election, Conduct\nIn July 2013, gunmen abducted two election officials a week before the presidential elections. Two days before the second round of the parliamentary election, two Senegalese MINUSMA peacekeepers were killed in a bombing outside the Malian Solidarity Bank in Kidal. On 15 December, the second round voter turnout was just 38.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234616-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian parliamentary election, Results\nIn the second round, out of 5,951,838 registered voters, 2,221,283 cast a vote - with 2,122,449 being valid - totalling a 37.32% turnout, according to the Constitutional Court", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234616-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nIssaka Sidib\u00e9, an RPM Deputy, was elected as President of the National Assembly on 22 January 2014. He received 115 votes, a large majority; 11 deputies voted instead for Oumar Mariko, while 20 deputies cast blank votes and one deputy cast a spoiled vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Mali on 28 July 2013, with a second round run-off held on 11 August. Ibrahim Boubacar Ke\u00efta defeated Souma\u00efla Ciss\u00e9 in the run-off to become the new President of Mali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Background\nAccording to the 1992 constitution, elections should have taken place in 2012. The first round was originally scheduled for 29 April, and the second round scheduled for 13 May. The first round was also planned to include a referendum on revising the constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Background\nThe elections would have marked the end of the second term of office of President Amadou Toumani Tour\u00e9, conforming to the Malian constitution which limits individuals to two presidential terms. Tour\u00e9 confirmed, at a press conference on 12 June 2011, that he would not stand for election again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Background, Insurgency and coup d'etat\nIn 2012, Tuareg and other peoples in northern Mali's Azawad region started an insurgency in the north under the banner of the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad. The Malian Army complained that it was ill-equipped to fight the insurgents, who had benefited from an influx of heavy weaponry from the 2011 Libyan civil war as well as other sources. On 21 March 2012 elements of the army staged a military coup d'\u00e9tat and formed the National Committee for the Restoration of Democracy and State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Background, Insurgency and coup d'etat\nThe scheduled elections were then called into question after coup leaders suspended the constitution and arrested government ministers, while promising that, at some time in the future, elections would be held to return governance to civilian control. Following the coup, the rebels made further advances to capture the three biggest cities in the north. On 1 April 2012, under pressure from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the leader of the junta Captain Amadou Sanogo announced that the constitution would be restored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Background, Insurgency and coup d'etat\nFollowing economic sanctions and a blockade by ECOWAS on the country, a deal brokered in Burkina Faso by President Blaise Compaor\u00e9 under the auspices of ECOWAS, was signed that saw Sanogo cede power to Dioncounda Traor\u00e9 to assume the presidency in an interim capacity until the election was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Background, Insurgency and coup d'etat\nOn 1 July 2013, 6,000 of a future total of 12,600 UN peacekeeping troops officially took over responsibility for patrolling the country's north from France and the ECOWAS' International Support Mission to Mali (AFISMA). The force would be led by former second-in-command in Darfur, Rwandan General Jean Bosco Kazura, and will be known as the MINUSMA. Though the group was expected to play a role in the election, the electoral commission's president, Mamadou Diamountani, said it would be \"extremely difficult\" to arrange for up to eight million voting identification cards when there were 500,000 displaced people as a result of the conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Electoral organisation controversies\nTo improve the electoral process, the government decided to use the election process of the Administrative Census to Elections (RACE) to further direct the Minister of Territorial Administration and Local Government and the General Administrator of Elections, General Kafougona Kone. The majority of political parties would prefer the use of another electoral system under the Administrative Census Vocation of Civil Status (RAVEC), an electoral process considered more reliable. However, the government considers that this second process with RAVEC presents a number of difficulties with identification of non-Malians living in the C\u00f4te d'Ivoire and there are a large number of corrections to be made in a very short time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Electoral organisation controversies\nThe cost of using this other process is estimated at 41 billion West African CFA francs (nearly $83 million US dollars). At a meeting between the government and political parties on 3 January 2012, the National Director of the Interior, to the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Local Government, Bassidi Coulibaly, acknowledged the weak influence of citizens for revision of the electoral lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Electoral organisation controversies\nJust as campaigning was about to get under way, the Malian government lifted the state of emergency in place in the country since the northern battles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Electoral organisation controversies\nAlthough the jihadist group MUJAO warned people not to vote and threatened to attack polling stations, no violence occurred during the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Candidates\nSeveral candidates declared their intention to run for the original elections or were invested by their party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234617-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Malian presidential election, Results\nOn 3 August 2013, ADEMA candidate Dramane Demb\u00e9l\u00e9, who placed third in the election, announced his support for Ibrahim Boubacar Keita in the second round, saying that \"we are in the Socialist International, we share the same values\". However, in endorsing Keita he contradicted the official stance of ADEMA, which had backed Keita's rival, Souma\u00efla Ciss\u00e9, on the previous day. The party stressed that Demb\u00e9l\u00e9 was speaking only for himself and that the party still supported Ciss\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season\nThe 2013 season was Malm\u00f6 FF's 102nd in existence, their 78th season in Allsvenskan and their 13th consecutive season in the league. They competed in Allsvenskan where they finished first, 2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen where they were knocked out in the group stage, Svenska Supercupen where they won the competition against IFK G\u00f6teborg and the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League where they were knocked out in the third qualifying round. Malm\u00f6 FF also participated in one competition in which the club continued playing in for the 2014 season, 2013\u201314 Svenska Cupen. The season began with the group stage of Svenska Cupen in March, league play started in April and lasted until November, Svenska Supercupen was the last competitive match of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season\nA new captain was announced since former captain Ulrich Vinzents left the squad as well as former vice captain and previous captain Daniel Andersson who announced his retirement from professional football in November 2012. Third captain Jiloan Hamad took over the captaincy. The club won their 17th Swedish championship title and 20th Allsvenskan title on 28 October 2013 when they defeated reigning champions IF Elfsborg in an away fixture at Bor\u00e5s Arena in the penultimate round of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nThe league season started in late March 2013 and ended in early November 2013. The official season fixtures were released on 14 December 2012. Malm\u00f6 FF started the season with a home fixture against newcomers Halmstads BK on 1 April which ended in a 1\u20131 draw. There was no longer break in the match schedule even though Sweden hosted the UEFA Women's Euro 2013 between 10 and 28 July, although there was shorter breaks due to international fixtures. Malm\u00f6 FF ended the season at home against Syrianska FC with a 3\u20131 win on 3 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nAfter the draw in the opening game the club won four games in a row against \u00c5tvidabergs FF, Kalmar FF, AIK and \u00d6sters IF, two of which were at home and two which were away games. This resulted in Malm\u00f6 FF positioning themselves second in the league table after IFK G\u00f6teborg with the same number of points albeit with a lesser goal difference. The next match after the four win streak was the away game against IFK G\u00f6teborg. This match ended 1\u20131 after G\u00f6teborg scored the equalizer in the last minute of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nA 1\u20131 draw in the next home game against IFK Norrk\u00f6ping still kept the club at second place in the table, although their first loss of the season in the next game, the away fixture against Djurg\u00e5rdens IF, saw Malm\u00f6 FF drop to a fifth place in the league table. The win-less streak continued in the next two games. Malm\u00f6 FF drew 2\u20132 in the away game against Mj\u00e4llby AIF, thus continuing Malm\u00f6 FF's difficult history at Strandvallen, Malm\u00f6 FF have never won an away fixture against Mj\u00e4llby at Strandvallen in eight tries since 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nFor the 10th round Malm\u00f6 FF faced Helsingborgs IF in the Scanian derby at home. The match was attended by a season best of 23,730 spectators and resulted in a 1\u20131 draw. With a third of the league matches played Malm\u00f6 FF had gathered 17 points and positioned themselves fourth in the league table after leaders Helsingborg, IFK G\u00f6teborg and last years winners IF Elfsborg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nMalm\u00f6 FF then won three games in a row, two away games against IF Brommapojkarna and Syrianska FC as well as the home game against top rivals Elfsborg. Despite this, the club remained in 4th position. This was followed by a rare home defeat against last years runners up BK H\u00e4cken with 3\u20131. This was followed up by two home wins which saw Malm\u00f6 FF advance up to second place in the league table behind Helsingborg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nIn the middle of European play in the UEFA Europa League the club lost the following away fixture against fellow European qualifying contender Gefle IF. This match was once again followed by a string of wins leading up to the 20th round of matches. On 11 August the club beat fellow title contender AIK 1\u20130 in Malm\u00f6 in a match that meant that Malm\u00f6 FF went three points ahead of AIK and with the same number of points as leaders Helsingborg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nMalm\u00f6 FF secured pole position in the table in the following fixture when they beat Kalmar FF at Guldf\u00e5geln Arena on 18 August with 4\u20131, Kalmar's first home defeat of the season. With only ten matches left of the season Malm\u00f6 FF was in the lead with 41 points. Helsinborg, IFK G\u00f6teborg and AIK trailed the club with 38 points respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nThe next fixture was Malm\u00f6 FF vs IFK G\u00f6teborg at Swedbank Stadion which Malm\u00f6 FF won 3\u20131 after having been down 0\u20131 after 17 minutes of play. This fixture established Malm\u00f6 FF as the top contender for the title. Next followed a 1\u20131 draw in the away fixture against \u00d6sters IF before a two-week international break. Malm\u00f6 FF followed up the break by losing at home against Djurg\u00e5rdens IF who they had previously lost against in the away fixture earlier in the season. Nevertheless, of this streak of two win-less matches Malm\u00f6 FF stayed at the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nThe club went on to win three consecutive fixtures in which the away match against Helsingborgs IF was crucial as this put Malm\u00f6 FF six points ahead of their rivals and kept the gap down to IFK G\u00f6teborg who was now their primary title contender. The club then later had the opportunity to increase their lead to seven points in the away fixture against BK H\u00e4cken as IFK G\u00f6teborg had lost their match against Djurg\u00e5rdens IF just moments before the start of the game at Rambergsvallen. However this failed as H\u00e4cken took their second win of the season against Malm\u00f6 FF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nNevertheless, Malm\u00f6 FF still had the opportunity to win the title if they could win two of the remaining three fixtures. In the next fixture at home against IF Bromapojkarna the away side equalized Malm\u00f6 FF's early lead and held the club to a draw until the 86th minute when Guillermo Molins scored the winning goal, Molins had also scored the first goal of the game. This meant that the club had the opportunity to clinch the league title with a win in the away fixture against IF Elfsborg at Bor\u00e5s Arena in Bor\u00e5s on 28 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nUp until the final hours prior to the match it was uncertain if the match could be played due to weather conditions caused by the St Jude storm that affected the whole of south-west Sweden at the time. However the match official deemed that the match could go ahead and 4,000 to 5,000 Malm\u00f6 FF who had travelled the 30 miles from Malm\u00f6 were let into the stands. The match was eventually won 2\u20130 by Malm\u00f6 FF after two goals from Molins yet again. This meant that the club had won its 20th Allsvenskan title and 17th Swedish championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Allsvenskan\nThis was the first time the club had secured a Swedish championship in an away fixture since the 1977 season, that time also in Bor\u00e5s at Ryavallen. The last match of the season was the home fixture against Syrianska FC on 3 November. Malm\u00f6 FF quickly opened the scoring with three goals in the game's first 19 minutes. Syrianska eventually reduced the lead to 3\u20131 which was the game's final result. 23,758 people attended the game at Swedbank Stadion, this season's best attendance ahead of the home fixture against Helsingborg. Daniel Andersson was substituted into play in the 84th minute of play to celebrate the end of his playing career. After the match the team was awarded Lennart Johanssons Pokal by previous UEFA and Swedish Football Association president himself, Lennart Johansson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Svenska Cupen\nMalm\u00f6 FF qualified for the group stage of the 2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen in the 2012 season by beating Sandvikens IF after extra time in round 2 in August 2012. The club was later seeded third in the group stage draw after finishing third in the 2012 Allsvenskan. The groups were drawn in November 2012 and Malm\u00f6 FF were drawn against newly relegated GIF Sundsvall, newly promoted \u00d6sters IF and Division 1 club IK Frej. The group stage was played in early March 2013 before the start of the league season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Svenska Cupen\nMalm\u00f6 FF played their first cup match of the new year against \u00d6sters IF on 2 March 2013 at Malm\u00f6 Stadion, the match finished in a draw 1\u20131. The second fixture was played against IK Frej who had beaten GIF Sundsvall 2\u20131 in the previous home fixture. The match which ended 2\u20130 in Malm\u00f6 FF's favour was played on 10 March 2013 at Skytteholms IP in Solna. \u00d6sters IF had played their last group fixture against IK Frej three days prior to Malm\u00f6 FF's last fixture, that match ended 5\u20130 for \u00d6sters IF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Svenska Cupen\nThis meant that Malm\u00f6 FF were forced to win their match against GIF Sundsvall with at least five goals to progress to the quarter-finals on superior goal difference. The match against GIF Sundsvall was played at Limhamns IP in Malm\u00f6 and ended 4\u20131 to Malm\u00f6 FF. This meant that the club finished second in the group, and therefore missed advancement to the quarter-finals, with seven points, this was as many points as \u00d6sters IF but with a lesser goal difference of +5 in comparison to \u00d6sters IF's +7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Svenska Cupen\nMalm\u00f6 FF entered the new cup season in the second round which was played on 21 August 2013. The club was drawn against Division 2 side S\u00e4vedalens IF and the match was played away in Partille. Malm\u00f6 FF won 6\u20130 and progressed to the group stage which was played in March 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, Svenska Supercupen\nMalm\u00f6 FF qualified for the 2013 Svenska Supercupen by winning the 2013 Allsvenskan on 28 October 2013. The match was played at home at Swedbank Stadion on 10 November 2013 and the club's opponents was 2012\u201313 Svenska Cupen winners IFK G\u00f6teborg. This was the second time that the club competed in Svenska Supercupen and it was the club's second attempt to win the competition after having failed the first time in 2011 against Helsingborgs IF. The match ended in a 3\u20132 win for Malm\u00f6 FF after Emil Forsberg scored two goals and Guillermo Molins scored the third and winning goal in injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, UEFA Europa League\nMalm\u00f6 FF qualified for the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League by merit of finishing third in the 2012 Allsvenskan. The club entered the competition in the first round of qualification. The draws for the first and second qualifying rounds were held on 24 June 2013, Malm\u00f6 FF was seeded in both the draw for the first qualifying round and the second qualifying round. Malm\u00f6 FF were drawn against Irish club Drogheda United in the first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, UEFA Europa League\nThe first leg in Dublin on 4 July ended 0\u20130 and the second leg on 11 July in Malm\u00f6 ended with a 2\u20130 victory for Malm\u00f6 FF, this resulted in a 2\u20130 aggregate score for Malm\u00f6 FF to take the club through to the second qualifying round. Malm\u00f6 FF played Scottish club Hibernian F.C. in the second qualifying round on 18 and 25 July. The first match at home was won 2\u20130 and the match in Edinburgh ended in a decisive 7\u20130 victory for Malm\u00f6 FF to win with a 9\u20130 aggregate score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Summary, UEFA Europa League\nMalm\u00f6 FF were not seeded in the draw for the third qualifying round which resulted in the winner of Malm\u00f6 FF and Hibernian facing Swansea City from the English Premier League. The first leg of the match was played in Swansea on 1 August and ended in a 4\u20130 victory for the home side. The second leg played in Malm\u00f6 on 8 August ended in a goalless draw which confirmed the aggregate score to 4\u20130 in favour of Swansea City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234618-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Players, Disciplinary record\nSource: Only competitive matches = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.Notes: Allsvenskan only", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234619-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Malta Open darts\n2013 Malta Open is a darts tournament, which took place at the Topaz Hotel in Bu\u0121ibba, Malta in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election\nGeneral elections were held in Malta on Saturday, 9 March 2013. The Labour Party won a majority of seats, unseating the Nationalist Party, which had been in power since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election, Background\nOn 10 December 2012 Lawrence Gonzi's government was defeated in a vote on the 2013 Financial Estimates when ruling party MP Franco Debono voted against the government's budget proposal in protest over transportation reform in giving a German operator the contract to manage the national bus service. Faced with loss of supply, Gonzi announced that the House of Representatives would be dissolved on 7 January and a general election called for 9 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election, Electoral system\nThe system of voting used was, as in previous elections, proportional representation through modified single transferable vote with five MPs to be returned from each of thirteen districts, i.e. 65 constituency seats in total, with a variable number of at-large seats added to ensure that the overall first-preference votes are reflected in the composition of the House of Representatives. There were also some minor changes to the boundaries of electoral districts from the previous general election and improved voting arrangements for hospital patients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election, Parties\nThe two leading political parties contesting the election were the Nationalist Party of the incumbent prime minister, Lawrence Gonzi and the Labour Party, led by Joseph Muscat, for whom this was the first general election at the helm of the party. The Third party was Democratic Alternative, a Green Party, which was seeking to elect its first MP. A small number of independent candidates also ran for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election, Parties\nNational Action, which stood candidates in the 2008 general election and 2009 European Parliamentary election, ceased activities in 2010 and did not contest this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election, Opinion polls\n\u00a4 Opinion polls adjusted for the preference of undecided voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election, Results\nFollowing the announcement of the preliminary result, in which Labour had 39 seats to 26 for the Nationalists, Labour party leader Joseph Muscat said from Naxxar: \"I wasn't expecting such a landslide victory for Labour. We must all remain calm, tomorrow is another day.\" Nationalist party leader Lawrence Gonzi conceded the election in saying \"The Nationalist Party needs to begin a reform process and at the same remain rooted in its values.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234620-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Maltese general election, Results\nThis was the first time the Labour party won a majority in the government since Malta joined the European Union, as well as being the first Labour government since the new millennium (as the previous one should have ended in 2001, but ended prematurely in 1998). Furthermore, the Labour party won absolute majority of the votes in 23 of the 35 localities, increasing its overall share of the votes by 2.2% from the last elections. The Nationalist Party was subsequently awarded four at-large seats, bringing it to 30 in all, to adjust for its share of the first-preference vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234621-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Man Booker Prize\nThe 2013 Booker Prize for Fiction was awarded on 15 October 2013 to Eleanor Catton for her novel The Luminaries. A longlist of thirteen titles was announced on 23 July, and these were narrowed down to a shortlist of six titles, announced on 10 September. The jury was chaired by Robert Macfarlane, who was joined by Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, Natalie Haynes, Martha Kearney, and Stuart Kelly. The shortlist contained great geographical and ethnic diversity, with Zimbabwean-born NoViolet Bulawayo, Eleanor Catton of New Zealand, Jim Crace from England, Indian American Jhumpa Lahiri, Canadian-American Ruth Ozeki and Colm T\u00f3ib\u00edn of Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234621-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Man Booker Prize, Judging panel\nOn 21 November 2012, it was announced that Robert Macfarlane would chair the panel of judges that would decide the winner of the 2013 award. Macfarlane declared that he felt \"very proud indeed to be chairing this prize, which has done so much to shape the modern literary landscape.\" On 17 December, he was joined by four other judges: biographer and critic Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, writer and broadcaster Natalie Haynes, journalist Martha Kearney, and writer, critic and reviewer Stuart Kelly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234621-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Man Booker Prize, Judging panel\n\"Part of the reason the prize is heralded internationally\", the announcement read, \"is because the judges stand as a guarantee of literary weight and seriousness of intent.\" The judges' backgrounds \u2013 as academics, professional writers and journalists \u2013 were emphasized as essential to their role as reviewers. \"We are all looking forward to the 10 months, 140 novels and many meetings and conversations that lie ahead of us,\" Macfarlane said, \"as we search for the very best of contemporary fiction.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234621-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Man Booker Prize, Winner\nOn 15 October, the chair of the judges Robert Macfarlane announced that the winner of the 2013 Man Booker Prize was New Zealand author Eleanor Catton for her second novel The Luminaries. By winning, Catton became, at the age of 28, the youngest author ever to win the Booker. She was previously, at the age of 27, the youngest author ever to be shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. At 832 pages, The Luminaries is also the longest work to win the prize in its 45-year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234621-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Man Booker Prize, Winner\nCatton is the second writer from New Zealand to win the prize, the first being Keri Hulme in 1985 with The Bone People. The judges' final decision was made after around two hours of discussion. Of The Luminaries, Macfarlane commented \"It's a dazzling work. It's a luminous work. It is vast without being sprawling.\" Catton was presented with the prize by the Duchess of Cornwall at Guildhall in London. As winner, Catton also received award money to the sum of \u00a350,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234622-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mandera local elections\nLocal elections were held in Mandera County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234622-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mandera local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident\nThe 2013 Manila Skyway bus accident occurred on December 16, 2013 between Bicutan and Sucat Exits of South Luzon Expressway in Para\u00f1aque, Metro Manila, Philippines, after a bus fell off the Skyway, crushing a delivery van and fatally wounding the van's driver. 19 people died and 19 others were injured. The Highway Patrol Group-National Capital Region-South Luzon Expressway described the incident as the worst to have happened along the Skyway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident, Accident\nThe accident occurred in the Manila suburb of Para\u00f1aque on December 16, 2013 at around 5:15 AM (PST). The bus, bound for Pacita Complex in San Pedro, Laguna, was traveling on Skyway, one of the longest flyovers in the world that runs above the South Luzon Expressway. The bus fell 6 meters (20\u00a0ft) from Skyway and crashed on top of a van that was on a service road below. Eighteen passengers of the bus were killed. The driver of the bus, Carmelo Calatcat, later died on December 23. As a result of the accident, traffic was slowed down on the highway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident, Investigation\nThe company that owned and operated the bus, Don Mariano Transit, had to suspend transit for thirty days for an investigation into the accident to be carried out. The Department of Transportation and Communications required the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board to suspend all of the 78 buses that Don Mariano Transit owned. The driver of the bus, Carmelo Calatcat, had to undergo a drug test. An audit of over 400,000 public utility buses was executed in Manila following the accident. The driver and operator of the bus faced charges by the authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident, Investigation\nThe Department of Labor and Employment admitted that Don Mariano Transit Corporation's Labor Standards Compliance Certificate was expired since July 2013. It was also reported that Don Mariano Transit did not pay its drivers their monthly salary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident, Investigation\nThe bus driver, Carmelo Calatcat, tested positive for drug use. Chief Superintendent Arrazad Subong of the Philippine National Police Highway Patrol group said that the drug test was somehow irrelevant as their investigation showed that the bus a few moments before the accident occurred had worn out tires and was overspeeding. The driver faced criminal charges of reckless imprudence resulting in multiple homicide, multiple injuries and damage to property. Should he be convicted, he could have faced at least six years of imprisonment but due to the number of fatalities caused by the accident, he could have faced life imprisonment instead. However, he died before he could even face trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident, Reaction\nJason Cantil, legal counsel for Don Mariano Transit, said that the accident was an isolated incident. Cantil said that the tires of the bus involved may not have been inspected but claimed that all other buses of the company were in good condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident, Reaction\nPresidential Communications Operations Office Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr. encouraged public utility vehicles to use speed-limiting or monitoring devices. He said that such devices would help bus operators to prevent accidents similar to the Skyway accident. Coloma added that it is up to legislators to come up with a law mandating operators to install such devices to their vehicles. Coloma also reiterated the government's preference for allowing the private sector to operate public transport as it is more efficient. He said the government's role is to regulate the private sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234623-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila Skyway bus accident, Reaction\nThe Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board plans to make the installation of speed-limiting devices on public utility vehicles as a response to the accident. The Department of Labor and Employment vowed to monitor labor law compliance more strictly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections\nLocal elections was held in Manila on May 13, 2013, within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the six congressmen, and the councilors, six in each of the city's six legislative districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections\nMayor Alfredo Lim is running for the mayorship for the third consecutive time; if he wins, he will be prohibited to run in 2016 due to term limits. Lim's opponent is former senator, vice president, deposed president then convicted plunderer and defeated 2010 presidential candidate, Joseph Estrada, who was a longtime San Juan mayor; in order to run for the mayorship, Estrada had to transfer his residence from San Juan to Manila. The two formerly contested the presidency in 1998, with Estrada emerging victorious.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections\nEstrada's running mate is Vice Mayor Isko Moreno, who has served since 2007; if he wins, he will also be term limited in 2016. Actor and Councilor Lou Veloso is Lim's running mate; Veloso was the councilor elected with the highest percentage of votes in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nOn May 4, 2012, Vice Mayor Isko Moreno joined the Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino party, fueling speculations that he would be former President Joseph Estrada's running mate. Estrada would confirm this on May 9, 2012, but, for one term only. On May 7, 2012, Incumbent Mayor Alfredo Lim announced he will run for re-election and said that Moreno was his original running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nA year prior to the election, Estrada transferred his residence from San Juan to Santa Mesa, Manila; this was made official by the Manila City Hall. Estrada's Manila home was formerly the headquarters of President Ramon Magsaysay during the 1953 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nOn September 18, 2012, Lim announced that he has picked 6th District Councilor Lou Veloso to be his running mate. Lim noted that Veloso is the councilor that emerged with the most votes in the last local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nOn October 1, 2012, during the first day of filing of certificate of candidacies, Lim and Veloso, along with their ticket's 36 city council bets, filed their certificate of candidacies at the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) field office in Arroceros, Manila. Lim is supported by all but one of the incumbent congressmen of Manila - Benjamin Asilo of the 1st District, Carlo Lopez of the 2nd District, Zenaida Angping of the 3rd District, Trisha Bonoan-David of the 4th District, and Sandy Ocampo of the 6th District. 5th District Representative Amado Bagatsing originally supported him but endorsed Estrada instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nLim also said that his 2013 campaign will be his last as he intends to retire from politics in 2016. He had previously served as mayor from 1992 to 1998, Secretary of Interior and Local Government under Estrada from 2000 to 2001, lost the mayorship to Estrada ally Lito Atienza in 2001, elected Senator in 2004 under the Estrada-backed Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino, and retook the mayorship from Atienza's son Ali in 2007, then successfully defending it against Atienza himself in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nA day later, Estrada and Moreno filed their certificate of candidacies. Estrada left his home at Santa Mesa with Moreno aboard his jeepney he made famous during the 1998 presidential election. Estrada drove the jeepney to the COMELEC office at Arroceros; the United Nationalist Alliance-backed Estrada ticket includes 29 of the incumbent 36 councilors. The contest between Lim and Estrada has been billed by many as \"Dirty Harry vs. Asiong Salonga\", with Lim being previously referred to as \"Dirty Harry\", and Estrada having played Asiong Salonga in a movie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nAside from Lim and Estrada, other candidates include Marino Magallanes, a fortune teller from Quiapo, mechanical engineer and perennial candidate Onofre Abad, lawyer Felix Cantal, Samuel Gabot, Rodolfo Lim and driver Fidel Cruz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nOn January 7, 2013, the Sandiganbayan ruled to dismiss via technicality a petition disqualifying Estrada from running due to a condition from his pardon granted by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo that said he would not seek elective office. However, he faced other disqualification cases from the same issue at the Commission on Elections and at the Regional Trial Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nOn January 16, the commission disqualified all of the mayoral candidates, save for Estrada and Lim, and declared them as \"nuisance candidates.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nThe two camps signed a covenant for peaceful elections at the Manila Police District headquarters on February 15, 2013. Commission on Elections chairman Sixto Brillantes and Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting chairman Henrietta de Villa witnessed the signing, which were also attended by the rest of the slates, including their running mates. A day later, the police arrested Moreno and five other UNA candidates for the city council for alleged illegal gambling. Estrada later said he may file charges against the police who arrested his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nThe police arrested the group after they proceeded to hold a bingo game, which the police had said to be illegal, after promising they would hold a raffle instead. Moreno and the other candidates were freed after the Manila Prosecutor's Office ruled that there was not enough evidence to prolong their detention. Moreno maintained that the bingo game is not illegal after President Ferdinand Marcos classified it as a parlor game. Brillantes later said that Moreno's group did not violate any election law when they held a bingo game as the campaign period for local elections has not yet started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nThe Manila Regional Trial Court dismissed another disqualification case against Estrada on March 4. Judge Marivic Umali heeded Estrada's lawyer Frank Chavez that the Commission on Elections and not the court had jurisdiction on the case. On April 1, the commission dismissed Estrada's last disqualification case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, House of Representatives elections, 3rd District\nZenaida Angping is the incumbent. She is a common candidate of the LP-KKK and UNA tickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, House of Representatives elections, 3rd District\nThe Commission on Elections disqualified James Jaime Marquez Tan from the election for being a \"nuisance candidate\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, House of Representatives elections, 4th District\nIncumbent Trisha Bonoan-David is running unopposed. Like Zenaida Angping, she is also a common candidate of LP-KKK and UNA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, House of Representatives elections, 6th District\nRosenda Ocampo is the incumbent and her main opponent is former Congressman Bienvenido Abante.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, City Council elections\nEach of Manila's six legislative districts sends six councilors to the City Council. The election is via plurality-at-large voting: A voter can vote up to six candidates; the six candidates with the highest number of votes in a particular district are elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, City Council elections\nIn addition, the barangay captains and the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) chairpersons in the city's barangays (communities) elect amongst themselves a president that will seat as an ex officio member of the city council with full voting powers. The presidents of the barangay captains and SK chairpersons that were elected after the 2010 barangay elections will serve until the winners of the 2013 barangay elections are seated in late November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, City Council elections\nIn case of a tie vote, the vice mayor, as the presiding officer, will vote to break the tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, City Council elections, 1st District\nRaffy Jimenez Crespo, son of former representative Mark Jimenez, was disqualified from this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, City Council elections, 1st District\nCristy Lim is a guest candidate of the LP-KKK coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, City Council elections, 3rd District\nIt composed of Binondo, Quiapo, San Nicolas and Santa Cruz", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234624-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Manila local elections, Results, City Council elections, 4th District\nIt is situated in Sampaloc. No. 6 Arlene Chua's term was cut short because of citizenship issues and was declared ineligible for office by COMELEC. 7th placer Krystle Bacani assumed office on March 17, 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234625-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries Women's Classic\nThe 2013 Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries Women's Classic was held from October 25 to 28 at the Fort Rouge Curling Club in Winnipeg, Manitoba as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was the second women's Grand Slam of the season. The event was held in a triple knockout format, and the purse for the event was CAD$60,000, of which the winner received CAD$15,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234625-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries Women's Classic\nIn just the second all-Manitoba final in the event's history, the Jennifer Jones rink defeated Jill Thurston's rink, winning their first Grand Slam event since 2011 and their first Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries event since it became a Grand Slam. Thurston made her first career Grand Slam playoffs appearance, as well as her first career Grand Slam final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234626-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Manitoba's women's provincial curling championship, was held from January 23 to 27 at the Veterans Memorial Sport Complex in Stonewall, Manitoba. The winning Jennifer Jones team represented Manitoba at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234626-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Process\nSixteen teams will qualify for the provincial tournament through several berths. The qualification process is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234626-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualifying Events, Scotties Berth Bonspiel\nThe 2013 Scotties Berth Bonspiel, presented by Monsanto, will take place from November 16 to 18, 2012. The event will qualify two teams into the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234626-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Regional Playdowns\nRegional playdowns will take place from December 14 to 16, 2012 at various locations and will qualify a total of 11 teams to the provincial playdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234627-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manly Warringah Sea Eagles season\nThe 2013 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles season is the 64th in the club's history since their entry into the then New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership in 1947. The team finished 4th in the regular season and qualified for the finals where they lost to the Sydney Roosters in the 2013 NRL Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234628-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manta Open\nThe 2013 Manta Open is a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 10th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Manta, Ecuador between 1 and 7 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234628-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Manta Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234628-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Manta Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as alternates into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234629-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manta Open \u2013 Doubles\nDuilio Beretta and Renzo Olivo are the defending champions but Olivo decided no to participate. Beretta played alongside Andrea Collarini and lost in the Quarterfinals to Nicol\u00e1s Barrientos and Eduardo Struvay. Marcelo Ar\u00e9valo and Sergio Gald\u00f3s defeated Alejandro Gonz\u00e1lez and Carlos Salamanca 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234630-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manta Open \u2013 Singles\nGuido Pella was the defending champion, but decided not to participate. Michael Russell defeated Greg Jones 4\u20136, 6\u20130, 7\u20135 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix\n2013 Isle of Man Festival of Motorcycling including the Manx Grand Prix and the Classic TT Races were held between Saturday 17 August and Friday 30 August 2013 on the 37.73-mile Mountain Course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix\nThe rebranded festival by the Isle of Man Department of Economic Development and the Manx Motor Cycle Club (MMCC) will included the Manx Grand Prix Races, the Manx Classic, the Manx Two Day Trials and the VMCC Manx Rally which will include the Festival of Jurby. The newly developed Festival will retain elements of the existing Manx Grand Prix Races, while also include the important Isle of Man TT brand in a new Classic TT, which will form part of a three-day classic meeting including a parade to celebrate the 90th Anniversary of the Manx Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 1; 500\u00a0cc Classic TT Race\nSaturday 24 August 2013 Mountain Course 4 laps\u00a0\u2013 150.92\u00a0miles (242.80\u00a0km)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 75], "content_span": [76, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 1; 500\u00a0cc Classic TT Race\nFastest Lap: Ollie Linsdell\u00a0\u2013 111.660\u00a0mph (20\u00a0minutes 16.446 secs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 2a; 350\u00a0cc Junior Classic TT Race\nMonday 26 August 2013 Mountain Course 4 laps\u00a0\u2013 150.92\u00a0miles (242.80\u00a0km)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 83], "content_span": [84, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 2a; 350\u00a0cc Junior Classic TT Race\nFastest Lap; Chris Palmer 101.469\u00a0mph (22\u00a0minutes 18.469 secs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 83], "content_span": [84, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 2b; 250\u00a0cc Lightweight Classic TT Race\nMonday 26 August 2013 Mountain Course 4 laps\u00a0\u2013 150.92\u00a0miles (242.80\u00a0km)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 88], "content_span": [89, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 2b; 250\u00a0cc Lightweight Classic TT Race\nFastest Lap; Ewan Hamilton 95.911\u00a0mph (23\u00a0minutes 36.186 secs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 88], "content_span": [89, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 3a; Classic TT Formula 1 Superbike Race\nMonday 26 August 2013 Mountain Course 4 laps\u00a0\u2013 150.92\u00a0miles (242.80\u00a0km)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 89], "content_span": [90, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 3a; Classic TT Formula 1 Superbike Race\nFastest Lap; Michael Dunlop 123.6780\u00a0mph (18\u00a0minutes 18.236 secs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 89], "content_span": [90, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 3b; Classic TT Formula 2 Race\nMonday 26 August 2013 Mountain Course 4 laps\u00a0\u2013 150.92\u00a0miles (242.80\u00a0km)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 79], "content_span": [80, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 3b; Classic TT Formula 2 Race\nFastest Lap; James Cowton 111.872\u00a0mph (20\u00a0minutes 14.142 secs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 79], "content_span": [80, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 4a; Newcomers Race 'A'\nWednesday 28 August 2013 Mountain Course 4 laps\u00a0\u2013 150.92\u00a0miles (242.80\u00a0km)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 5; Junior Manx Grand Prix\nWednesday 28 August 2013 Mountain Course 4 laps\u00a0\u2013 150.92\u00a0miles (242.80\u00a0km)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 75], "content_span": [76, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 5; Junior Manx Grand Prix\nFastest Lap; James Cowton 119.659\u00a0mph (18\u00a0minutes 55.123 secs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 75], "content_span": [76, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 6a; Super-Twin Race\nFriday 30 August 2012 Mountain Course 2 laps\u00a0\u2013 75.46\u00a0miles (121.40\u00a0km) Reduced Race Distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 69], "content_span": [70, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Results, Race Results, Race 6a; Super-Twin Race\nFastest Lap: Michael Sweeney\u00a0\u2013 108.163\u00a0mph (20\u00a0minutes 55.767 secs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 69], "content_span": [70, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Gallery\nMichael Dunlop (3) Suzuki\u00a0\u2014 Evening Practice Parliament Square, Ramsey 21 August 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Gallery\nOllie Linsdell (1) Paton 500c\u00a0\u2014 Lap 4 500cc Classic TT Parliament Square, Ramsey 24 August 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Gallery\nGiacomo Agostini (9) MV Agusta 500c\u00a0John McGuinness 500cc Honda - Classic TT Parliament Square, Ramsey 24 August 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Gallery\nChris Palmer (9) Honda - 350cc Classic TT Parliament Square, Ramsey 26 August 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Gallery\nMichael Dunlop (3) Suzuki\u00a0\u2014 Formula 1 Classic TT 2013 - Lap 3\u00a0Parliament Square, Ramsey 26 August 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234631-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Manx Grand Prix, Gallery\nChristopher Dixon (22) Yamaha\u00a0\u2014 Newcomers Race 'A' Manx Grand Prix 2013 - Lap 4\u00a0Parliament Square, Ramsey 28 August 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234632-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marakkanam violence\n2013 Marakkanam violence was a violent clash between Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) cadres and Dalit villagers at Marakkanam in Viluppuram district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, in which two people were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234632-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Marakkanam violence, Background\nThe incident took place on 25 April 2013, the day PMK and Vanniar sangam organised a youth festival in Mamallapuram near Chennai. Police said PMK cadres, who were on their way to attend the youth conference at Mahaballipuram, stopped near a bus stop at a Dalit village near Marakanam and consumed alcohol. When a few villagers questioned them, the PMK men assaulted the villagers and fled the scene. As a result two PMK cadres named Selvaraj and Vivek were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234632-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Marakkanam violence, Aftermath\nPMK founder S Ramadoss and party president G K Mani were arrested on 30 April in Villupuram who want the probe in the incident. This arrest spread the violence across the Tamil Nadu PMK cadres stoned the buses to protest against the arrest of their leaders. In the districts of Thiruvannamalai, Villupuram, Cuddalore, Vellore and Kanchipuram, some 1,601 buses were not operated even during day time due to violence. The violence took place till the release of S Ramadoss who was released on 11 May from Tiruchirapalli Central Prison. Totally, 853 buses were damaged and 165 trees were cut down during violence. The Government of Tamil Nadu threatened to ban PMK party over the violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234632-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Marakkanam violence, Court proceedings and Conviction\nMarakanam police filed case against 1,512 persons from both sides and inquired further. Initially it was said by police that Selvaraj was killed by accident but after post mortem reports revealed stab injuries on his body, the police changed the accident case to murder case. On 9 May 2013, the CB-CID officials\u00a0registered a murder case against six Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK) cadres for brutally attacking PMK cadre Selvaraj. On 3 February 2016 sessions court in Tindivanam pronounced the judgement that all the six accused VCK cadres were found guilty and convicted to life imprisonment for brutally killing Selvaraj. The judge pronounced the crime to be \u2018rarest of rare\u2019 while awarding the life sentence. The case on other person killed named Vivek is still under proceedings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234633-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marbella Cup\nThe 2013 Marbella Cup is the third edition of the tournament in Marbella Cup tournament is held in the Spanish resort of Costa del Sol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234634-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marburg Open\nThe 2013 Marburg Open is a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It take place in Marburg, Germany between 24 and 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234634-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Marburg Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234634-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Marburg Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234635-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marburg Open \u2013 Doubles\nMateusz Kowalczyk and David \u0160koch were the defending champions, but decided not to participate. Andrey Golubev and Evgeny Korolev defeated Jesse Huta Galung and Jordan Kerr 6\u20133, 1\u20136, [10\u20136] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234636-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marburg Open \u2013 Singles\nJan H\u00e1jek was the defending champion, but decided not to participate. Andrey Golubev defeated Diego Sebasti\u00e1n Schwartzman in the final 6\u20131 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234637-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mardan funeral suicide bombing\nOn 18 June 2013, a suicide bomber detonated his vest at a funeral in Shergarh , Mardan in northwest Pakistan, killing at least 34 people and injuring over 60 people. The attack took place at a funeral prayer service for Abdullah Khan, who owned a compressed natural gas station. One of the people killed in the attack was Imran Khan Mohmand, who was previously an independent MPA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234637-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mardan funeral suicide bombing, Bombing and aftermath\nThe bomb blast took place on 18 June 2013 during a funeral procession for a local businessman Haji Abdullah, who was shot a day before by unknown assailants. Imran Khan Mohmand , previously an independent candidate , but then part of the PTI party was injured and then later succumbed to his injuries. The procession was being led by a former MPA of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam , Maulana Muhammad Qasim , who survived the blast. No militant organization took responsibility for the attack. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial government announced monetary compensation for those involved. A sum of Rs. 300,000 for the families of those killed and Rs. 100,000 for those injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234638-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marikina local elections\nLocal elections were held in Marikina on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters will elect for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, two district representatives, and councilors, eight in each of the city's two legislative districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234639-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marilao local elections\nLocal elections were held in Marilao, Bulacan on May 13, 2013. The voters (Marile\u00f1os) will elect for the elective local posts in the municipality: the mayor, vice mayor, and eight councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234639-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Marilao local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nIncumbent mayor Epifanio Guillermo is term-limited and the party nominates incumbent Vice Mayor Tito Santiago, which is also term-limited as well. The party also nominates incumbent councilor Alex Castro and run for mayor and vice mayor of Marilao, Bulacan, respectively, under the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234639-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Marilao local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nHenry Lutao of Barangay Lias will run with incumbent councilor Andre Santos as his running mate under the banner of the Nacionalista Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234639-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Marilao local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234639-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Marilao local elections, Results, Municipal Council election\nVoting is via plurality-at-large voting: Voters vote for eight candidates and the eight candidates with the highest number of votes are elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections\nLocal elections were held in the Province of Marinduque on May 13, 2013 as part of the 2013 general election. Voters selected candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, a vice-governor, a governor and a representative for the lone district of Marinduque in the House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections\nIn this election, a number of provincial-level officials sought reelection, including incumbent governor Carmencita Reyes and incumbent congressman Lord Allan Jay Velasco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Background, Congressional election\nIncumbent congressman Lord Allan Jay Velasco, who was first elected in the 2010 election, is running for a second term. Although he ran under the Lakas\u2013CMD ticket in 2010, for this election he is running under the National Unity Party (NUP). His challenger is Regina Ongsiako Reyes, the daughter of incumbent governor Carmencita Reyes, running under the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Background, Congressional election\nHowever, Reyes was ordered disqualified by the First Division of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) over her citizenship status. In its ruling, the Comelec cited the Citizenship Retention and Re-acquisition Act of 2003, claiming that Reyes was still an American citizen and she had failed to renounce her citizenship. In addition, the ruling notes that Reyes did not submit sufficient evidence that she had been resident in Marinduque for at least one year, citing documents which point to her term as Provincial Administrator. The ruling was affirmed by the Comelec en banc on May 14, 2013. But Commission on Election Chairman Sixto Brillantes in his dissenting opinion pointed that the evidence presented by Velasco's camp is a double hearsay and inadmissible since it was never sworn nor authenticated by the issuing officer and it was taken in an internet blog of unknown blogger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 955]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Background, Congressional election\nDespite this, Reyes continued to sit as representative of Marinduque, with the Reyes camp claiming that it is the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal (HRET), and not the Comelec or the Supreme Court, that should have jurisdiction over the case. On September 11, 2014, Gabriela Representative Luzviminda Ilagan said that the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal voting 4-3 finally decided that they (HRET members) will uphold the exclusivity of jurisdiction over any protest or contest in the result of election of any House of Representatives members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Background, Congressional election\nWith this development, the Commission's and the Supreme Court's respective decisions will be no longer in effect. Thus, Representative Regina Ongsiako Reyes was the seating Congresswoman of the Lone District of Marinduque but did not finish her 3-year term as she was later removed from her post and replaced by Velasco in February 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Background, Gubernatorial election\nIncumbent governor Carmencita Reyes is running for a second term, having assumed the governorship after defeating then-incumbent Jose Antonio Carrion in the 2010 election, alongside her running mate, vice governor Antonio Uy Jr. Although she was a guest candidate of the Liberal Party the previous election, having run as a member of the party-list group Bigkis Pinoy, for this election she is running as the Liberal Party candidate. Reyes' running mate is doctor Romulo Bacorro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Background, Gubernatorial election\nUy has since left the Liberal Party and has decided to run for governor under the NUP, the party of Congressman Velasco. However, he does not have a running mate; instead, the NUP is endorsing Melecio Go of the Nacionalista Party for the position of vice governor. Go is currently a member of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan for the province's first district, and was elected in 2010 as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Background, Gubernatorial election\nCarrion was seeking to retake his seat after losing the previous election to Reyes. Though he ran under the Lakas\u2013CMD ticket in 2010, for this election he is running under the banner of the Nationalist People's Coalition. His running mate is Jose Alvarez, who previously sat as a member of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan for the province's first district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Results, Congressional election\nDespite being disqualified by the Comelec en banc, Regina Ongsiako Reyes was proclaimed anyway by the Provincial Board of Canvassers on May 15, 2013, although the camp of Lord Allan Jay Velasco attempted to stop the proclamation. Edwin Villa, the provincial election supervisor and head of Marinduque's Provincial Board of Canvassers, has since been replaced by Val Mendoza, the provincial election supervisor of Romblon, although it is unclear whether Mendoza assumed the position. Villa has since gone into hiding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Results, Municipal elections, Mogpog\nIncumbent vice-mayor Sebastian Mandalihan is term limited and running for provincial board membership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234640-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Marinduque local elections, Results, Municipal elections, Gasan\nIncumbent vice-mayor Servillano M. Balitaan is term-limited and is running for municipal councilor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234641-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marion Blue Racers season\nThe 2013 Marion Blue Racers season is the third season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234641-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Marion Blue Racers season\nThe Blue Racers announced they would be leaving the UIFL following the conclusion of the 2012 season. A few days later, the franchise returned to the CIFL. On September 18, 2012, the Blue Racers named CEO and General Manager LaMonte Coleman as the team's fifth head coach in franchise history. Three weeks prior to the season's start, offensive coordinator Martino Theus was promoted to head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234641-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Marion Blue Racers season\nEvery home game of the 2013 season will be shown on WMNO Marion TV 22, available via broadcast on UHF channel 22 and on Time Warner Cable channel 3 (Marion only).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234642-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marist Red Foxes football team\nThe 2013 Marist Red Foxes football team represented Marist College in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 22nd year head coach Jim Parady and played their home games at Tenney Stadium at Leonidoff Field. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 8\u20133, 7\u20131 in PFL play to finish in a tie for the league title with Butler. Marist lost a tie-breaker to Butler and did not receive the league's automatic bid to the FCS playoffs and did not receive and at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234643-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marsabit local elections\nLocal elections were held in Marsabit County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234643-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Marsabit local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team\nThe 2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team represented Marshall University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Doc Holliday and played their home games at Joan C. Edwards Stadium. They were a member of the East Division of Conference USA. They finished the season 10\u20134, 7\u20131 in C-USA play to win the East Division title. As East Division champions, they played West Division champions Rice in the C-USA Championship Game, losing to the Owls 24\u201341. They were invited to the Military Bowl where they defeated Maryland 31\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Miami (OH)\nThis was the 42nd time these two teams have faced each other, both in the Buckeye Conference (1933\u20131939) and in the Mid-American Conference (1953\u20131968; 1997\u20132004) over the years. Miami leads the overall win-loss record 29\u201311\u20131. The last times these two teams faced each other was in 2004, a 33\u201325 win over the RedHawks at the Joan C. Edwards Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Gardner-Webb\nThis was the first time these two teams had faced each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Ohio\nThis was the fifty seventh time these two teams had faced each other. Ohio leads the overall win-loss record 31\u201319\u20136. Previously, the last time these two teams faced each other was in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Virginia Tech\nThis will be the eleventh time these two teams have faced each other. Virginia Tech leads the overall win-loss record 8\u20132. The last times these two teams faced each other was in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, UTSA\nThis will be the first time these two schools have faced each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Florida Atlantic\nThis will be the first time these two teams have faced each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee\nThis will be the third time these two teams have faced each other. Marshall leads the overall win-loss record 2\u20130. The last meeting between Marshall and Middle Tennessee was in 1994, when both schools were still in what was then known as Division I-AA (now FCS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Southern Miss\nThis will be the ninth time these two teams have faced each other. Southern Miss leads the overall win-loss record 5\u20133. The last times these two teams faced each other was in 2012, when Southern Miss slipped from the Conference USA championship in 2011 to 0\u201312 last season. Marshall picked up its second win in Hattiesburg, Miss. at M. M. Roberts Stadium, 59\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, UAB\nThis will be the ninth time these two teams have faced each other. Marshall leads the overall win-loss record 6\u20132. The last times these two teams faced each other was in 2012, a 38\u201331 UAB win at Legion Field in Birmingham, Ala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Tulsa\nThis will be the fifth time these two teams have faced each other. Tulsa leads the overall win-loss record 4\u20130. The last times these two teams faced each other was in 2012, a 45\u201338 TU win at the Joan C. Edwards Stadium. Tulsa won Conference USA in 2012, and Marshall plays at TU for the second time in three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, FIU\nThis will be the second time these two teams have faced each other. Marshall leads the overall win-loss record 1\u20130. The last times these two teams faced each other was in 2011 in the Beef 'O'Brady's Bowl St. Petersburg (Fla.) at Tropicana Field, a 20\u201310 Thundering Herd win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, East Carolina\nThis will be the fifteenth time these two teams have faced each other. East Carolina leads the overall win-loss record 10\u20134. The last time these two teams faced each other was in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Rice\nThis will be the fifth time these two teams have faced each other. Marshall lead the overall series 3\u20131. The last time these two teams faced each other was in 2012 at Houston. Marshall won that game 54\u201351 in double overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234644-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Marshall Thundering Herd football team, Game summaries, Maryland\u2013Military Bowl\nThis will be the first time these two teams have faced each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234645-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Martyr's Memorial B-Division League\nMartyr's Memorial B-Division League is the second division of the Nepali association football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team\nThe 2013 Maryland Terrapins football team represented the University of Maryland, College Park in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Terrapins were led by third-year head coach Randy Edsall and play their home games at Byrd Stadium. This marked the Terrapins' 61st and final season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and their ninth season in the ACC's Atlantic Division. They finished the season 7\u20136 overall and 3\u20135 in ACC play to place fifth in the Atlantic Division. They were invited to the Military Bowl, where they lost to Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Before the Season\nOn June 25, 2013 top ranked recruit and high school All-American, Derwin Gray, was declared academically ineligible for the 2013 season and will not enroll in school. He is planning to explore options with prep schools and junior colleges and eventually return to Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Before the Season\nOn August 3, 2013 sophomore running back Wes Brown was suspended for one year. He will miss the entire 2013 season but he may be reinstated in time to join spring practices in 2014 should he comply with certain guidelines. The suspension was handed out in conjunction with a series of offseason transgressions to include being a suspect in a shooting in Baltimore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Game summaries\nGames are broadcast on radio stations that are part of the Terrapin Sports Radio Network. Long-time broadcaster Johnny Holliday covers play-by-play, Tim Strachan provides color commentary, and former Terrapin quarterback Scott McBrien is the sideline reporter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Game summaries, Florida International\nMaryland began its season at home taking on the FIU Panthers. Prior to this game, Maryland had won all of the previous three meetings between the two schools. The fourth meeting would have the same result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Game summaries, Florida International\nC.J. Brown returned to quarterback the Terps for his first game since 2011, having missed all of 2012 with an ACL injury. He dominated against FIU, completing 20 of 23 passes, passing for 281 yards and 3 touchdowns, and rushing for 105 yards and two touchdowns. 98 of those passing yards went to sophomore Stefon Diggs, whose day included a 66-yard touchdown reception. Junior college transfer Deon Long made also his presence known with 110 receiving yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Game summaries, Florida International\nWhile C.J. Brown was the leading rusher, other players also contributed to the ground game. Running backs Albert Reid, Brandon Ross and Jaquille Veii had at least 8 carries each, and their contributions helped the Terps amass 251 yards on the ground. Kicker Brad Craddock connected on three field goals and was 4 for 5 on PAT attempts. The Maryland defense combined for five sacks and limited FIU to just ten points, all in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Game summaries, Florida International\nFIU quarterbacks Jack Medlock and E.J. Hilliard were able to combine for only 80 yards and no touchdowns, completing 10 of 22 pass attempts. The Panthers were able to score a touchdown with 8:30 left in the 2nd quarter and pull within 10 points, but Maryland responded and scored three more touchdowns before halftime to secure a 40\u201310 lead at the break. Craddock would add his third field goal early in the 4th quarter for the final margin of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234646-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins football team, Game summaries, Connecticut\nOn September 16, Coach Randy Edsall announced that starting cornerback Dexter McDougle would miss the rest of the season following a shoulder injury suffered against Connecticut on September 14. McDougle, a 5th year senior with no medical redshirt option, will see his playing career with the Terrapins come to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234647-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins men's soccer team\nThe 2013 Maryland Terrapins men's soccer team was the college's 68th season of playing organized men's college soccer. The Terrapins played in the Atlantic Coast Conference where they emerged as the regular season and tournament champions. The Terrapins finished the season as the NCAA runner-up, losing the college cup final to Notre Dame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234647-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maryland Terrapins 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234648-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maserati Challenger\nThe 2013 Maserati Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took taking place in Meerbusch, Germany, between 10 and 18 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234648-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maserati Challenger, Entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234648-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maserati Challenger, Entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234649-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maserati Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nThis is the first edition of the event. Similar to singles, 2nd seeds Rameez Junaid and Frank Moser defeated top seeds Dustin Brown and Philipp Marx to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234650-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maserati Challenger \u2013 Singles\nThis is the first edition of the event. 2nd seed Jan H\u00e1jek defeated top seed Jesse Huta Galung in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234651-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Massachusetts's 5th congressional district special election\nA special election for Massachusetts's 5th congressional district took place on December 10, 2013, due to the resignation of Democratic Congressman Ed Markey following his election to the United States Senate in a special election on June 25, 2013. Primary elections were held on October 15, in which Democratic state senator Katherine Clark and Republican Frank Addivinola won their party nominations. State law required that Governor Deval Patrick call a special election between 145 and 160 days after the vacancy became official. On December 10, Clark easily defeated Addivinola with almost 2/3 of the vote, holding the seat for the Democrats. Clark's win marked the 92nd consecutive U.S. House loss by Republicans in Massachusetts since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234652-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (darts)\nThe 2013 Coral Masters was the inaugural staging of the non-ranking darts tournament The Masters, held by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC). It was held between 1\u20133 November 2013 at the Royal Highland Centre in Edinburgh, Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234652-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (darts)\nPhil Taylor won the title by beating Adrian Lewis 10\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234652-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (darts), Qualifiers\nOnly the top 16 players on the PDC's Order of Merit on 20 October 2013 qualified for the event. These were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234652-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (darts), Broadcasting\nThe tournament was available on ITV4 in the United Kingdom. It was also shown on RTL 7 in the Netherlands, Sport1 in Germany, Fox Sports in Australia and on Sky New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234653-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (snooker)\nThe 2013 Betfair Masters was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament held between 13 and 20 January 2013 at the Alexandra Palace in London, England. This was the first time that Betfair sponsored the event. The event was broadcast live on Eurosport and BBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234653-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (snooker)\nMark Selby won his third Masters title by defeating defending champion Neil Robertson 10\u20136 in the final. With this Selby became the sixth player to win the Masters more than two times after Cliff Thorburn, Stephen Hendry, Paul Hunter, Steve Davis and Ronnie O'Sullivan. Selby also became the first player to win back-to-back Triple Crown titles since Mark Williams 10 years before. This was Selby's 11th professional title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234653-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (snooker), Field\nDefending champion Neil Robertson was the number 1 seed. World Champion Ronnie O'Sullivan did not compete. The remaining places were allocated to players based on the latest world rankings (revision 3) except that Stephen Lee, ranked 9, did not play because he was suspended. As a consequence Mark Davis, ranked 17, was invited and seeded 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234653-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters (snooker), Prize fund\nThe total prize money of \u00a3500,000 was unchanged from the previous year but the distribution was changed with the winner receiving \u00a3175,000, an increase of \u00a325,000. The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament\nThe 2013 Masters Tournament was the 77th edition of the Masters Tournament and the first of golf's four major championships to be held in 2013. It was held from April 11\u201314 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. Adam Scott won the tournament on the second hole of a sudden death playoff against \u00c1ngel Cabrera. It was Scott's first major championship and the first time an Australian won the Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\nThe Masters has the smallest field of the four major championships. Officially, the Masters remains an invitation event, but there is a set of qualifying criteria that determines who is included in the field. Each player is classified according to the first category by which he qualified, with other categories in which he qualified shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\nGolfers who qualify based solely on their performance in amateur tournaments (categories 6\u201310) must remain amateurs on the starting day of the tournament to be eligible to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\nFour players were appearing in their first major: Steven Fox, Michael Weaver, Guan Tianlang and T. J. Vogel. Thirteen others were appearing in their first Masters: Alan Dunbar, John Peterson, David Lynn, John Huh, Scott Piercy, Russell Henley, Ted Potter Jr., George Coetzee, Nicolas Colsaerts, Jamie Donaldson, Branden Grace, Thorbj\u00f8rn Olesen, Thaworn Wiratchant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n1. Past Masters Champions\u00c1ngel Cabrera, Fred Couples (11), Ben Crenshaw, Trevor Immelman, Zach Johnson (15,16,17,18,19), Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Phil Mickelson (11,15,16,17,18,19), Larry Mize, Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Olaz\u00e1bal, Mark O'Meara, Charl Schwartzel (18,19), Vijay Singh, Craig Stadler, Bubba Watson (11,15,17,18,19), Tom Watson, Mike Weir, Tiger Woods (2,13,15,16,17,18,19), Ian Woosnam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n(Past champions who did not play: Tommy Aaron, Jack Burke Jr., Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Nick Faldo, Raymond Floyd, Doug Ford, Bob Goalby, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Fuzzy Zoeller. Nicklaus, Palmer, and Player served as \"honorary starters\" and teed off on the first day at the first hole to kick off the tournament.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n2. Last five U.S. Open ChampionsLucas Glover, Graeme McDowell (11,12,18,19), Rory McIlroy (4,14,15,16,17,18,19), Webb Simpson (12,15,17,18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n3. Last five British Open ChampionsStewart Cink, Ernie Els (13,15,17,18,19), P\u00e1draig Harrington (4,11,12), Louis Oosthuizen (11,15,17,18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n4. Last five PGA ChampionsKeegan Bradley (14,15,16,17,18,19), Martin Kaymer (18,19), Yang Yong-eun", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n5. Last three winners of The Players ChampionshipK. J. Choi (18), Tim Clark, Matt Kuchar (11,15,16,17,18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n6. Top two finishers in the 2012 U.S. AmateurSteven Fox (a), Michael Weaver (a)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n8. Winner of the 2012 Asia-Pacific Amateur ChampionshipGuan Tianlang (a)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n9. Winner of the 2012 U.S. Amateur Public LinksT. J. Vogel (a)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n11. The top 16 finishers and ties in the 2012 Masters TournamentJim Furyk (12,15,17,18,19), Sergio Garc\u00eda (15,16,17,18,19), Peter Hanson (18,19), Hunter Mahan (15,17,18,19), Kevin Na, Ian Poulter (14,18,19), Justin Rose (14,15,17,18,19), Adam Scott (13,15,17,18,19), Lee Westwood (15,17,18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n12. Top 8 finishers and ties in the 2012 U.S. OpenJason Dufner (15,16,17,18,19), John Peterson, Michael Thompson (16,19), David Toms (18)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n13. Top 4 finishers and ties in the 2012 British Open ChampionshipBrandt Snedeker (15,16,17,18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n14. Top 4 finishers and ties in the 2012 PGA ChampionshipDavid Lynn (18), Carl Pettersson (15,16,17,18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n15. Top 30 leaders on the 2012 PGA Tour Ben Curtis (16), Luke Donald (17,18,19), Rickie Fowler (16,17,18,19), Robert Garrigus (17,18,19), John Huh (17), Dustin Johnson (16,17,18,19), Ryan Moore (17,18,19), Scott Piercy (16,17,18,19), Steve Stricker (17,18,19), Bo Van Pelt (17,18,19), Nick Watney (16,17,18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n16. Winners of PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation for the season-ending Tour Championship, between the 2012 Masters Tournament and the 2013 Masters TournamentBrian Gay, Russell Henley (19), Martin Laird, Marc Leishman, John Merrick, D. A. Points, Ted Potter Jr., Kevin Streelman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n17. All players qualifying for the 2012 edition of The Tour ChampionshipJohn Senden (18,19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n18. Top 50 on the final 2012 Official World Golf Ranking listThomas Bj\u00f8rn, George Coetzee (19), Nicolas Colsaerts (19), Jason Day (19), Jamie Donaldson (19), Gonzalo Fern\u00e1ndez-Casta\u00f1o (19), Hiroyuki Fujita, Branden Grace (19), Bill Haas (19), Paul Lawrie (19), Matteo Manassero (19), Francesco Molinari (19), Thorbj\u00f8rn Olesen (19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Field\n19. Top 50 on the Official World Golf Ranking list on March 31, 2013Freddie Jacobson, Henrik Stenson, Richard Sterne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Second round\nFor 2013 the minimum number of players making the cut was increased from 44 to 50 (plus ties). As previously, all players within 10 shots of the leader also make the cut. 61 players made the cut, all those within 10 shots of the leader. Fourteen-year-old Guan Tianlang, playing in his first Masters, was the only amateur player to make the cut, despite being penalized a stroke for slow play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Second round\nAmateurs: Guan (+4), Vogel (+8), Weaver (+8), Smith (+11), Fox (+13), Dunbar (+16). Note: Tiger Woods originally signed for a 71 which gave him 70-71=141 (\u22123). However, his second-round score was adjusted on Saturday morning to a 73 (see below).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Third round\nPrior to the third round, a controversy concerning Tiger Woods developed. After Friday's second round, Woods signed for a score of 71 (\u22121), which included a bogey at the par-5 15th hole. Woods' third shot had hit the pin and rebounded into the water hazard. He took a penalty stroke and appeared to take his drop at the same position from which he had played his third shot. In an interview following the round Woods stated that he had actually dropped the ball two yards further back from the pin than the original position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Third round\nBased upon hearing the interview, tournament officials met with Woods Saturday morning and deemed the drop to have been in contravention of the rules. This could have meant disqualification, but instead Woods was assessed a two-stroke penalty for the illegal drop. He therefore scored a triple-bogey 8 at the 15th and had an adjusted second round score of 73 (+1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Final round, Summary\nIn the final round, played in a cold and steady rain, third round co-leader Brandt Snedeker fell out of contention with a 75. Jason Day had the lead with three holes to go but bogeyed the 16th and 17th holes to finish in third place at 281 (\u22127). Adam Scott and \u00c1ngel Cabrera both birdied the 72nd hole to finish tied for the lead at 279 (\u22129). Playing in the group ahead of the final twosome, Scott rolled in a 25-footer (8 m). Minutes later Cabrera matched Scott's birdie when he hit his approach shot to 3 feet (1 m) and made the putt to force a playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Final round, Summary\nThe sudden-death playoff began at the 18th hole, where Scott and Cabrera both scrambled for par from just short of the green after their approach shots each landed on the front section of the green and backed just off the fringe, with Cabrera's chip nearly holing out. At the next hole, #10, both were in the fairway then on the green in regulation. Cabrera's lengthy putt just missed and he tapped in for par. With the opportunity to win and in fading light, Scott sank his 15-foot (4.6\u00a0m) birdie putt for the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Final round, Summary\nIt was Scott's first major championship and the only time an Australian has won the Masters, after producing nine runners-up in the tournament. Following his victory, he paid tribute to Greg Norman: \"It was one guy who inspired a nation of golfers, and that is Greg Norman\". Earlier that day, Norman said that if an Australian won the title \"it would mean everything to [him]\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 62], "content_span": [63, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234654-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters Tournament, Round summaries, Playoff\nThe sudden-death playoff began on the 18th hole and ended on the 10th hole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234655-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Masters of Formula 3\nThe 2013 Masters of Formula 3 was the 23rd Masters of Formula 3 race held at Circuit Park Zandvoort on 7 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234656-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Match des Champions\nThe 2013 Match des Champions was the 8th edition of the annual super cup game in French basketball. This year the reigning LNB Pro A champions JSF Nanterre faced off against French Cup champions Paris-Levallois Basket. The game was played in the Vend\u00e9space in Mouilleron-le-Captif.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234657-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Matsumoto Yamaga FC season\nThe 2013 Matsumoto Yamaga FC season sees Matsumoto Yamaga compete in J. League Division 2. Matsumoto Yamaga are also competing in the 2013 Emperor's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234658-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Challenger\nThe 2013 Maui Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Maui, United States at the Wailea Tennis Club between 20 and 27 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234658-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234658-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Challenger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234658-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Challenger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received entry as a qualifier into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234659-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAmer Deli\u0107 and Travis Rettenmaier were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Lee Hsin-han and Peng Hsien-yin defeated Tennys Sandgren and Rhyne Williams 6\u20137(1\u20137), 6\u20132, [10\u20135] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234660-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Challenger \u2013 Singles\nGo Soeda successfully defended his title, defeating Mischa Zverev 7\u20135, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234661-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Invitational Tournament\nThe 2013 Maui Invitational Tournament was an early-season college basketball tournament played from November 15 to November 27, 2013. It was the 30th annual holding of the Maui Invitational Tournament, which began in 1984, and was part of the 2013\u201314 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Championship Round was played at the Lahaina Civic Center in Maui, Hawaii from November 25 to 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234661-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Invitational Tournament, Opening Round\nThe Opening Round was played on November 15\u201319 at various sites around the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234661-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Invitational Tournament, Regional Round\n* Games played at HTC Center in Conway, South Carolina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234661-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Maui Invitational Tournament, Championship Round\nThe Championship Round occurred from November 25\u201327 at Lahaina Civic Center in Maui, Hawaii.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Mauritania on 23 November. The opposition has vowed to boycott the election unless the president steps down beforehand. A total of 1,096 candidates have registered to compete for the leadership of 218 local councils across Mauritania, whilst 438 candidates are contesting for the 146 parliamentary seats. Some 1.2 million Mauritanians were eligible to vote in the election. The first round results yielded a landslide victory for the ruling UPR winning 56 seats and their 14 coalition partners winning 34 seats. The Islamist Tewassoul party won 12 seats. The remaining seats were contested in a runoff on 21 December 2013. The UPR won the majority with 75 seats in the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Background\nThe elections were originally set for 1 October 2011, then delayed several times to 16 October 2011, 31 March 2012, May 2012, October 2013 and November/December 2013, due to continuous disputes between the government and opposition parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe two-week campaign period began on Friday 8 November. The beginning of the campaign was greeted with fireworks, car honking, and loud music in the streets, in the capital of Nouakchott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nMohamed Mahmoud Ould Mohamed Lemine called for Mauritanians to give the Union for the Republic a majority in parliament so that they could support the program of President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz. The UPR is also the only party fielding a contestant in every constituency. The UPR has also criticized Tewassoul for its links to the Muslim Brotherhood, and has called for the movement to dissociate itself from Islamists elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nTewassoul has described its participation as a struggle against what it deems the dictatorship of President Mohamed Oul Abdel Aziz, and Party President Mohamed Jemil Ould Mansour has called for a huge turnout by Tewassoul supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nThousands of supporters of the COD marched in Nouakchott on 6 November to protest against the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Contestants\nA total of 74 parties took part. Tewassoul was the only member of the 11 party opposition alliance known as the Coordination of the Democratic Opposition (COD) to take part. The COD's boycott had been criticised by the ruling UPR, with Ould Mohamed Lemine saying such action was unjustifiable \"in view of the political and electoral reforms accomplished.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Contestants\nThe main contestants are seen to be the UPR, Tewassoul, and the People's Progressive Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234662-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mauritanian parliamentary election, Results\nFollowing the first round of voting, on 23 November, Tewassoul president Jemil Ould Mansour claimed at a party news conference that the party had found \"serious irregularities\" including ballot stuffing and voting being carried out after the count. Mansour claimed these irregularities could discredit the election, and stated that the party had sent a delegation to the electoral commission to complain. He did not say which parties he believed to have benefited from the alleged irregularities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests\nThe 2013 May Day protests were a series of international protests involving hundreds of thousands of people that took place worldwide on May Day (1 May 2013) over the ongoing global economic crisis including austerity measures and poor working conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Asia, Bangladesh\nThousands of garment factory workers protested poor working conditions following the 2013 Savar building collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Asia, Cambodia\nFive thousand garment workers marched in Phnom Penh demanding better working conditions and wage increases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Asia, Indonesia\nOver 120,000 people from Jakarta and the surrounding cities of Depok, Bogor, Tangerang and Bekasi gathered at Hotel Indonesia and marched to Merdeka Palace, disrupting business activity in Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Asia, Singapore\nSix thousand rallied at Hong Lim Park to protest immigration policy and high living costs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Asia, Turkey\nPolice clashed with protesters in Istanbul trying to reach Taksim Square. Twenty people were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Europe, UK\nComparatively muted protest in central London compared to the violence of previous years. It received very little mainstream news coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Europe, Greece\nProtesters marched in Athens and Thessaloniki. The communist party-affiliated PAME organised a large strike demonstration in Syntagma Square, while GSEE union and the public sector union ADEDY had their rally at Kafthmonos Square. The Athens May Day demonstration was saluted by Bangladeshi workers' representative as well as by Gilda Chacov Bravo, Cuban member of the Secretariat of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, Europe, Spain\nProtesters marched in Madrid and Barcelona. In Barcelona, protesters clashed with police, while activists smashed dozens of bank and shop windows and destroyed bus stops, telephone boxes and trash bins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234663-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 May Day protests, North America, United States\nProtests were held in Seattle, Los Angeles, Manhattan and Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234664-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maya Awards\nThe 2nd Annual Maya Awards (Indonesian: Piala Maya 2013) was an award ceremony honoring the best in Indonesian films of 2013. The ceremony was held in Hotel Umaniara De'Brawijaya, Kebayoran Baru, South Jakarta, on December 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234664-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Maya Awards, Awards\nThe number of awards being given increased from the previous year to 29 competitive categories with 3 special awards. The following categories were not present previously:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill\nThe 2013 Mayflower oil spill occurred on March 29, 2013, when the Pegasus Pipeline, owned by ExxonMobil and carrying Canadian Wabasca heavy crude from the Athabasca oil sands, ruptured in Mayflower, Arkansas, about 25 miles (40\u00a0km) northwest of Little Rock releasing about 3,190 barrels (134,000\u00a0US\u00a0gal; 507\u00a0m3) of oil. Approximately 12,000 barrels (500,000\u00a0US\u00a0gal; 1,900\u00a0m3) of oil and water mix was recovered. Twenty-two homes were evacuated. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) classified the leak as a major spill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill\nExxon's Pegasus pipeline carries 95,000 barrels per day (15,100\u00a0m3/d) of crude a distance of 850 miles (1,368\u00a0km) from Patoka, Illinois to Nederland, Texas. On April 2, 2013, PHMSA, the federal pipeline regulator, issued a corrective action order until repairs have been completed and all safety concerns addressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Pegasus Pipeline\nThe Pegasus Pipeline, (a/k/a, EMPCO Pipeline, and the Magnolia Pipeline) is 858 miles (1,381\u00a0km), and runs from Patoka IL to the Texas Gulf Coast. It was built in two segments between 1947-1954 as an oil pipeline, which shipped products from Corsicana Texas, both north for industrial uses, and south to Gulf Coast refineries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Pegasus Pipeline\nThe flow of the southern section was reversed in 1995, and again in 2002. The northern section was abandoned in 2002, before being re-commissioned in 2005-2006 and reversed to carry diluted bitumen from Alberta Tar Sands to refiners in Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Pegasus Pipeline\nThe pipeline sheet metal was manufactured by Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co, using a manufacturing process called LF-ERW (Low-Frequency Electric Resistance Welds). This process has been known to have latent defects which eventually leads to failures. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration issued advisory bulletins in 1988 and 1989 to alert operators of factors contributing to failures of pipelines constructed with ERW pipe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Substance spilled\nThere has been some controversy over the exact nature of the substance spilled in Mayflower. On April 5, the Environmental Protection Agency sent a request for more information about Wabasca Heavy\u2014the oil that spilled on the Pegasus line on March 29. The EPA's question was: \"Can the oil accurately be described as oil sands oil, or a type of diluted bitumen (dilbit)?\" In his response on April 10, Richard Byrne, Exxon's assistant chief attorney of environmental and safety law stated: \"Canadian producers report their production of Wabasca Heavy as bitumen.\" This contradicts statements by company officials that the substance spilled was simply \"heavy oil,\" not oil sands bitumen. However, the Material Safety Data Sheet for the product confirms that the Wabasca Heavy is bitumen mixed with hydrocarbon diluents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nEarly images from local media showed crude oil running along a suburban street and across lawns. The pipeline was shut after the leak was discovered on March 29. Twenty-two homes were evacuated. The oil flowed into storm drains leading to nearby Lake Conway, a fishing lake. First responders, including fire fighters, city employees, county road crews and police built dikes to block culverts and stop the crude from fouling the lake. ExxonMobil deployed 3,600 feet (1,100 m) of containment boom around the lake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nExxonMobil said that by early morning on March 30 there was no more oil spilling from the pipeline and trucks were there to assist with the cleanup. Residents of the homes evacuated were allowed to temporarily return to their homes escorted by police to retrieve personal items. ExxonMobil set up a claims hotline for affected residents. Officials from the EPA and the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) initiated an investigation of the spill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nThere have been varying estimates of how much crude spilled. Initially ExxonMobil did not state an exact amount. On March 30, the company reported that 4,500 barrels (190,000\u00a0US\u00a0gal; 720\u00a0m3) of oil and water mix had been recovered. The following day the company said 12,000 barrels (500,000\u00a0US\u00a0gal; 1,900\u00a0m3) of oil and water had been recovered. The company was unable to estimate how much of the total was oil and how much water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nOn April 10, UPI reported that around 5,000 barrels (210,000\u00a0US\u00a0gal; 790\u00a0m3) of oil were spilled but quoted Exxon as saying that the final volume would not be known until after the pipeline was repaired and refilled. Before determination of the penalties for the violations of federal and state environmental laws, the estimated amount was corrected to 3,190 barrels (134,000\u00a0US\u00a0gal; 507\u00a0m3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nOn April 1, 2013, the Federal Aviation Administration announced it was closing the airspace from the ground to 1,000 feet (300\u00a0m) over the disaster area; the restriction spanned a 5-mile (8.0\u00a0km) radius. The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported that the FAA's restriction stated \"only relief aircraft operations under direction of Tom Suhrhoff\" were permitted to enter the designated airspace. Surhrhoff was identified as an \"aviation advisor\" to ExxonMobil. On April 3 the FAA changed the restriction level to allow media access stating the media should not have been restricted from this type of incident, also claiming FAA was responsible for the error. The flight restrictions over Mayflower were cancelled on April 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nOn April 2, PHMSA issued a corrective action order to ExxonMobil Pipeline Co. preventing ExxonMobil from restarting operations on the affected segment of the pipeline until it is satisfied with repairs and all safety concerns have been addressed. According to the order: \"continued operation of the Pegasus Pipeline would be hazardous to life, property, and the environment.\" Arkansas' Attorney General Dustin McDaniel promised a state investigation into the cause and impact of the spill. In a letter to ExxonMobil McDaniel stated: \"There are many questions and concerns remaining as to the long-term impacts, environmental or otherwise, from this spill,\" He asked ExxonMobil to preserve records pending his investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nFor several days after the spill, local residents complained about the \"horrible smell\" of the diluted bitumen. Air quality monitoring has been conducted by the EPA and ExxonMobil and posted online by the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality. According to Fox 16 News, the air quality readings have been reviewed by the Arkansas Department of Health and are below levels that will cause health effects for the general population except in cleanup areas where emergency responders are working.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Response\nOn April 10, Attorney General McDaniel hired disaster management firm Witt O'Brien's to analyze the cleanup process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Effects\nMembers of the community have been engaged in gathering and spreading information about what happened due to the lack of media coverage about the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Effects, Water\nSince the spill on March 29, there have been conflicting reports as to whether the oil sands oil has reached Lake Conway. Official reports have indicated that there is no oil in Lake Conway, but an independent study claims to have samples showing oil in the water column. Scott Smith of Opflex, an oil clean-up company, states that official samples are of surface water only: \u201cExxon and the EPA are taking instantaneous water samples, grab samples from the surface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Effects, Water\nObviously if the contaminants in oil sands oil, and chemicals, are in the water column beneath the surface you\u2019re not going to get any of those molecules to test.\u201d Keith Stephens of Arkansas Game and Fish has countered these findings, pointing out that there have been no dead fish or other wildlife that would indicate that there is oil in the main body of the lake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Effects, Air quality\nWhile initial reports of air quality by the Arkansas Department of Health did not reveal levels that were of concern for health effects, monitoring by a citizens group has revealed significant readings of toxic chemicals. According to a representative of the Sierra Club: \"Total toxic hydrocarbons were detected at more than 88,000 parts per billion in the ambient air.\" Exxon reported detecting benzene and other harmful chemicals in early sampling at Mayflower but said air and water quality was within safe limits. However, the report, released by the Faulkner Citizens Advisory Group, said residents were still showing symptoms of exposure to harmful chemicals, including benzene and toluene, more than four weeks after the spill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Relationship to Keystone XL\nOne of the issues highlighted in national news coverage is the relationship to the Keystone XL Pipeline that has been proposed to carry oil from Canada's oil sands to refineries on the US Gulf Coast. An article in the National Geographic News states: \"Now, the broken conduit is at the center of a national debate\u2014the plan to transport much larger volumes of heavy oil from the Canadian oil sands through the United States, through both older pipelines like Pegasus and new ones like the proposed Keystone XL.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Relationship to Keystone XL\nA Reuters article quotes Representative Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat as saying: \"Whether it's the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, or ... (the) mess in Arkansas, Americans are realizing that transporting large amounts of this corrosive and polluting fuel is a bad deal for American taxpayers and for our environment.\" The article notes that a report from the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association, put together by oil and gas consultancy Penspen, argues that \"diluted bitumen is no more corrosive than other heavy crude.\" This latter claim has not been verified by independent peer-reviewed research and is the subject of a current study by the National Academy of Sciences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Investigative journalism\nOn July 22, 2013, InsideClimate News and the Arkansas Times announced that a crowdfunding initiative had amassed over $25,000 to fund two reporters to investigate the causes and consequences of the spill. Inside Climate News noted that ExxonMobil had not yet explained the cause of the 22-foot-long (7 m) gash in the pipeline, nor stated how much oil had been spilled. The oil company has maintained that the results of an inspection it conducted of the pipeline are not available to the public. The Inside Climate News article stated: \"That leaves two critical questions unanswered: Did Exxon manage and test its broken Pegasus pipeline according to established guidelines? And, if it did, is the Arkansas accident a warning that other pipelines might be at risk?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Investigative journalism\nThe two reporters chosen for this assignment are Elizabeth McGowan and Sam Elfing. McGowan was part of the InsideClimate News team that won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for its coverage of the 2010 Kalamazoo River oil spill. Eifling is an Arkansas native who has written for a variety of publications, including Slate and the Columbia Journalism Review.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Legal action\nResidents of Mayflower are seeking payment from ExxonMobil for the environmental damage caused by the spill. By initiating action, they've forced the state and federal governments to file a lawsuit against the company. According to Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel, the lawsuit came quickly\u2014within three months after the spill\u2014but he said that the governments were forced to act. Citizens may file suits in lieu of the government, if the government won't act. A threatened lawsuit from displaced residents forced the state and federal government to file suit, or lose the opportunity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Legal action\n\"We had 60 days to either resolve our claims or be masters of our own ship and, certainly, I think that the Department of Justice and the State Attorney General\u2019s office have a responsibility to litigate on behalf of the governments of the state and the federal government rather than abdicating that to private lawyers,\" McDaniel said. Commenting about ExxonMobil, McDaneil added: \"I think that they have done a really good job with response and cleanup, but then they break the law when they store the stuff that they removed from the site.\" The company had stored materials, including soil, water, concrete and wood chips, in large barrels at a company-owned site nearby. Arkansas officials had not granted permission to store hazardous material and have ordered the company to stop immediately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Legal action\nAccording to Fox 16 News, local residents banded together on April 5, 2013 and April 8, 2013 at a \"Mayflower Oil Spill Town Meeting hosted by Johnson & Vines Attorneys\" to discuss their legal rights. Since that time, in addition to the State action file by the Attorney General, a mass action has been filed by two law firms in Arkansas state court in Faulkner County, Arkansas: Johnson & Vines (member of the American Injury Attorney Group) and partnering firm, Hare, Wynn, Newell & Newton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Legal action\nIn 2015, ExxonMobil settled charges that it violated the federal Clean Water Act and state environmental laws, for $5.07\u00a0million, including $4.19\u00a0million in civil penalties. It did not admit liability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234665-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Mayflower oil spill, Findings\nSeveral problems with the pipe seam were identified as the cause of the failure. Hook cracks, extremely low impact toughness, and elongation properties were named for the pipe tested. The low-frequency electric resistance weld (ERW) pipe manufacturing process, used to make this pipe, has been known to have weaknesses with hook cracks and hardness issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234666-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Maysan governorate election\nThe Maysan governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234667-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game\nThe 2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game is an All-star basketball game that was played on April 3, 2013 at the United Center in Chicago, home of the Chicago Bulls. It is the 36th annual McDonald's All-American Game for high school boys. The game's rosters featured the best and most highly recruited blue chip boys high school basketball players graduating in 2013. Chicago, which became the first city to host the game in back-to-back years in 2012, will continue to host the game annually at least until 2015. The Kentucky Wildcats landed a record number of 5 selections at the time of the original selection and an additional later commitment. The West team won the game by a 110\u201399 margin and Aaron Gordon was MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234667-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, Rosters\nKentucky established a record in 2013 with five selections (Andrew Harrison, Aaron Harrison, James Young, Marcus Lee and Dakari Johnson) to the 24-man roster as well as a late addition, Julius Randle who have committed to one college program, while Duke (Jabari Parker and Matt Jones), North Carolina (Isaiah Hicks and Kennedy Meeks), Florida (Kasey Hill and Chris Walker) each had a pair of selections among their respective recruiting classes. Arizona (Aaron Gordon and Rondae Hollis-Jefferson) also ended up with two commits after Gordon announced at the 2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game media day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234667-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, Rosters\nLater, Kansas had two selections as well, but Andrew Wiggins did not sign with Kansas until May 2013 to join Wayne Selden Jr.. The previous record of four athletes in a single school's recruiting class had been shared by Michigan (1991, featuring four of the group soon to be known as the Fab Five), Duke (1999) and Kentucky (2011) The state of Texas produced five and the state of California produced four nominees. Parker is a native of the host city. The game includes a pair of twins in the Harrison brothers, which had recently happened in 2009 and 2006. Nine of the top ten recruits, according to ESPN.com's Class of 2013 ESPN 100 listing were selected, but Julius Randle, who missed most of the season with a foot fracture was not selected, originally. On March 6, Randle was added to the roster. He committed to Kentucky on March 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234667-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, Rosters, Awards\nOn March 18, Parker earned the Morgan Wootten Male Player of the Year (also known as the McDonald's player of the year). The award recognizes \"the McDonald's All-American who demonstrates outstanding character, exhibits leadership and exemplifies the values of being a student-athlete in the classroom and the community\". He won the award over five other finalists: Aaron Gordon, Aaron Harrison, Andrew Harrison, Dakari Johnson and Andrew Wiggins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234667-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, Rosters, Awards\nOn April 1, Demetrius Jackson won the boys skills contest, Nigel Williams-Goss won the three-point shooting contest and Chris Walker won the slam dunk competition at the Ratner Center. Aaron Gordon posted 24 points and 8 rebounds to earn the MVP of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234668-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's All-American Girls Game\nThe 2013 McDonald's All-American Girls Game is an All-star basketball game that was played on April 3, 2013 at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, home of the Chicago Bulls. The game's rosters featured the best and most highly recruited high school girls graduating in 2013. The game is the 12th annual version of the McDonald's All-American Game first played in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234668-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's All-American Girls Game, 2013 Game\nThe West team started strong, opening up an eleven-point lead early at 17\u20136. The game was roughly even from then until halftime, when the West led by ten points. Neither team shot well, with the East hitting just over 30% of their shots, and the West hitting 36%. However, the better shooting percentage and a rebounding edge by the West team, coupled with 21 turnovers by the East team, resulted in a large margin of victory by the West team, with a final score of 92\u201364. The West's Mercedes Russell had a double-double with 16 points and 12 rebounds, which helped her win the Award for Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234669-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's Burnie International\nThe 2013 McDonald's Burnie International was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit. It took place in Burnie, Australia, on 28 January \u2013 3 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234669-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's Burnie International, Men's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234669-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's Burnie International, Men's Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234669-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's Burnie International, Women's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 88], "content_span": [89, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234669-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's Burnie International, Women's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a Lucky Loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 88], "content_span": [89, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234670-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's Burnie International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJohn Peers and John-Patrick Smith were the defending champions but Peers decided not to participate. Smith played alongside Ruan Roelofse and defended the title by defeating Brydan Klein and Dane Propoggia 6\u20132, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234671-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 McDonald's Burnie International \u2013 Men's Singles\nDanai Udomchoke was the defending champion but decided not to participate. John Millman defeated St\u00e9phane Robert 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20130 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234672-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 McGrath Cup\nThe 2013 McGrath Cup was a Gaelic football competition played by the teams of Munster GAA. The competition differs from the Munster Senior Football Championship as it also features further education colleges and the winning team does not progress to another tournament at All-Ireland level. The competition was won by Kerry, defeating Tipperary in the final by seven points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234673-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 McNeese State Cowboys football team\nThe 2013 McNeese State Cowboys football team represented McNeese State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Cowboys were led by eighth-year head coach Matt Viator and played their home games at Cowboy Stadium. They were a member of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 10\u20133, 6\u20131 in Southland play to finish in second place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the second round to Jacksonville State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234673-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 McNeese State Cowboys football team, Media\nAll McNeese State games were broadcast on Gator 99.5 FM. KVHP 30.2 is the local affiliate for SLC TV and aired McNeese State games on SLC TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234673-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 McNeese State Cowboys football team, Game summaries, South Florida\nMcNeese State received $400,000 to play the upper division (FBS) USF Bulls to open the 2013 season for both programs. The Bulls prior record as an FBS team playing against FCS teams was 23\u20130; USF was a 20.5 point favorite before the game. The Cowboys spoiled Willie Taggart's debut as the Bulls' head coach, winning 53\u201321. The 32-point margin was the largest margin of victory by any FCS team over an FBS team since Division I was split into FBS and FCS in 1978.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election\nA by-election was held in the D\u00e1il \u00c9ireann Meath East constituency in Ireland on Wednesday, 27 March 2013 following the death of the Fine Gael Teachta D\u00e1la (TD) Shane McEntee on 21 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election\nThe Electoral (Amendment) Act 2011 stipulates that a by-election in Ireland must be held within six months of a vacancy occurring. The electorate of Meath East at the 2011 general election was 64,873.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election\nFine Gael candidate Helen McEntee, daughter of the deceased, was elected on the third count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election, Candidates\nOn 22 February 2013, both Fianna F\u00e1il and Sinn F\u00e9in selected their candidates for the by-election. Fianna F\u00e1il selected Senator Thomas Byrne, a former TD for the constituency. Sinn F\u00e9in selected Darren O'Rourke, a medical scientist who works as a health policy advisor to Caoimhgh\u00edn \u00d3 Caol\u00e1in TD. The Workers' Party of Ireland announced that Seamus McDonagh, a spokesperson for the local Campaign Against the Household and Water Taxes (CAHWT) campaign, would contest the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election, Candidates\nOn 5 March, the Green Party selected Se\u00e1n \u00d3 Buachalla as its candidate, a youth club development officer, while Direct Democracy Ireland announced that Ben Gilroy would be contesting the election. On 7 March, Fine Gael selected Helen McEntee, daughter of Shane McEntee, as its candidate. On 9 March, the Labour Party selected Meath County Councillor Eoin Holmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election, Candidates\nThere were four independent candidates: Charlie Keddy, Mick Martin, Gerard O'Brien and Jim Tallon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election, RT\u00c9 debate\nA RT\u00c9 Prime Time television debate held on 25 March featured candidates from the four main parties: Fine Gael, Labour Party, Fianna F\u00e1il and Sinn F\u00e9in. All other candidates were excluded, including the Green Party, DDI and Workers' Party candidates..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election, RT\u00c9 debate\nWorkers' Party candidate Seamus McDonagh said the Prime Time editor had no \"consistent criteria\" for this decision, and criticised the lack of an invitation to even sit in the audience despite having, he said, the support of several TDs. DDI's Ben Gilroy said RT\u00c9 \"just basically ignored us completely.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election, Result\nFine Gael candidate Helen McEntee finished first on the first count with 9,356 votes (38.5%), while Fianna F\u00e1il's Thomas Byrne came second with 8,002 votes (32.9%). McEntee was elected on the third count with 11,473 votes. The Labour Party candidate Eoin Holmes, got 4.6%, down from 21.0% that Labour received at the 2011 general election, and finished fifth behind new party Direct Democracy Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234674-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath East by-election, Result\nIt is the first time since 1975 that Fine Gael have won a by-election while in government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nThe 2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship is the 87th 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-00234675-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nThe draw for the group stages of the championship were made on 11 February 2013 with the games commencing on the weekend of 12 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nRatoath returned to the middle grade for the first time since 2007 after securing the J.F.C. crown last year, their fourth period as an Intermediate side. Donaghmore/Ashbourne's second string joined them after finishing as J.F.C. runners-up last year. This was the first time that the Ashbourne club had a second team in the Intermediate grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nNo team was relegated from the Senior grade to the Intermediate grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nOn 13 October 2013, Gaeil Colmcille claimed their 2nd Intermediate championship title when they defeated Clann na nGael 0-18 to 0-5, succeeding Na Fianna as Intermediate champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2012 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Participating teams\nThe teams taking part in the 2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Group stage\nThere are 3 groups called Group A,B and C. The top team in Group A qualifies for a Semi-Final. The 2nd and 3rd teams in Group A along with the two top finishers in Group B and C will qualify for the Quarter-Finals stage of the tournament. The draw for the group stages of the championship were made on 11 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234675-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Finals\nThe top team in Group A qualifies for a Semi-Final. The 2nd and 3rd teams in Group A along with the two top finishers in Group B and C will qualify for the Quarter-Finals stage of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Meath Senior Football Championship is the 121st edition of the Meath GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded teams in County Meath, Ireland, and also the 60th anniversary of the first use of the Keegan Cup, won by Navan O'Mahonys first in 1954. The tournament consists of 18 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, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship\nNavan O'Mahonys were the defending champions after they defeated Wolfe Tones in the previous years final, but were knocked out by Summerhill at the quarter-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship\nThis was Na Fianna's first year ever in the senior grade after claiming the 2012 Meath Intermediate Football Championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship\nNobber were relegated after 3 years as a senior club. Nobber appealed to the Leinster Council after their match with Oldcastle on the basis that the Meath County Board chose them to play Dunshaughlin first after Nobber drew with Oldcastle, even though the loser of the game was meant to play Dunshaughlin next. When Dunshaughlin defeated Nobber, this left Dunshaughlin safe from relegation with nothing to play for against Oldcastle and hence, were defeated. On 30 September, the Leinster Council rejected Nobber's appeal and they lost their senior status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship\nOn 20 October 2013, Summerhill GFC claimed their 7th Senior Championship title, when defeating Na Fianna 1-13 to 1-10 in Pairc Tailteann, Navan. The match was broadcast live on Irish television station TG4. Brian Ennis raised the Keegan Cup for Summerhill while Conor Gillespie claimed the 'Man of the Match' award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship\nThe draw for the group stages of the championship were made on 11 February 2013 with the games commencing on the weekend of 12 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship, Team Changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2012 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship, Participating Teams\nThe teams taking part in the 2013 Meath Senior Football Championship are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship, Group stage\nThere are 3 groups called Group A,B and C. The 2 top finishers in each group and the third-place finisher in Group A will qualify for the Quarter Finals. The third placed teams in Group B and C will qualify for a Preliminary Quarter Final, with the winner earning a place in last eight. The bottom finishers of each group will qualify for the Relegation Play Off. The draw for the group stages of the championship were made on 11 February 2013 with the games commencing on the weekend of 12 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship, Knock-out Stages, Relegation Play Off\nThe three bottom finishers from each group qualify for the relegation play off and play each other in a round robin basis. The team with the worst record after two matches will be relegated to the 2014 Intermediate Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234676-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Meath Senior Football Championship, Knock-out Stages, Finals\nThe winners and runners up of each group qualify for the quarter finals along with the third-placed finisher of Group A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234677-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Medicine Hat Charity Classic\nThe 2013 Medicine Hat Charity Classic was held from October 18 to 21 at the Medicine Hat Curling Club in Medicine Hat, Alberta as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. Both the men's and women's events were held in a triple-knockout format. The purse for the men's event was CAD$34,000, of which the winner received CAD$10,000, while the purse for the women's event was CAD$30,000, of which the winner received CAD$8,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234677-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Medicine Hat Charity Classic\nIt was an all-Saskatchewan final on the men's side with two teams from Regina against each other, with Randy Bryden defeating Scott Bitz. On the women's side, it was an international affair with Russia's Anna Sidorova defeating Japan's Sayaka Yoshimura.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games\nThe 2013 Mediterranean Games (Turkish: 2013 Akdeniz Oyunlar\u0131), officially known as the XVII Mediterranean Games (Turkish: XVII Akdeniz Oyunlar\u0131) and commonly known as Mersin 2013, was an international multi-sport event held from 20 to 30 June 2013 in Mersin, Turkey. Mersin was announced as the host city at the General Assembly of the International Committee of Mediterranean Games (CIJM) on 23 February 2011. Mersin is the second city in Turkey after \u0130zmir to host the Mediterranean Games. All 24 member National Olympic Committees (NOCs) of the ICMG participated in the Games. The official programme for the Games is featuring events in 27 different sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Background\nThe Mediterranean Games is a multi-sport event, much like the Summer Olympics (albeit on a much smaller scale), with participation exclusively from countries around the Mediterranean Sea where Europe, Africa and Asia meet. The Games started in 1951 and are held every four years. The idea of holding the Mediterranean Games originated with Muhammed Taher Pasha, who was the chairman of the Egyptian Olympic Committee and the vice-president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), at a meeting during the 1948 London Olympics. The Games \"were designed specifically to bring together the Muslim and European countries surrounding the Mediterranean basin\" to promote understanding through sporting competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Background\nThe first edition of the Mediterranean Games was held in the Egyptian city of Alexandria in 1951 and attracted 734 competitors from 10 nations. Initially the female athletes were not allowed to compete. Beginning by the fifth (1976) game in Tunis female athletes were also allowed. Turkey hosted the Games for the first time in 1971 in Izmir\u2014the sixth edition of the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Bidding process, Host city selection\nCities from three countries submitted their bids to host the 2013 Mediterranean Games. Two Greek cities, Volos and Larisa, made a combined bid. This was the fourth attempt by the Croatian city of Rijeka to host the Mediterranean Games. Rijeka had lost its bids in 1995 for the 1997 games, in 1999 for the 2001 games and in 2003 for the 2009 Mediterranean Games. The voting for the selection of the host of the 2013 Games was held in Pescara, Italy, host of the 2009 Mediterranean Games, on 27 October 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Bidding process, Host city selection\nThe election was conducted by the Mediterranean Games Bid Committee. At the end of the first round of voting, only Volos-Larisa and Rijeka remained; Mersin was eliminated after having received only thirteen votes. In the first round, Volos-Larisa and Rijeka received 31 and 24 votes, respectively. In the second round, the Greek bid of Volos-Larisa received enough votes to be elected as the host. The final round was comparatively more competitive, which was demonstrated by a three-vote difference between the final two bids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Bidding process, Host city selection\nGreece was stripped of the hosting rights on 28 January 2011 because of its financial crisis. The ICMG cited Greece's inability to conform the organisational requirements as a reason for this action. Culture and Tourism Minister of Greece Pavlos Geroulanos said that the initially proposed budget \"would have wasted money on a big, spendthrift party, [and that] [t]here are much better things [they] could spend that money on in the current situation\". ICMG conducted an on-line poll on 23 February 2011 to decide the new host. Three cities\u2014Tarragona, Tripoli and Mersin\u2014offered to host the 2013 Mediterranean Games. Citizens of the 21 member nations of the ICMG cast their votes to select the host. Mersin was selected after it received more than half of the total votes, and on 4 March 2011, ICMG president Amar Addad officially handed over the hosting rights of the 2013 Games to Mersin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Development and preparation, Organisation\nThe organising committee of the 2013 Mediterranean Games consists of eight members: president of the committee is Minister of Youth and Sports Suat K\u0131l\u0131\u00e7, Hakan Hakyemez, Governor of Mersin Hasan Basri G\u00fczelo\u011flu, Mehmet Baykan, Mersin Metropolitan Municipality Mayor Macit \u00d6zcan, rector of the Mersin University K. Aydin S\u00fcha, Hasan Albayrak and president of the Turkish Olympic Committee U\u011fur Erdener. It is in charge of \"organising and controlling the essential preparations\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Development and preparation, Costs\nAfter the success of the bid in February 2011, the Ministry of Youth and Sports spent \u20ba 215 million on building the venues and infrastructure up to 31 December 2012. The Ministry has allocated a budget of \u20ba 400 million to cover building the venues and infrastructure for the Games; at least \u20ba 100 million would be spent on the development of the Games village and the main stadium, and \u20ba 200 million is assigned for other venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Development and preparation, Logo and mascot\nThe official logo of this edition of the Mediterranean Games features a loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) getting out of sea, with water underneath it. An orange is shown above its back, which represents the dry summer subtropical climate of Mediterranean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Development and preparation, Logo and mascot\nKaretta is the official mascot of the Mersin Games. The organisers of the 2013 Games have taken steps to promote the Games through its mascot. It was used in various events like the 34th Istanbul Marathon, Third Citrus Festival and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Development and preparation, Venues\nThe main stadium of the 2013 Mediterranean Games is Mersin Olympic Stadium in Yeni\u015fehir district of Mersin. The stadium will host both the opening and closing ceremonies. A total of 38 venues will be used to host the events during the Games, 13 of them for training purposes only. The events will take place in several venues at different districts of Mersin and neighboring city of Adana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, The Games, Sports\nThere are significant changes in the programme for the Mersin Games in comparison to that of the 2009 Mediterranean Games held in Pescara. Three new sports, archery, badminton and taekwondo, are the special additions. The programme for the Games will feature a total of 27 different sports. Two disabled sports\u2014athletics and swimming\u2014will also be contested by the athletes with physical disabilities. Even though it was planned, equestrian competitions will not be held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234678-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games, Participating nations\nAll 24 member countries of the ICMG participated in the Games. This would be the highest number of nations in any edition of the Mediterranean Games. The Republic of Macedonia made its d\u00e9but in the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234679-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mediterranean Games medal table\nThe 2013 Mediterranean Games medal table is a list of National Olympic Committees (NOCs) ranked by the number of medals won by their athletes during the 2013 Mediterranean Games, held in Mersin, Turkey, from 20 to 30 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234680-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election\nThe Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election of 2013 was held on 23 February 2013 to elect the Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) from each of the 60 Assembly Constituencies (ACs) in the state of Meghalaya in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234680-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election, Background\nThe 8th Meghalaya Legislative Assembly was formed after Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election in 2008 and this assembly is to expire on 10 March 2013. Hence the new election to the 9th Meghalaya Legislative Assembly is announced by the Election Commission of India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234680-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election, Background\nAfter the scrutiny of the nomination by the candidates, 345 candidates were able to contest in polls in which 320 men and 25 women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234681-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Meistriliiga\nThe 2013 Meistriliiga (also known as A. Le Coq Premium Liiga for sponsorship reasons) was the 23rd season of the Meistriliiga, the first level in the Estonian football system. The season began on 2 March 2013 and ended on 9 November 2013. N\u00f5mme Kalju, the defending champions, finished runners-up behind Levadia, who won their 8th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234681-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Meistriliiga, Teams\n2012 Esiliiga champions Infonet, who lost out to Kuressaare in the promotion/relegation play-off as Esiliiga Runners-up in 2011, were promoted to this season's Meistriliiga making their first appearance in the top division. Esiliiga runners-up Tarvas lost out on promotion as Meistriliiga's 9th placed club Tallinna Kalev defeated them 3\u20131 on aggregate in the Promotion/relegation play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234681-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Meistriliiga, Teams\nTammeka finished at the bottom of the 2012 season but escaped relegation due to dissolving of seventh place Viljandi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234681-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Meistriliiga, Teams, Personnel and kits\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, 17], "section_span": [19, 44], "content_span": [45, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234681-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Meistriliiga, League table, Relegation play-offs\nTammeka as 9th-placed team faced 2013 Esiliiga side Rakvere Tarvas in a two-legged play-off for the spot in next year's competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234681-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Meistriliiga, Results\nEach team plays every opponent four times, twice at home and twice away, for a total of 36 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234682-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Challenger\nThe 2013 Melbourne Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard court. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Melbourne, Australia between 21 and 27 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234682-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Challenger, 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-00234683-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nAustralian pairing of Thanasi Kokkinakis and Benjamin Mitchell defeated compatriots Alex Bolt and Andrew Whittington, 6\u20133, 6\u20132, to be the inaugural champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234684-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Challenger \u2013 Singles\nThis is the first edition of the event and was won by Australian Matthew Ebden defeating Tatsuma Ito in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234685-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Cup\nThe 2013 Emirates Melbourne Cup was the 153rd running of the Melbourne Cup, Australia's most prestigious Thoroughbred horse race. The race, held on 5 November 2013, at Flemington Racecourse in Melbourne, Victoria, was won by Fiorente. The horse, owned by Andrew Roberts and Barry Pang, was bred in Ireland, trained in Australia by Gai Waterhouse, and ridden by jockey Damien Oliver. It was Oliver's third victory in the event, after previous wins in 1995 and 2002, and his first start after a ten-month ban for a betting offence. Waterhouse, the daughter of Tommy J. Smith, who trained winners in 1955 and 1981, became the first Australian woman to train a winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234685-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Cup\nThe race was attended by 104,169 people\u2014the Victoria Racing Club (VRC) had capped attendance at 110,000 for the Melbourne Cup and the Victoria Derby, but this mark was not reached at either race. Approximately A$90.6 million was wagered on the race through Totalisator Agency Boards in Victoria and New South Wales, with another $37.5 million wagered through equivalent agencies in Queensland, South Australia, and Tasmania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234685-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Cup, Field\nThe field for the 2013 Melbourne Cup consisted of 24 horses, with the barrier draw conducted three days prior to the race, on the day of the running of the Victoria Derby. Pre -race favourite Fiorente won the race by three-quarters of a length over Red Cadeaux who finished 1+1\u20442 lengths ahead of Mount Athos. He was the first favourite to win the race since Makybe Diva in 2005, and the first horse since Empire Rose in 1988 to win the race after placing second the previous year. Tres Blue and Dunaden, the winner of the 2011 race, both received banned medical treatment on the day of the race, but were both allowed to start, although a stewards' enquiry is planned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234685-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Cup, Fatalities\nAfter the race, the mare Verema was euthanised, having broken her cannon bone midway through the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season\nThe 2013 Melbourne Football Club season was the club's 114th year in the VFL/AFL since it began in 1897.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season\nMark Neeld entered into his second year as senior coach of Melbourne. After a horrid season in 2012, Neeld made a vast amount of list changes in the 2012 AFL Draft. These changes included the addition of experienced and key position players from other clubs such as Shannon Byrnes, Tom Gillies, Chris Dawes, David Rodan and Cameron Pedersen. Melbourne also added five new players from the National Draft, two new players from the Rookie Draft as well as one new player from the Greater Western Sydney Mini-Draft who will play in 2014. Jack Grimes and Jack Trengove continued their roles as co-captains of the football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season\nWith no Friday night games and only three home games against fellow Victorian sides at the MCG, Melbourne faced a financially challenging fixture. At the same time Melbourne received a simple fixture when compared to other teams by playing fellow-cellar dwellers in 2012 Greater Western Sydney, Gold Coast and Western Bulldogs twice and all 2012 finalists with the exception of Fremantle once. Melbourne hosted nine home games at the MCG, a sold home game against Brisbane Lions at TIO Stadium in Round 17 and a home game against North Melbourne at Etihad Stadium in Round 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season\nMelbourne endured one of their worst seasons in the club's 155-year history and arguably their worst in the modern era. They finished with only 2 wins (their least since the 1981 season) and a percentage of 54.07% (their worst since the 1919 season). It was also the worst seasonal performance from an established club since the demise of Fitzroy in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Overview\nThe 2013 season for Melbourne turned out to be disastrous to such an extraordinary magnitude that they required a complete refurbishment of their board and football department. Melbourne began the season as marginal favourites at home against fellow cellar dwellers Port Adelaide. However they displayed such visible problems with their ball use, work rate and turnover rate in the midfield that they were eventually shut out of the game and hammered by 79 points. After a week of media scrutiny over their Round 1 performance, Melbourne was expected to put in place a more spirited performance against Essendon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Overview\nFor the opening proportion of that game, they appeared to have lifted their intensity. However, after Essendon scored consecutive goals, Melbourne's problems from Round 1 occurred again and they were eventually slaughtered by 148 points. This was their greatest losing margin at the MCG in their entire VFL/AFL history. Fan backlash resulted from this enormous loss and the next week on 9 April, Melbourne made the decision to sack their CEO Cameron Schwab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Overview\nAfter a week of team bonding in Sorrento, Melbourne appeared to have turned around their form in Round 3 against West Coast, only trailing by 10 points at half time. However, by the time West Coast kicked consecutive goals in the second half, Melbourne would again shut down and eventually get hammered by 94 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Overview\nWith an average losing margin of 108 points in the first 3 rounds, Melbourne headed into their Round 4 clash against recent expansion team Greater Western Sydney at the MCG, in what was a must win game for Mark Neeld so that he may have maintained his coaching role. In a game of sub-standard football from both sides, Melbourne looked to be set to lose at 3 quarter time trailing by 19 points however managed to blow the game away with their highest ever quarter score in VFL/AFL history of 12 goals and 2 behinds to win by 41 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Overview\nIn subsequent rounds Melbourne's form didn't show any improvement from Round 4 however as the pressure for Mark Neeld to keep his job oscillated out of control. They got thrashed by 60+ points against Carlton in Round 6, Gold Coast in Round 7, Fremantle in Round 9, Hawthorn in Round 10 and Collingwood in Round 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Overview\nDuring Melbourne's bye, 2 major personnel changes would occur to the club. On 13 June, Melbourne president Don McLardy resigned and was replaced by vice-president Peter Spargo as an interim-president. 3 days later after weeks of pressure Mark Neeld was finally sacked from his senior coaching position and replaced by former Adelaide senior coach Neil Craig. Craig's first game coaching Melbourne was against fellow cellar dwellers St Kilda. Despite Melbourne controlling more possession of the ball with more inside 50s, they still lost by 35 points due to their lack of forward pressure. Melbourne however finally broke through for only their second win of the season against Western Bulldogs by 3 points. This came after Melbourne nearly conceded a 44-point lead midway through the final quarter by allowing the Western Bulldogs to kick the last 7 goals of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 950]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Overview\nAfter a gutsy performance against the 2012 premiers Sydney where Melbourne went down by 31 points, they would finish their miserable season by falling back into the shut-down habits they experienced at the start of the season. This included a 68-point loss to Geelong in Round 16, a 122-point loss to North Melbourne in Round 18, a 37-point loss to bottom of the ladder Greater Western Sydney in Round 19, a 95-point loss to Fremantle in Round 21 and a 68-point loss to Adelaide in Round 22. Melbourne would finish the season with a woeful 2 wins and 54.07%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 1\nDebut(s): Jimmy Toumpas, Jack Viney, Matt JonesDebut(s) for MFC: Shannon Byrnes (Geelong) , Tom Gillies (Geelong) , Cameron Pedersen (North Melbourne) , David Rodan (Richmond/Port Adelaide) Milestone(s): Lynden Dunn (100th AFL game) , Jack Viney (1st AFL goal) Brownlow Votes: Brad Ebert (Port Adelaide) 3 votes, Hamish Hartlett (Port Adelaide) 2 votes, Kane Cornes (Port Adelaide) 1 voteRecord: 0 Wins, 1 Loss, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 18th Substitutes: Sam Blease Mitch Clark", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 2\nDebut(s): Dean TerlichBrownlow Votes: Dyson Heppell (Essendon) 3 votes, Jobe Watson (Essendon) 2 votes, Brent Stanton (Essendon) 1 vote Record: 0 Wins, 2 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 18th Substitutes: David Rodan Jack Watts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 3\nMilestone(s): Michael Evans (1st AFL goal)Brownlow Votes: Chris Masten (West Coast) 3 votes, Matt Priddis (West Coast) 2 votes, Josh Kennedy (West Coast) 1 voteRecord: 0 Wins, 3 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 18th Substitutes: Jimmy Toumpas Aaron Davey", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 4\nBrownlow Votes: Nathan Jones 3 votes (Melbourne), Shannon Byrnes 2 votes (Melbourne), Tom Scully 1 vote (Greater Western Sydney) Record: 1 Win, 3 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Aaron Davey Jack Viney", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 5\nBrownlow Votes: Matthew Leuenberger 3 votes (Brisbane Lions), Dayne Zorko 2 votes (Brisbane Lions), Brent Moloney 1 vote (Brisbane Lions) Record: 1 Win, 4 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Aaron Davey Sam Blease", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 6\nDebut(s): Dean KentMilestone(s): Dean Kent (1st AFL goal), M. Jones (1st AFL goal) Brownlow Votes: Marc Murphy 3 votes (Carlton), Kade Simpson 2 votes (Carlton), Jarrad Waite 1 vote (Carlton) Record: 1 Win, 5 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Dean Kent Jack Grimes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 7\nDebut(s) for MFC: Chris Dawes Collingwood Milestone(s): James Strauss (1st AFL goal)Brownlow Votes: Gary Ablett 3 votes (Gold Coast), Dion Prestia 2 votes (Gold Coast), Harley Bennell 1 vote (Gold Coast) Record: 1 Win, 6 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Aaron Davey Dean Kent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 8\nBrownlow Votes: Brandon Ellis 3 votes (Richmond), Aaron Davey 2 votes (Melbourne), Nick Vlastuin 1 vote (Richmond) Record: 1 Win, 7 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Rohan Bail Jimmy Toumpas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 9\nBrownlow Votes: David Mundy 3 votes (Fremantle), Garrick Ibbotson 2 votes (Fremantle), Nathan Fyfe 1 vote (Fremantle) Record: 1 Win, 8 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Rohan Bail Neville Jetta", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 10\nBrownlow Votes: Brad Sewell 3 votes (Hawthorn), Luke Breust 2 votes (Hawthorn), Jordan Lewis 1 vote (Hawthorn) Record: 1 Win, 9 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Luke Tapscott Matt Jones", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 11\nBrownlow Votes: Dane Swan 3 votes (Collingwood), Scott Pendlebury 2 votes (Collingwood), Josh Thomas 1 vote (Collingwood) Record: 1 Win, 10 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Luke Tapscott Chris Dawes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 13\nDebut(s): Mitch ClisbyBrownlow Votes: Leigh Montagna 3 votes (St Kilda), Nathan Jones 2 votes (Melbourne), Jack Steven 1 vote (St Kilda) Record: 1 Win, 11 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Daniel Nicholson Chris Dawes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 14\nBrownlow Votes: Jack Watts 3 votes (Melbourne), Ryan Griffen 2 votes (Western Bulldogs), Tom Liberatore 1 vote (Western Bulldogs) Record: 2 Wins, 11 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Shannon Byrnes Sam Blease", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 15\nBrownlow Votes: Kieren Jack 3 votes (Sydney), Jarrad McVeigh 2 votes (Sydney), Dean Terlich 1 vote (Melbourne) Record: 2 Wins, 12 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Shannon Byrnes James Frawley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 16\nMilestone(s): Nathan Jones (150th AFL game), Colin Sylvia (150th AFL game), Jeremy Howe (50th AFL game) Brownlow Votes: Steve Johnson 3 votes (Geelong), Joel Selwood 2 votes (Geelong), Nathan Jones 1 vote (Melbourne) Record: 2 Wins, 13 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Jack Fitzpatrick Sam Blease", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 17\nBrownlow Votes: Tom Rockliff 3 votes (Brisbane Lions), Pearce Hanley 2 votes (Brisbane Lions), Jack Redden 1 vote (Brisbane Lions) Record: 2 Wins, 14 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Jimmy Toumpas Dean Kent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 18\nBrownlow Votes: Ben Cunnington 3 votes (North Melbourne), Todd Goldstein 2 votes (North Melbourne), Brent Harvey 1 vote (North Melbourne) Record: 2 Wins, 15 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Dean Kent Aaron Davey", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 19\nMilestone(s): Mitch Clisby (1st AFL goal)Brownlow Votes: Callan Ward 3 votes (Greater Western Sydney), Tom Scully 2 votes (Greater Western Sydney), Lachie Whitfield 1 vote (Greater Western Sydney) Record: 2 Wins, 16 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Aaron Davey Max Gawn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 20\nDebut(s): Troy Davis Brownlow Votes: Harley Bennell 3 votes (Gold Coast), Jack Viney 2 votes (Melbourne), David Swallow 1 vote (Gold Coast) Record: 2 Wins, 17 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Aaron Davey Daniel Nicholson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 21\nMilestone(s): Troy Davis (1st AFL goal), Jack Viney (Rising Star round nominee)Brownlow Votes: David Mundy 3 votes (Fremantle), Danyle Pearce 2 votes (Fremantle), Zac Clarke 1 vote (Fremantle) Record: 2 Wins, 18 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Aaron Davey Sam Blease", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 22\nBrownlow Votes: Scott Thompson 3 votes (Adelaide), Lewis Johnston 2 votes (Adelaide), Brad Crouch 1 vote (Adelaide) Record: 2 Wins, 19 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Aaron Davey David Rodan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, 2013 season, Home and away season, Round 23\nBrownlow Votes: Matthew Boyd 3 votes (Western Bulldogs), Adam Cooney 2 votes (Western Bulldogs), Tom Liberatore 1 vote (Western Bulldogs) Record: 2 Wins, 20 Losses, 0 DrawsLadder Position: 17th Substitutes: Luke Tapscott Max Gawn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\n2013 was Melbourne's worst season in a horrible string of seasons dating back to 2007. As a result, many Melbourne personnel who were part of the Jim Stynes-led board or football department originating back to 2008 either resigned or were dismissed from their positions. Because many personnel were in the midst of their contracts, they required large pay-outs which Melbourne couldn't financially cope with.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 19 February 2013, Melbourne were found not guilty from their tanking scandal originating from 2009. However, they received a $500,000 fine as the employers of the General Manager of Football Operations Chris Connolly and former Melbourne senior coach Dean Bailey, both of whom were found guilty in the investigation. Chris Connolly, who was still working at the Melbourne Football Club at the time the suspension was handed out received a 12-month suspension which prevented him from being involved at any club until 1 February 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 10 April 2013, four days after Melbourne's 148-point loss against Essendon, Cameron Schwab was asked to leave from his position as CEO after he originally had his contract renewed for a three-year term from 27 August by Don McLardy. Cameron Schwab accepted, and received an approximate $250,000 payout. Peter Spargo then took over as interim CEO before former Essendon CEO Peter Jackson took over the role on an interim basis for six months from 1 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 31 May 2013, Chris Connolly was given a two-year contract extension despite being in the process of serving his suspension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 3 June 2013, after a marathon scheduled board meeting in which Mark Neeld was speculated to be sacked from his role as Melbourne senior coach, Peter Jackson announced his findings from his first month as operating CEO of the club. He then proceeded to announce his recommendations to the club and agree to a contract extension until the end of 2014 to help carry out those recommendations. Neeld survived this board meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 6 June 2013, former Victorian Premier and former Hawthorn President Jeff Kennett claimed that he had been approached by the Melbourne Football Club board to take over as Melbourne President and encouraged on supporters to call and extraordinary general meeting to oust Don McLardy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 14 June 2013, Peter Jackson and Don McLardy made a plea to the AFL to receive emergency funding in order to reshape the entire board and football department on the condition that they provided a detailed plan that would be strictly carried through. This included the removal of several key personnel, the prevention of Jeff Kennett's campaign as Melbourne president from becoming successful and the prevention of Stephen Dank's alleged text message to Melbourne's Football Department as part of Essendon's drug scandal from having any immediate impact on the funds received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nAlso on 14 June 2013, Don McLardy announced his resignation as Melbourne Football Club president as well as the president of the Reach Foundation. Peter Spargo took over the role as Melbourne's interim president. In addition, Stuart Grimshaw resigned from his role on Melbourne's board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 17 June 2013, Peter Jackson announced the immediate termination of Mark Neeld's role as Melbourne senior coach only eighteen months into his three-year contract. He received a payout of around $600,000. Former Adelaide senior coach Neil Craig would take over as Melbourne's interim senior coach for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 25 June 2013, Melbourne's list manager Tim Harrington would have his contract terminated as Peter Jackson also advertised the new role of General Manager of Football Operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 26 June 2013, Melbourne's vice-president Guy Jalland announced his resignation from the board. 3 days later on 29 June 2013, Karen Hayes also announced her resignation from the board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 11 July 2013, Peter Jackson announced his intention to snare former Sydney Swans and 2005 premiership coach Paul Roos to become the new senior coach of the Melbourne Football Club from 2014 onwards. Paul Roos however claimed that he had not warmed up to the idea for a return to senior-coaching.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 12 July 2013, former West Coast player and Bernie Naylor Medallist Glen Bartlett joined the Board of the Melbourne Football Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 17 July 2013, the AFL finally gave a $2,500,000 bail out package for Melbourne to use for their proposed emergency funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 16 August 2013, Glen Bartlett was appointed as the new president of the Melbourne Football Club defeating a bid made by former Victorian Treasurer Alan Stockdale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 6 September 2013, Paul Roos was announced as the new senior-coach of the Melbourne Football Club. He signed a $2,000,000 deal for two years with the option of a third year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 9 September 2013, Neil Craig announced his intentions to leave the club as he had no new place on Paul Roos' new football department. He was not offered a new contract along with forward-line coach Leigh Brown and midfield coach Brian Royal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 2 October 2013, former CEO of VicSport Kate Raffey joined the board as well as former Melbourne footballer Jeremy Nichols on 1 November 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nOn 10 October 2013, Chris Connolly had his contract terminated despite signing a two-year extension earlier in the year in order decrease the overall cost of Melbourne's management structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Football Department and Board Restructure\nMelbourne's horrendous season of poor on-field form, tanking investigations, contract terminations, payouts and complete football department/board restructuring meant that they recorded a net loss of $1,700,000. This included a statutory loss of $3,100,000 with the AFL's bail out funding for 2013 of $1,450,000 not being taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Awards, Brownlow Medal tally\nThe 16 votes Melbourne collected in 2013 is the lowest ever by any team in a season under the 3-2-1 voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Awards, Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal tally (top 10)\nSid Anderson Memorial Trophy (Second in the Best and Fairest) \u2013 Colin Garland", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Awards, Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal tally (top 10)\nRon Barassi Snr Memorial Trophy (Third in the Best and Fairest) \u2013 Dean Terlich", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Awards, Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal tally (top 10)\nIvor Warne-Smith Memorial Trophy (Fourth in the Best and Fairest) \u2013 Matt Jones", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Awards, Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal tally (top 10)\nDick Taylor Memorial Trophy (Fifth in the Best and Fairest) \u2013 Colin Sylvia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Awards, Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal tally (top 10)\nHarold Ball Memorial Trophy (Best Young Player) \u2013 Jack Viney", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234686-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Football Club season, Awards, Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal tally (top 10)\nTroy Broadbridge Trophy (highest polling MFC player in the Casey Best and Fairest) \u2013 Jesse Hogan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234687-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Storm season\nThe 2013 Melbourne Storm season was the 16th in the club's history. They competed in the 2013 NRL season. They were coached by Craig Bellamy and captained by Cameron Smith. They had previously won the NRL's 2012 Telstra Premiership therefore started the season as reigning premiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234687-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Storm season\nSeven straight wins to start the season extended the club's winning streak to 15 games dating back to the previous campaign. The Origin period proved difficult to negotiate however with team unable to come up with some crucial wins at the business end of the season, eventually finishing in third place. Two finals losses to the Rabbitohs and Knights prematurely ended the season, as Storm did not make the Preliminary final stage for just the second time in eight years. The Storm attack was the shining light of the season, producing 98 tries to be ranked second in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234687-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Storm season\nThe team also had the best home record of any side in the NRL, losing just the one game at AAMI Park during the season. Cooper Cronk was rewarded for several seasons of brilliance, claiming his first Dally Medal Play of the Year honour. Off the field Storm experienced a change at the helm with Mark Evans replacing Ron Gauci as CEO midway through the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234687-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Storm season, Jersey\nIn 2013 the Storm jerseys were again made by Kooga. They created a New Jersey for 2013 which featured more navy blue and a more prominent and deeper V that integrated the sponsor's (Crown Casino) logo into the design better, the lightning bolts are also now purple for the first time. Colours yellow and white were removed and reduced respectively so that the jersey is essentially half navy blue and half purple. The away jersey is a white version of the home jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234687-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Storm season, Statistics\nStatistics Source: Table current as at the end of 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234687-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Storm season, Representative honours\nThe following players have played a representative match in 2013. (C) = Captain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234687-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Melbourne Storm season, Awards, Dally M Awards Night\nThe NRL Dally M Awards were held on 1 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234688-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial Cup\nThe 2013 Memorial Cup was a four-team, round-robin format ice hockey tournament played from May 17\u201326, 2013. It was the 95th Memorial Cup championship and determined the champion of the Canadian Hockey League (CHL). The tournament featured the London Knights, champions of the Ontario Hockey League, the Halifax Mooseheads, champions of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, the Portland Winterhawks, champions of the Western Hockey League, and the Saskatoon Blades, who won the right to host the tournament over bids by the Kelowna Rockets and the Red Deer Rebels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234688-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Memorial Cup\nThis was the first Memorial Cup to be held in Saskatoon since the Blades hosted it in 1989. The Halifax Mooseheads won the Memorial Cup for the first time in franchise history, beating the Portland Winterhawks 6\u20134 in the final. The Halifax Mooseheads joined the Saint John Sea Dogs in 2011, and the Shawinigan Cataractes in 2012, as the third straight team from the QMJHL to capture the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234688-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial Cup, Round-robin standings\nIndicates team won the tie-breaker to advance to the semi-finals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234688-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial Cup, Round-robin standings\nFor the second time since the current tournament format was established in 1983, the teams each split their first two games. At the conclusion of the round-robin, the tiebreaker between the first and second team as well as between the third and fourth placed team were decided by head-to-head records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234688-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial Cup, Statistical leaders, Skaters\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234688-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial Cup, Statistical leaders, Goaltending\nThis is a combined table of the top goaltenders based on goals against average and save percentage with at least sixty minutes played. The table is sorted by GAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234688-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial Cup, Statistical leaders, Goaltending\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 (minutes:seconds)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234689-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial of Hubert Jerzy Wagner\nThe XI Memorial of Hubert Jerzy Wagner was held at Orlen Arena in P\u0142ock, Poland from 6 to 8 September 2013. Like the previous edition, 4 teams participated in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234689-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Memorial of Hubert Jerzy Wagner, Qualification\nAll teams except the host must receive an invitation from the organizers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234690-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Memphis Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Memphis Tigers football team represented the University of Memphis in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tigers were led by second year head coach Justin Fuente and played their home games at the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee. The Tigers competed as a member of the American Athletic Conference. They finished the season 3\u20139, 1\u20137 in American Athletic play to finish in a tie for ninth place. Tom Hornsey won the Ray Guy Award, which honors college football's best punter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234691-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's African Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Men's African Volleyball Championship was the 19th edition of the Men's African Volleyball Championship, organised by Africa's governing volleyball body, the CAVB. It was held in Sousse, Tunisia from September 22 to 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234691-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's African Volleyball Championship, Format\nThe competition system of the 2013 Men's African Championship is the single Round-Robin system. Each team plays once against each of the 5 remaining teams. Points are accumulated during the whole tournament, and the final ranking is determined by the total points gained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234692-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Asian Champions Trophy\nThe 2013 Men's Asian Champions Trophy was the third edition of the Men's Asian Champions Trophy. The tournament was held alongside the women's tournament in Kakamigara, Japan from 2 to 10 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234692-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Asian Champions Trophy\nThe Six Asian teams (Pakistan, China, India, Japan, Oman and Malaysia) participated in the tournament which involved round-robin league among all teams followed by play-offs for final positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234692-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Asian Champions Trophy\nThe defending champions Pakistan won the tournament for the second time by defeating the hosts Japan 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234692-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Asian Champions Trophy, Teams\nBelow is the list of the participating teams for the tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234692-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Asian Champions Trophy, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 89 goals scored in 18 matches, for an average of 4.94 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234693-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Asian Individual Squash Championships\nThe 2013 Men's Asian Individual Squash Championships is the men's edition of the 2013 Asian Individual Squash Championships, which serves as the individual Asian championship for squash players. The event took place in Islamabad in Pakistan from 1 to 5 May 2013. Aamir Atlas Khan won his first Asian Individual Championships title, defeating Abdullah Al Muzayen in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234694-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Australian Hockey League\nThe 2013 Men's Australian Hockey League was the 23rd edition of the Australian Hockey League men's Field Hockey tournament. The tournament was held in the Victoria city of Melbourne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234694-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Australian Hockey League\nThe QLD Blades won the gold medal for the eighth time by defeating the VIC Vikings 3\u20131 in the final. NSW Waratahs won the bronze medal after defeating the Canberra Lakers 9\u20132 in the third place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234694-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Australian Hockey League, Competition Format\nThe tournament is divided into two pools, Pool A and Pool B, consisting of four teams in a round robin format. Teams then progress into either Pool C, the medal round, or Pool D, the classification round. Teams carry over points from their previous match ups, and contest teams they are yet to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234694-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Australian Hockey League, Competition Format\nThe top two teams in each of pools A and B then progress to Pool C. The top two teams in Pool C continue to contest the Final, while the bottom two teams of Pool C play in the Third and Fourth place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234694-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Australian Hockey League, Competition Format\nThe remaining bottom placing teams make up Pool D. The top two teams in Pool D play in the Fifth and Sixth place match, while the bottom two teams of Pool C play in the Seventh and Eighth place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234694-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Australian Hockey League, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 139 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 5.79 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234695-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's British Open Squash Championship\nThe Men's Allam British Open 2013 is the men's edition of the 2013 British Open Squash Championships, which is a PSA World Series event Platinum (Prize money\u00a0: 150,000 $). The event took place at the KC Stadium in Hull in England from 20 to 26 May. Ramy Ashour won his first British Open trophy, beating Gr\u00e9gory Gaultier in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234695-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's British Open Squash Championship, Prize money and ranking points\nFor 2013, the prize purse was $150,000. The prize money and points breakdown is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234696-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship II\nThe 2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship II was the 5th edition of the Men's EuroHockey Championship II, the second level of the men's European field hockey championships organized by the European Hockey Federation. It was held from the 3rd until the 11th of August 2013 in Vienna, Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234696-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship II\nThe tournament also served as a qualifier for the 2015 EuroHockey Championship, with the finalists Russia and France qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234696-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship II, Format\nThe eight teams were split into two groups of four teams. The top two teams advanced to the semifinals to determine the winner in a knockout system. The bottom two teams played in a new group with the teams they did not play against in the group stage. The last two teams were relegated to the Men's EuroHockey Championship III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234696-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship II, Results, Classification round, Fifth to eighth place classification\nPoints obtained in the preliminary round are carried over into Pool C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 106], "content_span": [107, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234697-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship III\nThe 2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship III was the 5th edition of the men's EuroHockey Championship III, the third level of the European field hockey championships organized by the European Hockey Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234697-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship III\nIt was held from 12 to 18 August 2013 in Lausanne, Switzerland. The tournament also served as a qualifier for the 2015 Men's EuroHockey Championship II, with the finalists qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234697-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship III, Qualified teams\nThe following eight teams, shown with pre-tournament world rankings, will competed in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234697-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship III, Results, Fifth to eighth place classification, Pool C\nThe points obtained in the preliminary round against the other team are taken over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 93], "content_span": [94, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234698-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship IV\nThe 2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship IV was the fifth edition of the EuroHockey Championship IV, the fourth level of the men's European field hockey championships organized by the European Hockey Federation. It was held in Athens, Greece from 21 to 26 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234698-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship IV\nGreece promoted to the 2015 EuroHockey Nations Championship III by finishing top in this round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234699-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship\nThe 2013 Men's EuroHockey Championship was the 14th edition of the men's EuroHockey Nations Championship, the biennial international men's field hockey championship of Europe organized by the European Hockey Federation. It was held alongside the women's tournament from 17 until 25 August 2013 in Boom, Belgium. The main sponsor for the tournament was TriFinance", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234699-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship\nGermany defeated Belgium in the final to win their eighth title and they earned their qualification to the 2014 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234699-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship, Format\nThe eight teams were split into two groups of four teams. The top two teams advanced to the semifinals to determine the winner in a knockout system. The bottom two teams played in a new group against the teams they did not play in the group stage. The last two teams were relegated to the EuroHockey Championship II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 50], "content_span": [51, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234699-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship, Results, Fifth to eighth place classification, Pool C\nThe points obtained in the preliminary round against the other team were taken over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 97], "content_span": [98, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234699-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 105 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 5.25 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234700-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the teams competing at the 2013 Men's EuroHockey Nations Championship. Each team had to submit 18 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234701-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Individual Closed Championships\nThe 2013 Men's European Individual Closed Championships is the men's edition of the 2013 European Squash Individual Championships, which serves as the individual European championship for squash players. The event took place in Herentals in Belgium from 4 to 7 September 2013. Gr\u00e9gory Gaultier won his seventh European Individual Championships title, defeating Simon R\u00f6sner in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234702-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship was the 28th edition of the European Volleyball Championship, organised by Europe's governing volleyball body, the CEV. It was held in Denmark and Poland from 20 to 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234702-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship\nThe championship was won by Russia with Italy as runners-up and Serbia on the 3rd place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234702-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's 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, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification\nThe qualification for the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship was held from May 12, 2012 to May 26, 2013. Nine teams qualified for the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship tournament, namely the six group winners of the Second Round, together with the three winners of the Third Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round\nThe six group winners qualified directly for the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship, while the six runners-up will moved on to the Third Round where three more teams qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 71], "content_span": [72, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool A, Tournament 1\nThe tournament was held at Pavilhao de Desportos in Vila do Conde, Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool A, Tournament 2\nThe tournament was held at Ba\u015fkent Volleyball Hall in Ankara, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool B, Tournament 1\nThe tournament was held at Sportcampus Lange Munte in Kortrijk, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool B, Tournament 2\nThe tournament was held at Kalev Sports Hall in Tallinn, Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool C, Tournament 2\nThe tournament was held at Sport Hall Sareza in Ostrava, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool D, Tournament 1\nThe tournament was held at Municipal Sports Hall Trikala in Trikala, Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool D, Tournament 2\nThe tournament was held at Energia Areena in Vantaa, Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool E, Tournament 1\nThe tournament was held at Palace of Sports in Kharkiv, Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool E, Tournament 2\nThe tournament was held at Ljudski vrt Sports Hall in Maribor, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool F, Tournament 1\nThe tournament was held at V\u00e1rosi Sportcsarnok in Szeged, Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234703-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship qualification, Second round, Pool F, Tournament 2\nThe tournament was held at Zemgales Olympic Center in Jelgava, Latvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 93], "content_span": [94, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads\nThis article shows all participating team squads at the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship, held in Denmark and Poland from 20\u201329 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Belarus\nThe following is the Belarussian roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Belgium\nThe following is the Belgian roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Bulgaria\nThe following is the Bulgarian roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Czech Republic\nThe following is the Czech roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Denmark\nThe following is the Danish roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Finland\nThe following is the Finnish roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, France\nThe following is the French roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Germany\nThe following is the German roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Italy\nThe following is the Italian roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Netherlands\nThe following is the Dutch roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 63], "content_span": [64, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Poland\nThe following is the Polish roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Russia\nThe following is the Russian roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Serbia\nThe following is the Serbian roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Slovakia\nThe following is the Slovak roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Slovenia\nThe following is the Slovenian roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234704-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship squads, Turkey\nThe following is the Turkish roster in the 2013 Men's European Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League\nThe 2013 Men's European Volleyball League was the tenth edition of the annual Men's European Volleyball League, which featured men's national volleyball teams from twelve European countries. A preliminary league round was played from June 13 to July 7, and the final four tournament, which was held in Turkey on July 13\u201314, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League\nFor this years edition, the first four sets were played over 21 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League, League round, Pool B, Leg 1\nThe tournament was played at Messzi Istv\u00e1n Sportcsarnok, Kecskem\u00e9t, Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League, League round, Pool B, Leg 2\nThe tournament was played at Pavell\u00f3 de la Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League, League round, Pool B, Leg 3\nThe tournament was played in Mediteranski Sportski Centar, Budva, Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League, League round, Pool B, Leg 4\nThe tournament was played in Sports Hall, Opava, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League, League round, Pool C, Leg 2\nThe tournament was played at Metrowest Sport Palace, Ra'anana, Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League, League round, Pool C, Leg 3\nThe tournament was played in Cengiz G\u00f6ll\u00fc Volleyball Hall, Bursa, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234705-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's European Volleyball League, Final four\nThe Final Four was held at the Amiral Orhan Ayd\u0131n Sports Hall in Marmaris, Turkey from July 13 to 14, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234706-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ford National Hockey League\nThe 2013 Men's Ford National Hockey League was the 15th edition of the men's field hockey tournament. The competition was held in various cities across New Zealand, from 10 to 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234706-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ford National Hockey League\nAuckland won the title for the third time, defeating Southern 4\u20133 in penalties after the final finished as a 2\u20132 draw. Canterbury finished in third place, defeating Midlands 3\u20132 in the third place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234706-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ford National Hockey League, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 186 goals scored in 36 matches, for an average of 5.17 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234707-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Africa Cup of Nations\nThe 2013 Men's Hockey Africa Cup of Nations was the ninth edition of the Men's Hockey Africa Cup of Nations, the quadrennial international men's field hockey championship of Africa organised by the African Hockey Federation. It was held in Nairobi, Kenya from 18 to 23 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234707-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Africa Cup of Nations\nThe winner qualified for the 2014 Men's Hockey World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234707-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Africa Cup of Nations, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 42 goals scored in 8 matches, for an average of 5.25 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234708-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Asia Cup\nThe 2013 Men's Hockey Asia Cup was the ninth edition of the Men's Hockey Asia Cup, the quadrennial international men's field hockey championship of Asia organized by the Asian Hockey Federation. It was held from 24 August to 1 September 2013 in Ipoh, Perak, Malaysia. The winner of this tournament qualified for the 2014 World Cup in The Hague, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234708-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Asia Cup\nThe defending champions South Korea defeated India 4\u20133 in the final to win their fourth title. Pakistan won the bronze medal by defeating the hosts Malaysia 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234708-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Asia Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 135 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 6.75 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234709-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters\nThe 2013 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters was the eighteenth edition of the Hamburg Masters, consisting of a series of test matches. It was be held in Hamburg, Germany, from July 25 to 28, 2013, and featured four of the top nations in men's field hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234709-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters, Competition Format\nThe tournament featured the national teams of England, Ireland, the Netherlands, 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, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234709-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 33 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 5.5 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234710-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Junior World Cup\nThe 2013 Men's Hockey Junior World Cup was the 10th edition of the Hockey Junior World Cup for men, an international field hockey tournament. It was held between 6\u201315 December 2013 in New Delhi, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234710-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Junior World Cup\nGermany won the tournament for the sixth time after defeating France 5\u20132 in the final, who participated in their first ever final in a top international event. The Netherlands won the third place match by defeating Malaysia 7\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234710-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Junior World Cup, Qualification\nEach continental federation got a number of quotas depending on the FIH World Rankings for teams qualified through their junior continental championships. Alongside the host nation, 16 teams will compete in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234710-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Junior World Cup, 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234710-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Hockey Junior World Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 223 goals scored in 44 matches, for an average of 5.07 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships\nThe 2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships were the 77th such event organised by the International Ice Hockey Federation. 48 teams representing their countries participated in seven levels of competition. The competition also served as qualifications for division placements in the 2014 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Championship\nThe Top division championship took place between sixteen teams from 3 to May 19, 2013. Sweden and Finland hosted the event with games played in Stockholm and Helsinki. The IIHF's official final ranking of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division I, Division I A\nThe Division I A tournament was played in Budapest, Hungary, from 14 to 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division I, Division I B\nThe Division I B tournament was played in Donetsk, Ukraine, from 14 to 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division II, Division II A\nThe Division II A tournament was played in Zagreb, Croatia, from 14 to 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division II, Division II B\nThe Division II B tournament was played in \u0130zmit, Turkey, from 21 to 27 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division III, Qualification tournament\nThe Division III qualification tournament was played in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, from 14 to 17 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234711-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division III, Main tournament\nThe Division III main tournament was played in Cape Town, South Africa, from 15 to 21 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234712-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Junior World Handball Championship\nThe 2013 IHF Men's Junior World Championship was the 19th edition of the tournament and was held in Bosnia and Herzegovina from 14 \u2013 28 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234712-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Junior World Handball Championship, Host cities\nBosnia and Herzegovina was awarded hosting rights in May 2011, at the IHF XXXIII Ordinary Congress in Marrakech, Morocco. After long negotiations with local government, four cities were chosen to host the competition: capital Sarajevo with two halls and Banja Luka, Ljubu\u0161ki and Zenica with one hall each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234712-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Junior World Handball Championship, Qualified teams\nOceania gave up their spot, a team from Europe (Serbia) replaced its spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234712-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Junior World Handball Championship, Preliminary round\n24 teams were drawn into four groups of six teams each. The draw was made in Sarajevo on 19 April 2013. The top four teams from each group advance to the Round of 16. The match schedule was released on May 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234713-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Laser Radial World Championship\nThe 2013 Laser Radial World Championships for Men were held in D\u00fan Laoghaire, Ireland between August 30 and September 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234714-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's NORCECA Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Men's NORCECA Volleyball Championship was the 23rd edition of the tournament, played from 23 to 28 September 2013 at The Langley Events Centre in Langley, Canada. The event served as qualifier for the 2013 FIVB Men's World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234714-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's NORCECA Volleyball Championship, Pool standing procedure\nMatch won 3\u20130: 5 match points for the winner, 0 match points for the loserMatch won 3\u20131: 4 match points for the winner, 1 match point for the loserMatch won 3\u20132: 3 match points for the winner, 2 match points for the loser", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234715-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's NORCECA Volleyball Final Four Cup\nThe 2013 Final Four Men's Volleyball Cup was the first edition of the annual Men's Volleyball Tournament, played by four countries from November 6\u20139, 2013 in Monterrey, Mexico. Mexico won the event with the Dominican Republic in second place and Canada won the bronze over the fourth place, Venezuela. The Mexican Tom\u00e1s Aguilera was awarded Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234716-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Oceania Cup\nThe 2013 Men's Oceania Cup was the eighth edition of the men's field hockey tournament. It was held from 30 October to 3 November in Stratford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234716-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Oceania Cup\nThe tournament served as a qualifier for the 2014 FIH World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234716-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Oceania Cup\nAustralia won the tournament for the eighth time, defeating New Zealand 5\u20132 in the final. Papua New Guinea finished in third place, defeating Samoa 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234717-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan American Cup\nThe 2013 Men's Pan American Cup was the fourth 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 10 and 17 August 2013 in Brampton, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234717-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan American Cup\nThe tournament doubled as the qualifier for two major international tournaments: the winner qualified directly to the 2014 World Cup, and the three teams not qualifying through the 2014 South American Games or the 2014 Central American and Caribbean Games qualified for the 2015 Pan American Games to be held in Toronto, Canada. Also, the top 6 teams qualified for the next Pan American Cup, while the bottom two will need to compete in the Pan American Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234717-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan American Cup\nArgentina won the tournament for the second time after defeating Canada 4\u20130 in the final. As they had already secured an automatic berth at the 2014 World Cup thanks to a second-place finish at the World League Semifinal in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, their quota was immediately awarded to first reserve team Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234717-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan American Cup, Qualification\nIn early 2011 the Pan American Hockey Federation (PAHF) announced a new qualification system for the Men's Pan American Cups, recognizing the differences in team strength of the top playing nations and the remaining associations. The top six nations at the 2009 Pan American Cup now will qualify directly with the remaining two spots being taken at the newly created Pan American Challenge, which was held in 2011 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234717-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan American Cup, Umpires\nBelow are the 11 umpires appointed by the Pan American Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234717-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan American Cup, Results\nPools were based on FIH Men's Outdoor Rankings as of 13 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234717-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan American Cup, Results, First round\nUruguay and Trinidad and Tobago faced traveling hurdles that required to alter the competition schedule. Both teams' opening matches were moved to Monday 12 August, while the remainder of the schedule was moved down a day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234718-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan-American Volleyball Cup\nThe 2013 Men's Pan-American Volleyball Cup was the eighth edition of the annual men's volleyball tournament, played by seven countries. It was held in Mexico City, Mexico from 19 to 24 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234718-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Pan-American Volleyball Cup, Pool standing procedure\nMatch won 3\u20130: 5 match points for the winner, 0 match points for the loserMatch won 3\u20131: 4 match points for the winner, 1 match point for the loserMatch won 3\u20132: 3 match points for the winner, 2 match points for the loser", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234719-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Softball World Championship\nThe 2013 ISF Men's World Championship, also known as the 2013 ISF Tradestaff Men's World Championship for sponsorship reasons, was an international softball tournament. The tournament was held in Auckland, New Zealand from 1\u201310 March 2013. It was the 13th time the World Championship took place. Sixteen nations competed, including defending champions Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234719-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Softball World Championship\nIn the end, New Zealand won over Venezuela. Defending champions, Australia finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234720-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Hockey Championship\nThe 2013 Men's South American Hockey Championship was the fourth edition of the Men's South American Hockey Championship and the sixth if you count the South American Games. It was held from 26 January until 2 February 2013 in Santiago, Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234720-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Hockey Championship\nArgentina won the tournament for the fourth time in a row by defeating Chile 4\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234720-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Hockey Championship, Statistics, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234720-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Hockey Championship, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 142 goals scored in 18 matches, for an average of 7.89 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234721-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Volleyball Championship\nThe 2013 Men's South American Volleyball Championship was the 30th edition of the tournament, organised by CSV. It was held in Cabo Frio, Brazil from 6 to 10 August 2013. The top two teams qualified for the 2014 World Championship and the champions also qualified for the 2013 World Grand Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234721-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Volleyball Championship\nInitially, format of the tournament was two pools of three teams with semifinals and final. But, CSV changed format to five-team round-robin after Venezuela withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234721-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American 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-00234722-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Volleyball Club Championship\nThe 2013 Men's South American Volleyball Club Championship was the fifth official edition of the men's volleyball tournament, played by seven teams over 8\u201312 May 2013 in Vivo Arena in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. The winning team qualified for the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234722-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's South American Volleyball Club Championship, Pools composition\nRJX Club Buenos Aires Unidos Vikingos de Miranda Carmelo Rowing Club", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234723-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's World Junior Squash Championships\nThe 2013 Men's World Junior Squash Championships is the men's edition of the 2013 World Junior Squash Championships, which serves as the individual world Junior championship for squash players. The event took place at the Hasta La Vista Club in Wroclaw in Poland from 16 to 21 July 2013. Karim El Hammamy won his first World Junior Open title, defeating Fares Dessouky in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234724-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's World Open Squash Championship\nThe AJ Bell 2013 Men's World Open Squash Championship is the men's edition of the 2013 World Championship, which serves as the individual world championship for squash players. The event took place in Manchester in England from 26 October to 3 November 2013. Nick Matthew won his third World Championship title, defeating Gr\u00e9gory Gaultier in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234724-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's World Open Squash Championship, Prize money and ranking points\nFor 2013, the prize purse was $325,000. The prize money and points breakdown is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 73], "content_span": [74, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234725-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's World Team Squash Championships\nThe 2013 Men's World Team Squash Championships is the men's edition of the 2013 World Team Squash Championships, which serves as the world team championship for squash players. The event was held in Mulhouse, France, from June 9 to June 15, 2013. The tournament is organized by the World Squash Federation and the French Squash Federation. The England team won its fifth World Team Championships beating the Egyptian team in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234725-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's World Team Squash Championships, Participating teams\nA total of 31 teams competed from all the five confederations: Africa, America, Asia, Europe and Oceania. For Botswana and Poland, it was their first participation at a world team championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234726-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Youth World Handball Championship\nThe 2013 IHF Men's Youth World Championship was the 5th edition of the tournament and was held at Hungary from 10 \u2013 23 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234726-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Youth World Handball Championship\nDenmark defeated Croatia 32\u201326 in the final to win the title for the third consecutive time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234726-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Youth World Handball Championship, Qualified teams\nOceania gave up their spot, a team from Europe (France) replaced its spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234726-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Men's Youth World Handball Championship, Preliminary round\n24 teams were drawn into four groups of six teams each. The draw was made in Buda\u00f6rs on 23 May 2013. The top four teams from each group advanced to the Round of 16. The match schedule was released on June 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234727-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Menznau shooting\nOn 27 February 2013, a gunman opened fire at the Kronospan wood-processing plant in the Swiss town of Menznau, killing four people. Five others were wounded, two critically. The gunman died during a struggle where another worker defended himself by throwing a chair at the gunman, then grabbed with both arms the gunman, during the struggle the gunman shot himself, although it was not possible to determine whether intentionally or accidentally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234727-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Menznau shooting, Shooting\nThe shooting, which took place at approximately 09:00 CET (08:00 UTC), occurred in the canteen area of the plant. The wounded were flown to two area hospitals for treatment. Among the victims was Benno Studer (born 29 December 1986), a successful Swiss Wrestler active in competitions since 2007, with notable victories in 2010 and 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234727-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Menznau shooting, Shooting\nThe gunman was identified as Viktor Berisha (in Swiss media mostly anonymized as \"Viktor B. \"), aged 42, a Kosovar Albanian who had received asylum in Switzerland in 1991, and who had been convicted to a prison sentence for robbery in 1998. At some point after 2003, he was naturalized as a Swiss citizen. The weapon used by the perpetrator was a Sphinx Systems model AT380 sub-compact pistol, legally owned by Berisha's brother. Berisha was married and had three children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234728-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MercedesCup\nThe 2013 MercedesCup was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 36th edition of the Stuttgart Open, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It was held at the Tennis Club Weissenhof in Stuttgart, Germany, from 6 July until 14 July 2013. Fabio Fognini won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234728-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MercedesCup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234728-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MercedesCup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234729-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MercedesCup \u2013 Doubles\nJ\u00e9r\u00e9my Chardy and \u0141ukasz Kubot were the defending champions, but decided not to participate. Facundo Bagnis and Thomaz Bellucci won the title, defeating Tomasz Bednarek and Mateusz Kowalczyk in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20134, [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234730-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MercedesCup \u2013 Singles\nThe 2013 MercedesCup was a men's tennis tournament held at the Tennis Club Weissenhof in Stuttgart, Germany. Janko Tipsarevi\u0107 was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Fabio Fognini won the title, defeating Philipp Kohlschreiber in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234730-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MercedesCup \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234730-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MercedesCup \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nThe first three seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234731-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mercer Bears football team\nThe 2013 Mercer Bears football team represented Mercer University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Bobby Lamb and played their home games at the Moye Complex. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League (PFL). This was Mercer's first year sponsoring football since 1941. This was also their only season as a member of the PFL as they joined the Southern Conference in 2014. They finished the season 10\u20132 overall and 6\u20132 in conference play, placing third in the PFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234732-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mercure Perth Masters\nThe 2013 Mercure Perth Masters were held from January 3 to 6 at the Dewars Centre in Perth, Scotland as part of the 2012\u201313 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple knockout format, and the purse for the event was GBP\u00a317,160, of which the winner, Thomas Ulsrud, received GBP\u00a36,000. Ulsrud defeated Mike McEwen of Canada in the final with a score of 7\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234733-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Merdeka Tournament\nThe 41st Merdeka Tournament were played from the 4th to 15 September 2013. Malaysia Under-23 team earned a huge boost ahead of December\u2019s Sea Games when they edged Myanmar 2-0 in the final. It was Malaysia\u2019s 12th title in Asia\u2019s oldest tournament (overall until this year edition), with the second title specifically for the Under-23 side, since its inception in 1957.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234733-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Merdeka Tournament, Teams\nThe participating teams are mostly Under-23 squads preparing for the 2013 SEA Games. Jordan have withdrawn from Merdeka Tournament in Kuantan and the FA of Malaysia has invited Myanmar as the replacements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234734-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mersin Cup\nThe 2013 Mersin Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Mersin, Turkey between 8 and 14 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234734-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mersin Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234734-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mersin Cup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234735-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mersin Cup \u2013 Doubles\nRadu Albot and Denys Molchanov were the defending champions; however, Molchanov chose not to compete. Albot teamed up with Oleksandr Nedovyesov but lost in the final to Andreas Beck and Dominik Meffert 7\u20135, 3\u20136, [8\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234736-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mersin Cup \u2013 Singles\nJo\u00e3o Sousa was the defending champion but chose not to compete. Ji\u0159\u00ed Vesel\u00fd defeated Simon Greul 6\u20131, 6\u20131 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234737-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Meru local elections\nLocal elections were held in Meru County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234737-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Meru local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234738-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 23\u201326. The top four regular season finishers of the league's teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at Arm & Hammer Park in Trenton, NJ. Canisius, the tournament champion, earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234738-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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. Canisius claimed the third seed over Siena by tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 68], "content_span": [69, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234738-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nJesse Puscheck was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Puscheck was a designated hitter for Canisius.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 102], "content_span": [103, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234739-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's soccer season will be the 21st season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234739-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season champions, the Loyola Greyhounds, left the MAAC for the Patriot League. The defending tournament champions are the Niagara Purple Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival\nThe 39th Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF), presented by the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), was held from 25 December 2013 to the first week of January 2014. During the festival, no foreign films are shown in Philippine theaters (except IMAX theaters) in order to showcase locally produced films. For this year, eight film entries were chosen by the MMDA to be showcased in the festival. Contrary to previous years, the Enteng Kabisote, Panday, and Shake, Rattle & Roll films were not presented for this year's festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival\n10,000 Hours won the most awards with fourteen, including Best Actor for Robin Padilla, Best Director for Joyce Bernal, and Best Picture. Other winners included My Little Bossings with four awards, Girl, Boy, Bakla, Tomboy with three, and Pagpag: Siyam na Buhay and Boy Golden with one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival, Background\nThe 38th Metro Manila Film Festival held in 2012 became the highest earning MMFF to date with 767 million pesos, 21% higher than that of 2011. On a speech by Chairman Francis Tolentino of Metropolitan Manila Development Authority or MMDA, announcement was held on the creation of a new category, \"Animation\" under the \"New Wave\" will be launched on this year. He stated, \"... With the growing talent of pool animators both locally and abroad, it is high time that we recognize and showcase their potential to a broader audience...\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival, Background\nThe Animahenasyon: Philippine Animation Festival will feature 5 animated films acts as Prelude to be shown in theater 1 week ahead of the mainstream films. In line with the move, the MMFF has partnered with the Animation Council of the Philippines, the country\u2019s lead organization in the promotion of the animation industry development. But in the press conference held on the announcement of 8 official entries, Chairman Tolentino announced that the animation category will have to be postponed until the next festival. He also announced the creation of the MMFF Review Committee which will assess and improve the rules, regulations, and implementing programs of the film festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival, Entries, Official entries\nOn 18 June 2013, the eight official entries were announced by MMDA Chairman Francis Tolentino namely 10,000 Hours, Girl, Boy, Bakla, Tomboy, Kimmy Dora: Ang Kiyemeng Prequel, Pagpag, Pedro Calungsod: Batang Martir, My Super Kap, and My Little Bossings. Due to technical difficulties and other external factors, some entries dropped out of the competition, in which the MMDA committee pick from other entries, which failed to be shortlisted, to replace the withdrawn entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival, Entries, New Wave entries\nThese films were screened from 18 to 24 December as a prelude to the MMFF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival, Awards\nOn 27 December 2013, the Metro Manila Film Festival Awards Night was held at Meralco Theater in Ortigas Center, Pasig. Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface. The awards night was aired on TV5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234740-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Metro Manila Film Festival, Box Office gross\nThe Metro Manila Development Authority was criticized for only releasing the official earnings of the Top 4 films.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234741-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mexican League season\nThe 2013 Mexican League season was the 89th season in the history of the Mexican League. It was contested by 16 teams, evenly divided in North and South zones. The season started on 22 March with the match between 2012 season champions Rojos del \u00c1guila de Veracruz and Olmecas de Tabasco and ended on 29 August with the last game of the Serie del Rey, where Tigres de Quintana Roo defeated Sultanes de Monterrey to win the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234742-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mexican state elections, Elections, Aguascalientes\nThere were elections for 11 mayors and 18 local councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234742-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mexican state elections, Elections, Baja California\nThere were elections for the governor, 5 mayors and 25 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234742-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mexican state elections, Elections, Baja California\nThe PAN candidate, Francisco Vega de Lamadrid narrowly defeated PRI candidate Fernando Castro Trenti, and became the next governor of Baja California. The election count was temporarily halted after local officials believed there was an error with an counting algorithm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234742-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mexican state elections, Elections, Tlaxcala\nThere were elections for 60 mayors, 32 councillors, and 391 presidents of communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234743-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mexico train accident\nThe 2013 Mexico train accident occurred on August 25, 2013 after the freight train \"La Bestia\", with 300 passengers on board, was derailed in Huimanguillo, Tabasco. The accident killed 6 people and another 22 were injured, 16 of them were in grave condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234744-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Beach mayoral election\nThe 2013 Miami Beach mayoral election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the mayor of Miami Beach, Florida. The election was held concurrently with various other local elections, and was officially nonpartisan. Philip Levine secured election with over 50% of the vote, avoiding a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season\nThe 2013 Miami Dolphins season was the franchise's 44th season in the National Football league (NFL), and the 48th overall in the American Football Conference Eastern Division (AFC East). The season concluded with the Dolphins finishing third in the AFC Eastern Division with an 8\u20138 record, and no postseason play for the fifth consecutive season. The Dolphins allowed a league-high 58 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season\nThe Dolphins entered the season under second-year head coach Joe Philbin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Personnel changes, Logo change\nDuring the 2012 season, speculation about the Dolphins updating their current logo, which was introduced during the 1997 season, began during a conference call with season-ticket holders; as owner Stephen Ross and CEO Mike Dee eagerly agreed with a fan on the potential changing of the logo. On December 26, 2012, via Dolphins CEO Mike Dee's Twitter account, Dee unofficially announced that a logo change would take place, but the team was still considering different designs; and an official announcement would be provided sometime before the 2013 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Personnel changes, Logo change\nOn March 27, 2013, following an accidental leaking of the new Dolphins logo on NFL.com, Dee confirmed in a press conference that the leaked image, as seen on NFL.com, was in fact the new official logo. This announcement came almost a month premature to the scheduled release date of the logo on April 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nThe Miami Dolphins entered the 2013 off-season with an estimated $45 million in salary cap space, third most among other teams, to retain the contracts of impending unrestricted free agents: running back Reggie Bush, safety Chris Clemons, tight end Anthony Fasano, wide receiver Brian Hartline, offensive tackle Jake Long, quarterback Matt Moore, cornerback Sean Smith and defensive tackle Randy Starks. As well as any future free agent signings, and 2013 NFL Draft picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nOn March 4, 2013, the Dolphins placed their franchise tag on defensive tackle Randy Starks, and Starks signed the franchise tender on March 20. The move kept Starks from becoming an unrestricted free agent and guaranteed him $8.45 million from the $3.72 million earned during the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nOn March 8, 2013, coming off his best career season, wide receiver Brian Hartline signed a new five-year contract for an estimated $31 million to remain with the Dolphins. Hartline's agent Drew Rosenhaus believed Hartline could have received more money in the open market, but decided to take a discount to remain a Dolphin. Shortly after, it was reported that quarterback Matt Moore signed a new two-year contract for an estimated $8 million, and should continue to play a backup role behind second year quarterback Ryan Tannehill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nWhen the NFL free agency period began at 4 p.m. EST on March 12, 2013, former Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Mike Wallace, who was viewed as the top free agent prospect of the 2013 offseason by many analysts, signed a five-year contract for an estimated $60 million. The Dolphins signed former Baltimore Ravens linebacker Dannell Ellerbe to a five-year deal worth an estimated $35 million, and former Oakland Raiders linebacker Philip Wheeler to a five-year deal worth an estimated $26 million. Subsequently, Miami released veteran linebackers Karlos Dansby and Kevin Burnett. While safety Chris Clemons re-signed a one-year contract to remain a Dolphin, and unrestricted free agent Anthony Fasano, who had spent the last five seasons in Miami, signed a four-year deal with the Kansas City Chiefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nOn March 13, 2013, it was reported that Reggie Bush had signed a four-year $16 million contract to play for the Detroit Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nOn March 15, 2013, cornerback Sean Smith decided to part ways from the Dolphins and signed a new three-year contract with the Kansas City Chiefs. Former New York Jets tight end Dustin Keller signed a new one-year contract, worth an estimated $4.25 million, and former St. Louis Rams wide receiver Brandon Gibson signed a new three-year contract with the Dolphins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nFormer Dolphins 2008 first round draft pick, offensive tackle Jake Long, after courting offers from various teams, signed a new four-year contract, worth an estimated $34 million, with the St. Louis Rams on March 18, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nOn March 30, 2013, cornerback Brent Grimes signed a one-year $5.5 million year with the Dolphins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Roster changes, Departures\nOn October 22, 2013, the Dolphins acquired offensive tackle Bryant McKinnie from the Baltimore Ravens for a conditional late round pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, 2013 draft class\nThe 2013 National Football League Draft was held from April 25\u201327 in the Radio City Music Hall in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, 2013 draft class\nThe Dolphins did not have a selection in the sixth round. The team traded their sixth-round selection (No. 180 overall) along with fourth- and sixth-round selections from the 2012 NFL Draft to the San Francisco 49ers in exchange for the 49ers' 2012 fourth-round selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Dolphins started their 2013 season on the road against the Browns. They would score first in the 1st quarter as Caleb Sturgis kicked a 45-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead. They led 6-0 in the 2nd quarter after Sturgis kicked a 49-yard field goal. The Browns got on the board and took the lead before halftime as Brandon Weeden found Jordan Cameron on a 7-yard pass for a 7-6 score. After the break, the Dolphins went back to work and took the lead as Ryan Tannehill found Brian Hartline for a 34-yard pass and retook the lead 13-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Browns then came within 3 as Billy Cundiff kicked a 39-yard field goal shortening the lead to 13-10. In the 4th quarter it was all Dolphins and Daniel Thomas ran for a 1-yard TD making the score 20-10 while Sturgis kicked a 36-yard field goal for the final score of the game 23-10. It was the Dolphins' first road win over the Browns since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Indianapolis Colts\nThe Dolphins traveled to take on the Colts. In the 1st quarter they got off to a fast start as Mike Wallace and Ryan Tannehill connected on an 18-yard TD pass for a 7-0 lead. The Colts got on the board as Adam Vinatieri nailed a 30-yard field goal for a 7-3 score. The Dolphins then increased their lead as Lamar Miller ran for a 10-yard TD making the score 14-3. The Colts would score in the 2nd quarter as Andrew Luck found Coby Fleener on a 3-yard TD pass shortening the lead to 4, 14-10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Indianapolis Colts\nThey eventually grabbed the lead as Ahmad Bradshaw ran for a 1-yard TD, 17-14. Caleb Sturgis of the Dolphins tied it up before halftime with a 54-yard field goal, 17-17. In the 3rd quarter, the Colts retook the lead as Vinatieri nailed a 38-yard field goal for a 20-17 game. The Dolphins then retook the lead as Charles Clay ran for a 1-yard TD for a 24-20 game. The Dolphins then held the Colts scoreless in the 4th quarter and vice versa which eventually gave the team the win as they improved to 2-0 on the season. This was also the Dolphins' first road win over the Colts since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nThe Dolphins went home for their season opener against the Falcons. The Falcons got off to a fast start as Matt Ryan found Jason Snelling on a 7-yard TD pass for a 7-0 lead the only score of the 1st quarter. They would make it 10-0 when Matt Bryant kicked a 52-yard field goal. The Dolphins got on the board when Daniel Thomas ran for a 5-yard TD coming within 3, 10-7. The Falcons then pushed ahead by 6 when Matt Bryant kicked a 30-yard field goal for a 13-7 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nThe Dolphins then wrapped up the scoring when Caleb Sturgis nailed a 46-yard field goal coming within 3 at halftime 13-10. The Falcons increased their lead in the 3rd quarter when Levine Toilolo caught a 2-yard pass from Ryan for a 20-10 lead not long before the Dolphins managed to tie the game at 20 when Sturgis kicked a 50-yard field goal followed up by Tannehill finding Brian Hartline on an 18-yard TD pass. The Falcons moved ahead in the 4th quarter as Bryant kicked a 33-yard field goal for a 23-20 lead but the Dolphins later on would score the game-winning TD when Tannehill found Dion Sims on a 1-yard pass for a final score of 27-23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at New Orleans Saints\nThe Dolphins would suffer their first loss of the season as they lost to the New Orleans Saints 38-17 on Monday Night Football and failed to earn their first 4-0 start since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nMiami would miss a field goal with less than a minute remaining. The miss doomed the Dolphins, as they lost to Baltimore 26-23 in a shootout game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Buffalo Bills\nWith their third straight loss, Miami fell to 3-3 after starting 3-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Dolphins would force four turnovers in this game as they beat Cincinnati 22-20 in overtime on Thursday Night Football. The game ended with a safety in overtime on a sack on Andy Dalton in the end zone by Cameron Wake. It was the first time since Adewale Ogunleye tackled Fred Miller in Miller's own end zone on November 14, 2004, a game ended on a safety in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nWith the win, the Dolphins evened their record at 4-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nTampa Bay came into this game having not won a game, at 0-8. The Dolphins would trail 15-0 for most of the first 2 quarters, but they would score 19 unanswered points from the end of the second quarter through most of the third to take a 19-15 lead. However, the Buccaneers would take the lead for good when they scored a touchdown early in the fourth quarter to go up 22-19, which would be the final score, thus giving the Buccaneers their first win of the season. The Dolphins were also seeking their first win in Tampa since 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 86], "content_span": [87, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Carolina Panthers\nMiami would build a 16-3 lead at one point. But the Panthers would rally behind Cam Newton to score a touchdown with less than a minute left. For the first time in franchise history, the Dolphins were defeated by the Panthers, as they had come into this game 4-0 all time against them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 84], "content_span": [85, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at New York Jets\nWith the commanding win, the Dolphins evened their record at 6-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nIn a game filled with snow similar to the Snowplow Game, the Dolphins would upset the Steelers 34-28 to keep their playoff hopes alive. The game is notable for the final play, in which the Steelers lateralled the ball 7 times, with the final lateral pass being caught by Antonio Brown in stride. Brown then sprinted down the sidelines, avoided several tackles, and sprinted into the endzone for an apparent game-winning touchdown. However, most noticeable on replay, Brown barely stepped out of bounds, with the left half of his foot barely touching the sideline. With the win, the Dolphins improved to 7-6. It was also the Dolphins' first win in Pittsburgh since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 85], "content_span": [86, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. New England Patriots\nWith the win, the Dolphins improved to 8\u20136 and climbed to the second Wild Card seat; however, with the Ravens' victory over the Lions the following night, the team went back to the seventh spot in the playoff hunt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Buffalo Bills\nWith the shutout loss, the Dolphins fell to 8-7 and put their playoff hopes on the line. This was the first time the Dolphins had been shoutout since week 17 of last year against the Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234745-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. New York Jets\nWith the loss, coupled with a wins by the Steelers and Chargers, the Dolphins ended their season 8-8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234746-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Hurricanes football team\nThe 2013 Miami Hurricanes football team represented the University of Miami during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the Hurricanes' 88th season of football and 10th as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Hurricanes were led by third-year head coach Al Golden and played their home games at Sun Life Stadium. They finished the season 9\u20134 overall and 5\u20133 in the ACC to finish in a three-way tie for second place in the Coastal Division. They were invited to the Russell Athletic Bowl where they lost to Louisville 36\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234747-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Marlins season\nThe Miami Marlins' 2013 season was the 21st season for the Major League Baseball franchise, and the second as the \"Miami\" Marlins. The Marlins finished the season with a 62-100 record, their 2nd worst record as an MLB franchise, and failed to make the playoffs for the 10th consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234747-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Marlins season, 2013 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, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234747-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami Marlins season, 2013 Player stats, Pitching\nNote: G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H =Hits; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts; ERA = Earned run average;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234748-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami RedHawks football team\nThe 2013 Miami RedHawks football team represented Miami University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season and finished the season with an 0\u201312 record. They were led by head coach Don Treadwell for the first five then led by interim head coach Mike Bath of their final seven games. They played their home games at Yager Stadium and competed as a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234748-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami RedHawks football team\nAfter opening the season 0\u20135, head coach Don Treadwell was fired and Mike Bath was named interim head coach. Over his tenure as head coach, Treadwell compiled a record of 8\u201321 since he was hired in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234749-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Miami mayoral election\nThe 2013 Miami mayoral election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the mayor of Miami, Florida. The election was officially nonpartisan, and held in conjunction with other city elections. City Commissioner Francis X. Suarez dropped out before the election in August. Incumbent Tom\u00e1s Regalado was reelected with over 78% of the vote against his three opponents, none of which got over 10% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team\nThe 2013 Michigan State Spartans football team represented Michigan State University in the Legends Division of the Big Ten Conference during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Michigan State played their home games at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan and were led by seventh year head coach Mark Dantonio. The Spartans finished the year 13\u20131, 8\u20130 and undefeated in Big Ten play. By winning the Legends Division, they earned a trip to the Big Ten Championship Game, their second appearance in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team\nFacing No. 2-ranked Ohio State, they defeated the Buckeyes 34\u201324, knocking Ohio State out of the running for the BCS National Championship Game. The Spartans received an invitation to the Rose Bowl, their first trip to the Rose Bowl since 1988. There they defeated No. 5-ranked Stanford for the school's first Rose Bowl win since 1988. With Notre Dame's victory earlier in the 2013 season vacated and the talent of the Spartans, players and sportswriters often tab MSU as the should-be national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Previous season\nMichigan State's 2012 campaign was a letdown from the 2011 season. That year the Spartans went 11\u20133, continued a two-year undefeated streak at home, advanced to the inaugural Big Ten Championship Game, defeated SEC powerhouse Georgia in the Outback Bowl, and ended the season ranked No. 10/11 in the Polls. However, the departure of key offensive players\u2014notably Kirk Cousins, Keshawn Martin, and B.J. Cunningham, who were all selected in the 2012 NFL draft\u2014proved costly for the 2012 Spartans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Previous season\nAfter surging to a No. 10 ranking in the both polls, the Spartans were favorites to be the Big Ten's representative for the Rose Bowl. A defeat at Spartan Stadium to Notre Dame snapped their home win streak and the Spartans stumbled into conference play with a come-from-behind win over Eastern Michigan, who ended the season 2\u201310. The Spartans went 3\u20135 in conference play, losing all of their home games. Those five losses were by a combined 13 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Previous season\nThe lone bright spot in that period came when Michigan State snapped a 21-game home winning streak for Wisconsin by beating the eventual Rose Bowl representatives, giving the Spartans their first win in Camp Randall Stadium since 2001. MSU only earned bowl eligibility by defeating Minnesota in the final game of the season. The Spartans accepted a bid to the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl and there overcame a 13\u20130 halftime deficit to defeat TCU 17\u201316, led in part by backup quarterback Connor Cook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Previous season\nOffensively, the Spartans were led by tailback Le'Veon Bell, who ended the regular season with 1,648 yards for 11 touchdowns, averaging 137.3 yards per game and earning 834 of his yards after contact. The Spartans were ranked ninth in the Big Ten for total offense, averaging 370.3 yards per game. Michigan State's offense managed only 21 touchdowns in 42 red zone trips this season and only 25 overall. Spartan quarterback Andrew Maxwell saw almost all the action that year, throwing for 2,578 yards and 13 touchdowns with a 53% completion rating. Backup quarterback Connor Cook only saw action in two games, going 5 for 6 with no touchdowns and one interception, which was returned for a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Previous season\nOn the defensive side, Michigan State led the Big Ten, giving up 273.3 yards per game and 16.3 points per game. They ranked in the top 10 nationally for total defense, scoring defense, rushing defense, and passing efficiency and yardage defenses. Junior linebacker Max Bullough led the Spartans with 101 tackles, while William Gholston's 3.5 sacks and Darqueze Dennard's three interceptions were also team leaders. Senior cornerback Johnny Adams, who also had three interceptions, was unable to play in the bowl game due to an injury. The Spartans had 13 interceptions during the regular season, third best in the Big Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Offseason, 2013 NFL Draft\nThree members of the 2012 Spartan football team were selected in the 2013 NFL Draft", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Offseason, 2013 NFL Draft\nIn addition, five other former Spartans were taken as undrafted free agents:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Offseason, 2013 NFL Draft\nMichigan State remained one of only seven teams to have had a player selected in each draft since the AFL/NFL merger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 69], "content_span": [70, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Offseason, Returning players\nOf the 22 starters from 2012, 16 returned for the 2013 campaign. The offense lost only two starters\u2014Sims and Bell\u2014while seven of the starting defensive players return. Junior punter Mike Sadler was the sole returning specialist. The Spartans retained their leaders in passing yards and touchdowns (Maxwell) and receiving yards and touchdowns (Fowler), but lost their leaders in rushing yards and touchdowns (Bell) and interceptions (Adams).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Offseason, Early NFL departures\nThe three Spartans drafted were all early departures; Bell, Gholston, and Sims had all just finished their junior year. No other underclassmen declared for the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nMichigan State's 2013 campaign kicked off against Western Michigan with a Friday night battle at Spartan Stadium. Michigan State came into the game with a 10\u20132 all-time record against the Broncos, who were led by first-year head coach P. J. Fleck. This game was part of the \"Celebrate the State\" series pitting MSU against Eastern, Central, and Western Michigan over ten seasons. Coming into the game, the Spartans had not lost a home opener since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nThe game started with stifling defense. The Spartans were able to secure two first downs on their opening drive and were forced to punt. After both teams went three-and-out, the Broncos appeared to gain some momentum on their second drive. However, on third-and-eleven, Broncos quarterback Tyler Van Tubbergen's pass was intercepted by Jarus Jones. While being tackled, Jones lateraled the ball to Kurtis Drummond, who ran the remaining 21 yards for a touchdown. After both teams exchanged punts, Van Tubbergen again threw an interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nAfter the interception, Connor Cook took over the quarterbacking duties for the Spartans, but this drive also ended in a punt, as did the two after it. The Broncos took over with 11:31 left in the second quarter, and Van Tuubergen threw two incomplete passes in driving rain. At this point \u2013 9:03 pm \u2013 the game was postponed due to lightning. The teams went to their locker rooms and would resume the contest 57 minutes later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nOn their next drive, the Broncos were bolstered by a 45-yard pass from Van Tubbergen to Timmy Keith. After Van Tubbergen was hurt two plays later, redshirt freshman Zach Terrell threw a touchdown in his first career snap. While the Spartans had to punt on the ensuing possession, their next drive was aided by 25 yards of penalties from the Broncos and a 26-yard completion from Andrew Maxwell to Bennie Fowler. Jeremy Langford finished off the drive with a touchdown, but Spartan kicker Kevin Muma did not make the point after attempt. After the kickoff, the Broncos let the remaining 22 seconds in the half expire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nMichigan State's second drive of the new half was spurred by a 33-yard punt return by Andre Sims and put the Spartans on the Bronco three-yard line on third down. Unable to convert, the Spartans settled for a field goal by Muma. Michigan State ended up in a similar position two drives later. An interception by Jairus Jones put Michigan State at Western's 12 yard line, but they were unable to gain any yardage and had to settle for a second field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nTwo drives later, Langford fumbled and Bronco Corey Sueing recovered, which stopped a Spartan drive 21 yards from the end zone. However, the Broncos ensuing drive came to an end when Marcus Rush stripped the ball when sacking Terrell. Shilique Calhoun recovered the ball and ran 16 yards for Michigan State's second defensive touchdown. While the game was effectively finished at that point, the Broncos finished the game with a 56-yard touchdown drive, but Terrell was unable to convert the 2-point conversion. With two minutes remaining and no Broncos timeouts left, the Spartans knelt down to run out the clock and earn their first win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nEach team punted 11 times during the game. The Spartans offense combined for 297 yards \u2013 181 from rushing and 118 from passing. Western had 204 offensive yards, but were limited to only 11 yards rushing. The Spartans' two quarterbacks combined for 17 completions on 37 attempts, while the two Broncos quarterbacks went 18 for 48. Terrell lead all quarterbacks with 120 yards and 2 touchdowns. While the Broncos only averaged 0.4 yards per rushing attempt, the Spartans averaged 4.3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Western Michigan\nLed by Jeremy Langford (94 yds, 1 TD, 1 fumble), the Spartans also had strong rushing performances by Cook (35 yds), Nick Hill (33 yds), and Riley Bullough (12 yds). WMU true freshman Corey Davis led both sides in receiving (8 catches, 96 yds, 1 TD). The Spartans had their worst passing game (3.1 yards per passing attempt) in the 80 games coached by Dantonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, South Florida\nMichigan State's second test was against the Bulls of the University of South Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, South Florida\nThe offense struggled against a South Florida defense that had surrendered 53 points the week before to FCS McNeese State. Jeremy Langford scored the Spartans lone offensive touchdown on a 2-yard run in the 4th quarter. Shilique Calhoun scored two defensive touchdowns, the first coming in the second quarter, as Tyler Hoover stripped USF QB Bobby Eveld of the football at the USF 2 yard line where Calhoun scooped up the ball and scored. His second touchdown came in the third quarter as he intercepted a Bobby Eveld pass and returned the ball 56 yard for a pick six. Michigan State won 21\u20136, as the defense completely shutdown the South Florida offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 81], "content_span": [82, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Youngstown State\nMichigan State's third game of the season was against the Penguins of Youngstown State University. The Spartans opened their 2011 season against Youngstown State, defeating the Penguins 28\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Youngstown State\nConnor Cook became the first Michigan State quarterback since Brian Hoyer to throw for 4 touchdowns in a game; all of Cook's touchdowns were thrown in the first half. The game was so out of hand in the second half that both Tyler O'Connor and Andrew Maxwell were both given playing time at the quarterback position. Standout performances from Nick Hill and Jeremy Langford proved big, as the Spartans rushed for 277 yards as a team, with 3 touchdowns. All in all, a big day for the offense lead the Spartans to a 55\u201317 victory over FCS opponent Youngstown State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 84], "content_span": [85, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nMichigan State's final non-conference game was against the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame in a matchup for the Megaphone Trophy. Coming into the matchup, the Irish had won the previous two meetings between the schools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nNotre Dame struck first, scoring the only points in the opening quarter, as kicker Kyle Brindza nailed a 41-yard field goal. The Spartans took the lead in the second quarter, as Connor Cook found Macgarrett Kings in the corner of the end zone for a 12-yard touchdown pass to take the lead 7\u20133. Notre Dame would respond with a touchdown of their own after a pass interference penalty called against Trae Waynes on fourth and one put them deep in Michigan State territory. Several plays later, Irish quarterback Tommy Rees would find T.J. Jones in the back of the end zone for a two-yard touchdown pass to give the Irish a 10\u20137 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nThe second half continued to be a low-scoring affair. Michigan State was able to tie the score in the 3rd quarter, as Freshmen kicker Michael Geiger made his very first field goal of his collegiate career from 25 yards, tying the game at 10 apiece. A turnover late in the third quarter proved costly for the Spartans, as on a halfback pass, true Freshmen R.J. Shelton threw an interception which swung momentum in Notre Dame's favor. The Irish re-took the lead for good in the fourth quarter on a Cam McDaniel seven-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nGeiger added a 42-yard field goal to make the score 17\u201313. The Spartans had an opportunity to take the lead in the closing minutes with one last drive. On their final drive, coach Mark Dantonio decided to pull a struggling Connor Cook (who had played every snap) in favor of the previous season's starter, Andrew Maxwell. The Spartans went four and out, Notre Dame took over on downs, and ran out the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nMichigan State suffered its first loss (and would end up being its only loss) of the year, falling to 3\u20131, while Notre Dame improved their record to 3\u20131. This was the Fighting Irish's third consecutive victory over the Spartans. Notre Dame and Michigan State would not play each other again until 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nIn February, 2018, the NCAA announced that Notre Dame would be forced to vacate all wins from he 2013 season, including this victory over the Spartans, due to academic misconduct.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nAfter a bye week, the Spartans opened their conference schedule against the Hawkeyes of the University of Iowa. Iowa had won last year's meeting in East Lansing in double overtime by the score of 19\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nAfter a scoreless 1st quarter, in which Michigan State turned the ball over on downs after failing a 4th down attempt, Michigan State scored first in the 2nd quarter after a lengthy drive ended with a Michael Geiger 27 yard field goal. Michigan State took a 3\u20130 lead. The Spartan defense forced an Iowa punt after a 3 play, 6 yard Iowa possession. The offense got the ball at their own 25. Connor Cook completed a pass to Bennie Fowler on 3rd and 6 for 12 yards to pick up a first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nThe following play, Cook took off for an 11-yard run down to the Iowa 48. Several plays later, Jeremy Langford would pick up a blitz on 3rd and 8 which allowed Connor Cook to find Macgarrett Kings, who then avoided several defenders on his way to the end zone for 46 yard touchdown pass to put Michigan State up 10\u20130. Iowa would get the score within 3 after a Jake Rudock swing pass to Damon Bullock went 47 yards for a touchdown to make it 10\u20137. After the Hawkeye defense forced a punt, Iowa scored another touchdown on their next possession, this time in the form of a Rudock pass to big TE C.J. Fiedorowicz 10 yards out. Iowa would have a 14\u201310 lead going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nMichigan State received the ball to start the second half and re-took the lead on their opening possession. Connor Cook led the offense directly down the field and finished off the drive with a 37-yard bomb to Bennie Fowler for a touchdown to re-take the lead 17\u201314. Cook only threw one incompletion the entire drive. Michael Geiger would then add a 35-yard field goal to put the lead at 20\u201314 going into the 4th quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nIn the 4th quarter, with it only being a 6-point game, Mark Dantonio called a fake punt on 4th and 4 as punter Mike Sadler ran for 25 yards to the Iowa 38 yard line to pick up the first down. As with most Spartan trick plays, coach Dantonio coined this one \"Hey diddle, diddle, send Sadler up the middle\". Michigan State would add another field goal, as Michael Geiger made his 3rd kick of the day, this time from 49 yards, to make the score 23\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nAfter Iowa missed a field goal attempt to bring the game within 6, Michigan State would add yet another field goal to their score on their next possession, with Michael Geiger converting his fourth field goal attempt, this one going for 45 yards. The score was now 26\u201314 Michigan State. On the very next Iowa possession, Darqueze Dennard would record his 2nd interception of the day, picking off Rudock on the very first play of the drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0026-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nWith 4 minutes remaining in the game, Iowa got the ball back, but took too much time trying to score, and failed to score a touchdown on 4th and 5 from the Michigan State 16 yard line. The Spartans took over on downs and kneeled out the clock for their first conference win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Iowa\nConnor Cook threw for a career-high (at the time) 277 yards as the Spartans overcame a 14\u201310 halftime deficit to win on the road in Iowa City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Indiana\nMichigan State's homecoming game will be against the Hoosiers of Indiana University. The winner of this game will earn the Old Brass Spittoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Purdue\nThe wet and cold fall weather would prove to be a factor for both teams during the game, as the Spartans and Boilermakers fought a low scoring game with half of the points scored coming from the defensive side of the ball. Spartan linebacker Denicos Allen returned a Purdue fumble 45 yards for the first touchdown of the day after Max Bullough hit Purdue quarterback Danny Etling hard in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Purdue\nPurdue's offense was held scoreless thanks to a strong defensive effort by the Spartans, missed field goals of 51 and 41 yards, and an interception by Isaiah Lewis in the end zone. Michigan State would get the only offensive points for the day when the ball was lateraled to Tony Lippett who threw to an open TE Andrew Gleichert for a 5-yard score. Michigan State earned bowl eligibility with the win for the 7th straight year under coach Mark Dantonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Illinois\nMichigan State closed out the first half of their conference schedule against the Illini of the University of Illinois. The last time the two schools met was in 2010, where the Spartans came out on top 26\u20136 en route to a share of the Big Ten title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Illinois\nIn a dominating performance on both sides of the football, Michigan State defeated Illinois in convincing fashion, by the score of 42\u20133. Connor Cook set a school record for passing efficiency, completing 15 of 16 passes for 208 yards and 3 touchdown passes. Jeremy Langford also compiled his 3rd consecutive 100 yard rushing performance, with 104 yards on 22 carries and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Illinois\nThe Spartan defense put on a dominant performance, with a key moment in the game coming in the 2nd quarter, as the Illini were on the Michigan State goal line with an opportunity to take the lead. In what would swing the momentum in favor of Michigan State, the Spartan defense made an impressive goal line stand, preventing them from scoring on 4th down. They also held Illinois to 128 yards of total offense, only surrendering 8 first downs all game, and held the Illini to 3 points\u2014all of which were season lows. The Illini were averaging 35.3 points a game coming into this contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Illinois\nMichigan State improved their conference record to 4\u20130, 7\u20131 overall. This loss signified the 17th consecutive conference defeat for Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nMichigan State opened their November schedule against the Wolverines of the University of Michigan. The Paul Bunyan Trophy was on the line. Sloppy weather conditions marred the 106th annual meeting between the Michigan State Spartans and the Wolverines of Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nMichigan had possession of the ball first, with Devin Gardner completing 2 passes right of the bat to Jeremy Gallon for 35 and 11 yards respectively. Michigan's drive stalled after Denicos Allen and Shilique Calhoun combined for a sack on Devin Gardner for a loss of 10 yards. Michigan would make a 49-yard field goal to go up 3\u20130. Michigan State's first offensive possession started off with an explosive play, as Connor Cook, scrambling to his right, threw a check down pass to fullback Trevon Pendleton, which went for 49 yards, putting them in Michigan territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nHowever, the Spartans were unable to convert on 3rd down and were forced to settle for a field goal, tying the game at 3 a piece. Neither team would have much success in the quarter after their initial offensive possessions, punting the ball back and forth throughout. The Spartan defense would record 4 sacks on Devin Gardner in the 1st quarter alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nOn the opening possession of the 2nd quarter, Connor Cook led the offense down to the Michigan 26 yard line before being denied on 3rd and 7. Freshmen kicker Michael Geiger would nail his second 40-yard field goal of the game, this time from 44 yards, to put the Spartans up 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nOn the ensuing Michigan possession, Devin Gardner completed a 58-yard pass to TE Jehu Chesson to put the Wolverines in Michigan State territory, but the defense stood tall, forcing the Wolverines to kick a field from 39 yards, which Michigan kicker Brendan Gibbons (who in the previous matchup kicked the game-winning field goal as time expired to give Michigan their first win over Michigan State since 2007) was able to make. Michigan State would then receive the football with 3:22 remaining in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0036-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nConnor Cook, much like the first possession of the quarter, led the offense down the field and with 23 seconds remaining in the half, found Bennie Fowler in the righthand corner of the end zone for a 14-yard touchdown pass. After converting the extra point, Michigan State held a 13\u20136 lead going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nThe Spartans would receive the ball to start the second half, and they took advantage of it, as Connor Cook led the offense down the field before coming up short on 3rd and 11 after an 8-yard pass to Tony Lippett. Michael Geiger would make his 3rd field goal of the day, this time from 35 yards. Later in the quarter, Michigan cornerback Raymon Taylor would cause the first turnover of the game, picking off Connor Cook and returning it 17 yards to set the Michigan offense up with good field position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nHowever, it was all for naught, as the Michigan State defense recorded a tackle for loss and 2 sacks on the following possession for the Wolverines. Michigan was forced to punt the ball and did not have a single positive yardage play the entire possession, as they had a total of 3 plays for \u221221 yards. With that came the end of the 3rd quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nThe 4th quarter was all Spartans, as on the opening drive of the quarter, Connor Cook and Jeremy Langford led the offense all the way down to the 1 yard line of Michigan. Connor Cook would then take the ball in for a touchdown on a QB draw, which put Michigan State up 22\u20136; the extra point was blocked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nOn the next Michigan possession, Devin Gardner would try to get Michigan back in the game, driving the Wolverines all the way to the Michigan State 15 yard line before Darqueze Dennard intercepted a pass intended for Jeremy Gallon at the Spartan 3 yard line, thus putting a lid on any potential comeback. The Spartan offense would then widen the gap, as they ate up the clock, going on an 8 play, 97 yard drive that would take 3:40 off the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0038-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nThe drive concluded with a 40-yard rushing touchdown from Jeremy Langford, the longest of his career, to put Michigan State up 29\u20136 with 2:43 left. After apparently suffering an injury on the previous drive, Devin Gardner sat out for Michigan's final drive, as true Freshmen quarterback Shane Morris would come in for backup duty. Michigan failed to convert on 4th and 4, and turned the ball over to the Spartans. In a show of respect to Senior QB Andrew Maxwell, who was the starting quarterback the year before, coach Mark Dantonio allowed him to take one final snap as a Spartan against Michigan, as he took the final knee to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan\nThe Spartan defense, in a physically dominating performance, recorded 7 sacks on Michigan QB Devin Gardner and held the Wolverines to a program low \u221248 yards rushing, en route to an impressive 29\u20136 victory over their in-state rivals. Denicos Allen, Shilique Calhoun, and Ed Davis all recorded 2.5 sacks each. Jeremy Langford had his 4th consecutive 100 yard rushing performance, carrying the ball 26 times for 120 yards and a touchdown. Connor Cook went 18/33 for 252 yards, 2 touchdowns (1 passing, 1 rushing), and an interception. This was the largest margin of victory for the Spartans over the Wolverines since 1967, when Michigan State defeated Michigan 34\u20130, and their 5th victory over Michigan in the last 6 years. More importantly however, the Paul Bunyan Trophy returned to East Lansing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nAfter a bye week, the Spartans played against the Cornhuskers of the University of Nebraska. In a key Legends division matchup between Michigan State and Nebraska, in which a victory for either team would put them in the drivers seat for the division title, the Spartans would come out victorious 41\u201328, getting revenge for last years loss to the Cornhuskers in East Lansing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nOn the opening drive, Nebraska running back Terrell Newby fumbled a pitch on an option play which was recovered by Michigan State. After Connor Cook overthrew a wide open Bennie Fowler in the back of the end zone, the Spartans had to settle for a field goal, giving them a 3\u20130 lead. On the ensuing Nebraska possession, QB Tommy Armstrong was intercepted by Kurtis Drummond. The Nebraska defense stood tall however, and forced a Michigan State punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nOn the return, Nebraska punt returner Jordan Westerkamp muffed the catch and regained possession, but a tackle made by Kurtis Drummond jarred the ball loose and the Spartans recovered the fumble at the Nebraska 8 yard line. Michigan State was quick to capitalize, taking only 46 seconds to score on a R.J. Shelton 5 yard rushing touchdown, putting them up 10\u20130. Nebraska would respond with a 32-yard touchdown pass from Tommy Armstrong to Sam Burtch, the first touchdown the Spartan defense had allowed in 3 games. As the 1st quarter came to an end, Michigan State was holding on to a 10\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nCapping off a lengthy drive that began in the 1st quarter, Michigan State added another field goal to its score, going up 13\u20137. The remainder of the 2nd quarter was a battle of field position, as neither offenses could find their way into the red zone. However, with 2:32 remaining in the first half, Shilique Calhoun forced Tommy Armstrong to fumble the football deep in Nebraska territory, which was recovered by Michigan State. The Spartan offense, in what would be a recurring theme of the game, capitalized off of another Nebraska turnover, as Jeremy Langford carried several defenders into the end zone with him for a 6-yard rushing touchdown, putting Michigan State up 20\u20137 going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nIn the 3rd quarter, Nebraska struck gold on its first possession of the second half after Michigan State was forced to punt on its opening drive. With the score 20\u201314, punter Mike Sadler pinned Nebraska down at their own 1 yard line after a 35-yard punt. On the first play of the possession, Tommy Armstong fumbled the ball, which was recovered by Trae Waynes at the Nebraska 3 yard line with 5:30 left in the quarter. Jeremy Langford would score on the first play, taking it in from 3 yards out to put the score at 27\u201314. Nebraska would score on the ensuing possession, going on an 11 play, 79 yard drive, which was capped off with a 38-yard touchdown pass from Tommy Armstrong to Kenny Bell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nAt the start of the 4th quarter, the Spartan defense held up, forcing Nebraska to punt the ball. Michigan State's offense would start at their own 25 yard line. They were able to move the ball all the way to the Nebraska 31 yard line, but were unable to convert on 3rd and 5, as a Connor Cook pass to Jeremy Langford came up 1 yard short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nWith the game on the line, Mark Dantonio called a fake field goal attempt on 4th and 1, as Mike Sadler managed to get 3 yards on the fake to pick up the first down. After an Ineligible Downfield penalty, Michigan State faced 3rd and 18. Jeremy Langford was able to pick up a blitz on the very next play, giving Connor Cook the time to find Keith Mumphery for a 27-yard touchdown pass. With 5:46 remaining, Michigan State took a 34\u201321 lead. The Spartan defense would then force Nebraska to punt the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0044-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nOn the ensuing Spartan possession, the offense grinded down the clock, tiring out the Nebraska defense. The drive ended after Jeremy Langford scored his 3rd touchdown of the day as he ran all the way to the end zone 37 yards out. Nebraska would score a touchdown with 10 seconds left, but the game was well out of reach at that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Nebraska\nWith 32 carries for 152 yards and 3 touchdowns, Jeremy Langford recorded his 5th straight 100 yard rushing performance, increasing his rushing totals to 926 yards and 199 carries. With this victory, Michigan State took a commanding lead in the Legends division as they improved their conference record to 6\u20130, 9\u20131 overall. With a loss, Nebraska fell to 4\u20132 in conference, 7\u20133 overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Northwestern\nIn their penultimate match-up of the season, the Spartans would face the Wildcats of Northwestern University. Northwestern defeated MSU in East Lansing the previous season, 23\u201320. Securing a victory in this game would earn Michigan State its 2nd Legends Division title in 3 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Northwestern\nThe 1st quarter featured both offenses going on lengthy drives, but were unable to score much, as of the 2 teams, Northwestern was only able to score a field goal, giving them a 3\u20130 leading going into the 2nd quarter. Offensively, the Spartans gained some momentum on their opening drive of the 2nd quarter in which Jeremy Langford carried the ball 8 times, the last of which was a 20-yard rush for a touchdown to put Michigan State up 7\u20133. After the Spartan defense forced a punt, the offense would get the ball back at their own 8 yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Northwestern\nOn 3rd and 5, Bennie Fowler bobbled a pass from Connor Cook over the head of 2 defenders, regained possession of the ball and scored on an 87-yard pass (the longest scoring play of the season for Michigan State) to give MSU a 14\u20133 lead. Northwestern would answer right back, making a field goal on their next possession to cut the deficit to 12. The score was 14\u20136 going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Northwestern\nThe Spartans received the ball first to start the 2nd half and scored on a 37-yard field goal from Michael Geiger, putting the score at 17\u20136. Michigan State would further add to its score on their next possession, going 8 plays, 87 yards on drive that was capped off with a 15-yard play action pass from Connor Cook to Josiah Price, giving the Spartans a 23\u20136 lead; the PAT was blocked. The Spartans would score once more in the 4th quarter on a Jeremy Langford 37 yard touchdown run. Michigan State won 30\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Northwestern\nThe Spartan defense recorded 3 interceptions and Connor Cook threw for a then career-high 293 yards, completing 16/23 passes for 2 TDs. Jeremy Langford recorded his 6th consecutive 100 yard rushing game on 25 carries, 150 yards rushing, and 2 TDs. Michigan State secured a spot in the 2013 Big Ten Football Championship Game, in the process winning their 2nd Legends Division title in 3 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 80], "content_span": [81, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Minnesota\nThe Spartans closed out their regular season against the Golden Gophers of the University of Minnesota. Michigan State defeated Minnesota the previous year in the final game of the season to gain bowl eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Minnesota\nAfter forcing a Minnesota punt on their opening possession, Michigan State would score first, putting together a 7-play, 80 yard drive that concluded with a Jeremy Langford run of 15 yards, giving Michigan State a 7\u20130 lead. On the ensuing Minnesota possession, Trae Waynes would record his first interception of the season, giving the ball right back to the offense. The offense, however, was unable to score and was forced to punt. The first quarter concluded with a 7\u20130 Michigan State lead, as neither team was able to score after the initial Michigan State possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0051-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Minnesota\nNot much would change in the 2nd quarter as the only score was a 21-yard field goal made by Minnesota kicker Chris Hawthorne to make the score 7\u20133 going into halftime. Both teams had an opportunity to score before halftime, but Minnesota QB Phillip Nelson and Connor Cook both threw interceptions in their opponents territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Minnesota\nThe general offensive stagnation came to an end on Michigan State's opening drive, as Connor Cook led the MSU offense down the field for a touchdown, connecting with Josiah Price for a 12-yard touchdown pass. Michigan State would take a 14\u20133 lead and never look back. Neither team would score for the remainder of the game in what would go down as a defensive slug fest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Minnesota\nJeremy Langford rushed for 134 yards on 24 carries and scored one of the games only touchdowns, in the process tying the school record for most consecutive 100 yard rushing performances with 7. Michigan State recorded their 3rd 11th win season in 4 years. Michigan State became the first Big Ten team to win all eight conference games by double digits since the conference went to an eight-game schedule in 1971. They also became the first unbeaten Big Ten team to win all of its conference games by double-figures since Michigan in 1943 (6\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nIn a rematch of a very close game last year in East Lansing, the Leaders division champion Ohio State Buckeyes would face the Legends division champion Michigan State Spartans in the Big Ten Championship Game. Michigan State made its second appearance in the conference championship game, having lost to Wisconsin in the inaugural title game. A lot was on the line, as Ohio State came into the game on a 24-game winning streak and was ranked No. 2 in the BCS standings. With a win, Ohio State was practically guaranteed a spot in the 2014 BCS National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0054-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nIn Michigan State's case, they were seeking their first BCS bowl bid ever. The Spartans were also seeking their first Rose Bowl appearance since 1988 where they defeated USC 20\u201317. Although Michigan State technically would have been able to get invited to the Rose Bowl even if they lost (as long as they were ranked within the top 14 in the BCS standings), the Spartans wanted to win the Big Ten outright. Needless to say, motivation and incentive for both teams were high. Ohio State would win the coin toss and defer possession until the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nSeveral Ohio State Pass Interference penalties kept the Michigan State offense on the field on the opening drive, where the Spartans stalled at the Buckeye 23 yard line after two consecutive Connor Cook incompletions. Michael Geiger put MSU up 3\u20130 after making a 40-yard field goal. The remainder of the 1st quarter was a defensive struggle, as neither team could manage to get into opposing territory. The score was 3\u20130 going into the 2nd quarter; Ohio State was held scoreless in the 1st quarter for the first since playing Penn State the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nOn the very first play of the second quarter, Connor Cook hit Keith Mumphery for 72-yard touchdown pass (the second longest scoring play all season for the Spartans) to put Michigan State up 10\u20130. Michigan State would add to its lead on their very next possession as Connor Cook hit Tony Lippett in the corner of the endzone on a 33-yard pass, giving the Spartans a 17\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0056-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nTrailing 17\u20130, Braxton Miller led Ohio State on its first scoring drive which ended after Miller found Corey \"Philly\" Brown over the top of the Michigan State defense on a 20-yard touchdown pass, cutting the deficit to 10. After the two teams traded possessions, Ohio State got the ball back with 1:23 remaining in the first half. The Buckeyes drive did not start off as planned, as on the very first play, Shillique Calhoun and Max Bullough combined for a sack which resulted in a loss of six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0056-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nOn the very next play, Braxton Miller got the majority of that lost yardage back with a 15-yard run. With 13 seconds left in the half, after a Michigan State timeout, Miller completed a 38-yard pass to TE Jeff Heuerman to put Ohio State in good field goal position at the MSU 11 yard line. Senior kicker Drew Basil converted a 20-yard field goal attempt as time expired to bring the Buckeyes within a touchdown going into halftime, giving them momentum going into the second half in which they would receive the ball first. At the end of the first half, Michigan State led 17\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nThe physical running attack of Ohio State would be the theme of the third quarter, as Buckeye RB Carlos Hyde, who had been relatively quiet up until that point, started to gain traction. The duo of Hyde and Miller rushed for a combined 64 yards on the opening Ohio State possession of the second half, and Miller tied the game on an 11-yard rushing touchdown, making the score 17\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nOn the ensuing Michigan State possession, Connor Cook threw only his fifth interception of the season (which would end up being the only turnover of the game), giving the ball back to the Ohio State offense with a short field. Despite this, the Spartan defense, who came into the game ranked No. 1 in total defense, got a critical stop, forcing Ohio State to punt the ball. The Buckeye defense then forced a three and out after the Ohio State special teams pinned the ball down at the MSU four yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0057-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nAfter a decent return, Ohio State started their drive in MSU territory. Taking advantage of the short field, Carlos Hyde and Braxton Miller imposed their will again, as Miller scored his second rushing touchdown of the game from six yards out to give Ohio State a 24\u201317 lead. Desperately needing a score after 24 unanswered Ohio State points, the Michigan State offense took the field. On a drive that featured a huge 33-yard run by Jeremy Langford and a key conversion on fourth and two on an option run play, Michael Geiger kicked a 44-yard field goal to bring Michigan State within four points. The third quarter ended with Ohio State leading 24\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nHigh drama ensued in the fourth quarter. After an Ohio State punt opened the quarter, the Michigan State offense went on an eight play, 90-yard drive that ended after Connor Cook completed a nine-yard touchdown pass to TE Josiah Price, who was wide open in the left side of the endzone. With the score, the Spartans took the lead back from Ohio State, 27\u201324. With under eight minutes remaining in the game, a Mike Sadler punt was partially blocked by Ryan Shazier (an All-Conference linebacker for the Buckeyes), which caused the punt to only net 19 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0058-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nBraxton Miller and the Ohio State offense took over with 7:36 remaining at the MSU 47-yard line. Knowing they had to get a critical stop, the Michigan State defense stood tall, as on 4th and 2, Spartan linebacker Denicos Allen beat his blocker and prevented Braxton Miller from converting the first down on a speed option play. Michigan State took over on downs and, several plays later, Jeremy Langford put the game out of reach on a 26-yard touchdown run, giving Michigan State a 34\u201324 lead and became the first 100-yard rusher the Ohio State defense had allowed all season. Down 10 with 2:16 remaining, Ohio State failed to convert on 4th and 10 after four consecutive Braxton Miller incompletions. Michigan State took over on downs and ran out the clock, with the final score being 34\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Season, Game summaries, Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game)\nOhio State's dream of playing for a National Championship came to an end, as did their 24-game winning streak. Michigan State won their first outright Big Ten Championship since 1987 and secured their first Rose Bowl appearance in 26 years. Connor Cook was named MVP, throwing for a then career-high 304 yards, completing 24 of 40 passes and three touchdowns. Jeremy Langford rushed for over 100 yards rushing for the eighth straight game, breaking the school record for most consecutive 100 yard rushing games, a record set back in 1985 by MSU great Lorenzo White. He also finished the regular season leading the Big Ten in rushing touchdowns (17). This win also signified the first 12 win season in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 106], "content_span": [107, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Statistics\nNote: Comp/Att = Completions/Attempts; Pct. = Completion Percentage; Pass Rat. = Passer Rating", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Statistics\nNote: XPM = Extra Point Made; XPA = Extra Point Attempt; XP% = Extra Point Percentage; FGM = Field Goal Made; FGA = Field Goal Attempt; FG% = Field Goal Percentage; LNG = Longest make", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234750-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan State Spartans football team, Statistics\nNote: TT = Total tackles; Sol = Solo tackles; Ast = Assisted tackles; TFL = Tackles for loss; FF = Forced fumbles; FR = Fumble recoveries; PD = Passes defended; INT = Interceptions", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team\nThe 2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, sometimes known as Team 134 in reference to the 134-year tradition of the Michigan football program, was an American football team that represented the University of Michigan during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wolverines played in the Legends Division of the Big Ten Conference and played their home games at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The team was led by head coach Brady Hoke, who was in his third season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team\nMichigan began the year with five consecutive victories, including a 41\u201330 victory over rival Notre Dame in just the second night game in Michigan Stadium history. The game set the all-time record for largest crowd attending an American football game at 115,109. However, in their sixth game, the Wolverines were upset on the road by unranked Penn State in four overtimes. Michigan went on to lose five of their final six games, eventually dropping out of the AP poll, ending with a loss to Kansas State in the 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl. The season ended with a record of 7\u20136 overall, 3\u20135 in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team\nThe Wolverines were led on offense by quarterback Devin Gardner, who led the team with 2,960 passing yards and 32 total touchdowns (22 passing and 11 rushing). Wide receiver Jeremy Gallon finished second in the Big Ten with 1,373 receiving yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Preseason\nThe 2012 team compiled an 8\u20135 record under second-year head coach Brady Hoke and faced South Carolina in the Outback Bowl, losing 33\u201328 on a last-minute touchdown. Michigan lost four games to teams that were ranked in the top ten of the AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Preseason\nOn March 20, the team announced that returning starting linebacker Jake Ryan suffered a torn ACL and was listed as out indefinitely. On April 1, the team announced that backup quarterback Russell Bellomy had also suffered a torn ACL and would be out indefinitely. On May 7, the team announced that punter Will Hagerup had been reinstated to the team following a suspension for a violation of team rules, but would sit out the season. On August 21, the team announced that wide receiver Amara Darboh would miss the season with a foot injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Preseason\nMichigan returns 13 out of 22 starters \u2014 six on offense and seven on defense. Michigan will be forced to replace captains quarterback Denard Robinson and safety Jordan Kovacs, as well as starters defensive end Craig Roh, linebacker Kenny Demens, defensive tackle Will Campbell, cornerback J.T. Floyd, center Elliott Mealer, offensive guards Patrick Omameh and Ricky Barnum, tight end Mike Kwiatkowski, and wide receiver Roy Roundtree. Back-up running back Vincent Smith also departed due to graduation. Taylor Lewan, however, decided to return for his senior season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Recruiting, Recruits\nMichigan's recruiting class was ranked No. 2 by Scout, No. 5 by Rivals, and No. 6 by ESPN. The program received 27 letters of intent on National Signing Day, February 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Rankings\nMichigan began the season ranked No. 17 in both the AP and Coaches' Polls, and remained there following its week one victory over Central Michigan. Michigan rose to No. 11 in the AP Poll and No. 12 in the Coaches' Poll after its victory over Notre Dame, but fell to No. 15 in the AP Poll and No. 14 in the Coaches' Poll following its narrow victory over Akron, and then fell again to No. 18 in the AP Poll and No. 17 in the Coaches' Poll following its narrow victory over Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Radio\nRadio coverage for all games will be broadcast statewide on The Michigan Wolverines Football Network and on Sirius XM Satellite Radio. The radio announcers are Frank Beckmann with play-by-play, Jim Brandstatter with color commentary, and Doug Karsch with sideline reports. This was Beckmann's 32nd and final season in the Michigan press box; he retired from sportscasting afterward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Central Michigan\nTo open the season, Michigan faced the Central Michigan Chippewas. This was the first meeting since 2006, when the game incurred a lightning delay, which was Michigan Stadium's first ever weather delay. Michigan won that game 41\u201317. Starting safety Thomas Gordon was suspended for the game for a violation of team rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Central Michigan\nMichigan dominated the game, winning 59\u20139. Michigan opened the scoring in the first quarter when Joe Reynolds returned a blocked punt 30 yards for a touchdown, but Central Michigan responded with a 23-yard field goal from Ron Coluzzi. Michigan ended the scoring in the first quarter with a Devin Gardner 22-yard touchdown run, making the score 14\u20133. Michigan outscored Central Michigan 21\u20133 in the second quarter. Fitzgerald Toussaint rushed one-yard for a touchdown before Coluzzi added another field goal for Central Michigan, this time from a distance of 27 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Central Michigan\nMichigan ended the scoring in the first half with a 21-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Jeremy Gallon and a four-yard touchdown run from Gardner, making the score 35\u20136 at halftime. Michigan outscored Central Michigan 21\u20130 in the third quarter via a two-yard touchdown run from Toussaint, a one-yard run from Derrick Green, and a five-yard touchdown run from Thomas Rawls, which made the score 56\u20136. The teams traded field goals in the fourth quarter, a 33-yard one from Coluzzi for Central Michigan and a 30-yard one from Brendan Gibbons for Michigan to end the scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Central Michigan\nMichigan's 59 points were the most scored by a Michigan football team in its season opener since 1905\u2014when Michigan defeated Ohio Wesleyan 65\u20130\u2014and were also the most points scored against a team since Michigan defeated Massachusetts 63\u201313 in 2012. The blocked punt returned for a touchdown in the first quarter was Michigan's first blocked punt returned for a touchdown since 2009, when Brandon Graham returned one against Delaware State. Michigan's defense recorded four sacks, which matched the previous season's high against Ohio State. 27 freshman made their debuts for Michigan during the game. Backup running back Drake Johnson suffered a torn ACL during the game and will miss the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nFollowing its game against Central, Michigan hosted the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. Notre Dame won the previous meeting 13\u20136. Billed as \"Under the Lights II\", this was the second night game in Michigan Stadium's history; the previous game also featured Notre Dame. Tom Harmon was honored as a Michigan Football Legend, and his #98 jersey was unretired and given to quarterback Devin Gardner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nMichigan won the game, 41\u201330. Michigan opened the scoring in the first quarter with a 44-yard field goal from Brendan Gibbons and added a 61-yard touchdown pass from Devin Gardner to Jeremy Gallon to expand its lead to 10\u20130. Notre Dame answered with a seven-yard touchdown pass from Tommy Rees to T. J. Jones, making the score at the end of the first quarter 10\u20137 in favor of Michigan. Notre Dame tied the game in the second quarter with a 44-yard field goal from Kyle Brindza, but Michinga regained the via a two-yard touchdown run from Devin Gardner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nAfter Notre Dame cut Michigan's lead to four via a 24-yard field goal from Brindza, Michigan scored ten unanswered points to end the half\u2014a Gibbons 38-yard field goal and a 12-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Gallon\u2014making the score 27\u201313 at halftime. Notre Dame reduced Michigan's lead to seven points in the third quarter on a 20-yard touchdown pass from Rees to Troy Niklas, but Michigan regained its 14-point advantage with a 13-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Gallon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nNotre Dame scored the first ten points of the fourth quarter via a Stephon Tuitt interception in the Michigan endzone for a touchdown and a Brindza 40-yard field goal, making the score 34\u201330 in favor of Michigan. Michigan, however, would score the final points of the game on a four-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Drew Dileo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nThe game's announced attendance was 115,109, making it the largest crowd ever to watch an American football game (college or NFL). Gardner accounted for 376 yards of Michigan's offense, the ninth highest single-game performance by a Michigan player. The only two Michigan players to contribute more total yards in a single game are Denard Robinson and John Navarre. Wide receiver Jeremy Gallon caught eight passes for 184 yards and three touchdowns, while rushing for 14 yards. Gallon's 184 receiving yards against Notre Dame is tied for the sixth highest single-game performance in Michigan history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nOn defense, cornerback Blake Countess had two interceptions for Michigan, the first two of his career, and became the first Michigan player to have two interceptions in a game since James Rogers against Purdue in 2010. Raymon Taylor recorded a career-high eleven tackles in the game. The win was Michigan's 400th victory at Michigan Stadium and improved its record against Notre Dame to 24\u201316\u20131. Gibbons' first-quarter field goal\u2014his 15th straight made field goal attempt\u2014broke the Michigan record for most consecutive field goals made. Remy Hamilton previously held the record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nStephen M. Ross, who donated $200 million to the University of Michigan earlier in the week, was named an honorary captain for the game. In recognition of his performance in the game, Gallon was named the Big Ten's Offensive Player of the Week. Gardner was named Davey O'Brien Quarterback of the Week and one of eight Manning Award Stars of the Week for his 5 touchdown performance, which included a record-tying 4 passing touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Notre Dame\nReferences to chickens were a widely reported side story to the game. After Notre Dame announced one year earlier that it would terminate the rivalry after the 2014 season, Michigan head coach Brady Hoke said Notre Dame was \"chickening out\" of the rivalry. When ESPN commentator Lee Corso made his pick for the game during the College GameDay show (which was in Ann Arbor for the game), he brought out several live chickens while picking Notre Dame to win the game, and fans in the background carried signs with poultry references, including \"Cluck of the Irish.\" At the end Michigan's 41\u201330 victory, in what Chantel Jennings of ESPN.com called the \"Dig of the Day\", the speakers at Michigan Stadium loudly played the \"Chicken Dance\" as Michigan fans \"danced in the stands.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Akron\nFollowing the game against Notre Dame, Michigan hosted the Akron Zips. This was the first meeting between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Akron\nMichigan avoided a massive upset with a goal line stand at the end of the game, ensuring a 28\u201324 victory. Michigan opened the scoring in the first quarter with a 48-yard touchdown pass from Devin Gardner to Devin Funchess, but Akron responded with a 45-yard field goal from Robert Stein. Following a scoreless second quarter, Michigan led 7\u20133 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Akron\nAkron opened the scoring in the third quarter with a 28-yard touchdown from Kyle Pohl to Zach D'Orazio, but Michigan responded with two touchdowns of its own\u2014a Gardner 36-yard run and a 33-yard pass from Gardner to Jehu Chesson\u2014giving Michigan a 21\u201310 lead. Akron responded with 14 points of its own\u2014a Justin March 27-yard interception return for a touchdown and a one-yard touchdown pass from Pohl to Tyrell Goodman\u2014to take a 24\u201321 lead. Michigan regained the lead and ended the scoring with a two-yard touchdown run from Fitzgerald Toussaint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Akron\nGardner recorded 103 rushing yards, which set a new career high. Brendan Gibbons missed a 45-yard field goal in the second quarter, which ended his streak of 16 consecutive made field goals. Blake Countess recorded his second straight game with an interception, while Jarrod Wilson recorded his first career interception. Akron became the 145th school to play Michigan in a football game, with Michigan's record improving to 116\u201325\u20134 in games when facing a new opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at UConn\nFollowing its near-upset from Akron, Michigan traveled to East Hartford to face the Connecticut (UConn) Huskies. In the previous meeting in 2010\u2014the rededication of Michigan Stadium\u2014Michigan defeated Connecticut 30\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at UConn\nMichigan won its second close game in two weeks, scoring 17 unanswered points to defeat UConn 24\u201321 after falling behind 21\u20137 in the third quarter. Michigan scored the only points of the first quarter via a Devin Gardner 17-yard touchdown. UConn responded with 14 unanswered points in the second quarter to take a 14\u20137 lead at halftime: an 11-yard touchdown pass from Chandler Whitmer to Spencer Parker and a seven-yard touchdown pass from Whitmer to Lyle McCombs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at UConn\nUConn opened the scoring in the third quarter when Ty-Meer Brown returned a Gardner fumble 34 yards for a touchdown, making the score 21\u20137 UConn. Michigan responded by scoring the final 17 points, a 35-yard touchdown run from Fitzgerald Toussaint in the third quarter, a 12-yard touchdown run from Toussaint in the fourth quarter, and a 21-yard field goal from Brendan Gibbons, which also occurred in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at UConn\nThe attendance of 42,704 was the largest crowd in the history of Rentschler Field. Toussaint carried the ball 24 times for a total of 120 rushing yards, his first effort over 100 yards since the game against Ohio State in 2011. Frank Clark recorded two sacks in the game, his first multi-sack game of his career. Desmond Morgan recorded his first career interception, while Chris Wormley and Raymon Taylor both recorded their first career sacks. Michigan's defense only allowed 206 yards of total offense and held UConn to one successful third down conversion out of eleven attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Minnesota\nAfter its trip to Connecticut, Michigan faced the Minnesota Golden Gophers. In the previous meeting, Michigan dominated Minnesota and won by a score of 35\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Minnesota\nMichigan again dominated Minnesota, winning 42\u201313. The teams traded touchdowns in the first quarter, with Michigan scoring on an eight-yard touchdown run from Fitzgerald Toussaint and Minnesota responding with a seven-yard touchdown pass from Mitch Leidner to Maxx Williams. Michigan scored the only points of the second quarter on a 24-yard touchdown pass from Devin Garder to Devin Funchess, giving Michigan a 14\u20137 lead at halftime. Michigan scored the first points of the third quarter on a two-yard touchdown run from Derrick Green, but Minnesota responded with a 44-yard field goal from Chris Hawthorne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Minnesota\nMichigan responded with a 12-yard touchdown run from Toussaint. Minnesota opened the scoring in the fourth quarter with a 27-yard field goal from Hawthorne to make the score 28\u201313, but Michigan scored the final 14 points of the game via a two-yard touchdown run from Devin Gardner and a 72-yard interception return for a touchdown from Blake Countess.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Minnesota\nThe game was Michigan's first game without a turnover since its 2011 meeting with Minnesota, and the first time Gardner had started a game as a quarterback without throwing at least one interception. Graham Glasgow replaced Jack Miller as the team's starting center, while Chris Bryant replaced Glasgow as the team's left guard. Michigan's offense did not attempt a pass during the first quarter of the game. Blake Countess's interception in the fourth quarter was his fourth of the season; he became the first Wolverine since Donovan Warren in 2009 to have four interceptions in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Penn State\nFollowing its game against Minnesota, Michigan traveled to State College to face the Penn State Nittany Lions for the first time since 2010. In the previous meeting, Penn State won by a score of 41\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Penn State\nPenn State won the game, defeating Michigan 43\u201340 after four overtime periods. Penn State opened the scoring in the first quarter with a 12-yard touchdown pass from Christian Hackenberg to Brandon Felder. Michigan responded with a 59-yard touchdown pass from Devin Gardner to Devin Funchess and a 47-yard field goal from Brendan Gibbons, which gave Michigan a 10\u20137 lead after the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Penn State\nPenn State responded in the second quarter with 14 unanswered points, via a 20-yard touchdown pass from Hackenberg to Jesse James and a 24-yard touchdown pass from Hackenberg to Felder, making the score 21\u201310 in favor of Penn State at halftime. Michigan responded with the first ten points of the third quarter. Frank Clark recovered a Penn State fumble and returned it 24 yards for a touchdown, while Gibbons added a 23-yard to make the score 21\u201320 in favor of Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0026-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Penn State\nPenn State responded with a 45-yard field goal from Sam Ficken, but Michigan regained the lead via a 16-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Jeremy Gallon. In the fourth quarter, Michigan added to its lead with a 37-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Funchess, making the score 34\u201324. Penn State scored the next ten points\u2014a 43-yard field goal from Ficken and a one-yard run from Hackenberg\u2014to tie the game and send it to overtime. Neither team scored in the first overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0026-0003", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Penn State\nIn the second overtime, Gibbons kicked a 25-yard field goal for Michigan, but Penn State responded with a 36-yard field goal from Ficken. After neither team scored in the third overtime, Gibbons gave Michigan a three-point lead with a 40-yard field goal in the fourth overtime, but Penn State responded with a two-yard touchdown run from Bill Belton to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Penn State\nThe game was the longest in Michigan football history, surpassing triple overtime victories against Michigan State in 2004 and Illinois in 2010. Devin Funchess recorded over 100 receiving yards for the second consecutive week. Frank Clark recorded two sacks and two fumble recoveries, as well as a defensive touchdown, giving Michigan its second consecutive week with a defensive touchdown. Jake Ryan played for the first time since his ACL injury in the spring. Brendan Gibbons recorded his 127th consecutive point after touchdown (PAT), setting a new Michigan record and passing JD Carlson in the process. Desmond Morgan recorded eight tackles during the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Indiana\nAfter its trip to State College, Michigan hosted the Indiana Hoosiers for the first time since 2010. Michigan won the previous game by a score of 42\u201335.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Indiana\nThe game turned into a shootout, with Michigan winning 63\u201347. Indiana opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 59-yard touchdown pass from Nate Sudfeld to Cody Latimer. Michigan responded with a 13-yard touchdown run from Devin Gardner and then took the lead via a two-yard touchdown run from Fitzgerald Toussaint. Michigan added to its lead in the second quarter via a seven-yard touchdown run from Toussaint, but Indiana responded with a 33-yard touchdown pass from Tre Roberson to Shane Wynn, cutting Michigan's lead to seven points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Indiana\nMichigan added a 21-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Jeremy Gallon, but as time expired in the half, Mitch Ewald kicked a 50-yard field goal, making the score 28\u201317 in favor of Michigan at halftime. The teams combined to score 37 points in the third quarter. Indiana cut Michigan's lead to four with a two-yard touchdown run from Tevin Coleman, but Michigan responded with a 50-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Gallon. Indiana answered with a five-yard touchdown pass from Roberson to Wynn and then reduced Michigan's lead to one point with a 23-yard field goal from Ewald.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Indiana\nMichigan answered with a one-yard touchdown run from Toussaint, but Indiana responded with a 67-yard touchdown pass from Roberson to Kofi Hughes, making the score 42\u201340 in favor of Michigan. In the fourth quarter, Michigan responded with a six-yard touchdown run from Gardner, but Indiana answered with a 15-yard touchdown run from Tre Roberson. Michigan once again extended its lead to nine points with a six-yard touchdown run from Gardner and then ended the scoring with a 27-yard touchdown run from Toussaint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Indiana\nJeremy Gallon broke the single-game receiving record for both Michigan and the Big Ten Conference during the game, catching 14 passes for a total of 369 yards. Gardner broke Michigan's single game records for both passing yards (503) and total offense (584). Michigan's offense set a new school record for total yardage with 751 yards of offense, breaking the previous record of 727 yards against Delaware State in 2009. Thomas Gordon recorded his first two interceptions of the season during the game. With the win, Michigan became bowl eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Michigan State\nFollowing its clash with Indiana, Michigan traveled to East Lansing to face its in-state rival, the Michigan State Spartans. Michigan won the previous game 12\u201310 on a last second field goal from Brendan Gibbons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Michigan State\nMichigan State dominated the game, winning 29\u20136. Michigan opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 49-yard field goal from Matt Wile, but Michigan State responded with a field goal of its own\u2014a 40-yard one from Michael Geiger. In the second quarter, Michigan State took the lead on a 44-yard field goal from Geiger, but Michigan responded with a 34-yard field goal from Brendan Gibbons. Michigan State regained the lead on a 14-yard touchdown pass from Connor Cook to Bennie Fowler. After leading 13\u20136 at halftime, Michigan State scored all points that occurred after halftime. In the third quarter, Geiger added a 35-yard field goal to give Michigan State a 16\u20136 lead. In the fourth quarter, Michigan State added two touchdowns via a one-yard touchdown run from Connor Cook and a 40-yard touchdown run from Jeremy Langford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Michigan State\nMichigan rushed for \u221248 yards, which was a school record for the lowest total rushing yards in a single game. Michigan fell to 35\u201324\u20132 when the two teams played games involving the Paul Bunyan Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Nebraska\nAfter its trip to East Lansing, Michigan hosted the Nebraska Cornhuskers. The previous meeting saw Michigan lose starting quarterback Denard Robinson to injury in the first half and it eventually lost the game 23\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Nebraska\nNebraska defeated Michigan 17\u201313 in a low-scoring affair. Nebraska opened the scoring in the first quarter via a 21-yard field goal from Pat Smith and an eight-yard run from Ameer Abdullah. Michigan responded in the second quarter with a 27-yard field goal from Brendan Gibbons, giving Nebraska a 10\u20133 lead at halftime. Michigan tied the game in the third quarter with a 5-yard touchdown pass from Devin Gardner to Devin Funchess, and then took the lead in the fourth quarter via a 40-yard field goal from Gibbons. Nebraska responded with a five-yard touchdown pass from Tommy Armstrong to Abdullah to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Nebraska\nThe loss was Michigan's first at Michigan Stadium since Brady Hoke became the head coach in 2011. Both Dennis Norfleet and Chris Wormley recorded their first career fumble recoveries. The attendance of 112,204 marked the 250th consecutive game Michigan Stadium has seen crowds of over 100,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Northwestern\nFollowing its game against Nebraska, Michigan traveled to Evanston to face the Northwestern Wildcats. Michigan won the previous meeting 38\u201331 in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Northwestern\nMichigan stunned Northwestern with a last second field goal to tie the game, and then won in triple overtime by a score of 27\u201319. The teams traded field goals in the first quarter, with Michigan scoring first via a 25-yard field goal from Brendan Gibbons, while Northwestern responded with a 40-yard field goal from Jeff Budzien. Northwestern scored the only points of the second quarter via a 22-yard field goal from Budzien and led 6\u20133 at halftime. Northwestern also scored the only points of the third quarter via a 29-yard field goal from Budzien to take a 9\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Northwestern\nMichigan responded with two field goals from Brendan Gibbons\u2014one from 28 yards and one from 44 yards, with the second one coming as time expired. The teams traded touchdowns in the first overtime, with Michigan scoring via an 11-yard touchdown pass from Devin Gardner to Jake Butt, while Kain Colter scored via a one-yard run for Northwestern. The teams traded field goals in the second overtime. Jeff Budzien kicked a 36-yard field goal for Northwestern, while Brendan Gibbons added a 29-yard field goal for Michigan. Michigan won the game in the third overtime via a 5-yard touchdown run from Gardner, converting a two-point attempt via a Gardner run, and then stopping Northwestern's offense during Northwestern's attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Northwestern\nMichigan improved its record to 9\u20132 in games that were decided in overtime. Jake Butt's touchdown in the first overtime was his first career touchdown. Jeremy Gallon became the school's tenth player to record 1,000 receiving yards in a season and the first since Mario Manningham did so in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Iowa\nAfter its game against Northwestern, Michigan completed its road portion of the schedule against the Iowa Hawkeyes. Michigan dominated the previous meeting, winning 42\u201317, with Devin Gardner accounting for all six of Michigan's touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Iowa\nIowa won the game by a score of 24\u201321. Michigan opened the scoring in the first quarter with a seven-yard interception return for a touchdown from Brennan Beyer, but Iowa responded with a five-yard touchdown pass from Jake Rudock to CJ Fiedorowicz. Michigan scored the next fourteen points via a two-yard pass from Devin Gardner to A.J. Williams and a nine-yard pass from Gardner to Jeremy Gallon, giving Michigan a 21\u20137 lead at halftime. Iowa scored the next 17 points to win the game. In the third quarter, Jake Rudock completed a 55-yard touchdown pass to Tevaun Smith, cutting Michigan's lead to seven points. In the fourth quarter, Mark Weisman tied the game via a nine-yard touchdown run, and Mike Myer gave Iowa the victory with a 34-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, at Iowa\nThe temperature at kickoff was 18\u00a0\u00b0F. Frank Clark had 2.5 tackles for a loss, while Michigan intercepted three passes and had its third defensive touchdown of the season. Blake Countess recorded his fifth interception of the season, while Raymon Taylor recorded his fourth interception of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Ohio State\nFollowing its road finale against Iowa, Michigan faced Ohio State in the 110th meeting of \"The Game\". Ohio State won the previous edition 26\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Ohio State\nOhio State won a thrilling contest 42\u201341 after Michigan missed a go-ahead two-point conversion attempt with 32 seconds remaining in the game. The teams combined for 28 points in the first quarter. Michigan opened the scoring via a one-yard touchdown run from Devin Gardner, but Ohio State responded with a 53-yard touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to Devin Smith. Michigan regained the lead via a four-yard touchdown run from Fitzgerald Toussaint, but Ohio State responded with a 53-yard touchdown run from Miller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Ohio State\nMichigan regained the lead in the second quarter via a 17-yard touchdown pass from Devin Gardner to Jeremy Gallon, but Ohio State responded with a 21-yard touchdown run from Braxton Miller, making the score 21\u201321 at halftime. In the third quarter, Ohio State took the lead for the first time in the game, with Braxton Miller scoring on a 3-yard touchdown run. Ohio State added to its lead via a 22-yard touchdown pass from Miller to Jeff Heuerman, making the score 35\u201321 in favor of Ohio State at the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0044-0002", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Ohio State\nIn the fourth quarter, Michigan responded with an 11-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Drew Dileo and a two-yard pass from Gardner to Jake Butt, which tied the score at 35. Ohio State regained the lead via a one-yard touchdown run from Carlos Hyde, but Michigan responded with a two-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Devin Funchess. Instead of attempting the extra point to send the game to overtime, Michigan decided to go for a two-point conversion to win the game in regulation. Gardner's pass was intercepted and Ohio State won its second consecutive game over Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Ohio State\nDevin Gardner completed 32 of his 45 attempted passes for 451 yards and four touchdowns. This was his second career game of over 400 passing yards; he is the only Michigan quarterback to have ever thrown for 400 passing yards in a single game. Gardner's 451 passing yards and Gallon's 175 receiving yards are the most passing and receiving yards ever recorded against Ohio State in the history of the rivalry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Game summaries, vs. Kansas State\nFor its final game of the season, Michigan faced Kansas State in the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl. This was the first ever meeting between the two schools. This was Michigan's forty-third bowl game in its history, and the first time it had ever played in the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl. It was also be the first time Michigan has played in Arizona since the 1986 Fiesta Bowl, when Michigan defeated Nebraska 27\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Depth chart\nStarters and backups against Central Michigan. Following Drake Johnson's season-ending injury against Central Michigan, Derrick Green replaced him as the backup running back, while Thomas Rawls replaced Justice Hayes as the third-string running back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Awards\nFifth-year senior offensive tackle Taylor Lewan earned his second consecutive and Michigan's third consecutive Rimington-Pace Offensive lineman of the Year award and tight end Devin Funchess was selected as the Kwalick-Clark Tight end of the Year. Lewan earned first-team All-Big Ten Conference recognition from both the coaches and the media, while Funchess and Blake Countess were All-Conference first team by the media and second-team honors by the coaches. Jeremy Gallon was a second team selection by both the coaches and the media, while Frank Clark was recognized as second-team by the coaches and honorable mention by the media. Other honorable mention selections were Jibreel Black (coaches and media), Devin Gardner, Brendan Gibbons and Raymon Taylor (media) and Michael Schofield (coaches). Following the season Gallon was selected team MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, Awards\nLewan was a first team All-American selection by Sporting News, a second team selection by the Associated Press, CBSSports.com, Walter Camp Football Foundation, Sports Illustrated and a third team selection by Athlon Sports. Countess, Funchess and Gallon were honorable mention selections by Sports Illustrated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234751-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Michigan Wolverines football team, 2014 NFL Draft\nIn addition to the drafted players both Thomas Gordon (New York Giants) and Fitzgerald Toussaint (Baltimore Ravens) signed contracts as undrafted free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234752-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Micronesian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in the Federated States of Micronesia on 5 March 2013 for the 10 seats in the Congress elected for a two-year term. A total of 21 candidates ran for election. Three MPs were elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election\nA by-election for the UK House of Commons constituency of Mid Ulster in Northern Ireland was held on 7 March 2013. The election was triggered by the resignation of Martin McGuinness, who had been elected to the seat in 1997 as the Sinn F\u00e9in candidate. The election was won by Francie Molloy, also of Sinn F\u00e9in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Resignation of the sitting MP - Martin McGuinness\nOn 11 June 2012, the sitting MP Martin McGuinness announced his intention to resign from the House of Commons to concentrate on his position as Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland and avoid so-called \"double jobbing\", by which members of the Northern Ireland Assembly sometimes also work as MPs or councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Resignation of the sitting MP - Martin McGuinness\nUnder the Westminster system, the vacation of a seat by a sitting MP triggers a by-election to choose their successor, with the election date in this case being set by the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland due to Sinn F\u00e9in's policy of abstentionism. In reference to the cost incurred by such an election,Sinn F\u00e9in said they would have preferred the vacancy be filled by co-option (as used for other elected bodies in Northern Ireland), but this is not permitted in the Westminster system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Resignation of the sitting MP - Martin McGuinness\nHaving delayed the announcement in part to avoid a winter election, McGuinness confirmed he had resigned on 30 December 2012, with the formal process of being appointed Crown Steward and Bailiff of the Manor of Northstead occurring on 2 January 2013, a procedural device that Sinn F\u00e9in oppose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Result\nSinn F\u00e9in candidate Francie Molloy held the seat. However, the majority was much reduced from the 2010 election. The Sinn F\u00e9in vote fell by five percentage points to just under 47%. Also, whereas in 2010 McGuinness was opposed by three unionist parties, the Democratic Unionist Party, Ulster Conservatives and Unionists and Traditional Unionist Voice, none of whom polled more than 15%, on this occasion there was only a single independent Unionist candidate, Nigel Lutton. Lutton took over 34% of the vote, a slight increase on the combined votes of the three unionists in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Result\n1This is compared to the combined vote at the 2010 general election of the Democratic Unionist Party, Ulster Conservatives and Unionists and Traditional Unionist Voice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign\nThe Statement of Persons Nominated was published on 21 February and confirmed that four candidates would contest the by-election. The result was declared in the early hours of Friday, 8 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, SDLP\nThe Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) chose Patsy McGlone MLA for Mid Ulster, as their candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Sinn F\u00e9in\nSinn F\u00e9in's Francie Molloy MLA, then deputy speaker of the Northern Ireland Assembly, was selected as the party's candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nNigel Lutton stood as an Independent Unionist, supported by the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP; who stood at the preceding general election as part of the Conservatives and Unionists), Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV) and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nThe possibility of a unionist 'unity' candidate to maximise the chance of defeating Sinn F\u00e9in was raised early on. There were discussions between the DUP and the UUP on standing a unity candidate. The UUP were described as being \"coy\" on whether or not they would stand or support another unionist candidate. The DUP chair of Magherafelt District Council and TUV leader Jim Allister MLA called for a unity candidate and TUV said they would probably not stand a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nThe UUP leader Mike Nesbitt said in late January that the party would be willing to support a \"community candidate\", but that the UUP would stand a candidate if the DUP stood a candidate. However, a meeting of the UUP constituency association was reported to be divided on the issue of whether to support a unity candidate. This came against a backdrop of greater unionist unity in Northern Irish politics more generally, including the setting up of the Unionist Forum and warmer relationships between the DUP and UUP, and the flag protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nOn behalf of the UK Independence Party, David McNarry MLA also supported the idea of a unionist unity candidate in a press release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nThe idea of a unionist unity candidate was criticised as \"living in the past\" by Molloy, the Sinn F\u00e9in candidate. Alliance candidate Eric Bullick also criticised the decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nOn 14 February, the UUP and DUP constituency associations both agreed to support victims' campaigner and local undertaker Nigel Lutton as a single unionist candidate. TUV are also supported Lutton's candidacy, with Walter Millar, the party's constituency chairman and their candidate at the general election, signing Lutton's nomination papers. However, two UUP Members of the Northern Ireland Legislative Assembly, former deputy leader John McCallister and Basil McCrea, resigned from the party in protest at the decision and closer co-operation with the DUP. After the by-election, in June 2013, they announced the formation of NI21, a new unionist party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nLutton declined to tell reporters which party he usually votes for. He previously worked as a personal assistant for DUP MP David Simpson, to whom he is related, and had before that been a member of the Young Unionists, the youth wing of the UUP. His election agent was UUP General Secretary Colin McCusker, a long-time personal friend. Both DUP and UUP politicians were involved in his campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nWillie Frazer, a victims' campaigner, independent unionist and spokesman for the then newly constituted protest alliance the Ulster People's Forum, initially announced his intention to stand. Frazer told a 'webchat' for the Belfast Newsletter that the Ulster People's Forum \"is not a political party\", and that in usual circumstances he would consider voting for the Traditionalist Unionist Voice. At the end of January 2013, Frazer then said he would consider not standing in favour of Jamie Bryson, a leading figure in the Belfast City Hall flag protests who is the interim chair of the Ulster People's Forum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Unionist unity\nAfter Lutton's selection, Frazer initially announced that he would not be running and fully supported him. However, he later said he would still consider standing if Lutton was too close to the DUP. He did not, in the end, submit his candidacy. After the by-election, in April 2013, he co-founded the Protestant Coalition, a new political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Allegations about the killing of Frederick Lutton\nNigel Lutton's father, Frederick, was a former RUC reservist killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) in 1979. In 2007, under Parliamentary privilege, DUP MP David Simpson (a cousin of Frederick Lutton) alleged that Francie Molloy, then a PIRA volunteer/member, was suspected by the police of being involved in Lutton's death. Simpson also claimed Molloy had become an informer for the British security forces after being caught in \"a compromising position\" and that he was \"well known \u2013 and this information is from the police \u2013 for a series of sexual indiscretions\". Molloy, the claims continued, allowed the police to \"break open\" the IRA's East Tyrone Brigade. These allegations were denied by Molloy, who has challenged unionists to repeat them outside Parliament, which would allow him to take legal action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 107], "content_span": [108, 935]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Candidates and the campaign, Allegations about the killing of Frederick Lutton\nUUP leader Mike Nesbitt has said he was unaware of the allegations against Molloy when he agreed on the choice of Nigel Lutton as candidate. Nigel Lutton stated that his decision to stand was not because of Molloy's candidacy. Nigel Lutton's uncle Joey was named as a member of the Glenanne gang in The Cassel Report, having been convicted for his part in a number of Ulster Volunteer Force killings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 107], "content_span": [108, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234753-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid Ulster by-election, Previous result\n2Compared to the Ulster Unionist Party at the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234754-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22\u201325. The top eight regular season finishers of the league's twelve teams, regardless of division, met in the double-elimination tournament held at All Pro Freight Stadium in Avon, Ohio. Sixth seed Bowling Green won their third tournament championship to earn the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234754-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top eight finishers based on conference winning percentage, regardless of division, were seeded one through eight. Teams then played a two bracket, double-elimination tournament leading to a single elimination final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234754-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nNick Bruns was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Bruns was a pitcher for Bowling Green, who recorded two wins and a save in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 91], "content_span": [92, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234755-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference football season\nThe 2013 Mid-American Conference football season was the 68th season for the Mid-American Conference (MAC). The University of Massachusetts who joined the conference the previous season would now be eligible for the conference championship as well as bowl games. Last season at the Marathon MAC Championship game, Northern Illinois defeated Kent State 44\u201337 for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234756-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Mid-American Conference men's soccer season will be the 21st season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234756-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season and tournament champions are the Akron Zips.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234756-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference men's soccer season, Changes from 2012\nFlorida Atlantic left when it was confirmed as a full member of Conference USA, which sponsors men's soccer, effective with the 2013\u201314 school year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234756-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-American Conference men's soccer season, MAC Tournament\nThe format for the 2013 MAC Men's Soccer Tournament will be announced in the Fall of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234757-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament began on May 15 and ended on May 19, 2013 at Marty L. Miller Field, on the campus of Norfolk State University in Norfolk, VA. It was an eight-team double elimination tournament. South Division top seed Savannah State won their first tournament championship to claim the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The Tigers defeated Bethune-Cookman, who had claimed thirteen of the fourteen tournament championships, with North Carolina A&T winning the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234757-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe four teams in the North Division and top four finishers from the South Division were seeded one through four based on regular season records, with first round matchups of the top seed from the North and the fourth seed from the South, the second seed from the North against the third seed from the South, and so on. The winners advanced in the winners' bracket, while first round losers played elimination games. The format means that one team from the South, Florida A&M, was not in the field. Savannah State claimed the top seed from the South over Bethune-Cookman by tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 76], "content_span": [77, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234757-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, Bracket\n* - Indicates game required 13 innings.\u2020 - Indicates game required 10 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234757-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Outstanding Performer\nKyle McGowin was named Outstanding Performer of the Tournament. McGowin was a pitcher for Savannah State, who threw all ten innings of the championship and recorded 11 strikeouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 100], "content_span": [101, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234758-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East Rally Championship\nThe 2013 Middle East Rally Championship season is an international rally championship sanctioned by the FIA. The championship is contested over seven events held in seven countries across the Middle East region, running from January to December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234758-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East Rally Championship\nReigning champion Nasser Al-Attiyah successfully retained the championship with an event in hand after taking victories in Qatar, Kuwait, Jordan and Cyprus and finishing second in Lebanon. He would go on to win Dubai as well. Al-Attiyah scored more than double the points of second placed driver, Khalid Al-Qassimi. Al-Qassimi finished second in Qatar, Kuwait and Cyprus and finished third in Jordan. Third place went to Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari who finished third in Qatar, Kuwait and Cyprus as well as a fourth place in Jordan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234758-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East Rally Championship\nThe only driver to defeat Al-Attiyah in a rally this year, Roger Feghali who won in Lebanon, is not a championship competitor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap\nThe 2013 Middle East cold snap, also referred to as Alexa, refers to the winter storm that hit the Middle East region in December 2013, affecting Syria, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, Turkey, and Egypt. The storm caused mayhem to millions of poor and displaced people across the region, especially afflicting refugees from the Syrian conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Meteorological history\nBeginning December 11, there was a big anticyclone inside a big northward meander in the jet stream over Europe; its east edge drew a strong current of cold air south from the Arctic. This polar outbreak overspread Turkey and the Eastern Mediterranean region, pushing below moist air associated with a passing front, causing heavy snow and sleet over higher ground in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Israel. At lower elevations, heavy rain from the system caused flooding in some areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Meteorological history\n(The west edge of the same anticyclone drew in a warm southwest wind from around the Azores to Britain.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Cyprus\nBy December 14, the storm had covered the island's Troodos mountain range with snow. Snowing had begun several days earlier, with snow reaching a peak thickness of 70\u00a0cm (28 inches) in Troodos. Four\u00a0hundred customers lost electricity, and several villages, including Armenohori, Farmakas, Kampi, and Sina Oros, completely lost it for extended periods of time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Egypt\nEgypt's capital Cairo witnessed extremely rare snowfall (mostly graupel) on Friday December 13 that the local media claimed to be the first in 112 years and night temperature was expected to drop as low as 2\u00a0\u00b0C (36\u00a0\u00b0F). Snow also fell heavily on Sinai mountains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Israel\nOn December 13, 2013, 40\u201370\u00a0cm (16\u201328\u00a0in) of snow fell in Jerusalem and 1\u00a0m (3\u00a0ft 3\u00a0in) in the Kefar Etzion area. Warmer parts of Israel received heavy rains, causing floods. The railway into Jerusalem ran although it was Sabbath for people stranded by blocked roads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Israel\nRoads were closed in Israel by deep snow and flooding. Storm clouds prompted Ben Gurion International Airport to shut down, forcing US Secretary of State John Kerry to cut short his meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah to return to West bank before roads and airports were out of service. Jerusalem was cut off for 48 hours by deep snow and flooding and cars abandoned after they got stuck in snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Palestine, West Bank\nOn December 13, 2013, 40\u201370 cm (16\u201328 in) of snow fell in Jerusalem and 1 m . Warmer parts of palestine received heavy rains, causing floods. The railway into Jerusalem stranded by blocked roads. Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jerusalem, and Hebron and many other towns and cities were coated in snow and some lower-lying areas suffered flooding from heavy rain. [ 10]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Palestine, West Bank\nSnow in Ramallah, Nablus, and Hebron ranged from 60\u2013145\u00a0cm (24\u201357\u00a0in), and in Bethlehem 20\u201355\u00a0cm (7.9\u201321.7\u00a0in). The scene in Manger Square, the square adjacent to the Church of the Nativity was that of a white Christmas with the square fully decorated and covered with a deep coat of snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Palestine, Gaza Strip\nThe Gaza Strip was lashed by torrential rain for a third day, and its Hamas rulers said that residents had been evacuated from 60 flooded homes since storms hit the coastal territory on December 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Jordan\nIn Jordan, Ghazi Sarhan, spokesman for Jordan's Administration of Syrian Refugee Camps, announced on December 13, that \"During the past 48 hours 10,000 blankets and 1,500 heaters have been distributed to refugees.\" Deep snow fell in Amman, where King Abdullah II of Jordan helped to push a car that had got stuck in snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Lebanon\nWhile snow is a common thing in Lebanon every year,It was reported that the Lebanese Army was called in to help distribute emergency aid to Syrian refugees, as the UN handed out fuel, blankets, heaters and food rations yesterday amid a third day of severe winter weather in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Lebanon\nAccording to Abou Faour's announcement, published in Al Nahar newspaper on December 12, \"There are 1,600 refugee [makeshift camps] in addition to 431 random camps, which makes it difficult to reach these places. That is why the cabinet had to ask for the help of the army to make as much aid reach those refugees as possible\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Syria\nThe United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) issued plans to airlift 40 tonnes (39 long tons; 44 short tons) of food for 50,000 to 60,000 people into the northeastern province of Hasakah from Iraq. The UN airlift of urgently needed food for tens of thousands of people in northeastern Syria, originally planned for December 12, was delayed by snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Syria\nAccording to Matthew Hollingworth, Syria Country Director for the United Nations' World Food Programme, most internally displaced Syrians fled their homes with few belongings so they do not even have enough warm clothes or blankets to fend off the freezing weather. They desperately need fuel for heating and to cook the food they receive as humanitarian assistance.\" Reportedly, a child and a baby died from the cold on December 12, and an activist in a besieged rebel-held town of Harra said residents were struggling to stay warm with the electricity cut off and no food or fuel allowed in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234759-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle East cold snap, Events by country, Syria\nIn southern Syria, the Golan Heights were covered with snow up to at least 100\u00a0cm (39\u00a0in) deep.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234760-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders football team\nThe 2013 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders football team represented Middle Tennessee State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Rick Stockstill and played their home games at Johnny \"Red\" Floyd Stadium. They were first year members of Conference USA (C-USA) in the East Division. They finished the season 8\u20135, 6\u20132 in C-USA play to finish in a tie for second place in the East Division. They were invited to the Armed Forces Bowl where they lost to Navy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234761-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Migori local elections\nLocal elections were held in Migori County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234761-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Migori local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who have made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234762-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Milano\u2013Torino\nThe 2013 Milano\u2013Torino was the 94th edition of the Milano\u2013Torino single-day cycling race. It was held on 2 October 2013, over a distance of 193\u00a0km, starting near Milan in Settimo Milanese and ending near Turin on the Colle di Superga (\"Superga Hill\").", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234762-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Milano\u2013Torino\nDiego Ulissi of Lampre-Merida, who was second in the 2012 edition, won the race, Team Saxo-Tinkoff's Rafa\u0142 Majka was second and Daniel Moreno (Team Katusha) completed the podium. The Italian rider attacked on the final climb together with Alberto Contador (2012 winner), Alejandro Valverde, Rafa\u0142 Majka, Domenico Pozzovivo and Daniel Moreno, waiting the last 250 m to sprint to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234762-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Milano\u2013Torino, Teams\nA total of 21 teams and more than 150 riders were invited to the race. Among the riders, there favourites were Alberto Contador, Alejandro Valverde, Joaquim Rodr\u00edguez, Jan Bakelants, Carlos Betancur and Diego Ulissi", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234763-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Milan\u2013San Remo\nThe 2013 Milan\u2013San Remo was the 104th running of the Milan\u2013San Remo single-day cycling race. It was held on 17 March over a shortened distance of 246 kilometres (152.9 miles), and was the fourth race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season. For the first time in 31 years, Milan\u2013San Remo was held on a Sunday, after race organisers requested to change and move into line with several of the other Classic races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234763-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Milan\u2013San Remo\nHeavy snowfall and bad weather forced organisers to shorten the race from 298 kilometres (185.2 miles) to 246 kilometres (152.9 miles) eliminating two key climbs\u00a0\u2013 the Passo del Turchino and Le Manie\u00a0\u2013 and arranging a bus transfer, for the race to begin a second time. A few riders elected not to take the restart, including Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Tom Boonen, who protested against the decision to let all riders rejoin the main group, despite several riders having lost contact before the race was neutralised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234763-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Milan\u2013San Remo\nAfter Boonen's team-mate Sylvain Chavanel and Team Sky rider Ian Stannard had led a reduced peloton over the summit of the final climb, the Poggio di San Remo, a group of six formed on the descent from the Poggio, including pre-race favourites Peter Sagan (Cannondale) and 2008 winner Fabian Cancellara of RadioShack\u2013Leopard. The sextet remained together until the finish, where Gerald Ciolek prevailed in the sprint for MTN\u2013Qhubeka, ahead of Sagan and Cancellara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234763-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Milan\u2013San Remo, Teams\nAs Milan\u2013San Remo was a UCI World Tour event, all UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. Originally, eighteen ProTeams were invited to the race, with seven other squads given wildcard places, and as such, would have formed the event's 25-team peloton. Originally admitted to the event as a wildcard, Team Katusha subsequently regained their ProTour status after an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Each of the 25 teams entered eight riders to the race, making up a starting peloton of 200 riders. Among the peloton was the first black South African rider in the race's history, MTN\u2013Qhubeka's Songezo Jim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl\nThe 2013 Military Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 27, 2013, at Navy\u2013Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The sixth edition of the Military Bowl, it featured the Marshall Thundering Herd of Conference USA against the Maryland Terrapins (based in nearby College Park) from the Atlantic Coast Conference. The game began at 2:30 p.m. EST and aired on ESPN. It was sponsored by aerospace and defense technology company Northrop Grumman, and was officially known as the Military Bowl Presented by Northrop Grumman. Marshall defeated Maryland by a score of 31\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl\nThe Thundering Herd finished the regular season with a 9\u20134 record (7\u20131 C-USA), champions of the Conference USA East Division. The Terrapins had a record of 7\u20135 (3\u20135 ACC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl\nThis was the first Military Bowl to be played at Navy\u2013Marine Corps Memorial Stadium. The first five were played at RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Teams\nThe game will feature the Marshall Thundering Herd of Conference USA against a Maryland Terrapins from the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Teams, Marshall Thundering Herd\nThe Thundering Herd improved on last season's 5\u20137 finish, winning the Conference USA East Division Championship and advancing to the 2013 Conference USA Football Championship Game. After their 41\u201324 defeat at the hands of the Rice Owls, bowl director Steve Beck extended an invitation to the Herd to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Teams, Marshall Thundering Herd\nIn addition to being Marshall's first Military Bowl, this is set to be the last Military Bowl to feature representation from Conference USA, as that tie-in will go to the American Athletic Conference from 2014 until at least 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Teams, Maryland Terrapins\nThe Terrapins got back to their winning ways after finishing 7\u20135 overall and 3\u20135 in-conference. They are making their first bowl appearance since they played in the 2010 edition of this game where they faced another Conference USA opponent in East Carolina. At season's end, bowl director Steve Beck extended an invitation to the Terps to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Teams, Maryland Terrapins\nThis will mark as the Terps' final game as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference before moving to the Big Ten Conference for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe first quarter started very slow. The first 4 drives all resulted in 3 and outs, but the next 3 resulted in touchdowns. On 2nd and Goal from the Maryland Terrapins 1 yard line, Marshall Thundering Herd quarterback Rakeem Cato threw a touchdown pass to Tommy Shuler. On the next drive, Maryland Terrapins quarterback C. J. Brown threw a touchdown pass to Levern Jacobs. The last scoring play of the first quarter occurred when Cato had another touchdown pass, this time to Gator Hoskins. After the first quarter, the score was 14\u20137 in favor of Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nThe second quarter started just like how the first quarter ended. Maryland's kicker, Brad Craddock, converted an early field goal from 25 yards. Marshall's next drive would also result in points, as their own kicker, Justin Haig, would make a 27-yard field goal. After the two teams traded punts, Maryland converted another scoring opportunity. Craddock made another field goal, this time from 31 yards away. After the field goal, Marshall had another opportunity to score, but had limited time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234764-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Military Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nWith 9 seconds left and facing a 4th down and 10 from the Maryland 33, Marshall coach Doc Holliday decided to go for it. Quarterback Rakeem Cato completed the pass to Essray Taliaferro, but they were not able to score nor were they able to get another play off in time. After the second quarter, the score was 17\u201313 in favor of Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234765-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee Brewers season\nThe 2013 Milwaukee Brewers season was the 44th season for the Brewers in Milwaukee, the 16th in the National League, and 45th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234765-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee Brewers season, Farm system\nThe Brewers' farm system consisted of seven minor league affiliates in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234766-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee IndyFest\nThe 2013 Milwaukee IndyFest was an IndyCar Series race held on June 15, 2013 at the Milwaukee Mile in West Allis, Wisconsin. The race was the ninth in the 2013 IndyCar Series season, and was won by Ryan Hunter-Reay of Andretti Autosport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234766-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee IndyFest, Report, Background\nAndretti Autosport had the most victories heading into the Milwaukee race, with James Hinchcliffe and Ryan Hunter-Reay winning two and one race, respectively. The defending race winner was Hunter-Reay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234766-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee IndyFest, Report, Qualifying\nMarco Andretti of Andretti Autosport clinched the pole position with a speed of 170.515\u00a0mph (274.417\u00a0km/h). His teammate James Hinchcliffe started second, Will Power started third, Ryan Hunter-Reay and E. J. Viso started fourth and fifth, respectively. Sebasti\u00e1n Saavedra started a career-high sixth, with Tony Kanaan, Josef Newgarden, Simon Pagenaud and Tristan Vautier rounded out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234766-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee IndyFest, Race\nIn the race, Takuma Sato dominated, leading a race-high 109 laps, until he drifted into turn 4 and nearly hit the wall; Sato then pitted under green, but Ana Beatriz's contact brought out the caution, bringing Sato down a lap, and he was eventually passed by Ryan Hunter-Reay on lap 198. Hunter-Reay led the remaining 53 laps and won by 4.809 seconds over H\u00e9lio Castroneves to claim his second straight victory at the track, becoming the first back-to-back race winner at Milwaukee since Tony Kanaan in 2006-07.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234766-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee IndyFest, Race\nThe win was Andretti Autosport's 47th in the IndyCar Series, and fifth at Milwaukee. Will Power finished third, behind by 5.39 seconds, for his first podium of the season, followed by E. J. Viso, his best finish of the year, and Hunter-Reay's teammate James Hinchcliffe closed out the top five. Pole-sitter Marco Andretti had his car stall when leaving the pits on lap 97 and stop on the backstretch with an electrical problem, and finished 20th. Scott Dixon, Sato, Dario Franchitti, Justin Wilson, and Kanaan finished the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234766-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Milwaukee IndyFest, Race, Race results\nPoints include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234767-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mini Challenge UK\nThe 2013 Mini Challenge season was the twelfth season of the Mini Challenge UK. The season started on 6 April at Snetterton Motor Racing Circuit and ended on 29 September at Donington Park. The season featured six rounds across the UK and one in Holland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234767-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mini Challenge UK, Championship standings\nChampionship points were awarded for the first 15 positions in each Championship Race. Entries were required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. There were bonus points awarded for Pole Position and Fastest Lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234768-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis City Council election\nThe 2013 Minneapolis City Council elections were held on November 5, 2013 to elect the 13 members of the Minneapolis City Council for four-year terms. 10 races produced a winner in the first round and the remaining three in the second round. Candidates affiliated with the Minnesota Democratic\u2013Farmer\u2013Labor Party (DFL) won all 12 of the seats where they had fielded a candidate, and the Green Party of Minnesota won the remaining one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234768-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis City Council election\nMembers were elected from single-member districts via instant-runoff voting, popularly known as ranked choice voting. Voters had the option of ranking up to three candidates. Municipal elections in Minnesota are officially nonpartisan, although candidates were able to identify with a political party on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234768-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis City Council election, Candidates, Dropped out\nGriggs announced on October 20, 2013 that he had accepted a job offer and would no longer be running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election\nThe 2013 Minneapolis mayoral election was held on November 5, 2013 to elect the Mayor of Minneapolis for a four-year term. This was the second mayoral election in the city's history to use instant-runoff voting, popularly known as ranked choice voting, first implemented in the city's 2009 elections. Municipal elections in Minnesota are nonpartisan, although candidates are able to identify with a political party on the ballot. After incumbent Mayor R. T. Rybak announced in late 2012 that he would not seek a fourth term, 35 candidates began campaigns to replace him. Many of these candidates sought the endorsement of the Minneapolis unit of the Minnesota Democratic\u2013Farmer\u2013Labor Party (DFL), though the convention ultimately ended with no endorsement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election\nAlthough she did not win enough votes to be victorious on the first ballot, DFLer Betsy Hodges held a \"commanding\" lead and was \"poised\" to be elected following completion of vote tabulations. Second-place finisher Mark Andrew effectively conceded on election night, saying that it was unlikely that he would overcome Hodges' lead. Hodges was elected in the 33rd round after two days of vote tabulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Background\nMinneapolis' 2009 elections were the first in the city's history to implement a system of ranked choice voting (RCV), whereby voters ranked up to their first three choices for an office instead of voting for just one. Turnout that year was, however, the city's lowest in decades with under 46,000 ballots being cast. Incumbent mayor R.T. Rybak won over 33,000 of those votes on the first round of voting, surpassing 22,579 which was the threshold of 50% of ballots cast plus one that were necessary to win the election. A 2010 report prepared for the Minneapolis Elections Department by David Schultz and Kristi Rendahl of Hamline University determined that it was unclear whether the RCV system had met its stated goals of \"increasing voter turnout, encouraging more candidates to run, [and] promoting more support for third party candidates.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Background\nOn December 27, 2012, Rybak, who had been in office since 2001, announced that he would not seek a fourth term as mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Candidates\nThe official filing period with the City of Minneapolis for mayoral candidacy began on July 30 and lasted for two weeks, until August 13. Candidates had until August 15 to withdraw and have their names taken off of the ballot. In March 2013, City Council member Cam Gordon proposed raising the fee to run for mayor to $500, a move intended to \"discourag[e] frivolous candidates\" according to the Star Tribune. However, the fee remained at $20 for the 2013 filing period. While the election is officially nonpartisan, there was a space on the affidavits of candidacy for candidates to declare their \"Political Party or Principle\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Candidates\nA total of 35 people declared their candidacy for mayor, a number that Minneapolis elections officials claimed hadn't been seen on the ballot since at least the 1980s, if not before. Hamline University's Schultz commented that the crowded race would make it difficult for candidates to get name recognition, \"[e]specially for some of those candidates who fall further down on the list because they probably don't have a lot of money, and they probably aren't going to get invited to debates.\" An article in MinnPost suggested that the majority of candidates' campaigns would not have a lot of funding with which to work, nor would they be well organized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Candidates\nGregg A. Iverson was the first of six candidates to submit their affidavits of candidacy on July 30, the first day of filing. Meanwhile, three candidates waited until August 13, the final day of the filing period, to submit their affidavits, including Cyd Gorman who was the last to file. No candidates who registered with the Elections Department took advantage of the ability to withdraw their candidacies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Candidates\nIn 2014, as a result of the high number of candidates, city voters approved an amendment to the city charter that raised filing requirements to either $500 or 500 signatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Announcements\nAlmost a month before Rybak announced that he intended to leave office, DFL City Council member Betsy Hodges of Minneapolis' thirteenth ward declared that she would run for mayor. Her plans, however, were contingent upon whether Rybak would elect to run for a fourth time. When Rybak made his announcement in December 2012, Hodges formally proclaimed her candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Announcements\nThe Star Tribune reported in early December 2012 that former DFL City Council President Jackie Cherryhomes was also considering a bid for the mayor's office. Cherryhomes last held office in 2001, but remained involved at the Minneapolis City Hall as a lobbyist. Like Hodges, she only intended to run if Rybak opted not to and, like Hodges, she announced that she would run promptly after Rybak declared he would not, on December 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Announcements\nDFL City Council member Gary Schiff from Minneapolis' ninth ward was also mulling a mayoral run in mid-December when he filed paperwork to form a committee that could support his potential candidacy. Unlike Hodges and Cherryhomes, Schiff stated that whether he would run or not would probably not be contingent upon what Rybak decided to do. On January 29, Schiff announced that he would seek the mayor's seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Announcements\nFifth ward City Council member Don Samuels, another DFLer, was considering running for the office shortly after Rybak announced that he wouldn't run again. Samuels had served on the City Council for a decade at that time and had most recently run but dropped out of a race for Hennepin County Commissioner. A day after Schiff made his candidacy official, Samuels entered the race as well, becoming the third sitting member of City Council to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Announcements\nMark Andrew, formerly a Hennepin County Commissioner and the chair of the DFL from 1995 until 1997, expressed in early January that he was \"very interested\" in potentially vying for the position of mayor. Since leaving public office, Andrew had begun GreenMark, an environmental marketing firm. He officially declared his candidacy on February 7, 2013, acknowledging his late entrance into the race relative to some of his opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Announcements\nRunning as an independent, attorney Cam Winton is mentioned in a Star Tribune article dated March 20, 2013. Winton, a Republican, stated that he did not intend to seek the DFL endorsement, making him the only candidate declared at the time to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Announcements\nDan Cohen, a Republican former City Council member, said on May 28 that he would run for mayor if the DFL failed to agree on an endorsement. Cohen, who sits on Minneapolis' Charter and Planning Commissions, was a Council member in the 1960s He last ran for mayor in 1969, losing to Charles Stenvig. Cohen formally declared his candidacy on June 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, Pre-convention debates\nThe first debate between mayoral candidates took place on March 27 at the University of Minnesota's Humphrey School of Public Affairs. Moderated by professor of political science Larry Jacobs, as well as some of his students, the debate included Andrew, Hodges, Schiff, Cherryhomes, and Samuels, noted by Jacobs as being the \"leading DFL candidates\". Winton observed the debate from the audience but was not invited to participate as he was not seeking the DFL endorsement. Candidates fielded questions on the new Vikings stadium (responding anywhere from heavily in favor of the project to staunchly against it), property taxes (no candidate accepted a pledge from Jacobs not to raise them), how to revitalize North Minneapolis, and their qualifications for the job of mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, DFL endorsement convention\nAn endorsement convention was held by the DFL on June 15, 2013, at the Minneapolis Convention Center. All candidates then declared with the exception of Winton (Andrew, Cherryhomes, Hodges, Samuels, Schiff, and Thomas) sought the nomination and were present at the event. Sixty percent of delegate votes were required to receive the endorsement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, Campaigns, DFL endorsement convention\nDuring the first round of voting, Jim Thomas, Cheryhomes, and Samuels were eliminated as each failed to secure the ten percent of the vote required to move on to the second round. Schiff was eliminated after the second ballot, leaving Andrew and Hodges. Andrew came first in every round of voting but never reached the 60 percent threshold. Hodges invited her delegates outside of the Convention Center to eat pizza. Their absence meant that a quorum was not present at the convention and so, on the fifth ballot, the convention ended with no endorsement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234769-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis mayoral election, General election, Results\nNone of the candidates passed the threshold to be elected in the first round, necessitating several rounds of vote transfers. Betsy Hodges was elected in the 33rd round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234770-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis municipal election\nA general election was held in Minneapolis on November 5, 2013. Minneapolis's mayor was up for election as well as all the seats on the City Council, the two elected seats on the Board of Estimate and Taxation, and all the seats on the Park and Recreation Board. Voters were able to rank up to three candidates for each office in order of preference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234770-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis municipal election, Mayor\nIncumbent Democratic\u2013Farmer\u2013Labor Mayor R. T. Rybak announced on December 27, 2012 that he will not be seeking re-election. 35 candidates ran for election. Betsy Hodges was elected in the 33rd round after two days of vote tabulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234770-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis municipal election, City Council\nAll 13 seats on the Minneapolis City Council were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234770-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis municipal election, Board of Estimate and Taxation\nThe two elected seats on the Board of Estimate and Taxation were up for election. Incumbents Carol Becker and David Wheeler were re-elected in the first round, both having passed the threshold to be elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234770-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis municipal election, Park and Recreation Board\nAll nine seats on the Park and Recreation Board were up for election. Three members were elected from one citywide, at-large district via the single transferable vote and six from single-member districts via instant-runoff voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234770-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis municipal election, Park and Recreation Board, Results, At-large\nAs no candidate passed the maximum possible threshold to be elected in the first round, several rounds of vote tabulations were necessary until three members were elected. John Erwin was elected in the fourth round and Annie Young and Meg Forney in the ninth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234770-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Minneapolis municipal election, Park and Recreation Board, Results, At-large\nSteve Barland, Meg Forney, Jason Stone, and Tom Nordyke were candidates in the 2009 Park and Recreation Board election, but were all defeated. Barland and Stone ran in District 5 and Forney in District 6. Tom Nordyke served on the Board as an at-large member from 2006 to 2009 and as its president from 2008 to 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234771-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team\nThe 2013 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represented the University of Minnesota in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Jerry Kill and played their home games at TCF Bank Stadium. They were a member of the Legends Division of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234771-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team, Before the season\nThe Gophers had their first, full intrasquad scrimmage during the Spring Game under Kill's tenure; his previous two Spring Games had been limited in scope. The game attracted 8,400 fans, the largest attendance for a Gophers Spring Game since Lou Holtz coached the team in the mid-1980s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234771-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team, Game summaries, Nebraska\nThe game was Minnesota's first win against Nebraska since a 26\u201314 victory on September 24, 1960.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234772-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota House of Representatives District 14A special election\nA special election was held in the U.S. state of Minnesota on February 12, 2013 to elect a new representative for District 14A in the Minnesota House of Representatives, caused by the resignation of Representative Steve Gottwalt on January 7, 2013. A primary election was not held. The election coincided with the District 19A special election. Tama Theis, the Republican Party of Minnesota nominee, won the special election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234772-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota House of Representatives District 14A special election, Background\nOn January 3, 2013, Representative Steve Gottwalt announced that he would resign to take a job as the director of state legislative policy for the Center for Diagnostic Imaging. He resigned on January 7, 2013, the day before the beginning of the new session of the Minnesota Legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 81], "content_span": [82, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234773-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota House of Representatives District 19A special election\nA special election was held in the U.S. state of Minnesota on February 12, 2013 to elect a new representative for District 19A in the Minnesota House of Representatives, caused by the resignation of Representative Terry Morrow on January 7, 2013. A primary election was held on January 29, 2013. The election coincided with the District 14A special election. Clark Johnson, the Minnesota Democratic\u2013Farmer\u2013Labor Party (DFL) nominee, won the special election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234773-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota House of Representatives District 19A special election, Background\nOn December 19, 2012, Representative Terry Morrow announced he would resign to join the Uniform Law Commission as its legislative director. He resigned on January 7, 2013, the day before the beginning of the new session of the Minnesota Legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 81], "content_span": [82, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234773-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota House of Representatives District 19A special election, Primary election\nThe Minnesota Democratic\u2013Farmer\u2013Labor Party (DFL) did not endorse a candidate until after the deadline for withdrawing (January 16 at 5:00\u00a0p.m.), leaving the candidates that did not win the party endorsement unable to withdraw their candidacies, causing a primary election. The losing candidates said they would abide by the endorsement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 87], "content_span": [88, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season\nThe 2013 WNBA season was the 15th season for the Minnesota Lynx of the Women's National Basketball Association. The Lynx won their second WNBA Championship in three years, and led the league in wins for the third straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season\nThe Lynx entered the season as the two-time defending WNBA Western Conference champions. The Lynx won the 2011 WNBA Finals, but lost the 2012 WNBA Finals to the Indiana Fever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season\nThe 2012 season saw the retirement of veteran center Taj McWilliams-Franklin. The Lynx replaced her in the offseason, trading guard Candice Wiggins for former University of Minnesota standout Janel McCarville, who had played with Lynx point guard Lindsay Whalen in college.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season\nDespite returning three olympians and an all-star in their starting lineup, the Lynx were considered something of an afterthought going into the season, with much of the press going to the Phoenix Mercury, which drafted Brittney Griner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season\nDespite the lowered expectations, the Lynx had another outstanding season, finishing with the best record in the WNBA for the third straight year, and placing four players in the WNBA All-Star Game. After dispatching the Seattle Storm in the opening round of the playoffs, the Lynx swept the Phoenix Mercury in the Western Conference Finals, to earn their third straight trip to the WNBA Finals. They then defeated the Atlanta Dream to win their second WNBA title in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Lynx' selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season, Transactions, Trades\nOn March 1, 2013, the Lynx announced that they had traded Candice Wiggins to the Tulsa Shock in exchange for a third-round pick in the draft and the rights to Janel McCarville from the New York Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season, Awards and honors\nWNBA Western Conference Player of the Month (August) - Maya Moore", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season, Awards and honors\nWNBA Western Conference Player of the Month (September) - Maya Moore", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season, Awards and honors\nWNBA Player of the Week - Maya Moore (3 times), Rebekkah Brunson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234774-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Lynx season, Awards and honors\nWNBA All-Stars - Seimone Augustus, Maya Moore, Rebekkah Brunson, Lindsay Whalen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234775-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Swarm season\nThe 2013 Minnesota Swarm season was the ninth season of the Minnesota Swarm, a lacrosse team based in Saint Paul, Minnesota playing in the National Lacrosse League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234775-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Swarm season\nThe season did not start the way the Swarm might have hoped. Five of their first six games were decided by a single goal, but the Swarm only won two of them. They fell to 3-7 before dominating three straight home games, winning by 7, 9, and 14 goals. They finished at 7-9, good for fifth in the West but thanks to the Buffalo Bandits' 6-10 record, the Swarm crossed over to the Eastern division and made the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234775-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Swarm season\nIn the first round, they had another dominating game, defeating the regular season champion Toronto Rock 20-11 in Toronto. But their visit to the Blue Cross Arena in Rochester was less successful, and the eventual champion Knighthawks ended the Swarm's season with a 12-10 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234775-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Swarm season, Regular season, Final 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, 60], "content_span": [61, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234775-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Swarm season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nThe 2012 NLL Entry Draft took place on October 1, 2012. The Swarm made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season\nThe 2013 Minnesota Twins season was the 53rd season for the franchise in Minnesota, and the 113th overall in the American League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season\nThe Twins started the 2013 season on April 1, with a game against the Detroit Tigers (losing Opening Day 2\u20134). The Twins ended their season with a 5\u20131 loss against the Cleveland Indians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season\nThe Twins finished their season with a 66\u201396 record, although they finished 4th in the American League Central standings ahead of the Chicago White Sox, avoiding a last place finish for the first time since 2010. The team continued to struggle with offense and bullpen rotation, despite the off-season acquisitions of veterans Vance Worley, Mike Pelfrey and Kevin Correia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nJanuary 18, 2013: Agreed to terms with LHP Brian Duensing and C Drew Butera on one-year contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nFebruary 14, 2013: Agreed to terms with LHP Rafael Perez on a minor league contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 10, 2013: Reassigned RHP Bryan Augenstein, RHP Nick Blackburn, RHP Alex Meyer, RHP Lester Oliveros and RHP Esmerling V\u00e1squez to their minor league camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 11, 2013: Optioned C Chris Herrmann to Rochester (IL) and RHP B.J. Hermsen, RHP Trevor May, RHP Michael Tonkin, C Josmil Pinto and INF Danny Santana to New Britain (EL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 15, 2013: Optioned RHP Kyle Gibson and LHP Caleb Thielbar to Rochester (IL). Reassigned RHP Anthony Slama, C Kyle Knudson and INF James Beresford to their minor league camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 16, 2013: Optioned OF Oswaldo Arcia to Rochester (IL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 17, 2013: Reassigned C Eric Fryer, INF Chris Colabello, INF Mark Sobolewski, OF Brian Dinkelman, OF Clete Thomas, RHP Deolis Guerra and RHP Shairon Martis to their minor league camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 23, 2013: Placed LHP Scott Diamond and RHP Anthony Swarzak on the 15-day DL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 26, 2013: Reassigned RHP P. J. Walters and RHP Samuel Deduno to minor league camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 27, 2013: Optioned RHP Alex Burnett to Rochester (IL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 30, 2013: Placed RHP Tim Wood on the 15-day DL, retroactive March 24. Reassigned RHP Rich Harden and LHP Rafael Perez to their minor league camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nMarch 31, 2013: Selected the contract of OF Wilkin Ram\u00edrez from Rochester (IL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234776-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Twins season, Offseason transactions and spring training\nThe Minnesota Twins finished in fifth place (.515) in the Grapefruit League during spring training with a 17\u201316 record overall (7\u201310 home / 10\u20136 away). They were 4.5 games behind the first place Baltimore Orioles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234777-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota United FC season\nThe 2013 season was Minnesota United FC's fourth season of existence and their third consecutive season playing in the North American Soccer League, the second division of the American soccer pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season\nThe 2013 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 53rd in the National Football League. It also marked the Vikings' final season playing their home games at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome; the team played their home games at TCF Bank Stadium for the 2014 and 2015 seasons while construction of U.S. Bank Stadium, which opened in 2016, took place on the site of the Metrodome. Following a Week 9 loss to the Dallas Cowboys, the Vikings were no longer able to match their 10\u20136 record from 2012, and their loss to the Baltimore Ravens five weeks later sealed their elimination from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season\nThe Vikings failed to win a road game (0\u20137\u20131) for the first time since 2001. Much like in 2001, the Vikings did moderately well (13th) on offensive yardage (344.2 yards per game) despite a quarterback carousel not present in 2001, but ranked among the worst in defensive yardage (397.6 yards per game); only the Dallas Cowboys gave up more yards on defense with 415.3 per game. The Vikings' defense also allowed the most points in the NFL in 2013 at 480 (30.0 points per game), four points shy of matching the most points the team ever allowed in a single season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season\nIt took until Week 10 for the Vikings to record their first win on American soil, their only other victory up to that point having come in the NFL International Series game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at London's Wembley Stadium in Week 4. Despite winning their last four home games to finish with an overall record of 5\u201310\u20131, the Vikings fired head coach Leslie Frazier after just over three seasons with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Preseason, Schedule\nThe Vikings' preseason opponents and schedule were announced on April 4, 2013. Their preseason began with a loss to the Houston Texans at Mall of America Field on August 9, followed by road defeats against the Buffalo Bills and the San Francisco 49ers; the game against the 49ers was the Vikings' second preseason matchup against the same opposition in two years. The preseason program concluded on a positive note \u2013 a home victory against the Tennessee Titans on August 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Preseason, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Houston Texans\nat Mall of America Field at Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Preseason, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Tennessee Titans\nat Mall of America Field at Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 86], "content_span": [87, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cleveland Browns\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Carolina Panthers\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Green Bay Packers\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Green Bay Packers\nWith Josh Freeman ruled out after suffering a concussion in the previous game, Christian Ponder reclaimed his spot as starting quarterback. Cordarrelle Patterson got the game off to a good start for the Vikings, returning the opening kickoff 109 yards for a touchdown to tie the NFL record. However, Aaron Rodgers responded for the Packers by leading his offense on a 14-play, 90-yard drive, culminating in an 11-yard touchdown pass to Jordy Nelson. The sides then exchanged field goals before Rodgers found Nelson again in the second quarter for a 76-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Green Bay Packers\nOn the Vikings' next possession, they were forced to punt, but Micah Hyde was able to return the kick 93 yards for another Packers touchdown to make the score 24\u201310. A controversial pass interference call against Packers cornerback Tramon Williams late in the half set the Vikings up with a first down on the Packers' 14-yard line; two plays later, Adrian Peterson had the ball in the end zone for an 8-yard touchdown, which kept the Vikings in with a chance going into the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Green Bay Packers\nBut the Packers offense remained unstoppable as Rodgers again led a long drive, capped by a 1-yard touchdown run from Eddie Lacy after they had converted three times on third down and once on fourth down during the series. After another three-and-out for the Vikings, the Packers offense picked up four first downs in the space of five plays on the way to a 25-yard touchdown run for James Starks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Green Bay Packers\nThe Vikings again went three-and-out on their next possession, but this time their defense was able to stop Green Bay at the goal line, limiting them to a 20-yard Mason Crosby field goal to make the score 41\u201317 with just over six minutes to play. Patterson again had a big return on the ensuing kickoff, taking it 51 yards to the Minnesota 42-yard line to set up a short field. Five plays later, Toby Gerhart narrowed the deficit to 17 points with a 13-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. Green Bay Packers\nVikings cornerback Josh Robinson was penalized on the onside kick that followed for touching the ball before it had gone 10 yards, allowing the Packers to run down the clock before Crosby slotted another field goal, this time from 45 yards. Inside the two-minute warning, Ponder threw an incompletion on fourth down, only for Tramon Williams to again be penalized for pass interference against Patterson, allowing Ponder the opportunity for a 19-yard touchdown run two plays later. The Vikings were unable to recover the onside kick, and Green Bay knelt out the clock for a 44\u201331 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Dallas Cowboys\nFollowing the high-scoring loss to the Packers, the Vikings, continuing with Christian Ponder as their quarterback, travel to Arlington, Texas to face the Dallas Cowboys. The first quarter was all field goals, as Dallas scored first with a 41-yarder by Dan Bailey, followed by a 23-yarder for the Vikings by Blair Walsh. In the second quarter, Bailey made another field goal from 44 yards to put the Cowboys up by 3, but the Vikings took a 10\u20136 lead into halftime, capping the ensuing 79-yard drive with a 6-yard run by Ponder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Dallas Cowboys\nAfter the half, Cowboy quarterback Tony Romo completed two consecutive 26-yard passes to tight end Jason Witten to give them an early touchdown and restore their three-point lead. On the very next play from scrimmage, Ponder fumbled the ball as he was sacked in the end zone, and the Cowboys' Nick Hayden recovered it for a touchdown, meaning the Vikings went from 10\u20136 up to 20\u201310 down in the space of two scrimmage plays. The Vikings responded immediately with a quick, six-play drive, culminating with a 31-yard pass from Ponder to Kyle Rudolph to cut the Cowboys' lead back to three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Dallas Cowboys\nAfter a series of punts going into the fourth quarter, Adrian Peterson scored for the Vikings with an 11-yard run with almost six minutes to go, but Walsh pushed the extra point kick wide right, giving the Vikings a three-point lead over the Cowboys. Vikings cornerback A. J. Jefferson intercepted Romo on the Cowboys' ensuing drive, putting the Vikings in a position to potentially take over the game, but the offense went three-and-out and was forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Dallas Cowboys\nThe Cowboys progressed downfield quickly, never faced with a third down, and scored with a 7-yard touchdown pass from Romo to Dwayne Harris, the third time the Vikings had given up a game-winning score in 2013. With less than 30 seconds to play, but they were unable to make any significant territorial gains and Ponder's last-second hail mary fell short, giving the Cowboys a 27\u201323 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Washington Redskins\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Vikings traveled to Green Bay in week 12 to face a Packers team missing quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who had suffered a fractured left collarbone three weeks earlier. After successive punts from each side started the game, the Packers were the first to score as backup QB Scott Tolzien ran in for a 6-yard touchdown, but two field goals from Blair Walsh and a 1-yard touchdown run for Adrian Peterson meant the Vikings took a 13\u20137 lead into halftime. They extended their lead midway through the third quarter as Christian Ponder hit tight end Rhett Ellison for a 12-yard touchdown, and Walsh made it a 16-point lead with a 29-yard field goal on the second play of the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Packers pulled the struggling Tolzien after the Ellison touchdown and replaced him with the recently re-signed Matt Flynn. Flynn then led the Packers on three consecutive scoring drives in the fourth quarter, starting with a 3-yard touchdown run for Eddie Lacy. Flynn's pass to Andrew Quarless on the two-point attempt fell incomplete, but Flynn was able to find Jarrett Boykin for a 6-yard touchdown on the next drive to reduce the Vikings' lead to three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Green Bay Packers\nInside the two-minute warning, Flynn combined with James Jones for a 28-yard completion on 4th-and-6, setting up Mason Crosby for the game-tying, 27-yard field goal. The Packers won the overtime coin toss and took the opening possession down to the Minnesota 2-yard line before having to settle for a field goal, only for Walsh to respond with a 35-yard effort. The two sides then exchanged possession as neither was able to put together a significant drive and the game ended in a 26\u201326 tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Chicago Bears\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Baltimore Ravens\nPlaying in the snow in Baltimore, the Vikings sought out their first road win of the season. During the first half, Adrian Peterson injured his ankle and was dropped from the game. Despite taking the lead with a touchdown late in the fourth quarter, the Vikings were unable to hold on as the Ravens scored a game-winning touchdown with four seconds left. With the loss, the Vikings dropped to 3\u20139\u20131 and were officially eliminated from postseason contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Detroit Lions\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Detroit Lions\nIn the last game to be played at the Metrodome before its demolition, the Vikings hosted their divisional rivals, the Detroit Lions. This turned out to be the only game of the Vikings' season (including preseason) in which the opposing team scored fewer than 20 points. A 50-yard run from Cordarrelle Patterson for the first score of the game put the Vikings up 7-0, where the score remained through halftime. After the half, Reggie Bush struck back with a 19-yard touchdown reception to tie the game at 7-7 in the third. The fourth quarter saw David Akers make two field goals to put the Lions in the lead 13-7. However, Matt Cassel threw a TD pass to Patterson to put the Vikings back in the lead 14-13, which they managed to hold onto for the remaining nine minutes of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234778-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Detroit Lions\nHead coach Leslie Frazier was fired as head coach of the Minnesota Vikings the following day. His tenure ended with a record of 21\u201332\u20131 in over three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234779-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Minor Counties Championship\nThe 2013 Minor Counties Championship was the 109th Minor Counties Cricket Championship season. It was contested through two divisions: Eastern and Western. Cheshire were Minor County Champions for the fifth time outright and seventh in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234779-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Minor Counties Championship, Standings\nTeams receive 16 points for a win, 8 for a tie and 4 for a draw. Teams also received 12 points for a win, 6 for a draw and 4 points for losing a match reduced to a single innings. Bonus points (a maximum of 4 batting points and 4 bowling points) may be scored during the first 90 overs of each team's first innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election\nA by-election for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly seat of Miranda occurred on 19 October 2013. The by-election was triggered by the resignation of Graham Annesley (Liberal), which was announced on 28 August 2013. Barry Collier (Labor) won the seat with a 55 percent two-party vote from a 26-point two-party swing, the largest swing in New South Wales history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election, Background\nThe Liberal member for Miranda, Graham Annesley, resigned from the New South Wales Parliament and as Minister for Sport and Recreation on 28 August 2013 to take up the post of chief executive officer of the Gold Coast Titans rugby league team. Annesley in his resignation to Parliament said he never regarded himself as a politician and that there were many aspects of politics he did not care for and he has always felt more at home as a sports administrator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election, Background\nA central Sutherland Shire electorate, Miranda crosses the peninsula between the Georges River and Port Hacking. It includes the suburbs of Como, Bonnet Bay, Oyster Bay, Kareela, Kirrawee, Gymea, Gymea Bay, Grays Point and parts of Sylvania, Miranda and Jannali. The seat's federal equivalent is in the western half of the Division of Cook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election, Background\nCreated in 1971, Miranda had traditionally been a Liberal electorate. It had only been won by Labor in landslide elections, two under Neville Wran in 1978 and 1981, and again under Bob Carr in 1999 and 2003. According to ABC psephologist Antony Green, the seat should have been recovered by the Liberals in 2007 but was narrowly retained by Labor. Going into the 2011 election, Miranda was Labor's most marginal seat, with a 0.8 percent two-party margin. In the 2011 election, the Liberals won government in a landslide. In the process, they picked up a large enough swing in Miranda to turn it into a very safe Liberal seat on paper in one stroke, with a 21.0 percent two-party margin. There were 39 seats held by the Coalition on smaller margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election, Campaign\nQuestions were raised over the Liberal-controlled Sutherland Shire Council's alleged property development favours in their draft Local Environmental Plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election, Campaign\nInternal Liberal Party polling conducted two weeks before the by-election produced a 54\u201346 lead to Labor indicating a 25-point two-party swing against the Liberal government, however a follow-up internal Liberal Party poll had the Liberals \"marginally in front\". Sportsbet offered $1.25 for the Liberals against $3.50 for Labor with Antony Green predicting a Liberal retain. Both major party leaders played down expectations of a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election, Results\nLabor won the seat with a two-party swing of 26 percent in the largest by-election swing in the state's history, outdoing even the 2010 Penrith by-election result. Premier Barry O'Farrell claimed Annesley's \"unexpected, mid-term resignation\" as the reason for the loss and rejected claims of a backlash against the Liberal government. Labor's Collier said the major issues for local voters were overdevelopment in the Sutherland Shire, the frequent closure of fire stations (uniformed firefighters were at polling stations protesting against the Liberal government), cuts to TAFE, and poor transport services at the Jannali and Kogarah train stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234780-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Miranda state by-election, Results\nLabor leader John Robertson released a statement claiming there was a clear message to the Liberal government from Miranda voters, saying \"The people of the shire have sent Barry O'Farrell the strongest of messages tonight ... in the last two-and-a-half years Barry O'Farrell and his government have taken families for granted ... Barry Collier was an outstanding local candidate who ran a strong community campaign, standing up for the Shire against Liberal cuts to services\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234781-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team\nThe 2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team represents Mississippi State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The team is coached by John Cohen, in his 14th year as a collegiate head coach, and his 5th at Mississippi State. The Bulldogs play their home games at Dudy Noble Field, and compete in the Southeastern Conference's West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234781-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team\nAfter the 2012 season, Assistant Coach Lane Burroughs leaves Mississippi State to become the head coach at Northwestern State. Nick Mingione becomes the assistant coach for the 2013 season, replacing Lane Burroughs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234781-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team\nAfter a third-place finish in the SEC West and a semifinal appearance in the 2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament, the Bulldogs advanced through the NCAA Tournament's Starkville Regional, Charlottesville Super Regional, and College World Series bracket to reach the College World Series final with an 8\u20131 record in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234781-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team, Roster\nButch Thompson (associate head coach)Nick Mingione (assistant coach)Tyler Bratton (volunteer assistant coach)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234781-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs baseball team, Ranking movements\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, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team represented Mississippi State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Dan Mullen, who was in fifth season with Mississippi State in the 2013 season. The Bulldogs played their home games at Davis Wade Stadium in Starkville, Mississippi, and competed in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #13 Oklahoma State\nThe No. 13 Oklahoma State Cowboys have been known more for their offense than their defense. The Cowboys' defense, however, kept Oklahoma State in the game long enough for their offense to wake up against the Mississippi State Bulldogs. J.W. Walsh threw for 135 yards and ran for another 125 and a touchdown to lead Oklahoma State to a 21\u20133 win over Mississippi State in the Texas Kickoff in Houston\u2019s Reliant Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #13 Oklahoma State\nWalsh finished 18 of 27 after relieving starter Clint Chelf on the Cowboys' third series. Jeremy Smith rushed for 102 yards and two touchdowns on 15 carries for Oklahoma State (1\u20130), which piled up 432 yards on offense after struggling for most of the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #13 Oklahoma State\nMississippi State\u2019s Tyler Russell finished 10 of 16 for 133 yards before being helped off the field and taken to the locker room in the third quarter after being brought down on a scramble. Dak Prescott replaced Russell, throwing for 89 yards on seven of 17 passing. LaDarius Perkins rushed for 50 yards on 16 carries and caught three passes for 52 yards for the Bulldogs (0\u20131), which had only 333 yards of offense and had trouble keeping drives going, finishing two of 16 on third down conversions. Oklahoma State's defense also had three sacks and intercepted two Mississippi State passes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #13 Oklahoma State\nMississippi State marched down the field in 57 yards on 13 plays taking over six minutes off the clock, but the Bulldogs were only able to get Devon Bell's 40-yard field goal to take a 3\u20130 lead. Russell was 5 of 7 on the drive for 58 yards. Oklahoma State's offense gained only 67 yards with less than four minutes remaining in the first half before Walsh got going.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #13 Oklahoma State\nWalsh worked the quarterback keeper three times for gains of 46 yards down the left sideline, 12 yards down the left sideline to the MSU 3 and capping it off with a 3-yard touchdown run to give the Cowboys a 7\u20133 lead with 2:16 left in the half. The Bulldogs looked to respond before the half as Jameon Lewis weaved the kickoff return 66 yards to the OSU 34, but a holding penalty and a sack by Tyler Johnson stopped the drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #13 Oklahoma State\nOSU continued the offensive momentum in the second half, driving 75 yards in 11 plays to take a 14\u20133 lead on a Smith 1-yard run with 10:41 left in the third. Smith tacked on a 20-yard touchdown run to begin the fourth quarter to up the lead to 21\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Alcorn State\nDak Prescott threw for 174 yards and two touchdowns in his first career start and Mississippi State breezed past Alcorn State 51\u20137. Mississippi State (1\u20131) didn't use several regular starters, including quarterback Tyler Russell, who suffered a concussion in the Bulldogs' season-opening loss to Oklahoma State. It didn't matter. The Bulldogs led 21\u20130 by early in the second quarter and 37\u20130 by halftime. It was the most points in the first half for the program since 1996. Mississippi State's Ashton Shumpert rushed for 98 yards and two touchdowns. Nick Griffin added 54 yards on the ground and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Alcorn State\nAlcorn State (1\u20131), which plays in the Football Championship Subdivision, managed just two first downs in the first three quarters. The Braves scored their only touchdown early in the fourth quarter on a 25-yard pass from John Gibbs Jr. to Tollete George.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Alcorn State\nThe 6-foot-2, 230-pound Prescott showed his poise early in the first quarter by converting two straight passes on 4th and 9 for a first down. The first was an 18-yard strike to Joe Morrow, but it was disallowed after officials ruled Alcorn State had called timeout. A sold out Davis Wade Stadium groaned, but Prescott came right back and hit Malcolm Johnson for a 23-yard gain. Two plays later, Prescott burst through the line for an 11-yard touchdown run and a 7\u20130 lead. The rout was just beginning. Mississippi State outgained Alcorn State 308\u201330 in total yards on the way to the huge halftime lead. Prescott completed 12 of 19 passes while also rushing for 20 yards and a touchdown. He didn't play in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Alcorn State\nThe second half started just as lopsided. Brandon Holloway ran the kickoff back 95 yards to Alcorn's 1-yard line, and Mississippi State scored two plays later for a 44\u20130 lead with 13:57 left in the third quarter. Alcorn State's George finished with four catches for 80 yards and the Braves' only touchdown. Gibbs was 11 of 25 passing for 135 yards, one touchdown and one interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nNick Marshall hit C.J. Uzomah for an 11-yard touchdown with 10 seconds left to lift Auburn to a 24\u201320 victory over Mississippi State on Saturday night, ending the Tigers' 10-game Southeastern Conference losing streak. Marshall led the Tigers (3\u20130, 1\u20130 SEC) down the field with big running and passing plays in easily his best game. The junior-college transfer completed his first five passes for 55 yards in leading Auburn 88 yards over the final 1:56. He then ran 11 yards on 3rd-and-10 before lofting the decisive throw to the right corner of the end zone. The play was reviewed and instant replay officials ruled that the 6-foot-4 tight end, Uzomah, was pushed out of bounds, enabling him to come back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nSubbing for an injured Tyler Russell for a second straight game, quarterback Dak Prescott ran for 133 yards and two touchdowns and passed for 213 for Mississippi State (1\u20132, 0\u20131). Russell sustained a concussion in the opener against Oklahoma State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nWith the game on the line, Marshall suddenly looked like anything but a guy who's had six weeks to learn an offense. He hit freshman Marcus Davis on three straight passes to cover 29 yards, then had a 17-yarder to Jaylon Denson. He also salvaged short gains with a couple of runs before heading out of bounds. Tre Mason's 3-yard run pushed it to the 11 before Auburn called timeout with 15 seconds left. Marshall was 23-of-34 passing for 339 yards and two touchdowns but was intercepted twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nHe passed for just 246 yards and two TDs in his first two games as starter combined. Marshall showed a knack for turning potential miscues into big plays. He dropped the shotgun snap, collected it on the bounce and hit a wide-open Quan Bray downfield for a 76-yard touchdown on the opening drive. Ryan White then hit Brandon Fulse for the two-point conversion. In the third quarter, Marshall caught his own batted pass and raced for a 37-yard gain. The Bulldogs forced the Tigers to settle for Cody Parkey's 47-yard field goal after Jamerson Love tackled Corey Grant for a loss. Parkey also had a 40-yarder and 19-yarder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nThe Bulldogs were able to keep in check Auburn tailbacks Corey Grant, Tre Mason and Cameron Artis-Payne, who had been the strength of the offense. Prescott completed 15 of 28 passes and carried 22 times. LaDarius Perkins gained 36 yards after he was one of seven starters held out of a route of FCS team Alcorn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nMississippi State coach Dan Mullen gambled on fourth-and-2 from his own 29 late, and Prescott delivered with a 3-yard gain. That enabled the Bulldogs to burn off another two minutes before punting, though they couldn't get another first down. It proved just enough time for the Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nMississippi State twice forced turnovers in Auburn territory in the second half, but failed to produce points both times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Troy\nDak Prescott threw for 233 yards and a touchdown, rushed for 53 yards and two touchdowns and caught a 36-yard touchdown pass to lead Mississippi State over Troy 62\u20137. Prescott's diverse and efficient performance was matched by Jameon Lewis, who caught a 50-yard touchdown pass, rushed for an 8-yard touchdown and threw the 36-yard touchdown that Prescott caught on a trick play. Prescott was starting just his third career game. The 6-foot-2, 230-pound sophomore completed 13 of 21 passes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Troy\nMississippi State (2\u20132) led 10\u20137 after the first quarter, but erupted for 35 points in the second quarter to take a 45\u20137 halftime lead. Troy (2\u20132) never recovered from the brutal second quarter. Corey Robinson, who is the NCAA's active leader in career passing yards, completed 15 of 25 passes for just 105 yards, one touchdown and one interception. It was the most points Mississippi State has scored in a game since 1994. The Bulldogs finished with 551 total yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Troy\nBesides Prescott and Lewis, Mississippi State didn't have many players with big individual numbers. That's because just about any Bulldog who touched the ball produced. Ten players caught a pass and nine had at least one rushing attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Troy\nThe Troy-Mississippi State series has traditionally been close, with the Trojans even earning one of the biggest wins in school history against the Bulldogs in 2001. But this one turned ugly by halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #10 Louisiana State\nZach Mettenberger surveyed the field with plenty of time to throw and then delivered a perfect spiral to Odell Beckham Jr., who stopped short of the sideline, spun inside and galloped 33 yards untouched for the touchdown. It was the ninth and final time the two hooked up for a completion, and it proved to be the knockout blow. Mettenberger threw for 340 yards and two touchdowns, Beckham had 179 yards receiving and two touchdowns and No. 10 LSU blew past Mississippi State for a 59\u201326 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #10 Louisiana State\nIt was a tight game for three quarters, but Mettenberger's touchdown to Beckham gave LSU a 38\u201326 lead on the first play of the fourth quarter and Mississippi State couldn't respond. LSU closed the game on a 31\u20130 run, including four touchdowns in the fourth quarter. Mettenberger completed 25 of 29 passes in another impressive performance during the senior's breakout season. Beckham was his favorite target \u2013 but Jarvis Landry also caught eight passes for 96 yards. It was a nearly flawless performance, and helped erase some of the sting of last week's 44\u201341 loss to Georgia. LSU's Jeremy Hill added 157 yards rushing and two touchdowns while Kenny Hilliard added 39 yards rushing and three touchdowns. The Tigers (5\u20131, 2\u20131 Southeastern Conference) have won 14 straight over Mississippi State (2\u20133, 0\u20132) dating back to 1999. LSU has a 21\u20131 record under Miles following a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 961]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #10 Louisiana State\nMississippi State's Dak Prescott threw for 106 yards and rushed for 103 more. Jameon Lewis caught seven passes for 111 yards and a touchdown. The Bulldogs' offense was good, especially early, but LSU's was even better. The Tigers' receiver duo of Landry and Beckham was unstoppable, even when Mississippi State appeared to have good coverage, and Mettenberger found them early and often. The Tigers finished with 563 total yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #10 Louisiana State\nLSU needed all those yards, because the defense was gashed for a second straight week. The Tigers gave up nearly 500 yards last week in a loss to Georgia and Mississippi State had some early success with a two-quarterback system. The 6-foot-2, 230-pound Prescott has been terrific in Russell's place, providing much more of a running threat. On the team's first offensive drive, he rewarded Mullen's confidence with a 28-yard touchdown run to pull the Bulldogs to 7\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #10 Louisiana State\nRussell entered the game early in the second quarter and also had immediate success, throwing a 20-yard touchdown to Lewis to pull Mississippi State to 21\u201316 in the second quarter. The Bulldogs took a 23\u201321 lead on Russell's 59-yard touchdown pass to De'Runnya Wilson, but LSU responded with a 14-yard touchdown pass from Mettenberger to Beckham to take a 28\u201323 lead into halftime. Russell's second touchdown pass was the 39th of his career, which set a Mississippi State record. He finished 7 of 11 for 146 yards passing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #10 Louisiana State\nThe teams combined for 608 total yards in the first half \u2013 334 for LSU and 274 for Mississippi State. LSU's defense tightened in the second half, giving up just three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nDak Prescott rushed for 139 yards and 2 touchdowns to lead Mississippi State to a 21\u201320 win over Bowling Green in a non-conference game Saturday night. After a failed fourth-and-1 by MSU, Bowling Green (5\u20132) had the ball and 4:21 on the clock at the end of the game, but couldn't get inside field goal range. Mississippi State (3\u20133) had 422 yards of offense, 245 on the ground as the Bulldogs won their 11th straight nonconference home game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nThe game was a back-and-forth affair. Mississippi State opened the game on a 9-play, 75-yard drive that ended in a LaDarius Perkins touchdown. Bowling Green's BooBoo Gates intercepted Prescott on MSU's next offensive series, and the Falcons eventually settled for a 35-yard field goal by Tyler Tate. Prescott responded on the next drive by rushing for a 75-yard touchdown. In the second quarter, Bowling Green answered with a 96-yard drive capped off by a 7-yardAndre Givens touchdown run. Mississippi State countered with a 75-yard drive and a 10-yard Prescott touchdown run with 1:04 left in the second quarter. But quarterback Matt Johnson worked Bowling Green into field goal range, and Tate nailed a 45-yarder to end the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nTate missed a 45-yard field goal on the opening drive of the third quarter, but Bowling Green responded with a 7-play touchdown drive on its next possession, to pull within one point; the eventual final margin. With 4:21 left in the game, Mississippi State went for a fourth-and-1 on the Bowling Green six yard line. Prescott's rush was inches short, and the Bulldogs turned it over on downs. Johnson completed four passes and Green rushed once to get the Falcons to midfield. But then the drive stalled, and Johnson failed to complete a fourth-and-11 to Ryan Burbrink, and Mississippi State ran out the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nFor MSU, Perkins rushed for 83 yards and one touchdown. Perkins, Joe Morrow and Jameon Lewis each caught four passes. Prescott was also 7-of-11 passing for 75 yards and one interception. Mullen again used both Prescott, a sophomore, and veteran quarterback Tyler Russell throughout the game. Russell finished 12-of-14 for 102 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Bowling Green\nJohnson was 19-of-33 for 194 yards for Bowling Green. Travis Green rushed for 99 yards and Ryan Burbrink caught four passes for a game-high 66 yards. Bowling Green's Gates was ejected in the second quarter for targeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nMississippi State coach Dan Mullen came to the postgame press conference, sat in his chair, adjusted the microphone and then let out a strange noise that was somewhere between a scream and sigh of relief. The Bulldogs had picked up their first Southeastern Conference victory of the season. But it wasn't easy at all. Mississippi State beat Kentucky 28\u201322 on Thursday night at Davis Wade Stadium. The Bulldogs built a 21\u20137 lead in the first half, but couldn't secure the game until Kentucky's last drive fell short at Mississippi State's 29 with 21 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nDak Prescott threw for 268 yards and two touchdowns and also caught a 17-yard touchdown pass in another impressive all-around performance. He completed a career-high 23 of 34 passes and also rushed for 33 yards. Jameon Lewis had a 19-yard touchdown run, caught a 17-yard scoring pass and also threw the 17-yard touchdown to Prescott on a trick play. Mississippi State (4\u20133, 1\u20132 SEC) beat Kentucky (1\u20136, 0\u20134) for a fifth straight season. It's the second time this season Lewis has had rushing, receiving and passing touchdowns in a game. The 5-foot-9, 195-pound senior was a quarterback in high school and Mullen relishes his diverse skill set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nKentucky's Joe Mansour made a 44-yard field goal with 8:15 remaining to pull the Wildcats to 28\u201322. Mississippi State chewed up 6 minutes of clock the ensuing next drive, but Kentucky had one final chance. The Wildcats methodically moved downfield until Maxwell Smith's fourth-down pass missed its target and Mississippi State escaped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nKentucky pulled to 21\u201319 in the third quarter on Jojo Kemp's 14-yard touchdown run. Then in what proved to be a key moment, the Wildcats recovered an onside kick, only to have it disallowed because of an offsides penalty. Mississippi State took advantage. A 74-yard drive ended on the halfback pass from Lewis to Prescott, who handed the ball off before leaking into the open field for the catch, touchdown and 28\u201319 lead. Prescott, a 6-foot-2, 230-pound sophomore, completed 11 of 18 passes for 160 yards and two touchdowns in the first half, helping Mississippi State to a 21\u201310 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nPrescott's first touchdown pass \u2013 a 60-yard fling to a wide open Malcolm Johnson \u2013 came after he danced out of the pocket while avoiding a sack. Kentucky's defense shifted forward because of Prescott's ability to run, and it gave Johnson time to slip behind the secondary undetected. The Bulldogs had 296 total yards in the first half. Mississippi State started the game with the intention of using two quarterbacks, but Tyler Russell suffered a sprained ankle on his first series and never returned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nKentucky's offense had a few good early moments \u2013 especially on a 51-yard screen pass from Smith to Timmons that tied the game at 7 \u2013 but the Wildcats became predictable because of their inability to throw downfield. Smith has dealt with pain in his throwing shoulder all season and wasn't close on most of his attempts to complete long passes. Kentucky's Smith completed 18 of 33 passes for 160 yards and one touchdown. Backup Jalen Whitlow led one touchdown drive, but was hampered because of a previous ankle injury. Raymond Sanders had 86 yards rushing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Kentucky\nMississippi State safety Nickoe Whitley was ejected in the second quarter after earning two personal foul penalties over a span of four plays. The extra 30 yards greatly aided Kentucky on a drive that ended on a 45-yard field goal by Mansour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #14 South Carolina\nConnor Shaw passed for four touchdowns, Mike Davis moved past 1,000 yards this season and the 14th-ranked Gamecocks got five turnovers to defeat the Bulldogs 34\u201316 for their school-record tying 15th straight home victory Saturday. It had been a long time coming for a group that had been one of the Southeastern Conference's best defenses the past few years. The Gamecocks had collected only 11 turnovers its first eight games, but got five of them \u2013 four off Mississippi State quarterback Dak Prescott \u2013 to pull away in the second half. The Gamecocks (7\u20132, 5\u20132 SEC) got 20 points off the turnovers, including 10 in the third quarter as they went from a touchdown up to a 34\u201310 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #14 South Carolina\nShaw played quarterback just the way he always has \u2013 with an emphasis on results. He missed practice Monday and Tuesday with a virus and was not as sharp as usual. Still, the senior tied his career best with the four touchdown passes. He had scoring throws of 14 and 43 yards to Shaq Roland, 6 yards to Damiere Byrd and 4 yards to Jerell Adams to move to 23\u20135 as South Carolina's starting quarterback. Shaw can tie Todd Ellis' school record for victories when South Carolina plays Florida here in two weeks. Davis had 128 yards and became the Gamecocks' first 1,000-yard rusher since Marcus Lattimore ran for 1,197 yards his freshman season three years ago. South Carolina won its seventh in row over the Bulldogs (4\u20134, 1\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #14 South Carolina\nPrescott threw three interceptions \u2013 he had just three in seven games coming in \u2013 and had a fumble. He did have touchdown runs of 1 and 11 yards, upping his SEC-leading touchdown total to 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #14 South Carolina\nThe Gamecocks got themselves back in the SEC Eastern Division hunt with last week's 27\u201324, double-overtime victory at then No. 5 Missouri. South Carolina's home streak is the second current longest in the country behind Michigan's 19 in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #11 Texas A&M\nJohnny Manziel threw for 446 yards and tied a career-high with five touchdown passes to lead No. 15 Texas A&M to a 51\u201341 win over Mississippi State. The crowd chanted \"one more year\" late in the game for Manziel, who is eligible for the draft after this season. Whether he comes back remains to be seen, but he went into the stands to celebrate with the student section when the game was over. Manziel denied that he even has entertained the thought that he might not play here again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #11 Texas A&M\nAmong the crowd of 88,504, third largest ever at A&M, on hand to see Manziel play at Kyle Field for the possibly final time was former President George H.W. Bush and former Texas A&M and current St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Michael Wacha. Texas governor Rick Perry was the co-pilot in the pre-game flyover and also attended the game. Manziel set a school career record for total yards with 9,040 and a single-season record with 31 touchdown passes. He became just the second A&M quarterback to run for 2,000 yards in a career and has 3,313 yards passing this year to become the first Aggie with two 3,000-yard passing seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #11 Texas A&M\nMississippi State cut the lead to 10 points early in the fourth quarter, but Manziel threw his fifth touchdown pass to make it 44\u201327 for A&M (8\u20132, 4\u20132 Southeastern Conference). The defense grabbed an interception and Ben Malena's 2-yard touchdown run extended the lead to 51\u201327. Dak Prescott threw for 149 yards and two scores and ran for 154 yards for Mississippi State (4\u20135, 1\u20134). Kennedy and Travis Labhart had two touchdown receptions each. Mike Evans had 116 yards receiving to break the school single-season record with 1,263.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #11 Texas A&M\nRussell started the game in place of Prescott, who missed practice this week after his mother died of cancer on Sunday. Prescott entered the game on Mississippi State's third drive and got the majority of the snaps after that. Manziel evaded the rush and connected with Kennedy for a 21-yard touchdown to extend Texas A&M's lead to 30\u201314 in the third quarter. The Bulldogs cut the lead to 10 points late in the third quarter on a touchdown pass by Prescott. But A&M made it 37\u201320 two plays later on a 15-yard run by Williams. That scored was set up by a 75-yard reception by Evans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #11 Texas A&M\nThe Bulldogs got within 10 points again after a touchdown throw by Tyler Russell with 2:19 remaining. But the onside kick was recovered by A&M. Bulldogs receiver Jameon Lewis threw a touchdown pass to Joe Morrow on a reverse early in the fourth quarter to get within 37\u201327. Trey Williams returned the ensuing kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown. But it was negated by an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty after he flipped into the end zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #11 Texas A&M\nManziel was intercepted three times, twice by Jamerson Love. The turnovers helped keep Mississippi State close, but the Bulldogs couldn't keep up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #1 Alabama\nAlabama looked lethargic, uninspired, sloppy and downright ordinary against a middling Southeastern Conference team. And the top-ranked Crimson Tide still found a way to win by nearly two touchdowns. T. J. Yeldon rushed for 160 yards and A. J. McCarron threw two touchdown passes as Alabama overcame four turnovers to beat Mississippi State 20\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #1 Alabama\nIt was the lowest scoring game of the season for Alabama (10\u20130, 7\u20130 SEC), which led 10\u20137 midway through the third quarter before pulling away. Alabama has seemed invincible over the past two months, winning seven straight games by at least three touchdowns. But that aura wasn't anywhere to be found at Davis Wade Stadium, with Nick Saban's bunch looking curiously mortal after last week's emotional victory over LSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #1 Alabama\nMississippi State (4\u20136, 1\u20135) kept the game far closer than most anticipated, but couldn't take advantage of Alabama's mistakes. Tyler Russell started for the injured Dak Prescott and completed 15 of 24 passes for 144 yards and an interception before leaving with a shoulder injury when the Bulldogs were trying to rally in the fourth quarter. A.J. McCarron tossed two rare interceptions and Yeldon had a costly fumble that led to Mississippi State's only touchdown, but Alabama survived to set up a much-anticipated Iron Bowl with Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #1 Alabama\nMississippi State had two chances to get back into the game in the fourth quarter after McCarron's second interception and a fumble by Kenyan Drake gave the Bulldogs field position in Alabama territory. But without Russell, Mississippi State's offense went nowhere. Freshman Damian Williams didn't connect on any of his five pass attempts \u2013 though two of them were good passes that were dropped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #1 Alabama\nMcCarron completed 18 of 32 passes. His first interception in the second quarter was his first in 139 pass attempts. It was the third 100-plus streak without an interception during his career. Alabama parlayed a methodical 14-play, 59-yard opening drive into Cade Foster's 33-yard field goal and a 3\u20130 lead. But the next four drives were brutal for the Crimson Tide's offense, which managed just two first downs during that span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #1 Alabama\nMississippi State tried to take advantage with a long drive midway through the second quarter, but it bogged down on the 7 and Evan Sobiesk missed a 24-yard field goal that could have tied the game. A few minutes later, the Tide finally broke through with Yeldon's 50-yard run down the sideline to Mississippi State's 28. McCarron hit Brian Vogler five plays later for an 18-yard touchdown pass with 20 seconds remaining in the second quarter to give Alabama a 10\u20130 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, #1 Alabama\nIt looked like that would be all the breathing room Alabama needed, but the mistakes continued in the second half. Yeldon fumbled after a 10-yard run and Mississippi State's Beniquez Brown recovered at Alabama's 48. The Bulldogs then drove downfield and scored thanks to Russell's timely passes and a stroke of luck. Russell fumbled just short of a touchdown, but right tackle Charles Siddoway fell on the ball in the end zone to pull Mississippi State within 10\u20137. McCarron's 11-yard pass to Norwood pushed the Tide ahead 17\u20137 with 5:46 left in the third quarter. Alabama's defense held an opponent to seven points or less for the sixth time this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nMississippi State finally got the best of Arkansas in an overtime game and in the state of Arkansas. True Freshman and third-string quarterback Damian Williams scored on a 25-yard touchdown run on the first play of overtime, and the Mississippi State defense made it stand, as the Bulldogs defeated Arkansas 24\u201317 on Saturday at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nMississippi State (5\u20136, 2\u20135 Southeastern Conference) got an interception by Taveze Calhoun on fourth down to seal the victory and keep its bowl hopes alive. Arkansas gained only one yard on its first three plays, and Calhoun stepped in front of the receiver and snared Brandon Allen's pass, returning it across midfield before being tackled. The Bulldogs lost to Arkansas in overtime contests in 1996, 2000 and 2010, all in Starkville, Miss., and had never defeated the Razorbacks in Arkansas. Mississippi State's best result in the Natural State was a 13\u201313 tie in 1993. Arkansas still leads the all-time series 15\u20138\u20131. The Bulldogs can become bowl eligible with a win over rival Ole Miss on Thanksgiving night in Starkville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nMississippi State had a chance to win the game in regulation, but Devon Bell's 42-yard field goal drifted wide right with 24 seconds remaining. That came after Arkansas (3\u20138, 0\u20137) failed to cash in on its own chance to take the lead late in regulation. With the score tied 17\u201317, Allen passed to Jeremy Sprinkle for 44 yards to the Mississippi State 12. But Alex Collins fumbled on the next play, and Nickoe Whitley recovered for the Bulldogs at the Arkansas 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nThe Razorbacks took the opening kick and went 56 yards for a touchdown. After Korliss Marshall's kick return gave the Razorbacks a short field, they quickly moved into Mississippi State territory. Javontee Herndon scored, also on an end around, and Arkansas led 7\u20130. Zach Hocker added a career-best 54-yard field goal in the second quarter to make it 10\u20130. Arkansas led 10\u20130 in the first half, but was unable to maintain the lead and lost its eighth consecutive game for the first time in school history. The Bulldogs countered in the final minutes of the second quarter. Bell's 24-yard field goal got them on the scoreboard with 5:08 left. Russell then found LaDarius Perkins on a play action down the middle of the field for a 30-yard touchdown to pull the Bulldogs even.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nAfter a first half that ended in a 10\u201310 tie, the Razorbacks took a 17\u201310 lead on a 22-yard run by Julian Horton in the third quarter on an end around. The Bulldogs answered immediately, covering 75 yards in 11 plays, as Tyler Russell connected with Jameon Lewis for a 5-yard touchdown on third down to knot the score. Russell completed 18 of 28 passes for 263 yards and two scores before leaving the game late in regulation with an apparent shoulder injury. Josh Robinson had 17 carries for 101 yards. Arkansas rushed for 225 yards as a team, spread out among nine ball carriers, but managed only 114 yards passing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Mississippi\nWith Mississippi State's offense struggling and time slipping away in the Egg Bowl, coach Dan Mullen turned to Dak Prescott and asked him to win the game. Injured shoulder and all, the sophomore quarterback did just that, running for a 3-yard touchdown in overtime to lead the Bulldogs past rival Mississippi 17\u201310 on a chilly Thursday night at Davis Wade Stadium. Prescott didn't enter the game until the fourth quarter because of a nerve injury to his non-throwing arm that caused him to miss the previous two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Mississippi\nBut the sophomore led the Bulldogs (6\u20136, 3\u20135 Southeastern Conference) to their tying drive in the fourth quarter and the game winner in overtime. Prescott completed 11 of 20 passes for 115 yards in a performance that will long be remembered in Egg Bowl lore. His game-winning touchdown came on a gutsy call by Mullen, who opted to go for it on fourth-and-1 at the 3 instead of kicking a short field goal. It was an emotional win for the Bulldogs and especially Prescott, whose mother died earlier this month after a yearlong battle with cancer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Mississippi\nOle Miss had a chance to tie the game in overtime, but the drive ended when quarterback Bo Wallace fumbled and Mississippi State's Jamerson Love recovered the ball in the end zone. The Bulldogs are now bowl eligible for a fourth straight season, the longest streak in school history. Mississippi State has won four of the past five Egg Bowls and five in a row at Davis Wade Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Mississippi\nMississippi State Freshman Damian Williams, the third-string quarterback, made his first career start because of injuries to Prescott and Tyler Russell. He completed 8 of 18 passes for 82 yards and one interception. Both teams struggled to move the ball in the chilly conditions \u2013 especially through the air. The temperature hovered in the low 30s throughout the night, which is downright frigid by Magnolia State standards. Ole Miss (7\u20135, 3\u20135) didn't have an offensive touchdown, scoring only on a field goal and blocked punt in the end zone. The Rebels ended the regular season on a two-game losing streak. The Rebels had one good early drive but it ended with nothing after Andrew Ritter's 27-yard field goal attempt bounced off the left upright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Mississippi\nWallace threw three interceptions before halftime, and the final one was costly. Mississippi State's Justin Cox grabbed it at the Ole Miss 30, and the Bulldogs' subsequent drive ended with Josh Robinson's 1-yard touchdown run for a 7\u20130 lead with 1:32 remaining in the second quarter. Ole Miss did nothing on its next possession and quickly punted back to Mississippi State, which looked as though it would ease into halftime with the lead. But a mistake on special teams hurt the Bulldogs when Collins Moore burst through the line and blocked Baker Swedenburg's punt after the snap was bobbled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0060-0001", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Mississippi\nIt was recovered by little-used senior Terrell Grant in the end zone to tie the game at 7. Ole Miss grabbed the lead for the first time early in the third quarter after Ritter's 22-yard field goal gave the Rebels a 10\u20137 advantage. The points were certainly welcome for the Ole Miss offense, but it was the team's fifth straight trip to the red zone without a touchdown, dating back to last weekend's loss to Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Mississippi\nThat lack of efficiency came back to haunt the Rebels. Williams played decently for the Bulldogs and avoided any major mistakes, but with the offense struggling early in the fourth quarter, Mullen turned to Prescott. Mullen said earlier in the week that Prescott wouldn't play in the Egg Bowl, but he looked plenty healthy as he led the Bulldogs down the field on his second drive, completing several impressive passes. The drive ended with Sobiesk's 36-yard field goal to tie it at 10. Mississippi State received the ball one final time but Sobiesk missed a 38-yard field goal wide right at the end of regulation that would have won the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Rice\nDak Prescott delivered a performance that would have made his mother proud and make him a dark-horse candidate for the Heisman Trophy in 2014. Prescott threw three touchdown passes and ran for two more scores Tuesday as Mississippi State trounced Rice 44\u20137 in the most one-sided AutoZone Liberty Bowl victory in the game's 55-year history in Memphis. The sophomore quarterback delivered arguably the finest performance of his career less than two months after his mother, Peggy, died of cancer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Rice\nMississippi State (7\u20136) wrapped up its fourth straight winning season and prevented Rice (10\u20134) from winning bowl games in back-to-back years for the first time. All of Mississippi State's losses this season came against teams currently in the Top 25: No. 13 Oklahoma State, No. 2 Auburn, No. 14 LSU, No. 8 South Carolina, No. 20 Texas A&M and No. 3 Alabama. The Bulldogs became bowl eligible by closing the regular season with consecutive overtime victories over Arkansas and Ole Miss. This marks the first time since 1974 that Mississippi State has closed a season with three straight wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Rice\nNobody faced more adversity than Prescott, who set a Liberty Bowl record by accounting for five touchdowns. Prescott was 17 of 28 for 283 yards passing and also ran for 78 yards on 14 carries. Prescott's performance delighted a partisan crowd of 57,846 and capped a triumphant late-season performance amid personal tragedy for the sophomore quarterback. Prescott came off the bench in the fourth quarter to lead Mississippi State to a 17\u201310 overtime victory over Ole Miss last month that earned the Bulldogs a bowl bid. Although Prescott and senior Tyler Russell had shared quarterback duties throughout the regular season, Prescott had the job to himself in the Liberty Bowl while Russell recovered from surgery to repair a torn labrum in his throwing shoulder. Prescott responded better than anyone could have reasonably imagined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Rice\nPrescott wasn't Mississippi State's only star on a night when the Bulldogs outgained Rice 533\u2013145 and scored the game's final 44 points. Mississippi State's Jameon Lewis caught nine passes for 220 yards to break the Liberty Bowl receiving record held by Houston's Vincent Marshall, who had 201 yards in a 44\u201336 loss to South Carolina in 2006. Lewis also set the school single-game record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Rice\nNot to forget, the Bulldogs also played dominant defense. Rice had won the Conference USA title \u2013 its first outright league championship of any kind since 1957 \u2013 by relying on a rushing attack that was ranked 16th among all Football Bowl Subdivision teams. Rice gained only 61 yards rushing \u2013 179 below its season average \u2013 on 32 carries against Mississippi State. Charles Ross, who entered the day having rushed for 1,252 yards and 14 touchdowns this season, was held to 28 yards on 10 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Game summaries, Rice\nRice took an early lead on Ross' 1-yard touchdown run, but Mississippi State took control by reaching the end zone on six of its next seven possessions. Prescott threw first-half touchdown passes to LaDarius Perkins, Malcolm Johnson and Artimus Samuel before running for two scores in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tCMP\tATT\tYDS\t%\tAVG\tTD\tINTDak Prescott\t156\t267\t1940\t58.4\t7.27\t10\t7Tyler Russell\t71\t109\t875\t65.1\t8.03\t5\t3Damian Williams\t23\t47\t279\t48.9\t5.94\t0\t2Jameon Lewis\t3\t3\t84\t100.0\t28.0\t3\t0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tCAR\tYDS\tAVG\tLNG\tTDDak Prescott\t134\t829\t6.2\t75\t13LaDarius Perkins\t137\t542\t4.0\t35\t2Josh Robinson\t78\t459\t5.9\t51\t3Ashton Shumpert\t46\t190\t4.1\t14\t3Jameon Lewis\t13\t117\t9.0\t44\t3Damian Williams\t37\t112\t3.0\t25\t1Nick Griffin\t24\t96\t4.0\t10\t1Derrick Milton\t13\t69\t5.3\t14\t2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tREC\tYDS\tAVG\tLNG\tTDJameon Lewis\t64\t923\t14.4\t65\t5Malcolm Johnson\t30\t391\t13.0\t60\t2Robert Johnson\t34\t389\t11.4\t61\t0De\u2019Runnya Wilson\t26\t351\t13.5\t59\t3LaDarius Perkins\t27\t248\t9.2\t32\t3Joe Morrow\t18\t211\t11.7\t31\t1Josh Robinson\t12\t115\t12.8\t23\t0Fred Ross\t9\t115\t12.8\t23\t0Brandon Holloway\t7\t77\t11.0\t34\t0Fred Brown\t5\t74\t14.8\t19\t0Dak Prescott\t2\t53\t26.5\t36\t2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tXPM\tXPA\tFGM\tFGA\t%\tLNG\tPTSDevon Bell\t25\t26\t6\t14\t42.9\t40\t43Evan Sobiesk\t15\t16\t3\t6\t50.0\t38\t24", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tATT\tYDS\tAVG\tLNG\tI-20Blake Swedenberg\t25\t1063\t42.4\t53\t6Devon Bell\t24\t990\t41.2\t62\t14", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tATT\tYDS\tAVG\tTD\tLNGJameon Lewis\t19\t446\t23.5\t0\t66Robert Johnson\t4\t41\t10.2\t0\t19Brandon Holloway\t3\t113\t37.7\t0\t95Chris Harrison\t1\t7\t7.0\t0\t7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tATT\tYDS\tAVG\tTD\tLNGJameon Lewis\t22\t51\t2.3\t0\t16Brandon Holloway\t2\t36\t18.0\t0\t23", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234782-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team, Statistics\nName\tSOLO\tAST\tTKL\tTFL\tSACKS\tINT\tFUMBrandon McKinney\t42\t29\t71\t7\t3.5\t0\t2Deontae Skinner\t33\t31\t64\t4.5\t1\t1\t0Kendrick Market\t43\t19\t62\t1.5\t0\t0\t0Nikoe Whitley\t38\t17\t55\t1\t0\t5\t1Matthew Wells\t28\t22\t50\t6\t1\t0\t2Taveze Calhoun\t33\t12\t45\t1.5\t0\t3\t1Preston Smith\t29\t15\t44\t6.5\t2.5\t0\t0Beniquez Brown\t16\t23\t39\t4.5\t0\t0\t2Richie Brown\t16\t22\t38\t3\t2\t1\t0Zach Jackson\t16\t17\t33\t2.5\t0\t0\t0Chris Jones\t17\t15\t32\t7\t3\t0\t0Denico Autry\t14\t17\t31\t6.5\t2\t0\t0Justin Cox\t23\t8\t31\t0.5\t0\t1\t0Jamerson Love\t22\t5\t27\t1\t0\t3\t1Kaleb Eulls\t9\t17\t26\t1.5\t0\t0\t0P.J. Jones\t9\t16\t25\t3\t1\t0\t0Will Redmond\t14\t9\t23\t2.5\t0\t0\t0Cedric Jiles\t14\t6\t20\t0\t0\t0\t0Deontay Evans\t11\t8\t19\t0\t0\t0\t0A.J. Jefferson\t12\t7\t19\t4\t2\t0\t0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234783-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils football team\nThe 2013 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils football team represented Mississippi Valley State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Delta Devils were led by fourth year head coach Karl Morgan and played their home games at Rice\u2013Totten Field. They were a member of the East Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234783-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils football team\nMississippi Valley State entered the season with a new offensive coordinator Karl Morgan, who was in his third season overall with the staff, after former offensive coordinator Ramon Flanigan became the head coach at The Lincoln University. On Media Day, Mississippi Valley State State was picked to finish fourth in the Eastern Division of the SWAC. They had two players, Defensive Lineman Robert Simpson and Defensive Back Kevin Euegene, selected to the Pre-Season All-SWAC 1st Team Defense. 2 additional players: wide receiver Julian Staford and offensive lineman Antonio Griggs, were selected as part of the All-SWAC 2nd Team Offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234783-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils football team, Media\nAll Delta Devils games will once again be carried live on WVSD radio and can be heard online through .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 63], "content_span": [64, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234784-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Monsters season\nThe 2013 Missouri Monsters season was the first season for the professional indoor football franchise and first in the Ultimate Indoor Football League (UIFL). One of six teams that competed in the UIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234784-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Monsters season\nLed by interim head coach Martino Theus, the Monsters played their home games at the Family Arena in St. Charles, Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234784-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Monsters season, Roster\nRookies in italicsRoster updated May 24, 201318 Active, 0 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234785-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri State Bears football team\nThe 2013 Missouri State Bears football team represented Missouri State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Terry Allen and played their home games at the Plaster Sports Complex. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 5\u20133 in MFVC play to finish in a four way tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Missouri Tigers football team (also called \"Mizzou\") represented the University of Missouri in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It marked the Tigers' second season as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) in the Eastern Division. The team was led by head coach Gary Pinkel, in his 13th year and played its home games at Faurot Field in Columbia, Missouri. The Tigers went into the season hoping to return to a bowl game after missing out the previous season. They succeeded after an 11\u20131 regular season and their first-ever SEC Eastern Division title. After a loss to Auburn in the SEC Championship Game they played in the 2014 Cotton Bowl Classic on January 3, 2014 against Oklahoma State, which they won 41\u201331. The two teams had last met on October 22, 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Recruits\nAll 20 recruits signed their National Letter of Intent on February 6, during the National Signing Period (February 6 \u2013 April 1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Recruits\nOn the eve of National Signing Day, Missouri ranks last in the SEC, 46th in the overall rankings according to .On the day after National Signing Day, ranks Missouri as 36th (3.00) best overall, ahead of only Kentucky (39th) in the SEC. has Mizzou at 39th (3.00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Recruits\nHis coaching staff agrees with his analysis, as does former Mizzou wide receiver Jeremy Maclin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Recruits\nMizzou's class has 11 of the 20 recruits from Missouri. In 2011, Mizzou had 19 recruits, and in 2010, only 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Recruits\nThe team added a needed defensive tackle, DeQuinton Osborne on May 31, 2013, but MU has not officially announced Osborne's addition to the recruiting class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Recruits\nFour recruits of the 20 (listed in the recruit section below) left the program for various reasons. Freshman offensive tackle Harneet Gill left the Missouri football team three days into preseason camp after deciding he had \u201clost faith in the plan\u201d to treat his surgically repaired foot and that Mizzou was not \u201cthe right fit,\u201d he said. Tailback Chase Abbington (Fort Zumwalt South) and defensive lineman Antar Thompson (Maplewood Richmond Heights) both failed to qualify academically and enrolled in junior college. Duron Singleton, a safety from Fresno City, CA, Community College, was expected to transfer and arrive last week, but Pinkel announced Thursday that Singleton wasn't joining the program, citing undisclosed \u201cpersonal reasons.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Schedule\n, as of December 8, 2013 (Retrieved: December 8, 2013)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Honors\nOn December 9, 2013, defensive end Michael Sam was named the SEC Defensive Player of the Year by the Associated Press, and was also a unanimous first-team All-SEC selection. Before the bowl season starts, Sam led the SEC with 10.5 sacks and 18 tackles for loss. Offensive tackle Justin Britt was also named to the first-team AP all-conference, as was defensive lineman Kony Ealy, and cornerback E.J. Gaines. Wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham and linebacker Andrew Wilson were named to the second-team list. Defensive end Markus Golden made the honorable mention list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Honors\nEaly had the strongest finish to the regular season of any Mizzou defender and heads into bowl season with 7.5 sacks, 12.5 tackles for loss, a team-best 14 hurries and three forced fumbles, the most among all SEC defensive lineman. Gaines finished the regular season with 68 tackles and a team-best four interceptions. In the December 7 loss to Auburn in the SEC title game, he picked up a fumble forced by Ealy, and returned it for a touchdown. He also earned first-team All-Big 12 honors as a sophomore in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Honors\nWith a huge game against Auburn, Green-Beckham now shares the team lead with 55 catches for 850 yards and a team-best 12 touchdowns. Wilson leads Mizzou in tackles for a third straight season with 98, matching his 2011 total. Coach Gary Pinkel is one of eight finalists for the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Honors\nMichael Sam named a Walter Camp Football Foundation First-Team All-American, the seventh for Coach Pinkel in his 13 years at Mizzou, and the first on the defensive side for Mizzou since Justin Smith in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Rankings\nMissouri cracked the AP poll (#25) on October 6, for the first time since the second week of the 2011 season when it was ranked #21. Missouri jumped nine slots to #5 in the AP poll on October 19, after their 36\u201317 win over #22 Florida. The #5 ranking is Missouri's highest since reaching No. 3 in 2008 at 5\u20130 before a home loss to Oklahoma State. They debuted at #5 in the .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Rankings\nThey reached #5 again on the AP poll on Nov. 24, after beating #24 Ole Miss, 24\u201310, at Oxford the day before, and stayed at #5 on all four polls after beating Texas A&M on Nov. 30. The Tigers fell to #9 after its 42\u201359 loss to the Auburn Tigers in the 2013 SEC Championship Game on December 7, ending its bid for a possible trip to the BCS National Championship Game. The 2013 Tigers team is the fourth in the past seven years to reach double-digits in wins, with the previous time a 10\u20133 record in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Rankings\nMissouri ended the SEC season with an 11\u20132 record. Mizzou extended its nation-leading streak of games forcing a takeaway to 43 consecutive games. Mizzou has jumped on top of opposing teams on the scoreboard all season, only trailing at the half for the second time this season vs. Auburn. The 8th ranked (BCS) Tigers were invited to and accepted an invitation to the 78th Cotton Bowl against the (10\u20132) #13-ranked Oklahoma State Cowboys on January 3, 2014, 7pm CT, to be televised on Fox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Rankings\nThe Cotton Bowl appearance will mark Mizzou's 11th New Year's Day (or later) bowl game in program history, and its first since playing in the 2008 Cotton Bowl against the Arkansas Razorbacks. The invitation is a reward for an outstanding season which saw the Tigers post one of the top turnaround years in the nation, going from 5\u20137 in 2012 to 11\u20132 \u2013 a 6-1/2 game improvement. This is MU's 30th alltime bowl appearance. The Tigers will be making their third appearance in the tradition-rich game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234786-0010-0004", "contents": "2013 Missouri Tigers football team, Rankings\nMizzou rolled to a 38\u20137 win over Arkansas in the 2008 game, as TB Tony Temple rushed for a Cotton Bowl-record 281 yards and four touchdowns against the 25th-ranked Razorbacks. That win closed a stellar season for Mizzou, who finished with a 12\u20132 record and a school-best final ranking of 4th in the final polls. Mizzou's other appearance in the Cotton Bowl was back in 1946, when Texas claimed a 40\u201327 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234787-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Missouri Valley Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21\u201325. All eight teams will participate in the double-elimination tournament, which was held at Illinois State's Duffy Bass Field in Normal, Illinois. The winner of the tournament will earn the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234787-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe league's eight teams were seeded based on conference winning percentage. The teams will play a two-bracket, double-elimination format tournament, with the winner of each bracket then playing a single-elimination final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234787-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Outstanding Player\nWichita State outfielder Garrett Bayliff was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234788-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, popularly referred to as \"Arch Madness\", as part of the 2012-13 NCAA Division I men's basketball season was played in St. Louis, Missouri March 7\u201310, 2013 at the Scottrade Center. The championship game was televised on CBS on Sunday March 10. The tournament's winner received the Missouri Valley Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234789-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season was the 23rd season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The defending regular and postseason champions, Creighton, left the conference to join the new Big East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234789-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was hosted and won by Bradley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234789-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season, Honors, 2013 NSCAA/Continental Tire NCAA Division I Men's All-Midwest Region Teams\nFirst Team\u2014 Midfielder James Fawke, Missouri State; Midfielder Faik Hajderovic, Evansville; Forward Wojciech Wojcik, Bradley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 135], "content_span": [136, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234789-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season, Honors, 2013 NSCAA/Continental Tire NCAA Division I Men's All-Midwest Region Teams\nSecond Team\u2014 Goalkeeper Brian Billings, Bradley; Defender Alec Bartlett, Drake; Forward Mark Anthony Gonzalez, Evansville", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 135], "content_span": [136, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234789-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season, Honors, 2013 NSCAA/Continental Tire NCAA Division I Men's All-Midwest Region Teams\nThird Team\u2014 Goalkeeper Trevor Spangenberg, Missouri State; Defender Grant Bell, Bradley; Midfielder Matt Polster, SIUE; Forward Christian Okeke, Bradley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 135], "content_span": [136, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234790-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri's 8th congressional district special election\nA special election for Missouri's 8th congressional district was held on June 4, 2013, following the resignation of Jo Ann Emerson on January 22, 2013, to head the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. The Republican and Democratic parties selected their own nominees without a primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234790-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Missouri's 8th congressional district special election\nThe deadline to request an absentee ballot for the special election was May 29, 2013. A televised candidate's forum took place on May 27, 2013, at Southeast Missouri State University-River Campus; all party candidates participated while the write-in candidate did not attend. In the general election on June 4, 2013, Republican Jason Smith received 67.1% of the vote, beating Democrat Steve Hodges (27.4%), Constitutional Doug Enyart (3.6%), and Libertarian Bill Slantz (1.5%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234791-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mizoram Legislative Assembly election\nThe Mizoram Legislative Assembly election, 2013 was held on 25 November 2013 in all 40 constituencies of the Legislative Assembly of Mizoram. Results were declared on 9 December. The main contest was between incumbent the Indian National Congress and the Mizo National Front led Mizoram Democratic Alliance. Incumbent Chief Minister Pu Lalthanhawla and his party Indian National Congress won a majority and continued in government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234791-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mizoram Legislative Assembly election, Background\nThe election for 40 seats legislative assembly was held on 25 November 2013. There were 6.9 lakh eligible voters. Voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) along with EVMs was used on a large-scale for the first time in India, in 10 assembly seats out of 40 in Mizoram elections. The seven armed battalion of state police and 31 companies of central para-military forces and other state police were deployed for peaceful election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234791-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mizoram Legislative Assembly election, Background, Candidates\nThere were total 142 candidates including 40 Congress and 40 Mizoram Democratic Alliance (MDA) candidates. MDA candidates include 31 Mizo National Front (MNF), 8 Mizoram People's Conference (MPC) and one Maraland Democratic Front (MDF) candidates. 38 Zoram Nationalist Party, 17 Bharatiya Janata Party, 2 Nationalist Congress Party and one Jai Maha Bharath Party candidate also contested. There were total six female candidates including 3 Bharatiya Janata Party candidates, one Congress, one MNF and one other female candidate. All the seats were reserved for Scheduled Tribe candidates, except Lunglei South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234791-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mizoram Legislative Assembly election, Results\nThe result was declared on 9 December 2013. Indian National Congress won a large majority of 34 out of 40 seats. Mizo National Front and Mizoram People's Conference won five seats and one seat respectively. 81% of eligible voters turned out to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234792-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards\nThe 2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards took place on November 22, 2013, at AsiaWorld-Arena in Hong Kong. The ceremony was the fourth consecutive Mnet Asian Music Awards to occur outside of South Korea", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234792-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards\nNominations were announced on October 23, 2013. Leading the nominees was Cho Yong-pil with six, followed by Psy, G-Dragon, and Girls' Generation with five nominations each. By the end of the ceremony, G-Dragon received the most wins with four awards, which includes the daesang (or grand prize) award \"Artist of the Year", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234792-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards, Background\nThis event marked the fifteenth Mnet Asian Music Awards. Using its slogan \"Music Makes One\" for the third consecutive time, MAMA was broadcast live in China, Japan, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia through various channels, as well as around the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234792-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards, Background\nThis is the first time that the three daesang awards were presented separately. The first daesang, the song of the year award, was given at the end of the first block, the second daesang, the artist of the year award, was given at the end of the second block, and the third daesang, the album of the year award was given at the finale. After the last daesang award was given, Stevie Wonder performed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234792-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards, Multiple awards, Artist(s) with multiple wins\nThe following artist(s) received two or more wins (excluding the special awards):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234792-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards, Multiple awards, Artist(s) with multiple nominations\nThe following artist(s) received three or more nominations (excluding the special awards):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234792-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mnet Asian Music Awards, Presenters and performers\nThe following individuals and groups, listed in order of appearance, presented awards or performed musical numbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234793-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mogadishu Turkish embassy attack\nThe 2013 Mogadishu Turkish embassy attack occurred on 27 July 2013 when al-Shaabab militants attacked the Turkish embassy in the Somali capital of Mogadishu, killing 3 people and injuring 9 others. At around 5:00\u00a0p.m. a minivan rigged with explosives detonated near the embassy compound. The explosion was followed by three armed militants attempting to storm the compound on foot, but they were repelled and killed by Turkish and Somali security guards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234793-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mogadishu Turkish embassy attack\nAl-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement. saying \u201cMujahideen forces in Mogadishu have just carried out an operation targeting a group of Turkish diplomats in Hodan district.\u201d The U.S. State Department labeled the attack a \"cowardly act\" while the United Nations Security Council released a statement condemning it in \"strongest terms.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234794-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohammad Reza Aref presidential campaign\nMohammad-Reza Aref (In Persian: \u0645\u062d\u0645\u062f\u0631\u0636\u0627 \u0639\u0627\u0631\u0641) served as the First Vice President of Iran, from 2001 to 2005 under Mohammad Khatami. Aref previously served as Minister of Technology in the first Khatami government. He is also a Sharif University of Technology professor. He announced his candidacy for the upcoming presidential election on 13 February 2013. On 11 June an announcement was made on his website that he is dropping out of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234794-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohammad Reza Aref presidential campaign, Election\nThe eleventh election of the President of Iran was scheduled to be held on Friday, 14 June 2013. Registration for candidates took place from 7 May and concluded on 11 May 2013. After the registration step, registered candidates had to be vetted by the Guardian Council in order to be on the ballot. The Guardian Council finally announced the list containing the name of a reformist candidate, Aref.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234794-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohammad Reza Aref presidential campaign, Policies, Foreign policy\nAs a reformist presidential candidate, Mohammad Reza Aref, criticized the foreign policy of the Ahmadinejad government, vowing to improve Iran\u2019s diplomatic relationships with other countries if elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234794-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohammad Reza Aref presidential campaign, Policies, Economy\nAref denounces interference of external forces such as military organizations into economical firms. In the first debate among candidates, he criticized the point and when the moderator asked about the main problem of economy of the country, Aref replied in an apparent indirect reference to the powerful Revolutionary Guard's extensive business interests:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234794-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohammad Reza Aref presidential campaign, Policies, Economy\n\"Interference of some military people and military-affiliated companies in the economy has limited space for participation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign\nSecretary of the Expediency Discernment Council and former Chief Commander of the Sepah Mohsen Rezaee launched his campaign in June 2010 for the 2013 Iranian presidential election after losing in the previous election. Rezaee made the announcement that he would run for President on 16 October 2012. He was the candidate of the Moderation and Development Party, a conservative party. He was also supported by Green Party of Iran. He lost the election, receiving 3,884,412 votes and ranking fourth behind winner Hassan Rouhani, runner-up Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Saeed Jalili.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Background, 2005 and 2009 nomination\nRezaee was a candidate of the presidential election of 2005, but withdrew on 15 June 2005, only two days before the election. He mentioned he was withdrawing from the race for \"the integration of the votes of the nation\" and \"their effectiveness\". He did not endorse any candidate. On 23 April 2009, he announced that he had entered the 2009 presidential race, after trying to find another conservative to run against President Ahmadinejad; he lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Background, Positions\nRezaee was a military commander during Iran\u2013Iraq War and also became chief of Sepah (Iran's second army) after the assassination of Mostafa Chamran. He held this position until 1997 when he announced his retirement from all military services. After that, he became a member of Expediency Discernment Council and also its secretary after six months. Tabnak, a news website, is close to him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Background, Early stages\nRezaee was one of the candidates who began his campaign just months after the 2009 election. His campaign headquarters was begun in early 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Background, Announcement\nMohsen Rezaee announced he would run for the presidency on 16 October 2012 during a trip to Tabriz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Background, Headquarters\nThe campaign was based in Tehran in Tajrish street, in a blue twelve-floor tower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Political platform\nHis major goal was about economics. He had a federalism platform and said he would do the same as People's Republic of China and Turkey had done in their economics. He also proposed green subsidies for farmers. He also had packages for resolving problems in foreign affairs relations and for the nuclear program of Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Potential vice presidents and cabinet members\nHe said that he would install a woman as head of the Central Bank and a famous economist as his Minister of Finance. He also said he would use Sunni Muslims in his cabinet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234795-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mohsen Rezaee presidential campaign, Polls\nHis chance in the polls was high before the candidates registered. After the nomination of other conservative candidates like Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf and Saeed Jalili, Rezaee's chance became lower.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season\nThe 2013 season was Molde's sixth consecutive year in Tippeligaen, and their 37th season in the top flight of Norwegian football. It was Ole Gunnar Solskj\u00e6r's third season as the club's manager. Molde were the defending champions in Tippeligaen, but lost their first four matches in the league and collected six points in the first ten games. The team did however turn the bad form, and finished the season in sixth place. The team won the 2013 Norwegian Football Cup, after defeating their main rivals Rosenborg 4\u20132 in the final. In Europe, Molde entered the UEFA Champions League in the second qualifying round, where they defeated Sligo Rovers. In the next round, the team was eliminated by Legia Warszawa on away goals. Molde proceeded to the Europe League play-off round, where they were knocked out by Rubin Kazan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season, Season summary\nMolde started the season poorly, losing their first four games. Their first point of the season came on 20 April 2013 in a 1\u20131 draw away to Odds, with Molde's goal coming from Daniel Berg Hestad. Molde's first victory of season came in the first round of the Norwegian Cup away to Elnesv\u00e5gen. They won 0-5 with the goals coming from new signings Aliou Coly, four, and Agnaldo. Their first league win of the season was a 4\u20131 victory against Aalesunds on 9 May 2013, with Joona Toivio, Magnus Wolff Eikrem and Jo Inge Berget scoring the goals. Molde then went on a 3-game winless streak that included a 1\u20135 defeat to Haugesund, their worst loss at home since Troms\u00f8 won 7\u20130 against Molde on 2 September 1995. This was also Molde's first ever loss against Haugesund at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season, Season summary\nMolde's second league victory came in their 12th game of the season, a 4\u20130 home defeat of H\u00f8nefoss that saw Molde rise off the bottom of the table for the first time all season. Molde had 4 players called up to the Norwegian U-21's for the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship in June 2013. These players were goalkeeper \u00d8rjan Nyland, defender Martin Linnes, midfielder Magnus Wolff Eikrem and attacker Jo Inge Berget. Both Eikrem and Berget scored in Norways 1\u20133 victory over England on 8 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season, Season summary\nMolde's first game back after the summer break was a 6\u20130 fourth round cup win over Adeccoligaen side Ranheim to put them into the Quarter-finals. Molde were 3\u20130 at half time after goals from Agnaldo 5mins, Gatt 17 and Simonsen 27. The second half goals came courtesy of a J\u00f8rgen Olsen Own goal in the 49th, Ekpo in the 50th and Chima rounded it off with his 5th goal of the season in the 80th minute. Molde narrowly continued their unbeaten run in their first league game back after the break with a 3\u20133 away draw against V\u00e5lerenga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season, Season summary\nMolde went 1\u20130 down after 10minutes when Morten Berre scored for the homeside, before Jo Inge Berget and Martin Linnes both scored to give Molde a halftime lead. In the second half Jan Gunnar Solli equalised for V\u00e5lerenga before Berre's second put them in the lead again. Agnaldo popped up the first minute of injury time to earn a point for the away side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season, Season summary\nOn 24 June, Magnus Wolff Eikrem was sold to Dutch Eredivisie side SC Heerenveen for 10,000,000 NOK. After round 14 of the championship, on 29/30 June, Molde moved out of the automatic relegation places for the first time during the season. Molde came from behind to win 3-1 at home to Sarpsborg 08 on 29 June 2013, thanks to goals from Martin Linnes, Daniel Chima and Zlatko Tripi\u0107 after J\u00e9r\u00e9my Berthod had given the lead early in the first half. The game against Sarpsborg 08 also resulted in a serious knee injury for Josh Gatt, which ruled him out for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season, Season summary\n3 July 2013 saw Molde take on Adeccoligaen side Mj\u00f8ndalen in the Quarter-finals of the Norwegian Cup, winning the match 2-0 with goals from Even Hovland and Zlatko Tripi\u0107. On the same day Molde announced the signing of Norwegian U21 international Mats M\u00f8ller D\u00e6hli from Manchester United on a two and a half year contract. 2 days later, on 5 July, Lauri Dalla Valle left Molde after only 6 appearances to join Belgian Second Division side Sint-Truiden. On the same day Molde announced that Per Egil Flo would be joining them from Sogndal on 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234796-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Molde FK season, Season summary\nOn 10 July, it was announced that Tommy H\u00f8iland was joining on 15 July, and 11 July it was announced that Vegard Forren was returning to the club following his unsuccessful spell at Southampton. Forren made his 2nd debut for Molde two days later in Molde's 1-0 away victory over Sligo Rovers in the 1st leg of the Champions League 2nd qualifying round. The winning goal for Molde came in the 42nd minute from Daniel Chima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234797-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moldovan government crisis\nThe 2013 Moldovan government crisis was a governmental crisis that took place in the Republic of Moldova. It started on 8 March 2013, after the Prime Minister Vlad Filat was dismissed by motion of censure of the Parliament. It ended on 30 May 2013, when Iurie Leanc\u0103's cabinet received a successful vote of confidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234797-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moldovan government crisis, Background\nThe government coalition Alliance for European Integration, composed by Liberal Democratic Party of Moldova (PLDM), Democratic Party (PD) and Liberal Party (PL), entered in an internal conflict. The President of the Parliament and PD leader, Marian Lupu accused Vlad Filat and his government for corruption, although in PL, someone sustained Filat, and the other ones sustained Lupu. The alliance was dissolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234797-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moldovan government crisis, Government falling\nFilat and his government were dismissed on 8 March 2013, after a parliamentary motion of censure against the cabinet, initiated by the Party of the Communists (PCRM). PD, PL and PCRM deputies voted for the motion, while PLDM and independents voted against it. President Nicolae Timofti asked Filat to maintain the function as Acting, until a new government is formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234797-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moldovan government crisis, Filat's designation\nTimofti designated Filat to form his third cabinet. The Prime Minister designate started to negotiate with the former political partners in the European Integration Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234798-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Molise regional election\nThe Molise regional election of 2013 took place on 24\u201325 February 2013, after that the 2011\u20132016 legislature was prematurely dissolved due to irregularities in the 2011 regional election. Paolo di Laura Frattura of the Democratic Party was elected President and the center-left performed approximately 16 points better than the center-left list for the Chamber of Deputies in the general election held the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234798-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Molise regional election, Background\nIn May 2012 a tribunal declared the 2011 election invalid due to irregularities and fraud committed by Michele Iorio (The People of Freedom, President of Molise since 2001) and his center-right coalition. After an appeal filed by the center-right failed, the Italian Council of State confirmed the 2011 election as invalid on 29 October 2012 and a new election was scheduled for February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234799-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Molson Canadian Men's Provincial Curling Championship\nThe 2013 Molson Canadian Men's Provincial Curling Championship, the men's provincial curling championship for New Brunswick, was held from January 30 to February 3 at the Gladstone Curling Club in Fredericton Junction, New Brunswick. The winning team will represent New Brunswick at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234799-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Molson Canadian Men's Provincial Curling Championship, Qualification events, Preliminary round\nThe preliminary round for the 2013 Molson Canadian Men's Provincial Curling Championship will take place from January 10 to 13 at Curl Moncton Beaus\u00e9jour in Moncton. Four teams will qualify to the provincials from the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 99], "content_span": [100, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234799-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Molson Canadian Men's Provincial Curling Championship, Qualification events, Wildcard round\nThe wildcard round for the 2013 Molson Canadian Men's Provincial Curling Championship will take place from January 18 to 20 at Gage Golf and Curling Club in Oromocto. Four teams will qualify to the provincials from the wildcard round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 96], "content_span": [97, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234800-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Molson Coors Tankard\nThe 2013 Molson Coors Tankard, the Nova Scotia men's provincial curling championship, was held from February 6 to 10 at the Truro Curling Club in Truro, Nova Scotia. The winning team of Paul Flemming represented Nova Scotia at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234800-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Molson Coors Tankard, Qualification rounds, Round 1\nThe first qualification round for the 2013 Nova Scotties Men's Provincial Championship took place from January 10 to 13 at the Amherst Curling Club in Amherst. The event was held in an open-entry triple knockout format qualifying five teams to the provincial playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234800-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Molson Coors Tankard, Qualification rounds, Round 2\nThe second qualification round for the 2013 Nova Scotties Men's Provincial Championship will take place from January 17 to 20 at the Wolfville Curling Club in Wolfville. The event will be held in an open-entry triple knockout format qualifying three teams to the provincial playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234801-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mombasa local elections\nLocal elections were held in Mombasa to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234801-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mombasa local elections, Prospective Candidates\nSuleiman Shabhal is a Businessman while Hassan Joho is the MP for Kisauni. Former KPA manager Abdhallah Mwaruwa had also declared his intention to run", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round\nThe 2013 Monaco GP2 Series round was a pair of motor races held on 24 and 25 May 2013, at the Circuit de Monaco, Monte Carlo, Monaco as part of the GP2 Series. It was the fourth round of the 2013 GP2 Series and was run in support of the 2013 Monaco Grand Prix. The first race, a 42-lap feature event, was won by Russian Time driver Sam Bird who started from third position. Kevin Ceccon finished second for the Trident Racing team and Arden International driver Mitch Evans took third. Stefano Coletti of the Rapax team won the shorter 30-lap sprint race from MP Motorsport's Adrian Quaife-Hobbs in second and Evans third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round\nJohnny Cecotto Jr. won the pole position for the feature race by setting the fastest lap in qualifying. His lost the lead to teammate Evans heading into the first corner and understeered into the barrier while holding off Fabio Leimer. Jolyon Palmer spun in avoidance blocking passage to the turn and the race was stopped because 15 cars were stranded. Evans led the restarted race but Bird passed him after the pit stop phase. Bird opened up a lengthy advantage over the rest of the field to win. Quaife-Hobbs started from pole position in the sprint race and kept the lead until Coletti passed him on the third lap. Although his lead diminished because of tyre wear Coletti led the event's remaining laps to claim the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round\nBird's feature race victory was his\u2014and Russian Time's\u2014second of the season and Coletti's sprint race win meant he became the first Monegasque driver to win on the streets of Monaco since Louis Chiron in 1931. The race results increased Coletti's Drivers' Championship lead to 24 points over Felipe Nasr. Bird's feature race win gained him two positions to move to third while Leimer fell to fourth. Rapax took the Teams' Championship lead from Carlin and Russian Time moved to third with Racing Engineering fourth with seven rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Background\nThe 2013 Monaco GP2 Series round was the fourth of eleven scheduled events in 2013. It was held on 24 and 25 May at the Circuit de Monaco in Monte Carlo and supported the 2013 Monaco Grand Prix. Tyre supplier Pirelli brought the red-banded supersoft and yellow-banded soft dry tyres to the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Background\nBefore the two races, Rapax driver Stefano Coletti led the Drivers' Championship with 93 points, 17 ahead of Felipe Nasr in second, who in turn, was a further 18 points in front of Fabio Leimer in third. Robin Frijns was fourth on 33 points and Sam Bird was four points behind him in fifth place. Carlin led the Teams' Championship on 107 points; Rapax had a small deficit of six points in second and Racing Engineering were third with 64 points. Hilmer Motorsports were fourth on 56 points and Russian Time were one point in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Background\nFor the round, there were 26 drivers were entered and all of them piloted the Dallara GP2/11 car fielded by 13 teams of two competitors each. After a strong start to the season, Frijns confirmed on Twitter that he would contest the Monaco round as his contract with Hilmer Motorsports was on a race-by-race basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nOne 30-minute practice session was held on Thursday before the two races. Bird, who called the Circuit de Monaco his favourite track in the GP2 Series, lapped fastest at 1 minute, 21.512 seconds on super-soft tyres, 0.057 seconds faster than Russian Time teammate Tom Dillmann in second. Mitch Evans, Carlin's Jolyon Palmer, Marcus Ericsson of DAMS, Arden International's Johnny Cecotto Jr., Leimer, Nasr, Rio Haryanto of Addax and James Calado made up positions two to ten. Only minor off-track excursions were reported with DAMS's St\u00e9phane Richelmi spinning at La Rascasse corner and stalled in his attempt to continue driving. Nasr narrowly avoided hitting the barrier at the Swimming Pool complex and Coletti, Leimer, Calado and Kevin Giovesi for Lazarus all ran deep onto the run-off areas at various points during practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nFriday afternoon's qualifying session ran for 30-minutes. As in 2012, qualifying was divided into two groups of 13 cars, with odd numbered vehicles in Group A and even numbered cars in Group B. The starting order was determined by the fastest overall driver in either group. Most cars had the soft types equipped at the start and most made pit stops for set-up alterations with some installing supersoft tyres. Cecotto clinched his first pole position of the season, the second of his career, and at Monte Carlo with a time of 1 minute, 21.141 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nHe was joined on the grid's front row by teammate Evans who led Group B; his best time was 0.016 seconds slower than Cecotto. On his final timed lap, Bird was fastest in the first 1\u20443 of the lap, but lost six tenths in the final 2\u20443 and was third. Leimer drifted sideways at the final corner on his fastest lap but avoided hitting the barrier en route to fourth. Kevin Ceccon (Trident) took fifth. Sixth-placed Palmer's first attempt at going faster proved unsuccessful as he encountered Richelmi in the final sector but took it at his next attempt before Leimer demoted him down the order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nJuli\u00e1n Leal (Racing Engineering) took seventh after encountering traffic on his final lap and needed to pass one car to record his fastest time. Dillmann qualified in eighth place. Nasr set the early pace in Group B before settling for ninth and Frijns took tenth. Ericsson in 11th was the fastest driver not to qualify in the top ten. He led Group B early on but was demoted as the session progressed. He was followed by Sergio Canamasas (Caterham Racing) in 12th and Rossi in 13th. Coletti was another Group B early pace setter but began from 14th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nHaryanto qualified in 15th but was demoted ten places on the grid for causing an avoidable accident at the season's previous round in Catalunya. Hence Nathana\u00ebl Berthon (Trident) inherited the place and was followed by Calado, Richelmi and Dani\u00ebl de Jong (MP Motorsport). 20th place qualifier Ren\u00e9 Binder (Lazarus) incurred a three-place grid penalty for impeding Canamasas during qualifying. Giovesi began in 20th with Daniel Abt (ART Grand Prix), Simon Trummer (Rapax) and Jake Rosenzweig (Addax) in 21st to 23rd positions. Lancaster started from 24th after a spin at Sainte D\u00e9vote turn necessitated yellow flags to be waved in the area. The final position in the field was taken by Adrian Quaife-Hobbs (MP Motorsport) whose fastest time was 2.2 seconds slower than Cecotto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 830]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races\nThe first race was held over 140\u00a0km (87\u00a0mi) or 60 minutes (whichever came first) and the regulations required drivers to make one pit stop. The first ten finishers scored points, with two given to the fastest lap holder. The grid for the second race was determined by the finishing order of the first but with the first eight drivers in reverse order of where they finished. It was run for 100\u00a0km (62\u00a0mi) or 45 minutes (whichever came first). In contrast to the prior race drivers were not required to make pit stops. The top eight finishers earned points towards their respective championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nThe feature race was due to start at 11:15 Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00) on 24 May, but was delayed by 15 minutes due to an incident during qualifying for the Porsche Supercup race in which several cars crashed at Massenet corner. Repairs were required to the barriers at the turn as they had been dislodged, and oil laid on the track surface at the same turn was covered with cement dust.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nWhen the race began under overcast and cool weather of 18\u00a0\u00b0C (64\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature of 26\u00a0\u00b0C (79\u00a0\u00b0F), wheelspin from Cecotto allowed his teammate Evans to lead the field into Sainte D\u00e9vote turn. Soon after a 15-car crashed at the first corner forced a stoppage. After losing the lead Cecotto was holding off Leimer through Sainte D\u00e9vote, it became impossible for Cecotto to maintain his line and he understeered straight into the barrier. Leimer was trapped and mounted the left-hand corner of Cecotto's car. Palmer took avoiding action by spinning on the inside, blocking the turn. Palmer avoided injury when Leal's front wing almost struck his helmet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nColetti, Leal, Dillmann, Frijns, Ericsson, Rossi, Berthon, Binder, Giovesi, Haryanto, Rosenzweig and Abt were all trapped in the blockade with varying degrees of car damage. Nasr was near Bird and Ceccon and avoided the collision between Leal and Palmer. Drivers ran back to their cars and remonstrated with marshals to allow them to take the restart. A 40-minute delay was necessitated for track clearing before the race could be restarted. Nine drivers had enough damage to warrant their retirement: Cecotto, Leimer, Palmer, Leal, Frijns, Ericsson, Rossi, Berthon and Giovesi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nThe running order was determined by where the drivers were in the first sector with others assigned their starting positions. This gave Evans the lead behind the safety car followed by Bird, Ceccon, Nasr and Calado. The safety car was withdrawn at the end of lap two and racing resumed. Evans and Bird opened up a two-second lead over Ceccon, Nasr, Calado and Richelmi. Although Evans had switched to the supersoft tyres during the stoppage Bird set consecutive fastest laps on the soft tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nAs they had been compromised by the first lap pileup and were at the back of the field, Dillmann and Coletti chose to make their mandatory pit stops when the window opened at the end of lap seven for rear soft compound tyres. Haryanto and Abt made their stops on the next lap and Calado and Lancaster followed on lap nine. Coletti's early pit stop caused him to lap faster than other drivers by two seconds. Other drivers became aware of the significance and Nasr entered the pit lane to keep his position from Calado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nCeccon and Richelmi did the same on the 11th lap, putting pressure on race leader Evans who was at this point three seconds a lap slower than Ceccon. Evans made his own pit stop on lap 12 for soft compound tyres but lost the lead to Ceccon, who made up enough time to pass him. Evans could not keep close to Ceccon and was three seconds behind after one lap and his diminishing pace hurt the delayed Bird who became the leader following Evans' pit stop. On lap 15, De Jong made a problematic pit stop: a rear jack failure delayed him and he crossed the yellow line at the pit lane exit twice, incurring a drive-through penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nBird set fast laps and maintained the lead after his pit stop at the conclusion of the 16th lap ahead of the yet-to-stop Binder, Ceccon and Evans. Bird was pushing when he slid clipping a kerb and glanced a barrier leaving Portier turn on lap 18. Abt went to the outside of Haryanto on lap 28 and braked later than him for 13th. The resulting manoeuvre meant Abt put Haryanto into an inside barrier and damaging his car's nose cone. The need for the safety car was avoided as Haryanto's car was moved away from the track quickly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nThe stewards deemed Abt too aggressive towards Haryanto and imposed a drive-through penalty on him showed him a black flag with an orange disc to instruct him to repair his car. Dillmann attempted to pass Rosenzweig but ran deep at the Novelle Chicane, requiring him to relinquish the position to Rosenzweig. Binder made his pit stop on the 29th lap and emerged in seventh behind Coletti. Bird continued to lead by 17 seconds over Ceccon who held off the faster Evans in third who himself had Nasr and Calado close behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nBird then opened up a 22 second lead over the rest of the field and maintained it to win the race. Ceccon finished second with a second covering Evans in third and Nasr in fourth; Evans narrowly held off Nasr for the final podium place. Calado secured fifth with Coletti and Binder sixth and seventh. Quaife-Hobbs passed Richemi for eighth in the final stages for the sprint race pole position. Richelmi and De Jong were ninth and tenth. Dillmann, Lancaster, Trummer, Rosenzweig, Canamasas and Abt were the final classified finishers. It was Bird's third GP2 Series win, his second of 2013 for Russian Time, and repeated his 2012 Formula Renault 3.5 Series win in Monaco. After the race, the stewards deemed Cecotto responsible for causing the first lap stoppage and barred him from competing in the following day's sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nThe second race began at 16:10 local time on 25 May. The weather at the start were cooler than the previous day's race with light rain falling. The air temperature was 17\u00a0\u00b0C (63\u00a0\u00b0F) and the track temperature was 25\u00a0\u00b0C (77\u00a0\u00b0F). Most cars started on the soft compound tyres. When the race started, pole sitter Quaife-Hobbs maintained the lead into Sainte D\u00e9vote corner while Coletti moved into second as Binder made a slow start and fell to sixth. Calado initially held third, but Evans overtook him on the outside at Mirabeau turn for third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nNasr passed Calado at the start of the following lap at Sainte D\u00e9vote corner for fourth position. Having been close behind Quaife-Hobbs in the race's opening stages, Coletti pressured him by using his local knowledge to apply pressure on the latter. Coletti lined up an overtake on Quaife-Hobbs on the third lap leaving the tunnel and into the Novelle Chicane. He steered right onto the inside and braked later than Quaife-Hobbs to pass him for the lead. Coletti began to pull away from Quaife-Hobbs, setting the race's fastest lap at that point on the fourth lap to be 2.1 seconds ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nQuaife-Hobbs focused himself on holding off the closing Evans, Nasr and Calado. Dillmann was forced to go two laps behind the leader on the seventh lap after he sustained car damage. Bird in seventh was challenged by Ceccon entering the Novelle Chicane forcing Bird to overshoot the corner to avoid a collision. Bird was aware that his move would entail a drive-through penalty and yielded seventh to Ceccon. Richelmi immediately attacked Bird but it became evident that Bird's car had a major problem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nBird lost further positions before entering the pit lane for technical assistance that put him one lap behind the race leader. He thus set the race's fastest lap on supersoft tyres; as he was outside the top ten he did not score the point entailed by the achievement. Palmer overtook Canamasas on lap 13 in a near-identical move to Abt's pass on Haryanto in the previous day's race. But on this occasion, both drivers continued without significant damage. Quaife-Hobbs held off the three-car train and appeared stronger as the race progressed and the tyres degraded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nAs the field became tightly packed, no driver had the advantage of getting the edge for moving up the field. This was the case until Rosenzweig stuck the front of his car down the inside of Lancaster through the Lowe's hairpin and tapped him into a half-spin. Rosenzweig moved into tenth as Lancaster could not recover sufficiently from the incident and lost five places in two corners. Coletti's hold on first waned because tyre degradation removed some of his earlier speed and handling, lowering his lead over Quaife-Hobbs to a second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nLess than four seconds covered the first five with a 14-second gap over a battle for sixth between Binder, Ceccon and Richelmi. Coletti had help from Quaife-Hobbs who defended from Evans. By this point, the track was completely dry with no rainfall. Evans tried again to take second on the final lap, almost hitting the rear of Quaife-Hobbs's car as the pair left the Novelle Chicane. Coletti maintained the lead for the rest of the race to win, making him the first Monegasque driver to win on the streets of Monaco since Louis Chiron in the 1931 Monaco Grand Prix. Quaife-Hobbs finished in second position, three-tenths of a second ahead of Evans in third. Nasr, Calado, Binder, Ceccon and Richelmi made up positions four through ten. De Jong, Rosenzweig, Canamasas, Palmer, Leimer, Leal, Frijns, Haryanto, Lancaster, Ericcson, Rossi, Giovesi, Berthon, Abt, Trummer, Bird and Dillmann were the final classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 972]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nThe top three drivers in both races appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and spoke to the media in a later press conference. Although Bird spoke of his satisfaction of controlling the pace of the feature race, he believed he was fortunate because of a new rear wing after Ceccon hit his car at the first start, \"It\u2019s an amazing to be able to win my first GP2 race in Monaco. Maybe I should have done it already in the past in GP2, but it felt pretty right today.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nCeccon stated he was \"happy\" to finish second and praised his team for a strategy that allowed him to pass Evans, \"It\u2019s my first GP2 podium and it\u2019s two years in a row that I finish on the podium here since I finished third last year in GP3 here as well. Today, I finished in P2 in race 1. It\u2019s good.\" When asked if he was disappointed to finish third, Evans replied yes as he struggled with grip on the supersoft compound tyres at the restart and was being pressured by Bird on the harder compounds. Evans spoke of his belief that had he overtaken Ceccon he could have had similar pace levels to Bird and felt the best possible result he could have achieved was second but said he would accept the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nAfter the sprint race, Coletti spoke of his childhood dream of hearing the Monegasque national anthem while standing atop the podium, \"It feels great I mean I\u2019ve seen all the drivers winning here since I was a kid. I\u2019m really, really happy especially that with this win I\u2019ve consolidated my lead in the standings.\" He said for the season's next race at Silverstone his team need to improve his car for qualifying and then aim to win the feature race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nQuaife-Hobbs said it felt \"amazing\" to achieve his first career podium, \"Today, it\u2019s a great reward for the team and how hard they\u2019ve worked. We are a new team. Now every new team have had a podium.\" He believed had he defended from Coletti on the third lap both drivers would not have entered the Novelle Chicane and said he chose to follow Coletti with the view for an attack later on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nThird-place finisher Evans revealed he struggled to get the optimum rear tyre temperature on the formation lap especially since the start was the best time to pass drivers and was aware that a podium finish was probably unrealistic. Nevertheless, he was happy to have finished on the podium again after altering his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nCecotto's driving in the feature race received much attention. It was third such incident in the season that Cecotto had courted controversy and criticism from drivers: he was disqualified from qualifying for the Sepang round when he forced Bird off the track but avoided a penalty in the Catalunya sprint race when he swerved across Canamasas in a battle for fifth. Leimer claimed that Cecotto solely concentrated on himself rather than making the corner, \"It's really, really disappointing as a lot was possible today and I could have scored a lot of points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nBut once more due to another driver I lost out, while my competitors in the battle for the championship are scoring.\" Palmer was more vocal in his criticism in Cecotto, remarking he would rather start from the pit lane than within two rows of Cecotto. Peter Allen of Formula Scout argued that while Cecotto's manoeuvre was not clearly malicious in intent, the driver deserved the ban to help him realise he needed to control his aggression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234802-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco GP2 Series round, Races, Post-race\nThe result increased Coletti's lead atop of the Drivers' Championship with 120 points. Nasr remained in second place, 24 points behind Coletti, while Bird's feature race victory moved him to third position. Because he scored no points in both races, Leimer fell to fourth and Calado moved from eighth to fifth. Rapax took the lead of the Teams' Championship by one point ahead of previous leaders Carlin. Russian Time moved to third place on 80 points and were a further 16 ahead of fourth-placed Racing Engineering. Arden took over fifth place with seven rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Monaco Grand Prix (formally known as the Formula 1 Grand Prix de Monaco 2013) was a Formula One motor race that took place on 26 May 2013 at the Circuit de Monaco, a street circuit that runs through the principality of Monaco. The race was won by Nico Rosberg for Mercedes AMG Petronas, repeating the feat of his father Keke Rosberg in the 1983 race. The race was the sixth round of the 2013 season, and marked the seventy-first time the Monaco Grand Prix has been held. Rosberg had started the race from pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Background, Tyres\nTyre supplier Pirelli brought its yellow-banded soft compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the red-banded super-soft compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre, just as they did the previous two years. It was the second time in the season that the super-soft compound was used at a race weekend, as was the case with the soft tyre compound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Free Practice\nThursday's Free Practice sessions saw many drivers struggling to find grip on the circuit, as Jean-\u00c9ric Vergne and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen both suffered major lock-ups at turn 4, and went off into the small run-off area. Lewis Hamilton locked up badly at turn 8, with his teammate, Nico Rosberg, touching the barrier at turn 7. Grosjean and Massa both crashed into the barriers at turn 1, and with Massa's crash being on Saturday morning's Free Practice session, he was unable to compete in qualifying. Adrian Sutil crashed into the outside barrier at turn 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe three qualifying sessions were held on 25 May. Q1 and Q2 were rain-affected, with mostly dry conditions for Q3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q1\nForce India's Paul di Resta, Caterham's Charles Pic, Sauber's Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez, Marussia's Max Chilton and Jules Bianchi, and Ferrari's Felipe Massa did not make it out of the first qualifying session. Bianchi stopped on track with an engine issue before setting a timed lap. Massa did not run a lap as his car was still being repaired following a crash in Free Practice Session No. 3 . Giedo van der Garde became the first Caterham driver to advance to the second round of qualifying in the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q2\nSauber's Nico H\u00fclkenberg, Toro Rosso's Daniel Ricciardo, Lotus' Romain Grosjean, both Williams drivers Valtteri Bottas and Pastor Maldonado, as well as Caterham's Giedo van der Garde were knocked out and did not advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying, Q3\nMercedes's Nico Rosberg took pole position for the Monaco Grand Prix with a time of 1m13.876s. Mercedes's Lewis Hamilton and Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel set the next two fastest times during the final round of qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nRosberg led from pole position ahead of teammate Lewis Hamilton at the start and Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber. Marussia's Bianchi started from pit lane after an issue on the starting grid. Maldonado and van der Garde had contact which forced Maldonado to pit the Williams for a new front wing. On lap 9, Charles Pic pulled over near the pit entry with an engine fire in the Caterham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFerrari's Felipe Massa had a large shunt going into Sainte Devote, very similar to his crash in the third free practice session on Saturday, but this time it was caused by a suspension failure. The safety car was deployed for the first time in the 2013 season and Rosberg retained the lead after a pit stop. Hamilton dropped to fourth place after leaving too much of a gap to the Red Bulls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 45, Maldonado and Chilton touched near Tabac sending Maldonado into the barriers. The race was red flagged to repair damage to the barriers and remove Maldonado's wrecked Williams, although Chilton was able to resume. The race resumed behind the safety car with Rosberg leading Vettel, Webber, and Hamilton. During the red flag stop, Sergio P\u00e9rez was given the position by Alonso, who was trying to avoid a penalty caused by an earlier incident at the chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nLotus's Grosjean crashed into the back of Toro Rosso's Ricciardo exiting the tunnel and the safety car was brought out once again. After the race, it was announced that Grosjean would receive a 10-place grid penalty for the Canada Grand Prix because of the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nP\u00e9rez touched the barriers near the Nouvelle Chicane after trying to overtake R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen on lap 69, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen had to pit for new tyres following a puncture caused by the collision. Fernando Alonso, teammate Jenson Button and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen himself later complained about P\u00e9rez's aggressive driving during the race, even though he did not receive any penalties. P\u00e9rez later retired after running down the exit road near Rascasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAfter Vettel set the race's fastest lap, 1:16.577, on lap 77 Red Bull reprimanded their driver over the radio for taking unnecessary risks, saying that there were no points to be gained for setting the fastest lap. Vettel replied \"but satisfaction\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234803-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nRosberg won the race ahead of Vettel, Webber and Hamilton, having led from start to finish. His victory came 30 years after his father, Keke Rosberg, won the 1983 Monaco Grand Prix. Raikkonen passed several cars on the last two laps to take the final points position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election\nGeneral elections were held in Monaco on 10 February 2013. The result was a victory for the Horizon Monaco alliance, which won 20 of the 24 seats in the National Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election, Electoral system\nVoters can either choose a party list or choose candidates from various lists (\"panachage\") for the 24 seats. The 16 candidates with the most votes are elected (with the older candidate breaking possible ties in votes). The eight other seats are chosen from lists in accordance with the proportional representation system for parties that have at least five percent of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election, Parties\nThe election was contested by two alliances, Horizon Monaco and Union Mon\u00e9gasque, as well as Renaissance, a party whose candidates were all employees of SBM. Horizon Monaco was an alliance of Rassemblement et Enjeux, the Union for the Principality and Synergie Monegasque, whilst Union Mon\u00e9gasque consisted of the Union de Mon\u00e9gasques and the National Union for the Future of Monaco. A total of 72 candidates contested the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election, Campaign\nAn unnamed official of the administration team said: \"We have had three lists before, as in 2008, but they were never full. We must therefore revise certain aspects, such as the voting cards, where the 72 names must be listed.\" Renaissance said that it seeks achievable goals instead of new policies. The party said that is sought representation in parliament \"to defend the interests of the SBM workers in Monaco.\" Horizon Monaco's leader Laurent Nouvion told Monaco Matin: \"I am very calm. I am more determined than ever to secure the future of Monaco and its compatriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election, Campaign\nI believe that our campaign has been clean and honest. We tried as hard as possible to connect to the Monegasque people and to respond to their concerns. This is the heart of our commitment. For me and my fellow candidates, this campaign has brought us even closer together and given us the sense of being a real team, just like a sports team....Adversity has strengethened our relationship.\" Union Mon\u00e9gasque's leader Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Robillon said: \"We have worked hard at this long campaign. We are here to make plans for the future, not to abuse our adversaries, frighten the population and create an atmosphere of hatred... This has been our goal throughout the campaign: we have sought to promote our programme while avoiding aggressive confrontation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election, Conduct\nThe Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe was invited by Monaco's ambassador to OSCE and sent a team of four observers from four countries led by Poland's Konrad Olszewski. They arrived on 30 January and will depart on 13 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election, Conduct\nBuses and car parks were free of charge in order to encourage voter turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234804-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Monegasque general election, Results\nAn 18-metre screen broadcast the result at the only voting centre at Salle du Canto from 08:00 to 19:00, with the result expected between 4:00-4:30 the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234805-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian Premier League\nThe 2013 Mongolian Premier League also known as Niislel Lig or Capital League is the 46th edition of the tournament. The number of teams reduce to seven due to the withdrawal of Ulaanbaataryn Mazaalaynuud in the 2012 season. It started on 1 May and ended on 31 August 2013. Erchim won the tournament for the eighth time by beating Khangarid 4\u20131 in penalties. Erchim will also advance to the 2014 AFC President's Cup representing Mongolia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Mongolia on 26 June 2013. The Democratic Party nominee, incumbent President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj was re-elected, defeating both Mongolian People's Party nominee of parliament member Badmaanyambuugiin Bat-Erdene and Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party nominee Natsagiin Udval, who was Minister of Health at the time of the election. Elbegdorj was inaugurated on 10 July 2013 for his second term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election\nBoth Elbegdorj and Bat-Erdene saw backing from the urban population in Ulan Bator, Bat-Erdene having more of a conservative following and the incumbent president supported by the middle class. Elbegdorj won the election with 50.9% of the popular votes, a nearly 9% margin over Bat-Erdene. Udval received 6.6% of the popular vote. Elbegdorj's re-election keeps the Democratic Party in power both in the presidency and the State Great Khural.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Electoral system\nThe election was held using the two-round system; if no candidate had received a majority of the vote in the first round, a second round would have been held. The second round was to be scheduled on 10 July 2013 if necessary. Only parties with seats in the State Great Khural were allowed to nominate candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Electoral system\nThe elections were the first in which Mongolians living abroad were allowed to vote, with an estimated 39,800 Mongolian citizens living outside Mongolia at the time of the election. Other reforms had been made since the 2012 parliamentary elections, including limits on money spent by candidates on campaigning and advertising. As in the 2012 elections, the presidential election used electronic voting machines from Dominion Voting Systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Campaign laws\nChanges to campaign laws were made in 2011 which restricted the amount of television and poster advertising a candidate could use. It also increased penalties for violators. The intent was to have the candidates judged on the merit of their platform rather than the budget of their campaign. This change increased the role of social networking such as Facebook and Twitter in candidates campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Candidates, Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj\nIncumbent president Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj was renominated by Democratic Party, and was also endorsed by Civil Will-Green Party and Mongolian National Democratic Party, both of which have seats in both the parliament and the government cabinet. Republican Party and Motherland Party expressed their full support for Elbegdorj's candidacy also.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Candidates, Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj\nElbegdorj was Prime Minister of Mongolia for two terms prior to his election as president in 2009. The incumbent president was \"heavily backed by the urban middle class\" of Ulaanbaatar. Elbegdorj was one of the leaders of the democratic revolution in 1990 that saw the fall of the People's Republic of Mongolia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Candidates, Badmaanyambuugiin Bat-Erdene\nThe opposition Mongolian People's Party nominated parliament member Badmaanyambuugiin Bat-Erdene. Bat-Erdene is a former wrestling champion and was the first wrestler to be announced as a presidential candidate in Mongolia. Bat-Erdene had a more conservative backing within Ulan Bator. Mongolian People's Party was the former communist party in power prior to the democratic revolution in 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Candidates, Natsagiin Udval\nThe Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party was initially unsure if it was going to field a candidate in the election, or support another party's candidate. It eventually nominated Natsagiin Udval to run. Udval is the Minister of Health and the Secretary-General of Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party. She was also the first woman to run for the presidency. Udval supports former president Nambaryn Enkhbayar who is in prison on corruption charges and who is chairman of Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Results\nIncumbent President Elbegdorj won the election with 50.23% of total votes, with Baterdene Badmaanyambuu and Natsagiin Udval getting 41.97% and 6.5% respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Results\nFollowing the announcement Mongolian Prime Minister Norovyn Altankhuyag pledged work with President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj to fight corruption in Mongolia. A political analyst said having the parliament and presidency represented by a single party would be good for foreign investment, as it shows a \"politically stable\" environment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Reaction\nU.S. President Barack Obama issued a statement on presidential election in Mongolia on 27 June 2013, the same day of the result of 2013 Mongolian presidential election was announced. In his statement, President Obama noted: \"President Elbegdorj has been an important leader in advancing democracy and freedom in his country and a key partner for the United States in Asia and globally... Through its impressive democratic achievements and its progress on economic liberalization, Mongolia serves as a significant example of positive reform and transformation for peoples around the world.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Reaction\nVuk Jeremi\u0107, President of the United Nations General Assembly for the 67th session expressed a satisfaction with the fair and successful election in his congratulations to Elbegdorj. United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon congratulated for successful Presidential election in Mongolia in his congratulatory message to Elbegdorj for his re-election as President of Mongolia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234806-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Mongolian presidential election, Reaction\nIn his congratulatory note to Elbegdorj on his victory, European Commission President Jos\u00e9 Manuel Barroso highlighted \"The European Commission considers that the presidential election has become another vital step of the Mongolian people to establish a democratic society that respects the rule of law and human rights.\" German Chancellor Angela Merkel noted \u201cThe Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe sent its group to Mongolia for the first time to observe the Presidential election, and it was an expression of strengthening of democracy and transparency in Mongolia,\u201d in her congratulatory message to Elbegdorj for his re-election as President of Mongolia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234807-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monmouth Hawks football team\nThe 2013 Monmouth Hawks football team represented Monmouth University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 21st-year head coach Kevin Callahan and played their home games at Kessler Field. After leaving in the Northeast Conference, they played 2013 as an FCS independent before joining the Big South Conference as a football only member in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234808-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Montana Grizzlies football team\nThe 2013 Montana Grizzlies football team represented the University of Montana in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Grizzlies were led by second-year head coach Mick Delaney and played their home games on campus at Washington\u2013Grizzly Stadium. Montana participated as a member of the Big Sky Conference, of which they are a charter member. They finished the season 10\u20133, 6\u20132 in Big Sky play to finish in third place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the second round to Coastal Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234808-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Montana Grizzlies football team, Schedule\nDespite also being a member of the Big Sky Conference, the game with North Dakota on September 14 is considered a non conference game and will have no effect on the Big Sky Standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234809-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Montana State Bobcats football team\nThe 2013 Montana State Bobcats football team represented Montana State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bobcats were led by seventh year head coach Rob Ash and played their home games at Bobcat Stadium. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 7\u20135, 5\u20133 in Big Sky play to finish in a four way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally\nThe 2013 Monte Carlo Rally (formally known as the 81\u00e8me Rallye Automobile Monte-Carlo) was a motor racing event for rally cars that was held over four days between 16 and 19 January, and marked the eighty-first running of the Monte Carlo Rally. After the ceremonial start in Monte Carlo, the rally was based in the French town of Valence. The rally itself was contested over eighteen special stages in the French provinces of Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes and Provence-Alpes-C\u00f4te d'Azur, covering a total of 468.42\u00a0km (291.06\u00a0mi) in competitive stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally\nThe rally was the first round of the 2013 World Rally Championship season, and marked the fortieth anniversary of the World Rally Championship; the 1973 event was the opening round of the championship in its inaugural season. Thirteen World Rally Car crews were entered in the event, including the defending World Drivers' Champion S\u00e9bastien Loeb, prior to the start a six-time winner of the Monte Carlo Rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally\nThe event was run in difficult conditions, with teams reporting during preparations for the event that the stages were subject to the heaviest snowfalls since the 2000 season. The rally was won by S\u00e9bastien Loeb, the seventy-seventh of his career and his seventh victory on the Rallye Monte Carlo. The Volkswagen Polo R WRC scored a podium on its competitive debut in the hands of S\u00e9bastien Ogier, with Dani Sordo completing the podium in a Citro\u00ebn DS3 WRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Entry list\nEntries for the rally closed on 14 December 2012, and were published one week later. Eighty-four entries were received, with seventy-three teams starting the event. Thirteen World Rally Cars started the event, as did eight entries in the newly formed WRC-2 championship for cars built to Group N and Super 2000 regulations, and three teams eligible to score points in the WRC-3 championship for two-wheel drive cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nThe itinerary for the 2013 rally remained relatively unchanged from previous years. The first day of the rally was made up of four special stages to the south and west of the rally base in Valence. Le Moulinon\u2014Antraigues was the first and longest stage\u2014at 37.10\u00a0km (23.05\u00a0mi)\u2014of the rally, and was made up of narrow and twisty roads that climb the Col de la Fayolle, before the road widens for a fast descent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nThis was followed by Burzet\u2014St. Martial, consisting of a series of long technical sections through a forest that opens up onto narrow roads that are exposed to the prevailing weather conditions. Both stages were contested for a second time later that afternoon. Both Le Moulinon\u2014Antraigues and Burzet\u2014St. Martial were modified from the 2012 route, having been extended slightly. This first leg of the rally was also the longest, covering some 135.40\u00a0km (84.13\u00a0mi) of competitive stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nThe second leg of the rally was made up of three stages to the north and west of Valence: Labatie d'Andaure\u2014Lalouvesc, St. Bonnet\u2014St. Julien Molhesabate\u2014St. Bonnet and Lamastre\u2014Gilhoc\u2014Alboussi\u00e8re. Labatie d'Andaure\u2014Lalouvesc was characterised by a long climb up the mountainside that became increasingly technical as it went on. St. Bonnet\u2014St. Julien Molhesabate\u2014St. Bonnet both started and finished in the commune of St. Bonnet, encircling a valley with fast, open roads at high altitude. Finally, Lamastre\u2014Gilhoc\u2014Alboussi\u00e8re was a fast and narrow descent that levelled out halfway through as it wound through open farmland. As with the first day of the rally, these three stages were contested twice; once in the morning and again in the afternoon. Similarly, the stages had all minor adjustments from the 2012 route.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nThe third day of the rally was the shortest at 92.00\u00a0km (57.17\u00a0mi). This leg of the rally also featured the most changes to the route. The Cimetiere de Vassieux\u2014Col de Gaudissart and Montauban-sur-l'Ouv\u00e8ze\u2014Eygalayes stages that have been used in recent years were not contested in 2012; instead, the cars travelled east and south of Valence for the St. Jean-en-Royans\u2014La Cime Du Mas stage, which follows a difficult route across the contours of three mountain peaks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nAlthough a regular feature of the rally route, the 2012 route used a version of St. Jean-en-Royans\u2014La Cime Du Mas that had not been featured since 1997. The cars returned to Valence for repairs at midday before contesting St. Nazaire le Desert\u2014La Motte Chalancon and Sisteron\u2014Thoard in the afternoon, both of which returned to the event after an extended absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nSt. Nazaire le Desert\u2014La Motte Chalancon was last used in 2009 as a round of the Intercontinental Rally Challenge when it was run in the opposite direction to the planned route for 2012, which follows narrow, twisty roads across a mountain ridge, passing through several small villages as it reaches a mountain pass over a kilometre above sea level. Sisteron\u2014Thoard had not featured in the route since 2002, featuring 36.70\u00a0km (22.80\u00a0mi) of difficult mountain climbs, undulating technical sequences and fast, open stretches at higher altitudes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nThe fourth and final leg of the rally was made up of five stages. This formed the longest overall day of competition, with the stages in the Provence-Alpes-C\u00f4te d'Azur region, close to the Italian border. The first of these stages, Moulinet\u2014La Bollene Vesubie (also known as the Col de Turini) was contested three times; twice in the afternoon, and once at night. The stage is famous for its endless series of hairpin bends, and steep inclines throughout the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Itinerary\nThe second stage, Lantosque\u2014Luc\u00e9ram, was also run twice across relatively flat terrain before climbing over a mountain ridge and descending to the commune of Luc\u00e9ram. The second running of the stage formed the \"Power Stage\" of the rally. This concept, introduced in 2011, awards bonus World Championship points to the three fastest drivers through the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 1\nThe opening stages of the rally presented a challenge to the drivers. Where the first pass through Le Moulinon\u2014Antraigues was mostly dry, the Burzet\u2014St. Martial stage was covered in snow, making tyre choice critical. With the cars running in the order that they finished the 2012 season, S\u00e9bastien Loeb was the first driver through the stages, and on his arrival at the end of Le Moulinon\u2014Antraigues it was observed that the dry conditions had torn the studs free of his front tyres. This would become a problem that all of the leading teams would be faced with.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 1\nNevertheless, Loeb set the early pace, finishing the stage seventeen seconds ahead of team-mate Mikko Hirvonen and looked unchallenged until S\u00e9bastien Ogier set a stage time that was three and a half second faster, giving the Volkswagen Polo R WRC a stage win on the very first stage it contested. Meanwhile, Jari-Matti Latvala in the second Polo R, arrived late at a time control checkpoint before the second stage, and received a thirty-second penalty. Ogier and Loeb maintained their momentum through the snowy Burzet\u2014St. Martial stage, but Loeb took the rally lead from Ogier by seven seconds. Dani Sordo, in the third works-supported Citro\u00ebn DS3 WRC, retained third place despite a fast time from Juho H\u00e4nninen in the Qatar World Rally Team Fiesta RS that saw him pick up two places overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 1\nFollowing the service park in Valence, the cars returned to Le Moulinon\u2014Antraigues, where Loeb continued to build on his lead, finishing the stage twelve seconds faster than Latvala, who after some initial teething problems had gained confidence in the Polo R. Sordo was once again third, whilst Hirvonen took fourth back from H\u00e4nninen. Ogier finished the stage fifth to be twenty-six and a half seconds behind Loeb. The second pass over Burzet\u2014St. Martial was dry, as the cars had swept the stage of snow during the first run over the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 1\nThe difference was so significant that Loeb set a stage time four minutes faster than the time he recorded in the morning. Hirvonen finished second, some thirty-four seconds slower, to capture third overall from Sordo. Mads \u00d8stberg finished the stage third ahead of Ogier, while Latvala finished fifth, recovering to fifth place overall after running as low as ninth during the morning stages. Burzet\u2014St. Martial also claimed the first retirement among the World Rally Cars when Thierry Neuville broke the suspension on his Fiesta RS, coming to a halt less than a kilometre from the spot he retired in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 1\nThe opening leg of the rally was also marked by technical troubles in the timing logs, with errors in the system falsely recording Loeb as stopping on the first stage. The problem was rectified when Citro\u00ebn shut off the Global Positioning System tracking devices installed in the cars driven by Loeb and Dani Sordo, but it was some time before organisers were able to confirm the results at the end of the day. Loeb finished the final stage with a lead of one minute and twenty seconds over Ogier, with Hirvonen third, a further twenty-six seconds behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 2\nConditions during the second leg were more consistent than on the first, but considerably colder, with snow recorded on all three stages. S\u00e9bastien Ogier recovered five seconds from overnight leader S\u00e9bastien Loeb on the first pass through Labatie d'Andaure\u2014Lalouvesc, but team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala struggled once again and lost fifth place to Evgeny Novikov, who went on to set the fastest time through St. Bonnet\u2014St. Julien Molhesabate\u2014St. Bonnet, ahead of Mads \u00d8stberg and Juho H\u00e4nninen to give Ford the three fastest times of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 2\nNovikov took his second stage win on Lamastre\u2014Gilhoc\u2014Alboussiere, while Loeb and Ogier duelled back and forth throughout the morning, taking several seconds away from each other across the three stages. Meanwhile, a difficult day saw Lotos Team WRC's Micha\u0142 Ko\u015bciuszko end the first leg in twenty-first position overall, and he spent most of the morning stages recovering, running as high as sixteenth before crashing his Mini John Cooper Works WRC on St. Bonnet\u2014St. Julien Molhesabate\u2014St. Bonnet. Despite extensive damage to the rear of his car, he was able to continue to the midday service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 2\nDuring the afternoon stages, Loeb won the second pass over Labatie d'Andaure\u2014Lalouvesc and there was no movement among the leading competitors in the overall standings. Juho H\u00e4nninen took his maiden stage win on the second running of St. Bonnet\u2014St. Julien Molhesabate\u2014St. Bonnet, six seconds ahead of Novikov who was a further six seconds ahead of Loeb. Loeb and Ogier returned to the top of the timing sheets for the final stage of the leg, the second running of Lamastre\u2014Gilhoc\u2014Alboussiere. Latvala finished third to close within twenty seconds of Hirvonen in fifth overall, whilst Julien Maurin in a privately entered Ford Fiesta RS WRC was forced out when he had an accident on the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 3\nS\u00e9bastien Loeb won his eighth stage of the rally as the cars resumed the third leg, finishing St. Jean-en-Royans\u2014La Cime du Mas a second and a half faster than S\u00e9bastien Ogier, while Evgeny Novikov finished the stage fourth to take a further seven seconds from Dani Sordo. 2011 winner Bryan Bouffier lost over a minute in his privately entered Citro\u00ebn DS3 WRC when he spun late in the stage, losing eighth place to Mads \u00d8stberg, who later took his first stage win at the WRC level on St. Nazaire le Desert\u2014La Motte Chalancon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 3\nNovikov finished the stage second, further closing the gap to Sordo, before finally catching him on Sisteron\u2014Thoard. At the end of the leg, Loeb held a lead of one minute and forty-seven seconds over Ogier, who sat a minute and a half ahead of Novikov. Sordo was fourth, less than two seconds behind the Russian, while Jari-Matti Latvala finally felt comfortable with his Polo R WRC, setting the second-fastest time on Sisteron\u2014Thoard and moving up into fifth place overall. Mikko Hirvonen slipped further down the order to sixth place, expressing dissatisfaction with his car, having developed a chronic understeer problem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 4\nThe final leg of the rally quickly claimed three scalps during the first pass of the famous Col de Turini stage. Evgeny Novikov crashed halfway through the stage, and despite his efforts to continue, the damage was terminal; Jari-Matti Latvala slid off the road, and was unable to rejoin the route, forcing him out; and Juho H\u00e4nninen developed a mechanical problem that brought his Ford Fiesta RS WRC to a halt. Bryan Bouffier was the surprise winner of the stage ahead of Mads \u00d8stberg in the sole surviving Fiesta and S\u00e9bastien Ogier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 4\nWith Novikov out, Dani Sordo reclaimed third place and scored his only stage win of the rally on stage fifteen. Further down the order, Micha\u0142 Ko\u015bciuszko passed WRC-2 entrant Armin Kremer to move up into the points-scoring positions in tenth, which the Polish driver would hold onto for the remainder of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, Leg 4\nS\u00e9bastien Loeb won the next stage, which would ultimately prove to be the last of the rally. Following the final service in Monaco, rally organisers decided to cancel the final two stages after they were overwhelmed with spectators. Loeb therefore won the rally, one minute and thirty-nine seconds ahead of Ogier, with Sordo in third. Mikko Hirvonen took fourth, whilst a difficult final stage for \u00d8stberg saw him lose fifth place to Bouffier. Martin Prokop took advantage of the retirements early in the day to secure seventh, ahead of Sepp Wiegand in the first of the WRC-2 entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, WRC-2\nEsapekka Lappi established an early lead in the newly created WRC-2 category, but his lead was short-lived when he hit a rock on the first pass through Le Moulinon\u2014Antraigues. Despite setting the fastest time of the stage, his \u0160koda Fabia S2000 was too badly damaged to continue, and he was forced to retire. He was joined in retirement by Peugeot 207 S2000 driver Luca Betti, who ran off the road on the same stage. Sepp Wiegand, also driving a \u0160koda Fabia S2000, inherited the lead and held a one-minute advantage over Armin Kremer by the end of the first day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, WRC-2\nWiegand consolidated his lead on the second day, extending his lead over Kremer to four minutes when he won all six stages of Leg 2. Wiegand had a scare on the third day, when his battery shorted out on St. Nazaire le Desert\u2014La Motte Chalancon, but he was able to pull over and repair the problem, finishing the day with a lead of nearly five minutes. A late charge from Armin Kremer on the final leg of the rally was not enough to overthrow Wiegand, who won the category and was classified eighth overall. Kremer finished second, with Ukrainian Yuiry Protasov in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, WRC-3\nThree entries were received for the WRC-3 championship, but only two cars started the event when French driver Quentin Gilbert lost his drivers' licence shortly before the event began. Of the two remaining entries, Renaud Poutot in a Citro\u00ebn DS3 built to R3T regulations established a one-minute lead over S\u00e9bastien Chardonnet in another DS3 during the first day. Poutot ended the first day in twentieth position, with Chardonnet in twenty-second and the two separated by Lotos Team WRC driver Micha\u0142 Ko\u015bciuszko. Poutot's rally came to an end on stage nine when he slid off the road and into a snowbank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Report, WRC-3\nHe was unable to get his car started, and retired on the spot, leaving Chardonnet as the sole remaining WRC-3 entry. Needing only to finish to score a full twenty-five points, Chardonnet drove cautiously throughout the remainder of the rally, and was ultimately classified thirteenth overall, forty-five minutes behind rally winner S\u00e9bastien Loeb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Results, Notable retirements\nUnlike other rallies in the World Championship, the Monte Carlo Rally does not employ \"Rally 2\" regulations, which allow a retired driver to re-enter the event at the start of the next leg. Because of this, any retirement from the event is permanent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234810-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte Carlo Rally, Results, Special stages, Power stage\nThe \"Power stage\" of the rally was to be held on an 18.95\u00a0km (11.77\u00a0mi) stage between the communes of Lantosque and Luc\u00e9ram in the region of Provence-Alpes-C\u00f4te d'Azur, with additional World Championship points to be awarded to the three fastest drivers. However, the stage was cancelled at the last minute due to overwhelming spectator numbers blocking access to the stage, and no points were awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 60], "content_span": [61, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234811-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters\nThe 2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters was a men's tennis tournament for male professional players, played from 13 April through 22 April 2013, on outdoor clay courts. It was the 107th edition of the annual Monte Carlo Masters tournament, which was sponsored by Rolex for the fifth time. It took place at the Monte Carlo Country Club in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France, near Monte Carlo, Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234811-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters\nRafael Nadal was the eight-time defending champion, but suffered his first defeat at the tournament since his debut in 2003 (he missed the tournament in 2004 due to injury), by losing in the final to Novak Djokovic. The defeat ended a 46-match winning streak dating back to the first of his eight consecutive titles at the tournament, in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234811-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters, Points and prize money, Points distribution\nBecause the Monte Carlo Masters is the non-mandatory Masters 1000 event, special rules regarding points distribution are in place. The Monte Carlo Masters counts as one of a player's 500 level tournaments, while distributing Masters 1000 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234811-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234812-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters \u2013 Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan were the two-time defending champions but lost in the final to Julien Benneteau and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 6\u20134, 6\u20137(4\u20137), [12\u201314].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234813-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters \u2013 Singles\nNovak Djokovic defeated the eight-time defending champion Rafael Nadal in the final 6\u20132, 7\u20136(7\u20131), to win the Singles title at the 2014 Monte-Carlo Masters. The win brought an end to Nadal's 46-match winning streak at the event. As a result, Djokovic became the first man to win singles titles at 8 of the 9 ATP Masters 1000 tournaments (he eventually won the ninth, Cincinnati, to complete the career Golden Masters).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234813-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234814-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monteforte Irpino bus crash\nAt least 40 people were killed and another 19 were injured in a bus crash near the town of Monteforte Irpino in Italy on July 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234814-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monteforte Irpino bus crash, Accident\nThe bus carrying pilgrims to their home from a visit to a Catholic shrine fell nearly 100 feet off the bridge on a road east of Naples. The bus carried nearly 50 passengers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Montenegro on 7 April 2013. Incumbent President Filip Vujanovi\u0107 of the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) was challenged by independent candidate Miodrag Leki\u0107, who was a common candidate endorsed by the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Background\nVujanovi\u0107's third candidacy was viewed controversial by many; the Social Democratic Party (SDP), the minor coalition partner of the DPS, threatened to end their coalition if Vujanovic \"illegally\" ran again and lodged an appeal to the Constitutional Court; SDP's leader Ranko Krivokapi\u0107 and the Montenegrin president are long-time rivals, mainly due to Vujanovi\u0107's moderate approaches to the country's national question, while Krivokapi\u0107 maintains a more hardline nationalist approach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Background\nThe opposition shared the ruling Social Democrats' viewpoint that Vujanovi\u0107 running for a third term was unconstitutional, adding that it was one of the representative elements of the DPS' authoritarian reign over Montenegro. Experts expressed opinion that he would perhaps endure the fate of Serbia's former president Boris Tadi\u0107, who lost the election running for his third term in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Background\nIt has also been pointed out that while the 2006 Serbian law enables Tadi\u0107 to run for the second time because his first mandate, elected while Serbia was not a country but a federal unit, the 2007 Montenegrin law makes no distinction, meaning this would legally be Vujanovi\u0107's third term, the Montenegrin constitution allows for only two terms in a lifetime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Background\nIn February 2013, the Constitutional Court officially approved Vujanovi\u0107's candidacy, noting that for his 2003-2008 term he was elected as President of Montenegro as a constituent entity within its state union with Serbia and served as de facto independent head of state only in 2006-2008, meaning that his 2008-2013 term is legally his first term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Campaign\nThe opposition had decided to unite under a common candidate which would best represent individual differences; the leader of the Democratic Front (DF) opposition alliance that was formed under the basis of Miodrag Lekic as president and ran at the 2012 national elections based on that idea, ran as an independent candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Campaign\nHe had received strong support immediately from the Socialist People's Party of Montenegro (SNP); the last remaining main opposition party, Positive Montenegro (PCG), originally had planned to present its party leader Darko Pajovi\u0107 as candidate but fell into deep financial problems and decided to endorse Lekic instead, as a common candidate of the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Results\nPrior to the official announcement of the results, both Filip Vujanovi\u0107 and Miodrag Leki\u0107 claimed to have won the election. Based on the vote count of the ruling Democratic Party of Socialists of Montenegro, Vujanovi\u0107 claimed to have received 51.3% of the vote, to 48.7% for Leki\u0107. However, the opposition Democratic Front stated that Leki\u0107 was the rightful winner of the election with 50.5% of the vote to Vujanovi\u0107's 49.5%. They likened Vujanovic's victory claim to a \"coup d'etat\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234815-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Montenegrin presidential election, Results\nOn 8 April 2013, Electoral Commission chairman Ivan Kalezi\u0107 announced that Vujanovi\u0107 had won the election with 51.2% of the vote. Representatives for Leki\u0107's campaign stated that they would not recognise the results and filed a request for a recount in all municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234816-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monterrey Open\nThe 2013 Monterrey Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 5th edition of the Monterrey Open and an International tournament on the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Sierra Madre Tennis Club in Monterrey, Mexico, from 1 to 7 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234816-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monterrey Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234817-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monterrey Open \u2013 Doubles\nSara Errani and Roberta Vinci were the defending champions, but chose not to participate this year. T\u00edmea Babos and Kimiko Date-Krumm won the title, defeating Eva Birnerov\u00e1 and Tamarine Tanasugarn in the final 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234818-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Monterrey Open \u2013 Singles\nT\u00edmea Babos was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Monica Niculescu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234818-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Monterrey Open \u2013 Singles\nAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova won the title, defeating Angelique Kerber in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234819-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Alouettes season\nThe 2013 Montreal Alouettes season was the 47th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 59th overall. The Alouettes finished in 3rd place in the East Division with an 8\u201310 record and struggled to make the playoffs after losing Anthony Calvillo to a career ending concussion, but made the playoffs for an 18th straight season, but lost in the East Division Semi-Final to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats 19\u201316 in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234819-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Alouettes season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2013 CFL Draft took place on May 6, 2013. The Alouettes had nine selections in the seven-round draft, after acquiring additional first and fourth round selections for placekicker Brody McKnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234819-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Alouettes season, Team, Roster\nItalics indicate Import players updated 2013-11-10 \u2022 46 Active, 16 injured, 8 Practice, 5 Suspended", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season\nThe 2013 Montreal Impact season was the club's second season Major League Soccer, the top flight of both American and Canadian soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season\nFor the 2013 season, outside of MLS, the Impact will compete in the 2013 Canadian Championship, Canada's domestic cup competition, which determines the Canadian entrant in the CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Review\nThe team started the season with Marco Sch\u00e4llibaum as new coach. After finishing 12th overall in the previous MLS season and second best Canadian team in MLS in 2012, the Montreal Impact officially started their 2013 season on Monday January 21, 2013 with a pre-season training sessions at Marie-Victorin Sports Complex in Montr\u00e9al-Nord. The squad's first official pre-season friendly took place on February 9, 2013, at the annual Walt Disney World Pro Soccer Classic tournament with a 2\u20131 victory over Sporting Kansas City. The team kicked off the season on March 2, 2013, with a 0\u20131 away victory over the Seattle Sounders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Review\nThey started the season very well with four straight victories, including their first two on the road, equaling their road wins total of last year of two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Competitions, MLS regular season, Table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Competitions, MLS regular season, Table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Competitions, MLS regular season, Results summary\nLast updated: October 27, 2013Source: 2013 Major League Soccer seasonPld = Matches played; Pts = Points; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Competitions, CONCACAF Champions League\nThe Montreal Impact will compete in the 2013\u201314 CONCACAF Champions League as a result of winning the 2013 Canadian Championship. The draw for the Group Stage was held on June 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Competitions, MLS reserves\nThe Montreal Impact will compete in the Eastern Division for the 2013 MLS Reserves season. This is the first year of the partnership between Major League Soccer and the USL Pro. As a result, Montreal will play the Rochester Rhinos twice and the results will count towards each teams respective tables. The division consists of seven teams, including Columbus Crew, Chicago Fire Soccer Club, FC Dallas, Houston Dynamo, New York Red Bulls, Rochester Rhinos and Toronto FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Player information, Starting 11\nLast updated: May 8, 2013Source: 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, International Caps\nPlayers called for senior international duty during the 2013 season while under contract with the Montreal Impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nLast updated: November 1, 2013Source: Italic: denotes player is no longer with team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Statistics, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: November 1, 2013Source: Competitive matchesOrdered by , and = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234820-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal Impact season, Miscellany, International roster slots\nMontreal has eleven MLS International Roster Slots for use in the 2013 season. Each club in Major League Soccer is allocated eight international roster spots and Montreal acquired the extra slots in trades with Chivas USA, Seattle Sounders FC and Portland Timbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234821-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal municipal election\nMunicipal elections were held in the city of Montreal, Quebec, Canada on November 3, 2013 as part of the 2013 Quebec municipal elections. Voters elected 65 positions on the Montreal City Council, including the mayor, borough mayors, and city councillors, as well as 38 borough councillors. Dennis Coderre replaced interim mayor Laurent Blanchard, who was elected to replace the previous interim mayor, Michael Applebaum, who resigned due to 14 charges laid against him including fraud, conspiracy, breach of trust, and corruption in municipal affairs. Previous elected mayor G\u00e9rald Tremblay left office on November 5, 2012 after his party Union Montr\u00e9al was suspected of corruption and mafia involvement. On July 2, 2013, Louise Harel, leader of the opposition Vision Montr\u00e9al, announced she would not be running for mayor, instead supporting Marcel C\u00f4t\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234821-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal municipal election, Final list of Mayor of Montreal candidates, Withdrawn\nOn October 30, Paunel Paterne Matondot decided to withdraw his nomination as mayor of Montreal at the election of November 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 87], "content_span": [88, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234821-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal municipal election, Opinion polls, For mayor\nDenis Coderre's support remained steady in public opinion polling during the campaign, while the other established \"major\" candidates \u2014 Marcel C\u00f4t\u00e9 and Richard Bergeron \u2014 largely failed to make an impression. Instead, a lesser-known candidate, M\u00e9lanie Joly, pulled ahead of both C\u00f4t\u00e9 and Bergeron in public opinion polling to emerge as the second-place contender by the time of the final published poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234821-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal municipal election, Results\nDenis Coderre confirmed polls prior to the election by winning the post of mayor of Montreal with 32.15% of votes and with a majority of 26,405 votes over M\u00e9lanie Joly, his closest rival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234821-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal municipal election, Results\nHis party, \u00c9quipe Coderre pour Montr\u00e9al, gained 27 of the 65 seats within city council. Meanwhile, Projet Montr\u00e9al, led by Richard Bergeron, gained the status of official opposition by winning 20 seats. Marcel C\u00f4t\u00e9's Coalition Montr\u00e9al won only 6 seats and M\u00e9lanie Joly's Vrai changement pour Montr\u00e9al won 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234821-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreal municipal election, Seat-by-seat results, Candidate statistics\nParty names are the official ones registered with \u00c9lection Montr\u00e9al.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234822-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreux Volley Masters\nThe 2013 Montreux Volley Masters was held in Montreux, Switzerland between May 28 \u2013 June 2, 2013. Eight teams participated in this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234822-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Montreux Volley Masters\nThe tournament returned after being cancelled in 2012 due to the 2012 Summer Olympics. Brazil defeated Russia to win their sixth title, with Fernanda Garay being awarded Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado\nOn the afternoon of Monday, May\u00a020, 2013, a large and extremely powerful EF5 tornado ravaged Moore, Oklahoma, and adjacent areas, with peak winds estimated at 210\u00a0mph (340\u00a0km/h), killing 24 people (plus two indirect fatalities) and injuring 212 others. The tornado was part of a larger weather system that had produced several other tornadoes across the Great Plains over the previous two days, including five that struck portions of Central Oklahoma the day prior on May\u00a019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado\nThe tornado touched down just northwest of Newcastle at 2:56\u00a0p.m. CDT (19:46\u00a0UTC), and stayed on the ground for 37 minutes over a 17-mile (27\u00a0km) path, crossing through a heavily populated section of Moore. The tornado was 1.08 miles (1.74\u00a0km) wide at its peak. It followed a roughly similar track to the deadlier 1999 Bridge Creek\u2013Moore tornado, which was smaller in size but just as severe; however, very few homes and neither of the stricken schools in the area had purpose-built storm shelters in the intervening years since the earlier tornado struck Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nOn May 20, 2013, a prominent central upper trough moved eastward toward the Central United States, with a lead upper low pivoting over the Dakotas and Upper Midwest region. A Southern stream shortwave trough and a moderately strong polar jet moved east-northeastward over the southern Rockies to the southern Great Plains and Ozarks area, with severe thunderstorms forming during the peak hours of heating. With the influence of moderately strong cyclonic flow aloft, the air mass was expected to become unstable across much of the southern Great Plains, Ozarks, and middle Mississippi Valley by the afternoon hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nEvidence of an unstable air mass included temperatures in the low to mid 80s \u00b0F (27\u201330 \u00b0C), dewpoints that ranged in the upper 60s \u00b0F (20\u00a0\u00b0C) to the lower 70s\u00a0\u00b0F (20\u201322\u00a0\u00b0C), and CAPE values ranging from 3500\u20135000 J/kg. Deep-layer wind shear speeds of 40 to 50 knots (46 to 58\u00a0mph) enhanced storm structure and intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nThese were present ahead of a cold front extending from a surface low in the eastern Dakotas, southwestward to near the Kansas City area and western Oklahoma, and ahead of a dry line extending from southwest Oklahoma southward into northwestern and west-central Texas. Outflow remnants from the previous night and the early day convection across the Ozarks and the middle Mississippi Valley were a factor in severe weather development with the most aggressive heating and destabilization on the western edge of this activity across the southern Great Plains and just ahead of a cold front. The National Weather Service office in Norman, Oklahoma had warned as early as May 15 that there would be a possibility of severe weather on May 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nThe most intense severe weather activity was expected to come across the southern Great Plains, specifically Central Oklahoma, during the afternoon hours on that Monday. As such, the Storm Prediction Center issued a moderate risk of severe thunderstorms during the early morning hours of May 20 from southeastern Missouri to north-central Texas. The degree of wind shear, moisture, and instability within the warm sector favored the development of supercells. Very large hail and tornadoes were both expected with these supercells, with the possibility of a few strong tornadoes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nThe Storm Prediction Center issued a tornado watch at 1:10\u00a0p.m. Central Daylight Time (CDT) early that afternoon for the eastern two-thirds of Oklahoma, northwestern Arkansas, and portions of north-central Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Meteorological synopsis\nGiven the atmospheric parameters thought to be in place at the time, the Storm Prediction Center inadvertently underestimated the threat of tornadic activity that afternoon; the probability table for the tornado watch \u2013 the 191st severe weather watch issued by the guidance center in 2013 \u2013 indicated a 40% (or \"moderate\") probability of two or more tornadoes and a 20% (or \"low\") probability of one or more tornadoes reaching between EF2 and EF5 intensity within the watch area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe thunderstorm that eventually produced the tornado developed less than one hour after the tornado watch was issued, around 2:00\u00a0p.m. CDT, across northern Grady County. Its rapid intensification resulted in the National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Norman issuing a severe thunderstorm warning for northern Grady, northwestern Cleveland, northern McClain, and southwestern Oklahoma Counties (including southwestern portions of the immediate Oklahoma City area) at 2:12\u00a0p.m. CDT. The thunderstorm quickly attained supercell characteristics, with rotation at the mid-levels of the storm's cloud structure becoming apparent even before it was officially classified as severe, due to the sufficient amounts of wind shear present over central Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nDue to the expected intensity of the storms, which were expected to be equal \u2013 if not, stronger \u2013 in severity to the supercells that produced the five tornadoes in the expected area of greatest tornadic threat the day prior, three of the Oklahoma City market's five television news outlets \u2212 NBC affiliate KFOR-TV (channel 4), ABC affiliate KOCO-TV (channel 5) and CBS affiliate KWTV (channel 9) \u2212 suspended normal programming and went into wall-to-wall weather coverage immediately after the tornado watch went into effect (Fox affiliate KOKH-TV (channel 25) and Telemundo affiliate KTUZ-TV (channel 30) began their coverage as the first severe thunderstorms erupted southwest of the state capital), and subsequently began relaying their audio feeds to radio stations throughout central Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nAs the forecast suggested that the most significant severe weather would occur in the mid-afternoon, around the time classes concluded for the day, many worried parents began arriving at schools throughout Moore and south Oklahoma City to pick up their children in advance of the storm. At 2:40\u00a0p.m. CDT, as rotation in the supercell was increasing at the cloud base, a tornado warning was issued for far northeastern Grady, western Cleveland, northern McClain, and southern Oklahoma Counties, as the storm approached the Oklahoma City metropolitan area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe tornado touched down at 2:56\u00a0p.m. CDT in northeastern Grady County, near Long Drive and the southwest corner of the North Country Club Road and Northwest 32nd Street intersection, roughly 4.4 miles (7.1\u00a0km) northwest of downtown Newcastle. Initially a narrow cone-shaped tornado, it first caused EF1 damage to a home and some trees before rapidly intensifying and striking a semi-rural subdivision on the north side of Northwest 32nd, where several homes were destroyed, two of which were leveled at EF4 intensity. At this point, the tornado began to grow rapidly in size, evolving into a large, wedge-shaped structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nSlight ground scouring began in this area, and several homes in a subdivision further to the northeast sustained EF3 damage. By 3:01\u00a0p.m. CDT, the National Weather Service issued a second, more strongly worded warning for the area: in a special weather statement that updated the existing tornado warning, the Norman forecast office declared a tornado emergency for southern Oklahoma City and Moore as various storm spotters confirmed that the large, violent tornado was approaching the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe Twin Lakes dual-polarization NEXRAD radar (near Lake Stanley Draper) detected a tornado debris signature one mile in diameter within the accompanying hook echo, as the tornado crossed into portions of south Oklahoma City in northern Cleveland County. The supercell also produced straight-line winds of 80 miles per hour (130\u00a0km/h) for at least one mile surrounding the tornadic circulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe tornado maintained EF3 intensity as it crossed the Canadian River into Cleveland County, and a decommissioned U.S. 62/U.S. 277 bridge was severely damaged; this bridge had to be demolished after the tornado ripped part of it from its mount and tossed it across Interstate 44. The tornado then continued directly toward south Oklahoma City and Moore, roughly following Southwest 149th Street.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nAt that point, it began to grow rapidly in width, and a second brief area of EF4 damage was noted near South May Avenue, where several homes were leveled, and one was swept clean from its foundation (this home was determined to have been nailed, rather than bolted to its foundation). A vehicle frame, engine block, and various other vehicle parts were found tangled within a grove of completely debarked trees in this area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nAs the tornado began to cross into south Oklahoma City, a traffic jam had occurred for a stretch of several miles along Santa Fe Avenue, as residents attempted to either escape from or pick up their children at schools located near the tornado's path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0008-0003", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nAs the station's news helicopter was capturing live video of the tornado, then-KWTV chief meteorologist Gary England \u2212 upon seeing footage of the backup that was being relayed by pilot Jim Gardner \u2212 urged drivers caught in the jam that may have been listening to the station's audio simulcast on area radio outlets to use nearby streets to detour out of the tornado's expected track. The tornado weakened briefly to an EF3 before re-intensifying to EF4 intensity near Forman Drive, flattening several homes as it moved through mostly rural areas south of Southwest 149th Street. As the tornado struck an oil production site, four oil tanks were blown away, one of which was never found. The others were thrown considerable distances; one was found a mile away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe tornado maintained its intensity as it struck the Orr Family Farm and the Celestial Acres horse training area, where up to 100 horses were reported killed, some being tossed into and tangled in downed power lines or thrown on top of nearby buildings; several horses that survived the tornado suffered severe injuries, with some being impaled by tree limbs or boards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nEvery building at Celestial Acres was either leveled or swept away at EF4 intensity, the ground on the property was scoured to bare soil, debris from structures was granulated, and vehicles were thrown and stripped down to their frames. Surveyors noted that based on the contextual damage, the tornado was likely at EF5 intensity in this area, though the construction quality of the affected buildings only permitted an EF4 rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nA 10-ton propane tank on the Orr Farm property was picked up and thrown more than a half-mile through the air by the tornado, and a strip mall near the farm was completely leveled as well. The tornado continued east, heavily scouring an open grassy field before slamming into Briarwood Elementary School, which was completely destroyed. The NWS originally rated this damage EF5, but further evaluation and a 2014 study published by the American Meteorological Society revealed evidence of poor construction at the school, and the rating was downgraded to EF4. Remarkably, no fatalities occurred at the school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0009-0003", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nTwo 12,000-gallon water tanks that were also swept off of the Orr Family Farm grounds were thrown into this area; the roof of Briarwood Elementary was struck by one of them \u2212 potentially aiding in compromising the building's structural integrity as it bent the steel girders that held up the roof \u2212 shortly before the main vortex struck the building, while the other fell onto and destroyed a home a few blocks east of the school. Past Briarwood Elementary, the tornado intensified even further and entered densely populated areas of western Moore, including the Westmoor subdivision where many well-built, anchor-bolted brick homes were flattened at EF4 intensity, and two were swept clean from their foundations, with damage at those two homes rated EF5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe tornado continued generally northeast at EF4 strength, completely debarking trees and leveling entire neighborhoods. Many homes were flattened in neighborhoods to the east of South Santa Fe Avenue. One anchor-bolted home that was reduced to a bare slab in this area was initially rated EF5, but was later downgraded to EF4 as closer inspection of the foundation revealed that the anchor bolts were missing their nuts and washers. The tornado then destroyed Plaza Towers Elementary School at EF4 intensity, where seven children were killed when a cinder block wall collapsed on top of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nMore than a dozen homes in a subdivision just to the south of Plaza Towers Elementary were swept cleanly away, though they were revealed to have been nailed rather than bolted to their foundations, and damage to this subdivision was subsequently rated EF4, though the tornado was likely extremely violent as lawns in this area were completey scoured down to bare soil. Entire blocks of homes were flattened, trees were completely debarked and denuded, vehicles were thrown and mangled, and the ground was severely scoured in other residential areas nearby, with the damage also rated EF4 in these areas. Most of the fatalities from the tornado occurred in the Plaza Towers neighborhood of Moore. In one of these houses (a block away from Plaza Towers Elementary), a woman was killed as she tried to seek shelter in a closet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nFurther to the northeast, at least a dozen cars were piled up against the front entrance of the Moore Medical Center, which sustained EF4 damage. One car was lofted and thrown onto the roof. Many homes in neighborhoods near the medical center were completely destroyed, including a row of four well-built brick homes with anchor bolts that were swept away, with damage to those four homes rated EF5. An open field directly behind this row of homes was deeply scoured, with only bare soil and clumps of dirt remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nA nearby manhole cover was removed, and multiple vehicles were mangled beyond recognition and caked in mud in this area as well. The nearby Warren Theater was spared a direct hit, but still sustained considerable damage to its exterior. A bowling alley in the area was leveled, and a 7-Eleven which was on the northern part of the damage path, was completely flattened with four people killed inside (including a three-month-old infant). The nearby Moore Cemetery was heavily damaged as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe tornado briefly weakened and caused EF3 damage to some other businesses near Interstate 35, before crossing and mangling several vehicles in the process. The tornado regained EF4 intensity on the other side of the Interstate as it tore through several neighborhoods and destroyed numerous additional homes (though the EF4 damage swath was narrower at this point). A large grassy field between two subdivisions in this area was scoured to bare soil, with wind-rowed structural debris and several mangled vehicles strewn to the east.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nOne brick home on Hunters Glen Court sustained EF5 damage, with only the slab foundation and anchor bolts remaining. Very little structural debris or house contents was recovered from that residence, and the small amount of debris that remained was wind-rowed well away from the site. Two vehicles were also lofted from the residence, one of which was thrown over 100 yards (91\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe tornado continued through Moore's eastern neighborhoods. Highland East Jr. High's main building was spared, but the separate gymnasium building was completely destroyed, and a set of lockers from the structure was lofted and thrown a considerable distance into a nearby neighborhood. The Moore Public Schools administration building, a converted former hospital located a few blocks to the east, was also struck and destroyed. The tornado was noticeably narrower at this point, but was still causing a continuous swath of EF4 damage to numerous homes as it moved through multiple subdivisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nA well-built, anchor-bolted home at the corner of Heatherwood Drive and Southeast 5th Street was reduced to a bare slab, sustaining EF5 damage. A large, well-bolted-down home at the end of a private drive near South Olde Bridge Road was also swept cleanly away at EF5 intensity. Debris was scattered well away from the site, a vehicle was thrown over 100 yards, and wind-rowing was again noted at that location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nFurther east, the tornado weakened to EF3 strength and exited the most populated parts of Moore, destroying six industrial buildings and damaging two others. A final small area of EF4 damage was noted nearby as two homes and a concrete building were leveled. The tornado then began to rapidly narrow and weaken, snapping and uprooting several trees and causing EF2 damage to a farm just east of Moore, where the house lost its roof and an outbuilding was destroyed. A pickup truck slid 200 feet (61\u00a0m) away from the farm into a field while remaining upright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Storm development and track\nThe violent updrafts in the supercell that produced the tornado lofted debris from homes and other buildings in Moore at least 10 miles (16\u00a0km) outside of the tornado's outer circulation, with reports of various objects and personal possessions being found as far away as Midwest City. At 3:33\u00a0p.m. CDT, the tornado dissipated at a nearby treeline about one-third of a mile east of Air Depot Boulevard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact\nThe Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management reported that 25 people were killed (with another death indirectly attributed to the tornado). An estimated 1,150 homes were destroyed, resulting in an estimated $2 billion in damages. The number of injured was 377. Entire subdivisions were obliterated, and houses were flattened in a large swath of the city. The majority of a neighborhood just west of the Moore Medical Center was destroyed. Witnesses said the tornado more closely resembled \"a giant black wall of destruction\" than a typical twister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact\nAmong the hardest hit areas were two public schools: Briarwood Elementary School and Plaza Towers Elementary School. A preliminary study of Briarwood Elementary School conducted in September 2013 by a group of structural engineers found some structural deficiencies that led to its collapse during the tornado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact\nChris Ramseyer, a structural engineer and an associate professor at the University of Oklahoma determined that the building's walls that were not reinforced with concrete, there had been a lack of connection between the masonry walls and support beams in several portions of the building, and anchor bolts were pulled from the ground by the tornado. Another engineer that was involved in the study stated that the deficiencies that Ramseyer pointed out were not uncommon building practices at the time, and that current building code standards would not ensure that Briarwood would have withstood winds in excess of 200\u00a0mph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact\nAt Plaza Towers, the second school to be hit, parents had been allowed to collect their children early in preparation for the oncoming storm. Therefore, by the time the tornado struck only about 75 students and teachers were in the building. Many students and teachers took shelter in bathrooms and closets, but in a newer addition to the building which housed the school's second and third grade classrooms, seven fatalities occurred. Third grade teacher Jennifer Doan was taking shelter with eleven of her students in a hallway when the tornado struck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact\nDoan and her students were trapped when the walls of the corridor collapsed on top of them. Doan, who was two months pregnant with her third child at the time, suffered severe injuries to her back, but did not lose the baby. She and five of her students were pulled out, with the children suffering only minor to moderate injuries. Another six of her students along with a student from another third grade class died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact\nThe Moore Medical Center was heavily damaged, but no one present in the building was injured by the tornado. The center's staff had to relocate 30 patients to a hospital in Norman and another hospital. Part of Interstate 35 was shut down due to debris that had been thrown onto the freeway. On May 21, Moore still did not have running water. There were more than 61,500 power outages related to the tornado. More than 100 people were rescued from areas that sustained significant damage from the tornado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact\nThe Oklahoma Department of Insurance estimated that insurance claims for damage would likely be more than $1 billion. Some meteorologists estimated that the energy released by the storm could have been eight to more than 600 times greater than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact, Casualties\nIn addition to erroneous reports concerning the status of Briarwood and Plaza Towers students, various reports regarding fatality and injury counts as well as persons unaccounted for were circulated by traditional and social media outlets in the immediate hours after the tornado struck, which could not immediately be confirmed or refuted due to communications disruptions in the affected areas or were the result of incorrect counting due to miscommunication of estimates. Within the first two days, it was reported that between 237 and 240 people had been injured, with the tally later increasing to over 350. The final count of injuries was later adjusted downward to 212.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact, Casualties\nOn the morning of May 21, the medical examiner's office incorrectly stated that 91 bodies of tornado victims had been received. This number was up from the earlier report of 51 bodies that were incorrectly stated as having been received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact, Casualties\nUpon the office's discovery that some victims were mistakenly counted twice due to communication errors made by Moore rescue response units that the bodies were admitted to area funeral homes (nearly all of the deceased were actually transported to the examiner's office in Oklahoma City), the actual number was revised downward and later confirmed at 24 tornado victims and two indirect victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact, Casualties\nThe first two deaths occurred in a house east of Briarwood Elementary School; one occurred near Santa Fe Avenue; seven occurred following a wall collapse at Plaza Towers Elementary; nine occurred within the neighborhoods mainly south of Plaza Towers Elementary; one occurred just east of Interstate 35; and one occurred in a home between Eastern Avenue and Bryant Avenue. A 90-year-old woman who suffered a fractured skull during the tornado later suffered a pair of strokes and died on August\u00a05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0021-0003", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact, Casualties\nOn May\u00a06, 2018, nearly five years after the tornado, a 14-year-old survivor who suffered posttraumatic stress disorder after losing seven of his friends at Plaza Towers Elementary School committed suicide. The 2013 Moore tornado was the deadliest tornado recorded in the U.S. since the Joplin, Missouri tornado that killed 158 people in May 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Impact, Casualties\nPatients were taken to Integris Southwest Medical Center and The Children's Hospital at OU Medical Center in Oklahoma City. Over 140 patients, including at least 70 children, were treated at hospitals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nOklahoma Governor Mary Fallin declared a state of emergency on May 20. She held her first post-tornado news conference at noon on May 21. The Federal Emergency Management Agency deployed urban search and rescue teams to the tornado-hit areas, and provided incident command personnel to organize and support rescue efforts. The Oklahoma National Guard was also deployed. Governor Mary Fallin requested assistance from then-President Barack Obama who declared a major disaster in the state and ordered federal aid to the affected areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nGovernor Fallin quickly dismissed an idea to make a law that would require all schools in Oklahoma to have a shelter that would protect children during severe weather (prior to the tornado, only two of the twelve schools in the Moore Public Schools district had storm shelters, Kelley Elementary and Westmoore High School, which were rebuilt with concrete safe rooms after both were destroyed in the 1999 Bridge Creek\u2013Moore tornado).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nCleveland, Lincoln, McClain, Oklahoma, and Pottawatomie Counties received federal funding for hazard mitigation measure statewide. Obama visited the disaster-stricken areas on May 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nThe third season finale of the sitcom Mike & Molly, titled \"Windy City\", was pulled by CBS from its original May 20 airdate within hours of the event due to the episode featuring a plotline involving a tornado descending on Chicago; the network later rescheduled the episode to air ten days later on May 30, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nAt noon on May 21, the U.S. Senate held a moment of silence for the victims. Delegates from several countries and Pope Francis offered condolences, and the United Nations offered assistance in the recovery efforts. The Canadian Red Cross began accepting donations of money and supplies for their American counterparts, to assist with disaster relief and recovery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nThe United Methodist Committee on Relief, Direct Relief, Matt Kemp of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunder, Continental Resources, Devon Energy, ONEOK, Koch Industries, Hobby Lobby, and Carrie Underwood all pledged donations to the relief efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nMoore Mayor Glenn Lewis stated that he would attempt to get an ordinance passed requiring storm shelters or safe rooms in new housing projects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nOn May 29, 2013, NBC aired Healing in the Heartland: Relief Benefit Concert, a fundraising concert that was held at Chesapeake Energy Arena in downtown Oklahoma City. The benefit was hosted by country singer and Oklahoma native Blake Shelton and featured performances from Miranda Lambert, Vince Gill, Reba McEntire, Rascal Flatts, Usher, Darius Rucker and Luke Bryan. The concert raised more than $6 million for the United Way of Central Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nOn June 2, 2013, Discovery Channel aired an hour-long documentary about the storm titled Mile-Wide Tornado: Oklahoma Disaster. The documentary provides a comprehensive look at the tornado's impact and drew comparisons of the storm to the 1999 Bridge Creek-Moore tornado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234823-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Moore tornado, Aftermath\nThe Moore City Council proposed a measure making twelve changes to its residential building codes, include requiring that new home construction in the city include hurricane clips or framing anchors, continuous plywood bracing and wind-resistant garage doors in order for homes to withstand winds up to 135\u00a0mph (equivalent to a high-end EF2 tornado). When the measure was passed in a unanimous vote held on March 17, 2014, Moore became the first city in the United States to adopt a building code addressing the effects of tornadoes on homes, which exceed the national standards set by the National Association of Home Builders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234824-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moorilla Hobart International\nThe 2013 Moorilla Hobart International was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 20th edition of the event and part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Hobart International Tennis Centre in Hobart, Australia from 6 through 12 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234824-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moorilla Hobart International, Single main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234824-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moorilla Hobart International, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234825-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moorilla Hobart International \u2013 Doubles\nIrina-Camelia Begu and Monica Niculescu were the defending champions but Niculescu decided not to participate. Begu teamed up alongside Simona Halep, but they lost in the quarterfinals to T\u00edmea Babos and Mandy Minella. Garbi\u00f1e Muguruza and Mar\u00eda Teresa Torr\u00f3 Flor won the title, defeating Babos and Minella in the final 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20135).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234826-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moorilla Hobart International \u2013 Singles\nThe 2013 Moorilla Hobart International was a tennis tournament played in Australia. In the singles competition Mona Barthel, who was the defending champion, lost to Elena Vesnina in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234827-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morehead State Eagles football team\nThe 2013 Morehead State Eagles football team represented Morehead State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Rob Tenyer and played their home games at Jayne Stadium. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 3\u20139, 3\u20135 in PFL play to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234828-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morgan State Bears football team\nThe 2013 Morgan State Bears football team represented Morgan State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 13th-year head coach Donald Hill-Eley and played their home games at Hughes Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234828-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Morgan State Bears football team\nMorgan State entered the 2013 with a new coordinators on both sides of the ball. Greg Gregory joined the team as the new offensive coordinator. Gregory came to Morgan State after being out of football in 2012. He was the offensive coordinator at the University of South Alabama from 2009 to 2011 and has previously been a head coach at Missouri Southern State University from 1998 to 1999. Jerry Holmes joined as the defensive coordinator. Holmes previously served as head coach at Hampton University in 2008 and has coached as defensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns (1999\u20132000), Washington Redskins (2001), San Diego Chargers (2002\u20132003), and Hampton (2004\u20132007).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234828-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Morgan State Bears football team\nThe Bears entered the 2013 season having been picked to finish ninth in the 2013 season. Morgan State hoped to prove those predictions wrong with their 3-second All-MEAC Pre-season members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234828-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Morgan State Bears football team\nThey finished the season 5\u20137, 5\u20133 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for third place. At the end of the season, Hill-Eley was fired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234829-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moroccan Throne Cup\nThe 2013 Moroccan Throne Cup was the 57th edition of the Moroccan Throne Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234829-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moroccan Throne Cup\nThe winner of the competition would qualify for the preliminary round of the CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234829-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moroccan Throne Cup, Final phases, Final\nThe match was played on 18 November 2013 at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234829-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moroccan Throne Cup, Notes and references\nThis article about sports in Morocco is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234830-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Casablanca\nThe 2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Casablanca was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Casablanca, Morocco between 28 October \u2013and 3 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234830-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Casablanca, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234831-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Casablanca \u2013 Doubles\nWalter Trusendi and Matteo Viola were the defending champions but chose not to participate. Italians Claudio Grassi and Riccardo Ghedin won the title over Germans Gero Kretschmer and Alexander Satschko 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234832-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Casablanca \u2013 Singles\nAlja\u017e Bedene was the defending champion but chose not to compete. Dominic Thiem won the title defeating Potito Starace in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234833-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra\nThe 2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 1st edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Kenitra, Morocco between 16 and 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234833-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234833-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players used Protected Entry to gain entry into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234833-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234834-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra \u2013 Doubles\nGerard Granollers and Jordi Samper-Montana defeated Taro Daniel and Alexander Rumyantsev 6-4, 6-4 to win the inaugural event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234835-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Kenitra \u2013 Singles\nDominic Thiem became the inaugural champion when Teymuraz Gabashvili retired 7\u20136(7\u20134), 5\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234836-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Meknes\nThe 2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Meknes was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Meknes, Morocco between 9 and 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234836-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Meknes, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234836-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Meknes, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234836-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Meknes, Champions, Doubles\nAlessandro Giannessi / Gianluca Naso def. Gerard Granollers / Jordi Samper-Montana 7-5, 7-6(7-3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234837-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Meknes \u2013 Doubles\nAdri\u00e1n Men\u00e9ndez and Jaroslav Posp\u00ed\u0161il were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Alessandro Giannessi and Gianluca Naso won the title, defeating Gerard Granollers and Jordi Samper-Montana in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234838-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Meknes \u2013 Singles\nCedrik-Marcel Stebe won the title, beating Yannik Reuter 6\u20131, 4\u20136, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234839-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger\nThe 2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Tanger, Morocco between 17 and 22 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234839-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234839-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234840-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger \u2013 Doubles\nSteve Darcis and Dominik Meffert were the defending champions from 2010 as there was no event in 2011 and 2012, but decided no to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234840-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger \u2013 Doubles\nNikola \u0106iri\u0107 and Goran To\u0161i\u0107 won the final against Maximilian Neuchrist and Mate Pavi\u0107 6\u20133, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234841-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger \u2013 Singles\nSt\u00e9phane Robert was the defending champion from 2010 as there was no event in 2011 and 2012, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234841-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Morocco Tennis Tour \u2013 Tanger \u2013 Singles\nPablo Carre\u00f1o Busta won the final against Mikhail Kukushkin 6\u20132, 4\u20131 ret.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234842-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mosconi Cup\nThe 2013 PartyPoker.net Mosconi Cup, the 20th edition of the annual nine-ball pool competition between teams representing Europe and the United States, took place 2\u20134 December 2013 at the Mirage in Las Vegas, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234842-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mosconi Cup\nTeam Europe won the Mosconi Cup by defeating Team USA 11\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election\nMoscow Oblast gubernatorial election of 2013 was held on September 8, 2013 as part of the regional elections, where 9 other oblasts held elections. It was also the same day as the mayoral election in the federal city of Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Regulations\nA candidate to the office must be a citizen of the Russian Federation over the age of 30, and must state to the Moscow Oblast Elections Commission that they do not own any cash or money in banks aboard, thus according to new Federal Law against corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Regulations\nThe candidate needs to collect 351 signatures from every 54 cities of the Moscow Oblast, in support of the nomination and shall be made within 20 days of the official publication of the decision to call the election. These signatures are not needed for candidates from registered political parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nIn March 2012, through the approval process of the regional legislature, The Moscow Oblast Duma, Sergey Shoygu was appointed as the Governor of Moscow Oblast. The United Russia party has proposed him to the post of governor and his candidacy was unanimously supported by the Moscow Regional Duma. Shoygu took into office on May 11, 2012, after the expiry of the term of office of the former governor, Boris Gromov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nIn May 2012, by the initiative of President Dmitry Medvedev, a federal law has been approved and according to the law, the direct elections of regional governors have returned. The law came into force on 1 June 2012. According to this law the first election of senior officials was scheduled to be held on October 14, 2012 in some regions of the Russian Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nSix months after taking office, the governor Sergey Shoygu left after he was appointed as the Minister of Defense, due to the fact that the previous Minister of Defence, Anatoly Serdyukov, was sacked. On November 8, 2012, President Vladimir Putin has appointed Andrei Vorobyov, who previously headed the faction of \"United Russia\" in the State Duma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nBefore the 2013 election, the regional elections were held twice a year - in March and October. Both called single day of voting. During 2012, the State Duma draft law on the single day of voting. The bill was passed in September 2012 and was approved by the Federation Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nIn accordance with the draft law, all the regional elections will be held on the same day - the second Sunday in September. In 2013, therefore, they will take place on September 8. This day will be elected by all the authorities who their governors term expired until September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nAfter the resignation of Sergey Shoygu from the Gubernatorial office, The Kremlin spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said that \"people will be appointed who will be acting governor until the next single voting day, that is almost a year. There is no other mechanism. \"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nThe decision to call the election shall be made not earlier than 100 days and no later than 90 days before election day, and then should published in the mass media, not later than five days from the date of its adoption. On June 6, 2013 the members of the Moscow Regional Duma approved the election date for governor of the Moscow region, so the elections scheduled for September 8, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nOn June 11, 2013, The Moscow Oblast Elections Commission (Mosoblizbirkom) began receiving documents for participation in the elections from potential candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nIn January 2013, the chairman of the Civil Society Fund and a former head of the internal policy of the Presidential Administration of Russia, Konstantin Kostin said that in his opinion on the election of the governor of the Moscow region of the second round will be: \"The fact is that today there is no candidate who could really resist Andrey Vorobiev and the 'United Russia'. We are talking about the scale and the resources and experience of the real work \".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nOn January 29, 2013, the Acting Governor of the Moscow region, Andrei Vorobyov presented his program of social and economic development until 2015 \"Our suburbs\", denoting it as the election. According to the deputy chairman of the Duma Committee on International Affairs, Alexander Romanovich, the performance of Andrei Vorobyov - this is the real beginning of the election campaign in Moscow Oblast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nOn March 22, 2013 the State Duma passed in the third and final reading of a law granting the subjects of the Russian Federation the right to elect the governor did not direct vote of the region's population, and the local parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nOn March 27 amendments to the law were approved by the Federation Council. In this regard, the acting governor of the Moscow region, Andrei Vorobyov said retaining direct gubernatorial elections in the region. On April 2 law signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234843-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Oblast gubernatorial election, Campaign\nIn November 2012 the candidates to Gubernatorial office began to send their documents to the Electoral Commission. The process for receiving documents and signatures was finished in June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade\nThe 2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade was a parade held in Red Square on 9 May 2013 to commemorate the 68th anniversary of the capitulation of the Third Reich in 1945. The annual parade marks the Allied victory in the Great Patriotic War on the same day as the signing of the German act of capitulation to the Allies in Berlin, at midnight of May 9, 1945 (Russian time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade\nThe President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, delivered his tenth holiday address, and it was the first parade for both the Minister of Defense General of the Army Sergey Shoigu (parade inspector) and Russian Ground Forces commander Col. Gen. Vladimir Chirkin (parade commander), replacing Valery Gerasimov who has been promoted to Chief of the General Staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0000-0002", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade\nThe parade this year included the Suvorov Military School and the Nakhimov Naval School for the first time in four years, and the first appearance from a Cossack cadet corps unit, joining the more than 11,000 service personnel that marched on Red Square, and the return of the full air fly over after two years. The BTR82A IFV made its parade debut this year as part of the mobile column. Sevastopol in Ukraine, where the Black Sea Fleet is based, and 23 other Russian cities will also hold parades on this day. As per tradition Kharkiv and Odessa in Ukraine also hold a full commemorative parade on this day as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade, Preparation\nSince November 2012, preparations for the parade have been well attended at the unit level. Individual and unit practices were held in the various military installations for all the participant units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade, Preparation\nIn March 2013, the full rehearsal started at the training center at Alabino, Moscow Oblast. The parade preparations started on April 11\u201312 for all the units as the mobile column of more than a hundred military vehicles finished up their practice runs on the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade, Preparation\nAlso undertaking practice runs are the massed military bands that will take part in the parade led by Lieutenant General Valery Khalilov in his 11th Victory Day Parade appearance and the squadron of Mil Mi-8 helicopters from the Army Aviation Training Center for the fly past segment later on, which will feature various other military aircraft. In all 68 aircraft are taking part after a 2-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade, Preparation\nMoscow practice runs for the parade proper commenced on April 24\u201326, 2013 on Red Square itself, and the practice runs ended on May 3 and 4 with two general practice runs. One final practice was scheduled for May 7, two days before the parade with Defense Minister Shoigu inspecting a full final rehearsal run, starting at 10 AM Moscow Time, the time in which the parade two days later will commence. Col. Gen. Chirkin led the marchers on that day's practice run on the Red Square grounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade, Preparation, 154th Independent Commandant's Regiment's change of title\nAs the parade practices commenced on April 11, the 154th Independent Commandant's Regiment, the official honor guard regiment of the Russian Armed Forces, joined the rehearsals as always as permanent participants, this time as the 154th Independent Commandant's Preobrazhensky Regiment, the new title bestowed on it several days ago via a Presidential executive order by Vladimir Putin in his constitutional duty as Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces. That very act was done on April 9 the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 102], "content_span": [103, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade, Preparation, 154th Independent Commandant's Regiment's change of title\nThis entrustment of the honorary title is a continuation of the great military traditions of the Russian armed services ever since the raising of the first two regiments of the Imperial Russian Army by no less than Peter the Great himself as well as of both the Imperial Russian and Soviet Armies as a whole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 102], "content_span": [103, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234844-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow Victory Day Parade, Parade Participants (full list)\nBold indicates first appearance, italic indicates multiple appearances, Bold and italic indicate returning appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election\nThe Moscow mayoral election of 2013 was held on September 8, 2013, as part of the regional elections, at the same time as the elections in Moscow Oblast and other Oblasts were held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election\nElections were held after Mayor Sergey Sobyanin had announced his departure on June 4. The elections were the first time in 10 years that citizens of the federal city of Moscow could choose their mayor by a popular vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election\nMoscow is both a city and separate federal subject, according to the Constitution of Russia. Most of federal subjects are headed by governors or presidents, but the office of the head of Moscow is called Mayor of Moscow, according to the Charter of the city of Moscow. Sergey Sobyanin won with 51.37% of the vote in the first round, with Alexei Navalny receiving 27.24% of the vote, significantly more than previously expected by the polls. Sobyanin was declared the winner after the first round. Voter turnout was 33.23%. The total number of registered voters was 7,176,568.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Background\nThe position of Mayor of Moscow was elected between 1991 and 2004. In 2004, Vladimir Putin suggested a law to abolish direct elections of governors, the Moscow mayor, and presidents of Russian regions. The law was swiftly adopted by the parliament. The new legislation moved the election system to an indirect one in which parliamentary political parties and the President of Russia nominated a candidate who must then have been approved by the Moscow City Duma. Following the 2011\u201313 Russian protests which followed the 2011 parliamentary election, President Dmitry Medvedev offered to re-introduce the direct elections of the governors and the mayor of Moscow, and corresponding legislation was approved by the Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Background\nOn June 5, 2013, the incumbent mayor, Sergey Sobyanin, who was nominated as mayor in 2010, announced his resignation from the post. Russian law allows the mayor to resign and run again for the same office if the president gives his approval. A short time later, Sobyanin confirmed his intention to stand for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Regulations\nA candidate to the office must be citizen of the Russian Federation over the age of 30. Self-nomination of candidates for the post of Mayor of Moscow, and the collection of signatures of 1% of Moscow voters (about 73 000 signatures) in support of the nomination shall be made within 30 days of the official publication of the decision to call the election. Or alternatively these signatures are not needed for candidates from registered political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Regulations\nEach of the political parties (electoral blocks were cancelled in the early 2000s) can nominate only one candidate for the post of mayor. In this case, the candidate can not give consent to be nominated from several polling organizations. The candidate nominated by self-nomination cannot give consent to be nominated in the same election by an electoral association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Regulations\nA candidate for mayor of Moscow may have up to 100 \"trusted representatives\". The maximum amount of a candidate's election fund shall not exceed 200 million rubles. In the second round of this amount may be increased by 10 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Regulations, Municipal filter\nAll registered candidates are required to pass so called municipal filter introduced be a federal law of 2012: all candidates are required to receive support from at least 6% of elected municipal deputies or heads of municipalities. Those supporting municipal deputies should represent no less than 75% of the federal subject's municipalities. One deputy can only support one candidate. For Moscow 2013 elections it means that every candidate should provide signatures of at least 110 elected municipal deputies representing 75% of all Moscow municipalities. Since most municipalities are controlled by the United Russia party the municipal filter is especially hard to pass for the opposition candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Regulations, Criteria for election\nTo be elected a candidate must get more than 50% of votes. If no one achieves 50%, a runoff is to be held in 14 days. Only the two most successful candidates from the first round participate in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234845-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow mayoral election, Election date\nIn a vote held on June 6, 27 members of Moscow City Duma backed the proposed date, and only two voted against it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234846-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow psychiatric hospital fire\nThe 2013 Moscow psychiatric hospital fire occurred on 26 April 2013 at 2:30 am Moscow Time (22:30 UTC). At least 38 people were killed, included 36 patients and two doctors after fires tore through a psychiatric hospital outside Moscow in the village of Ramensky, 70 miles north of Moscow in Moscow Oblast on April 26, 2013. 29 people were burned alive, killing some patients in their beds and others who were trapped by barred windows. Only 3 people survived, including 2 patients and a nurse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234846-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moscow psychiatric hospital fire, Fire\nThe fire broke out on the 26th April 2013 at 2:30 Moscow Time (22:30 UTC) in a psychiatric hospital near Moscow in a village called Ramensky, Dmitrovsky District. Ramensky is located approximately 70 miles north of Moscow in the Moscow Oblast in European Russia. The fire ignited on the 2nd floor of the 2 story building in a patient's bed. 3 doctors and 1 nurse ran to the bed but were burned alive immediately. The fire raged through the 2nd floor and killed everyone on that floor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234846-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Moscow psychiatric hospital fire, Fire\n6 minutes later, the 2nd floor collapsed and crushed patients on the ground floor. 4 minutes later, the fire services reached the hospital and spent the next 3 hours extinguishing the blaze. When the fire finally settled in the morning, the fire brigade broke into the building and searched for survivors but only found 3 injured people alive: a nurse on the 1st floor and 2 patients on the ground floor. The fire was likely caused by (because it was from a patients bed) the patient being schizophranic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234847-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open\nThe 2013 Moselle Open was a men's tennis tournament held in Metz, France and played on indoor hard courts. It was the 11th edition of the Moselle Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It was held at the Parc des Expositions de Metz M\u00e9tropole from 16 September until 22 September 2013. Second-seeded Gilles Simon won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234847-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wild cards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234847-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry from the singles qualifying draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234847-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234847-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open, Finals, Doubles\nJohan Brunstr\u00f6m / Raven Klaasen defeated Nicolas Mahut / Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20135)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234848-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open \u2013 Doubles\nNicolas Mahut and \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Roger-Vasselin teamed up with Rohan Bopanna, but lost in the semifinals to Johan Brunstr\u00f6m and Raven Klaasen. Mahut played alongside Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, but lost in the final to Brunstr\u00f6m and Klaasen, 4\u20136, 6\u20137(5\u20137).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234849-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open \u2013 Singles\nJo-Wilfried Tsonga was the two-time defending champion but lost in the final to Gilles Simon, 4-6, 3-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234849-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234849-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moselle Open \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nAll seeds, along with two other players, received byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km\nThe 2013 Motegi GT 250km was the final championship round of the 2013 Super GT season, the 8th points scoring race for GT500 cars and the 9th for GT300 cars. It took place on November 3, 2013 at Twin Ring Motegi in Motegi, Tochigi, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Background\nKohei Hirate and Yuji Tachikawa led the championship for Team Cerumo, having scored 58 points. Following their win at the previous race, TOM'S drivers Kazuki Nakajima and James Rossiter were 2nd in the championship, four points behind Cerumo. Eight teams in GT500 had a theoretical chance at winning the championship entering the Motegi round. In GT300 Team Mugen had an eight-point lead over Goodsmile Racing's Tatsuya Kataoka and Nobuteru Taniguchi, while in GT300 only five teams had a possibility of winning the championship. The Balance of Performance was re-adjusted in GT300, the air restrictor sizes for the Honda CR-Z and Subaru BRZ were returned to their sizes that were at the Fuji 300km round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Background\nBecause Motegi was the final round of the championship, teams that competed in all rounds of the championship had their weight ballast removed, all cars with the exception of the #5 Team Mach Nissan GT-R GT3 ran without weight ballast. Unlike other rounds which are normally 300km in length, Motegi is only a 250km race. 38 cars entered the final round at Motegi, the #360 Tomei Sports Nissan GT-R GT3 not entering Motegi was the only change from the Autopolis entry list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Report, Practice\nThe #38 Team Cerumo Lexus SC430 was fastest GT500 car in practice while the #100 Team Kunimitsu Honda HSV-010 GT was second fastest. In GT300 The #11 Gainer Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 set the fastest time from the #16 Team Mugen Honda CR-Z. The #37 TOM'S SC430 caused the first red flag 17 minutes into the session after spinning off at the final turn. A second red flag came out 40 minutes in after the car that was fastest at the end of the session, #38 Team Cerumo SC430 spun off at turn 2. The #19 Bandoh SC430 also had a problem and stopped on circuit with 20 minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Report, Qualifying\nQualifying was held on November 2, 2013. In the first session for all GT300 cars the championship leader, the Team Mugen Honda CR-Z with Yuhki Nakayama was fastest from the #11 Gainer SLS. The session was red flagged as Takashi Kobayashi spun off at the hairpin and was unable to rejoin the circuit, and would have to start the race from the rear of the grid. The only championship-contending team eliminated in Q1 for GT300 was the #52 SLS with Hironori Takeuchi driving. In the first GT500 session Masataka Yanagida was fastest for NISMO, 2nd went to Takashi Kogure. Both Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Makowiecki and James Rossiter, driving for teams that entered Motegi 3rd and 4th in the championship respectively failed to make the cutoff for the second session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Report, Qualifying\nIn the second GT300 session Kota Sasaki was fastest in the #61 Subaru BRZ, scoring the team's 5th pole position of the season and Sasaki's 10th in his career. Three of the 4 championship contending teams started in the top three, the GSR Hatsune Miku BMW that was 2nd in the championship would start 7th. Kazuya Oshima was fastest in the second GT500 qualifying session, setting a time a tenth faster than Koudai Tsukakoshi. The championship leading team would start 4th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Report, Race\nThe race was held on November 3, 2013. Oshima started the #6 SC430 from pole position and kept his lead while Tetsuya Yamano was able to lead from the start in GT300, but on lap 4, Bj\u00f6rn Wirdheim had overtaken Yamano for the lead, Wirdheim in the #11 Gainer SLS being able to lap much faster than anyone else in the class. On lap 4 in GT500 Kohei Hirate in the #38 SC430 passed Toshihiro Kaneishi in the #17 HSV-010 for 2nd and was then under attack from multiple cars behind. Oshima and Wirdheim kept extending their leads in their respective classes throughout the first stint, Oshima building nearly 20 seconds over Hirate and Wirdheim had nearly 40 seconds on 2nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Report, Race\nThe first pitstops occurred as early as lap 19, Kaneishi in the #17 being the first of the lead group to pit with Tsugio Matsuda, Juichi Wakisaka and Naoki Yamamoto pitting as well. Cerumo pitted a lap after and Yuji Tachikawa managed to keep his position over the #17, now with Koudai Tsukakoshi driving. On lap 32 Hiroaki Ishiura passed Tsukakoshi for 3rd, but 3 laps later Tsukakoshi re-passed Ishiura and began closing on Tachikawa again. Andre Couto and Ralph Firman made contact on lap 38, sending Firman into the wall and Couto receiving a drive-through penalty for the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Report, Race\nTsukakoshi overtook Tachikawa for 2nd on lap 38 but Tachikawa still held a 2-point lead in the championship and with other Lexus SC430's behind there was no change in position for the rest of the race, giving Team Cerumo, Tachikawa and Hirate the championship. Yuji Kunimoto won his first GT500 race for Team LeMans and Oshima won his 3rd GT500 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234850-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Motegi GT 250km, Report, Race\nKota Sasaki was catching Yuhki Nakayama for 2nd in GT300 in the closing laps but with two laps to go Sasaki spun, which assured Nakayama would finish 2nd, which was enough for Team Mugen to win the GT300 championship by five points over the race winners of Katsuyuki Hiranaka and Bj\u00f6rn Wirdheim, who were well ahead of anyone else in their class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234851-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto2 World Championship\nThe 2013 FIM Moto2 World Championship was a part of the 65th F.I.M. Road Racing World Championship season. Marc M\u00e1rquez was the reigning champion, but did not contest in season as he joined the MotoGP with Repsol Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234851-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto2 World Championship, Season summary\nPol Espargar\u00f3 became champion in the class, after overhauling Scott Redding towards the end of the season. With six race victories, Espargar\u00f3 won the championship by 40 points ahead of Redding, who won three races, with third place going to Esteve Rabat, a three-time race winner. Nicol\u00e1s Terol, who finished seventh, was another three-time race winner, with other victories taken by Mika Kallio (fourth) and Jordi Torres, who was tenth in the championship. In the constructors' championship, Kalex won thirteen of the seventeen races to win the title by almost 100 points from Suter, who won the other four races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234851-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto2 World Championship, Season summary\nThe following Grands Prix were scheduled to take place in 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234851-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto2 World Championship, Calendar\nThe F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Motocyclisme released a 19-race provisional calendar on 19 September 2012. On 23 November 2012, the calendar was updated following confirmation that the return of the Argentine Grand Prix would be postponed to 2014. The Grand Prix of the Americas held at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, United States, replaced the Portuguese Grand Prix, which had been run at Estoril since 2000. The United States hosted two races, the other two being the United States Grand Prix at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca (MotoGP class only) and the Indianapolis Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234851-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto2 World Championship, Results and standings, Riders' standings\nPoints were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234851-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto2 World Championship, Results and standings, Manufacturers' standings\nPoints were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234852-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto3 World Championship\nThe 2013 FIM Moto3 World Championship was a part of the 65th F.I.M. Road Racing World Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234852-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto3 World Championship, Season summary\nIn Moto3, the championship was dominated by three Spanish riders, all riding KTM machinery. Like the premier class, there was a final race title decider between Ajo Motorsport's Luis Salom, Estrella Galicia 0,0's \u00c1lex Rins and Maverick Vi\u00f1ales of Team Calvo; if any rider of the three won the race, they finished as the champion, regardless of the other results. After Salom crashed out early in the race, Rins and Vi\u00f1ales battled at the front, with Vi\u00f1ales ultimately coming out as the victor and champion, with Rins being passed for second place on the line by Jonas Folger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234852-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Moto3 World Championship, Season summary\nWith Salom only making it back up to fourteenth, Rins finished as runner-up ahead of Salom. With every race won by a KTM rider\u00a0\u2013 seven wins for Salom, six for Rins, three for Vi\u00f1ales and one for \u00c1lex M\u00e1rquez, the teammate of Rins, at Motegi\u00a0\u2013 the marque was comfortably the winners of the constructors' championship, scoring more than double the points of the next placed constructor, Kalex KTM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234852-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto3 World Championship, Calendar\nThe following Grands Prix were scheduled to take place in 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234852-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto3 World Championship, Calendar\nThe F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Motocyclisme released a 19-race provisional calendar on 19 September 2012. On 23 November 2012, the calendar was updated following confirmation that the return of the Argentine Grand Prix would be postponed to 2014. The Grand Prix of the Americas held at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, United States, replaced the Portuguese Grand Prix, which had been run at Estoril since 2000. The United States hosted three races, the other two being the United States Grand Prix at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca (MotoGP class only) and the Indianapolis Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234852-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto3 World Championship, Results and standings, Riders' standings\nPoints were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234852-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Moto3 World Championship, Results and standings, Manufacturers' standings\nPoints were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship\nThe 2013 FIM MotoGP World Championship was the premier class of the 65th F.I.M. Road Racing World Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Season summary\nJorge Lorenzo started the season as the defending World Champion, while Honda was the defending Manufacturers' Champion. Moto2 champion Marc M\u00e1rquez joined the MotoGP grid with Repsol Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Season summary\nIn the premier MotoGP class, Lorenzo, along with Repsol Honda teammates Marc M\u00e1rquez and Dani Pedrosa battled it out for most of the season in regards to the championship battle. Lorenzo won the opening race of the season in Qatar, before rookie M\u00e1rquez became the youngest premier class winner, as he claimed victory in the inaugural Grand Prix of the Americas in Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Season summary\nPedrosa took back-to-back victories at Jerez\u00a0\u2013 where M\u00e1rquez and Lorenzo battled for second place, clashing at the final corner\u00a0\u2013 and Le Mans, before Lorenzo did likewise at Mugello, and Catalunya; at the former, M\u00e1rquez retired from the race after crashing out of second place. At Assen, Lorenzo crashed during free practice and fractured his collarbone, and after emergency surgery and initial reports that he would not take part for the rest of the weekend, he competed in the race and finished fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Season summary\nM\u00e1rquez and Pedrosa finished second and fourth respectively, as Valentino Rossi took his first race victory since 2010. M\u00e1rquez then won the next four races, starting at the Sachsenring, where both Lorenzo and Pedrosa were sidelined with injuries; Lorenzo with a recurrence of his Assen injury after crashing in free practice once again, while Pedrosa was ruled out with low blood pressure, stemming from a separate incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Season summary\nAfter two more victories for Lorenzo at Silverstone, and Misano, M\u00e1rquez and Pedrosa collided at the Aragon Grand Prix, where a slight touch caused a sensor on Pedrosa's bike to tear and cut the traction control system. M\u00e1rquez went on to beat Lorenzo to victory, and after Pedrosa won in Malaysia, M\u00e1rquez held a 43-point lead in the championship with three races to go. However, a disqualification in Australia, as well as Lorenzo winning both in Australia and Japan reduced that margin to thirteen, ahead of the final race in Valencia; the first final race title decider since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Season summary\nAfter battling Pedrosa and Lorenzo in the early stages of the race, M\u00e1rquez finished third in the race to become the youngest premier class champion, beating Freddie Spencer's record from 1983. As well as this, M\u00e1rquez became the first rookie since Kenny Roberts in 1978 to win the championship in their d\u00e9but season, and only the fourth rider to win world championships in three different categories after Mike Hailwood, Phil Read and Rossi. Pedrosa's second place, behind Lorenzo, was enough for Honda to clinch the constructors' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Season summary, Regulation changes\nThe MotoGP class saw the introduction of a new qualifying system, in which the riders placed eleventh or lower based on times in Free Practice 3 were sent to Qualifying 1. The two fastest riders from that session would then join the ten fastest riders in Qualifying 2 to set the first 12 positions of the starting grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Calendar\nThe F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Motocyclisme released a 19-race provisional calendar on 19 September 2012. On 23 November 2012, the calendar was updated following confirmation that the return of the Argentine Grand Prix would be postponed to 2014. The Grand Prix of the Americas held at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, United States, replaced the Portuguese Grand Prix, which had been run at Estoril since 2000. The United States hosted three races, the other two being the United States Grand Prix at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca and the Indianapolis Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Results and standings, Riders' standings\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Results and standings, Constructors' standings\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234853-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 MotoGP World Championship, Results and standings, Teams' standings\nThe teams' standings were based on results obtained by regular and substitute riders; wild-card entries were ineligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234854-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Motorcycle Grand Prix of the Americas\nThe 2013 Grand Prix of the Americas was the second round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas on 21 April 2013. This was the first GP race at the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234854-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Motorcycle Grand Prix of the Americas\nMarc M\u00e1rquez won his first MotoGP race, in which was only his second race in the top level, and became the youngest ever rider to win a MotoGP race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234854-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Motorcycle Grand Prix of the Americas\nIt was the first Grand Prix since the 1982 Swedish Grand Prix where in all three categories, there were three new winners: at the Anderstorp it was Iv\u00e1n Palazzese (125cc), Roland Freymond (250cc) and Takazumi Katayama (500cc) who won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234854-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Motorcycle Grand Prix of the Americas, 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, 42], "section_span": [44, 90], "content_span": [91, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234855-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament took place from May 22\u201326. All six of the league's teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at California State University, Fresno's Pete Beiden Field. It was Fresno State's first year in the league after joining from the Western Athletic Conference. San Diego State won the tournament for the second time, earning the Mountain West Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234855-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe conference's six teams were seeded based on winning percentage during the round robin regular season schedule. The top two seeds received a bye to the second round, with the top seed playing the lowest seeded team that won its first round game, and the second seeded team playing the higher seeded first day winner. The losers of the first day's games played an elimination game in the double-elimination format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234855-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nTyler France was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. France was a freshman for San Diego State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234855-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Championship Winning Pitcher\nPhilip Walby of San Diego State was the Starting and Winning Pitcher of two games, including the Championship Game vs. New Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 100], "content_span": [101, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234856-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game\nThe 2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game determined the 2013 football champion of the Mountain West Conference (MW). The game, played at Bulldog Stadium on the campus of California State University, Fresno (Fresno State), was the first football conference championship game for the Mountain West Conference. The game featured the West Division champions Fresno State Bulldogs hosting the Mountain Division champions Utah State Aggies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234856-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game\nFresno State won 24\u201317 and represented the Mountain West in the 2013 Las Vegas Bowl on December 21 in Las Vegas, Nevada after defeating Utah State by 7 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234856-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game, History\nAfter the 2013 Mountain West Conference realignment, the league added two new members, San Jose State and Utah State for the 2013 season. By adding two new members for a total of 12 football members (11 all-sports members and football-only Hawaii), the MW was able to split into two divisions, the Mountain and the West, and to organize an annual conference championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234856-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game, Teams, Mountain Division Champions\nUtah State comes into the championship with a non\u2013conference record of 1\u20133 after losing to former Mountain West member Utah, USC and BYU, while beating Weber State. Utah State was first in the Mountain Division standings with a conference record of 2\u20130 until losing to Boise State. Utah State then fell to third behind Wyoming and Boise State. Wyoming then lost to Colorado State which moved Boise State to first and Utah State to second in the standings. Boise State then lost a close game in overtime against San Diego State, which moved Utah State back at first in the division. By the end of the regular season, Utah State stayed undefeated after the loss to Boise State bringing the Aggies to their first division championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 92], "content_span": [93, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234856-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game, Teams, Mountain Division Champions\nThis was Utah State's first appearance in Mountain West Conference Championship series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 92], "content_span": [93, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234856-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game, Teams, West Division Champions\nFresno State comes into the championship undefeated in non\u2013conference games against Rutgers, Cal-Poly San Luis Obispo, and Idaho. Fresno State stayed undefeated winning close games against Boise State, Hawaii and San Diego State and rose to #14 in the BCS Polls prior to their last game of the regular season against San Jose. After Fresno State lost to San Jose State they fell to #22 but continued to stay at the top of their division as the other five teams in the West Division lost more than one conference game, which led the team to their first division championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 88], "content_span": [89, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234856-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game, Teams, West Division Champions\nThis was Fresno State's first appearance in Mountain West Conference Championship series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 88], "content_span": [89, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234857-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Mountain West Conference men's basketball tournament was a tournament played at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada on March 12\u201315, 2013. With TCU departing for the Big 12, and Fresno State and Nevada joining the MWC, the MWC will have a 9 team tournament for 2013. As the tournament champion, New Mexico received the Mountain West Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234857-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nTeams are seeded by conference record, with a ties broken by record between the tied teams followed by record against the regular\u2013season champion, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 64], "content_span": [65, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season\nThe 2013 Mountain West Conference football season was the 15th season of college football for the Mountain West Conference (MW). In the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, the MW had 12 football members: Air Force, Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, Hawai\u02bbi, Nevada, New Mexico, San Diego State, San Jose State, UNLV, Utah State, and Wyoming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season\nThis was the third consecutive year in which the Mountain West saw changes in membership. In 2011, two of the conference's charter members, BYU (WCC and football independent) and Utah (Pac-12), left, while Boise State joined from the WAC. The following year, the MW lost TCU, members since 2005, to the Big 12, while gaining new all-sports members Fresno State and Nevada and football-only member Hawaii from the WAC. For 2013, the MW lost no schools, while adding two new full members from the WAC in San Jose State and Utah State. This brought the conference membership in football to 12, allowing the MW to split into divisions and launch a championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season, Preseason, Award watch lists\nThe following Mountain West players were named to preseason award watch lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season, Coaches\nNOTE: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season, Coaches\n*first year as conference member, ^achieved as head coach of New Mexico from 99\u201308", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season, Bowl games\nThe Mountain West Conference will have agreements with the following bowls for 2012\u201313:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season, Regular season\nAll dates, times, and TV are tentative and subject to change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234858-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mountain West Conference football season, Regular season\nThe Mountain West has teams in 3 different time zones. Times reflect start time in respective time zone of each team (Mountain\u2014Air Force, Boise State, Colorado State, New Mexico, Wyoming; Pacific\u2014Fresno State, Nevada, San Diego State, UNLV; Hawaii-Aleutian\u2014Hawai\u02bbi). Conference games start times are that of the home team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234859-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Movistar Team season\nThe 2013 season for Movistar Team began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234860-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mr. Olympia\nThe 2013 Mr. Olympia contest was an IFBB professional bodybuilding competition held September 27\u201328, 2013, at the Orleans Arena at The Orleans Hotel and Casino in Paradise, Nevada. It was the 49th Mr. Olympia competition held. Other events at the exhibition included the 212 Olympia Showdown, Ms. Olympia, Fitness Olympia, Figure Olympia, Bikini Olympia, Women's Physique Showdown, and Men's Physique Showdown contests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234861-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ms. Olympia\nThe 2013 Ms. Olympia contest is an IFBB professional bodybuilding competition and part of Joe Weider's Olympia Fitness & Performance Weekend 2013to be held on September 27, 2013, at the South Hall in the Las Vegas Convention Center in Winchester, Nevada and in the Orleans Arena at The Orleans Hotel and Casino in Paradise, Nevada. It was the 34th Ms. Olympia competition held. Other events at the exhibition include the 212 Olympia Showdown, Mr. Olympia, Fitness Olympia, Figure Olympia, Bikini Olympia, Women's Physique Showdown, and Men's Physique Showdown contests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234861-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ms. Olympia, 2013 Ms. Olympia qualified, Points standings\n1 In the event of a tie, the competitor with the best top five contest placings is awarded the qualification. If both competitors have the same contest placings, then both qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 62], "content_span": [63, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234862-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mubadala World Tennis Championship\nThe 2013 Mubadala World Tennis Championship was a non-ATP affiliated exhibition tournament. It was the 6th edition of the Mubadala World Tennis Championship with the world's top players competing in the event, which was held in a knockout format. The winner received a purse of $250,000. The event was held at the Abu Dhabi International Tennis Complex at the Zayed Sports City in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. It was a warm-up event for the 2014 tennis season, with the ATP World Tour beginning on December 30, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234863-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mubadala World Tennis Championship \u2013 Singles\nNovak Djokovic was the two-time defending champion, and successfully defended his title by defeating David Ferrer in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234864-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 MuchMusic Video Awards\nThe 2013 MuchMusic Video Awards were held on Sunday June 16, 2013 at the MuchMusic headquarters in Toronto, Canada. Demi Lovato was the first performer announced. Psy served as co-host and a performer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic\nThe 2013 Mudsummer Classic (formally the CarCash Mudsummer Classic presented by CNBC Prime's The Profit) was a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series stock car race held on July 24, 2013, at Eldora Speedway in New Weston, Ohio. The race was the first dirt track race held by a NASCAR national touring series (Cup, Xfinity, Trucks) since 1970. Contested over 150 laps, the race was the tenth of the 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season. Ken Schrader of self-owned Ken Schrader Racing won the pole position, and became the oldest pole sitter in NASCAR history at 58 years of age. Austin Dillon of Richard Childress Racing won the race, while Kyle Larson and Ryan Newman finished second and third, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic\nThe qualifying procedure was unique for the race; drivers' qualifying times set the starting grids for five heat races to determine the feature race's starting lineup, while the top five of a last chance qualifier (LCQ) advance to the feature. Schrader, Jared Landers, Timothy Peters, Kenny Wallace and Jeb Burton won the heat races, while Brennan Newberry won the LCQ. The feature's format was also distinctive compared to other NASCAR events, as it was divided into three segments, lasting 60, 50 and 40 laps. In the feature, Larson took the lead from Peters on lap 39, and later battled with Dillon for the win, and Dillon claimed the victory after he retained the lead on the green\u2013white\u2013checker finish for his fifth career Truck Series win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nThe last race run on dirt in a NASCAR national touring series occurred on September 30, 1970, at the North Carolina State Fairgrounds in Raleigh in a Grand National Series race, which was won by Richard Petty. Afterwards, NASCAR sanctioned the Busch All-Star Tour, a dirt late model series, which lasted from 1985 to 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nEldora Speedway, which opened in 1954, is a 0.5 mile (0.80\u00a0km) oval with turns at a 24 degree banking, while the straightaways are 8 degrees. The track's grandstands can fit 17,782 spectators, and the hillside seating can fit an unlimited number of fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nOn October 15, 2012, track owner Tony Stewart and Austin Dillon held a private test at the track, driving trucks. On November 28, NASCAR announced that Eldora Speedway would be on the schedule as the first of two Wednesday Truck races, along with the UNOH 200 at Bristol Motor Speedway for 2013. Although the track does not have any SAFER barriers, Tom Gideon, NASCAR Director of Safety, stated the track meets NASCAR regulations. By January 29, 2013, the 17,782 grandstand seats had been sold out, with purchasers from 48 states and six countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\n\"We've been looking at getting the trucks back to short tracks\u00a0\u2013 to the roots of racing including the dirt\u00a0\u2013 and we\u2019re excited to announce our 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will race at Eldora Speedway in July. The door-to-door racing that our truck series is known for plus Eldora's popularity and [Tony Stewart]'s dedication to putting on great shows for the fans is a perfect fit. We'll have a maximum starting field of 30 trucks at Eldora. More details on the race format are still being developed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nVarious non-Truck regulars entered the race for reasons such as to help a team in the owners' championship, with teams hiring drivers who are familiar with dirt racing to assist them in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nExamples include dirt track specialists Scott Bloomquist, who won The Dream and the World 100 at the track six times and three times, respectively; Tracy Hines, who had 85 career wins, including six at Eldora, and 52 starts in the Truck Series; Jared Landers, who won 100 features in his career; J. R. Heffner, who won the big-block modified championship at Lebanon Valley Speedway twice; Jeff Babcock, who won an American Late Model Series race at the track during 2013; and Joe Cobb, a dirt modified racer and the father of Truck Series regular Jennifer Jo Cobb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nCup Series drivers Dave Blaney, Ken Schrader and Ryan Newman, along with Nationwide Series drivers Austin Dillon, Kenny Wallace and Kyle Larson also ran in the event. Babcock, Blaney, Bloomquist, Hines, Schrader and Wallace had all won races at Eldora in various disciplines. Jason Bowles was later announced as the driver of the No. 5 for Wauters Motorsports, while Chris Jones was originally listed as the driver of the No. 93 for RSS Racing, but eventually withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nIn preparation for the race, tire provider Goodyear created new tires, branded \"Wrangler\", based on a previous dirt tire that the company made. To give the trucks more grip, the tires were widened by one inch to eleven. The bias-ply tires (instead of radial tires) also had treads to remove dirt quicker, in a block pattern, along with being softer. The left-side tires were staggered three inches shorter to 85.5 inches than the right tires (88.5) to assist in handling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nMeanwhile, the trucks had mesh shields and hood deflector screens attached to prevent debris from the dirt from entering the radiators and damaging the vehicles. The trucks also had the front spoilers and splitters removed, the grille closed, and the rear spoilers raised and enlarged by 40 square inches to generate more downforce. The trucks' windshields remained, meaning the track crew had to keep the track dry, to prevent mud from making them unable to be cleared. On the hoods, bug deflectors, which were 8 by 12 inches, were installed to prevent stones from hitting the windshield. Teams added under panels to the trucks' chassis to prevent dirt from increasing the trucks' weight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Background\nEntering the race, Matt Crafton led the points standings with 357 points, followed by Jeb Burton and James Buescher, both with 319 and 317 points, respectively. Ty Dillon and Johnny Sauter finished the top five with 309 and 305 points, respectively. Ryan Blaney had 290 points, and behind him were Miguel Paludo (285), Timothy Peters (281), Brendan Gaughan (280) and Darrell Wallace Jr. (272).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Practice\nTwo-hour practice sessions were held on July 23 from 4:30 to 6:30 P.M. EST, followed by another from 7:00 to 9:00 P.M, the latter being televised on Speed. Another practice was held the following day from 11:30 A.M. to 1:30 P.M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Practice\nKyle Larson held the fastest lap time in the first practice session with a time of 19.645 seconds and speed of 91.626\u00a0mph (147.458\u00a0km/h), followed by father/son pair Dave (19.856 seconds, 91.653\u00a0mph (147.501\u00a0km/h)) and Ryan Blaney (19.918 seconds, 90.371\u00a0mph (145.438\u00a0km/h)) and brothers Austin (19.982 seconds, 90.081\u00a0mph (144.971\u00a0km/h)) and Ty Dillon (20.205 seconds, 89.087\u00a0mph (143.372\u00a0km/h)). The top five featured three Chevrolets and two Fords; the fastest Toyota driver was John Wes Townley (20.483 seconds, 87.878\u00a0mph (141.426\u00a0km/h)), who was seventh-fastest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Practice\nIn the second session, the top five consisted of three Chevrolets in the top three positions and Toyotas in fourth and fifth: Austin (21.644 seconds, 83.164\u00a0mph (133.839\u00a0km/h)) and Ty Dillon (21.703 seconds, 82.938\u00a0mph (133.476\u00a0km/h)), Larson (21.719 seconds, 82.877\u00a0mph (133.378\u00a0km/h)), Ken Schrader (21.748 seconds, 82.766\u00a0mph (133.199\u00a0km/h)) and Tracy Hines (21.753 seconds, 82.747\u00a0mph (133.168\u00a0km/h)). The fastest Ford truck was Dave Blaney, with a lap time and speed of 21.872 seconds and 82.297\u00a0mph (132.444\u00a0km/h), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Practice\nIn the final practice, Toyotas dominated the top five, with Darrell Wallace Jr. leading the session with a time of 20.040 seconds and speed of 89.820\u00a0mph (144.551\u00a0km/h), followed by Hines (20.182 seconds, 89.188\u00a0mph (143.534\u00a0km/h)), Townley (20.303 seconds, 88.657\u00a0mph (142.680\u00a0km/h)) and Germ\u00e1n Quiroga (20.307 seconds, 88.639\u00a0mph (142.651\u00a0km/h)) comprising the top four; Chevy driver James Buescher (20.528 seconds, 87.685\u00a0mph (141.115\u00a0km/h)) was fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying\nThe field for the main event consisted only of 30 trucks instead of the usual 36, with the top 20 trucks in the owner's points standings guaranteed a spot. To determine the field, two-lap qualifying runs were held, which determined the starting grids for five heat races of eight laps each. The top five fastest qualifiers started on the pole for the heats, and the highest non-locked-in truck were transferred in to the main event until there were 25 trucks in the field. For drivers that did not qualify via the heats, the top four in a last-chance qualifier advance, with the final spot reserved for the most recent series champion, and if that spot is vacant, the fifth-place finisher in the LCQ would qualify for the main event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying\nQualifying was held at 5:05 P.M. Ken Schrader won the pole with a lap time of 19.709 seconds and a speed of 91.329\u00a0mph (146.980\u00a0km/h) for his first Truck Series pole since 2004, and became the oldest pole-sitter in NASCAR history at 58 years of age, passing Dick Trickle, who won the pole at Dover International Speedway in the Busch Series' MBNA Platinum 200 in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying\nThe heat races began at 7:00 P.M., with each heat race occurring after 15 minutes of the previous heat's start. The last chance qualifier was held at 8:45 P.M. Schrader eventually won his heat race after leading all 8 laps. In Heat 2, the first caution flag of the day was flown for Darrell Wallace Jr.'s spin with three laps remaining, and Jared Landers prevented a comeback by Matt Crafton to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying\nThe next heat was dominated by Timothy Peters, who led all eight laps; Heats 4 and 5 were won by Kenny Wallace and Jeb Burton, respectively, the two drivers leading every lap. In the last chance qualifier, J. R. Heffner, who started first in the race, failed to finish the race after completing one lap. Ultimately, Brennan Newberry led all fifteen laps to win, followed by Jeff Babcock, Jason Bowles and Justin Jennings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying\nNorm Benning clinched the fifth and final transfer spot after holding off Clay Greenfield, who nearly wrecked him three times; in response, Benning gave Greenfield the finger after the race concluded. Because they did not finish in the top five, Greenfield, Jimmy Weller, Bryan Silas, Joe Cobb and Heffner did not qualify for the event. When asked about the duel with Greenfield, Benning stated Tony Stewart told him that he \"singlehandedly made the show a success\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Race\nThe race started at 9:35 P.M. EST and televised live on Speed, while being broadcast on radio by Motor Racing Network. Krista Voda hosted Speed's prerace show, while Rick Allen, Phil Parsons and Michael Waltrip called the race from the booth; the network's pit reporters for the event were Ray Dunlap, Hermie Sadler and Bob Dillner. 1.4 million people viewed the race on television, the tenth-most viewed Truck race in series history, and the highest-watched event of the day; the race also had a Nielsen rating of 1.20. The weather for the race was mostly clear with a temperature of 68\u00a0\u00b0F (20\u00a0\u00b0C). The St. Henry High School band performed the national anthem, while the parade lap featured a four-wide salute by the trucks to the fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Race\nDue to the lack of a pit road, the race was split into three segments of 60, 50 and 40 laps so teams can make pit stops and adjustments between each segment, and there would be no positions gained nor lost during stops. In segment 1, Timothy Peters took the lead from pole-sitter Ken Schrader on lap 15, and led for 23 laps until Kyle Larson took the lead on lap 39, who led for the remainder of the segment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Race\nIn the final five laps of the segment, the first caution of the race flew for debris, and the beneficiary was Max Gresham, who was the first driver at least a lap down, which allowed him to regain a lap. In the second segment, Larson continued to lead for a total of 50 laps until Austin Dillon passed him on lap 89 after the former collided with Germ\u00e1n Quiroga. One lap later, another caution was flown for debris, and Gresham was again the beneficiary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Race\nOn lap 116, Jared Landers' truck became loose in turn 2, collected Ty Dillon and made contact with Johnny Sauter. Quiroga was the beneficiary on the resulting caution. Larson and Austin Dillon dueled for the remainder of the race, with Dillon allowing Larson to pass on lap 122, but Dillon managed to get past Larson on the following lap. Two more cautions for debris (first on the front stretch, the second in turn 4) were eventually flown, and a green\u2013white\u2013checker finish was initiated due to debris in turn 4 on lap 149.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0017-0003", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Race\nDillon retained the lead on the GWC to win, beating Larson by 1.197 seconds. Behind Dillon and Larson, Ryan Newman finished third, followed by Joey Coulter, Brendan Gaughan, Timothy Peters, Darrell Wallace Jr., Matt Crafton, Dave Blaney and Max Gresham. Sauter (accident) and Jeff Babcock (engine) failed to finish the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Race\nThe race concluded with four different leaders, eight lead changes, and six cautions. Dillon led the most laps with 64, followed by Larson (51), Peters (23) and Schrader (15). Despite winning the race, Dillon, along with six other drivers, did not receive Truck Series points due to a rule that allowed drivers to compete in only one series' drivers championship. The win was Dillon's first of 2013 and fifth Truck Series victory in 53 starts. It was also the 29th Truck Series win for owner Richard Childress and Richard Childress Racing's second Truck win of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234865-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Mudsummer Classic, Race\nIn August, Dillon's truck, his winner's trophy and a jar of dirt he shoveled at the start/finish line were placed on display in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234866-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mumbai building collapse\nThe 2013 Mumbai building collapse occurred on 27 September 2013 when a five-story building collapsed in the Mazagaon area of Mumbai city in Maharashtra a state in India. At least 61 people died and 32 others were injured in the disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234866-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mumbai building collapse, Collapse\nThe building, which collapsed at 6\u00a0a.m. IST on 27 September 2013, had more than 100 residents. Police said that the collapse occurred after a mezzanine floor was built without permission in an office-warehouse on the ground floor of the building. The 32-year-old building was owned by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation. Three officials in its civic markets department were arrested for not acting on reports that the building was unsound after the renovation works.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234867-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mundialito de Clubes\nThe third Mundialito de Clubes (Club World Cup in English) is a beach soccer tournament that took place, for the first time, at a temporary stadium at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil from 10 \u2013 17 November 2013. The previous two editions were held at the Praia do Sol stadium at the Arena Guarapiranga sport complex, located near Represa de Guarapiranga, a reservoir located in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234867-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mundialito de Clubes, Participating teams\nEight teams confirmed their participation in this year's tournament, a decrease of four teams who participated in the previous edition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234867-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mundialito de Clubes, Group stage\nThe draw to divide the teams into two groups of four was conducted on 21 October 2013. The official schedule was released on 22 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234867-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mundialito de Clubes, Group stage\nAll kickoff times are of local time in Rio de Janeiro (UTC-2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234868-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Football Championship\nThe 2013 Munster Senior Football Championship was that year's installment of the annual Munster Senior Football Championship held under the auspices of the Munster GAA. It was won by Kerry who defeated Cork in the final. It was Kerry's 75th title. Cork defeated Limerick and Clare, while Kerry defeated Tipperary and Waterford on their way to the final. The winning Kerry team received the Cuppy Cup, and automatically advanced to the quarter-final stage of the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final was the 122nd final of the Munster Senior Hurling Championship, one of the most prestigious provincial hurling championships. The match, contested by Limerick and Cork, took place on 14 July 2013 at the Gaelic Grounds in Limerick, and started at 4:00 p.m. It was Limerick's 45th Munster final and Cork's 80th. 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, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe championship winners were awarded a place in the semi-finals of the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, while the loser went through to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final\nLimerick beat fourteen-man Cork by 0-24 to 0-15 to secure the Munster crown for the first time since 1996. The Munster final failed to produce a goal for the first time since 1978. Cork's Patrick Horgan was sent-off in first half injury time for striking Limerick wing-back Paudie O'Brien on the helmet under a high ball. Limerick took advantage and went on to compile a comfortable victory. The final whistle was greeted by scenes of remarkable euphoria at the Limerick city venue as a seventeen-year wait for Munster glory finally came to an end. The Munster Cup was lifted by captain Donal O'Grady.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Route to the final, Limerick\nEntering the Munster Championship at the semi-final stage by virtue of a bye, Limerick's first game was at home against Tipperary on 9 June 2013. Limerick were very much the underdogs going into the game as, it was believed, the burden of playing in Division 1B of the National Hurling League would ultimately prove their undoing, while Tipperary would exploit time and space to exert unbearable pressure and ultimately restate their credentials as Kilkenny's most likely challengers for the All-Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Route to the final, Limerick\nAll did not go to plan for the Premier County, who were 0-03 to 0-01 behind early on and were five down when Se\u00e1n Tobin scored the opening goal for Limerick after Brendan Cummins had scooped the ball clear in a goalmouth scramble. Limerick led by 1-07 to 0-07 at half-time. John O'Dwyer came off the bench to make his championship debut and scored 1-03 in the second half for Tipp. He fired home a brilliant 49th-minute goal and Tipp led by 1-13 to 1-09. Limerick fought back to draw level at 1-14 apiece and set up a grandstand finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Route to the final, Limerick\nThey edged two points clear with points from subs Shane Dowling and Niall Moran, before Eoin Kelly dragged Tipp back into contention with five minutes left. But Limerick were flying and they bagged the final two scores through captain Donal O'Grady and Declan Hannon to secure a 1-18 to 1-15 victory, their first over Tipperary since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Route to the final, Cork\nAlso entering the Munster Championship at the semi-final stage by virtue of a bye, Cork's first game was at the Gaelic Grounds against Clare, quarter-final winners over Waterford, on 23 June 2013. Clare were slight favourites as they had won a Waterford Crystal Cup clash early in the year \u2013 before winning the two National League fixtures between the teams, including a relegation play-off. Cork started without injured duo Paudie O'Sullivan and Lorc\u00e1n McLoughlin, while team captain Pa Cronin also started on the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Route to the final, Cork\nClare played with a strong wind in the opening period and led by 0-11 to 0-08 at half-time. Cork scored the final point of the first half via goalkeeper Anthony Nash's long-range free, before they opened the second half in devastating fashion. Eight points on the bounce ensured that Cork's three-point deficit had become a five-point lead. Cork won the second half by 0-15 to 0-04 to score their first victory over Clare in 2013 \u2013 at the fourth attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match\nCork were appearing in the Munster final for the 80th time since the championship was founded in 1888. The team had won the Munster final fifty times (most recently in 2006) and were runners-up twenty-nine times (most recently in 2010). Limerick were appearing in the provincial showpiece for the 45th time. The team had won the championship eighteen times (most recently in 1996) and were runners-up twenty-six times (most recently in 2007).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Pre-match\nTicket prices for the final started at \u20ac20 for the Clare End and City End terraces, and were available at \u20ac30 for uncovered stand and \u20ac35 for the covered Mackey Stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nLimerick manager John Allen believed the element of surprise and a well drilled and disciplined panel of players were the deciding factors in their victory over Cork. Allen, who is in his second year as manager, said he had absolute faith that his players would deliver the victory on the big day. Cork manager Jimmy Barry-Murphy criticised the decision to send off Patrick Horgan in the first half saying \"It was an unbelievable decision that is all I can say, anyone that was at the match can judge for themselves.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nSpeaking on the Sunday game programme later that night, former Cork goalkeeper Donal Og Cusack agreed that the sending off was harsh, saying \"I think it was extremely harsh - I don\u2019t think the intention was there, I know technically the referee can say he made the right decision but referees are encouraged to use their common sense.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234869-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Reaction\nDeclan Hannon, Richie McCarthy and James Ryan were shortlisted by the Sunday game panel for the Man of the Match award before confirming James Ryan as the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234870-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Murang'a local elections\nThe 2013 gubernatorial elections for Murang'a County, Kenya, were held on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234870-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Murang'a local elections, Prospective candidates\nThe following are some of the candidates who had made public their intentions to run:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234871-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Murienua by-election\nA by-election was held in the Cook Islands electorate of Murienua on 19 September 2013. The by-election was precipitated by the resignation of sitting MP Tom Marsters following his appointment as Queen's Representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234871-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Murienua by-election\nPlanning for the by-election began immediately following the announcement of Marsters' appointment. Initially the by-election was expected to happen in August, but it was later delayed until September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234871-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Murienua by-election\nThe election was contested by two candidates: the Cook Islands Party's Kaota Tuariki and the Democratic Party's James Beer. It was won by Tuariki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234871-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Murienua by-election, Aftermath\nAllegations of electoral fraud, including late campaigning and treating, were raised shortly after the by-election. On 1 October the Democratic party lodged an election petition. A formal hearing of the petition was pre-empted by Tuariki's resignation, precipitating the 2014 Murienua by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234871-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Murienua by-election, Aftermath\nFollowing his resignation, the Democratic party lodged a complaint of bribery and treating against Tuariki with police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234872-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Murray State Racers football team\nThe 2013 Murray State Racers football team represented Murray State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Chris Hatcher and played their home games at Roy Stewart Stadium. They were a member of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 4\u20134 in OVC play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234873-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Music City Bowl\nThe 2013 Music City Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 30, 2013, at LP Field in Nashville, Tennessee. The 16th edition of the Music City Bowl began at 2:15 p.m. CST and was broadcast on ESPN. It featured the Ole Miss Rebels from the Southeastern Conference against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets from the Atlantic Coast Conference. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The game was sponsored by the Franklin American Mortgage Company and was officially known as the Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl. Ole Miss defeated Georgia Tech by a score of 25\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234873-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Music City Bowl, Teams\nThe two teams had met three times previously, with Georgia Tech holding a 2\u20131 lead and with each team winning a bowl game. In total bowl appearances, Ole Miss had a 22\u201312 record and Georgia Tech was 23\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234873-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Music City Bowl, Teams, Ole Miss\nThis season, Ole Miss set a new school record for yards in a season. Leading the team has been junior quarterback Bo Wallace, who is ranked 26th nationally in total offense (279.9 ypg) and in passing (257.5 ypg).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234873-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Music City Bowl, Teams, Georgia Tech\nThe Yellow Jackets have the 6th leading rushing attack with 311.7 yards per game. The team has scored 36.6 points per game, third best in the conference and 22nd nationally, and second-best in the program\u2019s modern era. Senior DE Jeremiah Attaochu is leading the defense with a career 31 sacks, just shy of breaking the school\u2019s career record. Offensively, the leader is senior A-back Robert Godhigh, recipient of the ACC\u2019s 2013 Brian Piccolo Award, who has gained 1,114 yards from scrimmage (694 rush, 420 catch) and his average of 12.4 yards per play leads the FBS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234874-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open\nThe 2013 Madrid Open (also known as the Mutua Madrid Open for sponsorship reasons) was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Park Manzanares in Madrid, Spain from 6\u201312 May. It was the 12th edition of the event on the ATP World Tour and 5th on the WTA Tour. It was classified as an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2013 ATP World Tour and a Premier Mandatory event on the 2013 WTA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234874-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open\nIon \u0162iriac the former Romanian ATP player and now billionaire businessman is the current owner of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234874-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234874-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234875-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski were the defending champions but lost in the second round to Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares. Bob and Mike Bryan won the title, defeating Peya and Soares in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234876-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRafael Nadal won the title, defeating Stanislas Wawrinka in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234876-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but lost to Kei Nishikori in the third round. This edition of the Madrid Masters was the first since 2001 (when the tournament was held in Stuttgart) to not feature either of the top two seeds in the quarterfinals, as world No. 1 Novak Djokovic was defeated in the second round by Grigor Dimitrov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234876-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234877-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSara Errani and Roberta Vinci were the defending champions, but chose not to participate in doubles. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Lucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Cara Black and Marina Erakovic in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234877-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234878-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mutua Madrid Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams successfully defended her title by defeating Maria Sharapova in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots\nThe clashes between the Hindu and Muslim communities in Muzaffarnagar district of Uttar Pradesh, India in August\u2013September 2013, resulted in at least 62 deaths including 42 Muslims and 20 Hindus and injured 93 and left more than 50,000 Muslims displaced. By date 17 September, the curfew was lifted from all riot affected areas and the army was also withdrawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots\nThe riot has been described as \"the worst violence in Uttar Pradesh in recent history\", with the army, as a result, being deployed in the state for the first time in last 20 years. The Supreme Court of India, while hearing petitions in relation to the riots, held the Akhilesh Yadav-led Samajwadi Party prima facie guilty of negligence in preventing the violence and ordered it to immediately arrest all those accused irrespective of their political affiliation. The Court also blamed the Central government for its failure to provide intelligence inputs to the Samajwadi Party-governed state government in time to help sound alerts. In 2021, a local court allowed the Yogi Adityanath-led BJP government to withdraw all cases against BJP leaders involved in the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Initial clashes\nOn 21 August 2013, communal clashes were reported from Muzaffarnagar and police registered cases against 150 people and 14 persons were taken into custody. Clashes between two communities, Hindus and Muslims, in Shamli and Muzaffarnagar grew on 27 August 2013. The original cause of the rioting is disputed according to bipartisan claims largely concerning the affected communities. In this case, the cause of this rioting alternates between a traffic accident and an eve-teasing incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Initial clashes\nAccording to the first version, the cause was a minor traffic accident involving some youths which then spiralled out of control when it eventually took on religious overtones. In the second version, a girl from the Hindu Jat community was allegedly harassed in an eve-teasing incident by one Muslim youth in Kawal village. In retaliation, Hindu relatives of the girl in question, Sachin Singh and Gaurav Singh, killed the youth named Shahnawaz Qureshi. The two brothers were lynched by a Muslim mob when they tried to escape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Initial clashes\nThe police arrested eleven members of the girl's family for killing the Muslim youth. According to Zee News report some locals, the police did not act against the killers of the Hindu brothers. According to police records, Gaurav and Sachin picked a fight with Shahnawaz over a motorcycle accident. While it has been widely reported that the fight was sparked off when Shahnawaz harassed Gaurav and Sachin's cousin sister, the FIR in the murder makes no mention of sexual harassment or molestation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0002-0003", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Initial clashes\nAccording to the other version the girl who was allegedly harassed by Shahnawaz commented that she had not gone to Kawal or known anybody by name of Shahnawaz. In the FIR registered for Shahnawaz's death, five people along with Sachin and Gaurav were named as responsible for his death. The reports mentions that the seven men entered Shahnawaz's home, took him out and killed him with swords and knives; he died on the way to the hospital. In the FIR registers for Sachin and Gaurav's death, seven other men were reported to be responsible; that episode was sparked by an altercation after Mujassim and Gaurav were involved in a bike accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Initial clashes\nAfter news of the killings spread, the members of both communities attacked each other. The police took possession of the three dead bodies, and temporarily brought the situation under control. The authorities also deployed Provincial Armed Constabulary personnel to Kawal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Initial clashes\nIn September 2013, fresh riots sparked off and around 11 people including TV journalist Rajesh Verma were killed and more than 34 were injured after which indefinite curfew was clamped and the army deployed to help maintain law and order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Gathering of masses\nThe killing of the three youths in Kawal village started echoing across the district. On 30 August, two days after the incident, despite ban on assembly of crowd, Muslim religious leaders gathered after Friday prayers and local Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and Congress leaders had hijacked the Muslim meeting demanding justice for the Kawal incident and made inflammatory speeches. Also, local Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders allegedly gave an incendiary speech instigating the Hindu farmers on 31 August. A First Information Report (FIR) has been lodged against all the leaders. After the meeting, the farmers were attacked and killed on their way home by mob with assault rifles and weapons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Jauli Canal Incident\nClashes between the two communities occurred at low frequencies for the next two weeks. The Beti Bachao Mahapanchayat, attended by lacs of people, proved to be inflammatory as it was allowed to be held by the district administration, despite imposition of 144 Crpc in the area, around 2,000 Jats returning from Panchayat were ambushed by Muslim mob armed with assault rifles and other sophisticated weapons near Jauli Canal on 7 September. The mobs had set fire on 18 tractor trollies and 3 motorbikes. According to an eyewitness account, the bodies were dumped into the canal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Jauli Canal Incident\nAlthough six bodies were recovered, it was rumoured that hundreds were missing. Bodies of three Jats were found at the site of violence and three Hindus bodies were fished out from Jauli Canal. District Magistrate agreed that many bodies were still missing, but doubted whether the missing people were killed or had migrated earlier from the village. Survivors of the Jauli Canal incident added that the policemen who were watching the assault did not help the victims, as they had said that 'they do not have orders to act'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Jauli Canal Incident\nThis Jauli Canal incident aroused Jats to go on a rampage against Muslims with the claim that the latter were responsible for the killings. This led to the riots, which killed around 43 muslim people and 20 hindu (including a news reporter and a photographer). The casualties occurred before the Army was deployed and a curfew was imposed in Muzaffarnagar and its surrounding Shamli district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Jauli Canal Incident\nEven with the curfew and use of army the clashes continued for the next three days, with casualties increasing to 43 by 12 September 2013. A state home department official said that 38 people died in Muzaffarnagar, 3 in Baghpat, and one each in Saharanpur and Meerut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Sexual violence\nThe first case of gang-rape was registered in the aftermath of the riots from the village of Fugana in Jogiya Kheda. Later two more cases of rape were registered in October. It was reported on 15 November 2013 that a total of 13 rape and sexual harassment cases were registered over the past two months of rioting and the report named 111 people in the incidents but no arrests had been made till then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Aftermath, Mahapanchayat in Sardhana\nA Mahapanchayat (great council) of 40 villages was held in Khera, Sardhana on 29 September 2013 to protest against the Uttar Pradesh government charging the local BJP MLA Sangeet Singh Som under the National Security Act. The crowd became violent when the police began to brandish sticks. The situation turned tense when a rumour spread that a youth injured in police action had died. Crowd set fire police jeeps and other vehicles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Aftermath, Repercussions\nOn 30 October 3 people were killed and 1 injured after a clash between two communities in Mohammadpur Raisingh village of Muzaffarnagar district. Police forces were deployed and an alert was sounded in the entire district. The incident is widely seen as repercussion of the violence in September. On 4 July 2014, a local court has recorded the statement of a witness and deferred till 16 July the hearing in the Kawal killing case here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Action\nApproximately 1,000 army troops were deployed and curfew was imposed in the violence-hit areas. 10,000 Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC) personnel, 1,300 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) troopers and 1,200 Rapid Action Force (RAF) personnel were deployed to control the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Action\nAround 10,000 to 12,000 preventive arrests were made by the police as of 11 September 2013. They cancelled 2,300 arms licenses, seized 2,000 arms, and filed seven cases under the National Security Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Action\nApproximately 50,000 people have been displaced. Some of them took shelter at ten state-run relief camps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Action\nBy 31 August 2013, five FIRs were registered in connection with the case and eleven people have so far been arrested and booked under various charges, including that of rioting and murder. Police arrested several Bhartiya Janta Party leaders for inciting communal violence including Sangeet Som, Rashtriya Lok Dal leader Dharamvir Baliyan, party's district president Ajit Rathi and ten other political activists when they tried to visit communal violence hit Kawal village of Muzaffarnagar district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Investigation\nSeventeen FIRs have been lodged against leaders including one for the Mahapanchayat (great council) which organised by the Bharatiya Kisan Union leaders. The Uttar Pradesh Government announced a one-member judicial commission composed of Justice Vishnu Sahay, a retired Allahabad High Court judge on 9 September 2013. The commission has been asked to submit a report about the violence within two months. The UP government also removed five senior officials of the police and the administration from Muzaffarnagar for their poor handling of the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Investigation, Misuse of social media\nChief Judicial Magistrate issued non-bailable warrants against 16 politicians. On 20 August 2013, BSP MP Kadir Rana was booked for his alleged hate speech in Khalapar area of the city. He was absconding but surrendered on 17 December 2013 and was sent to judicial custody. BJP MLA Sangeet Som was arrested for allegedly uploading a fake video that shows a Muslim mob brutally murdering a Hindu youth and delivering provocative speeches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Investigation, Sting operation\nA sting operation done by Headlines Today revealed that UP Cabinet Minister Azam Khan ordered police officers to release Muslims and not take action against them. However, Azam Khan has denied the charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Response\nPolitical parties such as Bahujan Samaj Party, Bharatiya Janata Party, Rashtriya Lok Dal and Muslim organizations including Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind demanded the dismissal of ruling Samajwadi Party government and imposition of President's rule in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Response\nThe failure of UP government to take prompt action is usually attributed to Akhilesh Yadav's indecision. According to a report in The Caravan, one reason for the hesitation may have been the response to a law and order directive weeks before the riots. Despite a ban on the activities of Vishwa Hindu Parishad, many of the organisations activists' managed to reach Ayodhya for a campaign. Akhilesh's government may have feared a similar undermining of their authority if they tried to ban the meeting of Mahapanchayat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Response\nHome Minister Sushilkumar Shinde informed the press that he had already warned the Uttar Pradesh government about the escalating communal tensions there, for which Akhilesh Yadav had promised preventive measures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Response\nSenior Samajwadi Party leader and Minority Welfare Minister Azam Khan was absent from Party's national executive meeting which was held at Agra. He is reportedly unhappy with the manner in which the district administration handled the situation in Muzaffarnagar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Response\nSompal Shastri, who was a candidate of Samajwadi Party from Baghpat, refused to contest 2014 Loksabha polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Response\nIn a Public Interest Litigation filed by a victim of the violence, Mohammed Haroon and others in the Supreme Court, the number of deaths was claimed to be over 200.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Relief camps\nState Government has organised relief camps in Muzaffarnagar and Shamli districts for riot victims of 9,000 families, with over 50,000 members. According to district magistrates of Muzaffarnagar and Shamli, 3,500 families comprising over 23,000 members in Muzaffarnagar and 3,000 families consisting of over 15,000 persons are staying in camps in Shamli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Relief camps\nIn Muzaffarnagar there are three relief camps where about 1,000 persons of one community have taken shelter while about 3,200 families of another community are staying in another 2 camps. In Shamli they are running 14 relief camps where foodgrains, milk, and water are provided to the families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Relief camps, Deaths in camps\nAs of 22 October 2013, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), has said that seven deaths have occurred in the Loi relief camp in the aftermath of last month's riots in Muzaffarnagar even as organisers at Malakpur camp in Shamli district admitted that eight babies died at the camp. In Joula camp out of 30 deliveries in the camp three babies had died. In December, Al Jazeera English reported that an additional 30 children had \"died due to the harsh cold\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Book\nThe book Living Apart: Communal violence and forced displacement in Muzaffarnagar and Shamli, based on a field report conducted between March and July 2016, chronicles the lives of the victims of the Muzaffarnagar riots and reflects on the violence that occurred. The book also offers criticism for the apparent apathy of the state government for the victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Book\nThe novella In The Name of Blasphemy, written by Neeraj Agnihotri, is also set in the backdrop of Muzaffarnagar riots, talking mainly about the suffering and brutality caused by the riots in the name of religion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Censure and indictment\nA report composed by a six-member team of the Center for Policy Analysis, comprising Harsh Mander, Kamal Chenoy, John Dayal, Seema Mustafa, Sukumar Muralidharan, and E.N. Rammohan, censured members of the Samajwadi Party(SP) and the Bharatiya Janata Party(BJP) for their role in the violence. According to the report, the violence was", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Censure and indictment\nseen to be a choreographed spectacle in which the SP and the BJP would create sharp polarisation on communal grounds, compelling the electorate to make a choice between them and squeezing out other parties which have been claiming significant shares of popular vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234879-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, Censure and indictment\nThe Justice Vishnu Sahai commission, which made an enquiry into the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, blamed members of the SP and the BJP for being involved in the violence. The commission also blamed senior police and administrative officials for errors which led to the escalation of the violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234880-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar National League\nThe MNL Myanmar 2013 is the Myanmar National League's fourth full regular season. The fixture schedule was released on third weeks of December 2012. The season is scheduled to begin on 5 January 2013 and end on 25 August 2013. At the end of the 2013 season, the top two teams from the MNL-2 New Holland League will be promoted to the MNL while the two bottom teams from the MNL will be relegated to the MNL-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234880-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar National League, Teams, Personnel and kits\nNote: 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234880-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar National League, Matches\nFixtures and results of the Myanmar National League 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots\nThe 2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots were a series of conflicts in various cities throughout central and eastern Myanmar (Burma).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, March riots in Meiktila\nTensions between Buddhist and Muslim ethnic groups flared into violent clashes in Meiktila, Mandalay Division on 20 March and continued until the 22nd, killing at least 40 and wounding 61 people. The violence started on 20 March after a Muslim gold shop owner, his wife, and two Muslim employees assaulted a Buddhist customer and her husband in an argument over a golden hairpin. A large mob formed and began to destroy the shop. The heavily outnumbered police reportedly told the mob to disperse after they had destroyed the shop. In the evening, a local Buddhist monk not involved in the incident was dragged from his bicycle, doused in petrol, and burnt alive by six Muslim youths at a nearby mosque. The killing of the monk caused the relatively contained situation to explode, greatly increasing intensity and violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 880]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, March riots in Meiktila\nThe deadliest incident occurred when a Buddhist mob attacked and torched the Mingalar Zayone Islamic Boarding School. While outnumbered security forces stood by, rioters armed with machetes, metal pipes, chains, and stones killed 32 teenage students and four teachers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, March riots in Meiktila\nOn 25 March, communal rioting targeting Muslim houses and mosques spread to the towns of Othekone, Tatkone and Yamenthin. At least 9,000 residents were documented to have been displaced by the violence. In April, the BBC obtained a leaked police video showing outnumbered police officers standing by while rioters torched houses and businesses in Meiktila. The video also shows the burning and killing of at least two Muslim students at the hands of rioters, which included Buddhist monks. The video was captured to prosecute the perpetrators later in court. On the third day, the situation stabilised when the government declared a state of emergency and deployed military troops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, March riots in Meiktila\nOn 21 May, seven Muslims, including the gold shop owner and those who perpetrated the murder of the monk, were convicted for inciting the unrest and jailed from 2 up to 28 years. In July, the Burmese courts sentenced 25 Buddhists to up to 15 years in prison for murder and other crimes during the riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, April riots in Okkan\nOn 30 April 400 Buddhists armed with bricks and sticks overran mosques and torched more than 100 homes and shops in Okkan, killing two people and injuring at least ten more. Another 77 homes were destroyed in the nearby villages of Yadanakon, Panipin, Chaukthe and Thekon. The riot reportedly began when a Muslim woman on a motorcycle accidentally bumped into a Buddhist monk, knocking over his alms bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, May riots in Lashio\nOn 29 May, violence broke out in Lashio, in Shan state bordering China, after reports that a 48-year-old Muslim man named Ne Win poured petrol on a young Buddhist woman with whom he was arguing and set her on fire. In response, a Buddhist mob armed with machetes and bamboo poles torched a mosque, a Muslim orphanage, and several shops after the police refused to surrender Ne Win. The Buddhists and Muslims continued to fight into the next day and at least one person died. Sword-wielding Buddhist gangs began patrolling the streets on motorbikes, forcing as many as 1,400 Muslims to take shelter in a Buddhist monastery until the police and army were able to restore order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, August riots in Kantbalu\nOn 24 August, violence once again flared up in Htan Gon village, 16 kilometres south of Kantbalu in the Sagaing Region, following rumours that a Muslim man tried to sexually assault a young Buddhist woman. Local monks led a 1,000-strong Buddhist mob to retaliate by burning down Muslim owned businesses and the village mosque. State television reported that 42 houses and 15 shops owned primarily by Muslims were razed during the three-hour riot. One firefighter and one civilian were injured in the incident. Police officers were powerless to contain the violence, but finally dispersed the mob by firing their pistols into the air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, October riots in Thandwe\nBetween 29 September and 2 October, Rakhine Buddhists rioted and attacked Kamein Muslims in Thabyachaing and Linthi villages, about 20 kilometres north of the coastal town of Thandwe in Rakhine State. Seven Muslims and two Buddhists were killed and between 70 and 80 houses were set on fire. About 500 ethnic Kamein Muslims were forced to flee from their homes. Local residents were worried that a further round of violence between Rakhine Buddhist and Muslim communities would ensue after two young Rakhine Buddhists girls aged five and six were found murdered on 17 and 18 November in separate incidents. One victim reportedly appeared to have been raped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, Spillover\nIn April 2013, Muslim and Buddhist detainees from Myanmar clashed at a refugee camp in Indonesia. Eight Buddhists were killed and fifteen other people were wounded. Sources have asserted that the provocation for the riot was due to sexual harassment against female Rohingya Muslim inmates by the Rakhine Buddhist inmates. An Indonesian court jailed 14 Muslim Rohingya for nine months each in December. The sentence was lighter than the maximum penalty for violence resulting in death, which is 12 years. The men's lawyer said they would appeal for freedom because there was no real evidence shown during the trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, Spillover\nIn May, two Muslims were arrested for planning to attack the Myanmar embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia with pipe-bombs. The mastermind of the plot said he was still at war with anyone oppressing Muslims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, Spillover\nIn June, at least four Buddhists were murdered in Malaysia which was linked to ethnic tensions in Myanmar. All the victims, including a man slashed to death by a machete-wielding mob in Kuala Lumpur, were Buddhists from Myanmar. Malaysian police had arrested approximately 60 Burmese immigrants in an attempt to control tensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, Spillover\nIn July, Muslims were blamed for the Bodh Gaya bombings, which targeted one of Buddhism's most revered sites. Five people, including two Buddhist monks, were injured by the blasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234881-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Myanmar anti-Muslim riots, Spillover\nOn 5 August, two pipe-bombs went off outside the Ekayana Buddhist Centre in West Jakarta as some 300 people gathered inside the temple for a sermon, injuring three people. There was a note from the perpetrators that read \"We respond to the screams of the Rohingya\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara\nThe Mysore Dasara 2013 is the 403rd edition of the annual royal festive gala event, a show of pomp and tradition that is held in the Mysore city in Karnataka, India for 10 days. The festival is called the Navaratri (meaning nine nights or Dussehra or Vijayadashami which conforms to the bright half (Shukla Paksha) of the month of Ashvin (Ashwayuja), from pratipada (first day) thithi (day) to navami (ninth) thithi (first nine days of the month) in the Hindu calendar corresponding to 5 to 13 October during 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara\nThe festival is also called Nada Habba (festival of the country) in Kannada language. The first day of the nine-day festivity started on 5 October with the traditional and religious special puja (worship) performed to Goddess Chamundeshwari in the Chamundi Temple on top of the Chamundi Hill, which forms the backdrop to the city; the temple was beautifully decorated with flowers and tourist from Gujarat, Rajasthan and other states enthralled the audience with their bhajan singing (devotional songs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0000-0002", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara\nOn this occasion, floral tribute wa offered to the goddess by Jnanpith Award winner Chandrashekhara Kambara and festivities will continue for ten days. The ninth day of the festival is a special event called the Mahanavami when the royal sword is worshipped and taken in a procession of elephants, camels and horses. The festival concludes on 14 October on the dashami day (tenth day from the start of the festival) with the grand finale of Jambusavari (a royal procession) with the idol of Chamundeshawri set in a golden howdah mounted on a richly caparisoned elephant. The procession is taken through the streets of the city and ends in the Banni Mantap where, in the evening, a torch light parade is held. Symbolically, the festival represents the victory of good over evil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara\nDuring the festival period the royal Mysore Palace, fitted with 96,000 bulbs is lit giving the palace a golden hue glittering brightness in the evenings which provides for a grand spectacle. Cultural programmes are part of the festivities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, History\nThe earliest recorded history of dasara celebration was during the reign of emperor Devaraya II of the Vijayanagar Empire during the 15th century which has also been attested by the Persian traveler, Abdul Razzak who witnessed this festival during 1442 - 43 AD. When the Wadiyar kings of Mysore who were initially subordinate to the Vijayanagara Empire, following the decline of the empire, declared themselves as rulers. Then, Raja Wadiyar (1578-1617 CE) founded the Kingdom of Mysore and the Wodeyar Dynasty in 1610.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, History\nHe continued the tradition of holding the dasara, first in Srirangapatna which was then their capital and then in Mysore city after they shifted their capital. In 1805, Krishnaraja Wodeyar III introduced the royal tradition of holding a durbar (Royal court) in the Mysore Palace when members of the royal family, courtiers, invited elites and common people of the city attended, and cultural programmes were performed. This tradition is continued even now, though as a private event called the \"khasgi (private) durbar\" by Srikantadatta Narasimharaja Wodeyar, the former scion of the Wodeyar family. On the durbar days, the present scion of the Wodeyar family occupied the golden thrown with all pomp and splendour when a march past of the royal elephants and horses is also held; open air musical concerts are a regular feature on the occasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, Jambo Savari\nJambo Savari is a royal procession of the Dusara that will take place on the Vijayadashami day (tenth day on 14 October). This procession, as in the past, will be taken through the streets of Mysore city. On this occasion, the main idol of the Goddess Chamundeshwari, placed over a golden howdah on the top of a richly decorated elephant is worshipped at the palace grounds by the royal couple and other assembled dignitaries. The procession starts from the palace with colourful floats, dance troupes, music bands, armed forces, folklores, the royal dignitaries, decorated elephants, horses leading the procession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, Jambo Savari\nThe procession terminates at the Bannimantap, a traditional practice linked to Mahabharata epic. Banni is a tree (Prosopis spicigera) which is worshipped at the mantap or hall. The legend narrated for this event is that during the Mahabharata, Banni tree was the place where the Pandavas the heroes of Mahabharata war had hidden their arms during their one-year vow of remaining incognito Agnatavasa. They retrieved their arms after the one-year period and in the subsequent war they won against Kauravas. Since then symbolically, the kings, before embarking on any warfare, traditionally worshipped this tree to come out successful in the war. After the conclusion of the parade, in the evening, at the same venue, Panjina Kavayithu a locally named event meaning \"torch-light parade\" is held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, Cultural events\nCultural events and exhibition ( inaugurated for the festival which lasts till December) are part of the nine-day festival. On the first day on 5 October, the cultural programmes was launched in the evening with folk and classical music at the Amba Vilas Palace. During the nine-day festival period 150 cultural programmes have been arranged. The venue of these programmes are at the Kalamandira, Jaganmohan Palace, Gyanabharati, Town Hall, Kuppanna Park, and Chikka Gadiyara. On this occasion the prominent buildings and streets are also lighted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, Cultural events\nIconic artist Hema Malini, an actor and dance exponent, is presenting a dance ballet on 8 October. The doyen of Hindustani music Pandit Jasraj will give a musical concert on 13 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, Cultural events\nOn this occasion, on the open grounds in front of the Maharaja College a Yuva Dasara (dasara for the youth) was scheduled to be held on 7 October featuring famous young singers like Sonu Nigam, Shaan and Sunidhi Chauhan, and Vijayprakash of Mysore who sang the famous \"Jai Ho\" song will entertain the audience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234882-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Mysore Dasara, Cultural events\nNancy Powell, the US Ambassador to India and the US Consul General from Chennai are special guests scheduled to attend the \"Jamboo Savari\" and \"Torchlight Parade\" on the tenth day of the festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234883-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 M\u0101ori All Blacks tour of North America\nOn 23 May 2013, it was announced by the New Zealand Rugby Union that following a successful tour in 2012, the M\u0101ori All Blacks will tour North America to take on Canada and the United States. The fixtures would not be the first time the national sides have met the invitational side, as the teams participated in the now defunct Churchill Cup, and the M\u0101oris faced Canada during their 2012 tour where the M\u0101oris were victorious 32-19. The head coach for the tour was announced as Taranaki's head coach Colin Cooper. He was assisted by Crusaders assistant coach Tabai Matson, and former All Black Carl Hoeft as the scrummage coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234883-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 M\u0101ori All Blacks tour of North America, Fixtures, Canada\nTouch judges: USA Appt (United States) USA Appt (United States)Television match official: USA Appt (United States)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234883-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 M\u0101ori All Blacks tour of North America, Fixtures, United States\nTouch judges: David Smortchevsky (Canada) Andrew McMaster (Canada)Television match official: Bryan Arclero (Canada)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234883-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 M\u0101ori All Blacks tour of North America, Squad\nNew Zealand M\u0101ori 29-man squad for the 2013 North America November Tour, facing Canada (3 November) and United States (9 November).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234883-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 M\u0101ori All Blacks tour of North America, Squad\nNote: Bold denotes players that have represented the M\u0101ori All Blacks in previous tours. Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under IRB eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-IRB nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234883-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 M\u0101ori All Blacks tour of North America, Squad, Squad notes\nTim Bateman took captaincy from Tanerau Latimer, who has made himself unavailable to have surgery on a long-standing arm injury. Several players were not considered due to injury including Ross Filipo and Bronson Murray. Ash Dixon replaced Corey Flynn after being ruled out of the tour through injury. Hika Elliot and Piri Weepu sustained injuries during the North American Tour and were replaced by Quentin MacDonald and Chris Smylie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234884-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NA LCS season\nThe 2013 NA LCS season was the first year of the North American League of Legends Championship Series. It was divided into spring and summer splits, each consisting of a regular season and playoff stage. The top six teams from the regular season advanced to the playoff stage, with the top two teams receiving a bye to the semifinals. Regular season games were played in a film studio in Sawtelle, Los Angeles, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234884-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NA LCS season\nThe spring split began on February 7 and concluded with the spring finals on April 28. Both the regular season and playoffs were won by Team SoloMid with a roster consisting of Dyrus, TheOddOne, Reginald, WildTurtle, and Xpecial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234884-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NA LCS season\nThe summer regular season and playoffs were both won by Cloud9 in their debut split, with a roster consisting of Balls, Meteos, Hai, Sneaky and LemonNation. Cloud9 also set a historic regular season finish of 25\u20133, a record which stood until PAX 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234884-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NA LCS season\nCloud9, TeamSoloMid and Team Vulcun qualified for the Season 3 World Championship by placing first, second and third respectively in the summer playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234885-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NAB Cup\nThe 2013 NAB Cup was an Australian Football League (AFL) pre-season competition that was played before the 2013 home and away season. The tournament commenced on 15 February 2013, and concluded with the NAB Cup Grand Final on 15 March 2013. The first group of matches was played between Collingwood, Essendon and Western Bulldogs in Melbourne at Etihad Stadium. The tournament was won by the Brisbane Lions, its first pre-season premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234885-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NAB Cup\nThe competition format was the same as the previous year and once again featured eighteen teams. Matches were played at both regular AFL venues and select regional centres. All matches in the first three rounds of the competition counted equally with four points for a win and percentage also being taken into account. The two best-performed teams, the Brisbane Lions and Carlton, played the NAB Cup Grand Final on 15 March. Teams not playing in the first week of Round 1 of the 2013 AFL season played one last pre-season match at various metropolitan locations across Australia in week 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234885-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NAB Cup\nThe format for the 2013 NAB Cup was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 60]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234885-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NAB Cup, Games\nThe fixtures were announced by the AFL on 24 October 2012. All times listed are local times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 19], "content_span": [20, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234886-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NACAC Cross Country Championships\nThe 2013 NACAC Cross Country Championships took place on January 26, 2013. The races were held at the Manchester Golf Club in Mandeville, Jamaica. A detailed report of the event was given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234886-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NACAC Cross Country Championships, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 114 athletes from 8 countries participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234887-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NACAM Rally Championship\nThe 2013 NACAM Rally Championship is the sixth season of the NACAM Rally Championship. This Championship is the FIA regional rally championship for the North America and Central America (NACAM) region. The season began April 20 in Oaxaca, Mexico, and is scheduled to end November 24 in Jamaica, after six events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234887-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NACAM Rally Championship\nReigning champion Ricardo Trivi\u00f1o won his fourth NACAM championship, winning four of the six rallies, three of them outright. Trivino won by 21 points over Venezuelan driver Alejandro Lombardo. Costa Rican driver Andr\u00e9s Molina won a season long battle with Mexican Carlos Izquierdo for third in the championship. Lombardo and Molina were the only drivers to take first place in NACAM points away from Trivi\u00f1o, having done so at the Peruvia Rally Ca\u00f1ete and the Costa Rican Rally Costa del Pacifico respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship\nThe 2013 NACRA Rugby Championship is a rugby union championship for Tier 3 North American and Caribbean teams, and took place between January and June, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship\nThe top four teams from the second round of 2012 NACRA Championship qualified for the second round of the 2013 championship, while the third place team from the north and south pools of the 2012 championship qualified for the final games of the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship\nThe championship is split between north and south, with the winner of each division playing in a final game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship\nThis was the first game in the NACRA Championship for Cura\u00e7ao and Turks and Caicos Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship, Round 1, Round 1b - North\nThe Bahamas hosted a game against the winner of Round 1a - North (USA South). The winner progressed to Round 2 - North to take on Bermuda and Cayman Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship, Round 1, Round 1b - South\nBarbados hosted game against the winner of Round 1a - South (Cura\u00e7ao). The winner progressed to Round 2 - South to take on Guyana and Trinidad & Tobago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship, Round 2\nRound 2 was played in regional single round robin (2 games for each team). The top team from the North pool and South pool progressed to the NACRA Championship final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship, Round 3\nThe winning team from Round 2 - North played off against the winning team from Round 2 South for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234888-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Rugby Championship, Round 3\nUSA South is the winner of the 2013 NACRA Rugby Championship. Matt Upton presumably won the MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234889-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Women's Sevens\nThe 2013 NACRA Women's Sevens was the ninth tournament of the North America and Caribbean Women's Sevens Championship, the official rugby sevens continental championships organized by NACRA. Both the women's and men's competitions were held at the George Town which was in the Cayman Islands. It was held on 9\u201310 November. The stadium was the Truman Bodden Stadium as it was also a qualification tournament for the Central America and Caribbean Games which would be held in Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234889-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Women's Sevens, General\nThe teams competed in two groups on the first day of the competition in a round-robin format. After the group stage, the teams advanced to the playoff stage beginning with the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234889-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Women's Sevens, General\nOn the first day there were no surprises, the favored team which was the Canadian reserves then easily advanced to the finals, in which they defeated the Mexicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234889-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NACRA Women's Sevens, General\nThree teams, besides Mexico, fulfilling the conditions imposed by the ODECABE earned promotion to the Central America and Caribbean Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234890-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Buffalo Funds - NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament was held in March at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Missouri. The 76th annual NAIA basketball tournament features 32 teams playing in a single-elimination format. The opening game started on March 13, and the National Championship Game was played on March 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234891-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 NAIA Division II Men\u2019s Basketball National Championship was held in March at Keeter Gymnasium in Point Lookout, Missouri. The 22nd annual NAIA basketball tournament featured thirty-two teams playing in a single-elimination format. The championship game was won by Cardinal Stritch University over William Penn University by a score of 73 to 59.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234891-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Tournament field\nThe 2013 tournament field was announced on March 5. The field was made up of 23 automatic qualifiers and eight at-large bids and one automatic host bid presented to College of the Ozarks. This tournament field welcomed four newcomers, Madonna (Michigan), Rochester (Michigan), Saint Xavier (Illinois) and Valley City State (North Dakota).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 67], "content_span": [68, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234891-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Highlights, First round\nWith five players scoring in double figures, including Roosevelt Green with eighteen, sixth seeded St. Xavier's dominated St. Mary's in first round action by a score of 82-60.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234891-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Highlights, Elite Eight\nDerek Semenas and Darren Moore both scored eighteen, and Moore pulled in eleven rebounds as second seed Cardinal Stritch defeated Dordt 82-76 in double overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234891-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Highlights, Championship game\nStritch won their first ever national championship 73-59 over William Penn on an impressive 21 point, seven rebound performance by Darren Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 80], "content_span": [81, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234892-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Football National Championship\nThe 2013 NAIA Football National Championship was a four-round sixteen team tournament played between November 23 through December 21 of 2013. The tournament concluded on December 21 with a single game played as the 58th Annual Russell Athletic NAIA Football National Championship. The game matched two undefeated teams: #1 Cumberlands Patriots (13-0) against #2 Grand View Vikings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234892-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA Football National Championship\nThe championship game was played at Barron Stadium in Rome, Georgia. A total of sixteen teams participated in the single-elimination tournament from across the country. Placement in the tournament was based on the final edition of the 2013 NAIA Coaches' Poll. This year's field included the top 16 teams from the final poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234893-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NAIA football rankings\nOne human poll makes up the 2013 National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) football rankings, sometimes called the NAIA Coaches' Poll or the football ratings. When the regular season is complete, the NAIA plans to sponsor a playoff to determine the year's national champion. A final poll will be taken after completion of the 2013 NAIA Football National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234893-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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 end of 2013, the team 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, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234893-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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 was 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, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series\nThe 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series was the nineteenth season of the Camping World Truck Series, the third highest stock car racing series sanctioned by NASCAR in North America. The season was contested over twenty-two races, beginning with the NextEra Energy Resources 250 at Daytona International Speedway and ending with the Ford EcoBoost 200 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Matt Crafton of ThorSport Racing claimed his first championship with only one finish outside the top twenty and by completing every lap of the season. Toyota won the year's Manufacturers' Championship, while Kyle Busch Motorsports won the Owners' Championship, with its No. 51 entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Schedule\nThe final calendar was released on November 28, 2012, containing 22 races. Speed was re-launched in August as Fox Sports 1. The two iterations televised every race in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nPrior to the season, NASCAR lowered its age limit for participation in the Camping World Truck Series to age 16, with a stipulation that 16- and 17-year-old drivers could only participate at races held at ovals 1 mile and shorter, and at road course tracks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nThe Camping World Truck Series started its 2013 season at Daytona International Speedway. Johnny Sauter would hold off Kyle Busch over the last few laps to avenge his loss in 2012 and take the victory. Following a month-long break, the Trucks returned to action at Martinsville Speedway. Rookie polesitter Jeb Burton would dominate most of the race. However, Daytona winner Sauter passed Burton with 17 to go, and pulled away from teammate Matt Crafton to win his second race in a row. The trucks traveled to Rockingham Speedway for the first stand-alone weekend of the season. Nationwide regular Kyle Larson dominated the race, leading 187 laps and cruising to his first career win. Ron Hornaday Jr. was penalized late in the race for intentionally sending Bubba Wallace into the fences, later fined $25,000 and was put on probation until June 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nThe Truck Series returned to action at the repaved Kansas Speedway. James Buescher, who dominated the intermediate tracks en route to the 2012 title, dominated the race, but was hampered by a slow four tire pit stop late in the race. Matt Crafton and Joey Coulter would inherit the top two positions, and the two would swap the lead for the final 30 laps until Crafton prevailed, taking his 3rd career Truck win since 2011. At Charlotte Motor Speedway, Kyle Busch would rally from a pre-race engine change and would drive past Miguel Paludo late in the race to claim his first Truck Series win since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nWith a week off, the Truck Series returned to action at Dover International Speedway. Polesitter Bubba Wallace would dominate the race. However, teammate and boss Kyle Busch took the lead from Wallace and Matt Crafton on lap 145 and never looked back, taking his second consecutive win of the season. At Texas, Ty Dillon would have the dominant truck, though four-time Texas winner Brendan Gaughan took the lead from Dillon during the middle portion of the race. However, a loose truck would take Gaughan out of contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nOn the restart at lap 144, rookie Jeb Burton drove past Dillon and held him off for his first career win. At Kentucky Speedway, Wallace once again dominated the race, leading 54 laps, but was taken out in a mid race incident with polesitter Ryan Blaney. Ty Dillon would inherit the lead from Kyle Busch and easily held off Busch and Brad Keselowski for his first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nThe Truck Series arrived at the Eldora Speedway for the inaugural Mudsummer Classic, the first race on dirt in any series since 1970. Ken Schrader started on pole, the oldest pole sitter in any NASCAR series at 58 years, but Austin Dillon and Kyle Larson battled for the lead throughout most of the race, with Dillon leading a race-high 63 laps. Dillon held off Larson and Ryan Newman on a green-white-checker finish to win his first start of the year. The Trucks would then trek to Pocono Raceway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nAfter a brief rain delay before the race, Ryan Blaney pulled away from pole sitter Miguel Paludo on the second green white checkered attempt to take his first win of the season. After a week off, the series returned to action at Michigan International Speedway. Polesitter Jeb Burton would dominate most of the race, seeking his second win of the year. Defending champion James Buescher would take the lead late in the race from Kyle Busch and would go on to take his first win of the season. At Bristol Motor Speedway, defending winner Timothy Peters led most of the race. However, Kyle Busch would rally from a penalty to take the lead late from Peters and hold off his late pass attempt to take the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nThe Trucks made their inaugural trip to Canadian Tire Motorsport Park and the series' first road course since 2000 for the Chevrolet Silverado 250. Chase Elliott led most of the first half, and Ty Dillon would dominate most of the second half of the race. However, Dillon's strategy of pitting on lap 35 of 64 forced him to stretch his fuel. Elliott would chase down Dillon through the last 15 laps. On the final lap in turn 10 (the final corner), Dillon attempted to block the inside line from Elliott, but Elliott spun Dillon and went on to become the youngest winner in series history, at 17\u00a0years, 9\u00a0months and 4\u00a0days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nThe Trucks then made their return to Iowa Speedway. Ross Chastain would dominate most of the race, leading 116 laps. Due to NASCAR allowing the teams only two sets of tires, James Buescher made the call to pit late to take a final set of sticker tires while others had used up their sets. This would prove to be the winning move as Buescher made his way past Chastain and held him off on two green white checkered attempts to take his second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nAt Chicago, Kyle Busch would dominate most of the race, but would have to fend off Brad Keselowski for his fourth Truck Series win. The Trucks then made their stop at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Late in the race, Ron Hornaday Jr. looked to snap his winless streak. However, Jennifer Jo Cobb slammed the wall, forcing a restart with 2 to go. Hornaday spun his tires, allowing Timothy Peters to get by and take his first win on an intermediate track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nWith the season winding down, the Truck Series traveled south to Talladega Superspeedway. Most of the afternoon would be dominated by survival. On the final run to the finish, Daytona winner Johnny Sauter, with a push from teammate Matt Crafton, vaulted ahead of the field in the tri-oval and took his third win of the season as chaos erupted behind him. The Trucks then returned to Martinsville Speedway. There, outside polesitter Bubba Wallace would dominate the race, while Cup drivers Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick were taken out in separate incidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nWallace would hold off Brendan Gaughan over the final 10 laps to take his first career win in the Truck Series, becoming only the second African American to win in NASCAR's top 3 series. Returning to Texas Motor Speedway, Ty Dillon would dominate the night, leading 130 of 147 laps en route to his third win of the season and the 100th win for the No. 3 in NASCAR's top series. Trekking out to the Phoenix International Raceway, it would be an all-night duel between young drivers Erik Jones and Ross Chastain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nFollowing a caution caused by dual spins by Timothy Peters and Bubba Wallace, Jones would pass Chastain on the restart with 10 to go and hang on to become the youngest winner in series history at 17\u00a0years, 5\u00a0months and 9\u00a0days, beating Chase Elliott's record from September. Points leader Matt Crafton continued his top-10 form, and only needed to start the final round at Homestead to win his maiden NASCAR championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Season summary\nAt the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, while Crafton wrapped up the championship by starting his engine, the Owners Championship and Rookie of the Year battles were still to be decided. The night would be dominated by polesitter Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch, the latter trying to win the owners championship. It seemed as though Crafton's 88 team would wrap up both championships when he crashed on lap 136 with Joey Coulter and Brennan Newberry. Busch would hold off Blaney and Jeb Burton on three green-white-checkered finishes to take his sixth win of the season and claim the Owners Championship with Crafton finishing 21st. Blaney would claim Rookie of the Year honors over Burton and Bubba Wallace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234894-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Results and standings, Drivers' standings\n(key) Bold\u00a0- Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0- Pole position earned by final practice results or rainout. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 81], "content_span": [82, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234895-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Canadian Tire Series\nThe 2013 NASCAR Canadian Tire Series season is the seventh season of the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series taking place in the summer of 2013. The season composed of twelve races at ten different venues. Seven of those events were contested on oval courses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234895-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Canadian Tire Series, Summary\nThe seventh season consists of 12 events spanning across 5 provinces featuring 12 events. Television rights are once again licensed to TSN in one-hour tape-delayed episodes, excluding both events at the Canadian Tire Motorsport Park road course which will be aired live on TSN and CTV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234895-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Canadian Tire Series, Summary\nThe season started on May 19 at the newly renovated Canadian Tire Motorsport Park with Louis-Philippe Dumoulin collecting his first series win with longtime veteran Jeff Lapcevich finishing second. After a two-year hiatus the series is set to return to the Autodrome St. Eustache on 27 July as the events in Montreal and Edmonton Airport will not return the calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234895-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Canadian Tire Series, Results, Championship standings\nBold\u00a0\u2013 Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0\u2013 Pole position earned by points standings. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series\nThe 2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series was the 32nd season of the Nationwide Series, a stock car racing series sanctioned by the NASCAR in the United States. The season was contested over thirty-three races and started on February 23, 2013 at Daytona International Speedway, with the DRIVE4COPD 300, and ended on November 16 with the Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Austin Dillon of Richard Childress Racing won the Drivers' Championship, becoming the first driver in the three major NASCAR series to do so without recording a win. The No. 22 entry of Penske Racing won the Owners' Championship, while Ford won the Manufacturers' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nThe 2013 season sees significant driver changes. With Nationwide champion Ricky Stenhouse Jr. moving to the Sprint Cup Series with Roush Fenway Racing, Trevor Bayne, who ran a partial Nationwide schedule with Roush, inherited the No. 6 Ford for 2013. Runner-up Elliott Sadler announced his departure from Richard Childress Racing in 2012, and signed to drive for Joe Gibbs Racing full-time in the No. 11 Toyota. In addition to Sadler, Brian Vickers, after running a partial Cup schedule, return to the Nationwide Series full-time for the first time since his championship season in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Teams and drivers, Driver changes\nJGR's former driver Brian Scott took over Elliott Sadler's old No. 2 ride at RCR, signing a multi-year deal with the team. Truck Series driver Parker Kligerman signed with Kyle Busch Motorsports for 2013, driving the No. 77 Toyota for the season. Former Sprint Cup driver Regan Smith drove the full season for JR Motorsports in the No. 7, replacing Danica Patrick. Kasey Kahne and his USAC driver Brad Sweet also moved from Turner Motorsports to JRM, sharing the No. 5 Camaro for the season. TriStar Motorsports fielded a car for Louisiana native Hal Martin, running for Rookie of the Year. Jeffrey Earnhardt, after driving a limited schedule, drove the full season with Go Green Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Schedule\nThe final calendar was released on November 13, 2012, containing 33 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Schedule, Schedule changes\nOn October 5, 2012, Circuit Gilles Villeneuve's promoter Fran\u00e7ois Dumontier announced that the series would not return to the circuit for the 2013 season. The event was later replaced by Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course located in Lexington, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Changes, Rule changes\nAfter banning all testing on tracks where any of the three premier series sanction races in 2008, NASCAR announced on September 29, 2012, that they will implement limited testing at tracks which sanction a race on the schedule. However, NASCAR stated that each team would only be allowed to test two different times, with each test at a different track. Rookie of the Year participants will also be allowed one extra test session, while NASCAR will choose two other events for extra testing during the race weekend. NASCAR also announced that the Nationwide Series's grid would decrease from 43 cars to 40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nThe Nationwide Series kicked off the 2013 season at Daytona International Speedway in the DRIVE4COPD 300. Following a big crash with 14 laps to go that resulted in a red flag, Regan Smith took the lead, attempting to take his second consecutive win. On the final lap, Smith attempted to block a pass attempt by Brad Keselowski and got turned into the outside wall, causing a big crash behind. Stewart drove to the inside and won his seventh career Daytona Nationwide race. However, the win was overshadowed by the last lap crash. Kyle Larson, who was collected into the crash, had his car lift off the ground and slamm into the safety fence. The car's engine and front wheels landed in the grandstands, injuring 33 fans (all of whom survived).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nThe series moved out west to Phoenix International Raceway. The race would be dominated by Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, and Brian Vickers. While Kenseth and Vickers had separate incidents taking them out of contention, Busch rallied from an early speeding penalty and drove to his first Nationwide win since 2011. The series made its lone stop at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nWith Cup contenders Keselowski and Dale Earnhardt Jr. having multiple issues throughout the day, Nationwide regular Sam Hornish Jr. pulled away from Kyle Busch in the closing laps to capture his first win of the season. Heading to the first short track of the season at Bristol, Kyle Busch once again dominated the race, leading 156 laps and holding off rookie Kyle Larson on the last lap for his second win of the season. Heading out west to the Auto Club Speedway, Kyle Busch would once again dominate the race weekend from the pole, easily winning his second consecutive race of the season and JGR's 9th consecutive win at ACS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nFollowing another off week, the Nationwide Series rolled into Texas Motor Speedway. Nationwide points leader Sam Hornish Jr. had the fastest car of the night, but contact with Jeremy Clements took Hornish out of contention. Kyle Busch took over the lead and easily won his third consecutive race of the season. The following week at Richmond International Raceway, the race would be dominated by Cup regulars Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch, and polesitter Brad Keselowski. The three swapped the lead throughout the night, with Busch and Harvick's cars fading in the closing laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nKeselowski made a late pass on Harvick and went on to capture his first win of the 2013 season. The teams then headed south to Talladega Superspeedway. Joey Logano would dominate the race and looked set to win another plate race. With the race cut to 110 laps due to impending darkness, Regan Smith, with help from JR Motorsports teammate Kasey Kahne, stormed past Logano in a three wide finish on the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nThough Kahne beat Smith to the start finish line, Smith was ahead of his teammate at the scoring loop, handing him his first win of the season as well as the points lead. The night race at Darlington Raceway would be dominated by JGR. Pole winner Kyle Busch dominated the race, leading 107 laps and holding off teammates Elliott Sadler and Brian Vickers to take his 5th win of the season. Austin Dillon started on pole for the History 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, but Kyle Busch once again dominated. Busch led the most laps and took his 2nd consecutive win (his 6th of the season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nAt Dover International Speedway, Kyle Busch once again dominated the race, looking for his 7th win of the season. A call for four tires late in the race proved to be his undoing and sent him outside the top-10. Joey Logano, who had won the previous year's race with Joe Gibbs Racing, inherited the lead and went on to win. The first stand-alone weekend for the Nationwide Series came at Iowa Speedway. Polesitter Austin Dillon dominated the race that had been pushed back from Saturday to Sunday and interrupted due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nHowever, Trevor Bayne would chase down Dillon and pass him before the race was declared official on lap 207, handing Bayne his first win of the season. The Nationwide Series headed north to Michigan International Speedway. Fuel mileage was key to winning the race, and points leader Regan Smith would take the lead over Parker Kligerman with 13 laps to go, and held off rookie Kyle Larson to take his second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nHeading to the first road course of the season at Road America, polesitter A. J. Allmendinger would dominate most of the race, holding off Justin Allgaier on a green-white-checkered finish to earn his first win in NASCAR. The following week at Kentucky Speedway, the race would be dominated by Cup regulars Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski. Though Busch would lead the most laps, Keselowski emerged with the dominant car of the night, being declared the race winner after the race was called due to rain on lap 170. The Nationwide Series made its return to Daytona the following week. The Penske duo of Sam Hornish and Joey Logano would be dominant throughout most of the race. However, Sprint Cup regular Matt Kenseth, with help from James Buescher, worked his way to the front and held off the field for the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nAt Loudon, Kyle Busch would once again dominate the race, but would have to survive a late red flag, as well as three green-white-checkered finishes to return to victory lane. At Chicagoland, defending winner Elliott Sadler had the dominant car, looking to turn his season around. However, Sam Hornish Jr. would rally from an early speeding penalty to take the lead from Sadler, only to be passed by teammate Joey Logano, who held on to take his second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nAt Indianapolis, pole-sitter Kyle Busch dominated the race, leading 92 of 100 laps and holding off Brian Scott to win his eighth race of the year. The series then returned to Iowa. Despite polesitter Austin Dillon dominating the race, Cup driver Brad Keselowski would rally twice in the race, first from a pit road penalty, then an overheating issue. Though both Dillon and Keselowski took four tires during the final round of pitstops at lap 200, Keselowski would charge through the field and take his third win of the season. At Watkins Glen, Keselowski and Penske Racing teammate Sam Hornish Jr. dominated the race, and Keselowski won his second consecutive Nationwide race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nAt Bristol, Kyle Busch started from the pole, and led 228 of 250 laps to win. Kevin Harvick held off Kyle Busch to win at Atlanta the following week. The Nationwide Series made its return to Richmond for its 1,000th race. Polesitter Brian Scott dominated the field, leading 239 of 250 laps. However, on the final restart, Scott spun his tires, handing the lead over to Brad Keselowski who held him and Regan Smith off for the win, as well as the 19th consecutive time that Cup regulars had won at Richmond. The series then returned to Chicagoland Speedway, where Kyle Busch led 195 of 200 laps to take his tenth win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nThe Nationwide Series then held its final stand alone race of the year at Kentucky. Truck series regular Ryan Blaney would dominate the field, easily taking his first career win. Returning to Dover, multiple pit strategies were the order of the day. While Trevor Bayne decided to pit on lap 25 Joey Logano and others decided to pit on lap 40. Kyle Busch, who was taken out of contention due to pit strategy, decided to max out his cars fuel mileage to lap 86. However, he was forced to pit under the green flag, costing him the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nLogano would take back the lead from Busch on lap 142 and would win his fourth consecutive Dover Nationwide race. The series made the final Midwestern stop at Kansas Speedway, where the race would be dominated by Regan Smith, hoping to put himself back in the championship hunt. However, Matt Kenseth's team would make a late call to pit for two tires, forcing him to conserve fuel. However, contact between Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski, whose respective cars were fighting for the owner's championship, late in the race caused a caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nOn the following restart, Kenseth pulled away for his second Nationwide win of the year. The teams then headed home to Charlotte Motor Speedway. Championship contender Sam Hornish Jr. dominated the early stages of the race with a fast car. Despite an early two-tire stop by Matt Kenseth, Hornish returned to the lead until the middle stages of the race, when Regan Smith took the lead after a round of pit stops. Rookie Kyle Larson used the outside lane to pass Smith and lead until lap 163. A slow stop by Larson's crew handed the lead to polesitter Kyle Busch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nDespite Hornish reeling in Busch after the restart, his car faded over the long run, allowing Busch to retake the lead with seven laps to go and sail to his eleventh win of the season. In the second Texas race, Alex Bowman won the pole for the 2nd straight Texas race but Sprint Cup driver Brad Keselowski dominated the race on his way to 7th win of the season. At Phoenix, Kyle Busch dominated from the pole and held off Justin Allgaier to sweep the Phoenix races in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0011-0004", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Season summary\nAustin Dillon and Sam Hornish Jr were separated by 8 points heading into the final race. At the season finale at Homestead, Sam Hornish Jr won the pole and was trailing Austin Dillon by 8 points. He and fellow Nationwide regular Kyle Larson dominated but Brad Keselowski passed Larson on fresher tires with less than 10 laps to go to score his eighth win of the season. Austin Dillon would finish twelfth and win the championship by 3 points despite not winning a race all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234896-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series, Results and standings, Drivers' 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, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race\nThe 2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on May 18, 2013, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Contested over 90\u00a0laps, the it was the second exhibition race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports took his record fourth All-Star Race victory, while Joey Logano finished second. Kyle Busch, Kasey Kahne, and Kurt Busch rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, Background\nThe track, Charlotte Motor Speedway, is a four-turn quad-oval track that is 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at twenty-four degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is five degrees. The back stretch, opposite of the front, also had a five degree banking. The racetrack has seats for 134,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, Background\nA total of 23 drivers were entered for the Sprint Showdown, while 19 different drivers were eligible to participate in the All-Star Race, including race winners from last season through the 2013 Bojangles' Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway and previous All-Star race winners from the past 10\u00a0years. The drivers who finished first and second in the Sprint Showdown, a 40-lap preliminary race, were also eligible to compete in the race, as well as the Sprint fan vote winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, Background\nThe race was 90 laps long, separated into five segments: four segments of 20 laps and a final segment of 10 laps. Following the fourth segment, drivers were repositioned by their average finish in the previous four segments to determine what position they would enter pit road. A mandatory four-tire pit stop was between the final two segments, while pitting between the 20 lap segments was optional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, Sprint Showdown\nMartin Truex, Jr. started on pole, but Jamie McMurray passed him in turn two on the first lap. McMurray led all 20 laps to win the first segment after holding off a mid-segment charge by Truex. Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. finished the segment in third, followed by Juan Pablo Montoya and Paul Menard. During the competition caution between segments, Casey Mears stayed out as the rest of the field came to pit road. McMurray took two tires and restarted second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, Sprint Showdown\nHe quickly re-took the lead and pulled away from the field as Stenhouse and Truex (who took four tires) tried to catch up. Stenhouse slightly closed in on McMurray over the next few laps while Truex and Jeff Burton battled for third. McMurray once again led all 20 laps to win segment two and advance into the All-Star Race. Stenhouse finished in second to advance as well. Burton, Menard, Truex, and Montoya rounded out the top six. Danica Patrick, who finished ninth, won the fan vote to advance to the All-Star Race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race\nCarl Edwards started on pole and choose the outside lane, with Kurt Busch starting second. Busch took the lead from Edwards in turn three on lap one as Brad Keselowski had transmission failure at the end of lap two. The first caution flag waved on lap eight for a rain shower and 11 of the remaining 21 cars (including Mark Martin, Tony Stewart, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Danica Patrick, and Jimmie Johnson) made pit stops. The field ran under caution for five laps, until the red flag came out on lap 13 and the jet dryers were called onto the track. After a 41-minute red flag, the field took the restart on lap 16. Kurt Busch continued to lead and won the first 20-lap segment. He was followed by Kyle Busch, Clint Bowyer, Carl Edwards, and Kasey Kahne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race\nFollowing the caution, Kurt Busch took the green flag with Kyle Busch on his outside. Kyle quickly moved around Kurt in turn two, but Kurt came back alongside Kyle in turn three. This allowed Clint Bowyer to pass them both and pull away with the lead, while Kyle and Kurt settled in second and third, respectively. On lap 25, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. bounced off the frontstretch wall and into Mark Martin, who was sent spinning into the infield, to bring out the third caution. On the restart, Kyle Busch passed Bowyer for the lead in turn three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race\nBusch led the next 12 laps to win the second segment, followed by Bowyer, Edwards, Kurt Busch, and Jimmie Johnson. During the caution, all drivers came down pit road, with the exception of Bowyer, Edwards, and Martin. On the restart, Bowyer continued to lead over Edwards and Kyle Busch. Edwards then quickly faded, leaving Busch in second and Johnson in third place. On lap 44, Kyle Busch passed Bowyer for the lead and pulled away, leaving Kurt Busch, Bowyer, Johnson, and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. to battle for the second position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race\nBowyer then fell back, leaving Kurt Busch in second, Johnson in third, and Earnhardt in fourth. Kyle Busch would lead the last 17 laps of the third 20-lap segment to win the segment (his second segment win). He was followed by Kurt Busch, Johnson, Earnhardt, and Joey Logano. The whole field came onto pit road during the caution (with some taking two tires and others taking four) and Kasey Kahne rolled off of pit road first, followed by Kevin Harvick, Greg Biffle, Denny Hamlin, and Kyle Busch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race\nAt the start of the fourth 20-lap segment, Harvick nosed ahead of Kahne, but Kahne was able to stay in front of Harvick and pull away. As a result of everyone shuffling on the restart, Kyle Busch fell back several positions but regained to sixth. The fifth caution waved on lap 65 for debris resulting from contact between Biffle and Earnhardt. Kahne led on the restart (lap 71), followed by Kurt Busch, Harvick, and Johnson. Busch passed Kahne for the lead on lap 72 and started to pull away as Kahne and Johnson battled for second. Busch led the last nine laps of segment four to win the segment (his second segment win), followed by Kahne, Johnson, Kyle Busch, and Matt Kenseth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234897-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Report, NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race\nDue to a new stipulation, the field was shuffled in order of their average finishes in the first four segments before the mandatory pit stop. This put Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Kahne, Johnson, and Logano as the first five onto pit road. Kahne came out first, followed by Johnson, Kyle Busch, Logano, and Kurt Busch. On the restart, Kahne and Johnson ran side-by-side for two laps until Johnson finally cleared Kahne and moved away. Johnson sped away over the last eight laps to win his second All-Star Race in a row (becoming the only driver to win four All-Star races). Logano finished second, followed by Kyle Busch, Kahne, and Kurt Busch. Hamlin, Earnhardt, Jamie McMurray, Matt Kenseth, and Edwards rounded out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series\nThe 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series was the 65th season of NASCAR professional stock car racing in the United States and the 42nd modern-era Cup season. The season began on February 16, 2013, at Daytona International Speedway, with the Sprint Unlimited, followed by the Daytona 500 on February 24. The season ended with the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on November 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series\nThe 2013 season was the first season using the Generation 6 race car, the Car of Tomorrow's successor, and marked the return to the qualifying procedure that was used before the 2005 season. However, at the two road courses on the schedule drivers qualified in groups instead of single laps. In September 2012, NASCAR removed a ban introduced in the 2008 season on testing at tracks that were on any of the premier series' schedules, replacing it with a testing limit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series\nChevrolet entered the season as the reigning Manufacturer's Champions, while Brad Keselowski was the reigning Drivers' Champion. However, because Keselowski failed to make the Chase, he was unable to defend his title. By the end of the season, Jimmie Johnson claimed his sixth Sprint Cup Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series\nThis would be the first season without Dodge since 2000 and the first without NASCAR legend Bill Elliott since 1974, although he did come out of retirement for a one-off start in the Xfinity Series in 2018 at Road America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Teams and drivers, Team changes\nPenske Racing changed their manufacturer to Ford after being with Dodge since 2003. Penske had collaborated with Ford from 1994 through 2002. During the off-season, Inception Motorsports was purchased by Swan Energy Inc. CEO Brandon Davis, renaming the team to Swan Racing. However, David Stremme remained as the driver of the team's car. Tommy Baldwin Racing changed the number of their primary car from 36 to 7 in honor of former Modified Series driver Tom Baldwin Sr., the father of team owner Tommy Baldwin Jr. During the season, James Finch announced that he would sell Phoenix Racing, and that his final race as owner of the team would be the Crown Royal presents the Samuel Deeds 400 at the Brickyard which was later changed to the AdvoCare 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Generation 6 car\nIn preparation for the 2013 season, NASCAR allowed the manufacturers participating in the series to develop a new car that resembles the production models. Areas of the car that were allowed to be changed were the area above the doors, hood and truck lid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Generation 6 car\nFord was the first to announce their 2013 car on January 24, 2012, with the Ford Fusion; however, the company modified the car in June 2012 by designing a new grille and hood lines. Afterward, Dodge revealed their 2013 Dodge Charger, while Chevrolet announced that the Chevrolet Impala would no longer race in the series, instead the Chevrolet SS, which is expected to go into production in 2014, would. On May 22, 2012, Toyota announced that the Toyota Camry would continue to be their race model for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Generation 6 car\nOn July 30, 2012, NASCAR approved each of the manufacturer's design after the results of the final aerodynamic test, allowing them to begin making parts for the cars. The new cars are expected to premiere in the 2013 Daytona Speedweeks. Dodge announced on August 7, 2012, that it would not participate in the series during the 2013 season after recording 55 victories in the previous eleven years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Generation 6 car\nTo benefit the safety of the drivers, NASCAR improved the roll cage that surrounds the driver after a large amount testing in the NASCAR Research and Development Center. The improvement features a new forward roof bar and center roof support bar that intersects in the center of the front section of the roll cage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Generation 6 car\nNASCAR later released cosmetic changes to the 2013 car, including the driver's last name on the windshield, the sponsor's logo placed on the roof, the team logo being moved from the headlights to the front bumper, and the reduction in size of contingency decals and car numbers due to the smaller size of the car. During the Autoweek's Racing Conference in Detroit, Michigan, NASCAR announced that the manufacturer logos will be placed on either side of the drivers' name to increase manufacturer identity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Generation 6 car\nStarting with the Subway Fresh Fit 500, the roof camera was removed for approximately two-thirds of points races to lessen turbulent air impact, though tracks like Daytona International Speedway, Talladega Superspeedway, Sonoma Raceway and Watkins Glen International retained the cameras.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nAfter banning all testing on tracks where any of the three premier series sanction races in 2008, NASCAR announced on September 29, 2012, that they will implement limited testing at tracks which sanction a race on the schedule. However, NASCAR stated that each organization is only allowed to test four different times, with each test at a different track. Rookie of the Year participants were allowed one extra test session, while NASCAR chose two other events for extra testing during the race weekend. NASCAR changed the car inspection process as well. The new process involves a laser mechanism which scans different parts of the car. Teams were first introduced to this new inspection process during the Talladega Superspeedway and Martinsville Speedway testing. It was also used during preseason testing at Charlotte Motor Speedway to make sure it doesn't have any problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 933]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nFurthermore, NASCAR removed the top-35 qualifying rule that was introduced in 2005 to revert to the previous qualifying rule. The rule was originally established so that full-time teams, as well as their sponsors, were ensured a spot in the race when 50+ cars attempted to race. For 2013, the top 36 starting positions were set by qualifying speed. Positions 37 to 42 were set by provisionals (based on owners points). Similar to previous seasons, the forty-third position were given to the most recent series champion who didn't qualify on time or the next available team in owner's points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nUnlike in previous years, the previous years' Owners points were only used for the first three races of a season instead of five. Also, NASCAR instituted a random draw to determine qualifying order instead of inverting the first practice speeds. Director of Competition Robin Pemberton stated the change was made due to teams manipulating their first practice run to get a later qualifying draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nOn January 9, 2013, the sanctioning body disclosed changes to track drying processes. At first, Brian France wanted to shorten waiting times by 80 percent, but he expects it to improve by 60 percent, stating, \"We won't be at 80 percent, but we're going to be dramatically better with a whole new system on how to dry the track as much as 60 percent (faster) and we will get to the 80 percent goal.\" Instead of jet dryers, track crews had a vacuum following a different air-powered system. Afterward, France said, \"We're patenting some technology that (uses) air pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nThink of it as giant tanks, scuba tanks, that drive air out and blow water\u00a0\u2013 or anything else\u00a0\u2013 off the surface in a dramatically better way. It's a big solution. We're not (all the way) there yet, but it's ready now.\" However, as NASCAR is requiring tracks to pay for its rental during race weekends, very few races have actually had the system available for use. While the race at Talladega was able to be run to completion during daylight hours thanks to the new system, the race at Chicago saw a 6-hour delay due to rain and the time it took to dry the track using conventional jet dryers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nIn response to the ongoing controversy over start and park teams, NASCAR decided to reallocate money from the last five finishing positions to the remainder of the field, making the practice less profitable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nNASCAR announced on April 22 that qualifying for the road course races at Sonoma Raceway and Watkins Glen International would change from the traditional single car qualifying to group qualification sessions. The rule, carried over from the Nationwide Series road races, is anticipated to speed up the qualifying process. The field that is entered for the event will be divided into qualifying groups based on times from final practice. The amount of time that each group has on track is at the discretion of the series director. The session will begin with the first car taking the green flag at the start/finish line, and a drivers fastest lap will be the one used to determine their starting position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Changes, Rule changes\nControversy arose after the Federated Auto Parts 400, in which Carl Edwards beat leader Paul Menard to the start/finish line and subsequently won. On September 15, NASCAR announced that starting with the race at Chicagoland, the second place driver will be allowed to cross the line first on restarts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Schedule\nThe final calendar was released on September 25, 2012, containing 36 races, with the addition of two exhibition races. The schedule also includes two Budweiser Duels, which are the qualifying races for the Daytona 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Schedule\n: Race was postponed a day because of persistent rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Schedule, Schedule changes\nThe 2013 schedule differentiated slightly from the 2012 season. The fall Chase races at Kansas Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway (Hollywood Casino 400 and the Good Sam Club 500) returned to their original positions on the schedule because of the completion of Kansas Speedway's reconfiguring project. That was the only change on the whole schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe 2013 season began on February 16, 2013, at Daytona International Speedway with Kevin Harvick winning the 2013 Sprint Unlimited in his final season with Richard Childress Racing. Five days later, Harvick recorded another victory at Daytona International Speedway in the first qualifying race of the Daytona 500, while Kyle Busch was victorious in the second qualifying race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nFollowing the Duels, the points paying season began with the 55th Daytona 500. Matt Kenseth, hoping to take home his second consecutive 500 win, dominated the race but was taken out of contention by an engine failure. Jimmie Johnson, making his 400th start, held off late challenges from teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Mark Martin to take his second Daytona 500 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe series then headed west to Phoenix International Raceway. There, Carl Edwards recovered from a disastrous Speedweeks by dominating the race, holding off the competition on fuel mileage to take his first win since 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAt Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the race was dominated by Kasey Kahne, who led 114 laps. However, new Joe Gibbs Racing driver Matt Kenseth took no tires during the final round of pit stops, handing him the lead, and managed to hold off a hard-charging Kahne to take his first win with JGR as well as becoming the third birthday winner in NASCAR history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe fourth race of the season was held at Bristol Motor Speedway and was largely dominated by Jeff Gordon and Matt Kenseth. However, on lap 390 Gordon's right front tire blew, sending him into Kenseth's path and knocking both of them out of the race. Denny Hamlin then led a fair portion of the race, seeking JGR's second consecutive win. However, after Hamlin and Joey Logano collided late, Kasey Kahne held off Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, and Brad Keselowski to grab his first win of the season. This race marked the beginning of animosity between Hamlin and Logano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nReturning west to race at Auto Club Speedway, Kyle Busch dominated the race, leading 125 laps. However, his ex-teammate Joey Logano pulled a bump and run on Denny Hamlin with 6 laps to go, but the two wrecked each other on the final lap, allowing Busch to sneak through and capture his first win of the season. Hamlin suffered a compression fracture in his back, which kept him out of action until Talladega.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAt Martinsville Speedway, the race was a battle between Jimmie Johnson and JGR teammates Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth. Johnson eventually dominated the weekend, leading 346 laps from pole and scoring his record 8th win at Martinsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe Cup Series then rolled into Texas Motor Speedway to return to the intermediate tracks. The night race was split between Martin Truex Jr. and Nationwide winner Kyle Busch. The two led for a combined 313 laps, but Busch beat Truex Jr. during the final round of pit stops on lap 315 to pull off his second weekend sweep of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe Cup Series then headed to the repaved Kansas Speedway. 2012 Fall winner and polesitter Matt Kenseth dominated the race, leading 163 laps and holding off another furious charge from Kasey Kahne to take his second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nFollowing Kansas, the series returned to the short tracks in the form of Richmond International Raceway. Though polesitter Matt Kenseth dominated the race, leading 140 laps, fellow Toyota drivers Clint Bowyer and Kyle Busch also took their turns up front. Kenseth faded over the race, and Busch was swept up in a near lane violation followed by a crash. After a crash on lap 325 involving Tony Stewart, Juan Pablo Montoya stayed out and led the next 67 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nIt seemed as though Montoya would get his first win on an oval track, but a crash by Brian Vickers on lap 394 set up a green-white-checker finish, sending most of the field down pit road. Jeff Burton and others stayed out during the round of pit stops, but Burton's teammate Kevin Harvick used his fresher tires to take the race lead and drive to his first win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nIn the tenth race of the season at Talladega Superspeedway, Matt Kenseth again dominated the race, leading over 140 laps. On lap 42, Kyle Busch and Kasey Kahne triggered a 16-car crash. Earlier in the race, on lap 23, Denny Hamlin, making his return from the injury he suffered in the Auto Club 400, switched out with Brian Vickers. Matt Kenseth led much of the first 110 laps, though Jimmie Johnson and Ford drivers Ricky Stenhouse Jr., polesitter Carl Edwards, Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski subsequently passed him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe Ford drivers then teamed up to pass Johnson, and before the yellow flag flew for rain, Edwards was able to pass Stenhouse. Three laps later, the red flag was flown. The rain delayed the race for 3 hours, 36 minutes. The race eventually restarted and continued to be led by Kenseth. Johnson took over after green-flag pit stops with 20 to go. The caution then came out and bunched the field up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nWith six laps left in the race and darkness arriving, Stenhouse and J. J. Yeley made contact, sending Yeley down the track into Kurt Busch, who flipped and landed on top of Ryan Newman's car, causing a green-white-checker finish. 14 cars in all were involved in the crash. Newman later criticized NASCAR for continuing the race even with darkness reaching the track so quickly. During the two-lap shootout, Front Row Motorsports teammates David Ragan and David Gilliland surged ahead of Kenseth, Johnson, and Edwards to finish in the top two, with Ragan securing his second career Sprint Cup victory and the first for Front Row Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAt Darlington Raceway, Kyle Busch dominated much of the race, but a deflating tire proved to be his undoing, as teammate Matt Kenseth passed Busch with 13 laps left. Busch quickly fell to sixth, while Kenseth won his first career Sprint Cup race at Darlington with interim crew chief Wally Brown, who was filling in for Jason Ratcliff. Denny Hamlin, in his first full race since the Auto Club 400, finished second, while Jeff Gordon, racing in his 700th Sprint Cup start, finished 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe second exhibition race of the season took place on May 18 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. In the Sprint Showdown (the race to determine the two drivers, and another that wins a fan vote, that will advance to the All-Star Race), Martin Truex Jr. qualified on the pole but was passed by Jamie McMurray on the first lap. McMurray led all 40 laps, win both 20-lap segments, and advanced into the All-Star Race. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. finished second to advance as well. Danica Patrick won the fan vote to advance after a 9th-place finish in the Showdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nIn the All-Star Race, Carl Edwards started on pole, but was quickly passed by Kurt Busch. Busch dominated the first 20-lap segment, which was interrupted by a caution for rain on lap seven and an ensuing red flag on lap 13 that lasted 41 minutes. Kyle Busch dominated segments two and three, before Kurt Busch once again found himself in the lead at the end of the fourth 20-lap segment. Due to a new stipulation, the field was re-ordered before the mandatory pit stop at the end of segment four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe drivers were ordered by their average finish in the first four segments. Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Kasey Kahne, Jimmie Johnson, and Joey Logano were the first five down pit road. Kahne's pit crew got him out first, followed by Johnson, Kyle Busch, Logano, and Kurt Busch. In the ensuing ten lap dash (segment five), Johnson and Kahne ran side-by-side for two laps before Johnson pulled away to take his second All-Star Race in a row (his record fourth win overall). He was followed by Logano, Kyle Busch, Kahne, and Kurt Busch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAt Charlotte Motor Speedway, the race was dominated by Kasey Kahne, Matt Kenseth and Kyle Busch. Denny Hamlin started on pole but was quickly passed for the lead by Kenseth. In a strange turn of events, the third caution came out on lap 122 for debris as a result of a cable that suspended a FOX Sports television camera over the frontstretch of the track snapping and falling on the track. Several cars ran over the cable, but only two sustained major damage: Kyle Busch and Marcos Ambrose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe red flag then came out on lap 126 as track officials cleaned up the cables. After a delay of 10 minutes, 40 seconds, NASCAR brought the cars down pit road and gave each team 15 minutes to look over their cars and do repairs if needed. Ten spectators received minor injuries as a result of the cable failure. Busch fell out of contention due to engine failure. Kenseth was hit from behind by Juan Pablo Montoya when he tried slow up due to a spin out by Jimmie Johnson. Kahne appeared to be headed towards back-to-back 600 victories, but a caution on lap 385 forced Kahne to stay out on old tires. 2011 Coke 600 winner Kevin Harvick, who took two tires, drove past Kahne on the restart to claim his second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAt Dover International Speedway, car owner Joe Gibbs had his 3 cars starting in 3 of the top 4 spots. Denny Hamlin won the pole, Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth started third through fourth. Martin Truex Jr. started 2nd. Kyle Busch later took the lead and nearly put points leader Jimmie Johnson one lap down until green-flag pit stops allowed Johnson to stay on the lead lap. During a caution, Matt Kenseth beat Busch off pit road to take the lead. Kenseth led the next 29 laps when his engine failed, giving Busch the lead again. Kenseth finished 40th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nBusch led the most with 150. Johnson came on strong in the second half of the race, leading 143 laps. Just under 100 laps after Kenseth's engine blew, Truex Jr.'s engine also blew. After pit stops due to a late caution, Juan Pablo Montoya was in the lead with Johnson in second. Stewart took only two tires on the final pit stop for track position. At the restart with 19 laps remaining, Johnson jumped the gun and was penalized. Johnson protested over the radio that he didn't deserve the penalty and stayed on the track asking for a review.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0034-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJohnson finally followed the order to head to the pits and serve a pass-through penalty. Johnson finished 17th. Stewart, aided by Johnson's miscalculation, Kasey Kahne's Turn 1 mistake and a fading Kyle Busch, caught a loose Montoya, passing him with three laps left. Stewart remained in the lead, winning his first race of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJimmie Johnson was rewarded the pole after qualifying was rained out. After Carl Edwards led the first nine laps, Johnson took the lead and dominated the race, leading 128 of 160 laps, to win his third race of the season. Greg Biffle, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Tony Stewart, and Ryan Newman rounded out the top-five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe race began with Busch colliding with pole-sitter Edwards in an attempt to grab the lead in the first turn. While Edwards lost multiple positions, Kurt Busch came out on top. Shortly after, the caution flag flew after Bobby Labonte got loose and spun into Gordon. After a lap 20 competition caution for the previous night's rain, Kurt Busch got loose off of turn two and crashed down the back-straightaway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAfterward, multiple caution flags and different pit stop strategies gave Joey Logano, Jamie McMurray, Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Kasey Kahne turns at leading the race. Johnson rebounded to the second position after falling to twelfth as a result of a restart mistake, and leader Kahne blew a right-front tire and hit the wall in turn one on lap 105. Johnson took over the lead but lost it to Earnhardt during pit stops. On the restart, Earnhardt pulled away from Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle as Johnson struggled to battle back to the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nSeveral laps later, Earnhardt developed engine problems and started to fall back, giving Johnson the lead (after he had passed Kenseth and Biffle). After a few slow laps, Earnhardt's engine blew up, bringing out yet another caution. After taking four tires in the pits, Johnson fell to 20th and Edwards took the lead ahead of Logano, Kenseth, and Biffle. Biffle then closed in on Edwards and passed him for the lead on lap 150, quickly pulling away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0037-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nA caution for McMurray's blown right-front tire came in the middle of the last round of pit stops, trapping Edwards a lap down (he got the free pass). Biffle, who had pitted under the green but did not go a lap down, cycled out as the leader. On the restart at lap 174, Kenseth got loose off of turn two and dropped several positions while Johnson, who restarted 10th, tried to pick up positions. Johnson gradually came through the field, passing Kevin Harvick to move into second with eight laps to go. However, as Johnson struggled to catch Biffle, he blew a right-front tire out of turn two on lap 198. Biffle sped away to win over Harvick, Martin Truex Jr., Kyle Busch, and Tony Stewart. Biffle's victory was the 1,000th for the Ford Motor Company in NASCAR's top 3 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJamie McMurray started on the pole, but Kurt Busch was able to get the lead early. However, Busch suffered back-to-back speeding penalties, sending him to the back of the field. Danica Patrick became the first woman to race a road course in the Sprint Cup Series; she spun midway through the race in turn seven and finished 29th. Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch both struggled, going off track numerous times. Martin Truex Jr. led 51 laps on his way to his first win in 218 races, setting a NASCAR record for most races between wins. Juan Pablo Montoya was running second on the white flag lap before running out of gas, relegating him to a 34th-place finish. Truex was followed by Jeff Gordon and Carl Edwards, with Kurt Busch and defending race winner Clint Bowyer rounding out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nDale Earnhardt Jr. started on pole, but Carl Edwards led the first 30 laps. After a lap 30 competition caution and a second caution on lap 43 for a Kyle Busch spin, Earnhardt assumed the lead until Jimmie Johnson passed him on the lap 46 restart. Johnson went on to dominate the race, leading 182 of the 267 laps. Two laps after the restart, Kurt Busch spun Brad Keselowski going into turn one, causing Keselowski to slide back up the track, where he collected Greg Biffle, Dave Blaney, and Travis Kvapil. The crash caused a red flag so the track could be cleaned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nOnce back to green on lap 52, Johnson held the lead over second-place Matt Kenseth until a restart on lap 94, when Kenseth moved into the lead and Kyle Busch passed Johnson for second. Kenseth led until the next caution (a debris caution on lap 109), when he came to pit road after running over the debris. Johnson, who stayed out, reassumed the lead and held it until lap 149, when he was beat off of pit road by Edwards following a caution for a Denny Hamlin tire failure. Hamlin hit the wall where there was no SAFER barrier and had a lengthy stay in the infield care center; however, he was not injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJohnson retook the lead shortly after the lap 154 restart and held the lead until lap 244 when he was beaten off of pit road by Kenseth, who didn't take any tires following a caution for Brian Vickers' collision with the wall. On the restart, Kenseth restarted on the outside and pulled away as Johnson spun his tires. Joey Logano tried to make it three-wide in turn one. This partly resulted in Johnson's car losing control and spinning onto the track apron. Johnson made a pit stop and restarted 25th on lap 251. However, Kenseth continued to lead, and he picked up his fourth win of 2013, ahead of Jamie McMurray, Clint Bowyer, Logano, and Kurt Busch. Johnson battled back to finish ninth after his spin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKyle Busch started on pole and led 30 of the first 33 laps. Jimmie Johnson then took the lead and dominated, leading 94 of 161 laps (a green-white-checker lengthened the race by one lap). Jamie McMurray led 10 laps just past the halfway point after Johnson restarted in the middle of the pack, but no one was actually able to take the lead from Johnson. A series of crashes occurred in the second half of the race, two of which involved four cars each and another which had six cars involved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe drivers in these crashes were: Martin Truex Jr., Juan Pablo Montoya, Kyle Busch, Aric Almirola, Greg Biffle, Jeff Gordon, Matt Kenseth, David Reutimann, Dave Blaney, David Stremme, Denny Hamlin, and A. J. Allmendinger. Hamlin and Allmendinger were both involved in two of the crashes, including the third (and largest) crash in which Hamlin lost control and hit the wall, and was then hit hard by Allmendinger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nA caution waved with four to go after Kasey Kahne and Marcos Ambrose (who were second and third at the time) tangled and Kahne hit the inside wall. This set up a green-white-checker finish attempt in which Johnson and Tony Stewart were able to get in front of Kevin Harvick and Clint Bowyer. Two large crashes occurred on the last lap; the first saw Carl Edwards got turned in turn one, collecting Ambrose, Bobby Labonte, Scott Speed, and others. In the tri-oval, Danica Patrick cut down in front of David Gilliland and was turned into Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Ryan Newman, causing a crash that also involved Kyle Busch, Casey Mears, and Jeff Burton, among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJohnson held off Stewart, Harvick, and Bowyer to win his fourth race of the season. Michael Waltrip rounded out the top five. Johnson became the first driver since Bobby Allison in 1982 to win both Daytona races in the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe second half of the season started with Brad Keselowski clinching the pole. Jimmie Johnson (who qualified second) was sent to the rear of the field for failing post-qualifying inspection. Keselowski led the first few laps, but relinquished the lead to Kyle Busch, who, in turn, lost it to Kurt Busch. As drivers came into and fell out of the top ten due to pit strategy, both Kurt and Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, Tony Stewart, and others took turns at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nStewart led the majority of the last 100 laps, but Brian Vickers passed both Stewart and Kyle Busch with about 15 laps left. The race saw an unusually high amount of cautions, with the 12th of the day coming out with four to go to set up a green-white-checker finish. On the restart, Vickers held the lead over Stewart and Busch, but coming to the white flag, Stewart ran out of fuel. This allowed Vickers to take his third career win over Kyle Busch, Jeff Burton, Keselowski, and Aric Almirola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nRound 20: Crown Royal Presents The Samuel Deeds 400 at The Brickyard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nRyan Newman started on pole after setting a new track-record in the process. This was Newman's 50th career pole. Newman led the first 29 laps, but Jimmie Johnson took over after a round of green-flag pit stops. Johnson led 74 laps, more than anyone else, swapping the lead several times with Newman and other drivers due to pit strategy. Three caution periods slowed the race, two for Timmy Hill's car slowing due to fuel pump problems and the other for Jeff Burton's slowing car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0048-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAfter a slow last green flag pit stop, Johnson fell 10 seconds behind Newman, who took only two tires during his last green flag pit stop. With 16 laps remaining the 1\u20132 leaders of Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick had to pit, giving the lead back to Newman who was now 7 seconds ahead of Johnson. Newman led the last 16 laps to win his first race since the 2012 Goody's Fast Relief 500. Newman became the 2nd driver in NASCAR history to win from his 50th career pole. Jeff Gordon accomplished this feat in the Pepsi 400 at Daytona in 2004. Johnson finished second, followed by Kasey Kahne, Tony Stewart, and Matt Kenseth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJimmie Johnson started on pole and led 43 laps early, with Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch, and others exchanging spots in the top five. The first caution was displayed in turn one on lap one after Juan Pablo Montoya got loose and slid up the track, collecting, most notably, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Matt Kenseth. Denny Hamlin's day was ended early, after he hit the wall on lap 14 and went out of the race, finishing in the 43rd position. Just before halfway, Johnson blew a tire and hit the wall, bringing out the caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0049-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nHe spent much of the remaining race around 25th, and rallied in the late stages to finish 13th. Kasey Kahne dominated the race after that, and swapped the lead with Jeff Gordon twice on the last two restarts to take his second win of the year. Gordon, Kurt Busch, Ryan Newman, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMarcos Ambrose won the pole position and led 51 of the first 62 laps. After a caution during green flag pit stops shuffled the field, Ambrose and others frontrunners were cycled outside the top 12 and Kyle Busch took over as the leader. Busch led the majority of the rest of the race and hold off Brad Keselowski and Martin Truex Jr. to win his second career race at Watkins Glen and his third of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMany contenders were caught up in numerous crashes during the race, including Kasey Kahne, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Ambrose, Matt Kenseth, Brian Vickers, Ron Fellows, Jeff Burton, Paul Menard, David Ragan, Landon Cassill, Tomy Drissi, and others. One crash involving five cars brought out a several-minute red flag to clean up oil dropped on the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJoey Logano took the pole position with a new track record and traded the lead with Kurt Busch early as three cautions waved in the first 15 laps. After crashing his primary car in practice, points-leader Jimmie Johnson started 41st and quickly came to the front to lead three laps during a round of pit stops. However, while running in 7th on lap 53, Johnson's engine failed and he was relegated to a 40th-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0051-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMeanwhile, several different drivers took turns at the front, with Kurt Busch leading 43 laps, Greg Biffle leading 28, Dale Earnhardt Jr. taking over for 20 circuits, and Brad Keselowski leading 17 laps. Earnhardt blew a right-front tire while in 6th place midway through the race and spent several laps in the garage under repairs. Late in the race, Mark Martin stayed out to try to win the race on fuel mileage. He led 23 laps before running out of gas with four to go, dropping him to 27th. This allowed pole-sitter Logano, who led a race-high 51 laps, to take his and Penske Racing's first win of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nDenny Hamlin took the pole and led the first 22 laps. After being passed by Kurt Busch, Hamlin fell back to mid-field. Busch led most of the laps until lap 81, when he came down pit road for a loose wheel and was given a pass-thru penalty for speeding. Carl Edwards and Dale Earnhardt Jr. shared the lead during the next two stints, before Clint Bowyer passed Earnhardt for the lead on lap 126. Bowyer led until getting spun on lap 176, causing the fourth caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0052-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nEdwards retook the lead, showing the way until being passed by Matt Kenseth on lap 236. After a lap 259 debris caution, Kenseth was caught speeding on pit road and relegated to the back, while Paul Menard stayed out to take the lead. Edwards once again claimed the lead on lap 322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKevin Harvick took the lead after the seventh caution on lap 335, but he was quickly passed by Edwards on lap 344. Edwards held the lead through two more cautions, but dropped a cylinder on lap 380 and blew his engine on lap 389. Kenseth held the lead through most of the final 120 laps and held off a final 10-lap charge by Kasey Kahne to score his fifth victory of the season. Juan Pablo Montoya finished third, and Brian Vickers and Joey Logano rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0053-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nEleven caution flags waved during the race, three of which were for debris. Drivers involved in seven, mostly minor, crashes included Ryan Truex, Josh Wise, Clint Bowyer, Tony Raines, Jimmie Johnson, David Reutimann, Aric Almirola, and Jeff Burton. The eleventh caution on lap 448, as Hamlin blew a tire and ran into Ryan Newman, causing a large crash also involving Brad Keselowski, Martin Truex Jr., Terry Labonte, and Kevin Harvick. Truex Jr. suffered a broken wrist after the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nRicky Stenhouse Jr. won his first pole, but quickly fell back at the start. Juan Pablo Montoya led the first 25 laps, before dropping the position to Joey Logano one lap before a scheduled competition caution. On the restart, Jeff Gordon was bumped by Matt Kenseth, causing an accordion effect that involved Kasey Kahne, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Burton, and Mark Martin. Some cars suffered major damage. Carl Edwards took the lead from Montoya on the restart and led until pit stops under the third caution at lap 60.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0054-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nGordon took over here, holding the lead until pit stops on lap 78 (the caution having been for Paul Menard's wheel coming off and being hit by Johnson). Edwards reclaimed the lead and held it until green-flag pit stops on lap 123. Logano (who was off-sequence) took over until Clint Bowyer went by on lap 139. He pitted on lap 166, and reclaimed the position from Logano on lap 173, before blowing his engine on lap 192.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nEdwards took the lead on pit road, but lost it to Logano on the restart, just before a crash involving Paul Menard and Denny Hamlin. Brad Keselowski passed Logano on lap 214 (just after the restart) and stayed in front until his engine dropped a cylinder on lap 244. After another cycle of green-flag pit stops, Logano held the lead until Jimmie Johnson spun on lap 286. Kyle Busch won the race off pit road and held the lead through two more cautions to pick up his fourth win of the season. Logano, Martin Truex Jr., Kurt Busch, and Ryan Newman rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe final race of the regular season was held at Richmond International Raceway. Jeff Gordon led the initial run, with Chase contenders Brad Keselowski and Kurt Busch following behind. Chase hopeful Jamie McMurray joined the battle for the lead during the early stages. When Gordon dropped back significantly, Keselowski and Busch swapped the lead in traffic. Keselowski ended up leading 142 laps on the night, but ended up 17th. Through the final 100 laps, Carl Edwards surged into the top 10 and took the lead from Busch after a round of pit stops on lap 349.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0056-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nWild Card contender Ryan Newman took the lead from Edwards with 10 laps to go, needing a win to break a tie with Martin Truex Jr. A spin by Clint Bowyer with 8 laps to go forced the field onto pit road. Paul Menard and others gambled on two tires in a repeat of the April race. On the final restart, Edwards beat Menard to the line and held off Busch and Newman for his second win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe Wild Card race ome down to the wire. The final spots came down to Joey Logano, Keselowski, Gordon, Truex Jr. and Newman. On the final round of stops, Logano took the wave-around, finishing 22nd and beating Gordon for 10th place in the Chase by a single point. Despite finishing 3rd, Newman was bounced out of the second Wild Card spot by Truex based on a tiebreak owing to the latter's 2nd-place finish at Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe spin by Bowyer led to controversy as to whether or not Bowyer spun himself out intentionally to allow Truex to win the tiebreaker with Newman. While Bowyer claimed that the spin was unintentional, audio from Brian Vickers' car was uncovered, revealing that Ty Norris had Vickers unnecessarily pit on the final restart in order to help Truex into the Chase. As it turned out, this forced Newman to the back of the cycle on pit stops, ensuring he would not finish high enough to break the tie with Truex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0058-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nOn September 9, 2013, NASCAR docked 50 owner/driver points from all three MWR teams. As the penalty was applied before points were reset for the Chase, this had the effect of ejecting Truex from the Chase and putting Newman in his place. Bowyer's totals were not affected, as he was locked into the Chase at Bristol. While NASCAR determined Bowyer's spin was not intentional, it found that MWR had manipulated the Chase standings by having Vickers pit improperly. Norris was also suspended indefinitely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAt the same time, evidence surfaced that Logano may have gotten a spot in the Chase due to illicit help from Front Row Motorsports, which is considered a partner with Logano's team at Penske Racing; both are Ford teams with Roush Fenway powertrains. Front Row's spotter was heard asking David Gilliland to let Logano pass him on the restart following the caution triggered by Bowyer's spin. Logano finished 22nd, enough to give him the final Chase spot. Four days after the race, NASCAR placed Penske and Front Row on probation for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0059-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAt the same time, Chairman Brian France announced that Gordon was added to the Chase as part of an \"unprecedented\" step of expanding the Chase to 13 cars. According to France, NASCAR had determined that Gordon would have qualified for the Chase if not for the \"unfair disadvantage\" he had suffered from the actions of MWR and Penske/Front Row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAfter a rain delay of over one hour, Joey Logano started on pole and led the first 32 laps. Jimmie Johnson took the lead on lap 32 pit stops by taking only two tires after a lap 30 competition caution. Johnson led 40 laps, then came to pit road for green-flag pit stops. Johnson would have a slow pit stop, relegating him to fifth place. This gave the lead to Matt Kenseth, who led the race until a caution waved on lap 108 for rain and a spin by Cole Whitt. The rain caused a lengthy delay of just over five hours and ten minutes while the track was dried.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe race resumed at night, and Kenseth held the lead until pit stops on lap 150. During the time Kenseth was out front, Juan Pablo Montoya blew a tire (causing the third caution) and Justin Allgaier spun in his first career Sprint Cup start (bringing out the fourth caution). Joey Logano's engine lost two cylinders as well. Jeff Gordon took the lead after the lap 150 pit stops and remained out front through the fifth caution until the next cycle of pit stops during the sixth caution on lap 170.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0061-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMeanwhile, Cole Whitt's car exploded in a ball of fire, and Brian Vickers' engine blew up. Greg Biffle won the race off pit road, but was passed by Kyle Busch on the lap 173 restart. Jeff Gordon pitted with a flat left-rear tire one lap later. On lap 177, Joey Logano's engine blew up, bringing out the seventh caution. Kyle Busch continued to lead, now in front of Martin Truex Jr. and Matt Kenseth, as Jimmie Johnson (who restarted 20th on lap 182) raced his way to the top three by lap 210.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nDale Earnhardt Jr. brought out the eighth caution on lap 226 by blowing his engine during a cycle of green-flag pit stops. Kyle Busch, Kenseth, and Johnson restarted as the top three, and Busch and Kenseth remained the top two until the end of the race. Justin Allgaier once again spun on lap 239, and Kenseth passed Busch on the restart. He held off Busch to win his sixth race of the year. Kevin Harvick finished third, Kurt Busch fourth, and Jimmie Johnson fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nRyan Newman took the pole with a new track record and led the first two laps, after which he fell back quickly. Kasey Kahne took over and led until the lap 36 restart, having retained the lead through pit stops during the first caution as a result of a spin by Josh Wise. The second caution immediately waved on lap 37 for a crash involving Jamie McMurray and Kevin Swindell. Martin Truex Jr., who took the lead from Kahne, continued to lead on the restart and led until green-flag pit stops on lap 110.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0063-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMeanwhile, Bobby Labonte blew a tire on lap 53, causing the third caution. Matt Kenseth and Brad Keselowski led during the pit cycle before handing the lead to Dale Earnhardt Jr., who was off-sequence with the others and led until lap 130. Truex took over again and stayed up front until Kenseth went by on lap 153.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe fourth caution flew for a crash on lap 165, and Jeff Gordon became the leader after pit stops. Debris caused the fifth caution on lap 201, and Jimmie Johnson came off pit road first; however, Clint Bowyer and Marcos Ambrose did not pit. By lap 210, Matt Kenseth had passed everyone to take the lead once more. David Gilliland blew his engine on lap 245, and Kenseth held the lead after the lap 250 restart as well as the lap 257 restart (following a spin by Kasey Kahne to bring out the seventh caution). Kenseth held the lead over Kyle Busch, Greg Biffle, and Jimmie Johnson over the last 40 laps to win his second consecutive race, and his seventh of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nDale Earnhardt Jr. won his second pole of the year and led the first 25 laps. Matt Kenseth, who started second, took over on lap 26 as a result of Earnhardt getting hung up in lap traffic. Earnhardt then retook the lead five laps later after more problems with lap traffic. The first caution waved on lap 37 for debris, and Kyle Busch came off pit road first. Busch led until Ryan Newman passed him lap 72. Earnhardt then went by Newman on lap 76 and led until missing pit road on lap 117 during green-flag pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0065-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nEarnhardt came out in eighth, giving the lead to Jimmie Johnson. Johnson led until pit stops under the second caution, which came out on lap 165 for debris. Matt Kenseth retook the lead from Johnson and held it until Johnson went back by on lap 198. The third caution, for fluid from Brad Keselowski's car, came out on lap 227, but Johnson held the lead off pit road. Johnson and Earnhardt pulled away on the restart as Kenseth lost a position to Kyle Busch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nBy lap 298, Earnhardt had caught Johnson, but struggled to get by, finally taking the lead as Johnson made a pit stop on lap 310. After the round of stops cycled through, Johnson retained the lead, with Kenseth, Gordon, and Earnhardt (who got stuck behind a slower car) following behind. The fourth caution flag waved on lap 370 for debris in turn three, and Johnson, Gordon, and Kenseth took two tires. Earnhardt came out fourth with four fresh tires, but could only get to second on the restart. Johnson held him off to take his fifth victory of the season and his record eighth win at Dover, surpassing Richard Petty and Bobby Allison with seven wins apiece. Joey Logano finished third, followed by Jeff Gordon and Kyle Busch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKevin Harvick won his first pole since 2006 in a race plagued with 15 cautions for debris, crashes, and spins involving several drivers, including Kyle Busch, Ryan Newman, and Danica Patrick. While points leader Matt Kenseth struggled with a loose racecar to finish eleventh, Harvick dominated the race, leading 138 laps en route to his third win of the season. Jimmie Johnson developed an engine problem with two laps to go and limped home to finish sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJeff Gordon started on pole and led the first 26 laps, losing the lead during pit stops to Kasey Kahne after Dave Blaney hit the wall to cause the first caution. All four Hendrick Motorsports cars dominated the race, leading all but 21 laps. Kahne led early, leading 138 laps in total, and Jimmie Johnson led 130 circuits himself. Dale Earnhardt Jr. led 19 laps after passing Kahne on a couple of restarts, and Jeff Gordon led the first 26 laps after starting first. Most of the laps led by other drivers, such as Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, Ryan Newman, Carl Edwards, Clint Bowyer, and David Gilliland, occurred during green-flag pit stops and totaled no more than Busch's total of four laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAfter the first caution at lap 25, three more caution flags waved during the race: first for Mark Martin's blown engine on lap 84, second for debris on lap 173, and last, once again for debris, on lap 308. Jimmie Johnson had taken the lead from Kahne on the lap 178 restart after the third caution and held the top point until pit stops during the last caution on lap 309, minus a few laps during a round of green-flag pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0069-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKasey Kahne and Jeff Gordon took two tires and beat Kenseth and Johnson, who took four tires, off of pit road. On the restart, Johnson got loose in turn two and dropped to seventh as Kahne tried to pull away from Kenseth and Brad Keselowski, who had quickly passed Gordon on the restart. Keselowski got by Kenseth and ran down and passed Kahne after a fierce battle with less than ten laps to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0069-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKeselowski led the final eight laps (to total eleven led in the race) to win his first race of the year and become the first non-Chase driver to win in the Chase since, ironically, Kahne in the 2011 Kobalt Tools 500. Kahne barely held on to second, Kenseth finished third, and Johnson recovered to finish fourth. Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, and Jeff Gordon rounded out the top seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nQualifying was cancelled due to rain, causing the starting positions to be set by the fastest times during the first practice. Thus, Aric Almirola started from the pole. The first caution quickly waved on lap three as Tony Raines' engine expired. After the restart, numerous drivers took turns leading as Kasey Kahne lost the draft just after lap 20 and quickly fell behind. Matt Kenseth, who first took the lead on lap 12 and led six laps, retook the lead on lap 27 and led the field until pitting on lap 42.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0070-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nOn lap 43, Kyle Busch was blocked on pit road by Jamie McMurray during green-flag pit stops and missed his pit stall, causing him to have to come down pit road again. Meanwhile, Brad Keselowski and Bobby Labonte received pass-through penalties for speeding on pit road. After pit stops, Kenseth, Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. traded the lead several times until the caution came out on lap 80 for a crash involving Marcos Ambrose and Juan Pablo Montoya. Montoya's car would be retired from the race. Johnson, Earnhardt, and Kenseth continued to do most of the leading until Kenseth's car fell back because of handling problems. Clint Bowyer and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. also took turns up front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKasey Kahne was caught speeding on pit road during the next round of green-flag pit stops and was given a penalty. Earnhardt cycled out into the lead and Johnson dropped to 17th. However, five laps later (lap 132), Johnson retook the lead. Earnhardt and Kyle Busch shared the lead with Johnson, as Kenseth once again dropped due to handling. After another round of green-flag pit stops just after lap 160, many drivers took turns leading until Jamie McMurray took over on lap 175.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0071-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nEarnhardt moved into second as the field quickly went from three-wide to single file in the top lane, causing drivers such as Johnson, Kenseth, and Jeff Gordon to fall to the back. On the last lap, the field remained single-file and off of turn two, third place Austin Dillon got sideways and was then turned around backwards by fourth place Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Dillon backed around into the wall directly in the path of Casey Mears, whose hit to Dillon caused him to go airborne and almost flip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0071-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMeanwhile, the caution waved and Jamie McMurray scored his seventh career win, his first since the 2010 Bank of America 500. Earnhardt finished second, followed by Stenhouse, Paul Menard, Kyle Busch, David Ragan, and David Gilliland. Johnson finished 13th and Kenseth came home 20th, allowing Johnson to take the points lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nDenny Hamlin took the pole with a new track record, but was quickly passed by Jimmie Johnson on lap three. The caution first waved on lap eight as Carl Edwards spun Jeff Burton, causing minor damage to both. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Kasey Kahne, Mark Martin, and Travis Kvapil received minor damage as well. The restart came on lap 20, and Kyle Busch passed for the lead on lap 26. Matt Kenseth then took the lead on lap 38. The second caution came out on lap 89 as Carl Edwards this time spun Travis Kvapil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0072-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKenseth held the lead off of pit road and on the lap 95 restart, before being passed by Johnson on lap 111. The third caution was thrown for Bobby Labonte spinning David Reutimann in turn three on lap 141. Johnson held the lead after pit stops and on the restart on lap 147. On lap 167, Kyle Larson's engine blew to bring out the fourth caution. Jeff Burton stayed out but was quickly passed by Johnson after the lap 181 restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0072-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nTwo laps later, as Burton and Earnhardt checked up near the front, a large stack of caused numerous cars to get damage, including polesitter Denny Hamlin, Kasey Kahne, Martin Truex Jr., Ken Schrader, and Aric Almirola. Kahne would get stuck in the turn one grass and would have to be towed back onto the track. Johnson continued to lead on the restart, but the sixth caution flew on lap 205 as Jamie McMurray and Kurt Busch got together. Busch spun and then collected Mark Martin. The race restarted on lap 210, and Kenseth retook the lead on lap 217, two laps before Travis Kvapil spun to bring out the seventh caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKenseth held the lead on the restart as Johnson started to fall back. The eighth caution came out on lap 230 for another spin by David Reutimann and Johnson led Kyle Busch and Dale Earnhardt Jr., among others, down pit road as Kenseth and many others stayed out. Kenseth led on the lap 235 restart but was passed by Clint Bowyer on lap 239 and quickly fell back, falling all the way to 17th by the ninth caution on lap 285.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0073-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMeanwhile, Johnson recovered to third by the caution as Jeff Gordon took the lead from Bowyer a lap earlier (lap 283). The caution came out for Reed Sorenson's stalled car on the track. Gordon and Johnson were the first two off of pit road and they held those positions on the lap 291 restart. On lap 298, the tenth caution fell over the track for debris off of Earnhardt's car. Landon Cassill was spun by Kasey Kahne on lap 309 to bring out the eleventh caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0073-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJohnson fell to fourth on the lap 315 restart, and Kevin Harvick and Ryan Newman got together on lap 319 in turn one, causing Newman to spin and bring out the twelfth caution. On lap 328, Juan Pablo Montoya made it three-wide with Marcos Ambrose and Truex, causing Truex to get spun and cause the 13th caution. Jimmie Johnson pitted from sixth and fell to 20th for the lap 333 restart. Debris on the frontstretch caused the 14th caution on lap 338, and Gordon and Kyle Busch made pit stops, giving the lead to Denny Hamlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0073-0003", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nClint Bowyer then took the lead from Hamlin on lap 351 and led until Cole Whitt spun and hit the wall in turn three on lap 366 to cause to 15th caution. Hamlin was the first off of pit road, but Elliott Sadler stayed out to take the lead. Matt Kenseth took the lead on lap 374 and J.J. Yeley spun on lap 380 to bring out the 16th caution. Kenseth continued to lead through the 17th caution on lap 416 for debris in turn one and the following pit stops and held the lead on the lap 424 restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0073-0004", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nKenseth was passed for the lead by Jeff Gordon on lap 479 and Gordon scored his first win of the season ahead of Kenseth, Clint Bowyer, Brad Keselowski, and Jimmie Johnson. The win awarded the 2013 Manufacturer Championship to Chevrolet and the finishes by Kenseth and Johnson caused a tie in the championship points, with the tiebreaker going to Kenseth with more race victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nCarl Edwards took the pole and led 38 laps in the early going, but engine trouble relegated him to a 37th-place finish. Jimmie Johnson took over and dominated, leading 255 laps on the day, being interrupted only by Brad Keselowski, who led 30 laps as a result to pit strategy. Johnson won his sixth race of the season as Matt Kenseth, who had a pit road speeding penalty, battled an ill-handling racecar to finish fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJimmie Johnson started the race with his fourth pole of the year, but in a lap one turn one scramble with Denny Hamlin and Joey Logano, he was bumped to the outside and fell back to sixth. Hamlin would then lead the first 18 laps, but relinquished the top spot to Jeff Gordon. Hamlin then fell all the way back to 23rd with a loose car before spinning out in turn two on lap 50 to bring out the first caution. Johnson had recovered to third by the caution, and followed Gordon and Kevin Harvick off of pit road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0075-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nHarvick then took the lead from Gordon on the lap 56 restart. Lap 101 saw the second caution, and Kasey Kahne took two tires on pit road to take the lead, while Johnson fell to fifth, Gordon sixth, and Harvick seventh. Timmy Hill crashed in turn one to bring out the third caution on lap 117, and many drivers outside the top ten, including Clint Bowyer and Matt Kenseth, came in to pit. Brad Keselowski then took the lead from Kahne on the ensuing restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0075-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe fourth caution came out on lap 132, as Travis Kvapil's engine blew up in front of Dave Blaney, causing Blaney to take evasive action and spin. Several drivers outside the top ten pitted, bumping Matt Kenseth up to 15th. However, as Keselowski continued to lead on the restart, Kenseth (battling an extremely tight racecar) dropped to 23rd before the field was slowed for the fifth time because of a crash involving Danica Patrick, Justin Allgaier, David Reutimann, and Cole Whitt. Many of the leaders pitted, but Jeff Gordon stayed out to take the lead, with Jamie McMurray and Ryan Newman just behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nAfter heavy battling on the restart, Johnson and Carl Edwards got together in turn one on lap 163, causing them to fall to 26th and 27th, respectively, as J. J. Yeley spun behind them. Ryan Newman took the lead by not pitting, as Matt Kenseth had a 25-second stop to fall from seventh to 29th. Johnson restarted 25th and worked his way back into the top 15, as Newman continued to lead over Joey Logano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0076-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nLap 191 saw a hard crash for David Reutimann in turn one to cause to seventh caution, and all of the frontrunners came down pit road, leaving Joey Logano and Kasey Kahne out front. As Logano led after the restart, Johnson came from fifth to third, and Kenseth dropped from 12th place to 20th as his car continued to have handling problems. By lap 224, Kahne had run down and taken the lead from Logano, and Kenseth had further fallen to 25th. Kahne pitted on lap 247, allowing Johnson to lead his first lap of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0076-0002", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nJohnson pitted on lap later, giving the lead to Edwards, who then gave the lead to Kevin Harvick on lap 250. Harvick, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kyle Busch, Clint Bowyer, and others stayed out several laps longer. Harvick ran out of fuel on lap 268, giving the lead to Earnhardt, who pitted on lap 271. Ryan Newman took the lead for four laps, then gave the top spot to Greg Biffle for a lap, before Carl Edwards cycled into a four-second lead over Kahne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0076-0003", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nThe eighth caution waved on lap 282 for debris from Danica Patrick's car, and eleven lead lap cars stayed out, including Edwards, Kahne, Johnson, and Harvick. Edwards continued leading on the lap 289 restart over Kahne, but Harvick passed Johnson to move into third. Harvick passed Kahne on lap 295 and began trying to run down Edwards. However, Harvick could not close and Edwards appeared to be on his way to sweeping the 2013 Phoenix races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0076-0004", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nBut with a lap and a half to go, Edwards ran out of fuel and Harvick took home the victory in his penultimate race with Richard Childress Racing. Kahne came in second and Johnson finished third, having led only one lap despite starting on pole. Edwards finished 21st, and Kenseth limped home in 23rd, losing 21 points to Johnson in the Championship standings to fall to 28 points behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMatt Kenseth won his third pole of the year, with third-place in points Kevin Harvick starting sixth and points-leader Jimmie Johnson starting seventh. Kenseth had the dominate car for most of the race, leading a race high 144 laps. Later, after a restart with 74 laps remaining, Kenseth restarted in sixth and Johnson lines up behind him in eighth. Jeff Gordon restarted in fourth and spun his tires, causing an accordion effect that involved Johnson, Kenseth, Mark Martin, and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0077-0001", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Season summary, Race reports\nMost of the damage was minimal, and Kenseth made his way up to finish second behind his teammate Denny Hamlin, who won his first race of the year. Harvick led eight laps to finished tenth and claim third in the points. Johnson, although he led no laps, finished in ninth place to win his sixth career championship by 19 points over Kenseth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234898-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Results and standings, Drivers\n(key)\u00a0Bold\u00a0\u2013 Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0\u2013 Pole position set by final practice results or owner's points. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234899-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Toyota Series\nThe 2013 NASCAR Toyota Series was the seventh season of the NASCAR Toyota Series, and the tenth organized by NASCAR Mexico. The season was composed by fifteen races. For first time, the series raced outside of Mexico, with a race in the Phoenix International Raceway. Jorge Goeters returned as reigning champion, and took part in the 2013 UNOH Battle at the Beach. Rodrigo Peralta was the champion of 2013 season and Santiago Tovar was declared the Rookie of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234899-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Toyota Series, Changes, Desafio\nAfter ten races the Top-8 championship drivers and 2 wild card drivers were selected for a five-race \"Chase system\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234899-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Toyota Series, Schedule\nIn 2013, Phoenix International Raceway was added to the schedule, marking the first event in Toyota Series history to be held in the United States. All the Mexican venues of 2012 season returned, and three races were held at night (Phoenix, Mexico City and Chihuahua). A 2nd race at El Dorado Speedway (Chihuahua) was supposed to be run at September 29 but was later cancelled and replaced by Aut\u00f3dromo Chiapas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234899-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Toyota Series, Results and standings, Drivers\n(key)\u00a0Bold\u00a0\u2013 Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0\u2013 Pole position set by final practice results. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led. * *\u00a0\u2013 All laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234900-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Whelen Euro Series\nThe 2013 NASCAR Whelen Euro Series was the fifth season and 1st with the new series denomination of stock car racing in Europe. The season started on 31 March at Nogaro, and ended on 13 October at Le Mans after twelve races at six meetings. Ander Vilari\u00f1o is the defending driver's champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234900-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NASCAR Whelen Euro Series, Schedule\nThe schedule was announced in November 2012. Dijon and Monza will be added to the series schedule, while the round at Motorland Arag\u00f3n will be a six-hour, non-points endurance race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234901-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NATC Motorcycle Trials Season\nThe 2013 NATC trials season was the 40th season. It consisted of ten trials events in three main classes: Pro, Expert and Womens Expert Sportsman. It began on 15 June, with round one in New York and ended with round ten in Minnesota on 25 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234901-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NATC Motorcycle Trials Season, Season summary\nPatrick Smage would claim his fifth NATC Trials Championship in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234901-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NATC Motorcycle Trials Season, 2013 NATC trials season calendar, Scoring system\nPoints were awarded to the top twenty finishers in each class. The best of nine rounds counted for the Pro class, and the best of six in Expert and Women's Expert Sportsman classes were counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game\nThe 2013 NBA All-Star Game was an exhibition basketball game that was played on February 17, 2013, during the National Basketball Association's (NBA) 2012\u201313 season. It was the 62nd edition of the NBA All-Star Game, and was played at Toyota Center in Houston, Texas, home of the Houston Rockets. The Western Conference defeated the Eastern Conference, 143\u2013138. Chris Paul of the Los Angeles Clippers was named the All-Star Game Most Valuable Player. The Rockets were awarded the All-Star Game in an announcement by commissioner David Stern on February 8, 2012. This was the third time that Houston had hosted the All-Star Game; the city had previously hosted the event in 1989 at the Astrodome and 2006 at the Toyota Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game\nStarters for the game were selected by the fans, who could select three frontcourt players and two guards from each conference. Previously, fans selected two forwards and one center instead of generic frontcourt players. Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers received the most overall votes at 1,591,437.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game\nStarting this season, NBA All-Star Saturday Night events became contests between the Eastern and Western Conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Coaches\nThe coaches for the All-Star game were the head coaches who led the teams with the best winning percentages in their conference through the games of February 3, 2013. Gregg Popovich of the San Antonio Spurs clinched the West position after a win on January 30. Erik Spoelstra of the Miami Heat clinched the East position after a win over the Toronto Raptors on February 3, 2013. The head coaches from the previous year, Tom Thibodeau and Scott Brooks, were not eligible for selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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 and three frontcourt players who received the highest vote were named the All-Star starters. NBA head coaches voted for the reserves for their respective conferences, none of which could be players on their own team. Each coach selected two guards, three frontcourt players and two wild cards, with each selected player ranked in order of preference within each category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Players\nIf a multi-position player was to be selected, coaches were encouraged to vote for the player at the position that was \"most advantageous for the All-Star team,\" regardless of where the player was listed on the All-Star ballot or the position he was listed in box scores. 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, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Players\nKobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers topped the ballots with 1,591,437 votes, which earned him a starting position as a guard in the Western Conference team. Bryant earned a record 15th consecutive All-Star selection. Chris Paul, Kevin Durant, Blake Griffin, and Dwight Howard completed the Western Conference starting position. The lone first-time All-Star in the Western Conference is the Houston Rockets' James Harden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Players\nAll of the players from the West started in last year's All-Star Game, save for Howard who started for the East, and similar to last year, both Los Angeles teams, the Lakers and the Clippers, are represented by two players each, all of whom are starters. Also sending a pair of players to the All-Star Game were the Oklahoma City Thunder, represented by Durant and Russell Westbrook, and the San Antonio Spurs, represented by Tim Duncan and Tony Parker. The Golden State Warriors had an All-Star representative for the first time since Latrell Sprewell was selected in 1997, with David Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Players\nThe Eastern Conference's leading vote-getter was LeBron James, who finished with 1,583,646 votes. Rajon Rondo, Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony, and Kevin Garnett completed the Eastern Conference starting positions. Anthony, James and Wade were starters for the previous year's Eastern Conference team. The Eastern Conference reserves included six first-time selections: Tyson Chandler, Paul George, Jrue Holiday, Kyrie Irving, Brook Lopez, and Joakim Noah. The Boston Celtics sent two players to start in the All-Star Game for the first time since 1984, when Larry Bird and Robert Parish started for the East. The New York Knicks sent two players to the All-Star Game for the first time since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Roster\n(C) \u2013 Named team captains for All-Star Game by National Basketball Players Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Roster\nDid not participate due to injury. Brook Lopez was named Rajon Rondo's replacement by NBA commissioner David Stern. Erik Spoelstra chose Chris Bosh to start in place of the injured Rajon Rondo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Game\nThe West led at the end of each quarter and won 143\u2013138 behind Chris Paul, who won MVP honors scoring 20 points, handing out 15 assists and grabbing 4 steals. The West never led by more than eight points through the first three quarters, but they pushed the lead to double figures early in the fourth. Kobe Bryant blocked two shots by LeBron James late in the game, part of a late run to secure the game for the West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Game\nKevin Durant led all scorers with 30 points and became the first player in NBA history to score 30+ points in three consecutive All-Star games, while Bryant had nine points and eight assists. Carmelo Anthony led the East with 26 points and 12 rebounds. James, who shot well during the latter part of the season's first half, shot only 7-for-18 while scoring 19 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Weekend, BBVA Rising Stars Challenge\nAndre Drummond was unable to participate due to injury. Andrew Nicholson was named Andre Drummond's replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 69], "content_span": [70, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234902-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Weekend, Competition score\nStarting in 2013, the Western Conference and the Eastern Conference will compete to see who gets the most points. This score will only be applied to All-Star Saturday Night competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234903-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Development League draft\nThe 2013 NBA Development League Draft was the 13th draft of the National Basketball Association Development League\u00a0(NBDL). The draft was held on November 1, 2013, just before the 2013\u201314 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234904-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Development League expansion draft\nThe 2013 NBA Development League expansion draft was the sixth expansion draft of the National Basketball Association Development League\u00a0(D-League). The draft was held on August 29, 2013, so that the newly founded Delaware 87ers could acquire players for the upcoming 2013\u201314 season. The 16 players were chosen from a pool of unprotected players among the league's teams. Each returning D-League team could protect up to 12 of their players from being selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234904-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Development League expansion draft\nTwo of the players that the Legends chose had previously been named NBA D-League All-Stars: Leo Lyons and Sean Williams. A Boston College alumnus, Williams was also one of two players taken who had previously been selected in an NBA Draft (Darington Hobson was the other).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals\nThe 2013 NBA Finals was the championship series of the National Basketball Association's (NBA) 2012\u201313 season and the conclusion of the season's playoffs. In the best-of-seven series, the defending NBA Champion and Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat defeated the Western Conference champion San Antonio Spurs in seven games to win their second consecutive title. The Heat were favored to repeat as champions over the Spurs. The finals began with Game 1 on June 6, and ended with Game 7 on June 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals\nThis series marked the fifth time the Spurs have made the NBA Finals since 1999, second-most for any franchise in that span behind the Los Angeles Lakers. The Spurs had won all of their previous four finals appearances, putting them only behind the six-time champion Chicago Bulls for most titles without ever losing a Finals, making this series the first Finals loss in Spurs history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals\nThis series was also the first time San Antonio had played in the NBA Finals without home court advantage, as Miami had home-court advantage based on their league-best regular season record of 66\u201316 compared to the Spurs' 58\u201324. It was the Heat's third consecutive NBA Finals appearance, the first Eastern Conference team to achieve that since the Chicago Bulls (1996\u20131998). This marked the first time a team made three consecutive Finals appearances since the Los Angeles Lakers did so in 2008\u20132010; since then, only the Golden State Warriors and Cleveland Cavaliers have been able to do so, making five and four consecutive Finals appearances, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals\nFour former NBA Finals MVPs played in the series (the Spurs' Tim Duncan and Tony Parker, and the Heat's Dwyane Wade and LeBron James), the most since 1987. The 2013 Finals also set a record for most international players on either Finals roster (10). Tim Duncan became the fourth player in NBA history to make a Finals appearance in three different decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals\nThis marked the last NBA Finals played during the tenure of NBA commissioner David Stern. It also marked the last time the Finals used the 2\u20133\u20132 format, after which it reverted to the 2\u20132\u20131\u20131\u20131 format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background\nLeBron James and Tim Duncan previously faced off in the 2007 NBA Finals, when James was with the Cleveland Cavaliers, which saw the Spurs sweep the Cavaliers in four games, giving San Antonio their fourth NBA title. After the deciding game, Duncan sought out James in the locker room to praise him for a great series and told James that the league would be his someday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background\nIn 2010, Spurs president of basketball and head coach Gregg Popovich made a congratulatory phone call to Heat president Pat Riley for signing LeBron James and Chris Bosh to play with Dwyane Wade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background, San Antonio Spurs\nThis was the San Antonio Spurs' fifth appearance in the NBA Finals, attempting to win their fifth NBA championship in team history. The Spurs finished the regular season with 58 wins, finishing in first place in the Southwest Division and the second overall regular season record among Western Conference teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background, San Antonio Spurs\nThey recorded only two losses in the first three rounds of the playoffs: they swept the Los Angeles Lakers in the first round in four games, eliminated the Golden State Warriors in six games in the second round, then swept the Memphis Grizzlies in the Western Conference Finals in four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background, Miami Heat\nThis was the Miami Heat's fourth appearance in the NBA Finals and the third appearance for three straight years, attempting to win their third NBA championship. The Heat finished with the best regular season record, recording a league leading 66 wins, and first place in the Southeast Division. They swept the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round of the playoffs in four games before eliminating the Chicago Bulls in five games in the second round, winning four straight games in the series. In the Eastern Conference Finals, the Heat defeated the Indiana Pacers in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background, Regular season series\nThe Heat won both games they played against the Spurs during the regular season: 105\u2013100 on November 29, 2012, and 88\u201386 on March 31, 2013. For the November 29 game at Miami which was nationally televised, Popovich sat out starters Duncan, Tony Parker, Manu Gin\u00f3bili, and Danny Green, at the end of a long road trip in order to ensure they had enough rest for the playoffs, as the Spurs had some of the oldest players in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background, Regular season series\nNBA commissioner David Stern was outraged when he learned of this and fined the Spurs $250,000 for not informing the Heat, the league or the media in a suitable time-frame that the four players were not making the trip to Miami. Despite the absence of their four starters, the Spurs led the game until the final minute when the Heat came back to win 105\u2013100.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Background, Regular season series\nThe Heat responded somewhat in kind for their trip to San Antonio, as LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, and Mario Chalmers sat out with minor injuries, though those moves were understandable in light of Miami's dominant position for clinching the home-court advantage for the playoffs as well as the end two games earlier of the Heat's record 27-game winning streak. Miami ended up winning anyway thanks to a last-second 3-pointer from the top player they left active for the game, Chris Bosh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 1\nSan Antonio won the opener as Tony Parker scored on a bank shot with 5.2 seconds in regulation with the shot clock about to expire. San Antonio scored 23 points in the fourth quarter, while limiting Miami to just 16. Parker led the Spurs with 21 points and 6 assists. The Heat held a 52\u201349 halftime lead, and LeBron James recorded a triple-double in the game with 18 points, 18 rebounds, and 10 assists. However, Miami's Dwyane Wade, who scored 17 points, was shut out in the final period. Chris Bosh, who recorded 13 points, only scored 2 in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nMiami evened the series, using a 33\u20135 run in the final two quarters after the two teams were neck-and-neck late in the third. During that run, LeBron James made a highlight-reel block on a dunk attempt by Tiago Splitter early in the fourth quarter. The Heat also made 10 out of 19 three-point shots, and five players had double-digit scoring games: James (17), Mario Chalmers (19), Ray Allen (13), Chris Bosh (12) and Dwyane Wade (10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nSan Antonio bounced back in Game 3, setting the Finals record for most three-pointers in a game (16), and giving the Heat their worst loss in franchise playoff history. The Spurs ensured the game was a blowout by outscoring Miami 35\u201314 in the fourth quarter after leading 78\u201363 at the end of the third. Gary Neal had one of the best games of his career, making 6-of-10 three-point shot attempts and finishing with 24 points, and Danny Green led all Spurs players with 27 points while hitting 7-of-9 from behind the arc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nThe Spurs shined despite a lackluster game from Tony Parker who scored only 6 points before he had to leave the game due to a hamstring injury. For the Heat, Mike Miller made all five of his three-point shots and finished with 15 points on the night, while Wade led the Heat with 16 points. However, LeBron James was held to just 7 of 21 shooting from the field, finished with only 15 points, and did not shoot a free throw for the first time in his Miami playoff career. After a strong showing in Game 2, Mario Chalmers was held scoreless with one assist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe Heat evened the series again, pulling away from San Antonio in the second half after an even contest at halftime, 49\u201349. The Heat continued their streak of not losing consecutive games that the team started in January. The Big Three (the trio of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh) for Miami finally came together in a big way. James led the Heat with 33 points, while Wade had 32 and Bosh added 20. Tim Duncan led the Spurs with 20 points. Tony Parker started strong with 15 points in the first half, but could not provide the Spurs with any offensive production in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 5\nSan Antonio used a marquee shooting performance to down the Heat and take a 3\u20132 series lead. The Heat trailed the Spurs by double digits for most of the game. Although they finally closed to within one point, 75\u201374, with 3:05 left in the third quarter, they could not overtake and San Antonio started to pull away after that. Making 42 of 70 shots, San Antonio became the first team to shoot at least 60 percent in an NBA Finals game since the Orlando Magic in Game 3 of the 2009 Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 5\nTony Parker led the Spurs with 26 points, while Danny Green scored 24 points, with 6 three-pointers, breaking the all-time record for three-pointers in a Finals series, set by Ray Allen in 2008. Manu Gin\u00f3bili, making his first start of the season, had a strong performance with 24 points and 10 assists. Tim Duncan also contributed a double-double (17 points, 12 rebounds), and provided strong defensive support. At one point in the game, Spurs went on a 19\u20131 run, with Green and Gin\u00f3bili scoring most of those points. LeBron James and Dwyane Wade turned in strong performances, leading the Heat with 25 points each, while Ray Allen had five three-pointers (including two four-point plays) and scored 21 points total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nThe Heat rode a triple-double performance from James (32 points along with 11 assists and 10 rebounds)\u2014becoming the first player since Magic Johnson in 1991 to have two triple doubles in the same NBA Finals series\u2014and 20 points from Mario Chalmers, while Tim Duncan led the Spurs with 30 points and 17 rebounds; however, Duncan was held scoreless after the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nFans and media outlets alike have begun dubbing it \"The Headband Game\" in reference to the signature accessory LeBron James lost on a dunk with just under nine minutes left in the 4th quarter and did not wear the rest of the way. The game is considered by players and commentators to be one of the greatest games in NBA history. LeBron James regards it as one of the best games in which he has ever taken part. NBA legend Magic Johnson called it \"one of the best two or three games\" he had ever seen. On July 17, 2013, Game 6 of the 2013 NBA Finals received the 2013 ESPY award for Best Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nThe Spurs were leading 75\u201365 at the end of the third quarter, but LeBron James sparked a 20\u20137 run for the Heat to start the fourth quarter, personally scoring 11 of those points. With 10:30 remaining, the Spurs still up 77\u201370, Mike Miller's shoe came loose but he did not have time to put it back on so he tossed it off court; with one sock and one shoe he received a pass from LeBron James and sunk a three-pointer to pull the Heat within four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nWith 2:09 remaining, the Heat pulled ahead 89\u201386 but the Spurs went on a run of their own spearheaded by Tony Parker, who shot a stepback three and a reverse layup in consecutive possessions to put his team ahead 91\u201389. On the next possession, James lost the ball in the post; this eventually led to a pair of Manu Gin\u00f3bili free throws after an intentional foul (by Ray Allen) on the other end, pushing the score to 93\u201389. James committed a second crucial turnover forcing it into the hands of Gin\u00f3bili, who was fouled by Allen. Gin\u00f3bili missed one of two free throws, setting the stage for the comeback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nWith 28.2 remaining, the Spurs were up 94\u201389, and league officials began bringing out the yellow tape to cordon off the floor for the Larry O'Brien Trophy presentation. LeBron James missed a three-pointer, but the ball was kept in Heat possession by Wade and Allen both tipping the ball until Mike Miller got the rebound and passed to James, who made the three-pointer to pull within two points with 20 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nAfter failing to steal the inbound pass, the Heat immediately fouled Kawhi Leonard, who also missed one of two free throws, keeping it a one possession game at 95\u201392. James was entrusted with the final shot but missed a 26-foot jumper from beyond the arc. Chris Bosh was able to collect a key offensive rebound before passing to Ray Allen, who stepped backward and made a three-point basket from the right corner with 5.2 left to send the game into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nSpurs head coach Gregg Popovich had opted for a small lineup to defend the perimeter in the closing moments of the fourth quarter, resulting in the Spurs' Tim Duncan being on the bench as both Heat's three-pointers came off of rebounds. The Spurs had no timeouts left after Allen's shot, but received a de facto extra timeout due to the video review that confirmed that Allen had both feet behind the 3-point line when he released the ball. Tony Parker was able to drive the length of the court and launch a short off-balance jumper over LeBron James, but it became an airball as the buzzer sounded to end the 4th quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 6\nIn overtime, James hit a floater with 1:43 remaining to give Miami a 101\u2013100 lead. That score would hold all the way down to final moments, where Dwyane Wade missed a jumper trying to extend the lead, and San Antonio getting the rebound with 12 seconds left. The Spurs opted not to call timeout and let Manu Gin\u00f3bili get a full head of steam heading towards the basket. However, Ray Allen stripped the ball away from Ginobili on his way up for a shot and Allen recovered the ball, forcing the Spurs to foul him with 1.9 left. Allen made both free throws to put Miami up 103\u2013100. San Antonio still had a chance but Bosh, who had a key block earlier in OT, came through with another key block in the final seconds to prevent a three-point game-tying shot from Danny Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 7\nJames scored 37 points, including five 3-pointers, and grabbed 12 rebounds to lead Miami to a 95\u201388 victory in Game 7. With the win, the Heat captured their second consecutive NBA championship. After a 3-point shot by Kawhi Leonard, the Spurs trailed by just two with 50 seconds remaining in the game. They had a chance to tie the game, but Duncan, guarded by Shane Battier, missed a shot under the basket and a follow-up tip-in attempt. James went on to hit a 17-foot jumper that secured the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 7\nWade scored 23 points and had 10 rebounds, and Battier scored 18 points on six 3-pointers to offset scoreless nights by Bosh and Allen. James tied Tommy Heinsohn's record set in 1957 for most points in an NBA Finals Game 7 win, and won his second straight NBA Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234905-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Finals, Broadcast\nIn the United States, the NBA Finals aired on ABC and Mike Breen and Jeff Van Gundy served as commentators. ESPN Radio aired it as well and had Mike Tirico and Hubie Brown as commentators. For the first time, ESPN Deportes provided exclusive Spanish-language coverage of The Finals, with a commentary team of \u00c1lvaro Mart\u00edn, Carlos Morales, and Alejandro Montecchia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League\nThe 2013 NBA Summer League is a pro basketball league run by the NBA just after the 2013 NBA draft. It gives newly drafted players a chance to test their skills against each other, and to give them a feel for professional basketball. All 30 NBA teams participated, along with the D-League Select. The Miami Heat were the only team to participate in both Summer Leagues. It ran from July 7\u201312 in Orlando and July 12\u201322 in Las Vegas. Jeremy Lamb of the Oklahoma City Thunder was named the Most Valuable Player of the Orlando Summer League. Jonas Valan\u010di\u016bnas of the Toronto Raptors went on to be named the Most Valuable Player of the Las Vegas Summer League. Ian Clark of the Golden State Warriors was named the Most Valuable Player of the Las Vegas Summer League Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Orlando Pro Summer League, Schedule, Championship Day\nThe seeding is determined by a team's total points after the first five days. Seven points are awarded in each game: three points for winning a game and one point for every quarter a team won. In the event of a tied quarter, each team are awarder half a point. If two or more teams have equal points, then the following tiebreakers apply:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Orlando Pro Summer League, Schedule, Championship Day\nEach team is paired with the team that is the closest seed to them, for example: the top two seeds will play in the championship game, the third and fourth seeds will play in the third-place game, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Orlando Pro Summer League, Honors\nThe All-Summer League Team is an honor bestowed on the best players in the summer league as voted on by participating Public Relations Directors and members of Orlando Magic official website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Las Vegas NBA Summer League, Championship\nThe championship will be determined by a single elimination tournament, the top 10 teams receive a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Las Vegas NBA Summer League, Championship, Seeding\nTeams are seeded first by overall record, then by a tiebreaker system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Las Vegas NBA Summer League, Championship, Seeding\nFirst-round losers play consolation games to determine 17th through 22nd places. These teams either keep their own seeding or inherit that of their first-round opponent, if lower. Based on this, teams are matched against their closest-seeded opponent with #17 playing #18, #19 playing #20, and #21 playing #22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Las Vegas NBA Summer League, Championship, Seeding\nSecond-round losers play consolation games to determine ninth through 16th places. These teams take the lower seed number of the two teams involved in their second-round games with the built-in assumption that lower-seeded teams that won their first-round games inherited the higher seed from the opponent they defeated. Based on this, teams are matched against their closest-seeded opponent with #9 playing #10, #11 playing #12, #13 playing #14, and #15 playing #16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234906-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA Summer League, Las Vegas NBA Summer League, Honors\nBeing named to the All-Summer League Team is an honor bestowed upon the best players in the Las Vegas summer league as voted on by members of the media in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 59], "content_span": [60, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft\nThe 2013 NBA draft was held on June 27, 2013, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. National Basketball Association (NBA) teams took turns selecting amateur U.S. college basketball players and other eligible players, including international players. State Farm was the presenting sponsor. The lottery took place on May 21, 2013. This was the first draft for New Orleans under their new Pelicans name after playing as the New Orleans Hornets previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA draft\nIt would also be the last draft for the Charlotte Bobcats under their old name, as they resumed playing under their old Hornets moniker that they last used in 2002 once the 2013\u201314 NBA season was over. Anthony Bennett, the first pick in the draft, had a very limited amount of media outlets considering him as a potential #1 pick in the draft. He bounced around the league and then was finally released by the Brooklyn Nets in January 2017 after averaging just 5.2 PPG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft\nHighlights of the draft included the first Canadian number one selection (Anthony Bennett). The draft also included the first Canadian pair of lottery picks (Bennett and Kelly Olynyk), the first Iranian draft choice (Arsalan Kazemi), the first New Zealander first round pick (Steven Adams) and the last first round draft selections announced by then-NBA commissioner David Stern, the last of which included a visit by Hakeem Olajuwon, Stern's first pick he ever announced back in 1984. He was replaced by current commissioner Adam Silver beginning with the 2014 NBA draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Notable undrafted players\nThese players were not selected in the 2013 NBA draft but have played at least one game in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Eligibility and entrants\nThe draft is conducted under the eligibility rules established in the league's new 2011 collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with its players union. The CBA that ended the 2011 lockout instituted no immediate changes to the draft, but called for a committee of owners and players to discuss future changes. As of 2012, the basic eligibility rules for the draft are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Eligibility and entrants, Early entrants\nPlayer who are not automatically eligible must declare their eligibility for the draft by notifying the NBA offices in writing no later than 60 days before the draft. For the 2013 draft, this date fell on April 28. Under NCAA rules, players will only have until April 16 to withdraw from the draft and maintain their college eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Eligibility and entrants, Early entrants\nA player who has hired an agent will forfeit his remaining college eligibility, regardless of whether he is drafted. Also, while the CBA allows a player to withdraw from the draft twice, the NCAA mandates that a player who has declared twice loses his college eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Eligibility and entrants, Early entrants, International players\nFifteen players who did not attend college in the US or Canada between the ages of 18 and 22 declared for the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 79], "content_span": [80, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Eligibility and entrants, Automatically eligible entrants\nPlayers who do not meet the criteria for \"international\" players are automatically eligible if they meet any of the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 73], "content_span": [74, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Eligibility and entrants, Automatically eligible entrants\nPlayers who meet the criteria for \"international\" players are automatically eligible if they meet any of the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Eligibility and entrants, Automatically eligible entrants\nIn addition to every college players who has completed their college eligibility and every \"international\" players who was born on or before December 31, 1991, the following player would also be eligible for selection in the 2013 NBA draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 73], "content_span": [74, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Draft lottery\nThe first 14 picks in the draft belong to teams that miss the playoffs; the order was determined through a lottery. The lottery determined the three teams that will obtain the first three picks on the draft. The remaining first-round picks and the second-round picks were assigned to teams in reverse order of their win-loss record in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 29], "content_span": [30, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Draft lottery\nBelow were the chances for each team to get specific picks in the 2013 draft lottery, rounded to three decimal places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 29], "content_span": [30, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Draft lottery\n^\u00a01:\u00a0Toronto Raptors' pick was conveyed to the Oklahoma City Thunder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 29], "content_span": [30, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Invited attendees\nThe NBA annually invites around 10\u201315 players to sit in the so-called \"green room\", a special room set aside at the draft site for the invited players plus their families and agents. The following 13 players were invited (listed alphabetically) to the 2013 NBA draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Trades involving draft picks, Pre-draft trades\nPrior to the day of the draft, the following trades were made and resulted in exchanges of draft picks between the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234907-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA draft, Trades involving draft picks, Draft-day trades\nThe following trades involving drafted players were made on the day of the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 62], "content_span": [63, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs\nThe 2013 NBA playoffs was the postseason tournament of the National Basketball Association's 2012\u201313 season. The tournament concluded with the Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat defeating the Western Conference champion San Antonio Spurs 4 games to 3 in the NBA Finals. LeBron James was named NBA Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs\nThe Miami Heat headed into the playoffs with a franchise-best 66 wins, topping the league in the regular season. Their 2012 Finals opponents, the Oklahoma City Thunder, topped the Western Conference with 60 wins, making it the first time since 2006 that the two teams who faced off in the previous year's finals topped their respective conferences in the next regular season. However, when the Thunder lost to the Memphis Grizzlies in the Conference Semifinals, home court advantage in the Western Conference Finals went to the San Antonio Spurs, who were two games ahead of the Grizzlies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs\nThe New York Knicks entered the playoffs with their best regular-season performance since 1997, finishing atop the Atlantic Division for the first time since 1994. The Indiana Pacers won the Central Division for the first time since 2004, while the Los Angeles Clippers made franchise history by winning their first Pacific Division title and having a 56-win season, tied with the Memphis Grizzlies, whose 56 wins were also a franchise record. The Denver Nuggets earned the West's third seed and headed into the playoffs with a franchise-record 57 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs\nThe Brooklyn Nets and Golden State Warriors made their first playoff appearances since 2007. This also marked the first time that Barclays Center hosted a playoff game. The Houston Rockets made their first playoff appearance since 2009, while the Milwaukee Bucks appeared for the first time since 2010. The Bucks were the first team since 2011 to make the playoffs despite finishing below .500 in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs\nThe San Antonio Spurs continued the longest active playoff streak at 16 straight appearances. The Dallas Mavericks missed the playoffs for the first time since 2000, ending the second-longest active streak of playoff appearances, which stretched 12 years. The Orlando Magic also missed the playoffs for the first time since 2006, ending the longest active streak in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs\nGame 7 between Chicago and Brooklyn marked the 14th straight postseason with at least one Game 7. The 1999 NBA Playoffs was the last time that a Game 7 was not played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Format\nThe six division winners and 10 other teams with the most wins from each conference qualified for the playoffs. The seedings are based on each team's record; however, a division winner is guaranteed to be ranked at least fourth, regardless of record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Format, Tiebreak procedures\nIf there were more than two teams tied, the team that wins the tiebreaker gets the highest seed, while the other teams were \"re-broken\" from the first step until all ties were resolved. Since the three division winners were guaranteed a spot in the top four, ties to determine the division winners had to be broken before any other ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Bracket\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 for the playoffs does not necessarily belong to the higher-seeded team, but instead the team with the better regular season record. Teams with home court advantage are shown in italics. If two teams with the same record meet in a round, standard tiebreaker rules are used. The doodle rule for determining home court advantage in the NBA Finals is head to head record followed by record vs. opposite conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (1) Miami Heat vs. (8) Milwaukee Bucks\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Heat and the Bucks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 102], "content_span": [103, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (2) New York Knicks vs. (7) Boston Celtics\nThis was the 15th playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Celtics winning eight of the first 14 meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 106], "content_span": [107, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (3) Indiana Pacers vs. (6) Atlanta Hawks\nThis was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the each team winning two series apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 104], "content_span": [105, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nThe Nets led wire-to-wire as they routed the Bulls 106\u201389 to take a 1\u20130 series lead. A dominant first half allowed the Nets to put the game away early as they outscored the Bulls 25\u201314 in the first quarter and 35\u201321 in the second quarter, building a 60\u201335 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nFollowing their embarrassing Game 1 loss, the Bulls bounced back with a 90\u201382 win, evening the series at 1\u20131 and stealing homecourt advantage. The Bulls took control of the game in the third quarter, outscoring the Nets 22\u201311 in the period and building a 12-point 4th quarter lead. The Nets attempted to rally, but the Bulls made enough clutch shots to hold them off. After scoring 89 points through 3 quarters in Game 1 (and 106 for the game), the Nets were held to 82 points for all of Game 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nThe Bulls took a 2\u20131 series lead with a 79\u201376 victory. Despite squandering most of a huge fourth quarter lead, the Bulls hung on to win when Cj Watson airballed a game-tying three-pointer at the buzzer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nThe Bulls stunned the Nets and took a commanding 3\u20131 series lead with a 142\u2013134 victory in triple overtime. The Nets trailed 58\u201355 at halftime. However, they outscored the Bulls 29\u201318 in the third quarter and led by 8 points heading into the fourth quarter. With less than 3 minutes to go, the Nets extended their lead to 14, and the Bulls trailed 109\u201395. However, the Bulls would go on a 16\u20132 run to force the first of three overtimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nNate Robinson caught fire, scoring 23 points in the 4th quarter, including 12 unanswered points as the Bulls cut the deficit to 109\u2013107 with just over one minute remaining. Carlos Boozer then scored the game-tying bucket to even the game at 109. On the Nets' next possession, Brook Lopez was fouled. He made both free throws to put the Nets up 111\u2013109. The Bulls drew up a play to give Luol Deng a go-ahead corner three. Deng missed the three, but Joakim Noah grabbed two offensive rebounds and tied the game at 111\u2013111.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nDeron Williams attempted to win the game at the end of regulation, but his shot rimmed out, and the Bulls forced overtime. During the overtimes, several players fouled out. For the Nets, Gerald Wallace and Reggie Evans would foul out while Robinson, Noah, and Gibson would foul out for the Bulls. The Bulls would go on to win the game in triple overtime as they pushed the Nets to the brink of elimination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nThe Bulls entered this game without the services of Derrick Rose, Luol Deng, and Kirk Hinrich, but almost blew a 3\u20131 series lead to the Nets. However, the Bulls dominated the first half, building a 61\u201344 halftime lead. In the second half, the Nets fought back as they cut the deficit to 4, but they got no closer as the Bulls prevailed with a 99\u201393 victory. It was the first time that the Bulls had won a Game 7 on the road in franchise history, becoming the 7th NBA road team to do so after leading series 3\u20131. They were 0\u20136 in their last 6 road Game 7's. This was also Gerald Wallace's last game as a Net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Brooklyn Nets vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Bulls winning the first meeting. All previous meetings took place while the Nets were in New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 103], "content_span": [104, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (1) Oklahoma City Thunder vs. (8) Houston Rockets\nThis was the seventh playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Thunder/SuperSonics franchise winning five of the first six meetings. All previous meetings took place while the Thunder franchise were still known as the Seattle SuperSonics. In game 2, Russell Westbrook was injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 113], "content_span": [114, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) Los Angeles Lakers\nThe Spurs dominated the Lakers in Game 1 and took a 1\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 112], "content_span": [113, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) Los Angeles Lakers\nThe Spurs dominated again in Game 2 and took a commanding 2\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 112], "content_span": [113, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) Los Angeles Lakers\nThe Spurs throttled the Lakers 120\u201389 and took a commanding 3\u20130 series lead. For the Lakers, the 31-point loss represented the largest home playoff loss in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 112], "content_span": [113, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) Los Angeles Lakers\nThe Spurs completed their sweep of the injury-depleted Lakers, routing them 103\u201382. Dwight Howard picked up two technical fouls and was ejected in the third quarter. It would end up being his final game in a Lakers jersey until his return to the team in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 112], "content_span": [113, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) Los Angeles Lakers\nThis was the 12th playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Lakers winning eight of the first 11 meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 112], "content_span": [113, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (3) Denver Nuggets vs. (6) Golden State Warriors\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Nuggets and the Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 112], "content_span": [113, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (4) Los Angeles Clippers vs. (5) Memphis Grizzlies\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Clippers winning the first meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 114], "content_span": [115, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (1) Miami Heat vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nThe Bulls stunned the Heat in Game 1 with a 93\u201386 victory. The game was close throughout, with neither team leading by more than 8 points. The Heat entered the fourth quarter with a 62\u201358 lead and led 86\u201383 with just over two minutes to play when the Bulls scored the game's final 10 points. After giving up only 37 points in the first half, the Heat's defense allowed the Bulls to score 35 points in the 4th quarter alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 109], "content_span": [110, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (1) Miami Heat vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nAfter Marco Bellinelli's game-tying three-pointer knotted the game at 86, Nate Robinson took over, scoring two consecutive shots to put the Bulls up 90\u201386 with just over 40 seconds left. On the Heat's next two possessions, LeBron James would shoot an airball and miss a long three-pointer, and Nate Robinson made enough free throws to seal the win and help the Bulls steal homecourt advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 109], "content_span": [110, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (1) Miami Heat vs. (5) Chicago Bulls\nThis was the seventh playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Bulls winning four of the first six meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 109], "content_span": [110, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (2) New York Knicks vs. (3) Indiana Pacers\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, 115], "content_span": [116, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (1) Oklahoma City Thunder vs. (5) Memphis Grizzlies\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Thunder winning the first meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 124], "content_span": [125, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (6) Golden State Warriors\nGolden State led by 16 with 4 minutes to go, when they miss 8 of their last 9 shots, while San Antonio caught fire. The Spurs would come back without Tim Duncan, who had been bothered by a stomach virus and had to be in the locker room for the final 4:31 of regulation. San Antonio finally tied the game on a Danny Green 3-pointer with 20 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 124], "content_span": [125, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (6) Golden State Warriors\nStephen Curry (who scored 22 points in the 3rd quarter) would have a shot to win the game at the buzzer, but he misses his tightly contested 15-footer so the game heads to OT. Manu Ginobili would have a shot to potentially win the game at the end of the 1st OT but it was off the mark therefore the game goes to a 2nd OT. In the 2nd OT, with the Spurs leading by 3, Ginobili takes an ill-advised 3 with still 12 seconds left on the shot clock and 48 left on the game clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 124], "content_span": [125, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0030-0002", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (6) Golden State Warriors\nCurry would score to cut the deficit to 1-point with 32 seconds left. The Spurs would drain the shot clock before Tony Parker missed a contested lay-up, which led to a Warriors fast-break, which was finished off with a reverse lay-up from Kent Bazemore with 3.9 left to give Golden State a sudden 1-point lead. However, Ginobili would make up for his previous misses by hitting the game-winning 3 with 1.2 left to take Game 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 124], "content_span": [125, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (6) Golden State Warriors\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Warriors winning the first meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 124], "content_span": [125, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Finals, Eastern Conference Finals, (1) Miami Heat vs. (3) Indiana Pacers\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, 102], "content_span": [103, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Finals, Western Conference Finals, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (5) Memphis Grizzlies\nThis was the first sweep of any NBA conference finals series since 2003, when the New Jersey Nets swept the Detroit Pistons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 112], "content_span": [113, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, Conference Finals, Western Conference Finals, (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (5) Memphis Grizzlies\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, 112], "content_span": [113, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, NBA Finals: (E1) Miami Heat vs. (W2) San Antonio Spurs\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Heat and the Spurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234908-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 NBA playoffs, NBA Records\nThe following records were set or tied during the playoffs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234909-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBL Canada Finals\nThe 2013 NBL Canada Finals was the championship series of the 2012\u201313 National Basketball League of Canada season and the conclusion of the season's playoffs. The Central Division champions London Lightning played against the Atlantic Division champions Summerside Storm, in a best-of-five series. The London Lightning the series 3\u20131. The Finals began on April 6, and ended on April 12. The Lightning claimed their second title in a row and Marvin Phillips was named Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234910-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBL Canada draft\nThe 2013 NBL Canada Draft was held on August 19, 2013, at Hilton Suites Conference Centre & Spa in Markham, Ontario. A total of 29 players were selected, in three rounds. Alex Johnson was selected with the first overall pick by the Ottawa SkyHawks, becoming the first Canadian to be the top pick in the NBL Canada Draft. Johnson did not appear for the SkyHawks, as he was traded to the Mississauga Power for Bol Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234911-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBT Cup\nThe 2013 NBT Cup (National Bank of Tuvalu Cup) was the 8th edition of Tuvalu's national football knockout tournament, known as the NBT Cup. The tournament began on 27 July 2013 and finished on 24 August 2013. Eight clubs participated. Defending champions were FC Tofaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234911-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NBT Cup\nThe winner was Tamanuku A, who won 4\u20132 against Tofaga A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 69]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234912-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NBT Cup (women)\nThe 2013 NBT Cup (women) (National Bank of Tuvalu Cup) is the first edition of national football knockout tournament, known as the NBT Cup. The tournament began on 27 July 2013 and finished on 24 August 2013. Five clubs participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234913-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NC State Wolfpack baseball team\nThe 2013 NC State Wolfpack baseball team represented North Carolina State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Wolfpack was coached by Elliott Avent, in his seventeenth season, and played their home games at Doak Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234913-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NC State Wolfpack baseball team\nThe Wolfpack finished with 50 wins, the most in school history, against 16 losses overall, and 19\u201310 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, good for second place in the Atlantic Division. They reached the College World Series for just the second time in their history, where they finished 1\u20132, eliminated by rival North Carolina 7\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234913-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NC State Wolfpack baseball team, Ranking Movements\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, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234914-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NC State Wolfpack football team\nThe 2013 NC State Wolfpack football team represented North Carolina State University in the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They played their home games at Carter\u2013Finley Stadium in Raleigh, North Carolina. It was their first season under head coach Dave Doeren. They finished the season 3\u20139 overall, and 0\u20138 in ACC play to finish in last place in the Atlantic Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234915-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Bowling Championship\nThe 2013 NCAA Bowling Championship was the 10th annual tournament to determine the national champion of women's NCAA collegiate ten-pin bowling. The tournament was played at Freeway Lanes in Canton, Michigan from April 11\u201313, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234915-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Bowling Championship\nNebraska defeated Vanderbilt in the championship match, 4\u00bd games to 2\u00bd (211\u2013199, 186\u2013197, 156\u2013169, 190\u2013190, 196\u2013189, 202\u2013182, 246\u2013200), to win their fourth national title. The Cornhuskers were coached by Bill Straub.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234915-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Bowling Championship\nNebraska's Liz Kuhlkin was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. Kuhlkin, along with four other bowlers, also comprised the All Tournament Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234915-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 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 given at-large bids for this championship, which consisted of a modified double-elimination style tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament began on Friday, May 31, 2013 as part of the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The 64 team double elimination tournament concluded with the 2013 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, which began on June 15 and ended with the final round on June 25. The UCLA Bruins swept the Mississippi State Bulldogs in a best-of-three series to win the NCAA National Championship, the university's first in baseball and the 109th national title in all sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\nThe 64 participating college baseball teams were selected from an eligible pool of 298 NCAA Division I programs. Thirty teams were awarded an automatic bid as champions of their individual conferences. Additionally, 34 non-automatic qualifying teams were awarded at-large berths by the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\nThe 64 teams were divided into sixteen regionals consisting of four teams each. All four teams, in each regional, competed in a double-elimination tournament. Regional champions then faced one another in a best-of-three games series in their individual Super Regional based upon a predetermined bracketed system. This format determined the final eight participants to advance to the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\nFourteen of the sixteen original Regional hosts advanced to their respective Super Regional; the exceptions were the #8 national seed Oregon Ducks and the Virginia Tech Hokies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\nFor the first time in television history, ESPN provided live cut-ins and highlights from all 16 Regionals with the new Bases Loaded platform \u2014 similar to ESPN Goal Line and Buzzer Beater for college football and basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament, National seeds\nThese eight teams automatically host a Super Regional if they advance to that round. Oregon was the only team not to advance to the Super Regional. Bold indicates CWS participant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament, College World Series\nThe College World Series began on June 15, 2013 and was held at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha, Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament, College World Series, All-Tournament Team\nThe following players were members of the College World Series All-Tournament Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament, Record by conference\nThe columns RF, SR, WS, NS, CS, and NC respectively stand for the Regional Finals, Super Regionals, College World Series, National Semifinals, Championship Series, and National Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament, Media coverage, Radio\nNRG Media, in conjunction with Westwood One/NCAA Radio Network, provided nationwide radio coverage of the College World Series, which was streamed online at dialglobalsports.com and broadcast across radio stations throughout the US. Kevin Kugler and John Bishop called all games leading up to the Championship Series. The championship series was called by Kugler and Scott Graham with Ted Emrich acting as field reporter for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234916-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament, Media coverage, Television\nFor the first time ever ESPN carried every game from the Regionals, Super Regionals, and College World Series across the ESPN Networks (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, and ESPN3). ESPN also provided Bases Loaded coverage for the Regionals. Bases Loaded was hosted by Dari Nowkhah and Anish Shroff with Kyle Peterson on hand as analysts. Bases Loaded aired the entire time on ESPN3 with select coverage on ESPN2 and ESPNU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234917-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships were the 75th NCAA Men's Division I Cross Country Championship and the 33rd NCAA Women's Division I Cross Country Championship held at the LaVern Gibson Cross Country Course in Terre Haute, Indiana near the campus of Indiana State University on November 23, 2013. Four different cross country running championships were contested: men's and women's individual and team championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234917-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships\nOn the men's side, the team national championship was won by the Colorado Buffaloes, their fourth title, while the individual championship was won by Edward Cheserek from Oregon. On the women's side, the team championship was won by the Providence Friars, their second title, and the individual championship was won by Abbey D'Agostino of Dartmouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234918-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings\nThree human polls and one formula ranking made up the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) football rankings, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. Unlike most sports, college football's governing body, the NCAA, does not bestow a national championship title. That title is bestowed by one or more of four different polling agencies. There are two main weekly polls that begin in the preseason\u2014the AP Poll and the Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234918-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings\nTwo additional polls were released midway through the season; the Harris Interactive Poll was released after the sixth week of the season, and the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) standings were released after the seventh week. The Harris Poll and Coaches Poll were factors in the BCS standings. At the end of the season, on Sunday, December 1, 2013, the BCS standings determined who played in the BCS bowl games as well as the 2014 BCS National Championship Game on January 6, 2014, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season was the highest level college football competition in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season\nThe regular season began on August 29, 2013 and ended on December 14, 2013. The postseason concluded on January 6, 2014 with the final BCS National Championship Game, played at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season\nThe Florida State Seminoles beat the Auburn Tigers in the BCS National Championship Game to become the consensus national champion of the 2013 season. This was the final season in which the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) was used to determine the national champion of the Football Bowl Subdivision; the BCS was replaced by the College Football Playoff system starting with the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Rule changes\nThe following rule changes were made by the NCAA Football Rules Committee for the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Rule changes\nA rule that would have required the colors of uniform jerseys and pants to contrast to the field was recommended by the Rules Committee but was denied by the Playing Rules Oversight Panel. This rule was proposed to prevent teams (such as Boise State) from wearing uniforms that matched the color of their field. Another recommended rule would have switched the side of the field on which the line-to-gain and down markers are displayed in each half but was also denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Rule changes\nThe NCAA Legislative Council also approved a new rule that allows any FBS team with a 6\u20136 record entering a conference championship game to be bowl-eligible regardless of the result of the title game. Previously, such teams (for example, Georgia Tech last season and UCLA in 2011) had to seek an NCAA waiver if they lost in their conference championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Conference realignment\nOn April 3, 2013, the schools remaining in the original Big East Conference, which had sold the \"Big East\" name to the seven Catholic schools that would later leave the league to form the new Big East in July 2013, announced that they would operate as the American Athletic Conference (shortened to AAC or \"The American). The AAC filled its membership by adding schools from Conference USA, which replaced its losses with former Sun Belt and Western Athletic Conference (WAC) members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Conference realignment\nThe WAC discontinued football as a sponsored sport after the 2012 season when most of its football-playing members announced their departures for other conferences, primarily the Mountain West, in the preceding years. The WAC became the first FBS (formerly Division I-A) conference to drop football since the Big West Conference did so after the 2000 season. Idaho and New Mexico State, the two WAC football members who remained for 2013 season, temporarily became FBS independents in football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Regular season top 10 matchups\nRankings reflect the AP Poll. Rankings for Week 9 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Conference champions\nRankings reflect the Week 15 AP Poll before the conference championship games were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Awards and honors, Heisman Trophy\nThe Heisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234919-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, Coaching changes\nThis is restricted to coaching changes that took place on or after May 1, 2013. For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2013, see 2012 NCAA Division I FBS end-of-season coaching changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234920-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football rankings\nThe following weekly polls comprise the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football rankings which determine the top 25 teams at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision level of college football for the 2013 season. The Sports Network poll is voted by media members while the Coaches' Poll is determined by coaches at the FCS level. Schools in transition to the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level of college football (including Old Dominion, Appalachian State, and Georgia Southern) were ineligible for the Coaches' Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, part of college football in the United States, was organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level. The season began on August 29, 2013, and concluded with the 2014 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game on January 4, 2014, at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Notable changes\nFor 2013, the FCS playoffs expanded for the first time since 2010. The Pioneer Football League champion now receives an automatic bid into the FCS playoffs, which increased to 24 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Notable changes\nUnder a standard provision of NCAA rules, all FCS programs were allowed to play 12 regular-season games (not counting conference title games) in 2013, and also in 2014. In years when the period starting with the Thursday before Labor Day and ending with the final Saturday in November contains 14 Saturdays, FCS programs may play 12 games instead of the regular 11. After 2014, the next season in which 12-game seasons are allowed will be 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nSeveral teams changed conferences from the 2012 season, with all moves officially taking effect on July 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nAlbany and Stony Brook became football-only members of the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). Previously, they had respectively been football-only members of the Northeast Conference and Big South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nGeorgia State left the FCS ranks to become a member of the Sun Belt Conference. As it began its FBS transition in 2012, it was counted as an FBS member for scheduling purposes in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nOld Dominion joined Conference USA (C-USA) and started its FBS transition. ODU was technically an FCS independent in 2013 before becoming a provisional FBS member in 2014 and a full FBS member in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nThe Southland Conference added four schools\u2014two with established football programs, one launching a new program, and another (New Orleans) without varsity football. The established programs were Abilene Christian and Incarnate Word, both joining from the Division II Lone Star Conference. While technically considered FCS independents in 2013, they played Division II schedules this season. Both would be counted as FCS members for scheduling purposes in 2014, at which time they began playing full Southland Conference schedules. Houston Baptist, arriving from the Division I Great West Conference, fielded a football team for the first time in 2013, but only played a partial schedule. Houston Baptist also began playing a full Southland schedule in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nMonmouth announced in December 2012 that it would leave the Northeast Conference (NEC) for the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC), effective in July 2013. As the MAAC has not sponsored football since 2007, Monmouth's football plans were uncertain. Those plans became clear on February 14, 2013, when the Big South Conference announced that Monmouth would become a football-only member of that league in 2014. Since Monmouth was transitioning from the limited-scholarship NEC to a conference that allows the full FCS limit of 63 scholarship equivalents, the Hawks played the 2013 football season as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nIn addition to the schools changing conferences, three others launched FCS football programs. Charlotte, which rejoined C-USA after eight years in the Atlantic 10 Conference, played as an FCS independent in its first football season, as part of its announced plan to become a full FBS member in 2015. The 49ers were counted as an FBS program for scheduling purposes in 2014 and became a C-USA football member in 2015. Two other schools, Mercer and Stetson, reinstated varsity football after decades-long absences\u2014Mercer had last played in 1941 and Stetson in 1956. Both initially planned to operate as non-scholarship programs in the Pioneer Football League. However, Mercer would later commit to scholarship football when it accepted an invitation to join the Southern Conference (SoCon) in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 875]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nTwo other SoCon members, Appalachian State and Georgia Southern, were officially announced on March 27, 2013 as future Sun Belt members. Both schools began FBS transitions in 2013 in advance of their 2014 entry into the Sun Belt. They were counted as FBS members for scheduling purposes in 2014, and were eligible for the Sun Belt football championship, but were not eligible for bowl games until completing their transitions in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference changes and new programs\nThis was also the last season for two other programs in their then-current conferences. Elon left the SoCon for the CAA in July 2014; at the same time, VMI left the Big South and returned to the SoCon after an 11-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, FCS team wins over FBS teams\n(FCS rankings from the Sports Network poll; FBS rankings from the AP Poll)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Conference summaries, Other conference winners\nNote: Records are regular-season only, and do not include playoff games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 88], "content_span": [89, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Postseason, NCAA Division I playoff bracket\nJanuary 41:00 PM CSTToyota Stadium,Frisco, Texas ESPN2 Dial Global Sports", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, Coaching changes, Preseason and in-season\nThis is restricted to coaching changes that took place on or after May 1, 2013. For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2013, see 2012 NCAA Division I FCS end-of-season coaching changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234921-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season, NFL draft selections\nListed below are all FCS players selected in the 2014 NFL Draft", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234922-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Field Hockey Championship\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Field Hockey Championship was the 33rd women's collegiate field hockey tournament organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, to determine the top college field hockey team from Division I in the United States. The Connecticut Huskies defeated the Duke Blue Devils in the finals to win their third national championship. The championship was played on November 24, 2013 at the L.R. Hill Sports Complex on the home field of the host Old Dominion Lady Monarchs in Norfolk, Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234923-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game was a postseason college football game between the North Dakota State Bison and the Sam Houston State Bearkats. It was played on January 5, 2013, at FC Dallas Stadium in Frisco, Texas. The culminating game of the 2012 NCAA Division I FCS football season, it was won by North Dakota State, 39\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234923-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game\nWith sponsorship by Enterprise Rent-A-Car, the game was officially known as the NCAA FCS Championship presented by Enterprise Rent-A-Car. The contest was a rematch of the prior season's championship game, which was also won by North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234923-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game, Teams\nThe participants of the Championship Game were the finalists of the 2012 FCS Playoffs, which began with a 20-team bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234923-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game, Teams, North Dakota State Bison\nNorth Dakota State finished their regular season with a 10\u20131 record (7\u20131 in conference), including a win over Colorado State of the FBS. As the first-seed in the tournament, the Bison defeated South Dakota State, Wofford, and fifth-seed Georgia Southern to reach the final. This was North Dakota State's second appearance in an FCS/Division I-AA title game, having won the prior season's title game over Sam Houston State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234923-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game, Teams, Sam Houston State Bearkats\nSam Houston State finished their regular season with an 8\u20133 record (6\u20131 in conference). Two of their losses were to FBS teams; Baylor and Texas A&M. Unseeded in the tournament, the Bearkats defeated Cal Poly, third-seed Montana State, and second-seed Eastern Washington to reach the final. This was also Sam Houston State's second appearance in an FCS/Division I-AA championship game, having lost the prior season's title game to North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234923-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Football Championship Game, Game summary\nBoth teams scored a field goal and touchdown in the first half, for a 10\u201310 score at halftime. The Bearkats appeared to take the lead on a 41-yard run by Timothy Flanders early in the third quarter, but the score was negated by a holding penalty. The Bison went on to score four second-half touchdowns, while holding the Bearkats to a single field goal. The 39\u201313 final score gave the Bison their second FCS championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 61], "content_span": [62, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game was the finals of the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament and it determined the national champion for the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The 2013 National Championship Game was played on April 8, 2013 at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, and featured the 2013 Midwest Regional Champions, #1-seeded Louisville, and the 2013 South Regional Champions, #4-seeded Michigan. Louisville's title was subsequently vacated by the NCAA on June 15, 2017 as the result of sex, stripper, and/or prostitution scandal related to both players on this team, as well as potential recruits. This decision was upheld on February 20, 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Michigan\nMichigan, who was led by 2013 national player of the year Trey Burke, was a #4 seed in the South Regional of the 2013 NCAA Tournament. In the 2nd round, Glenn Robinson III scored 21 points to lead the Wolverines past South Dakota State 71-56. In the 3rd Round, Michigan crushed VCU with a 78\u201353 win to advance to the Sweet 16 for the 1st time since 1994. Against Kansas, Burke made a long game-tying three-pointer with 4.2 seconds left to send the game to overtime, and Michigan would then win to advance to the Elite Eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Michigan\nMichigan routed Florida 79-59 to advance to the Final Four for the 1st time since 1993. Against Syracuse, with Michigan leading 58\u201356 with 19.2 seconds left, Jordan Morgan took the charge and Brandon Triche was called for an offensive foul. Then, Jon Horford made 1 of 2 free throws for a 59\u201356 lead. With 6 seconds left, Trevor Cooney missed a jump shot and Tim Hardaway Jr. got the rebound, then Caris LeVert threw it all the way to Morgan, who would dunk it in for a 61\u201356 win over Syracuse and a trip to the 2013 National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Michigan\nMichigan was competing for its 2nd ever National Title being in its 6th national title game, its 1st since the 1993 National Title Game when the Fab Five was around.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Louisville\nLouisville was the #1 overall seed in the 2013 NCAA Tournament and was placed in the Midwest Regional. Louisville had no trouble beating North Carolina A&T in the 2nd round with an easy 79\u201348 win. In the 3rd Round, Russ Smith scored 27 points as Louisville crushed Colorado State 82-56. In the Sweet 16, Russ Smith scored 31 points to beat Oregon 77-69 for a trip to the Elite Eight. Then the Cardinals overcame Kevin Ware's injury to beat Duke 85-63 and advance to the 2013 Final Four. Louisville survived the surprising Wichita State team to advance to the 2013 National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Louisville\nThis was Louisville's 3rd trip to the National Title Game and it also vied for its 3rd national title, which was later vacated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Starting lineups\nSelected in an NBA Draft (number corresponds to draft round)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 73], "content_span": [74, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Game summary, First half\nTrey Burke scored seven quick points to get Michigan out to an early 7\u20133 lead. But then he picked up two fouls and would be forced to sit on the bench. Spike Albrecht, replacing him, made four consecutive three-pointers leading to a 17-point first-half performance and Michigan would be up 35\u201323. But, Luke Hancock made four consecutive three-pointers to cut the Michigan lead to 38\u201337 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 81], "content_span": [82, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234924-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Game summary, Second half\nThe 2nd half featured several lead changes, then with 5:09 remaining, Trey Burke delivered a clean block on a Peyton Siva layup but the officials called a body foul. Siva made both free throws for a Louisville 69\u201364 lead. With 3:27 left, Luke Hancock made a three-pointer to give Louisville a 76\u201366 lead. Michigan took the game to an 80-76 deficit with 14 seconds left, but Siva made two free throws to give Louisville an 82\u201376 win. With 22 points, Hancock was named the 2013 NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament was a single-elimination tournament that involved 68 teams playing to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 19, 2013, and concluded with the championship game on April 8, 2013, at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta. This was the 75th edition of the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship, dating to 1939.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Final Four consisted of Louisville, Wichita State (second appearance), Syracuse (first appearance since their 2003 national championship), and Michigan, returning for the first time since the Fab Five's second appearance in 1993 (later vacated). By winning the West Region, Wichita State became the first #9 seed and first Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) team to reach the Final Four since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985. The last #9 seed to reach the Final Four was Penn, and the last MVC team to do so was Indiana State, both in 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nLouisville defeated Michigan in the championship game by a final score of 82\u201376, winning their first national title since 1986. They also are the last team from the original Big East Conference to win a national championship. On February 20, 2018, the NCAA vacated Louisville's entire tournament run, including its national title, due to a 2015 sex scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe tournament featured several notable upsets. For the first time since 1991, at least one team seeded #9 through #15 won at least once in the tournament. The most notable was Florida Gulf Coast University, who made their tournament debut in only their second year of Division I eligibility. They upset Georgetown and San Diego State in their first two games, becoming the first #15 seed to advance to the regional semifinals (where they were defeated by Florida). For the first time since 2010, a #14 seed won as Harvard defeated New Mexico in the West Region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe same region saw #13 La Salle, who won in the opening round, defeat #4 Kansas State and #12 Mississippi defeat #5 Wisconsin. In addition to that, the region's top seed, Gonzaga, was defeated in the round of 32 by eventual region winner Wichita State, who defeated La Salle in the Sweet Sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nTwo other teams also earned their first ever NCAA Tournament victory: Ivy League champion Harvard and Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) champion North Carolina A&T. Liberty became the first 20-loss team in five years to earn an NCAA bid, having finished its season with five consecutive wins to secure the Big South championship and its automatic qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule and venues\nThe following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2013 tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule and venues\nFor the third and final time, the Georgia Dome hosted the Final Four. The building was demolished in 2017 and replaced with Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The tournament saw two new venues being used for the first time. The City of Arlington, halfway between former host cities Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas, hosted for the first time at what is now known as AT&T Stadium, the home of the Dallas Cowboys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule and venues\nAfter a 19-year hiatus, the tournament returned to the city of Los Angeles, this time being played at the Staples Center, the city's major indoor sports venue, which replaced both the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena and the Forum in Inglewood. As of 2018, this is the last tournament to feature the Frank Erwin Center, The Palace of Auburn Hills or Rupp Arena. The Erwin Center is scheduled to close at the conclusion of the 2021-22 season, with the Longhorns moving into the Moody Center for the 2022-23 season. The Palace closed in 2017, replaced with Little Caesars Arena in downtown Detroit, which hosted early round games 2018. As of 2018, this is also the most recent year that UD Arena has hosted games after the First Four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Qualified teams, Automatic qualifiers\nThe following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2013 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 87], "content_span": [88, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nUnless otherwise noted, all times listed are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC\u221204)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Midwest Regional \u2013 Indianapolis, Indiana, Midwest Regional all-tournament team\nRegional all-tournament team: Seth Curry, Duke; Gorgui Dieng, Louisville; Mason Plumlee, Duke; Peyton Siva, Louisville", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 137], "content_span": [138, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, West Regional \u2013 Los Angeles, California, West Regional all-tournament team\nRegional all-tournament team: Carl Hall, Wichita State; Mark Lyons, Arizona; LaQuinton Ross, Ohio State; Deshaun Thomas, Ohio State", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 133], "content_span": [134, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, South Regional \u2013 Arlington, Texas, South Regional all-tournament team\nRegional all-tournament team: Mitch McGary, Michigan; Ben McLemore, Kansas; Mike Rosario, Florida; Nik Stauskas, Michigan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 128], "content_span": [129, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, East Regional \u2013 Washington, D.C., East Regional all-tournament team\nRegional all-tournament team: Vander Blue, Marquette; C. J. Fair, Syracuse; Davante Gardner, Marquette; James Southerland, Syracuse", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 126], "content_span": [127, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Final Four \u2013 Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia\nDuring the Final Four round, the champion of the top overall top seed's region was to play against the champion of the fourth-ranked top seed's region, and the champion of the second overall top seed's region was to play against the champion of the third-ranked top seed's region. Louisville (placed in the Midwest Regional) was selected as the top overall seed, and Gonzaga (in the West Regional) was named as the final top seed. Thus, the Midwest champion played the West Champion in one semifinal game, and the South Champion faced the East Champion in the other semifinal game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Final Four \u2013 Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia\nWichita State surprised the college basketball world by reaching the Final Four from the West region. They lost to Louisville in the first semifinal game, 72\u201368. Michigan defeated Syracuse 61\u201356 in the second semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Final Four \u2013 Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia\nOn February 20, 2018, NCAA took away from Louisville the 2013 winning title and allowed them to pay the fines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Final Four \u2013 Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia, Final Four all-tournament team\nFinal Four all-tournament team: Spike Albrecht, Michigan; Trey Burke, Michigan; Mitch McGary, Michigan; Cleanthony Early, Wichita State; Peyton Siva, Louisville; Luke Hancock, Louisville; Chane Behanan, Louisville;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 134], "content_span": [135, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Final Four \u2013 Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia, Final Four all-tournament team\nFinal Four most outstanding player: Luke Hancock, Louisville (the first non-starter to earn this title)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 134], "content_span": [135, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Game summaries, National Championship\nLouisville defeated Michigan 82\u201376 in the championship game. The win gave Louisville its first championship since 1986, and third overall. It became the eighth school to win at least three championships. Head coach Rick Pitino became the first coach to win an NCAA championship with two different schools. Michigan fell to 1\u20135 all time in championship games (including two losses vacated because of sanctions against the university).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 87], "content_span": [88, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Game summaries, National Championship\nMichigan's Trey Burke scored seven quick points to get Michigan out to a 7\u20133 lead, but also picked up two quick fouls and sat during much of the first half. With Burke on the bench, Michigan got a spark from freshman Spike Albrecht, a minor role player during the regular season. Albrecht hit four straight 3-pointers en route to a 17-point first half performance, easily surpassing his previous single game best of 7. Louisville trailed Michigan 35\u201323 late in the first half, before going on a run fueled by four straight three-pointers by Luke Hancock. At halftime, Michigan led 38\u201337.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 87], "content_span": [88, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Game summaries, National Championship\nThe second half featured several lead changes before Louisville pushed the margin to 10 on a three-pointer by Hancock with 3:20 remaining in the game. Michigan fought back, closing the gap to four points in the last minute, but ran out of time in its comeback effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 87], "content_span": [88, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Game summaries, National Championship\nHancock hit all five three-point shots he attempted in the game and led Louisville with 22 points, while teammate Peyton Siva scored 18 and had a game high 4 steals. Chane Behanan pulled down 12 rebounds to go with 15 points. Burke led Michigan with 24 points. Russ Smith, Louisville's leading scorer on the season, struggled in the game, shooting 3-for-16. Hancock was named as the game's most outstanding player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 87], "content_span": [88, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Other events surrounding the tournament\nOn May 10, 2012, the NCAA announced that as part of the celebration of the 75th Division I tournament, it would hold all three of its men's basketball championship games in Atlanta. The finals of the Division II and Division III tournaments were held at Philips Arena on April 7, the day between the Division I semifinals and final. In addition, Atlanta-based tournament broadcaster TBS announced that Conan O'Brien would tape his Conan talk show at The Tabernacle, located a few blocks from the Georgia Dome and Philips Arena, in the week leading up to the Final Four. March Madness studio analyst Charles Barkley and Dick Vitale were among the guests who appeared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 89], "content_span": [90, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Media, U.S. television\nThe year 2013 marked the third year of a 14-year partnership between CBS and Turner cable networks TBS, TNT and truTV to cover the entire tournament under the NCAA March Madness banner. CBS aired the Final Four and championship rounds for the 32nd consecutive year. The tournament was considered a ratings success. Tournament games averaged 10.7 million viewers, and the championship game garnered an average of 23.4 million viewers and a peak viewership of 27.1 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 72], "content_span": [73, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Media, Radio\nDial Global Sports (formerly Westwood One) and SiriusXM have live broadcasts of all 67 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Media, International\nESPN International held broadcast rights to the tournament outside of the United States: it produced its own broadcasts of the semi-final and championship game, called by ESPN College Basketball personalities Brad Nessler (play-by-play), Dick Vitale (analyst for the final and one semi-final), and Jay Bilas (analyst for the other semi-final). For the initial rounds, they use CBS/Turner coverage with an additional host to transition between games, with whiparound coverage similar to the CBS-only era. ESPN also has exclusive digital rights to the NCAA tournament outside of North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Media, International, Canada\nIn Canada, the TSN family of media outlets (including TSN2, RDS, and TSN Radio), which are part-owned by ESPN, own broadcast rights to the tournament. TSN produces separate studio coverage with Kate Beirness, Jack Armstrong, Dan Shulman and Sam Mitchell, but simulcasts CBS/Turner game coverage for the first five rounds (and ESPN International coverage for the Final Four).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234925-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Media, International, Canada\nAs in past years, TSN and TSN2 carry whiparound coverage (often in parallel) during the second, third and fourth rounds, in 2013 focusing when possible on games not being broadcast on CBS (as that network, but not the Turner channels, is also widely available in Canada).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234926-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament: qualifying teams\nThis is a list of qualifying teams for the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. A total of 68 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 37 teams were granted at-large bids, which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. All teams are seeded 1 to 16 within their regionals, while the Selection Committee seeded the entire field from 1 to 68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234926-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament: qualifying teams, Qualifying teams, Automatic bids\nAutomatic bids to the tournament were granted for winning a conference championship tournament, except for the automatic bid of the Ivy League given to the regular season champion. Seeds listed were seeds within the conference tournaments. Runners-up in bold face were given at-large berths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 100], "content_span": [101, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234926-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament: qualifying teams, Qualifying teams, Conferences with multiple bids\nAll other conferences have only one bid (see Automatic Bids)NOTE: Teams in bold represent the conference's automatic bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 116], "content_span": [117, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234927-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship was a golf tournament contested from May 28 to June 2 at the Crabapple Course of the Capital City Club in Atlanta, Georgia. It was the 75th NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship, and the tournament was hosted by the Georgia Institute of Technology. The tournament was won by the Alabama Crimson Tide who won their first championship by defeating the Illinois Fighting Illini in the match-play championship round. The individual national championship was won by Max Homa of the California Golden Bears who won by three strokes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234927-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship\nThe seedings for the regional tournaments were released on May 6, 2013, and the regional rounds were held around the country from May 16 to May 18, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234927-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship, Venue\nThis will be the first NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship held at the Capital City Club in Atlanta, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament was the national championship tournament for men's college ice hockey in the United States in 2013. The tournament involved 16 teams in single-elimination play to determine the national champion at the Division I level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the highest level of competition in college hockey. The tournament's Frozen Four \u2013 the semifinals and finals \u2013 was hosted by Robert Morris University at the Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh. Robert Morris' bid to host was co-sponsored by VisitPittsburgh and the Pittsburgh Penguins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nYale defeated Quinnipiac 4\u20130 in the championship game to win the program's first NCAA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Tournament procedure\nThe tournament consists of four groups of four teams in regional brackets. The four regionals are officially named after their geographic areas. The following were the sites for the 2013 regionals:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Tournament procedure\nThe winner of each regional will advance to the Frozen Four:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Qualifying teams\nThe at-large bids and seeding for each team in the tournament were announced on March 24. The Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) had six teams receive a berth in the tournament, ECAC Hockey and Hockey East each had three teams receive a berth, and the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) and Atlantic Hockey each had two teams receive a berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Frozen Four \u2013 Pittsburgh\nThe Frozen Four featured four teams that were seeking their first championship. This was only the second time this had happened since the first NCAA championship tournament in 1948, the other time being in 1958. Additionally, of the four Frozen Four participants in 2013, only Yale had previously reached the tournament semifinals, having finished third in the 1952 tournament. Yale's championship was the first for a team from ECAC Hockey since 1989. The championship game between Yale and Quinnipiac was the first time the championship game was contested between two ECAC Hockey teams since 1978.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 74], "content_span": [75, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Media, Television\nESPN had US television rights to all games during the tournament. For the ninth consecutive year ESPN aired every game, beginning with the regionals, on ESPN, ESPN2, and ESPNU, and ESPN3. They also streamed them online via WatchESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234928-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Media, Radio\nDial Global Sports used exclusive radio rights to air both the semifinals and the championship, AKA the \"Frozen Four.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234929-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship was the 43rd annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national championship for National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's college lacrosse. Sixteen teams were selected to compete in the tournament based upon their performance during the regular season, and for some, by means of a conference tournament automatic qualifier. The Divisions I men\u2019s lacrosse committees announced the matchups (16 teams, eight games) on 5 May 2013. Duke defeated Loyola, Notre Dame, Cornell, and Syracuse to capture to their second NCAA Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234929-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, Tournament overview\nThe tournament started on May 11 and ended on May 27 with the championship game at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234929-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, Tournament overview\nSchools from eight conferences, America East, Big East, Colonial Athletic Association (CAA), ECAC Lacrosse League (ECAC), Ivy League, Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC), Northeast Conference (NEC), and Patriot League, earned automatic bids into the tournament by winning their respective conference tournaments, leaving eight remaining at-large bids for top ranked teams. Albany (America East), Syracuse (Big East), Towson (CAA), Ohio State (ECAC), Yale (Ivy), Detroit Mercy (MAAC), Bryant (NEC), and Lehigh (Patriot) received automatic bids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234929-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, Returning All-Americans in the NCAA tournament\nThere are thirteen players on the top five teams in division I men's lacrosse (North Carolina, Cornell, Denver, Loyola (Md.) and Syracuse) that were All-Americans in the 2012 season. The only player on one of the top five teams that was a first-team All American in 2012 is RG Keenan from North Carolina. Cornell attackman Rob Pannell was a first-team All American in 2010 and 2011, but missed most of the 2012 season due to a broken foot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 96], "content_span": [97, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234929-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, Tewaaraton Award nominees in NCAA tournament\nThere are eight players on the top five teams in division I men's lacrosse (North Carolina, Cornell, Denver, Loyola (Md.) and Syracuse) that were nominees for the annual Tewaaraton award given to the best college lacrosse player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 94], "content_span": [95, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234929-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship, Major League Lacrosse players (drafted) in NCAA tournament\nMajor League Lacrosse holds its draft in January each year and selects from collegiate players that are playing their final year of eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 108], "content_span": [109, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234930-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament was the 55th edition of the tournament. The four team College Cup finals tournament was held at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania on December 13 and 15, 2013. On December 15, Notre Dame defeated Maryland, 2\u20131, to win its first national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234930-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, Qualified Teams\nA total of 48 teams qualified into the tournament proper, either automatically, or through an at-large bid that is determined by a selection committee. Each conference that field varsity soccer teams is awarded one automatic berth into the tournament. Depending on the conference, that automatic berth is either given the champions of the regular season, or the tournament that culminates the regular season. Twenty-two teams earn automatic bids into the tournament, while 26 enter through an at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234930-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, Format\nLike previous editions of the NCAA Division I Tournament, the tournament featured 48 participants out of a possible field of 198 teams. Of the 48 berths, 23 were allocated to the conference tournament or regular season winners. The remaining 25 berths were supposed to be determined through an at-large process based upon teams' Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) that did not win their conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234930-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, Format\nThe NCAA Selection Committee also named the top sixteen seeds for the tournament, with those teams receiving an automatic bye into the second round of the tournament. The remaining 32 teams played in a single-elimination match in the first round of the tournament for the right to play a seeded team in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234931-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships were contested in March 2013 at the Indiana University Natatorium in Indianapolis, Indiana at the 90th annual NCAA-sanctioned swim meet to determine the team and individual national champions of Division I men's collegiate swimming and diving in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234931-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships\nMichigan topped the team standings, finishing 73.5 points ahead of two-time defending champions California. It was the Wolverines' then-record twelfth men's team title and first since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234932-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships were the 92nd NCAA Men's Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships and the 32nd NCAA Women's Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon on the campus of the University of Oregon from June 5\u20138, 2013. In total, thirty-six different men's and women's track and field events were contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234932-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships\nOn the men's side, the team national championship was shared between the Texas A&M Aggies, their fourth title, and the Florida Gators, their second consecutive title. On the women's side, the team national championship was won by the Kansas Jayhawks, their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234933-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament was held from May 16 through June 6, 2013 as the final part of the 2013 NCAA Division I softball season. The 64 NCAA Division I college softball teams were selected out of an eligible 284 teams on May 12, 2012. 31 teams were awarded an automatic bid as champions of their conference, and 33 teams were selected at-large by the NCAA Division I Softball Selection Committee. The tournament culminated with eight teams playing in the 2013 Women's College World Series at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234933-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament, National Seeds\nTeams in \"italics\" advanced to Super Regionals. Teams in \"bold\" advanced to Women's College World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234933-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament, National Seeds\n9. LSU10. Alabama11. Washington12. Kentucky13. South Alabama14. Nebraska15. Louisville16. Texas A&M", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234933-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament, Media Coverage, Radio\nDial Global Sports provided nationwide radio coverage of the championship series, which was also streamed online at dialglobalsports.com. Kevin Kugler and Leah Amico provided the call for Dial Global.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234933-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament, Media Coverage, Television\nESPN carried every game from the Women's College World Series across the ESPN Networks (ESPN, ESPN2, and ESPNU). The ESPN Networks also carried select regional matches and every super regional match utilizing ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, and ESPN3. Austin hosted a regional, and the Texas games aired on Longhorn Network while the other matches will air on ESPN3. This was the second consecutive year Longhorn Network carried regional matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships were the men's and women's tennis tournaments played concurrently from May 16 to May 27, 2013 in Urbana, Illinois on the campus of the University of Illinois. It was the 67th edition of the NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championship* and the 32nd edition of the NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championship. * It was the eighth time the men's and women's tournaments were held at the same venue. It consisted of a men's and women's team, singles, and doubles championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships\nThe men's team championship was won by the Virginia Cavaliers, and the women's team championship was won by the Stanford Cardinal. The men's singles title was won by Blaz Rola from Ohio State, and the men's doubles title went to Jarmere Jenkins and Mac Styslinger of Virginia. The women's singles title was won by Nicole Gibbs of Stanford, her second consecutive singles championship. The women's doubles title was also won by the pair of Kaitlyn Christian and Sabrina Santamaria from USC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Men's Team Championship, National Seeds\n1. UCLA (Championship Round)2. Virginia (National Champions)3. Georgia (Semifinals)4. USC (Quarterfinals)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Men's Team Championship, National Seeds\n5. Ohio State (Semifinals)6. Ole Miss (Second Round)7. Tennessee (Quarterfinals)8. Kentucky (Round of 16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Men's Team Championship, National Seeds\n9. Duke (Quarterfinals)10. Mississippi State (Round of 16)11. Pepperdine (Quarterfinals)12. Texas A&M (Round of 16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Men's Team Championship, National Seeds\n13. Baylor (Round of 16)14. Oklahoma (Round of 16)15. Florida (First Round)16. Vanderbilt (Round of 16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Women's Team Championship, National Seeds\n1. Florida (Semifinals)2. North Carolina (Quarterfinals)3. Texas A&M (Championship Round)4. Georgia (Quarterfinals)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 84], "content_span": [85, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Women's Team Championship, National Seeds\n5. USC (Round of 16)6. Miami (FL) (Quarterfinals)7. UCLA (Semifinals)8. California (Quarterfinals)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 84], "content_span": [85, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Women's Team Championship, National Seeds\n9. Alabama (Round of 16)10. Michigan (Round of 16)11. Northwestern (Round of 16)12. Stanford (National Champions)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 84], "content_span": [85, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234934-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Tennis Championships, Women's Team Championship, National Seeds\n13. Clemson (Round of 16)14. Virginia (Round of 16)15. Nebraska (Round of 16)16. Texas Tech (Second Round)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 84], "content_span": [85, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament was played from March 23 through April 9, 2013. Tennessee continued its streak of making every NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at 32 consecutive appearances. Kansas made the Regional Semifinals for the second year in a row as a double-digit seed, UConn made it into the Final Four for the sixth consecutive year, the longest such streak, and Louisville became the first team seeded lower than fourth in a region to advance to the championship game. For the first time in tournament history, the same four teams were #1 seeds as in the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Tournament procedure\nPending any changes to the format, a total of 64 teams will enter the 2019 tournament. 32 automatic bids shall be awarded to each program that wins their conference's tournament. The remaining 32 bids are \"at-large\", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. The tournament is split into four regional tournaments, and each regional has teams seeded from 1 to 16, with the committee ostensibly making every region as comparable to the others as possible[citation needed]. The top-seeded team in each region plays the #16 team, the #2 team plays the #15, etc. (meaning where the two seeds add up to 17, that team will be assigned to play another).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Tournament procedure\nThe Selection Committee will also seed the entire field from 1 to 64.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, 2013 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues\nThe format is similar to the Men's Tournament, except that there are 64 teams; this in turn means there is no \"First Four\" round. Thirty-one automatic bids for conference champions and 33 at-large bids were available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 92], "content_span": [93, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, 2013 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues\nThe subregionals were played from March 23 through March 26. Sites chosen to host first- and second-round games in 2013 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 92], "content_span": [93, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, 2013 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues\nThe Regionals, named for the city rather than the region of geographic importance since 2005, held from March 30 to April 2, were at these sites:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 92], "content_span": [93, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, 2013 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues\nA regional had been scheduled at Sun National Bank Center in Trenton, New Jersey. However, the NCAA moved the regional to Connecticut because of a recently passed state law allowing single-game betting for professional and collegiate games. NCAA rules do not allow tournament events to be held in states that allow single-game betting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 92], "content_span": [93, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, 2013 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues\nThis is the third time that New Orleans has been selected as a women's Final Four location (previously, in 1991 and 2004) and second time at the Smoothie King Center (previously named Kiefer Lakefront UNO Arena); the 1991 Final Four was contested at the University of New Orleans' Lakefront Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 92], "content_span": [93, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Qualified teams, Automatic qualifiers\nThe following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2013 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 89], "content_span": [90, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Qualified teams, Tournament seeds\nKentucky vs. Navy, Oklahoma State vs. Duke, and Notre Dame vs. Iowa aired on ESPNU. Purdue vs. Louisville aired on ESPNEWS. All other first and second round games aired on ESPN2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 85], "content_span": [86, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Game summaries, Oklahoma City Regional\nAlmost all first-round games were won by the higher-seeded team except for Creighton, the 10 seed who upset Syracuse 61\u201356. The top seed, Baylor won easily, by 42 points over Prairie View A&M. The only other game within single digit margin was 6 seed Oklahoma beating Central Michigan by five points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 90], "content_span": [91, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Game summaries, Oklahoma City Regional\nIn the second round, three of the four games followed expectations, with the only upset being the 5 seed Louisville over 4 seed Purdue. In the third round, 2 seed Tennessee beat 6 seed Oklahoma as expected, but Louisville upset top seeded Baylor in a result some have called one of the greatest upsets in women's basketball history. Baylor won the National Championship in 2012, going undefeated during the season, and had returned every starter. While they lost one game in the current regular season, point guard Odyssey Sims was injured early in that game. The team had not lost a game in two years when playing at full strength. Louisville, the third best team in the Big East, hit sixteen of 25 three-point attempts, and held Griner to 14 points, after she had averaged 33 points in the first two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 90], "content_span": [91, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Media coverage, Television\nESPN had US television rights to all games during the tournament. For the first and second round, ESPN aired select games nationally on ESPN, ESPNU, or ESPNews. All other games were aired regionally on ESPN or ESPN2 and streamed online via ESPN3. Most of the nation got whip-a-round coverage during this time, which allowed ESPN to rotate between the games and focus the nation on the one that was the closest. The regional semifinals were split between ESPN and ESPN2, and ESPN aired the regional finals, national semifinals, and championship match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234935-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Media coverage, Radio\nDial Global Sports had exclusive radio rights from the regional finals on through the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234936-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship was the 32nd annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of Division I NCAA women's college lacrosse. The semifinal and championship rounds were played at Villanova Stadium (the home of Villanova Wildcats football) from May 24\u201326, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234936-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship\nThe University of North Carolina defeated their ACC rival University of Maryland to win their first ever women's lacrosse championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234936-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship, Tournament field\nAll NCAA Division I women's lacrosse programs were eligible for this championship, and a total of 26 teams were invited to participate. 13 teams qualified automatically by winning their conference tournaments while the remaining 13 teams qualified at-large based on their regular season records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234936-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship, Tournament field, Seeds\n1. Maryland (19-0)2. Northwestern (17-2)3. North Carolina (14-3)4. Syracuse (16-3)5. Florida (17-2)6. Georgetown (13-5)7. Penn State (12-6)8. Navy (18-1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234937-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament (also known as the 2013 Women's College Cup) was the 32nd 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 WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary, North Carolina from December 6\u20138, 2013 while the preceding rounds were played at various sites across the country from November 15\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234937-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nUCLA defeated Florida State in the final, 1\u20130 (in overtime), to win their first national title. The Bruins (22\u20131\u20133) were coached by Amanda Cromwell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234937-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe Most Outstanding Offensive Player was Jamia Fields from Florida State, and the Most Outstanding Defensive Player was Ally Courtnall from UCLA. Fields and Courtnall, alongside nine other players, were named to the All-Tournament Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234937-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe tournament's leading scorer, with 5 goals and 1 assist, was Makenzy Doniak from Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234937-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00234937-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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 although with a few exceptions. The first round was played exclusively on the home fields of higher-seeded teams (noted with an asterisk below). However, the second and third rounds were played on the home fields of the home fields of the two remaining teams in each bracket with the highest seed (generally the #1 and #2 seed in each bracket with a few noted exceptions). Those teams are also noted with asterisk. Finally, the quarterfinal round, or the championship match for each bracket, was played on the home field of the higher-seeded team, with no exceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234938-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships\nThe 2013 NCAA Women's Division I Swimming and Diving Championships were contested at the 32nd 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-00234938-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships\nThis year's events were hosted at the Indiana University Natatorium in Indianapolis, Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234938-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships\nGeorgia, runners up at the two previous championships, topped this year's team standings, finishing 84 points ahead of two-time defending champions California. This was the Lady Bulldogs' fifth women's team title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234939-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament began on December 5, 2013 and ended on December 21, 2013 at KeyArena in Seattle, Washington. The NCAA selection show was televised on Sunday, December 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234939-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, Qualifying teams\nThe champions of the NCAA's 32 conferences qualify automatically. Twenty-two conferences hold tournaments, while the other ten award their automatic bid on the basis of being the league's regular-season champion. Those that do not hold tournaments are the Atlantic Coast, American Athletic, Big 12, Big West, Big Ten, Ivy League, Mountain West, Pac-12, Southeastern and West Coast Conferences. The other 32 bids are apportioned on an at-large basis. Only the top 16 teams overall are seeded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234939-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, Bracket\nThe first two rounds were held on campus sites (the home court of the seeded team). Regional semifinals and finals were held at pre-determined sites. In 2013, those sites were hosted by Nebraska, Illinois, USC, and Kentucky, all of whom made the tournament and hosted in the first two rounds. Unlike the NCAA basketball tournament, where teams cannot be placed into regionals that they host, the selectors in the volleyball tournament were required to place qualifying teams in their 'home' regionals, in order to reduce travel costs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234939-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, Record by conference\n*Four tournament matches featured one Big Ten team against another, and likewise one featured one Pac-12 team against another. Each of those matches is counted as one win and one loss for the respective conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234939-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, Record by conference\nThe columns R32, S16, E8, F4, CM, and NC respectively stand for the Round of 32, Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight, Final Four, Championship Match, and National Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234939-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, Record by conference\nThe America East, American Athletic, Atlantic 10, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, Colonial Athletic, Conference USA, Horizon League, Ivy League, Metro Atlantic, Mid-American, Mid-Eastern Athletic, Missouri Valley, Mountain West, Northeast, Ohio Valley, Southern, Southland, Southwestern Athletic, Summit League, Sun Belt and Western Athletic Conferences all qualified one team which lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234940-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball rankings\nThe following human polls make up the 2013 NCAA Division I men's baseball rankings. The USAToday/ESPN Coaches Poll is voted on by a panel of 31 Division I baseball coaches. The Baseball America poll is voted on by staff members of the Baseball America magazine. These polls rank the top 25 teams nationally. Collegiate Baseball and the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association rank the top 30 teams nationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234940-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball rankings, Collegiate Baseball\nThe Preseason poll ranked the top 40 teams in the nation. Teams not listed above are: 31. Missouri State; 32. Wichita State; 33. New Mexico; 34. Kent State; 35. Virginia; 36. Southern Miss; 37. East Carolina 38. Coastal Carolina; 39. Dallas Baptist 40. Pepperdine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234940-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball rankings, NCBWA\nThe preseason poll ranked the top 35 teams. Remaining teams not listed above were: 31. Kent State 32. Southern Miss 33. UC Irvine 34. New Mexico 35. Coastal Carolina", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234941-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball season\nThe 2013 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 February 15, 2013. The season progressed through the regular season, many conference tournaments and championship series, and concluded with the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament and 2013 College World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234941-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball season\nThe College World Series, consisting of the eight remaining teams in the NCAA Tournament and held annually in Omaha, Nebraska at TD Ameritrade Park concluded on June 25, 2013 with the final game of the best of three championship series. UCLA defeated Mississippi State two games to none to claim their first championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234941-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball season, Conference standings\nThis is a partial list of conference standings for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234941-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball season, Conference standings, Conference winners and tournaments\nThirty one athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament or a double-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that win their regular season title are given the number one seed in each tournament. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The West Coast Conference will launch a four team tournament for the first time in 2013. The winner of the Great West Conference, which remains in a provisional status, does not receive an automatic bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234941-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I baseball season, College World Series\nThe 2013 season marked the sixty seventh 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 UCLA claiming their first championship with a two games to one series win over Mississippi State in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season\nThe 2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season was the 55th season of NCAA championship men's college soccer. There were 203 teams in men's Division I competition. The defending champions were the Indiana Hoosiers who defeated the Georgetown Hoyas in the 2012 College Cup. The season concluded with Notre Dame defeating Maryland 2\u20131 to win its first NCAA soccer title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Season overview, Pre-season polls\nSeveral American soccer outlets posted their own preseason top 25 rankings of what were believed to be the strongest men's collegiate soccer teams entering 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Regular season, Major upsets\nIn this list, a \"major upset\" is defined as a game won by a team ranked 10 or more spots lower or an unranked team that defeats a team ranked #15 or higher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, NCAA tournament\nThe College Cup was played at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania on December 13 & 15, 2013. In the semifinals, Notre Dame defeated New Mexico, and Maryland beat Virginia. In the Finals, Notre Dame prevailed 2\u20131 for its first championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Award winners, Hermann Trophy/National Player of the Year\nThe Hermann Trophy for the national men's Player of the Year was awarded by the Missouri Athletic Club and the National Soccer Coaches Association of America to Patrick Mullins of Maryland. Mullins became the fourth man and the seventh player overall to win the trophy in back-to-back years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 99], "content_span": [100, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Award winners, NSCAA/Continental Tire Men's NCAA Division I All-America Team\nOn December 9, 2013, the National Soccer Coaches Association of America released their All-American teams for the 2011 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The list included a first, second and third team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 118], "content_span": [119, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Award winners, NSCAA/Continental Tire Men's NCAA Division I All-America 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 118], "content_span": [119, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Award winners, NSCAA/Continental Tire Men's NCAA Division I All-America 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 118], "content_span": [119, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234942-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season, Award winners, NSCAA/Continental Tire Men's NCAA Division I All-America 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, 40], "section_span": [42, 118], "content_span": [119, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234943-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I softball season\nThe 2013 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 February 2013. The season progressed through the regular season, many conference tournaments and championship series, and concluded with the 2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament and 2013 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 June 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234943-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I softball season, Women's College World Series\nThe 2010 NCAA Women's College World Series took place from May 30 to June 4, 2013 in Oklahoma City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234943-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division I softball season, Records\nJunior class single game home runs:4 \u2013 Alexandria Anttila, Georgetown Hoyas; April 6, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234944-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Football Championship Game\nThe 2013 NCAA Division II Football Championship Game was a postseason college football game that determined a national champion in NCAA Division II for the 2013 season. It was played at Braly Municipal Stadium in Florence, Alabama, on December 21, 2013, with kickoff at noon EST (11:00 a.m. local CST), and television coverage on ESPN2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234944-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Football Championship Game, Teams\nThe participants of the 2013 NCAA Division II Football Championship Game were the finalists of the 2013 Division II Playoffs, which began with teams seeded 3\u20136 in each super region playing in the first round, the winners of which faced teams seeded 1\u20132 in the second round. From there, the bracket was a sixteen-team single-elimination tournament. The game featured the No. 1 seed Lenoir\u2013Rhyne Bears and the No. 1 seed Northwest Missouri State Bearcats. This was the eighth championship game appearance for the Bearcats and the first championship game appearance for the Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234945-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament involved 64 schools playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA\u00a0Division II\u00a0college basketball as a culmination of the 2012\u201313 basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234945-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe eight regional winners met at the Elite Eight for the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds held at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky. As part of the festivities surrounding the 75th edition of the NCAA tournament, the championship game was played at Philips Arena in Atlanta on April 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234945-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Qualification and tournament format\nThe champions of 22 of the 24 Division II basketball conferences qualified automatically. The Great Midwest Athletic Conference, in its first season of operation, and the Great American Conference, in its second season, were not eligible for automatic berths. (The Great American became eligible for an automatic berth with the 2014 tournament. The G-MAC did not receive an automatic berth until 2016 because it was not officially recognized as a D-II conference until 2013\u201314.) An additional 42 teams were selected as at-large participants by the selection committee. As in previous years, the first three rounds of the tournament were organized in regions comprising eight participants in groups of two or three conferences (two in the Central and Midwest regions) with seeds assigned by the selection committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234945-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Qualification and tournament format\nTraditionally, the Elite Eight regional winners meet in one site for the quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals. However, as noted above, this was changed for 2013 only, with the quarterfinals and semifinals held in Louisville and the final game in Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234945-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Qualification and tournament format\nThis was the final tournament for the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, which disbanded at the end of the 2012\u201313 school year, with most of the members forming the new Mountain East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 86], "content_span": [87, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234945-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Qualification and tournament format, Automatic qualifiers\nThe following teams automatically qualified for the national tournament as the champions of their conference tournaments:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 108], "content_span": [109, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234945-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament, Regionals, West - Bellingham, Washington\nAll-West Region team: Kwame Alexander (F/CSU San Bernardino) Jobi Wall (F/Seattle Pacific) Patrick Simon (F/Seattle Pacific) John Allen (G/Western Washington) Region Most Outstanding Player Richard Woodworth (G/Western Washington)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234946-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship\nThe 2013 NCAA Division II men's soccer championship featured 35 schools in four unbalanced Super-Regional tournaments involving seven to ten teams each. Super-Regional games were played at campus sites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234946-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship\nThe Division II College Cup was held at Blanchard Woods Park in Evans, Georgia, and was hosted by the Peach Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234946-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship\nIn the national semifinals, Rockhurst (17-3-3) was defeated by Southern New Hampshire 2\u20131, and Simon Fraser (17-2-2) fell to Carson-Newman 3\u20132. Southern New Hampshire (21-1-1) won its second Division II crown by beating Carson-Newman (16-5-1) 2\u20131 in the national final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234946-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship, Division II College Cup at Evans, Ga.\nAttendance: Semi #1 = N/A; Semi #2 = N/A; Final = 1200", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234947-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament was the 32nd 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-00234947-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament\nAshland defeated Dowling in the championship game, 71\u201356, to claim the Eagles' first NCAA Division II national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234947-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe championship rounds were contested at Bill Greehey Arena on the campus of the St. Mary's University in San Antonio, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234948-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football rankings\nThe 2013 NCAA Division II football rankings are from the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA). This is for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season\nThe 2013 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 31, 2013, and concluded with the National Championship Game of the NCAA Division II Football Championship on December 21, 2013, at Braly Municipal Stadium in Florence, Alabama. This was the final championship played in Florence, after twenty-eight straight finals, before the game moves to Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kansas. The Northwest Missouri State Bearcats defeated the Lenoir\u2013Rhyne Bears, 43\u201328, to win their fourth national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season\nThe 2013 Harlon Hill Trophy was awarded to running back Franklyn Quiteh from Bloomsburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Conference and program changes\nBlack Hills State, Lindenwood, Malone, McKendree, South Dakota Mines, and Walsh completed their transitions to Division II and became eligible for the postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Conference summaries\nGreat Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference \u2013 Ohio Dominican (10\u20131, 9\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Conference summaries\nGulf South Conference \u2013 North Alabama (10\u20133, 5\u20131) and West Alabama (8\u20133, 5\u20131)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Conference summaries\nLone Star Conference \u2013 Eastern New Mexico (7\u20133, 5\u20131) and Tarleton State (7\u20133, 5\u20131)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Conference summaries\nMid -America Intercollegiate Athletics Association \u2013 Northwest Missouri State (14\u20130, 10\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Conference summaries\nNortheast-10 Conference \u2013 American International (9\u20133, 8\u20131) and Stonehill (8\u20133, 8\u20131)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Playoffs\nThe 2013 NCAA Division II National Football Championship playoffs involved 24 schools playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division II college football. The tournament began on November 23, 2013 and concluded on December 21, 2013 with the 2013 NCAA Division II National Football Championship game at Braly Municipal Stadium near the campus of the University of North Alabama in Florence, Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234949-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division II football season, Playoffs, Format\nTwo teams in each super regional earned first-round byes. The first-round winners advanced to face a bye team in their super regional. Second-round winners met in the quarterfinals and quarterfinal winners advanced to play in the semifinals. First-round, second-round, quarterfinal and semifinal games were played on the campus of one of the competing institutions as determined by the NCAA Division II Football Committee. The home team at the championship was determined by the Division II Football Committee and the Shoals National Championship Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234950-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament was played at the end of the 2013 NCAA Division III baseball season to determine the 38th national champion of college baseball at the NCAA Division III level. The tournament concluded with eight teams competing at Time Warner Cable Field 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, with four regions consisting of six teams, and four consisting of eight, for a total of 56 teams participating in the tournament. The tournament champion was Linfield, who defeated Southern Maine for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234950-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament, Regionals, New York Regional\nLeo Pinckney Field at Falcon Park-Auburn, NY (Host: Ithaca College)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234950-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament, Regionals, Mideast Regional\nArt Nehf Field-Terre Haute, IN (Host: Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234950-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament, Regionals, Midwest Regional\nPrucha Field at James B. Miller Stadium-Whitewater, WI (Host: University of Wisconsin-Whitewater)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234950-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament, Regionals, Central Regional\nBrunner Field in the Duane R. Swanson Stadium-Moline, IL (Host: Augustana College (Illinois))", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234950-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament, World Series\nTime Warner Cable Field at Fox Cities Stadium-Grand Chute, WI (Host: University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh/Lawrence University/Fox Cities Convention and Visitors Bureau)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234951-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament was a single-elimination tournament of 62 teams held to determine the men's collegiate basketball national champion of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III. It began on March 2, 2013, and concluded with the championship game on April 7, 2013, at Philips Arena in Atlanta as part of the festivities for the 75th anniversary of the NCAA Tournament. The Amherst Lord Jeffs defeated the Mary Hardin\u2013Baylor Crusaders 87\u201370 in the championship game. The quarterfinal and semifinal rounds were held in Salem Civic Center in Salem, Virginia, the traditional Final Four host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234951-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament, Qualified teams, Automatic qualifiers\nThe following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2013 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the UAA, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 89], "content_span": [90, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234951-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament, Qualified teams, At-large qualifiers\nThe NCAA Selection Committee, by rule, must select one team from the conferences without automatic berths and non-affiliated schools (Pool B). The Selection Committee makes the remaining 19 selections at-large from all conferences (Pool C).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 88], "content_span": [89, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234951-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nUnless otherwise noted, all times listed are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-04)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234951-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, St. Mary's City, MD Sectional\nDue to an NCAA ban on postseason games in New Jersey, the first round match between top-seeded Ramapo and Morrisville State was held in Nyack, NY on the campus of Nyack College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 90], "content_span": [91, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234951-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Amherst, MA Sectional\nDue to an NCAA ban on postseason games in New Jersey, Stevens was unable to host its first round match between against Randolph-Macon. The match was moved to Bronx, NY on the campus of Lehman College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 82], "content_span": [83, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234951-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket, Amherst, MA Sectional\nDue to a scheduling conflicting, WPI could not host its second round match against Randolph\u2013Macon. The match was moved to Assumption College, also located in Worcester, MA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 82], "content_span": [83, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234952-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament: qualifying teams\nThis is a list of qualifying teams for the 2013 NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Tournament. A total of 62 teams entered the tournament. Forty-one of the teams earned automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments. The automatic bid of the University Athletic Association, which does not conduct a post-season tournament, went to its regular season champion. The remaining twenty teams were granted at-large bids, which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234952-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament: qualifying teams, Qualifying teams, Automatic bids\nAutomatic bids to the tournament were granted for winning a conference championship tournament, except for the automatic bid of the University Athletic Association given to the regular season champion. Seeds listed were seeds within the conference tournaments. Runners-up in bold face were given at-large berths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 102], "content_span": [103, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234952-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament: qualifying teams, Qualifying teams, Conferences with multiple bids\nAll other conferences have only one bid (see Automatic Bids)NOTE: Teams in bold represent the conference's automatic bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 118], "content_span": [119, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234953-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA Division Men's III Ice Hockey Tournament was the culmination of the 2012\u201313 season, the 30th such tournament in NCAA history. It concluded with Wisconsin\u2013Eau Claire defeating Oswego State in the championship game 5-3. All First Round and Quarterfinal matchups were held at home team venues, while all succeeding games were played at the Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234953-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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 eight different conferences. Three at-large bids were available for the highest-ranked non-conference tournament champions (overall seed in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234953-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured four rounds of play. All rounds were Single-game elimination. The top four ranked teams received byes into the quarterfinal round and were arranged so that were they all to reach the national semifinal the first seed would play the fourth seed and the second seed would play the third seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234953-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nBecause the top four ranked teams were split evenly between eastern and western teams these teams were automatically advanced into the Quarterfinal round. The remaining two western teams were placed in the dame First Round game with the winner advancing to play the top western seed. The bottom four eastern teams were arranged as follows; the fourth eastern seed would play the seventh eastern seed with the winner advancing to play the second eastern seed while the fifth eastern seed would play the sixth eastern seed with the winner advancing to play the top eastern seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234953-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe remaining team, the third eastern seed, received a bye into the quarterfinal to play the second western seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234953-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nIn the First Round and Quarterfinals the higher-seeded or ranked team served as host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234954-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III football season\nThe 2013 NCAA Division III football season, part of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association at the Division III level, began on August 31, 2013, and concluded with the National Championship Game of the NCAA Division III Football Championship on December 20, 2013, at Salem Football Stadium in Salem, Virginia. This was the twenty-first consecutive title game held in Salem. The Wisconsin\u2013Whitewater Warhawks defeated the Mount Union Purple Raiders, 52\u201314, to win their fifth national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234954-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III football season\nThe 2013 Gagliardi Trophy was awarded to quarterback Kevin Burke from Mount Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234954-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III football season, Playoffs\nTwenty-four conferences met the requirements for an automatic (\"Pool A\") bid to the playoffs. Besides the NESCAC, which does not participate in the playoffs, four conferences had no Pool A bid. The MASCAC and SAA were in the first year of the two-year waiting period; the SCAC and UAA had only four members, three short of the requirement. The American Southwest retained its Pool A bid despite falling below seven active Division III members, but entered the two-year grace period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234954-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III football season, Playoffs\nSchools not in Pool A conferences were eligible for Pool B. The number of Pool B bids was determined by calculating the ratio of Pool A conferences to schools in those conferences and applying that ratio to the number of Pool B schools. The 24 Pool A conferences contained 203 schools, an average of 8.5 teams per conference. Twenty-seven schools were in Pool B, enough for three bids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234954-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Division III football season, Playoffs\nThe remaining five playoff spots were at-large (\"Pool C\") teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234955-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans\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, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234955-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans\nThe 2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans are honorary lists that include All-American selections from the Associated Press (AP), the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA), the Sporting News (TSN), and the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) for the 2012\u201313 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. All selectors choose at least a first and second 5-man team. The NABC, TSN and AP choose third teams, while AP also lists honorable mention selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234955-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans\nThe Consensus 2013 College Basketball All-American team is determined by aggregating the results of the four major All-American teams as determined by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Since United Press International was replaced by TSN in 1997, the four major selectors have been the aforementioned ones. AP has been a selector since 1948, NABC since 1957 and USBWA since 1960. To earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors based on a point system computed from the four different all-America teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234955-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans\nThe point system consists of three points for first team, two points for second team and one point for third team. No honorable mention or fourth team or lower are used in the computation. The top five totals plus ties are first team and the next five plus ties are second team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234955-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans\nAlthough the aforementioned lists are used to determine consensus honors, there are numerous other All-American lists. The ten finalists for the John Wooden Award are described as Wooden All-Americans. The ten finalists for the Senior CLASS Award are described as Senior All-Americans. Other All-American lists include those determined by Fox Sports, and Yahoo! Sports. The scholar-athletes selected by College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) are termed Academic All-Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234955-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans, Academic All-Americans\nOn February 21, 2013, CoSIDA and Capital One announced the 2013 Academic All-America team, with Aaron Craft headlining the University Division as the men's college basketball Academic All-American of the Year. The following is the 2012\u201313 Capital One Academic All-America Men's Basketball Team (University Division) as selected by CoSIDA:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234955-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans, Senior All-Americans\nThe ten finalists for the Senior CLASS Award are called Senior All-Americans. The 10 honorees are as follows: Jordan Hulls won the Senior CLASS Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234956-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2013 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament involved eight schools in single-elimination play that determined the national champion of women's NCAA Division I college ice hockey. Regional quarterfinals were contested on March 15 and 16, 2013. The Frozen Four was played on March 22 and 24, 2013 at Ridder Arena in Minneapolis, with the University of Minnesota as the host school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234956-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe University of Minnesota won the title with a 6\u20133 win over Boston University, becoming the first NCAA women's hockey team ever to complete a perfect season (41\u20130\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234957-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Rifle Championships\nThe 2013 NCAA Rifle Championships were contested at the 34th 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-00234957-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Rifle Championships\nThe championship was again hosted by Ohio State University at the Lt. Hugh W. Wylie Range in Columbus, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234957-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Rifle Championships\nWest Virginia won the team championship, the Mountaineers' fifteenth NCAA national title in rifle and first since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234957-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Rifle Championships\nAdditionally, West Virginia's Petra Zublasing became the fourth person to win both individual championships, smallbore and air rifle, in the same year and the first since Matthew Emmons in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234957-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 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 eight teams contested this championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234958-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Skiing Championships\nThe 2013 NCAA Skiing Championships were held in Vermont and Vermont on March 6\u20139, 2013. Middlebury College hosted the event with alpine events at the Middlebury College Snow Bowl and Nordic events taking place at the Rikert Nordic Center. The competition was won by the Colorado Buffaloes after compiling the largest final-day comeback in NCAA Skiing Championships history. Twenty-one teams from three regions sent skiers to compete for the NCAA collegiate team championship and individual titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234958-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Skiing Championships, Regional Competitions\nThe NCAA skiing landscape is made up of three regions, each with one conference. The Western Region comprises the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association (RMISA), the Central Region of the Central Collegiate Ski Association (CCSA) and the Eastern Region of the Eastern Intercollegiate Ski Association (EISA). Qualification for the NCAA Championships is not only attained from competition in each regional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234958-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Skiing Championships, Venues And Events\nThe NCAA Skiing Championships are coed championship made up of eight events, two events in both alpine and Nordic racing for both men and women. Alpine events are giant slalom and slalom and Nordic events are classical and freestyle (skate). In Nordic competition, there is typically one shorter interval start race and one longer mass start race, and every two years it flips.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234958-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Skiing Championships, Venues And Events\nIn 2013, the events were: Women's Giant Slalom and Men's Giant Slalom on Wednesday, March 6; Women's 5K Classical and Men's 10K Classical interval start on Thursday, March 7; Women's and Men's Slalom on Friday, March 8; and Women's 15K Freestyle and Men's 20K Freestyle mass start on Saturday, March 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234958-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Skiing Championships, Venues And Events\nAll alpine events took place at the Middlebury College Snow Bowl and Nordic events at the Rikert Nordic Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234958-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Skiing Championships, Individual Champions\nIndividual champions are the winners of each of the eight races. Denver, Colorado and Vermont both captured two individual NCAA Championships while New Mexico and Utah had one apiece. Denver's Kristine Haugen became just the second alpine woman since 1990 and fifth overall to sweep the individual championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234958-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Skiing Championships, All-American Honors\nAll-American honors for skiing are administered by the United States Collegiate Ski Coaches Association and are determined by race results from the NCAA Championships. The top five skiers in each race are awarded a first-team All-America honor while skiers 6-10 are awarded second-team honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234959-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship\nThe 2013 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship was held in Pauley Pavilion, on the campus of UCLA in Los Angeles, California on April 19\u201321, 2013. The team competition was won by the Florida Gators. Twelve teams from the six regional meets advanced to the NCAA Division I national team and individual titles. The selection show announcing the regional pairings was held on Monday, March 25 at noon PT on NCAA.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234959-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship, Regional Championships\nRegional Championships were held on April 6, 2013 at the following six sites with start times between 4 and 6 p.m. local time:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234959-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship, NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship\nThe NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship was held in Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles, California, Friday, April 19, 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 79], "content_span": [80, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234959-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship, NCAA Championship (Super Six Finals)\nNCAA Championship (Super Six Finals): Los Angeles, California, Saturday, April 20 (4 p.m. PT) -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 79], "content_span": [80, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234959-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship, Individual Event Finals\nIndividual Event Finals: Los Angeles, California, Sunday, April 21 (1 p.m. PT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234960-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCAA football bowl games\nIn college football, 2013 NCAA football bowl games may refer to:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234961-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCBA Division I World Series\nThe 2013 National Club Baseball Association (NCBA) Division I World Series was played at University of Tampa Baseball Stadium in Tampa, FL from May 24 to May 30. The thirteenth tournament's champion was Penn State University. The Most Valuable Player was Kyle Gilbert of Penn State University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234961-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCBA Division I 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 exception of a one-game national championship rather than a best-of-3 format to determine the national champion like the NCAA. Beginning with the 2013 edition of the NCBA Division I World Series, the losers of Games 7 and 8 were sent to the other half of the bracket in addition to the losers of Games 1-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234962-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCBA Division II Tournament\nThe 2013 National Club Baseball Association (NCBA) Division II Tournament was a post-season tournament for the best teams in the NCBA during the 2013 season. 28 NCBA Division II college baseball teams met after playing their way through the regular season to play in the NCBA Tournament. The tournament culminated with eight teams competing for the 2013 NCBA Division II World Series at Brooks Stadium in Paducah, KY.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234962-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCBA Division II Tournament, Districts\nThe opening rounds of the tournament were played across eight pre-determined sites across the country, each consisting of a four-team field except for Districts VII and VIII, which consisted of a two-team best-of-three format. All other districts were double elimination. The winner of each district advanced to the NCBA Division II World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234963-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NCBA Division II World Series\nThe 2013 National Club Baseball Association (NCBA) Division II World Series was played at Brooks Stadium in Paducah, KY from May 17 to May 21. The sixth tournament's champion was Kennesaw State University. The Most Valuable Player was Aaron Moore of Kennesaw State University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234963-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NCBA Division II 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. There are a few differences between the NCAA and the NCBA format. One of which is that the losers of Games 1\u20134 move to the other half of the bracket. Another difference is that the NCBA plays a winner take all for its national title game while the NCAA has a best-of-3 format to determine its national champion. Another difference which is between NCBA Division I and II is that Division II games are 7 innings while Division I games are 9 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234963-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NCBA Division II World Series, Participants\n\u2021 - denotes school also has a NCBA Division I team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234964-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 ND15\n2013 ND15 (also written 2013 ND15) is an asteroid that is a temporary trojan of Venus, the first known Venus trojan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234964-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 ND15, Discovery, orbit and physical properties\n2013 ND15 was discovered on 13 July 2013 by N. Primak, A. Schultz, T. Goggia and K. Chambers, observing for the Pan-STARRS project. As of September 2014, it has been observed 21 times with a data-arc span of 26 days. It is an Aten asteroid and its semi-major axis (0.7235\u00a0AU) is very similar to that of Venus but it has high eccentricity (0.6115) and small orbital inclination (4.794\u00b0). With an absolute magnitude of 24.1, it has a diameter in the range 40\u2013100\u00a0m (for an assumed albedo range of 0.04-0.20).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234964-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 ND15, Trojan dynamical state and orbital evolution\n2013 ND15 has been identified as a Venus trojan following a tadpole orbit around Venus' Lagrangian point L4. Besides being a Venus co-orbital, this asteroid is also a Mercury crosser and an Earth crosser. 2013 ND15 exhibits resonant (or near-resonant) behavior with Mercury, Venus and Earth. Its short-term dynamical evolution is different from that of the other three Venus co-orbitals, 2001 CK32, 2002 VE68, and 2012 XE133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 55], "content_span": [56, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234964-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 ND15, Potentially hazardous asteroid\n2013 ND15 is not included in the Minor Planet Center list of potentially hazardous asteroids (PHAs) because its absolute magnitude is greater than 22.0, even though it comes to within 0.05\u00a0AU of Earth periodically. It approached Earth at 0.077\u00a0AU on 21 June 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 41], "content_span": [42, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234965-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NEAFL season\nThe 2013 NEAFL season was the third season of the North East Australian Football League (NEAFL). The Brisbane Lions reserves were the premiers for the season after they defeated the Sydney Swans reserves by 8 points in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234965-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NEAFL season, League structure\nThe league is split into two divisions called the Northern Conference and the Eastern Conference. The two teams who win their respective Conference finals series meet in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234965-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NEAFL season, State games\nThe two NEAFL conferences participated in state games in 2013, with the NEAFL Eastern Conference (NSW/ACT) competing against the Tasmanian State League and the NEAFL Northern Conference (QLD/NT) competing against the South Australian National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234965-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NEAFL season, Foxtel Cup\nThree NEAFL clubs were extended an invitation to compete in the Foxtel Cup knockout competition for 2013. These clubs were 2012 Northern Conference runners up Northern Territory, 2012 Eastern Conference premiers Queanbeyan and 2012 Northern Conference third-ranked team Southport. Their results are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234966-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL All-Star Game\nThe 2013 NECBL All-Star Game was the 20th exhibition game between all-stars from the New England Collegiate Baseball League's East and West Divisions. The game was held at Robbie Mills Field in Laconia, New Hampshire, the home field of the East Division's Laconia Muskrats, on July 21, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234966-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL All-Star Game, Rosters\nThe following are the rosters of both the East and West Division All-Star teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234966-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL All-Star Game, Rosters, East Division All-Stars\nJohn Lieske \u2013 New Bedford Bay Sox \u2013 Illinois State", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234966-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL All-Star Game, Rosters, East Division All-Stars\nChris Shaw \u2013 New Bedford Bay Sox \u2013 Boston College", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234966-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL All-Star Game, Rosters, East Division All-Stars\nChris Travers \u2013 New Bedford Bay Sox \u2013 Roger Williams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234967-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL season\nThe 2013 NECBL season was the 20th season of the New England Collegiate Baseball League, a wood bat collegiate summer baseball league. Changes for 2013 included the largest league expansion since 2003 with three new teams joining the league to increase the number of teams to 13. These include two expansion franchises, the Plymouth Pilgrims and the Ocean State Waves, as well as the Saratoga Brigade, the former Saratoga Phillies franchise from the New York Collegiate Baseball League, and the NECBL's first foray into New York state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234967-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL season, All-star game\nThe NECBL's 2013 All-Star Game will be hosted by the East Division's Laconia Muskrats at Robbie Mills Field in Laconia, New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234967-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NECBL season, Playoffs\nNote: The 4th and final seeds in each division were determined the day after the regular season ended with tie-breaking games. Sanford clinched the 4th seed in the Eastern Division by virtue of their 4-2 home victory over Laconia. Sanford hosted the play-in game due to their season series win over the Muskrats. Holyoke clinched the 4th seed in the Western Division by virtue of their 7-1 home victory over Saratoga. Holyoke hosted the play-in game after winning a coin flip that was performed because the teams split the regular season series 3-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft\nThe 2013 NFL Draft was the 78th annual meeting of National Football League (NFL) franchises to select newly eligible football players. The draft, which is officially called the \"NFL Player Selection Meeting\", was held at Radio City Music Hall in New York City on April 25 through April 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft\nEric Fisher was chosen first overall by the Kansas City Chiefs, becoming the fourth offensive lineman ever to be selected with the top pick (all of them being tackles), since the first Common draft in 1967. Players who attended high school in 39 of the 50 states were selected in this draft; Florida and California led with 27 draftees each. South Carolina contributed the most drafted players on a per capita basis with 13 players, or one of every 355,798 residents of the state. Among colleges, Florida State led with 11 players selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft\nA record 11 players from countries other than the United States were selected (Ghanaians Ezekiel Ansah and Edmund Kugbila, Tongan Star Lotulelei, German Bj\u00f6rn Werner, Englishman Menelik Watson, Estonian Margus Hunt, Liberian Sio Moore, Jamaican Trevardo Williams, Australian Jesse Williams, Canadian Luke Willson and Zimbabwean Stansly Maponga), breaking the record set by the 2012 NFL Draft. Meanwhile, nine offensive linemen were selected in the first round which ties a record previously set in 1968.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft\nThe following is the breakdown of the 254 players selected by position:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft, Early entrants\nA record 73 underclassmen forfeited any remaining NCAA eligibility they may have been eligible for and declared themselves available to be selected in the draft. Of these, 52 (71.2%) were drafted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft, Determination of draft order\nThe draft order is based generally on each team's record from the previous season, with teams which qualified for the postseason selecting after those which failed to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft, Trades\nIn the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft, Supplemental draft\nThe supplemental draft was held on July 11, 2013. For each player selected in the supplemental draft, the team forfeits its pick in that round in the draft of the following season. 6 players were eligible, but none were selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft, Selections by conference\nTwelve players from Southeastern Conference (SEC) programs were selected in the first round, which tied the record for most first-round selections from a single college conference set in 2006 by the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234968-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL Draft, Popular culture\nDuring Super Bowl XLVII, the NFL presented a promotional advertisement for the 2013 Draft featuring retired athlete Deion Sanders attempting a comeback return under the name \"Leon Sandcastle\". The ad followed the fictional exploits of Sandcastle (portrayed by Ball State cornerback Andre Dawson) through tryouts until he is drafted first overall by the Kansas City Chiefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season\nThe 2013 NFL season was the 94th season in the history of the National Football League (NFL) and the 48th of the Super Bowl era. The season saw the Seattle Seahawks capture the first championship in the franchise's 38 years in the league with a lopsided 43\u20138 victory over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII, the league's championship game. The Super Bowl was played at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on Sunday, February 2, 2014. It was the first Super Bowl hosted by New Jersey and the first to be held outdoors in a cold weather environment. The Seahawks scored 12 seconds into the game and held the lead the rest of the way on the back of their Legion of Boom defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season\nBroncos quarterback Peyton Manning was named the regular season's Most Valuable Player (MVP) by the voters of the Associated Press (AP) for a record fifth time after compiling passing stats which included regular season records for passing yards and passing touchdowns. Manning also was named the Offensive Player of the Year for the second time in his career. Carolina Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly earned Defensive Player of the Year honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season\nScoring reached historic levels throughout the league in 2013. As a whole the league set records for total points scored, points scored per game and the number of both touchdowns and field goals scored. The Broncos set a new standard for team scoring in the regular season with 606 points. In addition to the Broncos, ten other teams each scored over 400 points, the greatest number of teams to surpass that benchmark in a single year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season\nThe regular season got underway on Thursday, September 5, 2013, with the Broncos hosting the defending Super Bowl XLVII champion Baltimore Ravens in the annual kickoff game. The game presaged the Broncos' historic offensive production with a strong performance by Peyton Manning in which he tied a league record in throwing seven touchdown passes and led the Broncos to a 49\u201327 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season\nThe game was the start of a disappointing season for the Ravens in which they would finish out of the playoffs with an 8\u20138 record, thus ensuring that there would be no repeat Super Bowl winner for a tied record ninth straight season. The regular season wrapped up on Sunday night, December 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season\nThe playoffs began with the wild card round which took place the first weekend of January 2014. The league's propensity for scoring did not abate in the post-season, as exemplified by the Indianapolis Colts' wild come-from-behind 45\u201344 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs in the playoffs' opening game. The Conference Championship games featured the top seeded teams in each conference, the Seahawks in the NFC and the Broncos in the American Football Conference (AFC), hosting the San Francisco 49ers and New England Patriots respectively. Both home teams prevailed to set up just the second Super Bowl matchup of #1 seeds in the past 20 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Player movement\nThe 2013 league year began at 4\u00a0pm EST on March 12, which marked the start of the league's free agency period. The per-team salary cap was set at US$123,000,000. For the first time the league instituted a negotiating period prior to the start of free agency during which time agents representing prospective unrestricted free agent players (though not the players themselves) were allowed to have contact with team representatives with the purpose of determining a player's market value and to begin contract negotiations. This period, which was referred to by some as the \"legal tampering\" period, began at midnight on March 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Player movement, Free agency\nA total of 524 players were eligible for some form of free agency. Among the high-profile players who changed teams via free agency included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Player movement, Free agency\nEight players were assigned the non-exclusive franchise tag by their teams, which ensured that the team would receive compensation were the player to sign a contract with another team. These players were Brandon Albert (Chiefs), Jairus Byrd (Bills), Ryan Clady (Broncos), Michael Johnson (Bengals), Pat McAfee (Colts), Henry Melton (Bears), Anthony Spencer (Cowboys) and Randy Starks (Dolphins). None of these players changed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Player movement, Major trades\nThe following trades are notable as they involved Pro Bowl-caliber players and/or draft picks in the first three rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Player movement, Draft\nThe 2013 NFL Draft was held April 25\u201327, 2013, in New York City. Prior to the draft the NFL Scouting Combine, where draft-eligible players were evaluated by team personnel, was held in Indianapolis on February 20\u201326. In the draft, the Kansas City Chiefs made Central Michigan University offensive tackle Eric Fisher the first overall selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Officiating changes\nDean Blandino was named as the league's new Vice President of Officiating, succeeding Carl Johnson. Referee Alberto Riveron was then promoted to the league's Senior Director of Officiating, a newly created position as a second-in-command under Blandino. Bill Vinovich, who worked the previous season as a substitute referee, was then assigned to head Riveron's former on-field officiating crew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Rule changes\nThe following rule changes were approved at the NFL owners' meeting on March 20, 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Preseason\nTraining camps for the 2013 season opened in late July. The Buccaneers camp was the first to open with rookies reporting on July 17. The Cowboys were the first to open camp to veteran players on July 20. All teams were in camp by July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Preseason\nPrior to the start of the regular season, each team played at least four preseason exhibition games. The preseason schedule got underway with the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game on Sunday, August 4. The Hall of Fame game is a traditional part of the annual Pro Football Hall of Fame induction weekend celebrating new Hall of Fame members. It was played at Fawcett Stadium in Canton, Ohio, which is located adjacent to the Hall of Fame building. In the game, which was televised nationally on NBC, the Dallas Cowboys defeated the Miami Dolphins 24\u201320. The 2013 Hall of Fame class of Larry Allen, Cris Carter, Curley Culp, Jonathan Ogden, Bill Parcells, Dave Robinson and Warren Sapp was honored during the game. The 65-game preseason schedule concluded on Thursday, August 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe 2013 season featured 256 games played out over a seventeen-week schedule which began on the Thursday night following Labor Day. Each of the league's 32 teams played a 16-game schedule which included one bye week for each team between weeks four and twelve. The slate featured seventeen games on Monday night including a doubleheader in the season's opening week. There were also seventeen games played on Thursday, including the National Football League Kickoff game in prime time on September 5 and three games on Thanksgiving Day. The regular season wrapped up with a full slate of 16 games on Sunday, December 29, all of which were intra-divisional matchups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nUnder the NFL's scheduling formula, each team played each of the other three teams in their own division twice. In addition, a team played against all four teams in one other division from each conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe final two games on a team's schedule were against the two teams in the team's own conference in the divisions the team was not set to play who finished the previous season in the same rank in their division (e.g. the team which finished first in its division the previous season would play each other team in their conference that also finished first in its respective division). The pre-set division pairings for 2013 were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nIntra-conferenceAFC North vs. AFC EastAFC South vs. AFC WestNFC North vs. NFC EastNFC South vs. NFC West", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nInter-conferenceAFC North vs. NFC NorthAFC South vs. NFC WestAFC East vs. NFC SouthAFC West vs. NFC East", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe 2013 regular season schedule was released on April 18, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe 2013 regular season began on Thursday, September 5, with the NFL Kickoff Game in which the Denver Broncos hosted the Baltimore Ravens. The game was a rematch of a two-overtime playoff game of the previous season and broadcast on NBC. The Ravens, as the reigning Super Bowl champions, would normally have hosted the kickoff game, however, a scheduling conflict with their Major League Baseball counterparts, the Baltimore Orioles, forced the Ravens to start the season on the road (the Ravens' and Orioles' respective stadiums share parking facilities).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe Ravens became the first Super Bowl winner since 2003 to open their title defense on the road. The Broncos defeated the Ravens 49\u201327 on the strength of a record-setting performance by quarterback Peyton Manning. Manning completed 27 of 42 pass attempts for 462 yards and seven touchdowns. Manning set or tied numerous league records in the game including most touchdown passes in a game (tied with five others) and records for most career games with at least six, five and four touchdown passes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThere were two NFL International Series games held at Wembley Stadium in London. On September 29, the Minnesota Vikings defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers 34\u201327. On October 27, the San Francisco 49ers defeated the Jacksonville Jaguars 42\u201310. This season was the first of a four-year agreement for the Jaguars to play a home game in London (an agreement which was later extended an additional four years).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe Chargers and Raiders played an unusual late night game in the season's fifth week on October 6. The game, originally scheduled to start at 1:25\u00a0pm PDT, had to be moved to the evening to accommodate stadium schedules \u2014 Major League Baseball's Oakland Athletics, co-tenants of O.co Coliseum, had hosted the Game 2 of the 2013 American League Division Series the previous night and stadium crews needed nearly 24 hours to convert the stadium from a baseball to a football configuration. O.co Coliseum was only multi-purpose stadium which hosted both an NFL and an MLB team in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nAlthough the stadium conversion was complete by 3:30\u00a0pm local time, an 8:36\u00a0pm kickoff was necessary to avoid conflict with NBC's Sunday Night Football, where the 49ers hosted the Texans at Candlestick Park across the San Francisco Bay. The Chargers-Raiders game was the latest start time for a game in NFL history and was broadcast nationwide on the NFL Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe league's traditional slate of Thanksgiving Day games was played on Thursday, November 28. The Lions hosted the Packers in the early game at 12:30\u00a0pm EST, marking the Packers' 21st Thanksgiving game in Detroit. The Raiders visited the Cowboys in the late afternoon game at 3:30\u00a0pm CST. The evening game featured the defending Super Bowl champion Ravens hosting their AFC North rival Steelers at 8:30\u00a0pm EST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season\nThe Bills hosted the Falcons in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on December 1. The game was played at Rogers Centre one week after the 101st Grey Cup ended the 2013 Canadian Football League season. On January 9, the Bills and Rogers Communications had announced a five-year extension of the Bills Toronto Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Regular season, In-season scheduling changes\nThe following regular season games were moved either by way of flexible scheduling, severe weather, or for other reasons:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe wild card round of the playoffs featured the two wild card playoff qualifiers from each conference being hosted by the two lowest seeded divisional winners. The top two seeds in each conference \u2014 the Seahawks, Panthers, Broncos and Patriots \u2014 all had first-round byes. The games were played January 4\u20135, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe weekend's first game on Saturday featured the Colts staging the second biggest comeback in playoff history to defeat the Chiefs by a score of 45\u201344. The 28-point second half deficit the Colts overcame is exceeded only by the Bills\u2013Oilers playoff game from January 1993 which has become known simply as \"The Comeback.\" It was the first time in any NFL game (regular or postseason) that a team won in regulation play (i.e. not overtime) after having trailed by as many as 28 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe game was also the highest scoring postseason game to have been decided by a one-point margin as well as the first game in league history to finish with a 45\u201344 result. The Colts and Chiefs combined to gain 1,049 total yards which established a new single-game postseason record, breaking the record of 1,038 yards that was set by the Bills\u2013Dolphins first-round game on December 30, 1995, and matched in a Saints\u2013Lions first-round matchup on January 7, 2012. The loss was the Chiefs' eighth straight in the playoffs which broke an NFL record for consecutive playoff losses the franchise had previously shared with the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe Saints beat the Eagles 26\u201324 in the Saturday night game. It was the Saints' first ever road playoff victory. The Saints built an early 20\u20137 lead before the Eagles bounced back to take a 24\u201323 lead with less than five minutes remaining in the game. However, the Saints worked their way down the field while also working the clock on the game's final drive before Shayne Graham kicked the game-winning field goal from 32 yards out as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe early game on Sunday was the only game of the weekend not decided by three or fewer points with the Chargers defeating the Bengals, 27\u201310. Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton committed three second-half turnovers which led to the Chargers scoring 20 unanswered points to overcome a 7\u201310 halftime deficit. The Bengals loss marks a league record third straight year in which the team has lost its playoff opener, and extended the Bengals' streak of playoff futility to 23 seasons. Every other current NFL team has won a playoff game since the Bengals' last playoff victory in January 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nIn the late afternoon game on Sunday the 49ers defeated the Packers 23\u201320 on a brutally cold day at Lambeau Field. The temperature at game time was just 5\u00a0\u00b0F (\u221215\u00a0\u00b0C) with a wind chill of \u221210\u00a0\u00b0F (\u221223\u00a0\u00b0C). Quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who eschewed sleeves and gloves despite the chilly conditions, passed for 227 yards and rushed for 98 more to lead the 49ers to victory in a back-and-forth game. Phil Dawson kicked the winning field goal as time expired. This was the second straight year that the Packers' season had both started and ended with losses to the 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe divisional round games were played on January 11\u201312, 2014 and three of the four were rematches of regular season games \u2014 only the Patriots and Colts had not met in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nIn the early game on Saturday, the Seahawks defeated the Saints 23\u201315. The Seahawks held a 16\u20130 lead at halftime, but the Saints came back in the second half to make the game interesting. The Seahawks were able to hold on after a late Saints comeback effort, including an onside kick recovery, fell short. The Seahawks' offense centered around a 28 carry, 140 yard rushing effort from Marshawn Lynch, who also scored on a 31-yard run in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nPatriots running back LeGarrette Blount and the Patriots defense were the stars of the Patriots 43\u201322 victory over the Colts in the Saturday night game. Blount rushed for 166 yards and a franchise-record four touchdowns while Colts quarterback Andrew Luck was intercepted four times. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady broke a league record for most playoff games for a starting quarterback with 25 (a record he had previously shared with Brett Favre) and extended his own record of 18 career playoff wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe victory allowed the Patriots to reach the AFC Championship game for the third straight year as well as the eighth time with Brady and head coach Bill Belichick. Belichick moved into a second-place tie with Don Shula on the all-time postseason head coaching wins list, one victory behind Tom Landry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe 49ers defeated the Panthers by a score of 23\u201310 in the early Sunday game. The 49ers defense twice stopped the Panthers one yard short of the end zone and also recorded two interceptions and five quarterback sacks. 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick threw for one touchdown and ran for another in the game. The win put the 49ers into their third straight and fifteenth overall conference championship game, matching the Pittsburgh Steelers for most conference championship appearances. Jim Harbaugh became the first head coach in NFL history to take his team to the conference championship game in each of his first three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nIn the final game of the divisional round the Broncos beat the Chargers 24\u201317. It was only the fourth time in the season to date that the Broncos had been held to fewer than 30 points (three of which were against the Chargers), but the Chargers offense could not capitalize. The Broncos held a 17\u20130 lead in the fourth quarter before the Chargers launched a comeback that was too little and too late. The win put the Broncos into the AFC championship game for the first time since the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe conference championships took place on Sunday, January 19, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe early game featured the Broncos hosting the Patriots in the AFC Championship Game. The game was referred to by many as Manning-Brady XV as it was the fifteenth meeting (the fourth in the playoffs) of the two starting quarterbacks, Tom Brady and Peyton Manning. The Broncos defeated Brady and the Patriots 26\u201316 behind a 400-yard passing performance by Manning. Manning led the Broncos on two long touchdown drives where each used over seven minutes of game time and were the two longest drives in terms of game time of the Broncos season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThis was Manning's third career postseason game with 400 or more yards passing, equaling Drew Brees for the most such playoff games in league history. Broncos head coach John Fox, who previously led the Carolina Panthers to Super Bowl XXXVIII in 2004, became the sixth head coach in NFL history to take two different franchises to the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason\nThe NFC Championship Game had the Seahawks hosting the 49ers in the late game. The Seahawks defense forced three turnovers in the fourth quarter which proved to be the difference in the game. The last of these was a pass intended for Michael Crabtree in the endzone which was intercepted by Seahawks linebacker Malcolm Smith off a deflection by cornerback Richard Sherman with just 22 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter. The interception preserved a 23\u201317 Seahawks victory. In an on-field interview immediately after the game with Fox sideline reporter Erin Andrews, Sherman famously directed a rant at Crabtree whom Sherman called a \"sorry receiver.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII\nSuper Bowl XLVIII featured the top seeded team from each conference for just the second time in twenty years. The Broncos possessed the league's best offense (in terms of both scoring and yards) while the Seahawks had the league's top defense (also in both scoring and yardage). The game was played on February 2, 2014 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, just outside New York City and was televised in the U.S. by Fox with kickoff at 6:32\u00a0pm EST. This was the first ever Super Bowl to be staged outdoors in a cold weather environment although the temperature was a mild 49 degrees at kickoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII\nThe game started disastrously for the Broncos who, despite losing the coin toss, received the opening kickoff. On the game's first play from scrimmage from the Broncos' 14 yard line, Broncos center Manny Ramirez sent a shotgun snap over the head of quarterback Peyton Manning. The ball traveled into the endzone where it was covered by Broncos running back Knowshon Moreno who was touched down for a safety with just 12 seconds of game time elapsed. This was the quickest score ever in a Super Bowl. The Seahawks did not relinquish the lead in a 43\u20138 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII\nThis was the Seahawks first ever league championship since entering the NFL in 1976. Seahawks linebacker Malcolm Smith, who scored on a 69-yard interception return plus had a fumble recovery and tallied 10 tackles, was named the game's Most Valuable Player (MVP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII\nThis was the fifth Super Bowl loss for the Broncos, the most for any franchise. Even in defeat, though, Peyton Manning's record-breaking year continued. He set a record for most passes completed in a Super Bowl with 34. He also moved ahead of Tom Brady into first place on the career playoff passing yardage list with 6,589 yards. In addition, Broncos wide receiver Demaryius Thomas caught 13 passes to set a single-game Super Bowl record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Pro Bowl\nThe Pro Bowl is the league's all-star game. The league had raised doubts about the future of the exhibition due to concerns over the game's competitiveness in recent years, but on March 20, it was announced that the 2014 Pro Bowl would indeed take place, receiving a one-year reprieve. As in recent years, the game was held the week before the Super Bowl at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii. It was played on Sunday, January 26, and broadcast in the U.S. on NBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Pro Bowl\nThe format for the game was considerably altered in an effort to improve competitiveness. The biggest changes included an \"unconferenced\" format in which players would be selected regardless of the conference in which their team competes, a draft format to select the teams and various tweaks to increase the excitement of the game itself. Deion Sanders and Jerry Rice served as the non-playing captains for the two competing squads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nA nationwide poll conducted by Harris Interactive in December 2013 concluded that pro football is the favorite sport of Americans. Of the respondents asked the question, \"If you had to choose, which ONE of these sports would you say is your favorite? \", 35% chose pro football. That is up by one percentage point over the results of the previous year. Football has taken the top spot in the annual poll each year since it was first conducted in 1985. Baseball finished second, with 14% naming it as their favorite, followed by college football at 11%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nIn August, former Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez was charged with the murder of Odin Lloyd. Hernandez was released by the Patriots following his arrest in the murder investigation in June. In an effort to further distance themselves from the troubled Hernandez, the Patriots offered fans an opportunity to trade-in Hernandez jerseys for another jersey of comparable value. Hernandez would be convicted of the murder charge and sentenced to life imprisonment in April 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nEagles wide receiver Riley Cooper was caught on video using a racial slur during a music concert. After the video went viral during the team's training camp, Cooper was briefly sent away from the team to seek counseling. The Eagles also levied an undisclosed fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nIn August, just prior to the start of the season, a US$765,000,000 settlement proposal was announced in a class-action lawsuit brought against the league by former players who contended that the league concealed a link between head injuries sustained by players and traumatic brain injury which may only become apparent later in life. The judge in the case later rejected the settlement on the grounds that the amount may not be large enough to cover the needs of all the plaintiffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nIn October, the Buccaneers released quarterback Josh Freeman after trying unsuccessfully to trade him. Freeman had been considered one of the league's best young quarterbacks after leading the Bucs to a 10\u20136 record in 2010, but he clashed with head coach Greg Schiano (who took over in 2012) and was benched earlier in the year. Despite being just 25 years old, Freeman held franchise records for touchdowns and completions and was second in passing yardage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0048-0001", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nIt had come out earlier in the week that Freeman had been in the league's substance abuse program; Freeman described his participation as voluntary and a result of prescription drugs he was taking to treat ADHD. Shortly after his release, Freeman was signed by the Vikings. Freeman started for the Vikings in week seven, but he posted a passer rating of just 40.6 in that game and did not play another down during the season. He was inactive for nine of the Vikings' final ten games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nThree Buccaneers players \u2014 kicker Lawrence Tynes, guard Carl Nicks and cornerback Johnthan Banks \u2014 were diagnosed with Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections during the season. The potentially deadly strain of staph had been encountered by other NFL teams including the Washington Redskins, St. Louis Rams and Cleveland Browns in previous seasons. After the third infection was confirmed there was brief discussion as to whether the Bucs' week six home game against the Eagles would be played, but the decision was made to continue with the scheduled game. The Falcons even took the step of bringing in a hazardous materials crew to disinfect the visitor's locker room after the Bucs' visited Atlanta in week seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nDolphins offensive lineman Richie Incognito was suspended by the team in November after allegations surfaced that he bullied fellow lineman Jonathan Martin who left the team earlier in the season due to the impact of Incognito's actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nThe league's official investigation into the matter concluded that Martin and other Dolphins employees had been subjected to a \"pattern of harassment\" at the hands of Incognito as well as fellow linemen John Jerry and Mike Pouncey. The 144-page report, written by league-appointed investigator Ted Wells, called the situation a \"classic case of bullying\". The report also implicated Dolphins offensive line coach Jim Turner in some of the abuse; Turner was fired by the team shortly after the report's release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nRedskins head coach Mike Shanahan made a decision to bench the team's franchise quarterback, Robert Griffin III for the team's final three games of the 2013 season. Griffin had undergone knee surgery after being injured the previous season in which he was named NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year after being selected second overall in the 2012 draft. Griffin was much less productive in his second season. Shanahan stated that the decision to start Kirk Cousins over Griffin was made to protect Griffin from sustaining another injury, although there was speculation that Shanahan was unhappy about Griffin's friendly relationship with team owner Daniel Snyder. Shanahan was fired after the season ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nRussell Wilson the second-year quarterback of the Super Bowl champion Seahawks led all NFL players in terms of total licensed product sales (jerseys, T-shirts, figurines, photos, etc.) made from March 2013 through February 2014. The top six players on the list were quarterbacks, including, in order, Peyton Manning (who held the top spot the previous year), Colin Kaepernick, Robert Griffin III, Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady. The only non-quarterback in the top 10 was Wilson's Seahawks teammate, running back Marshawn Lynch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nLegendary Hall of Fame defensive lineman Deacon Jones died in June. Shortly thereafter the league honored Jones' legacy by creating the \"Deacon Jones Award\" to be given annually to the player who records the most quarterback sacks. Colts linebacker Robert Mathis was the inaugural winner of the honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nTennessee Titans owner Kenneth S. \"Bud\" Adams died in October. He was the only owner the franchise, which began in 1960 as the Houston Oilers in the AFL, has ever had. Adams was a second-generation oil tycoon who made his home in Houston, Texas. The team was inherited in equal parts by the families of Adams' three children with Adams' son-in-law Tommy Smith succeeding Adams as the president and CEO of the franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Notable events\nAside from those mentioned above, the following people associated with the NFL died in 2013:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Records and milestones\nThe 2013 season saw a number of league records set, most notably:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Awards and statistics, Individual season awards\nThe 3rd Annual NFL Honors, saluting the best players and plays from 2013 season, was held on February 1, 2014, at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 64], "content_span": [65, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Awards and statistics, All-Pro team\nThe following players were named first team All-Pro by the Associated Press:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Awards and statistics, Players of the week/month\nThe following were named the top performers during the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 65], "content_span": [66, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nArians went 9\u20133 as interim head coach of the Indianapolis Colts filling in for Chuck Pagano who left the team to undergo treatment for cancer. Arians's previous head coaching experience was with Temple University from 1984 through 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nMarrone had spent the past four seasons as head coach at Syracuse University. Prior to that he had been the offensive coordinator of the New Orleans Saints for three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nTrestman had spent the previous five seasons as head coach of the Montr\u00e9al Alouettes. During that tenure, he won back-to-back CFL Grey Cup championships in 2009 and 2010. He had previously coached for several NFL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nChudzinski had spent the previous two seasons as offensive coordinator of the Carolina Panthers and had served in the same capacity with the Browns in 2007 and 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nBradley was the defensive coordinator for the Seattle Seahawks the previous three seasons. Prior to that he served as linebackers coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2007 and 2008. He spent the first sixteen years of his coaching career toiling in the collegiate Division II and Football Championship Subdivision (previously known as Division I-AA) ranks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nReid had been fired earlier in the offseason after spending the past 14 seasons as head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nKelly had spent the previous four seasons as head coach at the University of Oregon where he had developed a reputation as an offensive innovator in leading the team to four straight BCS bowl games. He had previously been linked to the Browns' head coaching job before backing out and announcing his intention to remain at Oregon. A few days later he had a change of heart and accepted the Eagles job.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nThis is McCoy's first ever head coaching position. He had spent the past four years as offensive coordinator of the Denver Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nIn the six games (seven weeks) that Kromer served as interim head coach, the Saints compiled a record of 2\u20134 (.333); in the ten games under Vitt, the team went 5\u20135 (.500).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nDel Rio, the Broncos' defensive coordinator, had previously been the Jacksonville Jaguars' head coach from 2003 through 2011. The Broncos went 3\u20131 under Del Rio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nKubiak was fired on December 6, after a loss to the Jaguars on Thursday Night Football which was a franchise record eleventh straight defeat. Kubiak leaves Houston with a record of 63\u201366 (.488), including the franchise's only two playoff appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Head coach\nPhillips, the Texans' defensive coordinator, has nine seasons of previous head coaching experience with the Denver Broncos, Buffalo Bills and Dallas Cowboys, and has previously served as an interim head coach with the Atlanta Falcons and New Orleans Saints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Front office\nGraves was replaced by Steve Keim who has been with the franchise for 14 years. Keim started as a scout in 1999 and worked his way up to become director of college scouting in 2006, then director of player personnel in 2008 and finally vice president for player personnel in 2012. Prior to joining the Cardinals Keim had a brief playing career in the NFL and CFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Front office\nAssistant GM Doug Whaley was promoted to replace Nix. The 40-year-old Whaley had been groomed as Nix' replacement since he was hired from the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2010. He becomes the Bills first black GM and the league's sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Front office\nLombardi replaced Heckert in the GM role, although he was given the title of Vice President of Player Personnel. Lombardi had previously worked in the Browns front office from 1987 through 1995. He later spent eight seasons with the Oakland Raiders and has also worked for the Philadelphia Eagles and San Francisco 49ers. Most recently he was an NFL analyst for the NFL Network and NFL.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Front office\nSmith was replaced by David Caldwell. The 38-year-old Caldwell has seventeen years of NFL front office experience, most recently as director of player personnel for the Atlanta Falcons. Prior to his five-year stint in Atlanta where he served as director of college scouting from 2008 through 2011, Caldwell has also worked for the Carolina Panthers and Indianapolis Colts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Front office\nJohn Dorsey had worked in the Green Bay Packers scouting department since 1991, first as a scout and then as the team's director of college scouting since 1997. He left the Packers briefly following Mike Holmgren to the Seattle Seahawks in 1999, but returned after 14 months. He had a five-year playing career with the Packers in the 1980s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Front office\nJohn Idzik, Jr. was hired from the Seattle Seahawks where he was the vice president for football administration. He is primarily known as a salary cap expert. Prior to the Seahawks, Idzik worked for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Arizona Cardinals in a twenty-year NFL career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0079-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Head coach/front office changes, Front office\nSmith was replaced as GM by 40-year-old Tom Telesco who had been the vice president of football operations for the Indianapolis Colts' with whom he had worked for the past 15 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0080-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Stadium changes\n2013 marked the final season in which the Minnesota Vikings played their home games at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, as the team moved temporarily to TCF Bank Stadium (home of the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers) while their U.S. Bank Stadium was built at the same site as the Metrodome. The Vikings played the 2014 and 2015 seasons at TCF Bank Stadium and opened their new stadium for the 2016 season. The Vikings had called the Metrodome home since it opened in 1982.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0081-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Stadium changes\nThis was also the final season in which the San Francisco 49ers played their home games at Candlestick Park, as the team moved into the newly built Levi's Stadium located in Santa Clara, California, for 2014. The 49ers had played in Candlestick since 1971 and the stadium hosted Monday Night Football 36 times, including the stadium's farewell game on December 23. No other facility had as many Monday Night Football appearances. With the departure of the 49ers, Candlestick Park was left without any permanent tenants. On February 3, 2013, plans to demolish Candlestick Park were announced and took place after the final 2013 49ers game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0082-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Stadium changes\nTwo stadiums received new naming rights: In January 2013, Cleveland Browns Stadium was renamed FirstEnergy Stadium. The FirstEnergy Corporation, an energy company based in Akron, Ohio, agreed to pay the Cleveland Browns $6 million per year for 17 years to have its name on the team's stadium. In July 2013, Cowboys Stadium was re-branded as AT&T Stadium, though terms of the naming rights deal remain undisclosed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0083-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Uniforms\nSeveral teams made changes to their uniforms or logos prior to the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0084-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, Uniforms\nDue to a new recommendation that a player should use the same helmet for all games, several teams were forced to make changes in their plans to use alternate and throwback jerseys, including the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234969-0085-0000", "contents": "2013 NFL season, U.S. television coverage\nThis was the eighth and final year of the television contracts with CBS, Fox, NBC, and ESPN before the new nine-year contracts began in 2014. CBS and Fox continued to carry the Sunday afternoon AFC and NFC packages, respectively. NBC carried Sunday Night Football, the kickoff game, and the prime-time Thanksgiving game; and ESPN aired seventeen Monday Night games in sixteen weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234970-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NHK Trophy\nThe 2013 NHK Trophy was the fourth event of six in the 2013\u201314 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Yoyogi National Gymnasium in Tokyo on November 8\u201310. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2013\u201314 Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234970-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NHK Trophy, Eligibility\nSkaters who reached the age of 14 by July 1, 2013 were eligible to compete on the senior Grand Prix circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234970-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NHK Trophy, Entries, Changes to initial lineup\nIn the pairs' event, Yuko Kavaguti / Alexander Smirnov withdrew due to an injury to Smirnov. Anastasia Martiusheva / Alexei Rogonov were named as their replacements. In the ladies event, Li Zijun withdrew and was not replaced. In the men's event, Chafik Besseghier withdrew and was not replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234971-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NHL Entry Draft\nThe 2013 NHL Entry Draft was the 51st NHL Entry Draft. All seven rounds of the draft took place on June 30, 2013, at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. The top three selections were Nathan MacKinnon going to the Colorado Avalanche, Aleksander Barkov going to the Florida Panthers, and Jonathan Drouin going to the Tampa Bay Lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234971-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NHL Entry Draft, Eligibility\nIce hockey players born between January 1, 1993, and September 15, 1995, were eligible for selection in the 2013 NHL Entry Draft. Additionally, un-drafted, non-North American players born in 1992 were eligible for the draft; and those players who were drafted in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft, but not signed by an NHL team and who were born after June 30, 1993, were also eligible to re-enter the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234971-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NHL Entry Draft, Draft lottery\nBeginning with the 2013 NHL Entry Draft, all 14 teams not qualifying for the Stanley Cup playoffs had a \"weighted\" chance at winning the first overall selection. The Colorado Avalanche won the 2013 draft lottery that took place on April 29, 2013, thus moving them up from the second pick to the first pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234971-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NHL Entry Draft, Selections by round\nThe order of the 2013 Entry Draft is listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234972-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series\nThe 2013 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series was announced by the NHRA on August 12, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234972-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series\nThere were 24 Top Fuel, Funny Car, and Pro Stock car events, and 16 Pro Stock Motorcycle events scheduled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234972-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, Schedule\n1 The rules for the 4 Wide Nationals differ from other races:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234972-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, Schedule\n2 Due to heavy rains, the NHRA postponed the Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Southern Nationals until May 10\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234972-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, New drivers\nBrittney Force, daughter of John Force, made her NHRA debut driving in Top Fuel for John Force Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234972-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, Notable events\nNew England Dragway has been added to the NHRA schedule with the New England Nationals, and featuring all four Professional race categories. Morgan Lucas announces he will exit the cockpit of his dragster after the season's end, to attend to future family business.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season\nThe 2013 National Lacrosse League season, the 27th in the history of the NLL, began on January 5, 2013 and ended with the Championship game on May 11, 2013. The Rochester Knighthawks overcame a mediocre 8-8 season to get hot in the playoffs for the second straight year, defeating the Philadelphia Wings, Minnesota Swarm, and Washington Stealth to win their second straight Championship. The Knighthawks became the first team to repeat as NLL Champions since the 2002-2003 Toronto Rock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season\n2013 featured a very close regular season, as the top and bottom teams were only separated by 4 games (the 10-6 Toronto Rock vs. 6-10 Buffalo Bandits). The final playoff spot was up for grabs right up until the final weekend of the season. In the end, the Bandits were the lone team out of the playoffs, missed the post-season for the first time since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season, Final 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, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season, Final standings, Playoffs\n\u2022Final played at Langley Events Centre due to arena conflict in Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season, Final standings, Playoffs\nNOTE: In 2013, the NLL added a crossover rule to the playoff format:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season, Final standings, Playoffs\n\"Eight teams shall earn playoff berths. There is also a crossover allowed which will allow the 5th place team in the West Division to take the place of the 4th place team in the East Division if the 5th place team has a better record. Each division champion faces the fourth place finisher from their division (or the crossover team should that team qualify for the playoffs). The second place finisher in each division faces the third place finisher from their division in the Division Semifinals. Each game is hosted by the higher-seeded team.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season, Final standings, Playoffs\nWith a record of 7-9, the Minnesota Swarm was the 5th place West Division team. With a record of 6-10, the Buffalo Bandits were the 4th place East Division team. Since Minnesota had a better record than Buffalo, the crossover rule went into effect with Minnesota replacing Buffalo and playing as the 4th place team in the East Division playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NLL season, Awards, Weekly awards\nThe NLL gives out awards weekly for the best offensive player, best transition player, best defensive player, and best rookie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234973-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00234973-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00234974-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NPF Draft\nThe 2013 NPF Draft is the tenth annual NPF Draft. It was held April 1, 2013 8:00 PM ET in Nashville, TN at the Ford Theatre at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. It was broadcast on ESPN3. The first selection was LSU's Rachele Fico, picked by the Akron Racers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234974-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NPF Draft, 2013 NPF Draft\nPosition key: C = catcher; INF = infielder; SS = shortstop; OF = outfielder; UT = Utility infielder; P = pitcher; RHP = right-handed pitcher; LHP = left-handed pitcherPositions will be listed as combined for those who can play multiple positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234975-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NPSL season\nThe 2013 National Premier Soccer League season was the 101st season of FIFA-sanctioned soccer in the United States, and the 11th season of the NPSL. The season began in May 2013. FC Sonic Lehigh Valley were the defending champions, having won their first NPSL title the previous season. The league held their Annual General Managers meeting (AGM) during the weekend of the NASL Soccer Bowl in Atlanta in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234975-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NPSL season, Changes from 2012\nThe following changes regarding team relocation, rebranding, or expansion are effective for the 2013 NPSL season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234975-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NPSL season, Playoffs, Format\nNortheast RegionThe top two finishers in the Keystone and Atlantic Divisions play in a crossover playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234975-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NPSL season, Playoffs, Format\nMidwest Region - Great Lakes DivisionTop four teams are playing in a playoff tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234975-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NPSL season, Playoffs, Format\nMidwest RegionCentral Division Champion and Great Lakes Division playoff tournament winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234975-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NPSL season, Playoffs, Format\nWest RegionThe top two finishers in the Northern and Southern Divisions play in a crossover playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500\nThe 2013\u00a0NRA\u00a0500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on April 13, 2013, at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. Contested over 334 laps on the 1.5\u2013mile (2.4\u00a0km) quad-oval, it was the seventh race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Kyle Busch of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his second win of the 2013 season and first at Texas, while Martin Truex Jr. finished second. Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle, and Joey Logano rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500\nBy also winning the Friday night Nationwide Series race, Busch completed his second weekend sweep of 2013, having also accomplished this at Fontana. A Texas man committed suicide by pulling a gun on his head after an argument with another fan near an infield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Background\nTexas Motor Speedway is a four-turn quad-oval track that is 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at twenty-four degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is five degrees. The back stretch, opposite of the front, also has a five degree banking. The racetrack has a permanent capacity of 138,122 spectators, and an infield capacity of 53,000. Greg Biffle is the defending race winner after winning the event in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 231 points, while Brad Keselowski stood in second with 225 points. Dale Earnhardt Jr. followed in the third position, 17 points ahead of Kyle Busch and 20 ahead of Kasey Kahne in fourth and fifth. Biffle, with 199, was seven points ahead of Carl Edwards and 20 ahead of Clint Bowyer, as Paul Menard was seven points ahead of Matt Kenseth and twelve ahead of Joey Logano in tenth and eleventh. Jeff Gordon completed the first twelve positions with 164 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Background, Sponsorship controversy\nThe race's sponsorship by National Rifle Association (NRA) proved to be controversial prior to the race. Although race sponsorships are negotiated with the track owner, not NASCAR itself, the sanctioning organization has final approval and did not object to the sponsorship. Both NASCAR's acceptance of this sponsorship, and its timing, has been controversial, and offensive to gun control activists. Because of the sponsorship, Senator Chris Murphy asked Rupert Murdoch, whose News Corporation owns Fox Sports, which was scheduled to air the race, to not broadcast it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Background, Sponsorship controversy\nFox broadcast the race as scheduled, not least because failure to do so would have been a breach of the network's contract with NASCAR. However, Fox only used the official sponsored name once per hour (the minimum mandated by NASCAR) and otherwise referred to it generically (in this case as the \"Texas 500\"), the network's usual practice when a race's title sponsor does not buy ads during the race broadcast; the NRA reportedly did not seek to purchase any such ads. Duck Commander replaced NRA as the sponsor for the following year's race, while NRA would return as a race sponsor in 2016 for the Bristol Night Race in August at Speedway's owned Bristol Motor Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nTwo practice sessions were held in preparation for the race; both on Friday, April 12, 2013. The first session and second session lasted for 90 minutes each. During the first practice session, Martin Truex Jr., for the Michael Waltrip Racing team, was quickest ahead of Earnhardt Jr. in second and Johnson in third. Jamie McMurray was scored fourth, and Kevin Harvick managed fifth. Edwards, Jeff Burton, Kenseth, Biffle, and Casey Mears rounded out the top ten quickest drivers in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nMarcos Ambrose was quickest in the second and final practice session, ahead of Kyle Busch in second, and Aric Almirola in third. Kurt Busch was fourth quickest, and Truex Jr. took fifth. Juan Pablo Montoya, Burton, Biffle, Paul Menard, and Keselowski followed in the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-five cars were entered, meaning only two cars were not able to start because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Kyle Busch clinched his second pole position of the season, with a record-setting time of 27.509 seconds. After his qualifying run, Busch commented, \"Not too shabby of a day. ... I feel like we have a good piece for the race. It felt that good. Sometimes you feel that good and it's not very fast.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by his brother, Kurt Busch. Almirola qualified third, Ambrose took fourth, and Truex Jr. started fifth. Earnhardt, Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Edwards, and Montoya completed the first ten positions on the grid. The two drivers who failed to qualify for the race were Scott Speed and Scott Riggs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234976-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 NRA 500, Report, Post-race penalties\nThree teams were issued penalties after the race. The No. 56 Michael Waltrip Racing car of Martin Truex Jr. was fined six driver points and Michael Waltrip was penalized six owner points for the front car height failing to meet NASCAR specifications. Crew chief Chad Johnston was fined $25,000 and placed on probation until June 5. MWR did not appeal the penalty. The No. 2 and No. 22 Penske Racing cars were considered more controversial. The teams were fined for unapproved suspension parts. Penske Racing appealed the decision, but the only reduction involved the suspension from seven races to three (two plus the Sprint All-Star Race).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 41], "content_span": [42, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final\nThe 2013 NRL Grand Final was the conclusive and premiership-deciding game of the 2013 NRL season. Played on Sunday, 6 October at Sydney's ANZ Stadium between the minor premiers Sydney Roosters and the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles. The Roosters won the match 26\u201318 to claim their 13th premiership title, and became the first team since the St George Illawarra Dragons in 2010 to win the both the minor premiership and the premiership in the same season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Background\nThe NRL premiers for the 2013 season were decided between two Sydney based clubs, the minor premiers Sydney Roosters and the 4th-placed Manly Warringah Sea Eagles. It was the first time in 41 years the two sides played for a premiership title, which Manly last were victorious in claiming the 1972 title in the then NSWRL competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Background\nBoth the Roosters and the Sea Eagles have now featured prominently in grand finals since the turn of the new century, with the Roosters making the grand finals in 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2010 whilst the Sea Eagles have featured in 2007, 2008 and 2011. Despite making the most appearances in the past 14 seasons the Roosters had only been successful in one of their five previous appearances, when they defeated grand final debutants New Zealand Warriors 30 points to 8 in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Background\nThe Sea Eagles' last premiership victory was also against the Warriors when they defeated them in the 2011 decider 24 points to 10. It marked the first time since 2005 that either Wayne Bennett, Craig Bellamy or Des Hasler will not coach a side to a grand final, as each have claimed a grand final victory for the past seven seasons. Both Trent Robinson and Geoff Toovey were debutant grand final coaches in their first and second respective years in the NRL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Team lists\nNote: Both Boyd Cordner and Luke O'Donnell were late inclusions to the Roosters squad with Cordner replacing Frank-Paul Nuuausala at lock and both Nuuausala and O'Donnell replacing Isaac Liu and Dylan Napa on the interchange bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Match details, 1st half\nManly began strongly and had control early on. Pressure led to Roosters five-eighth James Maloney kicking out on the full, and a tackle from his opposing number Kieran Foran on back-rower Sonny-Bill Williams led to a dropped ball and possession for the Sea Eagles, which quickly led to their first try, scored by winger Jorge Taufua. Captain Jamie Lyon missed the conversion, making it 4-0 to the Sea Eagles, however a penalty a few minutes later led to a scoreline of 6-0 by the 17th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Match details, 1st half\nThe Roosters came back to score through winger Daniel Tupou on the back of a cross-field bomb from Maloney, and the Five-eighth's sideline conversion brought the scoreline to 6\u20136. A few minutes later a contentious penalty to the Roosters gave them another two points, and they took the lead into the halftime break, 8\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Match details, 2nd half\nIn only the 43rd minute, Manly were in scoring position, with halfback Daly Cherry-Evans grubber-kicking for Lyon, however he was tackled without the ball by Roosters substitute Mitch Aubusson, leading the video referees to rule a penalty try. Lyon converted it to bring the Sea Eagles back to the lead at 12-8. A forced drop-out conceded by the Roosters put Manly into attacking position quickly and they capitalised, Matai scoring and Lyon again converting to push the score out to 18-8 with only 30 minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Match details, 2nd half\nRoosters back-rower Aiden Guerra next scored however, and a conversion brought the Roosters back into the game at 18-14, before a line-break and offload from Williams to Maloney opened the Sea Eagles' defensive line. Maloney sprinted downfield and gave a pass to Minichello. The Roosters captain then put centre Shaun Kenny-Dowall in to score which, along with a conversion from Maloney, put the Minor Premiers back in the lead at 20\u201318 with 18 minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Match details, 2nd half\nAn error from the Roosters put Manly back into contention, but a knock on from winger David Williams and a lack of capitalisation on a Roosters mistake brought them back to the Manly end of the field following another line-break from the Roosters' Williams. A grubber kick from Maloney led to a freakish try to centre Michael Jennings, who grounded the ball only centimetres inside the dead ball line. A final conversion to Maloney took the score to 26\u201318, and even a short kick-off attempt from Manly couldn't crack the Roosters' defence in the last six minutes of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Match details, Post-match\nSydney Roosters captain Anthony Minichiello became the first fullback to captain his team to a Grand Final victory since Frank 'Skinny' McMillan in 1934. Manly halfback Daly Cherry-Evans was awarded the Clive Churchill Medal for best and fairest in the Grand Final, the first awarded to a player from a losing side since 1993, and only the third time this had happened, at the time. Jack Wighton, from the Canberra Raiders, has since achieved this in 2019. Roosters coach Trent Robinson became the first coach to win a premiership in their first year of coaching in the NRL since Ricky Stuart in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Match details, Post-match\nThe premiership rings awarded to the members of the winning team were worth AU$6,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234977-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Grand Final, Aftermath\nThe Roosters' premiership victory qualified them for the 2014 World Club Challenge, to be played in the 2014 pre-season against the winners of the 2013 Super League Grand final, Wigan Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234978-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Under-20s season\nThe 2013 NRL Under-20s season (commercial known as the 2013 Holden Cup due to sponsorship from Holden) was the sixth season of the National Rugby League's Under-20s competition. It was formerly called the Toyota Cup until 2013 when Holden bought the sponsorship. The draw and structure of the competition mirrored that of the NRL's 2013 Telstra Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234979-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL Under-20s season results\nThis article details scores and results from the 2013 NRL Under-20s season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234980-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season\nThe 2013 NRL season was the 106th season of professional rugby league club competition in Australia. The National Rugby League's main competition, named the 2013 Telstra Premiership after major sponsors Telstra Corporation, was contested by sixteen teams during the regular season, which lasted from March to September, and resulted in the top eight finishing teams, who went on to contest the finals. The season culminated in the Grand Final, in which the Sydney Roosters defeated the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 26-18 to win their first NRL premiership since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234980-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season\nThe NRL season started with the 2013 NRL All Stars match, which was played in February. The 2013 Holden Cup, the NRL's Under-20s competition, also took place alongside the Premiership, with most matches held before the first grade competition. The Parramatta Eels picked up the wooden spoon for the second consecutive season after winning only five matches for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234980-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season, Season summary, Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks supplements saga\nThe 2013 NRL season was marred by a major investigation involving the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks' supplements program, which was alleged to have taken place during the 2011 season. Following an almost year-long investigation by ASADA and the NRL, a series of penalties were applied on the club, including, among others, the 12-month suspension of Shane Flanagan as the club's head coach, as well as a $1,000,000 fine (with $400,000 suspended) and the deregistration of Trent Elkin as the club's trainer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 76], "content_span": [77, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234980-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season, Season summary, Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks supplements saga\nDespite the off-field controversy, the Sharks were still able to reach the NRL finals for the second consecutive year, losing to eventual grand finalists Manly in the second week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 76], "content_span": [77, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234980-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season, Season summary, Teams\nThe lineup of teams remained unchanged for the 7th consecutive year. A report conducted by Brand Finance valued the Penrith Panthers club at $46.2m, the highest of any Australian sporting brand, while the Brisbane Broncos had the highest brand equity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234980-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season, Finals series\nFor the second year the NRL uses the finals system previously implemented by the ARL competition from the 1990s (also used as the AFL final eight system) to decide the grand finalists from the top eight finishing teams. Both the seventh-placed Newcastle Knights and minor premiers Sydney Roosters return the finals after last featuring respectively in 2011 and 2010, whilst the other six teams (Bulldogs, Storm, Rabbitohs, Sea Eagles, Cowboys & Sharks) were featured in the preceding finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234980-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season, Regular season player statistics\nThe following statistics are of the conclusion of round 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234981-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season results\nThe 2013 NRL season will consist of 26 weekly regular season rounds starting on March 7, followed by four weeks of play-offs that culminate in the grand final on October 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234981-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NRL season results, Regular season, Round 18\nFor this round, NRL players selected for Game III of the 2013 State of Origin series were not available to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234982-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NRW Trophy\nThe 2013 NRW Trophy is an international figure skating competition during the 2013\u20132014 season. An annual event organized in Germany by the Skating Union of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), it has been sanctioned by the Deutsche Eislauf Union and the International Skating Union since 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234982-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NRW Trophy\nMedals are awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The competition is held in Dortmund in two parts. The Ice Dance Trophy, in which ice dancers compete on the senior, junior, and novice levels, was held from 1\u20133 November 2013. The singles and pairs portion, also with senior, junior, and novice levels, was held from 4\u20138 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234983-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NSCAA Men's Soccer All-Americans\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. The 2013 NSCAA Men's Soccer All-Americans are honorary lists that include All-American selections by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234983-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NSCAA Men's Soccer All-Americans, All-American Teams, NCAA Division I\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, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234983-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NSCAA Men's Soccer All-Americans, All-American Teams, NCAA Division I\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, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234983-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 NSCAA Men's Soccer All-Americans, All-American Teams, NCAA Division I\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, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234984-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NWSL College Draft\nThe 2013 NWSL College Draft took place on January 18, 2013. It was the first college draft held by the National Women's Soccer League to assign the NWSL rights of college players to the eight NWSL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234985-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NWSL Supplemental Draft\nThe 2013 NWSL Supplemental Draft took place on February 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234986-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 NWT/Yukon Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 NWT/Yukon Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the women's provincial curling championship for the Northwest Territories and Yukon, was held from January 11 to 13 at the Fort Smith Curling Club in Fort Smith, Northwest Territories. The winning team of Kerry Galusha will represent NWT/Yukon at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234986-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 NWT/Yukon Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe championship was originally scheduled to be held from January 24 to 27 at the Whitehorse Curling Club in Whitehorse, Yukon, but the Yukon Curling Association announced it would not be sending teams to the event. Therefore, the Northwest Territories Scotties Tournament of Hearts alone will constitute the NWT/Yukon Scotties Tournament of Hearts, and the winner of the Northwest Territories Scotties Tournament of Hearts will determine the region's representative at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234986-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 NWT/Yukon Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Mountain Standard Time (UTC-7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234987-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nadeshiko League\nThe 2013 Nadeshiko League season was won by INAC Kobe Leonessa, who defended their 2012 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234989-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nadeshiko League Cup Final\n2013 Nadeshiko League Cup Final was the 8th final of the Nadeshiko League Cup competition. The final was played at Hiroshima Big Arch in Hiroshima on September 1, 2013. INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234989-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nadeshiko League Cup Final, Overview\nINAC Kobe Leonessa won their 1st title, by defeating Okayama Yunogo Belle 3\u20131 with Chiaki Minamiyama, Goebel Yanez and Nahomi Kawasumi goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234990-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Naga (Camarines Sur) local elections\nLocal elections will be held in Naga City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters will elect for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234990-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Naga (Camarines Sur) local elections, City Council\nElection in the city council is at large at 10 seats will be on the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234991-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagaland Legislative Assembly election\nThe Nagaland Legislative Assembly election of 2013 took place on 23 February 2013 to elect the Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) from each of the 60 Assembly Constituencies (ACs) in the state of Nagaland in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234991-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagaland Legislative Assembly election, Background\nThe mandate of the 11th Nagaland Legislative Assembly, formed after the 2008 election, expired on 10 March 2013. Hence, the 12th Nagaland Legislative Assembly election was announced by the Election Commission of India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234991-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagaland Legislative Assembly election, Background\nAfter the scrutiny of the nomination papers put up by the candidates, 188 candidates in total were able to contest for a total of 60 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234991-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagaland Legislative Assembly election, Results\nA total of 1,098,007 people voted out of an eligible electorate of 1,198,449, representing a turnout of 90.19%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234991-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagaland Legislative Assembly election, Elected members, Aftermath\nOn 18 Jun 2014, 3 of the NCP MLAs defected to the BJP, leaving only one NCP MLA remaining in the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234992-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagoya Grampus season\nThe 2013 Nagoya Grampus season was Nagoya Grampus' 21st season in the J. League Division 1 and 31st overall in the Japanese top flight. It was Dragan Stojkovi\u0107 last season as manager, as he left at the end of the season, and they finsed 11th in the J League, reached the group stage of the J. League Cup and were knocked out of the Emperor's Cup at the second round stage by Nagano Parceiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234992-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagoya Grampus season, Squad\nAs of January 26, 2013Note: 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, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234992-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagoya Grampus 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234992-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagoya Grampus 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234992-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagoya Grampus 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234992-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagoya Grampus 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234992-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nagoya Grampus 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234993-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nairobi bus attack\nOn 14 December 2013, a hand grenade was thrown onto a minibus in Eastleigh, a Somali-dominated suburb in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. The explosion killed at least 4 people and wounded 36 others. It was the fourth such attack to occur during the 50th anniversary week of Kenya's independence. Thirteen people died since 10 December 2013, with no group claiming responsibility for the assaults. A string of similar attacks have occurred in various areas across Kenya since the Kenyan military deployed troops in southern Somalia against the Al-Shabaab militant group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234994-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nairobi local elections\nLocal elections were held in Nairobi County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general election was the first where there would be election of County governors and their deputies for the 47 newly created counties. They were also the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates. While it is not necessary to hold a degree to become e.g. president of the United States, a degree of a university recognised in Kenya is necessary to run for a gubernator seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234994-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nairobi local elections, Prospective candidatures\nThe following politicians made public their intentions to run but did not run or failed to obtain nominations in their preferred political parties:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234994-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nairobi local elections, Prospective candidatures\nGakuo and Muriuki failed in the TNA nominations while Wanjiru was barred by her party due to questions over the validity of her university degree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234995-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Naiste Meistriliiga\nThe 2013 Naiste Meistriliiga was the 21st season of women's league football in Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234995-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Naiste Meistriliiga\nThe league was won by P\u00e4rnu JK, its 4th consecutive title and 9th overall. By winning, P\u00e4rnu qualified to 2014\u201315 UEFA Women's Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234995-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Naiste Meistriliiga, League clubs\nThe following clubs are competing in Naiste Meistriliiga during the 2015 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234995-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Naiste Meistriliiga, Format\nThe 7 teams played each other twice for a total of 12 matches, with the top six teams qualifying for a championship round, where teams played each other once, bringing the total to 17 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234996-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Naisten Liiga\nThe 2013 Naisten Liiga, part of the 2013 Finnish football season, was the 7th season of the Finnish women's premier division Naisten Liiga since its establishment in 2007. The season started on 23 March 2013 and ended on 19 October 2013. \u00c5land United were the defending champions, having won their first Finnish championship in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234996-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Naisten Liiga\nThe season featured 10 teams. After 18 matches played, the league was divided to Championship Group of six and Relegation Group of four. The Champion, \u00c5land United, qualified for the first qualifying round of the 2014\u201315 UEFA Women's Champions League and GBK Kokkola was relegated to the Naisten Ykk\u00f6nen for the 2014 season. Merilappi United was promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234997-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Najaf governorate election\nThe Najaf governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar, and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234998-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nakuru local elections\nLocal elections were held in Nakuru County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234999-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Namibian Tri-Nations\nThe Namibian Tri-Nations tournament is the second edition of the Tier 3 African tournament that coincides with the 2013 end-of-year rugby union tests. With 2012 Champions Spain touring South America in the 2013 end-of-year international window, Kenya will join hosts Namibia and Zimbabwe over the 3 match days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00234999-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Namibian Tri-Nations\nThe tournament will return to the Hage Geingob Rugby Stadium in Windhoek over 3 match days with in a period of a week, 8 November - 16 November. Coincidentally, the three teams competing will all compete in the 2014 Africa Cup Division 1A tournament along with Madagascar who is competing in the Serendib International Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235000-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nandi local elections\nLocal elections were held in Nandi County were held on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general election was the first where there were election of County governors and their deputies for the 47 newly created counties. They were also the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre\nThe 2013 Nanga Parbat massacre was a terrorist attack that took place on the night of 22 June 2013 in Gilgit\u2013Baltistan, Pakistan. About 16 militants, reportedly dressed in Gilgit\u2212Baltistan Scouts uniforms, stormed a high-altitude mountaineering base camp and killed 11 people; 10 climbers and one local tourist guide. The climbers were from various countries, including Ukraine, China, Slovakia, Lithuania and Nepal. A Chinese citizen managed to escape the assailants, and a member of the group from Latvia happened to be outside the camp during the attack. The attack took place at a base camp on Nanga Parbat, the ninth-highest mountain on Earth. The mountain is popular among trekkers and mountaineers, and is typically toured from June to August because of the ideal weather conditions during these months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre\nIn November 2013, many of the assailants involved in the attack were arrested and tried under the Anti- Terrorist Act, although most of those who were arrested had been released by 2014; the identities of the actual perpetrators were never confirmed. According to the Pakistani Senate's standing committee on foreign relations, the original motive of the militants had not been to kill the tourists, but to kidnap them for ransom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Attack\nAt 10:00 p.m. local time on 22 June 2013, about 16 attackers entered the base camp, where foreign mountaineers who come to climb the Nanga Parbat mountains usually stay. The attackers then opened fire, killing 11 people, 10 mountaineers and one local guide. One was an American with dual Chinese citizenship; three came from Ukraine, two from Slovakia, one other from China and one from Lithuania; one a Sherpa from Nepal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Attack\nThe attackers had reportedly gained access to this remote location by abducting two Pakistani guides. The site of the attack is located 4,200 metres (14,000\u00a0ft) above sea-level and can only be approached via foot or horseback. According to a Diamer police official, Muhammad Nabi, one of the abducted guides was killed during the shootout, while the other was found and detained for questioning. He said that there was general misinformation in the media regarding the Pakistani killed. Nabi stated that the guide of the expedition was a Nepalese by the name of Sona Sherpa and not the Pakistani guide as portrayed by the local media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Attack\nZhang Jingchuan, a Chinese mountaineer who survived the assault, described his ordeal in a press-conference held at Kunming in the Yunnan province of China. He recalled the attack being sudden. He said that he was shot at and a bullet flew over his head. After that, he stated he got out and started running blindly towards a trench 30 metres (100\u00a0ft) away. Upon reaching the trench he jumped in and stayed there for 40 minutes. After that he made his way back to the cabin, where he called the police from a satellite phone. According to Zhang, a helicopter arrived nine hours after the incident, at first light, during which time he had grabbed an ice-axe and had moved to higher ground. Zhang Jingchuan also noted that before shooting the climbers, the attackers collected the climbers' passports and took their photos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Attack\nSher Khan, a Pakistani climber who survived the attack, revealed more details. According to his report, the terrorists first made the climbers give them money, satellite phones and radio sets, then tied the climbers' hands with ropes. After that, they asked the climbers to turn their faces in the opposite direction and shot them immediately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Attack\nThe perpetrators identified themselves as \"al-Qaida\" and \"Taliban\". Some were teenagers, while others were in their twenties and the leader was older. \"They were shouting God is Great, long live Islam and long live Osama bin Laden\", Sher Khan remembered. \"They kept shouting as they left. I remember one shouting: \"this is revenge for Sheikh bin Laden\".\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Attack\nThis shooting was the first time an attack on mountaineers occurred in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan, which was generally considered free from militancy apart from sporadic attacks on the minority Shi'ite Muslims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Attack\nAccording to later information, the terrorists planned to kidnap Chen Honglu (the dual Chinese-American citizen) to trade him for a Taliban commander in Afghanistan. As the attack unfolded in the Nanga Parbat base camp, Chen burst out of his tent and tackled one of the militants using martial arts techniques. The militant, named Mujeeb, panicked and shot him, destroying the main purpose of the mission and infuriating the terrorist commanders. The remaining climbers were then tied up and shot. The attackers then walked for five hours to a remote village where they buried their uniforms and had breakfast before walking on to another village and dispersing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Perpetrators\nThe Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement released later that day. The group claimed it was a retaliation for the U.S. drone strike that killed Wali-ur-Rehman, a Taliban commander, on 29 May 2013. The TTP's spokesperson, Ehsanullah Ehsan, said \u2033Through this killing we gave a message to (the) international community to ask (the) U.S. to stop drone strikes\u2033. Another TTP-associated militant group, Jundallah, which is notorious for organizing attacks on Shia Muslims and for its involvement in the Balochistan insurgency against Iran and Pakistan, had also previously claimed responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nFollowing the incident, the Interior Minister of Pakistan, Nisar Ali Khan, suspended the Inspector General of Police (IGP) and the Chief Secretary of Gilgit-Baltistan for their failure to provide effective security to the tourists. He further stated that an inquiry would be held to determine the cause of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nA day following the attack, Nisar told the National Assembly of Pakistan that an investigation committee consisting of the Chief of Army Staff (Ashfaq Parvez Kayani), the Director General of the ISI (Zaheerul Islam), representatives from other intelligence agencies and officials from the Gilgit-Baltistan police had been formed to investigate the incident. A local jirga was also formed in Diamer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nImmediately after the investigation started, 37 suspects were arrested from the villages surrounding the site of the attack. However, IGP Zakaria later said that 33 of them were porters who gave important information regarding the attack. All 37 were released after questioning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nA significant breakthrough was made four days after the incident when all 16 of the attackers were identified. According to the police chief, Zakaria, the help from the local Diamer jirga was instrumental in this development. The men volunteering in the jirga were dropped off into various adjacent valleys and then picked up for a debriefing in Chilas. The police chief further stated that all the attackers were local, with 10 of them belonging to Diamer, three to Mansehra and three of them belonging to Kohistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nThe ten Diamer valley residents were identified as Hidayat Ullah, Shafiqullah, Qari Rafaqat, Sana Ullah, Malik Nijad, Azizullah, Mahfoozul Haq, Mujeed, Shafi Muhammad and Hazrat Oman. The Chief Secretary of Gilgit-Baltistan, Munir Badini, was hesitant in linking them to the Pakistani Taliban but confirmed that from the reports he received, the assailants were trained in FATA, a place 760 kilometres (470\u00a0mi) downhill that is a hotbed of extremism and borders Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nOn June 30, 2013, a week after the assault, the Deputy Inspector General of Police for Gilgit-Baltistan police, Ali Sher, told the media that one of the attackers, Shafi Muhammad, was arrested in a house in the nearby town of Chilas. He said the attacker had been taking refuge in this house since the attack and arresting him was major milestone in resolving this case. Another attacker, Shafiqullah, was arrested later the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nOn July 6, 2013, the police arrested another person from Chilas believed to be involved in the shooting. Sher, in a press conference, stated that efforts to arrest all perpetrators had stepped up and more arrests would take place in the coming days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nOn July 15, 2013, four out of the 16 suspected attackers had been arrested. The identity of the fourth perpetrator was undisclosed. The Senate Standing Committee on Foreign Relations called a special meeting to get an update from the Gilgit-Baltistan authorities on the progress of investigation. The chairman of the Senate Committee, Haji Mohammad Adeel, said that he was concerned that there was no tangible progress in bringing the culprits to justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nThe Chief Secretary of Gilgit-Baltistan, Mohammad Younus Dhaga, was briefing the Senate Standing Committee on Foreign Relations over the attack on Nanga Parbat saying that \"it was unexpected that foreign tourists would be targeted in the area, since no tourist was killed there since 1854.\" Haji Mohammad Adeel disagreed, saying, \"no attack is carried out by making the plan public; it is the intelligence agencies' task to assess areas, while being cognisant of the overall security atmosphere.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nOn August 7, 2013, Taliban killed three security officials who were investigating the Nanga Parbat massacre. Gunmen opened fire on the officers' vehicle in Chilas in the Diamer district while it was returning from the house of the deputy commissioner. The officials who were killed included a police official, Superintendent Hilal Ahmed, who was driving the vehicle, Captain Ashfaq Aziz and Colonel Ghulam Mustafa. The latter two belonged to the Pakistan Army and were responsible for the internal security of the district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nThe death of army officials prompted the Pakistan Army to enter the district for the first time since the incident. The army conducted a targeted operation in four places in Chilas while the entry and exit points to the town were sealed and Army Aviation helicopters hovered above. The operations lasted till late in the evening of August 11, 2013. An undisclosed number of suspects were rounded up as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nOn August 19, 2013, it was reported that all 20 of the men supposed to be behind the Nanga Parbat attack had been arrested. The series of arrests were started by an army operation earlier in the week and ended with a targeted police operation in the suspected hideouts of these militants. According to the newly instated SP of Diamer district, Muhammad Navid, the arrested militants were also responsible for the February 2012 Kohistan Shia Massacre, in which 18 Shi'ite Muslims were killed. Navid further said that intelligence agencies played a pivotal role in the arrests and that further information would be released in a couple of days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nThe Chief Secretary of Gilgit-Baltistan, Younis Dagha, announced that among the arrested on August 19, 2013, was the terrorist Qaribullah (\"Hasan\"), a former Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan leader of the Chilas unit, who might be the mastermind of the Nanga Parbat attack, as well as M Nabi (Qari Husnain), who was a suspect in the murder of government officials on August 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests\nAs of June 2014, five out of 18 detained suspects were still in custody. However several militant sources say only one of them was involved in the attack, while the rest were forced to confess. Mujeeb remained in hiding in the forests of the district, where, from time to time, he was making audio recordings of militant poetry that were being brought into the markets of Gilgit. According to Bashir Qureshi, a member of the negotiating team assigned to bring the culprits out of hiding, there were many grey areas in the case. \"Nothing is clear, they have mixed up four different cases to give an impression that all the perpetrators have been arrested but the real perpetrators are still at large\", he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235001-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanga Parbat massacre, Investigation and arrests, 2015 Gilgit District jail escape\nOn 27 February 2015, four inmates made an attempt to escape from the Gilgit District jail. Of the two who managed to flee, one was alleged to have been involved in the Nanga Parbat mountaineering attack. Security agencies started an operation to capture the escapees, but as of 4\u00a0March\u00a02015 the escaped inmates had not been captured. A reward \u20a82,000,000 was also announced by the Gilgit\u2013Baltistan Home Secretary, Sibtain Ahmed, for people who helped the authorities in capturing Habib-ur-Rehman, the escaped inmate allegedly involved in the massacre at Nanga Parbat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 87], "content_span": [88, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235002-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanjing Ladies Open\nThe 2013 Nanjing Ladies Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the inaugural edition of the tournament and was part of the 2013 WTA 125K series. It took place in Nanjing, China, on 28 October\u20133 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235002-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanjing Ladies Open, Singles draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235002-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanjing Ladies Open, Singles draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235003-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanjing Ladies Open \u2013 Doubles\nThis was a new event of the WTA 125K series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235003-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanjing Ladies Open \u2013 Doubles\nMisaki Doi and Xu Yifan won the tournament, defeating Yaroslava Shvedova and Zhang Shuai in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235004-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanjing Ladies Open \u2013 Singles\nThis was a new event of the WTA 125K series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235004-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nanjing Ladies Open \u2013 Singles\nZhang Shuai won the tournament after Ayumi Morita had to retire with an injured left hamstring having lost the first set 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235005-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Napa Valley Challenger\nThe 2013 Napa Valley Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the First edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Napa, California, United States between 23 and 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235005-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Napa Valley Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235006-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Napa Valley Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nBobby Reynolds and John-Patrick Smith won the title, defeating Steve Johnson and Tim Smyczek in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235007-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Napa Valley Challenger \u2013 Singles\nDonald Young won the title, defeating Matthew Ebden in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235008-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Narok local elections\nLocal elections were held in Narok County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235009-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Camogie League\nThe 2013 National Camogie League, known for sponsorship reasons as the Irish Daily Star National Camogie League commenced in February 2013 and was won by Cork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235010-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Collegiate Roller Hockey Championships Division I\nThe 2013 National Collegiate Roller Hockey Championships was the 15th national championship tournament for college inline hockey in the United States. The Division I tournament involved 24 teams to determine the national champion of the 2012\u201313 season at the Division I level of the National Collegiate Roller Hockey Association (NCRHA), the highest level of competition in college inline hockey. The tournament was hosted by the Southeastern Collegiate Roller Hockey League at the Fort Myers Skatium in Fort Myers, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235010-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Collegiate Roller Hockey Championships Division I, Tournament procedure\nThe tournament consisted of 24 teams being divided into six pools of four, who play a three-game round robin within their pools. The teams were then seeded, based on pool standings, and advance to a five-round single elimination playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 85], "content_span": [86, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235010-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Collegiate Roller Hockey Championships Division I, Qualifying teams\nThe at-large bids for the tournament were announced on March 11. The pools and seeding for each team in the tournament were announced on March 25. The Eastern Collegiate Roller Hockey Association, Southeastern Collegiate Roller Hockey League and Western Collegiate Roller Hockey League each had five teams receive a berth in the tournament, Midwest Collegiate Roller Hockey League had four teams receive a berth, Great Plains Collegiate Inline Hockey League had three teams receive a berth, and the Southwest Collegiate Hockey League had two teams receive a berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 81], "content_span": [82, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235010-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Collegiate Roller Hockey Championships Division I, Pool play, Pool C\nError: Goals/Progression mismatch: S1 = -1 S2 = -1 GT1 = GT2 = Error: Goals/Progression mismatch: N1 = 0 N2 = 0 PN = 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 82], "content_span": [83, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235010-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Collegiate Roller Hockey Championships Division I, Pool play, Pool D\nError: Goals/Progression mismatch: S1 = -1 S2 = -1 GT1 = GT2 = Error: Goals/Progression mismatch: N1 = 0 N2 = 0 PN = 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 82], "content_span": [83, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235011-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Conference League\nThe 2013 National Conference League was the 28th season of the National Conference League, the top league for British amateur rugby league clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235011-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Conference League, Division Two\nWidnes West Bank resigned from the league mid-season; their results were expunged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235012-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football Challenge Cup\nThe 2013 National Football Challenge Cup was the 23rd season of National Challenge Cup, the main cup competition in Pakistani football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235012-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football Challenge Cup\nA total of 16 clubs entered the competition, the tournament commenced on 15 May 2018. Bahawalpur were the hosts for the tournament, thus earning DFA Bahawalpur a spot in the tournament, courtesy of being the hosts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235012-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football Challenge Cup\nKhan Research Laboratories were the defending champions, they were knocked out in quarter finals, losing 5\u20134 on penalties to the eventual winners National Bank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235012-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football Challenge Cup\nNational Bank won the tournament, defeating Karachi Electric Supply Corporation 1\u20130 in the finals. This was the first major trophy for National Bank since 1993, when they won the National Challenge Cup that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland)\nThe 2013 National Football League known for sponsorship reasons as the Allianz National Football League was the 82nd staging of the National Football League (NFL), an annual Gaelic football tournament for the Gaelic Athletic Association county teams of Ireland. The League began on Saturday 1 February 2014. Thirty-one Gaelic football county teams from the island of Ireland, plus London, participated. Kilkenny, who participated in previous years, withdrew from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland)\nThe reigning League Champions were Cork. 2012 All-Ireland Champions Donegal competed in the top division, as did Mayo whom they beat in the 2012 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final. The losing All-Ireland finalists in 2010 and 2011, respectively Down and Kerry, were there too. The top division was completed by newly promoted Kildare and Tyrone and 2011 All-Ireland Champions Dublin. All-Ireland Champions Donegal travelled to Croke Park to play Kildare in their first league game of the season on 3 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland)\nOn 28 April, Dublin defeated Tyrone by 0-18 to 0-17 to win their first league title since 1993. Two late points by Dean Rock and one by Jack McCaffrey in the final four minutes steered Dublin to victory", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Format, League structure\nThe 2013 format of the National Football League was a system of four divisions of eight teams. Each team played every other team in its division once, either home or away. 2 points were awarded for a win and 1 for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Format, Tie-breaker\nIf three or more teams were level on points, points difference was used to rank the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Format, Finals, promotions and relegations\nThe top four teams in Division 1 contested the 2013 NFL semi-finals (first played fourth and second played third) and final. The top two teams in divisions 2, 3 and 4 were promoted, and contested the finals of their respective divisions. The bottom two teams in divisions 1, 2 and 3 were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 1, Table\nCompete in Division 1 semi-finals\u00a0\u00a0Automatic relegation to Division 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 2, Table\nCompete in Division 2 final and automatic promotion to Division 1\u00a0\u00a0Automatic relegation to Division 3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 2, Table\n1Derry are placed ahead of Westmeath because they won the head-to-head game between the teams (2-17 to 1-05).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 2, Table\n2Louth are placed ahead of Galway because they won the head-to-head game between the teams (0-17 to 0-11).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 3, Table\nCompete in Division 3 final and automatic promotion to Division 2\u00a0\u00a0Automatic relegation to Division 4", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 3, Table\n1Monaghan are placed ahead of Meath because they won the head-to-head game between the teams (1-18 to 2-03).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 3, Table\n2Roscommon are placed ahead of Fermanagh because they won the head-to-head game between the teams (2-12 to 2-06).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 4, Table\nCompete in Division 4 final and automatic promotion to Division 3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 4, Table\n1Tipperary are placed ahead of Clare because they won the head-to-head game between the teams (1-13 to 0-10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235013-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 National Football League (Ireland), Division 4, Table\n2Waterford are placed ahead of Carlow because they won the head-to-head game between the teams (0-15 to 0-10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China\nThe 12th National Games of China were held in the northeastern province of Liaoning from 31 August to 12 September 2013. Liaoning was the sixth provincial level host of the games, following Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong, Jiangsu and Shandong. A total of 350 events in 31 sports were held at the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Host bidding\nFor the second time in the games' history, the selection of the host province/municipality in 2013 was made on the basis of bidding process (similar to the process undertaken to select the Olympic Games host city). The sports secretaries and officials from every province, municipality and autonomous region cast their votes in a secret ballot. The winning entry must receive a majority of the votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Host bidding\nIn the 12th National Games bidding process, Liaoning, Tianjin, Zhejiang and Hubei were the candidates. Each committee made a 20-minute presentation to the officials. In the first round of voting, Hubei with the lowest number of votes at 2 was eliminated while Liaoning received the highest at 38. In the second and final round, Liaoning won in a landslide victory with 43 votes with Tianjin and Zhejiang at 24 and 11 votes, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Host bidding\nThe Lioaning organisers settled on a blue and white harbor seal called Ningning (Chinese: \u5b81\u5b81) as the official mascot for the games. The harbor seal is a frequent sight in Liaodong Bay as it is the country's only nature reserve for the animals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Venues\nA total of 117 facilities were involved in the games, 25 of which were purpose built to host the games. Among them 64 were competition venues and 53 were for training. There was an emphasis on using pre-existing venues for the games and some of the newly developed venues were earmarked for public usage after the competitions. Unlike many other multi-sport events, which typically focus around a host city, the 12th Chinese Games held events in many cities within the host province, Liaoning. Shenyang contained the principal venue, the Shenyang Olympic Sports Center Stadium, where the opening and closing ceremonies were held. Other cities involved in the games were Anshan, Benxi, Chaoyang, Dalian, Dandong, Fushun, Huludao, Jinzhou, Liaoyang, Panjin, Tieling and Yingkou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Games, Pre-games events\nAlthough the opening ceremony is scheduled for 31 August 2013, a number of events are scheduled to take place before that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Games, Pre-games events\nThe first medals were awarded in the racewalking events, which are part of the athletics programme and were held on 10, 11 and 12 May. Wu Qianlong won the men's 50 kilometres walk and Wang Zhen won the men's 20 kilometre walk. A photo finish was needed for the women's 20\u00a0km walk and Lu Xiuzhi was declared the winner ahead of Liu Hong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Participation\nA total of 9770 athletes from 39 delegations took part in the competition (fewer than both the 2005 and 2009 editions). Among the delegations were 4 municipalities, 22 provincial teams and 5 autonomous regions. Further to this, the People's Liberation Army sent a team, and six sports association teams were entered (generally associations from specific industry groupings or large organisations).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235014-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 National Games of China, Medal table\nLike the previous games, the medal table did not only include the medals obtained from the games, but also included the medals obtained during the Olympics and Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235015-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Hurling League\nThe 2013 National Hurling League commenced in February 2013. 34 GAA county hurling teams: 32 from Ireland (including Fingal but not Cavan), London and Warwickshire, contested it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235015-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Hurling League\nOn the final day of fixtures in division 1A on 31 March, all six teams had a chance of either reaching the league semi-finals, or suffering relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235015-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Hurling League\nKilkenny won the NHL, defeating Tipperary in the final by 2-17 to 0-20 in the final on 5 May in Nowlan Park. Michael Fennelly scored two goals and three points in the first half as Kilkenny led by 2-07 to 0-11. In the second half Lar Corbett and JJ Delaney were sent off in the 46th minute after they wrestled each other on the ground near the Kilkenny goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235015-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Hurling League\nOn 13 May Kilkenny's Lester Ryan was named as the GAA-GPA Hurler of the League for 2013. Ryan scored 1-10 in six games from midfield including 0-3 in the semi-final win over Galway and 0-3 in the final victory against Tipperary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235015-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Hurling League, Format\nThe current format of the National Hurling League has been criticised by many including current managers, claiming that it's not benefitting the game in several counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235015-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Hurling League, Broadcasting rights\nSetanta Sports and TG4 will provide live coverage of matches in Ireland with RT\u00c9 providing highlights on Sunday nights. Setanta Sports broadcasts live matches in Australia. Setanta Sports also provides matches from the National Hurling League in Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235016-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Invitation Tournament\nThe 2013 National Invitation Tournament was a single-elimination tournament of 32 NCAA Division I teams that were not selected to participate in the 2013 NCAA Tournament. The annual tournament began on March 19 on campus sites and ended on April 4 at Madison Square Garden. Baylor defeated Iowa, 74\u201354, to capture the Bears its first NIT title in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235016-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Invitation Tournament, Participants, Automatic qualifiers\nThe following teams earned automatic berths into the 2013 NIT field by virtue of winning their conferences' regular season championship, but failing to win their conference tournament. These teams also did not receive an at-large bid for the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series\nThe 2013 National League Championship Series, the 44th NLCS, was a best-of-seven playoff pitting the St. Louis Cardinals against the Los Angeles Dodgers for Major League Baseball's National League pennant. The Cardinals beat the Dodgers in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series\nThis was the fourth postseason meeting between the Cardinals and Dodgers, after the 1985 NLCS (Cardinals won 4\u20132), 2004 NLDS (Cardinals won 3\u20131), and 2009 NLDS (Dodgers won 3\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series\nThe Cardinals would go on to lose to the Boston Red Sox in the 2013 World Series in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 1\nFriday, October 11, 2013 \u2013 8:37\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 1\nThings got off to a rough start for Los Angeles when Hanley Ramirez was hit in the ribs by a 95-mph Joe Kelly fastball, which impacted his ability for the remainder of the series. The Dodgers loaded the bases with two outs off of Joe Kelly on a double and two walks in the third inning when Juan Uribe's single scored two, but in the bottom of the inning, Zack Greinke allowed a two-out single to Kelly and walked Matt Carpenter before both men scored on Carlos Beltr\u00e1n's double tying the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 1\nGreinke allowed only two runs in eight innings, while striking out a season high ten batters, the first pitcher to strike out ten Cardinals in a post-season game since Denny Galehouse in the 1944 World Series. The game went into extra innings and in the top of the tenth, Mark Ellis tripled with one out and tried to score on Michael Young's sacrifice fly, but was thrown out by Beltran to end the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 1\nIn the bottom of the 13th, Beltran drove in the winning run with a line drive into the right-field corner that scored Daniel Descalso from second off of Kenley Jansen. The game was the third longest NLCS game ever (after game six in 1986 and game five in 1999), the Dodgers' longest post-season game since game two of the 1916 World Series and the Cardinals' longest ever. It was the longest NLCS Game 1 ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 2\nSaturday, October 12, 2013 \u2013 4:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 2\nThe Dodgers' offense was short-handed in game two because Hanley Ram\u00edrez sat out with injured ribs, the result of getting hit with a pitch in game one, and with Andre Ethier getting a day off for playing the entirety of Game 1's 13-inning affair. The game was a pitchers' duel as the Cardinals only got two hits off of Clayton Kershaw and two relievers. Jon Jay's sacrifice fly scored David Freese (after he doubled to lead off the inning) for the game's only run, in the bottom of the fifth. Due to a passed ball, Freese's run was unearned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 2\nThe Dodgers managed five hits off Michael Wacha but were unable to get any runs. They loaded the bases in the sixth inning with one out, but Wacha struck out Yasiel Puig and Juan Uribe to end the threat. Trevor Rosenthal struck out the side (Puig, Uribe, and pinch hitter Ethier) in the ninth inning for the save and the Dodgers fell behind 2\u20130 in the series. Kershaw was the first starting pitcher in postseason history to allow no earned runs and two or fewer hits and lose the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 3\nMonday, October 14, 2013 \u2013 8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 3\nIn Game 3, Hyun-jin Ryu pitched seven shutout innings and the Dodgers managed to score off Adam Wainwright to take the game 3\u20130. In the fourth, Mark Ellis hit a leadoff double, then scored on Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez's double one out later. Gonz\u00e1lez then scored on Yasiel Puig's triple, his first hit of the series, after 11 hitless at-bats. Hanley Ram\u00edrez had two hits and an RBI single in the seventh in his return to the Dodgers lineup, despite a fractured rib. It was the first postseason series since the 1948 World Series in which neither team hit a home run in the first three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 4\nTuesday, October 15, 2013 \u2013 8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 4\nRamirez was still hobbled by the rib injury and struggled at the plate and in the field before leaving the game in the sixth inning. In the third, Daniel Descalso hit a leadoff single, moved to second on a sacrifice bunt, then scored on Matt Carpenter's double. One out later, Matt Holliday's home run, the first of the series, put the Cardinals up 3\u22120. The Dodgers cut the lead to 3\u20132 on RBI singles by Yasiel Puig and A.J. Ellis off of Lance Lynn, but Shane Robinson's home run in the seventh off of J.P. Howell padded the Cardinals' lead to 4\u22122 as they took a commanding 3\u20131 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 5\nWednesday, October 16, 2013 \u2013 4:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 5\nThe Dodgers staved off elimination in Game 5 as Zack Greinke pitched seven strong innings and the bats came alive. In the second, the Dodgers hit four singles off of Joe Kelly, the last two of which by Juan Uribe and Greinke scored a run each. The Cardinals tied the game in the third when Matt Carpenter singled, then scored on Carlos Beltr\u00e1n's triple before Beltran scored on Matt Holliday's double. Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez's home run in the bottom of the inning put the Dodgers up 3\u22122.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 5\nThey added to their lead on home runs by Carl Crawford in the fifth, A. J. Ellis in the seventh off of Edward Mujica and Gonz\u00e1lez in the eighth off of John Axford. The four homers tied a Dodger post-season record that had previously been accomplished in Game 2 of the 1977 World Series and Game 1 of the 1978 NLCS. The Cardinals managed two runs off Kenley Jansen in the ninth on RBI singles by Matt Adams and Pete Kozma, but the Dodgers held on to win 6\u20134 and send the series back to St. Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nFriday, October 18, 2013 \u2013 8:37\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nHoping to force a game seven, the Dodgers sent their ace Clayton Kershaw to the mound to face the St. Louis Cardinals rookie Michael Wacha in a rematch of Game two's matchup. This time, Kershaw had his worst outing of the season, as he struggled through the third inning with 48 total pitches and surrendered a total of seven earned runs, ten hits, and two walks in four innings of work. Dodgers phenom Yasiel Puig committed two costly throwing errors that epitomized the frustration of that night. By contrast, Michael Wacha, backed up by solid defense and timely hits, stymied the Dodgers' offense, going seven innings and allowing just two hits and no runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nThe Cardinals scored in the third inning when Matt Carpenter lined a double into right field after an 11-pitch battle with Kershaw. Carlos Beltr\u00e1n scored Carpenter from second with a line drive single, again to right field, and advanced to second. Kershaw struck out Matt Holliday but yielded another single to Yadier Molina, which scored Beltran from second to make it 2\u20130 Cardinals. David Freese singled to center field to move Molina to second and Kershaw, already having an uncharacteristic night, walked Matt Adams to load the bases for Shane Robinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nRobinson drove in two runs with a single to right Puig, extending the Cardinals' lead to 4\u20130. Puig committed a throwing error by tossing the ball on a misstep and slinging it all the way to backstop over the head of catcher A.J. Ellis. Kershaw ended the inning by intentionally walking Pete Kozma and striking out Wacha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nThe Cardinals added five runs in the fifth inning. Molina singled to right field and reached second base on Puig's second throwing error of the night. David Freese singled to advance Molina to third base and Adams drove him home with a double in to make it 5\u20130 Cardinals. Kershaw left the game with runners on second and third after throwing 98 pitches and was replaced by reliever Ronald Belisario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nShane Robinson came up to the plate and reached second base on a choice out by shortstop Hanley Ram\u00edrez to catcher A.J. Ellis, who tagged out David Freese in a rundown between third and home. With runners still on second and third, Kozma was intentionally walked for the second time that night. Then Wacha hit Belisario's pitch and reached first base on a fielder's choice by second baseman Mark Ellis, who allowed Matt Adams to score after hesitating on a throw to home, making the score 6\u20130 Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nBelisario was replaced by relief pitcher J.P. Howell, who allowed Robinson and Kozma to score on a sacrifice fly by Carpenter and a wild pitch to Molina respectively, stretching the lead to 8\u20130. Carlos Beltran closed the door on the Dodgers' postseason by singling to left field and scoring Wacha for the final run of the game, giving the Cardinals a commanding 9\u20130 lead. The Dodgers had one more hit, a double by catcher A.J. Ellis. The Cardinals pitching staff retired the next 12 batters to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nWinning pitcher Michael Wacha was named the NLCS MVP after winning both of his starts with a 0.00 ERA, holding the Dodgers to a .149 batting average against (BAA), two walks and 13 SO in 13+2\u20443 scoreless IP. He became the fourth rookie to win a postseason series MVP award, following Larry Sherry (1959 World Series), Mike Boddicker (1983 NLCS), and Liv\u00e1n Hern\u00e1ndez (1997 NLCS and 1997 World Series).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Game 6\nThe victory earned the Cardinals their 19th pennant as a franchise and their second World Series appearance in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Game Summaries, Composite line score\n2013 NLCS (4\u20132): St. Louis Cardinals over Los Angeles Dodgers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Aftermath\nDays after their NLCS defeat, Dodgers general manager Ned Colletti and manager Don Mattingly held a joint press conference, in which Mattingly's job status was discussed. The press conference proved to be awkward and disjointed as both Colletti and Mattingly seemed at odds Mattingly's contract status. \"It puts me in a spot that everything I do is questioned because I'm basically trying out and auditioning, can you manage or can\u2019t you manage? That\u2019s not a great position for me as a manager,\" Mattingly voiced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Aftermath\nIn 2013, when the Dodgers stumbled to start the season, falling to last place in the NL West while injuries piled up, speculation was rampant that Mattingly would be fired. Team President Stan Kasten indicated to him at the time that things needed to improve for Mattingly to keep his job. The team responded, winning 42 of 50 games during a torrid midseason stretch to take over first place and eventually won the division by 11 games over Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Aftermath\nIronically, it was Colletti who was removed from his position first when the team brought in Tampa Bay's general manager Andrew Friedman to oversee Baseball Operations after the 2014 season. Colletti stayed with the team until taking a scouting job with the NHL's San Jose Sharks in September of 2019. Mattingly mutually parted with the club after the 2015 post-season and was replaced by Dave Roberts. Since the 2016 season, Mattingly has managed the Miami Marlins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Aftermath\nThe Cardinals and Dodgers met again during the 2014 National League Division Series with the Cardinals winning again and getting the better of 2013-2014 Cy Young and MVP 2014 winner Clayton Kershaw. Between the 2013 National League Championship Series and the 2014 National League Division Series, the Cardinals beat Kershaw in all four of his starts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Aftermath\nHanley Ramirez and Joe Kelly would eventually become teammates in Boston after Ramirez signed a free agent contract with the Red Sox during the 2014-2015 off-season (Kelly had been traded to Boston at the previous season's trade deadline). The 95-mph pitch from Kelly in the first inning of game one fractured Ramirez's rib and turned the entire series on its head. Kelly eventually became a Dodger in 2019 and even became a fan favorite. 2009-2013 Cardinal David Freese also became a popular Dodger for his clutch hitting during the twilight years of his career after being traded there from Pittsburgh in 2018. 2012-2013 Dodgers starting 2nd baseman Mark Ellis joined the Cardinals for the 2014 season, which was the last year of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235017-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Championship Series, Aftermath\nThe teams played again in the postseson in the 2021 National League Wild Card Game, with the Dodgers winning in the ninth on a Chris Taylor walk-off homerun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series\nThe 2013 National League Division Series were two best-of-five-game series to determine the baseball teams to participate in the 2013 National League Championship Series. The three divisional winners (seeded 1-3 based on record) and a fourth team \u2014 the winner of a one-game Wild Card playoff \u2014 played in two series. TBS carried most of the games, with some on MLB Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series\nThe restriction on teams from the same division meeting in the Division Series was removed prior to the 2012 season. Therefore, the Cardinals and Pirates, both from the Central Division, were able to meet in the Division Series. Under the format used from 1998\u20132011, (1) St. Louis would have faced (3) Los Angeles in one Division Series, and (2) Atlanta would have faced (4) Pittsburgh in the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series\nThe Pirates made their first postseason appearance since 1992, and their first appearance in the Division Series in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series\nThe Cardinals would go on to defeat the Dodgers in the NLCS, then lose the 2013 World Series to the American League champion Boston Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the current National League Central division rivals St. Louis and Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 1\n5:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 1\nThe Cardinals set a new NLDS record with seven runs in the third inning. Adam Wainwright drew a leadoff walk, then Matt Carpenter singled before Carlos Beltr\u00e1n's towering three-run home run (443 feet (135\u00a0m)), his 15th in post-season play tying Babe Ruth for eighth place on the list, put the Cardinals up 3\u20130. Only Derek Jeter (20) and Albert Pujols (18) among active players have more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 1\nA double, hit-by-pitch and walk loaded the bases before Jon Jay walked to force in another run, then David Freese cleared the bases with a single aided by an error to knock starter A. J. Burnett out of the game. Pedro Alvarez's leadoff home run in the fifth off Wainwright provided the only run for the Pirates. The Cardinals added a run in the bottom of the inning off Jeanmar Gomez on Daniel Descalso's forceout with runners on first and second aided by an error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 1\nNext inning Matt Adams walked with two outs before scoring the Cardinals' last run on Yadier Molina's double. Wainwright pitches seven innings allowing just one run, three hits while striking out nine. Carlos Martinez and Trevor Rosenthal pitched a scoreless eighth and ninth respectively as the Cardinals took a 1\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 2\n1:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 2\nThe Pirates scored first with two outs in the second inning off Lance Lynn as Gerrit Cole drove in Pedro \u00c1lvarez with a single after Jordy Mercer was intentionally walked. Alvarez hit his second home run of the series in the third, a two-run line drive. The Pirates added to their lead in the fifth when Justin Morneau doubled with one out and scored on Marlon Byrd's double. After Alvarez walked, Seth Maness relieved Lynn and Russell Martin plated Byrd with a single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 2\nThe Cardinals got on the board with a home run from Yadier Molina in the bottom of the fifth off Gerrit Cole. It was his third post-season home run. The Pirates added to their lead in the seventh inning as Martin plated Byrd again, this time via a sacrifice fly off Kevin Siegrist, then Starling Marte's lead off home run next inning off Shelby Miller capped the game's scoring at 7\u20131. Cole pitched six innings and three relievers held the Cardinals scoreless in the last three innings as the Pirates tied the series heading to Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 3\nThe Pirates opened up their first non-Wild Card postseason home game in 21 years by scoring two runs in the first inning on Marlon Byrd's single with runners on second and third off Joe Kelly. The Cardinals tied the game in the fifth with a two-out two-run single by Carlos Beltr\u00e1n off Francisco Liriano. The Pirates loaded the bases with one out in the sixth on a double and two walks off Kelly, who was relieved by Seth Maness, and took the lead on Russell Martin's sacrifice fly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 3\nBeltran's home run in the eighth off Mark Melancon tied the game again. The home run was Beltran's 16th playoff home run, which moved him past Babe Ruth for eighth place in postseason history. In the bottom of the inning, the Pirates got two on with one out off Carlos Martinez, who was relieved by Kevin Siegrist. Back-to-back RBI singles by Pedro Alvarez and Martin put the Pirates up 5\u20133. Jason Grilli pitched a scoreless ninth for the save as the Pirates took a 2\u20131 series lead. In the four playoff games since this one, the Pirates have failed to score 5 runs yet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 4\nGame 4 featured a pitching gem from St. Louis Cardinals rookie Michael Wacha. Wacha held the Pirates to just three base runners (one hit, two walks) through 7+1\u20443 innings pitched. It was the longest no-hitter length by a rookie pitcher since Jeff Tesreau went 5+1\u20443 innings with no hits allowed for the 1912 New York Giants. Wacha was acquired in the 2012 draft with the 19th overall pick, from the Los Angeles Angels as compensation for losing Albert Pujols. Pedro Alvarez broke up Wacha's no-hitter in the eighth with his third home run of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 4\nThat was the only hit the Pirates got in the whole game. Matt Holliday provided all the runs the Cardinals needed with his two-run homer in the sixth. Charlie Morton, the opposing starting pitcher, went 5+2\u20443 innings pitched, allowing just those two runs. With the Game 4 win, the Cardinals guaranteed a Game 5, making it the third straight NLDS Game 5 in as many years. Trevor Rosenthal picked up his first career post-season save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 5\n8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 5\nGame 5 pivoted Game 1 winner Adam Wainwright against the Pirates' rookie and Game 2 winner Gerrit Cole. The Cardinals got on the board first in the bottom of the second inning as Jon Jay walked with two-outs and David Freese broke the tie with a two-run home run. The Cardinals added to their lead in the sixth as Jay singled home Matt Holliday to make it 3\u20130 off Justin Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 5\nThe Pirates made some two-out noise in the top of the seventh as Justin Morneau, Marlon Byrd and Pedro Alvarez all singled (the last driving home Morneau), but Wainwright was able to get Russell Martin to ground out to end the threat. As of 2018, this is the last run the Pirates have scored in the postseason. Entering the bottom of the eighth and with the Cardinals leading 3\u20131, they put the game out of reach as Matt Adams hit a two-run home run off Mark Melancon to make it 5\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis, Game 5\nAfter allowing a walk and single, Adams was relieved by Jason Grilli, who allowed an RBI single to Pete Kozma. Wainwright finished the complete game by striking out Alvarez with two runners on base to send the Cardinals to the National League Championship Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Wainwright joins John Smoltz as the only pitchers in postseason history with three or more wins as a starter and at least three saves. Adam Wainwright also became the 5th Cardinal to pitch a CG with one ER in a winner-take-all postseason game. This was umpire Wally Bell's final MLB game as he died five days later of a heart attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Dodgers and Braves. The Braves previously defeated the Dodgers 3\u20130 in the 1996 NLDS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 1\nGame 1 of the series featured a pitching match-up of Kris Medlen against Clayton Kershaw. Kershaw would go on to strike out 12 Atlanta Braves batters in seven innings, while Kris Medlen was forced out after just four innings pitched. Kershaw's 12 strikeouts was the third most strikeouts by a Dodger pitcher in the playoffs, behind only Sandy Koufax (15 in the 1963 World Series) and Carl Erskine (14 in the 1953 World Series). His six straight strikeouts in the game tied an MLB post-season record set by Tim Belcher in game 2 of the 1988 NLCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 1\nYasiel Puig and Juan Uribe hit one-out singles in the second, then Skip Schumaker's sacrifice fly and A.J. Ellis's double scored a run each. Next inning, Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez's two-run home run made it 4\u20130 Dodgers. Mark Ellis's RBI double next inning made it 5\u20130 Dodgers. The Braves scored their only run of the game in the bottom of the fourth on Chris Johnson's RBI single with two on. The Dodgers scored their last run in the sixth when Ellis singled with one out off Jordan Walden and scored on Hanley Ramirez's double. Brian Wilson and Kenley Jansen pitched a scoreless eighth and ninth, respectively for the Dodgers, who took a 1\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 2\nIn Game 2, the Dodgers struck first when Mark Ellis walked with one out in the first and scored on Hanley Ram\u00edrez's double off Mike Minor, but the Braves tied the score in the second when Evan Gattis hit a leadoff single off Zack Greinke and scored on Andrelton Simmons's two-out double. Freddie Freeman doubled to lead off the fourth and scored on Chris Johnson's two-out single to put the Braves up 2\u20131. In the bottom of the seventh, Brian McCann drew a leadoff walk, then Johnson singled off Chris Withrow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 2\nAfter a sacrifice bunt and strikeout, Paco Rodriguez relieved Withrow and intentionally walked Reed Johnson before Jason Heyward's two-run single made it 4\u20131 Braves. Ramirez's home run in the eighth after a walk off David Carpenter cut the lead to 4\u20133. Craig Kimbrel recorded the four out save and the Braves evened the series at one game each. Braves shortstop Andrelton Simmons and Braves catcher Gerald Laird combined for a huge defensive play in the ninth inning throwing out Dodger's base runner Dee Gordon when he attempted to steal second base. This would end up being the final postseason game at Turner Field, as the Braves would not reach the postseason again before moving to SunTrust Park in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 3\n8:07\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 3\nGame 3 featured two rookies: Hyun-Jin Ryu of the Dodgers and Julio Teher\u00e1n for the Braves. It was an offensive explosion from both teams in the early innings. In the top of the first, Justin Upton doubled with one out and scored on Evan Gattis's single. After a walk, Gattis scored on Chris Johnson's single. The Dodgers loaded the bases in the second inning on two singles and a walk before Hyun-jin Ryu's sacrifice fly scored a run, then Carl Crawford's three-run home run put them up 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 3\nThe Braves loaded the bases in the third on three straight leadoff singles before Brian McCann's groundout and Johnson's fielder's choice scored a run each to tie the game. In the bottom of the inning, Hanley Ram\u00edrez hit a leadoff double then scored on Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez's single. Two outs later, Skip Schumaker's RBI single made it 6\u20134 Dodgers and knocked Teheran out of the game. The next inning, Carl Crawford reached on an error, then scored on Ramirez's triple off Alex Wood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 3\nAfter Gonz\u00e1lez struck out, Ramirez scored on Yasiel Puig's single before Juan Uribe's home run made it 10\u20134, all four runs were unearned. In the eighth, Ramirez hit an RBI single with two on and two outs off Jordan Walden, who was relieved by Luis Avilan. Gonz\u00e1lez and Puig then hit back-to-back RBI singles to make it 13\u20134. In the ninth, Jason Heyward's two-run home run off Paco Rodriguez made it 13\u20136 Dodgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0017-0003", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 3\nAfter allowing a walk and single, Rodriguez was relieved by Kenley Jansen, who struck out Brian McCann to end the game and give the Dodgers a 2\u20131 series lead. Hanley Ramirez continued his torrid NLDS by hitting two more extra base hits, tying a Dodgers franchise record for extra-base hits in a playoff series set by Steve Garvey and Duke Snider. Additionally, the 13 runs scored was a Dodgers record for a playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 3\nAt the age of 35 years, Chris Capuano picked up his first career post-season victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 4\n9:37\u00a0p.m. (EDT) at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 4\nThe Dodgers brought Clayton Kershaw back on short rest in Game 4 and he pitched six innings. Carl Crawford hit homers in his first two at-bats off Freddy Garc\u00eda in the first and third, the first Dodger to do so in the playoffs since Shawn Green in the 2004 National League Division Series. The Braves put runners on second and third with one out on a single and error by Adri\u00e1n Gonz\u00e1lez, who committed another error in the first, when Chris Johnson's single and Andrelton Simmons's groundout scored a run each, tying the game, both runs unearned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235018-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. Atlanta, Game 4\nElliot Johnson tripled with one out, then an RBI single by Jos\u00e9 Constanza off Ronald Belisario in the seventh gave the Braves the lead, but the Dodgers went back up on a two-run homer by Juan Uribe in the eighth off David Carpenter. Kenley Jansen struck out the side in the ninth to preserve the 4\u20133 series clinching victory for the Dodgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235019-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Wild Card Game\nThe 2013 National League Wild Card Game was a play-in game during Major League Baseball's (MLB) 2013 postseason played between the National League's (NL) two wild card teams, the Cincinnati Reds and the Pittsburgh Pirates. It was held at PNC Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on October 1, 2013. The Pirates won by a 6\u20132 score and advanced to play the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL Division Series. The game was televised on TBS, and was also broadcast on ESPN Radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235019-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Wild Card Game\nThe game marked the first postseason appearance by the Pirates since 1992 and the Pirates' victory gave the team their first postseason series win since the 1979 World Series. This was the third postseason appearance for the Reds in four seasons. It was the sixth postseason meeting between the Pirates and Reds (the others being in the NLCS in 1970, 1972, 1975, 1979, and 1990).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235019-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Wild Card Game\nPirates manager Clint Hurdle made his first postseason appearance since competing in the 2007 World Series as manager of the Colorado Rockies, while Dusty Baker fell to 0\u20133 in postseason appearances as manager of the Reds, a position from which he was relieved three days after the loss. The loss continued the Reds' postseason win drought, active since the 1995 National League Division Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235019-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National League Wild Card Game, Game results, Line score\nAfter a scoreless first inning and a half, the Pirates secured the first runs of the game with home runs by Marlon Byrd and Russell Martin in the bottom of the 2nd inning. Martin's home run came after Reds starting pitcher Johnny Cueto, having his name chanted mockingly by over 40,000 Pirates fans, dropped the baseball from the mound. Martin hit a home run on the next pitch. In the bottom of the third, Pedro Alvarez hit a sacrifice-fly to Shin-Soo Choo, which allowed Andrew McCutchen to score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235019-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 National League Wild Card Game, Game results, Line score\nIn the top of the fourth, with Choo and Ryan Ludwick on base, Jay Bruce hit a groundball single to Pirates left-fielder Starling Marte, allowing Choo to score. In the bottom of the fourth, Marte and Neil Walker scored off RBI hits by Walker and Byrd, respectively. In the bottom of the 7th inning, Russell Martin hit another home run. The Reds could only further respond with a Choo home run off of Tony Watson. The Pirates would maintain their lead and go on to win, with Jason Grilli closing the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235020-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National League speedway season\nThe 2013 season of the National League, the third tier of British speedway was contested by eight teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235020-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National League speedway season, Summary\nScunthorpe Saints and Rye House Cobras were missing from 2012, and replaced by Coventry Storm and Kent Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235020-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National League speedway season, Final table\nPL = Matches; W = Wins; D = Draws; L = Losses; Pts = Total Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235020-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National League speedway season, Final table\nScoring system:Home loss by any number of points = 0Home draw = 1Home win by between 1 and 6 points = 2Home win by 7 points or more = 3Away loss by 7 points or more = 0Away loss by 6 points or fewer = 1Away draw = 2Away win by between 1 and 6 points = 3Away win by 7 points or more = 4", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235020-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National League speedway season, Playoffs\nTop four teams race off in two-legged semi-finals and final to decide the championship. Dudley Heathens defeated King's Lynn Young Stars in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235020-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National League speedway season, National League Knockout Cup\nThe 2013 National League Knockout Cup was the 16th edition of the Knockout Cup for tier three teams. Dudley Heathens were the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235021-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National People's Congress\nThe 2013 National People's Congress (formally, the 1st Session of the 12th National People's Congress) held its annual meeting in March 2013 at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China. The session opened 5 March and concluded on 16 March, 2013 This was the Session in which major state positions were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235021-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National People's Congress, Government Work Report\nBelow are the key points of the country's achievements in the past five years, from Premier Wen Jiabao's work report:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland\nThe 2013 National Premier League Queensland is the first season under the new competition format in Queensland. The league consists of 14 teams across the State of Queensland. Brisbane City, Olympic FC and Redlands United joined from the Brisbane Premier League. Brisbane Strikers, QAS and Sunshine Coast Fire joined from the previous Queensland State League. Central Queensland FC, FNQ FC Heat and Northern Fury each had sides from their cities participating in the previous Queensland State League but new consortiums won bids to participate in the NPL and new identities were created, Fury taking on the identity of the former A-League club North Queensland Fury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland\nComplete new entities, Western Pride FC and Moreton Bay Jets were formed while Palm Beach Sharks was drawn from the Gold Coast Premier League but were former participants in years gone past in the Brisbane Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland, Regular season\nThe National Premier League Queensland 2013 season will be played over 22 rounds, beginning on 8 March with the regular season concluding on 18 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland, Regular season\nOlympic FC went through the first round of matches undefeated with 10 wins and 1 draw. Their first loss was at the hands of Brisbane City who won their round 12 clash, 3-1. This was after Olympic defeated Brisbane City 6-2 in the inaugural NPL Queensland match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland, Regular season\nThe Round 3 match between Western Pride and Sunshine Coast Fire was called off at approximately the 80 minute mark due to a severe thunderstorm. Fire were leading 4-0 at the time and under the competition rules, were awarded the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland, Regular season\nThe Round 10 match between Moreton Bay Jets and Western Pride was abandoned at the 80 minute mark due to an electrical floodlight failure. The Jets were leading 1-0 at the time and were awarded the victory under the competition rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland, Regular season\nOlympic FC claimed the Premiers title in Round 20 with a 3-1 victory over the Moreton Bay Jets at Goodwin Park on 4 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235022-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier League Queensland, Regular season\nOlympic FC, Brisbane City, Sunshine Coast Fire and the Brisbane Strikers formed the top four teams and therefore qualified for the finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235023-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier Leagues\nThe 2013 National Premier Leagues was the inaugural season of the Australian National Premier Leagues football competition. It began on 22 February 2013 and concluded on 13 October 2013. The National Premier Leagues was contested by clubs from five divisions. The divisions were ACT, NSW, Queensland, South Australia and Tasmania. The winners of each respective divisional league then competed in a finals playoff tournament at season end, culminating in a Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235023-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier Leagues, Final Series\nThe winner of each league competition (top of the table) in the NPL (with the exception of South Australia, where their entrant was the winner of the Finals Series) played each other in a final knockout tournament to decide the National Premier Leagues Champion for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235023-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier Leagues, Final Series\nThe participants were matched up based on geographical proximity, as if the three Federations not participating that season (Northern NSW Football, Football Federation Victoria and Football West) were doing so. Where a team would have played a non-participating Federation that team received a bye to the next round. The series was played over three rounds using a single match home or away knock-out format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235023-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier Leagues, Individual honours\nGlen Trifiro of Sydney United 58 received the John Kosmina Medal for best player in the NPL Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235024-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Premier Leagues Grand Final\nThe 2013 National Premier Leagues Grand Final was the first National Premier Leagues Grand Final. It was played on 13 October 2013 at KGV Park in Glenorchy between South Hobart and Sydney United 58. Sydney United 58 won 2\u20130 to secure their inaugural National Premier Leagues title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235025-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Pro Fastpitch season\nThe 2013 National Pro Fastpitch season was the 10th season of professional softball under the name National Pro Fastpitch (NPF) for the only professional women's 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, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235025-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events\nThe Carolina Diamonds ceased operations after the 2012 season. NPF announced that an expansion team named the NY/NJ Comets would begin play in the 2013 season, with the Comets awarded the contracts of the Diamonds' players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235025-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events\nNPF reached a deal with ESPN to broadcast 16 games during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235025-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events, Rule changes\nAfter the 2012 NPF season ended without a champion, NPF instituted new procedures to name a champion if the Championship Series is not finished:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235025-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events, Rule changes\nThe creation of a policy and criteria, to award the Cowles Cup, in the event of inclement weather. That policy states a reserve day to play the Championships and also a tiered process for naming a champion if the Series cannot be finished. That policy is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235025-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Pro Fastpitch season, Player acquisition, College draft\nThe 2013 NPF College Draft was held in Nashville, Tennessee on April 1 at 8:00 pm EST in Ford Theatre located in the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Akron Racers selected pitcher Rachele Fico of LSU as the first overall pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235025-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National Pro Fastpitch season, NPF Championship\nTeams are seeded by the final standings. The third- and fourth-seeded teams play each other, with the winner advancing. The second seeded team plays the winner of game one. The top seed plays a best-of-three series against the winner of game two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree\nThe 2013 National Scout Jamboree (United States) was the 18th national Scout jamboree held by the Boy Scouts of America from July 15, 2013 to July 24, 2013. It was the first national Scout jamboree held at the Summit Bechtel Reserve in West Virginia and the first jamboree to include Venturers as participants. Attendance was 40,795 Boy Scouts, Venturers, volunteers and staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree\nCompared to previous years, this jamboree operated more like a World Scout Jamboree with subcamps that promoted maximum interaction. It also served as a test at scale of the venue's facilities, since the Summit had been scheduled as the venue of the 24th World Scout Jamboree in 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree\nThe 2013 Jamboree was the first in over 30 years to not be held at Fort A.P. Hill, a US Army installation that had hosted every Jamboree since 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Events\nThere were two shows at the 2013 Jamboree, both occurring at the Summit Center stadium. The first show, which occurred on Tuesday, July 16, 2013, titled \"Welcome to West Virginia,\" was to feature Carly Rae Jepsen, but Jepsen backed out on March 5, 2013, citing the BSA's ban on openly gay and bisexual Scouts at the time. She announced her decision on Twitter saying, \"As an artist who believes in equality for all people, I will not be participating in the Boy Scouts of America Jamboree this summer.\" Teenage recording artist as well as country group replaced Jepsen in the show, and were well received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Events\nThe second show, which was titled \"Celebration of Scouting,\" occurred on Saturday, July 20, 2013, and featured Mike Rowe as the keynote speaker and rock band 3 Doors Down as the musical act. Originally, the show was to be headlined by pop rock band Train, but the band rescinded its commitment on March 1, 2013, citing the BSA's ban on openly gay and bisexual Scouts. The band said it would have been happy to play the show as long as the BSA \"makes the right decision before then,\" apparently a reference to a potential overturn of the ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Events\nAfter the BSA decision to allow openly gay Scouts (but not openly gay leaders) was released on May 2013, Train did not make any statement on returning to play at the Jamboree. Instead, the group was replaced by 3 Doors Down, which was announced as the headliner group on social media during the 2013 Jamboree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Events\nKing Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden also made an appearance at one of the shows, giving a speech to attendees at the stadium and speaking individually with a number of scouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Events\nAnother guest visitor was Gill Clay, the first grand-daughter of B-P.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Advancement\nNew merit badges introduced at the jamboree include Game Design, Programming, and Sustainability. A preview to the Mining in Society merit badge was also offered at the Jamboree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features\nApart from the change of venue and time, the 2013 Jamboree introduced several new elements to the Jamboree program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features, Sustainability\nThe goal of lessening the Jamboree's environmental impact was a prominent theme of the 2013 event, and inspired a number of initiatives in its planning and execution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features, Sustainability\nWater conservation was in full effect. This Jamboree was the first to ban all one-time use water bottles. The \"greywater\" methodology was also used: water from sinks and showers was used to flush toilets, leading the Summit to advertise a \"zero gallon\" water waste. Wastewater was passively treated in lagoons then used to drip irrigate the local forest, bringing water usage in a full cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features, Sustainability\nAccording to the BSA, almost all the lumber used to build the many onsite shower houses and latrine facilities came directly from forests on the property. Facilities did not require paint or harmful treatment for construction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features, Sustainability\nContingent units and staff members were provided with an officially licensed Jamboree duffel bag. All tent and cooking gear were provided onsite by The Summit, eliminating the need for each council to transport a tractor trailer full of unit equipment and thus, reducing the cost and carbon footprint of transportation to and from the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features, Technology\nAs part of the \"Scouting 2.0\" initiative, a large emphasis on technology was made during the Jamboree. For the first time, participants were advised to carry smartphones in order to use the Jamboree's mobile application for iOS and Android. The app was designed to help Scouts, Scouters and staff navigate the area through the ArcGIS Online Platform (developed and supported by Esri), as well as provide personalized daily activity schedules to all its users.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features, Technology\nAT&T sponsored a large part of this technology initiative. Cellular towers, many owned by AT&T, and wifi antennas were placed around the site providing mobile coverage for the Jamboree. Solar chargers were also be placed in subcamps, allowing participants to keep their devices charged on a daily basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, New features, Technology\nTechnology Quest was a half day experience that was a part of every participant's assigned weekly schedule. Scouts had a hands-on science and technology experience brought to the jamboree by major corporate, non-profit and educational partners. These included: NASA, National Geographic, Lego, AT&T, Microsoft, the Franklin Institute, Michigan Tech, West Virginia University Forensics, Team SLR from NASCAR, Destination Imagination, Parallax, Inc., National White Collar Crime Center, University of Charleston School of Pharmacy, Fairmont State University, Geocaching.com, Goal Zero, Mountain View Solar, Virginia Bioinformatics Institute and more. Activities included robotics, forensics, chemistry, physics, health care, IT, DNA and biotech, and photography.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Death\nMany adults from across the country came to support the Jamboree experience for over 40,000 people in attendance for over a week's time. One of the adult staff members from Beavercreek, Ohio collapsed on July 20, 2013 and was transported by ambulance to Plateau Medical Center in Oak Hill where he was pronounced dead after attempts to revive him had failed. The victim, Gene Schulz, was volunteering as a merit badge counselor and a historical reenactor of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. The cause of death was attributed to a heart attack. No other deaths were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235026-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 National Scout Jamboree, Controversy\nThere were several controversies leading up to and during the event, including exclusion of obese scouts, their longstanding anti-gay policies, and the high cost of the program as a result of issues with the construction of the Summit Bechtel Reserve vastly exceeding its initial budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards\nThe 48th National Society of Film Critics Awards, given on 4 January 2014, honored the best in film for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Picture\n1. Inside Llewyn Davis 2. American Hustle 3. 12 Years a Slave3. Her", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Director\n1. Joel Coen and Ethan Coen \u2013 Inside Llewyn Davis 2. Alfonso Cuar\u00f3n \u2013 Gravity 3. Steve McQueen \u2013 12 Years a Slave", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Actor\n1. Oscar Isaac \u2013 Inside Llewyn Davis 2. Chiwetel Ejiofor \u2013 12 Years a Slave 3. Robert Redford \u2013 All Is Lost", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Actress\n1. Cate Blanchett \u2013 Blue Jasmine 2. Brie Larson \u2013 Short Term 12 3. Ad\u00e8le Exarchopoulos \u2013 Blue Is the Warmest Colour 3. Julie Delpy \u2013 Before Midnight", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Supporting Actor\n1. James Franco \u2013 Spring Breakers 2. Jared Leto \u2013 Dallas Buyers Club 3. Barkhad Abdi \u2013 Captain Phillips", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Supporting Actress\n1. Jennifer Lawrence \u2013 American Hustle 2. Lupita Nyong'o \u2013 12 Years a Slave 3. L\u00e9a Seydoux \u2013 Blue Is the Warmest Colour 3. Sally Hawkins \u2013 Blue Jasmine", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Screenplay\n1. Richard Linklater, Ethan Hawke, and Julie Delpy \u2013 Before Midnight 2. Joel Coen and Ethan Coen \u2013 Inside Llewyn Davis 3. Eric Warren Singer and David O. Russell \u2013 American Hustle", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Cinematography\n1. Bruno Delbonnel \u2013 Inside Llewyn Davis 2. Emmanuel Lubezki \u2013 Gravity 3. Phedon Papamichael \u2013 Nebraska", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Non-Fiction Film\n1. The Act of Killing (TIE) 1. At Berkeley (TIE) 2. Leviathan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235027-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Foreign-Language Film\n1. Blue Is the Warmest Colour2. A Touch of Sin 3. The Great Beauty", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235028-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Amateur\nThe 2013 USASA National Women's Amateur was the 30th staging of the tournament, 14th since the introduction of the Open competition, and the first in five years. Six teams competed in three matches each on June 28 and 29, with a final match on the 30th. The Amateur competition occurred concurrently with the U23 competition, with the Open competition staged the three days before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235029-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Open\nThe 2013 USASA National Women's Open was the 18th staging of the tournament, and the first under a new format that eliminates regional qualification. The finals included four Midwest teams and took place from June 25th to 27th, with the Amateur and U-23 competitions taking place the next three days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235029-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Open\nThe defending champions are the Chicago Red Stars who were the first professional team to enter, and win, the competition. They did not attempt to defend their title, participating in the inaugural season of the National Women's Soccer League instead. They were members of WPSL Elite during the 2012 edition of the Women's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235029-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Open\nThe four teams participating in the Open Bracket of the 2013 National Women's Championships were the Des Moines Menace, Kansas City Shock, Houston Aces, and Kansas City Dynamos, the competition format being a round-robin as opposed to the previous used semifinals-to-final. The Houston Aces emerged as champions, winning all three of their matches, with the Kansas City Dynamos as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235030-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Soccer League season\nThe 2013 National Women's Soccer League season was the inaugural season of the National Women's Soccer League, the top division of women's soccer in the United States. Including the NWSL's two professional predecessors, Women's Professional Soccer (2009\u20132011) and the Women's United Soccer Association (2001\u20132003), this was the seventh overall season of FIFA and USSF-sanctioned top division women's soccer in the United States. The league was (and is) operated by the United States Soccer Federation and receives major financial backing from that body. Further financial backing was provided by the Canadian Soccer Association and the Mexican Football Federation. All three national federations paid the league salaries of many of their respective national team members in an effort to nurture talent in those nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235030-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Soccer League season\nThe league started on April 13 with FC Kansas City hosting Portland Thorns FC. The last regular season matches were played on August 18, followed by postseason playoffs which culminated with a one-game final on August 31. In the final, Portland Thorns FC defeated the Western New York Flash 2\u20130 to win the inaugural NWSL Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235030-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Soccer League season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player Acquisition\nPlayers were acquired through the 2013 Allocation of national team players announced on January 11, the 2013 NWSL College Draft on January 18, and the 2013 NWSL Supplemental Draft on February 7, along with free agency, trading and loans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235030-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Soccer League season, Teams, stadiums, and personnel, Player Acquisition\nThe Portland Thorns received an allocation with a notably strong offensive record including Alex Morgan and Christine Sinclair, the 2012 U.S. and Canadian Players of the Year and leading scorers for their national teams respectively, as well as a U.S. allocation (Morgan, Tobin Heath, and Rachel Buehler) that accounted for 1/3 of their national team's assists in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235030-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Soccer League season, Competition format\nThe regular season began on April 13 and ended on August 18. Each team played a total of 22 games: 11 at home and 11 away. Each team played", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235030-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Soccer League season, Competition format\nThe four teams at the end of the season with the most points qualified for the playoffs. Two semifinal games were played on August 24, with the winners advancing to the league final to be played on August 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235030-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 National Women's Soccer League season, NWSL Championship\nThe top four teams from the regular season qualified for the championship playoffs. In the semifinals, the regular season winner hosted the fourth-placed team and the regular season runner-up hosted the third-placed team. The highest-seeded semifinal winner then hosted the championship final. All match-ups were one-game series (as opposed to home-and-away series).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235031-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nations Cup (women's rugby union)\nThe fourth Nations Cup tournament was played at the University of Northern Colorado, USA during July and August of 2013 following on from the Under-20s competition which took place at Trent College, Long Eaton, England in early July. The tournaments included teams from the United States, South Africa, England and Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235031-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nations Cup (women's rugby union)\nThis tournament was succeeded by the Women's Rugby Super Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235031-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nations Cup (women's rugby union), Nations Cup 2013 (University of Northern Colorado), Final Table, Points scoring\n4 points awarded for a win, 2 points for a draw, no points for a loss. 1 bonus point awarded for scoring four or more tries and 1 bonus point for losing by less than 7 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 119], "content_span": [120, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235032-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International\nThe 2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit. It took place in Sydney, Australia, between 25 February and 3 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235032-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 93], "content_span": [94, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235032-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 93], "content_span": [94, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235033-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBrydan Klein and Dane Propoggia defeated Alex Bolt and Nick Kyrgios 6\u20134, 4\u20136, [11\u20139] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235034-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International \u2013 Men's Singles\nNick Kyrgios defeated Matt Reid 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235035-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nThis was a new event in 2013. Misa Eguchi and Mari Tanaka won the inaugural title, defeating Tamara \u010curovi\u0107 and Wang Yafan in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235036-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was a new event in 2013. Wang Yafan won the inaugural title, defeating Misa Eguchi in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Nauru on 8 June 2013. After Parliament was dissolved on 1 March, the elections were set for 6 April. However, a Supreme Court ruling annulled the dissolution and cancelled the elections. Parliament was dissolved again on 23 May, approximately one month before the normal end of its mandate, and elections were set for 22 June 2013, however President Sprent Dabwido declared a state of emergency and brought the election forward to 8 June. Parliament first sat on June 11 and Fisheries Minister Baron Waqa, the leader of the government forces, was elected president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election, Background\nIn February 2013 a constitutional crisis developed after two cabinet members resigned and a third was sacked by President Sprent Dabwido, leaving just two members in the cabinet, whilst the 18-member Parliament split into three factions. On 1 March Parliamentary Speaker Ludwig Scotty dissolved Parliament due to unruly behaviour by MPs, and elections were set for 6 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election, Background\nFormer President Marcus Stephen, who was one of the cabinet members to leave in February threatened to bring a legal challenge against the dissolution, claiming it had been carried out in an unconstitutional manner as MPs had not been given the chance to challenge the dissolution. When Stephens and seven other MPs did take the matter to the Supreme Court, it ruled that the adjournment had been carried out unconstitutionally. However, a government spokesman claimed that the Court had no power to force Scotty to reconvene Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election, Background\nIn mid-March the Supreme Court ruled that as the dissolution was null and void, the writ issued for elections in April was also null and void.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election, Background\nSpeaker Scotty resigned on 18 April and was replaced by Godfrey Thoma on 25 April. Thoma announced on 16 May that Parliament would be dissolved a week from that date. Speaker Thoma dissolved Parliament on 23 May and set elections for 22 June. On 27 May 2013 President Dabwido declared a state of emergency and re-set the election for 8 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nMPs are elected in eight multi-members constituencies using the Dowdall system, a modified version of the Borda count. Voters rank candidates by preference, with the first preference given a score of 1, the second preference a score of \u00bd, the third preference a score of \u2153 and so on. Voters must rank all candidates on the ballot for it to be valid. The candidates with the highest scores win the seats in a constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nUntil this election there had been 18 seats in Parliament with seven two-seat constituencies and one four-seat constituency, but following the June 2010 elections Parliament passed a bill to increase the number of seats to 19 to avoid 9\u20139 ties in the legislature. The extra member will be elected in the Meneng Constituency, which previously had two seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235037-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nA record total of 68 candidates registered for the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235038-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nauruan presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Nauru on 11 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235039-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Navotas local elections\nLocal elections was held in the city of Navotas on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. Re -electionist mayor-John Rey Tiangco won with a margin of almost 50% on his closest rival and the incumbent vice-mayor, Patrick Joseph Javier who was replaced by the winner of the vice-mayoral elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235039-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Navotas local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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. All candidates with party affiliation are supported by Partido Navote\u00f1o, the only local party in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235039-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Navotas local elections, Results, House of Representatives elections\nToby Tiangco is the incumbent. He is under Partido Navote\u00f1o, the ruling local party, which will contest this election at the banner of the United Nationalist Alliance. (He is also UNA's national secretary-general.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235039-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Navotas local elections, Results, City Council elections\nEach of Navotas's two legislative districts elects six councilors to the City Council. The six candidates with the highest number of votes wins the seats per district. Some who are running are the same names from 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235040-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Navy Midshipmen football team\nThe 2013 Navy Midshipmen football team represented the United States Naval Academy as an independent in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Midshipmen were led by sixth-year head coach Ken Niumatalolo and played their home games at Navy\u2013Marine Corps Memorial Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235040-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Navy Midshipmen football team, Roster, Depth chart\nThe following players comprised the team's Depth chart prior to the 2012 Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley\nOn 25 May 2013, Naxalite insurgents of the Communist Party of India (Maoist) attacked a convoy of Indian National Congress leaders in the Jhiram Ghati, Darbha Valley in the Sukma district of Chhattisgarh, India. The attack caused at least 27 deaths, including that of former state minister Mahendra Karma and Chhattisgarh Congress chief Nand Kumar Patel. Vidya Charan Shukla, a senior Congress leader, succumbed to his injuries on 11 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Background\nSukma district is a part of the \"red corridor\", the belt affected by the Naxalite\u2013Maoist insurgency. This region has been under continuous attack by the Maoists, who have been targeting police personnel and political leaders. The then Union Home Minister P Chidambaram had proposed to carry out counter offensive in the entire Bastar region but had to call off because of opposition from party leaders including Digvijaya Singh and some members of the National Advisory Council headed by Sonia Gandhi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Background\nNaxalites had called for a bandh on 25 and 26 May 2013 to protest 17 May 2013 operation against them by the security forces during an anti-Naxalite operation in which eight tribals were also killed, including three children. Naxalites were also protesting the conduct of \"Vikas Yatra\" of the Government and the \"Parivartan Yatra\" of the opposition Indian National Congress Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Background\nMaoists carry out a campaign called \"Tactical Counter Offensive Campaign\" (TCOC) which runs from April to early Monsoon in July. The thick Dharba forests provided them with good cover to carry out hit and run attacks. Congress leaders were warned about the possibility of an attack during their yatra. Later investigations revealed that Raman Singh Government's Vikas Yatra was also set as a target during his 7 May 2013 visit. However the plan could not succeed. Naxalites were enraged with the mobilisation of 2500\u20133000 security force personnel in the region in the then recent times. Their central commission hence allowed them to target the Parivartan Ralley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Attack\nLeaders of the Indian National Congress were carrying out a Parivartan Yatra (\"Change\" Rally) in the state, with a convoy of 25 vehicles carrying around 200 Congress leaders and workers. They were returning from a meeting organised in Sukma and were headed to Keshloor nearby Jagdalpur along National Highway 221 which connects Chhattisgarh with Krishna district in the adjacent state of Andhra Pradesh and hold its last rally there. Almost all the senior state party leaders; former Union Minister Vidya Charan Shukla, former state minister Mahendra Karma, Nand Kumar Patel, Uday Mudaliyar, senior Congress leader Gopi Madhwani, and prominent woman tribal leader Phulo Devi Netam from Bastar were present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Attack, Blast\nAs the convoy reached the deeply forested area of Dharba valley on Jagdalpur-Sukma Highway, 50\u00a0km from its destination, it was blocked by trees that had been felled by Maoists. The Maoists triggered an IED near the fourth vehicle in the convoy, completely damaging the vehicle and leaving a five-metre wide crater in the ground. In an attempt to flee, several vehicles collided with each other. The blast was carried out by a bomb using 27\u201330\u00a0kg of explosive using ammonium nitrate and electric detonators with command wire were used to trigger the blast. Investigators also found 200-meter long wires used to detonate the explosive which had been planted a few feet under the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Attack, Firing\nAs the vehicles slowed down, around 250 Maoists hiding in the adjoining hill tops of the JEERUM hills opened fire from both the sides. The personal security officers of the Congress leaders took positions and tried to defend them; firing continued for over 90 minutes. The Maoists waited for the PSOs to run out of ammunition before asking the Congress leaders to surrender. The Maoists, however, started firing indiscriminately when the Congress leaders emerged from their vehicles. Eyewitness said that when the Maoists struck, the mobile phones of all the leaders were also taken, as the attackers asked the names of the leaders, shooting some of them while leaving others alone .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Victims\nAround 28 people were killed in the attack which included twelve Congress leaders and workers, eight police and CRPF jawans and four other villagers. There was crossfire between Mahendra Karma's guards and the Naxalites, but when his defenders ran out of bullets, Karma surrendered along with various other Congress leaders. Naxalites then asked Congress leaders there to identify him. Karma came forward and identified himself. Naxalites then took him away and beat him. They then stabbed him several times and sprayed him with bullets, and then beat him again about the head with the butts of their guns. They also raised the slogans Mahendra Karma Murdabad. Autopsy revealed that 78 stab wounds were found on his body, which were made with a blunt object.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Victims\nMLA Uday Mudliyar, former MP and Gopal Madhavan were among the others killed in the gun fire. Vidya Charan Shukla sustained three bullets wounds, and was among several others who were critically injured. He died on 11 June 2013 after being treated at Medanta Medicity Hospital Gurgaon. Nand Kumar and Dinesh jumped out of the car; the two were found dead a day later. Following the attack, the Naxals abducted Patel, his son and few other leaders. Around 6 pm, they asked others to leave except Patel and his son.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Victims\nTheir bodies were later recovered from the forest at the ambush site. Autopsy revealed that Dinesh Patel had an axe injury on his head and it led to his death. Nandkumar Patel was also stabbed multiple times and there were also bullet wounds. At least ten security personnel, all of them personal security officers of Congress leaders, were also gunned down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Victims\nAccording to eyewitnesses, Vidya Charan Shukla's Personal Security Officer, Prafulla Shukla, shot himself with the last bullet he was left with after the shootout, apologising and regretting that he could not protect him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Survivors\nHowever, many people of the convoy survived and some were released by Naxalites. Kawasi Lakhma, a Congress MLA from Konta constituency in Bastar, who was part of convoy that was attacked and was kidnapped along with Patel and his son was later released by Naxalites. Lakhma asserted that he climbed up the valley and found the motorbike of a local TV journalist who was trying to film the happenings from a hilltop. Ajit Jogi, the ex-Chief Minister of Chhattisgarh, did not join the convoy as he was supposed to; he was provided a helicopter to travel as he was handicapped. Some of the survivors walked to Darbha town 12\u00a0km away, contacted police and party workers, then ferried the injured first to Darbha and later to Jagdalpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Perpetrators and planning\nA Maoist issued a four-page media statement, signed by Gudsa Usendi on behalf of spokesperson for the Dandakaranya Special Zonal Committee, CPI (Maoist), taking full responsibility for the attack, and narrated as the punishment for Salwa Judum founder Mahendra Karma. The statement said that Karma was the prime target of the attack along with state Congress leader Nand Kumar Patel. Though they expressed regret over the killing of low congress functionaries and other innocents. The Maoist-Naxalites who carried out the attack were the members of the Dhand Karineya Special Zonal Committee (DKSZC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Perpetrators and planning\n\"Pandu\", who had taken over as the 'Divisional Commander' of DKSZC after Ganesh Uike was removed, is believed to be the behind the attack. The initial firing on the convoy was through country-made weapons and later the Maoists used automatic weapons. Eyewitness said that when the Maoists struck, the mobile phones of all leaders were also snatched. The attacking Naxalites included a large number of women, and they kept communicating on their wireless sets during the operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Perpetrators and planning\nInvestigators believe the attack was carried out by Maoists belonging to Andhra Pradesh and Odisha, with a small contingent of Maoists from Chhattisgarh in the outer ring. Investigations reportedly revealed that a group of 40 to 50 Maoists had been camping in the area near the blast site for five days before the attack. They recced the site and also visited the local market several times. In the note, the rebels have also put forward seven key demands. They demanded to end the Operation Green Hunt and to send back the paramilitary forces from the Dandakaranya region. They also want the naxal revolutionaries and \"innocent\" tribals to be released from jail unconditionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Perpetrators and planning\nInvestigators said that after the attack, the Maoists divided themselves into two groups and moved towards Odisha. One of the groups was reportedly spotted in Gupteshwar in Koraput.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Rescue operation and reactions\nDarbha police station was at a distance of 10\u00a0km and a major CRPF camp was also nearby. However their way was blocked by trees that the Naxalites knocked down. It took security reinforcements several hours to reach the spot, as they had to walk carefully, for fear that land mines had been planted on the road leading to the area. This is because in past, it has been seen that Maoists plant mines in and around the area of attacks to target security forces rushing for rescue and relief operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Rescue operation and reactions\nPrime Minister Manmohan Singh reviewed the situation with Congress President Sonia Gandhi and other senior leaders. The PM called up chief minister Raman Singh to offer para-military reinforcements. Raman Singh had returned to Raipur, cancelling his Vikas Yatra, to hold an emergency meeting of the state cabinet. A three-day state mourning was declared and all those who died in the attack were given a state funeral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Rescue operation and reactions\nInjured were admitted in the Maharani Medical College in Jagdalpur. Critically injured Shukla was shifted to Raipur and then airlifted to Medanta Hospital in Gurgaon. Other injured were later brought to Ramkrishna Care hospital in Raipur. Manmohan Singh, Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Raman Singh and other leaders went to hospital to meet the injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Rescue operation and reactions\nThe Centre rushed more than 600 CRPF personnel, including the CoBRA anti-Maoist commandos, to sanitise and take control of the Naxal attack site in Chhattisgarh. The Centre has mobilised the CRPF personnel to not only take control of the area but also launch search and rescue operations as it is suspected that some people may be present in nearby jungles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Rescue operation and reactions\nPranay Sahay, the Director General of CRPF, later told media that \"the paramilitary force has put its best men on the job to track the \"retreating steps\" of the Maoists who carried out the deadly attack last week killing 27 people including state PCC chief Nand Kumar Patel and another prominent leader Mahendra Karma.\" According to media, the Additional Director General of the Border Security Force was stationed in Odisha to chase the Maoists who carried out the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Rescue operation and reactions\nThe Prime Minister announced \u20b9 500,000 each as ex-gratia relief from the National Relief Fund for families of those killed and \u20b9 50,000 each for those injured. Chief Minister Raman Singh announced a separate \u20b9 500,000 ex-gratia to the families of those killed, additionally asserting that the country will never bow before Naxalism. While addressing party workers at Congress Bhavan in Raipur he said, \"We will pursue the perpetrators of this crime with urgency and I can assure the nation that the Government is committed to bringing them to justice.\" President Pranab Mukherjee said the nation will neither be overawed nor intimidated by such actions. Leader of Opposition in Loksabha, Sushma Swaraj condemned the attacks and termed it to be shocking and most unfortunate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Rescue operation and reactions\nRural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh said that the Maoist-Naxalites had no faith whatsoever in the political system, democracy, electoral politics and constitutional values and all the talk of tribal welfare for them is a sham and is an excuse, and an alibi for perpetrating the violent overthrow of a democratic system. He said that Government shall \"intensify\" the development works in the 20\u201325 most affected districts. He also ruled out the possibility of talk with the Maoists stating that it was not the time to talk with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Post attack measures and investigation\nFollowing a request from the Chhattisgarh government which sought more forces to provide security to political leaders as well as to engage in anti-Naxal operations, Central Government sent 2,000 additional paramilitary force personnel to the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Post attack measures and investigation\nUnion Home minister Sushilkumar Shinde ordered an investigation by the National Investigation Agency. It reached the state on 27 May 2013 and began its probe to find out possible lapses on the part of the central forces or the state government. Union Ministry of Home Affairs also sent an advisory to all the Naxal-hit states asking them to thoroughly review the security of political leaders \u2013 both national and regional parties and, if necessary, their protection should be upgraded. As one such measure, Chief Minister, Raman Singh was provided on the following day with Z+ protection with National Security Guard commandos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Post attack measures and investigation\nThe Indian Air Force initiated the up gradation of its surveillance capacity in Maoist-hit areas after the failure of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) operating in the attack region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Post attack measures and investigation\nThe Chhattisgarh government also appointed a one-man commission under Chhattisgarh High Court judge Justice Prashant Mishra for a judicial enquiry into the attack. The commission would submit the report in three months. A special session of the Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly was also called on 3 June 2013 to discuss the Naxal issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235041-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Naxal attack in Darbha valley, Encounter in Salaikota reserve forest\nOn 14 September 2013, 14 Maoist cadres were shot by the Special Operation Group (SOG) at the Salaikota reserve forest (35\u00a0km from Malkangiri) in South Odisha. These Maoists were believed to be responsible for the attack on the Congress leadership in Chhattisgarh, and had entered Malkangiri district from Chhattishgarh. The operation was performed by SOG with an intelligence input and the \"BSF personnel in the background.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235042-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ncell Cup\n2013 Ncell Cup 2013, the A division knockout football tournament held in December, 2013 at Dashrath Stadium, Kathmandu, Nepal. The Second edition of the Ncell Cup tournament, sponsored by telecommunications company Ncell, will be participated by 12 clubs ranked under the \u2018A\u2019 division. Ranipokhari Corner Team withdrew from the tournament citing financial problems and were deducted 3 points in the 2013\u201314 league season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235042-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ncell Cup, Group stage\nGiven below facts are accurate as of 2 October 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 27], "content_span": [28, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235043-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebelhorn Trophy\nThe 2013 Nebelhorn Trophy was held on September 26\u201328, 2013 at the Eislaufzentrum Oberstdorf. It is held annually in Oberstdorf, Germany and is named after the Nebelhorn, a nearby mountain. Medals were awarded in men's and ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. Nebelhorn was the last qualifying event for the 2014 Winter Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235043-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebelhorn Trophy, Overview\nThough most Olympic spots were earned at the 2013 World Championships, six spots in each of men's and ladies' singles, four in pair skating, and five in ice dance were available at Nebelhorn for countries which remained without a berth in a discipline. Skaters from previously qualified countries also competed but only for medals; Nebelhorn could not be used to earn additional spots if a country already had one in a discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235043-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebelhorn Trophy, Overview\nRussia's Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov won the pairs' event after placing first in both programs, while Germany's Maylin Wende / Daniel Wende and Mari Vartmann / Aaron Van Cleave took silver and bronze respectively. Great Britain's Stacey Kemp / David King, Ukraine's Elizaveta Usmantseva / Roman Talan, Estonia's Natalja Zabijako / Alexandr Zaboev, and Israel's Andrea Davidovich / Evgeni Krasnopolski earned Olympic berths for their countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235043-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebelhorn Trophy, Overview\nThe ladies' event was won by Russia's Elena Radionova, with silver going to Japan's Miki Ando and bronze to the United States' Ashley Cain. The Olympic berths were earned by Brooklee Han for Australia, Elene Gedevanishvili for Georgia, Anne Line Gjersem for Norway, Kerstin Frank for Austria, Elizaveta Ukolova for the Czech Republic, and Isadora Williams for Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235043-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebelhorn Trophy, Overview\nJapan's Nobunari Oda won the men's event for the third time, finishing over 30 points ahead of silver medalist Jason Brown of the United States and bronze medalist Jeremy Ten of Canada. Securing an Olympic spot for their country were Alexei Bychenko for Israel, Zolt\u00e1n Kelemen for Romania, Michael Christian Martinez for the Philippines, Brendan Kerry for Australia, Yakov Godorozha for Ukraine, and Paul Bonifacio Parkinson for Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235043-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebelhorn Trophy, Overview\nMadison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue of the United States were the winners of the ice dance event ahead of Russia's Ksenia Monko / Kirill Khaliavin and Canada's Alexandra Paul / Mitchell Islam. China's Huang Xintong / Zheng Xun, Turkey's Alisa Agafonova / Alper U\u00e7ar, Australia's Danielle O'Brien / Gregory Merriman, Japan's Cathy Reed / Chris Reed, and Spain's Sara Hurtado / Adri\u00e0 D\u00edaz earned Olympic spots for their countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team\nThe 2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team represented the University of Nebraska in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Bo Pelini and played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Wyoming\nThis was the Cowboys' first visit to Lincoln since 1994, when Nebraska defeated the Cowboys 42\u201332 en route to a national championship. The two teams last played in 2011, when Nebraska defeated the Cowboys 38\u201314 in Laramie. In the week leading up to the game, Pelini handed out seven Blackshirts to his defense. This was the first time during Pelini's tenure that he has handed them out prior to the start of the season. In the game, both Ameer Abdullah and Imani Cross rushed for more than 100 yards. Despite the victory, the Nebraska defense allowed Wyoming to accumulate 602 yards of offense, the second-most allowed ever by Nebraska in a win. With Nebraska's victory they now lead the all-time series 7\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Southern Miss\nThe Huskers hosted the Golden Eagles for the second straight year, with the Huskers winning 49\u201320 in 2012. This game was originally scheduled to be hosted by Southern Miss in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, but the game was sold back to Lincoln to make more money for the visiting team after considering playing the game in New Orleans or Kansas City. Following this year's win, Nebraska now leads the series 4\u20131. USM won in Lincoln in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, UCLA\nThe UCLA Bruins traveled to Memorial Stadium for the first time since a 49\u201321 loss in 1994. This was the second game in a home-home series, with the Bruins winning in Pasadena 36\u201330 in 2012. Nebraska led 21\u20133 midway through the second quarter before UCLA scored a touchdown before halftime. In the third quarter, UCLA scored 28 straight points to take a 38\u201321 lead against Nebraska before adding a field goal late in the game. UCLA's win tied the series 6\u20136, until Nebraska took the lead after defeating the Bruins in the 2015 Foster Farms Bowl. Nebraska wore alternate uniforms in this game created by Adidas. The game set a Memorial Stadium attendance record with 91,471 in attendance. The record was broken the next season in the Miami at Nebraska game, with 91,585 in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, South Dakota State\nThe South Dakota State Jackrabbits made their third trip ever to Lincoln, falling to the Huskers previously in 1963 and 2010. After trailing 17\u201314, Nebraska scored 38 straight points en route to a 59\u201320 win over South Dakota State. The Huskers amassed 645 yards of total offense with 310 yards passing and 335 rushing, the first time in school history that Nebraska broke the 300-yard barrier in both rushing and passing. Starting quarterback Taylor Martinez sat out this game with a turf toe injury, so backups Tommy Armstrong Jr. and Ron Kellogg III took his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, South Dakota State\nTommy Armstrong went 12-of-15 for 169 yards with a TD in the win, while teammate Ron Kellog was 8-of-9 for 136 yards and a 1 TD of his own. Ameer Abdullah was the top Husker rusher with 139 yards and a TD on 15 carries while Imani Cross added 60 yards rushing and 2 TDs on 10 carries. Quincy Enunwa was the top receiving target with 6 catches for 78 yards, while Tyler Wullenwaber added 47 yards and a TD on two catches. For SDSU, Austin Sumner was 19-of-29 for 238 yards with 2 INTs. Zach Zenner had 21 carries for 202 yards, the 10th most individual rushing yards ever allowed by the Huskers, and 2 TDs. Cam Jones had 6 catches for 68 yards in the loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nIllinois made their first trip to Memorial Stadium since 1985. This was the first year of back to back trips to Lincoln for the Fighting Illini. Following this win the Huskers now lead the all-time series 8\u20132\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nThis was the second meeting ever between the schools. Purdue won the only other meeting, 28\u20130, in 1958 in West Lafayette. Purdue scored in the final minute of the game to avoid being shut out in a 44\u20137 Nebraska win. Nebraska's defense held Purdue to 216 total yards of offense while recording five sacks and forcing a pair of turnovers. The Boilermakers gained 32 yards rushing in the contest. Nebraska gained 435 total yards with 184 through the air and 251 on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nRon Kellogg III was the top passer for the Huskers, going 10-of-13 for 141 yards and a TD. Ameer Abdullah added 126 yards rushing on 20 carries with a TD and Quincy Enunwa was the top Husker receiver with four catches for 72 yards and a score. David Santos led the Huskers in tackles with five while Randy Gregory had two sacks and a fumble recovery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nNebraska and Minnesota met for the 54th time in a series that began in 1900. Nebraska has played Minnesota more times than any other Big Ten Conference member. Coming into the game the Golden Gophers led the all-time series 29\u201322\u20132, but Nebraska had won the last 16 games in the series, including the last two since joining the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nIn the game, after jumping out to a 10\u20130 lead, Minnesota used its run game to beat Nebraska for the first time since 1960, ending a streak of 16 straight losses to the Huskers. The Gophers outgained the Huskers in total offense 430\u2013328 and gained 271 yards on the ground. The game saw the return of Taylor Martinez to the starting lineup. He went 16-of-30 for 139 yards with 1 TD and 1 INT. Ameer Abdullah added 165 yards rushing on 19 carries in the loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nThis was the third straight year as Big 10 members against each other, with Northwestern winning 28\u201325 in 2011 and Nebraska winning in 2012, 29\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nJordan Westerkamp caught a tipped hail mary pass in the end zone as time expired from Ron Kellogg III to give Nebraska a 27\u201324 win over the Northwestern Wildcats. The Huskers outgained the Wildcats in the contest 472 yards to 326. Tommy Armstrong was 15-of-29 for 173 yards with 1 TD and 3 INTs in the win. Ameer Abdullah had 127 yards rushing on 24 carries and Jordan Westerkamp had four catches for 104 yards and a TD. Nebraska moves to 5\u20132 all-time against Northwestern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nNebraska mounted a late fourth quarter drive to win 17\u201313, tying the all-time series with Michigan at 4\u20134\u20131. The loss snaps a 19-game home winning streak under coach Brady Hoke at Michigan Stadium. The Huskers scored the first 10 points of the game in the first quarter, then Michigan scored the next 13 before Nebraska would come back with the game-winning touchdown with just over two minutes left in the game. The Huskers outgained the Wolverines in total offense 273 yards to 175 while holding Michigan to minus-21 yards rushing in the contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nTommy Armstrong was 11-of-19 for 139 yards with a TD, Ameer Abdullah had 27 carries for 105 yards with one rushing and one receiving TD and Quincy Enunwa had 7 catches for 69 yards to lead the Huskers offensively. Defensively, Randy Gregory came up with three sacks of Michigan QB Devin Gardner to lead a Blackshirt defense that produced seven sacks on the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Michigan State\nMichigan State, previously 0\u20137 against Nebraska, won their first ever game in the series with a 41\u201328 win over the Huskers. Nebraska outgained the Spartans in total offense 392 yards to 361 but was unable to overcome five turnovers, which resulted in 24 Michigan State points. MSU also held an advantage in time of possession at 38:37 to 21:23. Ameer Abdullah was the first runner this season to gain 100 yards on the Spartans, the number one ranked defense in the country coming into the game, with 123 yards on 22 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nNebraska was able to convert a field goal in overtime to give Nebraska a 23\u201320 win on the road over the Nittany Lions. The Huskers tied the game at 20\u201320 late in the fourth quarter on a 19-yard field goal by Pat Smith to force overtime. Penn State missed a 37-yard attempt in their overtime period while Smith connected on a 42-yarder for the win. Nebraska was outgained in total offense by Penn State 387 to 360 yards. Ron Kellogg III was 20-of-34 for 191 yards with a TD. Ameer Abdullah had 25 carries for 147 yards rushing and the receiving corps was led by Jordan Westerkamp with five catches for 62 yards and Quincy Enunwa who had three catches for 42 yards and a TD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nMeeting for the Heroes Trophy. Following the Husker's loss Nebraska now leads the series by a mark of 28\u201313\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235044-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, Game summaries, Gator Bowl\nThis year's Gator Bowl was a rematch of last year's Capital One Bowl that was won by Georgia. The Huskers led the contest en route to a 24-19 victory. UGA outgained Nebraska in total offense 416 to 307 but committed one more turnover. Nebraska was led by Tommy Armstrong who went 6-of-14 for 163 yards with two TDs and one INT. Included in that performance was a school-record 99 yard TD pass to Quincy Enunwa in the third quarter. Ameer Abdullah had 27 carries for 122 yards and a TD, his 11th 100-yard rushing performance of the season. Enunwa led in the receiving department with four catches for 129 yards and two TDs. For his efforts, Quincy Enunwa was named Gator Bowl MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235045-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Danger season\nThe 2013 Nebraska Danger season was the third season for the Nebraska Danger as a football franchise and their third in the Indoor Football League. One of just nine teams competing in the IFL for the 2013 season, the Nebraska Danger are members of the Intense Conference. The team played their home games under head coach Mike Davis at the Eihusen Arena in Grand Island, Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235045-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Danger season, Season summary\nThe Danger were successful in the regular season, clinching the Intense Conference and qualifying for the IFL playoffs. The team defeated the Colorado Ice to win the Intense Conference and reach the United Bowl but fell in the championship game to the Sioux Falls Storm 40-43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235045-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Danger season, Season summary\nThe Danger were named the IFL Franchise of the Year for 2013. Quarterback Jameel Sewell was named both the IFL's Most Valuable Player and its Offensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235045-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nebraska Danger season, Off-field moves\nShortly before the 2013 season began, the owner of the Cheyenne Warriors died which forced that team to suspend operations and the IFL to revise its schedule to accommodate the now 9-team league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235046-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Negeri Sembilan FA season\nThe 2013 season was Negeri Sembilan's sixth season in the Malaysia Super League, the top flight of Malaysian football. The club finished 12th in the table and were relegated to the Malaysia Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235046-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Negeri Sembilan FA season, Review, Pre-season\nNegeri Sembilan put eight new faces including two import players to cover Hoben Jang Hoben squad challenges in Super League 2013 season. Two import players are striker from Argentina, Emanuel De Porras and defender of Cameroon, William Paul Modibo offered a year contract as the latest backup squad Jangs in forming a strong team and the caliber of providing high quality performances for them to compete in the league .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235046-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Negeri Sembilan FA season, Review, Pre-season\n8 new faces in squad of the 2013 season are Mohd Hamsani Ahmad, Abdul Ghani Rahman and S. Sivanesan (Felda United), Mohd Fauzi Nan (Kedah), Azmeer Yusof (Pos Malaysia), Eddy Helmi Abdul Manan (Johor FC), Mohd Alafi Mahmud (MP Muar) and Mohd Radzuan Abdullah promote from Negeri Sembilan President's. Players who remain with squad are Kaharuddin, Badrulzaman, Tengku Qayyum, Norhafiz Zamani, Mohd Zulfaizham Kamis, Rashid Mamud, Muszaki, Mohd Alif, Norismaidham, Shahurain, Idris Karim, Halim Zainal, Mohd Nazrin Mohd Nawi, Mohd Firdaus Azizul, Shakir Ali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235046-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 Negeri Sembilan FA season, Review, Pre-season\nWhile the 9 pillars of migratory jangs is Qhairul Anwar and Effa Owona choose not to renew the contract and join Terengganu, Farizal Marlias migrated to Perak, Shukor Adan to ATM, S. Kunanlan to Selangor, G. Mahathevan to T-Team Titans and PBNS release defender from Czechoslovakia, Marian Farb\u00e1k, Vijayan Parameswaran and Mohd Shaffik Abdul Rahman. Source:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235046-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Negeri Sembilan FA season, Competitions, Malaysia FA Cup, Quarter-finals\nTerengganu FA won 6\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the Semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235046-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Negeri Sembilan FA season, Season statistics, Disciplinary record\n= Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting\nOn 1 November 2013, two people were killed and a third injured in a drive-by shooting attack outside the offices of the Golden Dawn political party, in Neo Irakleio, Athens committed by two unknown anarchists in retaliation for the murder of Pavlos Fyssas. As of May\u00a02021, the anti-terrorism branch of the Greek police is still investigating the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, The events of the murders\nOn 1 November 2013, two men approached the headquarters of the Golden Dawn party in Neo Irakleio, a northern suburb of Athens, by motorcycle and fired at three Golden Dawn members located outside of the party building. Golden Dawn members Giorgos Fountoulis and Manos Kapelonis were struck and killed, and a third man, Alexandros Gerontas, was seriously injured. At least 12 bullets were fired in the attack which reportedly lasted ten seconds. A witness reported that a man got off a motorcycle, wearing a helmet, and fired at 'close range'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, The events of the murders\nThe attack, which was described by police as a \"terrorist attack\" was caught on CCTV which has been released publicly. Two weeks later, a previously unknown anarchist militant group, 'The Fighting People's Revolutionary Powers\u2019 claimed responsibility for the attacks in a communication to a local news outlet, and said that the attacks were in retaliation for the two months earlier murder of anti-fascist activist and rapper Pavlos Fyssas. Police were unable to verify the authenticity of this claim of responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Background of the victims, Manolis Kapelonis\nManolis or Manos Kapelonis (Greek: \u039c\u03b1\u03bd\u03ce\u03bb\u03b7\u03c2 or \u039c\u03ac\u03bd\u03bf\u03c2 \u039a\u03b1\u03c0\u03b5\u03bb\u03ce\u03bd\u03b7\u03c2) was 22 years old, lived in Galatsi and had studied at the Athens Hellenic College. His father had served as president of the Association of Civil Government before 2010, and is now president in Public Construction Medical Institutions. The offices of the Local Organisation Northern Suburbs opened every Monday and Friday afternoon. He was among the most active part of the ideological faction. There deputies and officers often made speeches, and their chief texts and the parliamentary candidate in Boeotia often appeared on the official website of the Golden Dawn. His funeral took place on 4 November 2013, at the Church of Ipapanti in Artemida, with the discreet presence of police, and without media coverage, upon his family's request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Background of the victims, Giorgos Fountoulis\nGiorgos or Yiorgos Fountoulis (Greek: \u0393\u03b9\u03ce\u03c1\u03b3\u03bf\u03c2 \u03a6\u03bf\u03c5\u03bd\u03c4\u03bf\u03cd\u03bb\u03b7\u03c2) was 27 years old, lived in Neo Irakleio, and had studied physiotherapy. He had friends in Golden Dawn and took part in its events and activities, distributing leaflets with Kapelonis. He helped out as a security guard at the offices of Golden Dawn of the Local Organisation Northern Suburbs, and also with Golden Dawn's on-call safeguarding service for elderly pensioners who asked for protection when shopping or collecting their pensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Background of the victims, Giorgos Fountoulis\nHe had been a Golden Dawn member for at least one year, and was one of the keenest members in the Local Organisation Northern suburbs, though was not at a high level of Golden Dawn in security matters. His father worked at the post office. His funeral took place on 4 November 2013, at the Church of St. Georgios in Irakleio. At the funeral, hundreds shouted \"He Lives Forever\", also singing the Greek national anthem while holding Greek flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Reactions to the murders, Political reactions\nThe government, through its spokesman Simos Kedikoglou, made the following statement for the double murder: \"The killers, whoever they may be, will be dealt with ruthlessly by democracy, justice and the united Greek society. Let everyone know\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Reactions to the murders, Political reactions\nAll political parties in Greece united in unanimously condemning the attack. The murder of the two members hit the headlines and became the first topic on the global networks in Greece and around the world. The party of Golden Dawn issued an announcement after the assassination blaming the government and the media for the murders, further accusing the government of Antonis Samaras for failing to deal effectively with terrorism while the anti-terrorist branch of the Greek police was investigating Golden Dawn for criminal offenses instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Reactions to the murders, Political reactions\nThe Municipal Council of Thessaloniki condemned, by resolution, the murders of the two men in Neo Irakleio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Reactions to the murders, Political reactions\nIn December 2013, the government of Greece offered a reward of one million Euros, to anyone who would provide information that would lead to the capture of the murderers of Manolis Kapelonis and Giorgos Fountoulis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Reactions to the murders, Other reactions\nGolden Dawn commemorated thrice in memory of Kapelonis and Fountoulis of the Golden Dawn attended by MP Members and Greek citizens. Commemorations and marches by various far-right organizations and football fans holding candles and torches, also took place in countries like Italy, Serbia and Spain; assorted fascists in London held a demonstration which characterized the victims as \"Martyrs\", and in cities like Rome, Milan and Madrid. Supporters of football teams Radni\u010dki Ni\u0161 Hellas Verona and Lazio hung banners during a group match with slogans in support of the two victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Reactions to the murders, Other reactions\nThe action drew some criticism, with The Union of Italian Jewish Communities releasing a statement which read \"Any excuse, even the barbaric murder of the two young men, becomes a legal excuse to support movements that have racism, anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their DNA. [ sport- ] Stadium racism is an unacceptable phenomenon and should be treated as such. That is why we hope for immediate action and strict measures by the competent authorities\". Far right groups continue to remember the victims of the shooting, such as the Neo-Nazi Swedish Nordic Resistance Movement holding a commemoration of the victims on the fifth anniversary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Reactions to the murders, Other reactions\nThe mother of one of the killed Golden Dawn members was praised in the media for her 'dignified and outspoken response', saying \"I want to send a message especially to our youth, who are going through such difficult times, not to create such extremism,\", \"Bloodshed is not the right way. Where do we live? In a jungle?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Claim of responsibility\nTwo weeks later on the 16 November Zougla announced that an unknown person contacted the station informing them the area where an envelope which contained a USB stick was placed; and that the communique was stored on it. Zougla uploaded the 18-page communique, in which a previously unknown organization, 'The Fighting People's Revolutionary Powers', claimed the responsibility for the \"political executions of the fascist members of the Neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party\". The proclamation stated that the murders were seen by the group at least in part as retaliation for the fatal stabbing of Pavlos Fyssas by a Golden Dawn member, the communique claimed \"The brazen murder of Pavlos Fissas was the drop of blood that made the glass overflow,\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Claim of responsibility\nFollowing the publication of the communique Golden Dawn stated that \"the miserable and stupid manifesto of the cowardly murderers proves that they belong to the criminal ideological womb of the far left\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235047-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Neo Irakleio Golden Dawn office shooting, Claim of responsibility\nThe anti-terrorist branch of the Greek police announced in 2013 that it considered the digital proclamation as authentic that it was investigating the case. Shortly after the attacks, it was reported that police suspected urban guerrillas groups such as Conspiracy of Fire Nuclei or Sect of Revolutionaries as well as Nikos Maziotis, a member of Revolutionary Struggle who was at the time on the run from the police. No other attacks have been claimed by The Fighting Peoples Revolutionary Power As of May\u00a02021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election\nConstituent Assembly elections were held in Nepal on 19 November 2013. The vote was repeatedly delayed, having previously been planned for 22 November 2012 following the dissolution of the 1st Constituent Assembly on 27 May 2012, but it was put off by the election commission. The Nepali Congress emerged as the largest party in the 2nd Nepalese Constituent Assembly, winning 196 of the 575 elected seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Background\nFollowing King Gyanendra's suspension of Parliament and government takeover during the Nepalese Civil War, mass protests led to him to re-instate Parliament and end the war fought by the government against the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), on the condition that the constitution would be re-written. The king's powers were also removed and an election was held in 2008 to elect a Constituent Assembly. The Constituent Assembly was tasked with writing a new constitution; however, its deadline was extended several times, with the last one set for 27 May 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Background\nIn the lead up to the deadline, there were several violent protests by a variety of ethnic groups outside the Parliament building. Rallies were then banned in the area and around the PM's office with riot police guarding against protests and the Nepali Army on high alert in case the situation could not be controlled. Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai called for a new election on 22 November after the deadline passed, with a possibility of a state of emergency. A member of his party, Post Bahadur Bogati, announced that \"it is not possible to promulgate the constitution within the deadline now. That possibility is out, 100 percent.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Background\nOn the deadline day there were large protests as talks between the CPN (Maoist), Nepali Congress, Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist) and the Madhesi Front were ongoing. The talks broke down after the incumbent CPN (Maoist)'s demands for 10 to 14 new provinces largely along ethnic groups lines, which was supported by several small Madhesi parties calling for autonomy, was opposed by the Nepali Congress and the CPN (UML). CPN (Maoist) member Narayankaji Shrestha said that \"a constitution is not possible without federal states recognising the identity of ethnic groups.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Background\nThe opponents of the proposal said the move could lead to tensions amongst different castes. Ram Sharan Mahat of the Nepali Congress said that the CPN (Maoist) \"want[ed] to kill the assembly, not make the constitution\" in order to stay in power. At a cabinet session that night CPN (UML) general secretary and Deputy Prime Minister Ishwor Pokhrel walked out saying that the move was \"unconstitutional, neither is it based on political consensus.\" However, the Madhesi leader Laxman Lal Karna said that \"in the afternoon, the NC and the [CPN-]UML had said there was no chance of a deal. Let us go for polls. We have done the democratic thing.\" The CPN (Maoist)'s Barsha Man Pun then announced the election saying that \"we had no other alternative. We apologise for not being able to prepare the constitution.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Background\nThe Nepali Congress claimed the delays were a ploy by the UCPN (M) to remain in power and that Maoist-led government's \"unilateral decision was unexpected\". However, according to an AFP interview on Rajkishore Yadav, the Maoist-led government \"wanted to conduct elections in November 22\" but the election commission insisted that \"the lack of a workable constitution meant there were no legal provisions for holding a vote\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Background\nIn mid-September 2013, an opposition one-day strike called for the cancellation of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Opinion polls\nIn mid-2011, an opinion indicated that 45% of respondents opposed an extension of the CA's mandate. A majority of respondents were uncertain about who they would vote for. Similarly, there were calls for a fresh election by opposition politicians at the time. Most respondents also said a new constitution was the topmost priority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Opinion polls\nIn the Himal Media opinion poll conducted in March 2013, voters expressed a slight preference for the Nepali Congress, 14.9%, over the CPN (UML), 11.3%, and UCPN (Maoist), 7.3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Conduct\nIn the morning of the election, a bomb exploded near a voting station wounding three people after a boy picked up what he thought was a toy that then exploded. It also follows days of similar attacks by those opposed to the election. On December 16, Mohan Baidya, Chairman of the breakaway CPN(Maoist) which had boycotted the elections publicly stated his party had planted bombs across the country prior to the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Turnout\nVoters turned out in record numbers with nationwide turnout averaging 78.34% breaking the previous record of 68.15% in the 1991 general elections. The highest turnout was in Dolpa-1 at 89.5% and the lowest in Baitadi-2 at 67.32%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Results\nInitial results showed the Nepali Congress winning a plurality of the first-past-the-post seats with 105 of the 240 seats; the CPM-UML close behind with 91; and the Maoists far behind, winning just 26. Smaller parties and two independent candidates won the remaining 18 seats. 335 seats were allotted by proportional representation using a modified Sainte-Lagu\u00eb method of allocation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Reaction\nThe UCPN (Maoist) leader Prachanda protested the conduct of the election, alleging fraud, and threatening to withdraw from the Constituent Assembly. However domestic and international pressure mounted and various political leaders from Nepali Congress and CPN UML urged Unified Maoist to accept the peoples verdict and get involved in the process of a peaceful CA. Subsequently, an internal assessment by the party concluded vote-rigging was not the cause of the party's defeat and mentioned \"misrepresentation of the party on issue of federalism and the party\u2019s split\" as reasons for defeat. On December 25, 2013, the UCPN (Maoist) offered unconditional support to the Nepali Congress to form the next government following the signing of a four-point deal between the NC, CPN(UML), UCPN (Maoist) and Madesbadi parties that agreed to form a parliamentary body to investigate election irregularities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 954]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235048-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, Reaction\nIn response to the allegations of fraud leveled by the Maoist and smaller parties, Chief Election Commissioner Nilkantha Upreti affirmed the elections were \"concluded in a free, fair , impartial and credible manner\" and urged voters \"not to believe in such misleading publicity\" about the fairness of the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235049-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Netball Superleague Grand Final\nThe 2013 Netball Superleague Grand Final featured Team Bath and Celtic Dragons. Team Bath secured their fifth Netball Superleague title in eight years with a victory over Dragons. Dragons, who were playing their first grand final won the second quarter by two points to lead 31\u201330 at half-time. However Team Bath fought back and entered the final quarter with a two-point advantage at 46\u201344. Although Dragons kept themselves in the game with three successive goals, Team Bath stretched clear in the final two minutes to win it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235049-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Netball Superleague Grand Final, Teams\nStarting 7:GS Kadeen CorbinGA Pamela CookeyWA Asha Francis (c)C Mia RitchieWD Serena GuthrieGD Stacey FrancisGK Sam Cook", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235049-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Netball Superleague Grand Final, Teams\nBench: GA/GS Shaunagh CraigGK/GD Sophie MastersonC/WA Yasmin ParsonsGK/GD Gemma StewartWA/C Amanda Trounce", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235049-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Netball Superleague Grand Final, Teams\nStarting 7: GS Lottysha Cato GA Cara MoseleyWA Suzy Drane (c)C Krya JonesWD Nicola JamesGD Stephanie WilliamsGK Sara Hale", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235049-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Netball Superleague Grand Final, Teams\nBench:C/WA Bethan DykeGD/WD Nia JonesGS/GA Chelsea LewisGD/WD/GK Jenna MurieWA/GS/GA Emma Thomas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235050-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Netball Superleague season\nThe 2013 Netball Superleague season saw Team Bath finish as champions for the fifth time. In the grand final they defeated Celtic Dragons. 2013 used a three phases format similar to 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235050-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Netball Superleague season, Teams\nDuring the close season Northern Thunder changed their name to Manchester Thunder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235051-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nevada Wolf Pack football team\nThe 2013 Nevada Wolf Pack football team represented the University of Nevada, Reno in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wolf Pack were led by first\u2013year head coach Brian Polian and played their home games at Mackay Stadium. They were members of the West Division of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138 and 3\u20135 in Mountain West play to finish in fifth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235051-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nevada Wolf Pack football team, Previous season\nThe Wolf Pack finished the 2012 season 7\u20136 and 4\u20134 in Mountain West play to finish in fifth place and lost the New Mexico Bowl against Arizona by 48 to 49. Head coach Chris Ault resigned and was replaced by Brian Polian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235051-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nevada Wolf Pack football team, Preseason, Mountain West media days\nThe Mountain West media days were held on July 22\u201323, 2013, at the Cosmopolitan in Paradise, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235051-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nevada Wolf Pack football team, Preseason, Media poll\nThe preseason poll was released on July 22, 2013. The Wolf Pack were predicted to finish in fourth place in the MW West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235051-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nevada Wolf Pack football team, Preseason, Preseason All\u2013Mountain West Team\nThe Wolf Pack had one player selected to the preseason All\u2013Mountain West Team; one from the defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235052-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the women's provincial curling championship for New Brunswick, was held from January 30 to February 3 at the Tri-County Complex in Fredericton Junction, New Brunswick. The winning team of Andrea Crawford represented New Brunswick at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235052-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Round Robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Atlantic Standard Time (UTC\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235052-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification round\nThe qualification round for the 2013 New Brunswick Tournament of Hearts took place from January 4 to 6. The format of play was an open-entry double knockout, qualifying eight teams to the provincial playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution\nThe 2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution was undertaken through the process set out in the Electoral Boundaries and Representation Act of New Brunswick, Canada. The legislation establishes a statutory requirement for redistribution of electoral districts after every second New Brunswick general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution\nA commission was struck to draw 49 electoral districts, a decrease from 55 districts, which will first be used in the 2014 provincial election. The 49 boundaries will have to be within the range of 95% to 105% of the 1/49th of the number of registered voters in the province except in \"extraordinary circumstances\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution\nUnder the legislation, the commission will be chaired by one anglophone and one francophone and consist of 3 to 5 other commissioners, all of whom must be New Brunswick residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Legislative changes\nThe Electoral Boundaries and Representation Act of 2005 set out for a redistribution of 55 ridings after every decennial census with ridings within plus or minus 10% of 1/55th of the population. In Fall 2012, the legislation was amended to reduce the number of ridings to 49, shift away from census-based population numbers to the number of registered voters, and to make the process occur after every second election (approximately once every 8 years) rather than after each census (once every 10 years).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Commission\nThe commission was appointed on August 28, 2012 following the unanimous recommendation of a committee of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick. Its members are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Public hearings\nHearings were held in 13 communities around New Brunswick in October and early November 2012. Following these preliminary hearings, the commission created a draft proposal for public consideration at a second round of hearings that were held in February and March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, New boundaries\nThe commission released a draft map on January 17, 2013 which was open to changes following public consultations held from February 17 to March 6, 2013. Thereafter, the Commission prepared a final map, released on April 25. The Commission drew mostly completely new ridings. They said that because they had to reduce the number of ridings by about 10%, the tinkering that had been undertaken by previous boundaries commissions was not possible:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, New boundaries\nThe 49 ridings proposed in January were altered only slightly in the final map released on April 25. The final map was reviewed again by the commission after 23 appeals were filed backed by members of the legislature. The Commission adopted two name changes, and one minor boundary change affecting 35 voters as a result of the appeals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, New boundaries, New districts\nThese districts are almost entirely new, not reflecting any one former district or a merger of the majority of two previous districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, New boundaries, New districts\n* - measured in the percentage of its polling stations that came from the noted districts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, New boundaries, Merged districts\nThese districts are a result of a merger of large parts of two previous districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, New boundaries, Merged districts\n* - measured in the percentage of its polling stations that came from the noted districts** - riding was later renamed Oromocto-Lincoln-Fredericton in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, New boundaries, Largely unchanged districts\n* - measured in the percentage of its polling stations that came from the noted districts** - riding was later renamed Saint Croix in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Former districts\nThe commission was mandated with the creation of 49 districts, where 55 had existed before. The Commission stated this required recreating a map from scratch, though by coincidence, not design, some new districts resembled preceding districts. The old districts transposed into the new districts as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Former districts, Largely intact districts\nIn these districts, 70% or more of their polling stations continued into a new district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Former districts, Largely intact districts\n* - measured in the percentage of its polling stations that went to the noted districts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 87], "content_span": [88, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Former districts, Split districts\n* - measured in the percentage of its polling stations that went to the noted districts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Former districts, Dispersed districts\nThese districts were abolished with their parts being widely spread across several new districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Former districts, Dispersed districts\n* - measured in the percentage of its polling stations that went to the noted districts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235053-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick electoral redistribution, Court challenge\nAfter the release of the map, several Francophone organizations indicated they planned to challenge the law in court. The court challenge was initially delayed because of mediation between the groups and the provincial government. Mediation broke down without a result satisfactory to the groups, so they filed to challenge the boundaries in court. Two organizations and two individuals filed a joint suit against the process in general, and specifically including the communities of Memramcook and Neguac in majority Anglophone districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack\nAn African rock python killed two boys in Campbellton, New Brunswick, Canada, on August 5, 2013. The boys, who were aged four and six, were sleeping in an apartment above their friend's father's pet store. The python \u2013 which had been in a specially made enclosure in the apartment \u2013 had escaped, crawled through an air duct, and fallen through a ceiling tile above where the boys were sleeping. Following the incident, the python was euthanized. The python's owner was charged with criminal negligence for not preventing the deaths, but was found not guilty in a jury trial in November 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Prior incidents\nThe African rock python is one of the five largest snake species in the world (along with the green anaconda, reticulated python, Burmese python and amethystine python). At least two other examples of humans killed by an African rock python have been reported. A ten-year-old boy was reportedly killed and swallowed in South Africa in 2002, and a three-year-old boy was reportedly strangled by an African rock python in Centralia, Illinois in 1999. In another Canadian incident, a closely related species, a Burmese python, reportedly strangled a 28-year-old Brampton man in 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Event\nThe Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said the python escaped from its enclosure in the apartment and entered the living room where the boys were sleeping via the ventilation system. The python was approximately 4.3 metres (14\u00a0ft) long and weighed 45 kilograms (100\u00a0lb). The boys, ages 4 and 6, were brothers who were visiting their friend, whose father owned a pet shop below the apartment where they were staying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Event\nThe owner of the python \u2013 Jean-Claude Savoie \u2013 was interviewed by the Canadian network Global TV. According to the interview, the python was not in the pet store downstairs, but rather in a specially-built cage in the apartment upstairs. The python escaped from its enclosure through a hole in the ceiling, where a ventilation fan had been removed for maintenance. This gave the snake direct access to the air ducts in the ceiling, which then collapsed under the snake's weight above the living room. The air duct containing the snake crashed through the ceiling tiles and onto the boys, who were sleeping on a floor mattress located about 2.4 metres (8\u00a0ft) from the snake's enclosure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Controversy\nSeveral experts expressed skepticism about the incident and said that such behaviour by this type of snake would be extremely unusual, although there have been some previous reports of deadly attacks on humans. According to the reports, the snake did not consume the bodies after strangling the brothers. This \u2013 together with the fact that more than one child was killed in a single incident and that the other occupants of the apartment were reportedly not awakened by the disturbance \u2013 prompted questions about the circumstances regarding the alleged attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Controversy\nLee Parker, facilities manager at Reptilia, Canada's largest indoor reptile zoo, stated that these snakes do not \"go on killing sprees. It doesn't make sense to me.\" Though these objections were made, the possibility that the incident may be a homicide rather than an animal attack was ruled out by the RCMP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Controversy\nCourt records revealed that the pet shop owner was found pacing outside of the store with blood on his hands and wearing shorts by police who first arrived on the scene. The store owner told arriving police that the snake was still unaccounted for, leaving one to speculate whether the blood belonged to the boys or was his own (due to being bitten by the \"enraged\" snake or cut by debris from the collapsed ceiling).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Controversy\nKentucky Reptile Zoo director Jim Harrison stated that it was theoretically possible for the large python to have constricted around both boys at the same time, a theory supported by University of Texas professor, Neil Ford. Harrison also mentioned that since the boys handled a variety of farm animals (horses, llamas, goats, cats and dogs) earlier that day, they may have smelled like food to the snake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Controversy\nAlthough the pet shop was registered as a reptile zoo, police said that the province does not allow pythons and that the owner probably did not have the proper permits and authorization to keep the python under his care.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Aftermath\nThe python was euthanized by authorities. A coroner's preliminary autopsy report released on August 7 said that the boys died of asphyxiation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Aftermath\nThe two boys could be seen cleaning a large glass enclosure originally belonging to a green anaconda in pictures their mother posted on Facebook. This enclosure later held the African rock python that, unlike the green anaconda, was able to escape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Aftermath\nMember of the Legislative Assembly Donald Arseneault expressed frustration in April 2014 that the province would not review New Brunswick's Fish and Wildlife Act until the RCMP investigation was completed. Minister of Natural Resources Paul Robichaud defended the delay, saying that the completed RCMP investigation would help inform a review of the current law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235054-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Brunswick python attack, Aftermath\nAlthough the incident was treated as an accident, the RCMP arrested Savoie in Montreal on February 5, 2015. On March 31, 2015, Savoie was charged with criminal negligence for not preventing the deaths. However, he was found not guilty in a jury trial in November 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235055-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Caledonia Super Ligue\nThe New Caledonia Super Ligue 2013 season was the 40th season of the FCF since its establishment in 1962. The champions were chosen to represent the New Caledonia Super Ligue in the 2014\u201315 OFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season\nThe 2013 New England Patriots season was the franchise's 44th season in the National Football League and the 54th overall. The Patriots finished 12\u20134 and with the AFC's No. 2 seed for a second consecutive season. Along with their seeding, New England was awarded a first-round bye in the playoffs for the fourth season in a row, only the second such occurrence for any team since the league switched to a 6-team playoff format in 1990 (the others being the 1992-95 Dallas Cowboys). The Patriots defeated the Indianapolis Colts 43\u201322 in the Divisional round of the playoffs, but lost in the AFC Championship game to the Denver Broncos by a score of 26\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Roster changes, Free agency\nRB Danny Woodhead (free agent, San Diego Chargers), WR Wes Welker (free agent, Denver Broncos), WR Brandon Lloyd (released), TE Aaron Hernandez (released), G Donald Thomas (free agent, Indianapolis Colts) G Brian Waters (contract terminated), DE Trevor Scott (free agent), S Patrick Chung (free agent, Philadelphia Eagles), DT Kyle Love (released), DT Brandon Deaderick (released, Jacksonville Jaguars)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Roster changes, Free agency\nNotable Additions:QB Tim Tebow (free agent, later cut), RB LeGarrette Blount (trade), WR Danny Amendola (free agent), WR Michael Jenkins (free agent, later released), WR Donald Jones (free agent, released shortly before announcing his retirement), OT Will Svitek (free agent), DT Tommy Kelly (free agent), DT Armond Armstead (free agent/CFL), S Adrian Wilson (free agent. later placed on IR), KR/RB Leon Washington (free agent, later released, later re-signed), WR Austin Collie (free agent, later released, later re-signed).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Roster changes, 2013 draft class\nThe Patriots traded their fourth-round selection (No. 126 overall) to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in exchange for cornerback Aqib Talib and the Buccaneers' seventh-round selection (No. 226 overall). The Patriots traded their fifth-round selection (No. 162 overall) to the Washington Redskins in exchange for defensive end Albert Haynesworth, The Patriots also traded their sixth-round selection (No. 197 overall) and their 2012 fifth-round selection to the Cincinnati Bengals in exchange for wide receiver Chad Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Roster changes, 2013 draft class\nThe Patriots traded their first-round selection (No. 29th overall) to the Minnesota Vikings in exchange for selections in rounds two, three, four, and seven (No. 52, 83, 102, and 229 overall). Then, New England proceeded to trade running back Jeff Demps and the second of their three picks in the seventh round (No. 229 overall) to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for running back LeGarrette Blount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Roster changes, 2013 draft class\nFor the second time in five seasons, the Patriots elected not to choose a player in the first round of the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Schedule, Preseason\nThe performances of quarterback Tim Tebow during the preseason became a focal point of media coverage of the team. After connecting on two touchdowns to Quentin Sims in the game against the New York Giants, Tebow was released by the Patriots on August 31, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Schedule, Regular season\nFor the first time since the 2002 season, the Patriots did not play the Indianapolis Colts during the regular season, though the two teams met in the playoffs. The Colts\u2013Patriots rivalry had become one of the most known in modern era sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Buffalo Bills\nIn the season opener, both teams featured key new players to their franchises: the Bills' rookie quarterback EJ Manuel and the Patriots' new wide receiver Danny Amendola. Tom Brady struggled as the chemistry between him and his receivers was not great and as a result, Brady was inaccurate throughout the game. The Bills managed to take the lead in the 3rd quarter, but Brady mounted a masterful 4th quarter comeback by throwing quick, accurate passes to an injured Amendola to set up Gostowski for a game-winning field goal. The Patriots began their season 1\u20130 for the 10th straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. New York Jets\nThe Patriots home opener featured the long-time division rival Jets and their new rookie quarterback Geno Smith. The Patriots struck first with Tom Brady hitting a wide open Aaron Dobson for a 39-yard touchdown pass, his first of the year. Because It rained heavily throughout the game, it resulted in poor offenses from both teams. Brady failed to complete even 50% of his passes on the day. The lone bright spot on the Patriots offense was Julian Edelman, who caught 13 passes for 78 yards. After leading 13\u20133 at halftime, the Jets would try to rally with a 3-yard touchdown run by Bilal Powell, however the Pats' defense made a critical stop as the team improved to 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Patriots rolled through the struggling Buccaneers to improve to 3\u20130. Although the Patriots struggled early, they finally flexed their muscles on offense with an equally as impressive show of force on defense. On the first play of the game, Tom Brady hit Brandon Bolden for 11 yards and a first down. After an incomplete pass, Brady hit receiver Julian Edelman for 8 yards, but on 3rd-and-2, Brady was sacked by Lavonte David and Mark Barron and the Patriots punted. Josh Freeman drove the Buccaneers 50 yards in 8 plays, but Rian Lindell missed a 38-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Patriots punted again on their next drive. This time the Buccaneers drove 71 yards aided by 35 yards in Patriots penalties before Rian Lindell hit a 30-yard field goal, giving the Buccaneers a 3\u20130 lead. An 8-yard sack by Adrian Clayborn doomed the Patriots next drive as they punted again. With the drive starting at their own 45, the Bucs drove to the Patriots 34, but on 4th-and-5, rather than attempt a 52-yard field goal, they went for the first down, but Freeman's pass was incomplete. The Patriots' offense finally got going on the succeeding drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nBrady completed two passes to rookie receiver Aaron Dobson, including a 4-yard catch on 4th-and-2. Then hit Kenbrell Thompkins for a 16-yard touchdown pass as the Patriots marched 66 yards to take a 7\u20133 lead early in the 2nd quarter. The Bucs drove to the Patriots 38-yard line on their next drive once again turned it over on downs when Doug Martin was tackled for no gain by Brandon Spikes on 4th-and-1. This time Brady commandeered a 61-yard drive and hit Thompkins for a 5-yard touchdown pass, extending the lead 14\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0009-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nJosh Freeman was intercepted by ex-Buc Aqib Talib on the next drive and Stephen Gostkowski hit a 53-yard field goal right before halftime. Tom Brady threw an interception on the Patriots first drive after halftime, but the Buccaneers punted on their first two after halftime. Gostkowski later kicked a 46-yard field goal for the only scoring of the 3rd quarter as the Patriots defense shut down the Buccaneers. The Buccaneers turned it over for the third time on downs early in the fourth-quarter. The Patriots took it and kicked a 33-yard field-goal for the final score of 23\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0009-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nTom Brady had his best game of the season so far going 25/36 for 225 yards and 2 touchdowns with 1 interception despite 3 sacks. Running back Doug Martin could not reach the end zone for Tampa Bay despite running for 88 yards and Josh Freeman could not lead the Buccaneers offense to a touchdown. Tampa Bay's starting quarterback Josh Freeman would be released in the week following the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nIn their first strong test of the season, the Patriots defeated Matt Ryan and the Falcons in a close battle on Sunday Night Football to go 4\u20130. In what was billed a potential Super Bowl preview before the season, the Falcons limped to a 1\u20133 start after their defeat to New England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nAfter receiving the opening kickoff The Falcons got on the scoreboard first with a long, 14-play 75-yard drive which chewed 5:37 off the clock. They drove all the way to the Patriots 5-yard line, but had to settle for a 23-yard field goal by kicker Matt Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nThe Patriots responded later in the first quarter with a marathon drive of their own taking over 6 minutes off the clock, 12 plays and 76 yards later, third-string running back Brandon Bolden ran for a 3-yard touchdown, but the Falcons challenged and he didn't break the plane of the end zone, moving the ball back to the 1. Two plays later, Brady hit back-up tight end Matthew Mulligan for a 7\u20133 lead. On the following drive the Falcons put together another long, strong drive to the Patriots 15-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nOn 3rd-and-10, Ryan found Jacquizz Rodgers on a screen pass for 8 yards, the Falcons kept the offense on the field, though, but on 4th-and-2 Ryan couldn't complete his pass intended for Roddy White and they turned it over on downs. The Patriots took over and marched to the Falcons 31, aided by a 49-yard completion from Brady to Thompkins, before Gostkowski booted a 48-yard field goal, extending the lead to 10\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nRight before half-time, Ryan and the Falcons stormed 80 yards in 8 plays eventually, scoring on Ryan's 21-yard touchdown pass to Tony Gonz\u00e1lez with 0:46 left in the half which tied the game at 10. After the first two drives of the second half ended in punts, the Patriots put together a 14 play, 89-yard drive, taking 6:15 off the clock, driving all the way to the Falcons 4, but were forced to settle for a 22-yard field goal, giving them a 13\u201310 lead. This was the only score of the third quarter for either team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nOn the first play of the fourth quarter, on 3rd-and-19, Brady hit Thompkins for 26 yards with 15 added yards on a helmet-to-helmet hit by safety William Moore, moving the ball to the Falcons 47-yard line. On the very next play LeGarrette Blount burst through the middle and down the sideline for a 47-yard touchdown run to cap off a 6 play, 63-yard drive, increasing the lead to 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0005", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nThe Falcons responded on their next possession driving all the way to the Patriot 18, but on 3rd-and-5, Michael Buchanan sacked Ryan, and Bryant kicked a 45-yard field goal, trimming the score back to 7 at 20\u201313. It wouldn't last though. The Patriots responded by racing 80 yards in only 5 plays, aided by a 44-yard screen pass to Edelman, scoring on an incredible 18-yard touchdown catch by Thompkins for the largest lead of the night at 27\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0006", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nRyan was intercepted by Talib on the first play of the ensuing drive and the Patriots cashed in with Gostkowski's 49-yard field goal with 6:18 remaining, seemingly putting the game out of reach with a 30\u201313 score. However, the Falcons didn't quit. Down three scores the Falcons stormed 80 yards in 7 plays, taking less than two minutes, with Ryan hitting Gonzalez on an 11-yard touchdown pass, trimming the deficit to 30\u201320 with only 4:22 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0007", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nThe Falcons recovered the onside kick after it was fumbled by Sudfeld and drove to their own 7, but couldn't reach the end zone and Bryant kicked a 25-yard field goal making it a one possession deficit again at 30\u201323 with just 3:00 remaining. After an 8-yard run by Blount on 1st-down, Brady only gained a yards, and on 3rd-and-1 Blount seemingly stretched for a 1st down, but was ruled short, though replays showed he got the first down. After a timeout, the Patriots went for it on 4th-and-1, but Brady fumbled the snap for a turnover on downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0011-0008", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Atlanta Falcons\nStarting from their own 38, Ryan connected with Julio Jones for a 49-yard bomb to the Patriots 13. After back-to-back incompletions, Ryan hit Jacquizz Rodgers for 3 yards to the 10, setting up a do-or-die 4th-and-7. Ryan threw the pass in White's direction, but the pass was broken up by Talib with just 0:41 seconds left. Two kneels by Brady sealed the deal and the Patriots were 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Patriots first loss of the season came in Cincinnati, as the Patriots struggled to gain any offense against a great Bengals defense. Tom Brady's consecutive games with a TD pass streak ended at 52, two games short of Drew Brees' record, against the same team which he had started the streak in 2010. From start to finish the Bengals defensive line led by Geno Atkins made mince meat of the Patriots offensive line. Brady was hit and sacked early and often on the day. Both teams' defenses played extremely well in the game The first quarter was tough, physically demanding, and scoreless with both teams' first two drives ending in punts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Cincinnati Bengals\nAndy Dalton drove the Bengals to the Patriots' 9-yard line, but was intercepted by Brandon Spikes. The scoring started in the second quarter. After a Bengals punt, two completions and a 15-yard penalty moved the ball to the Bengals 32 yard-line. However, Blount fumbled late in the 2nd quarter after being tackled by Carlos Dunlap with Reggie Nelson recovering at the Cincinnati 30. Dalton sustained a short, 49-yard drive that ended in a 39-yard field-goal by Mike Nugent. The big play was an 18-yard catch by A. J. Green on 3rd-and-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Patriots punted on their next possession, but forced a three-and-out on their next drive. Brady led the Patriots to the Bengals 24-yard line and Stephen Gostowski kicked a 42-yard field goal with 13 seconds remaining in the first half to tie the game at 3\u20133. Cincinnati scored on their second drive of the second half. Marching down the field on a 13-play, 59-yard drive, eating 6:17 off the clock, that culminated in a 50-yard field goal by Nugent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Cincinnati Bengals\nOn their first possession of the fourth quarter, the Bengals scored the only touchdown of the day, with a 14-play, 93-yard drive, taking 7:48 off the clock, scoring on a 1-yard touchdown run by BenJarvus Green-Ellis on 4th-and-goal, extending the lead to 13\u20133. Giovani Bernard had a 28-yard run on 3rd-and-15, to the Bengals 30 on the drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0013-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Cincinnati Bengals\nOn their next drive, the Patriots, aided by a 53-yard completion to Dobson, though Dobson momentarily fumbled, drove all the way to the Bengals 1-yard line, but Blount was stuffed for no gain on 1st-down and two straight incompletions for the Patriots to settle for a 19-yard field goal by Gostkowski, trimming the deficit to 13\u20136. On the Bengals next drive, McCourty forced Bernard to fumble with Mayo recovering at the Bengals 46. On the drive, Brady launched a deep pass to Dobson, who caught it momentarily, but Terrence Newman punched the ball out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0013-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Cincinnati Bengals\nAfter an incomplete pass intended for Amendola, Brady was sacked by Wallace Gilberry and the Patriots punted. After a Bengals three-and-out, the Patriots drove to the Cincinnati 27 yard line before throwing a final fade intended for Dobson, but the ball was under-thrown and intercepted by Pacman Jones with 0:17 seconds remaining, and the Patriots lost for the first time of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Cincinnati Bengals\nBrady completed just 18 of 38 passes for 197 yards and 4 sacks. Danny Amendola had 4 catches for 55 yards in his first game since the season-opener due to a knee injury. The Bengals out-gained the Patriots 348\u2013241, had more first downs 21\u201315, led in time of possession 35:44-24:16. Both teams had two turnovers apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nIn a thrilling back and forth affair, the Patriots managed a sensational comeback against the undefeated Saints. Following the opening kickoff, Brady put together a 14-play 60-yard drive. The Patriots drove to the Saints 12, but on 3rd-and-7 Tom Brady was sacked for a 5-yard loss forcing them to settle for Stephen Gostkowski's 35-yard field goal to take the opening lead 3\u20130. The Saints went 3-and-out on their opening drive and the Patriots followed that with a 3-and-out of their own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Saints responded by marching 73 yards taking over five minutes off the clock with Drew Brees tossing a 3-yard touchdown pass to Travaris Cadet. The Patriots immediately responded by slowly moving 80 yards to take a 10\u20137 lead on Stevan Ridley's 1-yard touchdown run. The Saints went 3-and-out yet again on their next drive and the Patriots took advantage with a long drive taking up 4:52 seconds in 12 plays as they marched 69 yards to increase their lead to 17\u20137 on another Stevan Ridley touchdown run, this one from 4 yards out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nPunts filled the !of the half and the Patriots led 17\u20137 at halftime. The Saints took the opening kickoff of the second half 70 yards to the Patriots 10, but the Patriots kept them out of the end zone and Garrett Hartley kicked a 28-yard field goal to trim the lead 17\u201310. After a Patriots 3-and-out, the Saints stormed 67 yards with Khiry Robinson rushing for a 3-yard touchdown to suddenly tie the game at 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Patriots managed to respond on the follow-up drive marching 54 yards in 12 plays, but settled for Gostkowski's 54-yard field goal to retake the lead 20\u201317. Early in the fourth quarter on 3rd-and-12, the Drew Brees called a timeout to avoid delay of game, but the referees didn't see it so Brees was forced to snap the ball. Brees forced a pass intended for Jimmy Graham, but was intercepted by Kyle Arrington at the Saints 25 and returned for 5 yards to the Saints 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Patriots managed to reach the Saints 5-yard line, but were kept out of the end zone and Gostkowski kicked a 23-yard field goal to increase th Patriots lead to 23\u201317. The Saints immediately responded by storming 81 yards in 5:05 with Brees connecting with Kenny Stills on a 34-yard touchdown pass on 3rd-and-20, giving the Saints their second lead of the night 24\u201323. Four straight incompletions from Brady on the next drive seemingly ended the game, but the Patriots held the Saints to only three yards and Hartley kicked a 39-yard field goal to increase the lead to 27\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0005", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nBrady threw a seemingly game deciding interception with just 2:16 remaining but once again, the Patriots defense managed to hold the Saints to a 3-and-out (mostly due to the Saints erratic play calling). Brady got the ball back at his own 30 with 1:13 remaining and no timeouts, and mounted his 39th career game-winning drive. Tom Brady hit Edelman for 23 yards on the first play to move the ball to the Saints 47.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0006", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nHe then completed passes to Austin Collie for 15 yards and Aaron Dobson for 6 yards moving the ball to the Saints 26-yard line with 0:35 seconds left. Back-to-back incompletions set up a 4th-and-4. Brady completed a pass to Collie again for 9 yards. Brady spiked the ball at the 17 with :10 seconds remaining. On the very next play, Brady connected with Thompkins for a 7-yard touchdown pass with five seconds remaining on the clock giving the Patriots the 30\u201327 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0015-0007", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Saints attempted a hook-and-lateral on the kickoff, but Darren Sproles fumbled and Jamie Collins recovered to end the game. The win (his 28th comeback win and 40th game-winning 4th quarter drive) was also his first in four tries against a Drew Brees-quarterbacked team. With the exception of the final drive, the Patriots pass protection was horrid allowing 5 sacks. The Patriots pass defense played very well, with vaunted tight end Jimmy Graham not catching a single pass all night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 96], "content_span": [97, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at New York Jets\nThe Patriots played the Jets for the second time this season, with Rob Gronkowski making his first appearance of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at New York Jets\nThe Jets put together a 12 play, 90-yard march on their opening drive, scoring on Smith's 12-yard touchdown pass to Kerley for an early 7\u20130 lead. The Patriots countered though, racing 80 yards in 10 plays, scoring on a 1-yard touchdown run by Bolden to tie the game. The Jets drove to the Patriots 20 on their next drive, but Smith was intercepted by rookie Logan Ryan who returned it 79 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at New York Jets\nThe Jets responded on their next drive, marching 61 yards to the Patriots 19, and Folk trimmed the deficit to 14\u201310 on a 37-yard field goal. After the next two drives ended in punts, a 38-yard return by Edelman set the Patriots up well at the Jets 28. Six plays later, Ridley scored on a 17-yard touchdown run, increasing the Patriots lead to 21\u201310. Neither team scored for the rest of the half and the Patriots led 21\u201310 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at New York Jets\nOn the first play of the second half, Brady was sacked by Quinton Coples and just managed to recover his own fumble, but on the next play Brady was intercepted by Antonio Allen who returned it 23 yards for a touchdown, trimming the deficit to 21\u201317. Three possessions later, the Jets marched 52 yards in 8 plays, scoring on Smith's 8-yard touchdown run, giving the Jets a 24\u201321 lead. After another Patriots three-and-out, Josh Cribbs gave the Jets the ball at the Patriots 38 after a 21-yard return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0017-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at New York Jets\nThe Jets drove to the Patriots 19 and settled for a 37-yard field goal by Folk, increasing the Jets lead to 27\u201321. The Patriots answered on their next drive, marching 62 yards to the Jets 21, with Gostkowski kicking a 39-yard field goal, trimming the deficit to 27-24 early in the fourth quarter. Three possessions later, the Patriots drove 66 yards to the Jets 26 and Gostkowski tied the game 27\u201327 on a 44-yard field goal with less than :20 seconds left in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0017-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at New York Jets\nAfter a Patriots three-and-out, the Jets drove to the Patriots 38, but Folk missed a 56-yard field goal, giving the Patriots the ball back, but a controversial unsportsmanlike penalty was called on New England's Chris Jones for pushing his teammate into the offensive line, giving the Jets 15 yds and a first down. Nick Folk's second attempt at 42 yds didn't miss and the Jets won their first game against New England in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: vs. Miami Dolphins\nMiami dominated the first half, scoring 17 points as the Patriots looked ugly, struggling to gain any offense except for a field goal. Brady threw for only 25 yards in the first half (his fewest since 2003), and an interception only worsened his situation. It looked dangerously like New England would lose back to back division games for the first time since 2002. But the second half proved better, as Brady and the Patriots came out strong and scored 24 unanswered to win 27\u201317 thanks to Miami turnovers. Brady finished with just 116 passing yards while three Patriots backs combined for 147 rushing yards (Brady himself added five more).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nFour plays into the Steelers opening drive, Ben Roethlisberger was strip-sacked by Ninkovich with Joe Vellano recovering at the Patriots 42. However, the Patriots were forced to a three-and-out. Two possessions later, The Patriots marched all the way to the Steelers 1, but Ridley was tackled for no gain on 4th-and-Goal. After a false start penalty on Marcus Gilbert, Roethlisberger was intercepted at the Steelers 34 by McCourty. On the first play, Brady hit Amendola for a touchdown, giving the Patriots a 7\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nPittsburgh responded by driving to the Patriots 32, but on 4th-and-1 Le'Veon Bell was tackled for a 1-yard loss. The Patriots made Pittsburgh pay, racing 63 yards in 6 plays, scoring on Brady's 19-yard touchdown pass to Gronkowski, increasing the lead to 14\u20130. With the catch, Gronk already reached 100 yards, making this his 11th career 100 yard receiving game, extending his record for Patriots' tight ends. The Steelers drove to the Patriots 12, but settled for a 30-yard field goal by Shaun Suisham, trimming the deficit to 14\u20133. The Patriots answered with a field goal, as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nDriving all the way to the Steelers 3, but settled for Gostkowski's 21-yard field goal, making the score 17\u20133. The Steelers put a dent in the Patriots lead on their next drive, racing 71 yards in less than two minutes, scoring on Ben's 27-yard touchdown pass to Antonio Brown, making the score 17\u201310. The Patriots countered, though, racing 77 yards in under two minutes, too, scoring on Ridley's 1-yard touchdown run, giving the Patriots a 24\u201310 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0019-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nOn the fifth play of the first drive of the second half, Ridley was stripped by Troy Polamalu with LaMarr Woodley recovering at the Patriots 36. Five plays later, Ben hit Jerricho Cotchery for a 20-yard touchdown, trimming the deficit to 24\u201317. After a Patriots three-and-out, aided by a 24-yard return by Brown to the Patriots 46, the Steelers raced 46 yards in 5 plays, scoring on Ben's 8-yard touchdown pass to Cotchery, tying the game 24-24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0019-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Patriots drove to the Steelers 5 on their next drive, but on 3rd-and-3, Brady was sacked for a 9-yard loss by Jason Worilds, and Gostkowski kicked a 32-yard field goal, giving the Patriots a 27\u201324 lead. After a Steelers punt, the Patriots started to take over. Edelman returned the punt 43 yards to the Steelers 34. The Patriots proceeded to race 34 yards in 1:38, scoring on Brady's 17-yard touchdown pass to Dobson, increasing the lead to 34\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0019-0005", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nAfter a Steelers punt, the Patriots drove 61 yards in 8 plays, scoring on Ridley's 5-yard touchdown run, widening the lead to 41\u201324. Earlier on the drive, Ridley ran for 7 yards, making this his 5th-career 100-yard rushing game. The Steelers countered on their next drive, storming 80 yards in 10 plays, scoring Cotchery's third touchdown reception, trimming the deficit to 41\u201331. However, the Patriots were unstoppable. On the second play of the drive, after a 12-yard run by Blount, Brady hit Dobson for an 81-yard touchdown bomb, widening the lead to 48-31 late in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0019-0006", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThis was Brady's 3rd career 400-yard game, moving him to 7th on the all-time passing list with 47,062 career passing yards, passing Fran Tarkenton. This was his 37th career game with 3 touchdown passes. This was Dobson's 1st career 100-yard receiving game. The Steelers reached their own 48 on their next drive, but Harmon intercepted Ben at the Patriots 30 and returned it 42 yards to the Steelers 28. The drive lasted only two plays: a Blount 23-yard run and a Blount 5-yard run for a touchdown, putting the game away 55\u201331. The Steelers drove to the Patriots 39, but turned the ball over on downs. Brady took a knee to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nNew England posted its biggest single-game offensive output of the season to date, and the third highest in team history (630 yards) as the Patriots offense finally clicked in what amounted to a blowout win over the struggling Steelers. Brady threw for 432 yards and four touchdowns, while Aaron Dobson, Danny Amendola and Rob Gronkowski combined for 395 yards and four touchdowns. Ridley also had over 100 yds rushing and two touchdowns despite a third-quarter fumble. Ben Roethlisberger threw for 400 yds and 4 TDs as well, but also threw 2 interceptions. The 55 points was the most scored against the Steelers in team history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 97], "content_span": [98, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nTen years after their most famous meeting, the Patriots and Panthers battled back and forth on an exciting edition of Monday Night Football. After both teams punted on their opening drive, the Panthers stormed 75 yards in just 9 plays. On 3rd-and-3 at the Patriots 34, Cam Newton threw an incomplete pass, but Aqib Talib was flagged for unnecessary roughness. This moved the ball to the 19 and gave Carolina a new set of downs. A few plays later, Newton hit eventual Patriot Brandon LaFell for a 9-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nThe Patriots responded by driving to the 13-yard line of Carolina, but Stevan Ridley fumbled after being tackled by Kawann Short with Mario Addison recovering for Carolina. The Patriots had taken 6:41 off the clock, but had come away with zero points. Carolina responded by driving 63 yards to the Patriots 25-yard line, taking 6:01 off the clock, and Graham Gano drilled a 42-yard field goal, extending the lead to 10\u20130 with only 5:02 remaining in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nThe Patriots drove 42 yards to the Carolina 24, but Carolina's stout defense held the Patriots to only a field goal as Gostkowski drained a 42-year field goal with 1:09 remaining in the half. Carolina ran out the clock going to the locker room up 10\u20133, but Brady led New England back on another second-half comeback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nThe Patriots took the opening drive of the half for a touchdown marching 82 yards in only 8 plays with Brady throwing a short pass to Rob Gronkowski who carried three Carolina defenders into the end zone for a 9-yard touchdown, tying the score at 10-10. The Panthers responded immediately with an amazing 13 play, 81 yard drive, including 3 3rd-down conversions. On 3rd-and-7 at the Carolina 37, Cam Newton beat the Patriots blitz with a 14-yard scramble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nLater on 3rd-and-1 at the Patriots 40, Mike Tolbert ran for 2 yards and finally, on 3rd-and-4 at the Patriots 15, Newton connected with Greg Olsen for a 15-yard touchdown retaking the lead 17\u201310. The Patriots answered right back driving 80 yards using only 9 plays with Ridley redeeming himself with a 1-yard touchdown run tying the game at 17-17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0005", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nAfter a Panthers three-and-out the Patriots drove 30 yards to the Panthers 8-yard line, but the Panthers defense stood strong and held the Patriots to a 26-yard Gostkowski field goal, giving the Patriots their lead at 20\u201317 with 6:32 remaining in the game. However, Cam Newton led the Panthers down the field on a 13 play, 83 yard drive that took 5:33 off the clock and retook the lead at 24\u201320 with only :59 seconds left. Once again the Panthers converted 3 3rd-downs. On 3rd-and-6 at the Carolina 21, Newton ran for 15 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0006", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nOn 3rd-and-2 at the Carolina 44, Newton ran for 3 more yards. Finally, on 3rd-and-7 at the Patriots 36, Devin McCourty was flagged for a questionable pass interference on Greg Olsen. Newton finished the drive with a 25-yard touchdown pass to Ted Ginn Jr. on 2nd-and-15. On the Patriots final drive, Brady threw three straight incompletions to start the drive. On 4th-and-10, Brady connected with Gronkowski for 23 yards to the Patriots 43. After an incomplete pass, Brady fired an 11-yard pass to Danny Amendola to the Panthers 46.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0007", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nFour plays later Brady threw an incomplete pass intended for Aaron Dobson on 3rd-and-10, but Melvin White was called for pass interference, moving the ball to the Panthers 36. A 7-yard completion to Dobson an 11-yard completion to Shane Vereen moved the ball to the 18-yard line with :03 seconds left. On the last play Brady threw a pass to Rob Gronkowski, but was intercepted in the end zone by Robert Lester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0021-0008", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: at Carolina Panthers\nHowever, yet another controversial call by the referees decided the outcome of the game, as the Panther's Luke Kuechly was called for pass interference on Gronkowski, but the flag was picked up and announced there was no foul due to the ball being \"uncatchable\", nullifying the penalty and resulting in end of the game. However, after the game ended, media sources debated the ruling on the field, and it was the opinion of many that the call was incorrect and the Patriots were robbed of a chance to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Denver Broncos\nIn the 14th installment of the Brady-Manning Rivalry, the Patriots and Broncos battled in one of the most exciting editions of NBC Sunday Night Football in recent memory. The expected shootout between two potent offenses did not occur at the start of the game, as three New England turnovers on their first three drives of the game gave the Broncos a 17\u20130 lead in the 1st quarter. It was looking to be one of the most embarrassing performances in Patriot history as an additional touchdown gave Manning and the Broncos a 24\u20130 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Denver Broncos\nHowever, Brady and the Patriots were not going to let the Broncos run away with a blowout victory at Gillette. They regrouped in the locker room and came out to score 31 unanswered points, scoring on five straight drives out of the half, helped by three Denver turnovers of their own. The two halves were complete polar opposites, each displaying offensive domination on one side and defensive struggles on the other, flipping 180\u02da at the half. However, the Broncos managed to tie the game at 31 late in the 4th, eventually sending the game to overtime; during the tying drive Manning was intercepted by Aqib Talib but the pick was overturned on a pass interference penalty on Talib.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Denver Broncos\nThe Patriots won the coin toss, but surprisingly elected to defend first, hoping to stop the Broncos from scoring and to take advantage of the wind for a potential game-winning field goal. This was exactly what happened, as the two teams traded punts twice, but on New England's second punt, Broncos cornerback Tony Carter ran into the punt, and Patriots' Nate Ebner recovered the ball on the Broncos' 20 yard line, setting up Gostkowski's game winning 31 yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Denver Broncos\nThe 24 point deficit was the largest comeback in Brady's and the Patriots' history, and gave Brady his 10th win in 14 meetings over Manning-led teams. Brady threw for 344 yard and 3 TD's in the contest, and WR Julian Edelman had a career day with 110 receiving yards for two scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Denver Broncos\nThe win from down 24 points was the largest comeback win in Patriots history, surpassing 1984's comeback from down 23\u20130 against the Seahawks. The Patriots would break this comeback record three years later in Super Bowl LI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nNew England escaped Houston with a win as the Patriots and the Texans battled in a closely fought game a week after coming back to win against the Denver Broncos. After both teams punted on their opening drive Houston opened up the game by scoring the first points of the game on a touchdown. After a 2-yard run by Ben Tate, Case Keenum hit Andre Johnson on back-to-back completions for 42 yards, moving the ball to the Patriots 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nTate scored on a touchdown run on the very next play for the early 7\u20130 lead as the Patriots continued their trend of falling behind early. On the Patriots next drive they reached their own 49-yard line, but Tom Brady was intercepted by Jonathan Joseph on an underthrown ball intended for Rob Gronkowski. After an incomplete pass attempt to Andre Johnson, tight end Garrett Graham was called for a crucial offensive pass interference penalty, moving the ball 10 yards back to the 41.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nThey managed to reach the 25, but were four yards short of a first down and they settled for a Randy Bullock 43-yard field goal. New England answered with a touchdown on their next drive, moving 55 yards in just 6 plays with Brady hitting Gronkowski for a 23-yard touchdown pass. to trim the score to 10\u20137. The Texans reached the Patriots 27 on their next drive, but Case Keenum was intercepted by safety Logan Ryan. The Patriots drove from their own 20 to the Texans 37, but Stephen Gostkowski missed a 55-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nThe Texans stormed 55 yards in just 7 plays to take the lead 17\u20137, scoring on Ben Tate's 20-yard touchdown run with 1:52 remaining in the half. The Patriots punted and the Texans ran out the clock as the game went to halftime at 17\u20137. Again continuing a trend, Brady and the Pats came out of the locker room hot. The Patriots marched 55 yards using 7 plays with the big play being a Tom Brady connection to Rob Gronkowski for 50 yards moving the ball from the Patriots 37 to the Texans 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nA 12-yard pass moved the ball to the 1 where fullback James Develin ran it in for the touchdown, trimming the deficit to 17\u201314. Houston went three-and-out on their next possession and the Patriots struck for another touchdown. This time they moved the ball 73 yards in merely 7 plays with Brady darting a 7-yard touchdown pass to Shane Vereen to take their first lead at 21\u201317. However, the Texans immediately countered by storming 81 yards, taking 10 plays and chewing up 5:55 and culminating with Case Keenum scrambling for a 5-yard touchdown, retaking the lead at 24\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0005", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nLike the Texans, the Patriots immediately countered, storming 81 yards again, this time taking only 7 plays with LeGarrette Blount rushing for a 7-yard touchdown with 13:09 remaining in the game. Once again though, the Texans answered going 80 yards in just 3 plays to retake the lead 31\u201328. On the drive a 66-yard completion to DeAndre Hopkins moved the ball to the Patriots 14. Two plays later, Ben Tate ran in a 10-yard touchdown. The Patriots took the ball and drove 40 yards in 9 plays to the Texans 35-yard line and Gostkowski connected on a 53-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0006", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nThe Texans went three-and-out giving the Patriots the ball with a chance to take the lead. They drove to the Texans 35-yard line in 7 plays where Gostkowski drilled another clutch 53-yard field goal to give the Patriots a 34\u201331 lead with 3:12 remaining in the game. The Texans reached their own 43, but consecutive incomplete passes on 3rd and 4th down gave the ball to the Patriots. The Texans forced a punt, however, giving them one last chance to win or tie and force overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0025-0007", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nUnfortunately for the Texans, they couldn't move the ball and an incompletion as time expired gave the Patriots the win. The win marks the 9th on the year for the Patriots, ensuring their 13th winning season in a row, and ended a 3-game road losing streak. The loss puts the Texans at 2\u201310, easily their worst season since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: at Houston Texans\nThis marked the Patriots' only game outside of the Eastern Time Zone during the 2013 regular season (the Patriots would go on to play the AFC Championship Game in the Mountain Time Zone at Denver).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe Patriots won their third straight come-from-behind victory on a thrilling finish in Foxboro. The Browns took the opening kickoff and marched 47 yards in 10 plays to the New England 25-yard line where Billy Cundiff converted on a 43-yard field goal attempt. After both teams punted on their next possession, Tom Brady was intercepted by D'Qwell Jackson on a pass intended for Josh Boyce. The driving Browns appeared primed for a touchdown, but a penalty and an incomplete pass forced them to settle for Cundiff's 37-yard field goal increasing the lead to 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Cleveland Browns\nIt was all punts for the rest of the half as the Browns lead 6\u20130 at halftime. After the Patriots first drive of the half ended in a punt, the Browns stormed 73 yards using only 5 plays with Jason Campbell bombing a 40-yard touchdown pass to Gary Barnidge, the missed two-point conversion kept the score, 12\u20130. On the Patriots next drive, Tom Brady was strip-sacked by Paul Kruger and the Browns recovered. To make matters worse, Rob Gronkowski tore his ACL earlier on the drive, ending his season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0027-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Cleveland Browns\nBrady lead a touchdown scoring drive to put them within five points with 61 seconds remaining. The Patriots successfully recovered their onside kick attempt for the first time in team history since 1995, also against the Browns, who ironically were coached by Bill Belichick that year. On the ensuing New England drive, the Browns took a pass interference penalty in the endzone to give the Patriots a 1st and goal. New England took the 27\u201326 lead on a 1-yard pass by Brady to Amendola with 31 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0027-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Cleveland Browns\nAfter failing to convert on the 2 point play, the Browns attempted to get into field goal range for the win. With 1 second remaining, Billy Cundiff attempted a 58-yard field goal but fell short of the uprights, giving the Patriots their 10th win of the season, and their 11th straight 10 win season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Patriots traveled to Miami to face the Dolphins, looking to clinch the AFC East, playing their first game without Gronkowski since Week 6 vs the Saints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nAfter a Dolphins punt, the Patriots marched 83 yards to the Dolphins 4 on their opening drive, which took half of the quarter, but ended with a Gostkowski field goal. The next four drives of the game ended in punts. Midway through the second quarter, the Dolphins reached the Patriots 24. However, John Denney fumbled the snap and Nate Ebner recovered at the Patriots 31. The Patriots stormed 69 yards, scoring on Brady's 13-yard touchdown pass to Michael Hoomanawanui, increasing the lead to 10\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Dolphins got on the board on their next drive, racing 82 yards in just over a minutes, with Tannehill bombing a 39-yard touchdown pass to Wallace, making the score 10-7 Patriots at halftime. The Patriots drove all the way to the Dolphins 20 on their next drive, but Gostkowski missed a 38-yard field goal. The Dolphins managed to drive all the way to the Patriots 14, but could only chalk up a 32-yard field goal, tying the game 10-10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nAfter a Patriots punt, the Dolphins strung together a 10 play, 66-yard drive, scoring on a 2-yard touchdown pass to Daniel Thomas, giving the Dolphins a 17\u201310 lead a few plays into the fourth quarter. The Patriots responded by driving all the way to the Dolphins 5-yard line, but were forced to settle for a 23-yard field goal, trimming the deficit to 17\u201313. After a Dolphins punt, the Patriots raced 73 yards in just 6 plays, scoring on Brady's 24-yard touchdown pass to Edelman, giving the Patriots a 20\u201317 lead with just 4:07 remaining in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0029-0003", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nHowever, Gostkowski booted the ensuing kickoff out of bounds, giving the Dolphins the ball at their own 40. Facing a 3rd-and-16 at their own 34, Tannehill hit Brian Hartline for an 11-yard gain, then on 4th-and-5, Tannehill hit Charles Clay for a 6-yard gain and a first-down. Five plays later, Tannehill hit Marcus Thigpen for a 14-yard touchdown, giving the Dolphins a 24\u201320 lead with 1:15 remaining in the game. Facing a 4th-and-8 at their own 33, Brady hit Amendola for a 12-yard gain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0029-0004", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nFour plays later, Brady converted at 3rd-and-10 with a 12-yard screen pass to Edelman to the Dolphins 19. Four plays later, facing a 4th-and-5 at the Dolphins 14, Brady was intercepted in the end zone by Michael Thomas with 0:02 seconds left. Tannehill took a knee and the Dolphins won the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nMiami's victory was their first over the Patriots since 2009, having lost the last seven games in the division rivalry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: at Baltimore Ravens\nBefore the start of the game, the Patriots clinched the AFC East for the 5th straight year with Miami's 0\u201319 loss to Buffalo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Patriots played arguably their best all-around game of the year in a 41\u20137 domination of the Ravens. New England's defense was superb, forcing three fourth down turnovers, three interceptions and a missed field goal, while only allowing one touchdown as Joe Flacco struggled while playing with an MCL sprain. Brady led the Patriots to an early 14\u20130 lead and never looked back. After New England took a 27\u20137 lead late in the 4th quarter, Baltimore gave up two defensive scores in the final two minutes to lose by 34 points, the largest losing margin the Ravens have ever had at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThe Patriots earned their 4th straight first round bye and the AFC's second seed with a 34\u201320 win over the Bills in the 108th meeting of the rivalry. New England dominated the first half, taking a 16\u20133 lead into the locker room. Buffalo would score 17 points to keep it a close contest but could not overcome the Patriots defense enough to take the lead, as New England forced three fourth down turnovers for the second straight week. Julian Edelman became the 3rd player in New England history to make 100 receptions for 1,000 yards on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: vs. Buffalo Bills\nStephen Gostkowski broke his own team record for field goals made by kicking his 38th of the year. The story of the game though was Legarrette Blount, who had a career day, rushing for 189 yards and two touchdowns, and added 145 yards on two kickoff returns for a total of 334 all purpose yards on the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoff Game: vs. #4 Indianapolis Colts\nThe Patriots punched their ticket to their 3rd straight AFC Championship game in a 43\u201322 dominating victory over the rival Colts. In the week leading up to the AFC Division round matchup, the Patriots made their gameplan clear, intending to take advantage of the Colts' questionable run defense by using a healthy dose of their three threats out of the backfield: Legarrette Blount, Stevan Ridley and Shane Vereen. This gameplan proved to be extremely effective, as New England scored six touchdowns on the ground, with Blount setting a franchise postseason record by scoring four of the six TD's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 100], "content_span": [101, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoff Game: vs. #4 Indianapolis Colts\nThe three backs combined for 235 yards rushing, 166 coming from Blount alone, also a franchise postseason record. The Patriot defense was exemplary, picking off Andrew Luck four times, sacking him three times and relatively shutting down star wide receiver T.Y. Hilton for the majority of the game, although he did finish with 103 yards on four receptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 100], "content_span": [101, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235056-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Patriots season, Postseason, AFC Championship: at #1 Denver Broncos\nWith the loss, the Patriots became the first team to lose consecutive AFC championship games since the New York Jets in 2009 and 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season\nThe 2013 New England Revolution season was the team's eighteenth year of existence, all in Major League Soccer. The team also participated in the Desert Diamond Cup and U.S. Open Cup. The season began with a 1-0 win at the Chicago Fire on March 9 and concluded with a 1-0 win at Columbus Crew on October 27. That victory saw the Revolution make the playoffs for the first time since the 2009 season. The team lost 4-3 on aggregate to eventual champions Sporting Kansas City in the Conference Semifinals of the 2013 MLS Cup Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Squad statistics, Individual\nUpdated to match played December 3, 2013Source:\u00a0Italic: denotes player is no longer with team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Squad statistics, Top assists\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Squad statistics, Top Shutouts\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Standings\nNote: the table below has no impact on playoff qualification and is used solely for determining host of the MLS Cup, certain CCL spots, and 2014 MLS draft. The conference tables are the sole determinant for teams qualifying to the playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Standings\nSource: MLS ResultsPld = 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, 34], "section_span": [36, 80], "content_span": [81, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Miscellany, Allocation ranking\nNew England is in the #5 position in the MLS Allocation Ranking. The allocation ranking is the mechanism used to determine which MLS club has first priority to acquire a U.S. National Team player who signs with MLS after playing abroad, or a former MLS player who returns to the league after having gone to a club abroad for a transfer fee. A ranking can be traded, provided that part of the compensation received in return is another club's ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235057-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New England Revolution season, Miscellany, International roster spots\nNew England has 8 MLS International Roster Slots for use in the 2013 season. Each club in Major League Soccer is allocated 8 international roster spots and no New England trades have been reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235058-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Hampshire Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 New Hampshire Wildcats football team represented the University of New Hampshire in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 15th-year head coach Sean McDonnell and played their home games at Cowell Stadium. They were a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 10\u20135, 6\u20132 in CAA play to finish in a tie for second place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they defeated Lafayette, Maine, and Southeastern Louisiana to advance to the semifinals where they lost to North Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235059-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale\nThe 2013 New Haven Open at Yale (New Haven Open at Yale presented by First Niagara for sponsorship reasons) was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 45th edition of the New Haven Open at Yale, and part of the Premier Series of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Cullman-Heyman Tennis Center in New Haven, Connecticut, United States, from August 16 through August 24. It was the last event on the 2013 US Open Series before the 2013 US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235059-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235059-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry from a lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235059-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235059-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale, Finals, Doubles\nSania Mirza / Zheng Jie defeated Anabel Medina Garrigues / Katarina Srebotnik, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235060-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale \u2013 Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions, but decided not to defend their title together. Huber partnered up with Nuria Llagostera Vives, while Raymond played alongside Flavia Pennetta. Huber and Llagostera Vives defeated Pennetta and Raymond in the first round, but lost to Anabel Medina Garrigues and Katarina Srebotnik in the semifinals. Sania Mirza and Zheng Jie won the title, defeating Medina Garrigues and Srebotnik in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235061-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale \u2013 Singles\nPetra Kvitov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but she was defeated in the final by Simona Halep 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235061-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Haven Open at Yale \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235062-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Jersey State Senate election\nThe 2013 New Jersey State Senate election coincided with Chris Christie's landslide re-election to a second term as Governor of New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235062-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Jersey State Senate election\n2013 was an election of remarkable stability in the Senate, as just one seat (that of gubernatorial nominee Buono) failed to return its incumbent to office. As a corollary, no seats changed party for the second consecutive election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235063-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Jersey gubernatorial election\nThe 2013 New Jersey gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the governor of New Jersey. Incumbent Republican Governor Chris Christie ran for reelection to a second term in office. He faced Democratic nominee Barbara Buono and six others in the general election. Christie was reelected with over 60 percent of the vote and carried 19 of the state's 21 counties, with Buono only winning heavily Democratic Hudson and Essex. However, less than 40% of registered voters cast ballots, which was the lowest ever for a gubernatorial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235063-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 New Jersey gubernatorial election\nChristie became the first Republican gubernatorial candidate to win more than 50 percent of the vote since Thomas Kean's landslide victory in 1985. He won 21% of African Americans and 51% of Latinos. As of 2021, this is the most recent time a Republican won the governorship of New Jersey or won any statewide election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235063-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Jersey gubernatorial election\nChristie was criticized for spending an additional $12\u201325 million of state money to hold a special election for United States Senator for New Jersey three weeks earlier on October 16, instead of simply holding the special election on November 5, concurrent with the already scheduled gubernatorial election. The Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate was popular Newark mayor Cory Booker, who is black, and it was thought that Booker's presence on the ballot would attract more black and other minority voters who would be likely to vote for Buono. However, due to Christie's large margin of victory, it is unlikely that this potential extra turnout would have changed the outcome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235063-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Jersey gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Candidates, Removed from Primary Ballot\nAraujo, Bergmanson, Boss, and Webster had their nominating petitions challenged by the New Jersey Democratic State Committee; only Webster's petitions were found to be valid therefore allowing his name to remain on the primary ballot with Buono. Araujo and Boss subsequently filed new petitions to run in the general election as independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl\nThe 2013 New Mexico Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on Saturday, December 21, 2013 at University Stadium on the campus of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The eighth annual New Mexico Bowl, it featured the Colorado State Rams, representing the Mountain West Conference, against the Washington State Cougars, representing the Pac-12 Conference. The game began at 12:00 noon MST and was televised on ESPN. It was the first of the 35 2013\u201314 NCAA football bowl games that concluded the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl\nSponsored by Gildan Activewear, the game was officially known as the Gildan New Mexico Bowl. The Rams won 48\u201345 after they were down 15 points in the final minutes of the game; they scored a touchdown, Washington State lost two fumbles, after both of which, Colorado State scored, and after the latter of which, as time expired, they kicked a field goal to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Teams\nThe game has conference tie-in agreements with the Mountain West Conference (MWC), which ultimately sent Colorado State, a team that finished 7\u20136 during the season and had not appeared in a bowl since 2008 (they played in the New Mexico Bowl), who was the fourth selection from the conference, and the Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12), which ultimately sent Washington State, who was making their first bowl appearance since 2003 (they played in the Holiday Bowl), and was the seventh selection from the conference. The bowl was the first meeting between the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup\nFew media outlets thought this would be a particularly good game to watch, as it featured two mediocre teams, however since it was the first bowl game of the year, it received a decent amount of hype beforehand. One preview noted that it should be a fun game to watch, as it \"promises to be a high-scoring\" game. Both teams featured strong offenses, however they juxtaposed one another in that Washington State, as typical of Mike Leach-coached football teams, heavily relied on the passing game, whereas Colorado State relied heavily upon the running game. Though Washington State was only a 3.5 point favorite, college football analysts were nearly unanimous in predicting a Washington State victory by an even larger margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State\nLed by Mike Leach, in his second-year at Washington State, the Cougars opened the season with a loss to Auburn, an eventual top finisher on the final BCS Standings, and a win over then No. 24 ranked USC that sprung a three-game winning streak, prior to a loss vs. No.5 ranked Stanford. They lost three of their next four games, but then won two more, prior to closing their season with a loss to Washington in the Apple Cup. They played the most difficult schedule in the country, according to statistician Jeff Sagarin of USA Today.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State, Offense\nAn air raid offense (predominantly passing-oriented with quarterback in shotgun formation usually with four wide receivers) coordinated by Leach, Washington State was projected to have one of its biggest advantages in the passing game, where junior quarterback Connor Halliday recorded 4187 passing yards, which was fourth in the country, on 656 passing attempts, which led the country by more than 50, for 28 touchdowns and 21 interceptions, the latter of which was most in the country. He spread the ball around to many different receivers; eight different receivers had more than 30 catches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State, Offense\nThe Cougars' leading receiver was sophomore Gabe Marks, who caught 69 passes for 770 yards and 6 touchdowns. Fellow sophomore Dom Williams caught 39 passes for 644 yards and a team-leading 7 touchdowns, 6\u00a0feet 3\u00a0inches (1.91\u00a0m) 240 pounds (110\u00a0kg) senior Vince Mayle caught 40 passes for 501 yards and 6 touchdowns, and freshman River Cracaft, an honorable mention all-conference honoree, caught 37 passes for 489 yards and 2 touchdowns. There were no tight ends on the roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State, Offense\nWashington State's offensive line was expected to be able to protect Halliday relatively easily, as Colorado State would have to drop a significant portion of its defense in to coverage, thus limiting its ability to blitz. Senior center Elliot Bosch, who was an honorable mention all-conference performer, anchored the offensive line, and was supported by fellow former walk-ons Gunnar Eklund, a sophomore left tackle, and Joe Dahl, a sophomore left guard. Leach commented on the group of walk-ons, specifically Bosch, noting, \"He\u2019s developed his skills, worked really hard in the weight room and has been a big cornerstone for us.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0004-0003", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State, Offense\nWe wouldn\u2019t be in a bowl game without him.\" The Cougars' measly rushing attack, which averaged only 58.7 yards per game (123 out of 123 in the FBS), included junior Marcus Mason and sophomore Teondray Caldwell. Senior Andrew Furney, an honorable mention all-conference performer, handled the kicking duties, and made 15 of his 19 field goal tries with a long of 52 yards and 43 of his 44 extra point tries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State, Defense\nCoordinated by Mike Breske, the Cougars' 3-4 defense surrendered an average of 31.3 points per game, which was 92nd in the country. The defense was led by first team All-American safety Deone Bucannon, a prospect for the 2014 NFL Draft who recorded a team-leading 109 tackles, and tied for the team-lead with five interceptions (tied for 15th in FBS). He was joined at safety by Hawaiian sophomore Taylor Taliulu, who totaled 54 tackles. Fifth-year senior Casey Locker also contributed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State, Defense\nAt cornerback, senior Damante Horton also recorded 5 interceptions, and added 43 tackles and 3.5 tackles for loss (TFL), fifth-year senior Nolan Washington, who recorded 35 tackles, and freshman Daquawn Brown, who recorded 2 interceptions. The Cougars' linebackers were led by outside linebacker senior Justin Sagote, who finished second on the defense with 91 tackles, and added 2.5 TFL. Inside linebacker Darryl Monroe finished third on the defense with 81 tackles, adding 6.5 TFL, and 2 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Washington State, Defense\nOther contributors at linebacker included junior Cyrus Coen, who totaled 53 tackles, 6.5 TFL, and 3 sacks (third on the defense), sophomore Tana Pritchard, who totaled 47 tackles, and sophomore Kache Palacio, who recorded 42 tackles, 6.5 TFL, and 4 sacks. The strength of the Cougars' defense, however, was on the defensive line, particularly in stopping the run, which would be crucial against Colorado State's Kapri Bibbs. Key contributors on the line included 303 pounds (137\u00a0kg) sophomore Xavier Cooper, who led the defense with 13 TFL and 4.5 sacks, nose tackle Ioane Gauta, who recorded 41 tackles, 8 TFL, and 3 sacks, and Kalafitoni Pole, who recorded 26 tackles, 3 TFL, and 2 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Colorado State\nLed by head coach Jim McElwain, who played quarterback at Eastern Washington University in Cheney, Washington, about 67 miles from Washington State, the Rams went 7\u20136 during the season, yet did not win a single game against an opponent with a winning record. They began the season losing three of their first four games, including a loss to then number-one Alabama, where McElwain had previously spent several seasons as offensive coordinator. Subsequently, they won three of their next four games, including a victory in the Battle for the Bronze Boot against Wyoming before closing their season winning three of five, finishing a season with a win against Air Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Colorado State, Offense\nColorado State's offensive coordinator was Dave Baldwin, and the offense performed rather well, finishing 39th in the FBS in passing yards per game (258.5), 31st in rushing yards per game (202.7), and 29th in points per game (35.3). The focal point of the Rams' offense was sophomore junior college-transfer running back Kapri Bibbs, who was \"one of the most underappreciated offensive threats in the country\". He totaled 254 rushes (tied for 13th in FBS), 1572 rushing yards (eighth in FBS), and 28 touchdowns (second in FBS). Not surprisingly, he was a first team all-conference selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Colorado State, Offense\nSenior Chris Nwoke and sophomore Donnell Alexander also contributed at running back. At quarterback, junior Garrett Grayson threw 21 touchdown passes to 10 interceptions, totaling 3327 passing yards. Among his favorite targets were freshman Rashard Higgins, who caught 64 passes for 795 yards and 6 touchdowns and sophomore Joe Hansley, who caught 48 passes for 557 yards and 1 touchdown. At tight end, NFL Draft prospect Crockett Gillmore caught 43 passes for 533 yards and 2 touchdowns. Wide receivers Charles Lovett and Thomas Coffman, as well as tight end Kivon Cartwright were key contributors in the passing game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Colorado State, Offense\nColorado State's offensive line was \"gnarly\", and featured four seniors and one junior, and were anchored center Weston Richburg. Their kicker was Jared Roberts, a first team all-conference performer who made 17 of his 20 field goal tries with a long of 54 yards and all 54 of his extra point attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Colorado State, Defense\nCo-coordinated by Marty English and Al Simmons, the Rams' 3-4 defense was in the middle of the pack nationally, having allowed 417.3 yards per game and 28.6 points per game. They were better defending the pass than the run. The Rams' defense was anchored by senior linebacker Shaquil Barrett, whom the Mountain West Conference (MWC) named their defensive player of the year; he set a MWC record with 20.5 TFL, and totaled 12 sacks, which was third in the FBS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Colorado State, Defense\nOther starters at linebacker included junior Max Morgan, who led the defense, totaling 129 tackles on the season, junior Aaron Davis, who was second on the defense with 113 tackles, and added 6 TFL, and sophomore Cory James, who totaled 54 tackles and 6 sacks, the latter of which was second on the team. In the secondary, second team all-conference honoree Shaq Bell totaled 57 tackles and 7.5 TFL at cornerback. Safety Kevin Pierre-Lewis, a redshirt freshman, totaled 70 tackles on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Pregame buildup, Colorado State, Defense\nThe defensive leader in interceptions was sophomore safety Trent Matthews, who recorded 4 in addition to 64 tackles. Junior Bernard Blake totaled 60 tackles on the season. On the defensive line, the Rams featured three senior starters \u2013 Eli Edwards, a defensive end who totaled 28 tackles and 3.5 TFL entering the bowl game, Curtis Wilson, a defensive tackle who totaled 28 tackles and 2 sacks entering the bowl game, and 330 pounds (150\u00a0kg) nose tackle Calvin Tonga, who totaled 24 tackles and 2.5 TFL entering the bowl game. True freshman Jake Schlager led the team in special teams tackles with 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nWashington State (WSU) got the ball to start the game, but on the second play of the game, Connor Halliday threw an interception to Max Morgan of Colorado State (CSU), but Nolan Washington stripped Rashad Higgins on the ensuing play, giving WSU the ball right back, and they subsequently scored on a Halliday pass to River Cracraft. On CSU's ensuing drive, they were faced with a fourth down during which they punted from their end zone; the punt was blocked, setting WSU up at the six-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nAfter a roughing the passer penalty and then a holding penalty on consecutive plays, both against CSU, Halliday threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to Gabe Marks. After the ensuing kickoff, ESPN aired a series automobile and insurance commercials that were amongst the most viewed of the early bowl season. On the next drive, CSU was faced with a fourth down and short, and looked like they would punt, but at the last moment called an audible and rushed up the middle for a first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe next play, quarterback Garrett Grayson threw a 63-yard pass to Charles Lovett, making the score 14\u20137. CSU had WSU stopped with a sack, however after an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty gave WSU a first down, Halliday threw a touchdown pass to Theron West on the next play. CSU subsequently drove down the field, and kicked a field goal. WSU finished the quarter with a three-and-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nColorado State embarked on a long drive at the end of the first quarter that spanned into the second quarter, lasted 19 plays, 69 yards, and took up 7:05, but ultimately came up short, ending with a 19-yard field goal by Jared Roberts. On CSU's next drive, Deone Bucannon intercepted a Grayson pass, setting WSU up with good field position, with which Halliday threw his fourth touchdown of the game, a 28-yard pass to Vince Mayle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nSubsequently, WSU got the ball back after a 19-yard punt, and drove down the field on just 4 plays, capitalizing again on good field position with a 30 yard touchdown pass from Halliday to Rickey Galvin making the score 35\u201313. The pass was Halliday's fifth of the game, a new New Mexico Bowl record. On the ensuing drive for CSU, they went 75 yards down the field on 9 plays, ultimately scoring on a 1-yard touchdown run by Kapri Bibbs. After a three-and-out by WSU, CSU got the ball back with 30 seconds at the WSU 40 yard line. They took advantage of a pass interference penalty on WSU when Roberts kicked a 30-yard field goal as time expired, making the score 35\u201323 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nUpon receiving the opening kickoff, CSU promptly went three-and-out, giving the ball back to WSU, who started their drive in CSU territory after a 23-yard punt. WSU entered the red zone, but ultimately settled for an Andrew Furney field goal to take the lead by 15 (38\u201323). CSU's ensuing drive lasted only one play \u2013 a 75-yard touchdown run by Kapri Bibbs that made the score 38\u201330, with Washington State retaining the eight-point advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nThough they reached the red zone on their next drive, Cory James sacked Halliday twice, and then WSU committed a delay of game penalty, which ultimately moved them out of field goal range, so they had to punt. They had another opportunity, starting in CSU territory after Jordon Vaden fumbled the ball on a run after a catch, but punted then too. At the end of the third quarter, WSU led 38\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nEarly in the fourth quarter, WSU embarked on an 11-play, 80-yard drive that lasted 4:36, was led by Halliday completing eight of his nine pass attempts, and culminated when he completed a 22-yard touchdown pass to Isiah Myers to make the score 45\u201330. It would be WSU's final score ... after exchanging punts, CSU took possession of the ball with 4 minutes and 17 seconds remaining at their own 28-yard line, and Grayson led them on a drive that ended with a 12-yard touchdown pass from Grayson to Vaden. The extra point made the score 45\u201337.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nLooking to run out the clock, WSU repossessed the ball after the kickoff at their own 18-yard line with 2:52 to play. They executed two running plays, after both of which Colorado State burned timeouts to conserve time, and then converted a first down. On the next play, Halliday faked handing the ball off, and ran himself; he was hit at the line of scrimmage and appeared to fumble the ball (CSU would have recovered), but video review overturned the call on the field, and WSU retained possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nOn the very next play, however, Jeremiah Laufasa rushed the ball, and CSU's Shaquil Barrett forced and recovered a fumble at the WSU 31-yard line, giving CSU the ball with 1:51 to play. CSU ran eight plays on their subsequent drive, en route to a 1-yard touchdown run by Kapri Bibbs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0012-0003", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nNeeding a two-point conversion to tie the game, Donnell Alexander rushed the ball outside on a statue of liberty play and attempted to reach inside the pylon at the goal line, and was initially ruled out of bounds, however video review again overturned the call, and consequently, the score was tied at 45 with only 33 seconds to play. On the ensuing kickoff, WSU kick returner Teondray Caldwell brought the ball to the 23-yard line, where he fumbled, and CSU's Jake Schlager recovered at the 24-yard line. Two plays later on CSU's drive, Jared Roberts made a 41-yard field goal attempt as time expired to win the game, 48\u201345.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235064-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Bowl, Game summary, Broadcast\nThe game was broadcast on ESPN, with Mark Jones serving as the play-by-play announcer, Brock Huard, a former National Football League quarterback, serving as the analyst, and Olympic gold-medalist (in softball) Jessica Mendoza serving as the sideline reporter. ESPN also holds game rights on the radio, broadcasting it on ESPN Radio with commentators John Sadak (play-by-play), Tom Ramsey (analyst), and Niki Noto (sideline). Due to a basketball game between Georgetown and Kansas running late, the kickoff of the game could be seen only on ESPN News and WatchESPN until the basketball game ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235065-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Lobos football team\nThe 2013 New Mexico Lobos football team represented the University of New Mexico in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Lobos were led by second-year head coach Bob Davie. They played their home games at University Stadium and were members of the Mountain Division of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 3\u20139, 1\u20137 in Mountain West play to finish in sixth place in the Mountain Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235065-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Lobos football team, 2013 Annual team awards\nEach year members of the Lobos football team who distinguished themselves during the football season are honored at the Lobos Annual Football Awards Banquet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235065-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Lobos football team, 2013 Annual team awards\nFor the 2013 football season, the following team members were honored: Bill Brannin Most Valuable Player Award: Kasey Carrier; Reese Hill Offensive Most Valuable Player Award: Kasey Carrier; Clyde Hill Most Improved Player Award: Cole Gautsche; Colonel H.J. Golightly Defensive Most Valuable Player Award: Dallas Bollema; Chuck Cummins Most Inspirational Player Award: Dillon Farrell; 1st Team Award (Unselfish Devotion to the Team): Mat McBain; Outstanding Special Teams Player: Carlos Wiggins; Most Valuable Offensive Scout Team Player Award: Romell Jordan; Most Valuable Defensive Scout Team Player Award: Tayo Adewon; The Red Menace Award: Dillon Farrell; New Mexico Man Award: Reece White; Academic Achievement Award: Garrett Adcock; Academic Most Improved Award: Devonta Tabannah; Big Brother of the Year Award: Dillon Farrell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 894]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235065-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Lobos football team, 2013 Annual team awards\nAbout the Clyde and Reese Hill awards: The Hill brothers were members of the Lobos football team prior to WWII (Clyde, 1941; Reese, 1939\u20131941). Both men were described by UNM coaches as extraordinary athletes. Clyde came to UNM after serving in the U.S. Marines where he was a boxing champion. At UNM, he was a member of the university boxing team and made the football team as a walk-on. Reese came to UNM as a highly touted recruit. A \"legend\" in northern New Mexico high school sports, he lettered in four sports at St. Michael's High School in Santa Fe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235065-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 New Mexico Lobos football team, 2013 Annual team awards\nWhile at UNM, he was a member of the university's track, basketball and football teams. The Hill brothers were described by a contemporary as being \"He-Men, the kind of men who could throw you across a room.\" After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Clyde and Reese left UNM to enlist in the military. Clyde died as a U.S. Marine F4U fighter pilot at Okinawa with the rank of captain, while Reese\u2014a U.S. Army first lieutenant and glider pilot\u2014survived the invasion of Normandy only to be killed when his glider was shot down over the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235066-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team\nThe 2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team represents New Mexico State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Aggies were led by first\u2013year head coach Doug Martin and played their home games at Aggie Memorial Stadium. They competed as an independent. They were a football\u2013only member of the Sun Belt Conference (SBC) from 2014 to 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235066-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team, Game summaries, @ UCLA\nFirst meeting between the two schools. New Mexico State head coach Doug Martin replaced DeWayne Walker, who was a former UCLA defensive coordinator. Nick Pasquale was remembered during the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235066-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team, Game summaries, @ UCLA\n1st quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Jordon James 4-yard run (Kaim Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235066-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team, Game summaries, @ UCLA\n2nd quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Steven Manfro 20-yard pass from Brett Hundley (Fairbairn kick); UCLA \u2013 Manfro 12-yard run (Fairbairn kick); UCLA \u2013 Fairbairn 38-yard field goal; UCLA \u2013 Devin Fuller 21-yard pass from Hundley (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235066-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team, Game summaries, @ UCLA\n3rd quarter scoring: UCLA \u2013 Shaquell Evans 7-yard pass from Hundley (Fairbairn kick); UCLA \u2013 James 19-yard run (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235066-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team, Game summaries, @ UCLA\n4th quarter scoring: NMSU \u2013 Adam Shapiro 33-yard pass from A. McDonald (Mitch Johnson kick); UCLA \u2013 Malcolm Jones 3-yard run (Fairbairn kick); NMSU \u2013 B. Betancourt 4-yard run (Johnson kick failed); UCLA \u2013 Jones 3-yard run (Fairbairn kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl\nThe 2013 New Orleans Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 21, 2013, at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana. The thirteenth edition of the New Orleans Bowl, it featured the Tulane Green Wave of Conference USA against the Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns of the Sun Belt Conference. The game began at 8:00\u00a0p.m. CST and aired on ESPN. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. Sponsored by freight shipping company R+L Carriers, the game was officially known as the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl. The Ragin' Cajuns defeated the Green Wave by a score of 24\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl\nIn March 2016, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette vacated its 2011 and 2013 New Orleans Bowl wins, due to major NCAA violations including ACT exam fraud and payments to recruits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams\nThe Ragin' Cajuns accepted their invitation after earning an 8\u20133 record in their first eleven games of the season, going on to finish at 8\u20134 (5\u20132 Sun Belt). The Green Wave had a regular season record of 7\u20135 (5\u20133 C-USA). Despite the Superdome being the Green Wave's home venue, the Ragin' Cajuns are set to be the designated home team, as they are from the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave\n2013 was the Green Wave's most successful season in over a decade, finishing at 7\u20135 overall and 5\u20133 in Conference USA. At the season's conclusion, bowl director Billy Ferrante extended an invitation to play in the game. This will be the Green Wave's first New Orleans Bowl, as well as their first bowl game of any kind since the 2002 Hawaii Bowl, which saw them defeat the Hawaii Warriors by a score of 36\u201328 at Aloha Stadium. It will also be the Green Wave's final game as a member of Conference USA before moving to the American Athletic Conference for 2014, as well as their final game in the Superdome before moving to the on-campus Yulman Stadium for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave, Offense\nSecond-year head coach Curtis Johnson led the Green Wave into the game with a statistically lackluster offense that ranked near the bottom of the Football Bowl Subdivision in passing yards, averaging only 176.1 per game, rushing yards, averaging only 128.1 per game, and points scored, averaging only 25.1 per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave, Offense\nTheir mediocre passing game was led by Nick Montana, the son of NFL-great Joe Montana, who played his redshirt freshman and freshman season at University of Washington and his sophomore season at Mt. San Antonio College before transferring to Tulane, at which he was named the team's starter over Devin Powell, who played during the season when Montana sustained a separated right shoulder in October, prior to the season's first game. The two-pronged rushing game included senior running back Orleans Darkwa, who rushed for 780 yards and 9 touchdowns during the regular season, and junior running back Rob Kelley, who rushed for 422 yards and 3 touchdowns during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave, Offense\nRyan Grant, who was on the preseason Biletnikoff Award watchlist, saw his 2013 season numbers decline from 2012, but still managed to record 70 receptions, 926 yards, and 9 touchdowns, highlighted by a 14-reception, 187-yard, 2-touchdown performance in the Green Wave's second game, a loss at the hands of South Alabama. Other prominent receivers included junior wideout Justyn Shackleford (34 regular season receptions), and sophomore wideout Xavier Rush, freshman wideout Kedrick Banks, and Kelley, the latter three of whom each recorded 17 regular season receptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave, Offense\nSophomore tight end Sydie London was not much of a threat in the passing game (12 receptions in 12 games), but he was one of just two tight ends on the roster, so was almost a starter by default, though at one spring practice, did impress New Orleans Saints wide receiver Marques Colston, who thought he was one of the best players on the team. Tulane's offensive line was a much maligned group throughout the season. By the end of the season, they were ravaged by injury, and hindered both the running and passing games. The 2012 winner of the Lou Groza Award, senior kicker Cairo Santos, handled the kicking for the Green Wave, but regressed from being a perfect 21/21 to going 16/22, though he did have a long of 56 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave, Defense\nTulane's defense, which featured a 3\u20134 defensive scheme, fared better during the regular season than the offense. They ranked 22nd in the nation in scoring defense, surrendering only 21.2 points per game. They allowed 354.3 yards per game; of that 234.3 was in the passing game and 120 in the running game. The defensive line was anchored by Royce LaFrance, who recorded 6.5 sacks, tied for third in Conference USA. The other defensive end slot was occupied by Julius Warmsley, who recorded 41 tackles, and 4 sacks. The duo helped provide consistent pressure on opposing quarterbacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave, Defense\nSupplementing the ends' pass rush was reserve end Tyler Gilbert, who added three sacks. Augmenting the defensive ends was defensive tackle Chris Davenport (15 tackles, 1.5 sacks), who transferred from LSU prior to the season. Tulane also had a veteran core of linebackers, comprising seniors Zach Davis, who led the corps with 78 tackles, Darryl Farley, who recorded 62 tackles, as well as contributors senior Kyle Davis, freshman Nico Marley, and junior Taylor Bullock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Tulane Green Wave, Defense\nThe defensive backs also contributed to the team's defensive success, with Lorenzo Doss recording seven interceptions, tied for the best in the conference. Safety Darion Monroe led the entire defense in tackles, with 96; he also recovered three fumbles during the season. Derrick Strozier and Jordan Sullen also contributed at cornerback, recording two interceptions apiece, as did Ryan Travis, who was fourth on the team with 53 tackles. Jordan Batiste played a roving position in the secondary, but was a major contributor, as were Sam Scofield, a cornerback, and Shakiel Smith, a safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns\nThe Ragin' Cajuns continued their recent winning ways in 2013, clinching at least a share of the Sun Belt Conference championship once again with a 5\u20131 conference and an 8\u20133 overall record. After losing to the Louisiana\u2013Monroe Warhawks for only the team's third loss of the season (and first in-conference), bowl director Billy Ferrante extended an invitation to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns\nThis will be the Ragin' Cajuns third consecutive New Orleans Bowl, having won the previous two; the first being in 2011 where they defeated the San Diego State Aztecs by a score of 32\u201330, and the second being in 2012 where they defeated the East Carolina Pirates by a score of 43\u201334. The Ragin' Cajuns are only the second team to play in three consecutive New Orleans Bowls, joining the North Texas Mean Green who participated in the first four editions of the game, finishing with a 1\u20133 record. The Ragin' Cajuns began their season on a two-game losing streak, then won eight consecutive games, and then lost their final two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns, Offense\nThe Ragin' Cajuns' spread offense attack was coordinated by Jay Johnson. Junior Terrance Broadway played quarterback, and finished the regular season fifth in the Sun Belt in passing yards with 2276, third in passing touchdowns with 19, and led the conference with a 157.0 passer rating. Late in the season, Broadway broke his right throwing arm, and subsequently underwent surgery, however coach Mark Hudspeth was \"optimistic\" he would return for the bowl game. Freshman Brooks Haack was the backup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns, Offense\nA pair of backs led a \"solid running back tandem\" that Ragin' Cajuns' rushing attack \u2013 junior Alonzo Harris and freshman Elijah McGuire each exceeded 800 rushing yards, however McGuire did so averaging 8.9 yards per carry, whereas Harris averaged 4.7 yards per carry (Harris had 186 carries to McGuire's 92). Broadway also contributed to the rushing attack, attaining 421 yards on 117 carries. Harris had 13 touchdowns, McGuire had 7, and Broadway had 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns, Offense\nA trio of wide receivers anchored the Louisiana-Lafayette receiving game. 6\u00a0feet 4\u00a0inches (1.93\u00a0m) junior Jamal Robinson was by far Broadway's favorite target, leading the team with 50 receptions, 812 yards, and 8 touchdowns, senior Darryl Surgent was second on the team with 29 receptions, 398 yards, and 5 touchdowns, and junior James Butler was third on the team 26 receptions and 363 yards, however he had only one touchdown. Senior Jacob Maxwell started at tight end, and reeled in 12 passes for 158 yards and 2 touchdowns on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns, Offense\nMcGuire and fellow running back sophomore Effrem Reed also contributed in the receiving game. Junior college transfer Stephen Brauchle, who began his college career at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, teamed with walk-on holder Jake Guidry to handle the kicking duties for the Ragin' Cajuns; he made 8 of 13 field goal attempts with a long of 38 yards, and was 51 of 53 on extra point attempts. The offensive line was composed of brothers Daniel and Mykhael Quave, who started at right guard and left tackle respectively (Mykhael transitioned to tackle after playing at guard his freshman season), senior center Andre Huval, sophomore right tackle Octravian Anderson, and junior left guard Terry Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns, Defense\nThe Ragin' Cajuns defense, led by new coordinator James Willis, was led by one of \"the league's best linebackers\", Justin Anderson, who recorded a team-leading 123 total tackles, and 10 TFL, second on the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns, Defense\nJoining him in the linebacking corps was undersized (5\u00a0feet 11\u00a0inches (1.80\u00a0m) 188 pounds (85\u00a0kg)) sophomore Chris Hill, whose 37 tackles were eighth on the team, but who sustained an injury late in the season and was questionable for the bowl game, junior Darius Barksdale, who played in only seven games, and recorded 28 total tackles, sophomore Dominque Tovell, who though listed as a defensive end, played linebacker, and finished second on the team with 64 tackles, and led the team with 12 TFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Teams, Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns, Defense\nMuch to his shock, even freshman safety Al Riles saw time at linebacker due to injury depletion by the end of the season. On the defensive line, junior Justin Hamilton started at nose tackle, and totaled 37 tackles, 8 TFL, and 3 sacks, junior Christian Ringo was the predominant starter at defensive end, totaling 15 tackles, 2 TFL, and 1 sack, and senior defensive tackle Brandon McCray, who totaled 13 tackles and 2 TFL. In the secondary, Trevence Patt achieved second team all-conference recognition, totaling 41 tackles. Other starters included Corey Trim, T. J. Worthy, and Sean Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nTulane received the opening kickoff, and went three-and-out. Louisiana-Lafayette (ULL) took the field with Terrance Broadway at quarterback (there was question due to his injury as to whether he would start), however they rotated him with Jalen Nixon, but it was Broadway who was in the game when Elijah McGuire rushed for a 27-yard touchdown, ruled such after video review. After Nick Montana started the first drive, redshirt freshman Devin Powell entered the game on Tulane's second drive, but failed to have any success, for another three-and-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nTulane's defense got a stop on their next drive, highlighted by Nico Marley (grandson of Bob Marley) recording a tackle for loss on third and short, forcing a punt. Montana returned for Tulane on their next drive, during which they achieved their first first down of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nHowever, later in the drive, on an end around wide receiver pass, Ryan Grant's pass intended for Justyn Shackleford was intercepted, setting up the Ragin Cajuns for an offensive drive during which they drove down the field, taking advantage of a personal foul late hit that put them in the red zone and subsequently allowed Alonzo Harris to rush for a 15-yard touchdown, the final score of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nEarly in the second quarter, while in the red zone, Montana threw an interception to Corey Trim, who returned it for an 82-yard touchdown, giving ULL a 21\u20130 lead. Devin Powell subsequently replaced Montana. After each team went three-and-out, Tulane scored its first points, a 1-yard touchdown run by Orleans Darkwa that culminated a 9-play, 71 yard drive that encapsulated 4:43. ULL got the ball back, however Broadway threw an interception, setting up Tulane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nOn their first play, Powell threw a 49-yard pass to Ryan Grant who, amidst double coverage and despite a pass interference penalty, leaped and made the catch. After a pass interference penalty, Darkwa ran for a 7-yard touchdown, pulling the Green Wave within seven points. Not wanting to turn the ball over, the Ragin' Cajuns rushed on each play of their drive to get into the half, at which the score was 21\u201314, Louisiana-Lafayette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nThe teams exchanged punts to start the half. On Louisiana-Lafayette's second drive, Tulane lost tackle Chris Davenport and cornerback Lorenzo Doss to injury; both went to the locker room. Nevertheless, Tulane's defense forced another punt, but their offense failed to capitalize, burning a timeout, and punting back to the Ragin' Cajuns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nTulane's defense sustained another injury on ULL's next drive; senior defensive back Jordan Sullen was carted off the field after being kicked in the head during the course of the run on a screen pass that converted a second-and-long; he left the field on a backboard, however he stood up and hobbled to the backboard, thus alleviating concern of paralysis, which had happened to Tulane the previous season. Sullen was transported to Tulane Medical Center as a precaution, however was expected to make a full recovery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nMeanwhile, Doss returned to the game, and on the next play, Broadway threw an interception to cornerback Derrick Strozier, setting up Tulane in the red zone; they scored via a Darkwa touchdown run on the first play of their ensuing drive, tying the game at 21. ULL again failed to execute offensively, and went three-and-out. At the end of the third quarter, the game was tied at 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nLouisiana-Lafayette stopped Tulane's offensive momentum early in the quarter, forcing a punt. On ULL's ensuing drive, they were faced with a third down a six, and threw an incomplete pass, however a pass interference call gave them a first down, which energized the Ragin' Cajuns temporarily, but they ultimately punted, pinning Tulane inside the five yard line, from which, while under pressure, Powell threw the ball up in the air, and it was intercepted, setting ULL up with excellent field position, particularly when they went half the distance to the goal after a dead ball personal foul penalty on Tulane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nULL had an opportunity to score a touchdown, however after Broadway slipped during a run while in the open field on third down, ultimately going down due to cramps, and forcing Hunter Stover, a linebacker turned place kicker, attempted his first-ever college field goal, a 27-yard kick that he made, stopping Tulane's streak of 21 unanswered points. Tulane subsequently took the field and converted a first down, and failed to convert a third down at the 40-yard line, after which they decided to punt rather than test Santos's field goal range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nJalen Nixon took the field at quarterback on ULL's drive after Broadway went to the locker room for fluids. On back-to-back runs, Harris rushed for a first down, and then Nixon rushed for a first down, giving the Ragin' Cajuns momentum prior to beginning to try to work the clock. Faced with a third and ten and under duress, Nixon found an open receiver to convert the third down. Later in the drive, Strozier went down due to cramps, exiting the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0015-0003", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nWith 1:42, ULL was forced to punt after Scofield made an open field tackle to keep ULL out of field goal range, after which coach Curtis Johnson called timeout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0015-0004", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nTulane got the ball at the five-yard line with 1:35 and one timeout to try to start a drive to tie or win the game, however after Powell threw two incomplete passes at the ground, they were faced with a third and long; Powell escaped pressure in the end zone, and ultimately threw the ball up in the air and Shackleford reeled it in for a first down out to around the 40-yard line. Two plays later, Powell threw a 27-yard pass to Grant, putting Tulane in Santos's field goal range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235067-0015-0005", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nWith 24 seconds and a timeout, Tulane had the ball at the 25-yard line, but Powell took a sack at the 31-yard line, forcing Tulane to burn their final timeout with 13 seconds left. Santos subsequently came out to try a 48-yard field goal, but ULL tried to ice him by calling a timeout; after the timeout, Santos missed the field goal wide, winning the game for ULL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235068-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Privateers baseball team\nThe 2013 New Orleans Privateers baseball team represented University of New Orleans in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. Because of renovations to Maestri Field, the Privateers played their home games at Wesley Barrow Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235068-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Privateers baseball team\nThe team was led by fourth year head coach, Bruce Peddie who came off of a 17-27 record for the 2012 season. For the 2013 season, the Privateers competed as a Division I Independent after a 1-year stint as a Division II Independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235068-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Privateers baseball team, Personnel, Roster\n^Denotes players who also share pitching duties. 2013 UNO Privateers Roster", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235068-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Privateers baseball team, New Orleans Privateers in the 2013 Major League Baseball Draft\nThe following members of the New Orleans Privateers baseball program were drafted in the 2013 MLB Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 105], "content_span": [106, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235069-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Saints season\nThe 2013 season was the New Orleans Saints' 47th in the National Football League and their 38th playing home games at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. It also marked the seventh season under head coach Sean Payton, who returned to the team after serving a one-year suspension for his involvement in the team's 2012 bounty scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235069-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Saints season\nThe Saints improved their 7\u20139 record from last season, going 11\u20135 and making the playoffs as the sixth seed. They earned the franchise's first-ever road postseason victory, with a 26\u201324 win over the Philadelphia Eagles in the Wild Card round, ending the drought at 0\u20135. However, the Saints were eliminated by the eventual Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks in the divisional round, by a score of 23\u201315. The 2013 season was also the second time in three years the Saints went 8\u20130 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235069-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans Saints season, 2013 draft class\nNotesThe Saints did not have selections in the second, fourth, or seventh rounds. They forfeited their second-round selection as part of the punishment for the team's 2012 bounty scandal. They acquired the No. 82 selection in a trade that sent two fourth-round selections, Nos. 106 and 109 overall, to the Miami Dolphins. The No. 106 selection had been acquired in a trade that sent running back Chris Ivory to the New York Jets. The Saints traded their seventh-round selection to the Seattle Seahawks in exchange for linebacker Barrett Ruud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235070-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans VooDoo season\nThe 2013 New Orleans VooDoo season was the seventh season for the franchise in the Arena Football League. The team was coached by Pat O'Hara and played their first three home games at the New Orleans Arena. Due to the renovations to the arena that started immediately following the conclusion of the New Orleans Hornets season, the Voodoo played their remaining six home games at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. The VooDoo had a chance to clinch a playoff berth in their final game, but lost to finish the season with a 5\u201313 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235070-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans VooDoo season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated July 4, 201323 Active, 17 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235070-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans VooDoo season, Standings\nz - Clinched division and conference's best recordx - Clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235070-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Orleans VooDoo season, Regular season schedule\nThe VooDoo began the season by hosting the Orlando Predators on March 24. They closed the regular season against the Predators in Orlando on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season\nThe 2013 season is New Radiant Sports Club's 34th year in existence as a football club. New Radiant also participate in the AFC Cup this season, qualifying directly for the group stage by finishing first in the 2012 Dhivehi League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nNew Radiant finished as champions of last year's Dhivehi League, President's Cup and Charity Shield without losing a single game in the league. So they will be participating in the 2013 AFC Cup directly from the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nVelizar Popov was announced as the new head coach on 6 January 2013 following the resignation of Mohamed Shiyaz. Mohamed Iqbal and Mohamed Nizam were named as the assistant coaches, while Ibrahim Shaaz Habeeb as the club manager. Later during the mid season, club part company with Shaaz on mutual understandings, due to his personal responsibility and other reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nOn 13 January 2013, New Radiant announced that Imran Mohamed will replace Ahmed Thoriq as the team captain, and Ali Ashfaq and Mohamed Umair will be the team vice-captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nClub announced their 5 new signings at the club's Gold Night. Ali Fasir returned to the Blues after a year, with Mohamed Umair, Rilwan Waheed, Moosa Yaamin and Hussain Niyaz Mohamed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nOn 27 January 2013, New Radiant announced the signing of a foreign defender Sylla Mansah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nNew Radiant unveiled their new set of signings, Mohamed Jazlaan, Ibrahim Ushamath and Mohamed Shifan at their Open Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nOn 20 June 2013, New Radiant signed Akram Abdul Ghanee from Club Valencia and handed over his brother Assad Abdul Ghanee's number 13 jersey to him. 3 days later on 23 June 2013, club signed Ismail Easa from Maziya. He was given his usual 15 number jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nOn 26 June 2013, club signed Yusif Nurudeen, a Ghana under\u201321 international from Medeama Sporting Club on loan until the end of this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nDuring the club's mid-term congress, Hassan Shujau and Mohamed Shafeeq were named as the new vice chairman of the club. And club also announced that in honour of club supporters, New Radiant will vacant the number 12 jersey from next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Background\nNew Radiant loaned three of their youth players; Mohamed Karam, Ali Athoof and Ibrahim Waheed to the Third division side Thoddoo FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Kit\nSupplier: MediaNet / Sponsor: MiloState Trading Organization (STO) signed a sponsorship agreement with New Radiant on 14 February 2013. On 6 July 2013, club announced the extension of the sponsorship agreement with the main sponsor Milo to another two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 33], "content_span": [34, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Kit\nOn 31 July 2013, New Radiant signed a deal of MVR 1.4 million with Sports Power for two years (from 2014 season), with the local brand Sports Power as the club's kit provider. The current kit provider is MediaNet since 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 33], "content_span": [34, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Competitions, AFC Cup, Group stage\nNew Radiant and Yangon United are tied on head-to-head record, and so are ranked by overall goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235071-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New Radiant S.C. season, Competitions, FA Cup\n* Victory Sports Club withdraw from 2013 FA Cup and the match awarded New Radiant a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235072-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales Cup\nThe 2013 New South Wales Cup season is the second tier rugby league competition held in New South Wales, after the National Rugby League. The 2012 season of the New South Wales Cup commences on Saturday 19 March 2013. The Minor Premiership has ended with Cronulla sitting on top of the ladder at 43 points as the teams head into finals. The grand final will be played at ANZ Stadium at the 2013 NRL Grand Final, and will be broadcast by Fox Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235072-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales Cup, Clubs\nIn 2013, 13 clubs are fielding teams in the New South Wales Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235072-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales Cup, Clubs\n* : The season the team joined is in the NSW Cup, not any other competition before this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235072-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales Cup, Media\nThe 2013 Season was included as part of Fox Sports' Saturday Afternoon of Football. At the Start of the season it would kick off with the NSW cup, followed by the Holden Cup and then the NRL, however in round 23 the Holden cup and NSW cup were swapped and continued like this for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235073-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales Swifts season\nThe 2013 New South Wales Swifts season saw New South Wales Swifts compete in the 2013 ANZ Championship. During the regular season they finished eighth with a 4\u20139 record and did not qualify for the play-offs. During the season they defeated West Coast Fever, Northern Mystics, Canterbury Tactix and Melbourne Vixens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235073-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales Swifts season, Players, 2013 roster\nManager: Toni KidwellPhysiotherapist: Paula PeraltaBrett DoringDaniel VukovicSports science: Dr Grace BryantStrength and conditioning: Damien Austin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235073-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales Swifts season, Melbourne Vixens Summer Challenge\nThe main pre-season event was the Summer Challenge, hosted by Melbourne Vixens at the State Netball Hockey Centre on 23 and 24 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires\nThe 2013 New South Wales bushfires were a series of bushfires in Australia across the state of New South Wales primarily starting, or becoming notable, on 13 October 2013; followed by the worst of the fires beginning in the Greater Blue Mountains Area on 16 and 17 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires\nHigh fuel loads, coupled with warm, dry and windy weather, provided dangerous conditions which fuelled the fires. At the peak of the fires, on the morning of 18 October, over 100 fires were burning across the state. The Premier of New South Wales Barry O'Farrell declared a state of emergency on 20 October, empowering firefighters to evict residents and demolish fire-affected buildings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires\nThe fires were the worst in New South Wales since the 1960s, although they were dwarfed by the 2019-2020 Australia bushfires. As of 19\u00a0October\u00a02013, 248 houses and other structures were destroyed across the state. Two fatalities were attributed to the fires. It was estimated that claims will exceed A$94\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Background\nOn 13 October, the Bureau of Meteorology reported that September 2013 was the warmest on record for NSW. The state-wide mean daily temperature was 3.4\u00a0\u00b0C (6.1\u00a0\u00b0F) above the historical average and 0.9\u00a0\u00b0C (1.6\u00a0\u00b0F) above the previous September record (set in 1965). September was the warmest on record for close to 75% of the state and 63 stations, with 100-year stations such as Broken Hill and Wilcannia more than 1\u00a0\u00b0C (1.8\u00a0\u00b0F) warmer than their previous record; all other areas of the state recorded temperatures in the warmest 10% of years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Background\nWidespread temperatures more than 6\u00a0\u00b0C (11\u00a0\u00b0F) above normal were recorded between 22 and 30 September. Warm, dry weather and strong winds during September contributed to significant early-season bushfire activity, particularly along the coastal strip. Fires were particularly prevalent on 10 and 26 September, with two homes destroyed in western Sydney, while several homes in northeast NSW were threatened and the M1 Motorway closed near Taree due to fires on 26 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Background\nIn issuing its forecast for the October to December quarter on 25 September, the Bureau estimated the chance that the maximum temperature will exceed the long-term median maximum temperature are greater than 60% across most of southeast Australia, with odds greater than 70% in parts of the south and east coasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Background\nIn the week leading up to the bushfires, temperatures in the Blue Mountains peaked at 34.6\u00a0\u00b0C (94.3\u00a0\u00b0F) at Springwood on 10 October; with peak windspeed measured at 46\u00a0km/h (29\u00a0mph) from the northwest, on 13 October. At Lake Macquarie, the temperature peaked at 35.6\u00a0\u00b0C (96.1\u00a0\u00b0F) also on 10 October; with peak windspeed measured at 22\u00a0km/h (14\u00a0mph) also from the northwest on 13 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Background\nThe Commissioner of the New South Wales Rural Fire Service, Shane Fitzsimmons AFSM, issued an extreme fire danger warning for greater Sydney (including the Blue Mountains and Central Coast), the greater Hunter, and Illawarra/Shoalhaven regions for 10 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region\nThe most severe fires were located across the Greater Blue Mountains Area; with 210 houses and other buildings destroyed. Three major fires, starting in Lithgow, Springwood and Mount Victoria, attracted emergency warnings from the New South Wales Rural Fire Service on 17, 19 and 20 October. By 22 October, the fires that originated in Lithgow and Mount Victoria had spread significantly from their original point of ignition and were deliberately merged through controlled burning by firefighters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region\nThe decision to merge the edges of the infernos near Lithgow and Mount Victoria in the Blue Mountains is designed to destroy the land in a managed way, depriving the fires of the fuel that would otherwise have allowed them to merge uncontrolled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region\nAs of 25\u00a0October\u00a02013, fires in the Greater Blue Mountains Area had burnt out over 65,000 hectares (160,000 acres), much of the area lying within the Blue Mountains and Wollemi national parks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Lithgow\nThe State Mine fire started as a minor fire on 16 October 2013 near a defence force training base at Marrangaroo, and travelled up to 25 kilometres (16\u00a0mi) on 17 October. The fire affected most of the Lithgow and Bilpin area, and was the main producer of smoke that traveled across the Sydney metropolitan area on the afternoon of 17 October. Some properties were lost in the fire, most of them being on the outskirts of the Lithgow district, where the fire burned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Lithgow\nIt burned out most of the northern region of the Blue Mountains National Park, parts of Wollemi National Park, and triggered the evacuation of most of the Lithgow region. The communities affected included Bell, Berambing, Bilpin, Clarence, Dargan, Hartley Vale, Lithgow, McKellars Park, Mount Irvine, and Mount Wilson. The fire burnt out more than 55,000 hectares (140,000 acres) between Lithgow and Bilpin. An investigation later revealed that the fire was caused by explosives training which was being carried out by the Australian Defence Force. In 2013, a commission of inquiry as to the problems that led to the fire was begun before former Sydney judge, John O'Meally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Lithgow\nThe iconic Zig Zag Railway was mostly destroyed by the State Mine fire. Due to re-open in November, after closure following accreditation issues with the New South Wales Government, the railway suffered millions of dollars of damage which included ten passenger carriages, accommodation carriages, a near-complete new shower block and meals room, spare parts centre and workshop. Much of the damage was suffered by original railway equipment from the 1920s. It is estimated that the railway would take a full year to recover from the State Mine fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Springwood\nThe fire in the Springwood area began in bushland adjacent to Linksview Road, just before 1.30pm on 17 October. It has been alleged in a damages lawsuit to be caused by powerline damage due to strong winds felling a tree that had not been removed by the owner of the property on which it was located, however a Police investigation is still ongoing and is yet to determine the cause. The fire spread over 3,500 hectares (8,600 acres), primarily in Winmalee and Yellow Rock and nearby bushland, completely destroyed 193 houses and partially damaged approximately 200 more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Springwood\nA subsequent report described the damage in the Springwood, Mt Victoria and Lithgow fires that \"took hold within minutes and went on to destroy a total of 203 homes and damage another 286.\" The report noted: \"Financial losses have been estimated at around $170 million. Springwood Hospital was evacuated as were a number of nursing homes and several hundred children from schools.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Springwood\nAffected streets were Singles Ridge Road and most of the streets that intersect it, as well as some other nearby streets. The fire also impacted on the grounds of St Thomas Aquinas Primary School, and led to evacuations and lock-downs at several schools in Springwood and Winmalee that afternoon and evening. Over the following weeks, the fire spread to bushland in Faulconbridge, but firefighters successfully protected residential properties there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Mount Victoria\nOn 17 October a fire burning near the Mount York Road, north northwest of the village of Mount Victoria, on the western edge of the Blue Mountains plateau, had burned only a few hectares by 13:56 AEDT. Yet within minutes the fire had broken containment lines and by 15:45 AEDT an emergency warning was issued as the fire burned towards Mount Victoria as it destroyed seven houses, crossed the Darling Causeway to the east, and was burning into the Grose Valley, north of Mount Boyce and Blackheath.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Mount Victoria\nThe fire crossed to the west of Mount York Road and threatened properties in the Kanimbla and Megalong valleys. Back burning efforts by the RFS overnight on 21\u201322 October introduced 'The Plug', which forced the deliberate merger of the Mount Victoria fire with the fires that originated near Lithgow. ' The Plug' was the brain child of a long term resident, former National Parks Officer, serving Rural Fire Service Officer and general font of fire-fighting knowledge in the Blue Mountains, Peter Verhoeven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Mount Victoria\nAuthorities were concerned that weather conditions forecast for 23 October could drive the now merged fire eastwards, with little chance of stopping it, resulting in potentially disastrous impacts on many towns in the Blue Mountains. Consequently, the NSW Government ordered the closure of every school and child care centre on 23 October, and urged all residents of the Blue Mountains who did not need to be in the mountains to leave early that day prior to 9am to prevent possible loss of life and traffic congestion should fire fighting equipment needed to be moved rapidly. Hundreds of mountains residents left either on the 22nd or very early morning the 23rd ensuring fire fighters could work without hassle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Mount Victoria\nFortunately the weather was not quite as bad as forecast and fire fighters were able to slow its progress with most of the fire activity taking place around the State Mine fire on the Bells Line of Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Mount Victoria\nThe fire spread over 9,000 hectares (22,000 acres); before being declared officially out by 13 November, with its cause attributed to strong winds with resultant powerline damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Greater Blue Mountains region, Hawkesbury\nA number of smaller scrub fires were ignited in the Hawkesbury local government area, including fires at Gorricks Creek, Howes Swamp, Mellong, and Webbs Creek. As of 25\u00a0October\u00a02013, these fires had burnt out approximately 4,000 hectares (9,900 acres).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions\nMajor bushfires at several locations in the Hunter and Central Coast regions caused significant damage and posed threats to people and property. There was one fatality in the Lake Munmorah area, on 17 October, where a man died of a heart attack trying to defend his own home. Fires in the two regions had burned nearly 33,500 hectares (83,000 acres).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Great Lakes and Upper Hunter\nTwo fires in the Great Lakes local government area, near Bulahdelah and in the upper reaches of the Karuah River, burnt over 1,830 hectares (4,500 acres) of bushland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 107], "content_span": [108, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Great Lakes and Upper Hunter\nIn the Upper Hunter area, a fire near Mount Tangory, approximately 15 kilometres (9.3\u00a0mi) east of Singleton, burnt over 1,300 hectares (3,200 acres) of bushland, with the NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service attending to fire control. In the Muswellbrook Shire, a fire that ignited near Hungerford Creek burnt more than 22,000 hectares (54,000 acres) of native bushland in the Wollemi National Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 107], "content_span": [108, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Port Stephens\nFires in the Port Stephens area were first reported on 13 October, in the Tilligerry State Conservation Area between Salt Ash and Tanilba Bay, destroying six homes and burning approximately 50 hectares (120 acres); triggered by sparking power lines. Overnight, fire authorities had downgraded the bushfire to 'watch and act' level, but warned that a predicted southerly change could spread the blaze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Port Stephens\nA fire that started on 13 October 2013 to the east of Hank Street in Heatherbrae burnt out large sections of bushland in Heatherbrae and Tomago almost reaching the Hunter River to the south, resulting in the closure of Cabbage Tree Road, from the Pacific Highway to Nelson Bay Road. From Heatherbrae it moved in an easterly direction burning bushland in Raymond Terrace and Williamtown, causing the closure of Newcastle Airport and Nelson Bay Road, the main road from Newcastle to Port Stephens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Port Stephens\nNear the Heatherbrae roundabout embers from the fire started a secondary blaze that burned a portion of the grass median of the Pacific Highway northeast of the roundabout. The main fire forced the closure of Masonite Road and Camfield Drive, but remained east of the Pacific Highway. After a southerly wind change, the fire headed northeast, burning more of the Raymond Terrace and Williamtown bushland, surrounding Newcastle Airport and RAAF Base Williamtown on three sides, but remaining west of Medowie Road. At Campvale, north of Williamtown, the fire crossed Richardson Road burning much of the Campvale bushland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Port Stephens\nThe fire eventually stopped after burning into the southwestern corner of Medowie, approximately 13\u00a0km (8\u00a0mi) from where it began. To the west, the fire remained east of the Pacific Highway, stopping just short of the Lakeside area, the easternmost subdivision of Raymond Terrace. Although homes were threatened, none were lost. By 21 October, the fire was declared under control, having burned approximately 5,000 hectares (12,000 acres). Two boys, aged eleven and 15, have been charged for starting the fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Newcastle\nIn the Newcastle local government area, a fire that was ignited near Stockrington Road at Minmi, west of Newcastle central business district, became notable on 23 October; an emergency warning was issued by the RFS at 12:20 AEDT and the Pacific Motorway was closed at 13:40 AEDT, between Beresfield and Seahampton; and later re-opened to traffic. As of 25\u00a0October\u00a02013, the fire had burnt over 250 hectares (620 acres).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 88], "content_span": [89, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Lake Macquarie\nOn 23 October an emergency warning was issued, that was later downgraded, for a fire ignited near Oakdale Road at Gateshead in the Lake Macquarie local government area; in the Dudley-Redhead area. Late in the evening on 23 October the fire was burning towards the Awabakal Nature Reserve; and by 25 October the fire had burnt over 242 hectares (600 acres).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 93], "content_span": [94, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Hunter and Central Coast regions, Central Coast\nFires on the Central Coast were centred around the Lake Munmorah area. The Ruttleys Road fire posed a potential threat to properties in Nords Wharf, Cams Wharf, Catherine Hill Bay, Gwandalan, and Summerland Point. The fire peaked on 18 October, with the main concern placed on residents living in the Chain Valley Bay area. Large areas of forest in the Munmorah State Conservation Area were burned. On 17 October fires forced the closure of the Pacific Highway in both directions between Swansea and Lake Munmorah. As of 23\u00a0October\u00a02013 the fire had burnt approximately 2,850 hectares (7,000 acres) of bushland and was under control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 92], "content_span": [93, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Southern Highlands\nIn the Southern Highlands region, a fire that originated in the village of Balmoral in the Wingecarribee local government area was centred on the Hall Road fire, that broke containment lines on 17 October; and headed towards Yanderra. Flames of up 7 metres (23\u00a0ft) were reported. Fire authorities issued an emergency warning, and school children from Yanderra Public School were evacuated to Bargo. The Hume Motorway was closed in both directions, between Mittagong and Wilton, with south-bound traffic queued for 20 kilometres (12\u00a0mi); and the Southern Highlands railway line closed between Picton and Moss Vale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Southern Highlands\nBy 21 October, the fire warning was downgraded. Whilst the communities of Alpine, Aylmerton, Balmoral, Bargo, Buxton, Couridjah, Hill Top, Pheasants Nest, Wilton, Yanderra, and Yerrinbool were all threatened or affected by the Hall Road fire; only two houses and ten other buildings were destroyed. Over 15,600 hectares (39,000 acres) were burnt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Other areas\nIn the period from 13 October, fires were scattered across the state, concentrated along the Great Dividing Range. On the NSW South Coast, a fire near Wirritin in the Shoalhaven local government area, west of Ulladulla burnt 4,000 hectares (9,900 acres) of bushland; and claimed the life of the pilot of a plane which crashed while fighting fires in the rugged bushland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Major fires, Other areas\nOn the Mid North Coast region, a fire that was ignited in the upper catchment of the Dungay Creek within the Kempsey Shire burnt more than 3,400 hectares (8,400 acres); and three separate fires in the Clarence Valley local government area, concentrated in the Chaelundi National Park and in the Dalmorton State Forest, burnt over 7,700 hectares (19,000 acres) of bushland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Damage and effects\nTwo fatalities were attributed to the fires. At least 248 dwellings and other buildings were destroyed; with 193 properties destroyed and 109 damaged in the lower Blue Mountains at Springwood, Winmalee and Yellow Rock. More than 118,000 hectares (291,584 acres) of bushland were burnt across the state, concentrated around the eastern seaboard and highlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Damage and effects\nHSC examinations in some regions were affected by the bushfires. Among the schools affected by the fires, St. Columba's Catholic College, close to the Linksview Road Fire were evacuated mid-exam. Springwood High School and Winmalee High School. Lake Munmorah High School near the Ruttleys Road Fire was also evacuated. NSW Minister for Education Adrian Piccoli advised school students and parents attending affected schools, \"Students should not take risks to get to an exam. The first priority for every student is to make sure that they are safe,\". On 23 October every school in the Blue Mountains was closed to facilitate the work of the emergency services and to encourage residents to leave the mountains that day for their own safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Damage and effects\nTransport across the state was severely affected at its peak on 17 and 18 October and again on 23 October. Southwest of Sydney, the Hume Motorway was closed in both directions as a result of the bushfire at Balmoral. In the Blue Mountains, the Bells Line of Road was closed in both directions. The Great Western Highway, whilst not closed, was impacted by high traffic loads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Damage and effects\nThe Pacific Highway was also closed in both directions from Swansea to Lake Munmorah between 17 and 18 October due to the fire at Lake Munmorah; and again on 23 October between Beresfield and Seahampton, caused by the fire at Minmi. Buses replaced trains on sections of the Blue Mountains and Southern Highlands railway lines. As motorists sought alternate routes, congestion was felt on the Illawarra Highway, the Princes Highway and the Pacific Motorway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Response\nThe New South Wales Rural Fire Service and Fire and Rescue NSW responded to up to 100 fires on 17 October. On 19 October crews from fire authorities in Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and Queensland joined to assist NSW emergency services' teams. Additional support was provided from fire authorities interstate again on 23 October. Approximately 2,000 firefighters, deployed on rotation, and 200 fire engines were operational in the Blue Mountains area alone. The Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, confirmed on 19 October that bushfire-affected communities would have access to disaster assistance in nineteen local government areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Response\nAs of 26\u00a0October\u00a02013, A$5.5\u00a0million had been raised via public appeals from The Salvation Army, the St Vincent de Paul Society, the Australian Red Cross, ANGLICARE Diocese of Sydney and the Blue Mountains City Council Mayoral Relief Fund, asking for people to donate cash, rather than goods. On behalf of the royal family, Charles, Prince of Wales, donated an undisclosed amount to the Australian Red Cross. Personal messages of support and sympathy were received by the Governor of New South Wales from Australia's monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, and Pope Francis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Response\nI would like to convey my heartfelt sympathy to all those who have been affected by the devastating bushfires across New South Wales. My thoughts are with the many people who have lost their homes or livelihoods in the fires, and I have great admiration for the fire fighters, volunteers and emergency services officers who are working tirelessly to contain the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Response\nUnder the (NSW), the Premier of New South Wales declared a state of emergency for thirty days, with effect on 20 October, empowering emergency personnel to evict residents and demolish fire-affected buildings. Under the Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment scheme, people affected were eligible for a A$1000 cash payment for adults and A$400 for each child, subject to certain conditions for residents within the Blue Mountains, Lithgow, Muswellbrook, Port Macquarie-Hastings, Port Stephens, Wingecarribee and Wyong local government areas. A range of relief measures, including personal hardship and distress assistance, were made available by the NSW Government via the Ministry for Police and Emergency Services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Response\nIn the worst affected area of the Blue Mountains, the risk of asbestos contamination forced authorities to ban owners and the public from visiting houses destroyed by fire, until clearance was given. A recovery centre was established at Springwood, an animal evacuation shelter at Hawkesbury Showground, and emergency authorities conducted numerous meetings in locations where fires threatened communities. The NSW Government appointed Phil Koperberg to the position of Blue Mountains Bushfire Recovery Coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, International media coverage\nThe bushfires received prominent coverage on the BBC News, with correspondent, Jon Donnison filing:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, International media coverage\nFor families living around the small community of Springwood in the Blue Mountains, many have had their lives turned upside down. Australians are well used to the threat of bush fires, but nothing can prepare you for the moment when you return home to find your house and everything inside utterly gutted by fire. Several fires are still burning around Springwood. Relays of helicopters whirr through the smoky haze, dumping water to try and douse the flames. A drop in the temperature today has given fire fighters a window to try and get on top of the situation before the weekend, when the mercury is expected to rise again. It's only spring here. The fear is of a long and difficult summer fire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, International media coverage\nOther international coverage was also provided by The New York Times, CNN, Al Jazeera, The Guardian including on the UK-site homepage, and the New Zealand Herald.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Political debate\nOn 21 October, Christiana Figueres, a UN official on climate change, told CNN:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Political debate\nThe World Meteorological Organization has not established a direct link between this wildfire and climate change \u2013 yet. But what is absolutely clear is the science is telling us that there are increasing heat waves in Asia, Europe, and Australia; that there these will continue; that they will continue in their intensity and in their frequency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Political debate\nThe Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, criticised earlier comments made by Australian Greens' MP Adam Bandt, with Abbott stating on 17 October that \"Australia is a country which is prone to natural disaster but every time it strikes, it hurts and we grieve for all of those who are now hurting because of what's happened in NSW\". Abbott dismissed the claims made by Figueres and in an interview on national radio stated that \"Climate change is real as I've often said and we should take strong action against it. But these fires are certainly not a function of climate change, they're a function of life in Australia.\" Abbott's comments attracted a stern rebuke from former US Vice President Al Gore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235074-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 New South Wales bushfires, Political debate\nWell, it's not my place to get involved in your politics, but it reminds me of politicians here in the United States who got a lot of support from the tobacco companies and who argued to the public that there was absolutely no connection between smoking cigarettes and lung cancer. And for 40 years the tobacco companies were able to persuade pliant politicians within their grip to tell the public what they wanted them to tell them. And for 40 years the tragedy continued. And bushfires can occur naturally, and do, but the science shows clearly that when the temperature goes up and when the vegetation and soils dry out, then wildfires become more pervasive and more dangerous. That's not me saying it, that's what the scientific community says.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours\nThe New Year Honours 2013 were appointments by some of the 16 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, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours\nThe New Year Honours were announced on 28 December 2012 in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, on 31 December 2012 in New Zealand, and 28 December 2012 in the Cook Islands, Barbados, Grenada, Solomon Islands, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Saint Christopher and Nevis, Belize, and Antigua and Barbuda,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours\nThe recipients of honours are displayed as they were styled before their new honour 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. Civil, Diplomatic and Military as appropriate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, United Kingdom\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of the United Kingdom, on advice of the British Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Cook Islands\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of New Zealand, on advice of the Cook Islands Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Barbados\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Barbados, on advice of the Barbadian Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Grenada\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Grenada, on advice of the Grenadian Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Solomon Islands\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of the Solomon Islands, on advice of the Solomon Islands Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Saint Vincent and Grenadines\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, on advice of the Vincentian Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Belize\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Belize, on advice of the Belizean Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Antigua and Barbuda\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Antigua and Barbuda, on advice of the Antiguan and Barbudan Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235075-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours, Saint Christopher and Nevis\nBelow are the individuals appointed by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of Saint Kitts and Nevis, on advice of the Kittian and Nevisian Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235076-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Year Honours (New Zealand)\nThe 2013 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 2012 and the beginning of 2013. They were announced on 31 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235076-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00235077-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election\nThe 2013 election for New York City Comptroller was held on November 5, 2013, along with elections for Mayor, Public Advocate, Borough Presidents, and members of the New York City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election\nThe first-term incumbent Comptroller, John Liu, did not run for re-election, as he decided to run in the 2013 election for Mayor of New York City. The Democratic Party nomination was won by Scott Stringer, who defeated former Governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned in disgrace in 2008. John Burnett was the Republican nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election\nOn Election Day, Stringer handily defeated Burnett and various third-party candidates, winning 80.4% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nNew York City borough President Scott Stringer was considered to be the front runner for the Democratic nomination, having raised nearly $3.5 million as of July 7, 2013. When former New York governor Eliot Spitzer announced his intention to run for the office, he brought a larger challenge to Stringer. In 2008, while governor, Spitzer resigned amid a prostitution scandal. His name recognition as a former governor was expected to help him in the election, while the scandal was expected to harm his chances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\n\"I'm hopeful there will be forgiveness, I am asking for it,\" Spitzer said, commenting on the scandal. \"Politics is a contact sport,\" Spitzer said on July 8, on radio's The Bill Press Show. \"I made significant errors. I stood up, accepted responsibility, resigned. It's now been five years, I hope the public will extend its forgiveness to me.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nCoincidentally, Spitzer was running against Kristin M. Davis (who was running as a Libertarian), his former madam who had helped him get call girls as governor. She spent three months in prison for running an escort service. \"This is going to be the funnest campaign ever,\" she told The New York Daily News. \"I\u2019ve been waiting for my day to face [Spitzer] for five years,\" Davis said. \"I sat ... in Rikers Island, I came out penniless and nothing happened to him. The hypocrisy there is huge.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nStringer's campaign immediately responded to Spitzer's candidacy. On July 8, his campaign manager released a statement saying, \"Scott Stringer has a proven record of results and integrity and entered this race to help New York's middle class regain its footing. By contrast, Eliot Spitzer is going to spurn the campaign finance program to try and buy personal redemption with his family fortune. The voters will decide.\" The statement alluded to Spitzer's family fortune. Prior to Spitzer's announcement, Stringer had already received several endorsements from candidates in the mayoral election, most of whom did not withdraw their endorsements after Spitzer's announcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nOne of the first to publicly state her support of Stringer was Christine Quinn, who is the Speaker of the New York City Council. She stated, \"Scott Stringer has been an exceptional borough president with the highest ethical standards. He has my full support and I will do whatever I can to help him become the next comptroller of the City of New York.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nSpitzer appeared on CNBC's Morning Joe on July 9, and was visibly emotional when asked about what he had learned the past five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nStringer's fundraising soared dramatically after Spitzer's announcement. During the week of July 8, Stringer raised over $100,000. In all, Stringer had spent just over $679,000 and had $3 million on hand. Spitzer declared that he could use his family fortune to finance his campaign. Although he hired staffers to collect petitions, Spitzer's campaign did not list any major spending during the then most recent filing period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nOn July 11, a deadline passed for candidates to file an ethics report. Several of the candidates, most notably Spitzer, did not file the report in time. Not filing a report can lead to a fine of between $250 and $10,000. However, there was a 1-week grace period before any penalties were enforced. A lawyer representing Spitzer's campaign said the candidate was \"very busy\" last week working on filing petitions with the signatures he needed to secure a spot on the Democratic ballot. A spokesperson for Stringer's campaign stated, \"The old Eliot Spitzer supported stringent ethics disclosure. Just as we've seen on his decision to abandon campaign spending limits he once supported, it's increasingly clear that Eliot Spitzer believes there are two standards in public life\u2014one for him, and one for everyone else.\" Even with that news, Spitzer was still leading in polls conducted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 942]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nIn an ad that began airing during the week of July 22, 2013, Spitzer admitted that he \"failed-big time.\" He went on to say, \"I hurt a lot of people. When you dig yourself a hole, you can either lie in it the rest of your life, or do something positive. That's why I'm running... Everyone, no matter who you are, deserves a fair shot. I'm asking voters to give the same for me.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nNews coverage about the election (and, more specifically, Spitzer's attempt at redemption) were mixed. On July 18 CNN host Jake Tapper talked about Spitzer's \"incredibly reckless and ... very illegal\" prostitution scandal. In an interview on The Colbert Report, comedian Stephen Colbert noted Spitzer's lead in the polls by asking, \"Do you [Spitzer] think that signals progress for our country or the slow decay of our moral values?\" After Spitzer began laughing, Colbert declared, \"This isn't Charlie Rose motherf**ker!\" Speaking about Spitzer's own qualifications Colbert asked if Spitzer was \"at once and the same time above and below this job?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Democratic primary\nHe later asked, \"Shouldn't the job of comptroller go to someone who has shown a modicum of self-comptrol? Why should the people trust you?\" \"The totality of a record,\" Spitzer suggested, such as his time as Attorney General, make him a suitable candidate. In 2010, after the initial scandal, Colbert told him he could be honest with him because Spitzer had \"no public image to uphold.\" However, Politico blogger Gary Bauer suggested that, unlike Anthony Weiner (who was running for mayor), Spitzer seemed to be redeeming himself. Similarly, the Los Angeles Times noted that, while Spitzer's past had hurt him, voters were beginning to forgive him, noting that, unlike Weiner, Spitzer stopped his behavior immediately after leaving office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Republican primary\nJohn Burnett, a Wall Street financier, ran unopposed for the nomination of the Republican Party. In mid-July 2013, he announced he would release his personal tax returns. New York Republican consultant William F. B. O'Reilly opined that Burnett would have a reasonably strong chance of success in the election if Spitzer won the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Major third parties\nBesides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Minor third parties\nAny candidate not among the six qualified New York parties (Democratic, Republican, Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families) must petition their way onto the ballot; they do not face primary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235077-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Comptroller election, Results\nOn Election Day, Stringer handily defeated Burnett and various third-party candidates, winning 80.4% of the vote. Burnett received 16.7% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election\nElections for members of the New York City Council were held in 2013. Primary elections were held on September 10, 2013, for all 51 districts of the city council. Many incumbents are termed out of office, while others were defeated in the primary, resulting in the largest turnover of council members since 2001, when 36 new members were nominated and elected to office in the council. Those who won their primaries without another contending party in the same district are considered the effective winner of the seat outright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Incumbents not seeking reelection, Term-limited incumbents\n17 incumbent councilors (16 Democrats and 1 Republican) were prevented from seeking a 4th consecutive term by term limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 95], "content_span": [96, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Incumbents defeated, In primary election\nOne incumbent Democrat was defeated in the September primary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Manhattan, District 4\nIncumbent Democrat Daniel Garodnick was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, The Bronx, District 13\nIncumbent Democrat James Vacca was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 20\nIncumbent Democrat Peter Koo was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 21\nIncumbent Democrat Julissa Ferreras was unopposed in the Democratic primary", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 23\nIncumbent Democrat Mark Weprin was unopposed in the Democratic primary", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 25\nIncumbent Democrat Daniel Dromm was unopposed in the Democratic primary", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 26\nIncumbent Democrat Jimmy Van Bramer was unopposed in the Democratic primary", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 29\nIncumbent Democrat Karen Koslowitz was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 30\nIncumbent Democrat Elizabeth Crowley was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Queens, District 32\nIncumbent Republican Eric Ulrich was unopposed in the Republican primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Brooklyn, District 39\nIncumbent Democrat Brad Lander was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Brooklyn, District 43\nIncumbent Democrat Vincent J. Gentile was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Staten Island, District 49\nIncumbent Democrat Debi Rose was unopposed in the Democratic primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235078-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Council election, Results, Staten Island, District 51\nIncumbent Republican Vincent M. Ignizio was unopposed in the Republican primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon\nThe 2013 New York City Marathon was the 43rd running of the annual marathon race in New York City, United States, which took place on Sunday, November 3. It followed a one-year hiatus after the 2012 event was canceled due to Hurricane Sandy. Geoffrey Mutai of Kenya won the men's division with a time of 2:08:24, his second consecutive win in New York. Priscah Jeptoo, also from Kenya, won the women's division with a time of 2:25:07. The two winners each received $100,000 in prize money, with Jeptoo capturing the World Marathon Majors title for $500,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon\nIn the women's wheelchair division, Tatyana McFadden of the United States completed a historic sweep of the Boston, London, Chicago, and New York marathons in the same year, winning in 1:59:13. She became the first person to win four major marathons in a single calendar year. Switzerland's Marcel Hug won the men's wheelchair division in 1:40:14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon\nJimmy Jenson became the first person with Down syndrome to run the entire New York City Marathon, and Joy Johnson became the oldest woman to do so at age 86.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon\nA record high of 50,740 runners participated, of which 50,062 finished the marathon (30,536 men and 19,526 women). This was the largest number of participants of any marathon in history. This was the final race for marathon record holder Joy Johnson. The marathon also saw its one millionth overall starter since its start in 1970. The marathon was sponsored by ING Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon, Organization\nSecurity was notably increased at the marathon, following the Boston Marathon bombing, with baggage screenings, surveillance helicopters, and inspection of runners, among other measures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon, Race summary\nThe wheelchair division was scheduled to start at 8:30\u00a0a.m. EST, the elite women's division at 9:10\u00a0a.m., and the elite men's division at 9:40\u00a0a.m. The last wave of runners was scheduled to start at 10:55\u00a0a.m. At 9:00\u00a0a.m., the temperature at the starting line was a cool and windy 46\u00a0\u00b0F (8\u00a0\u00b0C), with a headwind for much of the race, which approached 20\u00a0mph (32\u00a0km/h) and hampered the runners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon, Race summary, Women's division\nAfter the first 3.1 miles (5\u00a0km), Bizunesh Deba, the eventual second-place finisher, and Tigist Tufa, the eventual eighth-place finisher, had taken a significant lead, 80 seconds ahead of the rest of the pack. At 12.4\u00a0mi (20\u00a0km) into the race, Deba and Tufa were 3 minutes ahead of the rest of the pack. Eventual winner Priscah Jeptoo trailed by 3:30 at the halfway point. Deba and Tufa maintained their lead after 16\u00a0mi (26\u00a0km), as the race entered Manhattan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon, Race summary, Women's division\nJeptoo closed to 1:30 behind the lead by the 20\u00a0mi (32\u00a0km) mark, after breaking from the pack on the Queensboro Bridge. With 3\u00a0mi (4.8\u00a0km) left, Deba was still in first place, while Jeptoo had overtaken Tufa for second place and drawn to 38 seconds behind Deba. Jeptoo caught up to Deba in Central Park just before 24\u00a0mi (39\u00a0km) into the race, then overtook Deba to win the race, finishing 48 seconds ahead in 2:25:07.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235079-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Marathon, Race summary, Men's division\nAfter the first 3.1 miles (5\u00a0km), Meb Keflezighi, the eventual 23rd-place finisher, led with a time of 15:42. The men's race had a tighter lead pack than the women's for the first 20\u00a0mi (32\u00a0km), when Geoffrey Mutai, the eventual winner, and Stanley Biwott, the eventual fifth-place finisher, broke away from the pack. Mutai and Biwott continued to lead the pack after 22\u00a0mi (35\u00a0km). Mutai then pulled ahead of Biwott to lead by 9 seconds after 23\u00a0mi (37\u00a0km), and led him by 33 seconds after 24\u00a0mi (39\u00a0km). Biwott fell back to finish fifth, while Mutai maintained his lead to win the race in 2:08:24, finishing 52 seconds ahead of second-place Tsegaye Kebede.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235080-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Public Advocate election\nThe 2013 New York City Public Advocate election was held on November 5, 2013, along with elections for the Mayor, Comptroller, Borough Presidents, and members of the New York City Council. Incumbent Democratic Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, serving his first term, ran for Mayor of New York City rather than seek re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235080-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Public Advocate election\nThe Democratic Party held its primary on September 10, and since no candidate reached 40%, a runoff was held on October 1 between the top two candidates, Councilwoman Letitia James and State Senator Daniel Squadron. James won the runoff to become the Democratic nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235080-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Public Advocate election\nThe Republican Party did not nominate a candidate. In the general election, James faced Green Party nominee James Lane and Conservative nominee Robert Maresca as well as various minor party candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235080-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Public Advocate election, Democratic primary, Tone\nThe runoff between Letitia James and Daniel Squadron was characterized as bitter by most of the media outlets that covered it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235080-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Public Advocate election, Major third parties\nBesides the two main parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235080-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City Public Advocate election, Minor third parties\nThe following parties without automatic ballot access succeeded in petitioning onto the ballot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections\nThe 2013 elections for borough presidents were held on November 5, 2013, and coincided with elections for Mayor, Public Advocate, Comptroller, and members of the New York City Council. Primary elections were held on September 10, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Bronx Borough President\nIncumbent Bronx Borough President Rub\u00e9n D\u00edaz, Jr. (D) is seeking reelection. D\u00edaz was first elected Bronx Borough President in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Bronx Borough President, Major Third Parties\nBesides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 92], "content_span": [93, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Bronx Borough President, General Election Result\nDiaz won the election with 89.4% of the vote. Perri earned 7.9%, Escoffery-Bey garnered 1.6% and Lundgren received 1.1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 96], "content_span": [97, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Brooklyn Borough President\nIncumbent Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz (D) cannot run again because of term limits. Markowitz has served three terms (12 years) as Brooklyn Borough President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Brooklyn Borough President, Major Third Parties\nBesides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 95], "content_span": [96, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Brooklyn Borough President, General Election Result\nAdams won the election with 90.8% of the vote. Weir garnered 9.2%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 99], "content_span": [100, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Manhattan Borough President\nIncumbent Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer (D) is not seeking reelection but is instead running for New York City Comptroller in the 2013 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Manhattan Borough President, Minor Third Party\nAny candidate not among the qualified New York parties must petition their way onto the ballot; they do not face primary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 94], "content_span": [95, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Manhattan Borough President, General election\nBrewer won the election with 82.9% of the vote. Casavis garnered 17.1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Queens Borough President\nIncumbent Queens Borough President Helen Marshall (D) could not run again due to term limits. Marshall has served three terms (12 years) as Queens Borough President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Queens Borough President, Minor Third Party\nAny candidate not among the six qualified New York parties must petition their way onto the ballot; they do not face primary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 91], "content_span": [92, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Queens Borough President, General Election Result\nKatz won the election with 80.3% of the vote. Arcabascio garnered 17.1% and Brown earned 2.6%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 97], "content_span": [98, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Staten Island Borough President\nIncumbent Staten Island Borough President James Molinaro (C) cannot run again because of term limits. Molinaro has served three terms (12 years) as Staten Island Borough President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Staten Island Borough President, Major third parties\nBesides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 100], "content_span": [101, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Staten Island Borough President, Minor third parties\nAny candidate not among the qualified New York parties must petition their way onto the ballot; they do not face primary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 100], "content_span": [101, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235081-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City borough president elections, Staten Island Borough President, General Election Result\nOddo won the election with 69.1% of the vote. Liedy garnered 29.7%, Bardel earned .7% and Johnson received .5% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 104], "content_span": [105, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election\nThe 2013 New York City mayoral election occurred on November 5, 2013, along with elections for Comptroller, Public Advocate, Borough President, and members of the New York City Council. The incumbent mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg, a Republican-turned-Independent, was term-limited and thus unable to seek re-election to a fourth term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election\nPrimary elections were held on September 10, 2013. The Republican nominee was former Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Joe Lhota. New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio was the Democratic nominee. De Blasio was elected mayor with 73.15% of the vote, becoming the first Democrat to win a mayoral election in the city since 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Background\nRepublican and Republican-endorsed candidates had won five successive mayoral elections in New York City. Republican Rudy Giuliani was elected in 1993 and re-elected in 1997. Republican Michael Bloomberg was then elected in 2001 and re-elected in 2005. He left the Republican Party in 2007, and successfully persuaded the city council to extend the city's term limits law so that he could run for a third term. He was re-elected as an Independent on the Republican and Independence/Jobs & Education ballot lines in 2009. The term limits law was subsequently changed by a referendum in 2010, reverting the limit to two terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Democratic primary\nAs the campaign started, early polling showed city council speaker Christine Quinn as the frontrunner. However, she was hampered by running what was widely viewed as a poor campaign, and by her connections to incumbent mayor Bloomberg. As Quinn declined in the polls, former U.S. Representative Anthony Weiner became the new frontrunner, helped by his popularity with women voters. However, Weiner's campaign collapsed after it was revealed that he had continued to engage in sexting after he had resigned from congress due to a previous sexting scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Democratic primary\nAfter this development, New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio surged in the polls, helped by several ads featuring de Blasio's interracial family, especially his son Dante, and by a campaign focusing on inequality, with de Blasio frequently referencing the novel A Tale of Two Cities. A week prior to the election, de Blasio was considered the frontrunner, and his campaign was given a boost when Mayor Bloomberg described it as \"racist,\" outraging Democratic voters and causing them to rally around de Blasio's campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Republican primary, Bribery scandal\nOn April 2, 2013, federal law enforcement officers arrested numerous New York City-area politicians. These included Democratic state senator Malcolm Smith and Republican city councilman Dan Halloran, who were charged with trying to bribe various Republican political leaders so as to get Smith onto the ballot as a Republican. The Mayor of Spring Valley and local Republican party leaders were also arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Major third parties\nBesides the Democratic and Republican parties, the Conservative, Green, Independence and Working Families parties are qualified New York parties. These parties have automatic ballot access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Minor third parties\nAny candidate not among the six qualified New York parties must petition their way onto the ballot; they do not face primary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Minor third parties, Liberal\nAfter the party twice endorsed a candidate for mayor, only to see them withdraw from the race, the party declined to endorse a third candidate, although they did consider endorsing Jack Hidary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235082-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York City mayoral election, Minor third parties, Libertarian\nJoe Lhota was originally nominated as the Libertarian candidate during the Party Convention held on April 6, 2013, a nomination he declined. It was soon after ruled by the Libertarian Executive Committee that this nomination was invalid and void due to the attending voters of this first Convention not being properly credentialed. A second nominating convention was held on June 11, 2013, which nominated Michael Sanchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season\nThe 2013 New York Cosmos season was the first season of the new team playing in the new North American Soccer League. Including the previous franchise, this was the sixteenth season of the club playing professional soccer in the New York metropolitan area. In 2013, the team earned the league's Fall Championship, and became the 2013 NASL Champions by winning the Soccer Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Background\nThe second version of the New York Cosmos came into existence during the summer of 2010. During the 2011 and 2012 calendar years, several youth teams and one tributary team under the Cosmos name played in an array of matches. The last season an organized team under the name \"New York Cosmos\" competed in any sort of professional level is 1985, nearly thirty years ago, when the Cosmos operated as an independent soccer club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Review, June\nOn June 18, 2013, Cosmos played their first friendly of the season, defeating Newtown Pride FC 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Review, July\nOn July 1, former United States men's national soccer team midfielder Danny Szetela agreed to join the Cosmos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Review, July\nOn July 21, the Cosmos played their second friendly of the season against Old Carthusians in London, England. The final score was 4\u20131 to Cosmos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Review, July\nThree days later on July 24, Cosmos played their second friendly in England against Leyton Orient, losing 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Review, July\nThe Cosmos then played their third and final friendly in England against Gillingham, drawing 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Competitions, NASL Spring Season\nThe Cosmos did not compete in the NASL spring season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235083-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Cosmos season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nThe Cosmos did not compete in the 2013 edition of the Open Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235084-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Film Critics Circle Awards\nThe 79th New York Film Critics Circle Awards, honoring the best in film for 2013, were announced on December 3, 2013 and presented on January 6, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235085-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Film Festival\nThe 51st New York Film Festival was held September 27 \u2013 October 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235085-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Film Festival\nThe Festival also included talks with Richard Curtis, James Gray, Paul Greengrass, Agnieszka Holland, and Frederick Wiseman. It was the first edition of the Festival following the retirement of longtime festival Director Richard Pe\u00f1a, succeeded by Kent Jones. The lineup saw a larger Main Slate selection than prior years, the addition of the documentary and \"Emerging Artists\" sections, and the renaming of the previous \"Masterworks\" program as \"Revivals\". The primary selection committee included Kent Jones (chair), Dennis Lim, Marian Masone, Gavin Smith, and Amy Taubin. The Godard retrospective was programmed by Kent Jones and Jake Perlin, and Views from the Avant-Garde was programmed by Mark McElhatten. Convergence was curated by Matt Bolish and Eugene Hernandez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season\nThe 2013 New York Giants season was the franchise's 89th season in the National Football League, the fourth playing their home games at MetLife Stadium and the tenth under head coach Tom Coughlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season\nThe Giants attempted to attain a playoff berth after failing to do so in 2012, and be the first team to play the Super Bowl on their own home field, which they share with the New York Jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season\nHowever, they failed to improve on their 9\u20137 record and were eliminated from playoff contention after their Week 14 loss to the Chargers. The Giants started 0-6, but rallied to win 7 of their last 10, finishing 7-9. This was the Giants' first losing season since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season\nThe Giants became the first team in NFL history to have a five-year era in which they won the Super Bowl in the third year of the era but missed the playoffs in all other years. Five other teams had similar situations where their lone playoff appearances in any five-year stretch were Super Bowl victories; however four of these were won on their fifth year of that stretch:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season\nThe San Francisco 49ers won their Super Bowl on their fourth year of their stretch from 1978 to 1982.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: at Dallas Cowboys\nWith the loss, the Giants start their season at 0\u20131. It was their first loss ever in AT&T Stadium since it opened in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Denver Broncos\nWith the loss, the Giants fell to 0\u20132. Eli Manning became 0\u20133 opposed to his brother Peyton. This would be the last time the Manning brothers played against each other in the NFL, with Peyton retiring following the 2015 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 81], "content_span": [82, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: at Carolina Panthers\nWith the shutout loss, the Giants fell to their first 0\u20133 start since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Kansas City Chiefs\nWith the loss, the Giants fell to their first 0\u20134 start since 1987 \u2013 which coincidentally also followed a Super Bowl victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nWith the loss, the Giants fell to 0\u20135, their worst start since the strike-shortened 1987 season and their 1979 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at Chicago Bears\nThe Giants fell to the Chicago Bears 27\u201321, and were 0\u20136 for the first time since 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThis game would give the Giants their first win of the season, and would also mark the only time Josh Freeman would start for the Vikings after transferring from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Philadelphia Eagles\nWith the win, the Giants improved to 2\u20136, and would snap an eight-game losing streak when playing on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Oakland Raiders\nThis game would snap a 5-game losing streak for Giants against AFC teams. They improved to 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 83], "content_span": [84, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Green Bay Packers\nWith the win, the Giants improved to 4-6. The game was originally scheduled for Sunday Night Football but was flexed to 4:25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: at San Diego Chargers\nWith the loss, the Giants fell to 5\u20138, and were mathematically eliminated from playoff contention for the second straight season, thus rendering them unable to play Super Bowl XLVIII on their home turf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nEli Manning threw a career high five interceptions during this game. This would be the second season in a row where the Giants were shutout by the top NFC seed in Week 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 84], "content_span": [85, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235086-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Giants season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Detroit Lions\nWith the win, the Giants placed the Lions out of post-season contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 80], "content_span": [81, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season\nThe 2013 New York Jets season was the franchise's 44th season in the National Football League and the 54th overall. The Jets improved their 6\u201310 regular season record from 2012 and attempted to make history as the first host team to play the Super Bowl on their own home turf, alongside the New York Giants, whom they share the same home field, MetLife Stadium. However, they missed the playoffs for a third consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThis game marked the debut of 2013 second-round draft pick QB Geno Smith from West Virginia. However, Smith only stepped in as QB due to incumbent starter Mark Sanchez suffering an apparent shoulder injury. Smith's first game didn't start off on the right foot, as he fumbled after taking a sack from Buccaneers MLB Mason Foster, and threw an interception to Buccaneers linebacker Lavonte David. Smith eventually rebounded by throwing his first career TD pass to Kellen Winslow Jr. to make the game close by halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe second half was a defensive struggle between both teams that wound up in both teams scoring in field goals. The biggest moment of the game came when Geno Smith scrambled out of bounds and Lavonte David (the same player who intercepted Smith earlier in the game) delivered a late hit to Smith in the last seconds of the game, resulting in a 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty against David which pushed the Jets' position forward just enough to enable a successful 48-yard field goal from Nick Folk to secure victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at New England Patriots\nGeno Smith had his worst game so far in his rookie season. After playing solidly in the first three quarters of the game against a mostly out-of-sync Patriots team (Tom Brady completed less than 50 percent of his passes for the first time since 2009), Geno Smith fell apart, throwing three interceptions in the fourth quarter alone; his third INT to Aqib Talib ultimately sealed the Jets' fate, as the Jets lost to the Patriots 13\u201310 in a sloppy matchup in Foxborough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Buffalo Bills\nIn a matchup of fellow rookie quarterbacks Geno Smith and E.J. Manuel, the game started off well for the Jets as Geno Smith ran in the end zone for a TD, and accounted for another on a long strike to Stephen Hill. The defense was stingy, holding off E.J. Manuel and the Bills offense throughout the game leading into the third quarter, and Nick Folk delivered two successful field goals to create a 20\u20136 cushion at the beginning of the 3rd quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Buffalo Bills\nHowever, it was to be acknowledged that the Jets committed a team-record 20 penalties for 168 yards, which helped the Bills get back into the game by the 4th quarter. Eventually, Geno Smith stepped up under pressure and delivered a game-winning, 69-yard TD to Santonio Holmes. As a result, the Jets proved that they can win in the face of adversity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Buffalo Bills\nBilal Powell had a good day, rushing 27 times for 149 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Tennessee Titans\nThis was the Jets' only game outside of the Eastern Time Zone during the 2013 season. Following three touchdown throws, the Jets sacked Jake Locker out of the game in the third quarter as Locker was sidelined the next two weeks with a hip injury. Geno Smith was picked off twice while in the fourth quarter he was sacked at his own goal line by Karl Klug; he attempted to switch the ball behind his back and Klug fell on the fumble for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Atlanta Falcons\nThe Jets traveled to Atlanta to take on a depleted Falcons team on Monday Night Football. The Jets grabbed a 27-14 lead in the fourth quarter but back to back Falcons touchdowns took them to a 28\u201327 lead on a Matt Bryant field goal with 1:54 remaining in the game. From there the Jets marched down the field on four Geno Smith completions, a Smith run, and two Bilal Powell runs; the resulting field goal from Nick Folk as time expired won it 30-28. With the win, the Jets improved to 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Jets came back home to face the winless Pittsburgh Steelers. The Jets struggled all afternoon as they lost 19\u20136, giving the Steelers their first win of the season. With the loss, the Jets fell to 3\u20133, and also fell to 4\u201319 all time against the Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New England Patriots\nThis game is well known for an infamous penalty that occurred during the overtime period. The Jets were lining up for a game winning 56-yard field goal in overtime to try and give them the win. Nick Folk kicked the ball, but the kick went wide right and the Patriots appeared to be taking over with a chance to win. However, Chris Jones of New England was called for a controversial unsportsmanlike conduct penalty after pushing his teammate into the offensive line. This penalty was later named \"leaping\". The penalty gave the Jets a first down, giving them three more downs to push the field goal attempt closer. This time, Folk drilled the kick from 42 yards, and the Jets came away with a win that improved them to 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Jets were thoroughly embarrassed as Andy Dalton threw five touchdowns and Pacman Jones scored on a 60-yard interception. With the loss, the Jets fell to 4\u20134. They were also given their worst defeat since losing 45\u20133 to the Patriots in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. New Orleans Saints\nRebounding from the embarrassing loss at Cincinnati, the Jets took down the 6\u20131 Saints, putting up 198 rushing yards while intercepting Drew Brees twice. Geno Smith completed just eight passes for 115 yards but rushed for 18 yards and a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Buffalo Bills\nAfter the win over the Saints, the Jets traveled to Buffalo to face the Bills. The Jets never led during the game, as the Bills commanded the game from start to finish, winning 37\u201314. Geno Smith was intercepted three times and ended up posting an overall passer rating of 10.1. With the loss, the Jets fell to 5\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Baltimore Ravens\nFor the second time this season and second time against an AFC North opponent, the Jets failed to score a touchdown, as they lost 19\u20133 to the Baltimore Ravens. Geno Smith was intercepted twice and for the second straight week and third time in the last four, failed to throw a touchdown pass. With the loss, the Jets fell to 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Miami Dolphins\nFor the second straight week, the Jets did not score a touchdown, as they managed only a field goal in a 23\u20133 loss to Miami. Geno Smith did not start in this game, as he was benched and replaced by Matt Simms. Simms did not do much of a better job, as he, like Smith, failed to throw a touchdown pass. Smith came in later on, but only went 4 for 10 throwing the ball and ended with a passer rating of 8.3. With the loss, the Jets fell to 5\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Oakland Raiders\nFor the first time in two weeks, New York scored a touchdown. Geno Smith returned to action as starting quarterback and threw a touchdown pass and an interception as the Jets defeated the Oakland Raiders 37\u201327. With the win, the Jets improved to 6\u20137 and kept their slim playoff hopes alive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Carolina Panthers\nWith the loss, the Jets fell to 6\u20138, and were mathematically eliminated from playoff contention for the third straight season after the Ravens defeated the Lions the following Monday night, therefore rendering them unable to play on their home turf in the Super Bowl. The Jets were seeking their first win in Charlotte since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Cleveland Browns\nIn a game that had no impact on the AFC playoff picture, the Jets managed a 24\u201313 win over the Cleveland Browns. Geno Smith committed no turnovers and threw two touchdowns in the win, which improved the Jets to 7\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235087-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Jets season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Jets traveled to Miami to end their season. The Jets beat Miami 20\u20137 to end the Dolphins playoff hopes. Geno Smith did not throw a touchdown, but he also did not turn it over. The Jets forced three Miami turnovers in the game. With the win, the Jets ended their season at an even 8\u20138. It was also the Jets\u2019 13th win against the Dolphins in their last 24 meetings and seventh in that span at Joe Robbie Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235088-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Liberty season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 17th season for the New York Liberty of the Women's National Basketball Association. The Liberty will play at Prudential Center in New Jersey due to renovations at Madison Square Garden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235088-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Liberty season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Liberty's selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235089-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Lizards season\nThe New York Lizards are a Major League Lacrosse (MLL) professional men's field lacrosse team based in Hempstead, New York, United States, located on Long Island. After the 2012 season the team changed its name from the Long Island Lizards to the New York Lizards. The team will play two of its seven home games in the 2013 season in Icahn Stadium on Randall's Island in New York City. The rest of the home games will be in Hempstead, NY on Long Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235089-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Lizards season, Current depth chart*\nAfter the first two games of the season, 11 of the 18 players that recorded a statistic in those games were returning players from the 2012 Lizards team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235089-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Lizards season, On 2013 roster, no stats\nMax Seibald (26 years old, Cornell '09) was on the 2013 Lizards injured reserve roster as of 20 May 2013 and had not appeared in a game in the 2013 season as of that date. Seibald was a four-time All-American (2006\u20132009), on the 1st team three times and on the 2nd team in his freshman year at Cornell. He was Player of the Year in Division I men's lacrosse in 2009. He played with Rob Pannell in the 2009 college season at Cornell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235089-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 New York Lizards season, On 2013 roster, no stats\nCornell made it to the final of the Division I men's lacrosse tournament that year before losing to Syracuse 9-10. He played in 10 games in the 2009 season for Denver in the MLL after playing in the NCAA tournament. His first year with the Lizards was in 2012. Seibald was on the US men's national lacrosse team in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235090-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Mets season\nThe 2013 New York Mets season was the franchise's 52nd season. The Mets hosted the 84th MLB All-Star Game on July 16 at Citi Field, their home for five seasons. The Mets finished the season with a record of 74\u201388, finishing third in the National League East Division. The season was the Mets' first non-fourth-place finish since 2008. It was also the final season for Ralph Kiner, who had been with their broadcast team since its first season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235090-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Mets season, Offseason\nThe Mets lost their rights to the Minor League Baseball affiliate Buffalo Bisons as their AAA team. For 2013\u201315, the Mets have agreed to a deal to claim the Las Vegas 51s as their newest minor league affiliate, for triple A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235090-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Mets season, Offseason\nOn November 7, 2012, the Mets and outfielder Jason Bay agreed to part ways, with the team buying out the $21 million remaining on his contract and releasing him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235090-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Mets season, Offseason\nOn December 17, the Mets and the Toronto Blue Jays agreed to a deal sending 2012 Cy Young Award winner R. A. Dickey, Josh Thole and Mike Nickeas to Toronto in exchange for prospects Travis d'Arnaud, Noah Syndergaard, and Wuilmer Becerra and veteran catcher John Buck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235090-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Mets season, Regular season\nOn May 30, the Mets swept the Yankees for the second time in the history of the modern Subway Series. The Yankees had swept six games from the Mets in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235090-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Mets season, Regular season\nOn August 30, 2013, the Mets traded catcher John Buck and outfielder Marlon Byrd through the waiver process, to the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Mets received reliever Vic Black and Dilson Herrera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235090-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Mets season, Regular season\nOn September 1, 2013, Sandy Alderson announced he expects manager Terry Collins to not be fired by the club. Fans and certain media members have been publicly criticizing Collins' moves in games, and his general managing presence, and repertoire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235091-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Red Bulls season\nThe 2013 New York Red Bulls season was the club's eighteenth season in Major League Soccer, the top division of American soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235091-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Red Bulls season, Statistics, Starting 11\nLast updated: October 27, 2013Source: 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235091-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Red Bulls season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, League table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 79], "content_span": [80, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235091-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Red Bulls season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Eastern Conference standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235091-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Red Bulls season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Results Summary\nLast updated: October 27, 2013Source: Match ResultsPld = 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season\nThe 2013 New York Sportimes season was the 19th season of the franchise in World TeamTennis (WTT) including the history it inherited from the 2011 merger with the New York Buzz, the 15th season since the founding of the New York metropolitan area-franchise and its third playing home matches in both New York City and the Capital District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season\nThe Sportimes finished in last place in the Eastern Conference and had the worst record in WTT in 2013. The team played five of its home matches in Guilderland, New York and the other two in New York City. This was the opposite of what it had done in the first two post-merger seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season\nOn January 15, 2014, Sportimes CEO Claude Okin announced that the franchise had been sold to businessman Russell Geyser and his minority partner Jack McGrory, and the team would be relocated to San Diego, California and renamed the San Diego Aviators. Okin said, \"This is a bittersweet event for me personally. I am very glad to have found a motivated and able new owner for the franchise: a person who will be able to re-imagine it in another great tennis town \u2013 but I will miss my team.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season, Season recap, Personnel changes\nPrior to the 2013 roster player draft, the Sportimes traded Martina Hingis to the Washington Kastles for financial consideration. Also prior to the draft, the Sportimes acquired Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld from the Orange County Breakers for financial consideration. Robert Kendrick, Jesse Witten and Kv\u011bta Peschke all returned for the 2013 season. Although not protected by the Sportimes in the marquee draft in February, John McEnroe was signed as a wildcard player in March, and played for the team in 2013. Claude Okin, the team's principal owner and CEO, also served as the team's coach for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season, Season recap, Personnel changes\nAbigail Spears was re-signed before the start of the season as a substitute player. She only appeared in the opening match. During the season, Eric Quigley was signed as a substitute player as well and appeared in one match. James Blake was also signed during the season as a wildcard player and appeared in one match for the Sportimes. Since WTT teams are permitted to have only one wildcard player of each gender, Blake was effectively released by the Sportimes when McEnroe was designated as the team's male wildcard player on July 18, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season, Season recap, Return to Guilderland\nAfter a temporary one-year absence during which it played its Capital District home matches in Troy, New York, the Sportimes returned to SEFCU Arena in Guilderland. The team reversed what it had done during the first two seasons after the merger with the Buzz by playing five of its home matches in the Capital District and only two at Sportime Stadium at Randall's Island in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season, Season recap, Disappointing results\nThe Sportimes finished with a dismal record of 4 wins and 10 losses, last in the Eastern Conference and the worst record in WTT. The team's final home match in Guilderland was a 20\u201313 loss to the Orange County Breakers on July 18, 2013. The team's final home match in New York City was a 23\u201315 overtime loss to the Washington Kastles on July 23, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 67], "content_span": [68, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season, Draft picks\nBased on their loss in the 2012 Eastern Conference Championship Match and record of 9 wins and 5 losses, which was better than the other conference championship loser, the Sportimes had sixth selection in each round of both WTT drafts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season, Draft picks, Marquee player draft\nThe Sportimes passed on both of their selections in the marquee player draft. They did not protect John McEnroe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235092-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Sportimes season, Draft picks, Roster player draft\nThe selections made by the Sportimes are shown in the table below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season\nThe 2013 New York Yankees season was the 113th season for the New York Yankees franchise. The Yankees began their season at home with an 8\u20132 loss against the Boston Red Sox on April 1. They finished tied for third place in the American League East with an 85-77 record, which was their worst since 1992. The Yankees failed to reach the playoffs for the first time since 2008 and only the second time in nineteen years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season\nLongtime Yankees closer Mariano Rivera and longtime starting pitcher Andy Pettitte each retired following the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, April\nFollowing a sour four-game sweep in the 2012 American League Championship Series and the loss of Derek Jeter to a broken ankle, expectations entering the Yankees' 113th season were uncharacteristically low. With the Blue Jays and Red Sox each making key acquisitions in the offseason as Yankee GM Brian Cashman's adjusted his strategy toward salary reduction, the American League East Division's reputation as a perennial powerhouse had shifted sharply against the Yankees. On Opening Day, the Bombers hosted their long\u2013time rivals, the Boston Red Sox, but lost 8\u20132. Their next game was also a defeat, but veteran pitcher Andy Pettitte was able to prevent an early sweep by pitching to a 4\u20132 victory. Mariano Rivera would also earn his first save in what would be a farewell tour of sorts for the future Hall of Fame closer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, April\nMuch to the surprise of fans and pundits alike, the injury-plagued Yankees held a first place lead in the division at the end of April with a record of 16\u201310. On April 12, they turned a 4\u20136\u20135\u20136\u20135\u20133\u20134 triple play in the 8th inning of a 5-2 win against the Baltimore Orioles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, May\nOn May 9, Yankees second baseman Robinson Can\u00f3 hit his 1500th career hit with a single to center field at Coors Field in a 3-1 win against the Colorado Rockies. Without the help of core players Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez, Curtis Granderson, and Mark Teixeira, all of whom had been assigned to extended DL stints, the Yankees remained competitive through shrewd acquisitions of journeyman and platoon roleplayers such as Travis Hafner, Brennan Boesch, Lyle Overbay, and former Boston Red Sox first-baseman Kevin Youkilis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, May\nThough Granderson and Teixeira would return to the Yankee lineup by early summer, both would return to the DL after each suffered further injury. On May 30, the Yankees were swept by their crosstown rival New York Mets for the first time in the season series between the teams after a 3\u20131 loss at home. The Mets' sweep come a full decade after the 2003 Yankees won all six games from the Mets. In the second game, Mariano Rivera suffered his first blown save of the season and the first in his career where he failed to get an out by allowing two runs in the ninth in a 2-1 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, June\nDespite entering the month of June with winning records for both April and May, the Yankees would finish the month with unimpressive offensive productivity and, due in large part to continued injury, a frustratingly inconsistent lineup. Following a sweep of the Cleveland Indians, the Yankees took three out of four games in Seattle and seemed capable of maintaining competitiveness until some of their core players returned. On June 8, Andy Pettitte won his 250th career win and Mariano Rivera continued his age-defying season by earning his 22nd save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, June\nBut by the end of an extended west coast trip, Kevin Youkilis and Mark Teixeira's injuries were aggravated and both were lost for the remainder of the season. The Yankees lost three games against the Oakland Athletics, including the 18-inning finale to complete the sweep. The end of June looked bleak for the Yankees, winning only one of three games against the Texas Rangers and getting swept by the Baltimore Orioles for the first time since 2005. The Yankees finished June with a record of 11 wins and 16 losses, the first time they finished a month with a losing record since September 2010, where they went 12\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, July\nJuly showed some improvement after winning six straight games, their longest winning streak of the year. On July 1, pitcher Andy Pettitte recorded his 1,958th strikeout as a Yankee, becoming the franchise's all-time strikeout leader with a strikeout of the Minnesota Twins' Justin Morneau, surpassing Whitey Ford. They swept a four-game set against the Twins in Minnesota and won the first two of three at home versus the Orioles, but Rivera's second blown save of the season, similar to the first (allowing two runs in the ninth in a 2-1 loss) snapped the streak. The Yankees finished the first half by losing two of three to the Twins at home for the first time since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, July\nAs was originally hoped at the beginning of the year, the return of much-needed reinforcements had started to look promising. Derek Jeter came back to the lineup for the first time since breaking his ankle in the 2012 ALCS, picking up a hit in his first at bat. Long-injured starting pitcher Michael Pineda also began playing in game situations in the minors, and third-baseman Alex Rodriguez had started at 20-game rehab assignment in Scranton. But Jeter's return was quickly marred by a quadriceps strain that would sideline the captain for several weeks after only one game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, July\nWith the summer trade deadline quickly approaching, the lack of right handed power, and the return dates of Rodriguez, Jeter, and Granderson still uncertain, the Yankees acquired outfielder Alfonso Soriano from the Chicago Cubs in the hopes of increasing the team's dismal power numbers (Soriano had hit 8 home runs the month prior to moving to New York, which is one more home run than the entire Yankee team had hit during that span). Soriano, who started his career with the Yankees, received a warm ovation from the Yankee fans upon his return on July 26. The New York Post reported soon after that Brian Cashman had reservations about acquiring Soriano, but was overruled by Yankee management.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, July\nDerek Jeter returned to the Yankee lineup for the second time on July 28 and hit a solo home run on the first pitch of his first at bat. Alfonso Soriano would hit a walk-off single to give the Yankees a 6\u20135 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, August\nOn August 5, Alex Rodriguez was suspended for 211 games (until the end of the 2014 MLB season) for his involvement with the South Florida anti-aging clinic Biogenesis. He promptly appealed this suspension and was allowed to resume play for the rest of the season, but the suspension was upheld for the entire 2014 MLB regular season and postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, August\nOn August 22, the Yankees swept a four-game set versus the Toronto Blue Jays at home for a perfect 10-0 home record versus them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, September\nAfter sweeping a three-game set at home versus the Chicago White Sox to start the month after being swept by them in Chicago on August 5\u20137 for the second straight year, the Yankees lost the first three of four at home to the Red Sox with Rivera blowing two saves, but won the last on a ninth inning wild pitch. They took three of four from the Orioles in Camden Yards before being swept by the Red Sox at Fenway Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, September\nThe Yankees closed interleague play with three games at home versus the San Francisco Giants. On September 20, Alex Rodriguez hit his 24th career grand slam to surpass Lou Gehrig as the all-time grand slam leader in a 5-1 win. Iv\u00e1n Nova pitched a complete shutout in the Yankees 6-0 win. In the series finale, Pettitte made his final home start in a 2-1 loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, September\nOn September 25, 2013, the Yankees lost to the Tampa Bay Rays, which for the second time in the wild card era, eliminated them from making the playoffs for the first time since 2008. The Rays swept the three-game set in the Bronx for the first time ever and Rivera made his final appearance in the 8th inning of the series finale, retiring all four batters he faced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235093-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New York Yankees season, Regular season, September\nThe Yankees finished the season by sweeping the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Park with Pettitte earning his final victory in the second game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships\nThe 2013 Federation Tournament of Champions took place at the Times Union Center in downtown Albany on March 22, 23 and 24. Federation championships were awarded in the AA, A and B classifications. Christ the King in Middle Village, Queens won the Class AA championship. Jon Severe of Christ the King was named the Class AA tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships, Class AA\nParticipating teams, results and individual honors in Class AA were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 71], "content_span": [72, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships, Class AA, Results\nChrist the King finished the season with a 27-3 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 80], "content_span": [81, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships, Class AA, Individual honors\nThe following players were awarded individual honors for their performances at the Federation Tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 90], "content_span": [91, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships, Class A\nParticipating teams, results and individual honors in Class A were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships, Class A, Individual honors\nThe following players were awarded individual honors for their performances at the Federation Tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 89], "content_span": [90, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships, Class B\nParticipating teams, results and individual honors in Class B were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235094-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New York state high school boys basketball championships, Class B, Individual honors\nThe following players were awarded individual honors for their performances at the Federation Tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 89], "content_span": [90, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235095-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Derby\nThe 2013 New Zealand Derby was a horse race which took place at Ellerslie Racecourse on Saturday 2 March 2013. It was the 138th running of the New Zealand Derby, and it was won by Habibi. With Silent Achiever having won the race 12 months earlier, it was the first time in the history of the race that fillies have won the Derby two years in a row. The runner-up, Fix, is also a filly, and it was just the second time fillies have finished first and second in the race in more than half a century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235095-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Derby\nThe race is also notable for being the fifth Derby win for jockey Vinnie Colgan - an all-time record for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235095-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Derby\nHabibi's Derby win came in just her seventh career start, and as part of her first racing campaign. She made her debut on her home track, Ruakaka, on October 17, winning over 1200m. A series of increasingly impressive wins followed, including a Group 2 double against males at Ellerslie Racecourse over the Christmas/New Year period. It was then that connections opted to target the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235095-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Derby\nAlthough she had tasted defeat for the first time at her previous start, when a fast-finishing third in the Avondale Guineas, Habibi was the hot favourite in the Derby. She began well, but settled in about midfield as a strong pace was set by front-runner Castlzeberg. Habibi made her run early in the home straight, and she and Fix passed Castlzeberg together and drew away to fight out the finish. Though Fix resisted strongly all the way to the line, Habibi was able to edge away to win by half a length.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235095-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Derby, Winner's details, The road to the Derby\nEarly-season appearances in 2012-13 prior to running in the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235095-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Derby, Winner's details, Subsequent Group 1 wins\nSubsequent wins at Group 1 level by runners in the 2013 New Zealand Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235096-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Grand Prix\nThe 2013 New Zealand Grand Prix event for open wheel racing cars was held at Manfeild Autocourse near Feilding on 10 February 2013. It was the fifty-eighth New Zealand Grand Prix and was open to Toyota Racing Series cars. The event was also the third race of the fifth round of the 2013 Toyota Racing Series, the final race of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235096-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Grand Prix\nTwenty Tatuus-Toyota cars started the race which was won by New Zealander Nick Cassidy for the second time in succession, a feat last achieved by Simon Wills who won the race back to back in 1998 and 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235096-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Grand Prix\nThe M2 Competition team dominated the race, filling all three podium positions. Briton Alex Lynn finished second, 0.7 seconds behind Cassidy. Third was Dutch driver Steijn Schothorst.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election\nThe 2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election was held on 15 September 2013 to choose the fourteenth Leader of the New Zealand Labour Party. The election was won by David Cunliffe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election\nIt followed the resignation of leader David Shearer on 22 August 2013. Nominations closed on 26 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election\nIt was the first leadership election the Party conducted using new party rules agreed in 2012 that allow party members to vote. The Labour Party election rules state that the vote is split among the party's caucus, party members and party affiliates (unions) in a 40/40/20 split. It was also the first time a Labour leadership contest had been contested by more than two participants since 1940.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, Background\nOn 22 August 2013 Shearer announced his resignation as party leader, explaining, \"My sense is I no longer have the full confidence of many of my caucus colleagues\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, Candidates\nDeputy leader Grant Robertson declared he would contest the leadership on 25 August. Former union leader Andrew Little announced he would not contest the leadership vote on the same day. Robertson was nominated by Megan Woods and Jacinda Ardern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, Candidates\nList MP Shane Jones declared he would contest the leadership on 26 August. At a news conference later that day, MP for New Lynn David Cunliffe, declared he would contest the leadership as well. Cunliffe previously stood for the leadership at the 2011 leadership election, and lost to David Shearer and Grant Robertson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, Opinion polls\nA TVNZ Colmar Brunton poll published on 25 August found David Cunliffe led the potential contenders with 29% of the popular vote and 32% of Labour Party members, followed by Jacinda Ardern on 15%, Shane Jones on 11%, Grant Robertson on 10% and Andrew Little on 9%. A Research Now poll released by 3 News on 6 September among the public returned 39.6% support for Cunliffe, 31.6% for Jones and 28.8% for Robertson. On 8 September TVNZ published a poll which asked which candidate respondents thought would be most likely to lead the Labour Party at the 2014 election. David Cunliffe was on 39%, Shane Jones on 18% and Grant Robertson on 15%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 64], "content_span": [65, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, Campaign\nThe first televised debate was held between the candidates on M\u0101ori Television on 26 August. A series of 12 candidates meetings will be held throughout the country for Labour Party members. Controversially, all candidates made use of their ability to fly around the country out of the Parliamentary Service's budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235097-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election, Result, Unions\nMembers of the Service & Food Workers Union directly voted in the election, while union delegates voted in the other five unions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235098-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Music Awards\nThe 2013 New Zealand Music Awards is the 48th holding of the annual ceremony featuring awards for musical recording artists based in or originating from New Zealand. The main awards event will be held on 21 November 2013 at Vector Arena, Auckland and will again be hosted by Shannon Ryan, along with new host Stan Walker. Nominations opened on 27 May 2013 and closed on 8 July 2013. Eligible works were those released between 1 July 2012 and 30 June 2013. The ceremony will be broadcast on television channel Four, as will a red carpet special hosted by Drew Neemia and Sharyn Casey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235098-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Music Awards\nThe technical award winners, legacy award recipient and the Critics' Choice Prize shortlist were announced on 22 October at the Pullman hotel, Auckland. The Critics' Choice Prize winner was announced at the Critic's Choice Showcase at the King's Arms bar on 6 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235098-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Music Awards, Early awards\nWhile most of the awards are presented at the main awards ceremony held in November, four genre awards are presented earlier at ceremonies of their field. The first was awarded in January, with the Tui for Best Folk Album presented at the Auckland Folk Festival in Kumeu to Auckland alt-country group Great North for their album Halves. The Tui for Best Jazz Album was presented in March to Nathan Haines at the National Jazz Festival in Tauranga for his album The Poet's Embrance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235098-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Music Awards, Early awards\nThe Tui for Best Pacific Music Album was presented to Aaradhna at the Pacific Music Awards in May for her album Treble & Reverb. The Best Country Music Song Tui was presented to Delaney Davidson and Marlon Williams for their album Sad but True \u2013 The Secret History of Country Music Songwriting Vol. 1 at the Gold Guitar Awards, also in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235098-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Music Awards, Early awards\nIn addition, the three technical awards are presented at the ceremony on 22 October 2013. Nominees for the technical categories were announced on 10 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235099-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand NBL season\nThe 2013 NBL season was the 32nd season of the National Basketball League. The 2013 season saw the withdrawal of the Auckland Pirates and Harbour Heat, but saw the return of the Waikato Pistons after a one-year hiatus as well as the Super City Rangers, who returned to the league for the first time since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235099-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand NBL season\nThe 2013 NBL Final Four saw the top four teams play off on Saturday 13 July in a semifinals round, with the winner of each game playing in the final on Sunday 14 July at Pettigrew Green Arena in Napier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235099-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand NBL season, Team information\n*Despite holding New Zealand citizenship, Jones had to play as an import due to a new league rule where each team could only field one naturalised New Zealand player (Manawatu already had Nick Horvath filling that spot).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235100-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Open Grand Prix\nThe 2013 New Zealand Open Grand Prix was the fourth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in North Shore Events Centre, Auckland, New Zealand April 10 until April 14, 2013 and had a total purse of $50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235101-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Radio Awards\nThe 2013 New Zealand Radio Awards were the awards for excellence in the New Zealand radio industry during 2012. It was the 36th New Zealand Radio Awards, and recognised staff, volunteers and contractors in both commercial and non-commercial broadcasting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235101-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Radio Awards\nThis is a list of nominees, with winners in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235102-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand V8 season\nThe 2013 New Zealand V8 season was the fourteenth season of the series, under the NZV8 guise. The season began at Teretonga Park on 11 January and finished at the Pukekohe Park Raceway ITM Auckland 400 V8 Supercars event on 14 April after five championship meetings. The TLX Championship was won by Jason Bargwanna and the TL Championship was won by AJ Lauder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season\nThe 2013 New Zealand Warriors season was the nineteenth season in the club's history. Coached by Matthew Elliott and captained by Simon Mannering, the Warriors competed in the National Rugby League's 2013 Telstra Premiership. They finished the regular season in 11th (out of 16 teams), failing to make the finals for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Jersey and sponsors\nIn 2013 the Warriors jerseys is again to be made by Canterbury of New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Jersey and sponsors\nThe Warriors are the best selling club in the NRL for merchandise sales. In 2013 they had seven different playing shirts on sale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Jersey and sponsors\nRed Bull was announced as a new sponsor of the club, signing a three-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Fixtures, Pre-season training\nPre -season training began on 5 November 2012. Australian wrestler and mixed martial arts fighter Brad Morris was employed on the Warriors coaching staff. The team was based at the Millennium Institute of Sport and Health and North Harbour Stadium during the pre-Christmas period. Four players joined the squad on pre-season trial contracts; Charlie Gubb, Suaia Matagi, Atelea Nafetalai, Nathaniel Peteru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Fixtures, Regular season\nThe Warriors will play ten home matches at Mount Smart Stadium, one at Eden Park and another at Westpac Stadium in Wellington. This will be the Warriors first home match held outside of Auckland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams\nThe Junior Warriors again competed in the Holden Cup while senior players who were not required for the first team played with the Auckland Vulcans in the NSW Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams, Holden Cup Squad\nIn John Ackland's last season with the club, the Junior Warriors made the grand final, before losing 30-42 to the Penrith Panthers juniors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams, Holden Cup Squad\nGrand Final team: David Fusitua, Metia Lisati, Adam Tuimavave-Gerrard, Ngataua Hukatai, Viliami Lolohea, Tuimoala Lolohea, Mason Lino, James Taylor, Siliva Havili, Albert Vete, Michael Sio, Raymond Faitala-Mariner and David Bhana (c). Bench: Eko Malu, Sam Lisone, Kouma Samson, Solomone Kata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams, Holden Cup Squad\nSeventeen Junior Warriors attended an NRL rookie camp on 24 and 25 November 2012. They were Vincent Afoa, Katamiro Atera, Trent Bishop, Raymond Faitala-Mariner, Sione Feao, David Fusitua, Ngani Laumape, Mason Lino, Sam Lisone, Kouma Samson, Kurt Robinson, Lafu Feagaiga, Tama Koopu, Kenneth Maumalo, Eric Newbigging, Sam Cook and Esera Esera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams, Vulcans squad\nThe Vulcans were coached by Willie Swann, who was assisted by Brent Gemmel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams, Vulcans squad\nThe Vulcans made the finals, losing to the Wests Tigers 24-34 in an elimination final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams, Vulcans squad\nThe 2013 squad was Aaron Nootai, Agnatius Paasi, Atelea Nafetalai, Daniel Palavi, Murray Iti, Nathaniel Peteru, Steve Waetford, Tangi Ropati and Zoram Watene. In addition, the Vulcans were able to select players contracted to the Warriors and not selected for first grade, including four under 20 players; Ngani Laumape, Siliva Havili, Trent Bishop and Visesio Setefano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Other teams, Vulcans squad\nSuaia Matagi was named the player of the year, ahead of runner up Tangi Ropati. John Palavi was named the rookie of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235103-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand Warriors season, Awards\nCaptain Simon Mannering won the Player of the Year award while Ngani Laumape won Rookie of the Year. The Clubman of the Year was Manu Vatuvei and Shaun Johnson won the People's Player of the Year, decided by public vote. Jerome Ropati was presented with a special Legacy Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum\nThe 2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum is a citizens-initiated referendum that took place by postal ballot from 22 November 2013 to 13 December 2013. It was on the Fifth National (Key) government's policy to partially privatise four energy-related state-owned enterprises and reducing the government's share in Air New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum\nIn March 2013, the groups collecting signatures to force the referendum announced that they had achieved enough signatures to comfortably clear the 10% registered voters threshold. However, in May 2013, the clerk of the house announced that the petition was 16,500 signatures short of the number required (308,753), as about 100,000 signatures on the petition were faulty or invalid. The organisers had a further two months to obtain the extra signatures. In September 2013, it was officially confirmed that the added signatures had successfully been collected, with the tally now standing some 18,500 more signatures than required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum\nThe referendum was backed by several prominent New Zealanders, including Dame Anne Salmond, who called it the \"only just way\" to determine whether asset sales are acceptable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum\nOn 30 September 2013, Prime Minister John Key announced that the referendum would be via postal ballot and would take place between 22 November and 13 December. The cost of the referendum would be $NZD9\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum\nJohn Key said that the Government intended to ignore the results of the referendum, as the 2011 general election gave them a mandate for the sell-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum\nThe referendum result showed a two to one majority against the proposed asset sales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum, Question\n\"Do you support the Government selling up to 49% of Meridian Energy, Mighty River Power, Genesis Power, Solid Energy and Air New Zealand?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum, Background\nThe National government was re-elected at the 2011 election on a platform of \"Mixed Ownership Model\" for the five state-owned companies Meridian Energy, Mighty River Power, Genesis Energy, Solid Energy and Air New Zealand, where a minority stake in the companies would be sold off. This policy was opposed by the opposition. A coalition of groups including the Green Party, Grey Power, Council of Trade Unions (CTU), Labour Party, New Zealand Union of Students' Associations (NZUSA), Greenpeace and others started a petition against it in April 2012. The New Zealand Herald argued in an editorial that the Green Party used parliamentary funding to pay people to collect signatures, which while legal broke a long-standing convention about citizen initiated referenda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum, Background\nBy July 2012, it was reported that nearly 200,000 signatures had been collected, of which 100,000 were collected by the Green Party. As a combined initiative, Labour and the Greens issued a protest T-shirt against asset sales in support of the referendum. By early January 2013, the group had collected 340,000 signatures, more than enough to force a referendum; 10% of registered voters or approximately 310,000 signatures are required to force a referendum, although more are generally required to be collected to account for invalid and duplicate signatures. By late February 2013, 391,000 signatures had been collected. On 12 March 2013, the entire 393,000-signature petition was presented to the House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum, Background\nHolding a referendum separate from an election process is estimated to cost $9\u00a0million. Defending this cost, Russel Norman, Greens co-leader, noted that this cost paled in comparison to the (to September 2013) $100\u00a0million cost of the asset sales program itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum, Result\nThe referendum took place by postal ballot, opening on 22 November 2013 and closing on 13 December 2013. 45 cent of eligible voters took part. Of those, approximately two-thirds voted against asset sales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235104-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand asset sales referendum, Result\nDespite the result of this referendum being not in favour of partial asset sales, Prime Minister John Key announced these partial asset sales would continue. He said: \"Three in four New Zealanders said no we don't agree with Labour and the Greens. I think it will be a dismal failure from their point of view.\" He had also gone on to call the referendum \"an utter waste of money\" as he had no intention of honouring its results, claiming the Government had been re-elected at the 2011 general election partially on the basis of the pending shares sell-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235105-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand bravery awards\nThe 2013 New Zealand bravery awards were announced via a Special Honours List on 2 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235105-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand bravery awards, New Zealand Bravery Decoration (NZBD)\nFor an act of exceptional bravery in a situation of danger:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget\nThe New Zealand budget for fiscal year 2013/14 was presented to the New Zealand House of Representatives by Finance Minister Bill English on 16 May 2013. This was the fifth budget English has presented as Minister of Finance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Outline\nBudget 2013 \"progressed the Government's programme while on track to surplus\":", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Outline\n(All figures for four years to 2016/17 unless otherwise stated).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Outline\nThe 2013 budget re-iterated the Government's targets \u2013 returning to surplus by 2014/15 and bringing net government debt back down to 20% of GDP by 2020:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Outline\nBudget 2013 confirmed the Government's decisions to cap and reduce debt:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Public services\nThe Ministerial Committee on Poverty has endorsed a number of important initiatives to help low-income families. They include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Welfare\n$188.6 million extra over four years in social welfare. This follows a $287.5 million investment in Budget 2012, and includes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Health\n$1.6 billion additional is to be spent on public health over four years for new health initiatives and to meet cost pressures and population growth. This takes total health spending to $14.7 billion in 2013/14. $1 billion of this extra funding goes to District Health Boards to take account of population changes and inflationary pressures. Extra health spending over the next four years includes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Education\nIn the current year and over the next four years, around $900 million extra will be spent on education initiatives across early childhood, primary and secondary education. The total spending in these sectors will be $9.7 billion in 2013/14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Education\nExtra education spending in the current year and over the next four years includes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Education\nMore than $130 million over four years and reprioritised funding in tertiary education. It includes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235106-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand budget, Reactions\nBusiness New Zealand welcomed the budget, but also added that it wanted to see \"bolder reform in the areas such as retirement savings and age of eligibility for superannuation and interest-free student loans.\" President of the New Zealand Council of Trade Unions, Helen Kelly said the budget \"has not addressed the big issues\" and said the budget did nothing to \"support struggling families; it does not do enough to alleviate our shocking child poverty and continues to prioritise short-term debt reduction over creating jobs and fairness.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235107-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand census\nThe 2013 New Zealand census was the thirty-third national census. \"The National Census Day\" used for the census was on Tuesday, 5 March 2013. The population of New Zealand was counted as 4,242,048, \u2013 an increase of 214,101 or 5.3% over the 2006 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235107-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand census\nThe 2013 census forms were the same as the forms developed for the 2011 census which was cancelled due to the February 2011 major earthquake in Christchurch. There were no new topics or questions. New Zealand's next census was conducted in March 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235107-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand census, Collection methods\nThe results from the post-enumeration survey showed that the 2013 census recorded 97.6 percent of the residents in New Zealand on census night. However, the overall response rate was 92.9 percent, with a non-response rate of 7.1 percent made up of the net undercount and people who were counted in the census but had not received a form.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235107-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand census, Results, Population and dwellings\nNote: All figures are for the census usually resident population count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235107-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand census, Results, Ethnicity\nThe census usually resident population count of 4,242,048 included 230,649 people without an ethnic response and 4,011,399 people who identified with at least one ethnicity. The figures for the total ethnicity of the population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235107-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand census, Results, Birthplace\nThe number of people living in New Zealand who were born overseas continued to climb. In 2013, 1,001,787 people (25.2 percent) were born overseas. For the overseas-born census \"usually resident population\":", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235107-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand census, Results, Religion\nThe table below is based on religious affiliation data recorded at the last three censuses for usually resident people. Note that figures and percentages may not add to 100 percent as it is possible for people to state more than one religion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235108-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand gallantry awards\nThe 2013 New Zealand gallantry awards were announced via a Special Honours List on 20 April 2013. Recipients are awarded New Zealand gallantry awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235109-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand local elections\nThe 2013 New Zealand local elections were triennial elections to elect local government officials and District Health Board members, and the membership of other local bodies such as Licensing Trusts. All elections were conducted by postal ballot, with election day being Saturday 12 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235109-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand local elections, Electoral systems\nThe local elections were held using postal ballot. Most city and district councils and all but one regional council used the first-past-the-post (FPP) voting system, with the exception of the following six city and district councils that used the single transferable vote (STV) voting system:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235109-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand local elections, Electoral systems\nThe Wellington Regional Council was the sole regional council using the STV system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235109-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand local elections, Electoral systems\nEnvironment Canterbury and Kaipara District were under statutory management and no elections were held. All District Health Boards used the STV system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235109-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand local elections, Timeline\nUnder section 10 of the Local Electoral Act 2001, a \"general election of members of every local authority or community board must be held on the second Saturday in October in every third year\" from the date the Act came into effect in 2001, meaning 12 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235109-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand local elections, Timeline\nKey dates for the election as set out by the Electoral Commission are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235109-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand local elections, Timeline\nPolitical commentator Vernon Small thought that the government would likely try and combine the local elections with the asset sales referendum, but this did not happen. Instead, the referendum was held via postal ballot between 22 November and 13 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season\nThe 2013 New Zealand rugby league season was the 106th season of rugby league that had been played in New Zealand. The main feature of the year was the National Competition run by the New Zealand Rugby League. The competition was won by the Akarana Falcons, who defeated the Counties Manukau Stingrays 22-12 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season\nThe New Zealand national rugby league team competed in the 2013 ANZAC Test in addition to the end of year World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nThe New Zealand national rugby league team played the annual ANZAC Test against Australia at Canberra Stadium on 19 April, losing 12-32. The squad was Josh Hoffman, Sam Perrett, Shaun Kenny-Dowall, Dean Whare, Jason Nightingale, Kieran Foran (c), Shaun Johnson, Jesse Bromwich, Issac Luke, Jared Waerea-Hargreaves, Frank Pritchard, Kevin Proctor, Alex Glenn, Bench: Elijah Taylor, Sam McKendry, Ben Matulino, Tohu Harris. Captain Simon Mannering was ruled out on the day of the test, with Glenn replacing him in the starting side and Harris joining the bench. Roger Tuivasa-Sheck was the reserve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nAt the end of the year the Kiwis participated in the 2013 World Cup, where they made it to the final and lost to Australia 2-34. The tournament was hosted in England, Wales, France and Ireland. The Kiwis played a warm up game against the Cook Islands side, winning 50-0. The match was not an official test match and featured a six-man bench and an unlimited interchange.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nThe New Zealand M\u0101ori side hosted the Murri Queensland Indigenous team. Coached by Darren Pirini, the squad consisted of Steve Wateford, Thyme Nikau, Rusty Bristow, Zebastian Luisi, Tee Mahe, Cody Walker, Jody Henry, Sam Rapira, Kurt Kara, Charlie Gubb, Bodene Thompson, Rulon Nutira, Scott Jones, Hamiora Mihaka, Tony Tuia, Jay Pukepuke and Kouma Samson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nThe Junior Kiwis lost 26-38 to the Junior Kangaroos at WIN Jubilee Oval on 13 October 2013. The side included Kurtis Rowe, Dallin Watene-Zelezniak, Jeremy Hawkins, Ngani Laumape, David Fusitua, Tuimoala Lolohea, Mason Lino, Albert Vete, Manaia Cherrington, James Taylor, Raymond Faitala-Mariner, Joseph Tapine, David Bhana (c). Interchange: Mitch Clark, David Minute, Zach Docker-Clay, Takai Moeakiola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nThe Kiwi Ferns competed in the Women's World Cup, losing the final for the first time. As part of the Festival of World Cups, New Zealand also sent a tertiary and defence force teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, National competitions, Rugby League Cup\nAuckland were the current holders of the Rugby League Cup but did not defend the trophy during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Australian competitions\nThe New Zealand Warriors spent their 19th first grade season in the Australian competition, playing in the National Rugby League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Australian competitions\nThe Junior Warriors again competed in the Holden Cup, while the Auckland Vulcans competed in the NSW Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Auckland\nThe Auckland Rugby League competition began on 30 March and ended on 18 August when the Point Chevalier Pirates defeated the Mount Albert Lions 24-22 in the grand final. The Sharman Cup was won by the Richmond Rovers who defeated the Otara Scorpions 18-14 and the Mount Wellington Warriors defeated the Glenfield Greyhounds 39-10 to win the Phelan Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Auckland\nZebastian Luisi was named the player of the year, Point Chevalier's Matiu Love-Henry was the rookie of the year, Mount Albert's James Blackwell was the competition's top try-scorer and Mount Albert's Cody Walker won the Lance Painter Rose Bowl as top goal scorer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Wellington\nThe University Hunters defeated the Randwick Kingfishers 22-10 to win the Wellington Rugby League competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Canterbury\nThe Hornby Panthers won the Canterbury Rugby League grand final with a 22-20 win in overtime over Halswell. It was the first game of rugby league to be played at Christchurch's Rugby Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Canterbury\nAddington, Sydenham and Linwood all celebrated their centenaries during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Waikato\nTaniwharau defeated Hamilton City Tigers 18-16 at Resthills Park, Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235110-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Northland\nThe Hikurangi Stags won the Whangarei City & District rugby league title, by defeating the Takahiwai Warriors 36-26 at Toll Stadium, Whangarei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm\nThe 2013 New Zealand winter storm was a highly intense extratropical cyclone which affected New Zealand on 20\u201322 June. The storm brought strong winds and high waves especially around the Wellington Region, and further afield chilling cold temperatures and heavy snow to the South Island. The storm was described by the New Zealand National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) as an extreme event. The maximum 10-minute average, sustained wind reading, recorded at Wellington airport was 101\u00a0km/hour, with individual gusts up to 130\u2013140\u00a0km/hour at this location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm\nWinds were equivalent to the strength of a category 1 or 2 hurricane on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale. Record wave heights of 15 m peak to trough were recorded by a buoy offshore from Baring Head in the Cook Strait. The highest wind gust was 202\u00a0km/hr, at Mt Kaukau, Wellington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Meteorological history\nOn 19 June a surface low pressure just to the northwest of the South Island and at the same time there was a southerly coming in with some cold air at the top of the atmosphere. \"The whole thing developed as a massive low that started to move across the west of the South Island, then [20 June] it moved across Cook Strait to create a new low just east of Kaikoura... that was the real kick in pants that caused a clockwise circle of wind.\" -Associate", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Meteorological history\nProfessor James Renwick at the School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences at Victoria University has researched how polar conditions affect our weather. \"To get an event like this, which is pretty extreme, we need the westerly wind that normally blows across New Zealand and the southern oceans to slow down and to buckle into a series of big meanders, north-south waves around the hemisphere.\" The air was so cold over the country, temperatures dropped to \u22126\u02daC in Tekapo, because the isobars stretched all the way to down to the edge of the Antarctic sea ice\". This followed bad weather earlier in the month on 4 June which saw winds up to 120\u00a0km/h and torrential rain and flooding across the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nHigh winds struck Central New Zealand on the night of 20 June and morning of 21 June. Wind gusts uprooted trees, ripped roofs off houses, smashed windows and flung trampolines into powerlines in Wellington, Kapiti Coast and Wairarapa, closing roads and schools across the lower North Island. The Fire Service received 932 emergency calls for help in the lower North Island in the 12 hours to 6\u00a0am 21 June. During the Storm residents were advised to stay indoors and not go out by the City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nWellington City Council said they had received many reports of flying debris with multiple reports of trees and powerlines down, along with broken windows and structural damage. In the suburb of Kingston a house lost its roof. Radio New Zealand listeners reported that roofing iron was blowing about on roads in Newtown. Emergency services said they were very busy during the storm. The Northern Police Communications Centre said 90% of the calls it received couldn't be answered by its overloaded central branch based in Wellington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nThe storm damaged houses, roads and seawalls, as well as closing 150 schools and leaving thousands without power across the country. The storm caused significant damage to the capital's electricity network and resulted in 30,000 homes and businesses without power at its peak. Conditions were so dangerous that some council and power companies stopped their workers from carrying out repairs, until the storm had subsided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nOcean waves measuring 15 metres (49\u00a0ft) from trough to peak were recorded from a buoy about 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) out to sea, near Wellington by NIWA. The waves washed away parts of some coastal roads and seawalls, and were the largest recorded near the capital since measurements began in 1995. Localised coastal flooding also occurred in the Wellington suburbs of Island Bay, Seaview and the city of Porirua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nIn Lower Hutt the local council estimated a cost of $100,000 NZD to remove debris washed up on the Petone foreshore when parts of the wall were smashed by the storm surge. Logs and driftwood lay scattered around Marine Parade to Eastbourne. The childhood holiday home of writer Katherine Mansfield was severely damaged by massive waves at Days Bay where several homes were completely destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nRacing at Trentham Racecourse was cancelled following the storm and the start of the Wellington LUX light festival was postponed until 22 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nThe Hawkes Bay region saw destructive winds, with a peak gust of 80\u00a0km/h recorded at Hawkes Bay Airport on 21 June. Police and council workers spent much of the following weekend cleaning up after the storm, most of which involved uprooted trees and blocked roads. Hawke's Bay Civil Defence manager Trevor Mitchell said the region had got off \"pretty lightly\" compared to other parts of the country, though some areas suffered localised surface flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235111-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 New Zealand winter storm, Impacts\nThe Insurance Council of New Zealand says the storm could be the biggest weather event, insurance-wise, in the lower North Island since the 2004 Manawatu River floods. Measurements placed the storm in the same category as five other major storms recorded in 1961, 1965, 1967, 1974, 1977 and 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235112-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Newcastle Knights season\nThe 2013 Newcastle Knights season was the 26th in the club's history. Coached by Wayne Bennett and captained by Kurt Gidley, they competed in the NRL's 2013 Telstra Premiership, finishing the regular season in 7th place (out of 16), thus reaching the finals. The Knights then came within one match of the grand final but were knocked out by eventual premiers, the Sydney Roosters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235112-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Newcastle Knights season, Jerseys and sponsors\nIn 2013, the Knights' jerseys were made by ISC and their major sponsor was Hunter Ports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235112-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Newcastle Knights season, Representative honours\nThe following players appeared in a representative match in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235113-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Newfoundland and Labrador Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Newfoundland and Labrador Scotties Tournament of Hearts women's provincial curling championship, was held January 16\u201320 at the Bally Haly Golf & Curling Club in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. The winning Stacie Devereaux rink would go on to represent Newfoundland and Labrador at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235113-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Newfoundland and Labrador Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Results\nAll draw times listed in Newfoundland Standard Time Zone (UTC\u221203:30).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 69], "content_span": [70, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235113-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Newfoundland and Labrador Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Playoffs\nDue to Devereaux being undefeated, she must be beaten twice by Strong in order for Strong to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 70], "content_span": [71, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235114-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Newfoundland and Labrador Tankard\nThe 2013 Newfoundland and Labrador Tankard, the men's provincial curling championship for Newfoundland and Labrador, was held from February 5 to 10 at the RE/MAX Centre in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. The winning team of Brad Gushue will represent Newfoundland and Labrador at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235114-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Newfoundland and Labrador Tankard, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Newfoundland Standard Time (UTC\u22123:30).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235115-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Newfoundland and Labrador municipal elections\nMunicipal elections were held in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador on September 24, 2013. This article lists the results in selected municipalities. Results are for mayoral elections unless otherwise specified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235116-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nicholls State Colonels football team\nThe 2013 Nicholls State Colonels football team represented Nicholls State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Colonels were led by fourth-year head coach Charlie Stubbs and played their home games at Manning Field at John L. Guidry Stadium. They were a member of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138, 1\u20136 in Southland play to finish in a tie for seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235116-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nicholls State Colonels football team, Media\nNicholls State football games were broadcast live on the radio through KLRZ 100.3 FM, KLEB AM 1600, and KBZE 105.9 FM. KLRZ and KLEB also streamed the games online.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235117-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nickelodeon Indonesia Kids' Choice Awards\nThe 2013 Nickelodeon Indonesia Kids' Choice Awards were held on 14 June 2013, at the Studio 8 in Kebon Jeruk, West Jakarta and hosted by Ayu Dewi and Coboy Junior. The ceremony held the theme for \"Slime Station\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235117-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nickelodeon Indonesia Kids' Choice Awards\nCoboy Junior led the nominations with two categories and also was biggest winner with taking home two awards for Favourite Child Star and Slime Star.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235118-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nicky Rackard Cup\nThe 2013 season was the ninth staging of the Nicky Rackard Cup. Donegal were the 2013 Champions, defeating Roscommon in the final. However, they were not promoted to the 2014 Christy Ring Cup due to a restructuring of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235118-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nicky Rackard Cup, Structure\n6 teams compete. 4 play in Round 1, 2 go straight to Round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235119-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nielsen Pro Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Nielsen Pro Tennis Championships was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 22nd edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Winnetka, United States between 1 and 7 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235119-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nielsen Pro Tennis Championships, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235119-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nielsen Pro Tennis Championships, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235120-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nielsen Pro Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nDevin Britton and Jeff Dadamo were defending champions, but Britton decided not to participate. Dadamo teamed up with Mischa Zverev but lost to Kevin King and Juan Carlos Spir in the first round. Yuki Bhambri and Michael Venus claimed the title, by beating Somdev Devvarman and Jack Sock 2\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20138]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235121-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nielsen Pro Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nJohn-Patrick Smith was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Jack Sock won the title, beating Bradley Klahn 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235122-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nigeria Entertainment Awards\nThe 2013 Nigeria Entertainment Awards was the 8th edition of the ceremony. It was held at the Skirball Center for the Performing Arts in New York and hosted by Basketmouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235123-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nigeria Premier League\nThe 2013 Nigeria Professional Football League will be the 42nd season of the competition since its inception, and the 23rd since the rebranding of the league as the \"Professional League\". Due to start in December, numerous delays and challenges to the board pushed the opening weekend back to February, and then pushed to March 9. There was a season-opening Super Four tournament won by Heartland F.C. between the four clubs involved in Continental competitions in order to get them ready for their international assignments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235123-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nigeria Premier League, Clubs\nSixteen teams from the previous season and four teams promoted from the Nigeria National League (Bayelsa United, El-Kanemi Warriors, Nasarawa United and Nembe City F.C.) participated in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235123-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nigeria Premier League, Table, News\nAkwa United were banished to Rojenny Stadium in Anambra State for the rest of the season after a Week 18 incident against Warri Wolves where fans invaded the pitch and attacked officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235123-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nigeria Premier League, Table, News\nA September game between Kano Pillars and Enyimba was abandoned in the final minutes because of crowd trouble. Pillars will play the rest of the season in Kaduna. After the league originally awarded the forfeit to Enyimba, the NFF ruled the game to be replayed 9 October in Lokoja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235124-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Night Train Tour\nThe 2013 Night Train Tour was the fifth headlining concert tour by American country music artist Jason Aldean, in support of his fifth studio album Night Train. It played at stadiums and arenas across North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235124-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Night Train Tour, Background\nAldean held the first ever concert at Sanford Stadium on the campus of the University of Georgia on April 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235124-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Night Train Tour, Background\nOn July 12, 2013, Aldean became the first country artist to ever headline Fenway Park. He sold out the historic park in seven minutes which is the quickest in the venue's history. Due to the quick sell-out he scheduled a second show for July 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235124-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Night Train Tour, Setlist\nThe following set list is representative of the show on September 20, 2013. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235124-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Night Train Tour, Setlist\n1. \"Crazy Town\"2. \"Take a Little Ride\"3. \"Tattoos on This Town\"4. \"When She Says Baby\"5. \"The Truth\"6. \"Fly Over States\"7. \"Texas Was You\"8. \"Johnny Cash\"9. \"Amarillo Sky\"10. \"Night Train11. \"1994\"12. \"Don't You Wanna Stay\"13. \"Tennessee River\"14. \"Big Green Tractor\"15. \"The Only Way I Know16. \"Dirt Road Anthem\"17. \"She's Country\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235124-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Night Train Tour, Tour DVD\nA live concert DVD entitled 'Night Train to Georgia' was released on October 15, 2013. Majority of the film was captured during Aldean's concert at Sanford Stadium on April 13, 2013. The film will include an 18-song set list that showcases 10 of his No. one hits. Also featured on the 90 minute DVD are personal interviews from Aldean, footage from his record-breaking Fenway Park and Wrigley Field stadium shows held in Summer 2013. There are also appearances by Kelly Clarkson, Luke Bryan and Ludacris as each of them joined him on stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235125-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nineveh governorate election\nThe 2013 Nineveh Governorate election in Iraq was held on 20 June with elections for the Al Anbar Governorate. Due to security problems, turnout was less than half that of the 2009 election. This election saw Sunni Arab parties lose a number of seats to minority parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235125-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nineveh governorate election, Background\nNineveh is one of Iraq's most demographically-diverse governorates. Out of a population of about 2.8\u00a0million, 2013 estimates cited by Niqash claim about 300,000 Turkmen, (primarily in Tal Afar and Rashidiya. A similarly-sized population of Yazidis live in the districts of Shekhan and Sinjar and near the town of Bashiqa. Some 250,000 Shabaks live in villages north and east of Mosul, and 200,000 Christians live in Bashiqa, Bartella and Bakhdida. There is a sizable Kurdish population, with many Yazidis also identifying as Kurds. Although elections for 13 of Iraq's 18 governorates were held on 20 April, elections in Al Anbar and Nineveh were delayed due to security concerns in the ongoing insurgency and Sunni-led protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235125-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nineveh governorate election, Violence\nAs of 14 June there were eight attacks on provincial-council candidates in Nineveh, resulting in six deaths (including Muhanad Ghazi, a Sunni Arab candidate for the Iraqi Republican Gathering\u2014a party supporting Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki). Ghazi was shot dead by unknown gunmen whilst walking home from the East Mosul mosque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235125-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nineveh governorate election, Violence\nAnother local politician, Younis al-Rammah (leader of the moderate United Iraqi Gathering party), was killed on 19 June\u2014the day before the election. Rammah was hosting a family gathering at a residence in Hadhar when a man embraced him, detonating a suicide vest and killing Rammah and four relatives. No group claimed responsibility for the attack, although Iraqi officials blamed it on attempts by the Islamic State of Iraq to disrupt the political process and return to sectarian violence. There was also violence on election day, with four Iraqi soldiers wounded by mortar rounds and roadside bombs in the Mosul area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235125-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nineveh governorate election, Analysis\nThe Uniters List, composed of al-Hadba and the Iraqi Islamic Party, had won 49.82 percent of the vote and 22 of 37 seats in the Nineveh Governorate Council in 2009. The party held eight of 39 council seats after the 2013 election. The local Arab parties lost control of the council, although Atheel al-Nujaifi remained governor. The new council president was Bashar Kiki, a Kurd; the new vice-president, Nour ad-Din Qabalan, was a Turkmen. Nujaifi's deputy, Abdul Qader Battoush, is also Kurdish. His second deputy, Hassan al-Allaf, is an Arab and one of three politicians elected from Mosul (which had produced a large number of Arab politicians in the previous election).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235125-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nineveh governorate election, Analysis\nAccording to local political scientist Hamza Hussein, the number of seats won by minorities demonstrated popular discontent and lack of confidence in the previous council. Local activist Rabea Mustafa said that opposition to the previous council arose largely from resentment of its fractured nature, which hampered its ability to deliver basic services. Mustafa also said that the election result was due to minorities being driven out of Mosul because of violence; these minorities then settled elsewhere in Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235125-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Nineveh governorate election, Analysis\nVoter turnout in Mosul was low, due to security problems and a lack of confidence in the political process and the previous council. Candidates were better able to canvass outside Mosul due to better security, and many Mosul-based candidates withdrew from the election. Voter turnout was about half that of 2009: 581,449, compared to 995,169 in the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235126-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open\nThe 2013 Yinzhou Bank Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 WTA 125K series. It took place in Ningbo, China, on 22\u201327 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235126-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open, Women's Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235127-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nShuko Aoyama and Chang Kai-chen were the defending champions, having won the 2012 Ningbo Challenger \u2013 Women's Doubles, but both players chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235127-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Doubles\nChan Yung-jan and Zhang Shuai won the title, defeating Irina Buryachok and Oksana Kalashnikova in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235128-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nHsieh Su-wei was the defending champion, having won the 2012 Ningbo Challenger \u2013 Women's Singles, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235128-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open \u2013 Singles\nBojana Jovanovski won the title, defeating Zhang Shuai in the final, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235129-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nippon Professional Baseball season\nThe 2013 Nippon Professional Baseball season is the 64th season since the NPB was reorganized in 1950.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235129-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nippon Professional Baseball season, Climax Series\nNote: All of the games that are played in the first two rounds of the Climax Series are held at the higher seed's home stadium. The team with the higher regular-season standing also advances if the round ends in a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235129-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nippon Professional Baseball season, Climax Series, First stage\nThe regular season league champions, the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles (PL) and the Yomiuri Giants (CL), received byes to the championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235129-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nippon Professional Baseball season, Climax Series, Final stage\nThe regular season league champions, the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles (PL) and the Yomiuri Giants (CL), received a one-game advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235129-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nippon Professional Baseball season, Climax Series, Final stage, Pacific League\nTohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles (4) vs. Chiba Lotte Marines (1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235129-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nippon Professional Baseball season, Japan Series\nPL Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles (4) vs. CL Yomiuri Giants (3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize\nThe 2013 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, for their \"extensive work to eliminate chemical weapons\". The award citation indicated the organization was awarded the prize, because they \u201chave defined the use of chemical weapons as taboo under international law. Recent events in Syria, where chemical weapons have again been put to use, have underlined the need to enhance the efforts to do away with such weapons.\u201d The committee criticized Russia and the United States for not meeting the extended deadline for destruction of its chemical weapons, and noted that certain countries \"are still not members\". The OPCW was the 22nd organization to be awarded the prize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Nomination\nThe Norwegian Nobel Committee announced on 4 March 2013, it had received 259 nominations for the prize. This was the highest number of nominations ever: 18 more than the previous record year 2011. Of those 259 nominations, 50 were for organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Announcement\nThe winner of the Award was announced on 11 October 2013. The press release indicated that the OPCW was awarded the prize for \"its extensive efforts to eliminate chemical weapons\". The announcement further reiterated the development of the Chemical Weapons Convention, which establishes the OPCW, as well as earlier instruments such as the Geneva Convention of 1925, but also indicated the use of chemical weapons during World War II and afterwards \"by both states and terrorists\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Announcement\nThe use of chemical weapons in Syria was also mentioned as a recent event underscoring the importance of elimination of chemical weapons. The OPCW contributed to the UN mission investigating the use of chemical weapons in Ghouta and its activities since 1 October entailed supervision of destruction activities, which followed the accession of Syria to the Chemical Weapons Convention (and its provisional application), OPCW Executive Council Decision EC-M-33/DEC.1. and was mandated via the United Nations Security Council Resolution 2118.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Announcement\nThe Nobel Committee was critical towards Russia and the United States for not meeting their extended deadlines for the full destruction of its chemical weapons in 2012, and mentioned that some states \"are still not members\". Non -member states of the OPCW are the states which are not party to the Chemical Weapons Convention: Angola, Egypt, Israel, Myanmar, North Korea and South Sudan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Committee\nThe Nobel Peace Prize is awarded by the Norwegian Nobel Committee. For the 2013 award, the members were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons\nThe Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) is an intergovernmental organisation, located in The Hague, Netherlands. The organisation promotes and verifies the adherence to the Chemical Weapons Convention which prohibits the use of chemical weapons and requires their destruction. The organization was established on 29 April 1997, upon the entry into force of the Chemical Weapons Convention. The verification consists both of evaluation of declarations by member states and on-site inspections. The principal body of the organization is the \"conference of states parties\", which normally is convened yearly. The Executive Council is the executive organ of the organisation and consists of 41 States Parties. The \"Technical Secretariat\" applies most of the activities mandated by the Council and is the body where most of the employees of the organisation work. Ahmet \u00dcz\u00fcmc\u00fc is Director-General of the OPCW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 76], "content_span": [77, 1005]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons\nAll 190 parties to the Chemical Weapons Convention are automatically members of the OPCW. Non -members are Israel and Myanmar, which are signatory states that have not ratified the Chemical Weapons Convention, and Angola, Egypt, North Korea and South Sudan, which have neither signed nor acceded to the Chemical Weapons Convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 76], "content_span": [77, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Reaction\nOPCW Director-General Ahmet \u00dcz\u00fcmc\u00fc told reporters that he hoped his organisation's work would help \"to achieve peace in that country [Syria] and end the suffering of its people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Reaction\nUnited Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon congratulated the organisation's work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Reaction\nUSA Today quoted a London-based Syrian opposition activist who doubted Syrian people would be celebrating the award. Similarly, a spokesperson for the Syrian National Coalition labelled the prize \"ironic\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235130-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Nobel Peace Prize, Reaction\nPakistani politician Imran Khan called on the USA and Russia to destroy their own chemical weapons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235132-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Nordic Figure Skating Championships was held from January 31 to February 3, 2013 at the Egilsh\u00f6ll in Reykjav\u00edk, Iceland. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles on the senior, junior, and novice levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235133-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic Futsal Championship\nThe 2013 Nordic Futsal Championship, was the Third edition of the Nordic Futsal Championship hosted by Stockholm, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235134-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic Futsal Cup\nThe 2013 Nordic Futsal Cup was held from December 4 to 7, 2013 in Nyk\u00f8bing Falster, Denmark. Sweden won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235135-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships\nThe FIS Nordic Junior and U23 World Ski Championships 2013 took place in Liberec, Czech Republic from 20 January to 27 January 2013. It was the 36th Junior World Championships and the 8th Under-23 World Championships in nordic skiing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235136-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic Opening\nThe 2013 Nordic Opening was the 4th edition of the annual cross-country skiing event. The three-day event was the first competition round of the 2013\u201314 FIS Cross-Country World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235136-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic Opening, World Cup points distribution\nThe winners of the overall standings were awarded 200 World Cup points and the winners of each of the three stages were awarded 50 World Cup points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235136-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic Opening, World Cup points distribution\nA total of 350 points was possible to achieve if one athlete won all three stages and the overall standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms\n2013 Nordic storms were a series of storms affecting predominantly the Nordic nations with other northern European nations also affected. The first storm in the series Hilde, named Otto by Free University of Berlin, and Eino in Finland was an extratropical cyclone affecting parts of northern Europe, causing disruption to electricity supplies and transportation across mid Norway, northern Sweden and central Finland during 15\u201318 November 2013. The storm brought a new record average wind speed to Sweden (at altitude), however wind speeds at lower altitudes were less than seen during Cyclone Dagmar of 2011. Most damage was caused by falling trees along the storm's path likely exacerbated by unfrozen ground. The total cost of damage is likely to be low, as the storm passed over relatively unpopulated regions of the Nordic nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Meteorological history\nThe storm formed over the Atlantic Ocean to the south of Greenland and west of Newfoundland on 15 November. The storm followed a similar, though more northerly path than Dagmar in 2011. The storm was estimated to be less intense than Dagmar, and the more northerly track would take it over lightly populated regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Meteorological history, Preparation and warnings\nBefore the storm the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute issued class 1- and class 2-warnings across Norrland. Class 2-warning remained active on 17 November in parts of V\u00e4sterbotten and Norrbotten. The Finnish Meteorological Institute issued a level 2 warning, that significant wind damage could occur in central Finland, and released advice for the public on how to prepare for strong winds and any potential power outages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 68], "content_span": [69, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Meteorological history, Preparation and warnings\nThe Norwegian energy company Statoil evacuated 97 people from the drilling platform Njord A as a safety precaution. Hurtigruten ferry sailings along the Norwegian coast were cancelled in preparation for the storm. Railway transport was halted overnight (16 November) in northern Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 68], "content_span": [69, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Meteorological history, Preceding weather\nFronts from low pressure area Nikolaus passed over Norway in the 24 hours before Hilde. These fronts brought close to extreme rainfall in Bergen on 15 November, and heavy rain across Western Norway which left many roads impassable as they were closed by landslides and rockfalls overnight 15\u201316 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Meteorological history, Preceding weather\nNorway's second-largest city Bergen, saw 60\u00a0mm of rain fall in 6 hours, Friday afternoon and evening. The calls generated overwhelmed the capacity of the city's emergency lines and Bergen municipality staff set up an alternate number to cope with incoming calls reporting flooding of homes and roads. The rainfall also closed the city's Fl\u00f8ibanen funicular railway for only the second time in 105 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Meteorological history, Preceding weather\nOn the Norwegian national road 15, a bus from Volda to Oslo was caught in a landslide between Hjelle and Oppstryn around midnight. None of the 35 passengers aboard were hurt but the bus was left stuck within the slide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Meteorological history, Preceding weather\nHigh winds across Finnmark in the far north of Norway were reported on 16 November, which led to the evacuation of Hammerfest Airport's tower, and grounding of all air traffic. Wind gusts of 75 knots (139\u00a0km/h) were reported on the mountains and 64 knots (119\u00a0km/h) at the airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nThe strongest wind gust in Norway was measured at Nord\u00f8yan Lighthouse in Vikna municipality, Nord Tr\u00f8ndelag at 49 metres per second (180\u00a0km/h), with an average windspeed reaching 39 metres per second (140\u00a0km/h). At Sklinna Lighthouse average winds of 35 metres per second (130\u00a0km/h) were measured with gust speeds of 44 metres per second (160\u00a0km/h) in Leka municipality, Nord Tr\u00f8ndelag. Locally guts over land reached between 40 to 50 metres per second (140 to 180\u00a0km/h) with waves of 13\u201315 m at the coast. Across central Norway high wind blew trees down onto powerlines. In Helgeland the E6 road was closed from the southern county border to the Korgfjell Tunnel. In the city of Trondheim police cordoned off areas of the city centre for public safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nIn Sweden the high altitude weather station at Stekenjokk, in Lappland recorded an average windspeed (10 minutes) of 47 metres per second (170\u00a0km/h; 110\u00a0mph), which surpassed the record of 44 metres per second (160\u00a0km/h; 98\u00a0mph) recorded in association with Gudrun in 2005 and another storm in 2\u20133 March 2011 also recorded at Stekenjokk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nThe station also recorded the highest gust (2 seconds) ever recorded in November during the storm at 56 metres per second (200\u00a0km/h; 130\u00a0mph) with the previous monthly record of 55 metres per second (200\u00a0km/h; 120\u00a0mph) recorded at Tarfala 7 November 2003, The highest ever gust recorded during any month in Sweden is 81 metres per second (290\u00a0km/h; 180\u00a0mph) recorded 20 December 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nInland at lower altitudes the strongest gusts were 29 metres per second (100\u00a0km/h; 65\u00a0mph) recorded at Vilhelmina, V\u00e4sterbotten County and Fr\u00f6s\u00f6n, J\u00e4mtland, which were lower than those seen during the Dagmar storm in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nIn Norway electricity was cut to 35,000 homes at the height of the storm, mostly in Tr\u00f8ndelag and Helgeland. The storm at its height left 36,000 without electricity in J\u00e4mtland, V\u00e4sternorrland and V\u00e4sterbotten in Sweden, which had been reduced to 28,000 by mid morning 17 November, with electricity suppliers warning some customers may not be reconnected until Monday 18 November. In Finland, an estimated 230,000 households were without electricity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nNorthern Sweden also saw problems with the mobile and land line phone network, with 15,000 customers without land line connections on 17 November, in the towns of Vilhelmina and Dorotea inhabitants had difficulty in reaching the emergency services telephone number. The Norwegian communications company Telenor reported that in Nord-Tr\u00f8ndelag 2,800 broadband and 4,600 fixed line customers were without service and in Nordland 300 broadband customers and 460 fixed line customers were also without service on 18 November. The company also reported difficulties with the mobile phone network in these counties, with over 150 2G base stations down and 60 3G base stations out of service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nIn Finland the regions of H\u00e4me, Tampere, Ostrobothnia, Satakunta and Savo, were particularly affected, with the storm felling many trees and breaking power lines. In western regions of Finland rail lines were disrupted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nIn Russia power outages were reported in the town of Lakhdenpokhya, Republic of Karelia due to the strong winds. Electricity supplies were also cut to 108 villages throughout the Leningrad region, while Saint Petersburg saw electricity lines, billboards, roofing and traffic signals toppled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nThe Saint Petersburg Dam was closed in the early morning 17 November with a storm warning in place in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact\nIn the Gulf of Finland the closure of the St Petersburg dam left the ferry MS\u00a0Princess Maria was unable to enter port, waiting out the storm with 2800 passengers on board. Strong winds forced its St. Peter Line sister ferry the MS Princess Anastasia to return to Tallinn harbour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact, Subsequent storms\nSeveral further low pressure systems impacted the Nordic countries immediately after the passage of Hilde.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact, Cyclone Oskari\nOskari (Vincenc) \u2013 November 29\u2013December 4, 2013. 976\u00a0hPa. Named by the Finnish Meteorological Institute. Oskari was stronger than Hilde in Finland, with a maximum gust of 34.7 metres per second (125\u00a0km/h) at M\u00e4rket skerry lighthouse, to the west of the \u00c5land Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact, Cyclone Xaver\nNamed Bodil by Danish Meteorological Institute and Sven by SMHI, the storm brought Force 12 winds and heavy snowfall. The storm brought a storm surge to the Irish and North Seas with coastal flooding resulting from what the Environment Agency in the United Kingdom described as the worst storm surge in 60 years. Record water levels were also reported in the \u00d8resund between Sweden and Denmark. Blizzards and severe weather in Sweden and Poland led to several fatalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact, Cyclone Xaver\nThe North Sea storm surge on 4\u20135 December 2013 saw water damage 1,400 buildings and 6,800 hectares (17,000 acres) of land, and caused no direct deaths. This was attributed to the warnings that were issued several days in advance and the improved coastal defences that had been built since the North Sea flood of 1953.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact, Cyclone Ivar (Seija)\nIvar named by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute, and Seija by the Finnish Meteorological Institute. unnamed by the FUB. December 10\u201317, 2013. 977\u00a0hPa. With a route and intensity similar to Hilde, Ivar once again brought hurricane-force winds to central Norway. In Norway 50,000 customers were without power. In Sweden the storm left 55,000 across Norrland without power. Near record level winds were reported from Finland, where 200,000 were left without power. Estonia saw winds up to 115\u00a0km/h and 45,000 homes without electricity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact, Cyclone Ivar (Seija)\nDescribed as more powerful than both Hilde and Oskari, but slightly weaker than Cyclone Dagmar of 2011 in Finland. Video of shoppers in \u00c5lesund, Norway, struggling against the wind from the storm was shown widely on internet after becoming a hit on YouTube. Hilde and Ivar brought the worst forest damage to Scandinavia since the New Year's Day Storm of 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235137-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Nordic storms, Impact, Cyclones Zaki and Adam\nZaki \u2013 December 12\u201316, 2013 and Adam December 14\u201319, 2013. 952\u00a0hPa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election\nThe Norfolk County Council election took place across Norfolk on 2 May 2013, coinciding with local elections for all county councils in England. The results were announced the following day, Friday 3 May 2013. The result brought to an end 12 years of Conservative administration, who finished three seats short of a majority after losing 20 seats, leaving the Council in no overall control (NOC). UKIP and the Labour Party both made gains of 14 and 11 seats respectively. The Liberal Democrats and the Green Party both lost three seats each, whilst an independent won a single seat in North Norfolk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Previous composition, Changes between elections\nIn between the 2009 election and the 2013 election, the following council seats changed hands:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 85], "content_span": [86, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Gains and Losses\nThe Conservative Party suffered net a net loss of 20 seats (22 losses and 2 gains); Liberal Democrats a net loss of 3 seats (4 losses and 1 gain); the Green Party lost 3 seats, finishing with four in total. UKIP made 14 gains to become the official opposition, while Labour gained 11 seats, and 1 seat was gained by an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Gains and Losses\nThe Conservatives lost one seat (Hevingham & Spixworth) to the Liberal Democrats in Broadland, one to an Independent candidate (North Coast) in King's Lynn and West Norfolk, 7 seats to Labour (Caister-on-Sea, Yarmouth North & Central, Clenchwarton & King's Lynn South, Gaywood South, King's Lynn North & Central, Bowthorpe and Catton Grove), as well as losing 13 seats to UKIP (Dereham South, Swaffham, Thetford East, Watton, Breydon, East Flegg, Gorleston St Andrews, Lothingland, Gayton & Nar Valley, Gaywood North & Central, Marshland North, Holt and Melton Constable).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Gains and Losses\nThe Liberal Democrats lost two seats to the Conservatives (Fakenham and Mundesley, both in North Norfolk), one seat to UKIP in Breckland (Thetford West) and one to Labour covering several city wards in the Norwich district (Lakenham).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Gains and Losses\nThe Green Party lost three seats to Labour in Norwich (Mile Cross, Sewell and Town Close).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Incumbent councillors\nA total of 55 incumbent councillors were defending their seats for the same party they had stood for in 2009 (or in one of the five subsequent by-election). 41 were successful in retaining their seats, while 14 were not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Incumbent councillors\n41 incumbent Conservative County Councillors were defending their seats at this election, including Judy Leggett (Old Catton), Judith Virgo (Humbleyard) and Barry Stone (Lothingland) who had won their seats in by-elections. Of these 41, 28 were re-elected while the other 13 lost their seats (9 to UKIP, 3 to Labour, 1 to the Liberal Democrats). All 5 Liberal Democrat incumbents held their seats. The Green Party had 3 incumbents defending seats; two were retained, while one was lost to Labour. Labour incumbents successfully defended all 5 of their seats (two of which they had won in by-elections - Susan Whitaker in Lakenham division and Alexandra Kemp (n\u00e9e Kampourpoulos) in Clenchwarton and King's Lynn South division). UKIP's single councillor retained his seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Incumbent councillors\nIncumbents who stood for other parties or as independents (such as former Conservative Jon Herbert in Forehoe) are not counted in these figures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Group leaders\nBill Borrett (Elmham & Mattishall) was re-elected unopposed as the Conservative group leader, George Nobbs (Crome) was re-elected unopposed as the leader of the Labour Group. The Liberal Democrats elected Dr Marie Strong (Wells) as their new group leader, replacing Mike Brindle who did not stand in this election. Richard Bearman (Mancroft) continued as the leader of the Green Party group. Richard Toby Coke (Gayton & Nar Valley) was selected as the UKIP group leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Turnout\nThe overall turnout at the election was 32.14% (215,465 votes, out of a total electorate of 670,383). The turnout in each division ranged form 18.09% in King's Lynn North & Central to 50.75% in Holt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Council Leader Election\nWith the council now being in no overall control it was unclear who would be elected Leader. In the event, at the initial election for Council Leader on 13 May 2013, the Conservatives lost by 40 votes to 43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 81], "content_span": [82, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Council Leader Election\nAfter the initial vote, a \"rainbow\" alliance was formed between Labour, UKIP, The Liberal Democrats with support from the Green Party. Under the agreement, the existing cabinet system would be abolished and replaced by a new committee system with Labour councillor George Nobbs to be nominated to be Leader. On 27 May he was elected by a vote of 42 to 38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 81], "content_span": [82, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Aftermath\nTom FitzPatrick (Fakenham) replaced Bill Borrett as Conservative group leader on 1 May 2014, however less than 10 months later he was successfully challenged by Cliff Jordan (Yare & All Saints) in the following March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Summary of Results, Aftermath\nThe 'Rainbow Alliance' of UKIP, Labour, and the Liberal Democrats with support from the Greens ran the Council until May 2016, with George Nobbs being re-elected by 43 votes to 40 in 2014, and by 42 to 39 in 2015. However, on 9 May 2016 the Alliance collapsed when the Green Party withdrew its support and abstained in the election for Leader, and Conservative Cliff Jordan won by 41 votes to 37. This enabled the Conservatives to run the Council through a minority administration until the local elections in May 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Candidates by party\nThere were a total of 364 candidates standing across the whole of the county - an average of 4\u2153 in each division. Both the Conservatives and Labour fielded a full slate of 84 candidates, UKIP stood 70 candidates, the Liberal Democrats stood 62, the Green Party stood 43, and there were 21 other candidates (including 3 for the Christian Peoples Alliance, 1 for the United People's Party and 17 independents).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Candidates by party\nCompared to 2009, UKIP had 52 more candidates, there were 6 more independent candidates than 2009, the Conservatives and Labour had the same number, the Liberal Democrats had 7 fewer candidates and the Green Party had 8 fewer candidates. The British National Party did not stand any candidates, compared to the 7 they stood in the previous election. In total, there were 44 more candidates than in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235138-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk County Council election, Candidates and results by division\nBelow are the results of the election, separated into the 7 districts and 84 divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 72], "content_span": [73, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235139-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk State Spartans football team\nThe 2013 Norfolk State Spartans football team represented Norfolk State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by ninth-year head coach Pete Adrian and played their home games at William \"Dick\" Price Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235139-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk State Spartans football team\nThe Spartans came into the season having been picked to finish seventh in the MEAC. The Spartans also entered the season with five players having been picked for the MEAC Pre-Season All-Conference 1st Team and four players having been selected for the 2nd-team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235139-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Norfolk State Spartans football team\nThey finished the season 3\u20139, 3\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235140-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Lacrosse League season\nThe 2013 North American Lacrosse League season was the first and only season in the history of the NALL. The season began January 5, 2013 and ended March 16, 2013. Originally scheduled as a 12-game season for each team, the season was cut to ten games for the Baltimore Bombers, Boston Rockhoppers and Kentucky Stickhorses. The Rhode Island Kingfish season was initially cut to 6 road games due to issues securing the Bradford R. Boss Arena. Eventually, due to the Bombers folding after only seven games, the rest of the regular season was canceled on March 11, and the championship game was moved to March 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235140-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Lacrosse League season, Current standings\nGrey indicated that the Baltimore Bombers folded before the season completed. Record shown is their record before they folded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235140-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Lacrosse League season, Championship\nSaturday, March 16, 2013 at 7:00PM EST, at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235141-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Soccer League season\nThe 2013 North American Soccer League season was the 46th season of Division II soccer in the United States and the third season of the revived North American Soccer League. It was contested by eight teams including one from Canada. Expansion club New York Cosmos was added to the NASL during the season. A split season format was used for the first time. Puerto Rico Islanders, originally planned to take part in this season, as they did in first two editions, took the year off, due to planned restructuring. The defending Soccer Bowl champions were the Tampa Bay Rowdies, while the San Antonio Scorpions were the defending North American Supporters' Trophy winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235141-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Soccer League season, Personnel and sponsorship\nNote1: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players and managers may hold one or more non-FIFA nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235141-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Soccer League season, Spring season\nThe New York Cosmos and the Puerto Rico Islanders did not participate in the spring season. (April 6 to July 4)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235141-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Soccer League season, Fall season\nThe New York Cosmos began participating in the fall season. (August 3 to November 2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235141-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North American Soccer League season, Soccer Bowl 2013\nSoccer Bowl 2013 was contested by the winners of the spring and fall seasons. The game was hosted by the winner of the spring season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235142-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team\nThe 2013 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team represented North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by third year head coach Rod Broadway and played their home games at Aggie Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235142-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team\nThe Aggies entered the 2013 season having been picked to finish third in the conference at MEAC Media Day. The Aggies also entered the season with a new offensive coordinator, Rickey Bustle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235142-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team\nThey finished the season 7\u20134, 4\u20134 in MEAC play to finish in a three way tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235142-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team, Game notes, Appalachian State\nThis game marked the 21st meeting overall between the Shaw University Bears and the Aggies, and the first between the two in 52 Years. Going into the match up, the Aggies held the all-time series at 3-17-1. The last meeting between the two in 1968, saw The Aggies defeat the Bears 0-69.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235142-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team, Game notes, Appalachian State\nThe Aggies called upon redshirt freshman quarterback Lamar Raynard to be the starting quarterback. Raynard passed for 188 yards with three touchdowns and 1 interception. Preseason All-American & MEAC Offensive player of the year, running back Tarik Cohen, ran for 106 yards and two touchdowns on 21 carries. This game marked Cohen's 13th career 100-yard game. Cohen is now 928 rushing yards short of becoming the all-time leading rusher in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235142-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina A&T Aggies football team, Post season, 2014 NFL Draft\nThe 2014 NFL Draft was held on May 8\u201310, 2013 at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. The following A&T players were either selected or signed as undrafted free agents following the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235143-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Central Eagles football team\nThe 2013 North Carolina Central Eagles football team represented North Carolina Central University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by interim head coach Dwayne Foster after former coach Henry Frazier, III was fired following a domestic dispute on August 22, 2013. The Eagles played their home games at O'Kelly\u2013Riddick Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 3\u20135 in MEAC play to finish in a tie for eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235144-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels baseball team\nThe 2013 North Carolina Tar Heels baseball team are representing the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. Head Coach Mike Fox is in his 15th year coaching the Tar Heels. They play their home games at Bryson Field at Boshamer Stadium and are members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235144-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels baseball team\nThe 2013 season was one of the best in school history. The Tar Heels were ranked #1 in the Baseball America poll for most of the season, and won their first ACC tournament title in six years. They made the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament as the overall number-one seed, and advanced to the 2013 College World Series. It was the 10th CWS appearance in school history, and their seventh appearance since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235144-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels baseball team, Ranking movements\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, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235145-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team\nThe 2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a member of Coastal Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by second-year head coach Larry Fedora and played their home games at Kenan Memorial Stadium. The Tar Heels finished the season 7\u20136 overall and 4\u20134 in ACC play to place fifth in the Coastal Division. They were invited to the Belk Bowl, where they defeated Cincinnati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235145-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, Before the season, Previous season\nIn his first year as head coach in a season that the UNC football team was ineligible for the ACC title, a bowl game and a ranking in the USA Today Coaches' Poll, Larry Fedora led the team to an 8\u20134 record. The offense finished the season ranked 14th out of 120 teams in terms of total yards per game. The defense finished the season ranked 56th out of 120 teams in terms of opponent total yards per game. North Carolina had at least eight victories in four of the five years from 2008 to 2012. The eight wins in 2008 and 2009 were vacated due to NCAA penalty. The last time North Carolina had more than eight victories was in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 79], "content_span": [80, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235145-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nMarquise Williams, Bryn Renner's backup quarterback in the 2012 season, was not enrolled in classes at UNC in the spring semester. UNC coach Larry Fedora said Williams may re-enroll at UNC during the summer. After the spring football game in April 2013, Fedora said that if the season started, early enrollee freshman quarterback Mitch Trubisky would be the second-string quarterback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 79], "content_span": [80, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235145-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, Before the season, Recruiting\nPrior to National Signing Day, four high school players that graduated early and received scholarship offers to play football at North Carolina enrolled for the spring semester, allowing them to participate in spring practice. These included: quarterback Mitch Trubisky, wide receiver Jordan Fieulleteau, running back Kris Francis, and offensive tackle R. J. Prince. On February 6, 2013 thirteen additional players signed their National Letter of Intent to play at North Carolina that completed the 2013 recruiting class. Based on the March 2012 sanctions from the NCAA, North Carolina could only sign a maximum of 20 players per year for the next two years versus the regular limit of 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235145-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, Before the season, Recruiting\nNorth Carolina's recruiting class was highlighted by five players from the \"ESPN 300\": No. 118\u00a0Brian Walker (CB); No. 159\u00a0Greg Webb (DT); No. 194\u00a0Johnathan Howard (WR); No. 219\u00a0Mitch Trubisky (QB); No. 275\u00a0Jordan Fieulleteau (WR). The Tar Heels signed the No. 42 recruiting class according to Rivals.com and the No. 29 recruiting class according to Scout.com. ESPN had North Carolina's class as the No. 21 recruiting class in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 74], "content_span": [75, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235145-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, Personnel, Coaching staff\nNorth Carolina head coach Larry Fedora entered his second year as the North Carolina's head coach for the 2013 season. After his first year of coaching, Fedora led the Tar Heels to an eight wins and four losses, but post season ineligibility ended their season after their final regular season game. Defensive line coach Deke Adams left the Tar Heels to coach the same position at South Carolina. On February 5, 2013, Illinois defensive line coach Keith Gilmore was hired to replace Deke Adams. David Duggan the outside linebackers coach and special teams coordinator left North Carolina for Southern Mississippi after one season of coaching. Larry Fedora then hired Arizona State coach Ron West to become the new co-defensive coordinator and linebackers coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235145-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 North Carolina Tar Heels football team, NFL Draft\nFive former players were selected in the 2014 NFL Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team\nThe 2013 North Dakota State Bison football team represented North Dakota State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by head coach Craig Bohl, in his 11th and ultimately final season, as he left to become the head coach at Wyoming after the season. The team, which played their 21st season in the Fargodome, entered the season as the two-time defending national champions. The Bison have been members of the Missouri Valley Football Conference since the 2008 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team\nThe season started with a road win over defending Big 12 champion Kansas State 24\u201321, in front of the second-largest crowd in Wildcats history. According to ESPN.com, Kansas State paid the Bison $350,000 for the matchup. This was the Bison's fourth straight win against an FBS opponent and seventh overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team\nThe university hosted ESPN College GameDay on September 21, 2013, as the Bison faced Delaware State that afternoon and defeated the Hornets 51\u20130. This was the first time in the show's history that it was broadcast live from downtown Fargo, and was a rare feature of a non-FBS program. On October 12, in a home game against Missouri State, the Fargodome set a new single-game attendance record (19,108).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team\nWith a win at Youngstown State, the Bison won their third consecutive MVFC title, and clinched an automatic playoff spot. The Bison finished the regular season with a perfect overall record of 11\u20130, their first undefeated record since 1990. NDSU received 17 points in the final AP Poll of the 2013 season, which would have ranked them 29th if that poll ranked teams beyond the top 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team\nOn December 9, 2013, Bohl was introduced as the next head coach at Wyoming effective at the end of the season. On December 15, Bison defensive coordinator Chris Klieman was selected as Bohl's successor as head coach for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team\nTheir victory in the 2013 FCS title game, held on January 4, 2014 at Toyota Stadium in the Dallas suburb of Frisco, Texas, made the Bison only the second team to win three consecutive FCS national titles, following the 2005\u20132007 run of Appalachian State. The Bison were also the first unbeaten FCS champions since Marshall in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team, Game summaries, at South Dakota State\n. Set a new home attendance record for South Dakota State (16,498).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235146-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 North Dakota State Bison football team, Game summaries, at South Dakota State\n\u2021Met twice in 2012, once in the regular season and again in the second round of the FCS playoffs. The Bison", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235147-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Greenville Crusaders football team\nThe 2013 North Greenville Crusaders football team represented North Greenville University in the 2013 NCAA Division II football season. They were led by first year head coach Jeff Farrington and played their home games at Younts Stadium. The team competed as a Division II Independent football team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods\nIn June 2013, a mid-day cloudburst centered on the North Indian state of Uttarakhand caused devastating floods and landslides, becoming the country's worst natural disaster since the 2004 tsunami. The rainfall received that month was far greater than the rainfall the state usually received. Debris blocked the rivers, causing major overflow. The main day of the flood was 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods\nThough some parts of Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh in India experienced heavy rainfall, some regions of Western Nepal, and some parts of Western Tibet also experienced heavy rainfall, which drained via the river system to inundate Uttarakhand; hence, over 89% of the casualties occurred in that state. As of 16\u00a0July\u00a02013, according to figures provided by the Government of Uttarakhand, more than 5,700 people were \"presumed dead.\" This total included 934 local residents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods\nDestruction of bridges and roads left about 300,000 pilgrims and tourists trapped in the valleys leading to three of the four Hindu Chota Char Dham pilgrimage sites. The Indian Air Force, the Indian Army, and paramilitary troops evacuated more than 110,000 people from the flood-ravaged area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nFrom 16 June 2013 a well-marked cyclonic circulation developed around a low pressure area over the Bay of Bengal, moving westwardly, rapidly intensified due to moisture supplied from both the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea, combining with intense western disturbances from the north, thus causing the Indian state of Uttarakhand and adjoining areas to receive heavy rainfall, leading to 375% of the benchmark rainfall during a normal monsoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nThis caused the melting of Chorabari Glacier at the height of 3800 meters and cresting of the Mandakini River, which led to heavy floods near Gobindghat, Kedar Dome, Rudraprayag district, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Western Nepal, and acute rainfall in other nearby regions of Delhi, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and some parts of Tibet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nThe upper Himalayan territories of Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand are full of forests and snow-covered mountains and thus remain relatively inaccessible. They are home to several major and historic Hindu and Sikh pilgrimage sites besides several tourist spots and trekking trails. Heavy rainfall for four consecutive days as well as melting snow aggravated the floods. Warnings by the India Meteorological Department predicting heavy rains were not given wide publicity beforehand, causing thousands of people to be caught unaware, resulting in huge loss of life and property.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nLandslides, due to the floods, damaged several houses and structures, killing those who were trapped. The heavy rains resulted in large flash floods and massive landslides. Entire villages and settlements such as Gaurikund and the market town of Ram Bada, a transition point to Kedarnath, had been obliterated, while the market town of Sonprayag suffered heavy damage and loss of lives. Pilgrimage centres in the region, including Gangotri, Yamunotri, Kedarnath and Badrinath, the hallowed Hindu Chardham (four sites) pilgrimage centers, are usually visited by thousands of devotees, especially after the month of July on wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nOver 70,000 people were stuck in various regions because of damaged or blocked roads. People in other important locations like the Valley of flowers, Roopkund and the Sikh pilgrimage centre Hemkund were stranded for more than three days. National Highway 7 (Old National Highway 58), an important artery connecting the region was also washed away near Jyotirmath and in many other places. Because summers have more number of tourists, the number of people impacted is substantial. For more than three days, stranded pilgrims and tourists were without rations or survived on little food.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nThe roads were seriously damaged at more than 450 places, resulting in huge traffic jams, and the floods caused many cars and other vehicles to be washed away. On 18 June, more than 12,000 pilgrims were stranded at Badrinath, the popular pilgrimage center located on the banks of the Alaknanda River. Rescuers at the Hindu pilgrimage town of Haridwar on the river Ganga recovered bodies of 40 victims washed down by the flooded rivers as of 21 June 2013. Bodies of people washed away in Uttarakhand were found in distant places like Bijnor, Allahabad and Bulandshahr in Uttar Pradesh. Searching for bodies who died during the extreme natural fury of June in Kedar valley continued for several months and even as late as September 2013, about 556 bodies were found out of which 166 bodies were found in highly decomposed state during fourth round of search operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nAlthough the Kedarnath Temple was not damaged, its base was inundated with water, mud and boulders from the landslide, damaging its perimeter. Many hotels, rest houses and shops around the temple in Kedarnath township were destroyed, resulting in several casualties. Most of the destruction at Kedarnath was caused by a sudden rapid melting of ice and snow on the Kedarnath Mountain, 6\u00a0km (3.7\u00a0mi) from the temple, which flooded the Chorabari Lake (upstream) and then Kedarnath. The temple was flooded with water resulting in several deaths due to drowning and panic-driven stampede.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin\nEven after a week, dead bodies had not been removed from Kedarnath town, resulting in water contamination in the Kedarnath valley and villagers who depend on spring water suffered various types of health problems such as fever and diarrhea. When the flood receded, satellite images showed one new stream at Kedarnath town. No damage at the Kedarnath Temple occurred. The Uttarakhand Government announced that due to the extensive damage to the infrastructure, the temple will be temporarily closed to regular pilgrims and tourists for a year or two, but the temple rituals will still be maintained by priests. The Temple opened for pilgrims on Sunday, 4 May 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin, Other regions affected by the disaster, National Capital Region\nNew Delhi, Gurugram, Faridabad and surrounding areas received a high amount of rainfall on 16 June 2013, leading to flooding of the low-lying areas of the cities. The Yamuna River swelled to a new height of 207.75 meters submerging the low lying flood plains along the banks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 96], "content_span": [97, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin, Other regions affected by the disaster, Uttar Pradesh\nSix-hundred and nine villages, covering a population of 700,000, in 23 districts of Uttar Pradesh were affected by the flood and drought. As of 11\u00a0July\u00a02013, more than 120 deaths were reported from the state. The number of people who went to Uttarakhand were mostly from Uttar Pradesh", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 86], "content_span": [87, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin, Other regions affected by the disaster, Himachal Pradesh\nIn Himachal Pradesh, floods caused loss of life and property and death toll in the state was 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 89], "content_span": [90, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Origin, Other regions affected by the disaster, Nepal\nAbout 6000 citizens of Nepal were visiting the Indian region, of which 1,000 were rescued as of 22 June 2013. Flooding of the Dhauliganga and the Mahakali rivers had caused extensive damage, with reports of 128 houses and 13 government offices swept away and over 1000 people homeless. A bridge that joins the India-Nepal border was highly damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 78], "content_span": [79, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Rescue operations\nThe Indian Army, Air Force, Navy, Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), Border SNational Disaster Response Force (NDRF), Public Works Department and local administrations worked together for quick rescue operations. Several thousand soldiers were deployed for the rescue missions. Activists of political and social organisations were also involved in the rescue and management of relief centres. The national highway and other important roads were closed to regular traffic. Helicopters were used to rescue people, but due to the rough terrain, heavy fog and rainfall, manoeuvring them was a challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Rescue operations\nBy 21 June 2013, the Army had deployed 10,000 soldiers and 11 helicopters, the Navy had sent 45 naval divers, and the Air force had deployed 43 aircraft including 36 helicopters. From 17 to 30 June 2013, the IAF airlifted a total of 18,424 people - flying a total of 2,137 sorties and dropping/landing a total of 3,36,930\u00a0kg of relief material and equipments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Rescue operations\nOn 25 June, one of 3 IAF Mil Mi-17 rescue helicopters returning from Kedarnath, carrying 5 Air Force Officers, 9 of the NDRF, and 6 of the ITBP crashed on a mountainous slope near Gauri Kund, killing all on board. The deceased soldiers were given a ceremonial Guard of honour by Home minister of India, at a function organised by the Uttarakhand State Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Rescue operations\nIndo Tibetan border Police (ITBP) a Force which guards the Indo China borders on the high himalayas with its 3 Regional Response Centres (RRCs) based at Matli (Uttarkashi), Gauchar (Chamoli) and Pithoragarh swung into action and started rescue and relief operation. 2000 strong ITBP force with its mountaineering skills and improvisation methods started rescue of stranded pilgrims. It was a simultaneous effort by ITBP at Kedar ghati, Gangotri valley and Govind ghat areas. According to official figures by ITBP, they were able to rescue 33,009 pilgrims in 15 days on their own from extreme remote and inaccessible areas. Before Army or Air Force called in, being deployed in the nearby areas, ITBP took the first call and saved many lives. They also distributed food packets to stranded pilgrims who were in a pathetic condition being not having any food for more than 72 hours at many places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 938]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Aftermath\nThe Prime Minister of India Manmohan Singh undertook an aerial survey of the affected areas and announced \u20b910 billion (US$140\u00a0million) aid package for disaster relief efforts in the state. Several state governments announced financial assistance, with Uttar Pradesh pledging \u20b9250 million (US$3.5\u00a0million), the governments of Haryana, Maharashtra and Delhi \u20b9100 million (US$1.4\u00a0million) each, the governments of Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh \u20b950 million (US$700,000) each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Aftermath\nThe US Ambassador to India extended a financial help of US$150,000 through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to the NGOs working in the area and announced that the US will provide further financial aid of US$75,000. The help was later politely rejected by Government of India. The Government of Kerala offered 20 million rupees and all ministers offered one month's salary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Aftermath\nThe Government of India also cancelled 9 batches, or half the annual batches of the Kailash-Mansarovar Yatra, a Hindu pilgrimage. The Chardham Yatra pilgrimage, covering Gangotri, Yamunotri, Kedarnath and Badrinath was cancelled for 2 years to repair damaged roads and infrastructure, according to the Uttarakhand Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Aftermath\nGovernment agencies and priests of Kedarnath temple were planning mass cremation of the hundreds of victims, after one week of tragedy. Local youths from several affected villages near Gangotri helped stranded tourists and pilgrims, by sending messages to their places and by providing food. Rescuers also retrieved approximately \u20b910 million (US$140,000) and other jewellery from local persons, including some people dressed like sadhu babas, who reportedly collected it from a destroyed building of a Bank and damaged shops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Aftermath\nNehru Institute of Mountaineering (NIM) was given the responsibility of Rebuilding Kedarnath. Although the institute did not have the expertise in urban planning or construction, they mastered high-altitude training. Under the leadership of Colonel Ajay Kothiyal, the NIM was successful in rebuilding Kedarnath.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Climate and environmental factors\nA study by Utah State University analyzed the natural and anthropogenic influences on the climate anomalies using simulations, and found that (a) northern India has experienced increasingly large rainfall in June since the late 1980s, (b) the increase in rainfall appears to be associated with a tendency in the upper troposphere towards amplified short waves, and (c) the phasing of such amplified short waves is tied to increased loading of green-house gases and aerosols. In addition, a regional modeling diagnosis attributed 60\u201390\u00a0% of rainfall amounts in the June 2013 event to post-1980 climate trends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, Climate and environmental factors\nUnprecedented destruction the rainfall witnessed in Uttarakhand state was also attributed, by environmentalists, to unscientific developmental activities undertaken in recent decades contributing to high level of loss of property and lives. Roads constructed in haphazard style, new resorts and hotels built on fragile river and more than 70 hydroelectric projects in the watersheds of the state led to a \"disaster waiting to happen\" as termed by certain environmentalists. The environmental experts reported that the tunnels built and blasts undertaken for the 70 hydro electric projects contributed to the ecological imbalance in the state, with flows of river water restricted and the streamside development activity contributing to a higher number of landslides and more flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 58], "content_span": [59, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235148-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 North India floods, In popular culture\nA novel titled A Long Journey was written and published by independent author Pawan Kumar Pandey, who has the floods and the resulting tragedy in his background. The 2018 film Kedarnath starring Sushant Singh Rajput and Sara Ali Khan tells a love story set in the times of the disaster in the valley around the Kedarnath Temple.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe 2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season was an event in the annual cycle of tropical cyclone formation, in which tropical cyclones formed in the North Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea. The season had no official bounds, but cyclones typically formed between May and December, with the peak from October to November. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the northern Indian Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe scope of this article is limited to the Indian Ocean in the Northern Hemisphere, east of the Horn of Africa and west of the Malay Peninsula. There are two main seas in the North Indian Ocean\u00a0\u2014 the Arabian Sea to the west of the Indian subcontinent, abbreviated ARB by the India Meteorological Department (IMD); and the Bay of Bengal to the east, abbreviated BOB by the IMD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe official Regional Specialized Meteorological Centre in this basin is the India Meteorological Department (IMD), while the Joint Typhoon Warning Center releases unofficial advisories. On average, 4 to 6 storms form in this basin every season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season summary\nAfter a five-month break in tropical cyclone activity over the basin, the first depression of the year developed over the southern Bay of Bengal on May 10, 2013. The system subsequently developed into Cyclonic Storm Viyaru during May 12, before it made landfall near Chittagong, Bangladesh during May 16. As a result of the formation of Viyaru, the low level equatorial monsoon flow strengthened over southern parts of the North Indian Ocean, which in turn allowed the south-west monsoon to set in over the Andaman Sea and parts of the Bay of Bengal during May 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season summary\nA depression developed and made landfall on West Bengal, during May 29, before it was last noted during May 31. During June 1, the south-west monsoon set in over Kerala, the Maldives and parts of the south and central Arabian Sea. Over the next two weeks one of the fastest onsets of the monsoon over India was observed After the monsoon had set in over Kerala, one of the fastest onsets of the monsoon over India was observed, with the whole nation covered by June 16 or about a month earlier than normal. Reasons for the fast onset included a favourable phase of the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation and the west-northwest movement of an area of low pressure between June 12\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Cyclonic Storm Viyaru\nOriginating from an area of low pressure over the southern Bay of Bengal in early May 2013, Viyaru slowly consolidated into a depression on May 10. The depression gained forward momentum and attained gale-force winds on May 11 and was designated as Cyclonic Storm Viyaru, the first named storm of the season. Operationally, the system was referred to as Mahasen; however, this was altered in 2014 with the final report and all archived advisories changed to show Viyaru. Owing to adverse atmospheric conditions, the depression struggled to maintain organized convection as it moved closer to eastern India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Cyclonic Storm Viyaru\nOn May 14, the exposed circulation of Viyaru turned northeastward. The following day, conditions again allowed for the storm to intensify. Early on May 16, the cyclone attained its peak intensity with winds of 85\u00a0km/h (55\u00a0mph) and a barometric pressure of 990 mbar (hPa; 29.23\u00a0inHg). Shortly thereafter Viyaru made landfall near Chittagong, Bangladesh. On May 17, it moved over the eastern Indian state of Nagaland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Cyclonic Storm Viyaru\nEarly in the storm's existence, it brought flooding rains to much of northwestern Indonesia, resulting in significant damage. At least four people died and six others were reported missing. In preparation for the storm, large-scale evacuations were recommended for parts of Myanmar. This resulted with people overcrowding boats to escape, and one or several vessels capsized, causing at least 39 deaths; 42 people were rescued while 19 others were unaccounted for and feared dead. The storm's expansive cloud mass also brought unsettled weather to Sri Lanka, Thailand, and southeastern India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Cyclonic Storm Viyaru\nSevere storms in India and Sri Lanka were responsible for at least 16\u00a0fatalities and significant damage; one person died in Thailand. Striking Bangladesh in a weaker state than initially expected, damage was moderate to severe. A total of 95,003\u00a0poorly constructed huts were damaged or destroyed, 17\u00a0people died, and nearly 1.3\u00a0million were affected across the country. Losses to crops exceeded \u09f32.75\u00a0billion (US$35.3\u00a0million). Myanmar was spared damage and further casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 02\nAn upper air cyclonic circulation developed into a low-pressure area on May 28. It slowly organized itself, and favorable conditions led to the intensification of the low-pressure area to a depression by the early hours of May 29. Slightly intensifying thereafter, the storm took a northward track and crossed the West Bengal coast in the evening hours of the same day, with peak winds of 45\u00a0km/h (28\u00a0mph). The depression attained its minimum central pressure of 990\u00a0mbar (29\u00a0inHg) on May 30. Staying almost a day inland maintaining depression strength, it weakened gradually and dissipated over the states of Bihar and Jharkhand in the evening hours of May 31 due to land interaction and reduced moisture availability. Contai in West Bengal received 260\u00a0mm of rainfall in 24 hours on May 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 03\nA low-pressure area formed over the Bay of Bengal on July 29. It intensified gradually, and the IMD classified the storm as a Depression in the early hours of July 30. The system made landfall between Balasore, Odisha and Digha, West Bengal by the same evening at peak winds of 45\u00a0km/h (28\u00a0mph) and a minimum central pressure of 990\u00a0mbar (990\u00a0hPa). Spending an entire day inland, the depression weakened into a well-marked low-pressure area on August 1 over the state of Madhya Pradesh in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 03\nThe storm's precursor brought heavy rainfall to coastal Bangladesh. 30,000 people were marooned as a result of the following severe floods in Kalapara Upazila. In India, a Storm Warning Signal-3 was hoisted in the ports of Odisha, and fishermen were cautioned against venturing into the sea. Chicholi in Madhya Pradesh received 280\u00a0mm of rainfall in 24 hours on August 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Land Depression 01\nA monsoonal low-pressure area formed over the Bay of Bengal on August 16. It gradually intensified, organizing itself into a Depression in the early hours of August 20 over coastal West Bengal and adjoining northern Odisha and Jharkhand. Over the next few days, the storm moved west-northwestward, before weakening into a well-marked low-pressure area on August 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Land Depression 01\nThe depression brought heavy rainfall to coastal West Bengal. Kolkata received 206\u00a0mm (8.1\u00a0in) of rainfall over a span of three days, the wettest spell of the monsoon season, causing flooding. At least four people were reported to have been killed across the state due to rain-related events. The system's precursor low caused authorities to raise cautionary signal number 3, at all maritime ports of Bangladesh. Pachmarhi in Madhya Pradesh received 500\u00a0mm (20\u00a0in) of rainfall in 72 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Phailin\nA tropical depression formed along the Gulf of Thailand on October 4. The tropical depression degenerated into a remnant low on October 6, as it crossed the 100th meridian on October 7. Under the influence of an upper air cyclonic circulation, it regenerated into a low-pressure area over the Andaman Sea and adjoining Tanintharyi region. It slowly organized itself and consolidated into a depression on October 8, followed by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) issuing a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 88], "content_span": [89, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Phailin\nIn the early hours of October 9 the JTWC upgraded the storm to a tropical cyclone. The same day, the IMD upgraded the storm to a deep depression, and subsequently a cyclonic storm, naming it Phailin. Rapid intensification ensued, and Phailin strengthened into a Very Severe Cyclonic storm on October 10, followed by the JTWC upgrading the storm to a strong Category 4 status. Continuing its rapid intensification, the storm reached Category 5 status the following day, the first storm to do so in the North Indian Ocean since Cyclone Sidr in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 88], "content_span": [89, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Phailin\nShortly before landfall, Phailin began another eyewall replacement cycle which led to slight weakening, and the system jumped back to Category 4 status. Maintaining intensity, the storm made landfall close to Gopalpur, Odisha in the evening of October 12. Phailin rapidly weakened as it tracked over rugged terrain, eventually dissipating into a well marked low-pressure area over the state of Bihar on October 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 88], "content_span": [89, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Phailin\nThe cyclone prompted India's biggest evacuation in 23 years with more than 550,000 people moving up from the coastline in Odisha and Andhra Pradesh to safer places. 44 deaths related to the cyclone were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 88], "content_span": [89, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Deep Depression ARB 01\nIn early November, a low-pressure area formed over the Arabian Sea. It slowly moved westwards and consolidated into Depression ARB 01 on November 8. The JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert the same day, reporting that the depression was moving into an area favorable for further intensification. The next morning, the IMD upgraded the storm to a deep depression; the JTWC similarly upgraded the system to a tropical storm following reports of 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph) winds near the storm's center of circulation. Remaining stationary for nearly a day, the storm crossed the coast of Somalia early on November 11. The system rapidly deteriorated due to land interaction, and both the JTWC and the IMD issued their final warnings on the system later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Deep Depression ARB 01\nARB 01 made landfall in the northeastern Puntland region on November 9, and dissipated by the 11th. Around 300 fatalities were reported in the wake of the storm, as well as livestock casualties and damaged infrastructure. Much of the damage was averted by an early administrative response overseen by the Puntland Disaster Management and Rescue committee, which coordinated relief efforts by the Puntland Maritime Police Force, governmental rescue teams, and the Puntland Highway Authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 05\nOn November 8, the remnants of Tropical Depression 30W (Wilma) crossed the Malay Peninsula, and emerged into the eastern Bay of Bengal. During the next several days, the system drifted towards the west while weakening further. On November 12, the system began to reorganize gradually, while continuing to move westwards. On November 13, the system was classified as a depression by the IMD, and given the identifier BOB 05. The depression maintained its intensity despite passing through an environment unfavorable for intensification, and was re-upgraded to tropical cyclone intensity by the JTWC on November 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 05\nShortly before landfall, the system weakened due to land interaction, and the JTWC issued its final warning. On November 16, BOB 05 made landfall near Nagapattinam, Tamil Nadu, and the system quickly began to weaken. Later on November 16, the IMD issued its final advisory on Depression BOB 05, as the system weakened into a well-marked area of low pressure. Over the next several hours, the remnant low of BOB 05 moved across the central part of Southern India, and the system continued to weaken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 05\nDuring the next several days, BOB 05 moved westwards across the Arabian Sea as a convectionless low. Later, the remnants of BOB 05 redeveloped a small amount of convection, while continuing to moved westwards. Late on November 21, the remnants of BOB 05 turned to the southwest, affecting Socotra Island on November 22. Early on November 23, the remnants of Depression BOB 05 dissipated just south of Socotra Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 05\nHeavy rains along with 60\u00a0km/h winds lashed many parts of the state of Tamil Nadu. Mayiladuthurai, a town in Nagapattinam district, experienced the highest rainfall, amounting to 220\u00a0mm. 13 people were killed as the Depression crossed the state's coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Helen\nLate on November 17, the remnant energy of Tropical Storm Podul contributed to the development of a trough over the Bay of Bengal, located near the Andaman Islands. During the next couple of days, the storm slowly organized and consolidated, prompting the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) to issue a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) during the early hours of November 19. Later on the same day, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) upgraded the storm to a depression, classifying it as BOB 06, followed by the JTWC reporting that the storm had reached Tropical Storm strength. A couple of hours later, the IMD upgraded BOB 06 into a Deep Depression, as the storm continued to intensify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Helen\nThe storm slowly drifted west-northwestward while deep convection consolidated around the system's well-defined center of circulation. In the early hours of November 20, the IMD classified BOB 06 as a Cyclonic Storm, thereby officially naming it Helen. Helen continued to intensify into a Severe Cyclonic Storm the following day, reaching its peak intensity of 100\u00a0km/h (62\u00a0mph) with a central pressure of 990\u00a0mbar (29\u00a0inHg).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Helen\nShortly before landfall, the storm's convection sheared to the north, causing its low level circulation to fully expose followed by the JTWC issuing its final bulletin, reporting that the storm had weakened due to land interaction. Helen made landfall south of Machilipatnam, Andhra Pradesh and rapidly deteriorated into a deep depression. It was last noted as a low-pressure area on November 23. A total of 11 deaths were reported in incidents related to the cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Lehar\nA low-pressure area formed over the South China Sea on November 18. It was then classified as a tropical depression later that day. It weakened into a low-pressure area on November 22 as it crossed the Isthmus of Kra and entered the Andaman Sea. It then gradually intensified, and the JTWC classified the system as a tropical depression on November 23. Later on the same day, the storm was upgraded into Depression BOB 07 by the IMD, while the JTWC upgraded the system into a tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 81], "content_span": [82, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Lehar\nThe following day, the BOB 07 strengthened further into a cyclonic storm, and the IMD assigned it the name Lehar. On November 25, the storm gradually consolidated further and was upgraded to a severe cyclonic storm by the IMD, while the JTWC reported that the storm had reached Category 1 status in the SSHS hurricane scale. The following day, Lehar further intensified into a very severe cyclonic storm, as both IMD and JTWC reported peak winds of 140\u00a0km/h (87\u00a0mph) and a central pressure of 982\u00a0mbar (29.0\u00a0inHg).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 81], "content_span": [82, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Lehar\nEarly on November 27, the JTWC reported the storm's low-level circulation center (LLCC) was losing its structure due to vertical wind shear, indicating a weakening trend. Thereafter, Lehar rapidly weakened into a depression and made landfall near Machilipatnam on November 28. Land interaction led to the degeneration of the storm into a well-marked low-pressure area, while it moved inland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 81], "content_span": [82, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Lehar\nThe cyclone affected the Andaman Islands with heavy rain and strong winds. It caused flooding, landslides, road blockage, uprooting of trees and damage to buildings. More than two dozen fishermen went missing and almost all of them were rescued by the Coast Guard and police. In Little Andaman, more than 2000 people were evacuated and kept in Onge-tikrey community hall there. In nearby Havelock Island, about 1500 people sought shelter in the Panchayat community hall. Mayabander and Port Blair recorded 24-hour rainfall accumulations of 243\u00a0mm and 213\u00a0mm respectively as the cyclone made landfall. Four flights originating from Chennai bound to Port Blair were cancelled due to the cyclone on November 25 while 110\u00a0km/h (68\u00a0mph) winds lashed the islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 81], "content_span": [82, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Madi\nOn November 30, a low-pressure area formed south of India close to the equator. A day later, microwave satellite imagery revealed a broad low-level circulation center (LLCC). The system slowly drifted northeastward over the next couple of days and slowly intensified. Though the sea surface temperatures were good enough for tropical cyclogenesis, moderate vertical wind shear kept the system from strengthening too quickly. On December 5, the JTWC issued a TCFA on the system. The following day, the storm strengthened further, and the JTWC initiated advisories on the system, designating it as \"06B\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Madi\nAround the same time, the IMD started tracking this system as Depression BOB 08. The storm remained nearly stationary over the next 24 hours. Early on December 7, the IMD further upgraded BOB 08 into a Deep Depression, and later upgrading it to Cyclonic Storm Madi about 370\u00a0km (230\u00a0mi) from Trincomalee, Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Madi\nTracking slowly north-northwestward under the influence of a deep shortwave trough, the storm quickly intensified into a severe cyclonic storm. Madi accelerated slightly while maintaining a large area of convection. By December 8, Madi had developed an excellent poleward outflow, with deep convection wrapped into a well-defined center. Both the JTWC and IMD were reporting winds of 65 knots (120\u00a0km/h; 75\u00a0mph) at the center. With this, the IMD upgraded Madi to a Very Severe Cyclonic Storm, the third in 2013. However, Madi moved into an area of increasing vertical wind shear, causing weakening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Madi\nMadi's poleward track was explained by the strong subtropical ridge located to the east of the system. On December 9, the IMD reported that Madi had weakened into a Severe Cyclonic storm. Despite the wind shear, Madi developed an eye on December 10, and the JTWC assessed the system as a Category 1 equivalent for a second time. Against all expectations, the storm continued to track in a northerly direction, until later that day, when it made a sharp, sudden, southwestward turn. Madi started losing all its convection to the strong wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0022-0002", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Madi\nAnother subtropical ridge located over India had steered the system southwestward. On December 11, Madi's LLCC became clearly exposed after dry air wrapped around the southern part of the system. This weakened Madi into a Cyclonic Storm, and later into a deep depression. Overnight, Madi weakened further into a depression and crossed the Tamil Nadu coast close to Vedaranyam around 1330 UTC on December 12, 2013. It then emerged into the Palk Strait at 1530 UTC and crossed the Tamil Nadu coast again near Thondi at 1700 UTC on the same day. Colachel in Kanyakumari district of Tamil Nadu got the highest rainfall of 115\u00a0mm in 24 hours on December 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 80], "content_span": [81, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235149-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season effects\nThis is a table of all storms in the 2013 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. It mentions all of the season's storms and their names, durations, peak intensities (according to the IMD storm scale), landfall(s)\u00a0\u2013 denoted by bold location names\u00a0\u2013 damages, and death totals. Damage and death totals include the damage and deaths caused when that storm was a precursor wave or extratropical low, and all of the damage figures are in 2013 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235150-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean missile tests\nThe 2013 North Korean missile tests were a series of North Korean missile tests in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235150-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean missile tests, May 2013 tests\nOn May 2013, North Korea launched three short-range guided missiles into the Sea of Japan. The first two missiles were shot in the morning, while the third was in the afternoon. The missiles were launched from the same location where two missiles had been displayed, fueled, and then removed weeks before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235150-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean missile tests, May 2013 tests\nOn 19 May 2013, North Korea launched a fourth missile that landed in the Sea of Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235150-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean missile tests, May 2013 tests\nOn 20 May 2013, North Korea launched short-range projectiles that landed in waters off the country's eastern coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test\nOn 12 February 2013, North Korean state media announced it had conducted an underground nuclear test, its third in seven years. A tremor that exhibited a nuclear bomb signature with an initial magnitude 4.9 (later revised to 5.1) was detected by the China Earthquake Networks Center, Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization and the United States Geological Survey. In response, Japan summoned an emergency United Nations meeting for 12 February and South Korea raised its military alert status. It is not known whether the explosion was nuclear or a conventional explosion designed to mimic a nuclear blast; as of two days after the blast, Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean investigators had failed to detect any radiation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Test\nOn 12 February 2013, a spokesman for North Korea's army command said it had successfully conducted a third underground nuclear weapons test, according to the Yonhap. North Korea also said the test had used a miniaturized nuclear device with greater explosive power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Test\nBefore North Korea announced they had conducted the test, seismic activity had already been detected in North Korea by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and the seismic network operated by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) Preparatory Commission, near the site of previous nuclear tests at Mantapsan in Kilju County. A large tremor, first estimated at magnitude of 4.9, was detected in North Korea, and governments in the region were trying to determine whether it was a third nuclear test. The USGS upgraded the magnitude of the possibly nuclear tremor from 4.9 to 5.1, located 24 kilometres (15\u00a0mi) east-northeast of Sungjibaegam, North Korea. The tremor occurred at 11:57\u00a0am KST (2:57\u00a0am UTC), and the USGS said the hypocenter of the event was only one kilometer deep.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Test\nLater, the Geophysical Service of the Russian Academy of Sciences assures the residents in the Russian Far East that the nuclear blast did not trigger any seismic events and underground tremors at 16:00 local time on 12 February 2013 in the area and thus the North Korea's nuclear test does not pose danger to the residents there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Test\nThe China Earthquake Networks Center (Abbreviation: CENC; Chinese: \u4e2d\u56fd\u5730\u9707\u53f0\u7f51\u4e2d\u5fc3) also reported this event, putting the magnitude at Ms 4.9. The tremor caused by the test could be felt by residents of the neighboring city of Hunchun and Antu, in Yanbian, Jilin Province, China. A citizen of Hyesan, Ryanggang Province of North Korea, 80\u00a0km (50\u00a0mi) west from the nuclear test site, reported that many 5- and 7-floor buildings shook very severely, and this caused cracking. The explosion was registered by 94 seismic stations and two infrasound stations in the CTBTO's global monitoring system. The CTBTO radionuclide network later made a significant detection of radioactive noble gases that could be attributed to the nuclear test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Yield estimates\nSouth Korea's defense ministry said the event reading indicated a blast of 6\u20137 kilotons, later revised to 6\u20139 kilotons using the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization's calculation method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Yield estimates\nThe Korea Institute of Geosciences and Mineral Resources estimated the yield as 7.7\u20137.8 kilotons while the Japanese put the estimation between 8 and 10 kilotons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Yield estimates\nSome experts estimate the yield to be up to 15 kilotons, since the test site's geology is not well understood. The Russian Defence Ministry said the power of North Korea's nuclear test blast \"surpassed 7 kilotons\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Yield estimates\nNORSAR compared the seismic data from all three North Korean nuclear tests and estimated the yield of the 2013 test as approximately 10 kilotons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Yield estimates\nThe Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources, a state-run geology research institute in Germany, estimated the yield initially at 40 kilotons. However, this estimation has since been revised to 14 kilotons of TNT (59\u00a0TJ) after the January 2016 North Korean nuclear test was conducted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Yield estimates\nOn 19 June 2013, the University of Science and Technology of China released a report that claimed that they had found the precise location of the test at latitude 41\u00b017\u203226.88\u2033, longitude 129\u00b04\u203234.68\u2033, with an error margin of 94 meters and the yield at around 12.2\u00a0kt, with a margin of error of 3.8\u00a0kt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Yield estimates\nIn comparison, the fission nuclear bombs dropped by the Enola Gay on Hiroshima (Little Boy, a \"gun-type\" nuclear bomb) and on Nagasaki by Bockscar (Fat Man, an \"implosion-type\" nuclear bomb) had blast yield equivalences of 16 and 21 kilotons respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Further tests\nOn 4 February 2013, a South Korean military official had stated that there was a \"chance that the southern tunnel is a decoy, but we are not ruling out that the regime will conduct nuclear tests simultaneously at both tunnels\". On 15 February 2013, North Korea had told China that they were preparing for one or two more nuclear tests that year. On 8 April 2013, South Korea had observed activity at Punggye-ri, suggesting that a fourth underground test was being prepared. It was later believed that the tunneling activity that started in April was for a long-term project, and that a nuclear test wouldn't occur soon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Further tests\nAccording to a U.S. expert, North Korea has everything in place for a fourth explosion but is hesitating due to the fear that it would anger China. A professor from Georgetown University predicted that test would occur in spring 2014 at latest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Further tests\nOn 17 December 2013, a member of South Korea's parliamentary intelligence committee said that a nuclear and missile test would occur soon to draw attention away from the execution of Jang Sung-taek. This was said after North Korea floated propaganda leaflets to South Korea that threatened the annihilation of Baengnyeongdo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Further tests\nOn 22 April 2014, South Korea reported that North Korea had stepped up its activity at its main nuclear test site, meaning they may be preparing for their fourth underground nuclear test. The United States urged North Korea to refrain from testing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Further tests\nOn 6 January 2016 North Korea says it has successfully carried out a hydrogen bomb test, which if confirmed, will be a first for the reclusive regime and a significant advancement for its military ambitions. The test took place at 10\u00a0a.m. local time, the regime said in a televised statement. The seismic event, which measured the event at a magnitude of 5.1, occurred 19 kilometers (12 miles) east-northeast of Sungjibaegam, the United States Geological Survey said. A senior U.S. administration told CNN it could take days to obtain the scientific data to determine whether this was a successful test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235151-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 North Korean nuclear test, Reactions\nIn response, Japan's Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, called an urgent security meeting of the United Nations Security Council. The emergency session was to be held 9\u00a0am EST on 12 February 2013. Tibor Toth, executive secretary of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization Preparatory Commission (CTBTO), confirmed the event's location was \"roughly congruent with\" nuclear tests carried out by North Korea in 2006 and 2009. Japan's Kyodo News service reported the Japanese defense ministry had scrambled aircraft to hunt for radiation effects. Japan's government held a national security council meeting in Tokyo according to NHK. The South Korean military also raised its readiness level. In general, international reactions to the 2013 North Korean nuclear test have been almost uniformly negative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235152-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Las Vegas mayoral election\nThe 2013 North Las Vegas mayoral election was held on April 2, 2013 to elect the mayor of North Las Vegas, Nevada. It saw the election of John Jay Lee, who defeated incumbent mayor Shari Buck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235153-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Miami mayoral election\nThe 2013 North Miami mayoral election took place on May 14, 2013 and June 4, 2013, to elect the mayor of North Miami, Florida. The election was officially nonpartisan. Lucie Tondreau was elected after a runoff election between her and former mayor Kevin Burns. The first round was held on May 14, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235154-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Queensland Cowboys season\nThe 2013 North Queensland Cowboys season was the 19th in the club's history. Coached by Neil Henry and co-captained by Johnathan Thurston and Matthew Scott, they competed in the NRL's 2013 Telstra Premiership. The Cowboys finished the season in 8th place and were knocked out in the first week of the finals by the Cronulla Sharks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235154-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Queensland Cowboys season, Season summary\nThe Cowboys entered the 2013 NRL season with high expectations and without their long time hooker and club legend Aaron Payne, who retired at the end of 2012. The side won their Round 1 game against the Canterbury Bulldogs but would only win five of their next 19 games, leaving them sitting in 15th place after 20 rounds. Tragedy struck the club on 29 April, when talented rookie Alex Elisala died at age 20. The Cowboys defeated the Parramatta Eels five days later, dedicating the game and the rest of the season to Elisala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235154-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Queensland Cowboys season, Season summary\nOn 29 July, coach Neil Henry had his contract terminated after re-signing until the end of 2014 in March. Henry stayed on as head coach until the end of 2013, as the Cowboys went on a six-game winning streak to finish in 8th place and qualify for the finals series. They were defeated 20-18 by the Cronulla Sharks in week 1 of the finals, in a game in which the Sharks scored a try on the 7th tackle of a set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235154-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Queensland Cowboys season, Season summary\nOn 1 October the club appointed former player Paul Green as their head coach for the 2014 and 2015 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235154-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 North Queensland Cowboys season, Season summary\nAt the end of the season, the Cowboys' had 13 players selected for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235154-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 North Queensland Cowboys season, Representatives\nThe following players have played a representative match in 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235155-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Texas Mean Green football team\nThe 2013 North Texas Mean Green football team represented the University of North Texas during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by third-year head coach Dan McCarney and played its home games at Apogee Stadium. It was the Mean Green's first season as members of Conference USA, competing in the West Division. The team earned a 9-4 record (6-2 in conference) and won the 2014 Heart of Dallas Bowl. Additionally, it set a school record for average home attendance per game at 21,030. The defense was notable for being statistically the best second half defense in the Football Bowl Subdivision. It received two top 25 votes in the Coaches' Poll to end the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235155-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Texas Mean Green football team\nThe team began the season with a 2-3 record in its first five games before going on a five-game winning streak, culminating in a win against the Rice Owls, which was televised on Fox Sports 1. After losing to the UTSA Roadrunners, the Mean Green were eliminated from conference championship contention. After defeating the Tulsa Golden Hurricane to end the regular season, the Mean Green defeated the UNLV Rebels in the Heart of Dallas Bowl. The bowl game win gave the Mean Green their best season and first bowl win since 2002 and their first winning season since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235155-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Texas Mean Green football team, Game summaries, Rice\nWith the win, the Mean Green became bowl eligible for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235155-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Texas Mean Green football team, Game summaries, UTEP\nThis game is notable for being the second highest attended game at Apogee Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235156-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Wales Crusaders season\nThis article details the North Wales Crusaders Rugby League Football Club's 2013 season. This is the club's second season after reforming following the former Super League club Crusaders Rugby League folding. The club will take part in Championship 1 for their second season. The club will be also taking part again in the Challenge Cup, and the National League Cup (known as the Northern Rail Cup for sponsorship reasons) for the first time in their short history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235156-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Wales Crusaders season, 2013 Table\nThis table is correct as of 1 September 2013. Source: and .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235156-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Wales Crusaders season, 2013 Table\nClassification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235156-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 North Wales Crusaders season, 2013 Squad\nIt was announced in October 2012 that Crusaders would be again holding open trials for the 2013 squad after very successful trials for the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235157-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 North Yorkshire County Council election\nAn election to North Yorkshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 72 councillors were elected from 68 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 four divisions which elected two members were Harrogate Bilton & Nidd Gorge, Harrogate Central, Knaresborough, and Selby Barlby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235157-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 North Yorkshire County Council election\nOf those seats UKIP won its first ever seats on the council in Bilton and Nidd Gorge, Mark Simpson is widely credited with engaging and campaigning the local area and is widely credited with the gain for UKIP. The electoral divisions were the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. The election saw the Conservative Party maintain overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235157-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 North Yorkshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235157-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 North Yorkshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235157-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 North Yorkshire County Council election, Divisional results, Harrogate district\nCllr John Savage was the Incumbent Councillor, however left the Conservative Party in 2010, before then joining the Liberal Party. Savage's vote share change is shown with that of the Liberal Party in the last election, who did not stand in said election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 84], "content_span": [85, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235158-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northamptonshire County Council election\nAn election to Northamptonshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. Following a boundary review, the number of county councillors was reduced from 73 to 57 from this election. All members were elected by first-past-the-post voting from single-member electoral divisions for a four-year term of office. The Conservative Party held on to their overall majority, having held overall control of the council since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235158-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northamptonshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235158-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Northamptonshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235158-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northamptonshire County Council election, Summary\nThe election saw the Conservatives maintain overall control of the council with a reduced majority of 8 seats. The Labour Party regained their status as the council's official opposition group with 11 seats, a net gain of five. The Liberal Democrats had 6 members elected, a net loss of three. UKIP achieved 3 council seats, while one independent candidate was elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235158-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Northamptonshire County Council election, Interim By-elections and Defections\nBetween 2009 and 2013, the only change to council composition were defections from the Conservatives who lost four councillors: one to UKIP, one to the Liberal Democrats and two went independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235159-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament began on May 24 and ended on May 26, 2013 at FirstEnergy Park in Lakewood, New Jersey. The league's top four teams finishers competed in the double elimination tournament. Top seeded Bryant won its first Tournament championship and claimed the Northeast Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235159-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top four finishers were seeded one through four based on conference regular season winning percentage. They then played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235159-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nJordan Mountford was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Mountford was a sophomore outfielder for Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235160-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held on March 6, 9, and 12, 2013. The tournament featured the league's top eight seeds. The tourney opened on Wednesday, March 6 with the quarterfinals, followed by the semifinals on Saturday, March 9 and the finals on Tuesday, March 12. LIU Brooklyn won the championship, its fifth, and received the conferences automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. This is LIU's third NEC Tournament Championship in a row, having won it the previous two years, they are the first NEC team to three-peat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235160-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nFor the ninth straight year, the NEC Men's Basketball Tournament will consist of an eight-team playoff format with all games played at the home of the higher seed. After the quarterfinals, the teams will be reseeded so the highest remaining seed plays the lowest remaining seed in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235160-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nTeams are seeded based on the final regular season standings, with ties broken under an NEC policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235160-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nAll games were played at the venue of the higher seed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235161-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Northeast Conference men's soccer season was the 33rd season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235161-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference men's soccer season\nThe Quinnipiac Bobcats are the defending regular season champions, while the Fairleigh Dickinson Knights are the defending tournament champions. Quinnipiac will be unable to defend their NEC regular season title, since they are moving to the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235161-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Conference men's soccer season\nCentral Connecticut won the Regular Season Championship by going 6-1-0 in conference play and will host the NEC Tournament in New Britain, Connecticut. St. Francis Brooklyn won the 2013 NEC Tournament Championship with the 4th seed by beating Central Connecticut (2-0) then Bryant (3-2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235162-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Grand Prix\nThe 2013 American Le Mans Northeast Grand Prix was an auto racing event held at Lime Rock Park, Lakeville, Connecticut, on July 5\u20136, 2013, and was the fourth round of the 2013 American Le Mans Series season. Muscle Milk Pickett Racing and their drivers Lucas Luhr and Klaus Graf earned their third consecutive victory of the season after Dyson Racing fell back. Level 5 Motorsports' Scott Tucker and Ryan Briscoe overcame an incident with Extreme Speed Motorsports in the P2 category to take the victory, but were later penalized championship points for the maneuver. RSR Racing earned their first victory in the PC class in 2013. BMW's John Edwards and Dirk M\u00fcller won the GT category, while Flying Lizard Motorsports scored their first win in the GTC category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235162-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Grand Prix, Qualifying, Qualifying result\nPole position winners in each class are marked in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235162-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeast Grand Prix, Race, Race result\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of their class winner's distance are marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog\nA dense wave of smog began in Northeast China, especially in major cities including Harbin, Changchun and Shenyang, as well as the surrounding Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Liaoning provinces on 20 October 2013. Unseasonably warm temperatures with very little wind across northeastern China coincided with the initiation of Northeast China's coal-powered municipal heating system. Record densities of fine particulates were measured in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog\nIn Harbin, the levels of PM2.5 particulate matter rose to 1,000 micrograms per cubic metre, worse than Beijing's historic highs. Visibility dropped to 50 metres (160\u00a0ft) and authorities grounded flights and closed more than 2,000 schools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog\nIn Changchun, air pollution recorded at an all-time high and the levels of PM2.5 particulate matter rose to 845 micrograms per cubic metre on 22 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog\nThe smog eased on 25 October 2013 and had completely dissipated by the 28th due to a cold front that had moved in from Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Background\nOfficials blamed the dense pollution on lack of wind, burning of crop waste in farmers' fields, and 20 October start-up of Harbin's coal-powered district heating system. Harbin lies in the north of China where winter temperatures can drop to \u221240\u00a0\u00b0C (\u221240\u00a0\u00b0F), necessitating a six-month heating season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Background\nAir pollution in Chinese cities is of increasing concern to China's leadership. Particulates in the air can adversely affect human health and also have impacts on climate and precipitation. Pollution from the burning of coal has reduced life expectancies by 5.5 years in the north of China, as a result of heart and lung diseases. According to the National Environmental Analysis released by Tsinghua University and The Asian Development Bank in January 2013, 7 of 10 most air polluted cities in the world are located in China, including Taiyuan, Beijing, Urumqi, Lanzhou, Chongqing, Jinan and Shijiazhuang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Background\nAs air pollution in China is at an all-time high, several northern cities are among the most polluted cities and have the worst air quality in China. Reporting on China's airpocalypse has been accompanied by what seems like a monochromatic slideshow of the country's several cities smothered in thick smog. According to a survey made by \"Global voices China\" in February 2013, China's 10 most polluted cities on the blacklist includes major Chinese cities like Beijing, Jinan, Shijiazhuang, Zhengzhou, and 6 other prefectural cities all in Hebei Province. These cities are all situated in traditional geographic subdivision of North China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Effects\nAll highways in the surrounding Heilongjiang province were closed. In Harbin, all primary and middle schools and the airport were closed for three days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Effects\nHospitals reported a 23 percent increase in admissions for respiratory problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Effects\nVisibility was reduced to below 50\u00a0m (160\u00a0ft) in parts of Harbin, and below 500\u00a0m (1,600\u00a0ft) in most of the neighboring Jilin province. On Fa Yuen Street in Harbin, visibility of less than 5\u00a0m (16\u00a0ft) was reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Effects\nIn Changchun, the capital of Jilin province, PM2.5 level rose to 845 on 22:00 p.m., 22 October 2013. Visibility of less than 50\u00a0m (160\u00a0ft) was also reported, but Changchun education bureau refused to close the school and was criticized by parents of the students and public. Other cities in the surrounding Jilin province, including Jilin, Songyuan and Fuyu, ordered to close the schools on 22 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235163-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Northeastern China smog, Effects\nDaily particulate levels of more than 40 times the World Health Organization recommended maximum level were reported in parts of Harbin municipality. The smog remained as of 23 October, when \"almost all monitoring stations in Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Liaoning provinces reported readings above 200 [\u03bcg/m3] for PM2.5\". PM2.5 is the amount of particulate matter less than 2.5 micrometres in diameter in the air, with the World Health Organization recommending a maximum 24-hour mean of 25 micrograms per cubic meter (\u03bcg/m3). On the morning of 23 October, PM2.5 measurements in Harbin had fallen to an average of 123\u00a0\u03bcg/m3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235164-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team\nThe 2013 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team represented Northern Arizona University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 16th-year head coach Jerome Souers and played their home games at the Walkup Skydome. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 9\u20133, 7\u20131 in Big Sky play to finish in second place. They were received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the first round to South Dakota State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235164-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team, Schedule\nDespite also being a member of the Big Sky Conference, the game with UC Davis on September 14 is considered a non conference game and will have no effect on the Big Sky Standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235165-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Colorado Bears football team\nThe 2013 Northern Colorado Bears football team represented the University of Northern Colorado in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Earnest Collins Jr. and played their home games at Nottingham Field. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 1\u201311, 0\u20138 in Big Sky play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235166-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Cypriot parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Northern Cyprus on 28 July 2013, a year earlier than necessary. The Republican Turkish Party emerged as the largest in the Assembly of the Republic, winning 21 of the 50 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235166-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Cypriot parliamentary election, Background\nThe government of Prime Minister \u0130rsen K\u00fc\u00e7\u00fck collapsed in May 2013 after eight MPs left his National Unity Party and the government lost a vote of no confidence. On 23 June Sibel Siber became interim prime minister, forming a government consisting of the Republican Turkish Party, the Democratic Party and the Communal Democracy Party. The new government was approved by a vote of 26\u201311 in the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235166-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Cypriot parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe fifty members of the Assembly were elected by proportional representation in five multi-member constituencies with an electoral threshold of 5%. Voters could either vote for a party list or for individual candidates. If they chose the latter, they could cast as many votes as there were seats in a constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235166-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Cypriot parliamentary election, Campaign\nFive parties with 250 candidates registered to contest the election, as well as seven independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235166-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Cypriot parliamentary election, Campaign\nThough election campaigns in Northern Cypriot elections are usually related to the Cyprus dispute, this main focus of the 2013 elections concerns about the National Unity Party's Turkish-backed economic programmes and austerity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235167-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern European Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 Northern European Gymnastics Championships was an artistic gymnastics competition held in Lisburn, Northern Ireland. The event was held between 23 and 24 November at the Lagan Valley LeisurePlex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235168-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team\nThe 2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team represented Northern Illinois University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Huskies competed in the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They were led by first-year head coach Rod Carey. They played their home games at Huskie Stadium. They finished the season 12\u20132, 8\u20130 in MAC play to win the West Division Title. They finished the regular season undefeated (12\u20130). They represented the West Division in the MAC Championship Game where they lost to East Division Champion Bowling Green 27\u201347. They were invited to the Poinsettia Bowl where they lost to Utah State 14\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235168-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team\nFresh off their Orange Bowl Appearance in 2012 the Huskies went undefeated until the MAC Championship. This garnered NIU National attention with the anticipation of another BCS Bowl appearance. Star quarterback Jordan Lynch was a top 3 candidate for the Heisman Trophy. The season marked the Huskies' sixth consecutive trip to a bowl game and their second consecutive bowl game loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235168-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nJordan Lynch threw for three touchdowns and ran for two more, as the team came away with their second win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235168-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team, Game summaries, Eastern Illinois\nJordan Lynch threw for 207 yards and three touchdowns, and Northern Illinois scored on a kickoff return and an interception return to rout Purdue 55\u201324. It's the first time a Mid-American Conference team has beaten two Big Ten foes during the same regular season, and the Huskies made it look easy, tying the MAC record for victory margin over a Big Ten school. Toledo beat Minnesota by 31 in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235168-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team, Game summaries, Kent State\nCameron Stingily ran for a career-high 266 yards and two scores as Northern Illinois remained undefeated with a 38\u201324 win over Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235168-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team, Game summaries, Akron\nThe Huskies used their defense and kicking game to beat Akron 27\u201320 on Saturday night after the offense went 1 for 15 on third-down conversions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235168-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Illinois Huskies football team, Game summaries, Central Michigan\nLynch had three rushing touchdowns and was 20 for 30 through the air for 155 yards and another score to help Northern Illinois (7\u20130, 3\u20130 Mid-American) extend the nation's best conference winning streak to 20 games. Lynch rushed for 316 yards, an FBS record for a quarterback, and the 23rd-ranked Huskies stayed unbeaten with a 38\u201317 victory at Central Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235169-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Iowa Panthers football team\nThe 2013 Northern Iowa Panthers football team represented the University of Northern Iowa in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The team was coached by Mark Farley and played their home games in the UNI-Dome. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 7\u20135, 3\u20135 in MVFC play to finish in a tie for seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235170-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Ireland Youth Soccer Tournament\nThe 2013 Northern Ireland Milk Cup was the thirty-first edition of the international football tournament which takes place annually in the north coast of Northern Ireland, and attracts competitors from across the globe. There are three sections to the tournament, the Elite Section (U19), the Premier Section (U17) and the Junior Section (U15). The 2013 U-19 edition was won by Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235170-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Ireland Youth Soccer Tournament\nThis article about a Northern Irish association football competition is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235171-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern NSW State League Division 2\nAdamstown Rosebud were the Minor Premiers as well as Grand Final winners in 2013. They were promoted to the newly formed NNSW National Premier Leagues for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season\n2013 was the sixth competitive season for the Cairns based Skill360 Northern Pride Rugby League Football Club. They competed in the QRL state competition, the Intrust Super Cup. 12 clubs competed, with each club playing 22 matches (11 home, 11 away and 2 byes) over 24 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season\nThe Pride finished first and won their first Minor Premiership. Head Coach Jason Demetriou was awarded the Men of League Coach of the Year. The Pride lost both Finals games (the Major Semi-Final and the Preliminary Final) and missed out on a Grand Final appearance. At the end of the season Captain Ty Williams retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season, 2013 Squad\nJordan Tighe (fullback) Semi Tadulala (wing) Hezron Murgha (fullback / wing) Justin Castellaro (wing) Brett Anderson (centre) Davin Crampton (centre / wing) Rickki Sutherland (centre) Ty Williams (c) (centre / five-eighth) Shaun Nona (halfback / five-eighth) Jordan Biondi-Odo (halfback) Sam Obst (halfback / hooker) Ryan Ghietti (halfback / hooker)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season, 2013 Squad\nAlex Starmer (Prop) Ben Laity (Prop) Jason Roos (Hooker) Steve Snitch (Prop / Second Row) Ben Spina (Lock / Second Row) Aidan Smith Nick Dorante (Prop) Maddie Oosen (Hooker) Brent Oosen (Second Row) Jamie Frizzo (Second Row) Tom Hancock (Second Row) Noel Underwood (Prop / Hooker) Mervyn Walker Brian Murgha", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season, 2013 Squad\nScott Bolton Matthew Bowen Kyle Feldt Ashley Graham Dallas Johnson Felise Kaufusi Blake Leary Ethan Lowe Robert Lui Scott Moore Joel Riethmuller Tariq Sims James Tamou Ray Thompson Ricky Thorby Wayne Ulugia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season, 2013 Squad\nDylan TaylorZac ParterBradley Stephen (Pride Under-18 Squad)Josateki Murray (Pride Under-18 Squad)Pete Tognolini (Pride Under-18 Squad)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season, 2013 Televised Games, Channel Nine\nIn August 2012 as part of the historic $1 billion five-year broadcasting agreement with Nine and Fox Sports, the Australian Rugby League Commission confirmed that Intrust Super Cup matches would continue to be televised by Channel 9 until 2018. One match a week will be shown live across Queensland at 2.00pm (AEST) on Sunday afternoons on Channel 9, WIN Television (RTQ), in remote areas on Imparja Television and in Papua New Guinea on Kundu 2 TV. The 2013 commentary team was Peter Psaltis, Paul Green, Matthew Thompson, Scott Sattler and Adrian Vowles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235172-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Pride RLFC season, 2013 Televised Games, Live Streaming\nIn 2013, all matches (including pre-season trials but excluding matches broadcast live by Channel Nine) were streamed live through the Pride website, with access granted exclusively to Pride members. Video production was by Studio Productions and the commentary team was Adam Jackson and Northern Pride Under-18s coach, Cameron 'Spiller' Miller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235173-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Tablelands state by-election\nA by-election was held for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly seat of Northern Tablelands on 25 May 2013. The by-election was triggered by the resignation of independent member Richard Torbay, which was announced on 20 March 2013. Adam Marshall was declared elected on 28 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235173-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Tablelands state by-election, Background\nThe seat became vacant when the former Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly and Member for Northern Tablelands, Richard Torbay, who was the endorsed candidate for the Nationals for the federal seat of New England, suddenly resigned from State Parliament. Immediately prior to his resignation, the National disendorsed Torbay as preselected candidate for New England. It was claimed that his resignation was due to the controversy surrounding his ownership of more than twenty Centrelink buildings dating back to the era when John Howard was Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235173-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Tablelands state by-election, Background\nFormer mayor of Gunnedah Shire, Adam Marshall, won preselection as the Nationals nominee ahead of Jock Laurie and Claire Coulton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235173-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Tablelands state by-election, Controversies\nDuring the campaign it was reported in the Armidale Express that Marshall had been a financial member of both the Labor and the National parties between 2001 and 2003; by the time his membership of the former expired in 2004, he was employed as a staff member for the then Independent Member for Tamworth, Peter Draper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235173-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Northern Tablelands state by-election, Controversies\nOne week prior to the by-election, Mal Peters, a councillor of Inverell Shire Council referred a matter of an undisclosed nature relating to Marshall to the Independent Commission Against Corruption. Marshall claimed that Peters' actions were spurious and questioned the timing of the complaint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235174-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northumberland County Council election\nElections to Northumberland County Council were held on 2 May 2013. The full council was up for election, with each successful candidate serving a four-year term of office, expiring in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235174-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northumberland County Council election\nThe council remained in no overall control with the Labour Party becoming the largest party, holding 32 out of 67 seats on the council. Of the remaining 35 seats on the council, the Conservative Party won the 21 seats, the Liberal Democrats won 11 seats and Independents won 3 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235174-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northumberland County Council election, Results\nThe overall turnout was 34.03% with a total of 84,949 valid votes cast. A total of 726 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235175-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northwest Missouri State Bearcats football team\nThe 2013 Northwest Missouri State Bearcats football team represented Northwest Missouri State University as a member of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA) during the 2013 NCAA Division II football season. Led by third-year head coach Adam Dorrel, the team finished the regular season with an undefeated 11\u20130 record. They won their fifth NCAA Division II Football Championship with a win over Lenoir\u2013Rhyne in the NCAA Division II Championship Game by a score of 43\u201328. The Bearcats played their home games at Bearcat Stadium in Maryville, Missouri, which has been the Bearcats' home stadium since 1917.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235176-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northwestern State Demons football team\nThe 2013 Northwestern State Demons football team represented Northwestern State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Demons were led by first-year head coach Jay Thomas and played their home games at Harry Turpin Stadium. They were a member of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 3\u20134 in Southland play to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235176-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northwestern State Demons football team, Media\nAll games aired on the radio via the Demon Sports Network, found on KNWD and online at nsudemons.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235177-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Northwestern Wildcats football team\nThe 2013 Northwestern Wildcats football team represented Northwestern University during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Pat Fitzgerald, in his eighth season at Northwestern, was the team's head coach. The Wildcats home games were played at Ryan Field in Evanston, Illinois. They were members of the Legends Division of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235177-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Northwestern Wildcats football team, Previous season\nThe Wildcats won their first bowl game since the 1949 Rose Bowl against California by defeating Mississippi State in the Gator Bowl 34\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235177-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Northwestern Wildcats football team, Game summaries, Ohio State\nFor the first time since November 11, 1995, ESPN's College GameDay was broadcast from Evanston prior to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235178-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 Norwegian Figure Skating Championships was held at the DNB Arena in Stavanger from December 14 to 16, 2012. Skaters competed in the discipline of single skating. The results were among the criteria used to determine the teams to the 2013 World Championships, 2013 European Championships, 2013 Nordic Championships, and 2013 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235179-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian First Division\nThe 2013 1. divisjon (referred to as Adeccoligaen for sponsorship reasons) was a Norwegian second-tier football league season. The season began on 7\u00a0April 2013 and was concluded on 3\u00a0November 2013. The league was contested by 16 teams. The top two teams were promoted to the Tippeligaen, while the teams placed from third to sixth place played a promotion-playoff against the 14th-placed team in Tippeligaen to win promotion. The bottom four teams were relegated to the 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235179-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian First Division, Background\nFrom the 2012 1. divisjon, Start and Sarpsborg 08 won promotion to Tippeligaen, while Stab\u00e6k and Fredrikstad were relegated to the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235179-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian First Division, Background\nTromsdalen, B\u00e6rum, Notodden and Alta were relegated from the 2012 1. divisjon, while Elverum, Kristiansund, Vard Haugesund and Follo were promoted from the 2012 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235179-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian First Division, Summary\nAt the end of the season Bod\u00f8/Glimt and Stab\u00e6k won promotion to the 2014 Tippeligaen, while Vard Haugesund, Kongsvinger Elverum and Follo was relegated to the 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup\nThe 2013 Norwegian Football Cup was the 108th season of the Norwegian annual knockout football tournament. It began with qualification matches in March 2013. The first round was played 17 April 2013 and the tournament ended with the final on 24 November 2013, which Molde won by beating Rosenborg 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup\nThe victory earned Molde a place in the second qualifying round of the 2014\u201315 UEFA Europa League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, Calendar\nBelow are the dates for each round as given by the official schedule:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, First round\nThe 48 winners from the Second Qualifying Round joined with 80 clubs from the Premier League, First Division and Second Division in this round of the competition. The matches took place on 16, 17 and 18 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, Second round\nThe 64 winners from the First Round were scheduled to play in this round of the competition. The matches took place on 1 and 2 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, Third round\nThe 32 winners from the Second Round were scheduled to play in this round of the competition. The matches took place on 29 and 30 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, Fourth round\nThe 16 winners from the Third Round were scheduled to play in this round of the competition. The matches took place on 19 and 26 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe 8 winners from the Fourth Round were scheduled to play in this round of the competition. The matches took place on 3, 4 July and 21 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe 4 winners from the Quarter-finals were scheduled to play in this round of the competition. The matches took place on 25 and 26 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235180-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup, Final\nThe 2013 Norwegian Football Cup Final was played between Rosenborg and Molde at Ullevaal Stadion in Oslo on 24 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235181-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian Football Cup Final\nThe 2013 Norwegian Football Cup Final was the 108th final of the Norwegian Football Cup. The final was contested by Rosenborg and Molde and took place on 24 November 2013 at Ullevaal Stadion in Oslo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election\nA parliamentary election was held in Norway on 8 and 9 September 2013 to elect all 169 members of the unicameral Norwegian Parliament. The centre-right coalition obtained 96 seats, while the incumbent red\u2013green coalition government obtained 72 seats and the Green Party obtained one. The Labour Party won the largest share (30.8%) of the votes cast, with the Conservatives coming second (26.8%), after increasing its share by 9.6 percentage points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election\nElections in Norway are held on a Monday in September, usually the second or third Monday, as determined by the king-in-council (i.e. the government). In 2013, the election was held on the second Monday. Each municipality was permitted to open some or all of its polling stations on the day before the nationwide election day. This option was exercised by 206 of the 428 municipalities. The main period for early voting was 12 August to 6 September, it was also possible to make an even earlier vote after 1 July by contacting the municipal government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election\nThe election was the fourth for incumbent Prime Minister of Norway Jens Stoltenberg, whose party was previously defeated in the 2001 parliamentary election, but who won both the 2005 parliamentary election and the 2009 parliamentary election (though in the latter election, the opposition narrowly received more votes than the coalition) leading the red\u2013green coalition. Had he been re-elected, Stoltenberg would have been the first prime minister in Norway to be elected for three consecutive terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election\nThe election ended with a victory for the four opposition right-of-center parties, which won a total of 96 seats out of 169 (85 needed for a majority). The biggest gain was by the Conservative Party, which took 26.8% of the vote, while the governing red\u2013green coalition lost ground; following convention, Stoltenberg's government resigned and handed over power in October. The Labour Party, however, remained the largest party in parliament with 30.8% of the popular vote. The Progress Party also lost ground, but nevertheless became a participant in the new government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election\nAmong the smaller parties, the centrist Liberal Party and Christian Democrats emerged holding the balance of power. Both had campaigned for a change in government. On 30 September the two parties announced that they would support a minority coalition of the Conservative and Progress parties, but they would not participate in the cabinet themselves. The two smaller members of the red\u2013green coalition both lost ground. The Centre Party lost only one seat and maintained a sizable parliamentary delegation, while the Socialist Left Party only narrowly reached the election threshold of 4%. The Green Party, which had not declared support for either bloc, received its first ever member of parliament with a single seat from Oslo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, System\nThe election used party-list proportional representation in nineteen multi-member constituencies, one for each of the counties of Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, System\nThe number of members to be returned from each constituency varies between 4 and 19. To determine the apportionment of the 169 seats amongst the 19 counties, a two-tier formula is used, based on population and geographic size. Each inhabitant counts one point, while each square kilometer counts 1.8 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, System\n150 of the seats are regular district seats. These are awarded based on the election results in each county, and are unaffected by results in other counties. Nineteen of the seats (one for each county) are leveling seats which are given to parties that win fewer seats than their share of the national popular vote entitles them to. A party must win 4% of the popular vote in order to win compensation seats, but may still win district seats even if it fails to reach this threshold. The system for apportioning seats is biased in favour of rural areas since the area of the county is a factor, but the system of compensation seats reduces the effect this has on final party strength.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, System\nThe total number of seats in the parliament remained unchanged at 169, but population changes meant that some counties gained or lost seats. Hedmark, Sogn og Fjordane, Nord-Tr\u00f8ndelag, Nordland and Troms all lost one seat each. Akershus, Hordaland and Rogaland gained one each, whilst Oslo gained two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Leadership changes, Liberal Party\nLars Sponheim, who had been leader of the Liberal Party since 1996, stepped down in 2010. Trine Skei Grande was elected new leader on 18 March 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Leadership changes, Christian Democratic Party\nDagfinn H\u00f8ybr\u00e5ten, who had been leader of the Christian Democratic Party since 2004, stepped down on 30 April 2011. Knut Arild Hareide was elected leader on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Leadership changes, Socialist Left Party\nKristin Halvorsen, who had been leader of the Socialist Left Party since 1997, stepped down in early 2012. Audun Lysbakken was elected as the new leader of the party on 11 March 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Leadership changes, Red Party\nTurid Thomassen, who had been leader of the Red Party since 2010, stepped down in early 2012. Bj\u00f8rnar Moxnes was elected as the new leader on May 6, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Campaign\nGoing into the campaign, the governing red\u2013green coalition were far behind in the polls. Several polls had also shown that a \"blue-blue\" coalition of the Conservative and Progress parties might gain a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe Labour Party continued to criticize the non-socialist opposition for being unable to propose a coalition that was endorsed by all parties. The Conservative Party desired a four-party coalition of all the opposition parties. The Liberal Party and Christian Democrats wanted a coalition with the Conservatives, while the Progress Party declared that they would not support a government they were not participating in. The opposition parties criticized the sitting government for health care queues and not making more use of private providers, for failure to invest in infrastructure, and for high tax rates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe Green Party had never been in parliament before, but performed strongly in several polls, some even showing them above the threshold which would give them a sizable delegation in parliament. The Greens did not declare support for either the red\u2013green or non-socialist blocs, but the Conservative Party considered the Greens to be well on the left side of the political spectrum. As their showings in polling rose, they began to face criticism for highly radical proposals. Nonetheless, the environmentally oriented Liberal and Socialist Left parties expressed worry that the Greens could become a spoiler by taking votes from them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe Conservative Party's image branding of its leader Erna Solberg tried to take a softer tone after she had been dubbed in the media as \"Iron Erna\" when she tightened immigration rules as local government minister about a decade ago. Instead, their election website had shown her with pictures of hearts and of her smiling. The party's campaign issues included for secure jobs, healthcare, education and better roads. It also campaigned for abolishing the inheritance tax, means-testing for welfare recipients, tax incentives for private savings, simplifying procurement rules to make it easier for smaller businesses to offer for government tenders and the deregulation of alcohol sales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Campaign\nThe 2011 Norway attacks were not a central issue of the campaign. All the main parties had strongly condemned both the attacks and the political ideology of the perpetrator. When Stoltenberg accused the Conservatives of poor leadership skills for failing to offer a united alternative to the red\u2013green coalition, Solberg retorted by pointing out that the Gj\u00f8rv Report had cited poor leadership prior to the attacks. The retort provoked a negative reaction and was described as legitimate but unwise by the political commentator Frank Aarebrot. 33 survivors of the attacks ran for parliament on a Labour ticket, with four being elected, but their status as survivors was not a campaign issue. The Progress Party focused less on this issue and more on healthcare and infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Opinion polls\nIn the run up to the election, various organizations conducted opinion polls to gauge voting intentions. Below is a month by month average of all opinion polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Opinion polls\nFor the smaller parties, the election threshold of 4% became a threat. Several opinion polls showed the Socialist Left Party below the threshold, and on August 18 the party called a press conference declaring that the future of a political force left of Labour was at stake. In the lead-up to the election, opinion polls consistently predicted a victory for the Conservative-led coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Opinion polls, Seat predictions\nThe total number of seats in the parliament will remain 169, but due to changes in the population, some counties will gain or lose seats. Hedmark, Sogn og Fjordane, Nord-Tr\u00f8ndelag, Nordland and Troms all lose one seat each. Akershus, Hordaland and Rogaland gain one each, whilst Oslo gains two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Election\nThe voting centres closed at 19:00 GMT and the publication of exit polls followed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Election, Reactions\nConservative Party leader Erna Solberg said: \"The voters had the choice between 12 years of red/green government or a new government with new ideas and new solutions\". Labour Party leader Jens Stoltenberg has conceded defeat, saying that the party tried \"to do what almost no one has done, to win three elections in a row, but it turned out to be tough\". Progress Party leader Siv Jensen said: \"We will ensure a solid footprint in a new government and if we are going to have good solutions, all four parties must have a place, all must be visible\". Christian Democrat leader Knut Arild Hareide said: \"The centre will play a key role. We and Trine Skei Grande (Liberal Party leader) have got a key role for the next four years. We are ready to put a new government in place\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Election, Reactions\nSeveral commentators noted in half-jest that all the parties had won something from the election. The four parties on the right gained a majority and were as such the victors, but also, for the defeated red\u2013green coalition, there was a silver lining. The Labour Party's numbers in the polls rose during the campaign and they retained their status as the largest party. The Socialist Left Party had a historically bad election, but they succeeded at climbing over the election threshold and retained seven seats, as compared with a mere two seats had they fallen under. The Centre Party did better than expected, and emerged from eight years in government with about the same amount of support as before. Meanwhile, the Green Party could celebrate their first ever member of parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Election, Analysis\nUniversity of Bergen politics professor Frank Aarebrot said of the election campaign that it was dominated by classical welfare issues such as better care for the elderly, improved hospitals and better schools. At the same time, he pointed out that no party called for Norwegians to pay privately for such things as hospital visits, college education or elderly care.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Government formation\nThe Conservative Party was said to be looking for coalition talks with the Progress Party, Liberal Party and the Christian Democrats. Solberg said that while staying committed to cutting taxes, reducing the size of government and improving health care, she acknowledged a need to make policy concessions. \"We will all have to give and take to get a policy stance that has a firm direction and will last over time. All three (other parties) will be tough negotiators in issues close to their hearts\". Four-party talks involved the Conservatives, Progress Party (FrP), Christian Democrats (KrF) and Liberals. FrP demanded Siv Jensen become the new finance minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235182-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Norwegian parliamentary election, Government formation\nOn September 30, the four parties on the right announced that they had reached an agreement for a minority cabinet consisting of the Conservative and Progress parties with confidence and supply from the Liberal and Christian Democratic parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team\nThe 2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Brian Kelly and played its home games at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana. They competed as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team\nAll wins in the 2012 and 2013 seasons were later vacated for use of ineligible players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Before the season, Previous season\nThe Fighting Irish finished the 2012 regular season 12\u20130. They lost to the University of Alabama 42\u201314 in the 2012 BCS National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Before the season, 2013 NFL Draft\nThe following former Notre Dame players were selected in the 2013 NFL Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Before the season, Transfers out / departures\nOn March 8, 2013, after only one year with the program, reserve quarterback Gunner Kiel announced he would transfer from the university. Sophomore wide receiver Davonte Neal left the team in late March, citing a desire to be closer to home. The day after Davonte Neal decided to transfer from Notre Dame, fellow wide receiver sophomore Justin Ferguson announced he was transferring as well and confirmed by coach Brian Kelly at a news conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Before the season, Transfers out / departures\nOn May 28, 2013, it was announced that starting quarterback Everett Golson is no longer enrolled at the university, and was suspended from the school for the fall semester due to an academic violation. Chris Badger departs back home to Provo, Utah and will transfer to BYU due to family illness and will appeal for waiver to play this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Before the season, Transfers in\nAlex Wulfeck, a specialist at Wake Forest, announced he would transfer to Notre Dame in May after he received his degree in May 2013. He would be enrolled in a graduate studies program while exhausting his final season of eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nThere were no staff changes following the 2012 season. The only \"change\" is that Brian Kelly turned play calling duties over to Chuck Martin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Before the season, Recruiting class\nBrian Kelly received 24 commitments in his third full recruiting class including four five-star recruits: outside linebacker Jaylon Smith, defensive tackle Eddie Vanderdoes, running back Greg Bryant, and defensive back Max Redfield. Vanderdoes would later decommit to play at UCLA, citing family health issues required that he be closer to home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Schedule\n\u2021Former NCAA Attendance Record (September 7, 2013 \u2013 September 10, 2016)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan (rivalry)\nFollowing its game against Temple, Notre Dame played the Michigan Wolverines in Ann Arbor. Notre Dame won the previous meeting 13\u20136. Billed as \"Under the Lights II\", this was the second night game in Michigan Stadium's history; the previous game also featured Notre Dame. Tom Harmon was honored as a Michigan Football Legends, and his #98 jersey was unretired and given to quarterback Devin Gardner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan (rivalry)\nMichigan won the game, 41\u201330. The game attendance of 115,109 was the largest crowd ever to watch a college football game. Quarterback Devin Gardner completed 21 of 33 passes for 294 yards and four touchdowns while throwing one interception. Gardner has also rushed for 134 yards and three rushing touchdowns in the first two games of the season. Gardner contributed 376 yards of total offense against Notre Dame ranks as the tenth best performance in Michigan history, as reflected in the following list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan (rivalry)\nThe only two Michigan players to contribute more total yards in a single game are Denard Robinson and John Navarre. Wide receiver Jeremy Gallon caught eight passes for 184 yards and three touchdowns and rushed for 14 yards. Gallon's 184 receiving yards against Notre Dame is tied for the sixth highest single-game performance in Michigan history. On defense, cornerback Blake Countess had two interceptions for Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan (rivalry)\nReferences to chickens were a widely reported side story to the game. After Notre Dame announced one year earlier that it would terminate the rivalry after the 2014 season, Michigan head coach Brady Hoke said Notre Dame was \"chickening out\". When ESPN commentator Lee Corso made his pick for the game during the College GameDay show (which was in Ann Arbor for the game), he brought out a live chicken, and fans in the background carried signs with poultry references, including \"Cluck of the Irish.\" At the end Michigan's 41\u201330 victory, in what Chantel Jennings of ESPN.com called the \"Dig of the Day\", the speakers at Michigan Stadium loudly played the \"Chicken Dance\" as Michigan fans \"danced in the stands.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, Michigan (rivalry)\nThe win made Michigan favorites in the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, USC (Jeweled Shillelagh) (rivalry)\n1st quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Silas Redd 1-yard run (Andre Heidari kick); ND \u2013 Troy Niklas 7-yard pass from Tommy Rees (Kyle Brindza kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 104], "content_span": [105, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, USC (Jeweled Shillelagh) (rivalry)\n2nd quarter scoring: USC \u2013 Heidari 22-yard field goal; ND \u2013 TJ Jones 11-yard pass from Rees (Brindza kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 104], "content_span": [105, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season, Game summaries, Pittsburgh (rivalry)\nAlthough Notre Dame's sports teams have joined the Atlantic Coast Conference (which Pittsburgh has also joined), the Panthers will be the only ACC team on Notre Dame's football schedule this year, as the agreement to play five ACC teams each year does not begin until 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235183-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Postseason, NCAA sanctions\nIn 2018, an investigation was launched that found Notre Dame had used ineligible players during the 2012 and 2013 seasons. As a result, Notre Dame was forced to vacate all wins from the 2012 and 2013 seasons as a punishment from the NCAA, which includes their Pinstripe Bowl win over Rutgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235184-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's soccer team\nThe 2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's soccer team represented the University of Notre Dame during the 2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. It was the 37th season of the university fielding a program. The Irish were coached by 13th-year head coach Bobby Clark and sixth year assistant coach, B. J. Craig, who was promoted to associate head coach prior to the season's start. Additionally, the coaching staff consisted of second year assistant coach, Greg Dalby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235184-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's soccer team\nThe 2013 season was the Irish's first year winning an NCAA title. The Irish finished the season with 17\u20131\u20136 record, and defeated Wisconsin, Wake Forest, Michigan State, New Mexico and Maryland en route to the championship. Additionally, the Irish won the ACC regular season with a 7\u20131\u20133 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235184-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's soccer team, Roster\nThe following players were members of the 2013 Notre Dame team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235184-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 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, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235184-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's soccer team, MLS Draft\nThe following members of the 2013 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's soccer team were selected in the 2014 MLS SuperDraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 59], "content_span": [60, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235185-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge\nThe 2013 Nottingham Challenge (known for sponsorship reasons as the Aegon Nottingham Challenge) was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit. It took place in Nottingham, United Kingdom, on 10\u201316 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235185-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge, ATP entrants, Singles, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235185-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge, ATP entrants, Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235185-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235186-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge \u2013 Men's Doubles\nOlivier Charroin and Martin Fischer were the defending champions, but decided not to participate. Sanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana won the final 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20137(3\u20137), [10\u20138] against Purav Raja and Divij Sharan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235187-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge \u2013 Men's Singles\nGrega \u017demlja was the defending champion, but chose to compete in the 2013 Birmingham Championship instead. Steve Johnson won the final 7\u20135, 7\u20135 against Ruben Bemelmans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235188-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAshleigh Barty and Sally Peers were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Barty chose to participate in the 2013 Birmingham Classic during that week and Peers chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235188-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge \u2013 Women's Doubles\nJulie Coin and St\u00e9phanie Foretz Gacon won the 2013 title, defeating Julia Glushko and Erika Sema in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235189-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge \u2013 Women's Singles\nAshleigh Barty was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided to participate in the 2013 Birmingham Classic that week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235189-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottingham Challenge \u2013 Women's Singles\nBritain's Elena Baltacha defeated Tadeja Majeri\u010d of Slovenia 7\u20135, 7\u20136(9\u20137) in the final, to claim the 2013 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235190-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottinghamshire County Council election\nThe Nottinghamshire County Council Election took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 67 councillors were elected from 54 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 the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. No elections were held in the City of Nottingham, which is a unitary authority outside the area covered by the County Council. The Labour Party won a narrow majority of one seat, gaining overall control from the Conservative Party who had controlled the council since the 2009 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235190-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nottinghamshire County Council election, By-Elections between May 2013 - May 2017\nBy-elections are called when a representative Councillor resigns or dies, so are unpredictable. A by-election is held to fill a political office that has become vacant between the scheduled elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 86], "content_span": [87, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235191-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Nova Scotia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the women's provincial curling championship for Nova Scotia, was held from January 23 to 27 at the Halifax Curling Club in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The winning Mary-Anne Arsenault rink represented Nova Scotia at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235191-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Atlantic Standard Time (UTC-4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235191-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification rounds, Round 1\nThe first qualification round for the 2013 Nova Scotties Tournament of Hearts took place from December 13 to 16, 2012 at the Sydney Curling Club in Sydney. The format of play was an open-entry triple knockout qualifying six teams to the provincial playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235191-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification rounds, Round 2\nThe second qualification round for the 2013 Nova Scotties Tournament of Hearts took place from January 4 to 6 at the Strait Area Community Curling Club in Port Hawkesbury. The format of play was an open-entry double knockout qualifying two teams to the provincial playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election\nThe 2013 Nova Scotia general election was held on October 8, 2013, to elect members to the Nova Scotia House of Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election\nThe result of the election was a Liberal victory under the leadership of Stephen McNeil, with the Liberals winning their first election since 1998. The Progressive Conservatives under the leadership of Jamie Baillie improved on their 2009 results and formed the official opposition, despite winning fewer votes than the New Democratic Party (NDP). The NDP, which had won power for the first time in 2009 under the leadership of Darrell Dexter was reduced to third place and became only the second one-term government in the province's history, and the first since 1882. Dexter was defeated in the riding he contested in Cole Harbour-Portland Valley by Liberal candidate Tony Ince.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Campaign\nThe election campaign began the week after Labour Day, when the Legislature would normally have been expected to return to work, had there been no election campaign. As criticism or defence of government policy would dominate the agenda, and by convention electoral mandates are understood to last about four years, despite a lack of fixed election dates, the timing was not controversial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Campaign\nThe Muskrat Falls or Lower Churchill Project, its associated Maritime Link, and electricity policy generally, immediately emerged as the key issue in the early campaign. . Liberals emphasized Nova Scotia Power's (NSPI) dominance of power generation, and its ability to exclude alternatives through its near-monopoly ownership of the distribution network, covering 129/130 Nova Scotians. They also promised to remove a conservation charge, named for demand response programs that never materialized (though many passive conservation programs run by Efficiency Nova Scotia did prove effective) \u2013 instead proposing that NSPI pay for it from its return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Campaign\nLiberals and Conservatives criticized NSPI's unaccountable 9.2% guaranteed rate of return even for unwise investments. Conservatives acknowledged that it was under pressure to meet a tough renewable standard (which they would relax) but also promised to freeze rates. The NDP government continued to defend Muskrat Falls as the only viable alternative to replace coal-fired power, even though this project was before the Nova Scotia Utilities Review Board as of the election call, remained unchanged and this was reflected in their campaign materials \u2013 they criticized the Liberal plan as likely to lead to higher power rates. The basis for these criticisms was unclear. However, a similar attempt to open generation competition in New Brunswick failed, in part because New Brunswick Power retained monopoly control of the distribution and transmission network, which intimidates competitors and makes it easy in practice to exclude them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 982]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Analysis\nOn election night, the Liberal Party formed a majority government by a comfortable margin. This was the first time the Liberals had formed government in Nova Scotia since 1999, and their first majority government victory since the 1993 election. From mid 2012, the Liberals had led every public poll and entered the campaign with a 20-point lead over the New Democratic Party (NDP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Analysis\nWhile the Liberals had been relatively successful in the Annapolis Valley and on Cape Breton Island during the 2009 election, they were completely shut out of the South Shore, Fundy, and Central Nova Scotia. More importantly, the NDP had dominated the Halifax metropolitan area, winning 14 out of 20 seats. In 2009, the NDP had been able to count on a large number of ridings in and around Halifax, while achieving historic gains across the province, including in traditionally Progressive Conservative (PC) and Liberal areas of rural Nova Scotia. In 2009, the PCs fell from first place to third place in the Legislature, and were completely shut out of the Halifax metropolitan area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Analysis\nIn the 2013 election, NDP support collapsed across the province, as it lost all of its seats in Central Nova Scotia, three of its seats in Fundy, and three of its seats on the South Shore. However, the most important shift was in the Halifax metropolitan area, where NDP support dropped from 54.07% in 2009 to 31.29% in 2013. The party wound up losing 13 of its seats, as the Liberals won 18 of 20 seats in and around Halifax.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Analysis\nStrong NDP areas in 2009, like Dartmouth, Central Halifax, and suburban areas north and east of the Harbour swung from the NDP to the Liberals. Among the casualties was Dexter, who lost his own seat to Liberal challenger Tony Ince by 21 votes. He was the first premier since Ernest Armstrong to be defeated in his own riding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235192-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nova Scotia general election, Analysis\nThe NDP had very poor vote concentration in the 2013 election. In Halifax, where it won 31.29% of the vote, it won only two seats. While the party finished second in the popular vote ahead of the PCs, its support was spread out around the province and not concentrated in enough areas to translate into seats. Combined with its collapse in Halifax, this left the NDP with only seven seats to the Tories' 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season\nThe 2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season officially commenced on 31 December 2012 with the start of the 2013 ATP World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nNovak Djokovic began the 2013 season in Australia. Alongside Ana Ivanovic, he represented Serbia at the 2013 Hopman Cup, where he played four singles and four mixed doubles matches. The Serbian duo finished runner-up, losing 1\u20132 to Spanish duo Anabel Medina Garrigues and Fernando Verdasco in the final. Two weeks later Djokovic took part in the first competitive tournament of the year \u2013 2013 Australian Open as the two-time defending champion. On the road to the final Novak defeated Stanislas Wawrinka in an epic five-hour meeting that finished 12\u201310 in the decisive set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nAlong the way, he defeated two Top 10 players \u2013 Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych and David Ferrer. In the final he met the No. 3 seed Andy Murray, whom he defeated in four sets to take his third straight title at Melbourne Park, the first man in the open era to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nThe following week, Djokovic represented his country in 2013 Davis Cup and helped Serbia to beat Belgium 3\u20132, winning his only match against Olivier Rochus in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nAt the end of the month Novak took part in the 2013 Dubai Tennis Championships, which he won without dropping a single set. In the final he defeated Berdych, winning his fourth Dubai title and maintaining a 100 percent start to the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nAfter the short break Djokovic headed to the United States, where traditionally the first two Masters tournaments are played. In Indian Wells, Novak was eliminated in the semifinals by Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro and in Miami, he lost surprisingly in the fourth round to Tommy Haas. Djokovic remained in the USA and won two singles matches against John Isner and Sam Querrey in the Davis Cup Quarterfinal, clinching the place for Serbia in autumn semifinal against Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nNext Djokovic took part in European Clay Court Season, where he played in four tournaments, aiming to capture the 2013 French Open at the end. For the first time in his career he won the Monaco Masters, defeating eight-time defending champion Rafael Nadal in the final. Djokovic was unsuccessful in the following events, losing in second round in Madrid and in the quarterfinals of Rome to Grigor Dimitrov and Berdych respectively. In Roland Garros he missed the opportunity to complete the Career Grand Slam after losing an epic five-set semifinal to Nadal, who eventually won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nAfter a two-week break Novak entered the Wimbledon Championships, where he played much better than in the previous tournaments on clay. He reached the final without dropping a set in the first five matches and won a tight meeting with del Potro, the meeting lasting almost five hours and being the longest semifinal in Wimbledon history. However, two days later Djokovic was not able to threaten Murray despite leading in the second and third set and having saved three championship points. He lost in straight sets, for the first time since 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nNovak then started a four-week break and started the North American Hard Court season at the beginning of August, aiming to stay at the top of ATP Ranking. At the Rogers Cup, he came attempting to win his third consecutive Canadian Open at the Montreal edition. Although he defeated Gasquet in a rematch of the 2012 final in what he called almost perfect play, he lost a close 7\u20136 third set tiebreak to nemesis Rafael Nadal in the semis, ending his hard court winning streak against Nadal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly summary\nDjokovic reached the quarterfinals at Cincinnati but lost to Isner 7\u20135 in a third set. Djokovic then lost in the US Open final in four sets to Nadal. Since then Djokovic won Beijing against Nadal in straight sets, Shanghai against del Potro and Paris against Ferrer. At the ATP World Tour Finals, Djokovic retained the trophy, beating Nadal in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, All matches\nThis table chronicles all the matches of Djokovic in 2013, including walkovers (W/O) which the ATP does not count as wins. They are marked ND for non-decision or no decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly records, Head-to-head matchups\nNovak Djokovic has a 24\u20136 (80.0%) record against players from the top 10, a 34\u20133 (91.9%) record against other players from the top 50 and 16\u20130 (100%) record against other players outside the top 50.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235193-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Novak Djokovic tennis season, Yearly records, Head-to-head matchups\nOrdered by number of wins(Bolded number marks a top 10 player at the time of match, Italic means top 50)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary\nThe presidential primaries of the Nueva Mayor\u00eda in 2013 was the method of election of the Chilean presidential candidate of the political parties Christian Democrat, Radical Social-Democrat, For Democracy, Socialist (who formed the Concertation of Parties for Democracy), Movimiento Amplio Social, Communist and Citizen Left and, in addition to the left-wing and center-left independents, grouped in the \"Nueva Mayor\u00eda\" pact, for the 2013 election. On that same date, the conglomerate also planned to hold its parliamentary primaries in districts and/or districts where appropriate; However, on 1 May it was decided that such primaries would not be carried out at the official level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary\nIt was the first primary of the Concertaci\u00f3n under the primary law, approved during 2012, which regulates its exercise. In addition, it had as a novelty the participation of more than two candidates, unlike the previous primary elections of the coalition, in it they faced - according to the order in which they appeared in the ballot - Michelle Bachelet, Jos\u00e9 Antonio G\u00f3mez Urrutia, Claudio Orrego and Andres Velasco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary\nMichelle Bachelet, who was president of the Republic between 2006 and 2010, obtained the nomination after winning more than 73% of the votes with the official support of the Socialist Party, the Party for Democracy, the Broad Social Movement, the Citizen Left and the Communist Party of Chile. In second place, the independent Andres Velasco was with about 13% of the votes. Further down was the Christian Democrat Claudio Orrego with 9% and the radical Jos\u00e9 Antonio G\u00f3mez Urrutia with 5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Background\nAfter the last primaries, and the defeat of Eduardo Frei before Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era that gave way to the first government of center right since the return to the democracy, voices arose to reform Concertaci\u00f3n and to think in a process of primaries more ample for the elections of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Background\nOn the other hand, the high popularity that Michelle Bachelet had when leaving the government placed her as the first option to face the following presidential elections; Despite her arrival in New York to run UN Women, Bachelet led all polls, outnumbering her nearest rival for the primaries by more than 40 points and defeating potential right-wing candidates in a runoff in all stages. This advantage of Bachelet, who held in suspense her aspirations as a candidate, raised the possibility of a direct nomination by the parties of the Concertaci\u00f3n without going to primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Primaries of the Christian Democrat Party\nWithin the Christian Democratic Party of Chile (PDC), there was debate regarding the possibility of raising one's own candidacy or to fold to the potential candidacy of Michelle Bachelet if she decided to return to the country. Finally, the party opted for the first option and two militants demonstrated their interest in being the candidate of the community: Senator Ximena Rinc\u00f3n, who publicly stated this intention in December 2011, which officialized on November 16, 2012; And the then mayor of Pe\u00f1alol\u00e9n, Claudio Orrego who decided to run for the presidency of Chile in March 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Primaries of the Christian Democrat Party\nFaced with such a scenario, the PDC defined in November 2012 to carry out an internal primary to define its pre-candidate to the Concertaci\u00f3n primary, which was held on January 19, 2013. This election was opened, so that both militants were able to vote for the PDC as citizens who were not registered in another political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Primaries of the Christian Democrat Party\n56, 263 people participated in the election, and the results were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nIn the months leading up to the 2012 municipal elections, the possibilities of reforming the Concertaci\u00f3n and expanding it, include other parties and movements of the left and center-left. In September 2011, the idea of generating an \"Opposing Convergence\" that replaced the Concertaci\u00f3n was born; However, this proposal would not materialize. Many concertationist leaders raised the exhaustion or death of the Concertaci\u00f3n as such.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nAlthough already since the municipal elections of 2008, the Concertaci\u00f3n had participated alongside the Communist Party and other movements in an instrumental pact to promote the election of candidates of both blocks (and that allowed in the 2010 parliamentarians the PC to obtain its first deputies under the Binominal system), the possibility of officially integrating them into a broader pact began to materialize during 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nThe PPD and the PRSD formalized the list For a fair Chile for the election of councilors with the PC, which annoyed the PS leadership and The PDC, who even indicated the \"end of the Concertaci\u00f3n.\" Nevertheless, the parties of the Concertaci\u00f3n and the Communist Party maintained their pact for the election of mayors, adding other movements and carrying out a process of primaries in 143 Communes in order to determine the unique candidate of the pact. The important victory that obtained the opposition to the government of Pi\u00f1era in the Municipalities, achieving some emblematic victories like the one of the independent Josefa Err\u00e1zuriz in Providencia, enhanced the possibility of a great pact between the parties and movements of center and left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nThe Radical Social Democratic Party had already announced in mid 2012 the election as a candidate for the presidency of Jos\u00e9 Antonio G\u00f3mez Urrutia, president of the group. The independent Andres Velasco, who had mentioned his possible candidacy in the event that Michelle Bachelet did not come, made his precandidature on 16 of November 2012 in the context of the Concertaci\u00f3n primaries, beyond what Bachelet did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nAlthough talks were held with Marco Enr\u00edquez-Ominami (ex-MP, who won 20% of the vote in the elections Presidential elections of 2009 after they did not allow him to participate in the concertacionist primaries) to integrate the Progressive Party into the presidential and parliamentary primaries, he finally rejected the option and announced his direct candidacy for the first round of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nIn March 2013, Michelle Bachelet officially announced her resignation to UN Women in order to return to Chile; In her return speech, Bachelet mentioned his intention to participate in a \"great primary\" that \"for a new majority, for a new policy, for a better country.\" His candidacy was immediately supported by the Socialist Party and Party for Democracy, which was joined by other movements such as the Broad Social Movement in the following days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nIn previous months, Congress had debated bills for the conduct of official primaries organized by the Electoral Service, unlike previous years where they were organized by the same parties. The law was finally approved, establishing June 30, 2013 as the first official primary in the country, both for presidential and parliamentary candidacies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nOn April 30, the presidents of the four parties of the Concertaci\u00f3n, plus those of the Broad Social Movement, the Citizen Left and the Communist Party of Chile, registered the presidential primary candidates in the pact called \"Nueva Mayor\u00eda\": Michelle Bachelet, Jos\u00e9 Antonio G\u00f3mez Urrutia, Claudio Orrego and Andr\u00e9s Velasco. This new pact, however, faced a severe crisis days later due to the impossibility of reaching an agreement to register primaries for the parliamentary elections before Servel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nAlthough the four candidates expressed their rejection of this situation, it was Velasco who most strongly criticized the presidents of the parties, even studying the possibility of retiring from the primaries and running directly to the first round of the presidential elections. However, the new law prevented candidates enrolled in a primary can participate in the first round, before which Velasco agreed to continue in the primary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nThe Communist Party, in spite of signing the registration of the candidates of the Nueva Mayor\u00eda, had not defined the candidate that would support in the primaries. After a long internal discussion, where it was analyzed the support to G\u00f3mez or Bachelet, the party finally chose to supportfor the latter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Expansion of the coalition\nThe support of the PC to Bachelet generated diverse critics, particularly by the rejection that previously had manifested some figures of the Communist Youths (such as Camila Vallejo) to the figure of Bachelet; besides, the possibility that the PC integrated for the first time a government since 1973, alerted certain moderated sectors of the old Concertaci\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Campaign\nThe campaign of the primaries was marked by the invitation to participate in the primaries, in the context of the first ones made officially by the Servel and under the voluntary vote, which debuted in the municipal elections of the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Campaign\nMichelle Bachelet launched a campaign focused on citizenship, showing faces of people who mentioned their government program through videos and social networks, taking advantage of the charisma and proximity that are considered her main attributes. Along with the motto \"I love Chile\", Bachelet raised on several occasions that she had not sought her candidacy, but had responded to the call of citizenship. Her campaign was aimed at mentioning her proposals to draft a new constitution, a free higher education system and a tax reform to finance it, without going into the details that could rub her broad base of support. Also, her campaign called for support from those who participated in the various demonstrations against the government of Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era (especially the student mobilization of 2011) to turn their demands into reality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 894]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Campaign\nJos\u00e9 Antonio G\u00f3mez Urrutia, meanwhile, put an emphasis on his concrete proposals, aligned more to the left than the rest of the candidates, especially focusing on convening a constituent assembly or eliminating the system of AFPs, should they be elected. With a much better budget than other candidates, G\u00f3mez had to focus mainly on his campaign through social networks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Campaign\nAndres Velasco's campaign started by strengthening his participation in them after he had originally raised his participation only if Bachelet did not appear. To this end, Velasco used the first motto VOY, reinforcing its distancing from the former. Moving forward in the campaign, Velasco concentrated on posing as a renewal against the bad practices of the \"old politics\"; the campaign adopted a more inclusive speech, with the new motto All\u00e1 vamos, and also more avant-garde in line with the liberal positions of Velasco. Thus, phrases like \"Let's get out of the closet\" or \"Let's abort prejudice\" were used by the independent campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Campaign\nClaudio Orrego, known mainly for his role as mayor of Pe\u00f1alol\u00e9n, had to face the challenge of positioning himself as a statesman. For this, the campaign was oriented to show him as a serious and responsible candidate, using dark colors and highlighting a red O. He also pointed to the most centrist and conservative electorate on several occasions, with a few posters being debated with the phrase \"I believe in God, so what? \", Paralleling the other pre-candidates with an agnostic or lay profile. Along with his campaign slogan \"Chile Dares\", Orrego also raised the issue of abuses and injustices as central in his campaign, especially through a viral video showing the indignation of citizenship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Campaign\nIn the weeks leading up to the primary, two live televised debates were held. The first was jointly organized by Canal 13 and CNN Chile, broadcast on June 10 and was moderated by journalists Daniel Matamala and Montserrat \u00c1lvarez. The second, was produced by Televisi\u00f3n Nacional de Chile, was held on June 23 and was moderated by Mauricio Bustamante.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235194-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Nueva Mayor\u00eda presidential primary, Campaign\nAlthough in the first debate the candidates devoted themselves to defend their ideas, the second debate marked a strong confrontation between some candidates, especially between Velasco and Orrego, who would have been targeting the most centrist segment of the electorate to reach second place (before an expected victory of Bachelet) that better position their future aspirations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235195-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nui by-election\nA by-election was held in the Nui constituency in Tuvalu on 10 September 2013. It was triggered by the resignation of the incumbent, MP Taom Tanukale, the Minister for Health, in the government of Willy Telavi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235195-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nui by-election, Result of the by-election\nThe Nui by-election was held on 10 September 2013. Leneuoti Maatusi was declared the winner, polling 297 of the 778 registered voters. Matusi has been a civil servant and served as the Secretary of the Nui Falekaupule. He beat Palemene Anelu, a recent graduate of the University of the South Pacific, who received 206 votes and Taom Tanukale, who received 160 votes. Nui is a two-seat constituency, and in the 2010 general election it had returned Isaia Italeli and Taom Tanukale with 24.6% and 23% of the vote respectively, ahead of three other candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235195-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nui by-election, Result of the by-election\nThe second member of parliament from Nui is Pelenike Isaia, who was elected following the death of her husband Isaia Italeli, in the 2011 Nui by-election.<", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235195-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nui by-election, Background to the Nui by-election\nAlthough there are no political parties in Tuvalu, Members of Parliament align themselves with the government or with the Opposition. A constitutional crisis developed in 2013 when Willy Telavi, the Prime Minister of Tuvalu, refused to recall Parliament following the 2013 Nukufetau by-election. Tuvalu's opposition then requested the Governor-General Iakoba Italeli to intervene against the Prime Minister's decision not to recall Parliament. On 3 July 2013 the Governor-General exercised his reserve powers in ordering Parliament to convene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235195-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Nui by-election, Background to the Nui by-election\nWhen the Parliament met on 30 July, the Speaker (Kamuta Latasi) refused to allow a debate on a no-confidence motion in the government of Willy Telavi. Taom Tanukale, the Health Minister then resigned from Parliament (and thus also from the government). This resignation appeared to be political manoeuvre as Willy Telavi responded by insisting that Parliament should be suspended until a by-election was held and declined to call the by-election. In Tuvalu a by-election can only be called when requested by the Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235195-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nui by-election, Background to the Nui by-election\nThe Governor-General Iakoba Italeli then proceeded to exercise his reserve powers to order Mr Telavi's removal and the appointment of Enele Sopoaga as interim prime minister. The Parliament subsequently confirmed the appointment of Enele Sopoaga as prime minister. The government of Enele Sopoaga had a majority of two going into the by-election. Leneuoti Maatusi, elected in the by-election, committed to support Prime Minister Enele Sopoaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election\nA by-election was held in the Nukufetau constituency in Tuvalu on 28 June 2013. It followed the death of MP and Minister for Finance Lotoala Metia, who died suddenly on 21 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election\nThe by-election ultimately played a key part in an unprecedented constitutional crisis, culminating in a change of government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Context\nThe by-election was seen as crucial for the future of Prime Minister Willy Telavi's government, which was reduced by Metia's death to a parity of seven seats apiece with the Opposition in Parliament. The government had previously survived a by-election in August 2011 caused by the death of Minister for Works Isaia Italeli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Context\nNukufetau is a two-seat constituency. In the 2010 general election, it had returned Enele Sopoaga and Lotoala Metia, respectively with 40.46% and 32.95% of the vote, ahead of one other candidate (incumbent Elisala Pita). For the by-election, of course, only one seat would be provided for, Sopoaga (the Leader of the Opposition) retaining the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Context\nBy early February 2013, no date had been set for the Nukufetau by-election, prompting the opposition to accuse the government of unnecessary (and potentially unconstitutional) delay. Tensions were reported on Nukufetau between supporters of the government and supporters of the opposition, with fears of violence, accentuating calls that the election should be decided swiftly. The opposition was campaigning actively for the seat, before the by-election had even been called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Context\nNukufetau's council of elders (Falekaupule) reportedly backed the opposition, as they had been doing for a while; in 2011, the elders had unsuccessfully asked Metia to \"reconsider his allegiance\" to Telavi, and to support Sopoaga instead. By mid-March, the government had still not set a date for the by-election, and Opposition MP Taukelina Finikaso accused the Telavi government of having shelved a water supply project on Nukufetau, so as to punish the atoll for its elders' lack of political support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Context\nAt the start of April, Finikaso lodged a claim in the High Court of Tuvalu, seeking an injunction to compel the government to proceed with the by-election. He argued that the government was afraid of losing its majority through the by-election, Parliament not having sat since Metia's death had rendered the seat vacant in December. Prime Minister Telavi responded that he wished to see the tensions on Nukufetau resolved before a by-election was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Context\nHe pointed to \"a number of officials\" having been dismissed by the local council, identifying this as a source of tension and division, and called for reconciliation before the election. He stated that the dismissal of officials, which he described as \"wrongful\", led him to doubt whether the election would be \"free and fair\"; hence the delay, he explained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Context\nIn May, complications emerged in relation to the court hearing due to rule on Finikaso's claim. Tuvalu's Chief Justice Sir Gordon Ward was a resident of New Zealand; to reach Tuvalu, he had to transit via Fiji. (The only flights to Funafuti International Airport are from Fiji.) He had formerly served as President of Fiji's Court of Appeal, but had resigned following the 2006 Fijian coup d'\u00e9tat; he had then criticised Fiji's military government. The Fiji government refused him transit, stating that Tuvaluan authorities had not \"submitted the proper paperwork in time\". Ward then offered to hear the case in New Zealand, which Finikaso accepted. The Tuvalu High Court ruling was issued in Auckland on 24 May, ordering that the by-election must be held within twenty-six days. The government then announced the election would be held on 28 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Candidates\nThe government nominated Petely Niuatui, a teacher. Were she to be elected, she would be only the third woman ever to be elected to the Tuvaluan Parliament, which for the first time ever would have two female MPs simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Candidates\nTwo candidates were \"nominated by the Nukufetau community with a strong Opposition backing\", with the understanding that one or the other would withdraw. One was Saufatu Sopoaga, former Prime Minister (2002-2004) and elder brother of the other sitting Nukufetau MP, Opposition leader Enele Sopoaga. The other was Elisala Pita, formerly an MP for the constituency from the 2003 by-election until his defeat in the 2010 general election. It was eventually decided that Pita would be the Opposition's candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Result and consequences\nPita won the seat by a landslide, with over two-thirds of the vote. The Opposition now had a majority of seats (eight to seven), and immediately called for the government to reconvene Parliament, which had not sat since Metia's death in December. A constitutional crisis developed when Prime Minister Telavi responded that, under the Constitution, he was only required to convene Parliament once a year, and was thus under no obligation to summon it until December 2013. Tuvalu's opposition then requested the Governor-General Iakoba Italeli to intervene against the Prime Minister's decision. On 3 July, Italeli exercised his reserve powers in ordering Parliament to convene, against the Prime Minister's wishes, on 30 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Result and consequences\nOn 30 July 2013, as the government was about to face a motion of no confidence, Health Minister Taom Tanukale unexpectedly resigned from Parliament (and thus also from the government) altogether. With Metia dead, Education Minister Falesa Pitoi ill and outside the country since December 2012, and Tanukale having resigned, this left Telavi with only three active government ministers other than himself: Deputy Prime Minister Kausea Natano, Foreign Affairs Minister Apisai Ielemia, and Home Affairs Minister Pelenike Isaia; he also had the support of the Speaker. (There were no government backbenchers.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Result and consequences\nThe following day, the reason for Tanukale's resignation became apparent. The Speaker, Kamuta Latasi, rejected the Opposition's attempt to table a motion of no confidence, on the grounds that there was now a vacant seat in Parliament. Latasi adjourned Parliament, and ruled that it would not reconvene until a by-election had been held - thus prolonging Telavi's minority government once more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235196-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Nukufetau by-election, Result and consequences\nUltimately, on 1 August Governor General Sir Iakoba Italeli intervened to remove Prime Minister Telavi from office, so as to enable Parliament to sit and determine who was to form a government. Parliament elected Opposition Leader Enele Sopoaga to the premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election\nThe 2013 Nunavut general election was held October 28, 2013, to elect 22 members to the 4th Legislative Assembly of Nunavut. In November 2012 the assembly passed the Nunavut Elections Act 2012, stating that the writs for election drop September 23, 2013, and an election be held October 28, 2013, the proclamation was registered November 9, 2012. At the 2013 forum, held on November 15, 2013, Peter Taptuna was selected as the new Premier of Nunavut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, Redistribution\nThe number of electoral districts were increased to 22 from 19. This is the first redistribution of boundaries since the territory was created in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, New premier and MLAs\nOn September 5, 2013, Premier Eva Aariak announced that she would stand for reelection but would not run for the position of premier after the election, paving the way for the 3rd Premier of Nunavut to be chosen. Despite wanting to seek a new position in the Legislature she was defeated in the general election marking the fourth provincial / territorial election in a row that an incumbent Premier has been defeated in his or her riding. (She was preceded by Darrell Dexter in Nova Scotia, Christy Clark in B.C. and Jean Charest in Quebec). A total of seven incumbents did not run for re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, New premier and MLAs\nIn total 73 people registered with Elections Nunavut as candidates. Of these 73 candidates, 12 were incumbents hoping for reelection, and five have been elected in previous territorial elections, four to Nunavut and one to the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories and 56 have not been elected in a territorial election before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, New premier and MLAs\nTwo ridings were won by acclamation and both of these were returning MLAs. A total of eight ridings were contested solely by candidates who have not been elected in a previous territorial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, New premier and MLAs\nOf the seven incumbent cabinet ministers, two chose not to re-offer, two were defeated (one in a by-election following a tie), and three were reelected (one by acclamation).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, Candidates\nFollowing is a list of candidates that had filed with Elections Nunavut by 2:00 pm (local time), September 27, 2013. Bold represents winning candidate. All results from Elections Nunavut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, Candidates\nThere were ties in two districts. In Rankin Inlet South, incumbent MLA Lorne Kusugak and challenger Alexander Sammurtok were tied with 172 votes. An official recount was held November 5 and was still found to be a tie. A by-election was scheduled for February 10, 2014, which was won by Sammurtok. In Uqqummiut, Niore Iqalukjuak and Samuel Nuqingaq were tied with 197 votes. After the official recount held November 5 Nuqingaq was found to have two more votes than Iqalukjuak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, Candidates, Retiring incumbents\nThe following incumbents have announced that they will not be running in the 2013 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235197-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Nunavut general election, Candidates, By-election\nWith the tie in Rankin Inlet South confirmed by a judicial recount, a new by-election was scheduled on February 10, 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235198-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nyamira local elections\nLocal elections were held in Nyamira County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235199-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nyandarua local elections\nLocal elections were held in Nyandarua to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235200-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Nyeri local elections\nLocal elections were held in Nyeri County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235201-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 N\u00fcrnberger Versicherungscup\nThe 2013 N\u00fcrnberger Versicherungscup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Nuremberg, Germany, on 10\u201315 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235201-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 N\u00fcrnberger Versicherungscup, 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-00235201-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 N\u00fcrnberger Versicherungscup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235202-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 N\u00fcrnberger Versicherungscup \u2013 Doubles\nRaluca Olaru and Valeria Solovyeva won the first edition of the tournament over first seeded Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld and Kv\u011bta Peschke with the score 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20133), [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235203-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 N\u00fcrnberger Versicherungscup \u2013 Singles\nIn the first edition of the tournament, Simona Halep defeated wild card Andrea Petkovic in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133, to claim her first WTA singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235204-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 O'Byrne Cup\nThe 2013 O'Byrne Cup is a Gaelic football competition played by the teams of Leinster GAA. The competition differs from the Leinster Senior Football Championship as it also features further education colleges and the winning team does not progress to another tournament at All-Ireland level. The O'Byrne Cup began on 6 January 2013 and was competed on a round robin basis, the top team in each group qualifying for the semi-finals. Kildare were the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235205-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 O'Higgins F.C. season\nThe 2013 O'Higgins F.C. season is O'Higgins F.C. 's 50th season in the Primera Divisi\u00f3n and their seventh consecutive season in Primera Divisi\u00f3n. The club plays in two tournaments: The 2013 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile season and the Copa Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235205-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 O'Higgins F.C. season\nUntil February 2013, O'Higgins played its home matches at the Estadio El Teniente in Rancagua. On 19 February, the stadium was closed in order to begin its renovation process. The stadium will be expanded to 15,000 seats and is set to be a host venue for the 2015 Copa Am\u00e9rica. Meanwhile, O'Higgins will use the Estadio La Granja in Curic\u00f3 as a temporary venue for home matches. Apart from this, the team played 2 of its home matches in Santiago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235205-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 O'Higgins F.C. season\nO'Higgins finished the Torneo Transici\u00f3n in 4th position, having big chances of reaching the title until the end of the season. The club enlist this season as \"a prelude\" for the title won at the 2013\u201314 Torneo Apertura in late 2013. In Copa Chile, the team eliminated Colo-Colo and managed to reach the Quarterfinals, where they lost to Cobreloa by a single goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235205-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 O'Higgins F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 January to 31 May 2013. This article also includes the Copa Chile, despite the competition started in 23 June 2012, as the team progressed to the knockout stages that were held during this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235206-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Kaohsiung\nThe 2013 OEC Kaohsiung was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Kaohsiung, Taiwan between 16 and 22 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235206-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Kaohsiung, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235207-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Kaohsiung \u2013 Doubles\nJohn Paul Fruttero and Raven Klaasen were the defending champion but chose not to compete. Top Seeds Juan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Robert Farah claimed the title defeating Yuki Bhambri and Wang Chieh-fu 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235208-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Kaohsiung \u2013 Singles\nGo Soeda was the defending champion but chose not to compete. Top seed Lu Yen-hsun won the title over Yuki Bhambri 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235209-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Taipei WTA Ladies Open\nThe 2013 OEC Taipei WTA Ladies Open also known as 2013 OEC Taipei WTA Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament and the last event of the 2013 WTA 125K series. It took place in Taipei, Taiwan, on 4\u201310 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235209-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Taipei WTA Ladies Open, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235210-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Taipei WTA Ladies Open \u2013 Doubles\nChan Hao-ching and Kristina Mladenovic were the defending champions, but Mladenovic decided not to participate. Chan played alongside Chan Yung-jan but lost in the first round to Anna-Lena Friedsam and Alison Van Uytvanck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235210-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Taipei WTA Ladies Open \u2013 Doubles\nCaroline Garcia and Yaroslava Shvedova won the tournament, defeating Friedsam and Van Uytvanck in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235211-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Taipei WTA Ladies Open \u2013 Singles\nKristina Mladenovic was the defending champion, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235211-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OEC Taipei WTA Ladies Open \u2013 Singles\nAlison Van Uytvanck won the tournament, defeating fellow Belgian Yanina Wickmayer in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235212-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2013 OFC Beach Soccer Championship took place from 31 August to 2 September 2013 on the grounds of the University of New Caledonia in Noum\u00e9a, New Caledonia. It acted as a qualifier for the 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. This time around, a second OFC team qualified alongside Tahiti for the World Cup, due to the facts that Tahiti is the host of the World Cup and that the OFC is only supposed to have one representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235212-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Beach Soccer Championship\nThe tournament was originally scheduled to take place in Papeete, Tahiti from August 4 \u2013 9 however due to the Tahitian national squad being involved in a European tour it was decided that the competition would be moved to New Caledonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235212-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Beach Soccer Championship, Participating teams\nThree teams have been confirmed to be participating in the tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235212-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nDue to numerous delays in the tournament's administration, the official schedule was not released until 22 August 2013, when the draw was conducted. The first-place finisher was declared the winner of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235212-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nAll kickoff times are listed as local time in New Caledonia, (UTC+11:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235213-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Champions League Final\nThe 2013 OFC Champions League Final was the final of the 2012\u201313 OFC Champions League, the 12th edition of the Oceania Cup, Oceania's premier club football tournament organized by the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC), and the 7th season under the current OFC Champions League name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235213-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Champions League Final\nThe final was contested between two New Zealand teams, Waitakere United and Auckland City, at Arena 2 of Mount Smart Stadium in Auckland, New Zealand, on 19 May 2013. The winner earned the right to represent the OFC at the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup, entering at the qualifying play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235213-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Champions League Final\nAuckland City won the final 2\u20131 to record their third consecutive and fifth overall Champions League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235213-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Champions League Final, Background\nThis is the first ever OFC club final which involves two teams from the same country. Either Auckland City or Waitakere United have appeared in the previous seven OFC club finals. Auckland City are the two-time defending champions and have played in four previous finals, winning all of them (2006, 2009, 2011, and 2012), while Waitakere United have played in three previous finals, winning two (2007 and 2008) and losing one (2010).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235213-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Champions League Final, Road to final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235213-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Champions League Final, Rules\nThe final was played as a single match at a pre-determined venue (a change from previous OFC Champions League finals which had been played on a home-and-away two-legged basis). If tied after regulation, extra time and, if necessary, penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235213-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Champions League Final, Match\nAssistant referees:Jan-Hendrik Hintz (New Zealand)Ravinesh Kumar (Fiji)Fourth official:Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235214-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Futsal Championship\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinker (talk | contribs) at 10:36, 14 April 2020 (fix bold). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235214-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Futsal Championship\nThe 2013 OFC Futsal Championship, also known as the OFC Futsal Championship Invitational 2013, was the ninth edition of the main international futsal tournament of the Oceanian region, organized by the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC). It took place from 23 to 27 July 2013, and was hosted by Auckland, New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235214-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC Futsal Championship\nEight teams took part in the tournament, including Malaysia and Australia (appearing as guest nations) and a 'New Zealand Invitational' side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235215-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-17 Championship\nThe 2013 OFC U-17 Championship was the 15th edition of the OFC's Under 17 championship, the biennial football championship of the Oceanian Confederation. All matches took place at Chapuis stadium, Luganville in Vanuatu from 17 to 27 April. 6 teams contested the final round of the Championship after the Solomon Islands Football Federation withdrew, as it could only financially support its Beach Soccer and Fustal sides in national competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235215-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-17 Championship\nAs winners, New Zealand qualified as Oceania's representative for the 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235215-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-17 Championship, Qualification\n5 teams 'pre-qualified' for the competition (before the Solomon Islands withdrawal), with the final team being decided through a preliminary round hosted by Samoa in late January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235215-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-17 Championship, Preliminary round\nA preliminary competition was required to find the Sixth and final place in the competition. The mini-tournament was hosted by the Samoan Football Federation between the dates of 22 and 26 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235215-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-17 Championship, Final round\nThe draw for the final round of competition was held at the Headquarters of the Oceania Football Confederation on 13 February 2013. The teams will play each other once in a round robin tournament based on a league system, with the winner qualifying for the FIFA U-17 World Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235216-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-20 Championship\nThe 2013 OFC U-20 Championship was the 19th edition of the OFC Under 20 Qualifying Tournament, the biennial football championship of Oceania (OFC). The competition was held at two venues in Fiji, from the 21 to 29 March, with the winner qualifying as Oceania's representative at the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235216-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-20 Championship\nNew Zealand, the previous title holders, won this year's edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235216-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-20 Championship, Venues\nFour matchdays were held at Churchill Park in Lautoka with the last matchday being held at Govind Park in Ba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235216-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-20 Championship, Group stage\nThe competition draw was conducted on February 8 at the headquarters of the Oceania confederation in Auckland, New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235216-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-20 Championship, Awards\nThe Golden Ball Award was awarded to the most outstanding player of the tournament. The Golden Glove Award was awarded to the best goalkeeper of the tournament. The Golden Boot Award was awarded to the top scorer of the tournament. The Fair Play Award was awarded to the team with the best disciplinary record at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235217-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OFC U-20 Championship squads\nAssociation football team rosters for the 2013 OFC U-20 Championship, the Oceanic Youth Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235218-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OSN Cup\nThe 2013 OSN Cup was an association football tournament held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from 5 September 2013 to 9 September 2013. The tournament was organized by the Saudi Arabian Football Federation and sponsored by the Middle Eastern and North African TV network OSN. This was the premier edition of the tournament. New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, Trinidad and Tobago and the United Arab Emirates were invited to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235218-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 OSN Cup\nAll matches were held at the King Fahd International Stadium About the tournament, SAFF president Ahmed Eid Al-Harbi said, \"Our goal is to promote the culture of football in the Kingdom, set more platforms for our talented team to demonstrate their skills and to encourage new talent to step forward and be proud participants in Saudi Arabia\u2019s modern football history.\" The United Arab Emirates were crowned champions after defeating New Zealand 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235219-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 OSN Cup squads\nThe following is a list of squads for each nation who competed at the 2013 OSN Cup in Saudi Arabia from 5 to 9 September 2013. Each squad consisted of players, of which had to be goalkeepers. Replacement of injured players was permitted until 24 hours before the team's game. Players marked (c) were named as captain for their national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235219-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 OSN Cup squads, Player representation, By club nationality\nNations in italics are not represented by their national teams in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235220-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oakland Athletics season\nThe 2013 Oakland Athletics season was the 45th for the franchise at O.co Coliseum, as well as the 113th in club history. Oakland was defending their division title in the new five-team American League West during the 2013 season. On September 22, 2013, they clinched their second straight American League West championship. They lost to the Detroit Tigers in five games in the 2013 American League Division Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235220-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oakland Athletics season, Offseason\nFollowing a successful 2012 season in which the team won the AL West, GM Billy Beane stated he would keep the team mostly intact, and \"if moves are made, they will be additions\". The first acquisition occurred October 19 in a three-team trade involving Arizona and Miami; Oakland sent Cliff Pennington to Arizona and minor leaguer Yordy Cabrera to Miami, and the team received Chris Young from Arizona. In November, the team traded pitcher Tyson Ross and minor leaguer A. J. Kirby-Jones to San Diego for infielder Andy Parrino and pitcher Andrew Werner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235220-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Oakland Athletics season, Offseason\nGrant Green, Arnold Leon, Shane Peterson, and Michael Ynoa were added to the 40-man roster and Andrew Carignan, Brandon Hicks (who was traded to the Mets) and Jim Miller (who was claimed off waivers by the Yankees and later designated for assignment) were removed. The next move was to trade Collin Cowgill to the Mets for Jefry Mart\u00e9. When free agent Stephen Drew signed with the Boston Red Sox, Oakland signed Japanese shortstop Hiroyuki Nakajima to a 2-year, $6.5 million deal, with an option for a third year, in order to fill the vacancy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235220-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 Oakland Athletics season, Offseason\nPitcher Graham Godfrey was sent to Boston as a player to be named later to complete a previous trade, while Brandon McCarthy and Jonny Gomes, who both elected free agency, signed with Arizona and Boston, respectively. In January, Oakland was involved in their second three-team trade of the offseason, trading pitching prospect A. J. Cole back to Washington (he was part of a trade for Gio Gonz\u00e1lez the year before) and receiving catcher John Jaso from Seattle. Upon the acquisition of Jaso, George Kottaras was designated for assignment. In February, the A's were involved in a five-player deal with new division rival Houston, trading Chris Carter, Brad Peacock and Max Stassi in exchange for shortstop Jed Lowrie and reliever Fernando Rodriguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235220-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oakland Athletics season, Offseason\nIn addition to player movement, there was also a coaching change made by the Athletics. Bullpen coach Rick Rodriguez was offered a position within the organization, and Darren Bush, the manager of the Triple-A affiliate Sacramento River Cats, will assume bullpen coaching responsibilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235221-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oakland Raiders season\nThe 2013 Oakland Raiders season was the franchise's 44th season in the National Football League, the 54th overall and the second under head coach Dennis Allen. With a 4\u201312 record, the Raiders secured their eleventh consecutive non-winning season, and missed the playoffs for an eleventh consecutive season. The Raiders entered the season with a new quarterback in Terrelle Pryor. Pryor started off the season in impressive fashion, with the team almost pulling off the upset in Week 1 against the Indianapolis Colts, and defeating the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235221-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Oakland Raiders season\nThe team and Pryor eventually cooled down, resulting in Pryor being benched for Matt McGloin in the game against the Houston Texans. Before this game, history was made in the game against the Philadelphia Eagles when Eagles quarterback Nick Foles threw 7 touchdown passes, the most passing touchdowns the Raiders had ever allowed in its history. Prior to the season starting, the Raiders brought back defensive back Charles Woodson, who spent the last 7 years with the Green Bay Packers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235221-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oakland Raiders season, 2013 draft class\nThe Raiders did not have a selection in the fifth round, as they traded their fifth-round selection (No. 138 overall) to the Seattle Seahawks in exchange for linebacker Aaron Curry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235221-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oakland Raiders season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. San Diego Chargers\nThis game was moved to an 8:35\u00a0p.m. PDT kickoff, and from CBS to NFL Network as a \"special edition\" of Thursday Night Football, as extended time was required to convert the field back from its baseball configuration due to an Oakland Athletics American League Division Series game the previous night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 85], "content_span": [86, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235222-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oberstaufen Cup\nThe 2013 Oberstaufen Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 22nd edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Oberstaufen, Germany between 22 and 28 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235222-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oberstaufen Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235223-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oberstaufen Cup \u2013 Doubles\nAndrei D\u0103escu and Florin Mergea were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Dominik Meffert and Philipp Oswald won the title, defeating Stephan Fransen and Artem Sitak 6\u20131, 3\u20136, [14\u201312] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235224-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oberstaufen Cup \u2013 Singles\nDominik Meffert was the defending champion, but lost to Guillaume Rufin in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235224-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oberstaufen Cup \u2013 Singles\nRufin won the title, defeating Peter Gojowczyk in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235225-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Oceania Athletics Championships were held at the Stade Pater Te Hono Nui in Papeete, French Polynesia, between June 3\u20135, 2013. The event was held jointly with the 2013 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships, and there were also exhibition events for masters, athletes with a disability and children. Detailed reports on a day by day basis were given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235225-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Athletics Championships\nThe event was overshadowed by the death of New Zealand racewalker Lesley Cantwell. She collapsed while waiting for the medal ceremony after winning the gold medal in the 5000 metres race walk event, and was taken to Papeete Hospital on life support. However, she died a few days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235225-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Athletics Championships\nIn the open division, a total of 44 events were contested, 21 by men and 22 by women, as well as 1 mixed medley relay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235225-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Athletics Championships, Medal summary\nComplete results can be found on the Oceania Athletics Association webpage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235225-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Athletics Championships, Participation (unofficial)\nThe participation of 480 athletes representing 24 teams from 22 countries was published. The list comprises also the U-18 athletes, some of them competed inboth the open and the youth event, especially in the relays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235225-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Athletics Championships, Participation (unofficial)\n20 of the participating teams were OAA members, one team an associate OAA member, only Niue was absent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235225-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Athletics Championships, Participation (unofficial)\nIn addition, there was a team from Wallis and Futuna, which is no OAA member, and two regional teams: A local team dubbed \"Tahiti West Coast\" (TWC in the results list, here dubbed TAH) and a \"Regional Australia Team\" (RAT in the results list, here dubbed NAUS) including athletes with \"their normal place of residence in Northern Australia (defined as comprising the Northern Territory and any parts of Western Australia and Queensland, north of 26th parallel south latitude).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235226-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Handball Champions Cup\nThe 2013 Oceania Handball Champions Cup was held in Sydney, Australia in August, 2013. This was organised by the Oceania Handball Federation and featured teams from Australia and New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235226-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Handball Champions Cup\nThe tournament was won by Australian team Sydney University. They won the right to represent Oceania in the 2013 IHF Super Globe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235227-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Sevens Championship\nThe 2013 Oceania Sevens Championship was the sixth Oceania Sevens in men's rugby sevens. It was held at ANZ Stadium in Suva, Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235227-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Sevens Championship\nSamoa won the Oceania Sevens Championship by defeating Fiji 31-17. Cook Islands and American Samoa, as the two highest finishers excluding core teams Fiji, Australia and Samoa, qualified for qualified for the 2013 Hong Kong Sevens and the opportunity later to qualify for the 2013\u201314 IRB Sevens World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235228-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships were held at the Stade Pater Te Hono Nui in Papeete, French Polynesia, between June 3\u20135, 2013. They were held together with the 2013 Oceania Open Championships. Detailed reports on a day by day basis were given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235228-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships\nA total of 40 events were contested, 21 by boys and 19 by girls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235228-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships, Medal summary\nComplete results can be found on the Oceania Athletics Association webpage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235228-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships, Participation (unofficial)\nAccording to an unofficial count, 116 athletes from 17 countries participated. In addition to 14 OAA member and 1 associate member teams, there was a team from Wallis and Futuna, which is no OAA member, and two regional teams: A local team dubbed \"Tahiti West Coast\" (TWC in the result lists) and a \"Regional Australia Team\" (RAT in the result lists) including athletes with \"their normal place of residence in Northern Australia (defined as comprising the Northern Territory and any parts of Western Australia and Queensland, north of 26th parallel south latitude).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235229-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Odds BK season\nThe 2013 season is Odd 5th consecutive year in Tippeligaen. It is Dag-Eilev Fagermo's sixth season as the club's manager. Odd also competed in the 2013 Norwegian Football Cup reaching the fourth round where they were knocked out by Bod\u00f8/Glimt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235229-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Odds BK 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235229-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Odds BK 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235229-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Odds BK 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235229-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Odds BK 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235229-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Odds BK 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235229-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Odds BK 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, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235230-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oddset Hockey Games\nThe 2013 Oddset Hockey Games was played between 6\u201310 February 2013. The Czech Republic, Finland, Sweden and Russia played a round-robin for a total of three games per team and six games in total. Five of the matches were played in the Malm\u00f6 Arena in Malm\u00f6, Sweden, and one match in the Ice Palace in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Finland won the tournament for the fourth time. The tournament was part of the 2012\u201313 Euro Hockey Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235230-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oddset Hockey Games, Games\nAll times are local (UTC+1 for the games in Sweden, and UTC+4 for the game in Russia).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235230-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oddset Hockey Games, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalties In Minutes; POS = PositionSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235230-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oddset Hockey Games, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235230-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Oddset Hockey Games, Tournament awards\nTournament All-Star Team selected by the media: Goaltender: Alexander Salak Defencemen: Ilya Nikulin, Ville LajunenForwards: Juhamatti Aaltonen, Sergei Mozyakin, Evgeny Kuznetsov", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235231-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open\nThe 2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 9th edition, for men, and 12th edition, for women, of the tournament and part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering totals of $100,000, for men, and $100,000, for women, in prize money. It took place in West Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada between July 29 to August 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235231-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235231-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open, Men's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw by special exempts:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235231-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open, Women's singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235232-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMaxime Authom and Ruben Bemelmans are the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235232-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJonathan Erlich and Andy Ram won the title, defeating James Cerretani and Adil Shamasdin in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235233-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nIgor Sijsling is the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235233-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nVasek Pospisil won the title after defeating Daniel Evans 6\u20130, 1\u20136, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235234-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nJulia Glushko and Olivia Rogowska were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but lost in the first round to St\u00e9phanie Dubois and St\u00e9phanie Foretz Gacon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235234-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSharon Fichman and Maryna Zanevska won the tournament, defeating Jacqueline Cako and Natalie Pluskota in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235235-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nMallory Burdette was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she decided to participate at the 2013 Southern California Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235235-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nJohanna Konta won the tournament, defeating Sharon Fichman in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235236-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Offaly Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2013 Offaly Senior Hurling Championship was the 115th staging of the Offaly Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment in 1896. The championship began on 10 May 2013 and ended on 6 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235236-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Offaly Senior Hurling Championship\nKilcormac/Killoughey were the reigning champions, and they successfully defended their title following a 1-21 to 1-14 defeat of Birr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235236-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Offaly Senior Hurling Championship, Teams, Overview\nAll but one of the twelve teams from the 2012 championship participated in the top tier of Offaly hurling in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235236-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Offaly Senior Hurling Championship, Teams, Overview\nLusmagh, who defeated St. Rynagh's by 4-11 to 2-14 in the final of the intermediate championship in 2012, availed of their right to automatic promotion to the senior championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235236-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Offaly Senior Hurling Championship, Teams, Overview\nSimilarly, Drumc defeated Shamrocks in the 2012 relegation play-off, and so Shamrocks were relegated to the intermediate grade for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235237-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Bobcats football team\nThe 2013 Ohio Bobcats football team represented Ohio University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by ninth-year head coach Frank Solich and played their home games at Peden Stadium. They are a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). They finished the season 7\u20136, 4\u20134 in MAC play to finish in a tie for third place in the East Division. They were invited to the Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl where they lost to East Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235238-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Machine season\nThe 2013 Ohio Machine season is the second season for the Ohio Machine of Major League Lacrosse. The Machine will try to improve upon their inaugural season in 2011, where they finished a league-worst 2-12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team\nThe 2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team represented Ohio State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the Buckeye's 124th overall, the 101st as a member of the Big Ten Conference, and the third as a member of the Big Ten Leaders Division. The team was led by Urban Meyer, in his second year as head coach, and played its home games at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team\nThe Buckeyes finished the regular season with an undefeated record for the second consecutive year, as well as Big Ten Leaders Division champions for the second consecutive year. They finished the season with a record of 12 wins and 2 losses (12\u20132 overall, 8\u20130 in the Big Ten), following losses to Michigan State in the Big Ten Championship Game and to Clemson in the Orange Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team\nAfter an undefeated season in 2012, Ohio State signed a highly ranked recruiting class and entered the 2013 season ranked No. 2 in all major college football polls, as well as being considered the favorite to win the Leaders Division, while also competing for the Big Ten championship and national championship. Ohio State opened the season defeating all of their non-conference opponents by a combined score of 210\u201361. The Buckeyes opened their conference schedule with victories over the Wisconsin Badgers and Northwestern Wildcats, both ranked at the time, and improved their record to 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team\nA 63\u201314 victory over Penn State and a 60\u201335 victory over Illinois kept the Buckeyes highly ranked throughout the season. A 42\u201341 victory over Michigan in The Game gave Ohio State a 12\u20130 regular season record for the second consecutive season. Following losses in the Big Ten Championship Game and the Orange Bowl, the Buckeyes finished the season ranked No. 10 in the Coaches' Poll and No. 12 in the AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team\nAt the end of the season, several players were recognized with postseason awards for individual accomplishments. Braxton Miller was named the Big Ten offensive player of the year, as well as the Big Ten quarterback of the year for the second consecutive season, while Carlos Hyde was named the Big Ten running back of the year. Also, Ryan Shazier was named to the Associated Press All-American First Team, while Carlos Hyde and Jack Mewhort were named to the Associated Press All-American Second Team. The Buckeyes' also had six players taken in the NFL Draft, including Shazier and Bradley Roby, who were both taken in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Previous season\nUrban Meyer, after being hired in November 2011, quickly brought in an entirely new staff to lead the team in 2012, featuring Tom Herman and Ed Warinner as co-offensive coordinators, with Everett Withers and former interim head coach Luke Fickell as co-defensive coordinators. Meyer also began to shape the team by bringing in a top ten recruiting class. Following an offseason of transition, Ohio State began the 2012 season against Miami (Ohio) on September 1, defeating the RedHawks 56\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Previous season\nOhio State entered Big Ten Conference play with a 4\u20130 record and in their first conference game, would defeat the Michigan State Spartans 17\u201316. A 63\u201338 victory over Nebraska on homecoming would give Ohio State a 6\u20130 record and put them in the top ten in the AP Poll. Overtime victories over Purdue and Wisconsin, along with many other close victories, would give the Buckeyes an 11\u20130 record heading into their annual matchup with the Michigan Wolverines. The Buckeyes defeated the Wolverines 26\u201321 and completed their undefeated season, the first for the program since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Previous season\nThough Ohio State was ineligible to play in any bowl game or to be ranked in the BCS or Coaches' Poll, they were still eligible for the AP National Championship. Following the season, Ohio State was ranked third in the AP Poll behind the national champion Alabama Crimson Tide and the second ranked Oregon Ducks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nOhio State began their spring camp earlier than they had in previous seasons, starting it on March 5. The 2013 spring game was played on April 13 and was broadcast on the Big Ten Network. Ohio State played their spring game at Paul Brown Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio, while Ohio Stadium underwent renovations. In similar formats to previous seasons, the Buckeyes were divided up into Scarlet and Gray teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nQuarterback Braxton Miller, who played on the Scarlet team, opened up the game with a 20-yard touchdown pass to Devin Smith and with no other scoring in the first quarter, the Scarlet team took their 7\u20130 lead to the second quarter. Kenny Guiton, who was the starting quarterback for the Gray team, tied the game up with a touchdown pass of his own to receiver Chris Fields. A Corey Brown touchdown reception with a few seconds remaining in the first half, would give the Scarlet team the 14\u20137 advantage heading into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nThe third quarter would be dominated by the Scarlet team as Braxton Miller would drive the team to the endzone, capping off the drive with a 5-yard touchdown run. A Drew Basil field goal with about four minutes remaining in the quarter would give the Scarlet a 24\u20137 advantage. The Gray team would not score until the fourth quarter, off of a 4-yard touchdown pass from Cardale Jones to Michael Thomas. The game, scoring wise, was capped off with a Chris Field 6-yard touchdown run, with the final score being 31\u201314 in favor of the Scarlet team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Spring practice\nQuarterback Braxton Miller finished the game going 16 of 25 for a total of 217 yards and two touchdown passes, along with his touchdown run. Corey Brown led the receivers with five receptions for 25 yards and touchdown, while sophomore receiver Michael Thomas accounted for 79 yards, a touchdown and seven receptions. On defense, lineman Adolphus Washington accounted for four sacks, leading both teams. The game also featured many new players replacing starters last season, though playmakers Noah Spence and Washington on the defensive line still impressed the coaching staff. The line accounted for a total of 11 sacks during the game, with a four quarterbacks involved being sacked at some point. Though the defense, impressed, with the majority of the success coming from the passing game with both teams only accounting for 122 rushing yards collectively on 45 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 950]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Fall camp\nTwelve separate Ohio State players were on preseason award watch lists in sixteen different award categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Fall camp\nThese include C.J. Barnett, Bradley Roby and Ryan Shazier for the Bednarik Award; Corey Brown and Devin Smith for the Biletnikoff Award; Christian Bryant, Roby and Shazier for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy; Shazier for the Butkus Award; Braxton Miller for the Davey O'Brien Award; Carlos Hyde for the Doak Walker Award; Barnett, Bryan and Roby for the Jim Thorpe Award; Jeff Heuerman for the Mackey Award; Hyde and Miller for the Maxwell Award; Jack Mewhort and Andrew Norwell for the Outland Trophy; Corey Linsly for the Rimington Trophy; Norwell and Shazier for the Lombardi Award; as well as Miller and Roby for the Walter Camp Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Before the season, Fall camp\nBefore the start of camp, Ohio State faced off the field issues with some players, including running back Carlos Hyde, who was suspended from the team following his arrest and involvement in an assault case against a female in Columbus, Ohio. Hyde was originally dismissed from the program when the news of the investigation first broke, however, when he was dropped as a person of interest, head coach Urban Meyer dropped his suspension to three games. Cornerback Bradley Roby was arrested on July 21 after an altercation at a bar in Bloomington, Indiana. The charges against Roby were reduced to misdemeanor on August 16. Ohio State opened their fall camp with all freshmen reporting on August 4, with other players reporting later in the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Personnel, Coaching staff\nOhio State head coach Urban Meyer was in his second year as the Buckeye's head coach during the 2013 season. In his first season with Ohio State, he led the Buckeyes to an undefeated season with twelve wins (12\u20130), though the team was unable to participate in the Big Ten Championship Game or a bowl game due to sanctions. On February 8, 2013, it was announced the cornerbacks coach Kerry Coombs was promoted to special teams coach for the upcoming season, while also retaining his role as cornerbacks coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Personnel, Returning starters\nOhio State returns 14 starters from the 2012 season, including nine on offense, four defense, as well as one on special teams. Quarterback Braxton Miller returns after starting all twelve games in 2012 and eight games in 2011. Along with Miller on offense, running back Carlos Hyde, offensive tackle Jack Mewhort and offensive guard Andrew Norwell all return on offense after being named to the Big Ten All-Conference team last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Personnel, Returning starters\nOn defense linebacker Ryan Shazier returns after being named to the All-Conference team in 2012, while cornerback Bradley Roby returns after being named to the AP All-American team last season. On offense, Ohio State lost tight end Jake Stoneburner and offensive tackle Reid Fragel, along with punter Ben Buchanan, all seniors. On defense, Ohio State lost defensive lineman John Simon, Garrett Goebel and Nathan Williams, linebackers Etienne Sabino and Zach Boren, along with cornerback Travis Howard, all to graduation. The only Buckeye junior eligible for the NFL Draft that declared eligibility was defensive lineman Johnathan Hankins, who was selected in the second round by the New York Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Personnel, Recruiting class\nPrior to National Signing Day on February 6, 2013, six high school players that graduated early and one transfer of the 2013 recruiting class enrolled for the spring semester in order to participate in spring practice. These early enrollments included: cornerbacks Eli Apple and Cameron Burrows, quarterback J.T. Barrett, fullback William Houston, defensive ends Tyquan Lewis Tracy Sprinkle, and fullback Devin Hill, who transferred from Purdue University. On February 6, 2013, the Ohio State University athletic department confirmed that it had received the National Letter of Intent from seventeen additional players to play at Ohio State that completed the 2013 recruiting class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Personnel, Recruiting class\nOhio State's recruiting class was highlighted by seventeen players from the \"ESPN 300\", including eight in the top 100: No. 11 Eli Apple (cornerback); No. 43 Gareon Conley (cornerback); No. 48 Trey Johnson (linebacker); No. 49 Jalin Marshall (wide receiver); No. 50 Vonn Bell (safety); No. 55 Dontre Wilson (athlete); No. 56 Joey Bosa (defensive tackle); and No. 62 Cam Burrows (cornerback). On signing day, Buckeyes head coach Urban Meyer was quoted as calling it a great day. With Meyer going onto say, \"I thought it would be a good day, but now I'll put it in the great category.\" The Buckeyes' signed the No. 2 recruiting class according to Rivals.com, the No. 1 recruiting class according to Scout.com, and the No. 3 recruiting class according to ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Schedule\nThe Big Ten Conference released the schedules for the 2013 season on April 6, 2011. The Big Ten will continue the same scheduling alignment as they had during the 2011 and 2012 seasons. As a result, Ohio State will play all five Leaders Division opponents: Illinois, Indiana, Penn State, Purdue, and Wisconsin. Ohio State will also face three Legends Division opponents: Iowa, Northwestern, and Michigan, the permanent cross-division opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Schedule\nOhio State will play four non-conference games: Buffalo of the Mid-American Conference, San Diego State of the Mountain West Conference, California of the Pac-12 Conference, and Florida A&M of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Ohio State has two bye weeks during the season, the first between their games against Northwestern and Iowa and their second between their games against Purdue and Illinois. Following their second consecutive undefeated season, Ohio State won the Leaders Division Championship and qualified to play in the Big Ten Championship Game against Michigan State, who defeated the Buckeyes 34\u201324. On December 8, Ohio State was selected to play in the Orange Bowl against Clemson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Schedule\nAll games during the 2013 season will be broadcast on the Ohio State Football Radio Network. Paul Keels will head the crew with play-by-play, Jim Lachey with color commentary, Marty Bannister as sideline and locker room reporter, and Skip Mosic serving as the pre-game and halftime show host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Buffalo\nThe Buckeyes' opened the 2013 season against the Buffalo Bulls, who they defeated 40\u201320 in Columbus. A false start and delay of game penalty would force Buffalo to punt on their first possession. Following a 4-play drive, the Buckeyes' would score on a touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to Devin Smith, and after a Kenny Guiton two-point conversion run, Ohio State took an 8\u20130 lead. Ohio State would score again on their second drive after a 7-yard touchdown pass from Miller to Chris Fields, and would convert another two-point conversion on a pass from Guiton to Jordan Hall. A 49-yard Hall touchdown run on the Buckeyes' next possession gave the Buckeyes' a 23\u20130 lead after the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Buffalo\nOhio State would be unable to capitalize on a Ron Tanner interception of Bull's quarterback Joe Licata, with freshman Dontre Wilson fumbling the ball on the next play. Buffalo would score their first points of the game on a 3-play drive that ended in a touchdown pass from Licata to Matt Weiser. Khalil Mack returned a Braxton Miller interception for a touchdown on the Buckeyes' ensuing possession and cut the Ohio State lead to 23\u201313. A 37-yard touchdown run from Jordan Hall would give Ohio State a 30\u201313 lead at halftime. Ryan Shazier, along with other Buckeyes players were carried off in the second quarter due to cramps in the hot weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Buffalo\nBuffalo would score on their first possession of the second half on a 10-yard pass from Joe Licata to Alex Neutz. The Buckeyes' responded with a 14-play drive, which ended in a 21-yard touchdown pass from Kenny Guiton to Chris Fields, giving Ohio State a 37\u201320 lead. A 39-yard Drew Basil field goal in the fourth quarter would be the final scoring play. With the victory, Ohio State extended their winning streak to 13 games, dating back to the previous season, the longest streak in the nation. The Bull's received $1 million to play the game in Ohio Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, San Diego State\nOn November 2, 2012, Ohio State announced San Diego State would replace Vanderbilt on the 2013 schedule after the Commodores canceled the game. Ohio State defeated the Aztecs 42\u20137 in the second game of the season. The Buckeyes' scored on their first offensive possession on a 7-yard touchdown run from freshman Dontre Wilson. Starting quarterback Braxton Miller left the game after the first drive with a knee injury and was replaced by Kenny Guiton. The Buckeyes would be unable to capitalize following a Doran Grant interception on the Aztecs' ensuing possession. A touchdown pass from Guiton to Corey Brown and a 4-yard touchdown run from Jordan Hall gave Ohio State a 21\u20130 lead at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, San Diego State\nKenny Guiton threw his first interception early in the second quarter to Damontae Kazee, though Guiton would score on the Buckeyes' next offensive possession on a 44-yard run. A fumble and sack by Noah Spence gave the Buckeyes the ball in Aztec territory, which would lead to a Rod Smith touchdown run, giving Ohio State a 35\u20130 lead at halftime. Ohio State would score on their second drive of the third quarter on a Guiton touchdown pass to Corey Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, San Diego State\nThe Buckeye defense would give up their first points against midway through the third quarter, following a 6 play, 72-yard drive by San Diego State. The Aztecs' scored a touchdown on a pass from Quinn Kaehler to Chad Young. Ohio State would run out the clock in the fourth quarter, ensuring the 42\u20137 victory. With the victory, Ohio State extended their winning streak to 14 games, and improved their overall record against San Diego State to 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, California\nIn their first road game of the 2013 season, Ohio State defeated the California Golden Bears of the Pac-12 Conference 52\u201334 in Berkeley. Kenny Guiton was named the starting quarterback prior to the game, replacing Braxton Miller, who was injured. Within the first five minutes of the game, the Buckeyes' jumped out to a 21\u20130 lead following 90 and 47-yard touchdown passes from Guiton to Devin Smith. A sack and forced fumble by Ryan Shazier on California's third drive of the game would help set up a 1-yard touchdown pass from Guiton to Chris Fields.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, California\nThe Golden Bears' first touchdown would come on their fourth drive, on a 61-yard reception thrown by Jared Goff to James Grisom. A Christian Bryant interception for the Buckeyes' would set up a 39-yard Drew Basil field goal. A 42-yard touchdown pass from Goff to Chris Harper would make the score 24\u201314, in favor of Ohio State, at the end of the first quarter. Following a 12 play, 74-yard drive, Ohio State extended their led to 31\u201314 following a 1-yard Jordan Hall touchdown run. Two field goals of 27 and 43-yards for California's Vincen D'Amato, would cut the Buckeye lead to 31\u201320 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, California\nOhio State would open the second half with possession of the ball, and scoring a touchdown on Jordan Hall's second touchdown run of the game. A 6-yard touchdown pass from Kenny Guiton to Corey Brown on their next possession, would make the score 45\u201320, in favor of the Buckeyes'. Jared Goff would throw his third touchdown pass of the day to Bryce Treggs midway through the third quarter. Hall's third touchdown run for the Buckeyes' would give Ohio State a 52\u201327 lead at the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, California\nA 1-yard touchdown run for Daniel Lasco of the Golden Bears' would be the only scoring play of the fourth quarter, with the Buckeyes winning 52\u201334. Kenny Guiton was recognized as the Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week for his 276 passing yard and four touchdown passes, while Ryan Shazier was recognized as the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week for his 12 tackles and forced fumble. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 15 games, and they improved their all-time record against California to 7\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Florida A&M\nIn their final non-conference game of the 2013 season, Ohio State defeated the Florida A&M Rattlers of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, 76\u20130, in Columbus. Kenny Guiton was named the Buckeyes' starting quarterback for the second consecutive game. The Buckeyes scored on all five of their drives in the first quarter for a 34\u20130 lead. Jordan Hall scored Ohio State's first touchdown on a 3-yard run, while Guiton threw four touchdown passes to four separate receivers. A blocked punt by Doran Grant and an interception by Bradley Roby set up good field positions for the Buckeyes and scoring drives. Ohio State continued to roll in the second quarter, scoring three touchdowns on all of their drives, including an 18-yard run from Jordan Hall and two touchdown passes from Guiton. The six touchdown passes from Guiton in the first half were a new Ohio State single-game quarterback record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 958]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Florida A&M\nThe Buckeyes took out their starters in the third quarter and kept the ball on the ground for the remainder of the game. Freshman running back Ezekiel Elliott took advantage of the playing time, scoring two touchdown in the third quarter, on 16- and 13-yard runs, and gave Ohio State a 69\u20130 lead going into the fourth quarter. A 10-yard touchdown run from Cardale Jones in the fourth quarter was the final scoring play of the game. Kenny Guiton was recognized as the Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week for his six touchdown passes. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 16 games. The Rattlers received $900,000 to play the game in Ohio Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\nIn their first conference game of the 2013 season, Ohio State defeated the Wisconsin Badgers 31\u201324 in Columbus. Braxton Miller was named as the starting quarterback for the first time in two weeks and would throw a 21-yard touchdown pass on the Buckeyes' first offensive possession. Wisconsin would tie the game up on their second offensive possession with a 36-yard touchdown pass from Joel Stave to Jared Abbrederis. The Buckeyes' would respond with a 26-yard touchdown pass from Miller to Devin Smith, giving Ohio State a 14\u20137 lead at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\nOhio State would extend their lead early in the second quarter, with a 45-yard Drew Basil field goal. Joel Stave would throw his second touchdown pass the Same Arneson, bringing the Buckeye lead back to one possession. In the final minutes of the half, the Buckeye offense would drive down the field and score on a touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to Corey Brown, giving the Ohio State a 24\u201314 at halftime. The Badgers' would commit their first turnover in the third quarter on a pass intercepted by Bradley Roby. Ohio State would score a touchdown reception by Corey Brown, giving Ohio State a 31\u201314 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\nWisconsin would put together a 9 play, 75 yard drive in the fourth quarter, which resulted in a touchdown run from James White. The Badgers' again received the ball with less than five minutes remaining and were able to drive down to the Buckeye 24 yard line and would ultimately settle for a 42-yard field goal. The Buckeyes' recovered the ensuing onside kick and would seal the 31\u201324 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\nBraxton Miller was recognized as the Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week after completing 17 of 25 pass attempts for 198 yards, while Cameron Johnston was named the Big Ten Special Teams Player of the Week. During the game senior safety Christian Bryant sustained an ankle injury during the game, which ultimately ended his season and career at Ohio State. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 17 games, and they improved their overall record against Wisconsin to 56\u201318\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nFor the first time since 2008, Ohio State played Northwestern in Evanston, and in the game Ohio State defeated the Wildcats 40\u201330. Ohio State received the opening kickoff and scored first on a Drew Basil 27-yard field goal. Tyler Scott forced a fumble on Ohio State's second possession, giving the Wildcats the ball deep in Ohio State territory. Northwestern took advantage of the turnover, scoring on a touchdown pass from Trevor Siemiah to Kain Colter, giving the Wildcats the 7\u20133 lead. A blocked punt in the shadow of Northwestern's endzone by Bradley Roby gave Ohio State their first touchdown and a 10\u20137 lead at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nOhio State's first drive of the second quarter covered 72 yards, and resulted in a 20-yard field goal from Basil. Northwestern scored on all of their drives in the second quarter, including a Kain Colter touchdown run, along with Jeff Budzien field goals, giving the Wildcats a 20\u201313 lead at halftime. Northwestern extended their lead on the first possession of the second half, driving 60 yards and taking a ten-point lead following a 32-yard field goal from Budzien. Ohio State committed third turnover on their first possession of the half, after a Braxton Miller fumble. A touchdown run from Carlos Hyde on the Buckeyes' next offensive drive would cut the Wildcat lead down to one possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nDoran Grant intercepted a Trevor Siemian pass early in the fourth quarter, setting up the Buckeyes deep within Northwestern territory. Hyde's second touchdown run gave Ohio State the lead again at 27\u201323. Northwestern responded with a Cameron Dickerson 12-yard touchdown reception from Siemian. Ohio State took the lead for good after a third touchdown run from Hyde, following an 81-yard drive. A Wildcat fumbled lateral recovered by Joey Bosa made the final score 40\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nHyde was recognized as Big Ten co-Offensive Player of the Week for his three touchdown runs, Roby was recognized as the Big Ten Special Teams Player of the Week, while Bosa was named Big Ten Freshman of the Week. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 18 games, and they improved their overall record against Northwestern to 60\u201314\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nIn their seventh game of the 2013 season and their third conference game, Ohio State defeated the Iowa Hawkeyes 34\u201324 in Columbus. Iowa received the opening kickoff and put together a 12 play, 80 yard drive that resulted in a 2-yard touchdown reception from Jake Rudock to C. J. Fiedorowicz, giving the Hawkeyes a 7\u20130 lead. Ohio State would respond on their first offensive drive by putting together a 12 play drive of their own that ended in a 27-yard Drew Basil field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nIowa again drove down the field on their second drive and would score on a Mike Meyer 28-yard field goal, giving the Hawkeyes a 10\u20133 lead at the end of the first quarter. Three plays into the second quarter Braxton Miller threw a 58-yard touchdown pass to Corey Browing, which tied the game. Iowa took the lead on their next possession on a Jake Rudock touchdown pass to Kevonte Martin-Manley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nOhio State would start the second half with a 1-yard touchdown run from Carlos Hyde. After a defensive stop, Braxton Miller touchdown pass to Devin Smith, which gave Ohio State a 24\u201317 lead. Iowa would respond on their next possession with one play, an 85-yard touchdown pass from Jake Rudock to Jake Duzey, tying the score again. In the fourth quarter, Ohio State would score on a second Hyde touchdown run, as well as a 25-yard field goal from Drew Basil. For the first time since the 2008 season, the Buckeyes' did not punt a single time in the game. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 19 games, and they improved their overall record against Iowa to 46\u201314\u20133 (47\u201314\u20133 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nIn their annual rivalry game, Ohio State defeated the Penn State Nittany Lions in Columbus 63\u201314. Ohio State opened the game with a 7 play, 75 yard drive and scored on a two-yard run from Carlos Hyde. Corey Brown would force an interception on the Nittany Lions' first offensive drive, though the Buckeye offense was unable to capitalize. Ohio State would score the next three touchdowns unanswered, giving the Buckeyes' a 28\u20130 lead. Two touchdowns came on 39-yard and 6-yard runs from Braxton Miller, with the third coming on a 3-yard pass from Miller to Chris Fields. Penn State would get on the board midway through the second quarter, scoring on a 12-yard pass from Christian Hackenberg to Brandon Felder. A 39-yard run by Hyde, along with a 25-yard pass from Miller to Corey Brown would give Ohio State a 42\u20137 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nCurtis Grant would recover a fumble on Penn State's second drive of the third quarter and set up the Buckeye offense in Penn State territory. Ohio State would capitalize on the turnover, scoring on a 26-yard pass from Braxton Miller to Dontre Wilson. A 2-yard touchdown run from Kenny Guiton on the Buckeyes' next offensive drive would give Ohio State a 56\u20137 lead at the end of the third quarter. Guiton and the Buckeye offense would complete a 13 play, 79 yard drive early in the fourth quarter that would end with another Guiton touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nA 65-yard pass from Tyler Ferguson to Allen Robinson would give Penn State their second touchdown of the game, making the final score 63\u201314. Braxton Miller was recognized at the Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week for his five touchdowns, while Dontre Wilson was recognized as the Big Ten Freshman of the Week for his touchdown reception and 96 all-purpose yards. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 20 games, and they improved their overall record against Penn State to 15\u201313 (16\u201313 without NCAA vacations and forfeits)(Penn States vacated wins were re-instated by the NCAA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nIn their ninth game of the 2013 season, Ohio State shutout the Purdue Boilermakers 56\u20130 in West Lafayette. The Buckeyes' took a 14\u20130 lead within minutes of the kickoff, scoring on an interception by Doran Grant on the second play of the game, as well as a 40-yard pass from Braxton Miller to Jeff Heuerman. Later in the quarter, Ohio State would put together a 6 play 62 yard drive that would end with a Braxton Miller pass to Nick Vannett and give the Buckeyes a three possession lead. Noah Spence would force a fumble, which would allow the Buckeyes' to score on a 2-yard touchdown pass from Miller to Corey Brown giving Ohio State a 28\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nIn the second quarter Kenny Guiton would come in and throw a one-yard touchdown pass to Chris Fields. Ohio State's final drive of the half would end in a 10-yard touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to freshman Ezekiel Elliott, with the Buckeyes' taking a 42\u20130 lead into halftime. Guiton would again lead the Buckeyes' into the endzone, this time on the first drive of the third quarter, this time running four yards for the touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nThe Buckeye defense would force their second shutout of the season, holding the Boilermakers out of Ohio State territory for most of the game. Kenny Guiton would score his second touchdown on the ground, this time running one yard for the score, and giving Ohio State a 56\u20130 lead. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 21 games, and they improved their overall record against Purdue to 39\u201314\u20132 (40\u201314\u20135 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nIn their annual rivalry game, Ohio State defeated the Illinois Fighting Illini 60\u201335 in Champaign. Ohio State quickly jumped out to a 21\u20130 lead, scoring on 70-yard run by Braxton Miller, an 18-yard pass from Miller to Carlos Hyde, as well as an interception return by Bradley Roby. The Buckeyes' would extend the lead to 28\u20130 in the second quarter on a Corey Brown reception. Illinois would score their first points of the day on a 67-yard punt return from V'Angelo Bentley. The Buckeyes' responded with a six play drive, which concluded in a Hyde touchdown run. An Illinois drive towards the end of the first half would cover 75 yards and end on a touchdown pass from Nate Scheelhaase to Steve Hull, making the score 35\u201314 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nIllinois received the ball to open the third quarter and would score on a second touchdown pass from Scheelhaase, this time to Evan Wilson, making it a two possession game. Ohio State would fumble on their ensuing drive. The Buckeyes' defense would score again, this time by sacking Scheelhaase in the endzone for the safety, which would result in a Carlos Hyde touchdown and giving Ohio State the 44\u201321 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nThe Illini and Nate Scheelhaase would respond, scoring a touchdown on the third play of the fourth quarter, and by converting the two point conversion, would make it a two possession game once again. A Drew Basil field goal on the next Buckeye drive would be answered by an Illinois touchdown, this time by Josh Ferguson. A third Carlos Hyde touchdown run late in the fourth quarter would put the game out of reach for the Illini, with Hyde's fourth touchdown on Ohio State's next offensive drive being the final scoring play of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nFor scoring four touchdowns in the game and rushing for 246 yards, fourth most in Buckeye history, Hyde was recognized as the Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week. Ryan Shazier, who had 16 tackles, was recognized as the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 22 games, and they improved their overall record against Illinois to 65\u201330\u20134 (66\u201330\u20134 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Indiana\nIn the final home game of the 2013 season, Ohio State defeated the Indiana Hoosiers 42\u201314 in Columbus. Ohio State shutout the Hoosiers through the first three quarter of the game, and would jump out to another fast start in the first quarter, going up 14\u20130. The Buckeyes' scored on their first possession of the game on a 16-yard Carlos Hyde run, and would score on their second possession with a 37-yard Braxton Miller run. A blocked punt by Bradley Roby would set up the Ohio State offense at the Hoosier 8 yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Indiana\nThe Buckeyes' would score two plays later Braxton Miller would score his second rushing touchdown of the game. Following a sack by Michael Bennett on fourth down, Ohio State drove 69 yards and scored on a Carlos Hyde run in the closing seconds of the second quarter, giving the Buckeyes' a 28\u20130 lead a halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Indiana\nIndiana would open up the second half with a 13 play drive, but would fail to score after Mitch Ewald missed a 41-yard field goal. Ohio State would score their fifth touchdown on a 24-yard pass from Braxton Miller to freshman Dontre Wilson. A fumble forced by Ryan Shazier at the end of the third quarter would keep the Hoosiers' out of the endzone. The Buckeyes' would score on a touchdown pass from Miller to Devin Smith at the start of the fourth quarter, giving them a 42\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Indiana\nIndiana would score on two Nate Sudfeld passes in the fourth quarter, the first to Shane Wynn, and the second to D'Angelo Roberts, making the final score 42\u201314. Ryan Shazier was recognized as the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week for his 16 tackles. With the victory, Ohio State's winning streak reached 23 games, a school record. The Buckeyes' improved their overall record against Indiana to 69\u201312\u20135 (70\u201312\u20135 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nIn the 2013 edition of The Game, Ohio State defeated the Michigan Wolverines 42\u201341 in Ann Arbor. After forcing a punt on the Buckeyes' first possession of the game, the Wolverines' would drive 99 yards in 5 plays, scoring on a 1-yard run from Devin Gardner. Ohio State responded with a 53-yard touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to Devin Smith. A 4-yard touchdown run from Fitzgerald Toussaint on Michigan's next drive, along with a 53-yard touchdown run from Miller tied the game 14\u201314 at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nMichigan, who would score on their first three drives of the game, took the lead on a touchdown pass from Gardner to Jeremy Gallon early in the second quarter. Ohio State would score their third touchdown of the day in the final minutes of the half on a 21-yard Miller run, tying the score 21\u201321 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nA fumble recovered by Tyvis Powell midway through the third quarter would set up the Buckeyes' 56-yard drive, culminating in a 3-yard touchdown run from Braxton Miller. A 22-yard touchdown pass from Miller to Jeff Heuerman on the ensuing Buckeye drive gave Ohio State the 35\u201321 lead at the end of the third quarter. A Devin Gardner touchdown pass to Drew Dileo early in the fourth quarter would cut the Buckeye lead down to one possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nA Carlos Hyde fumble on the following Buckeye drive set up the Wolverines in Ohio State territory, with Gardner throwing his third touchdown pass to Jake Butt and tying the score 35\u201335. Ohio State would drive 65 yard on their ensuing possession and take the lead on a Hyde touchdown run. The Wolverines' would put together an 11 play, 84 yard drive at the end of the game, scoring on a Gardner touchdown pass to Devin Funchess. The Wolverines attempted at two-point conversion for the victory, though it would fail after Tyvis Powell intercepted Gardner's pass attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nWith the victory, Ohio State secured their second consecutive undefeated regular season, along with extending their winning streak to 24 games. The 83 points scored between both teams was the second most in the history of \"The Game\", with 86 points being scored in 1902. With their second consecutive victory over Michigan, Ohio State improved their overall record against Michigan to 45\u201358\u20136 (46\u201358\u20136 without NCAA vacations and forfeits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan State\nIn the program's first appearance in the Big Ten Championship Game, Ohio State was defeated by the Michigan State Spartans 34\u201324. The Spartans' would receive the ball first and put together a 14-play drive that would cover 47 yards and end in a Michael Geiger 40-yard field goal, giving Michigan State the 3\u20130 lead, which would be the only scoring drive of the first quarter. Michigan State would extend their lead early in the second quarter, with two touchdown passes from Connor Cook to Keith Mumphery and Tony Lippett, giving the Spartans' the 17\u20130 advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan State\nThe Buckeyes' would score their first points on their fourth drive of the game, which would end in a touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to Corey Brown. Ohio State would score the final points of the half on a 28-yard field goal from Drew Basil, and cutting the Spartan lead to 17\u201310 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan State\nOhio State, who received the ball to open the second half, would tie the game up following a Braxton Miller 8-yard run. Ohio State would fail to capitalize on an interception from C.J. Barnett on the ensuing Spartan possession. The Buckeyes would take their first lead of the game midway through the third quarter after a 6-yard touchdown run from Miller, and giving Ohio State the 24\u201317 advantage. A field goal by Michael Geiger would cut the Ohio State lead to 24\u201320 at the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Michigan State\nMichigan State would take the lead once again early in the fourth quarter after a touchdown pass from Cook to Josiah Price. Ohio State would fail to convert a fourth down midway through the fourth quarter and give the ball back the Spartans, who would drive 61 yards in 6 plays, putting the Buckeyes away after a 26-yard Jeremy Langford touchdown run. The touchdown run would be the final scoring play of the game, with Michigan State defeated Ohio State 34\u201324. The loss ended Ohio State's 24-game win streak, the longest in school history and brought Ohio State's all-time record against the Spartans to 28\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Clemson\nOhio State was selected to play in the Orange Bowl on December 8 as a BCS at-large team. Ohio State faced the Clemson Tigers of the Atlantic Coast Conference, who defeated the Buckeyes 40\u201335. Clemson would open the game with a 6-play drive that resulted in a 48-yard touchdown run from Tajh Boyd. The Buckeyes' responded on their first offensive possession, driving 75 yards and tying the game on a Braxton Miller touchdown run. A 34-yard touchdown pass from Boyd to Sammy Watkins on Clemson's next possession gave the Tigers' a 14\u20137 lead. After the Buckeyes' special teams pinned Clemson within one yard of their endzone, the Ohio State defense forced an intentional grounding penalty in endzone, resulting in a safety, cutting the Clemson lead to 14\u20139 at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Clemson\nThe Tigers' would extend their lead midway through the second quarter on a touchdown pass from Tajh Boyd to Martavis Bryant, giving Clemson a 20\u20139 lead. Ohio State responded on their next possession, with a 5-play drive, resulting in a touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to Jeff Heuerman. A Miller 3-yard touchdown run at the end of the half gave the Buckeyes' their first lead at 22\u201320 going into halftime. Carlos Hyde scored his first touchdown of the game early in the third quarter, extending the Ohio State lead to 29\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Clemson\nClemson's next offensive drive would be extended after a fumbled punt and would result in the Tigers' scoring on a touchdown pass from Boyd to Sammy Watkins. Clemson would retake the lead later on their next offensive possession on Bryant's second touchdown reception, giving the Tigers' a 34\u201329 lead at the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Game summaries, Clemson\nOhio State's completed a 10-play, 75-yard drive early in the fourth quarter, which resulted in a 14-yard touchdown pass from Braxton Miller to Carlos Hyde. The touchdown gave the Buckeyes' the lead again at 35\u201334, following a failed two-point conversion pass from Kenny Guiton. Clemson would put together a 13-play drive on their next possession, and take the lead for the final time after a Stanton Seckinger touchdown reception, though they were unable to complete the two-point conversion. Miller would fumble the ball at midfield on the Buckeyes' next possession, though Ohio State would force a Boyd interception, with a Miller interception two plays later sealed the 40\u201335 Clemson victory. The loss brought Ohio State's all-time record against the Tigers to 0\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Rankings\nEntering the 2013 season, the Buckeyes' were ranked No. 2 in both the AP Preseason Poll and Coaches' Preseason Poll. Following their 40\u201320 victory over Buffalo in the first week, the Buckeyes' dropped to No. 3 in the AP Poll, being jumped by the Oregon Ducks. After defeated San Diego State 42\u20137 in the second week of the season, Ohio State would drop again, falling to No. 3 in the Coaches' Poll and No. 4 in the AP Poll, behind the Clemson Tigers. Ohio State was No. 4 when the first Harris Interactive Poll was released on October 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0049-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Rankings\nThe Buckeyes also debuted at No. 4 in first BCS standings of the season on October 20. The Buckeyes' would also drop to No. 4 in the Coaches' Poll on October 20, behind the Florida State Seminoles. Following the Oregon Ducks' loss to the Stanford Cardinal on November 7, Ohio State moved up to No. 3 in all four polls. The Buckeyes would drop to No. 4 in the AP Poll the following week, behind the Baylor Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0049-0002", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, Rankings\nFollowing losses by Baylor and the No. 1 Alabama Crimson Tide, Ohio State jumped to No. 2 in all four polls on December 1. After the Buckeyes' loss to Michigan State in the Big Ten Championship Game, they fell to No. 7 in the AP Poll, Harris Interactive Poll, and the BCS standings, while falling to No. 6 in the Coaches' Poll. After their loss to Clemson in the Orange Bowl, Ohio State was ranked No. 10 in the final Coaches' Poll and No. 12 in the final AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, After the season, Final statistics\nFollowing their loss to Clemson, Ohio State's final team statistics were released. On the offensive side of the ball, Ohio State ranked seventh in total offense (511.9 yards per game), fifth in rushing offense (308.6 yards per game), 88th in passing offense (203.3 yards per game), and third in scoring offense (45.5 points per game). On the defensive side of the ball, Ohio State ranked 46th in total defense (377.4 yards per game), ninth in rushing defense (109.4 yards per game), 110th in passing defense (268 yards per game), and 28th in scoring defense (22.6 points per game). In conference, Ohio State ranked third in rushing defense and 11th in passing defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, After the season, Final statistics\nIndividually, Carlos Hyde led the team in rushing with 1,521 total yards (138.27 yards per game), scoring 15 rushing touchdowns, and ranking fifth nationally in rushing yards per game. Braxton Miller finished the season completing 162 of 255 pass attempts, with 2,094 passing yards, 24 touchdown passes and seven interceptions. Miller also complied 1,068 rushing yards on 171 attempts, with 12 rushing touchdowns. Ryan Shazier led the team with 143 total tackles and 101 solo tackles. C.J. Barnett led the team with four interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, After the season, Awards\nAfter the Big Ten Championship Game, multiple Ohio State players were recognized for their on-field performance with a variety of awards and recognitions. The Big Ten recognized several players for their individual performances with various awards. On December 2, Braxton Miller was named the Graham-George Offensive Player of the Year, in addition to being named the Griese-Brees Quarterback of the Year for the second consecutive season. Carlos Hyde was named the Ameche-Dayne Running Back of the Year. Miller, Hyde, Corey Linsley, Ryan Shazier and Bradley Roby were named to the Coaches' All-Big Ten First Team. Corey Brown, Andrew Norwell, Jack Mewhort, Michael Bennett and Noah Spence were named to the Coaches' All-Big Ten Second Team. Miller, Hyde, Linsley, Norwell Mewhort, Spence, Shazier and Roby were named to the Media All-Big Ten First Team, while Bennett was named to the Media All-Big Ten Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 981]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, After the season, Awards\nIn addition to the conference awards, several players were also named to various All-American Teams. Ryan Shazier was named to the Associated Press All-American First Team, while Carlos Hyde and Jack Mewhort were named to the Associated Press All-American Second Team. Mewhort and Shazier were also named to the ESPN All-American Team. Mewhort was also named a Walter Camp All-American and Shaizer was named as a USA Today All-American. Joey Bosa was named a Freshman All-American by The Sporting News and College Football News.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, After the season, Coaching changes\nOn December 21, co-defensive coordinator Everett Withers accepted the head coaching position at James Madison. On January 10, defensive line coach Mike Vrabel accepted a position as linebackers coach for the Houston Texans. On January 15, Larry Johnson was brought onto the Ohio State staff as the defensive line and assistant head coach. Johnson spent 18 years at Penn State prior to joining the Ohio State staff. On January 23, Ohio State announced the hiring of Chris Ash to replace Withers as co-defensive coordinator, along with being named the safeties coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 74], "content_span": [75, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, After the season, NFL Draft\nFourteen players from Ohio State entered into the NFL Draft, twelve seniors and two juniors. On defense, Bradley Roby, Christian Bryant and C.J. Barnett all entered. On offense, Carlos Hyde, Jack Mewhort, Corey Linsley, Andrew Norwell, Corey Brown, Kenny Guiton, Jordan Hall, Marcus Hall and Chris Fields entered, while George Makridis entered on special teams. Shazier, a junior, announced his intention to enter the draft on January 6, and is projected to go in the first round. Roby, a redshirt junior, announced his intention to enter the draft in November, and is expected to go in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235239-0055-0001", "contents": "2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team, After the season, NFL Draft\nShazier was selected with the fifteen pick in the first round by the Pittsburgh Steelers, while Roby was selected with the thirty-first pick in the first round by the Denver Broncos. Mewhort was taken by the Indianapolis Colts and Hyde was taken by the San Francisco 49ers in the second round. Linsley was taken in the fifth round by the Green Bay Packers and Bryant was taken in the seven round by the St. Louis Rams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235240-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Ohio Valley Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22\u201325. The top six regular season finishers met in the double-elimination tournament, which was held at Pringles Park in Jackson, Tennessee. The tournament champion will earn the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235240-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top six regular season finishers were seeded by conference winning percentage. Teams then played a double-elimination tournament, with the top two seeds receiving a single bye. Belmont claimed the third seed over Jacksonville State by tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235240-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament team, Most Valuable Player\nAustin Peay infielder Reed Harper was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 90], "content_span": [91, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235241-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 6 \u2013 March 9 at Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. Belmont, the winner of the 2013 OVC Men's basketball tournament, received the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235241-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe tournament is an eight team tournament with the third and fourth seeds receiving a first round bye and the two divisional winners receiving byes through to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235241-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe top team in each division, based on conference winning percentage, automatically earns a berth into the OVC Tournament. The next six teams with the highest conference winning percentage also earn a bid, regardless of division. The 1st seed goes to the divisional winner with the higher conference winning percentage, while the No. 2 seed automatically goes to the other divisional winner. The remaining six teams are seeded 3-8 by conference winning percentage, regardless of division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235242-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Ohio Valley Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was held March 6 - March 9 at Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. The University of Tennessee at Martin received the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235242-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe tournament is an eight team tournament with the third and fourth seeds receiving a first round bye and the two divisional winners receiving byes through to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 65], "content_span": [66, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235242-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ohio Valley Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe top team in each division, based on conference winning percentage, automatically earns a berth into the OVC Tournament. The next six teams with the highest conference winning percentage also earn a bid, regardless of division. The 1st seed goes to the divisional winner with the higher conference winning percentage, while the No. 2 seed automatically goes to the other divisional winner. The remaining six teams are seeded 3-8 by conference winning percentage, regardless of division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 65], "content_span": [66, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235243-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Okayama GT 300km\nThe 2013 Okayama GT 300km was the first round of the 2013 Super GT season. It took place on April 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235244-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Okhotsk Sea earthquake\nThe 2013 Okhotsk Sea earthquake occurred with a moment magnitude of 8.3 at 15:44:49 local time (05:44:49 UTC) on 24 May. It had an epicenter in the Sea of Okhotsk and affected primarily (but not only) Asian Russia, especially the Kamchatka Peninsula where the shaking lasted for five minutes. Due to its great depth (609\u00a0km), it was not particularly intense at the surface, but was felt over a very large area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235244-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Okhotsk Sea earthquake\nSuch a deep-focus earthquake could be felt not only in areas surrounding the Okhotsk Sea but also in places as far as Tokyo (JMA 1) (about 2,374\u00a0km away), Nanjing (more than 4,000\u00a0km away), Atyrau (MM V) (about 7,196\u00a0km away), and Moscow (about 7,370\u00a0km away). The shaking prompted almost 900 residents to leave their homes in Moscow. Maximum recorded JMA intensity was Shindo 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235244-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Okhotsk Sea earthquake\nA related aftershock with a magnitude Mw 6.7 produced a supershear earthquake. It was an extremely deep (640 kilometers (400 miles)) supershear as well as unusually fast at \"eight kilometers per second (five miles per second), nearly 50 percent faster than the shear wave velocity at that depth.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235245-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners football team\nThe 2013 Oklahoma Sooners football team represented the University of Oklahoma in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, the 119th season of Sooner football. The team was led by two-time Walter Camp Coach of the Year Award winner, Bob Stoops, in his 15th 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, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235245-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners football team\nConference play began at home on September 7 with a win against the West Virginia Mountaineers and ended in the annual Bedlam Series on December 7 against the Oklahoma State Cowboys in Stillwater with the Sooners upsetting the Cowboys 33\u201324 on the road. With the victory over the Kansas State Wildcats on November 23, head coach Bob Stoops got his 158th career win to move past Barry Switzer for the most wins in program history. After finishing the regular season with a record of 10\u20132 (7\u20132 in Big 12 play), finishing in a tie for second place in the conference, the Sooners received an at-large bid to play in the Sugar Bowl, where they upset the Alabama Crimson Tide with a final score of 45\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235245-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners football team\nFollowing the season, Jalen Saunders and Aaron Colvin were selected in the fourth round of the 2014 NFL Draft, along with Corey Nelson and Trey Millard in the seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235245-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners football team, Postseason, Awards\nFreshman Dominique Alexander was named Big 12 Conference Defensive Freshman of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235245-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners football team, Postseason, All-Americans\nOklahoma's only All-American this year was Gabe Ikard. He was given first team All-American status by the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Walter Camp Foundation (WCFF), and CBS Sports (CBS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235245-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners football team, Postseason, 2014 NFL Draft\nThe 2014 NFL Draft was held at Radio City Music Hall in New York City on May 8\u201310, 2014. The following Oklahoma players were either selected or signed as free agents following the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235246-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners softball team\nThe 2013 Oklahoma Sooners softball team represented the University of Oklahoma in the 2013 NCAA Division I softball season. The Sooners were coached by Patty Gasso, who led her nineteenth season. The Sooners finished with a record of 57\u20134. They played their home games at OU Softball Complex and competed in the Big 12 Conference, where they finished first with a 15\u20132 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235246-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma Sooners softball team\nThe Sooners were invited to the 2013 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament, where they swept the Regionals and Super Regionals and then completed a run through the Women's College World Series to claim the NCAA Women's College World Series Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235247-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma State Cowboys football team\nThe 2013 Oklahoma State Cowboys football team represented Oklahoma State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Cowboys were led by ninth year head coach Mike Gundy and played their home games at Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma. They were a charter member of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 10\u20133, 7\u20132 in Big 12 play to finish in a three way for second place. They were invited to the Cotton Bowl Classic where they lost to Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget\nThe Oklahoma State Budget for Fiscal Year 2013, is a spending request by Governor Mary Fallin to fund government operations for July 1, 2012\u2013June 30, 2013. Governor Fallin proposed the budget on February 6, 2012. This was Governor Fallin's second budget submitted as governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget\nThe Oklahoma Legislature approved the budget on May 25, 2012, and Governor Fallin signed the budget into law on May 29, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, History\nOn February 6, 2012, Republican Governor of Oklahoma Mary Fallin proposed her $6.6 billion Executive Budget for Fiscal Year 2013. In accordance with the Oklahoma Constitution, the budget was balanced. Fallin's FY-2013 budget is flat compared to the 2012 Oklahoma state budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, History\nFallin submitted her proposal to the heavily-Republican dominated Oklahoma Legislature. In early May 2012, after months of debate and review by House and Senate budget committees, the Senate and House convened the Joint Committee on Appropriations and Budget to address the FY13 budget. After months of review and debate, late in May 2012, Governor Fallin and the legislative leadership reached a $6.8 billion budget deal, an increase of $200 million over Fallin's original proposed budget. The increase is approximately 3.2% more than the FY-2012 budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, History\nThe Republican dominated Senate passed the budget deal on May 22 by 30-15 vote, exactly along party lines. The Republican dominated House then addressed the budget on May 24. After an initial vote of 47-47 in which 17 House Republicans joined with all 30 House Democrats to vote against the bill. The House Democrats believed the bill did not provide adequate funding to education services while the several House Republicans believed the budget spent too money in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, History\nAfter a long recess the House reconvened and passed the budget 52-42, with 12 Republicans voting against the bill. 5 House Republicans who had originally voted against the budget switched their vote to ensure passage of the bill. Not a single Democrat in either the Senate or House voted in favor of the budget. Governor Fallin signed the 2013 budget bill on May 29, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, Governor's Major Issues\nIn her Budget Message to the Legislature, Governor Fallin identified the following issues are major goals for her Executive Budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, Budget Deal\nOn May 21, 2012, Governor Fallin, President pro tempore of the Oklahoma Senate Brian Bingman, and Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives Kris Steele reached a new budget deal worth $6.8 billion, an increase of $200 million over Fallin's original proposed budget. The additional revenues will come from redirecting agency-collected fees to the State's general fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, Budget Deal\nAs part of the budget deal, Governor Fallin and the legislative leadership approved the following appropriation issues:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, Total Spending, Requested\nThe governor's proposed Executive Budget for 2013 totals $6.6 billion in spending. Figures shown in the spending request do not reflect the actual appropriations for Fiscal Year 2013, which must be authorized by the Legislature. Percentages in parentheses indicate percentage change compared to FY2012 enacted budget. The budget request is broken down by the following expenditures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235248-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Oklahoma state budget, Total Spending, Enacted\nThe Oklahoma Legislature approved total appropriations for fiscal year 2013 of $6.8 billion. Percentages in parentheses indicate percentage change from fiscal year 2012 final appropriations. The final appropriations for Fiscal Year 2013 are broken down by the following expenditures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235249-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Old Dominion Monarchs football team\nThe 2013 Old Dominion Monarchs football team represented Old Dominion University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fifth-year head coach Bobby Wilder and played their home games at Foreman Field at S. B. Ballard Stadium. This season was season one of a two-year transition to the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), where the Monarchs became a member of Conference USA (C-USA) in 2014. As a result, the Monarchs competed as a FCS independent and were ineligible for the FCS playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235250-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ole Miss Rebels football team\nThe 2013 Ole Miss Rebels football team represented the University of Mississippi in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Hugh Freeze, who was in his second season with Ole Miss. The Rebels played their home games at Vaught\u2013Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Mississippi, and competed in the Western Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235250-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ole Miss Rebels football team\nOn February 11, 2019, Ole Miss announced the vacation of all wins in the years 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2016. In 2013, all wins except the Music City Bowl were vacated. In 2014, all wins except the Presbyterian game were vacated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235250-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ole Miss Rebels football team, Schedule\nOle Miss travelled to SEC opponents Vanderbilt, Auburn, Alabama, and ended the season on the road against Mississippi State. The Rebels played host to Texas A&M, Arkansas, LSU and Missouri. Ole Miss also travelled to Power 5 foe Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235250-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ole Miss Rebels football team, Schedule\n*- The game is being produced by Longhorn Network. The following stations will broadcast the game live throughout the Ole Miss broadcasting region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235251-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Olympic Hopes\nThe 2013 Olympic Hopes competition was a women's artistic gymnastics competition for junior gymnasts. The competition was held in Penza, Russia from June 19-21. The gymnasts competing were from Russia, Ukraine, Brazil, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235252-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Omaha mayoral election\nThe 2013 Omaha mayoral election took place on May 14, 2013. Incumbent Mayor Jim Suttle sought a second term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235252-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Omaha mayoral election\nThe position of mayor in Omaha is officially a non-partisan position. A blanket primary was held on April 2, 2013. The top two finishers in the primary, Suttle and City Councilwoman Jean Stothert, moved on to the general election. In the general election, Stothert defeated Suttle and became Omaha's first female mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235253-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oman Super Cup\nThe 2013 Oman Super Cup was the 11th edition of the Oman Super Cup, an annual football match between Al-Suwaiq Club, the champions of the 2012\u201313 Oman Elite League and the 2012\u201313 Sultan Qaboos Cup and Fanja SC, the runners-up of the 2012\u201313 Oman Elite League. The match was played at the Al-Seeb Stadium in Al-Seeb, Oman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235254-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step season\nThe 2013 season for Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step began in January at the Tour de San Luis. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obliged to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235255-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad\nThe 2013 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad took place on 23 February 2013. It was the 68th edition of the international classic Omloop Het Nieuwsblad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235255-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad\nTeam Katusha's Luca Paolini of Italy beat Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Stijn Vandenbergh of Belgium in a two-up sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235255-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, Teams\nNon ProTeams teams are indicated by an asterisk below. Each of the 25 teams were permitted up to eight riders, for a total of 198 riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235256-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad (women's race)\nThe 2013 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad \u2013 Women's race took place on 23 February 2013. It was the 8th women's edition of the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad. This year's Omloop started and ended in Ghent, Belgium and spanned 125\u00a0km (77.7\u00a0mi) in the province of East Flanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235256-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad (women's race)\nThe race was won by Australian rider Tiffany Cromwell who won a side-by-side sprint of Megan Guarnier. Emma Johansson won the sprint of the group behind the two and finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235257-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Omloop van het Hageland\nThe 2013 Omloop van het Hageland was the ninth running of the women's Omloop van het Hageland, a women's bicycle race in Belgium. It was held on 3 March 2013 over a distance of 122.3 kilometres (76.0 miles) around Tielt-Winge. The race ran in one line of 55.3 kilometres (34.4 miles), followed by 5 local laps of 13.4 kilometres (8.3 miles) each. It was rated by the UCI as a 1.2 category race. The race was part of the 2013 Lotto Cycling Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235258-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ondrej Nepela Trophy\nThe 2013 Ondrej Nepela Trophy was the 21st edition of an annual senior international figure skating competition held in Bratislava, Slovakia. It took place on October 3\u20135, 2013 at the Ondrej Nepela Ice Rink. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pairs, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235259-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election\nThe Ontario Liberal Party leadership election 2013, held on January 26, 2013, at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto, elected Kathleen Wynne as the new leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, replacing Dalton McGuinty, who announced his resignation on October 15, 2012. With the Liberals forming the Ontario government, Wynne consequently became Premier of Ontario. After leading a minority government for 18 months, she called an election after the defeat of her government's budget and she led her party to a renewed majority government in June 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235259-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, Background\nPremier Dalton McGuinty announced his pending resignation as leader of the Liberal Party on October 15, 2012, citing a desire to bring new blood to the party leadership. McGuinty also, citing the political \"logjam\" in Ontario, prorogued the Legislative Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235259-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, Rules and procedures\nUnder the procedure outlined by the party's constitution, the leader was to be chosen in a traditional delegated leadership convention in which up to 2,283 delegates were eligible to vote, made up of 1,712 elected delegates (16 elected by proportional representation in each of the 107 provincial riding associations), 419 ex officio delegates (current and former Liberal MPPs, defeated candidates from the last election, riding association presidents, party executive officers and other party officials, and federal Liberal MPs for Ontario) 144 youth delegates from 18 campus clubs and eight delegates representing the Women's Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235259-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, Rules and procedures\nRiding delegates ran on the slate of a leadership candidate or as independents, in the case of the former they were required to vote for that candidate on the first ballot but were free to change their support subsequently. Balloting at convention continued until one candidate received a majority of ballots cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235259-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, Rules and procedures\nThere was a $50,000 entry fee and $500,000 spending limit not including the 25% of all money raised by candidates which had to be turned over to the party in order to pay for the convention. Candidates were not permitted to accumulate more than $100,000 in debt. Nomination papers had to be signed by at least 250 party members. The registration fee for delegates was between $249 and $599.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235259-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, Rules and procedures\n44,421 party members were eligible to vote in the selection of delegates. Of these, less than 15,000 had been members when McGuinty announced his departure; 27,206 were recruited by the leadership campaigns before November 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235259-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, Results, Delegate selection meetings\nA total of 1,857 delegates were elected from Ontario's 107 electoral districts (1,712), and from the Ontario Liberal Party's 18 youth and 8 women's clubs (141). The delegates were selected over the weekend of January 12\u201313, with 896 elected on January 12 from the 905 region and northern and eastern Ontario and 957 elected on January 13 from Toronto and southwestern Ontario. Most of these delegates elected were pledged to support one of the leadership candidates on the first ballot at the January 25 convention, while some were independents who could vote for whomever they chose at the convention. An additional 419 ex-officio delegates were eligible to vote at the convention by virtue of party and elected offices they have held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235260-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Mine Rescue Provincial Competition\nThe 2013 Ontario Mine Rescue Provincial Competition was held June 5\u20137 at the South Windsor Recreation Complex, in Windsor, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, women's provincial curling championship, was held January 21-27, 2013 at the Kitchener-Waterloo Granite Club in Waterloo, Ontario. The winning Rachel Homan rink went on to represent Ontario at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Process\nTen teams qualify for the provincial tournament through several methods. Four teams qualify from Northern Ontario, two teams qualify from Regions 1&2, two teams qualify from regions 3&4 and two teams qualify from the Challenge Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification\nSouthern Ontario zones run from November 30-December 2, December 7-11 and December 14-18, 2012. Two teams from each zone qualify to 2 regional tournaments, and two teams from each of the two tournaments qualify to provincials. Two additional teams qualify out of a second chance qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification\nThe Northern Ontario provincial championship will occur December 13-16, 2012 at the Little Falls Curling Club in Atikokan, Ontario. Four teams qualify out of the Northern Ontario championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 4\nDecember 7-9, at the Garrison Golf & Curling Club, Kingston", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 5\nDecember 7-9, at the Fenelon Falls Curling Club, Fenelon Falls", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 7\nDecember 7-9, at the Bayview Golf & Country Club, Thornhill", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 8\nDecember 8-9, at the St. George's Golf & Country Club, Toronto", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 9\nDecember 7-9, at the Markdale Golf & Curling Club, Markdale", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 10\nDecember 7-9, at the Bradford & District Curling Club, Bradford", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 103], "content_span": [104, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 14\nBoth teams advance as they were the only two teams to enter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 103], "content_span": [104, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification, Southern Ontario Zone Qualification, Zone 16\nDecember 7-9, at the Forest Curling & Social Club, Forest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 103], "content_span": [104, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235261-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Northern Ontario Provincials\nThe Northern Ontario provincial championship was held from December 13 to 16, 2012 at the Atikokan Curling Club in Atikokan, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget\nThe 2013 Ontario budget, known as the Prosperous and Fair Ontario Act, is the budget for the province of Ontario for fiscal year 2013. It was presented to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for its first reading on 2 May 2013 by Charles Sousa, the Minister of Finance of the Government of Ontario, and received Royal Assent on 13 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Presentation\nThe first reading of the budget bill was presented to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario by Ontario Liberal Party representative Charles Sousa on 2 May 2013. The C$127 billion budget was designed to sufficiently appeal to Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs) of the Ontario New Democratic Party (NDP), whose support the Liberal minority government needed in order for the bill to pass. Nearly $1 billion of budgetary expenditures were made \"to meet NDP demands\". The Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario had already stated it would oppose the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Debate in legislature and Royal Assent\nAfter six debate sessions in the legislature from 7 May to 16 May, on 5 June a motion to arrange proceedings was taken, and the final second reading of the bill carried on division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Debate in legislature and Royal Assent\nIt was referred to the Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs by Order of the House on 5 June 2013, which considered the bill until 11 June, when it returned an amended bill which was ordered for third reading and carried on division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Debate in legislature and Royal Assent\nThe bill was granted Royal Assent by David Onley, the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, who signed it into law on 13 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Debate in legislature and Royal Assent\nAs a result of the passage of the Prosperous and Fair Ontario Act, numerous other Acts were amended or repealed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Revenues\nRevenues for fiscal year 2013 were expected to be $116.8 billion, a 2.3 percent increase compared to the 2012 provincial budget. This included a reduction in corporate income tax revenues of 5.8 percent, an increase of 5.7 percent in personal income tax revenues, and an increase of 3.8 percent in sales tax revenues. The government also borrowed $33.4 billion, of which 70 percent was from domestic sources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Revenues, Taxation and investment\nThe provincial government will collaborate with the federal government to mitigate \"aggressive tax avoidance\" transactions used to attempt to avoid Ontario taxes, and to minimize tax losses as a result of corporations transferring profits to other jurisdictions. It proposed amendments to the Securities Act and Commodity Futures Act, adding new classes of securities fraud for attempted market manipulation and attempted fraud, clarifying insider trading regulations, and allowing the Ontario Securities Commission to share information with regulatory and law enforcement agencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Revenues, Taxation and investment\nIt also repealed the sunset provision to the Retail Sales Tax Act to enable the government to collect or secure tax debts. Specifically, the government would withhold clearance certificates until resolution of debts associated with the Alcohol and Gaming Regulation and Public Protection Act (1996), Fuel Tax Act, Gasoline Tax Act, Race Tracks Tax Act, and Tobacco Tax Act. These are expected to generate about $300 million in additional tax revenues from 2013 to 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Revenues, Taxation and investment\nThe budget also ensures automatic adoption of measures in the 2013 federal budget regarding capital cost allowance, lifetime capital gains exemptions, dividend tax credit on ineligible dividends, corporate and trust loss trading, leveraged life insurance arrangements, character conversion transactions, and other federal legislative tax changes. The high income threshold for the top personal marginal tax rate increased from $500,000 to $509,000 as a result of indexing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Revenues, Taxation and investment\nStatutes amended by the budget include the Corporation Tax Act, Employer Health Tax Act, Fuel Tax Act, Gasoline tax Act, Income Tax Act, Land Transfer Tax Act, Mining Tax Act, Provincial Land Tax Act (2006), Retail Sales Tax Act, the Taxation Act (2007), and the Tobacco Tax Act. The budget eliminated specific information technology apprenticeship programs from the Apprenticeship Training Tax Credit, a tax credit program which was established in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures\nAssumptions for the budget include economic growth in real gross domestic product for the province of 1.5 percent in 2013, 2.3 percent in 2014, and 2.4 percent in 2015 and 2016, as well as the Canadian dollar exchange rate with respect to the United States dollar to be 98.0. Compared to the 2012 provincial budget, program spending was forecast to grow by 3 percent to $117 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures\nExpenditures were increased by $3 billion for healthcare and $2.4 billion for education, and were decreased by $2.2 billion for all other programs. The budget proposal included $1 billion allocated to the reserve fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures\nThe budget included $1 billion of expenditures in order to draw support from the NDP, the most significant of which were $404 million for welfare payments and credits, $260 million for improving access to home care, and $295 million for a youth employment program, the latter of which is the \"only new program that will receive any significant new money\" in the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Business and economy\nThe Employer Health Tax exemption was increased from $450,000 to $500,000 for small businesses, and was eliminated for companies other than registered charities with at least $5 million in payroll in Ontario. The change was made effective 1 January 2014, and will subsequently be indexed to the Ontario Consumer Price Index every five years. About 12,000 businesses had their Employer Health Tax liability eliminated as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Business and economy\nThe government announced the pending implementation of pooled registered pension plans per legislative changes by the federal government, and reform of the pension system. It also planned a 15 percent reduction in auto insurance premiums in 2014, after fraudulent claim issues were addressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Business and economy\nA \"Commercialization and Innovation Voucher\" pilot program was proposed, enabling entrepreneurs and small businesses to access services from Ontario research institutions. The capital cost allowance was extended, representing about $265 million over three years. Effective 1 April 2014, the biodiesel tax exemption was repealed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Business and economy\nThe government established a panel to review the provincial minimum wage legislation, which was required to report to the government within six months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Infrastructure\nA $100 million fund was established for use by small and rural municipalities for infrastructure repair, part of the government's three year $35 billion infrastructure program. The government announced the construction of additional high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV) over ten years for highways 401, 404, 410, and 427, and that a toll on existing HOV lanes could be applied for single-occupancy vehicles, which would raise about $250 million annually. The budget also contained a recommendation to extend Highway 427 north to Major Mackenzie Drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Infrastructure\nOf the $13 billion allocated for infrastructure spending in the 2013 fiscal year, $6.3 billion was for transportation, including funding for the construction of the expansion of the Yonge\u2013University line to Vaughan, and construction of the Confederation Line in Ottawa and the Ion rapid transit system in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Healthcare and social assistance\nThe budget specified that 149 hospitals in the province would receive $17 billion in funding, the same as the previous year, and that community and home care expenditures would rise by 6 percent to $4.56 billion, approximately 10 percent of all healthcare expenditures in the budget. Overall healthcare expenditures were expected to increase by $3 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Healthcare and social assistance\nRecipients of the Ontario Works and Disability benefit will retain $200 of employment earnings before the benefit is reduced. A legal aid fund was established to improve legal representation to individuals unable to afford it, providing $10 million annually from 2013 to 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Healthcare and social assistance\nThe budget introduced an income testing program for high-income seniors using the Ontario Drug Benefit program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235262-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Ontario provincial budget, Expenditures, Education\nEducation spending increased by $2.4 billion compared to the 2012 budget in order to fund the all-day junior kindergarten program announced in the 2010 provincial budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235263-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 13\nThe 2013 Open 13 was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 20th edition of the Open 13, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Palais des Sports in Marseille, France, from February 18 through February 24, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235263-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 13, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235263-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 13, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235264-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 13 \u2013 Doubles\nNicolas Mahut and \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin were the defending champions, but they lost in the semifinals to Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer. Rohan Bopanna and Colin Fleming won the title, defeating Qureshi and Rojer in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235265-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 13 \u2013 Singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro was the defending champion, but lost to Gilles Simon in the quarterfinals. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga won the title, defeating Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych in the final, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235265-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 13 \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235266-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 88 Contrex\u00e9ville\nThe 2013 Open 88 Contrex\u00e9ville was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Contrex\u00e9ville, France, on 15\u201321 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235266-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 88 Contrex\u00e9ville, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235267-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 88 Contrex\u00e9ville \u2013 Doubles\nYuliya Beygelzimer and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235267-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 88 Contrex\u00e9ville \u2013 Doubles\nVanesa Furlanetto and Amandine Hesse won the tournament, defeating Ana Konjuh and Silvia Njiri\u0107 in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235268-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 88 Contrex\u00e9ville \u2013 Singles\nAravane Reza\u00ef was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235268-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open 88 Contrex\u00e9ville \u2013 Singles\nTimea Bacsinszky won the tournament, defeating Beatriz Garc\u00eda Vidagany in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235269-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open BNP Paribas Banque de Bretagne\nThe 2013 Open BNP Paribas Banque de Bretagne was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Quimper, France between 10 and 16 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235269-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open BNP Paribas Banque de Bretagne, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235269-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open BNP Paribas Banque de Bretagne, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235269-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Open BNP Paribas Banque de Bretagne, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235270-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open BNP Paribas Banque de Bretagne \u2013 Doubles\nPierre-Hugues Herbert and Maxime Teixeira were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Johan Brunstr\u00f6m and Raven Klaasen won the final 3\u20136, 6\u20132, [10\u20133] against Jamie Delgado and Ken Skupski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235271-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open BNP Paribas Banque de Bretagne \u2013 Singles\nIgor Sijsling was the defending champion but decided to compete in the 2013 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament instead. Marius Copil defeated Marc Gicquel 7\u20136(11\u20139), 6\u20134 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235272-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Castilla y Le\u00f3n\nThe 2013 Open Castilla y Le\u00f3n was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 28th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Segovia, Spain between 29 July and 4 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235272-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Castilla y Le\u00f3n, ATP entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235273-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Castilla y Le\u00f3n \u2013 Doubles\nStefano Ianni and Florin Mergea were the defending champions, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235273-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Castilla y Le\u00f3n \u2013 Doubles\nKen and Neal Skupski won the title, defeating Mikhail Elgin and Uladzimir Ignatik in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20137(4\u20137), [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235274-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Castilla y Le\u00f3n \u2013 Singles\nEvgeny Donskoy was the defending champion, but chose to participate at the 2013 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235274-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Castilla y Le\u00f3n \u2013 Singles\nPablo Carre\u00f1o Busta won the title, defeating Albano Olivetti in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship\nThe 2013 Open Championship was a men's major golf championship and the 142nd Open Championship, held from 18\u201321 July at Muirfield Golf Links in Gullane, East Lothian, Scotland. Phil Mickelson shot a final round 66 (\u22125) to win his fifth major title, three strokes ahead of runner-up Henrik Stenson. Mickelson began the round five strokes back, in a tie for ninth place. Ian Poulter, Adam Scott, and 54-hole leader Lee Westwood tied for third, four back of Mickelson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Venue\nThe 2013 event was the 16th Open Championship played at Muirfield. The most recent was in 2002, when Ernie Els won his third major championship in a playoff over Stuart Appleby, Steve Elkington, and ultimately in a sudden-death playoff over Thomas Levet. Nick Faldo won the previous Open at the venue, in 1992; the first was in 1892.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Venue\nThe course was extended 158 yards (144\u00a0m) since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\nEach player is classified according to the first category in which he qualified, but other categories are shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n1. The Open Champions aged 60 or under on 21 July 2013Mark Calcavecchia (3,4), Stewart Cink (2,3), Darren Clarke (2,3), Ben Curtis (2,3), David Duval, Ernie Els (2,3,4,5,14), Nick Faldo, Todd Hamilton (2), P\u00e1draig Harrington (2,3,12), Paul Lawrie (5,6,17), Tom Lehman, Justin Leonard (3), Sandy Lyle, Mark O'Meara, Louis Oosthuizen (2,3,5,6,14), Tiger Woods (2,3,4,5,13,14,17)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n3. The Open Champions finishing in the first 10 and tying for 10th place in The Open Championship 2008\u20132012Tom Watson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n4. First 10 and anyone tying for 10th place in the 2012 Open Championship at Royal Lytham & St AnnesThomas Aiken, Nicolas Colsaerts (5,6,17), Luke Donald (5,6,7,14,17), Miguel \u00c1ngel Jim\u00e9nez (6), Dustin Johnson (5,14,17), Zach Johnson (5,14,17), Matt Kuchar (5,13,14,17), Graeme McDowell (5,6,10,17), Alex Nor\u00e9n (6), Geoff Ogilvy, Thorbj\u00f8rn Olesen (5,6), Ian Poulter (5,6,17), Adam Scott (5,11,14), Vijay Singh, Brandt Snedeker (5,14,17)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 32]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\nThe first 50 players on the Official World Golf Ranking for Week 21, 2013Keegan Bradley (12,14,17), Tim Clark, Jason Day, Jamie Donaldson (6), Jason Dufner (14,17), Gonzalo Fern\u00e1ndez-Casta\u00f1o (6), Rickie Fowler (14), Jim Furyk (14,17), Sergio Garc\u00eda (14,17), Robert Garrigus (14), Branden Grace (6,20), Bill Haas, Peter Hanson (6,17), Thongchai Jaidee (6), Martin Kaymer (6,12,17), David Lynn (6), Hunter Mahan (14), Matteo Manassero (6,7), Rory McIlroy (6,10,12,14,17), Phil Mickelson (9,11,14,17), Francesco Molinari (6,17), Ryan Moore (14), Carl Pettersson (14), Scott Piercy (14), D. A. Points, Justin Rose (6,10,14,17), Charl Schwartzel (6,11), Webb Simpson (10,14,17), Henrik Stenson, Kevin Streelman, Michael Thompson, Bo Van Pelt (14), Nick Watney (14), Bubba Watson (11,14,17), Lee Westwood (6,14,17)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n6. First 30 in the Race to Dubai for 2012Rafa Cabrera-Bello, George Coetzee, Marcus Fraser, Shane Lowry, Richie Ramsay, Marcel Siem, Bernd Wiesberger, Danny Willett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n8. First 5 European Tour members and any European Tour members tying for 5th place, not otherwise exempt, in the top 20 of the Race to Dubai on completion of the 2013 Alstom Open de FranceThomas Bj\u00f8rn, Mikko Ilonen, Brett Rumford, Richard Sterne, Marc Warren", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n14. The leading 30 qualifiers for the 2012 Tour ChampionshipJohn Huh, John Senden", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n15. First 5 PGA Tour members and any PGA Tour members tying for 5th place, not exempt in the top 20 of the PGA Tour FedEx Cup points list for 2013 on completion of the 2013 The Greenbrier ClassicHarris English, Russell Henley, Billy Horschel, Jimmy Walker, Boo Weekley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n18. First and anyone tying for 1st place on the Order of Merit of the Asian Tour for 2012Thaworn Wiratchant", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n19. First and anyone tying for 1st place on the Order of Merit of the Tour of Australasia for 2012Peter Senior", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n20. First and anyone tying for 1st place on the Order of Merit of the Southern Africa PGA Sunshine Tour for 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n22. First 2 and anyone tying for 2nd place, not exempt, on the Official Money List of the Japan Golf Tour for 2012Hiroyuki Fujita, Toru Taniguchi", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n23. The leading 4 players, not exempt, in the 2013 Mizuno OpenMakoto Inoue, Brendan Jones, Shingo Katayama, Kim Kyung-tae", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\n24. First 2 and anyone tying for 2nd place, in a cumulative money list taken from all official 2013 Japan Golf Tour events up to and including the 2013 Mizuno Open. Kim Hyung-sung, Satoshi Kodaira", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Field\nAlternates To make up the full entry of 156, additional players were drawn from the Official World Golf Ranking dated 7 July 2013 (provided the player was entered in the Open and did not withdraw from qualifying).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, First round\nZach Johnson was the first round leader after shooting a 5-under-par 66. Both Johnson and Indian outsider Shiv Kapur reached 6-under during their rounds before dropping shots on the tougher back nine, Kapur doing so during difficult afternoon conditions by birdieing six of his first seven holes. Two Spaniards, 49-year-old Miguel \u00c1ngel Jim\u00e9nez and Rafa Cabrera-Bello, had also reached 5-under before late bogeys, as had veteran Mark O'Meara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, First round\nTwo seniors were in the top five: O'Meara (56 years old), the 1998 champion, was tied for second at 67 and Tom Lehman (54), the 1996 champion, was tied for fourth at 68. Defending champion Ernie Els shot 74 (+3), tarnished by a triple-bogey after bunker trouble at the 16th. World number one Tiger Woods, playing in the tough later conditions, opened with a bogey after snap-hooking his tee shot and taking an unplayable lie, but fought his way back to 69 (\u22122) in pursuit of his 15th major championship. Out-of-form world number two Rory McIlroy, however, struggled to a 79 (+8) despite an early tee time. Phil Mickelson, four-time major champion and the winner of the previous week's Scottish Open, also had a 69 despite a closing bogey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nAt the end of the second round, nine players were under par, and the cut line was +8. Jim\u00e9nez was the leader at 139 (\u22123). Dustin Johnson, Henrik Stenson, Lee Westwood, and Woods were all one shot behind at 140.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nAmateurs: Fitzpatrick (+7), Mullen (+7), Porteous (+11), Stow (+11), Fox (+15), Forrest (+17), Pugh (+19).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nWestwood's 70 (\u22121) took the 54-hole lead at 210 (\u22123), which included a long eagle at the 5th hole. Hunter Mahan shot 68 (\u22123) to move into a tie for second at 212 (\u22121). Woods held sole possession of the lead early in the round, but carded 72 (+1) to fall back to 212 with Mahan. Adam Scott shot 70 (\u22121) to move to even-par 213.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nThrough the first six holes, 54-hole leader Westwood was even for the day, but then faltered down the stretch. After a bogey on the 8th, Westwood relinquished the lead to Scott, who birdied the 11th to go two-under for the championship. Westwood bogeyed three more holes to finish at +1. \"I didn't play badly, but I didn't play great\", he remarked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nMickelson, who started the round five shots back, carded a 34 (\u22122) on the front nine to get to even-par for the championship. After bogeying the 10th, he got back to even par with a birdie at the 13th, then birdied the 14th while Scott bogeyed the 13th and the two were tied for the lead at \u22121. After two pars, Mickelson birdied the final two holes to finish at 281 (\u22123). At that point, about an hour of play remained but Mickelson knew he had all but won the event. Scott followed up his bogey on the 13th with bogeys on each of the next three holes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nStenson shot 70 (\u22121) and finished three strokes back of Mickelson in second place at even-par 284. Ian Poulter got hot in the middle of his round and posted a 67 (\u22124) to tie for third with Scott and Westwood. Woods started the day two strokes off the lead, but shot a 74 (+3) to tie for sixth. Mahan, who also started the day two strokes back, carded a 75 (+4) and tied for ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235275-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nMickelson attained his fifth major title and first Open Championship. He had previously struggled at the event, recording just two finishes in the top-10 in 19 tries. Mickelson's caddy, Jim \"Bones\" Mackay, called the final round \"the best round of his career.\" Mickelson agreed, saying \"I don't care how I got it, [the Claret Jug trophy]\u00a0...it just so happened to be with one of the best rounds of my career\u00a0... I've always tried to go out and get it\u00a0... And today I did.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235276-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille\nThe 2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the sixteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $100,000 in prize money. It took place in Marseille, France, on 3\u20139 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235276-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille, 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-00235276-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235277-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille \u2013 Doubles\nS\u00e9verine Beltrame and Laura Thorpe were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235277-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille \u2013 Doubles\nSandra Klemenschits and Andreja Klepa\u010d won the title, defeating Asia Muhammad and Allie Will in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20135].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235278-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille \u2013 Singles\nLourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235278-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open F\u00e9minin de Marseille \u2013 Singles\nAndrea Petkovic won the title, defeating Anabel Medina Garrigues in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235279-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez\nThe 2013 Open GDF Suez was a women's professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 21st edition of the Open GDF Suez (formerly known as the Open Gaz de France) and a Premier tournament on the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at Stade Pierre de Coubertin in Paris, France from January 26 through February 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235279-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235280-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique\nThe 2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000+H in prize money. It took place in Nantes, France, on 28 October\u20133 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235280-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235280-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235281-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Doubles\nCatalina Casta\u00f1o and Mervana Jugi\u0107-Salki\u0107 were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235281-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Doubles\nLucie Hradeck\u00e1 and Micha\u00eblla Krajicek won the tournament, defeating St\u00e9phanie Foretz Gacon and Eva Hrdinov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235282-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Singles\nMonica Niculescu was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but withdrew before the event started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235282-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Nantes Atlantique \u2013 Singles\nAliaksandra Sasnovich won the tournament, defeating Magda Linette in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235283-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez R\u00e9gion Limousin\nThe 2013 Open GDF Suez R\u00e9gion Limousin was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Limoges, France, on 14\u201320 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235283-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez R\u00e9gion Limousin, 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-00235284-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez R\u00e9gion Limousin \u2013 Doubles\nMagda Linette and Sandra Zaniewska were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Zaniewska decided not to participate in 2013. Linette partnered up with Viktorija Golubic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235284-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez R\u00e9gion Limousin \u2013 Doubles\nLinette and Golubic won the tournament, defeating Nicole Clerico and Nikola Fra\u0148kov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235285-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez R\u00e9gion Limousin \u2013 Singles\nClaire Feuerstein was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Anna-Lena Friedsam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235285-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez R\u00e9gion Limousin \u2013 Singles\nKrist\u00fdna Pl\u00ed\u0161kov\u00e1 won the tournament, defeating Tamira Paszek in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235286-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Seine-et-Marne\nThe 2013 Open GDF Suez Seine-et-Marne was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Croissy-Beaubourg, France, on 25\u201331 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235286-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Seine-et-Marne, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235287-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Seine-et-Marne \u2013 Doubles\nAnna-Lena Friedsam and Alison Van Uytvanck won the title, defeating St\u00e9phanie Foretz Gacon and Eva Hrdinov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235288-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez Seine-et-Marne \u2013 Singles\nThis was a new event in 2013. Anne Keothavong won the title, defeating Sandra Z\u00e1hlavov\u00e1 in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235289-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Biarritz\nThe 2013 Open GDF Suez de Biarritz was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $100,000 in prize money. It took place in Biarritz, France, on 8\u201314 July 2013. The singles championship was won by Stephanie Vogt and the doubles championship was won by Yuliya Beygelzimer and Olga Savchuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235289-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Biarritz, 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-00235290-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Biarritz \u2013 Doubles\nS\u00e9verine Beltrame and Laura Thorpe were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012. Beltrame chose not to defend her title; Thorpe partnered up with Stephanie Vogt but lost in the semifinals to fourth seeds Yuliya Beygelzimer and Olga Savchuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235290-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Biarritz \u2013 Doubles\nBeygelzimer and Savchuk won the title, defeating Vera Dushevina and Ana Vrlji\u0107 in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20134, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235291-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Biarritz \u2013 Singles\nRomina Oprandi was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235291-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Biarritz \u2013 Singles\nStephanie Vogt won the title, defeating Anna Karol\u00edna Schmiedlov\u00e1 in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235292-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes\nThe 2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the sixteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $100,000 in prize money. It took place in Cagnes-sur-Mer, France, on 6\u201312 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235292-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235292-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235293-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes \u2013 Doubles\nAlexandra Panova and Urszula Radwa\u0144ska were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Radwa\u0144ska chose not to defend her title. Panova paired up with Valeria Solovyeva but lost in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235293-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes \u2013 Doubles\nVania King and Arantxa Rus won the title, defeating Catalina Casta\u00f1o and Teliana Pereira in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235294-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes \u2013 Singles\nYulia Putintseva was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235294-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Cagnes-sur-Mer Alpes-Maritimes \u2013 Singles\nWild card Caroline Garcia won the title, defeating lucky loser Maryna Zanevska in the final, 6\u20130, 4\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235295-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Touraine\nThe 2013 Open GDF Suez de Touraine was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Jou\u00e9-l\u00e8s-Tours, France, on 7\u201313 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235295-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Touraine, 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-00235296-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Touraine \u2013 Doubles\nS\u00e9verine Beltrame and Julie Coin were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Beltrame had announced her retirement from professional tennis in June 2013. Coin partnered up with Ana Vrlji\u0107 as the third seeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235296-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Touraine \u2013 Doubles\nCoin and Vrlji\u0107 won the tournament, defeating first seeds Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Micha\u00eblla Krajicek in the final, 6\u20133, 4\u20136, [15\u201313].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235297-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Touraine \u2013 Singles\nMonica Puig was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she decided to participate at the 2013 HP Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235297-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez de Touraine \u2013 Singles\nMirjana Lu\u010di\u0107-Baroni won the tournament, defeating An-Sophie Mestach in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235298-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez \u2013 Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions, but Raymond decided not to participate. Huber played alongside Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and lost in the final to Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci, 1\u20136, 1\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235299-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez \u2013 Singles\nAngelique Kerber was the defending champion, but she decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235299-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez \u2013 Singles\nMona Barthel won the title, defeating Sara Errani in the final 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235299-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open GDF Suez \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235300-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Harmonie mutuelle\nThe 2013 Open Harmonie mutuelle was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Saint-Brieuc, France between 1 and 7 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235300-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Harmonie mutuelle, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235300-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Harmonie mutuelle, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235301-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Harmonie mutuelle \u2013 Doubles\nLaurynas Grigelis and Rameez Junaid were the defending champions but Grigelis decided not to participate. Junaid played alongside Dustin Brown, but lost in the semifinals to Jesse Huta Galung and Konstantin Kravchuk. They lost in the final 3\u20136, 6\u20134, [7\u201310] to Tomasz Bednarek and Andreas Siljestr\u00f6m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235302-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Harmonie mutuelle \u2013 Singles\nGr\u00e9goire Burquier was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Jesse Huta Galung won the final 7\u20136(7\u20134), 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20133) against Kenny de Schepper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235303-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es\nThe 2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 17th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000+H in prize money. It took place in Saint-Gaudens, France, on 13\u201319 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235303-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235303-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235304-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es \u2013 Doubles\nVesna Dolonc and Irina Khromacheva were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their title. Dolonc played instead at the 2013 Sparta Prague Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235304-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es \u2013 Doubles\nJulia Glushko and Paula Ormaechea won the title, defeating St\u00e9phanie Dubois and Kurumi Nara in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20136(13\u201311).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235305-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es \u2013 Singles\nMariana Duque was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to defend her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235305-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Saint-Gaudens Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es \u2013 Singles\nPaula Ormaechea won the title, defeating Dinah Pfizenmaier in the final, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235306-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar\nThe 2013 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia between 4 and 10 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235306-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar, 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-00235306-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player entered the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235307-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar \u2013 Doubles\nMarcelo Demoliner and V\u00edctor Estrella Burgos were the defending champions but decided not to participate together. Demoliner partnered with Andr\u00e9 S\u00e1 and lost to Facundo Arg\u00fcello and Renzo Olivo in the first round. Estrella Burgos partnered with Guido Andreozzi but lost to Carlos Salamanca and Juan-Carlos Spir in the first round. Juan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Alejandro Gonz\u00e1lez won the title over wildcard compatriots Nicol\u00e1s Barrientos and Eduardo Struvay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235308-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar \u2013 Singles\nTennis player Alejandro Falla was the 2012 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235308-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Seguros Bol\u00edvar \u2013 Singles\nHe lost in the 2013 semifinals to Thomaz Bellucci. The eventual champion was V\u00edctor Estrella Burgos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235309-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Sud de France\nThe 2013 Open Sud de France was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the Open Sud de France, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Arena Montpellier in Montpellier, France, from February 4 to February 10, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235309-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Sud de France, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235309-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Sud de France, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235310-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Sud de France \u2013 Doubles\nNicolas Mahut and \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin were the defending champions, but Mahut decided not to participate. Roger-Vasselin played alongside Beno\u00eet Paire, but lost in the first round to Johan Brunstr\u00f6m and Raven Klaasen. Marc Gicquel and Micha\u00ebl Llodra won the title, defeating Brunstr\u00f6m and Klaasen 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [11\u20139] in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235311-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Sud de France \u2013 Singles\nTom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych was the defending champion but withdrew because of a wrist injury. Richard Gasquet won the title, defeating Beno\u00eet Paire in an all-French final, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235311-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open Sud de France \u2013 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-00235312-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open d'Orl\u00e9ans\nThe 2013 Open d'Orl\u00e9ans was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Orl\u00e9ans, France between 23 and 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235312-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open d'Orl\u00e9ans, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235313-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open d'Orl\u00e9ans \u2013 Doubles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd and Gilles M\u00fcller were the defending champions, but decided not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235313-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open d'Orl\u00e9ans \u2013 Doubles\nIllya Marchenko and Sergiy Stakhovsky won the title, defeating Ri\u010dardas Berankis and Franko \u0160kugor in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235314-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open d'Orl\u00e9ans \u2013 Singles\nDavid Goffin was the defending champion, but chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235314-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open d'Orl\u00e9ans \u2013 Singles\nRadek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won the title, defeating Leonardo Mayer in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235315-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur\nThe 2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 29th edition of the Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Nice Lawn Tennis Club in Nice, France, from May 19 through May 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235315-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235315-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235316-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Johan Brunstr\u00f6m and Raven Klaasen won the title, defeating Juan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Robert Farah in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235317-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur \u2013 Singles\nNicol\u00e1s Almagro was the two-time defending champion but decided not to participate. Albert Monta\u00f1\u00e9s won the title, defeating Ga\u00ebl Monfils in the final, 6\u20130, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235317-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235317-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Nice C\u00f4te d'Azur \u2013 Singles, Qualifying, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235318-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Rennes\nThe 2013 Open de Rennes was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the eight edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Rennes, France between 7 and 13 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235318-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Rennes, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235318-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Rennes, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players used protected ranking to get into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235319-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Rennes \u2013 Doubles\nPhilipp Marx and Florin Mergea were the defending champions but decided not to participate together. Marx partnered with Dustin Brown but lost to Michael Berrer and Franko \u0160kugor in the quarterfinal. Mergea partnered with Oliver Marach and won the title over Nicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler 6\u20134, 3\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235320-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Rennes \u2013 Singles\nKenny de Schepper was the defending champion, but lost to Nicolas Mahut in the final 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235321-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda\nThe 2013 Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda will be the 8th road race running on the Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda. It was held on 18 August 2013 over a distance of 132 kilometres (82.0 miles) and was the seventh race of the 2013 UCI Women's Road World Cup season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235322-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda TTT\nThe 2013 Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda \u2013 team time trial will be the 6th team time trial running on the Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda and the 6th race of the 2013 UCI Women's Road World Cup season. It will be held on 16 August 2013 over a distance of 42.5 kilometres (26.4 miles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235322-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda TTT, Preview\nOnly two teams have ever won a World Cup team time trial. These teams are Cervelo and Team Specialized\u2013lululemon (both with various incarnations of their team names). After the introduction of the team time trial for trade teams at the UCI Road World Championships in 2012, this team time trial World Cup race is an important benchmark for the team time trial at the 2013 UCI Road World Championships. Specialized\u2013lululemon, that won both the team time trial at the 2012 World Championships and the 2012 V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda World Cup, is the main favourite for the victory. The important rival teams are Orica-AIS and Rabobank\u2013Liv Giant, both medalists in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235322-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda TTT, The Route\nThe course is a 42.5\u00a0km from V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda to Herrljunga and back in and is mainly flat with one small climb after 35\u00a0km of an ascent of 40 metres in 2\u00a0km. The route is a challenging course including several tight corners and narrow roads. Crosswinds could be an important factor between V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda and Herrljunga and on the bridge on Kullingsleden after 32.5\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235322-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Open de Su\u00e8de V\u00e5rg\u00e5rda TTT, Race\nA maximum of 25 UCI Women's Teams and National Teams between 4 and 6 riders are allowed to start. Starting order of the teams will be the reverse order from UCI Road women World Cup standing after the previous World Cup race, the 2013 Tour of Chongming Island World Cup. The first team will start at 17:30 and the next teams with 3 minutes intervals. The final time will be the time of the fourth rider crossing the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235323-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orange Bowl\nThe 2013 Discover Orange Bowl was a college football bowl game played on Tuesday, January 1, 2013, at Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida. The game was organized by the Orange Bowl committee. The Orange Bowl featured ACC champions Florida State versus at-large selection and MAC champions Northern Illinois. The game was part of the 2012\u20132013 Bowl Championship Series and was the second of the series to be played, following the 2013 Rose Bowl. Florida State won the game by a score of 31\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235323-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Orange Bowl\nThe Florida State Seminoles clinched a berth in the 2013 Orange Bowl by winning the 2012 ACC Championship. The Northern Illinois Huskies became the first MAC team to earn a BCS berth by being the 15th ranked team in the nation. A school from a BCS non-automatic qualifying conference earns a bid if in the top sixteen and ranked ahead of a champion from an automatic qualifying conference. The Huskies, winners of the 2012 MAC Championship Game, became the first team from the MAC to make a BCS bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235324-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orange Open Guadeloupe\nThe 2013 Orange Open Guadeloupe was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Le Gosier, Guadeloupe between 25 and 31 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235324-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Orange Open Guadeloupe, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235325-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orange Open Guadeloupe \u2013 Doubles\nPierre-Hugues Herbert and Albano Olivetti were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Dudi Sela and Jimmy Wang won the final 6\u20131, 6\u20132 against Philipp Marx and Florin Mergea to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235326-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orange Open Guadeloupe \u2013 Singles\nDavid Goffin was the defending champion but decided to participate at the 2013 Sony Open Tennis instead. Beno\u00eet Paire won the final 6\u20134, 5\u20137, 6\u20134 against Sergiy Stakhovsky to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235327-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Challenger\nThe 2013 Oregon Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Portland, Oregon, United States, on July 15\u201321, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235327-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Challenger, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235327-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Challenger, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235328-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nThis was a new event on the ITF Women's Circuit. Irina Falconi and Nicole Melichar won the tournament, defeating Sanaz Marand and Ashley Weinhold in the all-American final, 4\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235329-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Challenger \u2013 Singles\nThis was a new event on the ITF Women's Circuit. Kurumi Nara won the tournament, defeating Alison Riske in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team\nThe 2013 Oregon Ducks football team represented the University of Oregon in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by first year head coach Mark Helfrich and played their home games at Autzen Stadium for the 47th consecutive year. They were a member of the Pac-12 Conference in the North Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Previous season, Summary\nThe Ducks had high expectations to make a run at a BCS national championship title. This was the first year under new head coach Mark Helfrich, after the departure of Chip Kelly to the NFL in the previous year. They were undefeated up to November 7, 2013, where they lost to Stanford, dimming their national championship aspirations. Their second loss of the season to Arizona on November 23, 2013, finally ended any chance of a national or conference championship. They were passed over for an at-large BCS bid at #10 in the country, and were selected to be the Pac-12 representative to the Alamo bowl. In the bowl game, they defeated the Texas 30-7. They finished the year #9 in the Coaches and AP Polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Previous season, Departing players\nNo Juniors or Redshirt-Sophomores declared early eligibility for the 2013 NFL draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Pre-season, Awards watch lists\nThe following Oregon players appeared on preseason award watch lists", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Pre-season, Spring football\nOn April 27, 2013 the Oregon Ducks capped off their spring football practices with the traditional Spring Football Game, open to the public held at Autzen Stadium. As has been the practice for many years, in order to gain admission to the game each fan must donate at least three non-perishable food items to Food for Lane County on their way in the stadium. Following a record donation year in 2012, Oregon fans again donated over 70,000 pounds of food to the charity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Pre-season, Spring football\nDonating food is not the only non-football activity for a good cause that is associated with the Oregon Spring Game, the game is played in honor of the United States Armed Forces and specifically the several reserve and guard units stationed close to Eugene. The football players will wear special made Nike uniforms that have \"Support Our Troops\" on the back where the player's last name is usually found, along with American Flags on the sleeves. During half-time a group of Marine Corps enlistees took the oath of enlistment on the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Pre-season, Spring football\nFollowing the game the players line up on the north sideline, with an equal number of service-members from each branch of the military lining up on the south sideline. The two groups meet in the middle of the field where the players then remove their jersey and give it to a service-member, the service-member in turns presents the football player with a challenge coin. The tradition of the Spring Game being dedicated to supporting the military is part of the legacy of former head coach Chip Kelly, following the funeral of a local soldier in 2010, which he attended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Pre-season, Spring football\nThe 2013 iteration of the game was the first under new head coach Mark Helfrich and it also implemented a new scoring system for the first time in several years. Traditionally the offensive and defensive coordinators act as head coaches of two different teams, which are selected via a draft, the two teams then face off in a normally scored exhibition game. Due to a rash of injuries on both sides of the ball the format was tweaked so that it was simply the offense versus the defense, with a modified points system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Pre-season, Spring football\nThe offense would score normally, with six points for touchdowns with the opportunity for point after attempts, and three points for field goals. The defense would follow normal rules for touchdowns as well, but would also gain three points for turnovers and one point every time that they kept the offense from scoring. The points system led to a lopsided victory by the offense, 65\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, After the season, Players drafted\nThe following Oregon players were selected in the 2014 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235330-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon Ducks football team, Statistics, Defense\nKey: POS: Position, SOLO: Solo Tackles, AST: Assisted Tackles, TOT: Total Tackles, TFL: Tackles-for-loss, SACK: Quarterback Sacks, INT: Interceptions, BU: Passes Broken Up, PD: Passes Defended, QBH: Quarterback Hits, FF: Forced Fumbles, FR: Fumbles Recovered, BLK: Kicks or Punts Blocked, SAF: Safeties", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235331-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon State Beavers baseball team\nThe 2013 Oregon State Beavers baseball team represents Oregon State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Beavers play their home games at Goss Stadium at Coleman Field and are members of the Pac-12 Conference. The team is coached by Pat Casey in his 19th season at Oregon State. The Beavers won the Pac-12 conference with a 24-6 conference record, and made it to the semifinals of the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, officially finishing tied for 3rd in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235331-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon State Beavers baseball team, Ranking movements\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, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235332-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon State Beavers football team\nThe 2013 Oregon State Beavers football team represented Oregon State University during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by head coach Mike Riley, in his eleventh straight season and thirteenth overall. Home games were played at Reser Stadium in Corvallis, and they were members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. The Beavers defeated the Boise State Broncos 38\u201323 in the Hawaii Bowl to end the season with a 7\u20136 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235332-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon State Beavers football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nThis was only the third time ever that an AP-ranked FBS program was beaten by an FCS program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235332-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oregon State Beavers football team, Awards\nJunior wide receiver Brandin Cooks won the 2013 Fred Biletnikoff Award as the nation's top college receiver. He set Oregon State records for career receiving touchdowns (23), single season touchdown receptions (15), single season receptions (120) and single season yards (1,670).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235333-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orica\u2013GreenEDGE season\nThe 2013 season for the Orica\u2013GreenEDGE cycling team began in January at the Bay Classic Series. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235334-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orienteering World Cup\nThe 2013 Orienteering World Cup was the 19th edition of the Orienteering World Cup. It contained 13 competitions, which took place in New Zealand, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235335-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Origins Award winners\nThe following are the winners of the 40th annual (2013) Origins Award, presented at Origins 2014:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season\nThe 2013 Orlando City Soccer Club season was the club's third season of existence in Orlando. Orlando finished second in the overall regular-season table. They were declared 2013 USL Pro Champions after beating Charlotte Eagles 7\u20134 in front of 20,886 fans at the Fifth Third Bank Field at the Citrus Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Background\nThe first set of returning players was announced on November 7, 2012, including Jamie Watson, Miguel Gallardo, Rob Valentino, Anthony Pulis, Mechack J\u00e9r\u00f4me and Adama Mbengue. Notably not on the player list was captain Ian Fuller, who was only listed in the press release as \"assistant head coach\". He has been a player/coach the previous two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Background\nThe biggest news regarding the fixture was the announcement of a home-and-away series of preseason friendlies with Tampa Bay Rowdies of the North American Soccer League. The teams will play on March 9 in Orlando, and March 30 in St. Petersburg. They could also potentially meet at the 2013 Walt Disney World Pro Soccer Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Background\nIn supporter news, the two largest supporters groups\u2014The Ruckus, and the Iron Lion Firm\u2014announced on November 18, 2012, that they were beginning discussions regarding the unification of the team's supporters groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Background\nOrlando City played a friendly against A.S. Roma of the Italian top-flight league Serie A on January 2, 2013. Roma was in town on a training visit to ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex. Roma won the match, 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Background\nAs part of the alliance between Major League Soccer and the United Soccer Leagues, Orlando City agreed to become the USL Pro affiliate club of Sporting Kansas City. They were matched with Seattle Sounders, and will play home and away matches against their reserve squad in the 2013 season. The first loans made by Sporting Kansas City to Orlando City under the arrangement were forward Dom Dwyer, midfielder Christian Duke, defender Yann Songo'o and goalkeeper Jon Kempin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Background\nOn February 15, 2013, the team announced that Fifth Third Bank had purchased naming rights to the stadium for Orlando City matches. The Citrus Bowl will be called Fifth Third Bank Field at the Citrus Bowl during Orlando City matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe most important part of the preseason for Orlando City was a local derby with the 2012 North American Soccer League champion Tampa Bay Rowdies. It was the first meeting between minor-league professional soccer teams based in the Greater Orlando and Tampa Bay areas since 1990, when the Tampa Bay Rowdies and Orlando Lions played in the American Professional Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Competitions, Friendlies\nThe derby, referred to as the I-4 Derby after the road that connects the cities, was won by Orlando City, who took 3\u20132 victories in both matches, on March 9 in Orlando and March 30 in St. Petersburg. Additionally, the Lions also beat the Rowdies, 2\u20130, when they met in the 7th place game of the 2013 Walt Disney World Pro Soccer Classic on February 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Competitions, U.S. Open Cup\nQualification for the U.S. Open Cup began in November 2012 in the fifth tier. The format will be similar to the 2012 tournament, but with the two lowest-ranked USL Pro teams and two expansion USL Pro teams starting in the first round, and the remaining USL Pro teams (including Orlando City and NASL teams entering in the second round. On June 12, Orlando City reached the Quarterfinals, the farthest round ever reached in team history and the farthest USL Pro team in 2013, guaranteeing a $15,000 prize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Club, Roster\nPlayers which have been announced as re-signed with Orlando or for which Orlando exercised an option to retain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Club, Squad information\n* = Denotes players who were retained after the move of the Austin Aztex FC organization to form Orlando City S.C.\u2020 = Denotes players on loan through USL Pro-MLS Reserve League alliance\u2021 = Retired as of May 30", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235336-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando City SC season, Media\nFor the 2013 season, all matches will stream live on the website using the stadium feed. Occasional matches will appear on Bright House Sports Network, with USL Nation using that feed when available. Some home matches can be heard on the radio as well, either 740 the Game or 102.5/107.7-HD2 WLOQ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235337-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando Predators season\nThe 2013 Orlando Predators season was the 22nd season for the franchise in the Arena Football League. The team was coached by Doug Plank and played their home games at Amway Center. Despite losing their first five games, the Predators recovered enough to qualify for the playoffs. However, they were eliminated by the Philadelphia Soul by a score of 59\u201355 in the conference semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235337-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando Predators season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated August 1, 201326 Active, 21 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235337-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando Predators season, Standings\nz - Clinched division and conference's best recordx - Clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235337-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Orlando Predators season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe Predators began the season on the road against the New Orleans VooDoo on March 24. Their first home game was on April 6 against the Philadelphia Soul. They closed the regular season against the VooDoo at home on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235338-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open \u2013 Doubles\nLyudmyla and Nadiya Kichenok were the defending champions, but chose instead to compete at the Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235338-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open \u2013 Doubles\nJe\u013cena Ostapenko and Eva Paalma won the tournament, defeating Quirine Lemoine and Martina P\u0159\u00e1dov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20132, 5\u20137, [11\u20139].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235339-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open \u2013 Singles\nAmra Sadikovi\u0107 was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235339-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Orto-L\u00e4\u00e4k\u00e4rit Open \u2013 Singles\nJe\u013cena Ostapenko won the tournament, defeating Susanne Celik in the final, 7\u20135, 4\u20136, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash\nThe Ottawa bus\u2013train crash was a collision that occurred between an OC Transpo double-decker bus and a Via Rail train in the Ottawa suburb of Barrhaven on September 18, 2013, that killed six people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Details\nThe collision occurred at 8:48 a.m. at a rail crossing near Fallowfield Road and Woodroffe Avenue on the Transitway, the city's dedicated road for buses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Details\nThe train, Via Rail #51 (pulled by General Electric P42 Genesis locomotive #915), departed Ottawa at 8:32 a.m., bound for Toronto. The bus, OC Transpo Route 76 (an Alexander Dennis Enviro500 double-decker #8017), had just departed from Fallowfield Transitway Station with 83 people aboard. The crossing's gates, lights, and bells engaged 47 seconds before the crash, and its gates were fully horizontal across the road 25 seconds before the crash. The train rang its bell but did not sound its whistle, due to a municipal whistle ban in effect between 8:00 p.m. and noon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Details\nThe train was travelling at 75 kilometres per hour (47\u00a0mph) at the time of the collision\u00a0\u2013 below its speed limit of 161\u00a0km/h (100\u00a0mph)\u00a0\u2013 and its emergency brakes were applied 2 seconds prior to the collision. The bus was travelling at 67.6\u00a0km/h (42.0\u00a0mph)\u00a0\u2013 above its speed limit of 60\u00a0km/h (37\u00a0mph)\u00a0\u2013 before its brakes were applied, which occurred 3 seconds before the crash; the full force of the brakes was not initially applied. The collision sheared off the front end of the bus and derailed the train.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Details\nFive occupants of the bus were pronounced dead at the scene of the accident (including the bus driver) and one later died in hospital, while thirty-five occupants were injured, five seriously. None of the train's passengers or crew were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Details\nCanadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne were among those who offered condolences to the victims of the crash and their families. The bus and the train involved in the crash were both removed from the scene on September 19, 2013. Via Rail train service resumed through the area in the morning of September 20, 2013. A community memorial was held for all of the victims of the crash at Cedarview Alliance Church on September 22, 2013, where funerals for two of the victims were also held later in the week. Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson was among those who attended the community memorial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation\nThe crash was investigated by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB). The TSB was not able to identify any issue with the track's condition or the operation of the train. The bus driver did not have any drugs or alcohol in his system and did not have any medical conditions that would have led to the crash. On September 28, 2013, TSB investigators and Ottawa Police investigators returned to the site of the incident in order to reenact the crash and collect more information on what might have led to the collision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Interim measures\nOn October 16, 2013, based on early observations made by the TSB, Ottawa's transit commission, in the body's first meeting since the crash, outlined four new safety improvements for the level crossing that was the site of the crash. These measures were clearing trees and brush from the area of the crash site to improve visibility, reducing the speed along the Transitway approaching the level crossing from 60 to 50 kilometres per hour (37 to 31\u00a0mph), installing bigger signs, and installing a new early warning light to caution buses when a train is coming. The city stated that these measures would only be extended to the crossing where the crash occurred and that these observations made by the TSB should not be confused with causes of the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Interim measures\nIn late fall of 2013, the City of Ottawa hired the consultant firm MMM Group to study whether or not the OC Transpo buses should be required to stop at all rail crossings as is done in many other regions in Canada. The results of the MMM group study were released on April 9, 2014, and suggested that requiring buses to stop at railway crossings actually increases collisions between buses and trains by 17 percent, prompting OC Transpo not to change their policy on the matter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Interim measures\nOn January 9, 2014, the City of Ottawa was ordered by Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC), as part of its workplace safety investigation of the crash, to assess the safety of each railway crossing in the city where OC Transpo buses and trains have the potential of coming into contact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Interim measures\nOn February 25, 2014, the TSB sent two letters to the City of Ottawa. The first addressed four incidents that happened in the months following the bus and train collision where buses went through the crossing involved after its warning lights started flashing but before its gates closed. This first letter recommended that the city take additional measures to ensure that buses are able to safely stop at level crossings when the warning lights are activated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Interim measures\nThe second letter addressed another incident that happened on February 14, 2014, at the same level crossing where one gate stayed down and the warning lights remained on after the train had passed. This second letter recommends that OC Transpo and Via Rail create standard operating procedures for dealing with malfunctioning automated level crossings. Further malfunctions of Via Rail crossings near the site of the crash led then Foreign Affair Minister and local MP John Baird to call for the resignation of Via Rail President Steve Del Bosco, who was later replaced as president by Yves Desjardins-Siciliano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Interim measures\nOn September 24, 2014, the TSB gave a progress update on the investigation. The update mentioned two potential factors in the crash: the speed of the bus, which exceeded the speed limit and affected its stopping distance, and a video screen located above the driver's work station used to monitor passengers on the upper level of the bus. The update stated that a passenger who was standing at the time of the crash or a similar situation may have caused a distraction. The update recommended that the video screen should go blank when the bus is moving and that more should be done to monitor bus speed, particularly around rail road crossings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Interim measures\nIn July 2015, a draft of the TSB's report was submitted to the City of Ottawa and Via Rail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Investigation, Final report\nOn December 2, 2015, the report of the TSB found that the driver of the bus was most likely distracted by the video screens that he was required to monitor as part of his job. The report also made recommendations to Transport Canada to develop guidelines for the use of in-vehicle video screens to reduce distraction, to develop crashworthiness standards for passenger buses, to equip passenger buses with crashworthy event data recorders, and to develop specific guidance for grade separation. The last recommendation of the report was for the City of Ottawa to review the need for grade separation at the level crossings at Woodroffe Avenue, Transitway and Fallowfield Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Aftermath\nOn July 11, 2014, the City of Ottawa decided to retire OC Transpo route 76, replacing it with route 72 in the fall schedule. On the first anniversary of the incident, city facility flags were lowered to half-mast. In October 2015, a memorial park was opened beside the Fallowfield Park and Ride which features six sections honouring each of the six victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Aftermath\nOn August 18, 2017, a survivor of the crash committed suicide. His family believes that his mental illness had been triggered by the events of the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Aftermath\nSeveral lawsuits were filed against the City of Ottawa and the estate of the bus driver by families of those who died in the crash as well as survivors. By September 19, 2017, of the 39 lawsuits filed against the city, collectively claiming $26 million, 31 had been settled with actual settlement payments totalling $8 million. By January 18, 2019, 35 of the 39 lawsuits had been settled, with the total payout rising to $9.7 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235340-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Ottawa bus\u2013train crash, Aftermath\nOn February 26, 2016, the City of Ottawa stated that it will study whether underpasses or overpasses are required at five of the city's railway crossings, including the crossing involved in the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235341-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Outback Bowl\nThe 2013 Outback Bowl was a post-season American college football bowl game, held on January 1, 2013, at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, as part of the 2012\u201313 NCAA Bowl season. It was the 27th edition of the Outback Bowl, named after sponsor Outback Steakhouse, and was telecast at 1:00\u00a0p.m. ET on ESPN. It featured the South Carolina Gamecocks from the Southeastern Conference (SEC) versus the Michigan Wolverines from the Big Ten Conference. South Carolina won, 33\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235341-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Outback Bowl, Teams\nThe Michigan Wolverines and South Carolina Gamecocks had met twice before, in the 1980s, and entered this contest with the series tied at 1-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235341-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Outback Bowl, Teams, South Carolina\nSouth Carolina entered the game with a 10\u20132 record, having lost to #14 AP Poll LSU and #9 Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235341-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Outback Bowl, Teams, Michigan\nMichigan entered the game with an 8\u20134 record, having lost to #1 AP Poll: Alabama, #4 Notre Dame, #3 Ohio State and #25 Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235341-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Outback Bowl, The Hit\n\"The Hit\"is widely considered to mark the turning point in the game for South Carolina and it earned a \"Best Play\" ESPY Award for South Carolina's Jadeveon Clowney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235341-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Outback Bowl, The Hit\n\"The Hit\" refers to a play by defensive end Jadeveon Clowney which occurred midway during the fourth quarter of play. After a Wolverines fake punt, followed by a controversial call awarding Michigan a first down during a critical time-consuming drive, Clowney gained instant fame for his violent tackle of Michigan running back Vincent Smith that came with 8:21 remaining in the fourth quarter. \"The Hit\" dislodged Smith's helmet and forced a fumble that Clowney himself recovered. \"The Hit\" set up a touchdown pass to wide receiver Ace Sanders on the next play. Although \"The Hit\" itself did not result in the game-winning touchdown, it is considered by many to have motivated a previously lethargic Gamecock offense to rally and ultimately win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235342-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ovation Awards\nThe nominees for the 2013 Ovation Awards were announced on September 16, 2013, at the Barnsdall Gallery Theatre in Hollywood, California. The awards were presented for excellence in stage productions in the Los Angeles area from August 27, 2012 to August 25, 2013 based upon evaluations from 250 members of the Los Angeles theater community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235342-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ovation Awards\nThe winners were announced on November 3, 2013 in a ceremony at the San Gabriel Mission Playhouse in San Gabriel, California. The ceremony was hosted by actor Michael McKean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235342-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Ovation Awards, Ovation Honors\nOvation Honors, which recognize outstanding achievement in areas that are not among the standard list of nomination categories, were presented when the nominations were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235343-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Owensboro Rage season\nThe 2013 Owensboro Rage season was the second and final season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235343-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Owensboro Rage season\nOn July 13, 2012, owner and general manager Eddie Cronin died in an automobile accident. On August 8, 2012, the Rage confirmed that they would continue to be a part of the CIFL again in 2013, with Cronin's fianc\u00e9, Melissa Logsdon running the team. The season will be dedicated to Cronin. On September 27, 2012, Logsdon announced that the team would be moving to Owensboro, Kentucky. The Rage also named Kory White as General Manager the same day. The Rage signed former Louisville quarterback Bill Ashburn as well as former Arena Football League wide receiver Robert Redd to get the team's offense going.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235343-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Owensboro Rage season\nAfter starting off 2-0, the Rage lost three straight games. To help the floundering team, the Rage signed Jared Lorenzen to help solidify the quarterback position. Lorenzen helped the Rage instantly by helping the Rage win a close game with the Marion Blue Racers. The Rage received two automatic victories from the folding of the Kane County Dawgs, bringing their record to 5-3, but with two games remaining in the season, the Rage suspended operations due to lack of funds. The Rage forfeit their final two games of the season, making their record 5-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235343-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Owensboro Rage season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated January 28, 201324 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235343-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Owensboro Rage season, Schedule, Standings\n\u2020Kane County played the second game on their schedule, but forfeited the other nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235344-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oxfordshire County Council election\nAn election to Oxfordshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 63 councillors were elected from 61 electoral divisions, which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. Following a boundary review, the electoral divisions were not the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. The election saw the Conservative Party lose overall control of the council as the party found itself one seat short of an overall majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235344-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oxfordshire County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235344-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Oxfordshire County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235344-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oxfordshire County Council election, Aftermath\nThe Conservatives lost the overall majority that they had held on the council for eight years. They were however able to continue to govern in a minority administration with the support of three of the four independent councillors - Lynda Atkins, Mark Gray and Les Sibley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235344-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oxfordshire County Council election, Aftermath\nThe support of these three independent councillors gave the Conservatives an overall majority of 34 out of 63 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235345-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Oznobishino bus crash\nThe 2013 Oznobishino bus crash occurred on 13 July 2013 at about 13:00 local time (09:00 UTC) when a bus carrying 64 people was hit by a KAMAZ truck in Oznobishino, Moscow Oblast, about 25 miles (40\u00a0km) southwest of Moscow. At least 18 people died and another 60 people were injured, with 12 of them in a critical condition. 14 of the victims died at the scene and another four died in hospital. The bus had been travelling from Podolsk to Kurkino when the accident occurred, ripping its back half off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235345-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Oznobishino bus crash, Crash\nThe truck driver was thrown out of his vehicle and survived the impact, as did the bus driver, though both were injured. The truck driver has been identified as a 46-year-old named Hrachya Harutyunyan (\u0410\u0440\u0443\u0442\u044e\u043d\u044f\u043d \u0413\u0440\u0430\u0447\u044c\u044f). The truck itself is reportedly owned by a private company. The Russian authorities declared the following Monday to be a day of mourning in Moscow following the accident. The driver was subsequently charged with violating traffic rules and faces up to seven years' imprisonment if convicted. Sogaz, the company responsible for insuring the bus, said that it would pay the families of each of the deceased a sum of around 2 million rubles ($60,000) in compensation, while the injured would receive around 600,000 rubles ($20,000) each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235345-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Oznobishino bus crash, Crash\nThe circumstances of the crash prompted a debate about whether the layout of the road had been a contributing factor and whether further measures were needed to crack down on bad driving. Andrei Vorobyov, the acting governor of the Moscow region, called for a tightening of the rules on public transport and goods vehicles. He also announced an inspection of the region's public buses and \"difficult crossroads\". Viktor Pokhmelkin, the head of the Movement of Russian Motorists, said that there was a history of frequent collisions at the intersection where the crash occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235345-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Oznobishino bus crash, Crash\nA widely read Russian blogger, Rustem Adagamov, argued that the road from which the truck driver occurred was winding and lacked traffic signs, preventing the truck driver from seeing the bus in time, though a survivor from the bus said that she had seen the truck coming from some distance away. The truck may also have been overloaded and may have had faulty brakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235345-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Oznobishino bus crash, Crash\nQuestions were also raised about tightening vehicle licensing rules. The truck had reportedly been using expired transit plates, temporary licence plates that are only supposed to be used on new cars. They are used illegally to evade vehicle checks in the police national vehicle database and to evade paying taxes. A Russian legislator proposed increasing the penalties for driving illegally using such plates, while another legislator announced measures requiring holders of foreign commercial drivers' licences to acquire an equivalent Russian driving licence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235345-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Oznobishino bus crash, Court hearings and reaction in Armenia\nCourt hearings of Hrachya Harutyunyan started on 15 July 2013. He was brought into the courthouse wearing inappropriate clothing, a women's dressing-gown. This sparked discontent in Armenia. A protest was held in front of the Russian embassy in Yerevan on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235346-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA All-Star Weekend\nThe 2013 PBA All-Star Weekend was the annual all-star weekend of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA)'s 2012\u201313 PBA season. The events were held from May 1 to 6, 2013 at the Davao del Sur Coliseum, Digos City, Davao del Sur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235346-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA All-Star Weekend\nHighlighting the weekend was the Gilas Pilipinas vs. PBA All-Stars game, which was held at the final day of the weekend. The All-Star game format was adapted to prepare the national team for the upcoming 2013 FIBA Asia Championship, which was similarly done in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235347-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup\nThe 2013 Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Commissioner's Cup was the second conference of the 2012\u201313 PBA season. The tournament began on February 8 and ended on May 19, 2013. The tournament is an import-laden format, which requires an import or a pure-foreign player for each team and with no height limit. From the semifinal round onwards, the tournament is sponsored by Cebuana Lhuillier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235347-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup, Format\nDue to the preparations of the Philippines men's national basketball team for the upcoming FIBA Asia Championship, the opening of Governors' Cup was moved on the second week of August, at the conclusion of the FIBA tournament. The Commissioner's Cup was extended until the last week of May and adapted the tournament format used during the Philippine Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235347-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup, Imports\nThe following is the list of imports, which had played for their respective teams at least once, with the returning imports in italics. Highlighted are the imports who stayed with their respective teams for the whole conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235348-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup Finals\nThe 2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup Finals was the best-of-5 championship series of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) 2013 Commissioner's Cup, and the conclusion of the conference's playoffs. The Alaska Aces and the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel competed for the 108th championship contested by the league. Alaska defeated Ginebra by sweeping the series, 3-0, with Alaska winning its first championship (13th overall) after Tim Cone's tenure with the Aces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235348-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup Finals\nThis was the third time the two teams met in the finals, and served as a rematch of the 1997 edition of the Commissioner's Cup, when Barangay Ginebra, then known as the Gordon's Gin Boars defeated Alaska, four games to two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235349-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA D-League Foundation Cup\nThe 2013 PBA D-League Foundation Cup is the second conference of the 2012-13 PBA Developmental League season. There are three new teams participating the league: Jumbo Plastic Linoleum Giants, Hog's Breath Cafe Razorbacks and EA Regen Med.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235349-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA D-League Foundation Cup, Format\nThe following format will be observed for the duration of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235350-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Governors' Cup\nThe 2013 Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Governors' Cup was the third and last conference of the 2012\u201313 PBA season. Due to the preparations for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship, the conference started on August 14, 2013, and finished on October 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235350-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Governors' Cup\nThe tournament is an import-laden format, which allows an import or a pure-foreign player for each team and with a height limit of 6-foot-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235350-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Governors' Cup, Imports\nThe following is the list of imports, which had played for their respective teams at least once, with the returning imports in italics. Highlighted are the imports who stayed with their respective teams for the whole conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235351-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Governors' Cup Finals\nThe 2013 Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Governors' Cup Finals (also known as the 2013 PLDT Telpad PBA Governors' Cup Finals for sponsorship reasons) was the best-of-7 championship series of the 2013 PBA Governors' Cup, and the conclusion of the conference's playoffs. Petron Blaze and San Mig Coffee competed for the 109th championship contested by the league. This was the first time the two teams met in the finals since the 2000 PBA Governors' Cup Finals when the Petron Blaze Boosters (then known as the San Miguel Beermen) defeated the San Mig Coffee Mixers (then known as the Purefoods TJ Hotdogs) in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235351-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA Governors' Cup Finals, Background, Head-to-head matchup\nThe conference head-to-head matchup was on August 31, 2013 at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235352-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA draft\nThe 2013 Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Rookie Draft was an event, which allows teams to draft players from the amateur ranks. The event was held at Midtown Atrium, Robinson Place Manila on November 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235352-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA draft, Draft lottery\nThe lottery determined the team that will obtain the first pick on the draft. The remaining first-round picks and the second-round picks were assigned to teams in reverse order of their cumulative final rankings in the previous season with heavier weight from the results of the Philippine Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 29], "content_span": [30, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235352-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA draft, Draft lottery\nThe lottery was held on October 11, 2013 during the halftime of the Game 1 of the 2013 PBA Governors' Cup Finals at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay. The Air21 Express won the rights to the first overall selection against the GlobalPort Batang Pier. Due to a previous transaction, the draft rights of Air21 belonged to the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel. GlobalPort's drafting rights were also previously traded to San Mig Coffee Mixers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 29], "content_span": [30, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235352-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA draft, Draft, 2nd Round\nNote: Air 21 and Alaska switched places in the 5th and 6th picks prior to an earlier trade agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235352-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA draft, Draft, 4th Round\nNote: GlobalPort (1st pick), Alaska (8th), Rain or Shine (9th) and San Mig Coffee (10th) passed on this round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235352-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA draft, Draft, 6th Round\nNote: Air21 (2nd pick), Barako Bull (3rd), and Talk 'N Text (7th) passed on this round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235352-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 PBA draft, Draft, 7th Round\nNote: Barangay Ginebra (4th pick) passed on this round; Meralco passed its supposed 6th pick in the 8th round to end the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235353-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBZ Zagreb Indoors\nThe 2013 PBZ Zagreb Indoors was an ATP tennis tournament played on hard courts indoors. It was the 8th edition of the PBZ Zagreb Indoors, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place in Zagreb, Croatia from February 2 through February 10, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235353-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PBZ Zagreb Indoors, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235353-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PBZ Zagreb Indoors, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235354-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBZ Zagreb Indoors \u2013 Doubles\nMarcos Baghdatis and Mikhail Youzhny were the defending champions but retired in the second round because of Baghdatis's foot injury. Julian Knowle and Filip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek won the title, defeating Ivan Dodig and Mate Pavi\u0107 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235355-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PBZ Zagreb Indoors \u2013 Singles\nMikhail Youzhny was the defending champion but lost in the semifinals to top-seeded Marin \u010cili\u0107. \u010cili\u0107 went on to win the title by defeating J\u00fcrgen Melzer 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour\nThe 2013 PDC Pro Tour was a series of non-televised darts tournaments organised by the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC). They were the Professional Dart Players Association Players Championships, the UK Open Qualifiers, and the European Tour events. This year there were 32 PDC Pro Tour events \u2013 16 Players Championships, 8 UK Open Qualifiers, and 8 European Tour events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, Prize money\nPrize money for each UK Open Qualifier was \u00a334,600, unchanged from 2012. Prize money for each Players Championship has been increased from \u00a334,600 to \u00a350,000, and the prize money for European Tour events has been increased to \u00a3100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, PDC Pro Tour Card\n128 players were granted Tour Cards, which enabled them to participate in all Players Championships, UK Open Qualifiers and European Tour events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, PDC Pro Tour Card, Q School\nThe PDC Pro Tour Qualifying School took place at the Robin Park Tennis Centre in Wigan from January 17\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, PDC Pro Tour Card, Q School\nA Q School Order of Merit was also created by using the following points system:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, PDC Pro Tour Card, Q School\nTo complete the field of 128 Tour Card Holders, places were allocated down the final Qualifying School Order of Merit. The following players picked up Tour Cards as a result:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, Players Championships\nThere were 16 Players Championship events this year. The first of these was played in Wigan on 4 May 2013 and the last in Wigan on 24 November 2013. The top 32 after all events have been completed will qualify for the 2013 Players Championship Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, UK Open Qualifiers\nThe results from the eight qualifiers shown below were collated to form the UK Open Order of Merit. The top 32 players received entry into the final stages of the 2013 UK Open, with the top 96 (plus ties) entering in the earlier rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, Challenge Tour\nThe PDC Challenge Tour was open to anyone aged between 14 and 25, who wasn't in the top 64 of the PDC Order of Merit. The top two in the Order of Merit received Tour Cards for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, Scandinavian Darts Corporation Pro Tour\nThe Scandinavian Pro Tour had eight events this year, with a total of \u20ac40,000 on offer. The leader of the Order of Merit after four events qualified for the 2013 European Championship. The winner after all eight events earned a place in the 2014 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 58], "content_span": [59, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, Scandinavian Darts Corporation Pro Tour\nReference for the dates, tournament names and venues in the table", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, North American Pro Tour\nThe North American Pro Tour was for players from the USA and Canada. The top player in this ranking got into the 2014 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, North American Pro Tour\nReferences for the dates, tournament names and venues in the table", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, Australian Grand Prix Pro Tour\nThe Australian Grand Prix rankings are calculated from events across Australia. The top player in the rankings automatically qualifies for the 2014 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235356-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC Pro Tour, Other PDC tournaments\nThe PDC also held a number of other tournaments during 2013. These were mainly smaller events with low prize money, and some had eligibility restrictions. All of these tournaments were non-ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts\nThe 2013 Betfair World Cup of Darts was the third edition of the PDC World Cup of Darts which took place between 1\u20133 February 2013 at the Alsterdorfer Sporthalle in Hamburg, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts\nEngland's Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis were the defending champions after defeating Australia's Simon Whitlock and Paul Nicholson in the 2012 final, and they retained their title by defeating the Belgian brothers Ronny and Kim Huybrechts 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Format\n24 countries in the PDC Order of Merit on 1 January after the 2013 PDC World Darts Championship were represented at the 2013 PDC World Cup of Darts. Each nation's top ranked player was joined by the second highest player of that country. For seeding the average rankings of the players was used, with the top eight seeds heading each of the eight groups of three countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Format\nThe 24 countries were separated into eight groups of three. Each team played one best of nine leg match against the other two in their group. The top two from each group advanced to the last 16 where the tournament became a straight knockout bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Format\nGroup matches and Last 16: best of nine legs doubles. Quarter-finals and semi-finals: 2 best of seven legs singles matches. Should the tie be 1\u20131, then a third and final doubles tie will be played. Final: Up to the four best of seven legs singles matches. First team to 3 points wins the title. Should the tie be 2\u20132, then a fifth and final doubles tie will be played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Teams and seeding\nThe 24 teams were divided into three pools based on their rankings, with one team from each pool assigned to each group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Teams and seeding\nOn 25 January, it was announced that the Philippines team of Lourence Ilagan and Christian Perez had to withdraw from the event due to travel problems and were replaced by Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Results, Group stage\nIf teams were tied on number of wins, the tie-breakers were leg difference and then group stage average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Results, Quarter-finals\nTwo best of seven legs singles matches. If the scores were tied, a best of seven legs doubles match settled the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Results, Semi-finals\nTwo best of seven legs singles matches. If the scores were tied, a best of seven legs doubles match settled the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Results, Final\nThree match wins were needed to win the title. Two best of seven legs singles matches were played, followed by reverse singles matches. If the score had been level after that, a best of seven legs doubles match would have been played to determine the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235357-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Cup of Darts, Television coverage\nThe tournament was broadcast by Sky Sports in the UK and Ireland, RTL 7 in the Netherlands and Fox Sports in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship\nThe 2013 Ladbrokes World Darts Championship was the 20th World Championship organised by the Professional Darts Corporation since it separated from the British Darts Organisation. The event took place at the Alexandra Palace, London between 14 December 2012 and 1 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship\nAdrian Lewis was the defending champion having won the last two editions of the tournament, but was beaten by Michael van Gerwen in the quarter-finals, thus ending Lewis' 15 match unbeaten run at the World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship\nPhil Taylor aged 52 claimed his 16th and last World Championship title with a 7\u20134 victory over Michael van Gerwen in the final, despite trailing 0\u20132 and then 2\u20134 after six sets. Taylor won five sets in a row for the win. Van Gerwen averaged between 105 and 108 in the early sets but as his average never dropped, Taylor's average levelled off at 103 as did his ascendancy over a rival he admitted in the post-match interview was 'hard to crack'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship\nWith his 2013 PDC World Championship win, Taylor became the first winner of the newly created Sid Waddell Trophy, named after the legendary darts commentator who died of bowel cancer on 11 August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Format and qualifiers\nThe televised stages featured 72 players. The top 32 players in the PDC Order of Merit on 26 November 2012 were seeded for the tournament. They were joined by the 16 highest non-qualified players from the Pro Tour Order of Merit, based on the 33 events played on the PDC Pro Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Format and qualifiers\nThese 48 players were joined by two PDPA qualifiers (as determined at a PDPA Qualifying event held in Barnsley on 26 November 2012), the highest ranked non-qualified player on the PDC Youth Tour Order of Merit, and 21 international players: the four highest names in the European Order of Merit not already qualified, and 17 further international qualifiers to be determined by the PDC and PDPA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Format and qualifiers\nSome of the international players, such as the four from the European Order of Merit, and the top American and Australian players were entered straight into the first round, while others, having won qualifying events in their countries, were entered into the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Prize money\nThe 2013 World Championship featured a prize fund of \u00a31,000,000 \u2013 the same as in the previous three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Draw\nThe draw for the Round of 64 took place on 4 December 2012, the preliminary round pairings were published on 26 November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Draw, Preliminary round\nThe winner played his first round match the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 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 the Preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 74], "content_span": [75, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Broadcasting\nThe tournament was available in the following countries on these channels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235358-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship, Broadcasting\nAdditionally, the semi-finals and final were broadcast in 3D in the United Kingdom and Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235359-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship PDPA Qualifier\nThe 2013 PDC World Darts Championship PDPA Qualifier was a darts event that took place on November 26. Stuart Kellett won the event defeating John Bowles 5-1 in an all unseeded final. Kellett started in the first round while Bowles started in the preliminary round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235359-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Darts Championship PDPA Qualifier, 2013 PDC World Darts Championship\nWinner Stuart Kellett lost in round one to 19th seed Dutchman Vincent van der Voort by three sets without reply while runner up John Bowles won his preliminary round match beating Spanish qualifier Carlos Rodriguez by four legs to two and was then involved in two exciting matches. In round one, he defeated 29th seed Englishman Jamie Caven by three sets to two but in round two he lost to 4th seed Scotsman Gary Anderson by four sets to three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 83], "content_span": [84, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235360-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Youth Championship\nThe 2013 PDC World Youth Championship was the third edition of the PDC World Youth Championship, a tournament organised by the Professional Darts Corporation for darts players aged between 14 and 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235360-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Youth Championship\nThe knock-out stages from the last 64 to the semi-finals were played in Barnsley on 22 March 2013. The final took place on 16 May 2013, before the final of the 2013 Premier League Darts, which was shown live on Sky Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235360-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Youth Championship\nJames Hubbard was the defending champion, but he was knocked out in the first round by Matthew Dicken. Michael Smith and Ricky Evans contested the final at The O2 Arena, London, with Smith winning 6-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235360-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC World Youth Championship, Qualification\nThe tournament featured 64 players. The top 52 players in the PDC Youth Tour Order of Merit automatically qualified for the tournament, with the top eight players being seeded. They were joined by 12 international qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235361-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC-E\n2013 PDC-E is a fictitious near-Earth object developed by Don Yeomans and others as the target of a table top emergency response drill at the International Academy of Astronautics 2013 Planetary Defense Conference. The drill was intended to give astronomers and other experts in asteroid and comet impact studies practice in responding to a hypothetical imminent impact with global consequences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235361-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC-E\nThe name 2013 PDC-E is a parody on minor planet naming conventions, PDC for Planetary Defense Conference, -E for exercise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235361-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC-E\nThe object is modeled after asteroid 367943 Duende, known as 2012 DA14 at the time. It is notionally a 300-meter-diameter stony asteroid that is part of the Aten dynamical family in 2013, when it is hypothetically observed by the Pan-STARRS telescope at a magnitude of 22.5. It migrates to the Apollo dynamical family over time. 2013 PDC-E is predicted in the exercise to pass through a dynamical keyhole of 1.2\u00a0km diameter in 2023 with a probability of 8%. If it did, it would strike Earth in 2028 with an impact velocity of 12.4\u00a0km/s, and an impact energy of approximately 700 megatons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235361-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PDC-E\nThe exercise featured a hit on the French Riviera. It was repeated with different targets and conditions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season\nThe 2013 USL Premier Development League season was the 19th season of the PDL. The regular season began on May 4 with 3 matches and ended on July 21 with 9 matches. The regular season was followed by a postseason tournament of conference winners to determine the league's champion. Four teams were added to the league and 13 teams dropped, bringing the total number of teams in the league to 64 for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, Standings\nNote: The first tie-breaker in PDL standings is head-to-head results between teams tied on points, which is why some teams with inferior goal differences finish ahead in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, Conference Championships, Divisional Playoffs\nFive of the divisions have additional matches in order for teams to qualify for the conference championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, Conference Championships, Divisional Playoffs\nIn the Great Lakes Division, the 2nd and 3rd place teams qualify for a play-in match. Winner advances with the 1st place team to the conference final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, Conference Championships, Divisional Playoffs\nIn the Northwest Division, the 2nd and 3rd place teams qualify for a play-in match. Winner advances with the 1st place team to the conference final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, Conference Championships, Divisional Playoffs\nIn the Eastern Conference, the 1st place team in the Mid-Atlantic Division automatically qualifies for the conference final four. The 2nd and 3rd place teams in the Mid-Atlantic Division and the 1st and 2nd place teams in the Northeast Division and the South Atlantic Divisions play each other to qualify for the conference final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, All-League and All-Conference Teams, Eastern Conference\nF: Pete Caringi (BAL) *, Carl Haworth (OTT) *, Dwayne Reid (OCN)M: Brandt Bronico (CAR), Brayan Martinez (JER), Jason Plumhoff (REA) * D: Shaun Foster (OTT), Damion Lowe (REA) *, Gilbert Manier (GPP), Hugh Roberts (BAL)G: Chad Bush (OTT) *", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 72], "content_span": [73, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, All-League and All-Conference Teams, Central Conference\nF: Moses Danto (WSA), Oliver Gore (RCO), Zach Steinberger (MIB)M: Bryan Ciesiulka (CHI), Jordan Green (KCB), Matt Walker (MIB)D: Brandon Fricke (DSM) *, Tyler Hemming (LON), Nolan Intermoia (THU), Axel Sj\u00f6berg (THU) * G: Tyson Farago (WSA)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 72], "content_span": [73, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, All-League and All-Conference Teams, Western Conference\nF: Niall Cousens (VAN), Brett Levis (VIC), Tyler Reinhart (FRE)M: Zach Barnes (POR), Paul Islas (FRE) *, Bobby Jhutty (VAN) * D: Derrick Bassi (VAN), Chris Brundage (SEA), Tyler Hughes (VIC), Trevor Spurgeon (FRE)G: David Meves (POR)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 72], "content_span": [73, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235362-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 PDL season, All-League and All-Conference Teams, Southern Conference\nF: Adam Black (OKC), Tyler Blackwood (ORL), Kris Tyrpak (AUS) * M: Itode Fubara (ORL), Jack McVey (TAM), Tony Rocha (AUS)D: Taian de Souza (PAN) *, Max Gunderson (AUS), Walter Kromholz (HOU), Felipe Souza (LAR)G: Devin Cook (AUS)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 73], "content_span": [74, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235363-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PEI Tankard\nThe 2013 PEI Tankard, the Prince Edward Island men's curling championship, was held from February 6 to 12 at the Crapaud Community Curling Club in Crapaud, Prince Edward Island. The winner of the Tankard, Team Eddie MacKenzie represented Prince Edward Island at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235363-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PEI Tankard, Postponements\nDue to the February 2013 nor'easter that hit the island, games scheduled for February 9th and 10th were postponed until the 11th and 12th. The event was originally scheduled to end on February 10th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235364-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PFF League\nThe 2013 PFF League (PFFL) was the 10th season of second tier of Pakistan Football Federation. The season started on 29 November 2013 and concluded on 28 December 2013. The event took place in Lahore, Layyah and Karachi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235365-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PFF National Men's U-23 Championship\nThe 2013 PFF National Men's U-23 Championship (known as the PFF-Suzuki U-23 Championship for sponsorship reasons) is the second edition of a football tournament in the Philippines organized by the Philippine Football Federation (PFF) and Japanese automaker Suzuki. It is the national competition of Men's Under-23 players representing the member associations of Philippine Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235365-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PFF National Men's U-23 Championship, Host\nOn March 19, it was reported that the Final Qualifying Round will be held at Perdices Stadium in Dumaguete City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235365-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PFF National Men's U-23 Championship, Host\nAfter a month-long delay, the regional qualifying and semi-final rounds of the 2013 PFF Suzuki Under 23 Championship resumed on May 17 until May 28 in Dumaguete City. The one-game finals showdown played on May 30 at 2:30 pm in the same venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship\nThe 2013 PGA Championship was the 95th PGA Championship, played August 8\u201311 at the East Course of Oak Hill Country Club in Pittsford, New York, a suburb southeast of Rochester. Jason Dufner won his first major title, two strokes ahead of runner-up Jim Furyk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Venue\nThis was the third PGA Championship at the East Course at Oak Hill; Jack Nicklaus won in 1980 and Shaun Micheel in 2003. It also hosted three U.S. Opens, in 1956, 1968, and 1989, and the Ryder Cup in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\nThe following qualification criteria were used to select the field. Each player is listed according to the first category by which he qualified with additional categories in which he qualified shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n1. All former PGA ChampionsRich Beem, Keegan Bradley (6,8,9), P\u00e1draig Harrington, Martin Kaymer (9), Davis Love III, Rory McIlroy (2,6,8,9,10), Shaun Micheel, Phil Mickelson (3,4,8,9,10), Vijay Singh, David Toms, Tiger Woods (6,8,9,10), Yang Yong-eun", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\nThe following former champions did not compete: Paul Azinger, Jack Burke Jr., Steve Elkington, Dow Finsterwald, Raymond Floyd, Doug Ford, Al Geiberger, Wayne Grady, David Graham, Hubert Green, Don January, John Mahaffey, Larry Nelson, Bobby Nichols, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Nick Price, Jeff Sluman, Dave Stockton, Hal Sutton, Lee Trevino, Bob Tway, Lanny Wadkins", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n2. Last five U.S. Open ChampionsLucas Glover, Graeme McDowell (6,8,9,10), Justin Rose (6,8,9,10), Webb Simpson (8,9)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n3. Last five Masters Champions\u00c1ngel Cabrera (8), Charl Schwartzel (8), Adam Scott (6,8,10), Bubba Watson (6,8,9)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n4. Last five British Open ChampionsStewart Cink, Darren Clarke, Ernie Els (8)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n6. 15 low scorers and ties in the 2012 PGA ChampionshipTim Clark (8), Ben Curtis, Jamie Donaldson, Peter Hanson (9), David Lynn (8), Geoff Ogilvy, Carl Pettersson (8), Ian Poulter (8,9,10), Steve Stricker (8,9)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n7. 20 low scorers in the 2013 PGA Professional National ChampionshipJ. C. Anderson, Danny Balin, Mark Brown, Caine Fitzgerald, Bob Gaus, Kirk Hanefeld, Rob Labritz, Jeffrey Martin, Dave McNabb, David Muttitt, Rod Perry, Ryan Polzin, Lee Rhind, Mark Sheftic, Sonny Skinner, Mike Small, Stuart Smith, Jeff Sorenson, Bob Sowards, Chip Sullivan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 31]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\nTop 70 leaders in official money standings from the 2012 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational to the 2013 RBC Canadian OpenBae Sang-moon (10), Charlie Beljan (10), Jonas Blixt (10), Roberto Castro, Kevin Chappell, Jason Day, Brendon de Jonge, Graham DeLaet, Luke Donald (9), Jason Dufner (9), Ken Duke (10), Harris English (10), Rickie Fowler, Jim Furyk (9), Sergio Garc\u00eda (9,10), Robert Garrigus, Brian Gay (10), Bill Haas (10), Russell Henley (10), Charley Hoffman, Billy Horschel (10), Charles Howell III, John Huh, Dustin Johnson (9,10), Zach Johnson (9), Chris Kirk, Jason Kokrak, Matt Kuchar (9,10), Martin Laird (10), Marc Leishman, David Lingmerth, Hunter Mahan, John Merrick (10), Ryan Moore (10), Ryan Palmer, Scott Piercy, D. A. Points (10), Brandt Snedeker (9,10), Jordan Spieth (10), Kevin Stadler, Scott Stallings, Kyle Stanley, Henrik Stenson, Kevin Streelman (10), Chris Stroud, Josh Teater, Michael Thompson (10), Bo Van Pelt, Jimmy Walker, Nick Watney (10), Boo Weekley (10), Lee Westwood (9)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 1031]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n9. Members of the United States and European 2012 Ryder Cup teams (provided they are ranked in the top 100 in the Official World Golf Ranking on July 28)Nicolas Colsaerts, Paul Lawrie, Francesco Molinari", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n10. Winners of tournaments co-sponsored or approved by the PGA Tour since the 2012 PGA ChampionshipWoody Austin, Scott Brown, Derek Ernst, Tommy Gainey, Gary Woodland", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n11. Vacancies are filled by the first available player from the list of alternates (those below 70th place in official money standings). Matt Every", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Field\n12. The PGA of America reserves the right to invite additional players not included in the categories listed aboveKiradech Aphibarnrat, Thomas Bj\u00f8rn, Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Paul Casey, K. J. Choi, George Coetzee, Gonzalo Fern\u00e1ndez-Casta\u00f1o, Marcus Fraser, Hiroyuki Fujita, Stephen Gallacher, Branden Grace, Luke Guthrie, Mikko Ilonen, Ryo Ishikawa, Freddie Jacobson, Scott Jamieson, Miguel \u00c1ngel Jim\u00e9nez, Brooks Koepka, Pablo Larraz\u00e1bal, Shane Lowry, Joost Luiten, Matteo Manassero, Hideki Matsuyama, Paul McGinley, Alex Nor\u00e9n, Thorbj\u00f8rn Olesen, Richie Ramsay, Brett Rumford, John Senden, Marcel Siem, Richard Sterne, Thongchai Jaidee, Peter Uihlein, Jaco van Zyl, Marc Warren, Tom Watson, Bernd Wiesberger, Danny Willett, Chris Wood", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Round summaries, First round\nJim Furyk and Adam Scott shot 5-under-par 65s and were tied for the lead after the first round. Rain suspended play for 71 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nJason Dufner posted a 7-under-par 63 to break the Oak Hill Country Club course record, which was held by Ben Hogan and Curtis Strange and tied in the same round by Webb Simpson. He held a two-stroke lead over Furyk, Scott, and Matt Kuchar. Woody Austin suffered a four-stroke penalty for carrying too many clubs in his bag for the first two holes and missed the cut by one stroke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nFuryk shot a 68 to take the lead going into the final round. Dufner was one shot behind, and Henrik Stenson was two shots behind. The low round of the day went to Dustin Johnson, who shot a 5-under-par 65 to move into a tie for ninth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nJim Furyk went into the final round with a one-shot lead at nine-under-par over Jason Dufner, but was tied for the lead when Dufner birdied the fourth hole. At the fifth hole, Dufner took the lead outright with a birdie to go 10-under-par, but Furyk regained a share of the lead with a birdie of his own on six. At No. 8, Dufner took the lead with a birdie to move to 11-under-par, and from that point onwards he was the sole leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235366-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nFuryk bogeyed the ninth hole and from that point until the end of the championship the margin was affixed at two strokes. At No. 16, both golfers made birdie to go to 12-under and 10-under-par respectively, however at the subsequent two holes they made bogeys to finish out their respective rounds at 10-under and 8-under-par. Dufner shot a two-under-par round of 68 to Furyk's one-over-par, 71. Henrik Stenson, who started the day two shots out of the lead, pulled within one stroke after eagling the fourth hole, but never really threatened the leaders after that and finished the tournament in solo third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235367-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Ben76266 (talk | contribs) at 23:15, 19 January 2020 (\u2192\u200eSchedule). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235367-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour\nThe 2013 PGA Tour was the 98th season of the U.S.-based golf tour, and the 46th since separating from the PGA of America. The season began on January 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235367-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour\nThe season ran from January to September, the shorter-than-usual schedule aiding in the transition from the long-running January\u2013December schedule to the new wraparound October\u2013September schedule. It was the last season to be held entirely in one calendar year; the 2014 season would begin in October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235367-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour, Schedule\nThe following table lists the main season events for 2013. \"Date\" is the ending date of each event. The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names are the number of wins they had on tour up to and including that event. For an explanation of the \"Status\" column, see PGA Tour event categories. OWGR is the number of Official World Golf Ranking points awarded for that tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235367-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour, Schedule\nThe 2013 schedule included 40 tournaments, and ran from January 4 to October 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235367-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour, Schedule, Unofficial events\nThe following events did not carry FedEx Cup points or official money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235368-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour Canada\nThe 2013 PGA Tour Canada season runs from June 6 to September 15 and consists of nine official golf tournaments. This is the 44th season of PGA Tour Canada (previously known as the Canadian Professional Golf Tour), and the first under the \"PGA Tour Canada\" name. On October 18, 2012, the Canadian Tour and the U.S. PGA Tour announced that they had reached an agreement by which the PGA Tour would take over the Canadian circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235368-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour Canada, Order of Merit leaders\nThe top five players on the Order of Merit earned Web.com Tour cards for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235369-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour Latinoam\u00e9rica\nThe 2013 PGA Tour Latinoam\u00e9rica was the second season of PGA Tour Latinoam\u00e9rica, having converted from the Tour de las Am\u00e9ricas which ceased to operate in 2012. PGA Tour Latinoam\u00e9rica is operated and run by the PGA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235369-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour Latinoam\u00e9rica, Schedule changes\nThe 2013 season was the first full season on the tour with the 2012 season having only operated for four months in 2012. The 2013 schedule was divided into two distinct swings, the first with events played from March through May, followed by the remainder of events in the October through December. The number of events increased from 11 in 2012 to 14 with, new events for the 2013 season were, Abierto Mexicano de Golf, Abierto del Centro and Abierto de Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235369-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour Latinoam\u00e9rica, Schedule\nThe table below shows the 2013 schedule. \"Date\" is the ending date of each event. The tour added three events to the schedule for the 2013 season. The season is also split into two sections; seven events in the first half of the year (March to June), and seven events in the latter half (October to December). The tour also expanded by two countries, introducing tournaments in Uruguay and Chile. The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names are the number of wins they had on tour up to and including that event. OWGR is the number of Official World Golf Ranking points awarded for that tournament. All tournaments have a purse of US$150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235369-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour Latinoam\u00e9rica, Order of Merit\nIn 2013 as in 2012 the top 5 players on the tour, known as 'Los Cinco', earned status to play on the Web.com Tour for the 2014 season. In 2013 the top 5 finishes on the order of merit qualifying for the Web.com Tour were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235370-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour of Australasia\nThe 2013 PGA Tour of Australasia was a series of men's professional golf events played mainly in Australia. The main tournaments on the PGA Tour of Australasia were played in the southern summer so they were split between the first and last months of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235370-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PGA Tour of Australasia, Tournament results\nThe table below shows the 2013 schedule. It only lists official money events on the tour. The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of PGA Tour of Australasia events he had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for PGA Tour of Australasia members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235371-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PIFL season\nThe 2013 Professional Indoor Football League season was the second season of the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). The regular season began March 8, 2013, and ended on June 22, 2013. Each team played a 12-game schedule. The top 4 teams in the regular season standings commenced the playoffs on July 1. The final was played July 8, with the Alabama Hammers defeating the Richmond Raiders to win their first league championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235371-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PIFL season, Pre-season\nThe Lehigh Valley Steelhawks joined the league, after playing two seasons in the Indoor Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235371-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PIFL season, Regular season\nThe Alabama vs. Louisiana game scheduled for May 25 was cancelled after the Swashbucklers declared bankruptcy. The Swashbucklers played their final three road games as scheduled, however the Alabama game was not made up, as it did not have an effect on playoff seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235372-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PJ10\n2013 PJ10 is a Near-Earth asteroid that was discovered on 4 August 2013 in Observatorio Astron\u00f3mico de La Sagra, with an estimated diameter of about 50 meters. At 02.18 GMT, 4 August 2013, this asteroid flew at a minimum distance from the Earth (371.4 thousand kilometers), accounting for 0.96 average radius of the lunar orbit, but until 2180 it will not approach the Earth closer than 3.2 million miles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235373-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PLFA season\nThe 2013 season of the Polish American Football League was the eighth season played by the american football leagues in Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235373-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PLFA season\nRegular season of the Topliga took place between March 23 and June 23, 2013. The Polish champion was determined in the play-off final - the VIII SuperFinal PLFA (known as the Polish Bowl VIII). The Giants Wroc\u0142aw beat the Warsaw Eagles in the championship game 29\u201313 hosted at the National Stadium in Warsaw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235374-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PNGNRL season\nThe 2013 Papua New Guinea National Rugby League season (or for sponsorship reasons, the 2013 Digicel Cup), is the 24th season of rugby league in Papua New Guinea. The season was won by the Port Moresby Vipers who defeated the Goroka Lahanis, who won the minor premiership, in the grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235375-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PSA World Series\nThe PSA World Series 2013 is a series of men's squash tournaments which are part of the Professional Squash Association (PSA) World Tour for the 2013 squash season. The PSA World Series tournaments are some of the most prestigious events on the men's tour. The best-performing players in the World Series events qualify for the annual 2013 PSA World Series Finals tournament. Ramy Ashour won his first PSA World Series Squash Finals trophy, beating Mohamed El Shorbagy in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235375-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PSA World Series, PSA World Series Ranking Points\nPSA World Series events also have a separate World Series ranking. Points for this are calculated on a cumulative basis after each World Series event. The top eight players at the end of the calendar year are then eligible to play in the PSA World Series Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235375-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PSA World Series, World Series Standings 2013\nBold \u2013 The first eight players present for the final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235376-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PSA World Series Finals\nThe 2013 PSA World Series Finals is the men's edition of the 2013 PSA World Series Finals (Prize money\u00a0: $110 000). The top eight players in the PSA World Series 2013 were qualified for the event, which took place at the Westwood Club in Richmond, Virginia in the United States from March 15 to March 19, 2014. Ramy Ashour won his first PSA World Series Finals trophy, beating Mohamed El Shorbagy in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235377-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PSA World Tour\nThe PSA World Tour 2013 is the international squash tour organised circuit organized by the Professional Squash Association (PSA) for the 2013 squash season. The most important tournament in the series is the World Championship held in Manchester in England. The tour features three categories of regular events, World Series, which feature the highest prize money and the best fields, International and Challenger. The Tour is concluded by the PSA World Series Finals, the end of season championship for the top 8 rated players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235377-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PSA World Tour, Retirements\nFollowing is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the PSA World Rankings top 30 for at least one month) who announced their retirement from professional squash, became inactive, or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235378-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PSL Grand Prix Conference\nThe 2013 PSL Grand Prix was the second tournament of the Philippine Super Liga for its maiden season. It was held from November 10, 2013 to December 14, 2013. For this conference (women's), each team was allowed to include two import players in the line up. The TMS-Philippine Army Lady Troopers clinched the women's championship, thereby winning all two conferences of the 2013 PSL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235378-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PSL Grand Prix Conference\nA men's division was also introduced with the PLDT myDSL Speed Boosters emerging as the first men's champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235379-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PSL Invitational Conference\nThe 2013 PSL Invitational was the inaugural tournament of the Philippine Super Liga of professional volleyball for its maiden season. It was held from July 7, 2013 to July 28, 2013. The TMS-Philippine Army Lady Troopers emerged as the first PSL champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235380-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Cup\nThe 2013 PTT Cup is a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It is the 1st edition of the tournament which is part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Istanbul, Turkey between 8 and 14 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235380-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235380-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as alternates into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 56], "content_span": [57, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235381-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Cup \u2013 Doubles\nJames Cluskey and Fabrice Martin won the final 3\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20135] against Brydan Klein and Ruan Roelofse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235382-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Cup \u2013 Singles\nBenjamin Becker won the title after Dudi Sela retired at 6\u20131, 2\u20136, 3\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235383-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Pattaya Open\nThe 2013 PTT Pattaya Open was a women's professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 22nd edition of the PTT Pattaya Open and was part of the International category on the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Dusit Thani Hotel in Pattaya, Thailand from January 26 through February 3, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235384-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Pattaya Open \u2013 Doubles\nSania Mirza and Anastasia Rodionova were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Kimiko Date-Krumm and Casey Dellacqua won the final against Akgul Amanmuradova and Alexandra Panova with the score 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235385-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Pattaya Open \u2013 Singles\nDaniela Hantuchov\u00e1 was the two-time defending champion but retired against Nina Bratchikova in the second round. Maria Kirilenko became the new champion after defeating Sabine Lisicki 5\u20137, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20131) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235386-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Thailand Open\nThe 2013 PTT Thailand Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 11th edition of the Thailand Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Impact Arena in Bangkok, Thailand, from September 21 through September 29, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235386-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Thailand Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235386-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Thailand Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235387-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Thailand Open \u2013 Doubles\nLu Yen-hsun and Danai Udomchoke were the defending champions, but lost in the quarterfinals to Jamie Murray and John Peers. Murray and Peers went on to win the title, defeating Tomasz Bednarek and Johan Brunstr\u00f6m in the final, 6\u20133, 3\u20136, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235388-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 PTT Thailand Open \u2013 Singles\nRichard Gasquet was the defending champion, but lost to Milos Raonic in the semifinals. Raonic went on to win the title, defeating Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235389-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Pacific Life Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was played March 13\u201316 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Paradise, Nevada. The UCLA Bruins, regular season champions, were named as the No. 1 seed team. Oregon won the tournament and received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament. Oregon defeated UCLA for the tournament championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235389-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nTeams were seeded by conference record, with ties broken by record between the tied teams followed by record against the regular-season champion, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235389-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Hall of Honor inductees\nInduction for the Hall of Honor on March 16, 2013 were: Jason Gardner (Arizona), Dennis Hamilton (Arizona State), Shareef Abdur-Rahim (California), Cliff Meely (Colorado), Chuck Rask (Oregon), Charlie Sitton (Oregon State), Ron Tomsic (Stanford), Lucius Allen (UCLA), Forrest Twogood (USC), Keith Van Horn (Utah), Nate Robinson (Washington) and Jim Keen (Washington State).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235390-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference football season\nThe 2013 Pac-12 Conference football season began on August 29, 2013 with USC at Hawaii. The conference's first game was played on September 7, 2013 with Washington State winning over USC, and the final game was the Pac-12 Championship Game on December 7, 2013. This is the third season for the conference as a 12-team league. The Sagarin Ratings had the Pac-12 as the best conference in the nation top to bottom in the final rating of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235390-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference football season, Previous season\nThe Second Pac-12 Championship Game was held on Friday, November 20, 2012. Stanford, the North Division Champions, defeated UCLA, the South Division Champions, to claim their thirteenth conference title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235390-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference football season, Previous season\nThe Stanford Cardinal ended the regular season with an 11\u20132 record which earned the team a berth in the Rose Bowl, where they defeated Wisconsin for their first Rose Bowl win since 1972. Oregon won eleven games and lost to Stanford and earned an at-large BCS berth. The Ducks defeated the Big 12 co-champion Kansas State in the Fiesta Bowl. Arizona beat Nevada and Arizona State beat Navy while Washington was defeated by Boise State, UCLA was defeated by Baylor, Oregon State was defeated by Texas, and USC was defeated by Georgia Tech in non-BCS bowls. The Pac-12 went 4\u20134 in all bowls, with a 2\u20130 mark in BCS bowls and 2\u20134 in non-BCS bowls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235390-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference football season, Players of the week\nFollowing each week's games, Pac-12 conference officials select the players of the week from the conference's teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235390-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference football season, Home game attendance\nSellout Game played at CenturyLink Field in Seattle. Pac-12 Championship Game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235391-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Pac-12 Conference men's soccer season was the 14th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235392-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game\nThe 2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game was played on Saturday, December 7, 2013 at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona, to determine the champion of the Pac-12 Conference in football for the 2013 season. North Division champion Stanford defeated South Division champion Arizona State to win their second consecutive Pac-12 title. The ESPN television networks broadcast the game, beginning at 4:45 PM PT/5:45 PM MT. Stanford went on to represent the Pac-12 Conference in the 2014 Rose Bowl Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235392-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game, History\nThe game was the third edition of the Pac-12 Football Championship Game. The previous season, the Stanford Cardinal defeated the UCLA Bruins 27\u201324 to win the conference title and represent the Pac-12 in the 2013 Rose Bowl Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235392-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game, Teams, Stanford\nFor the fourth season in a row, the Cardinal won 10 or more games. Led by LB Trent Murphy and LB Shayne Skov, the defense entered the game allowing just 87.3 yards rushing (3rd in FBS) and averaging 2.92 sacks (tied for 11th in FBS). Offensively, Stanford was led by RB Tyler Gaffney, who gained 1,485 yards this season for 17 touchdowns; and WR Ty Montgomery, who gained 161.9 all-purpose yards per game and scored 12 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235392-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game, Teams, Arizona State\nArizona State made its debut Pac-12 Championship game, having achieved its first 10-win season since 2007. During the regular season, the team outscored its opponents by 84 points and posted a 7-0 record when playing at home in Sun Devil Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235392-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game, Scoring summary\n1st quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Tyler Gaffney 69-yard run (Jordan Williamson kick); ASU \u2013 D. J. Foster 51-yard run (Zane Gonzalez kick); STAN \u2013 Gaffney 1-yard run (Williamson kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235392-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game, Scoring summary\n2nd quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Ty Montgomery 22-yard run (Williamson kick); STAN \u2013 Gaffney 1-yard run (Williamson kick); ASU \u2013 Foster 65-yard pass from Taylor Kelly (Gonzalez kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235392-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pac-12 Football Championship Game, Scoring summary\n4th quarter scoring: STAN \u2013 Montgomery 24-yard pass from Kevin Hogan (Williamson kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235393-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific League Climax Series\nThe 2013 Pacific League Climax Series (PLCS) consisted of two consecutive series, Stage 1 being a best-of-three series and Stage 2 being a best-of-six with the top seed being awarded a one-win advantage. The winner of the series advanced to the 2013 Japan Series, where they competed against the 2013 Central League Climax Series winner. The top three regular-season finishers played in the two series. The PLCS began on with the first game of Stage 1 on October 12 and ended with the final game of Stage 2 on October 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235394-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Mini Games\nThe 2013 Pacific Mini Games was the ninth edition of these Mini Games. They were held in Mata Utu in Wallis and Futuna from 2 to 12 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235394-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Mini Games, Sports\nEight sports were contested for these games. Number of events for each sport is in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235394-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Mini Games, Medal table\nKey:NOTE: This ranking does not include the six events in sailing, due to final results not present at the official website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235395-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Netball Series\nThe 2013 Pacific Netball series was held in Samoa between 4-6 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235396-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Rugby Cup\nThe 2013 Pacific Rugby Cup was the eighth edition of the Pacific Rugby Cup competition. The tournament featured national 'A' teams from Fiji, Samoa, and Tonga, and the \u00a0Junior Japan team which was added for the 2013 tournament. The format involved touring to play against Super Rugby development teams from Australia and New Zealand, and was intended include a round robin stage between the four core teams, but this leg of the tournament was cancelled to allow preparation for the end-of-year internationals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235396-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Rugby Cup, Table, Core Teams\nClassification:Teams standings are calculated as follows:Most log points accumulated from all matchesMost log points accumulated in matches between tied teamsHighest difference between points scored for and against accumulated from all matchesMost points scored accumulated from all matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235397-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Rugby League Test\nThe 2013 Pacific Rugby League International was created in advance of the international 2013 Rugby League World Cup campaigns played between Samoa and Tonga. Tonga won the test match 36\u20134. Tonga's Samisoni Langi won the player of the match award, scoring 16 points from two attempts and four conversions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235397-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Rugby League Test\nControversy occurred late in the match, as the game was ended before Langi had the chance to convert the final try because fans invaded the pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235397-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Rugby League Test\nBoth teams selected new players, with the most experienced players appearing between 3-8 times. The most experienced players in the test match were Tonga's Richard Fa'aoso and Etu Uaisele who both made 8 previous appearances. Samoa's most experienced player was Ben Roberts who made 3 previous appearances. All players were contracted to NRL clubs (though some were still playing in the NYC, except for Tongan winger Etu Uaisele who played for the Wyong Roos in the New South Wales Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235397-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Rugby League Test, Match details, ANZAC test\nThe 2013 ANZAC test (also known as the VB Test due to sponsorship by Victoria Bitter) was the 14th annual Anzac test, and was the first time the Australian Kangaroos played at Canberra Stadium and in the Australia's capital city. They defeated New Zealand 32-12 in the test match played on 19 April 2013 before a crowd of 25,628.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235397-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific Rugby League Test, October matches\nPacific nations participated in four matches before the 2013 Rugby League World Cup in Europe. Scotland played Papua New Guinea at Featherstone, New Zealand played the Cook Islands in Doncaster and England A played Samoa at Salford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season\nThe 2013 Pacific hurricane season was the first to see twenty named storms since 2009 but also had the ninth fewest ACE units on record, as many of the storms were weak and short-lived. The season officially began on May\u00a015 in the Eastern Pacific and started on June\u00a01 in the Central Pacific. Both ended on November\u00a030. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the eastern Pacific basin. However, the formation of a storm is possible at any time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season\nThe second storm of the season, Hurricane Barbara, brought widespread heavy rains to much of Southwestern Mexico and Central America. Damage estimates from the storm range from $50 to $356 million (2013 USD); four people were killed and four others are reportedly missing. In addition to Barbara, Hurricane Cosme killed three people despite remaining far offshore the Mexican coast. Hurricane Erick also brought slight effects to the region as well, killing two people. Later that month, Tropical Storm Flossie threatened to become the first storm to strike Hawaii in 20 years, causing minimal damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season\nIvo and Juliette both threatened Baja California Sur, and the former triggered flash floods across the Southwestern United States. In mid-September, Hurricane Manuel killed at least 169 people in Mexico, and was responsible for significant damage to the western coast and the area around Acapulco. In late October, Hurricane Raymond became the strongest storm and only major hurricane of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nOn May\u00a021, the Central Pacific Hurricane Center (CPHC) released its forecast for tropical activity across the Central Pacific during 2013. In its report, the organization predicted a 70 percent chance of a below-average season, a 25 percent chance of a near-average season, and a 5 percent chance of an above-average season, equating to 1\u20133 tropical cyclones across the basin. An average season yields 4\u20135 tropical cyclones. This forecast was based primarily on the expectation of Neutral El Ni\u00f1o\u2013Southern Oscillation conditions and a continuation of the positive Atlantic multidecadal oscillation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nTwo days later, the Climate Prediction Center (CPC) issued its forecast for tropical activity across the East Pacific during 2013. With near or below average sea surface temperatures in the eastern equatorial Pacific and a continuation of the climate pattern responsible for the ongoing era of low Pacific hurricane activity that began in 1995, the organization called for a 55 percent chance of a below-average season, a 35 percent chance of a near-average season, and a 10 percent chance of an above-average season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nIn total, the CPC predicted 11\u201316 named storms, 5\u20138 hurricanes, and 1\u20134 major hurricanes; an average season yields 15.4 named storms, 8.4 hurricanes, and 3.9 major hurricanes. Both the CPHC and CPC stressed the importance of being prepared prior to the start of the season, noting that significant tropical cyclones can occur even in below-average seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index for the 2013 Pacific hurricane season in total is 75.2625 units (68.81 units in the Eastern Pacific and 6.4525 units in the Central Pacific).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe season's first tropical storm formed on May\u00a015, coinciding with the official start of the Pacific hurricane season. On average, a tropical cyclone develops in May in the eastern Pacific every other year. The formation of Barbara in late May marked only the fifth time since 1949 that two tropical storms formed during the month, with the other seasons being 1956, 1984, 2007, 2012, and 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Alvin\nA tropical wave was first observed over the southeastern Caribbean Sea on May\u00a04. The wave entered the East Pacific a few days later, where atmospheric conditions allowed for gradual development. Curved bands of convection developed around a defined center early on May\u00a015, leading to the formation of a tropical depression around 06:00\u00a0UTC that day; at 7.8\u00b0N, the depression tied 1976's Hurricane Annette as the second-lowest-latitude tropical cyclone to form in the East Pacific. Twelve hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Alvin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Alvin\nInfluenced by a subtropical ridge over central Mexico, Alvin steadily strengthened and reached peak winds of 60\u00a0mph (95\u00a0km/h) early on May\u00a016. Thereafter, increasing wind shear and the introduction of mid-level dry air caused the cyclone to begin a quick weakening trend. The low-level circulation became increasingly elongated and opened up into a trough at 00:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a017. Six hours later, Alvin dissipated while located about 775\u00a0mi (1,245\u00a0km) southwest of Manzanillo, Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Barbara\nA tropical wave emerged off the western coast of Africa on May\u00a016, entering the East Pacific on May\u00a024. Following the passage of an atmospheric kelvin wave, a broad area of low pressure formed and gradually organized as convection simultaneously increased. At 12:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a028, the wave was declared a tropical depression; six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Barbara. Steered northeastward amid favorable atmospheric conditions, a period of rapid deepening ensued, and the system was upgraded to a Category\u00a01 hurricane at 18:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a029.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Barbara\nAt 19:50\u00a0UTC that day, Barbara attained peak winds of 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h) as it moved ashore west-southwest of Tonal\u00e1, Chiapas. The cyclone quickly weakened thereafter as it passed over the Sierra Madre mountain range. At 00:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a030, Barbara weakened to a tropical storm, and by six hours later, it further weakened to a tropical depression. After losing its deep convection, the depression degenerated into a remnant low at 12:00\u00a0UTC, while located over the Bay of Campeche. The remnant low opened into a trough at 00:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a031.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Barbara\nThe precursor disturbance brought rainfall to El Salvador, where one person was killed. In Mexico, rainfall peaked at 470\u00a0mm (19\u00a0in). Even though Hurricane Barbara struck a largely undeveloped stretch of coastal lagoons, containing small fishing villages, two elderly people were killed in Oaxaca. Furthermore, 14\u00a0fishermen were left missing off the coast of Tapanatepec; eight of which were found alive. The towns of Tonala and Arriaga were the worst affected by the hurricane. Although damage was minor, 50 people were evacuated and 2,000 homes were damaged. Throughout the region, 57,000 people were homeless and 10,000 hectares of crops were destroyed. Total economic losses were estimated at 4.53\u00a0billion pesos (US$358\u00a0million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Cosme\nA tropical wave, the same responsible for Tropical Storm Barry in the Atlantic, moved across the eastern Pacific in late June, yielding a broad area of low pressure by June\u00a021. Northwesterly shear initially hindered development of the system, but a subsequent decrease in upper-level winds, as well as the passage of an eastward-moving kelvin wave, led to the formation of a tropical depression by 12:00\u00a0UTC on June\u00a023; twelve hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Cosme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Cosme\nSteered northwest and eventually west-northwest, the cyclone intensified amid favorable atmospheric dynamics, becoming a minimal hurricane by 12:00\u00a0UTC on June\u00a025 and attaining peak winds of 85\u00a0mph (135\u00a0km/h) twelve hours later. A track over cooler waters and into an increasingly stable environment caused Cosme to weaken to a tropical storm by 18:00\u00a0UTC on June\u00a026 and further degenerate into a remnant low by 12:00\u00a0UTC the next day while located about 690\u00a0mi (1,110\u00a0km) west-southwest of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The remnant low tracked westward prior to dissipating well east-southeast of the Hawaiian Islands on July\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Cosme\nDue to the storm's large size, a \"green\" alert (low risk) was issued for the states of Colima, Jalisco and Michoac\u00e1n while a \"blue\" alert (minimum risk) was placed into effect for the states of Nayarit, Guerrero, and Baja California Sur. As the system passed through the Revillagigedo Islands, winds reached 42\u00a0mph (68\u00a0km/h) on Socorro Island. The outer rainbands brought moderate rains to Guerrero, causing minor flooding in Acapulco. Across the state, the storm generated 24 landslides, which blocked highways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Cosme\nTwo people were killed in the Guerrero, one a tourist that drowned in Zihuatanejo and the other a police officer in an airplane crash that injured 19 others. High seas flooded numerous buildings across coastal towns in Colima, damaging 34\u00a0tourist facilities and killing one person. Additionally, many restaurants built of wood and coconut were damaged. In Manzanillo, the port was closed to small craft, as was the port of Mazatl\u00e1n. Overall, 50 homes were damaged by the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dalila\nA tropical wave was first observed over the central Atlantic on June\u00a017. It entered the East Pacific on June\u00a024 and steadily organized, acquiring enough organization to be declared a tropical depression by 18:00\u00a0UTC on June\u00a029. Twelve hours later, it was upgraded to Tropical Storm Dalila. Steered northwest parallel to the coastline of Mexico, the cyclone only slowly organized despite favorable conditions, becoming a Category\u00a01 hurricane by 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a02.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dalila\nAfter attaining peak winds of 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h) six hours later, the influence of drier air and increasing shear caused the storm to begin a weakening trend. At 18:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a03, Dalila was downgraded to a tropical storm, and by 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a05, the system further weakened to a tropical depression. After becoming devoid of convection, Dalila degenerated into a remnant low at 06:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a07 while located roughly 460\u00a0mi (740\u00a0km) south-southwest of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The low turned east-northeastward into the circulation of Tropical Storm Erick thereafter, dissipating late on July\u00a08.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dalila\nWhen Dalila threatened Western Mexico, the states of Colima, Michoac\u00e1n, and Jalisco went under a yellow alert; Nayarit was placed on a green alert. Blue alerts were issued for Baja California Sur, Sinaloa, Guerrero, and Oaxaca. The port of Manzanillo was closed as a precaution, where the storm brought rain and storm surge. The outer rainbands of the storm also brought moderate to heavy rainfall along coastal areas of Colima and Jalisco. A total of 49 structures were damaged due to the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Erick\nA tropical wave moved off the western coast of Africa on June\u00a018 and continued westward across Central America and into the eastern Pacific by June\u00a029. It subsequently interacted with a large cyclonic gyre, leading to an increase in convective activity and the formation of an area of low pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Erick\nFollowing satellite and microwave data, the disturbance was upgraded to a tropical depression at 1200\u00a0UTC on July\u00a04. Initially, moderate easterly shear prevented much organization as the system tracked west-northwest; however, a reprieve in upper-level winds by 0000\u00a0UTC on July\u00a05 allowed the depression to intensify into Tropical Storm Erick as convective bands gained more curvature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Erick\nA period of steady intensification over the next day allowed the system to attain Category\u00a01 hurricane intensity at 0600\u00a0UTC and reach its peak with winds of 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 983\u00a0mb (hPa; 29.03\u00a0inHg) six hours later. Decreasing ocean temperatures caused the convective appearance to deteriorate at a steady pace; by 1800\u00a0UTC on July\u00a07, Erick weakened to a tropical storm, and by 0600\u00a0UTC on July\u00a09, the system no longer sustained enough organization to be considered a tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Erick\nThe outer rainbands of the storm brought gusty winds just offshore the Mexican coast. In Acapulco and Puerto Marques, the storm was responsible for minor flooding. Elsewhere across the state, most of the damage was due to landslides. Along the coast of Colima, 9-foot (2.7\u00a0m) waves were recorded. Although some flooding was reported across the state, damage was minor. Further north, in Nayarit, however, damage was extensive. One woman died. One river overflowed its banks, which directly affected numerous cities. The Mexican military and officials in Nayarit attempted to rescue hundreds of people affected by Hurricane Erick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Flossie\nA tropical wave moved off the western coast of Africa on July\u00a09 and crossed Central America on July\u00a018. The disturbance initially lacked a well-defined center until early on July\u00a025 as convection steadily increased, leading the formation of a tropical depression at 00:00\u00a0UTC that day; six hours later, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Flossie. Steered westward amid a favorable environment, the cyclone steadily intensified, attaining peak winds of 70\u00a0mph (115\u00a0km/h) at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a027 as an eye became evident on satellite imagery. Flossie crossed into the Central Pacific shortly thereafter, where increasing wind shear prompted a gradual weakening trend. At 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a030, the system weakened to a tropical depression; twelve hours later, it degenerated into a remnant low while located near the northern coast of Kauai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 914]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Flossie\nFollowing Flossie's crossing into the Central Pacific Hurricane Center's warning zone, a tropical storm watch was issued for Hawaii and Maui counties on July\u00a027. All Maui County parks were closed due to the storm as county authorities activated emergency operations. Upon becoming the first storm to directly hit the state in 20 years, gusty winds downed trees and power lines. More than 9,000\u00a0residences were without electricity across the state, with most outages concentrated in Kihei, Maui, and Puna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Gil\nThe formation of Gil is attributed to a tropical wave that departed the west coast of Africa on July\u00a016 and entered the East Pacific on July\u00a024. Initially disheveled, the wave slowly organized as convection increased and its associated center became better defined, leading to the formation of a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a030; six hours later, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Gil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Gil\nWith a small circulation, the cyclone entered a period of rapid deepening, intensifying into a Category\u00a01 hurricane at 18:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a031 and attaining peak winds of 85\u00a0mph (135\u00a0km/h) a day later. Thereafter, increasing shear and drier air caused the storm to begin weakening; at 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a02, Gil weakened to a tropical storm, and two days later, it weakened further to a tropical depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Gil\nA brief burst of convection allowed the cyclone to regain tropical storm intensity at 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a06 as it crossed into the Central Pacific, but Gil quickly weakened to a tropical depression twelve hours later. At 00:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a07, the system degenerated into an open trough well east-southeast of the Hawaiian Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Henriette\nA tropical wave emerged off the western coast of Africa on July\u00a019 and reached the East Pacific on July\u00a026. Embedded within the Intertropical Convergence Zone, convection slowly coalesced about an area of low pressure, leading to the formation of a tropical depression by 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a03; twelve hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Henriette while located about 1,800\u00a0mi (1,900\u00a0km) southwest of the southern tip of Baja California. The system initially moved west-southwest following formation, but turned toward the west-northwest as it reached the western periphery of a mid-level ridge to its north.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Henriette\nAmid a favorable environment, Henriette steadily intensified, becoming a Category\u00a01 hurricane by 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a06 and unexpectedly attaining peak winds of 105\u00a0mph (170\u00a0km/h) by 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a08. The hurricane quickly weakened over increasingly cool waters as it resumed its southwesterly track into the Central Pacific, weakening to a tropical storm early on August\u00a09 and further to a tropical depression two days later. By 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a011, the effects of increasing wind shear caused Henriette to degenerate into a remnant low while positioned roughly 430\u00a0mi (690\u00a0km) south of Kailua-Kona, Hawaii. The remnant low drifted west-southwest until dissipating the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Pewa\nA broad trough was first identified west of Central America in early August. This trough drifted westward to the south of the Hawaiian Islands by August\u00a014, where it yielded three defined areas of disturbed weather. Largely devoid of convection initially, the westernmost disturbance steadily organized over the coming days, leading to the formation of a tropical depression by 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a016; six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Pewa. The cyclone tracked west-northwest following formation, steered by a mid-level ridge to its north. Pewa crossed the International Date Line into the West Pacific on August\u00a018, where it would later become a typhoon before succumbing to unfavorable wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Unala\nOn August\u00a010, the CPHC began monitoring a trough located roughly 1,300\u00a0mi (2,090\u00a0km) east-southeast of the Big Island of Hawaii for potential development. Disorganized convective activity developed in association with the trough as it moved generally westward. By August\u00a013, multiple areas of vorticity formed within the disturbance, hindering its development into a coherent cyclone. Marginally favorable environmental conditions allowed for some organization on August\u00a015. Following an increase strong thunderstorms around the center, the CPHC stated that it was becoming a tropical depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Unala\nHowever, outflow from a nearby disturbance, which would soon become Tropical Storm Pewa, disrupted the system and caused it to become more disorganized. Late on August 19 the depression strengthened into a tropical storm. However, outflow from the nearby Typhoon Pewa caused an increase in wind shear over the system, causing Unala to become disorganized and weaken. By this time the system has crossed into the Western Pacific basin. During the afternoon hours of August 19, the depression had dissipated completely, as it was being absorbed by Pewa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Three-C\nThe third in a trio of Central Pacific tropical cyclones was first monitored by the NHC on August\u00a09. The disturbance formed a weak surface low three days later but ultimately opened into a trough as it entered the CPHC's area of responsibility on August\u00a014. There, steady organization led to the formation of a tropical depression around 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a019. Upper-level outflow from nearby Tropical Storm Pewa imparted shear on the newly formed system, and it failed to attain tropical storm strength, instead crossing the International Date Line as a tropical depression on August\u00a020 and dissipating the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Ivo\nThe southern portion of a tropical wave entered the East Pacific on August\u00a015. Although moderate shear initially hindered the organization of convection, a broad low- to mid-level circulation formed and steadily coalesced. Upper-level winds lessened on August\u00a022 as the disturbance turned northwestward, leading to the formation of a tropical depression by 12:00\u00a0UTC. Following designation, the depression began to interact with a tropical wave to its east, ultimately leading to an abrupt center formation to the northeast. By 00:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a023, the cyclone intensified into Tropical Storm Ivo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Ivo\nResuming its northwest track around a mid-level ridge across the central United States and Mexico, Ivo attained peak winds of 45\u00a0mph (70\u00a0km/h) before crossing a sharp sea surface temperature gradient. The system weakened to a tropical depression by 00:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a025 and further degenerated into a remnant low by 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a025 while located less than 115\u00a0mi (185\u00a0km) west of the west-central coast of the Baja California peninsula. The remnant low drifted slowly south-southwestward before dissipating early on August\u00a028.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Ivo\nWhen the system first posed a threat to the Baja California Peninsula, a \"green alert\" was declared for Socorro Island and Baja California Sur. At 21:00\u00a0UTC on August 23, a tropical storm warning was issued from Punta Abreojos to Loreto, including Cabo San Lucas. A tropical storm watch was placed for the Baja California Peninsula from Punta Abreojos to Punta Eugenia. Seven ports in Baja California Sur were closed. Along the peninsula, 6,000 people were affected and many highways were damaged. Water supply was cut off to Loreto. In all, 400 people were evacuated and 200 homes were flooded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Ivo\nSix people were injured, including two serious. In the United States, flash flood watches were issued for Pima County, extending westward across western Arizona and into Southern Nevada. Several roads were closed in Yuma County. In East County, many roads were flooded. Elsewhere, Borrego Springs saw 3 inches (76\u00a0mm) of rain in less than an hour, resulting in flash flooding, which stranded motorists. Several mudslides were also reported in San Bernardino County. One person drowned in Needles after flood waters overwhelmed her vehicle; 18 swift water rescues were made in the same area. Heavy rains in Nevada, amounting to nearly 4\u00a0in (100\u00a0mm) at Mount Charleston, caused significant flooding; damage in the Las Vegas Valley reached $300,000. Widespread flooding occurred around Zion National Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Juliette\nAn area of convection occurred on August 25. It was classified as a disturbance the next day. Late on August 27, the disturbance entered warm waters as it became Tropical Depression Ten-E. Due to warm waters and windshear, Ten-E intensified into Tropical Storm Juliette late on August 28. As Juliette races towards northwest, it reached peak intensity and then rapidly weakened to a depression on August 29. The JTWC issued its final advisories later that day while Juliette's remnants continued to move west, with its circulation dissipating very early on August 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Juliette\nUpon formation, a \"green alert\" was issued for Sonora, the northern portion of the Baja California Peninsula, Jalisco, Nayarit, and Socorro Island, while a \"blue alert\" was issued for Baja California Sur and Colima. Six shelters opened for in San Jos\u00e9 del Cabo and Cabo San Lucas and were used by 164 residents, though many refused to go. Much of Baja California Sur briefly lost power, including the communities of Todos Santos and Pescadero, and portions of Cabo San Lucas and San Jos\u00e9 del Cabo. Furthermore, one man was electrocuted and later died. One home was destroyed. A total of 1,600 persons spent the night in a shelter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Kiko\nOn August\u00a028, a trough within the ITCZ was first identified well south-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California. That day, an area of low pressure formed along the trough and tracked northwest. A tropical wave, one responsible for the development of tropical storms Erin and Fernand in the Atlantic, and Tropical Storm Juliette in the East Pacific, bypassed the low on August\u00a030, leading to an increase in convection and the formation of a tropical depression by 12:00\u00a0UTC that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Kiko\nThe depression initially strengthened slowly under the influence of moderate northerly wind shear, becoming a tropical storm by 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a031. Thereafter, upper-level winds became more conducive as the system turned north-northeast, and Kiko began a period of rapid deepening yielding peak winds of 75\u00a0mph (120\u00a0km/h) by 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a01. Following peak, an increase in wind shear and track over cooler waters led to a weakening trend. Kiko deteriorated into a tropical storm by 18:00\u00a0UTC and further degenerated into a remnant low by 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a02. The remnant low executed a cyclonic loop and tracked southeast before dissipating on September\u00a04.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lorena\nThe formation of Lorena is attributed to a tropical wave first identified over Central America on August\u00a031. The wave moved slowly across the East Pacific for several days while remaining disorganized. However, by 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a05, the disturbance acquired sufficient organization to be declared a tropical depression; six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Lorena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lorena\nSteered northwest around a mid-level ridge over Mexico, an elongation of the low-level center, separation of the low and mid-level centers, and light to moderate southwesterly shear prompted only gradual strengthening, and Lorena attained peak winds of 50\u00a0mph (80\u00a0km/h) on September\u00a06. Thereafter, the introduction of dry and stable air caused the cyclone to become disheveled as associated convection dissipated. Lorena weakened to a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a07 and degenerated into a remnant low six hours later while located 60\u00a0mi (95\u00a0km) west-southwest of Santa Fe, Mexico. The low turned west and south before opening up into a trough early on September\u00a09.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lorena\nUpon becoming a tropical cyclone, a \"yellow alert\" was issued for Colima and Nayarit. A \"green alert\" was issued for Socorro Island, Michoac\u00e1n, and Jalisco while a \"blue alert\" was in effect for Baja California Sur and Sinaloa. Classes were suspended for Los Cabos. The ports of Mazatl\u00e1n, La Paz, Cabo San Lucas, Los Barriles, and San Jos\u00e9 del Cabo were closed because of high waves. Lorena brought moderate rain over the peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Manuel\nOn September\u00a013, a tropical depression formed off the southwest coast of Mexico from a tropical wave that entered the basin two days earlier. Six hours later, it intensified into Tropical Storm Manuel while moving northwestward. The storm turned to the north on September\u00a014 as a mid-level ridge over central Mexico weakened. By 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a014, Manuel initially attained peak winds of 70\u00a0mph (115\u00a0km/h), which it maintained upon moving ashore near Pichilinguillo, Mexico six hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Manuel\nOnce inland, Manuel weakened quickly over the high terrain of Mexico, degenerating into a weak trough by 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a016. The remnant mid-level center and trough continued to the northwest around the ridge, emerging into the Gulf of California during the afternoon of September\u00a016. After the convection reorganized, Manuel reformed into a tropical depression about 175\u00a0mi (280\u00a0km) east of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Manuel\nWithin an environment exceptionally conducive for intensification, Manuel began a period of rapid deepening, becoming a tropical storm for a second time by 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a018 and a Category\u00a01 hurricane by 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a019. Twelve hours later, the system made landfall near Culiac\u00e1n, Mexico with peak winds of 75\u00a0mph (120\u00a0km/h). Manuel quickly weakened as it once again passed over the higher terrain of Mexico, becoming a tropical storm by 18:00\u00a0UTC and further degenerating into a broad area of low pressure over the Sierra Madre Occidental mountain range by 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Narda\nA tropical wave emerged off the western coast of Africa on September\u00a012 and entered the East Pacific almost two weeks later. On October\u00a01, an area of low pressure detached from the wave and began to organize as it moved west-northwest. Organized convective bands were observed by 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a06, marking the formation of a tropical depression about 865\u00a0mi (1,390\u00a0km) southwest of the southern tip of Baja California; six hours later, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Narda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Narda\nAmid a favorable environment, the cyclone steadily intensified after designation, attaining peak winds of 65\u00a0mph (105\u00a0km/h) by 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a07 as a partial eyewall became evident on satellite. However, associated convection began to weaken thereafter as Narda encountered drier air and stronger wind shear. At 00:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a09, Narda weakened to a tropical depression; after producing intermittent convection for a day, the system degenerated into a remnant low by 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a010. The low moved southwest and dissipated a few days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Octave\nA tropical wave moved across Central America and into the East Pacific on October\u00a05. While passing south of the coastline of Mexico, the wave interacted with a large area of disturbed weather at the base of an upper-level trough, and the two features eventually merged by October\u00a07. The incipient disturbance steadily organized over subsequent days, leading to the formation of a tropical depression by 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a012 while located about 545\u00a0mi (875\u00a0km) south of the southern tip of Baja California; six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Octave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Octave\nGradually recurving northeast around a subtropical ridge, the cyclone steadily strengthened amid a favorable atmospheric environment, reaching a peak intensity of 65\u00a0mph (105\u00a0km/h) by 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a013. Thereafter, the cloud pattern became increasingly disorganized as wind shear increased the storm moved over cooler waters. The system moved ashore near Cabo San Lazaro, Mexico at 05:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a023 with maximum winds of 45\u00a0mph (70\u00a0km/h) and quickly weakened over land. By 12:00\u00a0UTC, Octave weakened to a tropical depression, and six hours later, it further degenerated into a remnant low over the southern portion of Sonora. The low dissipated shortly thereafter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Priscilla\nAn area of convection, possibly in relation to a tropical wave that emerged off the western coast of Africa on September\u00a016, developed along the ITCZ on October\u00a07. Becoming embedded within a pre-existing, broad circulation, the disturbance only slowly congealed due to wind shear from nearby Tropical Storm Octave. Despite this, it acquired sufficient organization to be deemed a tropical depression by 00:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a014 while located about 810\u00a0mi (1,305\u00a0km) south-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Priscilla\nSteered northwest and north around a mid-level ridge over Mexico, the depression became a tropical storm by 06:00\u00a0UTC and attained peak winds of 45\u00a0mph (70\u00a0km/h) six hours later. Thereafter, a combination of cooler waters and the continued influences of Octave caused Priscilla to weaken. At 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a015, it was downgraded to a tropical depression, and by 18:00\u00a0UTC the following day, the cyclone degenerated into a remnant low. The low turned westward before dissipating on October\u00a018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Raymond\nA disturbance within the ITCZ was first identified over the southwestern Caribbean Sea on October\u00a013, crossing Central America and entering the East Pacific over the subsequent three days. Deep convection steadily increased and organized into curved spiral bands, leading to the formation of a tropical depression by 00:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a020; six hours later, it was upgraded to Tropical Storm Raymond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Raymond\nSteered northwest by a series of ridges to the cyclone's north, Raymond rapidly intensified amid warm ocean temperatures and low wind shear, becoming a hurricane by 00:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a021 and attaining Category\u00a03 status with peak winds of 125\u00a0mph (200\u00a0km/h) by 18:00\u00a0UTC that day. Executing a clockwise loop, significant cold water upwelling and increased upper-level winds caused the cyclone to weaken abruptly, deteriorating to tropical storm intensity by 06:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0033-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Raymond\nEnvironmental conditions became more favorable for intensification the next day, allowing Raymond to gradually intensify to hurricane strength by 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a027 and further to Category\u00a02 hurricane intensity twelve hours later. Recurving northeast under the influence of an approaching trough, the cyclone began to weaken once again as wind shear increased, with the system weakening below hurricane threshold again by 00:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a029 and further to tropical depression status by 06:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a030. After all associated convection dissipated, Raymond degenerated to a remnant low by 12:00\u00a0UTC. The remnant low turned west and dissipated on November\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Raymond\nDespite remaining offshore, Raymond's close proximity to the Mexican coast was enough to prompt tropical cyclone warnings and watches. Due to the threat of rainfall, residents from 81\u00a0municipalities in Mexico were ordered to evacuate out of flood-prone regions. Precipitation from Raymond peaked at 7.63\u00a0in (194\u00a0mm) near Acapulco within a two-day period. Minor flooding resulted from the outer rainbands of the hurricane. Though no deaths were reported, 585\u00a0people were rendered homeless. Following the storm, the Mexican government declared a state of emergency for 10\u00a0municipalities in Guerrero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Sonia\nA strong upward pulse of the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation pushed across the East Pacific during the last week of October, yielding the formation of a broad area of low pressure. A tropical wave passed through this gyre late on October\u00a026, leading to the formation of disorganized convection. After several days of consolidation, the disturbance acquired sufficient organization to be declared a tropical depression by 06:00\u00a0UTC on November\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Sonia\nGradually recurving northeast in response to a series of troughs to the system's north, the cyclone only slowly organized under moderate wind shear, and the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Sonia by 00:00\u00a0UTC on November\u00a03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0035-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Sonia\nAfter reaching peak winds of 45\u00a0mph (70\u00a0km/h) later that afternoon, an additional increase in upper-level winds caused the cyclone to weaken to minimum tropical storm intensity as it made landfall near El Dorado, Mexico early on November\u00a04. Sonia weakened rapidly once inland, becoming a tropical depression at 06:00\u00a0UTC and dissipating over the Sierra Madre Occidental mountain range six hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Storm names\nThe following names were used to name storms that formed in the Northeastern Pacific Ocean during 2013. The names not retired from this list were used again in the 2019 season. This is the same list used in the 2007 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 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. Two names, Pewa and Unala, were used, marking the first time multiple Central Pacific cyclones were named since three formed there in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nOn April\u00a010, 2014, at the 36th session of the RA IV hurricane committee, the name Manuel was retired due to the damage and deaths it caused and will not be used for another Pacific hurricane. Manuel was replaced with Mario for the 2019 Pacific hurricane season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235398-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific hurricane season, Season effects\nThis is a table of all of the storms that formed in the 2013 Pacific hurricane season. It includes their duration, names, landfall(s) (in parenthesis), damages, and death totals. Deaths in parentheses are additional and indirect, 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 2013 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season\nThe 2013 Pacific typhoon season was the most active Pacific typhoon season since 2004, and the deadliest since 1975. It featured one of the most powerful storms in history. It was an above-average season with 31 named storms, 13 typhoons, and five super typhoons. The season's first named storm, Sonamu, developed on January 4 while the season's last named storm, Podul, dissipated on November 15. Most of the first seventeen named storms before mid-September were relatively weak, as only two of them reached typhoon intensity. Total damage amounted to at least $26.41\u00a0billion (USD), making it the third costliest Pacific typhoon season on record; behind 2018 and 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season\nTyphoon Soulik in July was the strongest tropical cyclone to affect Taiwan in 2013. In August, Typhoon Utor cost US$3.55 billion damage and killed 97 people, becoming the second deadliest tropical cyclone of the Philippines in 2013. Three systems in August, Pewa, Unala and 03C, continuously crossed the International Date Line from the Central Pacific and entered this basin. Typhoon Haiyan caused catastrophic damage and devastation to the Philippines as a Category 5 super typhoon, killing more than 6,300 people, making it one of the deadliest Pacific typhoons on record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season\nThe scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean to the north of the equator between 100\u00b0E and the 180th meridian. Within the northwestern Pacific Ocean, there are two separate agencies that assign names to tropical cyclones, which often results in a storm having two names.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season\nThe Japan Meteorological Agency\u00a0(JMA) will name 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 tropical depressions in their area of responsibility, located between 115\u00b0E and 135\u00b0E and between 5\u00b0N and 25\u00b0N, regardless of whether or not the tropical cyclone has already been given a name by the JMA. Tropical depressions 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, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Seasonal forecasts\nDuring each season, several national meteorological services and scientific agencies forecast how many tropical cyclones, tropical storms, and typhoons will form during a season and/or how many tropical cyclones will affect a particular country. These agencies include the Tropical Storm Risk\u00a0(TSR) Consortium of the University College London, Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) and the Vietnamese National Center for Hydro Meteorological forecasts (VNCHMF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Seasonal forecasts\nIn early December 2012, the VNCHMF noted that a tropical depression or a tropical storm could form within December or January and affect Southern Vietnam. Within its January\u00a0\u2014 June seasonal climate outlook, PAGASA predicted that two to three tropical cyclones were likely to develop and/or enter the Philippine area of responsibility between January and March while two to four were predicted for the April to June period. On March 3, the VNCHMF predicted that there would be 11\u201313 tropical cyclones over the South China Sea during the season, with 5-6 directly affecting Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Seasonal forecasts\nLater that month the Hong Kong Observatory, predicted that the typhoon season in Hong Kong would be near normal with four to seven tropical cyclones passing within 500\u00a0km (310\u00a0mi) of the territory compared to an average of 6. In late April, the China Meteorological Administration's Shanghai Typhoon Institute (CMA-STI) predicted that between 22 and 25 tropical storms would develop within the basin during the year, while the Thai Meteorological Department (TMD) predicted that at least two tropical storms would move towards Thailand during 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Seasonal forecasts\nThe first of the two tropical storms was predicted to pass near Upper Thailand in either August or September, while the other one was expected to move to the south of Southern Thailand during October or November. On May 7, the TSR Consortium released their first forecast of the season and predicted that the basin would see a near average season with 25.6\u00a0tropical storms, 16\u00a0typhoons, 8.9\u00a0\"intense\" typhoons and an ACE index of about 311 units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Seasonal forecasts\nIn late June after a slow start to the season Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau predicted that the season, would be near average of 25.7 with 23\u201327 tropical storms occurring over the basin during 2013. Between two and four of the systems were also predicted to affect Taiwan compared to an average of around 3.6. Within its July forecast update TSR noted that despite the slow start to the season, they continued to anticipate either near or slightly above-normal activity for the remainder of 2013; however, the ACE index was reduced slightly to 294 units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Seasonal forecasts\nDuring July, PAGASA predicted that between eight and eleven tropical cyclones were likely to develop and/or enter the Philippine area of responsibility between July and September while five to eight were predicted to occur between October and December. Later in the month the VNCHMF, predicted that nine to ten tropical cyclones would be observed within the South China Sea, during the rest of the year. They also predicted that four to five tropical cyclones would directly affect Vietnam, while the CMA-STI predicted that between 22 and 25 tropical storms would develop or move into the basin during the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Seasonal forecasts\nOn August 6, TSR released their August update and significantly lowered their forecast to 22.3\u00a0tropical storms, 13.2\u00a0typhoons, 6.6\u00a0\"intense\" typhoons and an ACE index of about 230, which they noted would result in activity about 20% below their 1965\u20132012 average. This was because the season was running about 60% below the expected year-to-date activity and only one to two typhoons had developed by the end of July. During October 2013, the VNCHMF predicted that one to two tropical cyclones would develop and possibly affect Vietnam between November 2013 and April 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Season summary\nThe first two-thirds of the season were very weak, with only two typhoons forming despite the average amount of named storms forming. However, the season became dramatically active since mid-September. The last fourteen named storms formed within approximately two months, yet only three of them were below the typhoon strength. Initially, Typhoon Man-yi made landfall over Japan. Tropical Depression 18W, known in Vietnam as Tropical Storm No.8, flooding triggered by the storm in Vietnam, Laos and Thailand damaged nearly US$80 million and 23 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Season summary\nTyphoon Usagi made landfall over Guangdong, China and cost US$4.6 billion in the country, which was the third strongest storm of the basin in 2013. Later, Typhoon Wutip made landfall over Vietnam. In early October, Typhoon Fitow made landfall over Fujian, China and caused over US$10 billion damage, becoming the costliest tropical cyclone in 2013. Typhoon Danas affected Japan and South Korea, but without significant damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Season summary\nTyphoon Nari brought significant damage over the Philippines and eventually made landfall over Vietnam, as well as Typhoon Wipha which killed 41 people in Japan. Typhoon Francisco and Typhoon Lekima did not directly affect any country, but they were both violent typhoons, especially the latter one becoming the second strongest of this basin in 2013. Typhoon Krosa crossed northern Luzon on October 31 and intensified further, although it dissipated in the South China Sea. In early November, Tropical Depression Wilma formed over the Caroline Islands, moved out of the basin, and ultimately arrived in the Arabian Sea in mid-November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Season summary\nAt the same time in early November, Typhoon Haiyan initially affected Palau significantly. The typhoon later became one of the most intense tropical cyclones on record and immediately made landfall over the Philippines. After arriving at the South China Sea, Haiyan made landfall over Vietnam and also impact Guangxi and Hainan provinces of China. Typhoon Haiyan, also known as Typhoon Yolanda, caused 6,300 fatalities and over US$2 billion damage in the Philippines, becoming the deadliest and costliest typhoon in modern Philippine history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Sonamu (Auring)\nEarly on January 1, a tropical depression developed about 1,090\u00a0km (675\u00a0mi) southwest of Guam. Over the next couple of days, the depression moved northwestward and gradually developed in an area of moderate windshear. Late on January 2, the center passed over the Philippine island of Mindanao but maintained its deep convective banding, which prompted the JTWC to issue a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA). During the next day, PAGASA named the depression Auring. The system moved westwards into the Sulu Sea, and the JTWC initiated advisories on the system as 01W.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Sonamu (Auring)\nThe JMA reported later that day that the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Sonamu, before the JTWC followed suit early on January 4 as the system continued to consolidate. After further strengthening, Sonamu intensified into a severe tropical storm on January\u00a05, with 10-minute sustained winds of 95\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph). Early on January 8, the JMA and JTWC reported that Sonamu weakened into a tropical depression. The system dissipated on January 10 about 110\u00a0km (70\u00a0mi) west of Bintulu in Sarawak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Sonamu (Auring)\nWithin the Philippines, 1 person drowned while another person died after being hit by a coconut tree. A passenger ship was stranded near the coast of Dumaguete City on January 3 before being rescued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression Bising\nEarly on January 6, the JMA started to monitor a tropical depression that had developed, about 480\u00a0km (300\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Melekeok, Palau. Over the next few days the JMA continued to monitor the system as a tropical depression, before PAGASA named it Bising during January 11. Over the next few days the system moved towards the north-northeast, before it was last noted during January 13, as it weakened into an area of low pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression Bising\nBising caused moderate to heavy rains across Bicol Region, Eastern Visayas, Central Visayas and Mindanao. A school laboratory in Lanuza was damaged, and the loss were amounted to Php1.5 million (US$37,000).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Shanshan (Crising)\nOn February 18, a tropical depression formed about 650\u00a0km (405\u00a0mi) east of southern Mindanao, with PAGASA naming it Crising. With low to moderate wind shear, the depression developed further. On February\u00a019, the JTWC initiated warnings on Tropical Depression 02W, but discontinued advisories two days later after the circulation became poorly defined and convection was sheared. However, the JMA reported that the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Shanshan on February\u00a021. The next day, Shanshan weakened into a tropical depression before dissipating east of Natuna Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Shanshan (Crising)\nHeavy rains from the storm triggered flooding in the southern Philippines that killed eleven people and left two others missing. The storm damaged 1,346 houses, while crop damage estimated to be \u20b111.2\u00a0million (US$275,000). On February 20, classes in three cities in Cebu were suspended due to heavy rains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Yagi (Dante)\nOn June 6, a tropical depression formed southeast of the Philippines within an area of moderate wind shear. Located along the western edge of the subtropical ridge, the system gradually intensified while moving to the northeast, aided by strong divergence. On June\u00a07, PAGASA named the system Dante, and the next day the JMA upgraded the depression to Tropical Storm Yagi. Later, the JTWC initiated advisories and quickly upgraded to tropical storm status after the system consolidated. Slow strengthening continued, and Yagi peaked with winds of 85\u00a0km/h (55\u00a0mph) on June\u00a010. However, the storm was soon impacted by northwesterly wind shear, causing the system to become disorganized and weaken in intensity. Early on June 12, Yagi became extratropical to the south of Japan, and four days later it dissipated about 1,600\u00a0km (995\u00a0mi) southeast of Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 925]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Yagi (Dante)\nAfter Yagi had enhanced the southwest monsoon which brought heavy rain to parts of the Philippines, PAGASA declared that the rainy season had begun on June 10, 2013. Yagi also brought some rain to parts of Japan, including the island of Honshu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Leepi (Emong)\nEarly on June\u00a016, a tropical depression formed southeast of the Philippines, which PAGASA named Emong. Late on June\u00a017, the JTWC initiated advisories on Tropical Depression 04W. The next day, the JMA upgraded the depression to Tropical Storm Leepi on June\u00a018 after further organization and a general northward movement. Interaction with a tropical upper tropospheric trough\u00a0(TUTT) cell to the east of Leepi sheared the convection to the southwest of the center, which consisted of several smaller circulations. Based on this occurrence, the JTWC downgraded the system to tropical depression intensity early on June\u00a020, and early the next day, the JMA declared Leepi as extratropical near southwestern Japan. The storm fully dissipated early on June 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Leepi (Emong)\nDue to heavy rainfall from the precursor system, PAGASA issued a flash flood warning for parts of Mindanao. Heavy precipitation was reported in Davao City, as well as Greater Manila, where the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority offered free rides to stricken commuters. This system caused rains over parts of the Philippines including Southern Luzon, Visayas and Northern Mindanao. Later, the outer rainbands of Leepi caused downpours over eastern Taiwan. In Okinawa, sustained winds reached 55\u00a0km/h (35\u00a0mph) and gusts peaked at 87\u00a0km/h (54\u00a0mph). Despite losing much of its convection before reaching Japan, the remnants of Leepi continued to drop heavy rainfall. In Umaji, K\u014dchi, a station recorded 354.5\u00a0mm (13.96\u00a0in) of rain in a 24-hour period, more than half of the average June rainfall for the station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bebinca (Fabian)\nIn mid-June, strong but disorganized convection persisted in the South China Sea approximately 1,110\u00a0km (690\u00a0mi) south of Hong Kong. The disturbance gradually organized, and was classified as a tropical depression by the JMA at 1800\u00a0UTC on June 19; PAGASA followed suit six hours later, naming the system Fabian. Despite wind shear generated by a subtropical ridge, the depression maintained a well-defined circulation, allowing the system to intensify. At 0000\u00a0UTC on June\u00a021, the JMA upgraded the cyclone to Tropical Storm Bebinca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bebinca (Fabian)\nFollowing this upgrade in strength, however, Bebinca failed to intensify further, and leveled out in intensity prior to making landfall on Hainan on June 22. Bebinca's passage weakened the system to tropical depression strength, and, despite moving over the Gulf of Tonkin, failed to restrengthen before making a final landfall on June 23 east of Hanoi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bebinca (Fabian)\nDue to the potential effects of Bebinca, Sanya Phoenix International Airport cancelled or delayed 147\u00a0inbound and outbound flights, leaving 8,000\u00a0passengers stranded. In Beibu Bay, a fishing boat with four fishermen on board lost communication contact with the mainland, but were found the subsequent day. Rainfall in Hainan peaked at 227\u00a0mm (8.9\u00a0in) in Sanya. A total of 21.7 million people were affected, and damage amounted to \u00a510 million (US$1.63 million). Heavy rains affected several provinces in northern Vietnam, peaking at 356\u00a0mm (14.0\u00a0in) in Hon Ngu, Ngh\u1ec7 An Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Rumbia (Gorio)\nIn late June, a low-pressure area persisted within the ITCZ east of the Philippines. Initially tracking southward, the disturbance moved east and then recurved to the west. Steadily organizing, the disturbance became a tropical depression on June 27, moving to the northwest due to a nearby ridge. On June 28, the disturbance strengthened into Tropical Storm Rumbia, and the next day made its first landfall on Eastern Samar in the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Rumbia (Gorio)\nRumbia spent roughly a day moving across the archipelago before emerging into the South China Sea, where it resumed strengthening to a peak of 95\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph) on July 1, a severe tropical storm. The storm weakened slightly before moving ashore the Leizhou Peninsula in China late that day. Due to land interaction, Rumbia quickly weakened into a low-pressure area on July 2 and dissipated soon after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Rumbia (Gorio)\nUpon landfall in the Philippines, Rumbia caused extensive flooding across multiple islands, which disrupted transportation and displaced thousands of people. Power outages resulted from the heavy rain and strong winds, and seven deaths were reported within Concepci\u00f3n, Iloilo after an unnamed motorbanca capsized. At its landfall in China, Rumbia damaged large swaths of agricultural cropland and destroyed at least 112\u00a0buildings, causing \u00a57.68\u00a0million in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Soulik (Huaning)\nIn early July, an upper-level cold-core low persisted well to the northeast of Guam. Gaining tropical characteristics, the system soon developed a surface low and became a tropical depression early on July 7. Tracking generally westward, a motion it would retain for its entire existence, the depression underwent a period of rapid intensification starting on July 8 that culminated in Soulik attaining its peak strength early on July 10. At that time, the system had sustained winds estimated at 185\u00a0km/h (115\u00a0mph) and barometric pressure of 925\u00a0hPa (27.32\u00a0inHg).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Soulik (Huaning)\nThereafter, an eyewall replacement cycle and cooler waters weakened the system. Though it passed over the warm waters of the Kuroshio Current the following day, dry air soon impinged upon the typhoon. Soulik later made landfall late on July 12 in northern Taiwan before weakening in to a tropical storm. Briefly emerging over the Taiwan Strait, the storm moved onshore for a second time in Fujian on July 13. The system was last noted on July 14, as it dissipated over land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Soulik (Huaning)\nStriking Taiwan as a strong typhoon, Soulik brought gusts up to 220\u00a0km/h (140\u00a0mph) and torrential rains. Numerous trees and power lines fell, leaving roughly 800,000\u00a0without electricity. Severe flooding prompted thousands to evacuate as well. Four people lost their lives on the island while 123\u00a0more were injured. In East China, more than 162\u00a0million people were affected by the storm. Heavy rains and typhoon-force winds caused extensive damage and killed 11 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Cimaron (Isang)\nA tropical disturbance formed east of the Philippines on July 15. Later that day, it was given the name Isang by the PAGASA. Early the next day, it intensified into Tropical Storm Cimaron as it made several thunderstorms. Its remnants stayed east of Taiwan on July 19 and it finally dissipated on July 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Cimaron (Isang)\nOn July 17, a lightning incident within the Philippine province of Ilocos Sur, left two people dead and two others injured. Torrential rains over southern Fujian Province triggered significant flooding, with areas already saturated from Typhoon Soulik less than a week prior. A 24-hour peak of 505.3\u00a0mm (19.89\u00a0in) was measured in Mei Village, with an hourly maximum of 132.3\u00a0mm (5.21\u00a0in). Many homes were inundated and several roads were washed out. Some areas experienced 1-in-500-year flooding. Approximately 20.28\u00a0million people were affected by the storm, 8.92\u00a0million of whom were temporarily relocated. At least one person was killed and another was reported missing. An unusually intense thunderstorm associated with Cimaron produced a prolific lightning event over Xiamen, with 406\u00a0strikes recorded in two hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Jebi (Jolina)\nOn July 26, a low-pressure area was observed 600\u00a0km (375\u00a0mi) east of General Santos City and was embedded along the Intertropical Convergence Zone that brought heavy rains to Mindanao. During the next three days, the low-pressure area crossed the Philippines and arrived on the West Philippine Sea on July 30, located west of Batangas. After favorable conditions, both PAGASA and JMA upgraded the system into a tropical depression and was named Jolina. On July 31, the JMA upgraded the system into a tropical storm and was given the international name Jebi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Jebi (Jolina)\nOn September 2, The JMA upgraded Jebi into severe tropical storm. Jebi weakened into tropical storm and made landfall over Northern Vietnam On September 3, as well as the JTWC and JMA downgraded into tropical storm. Jebi weakened into tropical depression, as the JMA and the JTWC issued their final warning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Jebi (Jolina)\nIn Cotabato City, incessant rains caused by the low-pressure area in Mindanao submerged 25 of its 37 villages. The floods forced the city government to suspend classes for elementary both public and private schools. Heavy rains also flooded areas around the Liguasan marshland, including 14 low-lying towns in Maguindanao and seven towns in North Cotabato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Jebi (Jolina)\nAt least 7 people were killed in Vietnam. The most extensive losses took place in Qu\u1ea3ng Ninh Province where 320\u00a0homes and 200 hectares of crops were damaged. Losses in the area amounted to VND10\u00a0billion (US$476,000).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Mangkhut (Kiko)\nEarly on August 5, the JMA and PAGASA reported that a tropical depression had developed within a favourable environment for further development, about 145\u00a0km (90\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Puerto Princesa in Palawan with the latter naming it as Kiko. Later that day as the system consolidated further the JMA reported that the depression had developed into a tropical storm and named it Mangkhut, before the JTWC initiated advisories and designated it as Tropical Depression 10W. Over the next couple of days the system moved towards the north-northwest before it made landfall in Northern Vietnam during August 7 before it was last noted early the next day as it dissipated over Laos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Mangkhut (Kiko)\nDownpours throughout Wednesday night till Thursday were recorded at 80\u00a0mm (3.1\u00a0in) deep on streets of the capital, causing difficulties for many people to go to work. Meanwhile, rainfall went up to about 300\u00a0mm (12\u00a0in) in central Thanh H\u00f3a and northern Hai Phong city amid wind with a speed hitting 62\u201388\u00a0km/h (40\u201355\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Utor (Labuyo)\nOn August 8, the JMA, JTWC, and PAGASA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 560\u00a0km (350\u00a0mi) to the north of Palau, with the latter naming it as Labuyo as it approached the Philippine Area of Responsibility. During the next day, the JMA reported that the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Utor. Shortly thereafter, Utor began undergoing explosive intensification, achieving typhoon status early on August 10, as an eye developed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Utor (Labuyo)\nAt 1200 UTC on August\u00a011, Typhoon Utor attained peak intensity by the ten-minute maximum sustained winds reaching 195\u00a0km/h (121\u00a0mph) and the atmospheric pressure decreasing to 925\u00a0mbar (27.3\u00a0inHg). The system became exceptionally symmetrical, as the convective bands had further deepened, which prompted JTWC upgrading Utor to a super typhoon. Continuing westward, Utor made landfall over northern Luzon that evening. It emerged into the South China Sea as a weakened storm, and Utor failed to re-intensify significantly. At 07:50 UTC on August 14, Utor made landfall over Yangjiang in Guangdong, as a minimal typhoon. On August 15, after Utor made landfall in China, its remnants continued to travel slowly in a northerly direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Utor (Labuyo)\nThe Aurora province suffered the most damage from the typhoon, especially the coastal town of Casiguran. The capital of Manila received heavy rain but no significant damage was reported. 80 percent of the infrastructure was believed to be destroyed at Casiguran (about 2,000 homes). A total of over 12,000 homes were damaged. The town was isolated from the rest of the area when Utor's wind toppled transmission lines and cut off power. 158,000 residents were evacuated in southern China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Utor (Labuyo)\nHong Kong was hit by winds of up to 85\u00a0km/h (53\u00a0mph) while neighbouring Macao was battered with gusts of 70\u00a0km/h (43\u00a0mph). One person was killed in China, and hundreds of flights were either cancelled or delayed. A 190-metre (210\u00a0yd) long cargo ship was sunk off the coast of Hong Kong due to waves reaching up to 15 metres (16\u00a0yd) high. The crew abandoned the vessel and were saved by rescue workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 13W\nOn August 15, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 1,275\u00a0km (790\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Taipei. After interacting with Trami, the depression hit the Eastern Chinese coast and dissipated on August 18 and its remnants continued to move westerly track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Trami (Maring)\nOn August 16, a tropical depression had developed within a marginal environment for further development about 340 kilometres (210\u00a0mi) southeast of Taipei, Taiwan. During that day, the low level circulation consolidated while moving to the southeast, given the name Maring by PAGASA. It interacted with another depression to the north, exhibiting the Fujiwhara effect. On August 18, the depression also known as Maring strengthened into a Tropical Storm Trami according to the JMA, while steadily tracking generally eastwards. Trami weakened below typhoon intensity on August 23. The remnants of the system continued to move inland in a westerly direction. Trami made landfall in the Fujian province of China on August 22, 2:40\u00a0a.m. local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Trami (Maring)\nOn August\u00a018, officials in Luzon closed classes and government buildings in some cities due to heavy rainfall. Majors areas in Metro Manila and nearby provinces reported severe flooding. The Marikina River rose as high as 19\u00a0m (62\u00a0ft), forcing authorities evacuate nearby residents. Four provinces and Metro Manila were declared a state of calamity, and there were 18\u00a0deaths. The Yaeyama and Miyako Islands of Japan were battered with gusts from Trami as the system headed for Taiwan and China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Trami (Maring)\nIn Taiwan, the storm produced gale-force winds and heavy rainfall in northern Taiwan, with Taipei receiving 12\u00a0in (300\u00a0mm) of rain. Trami injured 10\u00a0people and forced 6,000 to evacuate, but damage was minor in Taiwan. In Fujian in eastern China, winds peaked at 126\u00a0km/h (78\u00a0mph), and heavy rainfall occurred in several cities, forcing over 100,000\u00a0people to evacuate. The system also intensified floods brought by earlier monsoonal rains in China, wreaking havoc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Pewa\nDuring August 18, the JMA and the JTWC reported that Tropical Storm Pewa, had moved into the Western Pacific basin from the Central Pacific, about 1,640\u00a0km (1,020\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Wake Island. During August 20 the JTWC reported that Pewa had become equivalent to a Category 1 hurricane on the SSHS, before reporting that the system had weakened into a tropical storm. Later that day, it was classified as a severe tropical storm by the JMA but wasn't classified as a typhoon. Pewa moved northwest as weak vertical windshear caused it to slowly weaken on August 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Pewa\nOn August 23, vertical windshear caused Pewa to weaken as it moved north. Pewa was then downgraded to a tropical storm later that day. Very early on August 25, Pewa was downgraded to a storm by the JMA. The next day, Pewa's circulation became exposed as it became a depression. On August 26, Pewa fully dissipated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Unala\nDuring August 19, the JMA and JTWC reported that Tropical Storm Unala had moved into the Western Pacific basin from the Central Pacific, as it rapidly weakened and moved westwards into the periphery of Severe Tropical Storm Pewa. The system was last noted by the JMA later that day as it weakened into a tropical depression and dissipated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Kong-rey (Nando)\nOn August 23, an area of convection persisted southeast of Manila. As indicated in global models, the system is forecast to consolidate as it moves poleward to more favorable environment conditions. On August 25, the JMA announced the formation of a tropical depression to the east of the Philippines and PAGASA allocated the designation Nando. The next day, the JTWC also upgraded it to a tropical depression, designating it as 14W. Later that day, the JMA upgraded Nando to a tropical storm, naming it Kong-rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 76], "content_span": [77, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Kong-rey (Nando)\nKong-rey brought heavy showers and gusty winds in the Philippines as the storm continued to intensify. On August 28, Kong-rey reached Severe Tropical Storm strength. It was then later has an exposed circulation shortly then it was downgraded to a tropical storm on August 29 as it is reported that 3 were killed in Taiwan. Both agencies downgraded Kong-rey to a weak tropical depression, until they made their final advisory on August 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 76], "content_span": [77, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Yutu\nLate on August 29, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 1,145\u00a0km (710\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Wake Island. Moving northeast, over the next three days the depression gradually developed further before the JMA named it Yutu on September 1. Later that day, as dry air wrapped into the circulation and strong vertical wind shear affected the system, the JTWC declared it a subtropical low. Meanwhile, the JMA reported that Yutu had weakened into a tropical depression. Over the next few days, Yutu performed a small loop and started to move westwards. The system was subsequently last noted by both agencies on September 5, as it dissipated, while it was located about 1,425\u00a0km (885\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Wake Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Toraji\nLate on August 30, a disturbance formed west of Taiwan from the outer rainbands of Kong-rey. Early on August 31, the JMA upgraded it to a tropical depression that had developed about 60\u00a0km (35\u00a0mi) to the north of Taipei, Taiwan. It was then later, designated as 15W by the JTWC as it moved towards the east of Taiwan. Favorable conditions of strengthening to a tropical storm as it heads to wards warm waters. Just nearly the same time when Yutu was declared a tropical storm, Tropical Depression 15W rapidly intensified into Tropical Storm Toraji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Toraji\nToraji entered the southern islands of Japan as it intensified. On September 2, Toraji created a small unbalanced eye as it rapidly races towards Japan. On September 3, moderate wind shear occurred as the JMA upgraded Toraji to a severe tropical storm as it enters the southern coast of Japan killing 3. Strong vertical wind shear made Toraji weaken to a depression. The JMA reported on September 4, that Toraji had degenerated into an extratropical low, before it dissipated during the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Man-yi\nA large disturbance formed near the Northern Mariana Islands late on September 9. Late on September 11, it developed into a tropical depression about 565\u00a0km (350\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Saipan. It was designated as 16W by the JTWC and upgraded to Tropical storm Man-yi on September 12, moving northwestward. Man-yi intensifying and grew larger as the pressure dropped 20\u00a0mbar (0.59\u00a0inHg). Late on September 14, Man-yi became a severe tropical storm, forming a small eye, and the next day strengthened briefly into a typhoon. Man-yi turned northward toward Japan, making landfall on September 16 near Toyohashi. Around that time, the storm became extratropical, and on September\u00a020 Man-yi dissipated near the Kamchatka Peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Man-yi\nAcross western Japan, hundreds of thousands of people were ordered to evacuate, including 260,000 in Kyoto. The JMA issued a \"special warning\" for three western Japan prefectures of Fukui, Kyoto, and Shiga. Over 70 people were injured and at least one person was killed. The government of Japan set up emergency task forces and employed rescue teams. Many homes were flooded and about 80,000 were without electricity in western and central Japan. Trains in Tokyo and its vicinity were suspended and hundreds of flights were grounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 18W\nOn September 15, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed within an area of low to moderate vertical windshear, about 1,000\u00a0km (620\u00a0mi) to the southeast of H\u00e0 N\u1ed9i, Vietnam. Over the next two days the depression gradually developed further as it moved westwards, before the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert late on September 17, as vertical windshear over the system decreased slightly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 18W\nDuring the next day after the depressions low level circulation center had started to consolidate, the JTWC initiated advisories and designated it as Tropical Depression 18W. During that day the system moved westwards along the southern edge of the subtropical ridge of high pressure, before the JTWC issued its final warning on the system later that day after the depression had made landfall in Vietnam. Over the next couple of days the system continued to move westwards and moved through Vietnam, Laos and Thailand, before it was last noted on September 21, over the Thai province of Phetchabun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 18W\nIn Vietnam, flooding triggered by the storm killed at least seven people and 5,000\u00a0homes were damaged or destroyed. Severe flooding took place in neighboring Laos where at least 10,000\u00a0structures were damaged and losses reached $61\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Usagi (Odette)\nFrom the southwest monsoon combined with the outflow of Typhoon Man-yi, a couple of disturbances was created on September 14. Early on September 16, it became a tropical depression which developed within an area of low wind shear about 1,300\u00a0km (810\u00a0mi) east of Manila in the Philippines. During that day as the circulation became better defined, PAGASA named the system \"Odette\", and later JMA upgraded the system to Tropical Storm Usagi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0046-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Usagi (Odette)\nOn September 17, JTWC upgraded Usagi to a tropical storm, and the next day both JMA and JTWC upgraded Usagi to a typhoon due to a developing eye. On September 19, Usagi began explosive intensification and formed a round eye; as the result, JTWC upgraded Usagi to a Category 4 super typhoon on the SSHWS, and the typhoon reached its peak intensity at 18Z. On September 20, Usagi began an eyewall replacement cycle and weakened due to land interaction between Taiwan and Luzon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0046-0002", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Usagi (Odette)\nWhen Usagi entered the Bashi Channel early on September 21, JTWC downgraded it to a typhoon due to weakening convection. At 11:40 UTC (19:40 CST) on September 22, Usagi made landfall over Shanwei, Guangdong, China. Soon, JTWC issued the final warning of Usagi, and JMA downgraded it to a severe tropical storm at 18Z. On September 23, JMA downgraded Usagi to a tropical depression in Guangxi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Pabuk\nOn September 19, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 325\u00a0km (200\u00a0mi) to the southeast of the Northern Mariana Islands, Saipan. over the next couple of days the system moved towards the northwest before the JTWC initiated advisories on the system and designated it as Tropical Depression 19W during September 21. Later that day, the JTWC upgraded it to a tropical storm as the JMA named it Pabuk very early on September 22. Pabuk just maintained its strength as it created a weak eye on September 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Pabuk\nPabuk also enhanced the southwest monsoon which brought heavy floods in the Philippines and created a disturbance which will later be Typhoon Wutip. The eye became bigger as it headed towards warm waters the next day. Pabuk was upgraded to a Category 2 typhoon by the JTWC but the JMA still has called this as a severe tropical storm on September 24. After reaching its peak intensity the following day, Severe tropical storm Pabuk weaken to a Category 1 typhoon on early on September 26. It gradually weakened before transitioning into an extratropical cyclone on September 27. Pabuk fully dissipated as it crossed the International Date Line on September 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Wutip (Paolo)\nA tropical disturbance formed from the southwest monsoon which was enhanced by Pabuk on September 23. On September 25, it became a tropical depression and slowly deepened off the west coast of the Philippines and named it Paolo by the PAGASA and classified as 20W by the JTWC early the next day. The system tracked west and strengthened into a tropical storm and named it Wutip on September 27 as it brought rainfall across Luzon. Tropical Storm Wutip became a severe tropical storm as it moved westwards on September 28, and rapidly became a typhoon. On September 29, Wutip became a Moderate Typhoon as it created an eye towards Thailand. It was rapidly downgraded by a tropical storm as it moved westwards on September 30. It slowly dissipated and crossed the 100th meridian very early on October 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Wutip (Paolo)\nAs of September 29, 74 Chinese fishermen were missing after the storm sunk 3 fishing boats in the South China Sea near the Paracel Islands as Thailand and Vietnam braced for torrential rain and flooding. Fourteen survivors had been rescued. Rain reached Vietnam on September 30 and then Thailand the following day, killing 42 people in Vietnam. Wutip killed 77 people in southeastern Asia during late September and early October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Sepat\nA very weak low-pressure area formed on September 27. During September 28, the JTWC started to monitor and classified it as a subtropical system under strong wind shear about 2,270\u00a0km (1,410\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Tokyo, Japan. After transtioning into a tropical cyclone, the JMA reported that the system had become a tropical depression during the next day. After consolidating, the JMA reported that the system had become a tropical storm early on September 30. The JTWC subsequently designated the system as Tropical Depression 21W later that day, as they initiated advisories on the system. It impacted Japan on October 2 without any damages and casualties. Tropical Storm Sepat entered cool waters later that day and became extratropical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Fitow (Quedan)\nA large tropical disturbance formed east of Palau late on September 26. It intensified to a tropical depression on September 29, and the PAGASA named it Quedan and JTWC designated it with 22W later that day. On September 30, deep convection wrapped around Quedan as it became a tropical storm, and it was named Fitow on October 1. Fitow rapidly intensified into a Category 2 typhoon as it moved north on October 3. A large eye developed as Fitow slammed into the southern Japanese Islands late on October 4, killing two people. Chinese authorities recalled some 65,000 fishing boats as 200\u00a0km/h (120\u00a0mph) wind gusts battered Wenzhou. 574,000 people were evacuated from Zhejiang and 177,000 from Fujian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Fitow (Quedan)\n70% of downtown Yuyao was flooded, which led to damage valued at over 20 billion yuan as well as riots and action by riot police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Fitow (Quedan)\nChinese authorities reported one person killed in Wenzhou and two dock workers missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Danas (Ramil)\nOn October 1, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed within an area of moderate vertical windshear, about 900\u00a0km (560\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Hag\u00e5t\u00f1a, Guam. Over the next 2 days the system gradually developed further as the low level circulation consolidated and became better defined, before the JTWC initiated advisories and designated the system as Tropical Depression 23W during October 3. During the next day both the JTWC and the JMA reported that the depression had developed into a tropical storm with the latter naming it as Danas. On October 5, Danas became a severe tropical storm and rapidly became a Category 1 typhoon as it races west towards warm waters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Danas (Ramil)\nLate on the same day, some agencies reported that it would reach Category 5 strength because of explosive intensification occurring as more convection wraps the storm. Early on October 6, Typhoon Danas was classified as a Category 2-3 typhoon as a small eye developed as the PAGASA gave it the name Ramil as it passed through the corner of the Philippine area of responsibility later that day as a strong Category 3 typhoon. Typhoon Danas underwent explosive intensification as it steadily and slowly enters warm waters and it became a Category 4 typhoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0055-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Danas (Ramil)\nIts eye became wider and was classified as an annular typhoon and impacted the Ryukyu Islands on October 7. Typhoon Danas then rapidly weakened as it entered cool waters near Japan on October 8, and on October 9, Danas became extratropical as it headed toward the northern part of Japan. Its remnants continued to be a low-pressure area and entered southern Alaska and Canada on October 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nari (Santi)\nOn October 8, the JMA started to monitor a tropical depression, that developed within an area of low to moderate vertical windshear, about 1,350\u00a0km (840\u00a0mi) to the west of Manila on the Philippine island of Luzon. During that day the system moved westwards along the southern edge of a subtropical ridge of high pressure, as it gradually developed further, before it was named Santi by PAGASA. It gradually intensified into a tropical storm, gaining the international name Nari on October 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0056-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nari (Santi)\nNari continued to intensify, and reached Category 3 status on October 11 as it moved west towards the Philippines and made landfall in Dingalan, Aurora. Power outages affected much of Central Luzon as the typhoon crossed the region. Five people were killed by falling trees and landslides from Nari as it weakened to a Category 2 typhoon on October 12. With land interaction, Nari weakened to a Severe Tropical Storm during October 13. Late on October 14, the system affected Vietnam and made landfall later that day. Due to land interaction, Nari weakened to an remnant low. Early on October 16, both the JMA and JTWC issued their final warnings on Nari, as the system dissipated. Within the Philippines a total of 15 people were left dead while 5 were missing, while total economic losses were amounted to be Php 12.3 billion (US$277.34 million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Wipha (Tino)\nOn October 8, 2013, the JMA started to monitor a tropical depression, that developed within an area of low to moderate vertical windshear, about 670\u00a0km (415\u00a0mi) to the east of Hag\u00e5t\u00f1a on the island of Guam. Tropical Depression 25W formed 696 nautical miles south of Iwo Jima, Japan on October 10. It strengthened into Tropical Storm Wipha, then continued to intensify into a severe tropical storm and later a typhoon. Wipha then rapidly intensified into a Category 4 typhoon on October 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Wipha (Tino)\nDuring the morning of October 14, Wipha entered the Philippine area of responsibility, and PAGASA promptly named it Tino as it created an eyewall replacement cycle becoming a Category 4 typhoon later that day. Early on October 15, Wipha rapidly weakened as it approached cooler waters near Japan. Late on October 16, Wipha transitioned into an extratropical storm. The remnants of Wipha continued to accelerate towards the northeast, and was located southeast of the Kamchatka Peninsula on October 17. Soon afterwards, Wipha turned to the east, and crossed the International Date Line on October 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Francisco (Urduja)\nOn October 15, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 465\u00a0km (290\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Hag\u00e5t\u00f1a, Guam. During that day the depression gradually developed further before later that day the JTWC designated it as Tropical Depression 26W. It was subsequently named Francisco by the JMA as it very rapidly became a severe tropical storm early on October 17. Explosive intensification occurred, and Francisco evolved to a Category 5 super typhoon late on October 19 and reached peak intensity early later that day. Francisco slowly weakened as it underwent an eyewall replacement cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0058-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Francisco (Urduja)\nAt noon on October 21, Francisco rapidly weakened to a Category 3 typhoon and became an annular typhoon. Very early on October 22, Francisco entered the Philippine area of responsibility and it was given the name Urduja, as convection around Francisco started to weaken later that day. On October 23, Francisco was downgraded to a severe tropical storm as it impacted the Ryukyu Islands. On October 26, Francisco impacted Japan as a tropical storm. It then rapidly dissipated southeast of Japan also interacting with extratropical storm Lekima the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 27W\nEarly on October 17, a tropical depression developed about 900\u00a0km (560\u00a0mi) northeast of Guam. The system gradually developed further within an area of moderate windshear that was off-set by an outflow mechanism, and early on October 19, the JTWC designated it as Tropical Depression 27W. During that day, the system moved northeastwards within an area of strong wind shear, along the southwestern edge of the subtropical ridge. The JTWC issued their final advisory on the system early on October\u00a020, after convection diminished. The system was last noted by the JMA on October 23 southeast of Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Lekima\nEarly on October 19, 2013, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed, within an area of strong vertical windshear, about 730\u00a0km (455\u00a0mi) to the northeast of the Micronesian island of Pohnpei. Due to an increase in convection and a consolidating low level circulation centre, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the system later that day. On October 20, the JTWC initiated advisories on the system later that day, while the JMA upgraded the system into Tropical Storm Lekima at 1800\u00a0UTC after it had developed into a tropical storm. The next day, the JMA reported that Lekima had become a severe tropical storm, while the JTWC reported that the system had become a typhoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Lekima\nAfter JMA upgraded Lekima to a typhoon early on October 22, the system began to undergo rapid deepening, developing a well-defined eye with a symmetric eyewall. Late on the same day, JTWC upgraded the system to a super typhoon with Category 5 strength on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale, owing to dual-channel outflow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Lekima\nSince early on October 23, JMA reported that Lekima has reached peak intensity and maintained for over one day. However, morphed integrated microwave imageries at CIMSS (MIMIC) depict that Lekima underwent an eyewall replacement cycle late on that day and completed it one day later. Lekima started to slowly weaken on October 24, and JTWC downgraded it to a typhoon. On October 25, under moderate to strong westerly vertical wind shear and interacting with the mid-latitude westerlies, Lekima began an extratropical transition and lost the eyewall structure. On October 26, Lekima completed its transition east of Japan and weakened into a storm-force developed low. The low fully dissipated as it crossed the International Date Line on October 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Krosa (Vinta)\nA non-tropical system formed late on October 23. It became a low-pressure area on October 26. On October 27, the JMA started to classify it as a tropical depression that had developed within a moderately favourable environment for further development, about 380\u00a0km (235\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Hag\u00e5t\u00f1a, Guam. On October 28, the system was given the designation 29W by the JTWC and named Vinta by the PAGASA. It became Tropical Storm Krosa by the JMA as it slowly intensified nearing the Philippines early on October 30. The next day, Krosa reached Category 1 typhoon intensity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0063-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Krosa (Vinta)\nLater that morning, the typhoon made landfall over Santa Ana, Cagayan. The typhoon intensified into a Category 2 typhoon soon after its Cagayan landfall. It is reported that 1 person died by heavy floods. On November 1, Krosa weakened to a Category 1 typhoon, but on early November 2, its eye expanded as it was in the South China Sea and became a Category 2 again. It maintained its strength and became a Category 3 typhoon later that day as vertical windshear occurred north of it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 30W (Wilma)\nA broad circulation formed early on October 31. On November 1, the JMA reported that it was upgraded to a tropical depression that had developed, about 280\u00a0km (175\u00a0mi) to the south of Palau. On November 2, the tropical depression weakened into a low-pressure area. On November 3, the system regenerated into a tropical depression, and the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert. The storm was then given the name Wilma by the PAGASA, and the designation 30W by the JTWC, as it impacted northern Mindanao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0064-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 30W (Wilma)\nOn November 4, Wilma weakened, and spawned a waterspout that caused minor damage. On November 6, the system impacted Vietnam, before it became a remnant low late on November 7. Then on November 8, the remnants of the storm continued to move west, crossing the 100th meridian east, and affecting Myanmar. The storm crossed the Malay Peninsula into the Bay of Bengal later on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda)\nOn November 3, a low-pressure area formed 45 nautical miles south-southeast of Pohnpei. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert. A few hours later, the JTWC designated the depression as \"31W\". At 10 AM JST the next day, the JMA named 31W as Haiyan. Haiyan rapidly intensified as it headed towards Palau and the Philippines. Rapid deepening occurred and it became a Category 5 super typhoon as it entered the Philippine area of responsibility, and was named Yolanda. Haiyan reached a barometric pressure below 900 mbars (895 mbars), the first since Typhoon Megi in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0065-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda)\nOn November 8, Haiyan weakened to a Category 4 typhoon as it entered the South China Sea. An eyewall replacement cycle occurred to Haiyan as it became a Category 3 typhoon. On November 9, the outer rainbands of the storm were felt in Cambodia and Vietnam. It weakened to a moderate typhoon as it impacted Laos. Haiyan rapidly weakened to a severe tropical storm as it killed 12 people in China on November 10, dissipating inland the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda)\nWithin the Philippines, Haiyan was the worst tropical cyclone to impact the island nation, as it became both the deadliest and most damaging typhoon since reliable records started in 1970. According to The Philippine National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, a total of 6,300 people were reported to have died in Haiyan, with 5,902 or 93% of the deaths occurring in Eastern Visayas. The cause of most of these deaths was attributed to trauma and people drowning, however, other causes included being electrocuted and hit by uprooted trees. A total of 8000 deaths were associated with the storm and total damages were estimated at Php571 billion (US$13 billion).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda)\nIn Vietnam, 14 people were killed indirectly by the storm. Haiyan also triggered floods in Mainland China, leaving 30 people dead and damages of CN\u00a54.58 billion (US$750 million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Podul (Zoraida)\nEarly on November 9, the JMA reported that a disorganized tropical depression had developed to the southeast of Koror, Palau. Following an increase in organization, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert for the system during November 10, as it was named Zoraida by PAGASA. Early on November 12, Tropical Depression Zoraida made landfall over Davao Oriental province in Eastern Mindando, before it moved into the Sulu Sea later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Podul (Zoraida)\nOn November 14, the system intensified to a tropical storm, and it was named Podul by the JMA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Podul (Zoraida)\nEarly on November 15, the JTWC issued their final warning on Podul, as the remnants of the system's low level circulation center made landfall over Vietnam. After moving westwards through Vietnam and Cambodia and into the Gulf of Thailand, Podul was last noted by the JMA and the Thai Meteorological Department during the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 33W\nTropical Depression 33W was a short lived tropical depression that was first noted during as a tropical disturbance during December 2, while it was located about 685\u00a0km (425\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Hag\u00e5t\u00f1a, Guam. Over the next day, the system quickly developed into a tropical depression, within marginal environment for further development, before it was declared to be a tropical depression during December 3. However, the system quickly weakened and was last noted as it dissipated over the Pacific Ocean to the northeast of Guam during the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nEarly on March 20, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 1,470\u00a0km (915\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Manila, in an area of moderate vertical wind shear. Over the next two days the system moved towards the west-northwest, before it was last noted by the JMA during March 22, as it dissipated over Southern Mindanao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring April 11, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had briefly developed within the Gulf of Thailand, about 440\u00a0km (275\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Ho Chi Minh City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nOn June 14, the CMA reported that a tropical depression had developed within a broad circulation that spanned most of the South China Sea, about 420\u00a0km (260\u00a0mi) to the southwest of Hong Kong. Over the next day the system moved towards the north-east and in conjunction with an area of high pressure located over south-eastern China, brought strong winds to south-eastern China and Hong Kong. The system was subsequently last noted by the CMA during the next day while it was located over Hainan Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nEarly on July 18, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed within the monsoon trough in an unfavorable environment for further development, about 710\u00a0km (440\u00a0mi) to the southwest of Manila. Over the next couple of days the system moved towards Hainan Island and Northern Vietnam, before it was last noted on July 20, as it dissipated about 250\u00a0km (155\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Hanoi, Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nOn August 10, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 500\u00a0km (310\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Manila in the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nTropical Depression Three-C moved into the Western Pacific basin, from the Central Pacific during August 20. However, the system quickly dissipated within the Western Pacific, as it suffered from increased vertical wind shear, which was caused by the outflow of Typhoon Pewa. Early on August 27, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 685\u00a0km (425\u00a0mi) to the south of Hong Kong. Early on August 28, the JMA started to monitor a tropical depression that had developed despite strong vertical wind shear about 925\u00a0km (575\u00a0mi) northwest of Anderson Air Force Base in Guam. Remaining nearly stationary, dry air started to wrap in to the system's fully exposed low level circulation center. The system dissipated two days later on August 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nEarly on September 6, the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed about 420\u00a0km (260\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Manila. The system moved towards the west-northwest before it was last noted by the JMA later that day, as a new tropical depression developed about 1,400\u00a0km (870\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Wake Island. The next day, the depression moved towards the west-northwest before it was last noted by the JMA later that day. On September 23, the JMA noted that a tropical depression had briefly developed about 1,600\u00a0km (995\u00a0mi) the north of Wake Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0078-0001", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nLate on October 2, the JMA started to monitor a tropical depression that had developed about 900\u00a0km (560\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Wake Island. Over the next day, the system remained nearly stationary before it was last noted on October 4. On October 4, the JMA started to monitor a tropical depression, that had developed within the Gulf of Thailand. Over the next couple of days, the system moved westward within an area of low to moderate vertical wind shear, before it passed over the Malay Peninsula and moved out of the Western Pacific Basin on October 6, and later developed into Cyclone Phailin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0079-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Other systems\nOn November 18, the JMA noted that a tropical depression had developed, about 215\u00a0km (135\u00a0mi) to the west of Bandar Seri Begawan. During that day it moved westwards, but was last noted by the JMA later that day. During the next day the JMA reported that a tropical depression had developed, about 365\u00a0km (225\u00a0mi) to the west of Kuala Lumpur. Over the next few days the system moved towards the west-northwest and moved into an extremely favorable environment, for further development while located over the Malay Peninsula during November 21. The next day, it crossed 100\u00b0E and moved into the North Indian Ocean, where it later developed into Cyclone Lehar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0080-0000", "contents": "2013 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, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0080-0001", "contents": "2013 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-00235399-0081-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names, International names\nDuring the season 29 tropical storms developed in the Western Pacific and each one was named by the JMA, when the system was judged to have 10-minute sustained windspeeds of 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph). The JMA selected the names from a list of 140 names, that had been developed by the 14 members nations and territories of the ESCAP/WMO Typhoon Committee. During the season the names Leepi and Mangkhut were used for the first time, after they had replaced the names Xangsane and Durian, which were retired after the 2006 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0082-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names, International names\nAfter the season the Typhoon Committee retired the names Sonamu, Utor, Fitow and Haiyan from its naming lists, and in February 2015, the names were subsequently replaced with Jongdari, Barijat, Mun and Bailu for future seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0083-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names, Philippines\nDuring the season PAGASA used its own naming scheme for the 25 tropical cyclones, that either developed within or moved into their self-defined area of responsibility. The names were taken from a list of names, that had been last used during 2009 and was used again during 2017. The names Fabian, Odette and Paolo were used for the first time during the year after the names Ondoy, and Pepeng were retired. The names Wilma, Yolanda, and Zoraida were also used for the first time (and only in the case of Yolanda).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0084-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names, Philippines\nAfter the season the names Labuyo, Santi and Yolanda were retired by PAGASA, as they had caused over 300 deaths and over PhP1 billion in damages. They were subsequently replaced on the list with Lannie, Salome and Yasmin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235399-0085-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific typhoon season, Season effects\nThis table lists all the storms that developed in the northwestern Pacific Ocean west of the International Date Line and north of the equator during 2013. It includes their intensity, duration, name, areas affected, deaths, and damage totals. Classification and intensity values are based on estimations conducted by the JMA. All damage figures are in 2013\u00a0USD. Damages and deaths from a storm include when the storm was a precursor wave or an extratropical low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235400-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships\nThe 2013 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships took place from November 11 to 19 at the Fei Yang Skating Centre in Shanghai, China. South Korea were the women's champions, their second title after winning the 2010 Pacific Curling Championships, while China won the men's tournament, extending their winning streak to seven years. The championships served as the Pacific zone qualifiers for the World Curling Championships. The top two women's teams, China and South Korea, qualified for the 2014 Ford World Women's Curling Championship in Saint John, New Brunswick. As the 2014 World Men's Curling Championship will be hosted in Beijing, China, with the hosts as automatic qualifiers, Japan was the single men's team that advanced to the World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235400-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships, Competition format\nThe men's tournament had six teams competing, while the women's tournament had five teams, with both tournaments utilizing a double round robin format. At the conclusion of the round robin tournaments, the top four men's and women's teams played in the semifinals. The semifinal rounds will be best-of-five series, with the two games that the teams played in the round robin counted as the first and second games in the best-of-five series. The medal round, as in previous years, consisted of single games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235401-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pacific-Asia Junior Curling Championships\nThe 2013 Pacific-Asia Junior Curling Championships was held from January 10 to 16 at the Toroko Curling Club in Tokoro, Kitami, Japan. In the men's tournament, China defeated Korea with a score of 7\u20133 to secure a spot at the 2013 World Junior Curling Championships, while in the women's tournament, Japan defeated China with a score of 7\u20134 to secure a spot at the 2013 World Junior Curling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235402-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pahang FA season\nThe 2013 season was Pahang's 23rd consecutive season in the top flight of Malaysian football. Pahang's victory in the 2013 Malaysia Cup for the third time in their history, last time they won are 21 years ago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235402-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pahang FA 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235402-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pahang FA season, Transfers\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, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235402-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pahang FA season, Transfers\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, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235402-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pahang FA season, Transfers\nFor recent transfers, see List of Malaysian football transfers 2012", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235402-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pahang FA season, Competitions, 2013 Malaysia Cup\nThe Final will be played on 3 Nov 2013 at Shah Alam Stadium, Shah Alam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235403-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan election day bombings\nOn 11 May 2013, the election day for Pakistan general election several bombings took place across the country. The bombings were targeted against offices of the Awami National Party. Another blast was in Quaidabad near a polling station. The blast killed over 10 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235404-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan gas bus explosion\n2013 Pakistan gas bus explosion occurred on 25 May 2013 after a gas cylinder exploded in a school minivan heading towards Gujrat in Pakistan. The blast killed at least 17 people, including 16 children and a bus driver and another 7 children were wounded. The children were aged between 6 and 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235404-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan gas bus explosion, Cause\nThe fire was reportedly caused by a spark when the driver of the dual-fuel bus switched from gas to petrol. Officer Ijaz Ahmad said a short-circuit next to a leaking petrol tank started the blaze. Police had earlier blamed an exploding natural gas cylinder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election\nGeneral elections were held in Pakistan on Saturday 11 May 2013 to elect the members of the National Assembly and the four provincial assemblies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election\nPrior to the elections, the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) formed an alliance with the Pakistan Muslim League (Q) and Awami National Party, while the main opposition party, the Pakistan Muslim League (N) (PML-N) allied with the Pakistan Muslim League (F) and Baloch parties. The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf led by cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan, also emerged as a key-player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election\nThe result was a hung parliament, with the PML-N receiving the most votes and winning the most seats, but falling six seats short of a majority. However, following the elections, 19 independent MPs joined the PML-N, allowing it to form a government alone with Nawaz Sharif as new Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election\nIn the provincial elections, the PPP was able to defend its majority in Sindh. The PTI won the most seats in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the first time it had gained control of a province. The PML-N emerged as the largest party in Punjab and Balochistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election\nThe elections were the first civilian transfer of power following the successful completion of a five-year term by a democratically elected government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Background\nBy Constitution's stipulation on Time of conducting elections in the country, [general] elections are to be held at an interval of five years or whenever parliament is dissolved by the President. Upon dissolution of the National Assembly (a lower house of the Parliament), the elections are to be held within a period of sixty days immediately under a caretaker set\u2013up. The previous elections were held in February 2008 and its term naturally expired in February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Background\nIn mid-January 2013, Sufi cleric and politician Dr. Tahir-ul-Qadri led a Long March from Lahore to Islamabad, which is over 350\u00a0km, demanding the electoral reforms, the quick dissolution of the National Assembly and a precise date for the election. The march attracted about ~50,000 participants from across Pakistan and ended peacefully. However, this appeared to have little impact on the PPP government who continued on as per normal, and were seemingly following their plan as to when to announce elections. The anti-corruption activism led by Imran Khan gathered momentum and political interests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Background\nIn the run up to the elections, a US Congressional report provided a brief overview of the PPP government between 2008 and 2013. The annual report included the input of 16 US intelligence agencies, including the CIA, which pointed the policies and performances of the PPP government during their five-year term. The report wanted that \"Economically, trouble looms. Pakistan, with its small tax base, poor system of tax collection, and reliance on foreign aid, faces no real prospects for sustainable economic growth. The government has been unwilling to address economic problems that continue to constrain economic growth. The PPP government has made no real effort to persuade its disparate coalition members to accept much-needed monetary policy and tax reforms, because members are simply focused on retaining their seats in the upcoming elections.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Background, Process\nWith assistance from the International Foundation for Electoral Systems, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP)announced the printing of computerised electoral rolls, the first of its kind database which resulted in the elimination of 35 million bogus voters off the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Background, Caretaker government\nFollowing the recommendations in Article 224 (Clauses 1A-1B) of the constitution of Pakistan, there arose a need to form a caretaker government to operate in the interim period between the normal dissolution of parliament, facilitating the election process, until a new government was formed after the election results were known. To this effect, prime minister Pervez Ashraf wrote a letter to the opposition leader Nisar Ali Khan, requesting him to propose names of persons for appointment as the caretaker prime minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Background, Caretaker government\nThe Pakistan Muslim League (N) (PML-N), Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan (JI), Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf (PTI) and Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam (JUI-F) all agreed on the name of retired senior justice Nasir Aslam Zahid as the caretaker PM until the elections take place. After a failure to achieve a consensus between the PPP government and the opposition, the matter was forwarded to a parliamentary committee of four members from both the government and the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Background, Caretaker government\nUnder the provision of Article 224-A (Clause 3) of the constitution, the Election Commission announced the appointment of retired Federal Shariat Court chief justice Mir Hazar Khan Khoso on 24 March 2013 in a press conference held by chief election commissioner Fakhruddin G Ebrahim. Consequently, Khoso was sworn into office as the caretaker prime minister on 25 March 2013, while his caretaker federal cabinet was sworn into office on 2 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Registered voters\nFollowing is the final list of registered voters in each district of Pakistan who are eligible to cast their vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign\nWith the announcement of the care-taker government, campaigning from parties\u2014including the PPP, PML (N) and PTI\u2014started as early as 27 March, six weeks ahead of the 11 May election date. Observers noted that different parties stressed on different interest groups \u2013 PTI on the disaffected youth, PML-N on the centre-right constituency, PPP on liberal classes and rural Sindhis, and MQM on Karachi-based muhajirs. Power shortages were another issue in the election campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Peoples Party\nFounded in 1968, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) is a centre-left and left oriented party, with a mainstream agenda of promoting socialist economics and social justice. The PPP announced that Zardari would be its candidate for the next Prime Minister, though Bilawal Zardari was still too young to become Prime Minister. Article 62 of the Constitution clearly states that the Prime Minister must be a person who is \"not less than twenty-five years of age and is enrolled as a voter in any electoral roll for election to the seat\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Peoples Party\nOn 5 May 2013, it was revealed that Zardari had left Pakistan for Dubai and would not be present at all on election day. He unexpectedly left the country and would not be addressing any party rallies or meetings. The PPP also announced that he would not return until after the elections are over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Peoples Party\nThe PPP's campaign was led by Amin Fahim, accompanied by notable leftist activists such as Taj Haider, Aitzaz Ahsan, Raza Rabbani, and Yousaf Gillani. The PPP ran two different political programmes during the election campaign: \"Massawat\" (lit. Egalitarianism) and \"People's Employment Programme\" for the youth voters, and also its vintage \"Roti Kapda Aur Makaan (lit. Bread, Cloth, House) slogan. The PPP highlighted its implementation of the nationalization and welfare programs that were launched in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Peoples Party\nIn addition, the PPP greatly supported awareness of industrial and labor rights, importance of higher education in the country, promotion of social economics, a foreign policy of building relations with Russia and Eastern Europe, counterterrorism legislation, efforts to reduce gas shortages in the country. Generally, the PPP's main focused was on gathering its support from Sindh. In a critical editorial in the English-language newspaper, The Nation, the PPP neglected to highlight the prevailing issue of energy conservation to reduce the repeated cycle of loadshedding in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Peoples Party\nSoon after the PM's last address on 16 March 2013, TV carried live broadcasts from the streets of Lahore and Karachi, where the public mood was one of anger over corruption, the bad economy, and faulty public services. The reaction of political analysts was mixed, with many holding massive corruption and nepotism as the reasons for the government's perceived failures. Even in his televised address, while trumpeting the occasion, PM Raja P Ashraf quietly conceded that his government had also been a source of disappointment for many.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Peoples Party\nPublic resentment had been fed by an endless list of problems: enduring power shortages [up to 18 hours a day at the peak of summer]; the failure to curb terrorist attacks, protect religious minorities and formulate a coherent anti-terrorism strategy; slow and weak response to the floods; sluggish economic growth, a bloated public sector, cresting inflation; and tales of legendary corruption, carving out private fortunes from a treasury to which they scandalously paid little in tax. Many Pakistanis, particularly among the urban middle classes, were looking to the next elections with relief.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Peoples Party\nIn Karachi and other parts of the country, the PPP also maintained a New Left alliance with the ANP, MQM, and Communist Party against the conservative parties in Sindh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Muslim League Noon\nThe Pakistan Muslim League, a centre-right conservative party, began its campaign on terminating the energy conservation crises, and also issues involving national security, economic development, higher education, immigration, and taxation reforms. The campaign was led by Nawaz Sharif, who emphasis the success of the privatisation to alleviate youth employment and small businesses, introducing policies for the environmental preservation, building motorways, counterterrorism legislation, economic liberalisation, improvement of the public transportation in all over the country, and then the decision of authorising the nuclear-testing programme in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Muslim League Noon\nOver several days, Sharif delivered speeches and visited in all over the country for the support, promising that: \"Just like the nuclear blasts, conducted in our last tenure, made us an atomic power, an economic explosion in our next term will turn the country into a commercial powerhouse.\" Furthermore, the PML(N) indicated to bring a balance on civil-military relations with the military, through opening a source of political channel to resolve issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Muslim League Noon\nThe PML(N) ran a political programme which was termed as \"Ilmi aur Maashi Dhamaka\" (lit. Education and Economic boom) at the public circles, and gained a lot of public support from all over the Punjab, and the financial support from the business community in Karachi, which proved to be a crucial factor in PML(N)'s efforts to gain majority in the elections. After delivering a victory speech in May 2013, Nawaz Sharif became Prime Minister for a third term on 5 June 2013 after receiving vote of confidence in the Parliament. He received 244 votes in the 342-seat parliament. The PML(N) was generally supported by PML(F) against the PPP in Sindh and BNP in Balochistan, also against the PPP. Terming it as \"EEE programme\" for Education, Energy, Economy, the PML(N) popularise its slogan \"Stronger Economy\u2013Strong Pakistan\", which was released in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Muslim League Noon\nAddressing to the national via news channels representatives, the PML(N) debated that aside from balancing the energy conservation, ending stagflation as well inflation, and resolving the issues relating to counter-terrorism and national security, its quick economic recovery programmes is also aimed to increase the expenditure on education, health, food security, and \"non-pension\" social security from the annual GDP by 2018, as part of the policy measurement programmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf\nThe Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) is a centrist, welfarist, and nationalist political party a mainstream political programme of supporting the \"Third Way\" and \"welfarism\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf\nIn the midst of election campaign, the PTI's chairman, Imran Khan, called for an inter-party elections for the leadership of the PTI. Many renowned individuals were defeated in the intra-party elections, such as Arif Alvi who was replaced by Pervez Khattak as secretary-general and Ejaz Chaudhary who defeated Ahsan Rasheed. Imran informed the media that no-one from his party will be eligible to hold the post of the party chairman for more than two terms. Motives behind this inter-party elections were to will ultimately finish off the \"dynasty-type, family limited companies politics\" from the country, as Imran Khan maintained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf\nThe PTI rigorously campaigned on social awareness, social reforms, telecommunication, and the expansion of the e-government in all over the country. Other main points of PTI's campaign was to end the role of country in the War on Terrorism and to regulate private schools' fees structure with the quality of education they provide. The PTI targeted the left-wing policies of PPP and the corruption that took place in state-owned enterprises after underwent through the nationalisation programme, started in 2008 by the PPP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf\nDuring a campaign rally in Lahore, Imran fell 14\u00a0ft as he was stepping off an improvised forklift. He was seen to be bleeding and unconscious with a gash on his head. He was then taken to Shaukat Khanum Memorial Hospital where Imran was treated for two fractures to his spinal column. During the election process, the PTI was also leading a religio-political alliance, consisting of Jamaat-e-Islami and the Shia minority MWM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pervez Musharraf\nOn 24 March 2013, former President Pervez Musharraf returned from self-imposed exile to lead the liberal APML and to run in the election despite threats from the far-right and extremist Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) on his life, similar to the return of Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated shortly after returning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pervez Musharraf\nOn immediate basis, Musharraf's candidature was rejected from his home town of Karachi on the grounds that he violated the Constitution and that he had sacked senior judges during his presidency. Electoral returning officer Ikramur Rehman upheld the objections by his rivals. The liberal PML(Q) official, Afzal Agha, said \"this is a biased decision.\" He was also rejected from the Kasur\u2013 a rural town in Punjab. However, he was later approved in the Chitral, also a rural town in Khyber\u2013Pathtunkwa. On 8 April 2013, the Supreme Court issued a summon to be appear over in the apex court to face charges of treason and barred him from leaving the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pervez Musharraf\nOn 16 April, an appeal for his approval from Chitral decided by a court in the provincial capital of Peshawar in which he was barred on the grounds that he violated the constitution by imposing emergency rule in 2007. His lawyer said that he would appeal to the Supreme Court. He was also ordered to be kept under house arrest for two weeks. On 23 April, he appeared at a Rawalpindi court under tight security on charges relating to the assassination of Benazir Bhutto. On 25 April, he was formally arrested for the same charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Campaign, Pervez Musharraf\nThe Peshawar High Court then banned him for life from taking part in politics activities. Chief Justice Dost Mohammad Khan said: \"The former dictator [Musharraf] had ordered senior judges and their families be put under house arrest and twice abrogated the country's constitution.\" In reaction to the ban, a party spokeswoman for the All Pakistan Muslim League said that it would boycott the election. He was granted US$20,000 bail on 20 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Violence, Pre-election violence\nThe extremist terrorist organisation, the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), claimed the responsibility for two bombings at the offices of independent candidates on 28 April. In Kohat, the TTP bombed left-wing ANP's Nasir Khan Afridi's office which killed six and critically wounded others. In the suburbs of Peshawar, a device bomb at killed three people. The next day, at least eight people, including the son of Afghani cleric Qazi Amin Waqad, were killed and 45 others were wounded in a suicide attack in Peshawar. The bomb had targeted Sahibzada Anees, a senior city administrator, who had just passed the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Violence, Pre-election violence\nHilal was a part of the Afghan High Peace Council and was organising a meeting of Afghan and Pakistani religious scholars to oppose militancy. All political parties condemned the attack. The same day, at a Karachi press conference the leaders of the left-wing parties\u2013 the PPP, MQM and ANP\u2014said that the attacks would not stop them from participating in the election. ANP's Secretary-General, Bashir Jan, said that his party had previously made sacrifices in relations to the 2012 assassination of Bashir Bilour, the former party leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0028-0002", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Violence, Pre-election violence\nHis statement followed an explosion that wounded three children near the election office of Mohammad Ahmed Khan, the ANP candidate from Charsadda in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. On 2 May, a bomb exploded outside the MQM headquarters in which seven people were injured. On 4 May, at least three people were killed and 34 others were wounded when two bombs targeted the election office of the MQM in the Azeezabad area of Karachi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Violence, Pre-election violence\nIn a rally in Kurram Valley, at least 15 people were dead and over 50 injured at a JUI(F) rally for candidates Munir Orakzai and Ain-u-Dun Shakir. The rally was part of the faction led by Fazal-ur-Rehman. The latter was slightly wounded. Armed skirmishes and tensions also flared near the Afghanistan\u2013Pakistan border. On 9 May, the son of former Prime Minister Yousef Raza Gilani, Ali Haider Gilani, was abducted following a gunfight at a rally in Multan that killed his personal secretary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Violence, Election day violence\nScattered gun and bomb attacks marred an otherwise celebratory day in a nation mired in economic crisis and locked in a fight with a virulent native Taliban insurgency. By the time polls closed in the evening, at least 20 people had died in attacks, the most serious targeting a pro-US political party in the southern port city of Karachi. The violence, which included blasts outside a political office in Karachi that left 10 dead, capped a bloody election season. More than 130 people have been killed in bombings and shootings over the campaign, prompting some to call this one of the deadliest votes in the country's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Violence, Election day violence\nSeveral bombs were reportedly defused before voting began on Saturday morning, according to al-Jazeera. No one had so far taken the responsibility for the attacks, except for the initial two blasts in the coastal city of Karachi, claimed by TTP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls\nVarious polls were conducted by different organisations, all of which show inconsistencies and different results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls\nIn March 2013, a survey by Heinrich B\u00f6ll Foundation showed that 29% of the people surveyed would support the Pakistan Peoples Party. As the highest nummain opposition party, 25% would support the Pakistan Muslim League (N), led by former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Another 20% supported the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) led by former cricketer Imran Khan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls\nAccording to a survey conducted by Gallup Pakistan and PILDAT the Pakistan Muslim League topped the list on voting intention score in Punjab, followed by the PPP and the PTI respectively. The February 2013 political forecast is based on a nationwide poll of approximately 9,660 voters in 300 villages and urban localities. The voting intention score of PML-N stands at 63% in North and Central Punjab, 69% in Western Punjab and 49% in Southern Punjab, shows the survey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls\nAccording to the consolidated findings of two nationwide polls on voting intentions, conducted by IRI and Gallup Pakistan respectively during past three months, the front runner in Pakistan's elections scheduled in mid-2013 is the PML-N. The PTI, according to the survey, is making deep inroads in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa where it has surpassed every other player by a 30% score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls\nPakistan Peoples Party to emerge victorious on basis of performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls\nSenior political analyst, Najam Sethi said, Nawaz Sharif held public meetings and rallies in every nook and corner of the country while Shahbaz Sharif completed development projects in Punjab which attracted politicians from the other parties. Sethi said that the 3% raise in the popularity graph of the PPP was made possible due to Asif Ali Zardari's efforts who gathered many such politicians as used to oppose him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls\nHe said the popularity of both the parties increased due to the revival of the traditional politics and the same was the cause of decrease in popularity of unorthodox politicians like Imran Khan. However, Imran Khan's next public meetings would help him a lot, Sethi predicted, saying that the PTI leader's graph would go up after public rallies in Lahore and Peshawar and the party would play an important role in formation of the next government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls, Support based on generation gap\nThe survey's findings indicate that the PTI's support is derived from all age groups\u00a0\u2013 22.9 per cent of those between 18 and 35 years, 18.6 per cent of those between 36 and 50 years, 18.4 per cent of those between 51 and 70 years and 7.7 of those above 70 years support the PTI, dispelling the notion that its vote bank is rooted in the younger generation. The highest proportion of those aged between 36 and 50 years (32.5 per cent) indicate a preference for the PPP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls, Support based on generation gap\nSimilarly, 46.2 per cent of those aged over 70 expressed a preference for the PML(N). Compared with respondents' voting histories, the PML(N)'s vote bank appears to have remained stagnant while the PPP's seems to have declined significantly. It appears that the PTI has a stronger urban base, while a higher proportion of rural respondents indicated that they would vote for either the PPP or the PML(N) in the upcoming elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls, Voting trends by ethnicity\nPredictably, the highest level of support for the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party was pledged by Sindhis, 55% of whom said they would vote for the PPP in the upcoming elections. This was followed by Seraiki-speakers at 46%. Around ~44% of Hindko-speakers said they intend to vote for the Pakistan Muslim League, closely followed by Punjabi people at 43%. The same proportion of Hindko-speakers\u00a0\u2013 44%\u00a0\u2013 also expressed an intention to vote for the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, indicating a close contest between the two parties (PMLN and PTI) within that particular demographic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls, Voting trends by ethnicity\nIt is worth noting that while 34% of Pakhtuns stated that they would vote for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, only 11% expressed support for the Awami National Party (ANP). 47% of Balochis said that they would vote for the Balochistan National Party. Similarly 90% Muhajirs of Hyderabad and urban areas of Karachi Largest metropolis in terms of area and population votes for Muttahida Qoumi Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls, Support based on household income\nOn average, approximately a third of those earning up to 30,000 rupees each month indicated a preference for the Pakistan Peoples Party whereas, among those earning more than 30,000 rupees, support for the party dropped to 10.8 percent. This is in keeping with the party's traditional pro-poor image. No such trend could be determined for the Pakistan Muslim League, whose level of support remained similar across all income levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Opinion polls, Support based on household income\nThose earning in excess of 250,000 rupees each month (the highest identified income bracket in the survey) expressed the maximum intention to vote for either the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) or the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, at 33 per cent each. While this figure may appear anomalistic in the MQM's case\u00a0\u2013 support for the party within the second highest income bracket (those earning between 100,000 and 250,000 rupees each month) was only four per cent\u00a0\u2013 it was possible to identify a rough direct trend between level of income and support for the PTI. In general, it appeared that support for smaller parties declined with increasing levels of income.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations\nThe National Democratic Institution have stated the elections will be a \"historical transition.\" An NDI assessment mission\u2014consisting of Canada's former prime minister Joe Clark, former Indonesian House of Representatives member Nursanita Nasution, Chatham House senior fellow Xenia Dormandy and NDI Asia programmes director Peter Manikas\u2014released its findings at a press briefing in Islamabad after its observation of Pakistan's political framework.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations\nThe mission visited Pakistan from 16 to 21 December and met with election authorities, government officials, party leaders, media and citizen monitoring groups. Joe Clark commended the co-operation of all parties, especially in adopting measures to bring the Federally Administered Tribal Areas under the political umbrella. Clark stated that the 18th Amendment to the constitution reflects the parliament's integrity and commitment towards a fair democratic handover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0041-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations\nNursanita Nasution highlighted the need to address the rights of women in the polling process so that \"fear and intimidation in high-risk areas such as Baluchistan, FATA, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Karachi\" would not strip women of the opportunity to vote. Xenia Dormandy suggested \"improving accessibility and adjusting locations\" of women polling stations closer to those for men so that they could travel with the men in their families to vote. Sandra Houston, Regional Director of NDI, stated \"We are impressed with the cooperation of all the stakeholders in assuring a smooth transition,\" sharing that voters have been registered with Computerised National Identity Cards and biometrics including photographs where possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, European Union\nThe European Union offered to send its observers to Pakistan's elections, in a bid to ensure a \"peaceful, credible\" vote that will be \"acceptable\" to all. \"The EU looks forward to upcoming elections that are peaceful, credible, transparent, inclusive and acceptable to the Pakistani people,\" EU foreign ministers said released after talks. The 27-nation bloc \"is ready to assist by deploying an election observation mission, as a tangible sign of our support for the democratic process,\" the statement added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, European Union\nThe ministers also said they looked forward to re-energizing ties with the next government and hoped quick contacts could lead to a third EU-Pakistan summit. Pakistan responded by saying it will welcome a European Union election observation mission during the forthcoming general elections. \"Yes, we will welcome the observation mission\", foreign secretary Jalil Abbas Jilani said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, European Union\nA 110-member team from the European Union will observe Pakistan's elections. The European Union High Representative and Vice-President of the European Commission, Ms. Catherine Ashton, has decided to authorise a European Union Election Observation Mission (EOM) to observe the elections. A member of the European Parliament will lead the 2013 EU EOM as its Chief Observer. The EU EOM team will include observers, experts, election analysts, political analysts, legal analysts, human rights analysts, media analysts and others. On the basis of special agreements with the EU, observers from Norway, Switzerland and Canada are also part of the EOM. Some members will be deployed well in advance of election day, while others will be deployed at least ten days prior to the election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, European Union\nThe observers will assess aspects of the election process, nomination of candidates, election campaign, counting, tabulation, announcement of official results and complaints' procedures, and will cover pre-election preparations, election-day itself and the post-electoral period. The observers will follow the political campaign and hold regular meetings with representatives of election management bodies, political parties, candidates and civil society groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, United States\nThe US Ambassador to Pakistan Richard Olsen stated that the United States applauds democratic tendencies in Pakistan, expressing hopes that free and fair general elections would lead to peaceful transfer of authority from one civilian government to successor dispensation. Completion of the current term by a democratically elected government will be a milestone in Pakistan's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, United States\nA US delegation consisting of Senator Carl Levin, US Ambassador to Pakistan Richard Olsen and Armed Services Committee Senator Jack Reed visited Pakistan on 8 January for talks with Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf. The delegation stated that not only the US, but the world would observe the general election with great interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, United States\nThe Centre for American Progress published a report called \"Previewing Pakistan's 2013 Elections\" whose author, Colin Cookman, writes that the United States should work with, and not attempt to control Pakistan's internal political processes. The report also warns that whoever wins the elections should try to resolve the problems the country faces or be prepared to face accountability. Cookman states that \"only Pakistanis themselves are capable of establishing a more stable, democratic system capable of balancing diverse interest groups and effectively addressing the country's challenges.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, United States\nIt encourages the US to make efforts to support Pakistan's democratic evolution and the success of its upcoming elections. Such efforts should include a public commitment to neutrality and respect for the electoral processes, coupled with support for an international observation mission. It also urges US diplomatic and military officials to continue to engage with a broad array of Pakistani civilian leaders and military officials, while making it clear that the United States \"does not favour any specific electoral outcome and strongly opposes any disruption of the constitutional process or intervention during the caretaker period.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, International monitor recommendations, United States\nUS officials have denied the general perception in Pakistan that the US government wants to influence the electoral process in Pakistan to bring in a friendly government. US Secretary of State John Kerry skipped a planned visit to Pakistan to avoid accusations of meddling in the 11 May elections. Spokesperson Victoria Nuland stated that the message the United States wants to send out during the election season is \"we have no favourites among Pakistani politicians and we are looking forward to work with whoever is elected on May 11.\" Secretary Kerry's decision to skip Pakistan during his South Asia visit is an indication of Washington's eagerness to maintain neutrality during the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Results\nStatistics and database collected and published by the Election Commission (EC), approximately ~86.9\u00a0million Pakistanis were registered to vote. Overall, the Voter turnout was 55.02%, the highest since 1970 and 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Results\nThe Election Commission results were broadcast by news channels announcing that the PML(N) had emerged as the largest party, winning four times as many seats as its nearest competitor, the PPP. Though, it fell short for a supermajority in the Parliament. The PML-N ranks were boosted into an overall majority by 19 independent winning candidates who switched allegiance to the PML-N. The PPP emerged as the second largest party, with 45 seats, and the PTI, with 33 seats, emerged as third largest party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nOn the night of the elections, the youth supporter, partisans, and lobbyists gathered in Raiwand\u2013 a private residential place of president of the PML, Nawaz Sharif. Speaking to his supporters and media representatives, Nawaz Sharif who was standing with his daughter, Maryam Nawaz and wife Kulsoom Nawaz, said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nThrough this vote and campaign, I have felt how much love Pakistan has for me. And I have twice as much love for you. Thank God that he has given us the chance to help you, to help Pakistan, to help the young people. We will fulfill all the promises that we have made. Pray that we can make a government on our own, without compromises or have to lean on anyone else. Because if we have to ask for seats, we cannot make a strong government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0053-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nWe forgive anyone who has abused us along the way and we have not cursed anyone. We want to get Pakistan out of trouble. We have a program to change the State of Pakistan. We must make a decision to change this country. To all other parties, I say come and sit at the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nThe Chief Election Commissioner Fakhruddin G. Ebrahim expressed gratitude to the voters for the record high turnout of 60%. Secretary of the Election Commission Ishtiaq Ahmed Khan said that the elections were free, fair and transparent and the claims of irregularities will be answered on a case-by-case basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nEven before the result was announced, the PTI conceded defeat. PTI leader Imran Khan congratulated Nawaz Sharif but also demanded recounting in numerous constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nMQM leader Altaf Hussain spoke to PML (N). He also called then the 'Punjabis representative party.' He went on to say that the \"Muslim League (N) has emerged victorious in the elections and Nawaz Sharif is a representative leader of the Punjabis.\" His statements were condemned by some in the Pakistani media and from supporters of the PML (N).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nMilitary analyst and security expert Talat Masood said: \"This is an ideal and a graceful victory for Sharif. He will form a strong government at the center, which is badly needed to tackle some enormous economic and security challenges.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Domestic\nPresident Asif Ali Zardari blamed the poor performance of PPP on a domestic and international conspiracy, as well as domestic terrorism by the Taliban preventing the party from campaigning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Economic\nThe country's stocks rose to record and the economic indicators performed well in advance of the unofficially determined results in an expectation of PML(N)'s win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Economic\nUpon news of the results, the KSE 100 at the Karachi Stock Exchange crossed the 20,000 mark for the first time on 13 May 2013. The victory by PML(N) in the general election lifted the stock market to an all-time high on 11\u201313 May, in a sign that investors, which include Goldman Sachs and Mark Mobius of Templeton, were seen as the top foreign investors at the Karachi Stock Exchange on the prospect of further market gains through a stable government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Reactions, Economic\nOn the day of the elections, the benchmark KSE 100 Index gained 1.8%, the most since 12 March, ~20,272.28 Marks, taking its rally this year to 20.0%. The MCB Ltd. gained ~4.9% to \u20a8. 261.60\u00a0million, poised for the highest close since May 2008. The Pakistan State Oil (PSO) jumped 5.0% to \u20a8. 221.86\u00a0million; the ABL Assets also increased its profit variation to ~$203.0\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Controversies, Incidents of malpractice and rigging\n\"I am fully justified on the basis of documentary evidence to set aside the election of the returned candidate, which does not reflect the true will of the people,\" Malik states in the report. \"I therefore discard the available record as well as the election record, which has been misappropriated or stolen. I declare the election of the returned candidates from PP-107, Hafizabad-III as a whole to be void.\" In PP-107, Hafizabad-III, 21,298 fake and bogus votes were counted as valid votes towards the vote account of the candidates. The number of used counterfoils found in election bags by the commission was 54,242, while the total number of polled votes in a statement by the Returning Officer (RO) was recorded as 72,895.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Analysis, Aftermath\nOn 17 May 2013, the Vice-President of the PTI, Zahra Hussain, was shot and killed in Karachi just before re-election was due to be held. Three days later, it was announced that the PTI had taken the Karachi seat in re-polling. Imran Khan alleged that Altaf Hussain, a leader of MQM, was responsible for inciting violence and was responsible for the murder. Few days later, British Police raided Altaf Hussain's house in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Analysis, Government formation\nThe PML(N)'s key strategist, Sartaj Aziz, announced in news media the next day that the independents candidates were in negotiation process with the PML(N) to join the party to form the government and to work out \"a few key portfolios.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235405-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani general election, Analysis, Government formation\nA total of nineteenth independents who had won from their respected constituencies joined the PML(N), which allowed the party to form a government with a simple majority. This swing ultimately led to Nawaz Sharif elevated as the Prime Minister. Soon after his appointment, Sharif said after being formally approved as Prime Minister that in regards to drone strikes: \"We respect the sovereignty of others and they should also respect our sovereignty and independence. This campaign should come to an end.\" Despite this, two days later another drone strike killed seven people in Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election\nPresidential elections were held on 30 July 2013 in Pakistan to elect the 12th President of Pakistan. Incumbent President Asif Ali Zardari\u2019s term was scheduled to expire on 8 September 2013; and as such, Article 41 of the Constitution of Pakistan required the elections to be held no later than 8 August 2013. The Electoral College of Pakistan \u2013 a joint sitting of the Senate, National Assembly and Provincial Assemblies \u2013 were tasked with electing a new president to succeed President Zardari, who declined to seek a second term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election\nAfter the Pakistan Peoples Party and its allies boycotted the presidential election, the two candidates were Mamnoon Hussain backed by the Pakistan Muslim League (N), and Wajihuddin Ahmed backed by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf. Agra-born Hussain was elected president by a majority securing 432 votes. The elections were the first time in Pakistani history where a civilian president was elected while an incumbent civilian President was still in office, completing a historic and democratic transition of power that began with the 2013 General Elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Background\nFollowing the 2013 general elections, it was expected that the new president would be chosen by the party that won a plurality and thus headed by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, the Pakistan Muslim League (N). It is the first time in the country that a president elect has been chosen in the presence of a sitting president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Schedule\nThe Election Commission of Pakistan announced the initial election schedule on 17 July 2013. All nomination papers for candidates had to be submitted by 24 July, with scrutiny occurring on 26 July. Candidates then had an additional 3 days to withdraw their nomination, after which the official candidate list was announced. The elections were originally to take place via secret ballot on 6 August, and official results confirmed the next day. The elections would be presided by the Chief Justices of the Islamabad High Court and the 4 provincial High Courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Schedule\nThe Supreme Court of Pakistan on 24 July, revised the date for the presidential election on the appeal of the ruling party, PML (N), asking the election commission to hold it on 30 July instead of 6 August. The court made the order as many of the lawmakers who will elect a replacement for President Asif Ali Zardari will be paying pilgrimages or offering special prayers on 6 August for the holy month of Ramadan, which ends a few days later, thus making it potentially difficult for some lawmakers to oblige with their religious duties along with the election. The petition was filed by the leader of the house in the Senate Raja Zafarul Haq on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Schedule\nThe court ordered the Election Commission of Pakistan to change the election schedule on the appeal of the Federal government: nomination papers were filed on 24 July, their scrutiny was held on 26 July, the withdrawal of candidature up to 12 noon on 27 July and the final list of candidates was published at 5pm on 27 July. The polling was held on 30 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Candidates\nThe PML (N) nominated former Sindh Governor Mamnoon Hussain as its candidate; while the Pakistan People's Party nominated Senator Raza Rabbani (later boycotting); and Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaaf named Justice Wajihuddin Ahmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Candidates, Mamnoon Hussain\nHussain is an Agra-born business man. He belongs to Sindh and owns a textile business in Karachi. He was born in Uttar Pradesh, India, in 1940. He started his political career in the 60s as a Muslim Leaguer. He is considered loyal to the former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Candidates, Mamnoon Hussain\nIn 1999, he was elected as the president of the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industries (KCCI) and was soon selected by Nawaz Sharif to become governor of Sindh in June 1999, but lost the post after the then Army Chief Gen Pervez Musharraf overthrew the PML-N government in a military coup in October 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Candidates, Wajiuddin Ahmed\nAhmed is a retired senior justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan, human rights activist, Jurist Doctor and former professor of law at the Sindh Muslim Law College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Candidates, Wajiuddin Ahmed\nPrior to be elevated as Senior Justice of the Supreme Court, he briefly tenured as the Chief Justice of the Sindh High Court from 1998 until refusing take oath in opposition to martial law in 1999. He remained a strong critic of President Pervez Musharraf, eventually taking up a leading role in Lawyer's movement in 2007 to oppose President Musharraf. Ultimately, he unsuccessfully ran for the presidential elections held in 2007. Since 2011, he has been active in national politicsthrough Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and became a forerunner on PTI platform for the presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Candidates, Boycotts\nOn 26 July, the PPP announced its decision to boycott the election. The Awami National Party (ANP) and the Balochistan National Party (BNP) also announced a boycott. They cited as their reason the Supreme Court of Pakistan's decision to change the election date from 6 August without consulting all parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Electoral College Strength\nThe Electoral College of Pakistan is formed by a joint sitting of the six leading political bodies in Pakistan:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Electoral College Strength\nSo that each province has an equal vote, all provincial assemblies are given exactly 65 votes in the electoral college. This mean that the each member of the Punjab Assembly has 65/370 = 0.176 votes, each member of the Sindh Assembly has 65/168 = 0.387 votes, each member of the KPK Assembly has 65/124 = 0.524 votes and each member of the Balochistan Assembly has 65/65 = 1 vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Polls\nThe country went to the polls at 10:00, 30 July amidst tight security arrangements. Over 1,174 members of the electoral college cast their votes to elect the ceremonial head of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Results\nPolling was held simultaneously in the Parliament and provincial assemblies. The legislative assemblies were pronounced polling stations at the outset of polling. Voting ended at 15:00 and after 5 hours the preliminary result was immediately released. Official confirmation of the winner came in the evening. Mamnoon Hussain will be sworn in as the 12th president of Pakistan on 9 September, a day after the incumbent President Asif Ali Zardari completes his five-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Results\nMamnoon Hussain was widely expected to be victorious. He got 277 votes from the Parliament, 54.14 from the Punjab Assembly, 24.76 from Sindh Assembly, 21.49 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly and 55 from the Balochistan Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Results\nOn the other hand, Justice (retd) Wajihuddin Ahmed got 34 votes from Parliament, 4 from Punjab Assembly, 1.9 from Sindh Assembly, 36.17 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly and one vote from Balochistan Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235406-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistani presidential election, Implications\nThe elections were boycotted by some parties, and some protests were held too. But overall, the elections completed safe and sound. They marked a historic and democratic transition of power. This was the first time in the history of Pakistan a democratically elected civilian president had completed his full five-year term and transitioned power to a new civilian president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods\nIn August 2013, Pakistan and eastern Afghanistan experienced heavy rain that led to flash flooding. More than 180 died as a result of the floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Background\nPakistan and eastern Afghanistan are frequently hit by flooding during the monsoon season. Since 2010, the region has suffered devastating floods that have left hundreds dead each year. The worst flooding in the past 80 years occurred in 2010, when flooding in Pakistan resulted in more than 1,700 deaths and widespread damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Floods\nBeginning 31 July 2013, Pakistan and parts of eastern Afghanistan experienced unusually heavy rainfall that caused widespread flash flooding. Flood waters began to recede on 5 August, but more heavy rain was expected later in August and September, the heart of monsoon season. All but one area of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan was flood-free by 5 August, as the waters receded almost as quickly as they had risen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Damage and casualties, Pakistan\nIn Pakistan 80 deaths were reported as of 5 August; more than 30 other people were injured. The death toll rose to 83 as of 13 August with more than 94 injured. Casualties spanned the country, with the city of Karachi in south Pakistan being the hardest hit. In the northwest, 12 deaths were reported in the tribal region, eight in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, and three in the Kashmir region. Fast moving water washed away many houses in the region. In central Pakistan, 12 deaths were reported in Punjab province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Damage and casualties, Pakistan\nIn the south, eight deaths were reported in Sindh and ten in Baluchistan. Across Pakistan, more than 66,000 people were affected by the rain and resulting floods. Many of the deaths were the result of collapsed houses or by electrocution from downed power lines. In Karachi, poor neighbourhoods experienced waist-deep flooding and widespread power outages. Drainage and sewage systems in the city were clogged, causing the streets to fill with water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Damage and casualties, Afghanistan\nMountainous regions in eastern and southeastern Afghanistan were the main areas hit by floods. In the rural Surobi District 61 people were killed, and around 500 mudbrick homes were washed away across more than a dozen villages. In the provinces of Khost and Nangarhar, flooding destroyed 50 houses and thousands of acres of farm land. 24 deaths were reported in the area. In the province of Nuristan at least 60 homes were destroyed across three districts, but no casualties were reported. On 10 August, at least 22 more people killed in the flash flood near Kabul As of 14 August death toll rises above 90 in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Reaction and relief efforts\nNawaz Sharif, Pakistan's Prime Minister, sent three cabinet ministers to survey affected areas. National Disaster Management Authority chief Muhammad Saeed Aleem blamed global climate change for the floods. In eastern Pakistan, 100 trucks carrying relief supplies were dispatched, and 30 medical camps were established. Officials in Karachi said it would take at least two days to clean up after the floods receded. The army was deployed to Karachi where army engineers worked to pump out the blocked drainage systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Reaction and relief efforts\nOfficials in Afghanistan said they were unable to deliver aid to some hard hit areas due to the access roads being controlled by the Taliban insurgents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235408-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pakistan\u2013Afghanistan floods, Reaction and relief efforts\nOn 5 August, United Nations spokesperson Martin Nesirky said UN and its humanitarian partners are ready help Afghanistan and Pakistan if required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235409-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Palack\u00fd University Rector election\nRector election was held at Palack\u00fd University on 16 October 2013. Historian Jaroslav Miller defeated the incumbent Rector Miroslav Ma\u0161l\u00e1\u0148.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235410-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Palanca Awards\nThe Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature winners for 2013. The awarding ceremonies were held on September 1, 2013, at the Peninsula Hotel Manila in Makati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa\nThe 2013 Palarong Pambansa, also known as the 2013 PALARO, was the 56th edition of the annual multi-sporting event held in Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental from April 21 to 27, 2013. Around 10,000 student athletes from 17 regions of the Philippines competed for the tournament, while the announced gold medalists and record breakers of this year received cash prizes for the first time. The motto for this edition was Sports: Road to Peace and Progress,promoting education, health, development and peace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Background\nIn its 56 years, it was the first time for the biggest sporting event for student athletes in the Philippines to be held and hosted by Dumaguete City. In addition, it was also the first time in its history that the private sector offered financial rewards and scholarships to those who performed exceptionally. Furthermore, some college and university sport officials and coaches were scouting for their future athletes during the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Bidding\nOn October 13, the officials of Department of Education and the Philippine Sports Commission have had a tedious selection and deliberation process of deciding where to host the 2013 event, taking into consideration the presentations made and the reports provided by the technical committee. The next month, the Department of Education officially gave the rights of hosting the 2013 Palarong Pambansa to Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental after winning 11-7 votes for the province and a one-tied vote. There were 19 Palarong Pambansa Board Members who cast their votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Venues\nThe opening and closing ceremonies of the 56th Palarong Pambansa were held at the Gov. Mariano Perdices Memorial Stadium, Dumaguete, Negros Oriental. Other venues are listed below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Broadcasting and media\nThe 56th edition of Palarong Pambansa became more known as it was partnered with the media for coverage and live updates of the sports events. PTV-4 or People's Television Network signed an agreement with the Department of Education to provide airtime as well as to telecast the daily events of the 2013 Palarong Pambansa highlights and updates. At the same time, the Department of Education teamed up with Rappler as its official social media partner for 2013. This is the second consecutive year for both PTV-4 and Rappler to cover the yearly sporting event after the first in Lingayen, Pangasinan in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Broadcasting and media\nOn the other hand, the event's official website and Facebook pages were managed by the local events Secretariat headed by Mr. Adolf P. Aguilar, the general events coordinator of the Palarong Pambansa. For the media bureau, the student volunteers from Silliman University and Foundation University were the ones to manage. Aside from the Facebook fanpage (\"Palarong Pambansa 2013\") and the Twitter account (@DepEd_PH), which were updated every second, there was also the live streaming, courtesy of Ustream, to provide more coverage of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Broadcasting and media\nA total of 200 ICT teachers in Negros Oriental were tapped to cover the various sporting events, making it the most photographed and most interactive Palarong Pambansa in history to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Sports\nThe 2013 Palarong Pambansa featured 17 sports in the 368 events. The 56th edition of the games was historical because of its demonstration sports, which includes Futsal, billiards, and Wushu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Billeting locations\nThe seventeen participating regions of the 2013 Palarong Pambansa were housed in different billeting locations around Dumaguete city. Public and private schools served as the billeting areas for athletes and coaches including medical staff and teachers. Below are the billeting quarters during the game:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Medal tally\nThe following list is the final medal tally as of April 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Criticisms and concerns\nBefore the 2013 Palarong Pambansa began, an estimate of 170 student athletes was reported to be affected by diarrhea. In fact, the majority of the victims were high school students from Region 8. Headaches and vomiting were observed and some affected athletes and officials were immediately brought to a nearby hospital in Dumaguete city. Apparently, food poisoning and drinking unclean water were the possible causes of the incident. In response, an investigation has been done and results were likely to come out. Food preparation is not the responsibility of the host province but of the visiting regions themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Criticisms and concerns\nMoreover, Athletics became intense when Region 12 (or CRAA/SOCCKSARGEN) made a protest in the \"Secondary Boys - 100m\" running event. A photo finish was requested to determine the winner of the race more accurately, but there was only one recorded video available for the edition that was not able to capture the finish of the said race. Thus, Christopher Lirazan of Region 6 (or Western Visayas) and Romnick Nor of Region 12/CRAA were in dispute for the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235411-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Palarong Pambansa, Criticisms and concerns\nAt the end of the competition, the only region that failed to maintain its perennial top three finish at the medal tally and the DepEd point system was Region 4A (or STCAA - Calabarzon). On the other hand, regional powerhouse NCR (or NCRAA) and Region 6 (or WVRAA) were able to keep their positions as the number one and two teams of 2013 respectively. The host (Region VII - CVRAA) claimed the third spot in the point system, while Region 10 (or NMRAA) was third place in the medal tally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot\nOn August 23, 2013, a prison riot broke out at Palmasola, a maximum-security prison in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. The riot started when members of one cell block attacked a rival gang in another, using propane tanks as flame throwers. Thirty-one people were killed, including an 18-month-old child who was living at the prison. Thirty-seven others were seriously injured. The riot led to calls for reform in the Bolivian prison system, which is plagued by overcrowding and long delays in the trial system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Background\nPalmasola is Bolivia's largest prison and holds about 3,500 prisoners. Like many prisons in Latin America, guards exert minimal control over what happens within the prison, leading to it being described as a \"prison town\". Guards instead concentrate only on securing the perimeter of the facility. According to former inmates, almost anything can be obtained in the prison. Businesses operate inside the prison to supply weapons and drugs. Under Bolivian law, children under the age of six may live in a prison with one of their parents. Four out of five prisoners in Palmasola are awaiting trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Background\nPrisons in Latin America are among the most dangerous in the world, and the ones in Bolivia are the second most overcrowded at 233% overcapacity (just behind El Salvador, with 299%). The driving factors in overcrowding are pre-trial detentions and judicial backlogs. At least 85% of the inmates in the country have pending trials/convictions. Many are imprisoned for minor drug offenses under Law 1008, a controversial legislation created in 1988 that places heavy penalties on drug offenders. In addition, prisons in Latin America are often run by inmates affiliated with a criminal group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Background\nThe gang leaders, known as \"delegates\", may charge fees to other inmates in exchange for certain benefits, such as occupying personal cells, enjoying family visits, or having televisions. Prisons in Bolivia may have so-called \"life insurance\" fees, mandatory extortion payments among inmates that range from $100 to $500. The fees are controlled by prison gangs, and those who fail to pay may face torture or death. Egregious as these abuses are, as of 2013, organized crime activities in Bolivia's penitentiary system are not at the levels of influence observed in most prisons of Central America, Brazil, Peru and Venezuela, where a significant proportion of outside organized crime is commanded from inside prisons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Riot\nAt approximately 6am on August 23, 2013, a riot broke out at Palmasola when a gang living in cell block B broke a hole in the wall that separated it from cell block A, the home of a rival gang. They then used machetes, small knives, and sticks to attack their rivals. The inmates used a number of propane tanks, first to suffocate victims with the gas, then set the tanks on fire, using them as flame throwers or bombs. Shell casings were found at the scene, but it was unclear whether guns had been used in the conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Riot\nFire spread quickly as straw mattresses caught fire, trapping some prisoners and causing others to jump off the roof in an attempt to escape the fire. A hundred additional police were dispatched to regain control of the prison; even so, it took four hours to do so. According to local politician Maria Inez Galvez, there were not enough guards on duty to take all the wounded to the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Casualties\nThirty-one people died in the riot, most of whom were burnt to death. Among the dead was an 18-month-old who was living at the prison. A further 37 inmates were seriously injured with burns over 60-90% of their bodies, and 256 were evacuated. It was the deadliest prison riot in Bolivian history. President Evo Morales ordered an investigation as relatives waited outside the prison to learn if loved ones were injured or killed. They angrily complained that guards had made no effort to save inmate lives, instead letting the injured die from their burns. The children living at the prison were evacuated after the fire. A list of the deceased had not been released as of August 24. More than 50 prisoners suspected as aggressors during the riot have been isolated pending questioning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Cause\nThe riot reportedly started as a battle over leadership and control of the \"Chonchocorito\" sector of the prison. The gang in cell block A had allegedly been extracting payments from their rivals in cell block B who grew sick of the extortion attempts and started the riot. The suspected ringleaders were convicted murderers and rapists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Reaction and aftermath\nThe archbishop of Santa Cruz, Sergio Gualberti, said the riot highlights \"the overcrowding that exists within Palmasola and much of the country\" due to \"breach of duty\" on the part of the judicial system causing long delays before trial. He said inmates are \"practically forgotten\" by the judicial system with no attempts at rehabilitation and criticized the prisons' failure to separate violent and non-violent offenders from each other. Worst of all, he said, was the subjection of children to prison conditions. He said the church was willing to provide financial support to put an end to the practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235412-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Palmasola prison riot, Reaction and aftermath\nThe Ombudsman agreed, saying the incident \"clearly shows the weakness in prison security, the crisis caused by overcrowding and delayed justice, insecurity within the facilities, and the inadequate prison infrastructure.\" A representative for the National Convergence political party accused the government of negligence saying the presence of alcohol, weapons, and phones within the prison was strong evidence that authorities had no control of internal security within the prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235413-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmer Cup\nThe 2013 Palmer Cup was held on June 7\u20139, 2013 on the South Course at Wilmington Country Club, Wilmington, Delaware. The United States won 20\u00bd to 9\u00bd. The teams were increased from 8 to 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235413-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmer Cup, Format\nThe order of the sessions was changed. On Friday, there were five matches of four-ball, while there were ten singles matches on Saturday. Five foursomes matches were played on Sunday morning followed by ten singles matches in the afternoon. In all, 30 matches were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235413-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmer Cup, Format\nEach of the 30 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 15\u00bd points won the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235413-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmer Cup, Teams\nTen college golfers from the United States and Europe participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235413-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Palmer Cup, Michael Carter award\nThe Michael Carter Award winners were James Erkenbeck and Pedro Figueiredo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235414-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pampanga local elections\nLocal elections was held in the Province of Pampanga on May 13, 2013, as part of the 2013 general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the four districts of Pampanga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235414-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pampanga local elections, Gubernatorial election\nIncumbent Governor Lilia Pineda is running for her reelection under to her local party KAMBILAN (a coalition composed of National Unity Party, Lakas\u2013CMD, Nationalist People's Coalition and United Nationalist Alliance), her running mate is her son Dennis Pineda. Governor Lilia will face again former governor Ed Panlilio of Liberal Party, his running mate is lawyer Maria Amalia Tiglao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235414-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pampanga local elections, Congressional Election, 1st District\nIncumbent Carmelo Lazatin is not running instead he is running for mayor of Angeles City, Lakas\u2013CMD thru the local party KAMBILAN nominates basketball coach and incumbent Vice-Governor Yeng Guiao. he will face former Congressman Francis Nepomuceno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235414-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pampanga local elections, Congressional Election, 2nd District\nIncumbent Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is running despite of her sickness and in hospital arrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235414-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pampanga local elections, Congressional Election, 3rd District\nAurelio Gonzales, Jr. is the incumbent. he will facing-off incumbent San Fernando City Mayor Oscar Rodriguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235414-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pampanga local elections, Congressional Election, 4th District\nIncumbent Anna York Bondoc is term limited; her brother Juan Pablo Bondoc is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235415-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan Am Badminton Championships\nThe XVIII 2013 Pan Am Badminton Championships were held in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, between October 24 and October 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235415-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan Am Badminton Championships\nThis event was part of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix series of the Badminton World Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235416-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Aerobic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 Pan American Aerobic Gymnastics Championships were held in Santiago, Chile, October 20\u201327, 2013. The competition was organized by the Chilean Gymnastics Federation, and approved by the International Gymnastics Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235417-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Combined Events Cup\nThe 2013 Pan American Combined Events Cup was held in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, at the Terry Fox Stadium on June 1\u20132, 2013. The event was held jointly with the Athletics Ontario Senior Combined EventsChampionships and the Qu\u00e9bec Canada Games Trials. A detailed report on the event and an appraisal of the results was given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235417-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Combined Events Cup, Participation\nAn unofficial count yields the participation of 27 athletes from 11 countries in the senior events. In addition, there were 26 local athletes (22 from Canada and 4 from the United States), and 5 junior athletes (including 1 from \u00a0Aruba, 1 from \u00a0Brazil, and 3 locals from Canada) integrated into the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235418-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Fencing Championships\nThe 2013 Pan American Fencing Championships were held in Cartagena, Colombia from 16 June to 21 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235419-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Individual Event Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 Pan American Individual Event Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held in San Juan, Puerto Rico, August 8\u201311, 2013. The competition was organized by the Puerto Rican Gymnastics Federation and approved by the International Gymnastics Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235420-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Judo Championships\nThe 2013 Pan American Judo Championships was held in San Jos\u00e9, Costa Rica from April 19\u201320, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235421-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Junior Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Pan American Junior Championships was held at the Estadio Alfonso Galvis Duque in Medellin, Colombia, from 23\u201325 August. The competition was originally scheduled for 2\u20134 August in Lima, Peru. Lima was ruled out as the host and the dates were also amended in April, due to the clash with the 2013 World Games in Cali and its proximity to the 2013 World Championships in Athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235421-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Junior Athletics Championships\nThe United States easily topped the medal table with fifteen gold medals and 38 medals in total, continuing their streak as the best performing nation at the championships (bar one interruption at the 2001 edition). Cuba and Canada, the other traditionally strong nations in the region, were the next best performers: Cuba won eight golds in its haul of eleven medals while Canada had the second largest total with 19 medals (six of them gold). Brazil and Mexico each took four golds and the host nation Colombia claimed twelve medals overall. Twenty-one of the 36 participating nations reached the medal table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235421-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Junior Athletics Championships\nTwo championship record marks were bettered in 2013, both of the women's field events. In the pole vault Canada's Alysha Newman and Venezuela's Robeilys Peinado both cleared 4.40\u00a0m (14\u00a0ft 5\u00a0in). Newman broke the North American junior record and Peinado improved her own Venezuelan record. American Megan Glasman was the other to break a championship record with her winning mark of 53.93\u00a0m (176\u00a0ft 11\u00a0in) in the javelin throw. Another record of note was the South American junior record of 13.42 seconds in the 110 metres hurdles, set by Colombia's Juan Carlos Moreno. Felipe dos Santos of Brazil also broke the regional junior record with his winning score of 7762 points in the decathlon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235421-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Junior Athletics Championships\nAmong the participants, two completed doubles: Arialis Gandulla Mart\u00ednez was the winner of both the women's 100 metres and 200 metres while Peru's Zulema Huacasi claimed both the 3000 metres flat and steeplechase titles. Brazil had two multiple medallists in Izabela da Silva (women's discus throw winner and shot put runner-up) and Thiago do Ros\u00e1rio (runner-up in both the men's 1500 metres and 5000 metres). Sage Watson of Canada won the 400 metres hurdles title, a silver in the 4\u00d7400 m relay, and a bronze in the flat race. Ecuadorian Angela Tenorio was a minor medallist in both the women's sprints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235421-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Junior Athletics Championships\nSeveral medallists from the 2013 World Youth Championships in Athletics were present. L\u00e1zaro Mart\u00ednez Santrayu repeated his triple jump title and Christoff Bryan won another men's high jump medal. Peinado and Tenorio had also won medals at the youth event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235422-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship\nThe 2013 Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship took place in Taubat\u00e9 from 19 to 23 June. It acts as the Pan American qualifying tournament for the 2013 IHF Super Globe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235422-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship, Modus\nThe seven teams played in two groups a round Robin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235422-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship, Modus\nThe two last from each group played the 5-8 place semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235422-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship, Modus\nThe loser of this played the 7 place game and the winners the 5th place game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235422-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship, Modus\nThe first from each group played against the second from the other group the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235422-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship, Modus\nThe losers of the semis played Third place game and the winners the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235423-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Men's Junior Handball Championship\nThe 2013 Pan American Men's Junior Handball Championship took place in Mar del Plata from 18\u201324 March. It acts as the Pan American qualifying tournament for the 2013 Men's Junior World Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235424-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Race Walking Cup\nThe 2013 Pan American Race Walking Cup was held in Ciudad de Guatemala, Guatemala. The track of the Cup runs in the Avenida Sime\u00f3n Ca\u00f1as, Zona 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235424-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Race Walking Cup\nA detailed report was given by Fernando Ruiz Del Valle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235424-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Race Walking Cup, Participation\nThe participation of 144 athletes from 19 countries is reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235425-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Road Cycling Championships\nThe 2013 Pan American Road Cycling Championships took place in Zacatecas, Mexico, May 1\u20135, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235426-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Track Cycling Championships\nThe 2013 Pan American Track Cycling Championships took place at the CNAR Velodrome, Mexico City, Mexico on February 6\u201310, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235427-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pan American Women's Handball Championship\nThe 2013 Pan American Women's Handball Championship was the twelfth edition of the Pan American Women's Handball Championship, which took place in the Dominican Republic from 1 to 8 June 2013. It acted as the American qualifying tournament for the 2013 World Women's Handball Championship to be held in Serbia from December 7 to 22. It was organized by the Pan-American Team Handball Federation. This was the second time that this tournament was held in the Dominican Republic after the 2007 Pan American Women's Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League\nThe 2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League season, known as the Telikom NSL Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the seventh edition of Papua New Guinea National Soccer League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League\nThe title was won by Hekari United, who defeated FC Port Moresby in the Grand Final 3\u20130 to win their seventh consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Teams\nOnly four sides returned from the previous season, with Tukoko University, Bulolo United and Petro Souths withdrawing from the competition. Hekari United and Gigira Laitepo Morobe returned for their seventh successive seasons, while Eastern Stars returned for their fifth and Besta PNG United for their fourth. Welgris Highlanders rejoined the league after a three-year absence, while there were debuts for Oro FC, WNB Tavur and FC Port Moresby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Format\nThe league reverted to the traditional 'home and away' fixtures after the previous season had seen each side play each other three times. The team at the top of the league after all matches were played was crowned 'Minor Premiers' and secured qualification for the 2013\u201314 OFC Champions League. At the end of the regular season, the top four teams advanced to a knockout competition, the winners of which were crowned Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nThe season kick-off was delayed several times due to late registrations leading to a lack of sufficient clubs. By late December 2012, only four teams had completed the registration process: current champions Hekari United, Besta United PNG, Welgris Highlanders and West New Britain Tavur. FC Port Moresby, joined in early January. At this stage, the NSL had decided to go ahead with the league with just six teams, the lowest since the inaugural season, but two sides, Morobe FC and Oro FC, submitted their registration documents on the same day, leaving the organisers with a dilemma. It was only on 29 January that the teams were confirmed, over two months later than usual, with the addition of Eastern Stars creating an eight-team league for the season ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nThe fixtures throughout the season were a little irregular, especially for WNB Tavur, who were based in the New Guinea islands, and thus incurred higher travel costs than most other teams. This meant that the side organised away matches in 'clumps' to avoid back-and-forth travel costs. As a result, they often played their matches outside of the usual weekend schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nBy the time WNB Tavur played their first match on 13 February, most other sides had already played two. Hekari and Besta PNG led the table with two wins from two, with Hekari top on goal difference thanks mainly to a 6\u20130 away win at Welgris Highlanders on the second weekend of the season. Tavur ended up drawing with Eastern Stars in their opening fixture, before playing back-to-back away matches on 20, 23 and 28 February to catch up to the rest of the schedule \u2013 all three of which they lost. By the end of February, after four fixtures played, Hekari led the table with four wins from four ahead of Besta PNG United \u2013 who had dropped points after a 1\u20131 draw with FC Port Moresby on match-day four \u2013 on ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nBy mid-March it had become clear that it would be a two-horse race for the title, with Hekari having won six out of six, and Besta managing to keep pace just two points behind them after six games \u2013 six clear of FC Port Moresby in third place. Moresby's challenge suffered another dent the following week when they were awarded a 3\u20130 away defeat against WNB Tavur, as they were unable to make the journey to the New Guinea islands. This would happen again to Welgris Highlanders later in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nOn 23 March, however, Moresby became the first club to take points off Hekari after a 1\u20131 draw in Port Moresby. This result put Hekari three points clear of Besta PNG at the top, having played a game more. On 30 March, FC Port Moresby defeated Gigira Laitepo Morobe 1\u20130 to bring them level on points with Morobe in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nOn 7 April, WNB Tavur recorded their only legitimate victory of the season, defeating Besta PNG United 2\u20131 in a match which would have put Besta top of the league, had they won it \u2013 Hekari were away taking part in the OFC Champions League and had three consecutive away fixtures in their group, which disrupted their NSL fixture scheduling. The following week, Besta would lose again, this time to FC Port Moresby, 3\u20130, again spurning the chance to go top, while inviting pressure from clubs behind them. On 20 April, Besta finally went top after a 5\u20131 win over Gigira Laitepo Morobe, while FC Port Moresby's 4\u20133 victory over Welgris Highlanders took them within one point of Hekari, having played four games more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nHekari returned to Papua New Guinea in late April, with one home fixture in the group stages of the OFC Champions League remaining, having already been eliminated. On 24 April, they defeated Oro FC 1\u20130 to return to the top of the league, before Besta's 2\u20132 draw with Eastern Stars left them one point ahead of Hekari with two games to play \u2013 both of them against Hekari. Hekari, meanwhile, had five fixtures remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nAfter Hekari beat Eastern Stars 9\u20131 midweek, Besta held Hekari to a 2\u20132 draw on the 'final day' of fixtures on 4 May, meaning they went into their final fixture needing to beat Hekari, and to hope that Hekari would lose the rest of their rescheduled fixtures, in order to claim the Minor Premiership. However, a fired-up Hekari thrashed Besta 5\u20130 on 8 May, securing the Minor Premiership, before winning all of their remaining fixtures to finish the season unbeaten. Hekari and Besta entered the playoffs alongside FC Port Moresby and fourth-placed Gigira Laitepo Morobe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235428-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Papua New Guinea National Soccer League, Summary\nIn the playoffs, Hekari eased past Morobe 3\u20130 to reach the final, while a disappointing Besta lost 2\u20130 against FC Port Moresby, allowing the debutants to enter the Grand Final at the first time of asking. Besta claimed third-place with a 3\u20132 win over Morobe in the third-place playoff, but Hekari stole the headlines again on 1 June with their seventh consecutive title, beating Port Moresby 3\u20130 with goals from Nigel Dabinyaba, Daniel Joe and a penalty from Ericson Komeng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235429-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Parachinar bombing\nThe 2013 Parachinar bombing occurred on 26 July 2013. At least 57 people were killed and more than 100 injured after two bombs exploded on a market in Parachinar a capital city in Kurram Valley and the largest city of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas in northern Pakistan on Friday the official said. The blast took place near the Afghan border and Shi'ite mosques. On 27 July 2013 the death toll rise to 57.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235430-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paradise Jam Tournament\nThe 2013 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. Maryland won the men's division while Duke won the women's Island Division and Syracuse won the women's Reef Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235430-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's Tournament\nThe women's tournament consists of 8 teams split into two 4-team, round-robin divisions: Island and Reef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235430-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's Tournament, Overview\nDuke beat Xavier 81\u201354 in the opening round of the Island Division on November 28, 2013. Kansas followed with a 68\u201463 victory over Central Michigan. The Reef Division teams played in the evening, when Texas A&M defeated Memphis 69\u201359. In the other match up, Syracuse defeated Texas 75\u201365.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235430-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's Tournament, Overview\nThe following day, Duke struggled early against Central Michigan; down 24\u201321 in the first half. The Blue Devils then went on an 18\u20132 run to take a large lead, and cruised to a 97\u201364 victory. In the other Island Division match-up, Xavier was down 26\u201320 with a minute to go in the first half, but tied the game at halftime. Kansas again pulled into the lead in the second half, on an 11\u20132 run to start the half, but Xavier came back to win the game 64\u201359.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235430-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's Tournament, Overview\nIn the Reef Division, unranked Texas upset previously unbeaten and 12th-ranked Texas A&M. Texas pulled out to a twelve-point lead at halftime, and the two teams played roughly even in the second half. Texas's Nneka Enemkpali scored 20 points, hitting seven of her eight field goal attempts and six of her eight free throw attempts. In the other Reef Division game, Syracuse pulled out to a 15-point halftime lead against Memphis, and extended the lead in the second half to remain undefeated with a 77\u201358 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235430-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's Tournament, Overview\nOn the final day of the tournament, Central Mich beat Xavier 88\u201462 in the Island Division. In the other match-up, Duke held only a nine-point lead at halftime, but pulled away to win by 33 points, 73\u201340. With an undefeated record, Duke won the Tournament title for the Island Division. In the Reef Division, Texas easily beat Memphis, 65\u201336 to go 2\u20131 in the tournament. Syracuse played 12th ranked Texas A&M in the other game. The Aggies led by six early in the game, but Syracuse took over and led by nine at halftime. They pulled out to a large lead in the second half. Texas A&M cut the lead back to single digits, but were unable to re-take the lead. Syracuse on the game 78\u201363 and won the Championship of the Reef Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235431-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Athletics Championships\nThe 2013 Campeonato de la Victoria or 2013 Torneo de la Victoria was held at the Secretaria Nacional de Deportes in Asunci\u00f3n, organized by Federaci\u00f3n Paraguaya de Atletismo. It was the 63rd edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235431-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Athletics Championships\nThe competition serves as the Paraguayan Athletics Championships in track and field for the Republic of Paraguay, being the country's most important national athletics competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235432-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Divisi\u00f3n Intermedia season\nThe 2013 Divisi\u00f3n Intermedia season was the 17th season of semi-professional football in Paraguay (second division), organized by the Paraguayan Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235432-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Divisi\u00f3n Intermedia season\nIt will start on March 30 and will end in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235432-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Divisi\u00f3n Intermedia season, Relegation\nRelegations is determined at the end of the season by computing an average (Spanish: promedio) of the number of points earned per game over the past three seasons. The three teams with the lowest average is relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235433-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season\nThe 2013 Divisi\u00f3n Profesional season (officially the 2013 Copa TIGO- Visi\u00f3n Banco for sponsorship reasons) was the 79th season of top-flight professional football in Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235433-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Torneo Apertura\nThe Campeonato de Apertura, also the Copa TIGO-Visi\u00f3n Banco for sponsorship reasons, was the 108\u00ba official championship of the Primera Divisi\u00f3n, called \"Don Osvaldo Dom\u00ednguez Dibb\", and was the first championship of the 2013 season. It began on February 9 and ended on June 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235433-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Torneo Clausura\nThe Campeonato de Clausura, also the Copa TIGO-Visi\u00f3n Banco for sponsorship reasons, was the 109\u00ba official championship of the Primera Divisi\u00f3n, and was the second championship of the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235433-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Aggregate table\nIn 2013, Paraguay have seven slots in international cups (three in the Copa Libertadores de America and four in the Copa Sudamericana). These seven slots will be filled by five teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235433-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season, Relegation\nRelegations is determined at the end of the season by computing an average (Spanish: promedio) of the number of points earned per game over the past three seasons. The two teams with the lowest average is relegated to the Divisi\u00f3n Intermedia for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election\nGeneral elections were held in Paraguay on 21 April 2013. They resulted in a victory for the Colorado Party, which had ruled the country for 60 years before losing power in 2008. The presidential elections were won by the Colorado Party's Horacio Cartes, who defeated Efra\u00edn Alegre of the Paraguay Alegre alliance. The Colorado Party also won the most seats in the Senate and Chamber of Deputies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Background\nIn the previous general elections in 2008 Fernando Lugo was elected President. However, he was controversially impeached and removed from office in a 48-hour period in June 2012, following an eviction at a farm that led to the death of six police and eleven farmers. Lugo was replaced by his vice-president Federico Franco. Following the impeachment, Paraguay was suspended from Mercosur and Unasur, who denounced the impeachment as a Congressional coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Background\nFranco was barred from running for a full term in 2013. The Constitution of Paraguay does not allow a president to run for reelection, even if he serves a partial term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Candidates\nForward Country (Avanza Pa\u00eds), a centre-left alliance including, amongst others, the Revolutionary Febrerista Party and the Christian Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Candidates\nFrente Guas\u00fa, a left-wing alliance including, amongst others, the Party for a Country of Solidarity and the Paraguayan Communist Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Candidates\nParaguay Alegre (lit. Happy Paraguay, alluding to their candidate's name), a centrist alliance including, amongst others, the Authentic Radical Liberal Party, the Democratic Progressive Party and the National Encounter Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Candidates\nOn the night of 2 February 2013, Lino Oviedo Silva, the candidate of the right-wing National Union of Ethical Citizens, died in a helicopter accident near Puerto Antequera, in the Chaco region. His death was confirmed the following day, when the national police rescue team found the three burnt corpses of Oviedo, the plane's pilot, and a bodyguard. His candidacy was taken over by his nephew Lino Oviedo S\u00e1nchez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Campaign\nReporters without Borders said in April 2013 that \"Paraguay continues to be a dangerous country for journalists, in part because of the links between politics and organized crime, which were widely criticized during the campaign.\" It noted that two television stations (the public TV P\u00fablica and private Canal 9 SNT) had refused to air a Frente Guas\u00fa campaign ad highlighting the role of candidates Cartes and Alegre in the impeachment of Fernando Lugo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Campaign\nDuring the campaign Cartes made homophobic statements, comparing homosexuals to monkeys and saying he would shoot himself in the testicles if his son turned out to be gay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235434-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Paraguayan general election, Reactions\nThe defeated candidate Alegre conceded to Cartes a short time after preliminary results were announced. Argentine president Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner congratulated the Paraguayan people, describing the election as \"exemplary\" and announced her endorsement of a re-admission of the country to the Mercosur community. Jos\u00e9 Mujica, the president of Uruguay, congratulated Cartes as well and invited him to the Mercosur summit that is to take place in his country in June. The European Union's high representative for foreign affairs, Catherine Ashton lauded the high turn-out, orderly and calm conduct of the election. Among the first felicitators was also Venezuelan president Nicol\u00e1s Maduro. Spain's Mariano Rajoy also congratulated him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks\nOn November 15, 2013, a gunman attacked the offices of the BFM TV news channel, in Paris, France. Three days later, on November 18, the same gunman attacked the offices of the Lib\u00e9ration newspaper and the headquarters of the Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale bank. The gunman hijacked a motorist whom he forced to drive to Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es before releasing him. The attacks set off a manhunt in search of the gunman, who was later apprehended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks\nThe gunman, Abdelhakim Dekhar, was already known to police for his role in the 1994 Rey-Maupin affair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Attacks, BFMTV Studio Incident\nOn November 15, 2013, Dekar, acting alone, entered 's news network station wielding a pump-action shotgun. He threatened journalists in the lobby briefly before leaving the station. It is unclear whether his weapon malfunctioned or if he chose not to shoot, but he left multiple unused cartridges and told witnesses, \"Next time, I won't miss.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Attacks, Lib\u00e9ration News Headquarters Attack and Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale Incident\nOn November 18, 2013 at 10 a.m., just three days after the initial attack, Dekar entered the headquarters of the Lib\u00e9ration newspaper and opened fire. During the attack, a 23-year-old freelance photographer was shot in the arm and chest. The gunman soon left and the victim was rushed to the hospital with critical injuries near his heart. Just two hours after the shooting at the Lib\u00e9ration newspaper, two shots were fired outside the French bank, Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale. Soon after, witnesses described the shooter as wearing a khaki coat and hat. No one was injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 94], "content_span": [95, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Attacks, Escape\nAfter fleeing from the site of the Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 G\u00e9n\u00e9rale shooting, Dekhar acquired a vehicle by taking a man hostage in the town of Pluteaux, near La D\u00e9fense. Dekar forced the man to drive three and a half miles towards central Paris before letting him go at the Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es. The gunman continued to flee but was later arrested in an underground parking complex 6 miles north of Paris, in Bois-Colombes. Officials reported that the gunman was extremely incoherent due to multiple prescription medications that he had consumed within a short period of time. It was later reported by officials that he tried to attempt suicide this way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Suspect\nParisian prosecutor Fran\u00e7ois Molins alleged that a lone gunman was behind the three attacks and the hijacking. On November 20, French authorities arrested Abdelhakim Dekhar in Bois-Colombes on suspicion of carrying out the attacks. Authorities said DNA and video evidence indicated that Dekhar was responsible for each of the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Suspect\nDekhar was already known to police due to his role in the Rey-Maupin affair in which the police alleged that he had supplied a gun to Rey and Maupin, a couple who would eventually attack five police officers in a high profile chase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Suspect\nPolice acquired a number of \"confused\" letters written by Dekhar, in which he accused the media of \"manipulation of the masses\", of capitalism, and of participating in a \"fascist plot.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Suspect, Family and early life\nAbdelhakim Dekhar was born in 1965 in Algrange, France. The third of eleven children, it is widely believed that he was born into an extremely unstable family and was a troubled child. At an early age, he ran away from home and spent a short period of his childhood in sponsored care. At 17, he joined the military and served in the 9th Parachute Regiment. During his first trial in the 1990s, he explained to the judge that his service was cut short because he was recruited to work for the Algerian secret service. After his release from prison in the late 1990s for his involvement in the Rey-Maupin affair, Dekhar lived quietly in Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Suspect, Involvement in Rey-Maupin affair\nIn 1998, Dekhar was sentenced to four years in prison for supplying the gun used by anarchist youths in an attempted robbery in the 1994 Rey-Maupin affair, but was soon released, having already served most of his time before the verdict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Motivation\nAt the trial, Dekhar claimed he was suicidal and \"desperate\" for the police to kill him, and raised political topics such as France's colonization of Algeria and social problems in the French suburbs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235435-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris attacks, Trial and sentencing\nIn 2017, Dekhar was sentenced to serve 25 years for the 2013 attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice\nThe 2013 Paris\u2013Nice was the 71st running of the Paris\u2013Nice cycling stage race, often known as the Race to the Sun. It started on 3 March in Houilles and ended on 10 March in Nice and consisted of eight stages, including a race-commencing prologue and a race-concluding mountain individual time trial. It was the second race of the 2013 UCI World Tour season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice\nThe race was won by Australia's Richie Porte of Team Sky, who took the lead after winning the race's queen stage\u00a0\u2013 the fifth stage\u00a0\u2013 to La Montagne de Lure, and also won the final time trial at Col d'\u00c8ze, to become the first Australian rider to win the race. Porte won the general classification by 55 seconds over runner-up Andrew Talansky (Garmin\u2013Sharp), who was winner of the race's third stage. Talansky also won the white jersey for the young rider classification, as he was the highest placed rider born in 1988 or later. Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Jean-Christophe P\u00e9raud completed the podium, 26 seconds behind Talansky and 81 seconds down on Porte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice\nIn the race's other classifications, Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Sylvain Chavanel was the winner of the green jersey for the points classification, amassing the highest number of points during stages at intermediate sprints and stage finishes, and Johann Tschopp was the winner of the mountains classification for the IAM Cycling team, who were making their World Tour d\u00e9but at the race. Team Katusha were the winners of the teams classification on their World Tour return, having missed the Tour Down Under after temporarily losing their World Tour status before successfully appealing the decision to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Teams\nAs Paris\u2013Nice was a UCI World Tour event, all UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad. Originally, eighteen ProTeams were invited to the race, with four other squads given wildcard places, and as such, would have formed the event's 22-team peloton. Team Katusha subsequently regained their ProTour status after an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. With Team Katusha not originally invited to the race, race organisers announced their inclusion to the race, bringing the total number of teams competing to twenty-three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Teams\nAmong the 184-rider start list was only one previous race winner; Andreas Kl\u00f6den, who triumphed in 2000, competed for the RadioShack\u2013Leopard team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Prologue\nThe opening stage of the 2013 Paris\u2013Nice was a short, flat, yet technical individual time trial stage in and around the Yvelines commune of Houilles, around 15\u00a0km (9.3\u00a0mi) outside Paris. Packed into just under 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi) of racing were numerous 90-degree bends, requiring riders to make short, sharp bursts of acceleration. As such, the stage itself was not suited towards any kind of time trial specialists; instead, riders who had a track background, rouleurs or certain sprinters who had sufficient pace to complete the course in a favourable time. Weather was not expected to be a major factor in the stage proceedings, unlike previous race-opening time trial stages. Marco Bandiera was the first rider to start the stage, on the World Tour d\u00e9but for his team, IAM Cycling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Prologue\nBandiera recorded a time of 3' 55\" for the course, but was almost immediately bettered by Team Katusha's Yuri Trofimov and Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step rider Stijn Vandenbergh. Vandenbergh's time of 3' 50\" was marginally beaten by S\u00e9bastien Minard of Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale, setting the tone for most of the stage with numerous placings set to be settled by tenths of a second. FDJ sprinter Nacer Bouhanni, riding a road bike for the course, was the first rider to go beneath 3' 50\", as he set a time of 3' 47\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Prologue\nHowever, his stay at the top was also short-lived as Blanco Pro Cycling's Maarten Tjallingii went three seconds quicker to move to the top of the timesheets. Astana sprinter Borut Bo\u017ei\u010d was the next rider to assume the stage lead, as he set a time of 3' 40\"; his time was ultimately good enough for a final placing of eighth. Bo\u017ei\u010d's time provided a stiff test for the majority of the field, as his time held on at the top for over half an hour, but Peter Velits (Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step) ultimately went quicker by less than a second to take the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Prologue\nAnother FDJ sprinter, and former French under-23 time trial champion, Geoffrey Soupe was the first rider to go underneath 3' 40\", but he would ultimately lose out on white jersey honours\u00a0\u2013 for young rider classification leader\u00a0\u2013 to Tjallingii's teammate Wilco Kelderman, who completed the course marginally quicker. French national champion Sylvain Chavanel was next to assume the lead for Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step, going a second faster than Kelderman, but immediately after, Damien Gaudin\u00a0\u2013 a former team pursuitist on the track for France\u00a0\u2013 knocked another second off the benchmark for Team Europcar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Prologue\nGaudin's time of 3' 37\" held until the end of the stage, and gave him his first victory as a professional, a performance he later described as \"mad\". Besides Chavanel, Lieuwe Westra recorded the best time of the overall contenders for Vacansoleil\u2013DCM, finishing less than a second off Gaudin's stage-winning time, in third position. Both riders were satisfied with their performances post-stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 1\nThe first mass-start stage of the race was set up ideally for the sprinters, with very little on the course to threaten the peloton. Over the course of the 195\u00a0km (121.2\u00a0mi) parcours, there was very little fluctuation of altitude, even with only one categorised climb en route. The fourth-category C\u00f4te de Buthiers ascent offered the first points towards the mountains classification of the race, but at 500\u00a0m (1,600\u00a0ft) long and a gradient of 4.2%, was not going to test the riders too much. Intermediate sprints at Malesherbes and La Madeleine-sur-Loing offered bonus seconds towards the general classification, the latter coming on a 47\u00a0km (29.2\u00a0mi) loop around Nemours, before the stage finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 1\nA trio of riders\u00a0\u2013 Vacansoleil\u2013DCM's Bert-Jan Lindeman, Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi rider Romain Sicard and Yannick Talabardon of Sojasun\u00a0\u2013 made the early breakaway from the field, and managed to extend their advantage to the peloton to almost seven-and-a-half minutes at one point during the stage, before eventually stabilising at the five-minute mark for the majority of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 1\nLindeman took maximum points on offer during the stage; he crossed each of the two intermediate sprint lines in first position, ahead of Talabardon and Sicard on both occasions, while it was the same order at the C\u00f4te de Buthiers, where Lindeman secured the polka-dot jersey for the day. After the climb, there was a crash in the peloton, which forced Rui Costa (Movistar Team) to withdraw from the race, with a wrist injury, bruising and stitches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 1\nAs the leaders were brought back towards the main field, an increase of pace in the peloton caused it to separate, and caught out several of the expected stage challengers, such as Argos\u2013Shimano's Marcel Kittel and Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Tom Boonen, who won the first mass-start stage in the 2012 edition of the race. Both riders would eventually finish in a group that finished just under two minutes behind the lead group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 1\nThe lead trio were eventually caught with around 23\u00a0km (14.3\u00a0mi) remaining, with the sprinters' teams moving towards the front of the peloton from there on, before the finish in Nemours. Orica\u2013GreenEDGE tried to set it up for Leigh Howard but their sprint train was overhauled by Boonen's teammate Sylvain Chavanel, who launched his sprint first. French national champion Nacer Bouhanni (FDJ) launched his sprint off Chavanel's wheel, and went side-by-side with Alessandro Petacchi of Lampre\u2013Merida, with Bouhanni just prevailing ahead of Petacchi and Cannondale's Elia Viviani. With ten bonus seconds on the finish line, Bouhanni took the leader's yellow jersey from Team Europcar's Damien Gaudin, who finished in the main field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 2\nThe second stage was run predominantly in a north-to-south direction, starting in Vimory in the Loiret department and finishing in the Allier commune of C\u00e9rilly, via a finishing loop of 18\u00a0km (11.2\u00a0mi) in length, and two intermediate sprint points\u00a0\u2013 one in Les Choux, while the other came on the first passage of the finish line in C\u00e9rilly\u00a0\u2013 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 2\nAlthough there were no categorised climbs during the stage, the final kilometre of the stage\u00a0\u2013 at the end of a 4\u00a0km (2.5\u00a0mi) long stretch of road\u00a0\u2013 was uphill, reaching a gradient of 4% in certain places. However, the stage was still designed to suit the sprinters, with the uphill finish also aiding the chances for the puncheurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 2\nStrong headwinds were prominent during the stage, although this did not stop three riders attacking in the opening kilometre; Kris Boeckmans of Vacansoleil\u2013DCM was joined by Saxo\u2013Tinkoff's Mads Christensen and Team Katusha's Gatis Smukulis, and the trio remained together until Les Choux, when Boeckmans elected to return to the main field after winning the intermediate sprint. Smukulis and Christensen soldiered on with a lead of around four minutes, but the peloton were back together by the 43\u00a0km (26.7\u00a0mi) mark, as FDJ established the pace of the group, to keep the overall leader Nacer Bouhanni out of danger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 2\nAfter around 20\u00a0km (12.4\u00a0mi) of stasis within the field, two of Boeckmans' teammates\u00a0\u2013 Thomas De Gendt and Juan Antonio Flecha\u00a0\u2013 attacked, along with Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi rider Mikel Astarloza and Maxime Bouet of Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale, and their advantage reached a similar mark to that achieved by the first breakaway, at around four minutes. FDJ continued to set the pace on the front, bringing the lead gap to around a minute with 60\u00a0km (37.3\u00a0mi) remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 2\nHowever, Bouhanni hit the ground heavily while negotiating a left-hand bend, falling face first. He had to abandon the race with two broken teeth, and required eight stitches for a burst lip. The peloton was neutralised as Bouhanni was receiving treatment by the roadside, but the pace lifted once again, after confirmation of Bouhanni's abandonment had been received by his teammates. The breakaway was negated with 45\u00a0km (28.0\u00a0mi) left to cover of the stage, when the sprinters' teams started to make early headway towards the front of the peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 2\nCannondale, Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step and Argos\u2013Shimano moved forward ahead of the second intermediate sprint, where Elia Viviani took maximum points for Cannondale, ahead of Sylvain Chavanel (Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step) and the rest of the field. Several solo attacks were neutralised on the loop around C\u00e9rilly, which set up a sprint finish. Lampre\u2013Merida tried to launch Alessandro Petacchi first, but Marcel Kittel (Argos\u2013Shimano) finished strongest down the right-hand side of the road and achieved his second win of the season by three bike lengths. Finishing just behind was Viviani, who became the race's third leader in successive days, as well as taking the lead of both the points and young rider classifications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 3\nFollowing the sprinter-friendly stages of the previous two days, the third stage was more undulating and included three categorised climbs during its 170.5\u00a0km (105.9\u00a0mi) itinerary. In between the two intermediate sprint points\u00a0\u2013 coming in the communes of Joze, and in Brioude itself\u00a0\u2013 were two third-category climbs of the Col de Potey and the C\u00f4te de la For\u00eat de la Comt\u00e9, but neither averaged more than 5% in gradient over the duration of their ascents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 3\nAfter reaching Brioude, the peloton completed a finishing loop of around 28\u00a0km (17.4\u00a0mi) in length; halfway around the loop was the day's final climb, the second-category C\u00f4te de Mauvagnat ascent, a 2.7\u00a0km (1.7\u00a0mi) long climb with a listed average gradient of 6.7%. The climb itself was seen as the pivotal point of the day's action, whether the sprinters could stay with the main field before the descent back into Brioude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 3\nHeavy rain made riding conditions slightly treacherous, but the day's breakaway formed in the opening kilometres as normal. For the second day running, Saxo\u2013Tinkoff's Mads Christensen made it into an attacking move, where he was joined by Vacansoleil\u2013DCM rider Martijn Keizer, S\u00e9bastien Minard (Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale) and Alexis Vuillermoz of the Sojasun team. The quartet slowly built up their advantage over the peloton, being led by the Cannondale team\u00a0\u2013 protecting the race leader Elia Viviani\u00a0\u2013 to a maximum advantage of around four minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 3\nKeizer led the group over the top of the two third-category climbs, and as a result, took the polka-dot jersey for mountains classification leader away from his teammate Bert-Jan Lindeman. The quartet were slowly brought back, and with added impetus from Team Katusha, RadioShack\u2013Leopard and Astana, the peloton had caught them prior to the C\u00f4te de Mauvagnat, with 23\u00a0km (14.3\u00a0mi) remaining. After several foiled attacks from his Astana teammate Maxim Iglinsky, Andriy Hrivko attacked towards the top of the C\u00f4te de Mauvagnat, and managed to build a small advantage before Team Sky's Vasil Kiryienka bridged the gap on the descent from the climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 3\nKiryienka crashed on the wet roads several kilometres later, which delayed Hrivko enough for him to be caught by a group of four riders\u00a0\u2013 Kiryienka's teammate David L\u00f3pez, Gorka Izagirre of Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi, Team Europcar's Davide Malacarne and hometown rider Romain Bardet (Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale)\u00a0\u2013 which later became seven riders in total as another Team Sky rider joined the lead group, with Richie Porte linking up with Garmin\u2013Sharp's Andrew Talansky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 3\nBMC Racing Team and Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step tried to lead the chase for the respective overall contenders Tejay van Garderen and Sylvain Chavanel, but the lead group managed to survive off the front by seconds. Malacarne tried a solo attack at the flamme rouge, but was chased down not long after, gesturing at his fellow escapees as they did so. Porte tried a long stint on the front of the group, but Bardet accelerated past him only to fade shortly after, and it was Talansky that prevailed by a bike length over Malacarne and Izagirre. With Viviani distanced on the final climb, Talansky became the race's fourth different leader, taking the young rider lead from Viviani as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 4\nStarting in the previous day's finishing commune of Brioude, the fourth stage was packed full of climbs, with a total of seven over the course of the 199.5\u00a0km (124.0\u00a0mi) parcours. The last two climbs\u00a0\u2013 both coming inside the final 25\u00a0km (15.5\u00a0mi) of racing\u00a0\u2013 were both second-category ascents of the C\u00f4te de Talencieux and the C\u00f4te de la Sizeranne, with gradients of 8.1% and 6.6% respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 4\nThe C\u00f4te de la Sizeranne, which was situated 8.5\u00a0km (5.3\u00a0mi) from the finish in Saint-Vallier, had most recently featured during the first stage of the 2012 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9; the climb had been a catalyst to a late-stage attack from Cadel Evans, J\u00e9r\u00f4me Coppel and Andrey Kashechkin, with the trio managing to hold off the advancing peloton by just four seconds. Along with the seven climbs, there were two intermediate sprint points at La Chaise-Dieu and Saint-Romain-d'Ay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 4\nAfter an initial solo move from Saxo\u2013Tinkoff's Michael M\u00f8rk\u00f8v was chased down, Gianni Meersman (Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step) along with Johann Tschopp of IAM Cycling and Javier Moreno of the Movistar Team went clear on the day's first climb, the C\u00f4te de Lachaud. Moreno elected not to continue with the breakaway, but the group remained as a trio, as Team Europcar's Thomas Voeckler moved up on them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 4\nAfter a near-40\u00a0km (24.9\u00a0mi) chase, M\u00f8rk\u00f8v and three other riders\u00a0\u2013 Argos\u2013Shimano rider Warren Barguil, Hubert Dupont of Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale and Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi's Romain Sicard\u00a0\u2013 were able to join the lead trio and eventually formed a breakaway of seven. The group's maximum advantage was around four minutes, with Garmin\u2013Sharp setting the pace for race leader Andrew Talansky. Numerous teams had stints on the front of the peloton, as they steadily brought back the lead group, as Tschopp accumulated enough points to take the polka-dot jersey as mountains classification leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 4\nWith 25\u00a0km (15.5\u00a0mi) remaining, Voeckler made a move off the front of the lead group, with only Dupont able to follow in the original instance. Tschopp and Meersman both later rejoined in the crosswinds, while behind the peloton was splitting into several groups; the front group of the main field eventually recaptured the four leaders with around 15\u00a0km (9.3\u00a0mi) remaining. With the group back together, several riders attempted to create solo moves on the final climb, the C\u00f4te de la Sizeranne, and on its descent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 4\nOmega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Sylvain Chavanel was prominent in several moves on the climb; with assistance from teammate Kevin De Weert, Chavanel chased down a move by Maxime Monfort, but was not allowed to gain sufficient ground due to his placing in the general classification. Coppel tried to repeat his Dauphin\u00e9 move in the closing stages, but it was left to a group sprint of around forty riders. Maxim Iglinsky was first to launch his sprint for Astana, but Michael Albasini finished the strongest to take the victory for Orica\u2013GreenEDGE. Iglinsky managed to hold on to second ahead of Chavanel's teammate Peter Velits, while Talansky maintained the race lead with a sixth-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 5\nThe queen stage of the 2013 Paris\u2013Nice, the fifth stage included the only summit finish of the race, finishing 1,600 metres (5,200\u00a0ft) above sea level at La Montagne de Lure after a near-14\u00a0km (8.7\u00a0mi) climb at an average gradient of 6.6% and reaching 8.5% in places. The climb itself was the last of six categorised climbs during the stage, although the other climbs en route\u00a0\u2013 mainly second- and third-category climbs compared to the first-category finishing climb\u00a0\u2013 were less steep and challenging to the field as a whole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 5\nAlso as part of the parcours were two intermediate sprint points at Saint-Saturnin-l\u00e8s-Apt and Forcalquier. La Montagne de Lure, described as the \"little sister of Mont Ventoux\", had previously featured in the race in 2009, when Alberto Contador soloed to victory during that year's sixth stage, beating closest rivals Fr\u00e4nk Schleck and Luis Le\u00f3n S\u00e1nchez by almost a minute, and taking the race lead in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 5\nRadioShack\u2013Leopard's Jens Voigt\u00a0\u2013 who finished in the top ten on the stage in 2009\u00a0\u2013 initiated the day's breakaway after 14\u00a0km (8.7\u00a0mi) of racing, and was later joined by Sojasun rider Cyril Lemoine, Paolo Longo Borghini of Cannondale and Thierry Hupond of the Argos\u2013Shimano team. The quartet steadily built up a lead over the peloton, eventually reaching a maximum advantage of around six-and-a-half minutes, but still causing no threat overall as Hupond was the best placed of the riders, some nine minutes behind the overnight leader Garmin\u2013Sharp's Andrew Talansky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 5\nFor most of the stage, the advantage remained between four and five minutes, with Talansky's squad maintaining their presence at the front of the peloton. Heading towards the final climb at La Montagne de Lure, the leaders still held a lead of approaching two minutes but was quickly being dwindled, with Team Sky moving their riders towards the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 5\nAt the foot of the climb, Voigt attacked on his own for the second time during the stage, as the peloton began to shrink with the pace mainly being set by Kanstantsin Sivtsov and David L\u00f3pez, with the squad's leader Richie Porte just behind them. Voigt's fellow breakaway companions were caught with around 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi) remaining, while Voigt remained a further minute up the road. He was caught 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi) later, which set up a spate of attacks in the following few kilometres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0022-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 5\nMichele Scarponi was able to gain a slight advantage for Lampre\u2013Merida, to which Talansky and Porte later closed down, while Nairo Quintana (Movistar Team) also latched onto the group. Talansky tried a second move, but Quintana led the rest of the ever-decreasing group up to him. Denis Menchov attacked just before 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) to go, and was initially given freedom to build a gap, at which point, Talansky made a third move before Porte closed him down again. Porte launched his own attack with 1.4\u00a0km (0.9\u00a0mi) left, quickly catching and passing Menchov, and soloed away to the stage victory and the yellow jersey. Menchov finished second, 26 seconds behind, while Talansky led a small group over the line in third, 33 seconds behind Porte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 6\nThe penultimate stage of the race was also its longest of the 2013 edition, with a 220\u00a0km (136.7\u00a0mi) itinerary for the peloton as the race moved towards the coast and Nice itself. There were five categorised climbs on the route, the first of which commenced just after the 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) point of the stage, with the third-category C\u00f4te du Bois de Rousset climb, an ascent of 4.4\u00a0km (2.7\u00a0mi) and a 4.5% average gradient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 6\nThe tougher climbs came in the second half of the stage, with a pair of first-category climbs\u00a0\u2013 the C\u00f4te de Cabris, 7.6\u00a0km (4.7\u00a0mi) at 5.8% and the Col du Ferrier, 4.3\u00a0km (2.7\u00a0mi) at 6.8%\u00a0\u2013 but with the summit of the Col du Ferrier still being over 70\u00a0km (43.5\u00a0mi) from the finish, on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice. As a result, it was still expected to come down to a sprint finish at the end, but the severity of the climbs was certain to rule out many of the pure sprinters from the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 6\nAstana rider Egor Silin was the catalyst of the breakaway, attacking on the C\u00f4te du Bois de Rousset, gaining maximum points on offer for the climb. He was later joined by ten other riders, with Johann Tschopp also being part of the group as he was looking to secure the mountains classification for IAM Cycling. Team Sky only allowed the breakaway to build up a lead of around three minutes due to the fact that another member of the breakaway, Arnold Jeannesson of FDJ, was only 1' 49\" behind the race leader, Richie Porte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 6\nAfter taking second place points behind Silin on the first climb of the day, Tschopp proceeded to take maximum points at the remaining four climbs of the day's stage, guaranteeing himself an unassailable lead in the classification. With 64 points, Tschopp held a 40-point lead over Argos\u2013Shimano's Thierry Hupond, with only ten points left to be taken at the finish of the following day's individual time trial at Col d'\u00c8ze, a first-category climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 6\nBy the time the lead group was on the descent of the Col du Ferrier, only six members of the original eleven-rider lead group remained out front, and were only a minute clear of the peloton that was being led by the BMC Racing Team, Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi and Team Sky. The breakaway was brought back by the main field prior to the day's second and final intermediate sprint point at Tourrettes-sur-Loup, with 34.5\u00a0km (21.4\u00a0mi) remaining of the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 6\nAstana's Andriy Hrivko as well as Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step pairing Peter Velits and Sylvain Chavanel attacked prior to the sprint, to gain vital bonus seconds towards the general classification. The trio returned to the peloton after the sprint, and ultimately Team Sky manned the front of the main group towards the finish in Nice, to set up the bunch sprint of around sixty riders. Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale and the BMC Racing Team moved towards the front for Samuel Dumoulin and Philippe Gilbert respectively, but Chavanel surprised both riders to take the sprint on the line. His result, a third stage win at Paris\u2013Nice, gave him the lead in the points classification as well as moving him into third place overall, with ten bonus seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 7\nFor the second year in succession, the race concluded at Col d'\u00c8ze on the outskirts of Nice, with a mountainous individual time trial. The 9.6\u00a0km (6.0\u00a0mi) test against the clock began in Nice, with the steepest part of the climb coming in the early stages, reaching a gradient of 8.5%\u00a0\u2013 against the average for the climb of 4.7%\u00a0\u2013 in the second kilometre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 7\nThe intermediate timing point came at the Col des Quatre Chemins, 4\u00a0km (2.5\u00a0mi) from the finish, with the final 1.5\u00a0km (0.9\u00a0mi) towards the summit of Col d'\u00c8ze were contested on a false flat. In 2012, the stage saw Bradley Wiggins and Lieuwe Westra battle it out for the general classification, with Wiggins winning the stage by two seconds and the race by eight seconds. As was customary of time trial stages, cyclists set off in reverse order from where they were ranked in the general classification at the end of the previous stage. Thus, Rick Flens of Blanco Pro Cycling, who, in 151st place, trailed overall leader Richie Porte (Team Sky) by one hour, twenty minutes and nine seconds, was the first rider to set off on the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 7\nFlens set the first benchmark with a time of 22' 35\". Evaldas \u0160i\u0161kevi\u010dius of the Sojasun team was next to hold first place, going eleven seconds quicker than Flens, before prologue winner Damien Gaudin (Team Europcar) went fastest with a time of 22' 11\". His lead was to last less than a minute as FDJ's J\u00e9r\u00e9my Roy went comfortably quicker than his time, more than a minute faster in a time of 20' 59\". Roy held the best time for the best part of an hour before Lampre\u2013Merida's Mattia Cattaneo knocked eight seconds off the benchmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 7\nJavier Moreno (Movistar Team) also went quickest for a period of time before J\u00e9r\u00f4me Coppel\u00a0\u2013 fifth on the climb in 2012\u00a0\u2013 moved top for Cofidis in a time of 20' 33\". Ion Izagirre moved the best time nearer the 20-minute mark as he took another eleven seconds off the best time, before his time was usurped by Michele Scarponi, as the Lampre\u2013Merida rider put in a solid performance and went top on 20' 19\". The first of four sub 20-minute times was recorded by the Movistar Team's Nairo Quintana, setting a time of 19' 43\", holding his pace all the way up the climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 7\nQuintana's time held into the later moments of the stage, as the top ten overall contenders hit the course. Simon \u0160pilak (Team Katusha) had gone quicker to the intermediate point than Quintana, but faded in the second half of the stage, and was thus unable to match his fourth place of 2012. Quintana's time remained untouched until the final two riders to start the stage; much like 2012, the top two were to battle for victory, as Porte and Andrew Talansky of Garmin\u2013Sharp were split by 32 seconds pre-stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0028-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Stages, Stage 7\nTalansky set the fastest intermediate split at the time, going six seconds quicker than Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale's Jean-Christophe P\u00e9raud, but Porte passed the same point 21 seconds quicker than Talansky had done so. P\u00e9raud had faded to five seconds behind Quintana at the finish\u00a0\u2013 despite falling at the start\u00a0\u2013 and with slower times for those around in him the general classification, he sealed a place on the final podium. Talansky crossed the finish line with the fastest time, going four seconds quicker than Quintana with a time of 19' 39\". However, Porte sealed victory in the race, and the stage itself, punching the air as he crossed the line in a time of 19' 16\", four seconds slower than Wiggins' winning time of 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Classification leadership table\nIn the 2013 Paris\u2013Nice, 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 yellow jersey. This classification was considered the most important of the 2013 Paris\u2013Nice, and the winner of the classification was considered the winner of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Classification leadership table\nAdditionally, there was a points classification, which awarded a green jersey. In the points classification, cyclists got points for finishing in the top 20 in a stage. Unlike in the better known points classification in the Tour de France, the type of stage had no effect on what points were on offer\u00a0\u2013 each stage had the same points available on the same scale. The win earned 25\u00a0points, second place earned 22\u00a0points, third 20, fourth 18, fifth 16, and one point fewer per place down to a single point for 20th. In addition, points could be won in intermediate sprints; three points for crossing the sprint line first, two points for second place, and one for third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Classification leadership table\nThere was also a mountains classification, the leadership of which was marked by a red and white polka-dot jersey. In the mountains classification, points were won by reaching the top of a climb before other cyclists. Each climb was categorised as either first, second, or third-category, with more points available for the higher-categorised climbs. For first-category climbs, points were awarded on a scale of 10\u00a0points for first across the climb, second place earned 8\u00a0points, third 6, fourth 4, and one point fewer per place down to a single point for seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Classification leadership table\nSecond-category climbs awarded points on a scale of 7\u00a0points for first place, second place earned 5\u00a0points, third 3, and one point fewer per place down to a single point for fifth. Third-category climbs, and the one fourth-category climb, awarded points to the top three riders only; 4\u00a0points for first across the climb, second place earned 2\u00a0points, third place earned 1\u00a0point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Classification leadership table\nThe fourth jersey represented the young rider classification, marked by a white jersey. This was decided the same way as the general classification, but only riders born after 1 January 1988 were eligible to be ranked in the classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235436-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Nice, Classification leadership table\nThere was also a classification for teams, in which the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage were added together; the leading team at the end of the race was the team with the lowest total time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235437-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Roubaix\nThe 2013 Paris\u2013Roubaix was the 111th edition of the Paris\u2013Roubaix race that took place on 7 April and was the tenth race of the 2013 UCI World Tour. The race stretched 254.5\u00a0km (158.1\u00a0mi) from start to finish and was won by Swiss rider Fabian Cancellara. Second and third were Belgian Sep Vanmarcke and Dutchman Niki Terpstra, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235437-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Roubaix, Teams\nAs the Paris\u2013Roubaix was a UCI World Tour event, all 19 UCI ProTeams were invited automatically and obligated to send a squad and the organizers invited six wild card teams to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235437-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Roubaix, Race overview\nRadioShack\u2013Leopard's Fabian Cancellara won the breathtaking sprint ahead of Sep Vanmarcke of Blanco Pro Cycling. Omega Pharma\u2013Quick-Step's Niki Terpstra sealed the final place on the podium by winning the sprint amongst the chasing group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235438-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Paris\u2013Tours\nThe 2013 Paris\u2013Tours was the 107th edition of this single day road bicycle racing event. John Degenkolb won the race from a mass sprint in front of Michael M\u00f8rk\u00f8v and Arnaud D\u00e9mare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235439-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Parramatta Eels season\nThe 2013 Parramatta Eels season was the 67th in the club's history. Coached by Ricky Stuart and captained by Jarryd Hayne, Reni Maitua and Tim Mannah, they competed in the NRL's 2013 Telstra Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235439-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Parramatta Eels season, Summary\nAnother wooden spoon followed in 2013, with the club suffering their second biggest loss ever (4\u201364 to Melbourne in Round 24), and conceding three other scores of 50 or more. On 12 September 2013 it was announced Ricky Stuart would leave the Eels to take up the head coaching role at Canberra for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235439-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Parramatta Eels season, Squad\nNote: Junior Paulo, Kaysa Pritchard, Kelepi Tanginoa and Vai Toutai were still eligible to play in the Holden Cup for the 2013 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235440-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Party Rock Open\nThe 2013 Party Rock Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Las Vegas, United States, on September 23\u201329, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235440-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Party Rock Open, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235441-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Party Rock Open \u2013 Doubles\nAnastasia and Arina Rodionova were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but Anastasia chose to compete at the 2013 Toray Pan Pacific Open and Arina decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235441-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Party Rock Open \u2013 Doubles\nTamira Paszek and Coco Vandeweghe won the title, defeating Denise Muresan and Caitlin Whoriskey in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235442-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Party Rock Open \u2013 Singles\nLauren Davis was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but she decided to participate at the 2013 Ningbo International Women's Tennis Open instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235442-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Party Rock Open \u2013 Singles\nMelanie Oudin won the title, defeating Coco Vandeweghe in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400\nThe 2013\u00a0Party\u00a0in\u00a0the\u00a0Poconos\u00a0400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on June 9, 2013, at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania, United States. Contested over 160 laps on the 2.5\u2013mile (4\u00a0km) triangular superspeedway, it was the fourteenth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his third win of the 2013 season, while Greg Biffle finished second. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Tony Stewart, and Ryan Newman rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400\nThis was the final NASCAR race for Jason Leffler before his death in a sprint car crash on June 12, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400, Report, Background\nPocono Raceway is a three-turn superspeedway that is 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked differently; the first is banked at 14\u00b0, the second turn at 8\u00b0 and the final turn with 6\u00b0. However, each of the three straightaways are banked at 2\u00b0. The front stretch at Pocono Raceway is 3,740 feet long, the longest at the track. The back stretch, is 3,055 feet long, while the short stretch, which connects turn two with turn three, is only 1,780 feet long. Joey Logano was the defending race winner after winning the race in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 473 points, while Carl Edwards stood in second with 443 points. Clint Bowyer followed in the third with 423, 24 points ahead of Matt Kenseth and Kevin Harvick in fourth and fifth. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., with 398, was in sixth; six ahead of Kasey Kahne, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Kyle Busch was three points ahead of Paul Menard and five ahead of Brad Keselowski in ninth and tenth. Jeff Gordon was eleventh with 361, while Aric Almirola completed the first twelve positions with 354 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 92 points, eight points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third after recording only 64 points before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, scheduled on June 7, 2013 for 90 minutes, was canceled because of rain showers. The second and third, held a day later on June 8, 2013, were 50 and 60 minutes long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nForty-three cars were entered for qualifying. However, wet weather soaked the track, therefore canceling the session and making the owner's points championship determine the qualifying grid. Johnson, whose owner was first in the owner's championship before the race, was rewarded the pole position. He was joined on the front row of the grid by Edwards. Bowyer was third, Kenseth took fourth, ahead of Earnhardt, Jr. who started fifth. Kahne, Kyle Busch, Menard, Keselowski and Gordon rounded out the first ten positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Johnson was quickest, ahead of Edwards and Kurt Busch in second and third. Marcos Ambrose and Harvick followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Kyle Busch, Tony Stewart, Earnhardt, Jr., Keselowski, and Juan Pablo Montoya rounded out the first ten positions. In the final practice session for the race, Kurt Busch was quickest with a time of 51.331 seconds. Johnson followed in second, ahead of Edwards and Stewart in third and fourth. Ryan Newman, who was fifteenth quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235443-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Party in the Poconos 400, Results, Race results\nPoints include 3 Chase for the Sprint Cup points for winning, 1 point for leading a lap, and 1 point for most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings\nOn 27 October 2013, a series of bomb blasts rocked the Indian city of Patna, Bihar at a massive election rally for BJP Prime Ministerial candidate Narendra Modi. Of the estimated 300,000 participants at the \"Hunkar\" rally, six people were killed and 85 others were injured in eight bomb blasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings\nNo one has claimed responsibility for the explosions; however, investigations suggest Indian Mujahideen were culpable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Bombings\nOn the morning of 27 October 2013, the first bomb exploded at Patna Junction railway station at around 10:00 , while two unexploded bombs were recovered by bomb disposal personnel. The second bomb exploded at 12:10, while the third bomb exploded at 12:25, both near Gandhi Maidan, where the Bharatiya Janata Party's Prime Ministerial candidate Narendra Modi was supposed to hold a rally in the lead-up to the 2014 Indian general election a couple of hours later. There were five other blasts from which three bombs exploded in and out of the Gandhi Maidan area, one exploded near a cinema hall and another close to the Twin Tower building complex in Patna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Bombings, Railway station\nA crude bomb exploded on an isolated place on platform 10 of Patna Junction railway station. One person who sustained injuries in this blast died. According to Railway Protection Force, the explosion took place at a paid toilet within the station. Two more homemade bombs were defused. According to Union Home Ministry, one of the two crude bombs placed had a timer attached to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Bombings, Gandhi Maidan\nLater that day, five more low intensity blasts took place in Gandhi Maidan, where the pre-election rally of Narendra Modi was taking place. Several people were injured in these blasts. One more blast took place in Elphinstine Cinema near the Gandhi Maidan, injuring six people. One more unexploded bomb was found below the dais where Narendra Modi had spoken in the rally, which has been defused. The eighth bomb exploded around 5 PM on the same day, which was believed to be hidden under garbage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Reactions\nPrime Minister of India Manmohan Singh condemned the blasts and spoke to Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar asking him to hasten a probe into the incidents. The Union Home Ministry sent NIA and NSG teams to the blast sites for investigate. Union Minister of State for Home Affairs R. P. N. Singh assured the Bihar government that the union government would provide all assistance in investigating the blast incident. For his part, Kumar condemned the blasts and said that his government had provided full security for the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Reactions\nHe also revealed that a suspicious suitcase was found in Gandhi Maidan two days previously and henceforth security would be beefed up. He also cancelled his scheduled trip of Munger and convened a meeting on the law and order situation. Narendra Modi expressed his condolences for the bomb blast victims online. A week after the blast, Modi returned to Bihar to offer condolences and Rs. 500,000 to the families of the six people killed in the attack. Dense fog allowed him to visit only three families while the other three were contacted over the phone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Reactions\nFormer Deputy CM of Bihar Sushil Kumar Modi called it a deliberate administrative failure and criminal negligence and wrong on Twitter: \"When I saw 3 blast in gandhi Maidan,I ranged DGP Bihar.he said that truck tyre has burst.\" [sic]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Reactions\nAn Indian National Congress leader, Shakeel Ahmad, wrote: \"Blasts during Modi Ji's 1st visit as PM hopeful to Bihar should be condemned by one and all. State govt and NIA should unearth the conspiracy.\" [sic] INC General Secretary Digvijaya Singh said: \"What a coincidence blast at Patna Railway on the day of Modi's Rally\u00a0! Challenge to Nitish Govt to find the culprit\u00a0!.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Reactions\nJamaat-e-Islami Hind General Secretary Nusrat Ali called for strong action against those who carried out the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Reactions\nHours after the attacks Union Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde was spotted at the music launch party of Bollywood movie Rajjo along with Kangana Ranaut. Several political parties, including the national Bharatiya Janata Party and Communist Party of India criticised his presence immediately after the blasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation\nWithin days of the blasts, the Nitish Kumar government in Bihar requested Union Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde to have the National Investigation Agency (NIA) take over the case. As terrorists were planting the bombs at Patna Junction railway station, one of the bombs prematurely exploded due to a wiring error. One of the suspects planting the bomb, Tarique alias Ainul was critically injured in the blast and died a few days later. Patna police converged on the scene of the blast and apprehended Imtiaz Ansari as he was attempting to flee in possession of explosives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation\nInterrogation of Imtiaz Ansari revealed that the bombings were coordinated by Indian Mujahideen, a Pakistani-linked Muslim terrorist group operating out of India. Ansari confessed that the goal was to ring the rally ground with bombs and cause stampede during the rally to kill as many of the participants, particularly women and children, as possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation\nHowever, as the blasts went off, BJP officials organising the rally led the crowd to believe they were fire crackers and appealed for calm, thus averting a much greater loss of life and foiling the Indian Mujahideen's plans of inciting a deadly stampede that could have killed hundreds. In the initial days of the investigation, six suspects were detained for interrogation based on leads obtained by police from Imtiaz Ansari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation\nInvestigators believe Mohammad Tehsin Akhtar alias Monu to be the mastermind behind the serial blasts, and the second-highest ranking leader of the terrorist outfit, Indian Mujahideen. Tehsin had been radicalized at a madrasa in Chikmagalur, Karnataka in 2005 and has moved up the ranks in the terrorist group since then. After the blasts, the terrorist mastermind Tehsin Akhtar was revealed by news media as the nephew of Taqui Akhtar, a leader of the Janata Dal (United), party which is currently in power in Bihar led by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. Taqui publicly disowned his nephew after reports of his involvement in the serial blasts arose in the media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation\nThe Gujarat Director General of Police lambasted the Bihar government for lack of cooperation and a lax approach to security for the rally despite receiving general intelligence inputs from the Intelligence Bureau (IB) of possible blasts during Modi's rally. He said that basic procedures mandatory for all public meetings, such as anti-sabotage checks and pre-event drills were not carried out by the Bihar Police despite requests made by Gujarat Police officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation\nBJP leaders, including former Bihar Deputy Chief Minister, Sushil Kumar Modi, asserted that the security lapses were a deliberate, possibly criminal attempt by the Bihar Chief Minister, Nitish Kumar, to take revenge on his political enemy, Narendra Modi. Nitish Kumar rejected this charge saying that he had directed police to make all necessary security arrangements for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation\nOn 5 November 2013, a tip-off in tracking one of the suspected masterminds of the blasts led the National Intelligence Agency to a small hotel in Ranchi, Jharkhand, 350 kilometers from Patna, where they discovered 9 live bombs just like those used in the Patna blasts. Police suspect that the Patna bomb blast suspects have been staying at this hotel. By April 2014, NIA had arrested eight suspects for their alleged involvement in the explosions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235444-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Patna bombings, Investigation, Chargesheet\nOn 24 April 2014, NIA filed the first chargesheet in the matter against Imtiaz Ansari under various provisions of the Indian Penal Code, Explosive Substances Act and other laws at an NIA special court. Cash rewards ranging from Rs. 5 lakh to Rs. 10 lakh have been declared for the arrest of the absconding accused\u2014Mujibullah, Hyder Ali, Numan and Taufiq Ansari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 47], "content_span": [48, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235445-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Patriot League Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Patriot League Baseball Tournament was held on consecutive weekends, with the semifinals held May 11-12 and the finals May 19-20. The higher seeded teams hosted each best of three series. Third seeded Army defeated Holy Cross for the second year in a row, and Army's seventh tournament title, to earn the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. Army and Holy Cross met in the final for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235445-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Patriot League Baseball Tournament, Seeding\nThe top four finishers from the regular season were seeded one through four, with the top seed hosting the fourth seed and second seed hosting the third. The visiting team wa designated as the home team in the second game of each series. In the semifinals, Holy Cross hosted Bucknell, while Navy hosted defending champion Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235445-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Patriot League Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nChris Rowley was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Rowley was a pitcher for Army, earning a complete game victory in game one of each series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235446-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 6, 9 and 13 at campus sites of the higher seed. The winner of the tournament, the BucknellBison received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235447-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Patriot League men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Patriot League men's football season will be the 21st season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235447-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Patriot League men's soccer season\nThe American Eagles are the defending regular season champions, while the Lafayette Leopards are the defending tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235448-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pau Grand Prix\nThe 72nd Grand Prix Automobile de Pau (Pau Grand Prix) was held around as held around the streets of the city of Pau, Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es-Atlantiques, south-western France, on 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235448-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pau Grand Prix, Entry list\nAll drivers used the Tatuus-Renault machine running the Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235449-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pekao Szczecin Open\nThe 2013 Pekao Szczecin Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 21st edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Szczecin, Poland between 16 and 22 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235449-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pekao Szczecin Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235450-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pekao Szczecin Open \u2013 Doubles\nAndre Begemann and Martin Emmrich were the defending champions, but chose not to compete. British team Ken Skupski and Neal Skupski outlasted the Italian team of Andrea Arnaboldi and Alessandro Giannessi to claim the title in three sets 6\u20134, 1\u20136, [10\u20137].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235451-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pekao Szczecin Open \u2013 Singles\nVictor H\u0103nescu was the defending champion but decided not to participate. 7th seed Oleksandr Nedovyesov defeated 8th seed Pere Riba 6\u20132, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election\nThe 13th Penang election was held on 5 May 2013. Polling took place in 40 constituencies throughout the State of Penang, with each electing a State Assemblyman to the Penang State Legislative Assembly. The election was conducted by the Malaysian Election Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election\nThe legislative body had been dissolved on 5 April by the Governor of Penang, Abdul Rahman Abbas, on the advice of the incumbent Chief Minister, Lim Guan Eng, who also led the state's ruling coalition, Pakatan Rakyat (PR). Electoral candidates were nominated on 20 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election\nThe PR not only successfully defended its two-thirds majority in the Penang State Legislative Assembly, it also captured an additional constituency from the state opposition, Barisan Nasional (BN), bringing PR's tally to 30 seats. This was despite BN's massive campaign in Penang, which included sponsored performances by Psy, Busta Rhymes and Ludacris in George Town. It was later revealed that BN's large-scale attempt at recapturing Penang, which it lost in the previous election, received substantial financial funding from Jho Low, a Penang-born tycoon notorious for his involvement in the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Background\nThe election was the 13th state election in the State of Penang since the independence of Malaya (now Malaysia) in 1957. The governing Pakatan Rakyat (PR) had won the previous election in 2008 and sought to secure their second consecutive term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Background\nAccording to the Constitution of the State of Penang, the Penang State Legislative Assembly, the legislature of Penang, has a maximum term of five years, starting from the date of the first sitting of Assembly following a state election. However, the Chief Minister, as Penang's head of government, may advise the Governor, the head of state, to dissolve the Assembly before the five-year period is up. On 5 April 2013, the Governor of Penang, Abdul Rahman Abbas, gave his consent to the incumbent Chief Minister of Penang, Lim Guan Eng, to dissolve the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Background\nA state election must be held within sixty days after the dissolution. The Malaysian Election Commission set 20 April as the nomination day and 5 May as the polling day, providing for a campaigning period of 15 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Background, Political parties\nThe Pakatan Rakyat (PR), the ruling coalition in Penang, was led by the incumbent Chief Minister, Lim Guan Eng. In the aftermath of the 2008 state election, the PR controlled 29 out of the 40 seats in the Penang State Legislative Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Background, Political parties\nThe PR was opposed by the Barisan Nasional (BN), which was led by Teng Chang Yeow of Parti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia (Gerakan).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Background, Electoral constituencies\nAll 40 state constituencies within Penang, which form the Penang State Legislative Assembly, were contested during the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Campaign\nThe PR-led Penang state government campaigned by emphasising the administration's achievements during its five-year tenure, including social welfare policies targeted at the needy and its success at cutting the state's public debts by 95%. The latter, along with a sharp increase in foreign direct investments into Penang since 2008, had been acclaimed by Bloomberg, an American news outlet, as \"Malaysia's biggest economic success\"; the article added that \"Penang\u2019s economic resurgence may bolster Pakatan Rakyat\u2019s claim that it can be an alternative to the Barisan Nasional (BN), which has run the country since independence from British rule in 1957\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Campaign\nThe BN, on the other hand, relied conspicuously on financial backing from Jho Low, a Penang-born businessman who was involved with the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), a national investment fund established by the Malaysian Prime Minister, Najib Razak. Lavish funds were spent on campaigning materiel and events, including free-of-charge public dinners, lucky draws and concerts featuring famous international artistes. Prime Minister Najib also made magnanimous pledges to Penangites in the course of the campaign, such as the construction of 9,999 affordable housing units at Air Itam by 1MDB and a monorail system within Penang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Campaign\nThe BN's campaign excesses became more apparent towards the polling day, with tens of thousands of 1Malaysia and BN flags placed haphazardly across the streets of George Town; in many instances, the blue flags marred the city's landscape. Once again, Jho Low was allegedly behind the production of such an unprecedented amount of flags. The chief of BN in Penang, Teng Chang Yeow, even reportedly plead to Jho Low's men to put up the flags properly, while denying that the BN was responsible for the voluminous amount of BN-linked flags throughout the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Campaign, Rallies and concerts\nBoth the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) and Barisan Nasional (BN) coalitions held rallies, known in Malay as ceramah, throughout Penang during the campaigning period just prior to the polling day. Pakatan Rakyat (PR) rallies, in particular, attracted record-breaking turnouts and generated a sizeable sum of donations. For instance, a PR rally at the Han Chiang College in George Town on 29 April 2013 drew a crowd of 50,000; the key speakers during the rally included Lim Guan Eng, Lim Kit Siang, Karpal Singh and Anwar Ibrahim. A few days later, an even larger PR rally, which was attended by more than 100,000 people, was held at George Town's Esplanade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Campaign, Rallies and concerts\nMeanwhile, the BN, learning from its defeat in the previous election, organised a series of sponsored concerts, which were financially funded by Jho Low. The most famous of all was Psy's concert at the Han Chiang College on 11 February, days after the Chinese New Year. Just before Psy appeared on-stage, it was the Malaysian Prime Minister, Najib Razak's turn to give a speech. Najib proceeded by repeatedly asking the crowd \"Are you ready for Psy?\" and the spectators responded \"Yes\". However, he next asked \"Are you ready for BN? \", which was met by a resounding \"No!\" from the crowd. The spectators also dispersed immediately after Psy finished performing his signature Gangnam Style. Another concert was held at the same venue on 20 April, featuring international artistes such as Busta Rhymes, Ludacris, Gigi Leung, Alan Tam and Hacken Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 905]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Incidents\nOn 23 April 2013, an improvised explosive device (IED) exploded at a Barisan Nasional (BN) rally in Sungai Jawi. The explosion caused no casualty, apart from a BN employee who was slightly injured. A second bomb, found later at the scene, was safely detonated by the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Incidents\nOn 24 April, BN-linked mat rempits (motorcycle hooligans) interrupted a Pakatan Rakyat (PR) rally at Gelugor. A journalist was assaulted by the mat rempits for attempting to take photographs of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Incidents\nDuring the polling day on 5 May, a gang of BN extremists gathered at a polling centre at Air Itam and provoked PR supporters, leading to a fistfight between both groups. More onlookers joined the fight and attacked the BN extremists, causing the BN gang to flee the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Results\nThe Pakatan Rakyat (PR) emerged from the election in a much stronger position, as it gained one additional constituency - Seberang Jaya - which was won by the People's Justice Party (PKR) candidate, Afif Bahardin; this increased the PR's tally in the Penang State Legislative Assembly to 30 seats. The PR also captured over +2\u20443 of the popular vote in Penang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Results\nThis was achieved in spite of Barisan Nasional's massive and lavish campaign to retake Penang. It was speculated that the loss of Seberang Jaya, which had been held by BN's dominant party, the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), was due to UMNO's choice of candidate. The BN's popular vote also slipped from 40.96% in the 2008 election to 32.09% in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Results\nAs with the 2008 election, BN's other component parties, namely Parti Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia (Gerakan), the Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) and the Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC), failed to win any seat, leaving UMNO, which won the remaining 10 seats in the Penang State Legislative Assembly, as the state opposition once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Aftermath\nIn 2015, it was revealed that Jho Low, the main financier of Barisan Nasional's failed election campaign, had been involved in the 1Malaysia Development Berhad scandal; Jho allegedly served as BN's senior strategist in Penang, funded free-of-charge public dinners, concerts and lucky draws during the election via the 1Malaysia Penang Welfare Club, and told the BN candidates that his funds would be made available to them upon request. A source from the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), who spoke on the condition of anonymity, commented that \"the money was flowing like hell\", adding that the funds, which were initially assumed to originate from corporate donors, did not pass through the party's official channels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235452-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Penang state election, Aftermath\nAlso in the same year, the Pakatan Rakyat (PR) coalition was disbanded, due to disagreements between the Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) and the Democratic Action Party (DAP) over the former's insistence to implement the Islamic penal code, known as hudud, in the State of Kelantan. In place of the defunct coalition, the DAP and the People's Justice Party (PKR), together with newcomers, the National Trust Party (Amanah) and the Malaysian United Indigenous Party (PPBM), formed the Pakatan Harapan (PH) in 2017; the PH subsequently announced its Penang leadership line-up as well. As a result of the departure of PAS from the PR, the coalition's successor, the PH, retained 29 seats in the Penang State Legislative Assembly just prior to the 2018 State Election, while PAS controlled a single seat - Permatang Pasir - and UMNO the remaining 10 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235453-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn Quakers football team\nThe 2013 Penn Quakers football team represented the University of Pennsylvania in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 22nd year head coach Al Bagnoli and played their home games at Franklin Field. They were a member of the Ivy League. They finished with a record of 4\u20136 overall and 3\u20134 in Ivy League play for three-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235453-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn Quakers football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Lafayette\nImproving to 4\u20130 when wearing their alternate red jerseys, the Quakers defeated the Lafayette Leopards 27\u201321 for the program's 820th overall win, 10th in the NCAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235453-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn Quakers football team, Game summaries, September 28 vs. Villanova\nIn their second game, Villanova trounced the Quakers at Villanova Stadium in a crosstown rivalry for the 12th consecutive season. Of the many shortcomings from Penn in the game, \"all pale in comparison to what happened to Penn\u2019s running game\". They had a total of 21 carries for just 43 yards, averaging just over two yards per carry. Villanova's coach Andy Talley commented, \"I just think our D-line played a little better than their O-line today.\" After the \"reality check\", the Quakers were set to begin their Ivy League slate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team\nThe 2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team represented Pennsylvania State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Bill O'Brien and played its home games in Beaver Stadium in University Park, Pennsylvania. They were a member of the Big Ten Conference and its Leaders Division. Penn State was ineligible to play in a bowl game for the 2013 season, the second season of a four-year ban, due to NCAA sanctions imposed in the wake of the Penn State child sex abuse scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team\nBefore the season, Penn State had an open competition to win the starting quarterback position; true freshman Christian Hackenberg won and started all 12 games for the Nittany Lions. Hackenberg headlined their recruiting class, which also featured tight end Adam Breneman. John Butler was named Penn State's new defensive coordinator upon the departure of Ted Roof.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team\nMost predicted Penn State would have a similar season to that of the 2012 team, which won eight games and lost four, but there was uncertainty, as injuries could decimate the team, which was already thin at many positions including offensive line and linebacker, while surprise performances from key players could lift them to success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team\nPenn State opened the season with two non-conference wins, but lost to the UCF Knights, who ultimately went on to a BCS bowl, the Fiesta, in their third game. Entering conference play, the Nittany Lions were 3\u20131, and in their first conference game they lost to Indiana before defeating Michigan in a quadruple-overtime thriller. They alternated losses and wins for the remainder of the season, losing to Ohio State, Minnesota, and Nebraska, and defeating Illinois, Purdue, and Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team\nDespite the team never being ranked, several players earned national and conference recognition, headlined by wide receiver Allen Robinson, who was named the Big Ten Conference Receiver of the Year and earned first team all-conference and All-American honors before subsequently announcing he would forgo his senior season and enter the 2014 NFL Draft. Senior John Urschel, an offensive guard, won the William V. Campbell Trophy\u2014sometimes referred to as the \"academic Heisman\". Hackenberg was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year. Additionally, backup quarterback Tyler Ferguson, who lost the preseason quarterback competition to Hackenberg, announced his intent to transfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team\nSoon after the season, two coaches\u2014Ron Vanderlinden and Charlie Fisher\u2014left Penn State for undisclosed reasons, though there was speculation that O'Brien forced them out. A few weeks later, O'Brien accepted the head coaching position with the Houston Texans, leaving the Nittany Lions after two seasons. Early in 2014, the Nittany Lions hired James Franklin to replace O'Brien as head coach for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Recruiting\nDespite NCAA sanctions including limited scholarships and a bowl ban, Penn State retained their top recruit: quarterback Christian Hackenberg. They finished with the 24th ranked recruiting class according to ESPN, who cited retention of top prospects Hackenberg and tight end Adam Breneman, as well as adding depth in the secondary, overall giving them a \"B\" rating. Linebacker recruit Zayd Issah never enrolled at Penn State after several instances of legal trouble. Entering camp, Hackenberg and Ferguson vied for the starting quarterback position; ultimately, Hackenberg won the job, and Ferguson served as the backup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason buildup\nComing off an 8\u20134 season during which, according to USA Today's Paul Myerberg, \"Attrition robbed Penn State of everything but the kitchen sink, or so we heard, so it was quite surprising when the sink, a few walk-ons, a mathematician, a local kid and a rookie coach went 8\u20132 after a sluggish start, pushing back against storm clouds and bringing PSU back from the abyss of life post-NCAA sanctions.\" Many college football analysts expected the Nittany Lions to perform similarly in 2013, although almost all season outlooks noted that the team could take a major step back from 2012 if they were hampered by injuries, or could surprise everyone and win more games than they did in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason buildup\nA solid backfield anchored by Zach Zwinak, a trio of established tight ends plus a promising newcomer, and a veteran offensive line highlighted the projected success offensively, while a new coordinator (John Butler), a \"borderline All-American\" linebacker (Glenn Carson), and much potential both on the defensive line and in the secondary, the latter of which was \"dramatically improved\", highlighted projected progress defensively. Also, a quarterback competition between Christian Hackenberg and Tyler Ferguson brewed, which provided intrigue entering the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason buildup\nFor Penn State to achieve success, they needed to avoid injuries that would hinder their already depleted depth due to NCAA sanctions. SBNation.com asserted, \"If either Hackenberg or Ferguson gets hurt, and the other one stinks ... if either Zach Zwinak or Bill Belton (who missed four games last year) gets hurt ... if basically any linemen get hurt (and linemen often get hurt) ... this house of cards comes tumbling down.\" ESPN.com reporter Josh Moyer wrote, \"In short, like last year, PSU is a bit of a wild card. If it receives strong efforts from its quarterback and the front seven, it should surpass last year's record. If it doesn't, it might be fortunate to get to seven wins.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, August 31 vs. Syracuse\nNote: Though the game was held at a neutral site, Penn State wore white uniforms and was considered the away team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, August 31 vs. Syracuse\nPrior to the game, Penn State coach Bill O'Brien hoped to keep his choice between Tyler Ferguson and Christian Hackenberg as starting quarterback a secret until the first snap. However, the night before the game, media reports began to surface that Hackenberg was going to be the starter. Hackenberg did start for the Nittany Lions, while Oklahoma transfer Drew Allen started for Syracuse, who had a quarterback competition as well. After Hackenberg played the first two drives for Penn State, Ferguson came in and promptly fumbled the football for a turnover and did not return. Allen Robinson, the Big Ten's leading receiver in 2012, did not start for what O'Brien said was, \"between me and Allen\", but he did play in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, August 31 vs. Syracuse\nAfter a scoreless first quarter, the second quarter featured three turnovers, and at half time, Penn State led 6\u20133 with two field goals from senior kicker Sam Ficken. On Penn State's first drive in the second half, Allen Robinson returned and caught a screen pass, which he ran for 25 yards, and then a 51-yard touchdown pass to make the score 13\u20133. On the ensuing drive, however, Syracuse came right back and scored a touchdown via a Jerome Smith 10-yard run. Early in the fourth quarter, Ficken made his third field goal of the day, a career-long 46 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, August 31 vs. Syracuse\nLater in the quarter, Hackenberg threw a 54-yard touchdown pass to Eugene Lewis to make the score 23\u201310. When only down by 6 points, Syracuse got the ball around their own 45-yard line with a little over two minutes left, but turned the ball over via an interception with under two minutes to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, August 31 vs. Syracuse\nHackenberg was named the Big Ten freshman of the week after totaling 278 passing yards, two touchdowns, and two interceptions, and Ficken was named Big Ten special teams player of the week, redeeming himself from the 2012 season, after kicking three field goals including a career-long 46-yard kick. Seniors DaQuan Jones and Stephen Obeng-Agyapong led the team defensively with nine tackles, including three for a loss, and a sack at defensive tackle, and eight tackles, a sack, a forced fumble that he recovered, and an interception at safety and linebacker respectively. After it was announced that Penn State lost senior tight end Matt Lehman for the season with a knee injury during the game, O'Brien announced that Obeng-Agyapong might practice with the tight ends to help replace him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nPrior to the game, Penn State was predicted to have the advantage on both sides of the ball at every position, and as such, was expected to win handily. Coming into the game, Penn State had sustained injuries two of their top tight ends, Matt Lehman and Kyle Carter. Lehman suffered a knee injury against Syracuse and was out for the season, while Carter was \"day-to-day\" with an arm injury, but played in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nThe Lions wanted to focus on improving their running game, which was lackluster against Syracuse; Eastern Michigan allowed 202 rushing yards on 5.8 yards per carry in week one. Defensively, linebacker depth was an issue for the Lions. Safety Stephen Obeng-Agyapong was expected to step up and take snaps at linebacker, in addition to speculation he could end up on offense. At half time, the Nittany Lions honored the 1973 Penn State Nittany Lions football team and retired the number of Penn State's only Heisman Trophy winner, number 22 John Cappelletti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nAfter both teams' first drives ended without points, Eastern Michigan got good field position to start their second drive, and attempted a 35-yard field goal, but after a low snap, Penn State defender Jordan Lucas tackled the holder for a loss, and the kick never got off, for a turnover on downs. Penn State failed to capitalize, however, as Hackenberg threw another incomplete pass on third down, starting the game with one completion in five attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nEastern Michigan scored first after the ball slipped from Hackenberg's hands and was returned for a touchdown by Hunter Matt for 11 yards, giving Eastern Michigan a 7\u20130 advantage with 4:01 in the first quarter. Penn State responded on their next drive scoring a touchdown on a 2-yard Zach Zwinak run, capping a 6-play, 67-yard drive that included a 43-yard reception to Allen Robinson to put the ball inside the 10-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nPenn State's next drive featured a hurry up offense, which Penn State calls \"NASCAR\", included 15+ yard completions to Jesse James and Matt Zanellato, and culminated with two consecutive runs by Bill Belton, the latter of which went for a 5-yard touchdown making the score 14\u20137. Eastern Michigan's ensuing drive had some success, as they got to Penn State 25-yard line prior to kicker Dylan Mulder pushing a 42-yard field goal attempt to the right of the goal posts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0012-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nAt the end of the first half, Penn State got into field goal range with under a minute to go, and Sam Ficken converted a 39-yard field goal, his Penn State record 14th straight, to make the score 17\u20137 with 17 seconds in the half. Penn State got the ball to start the second half, but exchanged punts with Eastern Michigan for their first three drives, both teams punting the ball away on their first three drives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0012-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nOn their fourth drive of the half, Penn State got to the board \u2013 on a six play drive that included a 20-yard run by Zwinak on 3rd and 24 (after two sacks) and a subsequent fourth down conversion, and then culminated with a 7-yard touchdown run by Zwinak making the score 24\u20137. After a quick punt, Penn State began to grind it out offensively prior to Hackenberg finding Robinson for a 45-yard touchdown pass to make it 31\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0012-0005", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nLater in the quarter, Belton broke loose for a 51-yard touchdown run, putting him over 100 rushing yards on the day making the score 38\u20137. After Eastern Michigan punted for the 10th time in the game, Penn State brought in Tyler Ferguson at quarterback to replace Hackenberg, who had already amassed 311 passing yards, a Penn State single game freshman record. On that drive, Akeel Lynch became the third Nittany Lion to rush for a touchdown, an 18-yard run with under five minutes to go. That would be the final scoring play of the game; Penn State won 45\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nThe Penn State defense struggled with defending the bootleg play early on, but recorded a shut out (the seven points for Eastern Michigan were off an offensive fumble) and limited Eastern Michigan to 183 total yards. They were led by senior defensive tackle DaQuan Jones, who recorded nine tackles and two sacks, Glenn Carson, who recorded 10 tackles, and Nyeem Wartman, who recorded six tackles and three pass deflections. On offense, the \"running back by committee\" approach proved successful \u2013 the two non-starters, Belton and Lynch, each recorded 108 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 7 vs. Eastern Michigan\nOne problem offensively was third down efficiency; the Lions were just 1 of 10 on third downs, bringing them to 2 of 26 on the season. One writer called Jones the game's MVP, noting his statistics, plugging holes opened by the offensive line, and overall \"dominance\", noting that he \"put on an absolute display\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nThis was the two teams' first meeting since 2004, and the meeting reunited O'Brien and George O'Leary, under whom O'Brien was a graduate assistant in 1995, his first season coaching. The two squads are also set to meet in Ireland to open the 2014 season. In an article in The Patriot-News, writer Bob Flounders asserted that if the Nittany Lions beat the Knights of UCF, they would be on a fast track to a 5\u20130 start, which would have been their first since 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nAs this was Penn State's first night game with a particularly young team, keeping emotions in check was a key, as was improving third down efficiency (the Lions were 2-for-26 on the season) good for dead last in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). UCF, who was 2\u20130 coming into the game, went 10\u20134 in 2012, and was led by their running back Latavius Murray, who graduated. As such, their top offensive player was quarterback Blake Bortles. Defensively, they had only allowed one scoring play all season. Penn State students organized a \"whiteout\", in which the entire student section dons white. Outside linebacker Mike Hull returned after missing the prior game against Eastern Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nUCF got the ball to start the game at their nine-yard line after a penalty on the kickoff return, and their junior quarterback Blake Bortles orchestrated an efficient drive in which he converted two third downs and was 6/7 passing for 65 yards and a 4-yard touchdown pass to Storm Johnson. Penn State took over and got two first downs, the latter of which as a fourth down conversion, before a 44-yard pass to Allen Robinson immediately followed by a 6-yard touchdown run by Zach Zwinak to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nPenn State moved the ball on their next drive, but ultimately turned the ball over on downs giving UCF good field position, with which they ran a two play drive culminating with a 58-yard touchdown run by Johnson to make it 14\u20137 UCF. Penn State's special teams responded with a 44-yard kickoff return by Geno Lewis, but their offense went three-and-out, and though they punted the ball deep into UCF territory, the Knights marched down the field with a strong running game and scored another touchdown to go up 21\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nOn Penn State's ensuing drive, Sam Ficken kicked a career-long 47-yard field goal. UCF got some decent yardage on their next drive, but Bortles threw his first interception since October 27, 2012 with 1:17 in the half, but they ran down the clock and Ficken missed his first field goal attempt of the season, a 57-yard try as time expired. At the half, UCF had 290 total yards including 170 rushing yards, compared to 220 total yards for Penn State with only 89 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0015-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nPenn State got the ball to start the second half, but punted on their first drive. UCF responded with a touchdown via a 25-yard pass. Penn State came right back with a touchdown of their own. UCF's ensuing drive brought them to the one yard line, but Penn State held them to a field goal, making the score 31\u201317. Zwinak rushed for his third touchdown of the game on Penn State's next drive, and Shawn Moffitt kicked his second field goal of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0015-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nPenn State drove 51 yards on their next drive before Zwinak lost a fumble with 5:43 remaining in the game. UCF went three-and-out, and on their punt, the snap went over the punter's head, and Penn State got the ball at the UCF 25. Penn State took advantage, scoring on a 5-yard touchdown pass to Allen Robinson with 57 seconds left. Penn State needed to regain possession of the ball after the score, and failed to do so, so ultimately UCF held on to win by three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nPenn State's defense had excelled in their first two games, but regressed significantly against Central Florida, particularly with poor tackling, which some attributed to their practice strategy of \"thud\" tackling, in which one does not actually take a player to the ground, instead making a \"thud\" to stop a player. Several media outlets speculated that the Lions used this due to their lack of scholarship players in the wake of sanctions imposed due to the Penn State child sex abuse scandal. Defensive coordinator John Butler renounced that assertion, commenting he employed \"thud\" when he coached at South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nPenn State's linebackers were also criticized; Glenn Carson and Nyeem Wartman received criticism for not being as strong as the 2012 team's Michael Mauti and Gerald Hodges. In addition, 2012 Big Ten Freshman of the Year defensive end Deion Barnes \"barely wreaked any havoc\", and DaQuan Jones, whose strong play had previously compensated for Barnes' weak play, was held to just five tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 14 vs. UCF\nThe offense, however, was considered a \"bright spot\"; they gained 455 total yards, though receiver Allen Robinson commented that a fast start would have helped them gain more early momentum: \"We are in the Big Ten playing against some great offenses and people are going to put points up early, so we need to get going early and start off fast.\" Freshman quarterback Christian Hackenberg earned Big Ten Freshman of the Week accolades for the second time in the first three weeks of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nPenn State came into the game 2\u20131, while the Kent State Golden Flashes entered 1\u20132, including 0\u20131 in conference play, though this was a non-conference matchup. Kent State was expected to be without their star offensive weapon, wide receiver and running back Dri Archer, who suffered lingering effects from an ankle injury sustained in week one. In 2012, Archer rushed for 1,429 yards and scored 16 touchdowns, led the Golden Flashes in receptions and receiving yards, and recorded three kickoff returns for touchdowns; he even received some Heisman hype (he did not win).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nWithout Archer, Kent State would have to more heavily rely on their freshman quarterback Colin Reardon, who had \"not exactly dazzled\" in Kent State's first three games, but had yet to throw an interception. Picking up the slack in the running game was Trayvion Durham, who had a total of 152 rushing yards in their first three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0017-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nThe game also featured two top sophomore defensive ends \u2013 NFL prospects Roosevelt Nix for Kent State and Deion Barnes for Penn State, neither of whom had gotten off to a particularly strong start to the season, but both of whom had won their conference's freshman of the year award in 2012. Penn State also looked to rebound from sloppy tackling the previous week against UCF that underscored an overall poor defensive performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0017-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nOffensively for Penn State, a quarter of the way through the season, one ESPN writer projected Allen Robinson to win the Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year award, and Christian Hackenberg to win the Big Ten Freshman of the Year award for their strong performances through the first three games. That duo along with the running back trio of Zach Zwinak, Bill Belton, and Akeel Lynch led Penn State's offense, which was coming off a performance in which they had scored 31 points, into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nIn heavy rain that announcer Kevin Kugler described as a \"deluge\", Penn State's Blue Band wore ponchos in the stands during a \"blue out\", to support the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape. After Penn State went three-and-out to start the game, Kent State got excellent field position at the opposition's 36-yard line after Penn State committed kick catching interference on the punt, but failed to capitalize as their kicker, Anthony Melchiori, missed a 31-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nPenn State's next drive stalled, and on fourth down, quarterback Christian Hackenberg executed a \"pooch punt\", in which the quarterback lines up in the shotgun formation, and punts the ball, for 44-yards pinning Kent State inside their 10-yard line. Penn State drove down the field late in the first quarter getting it to the five-yard line, when Hackenberg had the ball slip from his hand backing Penn State up to the 15-yard line, but on the subsequent play, Hackenberg completed a 15-yard pass to Bill Belton for a touchdown to culminate a 9-play, 87-yard drive encapsulating 3:39.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nKent State's offense again proved ineffective, and Penn State's proved strong, as they drove down the field on a 10-play, 82-yard drive ending with Zach Zwinak running for a 2-yard touchdown. Towards the end of the first half, the teams began to exchange punts, and the half ended with Penn State ahead 14\u20130. In the third quarter, Hackenberg threw an interception, but on the next drive, Kent State threw an interception and Penn State got the ball back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0018-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nLater in the quarter, Penn State ran a 51-yard drive that got them inside the ten-yard line down to the one, at which point Zwinak ran for a touchdown, his second of the game. Later in the quarter, Penn State began another drive that spilled into the fourth quarter on which Akeel Lynch was the primary running back for the Lions, running for a total of 78 yards en route to Sam Ficken booting his first field goal of the game, a 25-yarder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0018-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nIn the middle of the fourth quarter, Penn State embarked on a drive that milked over five-and-a-half minutes off the clock and culminated with Zwinak rushing for his third touchdown of the game, a one-yard score with 6:42 to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0018-0005", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nAfter another lackluster drive by Kent State, they punted for the ninth time, and on Penn State's ensuing drive, Tyler Ferguson entered at quarterback, and Von Walker, a member of Penn State's \"run-on\" program, entered at running back, and on the drive, Ficken kicked a personal record 54-yard field goal, the longest by a Penn State player since 1979, which was the final scoring play of the game, whose final score was 34\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nPenn State's defense excelled, shutting out an opponent for the first time since the 2010 season, also against Kent State. The Lions held Kent State to 190 total yards \u2013 just 56 rushing yards, and allowed them to move into Penn State territory only twice out of 14 drives. In the post game media conference, Coach Bill O'Brien commended his defensive coordinator John Butler for his hard work in practice the previous week to rebound from an embarrassing performance against Central Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nDefensive end Deion Barnes recorded his first sack of the season, and safety Ryan Keiser made his first career interception, while linebacker Glenn Carson led the team with seven tackles. Offensively, Penn State was led by their tandem at running back \u2013 trio Zach Zwinak, who had three touchdown rushes, excelling in the grind-it-out style of play Penn State employed in the rain, Bill Belton rushed for 90 yards on 13 carries and had a receiving touchdown, and Akeel Lynch had a \"career day\", rushing for 123 yards on just 14 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, September 21 vs. Kent State\nThe passing game faltered in the rainy conditions, as Christian Hackenberg frequently forced the ball to Allen Robinson for incomplete passes \u2013 Robinson finished with 3 receptions, and Hackenberg with 22 incomplete passes and an interception. Penn State did improve on third downs, converting 7-of-18, but remained in the bottom of the FBS, 120 out of 123 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 88], "content_span": [89, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #1 \u2013 September 28, 2013\nAfter their first four non-conference games, Penn State had their first of two mid-season bye weeks, this one heading into conference play. Off the field, Penn State received relief from sanctions imposed in wake of the Penn State child sex abuse scandal; based on a recommendation from independent integrity monitor George Mitchell, Penn State was allowed to have five additional scholarships in 2014, and up to the full 25 by 2015, meaning they would have the full 85 by the 2016 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #1 \u2013 September 28, 2013\n\u201cThe decision is the result of a thoughtful and deliberative process to ensure we reached the most appropriate outcome. During our discussions, we had the benefit of engaging with Senator Mitchell\u2019s expert perspective and the views of our Big Ten colleagues.\u201d \u2013 Rita Hartung Cheng, chair of the NCAA executive committee meetings regarding Mitchell's annual report", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #1 \u2013 September 28, 2013\nThe reduction of penalties led to an article in The Patriot News on whether Penn State achieved an \"unequivocal\" bye week victory, perhaps even their biggest victory of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #1 \u2013 September 28, 2013\nOn the field, several keys for improvement were identified within the media, including finding a secondary receiver to Allen Robinson, strengthening the secondary, and continuing improvement on third downs. Also, Penn State's tight end tandem, which struggled during non-conference play, needed to improve, particularly as Penn State had a young quarterback in Christian Hackenberg who would face tougher defenses in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 93], "content_span": [94, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 5 vs. Indiana\nIn their second game away from Beaver Stadium of the season, the Nittany Lions traveled to Bloomington, Indiana for their game against the Indiana Hoosiers, their first conference opponent. This was the teams' 17th meeting, with Penn State owning a 16\u20130 record coming into the game. Indiana featured the Big Ten's best passing offense in 2012, led by quarterback Chase Coffman, who returned in 2013. Indiana entered the game with a record of 2\u20132. As they had in 2012, struggled defensively in their first four games, averaging giving up nearly 33 points per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0024-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 5 vs. Indiana\nTheir offense however, had shined thus far, and had come into their previous game, a 45\u201328 loss to Missouri, averaging 50 points per game, but sputtered against the Tigers. A preview on SB Nation noted that Indiana's pass first offense might \"cause problems\" for Penn State, though it expressed some optimism, as Mike Hull finally returned and Adrian Amos moved from safety to cornerback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0024-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 5 vs. Indiana\nOffensively for Penn State, balancing the running game with the passing game was a key \u2013 in the previous season's game against Indiana, Penn Statewide receiver Allen Robinson caught 10 passes for 197 yards and 3 touchdowns \u2013 as this was expected to be a developmental game for freshman quarterback Christian Hackenberg. There was no conclusive advantage on special teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 5 vs. Indiana\nPenn State got the ball to start the game, and drove down the field with relative ease (facing only one third down) prior to stalling at their 26-yard line and turning the ball over on downs. After an Indiana three and out, Penn State ran another drive at the end of which they turned over on downs. Each team ran one more drive before Indiana attained first downs on three consecutive plays, ultimately culminating their possession with a five-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Nate Sudfeld to Isaiah Roundtree, making the score 7\u20130 at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 5 vs. Indiana\nPenn State responded on their second drive of the second quarter via a 46-yard pass from Hackenberg to Robinson to tie the game. Later, Mitch Ewald kicked a short field goal to re-take the lead. Penn State had a chance to tie the game again when kicker Sam Ficken attempted a 42-yard field goal, but Indiana blocked the kick, and with their ensuing momentum drove down the field at the end of the half, ultimately ending with Ewald hitting a field goal as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0025-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 5 vs. Indiana\nAfter halftime, Indiana ran a quick drive on which they punted before Penn State ran a 13-play, 80-yard drive that concluded with Robinson catching his second touchdown of the game, a 26-yard pass from Hackenberg. Indiana responded with a quick score; they converted a two-point conversion to take a 21\u201314 lead. Late in the third quarter, Hackenberg threw a fade pattern to Robinson in the corner of the end zone, which Robinson corralled, but he landed on his back out of bounds, and came up either with the wind knocked out, or some sort of back injury. Penn State settled for a field goal, and at the end of three, Indiana led 21\u201317. The fourth quarter entrenched the Hoosiers' lead, as they totaled 23 points to only 7 for Penn State, winning the game 44\u201324, their final score coming on a safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 5 vs. Indiana\nDubbed the \"low point ... of the Bill O'Brien era\" and Penn State's first ever loss to the Hoosiers, lack of execution was a primary problem for the Nittany Lions; Penn State was just one-of-five on fourth down conversion attempts, a few of which they attempted while in Sam Ficken's field goal range, and on two field goal attempts, there were two botched snaps, the first of which led to a blocked kick, the latter getting past the holder and rolling 31 yards by the time Ficken fell on the ball for a turnover on downs. O'Brien also conceded that poor coaching did not help the Lions, and that he tried to \"manufacture\" momentum at several points in the game: \"We coached very average today.\" \u2212 Bill O'Brien", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nIn the teams' first meeting since the 2010 season, the Nittany Lions looked to achieve their fourth consecutive win in the series, however even a hometown paper, the York Daily Record, predicted the Lions would lose, albeit in a close game, citing Michigan's superiority on both offense and defense, as well as coaching, compared to Penn State's superiority on special teams and intangibles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\n\"Coming off a loss like (Indiana) is just going to motivate us harder. I see more focus in our team after losses ... gets us to work harder in practice, in the film room in order to get a win because we're hungry. We're just more determined \u2013 we're hungry for a win. We really want it. We really need it. ... The best way to get over that loss, that feeling of a loss, is to win a game. So we're really searching for this one.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nGlenn Carson, Penn State senior middle linebacker, October 11, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nPenn State's edition of SB Nation also predicted the Lions would lose citing the Wolverines' better athletes, but noted that Michigan's quarterback Devin Gardner has thrown as many interceptions as touchdowns (8) coming into the game, and that Penn State's best chance to win would be if Michigan turned the ball over frequently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nComing off an embarrassing loss against Indiana, Penn State's coach Bill O'Brien was \"focused\" all week and refused to talk to the media about the prior week's loss, focusing strictly on the Michigan game, which was Homecoming for Penn State, was expected to be the first sellout of the season, and featured a whiteout, led by the student section. O'Brien noted, \"it would be crazy to think this is just another game\". The game was Penn State's second national broadcast of the year, with Penn State alumnus Matt Millen providing color commentary on Penn State's homecoming weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0030-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nMichigan, coming off a 42\u201313 victory over Minnesota, entered the game with a win-loss record of 5\u20130, one of two remaining undefeated teams in the Big Ten (the other was Ohio State, who was 6\u20130, and whom the Lions are scheduled to play on October 26).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0030-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nMichigan's defense, led by their star cornerback Blake Countless, who was tied for the NCAA lead with four interceptions entering the game, had yet to allow a rushing touchdown, and was expected to receive a boost from the return of their 2012 All-Big Ten linebacker Jake Ryan, who tore his anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) the prior season. As such, a key for Penn State was to match Michigan's physicality in strong offensive line play and establish the line of scrimmage, both on offense and defense, as the game would be won in the trenches. The game was described as a \"critical juncture\". Before the game, Penn State realized that, due to a Ticketmaster glitch, it had oversold student section tickets, and was forced to offer several alternate packages in order not to have to boot students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nWith a Goodyear blimp overhead, Michigan got the ball to start the game, and on their first play from scrimmage, they lost three yards when DaQuan Jones made a tackle for a loss stopping Fitzgerald Toussaint; the loss decimated the drive, which ended in a three-and-out. Penn State's drive was no more successful \u2013 after one first down, Christian Hackenberg threw an interception. On Michigan's ensuing drive, however, they were set up on another third down and long, and Penn State's Jordan Lucas picked off Michigan quarterback Devin Gardner's pass, setting Penn State up in the red zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0031-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nPenn State capitalized, as Hackenberg threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to senior receiver Brandon Felder. Michigan struck right back, getting two first downs in the running game prior to Gardner throwing a 59-yard touchdown pass to Devin Funchess to tie the game. Penn State did not get a first down on their next drive and tried to convert fourth down deep in their own territory, but failed, setting Michigan up with excellent field position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0031-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nPenn State's defense, however, responded, with Glenn Carson sacking Gardner to put Michigan out of field goal range, forcing a punt that Michigan downed around the five yard line. On Michigan's next drive, their kicker Brendan Gibbons made a 47-yard field goal. After Penn State again punted, Michigan embarked on a drive that included a third-and-long conversion, but ultimately ended when Gardner threw an interception to Penn State defensive end Anthony Zettel, who started over Deion Barnes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0031-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nIt took Penn State only one play to capitalize; Hackenberg threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Jesse James to put Penn State back up 14\u201310. Penn State struck again later in the quarter, again via a touchdown pass from Hackenberg to Felder. Late in the first half, Penn State defensive end C. J. Olaniyan sacked Gardner for the second time, forcing a fumble, which Penn State recovered, but their drive stalled, and they punted. Penn State held a 21\u201310 advantage at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nOn Penn State's first play from scrimmage in the second half, Zach Zwinak fumbled, and it was returned for a touchdown by Frank Clark to pull within four points. After another Penn State drive stalled, Michigan drove down the field, and was faced with a third-and-short before a freshman offensive lineman committed a dead ball unsportsmanlike conduct penalty to back up Michigan to face a third and long; on that play Olaniyan recorded his third sack of the day, and Michigan punted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0032-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nOn Penn State's ensuing drive, they turned the ball over again, this time via a Hackenberg interception; Michigan capitalized by kicking a field goal. When Penn State got the ball back, they ran a sustained, balanced drive (4 run plays, 5 pass plays, 50 yards) down the field during which they went to Bill Belton in the running game (as Zwinak had fumbled previously in the half) that culminated with Sam Ficken kicking a 45-yard field goal to go up by 4 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0032-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nMichigan promptly drove right back down the field, and Gardner threw a touchdown pass to Jeremy Gallon to take the lead for the second time, 27\u201324. In the fourth quarter, Ficken attempted a 47-yard field goal, but missed, and Penn State's 10-play 45-yard drive came up empty. Michigan took advantage of their ensuing field position and ran a quick drive that ended with a 37-yard touchdown pass from Gardner to Funchess, putting them on top by 10 with 10:28 to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0032-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nOn Penn State's ensuing drive, they converted a fourth down and one near midfield prior to a penalty and then a sack setting up a third and long on which Hackenberg threw an incomplete pass, so they were forced to settle with pulling within 7; Sam Ficken kicked a 43-yard field goal. Michigan tried to run out the clock on their next drive, and Penn State burned all three of their timeouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0032-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nThough they were at one point within field goal range, they committed a five-yard delay of game penalty that pushed them out of range, and they had to punt. Penn State got the ball with 50 seconds left and no timeouts at their own 20-yard line. Needing a touchdown to tie the game, Penn State's first play of scrimmage was a pass from Hackenberg to Robinson along the sideline that was ruled incomplete on the field, but was reviewed and overturned and counted as a 14-yard gain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0032-0005", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nThe next play was an acrobatic catch by Felder for 29 yards, and then a pass down the sideline to Robinson for 36 yards to put the ball inside the one yard line with 29 seconds remaining. Michigan then called their final timeout. Hackenberg then attempted a quarterback sneak over the right side for a touchdown; the play was reviewed and the call was confirmed, and Ficken made the extra point to tie the game with 27 seconds left. Michigan took the ball at their own 35, drove it to the other 35, and lined Gibbons up to attempt a 52-yard field goal, which he missed short. Penn State got the ball with two seconds left, but downed the ball to send the game into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nPenn State got the ball to start overtime, but went three-and-out and Ficken missed a field goal. Michigan used their entire possession to try to center the ball for Gibbons, and then they attempted a field goal, but it was blocked, to send the game into a second overtime. Michigan got the ball to start the second overtime, achieved one first down, and Gibbons redeemed himself, kicking a 25-yard field goal. Ficken responded, tacking on a 36-yard field goal to tie the game at 37, headed into a third overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nPenn State got the ball to start the third overtime, but on their first play, an end-around to Robinson that he fumbled and was recovered by Clark to set up Michigan with a chance to win the game with any score. Gibbons had an opportunity to win the game, but missed wide, and sent the game into a fourth overtime. Michigan got the ball to start the fourth overtime, and stalled, leaving Gibbons to attempt a 40-yard field goal, which he made to put the Wolverines on top 40\u201337.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0033-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nPenn State then needed a field goal to tie, or a touchdown to win. Faced with a fourth down and one, O'Brien sent his team out on the field to go for it, and they converted via a two-yard run by Belton. Three plays later, Hackenberg threw an incomplete pass intended for Robinson in the end zone, but officials called pass interference on the play, which occurred in the end zone, resulting in the ball being placed at the two yard line. On Penn State's next play, Hackenberg handed the ball off to Belton, who ran it in for a two-yard touchdown, winning the game for Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nThe four-overtime game was the longest in Big Ten Conference history. For their performance in the game, Athlon Sports named Hackenberg as both its Big Ten and National Freshman of the Week, and Olaniyan as its Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week. Hackenberg threw for over 300 yards for the third time, already moving him into a tie for third-most all time in Penn State history, tied with Daryll Clark, and behind Matt McGloin and Kerry Collins; it was the third time he had been named freshman of the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 12 vs. Michigan\nOlaniyan recorded 2.5 sacks and forced a fumble (that was recovered by DaQuan Jones), and this was his first career Big Ten Player of the Week accolade. ESPN named the game the best of the season's first half, and Robinson's catch late in regulation was named the number-one play on Sports Center's Top Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #2 \u2013 October 19, 2013\nAfter Penn State's quadruple overtime win against Michigan, they tried to get healthy, with veterans being held out of a scrimmage that occurred during the week of practice, instead working on conditioning. One ESPN writer opined that defensive coordinator John Butler needed to emphasize reworking the secondary, similar to how he had focused on reworking the defensive line, which was successful during the prior week's game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0035-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #2 \u2013 October 19, 2013\nAlso, Penn State needed to find additional \"playmakers\" to supplement Allen Robinson in the receiving game, as well as determine who would lead the running game, as Zach Zwinak had fumbled against Michigan and was taken out, and Bill Belton took over and performed well. Halfway through the season, ESPN.com rated Robinson as the team's offensive MVP, and defensive tackle DaQuan Jones as the team's defensive MVP. The midseason report noted that Penn State had a grueling schedule in the second half of the season that would test the depth of its defense, limited by lack of scholarship players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0035-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #2 \u2013 October 19, 2013\nLancaster Newspapers concurred with ESPN, awarding their first half offensive and defensive MVPs to Robinson and Jones respectively as well, adding Sam Ficken as special teams MVP. The column also called sophomore defensive end Deion Barnes the biggest disappointment of the first half, noting that he had even been relegated out of the starting lineup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0035-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Bye week #2 \u2013 October 19, 2013\nQuarterback Christian Hackenberg, who had started the first six games and had a \"halftime\" in the bye week, as there were still six games to play, viewed the bye week as a bonus: \"We have a couple more days to prepare, get a good game plan and get ready to go to a hostile environment and play a really good football team. I think it's more of a bonus for us.\" Coach Bill O'Brien concurred, asserting that Penn State's win against Michigan gave Hackenberg confidence and development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 91], "content_span": [92, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nIn Penn State's second nationally televised, prime time game, which was to be called by Nittany Lion alumnus Todd Blackledge, the Lions entered the game underdogs, even according to their local media. The opening line put Ohio State 14.5 point favorites. Pre -game buildup focused on Ohio State quarterback Braxton Miller, for whom there \"is no good way to stop\", and who Bill O'Brien called one of the top five players in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nIn tandem with star running back Carlos Hyde, Ohio State was expected to score a lot of points, even against Penn State's improved defense; a preview from York Daily Record writer Frank Bodani gave Ohio State the edge on offense, citing the tandem of Miller and Hyde, defense, citing playmaking game-changers Noah Spence and Ryan Shazier, who play defensive end and linebacker respectively, special teams, noting their punt blocking ability and return game, coaching, noting that Ohio State had not yet lost under Urban Meyer, and intangibles, citing the sold-out crowd in prime time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0036-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nKeys to the game for Penn State were to contain Miller, not get beaten over-the-top in coverage, and running the ball, so as to avoid becoming one-dimensional offensively. Ohio State needed to contain Penn State receiver Allen Robinson with their star cornerback Bradley Roby, \"ride Hyde\" (run the ball with Carlos Hyde), and get pressure on freshman quarterback Christian Hackenberg. Penn State made a few changes on their depth chart for the game, including placing Bill Belton and Zach Zwinak on the first team separated with an \"OR\". Also, Deion Barnes and Anthony Zettel were listed with an OR between their names; Zettel started the previous week against Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nOhio State got the ball to start the game, and promptly drove down the field on a 7-play, 75-yard drive culminating with a touchdown run by Carlos Hyde. Penn State responded with a solid drive of their own, running 12 plays and getting to the 12-yard line before Christian Hackenberg threw an interception in the end zone. The two teams exchanged punts, and then Ohio State scored, this time via a 39-yard run from their quarterback Braxton Miller. Hackenberg threw another interception late in the quarter, and Ohio State, early in the second quarter, capitalized with another touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0037-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nAfter scoring again, Penn State scored points for their first time to make the score 28\u20137, off a 12-yard touchdown reception by Brandon Felder. Ohio State scored twice more, and the halftime score was a 42\u20137 Ohio State advantage. After exchanging punts to start the second half, Zach Zwinak lost a fumble in Penn State territory for the second consecutive week, and for the second consecutive week, he did not carry the ball after it. It took Ohio State only two plays to take advantage, scoring a touchdown on a Miller pass to Dontre Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0037-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nOn Penn State's next drive, Tyler Ferguson replaced Hackenberg at quarterback due to an injury he sustained earlier in the game, Ferguson was no more effective, as Penn State ultimately punted. Ohio State scored once more in the third quarter, and they led 56\u20137 headed into the fourth quarter. After another touchdown for Ohio State, Ferguson threw a touchdown pass to Allen Robinson in which Robinson caught the screen pass behind the line of scrimmage, \"runs around, weaving thru traffic from one sideline to the other, and finishes in the end zone for a touchdown\". That would be the final scoring play of the game, which ended 63\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nIn what linebacker Mike Hull described as \"the worst game I've experienced\", Penn State allowed the most points it had since 1889, when they lost to the Duquesne Athletic Club on November 25, 1889 64\u20135. Ohio State totaled 686 total yards, whereas Penn State totaled 357. The game thrust the Buckeyes into consideration to play in the 2014 BCS National Championship Game, while it subjugated Christian Hackenberg, who \"wasn't ready for Ohio State or the 'Shoe\", according to an article on Bleacher Report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, October 26 vs. Ohio State\nAn article from SBNation.com noted, \"This Penn State one is a talented but extremely flawed one, flawed, especially defensively, in ways that are blatant and clear and easy for any well-coached offense to exploit, and flawed on offense with youth and with inexperience, destined to repeat the past because they must before it gets any better.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nComing off a shellacking against Ohio State, Penn State looked to rebound behind a strong defensive effort against Illinois. Linebacker Mike Hull noted, \"Practice Monday and (Tuesday) was real energetic and we were smacking people out there. We\u2019re ready to play another game on Saturday and get that taste of losing out of our mouth.\" Keys to the game included moving on from the prior Saturday's defeat, limiting big plays on defense, containing Illinois quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase, and protecting quarterback Christian Hackenberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0039-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nA pre-game analysis of statistical comparisons between the two squads gave Penn State an advantage in most offensive and defensive stats, while it gave Illinois an advantage on special teams. The analyst blamed sanctions imposed by NCAA president Mark Emmert in wake of the Penn State child sex abuse scandal for that disparity, citing scholarship reductions hampering depth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nIllinois got the ball to start the game, and on their opening drive, Scheelhaase threw an interception, setting up Penn State at their own 16, from which they ran a 7-play, 84-yard drive highlighted by a 47-yard pass to Allen Robinson, and culminating with Bill Belton rushing for a 1-yard touchdown. Penn State scored on their second drive as well, a lengthy 17-play drive that encapsulated 7:15, and resulted in Christian Hackenberg running for a 9-yard touchdown early in the second quarter to take a 14\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0040-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nAfter another Illinois punt, Penn State again drove down the field, but Sam Ficken missed a 37-yard field goal, his first miss on a kick inside of 40 yards on the season. On the final drive of the first half, Illinois finally achieved points, with kicker Taylor Zalewski making a 21-yard field goal as time expired. After Penn State's first second-half drive faltered, Illinois took the field, and embarked on a 13-play, 88-yard drive, ended by an 8-yard touchdown run from Josh Ferguson. At the end of the third quarter, Penn State led 14\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0040-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nIn the fourth quarter, the two teams each failed to score on their first drive, but on Illinois' second, Scheelhaase connected with Ferguson on a 7-yard pass to finish off a 13-play, 77-yard drive and take the lead for the first time in the game. Penn State's ensuing drive had promise, but ultimately ended when Belton lost a fumble at the two-yard line. Illinois failed to capitalize, however, and went three-and-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0040-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nTaking the field in Illinois territory, Penn State drove into field goal range, at which point Ficken made a 37-yard field goal to tie the game at 17 with 0:41 remaining. Illinois got the ball back, but after a false start penalty on them and a subsequent off-sides penalty on Penn State, they called timeout, and ran one additional play, on which Penn State recorded their first sack of the game. Time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0040-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nIn overtime, Penn State's second overtime game in their past three, they got the ball to start, and were faced with a third-down situation needing 11 yards to convert at the 15-yard line. Coming out of a timeout following a holding penalty that brought back a touchdown, Kyle Carter made his first and only reception of the day, a 15-yard touchdown pass thrown into a tight window by Hackenberg on one of Penn State's \"favorite\" plays known simply as \"pearl\". Illinois did not achieve a touchdown on their subsequent drive, as Ryan Keiser intercepted a pass on its first play, ending the game with Penn State emerging victorious, 24\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nIn a victory that coach Bill O'Brien refused to describe as either \"ugly\" or \"fortunate\" despite a variety of media sources doing so, one article from Lancaster Newspapers described the game by saying,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nThis was some bad football played by two teams going nowhere, both ailing mentally and emotionally over having been beaten on the road in their previous outings by a combined 88 points. And after a long day of players and coaches and officials throwing up all over each other, the truth that Illinois has not won a Big Ten game since Nov. 8, 2011 ... Which is to say, it came down to Illinois doing what it does, which is finding a way to lose, and Penn State doing what it (more often than not) does, which is to find a way to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nOffensively, Penn State totaled 25 first downs, two fewer than Illinois, but 490 total offensive yards, exceeding Illinois by 79. Allen Robinson caught 11 passes, and was the only Penn State receiver with more than three catches. The shuffled offensive line on which Donovan Smith did not start, \"yes, allowed a sack, and yes, committed a few penalties, but generally opened up gaping holes in the run game, gave Hackenberg plenty of time to throw, and controlled the line of scrimmage\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 2 vs. Illinois\nRunning back Bill Belton set career highs with both 36 rushes and 201 yards, and was named Big Ten co-offensive player of the week. It was the first time a Penn State player had rushed for over 200 yards since Larry Johnson in 2002. Defensively, Penn State stopped Illinois for a loss of yardage on only four plays, and though linebackers Mike Hull and Glenn Carson combined for 24 tackles, they had no interceptions, forced fumbles, sacks, or tackles for loss between them. The secondary struggled, though did record two interceptions, mitigating their overall ineffectiveness, much of which, however, stemmed from defensive coordinator John Butler's incessant third-down blitzes, leaving one-on-one coverage for overmatched cornerbacks such as Jordan Lucas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nIn the teams' first meeting since 2010, Penn State visited TCF Bank Stadium to face a Minnesota team looking for their fourth consecutive Big Ten victory, and their eighth win of the season, which would have been their first time since the 2003 season. There was consensus among both Penn State's and Minnesota's SB Nation sites, as well as independent picks, that Minnesota would win a relatively close game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nMinnesota's offense was one of the better rushing teams in the conference (20th in the nation), but Penn State's defense was also pretty good against the run, making it a good matchup. Freshman quarterback Christian Hackenberg in tandem with a running game that, in theory, was led by Bill Belton and supplemented by Zach Zwinak, and receivers Allen Robinson had potential to score a lot of points. Keys to the game included avoiding turnovers and running the football. Minnesota head coach Jerry Kill, recovering from seizures stemming from epilepsy, coached from the press box.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nPenn State received the opening kickoff, however on their first play from scrimmage, Bill Belton lost a fumble and Minnesota recovered and kicked a field goal after failing to achieve a first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0045-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nPenn State's punt on the subsequent drive was downed at the four-yard line, but the poor field position did not adversely affect Minnesota, who drove down the field for a 15-play, 96-yard drive, highlighted by a 24-yard pass from Philip Nelson to Maxx Williams to convert a fourth down to get down to the Penn State four-yard line, from which point they scored two plays later via a 1-yard run by David Cobb. Penn State responded, however, with Zach Zwinak rushing the ball 5 times for 61 yards including a 38-yard run, and ultimately a 6-yard touchdown scamper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0045-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nAt the end of the first quarter, Minnesota led 10\u20137. In the second quarter, Minnesota wasted no time, embarking on a 13-play, 70-yard drive that lasted 6:54 and ended with Nelson rushing for a 6-yard touchdown. Penn State responded, driving down the field on 13 plays for 65 yards lasting 5:57, culminating with Ficken kicking a 27-yard field goal after the drive stalled in the red zone. Late in the half, Minnesota drove down the field, and Nelson completed a 24-yard touchdown pass to Williams, putting Minnesota on top 24\u201310 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0045-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nReceiving the second half kickoff, Minnesota initiated a drive that included a 39-yard run by Cobb, but ultimately ended in their first punt of the day, which they downed inside the one-yard line. Penn State achieved two first downs, but an illegal block in the back on Jesse James decimated the drive, which ended with a punt, but they caught a break a play later when Minnesota fumbled and Malcolm Willis recovered in Minnesota territory. The break did not materialize with any points, but their subsequent punt was downed inside the five yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0045-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nDreadful field position continued when, after driving for several yards, Minnesota's punt settled inside the five yard line, again setting Penn State up with a long field. In the waning moments of the third quarter, Penn State relied on Zwinak, who rushed several consecutive times to garner Penn State breathing room. There was no scoring in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0045-0005", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nPenn State failed to convert a third down (they had still not converted any in the game), but Minnesota committed a roughing the kicker penalty, giving Penn State a second chance with which they converted their first third down of the game, but ultimately turned the ball over on downs. After a Minnesota punt, Penn State, for the first drive of the game, relied on their passing game to drive down the field, but, when faced with a fourth down and ten deep in Minnesota territory, failed to convert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0045-0006", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nOn Minnesota's ensuing possession, however, they managed to run only 47 seconds off the clock, and went three-and-out. Hoping not to again blow an opportunity, Penn State moved promptly down the field, and got into the red zone. While there, a pass to Allen Robinson resulted in a pass interference penalty called against Minnesota, giving Penn State the ball at the two-yard line, from where they fumbled, and Minnesota recovered, and embarked on a possession from which they would not relinquish the ball, winning the game 24\u201310, after no scoring in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nFollowing their victory and awarding of the Governor's Victory Bell, Minnesota players, purportedly \"a little excited after ... the team\u2019s first win over the Nittany Lions in nearly a decade\", broke the trophy. For Penn State, though coming off a 200-rushing yard performance, Belton took a back seat in the rushing attack to Zwinak after fumbling in the first quarter. In total, The Morning Call graded Penn State's offense by awarding them a C-, noting the lack of scoring despite opportunities in Minnesota territory, though noting Zwinak's resurgence as a mitigating factor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0046-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 9 vs. Minnesota\nThey awarded the defense the same grade, noting that though they improved in the second half, they were \"torched\" on consecutive drives early in the game. They summarized Penn State's coaching with a comment from O'Brien: \"It seemed like, when we made a call, they had the right call for it.\" In total, the article asserted that overall, Minnesota was the superior team. StateCollege.com's Ben Jones predominantly concurred, giving the offense a C-, but giving the defense a C+, noting that the defense did keep Penn State competitive in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nComing off a loss to Minnesota the preceding week, Penn State looked to defeat Purdue, which they had in every meeting since 2004. Though expected to beat an overmatched Purdue squad that was reeling, having lost 38\u201314 the prior week against Iowa, and 56\u20130 the week before that against Ohio State, and entering the game with a 1\u20138 record, the Lions would have to do so with even less depth than normal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0047-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nAt his mid-week press conference, Bill O'Brien announced at the midweek press conference that Ben Kline would miss the remainder of the season with a shoulder injury, for which he sustained surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0047-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nThere was also some pregame concentration surrounding the receiving corps \u2013 Allen Robinson was listed on the injury report with a shoulder injury, and Geno Lewis, who had proved to be a potential big play threat early in the season when he caught a 54-yard touchdown pass against Syracuse, but had recently been relegated to special teams, was also expected to receive increased playing time in Penn State's second-to-last home game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nPenn State received the opening kickoff, and on their first play from scrimmage, featured six offensive linemen (albeit unsuccessfully, as Bill Belton rushed for a one-yard loss), before driving down the field on a 13-play, 75-yard drive that culminated with Belton rushing for a five-yard touchdown; he carried the load on the drive, rushing the ball eight times for 36 yards. Penn State would never relinquish that lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0048-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nPurdue subsequently went three-and-out, and Penn State responded with another long drive (10 plays, 66 yards) that again culminated with a rushing touchdown, this time from Zach Zwinak on a one-yard run, his tenth touchdown of the season, becoming the 16th Penn State player to eclipse 10, and the first since 2008, when both Evan Royster and Daryll Clark did. Purdue's ensuing drive ended in the second quarter when quarterback Danny Etling threw a two-yard touchdown pass to Justin Sinz, making the score 14\u20137 Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0048-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nBill Belton lost a fumble on Penn State's next drive, but Purdue turned the ball over right back to Penn State when Jordan Lucas intercepted an Etling pass. Zwinak rushed for his second one-yard touchdown of the game on the ensuing possession. The Nittany Lions scored once more in the first half, via an eight-yard pass from Christian Hackenberg to Adam Breneman, but on the ensuing kickoff, Purdue's Raheem Mostert scored a touchdown on a 100-yard return, thus ending the first half with a score of 28\u201314, Penn State holding the advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0048-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nPurdue came out of halftime with a vengeance, driving down the field for 84-yards, ultimately pulling within 7 points on an 11-yard rush by Etling. The first field goal of the game occurred on Penn State's subsequent drive, a 29-yarder from Sam Ficken putting the Nittany Lions ahead 31\u201321. The Boilermakers turned the ball over again on their next drive, and Penn State capitalized when Zwinak rushed for his third touchdown of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0048-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nPurdue turned the ball over on downs their final drive of the third quarter, though Hackenberg threw an interception giving Purdue an opportunity early in the fourth quarter; again, a fumble eliminated any chance of a scoring drive coming to fruition, and Penn State went up 45\u201321 when Hackenberg rushed for a 4-yard touchdown to culminate an 11-play, 74-yard drive that encapsulated over a third of the fourth quarter, and ended with 4:27 to play. That would be the final scoring drive of the game, which Penn State won by the aforementioned score, 45\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nIn a game in which Penn State dominated the line of scrimmage, the Nittany Lions rushed for 289 yards behind an offensive line that opened up significant holes, allowing Penn State to achieve their goal of rushing the football, despite not achieving offensive tackle Garry Gilliam's goal of 400 yards. Purdue's coach Darrell Hazell had opined earlier in the week that Penn State's offensive line was not as good as previous opponents Wisconsin and Iowa, and Penn State used it as motivation, dominating the line of scrimmage, which numerous offensive lineman noted was \"fun\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0049-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nStarting center Ty Howle, who noted,\"It's fun, knowing you can go out there and impose your will each play. It's a lot of fun.\" and all-conference guard John Urschel, who agreed, saying, \"This was a real fun game for us, with respect to coming off the ball and just hitting guys. The offensive linemen really enjoyed it. We were having a blast. When you're an offensive lineman and you're getting yards, you want to run the ball over and over again.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0049-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nAllen Robinson caught his 78th pass of the season with his fifth catch of the game, and in doing so topped his 77 catches from the 2012 season. Aside from offensive accomplishments, the defense was also impressive, particularly play from Jordan Lucas, who ESPN commented earlier in the week plays with \"swagger\", and who, during the game, intercepted a pass, garnering a comment from The Patriot News that he is the \"top playmaker in the secondary\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0049-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 16 vs. Purdue\nDespite jubilation from the victory, including one Penn State player who quipped that the sixth win made Penn State bowl eligible (the NCAA banned Penn State from bowl participation as part of sanctions imposed in the Penn State child sex abuse scandal), seniors nostalgically remembered this was their second-to-last game at Beaver Stadium. The Lions bounced back from their previous loss against Minnesota, and had not lost two consecutive games under Bill O'Brien since their first two in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nOn Senior Day at Penn State, the final home game of the season, the 6\u20134 Lions were set to host the 7\u20133 Nebraska Cornhuskers, however despite the Huskers having the better record, the opening line gave Penn State a two-point advantage. Earlier in the week, it was announced that, in addition to the 14 seniors, Penn State would honor defensive tackle Kyle Baublitz, offensive tackle Garry Gilliam, and wide receiver Alex Kenney on the field prior to the game; none of the three planned to return for the 2014 season despite each having an additional year of eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0050-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nOffensively for Penn State, Biletnikoff Award semifinalist wide receiver Allen Robinson entered the game by far Penn State's biggest threat in the passing game, with three times more receptions (81) entering the game than Penn State's second receiver, Brandon Felder (27). Perhaps the biggest opportunity for Penn State's offense to achieve success against Nebraska's defense, however, was through the running game, either on the coattails of Bill Belton or Zach Zwinak; Nebraska's run defense had frequently been \"gouged\" against Big Ten offenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0050-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nSimilarly, Nebraska's offense would have an opportunity to continue to achieve success through its running game, led by Ameer Abdullah, who entered the game averaging 6.5 yards per carry. He had picked up the slack in the absence of their prior starter at quarterback Taylor Martinez, sidelined due to injury. Penn State coach Bill O'Brien predicted that whichever team committed fewer turnovers would win, as both teams had previously experienced problems with turnovers, both entering the game with negative turnover margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0050-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nBoth teams entered the game with freshmen quarterbacks, in Christian Hackenberg for Penn State, and Tommy Armstrong for Nebraska, but both teams' primary playmakers came from outside the quarterback position, with Robinson for Penn State, and Abdullah for Nebraska. According to York Daily Record writer Frank Bodani, Penn State's offense was more consistent than Nebraska's, who committed too many turnovers, giving Penn State the edge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0050-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nDefensively, Penn State was hit-or-miss in their secondary as well as in stopping the run, so Nebraska, who was also inconsistent, held a slight edge with their playmakers Randy Gregory and Ciante Evans, Nebraska also held an edge on special teams due to consistency and depth, but Penn State had superior coaching as well as intangibles, with a \"roaring crowd\" on Senior Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0050-0005", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nWith two hit-or-miss squads, most writers thought this would be a relatively close game, though a plurality leaned towards Nebraska edging out a victory, however some thought that Penn State's seniors would come out with a vengeance, never having defeated Nebraska since they joined the Big Ten, and the \"resilient\" group would use that motivation to eke out a victory in their final game at Beaver Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nShortly before the game, Penn State announced tailback Bill Belton would not play due to illness, leaving Zach Zwinak to carry the load in the running game in the snow. Nebraska received the opening kickoff, and promptly went three-and-out, forcing a punt, which though Penn State returner Jesse Della Valle fumbled, but the Lions recovered, setting up Penn State at their own 23 yard line, but they too went three-and-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nNebraska's second drive, however, got off to a much better start, as Ameer Abdullah rushed for a 25-yard gain on the drive's first play, but ultimately Penn State's defense held on a later third down and short play, forcing another punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nPenn State's subsequent drive showed promise, with Zwinak rushing for a few first downs (on one of which Nebraska star defensive back Cionte Evans was injured; he returned a few drives later), however they eventually punted, and for the second time, Alex Butterworth pinned them inside the 20, and Nebraska failed to execute, punting for the third time; on the punt return, Della Valle redeemed himself with a 25-yard return into Nebraska territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nPenn State took advantage of the field position, and in the waning seconds of the first quarter, Hackenberg threw a two-yard touchdown to Adam Breneman after Zwinak rushed the ball six times for a total of 27 yards; Sam Ficken missed the extra point, his first extra point miss of the season. Penn State led at the end of the first quarter, 6\u20130. On Nebraska's next drive, they entered with senior Ron Kellogg III at quarterback, after Armstrong's ineffectiveness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nKellogg III came in firing on all cylinders, completing his first three passes, before Abdullah ran for a first down, and then Kellogg III completed another pass, this time for a touchdown on a 27-yard pass to Quincy Enunwa. Nebraska made the extra point, taking a one-point lead. Penn State's next drive stalled, and again Butterworth was able to pin Nebraska inside the 20 on the ensuing punt. Nebraska subsequently went three-and-out, setting Penn State up with solid field position at their own 37-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0005", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nThey got one first down, and were positioned for another, but Felder dropped a pass, and Penn State's ensuing punt was blocked after Butterworth dropped the low snap, setting up Nebraska in Penn State territory. Nebraska recorded the game's first third down conversion en route to getting the ball in the red zone. On a snap to Abdullah from the wildcat formation, he ran up the middle, but fumbled into the end zone, and Della Valle recovered in the end zone, setting Penn State up with some momentum at their 20-yard line, however they were unable to capitalize, going three-and-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0006", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nNebraska's ensuing drive stalled, and they punted. Penn State came out trying to score before the half, and they did achieve a few first downs, but ultimately punted, and Nebraska downed the ball to go into half time leading by one. Coming out of the half, the snow showers returned, and Penn State got the ball to start the half, and they did convert a third down for the first time of the game, however again, their drive stalled, and Butterworth punted the ball for the sixth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0007", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nNebraska faced a third-and-long on their next drive, and on the play, C. J. Olaniyan sacked the quarterback, and forced and recovered a fumble, setting Penn State up inside the Nebraska 10 yard line. Two plays later, with the snow increasing in intensity, Hackenberg ran a play-action bootleg and rolled right, running for a 7-yard touchdown, putting Penn State up 13\u20137, as this time, Ficken made the extra point. The lead did not last long; Kenny Bell returned the ensuing kickoff for a 99-yard touchdown, the second consecutive week Penn State surrendered a return touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0008", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nBack where they started at the beginning of the half in terms of scoring differential, Penn State got the ball inside their own 20 after Geno Lewis fumbled the kickoff return (he recovered). Penn State achieved a first down on the drive, but a false start penalty set up a third-and-long situation from which they could not recover. They punted. Nebraska also punted on their next drive, and the punt was downed at the one-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0009", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nThey did not remain in the shadow of their own goal post for long, as Zwinak rushed for four yards, and then, on a play action pass, Hackenberg threw a 43-yard pass to Allen Robinson. Two plays later, however, Evans intercepted Hackenberg's pass, giving Nebraska good field position at their own 48. They capitalized, kicking a field goal, going up by four. The Huskers led 17\u201313 at the end of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0010", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nOn the first play of the fourth quarter, Jesse James caught a pass in the flat on a third-and-three, and ran down the sideline for a 46-yard touchdown putting Penn State up 20\u201317. Penn State quickly got the ball back, and looked to milk clock with Zwinak running the football, however two incomplete passes decimated the drive, and they punted it back to Nebraska. After exchanging punts, Nebraska embarked on a drive that had a 62-yard run by Abdullah called back due to a personal foul penalty called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0011", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nThe foul occurred deep into the run, so Nebraska still got the ball at Penn State's 27-yard line. Subsequently, they moved the ball into the red zone, and got it down to the one-yard line before a false start backed them up to the six-yard line ... one play later, they called timeout, and on the next play, Kellogg III scrambled and got to the one-yard line before he and Mike Hull collided, jarring the ball loose, but the ruling was that Nebraska maintained possession, and Smith made a 19-yard field goal to tie the game at 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0012", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nWhen Penn State received the subsequent kickoff, they ran the ball several times, and ultimately punted the ball away with 1:40 remaining from their 38-yard line; it was downed at the five-yard line, setting up Nebraska with two of their three timeouts and 1:31 remaining. Nebraska was backed up inside their one on third-and-long, and threw a long pass that fell incomplete, however Jordan Lucas was flagged for pass interference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0051-0013", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nThe next series, however, was decimated by penalties, and ultimately, Nebraska punted the ball away, and the game went into overtime, Penn State's third OT game of the season (they won the first two). In overtime, Penn State got the ball first, and after failing to achieve a first down, lined up to attempt a field goal, but the typically reliable Ficken missed another kick, and Nebraska conservatively positioned themselves for a field goal try on their ensuing possession. They lined up for a 37-yard field goal, but committed a false start penalty backing them up five yards. It did not matter, however, as Smith hit a 42-yard field goal to win the game, 23\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nNebraska dominated Penn State on special teams, and ultimately, that advantage led to their victory. If it were not for Sam Ficken missing an extra point in the first quarter, Nebraska would not have been able to settle for a field goal late in the second half to send the game into overtime. In addition to the missed extra point, Penn State allowed a kickoff to be returned for a touchdown for the second straight week, and had a punt blocked. Bill O'Brien commented, \"We\u2019ll continue to work hard in special teams. They\u2019re good kids working hard.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0052-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 23 vs. Nebraska\nOffensively, Penn State's was plagued by dropped passes that hindered Christian Hackenberg's overall performance, while the running game, though led by Zach Zwinak who rushed for 149 yards, was one-dimensional, as backup Akeel Lynch could muster only nine yards on five carries. Penn State's defense was \"in control for long stretches\", but ultimately allowed a third-string quarterback to win the game, and also allowed Ameer Abdullah to rush for 147 yards. Prior to the game, Penn State's seniors were lauded with a video tribute that noted, \"[Penn State was] led by your commitment, led by your loyalty, by your actions, led by example.\" This was their third overtime game of the season, but their first overtime loss since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 85], "content_span": [86, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nIn their final game of the season, Penn State looked to play spoiler and try to prevent Wisconsin from achieving a 10-win season and BCS Bowl opportunity in coach Gary Andersen's first season with the Badgers, who entered the game with a 9\u20132 record and were 24-point favorites to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0053-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nThe Badgers entered the game still employing their quintessential offensive philosophy even under their new coach \u2013 a power running game behind a physical offensive line led by two of the top rushers in the country, Melvin Gordon and James White, both of whom were on the preseason watchlist for the Doak Walker Award (given to the nation's best running back) and the former of whom was named one of ten semifinalists for the award in mid-November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0053-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nWhite, a tough runner in the middle of the field, had emerged in recent weeks, whereas Gordon, a speedster, led the team in rushing and led the country with an 8.2 yards-per-carry average. Wisconsin's offense also featured a strong passing game, highlighted by quarterback Joel Stave and favorite target Jared Abbrederis, however one game preview asserted that Penn State's defense matched up well against the Badgers' offense. Defensively, Wisconsin entered the game the fifth-best scoring defense in the country, allowing just 13.4 points per game. The \"stingy\" defense, the preview noted, would likely prove problematic for Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nPenn State received the opening kickoff, and after achieving a first down, Christian Hackenberg threw a 68-yard pass to fellow freshman Adam Breneman for a touchdown, the first offensive touchdown Wisconsin had allowed in the previous eight quarters. Wisconsin failed to respond, going three-and-out, and punting on their subsequent drive. Penn State, though they began with poor field position, converted a few third downs, gained 52 yards on a bubble screen to Allen Robinson, and ultimately was faced with a fourth down and inches in the red zone, but committed a false start penalty bringing on the field goal unit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nThe field goal was blocked, continuing Penn State's special teams woes, however their defense remained stout, forcing another punt, however on the Lions' ensuing drive, Hackenberg threw his first incomplete pass of the day, forcing a punt. In the waning minutes of the first quarter, the Badgers embarked on a drive in which they scored several first downs from both the running game and passing game. At the end of the quarter, they trailed 7\u20130, but were threatening, and a few minutes later, tied the game via a 4-yard pass from Joel Stave to tight end Brian Wozniak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nLater in the quarter, Wisconsin converted a third down and 16 situation, and ultimately scored a touchdown on a pass from Stave to Jeff Duckworth. On their next drive, Penn State was set up in the red zone after a pass interference call in the end zone that broadcaster Ed Cunningham criticized, and a few plays later scored a touchdown via a 3-yard pass to Geno Lewis. Lewis was uncovered on the goal line play, and though Wisconsin coach Gary Andersen ran down the sideline signalling for a timeout, it was not granted, and the play stood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0003", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nAt the half, the score was tied at 14. After Wisconsin's opening drive stalled, the Nittany Lions embarked on a demoralizing drive that fostered widespread defensive confusion from Wisconsin and ultimately ended when Jesse James caught a 7-yard touchdown pass from Hackenberg to put Penn State on top 21\u201314. On the ensuing Wisconsin drive, Penn State freshman linebacker sacked Stave and forced a fumble that defensive end C. J. Olaniyan returned deep into Wisconsin territory. Penn State earned points, with Ficken redeeming himself on a 28-yard field goal to put Penn State up by 10 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0004", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nOn the next two drives, each team went three-and-out. At the end of the third quarter, Wisconsin was near midfield during a drive in which they looked to pull within a field goal; at the end of the quarter, Penn State led 24\u201314. On one of the first plays of the fourth quarter, Trevor Williams intercepted Stave's pass, ending a scoring threat, and furthering the Nittany Lions' momentum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0005", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nPenn State started their drive at their own 28-yard line, and had a third down and short, but a false start backed them up to a third and long; Hackenberg was unfazed, however, as he threw a 59-yard touchdown pass to Geno Lewis, putting Penn State up by three possessions, 31\u201314. Down three scores, Wisconsin desperately needed a touchdown, and tried to convert a fourth down and 23, but Penn State recorded a sack, and subsequently got the ball with 9:49 to play. They failed to execute, and about a minute later, punted the ball away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0006", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nWisconsin drove down the field and pulled within 10, 31\u201321, on a Wozniak reception, his second touchdown catch of the day. Penn State got the ball off an onside kick with good field position, and faced a third down and three, but Donovan Smith committed his fourth false start of the day, and Penn State had to throw the ball, and the pass was incomplete. Penn State's subsequent punt was blocked. On the ensuing drive, Jack Russell kicked a career long 48-yard field goal to pull Wisconsin within seven points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0007", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nPenn State started their drive after Wisconsin kicked it deep inside their own 20-yard line. Penn State got some decent yardage on first down, but committed another false start, backing them up. Zwinak came through for the Lions, however, rushing on third-and-nine for 61 yards, his longest run of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0054-0008", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nFrom there, Penn State's drive stalled, and with 35 seconds left, Ficken attempted a 31-yard field goal, but missed, and Wisconsin consequently needed to drive the length of the field to score a touchdown, and they did get into Penn State territory, but ultimately, with nine seconds left, Stave threw the ball into the end zone, and Penn State safety Ryan Keiser came away with the interception for a touchback. Christian Hackenberg took a knee to end the game, and the Nittany Lions concluded their upset, winning 31\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\n\"The Nittany Lions stepped into Camp Randall as a 24-point underdog, as a struggling team that had just 61 scholarship players and was was [sic] set to face the nation's No. 15 team. But these Nittany Lions have become accustomed to overcoming the odds, and they again shocked Wisconsin in a 31\u201324 upset.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nJosh Moyer, ESPN Penn State/Big Ten Reporter, November 30, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\n20-year Big Ten Conference veteran Bill LeMonnier was the game's referee, his final game before retiring. LeMonnier was the referee for the 2011 BCS National Championship Game, and past recipient of the Golden Whistle Award, given by the National Association of Sports Officials. In the game, Penn State sent its seniors off by upsetting Wisconsin, ending the Badgers' hopes of playing in a BCS Bowl Game. Using the fact that they were 24-point underdogs as motivation, the Lions won the game by playing sound, fundamental football, not turning the ball over, while scoring two touchdowns subsequently off of Wisconsin interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, November 30 vs. Wisconsin\nThe game was Penn State's first road win in Big Ten conference play. After the game, to fulfill a bet, linebacker Glenn Carson cut the hair of offensive linemen (and roommates) Ty Howle and Adam Gress, both of whom had long hair that stuck out of their helmets that \"bothered\" Carson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 86], "content_span": [87, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season\nLess than a week after the season's conclusion, backup quarterback Tyler Ferguson announced his plans to transfer from the university to somewhere he would have an opportunity to start, rather than be Christian Hackenberg's backup for the remainder of his career. Later, it was announced that though he originally intended to transfer to Western Kentucky (WKU), at which Bobby Petrino was head coach; when Petrino accepted the head coaching position at Louisville, Ferguson changed his plans, and transferred there. In early December, it was reported that quarterbacks coach Charlie Fisher and linebackers coach Ron Vanderlinden, the latter of whom was a holdover from the Joe Paterno era, departed, with speculation that they were forced out by Bill O'Brien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season, Departure of Bill O'Brien\nSeveral weeks after the departure of those assistants, reports began to surface that O'Brien had interviewed for the Houston Texans' head coaching position to replace Gary Kubiak, who was fired late in the season. Subsequently, the two sides were reported to be negotiating a contract, and on January 3, 2014, the Texans held a press conference announcing O'Brien as their new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0059-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season, Departure of Bill O'Brien\nAssistant head coach and wide receivers coach Stan Hixon, safeties coach Anthony Midget, defensive coordinator John Butler, running backs coach Charles London, and strength coach Craig Fitzgerald submitted resignations on January 6, and most were expected to follow O'Brien to the NFL, leaving only offensive line coach Mac McWhorter, who was 63 years old and came out of retirement to coach at Penn State, defensive line coach Larry Johnson, a long-time member of the staff, and tight ends coach John Strollo, as assistant coaches on the staff, and thus making Penn State more attractive of a coaching position to a new coach, as he could bring in his own staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season, Departure of Bill O'Brien\nEarly candidates for the job included former Rutgers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Greg Schiano, Penn State alumni Al Golden, who was the coach of the Miami and Mike Munchak, who was the coach of the Tennessee Titans prior to his dismissal, and Pennsylvania native James Franklin, Vanderbilt's head coach, as well as Larry Johnson, Penn State's defensive line coach. In the ensuing days, ESPN reported that the search committee, led by athletic director David Joyner, targeted Munchak, Franklin, and Golden as its top three candidates, but that Johnson remained in the mix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0060-0001", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season, Departure of Bill O'Brien\nOn Sunday, January 5, 2014, Golden took himself out of contention for the position, while Munchak appeared to be an emerging strong candidate. Over the next few days, however, Franklin emerged as the top candidate, and on January 11, he was officially named and introduced as Penn State's head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0060-0002", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season, Departure of Bill O'Brien\nUpon his hiring, questions began to surface about whether he would retain Johnson or bring back Vanderlinden, the latter of whom was Maryland's head coach when Franklin was on its staff in 2000, to the staff; unlike when O'Brien was hired and announced that he would retain the pair at his introductory press conference, Franklin simply noted that he would meet with the pair, but commented that he is \"fiercely loyal\" to his assistants from Vanderbilt, and intended to bring many with him to Penn State. Ultimately, neither Johnson nor Vanderlinden were on Franklin's staff for the 2014 season, with the former accepting a position with rival Ohio State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season, Departure of Bill O'Brien\nIntermittently, Penn State named Johnson, the lone remaining holdover from the Joe Paterno era, the interim head coach in an effort to stabilize the program to prevent recruit defection, as well as prevent current players, namely quarterback Hackenberg, whose father commented that he was undecided on whether or not to return, from transferring. A few weeks later, however, it appeared Hackenberg would return, as Ferguson followed through on his plans to transfer, and Franklin lauded Hackenberg in his introductory press conference. After the announcement of O'Brien's departure, star wide receiver Allen Robinson, a junior, declared that he would forgo his senior season, and enter the 2014 NFL Draft; according to projections from a CBSSports.com mock draft, Robinson would likely be selected in the late first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 83], "content_span": [84, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235454-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post-season, Draft prospects\nThree players were invited to the 2014 NFL Scouting Combine, held February 22\u201325, 2014, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana: DaQuan Jones, Allen Robinson, and John Urschel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season\nThe 2013 Penrith Panthers season was the 47th in the club's history. Coached by Ivan Cleary and captained by Kevin Kingston, the team competed in the National Rugby League's 2013 Telstra Premiership. They finished the regular season 10th (out of 16), failing to reach the finals for the third consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season\nA report conducted by Brand Finance valued the Penrith Panthers club at $46.2m, the highest of any Australian sporting brand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season, Squad, Player transfers\nA \u2020 denotes that the transfer occurred during the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season, Jersey and Sponsors\nIn 2013 the Panthers had changed jersey suppliers, ending the relationship with supplier ISC, and starting a new apparel agreement with ASICS. They retained their predominantly black home jerseys from 2012, with minor changes to the collar, mainly due to the change in supplier. The alternate jersey was predominantly white with teal hoops around the midsection, though this jersey was seldom used in 2013, instead opting to use the Women in League jersey for away fixtures which is pink in color. The heritage jersey used was the 1967 white 'V' on brown design.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season, Jersey and Sponsors\nOAK were again the major sponsor of the Panthers in 2013. Hertz were announced as the sleeve sponsor for 2013. Tony Ferguson Weight Loss was located on the lower back of the jersey. Tooheys New and HostPlus were short sponsors for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season, Fixtures\nThe Panthers again use Centrebet Stadium as their home ground in 2013, their home ground since they entered the competition in 1967. In Round 17 Penrith got their largest ever win over the Gold Coast Titans, winning 40\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season, Other teams\nIn addition to competing in the National Rugby League, the Panthers also fielded semi-professional teams in the National Youth Competition's 2013 Holden Cup (for players aged under 20) and the New South Wales Rugby League's 2013 New South Wales Cup, where the team was known as the Windsor Wolves. The NYC team was captained by Tony Satini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235455-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Penrith Panthers season, Representative, International\n1 \u2013 Daniela was ruled out by injury. 2 \u2013 Segeyaro was ruled out of the tournament by a shoulder injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235456-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Perak FA season\nThe 2013 season was Perak's 10th consecutive season in the Malaysian Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235456-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Perak FA 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235456-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Perak FA season, Competitions, FA Cup\nThe draw was held at Wisma FAM on 10 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235456-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Perak FA season, Statistics, Top scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235457-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Persib Bandung season\nThe 2013 season was Persib Bandung's 54th season in the club football history and the 5th season competing in the Indonesia Super League. In 2013 the club plays in the Indonesia Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235457-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Persib Bandung season\nThey finished the season in fourth place with 63 points and Sergio van Dijk became the team top scorer with 21 goals, with it he equaled the total goals scored by Persib legend Sutiono Lamso in the 1994-95 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235457-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Persib Bandung season, Review and events\nPersib signed naturalized player Sergio van Dijk after the season had started. He made his debut against Persisam Putra Samarinda and scored a goal despite losing the match 2-1. On May 2013, Sriwijaya F.C. and Persib Bandung agreed to exchange players. Dzumafo moved to Sriwijaya and Hilton Moreira moved to Persib.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235457-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Persib Bandung season, Review and events\nThe match against Persija Jakarta that was due to be played in Gelora Bung Karno on 22 June 2013 was canceled after the bus that was used by the team and officials to reach the stadium was attacked by an unknown group. The rivalry between both clubs is well known; supporters of Persija Jakarta was suspected as the perpetrator of the attack. Police are still doing investigating the incident. PT. Liga Indonesia, which manages the Indonesia Super League, rescheduled the match to be played on 28 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235457-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Persib Bandung season, Review and events\nThe postponed game result was a 1-1 draw. During the match, both sets of supporters clashed inside the stadium in the 16th minute, postponing the match for 20 minutes. Roy Suryo the Minister of Youth and Sports Affairs of Indonesia resigned to calm both parties. As a result of the incident, the disciplinary commission of the Football Association of Indonesia banned the Persib Bandung supporters from attending their next season's away games. The management appealed the verdict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235457-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Persib Bandung season, Review and events\nOn 7 September 2013, the management confirmed that Persib Bandung would take part in the post-season friendly tournament Menpora Cup. They were drawn in the same group with Central Coast Mariners FC, Sriwijaya F.C. and Malaysia U-23. From originally five players, only Sergio van Dijk, Tony Sucipto and I Made Wirawan went to play in the 2013 Perang Bintang. The other two players, M. Ridwan and Supardi, were called back to join the team for the 2013 Menpora Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235458-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Persija Jakarta season\nThe 2013 season was Persija's 82nd competitive season. Persija finished in 11th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235458-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Persija Jakarta season, Season overview\nThe team started the season with Iwan Setiawan as coach, but in the middle he was replaced by Benny Dollo. Persija now in 15th position Indonesia Super League standings. Fabiano be the captain of the team after Bambang Pamungkas not with Persija in this season. Had been in the bottom of the standings, now Persija up away from the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235458-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Persija Jakarta season, Club, Kit\nPersija third jersey this season is a repro from Persija home jersey in 1985. At the time Persija still use red as the color of the home jersey. But since 1997, the home jersey Persija changed to orange color.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235458-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Persija Jakarta season, Club, 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, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235458-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Persija Jakarta season, Club, 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, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235459-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Persipura Jayapura season\nThe 2012\u201313 season is Persipura's 5th Indonesia Super League (ISL) season in Indonesian football history. This is the third time they can get 1st in ISL League Table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235459-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Persipura Jayapura season, Squads, First team squads\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-00235460-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Peru bus disaster\nOn October 12, 2013, a cargo truck carrying 51 people, including 14 children, plunged off a 200-meter cliff, killing everyone on board. This incident is currently tied with the 2018 Pasamayo bus crash as the deadliest road accident in Peruvian history. According to authorities, the truck, which was being used as a makeshift bus, was traveling to a celebration in the Santa Teresa district, when the driver lost control of the bus as it plunged off a 200-meter cliff into the Chaupimayo River below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235461-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Peruvian Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, was the 68th edition of the second tier of Federaci\u00f3n Peruana de Futbol. The season was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235461-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Peruvian Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThe clubs Cobresol and Coronel Bolognesi withdrew before the start of the season and was relegated to the Copa Per\u00fa for outstanding debts with the SAFAP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235461-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Peruvian Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThe clubs Sport \u00c1ncash and Alianza Cristiana were disabled and relegated to the Copa Per\u00fa for outstanding debts with the SAFAP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235462-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Peshawar mosque bombing\nOn 20 June 2013, a suicide bomber blew himself up at a Shiite mosque, killing 15 people and injuring over 20. The attack happened in the Shiite area known as Gulshan Colony. The attacker is believed to have been a Sunni Muslim. Three people were suspected of carrying out the attacks. The perpetrators first gunned down a police officer and a security guard, before the suicide bomber went into the mosque. There were reportedly around 300 people worshiping inside the mosque. The president of Pakistan, Asif Ali Zardari, commented about the attack saying, \"Such cowardly and heinous acts by the militants cannot weaken the nation's resolve to pursue its struggle against militancy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235463-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Petit Le Mans\nThe 16th Annual Petit Le Mans presented by Mazda was the 2013 edition of the Petit Le Mans automotive endurance race, held on October 6\u20139, 2013, at the Road Atlanta circuit in Braselton, Georgia, United States. The 1,000 miles (1,600\u00a0km) race was the final round of the 2013 American Le Mans Series season, as well as the final event of the American Le Mans Series as a whole before the series is reborn as the United SportsCar Championship in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235463-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Petit Le Mans\nRebellion Racing's Nick Heidfeld, Nicolas Prost, and Neel Jani won the team's second consecutive Petit Le Mans, a full six laps ahead of the P2 class winning Level 5 Motorsports Honda, who secured a championship for Scott Tucker with the victory. The BAR1 Motorsports won the Prototype Challenge category, their third straight victory of the season. Team Falken Tire Porsche held the GT class lead by less than a second at the finish, while Flying Lizard Motorsports won the GT Challenge category by a margin of six seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235463-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Petit Le Mans, Race, Race result\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of their class winner's distance are marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235464-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Peugeot Tennis Cup\nThe 2013 Peugeot Tennis Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It is the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil between 5 and 11 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235464-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Peugeot Tennis Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235465-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Peugeot Tennis Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMarcelo Demoliner and Jo\u00e3o Souza were the defending champions but lost to Thiemo de Bakker and Andr\u00e9 S\u00e1 in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235466-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Peugeot Tennis Cup \u2013 Singles\nGast\u00e3o Elias was the defending champion, but decide not to participate this edition. Agust\u00edn Velotti won in the final against Bla\u017e Rola 6-3, 6-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235467-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Cycling Classic\nThe 2013 Philadelphia Cycling Classic was a one-day women's cycle race, held in the United States on June 2 2013. The tour has an UCI rating of 1.2. The race was won by the American Evelyn Stevens of Velocio\u2013SRAM Pro Cycling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season\nThe 2013 Philadelphia Eagles season was the franchise's 81st season in the National Football League, and the first under head coach Chip Kelly. The Eagles improved on their 4\u201312 record from 2012, finishing 10\u20136 and clinching the NFC East division title and the playoffs for the first time since 2010, but after a close game, they lost to the New Orleans Saints in the Wild Card round of the playoffs, by a score of 26\u201324. The season was noted for LeSean McCoy winning the NFL rushing title, and the extremely successful season by Nick Foles where he produced 27 touchdowns to only 2 interceptions. Foles also threw seven touchdowns against the Oakland Raiders, tying an NFL record for most touchdowns in a single game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season\nThis was the Eagles' first season since 1998 without long-time head coach Andy Reid, who was fired following the 2012 season, and would become the head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs after his dismissal. Reid made his first return to Philadelphia during Week 3, in which the Chiefs won 16\u201326.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season\nThe Eagles had a three-way quarterback competition with Nick Foles, Michael Vick and Matt Barkley, with Vick winning the job. After Vick got injured, however, Foles took over as quarterback and was eventually named the new starting quarterback despite Vick's return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season\nIt took 62 weeks overall for the Eagles to win a home game; they continued the home losing streak that lasted throughout the rest of the 2012 season and extended it to 10 games, but they ended the streak by winning 24\u201316 against Washington at the Linc in Week 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Personnel changes\nOn December 31, 2012, long time head coach Andy Reid was fired. On January 16, 2013, Chip Kelly was hired as the new head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Personnel changes\nOn January 20, Pat Shurmur accepted the offensive coordinator job. Billy Davis accepted the defensive coordinator position on February 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Personnel changes\nTom Gamble was named Vice President of Player Personnel on February 13, a position that had been vacant since Ryan Grigson left to become general manager of the Indianapolis Colts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nThe Eagles started their 2013 season on the road against the Redskins. The Skins scored first when DeAngelo Hall returned a fumble 75 yards for a touchdown for a 7\u20130 lead. After this the Eagles dominated scoring 33 straight points as Alex Henery kicked a field goal from 48 yards out to come within four points for a 7\u20133 game. Next Michael Vick found DeSean Jackson on a 25-yard pass as the team took the lead 10\u20137. On the Skins' next possession, Alfred Morris was tackled in the end zone for a safety making the score 12\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nIn the second quarter, the Eagles continued to increase their lead as Vick found Brent Celek on a 28-yard touchdown pass for a 19\u20137 lead. Later on in the quarter, Vick ran for a 3-yard touchdown bringing the halftime score to 26\u20137. In the third quarter, LeSean McCoy ran for a 34-yard touchdown bringing the score to 33\u20137. The Skins started their scoring again as Morris ran for a 5-yard touchdown making the score 33\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nIn the fourth quarter, it was all Skins as RG3 found Leonard Hankerson on a 10-yard touchdown pass (with a failed two-point conversion) for a 33\u201320 game. Finally, the Skins came within six points as RG3 and Hankerson connected again this time on a 24-yard pass bringing the final score to 33\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. San Diego Chargers\nThe Eagles punted on their first possession. The Chargers took the ball and marched to the Eagles 31, but had to settle for a 49 field goal. The Eagles took the ball next and stormed 75 yards in 5 plays, driving to the Chargers 2, but kicked a field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nThis week marked the return of former Eagles head coach Andy Reid. The Eagles forced the Chiefs to a quick three-and-out, but the Eagles muffed the punt, and the Chiefs recovered at the Philadelphia 8. A few plays later, Ryan Succop kicked a 33-yard field goal. On Philadelphia's first possession, Michael Vick was intercepted by Eric Berry, on a pass intended for Brent Celek, who returned it 38 yards for a touchdown. After a Chiefs punt, Michael Vick busted off a 61-yard run, setting up his 22-yard touchdown pass to Jason Avant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nZach Ertz attempted to run in the two-point conversion, but failed, keeping the score 10\u20136. With less than a minute remaining in the first quarter the Eagles drove into Chiefs territory, but Vick was sacked by Justin Houston and fumbled. Two field goals by Ryan Succop was the only scoring of the second quarter, giving the Chiefs a 16\u20136 halftime lead. An Alex Henery field goal was the only score of the third quarter, giving the Chiefs a 16\u20139 lead entering the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nOn their first drive of the fourth quarter, Jamaal Charles capped off an eight-play, 62-yard drive with a 3-yard touchdown run, making the score 23\u20139. The Eagles immediately responded with a touchdown of their own, driving 78 yards with a 41-yard touchdown rush by LeSean McCoy, pulling to within 7. However, Kansas City struck the decisive blow with a 15-play, 73-yard drive, taking 8:15 off the clock and Ryan Succop adding his fourth field goals making the score 26\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0009-0003", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nOn their next drive, Michael Vick completed a 19-yard pass on third-and-10, but guard Todd Herremans was called for holding making it third-and-20 at their own 21. The Eagles turned the ball over on downs. The Chiefs did the same on their next drive. Finally, a strip sack by Justin Houston with recovering for Kansas City, sealed the deal. With the loss, the Eagles lost their second in a row, both being at home. The Eagles outgained Chiefs 431\u2013394 and had more first downs, 21\u201319, but the Chiefs had almost twice as much time of possession and won the turnover battle 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Denver Broncos\nThe Eagles visited Sports Authority Field in Denver to face the Broncos and their #1 offense. The received the ball first, but punted after only four plays. The Broncos took over and stormed 74 yards in only 9 plays to take the early lead. On the drive the Broncos converted three third downs on the drive including one on Peyton Manning's 6-yard touchdown pass to Wes Welker. The Eagles responded on their next drive by driving from their own 18 to the Broncos 17, but had to settle for Henery's 35-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Denver Broncos\nOn the ensuing kickoff Trindon Holliday returned the kick 105 yards for a touchdown, extending the lead to 14\u20133. The Eagles then engineered a 15-play, 73-yard drive to the 7-yard line, but the Broncos kept them out of the end zone and Henery kicked a 25-yard field goal. After a Broncos three-and-out, the Eagles finally managed to reach the end zone. They needed only 7 plays to go 64 yards. A 35-yard completion to Bryce Brown on third-and-11 moved the ball to the Denver 4. Two plays later Chris Polk rushed for a 4-yard touchdown, trimming the score to 14\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Denver Broncos\nDenver responded by marching 80 yards in 11 plays in a drive that took over 6 minutes off the clock and increased the lead to 21\u201313 after a Knowshon Moreno 4-yard touchdown run. Both teams punted to close out the half. Denver started where they left off, driving 80 yards in one less play culminating in Manning's 1-yard touchdown pass to Demaryius Thomas. Manning threw for 44 yards on the drive. After an Eagles punt, the Broncos ate 80 more yards on another touchdown drive which.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Denver Broncos\nManning continued to pick apart the Eagles secondary throwing for 58 yards on the drive which concluded with Manning once again connecting with Demaryius Thomas on a touchdown, this one for 15 yards, extending the lead to 35\u201313. The Eagles offense continued sputter as they punted again. The Broncos were completely the opposite, driving 65 yards for another touchdown, increasing the lead to 42\u201313. Manning added 56 more yards and a 4-yard touchdown pass to Welker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0010-0004", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at Denver Broncos\nThe Broncos forced the Eagles to punt again, but Steven Johnson blocked it and returned it 17 yards for a touchdown, making the score 49\u201313. The Eagles finally managed to avoid punting on their next drive, but Henery missed a 46-yard field goal. Matt Prater made one from 53 yards away on the Broncos next drive to make the score 52\u201313. The Eagles managed to march 80 yards on their next drive with Nick Foles hitting Jeff Maehl for a 6-yard touchdown pass to close the scoring. The Broncos held the ball for the final 4:35 to end the game. The Eagles lost their third in a row to fall to 1\u20133 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at New York Giants\nNick Foles relieved an injured Michael Vick. With the win, the Eagles improved to 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. New York Giants\nNick Foles was injured again, so Michael Vick was reinserted into the starting role, but after a few series, Matt Barkley took his place. The only touchdown in the entire game was during the fourth quarter after a botched snap for a punt was made by the Giants. The ball was recovered by the Eagles defense in the Giants' endzone for the touchdown. With the loss, the Eagles fell to 3\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Oakland Raiders\nNick Foles tied an NFL record in this game with seven touchdown passes as the Eagles beat the Raiders 49\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Green Bay Packers\nNick Foles threw three touchdown passes in this game, and the Eagles defense intercepted Scott Tolzien twice. Tolzien started in place of Aaron Rodgers, who had a collarbone injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Green Bay Packers\nWith the win, the Eagles evened their record at 5\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Washington Redskins\nA late game rally by Washington led them to the Eagles' 26-yard line. A shot to the end zone by Robert Griffin III was intercepted by Brandon Boykin, clinching an Eagles win. The Eagles moved to 6\u20135. This is the Eagles first win at Lincoln Financial Field since Week 4 of the 2012 season, because prior to this game, the Eagles had never won a game in their home stadium in 414 days since that same week, snapping a 10-game losing streak at home with this win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Detroit Lions\nIn a blinding snowstorm, with at least eight inches of snow on the field by the end of the game, LeSean McCoy broke the Eagles' single-game rushing record with 217 yards on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Minnesota Vikings\nat Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Eagles beat the Chicago Bears 54\u201311 on Sunday Night Football. Nick Foles went 21/25 for 230 yards and two touchdowns. LeSean McCoy ran the ball 18 times for 133 yards and two touchdowns. Towards the end, the Eagles brought in bench players to finish the game. Bryce Brown ran for a 65-yard touchdown with 6:14 to go with Michael Vick at the quarterback helm. This was Michael Vick's final appearance as an Eagle. This was the first game in NFL history to end with a final score of 54\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Chicago Bears\nWith the convincing win, the Eagles improved to 9\u20136, and would face their archrivals, the Dallas Cowboys, the following Sunday night for the division title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Dallas Cowboys\nThis game ended when Kyle Orton threw an interception late in the fourth quarter. With the win, the Eagles improved to 10\u20136 and sealed the NFC East title and the #3 seed in the playoffs. They were also the third team in a row to defeat the Cowboys in the last game of the regular season (Sunday Night Football: Week 17).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Wild Card Playoff Game: vs. #6 New Orleans Saints\nThe Eagles hosted the Saints in the Wild Card round. This was the first playoff game between the Saints and Eagles since the 2006 NFC Divisional Playoff game, which New Orleans won 26\u201324. The Saints had never won a road playoff game coming into this game. Philadelphia led 24\u201323 with less than a minute remaining. But the Saints marched down the field to win it with a Shayne Graham field goal as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 114], "content_span": [115, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235468-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Eagles season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Wild Card Playoff Game: vs. #6 New Orleans Saints\nWith the heartbreaking loss, the Eagles ended the season with an overall record of 10\u20137. This was their final appearance in the playoffs until 2017, when they went on to win Super Bowl LII.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 114], "content_span": [115, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235469-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Phillies season\nThe Philadelphia Phillies 2013 season was the 131st season in the history of the franchise. The Phillies played their first game of the season against the Atlanta Braves on April 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235469-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Phillies season, Season notes\nOn April 5, the Kansas City Royals beat the Philadelphia Phillies 13\u20134, spoiling their home opener with a sellout crowd of 45,307 at Citizens Bank Park. The interleague matchup was a rare one between teams who first met in the 1980 World Series, as the Royals previously only visited Philadelphia in 2004. Hall of Famers Mike Schmidt and George Brett, rivals when the Phillies beat the Royals to win their first championship 33 years earlier, threw out the first pitches (along with SNL's Joe Piscopo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235469-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Phillies season, Season notes\nOn August 16, 2013, the Phillies fired manager Charlie Manuel replacing him with third base coach Ryne Sandberg on an interim basis. At the time, the Phillies were 53\u201367, and Manuel had exactly 1,000 wins with the Phillies, a milestone he achieved on August 12. The league and fan base mostly expressed sadness and gratitude to Manuel for his tenure. Several Phillies veterans, including Chase Utley and Cole Hamels, expressed regret and guilt feeling their lack of production led to Manuel's firing; they viewed Manuel as a fatherly figure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235469-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Phillies season, Season notes\nSandberg commented the next day, \"It was a roller coaster of a day emotionally. It affected me and I think it affects the players.\" Manuel received significant accolades within the media for his class in handling the situation, while the Phillies organization, namely general manager Rub\u00e9n Amaro, Jr., were criticized within the media for firing Manuel at that point in the season, as well as for not having better players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235469-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Phillies season, Roster\nAll players who made an appearance for the Phillies during 2013 are included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235470-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Soul season\nThe 2013 Philadelphia Soul season was the eighth season for the franchise in the Arena Football League. The team was coached by Clint Dolezel and played their home games at the Wells Fargo Center. The Soul captured another division championship, and went on to reach the ArenaBowl for the second consecutive season. However, they were once again defeated by the Arizona Rattlers in ArenaBowl XXVI by a 48\u201339 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235470-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Soul season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated August 14, 201324 Active, 8 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235470-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Soul season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe Soul began the season on the road against the Arizona Rattlers on March 23, in a rematch of ArenaBowl XXV. Their first home game was on April 20 when they faced the Cleveland Gladiators. They closed the regular season on July 27, on the road against the San Antonio Talons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season\nThe 2013 Philadelphia Union season is the fourth season of the team's existence, competing in Major League Soccer, the top flight of American soccer. The team was managed by John Hackworth, in his second season with the club and first full season after taking over from Peter Nowak midway through the 2012 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, Background\nThis was the 4th season in MLS for the Philadelphia and the first full year under manager John Hackworth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, 2013 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, 2013 roster, 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, Match results, MLS regular season\nThe Union ended the season 12-12-10 overall, 7-5-5 at home, 5-7-5 on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, Match results, U.S. Open Cup\nThe Union, along with the other 15 US-based MLS teams, will enter the U.S. Open Cup in the Third Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, Match results, MLS Reserve League\nThe Union have chosen to affiliate with the USL-Pro's Harrisburg City Islanders and as such, will not field a reserve team this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, League table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, League table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, League table, Results summary\nLast updated: October 27, 2013Source: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, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, Player movement, Loans, Harrisburg Loanees\nAs part of the Union's agreement with the Harrisburg City Islanders, the following players have, at one point or another during the season, been loaned to Harrisburg. The City Islanders must have a minimum of four Union loanees on their roster at any one time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, Miscellany, Allocation ranking\nThe Union are currently 5th in the MLS Allocation Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235471-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Union season, Miscellany, International roster slots\nThe Union have eight MLS International Roster Slots for use in the 2013 season. Each club in Major League Soccer is allocated eight international roster spots per season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235472-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Wings season\nThe Philadelphia Wings are a lacrosse team based in Philadelphia playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2013 season was the 27th in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235472-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Wings season\nThe Wings finished with a 7-9 record, good for 3rd place in the Eastern division. They made the playoffs in consecutive years for the first time since 2002, but fell to the defending (and eventual) Champion Rochester Knighthawks 10-8 in the division semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235472-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00235472-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia Wings season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nThe 2012 NLL Entry Draft took place on October 1, 2012. The Wings made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse\nOn June 5, 2013, a building undergoing demolition collapsed onto the neighbouring Salvation Army Thrift Store at the southeast corner of 22nd and Market Streets in Center City, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, trapping a number of people under the rubble. The store was open and full of shoppers and staff. Six people died and fourteen others were injured. The construction contractor, Griffin Campbell, and excavator operator, Sean Benschop, were charged with involuntary manslaughter and other charges. They were found guilty of manslaughter, and Campbell and Benschop received prison sentences of 15 years to 30 years, and 7.5 years to 15 years, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Background\n2138 Market Street, an unoccupied four-story building, had been under demolition by Griffin Campbell Construction for several weeks prior to the collapse. This property is owned by Richard Basciano through his development corporation, STB Investments. 2138 Market was adjacent to the one-story 2140 Market Street building, which had a Salvation Army thrift store operating on the ground and basement levels. The store was open and full of shoppers and staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Background\nOn May 31, 2013, the property manager for STB, Thom Simmonds, emailed Plato Marinakos, an architect for STB, stating that Basciano visited that day and noticed no one was working. He indicated that Basciano would visit the site again that weekend and asked Marinakos to advise. The emails indicated that Basciano returned to the site on June 2 and was pleased to see progress. An 18-ton motorized excavator had been moved on to the site. After being granted immunity by the Grand Jury, Marinakos testified that on June 4, Griffin Campbell called for a progress payment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Background\nMarinakos then went to the site at 6 p.m. on June 4 and was alarmed to see an unsupported brick wall looming next to the Salvation Army building. Marinakos then testified that he told Campbell to take the wall down immediately, \"I was like, 'Griffin, you can't leave this wall here. This is just crazy. I mean, you can't do that.'\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Collapse\nAt 10:43 am, the four-story building under demolition collapsed onto the one-story building next door. The buildings crashed down with crumbling brick and wood snapping. Six people died and 14 people were injured. A 61-year-old woman was trapped for 13 hours and then hospitalized at Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania in critical condition. The 13 other injuries were minor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Collapse\nAfter the collapse, an 18-year-old high school student who had been walking by the building when it collapsed rushed to the scene and spent 15 minutes trying to free people from the rubble before emergency crews arrived. During a search-and-rescue operation, rescuers used buckets and their bare hands to move through bricks and rubble until the following morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Collapse\nIt was soon discovered that surveillance video from the front of a SEPTA bus operating eastbound on Market Street between 23rd and 22nd Streets had captured the scene at the moment of collapse. Up to a minute of this footage was released by SEPTA to news media outlets in July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Collapse, Suicide of building inspector\nOn June 12, 2013, Ronald Wagenhoffer, the 52-year-old City Department of Licenses and Inspections inspector responsible for inspecting the demolition site, was found dead in his truck with a gunshot to the chest. His death was ruled a suicide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Initial city response\nNews reports on June 7 following the collapse indicated that despite multiple complaints, the shoddy demolition work at 22nd and Market Street went uninspected for more than three weeks before the deadly collapse. Subsequent reports indicated that Ronald Wagenhoffer had reported he visited the site on May 14 and found no violations. At the time, the city did not require demolition contractors to establish their qualifications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Initial city response\nOn June 7, Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter held a press conference and issued two press statements in which he apologized to the dead and their families as well as the injured survivors and their families. Nutter also announced new demolition rules and standards designed to prevent similar tragedies. The new rules will require the same level of city monitoring and contractor expertise at private demolition sites that have been required during demolition at public sites. The new rules will prohibit contractors from using heavy machinery to demolish buildings adjacent to occupied structures, which was done at the 22nd and Market demolition. City inspectors were sent to over 300 demolition sites to check for safety violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Initial city response\nMayor Nutter said City Inspector General Amy Kurlan will begin an investigation of the collapse and government failings that contributed to it. Other investigations are underway by the Office of the City Controller, U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the Department of Licenses and Inspections, and the Philadelphia Police Department", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Emails\nOn July 14, The Philadelphia Inquirer published a series of emails detailing a dispute between the Salvation Army and STB. Most of the emails also were copied to City Deputy Mayor Alan Greenberger and his top development aide, John Mondlak. STB sought access to the Salvation Army property in order to conduct demolition operations safely. The two parties could not reach an agreement; however, STB initiated demolition nonetheless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Emails\nOn May 22, Thomas Simmonds of STB emailed Deputy Mayor Greenberger, whose duties as deputy mayor for economic development included overseeing the city's Department of Licences and Inspections, saying that 2138 Market was in a state of partial demolition that created \"a situation that poses a threat to life and limb\", and \"This nonsense must end before someone is seriously injured or worse: those are headlines none of us want to see or read.\" but the city took no action and STB proceeded with the demolition. Other emails indicated that the Salvation Army was also warned of the danger of collapse, but was in a long running dispute with STB regarding access to its building. Shortly after these emails were published in the Inquirer, the City of Philadelphia released numerous documents relating to the collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Emails\nOn December 17, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that they had obtained additional emails tied to the collapse, and which had been seen by the Grand Jury, which indicated the impatience of the developer with the pace of demolition and the demolition contractor's request for progress payments. An April 23 email indicated that Plato Marinakos, architect for STB, was getting bids for asphalt so that once demolition was complete, a parking lot could be installed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Emails\nAn April 29 email indicated that Richard Basciano, the STB owner, had stopped by the site and was \"shocked that the buildings were still standing,\" and demanded progress. Several other of the emails also emphasize the desire of the owners to get the demolition completed. On May 22 Thom Simmonds emailed Alex Wolfington, a consultant to STB, opposing further negotiations with the Salvation Army: \"Why?.. Waste more time? Wait for someone to be killed? You can do what you want but I am NOT backing off with these people and their half-baked charity. Perhaps you have the time and/or desire to 'deal' with their idiotic behavior. I don't and I won't. I have to look after the interests of the Owners - Richard and his daughters.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Criminal investigation\nOn June 8, Sean Benschop, the crane operator working on the demolition job at the time, was charged with six counts of involuntary manslaughter, 13 counts of recklessly endangering another person, and one count of risking a catastrophe. A blood test performed after the collapse when he admitted to taking codeine and percocet, revealed marijuana in his system. Benschop turned himself in to police later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Criminal investigation\nOn June 10, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams convened a grand jury to investigate the circumstances that led to the collapse, a step that may result in criminal charges against responsible individuals. On Sunday, June 16, the Philadelphia Inquirer ran an editorial calling for the investigations of the Market Street collapse to look at top officials and property owners. The Inquirer said, \"it was disheartening to hear a former mayor, Ed Rendell, defend Richard Basciano, who owns the building that fell through the thrift shop.\" The Inquirer editorial stated that \"responsibility goes much higher than Sean Benschop, the excavator operator who allegedly tested positive for drugs and has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and than the city building inspector who apparently killed himself\u00a0...[over having] wished he had done more to prevent it.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 945]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Criminal investigation, Grand jury charges\nOn November 25, 2013, R. Seth Williams, the district attorney, said based on recommendations from the Grand Jury, prosecutors had formally charged the contractor, Griffin T. Campbell, 49, with six counts each of third-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter, 13 counts of reckless endangerment and single counts of criminal conspiracy, risking catastrophe and causing catastrophe. Mr. Williams said that the collapse occurred because the building's structural supports, including some of its wooden joists, had been removed early in the demolition, leaving walls and floors without adequate support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 95], "content_span": [96, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Criminal investigation, Grand jury charges\nMr. Campbell was being paid a flat fee for the demolition and was intent on doing the work as cheaply as possible while saving scrap from the building for resale. According to an ABC web report \"The building owner who chose Campbell's $112,000 bid to take down three attached storefronts - when other bids were two or three times that amount - was not charged Monday. However, the grand jury has not finished its work, and Williams declined comment on whether owner Richard Basciano could be charged.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 95], "content_span": [96, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Criminal investigation, Grand jury charges\nRichard Basciano, a commercial developer previously dubbed the pornography king of New York's Times Square, owned the three adjacent, long run-down buildings being demolished by Griffin Campbell to make way for redevelopment. Plato Marinakos the architect who had been retained by STB, had secured the demolition permit from City Hall, testified before the grand jury after he was promised immunity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 95], "content_span": [96, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Investigations, Criminal investigation, Grand jury charges\nIn October 2014, Campbell was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and other charges. On January 8, 2016, he was sentenced to 15 years to 30 years imprisonment, and Sean Benschop received a sentence of 7.5 years to 15 years imprisonment for involuntary manslaughter charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 95], "content_span": [96, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, OSHA charges\nOn November 16, exactly six months after OSHA inspectors visited the demolition site and noted infractions, the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration cited Griffin Campbell, doing business as Campbell Construction, and Sean Benschop, doing business as S&R Contracting, for safety violations, including three willful per-instance violations, following the June 5, 2013, building collapse that killed six people and injured 14. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that David Michaels, assistant U.S. secretary of labor for occupational safety and health said \"This tragic incident could and should have been prevented,\" \"We should not be here today.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, OSHA charges\nAccording to The Philadelphia Inquirer \"Michaels also said the agency had begun discussions with the Justice Department about possible prosecutions, on top of a local grand-jury investigation that the District Attorney's Office initiated in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, OSHA charges\nOSHA levied the maximum fine possible against the Campbell firm - $70,000 - for each of what regulators determined were three \"willful violations\" of basic safety requirements: failing to prepare an engineering study for the demolition project; disobeying a rule requiring higher stories to be removed before demolition begins on lower floors; and removing lateral bracing, provided by the floors, to support walls more than one story high.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, OSHA charges\nRemoval of lateral bracing is a safety breach so \"egregious,\" OSHA regulators said, that the penalty was levied twice, for violations on two separate days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, OSHA charges\nAdditional citations for hard-hat violations, inadequate fall protection, and stair inspections pushed Campbell's total fines to $313,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, OSHA charges\nS&R was fined $84,000 for one \"willful\" violation of lateral bracing requirements, and two \"serious\" violations related to training and failure to protect employees from falls.\" In response to the charges, Griffin Campbell's attorney, William Hobson noted that \"Inspectors from both OSHA and the city's Department of Licenses and Inspections had visited the Market Street site repeatedly while the demolition was underway, Hobson said, \"and neither OSHA nor L&I ever shut down what was a safely-conceived demolition of the buildings. . .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, Civil cases\nA lawsuit was filed on June 6 for financial damages on behalf of Nadine White, the survivor who was buried under rubble. City officials began inspecting hundreds of demolition sites throughout the city. The demolition contractor violated several federal safety regulations and it was said that the building's owner should have picked a more qualified and competent contractor to do the work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, Civil cases\nOn September 3, 2013, a wrongful death complaint was filed by George Simpson, brother and administrator for the estate of Mary Lea Simpson. Mary Simpson, age twenty-four, was one of six people killed in the collapse. A set of defendants named in the lawsuit are the Salvation Army in Greater Philadelphia, The Trustees of the Salvation Army in Pennsylvania, The Salvation Army Eastern Territory, and the National Headquarters of the Salvation Army. Also named was Alistair Fraser,the Operations Manager for the Salvation Army Eastern Territory, responsible for architectural and/or engineering issues for the Salvation Army Thrift Store. Defendants Charles Deitrick and John Cranford are respectively the General Secretary and Administrator of the Salvation Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, Civil cases\nAdditional defendants are: Richard Basciano, STB Investments Corporation, Thomas Simmonds, Frank Cresci, 2100 West Market Street Corporation, 303 West 42nd Street Corporation, Nicetown House Development Corporation a/k/a Griffin Campbell Construction, Griffin T. Campbell, S&R Contracting, Sean Benschop, Plato Studio Architect, LLC, and Plato Marinakos, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Legal proceedings, Civil cases\nOn September 17, 2013, City Treasurer Nancy Winkler and her husband Jay Bryan, parents of Art student Anne Bryan who was killed in the collapse, filed a wrongful death suit. The couple held a press conference and called for answers, including the creation of an independent blue ribbon panel to investigate the City's Department of Licenses and Inspections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235473-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Philadelphia building collapse, Reforms to Department of Licenses and Inspections\nIn response to the collapse, the Philadelphia City Council has held hearings to evaluate the laws that regulate demolition in the city and the changes that Mayor Nutter enacted in response to the tragedy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 86], "content_span": [87, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Plastikspork (talk | contribs) at 18:42, 18 July 2020 (Fix). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship\nThe 2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship was the sixth edition of the Philippine Collegiate Champions League (PCCL), the postseason tournament to determine the national collegiate champions in basketball organized by the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP), the national basketball federation. The tournament was the sixth edition of the tournament in its current incarnation, and the eleventh edition overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship\nThe De La Salle Green Archers defeated the SWU Cobras in the best-of-three championship series, 2\u20130. There was no third-place game in this year's edition of the tournament, and so the FEU Tamaraws and the San Beda Red Lions shared the third-place honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Qualifying\nQualified to Final Four\u00a0\u00a0Qualified to regionals\u00a0\u00a0Qualified to zonals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Zonals\nThe delay in the completion of NCAA Season 89 has led to the rescheduling of the qualifying tournaments. The tournaments were supposed to start on October 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Zonals, Metro Manila\nThe Metro Manila zonals were held at the Technological Institute of the Philippines (TIP) gym from November 20 to 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 61], "content_span": [62, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Zonals, Luzon, North/Central Luzon\nThe North/Central Luzon zonal was held at the University of Northern Philippines (UNP) gym from November 11 to 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Zonals, Visayas\nThe Visayas zonals were supposed to be held at the Ormoc Superdome but due to the destruction of Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), the games were moved to the Cebu Coliseum. Also, due to the typhoon and to the Bohol earthquake a month earlier, the champions from Bohol (Bohol Institute of Technology-International College Crusaders) and Ormoc (Western Leyte College Mustangs) skipped the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Zonals, Mindanao, Northern Mindanao\nSTI-Cagayan de Oro Olympians defeated St. Columbian College, St. Paul University of Surigao, Christ the King College de Maranding, Bukidnon State University, and Mindanao State University-Marawi and Medical Center in the Northern Mindanao zonals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Zonals, Mindanao, Southern Mindanao\nThe Southern Mindanao zonals was held at the Almendras Gym in Davao City from November 10 to 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Regionals, Luzon\u2013Metro Manila\nThe first two rounds were held at the First Asia Institute of Technology and Humanities (FAITH) Gym in Tanauan, Batangas from November 25 to 26; the final three rounds are held at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig from November 28 to December 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235474-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship, Regionals, Southern Islands\nThe Southern Islands regional was held at Cebu City's Cebu Coliseum from November 18 to 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections\nThe 2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections were the 33rd lower house elections in the Philippines. They were held on May 13, 2013 to elect members to the House of Representatives of the Philippines that would serve in the 16th Congress of the Philippines from June 30, 2013 to June 30, 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections\nThe Philippines uses parallel voting for the House of Representatives: first past the post on 234 single member districts, and via closed party lists on a 2% election threshold computed via a modified Hare quota (3-seat cap and no remainders) on 58 seats, with parties with less than 1% of the first preference vote winning one seat each if 20% of the party-list seats are not filled up. Major parties are not allowed to participate in the party-list election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections\nWhile the concurrent Senate election features the two major coalitions in Team PNoy and the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA), the constituent parties of the coalitions contested the lower house election separately, and in some districts, candidates from the same coalition in the Senate are contesting a single seat. Campaigns for the House of Representatives are done on a district-by-district basis; there is no national campaign conducted by the parties. No matter the election result, the party of the president usually controls the House of Representatives, via a grand coalition of almost all parties. Only the ruling Liberal Party can win a majority, as it is the only party to put up candidates in a majority of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections\nAfter release of preliminary results, the Liberal Party emerged as the largest party in the chamber. Its coalition partners also held most of their seats. Incumbent Speaker Feliciano Belmonte, Jr. was easily reelected as the Speaker of the 16th Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Electoral system\nThe election for seats in the House of Representatives is done via parallel voting. A voter has two votes: one for one's local district, and another via the party-list system. A candidate is not allowed to stand for both ballots, and parties participating in the district elections would have to ask for permission on the Commission on Elections, with major parties not allowed to participate in the party-list election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Electoral system, Election via the districts\nEach district sends one representative to the House of Representatives, with the winner with the highest number of votes winning that district's seat. The representatives from the districts comprise at most 80% of the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 96], "content_span": [97, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Electoral system, Election via the party-list system\nIn the party-list system, the parties contesting the election represent a sector, or several sectors, or an ethnic group. In determining the winners, the entire country is treated as one \"district\". Each party that surpasses the 2% election threshold automatically wins one seat, they can win an additional number of seats in proportion to the number of votes they received, but they can't have more than three seats. The representatives elected via the party-list system, also known as \"sectoral representatives\" should comprise at least 20% of the seats. However, since the winners from the parties that surpass the 2% threshold had not reached the 20% quota ever since the party-list system was instituted, the parties that received less than 1% of the first preference vote are given one seat each until the 20% quota has been filled up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 104], "content_span": [105, 946]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Electoral system, Campaigning\nThe parties contesting the district elections campaign at the district level; there is no national-level campaigning. While no party has been able to win a majority of seats in the House of Representatives since the 1987 elections, the party of the incumbent president had usually controlled the chamber in the phenomenon known locally as the \"Padrino System\" or patronage politics, with other parties aligning themselves with the president's policies in exchange for pork barrel and future political favors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 81], "content_span": [82, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Electoral system, Campaigning\nWhile the parties contesting the Senate election grouped themselves into two major electoral alliances (Team PNoy and the United Nationalist Alliance), the constituent parties of those alliances separately contested the elections to the House of Representatives. However, as stated above, the parties will again coalesce once the 16th Congress of the Philippines convenes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 81], "content_span": [82, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, District changes\nReapportioning (redistricting) the number of seats is either via national reapportionment after the release of every census, or via piecemeal redistricting for every province or city. National reapportionment has not happened since the 1987 constitution took effect, and aside from piecemeal redistricting, the apportionment was based on the ordinance from the constitution, which was in turn based from the 1980 census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, District changes\nThese are the following laws pertaining to redistricting that were passed by Congress. While a locality that has a minimum of 250,000 people is constitutionally entitled to one district representative, Congress should enact a law in order for it to take effect. The creation of new districts may be politically motivated, in order to prevent political allies (or even opponents) from contesting one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, District changes\nBukidnon, Cotabato, Palawan and Quezon City received additional representatives in the upcoming Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, District changes\nThe number of new legislative districts may also increase the seats allocated for party-list representatives: for every five new legislative districts, one seat for a party-list representative is also created.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Marginal seats\nThese are seats where the winning margin was 3% or less, politicians may choose to run under a different political party as compared to 2010. This excludes districts where the nearest losing candidate or that candidate's party is not contesting the election, or districts that were redistricted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Retiring and term-limited incumbents\nThese are the incumbents who are not running for a seat in the House of Representatives, and are not term limited:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 88], "content_span": [89, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Open seat gains\n*Kaka Bag-ao is a party\u2013list representative for Akbayan who ran in Dinagat Islands district under the Liberal Party and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Results, District elections\nOnly the Liberal Party can win the election outright by placing candidates in a majority of seats. With 292 seats, including seats reserved for sectoral representatives, 147 seats are needed for a majority, and only the Liberal Party is contesting more than 150 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Results, District elections\nThe Liberal Party did win a near majority of the district seats. They are expected to form a coalition with other Team PNoy component parties, other parties, most independents, and most party-list representatives for a large working majority. Lakas-CMD is expected to form the minority bloc anew, while the United Nationalist Alliance and left-leaning representatives may join either bloc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Results, District elections\nA total of six independents won, one less than in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Results, District elections\nThe vote totals below were collected from the results displayed from the COMELEC's \"Transparency\" server. These are partial and unofficial. The seats won are the ones which had been officially proclaimed by the COMELEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Results, Party-list election\nThe Commission on Elections was supposed to release results for the party-list election along with the results for the Senate election; however, the commission suspended the release of results after questions of whether to include votes for the twelve disqualified parties, although not with finality, were to be included or not. Canvassing of results for the party-list election resumed on May 19 after the 12 senators-elect were already proclaimed, with the commission meeting to determine on what to do with the votes of the twelve disqualified parties. On May 22, the commission announced that they will proclaim the winning parties, but not the number of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Aftermath\nPreliminary results states that President Aquino's allies winning an overwhelming majority of seats in the House of Representatives. This makes Aquino the only president enjoy majorities in both houses of Congress since the People Power Revolution of 1986. This is seen as an endorsement of the voters of Aquino's reformist agenda; although several key wins elsewhere by the United Nationalist Alliance and its allies would mean that Aquino's chosen successor may face a significant challenge in the 2016 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Aftermath\nSpeaker Feliciano Belmonte, Jr. is seen to keep his speakership position with the Liberals winning at least 100 out of the 234 district seats. Majority Leader Neptali Gonzales II said that a great majority of incumbents are poised to successfully defend their seats, and that the Liberal Party are to be the single largest party in the lower house. The Nacionalista Party has at least 15 winning representatives, \"a substantial number\" of the 40 incumbents Nationalist People's Coalition are to hold their seats, and the 34-member National Unity Party House leader Rodolfo Antonino expects Belmonte to be reelected as speaker. The United Nationalist Alliance won three seats in Metro Manila, and at least 2 more seats outside the metropolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235475-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections, Aftermath, Election for the Speakership\n15th Congress Speaker Feliciano Belmonte, Jr. easily won reelection for the speakership. The race for minority leader, usually given to the person finishing second in the speakership race, was narrowly won by Ronaldo Zamora over Ferdinand Martin Romualdez. There was one abstention, from Toby Tiangco, who wanted to be an independent. Belmonte also abstained from voting, while Romaualdez and Zamora voted for themselves; if Belmonte only had one opponent he would've voted for his opponent, and his opponent would've voted for him (as seen in the 15th Congress speakership election). Since there were more than two nominees, the traditional courtesy votes did not push through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 91], "content_span": [92, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon\nElections were held in Calabarzon for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Batangas, 1st District\nTomas Apacible is the incumbent. His primary opponent is former Representative Eileen Ermita-Buhain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Batangas, 2nd District\nIncumbent Hermilando Mandanas, who had earlier resigned from the Liberal Party is term limited. The Liberals nominated actor and incumbent board member Christopher de Leon, with the United Nationalist Alliance nominating former Board Member Godofredo Berberabe. Berberabe died on March 4, 2013. The Running of Godofredo Berberabe is continued by his brother, Danilo Berberabe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Batangas, 3rd District\nNelson Collantes is the incumbent. His opponents are former Representative Victoria Hernandez-Reyes, Tanauan Mayor Sonia Torres-Aquino and Nicomedes Hernandez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Batangas, 4th District\nMark L. Mendoza is the incumbent. His opponent is Bernadette Sabili, wife of incumbent Lipa Mayor Meynardo Sabili.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Cavite, 1st District\nIncumbent Joseph Emilio Abaya resigned on October 18, 2012, in order to be the Secretary of Transportation and Communications. The seat is presently vacant up to election day. His brother, Francis Gerald is his party's nominee. Former Kawit mayor Fedrerico Poblete is his opponent, with movie director and activist Joel Lamangan withdrawing at the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Cavite, 3rd District (Imus)\nIncumbent Erineo Maliksi is running for the governorship; his party nominated former board member Alex Advincula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 93], "content_span": [94, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Cavite, 4th District (Dasmari\u00f1as)\nIncumbent Elpidio Barzaga of the National Unity Party is also nominated by the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 99], "content_span": [100, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Cavite, 6th District\nAntonio Ferrer is running for mayor of General Trias. His brother, incumbent General Trias Mayor Luis \"Jon Jon\" Ferrer IV is his party's nominee. His opponent is former Vice Governor Dencito Campa\u00f1a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Cavite, 7th District\nIncumbent Jesus Crispin Remulla is term limited; his brother former Representative Gilbert Remulla is his party's nominee. His primary opponent is Abraham Tolentino, incumbent Mayor of Tagaytay and brother of Metropolitan Manila Development Authority Chairman Francis Tolentino", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Laguna, 2nd District\nIncumbent Timmy Chipeco is term limited; his father, Calamba mayor Jun Chipeco, Jr., is his party's nominee. His opponent is former governor Teresita Lazaro", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Laguna, 3rd District\nMaria Evita Arago is the incumbent. She will oppose former ABS-CBN News anchor/reporter Sol Aragones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Laguna, 4th District\nIncumbent Edgar San Luis is running for the governorship. His Liberal Party, named Benjamin Agarao as their nominee in this district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Quezon, 2nd District\nIncumbent Irvin Alcala is running for the governorship; his uncle, Vice Governor Vicente Alcala, is his party's nominee. His opponents are former congresswoman Lynette Punzalan, Keigoutina Suarez, Lucena Mayor Barbara Ruby Talaga and Marivic Rivera", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Quezon, 3rd District\nIncumbent Danilo Suarez is term limited. His wife Aleta, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235476-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Calabarzon, Quezon, 4th District\nIncumbent Lorenzo Ta\u00f1ada III is term limited; his brother Wigberto is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235477-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Caraga\nElections will be held in Caraga for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235477-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Caraga, Agusan del Norte, 1st District\nIncumbent Jose Aquino II is not running for the position; instead, he is running for Butuan's mayorship. His Lakas\u2013CMD party did not name a nominee in this district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 92], "content_span": [93, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235477-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Caraga, Agusan del Norte, 2nd District\nIncumbent Angelica Amante-Matba is not running. Her brother incumbent Governor Erlpe John Amante is running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 92], "content_span": [93, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235477-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Caraga, Agusan del Sur, 2nd District\nEvelyn Mellana is the incumbent. She will face former Representative Rodolfo Plaza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 90], "content_span": [91, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235477-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Caraga, Dinagat Islands\nIncumbent Ruben Ecleo Jr. has been dropped from the rolls of the House of Representatives after the Supreme Court ruled that the Sandiganbayan's conviction of Ecleo on graft was valid. No special election was held. Dinagat Mayor Gwendolyn Ecleo is his party's nominee. She will face incumbent Akbayan Partylist Representative Kaka Bag-ao, who is running as guest candidate of the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 77], "content_span": [78, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon\nElections were held in Central Luzon for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Aurora\nIncumbent Juan Edgardo Angara is term limited and is instead running for the Senate. His aunt, Governor Bellaflor Angara-Castillo, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 75], "content_span": [76, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Bataan, 1st District\nIncumbent Herminia Roman is being challenged by Bases Conversion and Development Authority chairman Felicito Payumo; Payumo substituted for Edwin Enrile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 89], "content_span": [90, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Bataan, 2nd District\nIncumbent Albert S. Garcia is term limited; his father Governor Enrique Garcia is his party's nominee. Actor Onemig Bondoc of Aksyon Demokratiko withdrew his candidacy on February 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 89], "content_span": [90, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Bulacan, 2nd District\nIncumbent Pedro Pancho is term limited; his son Gavini is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 90], "content_span": [91, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Bulacan, San Jose del Monte\nArthur Robes is the incumbent. On early February, the Commission on Elections' Second Division disqualified his primary opponent, singer Imelda Papin for failure of proving her residence in the city; the complaint was filed by Arangkada San Joseno Political Party, which said that she is actually a resident of nearby North Fairview, Quezon City. However, the commission en banc overturned the Second Division's decision, thereby allowing Papin to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 96], "content_span": [97, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Nueva Ecija, 1st District\nIncumbent Josefina Joson is running for the governorship. Her husband Quezon mayor Mariano Cristino Joson is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 94], "content_span": [95, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Nueva Ecija, 4th District\nIncumbent Rodolfo Antonino is term limited\u00a0; his daughter Magnolia Antonino-Nadres is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 94], "content_span": [95, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Pampanga, 1st District\nIncumbent Carmelo Lazatin is not running instead he is running for mayor of Angeles City, Lakas-CMD thru the local party KAMBILAN nominates basketball coach and incumbent Vice-Governor Yeng Guiao. he will face former Congressman Francis Nepomuceno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 91], "content_span": [92, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Pampanga, 2nd District\nIncumbent Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is running despite of her sickness and in hospital arrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 91], "content_span": [92, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Pampanga, 3rd District\nAurelio Gonzales Jr. is the incumbent. He will be facing-off incumbent San Fernando City Mayor Oscar Rodriguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 91], "content_span": [92, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Pampanga, 4th District\nIncumbent Anna York Bondoc is term limited; her brother Juan Pablo Bondoc is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 91], "content_span": [92, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Tarlac, 3rd District\nJeci Lapus is the incumbent, he was defeated by Concepcion mayor Noel Villanueva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 89], "content_span": [90, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Zambales, 1st District\nIncumbent Mitos Magsaysay is term limited; she is running for the Senate; her son, Jesus Vicente II or Jobo, is her party's nominee. he will face outgoing olongapo city mayor James Gordon Jr. and former subic mayor Jeffrey Khonghun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 91], "content_span": [92, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235478-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Luzon, Zambales, 2nd District\nIncumbent Jun Omar Ebdane succeeded Antonio M. Diaz in a special election when the latter died in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 91], "content_span": [92, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas\nElections were held in Central Visayas for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Bohol\nEach of Bohol's three legislative districts elected representative to the House of Representatives. The candidates with the highest number of votes won the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 76], "content_span": [77, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Bohol, 1st District\nRene Relampagos was the incumbent. The last termer and incumbent Tagbilaran city mayor Dan Neri Lim challenged him for the congressional seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 90], "content_span": [91, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Bohol, 2nd District\nIncumbent Erico Aumentado died while in office on December 25, 2012. The Nationalist People's Coalition named his son Aris as their substitute. The younger Aumentado tangled with his father's perennial rival, former three-term congressman and the incumbent Trinidad mayor Roberto Cajes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 90], "content_span": [91, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Bohol, 3rd District\nIncumbent Arthur Yap ran unopposed for the second consecutive election after his opponent, Loboc mayor, Leon Calipusan, backed out for personal reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 90], "content_span": [91, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu\nEach of Cebu's six and 3 others legislative districts elected representative to the House of Representatives. The candidates with the highest number of votes won the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 75], "content_span": [76, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu, 1st District\nIncumbent Eduardo Gullas was term limited; he ran for mayor of Talisay City. His party nominated his son, Gerard Anthony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 89], "content_span": [90, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu, 3rd District\nIncumbent Pablo John Garcia ran for governor instead. His sister, incumbent Governor Gwen Garcia was party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 89], "content_span": [90, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu, 5th District\nIncumbent Ramon Durano ran for the Danao city vice mayoralty instead; his brother, former tourism secretary Joseph Ace Durano ran under the Liberal Party banner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 89], "content_span": [90, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu, 6th District\nGabriel Luis Quisimbing was the incumbent, his opponent was former congresswoman Nerissa Corazon Soon-Ruiz running under the United Nationalist Alliance banner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 89], "content_span": [90, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu City, 1st District\nIncumbent Rachel del Mar did not run; her party named Raul del Mar as their nominee. Her primary opponent was actress Annabelle Rama. Rama announced her candidacy for Congress via Twitter on May 2012, debunking rumors that she was running for the city council. Cebu City mayor Michael Rama, her cousin, confirmed Rama's candidacy. The PDP\u2013Laban, one of the parties within the United Nationalist Alliance, adopted Mayor Rama's ticket as their candidates in the elections, including Annabelle Rama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 94], "content_span": [95, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu City, 1st District\nThe Commission on Elections disqualified Junan Arenasa, Pablo Dorinio and Eliseo Tumulak for being \"nuisance candidates\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 94], "content_span": [95, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Cebu City, 1st District, 2nd District\nIncumbent Tomas Osme\u00f1a ran for mayor against incumbent Cebu City mayor Mike Rama. His party nominated Rodrigo Abellanosa for the South District congressional post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 108], "content_span": [109, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Lapu-Lapu City\nIncumbent Arturo Radaza did not run; his daughter Aileen Radaza was the party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 85], "content_span": [86, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Negros Oriental\nEach of Negros Oriental's three legislative districts elected representatives to the House of Representatives. The candidates with the highest number of votes won the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 86], "content_span": [87, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Negros Oriental, 1st District\nIncumbent Jocelyn Sy-Limkaichong was on her second term but she decided to run for governor instead. The ruling Liberal Party nominated her brother-in-law, former Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board board member Manuel Iway, as its nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 100], "content_span": [101, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Negros Oriental, 2nd District\nGeorge P. Arnaiz was the incumbent. His primary opponent was Bais City mayor Karen Villanueva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 100], "content_span": [101, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Siquijor\nOrlando B. Fua Sr. was the incumbent on his second term but decided not to run. Instead his party named his son Governor Orlando Fua Jr. as their nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 79], "content_span": [80, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235479-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Central Visayas, Siquijor\nWinning candidate Jose Ray Pernes died May 12, one day before election, because of a heart attack. He was substituted by his wife Marie Anne Pernes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 79], "content_span": [80, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235480-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Eastern Visayas\nElections were held in Eastern Visayas for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235480-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Eastern Visayas, Southern Leyte\nIncumbent Roger Mercado is term limited and is running for the governorship. Incumbent governor Damian Mercado is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 85], "content_span": [86, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila\nElections were held in Metro Manila (the National Capital Region) for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila\nIn any given district, the candidate who receives a plurality of votes will receive that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Caloocan, 1st District\nIncumbent Oscar Malapitan is term-limited and running for mayorship, his son Dale Gonzalo Malapitan is the party's nominee. He will face three-term mayor Enrico Echiverri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 90], "content_span": [91, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Caloocan, 2nd District\nMitzi Cajayon is the incumbent. She will face vice mayor Edgar Erice and former Congressman Luis Asistio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 90], "content_span": [91, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Makati, 1st District\nMonique Lagdameo is the incumbent. The district was the tightest race in 2010's legislative election, with Lagdameo enjoying a winning margin of 0.19%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 88], "content_span": [89, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Manila, 5th District\nAmado Bagatsing is the incumbent. His KABAKA party is affiliated with the United Nationalist Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 88], "content_span": [89, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Manila, 6th District\nIncumbent Rosenda Ocampo's primary opponent is Benny Abante, the erstwhile incumbent whom she defeated in 2010 by a margin of less than 2%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 88], "content_span": [89, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Navotas\nToby Tiangco is the incumbent. He is under Partido Navote\u00f1o, the ruling local party, which will contest this election at the banner of the United Nationalist Alliance. (He is also UNA's national secretary-general.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Para\u00f1aque, 1st District\nIncumbent Edwin Olivarez is running for mayor against Benjo Bernabe; his brother Eric is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 91], "content_span": [92, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Para\u00f1aque, 2nd District\nIncumbent Roilo Golez is term limited. His party nominates former mayor Joey Marquez, however he is running as independent. Marquez will be challenged by incumbent vice mayor Gustavo Tambunting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 91], "content_span": [92, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City\nThe second district of Quezon City was redistricted into three districts. The district that will continue to carry the \"second district\" name is the one surrounding the Batasang Pambansa Complex, immediately south of the La Mesa Dam watershed. The two new districts are designated as the fifth and sixth districts. The other districts that were not affected by the redistricting (first, third and fourth) retained their nomenclatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 79], "content_span": [80, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 1st District\nIncumbent Vincent \"Bingbong\" Crisologo is on his last term, having served as Representative of the 1st District from 2004\u20132013. ; his wife Rita is his party's nominee. she was lost to councilor Francisco Calalay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 2nd District\nThe second district of Quezon City was redistricted into three districts. The district that will continue to carry the \"second district\" name is the one surrounding the Batasang Pambansa Complex, immediately south of the La Mesa Dam watershed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 2nd District\nWinston Castelo, the incumbent 2nd district representative, is running here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 3rd District\nJorge Banal, Jr. is the incumbent, his opponent is former congressman Matias Defensor, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 4th District\nFeliciano Belmonte, Jr., the Speaker of the House of Representatives, is the incumbent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 5th District\nThe 5th district comes from old 2nd district's northernmost area, comprising most of Novaliches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 5th District\nActor and councilor Alfred Vargas won against former congresswoman Mary Ann Susano and former Congressman Dante Liban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Quezon City, 6th District\nThe 6th district comprises the old 2nd district's southernmost parts (Balintawak, Southern Portion of Novaliches and Tandang Sora areas). Lawyer Christopher \"Kit\" Belmonte, who ranked second to Winston Castelo in the 2010 polls), is running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 93], "content_span": [94, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, San Juan\nIncumbent JV Ejercito is running for the Senate under the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA); his UNA-affiliated Partido Magdiwang nominated former representative Ronaldo Zamora as their nominee. His opponent is Councilor Jannah Ejercito, daughter of Jessie Estrada, brother of Joseph Estrada, who is Ejercito's father.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 76], "content_span": [77, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Taguig and Pateros\nTaguig's 1st Sangguniang Panlungsod (SP) district and Pateros collectively elect one seat in the House of Representatives. Taguig's 2nd SP district is allocated another seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 86], "content_span": [87, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Taguig and Pateros, 1st District\nArnel Cerafica is the incumbent. He will be facing off against Councilor Gigi Valenzuela de Mesa. Cerafica is also nominated by local party Kilusang Diwa ng Taguig.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 100], "content_span": [101, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Taguig and Pateros, 2nd District\nSigfrido Ti\u00f1ga is the incumbent but decided not to run in any position due to his personal reason. Former Councilor Henry Duenas, Jr. will take his place to be a congressman. He will facing off against TV/Movie Director and Barangay Chairman of Fort Bonifacio Lino Edgardo S. Cayetano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 100], "content_span": [101, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Valenzuela, First district\nIncumbent Rexlon Gatchalian is running for the mayorship; his brother, Mayor Sherwin Gatchalian, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 94], "content_span": [95, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235481-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila, Valenzuela, Second district\nMagtanggol Gunigundo is the incumbent. He will be facing off against councilor Shalani Soledad-Romulo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 95], "content_span": [96, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa\nElections were held in Mimaropa for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa\nThe candidate with the most votes will win that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa, Marinduque\nIncumbent Lord Allan Jay Velasco, the son of Presbitero Velasco, Jr., an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines, is going up against Regina Ongsiako Reyes, daughter of provincial governor Carmencita Reyes and sister of Toll Regulatory Board Executive Director Edmundo Reyes, Jr. Velasco won against Edmundo Reyes in 2010; however, Reyes filed an election protest but the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal dismissed Reyes' suit and even increase Velasco's lead an additional 39 votes after recounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa, Marinduque\nReyes was disqualified by the Commission on Elections' First Division after it ruled that she is a naturalized American citizen, which also caused her residency to be forfeited as the commission said that \"she has not abandoned her domicile of choice in the USA.\" Reyes is allowed to appeal the decision to the commission en banc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa, Occidental Mindoro\nIncumbent Ma. Amelita Villarosa is term limited. Edgardo Urieta is her party's nominee, his opponent is governor Josephine Sato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 82], "content_span": [83, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa, Oriental Mindoro, 1st District\nIncumbent Rodolfo Valencia is term limited; Calapan city mayor Paulino Leachon is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 94], "content_span": [95, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa, Palawan\nThe second district of Palawan was redistricted into two districts: Puerto Princesa and Aborlan is designated as the third district, while the rest of the old second district retained that nomenclature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa, Palawan, 1st District\nIncumbent Antonio C. Alvarez is term limited; his son Franz Joseph is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235482-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Mimaropa, Palawan, 2nd District\nIncumbent Rep. Victorino Dennis Socrates is running for the vice governorship. While his National Unity Party did not name a nominee, his local party Partidong Pagbabago ng Palawan nominated Frederick Abueg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 85], "content_span": [86, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235483-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Northern Mindanao\nElections were held in the Northern Mindanao for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235483-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Northern Mindanao\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235483-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Northern Mindanao, Bukidnon\nBukidnon was redistricted into four districts after the candidacies were submitted. As a result, the Commission on Elections (Philippines) will take into account the places where the nominees are registered to determine on what district they are running under.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 81], "content_span": [82, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235483-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Northern Mindanao, Bukidnon, 3rd District\nIncumbent from the predistricted third district Jose Ma. Zubiri III found himself running at the redistricted 3rd district. His Bukidnon Paglaum party is in an electoral alliance with the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 95], "content_span": [96, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235483-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Northern Mindanao, Camiguin\nIncumbent Pedro Romualdo's opponent is former member of parliament Homobono Adaza. However, Romualdo died on April 23, 2013. His grandson Xavier who is one of the top 10 in 2012 bar exam as his replacement candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 81], "content_span": [82, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235483-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Northern Mindanao, Lanao del Norte, 2nd District\nIncumbent Fatimah Aliah Dimaporo is not running. Former Representative.Abdullah Dimaporo is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 102], "content_span": [103, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235483-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Northern Mindanao, Misamis Oriental, 2nd District\nIncumbent Yevgeny Vincent Emano opted not to run again for a 3rd and final term. Instead, he is running for governorship. Augusto H. Baculio is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 103], "content_span": [104, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235484-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Soccsksargen\nElections were held in Soccsksargen for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235484-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Soccsksargen\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235484-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Soccsksargen, Cotabato, 2nd District\nIncumbent 2nd district representative Nancy Catamco is running here. former representative Bernardo Pi\u00f1ol, Jr. is his main opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 90], "content_span": [91, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235484-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Soccsksargen, Cotabato, 3rd District\nThe third district covers the central part of the province. Senior Board Member Jose Tejada is running here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 90], "content_span": [91, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235484-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Soccsksargen, Sarangani\nEight-division world boxing champion and incumbent Manny Pacquiao is running unopposed. He is co-nominated by his People's Champ Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 77], "content_span": [78, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235484-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Soccsksargen, South Cotabato, 1st District\nPedro Acharon is the incumbent. His opponent is Rogelio Pacquiao, if elected, he will join his brother Manny in the House separately", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 96], "content_span": [97, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235484-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Soccsksargen, South Cotabato, 2nd District\nIncumbent Daisy Fuentes is running for governor. Ferdinand Hernandez is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 96], "content_span": [97, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas\nElections were held in Western Visayas for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas\nThe candidate with the most votes will win that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Aklan\nIncumbent Florencio Miraflores is term limited and running for the governorship. His cousin, Kasangga party-list representative Teodorico Haresco is his party's nominee but he is running as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 76], "content_span": [77, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Bacolod\nAnthony Golez Jr. is the incumbent. Originally from the Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC), his party nominated incumbent Mayor Evelio Leonardia instead. As a result, Golez is running as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 78], "content_span": [79, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Iloilo, 1st District\nIncumbent Janette Garin is term limited and is ineligible to run. Her husband, Vice Governor Oscar Garin Jr. is running in her place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 91], "content_span": [92, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Iloilo, 2nd District\nAugusto Syjuco Jr. is the incumbent, he was defeated by pavia mayor Arcadio Gorriceta and rank 3 on election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 91], "content_span": [92, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Iloilo, 4th District\nIncumbent Ferjenel Biron is term limited and is ineligible to run. His brother, Hernan Biron Jr. is running in his place. His opponent is former governor Niel Tupas Sr.. If Tupas elected, he will join his son Niel Jr. in the house separately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 91], "content_span": [92, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Iloilo City\nJerry Tre\u00f1as is the incumbent. He will be facing off against former congressman Raul Gonzales Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 82], "content_span": [83, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Negros Occidental, 2nd District\nAlfredo Mara\u00f1on III is term limited; he is running for the mayorship of Sagay; the National Unity Party named Leo Rafael Cueva as their nominee, he will be facing off against former Schools Division Superintendent of Cadiz City Otilia Galilea of the NPC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 102], "content_span": [103, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Negros Occidental, 3rd District\nAlfredo Benitez is the incumbent. He will face former Representative Jose Carlos Lacson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 102], "content_span": [103, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Negros Occidental, 4th District\nIncumbent Jeffrey Ferrer's certificate of nomination was unilaterally withdrawn by the Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC) after he campaigned for Alfredo Mara\u00f1on Jr. of the United Negros Alliance in the gubernatorial election instead of NPC nominee Vice Governor Genaro Alvarez Jr. The NPC instead is supporting independent Ike Barredo's candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 102], "content_span": [103, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235485-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Western Visayas, Negros Occidental, 5th District\nAlejandro Mirasol is the incumbent; he won in a special election that was called after erstwhile incumbent Iggy Arroyo died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 102], "content_span": [103, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235486-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao\nElections were held in the ARMM for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 94], "section_span": [94, 94], "content_span": [95, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235486-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 94], "section_span": [94, 94], "content_span": [95, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235486-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Maguindanao, 1st District\nBai Sandra Sema is Incumbent and she will face former Congresswoman Bai Sendig Dilangalen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 94], "section_span": [96, 121], "content_span": [122, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235486-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Maguindanao, 2nd District\nIncumbent Simeon Datumanong is term-limited; his Lakas\u2013CMD nominated Annie Datumanong, his daughter, as their nominee. Her primary opponent is Pandag Mayor Zajid Mangudadatu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 94], "section_span": [96, 121], "content_span": [122, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235486-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Tawi Tawi\nIncumbent Nur Jaafar is term limited and running for the governorship. Anuar Abubakar is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 94], "section_span": [96, 105], "content_span": [106, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region\nElections were held in the Bicol Region for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Albay, 1st District\nIncumbent Edcel Lagman (independent) is term limited; his son former Quezon City councilor Edcel Lagman, Jr. is running under Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 91], "content_span": [92, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Norte, 1st District\nIncumbent Renato Unico, Jr. is running for governor. Catherine Reyes is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 101], "content_span": [102, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Sur, 2nd District\nDato Arroyo is the incumbent and he will face outgoing Governor Luis Raymond Villafuerte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Sur, 3rd District\nIncumbent Luis Villafuerte is term limited; he will run for the governorship. His wife, Monetary Board member Nelly is his party's nominee. Late Secretary of the Interior and Local Government Jesse Robredo's widow Leni is her primary opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Sur, 4th District\nIncumbent Arnulfo Fuentebella is term limited; his son former congressman Felix William is his party's nominee. His opponent is actor Aga Muhlach, of the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Sur, 4th District\nOn November 2012, Muhlach's candidacy was in jeopardy when a Camarines Sur Municipal Trial Court (MTC) ordered his name to be stricken off the voters' list as it ruled that he had not complied with residency requirements. Muhlach appealed the decision. A month later, the Camarines Sur Regional Trial Court (RTC) in San Jose upheld the MTC decision, allowing the removal of Muhlach from the voters' list. However, the Philippine Court of Appeals issued a restraining order on January 2013 preventing the RTC from executing its decision, thereby allowing Muhlach to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Sur, 4th District\nA week later, the Commission on Elections ruled that Muhlach is a natural-born Filipino citizen and is thus eligible to run. The commission maintained that Muhlach, who had Spanish-born father who was a naturalized Filipino at the time of his birth and a natural-born Filipino mother, didn't renounce his Philippine citizenship when the Spanish government issued him a Spanish passport, and that while Muhlach may be a dual citizen, local laws have no control on laws from other countries, including their citizenship laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Sur, 4th District\nThe Court of Appeals ruled on February 13 that the Muhlachs be reinstated in the voters' list, annulling the decision of the MTC and RTC, saying that the couple \"have more than sufficiently complied with the residency requirement in law.\" Less than a month later, the Commission on Elections' Second Division dismissed a petition to dismiss Muhlach's certificate of candidacy due to his lack of residency, removing all obstacles for his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Camarines Sur, 5th District\nSalvio Fortuno is the incumbent. He will be going against former congressman Felix Alfelor, Jr. and actor Rez Cortez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Masbate, 1st District\nIncumbent Narciso Bravo, Jr. is term limited; his wife Maria Vida is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 93], "content_span": [94, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Masbate, 2nd District\nIncumbent Antonio Kho is running for the governorship; his wife former governor Elisa Olga Kho is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 93], "content_span": [94, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Sorsogon, 1st District\nIncumbent Salvador Escudero III died while in office. His widow Evelina is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 94], "content_span": [95, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235487-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Bicol Region, Sorsogon, 2nd District\nDeogracias Ramos, Jr. is the incumbent. Independent candidate Jose Solis, congressman until 2010 when he was term limited, died on April 23, 2013. It is unknown if he, as an independent, will have a replacement candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 94], "content_span": [95, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235488-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Cagayan Valley\nElections were held in the Cagayan Valley for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235488-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Cagayan Valley\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235488-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Cagayan Valley, Cagayan, 1st District\nIncumbent Jack Enrile is running for the Senate; his wife Salvacion is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 95], "content_span": [96, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235488-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Cagayan Valley, Cagayan, 2nd District\nBaby Aline Vargas-Alfonso is the incumbent after winning a special election when Florencio Vargas, her father, died. As a result of independent candidate Sherwin Calimag's disqualification, Vargas-Alfonso is running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 95], "content_span": [96, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235488-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Cagayan Valley, Isabela, 1st District\nRodolfo Albano Jr. is running for mayor of Cabagan, Isabela. His son, incumbent Vice Governor Rodolfo Albano III is his party's nominee", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 95], "content_span": [96, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235489-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Cordillera Administrative Region\nElections were held in the Cordillera Administrative Region for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 90], "section_span": [90, 90], "content_span": [91, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235489-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Cordillera Administrative Region\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 90], "section_span": [90, 90], "content_span": [91, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235490-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Davao Region\nElections were held in Davao Region for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235490-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Davao Region, Davao del Norte, 1st District\nAntonio Rafael del Rosario is the incumbent. He join his namesake Capiz Rep. Antonio del Rosario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 101], "content_span": [102, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235490-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Davao Region, Davao del Sur, 1st District\nIncumbent Marc Douglas Cagas is not running for position; instead he is running for the governorship. His mother Board Member Mercedes Cagas is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 99], "content_span": [100, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235491-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Ilocos Region\nElections were held in the Ilocos Region for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235491-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Ilocos Region\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235491-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Ilocos Region, Ilocos Sur, 1st District\nIncumbent Ryan Singson is not running; instead, he is for the governorship of Ilocos Sur. His brother, former Representative Ronald Singson who had resigned in 2011 due to a personal scandal, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 97], "content_span": [98, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235491-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Ilocos Region, Pangasinan, 3rd District\nIncumbent Maria Rachel Arenas was running unopposed but backed out; her mother, Rosemarie Arenas is her substitute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 97], "content_span": [98, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235491-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Ilocos Region, Pangasinan, 6th District\nIncumbent Marilyn Primcias-Agabas is running unopposed after her sole opponent, Brigido Gallano (independent), withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 97], "content_span": [98, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula\nElections were held in Zamboanga Peninsula for seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [77, 77], "content_span": [78, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula\nThe candidate with the most votes won that district's seat for the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [77, 77], "content_span": [78, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula\nIn Isabela, Basilan, although a part of this region, the voters elect their representative via Basilan's legislative district. Isabela is politically within Basilan despite being in a separate regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [77, 77], "content_span": [78, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga City, 1st District\nIncumbent Maria Isabelle Climaco Salazar did not run for re-election; she ran for the mayorship instead. Incumbent Mayor Celso Lobregat was her party's nominee under the coalition of LDP-LP-AZAP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 107], "content_span": [108, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga City, 1st District\nThe UNA-ZTZ coalition fielded former Monsignor Crisanto dela Cruz for the post. Dela Cruz previously run for the mayorship in 2007 and for the vice-mayorship in 2010. This was the second time where Dela Cruz and Mayor Lobregat went against each other; the previous time was in the 2007 mayoral elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 107], "content_span": [108, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga City, 2nd District\nIncumbent Erico Basilio Fabian was term limited and ran for the mayorship instead. He then formed a local coalition known as Fuerza Zamboanga, yielding District II Councilor Lilia Nu\u00f1o to replace him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 107], "content_span": [108, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga del Norte, 2nd District\nRosendo Labadlabad was the incumbent. He faced incumbent governor Rolando Yebes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 112], "content_span": [113, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga del Norte, 3rd District\nIncumbent Cesar Jalosjos was term-limited, and Johanna Jalosjos-Parre\u00f1o was the party's nominee. Former Zamboanga del Norte Governor Isagani S. Amatong ran against Jalosjos-Parre\u00f1o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 112], "content_span": [113, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235492-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections in the Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga Sibugay, 1st District\nIncumbent Jonathan Cabilao Yambao did not run; his mother, former representative Belma Cabilao was the party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 110], "content_span": [111, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235493-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives party-list election\nElections were held for seats reserved for the party-list representation in the House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 13, 2013. At most 10% of the seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines are reserved for party-list representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235493-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives party-list election\nThe election was via the party-list system, with a 2% \"soft\" election threshold via the Hare quota, except that no party can win more than 3 seats, and if the seats won do not reach the 20% of the seats of the entire House of Representatives, the parties that have yet to win seats will get a seat each until the 20% reserved for party-lists have been filled up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235493-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives party-list election, Party-list purge\nThe Commission on Elections (Comelec) purged the parties participating in the party-list election from almost 200 parties in the 2010 election to just over 100. However, most of the disqualified party-lists successfully got restraining orders from the Supreme Court to retain their names on the ballot. On April 6, 2013, the Supreme Court changed its earlier ruling on what are the criteria set for joining in the party-list election to a more liberal interpretation. With this, the court gave back the cases of the disqualified parties to the Comelec for consideration under the new interpretation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 78], "content_span": [79, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235493-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives party-list election, Raffle\nThe Comelec also raffled the parties on the order that they will appear on the ballot. This is to avoid parties using numbers or the letter \"A\" as the first letter of their party to be seen first by the voter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 68], "content_span": [69, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235493-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine House of Representatives party-list election, Nominees\nThe Comelec released the list of nominees of every party that appeared on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235494-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Peace Cup\nThe 2013 Philippine Peace Cup was the second edition of the tournament, an international football competition organized by the Philippine Football Federation (PFF) to celebrate peace month in the country through football. This edition involved the national teams of the Philippines and only two invitees instead of three. It was held in Bacolod, Negros Occidental from October 11\u201315, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235494-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Peace Cup, Participants\nNew Caledonia, Kyrgyzstan and an unspecified team from the 2012 Philippine Peace Cup were initially mooted as participants. On September 24, the PFF announced that Chinese Taipei, runners-up in the previous edition of the tournament had confirmed their participation. They also sent an invitation to the Federation of Uganda Football Associations, but they turned it down citing the expensive airfare and the bad timing due to having other commitments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235494-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Peace Cup, Participants\nThe Rwandese Association Football Federation (FERWAFA) were another invitee and the PFF claimed that they were close to finalizing their participation. However, the FERWAFA stated that they hadn't made any decision and had to check if they had budget to compete in the tournament. On September 27, the FERWAFA confirmed that they had arranged an international friendly match against Uganda on October 15, thus ruling them out of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235494-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Peace Cup, Participants\nThe following day, it was announced that Pakistan would be participating in the tournament. The PFF then stated that only three teams would be involved. Burundi and 2013 SAFF Championship winners Afghanistan were also considered as invitees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election\nThe 2013 election of members to the Senate of the Philippines was the 31st election to the Senate of the Philippines. It was held on Monday, May 13, 2013 to elect 12 of the 24 seats in the Senate. Together with those elected in 2010, the candidates elected in this election shall comprise the 16th Congress. The senators elected in 2010 will serve until June 30, 2016, while the senators elected in this election will serve up to June 30, 2019. The elections to the House of Representatives as well as local elections occurred on the same date. The Philippines use plurality-at-large voting for seats in the Senate: the twelve candidates with the highest number of votes win the twelve seats up for election. The Senate seat vacated by President Benigno Aquino III in 2010 was among the twelve seats to be put for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election\nWhile the Philippines is a multi-party democracy since 1987, parties have not been able to complete a 12-candidate slate. This means parties have to form coalitions in order to complete a slate, this lessens the number of slates the voters have to choose for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election\nIn this election, the two coalitions that completed 12-candidate slates are Team PNoy led by the President Benigno Aquino III's Liberal Party, and the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) of former president Joseph Estrada's Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino and Vice President Jejomar Binay's Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan; the two slates used to share three common candidates, until they were dropped by UNA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election\nTeam PNoy banked on Aquino's popularity and was leading 9\u22123 in the surveys, with Loren Legarda emerged topping the Senate election for a record-tying third time. However, on the final weeks of the campaign, Legarda was accused of hiding assets abroad, a charge she vehemently denied. On election night, former Movie and Television Review and Classification Board chairperson Grace Poe, daughter of defeated 2004 presidential candidate Fernando Poe, Jr., emerged as the frontrunner. Poe, Legarda, and four others were proclaimed on May 16, and further proclamations were held until May 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election\nTeam PNoy did win nine seats against UNA's three, with both coalitions winning at the expense of retiring or term-limited senators who were not members of either coalition. Team PNoy campaign manager and senator Franklin Drilon was elected Senate President upon the convening of the 16th Congress of the Philippines on late July, after emerging as the frontrunner in the Senate Presidency, at the expense of incumbent Juan Ponce Enrile of UNA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Electoral system\nPhilippine senatorial elections are done via the plurality-at-large voting system: the entire country is one at-large \"district\", where a voter can vote up to twelve people (one vote per candidate), with the twelve candidates with the highest number of votes deemed being elected. Senators who are currently serving their second consecutive term are term limited, although they may run again in 2016. Only half of the seats are up in every senatorial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Electoral system\nEach party has a slate of as many candidates as it can muster, although they do not usually exceed a 12-person ticket. If a party cannot complete a full ticket, they may invite \"guest candidates\" to complete the ticket. They may even come other slates, and these guest candidates may not participate in electoral rallies by their adoptive party(ies), or may not cooperate at the Senate if elected. A coalition of different parties may be formed in cases where no party has the ability to complete a full ticket; a party may not include their entire slate on a coalition ticket. Independents may become guest candidates and be included in coalitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Electoral system\nWhile the Philippines is a multi-party system, parties tend to group themselves into two major coalitions in midterm elections (Lakas-Laban vs NPC in 1995, PPC vs Puwersa ng Masa in 2001); sometimes a third, but weaker, coalition is formed. This is opposed to senatorial elections in presidential election years where most presidential candidates also have senatorial slates. This results in an election where voters can choose between two major political forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Electoral system\nWinning candidates are proclaimed by the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) sitting as the National Board of Canvassers. Candidates are proclaimed senators-elect if the thirteenth place candidate no longer has a mathematical chance of surpassing that candidate. Post-proclamation disputes are handled by the Senate Electoral Tribunal, a body composed of six senators and three justices from the Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Electoral system, Thirteenth Senate seat\nOn December 12, 2011, incumbent Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago was elected as a Judge of the International Criminal Court. As a result, she was expected to vacate her Senate seat after the impeachment trial of Chief Justice Renato Corona, which ended on May 29, 2012, a year before the 2013 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Electoral system, Thirteenth Senate seat\nOnce Santiago vacates her Senate seat, an additional senator would be elected in the upcoming election to serve the remaining three years of her unexpired term. However, the likelihood of a thirteenth Senator being elected became low though since Santiago has already stated that she will not quit her seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, 2010 election\nAs the 2010 Senate election was held concurrently with the presidential election, most of the presidential candidates also put up their respective senatorial slates. These slates shared several candidates, although most of the shared candidates only campaigned with one slate. The presidential election was won by the Liberal Party's Benigno Aquino III, defeating Joseph Estrada of the Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino (Force of the Filipino Masses; PMP); the vice presidential election was won by Estrada's running mate, Jejomar Binay of the Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan (Philippine Democratic Party-People Power; PDP-Laban).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, 2010 election\nThe Senate election resulted in a chamber where no party had more than four seats. Outgoing Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile of the PMP emerged as a compromise candidate in the election for Senate President when the Liberal Party's candidate, Franklin Drilon, could not muster majority of the votes in the Senate against defeated presidential candidate Manuel Villar of the Nacionalista Party. In the Senate Presidential election, Enrile defeated Alan Peter Cayetano of the Nacionalistas. Aside from Cayetano and Enrile voting for each other, only Cayetano's sister Pia and Joker Arroyo voted against Enrile; the three then constituted the Senate's minority bloc. Thus, most of the competing political forces in the 2010 election were united within the Senate for most of the 15th Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, United Nationalist Alliance\nThe PMP and the PDP-Laban signed a coalition agreement on April 4, 2012 for the 2013 elections, forming the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA). The two parties were formerly partners in the United Opposition in the 2007 election, and Estrada and Binay were running mates during the 2010 presidential election. Koko Pimentel, PDP-Laban president, has stated that the UNA's senatorial slate is now more than twelve members and is in the process of trimming down; he had also expressed reservations on the inclusion of Juan Miguel Zubiri, of whom he had won an election protest after the 2007 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, United Nationalist Alliance\nOn May 3, 2012, Zubiri took an oath to become a member of the PMP; Estrada and Binay were optimistic that Pimentel and Zubiri will be able to reconcile their differences prior to the start of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, United Nationalist Alliance\nOn May 10, 2012, UNA announced its first five senatorial candidates: incumbent senators Koko Pimentel and Gregorio Honasan, Cagayan Representative Jack Enrile, San Juan Representative JV Ejercito, and 2010 senatorial candidate Joey de Venecia. On June 11, 2012, UNA formally included Zubiri in its line-up, together with Cebu Governor Gwendolyn Garcia and Zambales Representative Mitos Magsaysay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, United Nationalist Alliance\nOn June 28, 2012, Pimentel officially declined his spot in the UNA line-up, citing Zubiri's continued inclusion in it. A week later, the commission accredited UNA as a political coalition, although it may face opposition from the use of the \"UNA\" acronym from the United Negros Alliance, a local political party from Negros Occidental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, United Nationalist Alliance\nThe UNA announced in August that former senators Richard J. Gordon and Ernesto Maceda were a part of their ticket, and that Senator Loren Legarda would be one of the last three candidates yet to be named in their ticket. UNA spokesperson JV Bautista also said that Pimentel had taken a leave of absence as PDP-Laban's presidency, and that PDP-Laban would not issue Pimentel's certificate of nomination as the latter is running under the Liberal Party. However, Pimentel denied that he took a leave of absence from the PDP-Laban presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, United Nationalist Alliance\nOn the first day of filing of certificates of candidacies, senatorial nominees of UNA filed theirs at the Commission on Elections national offices at Intramuros. Joey de Venecia withdrew from the election as he cited his business endeavors as reasons for his withdrawal; speculation was rife when Lorenzo Ta\u00f1ada III was one of the persons considered to fill in de Venecia's slot in the ticket, but Binay disclosed that Ta\u00f1ada was not in their choices \"any more.\" On October 4, UNA announced that Binay's daughter Nancy was their 12th nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, United Nationalist Alliance\nAfter perennial non-attendance of the three common candidates shared with Team PNoy, UNA announced on February 21 that they dropped the three from their ticket. UNA secretary-general Toby Tiangco cited Team PNoy's campaign manager Franklin Drilon's refusal to allow the three to participate in their campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nThe Liberal Party was open on creating coalitions or alliances with other parties for the 2013 election, as long as the politicians have the same principles as them. Secretary of Budget and Management Florencio Abad said on April 7, 2012 that it was too early to make conclusions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nTwo days later, the Liberals revealed 14 names of possible candidates on their ticket; these include candidates that were being considered on the UNA ticket. This meant there may be common names on both tickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nIn April 2012, the Nacionalista Party was choosing between UNA and the LP tickets, with party secretary-general Alan Peter Cayetano saying that it was too early to decide on such matters. The verdict in the impeachment of Renato Corona would affect their decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nOn May 17, 2012, Aquino revealed the party's four sure senatorial bets: Aurora Rep. Sonny Angara, TESDA Chairman Joel Villanueva, and 2010 senatorial candidates Risa Hontiveros and Ruffy Biazon. All four, however, are still considering their options to run for Senator. On June 28, 2012, party vice chairman Senator Franklin Drilon announced the candidacy of former Senator Ramon Magsaysay Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nSenator Francis Escudero, who formerly campaigned for the Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC)'s presidential nomination in 2010 before resigning from the party and withdrawing from the race abruptly, said he believed that the NPC and the Liberals \"are in coalition with one another.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nIt was announced on July 5, 2012, that the ruling Liberal Party (LP), Nationalist People\u2019s Coalition (NPC) and Nacionalista Party (NP) would most likely field a common senatorial ticket in the May 2013 elections. A meeting between Aquino and Villar agreed to coalesce for the 2013 elections, and details, such as local candidates, will be dealt upon on further meetings. Senator and Liberal Party vice chairman Franklin Drilon cautioned though that the agreement was \"not yet sealed\" as the distribution of slots in the ticket will also be a factor. The Nacionalistas had already endorsed four candidates in Senators Antonio Trillanes and Alan Peter Cayetano, and Representatives Robert Ace Barbers and Cynthia Villar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nHowever, NPC official and senator Tito Sotto on September said that the three-party coalition might not be pursued as the determination of candidates at the local level remain as stumbling blocks in the formation of the coalition; NPC has more local officials than the Liberals and Nacionalistas. Meanwhile, Representative Mark Villar of the Nacionalistas said that they will stay put with their coalition agreement with Liberals, and that most issues have already been resolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nBam Aquino, the president's cousin, and former senator Jamby Madrigal, one of the defeated presidential candidates in 2010, were sworn in as Liberal Party members. On October 1, the president announced the administration coalition's nominees in a speech at Club Filipino. The ruling coalition, aside from the Liberals, Nacionalistas and the NPC, included the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) and Akbayan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nThe three candidates common with both coalitions, namely Francis Escudero, Grace Poe and Loren Legarda went with the ruling party's proclamation rally. The three candidates were given instructions by the party leaders not to appear in the sorties of the rival coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Team PNoy\nAbaya also announced that Senator Franklin Drilon will serve as their campaign manager. However, Loren Legarda, when asked with whom she will campaign with, said \"I will campaign with the Filipino people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Makabayan coalition\nIn June 2012, Bayan Muna (Nation First) Representative Teodoro Casi\u00f1o announced his senatorial candidacy, and stated that his progressive Makabayang Koalisyon ng Mamamayan (Patriotic Coalition of the People) was \"in touch\" with the leaders of the United Nationalist Alliance to join their slate, and that joining the Liberal-led ticket would be difficult as he has significant political differences with President Aquino. He was also amenable on rejoining the Nacionalista Party ticket which included candidates from the Makabayan coalition in the 2010 election, or running on his own. UNA spokesperson Toby Tiangco said that he was unaware of any talks between UNA and Makabayan. However, on September, Casi\u00f1o announced that he not joining either ticket, saying that the coalition reached a consensus on the matter to prevent him from being beholden from other politicians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Makabayan coalition\nOn November 8, Makabayan announced the adoption of five guest candidates: Loren Legarda, Francis Escudero, Koko Pimentel, Cynthia Villar and Grace Poe. The six candidates of Makabayan would pursue a progressive agenda. On April 28, 2013, Makabayan further adopted the candidacies of Alan Peter Cayetano and Jamby Madrigal to add to their progressive senatorial slate. A week later, Ramon Magsaysay Jr. received Makabayan's endorsement on May 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Other coalitions, parties and independents\nThe other parties' tickets which were allowed by the commission to run were Ang Kapatiran, the Bangon Pilipinas Party, the Democratic Party of the Philippines, the Social Justice Society and several independents. Independents Edward Hagedorn and Ramon Monta\u00f1o and Ang Kapatiran candidates and were included in the first batch of approved candidacies, while the candidates of the Democratic Party, of the Social Justice Society, and independent Ricardo Penson were approved on the second batch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Other coalitions, parties and independents\nThe Centrist Democratic Party of the Philippines, headed by Cagayan de Oro representative Rufus Rodriguez did not name candidates for the election; they instead endorsed Francis Escudero, Koko Pimentel and Bam Aquino, all candidates of Team PNoy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Other coalitions, parties and independents\nThe People's Champ Movement, headed by Sarangani representative and Filipino boxing athlete Manny Pacquiao endorsed the entire United Nationalist Alliance ticket and endorsed the candidacies of Bangon Pilipinas Party senatorial candidate Eddie Villanueva and Team PNoy senatorial candidate Bam Aquino for the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Coalitions, Other coalitions, parties and independents\nLakas\u2013CMD, the former ruling party which did not named candidates under their banner, endorsed the candidacies of Nancy Binay and Richard J. Gordon of UNA, Eddie Villanueva of Bangon Pilipinas, and Cynthia Villar from Team PNoy, representative from Leyte Ferdinand Martin Romualdez announced on mid-April. This completed the list which earlier included JV Ejercito, Jack Enrile, Gregorio Honasan and Mitos Magsaysay from UNA, and Sonny Angara and Grace Poe from Team PNoy. Since there are only ten names, the party instructed local officials to endorse two from Tingting Cojuangco, Ernesto Maceda and Juan Miguel Zubiri of UNA, and Loren Legarda from Team PNoy, to complete their preferred 12-candidate slate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Term-limited incumbents\nThe following are barred from running since they are on their second consecutive six-year term:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Term-limited incumbents\nOnly one of the term-limited incumbents who were supposed to be appointed to the Cabinet were given government posts as of January 2014. Panfilo Lacson was appointed in December 2013 as the \"rehabilitation czar\" to coordinate reconstruction efforts after the devastation of Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda). In May 2014, Francis Pangilinan was named Presidential Assistant for Food Security and Agricultural Modernization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Candidates\nAfter the period of registering for candidacy has lapsed, the Commission on Elections approved on October 12 the candidacies of 27 people without benefit of a hearing. Most of these come from the Ang Kapatiran, the Liberal Party-led coalition, and the United Nationalist Alliance. On October 26, the commission added five more nominees to the list, mostly from the Democratic Party of the Philippines and the Social Justice Society. Chairman Sixto Brillantes said that the list would not be added with any more names and that it would be final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Candidates\nHowever, Brillantes announced on December 4 that the candidacy of Israel Virgines of the Bangon Pilipinas Party has been accepted. He submitted his candidacy past the 5:00\u00a0p.m. deadline on October 5 due to traffic and was originally disallowed from running but was reconsidered by the commission as he had previously run in the previous Senate elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Candidates\nThe lists below reflect UNA's removal of their three guest candidates from their slate effective February 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Opinion polls\nOpinion polling (locally known as \"surveys\") is carried out by two major polling firms: Social Weather Stations (SWS), and Pulse Asia, with a handful of minor polling firms. A typical poll asks a voter to name up to twelve persons one would vote for in the Senate election. Then, the results are presented with the candidates ranked in descending order of voting preferences. From these, one can find out which candidates may likely win, and which ticket would have the most winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Opinion polls\nThe first figure denotes the number of candidates from the party or coalition that made it to the top 12 in each survey; the figures inside the parenthesis are other candidates that made it within the margin of error of the 12th placed candidate. The figure of the party or coalition (except independents) that outright wins a majority of seats contested (7, if 12 seats are contested) is italicized, while the party or coalition that outright wins a majority of seats in the Senate (13) is boldfaced. Guest candidates are counted as if they are regular candidates of their respective slates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Opinion polls\nThese are the polls administered after October 5, 2012, the deadline for the filing of certificates of candidacies. When UNA removed their three guest candidates on February 21, surveys that were conducted on or after that date would no longer include those three within UNA's statistics, while those before that date included them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign\nWhile the candidates were legally allowed starting campaigning only on the 90th day before the election (February 12, 2013 for this election), the Supreme Court ruled in Lanot vs. COMELEC that the ban premature campaigning is unconstitutional as it infringes on a candidate's freedom of expression. This has led to some candidates to campaign even before the start of the campaign period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Before the campaign period\nEven before the start of the campaign period, candidates had begun releasing infomercials without explicitly stating that voters should vote for them; instead these were called \"advocacy ads\". The United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) is the first among the coalitions to air TV advertisements for their entire senatorial slate when ABS-CBN and GMA aired one of their advertisements on January 7, 2012. UNA's TV commercial featured minimal exposure to the candidates they share with the Liberal Party (LP)-led coalition, only showing them on the last frame. UNA also started having provincial sorties the next day, on January 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Before the campaign period\nPresident Aquino, in a provincial sortie in Mandaue, criticized UNA's early campaigning, saying that UNA \"have to prove more than our own candidates.\" UNA secretary-general Toby Tiangco answered that the Liberals have been airing political ads and holding provincial sorties way before UNA did, pointing out that Aquino's criticism was done at the LP's own provincial sortie. Tiangco also said the UNA candidates were faring better against the LP's. On mid-January, LP officials started working on their coalition's TV advertisement, and were looking for ways to include Aquino in the ad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Before the campaign period\nOn January 21, Secretary of Transportation of Communications Joseph Emilio Abaya said in a press conference at Malaca\u00f1ang Palace that Aquino himself reminded candidates from their coalition about campaign guidelines on appearing with UNA rallies. Abaya said a falling out with Aquino may be a bad enough penalty for candidates who will join UNA's rallies. Former president Joseph Estrada decried arrangement, saying that it is a virtual \"ban\" on common candidates. He further said that the ruling coalition is running scared, saying that \"They know that the results of the 2013 elections would reflect their chances in 2016.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0043-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Before the campaign period\nRepresentative Ben Evardone has challenged the UNA to clarify if they are \"fully supportive of President Aquino or has taken the role of the so-called united opposition that stands in the way of his daang matuwid (straight path) reform agenda\". Tiangco left it to the three common candidates on joining UNA sorties despite the consequences that will be imposed by the LP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Before the campaign period\nThe commission apologized to Teodoro Casi\u00f1o when the final draft of the ballot listed him as an \"independent\" when he is nominated by Makabayan. Chairman Sixto Brillantes expressed regret as the commission may not have the time to edit the ballot before they are printed, and noted that the counting of his votes would not be affected. Casi\u00f1o said that the error is unacceptable, and that there should not be mistakes in the practice of electoral rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Before the campaign period\nThe Liberal-led coalition renamed itself as \"Team Pinoy\", a play on words on \"pinoy\", an informal term used to denote the Filipino people (compare to \"canuck\"), and \"PNoy\", the administration's preferred reference to President Aquino, who has a \"Noynoy\" nickname. Angara said that \"we decided to use \u2018Pinoy\u2019 to send the message that this campaign is for all Filipinos.\" The coalition released its first TV advertisement the next day, with the \"Team PNoy\" spelling. Unlike UNA's advertisement, Team PNoy's advertisement included the three common candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Before the campaign period\nTeam PNoy expects the three common candidates to go to their campaign launch Manila's Plaza Miranda, the site of the Plaza Miranda bombing during the 1971 election, at the first day of the campaign period. Vice President Jejomar Binay personally picked Cebu City as the site of their campaign launch, to support suspended governor Gwendolyn Garcia. Loren Legarda had said that she will be not attending either rally, as she will celebrate the 80th birthday of her father with him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Rest of February\nTeam PNoy held their proclamation at Plaza Miranda in Quiapo, Manila. President Aquino presented all of the coalition's candidates, including the three common candidates with UNA. Meanwhile, the UNA proclamation rally proceeded at Plaza Independencia in Cebu City despite light rains. Vice President Binay, Senate President Enrile and former president Estrada presented the nine candidates in Cebu, the province with the highest number of registered voters in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Rest of February\nMeanwhile, Bangon Pilipinas candidate Eddie Villanueva opened his campaign at Malolos, Bulacan, while independent candidate Edward Hagedorn started his campaign with a press conference surrounded by Miss Earth candidates to emphasize his pro-environment agenda, which followed with a motorcade that ended at the Santo Ni\u00f1o Parish Church at Tondo, Manila. Makabayan candidate Teodoro Casi\u00f1o had a fun run that ended at the Senate building at Pasay to kick off his campaign. Samson Alcantara of the Social Justice Society opened his campaign outside his office at the corner of Taft Avenue and Padre Faura Street in Manila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Rest of February\nUNA threatened to drop Francis Escudero from their senatorial slate after he did not send a representative to UNA's proclamation rally, unlike fellow guest candidates Loren Legarda and Grace Poe. Escudero ignored the threat from UNA, maintaining that he would not be dictated by any party on the campaign, as he is running as an independent. The three were subsequently removed from the UNA senatorial line up on February 21, although President Estrada would still campaign for Poe in a personal capacity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Rest of February\nOn February 19, the commission investigated the campaign of Jamby Madrigal after she was charged with illegal campaigning for holding an online raffle for an iPad. Madrigal admitted the charge but said that her volunteers, who were mostly from the youth sector, were the ones behind the raffle and that she had no prior knowledge regarding it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Rest of February\nThe following day, when Team PNoy campaigned in Bacolod, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bacolod placed a tarpaulin in front of the San Sebastian Cathedral that urged people not to vote for candidates who supported the passage of the Responsible Parenthood and Reproductive Health Act of 2012, who they labeled as \"Team Patay\" (Team Death): Risa Hontiveros, Loren Legarda, Sonny Angara, Alan Peter Cayetano and Chiz Escudero of Team PNoy, Jack Enrile of UNA and Teddy Casi\u00f1o of Makabayan, while encouraging to vote for \"Team Buhay\" (Team Life): Cynthia Villar, Sonny Trillanes and Koko Pimentel of Team PNoy, and Gringo Honasan, JV Ejercito and Mitos Magsaysay of UNA. The commission ordered that the poster be taken down for being oversized. Bishop Vicente Navara said the diocese will just replace it with a poster that follows the commission's rules. The diocese cut the tarpaulin in half, but the commission would still press charges as it is still illegal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 1019]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, Rest of February\nMore than two weeks after her aborted campaign raffle, Jamby Madrigal went to the commission's main office in Intramuros to explain her side on the alleged illegal campaign violation for the aborted iPad raffle. Madrigal personally apologized for the raffle and asked the commission to examine the social circumstances of similar raffles occurring on social medial websites; Chairman Brillantes answered that the campaign activities on social networks are covered by the Omnibus Election Code.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, March\nThe erstwhile two-week standoff in Lahad Datu, Sabah between supporters of the Sultan of Sulu Jamalul Kiram III and the Malaysian authorities erupted in a gunfight that caused 14 deaths on March 1. President Aquino was in a campaign sortie with his ticket on San Fernando, Pampanga when the gunfight erupted, and he had to delay his appearance on the stage as he was monitoring the situation. In an interview at DZMM radio station, Secretary of Interior and Local Government Mar Roxas reiterated the government's position that the Sulu Sultanate supporters to leave Sabah, noting that the followers of Kiram were \"hard-headed\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, March\nTeam PNoy candidates defended the government's actions, faulting that the Kirams for what has transpired, and said that they should have followed the president and have withdrawn from Sabah to prevent bloodshed. Ramon Magsaysay Jr. said that \"If there is a firefight that is Mr. Kiram's problem. They should've withdrawn,\" while Koko Pimentel said that while it is the government's duty \"is to protest the abuse of its nationals, But a leader [Aquino] should also be able to direct them to do something especially if it's for their own good.\" Campaign manager Franklin Drilon later stated that Team PNoy would take a common stand on the conflict, and will support the president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, March\nThe candidates of UNA, on the other hand, criticized the government's actions. In a political rally at Cagayan de Oro, Richard Gordon labeled the response as \"severely woeful, anti-Filipino, and subservient to Malaysia.\" Campaign manager Toby Tiangco decried Roxas' \"hard-headed\" remarks as \"arrogant.\" Gregorio Honasan said \"they were being confronted with possible case, possible charges once they get back home. So, it\u2019s mixed signals. I\u2019m sure that was not what the President meant.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, March\nMeanwhile, the Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order to prevent the commission from enforcing its order in taking down the oversized poster in the Bacolod cathedral. In a surprise move, the Supreme Court stopped the implementation of the controversial Reproductive Health Law by issuing a status quo ante order for 120 days. The court will further determine the constitutionality of the law. The Catholic Church and several pro-life support groups praised the decision as a \"temporary victory\". Several members of the clergy have urged to backing of anti-RH legislators in the midterm polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, April\nThe International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) through its Philippine co-partnered media group, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) released details of offshore accounts listed under Senator Manny Villar and UNA senatorial candidate JV Ejercito based in the British Virgin Islands, a known tax haven. Villar later stated, that he owned the BVI-listed, Awesome Dragon Holdings Limited which was incorporated in 2007. Villar, the husband of Team PNoy senatorial candidate Cynthia Villar further pointed out that, \"a ready corporate vehicle for any strategic multinational business opportunity that may become available.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, April\nHe denied however that the company was used as a business front to avoid paying proper taxation as that company had an authorized capital of $1 and he listed this in his annual Statement of Assets, Liabilities and Net worth (SALN). Ejercito, meanwhile slammed the ICIJ report linking him to a BVI-listed company, Ice Bell Properties Limited, incorporated in 1999. Ejercito question the release of the report but did not confirm or deny the said BVI-listed company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0057-0002", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, April\nHe stated in a written reply, \"highly suspicious considering the ongoing electoral campaign of which I am one of the leading contenders among the UNA senatorial candidates. I have held high respect to (sic) the PCIJ as an institution. I hope that you will not allow yourself to fall in (sic) the manipulative efforts of desperate people in (sic) dirty politics.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, April\nIn the final weeks of the month, advocates and dissenters of the reproductive health law endorsed two sets of candidates for the Senate. The White Vote movement led by El Shaddai leader Mike Velarde and 40 Catholic lay organizations endorsed six UNA senatorial candidates Richard Gordon, Nancy Binay, Juan Miguel Zubiri, Gregorio Honasan, Mitos Magsaysay and JV Ejercito and three Team PNoy senatorial candidates, Aquilino Pimentel III, Antonio Trillanes IV and Cynthia Villar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0058-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, April\nThe Purple Vote movement composed of advocates for the reproductive health law endorsed seven Team PNoy senatorial candidates: Sonny Angara, Bam Aquino, Alan Peter Cayetano, Chiz Escudero, Risa Hontiveros, Loren Legarda, and Grace Poe. Former Health Secretary and lead convener of the Purple Vote movement Esperanza Cabral stated that although the main basis of their endorsement was on the passage of the RH law, the endorsed candidates consistently support other progressive measures including the sin tax reform law and the freedom of information bill and are known for their integrity. Noticeable in the endorsement is the non-appearance of UNA senatorial candidate Jack Enrile and Makabayan senatorial candidate Teodoro Casi\u00f1o both of whom were blacklisted under the Team Patay poster by the Bacolod cathedral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, April\nSecurity during the electoral campaign was heightened on both sides after members of the communist rebels of the New People\u2019s Army ambushed the convoy of Gingoog Mayor Ruthie Guingona, wife of former Vice President Teofisto Guingona, Jr., leaving the convoy driver and his brother dead. National condemnation of the ambush came from both sides of the political spectrum. Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte, Team PNoy campaign manager Franklin Drilon, and UNA campaign manager Toby Tiangco condemned the attack on Guingona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, May\nLoren Legarda was accused by self-styled public interest advocate Louis Biraogo of allegedly failing to declare her possession of a condominium unit at Park Avenue, New York City for four years until 2011. In addition, Biraogo accused the senator of trying to hide her alleged properties at Forbes Park, Makati. Biraogo detailed that Legarda paid US$700,000 (or 36 million pesos in 2006 exchange rates) for the Park Avenue property, and that she did not include the property as real property assets in her statements of assets, liabilities and net worth (SALN) from 2006 to 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0060-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, May\nThe next day, Legarda called a press conference to deny that she failed to declare the Park Avenue property, presenting a document signed by her lawyers saying that the property has been included in the SALN since 2007. Legarda added that she purchased the property while she was married to former Batangas governor Antonio Leviste. Legarda spent the greater part of press conference accusing of a certain \"Willie F.\", sending journalists \"column feeds\" related to the Park Avenue property.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0060-0002", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, May\nWhen pressed by journalists on who is Willie F.'s client, Legarda only hinted that the client was a male reelectionist senator, nicknamed \"Boy Kuryente\" (literally \"bum steer\") who was behind the rumors of President Aquino's mental health during the 2010 presidential campaign. President Aquino has spoken to Legarda and Francis Escudero, while Mar Roxas has spoken to Alan Peter Cayetano, allegedly the one behind the campaign against Legarda, to set aside their differences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Campaign, May\nSeveral religious groups have released their endorsements in the Senate election. These religious groups command a voting bloc, and is crucial in close races. The Iglesia ni Cristo reportedly endorsed seven Team PNoy candidates and five from UNA, while the Kingdom of Jesus Christ endorsed six Team PNoy candidates, five from UNA and independent candidate Edward Hagedorn. The Iglesia ni Cristo reportedly commands five to eight million voters nationwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Issues\nRepublic Act No. 10351 (commonly known as the Sin Tax Reform Law) was approved by President Benigno Aquino III on December 19, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Results, Per candidate, Unofficial tallies\nTelevision networks, election watchdogs, and other bodies may provide their own tallies from their copies of election returns. These are unofficial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Results, Per candidate, Unofficial tallies\nThese are from the tabulated election returns; in theory, the results here and the official one above, which is tabulated from the certificates of canvass, should be identical, once all of the votes are accounted for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Results, Per candidate, Unofficial tallies\nThe results from the COMELEC's \"Transparency\" server and the tally done by the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting are currently identical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Aftermath\nThe Commission on Elections allowed the media and other groups to use a server (the \"Transparency\" server) that would have tallied results directly from election returns; these were the first numbers that the media disseminated as the commission has yet to canvass results from the certificates of canvass, which came from the \"MBOC\" (Municipal Board of Canvassers) server, which is then transmitted to the provincial canvassers, than finally to the Commission on Elections en banc, which sits as the National Board of Canvassers (NBOC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Aftermath\nThe commission en banc convened as the NBOC on Monday, May 13 at a tent at the Philippine International Convention Center grounds. After initializing the Consolidated Canvassing System (CCS) on election night (Monday), the NBOC adjourned for morning the next day. Chairman Sixto Brillantes said that the NBOC is expected to proclaim the 12 winning senators on Wednesday night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Aftermath\nHowever, on Wednesday morning, Brillantes said the intermittent telecommunication signals in several towns slowed down the pace of the collection of the results. He then said that the plan of proclaiming all 12 senators on Wednesday night would be adjusted to only six winners. On Wednesday afternoon, the commission canceled the proclamation of any winning senator, with Brillantes saying that \"We are still analyzing what is happening on the field,\" adding that the proclamation would be held \"most probably tomorrow.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Aftermath\nOn Thursday, Brillantes said that the commission en banc will decide on a motion by UNA deferring the proclamation; if the commission denies UNA's motion, a proclamation of \"five to six\" winners will proceed by Thursday night. That night, the commission en banc sitting as the NBOC rejected UNA's motion to defer the partial proclamation, leading the way for the proclamation of the first six candidates leading in their official tally: Grace Poe, Loren Legarda, Francis Escudero, Alan Peter Cayetano, Nancy Binay and Sonny Angara. Binay refused to appear at the proclamation after the UNA motion was rejected. The NBOC based their proclamation on the 22% of the certificates of canvass, or about 13 million votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Aftermath\nThe NBOC proclaimed three more senators on Friday evening, basing it on 109 out of 304 certificates of canvass: Bam Aquino, Koko Pimentel and Antonio Trillanes. Only Aquino was present at the proclamation. Trillanes was out of town, and Brilantes said that Pimentel was ill. Pimentel opposed the proclamation, calling it \"premature\" and \"wrong\"; Pimentel explained that the winning candidates should only be proclaimed if the votes not yet canvassed would no longer theoretically affect the results. Trillanes would have gone to the proclamation if he was not out of town, and while he said that he respected Pimentel's decision, he said that it was an argument \"about formalities\". Due to stringent criticism, Brillantes threatened to resign if the first six senators proclaimed would eventually lose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Aftermath\nThe NBOC proclaimed the final three senators on Saturday night: Cynthia Villar, JV Ejercito and Gregorio Honasan, after only the overseas absentee ballots remained to be canvassed. Honasan's 705,000-vote lead against 13th-place Richard J. Gordon was deemed to be statistically impossible to be overtaken with only about 350,000 votes left to be counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Aftermath\nOn June 6, the commission released the final tally for the Senate election after the remaining uncounted votes can no longer affect the ranking of each candidate. Poe broke the record of Bong Revilla in 2010 for the most votes received in any election in the Philippines, by winning more than 20 million votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Reactions\nGrace Poe being finishing first in the unofficial counts ahead of longtime frontrunners Loren Legarda, Francis Escudero and Alan Peter Cayetano was seen as a surprise; Poe herself said that \"I am surprised. I didn\u2019t know this would happen.\" Poe credited her mother Susan Roces, Escudero (former spokesman of Fernando Poe, Jr. during his 2004 presidential campaign), President Benigno Aquino III, Mar Roxas and former president Joseph Estrada. Pollsters such as Social Weather Stations (SWS) and Pulse Asia acknowledged that they did not foresee Poe's number one finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0073-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Reactions\nPulse Asia fellow Ana Maria Tabunda further stated that while they missed the order of the twelve winning candidates, they managed to predict all 12 who appeared to be winning; meanwhile, SWS president Mahar Mangahas said that \"It was enough for us to have accurately predicted the 9-3 results even if we did not get their exact rankings.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Reactions\nNancy Binay's victory, which came despite the enormous social media bashing such as the \"Anyare?\" (What happened) meme pointing out Binay being a neophyte against Risa Hontiveros' accomplishments while in the lower house, Binay's refusal to participate in debates, and a satirical article stating that Binay sought a \"temporary protection order\" from the courts to prevent her from engaging in a debate, according to Tony La Vi\u00f1a, dean of the Ateneo School of Government, may have been attributed to the voters seeing Binay as an \"underdog\" to Hontiveros, and might have backfired against Hontiveros and helped Binay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0074-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Reactions\nLa Vi\u00f1a explained that Binay's victory was due to the fact that \"she never took the bait on all the attacks against her,\" and that the Vice President just shrugged off the anti-Binay comments. Political analyst Malou Tiquia also noted that Hontiveros' campaign message was already used in the 2010 election where she finished 13th and lost, and that the campaign message softened her image to voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On Poe finishing first\nPoe finishing first in the election was attributed by University of the Philippines Diliman (UP Diliman) assistant political science professor Nicole Curato to a very disciplined campaign via a clear association with her father Fernando Poe Jr. Curato added that while she was a Team PNoy candidate, some quarters in the United Nationalist Alliance openly supported Poe in the campaign, contributing to her victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On Poe finishing first\nPoe's #1 finish would catapult her to higher political ambitions in the 2016. UP Diliman political analyst Prospero de Vera expects Poe to be a candidate in the 2016 presidential or vice presidential election. If Poe joins the Liberal Party, de Vera said that President Aquino would expect a continuation of his \"Daang Matuwid\" (straight path) program, while noting out that he does not see a Mar Roxas-Poe tandem. De Vera instead sees a continued partnership of the Liberals with the Nacionalistas, with Poe and Alan Peter Cayetano as prospective running mates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On Poe finishing first\nHer final total of more than 20 million votes gives her the largest mandate to any Filipino in history, beating the record previously held by Bong Revilla in the 2010 Senate election. Poe eventually ran in the 2016 presidential election, losing to Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, and finishing behind Roxas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On who won the election\nIn his column in the Philippine Daily Inquirer, Amando Doronila noted that while the election can be seen as a victory for President Aquino, it should not be seen as a rejection of the opposition, as UNA managed to win three Senate seats, with the voters rebuffing Aquino's plea for a sweep of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0078-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On who won the election\nDoronila added that if Poe and Legarda ran on the UNA ticket, they could've won as well, and that the Team PNoy victory was a \"hollow victory\" as the Liberal Party needed the help of the Nacionalista Party and the Nationalist People's Coalition, with the Liberals only controlling a small nucleus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0079-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On bloc voting\nArchbishop-emeritus Oscar V. Cruz, on the \"Catholic vote\" said that Catholics \"were left still free to vote whom they wanted\". This comes at the heels of seven out of twelve candidates endorsed by the White Vote movement by Mike Velarde were winning, five of the six \"Team Buhay\" (\"team life\") candidates winning, and four of seven \"Team Patay\" (\"team death\") candidates winning. Bishops Arturo Bastes, Honesto Ongtioco, Martin Jumaod, and Mario Peralta, blamed the lack of unity amongst Catholic voters on \"money politics\", such as vote-buying, while Cagayan de Oro archbishop Antonio Ledesma blamed the Commission on Elections such as faulty electoral rolls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0080-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On the 60\u201330\u201310 ratio\nAfter all 12 senators were proclaimed, Ateneo de Manila University mathematics professor Lex Muga pointed out that, in any given time, the National Canvass Report had 60% of the votes go to Team PNoy, 30% to UNA, and 10% to other parties. Muga said there should have been variation amongst certificates of canvass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0080-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On the 60\u201330\u201310 ratio\nUNA campaign manager Toby Tiangco said that the percentages could not be the same for every place in the Philippines; meanwhile, Team PNoy spokesperson Miro Quimbo said that it \"is a result of a great message campaign led by the President himself and an aggressive ground war pursued by local parties allied with the President.\" Chairman Brillantes, for his part, while originally dismissing it as mere \"trending\", said that he would order the commission's information technology personnel on Muga's findings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0081-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On the 60\u201330\u201310 ratio\nMichael Purugganan, Dean of Science in New York University explained that \"Nothing fishy is going on. It is just poor math education,\" adding that \"each canvass represents a very large sample from the total votes. And therefore each canvass would give a result that would be very, very close to the 60-30-10 national average.\" Purugganan cited the law of large numbers \"which says that the larger your sample size is for an event, the closer your result from that sample will reflect the entire population.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0081-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Analysis, On the 60\u201330\u201310 ratio\nPurugganan pointed out that once a person goes down to precinct level, the vote totals will show more differences from the national total. The Rappler website has published a series of article refuting the 60\u201330\u201310 theory: one showed a regional tally, and tallies from Metro Manila and eight cities which showed the ratios start to deviate from the national average once specific places are tallied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0082-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Election for the Senate President\nAs early in April, Miriam Defensor Santiago said that the Senate President for the 16th Congress of the Philippines will come from Team PNoy, and that it will shall come from its oldest members; she tightened the contenders to Sergio Osme\u00f1a III, Franklin Drilon, TG Guingona and Cynthia Villar. Osme\u00f1a has said he is \"has no interest\" to the position, while Drilon has said that the presidency will be decided by the 24 senators. After all twelve senators-elect were proclaimed, Santiago narrowed down the contenders to between Drilon and Minority Floor Leader Alan Peter Cayetano. Meanwhile, Budget Secretary, Florencio Abad, a high-ranking Liberal Party official, said that they will not replace Enrile at the lame duck session from June 5 to 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0083-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Election for the Senate President\nHowever, the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA)-backed senators doubted if the component parties of Team PNoy can last up to the convening of Congress. Gregorio Honasan noted that in the opening of the 15th Congress, no administration candidate was agreed upon, and Enrile emerged as the compromise candidate. Meanwhile, a \"senior official of the Liberal Party (LP)\" told the Rappler news website that Drilon is almost sure to be the new Senate President, with the positions of Majority Floor Leader and committee chairmanships are the ones being negotiated. Furthermore, the LP source said that Drilon is expected \"at least 12 votes\", five \"swing votes\", six votes for Enrile, and that the voting would go from 13\u201311 to 18\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0084-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Election for the Senate President\nLater that week, Drilon, quoting Nacionalista Party President Manuel Villar, said that the Nacionalistas will stay in the coalition, and that the Nacionalistas and the Liberals will have a common candidate for the Senate presidency. Drilon also said that on the matter of committee assignments, senators will be given the committee of which they are an expert of, per usual Senate practice. Alan Peter Cayetano, for his part, said that \"The coalition of the NP and the LP is growing. The support for Senator Drilon is growing.\" Cayetano also said that the two parties might have a common candidate in 2016 presidential election, \"If two of the three biggest parties are working together.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0085-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Election for the Senate President\nOn May 2013, Drilon pronounced that UNA, quoting Enrile, \"will not be obstructionist\", and that Enrile gave permission to Drilon in seeking out to the members of the so-called \"macho bloc\", the senators who are identified to be close with Enrile. Senate president pro tempore Jinggoy Estrada confirmed the meeting of Drilon and Enrile, saying \"I have already given my word to Senate President Enrile. If the Senate President will go down, I will go down with him.\" Estrada himself later met with Drilon, reiterating his support for Enrile, and that Enrile will be their candidate for Senate president, and with his imminent defeat, be the Minority Floor Leader. Estrada also predicted that the administration coalition will eventually disintegrate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0086-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Election for the Senate President\nUpon the resumption of the one-day lame duck session on June 5, Enrile resigned from the Senate presidency \"as a matter of personal honor and dignity\". As per Senate rules, Senate president pro tempore Estrada succeeded Enrile as acting Senate president for the rest of the day without a new election. Later in the day, Estrada told the press that Enrile told him that he would like to be the minority leader in an impending Drilon Senate presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0086-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Election for the Senate President\nEstrada remarked that there are only six of them in the pro-Enrile bloc, and that Bong Revilla was considering joining Drilon's bloc in the 16th Congress. Also, Pia Cayetano was reportedly targeting the majority leadership, her brother Alan Peter the Senate president pro tempore post; Loren Legarda, who had previously served in both two positions, begged off, saying that she is \"not interested\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235496-0087-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Senate election, Election for the Senate President\nOn July 22, the day of convening of the 16th Congress, Juan Edgardo Angara and Grace Poe nominated Drilon for the Senate presidency, while JV Ejercito and Nancy Binay nominated Enrile. With Enrile and Drilon voting for each other, all other UNA members and Tito Sotto of the Nationalist People's Coalition voting for Enrile, others voting for Drilon, and Miriam Defensor Santiago being absent, this led to the election of Drilon as Senate president, with 17 senators voting for him, and six voting for Enrile, and 1 absence. Ralph Recto was elected Senate president pro tempore, Alan Peter Cayetano was elected majority floor leader, and Enrile became minority floor leader upon losing to Drilon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235497-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Super Liga season\nThe 2013 PSL Season was the maiden season of the Philippine Super Liga (PSL), the first professional volleyball league in the Philippines. The PSL began as a women's league during its inaugural tournament, the Invitational conference. A men's division was added for the succeeding tournament, the Grand Prix conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235497-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Super Liga season\nThe TMS-Philippine Army Lady Troopers were the first PSL champions, winning both tournaments held during the season. For the men's division, the PLDT myDSL Speed Boosters emerged as the first champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235497-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Super Liga season, Invitational Conference\nThe Invitational Conference, held from July 7, 2013 to July 28, 2013. It was the maiden tournament of the PSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235497-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Super Liga season, Grand Prix Conference\nThe Grand Prix Conference was held from November 10, 2013 to December 14, 2013. For this conference (women's), each team was allowed to include two import players in the line up. A men's division was also introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235497-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine Super Liga season, Grand Prix Conference, Women's division\nFive teams from the Invitational conference continued in the Grand Prix conference. The PCSO Bingo Milyonaryo Puffins were replaced by the RC Cola Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 74], "content_span": [75, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election\nBarangay elections was held on Monday, October 28, 2013. The election shall elect the Punong Barangay, more commonly known as barangay captains, and members of the Sangguniang Barangay, or barangay council, in 42,028 barangays throughout the Philippines whose terms start on November 30, 2013. Barangays are the smallest local government unit in the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election\nElections for Sangguniang Kabataan, known as the SK Chairman, and members of the Katipunan ng mga Kabataan were originally scheduled to be held at the same time but on September 24, 2013 the Philippine Congress voted to postpone the elections for at least a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election\nThese elections shall conclude the 2013 election cycle that started in May for the members of the Philippine Congress and provincial, city and municipal officials. Upon their election, barangay captains shall hold indirect elections for their cities and municipalities representations in the local councils and provincial boards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Background\nRepublic Act No. 9340 mandates that synchronized elections for the Barangay and SK elections to be held every three years on the last Monday of October. Presently (as of October 2013), there are 42,028 barangays across the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Background\nSeveral proposals have been made to postpone the elections. Fourteen bills were proposed in the 15th Philippine Congress to postpone the election to a variety of dates. COMELEC Chairman Sixto Brillantes has proposed postponing the elections to 2014 or early 2015. Postponement would require amending Republic Act No. 9340 by an act of Congress, signed by the president. Philippine president Benigno Aquino III is opposed to postponing the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Preparations, Postponement of the Sangguniang Kabataan elections\nBecause of allegations that the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) is a \"breeding ground for political dynasty and exposes the youth to corruption and the practice of traditional politicians\" known colloquially as trapos, on September 24, 2013, the Congress of the Philippines passed a bill to (a) postpone the scheduled October 2013 SK elections until sometime between October 28, 2014 and February 23, 2015 and (b) leave vacant all the SK positions until new officers are elected. The bill explicitly prohibits the appointing of officials to fill the vacant positions. Sen. Francis Escudero said the no-holder of officials would technically abolish the SK. The 10% funds from the Internal Revenue Allotment designated for SK activities will be used by the barangays for youth development programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Preparations, Special elections in Zamboanga City and Bohol\nThe Commission on Elections decided to postpone the elections in Zamboanga City in October 8 as the city was still reeling from the effects of the Zamboanga City crisis and of massive floods On the aftermath of the 2013 Bohol earthquake, Chairman Sixto Brillantes announced on October 21 that the commission also postponed the elections in the entire province of Bohol. The next day, commission voted to hold the elections in both places to be held on November 25, or five days before the terms of incumbents expire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Preparations, Gun ban and official campaign period\nA gun ban went into effect on September 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Preparations, Gun ban and official campaign period\nThe official campaign period was one week, from October 18 to 26, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Preparations, Gun ban and official campaign period\nFor the special elections in Zamboanga City and Bohol, the election period and gun ban went into effect from October 26 to December 10, 2013, filing of COCs was November 7\u201313, 2013, and the campaign period was one week, November 15\u201323, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Election\nThe election will be a manual election and not automated as the May 2013 national elections were. The ballots will be blank and voters will be required to write in the name of the candidates that they want to vote for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235498-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine barangay election, Election\nIn August 2013, there were 54,051,626 registered to vote in the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election\nA general election was held in the Philippines on May 13, 2013. It was a midterm election\u2014the officials elected will be sworn in on June 30, 2013, midway through President Benigno Aquino III's term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election\nBeing elected are 12 senators (half of the Senate), and all 229 district members of the House of Representatives. These national elections were held on the same day as local and gubernatorial elections, as well as a general election in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. In total, there were 18,022 national and local positions up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election\nBarangay officials, including barangay captains, were elected on October 28, 2013. The elections for SK officials were held at the same day, but on September 24, 2013, the Congress of the Philippines voted to postpone of the election for at least a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Registration of voters and candidates\nThe Commission on Elections (COMELEC) ended the year-long registration of new voters and voters transferring residences nationwide, apart from the general registration of voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) on October 31, 2012. Due to the commission not allowing an extension of registration, COMELEC offices nationwide were swamped with people on the last day of registration, although the process was mostly peaceful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Registration of voters and candidates\nThe COMELEC held a week-long separate registration for prospective candidates starting from October 1. The commission is expected to release a final list of candidates by October 6. Candidates running for the Senate should file certificates of candidacies at the commission's main office at Intramuros, while those running for the other positions should file at their local COMELEC offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Registration of voters and candidates\nThe commission completed the cleansing of the voters list in the ARMM, rejecting 236,489 names. Most were either double registrants or were too young to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Absentee voting\nRegistered voters who are members of the military, police, civil service and media who cannot vote at their voting precincts on election day may opt to register for local absentee voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Absentee voting, Overseas\nThe commission removed 238,557 overseas absentee voters from the voters' list after failing to manifest their intention to vote. Out of about 915,000 overseas voters, more than 200,000 had not voted in two preceding elections and were sent notices; only 29 replied and were not removed from the voters' list. However, after being slammed by the overseas Filipinos on their disenfranchisement, the commission reinstated the 238,557 overseas absentee voters; they also extended the deadline for the period of filing of the manifestation of intent to vote until election day itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Absentee voting, Overseas\nOverseas absentee voting started on April 13, and continued until election day. Depending on the diplomatic mission, a voter may vote personally or via the mail, and via manually or via the automated system. Voting in Saudi Arabia began on April 16 after the Saudi customs refused to release the voting paraphernalia in time for April 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Absentee voting, Local\nMembers of the police, military, members of the civil service and the media who had previously registered for local absentee voting voted for the Senate and party-list elections from April 28 to 30. Those which failed to vote at this period are still eligible to vote on election day itself. Out of the 18,332 voters that registered, 12,732 were found to be qualified by the commission and were allowed to vote. However, the commission said that the turnout was low; chairman Sixto Brillantes rued the low turnout, pointing out that the election was not on a presidential election year as the cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Campaigning\nOn January 13, the election period began. This allowed the commission to impose prohibitions on 24 activities, including a nationwide ban on guns and other deadly weapons on that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Campaigning\nThe commission released regulations on online campaigning on January 16. The COMELEC resolution stipulated that online propaganda can only be published on a website thrice a week, and allows advertisements in the form of pop-ups, banners and the like. Campaigning via social websites such as Twitter and Facebook would not be regulated. This is the first election the commission has regulated online campaigning. The commission dramatically reduced the amount of airtime candidates and parties can use during the campaign period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Campaigning\nPreviously, the commission imposed a 120-minute airtime limit on every TV station and 180 minutes on radio stations; for 2013, the commission capped the cumulative airtime to 120 minutes on TV and 180 minutes on radio for all networks. This was a reversion on the 2004, 2007 and 2010 elections, and returned to the original 2001 limit. The Fair Elections Act was not clear on whether the 120 minutes for TV and 180 minutes for radio were for every station or for all stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Campaigning\nThe commission, in a cost-saving measure, announced on January 18 that they ruled to use plastic seals with serial numbers instead of padlocks in securing ballot boxes. Chairman Sixto Brillantes remarked that padlocks are bulky and expensive, as compared to plastic seals cannot be tampered with and are cheaper. The commission expects to save more than 50% if plastic seals will be used; plastic seals would cost the commission P14 million, while padlocks would have cost them P34.2 million. The commission also announced that voters would no longer place their thumbprints on the ballot; instead signatures would be used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Campaigning\nOn January 23, the commission announced that it will be regulating the use of political colors, logos and insignias during the campaign. It monitored television personalities on whether they are being paid to wear colors that are connected to certain candidates. The commission also imposed a right of reply provision, that would give equal time and space for charges against candidates. This was also the first time the commission imposed the rule; the rule has been heavily opposed by the press, but Commission Rene Sarmiento said the rule balances the freedom of expression and public interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Campaigning\nOn mid-April, the Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order on limiting the airtime of political advertisements by candidates by the Commission on Elections. Voting 9\u20136, the high court favored the petition by Team PNoy senatorial candidate Alan Peter Cayetano to halt the implementation of Resolution No. 9615 and its amendment, Resolution No. 9631.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Campaigning\nThe airtime limit presently stands at an aggregate of 120 minutes in all TV networks and 180 minutes in all radio stations for all national candidates and an aggregate of 60 minutes in all TV networks and 90 minutes in all radio stations for all local candidates. Sixto Brillantes, dismayed and the high court rulings adverse to the election commission threatened to resign but later relented after a meeting with President Aquino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Source code\nSmartmatic, the source of the machines that were used in the automated elections, is embroiled in a dispute with Dominion Voting Systems over the ownership of the software that were used by the machines. This source code is mandated to be released by law. By early April, chairman Sixto Brillantes said that the deal to release the source was \"97 percent\" of being completed. However, on late April, Brillantes said that \"I\u2019m no longer interested because it\u2019s too late already.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Source code\nElection day is so close and even if they give us the source code now, it can no longer be reviewed for lack of time.\" Brillantes assured the public that despite the nonexistence of the source code, the machines can still work via the binary code. On early May, senatorial candidate Richard Gordon petitioned to the Supreme Court the commission to order the latter to reveal the source code to local review groups. Gordon, who authored the law mandating the automated elections, said that the commission does not have the discretion on whether or not political parties can review the source code.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Source code\nA few days after Gordon's petition, or exactly a week before the election, Brillantes announced that Smartmatic and Dominion signed an agreement releasing the source code, and that it would be presented to the public on May 8. Critics scored that the late release of the source code is not possible with only a few days remaining before the elections. On May 9, Dominion turned the source code, which was in a CD, to the commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Source code\nDominion, the commission and SLI Global Solutions, which had certified the source code months earlier, encrypted the source code on a computer provided by the commission. The source code was then burned anew to a separate CD-R, placed inside a safety box, and was delivered to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to be kept in a vault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Bans, Gun ban\nThe commission issued a nationwide gun ban that started on January 13, and will last for five months, until June 12, 2013, or a month after the election. By April 19, the number of violations to the gun ban was at 2,053.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Bans, Liquor ban\nThe commission also issued an \"expanded\" liquor ban: instead of banning intoxicating substances on election day and election eve, the commission included the four days preceding the election. Foreigners and certain hotels and similar establishments were exempted. However, the Supreme Court of the Philippines issued a restraining order reverting to the two-day liquor ban after it upheld a petition by the Food and Beverage Inc. and International Wines and Spirits Association. The commission then withdrew its resolution instituting the five-day liquor ban, reverting the ban to two days as originally intended by law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Bans, Money ban\nIn order to curb vote buying, the commission issued a resolution prohibiting bank withdrawals of more than 100,000 pesos. However, Secretary of Justice Leila de Lima expressed reservations on the constitutionality of the so-called \"money ban\", and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has explicitly stated that it would not comply with the commission's resolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Preparations, Bans, Money ban\nThe commission subsequently released a supplemental resolution amending the \"money ban\", which gives the banks the discretion on whether to allow bank withdrawals or not. However, the Supreme Court issued a status quo ante order against the \"money ban\", acting upon a petition by the Bankers Association of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results\nPolls opened at 7:00 and there were over 52 million eligible voters to vote for the more than 18,000 positions. In addition, police and military forces were put on higher alert for expectations of violence which had resulted in about 60 deaths since campaigning began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Congress\nThe congressmen elected in 2013, together with those senators elected in the 2010 elections, shall comprise the 16th Congress of the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Congress, Senate\nTwelve of the 24 seats in the Senate, or the seats up in odd-numbered years, are up for election, including the seat vacated in 2010 by the current president, Benigno Aquino III. Elections to the Senate are via plurality-at-large voting: the voter having 12 votes per candidate, and the candidates with the 12 highest number of votes being elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Congress, House of Representatives\nAll 292 seats in the House of Representatives are up. A voter had two votes in the House of Representatives elections: one for party-list representatives, which shall comprise at most 20% of the seats, and another for district representatives, which shall comprise the rest of the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Congress, House of Representatives\nElections are via first past the post system: the candidate with the highest number of votes wins that district's seat in the House of Representatives. There are 234 seats to be disputed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Congress, House of Representatives\nElections are via a closed list modified Hare quota system with a 2% election threshold. A voter may vote for one party. The parties are then ranked in descending order of votes. In the first round of seat allocation, the parties that win at least 2% of the vote win one seat each. In the second round, the remaining seats are distributed via the Hare quota, with remainders disregarded; however, a party may not win more than three seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0025-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Congress, House of Representatives\nIf the number of seats that are already distributed does not equal the number of seats reserved for party-list representatives, one seat shall be awarded to every party that did not win seats in the second round, including parties that did not surpass the 2% threshold, until the seats reserved for party-list representatives are filled up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Congress, House of Representatives\nMajor parties are prohibited from running in the party-list election, which was instituted to allow marginalized sectors of society to join the political process. With 234 district seats, and party-list seats should comprise at most 20% of the seats, there were 58 seats up for election", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao elections\nOriginally scheduled for 2011, Congress postponed the election to 2013 in order for reforms to be put in place and for the regional election to be synchronized with the 2013 election. All seats of regional elected officials are up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Results, Local elections\nAll local government units (LGUs) had their elections on this day. Positions up are mayors, vice mayors, councilors, and if applicable, governors, vice governors and board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Controversies\nElection watchdog AES Watch has called the 2013 elections \"a technology and political disaster\" due to several controversies, including premature proclamation of candidates and irregular decisions made during the canvassing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Controversies, PCOS transmission issues\nOn the day of elections, an estimated 18,000 voting machines, representing a quarter of the total 78,000 machines, experienced problems in transmitting the voting results. The Comelec claimed that the problems were caused not by the machines themselves, but by corrupted compact flash cards and issues with the cellular network coverage. Comelec Chairman Sixto Brillantes claimed that the Comelec was aware of problems with cellular network coverage, but deliberately kept it from the public until after the election. The poll watchdog AES Watch issued a statement on May 18, saying that up to 8.6 million votes had been affected, or possibly disenfranchised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Controversies, PCOS transmission issues\nPhilippine Long Distance Telephone Company, the Philippines' largest telecommunications company, released a statement dismissing the Comelec's allegations of cellular network problems, saying that the combined networks of Smart Communications and Sun Cellular covered every city and municipality in the country, and no unusually heavy traffic was recorded on election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Controversies, PCOS transmission issues\nThe Comelec failed to meet its self-imposed deadline of proclaiming winners in the senatorial election 48 hours after the end of the voting period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Controversies, Senatorial winners proclamation\nThe COMELEC proclaimed the first six senatorial winners of the election on May 16, though only 20 percent of election results had been canvassed. Three more winners were proclaimed the following day. The winners were proclaimed alphabetically rather than by the number of votes garnered, since the vote totals had not yet been finalized. Winning candidates Nancy Binay and Koko Pimentel declined to attend the proclamation, on the advice of their lawyers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Controversies, Lack of source code review\nFollowing the election, a poll watchdog alleged that the Comelec failed to do a review of the source code for voting machines used in the election, in violation of the Automated Election Systems Law. Under the law, the technical committee must have documented certification that the all hardware and software components were operating properly at least three months before the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235499-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine general election, Controversies, Vote-rigging speculation\nSpeculations of election fraud turned up following the elections, as the vote canvassing revealed a \"60-30-10\" pattern of votes\u2014wherein administration, opposition, and independent senatorial candidates consistently obtained 60 percent, 30 percent, and 10 percent of the votes respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections\nGubernatorial elections were held in the Philippines on May 13, 2013. All provinces elected their provincial governors for three-year terms who will be inaugurated on June 30, 2013, after their proclamation. Governors that are currently serving their third consecutive terms are prohibited from running as governors (they may run in any other position).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections\nHighly urbanized cities and independent component cities such as Angeles City, Cebu City, and Metro Manila with the municipality of Pateros are outside the jurisdiction of any province and thus won't elect for governors of their mother provinces (Pampanga and Cebu, for Angeles and Cebu City, respectively). These cities and Pateros would elect mayors instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Summary\n*Election results for Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino, as the Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan did not win governorships in 2010. * *Election results as Lakas-Kampi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Ilocos Region, Ilocos Sur\nIncumbent governor Chavit Singson is not running. His son, incumbent congressman Ryan Singson is running in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Ilocos Region, La Union\nIncumbent governor Manuel Ortega is running for reelection. His opponent is former congressman Tomas Dumpit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Ilocos Region, Pangasinan\nIncumbent governor Amado Espino, Jr. is running for reelection. His opponent is incumbent Alaminos City Mayor Hernani Braganza. Highest gubernatorial margin in Philippine Election 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Cagayan Valley, Batanes\nIncumbent governor Vicente Gato is running for reelection as an independent. His opponent is former governor Telesforo Castillejos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Cagayan Valley, Isabela\nIncumbent governor Faustino Dy III is running for reelection. Candidates Tony Aliangan and Lilia Uy were disqualified by Comelec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Cagayan Valley, Nueva Vizcaya\nIncumbent governor Luisa Cuaresma is term-limited and running for congress instead. Jose Gambito is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Cordillera Administrative Region, Abra\nIncumbent governor Eustaquio Bersamin is running for reelection. His primary opponent is former congresswoman Cecilia Seares-Luna. Candidate Joel Bicera Bersamin was disqualified by Comelec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 86], "content_span": [87, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Central Luzon, Aurora\nIncumbent governor Bellaflor Angara-Castillo is term-limited and therefore decides to run for Congress instead. Her brother, incumbent Baler Mayor Arturo Angara is running in her place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Central Luzon, Bataan\nIncumbent governor Enrique Garcia is term-limited and is running for congressman. His son Albert Raymond Garcia is running in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Central Luzon, Bulacan\nIncumbent governor Wilhelmino Sy-Alvarado is running for reelection. Candidate Jaime Almera was disqualified by COMELEC .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Central Luzon, Nueva Ecija\nIncumbent governor Aurelio Umali is running for reelection. His opponent is incumbent congresswoman Josefina Joson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Central Luzon, Pampanga\nIncumbent governor Lilia Pineda is running for reelection. Her main opponent is former governor Ed Panlilio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Central Luzon, Tarlac\nIncumbent governor Victor Yap is running for reelection. His opponent is incumbent Vice-Governor Pearl Pacada and Dr. Isa Cojuanco-Suntay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Central Luzon, Zambales\nIncumbent governor Hermogenes Ebdane is running for reelection. His opponent is former governor Amor Deloso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Calabarzon, Cavite\nIncumbent governor Juanito Victor C. Remulla is running for reelection running against incumbent congressman Ayong Maliksi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Calabarzon, Laguna\nIncumbent governor E. R. Ejercito is running for reelection. His opponent is incumbent congressman Edgar San Luis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Calabarzon, Rizal\nIncumbent governor Casimiro Ynares III is running for mayor of Antipolo City. His mother, former governor Rebecca Ynares is running in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Mimaropa, Marinduque\nIncumbent governor Carmencita Reyes is running for reelection. Her opponents are vice governor Antonio Uy, Jr. and former governor Jose Antonio Carrion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Mimaropa, Occidental Mindoro\nIncumbent governor Josephine Ramirez-Sato is term limited and is running for congresswoman. Incumbent vice governor Mario Gene Mendiola is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Mimaropa, Oriental Mindoro\nIncumbent governor Alfonso Umali, Jr. is running for reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Bicol Region, Camarines Norte\nIncumbent governor Edgardo Tallado is running for reelection. His opponent is 1st District Congressman Renato Unico, Jr. and former governor Jesus Typoco, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Bicol Region, Camarines Sur\nIncumbent governor Luis Raymund Villafuerte, Jr. is term limited and is running for congressman. His son, Miguel Villafuerte is running in his place. His primary opponents are his grandfather, incumbent congressman Luis Villafuerte, Sr. and former Solicitor-General Jose Anselmo Cadiz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Luzon, Bicol Region, Masbate\nIncumbent governor Rizalina Seachon-Lanete is running for reelection. Her opponents are incumbent congressman Antonio Kho and priest Fr. Leo Casas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Western Visayas, Aklan\nIncumbent governor Carlito Marquez is term-limited. Incumbent Congressman Florencio Miraflores is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Western Visayas, Iloilo\nIncumbent governor Arthur Defensor, Sr. is running for reelection, His opponent is incumbent Congressman Ferjenel Biron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Western Visayas, Negros Occidental\nIncumbent governor Alfredo Mara\u00f1on, Jr. successfully contested his reelection. His opponent was Vice Governor Genaro Alvarez, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 84], "content_span": [85, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Central Visayas, Cebu\nIncumbent governor Gwendolyn Garcia is term-limited and running for Congress instead. Her brother Congressman Pablo John Garcia is her party and the National Unity Party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Central Visayas, Negros Oriental\nRoel Degamo is the incumbent after the death of the former governor, the late Agustin Perdices, He will face incumbent Congresswoman Jocelyn Limkaichong and former finance secretary Margarito \"Gary\" Teves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Central Visayas, Siquijor\nIncumbent governor Orlando Fua, Jr. running for congressman instead; his brother Orville Fua is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Eastern Visayas, Leyte\nIncumbent governor Jericho Petilla was appointed Secretary of Energy, Vice Gov. Mimiet Bagulaya assumed as acting governor and is running as board member; Leopoldo Dominico Petilla is her party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Visayas, Eastern Visayas, Southern Leyte\nIncumbent governor Damian Mercado chose to run for Congressman instead; incumbent Congressman Roger Mercado is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 81], "content_span": [82, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga del Norte\nIncumbent governor Rolando Yebes is term-limited, he is running for congressman instead; his party didn't have any nominee, but nominated his ally, Cesar Jalosjos, to run for governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 91], "content_span": [92, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Zamboanga Peninsula, Zamboanga del Sur\nIncumbent governor Antonio Cerilles is running for reelection. On January 15, 2013, the Commission on Elections disqualified Dominador Jalosjos, Jr. (Nacionalista) who was to run for governor and his brother, Romeo Jalosjos who is a candidate for mayor of Zamboanga City for violating the Local Government Code of 1991 which bars ex-convicts to run for office and run short of the required one-year residency in the place where a candidate can run. Thereby, Cerilles is running for reelection unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 89], "content_span": [90, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Northern Mindanao, Bukidnon\nIncumbent governor Alex Calingasan is not running for reelection. He is running for Vice Governor instead; Vice Governor Jose Maria Zubiri, Jr. is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Northern Mindanao, Misamis Oriental\nIncumbent governor Oscar Moreno is term-limited and will instead run for Mayor of Cagayan De Oro City; Vice Governor Norris Babiera is his party's nominee. He will face Congressman Yevgeny Vincente \"Bambi\" Emano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 86], "content_span": [87, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Davao Region, Davao del Norte\nIncumbent governor Rodolfo Del Rosario is running for reelection. Candidate Norberto Mijanes was disqualified by Comelec, as a result Governor Del Rosario was running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 80], "content_span": [81, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Davao Region, Davao del Sur\nIncumbent governor Douglas Cagas is not running for reelection. He is instead running for Mayor of Digos City; Congressman Marc Douglas Cagas IV is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Soccsksargen, Cotabato\nIncumbent governor Emmylou Tali\u00f1o-Mendoza is running for reelection. Her main opponent is former governor Emmanuel \"Manny\" Pi\u00f1ol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Soccsksargen, South Cotabato\nIncumbent governor Arthur Pingoy Jr. is running for reelection. His opponent is incumbent congresswoman Daisy Avance-Fuentes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 79], "content_span": [80, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Soccsksargen, Sultan Kudarat\nIncumbent governor Suharto Mangudadatu is running for reelection as an independent candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 79], "content_span": [80, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Caraga Region, Agusan Del Norte\nIncumbent governor Erlpe John Amante is term-limited and will instead run for Congress; His sister, Representative Angelica Amante-Matba is his party's nominee. Candidate Jorge Lomongsod was disqualified by Comelec, as a result Rep. Angelica Amante-Matba was running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Caraga Region, Dinagat Islands\nIncumbent governor Glenda Ecleo is running for reelection. Her opponent is her daughter, incumbent vice governor Geraldine Ecleo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 81], "content_span": [82, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Caraga Region, Surigao del Norte\nIncumbent governor Sol Matugas is running for reelection. Her primary opponent is former governor Robert Lyndon Barbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Sulu\nIncumbent governor Abdusakur Mahail Tan is not running for reelection. His son, Abdusakur Tan II is running in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 93], "content_span": [94, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235500-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine gubernatorial elections, Mindanao, Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Tawi-Tawi\nIncumbent governor Sadikul A. Sahali is term limited; his son, Nurbert Sahali is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections\nLocal elections were held on the Philippines on May 13, 2013, the same day and on the same ballot as national elections. Elected were governors, mayors and council members of Philippine provinces, Philippine cities and Philippine municipalities. Separate elections for barangay officials were held on October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections\nPositions to be elected are mayors, vice mayors, and councilors, and if applicable, governors, vice governors and provincial board members. There will be elected 80 provincial governors, 80 provincial vice governors, 766 members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial board), 138 city mayors, 138 city vice mayors, 1,532 members of the Sangguniang Panlungsod (city council), 1,496 municipal mayors, 1,496 municipal vice mayors, and 11,972 members of the Sangguniang Bayan (municipal council).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections\nAlso included are elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) that were supposed to have been held in 2011 but were postponed and synchronized with the triennial elections. Voters in the ARMM will be electing one regional governor, one regional vice governor and 24 members of the regional assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Regional-level elections\nThe voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) elect a regional government, composed of a regional governor and a regional vice governor voted separately and under the first past the post system, and a regional assembly composed of three assemblymen elected from each district under the plurality-at-large voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Regional-level elections\nThe election was scheduled for 2011, but was postponed to 2013 to be synchronized with the rest of the country. The winning candidates will take over from the appointees of President Benigno Aquino III, who replaced the officials who had their terms expire on 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Provincial-level elections\nEach province is headed by a governor and a vice governor. The governor is the chief executive of the province, while the vice governor acts as the governor once the latter is unable to perform his duties, and has the casting vote in the provincial board in case of a tie on a measure, among other powers. While most governors and vice governors run on one ticket, the positions are elected separately, and the winners may come from different tickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Provincial-level elections\nEach province has a Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board, the legislative body of the province. A province's number of provincial board members depends on its financial standing (generally, the more populous provinces are richer), with the richest provinces having up to 14 board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Provincial-level elections\nIn addition, the provincial board has a seat reserved for the president of the provincial chapter of the League of Councilors which are indirectly elected from the city and municipal levels, and two more seats reserved for the presidents of the provincial chapters of the Association of Barangay (village) Captains (ABC) and of the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK; youth councils). These ex officio members are indirectly elected from the municipal and city levels, which were elected by the people in 2010; an election later in the year may change the membership of those two ex officio members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Provincial-level elections\nElection for the provincial board is via first past the post for single-member districts, and plurality-at-large voting for multi-member districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, City-level elections\nThe executive and legislative branches of cities are modeled after provinces, with a mayor, vice mayor and a city council made up of councilors. The city council has up to 36 regular members elected via plurality-at-large voting. Some cities are divided into councilor districts; if a city is divided into two or more congressional districts, the councilor districts would be coextensive with these. Some cities aren't divided into councilor districts; in cases such as this, the entire membership is elected at-large, with the city as one \"district\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, City-level elections\nAside from these regular members, city councils also have two ex officio members composed of the president of the city chapters of the Association of Barangay (village) Captains (ABC) and of the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK; youth councils). These ex officio members are indirectly elected from the barangay level, which were elected by the people in 2010; an election later in the year may change the membership of those two ex officio members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, City-level elections\nIn the results tables above, in cases when a candidate ran under two parties, a national party and a local party, the seat is credited to the national party. Therefore, all seats won by local parties here refer to parties that did not include a name of a national party on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Municipal-level elections\nThe executive and legislative branches of cities are modeled after cities, with the municipal councils being composed of eight (twelve in Pateros) regular members elected at-large. As with city councils, municipal councils have two ex officio members: one each from the municipal presidents of the Association of Barangay Captains, and of the Sangguniang Kabataan, all indirectly elected from the barangay level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Barangay-level elections\nElections for barangay level were held in October 2013. Each barangay has a chairman and seven kagawads (councilors) elected at large.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235501-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippine local elections, Campaign\nFor April 14 weekend, Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines' Vice President Archbishop Socrates Villegas instructed priests to tell their flock during mass \"not to vote for the candidate if the candidate cannot declare a categorical and clear 'no' to divorce, abortion, euthanasia, total birth control and homosexual marriages or death issues.\" This was seen as a setback for President Benigno Aquino's allies who had passed a birth control law the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235502-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Philippines men's national basketball team results\nThe Philippines national basketball team in 2013 was led by head coach Chot Reyes. The national team finished second at the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship gaining one of the three Asian berths for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup. The Philippines secured its place at the FIBA World Cup after 36 years of absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235503-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Phoenix FC season\nThe 2013 Phoenix FC season was the club's only season of existence, playing in the USL Professional Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235503-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Phoenix FC season, USL Pro\nAll times from this point on Mountain Standard Time (UTC\u221207:00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235504-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Phoenix Mercury season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 17th season for the Phoenix Mercury of the Women's National Basketball Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235504-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Phoenix Mercury season\nThere were high hopes for the Mercury after they drafted Brittney Griner first overall in the 2013 WNBA Draft. However, the Mercury got off to a slow start, and ultimately fired coach Corey Gaines on August 8, 2013, replacing him with Russ Pennell. Amber Cox, the Mercury President and CEO, took over Gaines' GM duties. Pennell helped turn things around, securing the third seed in the 2013 WNBA Playoffs. The Mercury earned a spot in the Western Conference finals against the Minnesota Lynx.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235504-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Phoenix Mercury season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Mercury's selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja\nThe 2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, also known as the 2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja in Malay, will be held from 8 November to 21 December 2013 at four different host venues namely Perlis, Kelantan, Johor and Selangor in Malaysia. Perak are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja\nThe Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja is one of the oldest and prestigious tournaments in the world with its first edition dating back to 1922. His Royal Highness the Regent of England Prince of Wales visited the East and this tournament was held in celebration in Singapore by Malaya's national footballing body Football Association of Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Teams\nThe participating teams usually include representatives of the state teams of Malaysia and neighbouring country Singapore. Fifteen teams will compete for the trophy in this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Teams\nThe fifteen teams are divided into a group of three and three groups of four, and they will play in a single round-robin format. The top two teams of each group will advance into the knockout stage which will be played in a single elimination format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Teams\nTake note that Singapore Malays are not the Singapore Lions, and they do not represent the Football Association of Singapore in this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Group stage\nThe draw for the group stage was held in Kuala Lumpur on 26 October 2013. The 15 teams were allocated into three groups of four and a group of three. A total of two football associations under one confederation are represented in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Group stage\nIn each group, teams will play against each other once in a single round-robin format. The matchdays were 8\u20139 November, 9\u201310 November and 10\u201311 November 2013. The group winners and runners-up will advance to the round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Knockout phase\nIn the knockout phase, teams will play against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs will be played on 16 November 2013, and the second legs will be played on 23 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Knockout phase, Semi-finals\nThe first legs will be played on 30 November 2013, and the second legs will be played on 7 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235505-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Piala Emas Raja\u2013Raja, Knockout phase, Final\nThe final will be played on 29 December 2013 at Darul Aman Stadium in Kedah, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235506-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinetown crash\nOn September 5, 2013, an articulated truck drove through a red light at high speed, killing 26 people (later becoming 27) and injuring at least 80, in Pinetown, South Africa. After a light turned green at the junction of Richmond/Josiah Gumede Roads, several vehicles (including taxis full of home-bound commuters) began advancing and were struck side-on moments later by a truck careening down Fields Hill. The driver maintained that the brakes had failed as it descended the notorious hill approaching the intersection. The crash was filmed by the dashcam of a vehicle that had been waiting for the light to turn green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235506-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinetown crash, Aftermath\nThe incident provoked a statement from the acting President of South Africa, Jeff Radebe, who expressed grief and emphasized the need for mindfulness when driving: \"The loss of such a high number of people, some of them breadwinners, is painful and has affected so many households negatively. We urge road users, especially drivers, to exercise caution on the roads especially when carrying passengers.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235506-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinetown crash, Aftermath\nAfter the accident, it was reported that the truck's license had recently expired. Subsequently, the driver Sanele Goodness May, a 23-year-old citizen from Swaziland was taken to court under multiple charges including homicide and reckless driving. He pleaded guilty to all charges and was sentenced to 8 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235506-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinetown crash, Aftermath\nLocal City Councillor Rick Crouch has been vocal about the Provincial Government's failure in stopping the carnage on Fields Hill, going as far as accusing the KwaZulu-Natal MEC for Transport, Community Safety and Liaison Willies Mchunu of practicing \"tombstone legislation\". Councillor Rick Crouch, has been campaigning for stricter rules for trucks on Fields Hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl\nThe 2013 Pinstripe Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 28, 2013 at Yankee Stadium in the New York City borough of The Bronx. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The fourth edition of the Pinstripe Bowl, it featured the Rutgers Scarlet Knights (based in nearby New Brunswick, New Jersey) of the American Athletic Conference against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, an independent team. It began at 12:00 noon EST and aired on ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl\nThe game was sponsored by the New Era Cap Company, and was officially known as the New Era Pinstripe Bowl. Notre Dame defeated Rutgers by a score of 29\u201316. Notre Dame's championship was vacated on February 13, 2018, due to an academic cheating scandal. Because of this the win will be taken away from Notre Dame record books.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl\nThe Fighting Irish accepted their invitation after earning an 8\u20134 record for the season, while the Scarlet Knights accepted their invitation after earning a 6\u20136 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl\nThis was the final game for Rutgers as a member of the American Athletic Conference. They joined the Big Ten Conference in the 2014 season, and the Pinstripe Bowl followed suit with a conference tie-in with the Big Ten starting in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Teams\nThe game featured the Rutgers Scarlet Knights of the American Athletic Conference against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. It was originally set to feature the Big 12 Conference's seventh bowl-eligible team; however, the conference had only six bowl-eligible teams, leading to Notre Dame accepting the at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Teams\nThis was the final game with the two conference tie-ins which had been in place since the bowl's inception in 2010, as from 2014 until at least 2019, the tie-ins will belong to the Big Ten Conference and the Atlantic Coast Conference. However, both Rutgers and Notre Dame could hypothetically return to the game under the new format, as the Scarlet Knights will be a member of the Big Ten and the Fighting Irish, as a non-football member of the ACC, will have access to the conference's sub-College Football Playoff \"New Year's Six\" bowl arrangements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Teams, Rutgers Scarlet Knights\nAfter the previous season saw the Scarlet Knights win the Big East Conference's co-championship with a 9\u20134 overall (5\u20132 conference) record, expectations diminished slightly for the next season, in particular with the influx of new teams joining the conference, which by season's beginning had transformed into the American Athletic Conference. While the Scarlet Knights' struggles were tougher than expected, finishing 3\u20135 in conference play, they managed to finish at 6\u20136 with a 31\u20136 victory over the South Florida Bulls in the season's final game, after which bowl director Mark Holtzman extended an invitation to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Teams, Rutgers Scarlet Knights\nThis will be the Scarlet Knights' second Pinstripe Bowl; Rutgers had previously won the 2011 game, defeating the Iowa State Cyclones by a score of 27\u201313. In addition, it will be Rutgers' final game as a member of the American before moving to the Big Ten Conference for 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Teams, Notre Dame Fighting Irish\nAfter the success of the previous season which led to a berth in the 2013 BCS National Championship Game (which they lost to Alabama by a score of 42\u201314), the Irish's expectations were moderately scaled back because of various departures. However, the Irish still managed a winning season at 8\u20134 overall, after which bowl director Mark Holtzman extended an invitation to play in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Teams, Notre Dame Fighting Irish\nAlthough this will be Notre Dame's first Pinstripe Bowl, the Fighting Irish are no strangers to Yankee Stadium or its predecessor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Teams, Notre Dame Fighting Irish\nThe Irish best remember Yankee Stadium as a frequent battleground for their rivalry with the Army Black Knights, it being the site of their games from 1923\u20131946 (with the exception of 1930's game), as well as in 1969 and 2010, with notable matchups including the famous \"Win one for the Gipper\" game in 1926, which saw the Irish triumph by a score of 7\u20130, as well as the 1946 \"Game of the Century\" between #2 Notre Dame and #1 Army which ended in a scoreless tie. Overall, the Irish are 15\u20135\u20133 in said games at Yankee Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Game summary\nPlacekicker Kyle Brindza of Notre Dame set a Pinstripe Bowl record with five field goals in a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235507-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pinstripe Bowl, Academic cheating controversy\nFollowing the revelation that several Notre Dame player's had academically cheated during their time on the football team, the NCAA ruled that Notre Dame's wins from the 2012 and 2013 seasons would be vacated, including the Pinstripe Bowl win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235508-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pirelli World Challenge\nThe 2013 Pirelli World Challenge season was the 24th season of the Sports Car Club of America's World Challenge Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235508-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pirelli World Challenge, Championships, Drivers' Championships\nChampionship points are awarded to drivers based on qualifying and finishing positions. The Pole position winner receives 7 points. In addition, 1 bonus point is awarded to a driver leading a lap during a race, and 3 bonus points are awarded to the driver leading the most laps. The driver who sets the fastest lap of the race receives 1 bonus point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235508-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pirelli World Challenge, Championships, Manufacturer championships\nManufacturer points are awarded according to the highest-finishing car from that manufacturer. Only manufacturers that are SCCA Pro Racing corporate members receive points. Points are awarded on the following basis:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235508-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pirelli World Challenge, Championships, Manufacturer championships\nIn addition, one bonus point is awarded to the pole-winning manufacturer. In the table below, the manufacturer's top finishing position is shown, with pole winner in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235509-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pitcairnese general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Pitcairn Islands on 12 November 2013. Shawn Christian was elected mayor, Brenda Christian was elected deputy mayor, and five candidates were elected to the Island Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235510-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Panthers football team\nThe 2013 Pittsburgh Panthers football team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Panthers were led by head coach Paul Chryst and played their home games at Heinz Field. They were a member of the Coastal Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference. This was Pitt's first season as a member of the ACC after being a member of the Big East since 1991. They finished the season 7\u20136, 3\u20135 in ACC play to finish in sixth place in the Coastal Division. Pitt was invited to the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, beating Bowling Green on a field goal by Chris Blewitt in the final two minutes. Running back, James Conner, rushed for 229 yards and broke a Pittsburgh bowl record previously held by Tony Dorsett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235511-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season\nThe 2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season was the franchise's 127th season as a member of the National League, 132nd season overall, and 13th season at PNC Park. The regular season began at home with a loss against the Chicago Cubs on April 1 and ended with a win at Great American Ball Park against the Cincinnati Reds on September 29. In their first winning season since 1992, the Pirates finished in second place in the National League Central Division with 94 wins and 68 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235511-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season\nThe Pirates earned their 82nd win of the season on September 9, ensuring the team's first winning season since 1992 and ending the longest stretch of losing seasons\u201420\u2014in North American professional sports history. Although the St. Louis Cardinals won the NL Central Division, the Pirates clinched a playoff berth for the first time since 1992 in one of two NL Wild Card spots on September 23. In the Wild Card Game, the Pirates secured their first postseason win since Game 6 of the 1992 National League Championship Series by defeating the Cincinnati Reds. In doing so, the team advanced to the 2013 National League Division Series, where they were defeated in five games by the eventual National League champion Cardinals, eliminating them from the 2013 postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235511-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season\nFive members of the 2013 Pirates were selected to represent the National League in the All-Star Game. In addition, team manager Clint Hurdle won the 2013 NL Manager of the Year Award in his third year with the Pirates, center fielder Andrew McCutchen was named NL Most Valuable Player, pitcher Francisco Liriano was named NL Comeback Player of the Year, and third baseman Pedro \u00c1lvarez tied for first place in home runs hit in the National League at 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235511-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season, Statistics\n\u2013 Qualified for batting title (3.1 plate appearances per team game)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235511-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season, Statistics\n\u2013 Qualified for ERA title (1 inning pitched per team game)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235511-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season, Statistics\n\u2020 \u2013 Denotes player was acquired mid-season. \u2021 \u2013 Denotes player was relinquished mid-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235511-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Pirates season, Transactions\nThe Pirates were involved in the following transactions during the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235512-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Power season\nThe 2013 Pittsburgh Power season was the third season for the franchise in the Arena Football League. The team was coached by Derek Stingley and played their home games at the Consol Energy Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235512-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Power season, Regular season schedule\nThe Power began the season at home against the Utah Blaze on March 23. They closed the regular season on July 26, on the road against the Spokane Shock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235513-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Riverhounds season\nThe 2013 Pittsburgh Riverhounds season is the club's fourteenth season of existence. It is the Riverhounds' third season playing in the USL Professional Division. It is the first season the Riverhounds will play at Highmark Stadium, a newly built 3,500 capacity soccer specific stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235513-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Riverhounds season, Background\nBefore the season began, the Riverhounds announced they would have a new stadium to play in, the 3,500 seat Highmark Stadium located in Pittsburgh's Station Square area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe 2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season was the franchise's 81st season as a professional sports franchise and as a member of the National Football League. It also marked the 14th season under leadership of general manager Kevin Colbert and the seventh under head coach Mike Tomlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe Steelers finished the season 8\u20138, competing with the Baltimore Ravens, Miami Dolphins, and San Diego Chargers for the final AFC playoff spot going into Week 17. The Steelers tried to prevent their worst start since 1968 in Week 4, but the Minnesota Vikings would defeat them 34\u201327. Baltimore, Miami, and San Diego were all 8\u20137 going into Week 17, while Pittsburgh was 7\u20138. This meant that the Steelers had to win and the Ravens, Dolphins, and Chargers all had to lose. Despite a win from the Steelers and losses from the Ravens and Dolphins, the Chargers went on to beat the Kansas City Chiefs 27\u201324 in overtime, taking the final playoff spot. It was the first season since the 1999 and 2000 seasons that the Steelers would miss back-to-back postseasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nSteelers 2\u20130 \u2013 Darius Reynaud Downs Ball in Own End Zone (14:57)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nTitans 7\u20132 \u2013 Jackie Battle 3 Yard Run (Rob Bironas Kick) (0:44)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nTitans 10\u20132 \u2013 Rob Bironas 26 Yard Field Goal (4:29)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nTitans 13\u20132 \u2013 Rob Bironas 44 Yard Field Goal (6:01)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nTitans 16\u20132 \u2013 Rob Bironas 27 Yard Field Goal (3:53)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nTitans 16\u20139 \u2013 Jerricho Cotchery 4 Yard Pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Shaun Suisham Kick) (1:23)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nThe Steelers started their 2013 season at home against the Titans. They scored first when Darius Reynaud down the ball in their own end zone to give the Steelers a safety for a 2\u20130 lead in the first quarter. In the 2nd quarter, the Titans took the lead as Jackie Battle ran for a 3-yard TD to make the score 7\u20132 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Tennessee Titans\nAfter the break, the Titans went right back to work as Rob Bironas nailed 3 field goals starting off in the 3rd quarter when he nailed one from 26 yards and also 2 in the 4th quarter from 44 and 27 yards out to take leads of 10\u20132, 13\u20132, and 16\u20132 respectively. The Steelers then tried their luck at a comeback attempt but only came up short as Ben Roethlisberger found Jerricho Cotchery on a 4-yard TD pass for a final score of 16\u20139 and their 3rd straight 0\u20131 seasonal start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nSteelers 3\u20130 \u2013 Shaun Suisham 44 Yard Field Goal (10:42)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nBengals 7\u20133 \u2013 Giovani Bernard 7 Yard Run (Mike Nugent Kick) (0:57)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nBengals 10\u20133 \u2013 Mike Nugent 41 Yard Field Goal (13:16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nTied 10\u201310 \u2013 Derek Moye 1 Yard Pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Shaun Suisham Kick) (1:54)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nBengals 17\u201310 \u2013 Giovani Bernard 27 Yard pass from Andy Dalton (Mike Nugent kick) (5:08)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nBengals 20\u201310 \u2013 Mike Nugent 25 Yard Field Goal (6:51)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nAfter a tough season-opening loss, the Steelers traveled to Cincinnati to take on the Bengals. The Steelers scored first when Shaun Suisham scored a field goal from 44 yards out to make the score 3\u20130. The Bengals took the lead as Giovani Bernard ran for a 7-yard touchdown making the score 7\u20133. The Bengals scored again in the 2nd quarter as Mike Nugent nailed a 41-yard field goal to make the score 10\u20133, followed up by Ben Roethlisberger finding Derek Moye on a 1-yard pass to tie the game at 10\u201310 at halftime. The Bengals retook the lead in the 3rd quarter as Andy Dalton found Bernard on a 27-yard pass to make the score 17\u201310, which was followed up by Nugent's 25-yard field goal in the 4th quarter for a final score of 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Cincinnati Bengals\nWith their 2nd straight loss to the Bengals, the Steelers started a season 0\u20132 for the first time since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 3\u20130 \u2013 Robbie Gould 47 Yard Field Goal (8:02)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 10\u20130 \u2013 Matt Forte 5 Yard Run (Robbie Gould Kick) (5:05)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 17\u20130 \u2013 Michael Bush 1 Yard Run (Robbie Gould Kick) (2:01)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 17\u20133 \u2013 Shaun Suisham 27 Yard Field Goal (13:36)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 24\u20133 \u2013 Major Wright 38 Yard Interception Return (Robbie Gould Kick) (8:57)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 24\u201310 \u2013 Antonio Brown 33 Yard Pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Shaun Suisham Kick) (6:27)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 27\u201310 \u2013 Robbie Gould 32 Yard Field Goal (10:54)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 27\u201313 \u2013 Shaun Suisham 36 Yard Field Goal (5:38)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 27\u201320 \u2013 Antonio Brown 21 Yard Pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Shaun Suisham Kick) (1:50)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 27\u201323 \u2013 Shaun Suisham 44 Yard Field Goal (10:38)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 34\u201323 \u2013 Earl Bennett 17 Yard Pass from Jay Cutler (Robbie Gould kick) (5:48)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nBears 40\u201323 \u2013 Julius Peppers 42 Yard Fumble Return (Robbie Gould Kick No Good) (3:57)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Steelers returned home after a tough road loss to the Bengals to take on the Bears. The first quarter was all Bears as they scored 17 unanswered points with Robbie Gould nailing a 47-yard field goal for a 3\u20130 lead followed up by Matt Forte's 5-yard touchdown run to make the score 10\u20130 and then Michael Bush's 1-yard touchdown run for a 17\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Steelers managed to get on the board in the 2nd quarter when Shaun Suisham nailed a 27-yard field goal to shorten the lead to 17\u20133, however the Bears increased their lead when Major Wright returned an interception 38 yards for a touchdown to make the score 24\u20133. The Steelers came within 14 points at halftime as Ben Roethlisberger found Antonio Brown on a 33-yard touchdown pass to shorten the score 24\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0029-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nAfter the break, Gould kicked a 32-yard field goal increasing the Bears' lead to 27\u201310, but the Steelers answered with 13 straight points starting in the 3rd heading into the 4th quarter as Suisham nailed a 36-yard field goal for a 14-point deficit (27\u201313) and then a 21-yard pass to Brown from Roethlisberger again, shortening the lead to 7 at 27\u201320. In the 4th quarter, the Steelers came within 4 points as Suisham nailed a 44-yard field goal to make the score 27\u201323. However, the Bears were able to seal the victory with Jay Cutler's 17-yard pass to Earl Bennett for a score of 34\u201323 and then Julius Peppers' 42-yard fumble return for a touchdown (with a failed PAT) for a final score of 40\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nWith the loss, the Steelers started a season 0\u20133 for the first time since 2000. With the Browns winning earlier in the day, the team was left in last in the AFC North.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nVikings \u2013 0\u20133 \u2013 B. Walsh 54 yd. Field Goal (12:08)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nVikings \u2013 0\u201310 \u2013 G. Jennings 70 yd. pass from M. Cassel (B. Walsh kick) (8:06)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nSteelers \u2013 7\u201310 \u2013 L. Bell 8 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (4:02)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nVikings \u2013 7\u201317 \u2013 A. Peterson 60 yd. run (B. Walsh kick) (12:42)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nSteelers \u2013 10\u201317 \u2013 S. Suisham 26 yd. Field Goal (3:39)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nVikings \u2013 10\u201320 \u2013 B. Walsh 37 yd. Field Goal (0:39)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nSteelers \u2013 17\u201320 \u2013 L. Bell 1 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (11:28)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nVikings \u2013 17\u201327 \u2013 A. Peterson 7 yd. run (B. Walsh kick) (7:52)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nVikings \u2013 17\u201334 \u2013 G. Jennings 16 yd. pass from M. Cassel (B. Walsh kick) (5:11)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nSteelers \u2013 24\u201334 \u2013 J. Cotchery 15 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (12:42)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nSteelers \u2013 27\u201334 \u2013 S. Suisham 28 yd. Field Goal (3:37)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nThe Steelers traveled to London, England and were considered the visitor team against a Matt Cassel-led Vikings team. The Vikes got off to a fast start as Blair Walsh nailed a 54-yard field goal for a 3\u20130 lead followed up by Matt Cassel hooking up with Greg Jennings on a 70-yard touchdown pass for a 10\u20130 lead. The Steelers managed to get on the board later on in the first quarter when rookie RB Le'Veon Bell ran for an 8-yard touchdown to make the game 10\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0042-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nThe Vikes moved ahead by double digits in the second quarter as Adrian Peterson ran for a 60-yard touchdown for a 17\u20137 lead. Shaun Suisham got the Steelers within a touchdown by nailing a 26-yard field goal for a 17\u201310 lead. Walsh moved the Vikes ahead by 10 at halftime by kicking a 37-yard field goal for a 20\u201310 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0042-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nThe Steelers came within 3 as Le'Veon Bell ran for a 1-yard touchdown shortening the lead to 20\u201317 but the Vikes managed to move ahead 27\u201317 after Peterson ran for a 7-yard touchdown and then Cassel found Jennings again on a 16-yard touchdown pass to make the lead 34\u201317. In the 4th quarter, Jerricho Cotchery hooked up with Ben Roethlisberger on a 15-yard touchdown pass for a 34\u201324 lead, and then tried to rally as Suisham nailed a 28-yard field goal. The Steelers' comeback attempt was ruined again as Roethlisberger was sacked and fumbled the ball with less than a minute left in the game, sealing the victory for the Vikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Minnesota Vikings\nWith this loss, the Steelers are off to their worst start since the AFL\u2013NFL merger. They had last started 0\u20134 in 1968, when they started 0\u20136. This is also the first time since 2006 in which the team would fall to 4 games below .500 when they started that season 2\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nJets \u2013 0\u20133 \u2013 N. Folk 25 yd. Field Goal (3:29)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nSteelers \u2013 3\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 46 yd. Field Goal (12:12)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nSteelers \u2013 6\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 33 yd. Field Goal (5:28)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nSteelers \u2013 9\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 48 yd. Field Goal (0:49)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nJets \u2013 9\u20136 \u2013 N. Folk 39 Yd. Field Goal (0:05)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nSteelers \u2013 16\u20136 \u2013 E. Sanders 55 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (12:39)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nSteelers \u2013 19\u20136 \u2013 S. Suisham 32 Yd. Field Goal (12:12)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nComing off of their bye week, the Steelers traveled to East Rutherford, NJ to take on the Jets. The Jets scored first in the first quarter when Nick Folk scored a 25-yard field goal for a 3\u20130 lead for the only score of that period. The Steelers managed to tie it at first in the 2nd quarter followed by taking the lead with 2 other field goals as Suisham kicked field goals from 46, 33, and 48 yards out for scores of 3\u20133, 6\u20133, and 9\u20133 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0051-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nThe Jets tried to rally as Folk nailed a 39-yard field goal for a 9\u20136 score at halftime. In the 2nd half, it was all Steelers as they pulled away when Ben Roethlisberger found Emmanuel Sanders on a 55-yard touchdown pass for a 16\u20136 lead in the 3rd quarter which was then followed up by Suisham's 32-yard field goal in the 4th quarter for a final score of 19\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 7\u20130 \u2013 H. Miller 3 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (5:24)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 7\u20133 \u2013 J. Tucker 46 yd. field goal (0:05)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 10\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 34 yd. field goal (9:59)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 10\u20136 \u2013 J. Tucker 38 yd. field goal (0:08)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 13\u20136 \u2013 S. Suisham 28 yd. field goal (2:56)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 13\u20139 \u2013 J. Tucker 32 yd. field goal (13:04)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 16\u20139 \u2013 S. Suisham 38 yd. field goal (9:59)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 16\u201316 \u2013 D. Clark 1 yd. pass from J. Flacco (J. Tucker kick) (1:58)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 19\u201316 \u2013 S. Suisham 42 yd. field goal (0:00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAfter a road win, the Steelers returned home to take on the Ravens. The Steelers scored first in the first quarter as Ben Roethlisberger hooked up with Heath Miller on a 3-yard touchdown pass making the score 7\u20130. Justin Tucker then got the Ravens on the board after nailing a 36-yard field goal shortening the lead to 7\u20133. In the 2nd quarter, the Steelers moved ahead by a touchdown as Shaun Suisham nailed a 34-yard field goal to make the score 10\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0061-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Ravens moved within 4 as Tucker nailed a 38-yard field goal for a 10\u20136 game at halftime with the Steelers leading. After the break, the Steelers went back to work in the 3rd quarter as Suisham kicked a 28-yard field goal for a 13\u20136 lead. The Ravens drew within 4 points again in the fourth quarter as Tucker kicked a 32-yard field goal for a 13\u20139 score. Again, the Steelers retaliated and moved ahead by 7 points as Suisham kicked a 38-yard field goal for a 16\u20139 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0061-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nHowever, Joe Flacco was able to find Dallas Clark on a 1-yard touchdown pass tying the game at 16\u201316. The Steelers managed to drive down the field for the game-winning field goal as Suisham nailed it from 42 yards out for a final score of 19\u201316 sending the Steelers to a 2\u20134 start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nRaiders \u2013 0\u20137 \u2013 T. Pryor 93 yd. run (S. Janikowski kick) (14:41)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nRaiders \u2013 0\u201314 \u2013 D. McFadden 7 yd. run (S. Janikowski kick) (7:28)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nSteelers \u2013 14\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 47 yd. field goal (14:14)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nRaiders \u2013 21\u20133 \u2013 D. McFadden 4 yd. run (S. Janikowski kick) (1:55)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nSteelers \u2013 21\u201310 \u2013 E. Sanders 9 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (12:11)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nSteelers \u2013 21\u201318 \u2013 L. Bell 2 yd. run (E. Sanders run for 2 pt. conversion) (1:24)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nAfter winning at home against the Ravens, the Steelers traveled to Oakland to take on the Raiders. The Raiders got off to a fast start in the 1st quarter when Terrelle Pryor ran for a 93-yard touchdown to take a 7\u20130 lead. This remains the longest touchdown run by any QB in NFL history. Darren McFadden ran into the end zone for a 7-yard touchdown run to make the score 14\u20130. The Steelers managed to get on the board in the 2nd quarter when Shaun Suisham nailed a 47-yard field goal for a 14\u20133 deficit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0068-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Oakland Raiders\nBut the Raiders moved ahead as McFadden ran for another touchdown from 4 yards out for a 21\u20133 score at halftime. After a scoreless 3rd quarter, the Steelers went back to work in the 4th quarter as Ben Roethlisberger found Emmanuel Sanders on a 9-yard touchdown pass to make the score 21\u201310 and then Le'Veon Bell ran for a 4-yard touchdown with the successful 2-point conversion to make the final score 21\u201318 as their comeback attempt again was cut short and the team fell to 2\u20135. On a positive note, they had won 2 out of their last 3 games coming off their bye week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 0\u20137 \u2013 D. Amendola 34 yd. pass from T. Brady (S. Gostkowski kick) (4:00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 0\u201314 \u2013 R. Gronkowski 19 yd. pass from T. Brady (S. Gostkowski kick) (10:30)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nSteelers \u2013 3\u201314 \u2013 S. Suisham 30 yd. field goal (7:36)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 3\u201317 \u2013 S. Gostkowski 20 yd. field goal (3:51)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nSteelers \u2013 10\u201317 \u2013 A. Brown 27 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (1:55)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 10\u201324 \u2013 S. Ridley 1 yd. run (S. Gostkowski kick) (0:10)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nSteelers \u2013 17\u201324 \u2013 J. Cotchery 20 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (11:02)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nSteelers \u2013 24\u201324 \u2013 J. Cotchery 8 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (7:10)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 24\u201327 \u2013 S. Gostkowski 32 yd. field goal (2:39)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 24\u201334 \u2013 A. Dobson 17 yd. pass from T. Brady (S. Gostkowski kick) (13:46)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0079-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 24\u201341 \u2013 S. Ridley 5 yd. run (S. Gostkowski kick) (9:16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0080-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nSteelers \u2013 31\u201341 \u2013 J. Cotchery 6 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (6:15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0081-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 31\u201348 \u2013 A. Dobson 81 yd. pass from T. Brady (S. Gostkowski kick) (5:15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0082-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nPatriots \u2013 31\u201355 \u2013 L. Blount 5 yd. run (S. Gostkowski kick) (2:41)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0083-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nAfter a tough loss to the Raiders, the Steelers traveled to Foxborough to take on the Patriots. The Patriots scored first when Danny Amendola caught a 34-yard TD pass from Tom Brady to make the score 7\u20130. In the 2nd quarter, the Patriots increased their lead as Brady found Rob Gronkowski on a 19-yard pass to make the score 14\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0083-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nThe Steelers finally got on the board when Shaun Suisham kicked a 30-yard field goal to make it 14\u20133, but the Pats went ahead by 2 touchdowns again as Stephen Gostkowski nailed a field goal from 20 yards out making the score 17\u20133. Ben Roethlisberger regardless was able to find Antonio Brown for his 200th career TD pass, a 27-yarder to come behind by 7, 17\u201310. But the Pats pulled away as Stevan Ridley ran for a 1-yard TD to make it 24\u201310 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0083-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nIn the 3rd quarter, Roethlisberger found Cotchery again on a 20-yard pass cutting the lead to 24\u201317 and again on an 8-yard pass tying the game at 24. However, the Patriots pulled away again as Gostkowski kicked a 32-yard field goal to make the score 27\u201324. They continued to dominate in the 4th quarter scoring a total of 17 straight points as Brady found Aaron Dobson on a 17-yard pass to make the score 34\u201324 and Ridley again ran for another TD from 5-yards out making the score 41\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0083-0003", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nRoethlisberger and Cotchery hooked up again on a 6-yard pass to shorten the lead to 41\u201331, however the Patriots were able to pull away as Brady found Dobson again on an 81-yard pass to make the score 48\u201331 and ended it with LeGarrette Blount's 5-yard run making the final score 55\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0084-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at New England Patriots\nWith the loss, the Steelers dropped to 2\u20136, the team's first such start since 2006. It may also be noted that since 2006 whenever the team has been below .500 in a season, they would eventually finish with 8 wins or more, but at the same time, miss out on the playoffs. Also, the 55 points are the most points ever scored against the Steelers as the Patriots became the first team to score 50+ points against the team since the Bills' victory of 52\u201334 in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0085-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nBills \u2013 0\u20133 \u2013 D. Carpenter 20 yd. field goal (6:16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0086-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nSteelers \u2013 3\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 36 yd. field goal (8:47)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0087-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nSteelers \u2013 10\u20133 \u2013 J. Cotchery 5 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (1:55)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0088-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nSteelers \u2013 17\u20133 \u2013 L. Bell 4 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (3:02)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0089-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nSteelers \u2013 20\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 37 yd. field goal (8:00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0090-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nSteelers \u2013 23\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 23 yd. field goal (4:34)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0091-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nBills \u2013 23\u201310 \u2013 C. Gragg 2 yd. pass from E. Manuel (D. Carpenter kick) (0:03)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0092-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nAfter a tough road loss to the Patriots, the Steelers traveled home to take on the Bills. The Bills scored first in the first quarter when Dan Carpenter nailed a 20-yard field goal for a 3\u20130 lead and the only score of the quarter. The Steelers however, responded by doing it big starting off in the 2nd quarter tying the game at 3 when Shaun Suisham nailed a 36-yard field goal. They would increase their lead as Ben Roethlisberger found Jerricho Cotchery on a 5-yard TD pass giving them a 10\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0092-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nAfter the break, the Steelers went back to work as Le'Veon Bell ran for a 4-yard TD increasing their lead to 17\u20133. They followed up in the 4th quarter with 2 Suisham field goals from 37 and 23 yards out for a lead of 20\u20133 and then 23\u20133 respectively. The Bills finally managed to score a TD in the final seconds of the game when EJ Manuel found Chris Gragg on a 2-yard pass, making the final score 23\u201310, sealing the win for the Steelers, who improved themselves to 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0093-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nSteelers \u2013 7\u20130 \u2013 A. Brown 34 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (6:20)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0094-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nSteelers \u2013 14\u20130 \u2013 A. Brown 47 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (3:58)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0095-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nLions \u2013 14\u20133 \u2013 D. Akers 35 yd. field goal (14:05)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0096-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nSteelers \u2013 17\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 25 yd. field goal (10:31)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0097-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nLions \u2013 17\u201310 \u2013 C. Johnson 79 yd. pass from M. Stafford (D. Akers kick) (10:13)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0098-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nSteelers \u2013 20\u201310 \u2013 S. Suisham 34 yd. field goal (7:19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0099-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nLions \u2013 20\u201317 \u2013 C. Johnson 19 yd. pass from M. Stafford (D. Akers kick) (3:52)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0100-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nLions \u2013 20\u201324 \u2013 J. Bell 2 yd. run (D. Akers kick) (1:42)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0101-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nLions \u2013 20\u201327 \u2013 D. Akers 19 yd. field goal (0:04)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0102-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nSteelers \u2013 23\u201327 \u2013 S. Suisham 21 yd. field goal (5:14)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0103-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nSteelers \u2013 30\u201327 \u2013 W. Johnson 1 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (4:46)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0104-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nSteelers \u2013 37\u201327 \u2013 J. Cotchery 20 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (2:29)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0105-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nAfter defeating the Bills, the Steelers stayed home to take on the visiting Lions. They started off scoring in the 1st quarter as Ben Roethlisberger found Antonio Brown on 2 consecutive TD passes from 34 and 47 yards out for leads of 7\u20130 and then 14\u20130. The Lions were able to get on the board as David Akers nailed a 35-yard field goal to make the score 14\u20133. The Steelers managed to pull away by 2 touchdowns as Shaun Suisham nailed a 25-yard field goal for a 17\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0105-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nThe Lions drew closer as Matthew Stafford found Calvin Johnson on a 79-yard TD pass shortening the lead to 17\u201310 not long before Suisham nailed a 34-yard field goal to make the score 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0105-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nJust then, the Lions managed to take the lead scoring 17 straight points when Stafford found Calvin Johnson again on a 19-yard pass making the score 20\u201317 and with the Lions taking the lead as Joique Bell ran for a 4-yard TD moving them ahead 24\u201320 and then finally wrapped things up in the first half as Akers nailed a 19-yard field goal to take a 27\u201320 lead at halftime. After the break, the Steelers got back to work as Suisham nailed a 21-yard field goal to shorten the Lions' lead to 27\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0105-0003", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nThey took the lead in the 4th quarter as Roethlisberger found Will Johnson on a 1-yard pass making the score 30\u201327. After a failed fake field goal attempt by the Lions, the Steelers set the ball up at their own 3-yard line. Due to a huge penalty against the team, the Steelers were able to move further down the field and seal the win for themselves as Roethlisberger found Jerricho Cotchery on a 20-yard pass for a final score of 37\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0106-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 3\u20130 \u2013 S. Suisham 47 yd. field goal (10:03)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0107-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nBrowns \u2013 3\u20133 \u2013 B. Cundiff 49 yd. field goal (7:21)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0108-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 10\u20133 \u2013 A. Brown 41 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (2:33)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0109-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 13\u20133 \u2013 S. Suisham 32 yd. field goal (0:07)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0110-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 20\u20133 \u2013 E. Sanders 4 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (7:43)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0111-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 27\u20133 \u2013 W. Gay 21 yd. interception return (S. Suisham kick) (4:27)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0112-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nBrowns \u2013 27\u201311 \u2013 J. Gordon 1 yd. pass from B. Weeden (B. Weeden pass to D. Bess for two-point conversion) (3:13)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0113-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nAfter a win over the Lions, the Steelers traveled to Cleveland to take on the Browns. They drew first blood as Shaun Suisham nailed a field goal from 47 yards out to take a 3\u20130 lead. The Browns managed to tie the game as Billy Cundiff helped them tie it at 3\u20133 in the first quarter. In the 2nd quarter, the Steelers moved back into the lead scoring 24 unanswered points in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0113-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nBen Roethlisberger found Antonio Brown on a 41-yard touchdown pass to make the score 10\u20133 followed by another Suisham field goal this time from 32 yards out to make the score 13\u20133 at halftime. In the 3rd quarter, Roethlisberger found Emmanuel Sanders on a 4-yard touchdown pass increasing their lead to 20\u20133 followed by William Gay who picked off Brandon Weeden and returned it 21 yards for a touchdown making the score 27\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0113-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Browns would score a touchdown of their own as Weeden found Josh Gordon on a 1-yard touchdown pass followed by a successful 2-point conversion pass to Davone Bess to make the final score 27\u201311 as the Steelers improved to 5\u20136 winning 3 straight and taking their trend to winning 5 out of their last 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0114-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 0\u20137 \u2013 T. Smith 7 yd. pass from J. Flacco (J. Tucker kick) (9:18)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0115-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 0\u201310 \u2013 J. Tucker 43 yd. field goal (3:01)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0116-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 0\u201313 \u2013 J. Tucker 34 yd. field goal (9:21)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0117-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 7\u201313 \u2013 E. Sanders 8 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (6:26)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0118-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 7\u201316 \u2013 J. Tucker 38 yd. field goal (3:49)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0119-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 7\u201319 \u2013 J. Tucker 45 yd. field goal (13:59)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0120-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 14\u201319 \u2013 L. Bell 1 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (9:32)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0121-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nRavens \u2013 14\u201322 \u2013 J. Tucker 48 yd. field goal (5:37)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0122-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nSteelers \u2013 20\u201322 \u2013 J. Cotchery 1 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (2-point pass conversion failed) (1:03)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0123-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nAfter a win at Cleveland, the Steelers traveled to Baltimore to take on the Ravens in what would be the Thanksgiving Primetime Game and of course their first game on Thanksgiving Day since 1998. The Ravens drew first blood as Joe Flacco found Torrey Smith on a 7-yard pass to make the score 7\u20130 in the first quarter. In then 2nd quarter, Justin Tucker nailed a 43-yard field goal for a 10\u20130 halftime lead. After the break, the Ravens went back to work in the 3rd quarter as Tucker nailed a 34-yard field goal for a 13\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0123-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nThe Steelers finally got on the board asBen Roethlisberger found Emmanuel Sanders on an 8-yard touchdown pass for a 13\u20137 score. On the ensuing kick-off, Mike Tomlin was standing just off the field along the Steelers' sideline as Baltimore's Jacoby Jones broke free on the return for a potential game breaking touchdown. Tomlin, with his back to the approaching play, appeared to glance over his shoulder then place his foot briefly onto the field as he jumped out of the way, causing Jones to veer inside where he was tackled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0123-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nSeveral Ravens players claimed Tomlin had intentionally interfered with Jones; if officials had agreed, a touchdown could have been awarded to the Ravens based on the palpably unfair act, no penalty was called. A week later the NFL fined Tomlin $100,000. The Ravens then pulled away as Tucker kicked yet another field goal putting his team ahead by 9, 16\u20137. In the 4th quarter, Tucker kicked yet another field goal this one from 45 yards out for a score of 19\u20137. The Steelers managed to draw within 5 points 19\u201314 when Le'Veon Bell ran for a 1-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0123-0003", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nTucker then kicked a 48-yard field goal to make the score 22\u201314. The Steelers started their comeback attempt as Roethlisberger found Jerricho Cotchery on a 1-yard touchdown pass for a 22\u201320 score. After this, they tried the 2-point conversion to tie the game and send it into OT, but they would come up short and miss the conversion with 1:03 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0124-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Baltimore Ravens\nThis dropped the team to 5\u20137 and 3rd place in the AFC North. Also they dropped to 2\u20135 on Thanksgiving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 87], "content_span": [88, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0125-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nSteelers \u2013 7\u20130 \u2013 E. Sanders 5 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (4:20)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0126-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nDolphins \u2013 7\u20133 \u2013 C. Sturgis 30 yd. field goal (0:40)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0127-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nDolphins \u2013 7\u201310 \u2013 C. Clay 6 yd. pass from R. Tannehill (C. Sturgis kick) (8:15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0128-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nDolphins \u2013 7\u201317 \u2013 D. Thomas 4 yd. run (C. Sturgis kick) (10:15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0129-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nSteelers \u2013 14\u201317 \u2013 A. Brown 43 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (8:58)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0130-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nSteelers \u2013 21\u201317 \u2013 T. Polamalu 19 yd. interception return (S. Suisham kick) (8:05)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0131-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nDolphins \u2013 21\u201324 \u2013 B. Hartline 4 yd. pass from R. Tannehill (C. Sturgis kick) (4:52)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0132-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nSteelers \u2013 28\u201324 \u2013 J. Cotchery 16 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (14:56)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0133-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nDolphins \u2013 28\u201331 \u2013 C. Clay 12 yd. pass from R. Tannehill (C. Sturgis kick) (2:53)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0134-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nDolphins \u2013 28\u201334 \u2013 C. Sturgis 27 yd. field goal (1:08)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0135-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAfter a tough road loss to the Ravens, the Steelers went home for a game against the Dolphins. They would score first as Ben Roethlisberger found Emmanuel Sanders on a 5-yard pass for a 7\u20130 lead. The Dolphins managed to get on the board as Caleb Sturgis kicked a 30-yard field goal making the score 7\u20133. In the 2nd quarter, Charles Clay caught a 6-yard touchdown pass from Ryan Tannehill as the Phins took the lead 10\u20137 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0135-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAfter the break, the Dolphins went right back to work as Daniel Thomas ran for a 4-yard touchdown making the score 17\u20137. The Steelers then came within 3 when Roethlisberger found Antonio Brown on a 43-yard touchdown pass making the score 17\u201314 and would eventually score again when Troy Polamalu picked off Tannehill and returned it 19 yards for a touchdown as they retook the lead 21\u201317. The Dolphins however moved back into the lead as Tannehill found Brian Hartline on a 4-yard pass for a 24\u201321 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0135-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nIn the 4th quarter, Roethlisberger found Jerricho Cotchery on a 16-yard touchdown pass as they moved ahead 28\u201324. Clay then caught a pass from Tannehill making the score 31\u201328 as the Dolphins retook the lead. They would stop scoring after Sturgis kicked a 27-yard field goal for a 34\u201328 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0135-0003", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins\nUnder a minute to go in the quarter, the Steelers got the ball back with Roethlisberger throwing to Brown and then Brown running for what seemed to be the game-tying (and eventually game-winning touchdown and PAT), but officials reviewed the play and it was determined that Brown had stepped out of bounds during the run ending the game dropping the team to 5\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0136-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nSteelers \u2013 7\u20130 \u2013 L. Bell 1 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (9:58)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0137-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nSteelers \u2013 14\u20130 \u2013 A. Brown 12 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (2:16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0138-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nSteelers \u2013 21\u20130 \u2013 A. Brown 67 yd. punt return (S. Suisham kick) (1:12)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0139-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nSteelers \u2013 24\u20130 \u2013 S. Suisham 25 yd. field goal (9:36)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0140-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nBengals \u2013 24\u20137 \u2013 G. Bernard 1 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (5:14)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0141-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nSteelers \u2013 27\u20137 \u2013 S. Suisham 45 yd. field goal (1:14)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0142-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nSteelers \u2013 30\u20137 \u2013 S. Suisham 26 yd. field goal (6:18)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0143-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nBengals \u2013 30\u201314 \u2013 T. Eifert 1 yd. pass from A. Dalton (M. Nugent kick) (14:09)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0144-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nBengals \u2013 30\u201320 \u2013 M. Jones 13 yd. pass from A. Dalton (2-point pass conversion failed) (5:46)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0145-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Steelers stayed home for a SNF duel against longtime division rival Bengals. The first quarter was all Steelers as they scored touchdowns in 3 different ways: Le'Veon Bell ran for a 1-yard, Antonio Brown caught a 12-yard pass, and then returned a punt 67 yards putting up scores of 7\u20130, 14\u20130, and 21\u20130. This remains the most points in their franchise history they have scored in the first quarter while it remains the largest number of points the Bengals have allowed in the first quarter alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0145-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThis streak of points stood at 24 straight as Shaun Suisham kicked a 25-yard field goal. The Bengals finally got on the board as Gio Benard ran for a 1-yard touchdown making the score 24\u20137. Suisham then nailed a 45-yard field goal to move his team ahead 27\u20137 at halftime. After this, the Steelers went back to work in the 3rd quarter coming away with another field goal from 26 yards out for a 30\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0145-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe 4th quarter however, was all Bengals as Andy Dalton and Tyler Eifert connected on a 1-yard touchdown pass making the score 30\u201314 not long before Dalton found Marvin Jones on a 13-yard pass making the score 30\u201320, but the 2-point conversion failed as the Steelers would eventually win the game with that score as the final sending them to 6\u20138. Coupled with losses of the Ravens, Chargers, and Dolphins, the Steelers also remained in the playoff hunt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0146-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nPackers \u2013 0\u20137 \u2013 J. Boykin 5 yd. pass from M. Flynn (M. Crosby kick) (4:02)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0147-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nSteelers \u2013 7\u20137 \u2013 E. Sanders 1 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (0:01)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0148-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nPackers \u2013 7\u201314 \u2013 E. Lacy 14 yd. run (M. Crosby kick)(1:53)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0149-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nSteelers \u2013 10\u201314 \u2013 S. Suisham 31 yd. field goal (0:02)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0150-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nSteelers \u2013 17\u201314 \u2013 B. Roethlisberger 13 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (11:51)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0151-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nPackers \u2013 17\u201321 \u2013 E. Lacy 2 yd. run (M. Cosby kick) (5:19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0152-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nSteelers \u2013 24\u201321 \u2013 M. Spaeth 11 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (1:55)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0153-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nSteelers \u2013 31\u201321 \u2013 C. Allen 40 yd. interception return (S. Suisham kick) (1:37)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0154-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nPackers \u2013 31\u201324 \u2013 M. Crosby 22 yd. field goal (12:04)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0155-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nPackers \u2013 31\u201331 \u2013 J. Kuhn 1 yd. run (M. Crosby kick) (7:14)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0156-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nSteelers \u2013 38\u201331 \u2013 L. Bell 1 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (1:25)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0157-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nAfter the win at home against the Bengals, the Steelers traveled to take on the Packers in a rematch of Super Bowl XLV. Coming into this game with a record of 2\u20135 in road games, the Packers scored first when Matt Flynn found Jarrett Boykin on a 5-yard pass for a 7\u20130 lead. The Steelers managed to tie it up late in the first quarter when Ben Roethlisberger found Emmanuel Sanders on a 1-yard pass taking the game to 7\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0157-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nIn the 2nd quarter, the Packers retook the lead as Eddie Lacy ran for a 14-yard touchdown making the score 14\u20137. This was followed up by the Steelers coming within 4 as Suisham kicked a 31-yard field goal as for a 14\u201310 score at halftime. After the break, the Steelers took the lead as Roethlisberger rushed for a touchdown himself from 13 yards out making the score 17\u201314. The Packers took the lead back as Lacy ran for a 2-yard touchdown making the score 21\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0157-0002", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Steelers then moved back into the lead as Roethlisberger found Matt Spaeth on an 11-yard pass, making the score 24\u201321, and then Cortez Allen picked off Matt Flynn returning the ball 40 yards for a touchdown, making the score 31\u201321. In the 4th quarter, the Packers tried a comeback attempt as Mason Crosby nailed a 22-yard field goal to come within 7, at 31\u201324. Eventually, they managed to tie the game when John Kuhn ran for a 1-yard touchdown at 31\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0157-0003", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nThe Steelers moved back into the lead as Le'Veon Bell ran for a 1-yard touchdown for a 38\u201331 lead. Matt Flynn moved the Packers down the field but his last attempt within the final 3 seconds was incomplete, sealing the win for the Steelers as they improved to 7\u20138 while finishing 3\u20135 in road games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0158-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 7\u20130 \u2013 A. Brown 9 yd. pass from B. Roethlisberger (S. Suisham kick) (9:53)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0159-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 14\u20130 \u2013 L. Bell 5 yd. run (S. Suisham kick) (4:22)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0160-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 17\u20130 \u2013 S. Suisham 30 yd. field goal (3:50)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0161-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nSteelers \u2013 20\u20130 \u2013 S. Suisham 32 yd. field goal (8:26)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0162-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nBrowns \u2013 20\u20137 \u2013 F. Whittaker 35 yd. pass from J. Campbell (B. Cundiff kick) (2:46)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0163-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe Steelers' final game of the season would be at home against the Browns. They would draw first blood as Ben Roethlisberger found Jerricho Cotchery on a 9-yard pass for a 7\u20130 lead. Le'Veon Bell ran for a touchdown from 5 yards out making the score 14\u20130 at halftime. Shaun Suisham would go on to kick 2 field goals in the 3rd and 4th quarters from 30 and 32 yards out making the score 17\u20130, and 20\u20130. Later on in the quarter, the Browns managed to score their only 7 points of the whole game as Jason Campbell found Fozzy Whittaker on a 35-yard pass for a final score of 20\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0164-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nThe team finished the season with another 8\u20138 record and despite losses by the Ravens and Dolphins, the Steelers were eliminated from playoff contention for the second consecutive season after the Chargers defeated the Chiefs. This would be the first time since 1999 and 2000 that the Steelers would fail to make the playoffs in consecutive seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0165-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. Cleveland Browns\nAntonio Brown became the first player in NFL History to record at least five catches and 50 yards in every game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235514-0166-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Transactions\nThe Steelers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2013 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election\nThe 2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election took place on November 5, 2013. Democrat Bill Peduto was elected the 60th Mayor of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The primary election was held on May 21, 2013. Incumbent Democratic Mayor Luke Ravenstahl, although eligible for a second full term, did not seek reelection as Mayor of Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election\nInitially, Luke Ravenstahl had indicated an intention to seek reelection in the 2013 election and had led early Democratic primary polling. Following Ravenstahl's withdrawal in early March 2013, several candidates not previously considering a campaign joined the race and others became speculated candidates. As of the primary election petition filing deadline on March 12, 2013, seven Democratic candidates and one Republican candidate, Joshua Wander, had filed to run. One Democratic candidate, Bill Robinson, stated he would run despite missing the petition deadline. After the field settled, there were four candidates seeking the Democratic nomination who were listed on the ballot and one seeking the Republican nomination. In addition, the sole Republican candidate also expressed an intention to run for the Democratic nomination as a write-in candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election\nOn May 21, 2013, Bill Peduto won the Democratic primary and Josh Wander, who had run unopposed in the Republican primary, won his party's nomination. Peduto defeated Wander and independent Lester Ludwig in the November general election. He was inaugurated as Pittsburgh's 60th mayor upon the expiration of incumbent mayor Luke Ravenstahl's term in January 2014. The next regular quadrennial mayoral election following the 2013 election took place on November 7, 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Background\nIn the 2005 election, Democrat Bob O'Connor was elected Mayor of Pittsburgh and assumed office in January 2006. In July 2006, O'Connor was diagnosed with a rare form of lymphoma, which was initially believed to be manageable. His health deteriorated, however, and he died on September 1, 2006. Luke Ravenstahl, as president of the Pittsburgh City Council, was subsequently sworn-in and assumed office as mayor. At the time, at age 26, Ravenstahl was the youngest mayor of a major U.S. city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Background\nA special election was scheduled for November 2007, which pitted Ravenstahl and Republican businessman Mark DeSantis. DeSantis mounted a serious campaign despite a heavy Democratic voter registration advantage in Pittsburgh. Nonetheless, Ravenstahl won the election by a wide margin to serve out the remainder of O'Connor's term, ending in 2010. Ravenstahl was again a candidate for re-election, this time for a full term, in the regularly scheduled November 2009 election. In the primary, he defeated City Councilman Patrick Dowd and attorney Carmen Robinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Background\nBoth candidates were able to tap into Democratic support; however, neither were able to overcome Ravenstahl's name recognition throughout the city. In the general election, the cross-filed Ravenstahl faced and ultimately defeated independent candidates Franco \"Dok\" Harris, son of former Pittsburgh Steelers player Franco Harris, and Kevin Acklin, who would eventually become Bill Peduto's Mayoral Chief of Staff after the 2013 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Background\nRavenstahl had an unstable relationship with the Pittsburgh City Council throughout his term as mayor, which included disagreements over the city budget. City Councilman Bill Peduto emerged as a political opponent of Ravenstahl's, with Peduto mounting a primary election challenge against Ravenstahl in 2007 before dropping out a short time later. Prior to the 2013 election, Ravenstahl had not held a fundraiser since 2009 and it was uncertain whether or not he would seek another term; however, an undisclosed source indicated to local news outlet KDKA in September 2011 that Ravenstahl would run for re-election in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, Early developments\nSeveral candidates expressed interest in running in the May 21, 2013, Democratic primary election. Incumbent Luke Ravenstahl officially announced in November 2012 that he would seek re-election to a second full term. In addition, Bill Peduto, who had run for Mayor of Pittsburgh in 2005 (losing in the primary to fellow Democratic City Councilman and eventual winner Bob O'Connor) and again for a short time in the 2007 special election before dropping out prior to the primary, announced his candidacy in December 2012 and was immediately endorsed by Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, Early developments\nCity Controller Michael Lamb, who stated that he had \"every intention\" of running for mayor, declared his candidacy in mid-January 2013. Jack Wagner, former Auditor General of Pennsylvania, also publicly expressed interest in the race and filed a petition to run in March. Wagner also reportedly considered an independent general election campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, Early developments\nPolling conducted between late December 2012 to mid-January 2013 by Civic Science found that a race between Luke Ravenstahl and Bill Peduto would be within single digit percentage points. The polling firm, however, emphasized that the poll was not intended to provide two-way race numbers and that the polling (which was completed on January 16) did not include Michael Lamb, who had entered the race the next day. According to the poll, blue-collar primary voters were more apt to support Ravenstahl while white-collar primary voters were more apt to support Peduto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, Early developments\nOn March 1, 2013, Ravenstahl announced that he would not seek reelection, reversing a prior decision to run for another term. The announcement came amid an investigation of fund use at the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, although Ravenstahl did not make any indication that this had contributed to his decision to withdraw. In addition, Ravenstahl alluded in his announcement to the medical condition of his mother, who had been suffering \"medical issues,\" but did not indicate that this had contributed to the decision either. Ravenstahl stated that he would serve out the remainder of his term, ending in January 2014. Shortly thereafter, City Council President Darlene Harris confirmed her intention to run. In addition, Jake Wheatley, Jim Ferlo, and Ricky Burgess became speculated candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, After Ravenstahl's withdrawal\nIn early March 2013, following the withdrawal of incumbent mayor Luke Ravenstahl, a poll conducted by Keystone Analytics found that Bill Peduto was leading the race, garnering the support of 30 percent of respondents. Jack Wagner was second with 20 percent of respondents voicing support. Nearly a quarter of respondents, 22 percent, remained undecided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, After Ravenstahl's withdrawal\nThe filing deadline to appear on the Democratic primary ballot was March 12, 2013, at 5:00 PM EDT. At this point, seven candidates had formally filed petitions to run for Mayor of Pittsburgh: Jim Ferlo, Darlene Harris, Michael Lamb, Bill Peduto, A. J. Richardson, Jake Wheatley and Jack Wagner. Allegheny County Councilman Bill Robinson stated that he would run for mayor despite not meeting the deadline for petitions to appear on the ballot. Jim Ferlo, despite filing to run, dropped out of the race three days later, on March 15. On March 27, Darlene Harris dropped out of the race. On the same day, Jack Wagner received endorsements from Pittsburgh police and firefighter unions, as well as former candidate and State Senator Jim Ferlo. Also on March 27, Bill Peduto was endorsed by State Representative Ed Gainey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 902]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, After Ravenstahl's withdrawal\nMichael Lamb ended his campaign on April 1, 2013, and endorsed Jack Wagner. Shortly thereafter, on April 3, a judge ruled that Wagner could use the approximately US$300,000 in his statewide campaign account, left over from his campaigns for state auditor and Governor of Pennsylvania, after the usage of these funds was challenged by fellow candidate Bill Peduto. Also on April 3, local media reported that candidate A. J. Richardson was arrested for allegedly driving under the influence after having been found by police passed out in his vehicle. Following his release from jail, Richardson dismissed the allegation as an attempt to sabotage his candidacy for mayor and expressed an intention to continue his campaign. However, Richardson stated at a mayoral candidates debate that evening that he would plead guilty to the charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, After Ravenstahl's withdrawal\nAnother poll released by Keystone Analytics in early April found that the Democratic primary had become largely a two-way race between Bill Peduto and Jack Wagner, with Wagner taking the lead following Michael Lamb's withdrawal and endorsement. Wagner garnered 38 percent in the poll, with Peduto receiving the support of 31 percent of respondents. Candidates Jake Wheatley and A. J. Richardson garnered 4 and 1 percent, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, After Ravenstahl's withdrawal\nTwo additional polls, released in late April and mid-May by Keystone Analytics, showed Peduto regaining the lead in the primary race. In the April poll, Peduto's lead was within the plus or minus 4.38 percent margin of error; he led Jack Wagner 38 to 36 percent. Jake Wheatley received 5 percent support and A. J. Richardson received less than 1 percent. A poll released in mid-May, with a plus or minus 4.9 percent margin of error, suggested that Peduto had expanded his lead over Wagner. Peduto was supported by 39 percent of respondents, while Wagner had 36 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, After Ravenstahl's withdrawal\nWheatley and Richardson garnered 8 and 1 percent, respectively. An additional poll, commissioned by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and conducted by Susquehanna Polling & Research and released in the final week before the primary, also showed Peduto leading Wagner, 42 to 33 percent. The same poll showed Wheatley with 6 percent and Richardson with 1 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Democratic primary, Results\nIn the end, Bill Peduto defeated Jack Wagner, Jake Wheatley and A. J. Richardson. Peduto gained a majority of the vote, with about 52 percent. Wagner, Wheatley and Richardson finished with about 40, 8 and 1 percent, respectively. Peduto carried much of the vote in wards in and around Downtown and to the east, with the exception of one ward carried by Wheatley in the uptown section. Wagner was most successful in the South Side and portions of the North Side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, Republican primary\nOnly one Republican candidate for mayor, Squirrel Hill resident Joshua Wander, filed a petition prior to the March 12 filing deadline to run as a Republican. In addition, Wander had stated an intention to run as a write-in candidate for the Democratic nomination. Wander had previously run as a write-in candidate for the Republican Mayoral nomination in the 2009 election, but was defeated by incumbent mayor Luke Ravenstahl, also a write-in candidate in the Republican primary. The Republican primary took place alongside the Democratic primary on May 21, 2013. Wander, having run unopposed, won the nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, General election\nBill Peduto and Josh Wander won the Democratic and Republican primaries, respectively, on May 21, 2013. In addition, City Council President Darlene Harris switched her party registration to \"independent\" on April 22, 2013, less than an hour prior to the deadline to be eligible as a third party candidate in the general election. August 1 was the deadline for third-party candidates to file to appear on the ballot. Harris did not file to run prior to the deadline, however, and thus was not an official candidate. Independent activist Lester Ludwig was the only officially declared independent running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, General election\nAs such, three candidates appeared on the general election ballot: Peduto, Wander and Ludwig. From the outset, Peduto was heavily favored by local media and political observers to win the election owing to the Democratic Party's voter registration advantage in Pittsburgh, although Wander stated that it was not his sole intention to win the race, but rather to \"convey a message that there is a choice.\" Two debates had been scheduled in October 2013, but Wander\u2014who had been running his campaign from Israel, where he was working as a security consultant\u2014and Ludwig did not attend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235515-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Pittsburgh mayoral election, General election\nAs a result, Peduto was the only candidate to attend the events, reformatting them as town hall events, and local television station WTAE-TV cancelled an October 29 debate as Wander did not confirm that he would be able to attend. Ultimately, Bill Peduto defeated both Wander and Ludwig to be elected as the 60th Mayor of Pittsburgh and was inaugurated to succeed Luke Ravenstahl in January 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship\nThe 2013 Players Championship was a golf tournament in Florida on the PGA Tour, held May 9\u201312 at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, southeast of Jacksonville. It was the 40th Players Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship\nTiger Woods won his second Players Championship, two strokes ahead of runners-up David Lingmerth, Jeff Maggert, and Kevin Streelman. Woods previously won twelve years earlier in 2001, after winning the previous three majors and the next for his Tiger Slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship\nDefending champion Matt Kuchar finished thirteen strokes back at even par, tied for 48th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Venue\nThis was the 32nd Players Championship held at the TPC at Sawgrass Stadium Course and it remained at 7,215 yards (6,597\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Field\nThe field consisted of 144 players meeting criteria 1\u201312, plus the winner of the 2012 Senior Players Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Field\nCharlie Beljan (3), Jonas Blixt (3), Keegan Bradley (2,3,5,7,9), Scott Brown, Jason Dufner (2,3,9), Ernie Els (2,3,5,9), Derek Ernst, Tommy Gainey (3), Sergio Garc\u00eda (2,3,6,9), Brian Gay (3), Russell Henley, J. J. Henry (3), Billy Horschel (9,11), Dustin Johnson (2,3,9,11), Zach Johnson (2,3,9), Matt Kuchar (2,3,6,7,9,11), Martin Laird (3), Marc Leishman (3), Graeme McDowell (3,5,9,11), Rory McIlroy (2,3,5,9), John Merrick (3), Phil Mickelson (2,3,5,9,11), Ryan Moore (2,3,9), Scott Piercy (2,3,9), D. A. Points (3,9,11), Ted Potter Jr. (3), Adam Scott (2,3,5,7,9,11), Webb Simpson (2,3,5,9), Brandt Snedeker (2,3,8,9,11), Scott Stallings (3), Kevin Streelman (3,11), Michael Thompson (3,9), Nick Watney (2,3,7,9), Tiger Woods (2,3,5,7,9,11)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Field\nLuke Donald (3,7,9), Rickie Fowler (3,9), Jim Furyk (3,8,9), Robert Garrigus (3,9), John Huh (3), Hunter Mahan (3,7,9), Louis Oosthuizen (3,5,9), Carl Pettersson (3,9), Justin Rose (3,7,9), John Senden (3), Steve Stricker (3,9), Bo Van Pelt (3,9), Bubba Watson (3,5,9), Lee Westwood (3,9)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Field\nRobert Allenby, Aaron Baddeley, Bae Sang-moon, Ricky Barnes, Jason Bohn, Jonathan Byrd, Chad Campbell, Roberto Castro, Bud Cauley, Greg Chalmers, Kevin Chappell, K. J. Choi (6), Tim Clark (6,9), Will Claxton, Ben Crane, Ben Curtis, Brian Davis, Jason Day (9), Brendon de Jonge, Graham DeLaet, James Driscoll, Ken Duke, Harris English, Matt Every, Martin Flores, Tom Gillis, Bill Haas (8,9), Brian Harman, P\u00e1draig Harrington (5), David Hearn, Tim Herron, Charley Hoffman, Charles Howell III, Freddie Jacobson (9), Chris Kirk, Colt Knost, Jason Kokrak, Davis Love III, Jeff Maggert, David Mathis, Troy Matteson, William McGirt, George McNeill, Bryce Molder, Noh Seung-yul, Geoff Ogilvy, Sean O'Hair, Jeff Overton, Greg Owen, Ryan Palmer, Pat Perez, Ian Poulter (7,9), Dicky Pride, John Rollins, Andr\u00e9s Romero, Rory Sabbatini, Charl Schwartzel (5,9), Vijay Singh, Kevin Stadler, Kyle Stanley, Brendan Steele, Henrik Stenson (6,9), Chris Stroud, Daniel Summerhays, Josh Teater, David Toms, Cameron Tringale, Johnson Wagner, Jimmy Walker, Boo Weekley, Charlie Wi, Mark Wilson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 1103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Field\n\u00c1ngel Cabrera, Stewart Cink, Lucas Glover, Martin Kaymer (9), Yang Yong-eun", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Field\nGonzalo Fern\u00e1ndez-Casta\u00f1o, Branden Grace, Peter Hanson, Francesco Molinari, Thorbj\u00f8rn Olesen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Field\nErik Compton, Luke Guthrie, James Hahn, Matt Jones, Jerry Kelly, Scott Langley, Richard H. Lee, Justin Leonard, David Lingmerth, David Lynn, Brian Stuard, Nicholas Thompson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Round summaries, First round\nPlaying in his first Players Championship, Roberto Castro tied the course record at 63 (\u22129) in relatively benign morning conditions. His round, which consisted of seven birdies, one eagle, and no bogeys, tied the record set by Fred Couples (third round) in 1992 and matched by Greg Norman (first round) in 1994. Zach Johnson and Rory McIlroy were three shots back, with six other players, including Tiger Woods, four shots back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nUnheralded first-round leader Castro fell far back into the pack after a second round 78. The halfway leader was 2008 winner Sergio Garc\u00eda after some impressive putting saw him to a 65 and 133 (\u221211). A stroke back was 2001 winner and world number one Woods, who shot a second straight 67 for a 134, his best 36-hole score at TPC Sawgrass by six strokes. Notables to miss the cut included former winners Phil Mickelson and Tim Clark, and world number four Justin Rose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nA rain delay on Saturday afternoon left eight players unable to complete their third rounds, with play to be completed Sunday morning. With one hole to play, unheralded rookie David Lingmerth, who had missed five straight cuts since a playoff loss in the early season, led by two from three former winners. 49-year-old Jeff Maggert had earlier shot the round of the day with a 66.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nA late bogey for Lingmerth, and strong play from the final group, left a three-way tie for the lead on a congested leaderboard at the conclusion of the third round. Lingmerth would play the final round with Garc\u00eda, who finished birdie-birdie-par, while co-leader Tiger Woods was one group back, alongside another outsider in former U.S. Amateur runner-up Casey Wittenberg. Ryan Palmer, who had lost a close friend in a traffic accident at the start of the week, was also amongst those one stroke back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nGarc\u00eda and Lingmerth were in the last group, with Woods in the group just ahead. Leading by several shots, Woods double-bogeyed No. 14 with a pulled hook into the water, which brought the field back in play. Woods came back into the lead by making a birdie on No. 16, after a bunker shot ended just a couple feet from the hole. Garc\u00eda hit his ball to the center of the No. 16 green and made a two-putt for a birdie, tying Woods for the lead going into No. 17. Lingmerth hit his second shot into the left green side bunker at No. 16, and hit a sand shot to just a few feet; he then converted on his birdie attempt to get one behind the leaders heading into No. 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nThe 17th hole was pivotal, as Woods hit his tee shot to 47 feet (14\u00a0m) and two-putted to make par. Lingmerth hit his tee shot to seven feet but did not make the birdie putt, leaving him with a par. Garc\u00eda, with a pitching wedge, hit the first tee shot in the water, a few feet short of the island green. On his next attempt, his ball hit the island green surface but bounded back into the water. His third shot hit the center of the green; he ended up with a quadruple-bogey seven that took him out of contention. He took a double-bogey on the final hole to finish six strokes back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nWoods' tee shot at the 18th was a slight draw, to the center of the fairway and the approach shot was within 16 feet (5\u00a0m); he two-putted for par and a 70. Lingmerth could have tied Woods with a birdie, but his tee shot with a driver went too long and into the right rough. His approach shot ended up 61 feet (19\u00a0m) from the pin and his birdie attempt missed the hole by several inches, ending off the green and he bogeyed. Woods won by two shots, his second win at the event, in his 300th career PGA Tour start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235516-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship, Spectators\nThe attendance of 173,946 set a single-week record and the single-day record was broken with 45,281 on Saturday. TV ratings were up 68 percent from 2012; the final-round ratings were the highest for the tournament since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235517-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship Finals\nThe 2013 Cash Converters Players Championship Finals was the sixth edition of the PDC darts tournament, the Players Championship Finals, which saw the top 32 players from the 2013 PDC Pro Tour Order of Merit taking part. The tournament took place from 29 November\u20131 December 2013 at the Butlin's Resort Minehead in Minehead, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235517-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship Finals\nDefending champion, Phil Taylor, who had a superb 2013 in winning the World Championship, the UK Open, the World Matchplay, the Sydney Darts Masters, the World Grand Prix, the Championship League, the Masters and the Grand Slam of Darts, looked on course to win the 2013 Players Championship also, when he led Michael van Gerwen 6\u20133 in the final. However, Taylor then fell victim to one of van Gerwen's purple patches as van Gerwen came back to win 11\u20137 and take the 2013 Players Championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235517-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship Finals, Qualification\nThis is the final ProTour Order of Merit for 2013 after all Players Championship events, UK Open Qualifiers and European Tour events had been played:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235517-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Championship Finals, Draw\nThe playing distance from the second round onwards has been reduced with respect to 2012. From the best of 19, 19, 21 and 25 legs to 17, 17, 19 and 21 legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235518-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Tour Championship Grand Final\nThe 2013 Players Tour Championship Grand Final (also known as the 2013 Dafabet Players Tour Championship Grand Finals for sponsorship purposes) was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 12 and 17 March 2013 at the Bailey Allen Hall in Galway, Republic of Ireland. It was the ninth ranking event of the 2012/2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235518-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Tour Championship Grand Final\nStephen Lee was the defending champion, but he couldn't compete due to his suspension from professional snooker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235518-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Tour Championship Grand Final\nDing Junhui won his sixth ranking title by defeating Neil Robertson 4\u20133 in the final. Ding also made the 97th official maximum break during his quarter-final match against Mark Allen. This was Ding's fifth 147 break and the ninth in the 2012/2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235518-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Tour Championship Grand Final, Prize fund and ranking points\nThe breakdown of prize money and ranking points of the event is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235518-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Players Tour Championship Grand Final, Seeding list\nThe players competed in 13 minor-ranking tournaments to earn points for the PTC and APTC Order of Merits. The seeding list of the Finals was based on the combined list from the earnings of both Order of Merits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235519-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Players' Championship\nThe 2013 Players' Championship was a curling tournament held from April 16 to 21 at the Mattamy Athletic Centre (Maple Leaf Gardens) in Toronto, Ontario as part of the 2012\u201313 World Curling Tour. It was the fourth men's and fifth women's Grand Slam event of the 2012\u201313 curling season. The event was held in a round robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235519-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Players' Championship, Men, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235519-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Players' Championship, Women, Round Robin Results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235520-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Plze\u0148 shopping center referendum\nPlze\u0148 shopping center referendum was held on 12 January 2013. Plze\u0148 citizens refused shopping center Corso to be built near historical center of the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235520-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Plze\u0148 shopping center referendum, Campaign\nOpponents of the shopping center called their campaign \"Yes for Pilsen.\" It was started on 19 December 2012. Opponents argumented that the council focuses only on economical aspect of the center and that the center wouldn't fit in the historical part of the city. The company Amadeus Real that invested in the center started their own campaign for the shopping center. The company argumented by new jobs for citizens. The city council started its own informational campaign on 5 December. It was focused on negative impacts to the city if the shopping center is refused.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235520-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Plze\u0148 shopping center referendum, Campaign\nSupporters of the center included Milan Chovanec while opponents were supported by Ji\u0159\u00ed Posp\u00ed\u0161il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400\nThe 2013 Pocono IndyCar 400 fueled by Sunoco, the twentieth running of the event, was an IndyCar Series race held on July 7, 2013, at the Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania. The race was the eleventh in the 2013 IndyCar Series season. The event made a return to the IndyCar schedule after a 23-year hiatus. Marco Andretti of Andretti Autosport won the pole position, while Chip Ganassi Racing driver Scott Dixon won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Report, Background\nPocono Raceway held an IndyCar race from 1971\u20131989, though as a 500-mile race, with the event ending after Pocono owner Joseph Mattioli chose not to return, citing the rivalry between the USAC and CART as a factor. The final race at the track was won by Danny Sullivan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Report, Background\nOn October 1, 2012, IndyCar announced that the Pocono race will make a return for 2013. However, the race was shortened by 100 miles to 400, as a request by ABC to fit the time window. The race became a part of the IndyCar Triple Crown of Motorsport, in which if a driver wins the Indianapolis 500, the Pocono IndyCar 400, and the season-ending MAVTV 500, they will win $1 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Report, Background\nThe first ten races of the 2013 season were split by Andretti Autosport and other teams, with Andretti drivers James Hinchcliffe winning three races and teammate Ryan Hunter-Reay winning two. The other five races were won by Takuma Sato (A. J. Foyt Enterprises), Tony Kanaan (KV Racing Technology), Mike Conway (Dale Coyne Racing), Simon Pagenaud (Sam Schmidt Motorsports) and H\u00e9lio Castroneves (Team Penske).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Report, Qualifying\nMarco Andretti of Andretti Autosport won the pole position after recording a lap speed of 221.273\u00a0mph (356.104\u00a0km/h), breaking the record set by Emerson Fittipaldi in 1989, who had a speed of 211.175\u00a0mph (339.853\u00a0km/h). Andretti's teammates Ryan Hunter-Reay (220.892\u00a0mph (355.491\u00a0km/h)) and James Hinchcliffe (220.431\u00a0mph (354.749\u00a0km/h)) started second and third, respectively. The last time a team swept the front row in qualifying was in the 1988 Indianapolis 500 with Penske Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Report, Qualifying\nWill Power (220.286\u00a0mph (354.516\u00a0km/h)) started fourth, while Tony Kanaan (219.625\u00a0mph (353.452\u00a0km/h)) and H\u00e9lio Castroneves (219.581\u00a0mph (353.381\u00a0km/h)) started fifth and sixth, respectively. Scott Dixon (219.500\u00a0mph (353.251\u00a0km/h), Takuma Sato (219.124\u00a0mph (352.646\u00a0km/h)), Simon Pagenaud (218.859\u00a0mph (352.219\u00a0km/h)) and Simona de Silvestro (218.590\u00a0mph (351.787\u00a0km/h)) rounded out the top ten. Meanwhile, the fourth Andretti driver, E. J. Viso, was in position to start in fourth until he hit the wall during qualifying; Alex Tagliani had also hit the wall while qualifying. Viso and Tagliani started 22nd and 24th, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Report, Qualifying\nFor Dixon, despite qualifying in seventh, was penalized ten spots due to conflicts between manufacturer Honda and IndyCar regarding the 2,000 miles (3,200\u00a0km) engine change rule. Dixon was not the only driver penalized for unapproved engine changes; among those forced to move back were: Dario Franchitti, Pippa Mann, Justin Wilson, Viso and Tagliani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Race\nThe race started with James Hinchcliffe hitting the turn 1 wall on the first lap. Later, on lap 61, his teammate Ryan Hunter-Reay was hit from behind by Takuma Sato while entering pit lane, suffering right front wheel and right wing damage, and was forced to go to the garage. The other Andretti Autosport driver on the front row, Marco Andretti, led 88 laps, but ran out of fuel as he crossed the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Race\nFor the other competitors, Scott Dixon, who had led only one lap all season (at the Indianapolis 500), led 38 laps, including the final 28 laps, and guided Chip Ganassi Racing to its 100th win, Honda's 200th win, and Dixon's 30th career victory. The win was Dixon's first since 2012 at Mid-Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Race\nHis teammates Charlie Kimball and Dario Franchitti finished second and third, marking the first time a team swept the podium since 2011, when Team Penske had Will Power, H\u00e9lio Castroneves and Ryan Briscoe in the top three at Sonoma Raceway, and at a Triple Crown race since Bobby Unser, Rick Mears and Mario Andretti of Team Penske finished in the top three spots at Ontario Motor Speedway in 1979. Power finished fourth, Josef Newgarden fifth, Simon Pagenaud sixth, Justin Wilson, Castroneves, Ed Carpenter, and Andretti closed out the top ten. Hunter-Reay finished 20th, and Hinchcliffe finished 24th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235521-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pocono IndyCar 400, Race\nIndianapolis 500 winner Tony Kanaan led portions of the race, but at lap 109 he clipped his front wing passing Scott Dixon for the lead. While Kanaan was able to continue, the team was forced to change the front wing under green flag conditions ending any chance Kanaan had at winning the second leg of the triple crown. Kanaan finished a disappointing 13th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235522-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Podgorica bus crash\nOn June 23, 2013, 19 people, all Romanians, were killed and another 28 wounded in a bus crash near Podgorica in Montenegro. The bus, with registration plate number B 123 MMJ, skidded off the road, crashing into a ravine about 40 m below. A local child who was on the road at the time of the accident was also injured, but not seriously. The accident reportedly occurred around 5 to 6 pm 30 km north of Podgorica, the capital and largest city of Montenegro. There were about 50 people on board, all of them Romanian citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235522-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Podgorica bus crash\nThe accident occurred during a rainstorm on a narrow road in mountainous terrain. The exact cause of the accident is unknown. The bus was carrying around 48 passengers, two drivers and a tourist guide, and was headed towards the Adriatic Sea. Attempts to rescue the survivors were inhibited by the rocky terrain of the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235522-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Podgorica bus crash\nMontenegro's Interior Minister Ra\u0161ko Konjevi\u0107 described the crash as \"an extremely serious accident\". Milo \u0110ukanovi\u0107, the Prime Minister of Montenegro, also visited the victims at the hospital, and expressed his condolences to the Romanian Ambassador to Montenegro. The Serbian Government also offered medical assistance for the injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235522-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Podgorica bus crash\nVictor Ponta, the Prime Minister of Romania, announced a day of national mourning for the date June 26. On the same day Montenegro also observed a day of national mourning in solidarity with Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl\nThe 2013 Poinsettia Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 26, 2013 at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California. The ninth edition of the Poinsettia Bowl, it featured the Mountain West Conference Mountain Division champion Utah State Aggies against the Mid-American Conference West Division champion Northern Illinois Huskies. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. It began at 6:30\u00a0p.m. PST and aired on ESPN. The game was sponsored by the San Diego County Credit Union and was officially known as the San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl. Utah State defeated Northern Illinois by a score of 21\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl\nThe Aggies accepted their invitation after finishing with an 8\u20135 record after losing in the 2013 Mountain West Championship Game to Fresno State. The Huskies, meanwhile, went undefeated in the regular season and won the MAC West, but ultimately lost out to Bowling Green in the 2013 MAC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl\nThis was the second meeting between these two teams. The first was in 1995, when NIU traveled to Utah State and lost 42\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Teams\nIn 2009, the Poinsettia Bowl announced that it had extended its agreement to continue to feature the Mountain West's second bowl-eligible team until at least 2013. The Huskies last played in this bowl game in 2006, where they lost to TCU 37\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nAfter receiving the opening kickoff, Utah State's (USU) opening drive stalled; however, their punt was downed inside the five yard line, forcing Northern Illinois (NIU) to drive the length of the field in order to score. NIU went three-and-out, and their punt went only 17 yards, giving USU the ball with only 29 yards needed to score a touchdown. They failed to do so, however, as, after losing six yards on the drive, Jake Thompson missed a 52-yard field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nSubsequently, NIU took possession of the ball, but quarterback Jordan Lynch lost a fumble, setting up USU, who this time capitalized on the field position with Nick Diaz making a 31-yard field goal to take a 3\u20130 lead. On NIU's ensuing drive, they ran 13 plays that totaled 55 yards, ultimately setting up a 37-yard field goal attempt for Mathew Sims. Sims missed, and USU regained possession. At the end of the first quarter, USU was in the middle of a drive, well into NIU territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nAt the beginning of the quarter, USU was at the NIU 25-yard line, having embarked, late in the first quarter, on a drive highlighted by a 58-yard rush by Joey DeMartino. Faced with another 3rd down and 16, USU failed to convert, and settled for another field goal by Diaz, this time a 39-yard kick. NIU finally responded, embarking on a 15-play, 78-yard drive that culminated when Lynch rushed for a 1-yard touchdown, making the score 7\u20136. After USU's next drive resulted in a punt, NIU took possession, and approached the red zone, but on a fourth down, failed to convert, consequently turning the ball over. USU failed to score before the half, and the score at the half was 7\u20136 NIU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nAfter receiving the opening half kickoff, NIU's first play of the half was an interception thrown by Lynch to USU's Brian Suite. The Aggies capitalized off the turnover; Darell Garretson threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Brandon Swindall, and USU regained the lead, 13\u20137. NIU failed to respond, and punted; after that, the teams exchanged punts once again before USU drove down the field, and entered the red zone, at which point Garretson threw an interception to Jim Thorpe Award finalist Jimmie Ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nAgain, however, NIU appeared to have failed to even achieve a first down, and brought on the punt team, but faked the punt, converting a fourth down and six as time in the third quarter expired. Entering the fourth quarter, NIU trailed by six, but had the ball around their own 30-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nNIU's drive at the end of the third quarter carried over; however, when faced with another fourth down, they did not run another fake, and ultimately gave the ball back to USU. On USU's ensuing drive, with a 3rd down and 23 situation, Garretson tried a screen pass, but the pass was batted in the air, and ultimately intercepted by Ken Bishop. Despite a favorable field position, NIU could not muster a first down after taking over at the USU 13-yard line, and ultimately missed a 29-yard field goal, their second miss of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThe score thus remained 13\u20137 as the Huskies failed to capitalize on the turnover and excellent field position. USU drove back down the field on their succeeding possession that lasted 17 plays and 80 yards, encapsulating 7:19, and scored on a DeMartino 1-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235523-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Poinsettia Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nStarting around their own 40-yard line, with just over four minutes remaining and no timeouts, NIU achieved two first downs before advancing into the red zone, at which point Lynch threw three consecutive incomplete passes into the end zone, before, on 4th down and 10, throwing a 15-yard touchdown pass to Juwan Brescacin with 1:44 remaining, pulling within seven points. Needing to attempt an onside kick, USU called a timeout to confer on strategy. When NIU ultimately made the kick, USU's Swindall recovered, and therefore USU was able to simply take a knee to finish the game, winning 21\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235524-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Point Optical Curling Classic\nThe 2013 Point Optical Curling Classic was held from September 27 to 30 at the Nutana Curling Club in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. The event was held in a triple knockout format, and the purse for the event was CAD$50,000, of which the winner, Jeff Stoughton, received CAD$12,000. Stoughton defeated Kevin Martin's team in the final with a score of 6\u20132. Martin's team was skipped by third Nedohin after Martin went out with a back injury, while Jeff Sharp subbed in as lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235525-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Polaris Music Prize\nThe 2013 edition of the Canadian Polaris Music Prize was presented on September 23, 2013 at The Carlu event theatre in Toronto, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235525-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Polaris Music Prize\nThe award was won by Godspeed You! Black Emperor for their album 'Allelujah! Don't Bend! Ascend!. The band subsequently released a statement criticizing the prize's gala trappings in a time of austerity, asserting that \"organizing a gala just so musicians can compete against each other for a novelty-sized cheque doesn't serve the cause of righteous music at all. Maybe the next celebration should happen in a cruddier hall, without the corporate banners and culture overlords.\" Despite their criticism the band accepted the award, but donated the prize money to a Quebec-based program of music education in prisons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235525-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Polaris Music Prize, Longlist\nThe prize's preliminary 40-album longlist was announced on June 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235526-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Polish Basketball Supercup\nThe 2013 Polish Basketball Supercup was an edition of the annual super cup game in Polish basketball. This year the reigning Polish Basketball League (PLK) champions Stelmet Zielona G\u00f3ra faced off against Polish Basketball Cup winners Trefl Sopot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235527-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pomeroy Inn & Suites Prairie Showdown\nThe 2013 Pomeroy Inn & Suites Prairie Showdown was held from March 14 to 17 at the Grande Prairie Curling Club in Grande Prairie, Alberta as part of the 2012\u201313 World Curling Tour. The men's event was held in a triple-knockout format, while the women's event was held in a round robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235528-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Germany\nThe 2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Germany season was the 28th German Porsche Carrera Cup season. It began on 4 May at Hockenheim and finished on 4 October at the same circuit, after seventeen races, with two races at each event bar Round 3. It ran as a support championship for the 2013 DTM season. Frenchman K\u00e9vin Estre won the championship for Hermes ATTEMPTO Racing. British Tolimit Motorsport driver Sean Edwards was killed on 15 October 2013 at Queensland Raceway in Willowbank, Australia, while instructing a member of the public at a private test session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235528-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Germany, Race calendar and results\n1# \u00a0\u2013 Race staged on the Sunday due to a pileup in the first start on the Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235528-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Germany, Championship standings, A-class\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, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235529-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain\nThe 2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain was a multi-event, one make motor racing championship held across England and Scotland. 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 is a multi class championship, with drivers grouped based on their ability and experience into three classes: Professional, Professional-Amateur 1 (Pro-Am 1) and Professional-Amateur 2 (Pro- Am 2). 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, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235529-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain\nThis season was the eleventh Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain. The season commenced on 31 March at Brands Hatch\u00a0\u2013 on the circuit's Indy configuration\u00a0\u2013 and concluded on 13 October at the same venue, utilising the Grand Prix circuit, after twenty races held at ten meetings, all in support of the 2013 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235529-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain, Race calendar and results\nOn 29 August 2012, the British Touring Car Championship announced the race calendar for the 2013 season, for all of the series competing on the TOCA package.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235530-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Italia\nThe 2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Italia season was the seventh Porsche Carrera Cup Italy season. It began on 4 May at Misano and finished on 20 October in Monza, after seven events with two races at each event. Enrico Fulgenzi won the drivers' championship driving for Heaven Motorsport, which won the teams' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235530-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Italia, Championship standings, Drivers' Championship\n\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 75% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235530-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Italia, Championship standings, Teams' Championship\n\u2020 \u2014 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 75% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235530-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Carrera Cup Italia, Championship standings, Michelin Cup\nThe Michelin Cup is the trophy reserved to the gentlemen drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235531-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Supercup\nThe 2013 Porsche Mobil 1 Supercup season was the 21st Porsche Supercup season. It began on 12 May on Circuit de Catalunya and finished on 3 November at Yas Marina Circuit, after nine races, all of which were support events for the 2013 Formula One season. A new car was introduced for the season as the Porsche 991\u00a0\u2013 the internal designation for the seventh-generation Porsche 911\u00a0\u2013 replaced the Porsche 997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235531-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Supercup\nThree-time champion Ren\u00e9 Rast did not return to defend his title, opting to focus on the ADAC GT Masters, the FIA GT Series and the Blancpain Endurance Series, where he would compete for Belgian Audi Club WRT. BTCC champion and former WTCC driver Alain Menu joined the series with his own team, FACH Auto Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235531-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Supercup\nAhead of the final round of the series in Abu Dhabi, Mon\u00e9gasque-based British driver Sean Edwards held a championship lead of eighteen points over Denmark's Nicki Thiim, with Michael Ammerm\u00fcller of Germany the only other driver to remain within contention for winning the title. Edwards was killed on 15 October 2013 at Queensland Raceway in Willowbank, Australia, while instructing a member of the public at a private test session. Thiim ultimately won the championship, after he won both races in Abu Dhabi; Edwards ended up second overall, finishing three points ahead of Ammerm\u00fcller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235531-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Supercup, Championship standings, Drivers' Championship\n\u2020\u00a0\u2013 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, 68], "content_span": [69, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235532-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor clay courts. It was the 36th edition of the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, and was part of the Premier tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Porsche Arena in Stuttgart, Germany, from April 22 until 28 April 2013. First-seeded Maria Sharapova won her second consecutive singles title at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235532-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235532-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235532-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, Finals, Doubles\nMona Barthel / Sabine Lisicki defeated Bethanie Mattek-Sands / Sania Mirza, 6\u20134, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235533-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Doubles\nIveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 and Barbora Z\u00e1hlavov\u00e1-Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 decided not to participate. Z\u00e1hlavov\u00e1-Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 played alongside Julia G\u00f6rges, but they lost in the first round to Liezel Huber and Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1. Mona Barthel and Sabine Lisicki won the title, defeating Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Sania Mirza in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235534-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sharapova was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, beating Li Na in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235534-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235535-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Port Adelaide Football Club season\nThe 2013 AFL season was the Port Adelaide Football Club's 17th season in the Australian Football League (AFL). The club was captained by Travis Boak and coached by Ken Hinkley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235536-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Port Huron Patriots season\nThe 2013 Port Huron Patriots season was the second season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise. The Patriots kicked off their exhibition schedule with a 62\u20132 victory over the Michigan Renegades, a semi-professional outdoor football team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235537-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland State Vikings football team\nThe 2013 Portland State Vikings football team represented Portland State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth year head coach Nigel Burton and played their home games at Jeld-Wen Field. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 6\u20136, 3\u20135 in Big Sky play to finish in ninth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235537-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland State Vikings football team, Schedule\nDespite also being a member of the Big Sky Conference, the game with UC Davis on September 21 is considered a non conference game and will have no effect on the Big Sky Standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season\nThe 2013 season was the Portland Thorns' inaugural season in the newly created National Women's Soccer League (NWSL), the top division of women's professional soccer in the United States. The Thorns ended the 22-game regular season with a 10-6-6 record, qualifying them for the NWSL playoffs. In their semi-final game the team beat FC Kansas City 3-2 in extra time, qualifying them to play Western New York Flash in the championship. The Thorns beat the Flash 2\u20130, making Portland Thorns FC the NWSL champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Background\nThe league's founding was announced on November 21, 2012, with Portland as a host for one of eight teams. At that time it was announced by Portland Timbers' owner Merritt Paulson that the Timbers would own the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Background\nThe chosen team, Portland Thorns FC, was announced on December 13, 2012, accompanied by the unveiling of its logo. Both the name and logo were intended to invoke Portland's nickname of the Rose City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Background\nCindy Parlow Cone was announced as the first head coach on December 19, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Roster\nIn the National Women's Soccer League's (NWSL) inaugural season, the eight founding clubs filled out their rosters through numerous mechanisms. First, teams are allocated national team players from the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Next, teams go through the NWSL College Draft, a free agency period, the NWSL Supplemental Draft, and the signing of Discovery Players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Final round, Results summary\nLast updated: August 18, 2013Source: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, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Player Transactions, National Team Player Allocation\nOn January 11, 2013, the league held its player allocation for the national team players, with Portland receiving seven players: Rachel Buehler, Tobin Heath, Karina LeBlanc, Alex Morgan, Marlene Sandoval, Luz Saucedo, and Christine Sinclair. On January 23, 2013, Heath signed a six-month contract with Paris Saint-Germain and expected to join the Thorns FC once the French club's season is concluded. On March 21, 2013, Sandoval and Saucedo, the two allocated Mexico national team defenders, were removed from the team roster, due to an injury and decision by the Mexican Football Federation, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 84], "content_span": [85, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Player Transactions, National Women's Soccer League College Draft\nEach team in the NWSL got to pick once per round, with the draft order based on how well each team did in allocation. The Thorns picked eighth (last) in each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 97], "content_span": [98, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235538-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Thorns FC season, Player Transactions, Supplemental Draft Picks\nAny player that wasn\u2019t selected in the NWSL College Draft, and was done with her college eligibility, was eligible for the NWSL Supplemental Draft. The draft lasted six rounds. Again, the Thorns selected eighth (last) in each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235539-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Timbers season\nThe 2013 Portland Timbers season was the 3rd season for the Portland Timbers in Major League Soccer (MLS), the top flight professional soccer league in the United States and Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235539-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Timbers season, Background\nCaleb Porter was announced as the Timbers head coach on August 29, 2012, but finished out coaching his final year at the University of Akron. He was introduced as the head coach on January 8, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235539-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Timbers season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Western Conference standings\nUpdated to matches played on September 25, 2013 01:00 EDTSource: gue Soccer (MLS), the top flight MLSSoccer.com(W1) = Western Conference champion; (WC) = Qualifies for playoffs via wild-card. Only applicable when the season is not finished: (Q) = Qualified for the MLS Cup Playoffs, but not yet to the particular round indicated; (E) = Eliminated from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235539-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Timbers season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Overall standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235539-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Timbers season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Results summary\nLast updated: October 27, 2013Source: 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, 80], "content_span": [81, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235539-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Timbers season, Competitions, Cascadia Cup\nThe Cascadia Cup is a trophy that was created in 2004 by supporters of the Portland Timbers, Seattle Sounders FC and Vancouver Whitecaps FC. It is awarded to the club with the best record in league games versus the other participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235539-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Portland Timbers season, Squad, Roster and Statistics\nAll players contracted to the club during the season included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235540-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open\nThe 2013 Portugal Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 24th edition of the Portugal Open for the men and the 17th for the women, and was part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour, and of the International-level tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the Est\u00e1dio Nacional in Oeiras, Portugal, from April 29 through May 5, 2013. Formerly named Estoril Open, the organization of the tournament changed its name to \"Portugal Open\" in order to recognize Portugal's success in organizing international events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235540-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235540-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235540-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235540-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235541-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nAisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer were the defending champions but lost in the final to Santiago Gonz\u00e1lez and Scott Lipsky, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, [7\u201310].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235542-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nJuan Mart\u00edn del Potro was the defending champion, but withdrew before the tournament, because of illness. Stanislas Wawrinka defeated David Ferrer 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235542-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235543-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nChuang Chia-jung and Zhang Shuai were the defending champions, but decided not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235543-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nChan Hao-ching and Kristina Mladenovic won the title, defeating Darija Jurak and Katalin Marosi in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235544-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nKaia Kanepi was the defending champion, but she lost in the semifinals to Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235544-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portugal Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova won the title, defeating Su\u00e1rez Navarro in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThe Portuguese local elections of 2013 took place on 29 September. The elections consisted of three types of elections in the 308 Portuguese municipalities, namely the elections for the Municipal Chambers, whose winners are elected mayors, the elections for the Municipal Assemblies, as well as the elections for the lower-level Parish Assemblies, whose winners are elected parish presidents. The latter were held separately in the more than 3,000 parishes around the country. The number of parishes had been reduced by over 1000 due to a local government reform undertaken by the Government led by Pedro Passos Coelho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThe process of submitting candidacies for these elections was marked by differences in the interpretation of the pertinent electoral law. This law prohibits a candidate, after having served for three terms, to run for Mayor, Municipal Assemblies or Parish Assemblies. But the law does not explicitly state whether it prohibits reelection only for the same municipality or parish, or for the same position in any municipality or parish. Candidates affected by this issue included Luis Filipe Menezes (PSD), running in Porto, and Fernando Seara (PSD/CDS\u2013PP), who was standing in Lisbon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThis controversy ended on 5 September 2013 with the decision of the Constitutional Court allowing mayoral candidates that had already served three consecutive mandates to run for election in a different municipality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThe Socialist Party (PS) won the largest number of municipal chambers in its history surpassing its previous best result in 2009. It also won the largest number of mayorships of any party in the history of Portugal. The PS also reconquered Coimbra and won in two large strongholds of the Social Democratic Party, Vila Real and Funchal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThe Social Democratic Party (PSD) was the biggest loser of these elections, as it lost almost a third of the municipalities that it had held. However, the PSD did gain several traditionally Socialist bastions like Braga and Guarda. The communist Democratic Unity Coalition won in the cities of Loures, Beja and \u00c9vora.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThe election was also marked by the strong electoral performances of various independent groups, which won several chambers. The most significant was the victory of independent Rui Moreira in Porto, who was supported by CDS-PP. The Democratic Unity Coalition increased its number of municipal chambers as well as its number of councilors by winning several chambers previously held by the Socialists, including winning back their historical stronghold of Loures. However, despite increasing their overall number of mayors, they also lost three chambers they won in 2009 to the Socialists; Chamusca, Crato, and Nisa. In Chamusca they had held the mayorship since 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThe People's Party (CDS-PP) broke a cycle of decline in local elections and won five municipalities, four more than in 2009. The Left Bloc suffered a heavy defeat, losing the only chamber they had, and electing fewer councillors than in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections\nThe turnout in these elections was the lowest ever, with 52.6% of voters casting their ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections, Parties\nThe main political forces that will be involved in the election are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections, Parties\n1 The PSD and the CDS\u2013PP will also form coalitions in several municipalities with the Earth Party (MPT) and the People's Monarchist Party (PPM).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235545-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Portuguese local elections, Results, Municipal Councils, City control\nThe following table lists party control in all district capitals, as well as in municipalities above 100,000 inhabitants. Population estimates from 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235546-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Power Horse Cup\nThe 2013 Power Horse Cup was a men's tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the Power Horse Cup as an ATP World Tour 250 series event on the 2013 ATP World Tour and replaced the World Team Cup, a team event previously held at the same venue. It took place at the Rochusclub in D\u00fcsseldorf, Germany, from May 19 through May 25, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235546-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Power Horse Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235546-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Power Horse Cup, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235547-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Power Horse Cup \u2013 Doubles\nAndre Begemann and Martin Emmrich won the first edition of the tournament, defeating Treat Conrad Huey and Dominic Inglot in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235548-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Power Horse Cup \u2013 Singles\nJuan M\u00f3naco won the first edition of the tournament, defeating Jarkko Nieminen in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235548-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Power Horse Cup \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235549-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pozna\u0144 Open\nThe 2013 Pozna\u0144 Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the jubilee tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Pozna\u0144, Poland from 13 to 21 July 2013, including the qualifying competition in the first two days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235549-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pozna\u0144 Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235549-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pozna\u0144 Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235549-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pozna\u0144 Open, Champions, Doubles\nGero Kretschmer / Alexander Satschko def. Henri Kontinen / Mateusz Kowalczyk, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235550-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pozna\u0144 Open \u2013 Doubles\nRameez Junaid and Simon Stadler were the defending champions, but they did not participate that year. Gero Kretschmer and Alexander Satschko won the title, defeating Henri Kontinen and Mateusz Kowalczyk in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235551-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pozna\u0144 Open \u2013 Singles\nJerzy Janowicz was the defending champion, but he did not participate that year. Andreas Haider-Maurer won the title, defeating Damir D\u017eumhur in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235552-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague Open\nThe 2013 Prague Open by Advantage Cars was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 16th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Prague, Czech Republic between 10 and 16 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235552-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235552-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235552-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235552-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received entry as an alternate into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235553-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague Open \u2013 Doubles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol and Horacio Zeballos were the defending champions, but both decided not to participate. Lee Hsin-han and Peng Hsien-yin defeated Vahid Mirzadeh and Denis Zivkovic 6\u20134, 4\u20136, [10\u20135] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235554-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague Open \u2013 Singles\nHoracio Zeballos was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Oleksandr Nedovyesov won the first edition of the event by defeating Javier Mart\u00ed 6\u20130, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235555-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague explosion\nOn April 29, 2013 at around 10:00am CEST (8:00 UTC), an explosion occurred in a building in the centre of Prague, Czech Republic. The incident occurred in a townhouse belonging to the Air Navigation Services of the Czech Republic on Divadeln\u00ed street in Old Town, Prague 1, close to the Academy of Sciences and National Theatre. The blast could be heard across the whole city centre, as far away as Prague Castle, 1.4\u00a0km (1\u00a0mi) away from the incident. 43 people were injured by the blast, one seriously. No one was killed. The resulting shock wave from the blast damaged windows in nearby buildings including the National Theatre, Caf\u00e9 Slavia, the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU), the Faculty of Social Sciences of Charles University and the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235555-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Prague explosion\nThe blast was caused by a natural gas leak. According to a head of the Prague Fire Service, gas could be smelled in the area following in the blast, causing risk of further explosions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235556-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prairie View A&M Panthers football team\nThe 2013 Prairie View A&M Panthers football team represents Prairie View A&M University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Panthers are led by third year head coach Heishma Northern and playetheir home games at Edward L. Blackshear Field. They are a member of the West Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235556-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Prairie View A&M Panthers football team, Media\nAll Prairie View A&M games will be carried live on KPVU 91.3 FM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235557-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prayag Kumbh Mela stampede\nOn 10 February 2013, during the Hindu festival of Kumbh Mela, a stampede broke out at the train station in Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India, killing 42 people and injuring at least 300 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235557-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Prayag Kumbh Mela stampede, Background\nKumbh Mela is a major Hindu religious festival that is celebrated every three years in four rotating places. The 2013 event was considered a Maha Kumbh Mela, which comes around only once every 144 years. It lasted 55 days and was expected to be attended by 100 million pilgrims, making it the largest temporary gathering of people in the world at that time. A temporary city covering an area larger than Athens was set up to accommodate the crowds. Sunday, 10 February was considered the most auspicious day, and 30 million people descended to Allahabad to bathe at the confluence of the Yamuna and the Ganges rivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235557-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Prayag Kumbh Mela stampede, The stampede\nAccording to initial reports, the stampede broke out after a railing on a footbridge collapsed at the Allahabad railway station. Eyewitnesses, however, said that the stampede was triggered after the railway police charged at the crowd with wooden sticks in order to control the huge rush at the station. 42 people were killed by the crush of people, including 29 women, 12 men, and an eight-year-old girl who died after waiting almost two hours for help. At least 45 people were injured in addition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235557-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Prayag Kumbh Mela stampede, The stampede\nIn an unrelated event earlier that day, two people were killed in another stampede.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235557-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Prayag Kumbh Mela stampede, Reaction\nPrime Minister Manmohan Singh expressed condolences and offered compensation to the affected people. Uttar Pradesh chief minister Akhilesh Yadav constituted a committee to probe the stampede. Uttar Pradesh's Panchayati Raj minister, Balram Yadav said that the inquiry would be launched and completed within a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235557-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Prayag Kumbh Mela stampede, Reaction\nOn 11 February 2013, Samajwadi Party leader Azam Khan, who was in charge of the Kumbh Mela, took responsibility for the stampede and resigned. Praising the minister for his sincere work, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister, rejected Khan's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235557-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Prayag Kumbh Mela stampede, Other stampedes\nDue to the huge number of attendees stampedes are relatively common during Kumbh Mela festivals. The 1954 Kumbh Mela stampede was the deadliest since India's independence, with an estimated 1,000 deaths. The 2003 Kumbh Mela stampede killed 39 people in the city of Nashik, and seven were killed during the 2010 Kumbh Mela in Haridwar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes\nThe 2013 Preakness Stakes was the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes thoroughbred horse race. The race was held on May 18, 2013, and was televised on NBC. The race was won by Oxbow. The post time of the race was 6:18 p.m. EDT. The race was the 12th race on a card of 13 races. The Maryland Jockey Club reported total attendance of 117,203, the second highest attendance for American thoroughbred racing events in North America during 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes, Field\n2013 Kentucky Derby winner Orb as expected entered the Preakness. It was announced on May 6 that Vyjack and Normandy Invasion would also be starting in The Preakness. Other Derby starters confirmed for The Preakness are Goldencents (17th) and the D. Wayne Lukas trained duo of Oxbow (6th) and Will Take Charge (8th). Later connections of Vyjack and Normandy Invasion withdrew their nominations. Horses that did not start in the Kentucky Derby and were nominated include Illinois Derby winner Departing, Sunland Derby winner Govenor Charlie and Titletown Five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes, Field\nNine 3-year-olds were entered for the 138th Preakness Stakes. The post position draw was held at the International Pavilion in the Pimlico Infield at 6 p.m. on May 15, 2013 and were broadcast live on Horse Racing TV using a blind draw. After the draw Orb was installed as the even money favorite, securing the rail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes, Race\nOn the day of the race, the Kentucky Derby winner Orb was bet down further from even money of 1\u20131 on the morning line down to a prohibitive odds-on favorite at 3-5 by post time. Florida Derby runner-up Itsmyluckyday was listed as a distant second favorite at \u200b8\u00a01\u20442-1 while Santa Anita Derby winner Goldencents was the third choice at almost \u200b9\u00a01\u20442-1 by post time. Oxbow was relegated to longshot status of almost \u200b15\u00a01\u20442-1, the only horse with longer odds was stablemate Titletown Five at 22\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 27], "content_span": [28, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes, Race\nAt the break Oxbow was brushed by Will Take Charge, and then steadied as Goldencents, Oxbow and Titletown Five rushed out to the lead in that order. Orb broke well in sixth place out of nine stakes winning colts. Passing the stands for the first time Oxbow moved to the lead and led by one and one half length over Goldencents completing the first quarter mile in a slow :23-4/5. Making a point to ride three to four paths off the rail Oxbow's jockey Gary Stevens slowed down the pace of the race. Rounding Pimlico's famous \"Clubhouse Turn\" Oxbow opened a daylight advantage moving ahead by two and a half lengths tipping the clock at :48-3/5 for the first half mile. At this point Orb was running in fifth place only two lengths behind Oxbow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 27], "content_span": [28, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes, Race\nRacing down the backstretch and entering the final turn Oxbow's lead dwindled to only a length and a half with Goldencents and Itsmyluckyday within striking distance. At the top of the lane Oxbow hit another gear and widened his lead to three lengths over Itsmyluckyday who went six wide and made a menacing run toward the front. The first mile was completed in 1:38 flat on the front end as Derby winner Orb toiled in sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 27], "content_span": [28, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes, Race\nNearing the wire, Oxbow, under some hand urging by Stevens, held on to win by one and three quarter lengths over Itsmyluckyday. Louisiana Derby runner-up Mylute closed from the back of the pack under Rosie Napravnik to finish third by two and a quarter lengths (the best finish ever by a woman jockey in the 138-year history of the Preakness). Kentucky Derby winner Orb made up some ground at the end but could finish no better than fourth, nine lengths behind the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 27], "content_span": [28, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235558-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Preakness Stakes, Race\nJust after the wire NBC announcer Tom Hammond exclaimed, \"Gary Stevens just stole the Preakness,\" with Oxbow becoming the first wire-to-wire winner of the race since Aloma's Ruler in 1982. The \"Hall-of-Fame ride\" allowed Oxbow to conserve enough energy to finish the mile and three sixteenths in a final time of 1:57.54; it was the slowest Preakness winning time since 1961.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 27], "content_span": [28, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235559-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Asia Trophy\nThe 2013 Premier League Asia Trophy was the sixth edition of the Premier League Asia Trophy. Sunderland, Manchester City, Tottenham Hotspur and Hong Kong club South China competed for the title on 24 July 2013 and 27 July 2013 at Hong Kong Stadium in So Kon Po, Hong Kong. Manchester City were the winners, beating Sunderland 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235559-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Asia Trophy\nThe tournament was also notable for the absence of Tottenham Hotspur's star Gareth Bale. Bale traveled with Spurs to Hong Kong, but an injury he suffered in training meant he did not play in either of Tottenham's matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235559-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Asia Trophy\nFurthermore, the tournament was also notable for the very poor quality of the grass on the pitch at the venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235559-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Asia Trophy, Results, Semifinals\nDelayed by 30 minutes due to rain. Game reduced to 80 minutes (40 minute halves).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235559-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Asia Trophy, Results, Semifinals\nDelayed by 10 minutes due to rain. Game reduced to 80 minutes (40 minute halves).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235560-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Darts\nThe 2013 McCoy's Premier League Darts was a darts tournament organised by the Professional Darts Corporation; the ninth edition of the tournament. The event began at the Odyssey Arena in Belfast on 7 February, and ended at The O2 Arena, London on 16 May. The tournament was shown live on Sky Sports in the UK and Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235560-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Darts\nPhil Taylor was the defending champion and he reached the final again this year, but lost 10\u20138 against Michael van Gerwen who won his first Premier League title on his debut appearance in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235560-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Darts, Qualification\nThe qualification format was different from the last edition of Premier League Darts. The top four players from the PDC Order of Merit after the 2013 PDC World Darts Championship automatically qualified. Alongside them, six (instead of four) additional players were chosen on the basis of their performance in the past year or in earlier editions of the Premier League. After the first nine rounds, the bottom 2 players were relegated. All players played each other once at that point. The remaining eight then competed against each other in the final five rounds for the play-offs places. All games in the league stage were played \"best of 12 legs\" (instead of \"best of 14 legs\"), thus games could be drawn by 6\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235560-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Darts, Venues\nThe venues remained the same as in the last Premier League Darts edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235560-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Darts, Prize money\nThe prize-money was increased to \u00a3520,000 from \u00a3450,000 in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235560-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Darts, Table and streaks, Table\nLast updated: 19 April 2013Source: Match reports from the results section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235560-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League Darts, Table and streaks, Table\nBottom two eliminated after Week 9. Top four qualified for the Play-Offs after Week 14. NB: LWAT = Legs Won Against Throw. A = AverageC% = Checkout PercentageHC = High Checkout. Players separated by +/- leg difference if tied. If leg difference is equal the table is sorted by the player's LWAT. If it is still tied, ranking is determined by average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235561-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League speedway season\nThe 2013 Premier League season was the second division of British speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235561-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League speedway season, Summary\nThe season took place between March and October 2013. The Scunthorpe Scorpions were the defending champions after winning in 2012. After finishing as runners-up the previous season, the Somerset Rebels went one better in 2013 and ended up being declared the Premier League Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235561-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League speedway season, League table\nHome: 3W = Home win by 7 points or more; 2W = Home win by between 1 and 6 points Away: 4W = Away win by 7 points or more; 3W = Away win by between 1 and 6 points; 1L = Away loss by 6 points or lessM = Meetings; D = Draws; L = Losses; F = Race points for; A = Race points against; +/- = Race points difference; Pts = Total Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235561-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League speedway season, Premier League Knockout Cup\nThe 2013 Premier League Knockout Cup was the 46th edition of the Knockout Cup for tier two teams. Somerset Rebels were the winners of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235561-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Premier League speedway season, Final\nSomerset were declared Knockout Cup Champions, winning on aggregate 103\u201377.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series\nThe 2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series (styled for sponsorship reasons as the 2013 J.P Morgan Asset Management Premiership Rugby 7s Series) was the fourth Rugby Union 7-a-side competition for the twelve 2013\u201314 Aviva Premiership Clubs. The group stages were run on 1\u20133 August 2013 and the final at the Recreation Ground on 9 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Format\nThe twelve Premiership Clubs were split into 3 Groups \u2013 A, B and C based upon geographical location \u2013 with each group playing on consecutive days at the beginning of August. Each team in the group played each other once, to the International Rugby Board Laws of the Game - 7s Variations. Based on the result, teams received:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Format\nFollowing all the games, the winner and runner up in each group progressed to the Final Stage. In the final, the 6 teams (3 Winners and 3 Runners up) were split into 2 pools. Again teams played each other once and points were awarded based on the match result. Following the culmination of this stage the winners of each pool progressed to the final, the winner of that game being declared the champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Group stage\nThe group draw was based on geographical location of the clubs playing. Premiership Rugby confirmed the match times on 4 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Group stage, Group A\nPlayed at Kingsholm, Gloucester on Thursday 1 August 2013. The attendance on the night was nearly 13,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Group stage, Group B\nPlayed at Franklin's Gardens, Northampton on Friday 2 August 2013. The attendance on the night was 9,432.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Group stage, Group C\nPlayed at Allianz Park, Barnet, London on Saturday 3 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Final stage\nThe Final Stage was played at The Recreation Ground, Bath on Friday 9 August 2013 in front of a sell out crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Final stage\nFor the finals, the 6 qualified teams were split into two pools of three teams. Scoring was the same as in the previous rounds (4 points for a win, etc. ), and the winner of each pool progressed to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Final stage, Final\nThe final was contested by the winners of the two finals pools. In a slight difference to the rest of the series, the final was played in two halves of 10 minutes (instead of 7 minutes), with a slightly longer half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235562-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Premiership Rugby Sevens Series, Broadcasting\nThe competition, including the final, will be broadcast live on the new BT Sport channel. The channel launched on Thursday 1 August, the first day of the competition. Highlights of the 2013 competition were shown on STV in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235563-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Premios Juventud\nThe 10th Annual Premios Juventud (Youth Awards) were broadcast by Univision on July 18, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235564-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Premi\u00e8re Ligue de soccer du Qu\u00e9bec season\nThe 2013 PLSQ season was the second season of existence for the Premi\u00e8re Ligue de soccer du Qu\u00e9bec, a Division 3 men's semi-professional soccer league and the highest level of soccer fully contained within the province of Qu\u00e9bec. It is below Major League Soccer and the North American Soccer League in the Canadian soccer league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235564-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Premi\u00e8re Ligue de soccer du Qu\u00e9bec season\nCS Mont-Royal Outremont won the 2013 league championship as well as the inaugural League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235564-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Premi\u00e8re Ligue de soccer du Qu\u00e9bec season, Teams\nThe 2013 season was contested between seven teams. CS Mont-Royal Outremont and FC Gatineau joined the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235564-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Premi\u00e8re Ligue de soccer du Qu\u00e9bec season, League Cup\nThe PLSQ debuted their League Cup this season, which took place following the end of the season. The top six teams from the league season were divided into two groups (the seventh place club - FC Boisbriand - did not qualify). Each team would play the other two teams in the group, with the first place finisher in each group advancing to the finals. CS Mont-Royal Outremont won the League Cup defeating FC Brossard 2-0 in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235565-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Presbyterian Blue Hose football team\nThe 2013 Presbyterian Blue Hose football team represented Presbyterian College in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fifth-year head coach Harold Nichols and played their home games at Bailey Memorial Stadium. They were a member of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 3\u20138, 1\u20134 in Big South play to finish in a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235566-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (Maldives)\nThe 2013 President's Cup was the 63rd season of the President's Cup, a knock-out competition for Maldives' top 4 football clubs. New Radiant Sports Club were the defending champions, having beaten Victory Sports Club in last season's final on penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235566-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (Maldives)\nThe final was held on 23 October 2012, in which New Radiant won the final 4-2 on extra time, claiming a record tenth President's Cup, after the scores were 2-2 at the end of normal time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235566-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (Maldives), Background, Broadcasting rights\nThe broadcasting rights for all the matches of 2013 Maldives President's Cup were given to the Television Maldives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235566-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (Maldives), Qualifier\nTop 4 teams after the end of 2013 Dhivehi League third round will be qualified for the President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235567-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (Maldives) Final\nThe 2013 President's Cup (Maldives) Final was the 63rd Final of the Maldives President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235568-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis)\nThe 2013 President's Cup (tennis) was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 7th edition for men and the 5th edition for women of the tournament and was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit and the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour, offering prize money of $125,000 for men and $100,000 for women. It took place in Astana, Kazakhstan, on 22\u201328 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235568-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis), ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235568-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis), WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235569-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis) \u2013 Men's Doubles\nKonstantin Kravchuk and Denys Molchanov were the defending champions, but Molchanov chose not to compete Kravchuk played with Teymuraz Gabashvili but lost in the quarterfinals. Riccardo Ghedin and Claudio Grassi won in the final against Andrey Golubev and Mikhail Kukushkin 3\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20138].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235570-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis) \u2013 Men's Singles\nEvgeny Donskoy was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Number 1 seed Dudi Sela overcame Mikhail Kukushkin 5\u20137, 6\u20132, 7\u20136(8\u20136).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235571-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis) \u2013 Women's Doubles\nOksana Kalashnikova and Marta Sirotkina were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235571-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis) \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLyudmyla and Nadiya Kichenok won the title, defeating Nina Bratchikova and Valeria Solovyeva in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235572-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 President's Cup (tennis) \u2013 Women's Singles\nMaria Jo\u00e3o Koehler failed to defend her title from 2012, losing to Ukrainian Nadiya Kichenok in the final, 6\u20134, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup\nThe 2013 Presidents Cup was held October 3\u20136 at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, a suburb north of Columbus. It was the tenth Presidents Cup competition and the sixth played in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup\nThe selection of Muirfield as the 2013 tournament site was taken as a tribute to golfing great Jack Nicklaus, who designed the course. Nicklaus has said that his involvement as tournament host for the 2013 Presidents Cup \"probably will be my last involvement in anything significant in the game of golf\". Muirfield was the third U.S. course to host the tournament, and the first course in the world to host Presidents Cup, Ryder Cup, and Solheim Cup international team competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup\nIn May 2012, Fred Couples and Nick Price were named captains of the U.S. and International teams, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup\nThe United States won for the fifth successive time with an 181\u20442\u2013151\u20442 victory over the International team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Format\nThe first day consists of six matches of fourball. The second day consists of six matches of foursomes. The third day consists of five matches of fourball in the morning and five matches of foursomes in the afternoon. On the fourth and final day, twelve singles matches were played. 34 matches were played in all. All fourball and foursomes matches that are all-square after 18 holes will score 1\u20442 point for each team. All singles matches that are all-square after 18 holes will continue until a winner is determined. The fourball matches being played first is a change from the previous seven Cups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Team qualification and selection, United States team\nThe United States team featured the top 10 in earnings from September 19, 2011 through September 2, 2013 (the Deutsche Bank Championship), with 2013 earnings weighted double, and two captain's picks. The captain's picks were announced on September 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 73], "content_span": [74, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Team qualification and selection, International team\nThe International team featured the top 10 in the Official World Golf Ranking as of September 2, 2013 and two captain's picks. The captain's picks were announced on September 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 73], "content_span": [74, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Thursday's fourball matches\nThe American team took a one-point lead after the first day of play, winning the final three matches and halving another. Play was delayed for 90 minutes due to rain but all matches were completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Friday's foursomes matches\nA nearly three-hour delay due to severe weather meant that only two of the six matches were completed on Friday. Phil Mickelson and Keegan Bradley defeated Jason Day and Graham DeLaet, 4 and 3, while Brendon de Jonge and Ernie Els defeated Hunter Mahan and Bill Hass, 4 and 3. The Americans led 41\u20442 to 31\u20442 at the close of play Friday. Matches resumed early Saturday morning with both sides winning two matches to tie the session at 3\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 47], "content_span": [48, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Saturday's matches, Morning fourball\nRain interrupted play for the third straight day. The U.S. team won four of the five matches to open a four-point lead. The matches did not end until late afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Saturday's matches, Afternoon foursomes\nDue to the mornings rain delay, the afternoon foursomes were not completed Saturday. Jason Dufner and Zach Johnson defeated Richard Sterne and Marc Leishman, 4 and 3, in the only match completed Saturday. The other four matches were complete through 9 to 13 holes when play was suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Saturday's matches, Afternoon foursomes\nThe table below reflects the official order. Match 19 (Sterne/Leishman vs Dufner/Johnson) began first, followed by Match 18 (Mickelson/Bradley vs Day/DeLaet), Match 22 (Simpson/Snedeker vs Oosthuizen/Schwartzel), Match 20 (Haas/Stricker vs Scott/Matsuyama), and Match 21 (Woods/Kuchar vs Els/de Jonge).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 60], "content_span": [61, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Sunday's singles matches\nThe matches are listed in their official order but the first five matches were actually played in this order: Matsuyama/Mahan, Day/Snedeker, DeLaet/Spieth, Els/Stricker, de Jonge/Dufner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235573-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Presidents Cup, Individual player records\nEach entry refers to the Win\u2013Loss\u2013Half record of the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235574-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prestige Hotels & Resorts Curling Classic\nThe 2013 Prestige Hotels & Resorts Curling Classic was held from October 4 to 7 at the Vernon Curling Club in Vernon, British Columbia as part of the 2013\u201314 World Curling Tour. Both the men's and women's events was held in a triple-knockout format. The purse for the men's event was CAD$26,000, while the purse for the women's event was CAD$39,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235575-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile\nThe 2013 Primera Divisi\u00f3n del F\u00fatbol Profesional Chileno season (known as the 2013 Torneo Transici\u00f3n Petrobras for sponsorship reasons) was the 82nd season of top-flight football in Chile. Huachipato was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235575-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile, Format changes\nStarting in 2013, the ANFP's Council of Club Presidents approved a change from a season contained entirely within a calendar year to a season that spans two calendar years. To manage this transition, the 2013 season was held with only a single championship instead of the traditional Apertura and Clausura format. The Apertura and Clausura format returned for the 2013\u201314 season, but without the playoff rounds conducted in the past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235575-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile, Teams\nEighteen teams will be competing in the Primera Divisi\u00f3n for the 2013 season, fifteen of whom are returning from the 2012 season. Universidad de Concepci\u00f3n, Uni\u00f3n San Felipe and La Serena were relegated last season after finishing 15th, 17th and 18th overall, respectively. They were replaced by San Marcos, \u00d1ublense and Everton, the 2012 Primera B winner, runner-up and fourth place, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235575-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile, Torneo de Transici\u00f3n\nThe Torneo de Transici\u00f3n began in January and will end in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235575-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile, Torneo de Transici\u00f3n, Classification stage\nThe Classification Stage began in January and ended in May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235576-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prince Edward Island Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Prince Edward Island Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Prince Edward Island's women's provincial curling championship, was held from January 24 to 27 at the Charlottetown Curling Club in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. The winning team will represent Prince Edward Island at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235577-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Princeton Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Princeton Tigers football team represented Princeton University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth-year head coach Bob Surace and played their home games at Powers Field at Princeton Stadium. Princeton was a member of the Ivy League. They finished with a record of 8\u20132 overall and 6\u20131 in Ivy League play to share the conference title with Harvard, their first title since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe\nThe 2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe was a horse race held at Longchamp on Sunday 6 October 2013. It was the 92nd running of the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe\nThe winner was Treve, a three-year-old filly trained in France by Criquette Head-Maarek and ridden by Thierry Jarnet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe\nTreve started second favourite in the race. The field was a strong one, including Orfevre, Ruler of the World, Kizuna, Intello, Al Kazeem and Leading Light. Treve was ridden by Thierry Jarnet as Frankie Dettori had broken his ankle in a fall at Nottingham Racecourse. Treve sweated up badly before the race and started poorly. Treve made ground rapidly on the outside and took the lead in the straight before accelerating clear of the field to win easily by five lengths from Orfevre and Intello.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Result\nGroup I - 4 800 000\u20ac - Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe - Plat - - SOUPLE - 17", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Result\n4\tKizuna\tM3\t11\t56\tY. Take\t7.6/1\t2\tlire", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Result\n6\tAl Kazeem\tM5\t18\t59,5\tJ.W. Doyle\t19/1\t2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Result\n7\tRuler Of The World\tM3\t\tR.L. Moore\t13/1\tCourte t\u00eate", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Result\n9\tGoing Somewhere\tM4\t4\t59\tG. Benoist\t103/1\tNez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Result\n10\tVery Nice Name\tM4\t1\t59,5\tP. Convertino\t102/1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Subsequent breeding careers\nLeading progeny of participants in the 2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Subsequent breeding careers, Other stallions\nKizuna (4th) \u2013 Maltese Diosa (1st Tulip Sho 2020)Ocovango (14th) \u2013 Langer Dan \u2013 1st Wensleydale Juvenile Hurdle (2019)Joshua Tree (13th) \u2013 Minor flat and jumps winnersLeading Light (12th) \u2013 Minor flat and jumps runnersVery Nice Name (16th) \u2013 Minor flat runnersFlintshire (8th) \u2013 Exported to America \u2013 Offspring yet to raceMeandre (10th) \u2013 Exported to Czech Republic", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235578-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Subsequent breeding careers, Broodmares\nPirika (15th) \u2013 Minor winner in JapanHaya Landa (17th) \u2013 Minor winner in JapanTreve (1st) \u2013 Offspring yet to race", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235579-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Bowl\nThe 2013 Pro Bowl was the National Football League's sixty-third annual all-star game which featured players from the 2012 season. It took place at 2:30\u00a0pm Hawaii\u2013Aleutian Time (UTC\u221210:00; 7:30\u00a0pm Eastern Time) on Sunday, January 27, 2013 at the Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii. The game was televised nationally by NBC in place of CBS. The game was delayed for 30 minutes due to flash flood warnings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235579-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Bowl\nJohn Fox of the AFC West Denver Broncos led the AFC \"home team\" against a \"visiting\" NFC team that was coached by the Green Bay Packers head coach Mike McCarthy of the NFC North. These coaches were selected for coaching the highest seeded team to lose in the Divisional Round of the playoffs, which has been the convention since the 2009 Pro Bowl. Ed Hochuli was the game referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235579-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Bowl\nPlayers on the winning team (NFC) each earned $50,000, while players on the losing team (AFC) earned $25,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235579-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Bowl\nThe Houston Texans and San Francisco 49ers had the most Pro Bowl selections with nine. The Kansas City Chiefs, despite only winning two games, had six selections. Six teams, the Carolina Panthers, Philadelphia Eagles, St. Louis Rams, Tennessee Titans, Jacksonville Jaguars, and San Diego Chargers, had no selections. Three rookie quarterbacks (Andrew Luck, Robert Griffin III, and Russell Wilson) were selected, which is the most in Pro Bowl history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235579-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Bowl, NFC rosters, Special teams\nIndicating he would retire after the Pro Bowl, NFC center Jeff Saturday treated the game as a testimonial match and crossed over to the AFC side for one play in order to reunite with quarterback Peyton Manning; the two had played together as members of the Indianapolis Colts for thirteen seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 41], "content_span": [42, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235579-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Bowl, Broadcasting\nThe game was televised nationally by NBC after Super Bowl XLVII broadcaster CBS declined to exercise their right to air the game, even though that network was using the game as part of the plot of an episode of Hawaii Five-0 to be aired three weeks later. This was the second of three consecutive years that NBC carried the game, since CBS also decided not to broadcast the 2012 Pro Bowl and FOX would later decline to carry the 2014 game. NBC will also broadcast the 2014 game as Super Bowl broadcaster Fox had declined to carry the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235580-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Duta FC season\nPro Duta Football Club played in Indonesian Premier League in 2013. This season is the first time for Pro Duta FC to compete in the top level of Indonesia's professional league. Their homebase is in Teladan, Medan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235580-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Duta FC season, Players, First team squad 2013\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, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235581-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Europe demonstration in Moldova\nThe Pro Europe demonstration took place in the capital of Moldova, Chi\u0219in\u0103u, on 3 November 2013. The demonstration was organised by three parties of the ruling coalition: Liberal Democratic Party of Moldova, Democratic Party of Moldova and Liberal Reformists Party. It's estimated that around 100,000 people participated at the demonstration, at that time being the biggest mass group or collection of groups of people, since Moldovan Declaration of Independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235581-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Europe demonstration in Moldova, Details\nOriginally, the organisers said the demonstration involved around 100,000 people, but the police estimated the crowd at 60,000 people. However, the police reevaluated this number and in an official communication declared that around 117,000 people took part. The crowd of people gathered in Moldova's capital Chi\u0219in\u0103u, on November 3, 2013 to show their support for closer ties with the European Union. It came a few weeks before a summit in Vilnius, Lithuania where Moldova hoped to sign a partnership agreement with the EU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235581-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Europe demonstration in Moldova, Details\nThe European integration is a chance to rebuild our economy, improve the quality of life and ensure prosperity of all citizens, to build a society with a clear vision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235581-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Europe demonstration in Moldova, Details\nThe demonstration was organised by the Moldovan government which wants to send a clear message to Brussels. However the country is under pressure from Russia which says closer ties with the EU would have \u201cserious consequences\u201d for Moldovan workers in Russia and the export of its goods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235581-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Europe demonstration in Moldova, Details\nAt the opening ceremony of demonstration, Moldovan soprano singer Valentina Naforni\u021b\u0103, performed the Anthem of Moldova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235581-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Europe demonstration in Moldova, Details\nAt the end of demonstration, participants have voted the \u2033Declaration from Chi\u0219in\u0103u\u2033.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235581-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Europe demonstration in Moldova, Aftermath\nAlong with Ukraine and Georgia, Moldova entered into an association agreement with the EU in June 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235582-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Mazda Championship\nThe 2013 Pro Mazda Championship was the 15th season in series history and first under new promoter Andersen Promotions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235582-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Mazda Championship\nAndretti Autosport driver Matthew Brabham won the championship with two races remaining capturing a series-record 11th win in his rookie season. Brabham's championship secured a scholarship to compete in Indy Lights in 2014. Brabham won 13 of the season's 16 races, shattering the series record. Juncos Racing's Diego Ferreira won the season opener and finished second in points with eleven podium finishes. Brabham's Andretti Autosport teammate Shelby Blackstock won a single race and two poles and finished third in points. Team Pelfrey's Spencer Pigot also won a single race and finished fourth in points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235582-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Mazda Championship\nAndretti Autosport also captured the team championship with two races remaining, their first in Pro Mazda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235582-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Mazda Championship\nThere were no full-time Expert class participants (a class for drivers age 35 and older). American Jay Horak won the championship with eight race starts by a narrow margin over Bobby Eberle, who also completed a partial schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235582-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro Mazda Championship\nWhile only nine drivers competed in all sixteen rounds of the championship, 27 different drivers made appearances in a Pro Mazda car over the course of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235583-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro12 Grand Final\nThe 2013 Pro12 Grand Final was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Pro12 season. The 2012\u201313 season was the second with RaboDirect as title sponsor and the fourth ever League Grand Final. Leinster won the game 24\u201318 against Ulster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235583-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro12 Grand Final\nThe win for Leinster ended a run of three successive league final losses. A Shane Jennings try in the first half helped Leinster to a 16-6 half-time lead, with Jamie Heaslip getting the second try in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235583-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro12 Grand Final\nIt was Jonathan Sexton's final match for Leinster before joining Racing M\u00e9tro, and also coach Joe Schmidt's last match before taking over as head coach of the Irish rugby team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235583-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro12 Grand Final, Route to the final, 2013 Playoffs\nThe semi-finals were played on the weekend of 10/11 May 2013; these followed a 1 v 4, 2 v 3 system with the games being played at the home ground of the higher placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235583-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pro12 Grand Final, Match, Details\nTouch judges:George Clancy (Ireland)Peter Fitzgibbon (Ireland)Television match official:Dermot Moloney (Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235584-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prosperita Open\nThe 2013 Prosperita Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Ostrava, Czech Republic between 29 April and 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235584-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Prosperita Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235584-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Prosperita Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235585-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prosperita Open \u2013 Doubles\nRadu Albot and Teymuraz Gabashvili were the defending champions but Albot decided not to participate. Gabashvili was scheduled to play alongside Luk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol but they withdrew due to Rosol's right bicep injury. Steve Darcis and Olivier Rochus defeated Tomasz Bednarek and Mateusz Kowalczyk 7\u20135, 7\u20135 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235586-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Prosperita Open \u2013 Singles\nJonathan Dasni\u00e8res de Veigy was the defending champion but decided to participate at the 2013 Tennis Napoli Cup instead. Ji\u0159\u00ed Vesel\u00fd won the final by defeating Steve Darcis 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235587-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Proton Malaysian Open\nThe 2013 Proton Malaysian Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament, and part of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia between 23 and 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235587-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Proton Malaysian Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235587-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Proton Malaysian Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235588-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Proton Malaysian Open \u2013 Doubles\nAlexander Peya and Bruno Soares were the defending champions, but chose not to participate this year. Eric Butorac and Raven Klaasen won the title, defeating Pablo Cuevas and Horacio Zeballos in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235589-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Proton Malaysian Open \u2013 Singles\nJuan M\u00f3naco was the defending champion but withdrew before the event started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235589-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Proton Malaysian Open \u2013 Singles\nJo\u00e3o Sousa won the title, defeating Julien Benneteau 2\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20134 in the final. It was the first ATP World Tour singles title ever won by a Portuguese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235590-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship\nThe 2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across England. The championship features a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers competing in 2 litre Formula Renault single seat race cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. The 2013 season was the 19th British Formula Renault Championship organized by the British Automobile Racing Club and the second season as the premier Formula Renault 2.0 championship in the United Kingdom. The season began at Donington Park on 14 April and ended on 29 September at Silverstone Circuit. The series will form part of the BARC club racing meetings and expanded from fourteen to sixteen rounds at six events all held in England, with four triple header events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235590-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship\nThe series has undergone rebranding after the BARC Championship became the prominent Formula Renault Championship in the United Kingdom. The series took the name Protyre Formula Renault Championship, dropping the BARC tag after its growth into one of the leading national single seater championships in Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235590-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship, Race calendar\nThe series formed part of the BARC club racing meetings and expanded to sixteen rounds at six events, with four triple header events. A championship calendar was released on 14 December 2012, with the final round once again in support of the 2013 British Touring Car Championship. All rounds will held in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235590-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship, Championship standings\nA driver's best 15 scores counted towards the championship, with any other points being discarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235590-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship, Protyre Formula Renault Autumn Cup\nThe 2013 Protyre Formula Renault Autumn Cup will be the 16th British Formula Renault Winter Series and the second all BARC championship only winter series. The series will be held at Rockingham Motor Speedway on 16 and 17 November. The meeting will take a two-day format with one qualifying and two races held each day, creating a four race championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235590-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship, Protyre Formula Renault Autumn Cup\nIt becomes a place of only the 16 November was scheduled for more than changed, the race was changed to three races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 77], "content_span": [78, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235590-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Protyre Formula Renault Championship, Protyre Formula Renault Autumn Cup, Race calendar and results\nThe calendar was announced by the championship organisers on 2 September 2013, with all rounds held at Rockingham Motor Speedway in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 104], "content_span": [105, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235591-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Provo Premier League\nThe 2013 Provo Premier League was the 15th season of top-tier football in the Turks and Caicos Islands. It began on 2 February 2013 and ended on 6 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens\nThe 2013 New Zealand National Rugby Sevens Tournament known as the Pub Charity Sevens will be hosted in Queenstown, New Zealand, on the 12 & 13 January 2013. It will be the 10th and final year Queenstown has hosted the event, with matches to be played at the Queenstown Recreational Ground and Jack Reid Park in Arrowtown. Sixteen men's provincial teams have qualified to compete in the annual national tournament following three regional tournaments (Southern, Central and Northern regions) in November and December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Format\nTeams from the 26 Provincial Unions have to qualify to attend at the National Event in Queenstown. The teams are divided into pools of four teams, who play a round-robin within the pool. The top two teams in each pool advanced to the Cup competition. The four quarterfinal losers dropped into the bracket for the Plate. The Bowl was contested by the third- and fourth-place finishers in each pool, with the losers in the Bowl quarterfinals dropping into the bracket for the Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Qualifying\n2013 Pub Charity Rugby Sevens qualifying began on the 24 November 2012 in Timaru, where 16 teams earned a place in the tournament, this automatically qualified them for the event in Queenstown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Qualifying, Southern Region\nOtago defeated Canterbury 34-21 in the men's Final to claim the Tofa Shield. Canterbury, Tasman, Southland and tournament hosts South Canterbury have all qualified for the men's National Sevens for 2013. Otago are not required to qualify given they host the Nationals in Queenstown but they won the event and so it was down to the other 3 semi-finalists plus the winner of the 5th/6th playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Qualifying, Northern Region\nOf the eight men\u2019s teams competing, there are six spots up for grabs for nationals and with the Auckland Barbarians not eligible to qualify it means just one team will miss out. Auckland will host the Northern Region National Sevens Qualifying tournamentat the Waitemata rugby Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Qualifying, Northern Region\nWaikato, North Harbour, Auckland, Counties Manukau, Bay of Plenty and Northland all qualified for 2013. Just one team missed out. That was Thames Valley this year, who lost their 6th v 7th playoff to Northland 15-10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Qualifying, Central Region\nThe Men\u2019s competition will follow a cross pool structure with teams being split into two pools of three, each team will play all teams from the opposing pool to develop a ranking system for playoffs. Pools were selected based on official rankings from the 2012 National sevens held in Queenstown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Qualifying, Central Region\nHawke\u2019s Bay, Manawatu, Taranaki, Wairarapa Bush and Wellington all qualified for the men's 2013 Pub Charity Sevens with Horowhenua Kapiti missing out after finishing 6th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Pool stage\nThe first round, or pool stage, saw the 16 teams divided into four pools of four teams. Each pool was a round-robin of six games, where each team played one match against each of the other teams in the same pool. Teams were awarded three points for a win, two points for a draw and one for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Pool stage\nThe teams finishing in the top two of each pool advanced to the cup quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235592-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Pub Charity Sevens, Pool stage\nPld = matches played, W = matches won, D = draws, L = losses, TF = tries for, PF = match points for, PA = match points against, +/\u2212 = sum total of points for/against, Pts = pool points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235593-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Puerto Rico teachers protest\nThe 2013 Puerto Rico teachers protest is an ongoing protest staged by the teachers of Puerto Rico's public school system which began on December 19, 2013. During the protest, teachers from the Puerto Rico Teachers Federation took over the floor of the Senate of Puerto Rico with the intention of halting an extraordinary session called by Governor Alejandro Garc\u00eda Padilla. Padilla was going to order a reform of the Puerto Rico Teachers Pension System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235593-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Puerto Rico teachers protest\nThe Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate of Puerto Rico stated he could not guarantee the safety of those in the hemicycle of the Capitol of Puerto Rico that houses the Senate. Both the Governor and the President of the Senate of Puerto Rico, Eduardo Bhatia, asked the Puerto Rico Joint Forces of Rapid Action (FURA) and the Puerto Rico Police to not intervene nor attempt to remove the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235594-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pulitzer Prize\nThe 2013 Pulitzer Prizes were awarded on April 15, 2013 by the Pulitzer Prize Board for work during the 2012 calendar year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election\nA by-election for the Punggol East Single Member Constituency in Singapore was held on 26 January 2013 with Lee Li Lian from the Worker's Party as the winning candidate. This followed due to the resignation of former parliamentary speaker Michael Palmer from the People's Action Party on 12 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election\nThis was the 17th by-election since the first election, and the second by-election in as many years. The Nomination Day was held on 16 January 2013, while Polling Day was on 26 January 2013. This was also returning officer, Yam Ah Mee's last stint, following his resignation from the People's Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election\nOn 26 January 2013, Lee Li Lian of the Workers' Party was elected as the Member of Parliament for Punggol East SMC, marking the second by-election victory for an opposition party after 1981. It also marked as a second SMC won by the Worker's Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Background\nThe by-election was called by President Tony Tan Keng Yam at the advice of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong after the seat of Punggol East was left vacant when then the incumbent, then Speaker of Parliament Michael Palmer, resigned from his seat due to him having an extramarital affair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Background\nA local tabloid, The New Paper, reported that they received a tip-off on 8 December 2012, in the form of screengrabs of phone messages that the Speaker of Parliament, Michael Palmer was having an extramarital affair. The messages suggested that the two had close relationship and met regularly on Mondays. The New Paper also stated that they have been in this relationship for a year. On the same Saturday, Palmer met DPM Teo Chee Hean to tender his resignation as speaker and MP. The next day, PM Lee Hsien Loong met Palmer to confirm his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Background\nOn 12 December 2012, the PAP called a press conference where Palmer announced that he resigned to \"take full responsibility for a grave mistake\" for having an improper relationship with a PA staff working in the Pasir Ris West constituency office, Laura Ong. Although Ong did not work under Palmer, Punggol East belonged to the Pasir Ris-Punggol division and Punggol East still works together on constituencies affairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Background\nDeputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean announced at the press conference announced that Teo Ser Luck will be the interim MP for Punggol East, while Zainal Sapari would be the new chairman for the Pasir Ris-Punggol town council. Deputy Speaker Charles Chong served as the Acting Speaker until 14 January 2013 where Halimah Yacob became the new speaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Background, Confirmation of by-election\nOn 9 January 2013, President Tony Tan Keng Yam issued a writ of election for the electoral division of Punggol East. The nominations was held on 16 January at North Vista Secondary School and voting took place on 26 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Candidates\nOn 10 January 2013, PAP unveiled their candidate to stand in the by-election, Dr Koh Poh Koon, a 40-year-old colorectal surgeon from Mount Elizabeth Medical Centre. Four days later, WP unveiled a previously-contested candidate Lee Li Lian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Candidates\nIn a press statement to the media on 15 January 2013, the Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA) announced secretary-general Desmond Lim as its candidates. At a news conference outside Rivervale Plaza later on the evening, the Reform Party (RP) announce that chief Kenneth Jeyaretnam will be the fourth candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Candidates\nThe Singapore Democratic Party initially expressed interest in contesting the election, even proposing a joint campaign with the WP, but on 15 January, the SDP announced its decision not to contest the by-election and backed WP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Candidates\nThere were potential independent candidates who declared their intentions to run. They included former People's Liberal Democratic Party founder Ooi Boon Ewe, retired acupuncturist Zeng Guoyuan and former Singapore People's Party member Benjamin Pwee, who later pulled out of the race, citing the lack of time to run under a party banner as a reason for pulling out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Results\nBefore results were announced, SDA's Desmond Lim conceded at about 10.42pm (SGT) thanking his supporters and vowed to 'keep SDA's flame alive' in the next election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Results\nResults were announced on 10.57pm (SGT) where WP's Lee was declared candidate-elect with a 54.52% out of 29,415 valid votes, beating PAP's rival Koh with a 43.71% vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Results\nTwo candidates had forfeited their $14,500 election deposit, namely Kenneth Jeyaretnam and Desmond Lim with 1.20% and 0.57% of the votes respectively, with the latter becoming the second candidate to have his election deposit forfeited twice since Harbans Singh, and setting a record-low vote share surpassing Teo Kim Hoe's former record of 196 votes or 0.81%, in post-independence Singapore; Lim's vote count would later be shattered in the 2015 elections by another candidate, Samir Salim Neji, with 150 votes or 0.60%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Results\nOverseas votes were tabulated four days after the by-election, on 30 January, seeing a 0.02% change in the top two parties after Koh and Lee received 19 and 7 votes respectively (there is only one spoilt and 32 abstained votes). The results are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Aftermath\nThe election had seen another setback for the PAP since the formation of the 12th Parliament after the 2011 election where WP won Aljunied GRC. WP subsequently made history with Lee becoming the first female MP in post-independence to helm a SMC and the second female opposition MP to do so after WP's chair Sylvia Lim. It was also the second by-election since 1981 in which PAP lost a parliamentary seat of Anson SMC during the term to the opposition. Lee was sworn-in to parliament a week later on 4 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Aftermath\nPrime Minister Lee congratulated WP for the victory and respected the voter's decision, and further cited that in a by-election, voters were seen choosing for an MP and not government, and encouraged them to vote for the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Aftermath\nHe then announced that the government will now focus on current national issues in Parliament including the Population White Paper and the annual Budget statement, and mentioned that the PAP are prepared for a long term with time to deliver results, and would continue to work to improve the lives of Singaporeans, and present the report card for voters to judge in the next general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235595-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Punggol East by-election, Aftermath\nIn the 2015 elections, PAP's Koh would be MP-elect for the Yio Chu Kang division under Ang Mo Kio GRC (and later Tampines GRC in 2020), but Lee was unable to retain the seat for a second term and returning Punggol East to the PAP-fold which was won by Joo Chiat SMC candidate Charles Chong in a narrow winning margin. Punggol East SMC would be defunct on a redistricting of boundaries in the 2020 elections under a new constituency of Sengkang GRC; WP would go on to win the GRC, eventually returning Punggol East (now renamed to Rivervale) back to the WP-fold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election\nProvincial elections were held in the Pakistani province of Punjab on 11 May 2013, alongside nationwide general elections and three other provincial elections in the provinces of Sindh, Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The remaining two territories of Pakistan, Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, were ineligible to vote due to their disputed status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election\nThe Pakistan Muslim League (N) returned triumphant in this elections, retaining Shehbaz Sharif as Chief Minister of Punjab. They obtained 313 out of 371 total seats, giving them a comfortable 4/5 majority in the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election, Background\nIn the 2008 elections, the PML (N) and the PPP formed a coalition government, with PML (N) as the senior party and Shehbaz Sharif as Chief Minister of Punjab. However, in 2011, the PPP was expelled from this coalition due to corruption in the Federal Government, (which was led by the PPP at the time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election, Campaign\nOverall, due to general mistrust with the federal government, the PML (N) was running on a wave of popular support in Punjab on an anti-PPP platform, due to widespread loadshedding, a slow economic growth rate, and general incompetence in the Federal Level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election, Campaign\nOn 30 October 2011, former cricketer turned politician Imran Khan held a rally in Punjab's capital city: Lahore. This rally attracted over 100,000 of his supporters and was a power show of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf. Following this, the popularity of the PTI rapidly increased and it emerged as the main challenger to the PML (N) in Punjab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election, Campaign\nBoth parties ran on two different platforms: Pakistan Muslim League (N) ran on the issues of tackling the energy conservation crisis, economic reforms and construction of new infrastructure in the country, while the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf ran on a more welfarist, centrist and anti-establishment platform, claiming to be an alternative to both mainstream parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election, Aftermath\nFollowing the elections, the Pakistan Muslim League (N) came out with well above a supermajority landslide in the assembly with 313 seats, and were comfortably able to form a government. They were followed by the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, which held only 30 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election, Aftermath\nThis election was notable for the downfall of the Pakistan Peoples Party and the Pakistan Muslim League (Q), which both held 106 and 79 seats respectively before the election and were reduced to merely 8 seats each, due to the rise of PTI and PML (N), although the sheer numbers that the PML (N) held in the assembly shocked many analysts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235596-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Punjab provincial election, Aftermath\nShehbaz Sharif, brother of PML (N) chairman and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, became Chief Minister for the third time in his life, securing over 300 votes in the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235597-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Purdue Boilermakers football team\nThe 2013 Purdue Boilermakers football team was an American football team that represented Purdue University during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Boilermakers competed in the Leaders Division of the Big Ten Conference, and played their home games at Ross\u2013Ade Stadium in West Lafayette, Indiana. Purdue was led by head coach Darrell Hazell, who was in his first season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235597-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Purdue Boilermakers football team\nPurdue finished the season with a 1\u201311 record, 0\u20138 in Big Ten play, to finish in sixth place in the Leaders Division, failing to qualify for a bowl game. The team was the first Purdue team to go winless in conference play since the 1993 Purdue Boilermakers football team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235597-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Recruiting, Recruits\nPurdue's recruiting class was ranked No. 57 by Scout No. 56 by Rivals and No. 50 by ESPN. The program received 23 letters of intent on National Signing Day, February 6, 2013. On June 13, Purdue signee, TyVel Jemison, decided to not attend Purdue and choose to enroll at Grand Valley State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235598-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pure Michigan 400\nThe 2013 Pure Michigan 400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on August 18, 2013, at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan. Contested over 200 laps on the 2.0-mile (3.2\u00a0km) superspeedway, it was the twenty-third race of the 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season. Joey Logano of Penske Racing won the race, his first of the season. Kevin Harvick finished second while Kurt Busch, Paul Menard, and Clint Bowyer rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235598-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Pure Michigan 400, Report, Background\nMichigan International Speedway is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) long. Opened in 1960, the track's turns are banked at eighteen degrees, while the 3,600-foot-long front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at twelve degrees. The back stretch, has a five degree banking and is 2,242 feet long. Michigan International Speedway has a grandstand seating capacity of 84,000 people. Greg Biffle was the defending race winner after winning the race in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235598-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Pure Michigan 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 808 points, while Clint Bowyer stood in second with 733 points. Carl Edwards followed in the third with 728, twenty-one points ahead of Kevin Harvick and thirty-five ahead of Kyle Busch in fourth and fifth. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., with 670, was in sixth; eleven ahead of Matt Kenseth, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Brad Keselowski was seven points ahead of Biffle and nine ahead of Martin Truex, Jr. in ninth and tenth. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 156 points, twelve points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third with 111 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235598-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Pure Michigan 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, scheduled on August 16, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third, held a day later on August 17, 2013, were each 55 minutes long. The qualifying for the event was the final ever broadcast for Speed, when Fox NASCAR play-by-play announcer Mike Joy said the final moments of Speed Channel and Fox NFL Sunday host Curt Menefee introduced Fox Sports 1 the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235599-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Pusk\u00e1s Cup\nThe 2013 Pusk\u00e1s Cup was the sixth edition of the Pusk\u00e1s Cup and took place 29 March to 1 April. Budapest Honv\u00e9d were the defending champions. Real Madrid won their second title by defeating Panathinaikos 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235600-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2013 Qatar Crown Prince Cup will be the 19th edition of the Qatar Crown Prince Cup and will take place from April 27 to May 4. The cup is contested by the top four finishers in 2012\u201313 Qatar Stars League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235601-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Open\nThe 2013 Qatar Open (also known as 2013 Qatar ExxonMobil Open for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 21st edition of the Qatar Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex in Doha, Qatar, from December 31, 2012 through January 5, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235601-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235601-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235602-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Open \u2013 Doubles\nFilip Pol\u00e1\u0161ek and Luk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol were the defending champions but decided not to participate together. Pol\u00e1\u0161ek partnered up Julian Knowle, while Rosol decided not to participate. Christopher Kas and Philipp Kohlschreiber won the title winning against Knowle and Pol\u00e1\u0161ek by 7\u20135, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235603-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Open \u2013 Singles\nJo-Wilfried Tsonga was the defending champion, but chose to compete at the Hopman Cup instead. Richard Gasquet won the 2013 tournament by beating Nikolay Davydenko 3\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235604-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open\nThe 2013 Qatar Total Open was a professional women's tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 11th edition of the event and part of the WTA Premier 5 series of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the International Tennis and Squash complex in Doha, Qatar between 11 and 17 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235604-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235604-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235605-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open \u2013 Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions but decided not to participate together this year. Huber played alongside Hsieh Su-wei, but lost to Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Anabel Medina Garrigues in the first round while Raymond partnered up with Samantha Stosur, but lost to Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears in the quarterfinals. Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci won the title, defeating Nadia Petrova and Katarina Srebotnik in the final 2\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235605-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235606-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open \u2013 Singles\nWorld No. 1 Victoria Azarenka successfully defended her title, beating world no. 2 Serena Williams in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 2\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235606-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open \u2013 Singles\nAll of the top three seeds (Azarenka, Williams and Maria Sharapova) were in contention for the World No. 1 ranking at the start of the tournament. Williams regained the World No. 1 ranking for the first time since October 2010, becoming the oldest No. 1 player in the history of the WTA after she beat Petra Kvitov\u00e1 in the quarterfinals. She would remain the world No. 1 for a further 186 weeks until September 12, 2016, when she was replaced by Angelique Kerber, tying Steffi Graf's record for longest consecutive spell at No. 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235606-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar Total Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235607-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Qatar motorcycle Grand Prix was the first round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Losail International Circuit near Doha in Qatar on 7 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235607-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Qatar 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235608-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Qingdao oil pipeline explosion\nThe 2013 Qingdao oil pipeline explosion occurred on 22 November 2013, when an oil pipeline in Chinese city of Qingdao, Shandong Province, China leaked and caught fire and exploded. The blast killed at least 62 people. At least nine people were detained by the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400\nThe 2013 Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race scheduled to be held on June 29, 2013, at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Kentucky, United States, but was postponed to June 30 because of persistent rain. Contested over 267 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) tri-oval, it was the seventeenth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Matt Kenseth of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his fourth win of the 2013 season, while Jamie McMurray finished second. Clint Bowyer, Joey Logano, and Kyle Busch rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nTwo practice sessions were held on June 28 in preparation for the race. The first session was 60 minutes, while second session was 90 minutes long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring the first practice session, Kevin Harvick, for the Richard Childress Racing team, was quickest ahead of Jimmie Johnson in second and Brad Keselowski in third. Kurt Busch was scored fourth, and Jeff Gordon managed fifth. Kyle Busch, Brian Vickers, Juan Pablo Montoya, Paul Menard, and Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. rounded out the top ten quickest drivers in the session. In the final practice session for the race, Johnson was quickest with a time of 29.819 seconds. Carl Edwards followed in second, ahead of Kyle Busch and Gordon in third and fourth. Jeff Burton, who was twelfth quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. clinched his twelfth career pole position, with a record lap time of 29.406 seconds and a speed of 183.636 miles per hour (295.533\u00a0km/h). After his qualifying run, Earnhardt, Jr. said, \"We thought we had a top-five car in practice, and we got some good cloud cover about six or seven cars in front of us before we went to qualify, and that brought the track temp down to give us a good advantage,\" Earnhardt said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\n\"It gave us a good opportunity to run a bit quicker lap than maybe what the car had in it.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Edwards. Johnson qualified third, Kyle Busch took fourth, and Marcos Ambrose started fifth. Denny Hamlin, Ryan Newman, Keselowski, Vickers, and Montoya completed the first ten positions on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Start, First half\nThe race was scheduled to start Saturday at 8:00\u00a0p.m., but pushed to Sunday afternoon due to rain, at 12:00\u00a0p.m. E.T., This prompted NASCAR to have a competition caution on Lap 30. Carl Edwards led lap 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Start, First half\nThe race ran 29 laps before the first caution, which was the competition caution, The race restarted on lap 36, and four laps later, the second caution of the race came out for a tire blowout on lap 39, The race restarted on lap 48, and the third caution of the race flew on lap 49 for a multi-car wreck in the , Brad Keselowski, Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch and others were involved in the incident, it started with Brad Keselowski spinning in the grass, and took out multiple cars, The red flag was displayed with Jimmie Johnson the race leader, it was lifted after 18 minutes and 34 seconds The race restarted on lap 51. A couple laps later, The fourth caution came out on lap 89 for debris on the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Start, First half\nDavid Gilliland blew a tire and brought out the fifth caution, Kasey Kahne won the free pass, The race restarted on lap 94. The fifth caution of the race came out on lap 149, Jeff Gordon won the free pass under caution. The race restarted on lap 154, Jimmie Johnson took the lead, The fifth caution then came out on lap 241 for a tire blowout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235609-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Quaker State 400, Report, Start, Wreck again and finish\nThe race restarted on lap 243 and the sixth caution came out for a wreck again, on lap 246, the race restarted on lap 250, Matt Kenseth won his first race at Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235610-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec City municipal election\nThe 2013 Quebec City municipal election took place on November 3, 2013, to elect a mayor and city councillors in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The election is in conjunction with 2013 Quebec municipal elections to be held across the province on the same date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235610-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec City municipal election\nQuebec City Council voted to reduce the number of councillors from 27 to 21 in time for the 2013 municipal election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235611-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election\nThe Quebec Liberal Party held a leadership convention in 2013 following Jean Charest's resignation after the party's 2012 election loss. The convention was held March 16\u201317, 2013, at the Verdun Auditorium in Montreal. The choice of venue was in part influenced by a lack of funds due to a recent drop in donations to the party. Philippe Couillard was elected on the first ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235611-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election, Procedure\nCandidates had until December 14, 2012 to be nominated by gathering the signatures of 500 party members from 50 ridings in 10 regions and submitting a $50,000 deposit. There was a $600,000 spending limit. Liberal riding associations in each of the province's 125 ridings were to select 24 delegates between February 4 and March 10, 2013. The party was unable to afford to pay delegates' travel expenses. Instead, the candidates themselves were allowed to reimburse the delegates. There were 5 debates, including one entirely in English. The rules and timeline were formally adopted on October 21, 2012, the day before the official start of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235611-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election, Procedure\nThe election was done in a traditional leadership convention format, in which delegates on the convention floor chose the leader. Each riding's 24 delegates was supposed to include an equal number of men and women and 8 members of the youth wing, although some ridings were unable to send a full delegation. It was the party's first contested leadership convention since 1983.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235611-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election, Candidates, Official candidates, Raymond Bachand\nMember of National Assembly for Outremont since 2005. Minister of Finance until 2012, former aide to Parti Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois Premier Ren\u00e9 L\u00e9vesque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 95], "content_span": [96, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235611-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election, Candidates, Official candidates, Philippe Couillard\nMember of National Assembly for Mont-Royal 2003\u20132007, Jean-Talon 2007\u20132008. Minister of Health until 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 98], "content_span": [99, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235611-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election, Candidates, Official candidates, Pierre Moreau\nMember of National Assembly for Marguerite-D'Youville 2003\u20132007, Ch\u00e2teauguay since 2008. Former Minister of Transport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 93], "content_span": [94, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235611-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election, Candidates, Withdrawn candidates, Jean David\nFormer Cirque du Soleil marketing vice-president. President of the party's youth wing from 1971 to 1972. Chair of the party's policy commission from 1999 to 2002, when he quit the party. David admitted at the beginning of his campaign he may not be able to meet the requirements to become an official candidate. He withdrew from the race two days before the deadline to submit his nomination papers, after failing to get the requisite 500 signatures in 50 ridings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 91], "content_span": [92, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235612-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Men's Provincial Curling Championship\nThe 2013 Quebec Men's Provincial Curling Championship (also known as the Quebec Tankard) was held from January 21 to 27 at the Complexe Sportif Victoriaville in Victoriaville, Quebec. The winning team represented Quebec at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235612-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Men's Provincial Curling Championship, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u22125).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235613-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Quebec Scotties Tournament of Hearts was held from January 22 to 27 at the Centre sportif Victoriaville in Victoriaville, Quebec. The winning team will represent Quebec at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235613-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC\u22125).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235614-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quebec municipal elections\nThe Canadian province of Quebec held municipal elections on November 3, 2013. Below are the results by region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235615-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Queen's Birthday Honours (Australia)\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours 2013 were announced on 10 June 2013 by the Governor General of Australia, Quentin Bryce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235615-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Queen's Birthday Honours (Australia), Public Service Medal (PSM), Australian Public Service\nAustralian Government Chief Information Officer and head of the Australian Government Information Management Office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 96], "content_span": [97, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235616-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Basketball League season\nThe 2013 Men's Queensland Basketball League season was the 28th running of the competition. The Rockhampton Rockets won the championship in 2013 to claim their fourth league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235616-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Basketball League season\nThe teams for this season were: Brisbane Capitals, Bundaberg Bulls, Cairns Marlins, Gladstone Port City Power, Gold Coast Rollers, Ipswich Force, Mackay Meteors, Northside Wizards, Rockhampton Rockets, South West Metro Pirates, Suncoast Clippers, Toowoomba Mountaineers and Townsville Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235616-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Basketball League season, Standings, Finals\n*The team that finishes 1st overall goes straight through to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235616-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Basketball League season, Standings, Finals\n* *The top two teams from each pool face-off in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235617-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Cup\nThe 2013 Queensland Cup season was the 18th season of Queensland's top-level statewide rugby league competition run by the Queensland Rugby League. The competition, known as the Intrust Super Cup due to sponsorship from Intrust Super, 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, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235617-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Cup\nThe Mackay Cutters won their first premiership after defeating the Easts Tigers 27\u201320 in the Grand Final at North Ipswich Reserve. Easts Tigers' five-eighth Cody Walker 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, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235617-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Cup, Teams\nIn 2013, the lineup of teams remained unchanged for the fifth consecutive year. After partnering with the Gold Coast Titans since 2007, the Ipswich Jets became an affiliate of the Brisbane Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235617-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Cup, Grand Final\nEasts, who finished the regular season in third, qualified for their third Grand Final after upsetting the second-placed Mackay in Week 1 and the first-placed Northern Pride in the major semi final. Mackay, after losing to Easts, defeated Ipswich in the minor semi final and upset the Pride 20\u20136 in the preliminary final to qualify for their first Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235617-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Cup, Grand Final, First half\nEasts were the first team to get on the board in the decided when centre Junior Sa'u scored in the 9th minute. In the 25th minute, they extended their lead to eight when Mackay put a dropout out on the full, kicking a penalty goal from right in front. The Cutters finally cracked the Tigers when winger Bureta Faraimo crossed in the right corner in the 29th minute. They took the lead for the first time when Faraimo scored his second in the 32nd minute, sprinting 50 metres down the sideline after a pass from his centre Michael Morgan. The lead didn't last long, as Easts scored in the 38th minute, when Sa'u latched onto a kick that the Cutters let bounce to score his second try.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235617-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Cup, Grand Final, Second half\nMackay levelled the scores at 14-all seven minutes into the second half when winger David Milne scored in the left corner. In the 64th minute, Mackay captured their second lead of the contest when Morgan picked up a loose ball and ran 50 metres to score in the right corner. Again, the lead did not last long, as Easts' prop Mitch Garbutt muscled over to score in the 69th minute. The Cutters took a one-point lead when halfback Matt Minto slotted a field goal from 20 metres out with six minutes left in the game. Mackay sealed the win in the 79th minute when hooker Anthony Mitchell darted from dummy half to score and secure the club's first Queensland Cup premiership. Mitchell was awarded the Duncan Hall Medal for Man of Match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235617-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Cup, Grand Final, Second half\nA North Queensland Cowboys feeder club, the Cutters' side featured Michael Morgan and Jason Taumalolo, who would both go on to become NRL regulars for the Cowboys and play in the club's 2015 NRL Grand Final win over the Brisbane Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235618-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Firebirds season\nThe 2013 Queensland Firebirds season saw Queensland Firebirds compete in the 2013 ANZ Championship. During the regular season Firebirds finished fourth, qualifying for the play offs. In the minor semi-final they defeated Waikato Bay of Plenty Magic 53\u201350 and in the preliminary final they defeated Melbourne Vixens 50\u201346. They were then defeated in the grand final by Adelaide Thunderbirds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235618-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Queensland Firebirds season, Melbourne Vixens Summer Challenge\nThe main pre-season event was the Summer Challenge, hosted by Melbourne Vixens at the State Netball Hockey Centre on 23 and 24 February. Queensland Firebirds were unbeaten, winning all three of their games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections\nLocal elections were held in Quezon City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. Registered voters of the city elected candidates for the following elective local posts: mayor, vice mayor, district representative, and six councilors at-large for each district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections\nLike in the previous election, Mayor Herbert Bautista and his running mate Vice Mayor Joy Belmonte of the Liberal Party garnered huge leads over their rivals. Candidates of the Liberal Party won all the congressional seats in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, Mayoral election results\nHerbert Bautista is the incumbent. Romeo Acebedo was disqualified by the COMELEC for being a nuisance candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, Vice Mayoral election results\nJosefina Belmonte is the incumbent. Allan Bantilo and Fermin Idea were disqualified by the COMELEC for being nuisance candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 1st District\nIncumbent Vincent \"Bingbong\" Crisologo is on his last term, having served as Representative of the 1st District from 2004-2013.; his wife Rita is his party's nominee. She lost to Councilor Francisco Calalay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 2nd District\nThe second district of Quezon City was redistricted into three districts. The district that will continue to carry the \"second district\" name is the one surrounding the Batasang Pambansa Complex, immediately south of the La Mesa Dam watershed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 2nd District\nWinston Castelo, the incumbent 2nd district representative, is running here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 3rd District\nJorge Banal, Jr. is the incumbent, his opponent is former congressman Matias Defensor, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 4th District\nFeliciano Belmonte, Jr., the Speaker of the House of Representatives, is the incumbent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 5th District\nThe 5th district comes from old 2nd district's northernmost area, comprising most of Novaliches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 5th District\nActor and councilor Alfred Vargas won against former representatives Mary Ann Susano and Dante Liban and broadcaster Gani Oro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235619-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon City local elections, House of Representative Elections, 6th District\nThe 6th district comprises the old 2nd district's southernmost parts (Balintawak and Tandang Sora areas). Lawyer Christopher \"Kit\" Belmonte, who ranked second to Winston Castelo in the 2010 polls), is running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections\nLocal elections was held in the Province of Quezon on May 13, 2013 as part of the 2013 general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the four districts of Quezon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, Background\nIncumbent David Suarez is running for a second term as governor of Quezon under the National Unity Party. Suarez assumed the governorship after defeating Rafael Nantes in the 2010 elections. His running mate is 2nd district board member Romano Franco Talaga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, Background\nIrvin Alcala, incumbent representative of the 2nd district of Quezon and son of incumbent Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala is running under the Liberal Party. Alcala was elected representative in 2010, as replacement of his father who did not run and was later appointed as Agriculture Secretary. His running mate is Samuel Nantes, son of former governor Rafael Nantes who became governor in 2007 until his death on May 17, 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, Provincial elections\nThe candidates for governor and vice governor 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, Congressional elections, 2nd District\nIncumbent Irvin Alcala is running for the governorship; his uncle, Vice Governor Vicente Alcala, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, Congressional elections, 3rd District\nIncumbent Danilo Suarez is term limited; his wife, former congresswoman Aleta Suarez, is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, Congressional elections, 4th District\nIncumbent Lorenzo Ta\u00f1ada III is term limited; his brother Wigberto Jr. is his party's nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, Burdeos\nGil Establecida is the incumbent, his opponent is councilor Freddie Aman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 102], "content_span": [103, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, General Nakar\nObing Ruzol is the incumbent, his opponent is former mayor Hernando Avellaneda, Sr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 108], "content_span": [109, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, Infanta\nIncumbent mayor Grace America is term-limited and running for vice mayor instead, her party nominate councilor Rodante Potes. his main opponent is vice mayor Ricardo Macasaet III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 102], "content_span": [103, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, Jomalig\nRodel Tena is the incumbent, his opponents are vice mayor Ruben Belda and Alex Enverga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 102], "content_span": [103, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, Lucban\nIncumbent mayor Moises Villasenor is term-limited, his party nominate his son Marvin Loui Villasenor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 101], "content_span": [102, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, Pagbilao\nIncumbent Romeo Portes is not running; his daughter, councilor Shierre Ann Portes-Palicpic, is running for her position under NUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, Patnanungan\nDanteo Eusebio is the incumbent, his opponents are councilor Ellen Malarasta and Saling Abrazando.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 106], "content_span": [107, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235620-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Quezon local elections, City and municipal elections, 1st District, Candidates for Mayor, Real\nIncumbent Joel Amando Diestro is running for his reelection independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 99], "content_span": [100, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400\nThe 2013\u00a0Quicken Loans\u00a0400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on June 16, 2013, at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan, United States. Contested over 200 laps on the two\u2013mile (3.2 km) superspeedway, it was the fifteenth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Greg Biffle of Roush Fenway Racing won the race, his first win of the 2013 season, while Kevin Harvick finished second. Martin Truex, Jr., Kyle Busch, and Tony Stewart rounded out the top five. It was also Biffle's 19th and final Cup Series win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Background\nMichigan International Speedway is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) long. Opened in 1968, the track's turns are banked at eighteen degrees, while the 3,600-foot-long front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at twelve degrees. The back stretch, has a five degree banking and is 2,242 feet long. Michigan International Speedway has a grandstand seating capacity of 71,000 people, with 13,000 seats having been removed from turns 3 and 4 since the race weekend in August 2012. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. was the defending race winner, having won the event in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 521 points, while Carl Edwards stood in second with 470 points. Clint Bowyer followed in the third with 452, thirteen points ahead of fourth-placed Earnhardt, Jr. and eighteen ahead of fifth-placed Kevin Harvick. Matt Kenseth, with 418, was in sixth; six ahead of Kyle Busch, who was scored seventh. Eighth-placed Kasey Kahne was two points ahead of ninth-placed Brad Keselowski and five ahead of Greg Biffle, who rounded out the top ten. Jeff Gordon was eleventh with 393, while Paul Menard completed the first twelve positions with 385 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Chevrolet was leading with 101 points, thirteen points ahead of Toyota. Ford was third after recording only 70 points before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the race. The first session, held on June 14, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third sessions, held a day later on June 15, were 55 and 60 minutes long, respectively. During the first practice session, Kasey Kahne was quickest with a fastest time of 35.889 seconds. Kurt Busch, who was 0.068 seconds slower, followed in second, ahead of Aric Almirola in third and Kevin Harvick in fourth. With a fastest time of 36.014 seconds, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. managed to be fifth quickest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-four cars were entered, meaning only one car would not obtain a spot in the race per NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Carl Edwards clinched his twelfth career pole position, with a lap time of 35.564 seconds and a speed of 202.452 miles per hour (325.815\u00a0km/h). After his qualifying run, Edwards commented on his results, saying, \"This is one lap, and it's good. I'm really happy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe process that's going to put us out front of Hendrick Motorsports and the guys at Joe Gibbs Racing and the rest of the guys we race against on Sunday, this process is just starting. We can use these positive things, like the pole position, hopefully a win, Greg [Biffle's] run last week, we can move forward. We've just got to keep moving forward. There's not a faster car in the place than our car today, and that's a big deal.\u201d He was joined on the front row of the grid by Kurt Busch. Kasey Kahne qualified third, Paul Menard took fourth, and Aric Almirola ranked fifth. Joey Logano, Austin Dillon, Matt Kenseth, Kyle Busch, and Juan Pablo Montoya completed the first ten positions on the grid. The driver who failed to qualify for the race was Scott Riggs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning practice session, Kurt Busch was quickest with a fastest lap time of 35.829 seconds, over two-tenths ahead of Carl Edwards in second and Jimmie Johnson in third. Paul Menard and Mark Martin followed in the fourth and fifth positions, respectively. Kasey Kahne, Greg Biffle, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, and Aric Almirola rounded out the first ten positions. In the final practice session for the race, Kurt Busch remained quickest with a time of 36.480 seconds, 0.651 slower than his fastest time of the second practice session. Kahne followed in second, ahead of Martin in third and Johnson in fourth. Edwards, who was second-quickest in second practice, could only manage fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Race\nThe race began with Kurt Busch colliding with pole-sitter Carl Edwards in turn 2 on the opening lap in an attempt to grab the lead. Edwards lost multiple positions as a result, and Kurt Busch emerged in front. The first caution flew on lap 6, after Bobby Labonte got loose and spun in turn 2, collecting Jeff Gordon. A competition caution was thrown on lap 20 for the previous night's rain. Kurt Busch lost the lead to Joey Logano during this caution, and only three laps after the subsequent restart, on lap 29, Busch got loose off of turn two and crashed down the back-straightaway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Race\nAfterward, multiple caution flags and different pit stop strategies gave Joey Logano, Jamie McMurray, Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., and Kasey Kahne turns at leading the race. At one point, Johnson rebounded to the second position after falling to twelfth as a result of a mistake made on a restart. On lap 104 and while leading the race, Kahne experienced a right-front tire failure and crashed into the outside wall in turn 1, setting his car ablaze and eliminating him from the event. Fortunately, Kahne was not harmed by the impact or the fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Race\nJohnson took over the lead but lost it to Earnhardt during pit stops. On the restart on lap 113, Earnhardt began to pull away from Kenseth and Biffle as Johnson struggled to battle back to the front. Several laps later, Earnhardt developed engine problems and fell off the pace, giving Johnson (who had successfully passed Kenseth and Biffle) the lead. After a few slow laps, Earnhardt's engine blew up, bringing out another caution on lap 131. After taking four tires in the pits, Johnson fell to 20th and Edwards took the lead ahead of Logano, Kenseth, and Biffle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Race\nFollowing the restart on lap 136, Biffle worked his way past both Kenseth and Logano into second and proceeded to chase down Edwards, passing him for the lead on lap 150 and quickly pulling away afterward. A caution for a right-front tire failure on the car of McMurray occurred in the middle of the last round of pit stops, trapping Edwards a lap down (although he would immediately receive the free pass). Biffle, who had pitted under the green but did not go a lap down, cycled out as the leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Race\nOn the lap of the restart (lap 174), Kenseth got loose off of turn two, causing him to drop several positions while Johnson, who restarted tenth, began to pass cars. Johnson gradually worked his way through the field, eventually passing Harvick to move into second with eight laps to go. However, as Johnson struggled to catch Biffle, he experienced a right-front tire failure off of turn 2 on lap 198, causing him to make contact with the outside wall and relegating him to a 28th-place finish after having to pit to address the tire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Report, Race\nBiffle sped away to take the victory over Harvick, Martin Truex, Jr., Kyle Busch, and Tony Stewart. Biffle's win was the 615th race victory for the Ford marque and 715th for Ford Motor Company in the Cup Series. It was also the 1,000th race victory for Ford Motor Company in NASCAR's three national touring series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235621-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Quicken Loans 400, Results, Race results\nPoints include 3 Chase for the Sprint Cup points for winning, 1 point for leading a lap, and 1 point for most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235622-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quito Challenger\nThe 2013 Quito Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 19th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Quito, Ecuador between 16 and 22 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235622-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Quito Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235623-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quito Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nJuan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Carlos Salamanca were the defending champions but Cabal decided not to participate. Salamanca partnered with Christopher Diaz-Figueroa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235624-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Quito Challenger \u2013 Singles\nJo\u00e3o Souza is the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Giovanni Lapentti. V\u00edctor Estrella of the Dominican Republic won the title over Argentinian Marco Trungelliti 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235625-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 RA109\n2013 RA109, is an extreme trans-Neptunian object discovered on September 12, 2013. This object orbits the Sun between 46.0 and 869\u00a0AU (6.9 and 130\u00a0billion\u00a0km), and has an orbital period of 9786 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235626-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 RF98\n2013 RF98 is a trans-Neptunian object. It was discovered on September 12, 2013 at Cerro Tololo-DECam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235626-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 RF98\nIt is part of the evidence for the Planet Nine hypothesis because it shares a similar argument of perihelion with other potentially shepherded TNOs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235626-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 RF98, Discovery, orbit and physical properties\n2013 RF98 was discovered by the Dark Energy Survey on September 12, 2013 observing with the 4 m Blanco Telescope from Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory. Its orbit is characterized by high eccentricity (0.897), moderate inclination (29.57\u00ba) and a semi-major axis of 349\u00a0AU. Upon discovery, it was classified as a trans-Neptunian object. Its orbit is relatively well determined; as of January 11, 2017 its orbital solution is based on 51 observations spanning a data-arc of 1092 days. 2013 RF98 has an absolute magnitude of 8.7 which gives a characteristic diameter of 50 to 120\u00a0km for an assumed albedo in the range 0.25\u20130.05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235626-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 RF98, Discovery, orbit and physical properties\nIt came to perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) around October 2009 and was last observed in September 2016. As of October\u00a02016, it is 36.6 AU from the Sun. Of the seven objects whose aligned orbits suggest the existence of Planet Nine, it is currently the closest to the Sun. It will be 18.7 AU from Uranus in 2021. It will be in the constellation of Cetus until 2022. It comes to opposition at the start of November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235626-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 RF98, Discovery, orbit and physical properties\n2013 RF98's orbit is similar to that of (474640) 2004 VN112, suggesting that they may have both been thrown onto their current paths by the same body, or that they may have been the same object (single or binary) at one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235626-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 RF98, Discovery, orbit and physical properties\n2013 RF98's visible spectrum is very different from that of 90377 Sedna. The value of its spectral slope suggests that the surface of this object can have pure methane ices (like in the case of Pluto) and highly processed carbons, including some amorphous silicates. Its spectral slope is similar to that of 2004 VN112.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235627-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship\nThe 2013 Rugby Football League Championship, which will be known as Kingstone Press Championship due to sponsorship by Kingstone Press Cider, is a semi-professional rugby league football competition played in the UK, one tier below the first tier Super League. The 2013 season is the first season to consist of a 14-team division. This was achieved by scrapping relegation for the 2012 season and having four teams promoted from the Championship 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235627-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship\nRelegation to Championship 1 is restored for the 2013 but as in previous years, there is no automatic promotion from this league to Super League, which uses a licensing system renewed every three years. Qualifying for the Grand Final or winning the Northern Rail Cup is a prerequisite for Championship clubs to be able to apply for a licence in the next round of applications for the 2015\u201317 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235627-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship\nAll of the teams in the 2013 Co-operative Championship will also compete in the 2013 Challenge Cup where they will enter in the third round. All of the teams will also compete in the 2013 National League Cup which starts before the Co-operative Championship with the finals held mid season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235627-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship, Teams\nThis year's competition features the same 10 teams as it did in 2012 plus the top four teams from the 2012 Championship 1 season, which are Barrow Raiders, Doncaster, Whitehaven and Workington Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235627-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship, Season Standings\nThis table is correct as of 1 September 2013. Source: and .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235627-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship, Season Standings\nClassification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference. Competition points: For win = 3; For draw = 2; For loss by 12 points or fewer = 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235627-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship, Season Results\nThe regular league season sees the 14 teams play each other twice (one home, one away) over 26 matches. The top eight teams at the end of the regular season goes through to the play-offs to determine the winners of the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235628-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship season results\nThis is a list of the 2013 RFL Championship season results. The Championship is the second-tier rugby league competition in the United Kingdom. The 2013 season started on 31 January and ends on 29 September with the Grand Final at Leigh Sports Village in Leigh, Greater Manchester, which replaces the previous venue of the Halliwell Jones Stadium in Warrington. 2013 is the first season to consist of a 14-team division, with the league expanding from 10 teams following the promotion of the top 4 teams from the 2012 Championship 1 season, Barrow Raiders, Doncaster, Whitehaven and Workington Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235628-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship season results\nThe 2013 season consists of two stages. The regular season was played over 26 round-robin fixtures, in which each of the fourteen teams involved in the competition played each other once at home and once away. In the Championship, a win was worth three points in the table, a draw worth two points apiece, and a loss by 12 points or less during the game earned one bonus point. Defeats by more than 12 points yielded no points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235628-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship season results\nThe Championship will be decided through the second stage of the season, the play-offs, which has been re-structured following the expansion. The play-offs now adopts the 8-team play-off, similar to what is used in the Super League with the top eight teams in the table contest to play in the Grand Final, the winners of which will be crowned champions. A decision whether to use the club-call system, as used in Super League, will be taken during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235628-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship season results, Play-offs\nThe play-offs will commence following the conclusion of the regular season and includes the top eight sides from the league and uses a top 8 play-off system, similar to Super League and AFL, culminating in the grand final at Leigh Sports Village in Leigh, Greater Manchester, home of Championship sides Leigh Centurions and Swinton Lions. Unlike the Super League playoffs, there is no Club Call in week three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235628-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship season results, Play-offs, Play-off ladder\nWeek 1. Qualifying/Elimination play-offs: Fixtures decided by regular reason finishing positions. Higher ranked teams play lower ranked teams. Higher ranked teams receive home ground advantage. Week 2. Preliminary semi-finals: Fixtures decided by regular season finishing positions. Higher ranked teams play lower ranked teams. Higher ranked teams receive home ground advantage. Week 3. Qualifying semi-finals: Winners of Qualifying play-offs play winners of Qualifying semi-finals. Higher ranked teams play lower ranked teams. Winners of Qualifying play-offs receive home ground advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235628-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship season results, Play-offs, Notes\nA. Match re-arranged for August due to Leigh's Challenge Cup Quarter Final tie", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235628-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 RFL Championship season results, Notes\nA. Matches originally postponed on 24 March due to snowB. Match postponed on 14 April due to pitch safety issuesC. Match re-arranged from 14 July due to Sheffield's Challenge Cup quarter final tieD. Matches re-arranged from 21 July due to Northern Rail Cup final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235629-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 RH74\n2013 RH74 is an Apollo asteroid and a near-Earth object discovered in September 2013 by the Catalina Sky Survey. The asteroid is roughly 300 meters in diameter. It was listed on the Sentry Risk Table in September 2013. It was detected by radar soon after discovery. On 2013-Oct-17 the asteroid passed 0.05258\u00a0AU (7,866,000\u00a0km; 4,888,000\u00a0mi) from Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235630-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Race of Champions\nThe 2013 Race of Champions was due to be the 26th running of the Race of Champions, and was due to take place over 14\u201315 December 2013 at the Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand. However the event was cancelled on 2 December due to political unrest in Bangkok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235630-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Race of Champions, Participants\nChampions from numerous series were invited, while also invited was nine-time 24 Hours of Le Mans winner Tom Kristensen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235630-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Race of Champions, Participants\nListed below are drivers who had been announced to compete prior to the event's cancellation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235630-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Race of Champions, The track\nA 697 metres tarmac track was constructed in the Rajamangala Stadium. The track had a bridge to connect the outer lane with the inner lane in an 8 shape track. All the races were planned to be 2 laps (1.394\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235631-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Radio Disney Music Awards\nThe 2013 Radio Disney Music Awards were held on April 27, 2013, at the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live in Los Angeles, California, after a five-year hiatus after 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235631-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Radio Disney Music Awards, Production\nOn March 15, 2013, The 2013 Radio Disney Music Awards was confirmed at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live, in Los Angeles, California. The awards would be held on April 27, at 6:00 pm. Tickets started selling on March 15, on Ticketmaster. The Radio Disney Music Awards contained 11 categories, with 3 to 5 nominees for votes in 4 weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235631-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Radio Disney Music Awards, Heroes for Change Award\nMary Dawson, a 15-year-old student from Los Angeles, won the Heroes for Change for her charity work and her involvement with PressFriends, a project which teaches children how to write. Misha Ahmad, Denzell Perry, Dara Reyes and Ben Harowitz were the other honorees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235632-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 RadioShack\u2013Leopard season\nThe 2013 season for the RadioShack\u2013Leopard cycling team began in January at the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235632-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 RadioShack\u2013Leopard season\nOn 21 December 2012, Nissan announced that they would cease to sponsor the team, with immediate effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season\nThe 2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, regarded as one of the greatest comeback seasons of all time, officially began on February 5 with the ATP Tournament in Vi\u00f1a del Mar in Chile. He lost in the final, but rebounded with victories at S\u00e3o Paulo and Acapulco. He then won the first Masters 1000 event of the year at Indian Wells. Nadal skipped Miami, and finished Runner up to Novak Djokovic at Monte-Carlo. He followed that with victories at Barcelona, Madrid, and then Rome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season\nAt the French Open, he defeated Djokovic in an epic semifinal that went to 9\u20137 in the fifth set, before defeating David Ferrer to win his 8th Roland Garros crown. He was then stunned by Steve Darcis in the first round of Wimbledon, in what would be his only defeat prior to the semifinals all season. Limping in the final set, many people thought his season was over, however a strong summer saw Nadal win Montreal, Cincinnati, and then the U.S. Open (def. Djokovic), thus clinching the Emirates Airlines U.S. Open Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0000-0002", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season\nThis granted him 3.6 million US dollars in prize money, the most money earned by a tennis player at a single tournament. A few days after the U.S. Open Final, he flew to Madrid to help Spain secure their World Group Playoff spot for 2014, with a victory against Sergiy Stakhovsky. He also scored a victory in doubles with Marc Lopez. These victories gave him a 75\u20137 (91.46%) record in singles, and 6\u20131 (85.71%) record in doubles in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, South American clay court season\nFollowing 222 days injured, Nadal returned on the tennis court on February 5 at the Chile Open. He played both single and double-events and reached the final in both tournaments. At the double-event he partnered up with the Argentine Juan M\u00f3naco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, South American clay court season\nThe next event for Nadal was the Brasil Open in S\u00e3o Paulo. He played again both single and double events, in which he partnered up with David Nalbandian who also was his opponent in the final of the single event. Nadal managed to overcome Nalbandian to win his first title in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, South American clay court season\nTwo weeks later Nadal played the Mexico Open in Acapulco where he managed to beat David Ferrer in the final to win his second title in a row in 2013. Following the Golden Swing Nadal confirmed his participation for the hardcourt event BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells in the USA taking place from March 4 to March 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, Indian Wells\nIn Indian Wells Nadal received a Bye in the first round. In the second round he faced Ryan Harrison and managed to beat him in straight sets. Nadal was drawn to face Leonardo Mayer next, but Mayer withdrew from the tournament due to an injury. Nadal's next opponent was Ernests Gulbis who was on a thirteen match winning streak before Nadal defeated him in three tight sets to reach the quarterfinals where he played against his long-time rival Roger Federer. Nadal was able to overcome Federer in two sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, Indian Wells\nIn the semifinals he played the World No. 6 Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych and managed again to win in two sets, which helped him to reach the final for the fourth time in his career. His opponent was Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro who had previously beaten world No. 1 Novak Djokovic in the semifinals. Nadal defeated del Potro in three sets, winning his record-breaking twenty-second ATP Masters 1000 event and his third Indian Wells title. Nadal subsequently withdrew from the Sony Ericsson Open in Miami in order to rest and prepare for the clay court season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, European Clay Court Season\nAt Monte-Carlo Nadal reached his ninth straight final but lost in two sets to Djokovic. He won in Barcelona in straight sets and then won the Madrid title for a record-breaking 23rd Masters 1000 title, before extending the record to 24 with three top 6 wins in a row against Ferrer, Berdych, and then Federer in an easy two set victory at the 2013 Rome Masters. Nadal capped off his streak with a ninth straight final this year at the 2013 French Open, defeating Djokovic in an epic match that finished 9\u20137 in the fifth set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, European Clay Court Season\nNadal won the first set and led in the second by a break, but Djokovic then took four straight games to win the set. Nadal responded by dominating the third and led twice by a break in the fourth, but Djokovic broke back on both occasions. As a result, Nadal failed to serve out the match and faltered in the subsequent tiebreak. The momentum seemed to be with Djokovic, who broke at the beginning of the fifth and led 4\u20132 before Nadal made an impressive comeback. The match was reminiscent of their 2012 encounter at the Australian Open final. This time the match time was 4:37. In the final Nadal thrashed an in-form Ferrer in straight sets, breaking his own record and winning an unprecedented 8th French Open Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, European Clay Court Season\nDuring the European clay season, Nadal earned a total of 5,100 points, making it (as of 2017) its most successful year in his entire career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, Grass Court Season\nNadal withdrew from Halle and played at Wimbledon. He was on a 22 match winning streak, when for the first time in his career, he lost a first round match at a Grand Slam, losing in three sets to lower-ranked Steve Darcis of Belgium. Many people speculated that this was the end of the year for Nadal, who was limping and visibly uncomfortable in his match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, American Hard Court Season\nNadal took a break after Wimbledon. He regained his form in Montreal, destroying dangerous server Jerzy Janowicz in the first round. He then put up a strong performance to beat No.1 Djokovic on the hard courts during the semifinal, beating him in the tie-breaker in the final set. He defeated Milos Raonic in the final in straight sets to win his third title in Montreal and a record 25th masters title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, American Hard Court Season\nNadal broke his own record yet again and won his 26th ATP Masters 1000 in Cincinnati Masters, beating Benjamin Becker, Dimitrov, Federer in the QF, Tomas Berdych, and finally John Isner in the final on Sunday 18 August. Nadal entered the final Major of the year having missed the previous edition last year due to injury. Cruising through the first three rounds, he defeated Philipp Kohlschreiber in 4 sets in the 4th round, and then reached the final in winning the rest of matches in straight sets. In the final, Nadal yet again faced Djokovic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, American Hard Court Season\nThis was their 6th meeting in a Major final. Rafa took the first set, Novak took the second. But Rafa then gained momentum and won the next two sets to win the title. Thus Rafael Nadal won his second US Open Championship, and his 13th Major overall, putting him third on the all-time list behind Federer (17) and Sampras (14). He became the 3rd player after Patrick Rafter and Andy Roddick to win the Summer Slam (Won Canada, Cincinnati, and the US Open in the same year). He remained undefeated so far on Hard Courts in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, Asian Fall & Indoor Hard Court Season\nAt the China Open Nadal returned to the No.1 ranking by reaching the final. He had a noteworthy comeback in the quarter-finals against Fabio Fognini, where he fought back from a set and break down to secure the victory. In the final he lost to Djokovic in two sets. Nadal was defeated at the Shanghai Masters by del Potro in the semi-finals. Nadal's final tournament of the year before the World Tour Finals was at the Paris Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Year summary, Asian Fall & Indoor Hard Court Season\nIn Paris, Nadal reached the semifinals where he was defeated by compatriot David Ferrer for the first time in their last 10 head-to-head meeting. At the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals Nadal was unbeaten (3\u20130) in round robin play and by winning his first 2 matches sealed the Year End ATP World No. 1 Ranking in the process. In the semifinals Nadal faced long time rival Roger Federer, and recorded his first indoor win against the Swiss at the ATP World Tour Finals in straight sets. In the final he faced Novak Djokovic but lost in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 84], "content_span": [85, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Tournament schedule, Singles schedule\n1 The symbol (i) = indoors means that the respective tournament will be held indoors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Tournament schedule, Singles schedule\n3 Since Rafael Nadal withdrew from the Swiss open in the final part of the season this tournament became countable and the points were eligible for rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235633-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Rafael Nadal tennis season, Yearly records, Exhibition matches\nRafael Nadal took part in the annual BNP Paribas Showdown, where he faced Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro in a rematch of their 2009 US Open semi-final. Nadal was defeated in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235634-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rai Open\nThe 2013 Rai Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Rome, Italy between 15 and 21 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235634-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rai Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235635-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rai Open \u2013 Doubles\nDustin Brown and Jonathan Marray were the defending champions but Marray decided not to participate. Brown played alongside Jamie Delgado, but they lost in the quarterfinals to Dominik Meffert and Philipp Oswald. Andreas Beck and Martin Fischer defeated Martin Emmrich and Rameez Junaid 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20130 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235636-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rai Open \u2013 Singles\nRoberto Bautista-Agut was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Julian Reister defeated Guillermo Garc\u00eda-L\u00f3pez 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235637-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajasthan Legislative Assembly election\nRajasthan Legislative Assembly elections, 2013 was held in Indian state of Rajasthan on 1 December 2013. Results were announced on 8 December. The incumbent ruling party Indian National Congress, led by the Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot, lost the elections to Vasundhara Raje-led BJP, who was being touted as the next incumbent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235637-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajasthan Legislative Assembly election, Election\nPolling was held on 1 December in 199 assembly seats out of 200 seats. Churu constituency polling was postponed to 13 December due to death of BSP candidate Jagdish Meghwal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235637-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajasthan Legislative Assembly election, Election\nVoter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) along with EVMs was used in 1 assembly seat in Rajasthan elections. There were 2,087 candidates including 166 women and one eunuch candidate. INC and BJP contested on all 200 seats while BSP on 195 seats. 38 CPI(M), 23 CPI, 16 NCP, 666 other parties candidates and 758 Independents were also in foray. Over 4.08 crore voters including 1.92 crore women were eligible to exercise their vote. There were 47,223 polling booths. Total voting turnout was 74.38%, the highest ever in state assembly election. The highest turnout (85.52%) was recorded at Jaisalmer and the lowest (55.21%) at Bharatpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235637-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajasthan Legislative Assembly election, Results\nThe results were declared on 8 December. Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot won from his Sardarpura constituency by a margin of 18,478 votes while Vasundhara Raje won from Jhalarpatan by 60,896 votes. The election also recorded best and worst performances for the BJP and the Congress respectively in the state. Influential Meena leader and MP from Dausa, Kirori Lal Meena received a big setback when his newly formed party, National People\u2019s Party won only four seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235638-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajya Sabha election in Tamil Nadu\nRajya Sabha election in Tamil Nadu was the indirect election to the Rajya Sabha which is the upper house of the Parliament of India to elect members from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The election were held for six seats on 27 June 2013. The elections for which voting was held for the first time in 17 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235638-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajya Sabha election in Tamil Nadu, Background\nThe term of six members of Rajya Sabha from Tamil Nadu expired on 27 July. Hence, the Election Commission of India decided to hold a biennial election for the six seats. The candidates were indirectly elected by the Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) of Tamil Nadu using a single transferable vote with proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235638-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajya Sabha election in Tamil Nadu, Candidates\nEach candidate should have 34 number of MLAs. Therefore, the party which has 34 MLAs can elect one member. The party which has less than 34 MLAs can get support from other parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235638-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rajya Sabha election in Tamil Nadu, Results\nThe results to the election were declared on June 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235639-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships\nThe 2013 Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 40th edition of the event known this year as the Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships, and part of the 500 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It was held at the Ariake Coliseum in Tokyo, Japan, from September 30 till October 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235639-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235639-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235640-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nAlexander Peya and Bruno Soares were the defending champions, but decided not to participate. Rohan Bopanna and \u00c9douard Roger-Vasselin won the title, defeating Jamie Murray and John Peers in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235641-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rakuten Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nKei Nishikori was the defending champion, but lost in the quarter-finals to Nicol\u00e1s Almagro. First-seeded Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro won the title, defeating Milos Raonic in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235642-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Raleigh mayoral election\nThe biennial election for the Mayor of Raleigh, North Carolina was held on October 8, 2013. The election was nonpartisan. Incumbent Mayor Nancy McFarlane ran for a second term. She received a majority of the vote on October 8, thus avoiding a runoff, which would have been held on November 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235643-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rali Vinho da Madeira\nThe 54th Rali Vinho da Madeira was the 9th rally of 2013 ERC Cup. The Italian driver Giandomenico Basso in Peugeot 207 S2000, won his 4th title in Madeira. Bruno Magalh\u00e3es was the best Portuguese, finishing in 2nd place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235644-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally America season\nThe 2013 Rally America Championship is the ninth season of the Rally America Championship. This championship is the premier rally championship in the United States. The season began 25 January in Michigan, and is scheduled to return to Michigan for the Lake Superior Performance Rally on 19 October after seven events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235644-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally America season\nThe championship was won by British driver David Higgins, his third consecutive championship victory. Higgins and co-driver Craig Drew took their Subaru Impreza to wins in the Rally in the 100 Acre Wood, Oregon Trail Rally and Lake Superior Performance Rally and finished in the top three placings in all seven rallies. Higgins finished 26 points ahead of Ford Fiesta driver Ken Block who won three of the other four events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235644-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally America season, Championship standings\nDrivers scoring at least ten points are shown. Lauchlin O'Sullivan scored 16 points, but later received a 20-point penalty. The 2013 Rally America Championship points are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235645-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Argentina\n2013 Rally Argentina (officially: 33rd Philips Rally Argentina) was the fifth rally in the 2013 World Rally Championship hold between 1 and 4 May. It had 14 special stages totalling 407.64 competitive kilometres. 24 out of 32 racer finished the rally successfully.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235645-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Argentina, Report\nAfter missing the rallies of Mexico and Portugal to compete in the FIA Grand Touring Series, S\u00e9bastien Loeb marked his return to rallying with first place in the Rally Argentina. S\u00e9bastien Ogier took the lead early on, but made a mistake whilst driving in heavy fog. He lost forty seconds, allowing Loeb to seize the advantage. Jari-Matti Latvala and Mikko Hirvonen fought over the final podium position until Hirvonen's Citro\u00ebn DS3 WRC developed an electrical problem. Latvala could not afford to rest, as he found himself fighting with Evgeny Novikov. A late charge on the final day\u2014including the fastest time on the power stage\u2014was enough for Latvala to secure third place and his first podium in Argentina. Hirvonen recovered to finish sixth overall, finishing third on the power stage to score an additional World Championship point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235645-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Argentina, Entry list\nThirteen World Rally Cars were entered into the event, as were eight entries in the WRC-2 championship for cars built to Group N and Super 2000 regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235646-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Australia\nThe 22nd Coates Hire Rally Australia was the tenth rally of the 2013 World Rally Championship, held from 12 to 15 September, 2013. S\u00e9bastien Ogier won his sixth rally of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235646-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Australia, Results, Power Stage\nThe \"Power Stage\" was a 29.44 km (18.29 mi) stage at the end of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235647-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Catalunya\nThe 49th Rally Catalunya was the twelfth and penultimate round of the 2013 World Rally Championship, held from 24 to 27 October, 2013. S\u00e9bastien Ogier won the rally, his eight victory of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235647-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Catalunya, Results, Power Stage\nThe \"Power Stage\" was a 26.48 km (16.45 mi) stage during the second leg of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235648-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Finland\nThe 63rd Neste Oil Rally Finland was the eighth round of the 2013 World Rally Championship season and was held between 31 July and 3 August 2013. The rally is based in Jyv\u00e4skyl\u00e4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235648-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Finland\nThe rally was also the eighth round of both WRC-2 and WRC-3 championships, and the third round of the JWRC championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235648-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Finland, Itinerary\nThe route of the rally features 23 stages with 324.21 kilometres of competitive distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235648-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Finland, Entry list\nThe entry list of the rally had overall 101 entries which was the biggest number in World Rally Championship since 2011 Rally Finland. 14 of the entries were World Rally Cars, 21 of them were competing in WRC-2, 11 in WRC-3 and 10 in Junior WRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235648-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Finland, Entry list\nOn the Thursday morning a total of 96 cars started the rally. Entries withdrawn are marked with a grey background.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235649-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Islas Canarias\nThe Rally Islas Canarias El Corte Ingl\u00e9s was the third round of the 2013 European Rally Championship. The stages were tarmac. Jan Kopeck\u00fd won the event after a huge fight with runner-up Craig Breen. Luis Monz\u00f3n rounded off the podium places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235650-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Italia Sardegna\nThe 2013 Rally Italia Sardegna was the seventh round of the 2013 World Rally Championship season. The event was based in Olbia, Gallura, and started on 21 June and was concluded on 23 June after twenty-three special stages, totaling 304.21 competitive kilometers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235650-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Italia Sardegna, Report\nS\u00e9bastien Ogier held the lead of the rally from start to finish; with three stage wins on the first day, Ogier held a lead of 46.6 seconds over Mikko Hirvonen, who battled for second with Thierry Neuville, with a difference of only 3.1 seconds at the end of the day. Both Qatar M-Sport World Rally Team drivers, Mads \u00d8stberg and Evgeny Novikov retired. On the second day, Hirvonen started with a stage win, but on the next stage went wide and got stuck into a ditch, leaving second place to Neuville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235650-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Rally Italia Sardegna, Report\nOgier's teammate, Jari-Matti Latvala recovered from 12th position after a puncture on stage one, to finish third. Dani Sordo was the best Citro\u00ebn finisher in fourth, ahead of Martin Prokop in fifth, while Elfyn Evans finished sixth on his d\u00e9but in a World Rally Car. Micha\u0142 Ko\u015bciuszko got his best result of the year in seventh, ahead of \u00d8stberg \u2013 recovering from his accident \u2013 to finish eighth via Rally-2. Robert Kubica got his first championship points by finishing ninth and Khalid Al Qassimi completed the top ten finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235650-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Italia Sardegna, Entry List\nThirteen World Rally Cars were entered into the event, as were Thirteen WRC-2 entries and Ten WRC-3 entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235651-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Liep\u0101ja-Ventspils\nThe 2013 Rally Liep\u0101ja-Ventspils was the second round of the 2013 European Rally Championship. The stages were mainly gravel with snowy and icy parts. Jari Ketomaa won the event after a huge fight with runner-up Craig Breen. Fran\u00e7ois Delecour rounded off the podium places. The 2WD Cup was won by Risto Immonen, while the Production Cup honors went to \u0160vedas Vytautas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235652-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally M\u00e9xico\nThe 2013 Rally Guanajuato M\u00e9xico was a motor racing event for rally cars that was held over four days between 7 and 10 March, which marked the 27th running of the Rally M\u00e9xico. The rally was based in the town of Le\u00f3n, Guanajuato. The rally itself was contested over 23 special stages, covering a total of 394.88\u00a0km (245.37\u00a0mi) in competitive stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235652-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally M\u00e9xico\nThe rally was the third round of the 2013 World Rally Championship season, and marked the fortieth anniversary of the World Rally Championship. Thirteen World Rally Car crews were entered in the event. It was the first WRC event since the 2006 Rally GB where reigning World Rally Champion S\u00e9bastien Loeb has not featured on the entry list as he elected not to enter Rally M\u00e9xico as part of his four-race 'retirement' season. Loeb has won every Rally M\u00e9xico since 2006. Since there is no previous Rally Mexico winner competing in the 2013 event, it is guaranteed that there will be a new winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235652-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally M\u00e9xico, Entry list\nThirteen World Rally Cars were entered into the event, as were six entries in the newly formed WRC-2 championship for cars built to Group N and Super 2000 regulations. There were no WRC-3 entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235653-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Poland\nThe 2013 Rally Poland, formally the 70. Rajd Polski, was the ninth round of the 2013 European Rally Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235654-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Sweden\nThe 2013 Rally Sweden was a motor racing event for rally cars that was held over four days between 7 and 10 February, which marked the sixty-first running of the Rally Sweden. The rally was based in the town of Karlstad and ran along the border of Norway. The rally itself was contested over twenty-two special stages, covering a total of 338.91\u00a0km (210.59\u00a0mi) in competitive stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235654-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Sweden\nThe rally was the second round of the 2013 World Rally Championship season, and marked the fortieth anniversary of the World Rally Championship. Twenty World Rally Car crews were entered in the event, including the defending World Drivers' Champion S\u00e9bastien Loeb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235654-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Sweden, Entry list\nTwenty World Rally Cars were entered into the event, as were thirteen entries in the newly formed WRC-2 championship for cars built to Group N and Super 2000 regulations. There were no WRC-3 entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235654-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Sweden, Itinerary\nThe itinerary for the 2013 rally sees a mixture of the same stages from 2012. The first stage will be a Super Special Stage held at the rally base in Karlstad. WRC fans had the chance to vote on the Rally Sweden Facebook page as to who they wanted to see starting the rally head-to-head. The majority of fans voted for French S\u00e9bastien Loeb vs S\u00e9bastien Ogier who are bitter rivals from when Ogier was the number two driver at Citro\u00ebn. Other 'dream heats' include Finns Mikko Hirvonen and Jari-Matti Latvala going head-to-head as well as two young Scandinavian drivers Mads \u00d8stberg vs Pontus Tidemand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235654-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Sweden, Itinerary\nThe first full day of the rally will be made up of seven special stages to the north of the rally base, mostly taking place in the region of Hagfors. Stages four and seven take place near Torsby. The day ends with the second and final running of the Karlstad Super Special Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235654-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally Sweden, Itinerary\nDay two will have eight stages across the region of Hagfors. Day three starts with the longest stage of the rally which is the 27.07\u00a0km (16.82\u00a0mi) stage of Mitandersfors near the region of Torsby and crosses the border into Norway. The next four stages take place near the Norwegian town of Kirken\u00e6r while the final stage of the day goes back to Sweden, taking place in Torsby which is also the Power Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235655-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally de Portugal\nThe 2013 Rally de Portugal was the fourth round of the 2013 World Rally Championship season. The event was based in Faro, Portugal, and started on 11 April and was concluded on 14 April after fifteen special stages, totaling 387 competitive kilometres, including a street stage in Lisbon on 12 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235655-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally de Portugal, Report, Before the rally\nThe rally was preceded by the \"Fafe Rally Sprint\", a single-stage exhibition event run over the famous Fafe stages in the country's north which was won by Citro\u00ebn Total Abu Dhabi WRT driver Dani Sordo. Dani Sordo won the rally's qualifying stage (5\u00a0km) and elected to run thirteenth (last WRC) on the road as a result. His strategy was followed by all competitors, resulting in an inverted starting order for the rally's first day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235655-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally de Portugal, Entry list\nThirteen World Rally Cars were entered into the event, as were twenty entries in the newly formed WRC-2 championship for cars built to Group N and Super 2000 regulations and nine WRC-3 entries. There was also ten entries in the debut of the Junior WRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235655-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally de Portugal, Results, Power Stage\nThe \"Power stage\" was a 5,230\u00a0km (3,250\u00a0mi) stage at the end of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235655-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rally de Portugal, Championship standings after the event, Junior WRC Drivers' Championship\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers, and one point for winning a stage. Five best results of the season are counted towards the final score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 96], "content_span": [97, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235656-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rallye A\u00e7ores\nThe SATA Rallye A\u00e7ores was the fourth round of the 2013 European Rally Championship. The stages were gravel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235657-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rallye Deutschland\nThe 31st ADAC Rallye Deutschland was the ninth round of the 2013 World Rally Championship, held from 22 to 25 August, 2013. Dani Sordo emerged victorious in his first ever WRC victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235657-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rallye Deutschland, Results, Power Stage\nThe \"Power Stage\" was a 24.58 km (15.27 mi) stage at the end of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235658-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rallye International du Valais\nThe 2013 Rallye International du Valais was the twelfth and final round of the 2013 European Rally Championship season, held in Switzerland between 7\u20139 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235659-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rallye de France-Alsace\nThe 4th Rallye de France Alsace was the eleventh round of the 2013 World Rally Championship, held from 3 to 6 October, 2013. S\u00e9bastien Ogier once again won the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235659-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rallye de France-Alsace, Results, Power Stage\nThe \"Power Stage\" was a 4.55 km (2.87 mi) stage at the beginning of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections\nThe 2013 Rangitikei local elections were held across the Rangitikei District of Manawat\u016b-Whanganui, New Zealand, for the offices of Mayor of Rangitikei and eleven members of the Rangitikei District Council on 12 October 2013. They were held as part of the 2013 New Zealand local elections. Postal ballots were issued to 9,866 registered voters, and were returned from 23 September to 12 October. Across the district, 4,856 people cast votes, a voter turnout of 49.22%. Some voters chose not to vote in particular elections or referendums, so voter turnout in individual elections varies from this figure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections\nAndy Watson was elected as mayor with 41.5% of the vote, defeating incumbent mayor Chalky Leary. First past the post (FPP) was used to elect the eleven members of the Rangitikei District Council\u2014four from the Marton ward, three from the Taihape ward, two from the Bulls ward and one each from the Hunterville and Turakina wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections\nThe previous local elections took place in October 2010 and the following elections will take place in October 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections, Mayor\nFormer two-term deputy mayor Andy Watson was elected, defeating incumbent mayor Chalky Leary by a 486-vote majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections, District council, Bulls ward\nThe two candidates with the most votes were elected, shown in the table below by a green tick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections, District council, Hunterville ward\nAs there were no other candidates, Dean McManaway was re-elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections, District council, Marton ward\nThe four candidates with the most votes were elected, shown in the table below by a green tick. Candidates shown with a cross lost their seats as incumbent councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections, District council, Taihape ward\nThe three candidates with the most votes were elected, shown in the table below by a green tick. Candidates shown with a cross lost their seats as incumbent councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235660-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei local elections, District council, Turakina ward\nAs there were no other candidates, Soraya Peke-Mason was re-elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235661-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei mayoral election\nThe 2013 Rangitikei mayoral election was part of the Rangitikei and wider New Zealand local elections. On 12 October 2013, elections were held for the Mayor of Rangitikei and other local government roles. The incumbent, Robert \"Chalky\" Leary, ran against three other candidates and lost re-election to Andy Watson who was elected with 41.5% of the vote, a 486-vote majority over Leary whose vote share succumbed to 31.3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235661-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei mayoral election, Campaign\nFor the first time since 2007 there was a contested election for the Rangitikei mayoralty, as in 2010 incumbent mayor Chalky Leary was elected unopposed. On 26 June former deputy mayor Andy Watson announced his intention to run for mayor, campaigning on a more transparent council and an establishment of a finance committee. Incumbent Chalky Leary was standing for a third term in office and campaigned on a no excess and no frills council whose significant work included the Hunterville and Taihape sewerage schemes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235661-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rangitikei mayoral election, Campaign\nMangaweka-based councillor Richard Aslett and executive officer of Rural Education Activities Programme Maree Brannigan announced their candidacies in August. Aslett's campaign was based on improving population and visitor growth principally, as well as saving services, scrapping a possible amalgamation and lowering rates. Brannigan, running on a Fresh Future Focus platform, campaigned on achieving a stable rural economy to ensure the continued thriving of business, environment and families in the Rangitikei District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235662-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Real Salt Lake season\nThe 2013 Real Salt Lake season is the team's ninth year of existence. The team's first game is on March 3 at Buck Shaw Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235662-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Real Salt Lake season, MLS regular season, Standings, Overall table\nNote: the table below has no impact on playoff qualification and is used solely for determining host of the MLS Cup, certain CCL spots, and 2014 MLS draft. The conference tables are the sole determinant for teams qualifying to the playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 72], "content_span": [73, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235662-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Real Salt Lake season, MLS regular season, Standings, Overall table\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 72], "content_span": [73, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235662-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Real Salt Lake season, MLS regular season, Results summary\nLast updated: August 16, 2013Source: MLS ResultsPld = 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, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235662-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Real Salt Lake season, Club, Roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Squad correct as of October 5, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235663-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Recopa Sudamericana\nThe 2013 Recopa Sudamericana (officially the 2013 Recopa Santander Sudamericana for sponsorship reasons) was the 21st edition of the Recopa Sudamericana, the football competition organized by CONMEBOL between the winners of the previous season's two major South American club tournaments, the Copa Libertadores and the Copa Sudamericana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235663-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Recopa Sudamericana\nThe competition was contested in two-legged home-and-away format between two Brazilian teams, Corinthians, the 2012 Copa Libertadores champion, and S\u00e3o Paulo, the 2012 Copa Sudamericana champion. The first leg was hosted by S\u00e3o Paulo at Est\u00e1dio do Morumbi in S\u00e3o Paulo on July 3, 2013, while the second leg was hosted by Corinthians at Est\u00e1dio do Pacaembu in S\u00e3o Paulo on July 17, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235663-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Recopa Sudamericana\nCorinthians won both legs, the first leg by 2\u20131, and the second leg by 2\u20130, to win their first Recopa Sudamericana title. Corinthians captain Danilo was selected as best player of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235663-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Recopa Sudamericana, Format\nThe Recopa Sudamericana was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the Copa Libertadores champion hosting the second leg. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235663-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Recopa Sudamericana, Match details, First leg\nAssistant referees:Marcelo Van Gasse (Brazil)Kleber Lucio Gil (Brazil)Fourth official:Pericles Cortez (Brazil)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One\nThis page provides the summary of Red Bull BC One World Finals South Korea 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One\nOn November 30, 2013, the world\u2019s 16 best B-Boys will go head to head in Seoul\u2019s Jamsil Arena to compete for the opportunity to be crowned the Red Bull BC One World Champion in its milestone 10th Anniversary year. After nine months of intense one-on-one battles across six continents, in a record 53 countries, more than 2,000 B-Boys competed to secure a place in the World Final alongside the past eight champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One\nIn 2013, Red Bull BC One held Cyphers, Regional Finals as well as the World Final. Winners of country Cyphers got the chance to compete in one of six global qualifiers in an attempt to reach the World Final. Following the global Cyphers, the Regional Final season ran from mid-July to mid-September, culminating in the Tenth World Final in late November. Regional Finals were held for the Americas in USA; Eastern Europe in Ukraine; Western Europe in Italy; Latin America in Colombia; Asia Pacific in Japan; and Middle East & Africa in Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, Regional Finals, RBBC1 Latin American 2013 results\nArex will represent Colombia and the Latin America Region at the World Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, Regional Finals, RBBC1 North American 2013 results\nGravity will represent USA and the North American Region at the World Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, Regional Finals, RBBC1 Middle East Africa 2013 results\nLil Zoo will represent Morocco and the Middle East Africa Region at the World Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, Regional Finals, RBBC1 Western European 2013 results\nFroz will represent Italy and the Western European Region at the World Final. Menno will represent Netherlands as a Wild Card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, Regional Finals, RBBC1 Eastern European 2013 results\nRobin will represent Ukraine and the Eastern European Region for the World Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, Regional Finals, RBBC1 Asia Pacific 2013 results\nNori will represent Japan and the Asia Pacific Region for the World Finals. Taisuke will also represent Japan as a Wild Card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 70], "content_span": [71, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, World Finals\nRed Bull BC One will take place in Seoul, Korea on November 30, 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235664-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull BC One, World Finals, Red Bull BC One 2013 results\nHong10 became the winner of the 10th anniversary of the Red Bull BC One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235665-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup\nThe 2013 Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup season was the seventh season of the Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup. The season began at Circuit of the Americas on 20 April and ended on 29 September at the Ciudad del Motor de Arag\u00f3n after 14 races. The races, for the first year contested by the riders on equal KTM 250cc 4-stroke Moto3 bikes, were held at eight meetings on the Grand Prix motorcycle racing calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235665-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup\nCzech rider Karel Hanika won the championship, securing the title after the Misano race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235665-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup, Championship standings\nPoints were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. Rider had to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235666-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Deer municipal election\nThe 2013 Red Deer municipal election was held Monday, October 21, 2013. The citizens of Red Deer, Alberta, elected one mayor, eight councillors (all at large) to the Red Deer City Council, the seven Red Deer School District No. 104 trustees (at large), and five of the Red Deer Catholic Regional Division No. 39's seven trustees (as Red Deer Ward). The election also featured a non-binding plebiscite about adopting a city council ward system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235666-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Deer municipal election\nFrom 1968 to 2013, provincial legislation has required every municipality to hold elections every three years. The Legislative Assembly of Alberta passed a bill on December 5, 2012, amending the Local Authorities Election Act. Starting with the 2013 elections, officials are elected for a four-year term, and municipal elections are moved to a four-year cycle. Incumbent three-term Mayor Morris Flewwelling retired following the election, two councillors ran for the vacant seat. Of the 63,979 eligible voters, only 20,364 turned in a ballot, a voter turnout of 31.8%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235666-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Red Deer municipal election, Plebiscite\nRed Deer City Council approved a non-binding plebiscite question and choices on May 27, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235667-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rediske Air DHC-3 Otter crash\nOn 7 July 2013, a single-engine de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter, operated by air charter company Rediske Air, crashed on take-off at Soldotna Airport, Alaska. The sole crewmember and all nine passengers on board were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235667-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rediske Air DHC-3 Otter crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft involved was a de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter with serial number 280 which was originally delivered to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Air Division on 25 February 1959 with Canadian registration C-FMPX. From 1979 to 2010 it operated commercially for various companies across Canada. In 2005 it was fitted with a Garrett TPE-33-10R turbine engine, and was re-registered in the United States in 2010 as N93PC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235667-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rediske Air DHC-3 Otter crash, Crash\nAccording to the United States' Federal Aviation Administration and local law enforcement officials, the aircraft \"struck the runway and burned\" shortly after take-off, before 11:20\u00a0a.m. AKDT (19:20 UTC), killing all ten people on board. It was flying to an unspecified fishing lodge. The National Transportation Safety Board was called in to investigate the cause of the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235667-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rediske Air DHC-3 Otter crash, Crash\nIn addition to the pilot, the crash killed nine people from two families visiting Alaska from Greenville, South Carolina. The victims' ages ranged from 11 to 74.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235667-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rediske Air DHC-3 Otter crash, Crash\nThe weather was reported to be cloudy at the time of the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235667-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rediske Air DHC-3 Otter crash, Investigation\nThere were no eyewitnesses to the accident. The incident aircraft was not equipped with a flight data recorder. Investigators found that a passenger had recorded the takeoff with the camera of his mobile phone. Due to the absence of any other recorded data, the NTSB decided to reconstruct the trajectory and speed of the airplane based on the recorded video. The analysis was challenging, since the camera was hand-held. By applying image analysis and 3D computer simulation, the NTSB was able to first estimate the time-varying orientation of the camera and then the location and orientation of the airplane. The NTSB report found: \"The analysis revealed that shortly after takeoff, flight speed started decreasing rapidly and angle of attack started increasing rapidly. Approximately 11 seconds after takeoff, flight speed and angle of attack reached levels corresponding to stall.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 935]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum\nA city-wide referendum on a new waste water treatment facility was held in Regina, Saskatchewan on September 25th 2013. The issue of the referendum was whether the facility would be financed through a Public-private partnership (P3) or through the design-bid-build (DBB) approach. The result was 57% against the DBB approach, and the treatment plant ended up being financed by a P3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Petition\nThe campaign to call this referendum started in response of a vote by the city council to finance the new $224-million Wastewater plant through a P3. A group called Regina Water Watch was created in opposition to this move, and started collecting signatures to force a referendum on the issue. According to the Saskatchewan Cities Act, a referendum must be held if 10% of the municipality's population sign a petition to hold it. By the end of June 2013, the group had amassed 24,000 signatures, above the 19,310 required by law. However, the city clerk's report judged the petition was insufficient to force the referendum after ruling that over 4000 of the signatures were invalid. The city council decided to vote for the referendum to be held anyway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Question\n\"Be it resolved that the council of the City of Regina publicly finance, operate and maintain the new wastewater treatment plant for Regina through a traditional Design, Bid, Build (DBB) approach.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Question\nThe question used the same wording that the original petition had proposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Campaign\nThe \"Yes\" side was led by Regina Water Watch, group which self-described as \"a citizens\u2019 coalition who are concerned about the privatization of Regina's water and wastewater system\". Their coalition \"includes community activists, the Council of Canadians Regina Chapter, CUPE 21, Making Peace Vigil and Clean Green Regina\". The campaign was also supported by the national Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), which helped organize the group's first meeting. The leader of the campaign was Jim Holmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Campaign\nThe \"No\" campaign was run by the City of Regina, and its main leader was Mayor Michael Fougere. The campaign was also supported by the Regina Chamber of Commerce. Federal finance minister Jim Flaherty expressed support for the goal of the campaign in an op-ed entitled \"Why I\u2019m giving Regina $58.5 million\", in reference to his government's promise of funding part of the costs of the plant if the P3 option was selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Campaign\nA debate on the referendum issue was held between Fougere and Holmes on September 18, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Campaign, Campaign finance\nThe City of Regina spent a total of $408,594.96 towards the \"No\" campaign. Other campaigns and third party groups were not required by law to reveal their campaign expenditures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Campaign, Campaign finance\nThe Canadian Union of Public Employees gave significant funds to Regina Water Watch, including registering their domain name reginawaterwatch.com, and paying for the report \"Flushing money away: Why the Privatization of Wastewater Treatment Plant is a bad idea\", which estimates that a P3 funding scheme would cost the city $61 million more than a DBB. The Regina Chamber of Commerce also participated in the campaign by paying for numerous newspaper and TV ads advocating for the \"No side\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Campaign, Campaign finance\nDuring the campaign period, neither CUPE nor the Regina Chamber of Commerce disclosed how much they were spending on the campaign. After the campaign was over, it was revealed that CUPE had spent $180,000 on the \"Yes\" campaign while the Chamber had spent between $125,000 and $130,000 on the \"No\" campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Results, Reaction\nOn the night the Results were posted, Regina Mayor Michael Fougere said \"\"I'll just say that the people have spoken and the people are always right. I'm very proud of the campaign we ran. I'm proud that people came out in large numbers to express their opinion on a very important issue for our city. I'm very proud of the results.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Results, Reaction\nJim Holmes reacted to the results by saying \"I think we were more optimistic than that going into it. We were up against very tough competition. We were outspent and vilified and everything else.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235668-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Regina wastewater plant financing referendum, Aftermath\nA P3 model funded the construction of the city's new wastewater treatment plant. In 2015, the Edmonton-based company Epcor was selected to design, build and operate the facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235669-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2\n2013 Regional League Division 2 was contested by the five regional league winners and runners up of the 3rd level championships of Thailand. The one best 3rd placed teams from the regional leagues also take part", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235669-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2\nTwelve teams were split into two groups of A & B, with the top two teams from group A & B gaining promotion to the Yamaha League-1 for the 2014 campaign, along with this, the two group winners would play off to determine the overall champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235669-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2, 2013 Regional League table All locations, 2013\nred Zone:2013 Regional League Division 2 Bangkok Metropolitan RegionYellow Zone:2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern RegionPink Zone:2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Western RegionGreen Zone: 2013 Regional League Division 2 Northern Region Region Orange Zone:2013 Regional League Division 2 North Eastern RegionBlue Zone:2013 Regional League Division 2 Southern Region", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235669-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2, Championship Pool Qualifying play-off\n\u2020 Winner\u00a0: Sukhothai (Qualification for the championship pool ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235670-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Bangkok Metropolitan Region\n2013 Regional League Division 2 Bangkok Metropolitan Region is the 5th season of the League competition since its establishment in 2009. It is in the third tier of the Thai football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235670-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Bangkok Metropolitan Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Promoted Clubs\nRayong United were promoted to the 2013 Thai Division 1 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 115], "content_span": [116, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235670-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Bangkok Metropolitan Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Relocated Clubs\nPaknampho NSRU re-located to the Regional League Bangkok Area Division from the Regional League Northern Division 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 116], "content_span": [117, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235670-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Bangkok Metropolitan Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Relocated Clubs\nGloblex, Krung Thonburi, Samut Sakhon, Thonburi BG United have all been moved into the Central-West Division 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 116], "content_span": [117, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235671-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern Region\n2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern Region is the 5th season of the League competition since its establishment in 2009. It is in the third tier of the Thai football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235671-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Promoted Clubs\nAyutthaya, Rayong and Trat were promoted to the 2013 Thai Division 1 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 112], "content_span": [113, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235671-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Relegated Clubs\nChanthaburi and JW Rangsit were relegated from the 2012 Thai Division 1 League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 113], "content_span": [114, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235671-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Relocated Clubs\nThai Airways-Look Isan relocated to the Regional League Central-East Division from the Bangkok Area Division 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 113], "content_span": [114, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235671-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Relocated Clubs\nAng Thong, Muangkan, Phetchaburi, Prachuap Khiri Khan, Looktabfah F.C. have all been moved into the Central & Western Division 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 113], "content_span": [114, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235671-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Eastern Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Expansion Clubs\nKabin United Pluak Daeng and Phan Thong joined the newly expanded league setup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 113], "content_span": [114, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235672-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Western Region\n2013 Regional League Division 2 Central & Western Region is the 1st season of the League competition since its establishment in 2013. It is in the third tier of the Thai football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235673-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 North Eastern Region\n2013 Regional League Division 2 North-East Region is the 5th season of the League competition since its establishment in 2009. It is in the third tier of the Thai football league system. The league winners and runners up will qualify for the 2013 Regional League Division 2 championship stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235673-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 North Eastern Region, Changes from Last Season, Team Changes, Promoted Clubs\nNo club was promoted to the Thai Division 1 League. Last years league champions Roi Et United and runners up Sisaket United failed to qualify from the 2012 Regional League Division 2 championship pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 108], "content_span": [109, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235674-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Northern Region\n2013 Regional League Division 2 Northern Region is the fifth season of the League competition since its establishment in 2009. It is in the third tier of the Thai football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235674-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Northern Region, Changes from last season, Team changes, Promoted clubs\nNo club was promoted to the Thai Division 1 League. Last years league champions Chiangmai, runners up Phitsanulok failed to qualify from the 2012 Regional League Division 2 championship pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 103], "content_span": [104, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235674-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Northern Region, Changes from last season, Team changes, Relocated clubs\nPaknampho NSRU have all been moved into the Bangkok Area Division 2013Singburi have all been moved into the Central-West Region 2013", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 104], "content_span": [105, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235674-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Northern Region, Stadium and locations, Personnel and sponsoring\nNote: 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, 47], "section_span": [49, 96], "content_span": [97, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235675-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Southern Region\n2013 Regional League Division 2 Southern Region is the 5th season of the League competition since its establishment in 2009. It is in the third tier of the Thai football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235675-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Southern Region, Changes from last season, Team changes, Promoted clubs\nNo club was promoted to the Thai Division 1 League. Last years league champions Trang and runners up Pattani failed to qualify from the 2012 Regional League Division 2 championship pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 103], "content_span": [104, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235675-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional League Division 2 Southern Region, Changes from last season, Team changes, Relegated clubs\nPhattalung, Songkhla were relegated from the 2012 Thai Division 1 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 104], "content_span": [105, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235676-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Championship\nThe 2013 Regional Women's Championship was a 50-over women's cricket competition that took place in the West Indies. It took place in August 2013, with 8 teams taking part and all matches taking place in Grenada and Saint Lucia. Jamaica won the tournament, beating Trinidad and Tobago in the final to win their second 50-over title in two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235676-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Championship\nThe tournament was followed by the 2013 Regional Women's Twenty20 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235676-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Championship, Competition format\nThe eight teams were divided into two groups of four, playing every team in their group once. Matches were played using a one day format with 50 overs per side. The top two teams in each group advanced to the semi-finals, whilst the bottom two teams in each group went into a play-off round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235676-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Championship, Competition format\nThe group worked on a points system with positions being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235676-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Championship, Competition format\nWin: 4 pointsTie: 2 pointsLoss: 0 points. Abandoned/No Result: 2 points. Bonus Points: 1 bonus point available per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235677-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Twenty20 Championship\nThe 2013 Regional Women's Twenty20 Championship was the second season of the women's Twenty20 cricket competition played in the West Indies. It took place in August 2013, with 8 teams taking part and all matches taking place in Grenada. Jamaica won the tournament, beating Barbados in the final to claim their second T20 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235677-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Twenty20 Championship, Competition format\nThe eight teams were divided into two groups of four, playing in a round-robin format. Matches were played using a Twenty20 format. The top two teams in each group progressed to the semi-finals, whilst the bottom two teams in each group played-off in two play-off matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235677-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Regional Women's Twenty20 Championship, Competition format\nThe group worked on a points system with positions being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235678-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Reinert Open\nThe 2013 Reinert Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Versmold, Germany, on 1\u20137 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235678-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Reinert Open, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235679-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Reinert Open \u2013 Doubles\nMailen Auroux and Mar\u00eda Irigoyen were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players chose not to defend their title; instead, opting to play at the $25,000 tournament in S\u00e3o Jos\u00e9 do Rio Preto, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235679-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Reinert Open \u2013 Doubles\nSofia Shapatava and Anna Tatishvili won the tournament, defeating Claire Feuerstein and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235680-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Reinert Open \u2013 Singles\nAnnika Beck was the defending champion in the 2013 Reinert Open, having won the event in 2012, but she chose not to defend her title in Versmold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235680-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Reinert Open \u2013 Singles\nDinah Pfizenmaier won the title, defeating Maryna Zanevska in the final, 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235681-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Remus F3 Cup\nThe 2013 Remus F3 Cup was the 32nd Austria Formula 3 Cup season and the first Remus F3 Cup season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235681-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Remus F3 Cup\nDespite missing the last round, Christopher H\u00f6her of Franz W\u00f6ss Racing was crowned champion by 118 points over Jo Zeller Racing driver Thomas Amweg. H\u00f6her was only 16 years old at the end of the season. Dr. Ulrich Drechsler became the Trophy class champion for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235681-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Remus F3 Cup, Teams and drivers\nAll Cup cars were built between 2005 and 2011, while Trophy cars were built between 1992 and 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235682-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Renault UK Clio Cup\nThe 2013 Renault UK Clio Cup is a multi-event, one make motor racing championship held across England. The championship features a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers, competing in a Clio Renault Sport 200 that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. 2013 will be the final season for the current car. It forms part of the extensive program of support categories built up around the BTCC centrepiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235682-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Renault UK Clio Cup\nThis season will be the 18th Renault Clio Cup United Kingdom season. The season will commence on 31 March at Brands Hatch\u00a0\u2013 on the circuit's Indy configuration\u00a0\u2013 and will conclude on 13 October at the same venue, utilising the Grand Prix circuit, after sixteen races to be held at eight meetings, all in support of the 2013 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235682-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Renault UK Clio Cup, Championship changes\nAfter a single year with the SRO as series promoter in 2012, the championship is returning to the hands of the British Automobile Racing Club with Simon North making a return to the role of Championship Manager. A post he held between 1992 and 2011. Further changes include a switch to Dunlop Tyres for the 2013 season, after several years using Michelin rubber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235682-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Renault UK Clio Cup, Race calendar and results\nThe championship calendar was announced by the series organisers on 7 December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235683-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican National Committee chairmanship election\nThe 2013 Republican National Committee (RNC) chairmanship election was held on January 25, 2013. Then-incumbent RNC Chairman Reince Priebus won re-election with near unanimity in the party's 2013 meeting in Charlotte, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention\nThe 2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention was the process by which the Republican Party of Virginia selected its nominees for the offices governor, lieutenant governor, and attorney general for the 2013 general election in November. The convention was held on May 17 and 18, 2013, in the state capital of Richmond at the Richmond Coliseum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention\nKen Cuccinelli's de facto nomination for governor was confirmed by acclamation at the convention. There were seven candidates for lieutenant governor; after an epic ten-hour, four-ballot battle, E.W. Jackson emerged as the nominee in an upset over better-funded candidates. Mark Obenshain narrowly defeated Rob Bell for the attorney general nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Cuccinelli vs. Bolling and switch to convention\nIn 2008, incumbent lieutenant governor Bill Bolling made a deal with then-Attorney General Bob McDonnell whereby McDonnell would run for governor and Bolling would run for re-election as lieutenant governor in 2009, and then Bolling would receive McDonnell's support for his own candidacy for governor in 2013. The deal was widely known and as such, Bolling was effectively running for governor since 2009, and in April 2010, Bolling filed the necessary paperwork to run in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 105], "content_span": [106, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Cuccinelli vs. Bolling and switch to convention\nVirginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, elected alongside McDonnell and Bolling in 2009, stated that he intended to run for re-election as attorney general in 2013, but did not rule out running for governor. In December 2011, Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli told his staff that he would run against Bolling for governor in 2013; the news went public, and in response, Bolling issued a statement accusing Cuccinelli of putting \"his own personal ambition ahead of the best interests of the commonwealth and the Republican Party.\" This infuriated Bolling and set up a primary. Cuccinelli's announcement came two days before the annual statewide conference of Virginia Republicans, at which Bolling and his staff expressed being upset with Cuccinelli's decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 105], "content_span": [106, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Cuccinelli vs. Bolling and switch to convention\nIn June 2012, the party's State Central Committee, which had new members since the committee previously voted to hold a primary, reversed course and voted 47\u201331 to select a nominee via convention in 2013, igniting much controversy among party members. The switch was a major blow to Bolling's candidacy, as Cuccinelli supporters were more ardent and involved in the party and thus more willing to travel to a day-long convention. Proponents of the reversal said a convention would prevent Democrats from meddling in the selection (Virginia does not register voters by party, making primaries open to voters regardless of party).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 105], "content_span": [106, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Cuccinelli vs. Bolling and switch to convention\nPrimaries are also run by the State Board of Elections and taxpayer funded; proponents said a convention, which is funded by the party, would save the state money. Convention proponents also argued that nominees selected by convention historically perform better in the general election than nominees selected by primary, and that conventions allow candidates to present their cases within the party, preventing candidates from tearing each other down via negative advertising seen by the general electorate. Opponents of the reversal said a convention would disenfranchise military voters who are unable to physically attend a convention, and would cost the party too much money. Bolling called the switch \"unprecedented and unfair\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 105], "content_span": [106, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Cuccinelli vs. Bolling and switch to convention\nOn November 28, 2012, Bolling withdrew from the race, in a \"recognition of how difficult it would be [for him] to win the nomination\", making Cuccinelli the de facto nominee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 105], "content_span": [106, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Importance of office of lieutenant governor\nThe lieutenant governor of Virginia is a part-time role and has historically been a largely ceremonial post, with the primary responsibility being breaking the rare 20\u201320 tie in the 40-member Senate of Virginia. The office is also seen as a stepping stone to the office of governor. However, the practical importance of the office increased dramatically after the 2011 state Senate elections created an evenly divided Senate with 20 Republicans and 20 Democrats, making the lieutenant governor's tiebreaking power critical and determining which party holds control of the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 101], "content_span": [102, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Importance of office of lieutenant governor, Speculation and field\nAfter the 2011 elections, there was much speculation as to who the nominee for the office would be, since Bolling was vacating the seat. Potential candidates who considered bids but did not run included Mark Obenshain, former GOP congressional nominee Keith Fimian, and state Sen. Jeff McWaters. Obenshain ended up running for attorney general; Fimian began raising money but decided not to run for the sake of his family; and speculation on McWaters waned and he never entered the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Importance of office of lieutenant governor, Speculation and field\nThe field began taking shape in mid-2012. Prince William County Board of Supervisors Chairman Corey Stewart was the first to enter the race, announcing his bid in April 2012. State Sen. Steve Martin of Chesterfield announced he was running in June 2012 (on the same day that he filled in for Bolling in presiding over a pro forma session of the Senate). State Delegate Scott Lingamfelter also joined the race in June 2012. Stafford County Board of Supervisors Chairwoman Susan Stimpson announced her run in August 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Importance of office of lieutenant governor, Speculation and field\nFormer delegate and state senator Jeannemarie Devolites Davis filed her paperwork to run in September 2012. Northern Virginia businessman and director of the state Republican 2012 election efforts Pete Snyder entered the race in November 2012. Attorney and pastor E.W. Jackson of Chesapeake rounded out the field, announcing he was running in December 2012 at the annual conference of state Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 124], "content_span": [125, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Background, Attorney General race\nCuccinelli's run for governor meant the attorney general's office was open in 2013. Within two weeks, three candidates announced bids for the office in 2013. State Sen. Mark Obenshain of Harrisonburg announced he was exploring a run on December 2, 2011, shortly after Cuccinelli announced he was running for governor, and formally entered the race nearly a year later in November 2012. On December 6, 2011, Delegate Rob Bell of Charlottesville entered the race. Fairfax County Circuit Court Clerk John Frey entered the race the next day. Frey dropped out in November 2012, saying his opponents had spent more time campaigning across the state than he did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Candidates on the ballot, Governor\nCuccinelli became the de facto nominee in January 2013, as Bolling had withdrawn and no other candidate filed for the Republican nomination by the deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Approval of rules\nThe convention was called to order on the afternoon of May 17, 2013. Rules for the convention, which were previously released, were adopted, and the convention then recessed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 87], "content_span": [88, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Approval of rules\nThe rules required a full 50% + 1 vote majority to win the nomination in each race. Multiple ballots were anticipated for the lieutenant governor race, as none of the seven candidates were expected to reach a majority so quickly. Only one ballot was required for attorney general. In the lieutenant governor balloting, if no candidate reached a majority after the first ballot, the bottom two candidates with the fewest votes would be eliminated, and five candidates would be on the second ballot. On the second ballot, the bottom two would be eliminated, and three candidates would be on the third ballot. If no candidate reached a majority after the third ballot, the third candidate would be eliminated, and the two remaining candidates would be on the fourth and final ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 87], "content_span": [88, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Nomination of Cuccinelli\nThe convention was called back to order on the morning of May 18, 2013. Cuccinelli was formally nominated by acclamation as thousands of delegates roared \"aye\" on the motion to nominate him for governor. In his acceptance speech, Cuccinelli stressed his record, contrasting his years of public service in Virginia with his Democratic opponent Terry McAuliffe's career. He rolled out a vision including specific calls for reforms of the tax code, education, and regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Candidate speeches\nAccording to the rules, candidates for lieutenant governor and attorney general were allotted seven minutes each to speak before the delegates. The most notable speech was that of E.W. Jackson, who electrified the crowd in an impassioned speech in which he rejected the label of \"African-American\", declaring, \"I am not an African-American, I am an American! I am tired of the hyphenation. No more hyphenation!\" He also vowed to \"get the government off our backs, off our property, out of our families, out of our health care and out of our way.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Nomination of Mark Obenshain\nObenshain defeated Bell on the first ballot by a margin of 55%-45%. After the ballots were counted, Bell came to the podium and motioned to withdraw his candidacy and nominate Obenshain for attorney general. Obenshain was then nominated by acclamation. Obenshain's nomination came 35 years after his father, Richard D. Obenshain, received the Republican nomination for the United States Senate on the same stage at the Richmond Coliseum in May 1978. Richard Obenshain was killed in a plane crash a few months after his nomination. Mark Obenshain was joined by his mother, Richard's widow, on the stage to accept the nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 98], "content_span": [99, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Nomination of E.W. Jackson\nChaos and conflicting statements went around the convention during the second, third, and fourth ballots in what appeared to be a stop-Jackson movement by the Snyder campaign. Snyder received the endorsements of tea party activist Jamie Radtke, and from Lingamfelter after his elimination, during balloting, which the campaign posted on flyers around the Coliseum. In the fourth round of balloting, flyers were distributed on the floor falsely claiming that Cuccinelli, Obenshain, and Stewart endorsed Snyder for the fourth ballot. All three of those campaigns denounced the flyers, and Stewart endorsed Jackson, even taking a lap around the floor with him to show his support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 96], "content_span": [97, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Nomination of E.W. Jackson\nShortly after 10:00 pm EDT, after eight hours of voting and four ballots, Pete Snyder went to the stage and motioned to withdraw his candidacy and nominate E.W. Jackson for lieutenant governor by acclamation. After a loud \"aye\" from the delegates, Jackson took to the stage, and after a short victory speech, was joined by Cuccinelli and Obenshain, as the 2013 Republican ticket was presented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 96], "content_span": [97, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Voting\nConvention voting used a weighted vote system in which votes were allocated to local city or county unit committees based on their city's or county's population. Each vote cast could be worth more or less than one weighted vote depending on how many votes were cast from that unit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Voting, First ballot\nObenshain won the attorney general race with 55% of both the weighted vote and the raw vote. Per the rules, Davis and Martin were eliminated after the first ballot as they placed sixth and seventh, respectively, out of seven candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Voting, Second ballot\nPer the rules, Stimpson and Lingamfelter were eliminated after the second ballot, as they placed fourth and fifth, respectively, out of five candidates. Stimpson and Stewart actually received more raw, or popular, votes than Snyder, who placed second, but Snyder received a higher weighted vote count. (Stewart received the votes of 1,297 delegates, Stimpson received the votes of 1,232 delegates, and Snyder received the votes of 1,196 delegates. However, Snyder received more weighted votes.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235684-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Republican Party of Virginia convention, Convention proceedings, Voting, Third ballot\nPer the rules, Stewart was eliminated after the third ballot, as he received the fewest votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235685-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Republika Srpska Football Cup Final\nThe 2013 Republika Srpska Cup Final will be the 20th final of the Republika Srpska Football Cup, the highest football cup competition in Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings\nThe 2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings took place on 11 May 2013, when two car bombs exploded in the Turkish town of Reyhanl\u0131, a town of 64,000 people, 5\u00a0km from the Syrian border and the busiest land border post with Syria, in Hatay Province, Turkey. At least 52 people were killed and 140 injured in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings\nTurkish authorities accused the government of Syria of being behind the bombings, and within two weeks had charged 12 Turkish nationals who it said were backed by the Syrian government. The state-run Anadolu news agency reported that in February 2018, a Turkish court sentenced nine suspects to life imprisonment and 13 other people to prison terms of 10 to 15 years for the bombings; and that in September 2018 another suspect was captured in Syria and brought to Turkey by Turkish intelligence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings\nThe Syrian government denied responsibility for the attacks. Other groups proposed as culprits include al-Nusra Front, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, and Syrian Resistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings\nFollowing the bombings, hundreds of Syrians fled Reyhanli, and some residents blamed the Turkish government for bringing the Syrian Civil War to the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Background\nReyhanl\u0131 is a town of 64,000 people in the far south of Turkey in Hatay Province, 5\u00a0km from the Turkey-Syria border and close to the busiest land border post with Syria, the Bab al-Hawa Border Crossing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Background\nMany Syrian refugees have passed through the town while fleeing from the Syrian Civil War. The nearby Cilveg\u00f6z\u00fc\u2013Bab al-Hawa Border Crossing, which is controlled on the Syrian side by rebels, is the busiest crossing point between the two countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Background\nOn 3 October 2012, mortar fire from Syria killed five people in the Turkish border town of Ak\u00e7akale. On 11 February 2013, the gate of the Cilveg\u00f6z\u00fc\u2013Bab al-Hawa Border Crossing was the scene of a deadly attack, when an explosion killed 17 people and injured 30 more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Bombings\nTwo car bombs were left outside Reyhanl\u0131's town hall and post office. The first exploded at around 13:45 EEST (10:45 UTC), and the second about five minutes later. People attempting to help those injured in the first explosion were caught in the second blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Bombings\nA Cumhuriyet journalist reported controversy over the number of fatalities. It was suspected by some news sources that government and local officials had instructed local health care workers to limit the death toll to 50, while the real number was 177.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Bombings\nWhile some Syrian refugees were caught in the blasts, the majority of the fatalities involved were local Turks. Although there is still no information about the names of the dead, local officials revealed their nationalities, and stated that 5 of 52 people killed by the attacks were Syrian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility\nSeveral options have been raised for the responsibility for the attack:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility, Syrian government \u2013 Mukhabarat\nOn Saturday, 11 May 2013, Turkey's two Deputy Prime Ministers B\u00fclent Ar\u0131n\u00e7 and Besir Atalay said \"the Syrian Mukhabarat and armed organizations are the usual suspects in planning and the carrying out of such devilish plans\", and Turkish sources accused Syria of being \"behind the attacks\". Syria, according to information minister Omran al-Zoubi, immediately denied responsibility for the attacks, stating: \"Syria [...] would never commit such an act because our values would not allow that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility, Syrian government \u2013 Mukhabarat\nOn 11 May, Turkish authorities said they had detained nine Turks with links to the Syrian Mukhabarat (military intelligence service) as suspects in the bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility, Syrian government \u2013 Mukhabarat\nOn 13 May, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan said that he held the Syrian government responsible. By 21 May, Turkey had charged 12 Turkish nationals with the attacks, which they alleged were backed by the Syrian government. On 25 May, Erdogan repeated his accusation that the Syrian regime was behind the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility, Syrian government \u2013 Mukhabarat\nNasir Eskiocak, a Turkish national captured by the Turkish police on 10 June 2013 and for a while the prime suspect of the attack, said the attack was ordered by the Syrian Mukhabarat, and then organized by him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility, Syrian government \u2013 Mukhabarat\nOn 12 September 2018, the Turkish National Intelligence Organization announced that they had captured Yusuf Nazik, who they alleged is one of the main suspects of the 2013 bombing. He was captured by Turkish intelligence in the Syrian regime-controlled city of Latakia. Nazik, born in the Antakya district of the province of Hatay, confessed in a video-recorded confession that he played a key part in the bombing as a coordinator between the bombers and the Syrian regime, which he said masterminded the attack. He referred to a Syrian intelligence officer named Mohammed, who had the codename \"Hadji\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility, Acilciler versus Turkish government\nTurkish authorities on 12 May 2013 suspected that former Turkish Marxist group Acilciler, now thought to be based in Syria, might have been revived by his leader Mihrac Ural, and might have ordered the attack. Acilciler was, according to The Huffington Post, long-rumored to have been formed by the Syrian military intelligence service Mukhabarat. The Turkish government on 12 May 2013 believed that Ural and his group, with their ties to pro-government Syrian groups, had carried out the attack. Mihra\u00e7 Ural, in return, has implicated the Turkish Intelligence Organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Responsibility, G\u00fclen movement\nIn 2015, former Adana prosecutor \u00d6zcan \u015ei\u015fman said in a letter to the Cumhuriyet newspaper that he was warned by MIT officers about a planned bombing attack in 2012 and 2013, three days before the Reyhanli attack. And that he was urged by the officers to carry out an operation against the cell. \u015ei\u015fman said he refused to carry out the operation and did not inform the police. \u015ei\u015fman was arrested in the same year and was sentenced 17 years in prison in 2019 for obtaining and exposing state secrets and being a member of the G\u00fclen movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath\nThere was widespread panic in Reyhanl\u0131 following the blasts, with many people attempting to flee the town. Clashes broke out between Turkish and Syrian people in Reyhanl\u0131, and police were forced to intervene by firing into the air to disperse the crowds. Turkish residents of the town reportedly attacked Syrian refugees and automobiles with Syrian license plates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath\nBBC Journalist Wyre Davies reported from the site of the bombings in Reyhanli that there was 'real anger' among the people on the streets, not just against whoever had carried out the attacks but also against the government in Ankara. Hundreds of Syrian refugees had been forced to leave, 'scapegoats for the crimes of others' in Davies' account, blamed for bringing the Syrian war to the town. The refugees were held to have made the town a target for Assad's agents in Turkey. The media also were unpopular. \"Whoever carried out the bombings has deliberately and successfully driven a wedge between two communities who had always coexisted, even before the war, because of cross-border trade and other historic ties\", the journalist wrote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath\nIn response to the attacks, the Turkish government sent large numbers of air and ground forces increasing the already heavy military presence in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath\nProtesters clashed with police in the town on Saturday, 18 May, voicing their anger over the government's response to the attack and its decision to take in Syrian refugees fleeing the Syrian conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath\nTurkey sealed the border with Syria for one month in order to stop possible suspects from escaping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath, Media ban\nThe Reyhanl\u0131 Court of Peace ordered all voice, written, and visual publications referring to the blasts' aftermath banned, including content describing, and images of, the injured and the dead. The court ruled that the written and visual content would jeopardize the confidentiality and outcome of the ongoing prosecution. On 16 May 2013, the Hatay First Criminal Court cancelled the order issued by the Reyhanl\u0131 Court of Peace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath, Media ban\nOnly the state-run Anatolia news agency and Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT) were allowed to cover visits by Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin and Health Minister Mehmet M\u00fcezzino\u011flu to the injured in Antakya State Hospital. When the main opposition leader Kemal K\u0131l\u0131\u00e7daro\u011flu, of the Republican People's Party (CHP), visited the victims at the same hospital on Monday, only reporters from Anatolia and TRT were allowed to cover K\u0131l\u0131\u00e7daro\u011flu's visit, while reporters from the Cihan News Agency, the \u0130hlas News Agency and the Do\u011fan News Agency were not allowed to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Aftermath, Media ban\nSeveral media unions protested the media ban imposed on the Reyhanl\u0131 bombings and appealed to the courts to remove the ban immediately. The media ban was condemned by several journalistic organizations in Turkey. Atilla Sertel, the chairperson of the Journalists Federation of Turkey, stated that such bans would cause major misinformation and would result in misleading the public. The Press Institute Association of Turkey claimed the court order upholding the ban was a censure and a major blow to press freedom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Reactions, Domestic\nTurkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davuto\u011flu said, \"There may be those who want to sabotage Turkey's peace, but we will not allow that. No one should attempt to test Turkey's power. Our security forces will take all necessary measures.\" Speaking in Berlin, he said that the bombings were a consequence of global inaction in intervening in the Syrian civil war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Reactions, Domestic\nOpposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu held Erdogan accountable for the bombings and compared him to Syria's president Assad. Erdogan threatened to sue him in response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Reactions, International\nSyrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi placed responsibility for the attacks on the Turkish authorities and said, \"it was the Turkish government that had facilitated the flow of arms, explosives, vehicles, fighters and money across the border into Syria\", and thus \"had turned the border areas into centres for international terrorism\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Reactions, International\nThe UN Security Council strongly condemned the Reyhanli bombings, stating, \"Any acts of terrorism are criminal and unjustifiable, regardless of their motivation, wherever, whenever and by whomsoever committed.\" NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen also condemned the attack, calling it \"despicable\", and said that NATO stood by Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Reactions, International\nBritish Foreign Secretary William Hague issued a Twitter statement saying, \"My thoughts are with family and friends of the victims. We stand with the people of Turkey.\" United States Ambassador Francis Ricciardone stated that the U.S. \"strongly condemns today's vicious attack, and stands with the people and government of Turkey to identify the perpetrators and bring them to justice.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Investigations\nOn 11 May, the authorities had immediately detained nine suspected Turks. By 20 May, 18 people had been detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Investigations\nInvestigations have revealed that Ankara was the initial target of the recent attacks in Reyhanl\u0131, according to Deputy Prime Minister Be\u015fir Atalay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235686-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Reyhanl\u0131 car bombings, Investigations\nIn July 2013, several M\u0130T intelligence officials were dismissed for negligence, after an inquiry concluded that M\u0130T had had sufficient information to prevent the attack, but had failed to share it with police quickly enough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235687-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rhode Island Rams baseball team\nThe 2013 Rhode Island Rams baseball team represents the University of Rhode Island in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. Jim Foster is in his 8th season as head coach of the Rams. The URI baseball team, is coming off 2012 season in which they were 33\u201325\u20131. The Rams play their home games at Bill Beck Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235688-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rhode Island Rams football team\nThe 2013 Rhode Island Rams football team represented the University of Rhode Island in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fifth year head coach Joe Trainer and played their home games at Meade Stadium. They were a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 3\u20139, 2\u20136 in CAA play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235688-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rhode Island Rams football team\nThe Rams entered the season having lost a school-record 13 straight contests dating back to the final two games of the 2011 season. That record was extended to 15 after losing their opening two games of 2013 before finally ending the losing streak with a win over Albany on September 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235689-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rhodes Lynx football team\nThe 2013 Rhodes Lynx football team represented Rhodes College during the 2013 NCAA Division III football season. The team won the Southern Athletic Association. Dan Gritti was the team's head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235690-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships\nThe 29th Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships took place from May 31 to June 2, 2013 at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, Austria including 34 National Federations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235690-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships, Results, Seniors, Ball\nKudryavtseva became the first rhythmic gymnast to score a 19 points (19.000) under the new 2013-16 Code of Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235691-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards\nThe 2013 Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards is the second presentation for the New Zealand Film Awards, a New Zealand film industry award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235691-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards\nFollowing the demise of the Aotearoa Film and Television Awards in 2012, New Zealand film industry figure Ant Timpson and nzherald.co.nz online entertainment editor Hugh Sundae announced the formation of the Sorta Unofficial New Zealand Film Awards, also known as the Moas. In 2013 the awards were renamed the New Zealand Film Awards, with the Rialto Channel as the primary sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235691-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards\nThe 2013 ceremony took place at Shed 10 (upstairs) in Auckland on 10 December 2013. It was webcast live at the nzherald.co.nz, and broadcast on the Rialto Channel on 15 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235691-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards, Nominees and winners\nMoas were awarded in 28 categories in four groups \u2013 feature film, documentary film, short film and television. The television category has only one award \u2013 Best Television Feature or Drama Series \u2013 a one-off award created to recognise excellence in television, as there is otherwise no New Zealand television award in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235691-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards, Nominees and winners, Short film\nMedia Design School Best Technical Contribution to a Short Film", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235692-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rice Owls football team\nThe 2013 Rice Owls football team represented Rice University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by seventh-year head coach David Bailiff and played its home games at Rice Stadium. The team was a member of the West Division of Conference USA (C-USA). They finished the season 10\u20134 overall, 7\u20131 in C-USA play, which was good for first place in the West Division. They won the C-USA championship by beating Marshall, the first-place team in the East Division, 41\u201324 in the C-USA conference championship game. They were invited to the AutoZone Liberty Bowl, where they lost to Mississippi State, 44\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235693-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Football Club season\nThe 2013 season marked the 106th season in which the Richmond Football Club participated in the AFL/VFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235693-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Football Club season, 2012 off-season list changes, Free agency\nNote: Compensation picks are awarded to a player's previous team by the league and not traded from the destination club", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235693-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Football Club season, 2012 off-season list changes, Trades\nNote: All traded picks are indicative and do not reflect final selection position", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235693-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Football Club season, 2013 season, Pre-season\nNote: Round 4 matches were conducted under normal AFL Premiership season rules and did not count towards the NAB Cup Ladder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235694-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Kickers season\nThe 2013 Richmond Kickers season was the soccer club's twenty-first season of existence. It was the Kickers' seventh-consecutive year in the third-tier of American soccer, playing in the USL Professional Division for their third season. The Kickers finished the season atop the USL Pro table, but lost in the playoff semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235695-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Raiders season\nThe 2013 Richmond Raiders season was the fourth season as a professional indoor football franchise and their second in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL). One of 7 teams competing in the PIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235695-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Raiders season\nThe team played their home games under head coach James Fuller at the Richmond Coliseum in Richmond, Virginia. The Raiders earned a 7-5 record, placing tied for 2nd in the league, qualifying for the playoffs. They were defeated in PIFL Cup II, 44-70 by the Alabama Hammers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235696-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Spiders baseball team\nThe 2013 Richmond Spiders baseball team will represent University of Richmond in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. They are coming off a 2012 season, in which they made it to the Atlantic 10 Championship game. Head Coach Mark McQueen is in his 5th year coaching the Spiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235697-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Richmond Spiders football team\nThe 2013 Richmond Spiders football team represented the University of Richmond in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second-year head coach Danny Rocco and played their home games at E. Claiborne Robins Stadium. The Spiders played as a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 6\u20136, 4\u20134 in CAA play to finish in a three way tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic\nThe 2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic (also known as the 2013 Prudential RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic for sponsorship reasons) was the inaugural running of the RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic one-day cycling race. It was held on 4 August 2013 as a 1.1 category event within the 2013 UCI Europe Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic\nThe race was won by FDJ.fr rider Arnaud D\u00e9mare in a sprint finish from a large main group of 96 riders. Sacha Modolo of Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox finished second, having also finished second on The Mall in the 2011 London-Surrey Cycle Classic. The podium was completed by Yannick Martinez of La Pomme Marseille.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic\nPre -race favourite Peter Sagan (Cannondale) failed to finish together with Matthew Goss (Orica\u2013GreenEDGE). The highest place Briton was Ben Swift (Team Sky) who having been edged out in the final sprint, rolled in tenth, ahead of Gerald Ciolek (MTN\u2013Qhubeka) - winner of the 2013 Milan\u00a0\u2013 San Remo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Route\nThe 221\u00a0km (137.3\u00a0mi) route chosen for the 2013 edition of the RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic was a variation of the course used for the 2012 Summer Olympics. The route featured five categorised climbs and three intermediate sprint points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Route\nRiders started from the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park close to the Olympic Velodrome before passing close to Canary Wharf and the Tower of London on the way through central London. Leaving London by the A4 the route passed through Richmond Park, Kingston upon Thames and Hampton Court Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Route\nIn Surrey the route passed through Weybridge and Ripley on the way to the first categorised climb of Newlands Corner near Guildford before heading along the A25 to Abinger Hammer. The route then featured three 27.3\u00a0km (17.0\u00a0mi) laps of a hilly section routed through Holmbury St Mary, Forest Green and Ockley which included the climb of Leith Hill - the highest point in South-East England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Route\nThe route back to London travelled through Dorking and included a single ascent of Box Hill before the largely flat run-in via Cobham, Kingston upon Thames, Wimbledon and Putney. The final kilometres followed the Embankment, past the Palace of Westminster, along Whitehall and turned right through Admiralty Arch 400m from the finish on The Mall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Route, Sprints classification\nThere were three Intermediate Sprints that counted towards the sprints classification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Route, Sprints classification\nNote that points were not awarded at the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Route, King of the Mountains classification\nThere were five categorised climbs that counted towards the King of the Mountains classification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Teams\n25 teams were invited to the 2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic: 8 UCI ProTeams, 6 UCI Pro Continental Teams, 10 UCI Continental Teams along with the British national team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Teams\nEach of the 25 teams were due to enter six riders to the race, making up a starting peloton of 150 riders. Belkin Pro Cycling and MTN\u2013Qhubeka both entered teams of five riders, and Vegard Breen of Joker\u2013Merida did not start, making a starting field of 147 riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Race report\nA breakaway of eight riders formed after 44\u00a0km, although their advantage did not increase beyond five minutes. The breakaway contained Ramon Sinkeldam of Argos\u2013Shimano who would subsequently amass enough points at the intermediate sprints and on the categorised climbs to win both the Sprints Classification and the King of the Mountains Classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Race report\nWith Team Sky, Orica\u2013GreenEDGE and Vacansoleil\u2013DCM controlling the peloton the gap to the breakaway reduced to a little over two minutes after the three laps of the Leith Hill circuit. The peloton briefly splintered on the last categorised climb of Box Hill as David Millar of Garmin\u2013Sharp set a furious pace which led to the escape of his team mate Jack Bauer together with Yoann Offredo (FDJ.fr) and Simon Yates (Great Britain Cycling Team) - who eventually caught the early breakaway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Race report\nWith the peloton approaching Yoann Offredo and Zico Waeytens (Topsport Vlaanderen\u2013Baloise) attacked the remnants of the breakaway on the approach to Kingston upon Thames and built a lead of over a minute with 20\u00a0km left to race, however on the approach to London (within the final 6\u00a0km) they too were caught by the peloton\u00a0\u2014 resulting in the widely expected bunch sprint on The Mall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Race report\nDavid Millar led the peloton through Westminster, but as the teams passed under the flamme rouge with 1\u00a0km to go it was FDJ.fr who were the better organised, delivering Arnaud D\u00e9mare to the line to win by a bike length from Sacha Modolo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Results, General classification\nOf the 147 starters 131 completed the course within the time limit and 96 riders finished on the same time. The top 10 finishers were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235698-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 RideLondon\u2013Surrey Classic, Results, King of the Mountains classification\nThe results of the King of the Mountains Classification were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235699-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Riga City Council election\nThe 2013 Riga City Council election was held on June 1, 2013, to elect Riga City Council, the unicameral local legislature of the Riga, as part of municipal elections across the country. At stake were all 60 seats in the City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235699-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Riga City Council election\nAfter 2009 elections Harmony created coalition with Christian-Democratic LPP/LC and Nils U\u0161akovs became Mayor of Riga. U\u0161akovs' popularity among Rigans had grown steadily, and 73% of the city's residents approved of U\u0161akovs' performance in December 2010. In 2011, LPP/LC party was dissolved and Harmony started ruling alone. In late 2012 Harmony united with political party Honor to serve Riga to participate in 2013 elections", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235699-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Riga City Council election\nAs a result of the election, Harmony and Honor to Serve Riga union received 39 of 60 seats and in June Nils U\u0161akovs was re-elected as mayor of Riga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235700-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rio Quente Resorts Tennis Classic\nThe 2013 Rio Quente Resorts Tennis Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Rio Quente, Brazil between 6 and 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235700-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rio Quente Resorts Tennis Classic, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235700-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rio Quente Resorts Tennis Classic, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235701-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rio Quente Resorts Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nGuido Andreozzi and Marcel Felder were the defending champions, but they chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235701-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rio Quente Resorts Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nFabiano de Paula and Marcelo Demoliner defeated Ricardo Hocevar and Leonardo Kirche 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235702-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rio Quente Resorts Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nGuilherme Clezar was the defending champion, but lost to James Duckworth in the quarterfinals. Rajeev Ram won the tournament by defeating Andr\u00e9 Ghem 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235703-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rizal local elections\nLocal elections will be held in the Province of Rizal on May 13, 2013 as part of the 2013 general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a municipal/city mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and representatives for the two districts of Rizal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235703-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rizal local elections, Gubernatorial election\nIncumbent governor Casimiro Ynares III is running for mayor of Antipolo. His mother, former governor Rebecca A. Ynares is running in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235703-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rizal local elections, Provincial Board elections\nAll 2 Districts of Rizal will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235703-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rizal local elections, City and Municipality Elections\nAll municipalities and City of Antipolo in Rizal will elect mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty and vice-mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235704-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Road to the Kentucky Derby\nThe 2013 Road to the Kentucky Derby /\u02c8d\u025c\u02d0rbi/ was based on a points system that replaced the previous system which consisted of about 185 graded stakes races worldwide. The series is divided into two phases, the Kentucky Derby Prep Season and the Kentucky Derby Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235704-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Road to the Kentucky Derby\nThe top 20 point earners earned a spot in the Kentucky Derby starting gate. Up to 24 horses could enter the race and four horses can be listed as \"also eligible\" and would be ranked in order accordingly in case any horse(s) be scratched prior to the race. If two or more horses have the same number of points, the tiebreaker to get into the race will be earnings in non-restricted stakes races, whether or not they are graded. In the event of a tie, those horses will divide equally the points they would have received jointly had one beaten the other. Horses listed as \"also eligible\" are not allowed to participate in the race once wagering is opened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235704-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Road to the Kentucky Derby\nThe 2013 season consisted of 36 races, 19 races for the Kentucky Derby Prep Season and 17 races for the Kentucky Derby Championship Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235705-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Road to the Kentucky Oaks\nThe 2013 Road to the Kentucky Oaks was a points system by which three-year-old fillies qualified for the 2013 Kentucky Oaks. It consisted of 35 races: 20 races for the Kentucky Oaks Prep Season and 15 races for the Kentucky Oaks Championship Season. The point system replaced a previous qualifying system which was based on graded stakes earnings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235705-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Road to the Kentucky Oaks\nBeholder was the leading qualifier for the 2013 Oaks, having earned a total of 164 points by winning the Breeders' Cup Juvenile (10 points), Las Virgenes (50 points) and Santa Anita Oaks (100 points), plus a 2nd-place finish in the Santa Ynez (4 points). She would finish second in the race to Princess of Sylmar, who qualified with 50 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235706-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Robert Morris Colonials football team\nThe 2013 Robert Morris Colonials football team represented Robert Morris University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 20th-year head coach Joe Walton and played their home games at Joe Walton Stadium. They were a member of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 5\u20136, 3\u20133 in NEC play to finish in a three way tie for third place. Head coach Joe Walton retired at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235707-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester Knighthawks season\nThe Rochester Knighthawks were a lacrosse team based in Rochester, New York, that played in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2013 season was the 19th in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235707-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester Knighthawks season\nThe Knighthawks finished the season second in the East division with an 8-8 record. But for the second straight year, they got hot in the playoffs, defeating the Philadelphia Wings, Minnesota Swarm, and Washington Stealth to win their second straight NLL Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235707-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester Knighthawks season, Regular season, Final 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235707-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester Knighthawks season, Transactions, Entry Draft\nThe 2012 NLL Entry Draft took place on October 1, 2012. The Knighthawks made the following selections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235708-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester Rattlers season\nThe 2013 Rochester Rattlers season is the 11th season for the Rochester Rattlers of Major League Lacrosse and third since the Chicago Machine rebranded themselves as the Rattlers after the original franchise relocated to Toronto. The Rattlers will try to improve upon their 7-7 record in 2012, which was not good enough to clinch a playoff spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235709-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester mayoral election\nThe Rochester Mayoral Election of 2013 took place on November 5, 2013 in the City of Rochester, New York, United States. Democratic Mayor Thomas Richards, who first took office following Robert Duffy's resignation to take office of Lieutenant-Governor of New York in 2011, ran for reelection and was defeated in both the Democratic Primary and the general election by former City Council President Lovely A. Warren. Green Party candidate Alex White also ran and received a notable 5% of the vote. Considered a major upset victory, Lovely Warren defeated the incumbent mayor Richards in their party's primary against most major polling predictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235709-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester mayoral election, Background\nIn May 2010, Rochester Mayor Robert Duffy was chosen by Andrew Cuomo to be his lieutenant gubernatorial nominee. They won on November 2, 2010 with 62% of the vote. Upon Cuomo's victory in the 2010 New York Gubernatorial Election, Duffy selected deputy mayor Thomas Richards to succeed him as interim-Mayor of Rochester, which he served from December 31, 2010 to January 18, 2011, when Richards resigned to ensure he could run in a special election without violating terms of the Hatch Act, which could have jeopardized federal funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235709-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester mayoral election, Background\nFollowing his resignation, a special election was called to determine who would hold the office of mayor until the following election year. Former Rochester mayor William A. Johnson, Jr. ran against Democrat-backed Richards in the race, which took place on March 29, 2011. Richards ultimately won the election with 48.48% of the vote to former Mayor Johnson's 41.72%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235709-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester mayoral election, Primary\nRichards announced on February 6, 2013 that he would run for re-election for a full term as Rochester mayor. He was challenged by city council president Lovely A. Warren. Considered the favorite to win and ahead in most major polls, Richards did not focus much attention to campaigning, instead choosing to continue his duties as mayor and spending time at home in the midst of a family emergency. In contrast, Warren spent much time on the campaign trail, going door to door and engaging with community leaders. Richards lost the Democratic primary to City Council President Lovely A. Warren on September 10, 2013 57% to 42%. The defeat was considered a major upset, as Richards was better funded and led in the pre-vote polling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235709-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester mayoral election, General Election\nFollowing his defeat in the Democratic Primary, Richards ended his active campaign and endorsed Warren for mayor, but was kept as the chosen candidate on the Independence and Working Families lines. The Independence Party created the grass roots Turn Out for Tom campaign. In response, Richards stated that he would serve if re-elected mayor but denied having any contact with the Independence Party campaign. Richards lost the election to Warren 55% to 39% on November 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235709-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rochester mayoral election, General Election\nFollowing the election, Lovely Warren was inaugurated in January 2014 and became the first female mayor of the city. Many of Richards' proposals and policies were kept under the Warren Administration including the construction of the new RGRTA bus terminal and the Inner Loop urban renewal project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235710-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rock Cup\nThe 2013 Rock Cup started on 16 March 2013 and ended on 1 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235710-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rock Cup, First round\nThe matches took place from 16 to 19 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235710-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rock Cup, Second round\nThe matches took place from 13 to 20 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235710-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rock Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe matches took place from 11 to 14 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 28], "content_span": [29, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season\nRoger Federer's 2013 tennis season officially began on 14 January at the start of the 2013 Australian Open. This season saw Federer suffer a considerable decline in form, dropping five places to number 7 in the world, his lowest ranking in 11 years, and seeing his run of 36 consecutive grand slam quarterfinals ended by a second round defeat at Wimbledon. This year also marked the first time since 2002 where Federer did not reach a major final. His only title win of the season was a victory at the Gerry Weber Open in Halle, an ATP 250 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season\nThe decline in form can be largely attributed to the severe back injuries Federer suffered for much of the season, hampering his play from March through October. He first injured his back in the early rounds of Indian Wells and then re-injured it in the quarterfinals of Hamburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Australian Open\nFederer kicked off his 2013 season with an appearance at the Australian Open, where he finished in the semifinals last year. Federer began his campaign against Frenchman Beno\u00eet Paire in the first round, and swept him in straight sets. He defeated long-time rival Nikolay Davydenko in the second round in straight sets, and faced Australian Bernard Tomic in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 108], "content_span": [109, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Australian Open\nAfter Federer converted on a break point in the first game and held to win the set, Tomic attempted to level the game, saving six break points and bringing the second set to a tiebreak, in which he had an early lead, but Federer overcame the deficit and won the tiebreak. Federer then broke Tomic twice and gave up only one game in the third set, winning the match in under two hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 108], "content_span": [109, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Australian Open\nFederer defeated big serving Canadian Milos Raonic in the fourth round in straight sets, having not dropped neither a set nor a service game through the fourth round. With the win, he also extended his record of consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinal appearances to 35, a run which extends back to the 2004 Wimbledon Championships. Federer faced Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the quarterfinals, where he and Tsonga traded breaks in the first set and brought the set to a tiebreak, which he won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 108], "content_span": [109, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0002-0003", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Australian Open\nTsonga took advantage of Federer's unforced errors in the second set, breaking his serve and holding to level out the match at one set all. The third set saw Federer and Tsonga again trading breaks and playing a tiebreak, which Federer won. Tsonga recovered from a triple break point in the fourth set, and broke Federer's serve and held the lead to bring the match to a fifth set, where Federer broke Tsonga and won the match after four match points and three and a half hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 108], "content_span": [109, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0002-0004", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Australian Open\nWith his win, Federer advanced to his tenth straight semifinal at the Australian Open. Federer played Andy Murray in the semifinals, and found himself down one set after Murray took advantage of Federer's poor first serves to break Federer's serve and hold for the lead. The second set went to a tiebreak, which Federer won after capitalizing on some mistakes from Murray. Murray then came back in the third set, and, with the help of two line calls that went in his favor, broke Federer and held to regain a one-set lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 108], "content_span": [109, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0002-0005", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Australian Open\nFederer held an early lead in the fourth set after breaking Murray, but Murray broke back on an unforced error from Federer. Momentum then shifted in favor of Murray, who came close to winning the match, but Federer forced the set to go to a tiebreak, which he won. In the fifth set, Federer was unable to respond to aces and winners from Murray, giving up two break points and losing the match in four hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 108], "content_span": [109, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Rotterdam Open\nFederer next played at the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament in Rotterdam, entering as defending champion. He played Grega \u017demlja of Slovenia in the first round, and blew past him, winning in straight sets in less than an hour. He next played wildcard Thiemo de Bakker of the Netherlands, and defeated him in straight sets in just over an hour. He played Frenchman Julien Benneteau in the quarterfinals, and found himself down one set after unforced errors led to his serve being broken. Federer then fought to secure the second set, but ultimately failed after missing a break point opportunity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 107], "content_span": [108, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Dubai Tennis Championships\nFollowing the loss of his Rotterdam title, Federer next attempted to defend his title at the Dubai Tennis Championships in Dubai. He faced Tunisian wildcard Malek Jaziri in the first round, and dropped the first set after Jaziri secured his first and only break point in the match. Federer then took charge of the match, winning twelve of the next fourteen games to secure a win. In the second round, Federer played Marcel Granollers of Spain, and broke Granollers' serve once in each set en route to a straight-sets victory. Federer then played perennial rival Nikolay Davydenko in the third round, and flew past him in less than an hour to a second straight-sets victory. He lost to Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych in the semifinals in a close match, while blowing three match points in the second set tiebreak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 119], "content_span": [120, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Indian Wells Masters\nAt the first Masters 1000 series event of the year, Federer once again entered as defending champion at Indian Wells. After receiving a bye in the first round, he faced Denis Istomin of Uzbekistan in the second round and defeated him in straight sets, completing the match in just under an hour. He played Croatian Ivan Dodig in the third round and advanced again in straight sets, dropping only four games en route to a victory in just over an hour. Federer next faced Swiss compatriot Stanislas Wawrinka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 113], "content_span": [114, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Australian Open and early hard court season, Indian Wells Masters\nHe won the match in three tight sets, nearly losing the match after Wawrinka broke in the third set. However, Federer held on to win the last set, and found perennial foe Rafael Nadal in the quarterfinals. Federer, however, entered the match having suffered a back injury in the previous round and was defeated in straight sets. He then continued with his pre-planned decision to take a two-month break from the sport, skipping the mandatory Masters 1000 tournament in Miami under an exception from the ATP, which allows older players to relax their schedules, and the non-mandatory Masters 1000 tournament in Monte Carlo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 113], "content_span": [114, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Spring clay court season and French Open, Madrid Open\nFederer next competed on clay at the Mutua Madrid Open, where he was the defending champion. Federer played Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek of the Czech Republic in the second round after a bye in the first round, and defeated him in straight sets. Federer then met Kei Nishikori of Japan in the third round. In the first set, Federer allowed Nishikori to convert on a break point opportunity, and Nishikori held the advantage to take the set. Federer came back in the second set, relying on strong shot-making to win five straight games and level the match at one set all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Spring clay court season and French Open, Madrid Open\nFederer's serve faltered in the third, and uncharacteristic errors from Federer, as well as strong play from Nishikori, meant that the Japanese number 1 defeated Federer for the first time in his career. This was Federer's earliest exit at the event since 2003, when the event was held as the Stuttgart Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Spring clay court season and French Open, Italian Open\nFederer played at the Italian Open in Rome, where he finished in the semifinals the previous year. After a bye in the first round, Federer played Potito Starace in the second round, dropping only seven points on serve and breaking Starace four times en route to a victory in straight sets in 51 minutes. He faced Gilles Simon of France in the third round, and raced past Simon in similar style, winning in just over an hour after again dropping only three games. Federer played Jerzy Janowicz of Poland in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 102], "content_span": [103, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Spring clay court season and French Open, Italian Open\nIn the first set, Federer and Janowicz traded games until Federer found a late break point, which he converted to take the set. Janowicz broke Federer in the first game of the second set and held to serve for the set, but Federer broke back and won the tiebreak to clinch the match. He played Beno\u00eet Paire of France in the semifinals. Paire held an early lead in the first before Federer broke back and won a tight tiebreak. Federer then broke early in the second set and held to win in straight sets. He played Rafael Nadal in his first final of the year, but fell short against a hot-handed Nadal, committing multiple unforced errors and having his serve broken five times en route to a loss in straight sets in just over an hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 102], "content_span": [103, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Spring clay court season and French Open, French Open\nFederer next competed at the French Open, where he finished in the semifinals the previous year. He played qualifier Pablo Carre\u00f1o-Busta of Spain in the opening round, and won in straight sets, converting all seven of his break points to move into the second round, where he swept past qualifier Somdev Devvarman of India, dropping only five games en route to a victory in straight sets. He faced Frenchman Julien Benneteau, who had beaten him earlier in the year, in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Spring clay court season and French Open, French Open\nAfter a break of serve by Benneteau to start off the match, Federer rebounded and took the first set. Benneteau tried to make inroads on Federer's serve, but Federer continued to dominate, winning the next two sets to move to the fourth round, where he faced Frenchman Gilles Simon. Federer won the first set comfortably, but Simon began to fight back. Federer lost his rhythm after he fell on the baseline in the second set, and Simon capitalized to take the set and level the match at one set all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Spring clay court season and French Open, French Open\nSimon took advantage of more unforced errors from Federer and won the third set, but Federer found his rhythm again and broke Simon's serve in the fourth, holding to level the match. Federer then secured an early break in the fifth and held to win the match, becoming the fourth person to have 900 wins on the ATP World Tour. He played Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the quarterfinals, where, after a decent start, Federer lost an early break advantage to Tsonga, and Tsonga broke again to take the first set. The next two sets saw Tsonga take a foothold on the match as numerous errors plagued Federer. Tsonga eventually won the match in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season and Wimbledon, Halle Open\nFederer played at the Gerry Weber Open in Halle, where he was the finalist last year. He played German wildcard Cedrik-Marcel Stebe in the second round. Though Federer struggled with his serve and made quite a few errors, including one in the first set which allowed Stebe to break his serve, Federer dominated most of the match and won in straight sets, marking his fortieth win at the Gerry Weber Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season and Wimbledon, Halle Open\nHe played German wildcard Mischa Zverev in the quarterfinals and swept past Zverev, not allowing him any games and breaking him a total of six times en route to a victory in forty minutes. Federer achieved his second double bagel of his career, his first since he double-bageled Gast\u00f3n Gaudio at the 2005 Tennis Masters Cup. He then faced defending champion Tommy Haas in the semifinal. In a tight first set, Federer gave up a break point in the sixth game of the set, and Haas held the lead to win the set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season and Wimbledon, Halle Open\nThe second set saw Federer win an early break point and level the match at one set all. Federer then broke Haas to love and held the lead to win the match. In the final, Federer played Russian Mikhail Youzhny. After wasted break point opportunities and unforced errors led to Youzhny edging Federer in the first set tiebreak, Federer improved his game and won the match to claim his first title of the season, tying John McEnroe for the third-most number of ATP titles won by a male player in the Open Era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season and Wimbledon, Wimbledon\nFederer played at the Wimbledon Championships, where he was defending champion and vying to match Rafael Nadal's record of 8 titles at a single Grand Slam tournament, which Nadal had just achieved at the French Open two weeks earlier. Federer played Victor H\u0103nescu of Romania in the first round, and dropped only five games en route to a straight-sets win in just over an hour. He played 116th-ranked Sergiy Stakhovsky of Ukraine in the second round, and had a one-set lead before dropping the next three sets and losing the match, unable to hold leads and convert on crucial points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season and Wimbledon, Wimbledon\nThe loss ended Federer's record streak of 36 consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinal appearances. This also marked his earliest loss at a Grand Slam tournament since the 2003 French Open, his first loss to a player ranked outside of the top 100 since losing to Richard Gasquet in 2005 (ranked 101st at the time). With Rafael Nadal's loss in the first round, this also was the first time ever that, when both of them were entered in a Grand Slam, that neither have made it to the second week. All of this, coupled with a slew of other player withdrawals, retirements, and upsets have led that day to be referred to as Black Wednesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 91], "content_span": [92, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer clay court season\nFederer added two outdoor clay events to his schedule before the US Open hard court season begins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer clay court season, German Open\nFederer played at the German Open Tennis Championships in Hamburg as a wildcard. Federer won the title in Hamburg four times when it was an ATP Masters Series event, but did not play there since 2008, when he was a finalist. Federer announced before his first round match in Hamburg that he was changing his racquet for the second time in his career (the first change occurred in 2002 just prior to the tournament in Hamburg of that year), upgrading from a 90-inch frame to a 98-inch frame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer clay court season, German Open\nHis first match was against German Daniel Brands, and he earned his first victory with his new racquet, rallying against strong play by Brands after dropping the first set. He next played Jan H\u00e1jek of the Czech Republic, and defeated him in straight sets after wasting many break and match points. He played Florian Mayer in the quarterfinals, and dropped his first set against Mayer in a tough three-set victory. In the semifinals, he played qualifier Federico Delbonis of Argentina for the first time, but lost in straight set, failing to convert break and set points as Delbonis took advantage to win both set tiebreaks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer clay court season, Swiss Open\nFederer next played at the Swiss Open. It was the first time Federer had participated in the Swiss Open since 2004. The tournament honored Federer's return by presenting him with a Swiss cow named Desiree. Despite the excitement over his return to the event, he was defeated in his opening match by Daniel Brands, his first opening-match loss since Rome in 2010. After the loss, Federer revealed that he had suffered a serious back injury several days before in Hamburg, and that he had taken anti-inflammatories and had been unable to practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, US Open Series and US Open, Cincinnati Masters\nAfter withdrawing from the Rogers Cup, Federer played at the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati, where he was the champion last year. Following a first-round bye, Federer played German Philipp Kohlschreiber in the second round. After speeding through the opening set, Federer found some trouble against Kohlschreiber in the second set, but managed to convert his second match point during the set tiebreak, keeping his winning streak against Kohlschreiber alive with a straight sets win. He played Tommy Haas in the third round, and came close to losing after Haas held a one-set, one-break advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, US Open Series and US Open, Cincinnati Masters\nFederer rallied to force a third set and won the match in under two hours. Federer next played Rafael Nadal in the quarterfinals. He broke Nadal late in the first set, playing fast and aggressive tennis with sharply angled, clean and powerful groundstrokes off both wings and frequent attacks at the net. He had opportunities to threaten Nadal on Nadal's serve in the second set, but this went awry, as Nadal continued to fight and as Federer began to rack up unforced errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0014-0002", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, US Open Series and US Open, Cincinnati Masters\nFederer's serve folded at the end of the second set and the start of the third, but he saved four match points on Nadal's serve before a wide forehand from Nadal on match point went unchallenged by Federer. Federer fell down the rankings again to No. 7, his lowest in over a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, US Open Series and US Open, US Open\nAt the US Open in New York Federer played Slovenian Grega \u017demlja in the first round, and won in straight sets after a lapse of concentration resulted in a drop of his serve in the third set. He next played Carlos Berlocq of Argentina in the second round, and swept him in straight sets, dropping only six games en route to a win in just over one and a half hours. He next played Adrian Mannarino in the third round, and won in similar fashion, holding his serve and dropping only five games in the match. In a surprise, Federer then lost to Tommy Robredo, a player he had beaten ten straight times, in straight sets in another error strewn display.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Asian Swing, Shanghai Masters\nFederer's first post-US Open tournament was at the Shanghai Masters. He defeated Andreas Seppi in the second round in straight sets, but dropped his next match in the third round against Ga\u00ebl Monfils in three sets. The loss marked only his second defeat against the Frenchman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, European Indoor Season, Swiss Indoors\nFederer next played in the Swiss Indoors. He defeated Adrian Mannarino in the first round in straight sets, and then came back from a one-set deficit against Denis Istomin in under two hours. In the quarterfinal, Roger Federer faced Grigor Dimitrov, nicknamed \"Baby Federer\", for the first time. Dimitrov was defeated in straight sets, but Federer had to recover from a service break down and force a tie-break decision in the second set. In the semifinal round, Federer defeated Vasek Pospisil in a very tight three-setter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, European Indoor Season, Swiss Indoors\nAfter winning the first set comfortably by breaking Pospisil's serve twice, Federer served for the match in the second set but squandered the opportunity. Then, Federer's serve was broken early in the deciding set, but he managed to return the service break and was able to serve for the match successfully at his second chance. Federer faced Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro for the title, in a repeat of the previous year's final that saw del Potro emerge again victorious. He fell short again in another three-set battle against the Argentine. Despite the loss, the match saw Federer display significant improvement in form after a sluggish run to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, European Indoor Season, Paris Masters\nFederer next played in Paris at the BNP Paribas Masters, knowing that he would qualify for the ATP World Tour Finals if he won his opening match against Kevin Anderson. With his win over Anderson, he became the sixth player to qualify (seventh if including the injured Andy Murray) for the Finals. He made it to the semifinals by subsequently beating Philipp Kohlschreiber and Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro, the latter whom he faced less than a week earlier in the final in Basel. His win over del Potro was only his second of the season over a top-10 player, first since January, and only top-5 win thus far. Federer met Novak Djokovic in the semifinals for their 30th career meeting, where he ultimately lost in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, European Indoor Season, ATP World Tour Finals\nFederer entered the ATP World Tour Finals as the No. 6 seed and was drawn in group B with Novak Djokovic, Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro, and Richard Gasquet. Before the tournament began, Federer received three ATP World Tour Awards: the Fans' Favourite Award for a record eleventh consecutive time, the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship award for a record ninth time, and the Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award for a record-tying second time. Federer played his first round-robin match against Djokovic, only 3 days after their last match in Paris, and he again lost in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, European Indoor Season, ATP World Tour Finals\nFederer had not lost an opening match in the World Tour Finals since 2008. Federer then defeated Gasquet in straight sets. With Novak Djokovic having won the group just after two round-robin matches, Federer played his last round-robin match against del Potro. It was the third match between them in the last three weeks of the season. Federer won, but not without saving a breakpoint, and booked a place in the semifinals against Group A winner Rafael Nadal, who had won all his three round-robin matches and successfully clinched the No. 1 ranking for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, European Indoor Season, ATP World Tour Finals\nFederer lost the semifinal match in straight sets, only managing to break Nadal's serve once in the first set. It was Federer's fourth consecutive defeat against Nadal in the 2013 season. At the end of the tournament, Federer overtook Tomas Berdych in the singles rankings and finished the season as world No. 6, his lowest since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 93], "content_span": [94, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235711-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Roger Federer tennis season, Yearly records, Head-to-head matchups\nRoger Federer had a 45\u201317 (72.6%) match win-loss record in the 2013 season. His record against players who were part of the ATP Rankings Top Ten at the time of their meetings was 4\u201310 (28.6%). The following list is ordered by number of wins:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup\nThe 2013 Rogers Cup presented by National Bank was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 124th edition (for the men) and the 112th (for the women) of the Canadian Open, and was part of the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 of the 2013 ATP World Tour, and of the WTA Premier 5 tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. The men's event was held at the Uniprix Stadium in Montreal, from August 3 to August 11 and the women's and legends events at the Rexall Centre in Toronto, from August 3 to August 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, Points and prize money, Prize Money\nThe total prize money pot for 2013 was $3,496,085, an increase of around $800,000 from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wild cards into the main singles draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, ATP singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry from the singles qualifying draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wild cards into the main singles draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, WTA singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry from the singles qualifying draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, Finals, Men's doubles\nAlexander Peya / Bruno Soares defeated Colin Fleming / Andy Murray, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235712-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup, Finals, Women's doubles\nJelena Jankovi\u0107 / Katarina Srebotnik defeated Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld / Kv\u011bta Peschke, 5-7, 6-1, [10-6]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235713-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, but lost to Robert Lindstedt and Daniel Nestor in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235714-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nRafael Nadal defeated Milos Raonic in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20132, to win the Men's Singles title at the 2013 Canadian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235714-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nNovak Djokovic was the two-time defending champion, but lost in semifinals to Nadal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235714-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nFor the first time since 1992, five Canadian players reached the second round or better. Milos Raonic and Vasek Pospisil both reached the semifinals where they played against each other, with Raonic becoming the first native finalist since Robert B\u00e9dard won the title in 1958.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235714-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235715-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKlaudia Jans-Ignacik and Kristina Mladenovic were the defending champions, but Jans-Ignacik could not participate on account of becoming a mother in early 2013. Mladenovic played alongside Galina Voskoboeva, but lost in the first round to Julia G\u00f6rges and Barbora Z\u00e1hlavov\u00e1-Str\u00fdcov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235715-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles, 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-00235716-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nPetra Kvitov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but she lost to Sorana C\u00eerstea in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235716-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nWorld No. 1 Serena Williams won the title for the third time, defeating C\u00eerstea 6\u20132, 6\u20130 in the final. The victory gave Williams her eighth title of 2013 and fifty-fourth career WTA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235716-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rogers Cup \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235717-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rolex Sports Car Series\nThe 2013 Rolex Sports Car Series season was the fourteenth and final season of the Grand American Road Racing Association's premier series, before merging up with the American Le Mans Series in 2014. It began on January 26, with the 51st running of the 24 Hours of Daytona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235717-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rolex Sports Car Series\nAs the NASCAR Holdings acquisition of Panoz Motor Sports, and IMSA, had already taken place, this season is technically one of two series that formed the 43rd season of the IMSA GT Championship that dates to 1971.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235717-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rolex Sports Car Series, Schedule\nThe schedule was released on September 28, 2012 and features the addition of three new circuits for the series; Circuit of the Americas, Kansas Speedway, and Road Atlanta. Also, the August 10 event at Road America will be a combined weekend with the American Le Mans Series, showcasing the organizations' recent merger. Previous races at Homestead-Miami Speedway, New Jersey Motorsports Park, Watkins Glen Short Course and Circuit Gilles Villeneuve do not return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235717-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rolex Sports Car Series, Championship standings\nChampionship points are awarded based on finishing positions as shown below. The exception is at the 24 Hours of Daytona, where a minimum of 15th place points are awarded so as not to excessively penalize a low finish when there are generally more entrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235718-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Maxima\nThe 2013 Roma Maxima was the 75th edition of the Italian semi-classic cycle race previously known as Giro del Lazio. The Giro del Lazio has not been raced since 2008, and the 2013 edition was the first one with the new name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235718-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Maxima\nThe race was scheduled on 3 March 2013; it started on Via Appia Antica in Rome, passed through the cobblestone section of the ancient Appian Way and the steep climbs of the Roman hills, and ended again in Rome in Via dei Fori Imperiali, near the Coliseum, after 180 kilometres (110\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235718-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Maxima\nThe French Blel Kadri won the race after a 127\u00a0km (78.9\u00a0mi) breakaway. Kadri, together with Andr\u00e9 Cardoso, Christophe Premont, Pim Ligthart and Albert Timmer, got away after 53\u00a0km (32.9\u00a0mi); on the climb to Campi di Annibale he dropped the other riders and powered on alone with 40\u00a0km (24.9\u00a0mi) to go. A five-rider group, among whom there was also Vincenzo Nibali, tried to chase Kadri down, but Kadri managed to hold the gap all the way to Rome. Lampre\u2013Merida's Filippo Pozzato won the sprint for the second place, and Grega Bole (Vacansoleil\u2013DCM) was third. Since Roma Maxima is not a World Tour event, riders were not allowed to use the radio during the race; so both Pozzato and Bole did not know that Kadri was still away, and Pozzato celebrated on the finish line thinking he had won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235718-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Maxima, Teams\nThe start list included 16 teams\u00a0\u2013 9 ProTeams and 7 Professional Continental Teams\u00a0\u2013 and a total of 128 riders. Among them, the pre-race favourites were Movistar Team pairing Alejandro Valverde and Giovanni Visconti, Lampre\u2013Merida's Damiano Cunego and Filippo Pozzato, Ag2r\u2013La Mondiale rider Carlos Betancur and Oscar Gatto of Vini Fantini\u2013Selle Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235719-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Open\nThe 2013 Roma Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Rome, Italy between 6 and 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235719-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235719-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 58], "content_span": [59, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235719-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 58], "content_span": [59, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235719-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received entry as an alternate into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 58], "content_span": [59, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235720-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Open \u2013 Doubles\nJamie Delgado and Ken Skupski were the defending champions, but decided not to participate together. Delgado played alongside Andreas Siljestr\u00f6m, but they lost to Philipp Marx and Florin Mergea in the second round, while Skupski partnered with Andreas Beck, but they lost to Dustin Brown and Rameez Junaid in the first round. Andre Begemann and Martin Emmrich defeated Marx and Mergea 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235721-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Roma Open \u2013 Singles\nJerzy Janowicz was the defending champion but decided to participate in the 2013 Mutua Madrid Open instead. Alja\u017e Bedene defeated Filippo Volandri 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235722-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian International Darts Open\nThe 2013 Romanian International Darts Open was the 4th edition of Romanian International Darts Open, organised by the Romanian Darts Federation. The tournament took place 27\u201329 October 2013 at Hotel Intercontinental 5* in Bucharest, Romania. The winner was Tony O'Shea who beat Ron Meulenkamp form Netherlands, in the final, by 6 legs to 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235722-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian International Darts Open\nThe tournament had, as special guests, the English professional darts players, Darryl Fitton (then rank 3 BDO) and Tony O'Shea (then rank 4 BDO).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project\nThe 2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project were a series of protests in Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca and dozens of other cities in Romania and abroad against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 mining project. The protesters say that the mining project would destroy the environment and heritage of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 and demand the withdrawal of a law which would enable this project to commence. In Bucharest, protests were held every evening in the University Square and marches were held each Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project\nAlthough at first largely ignored by the world press, the demonstrations are starting to receive more significant worldwide attention both by the media and the general population via the use of social networks. The protests were dubbed by Romanian press and not only Indignants Movement (Romanian: Mi\u0219carea Indigna\u021bilor) and Romanian Autumn (Romanian: Toamna Rom\u00e2neasc\u0103).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Background\nThe Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project was initiated by Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Gold Corporation, a company of which the largest shareholder is the Canada-based Gabriel Resources. The company was given in 2000, without bidding, a license for mining gold. The open-pit mining project will use cyanide to extract gold and it is expected to require the razing of three villages and destroying four mountain tops. If approved, it would be Europe's largest open-pit gold mine and it will use 12,000 tonnes of cyanide yearly, giving a yield of 350 tonnes of gold and 1,500 tonnes of silver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 68], "content_span": [69, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Background\nThe Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 campaign was originally organized by locals of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 who have refused to be relocated and have been battling the corporation for years in the courts. The activists claim that the project would cause an environmental disaster, that it would destroy the ancient Roman archeological sites and that the project involved handling assets to the Canadian company, while the Romanian state would earn only 6% out of the project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 68], "content_span": [69, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Background\nWithin the last 14 years, the company was not able to obtain all the needed permits due to failure to comply with the Romanian environment laws. The ruling Social Democrats made a campaign promise before the 2012 legislative elections to stop the project, but they changed their mind after winning the elections In order for the project to continue, the Romanian government approved a new draft law in late August 2013 and forwarded it to the Parliament which had to vote on it in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 68], "content_span": [69, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Background\nA concern was the fact that the legislation would give the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Gold Corporation the right to give compulsory purchase orders to the residents of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 who refused to sell their houses and lands. The draft law also sets time limits for the state authorities to grant all permits, regardless of potential infringements of national legislation or of court rulings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 68], "content_span": [69, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests\nThe protests tend to follow a weekly pattern, with the first day of protests, Sunday, 1 September being the starter for this routine. To this day, all over the country the major protests are held on Sundays, with the weekdays being reserved for local or minor protests, the Saturdays for mass alternative ways of spreading information about the protest and the Sundays peaking with the most people joining in all major cities. Since its beginning, every major Sunday protest has grown exponentially in numbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests\nThe protests were organized in cities across the country, with thousands of people in Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca. Protests were held across Europe, with an estimated 150\u2013200 Romanians and environmentalists protesting in London. The protests, organized during the evenings, involved the protesters blocking streets, drumming, singing and organizing sit-ins in the street. In Berlin and Brussels (in front of the UNESCO Headquarters), the protests included a die-in. In Chicago, members of the Romanian community, solidary with the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 protest movement, joined a spontaneous protest inside the consulate in Chicago. The protest took place at the Romanian Prime Minister's visit to the United States. People have made an open letter to Prime Minister Victor Ponta, through which they demand the ban of cyanide mining and shale gas exploitation in Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests\nSome protesters called upon President B\u0103sescu's and Prime-Minister Ponta's resignations, both politicians being supporters of the project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests\nThe 'Save Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103' campaign is now regarded as the largest civic movement in Romania since the 1989 revolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Rallies\nRallies are held every evening in Bucharest's University Square. They result every time in traffic delays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Rallies\nOn Tuesday, 10 September, in the middle of the street, in front of the University, a string quartet played to the protesters classical and modern music, including Metallica's Nothing Else Matters. The following Tuesday, near the fountain next to the University, a group of 50 dancers organized a flash mob dancing tango.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Rallies\nOn 21 September, nearly 7,000 people formed a human chain around the Palace of the Parliament. They were joined by thousands of cyclists, that marched around the building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Rallies\nOn 4 October, several paragliders from Cluj jumped from height at Dezmir Aerodrome, displaying messages for the salvation of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103. They were joined by dozens of young people coming to protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Rallies, Great Gathering and Proclamation of C\u00e2mpeni\nMore than 5,000 residents of C\u00e2mpeni, Alba County, gathered in city's centre to protest against cyanide mining project at Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 and against the Ponta Government. They were joined by thousands of activists from all major cities of the country. People are outraged because declarations of PM Victor Ponta who argued that in C\u00e2mpeni would protest extremist groups and that authorities are prepared to intervene. They accuse the entire political class of manipulation and betrayal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 120], "content_span": [121, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Rallies, Great Gathering and Proclamation of C\u00e2mpeni\nThe organizers of this event, supported by protesters, drew up a proclamation with clear and concise claims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 120], "content_span": [121, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Rallies, Great Gathering and Proclamation of C\u00e2mpeni\nColumn of protesters on Carol Boulevard, Bucharest, on 22 September", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 120], "content_span": [121, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Marches\nAs the media, particularly the TV stations, failed to cover properly the protests, the protesters marched each Sunday for hours throughout the neighbourhoods of Bucharest in order to spread the word of the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Marches\nAlso, slogans opposing the ongoing project of shale gas fracking were shouted and bystanders were invited to join. On 15 and 22 September, tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets again, including more than 22,000 in Bucharest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Incidents\nAlthough the protests are generally peaceful in conduct, some incidents were reported. In the first day of protests, a group of protesters tried to break into the government headquarters, but were stopped by gendarmes. Some teenagers who had joined the protesters jostled with law enforcement officers and threw firecrackers. In Cluj-Napoca, protesters lit smoke-producing objects. In Bucharest, Timi\u0219oara and Ia\u0219i, protesters installed tents on the roads, blocking the traffic on major arteries of circulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Incidents\nThe Minister of Culture, Daniel Barbu, was attacked by protesters with tomatoes in front of the prefecture in Cluj-Napoca on 13 September. The crowds demanded the resignation of the minister and displayed banners that read \"Barbu, gold mercenary, against the patrimony\" and \"Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 in UNESCO\". One of the protesters was forcibly removed from the minister's car by gendarmes. A similar incident took place in Bucharest historical centre, on 17 October, when Barbu faced an angry crowd after a debate in Club A. Protesters booed Barbu, who yelled at them \"You're neofascists\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Incidents\nAfter he got into his car, the windshield was broken when he closed the door. According to Barbu, this was due to stones thrown by protesters, but according to other reports, the windshield had been cracked beforehand, presumably by protesters. Following the incident three protesters were arrested and 40 others heard at local police station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Incidents\nOn 25 September, a group of 1,000 protesters gathered in front of a restaurant in C\u00e2mpeni, Alba County where the members of the Parliamentary Commission for Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 were dining, preventing them from getting out of its courtyard. Their minivan was able to exit following an intervention of the gendermes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Incidents\nThose attending the protests accuse the authorities of initiating repression against protesters, after, on 27 October and 3 November, protesters in Bucharest, Bra\u0219ov and Cluj-Napoca were hit and sprayed with irritant substances by gendarmes. Some of the anti-Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 demonstrators revealed by documents the aggressions of law enforcement and pressures they made (large fines, threats, etc.) to end anti-government protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protests, Incidents\nOn 9 December, about 50 Greenpeace activists from 10 countries entered the courtyard of the Parliament building and began to \"dig for gold\", displaying banners with the message \"Gold mining area\". Activists were seized by gendarmes and led to the sections 17 and 18 of the Police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protesters' profile\nThe protesters belonged to a wide range of social strata: students, teachers, priests, activists, artists, engineers, retired and unemployed people. They did not share a common ideology, but rather being a heterogenous mix of left and right wing-oriented people, including conservatives, libertarians, socialists, anticapitalists, nationalists, conspiracy theorists etc. Due to a vast majority of the protesters being young professionals, the protests have on occasion been called, both by its critics and its supporters, \"the protest of the hipsters\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protesters' profile\nAlthough there were relatively few, the existence of anti-capitalist young people among the protesters surprised many commentators. Dan Tapalag\u0103 of Hotnews argues that for people of his generation (who overthrew the Communist Party), it's hard to understand what the young people are thinking. Marius Ghilezan of Evenimentul Zilei blamed the parents for \"failing to give their children a pro-capitalist view\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protesters' profile\nThe protests had a non-hierarchical nature and no official leaders and have been organized through Facebook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protesters' profile\nAccording to sociologist Mircea Kivu, while during the first day of protests as many as 90% of the protesters were young, as the number of participants increased the following Sundays, the percentage of young people decreased to two-thirds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protesters' profile, Participants\nPrincess Brianna Caradja, a declared opponent of the mining project, was among those who joined the protests in Bucharest. She also took part in the nationwide protests in 2012. Other public figures participating in the demonstrations were the PDL deputy Theodor Paleologu, who said he would oppose the project at the vote in Parliament, and the vocalist of rock band Luna Amar\u0103, Mihnea Blidariu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 91], "content_span": [92, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Protesters' profile, Participants\nCsibi Magor, Romania Program Director of World Wide Fund for Nature, Claudiu Cr\u0103ciun, lecturer at the Faculty of Political Sciences, Remus Cernea, a well-known activist, and Cristian Neagoe, consultant at C\u0103rture\u0219ti Foundation were among those present during the protests in University Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 91], "content_span": [92, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Media portrayal\nProtesters accused the Romanian media of a media blackout, claiming that this was due to the fact that Gabriel Resources paid large sums of money in advertising throughout the years. According to Forbes Romania, Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Gold Corporation paid 5.4 million \u20ac-worth (rate card prices) of advertising in the Romanian newspapers during the last three years and about 550,000 \u20ac in TV ads last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Media portrayal\nOn 7 September, thousands of protesters marched to the publicly funded Romanian Television (TVR) headquarters to protest against the TVR's blackout, but this protest was not featured in its news program, either.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Media portrayal\nWith the exception of the national television channel Digi24, the first week of protests went uncovered in almost all mainstream mass-media, which led to a strong negative reaction in the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Media portrayal\nAs the protests became larger, it became impossible for the media to ignore the events. Still, the press was continuously criticised of presenting the news in a biased or distorted manner, in ways such as grossly minimising the activists' number to suggest the existence of a minor revolt or making use of TV personalities such as the popular media figure Mircea Badea to present the protesters as a mass of disoriented people with no defined purpose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Media portrayal\nSome media outlets accused the protesters and environmentalists of financial gains. For instance, TV show host Mihai G\u00e2dea of Antena 3 (Romania) accused Horia-Roman Patapievici of being a real estate speculator for owning land in Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103. Patapievici replied in an open letter that he owns only 1 square meter, as a symbol of solidarity with the people of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 and that it's not a real estate investment. Evenimentul Zilei accused the \"cunning NGO activists\" involved in the protests of receiving money from foreigners (such as George Soros's Open Society Foundations) and using the money to organize the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0034-0001", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Media portrayal\nLikewise, Mihai G\u00e2dea has addressed, in one of his shows, an insulting message to opposers of the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project in University Square. He called protesters \"B\u0103sescu's slaves\", adding that \"many of you don't know because of ketamine, high ketamine impedes you understanding things.\" He later defended himself, arguing that he didn't insult all the protesters. More than that, both Mihai G\u00e2dea and Mircea Badea were threatened on Facebook by angry protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Media portrayal\nThe protesters chanted against what they perceived as the corruption of press. Evenimentul Zilei claimed that this is part of a \"campaign of disinformation\" which intends to \"discredit the mainstream media\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 73], "content_span": [74, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Concessions\nPresident B\u0103sescu mentioned the possibility of having a national referendum regarding the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 project, but later on he clarified that it's just a possibility, not that he's starting a referendum. On 16 September, President Traian B\u0103sescu asked Prime-Minister Ponta to withdraw the law from the Parliament, arguing that it has clauses that breach the constitution and predicting that, if it passes, it would be rejected by the Constitutional Court of Romania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Concessions\nOn 9 September, Prime-Minister Victor Ponta predicted that the Romanian Parliament would reject the law and that the government would try to find other ways to increase jobs for that area. This news led to a fall of 48% of the shares of Gabriel Resources on the Toronto stock exchange and threats from the company to sue the Romanian state for damages of $4 billion if the law does not pass the Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Concessions\nNevertheless, PM Ponta changed his mind the following weeks, at first arguing that not doing the project \"would not be a big loss for Romania\" and a week later that it \"would be a negative signal to foreign investors\" and hence, \"a catastrophe for Romania\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Concessions\nCrin Antonescu, the leader of the National Liberal Party, announced that his party opposes the project.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Concessions\nOn 19 November, the Senate rejected the bill on Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103, in the form submitted by the Government. The Senate adopted with 119 votes \"for\", three votes \"against\" and six abstentions, the Report elaborated by the Special Parliamentary Commission on Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, that proposed the rejection of the bill as passed by the Government. The commission recommended a new draft law for all mining in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 69], "content_span": [70, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nFormer Minister of Culture R\u0103zvan Theodorescu claimed that the protests are \"a dangerous beginning\" and that the counterculture is dangerous for Romania because the protesters oppose all parties, which he argues to be \"the representatives of the Romanian people\". Former President Ion Iliescu dismissed the protesters as people \"don't know a great deal\" about the project and that they're acting like \"19th century poets horrified by industry\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nHistorian Vladimir Tism\u0103neanu applauded the protests, arguing that \"civic mobilization can stop government actions that are dangerous for the society\" and that \"the spirit of 1990 University Square is back\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nOn 4 September, Crown Princess Margareta of Romania transmitted, through a communique, the position of the royal family to the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project. Royal House of Romania, alongside the Romanian Academy, the Catholic and Orthodox churches and the civil society, supports, in every way possible, safeguarding and flowering virtues and values of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103, opposing the destruction of nature through gold cyanidation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nVictoria Stoiciu, an analyst at the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, considers that these manifestations are \"an unprecedented phenomenon since the 1990s\" and they are breaking the \"suffocating civic apathy in Romania\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nAdrian Sobaru, Romanian Television employee who in 2010 jumped from the balcony of the Chamber of Deputies in protest against austerity measures promoted by Emil Boc Government, decided, on 10 September, during his child's birthday, to go on hunger strike. He calls for depoliticization of public television, public radio and other important state institutions, solutions for Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 problem and compliance with all promises made by USL leadership during the electoral campaign. MediaSind Romanian Federation of Journalists solidarized with protests triggered by Adrian Sobaru and will inform the European Federation of Journalists, the International Federation of Journalists, the European Parliament and the European Commission about the manner in which Ponta Government will address the issues raised by Adrian Sobaru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nIn a press conference, President of the Senate, Crin Antonescu, said that the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project can not be sustained, considering also that the contrary public sentiment is more important than technical data. Likewise, the mayor of Cluj-Napoca, also former premier, Emil Boc, said on 4 September, in a press conference, that calls on the Government to withdraw the law on RMP, because is unconstitutional. Boc argues that it offers to a private company public powers that must belong only to the Government or public authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0046-0001", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nThe same opinion was adopted by President Traian B\u0103sescu, who also expressed his desire to pass responsibility for the project to state agencies. Liberal MEP Renate Weber said that she's ready to represent the Romanian State in a possible trial with Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Gold Corporation, arguing that the company is one of the type \"hit and run\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nOn 24 September, Mih\u0103i\u021b\u0103 Calimente, the head of the Foreign Intelligence Service Parliamentary Commission, claimed that ONGs financed by Soros acted like a catalyzer in the protests and that they can be \"a danger for national security\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nGreenpeace Romania announced on its official page that over 13,000 people ask lawmakers not to approve the \"disastrous\" bill for Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions\nAccording to Oxford Analytica, the protests have plunged the government into disarray and may bring it down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Involvement of the Romanian Intelligence Service\nThe Director of the Romanian Intelligence Service, George Maior and the Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service, Teodor Mele\u0219canu, were heard, on 30 September, by the parliamentary oversight commission on the subject of Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 117], "content_span": [118, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Involvement of the Romanian Intelligence Service\nGeorge Maior stated that the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project is a matter of national security, warning that some \"eco-anarchist structures\" might attempt to hijack the legitimate protest movements on the issue. He stressed that the Service has submitted, during 1999\u20132013, 500 informative notices on this topic, emphasizing that the institution he leads can not rule on whether the project will be implemented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 117], "content_span": [118, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Involvement of the Romanian Intelligence Service\nOn the same day, the Delegate Minister for Infrastructure Projects of National Interest and Foreign Investment, Dan \u0218ova, was heard saying that the operating license for the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 mining activities was granted to RMGC at the request of Canadian banks and the stock exchange. \u0218ova also said that the Romanian state would be obliged to give approval to RMGC to start mining operations at Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103, otherwise the company would appeal to the International Court of Arbitration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 117], "content_span": [118, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Protests in favor of the mining project\nProtests in favor of the mining project took place in Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 and surrounding localities, but at a lesser scale, their number not surpassing a few hundreds. They were largely orchestrated by RMGC themselves with the support of local administrations. 33 workers had blocked themselves into the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 museum shafts 300 metres below ground and threatened to go on hunger strike over fears jobs would be lost if the mining plans did not go ahead. They demanded the presence of Prime Minister Victor Ponta and PNL leader Crin Antonescu. On 15 September, the Prime Minister descended into the underground to discuss with the protesters, resulting in the end of their strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 108], "content_span": [109, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Protests in favor of the mining project\nIon Cristoiu, in an op-ed in Evenimentul Zilei, argued that Ponta's descent to the mine was a \"disgusting show\", reminding of Nicolae Ceau\u0219escu's propaganda and that Victor Ponta was simply an actor in a Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Gold Corporation ad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 108], "content_span": [109, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Protests in favor of the mining project\nWith the occasion of Miner's Day, 50 mayors in the Apuseni Mountains have sent to governors and lawmakers a call asking them to allow commencement of gold mining project in the village.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 108], "content_span": [109, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Protests in favor of the mining project\nOn 25 September, independent MP Remus Cernea and two other German environmentalists went to Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 to dialogue with supporters and opponents of the mining project. The three were aggressed by angry mobs. They were evacuated by police as they would have risked being lynched by residents and supporters of the project. Remus Cernea was trying to take part in discussions between the Parliamentary Commission and the syndicalists in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 108], "content_span": [109, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235723-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Romanian protests against the Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103 Project, Reactions, Protests in favor of the mining project\nIn an interview accorded to Pro TV, a Romanian television program, President Traian B\u0103sescu said that the protest at Ro\u0219ia Montan\u0103, pro-RMGC, is forged. The Head of State also said that he doesn't like \"to pretend that we enter into tourist galleries and say that we are the underground miners\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 108], "content_span": [109, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election\nMunicipal elections were held in Rome on 26\u201327 May 2013 to elect the Mayor of Rome and 48 members of the City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election\nThe outgoing Mayor Gianni Alemanno (PdL) stood in the election for a second term. The centre-left coalition candidate, heart surgeon Ignazio Marino (PD), was chosen by a multi-party primary election on 7 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election\nUnlike the 2008 municipal election, the number of municipi of the city had been cut down from 19 to 15, the same as the number of the members of the City Council, reduced from 60 to 48.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Background\nDespite Alemanno had repeatedly stated its intention to hold primary elections to choose the candidate of the centre-right coalition, on 2 September 2012 he announced his intention to run for a second term as Mayor of Rome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Background\nOn the contrary, the centre-left coalition decided to hold the primary election on 7 April 2013 to decide its mayoral candidate. There were 6 main candidates: five from Democratic Party and one from Left Ecology Freedom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Background\nAmong the most popular candidates there were Ignazio Marino, heart surgeon and senator, who was candidate in the 2009 Democratic Party leadership election; David Sassoli, journalist and MEP since 2009; and Paolo Gentiloni, former Minister of Communication in the Prodi II Cabinet. On 7 April Marino won the election and became the official candidate of the centre-left coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Voting System\nThe voting system is used for all mayoral elections in Italy, in the city with a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants. Under this system voters express a direct choice for the mayor or an indirect choice voting for the party of the candidate's coalition. If no candidate receives 50% of the votes, the top two candidates go to a second round after two weeks. This gives a result whereby the winning candidate may be able to claim majority support, although it is not guaranteed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Voting System\nFor municipi the voting system is the same, not referred to the mayor but to the president of the municipio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Voting System\nThe election of the City Council is based on a direct choice for the candidate with a preference vote: the candidate with the majority of the preferences is elected. The number of the seats for each party is determined proportionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Municipi election\nReduced from 19 to 15 in March 2013, municipi are governed by a president and a council of four members who are elected by its residents every five years. The municipi frequently cross the boundaries of the traditional, non-administrative divisions of the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Municipi election\nIn this election all 15 municipi were won by the center-left coalition, composed by Democratic Party and Left Ecology Freedom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Municipi election\nTable below shows the results for each municipio with the percentage for each coalition on the first round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235724-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Rome municipal election, Municipi election\nTable below shows the results for each municipio with the percentage for each coalition on the second round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235725-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Ronde van Drenthe World Cup\nThe 2013 Ronde van Drenthe World Cup was the 7th running of the women's Ronde van Drenthe World Cup, a women's bicycle race in the Netherlands. It was the first World Cup race of the 2013 UCI Women's Road World Cup. It was held on 9 March 2013 over a distance of 132.8 kilometres (82.5 miles), starting and finishing in Hoogeveen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235725-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Ronde van Drenthe World Cup\nMarianne Vos rode away from the peloton on the VAM-Berg in the last lap. Later Ellen van Dijk was able to join her in her escape. A few metres before the finish line Vos ourspinted Van Dijk and won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion\nA gas explosion caused by a large gas leak occurred in a residential area of Rosario, the third-largest city in Argentina, on August 6, 2013. A nearby building collapsed, and others were at high risk of structural failure. Twenty-two people died, and sixty were injured. Several organizations helped secure the area, search for survivors and aid people who lost their homes. Shortly after the explosion, the time needed for reconstruction was estimated at six months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion\nThe provincial judiciary launched an investigation into the cause of the explosion. Primary suspects were Litoral Gas (the natural-gas provider for Rosario) and an employee who carried out maintenance work at the building that day. Several public figures sent condolences, and most of the candidates for the 2013 primary elections suspended their political campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Explosion\nThe explosion occurred at 9:30\u00a0a.m. near the intersection of Oro\u00f1o and Salta Streets in central Rosario. Initial reports confirmed eight people dead, sixty injured and fifteen missing; eight more deaths were later confirmed. Searches the following day revealed twelve fatalities, ten of whom were identified. Of the people who were missing, some were found dead among the debris, while others were rescued. The search for survivors ended on August 13, with twenty-two people confirmed dead. A 65-year-old woman who had been injured died on October 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Explosion\nThe explosion was caused by a gas leak in a 30-year-old building. It severely damaged a nearby nine-story apartment building, causing it to collapse. M\u00f3nica Fein, mayor of Rosario, asked residents to avoid the area because of the risk that more buildings might collapse, and to ease the work of disaster management personnel. The streets were covered with broken glass from damaged buildings. Gas and electricity were immediately disconnected, and the national government sent an Argentine Federal Police task force to the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Explosion\nThe natural gas supplier, Litoral Gas, immediately began sealing the distribution pipe to the area. The Center for Ambulatory Medical Specialties of Rosario (Spanish: Centro de Especialidades M\u00e9dicas Ambulatorias de Rosario) managed the information about the dead and injured, and tents were prepared for those left homeless. Firefighters and other workers found people trapped on the upper floors of buildings and evacuated them over adjacent roofs. Although the building was not destroyed by the explosion, a high risk of structural failure remained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Investigation\nNeighbors reported to the press that they had smelled a gas leak several hours before the explosion and had called Litoral Gas. Company director Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Gonz\u00e1lez said that the company had received no such calls, and thought that callers might have dialed the 911 emergency number instead. Prosecutor Camporini reported at the trial that the building had experienced several gas leaks before the explosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Investigation\nThe provincial judiciary launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the explosion. The prosecution conducted a search and seizure at the offices of Litoral Gas to confirm the absence of customer complaints about the gas leak. Judge Juan Carlos Curto ordered the arrest of Carlos Osvaldo Garc\u00eda, an employee of the department responsible for gas service to the area. He was captured during the night, and his assistant Pablo Mi\u00f1o surrendered to police the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Investigation\nAccording to witnesses, one employee fled in a van before the explosion, when he realized the severity of the gas leak, while another remained to try to evacuate people from the endangered area. The van belonged to Garc\u00eda, who experienced an acute stress reaction during the trial. Curto checked the remnants of the gas employee's workshop to verify Garc\u00eda's testimony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Investigation\nProsecutor Graciela Arg\u00fcelles said that, according to the investigation, Litoral Gas ignored calls for help from Garc\u00eda, who was not properly trained to manage such a situation. The judge suggested that documents seized from Litoral Gas might prove the existence of customer reports of a gas leak. Curto thought that the employees might not bear sole responsibility, and that the liability of Litoral Gas had to be investigated as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Investigation\nPablo Mi\u00f1o was released from prison, but Curto refused to release Garc\u00eda, saying that Mi\u00f1o had extenuating circumstances which Garc\u00eda did not. Mi\u00f1o's job was to give Garc\u00eda the required tools, not to do the maintenance. He was in the street, watching over the van, which was not properly parked and locked, and did not see Garc\u00eda's work before the explosion. Curto stopped short of pronouncing Mi\u00f1o innocent at that early stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Investigation\nAs the case expanded beyond his jurisdiction, Curto recused himself from the trial and was replaced by Javier Beltramone, who released Garc\u00eda from prison. Litoral Gas demanded Beltramone's recusal for expressing an opinion about the case to the press. The appeal court agreed in a 2\u20131 vote to remove Beltramone, and the case was transferred to Patricia Bilotta. Garc\u00eda had claimed that he was following instructions received in the days before the explosion, so Bilotta summoned the technical officers of Litoral Gas to clarify that point. Litoral Gas said that Garc\u00eda had not received any instructions prior to the explosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Investigation\nLitoral Gas proposed an out-of-court settlement to the relatives of the victims, offering about 1200 US dollars per square meter of collapsed building, in addition to compensation for loss of life. Vice Governor Jorge Henn rejected it as immoral, and most of the families also initially rejected the proposal. By May 2014, however, almost half of the families had accepted the settlement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Reaction\nThe explosion occurred shortly before the primary 2013 Argentine legislative elections on August 11. The governor of Santa Fe province, Antonio Bonfatti, asked the political parties to end their campaigns to allow mourning for the victims of the explosion. The Front for Victory and Progressive, Civic and Social Front candidates suspended their campaigns, and the national government declared two days of mourning. The period of mourning was observed by all candidates in Buenos Aires and most other provinces, who ended their political campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Reaction\nPresident Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner, who had recently returned from a diplomatic visit to the United Nations, visited the site of the explosion on August 7. She was berated by local residents; some were angry because her surprise visit halted work at the site, and others thought her presence was politically motivated. The president stayed briefly, visited the CEMAR and met Bonfatti. Kirchner's entourage was surrounded by members of La C\u00e1mpora, who tried to prevent demonstrations against her and keep journalists and residents at bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Reaction\nWeeks before the explosion, several social networking sites had scheduled a country-wide cacerolazo (a pot-banging protest demonstration), known as 8A, against Kirchner for August 8. The websites had already conducted successful cacerolazos (8N and 18A). Despite the national mourning, the 8A protest went ahead as planned, with the added slogan \"No more pointless deaths\". Candidate Ricardo Gil Lavedra thought the cacerolazo should have been canceled, as the campaigning was, but fellow candidate Rodolfo Terragno supported it. It was attended by fewer people than previous ones in Buenos Aires and the rest of the country. The demonstration in Rosario was not a cacerolazo, but a silent candlelight vigil attended by nearly a hundred people. There was a second demonstration in Rosario on August 22, proceeding from the National Flag Memorial to the headquarters of Litoral Gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Reaction\nPope Francis sent a letter of condolence to Archbishop Jos\u00e9 Luis Mollaghan of Rosario, and it was read during a mass and procession for Saint Cajetan at Plaza 25 de Mayo. Newell's Old Boys and Rosario Central, two local soccer teams and rivals in the Rosario derby, organized a charity match for the victims at the Gabino Sosa Stadium, and Rosario-born Lionel Messi provided support through the \"Leo Messi\" charity. The charity match collected 120,000 pesos. Musicians Fito P\u00e1ez, Vicentico, Babas\u00f3nicos, Las Pelotas, Chaque\u00f1o Palavecino, Ciro Pertusi, Lisandro Aristimu\u00f1o, Pablo Dacal and Coki de Bernardis performed concerts in several Argentine cities to raise money for the victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Reconstruction\nBonfatti announced that Santa Fe province would provide financial help to the victims of the explosion. Since most houses in the vicinity were damaged, affected families would receive a subsidy of $20,000 to rent homes during reconstruction. They would receive $50,000 in credit to buy furniture and appliances, payable in 60 months with five percent interest. Rosario's real estate firms prepared a list of houses for rent without charging victims their regular fee. Some of the affected buildings may have had cheap insurances which would not cover the risk of an explosion. Some cars trapped in an underground parking lot could not be retrieved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Reconstruction\nWhen the search for survivors ended, authorities closed Salta Street. Engineers began checking the buildings at ground zero, trying to restore the original layout of the street and demolishing unstable structures. Secretary of Public Works Omar Saab said that the two remaining buildings were beyond repair and had to be demolished. As a sign of respect, the demolition would not be carried out with explosives. Secretary of Housing Gustavo Leone estimated that the work would take nearly six months. People were allowed to enter their destroyed houses in small groups at a time, starting on August 9. Nearby streets began to be reopened on August 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235726-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosario gas explosion, Reconstruction\nThe CGT union signed a deal with the association of factories of Rosario and the government of Rosario to make sure that all the victims of the explosions would keep their jobs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl\nThe 2013 Rose Bowl, the 99th edition of the annual game, was a college football bowl game played on Tuesday, January 1, 2013, at the same-named stadium in Pasadena, California. The Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association is the organizer of the game. The game matched Big Ten Conference Champions Wisconsin Badgers against the Pac-12 Conference Champions Stanford Cardinal, a rematch of the same two teams in the 2000 Rose Bowl. The Cardinal defeated the Badgers 20\u201314 for the Rose Bowl Championship. This was Wisconsin's third consecutive Rose Bowl defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl\nBecause of sponsorship by Vizio, the first game in the 2013 edition of the Bowl Championship Series was officially titled the Rose Bowl Game presented by VIZIO. The contest was televised on ESPN with a radio broadcast on ESPN Radio and XM Satellite Radio, which began at 1:30 PM (PST) with kickoff at 2:10 PM (PST).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl\nThe Rose Bowl Game, themed \"Oh, the Places You'll Go! \", was a contractual sell-out, with 64,500 tickets allocated to the participating teams and conferences. The remaining tickets went to the Tournament of Roses members, sponsors, City of Pasadena residents, and the general public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Pre-game activities\nThe game was presided over by the 2013 Rose Queen Vanessa Manjarrez, the Royal Court (Madison Teodo, Sonia Shenoi, Kathryne Benuska, Nicole Nelam, Tracy Cresta, and Victoria McGregor), Tournament of Roses President Sally Bixby, and Grand Marshal Jane Goodall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Pre-game activities\nAfter the teams' arrival in Southern California, the teams participated in the traditional Lawry's Beef Bowl in Beverly Hills and the Disney Media Day at Disneyland in nearby Anaheim. The Rose Bowl Hall of Fame ceremony luncheon was held prior to the game at the Pasadena Convention Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Pre-game activities\nThe bands and cheerleaders from both schools participated in the pre-game Rose Parade on Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena, California along with the floats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Pre-game activities\nA USAF B-2 of the 509th Bomb Wing at Whiteman Air Force Base performed a fly-over at the end of the National Anthem before the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Teams\nTeams playing in the Rose Bowl game are typically the winners of the Pac-12 and Big Ten conferences (each of which currently determines this by means of a conference championship game), unless one team (or both teams) plays in the BCS National Championship game. The teams were officially selected by the football committee of the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association on Selection Sunday on December 2, 2012. Also former ABC college football announcer Keith Jackson announced the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame Class of 2012 inductees John Cooper, Brian Griese and Ron Yary. Both teams held their pre-game practices at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California. Prior to the game, the two teams had met five times with the Badgers leading the series 4\u20130\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Teams, Stanford\nStanford, representing the North Division in the Pac-12 Football Championship Game, defeated UCLA, the South Division Champions 27\u201324 to earn a trip to Pasadena. The Cardinal last played in the 2000 Rose Bowl, also against the Wisconsin Badgers, losing 17\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Teams, Stanford\nThe Cardinal led the Pac-12 Conference in scoring defense (17.5 per game), rushing defense (87.7 yards per game), sacks (56), and kickoff coverage. Running back Stepfan Taylor rushed 302 times for 1442 yards with 12 touchdowns, averaging 110.9 yards per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Teams, Wisconsin\nThe Wisconsin Badgers, representing the Leaders Division in the 2012 Big Ten Championship Game, defeated the Nebraska Cornhuskers, the Legends Division Champions 70\u201331 to earn their third consecutive trip to the game. Wisconsin lost to the TCU Horned Frogs 21\u201319 in 2011 and to the Oregon Ducks 45\u201338 in 2012. Head coach Bret Bielema accepted the head coaching position at Arkansas prior to the game. Wisconsin was coached in the Rose Bowl by Bielema's predecessor and current athletic director Barry Alvarez, a member of both the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of Fame. He was the coach of the 1999 Wisconsin Badgers football team that defeated Stanford in the 2000 Rose Bowl and, prior to this game, had never lost a Rose Bowl (3\u20130).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235727-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose Bowl, Teams, Wisconsin\nRunning back Montee Ball rushed for 1,730 yards and 21 touchdowns on the season. He had nine 100-yard rushing games including two 200-yard rushing performances this season. His career 76 rushing touchdowns and 82 total touchdowns are both NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision records, and his 25 career games with multiple touchdowns equals the previous FBS record of Travis Prentice (who was also the prior holder of the two records broken by Ball). Ball is the 2012 Doak Walker Award winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235728-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose of Tralee\nThe 2013 Rose of Tralee was the 54th edition of the annual Irish international festival. The festival ran for a total of 7 days; two additional days were added due to The Gathering Ireland 2013. The festival ran from 14 to 20 August; concluding with the televised event on the final two nights. Many acts performed in Tralee during the festival, including; JLS, Ryan Dolan, The Coronas, Sharon Shannon and The Stunning. Shane Filan made his debut solo performance during the televised selection show on 20 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235728-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rose of Tralee\nThe Texas Rose, Haley O'Sullivan was crowned the winner of the Rose of Tralee for 2013 on 20 August. A memorable highlight from the festival was when the boyfriend of the New Orleans rose proposed to her during the live TV broadcast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235729-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosenborg BK season\nThe 2013 season was Rosenborg's 23rd consecutive year in Tippeligaen, their 46th season in the top flight of Norwegian football and first season with Per Joar Hansen as manager. They participated in the Tippeligaen, finishing second, the Cup and the 2013\u201314 UEFA Europa League, entering at the First qualifying round stage and reaching the Second qualifying round before an aggregate defeat to St Johnstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235729-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosenborg BK 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-00235729-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosenborg BK season, 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235729-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosenborg BK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235729-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosenborg BK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235729-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosenborg BK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235729-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rosenborg BK 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235730-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rostelecom Cup\nThe 2013 Rostelecom Cup was the final event of six in the 2013\u201314 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Luzhniki Small Sports Arena in Moscow on November 22\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 2013\u201314 Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235730-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rostelecom Cup, Eligibility\nSkaters who reached the age of 14 by July 1, 2013 were eligible to compete on the senior Grand Prix circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235730-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rostelecom Cup, Entries\nKevin Reynolds withdrew. He was replaced by Misha Ge. On 13 November 2013, it was announced that Evgeni Plushenko had withdrawn from the event due to injury. He was replaced by Konstantin Menshov. Brian Joubert withdrew and was not replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235730-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rostelecom Cup, Entries\nIn the ladies' event, Kaetlyn Osmond withdrew and was not replaced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235730-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rostelecom Cup, Entries\nIn the pairs' event, Britney Simpson / Matthew Blackmer withdrew and were replaced by Lindsay Davis / Rockne Brubaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235731-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Royal Bank Cup\nThe 2013 Royal Bank Cup was the 43rd Junior \"A\" ice hockey National Championship for the Canadian Junior Hockey League. The 2013 Royal Bank Cup marks the 43rd consecutive year a national championship has been awarded to this skill level since the breakaway of Major Junior hockey in 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235731-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Royal Bank Cup\nThe five competitors competing in the Royal Bank Cup included the host Summerside Western Capitals, the winners of the Fred Page Cup (Truro Bearcats), Dudley Hewitt Cup (Minnesota Wilderness), and the top two teams from the Western Canada Cup (Champion Surrey Eagles and runner-up Brooks Bandits).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235731-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Royal Bank Cup\nThe tournament was hosted by the Summerside Western Capitals which saw the round robin begin on May 11, 2013 and the final played on May 19, 2013. Tournament games were played at the Consolidated Credit Union Place in Summerside, Prince Edward Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235731-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Royal Bank Cup, History\nThe Royal Bank Cup in 2013 presented three historical moments. The Minnesota Wilderness, in having won the Dudley Hewitt Cup, became the first American club to compete at the Royal Bank Cup. Secondly, the 2013 final, for the first time ever, involved two teams that were not regional champions. The Summerside Western Capitals lost the Fred Page Cup to the Truro Bearcats but hosted the Royal Bank Cup, while the Brooks Bandits lost the Western Canada Cup to the Surrey Eagles and were admitted as runner-up by defeating the Yorkton Terriers due to the page playoff system. Additionally, as Brooks won the cup, they became the first team to win it without being a regional champion or host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235731-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Royal Bank Cup, Tournament, Round Robin, Results\nAll games played at the Consolidated Credit Union Place, in Summerside, P.E.I .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235732-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Royal Trophy\nThe 2013 Royal Trophy was the seventh edition of the Royal Trophy, a team golf event contested between teams representing Asia and Europe. It was held from 20\u201322 December at the Dragon Lake Golf Club in Guangzhou, China. Europe won the event by a score of 8\u00bd to 7\u00bd. They won five of the last six singles matches and halved the other for the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship\nThe 2013 Rugby Championship, known as The Castle Rugby Championship in South Africa, The Investec Rugby Championship in New Zealand, The Castrol Edge Rugby Championship in Australia and The Personal Rugby Championship in Argentina for sponsorship reasons, was the second edition of the expanded annual southern hemisphere championship consisting of Argentina, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand. New Zealand as the 2012 holders, was trying to keep their 100% winning record in the championship after winning six from six in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship\nThe Championship began on 17 August with Australia hosting New Zealand at the ANZ Stadium and South Africa hosting Argentina at the FNB Stadium. The South Africa vs Argentina match was originally meant to be held at the Free State Stadium, but it was moved to the FNB to form a unique sports programme \u2013 Nelson Mandela Sports Day \u2013 in honour of Nelson Mandela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship\nThe Championship concluded with South Africa hosting New Zealand at the Coca-Cola Park and Argentina hosting Australia at the Estadio Gigante de Arroyito. Argentina were the only nation to reuse the same venues from 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship\nThe Championship was retained by New Zealand after a 38-27 win against South Africa in Ellis Park on 5 October, keeping their 100% winning record in the expanded championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 1\nTouch judges:Jaco Peyper (South Africa)Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa)Television match official:Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 1\nTouch judges:Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (France)John Lacey (Ireland)Television match official:Eric Gauzins (France)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 2\nTouch judges:Craig Joubert (South Africa)Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa)Television match official:Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 2\nTouch judges:Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (France)John Lacey (Ireland)Television match official:Marshall Kilgore (Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 3\nTouch judges:Romain Poite (France)James Leckie (Australia)Television match official:George Ayoub (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 3\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Glen Jackson (New Zealand)Television match official:Ben Skeen (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 4\nTouch judges:J\u00e9r\u00f4me Garc\u00e8s (France)Francisco Pastrana (Argentina)Television match official:George Ayoub (Australian)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 4\nTouch judges:George Clancy (Ireland)Glen Jackson (New Zealand)Television match official:Vinny Munro (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 5\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (France)Television match official:Graham Hughes (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 5\nTouch judges:Wayne Barnes (England)Leighton Hodges (Wales)Television match official:Deon van Blommestein (South Africa)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 6\nTouch judges:John Lacey (Ireland)Greg Garner (England)Television match official:Graham Hughes (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Fixtures, Round 6\nTouch judges:Jaco Peyper (South Africa)Leighton Hodges (Wales)Television match official:Ben Skeen (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Warm-up matches\nOn 3 August and 9 August, Argentina played two uncapped matches against a New South Wales Waratahs Barbarians team in La Plata and in Salta in preparation for the tournament. The NSW Barbarians was composed of 21 Waratahs players (mostly players not involved in the Australian set-up for the championship) and 13 Shute Shield players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Summary\nNote:Ages, Caps and Clubs are off the starting date of the tournament (17 August 2013).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Argentina\nArgentina 30-man Squad for the Championship was announced on 25 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Argentina\nTom\u00e1s Lavanini was added to the squad to cover the second row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Argentina\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Australia\nAustralia 30-man squad for the Championship, including 8 uncapped players and the re-call of Fly Half Quade Cooper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Australia\nWith captain James Horwill ruled out of round's 3 and 4 and with Hugh McMeniman also out injured, Sitaleki Timani was brought into the squad as cover for the second row, but kept his place in the squad for the final two rounds. Dave Dennis was added to the squad to replace Jake Schatz who was ruled out of the championship after picking up an injury in training ahead of round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Australia\nBenn Robinson and Chris Feauai-Sautia were added to the squad for the away fixtures against South Africa and Argentina, with Nick Cummins and Jesse Mogg withdrawn from the squad due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Australia\nJames O'Connor was removed from the squad on 20 September following an off-field incident that occurred following the Wallabies win over Argentina in round 4. Uncapped player Peter Betham was called in as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, Australia\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, New Zealand\nNew Zealand 28-man squad for the Championship was announced on 4 August. Joe Moody was included in the squad as injury cover for Wyatt Crockett \u2013 who had a knee injury. Three additional players will assemble with the squad as part of the wider training squad, but will be released to their provincial sides on the Wednesday of each Test match; these players are: Frank Halai, Jeremy Thrush, and Francis Saili. Following an injury to Francis Saili, Centre Ryan Crotty was added to the training squad but will be released to his provincial side along with Halai and Thrush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, New Zealand\nWith Dan Carter out for the opening two tests, and with Aaron Cruden and Beauden Barrett injured after the opening round with a knee and calf injury, Colin Slade and Tom Taylor were called into the squad as cover for the First five-eighths. Luke Whitelock was also drafted in to replace Luke Romano (groin injury) and Brad Shields to cover sidelined Liam Messam (hamstring strain). Rhys Marshall spent time with the squad as an apprentice hooker as did Liam Coltman and Nathan Harris. Matt Todd was called in after round 3 to replace the injured Captain Richie McCaw, who was ruled out of the championship following an injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, New Zealand\nFollowing an injury to TJ Perenara, Piri Weepu was called up to the squad for the final two rounds against Argentina and South Africa both away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, New Zealand\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, New Zealand\n\u2021 \u2013 Included as injury cover for Wyatt Crockett. * \u2013 Part of the wider training squad", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, South Africa\nSouth Africa 30-man squad for the Championship was announced on 3 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, South Africa\nOn 18 August Lourens Adriaanse was added as a replacement for Trevor Nyakane, who was removed from the squad following repeated breaches of team protocol (he missed the bus and the team's flight to Argentina).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, South Africa\nPieter-Steph du Toit was added to the squad for the final two rounds with Australia and New Zealand playing at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, South Africa\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235733-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby Championship, Squads, South Africa\n\u2021 \u2013 Included to cover Fourie du Preez when he is unavailable to play for South Africa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235734-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League Asian Cup\nThe 2013 Rugby League Asian Cup is the second staging of the Rugby League Asian Cup which was contested by Thailand and the Philippines. Japan was originally set to participate in the tournament but later withdrew due to lack of available players. The tournament was also originally set to be held at the Challenger Field in Clark in Angeles, Pampanga but was moved to San Narciso, Zambales after the owner of the original venue, the Philippine Air Force, cancelled the booking of the tournament organizers because the field was needed for military maneuvers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235735-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League European Bowl\nThe competition this year there are 3 teams taking part with the Czech Republic being joined by Norway and Ukraine. The winners were Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup\nThe 2013 Rugby League World Cup was the fourteenth staging of the Rugby League World Cup and took place in England, Wales, France and Ireland. between 26 October and 30 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup\nIt was the main event of the year's Festival of World Cups. Fourteen teams contested the tournament: Australia, England, New Zealand, Samoa, Wales, Fiji, France, Papua New Guinea, Ireland, Scotland, Tonga, Cook Islands, Italy and the United States. The latter two were competing in the Rugby League World Cup for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup\nNew Zealand were the defending champions, having defeated Australia in 2008. Australia won the tournament, beating New Zealand 34\u20132 in the final to lift the trophy for the tenth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup\nIn terms of attendance, exposure and revenue, the 2013 tournament is considered the most successful Rugby League World Cup to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Organisation, Background\nThe Rugby League International Federation confirmed this competition as a part of its international program. The RLIF announced a five-year plan to build up to the 2013 World Cup with Four Nations tournaments held in 2009, 2010 and 2011. The competition was part of the UK's \"Golden Decade of Sport\". 2013 was chosen as the year of the World Cup to avoid a clash with the London Olympics in 2012. After 2013, the Cup will be held on a quadrennial cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Organisation, Host selection\nIn addition to the United Kingdom, Australia announced its intention to bid for the hosting rights, despite hosting the previous World Cup in 2008. The Australian Rugby League had been preparing a rival bid due to the success of the 2008 event but the business plan presented by the Rugby Football League for the UK to be the host was accepted by the RLIF at a meeting in July 2009. The event formed part of what was being dubbed a 'Golden Decade' in British Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Organisation, Host selection\nThe UK last hosted the World Cup in 2000, with the event generally being considered unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Organisation, Host selection\nPrince Charles welcomed representatives of all 14 nations and tournament organisers with a reception at Clarence House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Qualification\nThere were two qualifying pools for the remaining two World Cup places; a European and an Atlantic pool, with one side from each to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Qualification\nThe European Qualifying group involved Italy, Lebanon, Russia and Serbia while the Atlantic Qualifying group involved Jamaica, South Africa and the USA. In the Atlantic Qualifiers the United States and Jamaica defeated South Africa in the opening rounds leaving the final match between the two to determine who qualified for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup. United States defeated Jamaica to qualify for their first ever Rugby League World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Teams\nThe competition featured fourteen teams, compared to ten in 2008. Originally around twenty teams were to be involved in qualification, but subsequently the total number of teams involved in the tournament was fixed at nineteen. Twelve nations automatically qualified; the ten nations that contested the previous World Cup, Wales as winners of the 2009 European Nations Cup and the Cook Islands as runners up in the 2009 Pacific Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Match officials\nRules and officiating panel: Daniel Anderson, Stuart Cummings and David Waite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Pre-tournament matches\nBefore the World Cup it was announced that USA would face France in Toulouse, Scotland would play Papua New Guinea at Featherstone, England would play Italy at Salford, New Zealand would play the Cook Islands in Doncaster and England Knights would play Samoa at Salford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Venues\nThe games were played at various venues in England, Wales, Ireland, and France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Venues\nThe Millennium Stadium in Cardiff was the host stadium for the opening ceremony and a double header featuring hosts England playing Australia and Wales taking on Italy. The decision to play England vs Australia in Cardiff to open the tournament drew criticism from some in the press who believed that the game should have been played in England where a higher attendance could be expected, or at least a full house which would have looked better than the almost half empty Millennium Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Venues\nHeadingley in Leeds, the Halliwell Jones Stadium in Warrington, the Racecourse Ground in Wrexham and the DW Stadium in Wigan hosted the quarter-finals. Both semi-finals were hosted at Wembley Stadium, with the final held at Old Trafford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Match schedule\nThe match schedule was announced on 22 March 2012. The Rugby League International Federation announced the kickoff times of the matches, with the opening kickoff to be held on 26 October in Cardiff, at 14:30 local time. The group stage matches will be played at 14:00, 14:30, 16:00, 16:30, 18:00, and 20:00 local time, with knockout stage matches at 13:00, 15:00, and 20:00 local time. The semi-finals will be played at 13:00 and 15:30 local time and the final, on 30 November 2013 at the Old Trafford stadium, at 14:30 local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony took place at the Millennium Stadium on 26 October. The ceremony saw 550 dancers perform, 500 amateur and 50 professional, including former players Martin Offiah and Gareth Thomas, both of whom are from Strictly Come Dancing contestants. The ceremony also featured live music and a light show. The ceremony preceded the opening matches of England versus Australia, versus Wales and Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Group stage\nThe draw, undertaken at the launch of the event in Manchester on 30 November 2010, involved four groupsThe first two groups are made up of four teams whilst the other two groups feature three teams each. There will be a quarter-final round made up of the first three teams in the first two groups and the winners of each of the smaller groups. Group play will involve a round robin in the larger groups, and a round robin in the smaller groups with an additional inter-group game for each team so all teams will play three group games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Knockout stage\nQuarter-finals will follow the group stage, with three teams from each of Groups A and B and one team from each of Groups C and D qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Knockout stage\nAll times listed below are in Greenwich Mean Time (UTC+0) for English and Welsh venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Attendances\nSeven grounds achieved sell-out crowds, with four setting stadium records. Games held in both Wales and Ireland were watched by the biggest crowds ever for rugby league internationals in those countries. The final was played in front of the largest crowd ever to attend an international rugby league fixture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235736-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup, Broadcasting\n* The BBC and Premier Sports jointly televised seven live matches with the remaining 21 live matches exclusive to Premier Sports. The jointly live matches were England's Group A matches (BBC One), an inter-group match between Wales and Italy and a quarter-final (both on BBC Two), a semi-final and the final (both on BBC One). The jointly televised quarter-final and semi-final involved England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final\nThe 2013 Rugby League World Cup final was the conclusive game of the 2013 Rugby League World Cup tournament and was played between New Zealand and Australia on 30 November 2013 at Old Trafford, Manchester, England. Australia won the final by 34 points to 2 in front of a sell-out crowd, finishing the tournament undefeated. They reclaimed the cup from New Zealand, who had defeated them in the 2008 final. The Kangaroos won the Rugby League World Cup for the tenth time, and the first time since 2000. Their five-eighth, Johnathan Thurston was named man-of-the-match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final\nThe sellout crowd of 74,468 at Old Trafford set a new international rugby league attendance record, eclipsing the previous record of 73,361 established at the 1992 World Cup Final where Australia defeated Great Britain 10-6 at the old Wembley Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, New Zealand\nNew Zealand's road to the final started on 27 October at the Halliwell Jones Stadium in Warrington, where they played Samoa, who were knocked out in the quarter-final stage. New Zealand stormed the match with 8 tries to earn a 42-24 victory. New Zealand then found themselves playing the co-hosts France at the Parc des Sports in Avignon. In front of a sold out capacity crowd, New Zealand kept the hosts to zero points, while New Zealand scored 8 tries to win 48-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, New Zealand\nThe Kiwis returned to England to play Papua New Guinea, who had failed to win a single match in the run up the New Zealand game. New Zealand continued their Group B dominance and scored 10 tries to earn a 56-10 victory to top the group and advance to the knock out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, New Zealand\nNew Zealand faced Scotland in the quarter-final, who like New Zealand hadn't lost a single game in the Group stage but did at worst draw 30 all against Italy. New Zealand was victorious in the quarter-final match running in 8 tries to 1 to win 40\u20134. In a hard-fought semi-final, New Zealand won 20\u201318 against hosts England. The home side were leading for most of the first half, up 8-0, 25 minutes into the match. A try from Roger Tuivasa-Sheck and 2 goals from Shaun Johnson meant 8 all was the half time score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, New Zealand\nNew Zealand looked to start to dominate the match with a second 44th minute try from Tuivasa-Sheck for the Kiwis to lead 12-8. Tries from England's Kallum Watkins and Sam Burgess meant with just 10 minutes to go, England were in front 14-18. A last gasp try on the 80th minute for New Zealand, could at least take the semi-final to over time should Johnson not be able to convert his own try. Unfortunately for the hosts, Johnson bisected the posts to take the Kiwis their third final, and keep them with in the chance to defend their title. In reaching the 2013 World Cup Final, New Zealand had again equalled their record for consecutive victories with five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, Australia\nAustralia's road to the final started on the opening day of the tournament at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff against hosts England. Australia ran in 5 tries to England's 4 to earn a hard-fought 28-20 victory under the roof in Cardiff. Australia then played Fiji, who had opened their tournament with a 32\u201314 win over Ireland, at Langtree Park in St. Helens, but lost second rower Luke Lewis with a shoulder injury during the game. Lewis had collided with the advertising boards that were located close to the dead-ball line raising concerns about player safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, Australia\nHis injury would keep him out of football until mid-2014. Most of the safety concerns came from the use of soccer stadiums which generally have a shorter pitch length than desirable for a rugby league field (soccer pitches are 105 metres in length while the minimum length for a league field between the dead ball lines is 112 metres) which often led to shorter than regulation fields and left very little room between the dead ball lines and the fence. However, Langtree Park is actually a rugby league ground being the home venue of the famous St Helens club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, Australia\nThe Kangaroos were victorious in this match, winning 34-2 with 6 tries to nil. Thomond Park in Limerick was the venue for Australia's final match of the group stage against Ireland. Ireland hadn't won any matches in the run up this final match, only scoring 14 points in 2 games which came against Fiji (0 against England). With Australia's 9 tries, including 24 points in 10 minutes, Australia went out victors 50-0. With Australia's 3 from 3 wins in the group stage and the conceding of only 22 points, Australia topped Group A and advanced to the knock out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, Australia\nIn the quarter-final, Australia played surprise packet newcomers United States at The Racecourse Ground in Wrexham. The Hawks had played well to reach the finals, but were not expected to be a match for the tournament favourites. Australia were the victors 62-0 scoring 12 tries, including 4 from Jarryd Hayne playing in the unfamiliar position of centre, and 4 from Man of the Match Brett Morris. Australia played Fiji in the semi-final, a replay of the Group A match that happened on 2 November (28 days earlier). This time, Australia kept Fiji scoreless, running in 11 tries to win 64-0, which including a 22 points in 10 minutes. Australia therefore advanced to the final for the 10th time in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, Head to Head\nBefore the final, Australia and New Zealand had played each other 125 times, with Australia winning 95 times, New Zealand 27 and 3 draws. Of the last 10 encounters, Australia had won 8 of them, New Zealand 1 and a single draw. New Zealand's last win over the Kangaroos was a hard-fought 16-12 win in the 2010 Four Nations Final at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane. Their previous meeting was in April 2013 for the 2013 ANZAC Test, where Australia won 32-12 at the Canberra Stadium in Australia's capital city. The two teams had previously met each other on 17 occasions in a Rugby League World Cup match, with Australia winning 15 to New Zealand's 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, Head to Head\nAustralia and New Zealand had met in three previous World Cup Finals; 1988 at Eden Park in Auckland (won 25-12 by Australia), 2000 at Old Trafford (won 40-12 by Australia), and 2008. The 2008 Rugby League World Cup Final at Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium was won 34-20 by New Zealand. It was the first time New Zealand had won the World Cup, and the first time Australia had lost it World Champions crown since Great Britain had won in 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Background, Head to Head\nIn the run up to the 2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Australia had only conceded 22 points, and let though 4 tries, while scoring 238 points and crossing the line 43 times; 20 Group stage, 12 quarter-final and 11 Semi-final. New Zealand, however, had conceded 56 points and let through 11 tries, while scoring 206 points and attacking their opponent with 37 tries; 26 Group stage, 1 quarter-final and 3 semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details\nAlthough it had hosted 7 international matches since first being used in 1986 (including the 2000 World Cup Final), and was the host venue of the annual Super League Grand Final, prior to the game, concerns were raised by the Australian team management about the safety and suitability of Old Trafford as a rugby league venue, primarily the shorter than regulation in-goal areas (measured at 4.1 metres, shorter than the minimum allowable distance of 6 metres) and the slope around the perimeter of the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details\nThere were some suggestions of moving the game to Wembley Stadium in London, though this was ruled out by tournament organisers citing logistical and financial reasons. Two players, Brett Morris and Manu Vatuvei, fell victim to falling down the slope with Morris actually colliding with the advertising boards at the bottom of the slope after scoring a try while Vatuvei fell awkwardly on concrete, only emphasised the questions raised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 1st half\nAfter Australia kicked off, a New Zealand error in the first set of the game led to an early opportunity and field position for Australia, and the penalty was kicked by Johnathan Thurston to open the scoring to 2\u20130. The Kiwis suffered an early blow when after just one touch of the ball, Roger Tuivasa-Sheck had a recurrence of an ankle injury that forced him from the field after just 8 minutes with second rower Alex Glenn his replacement, forcing a re-shuffle with Simon Mannering moving to the centres and Dean Whare to the wing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 1st half\nAustralia weren't without their problems though as soon after Jarryd Hayne went down with an apparent concussion after colliding with the hip of Simon Mannering while tackling the Kiwi captain, though the Kangaroos centre would remain on the field. Further play from the Kiwis brought them into the Australian half of the field, and a holding penalty then given by the Australians was kicked by Shaun Johnson to level the score to 2\u20132 at the 16 minute mark. Despite Old Trafford having an in-goal area of just 4.1m, Australia were able to force a line drop-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 1st half\nFrom this, Thurston was able to kick to Billy Slater, setting up the first four-pointer which Thurston also converted to make the score 8\u20132. A try attempt by Cooper Cronk was controversially disallowed by the video referee, who ruled Isaac Luke had been able to stop the ball coming into contact with the in-goal grass while also giving New Zealand a penalty against Andrew Fifita for 'driving' Luke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 1st half\nCronk didn't have to wait long to score though, as a few minutes later Darius Boyd got around Whare and raced down the wing before putting in a miss-kicked grubber which Cronk managed to find to go over and score despite a desperate Kevin Locke tackle. Thurston kicked his 3rd goal from 3 attempts to take the score out to 14\u20132. Thurston's conversion of Cronk's try saw him overtake Michael Cronin as Australia's highest point scorer in test match football. Manu Vatuvei's attacking run for New Zealand saw him pushed over the sideline 5 metres out by 5 desperate Australian defenders, and an offside penalty at the 35 minute mark gave Thurston another kick to bring the score out to 16\u20132 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 2nd half\nBilly Slater opened the scoring on the first set of the second half, thanks to break by captain Cameron Smith who passed outside to Thurston who found Darius Boyd who raced down the sideline and found Slater in support as Kiwi fullback Kevin Locke loomed in defence. This gave Thurston another chance to convert and bring the score to 22\u20132. A charge-down by Ben Matulino and regather from Sonny Bill Williams led to New Zealand beginning attack at halfway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 2nd half\nMore potential attack from the Kiwis was defused easily by the Australians, until a New Zealand grubber gave possession back to the Australians. A flick offload from Josh Papalii led to a chip kick from Brett Morris, regathered and then re-kicked by Jarryd Hayne led to a sliding Morris try. A conversion by Thurston brought the score out to 28\u20132. Both teams were having issues with the geography of the ground, as Morris collided with the signage during his try and a flying Manu Vatuvei landed awkwardly on the concrete surrounding the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 2nd half\nAustralia's control of the game led to the New Zealanders forced into defense of their own line, defusing Australia's attack but not managing any successful attack of their own. A near 100 metre try by Morris, thanks to a 70-metre intercept run by Hayne, and conversion by Thurston made the score 34\u20132 with eight minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235737-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Final, Match details, 2nd half\nAustralian scrum half back Johnathan Thurston was named the final's man-of-the-match, his fourth such award of the tournament. His conversion of Cronk's first half try also broke Mick Cronin's 31-year-old record of 309 Test points for the Kangaroos. The 32-point margin set a new record for heaviest victory in a final, eclipsing Australia's 40\u201312 victory over the Kiwis in the same stadium in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235738-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group A\n2013 Rugby League World Cup Group A is one of the four groups in the 2013 Rugby League World Cup. The group comprises Australia, England, Fiji and Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235738-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group A, Ladder\nAll times are local - UTC+0/GMT in English venues. UTC+1/CET in French venues. UTC+0/WET in Irish venues. UTC+0/GMT in Welsh venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235738-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group A, Australia vs England\nNote: The match between Australia and England was the opening match of the World Cup, and was held at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff as part of a double-header with Wales vs Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235738-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group A, Fiji vs Ireland\nTouch Judges:Mark Craven (England)Tony Martin (England)Video Referee:Henry Perenara (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235738-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group A, England vs Ireland\nTouch Judges:Jamal Thompson (New Zealand)Jose Pereira (France)Video Referee:Henry Perenara (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235738-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group A, England vs Fiji\nTouch Judges:Jamal Thompson (New Zealand)Grant Atkins (Australia)Video Referee:Shayne Hayne (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235739-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group B\n2013 Rugby League World Cup Group B is one of the four groups in the 2013 Rugby League World Cup. The group comprises New Zealand, France, Papua New Guinea and Samoa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235739-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group B, Ladder\nAll times are local - UTC+0/GMT in English venues. UTC+1/CET in French venues. UTC+0/WET in Irish venues. UTC+0/GMT in Welsh venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235739-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group B, New Zealand vs Papua New Guinea\nThe 18,180 attendance was higher than all but one of Leeds Rhinos' home Super League attendances for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235740-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C\n2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C is one of the four groups in the 2013 Rugby League World Cup. The group comprises Scotland, Tonga, and Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235740-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C, Ladder\nAll times are local - UTC+0/GMT in English venues. UTC+1/CET in French venues. UTC+0/WET in Irish venues. UTC+0/GMT in Welsh venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235740-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C, Wales vs Italy (Inter-group)\nTouch Judges:Jamal Thompson (New Zealand)Jose Pereira (France)Video Referee:Shayne Hayne (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235740-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C, Wales vs Italy (Inter-group)\nNote: The match between Wales and Italy was an additional inter-group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235740-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C, Tonga vs Cook Islands (Inter-group)\nNote: The match between Tonga and Cook Islands is an additional inter-group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235740-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C, Scotland vs United States (Inter-group)\nTouch Judges:James Child (England)Tim Roby (England)Video Referee:Henry Perenara (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235740-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group C, Scotland vs United States (Inter-group)\nNote: The match between Scotland and United States is an additional inter-group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235741-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D\n2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D is one of the four groups in the 2013 Rugby League World Cup. The group comprises Cook Islands, United States and Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235741-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D, Ladder\nAll times are local - UTC+0/GMT in English venues. UTC+1/CET in French venues. UTC+0/WET in Irish venues. UTC+0/GMT in Welsh venues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235741-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D, Wales vs Italy (Inter-group)\nTouch Judges:Jamal Thompson (New Zealand)Jose Pereira (France)Video Referee:Shayne Hayne (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235741-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D, Wales vs Italy (Inter-group)\nNote: The match between Wales and Italy was an additional inter-group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235741-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D, Tonga vs Cook Islands (Inter-group)\nNote: The match between Tonga and Cook Islands is an additional inter-group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235741-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D, Scotland vs United States (Inter-group)\nTouch Judges:James Child (England)Tim Roby (England)Video Referee:Henry Perenara (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235741-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup Group D, Scotland vs United States (Inter-group)\nNote: The match between Scotland and United States is an additional inter-group match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235742-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup knockout stage\nThe 2013 Rugby League World Cup knockout stage will take place after the group stage of the 2013 Rugby League World Cup and will culminate in the 2013 Rugby League World Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235742-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup knockout stage\nThe quarter-finals will consist of eight teams; 1st, 2nd and 3rd from Group A and Group B, and the remaining two places being taken up by the winners of Group C and Group D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235742-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup knockout stage, Bracket\nAll times are local - British Summer Time (UTC+01 until 26 October, UTC+00 from 27 October) in British or Irish venues - Central European Summer Time (UTC+02 until 26 October, UTC+01/CET from 27 October)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235742-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup knockout stage, Quarter-finals, New Zealand vs Scotland\nTouch Judges:Jamal Thompson (New Zealand)obert Hicks (New Zealand)Video Referee:Shayne Hayne (Australia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 83], "content_span": [84, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235742-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup knockout stage, Semi-final, Australia vs Fiji\nTouch Judges:Robert Hicks (New Zealand)Tim Roby (England)Video Referee:Ben Thaler (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235743-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Atlantic\nThe 2013 Rugby League World Cup Atlantic qualification is a rugby league tournament that was held in October 2011 to decide the qualification for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup. It consisted of a round-robin play-off involving three teams; South Africa, Jamaica and the United States at Campbell's Field, New Jersey in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235743-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Atlantic, Jamaica vs United States\nCoached by Matt Elliott, the Tomahawks were leading 6\u20134 at half time and then shut out the Rugby Reggae Boys for the rest of the game finishing with a total of seven tries to gain a place in their first World Cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235743-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Atlantic, Squads, Jamaica\nThe Jamaica squad as of 22 September 2011 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235743-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Atlantic, Squads, South Africa\nThe South Africa squad as at 22 September 2011 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235744-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Europe\nThe 2017 Rugby League World Cup Europe qualification is a rugby league tournament that was held in October 2011 to decide the European qualification for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup. It consisted of a round-robin play-off involving four teams; Russia, Italy, Serbia and Lebanon. Both Italy and Lebanon remained unbeaten, recording two wins and a draw each. However, Italy topped the group as a result of points difference and therefore qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235744-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Europe, Italy vs Lebanon\nCoached by Carlo Napolitano and captained by Anthony Minichiello, Italy's draw with Lebanon was enough for them to gain the 14th and final place in the 2013 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235744-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Europe, Squads, Italy\nThe Italy squad as of 22 September 2011 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235744-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Europe, Squads, Lebanon\nThe Lebanon squad as at 22 September 2011 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235744-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualification \u2013 Europe, Squads, Russia\nThe Russia squad as at 22 September 2011 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235745-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualifying\nOf the fourteen teams that would participate in the 2013 Rugby League World Cup, only two were not automatic inclusions, so must win qualifying matches to enter the tournament, which was held in Wales and England. Originally around twenty teams were to be involved in qualification for the tournament, but this was eventually fixed at nineteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235745-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualifying, Qualified teams\nSeven teams from the Pacific qualified for the World Cup. All of these teams were granted automatic qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235745-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualifying, Qualified teams\nSix teams from Europe qualified; five teams automatically, with the sixth going to Italy, the winner of the European qualifying group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235745-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualifying, Qualified teams\nOne team from the Atlantic region qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235745-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualifying, Continental qualifying, Atlantic\nThe Atlantic qualifying group involved the USA, Jamaica and South Africa. The Atlantic qualifiers were held at Campbell's Field, New Jersey. USA won the group and qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235745-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup qualifying, Continental qualifying, Europe\nThe European qualifying group involved Russia, Italy, Serbia and Lebanon. Both Italy and Lebanon remained unbeaten, recording two wins and a draw each. However, Italy topped the group as a result of points difference and therefore qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads\nThe 2013 Rugby League World Cup featured the national teams (selected from twenty-four-man squads) of fourteen nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool A, Australia\nWith New Zealand claiming the trophy in 2008 and no tournament having been held prior to that since 2000, Australia's squad didn't feature a single World Cup winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool A, England\n* Replaced initially named Gareth Hock prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool A, Fiji\n* Replaced initially named John Sutton prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool A, Ireland\n* Replaced initially named Simon Grix who was ruled out by injury prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool B, New Zealand\n* Replaced initially named Tohu Harris prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool B, Papua New Guinea\n* Replaced initially named James Segeyaro who was ruled out by injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool B, France\n* Replaced initially named Cl\u00e9ment Soubeyras and Mathias Pala who were ruled out by injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool B, Samoa\n2 Replaced initially named Arden McCarthy, Masada Iosefa and Teofilo Lepou who were ruled out by injuries", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool B, Samoa\n3 Allowed to be called up mid-tournament, following injuries to Harrison Hansen, Reni Maitua and Frank Winterstein.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool C, Scotland\n* Replaced initially named Gareth Moore and Jonathan Walker who were ruled out by injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool C, Italy\n* Replaced initially named Terry Campese, Craig Gower and Vic Mauro who were ruled out by injuries prior to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235746-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby League World Cup squads, Pool D, Cook Islands\n* Replaced initially named Geoff Daniela who was ruled out by injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens\nThe 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens was the sixth edition of the Rugby World Cup Sevens. The tournament was held at Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow, Russia. New Zealand won the tournament, defeating England 33\u20130 in the final. Attendance for the tournament was poor, with matches played in mostly empty stadiums.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens\nWorld Rugby, then known as the International Rugby Board (IRB), initially stated that the Rugby World Cup Sevens would be scrapped if rugby sevens were to be included in the Olympic programme for the 2016 Summer Olympics. As the International Olympic Committee voted for the sport's inclusion, this was thought likely to be the last edition of the tournament. However, the IRB clarified that in June 2013, the tournament would be retained and held quadrennially from 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Hosting\nIn December 2009, the IRB confirmed that the governing rugby boards of Brazil (Brazilian Rugby Association), Germany (German Rugby Federation) and Russia (Rugby Union of Russia) formally expressed their intention to tender to host the tournament. Scottish Rugby Union, the governing rugby board of Scotland, which did not choose to express interest, was also previously considering bidding for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Hosting\nIn February 2010, the IRB reported that Rugby Union of Russia had formally submitted its tender for the right to host Rugby World Cup Sevens 2013, while the Brazilian and German rugby boards had confirmed their withdrawal from the bidding process. This announcement left Russia as the only country bidding to host the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Hosting\n\"This tender submission underlines our continued commitment to ignite a new Rugby frontier in Russia through a strategic vision of promotion, participation and growth.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Hosting\nSix days before hosting the 2010 IRB Junior World Rugby Trophy, Russia was officially named as host at the IRB annual congress on 12 May 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Qualification\n* Winner of Oceania qualifier will compete in Asian qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Qualification\nNotes (Men's): Canada and United States qualified for the tournament taking the 2 available places in the North America/Caribbean category. Zimbabwe and Tunisia qualified for the tournament taking the 2 available places in the Africa category. Australia and Tonga qualified for the tournament taking the 2 available places in the Oceania category. Portugal, Spain, France, Georgia and Scotland qualified for the tournament taking the 5 available places in the Europe category. Japan, Hong Kong and Philippines qualified for the tournament taking the 3 available places in the Asia category. Uruguay qualified for the tournament taking the 1 and only place available in the South America category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235747-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Qualification\nNotes (Women's): Canada qualified for the tournament through NACRA's regional qualifying tournament taking the 1 and only place available in the North America/Caribbean category. Tunisia qualified for the tournament taking the 1 available place in the Africa category. England, Ireland, Spain, France and Netherlands qualified for the tournament taking the 5 available places in the European category. Fiji, Japan, and China qualified for the tournament through AFRU's regional qualifying tournament taking the 3 available places in the Asian and Oceania category. Brazil qualified through CONSUR's regional qualifying tournament taking the 1 and only place in the South America category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men\nThis was the qualifications of the men to the 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens aimed at selecting men's national teams in the Rugby sevens, which appeared in the finals in Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men, General\nThe tournament organized by the IRB World Cup held in Moscow on 28\u201330 June 2013, and the attendance of twenty-four team. Automatic qualification to the final tournament hosts and quarter-received previous World Cup. The remaining seats were held in elimination tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men, Qualifying, Africa\nWith two spots at the tournament at stake, which was also an Africa Sevens Championship, which took place on 29\u201330 September 2012 in Morocco in Rabat, there were two places in the finals of the World Cup. Eight teams were divided into two groups of four competed on the first day Round-robin, while in the second phase took place in the play-off.. In the absence of automatic promotion with South Africa and Kenya met in the final of the representations Zimbabwe and Tunisia. In a direct duel turned out to be a better team Zimbabwe, and both teams gained promotion to the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men, Qualifying, North America / Caribbean\nThe qualifying Tournament, which is also NACRA Sevens, took place at the Twin Elm Rugby Park in Ottawa, 25\u201326 August 2012. The tournament was attended by eleven teams. On the first day they were fighting round-robin in three groups - two groups had four teams while one only having three, All the teams bar the weakest teams from each group advanced to the quarterfinals. The rate matches the phase play-off in the second day of the competition, there were two places in the finals of the World Cup. The favored teams Canada and USA met in the finals to thereby advance to the World Cup, and better in the direct duel turned out to Canadians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men, Qualifying, South America\nThe qualifying Tournament, which is also CONSUR Sevens, took place at the Est\u00e1dio da G\u00e1vea in Rio de Janeiro, 23\u201324 February 2013. The tournament was attended by ten representation teams divided into two groups that competed in the first phase round-robin. Top two from each group in the second phase of the re-formed group fighting for the medals round-robin and one place to promotion to the World Cup. Having been provided with automatic classification of Argentina won the contest, so the South American place in the finals of the World Cup was Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men, Qualifying, Asia\nIn the match played in Singapore on 2\u20133 November 2012, the event was attended by twelve teams seeded according to the results achieved in the continental championship. On the first day, the teams competed round-robin, four groups of three teams played on the same day, as well as the quarter-finals, of which the top three were rewarded with a qualification to the World Cup. Japan, Hong Kong and Philippines teams qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men, Qualifying, Europe\nIn the match played on July 20\u201321, 2012 at the Est\u00e1dio Algarve tournament was attended by twelve teams. The nine teams that participated in the 2012 Grand Prix Series, not so far gained promotion to the World Cup, joined the top three teams A Division Tournament Championship 2012, which was held in Warsaw in May 2012. The first day of the game took place in round-robin in three groups, then ranked team on results. The top eight, being the first two teams from each group and the two best third-placed - advanced to the stage play-off. In games played on the second day of the competition matches the rate was five places in the finals 2013 World Cup - gained them the tournament Cup semi-finalists and the winner of the Plate, were appropriate representation of Portugal, Spain, France, Georgia and Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235748-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Men, Qualifying, Oceania\nThe Oceania Championships, which is the qualifying tournament, held on 25\u201326 August 2012 in North Sydney Oval in Sydney. Two groups of four competed on the first day round-robin, while in the second phase took place in the play-off, the rate of addition to medals of the event were two places in the finals 2013 World Cup, a team that fought all outside having already achieved promotion Samoa, Fiji, New Zealand. The favorites for the race were the Australia and representatives of Samoa, who had no problems beating their opponents on the way to a decisive match. In the final, while the winners turned out to be the tournament host and participate in the World Cup finals in addition to their secured the third-place winner of the contest - Tonga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235749-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Women\nThe qualification process of women's teams for the 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens. Automatic qualification was extended to the host and the four semifinalists of the previous cup's tournament. The remaining spots were contested in each of the six regions' respective tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235749-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Women, Africa\nSeven teams competed in Rabat on 29-30 September for an open spot in the World Cup, since South Africa was already automatically qualified from their semifinal placement in the 2009 World Cup Sevens. Tunisia edged out Kenya at the final to reach eligibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235749-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Women, North America/Caribbean\nOn 25\u201326 August 2012, there was a tournament held in Twin Elm Rugby Park in Ottawa amongst five teams for one qualification bid, with the United States already qualified by making the semifinals of the 2009 Rugby World Cup women's tournament. It consisted of a round-robin tournament, with a playoff among the four highest-finishing teams, from which hosts Canada emerged winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235749-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Women, South America\nThe last qualifying tournament was held on 23\u221224 February 2013 in Rio de Janeiro for the sole remaining World Cup slot. Eight teams participated, with Brazil winning the tournament to qualify for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 61], "content_span": [62, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235749-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Women, Asia\nOn 6\u20137 October 2012, ten Asian teams and Oceania third place team Fiji met in Pune, India for a qualification tournament with three bids at stake. Fiji qualified to the World Cup as champions, with China and Japan also rounding out the remainder of the bids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235749-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Women, Europe\nFrom 30 June \u2013 1 July, the second leg of the Women's Sevens Grand Prix was held in Moscow among the twelve Grand Prix national teams in addition to the top four teams from prior lower-division tournaments. With Russia being host and therefore automatically eligible for the World Cup, five open bids were contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235749-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens qualifying \u2013 Women, Oceania\n8 women's teams met in Lautoka, Fiji for a 3\u20134 August tournament. With Australia and New Zealand already qualified for the World Cup, the other highest placing country gets to compete in 2012's Asian championship to contest the bid against a prospective Asia 3. With Fiji beating Papua New Guinea for the third place spot, they were invited to the Asian qualification tournament in Pune, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235750-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens squads \u2013 Men\nThe rosters of all participating teams at the men's tournament of the 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235751-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens squads \u2013 Women\nThe rosters of all participating teams at the women's tournament of the 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235752-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens \u2013 Men's tournament\nThe men's tournament in the 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens was held at Luzhniki stadium in Moscow. The tournament was held from 28 June to 30 June, with New Zealand beating England 33\u22120 at the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235752-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens \u2013 Men's tournament, Draw\nThe band allocation was completed on February 25 in advance of the pool draw on February 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235752-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens \u2013 Men's tournament, Draw\nThe 24 teams were ranked in four bands of six, determined by series points accumulated over the 2010/11 and 2011/12 HSBC Sevens World Series, and the first five rounds of the current 2012/13 Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 52], "content_span": [53, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235753-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens \u2013 Women's tournament\nThe women's 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens tournament was held at Luzhniki stadium and nearby Gorodok Stadium, both in Moscow. The tournament was held from 29 June to 30 June, with New Zealand beating Canada 29\u221212 at the final. The eight quarter-finalists qualified as core teams for the 2013\u201314 IRB Women's Sevens World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235753-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens \u2013 Women's tournament, Teams\nNotes: Canada qualified for the tournament through NACRA's regional qualifying tournament taking the 1 and only place available in the North America/Caribbean category. Tunisia qualified for the tournament taking the 1 available place in the Africa category. England, Ireland, Spain, France and Netherlands qualified for the tournament taking the 5 available places in the European category. Fiji, Japan, and China qualified for the tournament through AFRU's regional qualifying tournament taking the 3 available places in the Asian and Oceania category. Brazil qualified through CONSUR's regional qualifying tournament taking the 1 and only place in the South America category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235753-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens \u2013 Women's tournament, Draw\nThe band allocation was completed on February 25 in advance of the pool draw on February 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235753-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens \u2013 Women's tournament, Draw\nThe 16 teams were ranked in four bands of four, determined by series points accumulated over the three IRB Women's Sevens Challenge Cups, and the first two rounds of the 2012\u201313 IRB Women's Sevens World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 54], "content_span": [55, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl\nThe 2013 Russell Athletic Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 28, 2013 at the Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium in Orlando, Florida. It was one of the 2013\u201314 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The 24th edition of the Russell Athletic Bowl, it featured the Miami Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference (which Louisville will join in 2014) against the Louisville Cardinals of the American Athletic Conference. It began at 6:45\u00a0p.m. EST and aired on ESPN. The game was sponsored by the Russell Athletic uniform company. Louisville defeated Miami by a score of 36\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl\nThe Cardinals had a regular season record of 11\u20131 (7\u20131 American). The Hurricanes finished their season at 9\u20133 (5\u20133 ACC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams\nThe game featured the Miami Hurricanes against the Louisville Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami\nThe Russell Athletic Bowl chose Miami as its ACC representative. The Hurricanes started 7\u20130 and were ranked as high as #7 in the AP Poll. However, a three-game losing streak knocked them out of the polls and ultimately derailed their ACC title hopes. Although Louisville and Miami will be conference rivals starting in 2014, the teams will be in opposite divisions for football, and will not meet every year. Miami's protected cross-division rival is Florida State and Louisville's will be Virginia. Miami had self-imposed bowl bans each of the previous two seasons due to an NCAA investigation. The final sanctions ultimately did not include a bowl ban for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Offense\nJames Coley was the Hurricanes' offensive coordinator, and guided the offense throughout the season, during which it averaged 274.3 passing yards per game (29th in FBS), 172.5 rushing yards per game (63rd in FBS), and 35.9 points per game (25th in FBS). The Canes' offense featured third team all-conference honoree senior Stephen Morris at quarterback; he totaled 2868 passing yards, 21 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Offense\nA pair of sophomore running backs led the rushing attack, however one would not play in the bowl game \u2013 sophomore Duke Johnson, who rushed for a total of 920 yards and 6 touchdowns during the season en route to second team all-conference achievement, broke his ankle in Miami's game against Florida State and subsequently underwent surgery, which prevented his participation in the bowl game, and in his absence, sophomore Dallas Crawford picked up the slack, and in total, recorded 523 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns during the season. Freshman Gus Edwards also contributed, totaling 300 rushing yards and 4 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Offense\nMiami's leading receiver was senior Allen Hurns, a second team all-conference honoree, who recorded 60 receptions, exceeded 1,000 yards, and totaled 6 touchdowns on the season. Freshman Stacy Coley was second on the team in receptions with 30, and led the team with 7 receiving touchdowns. Sophomore Herb Waters and junior Philip Dorsett also contributed wide receiver, and junior Clive Walford contributed at tight end, catching 30 passes including 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Offense\nThree Miami offensive linemen achieved all-conference honors, with senior guard Brandon Linder achieving second team accolades, and senior tackle Seantrel Henderson and junior center Shane McDermott achieving third team recognition. The other starters on the line were sophomore Ereck Flowers at left tackle and junior Jon Feliciano predominantly at left guard (he made two starts at right tackle), both of whom started all 12 games. Sophomore Matt Goudis handled the kicking responsibilities, making 13 of his 17 field goal tries with a long of 49 yards, and making all 56 extra point attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Defense\nCoached by Mark D'Onofrio, Miami's assistant head coach and defensive coordinator, the Hurricanes' 4-3 defense was in the top half of FBS teams in terms of points allowed (averaged 26 per game), and was in the middle of the pack in terms of yards allowed (averaged 415.8 per game). The unit was anchored by first team all-conference honoree Denzel Perryman, who totaled 104 tackles including 5 TFL and 1.5 sacks. Joining Perryman in the linebacking corps was Jimmy Gaines, who was second on the defense with 76 tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Defense\nOther contributors included Tyrone Cornelius and Thurston Armbrister, each of whom started five games, and Tyriq McCord, whose four sacks led the team. On the defensive line, junior Anthony Chickillo started every game at defensive end, and totaled 44 total tackles (tied for fourth on the team), 7.5 TFL (second on the team), and 3.5 sacks (tied for second on the team). Senior Shayon Green started all 12 games opposite Chickillo, and recorded 63 tackles, 10.5 TFL (led the team), and 3 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0006-0002", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Defense\nIn the middle at tackle, however, there was more variance, as a total of four different players started games. Junior Olsen Pierre started 11 of the 12 games on the inside, recording a total of 29 tackles and 1 each TFL and sack. Senior Luther Robinson backed up Pierre in all 12 games (earning one start), and recorded a fumble recovery as well as 23 tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0006-0003", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Defense\nAt the other tackle spot, senior Curtis Porter started seven games (though played in all 12) and recorded 23 total tackles, 3 TFL, 1 forced fumble (FF), and 1 fumble recovery (FR), and 6\u00a0feet 6\u00a0inches (1.98\u00a0m) 310 pounds (140\u00a0kg) Virginia-transfer Justin Renfrow, a senior, started five games, and totaled 36 tackles and 1 FF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Miami, Defense\nIn the secondary, despite starting only two games, sophomore Deon Bush earned honorable mention all-conference accolades from the Atlantic Conference Sports Media Association; he totaled 24 tackles and recorded 1 each TFL, sack, and interception. Sophomore cornerback Tracy Howard also earned such recognition, recording 32 tackles and 4 interceptions on the season. The predominant starter at cornerback opposite Howard was junior Ladarius Gunter, whose 40 tackles placed him sixth on the team, and whose 3 interceptions were second on the team. Several players started at safety throughout the season; in the team's final game, however, the two starters were senior A. J. Highsmith and sophomore Rayshawn Jenkins ... earlier in the season, senior Kacy Rodgers II and Bush started games. All four saw regular playing time throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville\nAfter the previous season saw the Cardinals score an upset victory in the Sugar Bowl against the Florida Gators by a score of 33\u201323, expectations were enormous heading into the next season, especially with the massive conference upheaval leading to the Big East Conference's transformation into the American Athletic Conference. While the Cardinals once again played an outstanding season, finishing at 11\u20131 overall and 7\u20131 in the American, one loss kept the Cardinals from a return trip to the BCS; that loss being a 38\u201335 home defeat at the hands of the UCF Knights on Friday, October 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville\nAfter a 31\u201324 overtime victory on the road against the rival Cincinnati Bearcats to claim The Keg of Nails, Florida Citrus Sports CEO Steve Hogan extended an invitation to play in the game. In addition to being Louisville's first Russell Athletic Bowl, this will also be the Cardinals' final game as a member of the American Athletic Conference before moving to the Atlantic Coast Conference for 2014 and will serve as a preview for future conference play, given their opponent already plays in the ACC. It will also be the final Russell Athletic Bowl to be a tie-in for the American Athletic Conference, as that tie-in will go to the Big 12 Conference from 2014 through at least 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Offense\nOffensive coordinator Shawn Watson was in charge of the Cardinals' offense that averaged 35.1 points per game, which on the field was led by star junior quarterback Teddy Bridgewater, a potential top-10 pick in the 2014 NFL Draft, should he decide to forgo his senior year. During the season, he totaled 3,523 with 28 touchdowns and only 4 interceptions, the second lowest interception total amongst the top-10 passers in terms of yardage in the country. In contrast to the Cardinals' strong passing game, they were a mediocre rushing team, rushing for just 150.2 yards per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Offense\nTheir rushing attack was led by a complement of backs, including Dominique Brown, a 6\u00a0feet 2\u00a0inches (1.88\u00a0m) bruising junior who totaled 783 rushing yards and 8 touchdowns, and Senorise Perry, a smaller inconsistent speedster who entered the season the starter, but ultimately averaged 4.7 yards per carry and totaled 631 yards and 6 touchdowns recording fewer carries than Brown. Early in the season, Auburn-transfer Michael Dyer contributed in the rushing game, but subsequently sustained a groin and hip injury that nagged the remainder of the season, during which he did not play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Offense\nThe receiving game featured three players \u2013 all wide receivers \u2013 with over 40 catches. They were junior DeVante Parker, who from his 6\u00a0feet 3\u00a0inches (1.91\u00a0m) frame caught 46 passes for 743 yards and 11 touchdowns, the latter two of which led the team, senior Damian Copeland, who led the team with 52 receptions and gained 690 yards scoring five touchdowns, and senior Eli Rogers, who from a small stature (5\u00a0feet 10\u00a0inches (1.78\u00a0m)) caught 41 passes for 498 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Offense\nOther contributing wide receivers included juniors Kai De La Cruz and Robert Clark, who combined for 38 receptions, 480 yards, and 4 touchdowns. Complementing the wide receivers were two tight ends \u2013 junior Gerald Christian, who caught 26 passes for 401 yards and 4 touchdowns during the season, and senior Ryan Hubbell, who caught 14 passes for 236 yards during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Offense\nThe majority of the kicking duties (though he was listed as both a kicker and punter on the official team roster) were handled by sophomore John Wallace, who succeeded on 81% of his field goal tries during the season with a long of 39; he scored a total of 100 points adding 49/50 extra point tries. The Cardinals' offensive line entered the season needing to replace players who had totaled a combined 73 starts, but returning three juniors expected to contribute \u2013 Jake Smith, John Miller, and Jamon Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0010-0003", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Offense\nIn the last game of the season, the Cardinals started that trio at center, left guard, and left tackle respectively, while inserting senior Kamran Joyer and sophomore Ryan Mack on the right side at guard and tackle respectively. Though from time to time they struggled, Smith commented that they improved in each game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Defense\nLouisville's defense, which was coordinated by Vance Bedford, held opponents to 12.4 points per game, and recorded 39 total sacks, both of which were near the top of the NCAA. A strong defensive line contributed to the sack totals, and was led by senior end Marcus Smith, whose 12.5 sacks were top 10 nationally. Opposite him was junior end Lorenzo Mauldin, who recorded 9.5 sacks, which was top 20 nationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Defense\nIn the middle at tackle, seniors Brandon Dunn and Roy Philon combined for 78 tackles, with Dunn recording 4.5 tackles for loss (TFL) and 1 sack, and Philon contributing 12 TFL and 4 sacks. Though that was the starting lineup for all 12 of the Cardinals' regular season games, sophomore end Sheldon Rankins also saw playing time, and made 15 tackles as well as 3 sacks. Louisville's linebackers were another strong group, although they did not feature the same starting lineup in each game like the defensive line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Defense\nSenior middle linebacker Preston Brown led the defense with 91 tackles, adding 10.5 TFL, and 3.5 sacks. Supplementing his anchorage of the linebacking corps was sophomore weak side linebacker James Burgess, who was third on the team with 67 tackles, and added 7 TFL. Primarily starting on the strong side was former walk on George Durant, a redshirt senior who started only 7 games and earlier in the season was arrested for egregious speeding and charged with reckless driving as well as several other charges ... he ultimately entered the bowl game having amassed 15 tackles. Freshman Keith Kelsey provided depth at all three linebacker slots, and finished the season with 23 tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Defense\nTwo veteran safeties \u2013 junior Calvin Pryor and senior Hakeem Smith \u2013 anchored the Cardinals' defensive backfield, starting a combined 23 of 24 possible times. Pryor was second on the defense with 69 tackles, was tied for third on the defense with 3 interceptions, and led the secondary with 5.5 TFL. Smith made 42 tackles, 2 TFL, 1 sack, and 3 interceptions. Terrell Floyd, a \"solid\" and physical player, led the cornerbacks, recording 4 interceptions and adding 45 total tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235754-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, Teams, Louisville, Defense\nStarting opposite him was redshirt sophomore Charles Gaines, a converted wide receiver who also was a kick returner, led the team with 5 interceptions and was one of the defense's top playmakers. He supplanted fellow redshirt sophomore Jermaine Reve, who started early in the season, but upon being overtaken was relegated to an extra defensive back in passing situations and recorded 20 total tackles. Sophomore Gerod Holliman also contributed, primarily as a nickel back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235755-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Russia Open Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Russia Open Grand Prix was the eleventh grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Sports Hall Olympic, Vladivostok, Russia September 24 until September 29, 2013 and had a total purse of $50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235756-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 Russian Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held in Penza, Russia from March 3\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235757-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Cup\nThe 2013 Russian Cup was held in Penza, Russia from 17 August 2013 until 21 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 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 2013) was held from 25\u201328 December 2012 in Sochi. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The results are among the criteria used to select Russia's teams sent to the 2013 World Championships and 2013 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nThe list of entries was announced on 13 December 2012. Yulia Lipnitskaya, Polina Shelepen, and Uliana Titushkina withdrew from the ladies' event to recover from injuries and were replaced by the three reserves, Tatiana Fedoseeva, Julia Li, and Nikol Gosviani. Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov withdrew from the pairs' event. Aleksandr Gorshkov said that Larionov had boot problems and could not endanger his partner. They were replaced by Anastasia A. Gubanova / Alexei Sintsov. Artem Borodulin withdrew from the men's event and was replaced by Adian Pitkeev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nKristina Gorshkova / Vitali Butikov withdrew from the ice dancing event but were not replaced due to a lack of reserves. Officials decided to test a new security system involving a background check at the event. A couple of minor earthquakes occurred in Sochi but not during any skating. One occurred before the event. Another quake occurred at 2:30 am on 26 December \u2013 its epicenter was more than 150 kilometers (93 miles) away in the Black Sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nEvgeni Plushenko took the lead in the men's short program, with Sergei Voronov and Maxim Kovtun in second and third respectively. Plushenko also placed first in the free skating and took his 10th national title, while Voronov took silver and Konstantin Menshov the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nEkaterina Bobrova / Dmitri Soloviev were first in the short dance, followed by Elena Ilinykh / Nikita Katsalapov and Ksenia Monko / Kirill Khaliavin. Bobrova / Soloviev also placed first in the free dance and won their third national title, while Ilinykh / Katsalapov repeated as silver medalists and Ekaterina Riazanova / Ilia Tkachenko as bronze medalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nElizaveta Tuktamysheva took the lead in the ladies' short program ahead of three-time champion Adelina Sotnikova and Elena Radionova. Tuktamysheva fell ill before the free skating and her coach Alexei Mishin initially indicated that she would withdraw, but later she and her team decided she would compete. Tuktamysheva said, \"I might find myself in an even worse situation in the future. I have to know how to handle it, so we decided to skate.\" She won her first national title, while Radionova won silver in her second appearance at the event and Sotnikova took the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nTatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov placed first in the pairs' short program, ahead of Yuko Kavaguti / Alexander Smirnov and Ksenia Stolbova / Fedor Klimov. Volosozhar / Trankov won their second national title, Kavaguti / Smirnov won silver, and Stolbova / Klimov the bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nRussia's team for the 2013 European Championships was announced on 28 December:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Senior Championships\nThe president of the Russian skating federation, Aleksandr Gorshkov, said the results of the European Championships and Russian Cup Final would be considered in selecting the team to the 2013 World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Junior Championships\nThe 2013 Russian Junior Championships were held from 31 January to 3 February 2013 in Saransk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Junior Championships\nMikhail Kolyada won the junior men's title while Alexander Samarin and Alexander Petrov won silver and bronze respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Junior Championships\nJGP Final champion Elena Radionova won the junior ladies' event ahead of Serafima Sakhanovich and Maria Sotskova, both of whom were age-ineligible for junior internationals. 2012 World Junior champion Yulia Lipnitskaya finished 5th in her first competition since recovering from a concussion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Junior Championships\nJGP Final champions Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin took the junior pairs' title, with silver going to Evgenia Tarasova / Vladimir Morozov, who had finished ahead of them at the senior Russian Championships. The winners attempted no side-by-side triples but the silver and bronze medalists successfully performed at least one set. Kamilla Gainetdinova / Ivan Bich landed a SBS triple lutz, double toe combination at the start of their program and SBS triple toes after the half-way mark. They beat the JGP Final bronze medalists, Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev, for the bronze. JGP Final silver medalists Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat withdrew due to Davankova's leg injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Junior Championships\nJGP Final champions Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin withdrew due to Bukin's sinusitis. They were automatically named in the Russian team to Junior Worlds. In their absence, Valeria Zenkova / Valerie Sinitsin won the junior ice dancing title ahead of Evgenia Kosigina / Nikolai Moroshkin and Anna Yanovskaia / Sergei Mozgov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235758-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Figure Skating Championships, Junior Championships\nThe team to the 2013 World Junior Championships was announced on 5 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235759-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Super Cup\nThe 2013 Russian Football Super Cup (Russian: \u0421\u0443\u043f\u0435\u0440\u043a\u0443\u0431\u043e\u043a \u0420\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0438 \u043f\u043e \u0444\u0443\u0442\u0431\u043e\u043b\u0443) was the 11th Russian Super Cup match, a football match which was contested between the 2012\u201313 Russian Premier League and 2012\u201313 Russian Cup champion CSKA Moscow, and the runner-up of the 2012\u201313 Russian Premier League, Zenit Saint Petersburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235759-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Russian Super Cup\nThe match was held on 13 July 2013 at the Olimp-2, in Rostov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team\nThe 2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team represented Rutgers University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Scarlet Knights played their home games at High Point Solutions Stadium in Piscataway, NJ as a member of the American Athletic Conference. This was the second season with Kyle Flood as the head coach, and last season before transitioning to playing in the Big Ten Conference. They finished the season 6\u20137, 3\u20135 in American Athletic play to finish in a tie for sixth place. They were invited to the Pinstripe Bowl where they were defeated by Notre Dame. Notre Dame would later vacate the win on November 22, 2016 due to academic violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Previous season\nThey enter after finishing last season 9\u20134, 5\u20132 in Big East play to win the school's first ever Big East Conference football championship, sharing the conference title with Cincinnati, Louisville, and Syracuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Coaching staff\nRutgers head coach Kyle Flood enters his second year as the Scarlet Knights' head coach for the 2013 season (eighth year on the coaching staff overall). During his first year as head coach, he led the Scarlet Knights to an overall record of 9 wins and 4 losses (9\u20134) and the 2012 Big East Championship as co-champions with Louisville, Syracuse, and Cincinnati. Flood was awarded as co-Big East Head Coach of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Coaching staff, Coaching changes, Departures from 2012\nFormer offensive coordinator Dave Brock accepted an offer to become the head coach of the Delaware Blue Hens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 98], "content_span": [99, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Coaching staff, Coaching changes, Departures from 2012\nFormer defensive coordinator Robb Smith accepted an offer to become linebackers coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 98], "content_span": [99, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Coaching staff, Coaching changes, Departures from 2012\nFormer tight ends coach Darnell Dinkins \"left to pursue other interests\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 98], "content_span": [99, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Coaching staff, Coaching changes, Additions and promotions\nRon Prince, former head coach of the Kansas State Wildcats and most recently an offensive line coach with the Indianapolis Colts and Jacksonville Jaguars of the National Football League (NFL) was hired as offensive coordinator. Dave Cohen was promoted from linebackers coach to defensive coordinator, a position he has held previously with Western Michigan, Delaware, and Fordham. Darrell Wilson was hired away from Iowa, where he coached in the Big Ten Conference for twelve years, to coach defensive backs in his home state of New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 102], "content_span": [103, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Coaching staff, Coaching changes, Departures after regular season\nAt the conclusion of the regular season, Dave Cohen, Rob Spence, and Damian Wroblewski were fired by the university.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Game summaries, Fresno State\nRutgers opted to attempt a two-point conversion to win the game in overtime. The two point conversion was not successful, and Fresno State won in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235760-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team, Game summaries, Eastern Michigan\nQuarterback Gary Nova left the game during the first quarter with a concussion, being relieved by Chas Dodd. After games of 182, 119, and 192 rushing yards, Sophomore walk-on Paul James led the country in rushing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235761-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Rwandan parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Rwanda between 16 and 18 September 2013. The result was a victory for the Rwandan Patriotic Front, which maintained its absolute majority in the Chamber of Deputies, winning 41 of the 80 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235761-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Rwandan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nOf the 80 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, 53 were directly elected by closed list proportional representation with an electoral threshold of 5%. A further 27 seats were indirectly elected by local and national councils, including 24 reserved for women, two for representatives of youth and one for representatives of handicapped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235761-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Rwandan parliamentary election, Conduct\nIn the weekend preceding the election, on 13 and 14 September, two grenades exploded in a Kigali market. The Rwandan government blamed the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), the remnants of the force responsible for the 1994 Genocide. Questions were asked about the credibility of the election as transparent, free and fair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League\nThe 2013 S.League was the 18th season since the establishment of the S.League, the top professional football league in Singapore. It is known as the Yeo's Great Eastern S.League for sponsorship reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League\nThe season began in February 2013 and ended in November 2013. Tampines Rovers defended their title and the 2013 edition featured 12 teams in the league after Gombak United decided to sit out of the league due to financial problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League\nTampines Rovers beat Warriors F.C. on 15 February 2013 with a 2-1 scoreline to lift the 2013 Charity Shield, kicking off the 2013 S.League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League\nThe league also saw a month-long break between 26 May 2013 and 26 June 2013 in order for the preliminary round of the RHB Singapore Cup and Starhub League Cup to take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League, Major changes\nThe following were the key changes of season 2013 as compared to the previous season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 28], "content_span": [29, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League, Season statistics, Club Disciplinary Records\nUpdated to games played on 27 June 2013Points are awarded based on 1 point for each yellow card and 3 points for each sending off (regardless of sending-offs via two yellow cards or one red card)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 59], "content_span": [60, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League, Season statistics, Cards Handed Out By Match Officials\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by alphabetical order when total cards are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 69], "content_span": [70, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League, Season statistics, Cards Handed Out By Match Officials\nUpdated to games played on 27 June 2013Points are awarded based on 1 point for each yellow card and 3 points for each sending off (regardless of sending-offs via two yellow cards or one red card)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 69], "content_span": [70, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235762-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 S.League, Attendance figures\nThere isn't any established attendance figures. Only 1 report on attendance for Round 1 between Young Lions vs Hougang where 1,586 spectators attended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship\nThe 2013 South Asian Football Federation Championship, commonly referred to as 2013 SAFF Championship, was the 10th SAFF Championship for men's national football teams organized by the South Asian Football Federation (SAFF). The tournament took place from 31 August to 11 September 2013, and was hosted by Nepal for the second time, with the previous being in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship, Host selection\nNepal were selected as hosts in September 2012 during the 2012 SAFF Women's Championship in Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship, Broadcasting\nThe tournament was broadcast live in Nepal on Kantipur Television Network, Tolo TV in Afghanistan and Television Maldives in Maldives. Every match was broadcast live on YouTube.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship, Participating nations\nAlong with the hosts, the other seven nations from the South Asian region participated in the tournament. India came into the tournament as the reigning champions from the 2011 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 45], "content_span": [46, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship, Participating nations, Group Draw\nThe draw ceremony took place on 30 July 2013 at Kathmandu's Soaltee Crowne Plaza was attended by a host of dignitaries including All Nepal Football Association (ANFA) Chairman Ganesh Thapa, SAFF President Kazi Salahuddin, Secretary Alberto Colaco and National Sports Council Member-Secretary Yubaraj Lama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 57], "content_span": [58, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship, Match officials\nOn 22 August 2013, SAFF announced the 15 referees for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship, Group stage\nSAFF confirmed the groups and schedule on 30 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235763-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship, Awards\nThe following awards were given for the 2013 SAFF Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final\nThe 2013 SAFF Championship Final was the final match of the 2013 SAFF Championship which took place in Nepal on Wednesday, September 11, 2013, and was officiated by Tayeb Hasan Shamsuzzaman of Bangladesh. It was the 10th installment of the tournament since its inception in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final\nThis final was the first time a final was repeated in the SAFF Championship and such this was a repeat final of the 2011 SAFF Championship in which India thrashed Afghanistan 4\u20130 in India. However, in this final Afghanistan won with goals coming from Mustafa Azadzoy and Sandjar Ahmadi in the 9th and 62nd minute respectively. This would be Afghanistan's first SAFF Championship win after losing in the 2011 SAFF Championship in the final to India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Road to the final\nIndia entered the 2013 SAFF Championship as the reigning champion after defeating Afghanistan in the 2011 SAFF Championship. Afghanistan's best record previous was runners-up in the 2011 SAFF Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Road to the final\nTo the final, India struggled through and scraped by the group stage through head-to-edge edging out Pakistan from an own-goal by Samar Ishaq in a 1\u20130 win to the Indians. Later in the semi-finals, against Maldives, it took India until the 86th minute when Arnab Mondal opened the scoring to leave it a 1\u20130 win to proceed to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Road to the final\nAfghanistan, on the other hand, breezed by both Sri Lanka and Bhutan in the group stage with comfortable wins and a 0-0 stalemate with Maldives. To proceed to the final, Afghanistan won convincingly in a 1\u20130 win against the hosts Nepal with the lone goal coming from Sandjar Ahmadi in the 11th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Road to the final\nIndia entered the tournament as favorites to win but as matches progressed, many thought otherwise. Afghanistan entered the final as clear favorites to win, before the match, due to their journey and having their highest FIFA ranking, at the time, of 139. India, however, barely scraped by to the final and had a FIFA ranking of 145.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Squads\nDuring the tournament, Afghanistan had the most diverse squad. While most other nations had almost all players playing for their domestic league, Afghanistan had five players playing outside of Asia with four in Europe and the rest in either India's I-League or its domestic league the Afghan Premier League. The average age of the Lions of Khorasan was 26 years of age with goalkeeper Hamidullah Yosufzai the oldest at 31 and youngest being Sidiq Walizada at 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Squads\nIndia had all its players playing in its domestic I-League with four players being free agents. The average age of the Blue Tigers was 26 years of age, as well, with goalkeeper Sandip Nandy the oldest at 38 and Sandesh Jhingan the youngest at 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Match officials\nTayeb Shamsuzzaman of the Bangladesh was appointed the referee of the final and was assisted by Pakistani Moaid Al Sayeg and Issa Mahmoud Ahmad Al Amawi of Jordan. The fourth official was Adham Makhadmeh, also from Jordan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Match officials\nShamsuzzaman was listed as a FIFA referee in 1999. Since then, he had experience as a referee in the World Cup Qualifiers (AFC), AFC Cup, AFC Champions League, WAFF Championship and AFF Suzuki Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Match officials\nPrior to the final, he refereed for five other games in the 2013 SAFF Championship. He was referee in Afghanistan-Bhutan and Bhutan-Maldives matches in Group A before moving to the Group B match India-Nepal. Then finishing the group stage by being the referee for Afghanistan-Maldives and the semi-final of Maldives-India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Match officials\nIn the games that Shamsuzzaman was the referee, he showed no more than two yellow cards in every game with that being Bhutan-Maldives and Afghanistan-Maldives. He gave the red card in the group-stage match between Bhutan national football team and Maldives national football team and giving the Bhutan goalkeeper Leki Dukpa a red card for tripping Ali Ashfaq just outside the penalty box after rushing to a one-on-one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235764-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship Final, Match officials, Details\nAssistant referees:Moaid Al Sayeg (Pakistan)Issa Mahmoud Ahmad Al Amawi (Jordan)Fourth official:Adham Makhadmeh (Jordan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235765-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF Championship squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2013 South Asian Football Federation Cup, hosted by Nepal, which will take place between 1 and 11 September 2013. The player's total caps, their club teams and age are given below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235766-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SAFF U-16 Championship\nThe 2013 SAFF U-16 Championship is the 2nd edition of the SAFF U-16 Championship hosted by Nepal from 20 to 30 July at Dasarath Stadium and army ground. Seven teams from the region are taking part, divided into two groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235767-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SANFL Grand Final\nThe 2013 South Australian National Football League (SANFL) Grand Final saw Norwood defeat the North Adelaide by 40 points to claim the club's 29th premiership victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235767-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SANFL Grand Final\nThe match was played on Sunday 6 October 2013 at Football Park in front of a crowd of 36,685.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235768-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SANFL season\nThe 2013 South Australian National Football League season was the 134th 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-00235768-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SANFL season\nThe season opened on 28 March with the opening fixture between West Adelaide and Central District, and concluded on 6 October with the Grand Final, in which minor premiers Norwood went on to record its 29th premiership, defeating North Adelaide by 40 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235768-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SANFL season\nWoodville-West Torrens, West Adelaide, Central District also made the top (final) five teams and participated in the finals series. Port Adelaide, Sturt, South Adelaide, Glenelg all missed the top five, with the last of those finishing last to record its 16th wooden spoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235768-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SANFL season, Ken Farmer Medal\nThe Ken Farmer Medal is awarded to the SANFL's leading goal scorer during the home and away season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235769-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SAP Open\nThe 2013 SAP Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 124th edition of the SAP Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, United States, from February 11 through February 17, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235769-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SAP Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235769-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SAP Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235770-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SAP Open \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Xavier Malisse were the defending champions but Knowles did not participate this year because of his retirement from professional tennis in September 2012. Malisse played alongside Frank Moser and successfully defended the title, defeating Lleyton Hewitt and Marinko Matosevic in the final 6\u20130, 6\u20137(5\u20137), [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235771-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SAP Open \u2013 Singles\nMilos Raonic was the two-time defending champion and won the title for the third year in a row, defeating Tommy Haas in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup\nThe 2013 SARU Community Cup (known as the 2013 Cell C Community Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the first season of the SARU Community Cup competition and was contested from 16 February to 1 April 2013. The tournament is the top competition for non-university rugby union clubs in South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Competition, Format\nTwenty teams qualified for the Community Cup from the club leagues of the fourteen provincial unions in South Africa. The league winners all qualified, as well as six wildcard teams chosen by SARU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Competition, Format\nThe format of the Community Cup was exactly the same as the Rugby World Cup. The teams were divided into four pools, each containing five teams each. They would then play four pool games, playing other teams in their respective pools once each. Each team played two home games and two away games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Competition, Format\nThe winner and runner-up of each pool entered the play-off stage, held at a central venue over the Easter long weekend each year. The play-offs consisted of quarter finals, semi-finals and the final. The winner of each pool met the runner-up of a different pool in a quarter final. The winner of each quarter-final progressed to the semi-finals and the semi-final winners to the final, held at a neutral venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Competition, Format\nThe losing semi-finalists played each other in the Plate final. The losing quarter finalists met in the Bowl semi-final, the winners of which played in the Bowl final, while the losers played in the Shield final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Teams\nThe following teams were named by SARU as participants in the 2013 SARU Community Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Pool Stages\nOn 22 November 2012, the draw was made for the 2013 SARU Community Cup and the 20 teams were drawn in the 4 pools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Finals\nThe finals will be played at Outeniqua Park, George from 28 March to 1 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Finals, Quarter Finals\nThe winning teams qualify to the Cup Semi-Finals, while the losing teams qualify to the Bowl Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Finals, Cup Semi-Finals\nThe winning teams qualify to the Cup Final, while the losing teams qualify to the Plate Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235772-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 SARU Community Cup, Finals, Bowl Semi-Finals\nThe winning teams qualify to the Bowl Final, while the losing teams qualify to the Shield Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235773-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SBS Drama Awards\nThe 2013 SBS Drama Awards (Korean:\u00a0SBS \uc5f0\uae30\ub300\uc0c1) is a ceremony honoring the best performances in television on the SBS network for the year 2013. It was held at the SBS Prism Tower in Sangam-dong, Seoul on December 31, 2013, and hosted by Lee Hwi-jae, Lee Bo-young, and Kim Woo-bin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235774-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SCTV Awards\nThe 2013 SCTV Awards honored the popular in Indonesian television program and music. The ceremony award ceremony held at the JIEXPO Hall D2 in Kemayoran, North Jakarta, on November 29, 2013 and was broadcast on SCTV. It was hosted by Andhika Pratama, Gading Marten, and Senandung Nacita. The ceremony awards was attended by top artists, such as Noah, Syahrini, Afgan, Indah Dewi Pertiwi, Cherrybelle, SM*SH, Cakra Khan, Zaskia Gotik, Wali, and Armada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235774-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SCTV Awards, Winners and nominees\nThe nominees were announced on November 4, 2013. The winners are listed on boldface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235775-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SEABA Championship\nThe 10th Southeast Asia Basketball Association Championship was the qualifying tournament for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship; it also served as a regional championship involving Southeast Asian basketball teams. It was held on June 20 to June 23, 2013 at Medan, Indonesia. The two best teams qualified for the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235776-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SEABA Under-16 Championship\nThe 2013 SEABA Under-16 Championship was the qualifying tournament for Southeast Asia Basketball Association at the 2013 FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship. The tournament was held in Yogyakarta, Indonesia from July 14 to July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235777-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Championship Game\nThe 2013 SEC Championship Game was a college football game that was played on Saturday, December 7, 2013 in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, with the kickoff at 4:12pm ET. The 22nd annual SEC Championship Game, determined the 2013 champion of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The game was played between the Auburn Tigers, champions of the SEC's Western division, and the Missouri Tigers, champions of SEC's Eastern division. In the highest-scoring contest in the game's 21-year history, Auburn won 59\u201342.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235777-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Championship Game\nAuburn was the designated home team. The game was televised by CBS Sports for the 13th straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235777-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Championship Game, Notes\nThe winner of this game the last seven seasons has gone on to play for the BCS National Championship posting a record of 6\u20131. In 2011, SEC Champion LSU played fellow conference and division team Alabama for the national championship, marking first time two teams from the same conference and division played for the title. Alabama won 21\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235777-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Championship Game, Notes\nNeither 2013 division champion was bowl-eligible the previous year. In 2012 Missouri had a record of 5\u20137 (2\u20136 SEC), and Auburn was 3\u20139 (0\u20138 SEC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235777-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Championship Game, Notes\nMissouri and Auburn combined for a total of 101 points the most in the history of the SEC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235777-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Championship Game, Teams, Missouri\nAfter missing out on a bowl the previous season, the Tigers rebounded to win their first-ever SEC East title. They had won three division titles in the Big 12 in 2007, 2008, and 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235777-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Championship Game, Teams, Auburn\nOnly a year after their worst season in 60 years--including a winless SEC record--Auburn completed one of the biggest turnarounds in NCAA history. An upset win over rival Alabama gave them the SEC West title and a chance at playing for the national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235778-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Southeastern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Southeastern Conference held from March 13\u201317, 2013 in Nashville, Tennessee at Bridgestone Arena. The first round and quarterfinal rounds were televised through the SEC Network and ESPNU, and the semifinals and finals were broadcast nationally on ABC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235778-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nWith the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M to the league, the tournament expanded to 14 teams. As in previous years, the top four teams received byes to the quarterfinals; these byes now became double-byes with the addition of a new round featuring the four lowest seeds (11 through 14; seeds 5 through 10 receive a single bye into the second round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235778-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nAfter these matchups on the first day, the rest of the tournament proceeds as in previous years, with the 11/14 and 12/13 winners facing, respectively, seeds 6 and 5, and seeds 7 & 10 and 8 & 9 also squaring off in the second round. The four winners on the second day join the top four seeds in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235779-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Softball Tournament\nThe 2013 SEC Softball Tournament was held on May 8 through the 11th at John Cropp Stadium in Lexington, Ky. The Florida Gators beat the Missouri Tigers 10-4 in their first win since 2009. Freshman center fielder Kirsti Merritt\u2014the MVP of Florida Gators\u2014had two homers, seven RBI, four runs, a walk and two stolen bases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235780-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Southeastern Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was the postseason women's basketball tournament for the Southeastern Conference held from March 6 to 10, 2013 in Duluth, Georgia at the Arena at Gwinnett Center. The first and second rounds and the quarterfinal round was televised through FSS and SPSO, and the semifinals and finals was broadcast nationally on ESPNU and ESPN2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235780-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament, Format\nWith the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M to the league, the tournament likewise expanded to 14 teams. As in previous years, the top four teams received byes to the quarterfinals; these byes became double-byes with the addition of a new round featuring the four lowest seeds (11 through 14; seeds 5 through 10 receive a single bye into the second round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235780-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament, Format\nAfter these matchups on the first day, the rest of the tournament proceeded as in previous years, with the 11/14 and 12/13 winners facing, respectively, seeds 6 and 5, and seeds 7 & 10 and 8 & 9 also squaring off in the second round. The four winners on the second day joined the top four seeds in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235780-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThis year, Ole Miss chose to self-impose a post-season ban, so the teams were seeded 1\u201313, and the 11 seed received a single-bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season\nThe 2013 Southern Football League (SFL) premiership season was an Australian rules football competition staged across Southern Tasmania, Australia, over eighteen roster rounds and six finals series matches between 6 April and 14 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season\nThe competition's major sponsor for the season was Worksafe Tasmania, Boag's Draught and Telstra. This was Kingborough Tigers Football Club's final season in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 SFL season\nThe club (known as Kingston from 1885-2003) competed in the SFL as a founding member from 1996 until the completion of this season when they were given approval by AFL Tasmania to join the Tasmanian State League from the start of the 2014 season as a representative of the Kingborough and Huon region in state league football (rebranded as Tigers FC) to replace the Hobart Football Club who resigned from the TSL late in 2013 to rejoin the SFL from 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0001-0002", "contents": "2013 SFL season\nFormer Carlton and Brisbane Lions AFL three-time All-Australian and two-time Coleman Medalist full-forward, Brendan Fevola was granted permission by the SFL to play a one-off roster match with New Norfolk in the club's eleventh round home fixture against Brighton on 29 June where he kicked 16 goals in the Eagles 176-point victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, Participating Clubs, 2013 Medal Winners\nNote: Claremont's Nathan Brown polled the highest number of votes in the William Leitch Medal, five votes ahead of Nathan Ross but was ruled ineligible due to being reported and suspended for one match for striking in the final roster round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 56], "content_span": [57, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, Participating Clubs, SFL Reserves Grand Final\nNew Norfolk 8.8 (56) d Kingborough 5.8 (38) at KGV Football Park", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, Participating Clubs, SFL Under-18's Grand Final\nSorell 9.10 (64) d Kingborough 8.7 (55) at KGV Football Park", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 64], "content_span": [65, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 1\n(Saturday, 6 April 2013) Cygnet 21.6 (132) d Sorell 15.10 (100) at Cygnet Oval. East Coast 19.9 (123) d Brighton 13.7 (85) at Pontville Oval. Kingborough 13.8 (86) d Lindisfarne 9.13 (67) at Twin Ovals. Claremont 12.24 (96) d New Norfolk 14.10 (94) at Abbotsfield Park. Huonville Lions 16.12 (108) d Dodges Ferry 11.7 (73) at Huonville Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 2\n(Saturday, 13 April 2013) New Norfolk 15.15 (105) d Brighton 7.4 (46) at Pontville Oval. East Coast 21.6 (132) d Sorell 10.12 (72) at Pembroke Park. Kingborough 13.17 (95) d Claremont 13.12 (90) at Abbotsfield Park. Dodges Ferry 18.14 (122) d Cygnet 14.18 (102) at Shark Park. Lindisfarne 17.20 (122) d Huonville Lions 9.7 (61) at Anzac Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 3\n(Saturday, 20 April 2013) New Norfolk 28.22 (190) d Sorell 9.7 (61) at Boyer Oval. Cygnet 16.16 (112) d Lindisfarne 4.12 (36) at Cygnet Oval. Claremont 21.16 (142) d Brighton 10.14 (74) at Pontville Oval. Kingborough 21.8 (134) d Huonville Lions 6.8 (44) at Twin Ovals. Dodges Ferry 12.10 (82) d East Coast 11.10 (76) at Triabunna Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 4\n(Saturday, 27 April 2013) Sorell 8.10 (58) d Brighton 6.5 (41) at Pembroke Park. East Coast 11.15 (81) d Lindisfarne 9.9 (63) at Anzac Park. Kingborough 29.12 (186) d Cygnet 11.9 (75) at Twin Ovals. Claremont 8.13 (61) d Huonville Lions 7.12 (54) at Abbotsfield Park. New Norfolk 22.20 (152) d Dodges Ferry 8.11 (59) at Shark Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 5\n(Saturday, 4 May 2013) Dodges Ferry 13.11 (89) d Brighton 12.11 (83) at Pontville Oval. New Norfolk 18.16 (124) d Lindisfarne 13.6 (84) at Boyer Oval. Cygnet 14.20 (104) d Huonville Lions 15.8 (98) at Cygnet Oval. Claremont 20.17 (137) d Sorell 10.8 (68) at Abbotsfield Park. East Coast 16.8 (104) d Kingborough 12.13 (85) at Triabunna Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 6\n(Saturday, 11 May 2013) Claremont 19.14 (128) d Cygnet 15.12 (102) at Cygnet Oval. Lindisfarne 18.19 (127) d Brighton 12.11 (83) at Anzac Park. New Norfolk 25.19 (169) d Kingborough 13.6 (84) at Twin Ovals. Dodges Ferry 14.23 (107) d Sorell 11.4 (70) at Shark Park. Huonville Lions 19.8 (122) d East Coast 13.19 (97) at Huonville Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 7\n(Saturday, 25 May 2013) Lindisfarne 7.4 (46) d Sorell 1.4 (10) at Pembroke Park. Kingborough 14.18 (102) d Brighton 6.7 (43) at Pontville Oval. Claremont 16.9 (105) d Dodges Ferry 11.11 (77) at Abbotsfield Park. New Norfolk 17.12 (114) d Huonville Lions 11.15 (81) at Boyer Oval. East Coast 12.15 (87) d Cygnet 5.6 (36) at Triabunna Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 8\n(Saturday, 1 June 2013) Kingborough 26.15 (171) d Sorell 3.14 (32) at Twin Ovals. Lindisfarne 18.12 (120) d Dodges Ferry 7.7 (49) at Anzac Park. New Norfolk 16.19 (115) d Cygnet 11.13 (79) at Cygnet Oval. Huonville Lions 20.16 (136) d Brighton 13.7 (85) at Huonville Recreation Ground. Claremont 19.13 (127) d East Coast 9.10 (64) at Triabunna Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 9\n(Saturday, 15 June 2013) Cygnet 14.9 (93) d Brighton 7.7 (49) at Pontville Oval. New Norfolk 19.25 (139) d East Coast 4.7 (31) at Boyer Oval. Claremont 11.9 (75) d Lindisfarne 3.7 (25) at Abbotsfield Park. Kingborough 12.13 (85) d Dodges Ferry 12.9 (81) at Shark Park. Huonville Lions 10.16 (76) d Sorell 6.14 (50) at Pembroke Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 10\n(Saturday, 22 June 2013) Kingborough 12.13 (85) d Lindisfarne 7.17 (59) at Anzac Park. Cygnet 15.12 (102) d Sorell 13.14 (92) at Pembroke Park. New Norfolk 20.18 (138) d Claremont 7.4 (46) at Boyer Oval. Huonville Lions 17.17 (119) d Dodges Ferry 11.7 (73) at Shark Park. East Coast 10.12 (72) d Brighton 9.9 (63) at Triabunna Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 11\n(Saturday, 29 June 2013) New Norfolk 29.17 (191) d Brighton 2.3 (15) at Boyer Oval. * Cygnet 17.10 (112) d Dodges Ferry 12.12 (84) at Cygnet Oval. Kingborough 14.13 (97) d Claremont 11.10 (76) at Twin Ovals. East Coast 18.15 (123) d Sorell 6.8 (44) at Triabunna Recreation Ground. Huonville Lions 13.11 (89) d Lindisfarne 9.15 (69) at Huonville Recreation Ground. Note: Brendan Fevola makes guest appearance for New Norfolk and kicks 16 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 12\n(Saturday, 6 July 2013) Lindisfarne 14.10 (94) d Cygnet 5.6 (36) at Anzac Park. New Norfolk 20.14 (134) d Sorell 8.9 (57) at Boyer Oval. Claremont 15.19 (109) d Brighton 4.12 (36) at Abbotsfield Park. East Coast 15.10 (100) d Dodges Ferry 6.12 (48) at Shark Park. Kingborough 16.14 (110) d Huonville Lions 9.5 (59) at Twin Ovals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 13\n(Saturday, 13 July 2013) Brighton 18.17 (125) d Sorell 4.10 (34) at Pontville Oval. Cygnet 15.7 (97) d Kingborough 13.14 (92) at Cygnet Oval. New Norfolk 14.16 (100) d Dodges Ferry 10.7 (67) at Boyer Oval. Lindisfarne 17.8 (110) d East Coast 14.4 (88) at Triabunna Recreation Ground. Claremont 15.13 (103) d Huonville Lions 12.16 (88) at Huonville Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 14\n(Saturday, 20 July 2013) New Norfolk 22.21 (153) d Lindisfarne 8.13 (61) at Anzac Park. Kingborough 24.13 (157) d East Coast 4.7 (31) at Twin Ovals. Claremont 26.21 (177) d Sorell 6.6 (42) at Pembroke Park. Dodges Ferry 17.18 (120) d Brighton 14.14 (98) at Shark Park. Huonville Lions 17.10 (112) d Cygnet 15.12 (102) at Huonville Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 15\n(Saturday, 27 July 2013) New Norfolk 22.20 (152) d Kingborough 7.7 (49) at Boyer Oval. Sorell 16.8 (104) d Dodges Ferry 16.7 (103) at Pembroke Park. Lindisfarne 16.13 (109) d Brighton 8.15 (63) at Pontville Oval. Claremont 25.14 (164) d Cygnet 13.12 (90) at Abbotsfield Park. East Coast 16.8 (104) d Huonville Lions 11.13 (79) at Triabunna Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 16\n(Saturday, 3 August 2013) Kingborough 11.12 (78) d Brighton 9.8 (62) at Twin Ovals. Lindisfarne 24.17 (161) d Sorell 7.7 (49) at Anzac Park. Cygnet 18.7 (115) d East Coast 10.17 (77) at Cygnet Oval. Claremont 19.15 (129) d Dodges Ferry 6.11 (47) at Shark Park. New Norfolk 13.15 (93) d Huonville Lions 7.8 (50) at Huonville Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 17\n(Saturday, 10 August 2013) Claremont 9.10 (64) d East Coast 4.8 (32) at Abbotsfield Park. New Norfolk 32.16 (208) d Cygnet 6.8 (44) at Boyer Oval. Kingborough 17.9 (111) d Sorell 4.5 (29) at Pembroke Park. Lindisfarne 14.10 (94) d Dodges Ferry 8.10 (58) at Shark Park. Huonville Lions 11.15 (81) d Brighton 6.8 (44) at Pontville Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Round 18\n(Saturday, 17 August 2013) Claremont 18.12 (120) d Lindisfarne 12.8 (80) at Anzac Park. Cygnet 21.14 (140) d Brighton 9.7 (61) at Cygnet Oval. Kingborough 16.14 (110) d Dodges Ferry 9.13 (67) at Twin Ovals. New Norfolk 18.17 (125) d East Coast 11.11 (77) at Triabunna Recreation Ground. Huonville Lions 15.28 (118) d Sorell 8.6 (54) at Huonville Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Elimination Final\n(Saturday, 24 August 2013) Lindisfarne: 1.4 (10) | 9.8 (62) | 14.10 (94) | 17.16 (118) Huonville Lions: 3.2 (20) | 4.3. (27) | 5.5 (35) | 7.8 (50) Attendance: N/A at Anzac Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Qualifying Final\n(Saturday, 24 August 2013) Claremont: 2.1 (13) | 3.8 (26) | 10.10 (70) | 12.13 (85) Kingborough: 2.3 (15) | 3.4 (22) | 8.4 (52) | 9.5 (59) Attendance: N/A at Abbotsfield Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, First Semi Final\n(Saturday 31 August 2013) Kingborough: 2.5 (17) | 4.6 (30) | 8.13 (61) | 11.14 (80) Lindisfarne: 1.2 (8) | 4.3 (27) | 6.5 (41) | 8.8 (56) Attendance: N/A at Twin Ovals, Kingston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Second Semi Final\n(Saturday, 31 August 2013) New Norfolk: 4.4 (28) | 11.7 (73) | 14.8 (92) | 17.14 (116) Claremont: 3.2 (20) | 4.5 (29) | 9.6 (60) | 13.8 (86) Attendance: N/A at Boyer Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Preliminary Final\n(Saturday, 7 September 2013) Claremont: 4.1 (25) | 5.3 (33) | 6.6 (42) | 10.7 (67) Kingborough: 3.4 (22) | 3.6 (24) | 6.9 (45) | 7.11 (53) Attendance: N/A at KGV Football Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235781-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 SFL season, 2013 SFL Ladder, Grand Final\n(Saturday, 14 September 2013) New Norfolk: 4.4 (28) | 6.12 (48) | 11.12 (78) | 15.15 (105) Claremont: 2.5 (17) | 3.5 (23) | 8.7 (55) | 9.8 (62) Attendance: 5,337 at KGV Football Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team\nThe 2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team represented Southern Illinois University Edwardsville during the 2013 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. The Cougars, led by sixth year head coach Kevin Kalish, played their home games on Bob Guelker Field at the Ralph Korte Stadium as an affiliate member of the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Preseason\nEleven players returned from the 13-7-0 team of 2012, including three 2012 first team All-Missouri Valley Conference performers: CollegeSportsMadness.com third team All-American and first team NSCAA All-Region forward Christian Volesky, Missouri Valley Goalkeeper of the Year John Berner, and first team NSCAA All-Region defender Matt Polster, plus MVC All-Freshmen defender Brett Lane. They were joined by eight freshmen who were named one of the nation's top recruiting classes of the season, two newly eligible sophomores, and five transfers from other schools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Preseason\nBoth Matt Polster and Christian Volesky were included on the watch list of thirty-four potential candidates for the Missouri Athletic Club's men's Hermann Trophy, college soccer's highest individual honor. Goalkeeper John Berner was named as one of twenty-eight candidates for the Senior CLASS (Celebrating Loyalty and Achievement for Staying in School) Award which honors players for athletic success, academic excellence, and community service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Preseason\nThe Cougars received votes in the pre-season National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) coaches' poll, the SoccerTimes.com poll, and the Top Drawer Soccer rankings. In the MVC pre-season poll, the conference's coaches picked the Cougars to win the regular season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Preseason\nIn pre-season exhibitions, the Cougars defeated Milwaukee 2-0 and IUPUI 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nCoach Kevin Kalish arranged a challenging schedule designed to help move the Cougars back among the elite teams in NCAA Division I. With only five home games, SIUE visited seven other states, including California and Florida, and met five teams that were in the 2012 NCAA Tournament, all on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nOpening in California against a strong Santa Clara Broncos team, the Cougars dominated the first half en route to a 1\u20130 lead. After an on-field scrap early in the second half left the Broncos short-handed, Santa Clara evened the score on a break-away, then forced the Cougars, who had difficulty finding the back of the net, to go into a second overtime before prevailing, 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nTraveling the short distance to San Jose State, the Cougars faced a defense that contained most of the Cougar's offense except for Christian Volesky, who got off seven of the team's nine shots (six on goal) and scored two goals. The defense allowed only eight Spartan shots, and John Berner pulled down five saves in his first shutout of the young season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nIn the September 3rd NSCAA polls, the Cougars were ranked 26th in the national poll and tied for 2nd in the Midwest poll. Their opponents in the next two games, SMU and Tulsa, were 6th and 5th in the Midwest poll, respectively, while Tulsa remained ahead of the Cougars in the National poll at #22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nIn the first game of Tulsa's Golden Hurricane Classic, the Cougars met SMU, who was 0\u20132\u20130 after facing #1 Indiana and #7 Notre Dame in the opening weekend. In the first half, the Mustangs outshot the Cougars, while the Cougars led in fouls, but the score was knotted at nil. Christian Volesky scored his fourth goal of the season only 1:25 into the second half, and SIUE won the statistics battle for the half on the way to their third road win in three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nA tight, evenly fought defensive match at #22 Tulsa stayed at nil into the second half. The game began to turn against SIUE on a disputed Golden Hurricane goal. After Volesky was sent off, the short-handed Cougars kept pressing on offense, but a second Tulsa goal sealed the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nAfter the loss at Tulsa, The Cougars dropped in the September 10th NSCAA polls to #27 nationally and 4th in the Midwest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nPlaying without Volesky, the Cougars struck quickly versus Cincinnati, scoring in the second minute, but the longer the game went on, the more the All-American's absence was felt. The Bearcats pushed the action hard in the second half, eventually evening the score and sending the game into overtime. In the extra period, Cincinnati continued to pressure the Cougars, and, after a foul in the box, won the game on a penalty kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nFollowing the loss to Cincinnati, the Cougars dropped out of the national rankings completely and dropped to 7th in the Midwest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nIn the mid-week game at Omaha, the Cougars played their typical tight defense, although their offense was less effective, being call 14 times for being offside during the game. The first half saw only three shots by each team, none on goal, and ended tied at nil. Omaha tried increasing the pressure in the second half, out-shooting SIUE 12\u20134, but John Berner saved all four shots on goal. The Cougars took only four second half shots, two on goal, and for the second time in the season, Justin Bilyeu fired a thirty-yard free kick into the back of the net, giving the Cougars the 1\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nTraveling to Chicago, the Cougars might have been deceived by DePaul's 1\u20134\u20131 record and appeared to unready for the Blue Demon's quickness and physical style of play (DePaul led the game in fouls, 18\u20139). DePaul struck early, scoring two goals a minute and three seconds apart. Even though the Cougars bested the Blue Demons in shots, shots on goal, and corner kicks, they were not able to find the net as DePaul had six saves, and the Blue Demons prevailed, 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nA Tuesday night game at #18 Louisville pitted two young, freshman-loaded teams with similar styles of tight defense and ball control. One result was only two of the night's shots being on goal. In the midst of one traffic jam in front of the Cougar goal, the Cardinals scored the only goal for a 1\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nUIC came into Korte Stadium on a roll, with four consecutive shut-outs and five straight wins. Less than four minutes into the game, the Cougars turned the ball over behind the defense, and the Flames struck quickly, taking a 1-0 lead. Despite dominating play for the rest of the game, SIUE was once more unable to find the back of the net and fell to 4\u20135\u20130 on the season and 0\u20132\u20130 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nThe Cougars hosted Central Arkansas for Homecoming and the MVC opener for both 4\u20135\u20130 teams. SIUE celebrated as a Kendall-Moulin rebound shot went in, only to have the goal nullified by an offside call. With less than a minute and a half remaining in the first half, Kendall-Moulin found the back of the net a second time, and the Cougars took a 1\u20130 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nOnce again, the Cougars dominated play, but once again their opponent capitalized on an SIUE turnover, and UCA tied the game twenty minutes into the second half, sending the game into the season's third overtime contest for both schools. The Cougars came out challenging hard in overtime, and Ellis headed in a crossing pass for his first Cougar goal at 91:15, and SIUE took the victory, 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nBack on the road, the Cougars traveled to Evanston, Illinois, to face 14th-ranked Northwestern, their third ranked opponent of the season. As had happened so often this season, the offense dominated play without finding the back end of the goal; nine Cougars took shots, out-shooting the Wildcats 12\u20136 with five shots on goal saved by the Northwestern keeper. The defense, however, limited NU to only 6 shots, none of them on goal, and after two overtime periods, SIUE gained a draw on the road, moving their record to 5\u20135\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nOn the Tuesday after the Northwestern tie, the Cougars returned to the NSCAA regional rankings, at 10th in the Midwest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nTraveling to Tampa to face South Florida, the Cougars dominated play in the first half, taking a 1\u20130 lead even with three regulars not playing. After halftime, the Bulls came out with a helter-skelter, hard pressing attack. While being out-shot, the SIUE defense withstood the assault until again making a careless turnover that helped set up a USF goal to tie the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nWhen Volesky was taken down in the box while driving toward a second goal, the Cougars objected to no foul being called, and the fourth official took the unusual action of calling a foul on Cougars' head coach Kalish, with the referee then issuing a red card. The game went into overtime, with both teams having opportunities to score in both extra periods, but ended in a 1\u20131 tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nReturning to MVC play at Drake, the Cougars, playing without four regulars, yielded only the second early goal of the season as the Bulldogs scored on a rebounded shot in the ninth minute. Drake then outplayed SIUE the remainder of the game, out-shooting the Cougars 9\u20137, on-goal 3\u20131, and on corners 8\u20131 and emerged with the win, dropping SIUE to 5\u20136\u20132 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nThe Cougars faced Bradley at Peoria in their fourth consecutive road game. An evenly matched game, SIUE led in possession time, the Braves in corner kicks and goals. Bradly scored first on a rebounded shot off a controversial corner kick, then added an insurance goal in the final minute on an escaped save that rolled in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nReturning to Ralph Korte Stadium for the first time in three weeks, the Cougars had more lineup changes due to injuries as they faced Loyola for the first time as conference opponents. Although SIUE once more dominated the ball possession, they did little offensively. Two lackluster offenses went into overtime tied at nil. The Ramblers seemed energized by reaching overtime and pressed the action, getting a breakthrough that resulted in a loose ball being netted in the 99th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nHosting high-scoring Evansville on Senior Night, the Cougars came out hungry for a win that would assure them a spot in the MVC tournament. The defense showed its usual strength, limiting the Purple Aces to only four shots and three corners, none in the second half. The Cougars' offense pressured Evansville all game, with thirteen shots and ten corners, and finally scored in the 76th minute, ending a scoring drought of over 420 minutes and earning the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nThe regular season closer was at Plaster Sports Complex in Springfield, Missouri, home of MVC regular season champion Missouri State, the NCAA's #1 scoring defense. With the Cougars also having one of the nation's best scoring defenses, the game was expected to be a defensive struggle, and it did not disappoint in that respect. Regulation time ended tied at nil, resulting in the Cougars' 7th and the Bears' 8th overtime game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0026-0001", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nIn the 2nd overtime, 106 minutes, 25 seconds into the game, SIUE's Danzy headed a pass from Christianson down to himself and booted it into the net to give the Cougars the victory and the Bears their only conference loss of the season in front of the 4th largest home crowd in their 33 years of NCAA soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nThe quarterfinals of the MVC Championship Tournament pitted the fourth seed Cougars against the fifth seed Loyola Ramblers, who had gained their first ever MVC victory at SIUE. The Ramblers showed unexpected toughness on both defense and offense at Bradley's windy Shea Stadium. The statistics showed SIUE controlling the first half, although Loyola managed to force more corners, and the teams went to the locker rooms tied at nil at halftime. The Cougars looked more determined in the early second half and scored in the 56th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0027-0001", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nLoyola then pressed harder, but SIUE scored a second goal on a picture-perfect counterattack. Again, the Ramblers stepped up the intensity of their attacking, and the strong Cougar defense turned back Loyola drives again and again but had difficulty clearing the ball from their half of the field. In a traffic jam in front of the net as the seconds counted down, the Ramblers finally managed to score with only 5 seconds remaining in the game, and the Cougars advanced to face the winner of the Evansville vs. Bradley game in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nThe MVC Awards were announced at the banquet held on the evening between the tournament quarterfinals and semifinals. John Berner repeated as MVC Goalkeeper of the Year and was named to the MVC All-Conference First Team along with forward Christian Volesky and mid-fielder Matt Polster. Defender Justin Bilyeu was an All-Conference Honorable Mention, and defenders Andrew Kendall-Moulin and Austin Ledbetter were named to the MVC All-Freshman Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nIn the MVC Championship Tournament semifinals, the Cougars faced regular season champion Missouri State only six days after handing the Bears their only conference defeat of the season. Missouri State wanted revenge and pushed the action in the first half. A corner kick in the 18th was flicked on, leading to a header off the crossbar with the rebound going straight to another Bear who headed it in for the goal. In the second half, it was the Cougars who pressed the action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0029-0001", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nThen an SIUE defender made a poor pass that went to a Bear with an unobstructed path toward the goal. Goalkeeper Berner came out of the box to challenge, but the shot struck his arm, resulting in a handball call and an automatic red card in the 74th minute. Playing a man down, the Cougars continued to drive toward the Missouri State goal, but the Bears' NCAA-leading defense held them off again and again to preserve their win, ending SIUE's season far below expectations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nAt the conclusion of the conference tournament, midfielders Jabari Danzy and Matt Polster were named to the 2013 MVC Men's Soccer All-Tournament Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Season\nCougars' goalkeeper John Berner was selected by the Colorado Rapids as the 35th overall pick in the second round of the Major League Soccer draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Roster\nBuff background indicates returning players from 2012. Pink background indicates players \"redshirted\" in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235782-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team, Schedule and results\nVisiting team on the left, home team on the right. Rankings from National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235783-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SK Brann season\nThe 2013 season was Brann's 27th consecutive year in Tippeligaen and their third full season with Rune Skarsfjord as their manager. They participated in the Tippeligaen, finishing 8th, and the Cup where they reached the Third Round before defeat by Adeccoligaen side Mj\u00f8ndalen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235783-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SK Brann 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-00235783-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SK Brann season, 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235783-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SK Brann 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235783-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SK Brann 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235783-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SK Brann 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235783-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SK Brann 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, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235784-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SK100\n2013 SK100 is a trans-Neptunian object, both considered a scattered and detached object, located in the outermost region of the Solar System. The object with a moderately inclined and eccentric orbit measures approximately 135 kilometers (84 miles) in diameter. It was first observed on 29 September 2013, by astronomers at the Mauna Kea Observatories in Hawaii, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235784-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SK100, Orbit and classification\n2013 SK100 orbits the Sun at a distance of 45.5\u201378.1\u00a0AU once every 485 years and 9 months (177,421 days; semi-major axis of 61.79\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.26 and an inclination of 26\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235784-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SK100, Orbit and classification\nConsidered both a scattered and detached object, 2013 SK100 is particularly unusual as it has an unusually circular orbit for a scattered-disc object (SDO). Although 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235784-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 SK100, Orbit and classification\nThe 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. It is in a 3:1 resonance to Neptune. It seems to belong to the same group as (145480) 2005 TB190.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235784-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SK100, Physical characteristics\nJohnston's archive estimates a diameter of 134 kilometers based on an assumed albedo of 0.09, while American astronomer Michael Brown, calculates a diameter of 135 kilometers, using an estimated albedo of 0.08 and an absolute magnitude of 7.8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235785-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SL102\n2013 SL102 is an extreme trans-Neptunian object from the outermost region of the Solar System. It was discovered on September 28, 2013 by astronomers at Cerro Tololo Observatory, La Serena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235785-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SL102, Orbit and classification\nIt orbits the Sun at a distance of 38.1\u2013592.0\u00a0AU once every 5591 years and 11 months (2,042,441 days; semi-major axis of 315.04\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.88 and an inclination of 7\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team\nThe 2013 SMU Mustangs football team represented Southern Methodist University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Mustangs, led by sixth-year head coach June Jones, played their home games at Gerald J. Ford Stadium in University Park, Texas, an enclave of Dallas. This was the first year as a member of the American Athletic Conference after having previously played in Conference USA. They finished the season 5\u20137, 4\u20134 in American Athletic play to finish in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nThis game was the 49th meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the Texas Tech Red Raiders. The most recent match-up was September 5, 2010, a game in which Texas Tech defeated SMU with a final score of 41\u201323. After this game, Texas Tech leads the series 33\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Montana State\nThis game was the first meeting between the Mustangs and Bobcats. SMU leads the series 1\u20130\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M\nThis game was the 80th meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the Texas A&M Aggies. The most recent match-up was September 15, 2012, a game in which Texas A&M defeated SMU with a final score of 48\u20133. After this match-up, Texas A&M leads the series 44\u201329\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, TCU\nThis game was the 91st meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the TCU Horned Frogs. Before this game, the most recent match-up was September 29, 2012, a game in which TCU defeated SMU with a final score of 24\u201316. Heading into the 2013 matchup, TCU led the series 44\u201340\u20137. SMU and TCU share an intense crosstown rivalry which is commonly referred to as the Battle for the Iron Skillet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Rutgers\nThis game was the 1st meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the Rutgers Scarlet Knights. After Rutgers' victory in triple overtime, they led the series 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Memphis\nThis game was the 6th meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the Memphis Tigers. The most recent match-up was October 27, 2012, a game in which SMU defeated Memphis with a final score of 44\u201313. After SMU's 34\u201329 victory, the series stands tied at 3\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Temple\nThis game will be the 3rd meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the Temple Owls. The most recent match-up was September 30, 1946, a game in which SMU and Temple ended with a 7\u20137 draw. In fact, both previous meetings have ended in ties, so heading into the 2013 matchup, the series stands at 0\u20130\u20132. After SMU's victory, they took a 1-0-2 lead in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Cincinnati\nThis game was the 1st meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the Cincinnati Bearcats. After Cincinnati's win, they led the series 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, UConn\nThis game will be the 2nd meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the UConn Huskies. The only previous match-up was September 16, 1989, an infamous game for SMU as it was their first win after coming back from the Death Penalty sanctions in 1987 and 1988 in which SMU defeated UConn with a final score of 31\u201330 after coming back from a 14\u201330 deficit late in the 4th quarter. After SMU's 2013 victory, SMU leads the series 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, South Florida\nThis game was the 1st meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the South Florida Bulls. After SMU's victory, they led the series 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, Houston\nThis game will be the 29th meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the Houston Cougars. The most recent match-up was October 18, 2012, a game in which SMU defeated Houston with a final score of 72\u201342. Heading into the 2013 matchup Houston leads the series 17\u201310\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235786-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 SMU Mustangs football team, Game summaries, UCF\nThis game will be the 6th meeting of the SMU Mustangs and the UCF Knights. The most recent match-up was November 3, 2012, a game in which UCF defeated SMU with a final score of 42\u201317. Heading into the 2013 match-up UCF leads the all-time series 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235787-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 STCC \u2013 Racing Elite League\nThe 2013 Scandinavian Touring Car Championship was the third Scandinavian Touring Car Championship season. The season started at Ring Knutstorp on 4 May and ends on 21 September at Mantorp Park. It is the first year of TTA\u00a0\u2013 Racing Elite League silhouette regulations in the series following the merge of the STCC and TTA at the end of the 2012 seasons. Fredrik Ekblom goes into the championship as reigning champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235787-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 STCC \u2013 Racing Elite League, Teams and drivers\nAs the cars used during the 2012 STCC season were banned, major teams such as NIKA Racing (Chevrolet), Kristoffersson Motorsport and IPS (Volkswagen) did not join the merged championship. All teams were Swedish-registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400\nThe 2013\u00a0STP\u00a0400 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race that was held on April 21, 2013, at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas, United States. Contested over 267 laps on the 1.5\u2013mile (2.4 km) tri-oval, it was the eighth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Matt Kenseth of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race, his second win of the 2013 season and second straight at Kansas Speedway, while Kasey Kahne finished second. Jimmie Johnson, Martin Truex Jr. and Clint Bowyer rounded out the top five", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400\nThis was the third straight Sprint Cup race of 2013 where the winner won from the pole and led the most laps, following wins by Jimmie Johnson at Martinsville and Kyle Busch at Texas. This was the first such streak in over 28 years (the last time there were three straight races won from the pole was in 1985; with Bill Elliott at Michigan, Dale Earnhardt at Bristol, and Elliott at Darlington).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Background\nKansas Speedway is a four-turn tri-oval track that is 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked from seventeen to twenty degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is nine to eleven degrees. The back stretch, opposite of the front, is at only five degrees. The racetrack has a seating capacity for more than 72,000 spectators. Denny Hamlin was the defending race winner after winning the event in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Jimmie Johnson was leading the Drivers' Championship with 269 points, while Kyle Busch stood in second with 251 points. Greg Biffle followed in the third position, four points ahead of Brad Keselowski and five ahead of Carl Edwards in fourth and fifth. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., with 234, was two points ahead of Kasey Kahne and twenty-six ahead of Clint Bowyer, as Paul Menard was two points ahead of Matt Kenseth and fourteen ahead of Kevin Harvick in tenth and eleventh. Jamie McMurray completed the first twelve positions with 190 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 32], "content_span": [33, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions are scheduled to be held before the race. The first session, held on April 19, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third were held on April 20, and were 55 and 50 minutes long, respectively. During the first practice session, Edwards was quickest with a time of 28.117 seconds, ahead of Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. and Sam Hornish, Jr. in second and third. Martin Truex, Jr. followed in the fourth position, ahead of Aric Almirola in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-four cars were entered, meaning only one car was not able to start because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Kenseth clinched his ninth career pole position, with a record-setting time of 28.145 seconds. After his qualifying run, Kenseth commented, \"We didn't think we had a chance. It's unexpected, and it's one of the fastest tracks of the year. Felt great to go out late and jump over the other guys.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Edwards. Stenhouse, Jr. qualified third, Hornish, Jr. took fourth, and Kyle Busch started fifth. Almirola, Truex, Jr., Mark Martin, Ryan Newman, and Bowyer completed the first ten positions on the grid. The driver who failed to qualify for the race was Joe Nemechek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Juan Pablo Montoya was quickest, ahead of Stenhouse, Jr. and Almirola in second and third. Biffle and Edwards followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Truex, Jr., Kyle Busch, Earnhardt, Jr., Menard, and Newman rounded out the first ten positions. In the final practice session for the race, Kenseth was quickest with a time of 28.615 seconds. Almirola followed in second, ahead of Montoya and Kurt Busch in third and fourth. Kahne, who was twelfth quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 45], "content_span": [46, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Race, Start\nThe race started at 1:16 p.m. EDT with Matt Kenseth leading the field to the green flag, The first caution came out on lap 6 when Kyle Busch spun out in the back straightaway, the race restarted on lap 9, The second caution came out on lap 39 when Dave Blaney blew an engine and collided into Danica Patrick, the race restarted on lap 43, A couple of laps later, the third caution then came out for debris on lap 75, the race restarted on lap 78, The fourth caution then came out on lap 87 when Elliott Sadler spun out, the race restarted on lap 91, with Matt Kenseth the race leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 33], "content_span": [34, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Race, Second half\nThe fifth caution came out on lap 106 for a two-car wreck involving Kyle Busch and Joey Logano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235788-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 STP 400, Report, Race, Second half\nThe race restarted on lap 115 with Martin Truex, Jr. the race leader, the sixth caution then came out on lap 174 when Brian Vickers spun out, the race restarted with 89 laps to go, The seventh caution came out for a multi-car wreck involving Marcos Ambrose, Casey Mears and Josh Wise, the race restarted with 81 laps to go, A couple of laps later, Debris on the back straightaway brought out the eighth caution of the day, with 50 laps to go, the race restarted with 43 laps to go with Matt Kenseth the race leader, Matt Kenseth won his race in Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 39], "content_span": [40, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500\nThe 2013\u00a0STP\u00a0Gas\u00a0Booster\u00a0500 was a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stock car race held on April 7, 2013, at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia, United States. Contested over 500 laps on the 0.526-mile (0.847\u00a0km) oval, it was the sixth race of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series championship. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his record eighth win at the track, and second win of the season, while Clint Bowyer finished second. Jeff Gordon, Kasey Kahne and Kyle Busch rounded out the top five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500\nThis is the first NASCAR race since 2005 UAW Ford 500 without four-time Martinsville winner Denny Hamlin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Background\nMartinsville Speedway is a four-turn short track that is 0.526 miles (0.847\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at eleven degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, has a zero-degree banking. Like the front stretch, the back straight away also doesn't have a banked surface. The race consists of 500 laps, which is equivalent to a race distance of 263 miles (423\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Dale Earnhardt Jr. was leading the Drivers' Championship with 199 points, while Brad Keselowski stood in second with 187 points. Jimmie Johnson followed in the third position, 19 points ahead of Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle in fourth and fifth. Kyle Busch, with 163, was four points ahead of Kasey Kahne and nine ahead of Paul Menard, as Joey Logano was one point ahead of Denny Hamlin and five ahead of Matt Kenseth in tenth and eleventh. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. completed the first twelve positions with 139 points. The defending winner of the race was Ryan Newman, who won the race in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were scheduled before the race. The first session, held on April 5, 2013, was 90 minutes long. The second and third were scheduled on April 6, and were 45 and 60 minutes long. During the first practice session, Johnson was quickest with a time of 19.214 seconds, ahead of Juan Pablo Montoya and Clint Bowyer in second and third. Jeff Gordon followed in the fourth position, ahead of Keselowski in fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nIn the Saturday morning session, Bowyer was quickest, ahead of Kyle Busch and Gordon in second and third. Brian Vickers and Newman followed in the fourth and fifth positions. Jamie McMurray, Biffle, Jeff Burton, Martin Truex Jr., and Kevin Harvick rounded out the first ten positions. In the final practice session for the race, Bowyer was quickest with a time of 19.518 seconds. Johnson followed in second, ahead of Edwards and Biffle in third and fourth. Burton, who was eighth-quickest in second practice, managed fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nDuring qualifying, forty-four cars were entered, meaning only one car was not able to start because of NASCAR's qualifying procedure. Johnson clinched his thirtieth career pole position, with a time of 19.244 seconds. After his qualifying run, Johnson commented, \"In the first run out, we were in (qualifying) trim and made two or three laps, and I knew right away that we had a great shot at it today. At that point, I just needed to do my job and not mess up.\" He was joined on the front row of the grid by Marcos Ambrose. Vickers qualified third, Logano took fourth, and Kahne started fifth. Gordon, Keselowski., Kenseth, Newman, and Edwards completed the first ten positions on the grid. The driver who failed to qualify for the race was Mike Bliss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Race, Start\nThe race was started at 1:13\u00a0p.m. EST. as Marcos Ambrose led the field to the green flag. A couple of laps later, the first caution came out when Danica Patrick spun in Turn 3. The race restarted on lap 22 as Jimmie Johnson led on the first restart. The second caution came out on lap 70 for Scott Speed, who was stopped on the front stretch. Juan Pablo Montoya won the free pass under caution. The race restarted on lap 77, with Jimmie Johnson the race leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Race, Second Quarter\nOn Lap 173, the third caution came out for debris on the track. The race restarted on lap 180 and immediately the fourth caution came out for a multi-car wreck on the back straightaway. Jamie McMurray, Marcos Ambrose, and others were involved. The race restarted on lap 197. On lap 246, the fifth caution came out for a crash. The race restarted on lap 248. A few laps later, the sixth caution came out with 244 laps to go. Carl Edwards spun out in Turn 4. The race restarted with 239 laps to go, with Matt Kenseth in the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Race, Third quarter\nThe seventh caution came out for Martin Truex Jr. who spun on the track with 219 laps to go. The race restarted with 213 laps to go. The eighth caution came out for the spin of Kurt Busch with 206 laps to go. The race restarted with 201 laps to go. Kyle Busch led the field to the green. The ninth caution came with Ryan Newman cutting a front tire. The race restarted with 131 laps to go. The tenth caution came out with 51 laps to go when Brian Vickers spun out on the back straightaway. Paul Menard won the free pass under caution. The race restarted with 41 laps to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235789-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 STP Gas Booster 500, Report, Race, Fourth quarter\nThe eleventh caution came out with 33 laps to go when Dale Earnhardt Jr. spun out in Turn 4. The race restarted with 27 laps to go. With 13 laps to go, the twelfth caution came out when Kurt Busch caught fire on the front straightaway. The race was red flagged for more than six minutes for clean up. The race restarted with 7 laps to go. Jimmie Johnson won his eighth race at Martinsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235790-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SUGO GT 300km\nThe 2013 SUGO GT 300km was the fourth round of the 2013 Super GT season. It took place on July 28, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235791-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SVL season\nThe 2013 Shakey's V-League (SVL) season was the tenth season of the Shakey's V-League. There were two indoor conferences for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235791-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SVL season, 1st Conference\nThe Shakey's V-League 10th Season 1st Conference was the seventeenth conference of Shakey's V-League, a collegiate women's volleyball league in the Philippines founded in 2004. The opening ceremonies was held on April 7, 2013 at the Filoil Flying V Arena in San Juan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235791-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SVL season, Open Conference\nThe Shakey's V-League 10th Season Open Conference was the eighteenth conference of the Shakey's V-League, commenced on August 18, 2013 at the Filoil Flying V Centre, San Juan with 8 teams competing in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235792-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament took place March 12\u201316, 2013 at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas. The tournament champion, Southern University, received the Southwestern Athletic Conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235792-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nSeven teams participated in the 2013 tournament. Arkansas-Pine Bluff and Mississippi Valley State each received one-year postseason bans in men's basketball, and thus were not allowed to participate in the 2013 SWAC Tournament, due to failing to meet the NCAA's APR requirements. Texas Southern was serving a two-year postseason ban, after the NCAA Division I Infractions Committee said it found a lack of institutional control and outlined problems spanning 13 sports over a seven-year period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235793-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SY99\n2013 SY99, also known by its OSSOS survey designation uo3L91, is a trans-Neptunian object discovered on September 29, 2013 by the Outer Solar System Origins Survey using the Canada\u2013France\u2013Hawaii Telescope at Mauna Kea Observatory. This object orbits the Sun between 50 and 1,300\u00a0AU (7.5 and 190\u00a0billion\u00a0km), and has a barycentric orbital period of nearly 20,000 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235793-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 SY99\nIt has the second largest semi-major axis yet detected for an orbit with a perihelion beyond the zone of strong influence of Neptune (q > 38), second only to 541132 Lele\u0101k\u016bhonua, but exceeding the semi-major axes of Sedna, 2012 VP113 and 2010 GB174. 2013 SY99 has one of highest perihelia of any known extreme trans-Neptunian object, behind sednoids including Sedna (76 AU), 2012 VP113 (80 AU), and Lele\u0101k\u016bhonua (65 AU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235793-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 SY99, Discovery\nAccording to astronomers Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin, the discovery of 2013 SY99 provides additional evidence for the existence of Planet Nine, but Michele Bannister (see 10463), one of the astronomers who reported the discovery of this object, counters that it travels an orbit that is almost within the plane of the Solar System, rather than being tilted at high angles, as might be expected if it were being shepherded by a Planet Nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 20], "content_span": [21, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235793-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 SY99, Discovery\nIts existence was announced in 2016, but the observations were kept private until 2017. It was listed at the Minor Planet Center and the JPL Small-Body Database on 6 April 2017 with a three-year observation arc and an epoch 2017 heliocentric orbital period of 17,500 years. Barycentric orbital solutions, however, are more stable for objects on multi-thousand year orbits, and the barycentric period for 2013 SY99 is 19,700 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 20], "content_span": [21, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235793-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 SY99, Discovery\nAs of April 2019, its perihelion distance of q=50.029\u00b10.056\u00a0AU and semi-major axis a=690\u00b122\u00a0AU make 2013 SY99 a possible sednoid, according to the most common definition of the term (q>50\u00a0AU, a>150\u00a0AU). It is listed as a sednoid by some. However, 2013 SY99 is usually considered to be an extreme trans-Neptunian object and not a sednoid, due to its high eccentricity which makes the heliocentric orbit unstable. In the heliocentric reference frame, the perihelion is currently rising, and the nominal orbit has a perihelion distance above 50\u00a0AU only since October 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 20], "content_span": [21, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235793-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 SY99, Discovery\n2013 SY99 is estimated to be about 250\u00a0km (160\u00a0mi) in diameter and moderately red in color. In 2052 it will be roughly 20.3\u00a0AU (3.04\u00a0billion\u00a0km) from Neptune. It will come to perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) around 2055 when it will be 50\u00a0AU (7.5\u00a0billion\u00a0km) from the Sun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 20], "content_span": [21, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235794-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sabah state election\nThe 2013 Sabah state election was held on Sunday, 5 May 2013 concurrently with the 13th Malaysian general election. 60 state seats were contested to elect state legislature in the Malaysian state of Sabah. This was the 12th state election in Sabah. The state legislative assembly was dissolved on 3 April 2013 following the announcement by Najib Razak to dissolve the federal Parliament earlier on the same day. Sabahans will also elect 25 representatives to the federal legislature which will be covered as part of the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235794-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sabah state election\nThe 2008 election was won by the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition winning 59 out 60 seats. After the 2008 election, the Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) withdrew from the BN coalition resulting in 2 state seats to move out of BN. As a result, the composition of parties in the state legislature prior to dissolution was BN with 57, SAPP with 2 and DAP with 1 seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235794-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sabah state election\nThe final results shown that BN will keep the assembly with 48 seats, a decrease of 11 seats. The newly formed Pakatan Rakyat won 11 seats, comparing to 1 in the last assembly. Sabah-based State Reform Party also won 1 seat via its leader Jeffrey Kitingan, while another Sabah-based party SAPP was wiped out from the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235794-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sabah state election, Contenders\nBN was defending their previous victory and contested in all 60 state seats. out of the 60 seats, UMNO contested in 32, PBS in 13, UPKO in 6, LDP in 4 MCA in 2, GERAKAN in 2 and PBRS in 1. BN was challenged by the newly formed Pakatan Rakyat coalition consisting of PKR (43), DAP (8) and PAS (9). Other than Pakatan Rakyat, SAPP (41), STAR (47), BERSAMA (3) and KITA (1) also contested in the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235794-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sabah state election, Parliamentary election results\nThere were 25 parliamentary or federal seats contested in Sabah. Barisan Nasional won 22 seats while DAP won 2 seats (Kota Kinabalu and Sandakan) and PKR won 1 (Penampang).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235795-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento Challenger\nThe 2013 Sacramento Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the ninth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Sacramento, United States between 30 September and 6 October 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235795-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235795-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235796-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nTennys Sandgren and Rhyne Williams were the defending champions, but they lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235796-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nJohn-Patrick Smith and Matt Reid won the title, defeating Jarmere Jenkins and Donald Young in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20131), 4\u20136, [14\u201312].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235797-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento Challenger \u2013 Singles\nJames Blake was the defending champion but retired from tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235798-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento State Hornets football team\nThe 2013 Sacramento State Hornets football team represented California State University, Sacramento in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by seventh-year head coach Marshall Sperbeck and played their home games at Hornet Stadium. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 4\u20134 in Big Sky play to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235798-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacramento State Hornets football team, Schedule\nDespite Southern Utah also being a member of the Big Sky, their September 15 meeting was considered a non-conference game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235799-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sacred Heart Pioneers football team\nThe 2013 Sacred Heart Pioneers football team represented Sacred Heart University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by head coach Mark Nofri in his first official year as head coach after serving as the interim head coach in 2012. They played their home games at Campus Field. They were a member of the Northeast Conference. The Pioneers finished the season 10\u20133, 4\u20132 in NEC play to share the NEC championship with Duquesne. Due to their win over Dequesne, they earned the conference's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs, their first ever playoff appearance, where they were defeated in the first round by Fordham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235800-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Safari Sevens\nThe 2013 Safari Sevens are the 18th annual edition of the Safari Sevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235801-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Safeway Championship\nThe 2013 Safeway Championship was held from February 6 to 10 at the Yellowhead Centre in Neepawa, Manitoba. The winning Jeff Stoughton rink represented Manitoba at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235801-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Safeway Championship, Draw Brackets\n32 team double knockout with playoff roundFour teams qualify each from A Event and B Event", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235801-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Safeway Championship, Results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235802-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sagan Tosu season\nThe 2013 Sagan Tosu season was Sagan Tosu's second season in J.League Division 1 after being promoted for J.League Division 2 in 2011. They finished the season in twelfth position, whilst participating in the J.League Cup group stages and reaching the Semifinal of the Emperor's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235802-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sagan Tosu 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235802-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sagan Tosu 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235802-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sagan Tosu 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235802-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sagan Tosu 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235802-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sagan Tosu 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, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235803-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saginaw Sting season\nThe 2013 Saginaw Sting season was the fifth season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235803-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saginaw Sting season\nThe Sting's first move in its quest for a title defense in 2013 happened when they re-signed Head Coach Fred Townsend to a 3-year contract extension.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235804-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sail Komodo\n2013 Sail Komodo was the fifth international sailing event by Sail Indonesia cooperating with Indonesian Ministry of Maritime Affairs, Indonesian Marine Board, and other Indonesian government agencies which was held in the area of East Nusa Tenggara province. 2013 Sail Komodo took the theme \"The Golden Bridge Making East Nusa Tenggra \u2013 The World's Main Tourism Destination\"\" that was in line with Indonesian government's plan in accelerating the economic growth of remote areas through tourism and maritime sector. The series of events were held from 27 July to 14 September 2013 and more than 100 participants were involved in yacht rally which was the main activity of 2013 Sail Komodo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235804-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sail Komodo, Goal\nThe main goal of 2013 Sail Komodo was to accelerate the development of East Nusa Tenggara in economy and tourism sector. Moreover, 2013 Sail Komodo was also conducted to develop the tourism potential, increase citizens' welfare, expand the sailing route, and prepare East Nusa Tenggara to be world's tourists destination. The governor of East Nusa Tenggara hoped that 2013 Sail Komodo would affect the number of tourists coming to East Nusa Tenggara so that Visit Flobamora 2013 program would be successful as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 22], "content_span": [23, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235805-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Francis Cougars football team\nThe 2013 Saint Francis Cougars football team represented the University of Saint Francis, located in Fort Wayne, Indiana, in the 2013 NAIA football season. They were led by head coach Kevin Donley, who served his 16th year as the first and only head coach in the history of Saint Francis football. The Cougars played their home games at Bishop John D'Arcy Stadium and were members of the Mid-States Football Association (MSFA) Mideast League (MEL). The Cougars finished 1st in the MSFA MEL division and received an automatic bid to participate in the postseason NAIA playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235805-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Francis Cougars football team, Game summaries\n9/14/2013 - The Cougars opened the season against a formidable opponent in William Penn. The week prior, the Statesmen had opened their season with a convincing victory over then 9th-ranked Bethel (TN). The lack of a poll after that week kept the Statesmen from a higher national ranking. This game was tied 10-10 at the half. But USF took control in the second half, aided by a game-ending injury to the Statesmen's starting quarterback. The Cougars scored the last 21 points in the game. For their effort on the week, the Cougars were elevated to #2 in the NAIA Coaches Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235805-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Francis Cougars football team, Game summaries\n9/21/2013 - The Cougars home opener was against St. Ambrose, a tough 7th-ranked team that gave the Cougars a 1-point loss last season. The game's outcome wasn't certain until all time had expired from the clock. After scoring a late 4th quarter touchdown, the Bees had a chance to kick for 1 point to tie the score at 38-38. But the Bees opted instead to attempt a 2-point conversion. An incomplete pass denied the Bees the lead at that time. Later in the quarter, as time was running out, The Bees attempted a game-winning field goal. But the kick sailed wide as the clock struck :00, and Saint Francis came away with a 1-point victory of their own, 38-37. Next week, the Cougars return to the road to face their 3rd ranked opponent in 3 weeks when they visit #7 Grand View (IA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235805-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Francis Cougars football team, Game summaries\n9/28/2013 - The Cougars went on the road and fell to defeat against an impressive Grand View team, 23-7. For their win, Grand View improved to #4 in the national polls, while Saint Francis dropped 4 places to #6. The Cougars next opponent, Siena Heights (Mich.), entered the national polls for the first time, appearing at #25 in this week's rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235805-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Francis Cougars football team, Game summaries\n10/5/2013 - The Cougars went on the road to another tough ranked opponent. The Cougars trailed 17-14 at halftime. Under the leadership of quarterback David Yoder, who replaced an injured Josh Miller, the Cougars scored two touchdowns in the second half while holding Siena Heights scoreless to give them a 28-17 victory. This was their first conference win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235806-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Francis Red Flash football team\nThe 2013 Saint Francis Red Flash football team represented Saint Francis University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by fourth year head coach Chris Villarrial and played their home games at DeGol Field. They were a member of the Northeast Conference. They finished the season 5\u20136, 3\u20133 in NEC play to finish in a three way tie for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235807-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Helena Chief Councillor referendum\nA referendum on creating the post of Chief Councillor was held in Saint Helena on 23 March 2013. The proposal was rejected by 80% of voters, with voter turnout at just 10%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235807-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Helena Chief Councillor referendum, Background\nIn January 2013 the Government of Saint Helena published proposals for amendments to the constitution. This included the appointment of a Chief Councillor from the 12-member Legislative Council, who would appoint a further four members of the Executive Council instead of the entire Executive Council being elected by the Legislative Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235808-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Helena general election\nGeneral elections were held in Saint Helena on 17 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235808-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Helena general election, Electoral system\nThe 12 elected members of the Legislative Council were elected in a single constituency, with voters having 12 votes to cast. This marked a change from the 2009 elections, which saw Council members elected in two six-seat constituencies. A further three ex officio members were appointed to the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235809-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Paul mayoral election\nThe 2013 Saint Paul mayoral election was held on November 5, 2013 to elect the Mayor of Saint Paul, Minnesota for a four-year term. Incumbent Chris Coleman won re-election for a third term in the first round with 78.23% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235809-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Paul mayoral election\nThis was the first mayoral election in the city's history to use instant-runoff voting, popularly known as ranked choice voting, which was adopted by voters during the city's 2009 elections. Saint Paul did not hold a primary election on August 16, the 2013 date for primaries in Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235809-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saint Paul mayoral election, Background\nOn April 3, 2013, incumbent mayor Chris Coleman, who has been in office since 2006, announced that he would seek a third term as mayor. He was endorsed by the Saint Paul City DFL on June 10, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235810-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saladin governorate election\nThe Saladin Governorate election of 2013 was held on 20 April 2013 alongside elections for all other governorates outside Iraqi Kurdistan, Kirkuk, Anbar and Nineveh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235810-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saladin governorate election, Results\nFollowing the election Ahmed Abdullah al-Jubouri was re-elected as governor. In December 2013 Juburi was suspended by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for at least two months while allegations of corruption were investigated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235811-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Salford City Reds season\nThe Salford City Reds played in Super League XVIII during the 2013 season. This was the 18th season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235811-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Salford City Reds season\nPrior to the season the club looked to be folding until Marwan Koukash took over in January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235811-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Salford City Reds season\nReds' first game of the 2013 Super League was a 0-42 home defeat by Wigan Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235812-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Salina Bombers season\nThe 2013 Salina Bombers season was the team's first season as a professional indoor football franchise and first as a member of the Champions Professional Indoor Football League. One of ten teams in the CPIFL for the league's inaugural season, the Salina Bombers were owned by Chris Vercher. The Force played their home games at the Bicentennial Center in Salina, Kansas, under the direction of veteran head coach Bob Frey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235812-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Salina Bombers season, Season summary\nWith a 9-3 record, the Bombers finished 4th in the final CPIFL standings, which qualified the team for the playoffs. The Bombers traveled to Sioux City, Iowa, where they defeated the first-seeded Sioux City Bandits to advance to the Champions Bowl. In the first-ever Champions Bowl, the Bombers were defeated 47-34 by the Wichita Wild. Despite the loss, head coach Bob Frey was named CPIFL Coach Of Year for 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235812-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Salina Bombers season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated June 22, 201326 Active, 0 Inactive, 4 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235813-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Salisbury City Council election\nThe second set of elections to the Salisbury City Council were held on 2 May 2013. The whole council was up for election, and the Conservative Party gained the largest number of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235813-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Salisbury City Council election\nAll eight city council wards share the boundaries of the eight Wiltshire Council electoral divisions within Salisbury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash\nThe 2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash occurred in the early morning hours of 15 January 2013. A passenger train started to move without authorization, with only a cleaning lady on board. It overran a set of buffer stops and crashed into a block of flats in Saltsj\u00f6baden, Sweden. The cleaning lady was at first suspected of having \"stolen\" the train, but was later cleared of blame, as the train was found to have started moving because of violation of safety procedures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Incident\nOn 15 January 2013, a Saltsj\u00f6banan commuter train crashed into a residential building in the Stockholm suburb of Saltsj\u00f6baden, seriously injuring a cleaning lady who was in the train at the time. Travelling through two stations at 50\u00a0mph (80\u00a0km/h), the train derailed, running into the ground-floor kitchen of a house. The woman's condition was described as \"serious but stable\" in hospital. None of the five people who were inside the house at the time of the crash were hurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Incident\nBertil Grandinson, a resident on the top floor of the house, explained: \"We woke up at half past two by a terrible bang. It was as if an aeroplane crashed. I looked out the window and noted then to my great surprise that the train had run into the house. It is terrible and very shocking\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Incident\nPolice spokesman Ulf Lindgren said: \"It's incredibly lucky that no one in the house was injured. The head of the emergency services crew has ordered the house to be evacuated for safety reasons\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Investigation and aftermath\nInitially media reports suggested the train had been stolen by a 20-year-old cleaning woman; however, the train owner Storstockholms Lokaltrafik and operator Arriva spokespeople later apologised for this explanation and suggested that it was only ever an initial hypothesis, which they should not have shared with the media in such a way. As of 20\u00a0January\u00a02013, the cleaner's union, SEKO, was reportedly considering legal action for defamation on her behalf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Investigation and aftermath\nTwo weeks after the accident the cleaner claimed not to remember anything about the incident. The cleaner was cleared of all suspicion by the prosecutor's office on 18 January 2013. The prosecutor alleged that a number of \"unfortunate circumstances\" and \"a number of serious safety breaches on the train and where it was parked\" had led to the crash. The investigation was reported to be considering whether or not any laws had been broken in the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Investigation and aftermath\nThe remaining train car was removed from the house on 28 January, nearly two weeks after the crash occurred. The stretch of the railway between Neglinge and Saltsj\u00f6baden was closed for maintenance work until mid-September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Investigation and aftermath\nOn 5 May 2014 the Swedish Accident Investigation Authority published its final report absolving the injured woman of all responsibility. The report states that the \"dead man's switch\" had been secured in its depressed position with a foreign object, leaving the train stationary with brakes released and the power control lever in full forward power. Only the open doors caused the power to be cut off. After finishing her work, the cleaner entered the motorman's cabin as instructed to close the passenger-doors and exit through the cab door.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235814-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Saltsj\u00f6banan train crash, Investigation and aftermath\nWhen she closed the doors, the power to the traction switched in and the train took off. Lacking training, the cleaner could find no way to stop the train. Failure to set points to prevent the train entering the main line made the accident more serious than it would otherwise have been.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg state election\nThe 2013 Salzburg state election was held on 5 May 2013 to elect the members of the Landtag of Salzburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg state election\nThe governing coalition of the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6) and Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) suffered huge losses. The SP\u00d6 lost suffered a swing of almost 16 percentage points, while the \u00d6VP lost 7.5; despite its losses, the latter became the largest party in the Landtag. The Greens were the main beneficiary of the government's collapse, taking 20% of votes, their best ever result. The Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6) made modest gains, while Team Stronach debuted at 8.3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg state election\nDespite its losses, the \u00d6VP led by Wilfried Haslauer Jr. was the clear victor of the election. The party ultimately succeeded in negotiating a coalition with the Greens and Team Stronach, and Haslauer Jr became the new Governor of Salzburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg state election, Background\nAfter the 2009 election, the SP\u00d6 remained the largest party and Gabi Burgstaller won her second term as Governor, forming a coalition with the \u00d6VP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg state election, Background\nAfter speculative financial investments by the state became known in December 2012, second deputy Governor and finance minister David Brenner resigned. An oversight committee was formed in January to investigate the scandal. Greens leader Astrid R\u00f6ssler was chosen as committee chairwoman with the support of the \u00d6VP, over the FP\u00d6's candidate Friedrich Wiedermann, who was supported by the SP\u00d6. After concluding its investigation, the oversight committee recommended the dissolution of the Landtag and the calling of early elections. This was pushed by the \u00d6VP against the will of Governor Burgstaller, but was nonetheless agreed to. The four parliamentary parties agreed to schedule the election for 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00235815-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 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-00235815-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg state election, Aftermath\nAhead of the election, both SP\u00d6 Governor Burgstaller and \u00d6VP lead candidate Wilfried Haslauer Jr stated they would retire from politics if their respective parties failed to place first. On the evening of the election, Burgstaller announced she would resign all political functions. She was subsequently replaced as party leader by Walter Steidl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235815-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Salzburg state election, Aftermath\nDespite its losses, the \u00d6VP was the clear victor of the election, and Haslauer Jr was the prospective new Governor. However, the fragmented parliament promised difficulties in forming a government. He ultimately succeeded in negotiating a coalition with the Greens and Team Stronach. With the exception of Proporz states, this was the first time Team Stronach had joined a state government, with Hans Mayr becoming Minister for Transport, Infrastructure, and Housing. Astrid R\u00f6ssler of the Greens became deputy Governor alongside two other Greens ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team\nThe 2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team represented Sam Houston State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Bearkats were led by fourth-year head coach Willie Fritz and played their home games at Bowers Stadium. They were a member of the Southland Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Media\nAll Bearkats football games were broadcast by KSAM 101.7 FM. All non-televised Bearkats home games were streamed online by the Bearkats Sports Network at gobearkats.com or ESPN3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Before the season, 2013 recruits\n18 recruits committed to Sam Houston State during the 2013 Spring signing days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Before the season, Orange-White Classic\nSam Houston State returned to the birthplace of Bearkat football, Pritchett Field, for the annual Orange-White spring game. A presentation of the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award to head coach Willie Fritz took place before the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 86], "content_span": [87, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Before the season, Orange-White Classic\nQuarterbacks Brian Bell, Don King III, and Rubis Requeno ran the first and second team offenses, where running backs Timothy Flanders and Keyshawn Hill saw limited action, relinquishing most of the rushing duties to backups. The game also saw former backup quarterback Chris Grett play his new position at safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 86], "content_span": [87, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Before the season, Coaching changes\nFollowing the spring game, it was announced that Scott Stoker would no longer be the defensive coordinator of the Bearkats, having accepted the same position at University of Texas El Paso. On May 15, 2013, Sam Houston State announced Mike Collins, former DC and Assistant Head Coach of McNeese State, would become the defensive coordinator for Sam Houston State for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Before the season, Preseason All-Americans\nThree Sam Houston football players were named The Sports Network All-America for the 2013 season. Timothy Flanders, running back and the back-to-back Southland Conference Player of the Year, earned first team honors. Richard Sincere, the 2011 Southland Conference Offensive Player of the Year, was placed on the second team. Bookie Sneed, cornerback, was named to the third team squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Houston Baptist\nSam Houston faced the HBU Huskies for the first time, with HBU fielding its first football team in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Houston Baptist\nSHSU struck on its first possession, ending with a four-yard run by running back Timothy Flanders with 11:27 remaining in the first quarter, followed by the extra point by kicker Luc Swimberghe for a 7\u20130 lead. On the Bearkats' next possession, running back Keshawn Hill made a four-yard run at the 8:58-minute mark and with the extra point the score was 14\u20130 Bearkats. This was followed with SHSU quarterback Brian Bell making a 66-yard scoring pass to wide receiver Torrance Williams with 6:19 remaining in the quarter, and the extra point brought the score to 21\u20130 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Houston Baptist\nIn the second quarter, Bell made an eight-yard touchdown pass to tight end Josh Lyons, and Swimberghe's extra point raised the score to 28\u20130 Bearkats. On the Huskies' next possession, a pass by HBU quarterback Ka'Darius Baker was intercepted by SHSU defensive back Shelby Davis who returned the ball 48 yards for a touchdown at the 11:38 mark, and with the extra point SHSU increased its lead to 35\u20130. SHSU scored again with two-yard quarterback keeper by Bell at the 6:28 mark, and the Bearkats made a final score in the quarter with a four-yard run by running back Steven Hicks, which, following the extra point, had SHSU going into halftime with a 49\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Houston Baptist\nIn the third quarter, Schwimberghe completed a 41-yard field goal at the 10:44-minute mark extending SHSU's lead to 52\u20130. The Bearkats scored less than two minutes later with linebacker Tristan Eche intercepting a pass by HBU quarterback Jonathan Fleming and returning it 32-yards for a second defensive touchdown with 9:24 remaining in the quarter, the extra point raising the lead to 59\u20130 Bearkats. SHSU backup quarterback Don King III made the final score of the period, a three-yard quarterback keeper which, followed by an extra point by kicker Brad Dunavant brought the score to 66\u20130 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Houston Baptist\nIn the fourth quarter, an error during an HBU punt led to a safety at the 8:11 mark, raising SHSU's lead to 68\u20130. SHSU made the final score of the game with 3:58 remaining when wide receiver Cory Idlebird made a three-yard run. The extra point attempt by Dunavant failed, and the final score was 74\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Houston Baptist\nSam Houston quarterback Brian Bell completed five passes out of nine attempts for 90 yards, with fellow quarterbacks Don King III and Jared Johnson failing to complete their pass attempts. Sam Houston's Steve Hicks led rushing with 17 carries for 99 yards, followed by Richard Sincere running three times for 64 yards, Cory Idlebird carrying six times for 51 yards and Timothy Flanders carrying nine times for 51 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Houston Baptist\nWith the win, Sam Houston improves to 1\u20130. Sam Houston leads the all-times series 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nSam Houston faced Texas A&M for the second consecutive year, facing the FBS powerhouse for the twelfth time. The Aggies had won all previous meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nThe Aggies drew first blood in the first quarter, with A&M running back Tra Carson finishing a drive with a one-yard scoring run with 10:52 remaining in the period, which followed with the extra point brought the score to 7\u20130 Aggies. The Bearkats struck back on their next possession, with running back Timothy Flanders scoring on an 11-yard run at the 7:51-minute marker, followed by the extra point tying the score 7\u20137. Aggies quarterback Johnny Manziel connected with a 27-yard pass to wide receiver Sabian Holmes with less than three minutes in the quarter, putting A&M back on top 14\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nThe Aggies scored again in the second quarter at the 11:31 mark with a one-yard run by running back Ben Malena, however the extra point attempt by kicker Taylor Bertolet failed, with the new score 20\u20137 Aggies. A&M was again on the board at 4:23 with a 20-yard pass by Manziel to wide receiver Ja'Quay Williams, and with the extra point the new score was 27\u20137 Aggies. The Bearkats finally answered with a 33-yard pass by quarterback Brian Bell to Flanders, and kicker Luc Swimberghe's extra point brought the score to 27\u201314 Aggies. The Aggies made the final score in the period with a 35-yard field goal by Bertolet in the closing seconds, with the Aggies leading at halftime 30\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nThe Bearkats struck quickly in the third quarter, with Flanders making a 68-yard scoring running at the 14:04 mark, and the extra point reduced the Aggies lead to 30\u201321. Not to be outdone, the Aggies made two consecutive scoring drives, culminating with a one-yard run by Carson at the 10:27-minute mark and a ten-yard pass by Manziel to running back Brandon Williams at the 6:27-mark, raising the Aggie's lead to 44\u201328. The Bearkats struck again a mere 14 seconds after the previous Aggies score with Bell connecting with Torrance Williams on a 75-yard pass, bringing the score to 44\u201328 Aggies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nAfter that Texas A&M kept the Bearkats from the endzone, and Manziel made a six-yard quarterback keeper at the 5:24-minute mark, Aggies linebacker Nate Askew intercepted Bell for a pick-six with 3:42 remaining in the quarter and backup Aggies quarterback connected with wide receiver Travis Labhart at the 1:14-minute mark, all together raising the lead to 65\u201328 Aggies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nBy the fourth quarter both teams had pulled their starters and the game was a defensive standoff, both teams keeping each other from scoring. The final score was 65\u201328 Aggies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nSam Houston quarterback Brian Bell completed six of 15 pass attempts for 137 yards with two interception, with fellow quarterback Don King III completing one pass for 13 yards. Sam Houston's rushing game was anchored by Timothy Flanders who ran 19 times for 170 yards including two running touchdowns, followed by Keshawn Hill who carried the ball three times for 42 yards, Richard Sincere who ran six times for 11 yards and Ryan Wilson who rushed five times for ten yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas A&M Aggies\nWith the loss, Sam Houston is tied 1\u20131. Texas A&M leads the all-times series 12\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nThe Tigers and Bearkats played each other for the second consecutive year, with the 2012 meeting being the first match between the two schools since 1997. SHSU was looking to build on its 9\u20135 record they had against the Tigers. The Bearkats had won 5 of the last 6 meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nThe first quarter was a stalemate with neither team scoring, and the Bearkats struggled with their drives including one that ended with a fumble that was recovered by Texas Southern. The second quarter also started bitter for the Bearkats, with SHSU quarterback Brian Bell being intercepted twice, with the first interception being the start of a Tigers drive that ended with a 27-yard field goal by Tigers kicker Eric Medina with 12:35 remaining in the quarter, with Texas Southern leading 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nHowever, on Texas Southern's first play following the second interception off Bell, SHSU defensive back Desmond Fite forced a fumble off Tigers running back Edward Perkins-Loving and Sam Houston began to recover, beginning a drive that ended with a two-yard rushing touchdown by SHSU running back Timothy Flanders at the 5:52-minute mark, and kicker Luc Swimberghe's extra point brought the score to 7\u20133 Bearkats. On Texas Southern's next possession, Tigers quarterback Homer Causey fumbled due to pressure from SHSU defensive end Andrew Weaver and Sam Houston defensive back Michael Wade recovered the ball on the Tigers 9-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nBell then completed a six-yard scoring pass to SHSU wide receiver Torrance Williams with 4:35 remaining and the extra point brought the score to 14\u20133 Bearkats. Bell ran in a three-yard quarterback keeper at the 1:15-minute mark, and another late fumble by the Tigers on their side of the field resulted in a SHSU drive that ended with Flanders running in a one-yard score with 19 seconds remaining, however Swimberghe missed the extra point and the second quarter came to a close with Sam Houston leading 27\u20133 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nSHSU started the third quarter with opening drive that ended with a five-yard scoring pass from Bell to SHSU tight end Shane Young at the 10:11 mark, and the extra point raised SHSU's lead to 34\u20137. On SHSU's next possession, Bearkats running back Keyshawn Hill ran in a 23-yard touchdown raising the score to 41\u20137 Bearkats. What followed was a trade-off in scoring as Tigers running back Daveonn Porter broke free and made a 50-yard scoring dash for Texas Southern's first touchdown, and Medina's extra point made the score 41\u201310 Bearkats, which was the final score of the third period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nThe Bearkats spent the remainder of the third period working their way down the field. This culminated in a five-yard touchdown pass from backup quarterback Don King III to SHSU tight end Ragan Henderson in the opening seconds of the fourth quarter, with Swimberghe's point after raising SHSU's lead to 48\u201310. The Tigers retaliated less than four minutes later with a 10-yard quarterback keeper by Causey, and the score was now 48\u201317 Bearkats. SHSU made one final score with SHSU running back Ryan Wilson running in a one-yard touchdown with 8:13 remaining in the quarter, and the extra point made the final score 55\u201317 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nSam Houston quarterback Brian Bell completed nine of 17 passes for 121 yards and two interceptions, and Don King III had two successful passes out of two attempts for 13 yards. Sam Houston's Timothy Flanders rushed 19 times for 108 yards, Keyshawn Hill ran seven times for 65 yards, Ryan Wilson charged six times for 37 yards and Bell ran six times for 32 yards. On receiving, Richard Sincere made three catches for 53 yards, Shane Young caught three passes for 51 yards and Chance Nelson had one reception for 15 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Texas Southern\nWin the win, Sam Houston improved to 2\u20131. Sam Houston leads the series 10\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Incarnate Word\nThe Bearkats met the Cardinals for the second time, with Incarnate Word in the process of transitioning to the Southland Conference. Sam Houston won in the previous match-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Incarnate Word\nThe Cardinals started strong, scoring on their opening drive with a nine-yard pass by Cardinals quarterback Trent Brittain to wide receiver Casey Jennings at the 12:29 mark, and the extra point by kicker Jack Wilcox brought the score to 7\u20130 Cardinals. Sam Houston fought down to the red zone on its following possession, but Incarnate Word's defense kept the Bearkats out of the end zone and Sam Houston had to settle for a 19-yard field goal by kicker Luc Schwimberge with 7:49 remaining in the quarter, bringing the score to 7\u20133 Cardinals. Sam Houston scored again at the 1:49-minute mark with a 39-yard pass from Bearkats quarterback Brian Bell to wide receiver Chance Nelson to put the Bearkats ahead 10\u20137 at the end of the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Incarnate Word\nIncarnate Word struck again early in the second quarter with a one-yard scoring run from Cardinals running back Johnny Sessions, with Wilcox's extra point making the score 14\u201310 Cardinals. The Bearkats answered with a seven-yard rush by running back Timothy Flanders at the 8:52 marker and the Bearkats went ahead 17\u201314. Sam Houston scored again with 5:29 remaining in the half on a 26-yard pass from Bell to wide receiver Richard Sincere, and again in the closing minutes of the quarter with a 39-yard pass from Bell to wide receiver Torrance Williams, and the Bearkats went into halftime leading 31\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Incarnate Word\nThe Bearkats got on the scoreboard again early in the third quarter, with Bell completing a 16-yard pass to Williams at the 13:07 mark and the extra point raising the score to 38\u201310 Bearkats. An interception by Bearkats safety Johntel Franklin on the Cardinals next possession gave the Bearkats control in Cardinals territory, and Flanders ran in a 41-yard touchdown with 11:33 remaining in the quarter to raise the lead to 45\u201314. On this run Flanders became the all-time leading rusher for the Southland Conference, beating a record set in 1997 by Southwest Texas\u2019 Claude Mathis. The Cardinals finally answered with a 19-yard pass from Brittain to tight end Cole Wick to narrow the lead to 45\u201321 Bearkats. Sam Houston made the lone score in fourth quarter with a one-yard quarterback keeper by Bell at the 10:26 mark, and the final score was 52\u201321 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Incarnate Word\nSam Houston quarterback Brian Bell completed 19 of 25 passes for 285 yards, including four passing touchdowns. Timothy Flanders again led the running game with 15 carries for 157 yards, Bell rushed seven times for 35 yards, Keyshawn Hill ran six times for 25 yards and Jared Johnson ran three times for 23 yards. Bearkats receiving was anchored by Torrance Williams with nine receptions for 122 yards, Chance Nelson caught three passes for 63 yards, Richard Sincere received two for 35 yards and Gerald Thomas had one 25-yard reception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Incarnate Word\nWith the win, Sam Houston improves to 3\u20131. Sam Houston leads the all-time series 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nSam Houston faced the Eastern Washington Eagles in a rematch of last season's semi-final game, where SHSU managed to hold off a second-half comeback attempt by the Eagles to advance to the FCS national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nThe start of the game was delayed nearly 90 minutes due to a thunderstorm. Sam Houston made an early statement with SHSU wide receiver Richard Sincere scoring on a 51-yard run barely one minute into the game, and kicker Luc Swimberghe's extra point made the score 7\u20130 Bearkats. Not to be deterred, Eastern Washington scored on its first possession with a two-yard run by Eagles running back Demitrius Bronson at the 12:42-mark, however kicker Kevin Miller's point after was blocked, and the new score was 7\u20136 Bearkats. The Eagles struck again with 1:38 remaining in the period on a 33-yard pass from EWU quarterback Vernon Adams to wide receiver Ashton Clark, and the Eagles took the lead 13\u20137 at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nThe Bearkats answered early in the second quarter with a drive ending on an eight-yard quarterback keeper by SHSU quarterback Brian Bell at the 14:07 mark, and SHSU retook the lead 14\u201313. Eastern Washington's next drive came to an abrupt end when SHSU cornerback DeAntrey Loche intercepted a pass by Adams and returned it 42 yards for a score with 12:47 remaining in the quarter, extending the lead to 21\u201313 Bearkats. The Eagles got on the scoreboard again with a 59-yard pass from Adams to wide receiver Cooper Kupp at the 3:39-minute mark, closing SHSU's lead to 21\u201320. The Bearkats scored again in the final seconds of the quarter on an 18-yard pass from Bell to wide receiver Torrance Williams, and the period ended with the Bearkats leading 28\u201320 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nThe Eagles went three and out on their opening possession of the third quarter, and Sam Houston made good use of its subsequent drive, culminating in a 60-yard run by SHSU running back Timothy Flanders at the 12:38-mark, stretching the lead to 35\u201320 Bearkats. Eastern Washington worked their way down the field again, ending the possession with a three-yard scoring run by Bronson with 9:08 remaining in the quarter to again close the gap with a new score of 35\u201327 Bearkats. Sam Houston moved the ball to midfield on its next drive which led to a 50-yard touchdown pass from Bell to Williams for a new score of 42\u201327 Bearkats at the end of the period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nWhat followed was back and forth possessions without scores between the two teams, starting with the Eagles having to punt to the Bearkats. Bearkats running back Keyshawn Hill fumbled late in the third quarter on the Bearkats next possession and the Eagles recovered the ball on the EWU 40 yard line. The Eagles could not capitalize on the turnover, however, as two subsequent 15-yard penalties in the fourth quarter followed by a sack forced the team to punt to the Bearkats. SHSU ended this drive with a 12-yard rush by Flanders at the 6:10-mark, raising the lead to 49\u201327 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0038-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nThe Eagles made a final scoring drive finishing with a 62-yard pass from Adams to EWU running back Quincy Forte with 5:20 remaining in the quarter, and the new score was 49\u201334 Bearkats. The Eagles attempted an onside kick but SHSU wide receiver Chance Nelson recovered the ball, and the Bearkats spent the remainder of the game running the ball and the clock, ending with Bell taking a knee on the EWU 9-yard line for a final score of 49\u201334 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nSam Houston quarterback Brian Bell completed four of eight passes for 106 yards, including two touchdowns. The running game was led by Timothy Flanders who rushed 32 times for 280 yards, Richard Sincere who ran eight times for 98 yards, Bell who scrambled eight times for 45 yards and Keyshawn Hill who carried the ball four times for 17 yards. Torrance Williams caught two scoring passes for 68 yards, Ragan Henderson caught one ball for 26 yards and Chance Nelson had one 12-yard reception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Eastern Washington\nWith the win, Sam Houston improves to 4\u20131. Sam Houston leads the all-time series 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Lamar\nComing off a bye week, Sam Houston faced its first conference opponent of the season, the Lamar Cardinals. Sam Houston led the all-time series 24\u20139\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Lamar\nA highly defensive game left both team with a combined score of 17 points. Sam Houston got on the board first with a 45-yard run by SHSU quarterback Brian Bell 7:53-minute mark in the second quarter, and Luc Swimberghe's extra point made the score 7\u20130 Bearkats. The Cardinal's got on the scoreboard in the closing seconds of the period with a 47-yard field goal by Cardinal kicker Alex Ball, and the score at halftime was 7\u20133 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Lamar\nSam Houston made the lone score of the second half, with an 18-yard pass from Bell to wide receiver Stephen Williams with 2:58 remaining in the third quarter, Swimberghe's extra point raised the Bearkat lead to 14\u20133. The game was delayed by two hours late in the fourth quarter because of lightning strikes, before the game ended on an incomplete Lamar pass for a final score of 14\u20133 Bearkats. Lamar was able to hold Flanders to under 90 yards during the game, with majority of his carries in the fourth quarter. However, wide receiver Torrance Williams had 138 yards in punt returns and the SHSU defense kept the Cardinals to only 90 rushing yards. The Bearkats in comparison rushed for 255 yards, a notable decrease compared to 382 yards against Lamar in 2011 and 378 yards in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Lamar\nSam Houston quarterback Brian Bell had eight completions out of 17 attempts of 88 passing yards. Timothy Flanders led the running game with 28 rushes for 83 yards, Bell had 11 runs for 75 yards, Keyshawn Hill carried the ball six times for 35 yards and Richard Sincere ran twice for 24 yards. Stephen Williams had three receptions for 44 yards, Torrance Williams caught the ball twice for 17 yards and Chance Nelson had one reception for 10 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, McNeese State\nSam Houston faced the McNeese State Cowboys in its second conference match-up of the season. McNeese held a commanding lead in the series, with a 25\u20138\u20131 record against the Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, McNeese State\nSam Houston scored first, with a 38-yard field goal by kicker Luc Swimberghe at the 10:40 mark in the first quarter to bring the score to 3\u20130 SHSU. McNeese answered with a 17-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Cody Stroud to wide receiver Damon Gladney Jr. with 6:37 remaining in the quarter, and kicker Ryan Rome's extra point put the Cowboys ahead 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, McNeese State\nThe second quarter was quiet until the 4:45 mark when Swimberghe made a 30-yard field goal, narrowing McNeese's lead to 7\u20136. However, McNeese answered in the closing minute of the quarter with a 29-yard scoring pass from Stroud to wide receiver Ernest Celestie, and with the extra point McNeese led at halftime 14\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, McNeese State\nContinuing the theme of the previous two quarters, the Bearkats scored first in the third quarter with another Swimberghe field goal, this one a 21-yarder at the 6:51 mark and the new score was 14\u20139 McNeese. And again, McNeese answered a SHSU field goal with a trip to the end zone due to four-yard scoring run by running back Marcus Wiltz with 4:39 remaining in the quarter, and with the point after McNeese extended its lead to 21\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, McNeese State\nSam Houston finally found the end zone in the first minute of the fourth quarter on a three-yard pass from SHSU quarterback Brian Bell to tight end Deon Hutchinson, and the extra point by Swimberge brought the score to 21\u201315 McNeese. The Cowboys struck back the 10:11 mark with a 15-yard pass from Stroud to wide receiver Diontae Spencer, and the new score was 28\u201316. McNeese then turned an interception off of a bell into an eventual field goal with 3:18 remaining, extending their lead to 31\u201316. Sam Houston scored on an 18-yard pass from Bell to wide receiver Stephen Williams with 1 minute remaining to narrow the lead to 31\u201323, however an onside kick attempt failed and McNeese ran out the clock for a final score of 31\u201323.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nAfter losing to McNeese and falling to a #7 ranking in the FCS polls, SHSU looked to lick their wounds and turned their attention to their conference opponent Northwestern State Demons. The Demons held an all-time series lead of 19\u201316 over the Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nFor the third time this season, the Bearkats failed to put points on the board in the first quarter, with both teams exiting the first period with a blank scoreboard. SHSU finally got on the board with 9:42 remaining in the second quarter on a 45-yard field goal from kicker Luc Swimberghe, which gave SHSU a 3\u20130 lead. The Demons tied the score on their next possession with a 42-yard field goal from kicker Chris Moore at the 7:15 mark for a new score 3\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0051-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nAn impressive 93-yard kickoff return by SHSU running back Keyshawn Hill set up the Bearkats deep in Northwestern's red zone, and SHSU running back Timothy Flanders dotted the \"i\" with a seven-yard scoring running at the 6:58 mark, and the new score was 10\u20133 Bearkats. The Bearkats got on the board again with a little more than a minute left in the quarter on a 17-yard pass from SHSU quarterback Brian Bell to wide receiver Richard Sincere, and the extra point resulted in the Bearkats leading going into halftime at 17\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nThe Bearkats got possession of the ball first to start the third quarter and quickly took advantage of it, with a 44-yard scoring pass from Bell to wide receiver Torrance Williams at the 13:39-minute-mark, and Swimberghe's kick raised the score to 24\u20133 SHSU. Sam Houston found the end zone again on a nine-yard pass from Bell to wide receiver Chance Nelson with 5:52 remaining, extending the lead to 31\u20133 Bearkats. The Demons fumbled the ball on their subsequent kickoff return and SHSU recovered the ball deep in Northwestern territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0052-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nThis led to Bell making an 18-yard quarterback keeper at the 4:51 mark, however the extra point failed and the new score was 37\u20133 Bearkats. The Demons finally found the end zone in the closing seconds of the quarter on a nine-yard pass from Northwestern quarterback Zack Adkins to running back De'Mard Llorens, and the extra point by Moore resulted in the third quarter ending 37\u201310 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Northwestern State\nSam Houston made the lone score of the closing quarter with two-yard run by Bearkats running back Steven Hicks, and the final score was 44\u201310 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nSam Houston met Stephen F. Austin in its 88th meeting on nearly the 90th anniversary of the original Battle of the Piney Woods. The Bearkats led the all-time series 50\u201335\u20132 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nThe Bearkats scored on their first possession which ended with a 13-yard run by SHSU running back Keshawn Hill at the 9:58-mark, and with SHSU kicker Luc Swimberghe's extra point the Bearkats led 7\u20130. The Lumberjacks struck back on their next possession with a 26-yard pass from SFA quarterback Brady Attaway to wide receiver Braxton Bearden with 6:27 remaining in the quarter, and SFA kicker Jordan Wigg's point after tied the score 7\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0055-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nWhile the Bearkats went three and out on their next possession, the Lumberjacks took advantage of their subsequent series which resulted in a 14-yard scoring run by SFA running back Gus Johnson at 3:21, and the new score was 14\u20137 Lumberjacks. Not to be deterred, Sam Houston scored in the closing seconds of the quarter with an 11-yard run by SHSU running back Timothy Flanders, and the first quarter ended with score tied again 14\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nThe first few minutes of the second quarter featured possession-losing fumbles by first the Lumberjacks and then the Bearkats, and the Lumberjacks turned their recovery into a 20-yard scoring run by SFA running back Keith Lawson at the 10:15-minute mark with SFA retaking the lead 21\u201314. Stephen F. Austin missed a field goal on its next possession, and Sam Houston scored in the closing seconds of the quarter on a 15-yard pass from SHSU quarterback Brian Bell to wide receiver Stephen Williams, and the first half came to a close with the teams again tied 21\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nThe third quarter began with Sam Houston receiving the ball, which ultimately led to a four-yard scoring pass from Bell to SHSU tight end Shane Young at the 11:32-minute mark resulting in the Bearkats leading for the first time since the first quarter 28\u201321. Stephen F. Austin struck back at the 8:49-mark on a 39-yard pass from Attaway to wide receiver Mike Brooks, and the scores matched 28-28. The two teams exchanged possession without scores and the quarter ended 28\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nSam Houston, which had begun its latest possession in the final minutes of the third quarter, scored on the first play of the fourth period with a 38-yard pass from Bell to SHSU wide receiver Torrance Williams and the Bearkats regained the lead 35\u201328. This was the start of a Bearkat rout, with a Lumberjacks fumble setting up a 31-yard SHSU scoring run by Hill at the 13:16-minute mark, and the score was now 42\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0058-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nStephen F. Austin fumbled again on its next possession, the Bearkats scored quickly on 16-yard pass from Bell to wide receiver Ragan Henderson with 13:01 remaining in the quarter and SHSU extending its lead 49\u201328 Bearkats. SHSU cornerback DeAntrey Loche intercepted a pass by Attaway on SFA's next possession and returned it 45 yards for a defensive touchdown, and SHSU's lead raised to 56\u201328. Stephen F. Austin began a comeback attempt starting with a 59-yard pass from Attaway to Brooks with 8:25 remaining in the quarter, narrowing the lead to 56\u201335 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0058-0002", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nThe Lumberjacks scored again on a 75-yard pass from Attaway to wide receiver Tyler Boyd at the 5:18-mark at the Bearkats lead was again reduced, now 56\u201342. Stephen F. Austin scored on a third pass from Attaway to Brooks with 1:20 remaining in the period and the Bearkats lead dwindled to 56\u201349. The Lumberjacks attempted an onside kick but SHSU wide receiver Chance Nelson recovered the ball and the Bearkats ran out the remainder of the game clock with a final score 56-49.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Stephen F. Austin\nWith the win, Sam Houston improves to 7\u20132. Sam Houston leads the all-time series 51\u201335\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nThe Bearkats returned to Bowers for their final home game of the regular season, facing the Nicholls States Colonels on Senior Day. Sam Houston led the series 16\u201311\u20131 going into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nNicholls scored on its opening drive with a 37-yard field goal by Colonels kicker Andrew Dolan with 9:49 remaining in the first quarter, taking the lead 3\u20130. The Bearkats responded on their subsequent possession with a 16-yard rush by SHSU running back Keshawn Hill at the 7:55 mark, and with kicker Luc Swimberghe's extra point the Bearkats led 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nAfter a series of uneventful possession by both teams, the Bearkats worked their way down the field late in the first quarter, ultimately scoring on the first play of the second quarter with a 32-yard rush by SHSU wide receiver Richard Sincere to raise the lead to 14\u20133 Bearkats. Sam Houston got on the board again with its next possession when SHSU quarterback Brian Bell made a 45-yard run to the end zone at the 11:31-minute mark, and the Bearkats extended their lead to 21\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0062-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nNext, the Colonels worked their way down to the Bearkats red zone, however SHSU linebacker Tanner Brock forced a fumble and the Bearkats recovered the ball. One the Colonel's next possession, SHSU cornerback Tevin Creeks intercepted a pass by Nicholls quarterback Kalen Henderson and made it back to the Nicholls 23-yard line before being tackled after time had expired, and the Bearkats led 21\u20133 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nSam Houston got possession first in the third quarter and capitalized on it with a one-yard scoring run by Hill with 12:10 remaining, and the extra point increased the score to 28\u20133 Bearkats. On Nicholls' subsequent possession, SHSU defensive back Michael Wade intercepted a pass by Henderson and ran it back 48 yards for a defensive score, widening the gap to 35\u20133 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0063-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nSam Houston scored again on its next possession when Bell hit wide receiver Torrance Williams with a short pass who managed to slip a few tackles and take it 56 yards all the way to the house with 8:43 remaining in the quarter, and the Bearkats lead stretched to 42\u20133. Sam Houston put in their backups and got on the scoreboard one finale time when SHSU quarterback Don King III made a 10-yard touchdown run at the 1:31 mark to extend the lead to 49\u20133 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nThe Colonels finally found the end zone at the 10:28 mark in the fourth quarter on a two-yard run from Nicholls running back Mike Henry, and with Dolan's extra point the new score was 49\u201310 Bearkats. A Bearkats fumble and personal foul late in the period gave the ball back to the Colonels, which resulted in a 46-yard scoring pass from quarterback Beaux Hebert to wide receiver Xavier Marcus, closing the gap to 49\u201317 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0064-0001", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nThe referees made a BS targeting call against Bearkats linebacker Eric Fieilo during a Nicholls onside kick, giving the ball back to the Colonels who subsequently made a seven-yard scoring pass from Hebert to Colonels fullback Russ Gisclair in the final minute of the game, and the final score was 49\u201324 Bearkats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Game summaries, Nicholls State\nWith the win, Sam Houston improves to 8\u20131. Sam Houston leads the all-times series 17\u201311\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Season achievements\nOn September 14 during the Sam Houston-Texas Southern game, SHSU running back Timothy Flanders surpassed the Southland Conference all-time touchdown record of 59 set by Brent Grimes of Central Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Season achievements\nDuring the September 21 contest with Incarnate Word, Flanders broke the Southland Conference all-time rushing record of 4,691 set by Claude Mathis of Texas State University (formerly Southwest Texas State University) in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Season achievements\nAlso during the Incarnate Word game, SHSU wide receiver Richard Sincere became only the second Bearkat to record more than 1,000 yards in both rushing and receiving and the eighth to break 3,000 all-purpose yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235816-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team, Season achievements\nRunning back Timothy Flanders surpassed 5,000 yards with his 280-yard performance during the upset of then-No. 2 ranked Eastern Washington University on September 28, 2013. He became the first player in the Southland Conference and the 22nd in FCS to achieve the milestone. Flanders also won both conference and national player of the week honors for his monster game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235817-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samarkand Challenger\nThe 2013 Samarkand Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 17th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Samarkand, Uzbekistan between 13 and 19 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235817-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Samarkand Challenger, 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-00235817-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Samarkand Challenger, 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-00235818-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samarkand Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nOleksandr Nedovyesov and Ivan Sergeyev were the defending champions, but Sergeyev decided not to participate. Nedovyesov played alongside Farrukh Dustov and won the title by defeating Radu Albot and Jordan Kerr 6\u20131, 7\u20136(9\u20137) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235819-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samarkand Challenger \u2013 Singles\nDu\u0161an Lajovi\u0107 was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Teymuraz Gabashvili defeated Oleksandr Nedovyesov 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235820-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samburu local elections\nLocal elections were held in Samburu to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235821-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samford Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 Samford Bulldogs football team represented Samford University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by seventh year head coach Pat Sullivan and played their home games at Seibert Stadium. They were a member of the Southern Conference. They finished the season 8\u20135, 6\u20132 in SoCon play to share the conference title with Chattanooga and Furman. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the first round to Jacksonville State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235822-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sammarinese referendum\nTwo referendums were held in San Marino on 20 October 2013. Voters were asked whether they approve of measures to tie salary increase to inflation and whether the country should submit an application to join the European Union. Although both proposals had a majority vote in favour, neither reached the quorum of 32% of registered voters in favour (10,657 voters), resulting in both proposals being rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235822-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sammarinese referendum, Background\nThe referendum question on salaries was organised by the Democratic Confederation of San Marino Workers, and proposed that salaries would be revalued on 1 January at the same rate as the Government's official inflation figure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235823-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samoa Cup\nThe 2013 Samoa Cup was the third edition of the Samoa Cup, a domestic cup played by the teams of the year's Samoa National League participants. This cup was won by Lupe o le Soaga for the first time, winning over runners-up Kiwi FC 2-1 in the overall final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235824-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup\nThe 2013 Samsung Securities Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 14th edition of the men's tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour and the third edition of the women's event, which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit. It took place in Seoul, South Korea, on 28 October\u20133 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235824-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup, Men's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235824-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup, Women's Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235825-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nLee Hsin-han and Peng Hsien-yin were the defending champions but lost to Huang Liang-Chi and Yang Tsung-hua. Marin Draganja and Mate Pavi\u0107 won the title over Lee Hsin-han and Peng Hsien-yin 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235826-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nLu Yen-hsun was the three-time defending champion, but lost to Germain Gigounon in the first round. Du\u0161an Lajovi\u0107 won the title when Julian Reister withdrew with an illness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235827-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNigina Abduraimova and Venise Chan were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both decided not to compete in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235827-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nHan Na-lae and Yoo Mi won the tournament, defeating Kim Sun-jung and Yu Min-hwa in the all-Korean final, 2\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20136].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235828-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nErika Sema was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but chose not to compete in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235828-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Samsung Securities Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nHan Na-lae won the tournament, defeating Kim Da-hye in the all-Korean final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235829-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Scorpions FC season\nThe 2013 San Antonio Scorpions FC season was the club's second season of existence, where they played in the North American Soccer League, the second division of the American soccer pyramid. Including the San Antonio Thunder soccer franchise of the original NASL, this was the 4th season of professional soccer in San Antonio. The Scorpions were the reigning North American Supporters' Trophy winners and began play at Toyota Field in San Antonio, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235829-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Scorpions FC season, Competitions, NASL Spring Championship\nThe spring season consists of 12 games beginning on April 6 and ending on July 4. The schedule features a round robin format with each team playing every other team home and away. The winner of the spring season will automatically qualify for, and host, the 2013 Soccer Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235829-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Scorpions FC season, Competitions, NASL Fall Championship\nThe fall season consists of 14 games beginning on August 3 and ending on November 2. The schedule features a round robin format with each team playing every other team home and away. The fall season also introduces the New York Cosmos into the league. The winner of the fall season will automatically qualify for the 2013 Soccer Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235830-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Silver Stars season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 17th season for the San Antonio Silver Stars franchise of the Women's National Basketball Association. It is their 11th in San Antonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235830-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Silver Stars season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Silver Stars' selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235831-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Talons season\nThe 2013 San Antonio Talons season was the 13th season for the franchise, the fourth in the Arena Football League, and the second in San Antonio, Texas. The team was coached by Lee Johnson and played their home games at the Alamodome. Finishing the season with a 10\u20138 record, the Talons missed the playoffs by losing a tiebreaker with the Chicago Rush. They also finished the season with 9 different quarterbacks, 6 of them getting injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235831-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Talons season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated July 25, 201324 Active, 17 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235831-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio Talons season, Regular season schedule\nThe Talons began the season at home against the San Jose SaberCats on March 23. They closed the regular season at home against the Philadelphia Soul on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235832-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio mayoral election\nOn May 11, 2013, the city of San Antonio, Texas, held a mayoral election for the role of Mayor of San Antonio to serve a two-year term to expire in 2015. Julian Castro, the incumbent Mayor, was re-elected as mayor of San Antonio with a substantial majority, avoiding a runoff and earning a third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235832-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio mayoral election, Background\nJulian Castro, who was first elected mayor in the 2009 mayoral election, was re-elected in 2011 with an overwhelming majority, facing limited opposition and chose to seek re-election to a third term in this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235832-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio mayoral election, Candidates\nAfter the deadline to file passed, pundits noted that Julian Castro would likely secure re-election as no major challengers had opted to run for the second consecutive time, and the six challengers that did file did not make significant efforts to campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235832-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio mayoral election, Results\nOn May 11, 2013, the election for Mayor was held. Julian Castro secured re-election with over 66% of the vote, thus negating the need of a runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235832-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio mayoral election, Results\n* Vote percentage include all of Bexar County with a total of 8,764 either voting in another municipal election, casting a spoiled vote or casting no ballot for San Antonio mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235832-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 San Antonio mayoral election, Later Events\nDespite being elected to a third term as Mayor, Julian Castro would ultimately not serve the full term, as he was nominated and confirmed by the United States Senate to become the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, a role he would serve until the end of the Obama administration on January 20, 2017. The vacancy in the mayoralty was filled by an internal election of the City Council, leading to Ivy Taylor being selected to serve the balance of the term until the 2015 mayoral election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235833-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Chargers season\nThe 2013 season was the San Diego Chargers' 44th in the National Football League (NFL), their 54th overall, and their first under head coach Mike McCoy. The Chargers finished the regular season with a record of 9\u20137, improving on their 7\u20139 record from 2012. Also, they qualified for the playoffs for the first time since 2009. The Chargers defeated the Cincinnati Bengals in the Wild Card round by a score of 27\u201310, but lost to the Denver Broncos in the Divisional round by a score of 24\u201317. This was the Chargers' final playoff appearance in San Diego. They did not play in the postseason again until 2018, after relocating to Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235833-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Chargers season\nThe new head coach, Mike McCoy, along with offensive coordinator Ken Whisenhunt, completed the Chargers' first winning season since 2010. Only two offensive coaches returned from 2012 in an overhauled coaching staff, and a revamped offensive system had quarterback Philip Rivers release the ball earlier and taking what opposing defenses conceded. Rivers was sacked 30 times, compared to 49 the previous year, and threw for 4,479 yards and 32 touchdowns while tying a career-high with a 105.5 passer rating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235833-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 San Diego Chargers season\nSan Diego's rushing attack improved from the prior season's 1,461 yards and 3.6 yards per carry\u2014tied for the second worst in the league\u2014to 1,965 yards and a 4-yard average. Although they were speculated to have a poor, disappointing season, and getting off to a shaky start, the Chargers finished in the top eight of the overall standings. Rivers was named NFL Comeback Player of the Year, and Keenan Allen broke out into the national scene as a rookie sensation, breaking multiple wide receiver rookie records. Whisenhunt left at the conclusion of the season to become the head coach of the Titans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235833-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Chargers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Oakland Raiders\nThis game was moved to an 8:35\u00a0pm. PDT kickoff, and from CBS to NFL Network as a \"special edition\" of Thursday Night Football, as extended time was required to convert the field back from its baseball configuration due to an Oakland Athletics American League Division Series game the previous night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 90], "content_span": [91, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235833-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Chargers season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nKansas City missed a field goal as with a few seconds left to send the game into overtime, where Nick Novak kicked the game winner. With the win, the Chargers finished the 2013 season with a record of 9\u20137 and clinched the second wild card spot, becoming the 6th seed entering the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235833-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Chargers season, Game summaries, Postseason, AFC Wild Card Playoff Game: at #3 Cincinnati Bengals\nWith the Chargers defeating the Bengals, 27\u201310, they recorded their first playoff victory since 2008 and advanced to the AFC Divisional Playoff Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 112], "content_span": [113, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235833-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Chargers season, Game summaries, Postseason, AFC Divisional Playoff Game: at #1 Denver Broncos\nWith the Chargers falling to the Broncos, the Chargers finished the season 10\u20138, their first double-digit winning season since 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 109], "content_span": [110, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235834-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Padres season\nThe 2013 San Diego Padres season was their 45th season in MLB, and their 9th at Petco Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235834-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Padres season\nThe Padres started the season on April 1 against the New York Mets. The Padres matched their record from the previous year of 76-86.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235834-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Padres season, Offseason and spring training\nOn January 30, 2013, 2012 Gold Glove and Silver Slugger third baseman Chase Headley signed a one-year contract worth $8.575 million with San Diego. On March 17, 2013, during spring training, he fractured the tip of his left thumb when it got caught under the second base bag while he was sliding feet-first to break up a double play. He started the season on the disabled list, and returned exactly a month after the injury on April 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235834-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Padres season, Offseason and spring training\nThe Padres finished in eleventh place at the end of spring training, eleven games behind first place Kansas City Royals, with a 16-20 record (10-9 home / 6-11 away) and .444 percentage in the Cactus League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235834-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Padres season, Regular season\nThe Padres began the season with a 5\u201315 record, but then went 30\u201319 to move a game above .500 (35\u201334) for the first time since ending the 2010 season at 90\u201372.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235834-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Padres season, Regular season\nRookie second baseman Jedd Gyorko finished the season as the team leader in both home runs (HR) (23) and runs batted in (RBI) (63). His HR total led all MLB rookies that season, and he was the first rookie second baseman in MLB history to lead his team in RBIs. Additionally, he became just the second rookie to lead the Padres in either category since Nate Colbert in San Diego's inaugural season in 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235835-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego State Aztecs football team\nThe 2013 San Diego State Aztecs football team represented San Diego State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Aztecs were led by third-year head coach Rocky Long and played their home games at Qualcomm Stadium. They were members of the West Division of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 8\u20135, 6\u20132 in Mountain West play to finish in second place in the West Division. They were invited to the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl where they defeated Buffalo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235835-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego State Aztecs football team, Game summaries, vs Buffalo\u2013Famous Idaho Potato Bowl\nJeff Hilyer from the Sun Belt Conference was the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 94], "content_span": [95, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235836-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Diego Toreros football team\nThe 2013 San Diego Toreros football team represented the University of San Diego during the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Dale Lindsey and played their home games at Torero Stadium. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League. They finished the season 8\u20133, 7\u20131 in PFL play which would have been good enough for a tie for the league title. However, San Diego declared itself ineligible for the league title after improper scholarships were offered to football players. Their official conference record for the season is recognized as 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235837-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Fernando (Pampanga) local elections\nLocal elections were held in the city of San Fernando in Pampanga on May 13, 2013, in conjunction with the 2013 Philippine midterm elections. Registered voters of the city were electing candidates for the following elective local posts: city mayor, city vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235837-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Fernando (Pampanga) local elections, Overview\nBoth incumbent mayor Oscar Rodriguez and vice mayor Edwin Santiago have served their third terms, thus, are term limited. Rodriguez will return and will run for Congress for the third district of Pampanga, facing the incumbent Aurelio Gonzales Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235837-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Fernando (Pampanga) local elections, Overview\nOn October 1, 2012, the returning and first city mayor, Dr. Rey B. Aquino, filed his first certificate of candidacy in COMELEC office, together with their 10 candidates for city councilors under the banner of Team Fernandino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235837-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Fernando (Pampanga) local elections, Results\nThe candidates for mayor and vice mayor with the highest number of votes win their respective seats. They are elected separately; therefore, they may be of different parties when elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235837-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 San Fernando (Pampanga) local elections, City Councilors\nVoting is via plurality-at-large voting: Voters will vote for ten (10) candidates and the ten candidates with the highest number of votes are elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235837-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 San Fernando (Pampanga) local elections, City Councilors\nOf the incumbent councilors elected in 2010, six are not seeking re-election for various reasons:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season\nThe 2013 season was the San Francisco 49ers' 64th in the National Football League, 68th overall and third under the head coach/general manager tandem of Jim Harbaugh and Trent Baalke. This was the 49ers' final season playing their home games at Candlestick Park before moving into Levi's Stadium for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season\nThe 49ers entered the season as the defending NFC champions, qualified for the playoffs as the fifth seed Wild Card, and hoped to win a sixth Super Bowl title, after falling just short during the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season\nThe 49ers' defeated the Green Bay Packers 23\u201320 in the Wild Card round and the Carolina Panthers 23\u201310 in the Divisional round, but lost to the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC Championship by a score of 17\u201323, failing to join the 1985 New England Patriots, 2005 Pittsburgh Steelers, 2007 New York Giants, and 2010 Green Bay Packers as the only teams to win 3 straight road games in the playoffs. The playoff loss also tied an NFL record for most losses with a Super Bowl berth at stake with nine (first set by the 2000 Oakland Raiders).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season\nThe 2013 season was the last season in which the San Francisco 49ers qualified for the playoffs or had a winning season until 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Green Bay Packers\nColin Kaepernick set a career-high with 412 yards passing and three touchdowns, the first 400-yard passing game by a 49ers quarterback since Tim Rattay on October 10, 2004, as well as the first 400-yard, three-touchdown passing game since Jeff Garcia in 1999. Anquan Boldin, making his debut as a 49er, racked up 208 yards receiving on 13 receptions, and scored a touchdown. Vernon Davis had 6 receptions for 98 yards and two touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Seattle Seahawks\nSeattle comfortably beat the 49ers for the second consecutive season at home, with the Seahawks defense proving far too strong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Indianapolis Colts\nThe 49ers were heavily beaten for the second straight week to fall to a 1\u20132 record. The Colts' running game and defensive strength proved too strong in Kaepernick's first home defeat as a starter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: at St. Louis Rams\nThe 49ers season got back on track with a heavy Thursday Night Football victory over divisional opponent St Louis. Both the passing and running offense were effective in the victory, a positive sign of things to come, while the defense was its usual strong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Houston Texans\nAnother large victory gave the 49ers their first back-to-back victories of the season. Quarterback Colin Kaepernick only completed 6 of his 15 passes, with the running attack and defense at the top of their games. Frank Gore and Anthony Dixon ran for touchdowns, while cornerback Tramaine Brock picked off two Matt Schaub passes, one for a touchdown on Schaub's first pass of the game, with Tony Jerod-Eddie also picking up an interception. The 49ers improved to 3\u20132, just one game off the 4\u20131 Seattle Seahawks in the battle for NFC West, who had lost to the Indianapolis Colts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nA third straight win for the 49ers as the offense and defense sparked. Colin Kaepernick had 252 yards for two touchdowns, both to Vernon Davis, Frank Gore ran for 101 yards, and the defense forced four turnovers for the second consecutive game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Tennessee Titans\nThe 49ers cruised to a fourth consecutive win thanks to a strong running game, with Frank Gore picking up 70 yards for 2 touchdowns and Colin Kaepernick 68 yards for 1 touchdown. The final scoreline was flattering for the young Titans, who fell to a 24\u20130 deficit at the end of the third quarter. A muffed punt for a touchdown for Kassim Osgood was also a highlight for the 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Jacksonville Jaguars\nFrank Gore and Colin Kaepernick each ran for two touchdowns in the 49ers comfortable victory over the 0\u20137 Jaguars at Wembley Stadium in London, the eighth NFL match the venue has hosted, to improve to 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 96], "content_span": [97, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nAfter five straight victories, the 49ers dropped another home match following their bye. The Panthers' defense was too strong, limiting Colin Kaepernick to 91 yards and an interception as the 49ers could only score three field goals. The mid-game loss of tight end Vernon Davis and safety Eric Reid to concussions did not aid the 49ers cause as they fell to 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at New Orleans Saints\nAnother set of back-to-back losses came in controversial circumstance for the 49ers that saw the team slip to 6\u20134. The 49ers led 20\u201317 with less than five minutes to go in the final quarter, before two Garrett Hartley field goals won it for the Saints, the second as time expired. On the drive leading to the first or these field goals, linebacker Ahmad Brooks was flagged for a contentious personal foul on Drew Brees for a blow to the neck on a sack and fumble, leading to a 15-yard penalty. Colin Kaepernick's three and out between the field goals also was a major contributor to the Saints' victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Washington Redskins\nThe 49ers got back to winning ways with a comfortable victory in Washington. Colin Kaepernick hit form with 235 yards and 3 touchdowns, while Redskins' quarterback Robert Griffin III threw just 118 yards and an interception in addition to being sacked 4 times, in a match-up between what are widely considered two of the league's best young quarterbacks. The 49ers improved to 7\u20134 as they looked to seal a playoff spot and pressure Seattle for the NFC West crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 96], "content_span": [97, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. St. Louis Rams\nThe 49ers defeated the Rams for the second time this season on the back of strong performances from the passing offense. Colin Kaepernick threw for 275 yards and a touchdown, Anquan Boldin caught nine passes for 98 yards, Michael Crabtree caught a 60-yard pass in his first game for six months following an achilles injury, and Vernon Davis athletically hurdled his way over a defender on two separate occasions for 82 yards and a touchdown, the 49ers improving to 8\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSeeking to avenge their week 2 loss in Seattle, the 49ers defense held Seahawks quarter back Russell Wilson and running back Marshawn Lynch to 199 passing yards and 72 rushing yards respectively. 4 field goals from kicker Phil Dawson, an 8-yard touchdown pass to tight end Vernon Davis, and a 51-yard run by running back Frank Gore in the fourth quarter lifted the 49ers to a 19\u201317 victory and improved their record to 9\u20134. The win also continued the Seahawks' losing streak at Candlestick Park since 2008. This would not be the last time these two teams would meet as they met again in the 2013 NFC Championship game. This was the 49ers' last win over the Seahawks until 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe 10th win of the season and fourth consecutive win came easily as the 49ers looked to clinch a playoff spot. Vernon Davis caught a touchdown for the fifth consecutive game and Michael Crabtree caught his first touchdown since returning from injury, as Colin Kaepernick threw for 203 yards and two touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nThe 49ers played their final regular season game at Candlestick Park on Monday Night Football against the Atlanta Falcons. Their 34\u201324 victory came after an interception by NaVorro Bowman with 1:28 left in the game. The play would seal a win for a playoff spot for the 49ers and is called The Pick at the Stick by some sports columnists. This game was also Candlestick Park's 36th and final game on Monday Night Football, the most at any stadium used by the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Arizona Cardinals\nPhil Dawson kicked a 40-yard field goal as time expired to lock up the 5th seed for the 49ers. The 49ers started on fire, leading 17\u20130 after the first quarter, with the Cardinals showing courage and determination in their fightback, squaring the game at 20\u201320 before LaMichael James' 45-yard kickoff return and two quick completions by Colin Kaepernick set up Dawson's game winner. Anquan Boldin was very impressive, catching nine passes for 149 yards and a touchdown in his first game back in Arizona after the Cardinals traded him to Baltimore prior to the 2010 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Arizona Cardinals\nThe 49ers finished the season with an impressive 12\u20134 record, half a win better than the previous season, to give them second place in NFC West and the 5th seed in the playoffs (the 49ers won the NFC West and had the #2 seed in 2012), securing them a trip to Green Bay in the Wild Card Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Wild Card Round: at Green Bay Packers\nIn one of the coldest games in NFL playoff history, Colin Kaepernick threw for 227 yards and ran for a game-high 98 as the 49ers beat the Packers 23\u201320. The Packers tied the game at 20 with a field goal with 5:06 left, but Kaepernick led the 49ers down the field to set up a game-winning 33-yard field goal by Phil Dawson as time expired. The 49ers are now 4\u20130 against Green Bay in the last two years, after going 1\u201311 against them (including playoffs) from 1995 to 2010. This was also the first time ever the 49ers won at Green Bay in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 102], "content_span": [103, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Divisional Round: at Carolina Panthers\nThe 49ers advanced to their third consecutive NFC Championship game by beating a red hot Carolina Panthers team, 23\u201310. Coming into the game, the Panthers had won eleven of their last twelve games and finished the season ranked number two in total defense. This game was a rematch from week 10, with the Panthers winning 10\u20139. This time though, it was the 49ers who would come out victorious. Two key goal line stands by the 49ers defense in the second quarter (including a stop on fourth-and-goal at the 1-yard line) were the major difference in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 103], "content_span": [104, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Divisional Round: at Carolina Panthers\nThe 49ers defense shut the Panthers out in the second half with constant pressure on Cam Newton, sacking him twice and intercepting a pass late in the fourth quarter that shut down any chance Carolina had at a comeback. Colin Kaepernick went 15 for 28 for 196 yards and a touchdown, while Anquan Boldin had 8 catches for 136 yards. The 23 points by the 49ers were the most points the Panthers allowed at home this year. The 49ers then headed to Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 103], "content_span": [104, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Championship Game: at Seattle Seahawks\nThough the 49ers led 10\u20133 at halftime, the Seahawks came back and then survived a late 49ers comeback attempt. With Seattle leading 20\u201317 in the fourth quarter, Colin Kaepernick attempted to rally his team, but fumbled once and threw two interceptions in the final three 49ers possessions of the game. Seahawks outscored San Francisco 20\u20137 in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 103], "content_span": [104, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Championship Game: at Seattle Seahawks\nIn the fourth quarter, NaVorro Bowman suffered a major knee injury on a tackle and forced fumble near the goal line; his recovery of the ensuing fumble was not seen by the officials (and the league later agreed that the officials had missed the call); the 49ers forced another fumble on the next play and recovered it, but they could not take advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 103], "content_span": [104, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235838-0021-0002", "contents": "2013 San Francisco 49ers season, Postseason, Game summaries, NFC Championship Game: at Seattle Seahawks\nIn the last minute of play, Kaepernick again had the 49ers in position to try for a win, but his pass to Michael Crabtree in the end zone was deflected by Richard Sherman and intercepted by Malcolm Smith, clinching the win for Seattle. The contest between the two elite defenses led many to consider the game a quasi-Super Bowl, as popular opinion was that the 49ers and Seahawks were the two best teams in the NFL given recent history. This opinion was only cemented further after the Seahawks defeated the Denver Broncos 43\u20138 in the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 103], "content_span": [104, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235839-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco Giants season\nThe 2013 San Francisco Giants season was the Giants' 131st year in Major League Baseball, their fifty-sixth year in San Francisco since their move from New York following the 1957 season, and their fourteenth at AT&T Park. They entered the season as the defending World Series Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235839-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco Giants season, Batting\nStats in bold are team leaders. Pitchers are not included in the list. Note: 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; OBP = On-base percentage; SLG = Slugging Percentage; OPS = On-base + Slugging percentage SB = Stolen bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235839-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Francisco Giants season, Pitching\nNote: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235840-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose Earthquakes season\nThe 2013 San Jose Earthquakes season is the club's 16th year of existence, as well as its 16th season in Major League Soccer and its sixth consecutive season in the top-flight of American soccer. Including all previous franchises, this is the 31st year with a soccer club in the San Jose area sporting the name \"Earthquakes\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235840-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose Earthquakes season\nSan Jose entered the season as the defending Supporters' Shield winners, having the best regular season in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235840-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose Earthquakes season, Competitions, 2013 Season, Results by round\nLast updated: October 26, 2013Source: 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, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235840-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose Earthquakes season, Standings, Major League Soccer\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235841-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose SaberCats season\nThe 2013 San Jose SaberCats season was the 17th season for the franchise Arena Football League (AFL). The team was coached by Darren Arbet and played their home games at the SAP Center at San Jose. The SaberCats qualified for the playoffs with a 13\u20135 record, but were eliminated by the top seeded Arizona Rattlers in the conference semifinals by a 59\u201349 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235841-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose SaberCats season, Final roster\nRookies in italics updated August 2, 201324 Active, 18 Inactive", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235841-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose SaberCats season, Standings\nz - Clinched division and conference's best recordx - Clinched playoff berth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235841-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose SaberCats season, Schedule, Regular season\nThe SaberCats began the season by visiting the San Antonio Talons on March 23. Their first home game was against the Orlando Predators on March 29. They closed the regular season at home against the Chicago Rush on July 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team\nThe 2013 San Jose State Spartans football team represented San Jos\u00e9 State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Spartans were led by first year head coach Ron Caragher and played their home games at Spartan Stadium. The Spartans were first-year members of the Mountain West Conference in the West Division. They finished the season 6\u20136, 5-3 in Mountain West play to finish in a tie for third place in the West Division. Despite being bowl eligible, the Spartans were not invited to a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, Personnel\nAfter Mike MacIntyre resigned as head coach at San Jose State to accept the head coaching job at the University of Colorado Boulder, San Jose State hired University of San Diego head coach Ron Caragher on December 17, 2012, however, defensive coordinator Kent Baer served as interim head coach for San Jose State's victory in the 2012 Military Bowl on December 27, 2012. Several of Caragher's assistant coaches from San Diego followed Caragher to San Jose State, including Jimmie Dougherty, Donte Williams, and Joe Staab. Kenwick Thompson, a defensive assistant coach for San Jose State from 2001 to 2006 and for Cal from 2007 to 2012, returned to San Jose State as defensive coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, Game summaries, Sacramento State\nSJSU\u2014Jones 31 yd pass from Fales (Lopez kick is good) 13:10 SJSU 10\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, Game summaries, Sacramento State\nSJSU\u2014Grigsby 15 yd pass from Fales (Lopez kick is good) 0:54 SJSU 17\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, Game summaries, Sacramento State\nSJSU\u2014Simpson 54 yd run (Lopez kicked is good) 8:20 SJSU 24\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 76], "content_span": [77, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, Game summaries, at Stanford\nSTAN-Cajuste 40 yd pass from Hogan (Williamson kick is good) 10:12 STAN 7\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, After the season, Awards\nSpartan quarterback David Fales won the Alan B. Simpkins Most Valuable Player Award at the San Jose State football awards banquet in December 2013. At the same event, Keith Smith won the Outstanding Defensive Player award, and Chandler Jones the Outstanding Offensive Player award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, After the season, Awards\nBen\u00e9 Benwikere, Chandler Jones, and Keith Smith were named to the All-MWC first team. Second-team All-MWC picks were David Fales, Nicholas Kaspar, and Austin Lopez. Billy Freeman and Ryan Jones were honorable mention All-MWC selections, and the MWC also named Tyler Winston the Freshman of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, After the season, Awards\nA record 16 San Jose State football players were selected to the Academic All-MWC Team for the Fall 2013 semester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, After the season, Awards\nChandler Jones and Ben\u00e9 Benwikere were invited to the 2014 East\u2013West Shrine Game. David Fales was invited to the 2014 Senior Bowl and became the first San Jose State quarterback invited to the Senior Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, After the season, Coaching changes\nAfter Vanderbilt hired Kenwick Thompson as defensive coordinator shortly after the close of the 2013 season, San Jose State hired Greg Robinson to replace Thompson. Robinson was previously defensive coordinator at Texas in 2013, and his experience includes defensive coordinator of the Denver Broncos from 1995 to 2000, including the teams that won Super Bowls XXXII and XXXIII.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, After the season, Coaching changes\nKeith Carter replaced offensive line coach Hank Fraley, who left for the Minnesota Vikings. Carter previously served as offensive quality control coach for the Super Bowl XLVIII championship winning Seattle Seahawks. Terry Malley, formerly the tight ends coach in 2013, moved to wide receivers coach for 2014 and replaced Greg Lewis, who left for Pittsburgh. Joe Staab moved from coaching safeties to outside linebackers. In addition to being offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, Jimmie Dougherty became assistant head coach. Graduate assistant Andrew Rolin was promoted to the full running backs coach position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235842-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 San Jose State Spartans football team, After the season, NFL Draft\nIn the 2014 NFL Draft, two San Jose State players were selected. Ben\u00e9 Benwikere was selected in the 5th round, 148th overall by the Carolina Panthers. David Fales was selected in the 6th round, 183rd overall by the Chicago Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 71], "content_span": [72, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235843-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Luis Open Challenger\nThe 2013 San Luis Open Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 20th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in San Luis Potos\u00ed, Mexico between 25 and 31 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235843-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Luis Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235843-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Luis Open Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235843-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Luis Open Challenger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235844-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Luis Open Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nNicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler were the defending champions but they decided to participate in the 2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira instead. Marin Draganja and Adri\u00e1n Men\u00e9ndez-Maceiras defeated Marco Chiudinelli and Peter Gojowczyk 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final to capture the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235845-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Luis Open Challenger \u2013 Singles\nRub\u00e9n Ram\u00edrez Hidalgo was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Alessio di Mauro defeated Daniel Kosakowski 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235846-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Marino CEPU Open\nThe 2013 San Marino CEPU Open was a professional tennis tournament plays on clay courts. It was the 26th edition of the tournament which is part of the Tretorn SERIE+ of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It takes place in City of San Marino, San Marino between 5 and 11 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235846-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Marino CEPU Open, 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-00235847-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Marino CEPU Open \u2013 Doubles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd and Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k were the defending champions, but Dlouh\u00fd chose not to compete. Merti\u0148\u00e1k played with Mikhail Elgin but lost to eventual runners-up Daniele Bracciali and Florin Mergea. Nicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler won the title 6\u20132, 6\u20134 over Bracciali and Mergea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235848-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Marino CEPU Open \u2013 Singles\nMartin Kli\u017ean was the defending champion, but had to compete in the 2013 Rogers Cup instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235849-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Marino and Rimini Riviera motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2013 San Marino and Rimini Riviera motorcycle Grand Prix was the thirteenth round of the 2013 MotoGP season. It was held at the Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli in Misano Adriatico on 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235849-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Marino and Rimini Riviera 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, 56], "section_span": [58, 104], "content_span": [105, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235850-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Martin Jilotepeque bus disaster\nThe 2013 San Martin Jilotepeque bus disaster occurred in San Martin Jilotepeque, Guatemala on Monday September 9, 2013, at 7:50 local time. A passenger bus from Transportes Sanmartineca carrying more than 80 passengers crashed into a 200-meter ravine after missing a sharp bend in the road connecting San Martin Jilotepeque to Chimaltenango. 48 people died and another 37 were wounded in the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235851-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pablo local elections\nLocal elections was held in San Pablo City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235851-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pablo local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nIncumbent Mayor Vicente B. Amante is term limited. his party UNA nominate his son and city administrator Loreto Amante. his opponents are former mayor Florante Aquino from PDP-Laban, former vice mayor Hizon Arago, father of Congresswoman Maria Evita Arago from Liberal Party and City councilor Angelo Adriano as an independent candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235851-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pablo local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nIncumbent vice-mayor Angelita Yang will run as a reelectionist under UNA, her opponents are Restituto Mendoza, PDP-Laban's nominee, Frederick Martin Ilagan from Liberal Party, Alejandro Yu from Nacionalista Party, Edwin Gapunay and Michael Anthony Potenciano both independent candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235851-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pablo local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235851-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pablo local elections, City Council\nElection in the city council is at large at 10 seats will be on the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235852-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pedro local elections\nLocal elections was held in the Municipality (later and now city) of San Pedro on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and eight councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235852-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pedro local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nIncumbent Mayor Calixto Cat\u00e1quiz decided to run for reelection under Nacionalista Party but on 7 May 2013, was disqualified by the Comelec (First Division). He was later substituted by his wife Mrs. Lourdes S. Cataquiz, former Vice Mayor of San Pedro (2004-2007). Her opponents are the incumbent vice-mayor Norvic Solidum under the Liberal Party and Berlene Alberto an independent candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235852-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pedro local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral election\nSeven candidates are running for vice-mayor; Sheriliz Almoro under Liberal Party, Nacionalista Party's Rafael Campos, Melvin Matibag from Nationalist People's Coalition and four independent candidates namely Roland De Leon, Ray Michael Junia, Lito Patromo and Ernesto Remoquillo, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235852-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 San Pedro local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack\nThe 2013 Sana'a attack occurred on 5 December 2013 when a series of bomb and mass shooting gun attacks killed at least 56 people and wounded 162 at the Yemeni Defense Ministry in Sana'a, Yemen. Yemeni military investigators say 12 militants, mostly Saudi nationals, were responsible for the attack", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack, Attack\nGunmen killed four guards surrounding the ministry compound. After the gate was open, a suicide bomber drove an explosive-laden car into the western entrance of the Defense Ministry complex. The suicide car bombing was followed by a coordinated attack by militants in another car. The gunmen entered the Al-Oradi Hospital inside the compound, shooting at those inside and killing many. At least six of the casualties were doctors and four were patients from a hospital within the complex. Another coordinated attack and gunfight outside the complex late afternoon was reported to have taken place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack, Perpetrators\nOn 5 December, Ansar al-Sharia, a militant group linked to al-Qaeda has claimed responsibility for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack, Victims\nThe attacks claimed 56 lives and caused more than 200 injuries. Foreign medical workers were among the casualties. Among those who were killed were seven Filipino medical workers (including one doctor), two German aid workers, two Vietnamese doctors and one Indian nurse. Officials have said that all 12 militants which including Saudi Arabians were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack, Aftermath\nOn 6 December, the U.S. military has increased its regional alert status following deadly, coordinated strikes on Yemen\u2019s defense ministry that killed 57 and wounded 167 people on Thursday, a senior U.S. defense official said on Friday. \u201cThe United States military is fully prepared to support our Yemeni partners in the wake of this incident,\u201d the official told Reuters on condition of anonymity, and without offering further details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack, Aftermath\nThe Philippines has banned deployment of migrant workers to Yemen in response to the attack which saw the deaths of seven Filipinos. The Philippine government will pay the expense of Filipinos who wish to return to the Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack, Aftermath\nGermany temporarily reduced its staff at its embassy in Sana'a and called for its aid workers in Yemen to leave the country \"as quickly as possible\",.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235853-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Sanaa attack, Aftermath\nAfter footage of the attack was aired on Yemeni television, showing an attack on a hospital within the ministry compound and the killing of medical personal and patients, the head of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula released a video message apologizing. Qassim al-Raimi claimed that the team of attackers were directed not to assault the hospital in the attack, but that one had gone ahead and done so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting\nOn June 7, 2013, a killing spree by a lone shooter occurred in Santa Monica, California. Its catalyst was a domestic dispute and subsequent fire at a home, followed by a series of shootings near and on the Santa Monica College campus. Six people were killed, including the suspect, and four injured. The shooter \u2014 23-year-old John Zawahri \u2014 was killed by police officers when he exchanged gunfire with them at the Santa Monica College library.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Events, Family murders and arson\nThe California Highway Patrol received a phone call at 11:52\u00a0a.m. PDT on June 7, 2013, of shots fired. Upon arrival, police called the fire department when they saw a house on fire, located at 2036 Yorkshire Avenue, where Zawahri lived. After the fire was under control, the bodies of two men were found in the house, both having died from gunshot wounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Events, Shooting spree\nAfter setting fire to the house, Zawahri \u2014 armed with an AR-15-type semi-automatic rifle, which he assembled from legally purchased components (though he was legally prohibited from possessing firearms), some of which required machining with a mill \u2014 stopped a woman driving a Mazda hatchback, holding her at gunpoint. A passing female driver tried to intervene, and was shot and wounded by Zawahri. He then ordered the driver of the first car, a 41-year-old woman, to drive him to the Santa Monica College campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Events, Shooting spree\nAlong the way, Zawahri shot at Big Blue Bus 4057, which was carrying approximately two dozen passengers, three of whom suffered injuries. A police cruiser was also fired upon. Upon arriving on the college campus, Zawahri shot into a Ford Explorer, killing the 68-year-old male driver and fatally wounding the passenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Events, Shooting spree\nHe then continued on foot toward the college library, fatally shooting another woman immediately outside. Entering the library, Zawahri opened fire on students inside, then focused his gunfire on a group of library employees barricaded in a storage room. Witnesses stated they heard gunshots and screams, but were able to hide or escape unharmed. While on the campus, he fired at least 70 rounds, and dropped a duffel bag loaded with magazines, boxes of ammunition and a .44 caliber revolver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Events, Shooting spree\nWhen police arrived at the college, they exchanged gunfire with Zawahri. He was shot by Santa Monica Police Officers Robert Sparks, Jason Salas and Santa Monica College Captain Ray Bottenfield inside the library, and then brought outside, where he died. Authorities investigated up to nine crime scenes believed to be tied to the thirteen-minute-long shooting spree. Though Zawahri had been killed, officers actively searched the college campus for additional shooters and victims for over eight hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Aftermath\nSanta Monica College was placed on lock-down and issued a statement on its Facebook page for students to stay away from the campus. The lock-down was lifted later that day, but the campus grounds remained closed until the following Monday morning, when students were scheduled to take final exams. All schools in the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District were placed on lock-down as well. In the days and weeks following the shooting, mental health counseling was provided at Santa Monica College to students, employees, and the surrounding community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Aftermath\nPresident Barack Obama was in Santa Monica at the time for a fundraiser just a ten-minute drive from the campus. His motorcade was rerouted and he left safely on Air Force One. A report of the shooting released in March 2014 later revealed that the reason behind the quick police response was Obama's presence, which required a large number of police officers and also specialized tactical resources in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Aftermath\nOn August 7, 2013, exactly two months after the killing spree, the Los Angeles Community College District Board of Trustees adopted a resolution banning firearms on its nine area campuses. The resolution cited \"repeated, serious occurrences of campus-based shootings\". It also stated \"the presence of firearms, even when nonoperational and in the instructional setting, lends itself to the potential for panic and fear\". The policy allows weapons on campus only if carried by a sworn law enforcement officer or for use in a theatrical performance. It effectively ended the conduct of non-credit gun safety classes previously offered on LACCD campuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Victims\nSix people were killed on the day of the incident, including Zawahri, who was shot by police. One shooting victim died from her wounds in the hospital two days later. Four others were injured. The injured victims were treated at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. The conditions of the wounded victims ranged from critical to good, and at least one underwent surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Victims\nZawahri's first victims were his father, 55-year-old Samir Zawahri, and older brother, 24-year-old Christopher Zawahri, both of whom lived in the home at 2036 Yorkshire Avenue in Santa Monica. They were believed to have been shot and killed after the house was set on fire. One of the victims was Debra Lynn Fine, a 50-year-old woman shot as she came upon the Yorkshire Avenue carjacking and attempted to intervene. Three other people went to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center with minor injuries; one had shrapnel-type injuries and the two others had injuries not related to gunfire. All were treated and released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Victims\nOn the day of the incident, two people were killed near the library at Santa Monica College. One was Margarita Gomez, a 68-year-old woman who was collecting recyclable material, and the other was Carlos Navarro Franco, the 68-year-old groundskeeper for the school and the driver of the Ford Explorer. His 26-year-old daughter and passenger, Marcela Dia Franco, was wounded and died from her injuries in a hospital two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Victims\nThe Los Angeles County Coroner's Office released the causes of death on June 12. Samir Zawahri was shot multiple times, and Christopher Zawahri was shot once in the chest. Carlos Navarro Franco died of gunshot wounds to the neck and face; his daughter, Marcela Dia Franco, a student at the college, died of a gunshot wound to the head. Margarita Gomez, the woman who was collecting cans outside the library, died after being shot in the abdomen and chest. Zawahri died of multiple gunshot wounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Perpetrator\nJohn Samir Zawahri (June 8, 1989 \u2013 June 7, 2013) was identified by officials as the shooter on June 8. He was armed with an AR-15-type semiautomatic rifle, a .44 1858 Remington model cap-and-ball revolver, and an additional upper receiver for the rifle. He was described as wearing black tactical clothing and \"body armor\" by his carjacking victim Laura Sisk, though it was later determined the tactical vest did not contain any type of armor. Sources said Zawahri had forty 30-round magazines in pouches in his clothing and in a bag he carried. Ammunition was strapped to his body as well as in pouches in his clothing and tactical vest. Law enforcement sources stated that they believed the attack was premeditated, citing the gunman's extensive armament and preparation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Perpetrator\nIn 2006, when Zawahri was a student at Olympic High School in Santa Monica, a teacher saw him surfing the Web for information on assault weapons and instructions on making explosive devices. School staff also learned that he had repeatedly made threats against students, teachers, and campus security officers. Within days, police were involved and bomb-making materials were found at his home. Zawahri was subsequently admitted to the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute. Zawahri was a student of Santa Monica High School before enrolling in Santa Monica College in the winter of 2009. The college had no disciplinary issues with Zawahri, officials said. He left the school in the fall of 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Perpetrator, Motive\nThe rampage allegedly started over an undetermined family dispute. Public records show that Zawahri's parents were married in 1985 and moved into the house they purchased on Yorkshire Avenue in 1996, but the mother, Randa Abdou, left the home and moved to an apartment with the two boys in 1998. She sought a restraining order against the father for domestic violence a short time later, but the case was dismissed when the mother failed to appear in court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Perpetrator, Motive\nSubsequently, the elder son lived with the father at the residence on Yorkshire Avenue, while Zawahri lived in an apartment in Mar Vista, Los Angeles with his mother. Though there is no record that the couple divorced, by 2013 they had been living separately for years. Randa Abdou was out of the country visiting relatives at the time of the shooting, but returned during the following weekend and was assisting authorities in the investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235854-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Monica shooting, Perpetrator, Motive\nZawahri prepared a three-page handwritten note that was found on his body. In it, he expressed remorse for killing his father and brother, but did not give a motive. He said goodbye to friends and expressed hope that his mother would be taken care of and receive recompense from his father's estate. Investigators believe that mental illness played a role in the killings, but no details were given. Searching his home, police found replica weapons and illegal zip guns. It was also learned that the California Department of Justice advised Zawahri in an October 2011 letter that he was ineligible to purchase a firearm. The incident occurred the day before Zawahri's 24th birthday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235855-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Rosa local elections\nLocal elections was held in Santa Rosa City on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, and ten councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235855-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Rosa local elections, Overview\nIncumbent Mayor Arlene B. Arcillas decided to run for reelection under Liberal Party. Her opponent is Alicia Lazaga, a nominee under PDP-Laban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235855-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Rosa local elections, Overview\nMayor Arcillas' running mate is incumbent vice-mayor Arnel Gomez, who is also under Liberal Party. His opponents are former vice mayors Jose Catindig, Jr. and Manuel Alipon. Catindig also served as Mayor from 2005 to 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235855-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Rosa local elections, Results\nThe candidates for 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235855-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Santa Rosa local elections, Results, City Council Elections\nVoters will elect ten (10) councilors to comprise the City Council or the Sangguniang Panlungsod. Candidates are voted separately so there are chances where winning candidates will have unequal number of votes and may come from different political parties. The ten candidates with the highest number of votes win the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season\nThe 2013 season is Santos FC's hundredth first season in existence and the club's fifty-fourth consecutive season in the top flight of Brazilian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season\nSantos reached the Campeonato Paulista Finals for fifth consecutive season, but failed to win their fourth consecutive title as they lost by 2\u20133 on aggregate for their biggest rival, Corinthians. On 25 May 2013, Santos announced that they had sold Neymar to Barcelona for a fee of \u20ac 57 million. A week later, the club sacked the head coach Muricy Ramalho due to the discontent of the crowd and the club's directors with his results. For his place, Claudinei Oliveira assumed as caretaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season\nAs part of Neymar's sold to Barcelona, Santos played in the Joan Gamper Torphy against them and suffered their third worst defeat in history, losing by 8\u20130. In the Copa do Brasil, Santos were eliminated in the Round of 16, losing 1\u20132 on aggregate score to Gr\u00eamio. On 30 August, Claudinei Oliveira was promoted to head coach after 3 months as caretaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season, Players, Squad information\n1 Player has his rights assigned to another club where he has never played for (such as Tombense, Deportivo Maldonado and Mirassol).Last updated: 8 December 2013Source: for appearances and goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season, Players, Reserve 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season, Players, Joan Gamper Trophy 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season, Players, Starting XI\nLast updated: 8 December 2013Source: Squad statistics 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, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season, Players, Appearances and goals\nLast updated: 8 December 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season, Players, Goalscorers\nLast updated: 8 December 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matches", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235856-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Santos FC season, Players, Disciplinary record\nLast updated: 8 December 2013Source: Match reports in Competitive matchesOnly competitive matches = Number of bookings; = Number of sending offs after a second yellow card; = Number of sending offs by a direct red card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235857-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Santosh Trophy Group Stage\nThe group stage of the 2012\u201313 Santosh Trophy features 16 teams: the 4 automatic qualifiers and the 12 winners of the qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235857-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Santosh Trophy Group Stage\nThe teams were drawn into four groups of four, and played each once in a round-robin format. The matchdays were from 21 February to 26 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235857-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Santosh Trophy Group Stage\nThe top team in each group advances to the Semi-Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections\nLocal elections will be held in the Province of Sarangani on May 13, 2013 within the Philippine general election. Voters will select candidates for all local positions: a town mayor, vice mayor and town councilors, as well as members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, the vice-governor, governor and a representative for the lone district of Sarangani. Incumbent governor Miguel Rene Dominguez is barred for seeking another term because he is limited to three terms only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn September 9, 2011, although allowed to seek another term, Filipino eight-division world boxing champion and incumbent Representative Manny Pacquiao announced his intention to run for governor. He also announced that he will trade positions with incumbent governor Miguel Rene Dominguez who is on his third term and is not allowed to seek another term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn April 14, 2012, Pacquiao bolted the Liberal Party and joined the PDP-Laban. Pacquiao became a member of the Liberal Party faction of then Manila Mayor Lito Atienza. He then ran for representative of the 1st District of South Cotabato. However, he lost to then representative and incumbent General Santos mayor Darlene Antonino-Custodio. He then joined the Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino of then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. In 2010, he ran again as representative of the lone district of Sarangani under the People's Champ Movement which is affiliated with the Nacionalista Party and won over the Chiongbian clan. He then moved to Liberal Party along with other elected representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Gubernatorial and vice gubernatorial election\nOn October 2, 2012, Pacquiao decided to run for reelection as representative of Sarangani. His wife, Jinkee Pacquiao filed her candidacy for vice governor. She is the running mate of incumbent vice governor Steve Solon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Provincial Elections\nThe candidates for governor and vice governor 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, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Congressional elections\nSarangani's lone legislative district will elect a representative to the House of Representatives. The candidate with the highest number of votes wins the seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Congressional elections\nEight-division world boxing champion and incumbent Manny Pacquiao is running unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Sangguniang Panlalawigan elections\nAll 2 Districts of Sarangani will elect Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235858-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarangani local elections, Mayoralty Election\nAll municipalities of Sarangani will elect mayor and vice-mayor this election. The candidates for 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. Below is the list of mayoralty candidates of each city and municipalities per district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235859-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Open\nThe 2013 Sarasota Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Sarasota, United States between 13 and 21 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235859-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235859-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235859-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 62], "content_span": [63, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235860-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Open \u2013 Doubles\nJohan Brunstr\u00f6m and Izak van der Merwe were the defending champions but van der Merwe decided not to participate. Brunstr\u00f6m paired up with Eric Butorac, but they lost to Steve Johnson and Bradley Klahn in the first round. Ilija Bozoljac and Somdev Devvarman defeated Johnson and Klahn in the final 6\u20137(5\u20137), 7\u20136(7\u20133), [11\u20139] to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235861-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Open \u2013 Singles\nSam Querrey was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Alex Kuznetsov defeated Wayne Odesnik 6\u20130, 6\u20132 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235862-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Thunder season\nThe 2013 Sarasota Thunder season was the first and only season for the professional indoor football franchise and first in the Ultimate Indoor Football League (UIFL). The Thunder were one of six teams that competed in the UIFL for the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235862-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Thunder season\nLed by head coach Greg Walls, the Thunder played their entire season as a travel team, based out of Sarasota, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235862-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarasota Thunder season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated October 29, 20123 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake\nThe 2013 Saravan earthquake occurred with a moment magnitude of 7.7 at 15:14 pm IRDT (UTC+4:30) on 16 April. The shock struck a mountainous area between the cities of Saravan and Khash in Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran, close to the border with Pakistan, with a duration of about 25 seconds. The earthquake occurred at an intermediate depth in the Arabian plate lithosphere, near the boundary between the subducting Arabian Plate and the overriding Eurasian Plate at a depth of about 80\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake\nIt was the largest earthquake in Iran within the last 40 years, equal in magnitude to the one that shook Tabas in 1978 killing 15,000, and possibly the largest in the last half-century. The earthquake followed a magnitude 6.3 event near Bushehr. The town of Mashkel was close to the quake's epicentre, and around 85 percent of the city's buildings were demolished. Thirty-five people were killed in the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Primary effects\nThe earthquake struck 83 kilometres (52\u00a0mi) east of the city of Saravan, Iran, and was felt throughout much of eastern Iran and southern Pakistan, and as far away as Riyadh, Manama, Doha, Abu Dhabi, Muscat, and Delhi. Initial sources cited that close to 100 people lost their lives in Iran and that Iran had confirmed the deaths of 40, but these sources have been disputed; Iran has since officially denied death counts, only reporting injuries, as of 14:00 UTC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Primary effects\nAlthough the earthquake was much stronger than previous ones in the area, the depth and the terrain/population density above the focus, as well as predominating building construction being relatively light materials such as mud and wood, meant that there were relatively few casualties in Iran, although the number of casualties was higher in the neighbouring state of Pakistan, with at least 34 reported deaths. According to the Iranian Red Crescent, all communications in the area have been cut, and rescue teams have been dispatched. Buildings were evacuated as far away as Delhi and on the Arabian Peninsula, and many buildings in Iran were completely destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Tectonics\nThe quake reportedly occurred within the subducting Arabian Plate below the overriding Eurasian Plate. The Strait of Hormuz separates two forms of plate collision. To the northwest, continental crust portions of the Arabian and Eurasian Plates are colliding, resulting in compressive faulting. To the southeast, dense oceanic crust of the Arabian Plate is subducting underneath the Eurasian Plate at the Makran Trench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Tectonics\nIran lies on the fault line between the Arabian plate and the Eurasian plate. The collision of these two plates cause most of the earthquakes that strike Iran. The specific area of the fault that lies below the Sistan and Baluchestan Province is referred to as the Makran region. In this area the Arabian Plate is folding under, or subducting, the Eurasia Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Tectonics, Earthquake activity\nThere has been an increase in earthquake activity in not only Iran but also neighboring Pakistan. In the entire 20th century Pakistan and Iran experienced a combined total of twenty-six earthquakes. Within the first thirteen years of the 21st century Pakistan and Iran have suffered a combined total of eighteen earthquakes, with the most recent earthquake in Iran occurring on April 16, 2013 and the most recent earthquake in Pakistan occurring on September 28, 2013. These earthquakes can range from microearthquakes, measuring less than a 2.0 on the moment magnitude scale (Mw\u202f), to very large events measuring 7.0\u20137.9 Mw\u202f. The smallest earthquakes may not be felt, while major earthquakes can be assessed at VIII (Severe) or higher on the Mercalli intensity scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Tectonics, Earthquake activity, Subduction\nSubduction usually occurs at convergent fault lines. The underlying tectonic plate descends, or subducts, into the Earth's mantle. Earthquakes occurring at these faults are very large in magnitude and scale. In this case the disappearing Arabian plate is part of the oceanic crust while the Eurasia plate is part of the continental crust.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Tectonics, Earthquake activity, The Makran region\nThe Makran Region Of Pakistan and Iran is characterized by three mountain ranges. These mountain ranges, the Makran Coastal Range, the Central Makran Range, and the Siahan Range, are located in the southwestern area of the Baluchestan province of Pakistan. These ranges are the product of years of collision between the Indian Plate and the Eurasia tectonic plate. The Makran Region is also the covering point of three tectonic plates. The Indian plate, Eurasia plate, and the Arabian plate meet and converge in this area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 74], "content_span": [75, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Preparedness and response, Scientific preparedness\nThere is no method to accurately predict an earthquake, however, there are systems which attempt to give early warningswhen earthquakes occur. Currently the most all-inclusive system is Japan's Earthquake Early Warningsystem. This system is monitored by the Japanese Meteorological AgencyThe JMA sends out the warnings through the television, mobile devices, the internet, and the radio as soon as an earthquake is detected. Other countries have similar systems that are mostly limited to a particular region, for example, the United States' early warning system is in place only for the earthquake disposed west coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Preparedness and response, Scientific preparedness\nOne study conducted in California, United States suggests there may be a new way to more precisely presage earthquakes. This group of scientists, composed of scientists from the Carnegie Institution for Science, Rice University, and the University of California, Berkeley monitored earthquake waves in the San Andreas Fault using seismometers for twenty years. This group discovered cracks in the fault filled with fluids. The scientists noticed that these fluids shifted after being disrupted by seismic activity. Shifting fluids cause faults to weaken, making them more prone to earthquakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Preparedness and response, The Red Crescent\nThe International Federation of the Red Cross and the Red Crescent Societiesis a nongovernmental organization founded at the 1919 Paris Peace Conferenceafter World War I. The IFRC has seven fundamental principles. These principles include ensuring respect for all humans, making no discrimination as to nationality, religious beliefs, or political opinion, and remaining neutral in times of controversy. The IFRC also has a set of goals it aspires to achieve during each disaster recovery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 68], "content_span": [69, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Preparedness and response, The Red Crescent\nThese four goals are: reducing the deaths, injuries, and impact caused by the disaster; decreasing the amount of death and illnesses caused by diseases and public health emergencies; increasing its ability to address the urgent situations; and promote respect for human dignity while reducing intolerance and discrimination. The IFRC has created stock procedure for disaster relief, however the specifics vary based on the type of disaster, the region the disaster affected, and the amount of destruction caused by the disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 68], "content_span": [69, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Preparedness and response, The Red Crescent\nOn April 9, 2013, the IFRC deployed seventy-five rescue teams to northwestern Iran following a 6.3 magnitude earthquake. The next day over 800 volunteers were in the disaster area helping those affected. A week later a 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck southeastern Iran, the IFRC dispatched air assessment teams in addition to forty ambulances. While the first earthquake was much more destructive, the IFRC was still able to aid both disaster areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 68], "content_span": [69, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Preparedness and response, The Red Crescent\nIn June 2013, the IFRC and the Red Crescent Society of the Islamic Republic of Iranagreed to band together in an attempt to redouble their efforts to promote better building codes in disaster prone areas, like Iran. These two groups will also work together to strengthen each group's capacity to respond to disasters. Their goals include erecting resilient buildings, improving disaster preparedness, and further developing the IFRC's disaster response guiltiness. There may be similar partnerships between the IFRC and other countries to achieve similar goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 68], "content_span": [69, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Damages and casualties\nThe afternoon of April 16, 2013 rocked the Sistan and Baluchestan province of Iran and Pakistan. The earthquake, measuring 7.7 on the moment magnitude scale, was not only felt in this southeastern area of Iran and Pakistan but also as far away as India's capital city of Delhi. The rural city of Khash, the closest city to the epicenter, is part of Iran's most impoverished province. Most of the citizens of the Sistan and Baluchestan province live in either mud shacks or tents. The lack of actual structures contributed to the minimal damage which occurred due to this earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235863-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Saravan earthquake, Damages and casualties\nAnother contributing factor is the depth of the epicenter. The epicenter of this earthquake was located fifty-nine miles beneath the earth's surface causing damage that would normally be found after an earthquake measuring 4.0 magnitude on the Richter magnitude scale. About 127 people were injured, however these injuries were mostly minor broken bones, and the deaths totaled thirty-five people on both the Iranian and Pakistani side of the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season\nThe 2013 season was Sarawak FA's 1st season in the Malaysia Premier League, after relegated in 2012 Malaysia Super League. Sarawak FA was relegated by Pahang in Playoff Qualifying after the MSL reducing the teams competing in 2013 to 12 teams from 14 teams. 2013 was the best ever Sarawak comeback after almost 13 years of Sarawak Black era. For the 2013 season Sarawak was promoted to 2014 Malaysia Super League after being 1st in the league and being invincible after securing 18 wins with 4 draws and being undefeated throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season\nThis is Robert Alberts' third season in charge after taking over from Haji Mohd Zaki Sheikh Ahmad in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season\nSarawak was successful in home soil with the records of 84% home wins throughout the 2013 season with 91% home league wins. Sarawak only lost to Kelantan in Malaysia FA Cup Quarter-Finals by 0-2. Sarawak also drew with Sabah 0-0 in league games and 1-1 to Pahang in the most memorable night of Semi Finals Malaysia Cup which they lost by aggregate 4-2 that stops them to equal their record in 1999 Final Malaysia Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season, 2013 Malaysia Premier League\nSarawak were unbeaten in their league games thus winning it for the first time. They were promoted to Malaysia Super League after defeated Kuala Lumpur 4-0 in Stadium Negeri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season, 2013 Malaysia Premier League\nLast updated: 18 September 2013. Source: 2013 Malaysia Premier League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season, 2013 Malaysia Cup\nSarawak were drawn in Group D with Malaysia Super League Champions, Singapore Lions XII, Perak FA and Malaysia Premier League team, Kedah FA whom were the first team to win Double Treble in 2006-2007 and 2007-2008. Sarawak started with a loss to Perak FA in Ipoh Stadium 2-1 after leading 1-0 in the first half. Sarawak buck up in their second match against Lions XII in Stadium Negeri 2-1. Sarawak were drawn 0-0 in Darul Aman after both Kedah and Sarawak fails to score any goals in their third group matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season, 2013 Malaysia Cup\nSarawak then captivated to win 4-0 in Stadium Negeri defeating Kedah in their fourth matches. With a just a draw will do, Sarawak fails to secure their spot to Quarter-finals in the fifth match after lost 1-0 to the home side Lions XII. Sarawak need to win their last match in order to book their place in the Quarter-finals for the first time since 2006. Sarawak beaten Perak 6-1 with Muamer Salibasic scores hat-trick on that night. Sarawak were group champion of group D while Lions XII placed second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235864-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarawak FA season, 2013 Malaysia Cup\nSarawak reached their first Malaysia Cup semi-finals in 13 years after defeating Sime Darby 3-1 at the State Stadium in the quarter-final second leg. Sarawak advanced to the semi-finals with a 3-1 aggregate win. However, they were stop by Pahang in Semi-finals after losing 4-2 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235865-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sardinia floods\nThe 2013 Sardinia floods took place in and around the Sardinian town of Olbia between 17 and 19 November 2013. They also affected other parts of northeastern Sardinia and killed at least 18 people. Thousands of people were left homeless. The places which suffered the most damage were Olbia, and in general the whole region of Gallura. The flood caused damages of over 1 billion euro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235865-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sardinia floods, Impact\nThe flooding was associated with an extratropical cyclone in the western Mediterranean Basin in November 2013, named Cyclone Cleopatra (also Ruven by the Free University of Berlin) which developed slow-moving embedded thunderstorm complexes, as cold air flowing from the north entered the Mediterranean and interacted with warm moist air to the east.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235865-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sardinia floods, Impact\nContinuous rain over two days resulted in the overflowing of the rivers in the northeastern part of Sardinia, flooding villages like Torp\u00e8 and towns such as Olbia, Nuoro and Oristano. The cyclone brought extremely heavy rain to the island of Sardinia as more than 440\u00a0mm (17\u00a0in) of rain fell in 90 minutes on the morning of 19 November, resulting in flooding and swollen rivers bursting their banks. The area around the north-eastern city of Olbia has been affected the worst, where up to 3\u00a0m (120\u00a0in) of water has left cars and homes submerged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235865-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sardinia floods, Impact\nFurther afield, ferry services between Naples and the islands of Capri, Ischia and Procida were affected by gale-force winds and heavy seas, with bad weather spreading to Calabria and Campania on the Southern Italian mainland. As far north as Rome, authorities were monitoring the Tiber river.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235865-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sardinia floods, Aftermath\nAt least 18 people died as a result of the flooding in Sardinia. Enrico Letta, the Italian prime minister, declared a state of emergency on the island, describing it as a \"national tragedy\", promising 20 million euro for the reconstruction. As of 2014, the aforementioned funds have never been assigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235865-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sardinia floods, Aftermath\nOn November 19 the Parliament of the European Union observed a minute's silence in memory of the victims, anticipated from condolence by the president of European Commission Jos\u00e9 Manuel Dur\u00e3o Barroso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235865-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sardinia floods, Aftermath\nThe date for the national day of mourning was established for November 22, with the flag of Italy at half-mast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235866-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarpsborg 08 FF season\nThe 2013 season was Sarpsborg 08's 2nd season in Tippeligaen, following their promotion back to the top level in 2012. It was also their first season with Brian Deane as the club's manager. Sarpsborg 08 competed in the Tippeligaen, finishing 14th, entering the Relegation play-offs in which they defeated Ranheim 3-0 over two legs. They also competed in the cup where they reached the Second Round, losing to Kvik Halden of the 2. Divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235866-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarpsborg 08 FF 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-00235866-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarpsborg 08 FF 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-00235866-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarpsborg 08 FF 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-00235866-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarpsborg 08 FF 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-00235866-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sarpsborg 08 FF 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-00235867-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 SaskTel Tankard\nThe 2013 SaskTel Tankard will be held from January 30 to February 3 at the Northern Lights Palace in Melfort, Saskatchewan. The winning team will represent Saskatchewan at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235868-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan New Democratic Party leadership election\nAn election for the leadership of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party was triggered on November 7, 2011 following Dwain Lingenfelter's resignation after losing his seat in the 2011 election. The party selected its new leader on March 9, 2013, by a one-member one vote system held during a convention at TCU Place in Saskatoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235868-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan New Democratic Party leadership election, Candidates, Ryan Meili\nDoctor, author and community health advocate.Runner-up for the Saskatchewan NDP leadership in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 82], "content_span": [83, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235868-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan New Democratic Party leadership election, Withdrawn candidates, Erin Weir\nEconomistFormer President and Vice-President of the Saskatchewan Young New DemocratsFederal NDP candidate in Wascana during the 2004 election. Weir withdrew from the race on February 20, 2013 and endorsed Ryan Meili.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 91], "content_span": [92, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235868-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan New Democratic Party leadership election, Results, First ballot\n(Weir withdrew February 20 to support Meili, too late to be removed from the mail ballot; Wotherspoon withdraws following the first ballot without endorsing a candidate.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 81], "content_span": [82, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season\nThe 2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season was the 56th season for the team in the Canadian Football League. The Roughriders improved upon their 8\u201310 record from 2012 and made the playoffs for the second straight season, while hosting their first playoff game since 2010. After defeating the BC Lions and Calgary Stampeders in the playoffs, the Roughriders qualified for their fourth Grey Cup appearance in seven years and first ever at their home stadium. The team defeated the Hamilton Tiger-Cats 45-23 in the 101st Grey Cup en route to winning the franchise's fourth championship. With the added seats at Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field, the Roughriders led the league in attendance for the first time, with an average of 37,503 fans attending each regular season game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Offseason, Coaches\nThe Riders began their offseason coaching changes by releasing defensive line coach Mike Walker, linebackers coach Alex Smith, and offensive line coach Kris Sweet. The team hired former Alouettes assistant coach Mike Sinclair to be the defensive line and assistant head coach, but he later joined Marc Trestman's staff with the Chicago Bears. Special teams coordinator Craig Dickenson also resigned with the club, moving to the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, while Bob Dyce moved into that role from the offensive coordinator position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Offseason, Coaches\nArguably, the team's biggest coaching hire was Dyce's replacement, George Cortez, the former head coach and coordinator for the Tiger-Cats, whose team led the league in points scored. They also hired Richard Kent to be another defensive backs coach and Doug Malone and Todd Howard to be the offensive and defensive line coaches, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Offseason, Players\nOn January 24, 2013, the Riders traded Justin Harper and a 2014 4th round pick to the BC Lions for six-time all-star and two-time Grey Cup champion Geroy Simon. Simon had been a member of the Lions since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Offseason, Players\nThe Roughriders were also lauded for signing many big name free agents, including the 2009 Most Outstanding Canadian and the 100th Grey Cup's Most Valuable Canadian, Ricky Foley. They also signed defensive backs Dwight Anderson, Weldon Brown, and linebacker Tristan Black.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Offseason, Players\nOn June 1, 2013, former Roughriders defensive end John Chick, who was released by the Jacksonville Jaguars of the NFL, signed with the Roughriders after much speculation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Offseason, CFL Draft\nThe 2013 CFL Draft took place on May 6, 2013. The Roughriders had seven selections total in the seven-round draft, after trading away their second round pick during a 2012 draft trade and their fourth round pick in a trade for Greg Carr. Their third round pick was traded to Toronto for three fifth round picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Edmonton Eskimos\nThe Roughriders started their season in Edmonton, getting impressive performances from Darian Durant and Kory Sheets, in a dominating 39-18 win against the Eskimos. Durant completed 14 passes for 171 yards and three touchdowns, which was the third time in five games in his career that he passed for at least three touchdowns and no interceptions in the opening game of a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Edmonton Eskimos\nSheets had 17 rushes for a career best 131 yards and a touchdown while Renauld Williams gave the Riders a comfortable lead with an interception return for a touchdown on the last play of the first half to make the score 22-1 at the half. The game was the sixth time in the last seven seasons that the Roughriders won their opening game of the season. It was also the team's first win in Edmonton since September 26, 2009 and their first road victory against a west division opponent since July 10, 2010, ending a 14-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs Calgary Stampeders\nIn Week 2, the Roughriders found outstanding performances from receivers Chris Getzlaf, Weston Dressler and once again Durant and Sheets, in a 36-21 win over the Stampeders. Dressler had 10 catches for 108 yards and a touchdown while Getzlaf had eight receptions for 97 yards and a major of his own. Sheets set another career high with 133 rushing yards, and the Roughriders became the only team in the CFL to be undefeated, which is the first time since 2006 that there is only one undefeated team after two weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 99], "content_span": [100, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs Calgary Stampeders\nSaskatchewan dominated the time-of-possession, especially in the second half, where the Roughriders had the ball for close to 22 minutes compared to the Stampeders' eight, leading to a defensive shut out for Saskatchewan in the second half. With the temporary seating installed for the 101st Grey Cup, it was the largest opening day crowd and fourth largest overall in franchise history with 35,296 fans in the stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 99], "content_span": [100, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Toronto Argonauts\nIn Week 3, the Roughriders played defending Grey Cup champions Toronto Argonauts. Durant continued his outstanding start to the season as he completed 14 of 19 passes for 245 yards and three touchdowns before leaving early in the fourth quarter with an apparent ankle injury. He begins the season with eight touchdowns with no interceptions and a 72.0% completion rate. Kory Sheets recorded yet another career high with 178 rushing yards, which was his third 100-yard rushing game after recording three all of last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Toronto Argonauts\nTaj Smith had the first 100-yard receiving game of his career with three catches for 141 yards and two touchdowns. Rob Bagg recorded his first touchdown catch since September 25, 2010 following knee injuries that kept him out of most of the last two seasons. It was also Durant's 100th career touchdown pass. Remarkably, the Roughriders didn't record a turnover until the fourth quarter with 23 seconds left on a muffed onside kick return, which was the team's first turnover of the season. The Roughriders had a 3-0 record to start the season for the fourth time in the last six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs Hamilton Tiger-Cats\nFormer Roughriders quarterback and head coach Kent Austin, who led the Roughriders to the 1989 Grey Cup as a player and the 2007 Grey Cup as a head coach, returned to Mosaic Stadium as the head coach and general manager of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats for the first time since the 2007 Grey Cup victory. After sustaining a foot injury, Darian Durant was a game-time decision and excelled, passing for 347 yards and four touchdowns, which was the first time he passed for four touchdowns since a 2012 week one victory over the Tiger-Cats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs Hamilton Tiger-Cats\nRob Bagg led all receivers with 125 receiving yards and two touchdowns, which was his first 100-yard and multi-touchdown performance since a 2010 game, once again against the Tiger-Cats. Offensive lineman Dan Clark scored his first touchdown on a pass from Durant and Kory Sheets recorded his fourth straight 100-yard rushing game, which was the best four-game start in CFL history with 572 rushing yards. The Roughriders recorded a 4-0 start to the season for only the fourth time in franchise history in the modern era of Canadian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Hamilton Tiger-Cats\nLeading up to their week 5 game against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, there was again speculation that Durant may not play due to his foot injury sustained against the Argos. As a game-time decision, Drew Willy made his third professional start and first of the season as he completed 14 of 25 passes for 269 yards and three touchdowns en route to the Roughriders' fifth straight win to open the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Hamilton Tiger-Cats\nKory Sheets rushed for 140 yards and became the first player in CFL history to rush for over 100 yards in each of the first five games to start the season. He also set a franchise record for consecutive 100-yard rushing games with five, surpassing the previous records held by George Reed (1969) and Mike Strickland (1978). Geroy Simon led all receivers with 125 receiving yards and scored his first touchdown as a Roughrider and the 101st touchdown reception of his career. John Chick recorded his first sack since returning to the Roughriders and Tearrius George had his first multi-sack game since 2007, matching his career high with three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Calgary Stampeders\nThe Roughriders suffered their first loss following the bye week to the Calgary Stampeders, leaving the season series split at one game apiece and setting up a rubber match in week 18. After not allowing more than 100 yards rushing in any game in the first five weeks, the Roughriders defense gave up 223 yards including 175 by Jon Cornish to go along with his four rushing touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 99], "content_span": [100, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: at Calgary Stampeders\nWhile trailing by six points in the third quarter, kick returner Jock Sanders made the peculiar decision to return a kick from the one-yard line, resulting in a safety two plays later followed by a touchdown by Calgary on the ensuing drive, putting the game out of reach. Saskatchewan came into the game as the second-least penalized team, but committed a season-high 10 fouls for 126 yards. Individually, Kory Sheets had eight rushing yards in the first half, but finished strong with 133 total rushing yards by the end of the game, extending his 100-yard game streak to six. Sheets also committed the first offensive turnover of the year for the Roughriders after he fumbled in the first quarter. Darian Durant again had a strong game, passing for three touchdowns, increasing his league-leading total to 15, while having yet to record an interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 99], "content_span": [100, 954]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs Montreal Alouettes\nWith a sellout 40,637 in attendance at Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field, the Saskatchewan Roughriders tried to get back on track after suffering their first loss of the 2013 season to Calgary. In the first quarter, Darian Durant found Weston Dressler for a touchdown and later would eclipse the 20,000 passing yards mark for his CFL career. Early in the second quarter, Ricky Foley would injure Alouettes quarterback Anthony Calvillo, forcing Calvillo sit out the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 99], "content_span": [100, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs Montreal Alouettes\nRiders returner Jock Sanders suffered two fumbles in the game, making Dressler and Weldon Brown take over for punt and kickoff returns respectively. Rob Bagg would exit the game after an apparent lower body injury. Longtime CFL receiver Geroy Simon caught his 1,000th career reception, becoming only the third CFL player to do so. With the score tied 14-14, Alouettes' defensive back Jerald Brown recovered a fumble by Durant and returned it for a touchdown late in the 4th quarter, but Durant responded with a 65-yard touchdown toss to Taj Smith, tying the game again. Following a Montreal two-and-out, Dressler returned the ensuing punt 38 yards, setting up Christopher Milo's 36-yard game-winning field goal. This was the first game of the season in which Kory Sheets did not rush for over 100 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 99], "content_span": [100, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Edmonton Eskimos\nFollowing below average performances by Darian Durant and Kory Sheets in week 8, both players got back on track against the Edmonton Eskimos to lead their team to victory. Durant completed 80% of his passes for 334 yards, which is the highest completion percentage in a start during his CFL career. While he didn't throw an interception for the seventh straight start, he also didn't throw a touchdown pass, which was the first time he had not thrown at least two touchdown passes during this streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Edmonton Eskimos\nThis was probably due to Sheets scoring both of Saskatchewan's touchdowns on rushes, where he ran for 139 yards en route to becoming the fastest player to reach 1,000 yards rushing to start a season, doing so in the first eight games. Geroy Simon passed 16,000 yards receiving in his career and Christopher Milo connected on all five of his field goal attempts to keep him perfect on the season. The game saw seven lead changes, but the defense made big plays in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: at Edmonton Eskimos\nDwight Anderson recorded his second interception of the season with Edmonton on the Saskatchewan 4-yard line and trailing only by two points. After a Ricky Schmitt single on the ensuing drive to give the Roughriders a three-point lead, Weldon Brown forced Edmonton quarterback Mike Reilly to fumble on the next Eskimo drive to seal the Saskatchewan victory. The Roughriders have a 7-1 record for only the second time in franchise history, with the first being in 1970 when that team finished 14-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs Winnipeg Blue Bombers\nThe Roughriders hosted the second largest crowd in franchise history with a sellout crowd of 44,910 fans at Mosaic Stadium to witness a 48-25 win over their arch-rival Winnipeg Blue Bombers. After being down by four points at half-time, the Roughriders outscored the Blue Bombers 34-7 en route to their ninth straight Labour Day Classic victory. Darian Durant threw his first interception of the season to Winnipeg's Henoc Muamba, but responded by throwing four touchdown passes thereafter to go along with his third 300-yard game of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 103], "content_span": [104, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs Winnipeg Blue Bombers\nKory Sheets missed the 100-yard rushing mark for just the second time of the season, but recorded the best nine game start in CFL history with 1,149 rushing yards. On defense, Dwight Anderson recorded an interception for the third consecutive game and John Chick had his first multi-sack game since the 2009 Labour Day Classic. The win improved the Riders' record to 8-1 which is the best nine-game start in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 103], "content_span": [104, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235869-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, Team, Roster\nItalics indicate Import player updated 2013-11-24 \u2022 46 Active, 20 Injured, 6 Practice Roster", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235870-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 SaskPower Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Saskatchewan's women's provincial curling championship, was held from January 23 to 27 at the Balgonie Stardome in Balgonie, Saskatchewan. The winning team represented Saskatchewan at the 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kingston, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235870-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Process\nTwelve teams will qualify for the provincial tournament through several methods. The qualification process is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235870-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Rounds, Northern Qualification\nThe 2013 SaskPower Women's Northern Playdown will take place from January 10 to 13 at the Twin Rivers Curling Club in North Battleford. The format of play shall be an open-entry triple knockout, and four teams will be qualify to the provincial playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 93], "content_span": [94, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235870-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Qualification Rounds, Southern Qualification\nThe 2013 SaskPower Women's Southern Playdown will take place from January 10 to 13 at the Melville Curling Club in Melville. The format of play will be an open-entry triple knockout, and four teams will qualify to the provincial playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 93], "content_span": [94, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235871-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final\nThe 2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final was the 38th final of the Crown Prince Cup. It took place on 22 February 2013 at the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and was contested between Al-Hilal and Al-Nassr. It was Al-Hilal's 13th Crown Prince Cup final and Al-Nassr's fifth final. This was the first meeting between these two clubs in the final. In addition, this was Al-Nassr's first final since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235871-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final\nAl-Hilal won 4\u20132 on a penalty shoot-out after a 1\u20131 draw at the end of extra time, securing a record-extending 12th title in the competition and their sixth one in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235871-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final, Venue\nThe King Fahd International Stadium was announced as the host of the final venue. This was the twelfth Crown Prince Cup final hosted in the King Fahd International Stadium following those in 1992, 1994, 1998, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235871-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final, Venue\nThe King Fahd International Stadium was built in 1982 and was opened in 1987. The stadium was used as a venue for the 1992, 1995, and the 1997 editions of the FIFA Confederations Cup. Its current capacity is 68,752 and it is used by the Saudi Arabia national football team, Al-Nassr, Al-Shabab, and major domestic matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235871-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final, Background\nAl-Hilal reached a record 13th final after a 1\u20130 away win to Al-Faisaly. This was Al-Hilal's sixth final in a row. Previously, they won finals in 1964, 1995, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, and 2012, and lost in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235871-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final, Background\nAl-Nassr reached their fifth final, after a 2\u20130 away win to Al-Raed. They reached their first final since 1996 when they finished as runners-up after losing to Al-Shabab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235871-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Crown Prince Cup Final, Background\nThis was the first meeting between these two sides in the Crown Prince Cup final. This was the ninth meeting between these two sides in the Crown Prince Cup; Al-Hilal won 7 times while Al-Nassr won once in 1973. The two teams played each other twice in the season prior to the final with both teams winning once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235872-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saudi Super Cup\nThe 2013 Saudi Super Cup was the first Saudi Super Cup, an annual Saudi football match contested by the winners of the Saudi Professional League and the winners of the King Cup of Champions. Al-Fateh won the match 3\u20132 after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235873-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah Challenger\nThe 2013 Savannah Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Savannah, United States between 22 and 28 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235873-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235873-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a special exempt into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235873-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah Challenger, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235874-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nCarsten Ball and Bobby Reynolds were the defending champions but decided not to participate together. Ball played alongside Ryan Harrison, but they lost to David Rice and Sean Thornley in the first round. Reynolds partnered with Alex Bogomolov, Jr., but they withdrew because of a plantar fasciitis injury contracted by Reynolds. Teymuraz Gabashvili and Denys Molchanov defeated Michael Russell and Tim Smyczek 6\u20132, 7\u20135 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235875-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah Challenger \u2013 Singles\nBrian Baker was the defending champion, but chose not to compete. Ryan Harrison won the final 6\u20132, 6\u20133 against Facundo Arg\u00fcello.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235876-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah State Tigers football team\nThe 2013 Savannah State Tigers football team represented Savannah State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Tigers are members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). This was their first season under the guidance of head coach Earnest Wilson, and the Tigers played their home games at Ted Wright Stadium. They finished the season 1\u201311, 0\u20138 in MEAC play to finish in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235876-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Savannah State Tigers football team, Coaches and support staff\nSavannah State will go into the 2013 season with a completely new staff. On April 17, athletic director Sterling Steward Jr. announced that only cornerbacks coach Corey Barlow would return for the 2013 season. Barlow became the interim head coach until Savannah State announced the hiring of Coach Wilson on June 7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235877-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Save Cup\nThe 2013 Save Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Mestre, Italy, on 2\u20138 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235877-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Save Cup, WTA entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 43], "content_span": [44, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235878-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Save Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMailen Auroux and Mar\u00eda Irigoyen were the defending champions, having won the event in 2012, but both players decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235878-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Save Cup \u2013 Doubles\nLaura Thorpe and Stephanie Vogt won the title, defeating Petra Krejsov\u00e1 and Tereza Smitkov\u00e1 in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235879-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Save Cup \u2013 Singles\nKarin Knapp was the defending champion, having won the event in 2012, but decided not to participate in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235879-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Save Cup \u2013 Singles\nClaire Feuerstein won the title, defeating Nastja Kolar in the final, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235880-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Saxo\u2013Tinkoff season\nThe 2013 season for Saxo\u2013Tinkoff began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTeam, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every event in the UCI World Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235880-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Saxo\u2013Tinkoff season\nOn 25 June 2012, it was announced that the Russian Tinkoff Bank would join the team as co-sponsors for the rest of the 2012 season and through to the end of 2013. Saxo Bank also renewed their sponsorship through 2013, with the team's name thus becoming Saxo-Tinkoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235881-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scheldeprijs\nThe 2013 Scheldeprijs was the 101st edition of the Scheldeprijs cycle race and was held on 3 April 2013. The race was won by Marcel Kittel of the Argos\u2013Shimano team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235882-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotland Sevens\nThe 2013 Scotland Sevens was the seventh edition of the tournament and the eighth tournament of the 2012\u201313 IRB Sevens World Series. The host stadium was the Scotstoun Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235882-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotland Sevens\nAt the end of this event, the top 12 \"core teams\" (those participating in all series events) on the series table secured their core status for the 2013\u201314 series. The remaining three core teams will drop to the eight-team World Series Core Team Qualifier, to be held during the season's final event in London. The top three teams at the end of the Core Team Qualifier will also earn core status for 2013\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235882-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotland Sevens, Format\nThe teams were divided into pools of four teams, who played a round-robin within the pool. Points were 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 top two teams in each pool advanced to the Cup competition. The four quarterfinal losers dropped into the bracket for the Plate. The Bowl was contested by the third- and fourth-place finishers in each pool, with the losers in the Bowl quarterfinals dropping into the bracket for the Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the Canadian women's national curling championship, was held from February 16 to 24 at the K-Rock Centre in Kingston, Ontario. It was the ninth time Ontario hosted the Tournament of Hearts. Ontario last hosted the Scotties in 2010 in Sault Ste. Marie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts\nIn the final, Rachel Homan of Ontario defeated former Scotties champion Jennifer Jones with a score of 9\u20136 to claim her first Scotties title. Homan and her team went on to represent Canada at the 2013 World Women's Curling Championship in Riga, Latvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Event summary\nIn the fifty-third edition of the Canadian Women's Curling Championship, there was a mix of veterans and newer faces in the team rosters. The defending champion Heather Nedohin rink represented Team Canada, while 2007 world champion Kelly Scott and her rink from British Columbia and 2008 world champion Jennifer Jones and her team from Manitoba also made appearances. Two-time world champion Mary-Anne Arsenault and her team from Nova Scotia (including six-time Hearts champion Colleen Jones throwing second stones) made a notable appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Event summary\n2005 Canadian Junior champion Andrea Crawford skipped her team from New Brunswick, and 11-time Territories champion Kerry Galusha skipped the Northwest Territories/Yukon team. Other teams included 2010 Olympic silver medalist Kristie Moore and her rink from Alberta, 2007 Canadian Junior Champion Stacie Devereaux from Newfoundland and Labrador, 2010 Canadian Junior Champion Rachel Homan and her rink from Ontario, 2001 World Junior Champion Suzanne Birt of Prince Edward Island and 1999 Ontario & 2005 Quebec champion Allison Ross representing Quebec. Only one skip made her Hearts debut, Jill Shumay of Saskatchewan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Event summary\nTeam Manitoba, skipped by Jennifer Jones, became the first team to go undefeated in round robin play since Linda Moore of British Columbia did so in 1985. Jones, who made her ninth consecutive Scotties appearance, also secured her ninth consecutive spot in the playoffs. She played Team Ontario, skipped by Rachel Homan, in the page 1 vs. 2 playoff game, but lost her first game in the tournament as Homan and her team defeated her with a score of 8\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Event summary\nTeam British Columbia, skipped by Kelly Scott, played Team Canada, skipped by Heather Nedohin, in the page 3 vs. 4 playoff game, but lost as Team Canada's strong play gave them an 8\u20134 win in 9 ends. Team Canada attempted to reach their second straight final, playing in the semifinal against Manitoba. Jones made up for her poor play in the page playoffs, securing an 8\u20135 win for a spot in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Event summary\nTeam Canada was relegated to the bronze medal game, where Team Canada and Team British Columbia battled back and forth before a missed double takeout in the final end by Nedohin gave British Columbia the win, by a score of 10\u20138. Manitoba and Ontario faced off for the championship in the final. Manitoba found themselves in a three-point hole when Jones missed a crucial draw, but regained some momentum with a stolen point in the fourth end and a deuce in the sixth end to tie up the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0003-0003", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Event summary\nIn the seventh end, a successful double takeout by Homan led to another three-point end for Ontario, and a missed triple takeout by Jones led to a steal of two points for Ontario. The game ended after Ontario ran Manitoba out of stones in the tenth end, giving Ontario its first Scotties title in sixteen years. The Homan rink also became the first ever Ottawa-based team to win either the Scotties or the Brier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Heather NedohinThird: Beth IskiwSecond: Jessica MairLead: Laine Peters Alternate: Cori Morris", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Kristie MooreThird: Blaine de JagerSecond: Michelle DykstraLead: Amber Cheveldave Alternate: Ren\u00e9e Sonnenberg", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Kelly ScottThird: Jeanna SchraederSecond: Sasha CarterLead: Sarah Wazney Alternate: Diane Gushulak", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Jennifer JonesThird: Kaitlyn LawesSecond: Jill OfficerLead: Dawn AskinAlternate: Kristin MacCuish", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Andrea CrawfordThird: Rebecca AtkinsonSecond: Danielle ParsonsLead: Jodie deSollaAlternate: Jane Boyle", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Stacie Devereaux Third: Erin PorterSecond: Lauren WasylkiwLead: Heather Martin Alternate: Julie Devereaux", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Mary-Anne Arsenault Third: Kim KellySecond: Colleen Jones Lead: Jenn Baxter Alternate: Nancy Delahunt", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Rachel Homan Third: Emma Miskew Second: Alison KreviazukLead: Lisa Weagle Alternate: Stephanie LeDrew", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Suzanne BirtThird: Shelly BradleySecond: Sarah FullertonLead: Leslie MacDougall Alternate: Stefanie Clark", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Allison Ross Third: Audr\u00e9e Dufresne Second: Brittany O'RourkeLead: Sasha Beauchamp Alternate: Annie Lemay", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Jill Shumay Third: Kara Johnston Second: Taryn Holtby Lead: Jinaye Ayrey Alternate: Patty Hersikorn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Kerry Galusha Third: Sharon Cormier Second: Megan Cormier Lead: Wendy Miller Alternate: Shona Barbour", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235883-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Round robin results, Draw 9\n*Sonnenberg spared for Moore in skipping Alberta for this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235884-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Challenge Cup Final\nThe 2013 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, also known as the Ramsdens Cup Final for sponsorship reasons, was an association football match between Queen of the South and Partick Thistle on 7 April 2013 at Almondvale Stadium in Livingston. It was the 22nd 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, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235884-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Challenge Cup Final\nBoth teams progressed through four elimination rounds to reach the final. The match was Queen of the South's fourth appearance in the final of the competition, the last in 2010, whilst it was Partick Thistle's first cup final in 42 years since the League Cup in 1971. The tournament was contested by clubs below the Scottish Premier League; Partick Thistle from the First Division and Queen of the South from the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235884-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Challenge Cup Final\nThe scoreline was 0\u20130 after 90 minutes of normal time which forced 30 minutes of extra time to be played. Queen of the South scored the first goal of the game in the 101st minute from Nicky Clark. Partick Thistle were awarded a penalty kick with only two minutes left to play and missed; Aaron Muirhead, who missed the penalty, was then sent off for headbutting Chris Higgins. Partick equalised the score to 1\u20131 in the final minute of the match from Kris Doolan and take the game to penalties. Queen of the South emerged victorious after winning the shoot-out 6\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235884-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, Route to the final\nThe competition is a knock-out tournament and in 2012\u201313 was contested by 32 teams; the 30 clubs that played in the First, Second and Third Divisions of the Scottish Football League and two Highland Football League clubs by invitation. For the first and second rounds only, the draw was divided into two geographical regions \u2013 north/east and south/west. Teams were paired at random and the winner of each match progressed to the next round and the loser was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final\nThe 2013 Scottish Cup Final was the 128th final of the Scottish Cup, the most prestigious knockout football competition in Scotland. The match took place at Hampden Park on 26 May 2013 and was contested by Hibernian and Celtic. It was the first time the two clubs had played each other in the Scottish Cup since the 2001 final, which Celtic won 3\u20130, but Hibs' second consecutive final following their heavy defeat against Hearts the previous year. For the first time in its history, the Scottish Cup Final was played on a Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final\nCeltic won the match 3\u20130, taking a 2\u20130 lead in the first through two Gary Hooper goals, before Joe Ledley added a third late in the second half. It was their 36th win of the Cup, extending their own record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Route to the final, Hibernian\nScottish Premier League club Hibernian entered the competition in the Fourth Round. They began their campaign against cup holders Heart of Midlothian at Easter Road. The only goal of the game was scored by midfielder David Wotherspoon. Hibs then took on SPL opposition again, this time in the shape of Aberdeen. Hibs won 1\u20130 courtesy of a Gary Deegan strike, with the winning margin being preserved by a penalty kick save by Ben Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Route to the final, Hibernian\nIn the quarter-final Hibs were drawn against another SPL club, Kilmarnock. Leigh Griffiths scored a hat-trick as Hibs won through by 4\u20132. In the semi final at Hampden Park, Hibs faced Falkirk in an enthralling encounter. Despite falling three goals behind within half an hour, Hibs managed to pull back this deficit to force extra time. Leigh Griffiths scored a late winner, sending Hibs to their first consecutive Scottish Cup final appearances for 89 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Route to the final, Celtic\nCeltic also entered the competition at the fourth round (last 32) stage and were drawn at home against Second Division club Arbroath. Manager Neil Lennon made several changes to his team for the match, which was played a few days before a crucial UEFA Champions League match against Spartak Moscow. Celtic took the lead through an own goal by Arbroath, but missed chances and Arbroath scored a late equalising goal to force a replay at Gayfield Park. Arbroath again gave Celtic a difficult test in the replay, despite conceding an early goal scored by Adam Matthews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Route to the final, Celtic\nThis proved to be the only goal of the game and Celtic progressed to the fifth round, against Raith Rovers. Played on a heavy and bumpy Starks Park pitch, Celtic eventually overcame a defensive performance by Raith to win 3\u20130, with Kris Commons, Charlie Mulgrew and James Forrest scoring the goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Route to the final, Celtic\nIn the quarter-finals, Celtic were drawn away to St Mirren, who had eliminated Celtic from the 2012\u201313 Scottish League Cup a month beforehand. Early goals by Joe Ledley and Anthony Stokes, either side of an equaliser by St Mirren, gave Celtic a 2\u20131 victory at St Mirren Park. In the second semi-final at Hampden Park, Celtic won a thrilling match by 4\u20133 after extra time against Dundee United. A Kris Commons goal gave Celtic an early lead, but United scored twice midway through the first half to lead 2\u20131. Victor Wanyama scored an equaliser almost immediately and Commons scored another goal after 60 minutes to give Celtic a 3\u20132 lead. Jon Daly scored his second goal of the game to equalise and force extra time. Soon after Daly had hit the post, Anthony Stokes scored the winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Pre-match\nThis was Hibs 13th appearance in the Scottish Cup Final. They had previously won two Scottish Cups (in 1887 and 1902), and been beaten in ten finals. Celtic appeared in their 55th Scottish Cup Final and had won the Scottish Cup on 35 previous occasions, most recently in 2011. The clubs had previously met in five Scottish Cup Finals, most recently in 2001. Hibs won the first Scottish Cup Final meeting in 1902, with Celtic winning the four subsequent meetings in 1914 (after a replay), 1923, 1972 and 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Pre-match\nFor the first time in its history, the Scottish Cup Final was played on a Sunday. This was done to comply with UEFA regulations which prohibit televised matches being played on the same day as the UEFA Champions League Final. The 2012 Scottish Cup Final was played on the same day as the 2012 UEFA Champions League Final, but this was done under a one-year waiver offered by UEFA. Fixture congestion meant that the 2013 Scottish Cup Final could not be moved to an earlier weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Pre-match\nBoth clubs received an allocation of approximately 20,000 tickets, out of a total capacity at Hampden Park of 52,063. The remaining seats were accounted for by Hampden Park debenture holders, hospitality, sponsors, media and segregation areas. Tickets cost \u00a335 in the North and South Stands, with prices set at \u00a328 for adults and \u00a310 for concessions (adults aged over 65, matriculated students and children under 16 years old) in the West and East Stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Match\nWillie Collum was appointed to referee the match, with Willie Conquer and Martin Cryans as his assistants. For the first time in a competitive Scottish match, additional assistant referees were appointed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Match, Report\nCeltic opened the scoring in the 8th minute; a poor clearance from Hibs defender Alan Maybury was intercepted by Anthony Stokes who sent a cross from the left beyond the reach of goalkeeper Ben Williams and was side-footed into the goal by Gary Hooper. Despite the conceding of an early goal, Hibs did not crumble but it was Celtic who continued to create the better goalscoring chances. On 31 minutes, Celtic doubled their lead. Stokes sent in another cross from the left, and Hooper ran in between two Hibs defenders to shoot past Williams in goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235885-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Cup Final, Match, Report\nThe second half was a quiet affair, but Celtic sealed their victory with a third goal on 80 minutes. Mikael Lustig set up Hooper with an excellent chance to complete his hat trick, but the Celtic striker mis-kicked. The ball broke to Joe Ledley, who fired a powerful shot into the top corner of Williams' goal to put Celtic 3\u20130 ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final\nThe 2013 Scottish League Cup Final was the 67th final of the Scottish League Cup. The final took place on 17 March 2013 at Hampden Park, Glasgow. The clubs contesting the 2013 final were SPL clubs, St Mirren and Hearts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final\nAs Hearts finished in the top five of the SPL, they entered the League Cup in the third round. They made a convincing start, defeating Livingston in third round. A much tougher test awaited the Jambos in the shape of Dundee United in the quarter-finals, although they defeated the 2008/09 semi-finalists on penalty kicks. Hearts came up against Inverness CT in the semi-finals at Easter Road and were again victorious on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final\nSt Mirren finished 8th in the SPL and entered the League Cup in the second round. They too made a fantastic start, thrashing Ayr United. Hamilton were the Buddies' opponents in the third round and Danny Lennon's men sneaked through after a goal in stoppage time. The quarter-finals saw the Saints take a trip up to Pittodrie to face Aberdeen, and after a 2\u20132 draw after extra time, the men from Paisley won on penalties. A trip to Hampden Park for the semi-finals saw St Mirren run out 3\u20132 winners against Celtic and set up a final against Hearts. St Mirren won the final 3-2 against Hearts. It was their first major trophy since the 1987 Scottish Cup victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final, Route to the final\nHearts were one of the five Scottish Premier League sides who entered the League Cup in the third round. St Mirren finished 8th in the Scottish Premier League the previous season and entered the League Cup in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final, Route to the final, St Mirren\nIn the second round St Mirren faced a home tie against Second Division team Ayr United. Five different players got on the scoresheet for the Saints and saw them through comfortably.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final, Route to the final, St Mirren\nIn the next round St Mirren faced First Division team Hamilton at St Mirren Park. Lee Mair's goal in the 92nd minute gave the home side victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final, Route to the final, St Mirren\nSt Mirren drew with Aberdeen in the quarter-finals, but were victorious on penalty kicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final, Route to the final, St Mirren\nSt Mirren beat Celtic in the semi-final with a magnificent display. Paul McGowan, formerly of Celtic, was one of the Saints' three goalscorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final, Route to the final, Hearts\nIn the third round Hearts faced a home tie against First Division team Livingston. Two goals from Marius \u017dali\u016bkas and one from Danny Grainger saw the Jambos through comfortably. In the next round Hearts faced fellow Scottish Premier League team Dundee United at Tannadice. Callum Paterson opened the scoring for Hearts before Johnny Russell equalised for the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235886-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish League Cup Final, Route to the final, Hearts\nHearts beat Inverness CT on penalties in the semi-final. Andrew Shinnie put the Highlanders ahead shortly after half time, but debutant Michael Ngoo struck the equaliser for the Gorgie club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235887-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Open Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Scottish Open Grand Prix was the sixteenth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Emirates Arena, Glasgow, Scotland November 20\u201324, 2013 and had a total purse of $50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship\nThe Scottish Rally Championship is a rallying series run throughout Scotland over the course of a year, that comprises seven gravel rallies and one tarmac event. Points are awarded to the top placed drivers and the driver scoring the highest number of points over the season is declared Champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship\nDavid Bogie begins the year as defending champion after winning five out of the eight events in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship\nFor season 2013, the championship will be sponsored by ARR Craib Transport Ltd, an Aberdeen based road haulage and logistics company. This is a one-year deal announced in December 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship\nThe 2013 season begins in the snow-covered forest tracks around Inverness on 16 February, with the season finale taking place around Perth on 5 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship\nFollowing the Colin McRae Forest Stages Rally in October, David Bogie and his regular co-driver Kevin Rae were declared 2013 Scottish rally champions. This represents a record breaking fifth title in a row for the pair. The award ceremony took place on 30 November 2013 at the Marriott Hotel in Glasgow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship, Thistle Snowman Rally\nThe opening event of the season, the Thistle Snowman Rally was abandoned due to an accident involving a competing car, which left the road and killed a 50-year-old spectator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship, Thistle Snowman Rally\nOn 12 March 2013, series organisers announced that the Galloway Hills Rally\u00a0\u2013 a reserve event when the championship calendar was first announced\u00a0\u2013 would be included as the championship finale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship, 2013 Calendar\nFor season 2013 there are to be 8 events held on a variety of surfaces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235888-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Rally Championship, Drivers' championship standings (Top 10)\nPoints are awarded to the highest placed registered driver on each event as follows: 30, 28, 27, 26, and so on down to 1 point. At the end of the Championship, competitors will nominate their best 6 scores out of the 8 events as their final overall Championship score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235889-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Cup\nThe 2013 Scottish Women's Cup is the national cup competition in Scottish women's football. All teams in the Scottish Women's Football League and Premier League are eligible to enter. Caithness Ladies who do not play in national league competition also enter for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235889-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Cup, Preliminary round\nThe draw for the preliminary round was announced on 4 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235889-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Cup, First round\nThe draw for the first round was announced on 25 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235889-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Cup, Second round\nThe draw for the second round was made on 28 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235889-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Cup, Semi-finals\nThe draw for the semi-finals took place on 9 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235890-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Premier League\nThe 2013 Scottish Women's Premier League was the twelfth season of the Scottish Women's Premier League, the highest division of women's football in Scotland since its inception in 2002. The competition started on 17 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235890-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Premier League\nA total of twelve teams are contested the league. Glasgow City were the reigning champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235890-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Premier League\nBuchan Ladies and Kilwinning SC Ladies were promoted from the SWFL First Division after finishing 3rd and 4th respectively and both appeared in the Premier League for the first time. First Division champions Hibernian Reserves and runners-up Celtic Reserves were unable to be promoted as league rules stipulate each club may field only one team in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235890-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Premier League\nThe SWPL continued in the format adopted in 2012. The 12 clubs faced each other once (11 games per club), after which the league split into top six and bottom six sections based on league position. Each club then played home and away against clubs in their respective sections to give a total of 21 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235890-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Premier League\nGlasgow City won their seventh consecutive championship title on 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235890-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Premier League, Teams, Stadia and locations\nThe most regular home ground is shown though some clubs played matches at other venues throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235890-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Scottish Women's Premier League, Results, Matches 12\u201321\nAfter 11 matches, the league splits into top six and bottom six sections. Clubs played every other club in their section twice (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire\nA large fire occurred on September 12, 2013 on the boardwalks and at the Funtown Pier of Seaside Heights and Seaside Park, New Jersey, on the Jersey Shore destroying more than 50 businesses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire, Fire\nThe fire was first reported at 2:05\u00a0p.m. EDT, underneath Kohr's Frozen Custard and Biscayne Candies on the boardwalk. The fire, driven by 30-40 mile per hour winds and tar roofing material, quickly spread to other businesses, including those recently rebuilt in the year since Hurricane Sandy. The fire destroyed more than 50 businesses on Seaside Park's end of the boardwalk, including the Funtown Pier amusement park, which resided on the border of Seaside Park and Seaside Heights. Embers blew for at least 8 blocks, igniting fires at the Casino Pier as well the Royal Sands Condominium complex at Sumner Avenue and Ocean Terrace, both of which were quickly extinguished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire, Fire\nAt 6:39\u00a0p.m. EDT, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie arrived at the scene. The six-alarm fire was fought by over 400 firefighters from multiple counties, as well as crews from the New Jersey Forest Fire Service and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Crews from Union County arrived with one of the state's three high-powered water cannon systems, originally purchased using Homeland Security funds to use in the event of a terrorist attack on oil tank fields. Firefighting efforts were hindered due to a lack of water from pipes damaged during Hurricane Sandy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire, Fire\nFirefighters drew water from the Barnegat Bay across the island to fight the fire, as the ocean was deemed too rough to pump water. Emergency crews destroyed 25 feet of the boardwalk at Lincoln Avenue to create a fire line to help stop the fire from spreading north. Though wind created a challenge for firefighters and there were explosions in the buildings, it was brought under control by 7:45\u00a0p.m. EDT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire, Fire\nNo injuries were reported from the fire, however, three police officers were injured after falling off the back of a truck operated by Seaside Park Emergency Management. All roads leading into Seaside Heights and Seaside Park, including Route 35 and the Mathis and Tunney Bridges were closed into the following morning. Residents in towns as far north as Long Branch could smell the smoke from the fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 40], "content_span": [41, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire, Investigation and cause\nOn September 17, 2013, authorities said the fire was accidental and linked it to electrical wiring under the boardwalk and subfloor, and equipment they say was compromised by Hurricane Sandy's floodwaters. Investigators said the fire originated under a building that housed a candy store and an ice cream stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire, Demolition and cleanup\nSeaside Park and Seaside Heights officials agreed in October 2013 to hire Eagle Paving Corp. to demolish and clean up the areas affected by the fire. The towns agreed to pay $4.7 million for the recovery work, which began in October 2013 and took around 60 days to complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235891-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Seaside Park, New Jersey fire, Re-building\nThe boardwalk was re-opened for the summer 2014 season. In July 2016, plans were scrapped for the rebuilding of Funtown Pier due to concerns from citizens over and the planning board refusing to allow structures over 100' tall to be built.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235892-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Mariners season\nThe 2013 Seattle Mariners season was the 37th season in franchise history. The Mariners played their 14th full season (15th overall) at Safeco Field. They finished with a record of 71\u201391 and 4th place in the AL West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235892-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Mariners season, Players 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; SB = Stolen bases; AVG = Batting average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235892-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Mariners season, Players stats, Pitching\nNote: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV=Saves; SVO = Saves Opportunity; IP = Innings pitched; H =Hits; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR= Home Run allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season\nThe 2013 Seattle Reign FC season was the club's first season in the National Women's Soccer League, the top division of women's soccer in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Background\nIn November 2012, it was confirmed that a Seattle-based women's professional soccer team owned by Bill Predmore (founder and president of Seattle-based digital marketing agency, POP) had been accepted into a new women's professional soccer league, later named National Women's Soccer League. Former general manager of the Seattle Sounders Women and Seattle Sounders FC Director of Youth Programs, Amy Carnell, was named General Manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Background\nOn December 21, 2012, the team announced Laura Harvey as their first head coach. Harvey was head coach of Arsenal L.F.C. from 2010-2012 after serving as an assistant for two years, assisted and then coached Birmingham City L.F.C. from 2002-2008, and served as an assistant coach for England's U-17, U-19 and U-23 women's national teams from 2005-2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Review, Drafts and signings\nOn January 11, 2013, as part of the NWSL Player Allocation, Kaylyn Kyle (CAN), Teresa Noyola (MEX), Megan Rapinoe (USA), Amy Rodriguez(USA), Jenny Ruiz (MEX), Hope Solo (USA), and Emily Zurrer (CAN) were named to the Seattle team. On January 18, the Reign selected Christine Nairn, Mallory Schaffer, Kristen Meier, and Haley Kopmeyer at the 2013 NWSL College Draft. On February 4, 2013, it was announced that the team had signed four free agents: Kate Deines, Jessica Fishlock, Tiffany Cameron, and Lindsay Taylor. During the February 7, 2013 NWSL Supplemental Draft, the team selected Nikki Krzysik, Lauren Barnes, Laura Heyboer, Liz Bogus, Michelle Betos and Kaley Fountain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Review, Preseason\nLeading into the preseason, it was learned that the Reign would be without all of their U.S. national team allocated players for almost half of the season. National team forward, Amy Rodriguez, announced she was pregnant with her first child and would not be playing during the inaugural season. U.S. national team goalkeeper, Hope Solo, would be away for the first part of the season after recovering from wrist surgery and Megan Rapinoe had signed with French side, Olympique Lyonnais, from January to June and would miss at least nine games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Review, Regular season\nAfter traveling to Japan in the preseason to play matches against defending L. League champion INAC Kobe Leonessa, Fukuoka J. Anclas, and Nojima Stella Kanagawa, the Reign faced their first regular season match against the Chicago Red Stars at Benedictine University, in which Seattle's first college draft pick, Christine Nairn, scored the Reign's first goal of the season via a header off an assist from Liz Bogus. The Red Stars later tied the game 1-1, but the point that Seattle earned in the game would be its only for the next nine games. Without the U.S. national team players or a veteran goalscorer up front, the team struggled to win games. Although the losses were for the most part consistently low-scoring games, it was apparent that the Reign was missing some final ingredients for success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Review, Regular season\nIn June 2013, head coach Laura Harvey began making some trades and signing new players. Forward and Canadian international, Tiffany Cameron was waived, later to be picked up by FC Kansas City and former U.S. national team defender, Stephanie Cox was added to the roster. Mexican allocated player and former Stanford Cardinal standout, Teresa Noyola, was traded to FC Kansas City for Renae Cuellar, and Noyola's fellow former Stanford Cardinal goal-scorer, Lindsay Taylor was traded to the Washington Spirit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Review, Regular season\nAfter a brief stint on the team by Tobagonian international, Kennya Cordner who was later waived and replaced by Australian national team co-captain, Emily van Egmond due to the league's restriction on only having two international players on a team (in addition to allocated players), and the return of U.S. national team players, Solo and Rapinoe, the Reign began to turn the season around with a 1-1 tie against the Western New York Flash. The game would be the first of a six-game undefeated streak for the Reign with two ties and four wins. After losing to regional rival, Portland Thorns FC, 2-1 in the season finale in front of a sold-out crowd of 3,855, the Reign ended the 2013 NWSL season seventh in the league with a 5-14-3 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC 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, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235893-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Reign FC season, Competitions, Regular season, Results summary\nLast updated: August 18, 2013Source: 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, 75], "content_span": [76, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season\nThe 2013 season was the Seattle Seahawks' 38th in the National Football League and their fourth under head coach Pete Carroll. With the Seahawks 10th win only 11 weeks into the season, the team secured double-digit victories in consecutive seasons for the first time in franchise history. Their 13\u20133 regular season record is tied with the 2005 season for the best in franchise history. Seattle\u2019s defense in 2013 is regarded by many to be one of the best in NFL history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season\nSeattle entered the 2013 season at 17/2 odds to win Super Bowl XLVIII, just short of the Denver Broncos and San Francisco 49ers at 6/1. This was despite placing second in the NFC West and dropping its divisional round game against the Atlanta Falcons the previous year. The Seahawks were, by power ranking, ranked the strongest team by an NFL.com analyst before the season and by ESPN analysts after the regular season. The defense led the league in points allowed (231), yards allowed (4,378), and takeaways (39), the first team to lead all three categories since the 1985 Chicago Bears. Their +186 point differential is the best in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season\nThe Seahawks clinched the NFC's No. 1 seed and homefield advantage throughout the playoffs with their 13\u20133 record. The Seahawks defeated the New Orleans Saints 23\u201315 in the Divisional round and the San Francisco 49ers 23\u201317 in the NFC Championship. In Super Bowl XLVIII, they defeated the Denver Broncos 43\u20138 for their first Super Bowl victory in franchise history. Of Seattle's thirteen wins, eight of them were decided by eleven points or more, with their season best margin being a 45-17 win against the Jaguars. There were eight instances of the Seahawks allowing two touchdowns or less. The 2013 Seahawks' 14.4 points allowed per game in the regular season is the lowest in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Carolina Panthers\nThe Seattle Seahawks kicked off their 2013 campaign with a hard-fought, ugly win over the Carolina Panthers, 12\u20137. This game marked Russell Wilson's first 300-yard passing game, and Cam Newton's worst career performance, posting 125 yards through the air, a career low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Carolina Panthers\nThe first quarter was scoreless, with both sides exchanging a couple of punts. On their third possession of the game, in the second quarter, Seattle drove into the red zone, capping it with a Stephen Hauschka 27-yard field goal. Carolina responded immediately, taking advantage of a couple of Seattle penalties and some big runs by DeAngelo Williams. Cam Newton hit Steve Smith for a 3-yard TD. Seattle responded with a drive to around the Carolina 27 yard line, but Charles Godfrey sacked Russell Wilson and stripped the football, which Carolina recovered. So the first half ended 7\u20133, in favor of Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Carolina Panthers\nThe second half began with a defensive battle. Hauschka made a 40-yard field goal, after a drive that lasted over 4 minutes, cutting the lead to 7\u20136. After forcing Carolina to punt midway through the fourth quarter, Seattle's offense produced its finest drive of the day. A couple of Russell Wilson passes, followed by a Robert Turbin 15-yard scamper, set up Seattle at the Panthers' 43 yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at Carolina Panthers\nRussell Wilson overthrew receiver Stephen Williams on first down, but on second down and 10, using exactly the same play, Wilson connected with second-year man Jermaine Kearse for a 43-yard score, with 10 minutes left to play. They failed on the two-point conversion however, so Seattle clung to a 12\u20137 lead. DeAngelo Williams made some big runs. Inside the Seattle 35 yard line, Williams took off for 24 yards and looked like he was going to score, but Earl Thomas caused him to fumble inside the 10 yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nIn week 2, the Seahawks took on their division rivals, the San Francisco 49ers. Prior to the season, NFL analysts rated this rivalry as the top upcoming rivalry, as well as the top rivalry of the decade. Both teams proved that point, when they had an arms race in the off-season, Seattle picking up Percy Harvin and San Francisco picking Anquan Boldin in the off-season, among others. Last season, the teams were 1\u20131 against each other, Seattle being the better team, as they blew out the Niners 42\u201313 in the last meeting in Seattle, coincidentally, also on Sunday Night Football. It was also a day that Russell Wilson and Colin Kaepernick appeared to bet an eyebrow, with the loser shaving his eyebrow; this was later revealed to be a publicity stunt. Finally, it was a day where former Seahawk Shaun Alexander would raise the 12th man flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 936]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nThe game began quietly though, as both sides failed to establish a rhythm. The game was delayed midway through the first quarter due to lightning in the vicinity of the stadium, the second such case in the 2013 season (Ravens-Broncos kickoff game in week 1 was the first). After getting back onto the field, the 49ers blocked a Seahawks punt and got the ball in Seattle territory. However, Seattle claimed a whistle was heard from the crowd, which confused the linemen and the punter. That claim was later justified by NBC analyst Cris Collinsworth. The Niners took advantage and drove to the Seattle 10-yard line. However, on third down, Earl Thomas intercepted a Colin Kaepernick pass, and Seattle regained possession. A few plays later, Russell Wilson was intercepted by rookie Eric Reid, and the tug of war continued into the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nAll was quiet until midway through the second quarter, where fullback Bruce Miller was caught holding in the endzone, the result of which was a safety, and a Seattle 2\u20130 lead. Later on, defensive end Cliff Avril strip sacked Kaepernick and K. J. Wright recovered for Seattle, the result of which was a Stephen Hauschka 30-yard field goal. Halftime came with a small 5\u20130 Seahawks lead. The game was pretty dark and messy at that point, the only bright side being Seattle running back Marshawn Lynch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nIn the third quarter, the Seahawks came out roaring. On third and 12, Wilson connected with receiver Doug Baldwin for a 51-yard gain to inside the 49ers 25 yard line. A few plays later, Lynch took it to the house on a 14-yard run, 12\u20130 Seattle. The 49ers responded with a drive to the Seattle 6-yard line, capped of by Phil Dawson 21-yard field goal, that included a 28-yard scramble by Kaepernick, 12\u20133 Seahawks. However, that would be it for the Niners, and the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nIn the fourth quarter, the Seahawks demolished the Niners on all phases of play. It started with Wilson hitting Lynch for a 7-yard score on third down. A few plays into the Niners next drive, Kaepernick was intercepted by Richard Sherman, who took it to the 49ers 25-yard line. That resulted in a 37-yard Hauschka field goal. On the ensuing Niners drive, Kaepernick was intercepted again, this time by safety Kam Chancellor, who had signed a contract extension earlier in the year. Lynch scored on a 2-yard run on the next play. Seattle led 29\u20133. The 49ers fumbled the ensuing kickoff, and Seattle recovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 2: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nSeattle won, in convincing style, silencing any critics. The 12th man also broke a Guinness world record, for the loudest outdoor stadium. Yet again, Seattle dominated on SNF, and Pete Carroll improved to 3\u20134 overall against the Niners, and 2\u20133 against bitter rival Jim Harbaugh. Seattle was now 2\u20130, and still unbeaten at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nThe Seahawks entered week 3 on top of the NFC to take on the Jacksonville Jaguars who were on the opposite end of the AFC. This game did not garner much attention, considering the fact that it was a \"best vs worst\" game. However, that didn't change Seattle's positive \"1\u20130\" mentality to the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nSeattle opened up the game with a punt. After forcing a Jacksonville three and out, on a drive which included a Clinton McDonald sack, Russell Wilson marched the Seahawks right down the field, on a drive that included a 27-yard run by Marshawn Lynch, and on third and goal from the 1-yard line, hit tight end Zach Miller for a touchdown, and an early 7\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nPicking up from where they left off in the first quarter, Seattle took their first drive of the second quarter, where Wilson connected with Miller for a 4-yard touchdown pass, the duo's second of the day. After a Stephen Hauschka 21-yard field goal on the next drive, the game got quiet until the Jaguars final drive of the half, where Chad Henne was intercepted by linebacker Bobby Wagner, with under a minute left to play. Wilson then made some beautiful completions to receivers Golden Tate and Sidney Rice in lightning fast succession, the latter of whom caught an 11-yard pass for a touchdown with 10 seconds left on the clock, to send Seattle up 24\u20130 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nOn the Seahawks first drive of the second half, they picked up were they left off, as Wilson hit rice for a 23-yard score, marking Wilson's fourth TD pass of the day, tying a career-high, and putting the Hawks up 31\u20130. On the ensuing drive, however, Wilson was picked off by linebacker Paul Posluszny, who returned it to the Seattle 2-yard line, where Jaguars RB Maurice Jones-Drew punched it in on the next play, 31\u20137 Seattle. That was the last time Wilson touched the ball. Backup Tarvaris Jackson took over and drove Seattle to the Jaguars 35-yard line, not missing a single completion on the drive. He then threw a TD pass to Doug Baldwin, adding to the lead, 38\u20137 Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nSeattle then shut its system off, which allowed Henne to hit receiver Cecil Shorts III for a couple of long completions on the Jaguars next couple of drives, racking up 10 points, including a fourth-quarter run by Jordan Todman, his first career TD, 38\u201317 Seattle. Jackson led the Seahawks downfield, scoring on a 5-yard scramble, re-establishing a big lead, 45\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars\nSeattle started 3\u20130 for the first time since 2006, and the first time in the Pete Carroll era. Seattle is still unbeaten at home, with a 10\u20130 record including last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 4: at Houston Texans\nThe Seahawks led 3-0 after the first quarter, but the Texans scored 20 unanswered points in the second quarter, building a 20-3 halftime lead. However, the Seahawks outscored the Texans 17-0 in the third and fourth quarters. With less than three minutes to go, and the Texans leading 20-13, Matt Schaub's pass on 3rd down was picked off by Richard Sherman and returned 58 yards for a pick six, allowing the Seahawks to tie the game and force overtime. The Seahawks would go on to win the game in overtime by a final score of 23-20. With the win, the Seahawks would open the season with a 4-0 record for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Indianapolis Colts\nThis would be the first meeting between quarterbacks Russell Wilson and Andrew Luck, who were both selected in the 2012 NFL Draft. Though Wilson and the Seahawks maintained a lead throughout the first three quarters, Luck led the Colts back, taking the lead and never letting go in the 4th. It would be the first loss for the Seahawks in the season, dropping their record to 4-1. The Colts punted and the Seahawks drove down the field and scored a field goal to go up 3-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Indianapolis Colts\nAfter another Indy three-and-out, Russell Wilson threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Golden Tate to take a 10-0 lead. Then another Indy punt was blocked and bounced out of the endzone to extend the lead to 12-0. Seattle punted to Indy when Andrew Luck threw a 73-yard touchdown to T.Y. Hilton to make the score 12-7. Seattle drove into field goal range but a 48-yard field goal was blocked and returned for a touchdown by the Colts. Indy led 14-12 until Wilson found Jermaine Kearse to give Seattle a 19-14 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 5: at Indianapolis Colts\nLuck led the Colts downfield and they kicked a field goal to make it 19-17 at the half. Seattle kicked another field goal to make it 22-17. Indianapolis fumbled and led to a 25-17 Seahawks lead. Luck then found Hilton in the endzone but the two-point-conversion failed leaving the score at 25-23. Seattle then kicked a 4th field goal to extend their lead to 28-23. Indy scored a touchdown to make it 31-28 and then a field goal to make it 34-28 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. Tennessee Titans\nFollowing their loss to the Colts, the Seahawks returned to CenturyLink field to host the Tennessee Titans. The Seahawks allowed a field goal from Titans kicker Rob Bironas, but a second quarter touchdown from running back Marshawn Lynch caused the Seahawks to retake the lead. The Seahawks attempted to extend their lead at the end of the quarter with a field goal. With usual holder Jon Ryan in the locker room with a potential injury, reserve safety Chris Maragos was asked to hold the ball for the field goal attempt. Maragos however fumbled the snap, which was recovered by Titans special teamer Jason McCourty and run back 77 yards for a touchdown. The Seahawks then entered halftime behind 7-10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 6: vs. Tennessee Titans\nDuring the 3rd quarter, the Seahawks held the Titans scoreless while scoring a field goal of their own, tying the game. An additional field goal during the 4th put the Seahawks ahead again. On the first play of the next drive, Fitzpatrick threw an interception to Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman. The Seahawks capitalized by with another touchdown from Lynch. The Seahawks would only allow another field goal from the Titans, and the win brought their record to 5-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at Arizona Cardinals\nPlaying on Thursday Night Football, the Seahawks easily defeated their division rival behind quarterback Russell Wilson's 235 throwing yards, running back Marshawn Lynch's 91 running yards, and two interceptions from secondary members Brandon Browner and Earl Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at St. Louis Rams\nThe Seahawks defeated the Rams 14-9 in a Monday Night Football thriller. The Rams were successful at limiting the Seahawks offense, holding running back Marshawn Lynch to a season low of only 23 yards and sacking quarterback Russell Wilson seven times. After holding the Rams to a field goal in the first quarter, the Seahawks went ahead with a 2-yard touchdown pass to Golden Tate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at St. Louis Rams\nThe Rams responded in the third quarter with another field goal, cutting down the Seahawks' lead to 1. After an incomplete pass to Jermaine Kearse on the first play of the next drive, Wilson threw an 80-yard touchdown to Golden Tate. It was the longest play of either player's career. On his way towards the end zone, Tate turned and sarcastically waved towards Rams safety Rodney McLeod. Though the touchdown would count, the Seahawks would be penalized for taunting during the kickoff. Carroll chastised Tate after the penalty occurred, and Tate was fined $7,875 after the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 8: at St. Louis Rams\nAfter the Seahawks allowed an additional Rams field goal, the game came down to the final drive. The Rams, in possession of the ball with 5:42 left in the game, managed to drive the ball all the way to the 6 yard line with less than 1:20 left on the clock. A missed throw from Rams quarterback Kellen Clemens and a 4-yard run from Rams running back Daryl Richardson allowed the Rams a 3rd and Goal at the 2-yard line, but a defensive offsides call on Seahawks defensive end Chris Clemons cut the distance in half. The Seahawks stopped an additional run from Richardson, and Rams head coach Jeff Fisher called a timeout with only 4 seconds left in the game. Seahawks cornerback Brandon Browner successfully defended Clemens's final pass towards Brian Quick, sealing the Seahawks victory and bringing their record to 7-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 9: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe top-ranked Seahawks hosted the winless Tampa Bay Buccaneers in what many believed would be a blowout. However, the Buccaneers marched to a 21-0 lead during the 2nd quarter, which included a trick play from running back Mike James. Despite giving up a field goal later in the game, the Seahawks came roaring back, tying the game during the fourth quarter and forcing overtime. The Seahawks narrowly avoided an upset with a 27-yard field goal from Stephen Hauschka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 94], "content_span": [95, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 10: at Atlanta Falcons\nThis was a rematch of the NFC Divisional matchup from the 2012 postseason. The Seahawks jumped out to a 23-3 halftime lead and never looked back, routing the Falcons 33-10. The Seahawks won their fifth consecutive game as their record improved to 9-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 11: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nAt the beginning of this game, Doug Baldwin flew the Philippines flag in memory of the victims of Typhoon Yolanda. Free agent signee Percy Harvin saw his first minutes of playing time of the season during the game, incidentally against the team that drafted him. He would catch one pass for 17 yards and return one kickoff for 58 yards. The Seahawks entered the bye week with a 10-1 record, the best in the NFL at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 13: vs. New Orleans Saints\nThe Seahawks dominated from start to finish, routing the Saints 34-7. The Seahawks won their 7th consecutive game as their record improved to 11-1. They became the first team to clinch a berth for the 2013 postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: at San Francisco 49ers\nIn week 14 the Seahawks traveled out of their stadium to San Francisco where they took a loss to the 49ers. Russell Wilson was intercepted to end the game and continued the Seahawks' losing streak in Candlestick Park in which they last won in 2008. It was their last appearance at Candlestick, as the 49ers moved to Levi's Stadium for the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 14: at San Francisco 49ers\nWith the loss, the Seahawks' record dropped into 11-2. This would be the last time they lost to the 49ers until 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at New York Giants\nIn what many pundits dubbed a \"Super Bowl dress rehearsal\", the Seahawks faced the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium, where the Super Bowl would be held at the end of the season. The Legion of Boom intercepted Giants quarterback Eli Manning five times and held the team scoreless throughout the entire game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nIn Seattle's first loss at home since the 2011 season, the team record dropped to 12-3. Amazingly, this would also be Russell Wilson's first home loss in football since his college season with North Carolina State University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Regular season, Week 17: vs. St. Louis Rams\nWith the win, the Seahawks' record improved to 13-3 as they clinched the NFC West and the NFC's #1 seed. The Seahawks would hold homefield advantage for the entirety of the 2013 postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Postseason\nSeattle entered the postseason as the #1 seed in the NFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Postseason, NFC Championship Game: vs. #5 San Francisco 49ers\nThis was the Seahawks' first conference Championship game appearance since 2005 and only the third ever for the franchise, after 2005 and 1983. The Seahawks overcame a 10-3 deficit at the end of the half and finished strong, outscoring San Francisco 20-7 in the 2nd half. With Seattle leading 20-17 in the 4th quarter, Colin Kaepernick tried to rally his team, but fumbled once and threw 2 interceptions in the final three drives in the game for San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 107], "content_span": [108, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0036-0001", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Postseason, NFC Championship Game: vs. #5 San Francisco 49ers\nIn the fourth quarter, NaVorro Bowman suffered a major knee injury on a tackle and forced fumble near the goal line, but the 49ers forced another fumble on the next play on 4th down. On the second play following fumble recovery, Kaepernick threw an interception to Kam Chancellor. Kaepernick again had the 49ers in position to try for a win, but his pass to Michael Crabtree in the end zone was deflected by Richard Sherman and intercepted by Malcolm Smith, locking up the win for Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 107], "content_span": [108, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235894-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Seahawks season, Game summaries, Postseason, Super Bowl XLVIII: vs. #A1 Denver Broncos\nIn dominating fashion, the Seahawks would win their first championship in the history of the franchise. This was also the first football team since the 1990 Buffalo Bills to not have any players on the roster with Super Bowl experience. It was Seattle's first major championship in 35 years since the 1979 Seattle SuperSonics. Linebacker Malcolm Smith would end up earning the Super Bowl MVP award for his 69-yard interception, 1 fumble recovery, and 6 tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 99], "content_span": [100, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season\nThe 2013 Seattle Sounders FC season was the club's fifth season in Major League Soccer, the United States' top-tier of professional soccer. For the Sounders FC organization, it was their fifth year of existence, and including all previous clubs, it was the 33rd season of soccer in Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Players, Squad information\nMajor League Soccer team are limited to seven players without U.S. citizenship, a permanent resident (green card holder), or the holder of other special status (e.g., refugee or asylum status). Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Squad correct as of November 19, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Players, Transfer summary\nSeattle finished its 2012 season by releasing Mike Seamon and Andrew Weber on the 4th December. Three days later, the club traded Jeff Parke to the Philadelphia Union in exchange for the fifth pick in the 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Season overview, Preseason\nOn October 11, during the tail end of the 2012 regular season campaign, it was announced that Seattle Sounders FC would be participating in the 2013 Desert Diamond Cup with the dates of the matches announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Match results, MLS regular season, Standings\nNote: the table below has no impact on playoff qualification and is used solely for determining host of the MLS Cup, certain CCL spots, and 2014 MLS draft. The conference tables are the sole determinant for teams qualifying to the playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Match results, MLS regular season, Standings\n(SS) = Supporters Shield winner; (E1) = Eastern Conference champion; (W1) = Western Conference champion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Match results, MLS regular season, Results summary\nLast updated: October 27, 2013Source: MLS ResultsPld = 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Match results, U.S. Open Cup, Heritage Cup\nThe competition began in 2009 when the expansion Seattle Sounders FC began play, becoming the second MLS team named after their NASL counterpart \u2014 the San Jose Earthquakes having been the first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Squad statistics, Top scorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Squad statistics, Top assists\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total assists are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Squad statistics, Clean sheets\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Squad statistics, Disciplinary record\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total cards are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Squad statistics, Captains\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when games are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Squad statistics, Starting XI\nLast updated: November 7, 2013Source: Squad statistics 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, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Miscellany, Allocation ranking\nSeattle is in the No. 3 position in the MLS Allocation Ranking. It swapped its natural position, No. 15, with Chivas USA in the Shalrie Joseph trade. The allocation ranking is the mechanism used to determine which MLS club has first priority to acquire a U.S. National Team player who signs with MLS after playing abroad, or a former MLS player who returns to the league after having gone to a club abroad for a transfer fee. A ranking can be traded, provided that part of the compensation received in return is another club's ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235895-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Sounders FC season, Miscellany, International roster slots\nSeattle has eight MLS International Roster Slots for use in the 2013 season. Each club in Major League Soccer is allocated eight international roster spots and Seattle traded an international spot to Montreal Impact in return for Lamar Neagle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235896-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Storm season\nThe 2013 WNBA season is the 14th season for the Seattle Storm of the Women's National Basketball Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235896-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle Storm season, Transactions, WNBA Draft\nThe following are the Storm's selections in the 2013 WNBA Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235897-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle mayoral election\nThe 2013 Seattle mayoral election took place on November 5, 2013, to elect the mayor of Seattle. Incumbent Mayor Michael McGinn ran for re-election to a second term in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235897-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle mayoral election\nMunicipal elections in Washington are officially non-partisan. A non-partisan primary was held on August 6, 2013. The top two finishers, State Senator and Ed Murray, who received 30% of the vote, and incumbent Mayor McGinn, who received 29% of the vote, advanced to the November general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235897-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seattle mayoral election\nMurray won the general election with 52% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake\nThe 2013 Seddon earthquake measured 6.5 on the Mww scale and was centred in New Zealand's Cook Strait, around 20 kilometres (12\u00a0mi) east of the town of Seddon in Marlborough. The earthquake struck at 5:09:30\u00a0pm on Sunday 21 July 2013 (05:09 UTC) at a depth of 13 kilometres (8\u00a0mi), according to Geonet. The United States Geological Survey also measured the quake at 6.5, at a depth of 17 kilometres (11\u00a0mi). The quake caused moderate damage in the wider Marlborough area and Wellington, the nation's capital city 55 kilometres (34\u00a0mi) north of the epicentre. Only minor injuries were reported. Several aftershocks occurred during 21\u201329 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake\nThe Seddon earthquake is considered the first of an earthquake doublet, with a second earthquake of similar magnitude occurring on 16 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake, Earthquake, Foreshocks\nThe earthquake was preceded by a series of foreshocks, the largest of which had a magnitude of 5.7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake, Earthquake, Foreshocks\nBelow is a list of all foreshocks magnitudes 5.0 and above that occurred in the region between 19 July 2013 and 21 July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nThe earthquake generated a series of aftershocks, the largest of which had a magnitude of 5.4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nBelow is a list of all aftershocks magnitudes 5.0 and above that occurred in the region between 21 July 2013 and 2 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 47], "content_span": [48, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake, Damage\nThe quake resulted in varying degrees of damage to thirty-five buildings within the Wellington CBD with glass from broken windows falling onto the main thoroughfares of Lambton Quay, Featherston Street, and Willis Street. Damage was also caused in Paraparaumu, Wainuiomata, Porirua and the Hutt Valley in the North Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake, Damage\nThe Wellington Region emergency management office was activated on the evening of 21 July, as were those in the lower part of the North Island. On 22 July parts of Wellington's central business district were closed to the public to allow for inspections to buildings with damaged and potentially dangerous fa\u00e7ades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235898-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Seddon earthquake, Damage\nFour people were injured in the quake, which lasted for 20 seconds, blowing out windows, cracking concrete and swaying buildings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs\nThe 2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs (Playoffs de Ascenso or Promoci\u00f3n de Ascenso) were the final playoffs for promotion from 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B to the 2013\u201314 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. It also decided the three teams which placed 16th to be relegated to the 2013\u201314 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Format\nThe four group winners have the opportunity to promote directly and become the overall Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B champion. The four group winners will be drawn into a two-legged series where the two winners will be promoted to the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n and will enter into the final for the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B champion. The two losing semifinalists will enter the playoff round for the last two promotion spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Format\nThe four group runners-up will be drawn against one of the three fourth-placed teams outside their group while the four third-placed teams will be drawn against each other in a two-legged series. The six winners will advance with the two losing semifinalists to determine the four teams that will enter the last two-legged series for the last two promotion spots. In all the playoff series, the lower-ranked club will play at home first. Whenever there is a tie in position (e.g. like the group winners in the Semifinal Round and Final or the third-placed teams in the first round), a draw will determine the club to play at home first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Group Winners Promotion Play-off, Qualified teams\nThe draw was held in the RFEF headquarters, in Las Rozas (Madrid), on 20 May 2013, 16:30 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Group Winners Promotion Play-off, Matches, Semifinals\nThe aggregate winners were promoted and qualified to the 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B Final. The aggregate losers advanced to the second round promotion play-off for non-champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 88], "content_span": [89, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Non-champions Promotion Play-off, First round, Qualified teams\nThe draw was held in the RFEF headquarters, in Las Rozas (Madrid), on 20 May 2013, 16:30 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 97], "content_span": [98, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Non-champions Promotion Play-off, Second round, Qualified teams\nThe draw was held in the RFEF headquarters, in Las Rozas (Madrid), on 3 June 2013, 17:00 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 98], "content_span": [99, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Non-champions Promotion Play-off, Third round, Qualified teams\nRegulations determined the ties and were confirmed in the RFEF headquarters, in Las Rozas (Madrid), on 17 June 2013, 16:30 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 97], "content_span": [98, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Relegation play-off, Qualified teams\nThe draw was held in the RFEF headquarters, in Las Rozas (Madrid), on 20 May 2013, 16:30 CEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235899-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs, Relegation play-off, Matches, Semifinals\nThe losers of this tournament will be relegated to the 2013\u201314 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs\nThe 2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs took place in June 2013. The Segunda Divisi\u00f3n promotion phase (known as Promoci\u00f3n de ascenso) was the second phase of 2012\u201313 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n and was to determine the third team which promoted to 2013\u201314 La Liga. Teams placed between third and sixth position (excluding reserve teams) took part in the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs\nRegulations were the same that previous season: the fifth placed faced the fourth, while the sixth positioned team faced the third. In case of an eliminatory competition tie, extra time would be played but there would not be a penalty shoot-out; the winner would be the best positioned team. The first leg of the semi-finals were played on 12 June, and the second leg on 15 June at home of the best positioned team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs\nThe final was also be two-legged, with the first leg on 19 June and the second leg on 22 June, with the best positioned team also playing at home the second leg. Almer\u00eda and Girona played the final phase where Almer\u00eda was winner and promoted to La Liga after two years of absence. Alcorc\u00f3n and Las Palmas were eliminated in semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Almer\u00eda\nAlmer\u00eda qualified for this phase on the last matchday after failing to secure promotion to La Liga directly after they lost 1\u20130 at El Madrigal in the decisive last match was against the already promoted Villarreal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Almer\u00eda\nAlmer\u00eda's last participation in La Liga was in 2010\u201311. The club had spent four seasons in a row in the top division, where they debuted in 2006\u201307. It ranked 41st in the all-time La Liga table. This was the second season in the second division since their relegation in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Girona\nGirona was the only known team to qualify for the play-offs before the last matchday, assuring fourth place in the 41st round. They made a spectacular performance and spent all season in promotion places, some of them in direct promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Girona\nGirona had never been in La Liga. This was the fifth season in the second division since their return in 2008\u201309 after 50 years in lower categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Alcorc\u00f3n\nAlcorc\u00f3n was one of the teams which they spent almost all season in promotion places, most of them in the play-offs zone, but they qualified for this phase in the last matchday. They were fighting together with Las Palmas and Ponferradina for the remaining two places (fifth and sixth) for play-offs, and eventually repeated the play-off appearance from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Alcorc\u00f3n\nAlcorc\u00f3n had never been in La Liga. This was the third season in the second division since their debut in 2010\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Las Palmas\nLas Palmas made a regular season and was in play-offs zone in the last part of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Road to the play-offs, Las Palmas\nLas Palmas last participation in La Liga was in 2001\u201302. Las Palmas spent 31 seasons in the top division: the first in 1951\u201352, and from 1954\u201388 except periods 1960\u201364 and 1983\u201385, and lately from 2000\u201302. It ranked 19th in the all-time La Liga table. They were in the category since 2006\u201307.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Promotion play-offs, Semifinals, First leg\nAssistant referees:Javier Mart\u00ednez Nicol\u00e1s (Region of Murcia)Juan Jos\u00e9 L\u00f3pez Mir (Region of Murcia)Fourth official:Alfonso Melgares de Aguilar Fern\u00e1ndez (Region of Murcia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Promotion play-offs, Semifinals, First leg\nAssistant referees:Francisco Javier Garc\u00eda Sabuco (Navarre)I\u00f1igo Prieto L\u00f3pez de Cera\u00edn (Navarre)Fourth official:David Jes\u00fas Pinto Herrera (Tenerife)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Promotion play-offs, Semifinals, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Juan Manuel S\u00e1nchez Fern\u00e1ndez (Extremadura)Alberto Romera Dur\u00e1n (Extremadura)Fourth official:Francisco Javier Hern\u00e1ndez Maeso (Extremadura)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Promotion play-offs, Semifinals, Second leg\nAssistant referees:David Canales Cerd\u00e0 (Valencian Community)Sergio Chinchilla Ortega (Valencian Community)Fourth official:Miguel Bosch Dom\u00e8nech (Valencian Community)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Promotion play-offs, Final, First leg\nAssistant referees:C\u00e9sar de Juana Gonz\u00e1lez (Cantabria)Mateo Nicol\u00e1s Vaquero Agama (Extremadura)Fourth official:Adri\u00e1n Cordero Vega (Cantabria)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235900-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Promotion play-offs, Final, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Jorge Bueno Mateo (Aragon)Jos\u00e9 Antonio Garrido Romero (Community of Madrid)Fourth official:Andr\u00e9s Manuel Ceballos Silva (Extremadura)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235901-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Barranquilla\nThe 2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Barranquilla was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Barranquilla, Colombia between 8 and 14 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235901-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Barranquilla, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235901-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Barranquilla, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235902-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Barranquilla \u2013 Doubles\nNicholas Monroe and Maciek Sykut were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Facundo Bagnis and Federico Delbonis defeated Fabiano de Paula and Stefano Ianni 6\u20133, 7\u20135 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235903-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Barranquilla \u2013 Singles\nAlejandro Falla was the defending champion but chose not to compete. Federico Delbonis defeated Facundo Bagnis 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235904-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Bucaramanga\nThe 2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Bucaramanga was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bucaramanga, Colombia between 23 and 29 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235904-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Bucaramanga, Singles main draw Entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235904-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Bucaramanga, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235905-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Bucaramanga \u2013 Doubles\nAriel Behar and Horacio Zeballos were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Marcelo Demoliner and Franko \u0160kugor won the final 7\u20136(10\u20138), 6\u20132 against Sergio Gald\u00f3s and Marco Trungelliti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235906-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Bucaramanga \u2013 Singles\nWayne Odesnik was the defending champion but lost in the final to Federico Delbonis 6\u20137(4\u20137), 3\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235907-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Cali\nThe 2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Cali was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the sixth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cali, Colombia between 9 and 15 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235907-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Cali, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235908-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Cali \u2013 Doubles\nJuan Sebasti\u00e1n Cabal and Robert Farah were the two-time defending champions, but chose not to compete. The Argentinian team of Guido Andreozzi and Eduardo Schwank defeated Carlos Salamanca and Jo\u00e3o Souza 6-2, 6-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235909-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Cali \u2013 Singles\nJo\u00e3o Souza was the defending champion, but lost to eventual champion Facundo Bagnis. Bagnis defeated compatriot Facundo Arg\u00fcello 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235910-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Medell\u00edn\nThe 2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Medell\u00edn was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Medell\u00edn, Colombia between July 22 and 28 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235910-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Medell\u00edn, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235911-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Medell\u00edn \u2013 Doubles\nNicholas Monroe and Simon Stadler were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Emilio G\u00f3mez and Roman Borvanov won the final 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134) against Nicol\u00e1s Barrientos and Eduardo Struvay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235912-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Medell\u00edn \u2013 Singles\nPaolo Lorenzi was the defending champion, but chose to compete at the 2013 ATP Vegeta Croatia Open Umag instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235912-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Medell\u00edn \u2013 Singles\nAlejandro Gonz\u00e1lez won the title, defeating Guido Andreozzi in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235913-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira\nThe 2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Pereira, Colombia between 25 March and 31 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235913-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235913-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as an alternate into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235913-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235914-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira \u2013 Doubles\nMart\u00edn Alund and Guido Pella were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Nicol\u00e1s Barrientos and Eduardo Struvay defeated Facundo Bagnis and Federico Delbonis 3\u20136, 6\u20133, [10\u20136] in the final to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235915-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seguros Bol\u00edvar Open Pereira \u2013 Singles\nCarlos Salamanca was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Teymuraz Gabashvili. Santiago Giraldo won the final 6\u20132, 6\u20134 against Paul Capdeville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235916-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Selangor FA season\nThe 2013 season is Selangor FA's 8th season playing in Malaysia Super League. They also competed in two domestic cups, Malaysia FA Cup and Malaysia Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235916-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Selangor FA season, Competitions, Malaysia Super League, Selangor FA Results\nFixtures and Results of the Malaysia Super League 2013 season. Win\u00a0\u00a0Draw\u00a0\u00a0Loss", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 81], "content_span": [82, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235917-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Selangor state election\nThe 13th Selangor state election was held on 5 May 2013. The Selangor State Legislative Assembly would automatically dissolve on 22 April 2013, the fifth anniversary of the first sitting, and elections must be held within sixty days (two months) of the dissolution; on or before 22 June 2013, with the date to be decided by the Election Commission of Malaysia, unless dissolved prior to that date by the Head of State, Sultan of Selangor on the advice of the Head of Government, Menteri Besar of Selangor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235917-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Selangor state election\nThe incumbent unofficial coalition Pakatan Rakyat won a supermajority of 44 seats and was able to formed a government, securing a second term while the opposition Barisan Nasional won 12 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235917-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Selangor state election, Background\nThe state election is the 13th state election in Selangor since the independence of Malaya (now Malaysia) in 1957. The governing Pakatan Rakyat (PR) will seek to secure their second consecutive term in office since 2008. According to the Laws of the Constitution of Selangor 1959, the maximum term of the Selangor State Legislative Assembly, the legislature of Selangor, is five years from the date of the first sitting of Assembly following a state election, after which it is dissolved by operation of law. The Assembly would have been automatically dissolved on 22 April 2013, the fifth anniversary of its first sitting on 22 April 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235917-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Selangor state election, Background, Electoral system\nEach state constituencies of Selangor will elect one member to the Selangor State Legislative Assembly using the first-past-the-post voting system. If one party obtains a majority of seats, then that party is entitled to form the State Government, with its leader as Menteri Besar. If the election results in no single party having a majority, there is a hung assembly, of which will be dissolved under the royal prerogative of the Sultan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235917-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Selangor state election, Background, Voting Eligibility\nTo vote in the state election, one had to be:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235918-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Senate of the Philippines funds controversy\nThe Senate of the Philippines was stirred in a political controversy over the use of the operating expenses of senators, known as the Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE). A report on the Philippine Daily Inquirer on January 9, 2013, which noted that Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile authorized the release of additional operating expenses of almost PHP 30 million during the Christmas season. The controversy has led to the auditing of the finances of the Senate by the Commission on Audit and abrupt motion to declare the vacancy of the Senate leadership by Enrile himself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235918-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Senate of the Philippines funds controversy, Philippine Daily Inquirer report\nA report made by the Philippine Daily Inquirer on January 9, 2013, stated that Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile authorized the dispersal of additional operating expenses as a cash bonus to senators amounting to PHP30 million. Although all senators were to receive PHP 1.6 million, the authorization applied to all but four senators, namely Senate Minority Floor Leader Alan Peter Cayetano, Pia Cayetano, Miriam Defensor Santiago and Antonio Trillanes IV who received PHP 250,000. According to Enrile, the additional operating expenses came from the funds designated to the current vacant seat of then Senator Benigno Aquino III who assumed the presidency in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235919-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Senior Bowl\nThe 2013 Senior Bowl was an all-star college football exhibition game featuring players from the 2012 college football season, and prospects for the 2013 Draft of the professional National Football League (NFL). The 64th edition of the Senior Bowl was won by the South team, 21\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235919-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Senior Bowl\nThe game was played on January 26, 2013, (4 p.m. ET), at Ladd\u2013Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Alabama. The coaching staff of the Detroit Lions, led by head coach Jim Schwartz, coached the South team. The coaching staff of the Oakland Raiders, led by head coach Dennis Allen, coached the North team. Schwartz had previously coached in the 2010 Senior Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235919-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Senior Bowl\nCoverage of the event was provided on the NFL Network. Clothing company Nike was the sponsor for the second consecutive year, and provided apparel for the game. The referee for the game, David Smith of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), had been a quarterback for Alabama and MVP of the 1988 Sun Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235919-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Senior Bowl, Rosters, South Team\nAndre Ellington was injured in practice and did not play; his roster spot was filled by Mike James.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235920-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Senior League World Series\nThe 2013 Senior League World Series took place from August 11\u201317 in Bangor, Maine, United States. Chitr\u00e9, Panama defeated Kennett Square, Pennsylvania in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round\nThe 2013 Sepang GP2 Series round was a pair of motor races held on 23 and 24 March 2013 at the Sepang International Circuit in Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Malaysia as part of the one-make single seater GP2 Series. It was the first round of the 2013 GP2 Series and was run in support of the 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix. The first event, a 30-lap feature race, was won by Racing Engineering driver Fabio Leimer from a fourth position start. James Calado finished second for ART Grand Prix and Rapax's Stefano Coletti took third. Coletti won the 22-lap sprint race held the following day. Carlin's Felipe Nasr took second and Mitch Evans of Arden International was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round\nColetti won the first pole position of his career in the GP2 Series by posing the fastest lap in qualifying and he led the race until he made a pit stop for the hard compound tyres at the conclusion of lap six following pressure by Leimer. Coletti retook the lead after all drivers made their pit stops but he lost the position to Leimer on lap 25 because of tyre degradation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round\nLeimer held the lead for the rest of the race to achieve his first victory in the GP2 Series since the 2011 Catalunya sprint race and the third of his career. St\u00e9phane Richelmi began the sprint race from pole position but he lost the lead to Coletti at the second corner on the first lap. Although Nasr caught him in the closing laps, Coletti kept the lead to take his third GP2 Series career win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round\nThe results of the first round of the season gave Coletti the early lead in the Drivers' Championship with 36 points and Leimer's victory in the feature race put him eleven points behind in second. Nasr was third and Calado fourth. In the Teams' Championship, Rapax took the lead with 42 points, 7 points ahead of Racing Engineering in second. Carlin in third were a further three points behind with ten rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Background\nThe 2013 Sepang GP2 Series round was the first of eleven scheduled one-make, single seater motor racing events of the 2013 GP2 Series. It was held on 23 and 24 March 2013 at the 5.543\u00a0km (3.444\u00a0mi) long Sepang International Circuit in Sepang, Selangor and was run in support of the 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix. It was the second time in GP2 Series history that a race meeting was held in Malaysia after the 2012 round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Background\nThe track is considered by drivers to be the toughest challenge of the season due to hot and unpredictable weather and the track's abrasive asphalt surface making tyre management necessary. As in the 2012 round, tyre supplier Pirelli brought the yellow-banded soft compound tyres and the orange-banded hard dry compound tyres to Malaysia. There were 26 drivers divided into 13 teams each entered for the round and every entrant utilised the Dallara GP2/11 vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nOne practice session lasting half an hour was held on the Thursday before the two races. James Calado set the fastest lap time for ART Grand Prix ten minutes in hot weather conditions at 1 minute, 45.403 seconds. Simon Trummer was second-fastest for Rapax and Russian Time's Tom Dillmann placed third. 2012 GP3 Series champion Mitch Evans of Arden International was the best-placed rookie in fourth and Marcus Ericsson in the faster of the two DAMS cars was fifth. The rest of the top ten were Felipe Nasr, Johnny Cecotto Jr., Stefano Coletti, Rio Haryanto and St\u00e9phane Richelmi. While the session passed relatively peacefully, Juli\u00e1n Leal went into a gravel trap at turn four and Kevin Ceccon had to drive onto the run-off area to avoid hitting Sergio Canamasas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nFriday afternoon's qualifying session ran for half an hour. The drivers' fastest lap times determined the starting order for the first race. The pole position winner scored four points in the Drivers' and Teams' Championships Rain during the second practice session for the Malaysian Grand Prix created a wet track but it completely dried up before the GP2 qualifying session began. Sam Bird, in his first GP2 Series qualifying session since the 2011 season, was the early pace setter and held pole position until Nasr went faster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nIt was taken by Fabio Leimer midway through the session, until Coletti set a time of 1 minute, 48.850 and improved it by more than four seconds to a 1 minute, 44.280 seconds which was never bettered despite a small error putting him into the grass. Coletti took his first GP2 Series career pole position. He was joined on the grid's front row by Calado who was prevented from taking pole position because of a minor mistake late on his lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying\nNasr started from third after locking his tyres entering the turn 15 hairpin and had an oversteer leaving the corner. Leimer did not improve on his second timed lap and was fourth. Bird was provisionally fifth as Evans continued to be the highest-placed rookie in sixth. In positions seven through ten were Haryanto, Ren\u00e9 Binder, Trummer and Dillmann. Leal was the fastest driver not to enter to the top ten. Behind him the rest of the provisional field was Canamasas, Ericsson, Johnny Cecotto Jr., Adrian Quaife-Hobbs, Richelmi, Conor Daly, the Trident duo of Nathana\u00ebl Berthon, Ceccon, Ma Qinghua, Dani\u00ebl de Jong, Daniel Abt, Jolyon Palmer, Jake Rosenzweig, P\u00e5l Varhaug and Kevin Giovesi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Practice and qualifying, Post-qualifying\nAfter qualifying, Berthon and Canamasas physically remonstrated about on-track etiquette as they waited in the weighbridge area for undisclosed reasons. The stewards deleted Cecotto's lap times because they deemed him to have made an \"unacceptable\" reaction and Bird was given a three-place grid penalty for impeding Cecotto. With five minutes left of qualifying, Bird delayed Cecotto at turns five and six because he was warming his tyres. He turned off the racing line to allow Cecotto through leaving turn six. Cecotto drew alongside Bird and retaliated for the latter's earlier impediment by swerving to his right into turn seven. putting Bird into the outside grass area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races\nThe first race was held over 170\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi) or 60 minutes (which ever came first) and all drivers were required by regulations to make one pit stop. The first ten finishers scored points, with two given to the fastest lap holder. The grid for the second race was determined by the finishing order of the first but the first eight drivers were in reverse order of where they finished. It was run for 120\u00a0km (75\u00a0mi) or 45 minutes (which ever came first). In contrast to the prior race drivers were not required to make pit stops. The top eight finishers earned points towards their respective championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nThe feature race began in hot weather at 11:15 Malaysian Standard Time (UTC+08:00) on 23 March. Leimer made a fast start from fourth place to slalom straight past Calado and Nasr. He drew to the outside of Coletti to contest the lead into the first corner but lost the duel. Evans, ill with food poisoning, took over fourth as an overtake from Calado on Nasr at turn four put both drivers wide. The first retirement came on lap one as the field braked for turn nine and Ericsson misjudged his braking point and ran into the rear of Palmer's car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nEricsson's vehicle stopped in the barrier alongside the circuit. Once a rhythm was established, it became apparent that tyre wear would become a factor as Leimer put race leader Coletti under heavy pressure but he withstood all of his challenges, giving Calado, Nasr and Evans, who were duelling over third, the opportunity to draw closer. On lap three, Quaife-Hobbs mistimed an pass on his teammate de Jong at turn 15 and two retired following a collision with each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nColetti struggled as his soft compound tyres degrading and he made a pit stop for the hard compound tyres as soon as drivers were permitted by series officials to do so at the end of lap six. That allowed Leimer into the lead who immediately began setting a series of consecutive fast laps in clear air in the hope of providing himself with a small lead over Coletti after his pit stop. However Leimer's tactic greatly slowed him compared to Coletti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nIn the meantime, Abt triggered localised yellow flags on lap ten when he spun off the track and marshals were required to move his car. Leimer emerged close behind Coletti after he made his pit stop on the 11th lap. The yet-to-pit Bird became the new leader when Leimer made his pit stop but his opportunity of claiming a strong result was diminished when he received a drive-through penalty for overtaking under yellow flag conditions. Palmer took the lead on lap 12 and held it until his lap 21 pit stop for the soft compound tyres. On lap 23, Evans and Richelmi ran wide at turn one and Bird overtook them for seventh. Leal overtook Cecotto for fifth on the next lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nColetti re-took the lead but began to struggle on the hard compound tyres, allowing Leimer to close up as his tyres degraded and frequently locked his wheels. However, Leimer could not immediately overtake Coletti because he lacked the straightline speed on the straight linking turns 14 and 15. Leimer's awareness of Calado getting closer grew more as the race progressed and he knew he had to pass Coletti as soon as possible. He tried doing this leaving the final corner on lap 25 but was unsuccessful despite exiting faster than Coletti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nOn the next lap, Coletti put Leimer onto the outside but Leimer overtook him on the racing line at the exit of turn four for the lead. By this point, Calado got close to Coletti and out-braked him at the final corner in attempting to pass but ran deep. Coletti got back through but Calado then tucked into his slipstream and had the grip to overtake him on the inside at the first corner for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nFurther down the order, Haryanto hit Varhaug while battling for position and Dillmann swerved to avoid getting involved in the duel. Evans locked his tyres, allowing Trummer to pass him for ninth place. At the front, Leimer set a series of lap times under the 1 minute, 50 seconds range in clear air to grow his lead over Calado to two seconds. Leimer crossed the start/finish line at the end of lap 30 to achieve his third victory in the GP2 Series and his first since the 2011 Catalunya sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Feature race\nCalado was second and Coletti completed the podium in third. Off the podium, Nasr took fourth, Leal had the best series result at the time in fifth, Palmer finished sixth and Bird recovered from his penalty to finish seventh. Richelmi finished eighth and took the pole position for the sprint race. Completing the top ten were Trummer and Evans. The final classified finishers were Binder, Cecotto, Daly, Dillmann, Varhaug, Giovesi, Ceccon, Rosenzweig, Canamasas, Haryanto and Ma. After the race, the stewards deemed Quaife-Hobbs responsible for the collision with his teammate de Jong on lap three and imposed a five-place grid penalty on him for the sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nThe second race began in cloudy weather at 12:15 local time on 24 March. Ma was ruled unfit to compete after the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile medical doctor diagnosed him with gastroenteritis which led to extreme dehydration. At the start of the formation lap, Palmer stalled his car and was required to start from the pit lane. As a result, Nasr used the vacant spot left by his teammate Palmer to pass the slow-starting Bird and Leal on the inside line going into the first turn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nHowever it was the sixth-placed Coletti who took the lead away from Richelmi because he made a strong getaway and steered onto the outside to pass him leaving the second corner. Going into the braking zone for turn four, Calado got caught out by Leimer and mistimed an pass on him and hit the right-rear corner of his car. The impact dislodged Calado's front wing, which folded under his car. This rendered Calado unable to steer and had limited braking capabilities since he could not control his vehicle which launched over the grass on the inside. He struck Leal and Bird at high speed and all three drivers instantly retired in the turn four gravel trap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nRichelmi was overtaken by Nasr at turn one at the start of the second lap and made it stick at the turn two switchback. Coletti, Nasr and Richelmi pulled out a one-second lead over Evans in fourth place with Cecotto in fifth and sixth-placed Leimer who continued to circulate the track despite the first lap contact with Calado. From then on Coletti opened his lead over Nasr to 21\u20442 seconds with a series of fastest laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nHowever, he put himself a risk of putting his tyres under excess stress and creating an identical situation of him losing the chance of victory to a driver who better conserved their tyres. With the lead now stabilised, attention focused on Palmer further down the order as he moved his way through the field and got to 14th midway through the race while Ericsson gained two places to be in 16th. On lap 16, Richelmi out-braked himself and ran deep onto the run-off area at the turn 15 hairpin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0013-0002", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nEvans had conserved his tyres in the laps beforehand and overtook Richelmi for third. He then repelled a counter-attack from Richelmi into the first corner. On lap 17, Leimer found the damage to his car from the first lap incident with Calado caused too much rear tyre wear and a sudden loss of grip put him into the turn 11 gravel trap and out of the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nTyre degradation became a factor in the final laps as Nasr lowered Coletti's lead to 1.2 seconds and then to six-tenths of a second by the start of the final lap. It was not enough for Nasr to get close enough to challenge Coletti who managed the gap and his tyres to achieve his third career series victory. Nasr followed 4\u20445 of a second later in second and Evans became the youngest driver to claim a podium in the GP2 Series in third. Off the podium, Richelmi finished fourth and Cecotto benefited from the first lap crash to take fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Races, Sprint race\nCecotto was ahead of Trummer and Daly who were separated by just 2\u20445 of a second in sixth and seventh. Binder finished sixth-tenths of a second ahead of Palmer for eighth. The final classified finishers were Giovesi, Dillmann, Leimer, Ericsson, de Jong, Canamasas, Abt, Quaife-Hobbs, Haryanto, Varhaug, Rosenzweig, Berthon and Ceccon. After the race, the stewards imposed a ten-place grid penalty on Calado for the next feature race of the season in Bahrain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Post-round\nThe top three drivers in both races appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and in separate press conferences. Leimer commented on his satisfaction over winning his first race for almost two years and said his goal was to win the opening race of the season, \"I think it was important for me and the team that we\u2019re already at the front. Everything worked really well today. Mentally, this win is a real boost for me and the team. We\u2019ve worked really hard during the winter and it\u2019s paid off.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Post-round\nCalado stated his slow start was caused by cold tyres and him starting on the circuit's dirty side. Nevertheless, he congratulated Leimer on his victory and said he was still happy to finish in second. Third-placed Coletti said he was happy with the result despite problems with his tyres, \"I scored good points. The championship is long and we have the time to find a solution to make sure the car is even better during the race. I\u2019m pretty confident.\" He revealed his tyres began to degrade from the fourth lap which prompted him to make an early pit stop for the hard compound tyres because he feared losing time and Leimer overtaking him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Post-round\nAfter the sprint race, Coletti said work put into his car overnight helped him and emphasised the importance about racing in Malaysia's hot weather, \"It was really hot out there and very difficult especially when you have to think about the tyres and concentrate on doing everything right because any little mistake can destroy your tyres and the race can be over. So it\u2019s really not easy in the heat!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Post-round\nNasr said he was happy to finish second and revealed that was his goal for the sprint race before discussing his duel with Coletti, \"What I could see from the car was that Stefano built a gap and was safe from there. After that I was mainly trying to save my tyres as best as I could. When it was eight laps to go, I started to push to try and catch up with him, but my rear tyres did not last long enough. I think that\u2019s something we need to work on, but I\u2019m still pleased with second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Post-round\nI\u2019ve scored good points for the championship.\" Third-placed Evans said his team adjusted his car to improve its balance for the sprint race and stated he did not try to get second because of the high level of tyre wear, \"I was hoping maybe Felipe would have caught Stefano and maybe made contact with him but that did not happen (Laughs). I am satisfied with third in my debut. I think we\u2019re in a good position for the rest of the championship.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235921-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Sepang GP2 Series round, Post-round\nSince Sepang was the first round of the season, Coletti became the early leader of the Drivers' Championship with 36 points. Leimer's feature race victory put him eleven points behind in second and Nasr was a further point behind in third. Calado's second place in the feature race put him fourth and Richelmi was fifth. In the Teams' Championship, Rapax assumed the lead with 42 points, seven points ahead of Racing Engineering in second with Carlin another three points behind in third place. ART Grand Prix were fourth with Arden International fifth with ten rounds left in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections\nA small number of municipalities in Serbia held local elections in 2013. These were not part of the country's regular cycle of local elections but instead took place in certain jurisdictions where either the local governments had fallen or the last local elections for four-year terms had taken place in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections\nAll local elections in Serbia are held under proportional representation. Mayors are not directly elected but are instead chosen by elected members of the local assemblies. Parties were required to cross a five per cent electoral threshold to win representation in the local assembles in 2013, although this requirement was waived for parties representing national minority communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections, Results\nNote: The first percentage column in the results section 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 five per cent of all votes to cross the electoral threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nAn election was held in Vo\u017edovac on 15 December 2013 due to the expiration of the term of the previous municipal assembly, which was elected in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nAleksandar Savi\u0107 of the Progressive Party was chosen as mayor after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nAn election was held in Zemun on 2 June 2013 due to the expiration of the term of the previous municipal assembly, which was elected in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nDejan Mati\u0107 of the Progressive Party was selected as mayor after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nAn election was held in Vrbas on 13 October 2013 due to the expiration of the term of the previous municipal assembly, which was elected in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235922-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nBratislav Ka\u017ei\u0107 of the Progressive Party was selected as mayor after the election. Ka\u017ei\u0107 resigned in July 2016 and was replaced by Milan Glu\u0161ac of the same party. Glu\u0161ac, in turn, resigned in January 2017 to prompt new local elections ahead of schedule and was appointed as leader of a provisional authority the governed the municipality in advance of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season\nThe 2013 Serena Williams tennis season officially began on 30 December with the start of the 2013 WTA Tour, and follows on from a 12-match winning streak which began at the end of the 2012 Season. Williams produced the most consistent season in her career reaching 13 finals and winning 11 titles, the most since 12 titles from Martina Hingis in 1997. She also won her second French Open, her first since 2002, as well as her fifth US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0000-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season\nShe also dominated the clay season winning 5 titles and having a 28\u20130 record on the surface and produced her longest winning streak at 34. Williams also had the best winning percentage of 95.1%, the highest since 1990 and became the first women's player to eclipse the $10 million mark at $12,385,572, beating the previous single-season prize money record of $7.9 million set in 2012 by Victoria Azarenka. Williams finished the year at no. 1, this the third time that Williams ended as the number 1 player in the year. Based on her performance in 2013, she was named 'World Champion' for the fourth time and the second time in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Brisbane International\nWilliams began her 2013 campaign at the Brisbane International. In her first match, she faced compatriot and second-ranked American Varvara Lepchenko and won in straight sets in 59 minutes. In the second round, she faced Frenchwoman Aliz\u00e9 Cornet and took the match, winning both sets at two in exactly an hour with the help of 6 aces. In the quarterfinals, Williams faced another American in Sloane Stephens and defeated her younger foe, breaking Stephens once in each set, while holding her serve at each time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 119], "content_span": [120, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Brisbane International\nIn the semifinals Williams was bound to face world no. 1 Victoria Azarenka; however, the Belarusian withdrew before the match with a toe injury, giving Williams a free bye into the final. In the final, Williams faced Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova; the match started with holds in the first four games but Williams then took seven games in a row before Pavlyuchenkova took another game. Williams then closed out the match, losing only three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 119], "content_span": [120, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nWilliams came into the Australian Open as the heavy favorite to win the title; she was coming in with a 17-match winning streak that stretched from the 2012 US Open and a 21-set winning streak stretching from the third set of the US Open final. In the first round, she faced Edina Gallovits-Hall, where Williams suffered a health scare when she twisted her right ankle in the fifth game of the first set, however it did not hamper her as she won without dropping a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 112], "content_span": [113, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nIn the next round she faced Garbi\u00f1e Muguruza and suffered another incident, when Williams's hit smacked her mouth with her racket following through on a defensive lob. Williams broke in the first game and also in the seventh game to win the first set; she then cruised through the second set with a bagel. In the third round, against Japanese Ayumi Morita, she served her second 207\u00a0km/h serve of the tournament. Williams roared through the first set losing only one game, Morita then took the first three games, Williams then won the last six games to win the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 112], "content_span": [113, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0002-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nWilliams then faced 14th seed, Russia's Maria Kirilenko. Williams broke in the fourth and eighth games of the match to take the first set; she served 95% of first serve in the set. Williams stormed past the second set with a bagel to advance to the quarterfinals. Williams at one point won 23 straight service points. Williams also made 22 winners with 6 aces to Kirilenko's 7 winners with 1 ace, she also only made 6 unforced errors to Kirilenko's 15 In the quarterfinals she faced compatriot Sloane Stephens; Williams took the first set by breaking in the eighth game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 112], "content_span": [113, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0002-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nWilliams then suffered a back spasm in the middle of the second set, where she led by a break but eventually lost the set 5\u20137. In the third set, Williams led by a break by the seventh game but eventually lost the next 3 games, losing to Stephens. Both women, made 23 winners; however, Williams made more unforced errors with 48 to Stephens 39. She also ended her 20-match winning streak and her 30 sets won in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 112], "content_span": [113, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Australian Open\nSerena Williams also played doubles with sister Venus. In the first three rounds, they faced Camila Giorgi and Stefanie V\u00f6gele, Vera Dushevina and Olga Govortsova, and fifth seeds Nadia Petrova and Katarina Srebotnik winning in straight sets in all three victories. In the quarterfinals, they faced top seeds Roberta Vinci and Sara Errani, they took the first set and served for the match at 6\u20135, until they eventual lost the seconds set in a tie-break. They also had many chances in the third but lost it in the end 5\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 112], "content_span": [113, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Qatar Total Open\nWilliams during her on court interview after defeating Kvitova and reclaiming the world no.1 status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Qatar Total Open\nWilliams then played at the Qatar Total Open in Doha for the first time. Williams, being seeded second, received a bye in the first round. In the second round, she faced a lucky loser in Russian Daria Gavrilova. Williams from the fifth game racked in nine straight games, Williams served out the match, she hit 25 winners to Gavrilova's 9, and both hit 14 unforced errors. In the second round she faced the younger Radwa\u0144ska Urszula, Williams won the first eight games, before being broken by Radwa\u0144ska. Williams closed it out in the ninth game of the second set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Qatar Total Open\nWilliams had a 20\u201315 winner-unforced error to Radwa\u0144ska's 6\u201320. In the quarterfinals she faced world no. 8 Petra Kvitov\u00e1, Kvitov\u00e1 took the first break in the sixth game and took advantage, winning the set, the first set Williams has lost to Kvitov\u00e1. The second set went Williams' favor as she broke in the eighth game closed it out. In the deciding set Kvitov\u00e1 took a break lead by the fifth game. However Williams came back to win the set 7\u20135. Williams made 14 aces to Kvitov\u00e1's 9, both served 8 double faults.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Qatar Total Open\nWilliams made 37 winners to Kvitov\u00e1's 35, but she also made more unforced errors 31 to 28. This win gave Williams the WTA number 1 ranking, becoming the oldest to hold it. In the semifinals, Williams faced world no. 3 Maria Sharapova. Williams took the first set after breaking in the sixth game. Williams then dominated the second set, breaking the Russian twice to win it. In the final, Williams faced the top seed Victoria Azarenka, Williams went down by a break, but came back, eventually lead to a tie-break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0005-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Qatar Total Open\nWilliams had set point on serve at 6\u20135, but lost the next three points to lose the breaker. Williams then took control of the second set winning it with two breaks. In the third set, Williams started slowly, losing the first three games, and it was enough for Azarenka as they both held serve until the end of the match. This loss was the first to Azarenka since the 2009 Sony Ericsson Open and ended Williams' 9-match winning streak against Azarenka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Dubai Tennis Championships\nWilliams withdrew 45 minutes before she was due to play Marion Bartoli at the Dubai Tennis Championships with a back injury. This withdrawal will count as a zero-pointer in her allotted year-end rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 123], "content_span": [124, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Sony Open Tennis\nPlaying in her first tournament as the world no. 1 at the Sony Open Tennis as the top seed she received a bye into the second round where she faced Italian Flavia Pennetta. Williams took the first set with a loss of one game; she come back from triple break point down twice and she was 2/10 in break point opportunities. The second set was won by Williams by the same score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Sony Open Tennis\nWilliams then took on Ayumi Morita, Morita took the first 3 games of the match, but Williams pegged back taking the next 7 games, Williams then broke Morita in the sixth game of the second set to take the match. In the fourth round, she faced Slovakian Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1, the match started with 2 breaks, Cibulkov\u00e1 then took the next seven games from the fourth game, to take a set and break lead. Williams then took the next six games from, in the process winning the second set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0007-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Sony Open Tennis\nWilliams then completed her comeback, winning the third by 2. Williams ended with 40\u201341 winners-unforced errors to her opponents 12\u201319 ratio. In the quarterfinals, Williams faced Li Na. Williams took the first set breaking Li in the sixth game of the match. In the second set Williams took a break lead but Li took the next five games and had a set point on the Williams serve, Williams saved the set point and took the next four games to force a tie-break, that went to Williams. In the semifinals, she faced fourth seed and defending champion Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0007-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Sony Open Tennis\nWilliams took the first set without dropping a game. In the second set Williams broke Radwa\u0144ska in the third game to finally take the set and the match. She hit 40 winners and 21 unforced errors to Radwa\u0144ska's 6 winners and 12 unforced errors. Williams made 12 aces including 5 in the third game of the second set. In the final Williams faced Maria Sharapova. Sharapova got the decisive break in the ninth game and serve the set out. This ended the 13 straight sets Williams had won over Sharapova and the first she had lost in 5 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0007-0004", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Early hard court season and Australian Open, Sony Open Tennis\nIn the second set, Williams won the first two games before Sharapova reeled off three straight games herself. Being a break down Williams reeled off 10 straight games to win the match. Williams had a 34\u201329 winners-to-unforced errors ratio to Sharapova's 14\u201325. This win gave Williams the most titles at the tournament at six and most wins at the event at 61 and is tied with Agassi in both accolades. This win also meant that Williams has beaten Sharapova 11 straight times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 113], "content_span": [114, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Family Circle Cup\nWilliams then played her first clay court tournament at the Family Circle Cup. She entered the event as the defending champion and as the first seed. Williams received a bye to go through the second round, where she faced Camila Giorgi. Williams won the first set with Giorgi breaking and winning serve only once. In the second set, Williams broke in the fifth game and ninth game of the match to advance. Williams made nine aces and no double faults, whereas her opponent made five aces to a dozen double faults.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0008-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Family Circle Cup\nOn the following day, she faced compatriot Mallory Burdette, the first set went on serve until Williams broke in the tenth game to take the set. Williams then got broken in the first game, but came back winning six of the last seven games to win. Later in the day Williams played her quarterfinal match, playing two singles match in the same for the first time in her career. Williams took on Lucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 in a rematch of last year's final. The match began with two breaks, \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 then broke in the fifth game and then consolidated the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0008-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Family Circle Cup\nHowever, Williams came back winning 10 of the last 11 games to go through. In the semifinals Williams faced big sister Venus Williams in their 24 meeting and their first in more than three years, with their last match coming in the 2009 WTA Tour Championships Final. The first set went to Serena, with Serena breaking Venus thrice in the set, with she her herself getting broken once. In the second set, Serena broke Venus' serve in the first and seventh game to advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0008-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Family Circle Cup\nThe match was the fewest games won by the losing foe with three in the all of the 24 meeting between the sisters. In the final, Williams faced Jelena Jankovi\u0107, whom she had led 5\u20134 in head-to-head. The first set, four games stayed on serve with Williams not dropping a point and Jankovi\u0107 being pushed to deuce. However, things turned around as Jankovi\u0107 broke Williams in the fifth and ninth game to take the set. The second set saw Williams rallied to take all of the six games to win it with a bagel. The third set went to Williams breaking Jankovi\u0107 in the third and seventh game and served out the match in her third match point. Williams was 39\u201325 winners to unforced errors to Jankovi\u0107 21\u201323. This is Williams third Family Circle Cup and extends her 15-match winning streak at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Mutua Madrid Open\nWilliams came into the Mutua Madrid Open as the defending champion. Williams began her defense against Yulia Putintseva. Putintseva broke Williams in the opening game; Williams then broke back in the sixth game. The opening set then went to a tie-break, with Williams winning it. In the second set, Williams broke serve four times, while getting broken once herself to win the second set with a breadstick to win the match. In the following round, Williams went against local Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Mutua Madrid Open\nWilliams took an early lead in the first set and served for it in the seventh game just to be broken, but broke back to take the set. In the second set, they went toe-to-toe, where Williams sneaked ahead, breaking in the twelfth game to win the match. In the round of 16, Williams faced 13th seed Maria Kirilenko. Both held serves in the first six games, until Williams raced through, winning nine of the last ten games. Williams made 22 winners and 10 unforced errors to Kirilenko's 9 and 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0009-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Mutua Madrid Open\nWilliams lost 2 points on serve, both on the second serve, and made no unforced errors in the second set. In the last 8, Williams took on wild card Anabel Medina Garrigues; the first set went on serve until Williams broke in the eighth game and then served it out. In the second set, Medina Garrigues took advantage of an erratic Williams taking the second set in a bagel. Williams took the first two games of the final set just to see Medina Garrigues take the next four; however, Williams came back and won the set in the twelfth game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0009-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Mutua Madrid Open\nWilliams made 39 winners to 48 unforced errors to Medina Garrigues' 19 and 18. In the semifinals, Williams faced Sara Errani. Errani broke twice in the third and seventh game just to see Williams break back right after. Williams then broke in a hard-fought game in the twelfth game to take the set. Williams then broke Errani in the fourth game and then in the eighth game to advance to the final. Williams made 47 winners to Errani's 8 and 39 unforced errors to Errani's 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0009-0004", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Mutua Madrid Open\nThis marks Williams first red clay final since her triumph in the 2002 French Open. Williams faced 2nd-seed Maria Sharapova in the final, where the winner could take the number 1 ranking. Williams dominated the first set, winning the first four games and eventually closing it out in the seventh game. Sharapova then broke Williams in the opening game but Williams broke back in sixth game and then again in the tenth game to take the match. Williams made 18 winners and unforced errors, while Sharapova made 14 winners to 21 unforced errors. This is Williams' 50th career title and her first on the red clay since the 2002 French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 104], "content_span": [105, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Internazionali BNL d'Italia\nWilliams came into the Internazionali BNL d'Italia with a 19-match winning streak and the top seed. She received a bye into the round of 16 and played British number 1 Laura Robson. The match began with Robson breaking Williams; however Williams won 6 of the next 7 games to take the set. Williams then broke serve twice to take a similar scoreline and advance. Williams was 13-11 winners-unforced errors to Robson 16\u201335. In the next round she took on Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1 and dropped only a game in the match and made 40 winners to 16 unforced errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 114], "content_span": [115, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Internazionali BNL d'Italia\nIn the final 8, Williams faced Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro. Williams took control of the match losing only two games both in the first set. Williams made 26 winners to 14 unforced errors to the Spaniards 9 winners and 16 unforced errors. In the semifinals, Williams went against surprise semifinalist in qualifier Simona Halep. Halep took an early break in the third game, however Williams came back winning 11 of the last 12 games, including a bagel in the second set to win the match. Williams made 24 winners and 20 unforced errors to Halep's 3 and 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 114], "content_span": [115, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, Internazionali BNL d'Italia\nIn the final she faced Victoria Azarenka in a rematch of the Doha final. Williams took the first three games before Azarenka could take a game breaking Williams' serve in the fourth game, Williams then took the next three to win the set. The pair then traded three breaks of serve from the sixth game, before Williams could serve it out in the ninth game and revenge her loss. Williams hit 41 winners and 19 unforced errors in the match along with 8 aces. The win extends Williams longest winning streak in her career to 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 114], "content_span": [115, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, French Open\nWilliams came into the French Open as the favorite, having not lost a match on clay and riding on a 24 match winning streak. Williams also was the top seed and world no. 1 and will come out of the event as the world no. 1 whatever the result of the tournament is. In her opening match, she went up against Anna Tatishvili, where Williams rallied through to win the first nine games dropping only a point on serve before Tatishvili could get a game. Williams then won the remaining three games to advance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0011-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, French Open\nIn the next round, Williams faced wildcard Caroline Garcia. Williams won the first five games and finished it off the set in the seventh game and then broke twice in the second to take the match. Williams made 27 winners and 9 unforced errors to her opponents 14 a piece. In the third round, Williams took on Sorana C\u00eerstea. Williams took the first set in a bagel, the second set went on serve until the fifth game, where Williams won the last four games. Williams was 13\u201316 on winners and unforced errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0011-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, French Open\nIn the round of 16, Williams went against the no. 1 doubles player Roberta Vinci, Williams took the first set, dropping only a game. The second set went on serve until Williams broke in the eighth game and closed it out in the next game to win in straight sets. In the quarterfinals, Williams faced former French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova. In the first set, Williams cruised through the set dropping only a game with the aid of 15 winners. However, in the second set, Kuznetsova won the first four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0011-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, French Open\nKuznetsova then served for the set in the ninth game and was up 40\u20130, however Williams squandered four break points in the game to bring it to a deciding set. Kuznetsova hit 11 winners to Williams' 8, while hitting the same number of unforced errors. Kuznetsova then broke early and had a chance to take a second break in the 3rd game, however Williams saved three break points to hold. Williams then won 5 of the last 6 game to advance to her first French Open semifinal since 2003. In the semifinals, Williams faced last years runner-up Sara Errani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0011-0004", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, French Open\nWilliams stormed through the first 9 games before Errani could get her only game of the match. Williams then served it out in the seventh game in a 46-minute white wash, dropping only 5 points on serve. Williams hit 40 winners to her opponents 2 and 15 unforced errors to Errani's 3. Chris Evert described this as the finest female performance on clay she had ever seen. Williams faced defending champion and number 2 seed Maria Sharapova in the final. Williams was broken in the second game, but won four of the next five games to gain the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0011-0005", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay court season and French Open, French Open\nSharapova then broke back in the eight game before Williams went on to break again to take the set in the tenth game. Williams proceeded to play well breaking Sharapova's serve in the second set before serving for the championship in the tenth game. In this service game, Williams fired 3 aces to win her second French Open title 11 years after her first. Williams hit 29 winners-21 unforced errors-10 aces-0 double faults to Sharapova's 10-17-2-4 in comparison. The win improved Williams' win-streak to a career-longest 31 matches. She became the fourth woman in the Open era after Martina Navratilova, Chris Evert and Steffi Graf to win each Grand Slam title twice or more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Wimbledon\nWilliams came into Wimbledon as the heavy favorite to win her sixth Wimbledon title, being on a 31-match winning streak, number 1 seed, and defending champion. Williams opened her campaign for her 17th slam against Mandy Minella. Williams stormed through the first set dropping only a game and not dropping a point on serve. Minella then came back, winning the first two games of the second set, just to see Williams reel off six of the last seven games to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Wimbledon\nIn the next round, she took on youngster Caroline Garcia, Williams took the first set by breaking Garcia in the ninth game, then took the second set taking the last four games from 2-all. In the round of 32, Williams faced Japanese veteran Kimiko Date-Krumm. Williams served for the first set in the seventh game, just to get broken. But Williams came back to take the next seven games to win in two sets. In the last 16, Williams had German Sabine Lisicki in her path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0012-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Wimbledon\nLisicki took the first set at ease dropping only two games as Williams fired back in the second set dropping only a game. Williams then took a 3\u20130 lead then a 4\u20132 lead, however Williams got passive, wasting four break points in the 8th game as Lisicki took initiative and took four games in a row to win 6\u20134 in the third, ending Williams's 34-match winning streak, the longest in her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Wimbledon, Collector Swedish Open\nAfter her Wimbledon Loss, Williams came back to clay and played the Collector Swedish Open. Williams played her opening match against Sesil Karatantcheva. Williams won the match with ease dropping only three games in just 64 minutes. In her second round match, Williams took on Anna Tatishvili, Williams cruised to victory in straight sets with help from her seven aces. Williams then faced Spaniard Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino, demolishing her opponent, Williams won in a double breadstick scoreline. In the final four, Williams had Kl\u00e1ra Zakopalov\u00e1 on the other side of the net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Wimbledon, Collector Swedish Open\nWilliams dominated the opening, proceeding to take the first 8 games of the match. Zakopalov\u00e1 came back and broke Williams to get on serve up to the 8th game; however, Williams took the last 2 games to reach the final. In the final, Williams took on local Johanna Larsson. Larsson took an early break lead, breaking Williams in the 4th game, just to see Williams reel in 11 of the next 13 games to win the title. This is Williams' first title that is below a premier level. This also marks Williams being undefeated on clay in 2013 having a 28\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 85], "content_span": [86, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, Rogers Cup\nWilliams' began her US Open campaign at the 2013 Rogers Cup in Toronto. Williams received a bye in the first round and faced Francesca Schiavone. Schiavone broke in the fifth game; however, Williams came back and won seven games in a row to take a set and double break lead. Schiavone then took two games just to see Williams take the next two and win the match. In the third round, Williams faced Venus' conqueror Kirsten Flipkens. Williams dominated the first set with a bagel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0014-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, Rogers Cup\nIn the second set, Williams broke in the fourth game and it was enough to take the set and advance. In the quarterfinals, Williams defeated Slovakian Magdal\u00e9na Ryb\u00e1rikov\u00e1, dropping only a game on each set, which was a hold and a break respectively. In the final 4, Williams took on Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska. In the first set, the pair traded breaks twice to push it to a tiebreak, which Williams won. In the second set, Radwa\u0144ska took an early break lead, however Williams then broke Radwa\u0144ska twice to win the match. Williams then took on surprise finalist Sorana C\u00eerstea; Williams took the first three games, just to see C\u00eerstea take the next two, however Williams raced through winning the last nine games to win the title. This is Williams' eight title of the year matching her most titles in a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, Western & Southern Open\nAfter a successful campaign at the Roger's Cup in Toronto, Williams played in the 2013 Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati. Although she came in as the clear favorite, Williams had never won the tournament before. Along with the other top 8 seeds, she received a first round bye and went on to face Eugenie Bouchard of Canada in the second round. Bouchard broke in the first game, they then traded breaks in the fourth and fifth game. Bouchard then held with a break lead in the tenth game to take the set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0015-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, Western & Southern Open\nWilliams then broke in the fourth and eight game to push it to a decider. In the third set, Williams took the first four games, before Bouchard could take two straight games to see Williams win the next two to advance. Williams then took on German Mona Barthel. Williams broke in the second game, just to be broken serving for the set in the ninth game, however Williams broke to take the set. Williams then won the first five games before Barthel could win a game; Williams then closed it out to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0015-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, Western & Southern Open\nIn the quarterfinals, Williams faced Simona Halep and took the first set with a bagel. The second set was closer; the pair traded breaks in the fourth and fifth game before Williams could break in the tenth game to win the match. Williams then went against China's Li Na and won in straight sets. The two sets had similar situations as Williams took a 4\u20132 lead in both; Li served for both in the tenth game just to get broken by Williams and then again in the twelfth game of each set to reach her first Cincinnati final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0015-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, Western & Southern Open\nThe final saw the top two seeds, Williams and Azarenka, take to the court for the title. After a dominant display by Williams and an error plagued game from Azarenka, Williams took the first set with a two break lead. A revitalised Azarenka began to take charge and the errors started creeping into Williams game, Azarenka then took the second set with a similar scoreline. Azarenka led by an early break in the final set, just to see Williams come back and serve for it in the tenth game only to get broken and lead to a tie-break, which Azarenka took 8 points to 6. This broke Williams' 14 match winning streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nAfter her disappointing loss to Azarenka in Cincinnati, Serena entered the 2013 US Open as the top seed, the defending champion, and bidding to become the oldest woman to win the U.S. Open since tennis turned professional in 1968. She beat former French Open champion Francesca Schiavone in the opening round, dropping only a game and hitting 13 winners to 8 unforced errors. In the second and third rounds, Williams easily dispatched Kazakhstan opponents, Galina Voskoboeva and Yaroslava Shvedova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nIn the Round of 16, Williams had a rematch of the Australian Open against Sloane Stephens, who surprisingly beat Williams in that event. In the first set, Williams broke first only to get broken back by Stephens in the 7th game. Williams then broke in the tenth game to take the set and cruised through the second set in a breadstick to avenge her loss at the Australian Open. Williams put up a ratio of 22 winners to 13 unforced errors. She then faced Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro, in the latter's birthday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0016-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nWilliams didn't drop a game, handing the Spaniard a double bagel loss; the first in a US Open since 1989, when 18-time major title winner Martina Navratilova did it to Manuela Maleeva. She again had a good ratio, with 20 winners to 9 unforced errors. In the final 4, Williams faced 5th seeded Li Na of China. Williams cruised past the Chinese with a bagel in the first round. Li then took an early break in the second, but Williams won four straight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0016-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nLi then served to stay in the match in the 7th game and saved 6 match points to make Williams serve it out, which Williams did in her 7th match point. For the first time in the event, Williams made more unforced errors of 20 to winners of 19. In the final, Williams took on second seed Victoria Azarenka in a rematch of last year's final. The pair exchanged breaks in the first two games. Williams then survived a long tenth game and broke the Belarusian the following game, then served out the set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0016-0004", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nIn the second set, Williams served for the match twice in the tenth and twelfth game, but got broken by Azarenka to push it to a tie-break, which Azarenka outlasted Williams 8\u20136. Williams then cruised through the final set dropping only a game, winning the match on her 2nd championship point. Williams made 36 winners and 9 aces to 35 unforced errors and 5 double faults. This was Williams' 5th US Open and 17th Slam title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0016-0005", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nIt was the first time Serena was able to defend a US Open title while also becoming the oldest women's US Open champion in the Open Era, surpassing the previous record set by Australia's Margaret Court. For winning the US Open Series, Williams received $2.6m and an additional million in prize money, the highest single paycheck in tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nIn the doubles competition, Serena paired with sister Venus for the second time in the year. They opened their US Open against the Spanish pairing of Silvia Soler Espinosa and Carla Su\u00e1rez Navarro. They lost the first set in a tie-break but they dominated the next two sets, dropping just three games, with a bagel in the second. They then competed against compatriots, Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears, and won both sets. Next, they played Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Lucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1, and quickly dominated the first set with a breadstick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0017-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nIn the second set, they served for the match in the tenth game but got broken and were pushed to a tie-break, which they won. In the quarterfinals, they took on world no. 1's Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci, and dominated them in straight sets. In the semifinals, the sisters faced the Czech pairing of Andrea Hlav\u00e1\u010dkov\u00e1 and Lucie Hradeck\u00e1, and were surprisingly beaten in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, China Open\nWilliams came into the China Open as the top seed and was assured to end the year at number 1. Williams began her quest for her 10th title against Elena Vesnina in the first round. The first set saw Vesnina breaking Williams twice; However, Williams broke the Russian three times to take the set. Williams then won the last five games to advance. In the second round, Williams took on Francesca Schiavone, in a rematch of the US Open first round where Williams only dropped a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0018-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, China Open\nIn the first set, it remained on serve until the tenth game when Williams broke Schiavone to take the set. In the second set, Schiavone served for it in the ninth game and had 2 set points but Williams broke and took the next three games to win the set and match. Williams then faced Maria Kirilenko in the round of 16 and defeated her Russian opponent in two very tight sets, with Williams winning both sets by breaking Kirilenko in the twelfth game. In the quarterfinals, Williams went against Caroline Wozniacki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0018-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, China Open\nWilliams won 10 of the first 11 games in the process, taking the first set. However, Wozniacki came back winning three games in a row to keep it just a break down. Williams kept the break lead and won the second set. In the semifinals, she took on 3rd seed Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska and won in straight sets; breaking Radwa\u0144ska twice on each set and facing only 1 break point in the last game and saving it. Williams then faced Jelena Jankovi\u0107 in the final. In the first set, Williams broke Jankovi\u0107 twice to take the set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0018-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, China Open\nIn the second set, Jankovi\u0107 broke in the third game, but took a medical timeout right after and lost the last five games to give Williams the title. This was Williams' 10th title of the year and her first China Open title since winning the first edition of the event in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 102], "content_span": [103, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, WTA Championships\nWilliams came into the Year-End Championships being assured to end the year at no. 1 and in a 10 match winning streak having won it in 2012 and 2009, while missing the 2010 and 2011 editions. She was grouped alongside Agnieszka Radwa\u0144ska, Petra Kvitov\u00e1, and Angelique Kerber in the red group. Her first match was against German Kerber. Williams broke at the 3rd game of the first set and held serve in the entire set to take the first. Williams then won the second set with a breadstick. Williams made 31 winners and 11 unforced errors in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 109], "content_span": [110, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0019-0001", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, WTA Championships\nIn her second match in her group, Williams faced Pole Radwa\u0144ska. Williams broke Radwa\u0144ska to wrap up both sets in the eight and tenth game respectively to go 2\u20130 in her group. In her final round robin match, she took on Czech Kvitov\u00e1. Williams fend off break points in the opening game and then broke Kvitov\u00e1 in the second and eight game to take a set lead and assured her a spot in the semifinals. The second set was tighter, Williams broke Kvitov\u00e1 in the fourth game and that was enough to win the set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 109], "content_span": [110, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0019-0002", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, WTA Championships\nWilliams hit 11 aces in the match. After finishing first in her group, Williams took on Jelena Jankovi\u0107 in the semifinals. Jankovi\u0107 took the initial lead breaking Williams in the fourth game, but Williams came back breaking the Serbian in the fifth and seventh game, and held in the tenth game to take the first set. In the second set, Jankovi\u0107 broke the American three times, whilst getting broken once to take the set breaking Williams in the eight game, this is the first set Williams lost in 11 consecutive straight set wins at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 109], "content_span": [110, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0019-0003", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, WTA Championships\nIn the deciding set, the first 3 games were breaks of serve, Williams then broke against in the fifth game. Williams served for it for the first time at the eight game but was broken, however, she closed it out serving it out in the tenth game in her 4th match point and saving a break point. Williams hit an even 40 winners and 40 unforced errors. In the final, Williams took on first time finalist and fourth seed Li Na. Li dominated the first set breaking Williams twice to take the set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 109], "content_span": [110, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0019-0004", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian Swing and Year-End Championships, WTA Championships\nWilliams took a quick lead in the second set taking the first three games, however Li came back winning the next three. However Williams dominated winning the final nine games, to take the sets at three and love to claim her fourth Year End Championships title and 11th title in the year. She also extends her winning streak at 15 at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 109], "content_span": [110, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Fed Cup\nWhile she didn't play in the United States' first round match against Italy, Williams represented United States in the Fed Cup against Sweden for a spot in the 2014 World Group. In her opening rubber, she faced Johanna Larsson and dominated her opponent winning both set with a loss of only two games in each in just 66 minutes. In her second rubber, Williams took on Sofia Arvidsson and just needed 56 minutes to a straight set victory to give United States a 2\u20131 advantage, which her sister Venus closed out when she beat Larsson to help US advance to the World Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235923-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Serena Williams tennis season, Yearly records, Head-to-head matchups\nOrdered by percentage of wins, as of WTA Tour Championships", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion\nThe 2013 Serendra explosion was an explosion that occurred in the Two Serendra condominium complex occurred in Taguig, Metro Manila, Philippines. The explosion killed at least 3 people, and another 5 were injured in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nInterior Secretary Mar Roxas confirmed that only three persons were killed and five were injured in Friday night's Two Serendra blast that rocked the Bonifacio Global City (BGC), in Makati last Friday. The Office of the Civil Defense, meanwhile, apologized for releasing wrong information on the number of fatalities from the condo blast. It earlier said that six people died in the explosion. The fatalities were identified as Salimar Natividad, driver of the Abenson delivery van along with two crew members Jeffrey Umali and Marlon Bandiola. Roxas said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe victims' closed van was crushed by a concrete wall that was blown off the Unit 501 of Two Serendra as they were passing by McKinley Parkway road. It then collided with a Hyundai Starex van driven by Orlando Agravante, who was unhurt. The explosion which happened at about 8 p.m. also injured Angelito San Juan, tenant of unit 501 of Two Serendra, who suffered burns. He was brought to the intensive care unit of the St. Luke's Medical Center, in BGC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe other injured victims were identified as Allen Poole, an American and tenant of unit 683 who suffered cuts from shattered glass, and three passersby identified as Louise Lorenzo, a 9-year-old girl; Janice Nicole Bonjoc; and 19-year-old Joy Garcia. Although bomb-sniffing dogs from the police and the Philippine Army did not detect any bomb residues from Unit 501, Roxas said they are not ruling out a possible bomb attack. Roxas said that the K9 dogs deployed never even barked nor stayed in a spot. He said that based on investigations, the explosion generated a fire that traveled between the floor levels of the condominium building. A used fire extinguisher was earlier found at unit 506.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe condo unit owner and the building's developer may be liable for negligence that resulted in a gas leak that led to the May 31 deadly explosion at Two Serendra condominium in Taguig, Interior and Local Government Secretary Mar Roxas said Thursday. Citing the findings of the inter-agency task force and foreign experts that looked into the incident, Roxas said the leak in Unit 501-B was caused by the \"unauthorized movement of the gas range (which) caused a detachment of the gas supply hose.\" The explosion occurred when the leak was ignited by a light switch, he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe tenant, one of four people who died as a result of the blast, was not alerted of the leakage because the \"vaporized\" LPG used in Serendra's pipeline system was odorless, Roxas added. That attitude of the Ayala Land developer and the cooking-gas supplier led to the blast that killed four people at the residential block Two Serendra in Taguig on May 31, Interior Secretary Mar Roxas said on Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe Ayala-owned Serendra Inc., in a statement issued Thursday, said that it had taken note of the findings of the interagency task force that investigated the explosion and that it remained \u201cconfident that government regulations and standards have been complied within the design and operation of Serendra.\u201d Serendra Inc. promised to work with the government for the improvement of those standards and adhere to any changes in regulations. \u201cOnce again, we wish to express our regret over the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0003-0003", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe conclusion of the IATF investigation will allow us to expedite the conduct of repairs and restoration of the damaged building so the affected residents can return to their units as the soonest possible time,\u201d the company said. An explosion ripped through an apartment on the fifth floor of Two Serendra at 8:30\u00a0p.m. on May 31, blowing off an entire wall and sending it flying across the road below. The wall crashed on a passing delivery van of a prominent chain of appliance stores, killing the vehicle\u2019s three occupants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0003-0004", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nFive others, including an American and a 9-year-old child, were injured. Angelito San Juan, the renter of the apartment who was vacationing from the United States, suffered serious burns and died in hospital a month later. The government investigation by the task force, led by Roxas, began on June 1. to continue, especially in this kind of sensitive matter [involving] the vaporized distribution system of gas,\u201d Roxas said, as he presented the final findings of the task force at a news conference in Camp Crame on Thursday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0003-0005", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nRoxas reiterated the previous finding of the task force that the blast that destroyed Unit 501-B in Two Serendra was not caused by a bomb, but by liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) that leaked from the main gas supply line of the building. Justice for victims Roxas said the task force identified the possible liabilities in the explosion of Makati Development Corp. (MDC), the property developer of Two Serendra, and Bonifacio Gas Corp. (BGC), the supplier of LPG to the building. Both companies belong to the Ayala Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0003-0006", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nAlso facing possible charges are the owner and caretaker of Unit 501-B, officials of RM Larido Construction Services, which renovated the apartment, and Two Serendra Inc. Gas range moved Citing the final task force report, Roxas said investigators discovered that the workers of RM Larido Construction Services, with the consent of the owner, Marianne Cayton-Castillo, moved the gas range in Unit 501-B by 22.9 centimeters from its original position when they renovated the apartment. Roxas said the paint drippings on the hose of the gas range, which connects it to the main gas line, showed that the hose was lying on the floor when the explosion happened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe investigators also noted that the steel clamp used to lock the hose connected to the gas range\u2019s nozzle was found far from where it should be, which meant that the workers did not properly refit the hose, \u201cThis is the proximate cause of the gas leak. We found out that the workers were not authorized to move the gas range. It was not part of the approved renovation works,\u201d he said. He said three employees of the construction firm admitted that they moved the gas range, even if it was not part of the renovation program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nThe accumulated gas fumes inside the room was ignited when the light switch was turned on, he added. Safety gadgets failed the explosion could have been prevented had the gas leak detector and automatic shutoff valve of the gas range, and the separate LPG leak detector gadget of the building functioned properly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0004-0002", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\n\u201cBut the gas leak detector and the automatic shutoff valve are connected to the main electrical line of the gas range, which was unplugged at the time of the incident,\u201d the building\u2019s only gas leak detector did not activate after a power outage in the area hours before the blast. Roxas said he had briefed the President on the final report of the task force, which would be submitted to the Department of Justice, Department of Energy, Department of Public Works and Highways and other governmental agencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0004-0003", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nForeign experts The government, Roxas said, sought the help of New York-based Kroll, Inc. Advisory Solutions, headed by certified fire investigator James William Munday, for an independent investigation of the blast. the government paid $67,500, or about P3 million, to Kroll, which had investigated similar blasts in other parts of the country. He said it would be up to the justice department to determine if the groups and individuals involved could be held liable for civil and criminal offenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235924-0004-0004", "contents": "2013 Serendra explosion, Overview\nAsked why the task force did not recommend the filing of charges against MDC, BGC and the others, Roxas said: \u201cThis is the first time that something like this happened in our country and that\u2019s why we focused on [the scientific investigation].\u201d \u201cIf what happened and other contributing elements constitute legal liabilities, it\u2019s better to let the lawyers determine them. If this was a brawl, stabbing or shooting incident, the police would know how to investigate it. But this is something more complex,\u201d he said. Roxas added: \u201cOur investigators were asked to ascertain facts based on science, not to include legal liabilities. That task belongs to the government prosecutors and the courts.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235925-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Setanta Sports Cup\nThe 2013 Setanta Sports Cup was the eighth staging of the annual all-Ireland football competition. It commenced on 11 February 2013 and ended on 11 May 2013 with the final played at the Tallaght Stadium, Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235925-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Setanta Sports Cup\nCrusaders were the defending champions, after they defeated Derry City 5\u20134 on penalties in the 2012 final, when the match ended 2\u20132 after extra time. However, this season they went out 4\u20131 on aggregate in the quarter-finals to Cork City. Shamrock Rovers were the eventual winners for the second time overall, following a comfortable 7\u20131 win over Drogheda United in the final. This season's competition was notable for the fact that all four semi-finalists represented the Republic of Ireland. It was also the sixth time in the eight competitions played thus far that the winner had been a League of Ireland club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235925-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Setanta Sports Cup, Qualifiers\nThe following clubs qualified to take part in this year's competition. The eight unseeded clubs entered in the first round, while the four seeded clubs entered in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235925-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Setanta Sports Cup, First round\nThe first round draw was made on 6 December 2012. Four League of Ireland and four IFA Premiership clubs played each other in the first round over two games with the winners qualifying for the quarter-finals. The first legs were played on 11 February 2013 and the second legs were played on 18 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235925-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Setanta Sports Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe winners of the four first-round games joined the four seeded teams in the quarter-finals. The first legs were played on 26 February and 4 March, while the second legs were played on 4 and 11 March 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235925-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Setanta Sports Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs of the semi-finals will be played on 16 April and the second legs on 22 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235926-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Setanta Sports Cup Final\nThe 2013 Setanta Sports Cup Final was the final match of the 2013 Setanta Sports Cup, an all-Ireland association football competition. The match took place on 11 May 2013 in Tallaght Stadium, home of one of the participating teams, Shamrock Rovers. Drogheda United were the other side to contest the final. Shamrock Rovers won the match 7\u20131 to win their first trophy under manager Trevor Croly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235927-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali\nThe 2013 Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali was the 28th edition of the Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali cycling stage race. It started on 20 March in Gatteo and ended on 24 March in Fiorano Modenese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235927-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali\nThe race was officially presented on 12 March 2013 in Sant'Angelo di Gatteo. It consisted of four full stages and two half-stages; the first stage, second half-stage (Stage 1b) was a particular team time trial in which each team was split into two separate mini-teams, with the final time taken on the third rider who crossed the finish line. This original time trial was won by Team Katusha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235927-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali\nThe race was won by Lampre\u2013Merida's Italian rider Diego Ulissi, who took the leader's red jersey by winning the second stage. His teammate Damiano Cunego was second in the General classification, was the winner of the Points classification, as well as the third stage. Colombian rider Miguel \u00c1ngel Rubiano (Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela) completed the podium. Alessandro Mazzi of Utensilnord Ora24.eu won the King of the Mountains classification, and Francesco Manuel Bongiorno (Bardiani Valvole\u2013CSF Inox) won the Young rider classification. Androni Giocattoli\u2013Venezuela was first in the Teams classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235927-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali, Teams\n25 teams were invited to take part in the race, including the ProTeams Lampre\u2013Merida, Cannondale, Astana and Team Katusha. The 25 teams were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235928-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Seve Trophy\nThe 2013 Seve Trophy by Golf+, the eighth edition of the Seve Trophy, was played 3\u20136 October at Golf de Saint-Nom-la-Bret\u00e8che in France. The team captain for Great Britain and Ireland was Sam Torrance, while the captain for Continental Europe was Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Olaz\u00e1bal. The contest took place at the same time as the 2013 Presidents Cup, unlike 2009 and 2011 when it was scheduled during the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup playoffs. Continental Europe won the tournament by 15 to 13, their first victory since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235928-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Seve Trophy, Format\nThe teams will compete over four days with five fourball matches on both Thursday and Friday, four foursomes matches on Saturday morning, a further four foursomes matches on Saturday afternoon and ten singles matches on Sunday. This means that a total of 28 points are available with 14\u00bd points required for victory. This will be the first Seve Trophy without any greensome matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235928-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Seve Trophy, Teams\nThe teams are made up of five leading players from the Official World Golf Ranking as of 23 September 2013 and five leading players (not otherwise qualified) from the Race to Dubai at the conclusion of the Italian Open (22 September 2013). There were a number of players (listed after each table below) who qualified for the trophy, but pulled out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235928-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Seve Trophy, Teams\nGonzalo Fern\u00e1ndez-Casta\u00f1o was a late replacement for Peter Hanson who withdrew from the Continental Europe team with a back injury. Hanson had qualified as one of the leading 5 players in the World Rankings (world ranked 39). After his withdrawal his place amongst the World Rankings qualifiers was taken by Nicolas Colsaerts who had previously qualified through the Race to Dubai list. Colsaerts' place in the Race to Dubai list was taken by Fern\u00e1ndez-Casta\u00f1o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235928-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Seve Trophy, Teams\nThe following players qualified but did not play: Justin Rose (world ranking - 5), Rory McIlroy (6), Graeme McDowell (11), Luke Donald (15), Lee Westwood (18), Ian Poulter (20) and Martin Laird (59).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235928-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Seve Trophy, Teams\nThe following players qualified but did not play: Henrik Stenson (world ranking - 4), Sergio Garc\u00eda (17), Jonas Blixt (35) and Martin Kaymer (42).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235928-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Seve Trophy, Sunday singles\nSimon Khan had to pull out of the event through to injury. Under the rules of the event a half was agreed, while Thomas Bj\u00f8rn sat out the singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 01:33, 10 September 2021 (Alter: template type. Add : title, magazine. Changed bare reference to CS1/2. Removed parameters. Some additions/deletions were parameter name changes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by BrownHairedGirl | Linked from User:BrownHairedGirl/Articles_with_bare_links | #UCB_webform_linked 5/657). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests\nOn 5 February 2013, protests began in Shahbag, Bangladesh following demands for capital punishment for Abdul Quader Mollah, who had been sentenced to life imprisonment, and convicted on five of six counts of war crimes by the International Crimes Tribunal of Bangladesh. Later demands included banning the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami party from politics including election and a boycott of institutions supporting (or affiliated with) the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests\nProtesters considered Mollah's sentence too lenient, given his crimes. Bloggers and online activists called for additional protests at Shahbag and joined the demonstration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests\nRuling party Awami League supported the protests. However, main opposition party the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) initially expressed its support for Jamaat-e-Islami, a political ally. But, the BNP cautiously welcomed the Shahbag protest, while warning the government not to make political mileage from a movement demanding capital punishment for war criminals. A counter-protest, questioning the validity of the tribunal and the protest movement and demanding release of those accused and convicted, was called by Jamaat-e-Islami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests\nDuring the protests, blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider was killed outside his house. On 1 March, five students of North South University were arrested who 'confessed' involvement in Rajib's killing. From the killing of Haidar, his and his fellow bloggers' writing regarding prophet Muhammad made public by Amaar Desh. Therefore, against those bloggers Hefazat-e-Islam was formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests\nOn 27 February 2013, the tribunal convicted Delwar Hossain Sayeedi of war crimes and sentenced him to death. Jamaat followers protested and there were violent clashes with police. About 60 people were killed in the confrontations; most were Jamaat-Shibir activists, and others were police and civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests\nThe movement received considerable criticism in Bangladesh and abroad for encouraging the revival of fascism in the country by the use of slogans inciting violence, being politically motivated, forcing students of the University of Dhaka to join, blocking the road to hospitals, violating dead bodies, and so on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context\nIn 1971 Bangladesh was the portion of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan known as East Pakistan. In the 1971 Liberation War of Bangladesh, East Pakistan fought West Pakistan for nine months. During this period the Indian Army which provided guerrilla training to Mukti Bahini, joined the war on 3 December 1971 in support of the liberation of East Pakistan. Armed conflict ended on 16 December 1971 through surrender of the Pakistani Armed Forces to the joint force of Bangladesh and India, resulting in the formation of the People's Republic of Bangladesh as an independent state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context\nAccording to the famous Blood telegram from the United States consulate in Dhaka (formerly known as 'Dacca') to the State Department, many atrocities had been committed by the Pakistan Army and its supporter Razakars and Al-Badar militia. Time reported a high-ranking US official as saying, \"It is the most incredible, calculated killing since the days of the Nazis in Poland.\" Estimates are that one to three\u00a0million people were killed, nearly a quarter of a million women were raped and more than ten\u00a0million people fled to India to escape persecution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context\nA paramilitary force known as the Razakars was created by the May 1971 Razakar Ordinance promulgated by Tikka Khan, the governor of East Pakistan. The ordinance stipulated the creation of a volunteer force, trained and equipped by the provincial government. Razakar (Bengali: \u09b0\u09be\u099c\u09be\u0995\u09be\u09b0), originally meaning volunteer, became a derogatory term among Bangladeshis due to the widespread killings of civilians and atrocities committed by the paramilitary during the war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context\nThe majority of East Pakistanis supported the call to create a free and independent Bangladesh during the Liberation War. However, Pakistani supporters and members of Islamic political parties, particularly Jamaat-e-islami(JIP) and its east Pakistan student wing Islami Chatra Sangha (ICS, Bengali: \u0987\u09b8\u09b2\u09be\u09ae\u09c0 \u099b\u09be\u09a4\u09cd\u09b0 \u09b8\u0999\u09cd\u0998, romanized:\u00a0Islami Chhatro Sh\u00f4nggho), the Muslim League, the Pakistan Democratic Party (PDP) Council and Nezam-e-Islami, collaborated with the Pakistani army to resist the formation of an independent Bangladesh. The students belonging to Islami Chatra Sangha were known as the Al-Badr force; people belonging to Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan, Muslim League, Nizam-e-Islami and similar groups were called Al-Shams, and the Urdu-speaking people (generally known as Bihari) were known as Al-Mujahid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, After the Independence\nAfter the independence, Bangladesh government locked up many Rajakars and defenders of Pakistan. However, In November 1973 Sheikh Mujibur Rahman issued a general pardon for all people who opposed the independence and helped the Pakistani Army, and eventually all prisoners were let go. However, Rahman banned all kinds of Islamic parties including the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami. Eventually the ban was lifted, and under Ershad Jamaat-e-Islami participated in 1986 election. They got 10 seats with 4.6% vote. In the 1991 election, which was the first free and fair election after independence, Jamaat got 18 seats out of 300 and gained 12.2% of vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, After the Independence\nAgainst Ghulam Azam who was Amir of Jamaat-e-Islami, Jahanara Imam organized the Ghatak-Dalal Nirmul Committee (Committee for Eradicating the Killers and Collaborators of '71), and she become a public face. The committee called for the trial of people who committed crimes against humanity in the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War in collaboration with the Pakistani forces. The Ghatak-Dalal Nirmul Committee set up mock trials in Dhaka on 26 March 1992 known as Gono Adalat (People's Court) and symbolically 'sentenced' persons they accused of being war criminals. Imam and others were reportedly charged with treason during the government of Bangladesh Nationalist party. In 1996 election, Jamaat's public support decreased and they got only 3 seats in that election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, After the Independence\nIn 2001 Election, BNP with 3 others parties including Jamaat-e-Islami wins the election. Jamaat got 17 seats. From 2001 to 2003, Amir of Jamat-e-Islami Motiur Rahman Nizami served as the Minister of Agriculture, then as the Minister of Industry from 2003 to 2006. And general secretary of Jamaat Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojaheed served the Ministry of Social Welfare between 2001 and 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) of 2010\nSince 2000, there has been growing demands in Bangladesh for justice related to war crimes committed during the 1971 struggle; the issue was central to the 2008 general election. The Awami League-led, 14-party Grand Alliance included this issue in its election manifesto. Its rival, four-party alliance (which included the BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami) had several leaders alleged to have committed war crimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) of 2010\nThe Grand Alliance won the election (held on 29 December 2008) with a two-thirds majority, based in part on its promise to prosecute alleged war criminals. On 29 January 2009 the new Parliament unanimously passed a resolution to prosecute war criminals. The government intended to use the 1973 law: the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act. The government worked to amend the law, updating it and incorporating in it other nations' experience. The amendments provided the legal basis for the trial of individuals and political parties that had committed war crimes during Bangladesh liberation war. The government was empowered to appeal tribunal decisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) of 2010\nOn 25 March 2010, the Awami-led government announced the formation of a three-member tribunal, a seven-member investigation agency, and a twelve-member prosecution team to conduct the trials under the ICT Act 1973. The panel of three judges included Fazle Kabir and Zahir Ahmed, with Mohammed Nizamul Huq as chairman. Abdul Matin, Abdur Rahim, Kutubur Rahman, Shamsul Arefin, Mir Shahidul Islam, Nurul Islam and M. Abdur Razzak Khan were appointed to assist the state prosecutors. Golam Arif Tipu was named Chief Prosecutor. Others prosecutors were Syed Rezaur Rahman, Golam Hasnayen, Rana Das Gupta, Zahirul Huq, Nurul Islam Sujan, Syed Haider Ali, Khandaker Abdul Mannan, Mosharraf Hossain Kajal, Ziad Al-Malum, Sanjida Khanom and Sultan Mahmud Semon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, Verdicts\nA formal charge was filed by the prosecution against Abdul Quader Mollah on 18 December 2011. He was charged with:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, Verdicts\nOn 5 February 2013, the ICT found Mollah guilty of crimes against humanity. He was sentenced to life imprisonment for the Alubdi and Ali killings and 15 years each for the Pallab, Meherunnesa and Taleb murders. The day before the verdict was announced, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami (of which Mollah is a leader), announced a nationwide dawn-to-dusk general strike for 5 February in protest of their leader's conviction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Historical context, Verdicts\nMany citizens (especially young people) were outraged that, given his crimes, Mollah was sentenced to life imprisonment rather than death. The verdict was criticised in social media, and a peaceful demonstration began at Shahbagh Square in Dhaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Protesters' demands, Reading of oath\nWe swear an oath that the leadership of the mass of people from the Gonojagaran Mancha (National Awakening Stage) will continue the movement from Teknaf to Tetulia until capital punishment is handed down to those Razakar and Al-Badr members who committed crimes against humanity like mass killing and rape in 1971. We take the oath that we will remain vocal, both on the streets and online, until the politics of the war criminals, Jamaat and Shibir, is banned and the citizenship of their members cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Protesters' demands, Reading of oath\nWe further take the oath that we will continue this demonstration and keep demanding trials, under a special tribunal, of those Razakars and Al-Badr activists who were convicted, and under trial, but freed after 1975. We swear that we will boycott the war criminals' business entities \u2013 Islami Bank, Ibn Sina, Focus, Retina and various other coaching centres. We know through these they collect money to continue with their anti-liberation activities. We will also boycott the academic and cultural organisations through which they are spreading anti-liberation sentiments among the children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Protesters' demands, Reading of oath\nIn brief, we will work for banning all the business, social and cultural organisations belonging to Razakars and Al-Badr activists. We swear that we will continue with our demand for stringent punishment of Jamaat and Shibir, who have committed crimes of sedition by threatening civil war, after making their immediate arrest by recognising them through video footage of news and newspaper pictures. We swear that we will boycott war criminals' mass media like Diganta Television, Daily Naya Diganta, Amar Desh, The Daily Sangram, Sonar Bangla Blog. We will not subscribe to the newspapers of the war criminals at any office or house. At the same time, we request the pro-liberation mass media to boycott the war criminals and their accomplices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Origins\nProtest began right after the verdict was announced. Student organisations started the protest immediately after the Judgement in the Shahbag square that was the actual call for people to gather in the Shahbag square within half an hour of the Judgement. It took half an hour to spread out the call for protest through different social media and later the satellite TV channels. BOAN and some other social and cultural organisations called for different programmes in the same venue who later worked together. Demonstrators gathered at Shahbag Circle; they painted murals on the road, drew cartoons, hanged effigies of war-crimes suspects and chanted slogans, with a vow to continue demonstrating until their demands were met.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Origins\nOn 7 February, demonstrations began at 8 am. Thousands of people gathered with banners, posters, Bangladeshi flags and placards in Shahbag with their demands. On Friday afternoon, a mass rally was held at Shahbag with an estimated attendance of more than 100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Origins\nOn 12 February, protesters observed three minutes of silence at 4 pm at Shahbag and all across Bangladesh. In Dhaka, traffic was stopped as thousands of people took to the streets, formed human chains and stood in silence. A Bangladesh Premier League game at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium halted for three minutes, as players and supporters observed the silence. Parliamentarians and the police also joined the protest. Bengali singer Kabir Suman wrote a song entitled \"Tin Minit\" (\"Three Minutes\") in honour of the silent protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Further developments\nOn 21 February, International Mother Language Day, the number of protesters reached a new high. Its leadership declared 26 March 2013, the Independence Day of Bangladesh, as the deadline for the government to ban Jamaat-e-Islami from politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Further developments\nThe government did not ban Jamaat-e-Islam from politics after the deadline was over. Seven protesters calling themselves the Shaheed Rumi Squad began a fast until death on 26 March at 10:30 pm in front of the National Museum, protesting \"inadequate government action\" to ban Jamaat in response to the Shahbagh protesters' ultimatum. The fasters said at a press briefing that they would send an open letter to Prime Minister Hasina during the 100th hour of their protests. More than 100 organisations expressed solidarity with the hunger strikers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Sentencing of Delwar Hossain Sayeedi\nOn 28 February the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, Nayeb-e-Ameer (vice-president) of Jamaat-e-Islami, to death for convictions on 8 out of 20 charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War. The protesters celebrated the sentence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Counter-demonstrations\nJamaat followers were enraged by the decision, claiming that the case against Sayeedi was politically motivated. His lawyer, Abdur Razzaq, accused authorities of preventing a key witness from testifying and intentionally slanting the process. \"This is a perverse judgment. It is inconceivable that a court of law awarded him a conviction. This prosecution was for a political purpose\", Razzaq said. Jamaat quickly called for a nationwide two-day strike, to start on 3 March. By afternoon, violence led by Jamaat-e-Islami supporters had erupted across Bangladesh. \"The Jamaat-e-Islami is fighting for its political survival\", said a spokesperson. By the end of the day thirty-five people were dead, including three police officers; an additional eight hundred were injured. According to the BBC, it marked \"the worst day of political violence in Bangladesh in decades\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 927]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Counter-demonstrations\nClashes between police and Jamaat-e-Islami workers continued on 1 March, spreading to the northern districts of Gaibandha and Chapai Nawabganj. Opposition leader Khaleda Zia criticised government \"brutality\" and Jamaat called for a demonstration in the capital, Dhaka. Security measures were increased to prevent the situation from escalating. The death toll rose to forty-four (including six policemen). Former prime minister and BNP member Khaleda Zia declared a nationwide dawn-to-dusk hartal for 5 March, and called for countrywide rallies on 2 March to protest what she called government corruption, misrule, oppression, and \"mass killings\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Counter-demonstrations\nViolent conflict continued on 2 March, with another four deaths and hundreds of injuries. In Chittagong district police opened fire on Jamaat-e-Islami protesters, leading to three deaths. In Nilphamari, a young person died in a clash between protesters and police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Counter-demonstrations\nOn 3 March, violence continued as the Jamaat-organised strike began. In Bogra Jamaat supporters attacked police outposts with sticks and homemade bombs, leading to at least eight deaths. In Godagari two deaths were reported in a similar incident, and three deaths were reported in the Joypurhat district. Violence continued in Chittagong as well, where Jamaat claimed that police opened fire without provocation. The government denied the charge, saying that violence against citizens and police would not be tolerated; three deaths were reported. \"People in the street are very, very afraid of Jamaat-e-Islam. I am scared\", reported an eyewitness in Dhaka. Jamaat supporters were accused to attack the Hindu citizens and their homes in many parts of the country, and torching Hindu temples, which was denied by Jamaat-e-Islami. More than 40 temples and many statues were destroyed and scores of houses set ablaze, leaving hundreds of people homeless throughout the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 1033]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Counter-demonstrations\nAmnesty International has urged the Bangladeshi government to provide better protection for minority Hindus. Abbas Faiz, the organisation's Bangladesh researcher, has noted that the attacks on the Hindu community were predicted and it was shocking that people were attacked because of their religion. Attacks on Hindu communities had been widespread during the 1971 liberation war of Bangladesh. The Pakistani Army, Razakar and Al-Badar (organised by and are former militant political wings of Jamaat-e-Islami) were involved in committing atrocities against the Hindu minority in East Pakistan (Bangladesh).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Development, Counter-demonstrations\nThe Islamist pressure group Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh, has accused several protesters of the Shahbagh of lampponing Muhammad, and making pornographic depictions of him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, Domestic response\nThe Shahbag protest has attracted people from all social strata to its cause. The Shahbag intersection at the center of the protests has been referred to as \"Generation Circle\" (Bengali: \u09aa\u09cd\u09b0\u099c\u09a8\u09cd\u09ae \u099a\u09a4\u09cd\u09a4\u09cd\u09ac\u09b0 Proj\u00f4nmo Ch\u00f4ttor) or \"Shahbag Square\", in a nod to the events which unfolded in Tahrir Square, Cairo. The protest spread from Shahbag to other parts of the country, with sit-ins and demonstrations in Chittagong, Rajshahi, Khulna, Sylhet, Barisal, Mymensingh, Rajbari, Rangpur, Comilla, Bogra, Narayanganj, Sunamganj, Noakhali and Narsingdi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, Domestic response, Political response\nState Minister for Law, Quamrul Islam, said that the verdict against Abdul Quader Mollah could have been different if people had taken to the streets sooner. The government is planning to file appeals with the Supreme Court contesting the sentence for Mollah. On 11 February the Cabinet approved proposed amendments to the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act 1973, introducing a provision for plaintiffs to appeal verdicts handed down by the tribunal. This amendment, if passed, would enable the state to appeal Mollah's life sentence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 71], "content_span": [72, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, Domestic response, Political response\nJamaat-e-Islami, which was already staging protests against the impending trial of its leaders, called for a general strike. Jamaat continues to demand that the international war crimes tribunal be stopped and its party leaders freed. Jamaat supporters had staged nationwide demonstrations with increasing frequency from November 2012 to February 2013, demanding the release of its leaders. Actions included firing gunshots, smashing and setting fire to vehicles and detonating homemade bombs. Violence was targeted at police stationed in the capital, Dhaka, and major cities such as Rajshahi, Cox's Bazar, Chittagong, Rangpur, Dinajpur and Khulna. Several Jamaat-Shibir activists were arrested during the strikes and confrontations with police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 71], "content_span": [72, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, Reaction from Bangladeshis abroad\nBangladeshis abroad have expressed solidarity with the protests through social media websites Facebook and Twitter. Demonstrations of solidarity have also taken place in Australia, Malaysia, Germany, and the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, Reaction from Bangladeshis abroad\nBangladeshis in New York City joined in a symbolic protest on 9 February at Diversity Plaza in Jackson Heights. A mass sit-in was organised by the Bangladeshi community in Sydney on 10 February at the International Mother Language Monument in Sydney Ashfield Park. At a rally at the Angel Statue in Melbourne, demonstrators signed a petition to Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina demanding death for war criminals. Bangladeshis in Taiwan also expressed their solidarity with the Shahbag protests on 10 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, Reaction from Bangladeshis abroad\nOn 10 February, Bangladeshi students gathered at Rutgers University in New Jersey to express solidarity with the Shahbag protests. Bangladeshi residents joined the students to express their support. Bangladeshi students at the University of Delaware and nearby residents demonstrated their solidarity with the Shahbag movement on 15 February at a busy intersection in Newark, Delaware. A candlelight vigil was held that evening for Rajib, a blogger and activist who was killed several hours before the demonstration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, Reaction from Bangladeshis abroad\nIn London, protesters at Altab Ali Park in solidarity for Shahbag were attacked by Jamaat-e-Islami supporters. Protests are held at the park every week by both sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Reactions, International response\nOn 18 February British Foreign Office minister Sayeeda Warsi hailed the Shahbag Square protests, describing them as peaceful, productive and non-violent. An article in the Fletcher Forum of World Affairs by Suzannah Linton on 27 February expressed concern about \"bloodlust in Bangladesh\" and called on the international community to steer the process towards international standards. William Nicholas Gomes, human rights activist and journalist criticised the shahabg protests. Indian government supported this movement from the first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Media coverage, Domestic\nIn Sreemangal, Moulvibazar cable operators in solidarity with the protests have stopped broadcasting the pro-Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami television channel Diganta Television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Media coverage, International\nThe BBC News, CNN, Yahoo! News, Reuters, Al Jazeera, The New York Times, The Independent and others have published stories on the protests; BBC Bangla has been closely following the events. Reuters photographer Andrew Biraj published \"live\" photos of mass demonstrations at Shahbag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Media coverage, Social media\nFacebook had played an important role in spreading news worldwide about events at Shahbag. A Facebook event was created calling for a protest at Shahbag; the human chain which went viral on 5 February 2013. Facebook was one of the main sources of information about Shahbag protest among its activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Media coverage, Social media\nBangladeshis used the Twitter hashtag \"#shahbag\" to provide live updates of the movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Outcome\nThe demonstration put pressure on the government to amend the International Crimes Tribunal Act so war criminals \"can be swiftly executed if convicted\". The cabinet also set a 60-day limit for the Supreme Court's Appellate Division to rule on appeals, to keep the cases moving. This means that those who have been convicted and sentenced to death could be executed this year if their verdicts survive appeal. In response to popular protests, Jute and Textiles Minister Abdul Latif Siddiqui said on 12 February that a bill is being drafted to ban Jamaat-e-Islami from Bangladeshi politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Outcome\nOn 17 September 2013, Bangladesh Supreme Court found Abdul Quader Molla guilty of murders and other war crimes and ordered his execution, executed on 12 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Slogans inciting violence\nDuring the movement, protesters used various slogans. These included \"Ekta ekta Shibir dhor, dhoira dhoira jobai kor.\" (\"Catch Shibir activists one by one, and slaughter them. \"), \"Rajakarer chamra, kutta diya kamra.\" (\"Make dogs chew on the skin of razakars. \"), among others, which were accused of promoting violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Political motivations\nSince the International Crimes Tribunal's inception on 25 March 2010, of the 83 people tried 52 were sentenced to death and 31 people were not. Those not sentenced to death included only three Jamaat leaders. The remainder included BNP leaders, former Awami League activists etc. The protests began when Jamaat leader Abdul Quader Mollah was not sentenced to death, due to the sentiment that war criminals deserves capital punishment. Even after the verdict of Ghulam Azam's 90-year sentence, a 24-hour nationwide strike was called in protest. Notably however, there were minimal protests when non-Jamaat leaders were not given death sentences. Consequently, critics say the protests were not motivated by seeking justice for victims of war crimes, but rather by the desire to see Jamaat's leaders hanged, Jamaat-e-Islami banned from politics, and Jamaat institutions 'boycotted', indicating the protests were politically motivated in nature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 1000]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Government sponsoring\nThe ruling party Awami League fully supported the protests, with the police helping in blocking roads until they ended. Security forces allegedly spent thousands of taka every day towards the leaders, and criticized opposition leader Begum Khaleza Zia and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party on multiple occasions. Members of Awami League's student wing Bangladesh Chhatra League joined the demonstrations too. Critics claim the movement was partially created by the government itself to gain public support for hanging Jamaat leaders to consolidate its power 42 years after the war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Violating dead bodies\nOn 25 October 2014, after the funeral of Golam Azam, a Shahbag movement's leader named Mahmudul Haque Munshi attempted to hurl a shoe at the vehicle carrying the coffin of Golam Azam, for which he was praised by fellow protesters. A number of critics opposed this however, condemning the action as promoting hatred and violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Vandalizing hospitals, banks and educational institutions\nShahbag protesters called for boycotting Jamaat-supported/sympathising institutions such as Islami Bank and Retina Coaching Centre. Eventually, many protesters vandalized and attacked those institutions too.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 93], "content_span": [94, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Enforced participation\nBangladesh Chhatra League were accused of enforcing students from various residential halls of the University of Dhaka to join the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Reviving neo-fascism in Bangladesh\nProtestors called for boycotting media outlets that did not support their views, including Diganta Television, Daily Naya Diganta, Amar Desh, and The Daily Sangram, which are newspapers and television networks that criticised the Awami League government. Eventually, the government banned Diganta Television on 6 May 2013. The Acting Editor of the Amar Desh newspaper, Mahmudur Rahman, was arrested on 11 April 2013, with the government closing down the newspaper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 70], "content_span": [71, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Reviving neo-fascism in Bangladesh\nCritics say that Shahbag protests were the beginning of fascism in Bangladesh, through which Awami League is still in power today.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 70], "content_span": [71, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Using under-aged children\nProtesters were accused of encouraging under-aged children to join in on the violent slogans as a means of accruing sympathy and public support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235929-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Shahbag protests, Controversy, Blocking the Hospital Road\nShahbag is home to many hospitals, including many of the largest ones of the city such Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University, BIRDEM General Hospital and Ibrahim Medical College. The blockage of this important and sensitive road by protesters for more than a month was accused of causing significant patient suffering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235930-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Challenger\nThe 2013 Shanghai Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Shanghai, China between 2 and 8 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235930-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235930-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Challenger, Singles main draw entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry as a lucky loser the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235931-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Challenger \u2013 Doubles\nSanchai Ratiwatana and Sonchat Ratiwatana were the two-time defending champion, and successfully defended their title against Lee Hsin-han and Peng Hsien-yin 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235932-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Challenger \u2013 Singles\nLu Yen-hsun was the defending champion but decided not to participate. Y\u016bichi Sugita defeated Hiroki Moriya 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235933-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai International Film Festival\nThe 2013 Shanghai International Film Festival was the 16th such festival devoted to international cinema held in Shanghai, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235933-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai International Film Festival, International Jury\nThe members of the jury for the Golden Goblet Award were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235934-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Masters\nThe 2013 Bank of Communications Shanghai Masters was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 16 and 22 September 2013 at the Shanghai Grand Stage in Shanghai, China. It was the third ranking event of the 2013/2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235934-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Masters\nJohn Higgins was the defending champion, but he lost 1\u20135 against Mark Davis in the last 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235934-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Masters\nDing Junhui won his seventh ranking title by defeating Xiao Guodong 10\u20136 in the final. This was the first time that two Chinese players had reached the final of a ranking event, but was also the first of three consecutive ranking finals between Asian players, all of which were won by Ding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235934-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Masters, Prize fund\nThe total prize money of the event was raised to \u00a3425,000 from the previous year's \u00a3400,000. The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235934-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Masters, Wildcard round\nThese matches were played in Shanghai on 16 and 17 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235934-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Masters, Qualifying\nThese matches were held between 7 and 10 August 2013 at the Doncaster Dome in Doncaster, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235935-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Rolex Masters\nThe 2013 Shanghai Rolex Masters was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the fifth edition of the Shanghai ATP Masters 1000, classified as an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2013 ATP World Tour. It took place at Qizhong Forest Sports City Arena in Shanghai, China from October 6 to October 13, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235935-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Rolex Masters, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235935-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Rolex Masters, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235936-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Rolex Masters \u2013 Doubles\nLeander Paes and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek were the defending champions, but \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek chose not to compete. Paes played alongside Daniel Nestor, but lost in the second round to Robert Lindstedt and Vasek Pospisil. Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo won the title, defeating David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20137(6\u20138), [10\u20132].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235937-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Rolex Masters \u2013 Singles\nNovak Djokovic was the defending champion and successfully defended his title by defeating Juan Mart\u00edn del Potro in the final, 6\u20131, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235937-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Rolex Masters \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235938-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Shenhua F.C. season\nThe 2013 Shanghai Shenhua season was Shanghai Shenhua's 10th season in the Chinese Super League and 51st overall in the Chinese top flight. They also competed in the Chinese FA Cup losing in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235938-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Shenhua 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235938-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Shenhua 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235939-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Shenxin F.C. season\nThe 2013 Shanghai Shenxin season is Shanghai Shenxin's 4th consecutive season in the Chinese Super League. They will also compete in the Chinese FA Cup starting in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235939-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Shenxin 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235939-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Shenxin 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235939-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai Shenxin F.C. season, Players, 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, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235940-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai shooting\nOn June 22, 2013, a man went on a killing spree in Shanghai, China. Six people died and four others were injured. The perpetrator allegedly beat to death a coworker at Guangyu fine chemical company in Shanghai's Baoshan District, and then shot to death one person in Pudong District. The perpetrator shot and killed one person in the Baoshan District, and then returned to the fine chemical company, where he shot to death three more people before being apprehended. The suspected perpetrator is 62-year-old Jieming Fan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235940-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai shooting, Details\nThe attacker allegedly beat a colleague to death at the Guangyu fine chemical company in the Baoshan district of the city. He retrieved a hunting rifle that had been hidden in his dormitory, and then asked a taxi cab driver to take him to Pudong District. When the cab stopped in the Pudong District, the attacker shot the driver to death and drove the vehicle back to Baoshan. In Baoshan, he shot and killed a soldier who was guarding the entrance to a barracks and stole his gun. The suspect then returned to the factory and shot dead three more people, including a manager who may have also been one of the factory's owners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235940-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shanghai shooting, Suspect\nThe suspected perpetrator is 62-year-old Fan Jieming. According to Shanghai police, the rampage may have been motivated by an economic dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235941-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shannons Nationals Racing Championships season\nThe 2013 Shannons Nationals Motor Racing Championships season was the eighth time that the Shannons Nationals Motor Racing Championships were held. The season began on 22 March 2013 at Sydney Motorsport Park and finished on 17 November 2013 at Sandown Raceway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235941-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shannons Nationals Racing Championships season\nThe 2013 Australian Manufacturers' Championship, 2013 Australian Saloon Car Series, 2013 Australian Superkart Championship, 2013 Australian Suzuki Swift Series, 2013 Kerrick Sports Sedan Series and the 2013 Kumho V8 Touring Car Series were all held exclusively on the Shannons Nationals calendar. Rounds of the 2013 Australian Drivers' Championship, 2013 Australian GT Championship, 2013 Porsche GT3 Cup Challenge Australia, 2013 PRB Motorsport Series and the 2013 Radical Australia Cup were also part of the Shannons Nationals schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests\nThe Shapla Square protests also known as Operation Shapla or Operation Flash Out by security forces refers to the protests, and subsequent shootings, of 5 and 6 May 2013 at Shapla Square located in the Motijheel district, the main financial area of Dhaka, Bangladesh. The protests were organized by the Islamist pressure group, Hefazat-e Islam, who were demanding the enactment of a blasphemy law. The government responded to the protests by cracking down on the protesters using a combined force drawn from the police, Rapid Action Battalion and paramilitary Border Guard Bangladesh to drive the protesters out of Shapla Square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests\nFollowing the events at Motijheel, protests in other parts of the country also broke out, during which 27 people died, although different sources report casualty numbers ranging from 20 to 61. The opposition party BNP initially claimed thousands of Hefazat activists were killed during the operation, but this was disputed by the government. Human Rights Watch and other human rights organizations put the total death toll at above 50. Initial attempts to dispute the chain of events were thwarted due to the government closure of two television channels, Diganta Television and Islamic TV, which were live telecasting the operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Background, 13 point demand\nIn early 2013, Hefajat-e Islam emerged as a pressure group composed of madrassah teachers and students, led by Shah Ahmad Shafi, rector of Hathazari Madrasah. The group became particularly active after allegations surfaced that some protesters in the Shahbag protests were involved in the publishing of content offensive to Muslims on blogs, including the depiction of Muhammad as a pornographic character. On 6 April 2013, its supporters made a long-march to promote their 13-point charter, which included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Background, 13 point demand\nThe government responded by saying that it had \"already met\" many of the group's demands. This included the arrest of four bloggers for making derogatory comments against the Muhammad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Background, Human Rights Watch warning\nOn 3 May 2013, Human Rights Watch issued warnings, based on information obtained from diplomatic missions regarding an imminent government crackdown, to security forces against committing excesses in the planned upcoming protests. It also urged the government to appoint an independent commission to investigate the killing of civilians since February, and prosecute those responsible for unlawful killings and use of force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Protests, 5 May\nHefazat-e-Islam organized a protest on 5 May demanding a trial of \"atheist bloggers\", and new legislation for the punishment for blasphemy. On 5 May 2013, Hefazat activists blockaded all six entrance routes to Dhaka from dawn. At noon, with the permission of Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP), activists entered Dhaka and started moving towards Baitul Mukarram Mosque to attend a prayer service. However, activists of Hefazat-e- Islam were attacked en route by armed Awami League activists, who were using the Gulistan Road to reach Shapla Square. In self defense, Hefazat activists counterattacked with bricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Protests, 5 May\nDuring the clashes, two television journalists were injured, apparently by Hefazat protesters. At about 3:00 pm, while Hefazat leaders were delivering speeches, the Secretary General of the Awami League, Sayed Ashraful Islam, demanded, via press conference, that they leave Dhaka. The opposition party Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) countered by asserting that Hefazat members had a democratic right to assemble and articulate their cause. During the unrest, Hefazat protesters allegedly attacked the offices of the Communist Party of Bangladesh at Motijheel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0005-0002", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Protests, 5 May\nHefazat claimed that their workers were unarmed and had come under attack by police and Bangladesh Chhatra League activists at Gulistan, Purana Paltan and Baitul Mukarram, and in front of the Communist Party offices. Hefazat supporters reportedly vandalized at least 50 vehicles and several buildings during their rally. They violently attacked others in front of the Awami League headquarter at Paltan, Dhaka, and allegedly set fire to a number of book stores near the Baitul Mukarram mosque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Protests, 6 May\nBy nightfall, many of the demonstrators had left the city, but about 50,000- 70,000 still remained in Shapla Square. There, they held prayers and were addressed by their leaders. At around 2.15 am on 6 May, security forces cut power to the area. At 2:30\u00a0a.m. about 5000 members of the security forces launched \"Operation Shapla\", or \"Operation Flash Out\", to remove them. The forces included members of the Bangladesh Police, RAB, and BGB. At first they used megaphones, asking the protesters to leave the area peacefully.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Protests, 6 May\nThen, moving in from three directions via Dainik Bangla, Fakirapool and Bangladesh Bank intersection, security forces used tear gas, rubber bullets, and sound grenades to disperse the demonstrators. Most fled the area, but others hid in side streets and buildings, where they were shot down by security forces. Hefazat alleges that the bodies were then picked up by garbage trucks and dumped outside the city. Ahmad Shafi was escorted away from a madrassa in Dhaka and flown to Chittagong. Police insisted he was not arrested but was leaving voluntarily.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Protests, 6 May\nOn the following morning, the protests spread across the country. In Narayanganj, students and teachers of a local madrasa held protests and blockaded the Dhaka-Chittagong highway. In return, police fired on the protesters, killing 27. In Hathazari Upazila, six people were shot dead by police, while in Bagerhat, a Hefazat member died in a clash between protesters and police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Casualties\nAccording to government estimates, the number of casualties in this operation was 11, including a few law enforcement members, while the Daily Star reported 5 deaths. Opposition parties initially claimed that 2000- 3000 of protesters had been killed, while Hefazat claimed about 1000 deaths. Human Rights Watch disagreed with Hefazat's claims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Casualties\nSome victims were bystanders, including a number of shopkeepers near the Baitul Mukarram, while most were Hefazat supporters, including children, who were killed by a blow to the head or gunshot wounds. Doctors at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital confirmed that many of those dead had been shot in the head. One policeman was also attacked in reprisal. According to Human Rights Watch, eyewitnesses saw 25-30 bodies that were confirmed dead. This included British activist and journalist David Bergman, who saw 24 bodies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Casualties\nThe Guardian reported 22 confirmed deaths, while an investigation conducted by Aljazeera revealed that 14 bodies of \"bearded men\" with gunshot wounds were buried, after the protests, at Dhaka's state-run cemetery. Human rights group Odhikar reported 61 deaths, but refused to reveal the names of the victims out of security concerns for their families. The UK Home Office estimates a total of no fewer than total of 50 deaths. Many individuals, including orphan children, were missing, which may have contributed to the discrepancies in casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Casualties\nBecause of the differing views, Human Rights Watch called for an independent body to investigate the protest deaths. Amnesty International demanded that Bangladesh government set up an independent and impartial investigation immediately to look into police excesses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Censorship\nDiganta TV and Islamic TV channel were broadcasting live footage of the raid on Motijheel when they were forced off-air on the dawn of 6 May. Diganta Television's chief reporter M. Kamruzzaman said that around 25 plain-clothed policemen and an official from the broadcast commission had entered their studios without warning. According to the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), the channels' reporting on raid on Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh contained \"exaggerated things, (had) given misinformation and called for breaking the law and attacking the law enforcers.\" Critics have accused the Sheikh Hasina government of using the Islamist issue to silence dissidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Domestic, Government\nIn response to the massacre allegations, police claimed the operation resulted in \u201czero casualty\u201d while 14 party leaders claimed it to be \"bloodless.\" Bangladeshi foreign minister Dipu Moni downplayed reports of inaccuracy in government figures and added that \"most of the people in the country doesn't even think that there was any controversy with the matter.\" On 19 June, Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina rejected the allegations, stating in Parliament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Domestic, Government\n... and that day's event was fully televised, you have seen how they have rubbed red dye onto their bodies and when police came and called them they got up and ran away ... we saw that dead bodies made a run for it! This kind of drama has been made there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Domestic, Government\nShe also blamed the attack on her arch rival Khaleda Zia, claiming: \u201cShe (Khaleda) is the instigator, she is the issuer of order.\u201d Awami League politicians blamed Qamrul Islam BNP, Jamaat and ISI of backing the protests. Hefazat was also criticized for bringing minors, who were also attacked by law enforcement agencies during the operation, to the protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Domestic, Opposition\nThe opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party compared the attacks to the Pakistani crackdown on 25 March and Jalianwala Bagh massacres. BNP leader MK Anwar called it a \"disastrous killing.\" In response, Detective Branch police raided the houses of city BNP convener Sadeque Hossain Khoka and Bangladesh Jatiya Party chairman Andaleeve Rahman Partha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Domestic, Hefazat-e-Islam\nWhile some Hefzat activists vowed \"revenge\" after the killings, Hefazat amir Shah Ahmad Shafi appealed for calm and called a general strike all over Bangladesh on 12 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Domestic, Others\nOn 10 June 2013, human rights group Odhikar, published a fact finding report claiming 61 deaths, but refused to provide any names of the victims report, citing security concerns for the families of the victims. The Ain O Shalish Kendro demanded impartial investigation \"to deal with them (Hefazat-e-Islam) more strategically and responsibly.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, International\nUN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon voiced concern over the killing of unarmed protesters in Bangladesh and requested the government to sit with religious and political leaders. US ambassador, Dan Mozena, has cautioned that all groups and individuals have rights to protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Lawsuits\nThe government filed 12 cases against Hefazat-e Islam leaders for murder, vandalism, arson and destruction of properties and other charges. Hefazat denies the charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Lawsuits\nOn 27 June, Martin F. McMahon & Associates, a US law firm representing two US-based organisations, Human Rights and Development for Bangladesh and Bangladeshi-Americans in Greater Washington DC filed cases in the International Criminal Court against 25 Bangladeshi ministers and security officials, including Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina for alleged \"torture, forced disappearance, extrajudicial executions and mass killings\", Ahmed Ziauddin, a Brussels based Bangladeshi lawyer who was accused of influencing the proceedings of Bangladesh's International Crimes Tribunal at the instruction of Bangladesh government, stated- \"I am not sure about the objective of it and I am sure those Washington-based organisations have some political motives. They may have been trying to create political hype since filing a complaint in the ICC does not mean proceedings of a case will start immediately\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 941]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235942-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Shapla Square protests, Reactions, Lawsuits\nOn 10 August, Police raided the office of Odhikar and arrested its general secretary Adilur Rahman Khan. In a press briefing Police said they found the list of 61 deaths and released it to the media. In a press statement, the US Department of State expressed deep concern over the arrest and demanded his immediate release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235943-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sheikh Jassim Cup\nThe 2013 Sheikh Jassim Cup was the 35th edition of the league cup competition for football teams from Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235943-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sheikh Jassim Cup, Groups\n18 clubs from the Qatar Stars League and Qatari 2nd Division were drawn into 4 groups. The winners of each group qualify for the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235943-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sheikh Jassim Cup, Groups\nAll group games are played in one 'host' location, instead of the common home and away format used in other competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235944-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shelbourne F.C. season\nIn 2013 Shelbourne F.C. competed in the League of Ireland Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235944-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shelbourne F.C. season, The Club, First Team Squad 2013\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, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235944-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shelbourne F.C. season, Premier Division, Summary\nLast updated: June 14, 2013. Source: League of Ireland Premier Division Fixtures", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235945-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shell-Pennzoil Grand Prix of Houston\nThe 2013 Shell-Pennzoil Grand Prix of Houston was the third and final doubleheader of the 2013 IndyCar Series season. The races took place on October 5 and 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235945-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shell-Pennzoil Grand Prix of Houston, Report\nThe starting scene of race 1 was a crash involving James Hinchcliffe and Ed Carpenter after Hinchcliffe's car suffered stall. The first race was won by Scott Dixon, who finished second to Team Penske driver Will Power in the second race. The second race was also notable for an accident on the final lap involving Dario Franchitti, E. J. Viso, and Takuma Sato. Franchitti suffered major injuries in the crash, and was forced to retire from racing due to the severity of the injuries he sustained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235946-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shimizu S-Pulse season\nThe 2013 Shimizu S-Pulse season was Shimizu S-Pulse's 21st consecutive season in J.League Division 1. Shimizu S-Pulse also competed in the 2013 Emperor's Cup and 2013 J.League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235947-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Shropshire Council election\nElections to Shropshire Council were held on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. These were the second elections to the unitary authority created as part of local government restructuring in Shropshire, following on from the previous elections in 2009. All 74 seats in the 63 electoral divisions (consisting of 53 single member divisions, nine 2-member divisions and one 3-member electoral division) were up for election across Shropshire. At the same time, all town and parish council contested elections took place, most notably including Shrewsbury Town Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235947-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Shropshire Council election\nThe Conservative party retained control of the Council, though with a slightly reduced majority, with 3 fewer seats compared to just prior to the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235947-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Shropshire Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235947-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Shropshire Council election, Previous council\nShropshire Council was Conservative controlled prior to the 2013 election, with 51 Conservative councillors immediately before the election. The Conservatives won 54 seats at the 2009 election, but lost three of these in by-elections during the term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235947-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Shropshire Council election, Previous council\nThe Liberal Democrats won 11 seats at the 2009 election, but increased their numbers to 14 during the term, gaining at the by-elections from the Conservatives. Labour had 7 seats, Independent Community and Health Concern one seat, and a final seat was held by an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235947-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Shropshire Council election, Previous council, Changes to divisions\nThere were no changes to division boundaries or seat allocations since 2009, but two divisions changed their names: 'Minsterley' to 'Rea Valley', and 'Selattyn and Gobowen' to 'Gobowen, Selattyn and Western Rhyn'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235947-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Shropshire Council election, Uncontested elections\nIn six electoral divisions the number of candidates nominated equalled the number of councillors to be elected, so these seats were uncontested. They were Corvedale, Shawbury, St Oswald, The Meres, Whitchurch North (two members), and Whitchurch South. The seven candidates elected unopposed were all Conservatives. This resulted in more than 20,000 people being refused a vote including the whole town of Whitchurch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235948-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Siaya local elections\nLocal elections were held in Siaya County to elect a Governor and County Assembly on 4 March 2013. Under the new constitution, which was passed in a 2010 referendum, the 2013 general elections were the first in which Governors and members of the County Assemblies for the newly created counties were elected. They will also be the first general elections run by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission(IEBC) which has released the official list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235949-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Siberia Cup\nThe 2013 Siberia Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Tyumen, Russia between 18 and 24 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235949-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Siberia Cup, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235950-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Siberia Cup \u2013 Doubles\nIvo Klec and Andreas Siljestr\u00f6m were the defending champions but chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235950-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Siberia Cup \u2013 Doubles\nSergey Betov and Alexander Bury won the title, defeating Ivan Anikanov and Ante Pavi\u0107 in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235951-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Siberia Cup \u2013 Singles\nEvgeny Donskoy was the defending champion, but lost to Illya Marchenko in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235951-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Siberia Cup \u2013 Singles\nAndrey Golubev won the title, defeating Andrey Kuznetsov in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235952-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Open\nThe 2013 Sibiu Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the second edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It takes place in Sibiu, Romania between 23 and 29 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235952-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235952-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a lucky loser the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 59], "content_span": [60, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235953-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Open \u2013 Doubles\nMarin Draganja and Lovro Zovko were the defending champions but chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235953-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Open \u2013 Doubles\nRameez Junaid and Philipp Oswald won the title, defeating Jamie Delgado and Jordan Kerr 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235954-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Open \u2013 Singles\nAdrian Ungur was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Jaroslav Posp\u00ed\u0161il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235954-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Open \u2013 Singles\nPosp\u00ed\u0161il went on to win the title, defeating Marco Cecchinato 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235955-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sibiu Rally Romania\nThe 2013 Sibiu Rally Romania, formally the 13. Sibiu Rally Romania, was the seventh round of the 2013 European Rally Championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship\nThe 2013 FIM Sidecarcross World Championship, the 34th edition of the competition, started on 1 April and finished after fourteen race weekends on 22 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship\nThe defending champions were Dani\u00ebl Willemsen from the Netherlands and his passenger Kenny van Gaalen. However, Willemsen competed with two different passengers in 2013, Robbie Bax and Belgian Dagwin Sabbe, but missed most of the season through injuries. The 2013 World Championship was won by Belgian driver Ben Adriaenssen and his Dutch passenger Ben van den Bogaart. It was the first title for both of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship\nAll up, 56 teams were qualified overall, from the World Champions in first spot with 610 points to the 56th placed Lithuanian team of Vytautas and And\u017eejus Racka on one point. The Dutch-Latvian combination of Etienne Bax and Kaspars Stupelis finished runners-up in the overall standings for the second year in a row while defending champion Dani\u00ebl Willemsen finished only 21st. Ben Adriaenssen and Ben van den Bogaart won eleven races and seven Grand Prix in the 2013 season, followed by Etienne Bax and Kaspars Stupelis with fourteen race wins and six Grand Prix. Of the other teams, only Jan Hendrickx with Elvijs Mucenieks won a Grand Prix. Hendrickx/Mucenieks also won one race during the season, while the French team of Valentin Giraud and Nicolas Musset won the remaining two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship\nThe Sidecarcross World Championship, first held in 1980 and organised by the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de Motocyclisme, is an annual competition. All races, manufacturers and the vast majority of riders in the competition being in and from Europe. Sidecarcross is similar to motocross except that the teams consist of two riders, a driver and a passenger. Races are held on the same tracks as solo motocross but the handling of the machines differs as sidecars don't lean. The majority of physical work in the sport is carried out by the passenger, who speeds up the sidecarcross in corners by leaning out. The coordination between the driver and the passenger are therefore of highest importance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Overview\nThe fourteen Grand Prix of the season were held in nine countries, Switzerland (two GP's), Ukraine, Germany (three GP's), Czech Republic, Netherlands, Belgium (two GP's), France (two GP's), Estonia and Latvia. In comparison to the 2012 edition, the Grand Prix of Russia was dropped off the calendar while the Ukrainian GP made a return and Switzerland, Belgium and Germany were each awarded an extra GP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nEvery Grand Prix weekend is split into two races, both held on the same day. This means, the 2013 season with its fourteen Grand Prix had 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. In case of a tie, the results of the second race as used to determine the winner. While this overall winner receives no extra WC points, they usually are awarded a special trophy. Race start times are set at 13:30 and 16:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nEvents typically consist of a qualifying competition, held in multiple stages on Saturdays of a race weekend while the two race events are typically held on Sundays. One exception to this rule is Easter weekends, when the races are held on Easter Monday. Race weekends can consist of additional motocross or quart support races as well, but the FIM stipulates that the World Championship races have priority. Riders have to be provided with at least one 30 minute free practice season, which will be timed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0006-0001", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nA race can consist of up to 30 starters and the qualifying modus is dependent on the number of entries. Up to 32 entries, it will be held in one group split into two sessions of 30 minutes each. Above 32 entries, the starter field will be sub-divided into two groups through ballot and the current standings. Each qualifying group can consist of up to 30 racers. Should there be more than 60 entries, a pre-qualifying has to be held. Of the riders in the two groups, the top-twelve directly qualify for the races. The remaining teams then go to a second-chance qualifying, in which the best six advance. The riders placed seventh and eighth remain in reserve should one of the qualified teams not be able to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nThe FIM stipulates that all drivers must be of a minimum age of 18 while passengers have to be at least 16 years old to compete, but no older than 50. Riders older than 50 have to provide a certificate of medical fitness to be permitted to compete. The driver has the right to exchange his passenger under certain conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nThe engines permitted in the competition in 2013 were 2-stroke from 350 to 750 cc or 4-stroke up to 1,000 cc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nStarting numbers for the season are awarded according to the previous seasons overall finishing position of the driver. Current or former World Champions have however the right to pick any number they wish, except the number one which is reserved for the current World Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nThe competition is open for motor cycles with two-stroke engines from between 350 and 750cc and four-stroke engines of up to 1,000cc. Each team is permitted the use of two motorcycles with the possibility of changing machines between races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nThe FIM does not permit radio communication between riders and their teams. Outside assistance during the race on the course is not permitted unless it is through race marshals in the interest of safety. Limited repairs in the designated repair zone during the race are permitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nThe first twenty teams of each race score competition points. The point system for the 2013 season was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Prize money\nIn 2013 prize money was awarded to all rider scoring points, with \u20ac300 going to each race winner, \u20ac250 to the runners-up, gradually declining from there, with \u20ac50 going to all teams placed 12th to 20th. Additionally, every team qualified for the race plus the two reserve teams receive \u20ac500 in travel compensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Retirements\nAt the end of the 2013 season a number of long-term competitors retired from the competition, the most successful of those being Latvian Maris Rupeiks, active since 1998 with a third place in 2005 as his best result, and Swede Henrik S\u00f6derqvist, active since 1997 with a third place in 2001 as his best result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235956-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidecarcross World Championship, Classification, Manufacturers\nParallel to the riders championship, a manufacturers competition was also held. In every race, only the best-placed rider of every make was awarded points in this competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235957-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidekicks Premier season\nThe 2013 Sidekicks Premier season was the first season of the Premier Arena Soccer League affiliate of the Dallas Sidekicks professional indoor soccer club. The Dallas Sidekicks, a team in the Professional Arena Soccer League, launched Sidekicks Premier as a developmental affiliate to allow rookies and prospects to perform in a structured setting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235957-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidekicks Premier season\nSidekicks Premier, a South Central Division team, played their home games in the Inwood Soccer Center in Addison, Texas. The team was led by head coach Tatu with assistant coaches Mike Powers and Caesar Cervin. Team owner Ronnie Davis coached the team for one away game, the July 7th match against the Alamo City Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235957-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidekicks Premier season, Season summary\nThe team finished the 8-game regular season with a 7\u20131 record, placing second in the South Central Division, just behind Austin FC who finished with a 7\u20130\u20131 record. The team qualified for post-season play but elected not to travel to California for the league playoffs. A 2014 summer season was planned but cancelled after the team was unable to secure a suitable venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235957-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidekicks Premier season, Player roster\nAs of July 14, 2013Note: 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, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash\nThe June 2013 Sidon clash in June 2013 was part of the Syrian Civil War spillover in Lebanon, and involved the Lebanese Army and Sunni militants in the city of Sidon, Lebanon. Clashes between the followers of militant preacher Ahmed Al-Assir resulted in the deaths of 18 soldiers, 25\u201340 al-Assir gunmen, two civilians, and according to some sources, four Hezbollah fighters. The clashes were the deadliest since the Syria-related internal conflict in Lebanon began in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Background\nThe Syrian civil war has heightened sectarian tensions within Lebanon, particularly between Sunni and Shia Muslims, many of whom support opposing sides and have entered the conflict in large numbers. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah announced on May 25 that Hezbollah would openly support President Bashar al-Assad's forces in fighting the insurgency in Syria. Some Sunni leaders in Lebanon have likewise at various points in time called for Jihad against the Assad government in Syria, and urged Lebanese to join.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Background\nIn June 2013, clashes broke out in an eastern suburb of Sidon after several people attacked, threw stones at, and shattered the windows of a car belonging to Amjad al-Assir, the brother of Hezbollah critic and hard-line cleric Sheik Ahmad al-Assir. Al-Assir then gave Hezbollah a one-week ultimatum to vacate apartments occupied by the group's supporters in the mostly Sunni city. Clashes broke out between gunmen backing Hezbollah and Sheik Al-Assir, both sides wielding automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades. Officials stated that the gunmen fighting al-Assir's followers were believed to be Hezbollah sympathizers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Background\nLebanese army troops deployed in the area of the fighting, which subsided after several hours. The military called on gunmen to withdraw immediately from the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Fighting\nOn 23 June 2013, heavy street fighting erupted between the Lebanese Army, with Hezbollah military backing, and gunmen loyal to Al-Assir, with a clash at an Army checkpoint near the Abra complex that houses the Bilal bin Rabah Mosque. McClatchy News and the Times of London reported that Hezbollah forces backed the army. Roads were later blocked in other parts of the country, and the army came under fire in the Ain el-Hilweh camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Fighting\nThe next day, the Lebanese army launched a crackdown on the pro-Assair militia attacking houses near his Mosque in Sidon from which Assair operates. At least four tanks and several army vehicles were destroyed. Lebanese Army commandos seized a complex controlled by gunmen loyal to Sheikh Ahmad Assir. Assir reportedly fled the complex at around 10 a.m., shortly after the Army stormed the premises which the military gradually gained control over throughout the day. 22 bodies were pulled out of Assir's mosque after the Army captured it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Fighting\nSources said soldiers were still trading gunfire with snipers located on the rooftops of nearby buildings. Ahmed al-Assir was still at large with the Army having orders to capture or kill him after he was accused of killing soldiers in \"cold blood\". 65\u201370 gunmen, including several non-Lebanese nationals, reportedly either surrendered or were captured by Army units during the raid on the complex. Lebanon's military prosecutor issued arrest warrants against Assir and 123 of his followers. The warrants included the names of Assir's brother, and singer Fadl Shaker, who gave up his singing career to follow Al-Assir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Fighting\nThe raid on the compound at noon came after an attempt by a group of Salafi preachers to mediate a truce reached a dead end, with the Army determined to continue its operations until Assir was captured and his followers crushed, the sources said. Some sources claimed Hezbollah fighters had backed the Lebanese Army, but this was strongly denied by Lebanese Defence Minister Fayez Ghosn, who insisted the army fought alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Fighting\nOverall, at least 50 people died during the fighting. 17\u201318 soldiers, 25\u201340 militants and reportedly four Hezbollah fighters were killed. Two civilians were killed, including a bodyguard of a cleric, who tried to reach the fighting to negotiate a ceasefire. 100\u2013128 Lebanese soldiers, 60 pro-Assir militants, over 50 civilians and reportedly 15 Hezbollah fighters were wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Aftermath\nPartly as a result of Assir's calls for help while holed up in his mosque in Sidon, thousands of youths in the outskirts of a slum in Cairo, Egypt attacked a Shia gathering there and killed its leader and three of his followers. Assir denounced the army as Shia stooges and urged soldiers to defect from the Lebanese army and join him, but this was condemned by the grand mufti of Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235958-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Sidon clash, Aftermath\nAfter McClatchy News and the Times of London reported that the Lebanese Army had fought alongside Hezbollah in the battle, the Army threatened legal action against news institutions that made such reports. Shortly after those threats, video of Hezbollah fighting alongside the Army was broadcast on Lebanese television. The Army also came under fire from human rights activists for the videotaped beating of one detainee from the battle and the death during questioning of a second arrestee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235959-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Silverstone GP2 and GP3 Series rounds\nThe 2013 Silverstone GP2 and GP3 Series rounds were a set of GP2 Series and GP3 Series motor races held at the Silverstone Circuit in Silverstone, United Kingdom on 29 and 30 June 2013 as the fifth round of the 2013 GP2 Series season and as the third round of the 2013 GP3 Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235959-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Silverstone GP2 and GP3 Series rounds\nSam Bird took back-to-back Feature Race victories while Jon Lancaster of Hilmer Motorsport won his first race of the season in the Sprint race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235959-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Silverstone GP2 and GP3 Series rounds\nAs for GP3, both Jack Harvey and Giovanni Venturini won the Feature and Sprint races respectively resulting in both drivers earning their first victories of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235960-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sindh provincial election\nProvincial elections were held in the Pakistani province of Sindh on 11 May 2013, alongside nationwide general elections and three other provincial elections in the provinces of Punjab, Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The remaining two territories of Pakistan, Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, were ineligible to vote due to their disputed status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235960-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sindh provincial election\nThe Pakistan Peoples Party, led by Syed Qaim Ali Shah, despite losing almost 10% of its vote, returned victorious in this election, losing only one seat overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235960-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sindh provincial election, Background\nPrior to this election, the Pakistan Peoples Party and Muttahida Qaumi Movement were in a coalition government with each other despite the fact that the PPP had enough seats to be able to form a government by themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235960-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sindh provincial election, Campaign\nOverall, the election campaign for the Pakistan Peoples Party was based mainly on garnering support in Sindh, while the Muttahida Qaumi Movement campaign was mainly based in Karachi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235960-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sindh provincial election, Campaign\nThe Pakistan Peoples Party ran on the platform of praising the nationalisation and welfare programs since they took office in 2008, although the Muttahida Qaumi Movement campaigned more on the Muhajir Nationalist side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235960-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sindh provincial election, Results\nFollowing the elections, the party positions in the assembly remained largely the same, with slight changes. New additions into the assembly included Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, a welfarist, anti-establishment party led by former cricketer Imran Khan, who emerged as the second largest party in Karachi and gained 4 seats. Despite significant drops in the percentage vote share, the change in the assembly composition was not visible, and the Pakistan Peoples Party was able to form a government in Sindh for the ninth time in its existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup\nThe 2013 Singapore Cup was the 16th season of Singapore's annual premier club football tournament organised by Football Association of Singapore. Due to sponsorship reasons, the Singapore Cup is also known as the RHB Singapore Cup. Warriors FC, then known as Singapore Armed Forces FC, were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup\nThe final was played at Jalan Besar Stadium in Kallang, Singapore. Home United, who had finished as quarter-finalists last year, won by defeating S.League rival Tanjong Pagar United 4\u20131. This was Home's sixth Singapore Cup title, previously winning it in 2000, 2001, 2003, 2005, and 2011. Together with 2013 S.League champions Tampines Rovers, Home United fills the 2014 AFC Cup spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup\nThe defending champions Warriors were eliminated in the preliminary round, thus becoming the first team to leave the competition as title holders at this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Prize money\nFor the 2013 edition, Football Association of Singapore (FAS) increased the prize money for the champions, runners-up and second runners-up. A base fee of S$2,000.00 was awarded to losers in the preliminary round. For teams which failed to reach the semi-finals, FAS awarded S$4,000. Thereafter, the third and second runners-up receive a total of S$10,000.00 and S$40,000.00 (up from S$20,000.00) respectively, while the champions and runners-up receive S$100,000.00 (up from S$80,000.00) and S$60,000 (up from S$40,000.00) respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Teams\nA total of 16 teams participated in the 2013 Singapore Cup. Twelve of the teams were from domestic S.League and the other four were invited from the Philippines, Cambodia and Laos. Global FC, Boeung Ket Rubber Field and Lao Police Club are the champions of their respective countries' leagues in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Format\nThe sixteen teams were drawn into two distinct pools in the preliminary round. They will play against one another in a single leg knockout basis. Winners of this round will progress and advance to the quarter-finals. Thereafter, matches are played in two legs with the exception of the one-match finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Round and draw dates\nUnlike previous editions where teams were drawn with a clear route to the final, clubs will now be drawn on a round-by-round basis. The clubs competing in each round of the competition will be drawn in pairs, with the tie to be played in a knockout format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Round and draw dates\nAll draws are held at Football Association of Singapore headquarters in Kallang, Singapore unless stated otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Preliminary round\nIn the preliminary round, teams were drawn into two distinct pools. They will play against one another in a single leg knockout basis. The draw for the preliminary round was held on 1 May 2013. The matches will played from 26 May to 1 June 2013. Winners of this round will progress and advance to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Knockout phase\nIn the knockout phase, teams play against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The draw for the quarter-finals was held on 4 June 2013. The draws for the semi-finals, third place playoff and final were held on 17 September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 22, 23, 24 and 25 July, and the second legs were played on 26, 27, 28 and 29 July 2013. Winners of this round advance to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235961-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 22, 23, 24 and 25 July, and the second legs were played on 26, 27, 28 and 29 July 2013. Winners of this round advance to the final, while the losers will vie for the third place in the third place playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix\nThe 2013 Singapore Grand Prix (formally known as the 2013 Formula 1 SingTel Singapore Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race that was held on Sunday, 22 September 2013 at 20:00 SST by the Marina Bay Street Circuit in Marina Bay, Singapore. The race was the thirteenth round of the 2013 season, and marked the 6th running of the night race, the Singapore Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix\nSebastian Vettel took his most dominant victory statistically. He took pole position, led every lap, scored the fastest lap, and won by more than 32.6 seconds; his third Grand Slam. With a nearly perfect start and good handling of the safety car situation, Fernando Alonso took second position from seventh on the grid. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, despite a back injury and a start from 13th, climbed up to the final podium position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix\nNico Rosberg, who started on the front row alongside Vettel, was caught out by a failed tyre strategy to finish fourth while British teammate Lewis Hamilton followed him home for 5th place. Felipe Massa took sixth, over a minute behind the race winner while Jenson Button slipped down the order in the last few laps to finish seventh with Sergio P\u00e9rez, Nico H\u00fclkenberg and Adrian Sutil picking up the final points places. The results meant that Vettel again increased his championship lead to 60 points over Fernando Alonso with Lewis Hamilton a further 36 points behind and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen two behind Hamilton's total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Background\nThe circuit layout was revised for the 2013 race, with the removal of the \"Singapore Sling\" chicane at Turn 10. The corner was condensed down to a single change in direction, with the large kerbs that had been used to mark the chicane removed entirely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Background\nTyre supplier Pirelli brought its white-banded medium compound tyre as the harder \"prime\" tyre and the red-banded supersoft compound tyre as the softer \"option\" tyre, as opposed to the previous year where soft and supersoft selection were provided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Qualifying\nPirelli stated that their supersoft tyres are two seconds faster per lap than their medium compound, which meant that the teams had to establish a good tyre strategy for the weekend. Reigning triple world champion Sebastian Vettel took command in the final two practice sessions, while Lewis Hamilton was the fastest man in the first session. Hamilton's teammate Nico Rosberg and Romain Grosjean were also strong contenders for pole position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q1\nThe two Red Bull drivers and Grosjean successfully qualified for the next session with the medium compound tyres, leaving their three sets of supersoft tyres unused for the following two sessions. The two drivers from Caterham and Marussia as well as Pastor Maldonado and Paul di Resta were eliminated during this session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q2\nThe biggest surprise of Q2 was the elimination of Lotus's Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. It was later revealed that the Finn suffered from a trapped nerve in his lower back on a quite bumpy circuit. Sauber's Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez qualified for Q3 for the first time in his young Formula One career. His teammate Nico H\u00fclkenberg was on pace for a Q3 appearance as well, but the German suffered a DRS issue during his final flying lap, resulting in a Q2 exit. It was the first time this season that H\u00fclkenberg could not out-qualify his teammate. Both Mercedes drivers qualified for Q3 on the set of supersoft tyres they previously used in Q1, which means that they joined Vettel, Grosjean and Mark Webber as the drivers who still had two sets of new supersoft tyres for Q3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q3\nThe five drivers with two unused sets of supersoft tyres went out on track early in the session for a first flying lap. Vettel was by far the fastest man of that group, lapping in 1:42.841, more than six-tenths of a second faster than Rosberg. As a result, the defending world champion elected to stay in the pits, while the others all went on track, either for a first or a second flying lap, except Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez, who opted to save his tyres for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Qualifying, Q3\nWhat seemed to be a guaranteed pole position for Vettel proved to be very uncertain as the German watched Webber posting the fastest first sector time, quickly followed by successive fastest second sector times by Rosberg and Grosjean. Vettel's time still stood by less than a tenth, ahead of Rosberg and Grosjean. Webber took fourth in front of Hamilton. The Ferrari duo could only manage sixth and seventh, with Felipe Massa in front of Fernando Alonso. Jenson Button had to settle for eighth, while the impressive Daniel Ricciardo posted yet another Q3 appearance with ninth. Guti\u00e9rrez started in tenth place after not posting a lap time to save his tyres for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Race\nThe race began Sunday, 22 September 2013 at 20:00 SST. Sebastian Vettel started from pole ahead of Nico Rosberg with Adrian Sutil the only driver starting on the medium compound 'Prime' tyre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Race\nRosberg got a better start than Vettel into the first corner but ran wide allowing Vettel back through. Fernando Alonso who started seventh got a good start to move up to third. Vettel gained a five-second advantage over Rosberg in the first three laps and continued to pull away as Rosberg also pulled away from Alonso. Mark Webber overtook Romain Grosjean early on using DRS to move back up to fourth. Lewis Hamilton had a bad start falling behind both Ferraris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0009-0001", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Race\nHe overtook Massa back soon after but the move was deemed to be an illegal overtake by the stewards as it took place off the track, meaning he had to give the position back. After the first few laps Vettel led from Rosberg, Alonso, Webber, Grosjean, Massa, Hamilton, Button, H\u00fclkenberg and P\u00e9rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Race\nKimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen who started 13th and had a bad back quickly moved up the order overtaking Esteban Guti\u00e9rrez and Daniel Ricciardo who both started in the top 10. Webber chased down Alonso before being instructed to stay around two seconds behind Alonso so he would not overheat his tyres or engine. The race was then mostly uneventful as Vettel extended his lead to around seven seconds before R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen became the first driver to stop on lap 11. This sparked a chain reaction showing the tyres had not lasted as long as expected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0010-0001", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Race\nHamilton jumped Massa in this first round of stops. Paul di Resta kept going until lap 21 before stopping to change his worn option tyres and in doing so slowed down Alonso and allowed Webber, Grosjean and Rosberg to bunch up behind Alonso. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen used his early stop to move into the points ahead of H\u00fclkenberg, P\u00e9rez and Button but at the front Vettel stretched out the lead even further to over 10 seconds until Ricciardo, Vettel's Red Bull teammate for 2014, crashed under the grandstand bringing out the safety car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0010-0002", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Race\nThis meant that the safety car had been used in every Singapore Grand Prix. Shortly after the safety car came in, Grosjean had pneumatic problems in his engine and have to retire after a failed rescuing repair attempt. Vettel quickly pulled away from the rest by about two seconds per lap until he is able to pit without losing the lead. Di Resta was running in 10th before he crashed into the barriers. Webber's car discovered a water leak which slowed him down before it caught fire on the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 31], "content_span": [32, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Post-race\nAlonso stopped in the middle of Turn 7 to pick up Webber, who had retired on the final lap of the race. The stewards gave reprimands to the both of them for their actions. Crucially, Webber earned his third reprimand of the season, thus triggering an automatic 10-place grid penalty at the next race in Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235962-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Grand Prix, Post-race\nA controversy developed after some spectators booed at Sebastian Vettel during the podium ceremony, prompting the TV interviewer Martin Brundle to break off and tell the jeering crowd to be quiet politely. The crowd's behaviour, which was not the first such incident directed at Vettel during the 2013 season, drew condemnation from Red Bull team principal Christian Horner, fellow driver Lewis Hamilton and former world champion Niki Lauda, among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup\nThe 2013 Singapore League Cup (known as the Starhub League Cup for sponsorship purposes) is a cup competition played in the month of June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup\nThe draw for the Cup was held on Sunday, 12 May 2013 at the Football Association of Singapore's headquarters in Jalan Besar Stadium, Singapore. Apart from the teams in the S.League which participated in the Starhub League Cup, the 2013 edition also saw an NFL side qualify for the cup draw following a playoff between four sides: Singapore Recreation Club and Singapore Cricket Club, who are the NFL Division 1 Champions and Runners-up, and Admiralty Football Club and Sporting Westlake FC, who are the NFL Division 2 Champions and Runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup\nAdmiralty FC made it through to the tournament proper; after trailing 0-1 they scored three goals to defeat Singapore Recreation Club 3-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup\nThe League Cup semi finals, League Cup final and Plate final were originally scheduled to be played on 20 June 2013 and 23 June 2013 respectively but were postponed to September 2013 in view of the worsening haze conditions in Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Preliminary Playoffs\nThe semi-finals of the preliminary playoffs were played on 5 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Preliminary Playoffs\nAdmiralty FC beat Singapore Cricket Club 2-1 in the first semi-final, while Singapore Recreation Club edged out Sporting Westlake 1-0 in the other semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Preliminary Playoffs\nThe final of the preliminary playoffs was held on 12 May 2013 at 5pm, just before the League Cup draw was held at the same venue. Admiralty FC prevailed against Singapore Recreation Club despite going behind after 21 minutes; the Wolves triumphed after former S.League players, Jonathan Xu and Guntur Djafril, as well as former football reality show First XI contestant, Haziq Sudhir, each scored a goal to reverse the score in Admiralty's favour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Preliminary Playoffs\nAs an added incentive for the NFL side, a $2,000 prize money was also presented to the winning team on top of successfully progressing into the 2013 StarHub League Cup. This new move by the S.League is aimed at giving NFL teams an opportunity to experience the professional competitiveness level of a cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, First round\nThe 2013 Starhub League Cup draw was held at Jalan Besar Stadium on 12 May 2013 following Admiralty FC's victory over Singapore Recreation Club, ensuring the NFL Division One side's inclusion in the 2013 edition of the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, First round\nHarimau Muda B, Woodlands Wellington, Home United and preliminary playoff winners Admiralty FC were drawn into Group A, while Tampines Rovers, Courts Young Lions and Tanjong Pagar United made up Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, First round\nAlbirex Niigata (S), Hougang United and Geylang International were drawn into Group C and Brunei DPMM, Balestier Khalsa and Warriors F.C. made up Group D, which is also known as the \"Cup Winners\" group due to the three being the previous season's RHB Singapore Cup winners, League Cup Plate winners and League Cup winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, First round\nThe League Cup was originally scheduled to be played within the month of June in a round robin format with the original fixtures announced by FAS on 21 May 2013. However, due to the haze conditions in Singapore, the League Cup semi finals, League Cup final and Plate final, which were originally scheduled to be played on 20 June 2013 and 23 June 2013 respectively, were postponed to September 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Preliminary stage\nGroup A: Admiralty FC (Preliminary Playoff Winners), Harimau Muda B, Home United, Woodlands Wellington", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Preliminary stage\nGroup B: Young Lions FC, Tampines Rovers, Tanjong Pagar United", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Plate Competition\nLike the 2012 edition of the League Cup, the second runners-up from each group will face each other in the semi-finals of the League Cup Plate Competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235963-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore League Cup, Plate Competition\nThe winners will go on to meet each other in the League Cup Plate Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235964-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore Super Series\nThe 2013 Singapore Super Series was the sixth super series tournament of the 2013 BWF Super Series. The tournament was held in Singapore from 18\u201323 June 2013 and had a total purse of $200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks\nThe 2013 Singapore cyberattacks were a series of cyberattacks initiated by the hacktivist organisation Anonymous, conducted partly in response to web censorship regulations in Singapore. A member of Anonymous, known by the online handle \"The Messiah\", claimed responsibility for spearheading the attacks. On 12 November 2013, James Raj was charged in a Singapore court as the alleged \"Messiah\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Background\nOn 1 June 2013, a set of web censorship regulations drafted by the Media Development Authority became effective in Singapore. Under the new rules,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Background\nwebsites with at least 50,000 unique visitors from Singapore every month that publish at least one local news article per week over a period of two months ... will have to remove 'prohibited content' such as articles that undermine 'racial or religious harmony' within 24 hours of being notified by Singapore's media regulator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Background\nIn response to concerns regarding the new rules, government officials responded that they \"do not impinge on internet freedom\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nOn 28 October 2013, the attacks began with the People's Action Party's Community Foundation's webpage being hacked, followed by the official website of the Ang Mo Kio Town Council. Site administrators locked the site thereafter and a police report was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nTwo days later, a purported member of Anonymous uploaded a four-minute-long video on YouTube, in which he, wearing a Guy Fawkes mask, threatened to \"bring down key infrastructure in Singapore\". He also urged Singaporeans to don red and black on 5 November as well as black out their Facebook profile pictures. In the video, he made reference to The Messiah, who he called \"one of [Anonymous'] comrades\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nThe Straits Times news reporter Irene Tham posted a critique of the video on her newspaper blog. In retaliation, the Messiah defaced the blog, its title being changed to \"Dear ST [Straits Times]: You just got hacked for misleading the people!\". The Messiah edited the article to state that Tham had misconstrued his speech, \"conveniently modifying the sentence 'war against the Singapore government' into 'war against Singapore'.\" He also urged Tham to either apologise within two days or resign from her job as a result of her \"blasphemous lies\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nLater on, in an email to Yahoo Singapore, The Messiah said", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nwe reached out to our comrades from other fractions [sic] who together with us performed DNS poisoning on the .gov.sg sites, taking them down for a period of time. But there must have also been some patching that was done as some of our favourite point of entries into their networks seemed to be fixed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nOn 3 November, the website of the Seletar Airport was hacked. Its webpage replaced with a black and green background with an image in the middle resembling a skull wearing a hood. The site resumed normal operations 30 minutes after the hack was first noticed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nOn 5 November, the Twitter and YouTube accounts of Singaporean entertainer Ridhwan Azman were hacked. According to posts from the compromised account, this was in retaliation for \"dissing the legion\". Apart from this incident, Anonymous did not carry out any other major activity, contrary to its promise to ignite a massive protest on that date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nTwo days later, the hacktivists hacked into and vandalised a subpage on the website of Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, following Lee's vow to bring The Messiah and his accomplices to justice. It was later found that Mohammad Azhar Bin Tahir and Mohammad Asyiq Bin Tahir were responsible for the attacks. Additionally, the webpage of the Istana was hacked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Incidents\nOn 20 November, the websites of 13 schools, which were hosted on a single server, were reportedly defaced between 3:30pm to 5pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Reception\nNews of the cyberattacks were picked up by international news outlets, including the South China Morning Post, The Huffington Post, Time, The Star, and The Jakarta Post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Reception\nRegarding the hacking of the Ang Mo Kio Town Council's website, Member of Parliament Ang Hin Kee dubbed it as \"malicious\", promising to boost the page's security system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Reception\nAfter the release of the YouTube video, the Government IT Security Incident Response Team immediately released an alert to all the Singaporean government agencies. The Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore responded in an official statement, \"We are aware of the video, and the police are investigating the matter.\" The Singapore Press Holdings (SPH), of which The Straits Times is a subsidiary, promptly took down the blog which was hacked into and filed a complaint to the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Reception\nSingaporean politician and Deputy Chairman of Singapore's Parliamentary Committee for Communications and Information, Baey Yam Keng, offered, \"We do not know what the hacker's capabilities are, so it's important for us to take this very seriously.\" Bertha Henson, who operates Breakfast Network, a Singaporean news outlet, felt that The Messiah's action would \"make the government seem right, that we [independent website operators] are just troublemakers.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Reception\nPrime Minister Lee Hsien Loong pledged to hunt down the team responsible for the cyberattack, stating, \"It is not a laughing matter. It's not just anything goes, and you're anonymous, therefore there's no responsibility. You may think you are anonymous. We will make that extra effort to find out who you are.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235965-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Singapore cyberattacks, Reception\nThe cyberattacks were featured in the tenth episode of the 2015 season of Crimewatch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235966-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sioux City Bandits season\nThe 2013 Sioux City Bandits season was the team's fourteenth overall, thirteenth as the Sioux City Bandits and first as a member of the Champions Professional Indoor Football League (CPIFL). One of ten teams in the CPIFL for the inaugural 2013 season, the Bandits finished the regular season with a 10-2 record to earn the number one seed in the playoffs, in which they lost on a missed last-second field goal to the Salina Bombers, 29-28 in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235966-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sioux City Bandits season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated July 10, 201329 Active, 0 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235967-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sioux Falls Storm season\nThe 2013 Sioux Falls Storm season was the team's fourteenth season as a professional indoor football franchise and fifth in the Indoor Football League (IFL). One of just nine teams competing in the IFL for the 2013 season, the Sioux Falls Storm were members of the United Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235967-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sioux Falls Storm season\nLed by head coach Kurtiss Riggs, the Storm played their home games at the Sioux Falls Arena in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Sioux Falls entered the 2013 season following consecutive wins in the league's \"United Bowl\" championship game in 2011 and 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235967-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sioux Falls Storm season\nAfter early season struggles, 36-year-old former MVP quarterback Terrance Bryant returned under center. Bryant had quarterbacked the team to their United Indoor Football titles from 2005-2008 and had his number 5 retired. Bryant returned as number 15. The Storm finished the regular season 10-4 and earned home field throughout the playoffs. Sioux Falls defeated Cedar Rapids 44-20 in the United Conference Championship to return to the United Bowl. The Storm won a back-and-forth United Bowl over Nebraska 43-40, capturing their third straight IFL title and seventh overall indoor football title. Bryant was named MVP of the United Bowl after throwing four touchdowns in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235967-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sioux Falls Storm season, Off-field moves\nShortly before the 2013 season began, the owner of the Cheyenne Warriors died which forced that team to suspend operations and the IFL to revise its schedule to accommodate the now 9-team league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235967-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sioux Falls Storm season, Roster\nRookies in italics updated March 26, 201325 Active, 1 Inactive, 0 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship\nThe 2013 Six Nations Championship, known as the 2013 RBS 6 Nations because of the tournament's sponsorship by the Royal Bank of Scotland, was the 14th series of the Six Nations Championship, the annual northern hemisphere rugby union championship. It was contested by England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship\nIncluding the competition's previous incarnations as the Home Nations Championship and Five Nations Championship, it was the 119th edition of the tournament. Wales won the tournament for the second time in two years, the first time they had won back-to-back championships since their 1978 and 1979 wins. France collected the wooden spoon by finishing last for the first time since 1999. It was also the first time every team managed to win at least 3 competition points (the equivalent of a win and a draw or three draws) since 1974.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Participants\n2 Except the round 3 match as he was suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Overview\nAt the start of the 2013 Six Nations Championships England were favoured to win by many pundits after they beat the world champion New Zealand team in December 2012. France, enjoying a winning streak prior to the competition, were also considered strong contenders. In contrast defending champions Wales had suffered seven consecutive defeats (4 versus Australia) and were without their regular head coach Warren Gatland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Overview\nExpectations regarding England and Wales were confirmed in the first round of matches, played on 2 February, with England enjoying a convincing 38\u201318 victory against Scotland and Wales losing 22\u201330 against Ireland despite a Welsh comeback from 3-30 down just after half time. France however were upset in their first game, going down 23\u201318 against Italy. The following week both England and Wales won their matches, against Ireland and France respectively. Scotland meanwhile beat Italy 34\u201310 in the other game, their first Six Nations victory since 2011. In round three Wales defeated Italy 9\u201326 and England beat France 23\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0003-0002", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Overview\nIn the remaining match, Scotland defeated Ireland for a second consecutive victory. Wales won their round four clash against Scotland 26-13 and in the process achieved a record fifth consecutive away win in the Six Nations. England remained undefeated after beating Italy 18-11. Ireland and France tied 13\u201313, giving France their first points in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Overview\nEngland having won all four matches to this point (on 8 points) and Wales with three victories (6 points) meant that their match against each other in the final week, on 16 March, would determine the champions. A victory by Wales would give them two points and put them on equal footing with England. If they won by more than seven points they would move ahead on points differential and retain the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Overview\nEngland were slight favourites heading into the game due to their unbeaten run, although Wales had the advantage of a more experienced side and playing at home in the Millennium Stadium. Going into the final round Scotland were on 4 points, Ireland on 3, Italy on 2 and France on 1. Italy ended up beating Ireland and Scotland lost to France, giving Scotland and Italy 4 points each (with Scotland finishing ahead on points differential) and Ireland and France 3 points each (with Ireland finishing ahead on points differential). France ended up with the wooden spoon, the first time they had finished last in the competition since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Overview\nWales defeated England by an emphatic 30\u20133, their biggest ever win over England. At half time Wales had just a 9-3 lead, with three penalties to fullback Leigh Halfpenny against one from England's Owen Farrell. The first 20 minutes of the second half saw Wales score points through a try to winger Alex Cuthbert, and another penalty goal to Halfpenny. This gave them a comfortable 17-3 lead heading into the last quarter of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Overview\nWales fly half Dan Biggar dropped a goal, which was then followed by a second try to Cuthbert in the 66th minute to put the game beyond England. Biggar kicked a final penalty with 10 minutes to go to give Wales their 30\u20133 victory. Wales coach Rob Howley described the victory as a better achievement than their 2012 Grand Slam and Welsh captain Sam Warburton described the win as the \"best moment\" of his career. England coach Stuart Lancaster admitted that his side \"didn't turn up\" to their final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures\nAs with the 2012 Six Nations Championship, there were no Friday night fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 1\nTouch judges:Jaco Peyper (South Africa)Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (France)Television match official:Graham Hughes (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 1\nTouch judges:J\u00e9r\u00f4me Garc\u00e8s (France)Francisco Pastrana (Argentina)Television match official:Nigel Whitehouse (Wales)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 1\nTouch judges:Wayne Barnes (England)Leighton Hodges (Wales)Television match official:Gareth Simmonds (Wales)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 2\nTouch judges:John Lacey (Ireland)Leighton Hodges (Wales)Television match official:Marshall Kilgore (Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 2\nTouch judges:Alain Rolland (Ireland)Francisco Pastrana (Argentina)Television match official:Giulio De Santis (Italy)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 2\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (France)Television match official:Iain Ramage (Scotland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 3\nTouch judges:Alain Rolland (Ireland)Pascal Ga\u00fcz\u00e8re (France)Television match official:Geoff Warren (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 3\nTouch judges:John Lacey (Ireland)Leighton Hodges (Wales)Television match official:Jim Yuille (Scotland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 3\nTouch judges:J\u00e9r\u00f4me Garc\u00e8s (France)Greg Garner (England)Television match official:Eric Gauzins (France)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 4\nTouch judges:Glen Jackson (New Zealand)Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa)Television match official:Giulio De Santis (Italy)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 4\nTouch judges:Wayne Barnes (England)Greg Garner (England)Television match official:Nigel Whitehouse (Wales)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 4\nTouch judges:Nigel Owens (Wales)Mathieu Raynal (France)Television match official:Simon McDowell (Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 5\nTouch judges:Romain Poite (France)Glen Jackson (New Zealand)Television match official:Jim Yuille (Scotland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 5\nTouch judges:Craig Joubert (South Africa)John Lacey (Ireland)Television match official:Marshall Kilgore (Ireland)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Fixtures, Round 5\nTouch judges:George Clancy (Ireland)Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa)Television match official:Carlo Damasco (Italy)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Media coverage\nIn the United Kingdom, BBC One televised the all matches live apart from the round five match between France and Scotland which was televised live on both BBC HD and BBC Two. There was also a forum show on the BBC Red Button for satellite, cable and Freeview viewers after several matches. Four days after the conclusion of the tournament, there was a highlights programme called \u201cWales v England: We Did It!\u201d shown at 10:50pm on BBC One in Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Media coverage\nIn Wales, Wales matches were televised live in Welsh by S4C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Media coverage\nElsewhere, the tournament's matches were televised live by RT\u00c9 in Ireland, France T\u00e9l\u00e9visions in France, Sky Italia in Italy, ESPN in Australia, New Zealand, Pacific Islands and Japan, SuperSport in South Africa, ESPN+ in Latin America, ESPN Brasil in Brazil, Setanta Sports Asia in Southeast Asia, Dolce Sport in Romania, Nova Sports in Greece, Sport TV in Portugal, Sport 1 in eastern Europe as well as Channel 9, Arena Sport TV and Canal+.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235968-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship, Media coverage\nIn the United States, BBC America televised one match from each week live while Universal Sports televised all the matches in delay as did Sportsnet World in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads\nThe 2013 Six Nations Championship was a rugby union tournament played from 2 February to 16 March 2013. It was the 14th annual Six Nations Championship since the addition of Italy to the initial five of England, France, Ireland, Scotland and Wales, and the 119th season of the competition overall. Teams were permitted to name squads of unlimited size, but typically named between 30 and 35 players in their initial selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads\nAll ages, caps and clubs accurate as of 2 February 2013, the first day of the tournament. Additions to each squad following the initial announcements are indicated by an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, England\nEngland head coach Stuart Lancaster named an initial 33-man squad for the tournament on 9 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, England\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, France\nFrance head coach Philippe Saint-Andr\u00e9 named a 33-man squad for the tournament on 11 January 2013. Adrien Plant\u00e9 replaced Ga\u00ebl Fickou and Hugo Bonneval replaced Vincent Clerc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, France\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Ireland\nIreland head coach Declan Kidney named an initial 33-man squad for the tournament on 27 January 2013. Flanker Rhys Ruddock, centre Darren Cave, wing Andrew Trimble and fullback Robbie Henshaw were added to the squad on 5 February, following injuries to Peter O'Mahony, Gordon D'Arcy and Keith Earls. Prop Stephen Archer and fly-half Ian Madigan were added to the squad on 7 March, following injuries to Tom Court and Jonathan Sexton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Ireland\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Italy\nItaly head coach Jacques Brunel named a 30-man squad for the tournament. Mauro Bergamasco was added to the squad on 18 February after captain Sergio Parisse was given a 30-day ban for the red card he received playing for his club side Stade Fran\u00e7ais in a Top 14 match against Union Bordeaux B\u00e8gles on 16 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Italy\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Scotland\nScotland interim head coach Scott Johnson named a 35-man squad for the tournament on 14 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Scotland\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Wales\nWales interim head coach Rob Howley named a 36-man squad for the tournament on 15 January 2013, including five uncapped players. Lock Alun Wyn Jones was called into the squad on 12 February 2013 after recovering from injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235969-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Championship squads, Wales\nNote: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235970-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Six Nations Under 20s Championship\nThe 2013 Six Nations Under 20s Championship was a rugby union competition held between February and March 2013. England won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235971-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Six-red World Championship\nThe 2013 Six-red World Championship (often styled the 2013 SangSom 6-red World Championship for sponsorship and marketing purposes) was a six-red snooker tournament held between 2 and 7 September 2013 at the Montien Riverside Hotel in Bangkok, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235971-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Six-red World Championship\nMark Davis defended his title, which he won in 2012, by defeating Neil Robertson 8\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235971-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Six-red World Championship, Prize money\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235971-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Six-red World Championship, Round-robin stage\nThe top four players from each group qualified for the knock-out stage. All matches were best of 9 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235972-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Skate America\nThe 2013 Hilton HHonors Skate America was the first event of six in the 2013\u201314 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan on October 17\u201320. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2013\u201314 Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235972-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Skate America, Eligibility\nSkaters who reached the age of 14 before July 1, 2013 were eligible to compete on the senior Grand Prix circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235972-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Skate America, Entries, Changes to initial lineup\nOn September 30, 2013, Evan Lysacek announced that his injury would force him out of Skate America. He was replaced by Jason Brown. Vanessa James / Morgan Cipres withdrew and were replaced by Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro. Brian Joubert and Denis Ten also withdrew, and no substitutes were announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235973-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Skate Canada International\nThe 2013 Skate Canada International was the second event of six in the 2013\u201314 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Harbour Station in Saint John, New Brunswick on October 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 2013\u201314 Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235973-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Skate Canada International, Eligibility\nSkaters who reached the age of 14 by July 1, 2013 were eligible to compete on the 2013 senior Grand Prix circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235973-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Skate Canada International, Entries, Changes to initial lineup\nOn September 26, 2013, it was reported that Yuna Kim withdrew because of a foot injury. Courtney Hicks was named to replace her. Kiira Korpi also withdrew and was replaced by Natalia Popova. Yuko Kavaguti and Alexander Smirnov withdrew due to an injury to Smirnov. They were replaced by Haven Denney and Brandon Frazier. Alena Leonova withdrew due to a leg injury. No replacement was announced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 67], "content_span": [68, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235974-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sky Blue FC season\nThe 2013 Sky Blue FC season was the team's fourth season of existence. Sky Blue played the 2013 season in National Women's Soccer League, the top tier of women's soccer in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235974-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sky Blue FC season, Background\nThe foundation of the National Women's Soccer League was announced on November 21, 2012, with Sky Blue FC selected as a host for one of the eight teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235974-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sky Blue FC season, Match results, Standings, Results summary\nLast updated: 31 August 2013Source: 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 66], "content_span": [67, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235974-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sky Blue FC season, 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, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235975-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Skycity Triple Crown\nThe 2013 Skycity Triple Crown was a motor race meeting for the Australasian sedan-based V8 Supercars. It was the sixth event of the 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship. Three races were held during the race meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235975-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Skycity Triple Crown\nJamie Whincup of Triple Eight Race Engineering continued his recent form by winning the 60/60 Sprint race on Saturday. His luck would turn on Sunday, however, with a drive-through penalty in the final race dropping him to nineteenth. David Reynolds, driving for Rod Nash Racing, showed good pace, taking two pole positions, though his best result would only be a third place in the third race. Ford Performance Racing's Mark Winterbottom scored his first win of the season in the second race while Whincup's team-mate Craig Lowndes won the third race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235975-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Skycity Triple Crown\nThe Holden Racing Team's James Courtney found form, taking a pole position and two podium finishes before retiring in the final race. The event also saw the best finishes for both Nissan and Mercedes-Benz, with Rick Kelly and Tim Slade finishing fifth and sixth respectively in the 60/60 Sprint race. German driver Maro Engel also scored his best result, with a ninth place in the third race, which was marred by a multi-car crash on the first lap which eliminated seven cars and caused the race to be shortened by eleven laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235976-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Skyrunner World Series\nThe 2013 Skyrunner World Series was the 12th 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, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235976-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Skyrunner World Series\nFor the first time it is not assign an overall title but only those in the category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235977-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slavic Cup\nThe 2013 Slavic Cup is a regional invitational tournament for national teams in women's association football. The tournament was held from 7 to 11 March 2013 in the Croatian cities of Rovinj and Pore\u010d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235978-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak Cup Final\nThe 2013 Slovnaft Cup Final was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Slovak Cup, the 44th season of the top cup competition in Slovak football. The match was played at the \u0160tadi\u00f3n MFK Ru\u017eomberok in Ru\u017eomberok on 1 May 2013 between M\u0160K \u017dilina and \u0160K Slovan Bratislava. \u0160K Slovan Bratislava won 2\u20130 and Slovan have a chance acquire double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235978-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees: Radom\u00edr Sluk Martin Vindi\u0161Fourth official: Du\u0161an Kuba\u010dkaAdditional assistant referees: Vladim\u00edr Vnuk M\u00e1rio Vlk", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235979-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak Open\nThe 2013 Slovak Open was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 14th edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Bratislava, Slovakia between 4 and 10 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235979-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak Open, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235980-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak Open \u2013 Doubles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Dlouh\u00fd and Michail Elgin were the defending champions but Dlouhy chose not to compete. Elgin partnered with Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k and was defeated by losing finalist Gero Kretschmer and Jan-Lennard Struff, who in turn lost to Henri Kontinen and Andreas Siljestr\u00f6m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235981-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak Open \u2013 Singles\nLuk\u00e1\u0161 Rosol was the defending champion but lost to Luk\u00e1\u0161 Lacko in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235982-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak regional elections\nElections were held in Slovakia's eight self-governing regions on 9 November 2013. Elected were Regional Governors and City Councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235982-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak regional elections\nIt was held on basis of 2 rounds if candidate haven't gained 50\u00a0% of votes, if he gained the required percents, there would not be runoff. Only three candidates got elected in the first round, in Pre\u0161ov, \u017dilina, and Tren\u010d\u00edn Regions. There was runoff in Ko\u0161ice, Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica, Nitra, Trnava, and Bratislava Regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235982-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovak regional elections\nSix of the regional presidencies were won by centre-left Direction \u2013 Social Democracy (Smer), with Bratislava Region being carried on by incumbent Governor Pavol Fre\u0161o of Slovak Democratic and Christian Union \u2013 Democratic Party. The biggest surprise came in Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica Region, where leader of the far-right People's Party \u2013 Our Slovakia, Marian Kotleba, got to the second round of elections to face off with incumbent Governor Vladim\u00edr Ma\u0148ka of Smer. He then defeated Vladim\u00edr Ma\u0148ka in the second round and won the runoff by 55,5\u00a0% (71 397 Regional votes) and became Governor of Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica Region, and also ended as candidate with most votes to City Council of Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica (8678 votes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235983-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovenian Football Cup Final\nThe 2013 Slovenian Football Cup Final was the final match of the 2012\u201313 Slovenian Cup, the 22nd edition of the Slovenian Football Cup, the top knockout tournament of Slovenian football and the second most important football competition in the country after the Slovenian PrvaLiga championship. The match was played on Wednesday, 29 May 2013 at the Bonifika Stadium in Koper, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235983-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovenian Football Cup Final, Venue\nThe match was played at the Bonifika Stadium, a 4,047 all-seater stadium in Koper, which replaced Arena Petrol, Ljudski vrt and Sto\u017eice Stadium, where the previous eight finals were held. In addition, this was the first Slovenian cup final held in the Slovenian Riviera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235983-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovenian Football Cup Final, Background\nThe final was played between the two Styrian teams, Maribor and Celje, both competing in the Slovenian PrvaLiga. This was the second time Maribor and Celje met in the cup final, having faced each other in the final during the 2011\u201312 cup edition, where Maribor won their seventh cup title after a penalty shootout. Celje previously competed in six finals, but managed to win only once, when they defeated Gorica in the 2004\u201305 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235983-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovenian Football Cup Final, Road to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235983-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovenian Football Cup Final, Match details\nMan of the Match: Agim Ibraimi (Maribor)Assistant referees:Primo\u017e Arhar (Slovenia)Marko Stan\u010din (Slovenia)Fourth official:Darko \u010ceferin (Slovenia)Delegate:Leopold Rogli\u010d (Slovenia)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235984-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Slovenian Supercup\nThe 2013 Slovenian Supercup was the ninth edition of the Slovenian Supercup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Slovenian PrvaLiga and Slovenian Cup competitions. The match was played on 7 July 2013 at the Arena Petrol stadium in Celje between the 2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga winners Maribor and the 2012\u201313 Slovenian PrvaLiga runners-up Olimpija Ljubljana, as Maribor won both the Slovenian Cup and the Slovenian PrvaLiga in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235985-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Smethwick fire\nAt around 11pm on the night of 30 June 2013, a sky lantern landed on a Jayplas plastics and paper recycling plant on Dartmouth Road, near to the West Bromwich Albion football ground, at Smethwick, West Midlands, England, igniting the material stored there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235985-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Smethwick fire\nThe resulting fire was the largest ever dealt with by the West Midlands Fire Service (WMFS), who deployed over 200 firefighters and nearly 40 appliances, including seven appliances borrowed from Staffordshire Fire and Rescue Service and three from Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue Service. Three firefighters were taken to hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235985-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Smethwick fire\nThe 6,000 feet (1,800\u00a0m) column of smoke cloud could be seen as far away as Coventry. 10 miles away in Yardley, the skies were filled with grey ash in the morning rush hour. WMFS received over 400 emergency phone calls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235985-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Smethwick fire\nThe Canal and River Trust and the Environment Agency monitored nearby waterways for toxic residues in the run-off water. Birmingham Airport monitored the smoke in case it affected arriving or departing flights. Delays were caused on the adjacent M5 Motorway and the region's road network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235985-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Smethwick fire\nWMFS broadcast live from the site over the Internet, via Bambuser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235985-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Smethwick fire\nInitial estimates put the cost of the damage caused at \u00a36 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235985-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Smethwick fire\nOn the afternoon of the 1 July, the WMFS called for \"an urgent review of the legislation regarding the use of airborne \u2018fire\u2019 lanterns\", calling on the public and event organisers to stop using them and questioning whether event licences should be issued for events where they were to be used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235986-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Snooker Shoot-Out\nThe 2013 Betfair Snooker Shoot Out was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 25 and 27 January 2013 at the Circus Arena in Blackpool, England. It was played under a variation of the standard rules of snooker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235986-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Snooker Shoot-Out\nBarry Hawkins was the defending champion, but he lost 38\u201358 against Stephen Maguire in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235986-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Snooker Shoot-Out\nMartin Gould won the final 1\u20130 (104\u20130) against Mark Allen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235986-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Snooker Shoot-Out, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235986-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Snooker Shoot-Out, Draw\nThe draw for round 1 was made on 9 November 2012 and was broadcast live by Talksport. The draw for each round including the semi-finals was random, conducted live at the venue. The shot clock was reduced from 20 to 15 seconds per shot for the first 5 minutes and from 15 to 10 seconds for the last 5 minutes. There has been only one century break in the tournament. Mark Selby compiled a 125 break against Ken Doherty in round 1. All times are UTC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 28], "content_span": [29, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235987-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Social Christian Unity Party presidential primary\nThe 2013 presidential primary of the Social Christian Unity Party of Costa Rica was held on May 9, 2013 as part of the 2014 Costa Rican general election. The two main traditional factions of PUSC (Calderonistas and Liberals) competed for the nomination. The competing parties were Costa Rica's Children's Hospital Dr. Rodolfo Hern\u00e1ndez, and the lawyer, businessman, and former president of the Costa Rican Social Security Fund Rodolfo Piza. This was PUSC's fifth primary election in its history and the first in twelve years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235987-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Social Christian Unity Party presidential primary\nHern\u00e1ndez was nominated by the group \u201cCalderonista Convergence\u201d, close to former president Rafael \u00c1ngel Calder\u00f3n Fournier who personally endorsed Hern\u00e1ndez and followed the \u201cCalderonism\u201d (the historical ideology of 40's caudillo and Fournier's father Rafael \u00c1ngel Calder\u00f3n Guardia, a Christian socialist) whilst Piza was endorsed by the Social Christian Rebirth group, part of the more right-wing Liberal faction lead by former president (and Fournier's rival) Miguel \u00c1ngel Rodr\u00edguez Echeverr\u00eda. On this election Piza had the support of Dr. Abel Pacheco's faction including Pacheco himself and his Prime Minister Ricardo Toledo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235987-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Social Christian Unity Party presidential primary\nHern\u00e1ndez won the primary by a landslide victory with 77% of the votes and nominates Piza as his Vice-President. Nevertheless, Hern\u00e1ndez would resign his candidacy a few months later accusing the Party\u2019s leadership of treacheries and backstabbing. Piza took over the candidacy reaching only 6% of popular vote on the presidential ballot, but increasing its support for Congress to the point of duplicating its number of deputies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season\nThe 2013 season was the 99th in Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras's history. It was the second time in history that Palmeiras played in the second division of the Campeonato Brasileiro. Palmeiras competed in the Brasileiro Serie B, Campeonato Paulista, the Copa Libertadores and the Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season, Competitions, Campeonato Paulista\nThe Campeonato Paulista is the major championship of S\u00e3o Paulo state, involving teams from all over the state. Palmeiras debuted in the competition on January 20 against Bragantino. The last time Palmeiras won the competition was in 2008. In 2013 Palmeiras finished placing sixth after being eliminated on penalties in the round of 16 against Santos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season, Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B, Matches\nSchedule released on March 25, 2013. The games had a break during the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, which was held between June and July in Brazil. Six rounds were played before the stoppage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season, Copa do Brasil\nThe table for the competition was released on February 4, 2013. Palmeiras was the title holder. The team entered in the Round of 16. The draw for the round of 16 was held on August 6, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season, Players, Libertadores squad\nPalmeiras sent the list of 30 players to CONMEBOL to play the Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season, Players, Libertadores 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, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235988-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras season, Players, Libertadores squad\nNote: For the knockout stages Palmeiras made two changes in the Libertadores squad: Andr\u00e9 Luiz replaced Marcos Vin\u00edcus and Serginho replaced Edilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 70], "content_span": [71, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235989-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sogndal Fotball season\nThe 2013 season was Sogndal's third season back in the Tippeligaen. They finished the season in 12th place and were knocked out of the cup by V\u00e5lerenga in the Fourth Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235989-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sogndal Fotball 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-00235989-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sogndal Fotball 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, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235989-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sogndal Fotball 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-00235989-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sogndal Fotball 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-00235989-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sogndal Fotball 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-00235989-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Sogndal Fotball 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-00235990-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament\nThe 2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $75,000+H in prize money. It took place in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, on 18\u201324 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235990-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235990-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry into the singles main draw as a lucky loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235991-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nThis was a new event on the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235991-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nTimea Bacsinszky and Kristina Barrois won the tournament, defeating Anna Morgina and Kate\u0159ina Siniakov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20130, [10\u20134].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235992-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament \u2013 Singles\nThis is a new event on the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235992-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Soho Square Ladies Tournament \u2013 Singles\nVictoria Kan won the tournament, defeating Nastja Kolar in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup\nThe 2013 Solheim Cup was the 13th edition of the Solheim Cup matches, held on August 16\u201318 at the Colorado Golf Club in Parker, Colorado, southeast of Denver. The Solheim Cup is a biennial team competition between the top women professional golfers from the United States and from Europe. Similar to the Ryder Cup, it is a three-day match play event between teams of twelve players. Europe won the matches by a score of 18\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup\nThe U.S. team had won eight of the twelve previous Solheim Cups. Europe was the defending champion, having won in 2011 in Ireland, but had never won in the United States. The matches included a series of firsts for Team Europe:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup\nEurope maintained a lead after each of the five sessions and dominated the last two sessions: Saturday afternoon fourball and Sunday singles by 111\u20442 to 41\u20442 points to retain the Cup and win in the United States for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Format\nThe Solheim Cup is a match play event, with each match worth one point. The format is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Format\nWith a total of 28 points, 141\u20442 points are required to win the Cup, and 14 points are required for the defending champion to retain the Cup. All matches are played to a maximum of 18 holes. If the score is even after 18 holes, each team earns one-half point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Eligibility criteria\nThe United States and European teams have different eligibility criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 72], "content_span": [73, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Eligibility criteria\nTeam USAMembers of the United States team had to be current members of the LPGA Tour and be born in the United States. This was the last Solheim Cup held under these rules; beginning with the 2015 edition, eligibility was expanded to include the following categories of LPGA Tour members:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 72], "content_span": [73, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Eligibility criteria\nEither:(i) born in a European country; and(ii) holding a current passport of that European country;Or:(i) having been naturalised as a citizen of a European country;(ii) having held a current passport of that European country for the immediately preceding four (4) consecutive years;(iii) having resided in that European country for the immediately preceding four (4) consecutive years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 72], "content_span": [73, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Eligibility criteria\nA European country is a nation situated in the continent of Europe and is recognised as an independent state by the United Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 72], "content_span": [73, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Eligibility criteria\nAny player who holds dual nationality (of which one shall be the nationality of a European country) shall elect on joining the LET in each of 2012 and 2013 whether she wishes to be eligible for selection for the 2013 European Solheim Cup Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 72], "content_span": [73, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Team selection\nThe United States and European teams were selected by different methods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Team selection\nTeam USATeam USA qualified by earning points for wins and for top-20 finishes on the LPGA Tour over a two-year period. Points were earned beginning with the 2011 LPGA Hana Bank Championship and concluding with the 2013 Women's British Open. Points were increased in 2013 and doubled in the four major championships. The eight players with the highest points were automatically selected for Team USA. Two additional players qualified based on their position in the Rolex Women's World Golf Rankings and two were selected as wildcards by the team captain from among all eligible players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Team qualification and selection, Team selection\nTeam EuropeTeam Europe consisted of the top four players from the LET Solheim Cup standings, followed by the top four LET members on the Women's World Golf Rankings as of the conclusions 2013 Women's British Open who were not already qualified via the Solheim Cup standings, and four captain's selections. Qualifying points for Team Europe were awarded weekly to the top-10 finishers at official LET events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Teams\nMeg Mallon was the captain of Team USA. She appointed Dottie Pepper and Laura Diaz as assistant captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Teams\n1Age at the start of the 2013 Solheim Cup matches on August 16, 2013 (Pepper turned 48 during the matches). Rolex rankings as of the date of team selection on August 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Teams\nLiselotte Neumann was the captain of Team Europe. She appointed Carin Koch and Annika S\u00f6renstam as assistant captains. S\u00f6renstam previously served as one of two assistant captains in the 2011 Solheim Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Teams\n1Age at the start of the 2013 Solheim Cup matches on August 16, 2013. Rolex rankings as of the date of team selection on August 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Course\nOpened in 2007, the championship course of the Colorado Golf Club previously hosted the Senior PGA Championship in 2010, won by Tom Lehman. From the back tees, the course length exceeds 7,600 yards (6,950\u00a0m); its average elevation is over 6,100 feet (1,860\u00a0m) above sea level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day one, Morning foursomes\nAnna Nordqvist and Caroline Hedwall went 1 up in their match against Stacy Lewis and Lizette Salas on the 6th hole. They would retain this lead and won the first point for Europe by a 4&2 margin. Match 2 was a much tighter affair in which Suzann Pettersen and Beatriz Recari claimed a 2&1 victory over the Texan pairing of Brittany Lang and Angela Stanford. Morgan Pressel and Jessica Korda dominated their match against Catriona Matthew and Jodi Ewart Shadoff and secured the United States' first point with a 3&2 victory. Azahara Mu\u00f1oz and Karine Icher were never behind in their match against Cristie Kerr and Paula Creamer and won their match by a 2&1 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 44], "content_span": [45, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day one, Afternoon fourball\nCaroline Hedwall and Caroline Masson were never behind in their match against Angela Stanford and Gerina Piller and won by 2&1. Though behind early on, Brittany Lincicome and Brittany Lang went 1 up on the 9th hole and retained that lead to win their match against Anna Nordqvist and Giulia Sergas by 4&3. Cristie Kerr and Michelle Wie dominated their match against Catriona Matthew and Charley Hull and won by a 2&1 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day one, Afternoon fourball\nThe top match between Suzann Pettersen and Carlota Ciganda and Stacy Lewis and Lexi Thompson was the closest and contained a lot of controversy. While all-square on the 15th hole Ciganda hit into a water hazard but rather than put the ball back two club lengths from the hazard she was allowed to go back 40 yards due to an incorrect ruling. The controversy delayed the match for nearly 30 minutes. Ciganda hit her approach to the green and holed a 15-foot par putt. On the 16th Europe would go 1 up and would retain that lead to win the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day two, Morning foursomes\nAnna Nordqvist holed her tee shot at the 187 yard, par 3, 17th hole to win the first match of the day. It was the first hole-in-one in Solheim Cup history. At one point Stacy Lewis and Paula Cremer were 4 up against Azahara Mu\u00f1oz and Karine Icher through 10 holes before the Europeans made the match all-square on the 14th. The match was again all-square on the 18th which was won by the United States to ensure a 1-hole victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 44], "content_span": [45, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0021-0001", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day two, Morning foursomes\nBrittany Lincicome and Lizette Salas were 2 up with two holes to play and lost them both to Catriona Matthew and Caroline Masson, resulting in a halved match. Michelle Wie and Brittany Lang fought back against Suzann Pettersen and Beatriz Recari to go 1 up on the 12th hole. They would close out the match by a 2&1 margin. This was the only session that the United States would win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 44], "content_span": [45, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day two, Afternoon fourball\nThere was further controversy on Friday's fourballs matches. With the match all-square through 6 holes against Jodi Ewart Shadoff and Charley Hull, Paula Creamer faced a bogey putt on the 7th hole, which had the same line as her partner Lexi Thompson's putt for par. When drawing back one her putter, one of the European caddies conceded the putt. It transpired that assistant captain Annika S\u00f6renstam had advised him to do so. This resulted in a 30-minute delay to assess if there should be a penalty but none was given and Thompson holed out for par. The English pairing would regain a 1 shot lead on the 17th and finish 2 up on the 18th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day two, Afternoon fourball\nAzahara Mu\u00f1oz and Carlota Ciganda were all-square with Gerina Piller and Angela Stanford on the 18th where Ciganda holed a 10-foot birdie putt to win the match. Caroline Hedwall and Caroline Masson dominated their match against Michelle Wie and Jessica Korda and won the match by a 2&1 margin. There was some minor controversy in this match as Michelle Wie had run away from the 16th green after holing a putt to keep her match alive, however the Europeans were still to putt. She later apologized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0023-0001", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day two, Afternoon fourball\nBeatriz Recari and Karine Icher were never behind in their match against Cristie Kerr and Morgan Pressel all day and on the 18th hole Icher holed a 40-foot putt from off the putting surface to ensure that Europe won that match. There was considerable tension in this match. On the 16th hole both Recari and Kerr hit their tee shots into a hazard and officials needed to step in to place both balls after they could not agree on each other's ball placement. All four players would have a further argument on the 16th hole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day two, Afternoon fourball\nThis resulted in Europe winning all of the fourballs matches for the first-time since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day three, Singles\nEurope's Charley Hull earned the first point, defeating Paula Creamer. Anna Nordqvist, in the lead-off match against Stacy Lewis, had been 2 up through the sixth hole until Lewis staged a comeback to take a one-shot lead at the 14th. Nordqvist leveled the match on the 17th and Lewis holed an eight-foot putt on the 18th hole to halve the match. Carlota Ciganda, who was never behind in her match, defeated Morgan Pressel 4&2 for Pressel's first ever defeat in a Solheim singles match. Brittany Lang dominated her match against Azhara Mu\u00f1oz, winning 2&1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day three, Singles\nThe Caroline Hedwall\u2013Michelle Wie match was all square on the 16th hole. Hedwall birdied on the 18th hole, ensuring that Europe retained the Cup. Europe clinched the win when Catriona Matthew secured the necessary half-point in her halved match with Gerina Piller. U.S. rookie Lizette Salas led Suzann Pettersen before Pettersen brought the match to all-square. Lexi Thompson led for the entire match against Caroline Masson, winning 4&3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Day three, Singles\nJessica Korda had a one-shot lead over Giulia Sergas heading into the 18th hole, which Sergas birdied to halve the match. Jodi Ewart Shadoff went 1 up against Brittany Lincicome on the 8th hole. regained this lead on the 11th, winning 3&2. Beatriz Recari was never behind in her match against Angela Stanford and won by 2&1. The anchor match between Karine Icher and Cristie Kerr was all-square approaching the 18th hole when the pair agreed to mutually concede, ending the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235993-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Solheim Cup, Individual player records\nEach entry refers to the Win\u2013Loss\u2013Half record of the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake\nThe 2013 Solomon Islands earthquake struck northeast of Australia on 6\u00a0February with a moment magnitude of 8.0 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). Its epicenter was the Solomon Islands, at the boundaries of the Australian and Pacific tectonic plates, causing local evacuations and a tsunami of 1.5\u00a0m (4.9\u00a0ft) and killing at least nine people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Tectonic setting\nThe Santa Cruz and Solomon Islands are located on the plate boundary between the Australian and Pacific plate. This highly seismic region has \u201cnear 90\u00b0 bend in the boundary\u2026\" This area experiences much plate movement as the Santa Cruz Island \u201chas upper plate strike-slip and normal faulting, plate boundary under-thrusting, outer rise extensional faulting, and intraplate faulting\u201d and the Solomon Islands are located on the subduction zone of the two boundaries. On February 6, 2013, the largest under-thrusting earthquake ever to be recorded in that area caused a tsunami and both were destructive to the area. Major villages on both groups of islands, Lata and Nend\u00f6 were destroyed and at least 724 homes were confirmed as damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake\nOn 6\u00a0February 2013, at 12:12 local time (01:12 UTC) an earthquake struck the Solomon Islands, located in the south Pacific Ocean. The epicenter was 76 kilometres (47\u00a0mi) west of Lata on Nendo Island. The earthquake occurred due to the interaction between the Australian Plate and the Pacific Plate, and was preceded by dozens of foreshocks in the region. The magnitude of this earthquake was put at 8.0 on the moment magnitude scale. At least 20\u00a0aftershocks were reported, including one measuring 7.1 on 8\u00a0February and two measuring M7.0. \u201cThis event had a shallow dipping thrust faulting mechanism\u2026\u201d and \u201c\u2026produced a tsunami of ~ 1.5 height\u201d on the Santa Cruz Islands. Toward the end of the week before February 6, the area was very active and there were many magnitude 6 earthquakes that occurred in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake\nThe closest island to the epicenter, Nendo and its largest city, Lata were said to experience the largest amount of shaking. Even though there were aftershock earthquakes of magnitude 6, the most worrisome effect of the earthquake was the potential tsunami. As the wait for the tsunami continued, many villages had already been destroyed. For example, earthquake shaking destroyed many villages to the west and south of Lata, on the coastline, before the tsunami arrived. Many Pacific countries ordered evacuations, as their authorities did not take any risks. Countries that were not on the warning list were evacuated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake\nResidents of the Solomon Islands and other surrounding islands were working their way to higher ground. Major traffic jams were caused in Honiara, the capital city of Solomon Islands as people attempted to flee the coming wave. After the main shock, the epicenter area was hit by 13 aftershocks greater than magnitude 5.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake\nThe earthquake was formed on the boundary between the Pacific and Australian plates. This area has complicated faulting patterns that are close to the Solomon Island arcs and Vanuatu Island arcs. The area is used to high frequency, low to moderate intensity seismic activity. Many of the \u201clarger events recorded have involved intraplate and interplate earthquakes with magnitudes up to about 8.0, several of which were located near the abrupt bends in the arcs. The Solomon Islands appear to have more seismic activity than the other areas earthquake productivity than most areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake\nThe area also seems to produce more earthquake \u201cdoublets\u201d and \u201ctriplets,\u201d a deviation from the normal earthquake aftershock in which a second and sometimes third earthquake can be produced from the aftershock of the first earthquake. This occurs rarely, maybe once or twice a year, making this area a unique seismic area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake, Damage\nIn Honiara, the capital of the Solomon Islands, residents evacuated to higher ground, causing traffic jams. Local news agencies reported that four villages were destroyed. Houses were flooded in eastern Temotu Province. On Santa Cruz Island, 1.5\u00a0m (4.9\u00a0ft) waves damaged 50\u00a0buildings. In Lata, the tsunami damaged the airport and flooded low-lying areas, killing nine people, five elderly and one child. More than 100\u00a0houses on the island were damaged, and the water and electricity services were interrupted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0005-0001", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake, Damage\nIt was reported that almost all houses in Nela village were washed away, and some homes in Venga village were shifted by water. Officials in Noumea ordered residents to evacuate along the eastern coast of New Caledonia and nearby Loyalty Islands. Residents also evacuated to higher ground in Suva, the capital of Fiji. The earthquake killed 9 people, and 5 people remain listed as missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Earthquake, Tsunami\nThe Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued a tsunami warning for the Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea, Fiji, and several other islands in the region; the agency also issued a tsunami watch for Australia, New Zealand and eastern Indonesia. The earthquake produced a tsunami measuring 1 metre (3\u00a0ft 3\u00a0in) at Lata, Solomon Islands, that reached about 500\u00a0m (1,600\u00a0ft) inland. Smaller tsunamis of 11\u00a0cm (4.3\u00a0in) and 50\u00a0cm (20\u00a0in) were reported in Vanuatu and New Caledonia, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Environmental context\nThere are many human elements that affect the ecosystem and how both the Santa Cruz and Solomon Islands will recover from natural disasters. Though it was once one of the most diverse ecosystems in the world, very little attention is given in the Solomons to biodiversity and environmental conservation. 85% of the people on these islands live a subsistence lifestyle. The population is growing about 4.4% annually and as it grows, the people must use more of their natural resources as food and shelter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235994-0007-0001", "contents": "2013 Solomon Islands earthquake, Environmental context\nThe ecosystems in both of these islands are already being threatened by invasive species, major loss of coastal land, and overharvesting. That means that sudden major loss of biodiversity, like that caused by both the earthquake and tsunami, can lead to \u201chunger, poverty, disease, and conflict and is a threat to internal security\u2026\u201d to both islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235995-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Somerset County Council election\nAn election to Somerset County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the 2013 United Kingdom local elections. 55 councillors were elected from 54 electoral divisions, which returned one county councillor each with the exception of the two-member Glastonbury & Street division. Members were elected by the first-past-the-post voting system for a four-year term of office. The electoral divisions were changed from those used at the previous election in 2009, reducing the number of county councillors from 58 to 55 from this election. No elections were held in North Somerset or Bath and North East Somerset, which are unitary authorities outside the area covered by the County Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235995-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Somerset County Council election\nThe Conservative Party retained control of the council, despite having their majority reduced. They won 28 of the 54 seats contested on 2 May, in addition to the division of Coker, where the election was delayed until 16 May due to the death of one of the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235995-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Somerset County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235995-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 Somerset County Council election\nIt is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235995-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Somerset County Council election, Results by division, Bridgwater South\nThe nomination of Judith Kendall (Liberal Democrats) was ruled as invalid", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 76], "content_span": [77, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235995-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Somerset County Council election, Results by division, Cannington\nDavid Wilson (UK Independence Party) was withdrawn as a candidate before the close of nominations", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235995-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Somerset County Council election, Results by division, Coker\nElection was deferred until 16 May 2013, due to the death of the original UK Independence Party candidate, Audrey Spencer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235996-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis\nThe 2013 Sony Open Tennis (also known as 2013 Miami Masters), a men's and women's tennis tournament, was the 29th edition of the Miami Masters event and played on outdoor hard courts at the Tennis Center at Crandon Park in Miami. The tournament was held from March 18 to 31, 2013, and was part of the 2013 ATP World Tour and the 2013 WTA Tour, classified as an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 and a Premier Mandatory event, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235996-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis, Points and prize money, Prize money\nThe total commitment prize money for this year's event was $5,185,625 each (WTA Tour and ATP World Tour).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235996-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis, Players, Men's Singles, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235996-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis, Players, Men's Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235996-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis, Players, Women's Singles, Other entrants\nThe following player received entry using a protected ranking into the main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235996-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis, Players, Women's Doubles, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235997-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis \u2013 Men's Doubles\nLeander Paes and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek were the defending champions, but did not compete as a team this year. \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek did not enter the tournament, citing an injury, while Paes played alongside Micha\u00ebl Llodra, but lost in the second round to Grigor Dimitrov and Frederik Nielsen. Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer won the title, defeating Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235998-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis \u2013 Men's Singles\nNovak Djokovic was the defending champion, but lost in the fourth round to Tommy Haas. This championship was the first since the tournament's inception that no American was featured in the quarterfinals, with the last player from the US, Sam Querrey, beaten in the fourth round by Tomas Berdych. This meant that it was also the first all-European final eight at the Miami Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235998-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndy Murray won his second Miami Masters title (after 2009), defeating David Ferrer in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20131).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00235999-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis \u2013 Women's Doubles\nMaria Kirilenko and Nadia Petrova were the defending champions, but Kirilenko chose not to compete this year. Petrova teamed with Katarina Srebotnik and successfully defended the title, defeating Lisa Raymond and Laura Robson in the final 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236000-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis \u2013 Women's Singles\nAgnieszka Radwa\u0144ska was the defending champion, but lost 6\u20130, 6\u20133 in the semifinals to the eventual champion Serena Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236000-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Sony Open Tennis \u2013 Women's Singles\nWilliams went on to win the tournament for the record sixth time, defeating five-time finalist Maria Sharapova 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236001-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Sophia Awards\nThe 2013 Sophia Awards (Portuguese: Pr\u00e9mios Sophia 2013) were the 2013 edition of the Sophia Awards, an award presented by the Portuguese Academy of Cinema to honour the best in Portuguese filmmaking. The award ceremony took place on October 6, 2013 at the S\u00e3o Carlos National Theatre in Lisbon, Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236002-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Soul Train Music Awards\nThe 2013 Soul Train Music Awards ceremony took place on December 1, 2013 at the Orleans Arena in Paradise, Nevada and was hosted by comedian and actor Anthony Anderson. The ceremony was aired on BET and Centric and included special tributes to Dionne Warwick, who received the Soul Train Legend Award and Keith Sweat given the Lifetime Achievement Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236002-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Soul Train Music Awards\nTamar Braxton and Robin Thicke took the lead as the big winner's during the ceremony; including Braxton taking Record of the Year and Thicke taking Song of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236002-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Soul Train Music Awards, Performers, Tribute performers\nKeith Sweat performed in honor of his own tribute; a medley of his most popular songs, also a duet with Faith Evans for his song \"Make It Last Forever\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236002-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Soul Train Music Awards, Telecast\nThe Soul Train Awards were aired on BET and Centric on December 1, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236003-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Africa Sevens\nThe 2013 South Africa Sevens was the third tournament within the 2013\u20132014 Sevens World Series. It was held over the weekend of 7\u20138 December 2013 at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Port Elizabeth, with South Africa emerging the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236003-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Africa Sevens, Format\nThe teams were drawn into four pools of four teams each. Each team played everyone in their pool one time. 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, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236003-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Africa Sevens, Teams\nThe participating teams and schedule were announced on 30 November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236004-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South African Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 South African Figure Skating Championships were held in Cape Town on 1\u20132 March 2013. Skaters competed in the discipline of ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236005-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Alabama Jaguars football team\nThe 2013 South Alabama Jaguars football team represented the University of South Alabama in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They were led by fifth-year head coach Joey Jones and played their home games at Ladd\u2013Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Alabama as a member of the Sun Belt Conference. This season marked the first season the Jaguars' were eligible for the Sun Belt championship and to play in a bowl game. They finished the season 6\u20136, 4\u20133 in Sun Belt play to finish in a fourth way tie four third place. Despite being bowl eligible, they were not invited to a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236006-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Aerobic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 South American Aerobic Gymnastics Championships were held in Cali, Colombia, July 27\u201330, 2013. The competition was organized by the Colombian Gymnastics Federation, and approved by the International Gymnastics Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236007-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 South American Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held in Santiago, Chile, December 2\u20138, 2013. This was the 12th edition of the South American Artistic Gymnastics Championships for senior gymnasts. The competition was initially scheduled for August, and was approved by the International Gymnastics Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236008-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Basketball Championship for Women\nThe 2013 South American Basketball Championship for Women was the 33rd edition of the tournament. Eight teams featured the competition, held in Mendoza, Argentina from July 31 to August 4. Brazil was the defending champion and retain the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236009-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2013 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup CONMEBOL qualifier, also commonly known as the 2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship, was the fifth Beach Soccer World Cup qualification championship for South America, held from February 10\u201317 at Parque Recreativo, in Merlo, a town in the San Luis Province of Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236009-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship\nThe qualifiers were not coordinated by CONMEBOL at the time. The event was organised by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), under the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Qualifier title. CONMEBOL first recognised the tournament this year, under the title South American Beach Soccer Championship, also acknowledging the 2006\u201311 events as historic editions of the championship. CONMEBOL eventually began organising the qualifiers in 2017, under a new title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236009-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship, Participating teams\nThe same nine nations who played in the 2011 qualifiers have entered into the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236009-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship, Match officials\nHere is the list of match officials for this tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236009-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nThe draw to divide the nine teams into two groups (one will have five teams, the other will have four) was conducted on 8 January 2013. The subsequent schedule seen here is the official schedule, which was finally released on 9 February 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236009-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship, Group stage\nAll match times will be correct to that of local time in Merlo, being Argentina Time, (UTC-03:00).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236009-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Beach Soccer Championship, Playoff Stage, Seventh place playoff\nSince there are nine teams in the tournament, it was decided that a group stage-like playoff to determine the bottom three placements would be held. This group would involve the 4th and 5th-place finishers in Group A and the 4th-place finisher in Group B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236010-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics\nThe 48th South American Championships in Athletics were held at the Parque de Atletismo Campo El\u00edas Guti\u00e9rrez in Cartagena, Colombia, between July 5-7, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236010-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics\nA total of 44 events were contested, 22 by men and 22 by women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236010-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics\nDetailed reports on the championships were given by Eduardo Biscayart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236010-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics, Records\nOne new area record in pole vault, as well as seven new South American Championships records and a couple of other (mainly national) records were set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236010-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics, Medal summary\nThe results were published by the Federaci\u00f3n Colombiana de Atletismo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 61], "content_span": [62, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236010-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics, Participation\nAll 13 member federations of CONSUDATLE were participating summing up to about 322 athletes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 61], "content_span": [62, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236011-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results\nThese are the official results of the 2013 South American Championships in Athletics which took place on July 5\u20137 in Cartagena, Colombia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236012-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Cross Country Championships\nThe 2013 South American Cross Country Championships took place on February 24, 2013. The races were held at the Parque del Complejo Ayu\u00ed Resort y Spa Termal in Concordia, Entre R\u00edos, Argentina. A detailed report of the event was given for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236012-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Cross Country Championships, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 91 athletes from 7 countries participated. This is in agreement with the official numbers as published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236013-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Footballer of the Year\nThe 2013 South American Footballer of the Year, given to the best football player in South America by Uruguayan newspaper El Pa\u00eds through voting by journalists across the continent, was awarded to Ronaldinho of Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro on December 31, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236013-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Footballer of the Year, Rankings\n1Players who have been to Europe before ending the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236014-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Junior Championships in Athletics\nThe 40th South American Junior Championships in Athletics (Spanish: Campeonatos Sudamericanos de Atletismo de Juveniles) were held from October 18\u201320, 2013 at the Estadio Jaime Zapata in Resistencia, Chaco, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236014-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Junior Championships in Athletics, Medal summary, Men\n\u2020: In the 400 metres hurdles event, Gerald Drummond from \u00a0Costa Rica was 3rd in 53.74, running as a guest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236014-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Junior Championships in Athletics, Medal table (unofficial)\nA medal count was published. There is a slight difference to an unofficial medal count. However, another source supports the number of 7 gold medals for Colombia as published below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236014-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Junior Championships in Athletics, Participation\nThe participation of 273 athletes (including 2 guests) from 12 countries (including 1 guest country) is published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 68], "content_span": [69, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236015-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2013 South American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships were held in Santiago, Chile, December 10\u201315, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236016-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Roller Hockey Clubs Championship\nThe South American Roller Hockey Clubs Championship was to be the 28th edition of the Roller Hockey South American Club Championship. It was held in November 2013 in Santiago, in Chile. The tournament was considered cancelled, after the illegalities committed during the tournament by the organization and the South American Roller Sports Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236017-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rugby Championship \"A\"\nThe 2013 South American Rugby Championship (Confederaci\u00f3n Sudamericana de Rugby (CONSUR) Championship) Division A will double as a 2015 Rugby World Cup qualifier. The matches will be held in Montevideo, Uruguay and Temuco, Chile between 27 April and 4 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236017-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rugby Championship \"A\"\nArgentina already qualified for the 2015 Rugby World Cup, after being quarter-finalists at the 2011 Rugby World Cup. The highest place team after Argentina will progress to a playoff with the losing team in the North America playoff, either Canada or the US.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236017-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rugby Championship \"A\"\nArgentina, Uruguay and Chile have qualified for this tournament, after finishing in the top three of the 2012 edition. The fourth spot went to Brazil, decided by a playoff between the 4th placed team at the 2012 South American Rugby Championship \"A\" (Brazil) and the 2012 South American Rugby Championship \"B\" champions (Paraguay).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236018-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rugby Championship \"B\"\nThe Confederaci\u00f3n Sudamericana de Rugby (CONSUR) B Division Championship in Luque, Paraguay was held during August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236018-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rugby Championship \"B\", 2013 CONSUR B Championship\nNumber in brackets indicates the pre-tournament IRB ranking of team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236019-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rugby Championship \"C\"\nThe Confederaci\u00f3n Sudamericana de Rugby (CONSUR) Championship C Division Championship took place between 1\u20137 December 2013 at Colegio Franco Costarricense in San Jose, Costa Rica. This was the second time CONSUR has run a 3rd division championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236019-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Rugby Championship \"C\"\nCosta Rica hosted Guatemala, Ecuador and El Salvador, with the tournament played over three game days. The tournament was conducted as a single round robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236020-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Trampoline Championships\nThe 2013 South American Trampoline Championships were held in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia, December 10\u201315, 2013. The competition was organized by the Colombian Gymnastics Federation and approved by the International Gymnastics Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236021-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-15 Championship\nThe 2013 South American Under-15 Football Championship (Spanish: Campeonato Sudamericano Sub-15 Bolivia 2013) is the 6th South American Under-15 Football Championship for national teams affiliated with CONMEBOL. It is set to begin on November 16, and end on November 30. The winning team will represent South America in the 2014 Summer Youth Olympic Football Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236021-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-15 Championship, Venues\nSanta Cruz and Tarija are the main venues of the tournament. Montero was announced as an extra venue days before the start of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236021-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-15 Championship, Referees\nOn October 23, 2013 a referee and an assistant referee from each country where chosen for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236021-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-15 Championship, First round\nThe First round took place between the 16th and 25 November. The top two teams in the group advanced to the next stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236021-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-15 Championship, First round\nIf teams finish level on points, order will be determined according to the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236021-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-15 Championship, Final round\nThe final stage is scheduled to take place between 28 November and 30 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236022-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Championship\nThe 2013 South American Under-17 Football Championship (Spanish: Campeonato Sudamericano Sub-17 Argentina 2013) was the 15th U-17 tournament for national teams affiliated with CONMEBOL. It was held in Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236022-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Championship\nThis tournament gave four berths to the 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup, which was held in United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236022-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Championship, Choice and background\nArgentina was chosen as host country, as agreed at a meeting of the executive committee of CONMEBOL on 18 March 2011 at the headquarters of South American football being located in Luque, Paraguay. The meeting lasted about 3 hours and during that time it was decided to have Argentina as the headquarters for both the 2013 South American U-17 and U-20 Tournaments in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236022-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Championship, Match officials\nThe list of referees selected for the tournament was announced on 9 March 2013 by CONMEBOL's Referee Commission. The referees were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236022-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Championship, First stage\nWhen teams finished level on points, the final order was determined according to:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236023-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Championship squads\nAll the players had to be born after 1 January 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236023-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Championship squads\nPlayers name marked in bold have been capped at full international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236024-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Women's Championship\nThe 2013 South American Under-17 Women's Football Championship is the fourth instance of the South American Under-17 Women's Football Championship. It was played from 12 to 29 September in Paraguay. The top three teams qualified to the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup to be held in Costa Rica. The tournament was won by Venezuela, winning their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236024-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Women's Championship\nThe tournament was originally scheduled from 7 to 25 August but rescheduled in July 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236024-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Women's Championship, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was held on 2 August 2013. Paraguay as hosts and Brazil as champions were fixed as heading groups A and B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236024-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Women's Championship, Group stage\nIf teams finish level on points, order will be determined according to the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236024-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-17 Women's Championship, Final round\nThe top two teams of each group play another round-robin. Venezuela, Colombia and Paraguay qualified to the 2014 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236025-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-20 Championship squads\nThe 2013 South American U-20 Championship was an international association football tournament held in Argentina. The ten national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 22 players; only players in these squads are eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236025-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-20 Championship squads\nEach player had to have been born after 1 January 1993. (Source for player names:)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236025-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American U-20 Championship squads\nPlayers names marked in bold have been capped at full international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236026-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Youth Football Championship\nThe 2013 South American Youth Football Championship (Spanish: Campeonato Sudamericano Sub-20 Juventud de Am\u00e9rica Argentina 2013, Portuguese: Campeonato Sul-Americano Sub-20 Juventude da Am\u00e9rica Argentina 2013) was an association football competition for national under-20 teams in the South America (CONMEBOL). The tournament was held in Argentina from 9 January to 3 February 2013 and was won by Colombia, with Paraguay as runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236026-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Youth Football Championship\nColombia, Paraguay, Uruguay and Chile, which were the first four teams of this tournament qualified for the 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup to be held in Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236026-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Youth Football Championship, Host selection\nArgentina was chosen as host country at a meeting of the CONMEBOL Executive Committee on 18 March 2011 at CONMEBOL headquarters in Luque, Paraguay. At the meeting, it was decided to make Argentina the host nation for both the South American Under-20 and Under-17 tournaments in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236026-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Youth Football Championship, First stage\nWhen teams finished level of points, the final order was determined according to:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236026-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Youth Football Championship, Final stage\nThe final stage was scheduled to take place between 20 January and 3 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236027-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South American Youth Games\nThe 2013 South American Youth Games, also known as the I South American Youth Games, was a multi-sport event celebrated in Lima, Peru from September 20 to 29, 2013. Approximately 1,200 athletes from 14 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) competed in 95 events from 19 sports and disciplines, making the first event in the history of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236028-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Asian Games\nThe 2013 South Asian Games, officially the XII South Asian Games, was a scheduled multi-sport event to take place in Mizoram and Shillong, India. With this edition of the Games, India became the second country to host the Games three times (the previous editions being held in Kolkata in 1987 and Chennai in 1995), after Bangladesh. It was also the first time that Delhi hosted the Games. The Games witnessed a change in the original host country, and faced delays which pushed back the conduct of the Games by several months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236028-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Asian Games, Host change\nOriginally, as per tradition of bringing the Games to each and every country of South Asia, Bhutan was selected to host the 12th edition of the Games. However, at the 41st South Asian Olympic Council held at Dhaka in February 2010, Bhutan expressed its inability to host the Games. So, to replace Bhutan, Delhi stepped in as host of the Games. Indian Olympic Association President Suresh Kalmadi officially received the SAG flag in Dhaka after the 11th edition of the Games drew to a close on February 9, 2010. The Sports Ministry of India said, in an official press statement, that Delhi had been chosen as host so that the sport infrastructure built for the 2010 Commonwealth Games remains in use.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236028-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Asian Games, Delay\nInitially, the Games were expected to be held in October, 2012. However, during the General Body meeting of the Indian Olympic Association (IOA) on December 16, 2011, it was decided to postpone the Games to February, 2013. The primary concern highlighted was that the original plan meant that the Games would be held only two months after the 2012 Summer Olympics, a fact which made athletes uncomfortable. In addition, the Delhi Government had stated that \"accommodation would be a problem during October-November\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236028-0002-0001", "contents": "2013 South Asian Games, Delay\nIn April 2012, the IOA sent letters to all the National Olympic Committees (NOCs) of South Asia, announcing that the Games will be held for eight days beginning from February 13, 2013; further discussions would take place at an all-NOC meeting in Moscow. President of the Nepal Olympic Committee Dhruba Bahadur Pradhan also reported about the proposed additions of fencing, equestrian, gymnastics and the triathlon to the Games schedule. As of January 2013, host city and dates of the games were not yet confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236028-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South Asian Games, Delay\nThe International Olympic Committee banned the Indian Committee in March for political interference (the national government played a role in Olympic officials' selection). This delayed the event further as the ban was only lifted in May and the possibility of a low-cost edition of the games was raised among ongoing hosting discussions and poor relations with neighboring Pakistan due to the 2013 India\u2013Pakistan border incidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236028-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South Asian Games, Delay\n2 years later, on the 11 February 2014, the International Olympic Committee decided to lift the ban. Up until now, the Indian side competed in Olympic events such as the Winter Olympic Games as independent participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236028-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South Asian Games, Delay\nA year later, on 5 June 2015, the uncertainty over the venue to host the 12th South Asian Games ended with the Sports Ministry and Indian Olympic Association deciding to hold the regional multi-sporting event in Guwahati and Shillong in November-December 2015. However, this was postponed even further to a tentative date of February 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236029-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina Gamecocks baseball team\nThe 2013 South Carolina Gamecocks baseball team represented the University of South Carolina in the 2013 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Gamecocks played their home games in Carolina Stadium. The team was coached by Chad Holbrook, who was in his first season as head coach at Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236029-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina Gamecocks baseball team, Rankings\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, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236029-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina Gamecocks baseball team, Gamecocks in the 2013 MLB Draft\nThe following members of the South Carolina Gamecocks baseball program were drafted in the 2013 Major League Baseball Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236030-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina Gamecocks football team\nThe 2013 South Carolina Gamecocks football team represented the University of South Carolina in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Gamecocks competed as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) as part of its East Division. The team was led by head coach Steve Spurrier, in his ninth year, and played its home games at Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236030-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina Gamecocks football team, Players, Depth chart\nProjected starters and primary backups versus Mississippi State on November 2, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236031-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina State Bulldogs football team\nThe 2013 South Carolina State Bulldogs football team represented South Carolina State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 12th year head coach Oliver Pough and played their home games at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium. They were a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 9\u20134, 7\u20131 in MEAC play to win a share of the MEAC championship with Bethune-Cookman. Due to their loss to Bethune-Cookman, they did not receive the conference's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs. However, they did receive an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the first round to Furman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236032-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina's 1st congressional district special election\nA special election for South Carolina's 1st congressional district was held on May 7, 2013, to fill the seat following the resignation of U.S. Representative Tim Scott, who was appointed to the United States Senate by Governor Nikki Haley to fill the seat previously held by Jim DeMint. DeMint resigned from the Senate on January 1, 2013, to accept a position as president of The Heritage Foundation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236032-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina's 1st congressional district special election\nThe filing period for candidates lasted between January 18 and January 28, 2013. The special primary elections took place on March 19, 2013. Businesswoman Elizabeth Colbert Busch won the Democratic Party primary and Mark Sanford, the former governor of South Carolina who held the seat from 1995 to 2001, advanced to a runoff with former Charleston County Councilman Curtis Bostic for the Republican Party nomination. Prior to the runoff, 14 Republicans and one Democrat signed the \"Reject the Debt\" pledge put out by the nonpartisan Coalition to Reduce Spending. In the runoff election on April 2, Sanford defeated Bostic. Eugene Platt, a James Island Public Service Commissioner, was nominated by the South Carolina Green Party. In the general election on May 7, Sanford received 54% of the vote, beating Colbert Busch (45%) and Platt (1%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 908]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236032-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Carolina's 1st congressional district special election, General election\nOn May 7, 2013, Mark Sanford won the election and took the seat vacated by U.S. Representative Tim Scott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 83], "content_span": [84, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236033-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Dakota Coyotes football team\nThe 2013 South Dakota Coyotes football team represented the University of South Dakota in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by second year head coach Joe Glenn and played their home games in the DakotaDome. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 4\u20138, 3\u20135 in MFVC play to finish in a tie for seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236034-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Dakota State Jackrabbits football team\nThe 2013 South Dakota State Jackrabbits football team represented South Dakota State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by 16th year head coach John Stiegelmeier and played their home games at Coughlin\u2013Alumni Stadium. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 9\u20135, 5\u20133 in MVFC play to finish in a four way tie for second place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS playoffs where they defeated Northern Arizona in the first round before losing in the second round to Eastern Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236034-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Dakota State Jackrabbits football team, Schedule\nThe Dakota Marker matchup against North Dakota State set a new single-game home attendance record (16,498).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236035-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South East Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships\nThe 19th South East Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships 2013 were held at the Garden Square of the Harrison Plaza in Manila, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236036-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Florida Bulls football team\nThe 2013 South Florida Bulls football team represented the University of South Florida (USF) in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bulls played their home games at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. The 2013 college football season was the 17th season overall for the Bulls, and their first season as a member of the American Athletic Conference. They were led by first year head coach Willie Taggart after USF fired Skip Holtz at the conclusion of the 2012 season. This season followed a season that saw the Bulls win their fewest games in program history (3). They broke that record by only winning 2 games in 2013, finishing 2\u201310, 2\u20136 in American Athletic play to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack\nIn 2013 there were two major sets of cyberattacks on South Korean targets attributed to elements within North Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, March\nOn 20 March 2013, three South Korean television stations and a bank suffered from frozen computer terminals in a suspected act of cyberwarfare. ATMs and mobile payments were also affected. The South Korean communications watchdog, the Korea Communications Commission, raised their alert level on cyber-attacks to three on a scale of five. North Korea has been blamed for similar attacks in 2009 and 2011 and was suspected of launching this attack as well. This attack also came at a period of elevated tensions between the two Koreas, following Pyongyang\u2019s nuclear test on 12 February. South Korean officials linked the incident to a Chinese IP address, which increased suspicion of North Korea as \"[i]ntelligence experts believe that North Korea routinely uses Chinese computer addresses to hide its cyber-attacks.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, March\nThe attacks on all six organizations derived from one single entity. The networks were attacked by malicious codes, rather than distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks as suspected at the beginning. It appeared to have used only hard drive overwrites. This cyberattack \u201cdamaged 32,000 computers and servers of media and financial companies.\u201d The Financial Services Commission of South Korea said that Shinhan Bank reported that its Internet banking servers had been temporarily blocked and that Jeju Bank and NongHyup reported that operations at some of their branches had been paralyzed after computers were infected with viruses and their files erased. Woori Bank reported a hacking attack, but said it had suffered no damage. Computer shutdowns also hit companies including the Korean Broadcasting System, Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation, and YTN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, March\nThis cyberattack \u201ccaused US$750 million in economic damage alone. (Feakin 2013)\u201d Also, \u201c[t]he frequency of cyber attacks by North Korea and rampant cyber espionage activities attributed to China are of great concern to the South Korean government. (Lewis 2013)\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, June\nThe June 25 cyber terror is an information leak that occurred on June 25, 2013 that targeted Cheongwadae and other institutions. The hacker that caused this incident admitted that the information of 2.5 million Saenuri Party members, 300 thousand soldiers, 100 thousand Cheongwadae homepage users and 40 thousand United States Forces Korea members. There were apparent hacking attacks on government websites. The incident happened on the 63rd anniversary of the start of the 1950-53 Korean War, which was a war that divided the Korean peninsula. Since the Blue House\u2019s website was hacked, the personal information of a total of 220,000 people, including 100,000 ordinary citizens and 20,000 military personnel, using the \u201cCheong Wa Dae\u201d website were hacked. The website of the office for Government Policy Co-ordination and some media servers were affected as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 900]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, June\nWhile multiple attacks were organized by multiple perpetrators, one of the distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against the South Korean government websites were directly linked to the \u201cDarkSeoul\u201d gang and Trojan.Castov. Malware related to the attack is called \"DarkSeoul\" in the computer world and was first identified in 2012. It has contributed to multiple previous high-profile attacks against South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, June, Timeline\nAt approximately 2013 June 25 9:10 AM, websites such as the Cheongwadae website, main government institute websites, news, etc. became victims of website change, DDoS, information thievery and other such attacks. When connecting to the Cheongwadae homepage words such as 'The great Kim Jong-un governor' and 'All hail the unified chairman Kim Jong-un! Until our demands are met our attacks will continue. Greet us. We are anonymous' would appear with a photo of president Park Geun-hye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, June, Timeline\nThe government changed the status of cyber danger to 'noteworthy' on June 25 10:45 AM, then changed it to 'warning' on 3:40 PM. Cheongwadae uploaded an apology on June 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, June, Timeline\nThe Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning revealed on July 16 that both the March and June incidents corresponded with past hacking methods used by North Korea. However, the attacked targets include a Japanese Korean Central News Agency site and major North Korean anti-South websites, and the hackers also have announced that they would release information of approximately 20 high-ranked North Korean army officers with countless pieces of information on North Korean weaponry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, Response\nFollowing the hacking in June there was further speculation that North Korea was responsible for the attacks. Investigators found that \u201can IP address used in the attack matched one used in previous hacking attempts by Pyongyang.\u201d Park Jae-moon, a former director-general at the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning said, \u201c82 malignant codes [collected from the damaged devices] and internet addresses used for the attack, as well as the North Korea's previous hacking patterns,\" proved that \"the hacking methods were the same\" as those used in the 20 March cyber attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, Response\nWith this incident, the Korean government publicly announced that they would take charge of the \u201cCyber Terror Response Control Tower\u201d and along with different ministries, the National Intelligence Service (NIS) will be responsible to build a comprehensive response system using the \u201cNational Cyber Security Measures.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, Response\nThe South Korean government asserted a Pyongyang link in the March cyberattacks, which has been denied by Pyongyang. A 50-year-old South Korean man identified as Mr. Kim is suspected to be involved in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236037-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korea cyberattack, Appearance in the South Korean National Geographic\nThe South Korean National Geographic published cyber terror as one of the top 10 keywords of 2013 due to these attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236038-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2013 South Korean Figure Skating Championships (Korean: \uc81c67\ud68c \uc804\uad6d \ub0a8\ub140 \ud53c\uaca8\uc2a4\ucf00\uc774\ud305 \uc885\ud569\uc120\uc218\uad8c\ub300\ud68c) was the South Korean Figure Skating Championships for the 2012\u201313 season. It was the 67th edition of those championships held. It was organized by the Korean Skating Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236038-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean Figure Skating Championships\nSkaters competed in the disciplines of men's and ladies' singles on the senior, junior, and novice levels for the title of national champion of South Korea. The results of the national championships were used to choose the Korean teams to the 2013 World Figure Skating Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236038-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean Figure Skating Championships\nThe competition was held between 4 and 6 January, 2013 at the Mokdong Ice Rink in Seoul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot\nIn August 2013, South Korea's spy agency, the National Intelligence Service, accused Lee Seok-ki, a lawmaker from the leftist Unified Progressive Party (UPP),of plotting to overthrow the country's government if war broke out with North Korea. He allegedly leda secret May meeting of 130 members of his party aimed at attacking South Korean infrastructure if the heightened tensions between Koreas in the spring of 2013 had led to war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot\nAfter further investigation, on September 26, 2013, South Korean prosecutors indicted Lee Seok-ki on charges that he was plotting a pro-North Korea rebellion to overthrow the government, saying his plan posed a \"grave\" national security threat. On 17 February 2014, he was sentenced to 12 years of prison by a district court although the sentence was reduced to 9 years by the Seoul High Court upon appeal, which was upheld by South Korea\u2019s Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot\nOn 3 November 2014, following Lee's initial conviction, the government of President Park Geun-hye asked the Constitutional Court of South Korea to disband the UPP. and on 18 December 2014 the party was disbanded, stripping Lee and 4 other lawmakers of their seats in parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Intelligence Service's (NIS) investigation\n\"The National Intelligence Service carried out detailed investigations into this case for the past three years and confirmed Representative Lee Seok-ki is suspected of assisting the national enemy and conspiring in a rebellion based on various evidences, such as the testimony of witnesses, the comments Lee made at several secret meetings, confiscated documents and some other materials contained in USB devices,\" Justice Minister Hwang Kyo-an said during a speech at the National Assembly on September 4, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 125], "content_span": [126, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Intelligence Service's (NIS) investigation\nThe 10 major suspects who had been investigated by NIS are Lee Seok-ki (a lawmaker of the UPP), Woo Wi-young (an ex-spokesman of the UPP), Kim Hong-ryul (the Kyunggi provincial chairman of the UPP), Kim Keun-rae (a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP), Hong Soon-seok (a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP), Lee Sang-ho (an adviser of Kyunggi Alliance for Progressive Movement), Lee Young-chun (a Kyunggi-Paju branch manager of Korean Confederation of Trade Union), Jo Yang-won (the representative of Social Trend Institute), Han Dong-geun (a former Suwon city chairman of the UPP), Park Min-jung (a former youth chairman of the UPP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 125], "content_span": [126, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0004-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Intelligence Service's (NIS) investigation\nNIS had acquired court approvals for wiretapping and had been collecting a wide range of evidence by closely monitoring the secret meetings of Lee Seok-ki and his colleagues. The NIS is said to have secured recordings of Lee's speech at a meeting of the East Kyunggi Coalition, the mainstream faction of the UPP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 125], "content_span": [126, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Intelligence Service's (NIS) investigation\nThe NIS investigation focuses on \"Revolutionary Organization (RO),\" the true nature of which was first informed by an internal whistle blower of the UPP. He, identified only as 40-year-old Mr. Yi, is known to have been one of the core members of the insurgent group. Reports said Mr. Yi had been disappointed by North Korean submarine attack on a South Korean corvette \"Cheonanham\" in March 2010, and the RO's unconditional loyalty to North Korean regime, and he finally decided to reveal the treason plot and get a 'new life.' He allegedly handed in a USB drive containing the RO's doctrine and goal, members' activities, and materials for ideological study. The NIS was reported to have said that Mr. Yi's statements coincide largely with what was found from the subsequent probe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 125], "content_span": [126, 908]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Intelligence Service's (NIS) investigation\nOn September 17, 2013, the NIS searched and seized the houses of five people: Hong Sung-gyu (spokesman for the UPP), Kim Yang-hyun (Pyungtek city chairman of the UPP), Kim Seok-young (Ansan city Sangrok Gap area chairman of the UPP), Choi Jin-seon (the representative of Hwasung Center for Labor and Human Rights), Yoon Yong-bae (chairman of the organizing committee of the Korea Alliance for Progressive Movements).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 125], "content_span": [126, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Intelligence Service's (NIS) investigation\nOn September 24, 2013, the NIS additionally searched and seized the office of Ahn So-hee, a member of Paju city council, for violating the National Security Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 125], "content_span": [126, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Arrest, search, and seizure\nOn August 28, 2013, agents from the National Intelligence Service raided the homes and offices of an opposition lawmaker, Lee Seok-ki, and other members of a far-left opposition party, detaining three of them on charges of plotting to overthrow the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Arrest, search, and seizure\nThe three persons detained were Hong Soon-seok, a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP; Han Dong-geun, a former Suwon city chairman of the UPP; and Lee Sang-ho, an adviser of Kyunggi Alliance for Progressive Movement. And a total of 14 have been banned from leaving the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Arrest, search, and seizure\nThe NIS agents, who raided Lee Seok-ki's office in the National Assembly with the warrant at 8:10 am, faced resistance of Lee's aides and were able to enter the office only after 20 minutes of struggle. But inside the office, Lee Seok-ki's fellow lawmakers including Kim Mi-hee blocked the door of another Lee's office room until 3:00 pm. Ahead of the raid, Lee's aides are alleged to have shredded documents of unknown content.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Arrest, search, and seizure\nLee Seok-ki was said to appear at 6:58 am, August 28, at his studio apartment at Mapo-gu, the western part of Seoul, disguised and wearing a cap, and ran away in a cab as soon as he found his place was being searched by investigators. He showed up at the National Assembly hall on the next day with the suspicion that he had already destroyed important evidence. Investigators allegedly seized 57 letters of vowing loyalty to Lee Seok-ki, tap detection equipment, and 91 million won worth of bank notes (US$1 = 1,100 Korean won).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Assembly's approval for arrest\nOn September 2, 2013, South Korea's National Assembly received the government's arrest motion for lawmaker Lee Seok-ki, signed by President Park Geun-hye. According to the Korean National Assembly Act, the arrest motion should be decided by vote in the plenary session 24 hours after and within 72 hours from the report of the motion. Kang Chang-hee, the speaker of the National Assembly, submitted the proposal of opening plenary session from September 2 to December 10 and put it to a vote, which was the preliminary procedure to pass the arrest motion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 113], "content_span": [114, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0012-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Assembly's approval for arrest\nThe proposal was passed with 255 in favor, 2 against, and 7 abstentions. Kim Mi-hee and Kim Jae-yeon from the UPP opposed the proposal. Seven abstainers, all of whom were from the opposition Democratic Party, were Moon Jae-in, Lee In-young, Kim Yong-ik, Do Jong-hwan, Yu Sung-yeop, Eun Soo-mi, and Lim Soo-kyung. Lee Seok-ki didn't participate in the vote at all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 113], "content_span": [114, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Assembly's approval for arrest\nOn September 4, 2013, the South Korean National Assembly overwhelmingly passed a proposal that would lift Lee Seok-ki's legislative immunity against arrest. It is believed to be the first time the assembly has passed such a motion over rebellion charges. The vote was 258 in favor and 14 against, with 11 abstentions and 6 invalid. After the vote the Suwon District Court issued a warrant against Lee Seok-ki, and the arrest was made by the National Intelligent Service in a speedy manner. In executing the warrant at Lee's office in the National Assembly, NIS investigators had nearly an hour-long confrontation with vehemently-resisting UPP members who blocked the path to Lee's Office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 113], "content_span": [114, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Assembly's approval for arrest\nPrior to the National Assembly's vote, Justice Minister Hwang Kyo-an attended the session and explained the reasons of filing the arrest motion against Lee. \"Lee Seok-ki organized and led the Revolutionary Organization (RO), a rebel group, the purpose of which was to revolutionize South Korean society with 'Juche,' the political ideology of the North Korean state. He plotted a pro-North rebellion by instigating the RO members to make physical and military preparation for war between North and South Korea, and by drawing up riot plans such as destroying the nation's infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 113], "content_span": [114, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Assembly's approval for arrest\nMinister Hwang declared that Lee Seok-ki committed following three crimes. 1. Rebellion conspiracy: A collusion and an agreement between two or more persons on plans and contents of rebellion crime. According to the judicial precedent of the Supreme Court of Korea, it does not require that a detail plan of action must be conspired to constitute an offense. 2 . Instigation of rebellion: Any word or action that promotes or stimulates to commit insurgency. 3. Benefiting enemy, the offense under National Security Act: To praise, inspire, propagate or conform to the activities of anti-government organization while knowing that such an act endangers national security or free democratic basic order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 113], "content_span": [114, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, The National Assembly's approval for arrest\nAccording to Minister Hwang, the Prosecutor's Office made a decision that Lee Seok-ki and his followers' crime is a clear danger and defiance to the free democratic basic order of the Republic of Korea, after a close analysis of the evidence. Prosecutors also said there are enough grounds for imprisonment of Lee Seok-ki and his accomplices, considering the following facts. The members of RO, a rebellion group, abided by the rules of organizational security. Under the rules they planned and executed detailed security principles and guidelines, such as destroying evidences. It was highly possible for the criminals to obstruct the investigators' activities of identifying the true nature of the RO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 113], "content_span": [114, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nLee Seok-ki allegedly called on his colleagues to prepare to conduct a \"speedy war\" against the South Korean government should Pyongyang issue an order to attack, according to a transcript of his address during their secret meeting in May 2013. Lee, of the minor opposition Unified Progressive Party, was accused of forming an underground pro-North Korean organization and plotting and instigating an armed revolt. The group, known as \"RO\" is thought to have been formed within the East Kyunggi Coalition and have around 130 members. The East Kyunggi Coalition is a left-leaning political group that backs Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nAccording to the request for Lee Seok-ki's arrest submitted to the National Assembly on September 2, 2013, Lee claimed at a meeting of the group in May 2013 that North Korea had effectively declared war and that they should prepare an offensive. \"As of March 5, the North Korean People's Army command declared the armistice agreement invalid. Scrapping the armistice agreement means war. Let's prepare for war throughout the country,\" Lee is quoted as saying. Lee Seok-ki is also alleged to have called on his \"comrades\" to collaborate to show \"limitless creative thinking\" in their attacks. Lee also allegedly told the attendants of his supporters' rally in March 2012 that the parliament would become the \"frontline for class strife,\" and that the current political environment would lead to separation of \"revolutionary and anti-revolutionary forces.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 955]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nLee Seok-ki was reported to have said that the current bipartisan system in South Korea was a result of the American colonists' strategy to divide and control South Korea. At a secret meeting held in August 2012 near Seoul area, Lee presented the plan to 'seize power' by making his party the largest opposition party through the 2014 local election and the 2016 general election, and by finally winning the presidential election in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nThe RO group allegedly discussed details of how to make preparations to strike the South Korean government and the U.S. military, such as by incapacitating internet networks and infrastructure for oil and gas supplies and other major logistical facilities in the Seoul area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nSpecifically, they are known to have conspired to destroy the Hye-hwa branch of Korea Telecom Corporation, the Internet Data Center in Bundang, and the Pyung-taek distribution base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nHye-hwa branch of KT is in charge of core telephone business and internet service. If Hye-hwa branch goes wrong, the internet speed in the country can be substantially slower. The \"Internet Chaos\" of South Korea in 2003 was caused by a server outage in the Hye-hwa branch, paralyzing the nationwide internet service network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nInternet Data Center in Bundang is also equipped with various internet server platforms. Even though the IDCs are located separately at various places such as Mapo, Seon-reung in Seoul, a terrorist attack on even a single IDC can cause serious telecommunication problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nIn Pyung-taek distribution base, Korea National Oil Corporation maintains a large-scale facilities that store about 6.2 million barrels of oil and liquefied petroleum gas for use in case of national emergency or war. If the base is attacked, a large explosion and fire will seriously damage the storage facilities and nearby area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nIn March 2013, when tension rose in Korean peninsula after North Korea vowed to nullify the armistice agreement, Lee Seok-ki allegedly issued \"three major guidelines of preparing war\" for the members of RO, the insurgent group. The guidelines, which were delivered by regional RO leaders like Hong Soon-seok (a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of UPP), are as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\n1. Build a solidarity organization for emergency as soon as possible. 2 . Perform a large-scale propaganda using a crowd of people just like the time when \"the Mad Cow Disease riot\" hit the nation. 3. Gather information on military facilities such as U.S. Army camps, U.S. radar bases, and power plants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nThe leaders of the RO allegedly educated its members the method of destroying criminal evidence. On May 8, 2013, Hong Soon-seok (a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP) gave a guideline to Han Dong-geun (a former Suwon city chairman of the UPP), urging him to break and swallow USB drives in case of emergency like investigators' raid. There is also an instruction for escape, under which RO members have to look for a hiding place of their own and always possess 100 thousand Korean won in cash. They were also told to evade the investigators' chase by fleeing and exchanging secret passwords when reconnecting a RO member.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nOn April 5, 2013, at the office of Suwon Medical Cooperation, Hong Soon-seok and Han Dong-geun had a secret meeting with the RO \"cell\" members, according to Lee Seok-ki's prior order. At the meeting all the members vowed loyalty to North Korea, watching the North Korean war movie \"Wol-mi do island(1982).\" The movie makes a hero of the North Korean artillery soldiers stationed in 'Wol-mi do' island, who fought U.N. troops conducting the famous 'Incheon landing operation' during the Korean War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nLee Seok-ki requested over 80 documents from the government including confidential national defense materials related to the American and the South Korean armed forces. He requested confidential material on the U.S. and South Korean joint strategic response in case of an attack from North Korea. Since Lee was elected as a proportional representative to the National Assembly in April 2012, he requested 84 documents from 10 different government branches, of which 46 were related to military issues and 36 were related to U.S.-South Korea armed forces and relations between Seoul and Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nIn April 2013, when North Korea was protesting annual joint military drills by South Korea and the U.S., Lee requested from the Defense Ministry materials on Seoul and Washington's joint strategy in case of attack by Pyongyang. He also requested materials on the March 2013 South Korea-U.S. agreement to carry out a joint counterattack in case of any surgical strike on the South from the North, the strength of a counter-provocation plan and details on the military command in such cases of attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0030-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nHe looked into what kind of military support was available to the South in case of such an attack, including from U.S. Forces Japan and the Unified Nations Command. He wanted information on who has operational control in times of crisis on the Korean Peninsula and cooperation among the armed forces of South Korea, the U.S. and Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nLee Seok-ki had visited North Korea on two different occasions, the South Korean government said on September 2, 2013. Reports said Lee Seok-ki traveled to North Korea to secretly meet with North Korean officials. Any such meeting could link the rebellion plot to North Korea. \"Records showed he was at the Mount Kumgang resort on March 31-April 1 in 2005 and again on March 16\u201318 of 2007,\" Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Hyung-suk said. Kim said that Lee went to the scenic mountain on a package tour with members of CN Communications, an advertising company he managed. The spokesman said that during the 2005 trip, Lee Seok-ki was on parole after being released from prison. He had been imprisoned for pro-North Korean activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nAuthorities reportedly found circumstantial evidence, from which it could be inferred that RO members secretly visited North Korea, contacted the North Korean spy agency, and maintained liaison with highly trained reconnaissance agents of the North. \"Lee Seok-ki and the RO's core members had worked in the People's Democratic Revolution Party(PDRP). Since PDRP had conducted espionage activities for North Korea receiving orders from it, it is also highly likely that the RO is connected to North Korea in one way or another,\" the authorities said. Especially the fact that Kim Keun-rae(a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP), Jo Yang-won(the representative of Social Trend Institute), and other RO members had visited North Korea individually or in a group, was presented as strong circumstantial evidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 917]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nThe National Intelligence Service found core members of the RO had kept in contact with an unidentified person suspected of being a North Korean spy. The NIS continues to probe into their contact route and the contents of communication among them. Last year they detected Lee Sang-ho(an adviser of Kyunggi Alliance for Progressive Movement) and Hong Soon-seok(a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP) had made an international calls on a regular basis, using specific public phones in Seoul and Suwon city. The NIS tapped those public phones legitimately with warrants issued by the court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0033-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nAs a result, they found Lee Sang-ho and other suspects showed a consistent pattern of behavior: The always sent an e-mail to an unknown G-mail user in the U.S. right after they made an international call to the suspected spy from North. During the phone call, they allegedly mentioned the activities of the RO and had a dialogue like \"I will send you an e-mail.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Criminal charges and suspicion\nThe suspected spy, who communicated with the RO members, was also found to have forward the e-mails to China using a sophisticated security tool to evade tracking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\nOn September 26, 2013, South Korean prosecutors indicted Lee Seok-ki, a left-wing lawmaker, on charges that he was plotting a pro-North Korea rebellion to overthrow the government, saying his plan posed a \"grave\" national security threat. Senior prosecutor Kim Soo-nam told a news conference that Lee and his colleagues specifically brought up possible targets to attack, including a telecommunications facility in Seoul, during the May meeting, which drew 130 people. He said the plotters also discussed using websites to find ways to manufacture firearms and bombs. According to transcripts of conversations at the meeting publicized by South Korean media, some participants talked about ways to make powerful BB guns and searching the internet to find ways to build homemade bombs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\nKim said Lee Seo-ki believed that high tensions between the two Koreas in 2013 spring would lead to war. \"It's an incident that an underground revolutionary organization....systemically and collectively plotted to overthrow a free democracy and posed a grave threat to\" South Korea's national security, Kim said. He said Lee Seok-ki was indicted on two other charges-inciting a rebellion and praising North Korea in violation of South Korea's anti-Pyongyang security law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\nOn September 25, 2013, three of Lee Seok-ki's colleagues were also indicted. They are Hong Soon-seok(a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP), Lee Sang-ho(an adviser of Kyunggi Alliance for Progressive Movement), and Han Dong-geun(a former Suwon city chairman of the UPP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\nAs of September 26, 2013, totally 4 suspects were indicted after searching and seizing 16 people. The investigation continues into other suspects such as lawmakers Kim Mi-hee and Kim Jae-yeon, both of whom are suspected of participating in the secret meeting of the rebellion group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\nThe two major criminal charges of Lee Seok-ki presented in the bill of indictment are as follows .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\n1. \"Plotting insurgency\" with a resolution of violent revolutionIn March 2013, Lee issued the three guidelines for war:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\na. Build a solidarity organization for emergency as soon as possible. b. Perform a large-scale propaganda using a crowd of people just like the time when \"the Mad Cow Disease riot\" hit the nation. c. Gather information on military facilities such as U.S. Army camps, U.S. radar bases, and power plants. He made a lecture to 20 people from the CNP Group, which was responsible for the finance and the strategy of the RO, that they should resolve to make ideological and physical preparation; strengthen security against white terror and preventive custody; and wage an unconventional partisan war in the rear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Prosecutor's indictment\n2. Violation of the National Security Act, by praising and inspiring Lee participated in \"the rally for supporting Lee Seok-ki\" with Hong Soon-seok(a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP) and other 400 members of the organization and sang \"the song for comrades of revolution.\" He also violated the National Security Act by possessing materials for \"benefiting\" the enemy: 90 original North Korean contents including a CD of \"the works of the great general Kim Jung-il\"; 15 North Korean movies\u00a0; 30 North Korean novels;27 materials written by pro-North organization and people; and 28 other works.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, Investigation and legal proceedings, Judgment of first trial\nOn 18 February 2014, Suwon district court adjudicated that Lee serve 12 years in prison, and other prosecuted defendant were adjudicated for 4 to 7 years in prison. And the prosecutions are imminent to prosecute other RO members. Lee's attorney said that they will appeal the adjudication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group\nThe RO, organized in August 2003 (the NIS's estimation) after the leader Lee Seok-ki was released from prison, can be described as an updated version of the People's Democratic Revolutionary Party(PDRP), a former underground insurgent organization. The RO, like the PDRP, has a goal of destroying free democratic system of South Korea with more reinforced leadership and security system than its predecessor. The RO has a centralized leadership structure where all the members protect and follow orders from one strong leader, Lee Seok-ki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0044-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group\nThey observe very strict security rules of their own to hide their existence: They used encrypting software when sending e-mails\u00a0; Clone Phones of stolen identities are used in communication among members; and especially they used \"Stenography\", a technique of hiding messages in a picture or a text file, typically used by North Korean spies. During 2003-2013 the RO members reportedly infiltrated political parties and NGOs in South Korea and pursued a communist revolution in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, Organizational structure\nThe RO was reported to have been organized in 2003 under the guidance of Lee Seok-ki with about 130 persons, most of whom had been the member of the South Kyunggi Committee of the People's Democratic Revolutionary Party(PDRP), the illegal pro-North Korean organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 111], "content_span": [112, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, Organizational structure\nThe organizational structure of the RO, provided by the National Intelligence Service, is as follows. Under Lee Seok-ki, the person in charge, the RO has \"the Central Committee\" which consists of four regional and two sectional divisions. The four regional divisions are the East Kyunggi, the South Kyunggi, the Central West Kyunggi, and the North Kyunggi, where \"Kyunggi\" is the name of a province that forms a big metropolitan area around Seoul city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 111], "content_span": [112, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0046-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, Organizational structure\nthe East Kyunggi is led by Jo Yang-won (the representative of Social Trend Institute) as a senior cell leader, and Kim Keun-rae (a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP) as a junior cell leader. Lee Sang-ho (an adviser of Kyunggi Alliance for Progressive Movement), as a senior cell leader, is in charge of the South Kyunggi. The Central West Kyunggi is controlled by Hong Soon-seok (a Kyunggi provincial vice chairman of the UPP) as a senior cell leader, and Han Dong-geun (a former Suwon city chairman of the UPP) as a junior cell leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 111], "content_span": [112, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0046-0002", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, Organizational structure\nThe North Kyunggi is under the charge of Kim Hong-ryul (the Kyunggi provincial chairman of the UPP) as a senior cell leader, and Lee Young-chun(a Kyunggi-Paju branch manager of Korean Confederation of Trade Union) as a junior cell leader. The two sectional divisions are the Central Team led by Woo Wi-young (an ex-spokesman of the UPP) and the Youth Team managed by Park Min-jung(a former youth chairman of the UPP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 111], "content_span": [112, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, Organizational structure\nEvidence showed several public servants are included among 130 RO members. Those public servants also participated in the secret meeting of the RO. They were known to work at the community centers or county offices in Kyunggi Province, where most members of the East Kyunggi Coalition of the UPP have residence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 111], "content_span": [112, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, Affiliation and conforming process\nThe procedure for affiliation with the RO is made up of three stages, which are \"education meeting\", \"ideology circle\", and \"acquisition of membership\". In the \"education meeting\" level, the RO candidates learn the basic communist ideology with text books like \"the Rewritten Modern History of Korea\", in order to become \"Juche\"(the North Korean philosophy of communism) activists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 121], "content_span": [122, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0048-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, Affiliation and conforming process\nThose who showed eagerness to learn and finished the first stage move up to the second level of \"ideology circle,\" where they get intensified ideological education with the original North Korean textbooks such as \"About Juche ideology,\" \"The Juche revolutionary view on organizations,\" \"Memoirs of Kim Il-sung,\" and \"The collection of Kim Il-sung's writings.\" At the final stage, candidates formally become members of the RO through the procedures like writing and evaluating resumes, statement of resolution, and recommendation letters. In the initiation ceremony, usually held in an isolated place near seashore or mountain, when the question is asked \"Who is our boss? \", candidates have to answer \"Secretary Kim Jung-il,\" the former leader of North Korea who died in November 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 121], "content_span": [122, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, History of RO\nThe origin of the RO is closely related to the People's Democratic Revolutionary Party(PDRP), the underground insurgent organization founded back in the 1990s. In 1998 the National Intelligence Service of South Korea found the connection between North Korean spies and the PDRP through analyses on the evidences like North Korean spies' note books secured from wrecked North Korean semi-submarine boat. The core figure of the PDRP was Kim Young-hwan who wrote the book \"Iron Letters\" widely known as a textbook of \"Juche\", the North Korean communist ideology, in the 1980s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0049-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, History of RO\nIn 1989 Kim Young-hwan secretly visited North Korea, joined the communist Workers' Party of Korea, and met Kim Il-song, the leader of North Korea at the time. After that he organized the PDRP with comrades like Ha Young-wook, his alumnus of Seoul University law major. In 1999 Kim Young-hwan was imprisoned for violation of National Security Act, but soon walked out of jail with indictment postponed, after having written a pledge for \"ideology change.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, History of RO\nLee Seok-ki also played an important role in the foundation of PDRP as by participating in the inaugural ceremony and actively supporting the party's doctrine \"Let's win the people's independence under the ideological guidance of 'Juche', the North Korean communism.\" In 2002 Lee Seok-ki was involved in the espionage case centered on the PDRP, and in 2003 he was sentenced to 30 months in prison for violating the National Security Act. But on August 15, 2003, he was granted a special pardon for the Independence Day commemoration and released on parole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, RO (Revolutionary Organization), the insurgent group, History of RO\nThe National Intelligence Service believes that the PDRP's doctrines and the goal of communist revolution survived in the RO even though the PDRP itself had been broken up. The ground for the belief is that the RO's four regional divisions of Kyunggi came from \"the Committee of South Kyunggi\" which was one of the branches of PDRP, and that Lee Seok-ki, the RO's leader, was found to have served as the chief of the committee. The NIS estimates that the RO was organized in late 2003 when Lee Seok-ki was released from prison by the special pardon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 100], "content_span": [101, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Suspected destruction of evidence\nOn August 28, 2013, the NIS agents raided Lee Seok-ki's office with the warrant at 8:10 am, but faced resistance of Lee's aides and succeeded to enter the office only after 20 minutes of struggle. Inside the office, Lee Seok-ki's fellow lawmakers including Kim Mi-hee blocked the door of another Lee's office room until 3:00 pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 102], "content_span": [103, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Suspected destruction of evidence\nOn August 28, 2013, Lee Seok-ki allegedly took a taxi and ran away in disguise when he found the investigators searching and seizing his place, according to the report of Channel A, a South Korean TV network. On the next day Lee explained he stayed in Seoul. Owing to his running away the execution of the search warrant on his body had to be delayed until the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 102], "content_span": [103, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Resisting arrest\nOn September 2 at 10:30\u00a0a.m., at one of the National Assembly's meeting rooms, Kim Jae-yeon and Kim Mi-hee, fellow lawmakers of Lee Seok-ki from Unified Progressive Party(UPP), confronted with the passage of the arrest motion for Lee, appealed to lawmakers from the Democratic Party to help Lee. They distributed \"the statement of appeal\" saying that Lee is innocent of insurgency plot and the NIS investigation is merely McCarthyism and a witch hunt. And about 200 members of the UPP's regional committee crowded in front of the National Assembly's building and collided with security guards there shouting \"Stop approving the arrest motion for Lee.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Resisting arrest\nOn September 4, 2013, members of the UPP fiercely protested and collided with the NIS investigators executing the arrest warrant for Lee Seok-ki. The NIS, for the execution of the warrant, sent about 60 investigators to Lee's office in the National Assembly's hall, but they were blocked by the UPP members' violence. About 30 people from UPP cursed, pushed, and even beat the NIS investigators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Denying charges and changing statements\nOn August 31, 2013, the Unified Progressive Party(UPP) held a demonstration in protest of NIS's investigation of Lee Seok-ki and other members of the party on charge of insurgency plot, in front of NIS building in Seocho-Gu, Seoul. In the protest, titled as \"a rally against NIS's fabrication of charges and repression\", the UPP lawmakers Lee Seok-ki, Lee Jung-hee, and Oh Byung-yoon participated and about 1,500 people(calculation by police) rallied. \"This case is a complete set-up. The NIS must stop spreading false information and reveal the video recordings of the plot meeting, if they have any\" the UPP chairwoman Lee Jung-hee said in the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 108], "content_span": [109, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Denying charges and changing statements\nThe UPP lawmakers' continuous changing of their previous comments aroused controversies. At first, Lee Seok-ki said \"I have never mentioned firearms\" denying all the suspicions. But he changed his initial statement and said \"It is just a piece of transcript edited with a few keywords,\" soon after the recording of secret meeting was released. He was found to have said \"Even a gun can be more valuable than tens of thousands of nuclear weapons,\" at the meeting. Lee Seok-ki even denied holding the May 12 secret meeting by saying, \"All the charges were fabricated.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 108], "content_span": [109, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0057-0001", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Denying charges and changing statements\nBut after the detailed transcript of the meeting was open to public, the UPP spokesman Hong Sung-gyu explained, \"The meeting was held by Kyunggi regional branch of the UPP, where Lee Seok-ki was invited to make lectures on current political issues,\" virtually accepting the secret meeting was held. The UPP lawmaker Kim Jae-yeonn also changedher comments from \"There was no such meeting in May\" to \"I participated in the meeting\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 108], "content_span": [109, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Denying charges and changing statements\nOn September 4, 2013, the UPP Chairwoman Lee Jung-hee convened a press conference and told reporters that everything Lee Seok-ki and RO members said at the May 12 meeting was a \"joke.\" \"Among the 130 attendees, only one or two of them mentioned weapons or destroying facilities, but it was a kind of a joke, and although some said things like that, the others just laughed,\" the chairwoman said. Her comments conflicted with previous ones. When the prosecution first revealed the insurrection allegation, She and other UPP members said they were \"fabricated\" and even denied that the May 12 meeting took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 108], "content_span": [109, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236039-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 South Korean sabotage plot, United Progress Party's resistance, Denying charges and changing statements\nOn September 4, 2013, just before the passage of arrest motion for Lee Seok-ki in the National Assembly, Lee was given a chance to make a final explanation and claimed, \"In a report of the New York Times, they compared the NIS investigation to the past regime's political repression on dissidents in the 1970s, \"Yushin\" era.\" But his comments turned out to be false. The corresponding report of NYT merely quoted the UPP's comments. Lee Seok-ki deceived people by saying as if the comparison were the NYT's own opinion. The original text of NYT report on August 28, 2013, is as follows\u00a0; On Wednesday, the Unified Progressive Party said that the raid was reminiscent of the Yushin, or \"revitalization,\" era, when Ms. Park's father, Park Chung-hee ruled the country with an iron fist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 108], "content_span": [109, 892]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236040-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Seas Island Resort Women's Pro Classic\nThe 2013 South Seas Island Resort Women's Pro Classic was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Captiva Island, United States, on November 4\u201310, 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236040-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Seas Island Resort Women's Pro Classic, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236041-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Seas Island Resort Women's Pro Classic \u2013 Doubles\nGabriela Dabrowski and Allie Will won the title with a 6\u20131, 6\u20132 win over Julia Boserup and Alexandra Mueller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236042-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Seas Island Resort Women's Pro Classic \u2013 Singles\nMandy Minella won the tournament, defeating Gabriela Dabrowski in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election\nThe South Shields by-election was a by-election held for the United Kingdom House of Commons constituency of South Shields. It was triggered by the resignation of David Miliband, the previous Member of Parliament (MP) and former Foreign Secretary, who had held the seat for Labour since 2001. The by-election took place on 2 May 2013, coinciding with local elections across England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election\nThe by-election was won by Emma Lewell-Buck of the Labour Party with 50.4% of the vote. The UK Independence Party (UKIP) came second with 24.2%, with the Conservatives dropping to third with 11.5%. The Liberal Democrats' candidate came seventh with just 1.4%, the Liberals' or Liberal Democrats' lowest share of the vote at a by-election since 1948.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Resignation of David Miliband\nThe seat became vacant after David Miliband, the incumbent Member of Parliament (MP) and former Foreign Secretary, announced on 27 March 2013 that he intended to resign from Parliament, in order to take up a position as head of the International Rescue Committee in New York City. In an interview with the BBC, he also explained that he \"feared\" his continued involvement in British politics was a \"distraction\" to his brother Ed's leadership of the Labour Party. Miliband's resignation was formally announced on 15 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Date\nThe date for the by-election was scheduled for 2 May 2013 to coincide with local elections across England, although none of those local elections were for councils or positions in South Shields - the nearest elections being for the county councils of Durham and Northumberland, and for the directly elected mayor of North Tyneside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Candidates and campaign\nThe Labour Party selected South Tyneside councillor Emma Lewell-Buck as its candidate on 10 April 2013. Mark Walsh, a fellow councillor, had been considered the favourite to be selected, but withdrew for \"personal reasons\" hours before the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Candidates and campaign\nThe Conservative Party selected the previous 2010 candidate Karen Allen to once again stand for the party on 11 April 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Candidates and campaign\nThe Liberal Democrats chose Hugh Annand as their candidate on 11 April 2013. Annand had previously stood in North East Hertfordshire and has also been chosen as the seventh candidate on their East of England party-list for the 2014 European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Candidates and campaign\nThe UK Independence Party announced on 7 April 2013 that Richard Elvin would be their candidate. Elvin finished second in the 2012 Middlesbrough by-election with 12% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Candidates and campaign\nAlan \"Howling Laud\" Hope, the leader of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party and perennial by-election candidate, stood as the party's candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236043-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 South Shields by-election, Candidates and campaign\nComedian Simon Brodkin, in character as Lee Nelson, was duly nominated as a candidate for 'Lee Nelson\u2019s Well Good Party', but then withdrew his nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236044-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Sulawesi gubernatorial election\nAn election was held on 22 January 2013 for the post of Governor of the Indonesian province of South Sulawesi. The incumbent governor Syahrul Yasin Limpo of the Golkar party was re-elected with 52% of the vote. The principal opponent was Ilham Arief Sirajuddin of the Democratic Party, who obtained 42% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236045-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Sydney Rabbitohs season\nThe 2013 South Sydney Rabbitohs season was the 104th in the club's history. Coached by Michael Maguire and captained by John Sutton, they competed in the National Rugby League's 2013 Telstra Premiership, finishing the regular season in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236045-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Sydney Rabbitohs season, Pre-season\nIn 2013, the Rabbitohs again competed in three pre-season trial matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides\nA mass shooting on January 19, 2013, in South Valley, New Mexico, resulted in the deaths of five family members of the Griego family: the parents and three younger children. They were shot with two different weapons. The 15-year-old eldest son of the family, Nehemiah Griego, was arrested and charged with the shootings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides\nIn October 2015, Nehemiah Griego pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder and three counts of child abuse resulting in death. As he was a minor at the time of the crimes, a family court judge proposed to sentence him accordingly. This was appealed by the prosecutor and overturned by the appeals court in 2019. Griego was sentenced as an adult.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Events\nAccording to police, the suspect Nehemiah Griego, 15 years old, shot and killed his parents and three siblings at their house in South Valley, New Mexico, near Albuquerque. First he shot his mother around midnight, with a .22 rifle. He said his younger brother Zephaniah woke up, and Griego told him he had shot their mother. He next shot Zephaniah with the same rifle. He went into the bedroom shared by his two younger sisters, who were crying, and fatally shot them each in the head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Events\nGriego went downstairs to wait for his father to return home from his shift at a homeless shelter. When the father returned about 5 a.m., Griego shot him multiple times with an AR-15-type semi-automatic rifle with a scope. The youth drove to church, with two rifles in the van. He told his girlfriend that his family was killed in an accident. The pastor received news that something was wrong with his father. When the pastor asked Griego about his father, Griego stated that his family was dead. The pastor and another member of the congregation, a retired homicide detective, decided to drive Griego back to house, but on the way the retired detective felt something was wrong and called 911.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Events\nAfterward Griego changed his account of the events and made a statement to police, saying that he had been having suicidal and homicidal thoughts. He said he had obtained the guns from his parents' closet, that his father had bought them and taught both him and his mother to use them. He e-mailed a photo of his dead mother to his girlfriend. His intention had been to drive away, murder more people, and die in a gun battle with police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Events\nAt age 15, Griego was classified as a minor at the time of the crime. Under New Mexico law, minors charged with first-degree murder are to be tried as adults. However, persons who are minors when a crime is committed cannot be sentenced to death or life-without-parole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Victims\nThe five victims were Greg Griego and his wife Sarah, and their three younger children, a son and two daughters. The father, 51-year-old Greg Griego, was a former pastor at the area's Calvary Church. He served as a chaplain to the Albuquerque Fire Department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Victims\nHe and his wife, 40-year-old Sarah Griego, were both active in prison ministry. They were the parents of the alleged shooter, Nehemiah Griego, and nine other children, several older than the shooter. The murdered children, nine-year-old Zephaniah, five-year-old Jael, and two-year-old Angelina, were Nehemiah's younger siblings living at home. New Mexico politician Eric Griego is a brother of the late Greg Griego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Perpetrator\nThe perpetrator is 15-year-old Nehemiah Griego. He was booked into Bernalillo County Juvenile Detention Center and was charged with two counts of murder and three counts of child abuse resulting in death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Perpetrator\nHe agreed to speak to police without an adult or lawyer present. Griego told the police investigators \"that he was angry at his mother and had suicidal thoughts\". He initially pleaded not guilty due to insanity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Legal proceedings\nBy January 2015, the case was at a standstill due to several complications. Mental health evaluations of Griego were underway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Legal proceedings\nIn October 2015, Griego pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder and three counts of child abuse resulting in death. The Sheriff's office had said that Griego had been planning the killings for days. He had been held at the Sequoyah Adolescent Treatment Center for the previous 18 months before his plea. There would be hearings by the court as to the suitability of Griego to treatment as a juvenile. Extended family members supported the idea of an amenability hearing to determine whether the youth could be treated, and did not want to see the case go to trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Legal proceedings\nOn February 11, 2016, Judge John J. Romero of the New Mexico Children's Court determined that, based on mental health evaluations, Griego is \"amenable to treatment\" and would be sentenced as a juvenile. This would mean that Griego, then 18, would likely be released from a youth detention facility when he turns 21. Bernalillo County District Attorney Kari Brandenburg announced that she would be appealing the ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Legal proceedings\nIn August 2019, Judge Alisa Hart filed a 75-page order in 2nd Judicial District Court that reversed the order of the lower court to have Griego be sentenced in juvenile court. She found that, at age 22, he was \"not amenable to treatment or rehabilitation in available facilities\" and believed that he should not be treated in an unlocked facility. She said he is to be sentenced as an adult. He faced a sentence of up to 120 years in prison because of the multiple victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236046-0013-0001", "contents": "2013 South Valley homicides, Legal proceedings\nHis public defender said that it was also possible for him to receive a lesser sentence and continued treatment for his issues. These were confidential because he was a minor when he committed the crimes. Greigo was ultimately sentenced to three concurrent life sentences plus seven years to run consecutively with the life sentences with credit given for the 2,476 days \u2013 six years and 285 days already served and in all must serve 30 years before being eligible for parole. Griego is currently imprisoned in the Lea County Correctional Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games\nThe 2013 Southeast Asian Games (Burmese: \u1042\u1040\u1041\u1043 \u1001\u102f\u1014\u103e\u1005\u103a \u1021\u101b\u103e\u1031\u1037\u1010\u1031\u102c\u1004\u103a \u1021\u102c\u101b\u103e \u1021\u102c\u1038\u1000\u1005\u102c\u1038 \u1015\u103c\u102d\u102f\u1004\u103a\u1015\u103d\u1032), officially known as the 27th Southeast Asian Games, was a Southeast Asian multi-sport event took place in Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar. Around 4730 athletes from 11 participating nations competed at the games, which featured 460 events in 34 sports. The games were held from 11 to 22 December 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games\nIt was the third time for Myanmar in hosting the Southeast Asian Games. The country hosted the Games in 1961 and 1969 respectively in Yangon, then capital of the country. Singapore withdrew its hosting rights due to expected delays in the completion of its new national stadium, it eventually hosted in 2015. Nay Pyi Taw became the second city in Myanmar to host the Southeast Asian Games. The games were opened and closed by Nyan Tun, the Vice-president of Myanmar at the Wunna Theikdi Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games\nThe final medal tally was led by Thailand, followed by host Myanmar and Vietnam. Several Games and national records were broken during the games. Though there were several controversies, the Games were generally deemed successful with the rising standard of competition amongst the Southeast Asian nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Organisation, Host city\nMyanmar, Vietnam, Philippines and Thailand revealed their intentions to host the 2013 edition. However, since the latter three nations hosted the 2003, 2005 and 2007 editions, respectively, these countries were less favored to host this edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Organisation, Host city\nMyanmar held the longest interval between hosting the games, spanning a time of 44 years. The Southeast Asian Games Federation (SEAGF) Council met in Jakarta on 31 May 2010 unanimously agreed to award the Myanmar Olympic Committee the right to host the 27th edition of the games. The official website of the Olympic Council of Asia also approved the fact that Myanmar would host the 27th Southeast Asian Games in its news launched on 7 June 2010. ASEAN Football Federation (AFF)'s official website also announced that Myanmar would host the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Organisation, Development and preparation\nThe Myanmar SEA Games Organising Committee (MYASOC) was formed to oversee the staging of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Organisation, Public transport\nAs Naypyidaw was yet to be fully developed into a city, only shuttle bus services were provided throughout the games and were used to ferry athletes and officials to and from the airport, games venues and games village. The co-host cities of the games, Yangon, Mandalay and Ngwesaung also provided the same services during the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Organisation, Countdown\nThe official countdown to the games' opening ceremony began a year prior on 11 December 2012. The countdown clocks were located in Nay Pyi Taw and other cities in Myanmar that co-hosted the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Organisation, Torch relay\nThe torch relay of the games began at Yangon's Thuwunna Indoor Stadium and ended in Nay Pyi Taw during the opening ceremony, covering a distance of 320 kilometres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Marketing, Logo\nThe logo of the 2013 Southeast Asian Games is an image of the map of Myanmar. The Southeast Asian Games Federation logo at the tip of the logo, has eleven rings which resembling the 11 Southeast Asian countries and the Southeast Asian Games Federation. Yellow, green and red, the national colours on Myanmar's National Flag, represents Myanmar as the games' host nation. The yellow circle represents equality and fraternity, green color represents love of nature and the green economy, while the red color represents courage and hard working nature of Myanmar. The circular shape represents complete perfection and endless prosperity among the Southeast Asian countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Marketing, Mascot\nThe official mascot of the 2013 Southeast Asian Games is a couple of owls named Shwe Yoe and Ma Moe. The owls are considered lucky charms in Burmese tradition. The owl is globally taken to be the wisest, calmest and balanced animal. But, in Myanmar, it is also taken to be auspicious and believed to bring forth luck and prosperity to the family, for which the owl dolls are kept at their homes as lucky charms. The owl as the official mascot of Myanmar SEA Games 2013 has a personality: wise, calm, lucky, loyal, and friendly. The personality of an owl was intended to bring forth co-operation, friendship, and better understanding among the participating countries. The mascots are named after a famous Burmese dance, U Shwe Yoe and Daw Moe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Marketing, Songs\nSeveral songs, including the theme of the games \"Colourful Garden\", were written by Lin Htet for the 2013 Southeast Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony was held on 11 December 2013 at the Wunna Theikdi Stadium. It marked the nation's biggest sporting event since 1969. It was led with pre-launch entertainment and a series of screens beamed a dramatic lights show during the Chinese-backed extravaganza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Opening ceremony\nThe ceremony began with fireworks displays at the stadium. The theme song \"Colourful Garden\" was performed during the flag-raising ceremony after performances made by 12,000 school children and the Myanmar Royal Auspicious Orchestra. Chairman of the 27th SEA Games Organising Committee, Vice-President Nyan Tun opened the Games with another explosion of colourful fireworks. The Games' torch was relayed by six former Burmese athletes before Aye Myint Kyu, the Union Minister for Culture, handed it to a Burmese archer where he lit up the Games cauldron by shooting an arrow into it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Opening ceremony\nA showcase of arts and culture about Burmese history was made, with dance performances accompanied the ending of the ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Closing ceremony\nThe closing ceremony was held at Wunna Theikdi Stadium on 22 December 2013. It was started with an hour of music following the performance of \"Colorful Garden\", the theme song for the Games and subsequently, \"Loyalty of Blood\" was later presented by well-known artists May Sweet and Maykhala. The musical hors d'oeuvres concluded with all artists joining together in \"Be Peaceful\". President Thein Sein and his wife Khin Khin Win then entered the stadium, following which the Closing Ceremony was officially opened with pyrotechnic displays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Closing ceremony\nFour performances were presented with the first directly connected the SEA Games to Burmese tradition, celebrating the sport of chinlone, which is believed to have first appeared in Myanmar in the 5th century. It then followed with the \"Elephant Dance\" which about paying tribute to the elephants in Myanmar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Closing ceremony\nThe Closing Ceremony then paid homage to the 135 officially recognised ethnic races diversity of the country with the performance of \"Everlasting Myanmar\", depicting the rich diversity of the population, and simultaneously the many obstacles on the path to realising a new, peaceful and prosperous modern state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Closing ceremony\nMedal winners of every participating countries were then paraded onto the stadium floor to the beat of martial music \u2013 chants of \"Myanmar\" ringing through the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Closing ceremony\nWith the procession complete, President Thein Sein officially announced the 27th SEA Games concluded, as strobe lights searched the sky and a cornucopia of fireworks exploded over the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Closing ceremony\nAfter Myanmar handed over the SEA Games responsibilities to Singapore, host of the 2015 Southeast Asian Games, the Games ended with one last round of fireworks and round of musical performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Sports\nMyanmar hosted 34 sports, fewer than the number of sport in 2011 Southeast Asian Games in Indonesia. Organisers did not nominate the sports of beach volleyball and dance sports, because they considered those uniforms unsuitable for Burmese women. Tennis and Gymnastics, two Olympic sports, were not played in December. In this edition of the Games, floorball was also contested as a demonstration sport. The following sports below were calendared for the 2013 Southeast Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Sports\n\u00b9 \u2013 not an official Olympic Sport. \u00b2 \u2013 sport played only in the SEAG. \u00b3 \u2013 not a traditional Olympic nor SEAG Sport and introduced only by the host country. \u00b0 \u2013 a former official Olympic Sport, not applied in previous host countries and was introduced only by the host country. \u02b0- sport not played in the previous edition and was reintroduced by the host country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, The games, Medal table\nIn September 2014, Myanmar gold medalists Saw Marla Nwe (athletics) and Min Zaw Oo (bodybuilding), along with Indonesian gold and silver medalist Indra Gunawan (swimming), tested positive for a banned drug and were stripped of their medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Broadcasting\nInternational Broadcast Center was constructed in Maniyadana Jade Hall in Naypyidaw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236047-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian Games, Concerns and controversies\nFollowing the shocking defeat of Myanmar football team to Indonesia in the group match that causing them failed to qualify the semi-finals, Myanmar hooligan supporters tore up seats, hurled stones at officers as well burning Southeast Asian Games memorabilia and other billboards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236048-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian floods\nThe 2013 monsoon season (August 2013 \u2013 December 2013) saw large-scale flooding return to Indochina after a calmer 2012 monsoon season. Poverty stricken Cambodia was hardest hit, with some 83 deaths. Countries affected also include Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, and Myanmar. Philippines has seen the annual typhoon related occurrences, which often pummel into Indochina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236048-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian floods, Background\nFlooding and/or related typhoon damage is an annual occurrence in all of Southeast Asia. However, deforestation, land subsidence, poor drainage, have exacerbated existing problems, while development of infrastructure such as dams, drainage, and pumps have lessened it elsewhere. Despite a long history of devastation and little spread of news outside the region, more global attention has been paid to Southeast Asian flooding as it has become a manufacturing hub in the global supply chain and major tourist destination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236048-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian floods, Cambodia\n83 people, half of them children were killed and Preah Khan temple of Angkor Wat complex sustained damage. Death toll updated to 104 Oct.9", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236048-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian floods, Thailand\nSevere flooding occurred in Eastern Thailand, especially in the provinces of Sa Kaeo, Prachin Buri, Chon Buri. Floods unrelated to the monsoon occurred in Phuket. Despite government assurances after the 2011 disaster, flooding has shutdown two factories at an Amata estate. As of Oct 9th, 28 out of 77 Thai provinces had been affected and 39 people had been killed, but the health ministry put the death toll at 51, with more than 3 million people affected since July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236048-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian floods, Myanmar\nAs of 22 September 2013, the floods had made some 300,000 people homeless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236048-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian floods, Vietnam\nTyphoon Wutip killed 40 in Vietnam and removed 200,000 roofs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze\nThe 2013 Southeast Asian haze was a haze crisis that affected several countries in Southeast Asia, including Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Southern Thailand, mainly during June and July 2013. The haze period was caused by large-scale burning in many parts of Sumatra and Borneo. Satellite imagery from NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites showed that the haze was mainly due to smoke from fires burning in Riau province, Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze\nThe 2013 Southeast Asian haze was notable for causing record high levels of pollution in Singapore and several parts of Malaysia. The 3-hour Pollution Standards Index in Singapore reached a record high of 401 on 21 June 2013, surpassing the previous record of 226 set during the 1997 Southeast Asian Haze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0001-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze\nOn 23 June, the Air Pollution Index (API) in Muar, Johor spiked to 746 at 7 a.m. which was almost 2.5 times above the minimum range of the Hazardous level thus resulting in the declaration of emergency in Muar and Ledang (which was afterwards lifted on 25 June in the morning), leaving the towns in virtual shutdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nOn 19 June 2013, NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites captured images of smoke from illegal wildfires on the Indonesian island of Sumatra blowing east toward southern Malaysia and Singapore, causing thick clouds of haze in the region. As stated by a local Indonesian official, the source of the haze might be a 3,000 hectare peatland in Bengkalis Regency, Riau Province, which was set ablaze by an unknown party on 9 June. As many as 187 hotspots were picked up by satellites on 18 June, down to 85 on 20 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nOn 21 June 2013, a total of 437 hotspots were detected in Sumatra. Two days later, the number was down to 119. On 24 June 159 hotspots were detected in Riau, out of a total of 227 detected in Sumatra. An air force officer explained that the low number of hotspots detected on some days was due to heavy cloud cover, which prevented the satellite from detecting some of the hotspots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0003-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nThe Malaysia Department of Environment said that 173 hotspots were detected in Malaysia on 24 June, with 1 in Negeri Sembilan, 1 in Terengganu, 3 in Sabah, and 168 in Sarawak. Many of the hotspots were owned by palm oil companies or smallholder farmers who supply palm oil to these companies and use slash-and-burn methods to clear their land for the next planting season. However, Singapore's Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong, said that the fires were most likely started by errant companies, instead of slash-and-burn by smallholders. On 25 June, Indonesia's president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono issued a formal apology to Malaysia and Singapore for the hazardous smog.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nOn 26 June 2013, 265 hotspots were detected by satellites, but decreased to 54 on 27 June after heavy rain fell overnight between the two days. Newly promoted Premier League team Cardiff City also cancelled a week-long visit to Malaysia, the home of its billionaire owner, Vincent Tan, that was scheduled to begin that week, as a result of the severe haze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nThe number of hotspots in Sumatra continued to decrease on 27 June, with 42 hotspots recorded at 4pm. At the same time on 28 June, only 15 hotspots were detected by satellites. Singapore's National Environment Agency said that this could be the reason for the improving haze conditions in Singapore and Malaysia over the past week. The number of hotspots decreased further to just 7 on 29 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nThe World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) renewed calls for the enaction and enforcement of zero-burn policies. Based on satellite detection of hotspots, the province of Riau in Sumatra was found to contain over 88% of the hotspots that caused the worst haze over Singapore and Peninsular Malaysia since 1997. From 1 to 24 June, NASA satellites have detected a total of more than 9,000 hotspots in Sumatra, and more than 8,000 of them were located in Riau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nBy 29 June, a total of 2,800 military personnel, as well as helicopters and aircraft, were being deployed to fight the fires. About 3,000 civilians were also helping with the firefighting. The fires reduced from an area of 16,500ha to 4,081ha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nOn 1 July 4 hotspots were detected in Riau, the lowest number so far since the burning started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0009-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nThe next day, the number of hotspots rose sharply as Sumatra was experiencing dry weather. There were 159 hotspots in Sumatra, with 63 of them located in Riau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0010-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nOn 21 July, the number of hotspots in Sumatra spiked to reach 261 as a result of the continuing dry weather. 173 hotspots were detected in Riau. The remaining hotspots were mainly located in the north of the island, in Aceh and North Sumatra. In Malaysia, a total of 19 hotspots were detected. There were 7 hotspots in Johor, 4 each in Kelantan and Pahang, 2 in Perak, and 1 each in Selangor and Sabah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0011-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nThe hotspots decreased slightly a day later. 167 hotspots were detected in Riau, out of a total of 252 in Sumatra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0012-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nHowever, the number of hotspots in Riau climbed to 183 on 23 July, the highest number of hotspots detected in Riau since the haze returned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0013-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nOn 24 July, satellites detected 185 hotspots in Riau. Indonesian authorities said that the number of hotspots is expected to rise in August, when slashing-and-burning activity is very likely to peak, thus causing the haze to possibly thicken and increase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0014-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nOn 25 July, the number of hotspots in Riau decreased to 56, after 4 helicopters and 100 military personnel helped to fight the fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0015-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Chronology of events\nThere was a sharp increase in the hotspots in Indonesia on 26 August 2013, with 488 hotspots detected. There were 308 hotspots the day after, on 27 August 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0016-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Brunei\nOn 23 June, the Asean Specialised Meteorological Centre (ASMC) in Singapore detected 642 hotspots, which were scattered mostly in parts of central and west Borneo that caused a haze in Brunei and other parts of Borneo. On 20 June, Brunei-Muara District recorded a \"good\" PSI reading of 44, Belait recorded a \"moderate\" 75, Temburong recorded a \"moderate\" 64, and Tutong recorded a \"moderate\" 66.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0016-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Brunei\nBy 21 June, The Department of Environment, Parks and Recreation of Brunei said the PSI readings were \"relatively higher than normal\", but air pollution levels were still considered \"moderate\" as the PSI readings in Brunei were still below 100. Belait recorded the highest PSI reading (98), followed by Temburong (94), Tutong (92), and Brunei-Muara (65), which was the lowest. On 24 June, haze in Brunei remained unchanged with PSI readings in Brunei-Muara at a good 43, Belait at a moderate 75, Temburong at a moderate 72 and Tutong at a moderate 73. On 26 June, the haze was gone from Brunei and PSI levels returned to \"good\" levels. However, \"moderate\" levels were still recorded on Tutong (70) and Belait (64). The total number of hotspots also declined from the 231 reported on Saturday to 117 on Tuesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0017-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Brunei, Measures taken\nDuring the haze period, the Brunei Ministry of Health released a health advisory to the public. The public was also advised to regularly check the PSI (Pollutant Standard Index), follow the health advisory and seek treatment if they felt unwell because of haze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0018-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nIn Pekanbaru, capital of Riau province, where the majority of hotspots were located, visibility dropped and a number of Pekanbaru residents complained that the haze was affecting their health, and Sultan Syarif Kasim II Airport had to be closed for several hours, causing several flights to be diverted to nearby airports such as Polonia International Airport, Medan or to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Flights to and from Pinang Kampai Airport of Dumai were also suspended by the authorities because of poor visibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0019-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nWhile much of the press focused on the haze's impact in Singapore and Malaysia, the local residents of Riau were also affected. Residents fled their homes in Bengkalis, with about 30% experiencing respiratory problems. The fires burned through hectares of local farmland, decimating the season's crops. The PSI in Dumai hit 492 on the morning of 21 June 2013. However, because of the wind patterns, most parts of Indonesia were not hit by the haze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0020-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nEarlier on 22 June, Indonesian government blamed eight companies, including Jakarta-based PT Sinar Mas Agro Resources and Technology (SMART) and Asia Pacific Resources International (APRIL), for the fires. Later on 22 June, Environment Minister Balthasar Kambuaya revealed that at least 20 plantation companies operating in Riau were suspected to have caused land and forest fires, of which 8 were Malaysian: PT Langgam Inti Hiberida, PT Bumi Rakksa Sejati, PT Tunggal Mitra Plantation, PT Udaya Loh Dinawi, PT Adei Plantation, PT Jatim Jaya Perkasa, PT Multi Gambut Industri and PT Mustika Agro Lestari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0020-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nHowever, following a meeting in Indonesia between Balthasar and Palanivel, only four of the companies were from Malaysia and the companies had denied any involvement in the fires. Other local companies detected were PT Siak Seraya, PT Kimia Tirta Utama, PT Inti Indo Sawit Subur, Village Unit Cooperatives (KUD)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0020-0002", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nDayus Mas, PT Padasa Enam Utama, PT Kartayatam Bhakti Mulia, PT Langgam Inti Hibrindo, PT Riau Sakti Trans, PT Raja Garuda Masa Sejati, PT Sabira Negeri Utama, PT Guntung Hasrat Makmur, PT Panca Surya Agrindo, PT Bumi Reksa Nusa Sejati, PT Surya Bratasena Plantation, PT Adei Crumb Rubber, PT Rokan Adi Raya, Cooperatives 13 Anak Suku Bonai, PT Karyatama Bhakti Muli and PT Agroraya Gematrans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0021-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nOn the morning of 24 June, the haze shrouded Pekanbaru, the provincial capital of Riau. The PSI in Pekanbaru had been hovering around the moderate reading of 100 the previous week, but it rose to an unhealthy reading of 140 on the night of 23 June 2013. The same morning, several commercial flights at Syarif Kasim II Airport were delayed before takeoff by poor visibility caused by the haze. In Dumai, one of the worst-affected regencies in Riau, visibility was reduced to less than 500m after the PSI hit a hazardous record of 900. This was the highest in any haze crisis and three times above the minimum \"Hazardous\" level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0022-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nOn 25 June, eight Indonesian farmers were arrested for creating fires that set in motion the blazes. The number increased to 23 on 1 July, after another six farmers were arrested for carrying out illegal slash-and-burn activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0023-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nIndonesia said that it would ratify the 2002 ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution as soon as possible. Indonesia's Environment Minister, Balthasar Kambuaya, emphasised the importance of ratifying the agreement, saying that Indonesia should be concerned about the impact of the haze on its own people, and also the well-being of people in neighbouring countries affected by the haze. As of 6 July 2013, Indonesia had yet to ratify the pact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0024-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nOn 21 July, thick haze blanketed Dumai again because of the sudden increase in the number of hotspots, with visibility at street level dropping to below 200m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0025-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia\nOn 22 July, many parts of Riau recorded hazardous PSI readings. The worst reading, 619, was recorded in Rumbai, north of Pekanbaru, the provincial capital of Riau. Since then, the air quality in Riau has been worsening. Flights to and from Pekanbaru were delayed because of the deteriorating visibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0026-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nThe Indonesian government used weather-changing technology to create artificial rain and extinguish raging fires. It earmarked around 200 billion rupiah (around US$20M, S$25.6M at the time) to handle the disaster and deployed seven military aircraft for water bombings and cloud-seeding to fight raging forest fires on 21 June 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0027-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nIn June alone, more than 3000 soldiers, marines and air force officers were deployed to help fight the fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0028-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nThe Agriculture Minister Suswono stated that an investigation has been launched to find the firms responsible for the air pollution, and agreed to publish the names of the firms if they were proven guilty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0029-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nForestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan said the government would not tolerate companies burning land and bushes that caused the haze shrouding Riau and its surroundings. Companies which are proved to have used slash-and-burn to clear land would be acted upon firmly. The government assigned the National Police to handle the legal process and make sanctions against firms behind forest fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0030-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nAt dawn on 23 June, rain fell for 30 minutes in Dumai, the coastal city nearest to many of the hotspots, as a result of cloud-seeding. Rain fell on Dumai again at 5pm on the same day, after a Hercules C-130 jet commenced cloud-seeding in the Bengkalis district as well as Dumai at 2pm. However, not much rain fell. First Lieutenant Fajar Gusthana, one of those who did the cloud-seeding, said that it was difficult as there were very few clouds, and the clouds were generally quite thin. He also said that there were no clouds directly above the hotspots, which made it harder for them to carry out the cloud-seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0031-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nOn 27 June, Indonesia said that it would start larger scale water-bombing in one week. Indonesia planned to do this with the help of rented Russian Kamov helicopters with belly tanks that could carry 8,000 litres of water, compared with Indonesian helicopters carrying 500 litres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0032-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nIndonesia switched into preventive mode on 1 July, after it had successfully put out most of the fires, although fires were still raging underground in the peatland. To enable itself to respond faster and extinguish the fires before they got out of control again, Indonesia increased night patrols. Water-bombing and cloud-seeding aircraft were placed on standby. Indonesia has said that the standby aircraft should be able to respond quickly to the fires and fly out immediately to Jambi, South Sumatra, and Lampung in Sumatra, as well as four provinces in Kalimantan on Borneo. Indonesia's National Disaster Management Agency spokesman Dr Agus Wibowo said that Indonesia expects fires to affect seven other provinces as well, as the dry season was not at its peak yet and was expected to continue until October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0033-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nAs of 21 July, there were four helicopters and an aeroplane on standby in Riau, so that fires could be put out using cloud seeding and water bombing. A statement from Indonesia's disaster management agency on 22 July said that there were a total of 6 aeroplanes on standby for cloud seeding, while soldiers were also placed on standby to help fight any fires that occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0034-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nIndonesia began cloud-seeding and water bombing over Riau on 22 July, to reduce the number of hotspots which had risen sharply over the prior weekend and caused the haze to return to Malaysia. More than 370 firefighters were deployed to fight the fires, with 3 helicopters used for water bombing. In Pekanbaru, the provincial capital of Riau, there were more than 22 water-bombing operations carried out. However, there was only one cloud-seeding operation conducted, as there were insufficient clouds over Pekanbaru to make rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0035-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nWillem Rampangilei, a deputy minister at the Coordinating Ministry for People's Welfare, said that the provincial government had already tried its best to fight the fires, but the number of hotspots remained about the same. He also said that following the failure to decrease the number of hotspots significantly, Jakarta would send more troops to fight the fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0036-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nOn 24 July, planes conducted cloud seeding operations, to reduce the haze which had shrouded Riau and the Straits of Malacca for the past few days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0037-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Indonesia, Measures taken\nOn 8 January 2014, the Meulaboh district court on Sumatra island ruled that Indonesian company Kallista Alam had illegally burnt vegetation on 1,000 hectares (2,500 acres) of peatland in Aceh province to clear it for a palm oil plantation. In the civil case brought by the Ministry of Environment, the court ordered the company to pay 114.3 billion rupiah (S$9.4 million) in losses to the state and 252 billion rupiah to rehabilitate the land it destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0038-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nThe haze that affected Malaysia was the worst since 2005, starting with the Air Pollution Index (API) hitting 172 on 19 June. On 17 June, there were only two areas recording unhealthy API values, a reduction from six areas on 16 June. According to the Malaysian Department of Environment, the two areas were Kemaman, Terengganu (118) and Balok Baru, Kuantan, Pahang (110). On 19 June, API readings at 5 p.m. by the Malaysian Department of Environment showed that Johor and Malacca were the two states worst affected by the haze. The highest reading in Johor was 172, recorded in Muar, while that of Malacca was 161, recorded in the state capital, Malacca City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0039-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 20 June, the haze in Malaysia worsened. Johor and Malacca remained the worst-affected states. In Johor, Muar recorded a hazardous reading (383) at 11 a.m., which was one of the worst among the readings. Kota Tinggi was the second worst, hitting a Very unhealthy reading of 232. In Malacca, an API reading of 137 was recorded in Malacca City exceeding the Unhealthy API. Readings in other parts of Malaysia ranged from Good to Unhealthy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0040-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nA day later, the Malaysian Meteorological Department predicted that the haze would not dissipate until 26 June, when tropical storm Bebinca was expected to be blown from the southwest, bringing strong winds and dry weather to carry the smog from Sumatra over to West Malaysia. The Johor State Health Department reported the number of citizens with upper respiratory tract ailments increased by at least 21%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0041-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 23 June, the Air Pollution Index (API) in Muar, Johor spiked to 746 at 7 a.m. which was almost 2.5 times the lower end of the Hazardous level thus resulting in the declaration of a state of emergency in Muar and Ledang (which was afterwards lifted on 25 June in the morning), leaving the towns in virtual shutdown. It was also almost 450 more than the minimum range of the Hazardous level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0042-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 24 June, shifting winds blew the haze northwards away from Johor and Singapore, towards Malacca, Selangor, Negeri Sembilan, Perak and Penang. The haze also blanketed the east coast, especially the states of Pahang, Terengganu, and Kelantan. Air quality in central and northern Peninsula Malaysia was also worsening. Kuala Lumpur recorded an Unhealthy API of 198 at 11 a.m. indicating the first reading in KL to be on the cusp of entering the Very unhealthy range in the haze season. Port Dickson was the worst hit by the haze, with the API entering the Hazardous range with a reading of 335 at 7 a.m., although the figure decreased to a Very unhealthy reading of 292 at 11 a.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0043-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nEven though the haze had cleared off a bit in the southern parts of the nation, Port Klang recorded a Very unhealthy series of API values which reached the Hazardous range with a reading of 487 in the morning of 25 June. The drifting smoke from the south also caused other places in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur to be blanketed by thick smog, resulting in the API coming very close to entering the Hazardous level. Seri Manjung in Perak which is 200\u00a0km away from Port Klang was also hit hard by the haze. Visibility remained poor in Kuala Lumpur and several other states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0044-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nMalaysians were able to breathe easier when the overnight rain in numerous parts of the west coast helped to clear the skies. There was a significant drop in the API values in most areas, including Port Klang since 26 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0045-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nThe haze crisis is believed to have claimed its first life, a diabetic woman from Muar who was suffering from asthma. Another casualty was an elderly man, also from the same town. Both deaths were reported early in the week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0046-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 29 June, the improvement in API readings continued, with the PSI readings hovering in the Good and Moderate ranges. At 5pm, the worst PSI readings were in the Moderate range, recorded in Kota Tinggi and Bukit Rambai, at 81 and 86 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0047-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 21 July, the haze blanketed certain states of Malaysia yet again. Some parts of Selangor, Negeri Sembilan, and Malacca were hit with API readings in the higher part of the Moderate range. Bukit Rambai, in the state of Malacca, was worst hit. At 12am, a moderate API reading of 94 was recorded. The reading then continued to escalate, hitting right at the very end of the Moderate range (100) at 7am, and entered the Unhealthy range an hour later. The air quality in Bukit Rambai continued to worsen, and the highest API value of the day, 118, was recorded at 8pm and 9pm. It began to subside at 10pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0048-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 22 July, the haze conditions in Selangor, Malacca and Negeri Sembilan worsened. Johor also got hit by the haze. Bukit Rambai remained the worst hit of all, with an unhealthy API of 135, the worst since the haze returned, recorded there. Muar, Malacca City, Banting, and Kuala Lumpur also recorded unhealthy readings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0049-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 23 July, the haze conditions changed again. At 8am, API readings in Port Klang was 105, 116 in Bukit Rambai and 115 in Muar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0050-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nVisibility at several Malaysian airports was reduced by the haze, which travelled northwards to the northern states of Terengganu, Kelantan and Penang. In Terengganu, visibility at the Sultan Mahmud Airport in Kuala Terengganu was reduced to 3\u00a0km in the evening, while visibility at Kerteh Airport was reduced to 6\u00a0km. In Penang, the Penang International Airport in Bayan Lepas also had visibility reduced to 6\u00a0km. However, in Kelantan, visibility at the Sultan Ismail Petra Airport in Kota Baru was at a safe 10\u00a0km. Petaling Jaya and Subang, both in Selangor, were also hit by poor visibility at around noon, but it gradually improved to reach 6\u00a0km and 9\u00a0km respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0051-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nThe haze was expected to ease over Johor, Pahang, Klang Valley, Muar, Malacca City and Manjung on 25 July, where rain was expected. However, Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya, Kuala Selangor, Putrajaya, Port Dickson would remain dry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0052-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 24 July, Ipoh, Tanjung Malim, and Perai recorded unhealthy API levels in the afternoon, at 106 (4pm), 101 (5pm) and 102 (1pm and 2pm) respectively. API readings for the day were mostly moderate in Malaysia, although a few areas recorded good readings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0053-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 25 July, the haze continued to be blown towards the northern parts of Malaysia. Air quality in most parts of Malaysia were in the Moderate range for the day. The worst hit areas were Ipoh, the state capital of Perak, and Seberang Jaya, in Penang, where unhealthy API levels were recorded in the afternoon. The highest API reading of the day, 106, was recorded in Ipoh at 4pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0054-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 26 July, Bukit Rambai (Malacca), Seri Manjung (Perak), Port Klang (Selangor) and Perai (Penang) were worst affected, with the highest API readings at 82 (11pm), 87 (12am), 84 (12am) and 87 (12am).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0055-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 27 July, air quality in many parts of Malaysia returned to the Good range, although some remained in the Moderate range. From 12am to 5am, most of the API readings were in the lower part of the Moderate range. However, Bukit Rambai, Seri Manjung, Port Klang and Ipoh remained the worst affected areas, with a highest API reading of 83 (multiple times in the morning), 79 (2am and 3am) and 78 (2am and 3am) respectively. Ipoh's API almost entered the Unhealthy range, recording the worst reading of the day, 99, at 3pm. This was only one point away from the \"Unhealthy\" range, in which even the slightest increase could result in the entering of the \"Unhealthy\" range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0056-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 28 July, air quality remained in the Moderate range in many parts of Malaysia during the day, although most areas recorded good readings in the early morning. Bukit Rambai's air quality remained in the Moderate range for the whole day. Its worst reading was 82, recorded at 10pm and 11pm. In Negeri Sembilan, Seremban was worst-affected, recording a moderate 84 at 4pm. Ipoh's worst reading was a moderate 92, also at 4pm. Selangor, which included the capital state of Wilayah Persekutuan, was worst-hit. Petaling Jaya, Putrajaya, and the Cheras area of Kuala Lumpur all recorded unhealthy API levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0056-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nCheras was worst affected, with air quality remaining unhealthy from 2pm to 6pm. Its highest reading, 139, was recorded at 5pm, the worst reading of the day in Malaysia. Petaling Jaya's air quality was unhealthy from 3 to 4pm, recording 105 at 3pm. Putrajaya only breached the 100 mark for an hour, recording 101 at 5pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0057-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 29 July, Bukit Rambai, Seremban, Banting, Port Klang, Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya and Shah Alam were worst hit. Excluding KL, their worst readings were 84 (11pm), 95 (4pm), 82 (10pm), 92 (11pm), 81 (10\u201311pm) and 80 (11pm). The Batu Muda area of KL recorded its worst reading of 83 from 2pm to 6pm. The Cheras area of KL recorded readings in the lower part of the Moderate range for most part of the day, but was the only place to breach the Unhealthy range, when an API reading of 102 was recorded at 1pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0058-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 30 July, Bukit Rambai was worst affected, with the API constantly remaining in the 80s. Its worst reading was 85, recorded at 12am. Tanjung Malim recorded 81 at 3pm, after a sudden spike from a good 48 the previous hour, although it dropped to 52 at 4pm. Port Klang recorded the worst reading of the day, 92, at 12am. However, air quality in the other badly affected areas of the previous day improved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0059-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 31 July, Bukit Rambai remained the worst affected area. API readings there hovered in the 80s, although occasionally dropping to the upper 70s, like the past few days. The highest reading was 84, at 10am. That was also the highest reading for the day in Malaysia. Port Klang's API readings rose from the 50s in the early morning to 77 (5\u20139pm). For most of the day, it was in the 70s. API readings in some other areas like Kemaman in Terrenganu, Banting, Malacca City and Muar were in the 60s for most of the day. Tanjung Malim's air quality was good for most of the day, but spiked suddenly to reach 72 at 3pm, and 75 an hour later. It gradually decreased and returned to the Good range at 8pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0060-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 1 August, Bukit Rambai remained the worst-affected. API readings there dropped gradually during the morning, reaching 68 at 11am, the lowest recorded there for many days already. However, it then increased quickly for the rest of the day, breaching the 80 mark at 3pm. At 4pm, API was 90. As of 10pm, the API was 92. The highest API for the day in Bukit Rambai was 93, recorded at 9pm. That was also the highest reading of the day in Malaysia. Port Dickson's air quality remained between 52 and 70 for most of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0060-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nHowever, it suddenly increased to 78 at 3pm and 83 at 4pm, before dropping an hour later. In Kuala Lumpur, air quality was mainly in the 50s. But in the Cheras area of KL, API readings soared to 71 at 2pm, then to 86 at 3pm, 77 at 4pm, before returning to the 50s. In Seremban, air quality hovered around 60 for most of the day, although at 3pm, a reading of 80 was recorded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0061-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nOn 2 August, the haze still hit Bukit Rambai the hardest. In the early morning, the API readings continued rising up the 90s, hitting 100 at 5am. That meant it was at the top of the \"Moderate\" range and even if it were to increase by only 1, that's it and it would enter the \"Unhealthy\" range. At 6am, the API reading entered the Unhealthy range, hovering between 101 and 105. The highest reading, 105, was recorded at noon. At 3pm, the air quality was back in the Moderate range, and subsided gradually. At 9pm, it was 84.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0061-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Peninsular Malaysia\nHowever, instead of Bukit Rambai, it was Tanjung Malim which recorded the worst reading of the day, 114, at 5pm. That was also the highest in Malaysia. Like the past few days, Tanjung Malim's air quality was Good for most of the day, only spiking for a few hours each day. The air quality there entered the Moderate range at 2pm, and returned to the Good range at 8pm. Other than the above two locations, Kemaman, Port Dickson, Seremban, Nilai and Malacca City also recorded air quality in the 70s for a few hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0062-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Malaysian Borneo\nOn 20 June, the API index in Sabah was moderate, with Kota Kinabalu at 74, Keningau, 66 and Sandakan, 42. On 22 June, the hazy condition in Sabah and Labuan became worse when the index in several areas had risen. Keningau registered a reading of 98 at 11 a.m., while Kota Kinabalu with 91 and Labuan 97. Until 25 June, only Sandakan and Tawau enjoyed cleaner air than other areas, with API readings at 50 and 42 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0063-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Malaysian Borneo\nIn Sarawak, the API entered the moderate range on 20 June, with readings of 72 in Miri and 55 in Kapit and Sri Aman. In addition, sixteen hot spots were detected on 18 June with Mukah having the most with five and Sarikei, three. Big plantation companies had been accused of being the major cause of haze in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0064-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nThe organisers of the Olympic Day Run, McDonald's Malaysia and Olympic Council of Malaysia announced on 20 June the postponement of the 10th annual Run scheduled for 23 June amid health fears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0065-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nAs of 23 June, more than 600 schools closed in areas of Johor where the Air Pollution Index (API) readings had exceeded the hazardous point of 300. Schools in areas with the API reaching 150 were advised to avoid outdoor activities. While the 2013 Johor Rugby Carnival had to be deferred until further notice, a directive was given to cancel all outdoor activities in the Malaysian National Service (PLKN) training camps in affected areas with Unhealthy API readings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0066-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nThe Department of Environment issued a ban against open burning in Selangor, Malacca and Johor; those convicted would face fines of not more than RM500,000 (S$199,400), a maximum imprisonment of five years, or both according to Section 29AA(2) of the Environmental Quality (Amendment) Act 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0067-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nMalaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak advised the public to reduce outdoor activities while the haze was still present. On 23 June, he declared a state of emergency in two southern districts, Muar and Ledang after the API values increased badly. The emergency status was later lifted on 25 June, Tuesday morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0068-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nOn 23 June, Malaysia's Natural Resources and Environment Minister, Datuk Seri G. Palanivel pronounced the closure of all schools in Kuala Lumpur, Selangor and Malacca on 24 June as a precautionary step. A total of 480 government-run kindergartens in Malacca were told to stop classes. Operators of private kindergartens and pre-schools were urged to follow suit by the state government of Malacca. Schools in Port Dickson and Kuantan were shut down as ordered by the respective state governments. In Johor Bahru, a number of schools remained temporarily closed while 300 schools in other parts of Johor were allowed to operate again as usual.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0069-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nThe next day, Pizza Hut Malaysia also temporarily halted delivery services for their Muar and Port Klang branches to ensure the riders' safety because of the worsening haze. They resumed delivery services in Muar a day later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0070-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nOn 25 June, Malaysia's Education Minister, Muhyiddin Yassin said that parents had the discretion not to send their children to school in fear of health problems as long as they informed the relevant school authorities, as schools in some states were starting to reopen. The Department of Environment (DOE) began updating the API readings on an hourly basis. They were made available for public access on both the department's official website and portal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0071-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nThe haze forced the opening ceremony of the 13th Parliament session in Kuala Lumpur to be held indoors for the first time in Malaysian history. Yang di-Pertuan Agong Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah did the customary inspection of the guard-of-honour at the banquet hall of the Parliament building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0072-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nG. Palanivel was scheduled to meet his Indonesian counterpart to discuss the situation while Malaysian and Singaporean officials sought to move forward a meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) haze committee to the following week instead of August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0073-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nThe Premier League newcomers, Cardiff City F.C. also postponed their six-day promotional tour of Malaysia in the week because of the air pollution crisis. Concurrently, all orders to shut schools in the nation were withdrawn by 27 June, though outdoor activities were to remain cancelled in some parts of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0074-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nOn 28 June, the Shell Eco-marathon that was planned to be held in Kuala Lumpur on 4\u20137 July was cancelled because of worsening air quality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0075-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Malaysia, Measures taken\nUpon the return of the haze in mid-July, the Penang state government prepared 200,000 face masks to be distributed to the people, especially school children, pregnant women, motorcyclists and pillion riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0076-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nMild haze began to affect Singapore on 13 June, before air quality worsened and remained in the Unhealthy range for a few days. Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) first hit levels unseen in 16 years when a PSI of 155 was recorded at 10 p.m. on 17 June 2013. The highest in the 16 years of the haze was finally broken. At 10 p.m. on 19 June 2013, the 3-hour PSI reading of 321 breached the Hazardous zone for the first time in history, surpassing its previous record of 226 (Very unhealthy) during the 1997 haze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0076-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nHowever, the 10 p.m. reading was released 57 minutes late at 10:57\u00a0p.m. and the reading soon decreased to 282 at 11 p.m., and 218 at 12 a.m., both of which are in the Very unhealthy range. At 1 p.m. on 20 June 2013, the 3-hour PSI reading reached record levels once again with a reading of 371 in the Hazardous range, a jump from 299 an hour ago, which was only one point shy of the \"Hazardous\" level. The PM2.5 concentration also reached 300 for the first time in the nation's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0077-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nAt 11 a.m. on 21 June 2013, another new all-time high was recorded, with a PSI of 400. The new record was broken again at 12 p.m., with the PSI remaining in the Hazardous range at 401.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0078-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nAs with prior haze events, this strained ties between Indonesia and Singapore, with Indonesia swiftly pushing the blame for the haze to Singapore and Malaysia, which invested in palm oil firms in the area of the burning. The Prime Minister of Singapore, Lee Hsien Loong, as well as Vivian Balakrishnan, the Singaporean Minister of Environment and Water Resources, expressed concern over the haze and called on Indonesia to do more to resolve the issue. However, Indonesian officials became irate at the demands, and on Thursday Indonesia's Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare Agung Laksono accused Singapore of acting \"like a child.\" In response, Singapore's Emeritus Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong responded that \"the Singapore Child is being suffocated\", borrowing the same descriptor to highlight the nation's innocence yet vulnerability in the haze crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 923]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0079-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nWhile cloud seeding was suggested to get rid of the haze, Singapore's meteorological service found it not possible because of insufficient cloud cover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0080-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nInitially, face masks were sold out in major drugstores and other retailers because of strong demand, although the Ministry of Health subsequently reassured the public that restocks were being distributed from its armoury of close to nine million N95 masks. More than 4 million masks were distributed after that, with 1 million masks to constituencies and the remaining 3 million to retailers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0081-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nThe Manpower Ministry refrained from issuing a stop-work order, saying that the Government would do so only if the haze worsened severely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0082-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nOn 22 June 2013, the haze started giving way to clear skies as the PSI dropped from 326 at 10am in the Hazardous range to 73 at 5pm in the Moderate range. The next day, the improvement was sustained in the morning, with the PSI in the Moderate range. The improvement in the air quality was due to a change in the direction of the low level winds over Singapore, from south-westerly to southerly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0082-0001", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nAs dry conditions and winds blowing from the southwest or west persisted, the 24-hour PSI reading for the rest of the day was expected to be in the Moderate range. However, in the night the PSI reached 102, which is in the Unhealthy range, in the west. The readings increased as the night passed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0083-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nIn the late afternoon of 25 June 2013, thunderstorms accompanied by strong, gusty winds drenched many parts of Singapore with heavy rain and hailstones even fell in the western part of Singapore. The storms were a welcome respite, after Singapore had endured a week of record-breaking haze and no rain. There was a huge decrease in the PSI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0084-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nSingapore's Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Dr Vivian Balakrishnan assured Singaporeans that Singapore's water quality had not been affected by the haze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0085-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nOn 30 June 2013, a morning shower caused a significant decrease in the 3-hour PSI readings. The PSI had dropped into the Good range. However, PM2.5 concentrations for the past few days had remained unhealthy, and this was predicted to continue into the coming days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0086-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nOn 1 July, the PSI readings remained in the Good range for most of the day. The highest PSI readings of the day were 49\u201353 (Moderate). PSI readings on 2 and 3 July were also in the Good range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0087-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nOn 5 July 2013, a PSI reading of 6 was recorded \u2013 the lowest reading since the haze started blowing towards Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0088-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nDespite Malaysia getting hit by the haze on 21 and 22 July, Singapore remained relatively unaffected, as the winds were mainly blowing from the south or southeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0089-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nOn 26 July, the PSI reached the 40s for the first time in weeks, reaching a high of 46.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0090-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nOn 31 July, the PSI reached a high of 44, but decreased again the next day because of thunderstorms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0091-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore\nOn 20 August, the haze briefly returned to Singapore during the afternoon with the PSI rising to 55.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0092-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Singapore, Measures taken\nOver the first four days of the haze, the government and other institutions implemented a series of safety precautions meant to reduce exposure to the haze. Most were focused on restricting outdoor activities. Schools and childcare centres began restricting outdoor activities. It was announced that should the haze situation worsen, schools would be closed and the Ministry of Manpower Singapore might issue a stop-work order; the Ministry of Education declared all school activities in June cancelled on 21 June 2013. In addition, talks with Indonesia were initiated. The Singapore Government distributed a few hundred thousand respirators to households without the means to purchase their own, while the country's top Islam board gave the green light for Muslims to not attend Friday prayer at mosques should they deem fit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0093-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Southern Thailand\nAs of 25 June, the haze affected Southern Thailand according to the Thai News Agency. The haze affected the Yala Province first, causing irritation to the locals but not affecting visibility on the road. A day later, the haze in Pattani, Yala and Satun thickened and caused poor visibility on the road. Among the seven Southern Thailand provinces affected by the haze, Narathiwat was hit the worst, with particulate matter levels there reaching 129\u00a0\u03bcg/m3, a level which is considered adverse to health.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0094-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Countries affected, Southern Thailand, Measures taken\nThe provincial public health offices have advised the public to wear a face mask and avoid any outdoor activities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0095-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Comparison with previous haze events in Southeast Asia\nForest and land fires have been an annual occurrence in Sumatra in recent history. In the period from 2006 to 2013, the cumulative hotspot count in 2013 was the fifth highest. There were more hotspots in 2012, 2006, 2007 and 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0096-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Comparison with previous haze events in Southeast Asia\nThe record-breaking pollution levels in Singapore and Peninsular Malaysia in June 2013 were caused by a combination of a spike in hotspots in Sumatra and wind patterns which directed the smoke towards Singapore and Malaysia during that month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236049-0097-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Asian haze, Comparison with previous haze events in Southeast Asia\nThere were more than 8,000 fire alerts in Sumatra in June 2013. Over the past 12 years, there have only been three other months with more than 8,000 fire alerts \u2013 all of which occurred in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236050-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks football team\nThe 2013 Southeast Missouri State Redhawks football team represented Southeast Missouri State University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Tony Samuel and played their home games at Houck Stadium. They were a member of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 3\u20139, 2\u20136 in OVC play to finish in a tie for seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236051-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21 through May 26 at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama. The annual tournament determined the tournament champion of the Division I Southeastern Conference in college baseball. The tournament champion, LSU, earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236051-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe tournament has been held every year since 1977. Entering the 2013 event, LSU had claimed nine championships, the most of any school. Original members Georgia and Kentucky along with 1993 addition Arkansas have never won the tournament. This was the sixteenth consecutive year and eighteenth overall that the event has been held at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium, formerly known as Regions Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236051-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament\nIn 2013, the tournament set a new all-sessions attendance record of 134,496. The average per session was 8,115.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236051-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe regular season division winners claimed the top two seeds and the next ten teams by conference winning percentage, regardless of division, claimed the remaining berths in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236051-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe bottom eight teams played a single-elimination opening round, followed by a two-bracket double-elimination format until the semifinals, when the format reverted to single elimination through the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236051-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament, Notes\nThe Mississippi State vs Missouri first-round game lasted 17 innings. This tied the record for the longest game in SEC Tournament history, which was originally set by Arkansas and Auburn in 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 55], "content_span": [56, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236051-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nChris Cotton was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Cotton was a pitcher for LSU, serving as closer. In the championship game, he pitched the final 2.2 innings and did not allow any of the eight batters he faced to reach base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 91], "content_span": [92, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season\nThe 2013 Southeastern Conference football season began on August 29 with Ole Miss visiting Vanderbilt, and will conclude with the Allstate Sugar Bowl and/or the BCS National Championship Game in early January. The 2013 season was considered to be a \"bridge\" season and was not based on any past or future formatting. New inter-division rivalry games between Texas A&M-South Carolina and Arkansas-Missouri did not take place until the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, Regular season\nRankings reflect that of the AP poll for that week until week eight when the BCS rankings will be used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, SEC vs AQ-conference matchups\nThis is a list of the BCS-league teams the SEC plays in the non-conference (Rankings from the AP Poll):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-SEC Teams\nThe Southeastern Conference coaches voted for the All-SEC teams after the regular season concluded. Prior to the 2013 SEC Championship Game the teams were released. Alabama placed the most representatives on the 2013 All-Southeastern Conference Coaches\u2019 Football Team, the league office announced Tuesday. Alabama had nine total members, including a league-leading five representatives on the first team. LSU followed with eight total selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-SEC Teams\nTwelve of the 14 SEC schools had a member on the first-team All-SEC squad. Alabama led with five, followed by Texas A&M with four. Georgia and SEC Champion Auburn each placed three total members on the first team. Every SEC school was represented by at least one member on the All-SEC teams, including seven institutions with four or more All-SEC selections each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, Awards and honors, All-SEC Teams\nCoaches were not permitted to vote for their own players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, 2014 NFL Draft\nN.B: In the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2014 Draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, Home attendance\nGames played at Arkansas' secondary home stadium War Memorial Stadium, capacity: 54,120.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236052-0008-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Conference football season, Home attendance\nAttendance was 84,693 for the WLOCP, an SEC home game played at a neutral site", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236053-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team\nThe 2013 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team represented Southeastern Louisiana University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Lions were led by second-year head coach Ron Roberts and played their home games at Strawberry Stadium. They were a member of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 11\u20133, 7\u20130 in Southland play to win the Southland Conference championship. They received the conference's automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs where they defeated fellow Southland member Sam Houston State in the second round before losing in the quarterfinals to New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236053-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team, Media\nAll Lions games can be heard on KSLU 90.9 FM and online at LionSports.net. Conference home games not shown by another source will be done by Southeastern Channel, the student production group. All games are shown tape delayed on Southeastern Channel Thursday at 8 PM, Friday at 3 PM, Saturday at 8 AM, and Sunday at 1 PM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236054-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern California Open\nThe 2013 Southern California Open was a professional women's tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the 4th edition of the tournament since its resumption in 2010, and a Premier tournament on the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place in Carlsbad, California, United States from July 29 to August 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236054-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern California Open, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236055-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern California Open \u2013 Doubles\nRaquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears successfully defended their title, defeating Chan Hao-ching and Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236056-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern California Open \u2013 Singles\nDominika Cibulkov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but lost in the first round to Ana Ivanovic. Samantha Stosur won the title, defeating Victoria Azarenka in the final, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236056-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern California Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236057-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2013 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 26 at Fluor Field at the West End in Greenville, South Carolina. The annual event determines the conference champion of the Division I Southern Conference in college baseball. Third seeded Elon won their second tournament champion to earn the league's bid to the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 18 athletic championships held by the conference in the 2012\u201313 academic year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236057-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe tournament was originally held from 1950-53, when the Southern Conference was a large conference composed of several small schools and several large schools, the latter of which would form the Atlantic Coast Conference after the 1953 season. The event was re-established in 1984 and has been held every year since. Western Carolina has claimed nine championships, the most of any school, with The Citadel close behind at eight tournament wins. Georgia Southern and Furman are the only other schools with multiple championships, winning five and two, respectively. Davidson and UNC Greensboro are the only current members to never win a title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236057-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThis is the second consecutive year and third year overall for the tournament in Greenville, after spending 21 of 22 seasons in Charleston, South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236057-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top eight teams from the regular season are seeded one through eight based on conference winning percentage. They meet in a two bracket double-elimination tournament with a championship game between the winners of each bracket. Davidson, UNC Greensboro, and Wofford did not qualify for the field. College of Charleston claimed the second seed over Elon by tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236057-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Outstanding Player\nJoe Jackson was named Tournament Most Outstanding Player. Jackson was a catcher for The Citadel who recorded 10 hits in 13 at-bats and reached base on 18 of 20 plate appearances for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 90], "content_span": [91, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236058-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2013 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place between Friday, March 8 and Monday, March 11 in Asheville, North Carolina, at the U.S. Cellular Center. The entire tournament was streamed on ESPN3, with the Southern Conference Championship Game televised by ESPN2. The champion received an automatic bid into the 2013 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236059-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference football season\nThe 2013 Southern Conference football season, part of the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season competition of college football, began on Thursday, August 29, 2013 with Chattanooga hosting Tennessee\u2013Martin. The regular season concluded on November 23, while Samford and Furman qualified for the NCAA Division I Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236059-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference football season\nSamford was eliminated in the first round by Jacksonville State. Furman defeated South Carolina State in the opening round, but fell to eventual champion North Dakota State 38\u20137 in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236059-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference football season\nAppalachian State and Georgia Southern played their final seasons as members of the Southern Conference but were ineligible to win the conference championship or participate in the playoffs as they transitioned to the Football Bowl Subdivision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236059-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference football season, Rankings\nAppalachian State and Georgia Southern were ineligible for the Coaches' Poll due to the additional scholarship players on the rosters as part of their transition to FBS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236059-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference football season, Regular season\nRankings reflect that of the Sports Network poll for that week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236060-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2013 Southern Conference men's soccer season will be the 18th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. It will be the last season for the Davidson Wildcats, who will leave for the Atlantic 10 Conference. Two other schools, Appalachian State and Georgia Southern, will leave for the Sun Belt Conference in 2014, but both men's soccer teams are expected to remain SoCon affiliates because the Sun Belt only sponsors soccer for women. In fact, it has already been confirmed that Appalachian State will remain in SoCon men's soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236060-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference men's soccer season\nThe defending regular season and tournament champions are the Elon Phoenix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236060-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Conference men's soccer season, SoCon Tournament\nThe format for the 2013 Southern Conference Men's Soccer Tournament will be announced in the Fall of 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 62], "content_span": [63, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236061-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Illinois Salukis football team\nThe 2013 Southern Illinois Salukis football team represented Southern Illinois University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by sixth year head coach Dale Lennon and played their home games at Saluki Stadium. They were a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. They finished the season 7\u20135, 5\u20133 in MFVC play to finish in a four way tie for second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236062-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Jaguars football team\nThe 2013 Southern Jaguars football team represented Southern University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Jaguars were led by first year head coach Dawson Odums, who was made the new head coach he served serving as interim head coach for the final nine games of the previous season. The Jaguars played their home games at Ace W. Mumford Stadium and were a member of the West Division of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). The Jaguars finished the season with a 9\u20134 record, as West Division Champions and with a victory over Jackson State in the SWAC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236062-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Jaguars football team, Media\nAll Southern Jaguars football games were broadcast on KQXL-FM 106.5 with Chris Powers (play-by-play), Gerald Kimble (analyst), and Eric Randall (sideline) calling the Jaguar Action. All home games will also been televised tape delayed by Cox Sports, usually on Sunday nights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season\nThe Southern Kings participated in their first ever Super Rugby competition in 2013. They won three, drew one and lost twelve of their matches during the regular season to finish fifth and last in the South African Conference and fifteenth and last on the overall log. Their top try scorer in the competition was Wimpie van der Walt, who got six tries, and their top points scorer was Demetri Catrakilis, who scored 142 points. As a result of finishing bottom of the South African Conference, they had to play a two-legged promotion/relegation play-off series against the Lions. The Lions beat them 44\u201342 on aggregate to return to Super Rugby in 2014 at the expense of the Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season\nIt was also their final season in Super Rugby until 2016, when they returned after the Super Rugby competition was expanded to 18 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season, Personnel, Squad\nThe following players were named in the Kings squad for the 2013 Super Rugby season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season, Personnel, Coaches and management\nThe Kings coaching and management staff for the 2013 Super Rugby season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0004-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season, Season, Log\nThe final log standings in the 2013 Super Rugby season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0005-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season, Season, Log\nThe final log standings in the 2013 Super Rugby promotion/relegation play-off were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0006-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season, Season, Matches\nThe results of the Kings' matches during the season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236063-0007-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Kings season, Player statistics\nThe Super Rugby appearance record for players that represented the Kings in 2013 is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236064-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Miss Golden Eagles football team\nThe 2013 Southern Miss Golden Eagles football team represented the University of Southern Mississippi in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season as a member of the East Division of Conference USA. They were led by first-year head coach Todd Monken and played their home games at M. M. Roberts Stadium in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. They finished the season 1\u201311, 1\u20137 in C-USA play to finish in a three-way tie for fifth place in the East Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236065-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Utah Thunderbirds football team\nThe 2013 Southern Utah Thunderbirds football team represented Southern Utah University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by sixth year head coach Ed Lamb and played their home games at Eccles Coliseum. This was their second year as a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 8\u20135, 5\u20133 in Big Sky play to finish in a four way tie for fourth place. They received an at-large bid to the FCS Playoffs where they lost in the first round to Sam Houston State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236065-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Utah Thunderbirds football team, Media\nAll Thunderbirds football games were broadcast live on KSUU. They were streamed online at power91radio. All conference road games and all home games not on Root were streamed via Big Sky TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236065-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Utah Thunderbirds football team, Schedule\nThe 2013 schedule was the first 12-game schedule in Thunderbirds history. Even though the Thunderbirds played 9 conference opponents, only 8 of the games counted as conference games. The series with Sacramento State was scheduled before Southern Utah became a member of the Big Sky and did not count as a conference game for either team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236066-0000-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Vietnam and Cambodia blackout\nThe 2013 Southern Vietnam and Cambodia blackout was a power outage in the southern region of Vietnam on 22 May 2013, affecting millions of people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236066-0001-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Vietnam and Cambodia blackout, Immediate impact\nPower went off at around 14:14\u00a0pm (UTC+7) on 22 May 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236066-0002-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Vietnam and Cambodia blackout, Cause\nA careless move of a truck deployed to plant trees in New B\u00ecnh D\u01b0\u01a1ng City urban area is the direct cause for the massive power outage in the southern region of Vietnam. When moving a tree on Wednesday afternoon, the truck let the tree bump onto a line in the national power grid (500 KV).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00236066-0003-0000", "contents": "2013 Southern Vietnam and Cambodia blackout, Effects\nThis incident caused a massive blackout in 22 provinces and cities in the South of Vietnam. In fact, there has not been any kind of property insurance for these assets in case of unexpected massive and long outage. It even caused the electricity cut for the capital city of Cambodia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 336]}}